<?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="00057863_0001"/>
?<lb/>
$ht<lb/>
(Eawlmtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carol ma campus community<lb/>
since 1925<lb/>
November 13, 1986<lb/>
New Chancellor Candidates<lb/>
Plan Visit To ECU Campus<lb/>
Bv PATT1 KEMM1S<lb/>
Nf?v Kdilor<lb/>
According to Ralph Kinsey,<lb/>
chairman of the Board of<lb/>
rrustees, two candidates for the<lb/>
iob of chancellor will be visiting<lb/>
campus in the upcoming weeks<lb/>
Gregor O'Brien, provosl at<lb/>
the University of South Honda in<lb/>
Tampa, will be here No. 19-21,<lb/>
while Richard Eakin. vice presi-<lb/>
dent for planning and budgeting<lb/>
at Bowlmg (ireen State Universi-<lb/>
ty in Ohio, will be visiting Vu<lb/>
23-25.<lb/>
kmsev said their visits will give<lb/>
the adminstration, faculty and<lb/>
students a chance to meet the<lb/>
candidates.<lb/>
O'Brien. 42. has been the the<lb/>
vice president ol academic affairs<lb/>
and provost at I'SF sinceOctober<lb/>
1983.<lb/>
He received a bachelor's degree<lb/>
in social relations from 1 ehigh<lb/>
University in 1966 and a master'<lb/>
m psychology from Boston<lb/>
University.<lb/>
He has worked at Harvard<lb/>
Medical School, the University of<lb/>
Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and the<lb/>
University of Michigan Flint<lb/>
since receiving his doctorate.<lb/>
O'Brien is married and has two<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Fakin, 48, received a<lb/>
bachelor's degree in math and<lb/>
physics from Geneva College in<lb/>
I960, and a master's from<lb/>
Washington State University. He<lb/>
?hen earned a doctorate in math<lb/>
form WSU in 1964.<lb/>
Eakin has been at Bowling<lb/>
Green since 1964, when he served<lb/>
a, an assistant professor. While<lb/>
at Bowling Green, he has been<lb/>
assistant dean of the graduate<lb/>
school and director of graduate<lb/>
admissions, vice provost for stu-<lb/>
dent affairs , vice provost for<lb/>
planning and budgeting and is<lb/>
now the vice president for plann-<lb/>
ing and budgeting.<lb/>
Fakin is also married and has<lb/>
two children.<lb/>
The 11 member search commit-<lb/>
tee responsible for Finding can-<lb/>
didates to take Chancellor John<lb/>
Howell's place has choosen less<lb/>
than five nominees from the 186<lb/>
applications received since the<lb/>
committee formed in February,<lb/>
1986. The committee will submit<lb/>
two nominations for the job to<lb/>
the Board of Trustees and to the<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
system by January. The UNC<lb/>
Board of Governors will then be<lb/>
sent one of these nominations for<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
Howell announced last vear<lb/>
that he would retire no late than<lb/>
June 30, 1987. He has been<lb/>
chancellor since 1982. Before he<lb/>
was chancellor, Howell served at<lb/>
ECU as a professor of political<lb/>
science and dean, provost and<lb/>
vice chancellor for academic af-<lb/>
fairs.<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell will be retiring no later than Jun<lb/>
be visiting campus next week.<lb/>
e 30. 1V8" fwo candidates for the job will<lb/>
New Law Has Effect On Area Taverns<lb/>
B DON RELTER<lb/>
Iml Reflector suft<lb/>
The legal drinking age<lb/>
North Carolina residents<lb/>
raised from 19 to 21 just over two<lb/>
months ago. bin Greenville<lb/>
tavern owners sdv the change has<lb/>
alreadv watered down 'heir pro<lb/>
Fits<lb/>
for<lb/>
was<lb/>
"There has been an across-the-<lb/>
board decrease in business among<lb/>
all clubs in the state of North<lb/>
Carolina that cater to crowds in<lb/>
the 18- to 30-year old range<lb/>
said Tom Haines, president of<lb/>
the Greenville Nightclub Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"Speciallv hard hit are the col-<lb/>
lege towns and the resorts com-<lb/>
munities, but we won't see about<lb/>
them until next summer<lb/>
Some bars have been able to<lb/>
trace their losses directly to their<lb/>
monthly profits since the drink-<lb/>
ing age was raised on Sept. 1, ac-<lb/>
cording to Robert Saieed, owner<lb/>
of Rafters nightclub at the corner<lb/>
of Fifth Street and Reade Circle.<lb/>
'We're off bv at least 40 per<lb/>
-??,  " ?? "ii civ at least 40<lb/>
Expert Lectures On Hunger<lb/>
? VIRGINIA LIVINGSTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Beyoi the Myths of Hunger:<lb/>
Towards a Politics of Hope" will<lb/>
be 're topic of a speech bv the co-<lb/>
founder of the Institute for Food<lb/>
and Development, Joseph Col-<lb/>
lins.<lb/>
C ollins will be giving his speech<lb/>
next Tuesday, Nov. 18, at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in Fletcher Music Auditorium.<lb/>
Collins, who holds a doctorate<lb/>
in public policy from Columbia<lb/>
University, has traveled exten-<lb/>
sively to research the causes of<lb/>
hunger and has published manv<lb/>
books on the subject of hunger<lb/>
and its causes.<lb/>
His work with the poor and the<lb/>
hungry began in the late 50's and<lb/>
early 60's when he was a<lb/>
missionary-in-training with<lb/>
Maryknoll parish priests in Latin<lb/>
America and Southeast Asia.<lb/>
It was in the slums of Chile, the<lb/>
highlands of Guatemala and the<lb/>
Philippine island of Mindanao<lb/>
that Collins realized his life work<lb/>
would be bringing the realities of<lb/>
underdevelopment to Americans<lb/>
He said, "1 began to see how all<lb/>
of our lives are interconnected. 1<lb/>
decided to help more of my<lb/>
fellow Americans understand<lb/>
how our choices, our society and<lb/>
our government, affect people's<lb/>
lives in the rest of the world<lb/>
This decision led him to obtain<lb/>
his doctorate. He worked at the<lb/>
Institute for Policy Studies from<lb/>
1971 to 1973. He directed the<lb/>
research that led to the publica-<lb/>
tion of "Global Research the<lb/>
first major study of the global-<lb/>
spanning powers of multinational<lb/>
corporations.<lb/>
He collaborated on a report to<lb/>
the 1974 LN. World Food Con-<lb/>
ference in Rome. The paper was<lb/>
the First to challenge the accepted<lb/>
view of hunger: hunger was caus-<lb/>
ed by scarcity, overpopulation<lb/>
and malevolent nature. From<lb/>
then Collins began to work on en-<lb/>
ding the myths of hunger and<lb/>
