<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057849_0001"/>
Gtoe<lb/>
(ftaroltmatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.61 No.7<lb/>
Tuesday, September 23,1986<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
GOP Candidate On Campus<lb/>
Moye<lb/>
"if Es C,<lb/>
Napping Between Classes<lb/>
You never know what you'll find in the halls of the art building!<lb/>
By CAROLYN DRISCOLL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Howard D. Moye, first district<lb/>
republican congressional can-<lb/>
didate was at ECU yesterday<lb/>
drumming up student support for<lb/>
the November 4 election.<lb/>
While on campus, he introduc-<lb/>
ed Brian Lassiter as chairman of<lb/>
the Student Committee for Moye<lb/>
at the university.<lb/>
"I also took the opportunity to<lb/>
discuss some of the issues of my<lb/>
campaign with those present. I<lb/>
want students to recognize my<lb/>
stand and realize that I am in-<lb/>
terested in students he said.<lb/>
Moye, running against incum-<lb/>
bent democrat, Congressman<lb/>
Walter B. Jones, stated that the<lb/>
main issue of his campaign is the<lb/>
federal deficit. "I am all for a<lb/>
balanced budget he said,<lb/>
"while my opponent opposed the<lb/>
Gramm-Rudman plan to require<lb/>
a balanced budget<lb/>
According to Moye, one of the<lb/>
most important implications of<lb/>
the growing deficit is the effect it<lb/>
will have in the future on people<lb/>
who are students now.<lb/>
"We, as a nation, are spending<lb/>
more money than we are taking<lb/>
in ? this is a scary thing to be<lb/>
passing on to the next<lb/>
generation he stated.<lb/>
Also at issue in this campaign<lb/>
is that of the tobacco farmers.<lb/>
Moye said that upon being<lb/>
elected, he would bring a bill<lb/>
before Congress which would re-<lb/>
quire "truth-in-labeling" by<lb/>
tobacco manufacturers. This<lb/>
stems from his concern that 27<lb/>
percent of U.S. tobacco exports<lb/>
last year was not pure U.S. tobac-<lb/>
co; instead, he claims, it was im-<lb/>
ported trom countries such as<lb/>
Brazil, and then exported again.<lb/>
This practice, said Moye, had<lb/>
the effect of "replacing a large<lb/>
amount of tobacco that could<lb/>
have been produced b U.S.<lb/>
farmers as well as "lowering<lb/>
the quality of tobacco said to be<lb/>
produced here<lb/>
He attributed practices which<lb/>
have hurt the American tobacco<lb/>
farmer to the lack of "adequate<lb/>
representatives to fight for fair<lb/>
markets a situation which he<lb/>
said exists for every other type of<lb/>
farmer in the country.<lb/>
"There is a misconception<lb/>
he continued, "that the problems<lb/>
of the U.S. tobacco farmers ?<lb/>
and of all farmers ? were in-<lb/>
evitable. But that is not true. My<lb/>
interest is in representing the<lb/>
tobacco farmers of this district. 1<lb/>
will not be used by the big<lb/>
cigarette firms<lb/>
Howard Moye<lb/>
NC To Serve As Waste Disposal Site<lb/>
(UPI) ? At least one North<lb/>
Carolina county is bolstering its<lb/>
defenses against a possible low-<lb/>
level radioactive waste disposal<lb/>
site, which officials say they must<lb/>
open somewhere in the state even<lb/>
if they withdraw from a regional<lb/>
compact.<lb/>
"We're going to have to spend<lb/>
Student Loans Still A vailable<lb/>
RALEIGH-Despite new<lb/>
federal regulations that have<lb/>
slowed the processing of financial<lb/>
aid applications for college<lb/>
students, an official at North<lb/>
Carolina's central lender for stu-<lb/>
dent loans says money still is<lb/>
available for the 1986-87 school<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"We started with more than 66<lb/>
million dollars in available loan<lb/>
money explains D. L. Paul,<lb/>
president of Raleigh-based Col-<lb/>
lege Foundation Inc. (CFI) "We<lb/>
will have adequate loan funds for<lb/>
North Carolina students at<lb/>
undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
levels throughout the academic<lb/>
year and also for summer school<lb/>
in 1987. The loans can be used at<lb/>
accredited colleges, universities,<lb/>
vocational and technical schools,<lb/>
in or out of state<lb/>
CFI's sole purpose is providing<lb/>
financial assistance specifically<lb/>
for North Carolina students.<lb/>
New regulations from the<lb/>
Department of Education has re-<lb/>
quired a vast increase in the<lb/>
amount of paperwork for college<lb/>
financial aid officers, often<lb/>
delaying distribution of funds.<lb/>
One regulation now requires<lb/>
campuses to verify at least half of<lb/>
the income statements of all aid<lb/>
applications. Another new re-<lb/>
quirement forces all students ap-<lb/>
plying for a Guaranteed Student<lb/>
Loan to first apply for a Pell<lb/>
Grant, even if they don't qualify.<lb/>
Pell Grants are awarded to the<lb/>
neediest students, those whose<lb/>
parents earn less than $28,000 per<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"In theory, the new regula-<lb/>
tions are good Paul says.<lb/>
"They were designed to make<lb/>
sure only qualified students<lb/>
receive federal money. But the<lb/>
regulations have tremendously<lb/>
increased the paperwork of col-<lb/>
lege financial aid officers. In ad-<lb/>
dition, the timing of the new<lb/>
regulations have resulted in some<lb/>
having to wait until<lb/>
students<lb/>
they're in school to find out if<lb/>
they were approved for a loan.<lb/>
Many schools advised students to<lb/>
report as scheduled. Financial aid<lb/>
officesand our offices-are still<lb/>
handling applications and ques-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"Once loan applications are<lb/>
received at CFI, we process them<lb/>
as quickly as possible Paul<lb/>
adds. "We are very sensitive of<lb/>
the time factor involved for the<lb/>
students applying for loans<lb/>
Loan funds are provided an-<lb/>
nually by the state's full - service<lb/>
banks and are administered by<lb/>
CFI. Of the 63 North Carolina<lb/>
banks, 46-or 73 percent-either<lb/>
have participated or are par-<lb/>
ticipating in funding the educa-<lb/>
tional loan program administered<lb/>
by CFI.<lb/>
a lot of time and a lot of money<lb/>
on this problem said Grier<lb/>
Lackey, chairman of the Alex-<lb/>
ander County Board of Commis-<lb/>
sioners. "We think everybody<lb/>
will be building a defense.<lb/>
Hopefully, we're going to be a<lb/>
step ahead of everybody else<lb/>
But state officials said Monday<lb/>
they would rather counties direct<lb/>
their energies toward helping the<lb/>
state locate the best site instead of<lb/>
toward barring the facility from<lb/>
their areas.<lb/>
"I hate to see all efforts on the<lb/>
local level gearing up to fight a<lb/>
site and not gearing up to help the<lb/>
State come up with the site<lb/>
selection process said Dayne<lb/>
Brown, chief of the state Depart-<lb/>
ment of Human Resource's<lb/>
radiation protection section.<lb/>
North Carolina, selected this<lb/>
month by the Southeast Compact<lb/>
Commission to host the region's<lb/>
next waste facility, must soon<lb/>
begin looking for possible<lb/>
disposal sites whether the state<lb/>
honors its committment to the<lb/>
Southeast Compact Commission<lb/>
or breaks off to open its own<lb/>
facility.<lb/>
"One way or another, there is<lb/>
going to be a site said Earl Mac<lb/>
Cormac, Gov. Jim Martin's<lb/>
science advisor.<lb/>
Alexander County commis-<lb/>
sioners have set up a fact-finding<lb/>
committee to bolster the count) 's<lb/>
case against opening a waste<lb/>
facility there. Count officials<lb/>
also are planning to hire a lob-<lb/>
byist to plead their case in<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
"We knov that no action has<lb/>
been taken pertaining to the<lb/>
selection of a site, but we can't go<lb/>
to sleep on this issue Lacke<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We feel it's really premature<lb/>
for anybody to get alarmed<lb/>
said Chuck McLendon.<lb/>
spokesman for the state Depart-<lb/>
ment of Human Resources. "The<lb/>
actual location of a site is a year<lb/>
See COV3TST1ES page 3<lb/>
Club Day To Inform Students<lb/>
By THERESA ROSINSKI<lb/>
SUf f Writer<lb/>
"Club Awareness Day gives<lb/>
students the opportunity to get<lb/>
involved with the organization<lb/>
they've been looking for said<lb/>
Anthony Jackson, vice-president<lb/>
of SGA.<lb/>
The event is designed so that all<lb/>
the organizations on campus<lb/>
could get together and inform<lb/>
students about their organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The purpose of Club<lb/>
Vigil For POW-MIA's<lb/>
ByDA?fi?SEJ<lb/>
WARD<lb/>
A candlelight vigil honoring<lb/>
POW - MIA soldiers from the<lb/>
Vietnam Conflict was held Fri-<lb/>
day, Sept. 19, in front of ECU's<lb/>
Joyner Library.<lb/>
The purpose of the vigil was to<lb/>
enhance awareness among the<lb/>
general public of soldiers who<lb/>
have not returned, explained Jim<lb/>
Reid, organizer of the vigil.<lb/>
"One of the things we want to<lb/>
do is focus upon the 61 North<lb/>
Carolinians who are still there<lb/>
(Vietnam) while also bringing to<lb/>
light the more than 2,000<lb/>
Americans missing, as well<lb/>
Reid said.<lb/>
Among the programs that the<lb/>
Greenville Veteran's Organiza-<lb/>
tion have established include the<lb/>
vigil, Veteran's Day Parade, and<lb/>
a specially designed flag. ECU<lb/>
was the first college campus in<lb/>
the nation to fly the POW-MIA<lb/>
flag. The flag, which flies directly<lb/>
below the American Flag near<lb/>
Joyner Library, shows the<lb/>
sillouette of a man with the letters<lb/>
POW-MIA written above it.<lb/>
In attendance at the vigil were<lb/>
several East Carolina students.<lb/>
"One thing that thrills me is to<lb/>
see this generation growing up<lb/>
and having fun stated Dusty<lb/>
Hanks, a Vietnam Veteran. He<lb/>
went on to comment that the<lb/>
students attendance meant a lot.<lb/>
"They, the students, prove that<lb/>
the war is not forgotten<lb/>
"It doesn't matter what you<lb/>
thought of Vietnam stated Jen-<lb/>
nifer Walker, an ECU Senior,<lb/>
"they are our men and we want<lb/>
them back ? dead or alive<lb/>
Anyone interested in this cause<lb/>
should contact the Greenville<lb/>
Veteran's Outreach Center<lb/>
located on 150 Arlington<lb/>
Boulevard.<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Editorials4 Record review, Big Foot part 2,<lb/>
Style1 ?? cly animation ? see STYLE<lb/>
Comics7 P?g? 7.<lb/>
Sports10 Newly constructed frisbee-golf<lb/>
Classifieds12 course in Greenville ? see<lb/>
Announcements9 SPORTS page 8<lb/>
Awareness Day is two-fold, ac-<lb/>
cording to Steve Cunanan, presi-<lb/>
dent of SGA. "For one, it allows<lb/>
organizations to attract new<lb/>
members, and secondly, it allows<lb/>
the students to look at all the<lb/>
organizations under one roof and<lb/>
decide what they're interested<lb/>
in<lb/>
The event will take place<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept. 24 from 10<lb/>
a.m. to 4 p.m. on the mall.<lb/>
Twenty-five organizations will<lb/>
be represented this year including<lb/>
media groups, religious groups,<lb/>
SRA, SGA, Student Union, and<lb/>
many more.<lb/>
"We're trying to alleviate some<lb/>
of the student apathy b getting<lb/>
them involved with the campus<lb/>
said Jackson. "A lot o students<lb/>
come to ECU wanting to get in-<lb/>
volved in an organization but<lb/>
they don't know who to get in<lb/>
touch with. Club Awareness Day<lb/>
alleviates this problem<lb/>
It's a great opportunity for<lb/>
organizations large and small to<lb/>
spark up excitement in the<lb/>
students, according to Jackson.<lb/>
"There's something for<lb/>
evervone<lb/>
Cable TV In Dorms<lb/>
; Discussed by SRA<lb/>
ECU students any have the luxury of bring" JblVto geTcabletv In"<lb/>
the dorms. Discussion of this possibility comes before the SRA this<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
By CAROLYN DRISCOLL<lb/>
AaUUUBfl Newi Editor<lb/>
The possibility of bringing<lb/>
cable television to the dorms at<lb/>
ECU is being discussed among<lb/>
the Student Residence Associa-<lb/>
tion and the Department of<lb/>
Residence Life, according to<lb/>
Bryan Lassiter, SRA president.<lb/>
"The administration is looking<lb/>
at this as a definite possibility<lb/>
said Lassiter.<lb/>
If cable were to be installed in<lb/>
the dorms, it would include basic<lb/>
cable only. Movie channels<lb/>
would not be an option, he said.<lb/>
Lassiter said the reason for this<lb/>
is that the cable company was<lb/>
afraid that the dorm students<lb/>
would do damage to the boxes<lb/>
that come with your subscription<lb/>
to the movie channels. Off-<lb/>
campus students who have movie<lb/>
channels do a lot of damage to<lb/>
the boxes, according to the cable<lb/>
company, but those students<lb/>
have to sign a written release.<lb/>
In terms of the university as a<lb/>
whole, Lassiter stressed that the<lb/>
option of cable in the residence<lb/>
halls might help fill the dorms to<lb/>
100 percent capacity instead of 98<lb/>
percentWe (residence halls) are<lb/>
in direct competition with the<lb/>
area apartments, and if we can't<lb/>
provide cost-effective, comfor-<lb/>
table space for students on cam-<lb/>
pus, then the whole system is in-<lb/>
efficient<lb/>
Elmer Meyer, associate dean of<lb/>
Student Life saidIn the long<lb/>
run, the potential for cable in the<lb/>
dorms is there. In addition to the<lb/>
regular cable stations, there are<lb/>
some unused stations. Hopefully,<lb/>
we would be able to get some<lb/>
educational programs on, pro-<lb/>
grams that would be of direct in-<lb/>
terest to students<lb/>
However, he said, there is a<lb/>
concern among the administra-<lb/>
tion that it mean students having<lb/>
to choose between going to the<lb/>
library and staving in to watch tv.<lb/>
Another caution is that it will<lb/>
mean raising the rent for rooms<lb/>
in those dorms which will have<lb/>
access to cable. Although reluc-<lb/>
tant to give an estimate of how<lb/>
much rent will go up, Meyer did<lb/>
estimate twenty to forty dollars,<lb/>
maybe more.<lb/>
Still in the planning stages, the<lb/>
possibility of cable will be<lb/>
discussed at today's SRA<lb/>
meeting, at 4 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall. "These meeting are<lb/>
open to everyone. If anyone has<lb/>
any ideas or suggestions, they are<lb/>
welcome to attend the meeting<lb/>
said Lassiter.<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
ft<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
?UBv<lb/>
<pb facs="00057849_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 23, 1986<lb/>
Sept. 11<lb/>
3:00 a.m.<lb/>
A Slay Dorm resident was<lb/>
observed being in possession of<lb/>
an alcoholic beverage while being<lb/>
under age.<lb/>
2:55 p.m.<lb/>
A Scott Dorm resident reported<lb/>
the breaking and entering of his<lb/>
room and the larceny of clothes<lb/>
and money.<lb/>
3:10 p.m.<lb/>
A Fletcher Dorm resident<lb/>
reported the larceny of her bicy-<lb/>
cle from the west side of Aycock<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
An officer, after serving a search<lb/>
warrant, reported finding drug<lb/>
paraphernalia in a Scott Dorm<lb/>
room.<lb/>
9:45 p.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident reported<lb/>
the larceny of a gym bag and its<lb/>
contents from the handball court<lb/>
at Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
11:20 p.m.<lb/>
An officer reported that a Green-<lb/>
ville resident was in possession of<lb/>
liquor east of Scott Dorm while<lb/>
being under age.<lb/>
Sept. 12<lb/>
12:40 a.m.<lb/>
An Aycock Dorm resident was<lb/>
found to be in possession of<lb/>
alcohol while being under age.<lb/>
The student was found south of<lb/>
Jenkins Art Building.<lb/>
2:00 a.m.<lb/>
An Umstead resident was<lb/>
reported intoxicated and in<lb/>
possession of alcohol, south of<lb/>
Garrett Dorm.<lb/>
2:15 a.m.<lb/>
An officer reported a group of<lb/>
nine white males were excessively<lb/>
loud and that six of the subjects<lb/>
had consumed alcohol and all of<lb/>
them were under age. The group<lb/>
was located northeast of Slay<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
2:45 a.m.<lb/>
An Aycock resident and a Scott<lb/>
resident were intoxicated and<lb/>
under age in White Dorm lobby.<lb/>
3:30 a.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident had con-<lb/>
For your Capezio Dancewear, tap shoes,<lb/>
ballet shoes, jazz shoes, let our<lb/>
experienced shoe fitters help you.<lb/>
The Pqzq only.<lb/>
MMM VOiTRE A STAR IN CAPEZIO ?<lb/>
Look What Surfaced<lb/>
jB STRTIOW<lb/>
Every Tuesday Is<lb/>
College Night<lb/>
Ham &amp; Cheese<lb/>
Bologna &amp; Cheese<lb/>
Ham, Salami &amp; Cheese<lb/>
7 p.m11 p.m. Pepperoni, Salami &amp; Cheese<lb/>
99C SUBS ;urkChcc<lb/>
Ham, Turkey &amp; Cheese<lb/>
Your Choice of<lb/>
Not Valid On Deliveries<lb/>
60 Oz. Pitchers $1.99 ??<lb/>
11 a.mll p.m. 752-2183 215 E. 4th St.<lb/>
"Big Tex" is a big quarter pound of prize<lb/>
western ground beef cooked up into the<lb/>
hamburger you've been hankering for!<lb/>
"Big Tex" is always a special treat at<lb/>
Western Sizzlin. Bring in the whole family<lb/>
and enjoy1<lb/>
$139<lb/>
includes French Fries<lb/>
(No takeouts please)<lb/>
<lb/>
 !<lb/>
tt<lb/>
sumed alcohol while being under<lb/>
age. He was found northwest of<lb/>
the Graham Building.<lb/>
7:05 a.m.<lb/>
An officer reported that a win-<lb/>
dow in the trailers owned by the<lb/>
T.H. Electrical Company had<lb/>
been vandalized at the construc-<lb/>
tion site of the new classroom<lb/>
building.<lb/>
12:38 p.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident reported a<lb/>
hit and run accident with a per-<lb/>
son injured on Campus Drive<lb/>
east of the Graham Building.<lb/>
12:40 p.m.<lb/>
A Jones Hall resident reported<lb/>
the larceny of his bike from the<lb/>
shed at Jones Hall.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
An Umstead resident reported<lb/>
the breaking and entering of his<lb/>
vehicle and the larceny of his bat-<lb/>
tery. His vehicle was parked in<lb/>
the 3rd and Reade Street parking<lb/>
lot.<lb/>
9:27 p.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident was banned<lb/>
from campus for suspicious ac-<lb/>
tivity on 4th floor of Jones<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
10:00 p.m.<lb/>
An Aycock resident was reported<lb/>
being intoxicated and disruptive<lb/>
on the 1st floor of Jones Hall.<lb/>
11:45 p.m.<lb/>
Two Aycock residents were<lb/>
discovered having alcoholic<lb/>
beverages in their dorm room.<lb/>
Sept. 13<lb/>
12:25 a.m.<lb/>
An Aycock resident was in<lb/>
possession of alcohol while being<lb/>
under age. He was found north<lb/>
of Aycock Dorm in the Cour-<lb/>
tyard.<lb/>
12:40 a.m.<lb/>
A Greene Hall resident reported<lb/>
the breaking and entering and<lb/>
larceny of her wallet and jewelry<lb/>
from her dorm room.<lb/>
2:20 a.m.<lb/>
A Slay Hall resident reported the<lb/>
larceny of his clothing from laun-<lb/>
dry room on the 1st floor of Slay<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
6:30 p.m.<lb/>
A White male from Johnson Air<lb/>
Force Base and a white male<lb/>
from Cherry Point were arrested<lb/>
in North Stands of Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium for simple affray.<lb/>
9:10 p.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident was ar-<lb/>
rested at Ficklen Stadium for be-<lb/>
ing intoxicated and disruptive.<lb/>
10:00 p.m.<lb/>
A White male from Greensboro<lb/>
was arrested for DW1, driving<lb/>
while license was revoked and<lb/>
stop sign violation on Faculty<lb/>
Drive.<lb/>
11:15 p.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident reported<lb/>
the larceny of her pocketbook<lb/>
from Section 37 of Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
11:20 p.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident reported<lb/>
the larceny of her pocketbook<lb/>
from Section 22 of Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
Sept. 14<lb/>
12:26 a.m.<lb/>
Two Belk Dorm residents were<lb/>
found in possession of drug<lb/>
paraphernalia in Belk Dorm.<lb/>
1:39 p.m.<lb/>
A Cotten Hall resident reported<lb/>
vandalism to her vehicle tire<lb/>
while parked south of Cotten<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
2:41 p.m.<lb/>
A Jarvis resident reported van-<lb/>
dalism to his vehicle tires while<lb/>
parked south of Cotten Hall.<lb/>
8:05 p.m.<lb/>
A Jarvis resident reported the<lb/>
breaking and entering of his vehi-<lb/>
cle and the larceny of a pocket-<lb/>
book from the same. The vehicle<lb/>
was parked north of Jarvis<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
10:08 p.m.<lb/>
An officer confiscated a boot<lb/>
knife from a white male on Mall<lb/>
Drive.<lb/>
Sept. 15<lb/>
5:15 p.m.<lb/>
Director of Jarvis Dorm reported<lb/>
the door to a first floor Jarvis<lb/>
room was set on fire.<lb/>
9:10 p.m.<lb/>
An Aycock student reported the<lb/>
larceny of his wallet from his<lb/>
dorm room.<lb/>
11:05 p.m.<lb/>
Three black males were arrested<lb/>
for trespassing after previously<lb/>
being banned from campus.<lb/>
Sept. 16<lb/>
10:35 p.m.<lb/>
A black female from Camp Le-<lb/>
juene was arrested and banned<lb/>
from campus for assaulting a<lb/>
Tyler Hall resident.<lb/>
11:30 p.m.<lb/>
A Jones Dorm resident was<lb/>
found to be in possession of beer<lb/>
on College Hill Drive.<lb/>
Sept. 17<lb/>
1:35 p.m.<lb/>
Two members of the Athletic<lb/>
Department reported the larceny<lb/>
of their personal property from<lb/>
the StaffFaculty locker room in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
10:54 p.m.<lb/>
An anonymous complaintant<lb/>
reported a peeping torn on the<lb/>
fourth floor, northwest stairwell<lb/>
of Aycock Dorm. An Aycock<lb/>
resident was found at that loca-<lb/>
tion with binoculars.<lb/>
Sept. 18<lb/>
4:30 p.m.<lb/>
A Garrett Hall resident reported<lb/>
the breaking and entering of his<lb/>
room and the larceny of a check.<lb/>
Sept. 19<lb/>
12:15<lb/>
A Garrett Dorm resident was<lb/>
found to be in possession of d<lb/>
weapon on campus.<lb/>
1:20 a.m.<lb/>
A Kingston Place resident was ar<lb/>
rested for DW1 and speeding<lb/>
north of Flanagan.<lb/>
1:45 a.m.<lb/>
A Slay Hall resident was found to<lb/>
have consumed alcohol while<lb/>
under age on Campus Drive.<lb/>
Sept. 20<lb/>
6:02 a.m.<lb/>
Two officers arrested two men<lb/>
for the breaking and entering of a<lb/>
motor vehicle and the larceny of<lb/>
doughnuts from the Krispy<lb/>
Kreme truck. The truck was<lb/>
parked in the Jones Cafeter.d<lb/>
loading area.<lb/>
1:11 p.m.<lb/>
A Greene Hall resident reported<lb/>
unknown person(s) entered her<lb/>
vehicle and looked through the<lb/>
contents of the glove compart-<lb/>
ment. The vehicle was parked in<lb/>
the lot south of Greene Hall.<lb/>
11:15 p.m.<lb/>
Two officers located a vehicle on<lb/>
campus that was wanted by the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department<lb/>
The vehicle was stopped at the<lb/>
Afro-American Culture Center<lb/>
and held for Greenville Police.<lb/>
Sept. 21<lb/>
3:45 p.m.<lb/>
A Garrett Dorm resident wa<lb/>
found to be in possession ol<lb/>
weapon on campus.<lb/>
8:40 p.m.<lb/>
A Garrett Dorm resident<lb/>
reported the larceny of wood<lb/>
from outside his dorm room.<lb/>
at Overton 's Shopping Center<lb/>
Home of Overton '5 Supermarket, Kerr Drugs,<lb/>
&amp; Overton's University Econo Wash<lb/>
Overtoil's Salad Bar<lb/>
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MILWAUKEE'S BEST<lb/>
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12 pack - 12 oz cans $3.29<lb/>
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI<lb/>
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OVEETONS<lb/>
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2 Blocks From ECU<lb/>
m m m u<lb/>
??? - -m -m f<lb/>
American<lb/>
LONDON (UPI) - s. ki<lb/>
dent Anatoly Shcharanskv warn-<lb/>
ed the United States to stand<lb/>
B against the Soviet Union<lb/>
m the arrest of U.S. journalist<lb/>
'? Ids Daniloff, saving the<lb/>
Kremlin feeds on weakness<lb/>
It's exact!) like in the case of<lb/>
?rists said Shcharau ?<lb/>
i arrived in Britain Sundav I<lb/>
week's visit, including a<lb/>
eting Tuesday with Prime<lb/>
Minister Margaret Thatcher.<lb/>
"There can be no compromis-<lb/>
ing. The minute the Amen<lb/>
president speaks from weakness<lb/>
'hev will have no chance The on-<lb/>
h the K()B and Soviel<lb/>
Government understands<lb/>
weakness<lb/>
He said the Soviets a-<lb/>
moment" before a supe<lb/>
summit might release Dai<lb/>
and claim they are making<lb/>
-el<lb/>
1<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
StJ<lb/>
u<lb/>
y<lb/>
mm<lb/>
i,<lb/>
By MABY-EliSHA ADAMS<lb/>
el<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
What is insomrj and ' <lb/>
it be treated?<lb/>
Insomnia is described as tl<lb/>
ability to sleep, or sic<lb/>
prematurely ended or interrupl<lb/>
by periods of wakefuiness<lb/>
somnia is not a disease but may<lb/>
be the symptom of many<lb/>
diseases. The most frequent<lb/>
causes of insomnia are anxiety<lb/>
and pain, followed by the<lb/>
tion of substance conta<lb/>
nicotene or caffeine which are<lb/>
stimulants.<lb/>
There are several treatme:<lb/>
may try for insomnia. These<lb/>
elude.<lb/>
?Don't stay in bed if you're w,de<lb/>
awake. The more you lie in bee;<lb/>
and worn about not being able<lb/>
to sleep, the harder n will be<lb/>
sleep.<lb/>
?Don't use your bed as your ?<lb/>
chen table, study area or TV<lb/>
viewing area. Your body may re-<lb/>
pond by wanting to eat, w<lb/>
TV, or read instead of sleep s<lb/>
Counties Co<lb/>
For Radioacl<lb/>
Continued from pa?e 1<lb/>
or two away.<lb/>
About 15 counties of the 36<lb/>
named in a consultant's<lb/>
which the compact used to se<lb/>
North Carolina as the<lb/>
have called Brown's H ce, ?<lb/>
ried that they werep<lb/>
host counties, he aiu. But<lb/>
ficials said the state will disregard<lb/>
the report's suggestions<lb/>
"Ou basic opinion on the<lb/>
DamesgtMoore list of ?6cour<lb/>
is thai you c i d thro 'in<lb/>
ash can McClendon said.<lb/>
"We'r: not bound in any wav<lb/>
Get the<lb/>
word out<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
in The Easi CtroliniM<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057849_0003"/><lb/>
; x ket 4.30 p m<lb/>
ehicle A Ciarrett Hall resident reported<lb/>
Jarvis the breaking and entering of his<lb/>
room and the larceny of a check.<lb/>
Sept. 19<lb/>
boot<lb/>
)i Mall 12:15<lb/>
A Ciarrett Dorm resident was<lb/>
found to be in po?,session of a<lb/>
vseapon on campus.<lb/>
1:20 a.m.<lb/>
sd A Kingston Place resident was ar-<lb/>
'arvis rested tot DW1 and speeding<lb/>
north of Flanaga<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
I 4 a.m.<lb/>
the A S!j Hall resident was found to<lb/>
have consumed alcohol while<lb/>
under age on Campus Drive.<lb/>
Sepi :<lb/>
to officers arrested two men<lb/>
? Hreakmg and entering of a<lb/>
motor vehicle and the larceny of<lb/>
gl tits from the Krispy<lb/>
krerr.e 'ruck. The truck was<lb/>
Iced in the Jones Cafeteria<lb/>
a<lb/>
ene Hall resident reported<lb/>
?rs (s) entered her<lb/>
vked through the<lb/>
; glove compart-<lb/>
 as parked in<lb/>
? ireene Hall<lb/>
i ated a vehicle on<lb/>
was wanted by the<lb/>
. e Department.<lb/>
cie was slipped at the<lb/>
V - :an Culture Center<lb/>
. : Mr Greenville Police.<lb/>
?1<lb/>
? hi<lb/>
resident was<lb/>
: session of a<lb/>
on c<lb/>
D rm resident<lb/>
cen) oi wood<lb/>
- jorm room.<lb/>
'ZS,<lb/>
NATURAL LIGHT<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
. $2.29<lb/>
lltllldi pock - 12 oz cons<lb/>
"f, $8.99<lb/>
per cose<lb/>
MILWAUKEE'S BEST<lb/>
Light Beer<lb/>
12 pack - 12 oz cans $3.29<lb/>
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI<lb/>
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 r&amp;<lb/>
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sF<lb/>
&amp;.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
tnc<lb/>
i<lb/>
SEPTMEMBER 23, 1986<lb/>
American Accused Of Spying In China<lb/>
LONDON (UPI) - Soviet dissi-<lb/>
dent Anatoly Shcharansky warn-<lb/>
ed the United States to stand<lb/>
strong against the Soviet Union<lb/>
over the arrest of U.S. journalist<lb/>
Nicholas Daniloff, saying the<lb/>
Kremlin feeds on weakness.<lb/>
"It's exactly like in the case of<lb/>
terrorists said Shcharansky,<lb/>
who arrived in Britain Sunday for<lb/>
a week's visit, including a<lb/>
meeting Tuesday with Prime<lb/>
Minister Margaret Thatcher.<lb/>
"There can be no compromis-<lb/>
ing. The minute the American<lb/>
president speaks from weakness<lb/>
they will have no chance. The on-<lb/>
ly thing the KGB and Soviet<lb/>
Government understands is<lb/>
weakness<lb/>
He said the Soviets at "the last<lb/>
moment" before a superpower<lb/>
summit might release Daniloff<lb/>
and claim they are making con-<lb/>
cessions to make up for their<lb/>
other human rights violations.<lb/>
"It's very important to be<lb/>
strong in this case he said.<lb/>
Shcharansky, 38, a founder of<lb/>
Moscow's Helsinki Watch group,<lb/>
was convicted in the Soviet Union<lb/>
of spying for the United States<lb/>
and was imprisoned for nine<lb/>
years until his release in February<lb/>
in what the Soviets called an<lb/>
East-West spy swap. The United<lb/>
States denies that Shcharansky,<lb/>
who now lives in Israel, was a<lb/>
spy.<lb/>
Daniloff, a Moscow-based cor-<lb/>
respondent for U.S. News<lb/>
World Report, was arrested Aug.<lb/>
30 on spy charges after a source<lb/>
handed him a package the Soviets<lb/>
said contained military secrets<lb/>
about the war in Afghanistan.<lb/>
Daniloff said he accepted the<lb/>
package thinking it was a going-<lb/>
away present.<lb/>
 He is in the custody of the U.S.<lb/>
Embassy in Moscow until his trial<lb/>
or a diplomatic resolution to his<lb/>
case.<lb/>
Shcharansky said the Soviet<lb/>
Union tried in 1977 to frame a<lb/>
U.S. correspondent in a similar<lb/>
case, but it fell through.<lb/>
Shcharansky urged President<lb/>
Reagan to "be strong" and said<lb/>
U.S. officials erred initially by<lb/>
saying in "no way" would it af-<lb/>
fect overall superpower relations.<lb/>
But he said the U.S. decision<lb/>
last week to expel 25 Soviet<lb/>
diplomats at the United Nations<lb/>
was "a good step<lb/>
Shcharansky talked to<lb/>
reporters before addressing 5,000<lb/>
activists campaigning for the<lb/>
release of Soviet Jews denied per-<lb/>
mission to emigrate. Jewish of-<lb/>
ficials estimate 30,000 Jews,<lb/>
known as "refuseniks have<lb/>
been denied permission to leave<lb/>
and say perhaps an additional<lb/>
400,000 would leave if they<lb/>
could.<lb/>
"They are in the front line in<lb/>
the battle between democracy<lb/>
and totalitarian governments<lb/>
he said, adding the West should<lb/>
not abandon the concept of link-<lb/>
ing Western trade to Jewish<lb/>
emigration from the Soviet<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
204 East 5th St<lb/>
Jppk ocoids<lb/>
WANTED:<lb/>
Staff Illustrator<lb/>
The East Carolinian is looking for an all<lb/>
purpose illustrator. Art majors and those with<lb/>
experience are preferred. A portfolio is<lb/>
required. Call 757-6366 or stop by the<lb/>
Publications Building.<lb/>
Mon-Thuf 10 AM-9 PM<lb/>
Fn-Sot 10 AM- 10 PM<lb/>
Phone 758-1427<lb/>
Just Arrived Albums &amp; Tapes<lb/>
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James Brown "GRAVITY"<lb/>
Many Compact Discs Arriving<lb/>
Daily ? Check Out Our Selection<lb/>
?y MABY-ELfSHA ADAMS<lb/>
What is insomnia and how can<lb/>
it be treated?<lb/>
Insomnia is described as the in-<lb/>
ability to sleep, or sleep<lb/>
prematurely ended or interrupted<lb/>
by periods of wakefulness. In-<lb/>
somnia is not a disease but may<lb/>
be the symptom of many<lb/>
diseases The most frequent<lb/>
causes of insomnia are anxiety<lb/>
and pain, followed by the inges-<lb/>
tion of substances containing<lb/>
nicotene or caffeine which are<lb/>
stimulants.<lb/>
There are several treatments you<lb/>
may try for insomnia. These in-<lb/>
clude:<lb/>
?Don't stay in bed if you're wide<lb/>
awake. The more you lie in bed<lb/>
and worry about not being able<lb/>
to sleep, the harder it will be to<lb/>
sleep.<lb/>
?Don't use your bed as your kit-<lb/>
chen table, study area or TV<lb/>
viewing area. Your body may res-<lb/>
pond by wanting to eat, watch<lb/>
TV, or read instead of sleeping<lb/>
when it's bedtime.<lb/>
?Exercise during the day or early<lb/>
evening. Exercising too late in the<lb/>
evening may keep you awake.<lb/>
?Try to keep the hours before<lb/>
bedtime as anxiety-free as possi-<lb/>
ble. Peace of mind is essential to<lb/>
falling asleep.<lb/>
?Don't drink caffeine-containing<lb/>
drinks or foods in the evening or<lb/>
before bedtime.<lb/>
?If you smoke, decrease the<lb/>
number of cigarettes you smoke<lb/>
in the evening.<lb/>
?Certain medicines, including<lb/>
cold tablets, may keep you awake<lb/>
at night. Read the "side effects"<lb/>
and "warnings" sections on your<lb/>
medicine containers or ask your<lb/>
heaJth care provider about swit-<lb/>
ching to similar medicines with<lb/>
less insomnia effects.<lb/>
?Warm milk, a warm bath, and<lb/>
reading something less<lb/>
stimulating may help to relax<lb/>
you.<lb/>
?Don't eat heavy foods before<lb/>
bedtime.<lb/>
?Try to go to sleep and rise each<lb/>
day at the same time.<lb/>
Quality Copies<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
321E 10th street<lb/>
(919)752-0875<lb/>
Murday M0n-6:00pm<lb/>
<lb/>
 Ti. Mexican Restaurant <lb/>
Counties Considered<lb/>
For Radioactive Dump<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
or two away<lb/>
About 15 counties of the 36<lb/>
named in a consultant's report,<lb/>
which the compact used to select<lb/>
North Carolina as the host state,<lb/>
have called Brown's office, wor-<lb/>
ried that they werep i ospective<lb/>
host counties, he saiu. But of-<lb/>
ficials said the state will disregard<lb/>
the report's suggestions.<lb/>
"Our basic opinion on the<lb/>
Dame-&amp;Moore list of 36 counties<lb/>
is thai you could throw it in<lb/>
the irash can McClendon said.<lb/>
"We'r. not bound in any way by<lb/>
that report. We will decide on our<lb/>
own, through the legislative pro-<lb/>
cess and through a special com-<lb/>
mittee<lb/>
<lb/>
?8fc<lb/>
15<lb/>
V),<lb/>
y<lb/>
??J!<lb/>
x<lb/>
EYERMAN<lb/>
IS<lb/>
Our Man<lb/>
0 0 0<lb/>
Freshman Class<lb/>
President<lb/>
Authentic Mexican Food<lb/>
521 Cotanche St 757-1664<lb/>
Open 7 Days For Lunch &amp; Dinner<lb/>
"Bienvenidos. Amigos<lb/>
Chico's has expanded!<lb/>
Fiesta Room: Great Mexican Dining<lb/>
for groups of up to TOO.<lb/>
Rosa's Cantina: Drinks, Appetizers and good<lb/>
times for groups of up to 25.<lb/>
Starting October 1st. Drink Specials<lb/>
and Hot Botanas in the lounge.<lb/>
Get the<lb/>
word out<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
in The East Carolinian<lb/>
Explore the freedom and pleasure of dance<lb/>
Down Easf Dance has a creative and<lb/>
positive approach to dance, making it a<lb/>
total and fun experience. Each class is<lb/>
more than just another lesson;<lb/>
's a gratifying adventure<lb/>
shared through movement.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
Classes in ballet,<lb/>
jazz, tap &amp; modern. Beginning,<lb/>
intermediate and advanced<lb/>
classes. A fun alternative to stay<lb/>
in shape.<lb/>
down east<lb/>
419 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
758-8198<lb/>
Within walking distance from campus.<lb/>
dance<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Tuesday, September<lb/>
Admission<lb/>
Leggs Contest<lb/>
23, 1986<lb/>
$2.00 Guys<lb/>
$1.00 Ladies<lb/>
9:00-2:00 AM<lb/>
90C Cans All Nile<lb/>
PRIZES<lb/>
1 9t I d?UU CQSI1 plus 1 year Free Pass to the Elbo<lb/>
2nd $50.00 CaSll plus I year Free Pass to the Elbo<lb/>
?5.00 cosh  t, p.<lb/>
jP<lb/>
Entries can call 758-4591 or come bv the Elbo to sin up.<lb/>
EEE<lb/>
 r0- Presents<lb/>
Braft nite<lb/>
Wednesday, September 24, 1986 9:00-2:00 AM<lb/>
Admission $1.50 Guys $1.00 Ladies<lb/>
1 Qt Draft AH<lb/>
jwm 'm<lb/>
m' mwMf ?.??,?, ? O i?<lb/>
.????<lb/>
N?"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057849_0004"/><lb/>
Stye last Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
TOM LUVENDER, Central Manage,<lb/>
Daniel Maurer, M?f(?? ??<lb/>
Patti Kemmis. sews Eduor Steve Folmar, w?r ? mmmi<lb/>
Scott Cooper, omm &amp;,? Anthony Martin, mnmcmk mi<lb/>
Rick McCormac, tvS? ???? Meg Needham, 0,?? Manager<lb/>
John Shannon, w &amp;? Shannon Short, produa.cn Manager<lb/>
Pat Molloy, rm nm ir- ?i'w DeChanile Johnson, .? ??,??<lb/>
September 23. 1986<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
.Campus Forum<lb/>
Election Time<lb/>
Dear Editor,<lb/>
Normally, alumni do not feel it<lb/>
necessary to get involved with student af-<lb/>
fairs; it is usually over after graduation.<lb/>
However, my interest in Student Govern-<lb/>
ment has had to extend into my alumni<lb/>
status because of the actions of a remain-<lb/>
ing individual, Chris Tomasic.<lb/>
In last fall's elections, I felt it was<lb/>
perfectly legitimate for a person to run for<lb/>
Class Officer and Day Representative,<lb/>
concurrently. Chris read the constitution<lb/>
and interpreted it in such a way that 1) it<lb/>
was unconstitutional for me to run for<lb/>
Class Officer and Day Representative, and<lb/>
2) it was morally wrong to run for both<lb/>
because a person should run only for the<lb/>
office that he or she could serve best. In<lb/>
the subsequent conversation with Chris, he<lb/>
was obviously vehement that this was con-<lb/>
stitutionally and morally incorrect.<lb/>
Now, a year later, Chris has decided that<lb/>
it is alright to pursue two offices at the<lb/>
same time. This can be for one of two<lb/>
reasons; either he has had a serious change<lb/>
of heart on this issue or now that the rule<lb/>
effects him, he has changed his mind.<lb/>
Chris, you can not have it both ways.<lb/>
You can not hold people up to moral stan-<lb/>
dards that you create and then not follow<lb/>
them yourself.<lb/>
Where do you stand, Chris?<lb/>
Chris, do the right thing. If you stand<lb/>
where you stood before, you must be<lb/>
responsible to and uphold your own moral<lb/>
standards. Either run for the Day<lb/>
Representative position or for the Class<lb/>
Office, but not both!<lb/>
Kirk shelley<lb/>
? Senior Class President.<lb/>
Class of 1986<lb/>
Scott Thomas<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
I will make this short because I realize<lb/>
how limited and valuable a student's time<lb/>
can be. My name is Scott Thomas and I am<lb/>
a candidate in the Student Government<lb/>
Association election to be held Sept. 24.<lb/>
I have been actively involved in SGA<lb/>
since entering ECU; first serving on the<lb/>
judicial review board, then later as class<lb/>
president and day representatfrer"<lb/>
Representing you in student government<lb/>
has been both a pleasure and challenge and<lb/>
I appreciate the support you have given me<lb/>
in the past.<lb/>
There will be many important issues fac-<lb/>
ing the SGA this year, so I have decided to<lb/>
again seek office in order for your voice to<lb/>
I be heard. I am running for the offices of<lb/>
Sophomore Class President and Day<lb/>
Representative. This combination will help<lb/>
me to be better informed of the happenings<lb/>
in student government and will allow me to<lb/>
support the things that will benefit the en-<lb/>
tire student body of ECU.<lb/>
1 am asking your vote and support and<lb/>
in return I promise to give you the kind of<lb/>
open, honest, fair and efficient representa-<lb/>
tion that you deserve, and can be proud of.<lb/>
Scott Thomas<lb/>
Sophomore Class Candidate,<lb/>
SGA Elections<lb/>
Brian Lassiter<lb/>
To whom it may concern:<lb/>
We, the students, have an important<lb/>
choice to make on Wednesday for Senior<lb/>
Class President. The choice is between<lb/>
Bryan Lassiter and Chris Tomasic.<lb/>
1 have known Bryan four years, and in<lb/>
that time I have seen in him great leader-<lb/>
ship ability. I have seen an unsurpassed<lb/>
ability to clearly and promptly speak for<lb/>
the students of ECU all over the state of<lb/>
North Carolina and throughout this entire<lb/>
Nation.<lb/>
Bryan knows what needs to be done to<lb/>
get students' grievances heard. He has<lb/>
represented you and me before the Deans<lb/>
of this school, Chancelor Howell and the<lb/>
Governor of this state. Far more important<lb/>
than all of this, Bryan Lassiter is a true<lb/>
friend. When 1 met Bryan, I met someone<lb/>
who cared for me as a person.<lb/>
We have a clear choice to make. I ask<lb/>
you to join me and vote for Bryan Lassiter<lb/>
for Senior Class President.<lb/>
Edward I ash.<lb/>
Senior, Art<lb/>
VtttOWrVIHOHUiAJ&amp;Bwtwa), tMT7B?ftPrrvGSryrV'<lb/>
England's Labor Party Troubled<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Publica-<lb/>
tions Building, across from the entrance<lb/>
of Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Students, facul-<lb/>
ty and staff writing letters for this page<lb/>
are reminded that they are limited to<lb/>
one every five issues.<lb/>
LONDON ? The Labor Party in<lb/>
England has problems similar to those<lb/>
of the Democratic Party in America,<lb/>
though England's problems are more<lb/>
desperate than our own because the<lb/>
positions of its extremists are extremer<lb/>
than our own.<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
By WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY<lb/>
When we think of extremism in<lb/>
America we think of, oh, Bella Abzug<lb/>
and John Kenneth Galbraith, and<lb/>
although it is prudent to assume that if<lb/>
either became the chief of government<lb/>
in America, the republic would last<lb/>
about a fortnight after their inaugura-<lb/>
tion, it is also pretty safe to assume that<lb/>
no such thing is likely to happen.<lb/>
In Great Britain, the problem isn't<lb/>
with socialist romantics, but rather with<lb/>
a very hard-bitten set that doesn't have<lb/>
control of the Labor Party, but which<lb/>
leaves the Labor Party, in the absence<lb/>
of their support, suspended in<lb/>
powerlessness.<lb/>
The Militant Tendency (we do not<lb/>
joke ? that is what they call<lb/>
themselves) are "Trotskyists and<lb/>
although Trotsky's works are given out<lb/>
to anyone who comes close to their base<lb/>
of operations, it is doubtful that if you<lb/>
stopped at random one of the 8,000<lb/>
members on the street and asked him<lb/>
three questions that reached into Trot-<lb/>
sky's theories you would come out lear-<lb/>
ning much about Trotsky.<lb/>
The Militants use Trotsky in the way<lb/>
the Third World uses Marx. You can<lb/>
butcher away as you like, if only you<lb/>
float a banner above your party with a<lb/>
label on it that once attracted hard in-<lb/>
tellectual thought, and U.N. types will<lb/>
say that you are in communion with a<lb/>
great ideological movement.<lb/>
Well, what would the Militants do?<lb/>
Their projection of things to come is<lb/>
roughly as follows. Margaret<lb/>
Thatcher's Conservative Party will lose<lb/>
the next election to a coalition of Labor<lb/>
and Alliance (itself a coalition of Social<lb/>
Democrats who split from Labor and<lb/>
the old Liberal Party). The new Labor<lb/>
Party will rule for a while, but will do<lb/>
nothing to satisfy the cravings of those<lb/>
within the Labor Party (the Militants)<lb/>
with fire in the belly about reform.<lb/>
The new administration will not be<lb/>
able to come up with 1 million new jobs<lb/>
(14 percent of British labor is<lb/>
unemployed), and in the general chaos,<lb/>
fresh elections will be called. The Con-<lb/>
servatives will win these elections (1 am<lb/>
continuing as the narrator of the<lb/>
Militants' scenario), and, face-to-face<lb/>
with a desperate domestic situation,<lb/>
they will institute a "Bonapartist"<lb/>
regime.<lb/>
By that 1 mean a strongman,<lb/>
Napolean-style, will take over and begin<lb/>
to run things. Ah, but that is the mo-<lb/>
ment for the Militants: They will seize<lb/>
power and, with or without the shed-<lb/>
ding of blood, undertake to implement<lb/>
their program. Which is?<lb/>
Just to begin with, they will abrogate<lb/>
ties with NATO. They will nationalize<lb/>