began to try and change interna-<lb/>
tional understanding of hunger.<lb/>
Collin founded the Institute<lb/>
for Food and Development with<lb/>
the author of the best-seller,<lb/>
"Diet for a Small Plant<lb/>
Frances Moore Lappe in 1975.<lb/>
They refused to accept corporate<lb/>
and government donations so<lb/>
their research and education<lb/>
center could be free of outside<lb/>
pressures. They began extensive<lb/>
research in Africa, Asia and<lb/>
Latin America and two vears<lb/>
later produced "Food First:<lb/>
Beyond the Myth of Scarcity<lb/>
This book proved that hunger<lb/>
and poverty were not inevitable<lb/>
but the result of the world's food<lb/>
production being ever-<lb/>
lncreasingly concentrated.<lb/>
Since "Food First Collins<lb/>
and Lappe have collaborated on<lb/>
other books that dispell the<lb/>
myths of hunger. Several of these<lb/>
books have become required<lb/>
reading for development<lb/>
workers.<lb/>
In 1979. Collins went to<lb/>
Nicaragua, at the government's<lb/>
request, to advise their Ministry<lb/>
Of Agriculture on agrarian<lb/>
reform and food policies. After<lb/>
four years of study Collins<lb/>
published a study on the suc-<lb/>
cesses and failures of creating a<lb/>
food system that would benefit<lb/>
all the people. Collins also co-<lb/>
authored the first comprehensive<lb/>
anayisis of food and agricultural<lb/>
policies in Cuba that was based<lb/>
on on-the-ground research.<lb/>
According to the sponsors of<lb/>
Collins' presentation, Collins<lb/>
chose East Carolina over Duke<lb/>
and several other schools that<lb/>
were vying the hear his message.<lb/>
cent he said. "The bars<lb/>
downtown depend almost entire-<lb/>
ly on students and we're down on<lb/>
weekdavs especiallv<lb/>
Meanwhile, others say thev<lb/>
haven't been affected too harshlv<lb/>
bv the change in the law.<lb/>
"I don't believe business has<lb/>
slacked off that much said Bar-<lb/>
bara .McDade, daytime manager<lb/>
of New Deli, a restaurant on<lb/>
Cotanche Street which serves as a<lb/>
nightclub on some evenings.<lb/>
However, Ms. McDade said<lb/>
New Deli is primarilv a<lb/>
restaurant.<lb/>
Despite the expected losses,<lb/>
Haines said the taverns are sur-<lb/>
viving.<lb/>
"To our surprise, we haven't<lb/>
been devastated said Haines.<lb/>
who is a part-owner of the Attic<lb/>
Rock &amp;. Roll and Grog's<lb/>
nightclub, both located on Fifth<lb/>
Street. "Even though we've seen<lb/>
a dropoff, no one to this point<lb/>
has gone out of business because<lb/>
of it<lb/>
Some taverns have been able to<lb/>
alter admission policies in order<lb/>
to regain some profits, according<lb/>
to Haines, who said North<lb/>
Carolina bar owners have an ad-<lb/>
vantage over those in several<lb/>
others states.<lb/>
"Luckily, 18, 19 and 20-year-<lb/>
olds are still allowed to enter<lb/>
establishments Haines said.<lb/>
"In Georgia, you must be 21 to<lb/>
get into a place that's a night<lb/>
club.<lb/>
"They (the customers) are still<lb/>
coming out here if they wan-<lb/>
entertainment or to see a good<lb/>
band. They accept the fact tha'<lb/>
thev can't drink and still come<lb/>
down<lb/>
Saieed said under-age<lb/>
customers are still spending<lb/>
money in his club.<lb/>
"We're letting 18, 19. and<lb/>
20-veat-olds in and putting arm<lb/>
bands on Lhem Saieed<lb/>
"We also have a small door<lb/>
charge on them. Thev also buv<lb/>
some soda.<lb/>
"We're going o remodel our<lb/>
format to attract younger<lb/>
people<lb/>
Raising the drinking age has<lb/>
not accomplished what it wa-<lb/>
designed to do, according to<lb/>
Haines and Saieed.<lb/>
"This law basically has ac-<lb/>
complished nothing more than<lb/>
making law abiding people<lb/>
criminals Haines said. "In two<lb/>
polls taken after the drinking age<lb/>
was raised, under-age people<lb/>
gave a 100 percent negative<lb/>
response" to obeying the law.<lb/>
"Any time you create a law<lb/>
that nobody breaks, it's stupid,<lb/>
and any time you have a law that<lb/>
everyone breaks, there are pro-<lb/>
blems<lb/>
"If it (the law) was working, it<lb/>
would be better Saieed said.<lb/>
"But now, all we have is under-<lb/>
age drinking going<lb/>
unc<lb/>
-<lb/>
? . : ? n V<lb/>
r,c age<lb/>
"Wl<lb/>
? ? ' i lent<lb/>
-otc wit<lb/>
ids H i<lb/>
? ing ? v Utopiai :ie<lb/>
'?. and ??? c <lb/>
? ?<lb/>
KJs?j on err. -arher than<lb/>
Meanwhile, Ha es c<lb/>
c ? mwc in - m.<lb/>
pact In v?<lb/>
drink at ??. rial age<lb/>
' Nor ma ? la w -abid<lb/>
citizens are considered<lb/>
criminals Haines sa;d It<lb/>
the respect thev hav aWi<lb/>
They feel the law is so unfair that<lb/>
thev autom ica - le. I:<lb/>
makes it easier for then con-<lb/>
sider breaking other law. h<lb/>
creates a disrespc. I foi the whole<lb/>
svsiern.<lb/>
"You're telling adults I at hey<lb/>
are old enough and responsible<lb/>
enough to vote, fighl for their<lb/>
country, buv a house, raise a<lb/>
familv, but they're i old<lb/>
enough or responsible .<lb/>
drink a beer<lb/>
Furthermore, the new drinking<lb/>
policy has put drinking back in<lb/>
ee BARS paue 2.<lb/>
'Fantasy9 Performs Saturday<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
W lo The<lb/>
I tut Oral Mm<lb/>
? LLBN MURFMY? The<lb/>
Wet Yet?<lb/>
While most students hurry through the rain, some of us seem oblivious to the wetness.<lb/>
 Lak<lb/>
ECU's Fantasy, a group spon-<lb/>
sored by the sign language club,<lb/>
will be giving their fall perfor-<lb/>
mance "Fantasy, American<lb/>
Style" Sat. Nov 15 in Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall at 8 p.m. Admission<lb/>
will bc$l.<lb/>
An off-shoot of the sign-<lb/>
language club, Fantasy is made<lb/>
up of hearing and hearing-<lb/>
impaired students who perform<lb/>
popular songs and skits in sign<lb/>
language. The group, which was<lb/>
started in 1978, has grown rapid-<lb/>
ly and has performed on many<lb/>
occassions throughout Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Pam King, ECU's Fantasy<lb/>
director, is excited about the<lb/>
group and said that their purpose<lb/>
is to provide a service to the deaf<lb/>
and hearing impaired.<lb/>
"Fantasy is basically set up to<lb/>
provide deaf and hearing-<lb/>
impaired people to see and hear<lb/>
music King said. "It's kind of<lb/>
a way of 'showing' them music.<lb/>