the banks and the insurance companies,<lb/>
and everything else that vaguely inter-<lb/>
rupts their vision. (Oh. yes. they will<lb/>
abolish the monarchy and the House of<lb/>
Lords). ?<lb/>
It is in one sense Laugh-In time, if we<lb/>
focus only on what it is the Militants<lb/>
would like to accomplish and what it is<lb/>
that they would bring on if they had<lb/>
their way. But it is all a little less than<lb/>
entirely ludicrous because the Militants'<lb/>
hold on the Labor Party is a little like<lb/>
the bloodstain's hold on Lady Macbeth.<lb/>
For all that Neil Kinnock parades his<lb/>
intention of excreting these crazies, he<lb/>
cannot do this and still hope to achieve<lb/>
power, because although the member-<lb/>
ship is not large, the Militants' influence<lb/>
is organizationally significant, much as<lb/>
Lenin's was significant on the assembly<lb/>
dominated by Kerensky.<lb/>
The city of Liverpool is ruled by<lb/>
Militants; they take in, in revenue,<lb/>
about a quarter of the money spent an-<lb/>
nually by Labor; an estimated 30<lb/>
members of the Parliament are<lb/>
Militants.<lb/>
Kinnock is given to periodic aenun<lb/>
ciations of the extremes in his parts,<lb/>
designed to reassure the majority of the<lb/>
British that they are doing less than<lb/>
committing suicide by voting Labor,<lb/>
and to a certain extent he has succeeded<lb/>
The polls show that whereas a few mon-<lb/>
ths ago Alliance voters were divided a-<lb/>
to which party they preferred to lead a<lb/>
coalition government, they are now in-<lb/>
clined, by 11 points, to make common<lb/>
cause with the Labor Party.<lb/>
All of this might be dismissed a a<lb/>
very bad dream, except that it leaves the<lb/>
observer wondering, wondering. Grea:<lb/>
Britain, by most standards, is deemed a<lb/>
civilized state, yet the principal opposi-<lb/>
tion party is in favor of what rea!l<lb/>
amounts to unilateral surrender to the<lb/>
Soviet Union (unilateral nuclear disar-<lb/>
mament equals the end of NATO equal<lb/>
the end of the U.S. umbrella equals the<lb/>
probable end of the political in-<lb/>
dependence of Western Europe).<lb/>
If that much can happen to the party<lb/>
of Bevin, Attlee and GaitskeU, wha1 ?<lb/>
to stop it all from going . "er9<lb/>
William F. Buckle) a the editor of<lb/>
National Review magazintLJe adao<lb/>
hosts a television talk show called 'Tir-<lb/>
ing Line. "<lb/>
Campus Spectrum<lb/>
In addition to :he "Campus<lb/>
Forum" section of the Editorial<lb/>
Page, The East Ctrolinian has re-<lb/>
established the "Campus Spectrum<lb/>
This is an opinion column featuring<lb/>
guest writers from the student body<lb/>
and faculty. The columns printed in<lb/>
the "Campus Spectrum" will contain<lb/>
current topics of concern to the cam-<lb/>
pus, community or nation.<lb/>
The columns are restricted in con-<lb/>
tent only with regard to rules of<lb/>
grammer and decency. Persons sub-<lb/>
mitting columns must be willing to<lb/>
accept "by-line" credit for their ef-<lb/>
forts, as no entrys from ghost writers<lb/>
will be published.<lb/>
Evangelicals Make Bid For Political Power<lb/>
By JOHN B. JUDIS<lb/>
rw Nr. RcpaMtc<lb/>
In 1980 and 1984, conservative evangelicals were<lb/>
loyal lieutenants in the Republican army, but as the<lb/>
Reagan era draws to a close, they have become a<lb/>
large and unruly force. Pat Robertson's presidential<lb/>
candidacy is merely the most visible sign of the<lb/>
evangelical right's new strategy. In almost every<lb/>
Southern, Midwestern and Western state, they are<lb/>
running candidates and seeking party leadership<lb/>
positions. And they are having an impact.<lb/>
In the Oregan State primary, fundamentalist<lb/>
minister Joe Lutz received 43 percent of the votes in<lb/>
his narrow loss to incumbent Senate Finance Com-<lb/>
mittee Chariman Robert Packwood, although<lb/>
Packwood outspent Lutz by almost 50-to-l.<lb/>
In Indiana, the Rev. Don Lynch astonished local<lb/>
officials by winning a Republican congressional<lb/>
primary over a candidate anointed by local party<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
Local Republicans have become alarmed by the<lb/>
evangelicals' bid for political power. Indiana Coun-<lb/>
ty Chariman John Sweezy said: "If the Christian<lb/>
right becomes a major portion of the (Republican)<lb/>
voting bloc, then it has the potential to destroy it.<lb/>
We would lose our centrist base<lb/>
Evangelicals, who often call themselves "Bible<lb/>
conservatives stress social, moral and religious<lb/>
issues. They favor the rollback of communism, but<lb/>
in a more militant and uncompromising manner<lb/>
than other conservatives.<lb/>
Transfixed by a vision of Armageddon ? the<lb/>
final battle between good and evil ? they believe<lb/>
the United States must seek military superiority in<lb/>
preparation for an eventual war.<lb/>
Above all, Bible conservatives don't sound or<lb/>
look like Republican conservatives. The grass roots<lb/>
of the movement tend to be poorer, more blue col-<lb/>
lar and less cosmopolitan than the average<lb/>
Republican.<lb/>
The evangelical movement is neither tightly con-<lb/>
trolled nor politically unified. The initial upsurge<lb/>
was inspired by national leaders and organizations<lb/>
? the Rev. Jerry Falwell's Liberty Federation,<lb/>
Robertson's Freedom Council, Christian Voice and<lb/>
the American Coalition for Traditional Values.<lb/>
Much of the ferment, however, appears to be<lb/>
spontanous. Most often the national organizations<lb/>
become important after a spontaneous local move-<lb/>
ment has made a candidate or issue visible.<lb/>
Within the movement's leadership there are sur-<lb/>
prising disagreements about strategy. The sharpest<lb/>
difference is between Falwell and the rest of the<lb/>
movement. In 1984, Falwell saw himself used as a<lb/>
successful rallying point for the opposition. In<lb/>
response, Falwell adopted what might be called a<lb/>
middle-of-the-road strategy.<lb/>
This January, Falwell changed the name of the<lb/>
Moral Majority to the Liberty Federation, and he<lb/>
publicly endorsed Vice President George Bush.<lb/>
Even his own lieutenants acknowledge that Falwell<lb/>
was moved in part by expediency.<lb/>
Falwell is also backing California's pro-choice<lb/>
Republican Senate candidate Ed Zschau,<lb/>
calculating that Zschau's opponent, Alan<lb/>
Cranston, is worse. The rest of the Christian right<lb/>
finds Falwell's support for Zschau incomprehensi-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
Robertson's run for the presidency is as con-<lb/>
troversial among evangelical leaders as Falwell's<lb/>
support for Zschau. Many fear that Robertson will<lb/>
not only diminish their influence in the presidential<lb/>
nominating process, but will also expose Christian<lb/>
fundamentalism to hostile and destructive scrutiny.<lb/>
Robertson is a Pentacostal Christian who prays<lb/>
by speaking in tongues, believes in faith healing and<lb/>
seems to regard God as a kind of supreme guidance<lb/>
counselor.<lb/>
Robertson writes, "Yet as I was praying before<lb/>
God the next week, he said to me, 'Pat, I want you<lb/>
to have an RCA transmitter<lb/>
Evangelical leaders worry that by identifying the<lb/>
entire movement with Robertson's Pentecostalism,<lb/>
liberals will be able to discredit evangelism as a<lb/>
whole.<lb/>
Right-wing evangelism began to gain popularity<lb/>
when the Cold War and the nuclear age appeared to<lb/>
confirm its prophecies of Armageddon. As explain-<lb/>
ed in books like Robertson's The Secret<lb/>
Kingdom, the onset of a seven-year period of<lb/>
tribulation is near. Its imminence is confirmed by<lb/>
the founding of the state of Israel, which the fun-<lb/>
damentalists believe confirms biblical prophecy,<lb/>
and by the hostility between Israel and the Soviet<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
The Tribulation will begin with the signing of a<lb/>
pact between the Anti-christ and Israel. The Anti-<lb/>
christ will break his pact, and Armageddon will<lb/>
commence, culminating in a nuclear war between<lb/>
West and East that will wipe out one-third of the<lb/>
globe. With a handful of humans remaining, Christ<lb/>
will return.<lb/>
The fundamentalists draw basic political conclu-<lb/>
sions from this scenario. Because Israel is the most<lb/>
important bulwark against the Soviet Union, they<lb/>
make the defense of Israel their highest priority.<lb/>
The fundamentalists also believe that attempts to<lb/>
reach arms accords with the Soviet Union are futile<lb/>
and self-delusionary. They do not welcome, but<lb/>
they also do not fear, the prospect of nuclear war.<lb/>
Conservative intellectuals have two competing<lb/>
views of what today's right-wing evangelical up-<lb/>
surge will mean for the Republican Party. The op-<lb/>
timistic view is that the evangelicals are leading a<lb/>
shift in political priority both in the Republican<lb/>
Party and nationally from economic to cultural<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
Political consultant Robert Teeter voices the<lb/>
more pessimistic and far more widespread view.<lb/>
Teeter does not think the cultural issues can bind<lb/>
the Republican coalition. "It is the economic<lb/>
themes that all the parts of the Republican coalition<lb/>
have agreed upon. With cultural ssues, the cracks<lb/>
begin to show. Cultural issues have added new peo-<lb/>
ple to the Republican coalition, but it is not what<lb/>
has unified them<lb/>
Jay Wickliff, the Muncie businessman whom<lb/>
Don Lynch defeated in the primary, has a<lb/>
nightmare about 1988. "The worst possible<lb/>
scenario is that you get Democrats stuck in the<lb/>
whole welfare thing and you get Republicans cover-<lb/>
ing their fundamentalist flank, screaming about<lb/>
social issues and banning books.<lb/>
"You get a big fight going and you have the<lb/>
whole middle of the political spectrum saying,<lb/>
'What are these guys doing?' You end up with a<lb/>
fuss over all these unproductive issues that split the<lb/>
country and you get no real focus on leading the<lb/>
country forward<lb/>
Wickliffs nightmare won't come to pass. The<lb/>
Republicans will not nominate Robertson for presi-<lb/>
dent. And the Democrats are unlikely to stake their<lb/>
tenuous political future on a promise to expand the<lb/>
Great Society.<lb/>
But if Robertson is able to mobilize a noisy<lb/>
minority in the primaries, and if the right-wing<lb/>
evangelicals continue to press for power in the<lb/>
Republican Party, then many Republicans may<lb/>
wish that they had slept through the 1988 elections.<lb/>
John B. Judis, a semior editor of In These Times,<lb/>
is completing a biography of William F. Buckley<lb/>
, i-i ? ?'i r?- r? w ????<lb/>
n? ?ur wmntm?<lb/>
.? ???- ?-<lb/>
-? i?i m <lb/>
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<pb facs="00057849_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 23, 1M6<lb/>
A PRue FREE<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
lit PRINK<lb/>
TO THAT'<lb/>
GT3U<lb/>
J<lb/>
Troubled<lb/>
ei odic denun-<lb/>
hts party,<lb/>
n ajorit) of the<lb/>
ng less than<lb/>
? N ting I abor,<lb/>
nexu ehass ceded:<lb/>
H hereas a few mon-<lb/>
ters a ere dided as<lb/>
Ferred to 'cad a<lb/>
tie i arc nov in-<lb/>
nts make common<lb/>
Party.<lb/>
 smissed as a<lb/>
rial il leaves the<lb/>
dering. Great<lb/>
Is, is deemed a<lb/>
incipal opposi-<lb/>
of what really<lb/>
surrender to the<lb/>
raJ nuclear disar-<lb/>
? NATO equals<lb/>
N mbrella equals the<lb/>
the political in-<lb/>
 estern Europe).<lb/>
appen to the party<lb/>
Gaitskell, what is<lb/>
? going further?<lb/>
luckley is the editor of<lb/>
- .how caHed "Fir-<lb/>
Campus Spectrum<lb/>
to the "Campus<lb/>
: the Editorial<lb/>
Carolinian has re-<lb/>
in pus Spectrum<lb/>
umn featuring<lb/>
the student body<lb/>
The columns printed in<lb/>
'rum" will contain<lb/>
' -oncern to the cam-<lb/>
? or nation.<lb/>
? are restricted in con-<lb/>
"egard to rules of<lb/>
decency. Persons sub-<lb/>
? mu be willing to<lb/>
t for their ef-<lb/>
from ghost writers<lb/>
;hed.<lb/>
Power<lb/>
th in the Republican<lb/>
economic to cultural<lb/>
sultam Robert Teeter voices the<lb/>
 more widespread view.<lb/>
think the cultural issues can bind<lb/>
:an coalition. "It is the economic<lb/>
It all the pam of the Republican coalition<lb/>
Id upon With cultural 'ssues, the cracks<lb/>
low Cultural issues have added new peo-<lb/>
Republican coalition, but it is not what<lb/>
them<lb/>
tkliff, the Muncie businessman whom<lb/>
:h defeated in the primary, has a<lb/>
about 1988. "The worst possible<lb/>
that you get Democrats stuck in the<lb/>
tre thing and you get Republicans cover-<lb/>
fundamentalist flank, screaming about<lb/>
s and banning books.<lb/>
St a big fight going and you have the<lb/>
Idle of the political spectrum saying,<lb/>
lthese guys doing?' You end up with a<lb/>
 these unproductive issues that split the<lb/>
Id you get no real focus on leading the<lb/>
Iward<lb/>
js nightmare won't come to pass. The<lb/>
is will not nominate Robertson for presi-<lb/>
jhe Democrats are unlikely to stake their<lb/>
litical future on a promise to expand the<lb/>
Ftv-<lb/>
Robertson is able to mobilize a noisy<lb/>
the primaries, and if the right-wing<lb/>
continue to press for power in the<lb/>
Party, then many Republicans may<lb/>
ley had slept through the 1988 elections.<lb/>
Tudis, a semior editor of In These Times,<lb/>
g a biography of William F. Buckley<lb/>
f<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057849_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 23, 1986<lb/>
Washington DC Just Like Any Other City<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UP1) ? In<lb/>
many ways, the nation's capital is<lb/>
a real city, not unlike others in<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
Washington, District of Col-<lb/>
umbia, has buildings and streets,<lb/>
trees and lawns, statues and<lb/>
monuments, policemen and<lb/>
firemen, theaters and movies and<lb/>
rush hour traffic.<lb/>
And, certainly, Mayor Marion<lb/>
Barry's administration can go up<lb/>
against any city in the area of<lb/>
scandal ? past, present and<lb/>
under investigation.<lb/>
But people in the rest of the<lb/>
country ? at least those few who<lb/>
might give it a thought ? fail to<lb/>
realize that their capital is also<lb/>
unlike any other city.<lb/>
It is a feudal state ruled collec-<lb/>
tively by 535 kings and queens of<lb/>
Congress, who, in their largesse,<lb/>
permit one delegate to sit, but, of<lb/>
course, not vote with them.<lb/>
The kings and queens, possibly<lb/>
knowing the eventual outcome,<lb/>
did some years back approve a<lb/>
constitutional amendment gran-<lb/>
ting statehood to the District of<lb/>
Columbia. The thought raised an<lb/>
amazing lack of interest in the<lb/>
states and is ratification is now<lb/>
considered a dead issue.<lb/>
As a result, the district, as it is<lb/>
most commonly referred to,<lb/>
operates on something cal led<lb/>
limited home rule. Loosely<lb/>
translated, this means that the<lb/>
citizens can elect a mayor and<lb/>
council and run the city ? up to<lb/>
point.<lb/>
Although the subject of<lb/>
dispute. Congress controls the<lb/>
purse strings, all the way accor-<lb/>
ding to some, part of the way in<lb/>
the thinking of others.<lb/>
There are those who say that<lb/>
money the city itself generates is<lb/>
subject to the whims of the kings<lb/>
and queens, in addition to the<lb/>
money provided by the federal<lb/>
government.<lb/>
The realization to what degree<lb/>
the District of Columbia is a<lb/>
chattel of Congress comes to light<lb/>
rarely, most senators and con-<lb/>
gressmen finding more rewards in<lb/>
weightier (a tax reform bill) or<lb/>
political (a public works project<lb/>
for their state) matters.<lb/>
But come to light it does, as it<lb/>
did last week when the Senate<lb/>
had to act on the fiscal 1987 ap-<lb/>
propriations bill for the District<lb/>
of Columbia. Given its standing<lb/>
among priorities, the deed was<lb/>
undertaken at night and the bill<lb/>
passed by voice vote.<lb/>
But the committee's report<lb/>
outlined some matters the Senate<lb/>
would like the city to attend to,<lb/>
which is awfully close to an<lb/>
order.<lb/>
For instance, the Senate gave<lb/>
the city a gentle nudge to increase<lb/>
the minimum drinking age to 21,<lb/>
thereby calling what the report<lb/>
calls the "blood borders" with<lb/>
Virginia and Maryland where the<lb/>
thirst-quenching age has already<lb/>
been increased.<lb/>
The Senate is also concerned<lb/>
about the gypsy moth in the<lb/>
district, properly so, and feels<lb/>
"clearly a more vigorous effort is<lb/>
required" to combat this pest<lb/>
that threatens to destroy the<lb/>
hardwood trees.<lb/>
And the Senate is really mad<lb/>
about the city's slow pace in<lb/>
building a new prison, as if any<lb/>
neighborhood is eager to have the<lb/>
jailed cons next door.<lb/>
No matter, if the city doesn't<lb/>
have site and acquisition plans by<lb/>
next month, it will have to give<lb/>
back $40 million of tie $50,000<lb/>
so far allocated for the pen. And<lb/>
no trying to enlarge the current<lb/>
prison, located in nearby<lb/>
Virginia.<lb/>
Of course there's the question<lb/>
of abortion. There always will be<lb/>
a question of abortion as long as<lb/>
the Senate's anti-abortion conser-<lb/>
vatives make a career out trying<lb/>
to outlaw it.<lb/>
To keep within the rules, the ci-<lb/>
ty has used its self-generated<lb/>
revenues to provide abortions for<lb/>
the poor in cases of rape or incest<lb/>
because the law prohibits the use<lb/>
of federal money for abortion ex-<lb/>
cept when the life of the mother is<lb/>
in danger.<lb/>
The House, in its great<lb/>
wisdom, decided that the crea<lb/>
tions of rape and incest don'<lb/>
qualify for abortions, no matter<lb/>
where the money comes from<lb/>
The Senate decided to let well<lb/>
enough along, but only by a<lb/>
48-42 vote.<lb/>
But the bill provided one more<lb/>
clue that the k:ngs and queens<lb/>
would just as ' on set the people-<lb/>
free. Included was $100,000 to<lb/>
keep alive the process by which<lb/>
the District of Columbia would<lb/>
become the 51st state ? should<lb/>
the states ever grant that<lb/>
privilege.<lb/>
Liberals Follow Conservative's Trail<lb/>
COMING ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
(CPS) ? A liberal think tank<lb/>
says it may soon start funding<lb/>
overtly liberal papers on a<lb/>
number of campuses.<lb/>
Copying the strategy of the<lb/>
conservative Institute for Educa-<lb/>
tional Affairs (1EA)?which has<lb/>
provided start-up money for<lb/>
some 60 overtly right-wing cam-<lb/>
pus papers since 1983?the<lb/>
Center for National Policy<lb/>
(CNP) in Washington, D.C. says<lb/>
it will try to start funnelling<lb/>
money to leftist papers sometime<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Students from William and<lb/>
Mary, Boston College, Penn,<lb/>
Texas. American University and<lb/>
Michigan, among others, already<lb/>
have "expressed interest" in get-<lb/>
ting funding from the CNP,<lb/>
reports the CNP's Peter Scher.<lb/>
Scher, who refuses to say how<lb/>
much money the group will spend<lb/>
or how many papers it plans to<lb/>
fund, says the CNP will start<lb/>
choosing which papers to under-<lb/>
write in October.<lb/>
"Oh, we have a lot of student<lb/>
interest in starting alternative<lb/>
newspapers Scher says. "On<lb/>
many campuses, the more conser-<lb/>
vative element has resulted in<lb/>
one-sided issue debates only<lb/>
The idea for mounting a liberal<lb/>
alternative to the lEA's funding<lb/>
of campus papers first arose at an<lb/>
early August CNP meeting at<lb/>
which Scher, CNP President Kirk<lb/>
O'Donnell and about 100 col-<lb/>
legians f.om around the country<lb/>
bemoaned how conservati es had<lb/>
come to dominate campus opi-<lb/>
nion.<lb/>
"I'm sure some people still<lb/>
think the world is square, too<lb/>
replies IEA President Leslie<lb/>
Lankowsky.<lb/>
The CNP's O'Donnell says,<lb/>
"our major purpose here is to<lb/>
promote public dialogue and<lb/>
public research about public pro-<lb/>
blems<lb/>
The conservative papers have<lb/>
promoted dialogue by adopting<lb/>
many of the issues and arch tones<lb/>
of The Dartmouth Review, which<lb/>
was the first conservative paper<lb/>
published with IEA money.<lb/>
The Dartmouth paper is now<lb/>
self-sustaining, Lenkowsky<lb/>
reports, though the IEA still<lb/>
makes annual grants of about<lb/>
$3,500 each to 33 other conser-<lb/>
vative papers.<lb/>
The papers themselves have<lb/>
stirred up almost constant con-<lb/>
troversy by readily attacking<lb/>
campus homosexuals, "liberal"<lb/>
professors, course catalogs, anti-<lb/>
apartheid activists and others<lb/>
with pejoratives in their news col-<lb/>
umns.<lb/>
Most recently, Dartmouth<lb/>
Review staffers stood trial for<lb/>
vandalizing anti-apartheid<lb/>
"shanties<lb/>
"A few years ago recalls Ben<lb/>
Bagdikian, dean of<lb/>
Cal-Berkeley's graduate school<lb/>
of journalism, "Dartmouth, Yale<lb/>
and Berkeley newspapers were<lb/>
subsidized to be neoconservative.<lb/>
The feeling was that there was<lb/>
not enough conservative papers<lb/>
around<lb/>
"The danger he adds, "ex-<lb/>
ists when papers receive subsidiz-<lb/>
ed financial backing to create an<lb/>
artificial political point-of-view<lb/>
South Park<lb/>
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 VOTE <lb/>
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that doesn't exist in the com-<lb/>
munity already<lb/>
The CNP and others fret cam-<lb/>
pus papers those funded by<lb/>
students as well as by the IEA -<lb/>
no longer reflect the liberalism<lb/>
that exists in the college com-<lb/>
munity.<lb/>
Some Harvard students, for<lb/>
example, started the liberal Har-<lb/>
vard Perspective last year "when<lb/>
it became clear the Daily Crimson<lb/>
 a very good moderate daily, by<lb/>
the way was only interested in<lb/>
what the dean said instead of<lb/>
what the issues were says Peter<lb/>
Robinson, the Perspective's<lb/>
president.<lb/>