We have a different way of per-<lb/>
forming ? it's kind of like lips n<lb/>
cing songs.<lb/>
"We've performed all over the<lb/>
place ? for basketball games at<lb/>
halftime, in front of the student<lb/>
stores, in malls. We performed<lb/>
for the School of the Deaf in<lb/>
Wilson King continued. "We<lb/>
usually do one large one (perfor-<lb/>
mance) in the fall and another<lb/>
one in the spring. Whoever asks<lb/>
us, we'll perform for 'em<lb/>
Fantasy has about 10 to 30<lb/>
members, varying from time to<lb/>
time, according to King. Current-<lb/>
ly, there are about 25, with a<lb/>
dozen practicing for Saturday's<lb/>
big performance.<lb/>
Sign language club president<lb/>
Allison Carreras and vice presi-<lb/>
dent Jeff Campagna are equally<lb/>
excited about the program.<lb/>
"I love it. It's a great feeling to<lb/>
be able to sing a song with your<lb/>
hands. We've travelled to some<lb/>
small towns to perform and this<lb/>
year we've been invited to per-<lb/>
form in New Mexico Carreras<lb/>
said. "I live with a hearing-<lb/>
impaired person and just to show<lb/>
her what's on the radio? is reallv<lb/>
whv I enjoy it<lb/>
"I'm verv pleased with it (the<lb/>
group). It's been verv educational<lb/>
for me and the people we per-<lb/>
form for sophomore Cam-<lb/>
pagna said. "It's a lot of hard<lb/>
work, but it's been a great ex-<lb/>
perience ? that's why I plan to<lb/>
stay with it for three more vears<lb/>
I really enjoy the people I work<lb/>
with and performing for other<lb/>
people<lb/>
Fantasy performs for everyone<lb/>
of all ages and for both hearing<lb/>
as well as the deaf and hearing<lb/>
impaired. The group urges all<lb/>
students, facultv and residents to<lb/>
come out and see their perfor-<lb/>
mance Saturday night.<lb/>
(Special thanks to Co-Sports<lb/>
Editor, Scott Cooper j<lb/>
ON THE INSIDE<lb/>
Crime Column 3<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Entertainment7<lb/>
Sports10<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifieds12<lb/>
?New movie<lb/>
reviewed? see<lb/>
MENT page 7.<lb/>
Soul Man<lb/>
ENTERTAIN-<lb/>
?Men and women's swim teams<lb/>
keep perfect scores? see<lb/>
SPORTS page 10.<lb/>
<lb/>
VI<lb/>
r- - ? " ? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057863_0002"/><lb/>
NOVEMBER 13.1986<lb/>
Bars Lose Business.<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
the cars, which is the reason why<lb/>
the law was changed in the first<lb/>
Place, according to Haines.<lb/>
"Under the old law, people<lb/>
were drinking a large percentage<lb/>
of their consumption in a con-<lb/>
trolled situation by the drink in a<lb/>
bar with a bartender or a bouncer<lb/>
telling them when they had<lb/>
enough, and they were cut off<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
"Now, we have an uncontroll-<lb/>
ed situation where people buy it<lb/>
by the case, by the bottle and by<lb/>
the keg. It is consumed in larger<lb/>
quantities and in uncontrolled<lb/>
situations in apartments and back<lb/>
in cars. And that's the one thing<lb/>
we were trying to do away with<lb/>
Haines said beer sales at other<lb/>
Greenville outlets where alcohol<lb/>
is available are up.<lb/>
"Sales of beer on the wholesale<lb/>
level are up in Greenville since the<lb/>
age was raised while nightclubs<lb/>
are showing a decline he said.<lb/>
Furthermore, while nightclub<lb/>
owners are often overlooked as<lb/>
members of the business com-<lb/>
munity, Haines said they should<lb/>
receive more respect.<lb/>
"Greenville clubs historically<lb/>
have better reputations than most<lb/>
other towns in North Carolina<lb/>
he said. "Most of the owners are<lb/>
college graduates, service<lb/>
veterans, and teachers. They are<lb/>
people that are very intelligent<lb/>
and upstanding citizens<lb/>
Haines said people need to re-<lb/>
examine the law and determine<lb/>
what it has done.<lb/>
"If anything, the community<lb/>
should support the idea of the<lb/>
controlled situation. They should<lb/>
support what we're doing. People<lb/>
are social animals, and they will<lb/>
find one way or another to have<lb/>
an outlet whether it is profes-<lb/>
sional and controlled or just<lb/>
haphazard<lb/>
(This story was reprinted with the<lb/>
permission of The Daily Reflec-<lb/>
tor.)<lb/>
Stye East (EaralftiUtit<lb/>
Steve Folmar, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives:<lb/>
Anne Leigh Mallory John Rusk<lb/>
Steve Mote Jill Tayloi<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CLOTHING AND<lb/>
TEXTILES ASSOC.<lb/>
I "e C o'ng ana Te?t,? AssOO?tiOP will<lb/>
  n9 a'4 45 on NOv 13 " th( VinLl"<lb/>
? lgham Roo Tnr? w" ot r?frMhm?Ntf<lb/>
ao a aues' sceake' We will tw vak ng<lb/>
Ul Q, sas Dar'v ?r c'otn.ng<lb/>
aiCKs are weicomf<lb/>
. I v<lb/>
SRA<lb/>
Attention Pun Loverj! student Resident<lb/>
Association ,n conjunction wifn Pizza Hut<lb/>
will sponsor a blood drive Nov II 19 Irom<lb/>
13 t pm (n room 344 Mendenh?H Eacn par<lb/>
ticpant will receive a coupon for a free per<lb/>
sonai pizza Irom Pizza Hut 01 Greenville<lb/>
ECUWRESTLINGCLUB<lb/>
So you want to be a wrestler? There will be<lb/>
an organizational meeting of the new ECU<lb/>
wrestling club In room 103 Memorial Gym<lb/>
Nov 20 a' 8 pm jom us<lb/>
ECU FANTASY<lb/>
 ght s re-ea-Sa for Fan'iit<lb/>
A ca-S e beg n a' 6 30 " B'Oiogv<lb/>
'03 Ree-ff e rjrcsa renearsai on<lb/>
Nf-or 15 a' 12 00 snarp in Fietcher<lb/>
?e 'a -a Pfrio-mf,s s'age crew<lb/>
eber. ushers ac ma ntnance us<lb/>
sow uc a' 'ie r? ta "a aga " b. nj to<lb/>
CfM'f or "e s"ow a" S o"<lb/>
ACT<lb/>
?"?? A-eca" College Tes'g will be of<lb/>
?free a Eas' Carol na U-versity on Sa'ur<lb/>
na. DetemCe, 13 9i6 Appi.ca on blanks<lb/>
a-p to be cocip're ana maieo to ACT<lb/>
Reg sa' or po Bo? 414 Iowa c ly iowa<lb/>
5224C Arc ca' os "us1 be Dos"ariied no<lb/>
?tH fl. ovemt)er i4 i?? ADC1 ca'ons<lb/>
nan re rra "ec from ?"? ECU Test ng<lb/>
Cee' Room 105 Soe p Bu 0 ng<lb/>
ECANS<lb/>
There wii be a meeting Thurs Nov 13 at 6<lb/>
pm in the Nso B'ao 101 All nurs,ng<lb/>
students are encouraged to come Come<lb/>
00k a' us iow<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
The ECU Chap'er of the College<lb/>
Republicans meet every Tuesday in room<lb/>
221 Wendenhall Meetings are at 6 30 pm<lb/>
Don't believe liberal falsehoods America is<lb/>
still the h0me of a'a word ana success!<lb/>
Come 0.n us Diai 830 I2v8 for more ,nor<lb/>
mation<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
Sponsored by Campus Crusade for Chris!<lb/>
Th.s Thursday, we are having our weekly<lb/>
meeting ,n B-ews'e- 102 B at 7 30 pm Come<lb/>
for Christian tenowsh.p, run, ana how to<lb/>
walk w th jesus Christ ,n the 30th century to<lb/>
day We hope ta see you there<lb/>
BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
The ECU B'Oiogy Oub will have its next<lb/>
meeting on Von , Nov 17 in BN 102 at 7 pm<lb/>
D' v.ncent Beiiis will oe speaking on the use<lb/>
of bioiog.cai resources of Costa Rica impor<lb/>
fant notice those who plan on working the<lb/>
b'ooa drive in the spr ng should attend this<lb/>
meet.ngi New memberships will be takem<lb/>
SED<lb/>
ou oa a re'a oe'spec' ve or Cu'<lb/>
9 a"a r?? Mao ? with Reagan s<lb/>
Ods Acae c ac Centra1<lb/>
-a' SED iSfucen's For Economic<lb/>
?a ee'ever, Su"3a, t'Om 7 f pm<lb/>
n 238 2-3 ? oo- Menoe-a<lb/>
ABORTIOSS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$205 Abortion from I? to 18 weeks at<lb/>
additional eosi Pregnanc) Tes Birth Control<lb/>
and Problem Pregnanc Counseling For<lb/>
further information, call 832-0535 (toll free<lb/>
number: l-MO-532-5384) between ?? a.m. and 5<lb/>
p.m. v.eckdas. General anesthesia available<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
Admission $1.50 Guys 50c Ladies<lb/>
75 TALL CANS &amp; COOLERS<lb/>
10 DRAFT<lb/>
ALL NITE<lb/>
SPECIAL OFFER - THE GOOD STUFF - FOR LESS THAN A BUCK!<lb/>
TRyHfEnoysNEw<lb/>
JUST<lb/>
ONE WEEK ONLY<lb/>
103 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
502 E. Tenth St.<lb/>
624 S. Memorial Dr.<lb/>
Special Introductory Offer Ends Nov. 20th<lb/>
? <lb/>
We serve Maxwell House Coffee<lb/>
A<lb/>
f?<lb/>
u,<lb/>
Ni'vember <lb/>
11:3 i .1<lb/>
A ' of Jarvis D<lb/>
reported the larcer ?<lb/>
from the bike i<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
v:oP m<lb/>
A Clemen- <lb/>
reported the breai <lb/>
mg of her room a:<lb/>
of mone<lb/>
 5 p.m<lb/>
A<lb/>
finding a bag<lb/>
peared to be mat<lb/>
10:00 pm<lb/>
A resident<lb/>
a as observe I<lb/>
nance in the area ea<lb/>
Dorm and re- .<lb/>
hen requeste I<lb/>
November 7<lb/>
12 ?0a.m<lb/>
Liberal<lb/>
1 OS -NGEI ES A<lb/>
Students have become less ii<lb/>
terested ir.<lb/>
vulnerable I<lb/>
pro bar<lb/>
necessarily more r.<lb/>
than the) were 2<lb/>
report released last ? ?<lb/>
Higher I<lb/>
stitute (HERI) at UCLA<lb/>
L CIA.<lb/>
American Count<lb/>
sures some 20 ??<lb/>
freshmen a ear abou' theii -<lb/>
lege plans, their social attitudes<lb/>
and their politi<lb/>
To mark the 20th anr.<lb/>
Of the ure HBRI<lb/>
issued  rep n su<lb/>
some of theii ma i I<lb/>
The most obvious .<lb/>
HERls Dr K.C. Gree<lb/>
majors s-udents cho<lb/>
have been sharp<lb/>
numbers of math, humanities<lb/>
and liberal arts sc . .<lb/>
education majors. Green says<lb/>
b cgest increase has been<lb/>
buMne<lb/>
"Students are going<lb/>
(armed with) h preferences<lb/>
e sasv. "Forthe I - time, we're<lb/>
seeing the (numbe- I students<lb/>
aiming primarily) to be financial- <lb/>
lv well off increasing<lb/>
By the same token. (<lb/>
notes, student interest in deelop-<lb/>
ing "a meaningful philosoph) of<lb/>
life" is decreasing.<lb/>
"We're in the materialistic age<lb/>
now. The countrj is just emerg-<lb/>
ing from the wors; economic<lb/>
period since the thirties he<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
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 r 2<lb/>
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FT<lb/>
IITE<lb/>
CK!<lb/>
OLD FASHIONED <lb/>
L HAMBURGERS J<lb/>
November 6<lb/>
11:30 a.m.<lb/>
A resident of Jarvis Dorm<lb/>
reported the larceny of his bicycle<lb/>
from the bike rack west of Jarvis<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
3:20 pm.<lb/>
A Clement Dorm resident<lb/>
reported the breaking and enter-<lb/>
ing of her room and the larceny<lb/>
of money.<lb/>
8:55 p.m.<lb/>
A Jones Dorm RA reported<lb/>
finding a baggie of what ap-<lb/>
peared to be mariiuana.<lb/>
10:00 p.m.<lb/>
A resident of Garrett Dorm<lb/>
 as observed creating a distur-<lb/>
nance in the area east of Clement<lb/>
Dorm and refused to produce ID<lb/>
when requested to do so.<lb/>
November 7<lb/>
12:30 a.m.<lb/>
An ECU Officer reported<lb/>
observing five white males<lb/>
tampering with a vehicle parked<lb/>
in the 14th and Berkley freshman<lb/>
lots. The subjects were identified<lb/>
as ECU students.<lb/>
1:20 a.m.<lb/>
Three Aycock residents, a<lb/>
White Dorm resident and a Tyler<lb/>
Dorm resident were found to be<lb/>
in possession of marijuana and<lb/>
drug paraphenalia. A non-<lb/>
student was banned from campus<lb/>
in connection with the incident.<lb/>
1:51 a.m.<lb/>
A Scott Dorm resident was<lb/>
observed exceeding the posted<lb/>
speed limit and was found to be<lb/>
in possession of a ficticious ECU<lb/>
ID card which showed his date of<lb/>
birth to be April 14, 1963.<lb/>
2:45 a.m.<lb/>
An ECU Officer reported that<lb/>
he attempted to stop a school<lb/>
bus, being operated on campus in<lb/>
the area of Brewster Building.<lb/>
The operator jumped out of the<lb/>
bus and fled north jthrough the<lb/>
classroom area of campus. The<lb/>
bus had been apparently stolen<lb/>
from Rose High School.<lb/>
2:10a.m.<lb/>
A Jones Dorm resident was ex-<lb/>
tremely intoxicated and was 18<lb/>
years old. She was violating the<lb/>
underage alcohol law.<lb/>
7:15 p.m.<lb/>
A Belk Hall resident reported<lb/>
vandalism to his dorm room win-<lb/>
dow by unidentified white males.<lb/>
November 9<lb/>
3:24 a.m.<lb/>
An ECU Officer reported six<lb/>
males and three females having a<lb/>
keg party in a room on the third<lb/>
floor of Belk.<lb/>
3:43 a.m.<lb/>
A Belk Dorm resident was<lb/>
observed by an ECU Officer,<lb/>
consuming alcohol outside of a<lb/>
suite on the third floor of Belk.<lb/>
November 10<lb/>
1:15 a.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident was ar-<lb/>
rested with DWI and careless and<lb/>
reckless driving on 11th St.<lb/>
2:30 a.m.<lb/>
A Jarvis Resident was observed<lb/>
gaining entry to Jarvis Dorm by<lb/>
forcibly pulling on the secured<lb/>