But "the conservative Salient,<lb/>
dealing with political issues,<lb/>
basically dominated and set the<lb/>
agenda (for discussion on cam-<lb/>
pus) says Robinson, who adds<lb/>
the Perspective intends to talk to<lb/>
the CNP about funding later this<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
The IEA's Lenkowsky<lb/>
disagrees. "In our view, the<lb/>
liberal and .left:0 views<lb/>
already dominate the main<lb/>
papers He says the IEA still<lb/>
averages "one call a week" from<lb/>
students interested in starting<lb/>
conservative papers on their cam-<lb/>
puses.<lb/>
DO YOU WANT TO WORK<lb/>
Iamediale Job<lb/>
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KELLY<lb/>
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When Father Was<lb/>
Away On Business<lb/>
Weekend Lot Shows<lb/>
Friday &amp; Saturday at 11:00 PM<lb/>
Monty Python and<lb/>
the Holy Grail<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Black Sororities<lb/>
Host<lb/>
A Fall Rush<lb/>
Black Sorority Informal Fall Rush<lb/>
September 14, Registration $1.00 and Reception<lb/>
7.00 Mendenhall Multi-purpose Room<lb/>
September 15, Rush Party, Alpha Kappa Alpha,<lb/>
Coffee House, 7:00<lb/>
September 16, Rush Party, Delta Sigma Theta, Coffee<lb/>
House, 7:00<lb/>
September 17, Rush Party, Zeta Phi Beta, Coffee<lb/>
House, 7:00<lb/>
September 18, Rush Party, Sigma Gamma Rho,<lb/>
Coffee House, 7:00<lb/>
September 19, Social, TBA<lb/>
September 22, Rush Party, Alpah Kappa Alpha,<lb/>
Coffee House, 7:00<lb/>
September 23, Rush Party, Delta Sigma Theta, Coffee<lb/>
House, 7:00<lb/>
September 24, Rush Party, Zeta Phi Beta, Coffee<lb/>
House, 7:00<lb/>
September 25, Rush Party, Sigma Gamma Rho,<lb/>
Coffee House, 7:00<lb/>
HU<lb/>
') Clay Fi<lb/>
By MIC AH HARRIS<lb/>
Clay Animation is an an form<lb/>
which has only begun to come in-<lb/>
to its own although it has beer.<lb/>
around roughly as long as tradi-<lb/>
tional drawn animation. It r<lb/>
been overshadowed b<lb/>
latter's domination of theav<lb/>
houses. Cartoons were<lb/>
more economical<lb/>
So. it was with the TV age<lb/>
clay animation began to<lb/>
Stable. Art Clokey's "GumK-<lb/>
ho debuted in 1955, was<lb/>
first clay animated persona<lb/>
jrho could b recognized<lb/>
Jnerchandized like his I -<lb/>
dimensional cousins.<lb/>
I Clay animation contir.ties I<lb/>
iised in children's prograr<lb/>
as "Sesame Street" and Pee Uee<lb/>
Hermans' new Saturday mo-<lb/>
program. But the theatre screen!<lb/>
are the arena of clay anim<lb/>
champion Will Vmton, a<lb/>
of Portland, Oregon.<lb/>
I Vinton's work is nevertheless<lb/>
?most familiar on the tele<lb/>
;screen. His studio is respor<lb/>
Ifor Kentuckv Fried Chicker-<lb/>
animated chicken nugge<lb/>
;paign. He also provide thi<lb/>
animated antics of punk<lb/>
ghetto-box toting Vance an: I<lb/>
Ipick-pocketing pig in a reel <lb/>
John Fogeny video.<lb/>
But the large screen has always j<lb/>
been Vinton's area of concentra-<lb/>
tion. In the mid-seven ties, he andl<lb/>
a partner created an Acaden<lb/>
Award nominated short end I<lb/>
Closed Mondays" w- I<lb/>
; followed a drunk's surrea. I<lb/>
journey into a museum where hef<lb/>
became an exhibit himself.<lb/>
In his later work Vie I<lb/>
 favored classic talcs. The sur f<lb/>
matter was initially determines<lb/>
j'by Vinton's financial backer J<lb/>
I the 'ime, the educational E j<lb/>
? Budd films.<lb/>
Fo- Silly Budd. Vimon create<lb/>
-4an Wnkle ? The 3tr?<lb/>
uciaiis of the miniature sets werj<lb/>
matched by those of the clay pui<lb/>
pets.<lb/>
IComedv In<lb/>
Sh<lb/>
I By MONT<lb/>
t<lb/>
 "Hey pal. didja here the I<lb/>
Sabout the<lb/>
s<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
P<lb/>
f<lb/>
k<lb/>
oflai<lb/>
 " ?????????- ? " mgn?ii"i? rn <lb/>
 mmi?nn<lb/>
<pb facs="00057849_0007"/><lb/>
her City<lb/>
r. plans by<lb/>
jve to give<lb/>
e $50,000<lb/>
pen. And<lb/>
ic current<lb/>
nearb<lb/>
question<lb/>
ivs will be<lb/>
long a?.<lb/>
n conser-<lb/>
trwng<lb/>
I rs, the ci-<lb/>
nerated<lb/>
;ons for<lb/>
yt incest<lb/>
the use<lb/>
tion ex-<lb/>
Mher is<lb/>
in danger.<lb/>
The House, in its great<lb/>
wisdom, decided that the crea-k<lb/>
tions of rape and incest don't<lb/>
qualify for abortions, no matter<lb/>
where the money comes from.<lb/>
The Senate decided to let well<lb/>
enough along, but only by a<lb/>
48-2 vote.<lb/>
But the bill provided one more<lb/>
clue that the k;ngs and queens<lb/>
would just as on set the people-<lb/>
free. Included was $100,000 to<lb/>
Weep alive the process by which1<lb/>
the District of Columbia would<lb/>
become the 51st state ? should<lb/>
the states ever grant that<lb/>
privilege.<lb/>
ACTIONS<lb/>
it&amp;<lb/>
ising<lb/>
s<lb/>
?vie<lb/>
Was<lb/>
siness<lb/>
IOWS<lb/>
1 00 PM<lb/>
n and<lb/>
rail<lb/>
1<lb/>
rJ.<lb/>
gathering place<lb/>
orority Informal Fall Rush<lb/>
Registration $1.00 and Reception<lb/>
Viendenhall Multi-purpose Room<lb/>
Rush Party, Alpha Kappa Alpha,<lb/>
?:00<lb/>
IRush Party, Delta Sigma Theta, Coffee<lb/>
Rush Party, Zeta Phi Beta, Cofiee<lb/>
Rush Party, Sigma Gamma Rho,<lb/>
:00<lb/>
Jociai, TBA<lb/>
ush Party, Alpah Kappa Alpha,<lb/>
1.00<lb/>
tush Party, Delta Sigma Theta, Coffee<lb/>
Lush Party, Zeta Phi Beta, Coffee<lb/>
Lush Party, Sigma Gamma Rho,<lb/>
:00<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINJAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 23. 1986<lb/>
Page-<lb/>
Never Bothered Gumby<lb/>
By M1CAH HARRIS<lb/>
Mf Writer<lb/>
Clay Animation is an art form<lb/>
which has only begun to come in-<lb/>
to its own although it has been<lb/>
around roughly as long as tradi-<lb/>
tional drawn animation. It has<lb/>
been overshadowed by the<lb/>
latter's domination of theatrical<lb/>
houses. Cartoons were simply<lb/>
more economical.<lb/>
So, it was with the TV age that<lb/>
clay animation began to be<lb/>
viable. Art Clokey's "Gumby<lb/>
who debuted in 1955, was the<lb/>
first clay animated personality<lb/>
who could by recognized and<lb/>
merchandized like his two-<lb/>
dimensional cousins.<lb/>
Clay animation continues to be<lb/>
used in children's programs such<lb/>
as "Sesame Street" and Pee Wee<lb/>
Hermans' new Saturday morning<lb/>
program. But the theatre screens<lb/>
are the arena of clay animation<lb/>
champion Will Vinton, a native<lb/>
of Portland, Oregon.<lb/>
Vinton's work is nevertheless<lb/>
most familiar on the television<lb/>
screen. His studio is responsible<lb/>
for Kentucky Fried Chicken's<lb/>
animated chicken nuggets cam-<lb/>
paign. He also provided the<lb/>
animated antics of punkish,<lb/>
ghetto-box toting Vance and his<lb/>
!pick-pocketing pig in a recent<lb/>
! John Fogerty video.<lb/>
But the large screen has always<lb/>
been Vinton's area of concentra-<lb/>
tion. In the mid-seventies, he and<lb/>
a partner created an Academy<lb/>
Award nominated short entitled<lb/>
"Closed Mondays" which<lb/>
followed a drunk's surrealistic<lb/>
journey into a museum where he<lb/>
became an exhibit himself.<lb/>
In his later works, Vinton has<lb/>
I favored classic tales. The subject<lb/>
? matter was initially determined<lb/>
by Vinton's financial backer of<lb/>
(the time, the educational Billy<lb/>
I Budd films.<lb/>
j Fo- Billy Budd. Vinton created<lb/>
t musnine adaptation afMp<lb/>
Ran W'nkle . The intricate"<lb/>
! uciaiis of the miniature sets were<lb/>
matched by those of the clay pup-<lb/>
pets.<lb/>
The "actors" were built over<lb/>
jointed armatures for stability.<lb/>
While certain physical laws<lb/>
sometimes require an awkward-<lb/>
ness of figure design, the faces<lb/>
are exquisite in their expressions.<lb/>
Vinton's puppets emote, they<lb/>
breathe, their eyes sparkle with<lb/>
life.<lb/>
An adaptation of The little<lb/>
Prince was next and it remains<lb/>
one of Vinton's studio's shining<lb/>
moments. The screenplay cap-<lb/>
tured the elusive spirit of the<lb/>
book. The characters' expres-<lb/>
sions were rich. And a technique<lb/>
of actually painting with clay<lb/>
provided dazzling optical effects.<lb/>
In addition, actor Cliff Robert-<lb/>
son's narration is warm and mov-<lb/>
ing. The Little Prince is a true if<lb/>
undervalued gem in the history of<lb/>
animated films.<lb/>
Vinton later produced an adap-<lb/>
tation of Tolstoy's lovely tale,<lb/>
"Where There Is Love, There is<lb/>
God Also" as Ivan the Cobbler.<lb/>
This is another film that<lb/>
transcends the silliness many<lb/>
associate with the term "anima-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Breaking with children's<lb/>
classics, Vinton produced a short<lb/>
entitled "A Christmas Gift" with<lb/>
music by the "Paul" of Peter,<lb/>
Paul and Mary fame. There was<lb/>
also another Oscar nominated<lb/>
short, an animated version of<lb/>
"The Creation<lb/>
Vinton provided clay anima-<lb/>
tion effects (he has trademarked<lb/>
his own process as<lb/>
"Claymation") for Walt<lb/>
Disney' Return To Oz Vinton's<lb/>
animated version of the gnome<lb/>
king was very preferrable to the<lb/>
live actor version of the character<lb/>
used in close-ups.<lb/>
Vinton's latest effort was this<lb/>
past summer's The Adventures of<lb/>
Mark Twain, a stunning, entirely<lb/>
Claymation feature which was in<lb/>
the works for approximately<lb/>
three years.<lb/>
I jFhf 4$rfn?3'frl?M?e ftim in-<lb/>
volved Twain, accompanied by<lb/>
Tom, Becky, and Huck, flying a<lb/>
Jules Verne-type space craft to<lb/>
rendez-vous with Haley's Comet<lb/>
(with which Twain had pro-<lb/>
phesied he would depart this<lb/>
world ? and did, though not in<lb/>
the elaborate fashion of the film).<lb/>
However, the bulk of the<lb/>
movie was adaptations of<lb/>
Twain's lesser known and more<lb/>
cynical tales, such as "The Diary<lb/>
of Adam and Eve" and "The<lb/>
Mysterious Stranger While this<lb/>
film marked Vinton's return to<lb/>
classics, the material was<lb/>
decidedly anti-God and made a<lb/>
startling contrast with his earlier<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Although Mark Twain's tone<lb/>
was depressing as opposed to the<lb/>
bitter sweetness of The Little<lb/>
Prince or Ivan the Cobbler, it was<lb/>
more visually stunning than<lb/>
anything the studio had attemp-<lb/>
ted before. The visualizationof<lb/>
Satan in "The Mysterious<lb/>
Stranger" segment is as chilling<lb/>
as Disney's version in "Night On<lb/>
Bald Mountain" in Fantasia.<lb/>
Satan is depicted as a mound<lb/>
is foot. Part II<lb/>
Tracks Spark Fear<lb/>
By MONTE GIBBS<lb/>
9Uff Writer<lb/>
"The biggest, ugliest tracks<lb/>
I've seen Brody Parker summ-<lb/>
ed up the overall feeling of most<lb/>
people in North Carolina for-<lb/>
tunate enough, or unfortunate<lb/>
enough, to have received a<lb/>
Bigfoot visit.<lb/>
In fact, it seems that the elusive<lb/>
creature suspected of lurking in<lb/>
our state is not welcome at all.<lb/>
Though most people do not grant<lb/>
the creature existence, some have<lb/>
been given a showing, willing or<lb/>
not. This installment discusses<lb/>
two such people within our state.<lb/>
Brody Parker, a resident of<lb/>
Chatham County, thought she<lb/>
had been warned of the creature's<lb/>
presence before the tracks were<lb/>
found. The Parker family dog<lb/>
was behaving strangely a few<lb/>
days before. "He was almost<lb/>
having a fit he was so scared<lb/>
said Parker.<lb/>
The next day, the Parkers<lb/>
awoke to find one hundred three-<lb/>
toed footprints making a trail<lb/>
across their acre garden, leading<lb/>
into the thick woods near the<lb/>
river. The tracks, measuring<lb/>
nineteen inches long with a yard<lb/>
stride in between prints, lead to a<lb/>
bean patch, which showed<lb/>
evidence of a visit. The tops of<lb/>
some of the beans had been bitten<lb/>
off, then tossed to the ground.<lb/>
Limbs from a pecan tree were<lb/>
broken as well.<lb/>
Game Warden A.C. Goodwin<lb/>
of Chatham County was notified,<lb/>
as was the sheriff. Although the<lb/>
tracks would later be written off<lb/>
by the game warden as hoaxes,<lb/>
the deputy sheriff, Larry Harris,<lb/>
believed the footprints were ge-<lb/>
nuine. By the time the investiga-<lb/>
tion was over, some 200 people<lb/>
had gathered at the Parker farm,<lb/>
insisting that a hunt be organiz-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Harris dismissed the crowd,<lb/>
and the Parkers plowed up the<lb/>
field, destroying the evidence.<lb/>
The disgruntled onlookers gave<lb/>
up on the hunt, as well as<lb/>
testimony. But Brody Parker<lb/>
began to wonder if her farm was<lb/>
a regular path for the creature,<lb/>
and remembered the words of her<lb/>
landlady ten years before when<lb/>
the family had moved in.<lb/>
"She told me there were two<lb/>
and three hooks on every door<lb/>
and to use them<lb/>
Another individual, a hunter<lb/>
who wished to remain<lb/>
See PEOPLE, page 8<lb/>
'Comedy In The Zone<lb/>
Shock Dishes Up The Wit<lb/>
By MONTE GIBBS<lb/>
9Wf rttec<lb/>
5-<lb/>
I "Hey pal, didja here the one<lb/>
about the<lb/>
Every office, classroom, dorm<lb/>
and restaurant in the world has<lb/>
heard this intro by the now<lb/>
famous "local-yokel the guy<lb/>
who cracks jokes, usually corny<lb/>
ones, all day as if he were paid to.<lb/>
Sometimes the jokes and the<lb/>
comedy may get on your nerves,<lb/>
especially when the delivery is<lb/>
poor.<lb/>
Rm Stock breagM ?ean of ImgMtr to the cyw of<lb/>
?tT.Wt Comedy Zone.<lb/>
Well T.Ws has done comedy<lb/>
right.<lb/>
T.Ws, the fashionable night<lb/>
club located four miles from cen-<lb/>
tral campus down 10th street,<lb/>
then left on 264 bypass, has<lb/>
unveiled a new source of comedy<lb/>
entertainment in Greenville ap-<lb/>
propriately called " The Comedy<lb/>
Zone Held Wednesday nights<lb/>
on center stage in T.Ws, this oc-<lb/>
casion is the perfect vehicle for<lb/>
up and coming comedians to use<lb/>
to display their material and test<lb/>
the waters.<lb/>
The Comedy Zone is part of a<lb/>
national resurgence in live com-<lb/>
edy entertainment. Comedians<lb/>
who began by doing stand-up<lb/>
comedy in night-clubs ? per-<lb/>
formers like Jay Leno, Billy<lb/>
Crystal, and David Letterman ?<lb/>
became successful through<lb/>
movies, television series and<lb/>
specials, popularizing comedy.<lb/>
"I've found that small towns<lb/>
like Greenville really do have a<lb/>
lot of people waiting for some<lb/>
good laughs said comedian<lb/>
Ron Shock, the feature act last<lb/>
Wednesday. Indeed Greenville<lb/>
must, because Ron Shock and his<lb/>
opening act, Danny Gray, had<lb/>
the entire audience in tears.<lb/>
Shock, who is currently tour-<lb/>
ing the United States, does a ter-<lb/>
rific range of material ranging<lb/>
from discussion about Oral<lb/>
Roberts' 900 feet tall Jesus to a<lb/>
hilarious bit called "Sex is Good<lb/>
When The somewhat less ex-<lb/>
perienced opening comedian<lb/>
Danny Gray, though less funny,<lb/>
still had the audience entranced.<lb/>
These two talented performers<lb/>
are just a few of the headlincrs<lb/>
that will be featured at T.Ws.<lb/>
The club presents acts in a com-<lb/>
fortable, leisurely atmosphere<lb/>
that makes it hard to be uptight<lb/>
for long. The comics are usually<lb/>
at ease, too, and perform good,<lb/>
uncensored fun for patrons over<lb/>
18 years of age.<lb/>
of alien dust from the waist<lb/>
down, a robotic exo-skeleton<lb/>
from the waist up, but with no<lb/>
head. Instead, he holds a<lb/>
theatrical mask above his neck<lb/>
when he speaks and the mask oc-<lb/>
casionally distorts horribly as the<lb/>
creature's evil exceeds his ability<lb/>
to contain it.<lb/>
Rip Van Winkle, The Little<lb/>
Prince, and Ivan the Cobbler<lb/>
have appeared on select pay-<lb/>
movie channels over the holidays<lb/>
under the umbrella title of<lb/>
"Trilogy<lb/>
"A Christmas Gift" has shown<lb/>
up on CBN's "700 Club" and<lb/>
Return To Oz is available on<lb/>
video cassette along with "Closed<lb/>
Mondays which is part of the<lb/>
Fantastic Animation Festival<lb/>
And if you are lucky, you mav<lb/>
catch the John Fogerty 'Will Vin-<lb/>
ton collaboration on MTV.<lb/>
Any new Vinton productions<lb/>
should be watched for. Thev<lb/>
create a sense of wonder which is<lb/>
the very soul of animation.<lb/>
Above is rnn artist's conception of the size a Sasquatch ma reach.<lb/>
The Review<lb/>
Heads Firmly Planted<lb/>
By D. A. SWANSON<lb/>
What a pretty, pretty album.<lb/>
Beat Rodeo's Home In The Heart<lb/>
Of The Beat is so neat and clean<lb/>
and obvious that you'd better<lb/>
cover your stereo with plastic<lb/>
before playing it. (When you<lb/>
desperately try to remove the nee-<lb/>
dle from the disk you may ac-<lb/>
cidentally spew that wonderful<lb/>
Mendenhall Pirate Burger lunch<lb/>
all over it.) Maybe they just tried<lb/>
too hard.<lb/>
But, seriously now, how could<lb/>
not only Beat Rodeo, but I.R.S.<lb/>
records as well, allow something<lb/>
like this Nutra-Sweet coated<lb/>
hunk of armadillo doo-doo to<lb/>
even make it to the printers?<lb/>
Especially after such a promising<lb/>
debut release last year with Stay-<lb/>
ing Out Late With Beat Rodeo<lb/>
Who knows?<lb/>
The primary, and probablv<lb/>
sole reason for this unfortunate<lb/>
flop however, is in the produc<lb/>
tion by Scott Litt. Whereas the<lb/>
debut was produced primarily b<lb/>
See NEW ALBUMS, page 8<lb/>
Hooters Offers Fare<lb/>
For All Occasions<lb/>
By BECKY TOY<lb/>
9Uff Writer<lb/>
It seems hard to imagine that a<lb/>
civilized establishment would ex-<lb/>
ist in the shadow of a Farm Fresh<lb/>
grocery store, but that is where<lb/>
you'll find Hooters. A cozy<lb/>
place, with a spacious cathedral<lb/>
ceiling and loft, Hooters is open<lb/>
seven days a week to offer a wide<lb/>
variety of soups, salads, sand-<lb/>
wiches and some of the best ap-<lb/>
petizers around to munch on.<lb/>
You, meanwhile, may kick back<lb/>
with a beer or a drink, relaxing<lb/>
The appetizers run the gamut<lb/>
from Boiled Shrimp ($6.25),<lb/>
Fried Mushrooms or a Vegetable<lb/>
Medley, fried also (around<lb/>
$2.50), to Beer Batter Onion<lb/>
Rings ($1.45) and the ever<lb/>
popular Potato Skins ($3.50),<lb/>
with a variety of toppings.<lb/>
They're all highly edible, but the<lb/>
Fried Mushrooms always call my<lb/>
name on any menu.<lb/>
Hooters also offers a Mexican<lb/>
selection of appetizers ($2.75 to<lb/>
$5.25), with choices ranging from<lb/>
Nachos to Mexican Pizza.<lb/>
In the entree section it is im-<lb/>
possible to choose one category.<lb/>
The stuffed potatoes ($3.75 to<lb/>
$4.25) which come with a salad<lb/>
are huge and full of diet-defying<lb/>
shrimp, hamburger, or ham and<lb/>
mushrooms, and drip with<lb/>
cheese.<lb/>
The burgers ($4.25) are done<lb/>
untraditionally: with names like<lb/>
Cheeseburger in Paradise and a<lb/>
Bacon and Swiss, how can you go<lb/>
wrong? The sandwiches are a<lb/>
mixture of the classics, like the<lb/>
French Dip or Corned Beef on<lb/>
Rye ($4.25 to $3.50) and some<lb/>
killer-combos like the Hooter,<lb/>
the Nite Owl Spectacular, or the<lb/>
Lite Owl ($3.75, $3.95, $2.95).<lb/>
For dessert you may have a<lb/>
hard time choosing from the<lb/>
Kahlua Mousse and Fried Ice<lb/>
Cream ($1.75, $1.50), or giving it<lb/>
all up for a coffee, liquour and<lb/>
whipped cream concoction,<lb/>
which is just as sinful and satisfy-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
So, when you're out on the 264<lb/>
Neon Way, scoping the usual fast<lb/>
food joints, thinking about<lb/>
eating your way through the<lb/>
grocery store, stop: check out<lb/>
Hooter's. It's an intimate little<lb/>
place, with great food and ex-<lb/>
cellent service.<lb/>
<lb/>
????:?" ? "T3L l<lb/>
???<lb/>
m ? m<lb/>
mamim?a<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057849_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 23, 1986<lb/>
New Albums By Beat Rodeo And Talking Heads Reviewed a 1tthnr<lb/>
Continued from page 7 BeaI Rodeo and Sku, Go baV).line .nvthin. hv Ph,kH?,H  ? . . JM W I I I J I<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
North Carolinian Don Dixon and<lb/>
was recorded live, this new effort<lb/>
has a one hundred percent studio<lb/>
sound. All of the spontaneity and<lb/>
soul of this actually fine band has<lb/>
been mercilessly sanded and hon-<lb/>
ed down to a flat, obsequious<lb/>
Muzac-combo.<lb/>
This tragedy does have its<lb/>
moments, however. If you listen<lb/>
very, that's VERY ? closely to<lb/>
"Everything I'm Not" you may<lb/>
hear the deeply quavering<lb/>
soprano of New Jersey's Syd<lb/>
Straw. But you've got to dig<lb/>
under Steve Almaas' sometimes<lb/>
bothersome voice and the Holi-<lb/>
day Inn organ keyboards.<lb/>
It" some well-meaning friend<lb/>
should give you this piece of<lb/>
vinyl, you might want to try-<lb/>
listening to that song and perhaps<lb/>
"New Love" and "Home In The<lb/>
Heart Of The Beat But, even<lb/>
here, beware. My apologies to<lb/>
People Tell<lb/>
Of Bigfoot<lb/>
Visitations<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
anonymous, relayed his story to<lb/>
Gordon Strasenburgh, an avid<lb/>
Bigfoot hunter from Atlanta,<lb/>
Georgia. Strasenburgh has since<lb/>
moved, but continues to pursue<lb/>
Sasquatches throughout the<lb/>
southeast. The hunter's story was<lb/>
particularly interesting since he<lb/>
had seen the creatures over four<lb/>
times in the last 20 years.<lb/>
Remarkably, the creatures had<lb/>
been spotted in the same loca-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Strasenburgh received a call<lb/>
from the hunter, a native of<lb/>
Charlotte. The hunter had spent<lb/>
a great deal of time tracking on<lb/>
South Mountain, one of the<lb/>
many ranges along the Blue<lb/>
Ridge Mountains, which extends<lb/>
down from Morganton and<lb/>
Hickory.<lb/>
"For the latest encounter, he<lb/>
was camping near a stream in<lb/>
South Mountain said Strasen-<lb/>
burgh. "Around twilight, after<lb/>
he had finished eating but with a<lb/>
fire still going, his dog first bark-<lb/>
ed and then curled up and whin-<lb/>
ed. He saw something bent down,<lb/>
which then straightened up. 'I<lb/>
know it was seven feet tall,<lb/>
because I'm 6'2 the hunter<lb/>
said<lb/>
According to Strasenburgh,<lb/>
the hunter said, "It had no neck,<lb/>