door.<lb/>
10:30 a.m.<lb/>
An Aycock resident reported<lb/>
larceny of his bike from a post in<lb/>
14th and Berkley parking lot.<lb/>
2:40 p.m.<lb/>
A White Hall resident reported<lb/>
the larceny of her bike from the<lb/>
east side of White Hall.<lb/>
9:30 p.m.<lb/>
A Wintcrville resident was ar-<lb/>
rested for damage to real proper-<lb/>
ty and was banned from campus<lb/>
in connection with a vandalism<lb/>
incident in Belk Dorm.<lb/>
9:53 p.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident reported<lb/>
having her purse taken from her<lb/>
while she was southeast of<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
November 11<lb/>
4:00 a.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident was ban-<lb/>
ned from campus when he at-<lb/>
tempted to obtain a release form<lb/>
for his towed vehicle after drug<lb/>
paraphenalia was observed in the<lb/>
vehicle at the time it was towed.<lb/>
4:45 a.m.<lb/>
A Cary resident was banned<lb/>
from campus when he attempted<lb/>
to obtain a release form for his<lb/>
towed vehicle after drug<lb/>
paraphenalia was observed in the<lb/>
vehicle at the time it was towed.<lb/>
4:40 p.m.<lb/>
A Greenville resident was ar-<lb/>
rested for damage to property<lb/>
and was banned from campus in<lb/>
connection with an incident that<lb/>
occured in Belk Dorm.<lb/>
November 12<lb/>
12:02 a.m.<lb/>
A Fletcher Hall resident<lb/>
reported that unknown persons<lb/>
sprayed the fire hose on the north<lb/>
stairwell of the sixth floor of Flet-<lb/>
cher Hall.<lb/>
1:15 a.m.<lb/>
An ECU Officer arrested a<lb/>
Cherry Point man for trespassing<lb/>
in Greene Dorm.<lb/>
Liberal Arts Loses Support<lb/>
l OS ANGELES, CA (CPS) -<lb/>
Students have become less in-<lb/>
terested in liberal arts, are more<lb/>
vulnerable to job pressures, are<lb/>
probably less liberal but aren't<lb/>
necessanh more conservative<lb/>
than they were 20 vears ago, a<lb/>
report released las: week bv the<lb/>
Higher Education Research In-<lb/>
stitute (HERI) a; LCI A savs.<lb/>
LCI A, along with the<lb/>
American Council on Education,<lb/>
surveys some 2(X).xX) college<lb/>
freshmen a year about their col-<lb/>
lege plans, their social attitudes<lb/>
and their political beliets.<lb/>
To mark the 20th anniversary<lb/>
of the survevs, HERI officials<lb/>
issued a report summarizing<lb/>
s-me of their major finds.<lb/>
The most obvious change, says<lb/>
HERI's Dr. K.C. Green, is in the<lb/>
majors students choose. There<lb/>
have been sharp drops in the<lb/>
numbers of math, humanities<lb/>
and liberal arts, science, and<lb/>
education majors. Green says the<lb/>
biggest increase has been in<lb/>
business.<lb/>
"Students are going to college<lb/>
(armed with) job preferences<lb/>
he says. "For the first time, we're<lb/>
seeing the (number of students<lb/>
aiming primarily) to be financial-<lb/>
ly well off increasing<lb/>
By the same token. Green<lb/>
notes, student interest in develop-<lb/>
ing "a meaningful philosophy of<lb/>
life" is decreasing.<lb/>
"We're in the materialistic age<lb/>
now. The country is just emerg-<lb/>
ing from the worst economic<lb/>
period since the thirties he<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
GULF<lb/>
says. "It cut a wide swathe across<lb/>
(the nation). Students are saving<lb/>
i don't want this to happen to<lb/>
me<lb/>
Such "materialism" also keeps<lb/>
showing up in surveys by the In-<lb/>
stitute for Social Research (ISR)<lb/>
at the University of Michigan,<lb/>
which runs another annual na-<lb/>
tionwide survey of student at-<lb/>
titudes<lb/>
"We're seeing similarities (to<lb/>
the LCI A study) in freshman<lb/>
statements on desired and prefer-<lb/>
red work settings the ISR's Dr.<lb/>
Jerald Bachman reports.<lb/>
"Students prefer to be employed<lb/>
by large corporations now<lb/>
Bachman suspects it's because<lb/>
the job market is "too crowded<lb/>
now. These kids are at the tail<lb/>
end of the Baby Boom, and they<lb/>
are going to suffer the most<lb/>
Whatever the reasons, Green<lb/>
thinks "the declining interest in<lb/>
certain majors ? like engineering<lb/>
(which has lost about 68,000<lb/>
students) ? doesn't bode well for<lb/>
the nation's future<lb/>
"Every major has gone<lb/>
through 'boombust' cycles<lb/>
says Bachman. "When engineer-<lb/>
ing was flooded several years<lb/>
ago, fewer students went in<lb/>
Perhaps most surprisingly,<lb/>
Green says the HERI surveys<lb/>
Riggan Six Repair<lb/>
111 (West 4th St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
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7514204<lb/>
disprove the popular notion that<lb/>
college students are becoming<lb/>
more conservative politically.<lb/>
While fewer students now call<lb/>
themselves "liberal about the<lb/>
same number of students call<lb/>
themselves "conservative" today<lb/>
as 20 years ago.<lb/>
The "real growth" area of the<lb/>
collegiate political spectrum, he<lb/>
says, has been among students<lb/>
who call themselves "middle of<lb/>
the road<lb/>
But when asked to take a posi-<lb/>
tion on specific issues, even<lb/>
students who label themselves as<lb/>
"conservative" tend to expose<lb/>
traditionally liberal stances.<lb/>
Green says.<lb/>
The vast majority ot students<lb/>
support abortion rights, want a<lb/>
bigger federal role in social issues<lb/>
and would like to see defense<lb/>
spending cut.<lb/>
"The students know the<lb/>
issues he explains. "There is a<lb/>
very clear, very strong student<lb/>
support (base) for typically<lb/>
liberal issues. The only real place<lb/>
we saw a decline was in 'law and<lb/>
order<lb/>
Increasingly conservative on<lb/>
that point, more students agree<lb/>
that "there is too much concern<lb/>
m ?i open 7 DAYS<lb/>
for<lb/>
If Lunch &amp; Dinner<lb/>
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NOVEMBER 1986<lb/>
Uatch Special Monday-Friday<lb/>
Dinner Specials Sunday-Thursday<lb/>
TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY<lb/>
Drink Special<lb/>
of the Month:<lb/>
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FOR<lb/>
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7 o?V Monday ?? P" j ? j "??j<lb/>
in the courts for the rights of<lb/>
criminals" than ever before.<lb/>
Similarly, more students support<lb/>
the death penalty than 20 years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
Michigan's Bachman notes<lb/>
some other political changes, too.<lb/>
"Democrats had a<lb/>
preponderance (of student loyal-<lb/>
ty) ten years ago. We've seen<lb/>
some modified shift. There's<lb/>
more balance now between the<lb/>
Republicans and Democrats, but<lb/>
the largest number by far is still<lb/>
not committed to either party<lb/>
"Students are really not thai<lb/>
much different from the rest of<lb/>
the country as a whole<lb/>
Bachman notes, "and that's true<lb/>
in just about anything<lb/>
Ctttrtrs<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057863_0004"/><lb/>
?lre iEaat (Earnlmtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community<lb/>
since 1925<lb/>
Path Kemmis, w,fi<lb/>
Scott Cooper, ,<lb/>
Rick McCormac, ,<lb/>
John Shannon, <lb/>
fM MOI LOY <lb/>
T()Ml I'VINDFR ????<lb/>
Danii i Maurer, .?,???(,??<lb/>
STFVF Foi.MAR, n,rrc? , Atmm<lb/>
Anthony Martin. ??? (rMlMmw,<lb/>
MFC, NFFDHAM. cMm. itaw,<lb/>
Shannon Short, a ????<lb/>
DfChanii f Johnson, om<lb/>
Novembei F3, 1986<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Gosh! I just<lb/>
hate lo see<lb/>
human rights<lb/>
violations<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Matching Revenue Bill Passed<lb/>
The SGA Legislature debated<lb/>
and voted on a new bill that will af-<lb/>
fect every student government<lb/>
sponsored organization. Ii may well<lb/>
be the most significant decision the<lb/>
bod) will make this year.<lb/>
On Monday night the legislature<lb/>
passed a bill that will require every<lb/>
organization petitioning the SGA<lb/>
for funds to raise at least 15 percent<lb/>
of their requested appropriations.<lb/>
This bill can not have come at a bet-<lb/>
ter time, as our campus is growing<lb/>
larger and our available monies are<lb/>
being spread thinner.<lb/>
At present, there are well over 50<lb/>
campus organizations thai receive<lb/>
funds from the SGA. As this school<lb/>
year progresses that number will<lb/>
grow larger, but the SGA's budeet<lb/>
will not.<lb/>
Having started the 'S68' fiscal<lb/>
vear with a budget of S126.000, the<lb/>
SGA now has S19,100 remaining.<lb/>
With more than 50 percent of the<lb/>
vear left, they have only 15 percent<lb/>
of their budget to work with.<lb/>
This is not as bad as it seems, of<lb/>
course, as the basic needs of student<lb/>
groups hae been taken care of in<lb/>
annual appropriations. Just the<lb/>
same, new groups are submitting<lb/>
constitutions almost every week;<lb/>
upon acceptance these groups<lb/>
become eligible for funding.<lb/>
With this in mind, the positive<lb/>
aspects of this bill become obvious.<lb/>
First and foremost it will help<lb/>
delay, perhaps even avoid, the need<lb/>
for an increase in student fees,<lb/>
something none of us can truly af-<lb/>
ford.<lb/>
It will also force student groups<lb/>
to unify and be more self sufficient.<lb/>
Many of the smaller groups on<lb/>
campus are loosely organized,<lb/>
which leads to their executive<lb/>
members doing most of the work.<lb/>
If required to raise money, perhaps<lb/>
such groups will find the "unity they<lb/>
lack.<lb/>
This bill will also help to weed<lb/>
out the transient groups; groups<lb/>
that ask for money one year and<lb/>
disappear the next due to lack of in-<lb/>
terest. Such groups are not uncom-<lb/>
mon.<lb/>
While this newspaper may not<lb/>
agree with the SGA Legislature on<lb/>
every issue, it does on this one. We<lb/>
only wish some one had thought of<lb/>
it sooner.<lb/>
Thats better!<lb/>
ElyJng The FriendlxSkm<lb/>
Deregulation Yes Informality No<lb/>
rit.?. a Iri i.i i - .<lb/>
Professor Alfred Kahn, who presided<lb/>
over the liquidation of the old ways by<lb/>
introducing deregulation of the airlines,<lb/>
proudly holds up as testimonial to his<lb/>
good work that the consumer is paying<lb/>
substantially less (20 percent is the<lb/>
figure commonly used) than he was pay-<lb/>
ing under regulation, and that, as thev<lb/>
say in the trade, is the bottom line. In a<lb/>
market society the consumer is, and<lb/>
ought to be, king. However, the ques-<lb/>
tion is legitimately asked: To what ex-<lb/>
tent have those airline travelers been<lb/>
riding on credit?<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
By<lb/>
WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY Jr.<lb/>
VERES CWI rKE P?J6 M TViAT 2EAU.Y VvJCRfcg<lb/>
THE im CZSVPPVi akp vom!<lb/>
Whose credit? Why, the credit of the<lb/>
capitalist, the investor. If a consortium<lb/>
of investors brings together $100 million<lb/>
to start airline service between Atlanta<lb/>
and Chicago and sells tickets for $10 a<lb/>
ride, the statistician can gleefully note<lb/>
down the savings of Atlanta-Chicago<lb/>
passengers, but before very long, the<lb/>
Mad Man Muntz Airline is going to go<lb/>
out of business, and statistics on a very<lb/>
different ledger are going to show that<lb/>
$100 million of risk capital unhappily<lb/>
disappeared.<lb/>
Last week I flew the hour's flight<lb/>
from Los Angeles to San Francisco,<lb/>
first class, and noted with a start that<lb/>
my ticket had cost $180. Last summer, I<lb/>
flew tourist class from New York to San<lb/>
Francisco and back for $194. That was<lb/>
10 hours of flying, making the contrast<lb/>
dramatic. United was charging 10 times<lb/>
as much per hour in the air in the one<lb/>
case as compared to the other. Granted,<lb/>
one was first class, but it is not seriously<lb/>
suggested that first class should be 10<lb/>
times tourist class. What it is is the wide<lb/>
scramble, for opportunistic fares.<lb/>
Philanthropy today, extortion tomor-<lb/>
row.<lb/>
All of this will shake down, but when<lb/>
it does, expect that the surviving airlines<lb/>
are going to demand solvency, and<lb/>
many of the apparently eternal advan-<lb/>
tages of deregulation are going to fly<lb/>
away into the horizon. So deregula-<lb/>
tion, yes; free travel, no.<lb/>
On another front, airlines have, in<lb/>
their service, become slaves to the<lb/>
movies. Flying San Francisco to New<lb/>
York on TWA, departure time was 9:15<lb/>
a.m. At 10:15 a.m the passengers were<lb/>
offered a sumptuous breakfast. Now,<lb/>
anyone who has a flight at 9:15 wili<lb/>