smelled like a really bad dump,<lb/>
and made a sound which began<lb/>
with a growl and went to a howl<lb/>
or whistle<lb/>
Strasenburgh continued, "He<lb/>
took it for granted that it was a<lb/>
male. He had a 30-30 Winchester<lb/>
with him and fired at it after it<lb/>
began to walk away. It let out<lb/>
another howl or whistle and went<lb/>
off into the woods<lb/>
"He said he almost fainted<lb/>
when it first stood up said<lb/>
Strasenburgh, "and that it was<lb/>
like a big human, with long arms<lb/>
and shoulders he described as<lb/>
'widehugemaybe four feet<lb/>
across. The arms were as big as<lb/>
telephone poles<lb/>
William Roemmerman,<lb/>
founder of the American Sas-<lb/>
quatch Association, started that<lb/>
group after seeing and tracking<lb/>
several creatures in Washington,<lb/>
Oregon, and California. He is<lb/>
widely known as an expert among<lb/>
Bigfoot investigators.<lb/>
Roemmerman said, "Though<lb/>
they (Sasquatches) certainly are<lb/>
not as commonly seen or<lb/>
numerous in reports, there is a<lb/>
definite study showing the<lb/>
presence of this, or some similar<lb/>
type of animal within the con-<lb/>
fines of the state of North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Perhaps the creature is not<lb/>
welcome here. But local animosi-<lb/>
ty would not be unwarranted.<lb/>
The Sasquatch has been known,<lb/>
within this state, to have caused<lb/>
property damage, destroyed<lb/>
fences, eaten crops and animal<lb/>
feed, yelled and howled for ex-<lb/>
ceptionally long periods at night,<lb/>
and scattered garbage cans.<lb/>
Aside from the obvious fact of<lb/>
how unsettling it would be to run<lb/>
into one of them, creatures do<lb/>
have some history of a hatred of<lb/>
pursuit, in particular by dogs. In<lb/>
some isolated incidences, dogs<lb/>
have been torn in two, and slam-<lb/>
med into the sides of houses by<lb/>
the creatures. Some Sasquatches<lb/>
have been witnessed mangling<lb/>
dogs with their own hands as if<lb/>
they were wadded pieces of<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
The Bigfoot creature has not<lb/>
made friends within our state.<lb/>
MM<lb/>
v<lb/>
Beat Rodeo and Skully. Go<lb/>
throw a rock at Litt.<lb/>
But, all is not sludge this week.<lb/>
New, from the Talking Heads, is<lb/>
True Stories and it is a treat.<lb/>
What once appeared as "David<lb/>
'Psycho Byrne and his Talking<lb/>
Heads" has finally transformed<lb/>
into Byrne-Frantz-Weymouth-<lb/>
Harrison, all-American flipped-<lb/>
out family! The music is even and<lb/>
solid, Byrne's voice is as multi-<lb/>
layered as ever, and Tina<lb/>
Weymouth has finally taken full<lb/>
control of her once slightly timid<lb/>
bass-line.<lb/>
With True Stories this once<lb/>
aloof and austere group of<lb/>
musical artists from the seventies<lb/>
(More Songs About Buildings<lb/>
And Food, Fear Of Music) has<lb/>
made the full promenade through<lb/>
synthetic experimentation and<lb/>
finally rediscovered the American<lb/>
Dream.<lb/>
In fact, there is a considerable<lb/>
amount of dreaming going on<lb/>
here. "City of Dreams" and<lb/>
especially "Dream Operator"<lb/>
may be more dreamlike than<lb/>
anything by Pink Floyd.<lb/>
But the most overwhelming im-<lb/>
age on this album is the wide-<lb/>
open-spaces feeling strongest in<lb/>
songs like "Radio Head" and<lb/>
"People Like Us Something<lb/>
here is very reminiscent of Re-<lb/>
main In Light's "The Big Coun-<lb/>
try The better part of this new<lb/>
LP was recorded in various<lb/>
studios in Texas giving it a quali-<lb/>
ty which is a complete turn-<lb/>
around from their early days in<lb/>
Rhode Island and New York. It<lb/>
sounds like they've finally got<lb/>
their feet firmly planted in the<lb/>
earth.<lb/>
"Love For Sale" and "Papa<lb/>
Legbo for all you old Heads<lb/>
fans, have got just enough of the<lb/>
old frantic Byrne sound to re-<lb/>
mind us that, yes, this is the same<lb/>
group. And "Hey Now with its<lb/>
strolling-in-Barbados rhythms<lb/>
may even attract a few new fans<lb/>
from the Jimmy Buffet ranks.<lb/>
The only weak spots here are in<lb/>
"Puzzlin' Evidence and<lb/>
"Wild, Wild Life" (now receiv-<lb/>
ing heavy airplay). But even these<lb/>
songs are relatively good<lb/>
True Stories may not become<lb/>
an all-time best-seller, but for<lb/>
people of especially<lb/>
discriminating taste, this is the<lb/>
album of the year.<lb/>
Next week we'll be looking at<lb/>
The Johnson's debut album.<lb/>
Break Tomorrow's Day as well as<lb/>
? (drum roll, please) ? The new<lb/>
Boston disk. So, see you there.<lb/>
And once again, thanks to<lb/>
WZMB and Dangerous Dave<lb/>
Elliot for all of the continuing<lb/>
support and celestial insight.<lb/>
WE WILL MATCH<lb/>
ANY ADVERTISED<lb/>
GROCERY FEATURE<lb/>
PRICE IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
Excluding Meat, Produce,<lb/>
Deli, Bakery &amp; Continuity<lb/>
Bonus Items. Bring Current<lb/>
Week Food Store Ad With<lb/>
You. We Will Match<lb/>
Like Items Or Equal<lb/>
Quality.<lb/>
The supermarket with<lb/>
Will?!<lb/>
lYAKHHIMISi;<lb/>
MUCKS<lb/>
OIULITY TIM<lb/>
SS?0cllVSi ?R?UGM SAT SEPT 2' AT iA. ACEN'irR MGRCEMvi-it<lb/>
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES<lb/>
u<lb/>
ntroducing<lb/>
plus<lb/>
Double Coupons<lb/>
See store for details<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
BEEF - PORK - LAMB - VEAL<lb/>
Fiesh C ut<lb/>
A&amp;P s tnmmmg mo-e from their beef than ever before and that s good news for you'<lb/>
Because lean beef m an important source of nutrition for today s health and d.et-conscous<lb/>
American You see lean beef provides h.gh amounts of nutrients - especially protein ,ron<lb/>
zmc. and Vitamin Bt2 in relation to its calorie content Did you know that a 3' oz (80 q)<lb/>
serving of s.riom tip has (ust 168 calor.es? So go ahead En)0y lean beef today<lb/>
A&amp;P s THIN TRIM pol cy<lb/>
makes it easy'<lb/>
sameFiavo- Better Value<lb/>
ZJflffVfflflKVfl<lb/>
BONELESS TOP<lb/>
GOLDEN RIPE<lb/>
Sirloin Steaknumbo Honeydews<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
jar<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH AN AOOlTION<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERVOAV LOW P<lb/>
DOUBLE ? Q<lb/>
Chunk<lb/>
UaMT TWO WTT<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EV<lb/>
REGULAR OR<lb/>
re<lb/>
risco S<lb/>
riscol s3fc'r,e?9 3<lb/>
-?" I j C<lb/>
tMIT ORE OF YOUR Cl<lb/>
PURCHASE AT E<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY<lb/>
? mWiWi i?hmrOTi<lb/>
?yiiii ? in mi ? uii<lb/>
!? ' 1"<lb/>
(UPI) ? Toiling barefoot in an ween<lb/>
enchanting garden of strange has<lb/>
I shaped cacti helps visionary tholoi<lb/>
author Robert Silver berg steer his comr<lb/>
soaring mind back to the planet to gn<lb/>
I Earth. mechi<lb/>
"They're truly a science fiction for t.<lb/>
I kind of plant said SiKerberg of 5tor<lb/>
the alien-like world of succulents Fine,<lb/>
he grows outside his stone and and<lb/>
I brick home hidden on a pinnacle futunj<lb/>
of the Oakland hills just east of them<lb/>
jSan Francisco. begins<lb/>
At high noon each day, Bor<lb/>
jSilverberg promptly sets aside his and<lb/>
jtask of creating new galaxies and L'nivel<lb/>
space tales to enter the garden his fii<lb/>
and dig in the dirt. It helps him C, at<lb/>
relax and switch off a vivid lm- Teen<lb/>
agination. The top selling author prohfi<lb/>
who has turned out more than 40 tc<lb/>
books in a 30-year career of Nebuij<lb/>
science fiction writing follows a as pre<lb/>
rigid daily routine. He gets up at tion<lb/>
6 a.m eats breakfast, feeds his Siivt<lb/>
three cats, shuffles through the sionali<lb/>
;mail and sits down at his com- wand<lb/>
puter in a stone guest cottage scienc<lb/>
where he creates cosmic chaos nove.si<lb/>
from 8:30 a.m. until noon. novel<lb/>
He doesn't drink coffee, ned sc<lb/>
smoke cigarettes or space out more<lb/>
once a project is underway. And books<lb/>
he never works on weekends. scienc<lb/>
"By noon I've reached the 'i<lb/>
point where what I'm writing no reader,1<lb/>
longer makes sense to me he have<lb/>
said. "I really work in a headlong :<lb/>
way that wipes me out. So I'm d on<lb/>
happy to stagger out, get some blastn<lb/>
lunch and go into the garden. I 'Thl<lb/>
start recovering about m;d after- deeply<lb/>
noon and I try not to think about is moi<lb/>
my work at all until the next mor- fun '<lb/>
ning Sih<lb/>
Presently, Silverberg is bet- ideas<lb/>
Anno<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
CRIMINAL JUSTICE<lb/>
riser xa inaat 9 of Mt nas ?-c<lb/>
CORSO or Two Seot 23 a 5 15 p - -<lb/>
.DSta.T ioeo? a AAe-ae A Sac a<lb/>
?ftorK cc Cf mum) Just.ce r-aars ana Ml<lb/>
fO?o WHm are aikeo c ?t?no<lb/>
t 1<lb/>
ECUSURFIN6<lb/>
The team n-ieis were held 'as Suneav a'<lb/>
Rooanme You can ?t.n surt a- Na a? I<lb/>
ou missed the Try outs The I -v contes s<lb/>
OC 11 12 n Ocean City. Me "There ? ?? a<lb/>
school van gong or Hi 5 h- p -err ? ? r<lb/>
meeting this Thurs a" I - -00m g "i<lb/>
JOyner Library Br,nQ a insurance 0 Ml<lb/>
"sure you eg.b.i.N or ?he 'ea- Bwst) anc<lb/>
girls art welcome '0 me MMltoaj ?nc a<lb/>
newcomers are crgee to aftenc<lb/>
ECU AMBASSADORS<lb/>
A?oassaoors1 Dor' torse' ?doa. <lb/>
recept on tor new memoers or wee Sec<lb/>
24tr A general meeting for mew ene aw;<lb/>
members oe wee Oc? 1 at S IS n the<lb/>
multipurpose room of Menoenhah<lb/>
PPMA<lb/>
Pre D'Otess orj neaNk A a-ce nave<lb/>
a mee? rig on wee Seo Jam M -00 J4 a" t<lb/>
p m a) RAenaenn ?tAe'nbers a'e 'Sc c<lb/>
atteno Aim any r-eresfec $tyoe"ts are<lb/>
welcome to come to me meet no a, M<lb/>
ALPHA EPSILON<lb/>
DELTA<lb/>
Attention members There w be a<lb/>
meet.no .n F ?7 at 7 ane Este AAason ??<lb/>
tor of voluntw Services a' PCMM ? oe<lb/>
me speaker Everyone we come 0f cers<lb/>
There w-H be a meet.no, a' I 3C M P anager<lb/>
Study Lounge<lb/>
ECUGOSPELCMOIR<lb/>
The ECU Go?pei Co e'eser's once aga R<lb/>
their annual Song Show Tues Sec Z3 <lb/>
pm in Menor x Theare Aa ss or sja-e<lb/>
aoor prizes w M be g ver ewa<lb/>
EARLY CHILDHOOD<lb/>
EDUCATION CLUB<lb/>
ECJ memiers want vou 'ciki pa" at mm<lb/>
? amily Please 10 us for a mee' ngor wee<lb/>
sept 24Wi a ? 3C - So?g? 301<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
Sponsorec by Campus C-uveoe tor C m<lb/>
W? 0?t together every Thursoay at? c ?<lb/>
?n I'fwi'r room 10 6 Three reasons M<lb/>
have tun fellowship, ana gooo '&amp;<lb/>
teachings s?e you mere<lb/>
MARAUDERS<lb/>
An on campus aovenhjre group .mute ??<lb/>
' "Tereatea students to afno first mee?mg<lb/>
Oct 1 a' 5 - room 711 aAenoenrujii<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Will hotd its second meeting Tes -?g"<lb/>
S?P? 23 ?-B-ewster D '3e'i Members?rc<lb/>
enceurpge ?o bring a friend and all n<lb/>
'eretttd students are invited to attend<lb/>
Pl?)e remember that due are still being<lb/>
collected Let ut litigate;<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
Arc you planning an taking me GRE<lb/>
LSAT. MAT. MEOCAT or ottwjr standard!<lb/>
?? tnttT Tnit workshop win cover bagic tn-<lb/>
'brmajtton about these test, test taking<lb/>
?'ra??gy and ?mp?e terns Sa)t.?.?ip.l"<lb/>
JU Wrtgw BKtg Maw ta aw wail on me 6RE1<lb/>
' rm arg planning on taking me GRE Mr eo<lb/>
migaMn sg Grad School mis ? fcariaa can<lb/>
???? V? prepare Tyagg a? im?. Mat taking<lb/>
????v. scores and sample iMn? win be<lb/>
?at B.Spm 3'3 ffr" ?'dg<lb/>
 k"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057849_0009"/><lb/>
<lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTFMBfcR2.1, 986<lb/>
New Albums By Beat Rodeo And Talking Heads Reviewed<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
North Carolinian Don Dixon and<lb/>
was recorded live, this new effort<lb/>
has a one hundred percent studio<lb/>
sound. All of the spontaneity and<lb/>
soul of this actually fine band has<lb/>
been mercilessly sanded and hon-<lb/>
ed down to a fiat, obsequious<lb/>
Muzac-combo.<lb/>
This tragedy does have its<lb/>
moments, however. If you listen<lb/>
very, that's VERY ? closely to<lb/>
"Eerthing I'm Not" you may<lb/>
hear the deeply quavering<lb/>
soprano of New Jersey's Syd<lb/>
Straw But you've got to dig<lb/>
under Stee Almaas' sometimes<lb/>
bothersome oice and the Holi-<lb/>
day Inn organ keyboards.<lb/>
It some well-meaning friend<lb/>
should give you this piece of<lb/>
vinyl, you might want to try<lb/>
listening to that song and perhaps<lb/>
"New Loe" and "Home In The<lb/>
Heart Of The Beat But, even<lb/>
here, beware. My apologies to<lb/>
People Tell<lb/>
Of Bigfoot<lb/>
Visitations<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
anonymous, relayed his story to<lb/>
Gordon Strasenburgh, an avid<lb/>
Bigfoot hunter from Atlanta.<lb/>
Georgia. Strasenburgh has since<lb/>
moed. but continues to pursue<lb/>
Sasquatches throughout the<lb/>
southeast. The hunter's story was<lb/>
particularly interesting since he<lb/>
had seen the creatures oer four<lb/>
times in the last 20 years.<lb/>
Remarkably, the creatures had<lb/>
been spotted in the same loca-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Strasenburgh received a call<lb/>
from the hunter, a native oi<lb/>
Charlotte The hunter had spent<lb/>
a great deal of time tracking on<lb/>
South Mountain, one of the<lb/>
manv ranges along ihe Blue<lb/>
R:Jge Mountains, which extends<lb/>
down from Morganton and<lb/>
Hickorv.<lb/>
"For the latest encounter, he<lb/>
was camping near a stream in<lb/>
South Mountain said Strasen-<lb/>
burgh. "Around twilight, after<lb/>
he had finished eating but with a<lb/>
fire stiM going, his dog first bark-<lb/>
ed and then curled up and whin-<lb/>
ed. He saw something bent down,<lb/>
which then straightened up. T<lb/>
know it was seven feet tall,<lb/>
because I'm 6'2 the hunter<lb/>
said<lb/>
According to Strasenburgh,<lb/>
the hunter said, "It had no neck,<lb/>
smelled like a really bad dump,<lb/>
and made a sound which began<lb/>
with a growl and went to a howl<lb/>
or whistle<lb/>
Strasenburgh continued. "He<lb/>
took it for granted that it was a<lb/>
male. He had a 30-30 Winchester<lb/>
with him and fired at it after it<lb/>
began to walk away. It let out<lb/>
another howl or whistle and went<lb/>
off into the woods<lb/>
"He said he almost fainted<lb/>
when it first stood up said<lb/>
Strasenburgh, "and that it was<lb/>
like a big human, with long arms<lb/>
and shoulders he described as<lb/>
'wide.hugemaybe four feet<lb/>
across. The arms were as big as<lb/>
telephone poles<lb/>
William Roemmerman,<lb/>
founder of the American Sas-<lb/>
quatch Association, started that<lb/>
group after seeing and tracking<lb/>
several creatures in Washington,<lb/>
Oregon, and California. He is<lb/>
widely known as an expert among<lb/>
Bigfoot investigators.<lb/>
Roemmerman said, "Though<lb/>
they (Sasquatches) certainly are<lb/>
not as commonly seen or<lb/>
numerous in reports, there is a<lb/>
definite study showing the<lb/>
presence of this, or some similar<lb/>
type of animal within the con-<lb/>
fines of the state of North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Perhaps the creature is not<lb/>
welcome here. But local animosi-<lb/>
ty would not be unwarranted.<lb/>
The Sasquatch has been known,<lb/>
within this state, to have caused<lb/>
property damage, destroyed<lb/>
fences, eaten crops and animal<lb/>
feed, yelled and howled for ex-<lb/>
ceptionally long periods at night,<lb/>
and scattered garbage cans.<lb/>
Aside from the obvious fact of<lb/>
how unsettling it would be to run<lb/>
into one of them, creatures do<lb/>
have some history of a hatred of<lb/>
pursuit, in particular by dogs. In<lb/>
some isolated incidences, dogs<lb/>
have been torn in two, and slam-<lb/>
med into the sides of houses by<lb/>
the creatures. Some Sasquatches<lb/>
have been witnessed mangling<lb/>
dogs with their own hands as if<lb/>
they were wadded pieces of<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
The Bigfoot creature has not<lb/>
made friends within our state.<lb/>
Beat Rodeo and Skully. Go<lb/>
throw a rock at Liu.<lb/>
But, all is not sludge this week.<lb/>
New, from the Talking Heads, is<lb/>
True Stories and it is a treat.<lb/>
What once appeared as "David<lb/>
'Psycho' Byrne and his Talking<lb/>
Heads" has finally transformed<lb/>
into Byrne-Frantz-Weymouth-<lb/>
Harnson, all-American flipped-<lb/>
out family! The music is even and<lb/>
solid, Byrne's voice is as multi-<lb/>
layered as ever, and Tina<lb/>
Weymouth has finally taken full<lb/>
control of her once slightly timid<lb/>
bass-line.<lb/>
With True Stories this once<lb/>
aloof and austere group of<lb/>
musical artists from the seventies<lb/>
(More Songs About Buildings<lb/>
And Food, Fear Of Music) has<lb/>
made the full promenade through<lb/>
synthetic experimentation and<lb/>
finally rediscovered the American<lb/>
Dream.<lb/>
In fact, there is a considerable<lb/>
amount of dreaming going on<lb/>
here. "City of Dreams" and<lb/>
especially "Dream Operator"<lb/>
mav be more dreamlike than<lb/>
anything by Pink Floyd.<lb/>
But the most overwhelming im-<lb/>
age on this album is the wide-<lb/>
open-spaces feeling strongest in<lb/>
songs like "Radio Head" and<lb/>
"People Like Us Something<lb/>
here is very reminiscent of Re-<lb/>
main In Light's "The Big Coun-<lb/>
try The better part of this new<lb/>
IP was recorded in various<lb/>
studios in Texas giving it a quali-<lb/>
ty which is a complete turn-<lb/>
around from their early days in<lb/>
Rhode Island and New York. It<lb/>
sounds like they've finally got<lb/>
their feet firmly planted in the<lb/>
earth<lb/>
"Love For Sale" and "Papa<lb/>
legbo for all you old Heads<lb/>
fans, have got just enough of the<lb/>
old frantic Byrne sound to re-<lb/>
mind us that, yes. this is the same<lb/>
group. And "Hey Now with its<lb/>
strolling-in-Barbados rhythms<lb/>
may even attract a few new fans<lb/>
from the Jimmy Buffet ranks.<lb/>
The only weak spots here are in<lb/>
"Puzzlin' Evidence and<lb/>
"Wild. Wild Life" (now receiv-<lb/>
ing heavy airplay). But even these<lb/>
songs are relative!) good<lb/>
True Stories mav not become<lb/>
an ail time best seller, but for<lb/>
people of especially<lb/>
discriminating taste, this is the<lb/>
album of the year<lb/>
Next week we'll be looking at<lb/>
The Johnson's debut album.<lb/>
Break Tomorrow 's Day as well as<lb/>
? (drum roll, please) ? The new<lb/>
Boston disk So. see vou there<lb/>
And once again, thanks to<lb/>
WZMB and Dangerous Dave<lb/>
Elliot for all of the continuing<lb/>
support and celestial insight<lb/>
WE WILL MATCH<lb/>
ANY ADVERTISED<lb/>
GROCERY FEATURE<lb/>
PRICE IN GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
Excluding Meat. Produce,<lb/>
Deli, Bakery &amp; Continuity<lb/>
Bonus Items. Bring Current<lb/>
Week Food Store Ad With<lb/>
You. We Will Match<lb/>
Like Items Or Equal<lb/>
Quality.<lb/>
The supermarket with<lb/>
WAICHIMMISi:<lb/>
l?ltM:b<lb/>
WIAiJTY UNI<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGHSAT SEPT 2 AT SAV ?0 ?-  ,?,ts.<lb/>
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QuAN' T f S<lb/>
WjIKKHOIISI<lb/>
I<lb/>
plus<lb/>
Double Coupons<lb/>
See store for details<lb/>
nt<lb/>
Ft<lb/>
roducinq<lb/>
New<lb/>
ff<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
BEEF PORK-LAMB VEAL<lb/>
I<lb/>
f M-sh e ut<lb/>
A&amp;P trimming more from heir beef than ever be'ore and that s good news tot you'<lb/>
Because iear beef is an important source of nutrition for today s health and diet conscious<lb/>
AmrriCdn You see iean beef provides high amounts of nutrients especially protein iron<lb/>
rin( arJ Vitamin B'2 in relation to its calorie content Did you know that a 3 oz (80 g1<lb/>
sfving of sinoin t p has ;us! 168 calories9 So go ahead EnOy lean beet today<lb/>
AiP s THiN TRIM pol cy<lb/>
makes it easy'<lb/>
sameFiavo Better Value<lb/>
THIN TRIM GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
BONELESS TOP<lb/>
GOLDEN RIPE<lb/>
Sirloin Steakl'Jumbo Honeydews<lb/>
ii<lb/>
<lb/>
DUKE'S<lb/>
m m m WW FRESH<lb/>
Mayonnaise pfohoe Frm<lb/>
V' IO<lb/>
0<lb/>
JMlT ONE WITH AN ADD' TIOSAl<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVER? DAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
DOUBLE "Q" ? IN OIL OR WATER<lb/>
Chunk Light Juna<lb/>
CRISP FANCY GOLD OR<lb/>
Delicious AppleS<lb/>
Mfe<lb/>
P&amp;Q<lb/>
V<lb/>
V <lb/>
6.5 oz.<lb/>
can<lb/>
UNIT TWO WITH AM AOOmONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE.<lb/>
iNri<lb/>
bsA<lb/>
?PEI<lb/>
REGULAR OR BUTTER FLAVOR<lb/>
risco Shortening<lb/>
f(risc s3h?? 3 ib. 168<lb/>
I -? ?-?? i ? can <lb/>
tea<lb/>
IT ONE OF YOUR CHOICE AlIH AN ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
HOMESTYLE ? REGULAR<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
:<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERVOAV LOW PRICE<lb/>
Coca Cola<lb/>
99?<lb/>
2 Liter<lb/>
Bottle<lb/>
Good only in Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
CHICKEN ? TURKEY ? SALISBURY STEAK<lb/>
MEAT LOAF ? CHOPPED BEEF<lb/>
Banquet Dinners<lb/>
89<lb/>
11 oz.<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
H&amp;<lb/>
TROPICANA<lb/>
W T'W"?"<lb/>
m ?f?<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
REGULAR ? LIGHT<lb/>
Stroh's Light<lb/>
STRdf)H<lb/>
64 oz.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
ctn. of<lb/>
12 oz.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
BEEF ? TURKEY ? CHICKEN<lb/>
Morton Pot Pies<lb/>
8 02.<lb/>
pkgs.<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY 7 A.M11 BMlK 703 GREENVILLE BLVD. OPEN 24 H0URS<lb/>
Author<lb/>
(UPI) ? Toiling barefoot in ar.<lb/>
enchanting garden of strange<lb/>
shaped cacti helps visionar<lb/>
author Robert Silver berg tied<lb/>
soaring mind back to the plane<lb/>
Earth.<lb/>
"They're truly a science fiction<lb/>
kind of plant said Sirverberg ?f<lb/>
the aUen-hke world of succuki<lb/>
he grows outside his stone and<lb/>
brick home hidden on a pinnacle<lb/>
of the Oakland his just east of<lb/>
San Francisco.<lb/>
At high noon e- da)<lb/>
Silverberg promptly sets aside I<lb/>
task of creating new galaxies I<lb/>
space tales to enter<lb/>
and dig in the din V hell<lb/>
relax and switch off a vivid ai<lb/>
agination. The ' t e<lb/>
who has turned out more thai i<lb/>
books in a 30-yea' carea<lb/>
science fiction writing Pol ? ?<lb/>
rigid daily routine He gel<lb/>
6 a.m eas breakfasi Ph I<lb/>
three ca shuffle- thx <lb/>
mail and sits dow at his n<lb/>
puter in a stone . "age<lb/>
,here he creae- cosmic<lb/>
from 8:30 a.m. until n<lb/>
He doesn it <lb/>
smoke cigarettes i -race<lb/>
once a project - inderwa<lb/>
he never works " eee-<lb/>
"By noon I've rear<lb/>
point where wha<lb/>
longer make- sense tc m<lb/>
said. "1 really work in a head<lb/>
way that wipe1- me<lb/>
happy ' staggei<lb/>
lunch and go<lb/>
start recovering aboui I<lb/>
noon and I try not t<lb/>
my work at all ant th -<lb/>
ning "<lb/>
Presently. Sii-<lb/>
ee.<lb/>
has<lb/>
thole<lb/>
comit<lb/>
to gl<lb/>
? ? -<lb/>
F in<lb/>
Be<lb/>
( i<lb/>
l<lb/>
Anno<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
CRIMINAL JUSTICE<lb/>
!?  ? ?  " - t - s -<lb/>
-an Turnz <lb/>
 - W?3 -??<lb/>
? ?- - - -a ? t ? VS?-<lb/>
??-3?C B OTS '? a?<lb/>
ECU SURFING<lb/>
? ???- ?? a wer head<lb/>
ROUfrtftt -x - ? s  ?-? -<lb/>
- Mi ? ssc Me ? .? -? ??  ?<lb/>
? 1-11 - D:ta- Dly. MS 1 mr ? r? a<lb/>
sc-oc .a"  r - ?   .<lb/>
meeting m?j rtturs a' I - -<lb/>
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-s-? . x ? g t ???- - . ?<lb/>
5 ' s a-r .r? ?- ?? ????  me -?<lb/>
ECU AMBASSADORS<lb/>
a ?:asvac-s Demi targe ?<lb/>
-ec?" ? 'o- nem ?f ?rr? ar ed s?c<lb/>
4 i ?-a meeting "r- ?e?? ?<lb/>
-?e- ?? ec Od a' 5 '5 " "<lb/>
hpurooai room Mt r?<lb/>
PPMA<lb/>
orr??s ana He ' ? enee "? -<lb/>
a eeng  A-r i-r-  -<lb/>
p m- ?e:r-a tMmfttri a'? urge<lb/>
????is a -????? student ere<lb/>
??nt ?p ? gas etc<lb/>
ALPHA EPSILON<lb/>
DELTA<lb/>
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e?? nF X1 at7 a-c Ei va?-<lb/>
?x cee- S? ;? a' p;v- ? r<lb/>
? r so?a?f" Etf.rr ? - ? r -<lb/>
"rt s a meet -? a- s v: - ?<lb/>
S'jo.L c<lb/>
ECU GOSPELCHOIR<lb/>
TheECU&amp;oapc C preeennor ? ega<lb/>
?- - ??a S; SIMM) TiaM<lb/>
pinn we . neeatni a " -?? <lb/>
33C r' :? fe i ?er aa-<lb/>
EARLY CHILDHOOD<lb/>
EDUCATION CLUB<lb/>
EC2 ??&amp;'? a? . x ? ?<lb/>
? ? ? , p?w ?r us tar a meei t ?<lb/>
WC' Taw a- 4 K n StW gW Mi<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
S?xy-v'c r. Car ! HMM<lb/>
 se 'ts)er' ?? . m MHn itJ 3C c<lb/>
- ?'??' rmmm 's 6 TMrae -revx?<lb/>
"jve hffi -e m.s- r a- IIM P<lb/>
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MARAUDERS<lb/>
A" or cetx. ar.? ?; x:<lb/>
-ere??ecsruoers c a"ec 5S<lb/>
Oc' l a 5 - raean  s??x?ea<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
a nt 1 ? ?? M ? J 'urn ' v"<lb/>
Sec' 33 -(???'?? D i-l ?Aebe-?a'?<lb/>
ecovege M " ??? a"c a<lb/>
'ere?teo ?yoe"i a' m 're -c ae-c<lb/>
p eaie rfmebe- na' Owe ?rt M kaMJ<lb/>
codecteo Let u? ? ja<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
A'e iou piai? ar 'am "? GBE<lb/>
-SAT ma ?EDC ? s1' 'a-oa-3 :<lb/>
?o MM Th.? worksnor ???" oa?<lb/>
?ormat,or ateu "?e?e e??  ?. -<lb/>
,raeg? and ?mo'e NM Sec' ? eSp"<lb/>
31 Wrignt Blag mow o 90 ?re or ??? G?E<lb/>
' yow arepiann ngor 'a? "?eGBE tar ao<lb/>
"liiaion to Grao Sci?Oi "?.? or?r?oc ca-<lb/>
e you prepare f ype? at e-? 'W M "<lb/>
rrtegv. icvn ao M?MJB1 ? ?<lb/>
O'lcueaeo Sec 3D ?!f ntHP '?B<lb/>
B)gjl gfjn aii I? ????J? -  r- W- m?mmmWr-? ???-? HH lUl ?? l<lb/>
????<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057849_0010"/><lb/>
s Reviewed<lb/>
in the<lb/>
"Papa<lb/>
Head<lb/>
of the<lb/>
to re-<lb/>
it ame<lb/>
vith its<lb/>
thms<lb/>
tw fans<lb/>
Irks<lb/>
are in<lb/>
and<lb/>
ireceiv<lb/>
songs are relatively good.<lb/>
True Stories mav not become<lb/>
an all time be-a-seller, but for<lb/>
people of especially<lb/>
discriminating taste, this is the<lb/>
album of the ear.<lb/>
Next week we'll be looking at<lb/>
I he Johnson's debut album,<lb/>
Hreak Tomorrow 's Day as well as<lb/>
(drum roll, please) ? The new<lb/>
Boston disk So, see ou there.<lb/>
nd once again, thanks to<lb/>
WZMR and Dangerous Dave<lb/>
Elliot: for all of the continuing<lb/>
support and celestial insight.<lb/>
VAI'KHIMIKi:<lb/>
(t'ltN&amp;W<lb/>
WUJJI1 TOO<lb/>
s ? - S  ; S.<lb/>
bfe Coupons<lb/>
?ee store for details<lb/>
FOLICY<lb/>
IK .AMB VEAL<lb/>
Better Value<lb/>
GOLDEN RIPE<lb/>
,<lb/>
III<lb/>
ICRISP FANCY GOLD OR<lb/>
IUS<lb/>
3<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
129<lb/>
r ?<lb/>
LUNCHEON MEAT<lb/>
12 02.<lb/>
KUl<lb/>
UMT ONE WITH AM AOOmOMAL<lb/>
ULi jj  T 1Mv:<lb/>
EN ? TURKEY ? SALISBURY STEAK<lb/>
AEAT LOAF ? CHOPPED BEEF<lb/>
mquet Dinners<lb/>
89c<lb/>
11 oz.<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
BEEF-TURKEY. CHICKEN<lb/>
irton Pot Pies<lb/>
8 oz.<lb/>
pkgs.<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
;<lb/>
??-? ? ? 1<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
J<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 23. 1986<lb/>
(UPI) ? Toiling barefoot in an<lb/>
enchanting garden of strange<lb/>
shaped cacti helps visionary<lb/>
author Robert Silverberg steer his<lb/>
soaring mind back to the planet<lb/>
Earth.<lb/>
"They're truly a science fiction<lb/>
kind of plant said Silverberg of<lb/>
the alien-like world of succulents<lb/>
he grows outside his stone and<lb/>
brick home hidden on a pinnacle<lb/>
o( the Oakland hills just east of<lb/>
San Francisco.<lb/>
At high noon each day,<lb/>
Silverberg promptly sets aside his<lb/>
task of creating new galaxies and<lb/>
space tales to enter the garden<lb/>
and dig in the dirt. It helps him<lb/>
relax and switch off a vivid im-<lb/>
agination. The top selling author<lb/>
n ho has turned out more than 40<lb/>
books in a 30-year career of<lb/>
science fiction writing follows a<lb/>
rigid daily routine. He gets up at<lb/>
6 a.m cats breakfast, feeds his<lb/>
three cats, shuffles through the<lb/>
nail and sits down at his com-<lb/>
puter in a stone guest cottage<lb/>
vhere he creates cosmic chaos<lb/>
from 8:30 a.m. until noon.<lb/>
He doesn't drink coffee,<lb/>
Ntnoke cigarettes or space out<lb/>
once a project is underway. And<lb/>
he never works on weekends.<lb/>
"By noon I've reached the<lb/>
point where what I'm writing no<lb/>
longer makes sense to me he<lb/>
said. "I really work in a headlong<lb/>
way that wipes me out. So I'm<lb/>
happy to stagger out, get some<lb/>
lunch and go into the garden. I<lb/>
start recovering about mid after-<lb/>
noon and I try not to think about<lb/>
my work at all until the next mor-<lb/>
ning<lb/>
Presently, Silverberg is bet-<lb/>
ween science fiction novels. He<lb/>
has been editing a sci-fi an-<lb/>
thology in which he analyzes and<lb/>
comments on the selected stories<lb/>
to give readers a sense of the<lb/>
mechanics that go into writing<lb/>
for this genre. His latest novel,<lb/>
Star Of Gypsies, (Donald I.<lb/>
Fine, $18.95) was just released<lb/>
and he'll begin work on a new<lb/>
futuristic book as soon as Nor-<lb/>
thern California's rainy season<lb/>
begins.<lb/>
Born in New York City in 1935<lb/>
and educated at Columbia<lb/>
University, Silverberg published<lb/>
his first novel, Revolt on Alpha<lb/>
C, at age 20 and it became a<lb/>
Teenage Book Club selection. A<lb/>
prolific writer, he has since won<lb/>
two Hugo Awards and four<lb/>
Nebula Awards, and has served<lb/>
as president of the Science Fic-<lb/>
tion Writers of America.<lb/>
Silverberg says it takes profes-<lb/>
sionalism rather than a magic<lb/>
wand to consistently create good<lb/>
science fiction and fantasy<lb/>
novels. He produces about one<lb/>
novel a year, and he has also pen-<lb/>
ned scores of short stories and<lb/>
more than a dozen non-fiction<lb/>
books in the fields of history,<lb/>
science and archeology.<lb/>
"I don't write for dimwit<lb/>
readers said Silverberg. "I<lb/>
have enough of an adult science<lb/>
fiction audience to sustain me. I<lb/>
don't have to write ray-gun<lb/>
blasting nonsense.<lb/>
"The best science fiction is<lb/>
deeply moving and powerful and<lb/>
is mostly middle of the road<lb/>
fun<lb/>
Silverberg said most of his<lb/>
ideas arrive internally and sub-<lb/>
Of<lb/>
consciously as a "little subliminal<lb/>
twitch which he either accepts<lb/>
or rejects.<lb/>
"The beginning's usually very<lb/>
small, a little dust nucleus around<lb/>
which a snowflake will form, a<lb/>
fleck of something in my mind,<lb/>
often a title he said. "A tide<lb/>
will come to me and obviously<lb/>
something is attached to it in my<lb/>
subconscious and I will think,<lb/>
'What kind of story will fit a title<lb/>
like that?' It's not a conscious<lb/>
question because in the process,<lb/>
suddenly the story follows<lb/>
In Star of Gypsies, Silverberg<lb/>
creates an epic and complex story<lb/>
in which vagabond gypsies<lb/>
descended from a dead Earth<lb/>
roam the galaxies of the future<lb/>
seeking their true identity and<lb/>
home ? a place called Romany<lb/>
Star.<lb/>
"I write the situation down<lb/>
and then follow a process of<lb/>
manipulating it said Silverberg.<lb/>
In Gypsies, the situation started<lb/>
as gypsies from Earth going into<lb/>
space and wandering from planet<lb/>
to planet the way they wander on<lb/>
Earth.<lb/>
"That idea rapidly led me to,<lb/>
'Suppose gypsies came from<lb/>
space to begin with?' And next,<lb/>
whose story are we telling? What<lb/>
happens to them? What are the<lb/>
obstacles that need to be over-<lb/>
come and so on. That's how it<lb/>
happens. It's largely an un-<lb/>
conscious process that occurs<lb/>
over and over<lb/>
Within the plot, Silverberg in-<lb/>
vents a new form of space travel<lb/>
called relay sweep and shows<lb/>
readers such scenes as green ten-<lb/>
tacles wriggling above an icepack<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
CRIMINAL JUSTICE<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the NASW ana<lb/>
CORSO 00 Tues . Sept 23 at 5 15 p m ,n<lb/>
upstairs looby of MenrjenhaM All Social<lb/>
Work and Criminal Justice maiors ana m<lb/>
'endea maiors are asked to attend<lb/>
ECO SURFING<lb/>
team tri8is were tieie last Sunday at<lb/>
tne You can still surf on the team if<lb/>
ssec the fry outs The first contest is<lb/>
? n Ocean City, Md There MM be a<lb/>
van gomg on this trip There is a dub<lb/>
ig this Trur5 at in room B 104.<lb/>
Lbrary Bring all insurance info, to<lb/>
you eiig.b'iity on the team Guys and<lb/>
r? welcome to the meeting and any<lb/>
"ers are urged to attend<lb/>
ECU WINDSURFING<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Windsurfing Club is now being<lb/>
formed There will be an organizational<lb/>
meeting for anyone interested in windsurf<lb/>
? ng in Mendenhall 247 on Wed . Sept 24th at<lb/>
? Trips, instruction and FUN IN THE SUN!<lb/>
Beginners welcome<lb/>
POLITICAL SCIENCE<lb/>
TheDept of Pol Science needs work study<lb/>
students for clerical positions Please appiy<lb/>
in the Political Science Office Brewster<lb/>
A 124 or inquire at 757-4030<lb/>
The<lb/>
Rjioan<lb/>
Ou m<lb/>
Oct II<lb/>
SCtlOOi<lb/>
Tiff' n<lb/>
JOyner<lb/>
nsure<lb/>
3'r's a<lb/>
"ewcc<lb/>
ECU AMBASSADORS<lb/>
Aoassadors! Don't forget about the<lb/>
-ecept.on for new members on Wed Sept<lb/>
24Hl A general meeting for mew and old<lb/>
emoers will be Wed , Oct 1 at 5 15 m the<lb/>
multipurpose room of Mendenhall<lb/>
ECU VETERANS<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
Will meet on Tues .Sept 30 at 7 30 p m ,n<lb/>
room 212. Mendenhall The mam topics will<lb/>
be nommahons of officers, discussion of the<lb/>
Veterans Day 10K race and parade, and the<lb/>
club's Tailgate Party at the next home game<lb/>
against Southwestern Louisiana on Oct 4<lb/>
Come and share your idaat and give us you<lb/>
support involvement is the key to this year's<lb/>
success! All students, faculty, and staff are<lb/>
mvited to attend. See you there!<lb/>
ECU FACULTY AND<lb/>
STAFF CLUB<lb/>
Applications for the ECU Faculty erw<lb/>
Staff Club are available by calling ext 4454<lb/>
Apply before the next activity on October<lb/>
11th to take full advantage yMr(y<lb/>
dues<lb/>
Riggan Sho Repair<lb/>
111 West 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
"Shoe Repjir Ai rhe I en Best<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
PPMA<lb/>
Pre professional Health Alliance will have<lb/>
a meeting on Wed . Sept 24th ,n room 247 at 7<lb/>
in Mendenhall Members are urged to<lb/>
'teno Also any interested students are<lb/>
eicome to come to the meeting as well.<lb/>
ALPHA EPSILON<lb/>
DELTA<lb/>
Attention members There will be a<lb/>
-eetmg ,n F 307 at 7 and Estel Mason, dlrec<lb/>
tor of Volunteer Services at PCMH, will be<lb/>
rht speaker Everyone welcome. Officers<lb/>
'here will be a meeting at a 30 in Flanagen<lb/>
Study Lounge<lb/>
5TH STREET IMPORT<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
MOVES<lb/>
ECUGOSPELCHOIR<lb/>
The ECU Gospel Choir presents once again<lb/>
their annual Song Show Tues Sept 23. 7<lb/>
P m m Hendrix Theatre Admission is SI and<lb/>
door pr.zes will be given away<lb/>
EARLY CHILDHOOD<lb/>
EDUCATION CLUB<lb/>
EC2 members want you to be a part of our<lb/>
family. Please iom us for a meeting on Wed .<lb/>
sept 24th at 4 30 in Speight 30i<lb/>
?Finest in Foreign Car Repair<lb/>
?We repair Toyota, Honda, VW, Fiat, Porsche<lb/>
Volvo, Datsun, Lotus, Mercedes, BMW, Audi'<lb/>
bubaru and others<lb/>
?New Location! Dickinson &amp; Memorial - across<lb/>
from Lincoln Mercury Dealership.<lb/>
4500 sq.ft.<lb/>
2204 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
756-9434<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
Sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ<lb/>
e get together every Thursday at 7 30 p m<lb/>
'? Brewster. room 103 B Three reasons: to<lb/>
"ave fun, fellowship, and good Bible<lb/>
'each.ngs see you there<lb/>
MARAUDERS<lb/>
An on campus adventure group invites all<lb/>
"terested students to attend its first meeting<lb/>
Oct 1 at 5 in room 221 Mendenhall.<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Win hold its second meeting Tues. night,<lb/>
Sept 23 in Brewster D 113 at I. Members ere<lb/>
encourage to bring a friend, and all m<lb/>
'erested students are invited to attend<lb/>
Pease remember that dues ft still being<lb/>
collected. Let us litigate)<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
Are you planning on taking the GRE<lb/>
i-SAT, MAT, MEDCAT or Other stendardiz<lb/>
eo tests? This workshop will cover basic In-<lb/>
formation about these tests, ta?t taking<lb/>
strategy and sample items. Sept 29. 4-S p.m.<lb/>
5'J Wright Bldg Mow to do well on the GRE!<lb/>
H you are planning on taking me GRE for ad-<lb/>
mission to Gred School, this workshop can<lb/>
n?P ou prepare Types of items, teat taking<lb/>
strategy, scores, and sample items will be<lb/>
aicussed Sept. 30. 4-5 p.m JU Wright Bldg<lb/>
HELP WANTED:<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now hiring<lb/>
typesetters to work mornings and<lb/>
afternoons. Typing speed of 40 wpm and<lb/>
faster preferred. Call 757-6366 or stop by<lb/>
the Publications Building.<lb/>
that turn out to be the tops of<lb/>
trees living in a frozen, buried<lb/>
forest.<lb/>
The decision to make the wav-<lb/>
ing tentacles a plant instead of an<lb/>
animal was a twist of imagery,<lb/>
said Silverberg, and it creates a<lb/>
surprise for the reader. The relay-<lb/>
sweep, in which a sphere of force<lb/>
picks up space travellers and fl-<lb/>
ings them haphazardly through<lb/>
galaxies, was just subconscious<lb/>
improvisation, he added.<lb/>
BLOOM COUNTY<lb/>
"I don't think anything like<lb/>
that relay system has ever been<lb/>
used in science fiction and I<lb/>
didn't spend two minutes inven-<lb/>
ting it he said. "It was just<lb/>
there when I needed it<lb/>
Silverberg said his background<lb/>
in history and archeology gives<lb/>
him some down to earth perspec-<lb/>
tive on other worlds and events<lb/>
which, of course, must be highly-<lb/>
imaginative and exciting.<lb/>
"I think the one thing that's<lb/>
say, rWrooY-Poes<lb/>
the vwflifry (f<lb/>
hwt.nl, ktti<lb/>
nWTEKS t'JlR<lb/>
mruRB ycxv ?<lb/>
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THAT WITHOUT i5 W 'All?<lb/>
HVNTEfiS UOULP OHUlttP I:?-?<lb/>
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MQlhiK SfMteWOK P<lb/>
TOASTER i<lb/>
very important for science fiction<lb/>
books to do, besides the complex-<lb/>
ities of plot and the interesting<lb/>
aspects of character and all that<lb/>
standard fiction stuff, is to toss<lb/>
the reader something astounding<lb/>
every once in awhile. In fact,<lb/>
more than every once in awhile.<lb/>
"A novelist is God said<lb/>
Silverberg. "I've created galax-<lb/>
ies, made up planets and invented<lb/>
whole new worlds. But it's all in<lb/>
the name of entertainment<lb/>
by Berke Breathed<lb/>
; uoa ?? tne urn<lb/>
Of 1L H .7 TH : -<lb/>
mm '?? ?. - y&amp;K<lb/>
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Optometrist<lb/>
Professional Eye Care For Your Family<lb/>
COMPLETE EYE<lb/>
EXAMINATIONS &amp;<lb/>
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SAME DAY DISPENSING OF CONTACT LENSES IN MOST CASES<lb/>
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TUESDAY 8 AM - 7 PM<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057849_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 23, 1986<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
An uninspired ECU football<lb/>
team ran into an explosive 10th-<lb/>
ranked Auburn squad, and the<lb/>
result was a 45-0 loss for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
ECU fell behind early in the<lb/>
contest, giving up 21 points in the<lb/>
opening quarter and trailed 31-0<lb/>
at the half.<lb/>
The tone for the contest was set<lb/>
on Auburn's first possession, as<lb/>
the Tigers took the opening<lb/>
kickoff and promptly marched 73<lb/>
yards in 10 plays. Reggie Ware<lb/>
covered the final yard with a dive<lb/>
"The close loss ECU had last<lb/>
week obviously took a lot out of<lb/>
them Dye commented. "I still<lb/>
think ECU has some fine football<lb/>
players and a fine football<lb/>
team<lb/>
However, Baker refused to<lb/>
blame his team's poor showing<lb/>
on the West Virginia game.<lb/>
Last week, we lost a big game<lb/>
to West Virginia but that's no ex-<lb/>
cuse for today's performance<lb/>
Baker said. "We played terribly<lb/>
on offense and on defense, and<lb/>
our kicking game was the most<lb/>
atrocious that I can ever<lb/>
remember it being<lb/>
Quarterback Libretto had his<lb/>
over the top of the line putting first freshman-like outing for the<lb/>
JON JORDAN- KC'J PHOTO LAB<lb/>
Airborne!<lb/>
Cornerback Roswell Streeter flys through the air in an attempt to<lb/>
block a point after touchdown attempt.<lb/>
Cross Country Teams<lb/>
Make Good Showings<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
vmnri, Writer<lb/>
The ECU men's and women's<lb/>
cross-country teams once again<lb/>
had respectable showings this<lb/>
weekend in the Seahawk Invita-<lb/>
tional at Wilmington.<lb/>
In the men's event the Pirates<lb/>
placed in the seventh position in<lb/>
the 10-team field.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary took first<lb/>
place in the event followed by St.<lb/>
Augustines. Baptist College<lb/>
managed to place third, with<lb/>
Pembroke College grabbing<lb/>
fourth and Christopher Newport<lb/>
in fifth.<lb/>
The leading runner for the<lb/>
men's team was Milton Matheny,<lb/>
who placed in the 23rd position<lb/>
overall with a time of 26:42 on<lb/>
the 8,000-meter course.<lb/>
Rob Rice was next for the Bucs<lb/>
with a time of 27:19, which put<lb/>
him in 30th place. Third for the<lb/>
Pirates was Mike McGehee, who<lb/>
grabbed the 31st position with a<lb/>
time of 27:23.<lb/>
Other runners whose scores<lb/>
counted for ECU included Pete<lb/>
Higgins, who finished in 46th<lb/>
place overall with a time of 28:25,<lb/>
and John Byrd, who placed in<lb/>
47th place with a 28:27 time.<lb/>
The Pirates had two other run-<lb/>
ners whose score did not count.<lb/>
They were Matt Schweitzer (49th<lb/>
place with time of 28:58) and<lb/>
Vincent Wilson (60th place with<lb/>
time of 31:42).<lb/>
The women's cross-country<lb/>
team finished third overall in<lb/>
their competition out of a field of<lb/>
eight teams.<lb/>
St. Augustines won the event<lb/>
followed by UNC-Wilmington,<lb/>
who nosed the Pirates out for the<lb/>
second spot.<lb/>
Baptist College finished<lb/>
fourth, with the fifth spot taken<lb/>
by Coastal Carolina College.<lb/>
The top finisher for ECU was<lb/>
once again Annette Burton, who<lb/>
for the second-straight week<lb/>
finished in the second spot<lb/>
overall, with a time of 20:22 over<lb/>
the 5,000-meter course.<lb/>
Kim Griffith was next for ECU<lb/>
with a time of 22:09, which put<lb/>
her in seventh place. She was<lb/>
Sheri Swick, who took the 31st<lb/>
position with a clocking of 26:28.<lb/>
Lucretia West also ran for the<lb/>
women's team and placed in 39th<lb/>
position with a time of 30:10. Her<lb/>
score however did not count since<lb/>
only the top-five runners count in<lb/>
cross-country events.<lb/>
Assistant coach Steve Thomas<lb/>
credited the Pirates with another<lb/>
good performance.<lb/>
"I was once again impressed<lb/>
with the performance this<lb/>
weekend, especially Annette's<lb/>
(Burton). Milton (Matheny) and<lb/>
Rob (Rice) also had outstanding<lb/>
races said Thomas. "The<lb/>
men's team has been hurt some<lb/>
with injuries, but the times still<lb/>
were not that bad<lb/>
Thomas went on to say that the<lb/>
Pirate runners were making<lb/>
noticeable improvements in their<lb/>
running.<lb/>
"We're getting there, we're not<lb/>
exactly where I wanted to be at<lb/>
this time but we are still improv-<lb/>
ing stated Thomas.<lb/>
Auburn up 7-0<lb/>
Then, on ECU's second snap<lb/>
from scrimmage, Shan Morris in-<lb/>
tercepted a Charlie Libretto pass<lb/>
at the Pirate 34.<lb/>
Auburn went the distance in<lb/>
five plays, scoring on a one-yard<lb/>
touchdown run by Tim Jessie to<lb/>
go ahead 14-0.<lb/>
The game was never close from<lb/>
that point, as the Pirate offense,<lb/>
playing without starting guards<lb/>
Greg Thomas and Rich Autry,<lb/>
was never able to generate any<lb/>
scoring threats.<lb/>