have eaten breakfast, so that being serv-<lb/>
ed at 10 is the equivalent of being served<lb/>
lunch at 10. Why not wait until noon?<lb/>
To do so gets in the way of the movie.<lb/>
Swissair leaves Geneva for New York at<lb/>
2:30 p.m and, I kid you not, serves<lb/>
you a Lucullan meal at 4 p.m which is<lb/>
milk-and-cracker time for English kid-<lb/>
dies.<lb/>
But it all pales up against the latest<lb/>
social amenity experienced at the hands<lb/>
of Pan Am. The stewardess was taking<lb/>
drink orders for serving after the<lb/>
passengers were airborne, and had on<lb/>
her clipboard the names of the<lb/>
passengers, alongside which she would<lb/>
scribble in their choices. She came to me<lb/>
. and said, "Mr. Buckley. Now, what do<lb/>
you wish to be called?"<lb/>
This had never happened to me<lb/>
before, and I was struck quite dumb. I<lb/>
recalled the secret name I was assigned<lb/>
during my months in the CIA. The two<lb/>
serial numbers I had while in the infan-<lb/>
try flashed through my mind. I faintly<lb/>
recalled being told by my mother that I<lb/>
had been baptized not William Frank,<lb/>
as requested, but William Francis<lb/>
because the priest had said huffily that<lb/>
there was no "St. Frank only a St.<lb/>
Francis. I was able only to gurgle, "Mr.<lb/>
Buckley which provoked a cheerful,<lb/>
"Very well with just a trace of if-you-<lb/>
want-to-be-stuffy-it's-OK-by-Pan Am,<lb/>
and she was off, accosting the<lb/>
gentleman behind me, with the same<lb/>
questions. He opted for a Bloody Mary<lb/>
and to be called Phil.<lb/>
And what do you, madam, sir, wish<lb/>
to be called? Lillykins? Butch? It would<lb/>
be fun to try it out on the pope traveling<lb/>
incognito. Ah, Mr. Wojtvla, what<lb/>
would you like to be called? "Just call<lb/>
me Bishop of Rome, Vicar of Jesus<lb/>
Christ, Successor of St. Peter, the<lb/>
Prince of the Apostles. Supreme Pon-<lb/>
tiff, Patriarch of the West, Primate of<lb/>
Italy, Archbishop and Metropolitan of<lb/>
the Roman province, and Sovereign of<lb/>
the State of Vatican Citv Evelyn<lb/>
Waugh was right. Intimacv, ves; for-<lb/>
mality, yes; informalitv, no.<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
In addition to the "Campus<lb/>
Forum" section of the Editorial<lb/>
Page, The East Carolinian 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/>
Persons interested in participating<lb/>
or seeking further information mav<lb/>
contact Daniel Maurer, managing<lb/>
editor of The East Carolinian at<lb/>
757-6366, or stop by our offices on<lb/>
the second floor of the Publications<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
? - ? v-?.?in. in. uyicu iui a mooay Mary<lb/>
Believe It Or Not You Can Campaign For The Peace Prire<lb/>
Bv.lACOBUEISBERG  lmm . L . " "?? M 1,Z<lb/>
By JACOB WEISBERG<lb/>
Ihr r? krpuhli.<lb/>
"I was of course er stunned and grateful and<lb/>
melancholy EHe Wiesel told The New York Times<lb/>
about his initial reaction to winning the 1986 Nobel<lb/>
Peace Prize.<lb/>
"1 fell back into the mood of Yom Kippur,<lb/>
serious reflections about my parents and my grand-<lb/>
parents. It took me half an hour to get out of it<lb/>
But when Wiesel finally came to, he told a press<lb/>
conference in New York, "There are no coin-<lb/>
cidences. It it (winning the prize) happens after<lb/>
Yom Kippur here, then some of mv friends and<lb/>
myself have prayed well<lb/>
Actually, they did a little more than pray. Over<lb/>
the past several years, a few of Wiesel's friends have<lb/>
circled the globe in an intensive effort to win him<lb/>
the prize. Sigmund Strochlitz, who owns a Ford<lb/>
dealership in New London, Coon has directed the<lb/>
offensive. A survivor of Auschwitz, Strochlitz has<lb/>
visited the halls of Congress, the West German<lb/>
Bundestag, the French Assembly and the<lb/>
Norwegian Parliament on Wiesel's behalf.<lb/>
It might sound difficult to lobby for the Nobel<lb/>
Peace Prize. In reality, it's not so tough. According<lb/>
to the rules of the Norwegian Nobel Committee,<lb/>
several categories of people are eligible to make<lb/>
nominations. Parliamentary representatives,<lb/>
judges, academics and former Nobel laureates are<lb/>
among those entitled to send letters by the bushel.<lb/>
He's succeeded in getting hundreds of them, in-<lb/>
cluding nominations from Francois Mitterrand and<lb/>
former Peace Prize winners Henry Kissinger, Lech<lb/>
Walesa and Mother Theresa.<lb/>
Wiesel's supporters have concentrated much of<lb/>
their energy on the U.S. Senate. One Senate aide<lb/>
described their campaign as "relentless and heavy-<lb/>
handed<lb/>
"Strochlitz would show up every winter and say<lb/>
it's time to write letters again one staffer said.<lb/>
"He'd say, you did it last year. It's time to do it<lb/>
again. He'd get the senators to send 'Dear Col-<lb/>
league' letters to each other in an ever-widening cir<lb/>
cle Strochlitz, a close friend of Wiesel's, denies<lb/>
doing any campaigning.<lb/>
Here's how it worked. Strochlitz asked Sen.<lb/>
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, for example, to<lb/>
nominate Wiesel, and to request similar letters from<lb/>
10 of his colleagues. Strochlitz provided Moynihan<lb/>
with the names. Of course, many of the legislators<lb/>
Moynihan asked had no idea they could nominate<lb/>
anyone for a Nobel Prize. And a few hardly knew<lb/>
who Elie Wiesel was. The letters they sent are<lb/>
perhaps less flowery than some the Nobel Commit-<lb/>
tee has received in the past:<lb/>
U.S. Senate<lb/>
January 26, 1984<lb/>
Members of the Committee.<lb/>
It is my honor to propose Mr. Elie Wiesel for the<lb/>
1984 Nobel Peace Prize. As you well know, Mr.<lb/>
Wiesel has dedicated most of his life toward the<lb/>
goal of peace throughout the world. In my opinion,<lb/>
you could not go wrong by awarding the Nobei<lb/>
Peace Prize to this most deserving gentleman.<lb/>
With respect,<lb/>
Barry Goldwater<lb/>
By Strochlitz's count, more than 50 senators and<lb/>
140 representatives have written to Oslo on Wiesel's<lb/>
behalf. More than 70 members of the West German<lb/>
Bundestag have also nominated Wiesel. After get-<lb/>
ting a few dozen senators under his belt, Strochlitz<lb/>
began grouping them in interesting ways. One year<lb/>