Pirate coach Art Baker was<lb/>
disappointed in his team's play ?<lb/>
especially their lack of intensity.<lb/>
"Our first mistake was getting<lb/>
off the bus Baker said. "I can't<lb/>
explain our team's attitude. We<lb/>
went on the field slow, came off<lb/>
the field slow and looked like we<lb/>
were in slow motion on the field.<lb/>
There was just no spring or<lb/>
bounce in our team this week<lb/>
While the Pirates came out<lb/>
flat. Auburn came out smoking.<lb/>
The Tigers, using a well-balanced<lb/>
offensive attack, netted 17 first-<lb/>
downs in the first half alone,<lb/>
gaining 189 yards passing and 163<lb/>
yards rushing in the opening two<lb/>
quarters of play.<lb/>
"Our first half was the best I<lb/>
can remember since against<lb/>
Georgia Tech in 1984 Auburn<lb/>
coach Pat Dye said. "I really<lb/>
think we played well. If we<lb/>
didn't, there is no way the score<lb/>
could have been like it was<lb/>
Dye felt that that ECU was still<lb/>
suffering from the close loss the<lb/>
Pirates suffered a week ago to<lb/>
West Virginia.<lb/>
Bucs, hitting on only three of 12<lb/>
passes with one interception.<lb/>
Both Baker and Dye attributed<lb/>
his performance to the extra week<lb/>
Auburn had to prepare for the<lb/>
Pirates' run and shoot offensive<lb/>
attack.<lb/>
"The fact that they had two<lb/>
weeks to prepare for us helped<lb/>
them a great deal Baker said.<lb/>
"Charlie (Libretto) was very inef-<lb/>
fective today. They completely<lb/>
shut our passing game down<lb/>
"We completely disrupted his<lb/>
(Libretto's) concentration Dye<lb/>
said. "He is a young quarterback<lb/>
and our defensive coaches came<lb/>
up with a lot of schemes and dis-<lb/>
quised them well to create pro-<lb/>
blems for them<lb/>
Among the few bright spots for<lb/>
the Pirates was the running of<lb/>
Jarrod Moody, who gained 65<lb/>
yards on eight carries and the<lb/>
kickoff returning of Walter<lb/>
Wilson and Reggie McKinney.<lb/>
Wilson gained 91 yards on four<lb/>
returns while McKinney had 68<lb/>
yards on just two.<lb/>
While ECU head man Baker<lb/>
was obviously down after the<lb/>
tough loss, Auburn coach Dye<lb/>
hardly seemed like a man who's<lb/>
team had won 45-0.<lb/>
"There's no doubt I still have<lb/>
strong feelings for ECU Dye<lb/>
said. "When the score got out of<lb/>
hand I had mixed emotions. I<lb/>
wanted our young players to do<lb/>
well, but at the same time I cer-<lb/>
tainly didn't want to put any<lb/>
more points on the scoreboard<lb/>
and embarrass them. They ob-<lb/>
viously are a much better football<lb/>
team than they showed today<lb/>
Kickoff Return<lb/>
ESl ZZZZZ' Wi,5?n '80're,urni'kkk? ?<lb/>
Soccer Team Sweeps<lb/>
In Wesleyan Tourney<lb/>
B TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
4Bi?Ual Hporu fcdllac<lb/>
The ECU soccer team had a<lb/>
very succesful weekend as it pick-<lb/>
ed up a pair of wins in the North<lb/>
Carolina Wesleyan Tournament.<lb/>
The Pirates picked up the first<lb/>
of the two wins on Saturday with<lb/>
a hard fought 1-0 decision over<lb/>
Washington &amp; Lee.<lb/>
Sophomore midfielder Robert<lb/>
Larrison scored the winning goal<lb/>
for the Bucs on an assist from<lb/>
senior Jamie Reibel.<lb/>
The Pirate defense held strong<lb/>
throughout the game allowing<lb/>
only 12 shots at the goal b<lb/>
Washington &amp; Lee.<lb/>
In Sunday's contest, ECU used<lb/>
a high-powered offensive attack<lb/>
to defeat Shenandoah 4-1.<lb/>
The Pirate defense once again<lb/>
had an outstanding game as it<lb/>
allowed Shenandoah only five<lb/>
shots at the goal.<lb/>
Reibel got the scoring under-<lb/>
way for the Pirates with a goal on<lb/>
an assist by Larrison to give EC I<lb/>
a 1-0 lead.<lb/>
The Bucs increased their lead<lb/>
to 2-0 when freshman midfielder<lb/>
Roy Andersch scored a goal.<lb/>
Andersch received an assist from<lb/>
treshman Jeff Corson.<lb/>
After Shenandoah had closed<lb/>
the gap to 2-1. Corson retaliated<lb/>
for the Bucs as he knocked in a<lb/>
goal off an assist from Andersch<lb/>
to boost the lead to 3-1.<lb/>
Corson added the final goal of<lb/>
the game for ECU on a penalty-<lb/>
kick late in the match.<lb/>
The two wins over the weekend<lb/>
lifts the Pirates season mark to<lb/>
4-3-1.<lb/>
The next action for the soccer<lb/>
team will come on Sept. 2" as<lb/>
they will host American Universi-<lb/>
ty on the ECU Soccer Field at 2<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
American should prove to be a<lb/>
stiff test for the Pirates as they<lb/>
finished the season last year as<lb/>
the runner-up in the NCAA<lb/>
Division-I soccer tournament.<lb/>
 ' vu.joguaiui, LJivision-i soccer tournament<lb/>
New Irate Disc-Golf Course<lb/>
followed by Stephanie Ingram, Irate team member Bob DeMan r't01<lb/>
who finished in the 11th position four fifth hole on thTtri!L courT. d,ffiCUlt P"r<lb/>
with a time of 22:29.<lb/>
Other scores which counted for<lb/>
the women's team included Jill<lb/>
Gorenflo, who finished in 20th<lb/>
place with a time of 23:29, and<lb/>
Men<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
OMfc?Mtof<lb/>
A frisbee-golf course in Green-<lb/>
ville?<lb/>
Well, it is Finally becoming<lb/>
reality as ECU's Irates have<lb/>
recently constructed a new nine-<lb/>
hole course off of Charles<lb/>
Boulevard, between the women's<lb/>
softball field, Harrington Field<lb/>
and Bunting Track. It's called the<lb/>
Irate Disc-Golf Course.<lb/>
Although the Irates were the<lb/>
sole creator of the course, the<lb/>
SGA (Student Government<lb/>
Association) and the IRS<lb/>
(Intramural-Recreational Ser-<lb/>
vices) supplied the funding for<lb/>
the equipment needed. The Irates<lb/>
provided the muscle and sweat to<lb/>
actually create the course.<lb/>
The cost of the course was<lb/>
$1,700. The SGA put up $1,250<lb/>
as the IRS added the $450 to<lb/>
complete the course. IRS coor-<lb/>
dinator of Club Sports, Pat Cox,<lb/>
overlooked the entire process of<lb/>
fund raising, information and the<lb/>
use of land.<lb/>
The Irate Disc-Golf Course<lb/>
idea began back in the fall of<lb/>
1985 by the ECU Frisbee Club.<lb/>
The Irates then sent away for<lb/>
literature from the Tri-State Disc<lb/>
Golf Association. Bob DeMan,<lb/>
Randy Allen and John Brady and<lb/>
the Irates then planned the outlay<lb/>
ELLIN MUBFMY - TMt 1AST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
and here's how it ends up.<lb/>
of the course. Director of IRS,<lb/>
Steve Cohen, said he was 100 per-<lb/>
cent behind the golf course idea<lb/>
? and hopes to plan IRS ac-<lb/>
tivities (possibly a frisbee-golf<lb/>
tournament in the spring of '87).<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
Tues. Sept. 23,1908<lb/>
By failing to touch second<lb/>
base, Fred Merkle costs the<lb/>
Giants the pennant. Merkle is<lb/>
on base when Al Bridwell hits<lb/>
what appears to be a game-<lb/>
winning single against the<lb/>
Cubs. As the winning run<lb/>
scores, Merkle returns to the<lb/>
dugout without touching se-<lb/>
cond. Johnny Evers alertly tags<lb/>
second base, and umpire Hank<lb/>
O'Day calls the force-out,<lb/>
which wipes out the run. The<lb/>
Giants filed a protest, and the<lb/>
entire game is replayed two<lb/>
weeks later with the Cubs winn<lb/>
ing the game and the pennant<lb/>
By DON RUTLEDGE<lb/>
Sparta Writer<lb/>
It was a good day for the ECU<lb/>
Tennis program last Wednesday,<lb/>
as the men and women both<lb/>
scored impressive victories. The<lb/>
men, playing at Campbell in their<lb/>
first-dual match of the season,<lb/>
won 7-2, the only losses being<lb/>
close 3-set contests.<lb/>
All but one of ECU's wins<lb/>
were in straight sets. Coach Sher-<lb/>
man was particularly pleased<lb/>
with the play of the doubles<lb/>
teams. "Previously our singles<lb/>
play had been much stronger<lb/>
than our doubles Sherman<lb/>
said, "and at the Campbell<lb/>
match our doubles play was very<lb/>
strong<lb/>
The women were at home on<lb/>
the Minges courts Wednesday<lb/>
taking on UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
  Luuiiwuiicm in iac spring or oj<lb/>
Camels; Women Dog 'Hawks<lb/>
ECU had nnlv rn? l.cat m?i. .  . "<lb/>
ECU had only one 3-set match as<lb/>
they rolled the Seahawks 9-0 for<lb/>
their second win of the year<lb/>
against no losses.<lb/>
"We've been working a lot on<lb/>
serves and returns, and they<lb/>
(ECU women) placed their serves<lb/>
well and forced their returns, get-<lb/>
ting on offense early in every po-<lb/>
ing said a happy Coach Sher-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Summing up Wednesday's ac-<lb/>
tion, the coach said, "Both the<lb/>
men and the women served really<lb/>
son, the nation's top-ranked<lb/>
NAIA tennis team two years ago,<lb/>
were too strong as they handed<lb/>
the women their first loss of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Playing on clay there, the<lb/>
breaker, and a five-and-a-half-<lb/>
hour long one at that.<lb/>
"It was a great comeback by<lb/>
Susan (Montjoy) and that was<lb/>
about all the coach could muster<lb/>
:rz:r'Ti ?????k<lb/>
but came back to take two<lb/>
doubles contests and lose the<lb/>
third in 3-sets. Although it was a<lb/>
tough loss, coach Sherman was<lb/>
"super, super pleased with our<lb/>
playing. Davidson's coach said<lb/>
that was the best any ECU<lb/>
zc ?" asr pos,t,on 2"added ? he sh?-<lb/>
Sunday's match at UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte was a repeat of Satur-<lb/>
early in each point.<lb/>
While the men's team had the<lb/>
weekend off, the women travell-<lb/>
ed to Davidson College and<lb/>
UNC-Charlotte for what turned<lb/>
out to be a grueling nine-and-a-<lb/>
half hours on the courts. David-<lb/>
adding, "Susan had about nine-<lb/>
and-a-half hours on the court in<lb/>
two days<lb/>
Wednesday is the men's first<lb/>
home match. They'll take on<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington to make it 2-0<lb/>
for the season. Then on Friday,<lb/>
both teams will travel, the women<lb/>
Although the frisbee club now<lb/>
has a nine-hole course, DeMan<lb/>
feels nine more wouldn't be a<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
"We're hoping the Student<lb/>
Government (Association) can be<lb/>
as generous as last time, because<lb/>
nine more holes is twice as nice<lb/>
DeMan said. "It's a student golf<lb/>
course and we're planning stu-<lb/>
dent activities for intramurals.<lb/>
"Raleigh has three courses.<lb/>
New Bern has one, Jacksonville<lb/>
has one, Winston Salem has one,<lb/>
Durham has one DeMan<lb/>
continued, "and Greenville<lb/>
should have one. Those (other)<lb/>
places are great ? thev have<lb/>
tournaments all the time.<lb/>
Hopefully Greenville will have an<lb/>
18-hole tournament one day<lb/>
Goldsboro native Perry Smith,<lb/>
who recently ranked 81st in the<lb/>
world in a Huntsville, Ala tour-<lb/>
nament, praised the newly-<lb/>
constructed frisbee-disc course.<lb/>
According to DeMan, Smith felt<lb/>
that "the course was one of the<lb/>
best he had played on and that it<lb/>
was one of the more competitive<lb/>
courses around<lb/>
Another individual w ho played<lb/>
a big role in the development of<lb/>
the frisbee-golf course is Crl<lb/>
Hartsfield. Hartsfield, advisor to<lb/>
the frisbee club and an ECU<lb/>
employee, has been instrumental<lb/>
to the club, according to DeMan.<lb/>
"He's not just an advisor, he's<lb/>
a good friend to the team<lb/>
DeMan explained. "He plays<lb/>
with us on occassion. He's a nice<lb/>
guy and gets behind us and sup-<lb/>
ports us.<lb/>
"He's our advisor and helps us<lb/>
with a lot of situations between<lb/>
the frisbee club and the IRS<lb/>
DeMan added. "He can make<lb/>
those guys bend a little and make<lb/>
us betid a little to make us meet<lb/>
? he's a good communicator<lb/>
With the hard work of the<lb/>
day score-wise, but the ECU<lb/>
women were in a position to win<lb/>
this one as three of their losses<lb/>
came in 3-sets. It was a heart-<lb/>
going to Meredith College for the ECU frisbee dub anth ?f 5l<lb/>
East? Collegiate motional, pleanuthf ID<lb/>
?or thAm? ?0ItoRichmond Golf Course Unow a reyltl;<lb/>
for the Richmond Invitational. open every day and ?iTsTdentT<lb/>
See PIRATE . .? 11 Sft "? SUff w ?? ?<lb/>
!ee riKATfc page 12 their hand at the new course.<lb/>
Intra<lb/>
What's Comil<lb/>
Volleyball Ai<lb/>
Do the terms spike, net, hits, foe<lb/>
fault, and serve mean anything I<lb/>
you? Does the sport of vollevbal<lb/>
come to mind? It should! The n<lb/>
tramural sports program is gear<lb/>
ing up for an exciting voUeybaJ<lb/>
season. Get a team together an<lb/>
participate. Registration for tl<lb/>
"in bounds" activitv is Mon<lb/>
Oct.6, in Merorial Gym roon<lb/>
105-C from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m A<lb/>
team captains meeting is sche<lb/>
ed on Tues. Oct. 7, in Brew<lb/>
C-103 at 5:30 p.m. Some re-<lb/>
ing division champions who wi<lb/>
be trying to defend their title are<lb/>
men's independent, Lack) Seven<lb/>
fraternity A Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
fraternity 'B Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
mens residence hall, 307 spikes<lb/>
womens independent. The Good<lb/>
Bad and Ugh; sorority, Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma; women's reside<lb/>
hall, The Gumbys. It's sure t<lb/>
an exciting season.<lb/>
Anyone interested in officia <lb/>
volleyball should attend the I<lb/>
clinic which is scheduled or.<lb/>
Mon Oct. 6, in Memorial Gvm<lb/>
room 102 at 9 p.m Any ques<lb/>
tions, contact Patty Conn<lb/>
sport manager, at 757-6381<lb/>
stop by Memorial Gym 104-A<lb/>
Swimmers, G,<lb/>
Suits: Ready,<lb/>
A swim meet, intramura:<lb/>
style guaranteed to be "he<lb/>
of fun. Anyone may participate<lb/>
as long as he or she is currei<lb/>
enrolled at ECU. The eve- <lb/>
range from a 50-meter freestyle<lb/>
to a 100-meter innertube relav<lb/>
Registration for this spla<lb/>
one day event will be held on<lb/>
Mon Sept. 29 in Memorial<lb/>
Gym, room 105 ? C 11 a.m. un-<lb/>
til 7 p.m. The team captam-<lb/>
individual participant meeting<lb/>
will be held on Tues Sept. 30, at<lb/>
6:30 p.m. in Brewster B-102.<lb/>
Don't miss registration! You will<lb/>
have the opportunity to "dive"<lb/>
into the following events:<lb/>
50-meter freestyle<lb/>
preliminari? M-meter butterflv<lb/>
JS<lb/>
Be on the lookout for Co-Rec soft<lb/>
you.<lb/>
1: you're finding <lb/>
tighter than usual, now - ?<lb/>
join The Spa. Studt I<lb/>
on a monthly basis lor onhj<lb/>
month. That's $25 t ?I rj<lb/>
any strings attached.<lb/>
The Spa offers 52 I<lb/>
outs every week, exerc: I<lb/>
weights, steam room, saur<lb/>
pool. Plus, there are plentyl<lb/>
n<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057849_0012"/><lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
m 1 <lb/>
JO jO?D?n ? icu ?OTO LAB<lb/>
tjf Return<lb/>
It U ilson (80) rtturns a kickoff in Satur-<lb/>
am Sweeps<lb/>
van Tourney<lb/>
ncreased iheir lead<lb/>
2 ?  freshman midfielder<lb/>
R Vndersch scored a goal.<lb/>
I an isl Tom<lb/>
A:<lb/>
rer Shenandoah had closed<lb/>
ap to 2-1, Corson retaliated<lb/>
le Bucs as he knocked in a<lb/>
assist from Andersch<lb/>
he iead to 3-1.<lb/>
added the final goal of<lb/>
for ECU on a penaltv<lb/>
ate in rhe match.<lb/>
? wins over the weekend<lb/>
he Pirates season mark to<lb/>
The next action for the soccer<lb/>
,ome on Sept. 27 as<lb/>
k v. ill host American Universi-<lb/>
n the ECU Soccer Field at 2<lb/>
n p.m.<lb/>
American should prove to be a<lb/>
e stiff test for the Pirates as they<lb/>
finished the season last year as<lb/>
runner-up in the NCAA<lb/>
Division-I soccer tournament.<lb/>
If Course<lb/>
Although the frisbee club now<lb/>
has a nine-hole course, De.Man<lb/>
feels nine more wouldn't be a<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
"We're hoping the Student<lb/>
Government (Association) can be<lb/>
as generous as last time, because<lb/>
rune more holes is twice as nice<lb/>
DeMan said. "It's a student golf<lb/>
course and we're planning stu-<lb/>
dent activities for intramurals.<lb/>
"Raleigh has three courses,<lb/>
New Bern has one, Jacksonville<lb/>
has one, Winston Salem has one,<lb/>
Durham has one DeMan<lb/>
continued, "and Greenville<lb/>
should have one. Those (other)<lb/>
places are great ? they have<lb/>
tournaments all the time.<lb/>
Hopefully Greenville will have an<lb/>
18-hole tournament one day<lb/>
Goldsboro native Perry Smith,<lb/>
who recently ranked 81st in the<lb/>
world in a Huntsville. Ala tour-<lb/>
nament, praised the newlv-<lb/>
constructed frisbee-disc course.<lb/>
According to DeMan, Smith felt<lb/>
that "the course was one of the<lb/>
best he had played on and that it<lb/>
was one of the more competitive<lb/>
courses around<lb/>
Another individual who played<lb/>
a big role in the development of<lb/>
the frisbee-golf course is Carl<lb/>
Hartsfield. Hartsfield, advisor to<lb/>
the frisbee dub and an ECU<lb/>
employee, has been instrumental<lb/>
to the club, according to DeMan.<lb/>
"He's not just an advisor, he's<lb/>
a good friend to the team<lb/>
DeMan explained. "He plays<lb/>
with us on occassion. He's a nice<lb/>
guy and gets behind us and sup-<lb/>
ports us.<lb/>
"He's our advisor and helps us<lb/>
with a lot of situations between<lb/>
the frisbee club and the IRS<lb/>
DeMan added. "He can make<lb/>
those guys bend a little and make<lb/>
us bend a little to make us meet<lb/>
? he's a good communicator<lb/>
With the hard work of the<lb/>
ECU frisbee club and other peo-<lb/>
ple and groups, the Irate Disc-<lb/>
Golf Course is now a reality. It is<lb/>
open every day and all students,<lb/>
faculty and staff are invited to try<lb/>
their hand at the new course.<lb/>
? IAN<lb/>
s<lb/>
cr-<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 23. 1986<lb/>
11<lb/>
Intramural Athletics<lb/>
What's Coming Up Next:<lb/>
Volleyball And Putt-Putt<lb/>
By DENISE CROMER<lb/>
Do the terms spike, net, hits, foot<lb/>
fault, and serve mean anything to<lb/>
vou? Does the sport of volleyball<lb/>
.orne to mind? It should! The in-<lb/>
ti amural sports program is gear-<lb/>
ing up for an exciting volleyball<lb/>
reason. Get a team together and<lb/>
participate. Registration for this<lb/>
"in bounds" activity is Mon<lb/>
Oct.6, in Memorial Gym room<lb/>
105-C from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m A<lb/>
earn captains meeting is schedul-<lb/>
ed on Tues. Oct. 7, in Brewster<lb/>
( -103 at 5:30 p.m Some return-<lb/>
ng division champions who will<lb/>
e trying to defend their title are:<lb/>
men's independent, Lucky Seven;<lb/>
aternity A Phi Kappa Tau;<lb/>
fraternity 'B Phi Kappa Tau;<lb/>
mens residence hall, 307 spikes;<lb/>
a omens independent, The Good<lb/>
Bad and Ugly; sorority, Sigma<lb/>
?Mgma Sigma; women's residence<lb/>
hall, The Gumbys. It's sure to be<lb/>
an exciting season.<lb/>
Anyone interested in officiating<lb/>
volleyball should attend the first<lb/>
clinic which is scheduled on<lb/>
Mon Oct. 6, in Memorial Gym,<lb/>
room 102 at 9 p.m Any ques-<lb/>
tions, contact Patty Connor,<lb/>
port manager, at 757-6387 or<lb/>
stop by Memorial Gym 104-A.<lb/>
Putt-Putt-Putt<lb/>
Team Putt Putt registration<lb/>
will be held Mon. Sept. 29,<lb/>
Memorial Gym 105-C between 11<lb/>
a.m. and 7 p.m. The tournament<lb/>
will be held for one full week of<lb/>
fun beginning Oct. 6. Organize a<lb/>
team or register as an individual.<lb/>
Kick In The Grass<lb/>
Kickoff to an exciting season<lb/>
of intramural Soccer. It will keep<lb/>
you "indirectly" on the defense.<lb/>
Registration for this charge of a<lb/>
game is scheduled for Oct. 13 in<lb/>
Memorial Gym, room 105-C<lb/>
from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m The<lb/>
teams captains meeting will be<lb/>
Oct. 14 in Brewster C-103 at 5:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The first officials clinic will be<lb/>
held on Oct. 13 in Memorial<lb/>
Gym, room 102 at 9 p.m<lb/>
Anyone interested please stop by;<lb/>
no experience is necessary. If you<lb/>
have any questions, contact Todd<lb/>
McCullom at 757-6387 or stop by<lb/>
Memorial Gym room 104-A.<lb/>
Don't miss out! Get up a team<lb/>
and be a part of it!<lb/>
Swimmers, Grab Your<lb/>
Suits: Ready, Set, Swim<lb/>
Flags Fly As Winners<lb/>
Take To The Fields<lb/>
A swim meet, intramural<lb/>
-lyle guaranteed to be "heats"<lb/>
of fun. Anyone may participate<lb/>
as long as he or she is currently<lb/>
enrolled at ECU. The events will<lb/>
range fr.n a 50-meter freestyle<lb/>
to a 100-meter innertube relay.<lb/>
Registration for this splashing<lb/>
one day event will be held on<lb/>
Mon Sept. 29 in Memorial<lb/>
Gym, room 105 ? C 11 a.m. un-<lb/>
til 7 p.m. The team captain-<lb/>
individual participant meeting<lb/>
will be held on Tues Sept. 30, at<lb/>
6:30 p.m. in Brewster B-102.<lb/>
Don'r miss registration You will<lb/>
have the opportunity to "dive"<lb/>
viuo ihe following events:<lb/>
50-meter freestyle<lb/>
preliminary 50-meter butterfly<lb/>
50-meter backstroke<lb/>
50-meter breaststroke<lb/>
200-meter medley relay<lb/>
100-meter T-shirt relay<lb/>
50-meter freestyle finals<lb/>
100-meter butterfly<lb/>
100-meter backstroke<lb/>
100-meter breaststroke<lb/>
100-meter freestyle<lb/>
100-meter innertube relay<lb/>
100-meter individual medley<lb/>
200-meter freestyle relay<lb/>
Team conpetiton may be quite<lb/>
challenging with the defending<lb/>
All-Campus and Fraternity-<lb/>
Sorority Champions (Lambda<lb/>
Chi Alpha and Zeta Tau Alpha)<lb/>
returning with anticipation of<lb/>
repeating. Don't pass up a great<lb/>
chance to splash around!<lb/>
Spikers Take To The Net!<lb/>
Volleyball registration takes place Oct. 6 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Memorial Gym room 105-C. Everyone interested in a slamming<lb/>
good time should get a team together and sign up. Registration is<lb/>
your ticket to fun!<lb/>
Only two weeks into the<lb/>
season, and already we are seen-<lb/>
ing outstanding performances<lb/>
displayed by all participants. To<lb/>
give you just a taste of what pro-<lb/>
mises to be a funfilled season,<lb/>
here are some early highlights:<lb/>
G-Force vs Milwaukee's Best:<lb/>
Defense dominated the first half<lb/>
of play between these two<lb/>
powerhouse teams. Mania Pitt,<lb/>
off G-Force, intercepted two<lb/>
passes while his teammate, Tony<lb/>
Lewb picked off one. This<lb/>
stalemate was broken when<lb/>
Sidney McCall of G-Force caught<lb/>
a short pass for a touchdown.<lb/>
G-Force continued to dominate<lb/>
yet another by David Chestnutt.<lb/>
Milwaukee's Best finally got on<lb/>
the board with Rick klinton who<lb/>
caught a touchdown pass and<lb/>
also scored the two point conver-<lb/>
sion on a bootleg play. Rick Klin-<lb/>
ton of Milwaukee's Best then in-<lb/>
tercepted a pass and Aaron<lb/>
Beavlier finished the drive with<lb/>
the touchdown. David Chestnutt<lb/>
capped off the game by scoring<lb/>
hes second touchdown. The final<lb/>
score was 24 ? 14 in favor of<lb/>
G-Force.<lb/>
N.F.C. East vs Odds Makers:<lb/>
In the NFC East's first possesion,<lb/>
Al Stewart ran a reverse for a<lb/>
65-yard first score. On their<lb/>
fourth possesion, the NFC East's<lb/>
Stewart scored from 10 yards out<lb/>
to close the half. The second half<lb/>
was again controlled by the NFC<lb/>
squad as Mike King, Stewart,<lb/>
John Kilpatrick and Bruce Pit-<lb/>
man all scored. When it was all<lb/>
over, NFC East took the victory<lb/>
34-6<lb/>
Classic Freestyle vs Golden<lb/>
Hearts B: The classic Freestyler's<lb/>
opened the game with a 35-yard<lb/>
run by Jane Gaiter who also got<lb/>
the extra point conversion.<lb/>
Gunter then came out throwing<lb/>
with a 20-yard pass to Jackie<lb/>
Pellinger for the second<lb/>
touchdown of the game. Then, in<lb/>
the second half, it was Susan<lb/>
Locke who made an interception<lb/>
and also finished the drive with a<lb/>
20-yard reception for the score.<lb/>
The half was closed out with a<lb/>
30-yard touchdown pass from<lb/>
Gunter to Dellinger.<lb/>
Flag Football<lb/>
Rankings (Sept. 18)<lb/>
Men<lb/>
1 Lake Boys<lb/>
2 Shake Masters<lb/>
3 Armed and Dangerous<lb/>
4 Doggie Style<lb/>
5 Jones Y Team<lb/>
Women<lb/>
1 Enforcers<lb/>
2 Alpha Phi<lb/>
3 ARBNAF<lb/>
4 Greene Rebels<lb/>
5 Campus Crusade<lb/>
Co-Rec Begins With Race<lb/>
(?'? r'<lb/>
?<lb/>
Be on the lookout for Co-Rec softball, coming soon to a field<lb/>
near<lb/>
The Dept. of Intramural <lb/>
Recreational Services will host a<lb/>
cross campus fun run which will<lb/>
take place on SatOct. 18, during<lb/>
homecoming weekend. It will<lb/>
start at 8:45 a.m. and you can<lb/>
register between 8 and 8:30 that<lb/>
morning. The race is open to all<lb/>
ECU students, faculty, and staff<lb/>
as well as alumni. The event will<lb/>
have two separate races, so you<lb/>
have the choice of a two-mile or a<lb/>
four-mile run. Get involved, run<lb/>
for fun!<lb/>
Co-Rec Flag Football<lb/>
If you would like to be a part<lb/>
of a mixed up group of flag foot-<lb/>
ball participants, then get involv-<lb/>
ed with our Co-Rec Flag Football<lb/>
league. The teams are comprised<lb/>
of eight members, four men and<lb/>
four women. It's sure to be a<lb/>
"rush" for fun. Registration will<lb/>
be Oct. 20 in Memorial Gym<lb/>
room 105-C from 11 a.m. to 7<lb/>
p.m The team captains meeting<lb/>
is Oct. 21 in Biology room N-102<lb/>
at 5:30 p.m. The Third Regiment<lb/>
was last year's All Campus<lb/>
Champions and intend to repeat<lb/>
again this year, so let's give them<lb/>
some competition for their pass-<lb/>
ing thoughts.<lb/>
Dribble, ShootScore!<lb/>
Bounce into Co-Recreational<lb/>
Basketball! To register for this<lb/>
challenging event you must go by<lb/>
room 105-C in Memorial Gym on<lb/>
Tues Oct. 20 between 11 a.m.<lb/>
and 7 p.m.<lb/>
A team captain's meeting will<lb/>
be the following day, Oct. 21, in<lb/>
Biology N-102, at 6:30 p.m<lb/>
Each team will consist of five<lb/>
members, three females and two<lb/>
males. Rule modifications to ac-<lb/>
comodate this unique situation<lb/>
have been made: field goals by<lb/>
men are two points but those by<lb/>
women will be three points.<lb/>
Co-Rec Cageball is the newest<lb/>
co-rec sport sponsored by the In-<lb/>
tramural Recreational Services.<lb/>
The action and fun will be ex-<lb/>
citing for you and your friends in<lb/>
late October. Watch this space<lb/>
for more details and registration<lb/>
dates.<lb/>
Save your breath.<lb/>
Plant a tree to make<lb/>
more oxygen.<lb/>
East Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn<lb/>
Corner 10th &amp; Dickinson Ave<lb/>
We Buy Gold &amp; Silver<lb/>
2s<lb/>
All Transactions Confidential <lb/>
Buy - Sell - Trade tfs<lb/>
752-0322<lb/>
Hours. 9:00 ? m -6 00 pa<lb/>
Mm-Sal<lb/>
H3vvBIrpDve<lb/>
?ur Grades<lb/>
AtTheBeach.<lb/>
If you're finding your bathing suit<lb/>
tighter than usual, nows a fitting time to<lb/>
join The Spa. Students can join The Spa<lb/>
on a monthly basis for only $25 per<lb/>
month. That's $25 for 30-days without<lb/>
any strings attached.<lb/>
The Spa offers 52 aerobics work-<lb/>
outs every week, exercise machines, free<lb/>
weights, steam room, sauna and whirl-<lb/>
pool. Plus, there are plenty of trained<lb/>
instructors to help you shape up.<lb/>
So, if your body is flunking the<lb/>
beach test, call or drop by The Spa for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
Improving your grades at the beach<lb/>
simply requires a little home work.<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
best health club value.<lb/>
SOUTH PARK SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
GREENVILLE 756 7991<lb/>
Tequila Bar<lb/>
a Weekly Specials<lb/>
R<lb/>
Slinrise Sunday: Imports $1.25, Tequila Sunrise $2.00<lb/>
Monday Night FOOtball: Quarter Draft S Melon<lb/>
Margaritas<lb/>
Toasty Tuesday: Toasted Aimonds $2.25<lb/>
Wednesday: Margarita $1.759 Pitcher $6.75<lb/>
Thirsty Thursday: Drink and Drown - Pitchers $2.75.<lb/>
Tequila Shot $1.75<lb/>
Fried Friday: Get Fried Early at our new Attitude<lb/>
Adjustment hour at 4:30; end the night upside down! Free hors<lb/>
d'ouevres<lb/>
Saturday: House Drink ? Tequila Blues<lb/>
109E. 5th Si.<lb/>
752-4926<lb/>
.?,???. ? m<lb/>
T? n?rr- -i -ti?i jfii. j j<lb/>
j<lb/>
<pb facs="00057849_0013"/><lb/>
1. THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 23, 1986<lb/>
j?HHp??4MMI JHHHMHE??? ??????? ?????????<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
t????????????????????????????????<lb/>
??????4HHMHM??????????????????????????<lb/>
Pirate Tennis Results<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
SIO EPS: What can we say? It was<lb/>
def inately a great way to prepare for<lb/>
Monday morning! Let's do it again<lb/>
? and soon! Love, the AOTT's.<lb/>
CHIPPER<lb/>
headlights!<lb/>
Watch<lb/>
those<lb/>
CHI OMEGA: Congratulations to<lb/>
our new Fall pledges, the Beta Etas:<lb/>
Kim Akkis, Marcia Amatangelo,<lb/>
Alyce De St. Aubin, Kelly Belton,<lb/>
Terrie Dills, Kimberly Du.s, Kelly<lb/>
Easterling, Tina Marie Harrelson,<lb/>
Lori Hayes, Whitney Hearl,<lb/>
Catherine Hickman, Julie Holland,<lb/>
Melissa Lin, Catherin Lynham,<lb/>
Vicki Lynn Martin, Missy<lb/>
Michalove, Lori Moore, Michelle<lb/>
Sheeran, Carole Shore, Windy Spell,<lb/>
Angie Spencer, Caroline Stovall,<lb/>
Lisa Thompkins, Amada Weathers<lb/>
poon and Carole Weeks. Ya'll are<lb/>
GREAT! The Sisters of Chi Omega<lb/>
SIG EPS: The little sisters would<lb/>
like to congratulate the fall 1986<lb/>
pledge classwelcome to the best<lb/>
fraternity on campus!<lb/>
DELTA ZETA SISTERS: We love<lb/>
you and we're proud to be a part.<lb/>
The Jammin' Pledge Class Beta<lb/>
Omicron. P.S. Thanks tor the burnt<lb/>
weenies<lb/>
LONELY GUY: Seeking "attractive<lb/>
white lady who enjoys fuzzy navels,<lb/>
walks by the river, and road trips to<lb/>
the beach. Call 752 8308, ask for J.<lb/>
ZTA: Congratulations to newly<lb/>
elected ZTA officers: President-<lb/>
Ellen McPherson, Vice President<lb/>
Scotia Miller, Secretary Tobi<lb/>
Ferguson, Treasurer Pam<lb/>
Meacher, and Panhellenic Delegate<lb/>
Crina Kern.<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON: Hey Sig<lb/>
Eps, we know this is late but we just<lb/>
want to say that PREF NIGHT WAS<lb/>
GREAT! Can't waif to party with<lb/>
ya'll again! Love, the Chi O's.<lb/>
KNIGHTS OF SIGMA NU: L.Sleft<lb/>
me with a STD.Should 1 go for those<lb/>
ribs? Ace"Scream i ngfor<lb/>
Vengeance"<lb/>
CHUCK:Guesswhat?1still<lb/>
rememberhowtospellourlast<lb/>
name! Bythewa howwasthe<lb/>
test?<lb/>
CHI OMEGA: Thanks to the Beta<lb/>
Zeta's for your great pledge project<lb/>
Ya'll did a great job this weekend<lb/>
and the flowers look super! We love<lb/>
va'M! The Sisters<lb/>
ATTENTION KA FALL PLEDGES:<lb/>
Just a CONGRATULATION on your<lb/>
decision to join the GREATEST<lb/>
fraternity at ECU. Looking forward<lb/>
to meeting you all. Love, Your Little<lb/>
Sisters.<lb/>
PIKA: The brothers of Pika want to<lb/>
congratulate the following new<lb/>
pledges: James Johnson, Stephen<lb/>
Goodwin, Rich Harker, Wayne<lb/>
Barber, Tim Sheehy. Sam Jackson,<lb/>
Ben Reinhold, Matthew Ricks,<lb/>
Cabell Lawton, Mike Patrick, Joe<lb/>
Gngsby, Jeff LeBlanc, Tim Slavin,<lb/>
R.J. Will, Chris Walters, Dig Chavis.<lb/>
Eric Smith, Kevin Smith, Scott<lb/>
Lamon, Tim Bowles, Kevin Thomp<lb/>
son, BMly Mac Wilson, Tim<lb/>
McNamara, Andrew Vansickle,<lb/>
John Taylor and Brian Spruill.<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY STEPHEN:<lb/>
How about dinner this weekend- any<lb/>
place you want. Or better yet, a<lb/>
roast beef sandwich in Jones. From,<lb/>
a friend (a.k.a Lovebunny) P.S.<lb/>
Kissy, Kissy.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: We'd like to con<lb/>
gratulate and welcome Nikki<lb/>
Malhmood to our fall 1986 pledge<lb/>
class We love you! The Sisters and<lb/>
Pledges of Delta Zeta.<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI: Thanks, you guys,<lb/>
for a wonderful blast, the food and<lb/>
the drink flowed a little too fast,<lb/>
thanks for showing our pledges the<lb/>
best you brothers of Lambda Chi<lb/>
have outdone the rest. Alpha Phi's.<lb/>
ORGAN: The solution to everyone's<lb/>
problemsget laid.<lb/>
KNOTTHEAD AND LIZZARD: Y'll<lb/>
did a terrific job with rush and we're<lb/>
really proud of you! Knotthead- no<lb/>
more family reunions. Lizzard Stay<lb/>
out of those Briar Patches! The<lb/>
Alpha Phi's.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI: Would like to con-<lb/>
gratulate the Beta Omicron Pledge<lb/>
Class Julie Daniel, Karen Shep<lb/>
para, Sarah Daugherty, Elizabeth<lb/>
Lee, Martha Walton, Crystal Nolan,<lb/>
Beth Haun, Nancy Haeussler, Amy<lb/>
Gillespie, Dale Rankin, Donna<lb/>
Kahlbauch, Marcia Jauregui, Sherri<lb/>
CArter, Renee Hoffman, Amy Pro<lb/>
ehl, Bonnie Armentrout, Leann<lb/>
Cherry, Kristy Childs and Amy Har-<lb/>
rington<lb/>
RICHMOND CREW:<lb/>
great weren't they?<lb/>
AAE was<lb/>
JAY THE GERBIL: Been running<lb/>
on any treadmills lately?<lb/>
LEA R Happy 19th! You finally<lb/>
made it to the drinking age and they<lb/>
deeked you again! We'll get around<lb/>
it somehow We love you! TKE's are<lb/>
the d?daies! Adair Barbara anc<lb/>
Kathy.<lb/>
PETEY: Hope your 22nd was the<lb/>
greatest We love ya JT and<lb/>
MB.<lb/>
TO JMC: Congratulations on Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Phi little sister. Time to<lb/>
celebrate at Western Sizzlin. LET'S<lb/>
FRAME IT Love, KAS.<lb/>
TKE LITTLE SISTER RUSH<lb/>
Wed. Thurs Sept 24th 25th, 8 11<lb/>
p.m. Come Party With The Best<lb/>
RANDY FRANCIS: Desperately<lb/>
seeking female companionship. On<lb/>
ly prerequisite is a functioning<lb/>
cardio pulminary system. Any<lb/>
animate female is urged to call<lb/>
752-6217. No fat chicks. Please.<lb/>
DELTA PLEDGE CLASS: We went<lb/>
after Quality and Quantity and got<lb/>
them both; Good Luck. Brothers of<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
THE LADIES ZOO IS BACK<lb/>
Wednesday night! Beau's<lb/>
nightclub's Ladies Zoo mega keg<lb/>
party! 756-6401.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
S205 Abortion from 1? to 18 weeks at<lb/>
additional cost. Pregnancy Test. Birth Control,<lb/>
and Problem Pregnancy Counseling. For<lb/>
further information, call 832-0535 (toll free<lb/>
number: 1-800-532-5384) between 9 a.m. and 5<lb/>
p.m. weekdays. General anesthesia asailable<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
GpmEdy Zpne<lb/>
NOW ADMITTING AGES 18 &amp;<lb/>
UP EVERY NITE! <lb/>
ADMISSION SPECIAL<lb/>
ONLY $2.00 UNTIL 9:30 ?.<lb/>
BRING A FRIEND IN FOR FREE<lb/>
UNTIL 9:30 <lb/>
t COMING SAT. SEPTEMBER 27<lb/>
Chairmen of the Board<lb/>
Don't Drive oil the liberty Hide<lb/>
For More Info Cull 78-5570<lb/>
 Kt fVutnl<lb/>
WEDNESDAY I WEDNESDAY I WE<lb/>
DNESDAYILADIES ZOOl: Ladies<lb/>
Zoo! Kegs! Kegs! Kegs! Ladies!<lb/>
Ladies! Ladies! Beau's Niteclubl<lb/>
756 6401.<lb/>
BEAU'S ALL NEW LADIES ZOOl:<lb/>
Wednesday Nite! Ladies! Kegs!<lb/>
Music! Beau's Niteclub 756-6401.<lb/>
KA BROTHERS, PLEDGS AND<lb/>
LITTLE SISTERS: Thanks for all<lb/>
your support during our rush. You<lb/>
all are the BEST EVER! What a<lb/>
FANTASTIC fraternity! Remember<lb/>
our meeting at 8:15 p.m. Sunday.<lb/>
Love, Little Sister Officers.<lb/>
NEED A D.J.T: Are you having a<lb/>
party and need a D.J.? For the best<lb/>
in top 40, beach and dance call<lb/>
Morgan at 758 7967. Reasonable<lb/>
rates. References on request.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 Fender strat, 1<lb/>
Fender Bullet, 2 Boss Effects<lb/>
pedals- reasonable. 758 9028. Leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 3 blocks from ECU. 1<lb/>
bedroom with private entrance.<lb/>
Utilities paid. $160month. Call<lb/>
758 1274 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
WINDSURFING: The ECU wind<lb/>
surfing club is now being formed<lb/>
There will be an organizational<lb/>
meeting for anyone interested in<lb/>
windsurfing in Mendenhall 247 on<lb/>
Wed Sept. 24th at 6. Trips, instruc-<lb/>
tion and FUN IN THE SUN! Begin<lb/>
ners welcome.<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
CHEAP TYPING: Reports, etc. Call<lb/>
Anne at 752-3015 and leave a<lb/>
message.<lb/>
COMPUTERIZED TYPING SER<lb/>
VICE: Word processing. The<lb/>
Dataworks specializes in student<lb/>
document services including<lb/>
reports, term papers, dissertions,<lb/>
theses, resume's and more. All work<lb/>
is computer checked against 50,000<lb/>
word electronic dictionary. Rates<lb/>
are as low as $1.75 per page, in-<lb/>
cluding paper (call for spedific<lb/>
rates.) Call Mark at 757 3440 after 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND<lb/>
PHOTOCOPYING SERVICES: Typ<lb/>
ing resumes, term papers, thesis<lb/>
papers. Call SDF Professional Com<lb/>
puter Services Inc 106 E. 5th St.<lb/>
(near Cubbies) Greenville. 752 3694.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SER-<lb/>
VICE: Experience quality work,<lb/>
IBM Selectric typewriter. Call Lanie<lb/>
Shive at 758-5301.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
ECU Mea 7-CaapMI 2<lb/>
T Reynolds(C) d. Dan LaMont<lb/>
7-5.3-6.6-3<lb/>
J. Melhorn(EC) d. T. Maynor 6-3.6-1<lb/>
G Loyd(EC) d. C. Maynor 6-3.7-5<lb/>
R He$ter(Q d. J. Taylor 1-6.6-3.7-5<lb/>
P. Campanaro(EC) d. J. Gaskms<lb/>
6-3.4-6,6-1<lb/>
T. Sumner(EC) d. D. Lai 6-1.6-2<lb/>
Doable<lb/>
Taylor-Melhorn(EC) d. Maynor-Maynor<lb/>
6-3,6-2<lb/>
Loyd-LaMont(EC) d Reynolds-Hester<lb/>
6-1,6-4<lb/>
Campanaro-Scott Avery(EC) d.<lb/>
Gaskins-Lai 6-4,6-1<lb/>
ECU Women 9-LNC-VYUmiagtoa 0<lb/>
L. Eichholz(EC) d. J. Phillips 6-2.6-0<lb/>
A Zeimer(EC) d. M. Tyynisman 6-1.6-4<lb/>
Ty Myers(EC) d. W. Todd 6-1.6-1<lb/>
M. Swaim(EC) d. J. Tolson 6-4,3-6,6-1<lb/>
H Murray(EC) d. S. Evans 6-2,6-3<lb/>
S. Montjoy(EC) d. M. Unchurch 6-0,6-1<lb/>
Doable<lb/>
Eichholz-Zeimer(EC) d Phillips-<lb/>
Tyynisman 6-2,6-0<lb/>
Murray-Swaim(EC) d. Todd-Tolson<lb/>
6-3,6-2<lb/>
Myers-Montjoy(EO d. Evans-Unchurch<lb/>
6-2.6-1<lb/>
WmkmdR?dU:<lb/>
ECU Woata 1-Davtfeoa 7<lb/>
McNeilsD) d. EichhoU 6-1.6-4<lb/>
Stonc(D) d. Zeimer 6-1.62<lb/>
Podohn(D) d. T. Myers 61.63<lb/>
Johnson(D) d. Swaim 64,61<lb/>
PriceD) d Murray 6-0,60<lb/>
StubbKD) d Montjoy 7-5.4-6.63<lb/>
A.<lb/>
M.<lb/>
D<lb/>
M<lb/>
J<lb/>
A<lb/>
Eichholz-Zeimer(EC) d McNeils-<lb/>
Johnson 64,6-4<lb/>
Stone-Pnce(D) d. Swaim-Murray<lb/>
63.4-6.64<lb/>
Mont)oy-Myers(EQ d. Carr-Hall 7-5,6-3<lb/>
ECU Woaaea M' NC -Charlotte 7<lb/>
Eichholz(EQ d. M. Dorn 2-o.6-4.6-4<lb/>
C. van NeiHUNC-C) d. Myers 7-5.67 6-3<lb/>
S Smith(UNC-Q d Swaim 4-6.63.62<lb/>
M Auffant(UNC-C) d. Murray 61.63<lb/>
SwaimfEQ d D Wangann 64 5-7 7.5<lb/>
D Ciolfi(UNC-0 d. Kim BeTaer 63 6-4<lb/>
DoaMea<lb/>
Auffant-van NeiKUNC-Q d Eichholz-<lb/>
Berger 62.62<lb/>
Dorn-Smith(UNC-C) d. Swaim-Murrav<lb/>
6-2.6-4<lb/>
Wangann-Ciolfl(UNC-C) d. Mont.ov-<lb/>
Myers 64,0-o.7-6<lb/>
 <lb/>
JOB WANTED: Man desires job as<lb/>
houskeeper or attendant for the sick.<lb/>
Non-smoker, non-drinker and have<lb/>
good references. 752-6079.<lb/>
WATERBED FOR SALE: King size<lb/>
waterbed ro sale. Semi-waveless,<lb/>
heater included. Less than 6 months<lb/>
old. Headboard included. $250. Call<lb/>
758-9768 after 12 noon. Ask for Craig.<lb/>
$60 PER HUNDRED PAID: For<lb/>
remailing letters from home! Send<lb/>
self addressed, stamped envelope<lb/>
for informationapplication.<lb/>
Associates, Box 95 B, Roselle, NJ<lb/>
07203.<lb/>
REWARD: Free trip to Daytona,<lb/>
plus commission money. WANTED<lb/>
Organized group or individual to<lb/>
promote the number 1 Spring Break<lb/>
trip to Daytona. If interested call<lb/>
DESIGNERS OF TRAVEL,<lb/>
1 800 433 9074 immediately!<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
Christian atmosphere, responsible 2<lb/>
bedroom condo. in Treetops. $150<lb/>
plus utilities and phone. Call Beth<lb/>
756-6320, 756 2724, or 758 3471 Ext. 240<lb/>
(NCNB).<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: To share<lb/>
tew apt. located at 405 E. 5th St<lb/>
(Regency House Condos Apt 10.<lb/>
Iblock (300 steps) from Downtown<lb/>
and 1 block from campus<lb/>
Everything is new, must see! No<lb/>
deposits req'd for either apt. or<lb/>
Jtilities! Rent $175 plus 12 util. Call<lb/>
155-6686 and leave name 6 phone<lb/>
lumber.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Free<lb/>
security deposit of $150. Kingston<lb/>
Place Aptv, Central heatair, full<lb/>
furnished, includes all kitchen uten-<lb/>
sils, and use of pool. $150 per month<lb/>
plus utilities. For ,nfo. call Don<lb/>
Fazio at 757 3218<lb/>
FORSALECanyou buyjeeps,<lb/>
cars,4 x 4's seizedin drug raids for<lb/>
under$100?Callfor factstoday.<lb/>
602 837 3401.Ext. S 711.<lb/>
COMMODORE 64 COMPUTER<lb/>
AND DISK DRIVE FOR SALE: Ex<lb/>
cellent condition. Lots of extras-<lb/>
diskettes, cartridges, books, etc.<lb/>
$400. Call 758 7461 and ask for Suzi.<lb/>
MODEL WANTED: Girl with<lb/>
shoulder-length or longer brown hair<lb/>
needed to model for two paintings.<lb/>
$30 minimun paid for each plus 40<lb/>
percent of any sales. Needs any kind<lb/>
of white dress, pref. long. Pref. to be<lb/>
available 11-1 on weekends. Call An<lb/>
dy at 752-7284.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
Georgetown Apts 2 bedroom, close<lb/>
to campus, need 1 or 2 roommates<lb/>
Call 752 9245.<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Ice Cream <lb/>
Award Winning ice Cream ?<lb/>
321 East 10th Street Greenville, N.C. 27858 H<lb/>
Call 758-4896 <lb/>
Buy One Blend-In or Sundae<lb/>
Get the Second<lb/>
1 2 PRICE!<lb/>
One Coupon Per Order. Please Coupon Expires Uon September 29, 1986 I<lb/>
?I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
eo KROCERINC FOR ALL YOUR<lb/>
Tailgate Party<lb/>
Needs!<lb/>
Register To WW I WM<lb/>
Pirate Football Tickets<lb/>
To eto Qivn Awmy<lb/>
For Each Home Gama ft?lst? Now<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
SERVE N SAVE<lb/>
Sliced<lb/>
Lunchmeat<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
99<lb/>
Qt.<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
KROGER 2t LOWFAT<lb/>
OR HOMOGENIZED<lb/>
Whole<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
69<lb/>
SSSSSSS?<lb/>
V.VAV.V.VAV.W<lb/>
mm<lb/>
 " 11<lb/>
? ?????????????<lb/>
????????????<lb/>
(??t2<lb/>
Ltr.<lb/>
NRB<lb/>
DIET COKE. CHERRY COKE.<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE COKE OR<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
Classic<lb/>
99<lb/>
CAROLINA PRIDE<lb/>
ALL MEAT OR<lb/>
All Beef<lb/>
Wieners.<lb/>
12<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
$119<lb/>
NABISCO<lb/>
Premium<lb/>
Saltines.<lb/>
16<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Box<lb/>
?T Blihit<lb/>
STOKELV PEAS<lb/>
Corn or<lb/>
Green Beans<lb/>
16<lb/>
Ox<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
SENECA<lb/>
Apple<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
Gal.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
$<lb/>
119<lb/>
MOUSE (5 OZ.) HAIR<lb/>
SPRAY (9 OZ.) CONDITIONER OR<lb/>
Aqua Net<lb/>
Shampoo<lb/>
16<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
99<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
NEW CROP<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Tokay<lb/>
Grapes<lb/>
69<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
OLO FASHION<lb/>
White<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
VHS Video Movie Rentals<lb/>
$<lb/>
199<lb/>
? 24Nour<lb/>
aai rwiui<lb/>
MunOrooB of fovoifto movt0t<lb/>
to ehoooo homl<lb/>
MILLER LITE<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
$<lb/>
095<lb/>
24 PK<lb/>
12 OZ CANS<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised<lb/>
items is required to be<lb/>
readily available for sale in<lb/>
each Kroger Sav-on. except<lb/>
as specifically noted in this<lb/>
ad. if we do run out of an<lb/>
item we will offer you your<lb/>
choice of a comparable<lb/>
item when available,<lb/>
reflecting the same sav-<lb/>
ings or a ralncheck which<lb/>
will entitle you to pur<lb/>
chase the advertised item<lb/>
at the advertised price<lb/>
within SO days Only one<lb/>
vendor coupon win be ac-<lb/>
cepted per Item<lb/>
<lb/>
Go Krogering<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
r?<lb/>
- ? ? -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057849_0014"/>
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