he got the entire Massachusetts congressional<lb/>
delegation to nominate Wiesel. Another year he<lb/>
solicited letters from all the members of the Senate<lb/>
Banking Committee. Strochlitz was helped by John<lb/>
Silber, president of Boston University, where<lb/>
Wiesel teaches. Silber called Strochlitz "the real<lb/>
strategist and campaigner<lb/>
"Strochlitz did everything in his power Silber<lb/>
said. "He would say to me: 'John, you know these<lb/>
people in Congress I'd write to them and send<lb/>
copies to their responses to Strochlitz, so he could<lb/>
keep track of everythin we were doing Silber said<lb/>
that he is especially delighted at Wiesel finally winn-<lb/>
ing the prize, since it is the second such award<lb/>
bestowed upon someone associated with his school.<lb/>
Martin Luther King, who won the Peace Prize in<lb/>
1964, was a student at Boston Universitv during the<lb/>
1950s.<lb/>
In Silber's letters to the Nobel Committee, he<lb/>
argued that Wiesel was a voice for victims<lb/>
everywhere. Each year that he renominated Wiesel,<lb/>
he wrote about some new effort of Wiesel's on<lb/>
behalf of the oppressed ? whether his work for<lb/>
Cambodian boat people, or Soviet Jews, or Arab<lb/>
regugees or the disappeared in Argentina. A typical<lb/>
letter from Silber points out that "Wiesel traveled<lb/>
at considerable risk to his personal health and safe-<lb/>
ty into the jungles of Honduras, where he met with<lb/>
Miskito Indians Attached is an op-ed piece<lb/>
Wiesel published in the Los Angeles Times, detail-<lb/>
ing the Miskito's plight. As Silber put it one year,<lb/>
"I am sure that my letter will not be the first, nor<lb/>
indeed the only such letter to reach you<lb/>
Another of Silber's tactics has been to suggest ap-<lb/>
propriate anniversaries for the Nobel committee to<lb/>
make use of in honoring his friend. In 1984 he<lb/>
wrote of the connections between Wiesel and<lb/>
Orwell. The following year Silber's letter reminded<lb/>
the committee that it was the 40th anniversary of<lb/>
the liberation of the death camps. Like journalists,<lb/>
Wiesel's friends searched endlessly for a new "peg<lb/>
on which to hang the same old story.<lb/>
Silber said Wiesel never inquired about the effort<lb/>
to get him the prize, though he was aware of it. "He<lb/>
never asked anybody, never asked me, never asked<lb/>
Strochlitz Silber said. "We said, 'Stand still, Elie.<lb/>
Step aside, do your work. Don't worry about our<lb/>
work, which is to make them (the Nobel Commit-<lb/>
tee) aware of you Silber added, "Nobody wins<lb/>
unless the Nobel Committee knows about them<lb/>
Silber and Strochlitz both vociferously decline any<lb/>
share of the credit for Wiesel's prize in 1986. "That<lb/>
would be like the trainer claiming he's the<lb/>
racehorse Silber said. "We mav have fed the<lb/>
oats, and curried the flanks. But that horse could<lb/>
run<lb/>
According to all published reports, Wiesel has<lb/>
been on the Nobel Committee's short list for the<lb/>
past few years. And this year members of the jurv<lb/>
thought it necessary to make a non-controversial<lb/>
selection.<lb/>
Looking down the list of past winners one<lb/>
wonders what the prize is actually for. Some years it<lb/>
appears to reward good deeds on a large scale<lb/>
Other times, it seems to honor political leadership<lb/>
On a few occasions, like 1973, when it was awarded<lb/>
jointly to Henry Kissinger and Le Due Tho. it has<lb/>
seemed closer to a war prize than a peace prize<lb/>
These days, it's a rather amorphous accolade ?<lb/>
sort of a moral hall of fame for the indisputablv de-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
Whatever the Nobel Peace Prize signifies, it's<lb/>
clear that people lobby for it. Nobody seems quite<lb/>
sure what Japanese prime minister Eisaku Sato won<lb/>
his Nobel for in 1974. but it is well known that he<lb/>
hired a public relations firm to help his campaign<lb/>
along Jimmy Carter, Armand Hammer and Indira<lb/>
Gandhi have been among the more recent cam-<lb/>
paigners who appear to have failed (so far) in drives<lb/>
for the prize. (Hammer reportedly sent Ann<lb/>
mT iadC nCckUce with a notc "king iff she<lb/>
could help him get nominated.) Mohandas Gandh.<lb/>
never campaigned for, and never got. the most<lb/>
coveted prize on planet Earth.<lb/>
Because the prize has such prestige, it's a bit dis-<lb/>
quieting to discover that the winners actually<lb/>
wanted it. Nobody wants to think that the Mother<lb/>
HTSXlfbid f? wth,y r?? m<lb/>
fact, Mother Theresa never did camnaian fnr th<lb/>
Nobel Peace Prize. But she seemsbX ?ceo<lb/>
tion, Elie Wiesel the rule. '<lb/>
Integra<lb/>
PHII AIM l PHIA<lb/>
Halting,<lb/>
cess, b a ?<lb/>
grou<lb/>
nave e<lb/>
tion in n<lb/>
 I<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
impr<lb/>
But<lb/>
son ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
a hi<lb/>
I<lb/>
Blacl<lb/>
(BS1 ?<lb/>
BS1<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
: "<lb/>
?<lb/>
ould<lb/>
Bu<lb/>
b u r <lb/>
? "Siw proved n<lb/>
? ? <lb/>
Blac k<lb/>
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' ISCJ<lb/>
mostly w<lb/>
admitting<lb/>
iarce nun<lb/>
The new ?<lb/>
they felt<lb/>
 ignore<lb/>
Jacob Weisberg is a former reporter-resma.<lb/>
the New Republic. -researcher at<lb/>
DEBBIE:<lb/>
Thanks for<lb/>
the office<lb/>
time, one<lb/>
day we<lb/>
will get ouii<lb/>
ork done!<lb/>
mNmi,rrwxYv:Afj:zi'msA,7TT3r,<lb/>
mfem M?em? wwwmwm. . <lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057863_0005"/><lb/>
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Li<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 13. I9W<lb/>
rmality No<lb/>
? ?. madam, sir, wish<lb/>
llykins? Butch-7 It would<lb/>
on the pope traehng<lb/>
. Mr Wojtyla, what<lb/>
e to he called? "Just call<lb/>
Rome, Vicar of Jesus<lb/>
ssor of St. Peter, the<lb/>
Vp stles Supreme Pon-<lb/>
the West, Primate of<lb/>
larcJ<lb/>
p and Metropolitan of<lb/>
nee. and Sovereign of<lb/>
Vatican Cit<lb/>
jhi Intimacy,<lb/>
' a ? no.<lb/>
Exelyn<lb/>
ves; for-<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
In addition to the "Campus<lb/>
on" section of the Editorial<lb/>
gc The East Carolinian has re-<lb/>
hed the "Campus Spectrum<lb/>
is an opinion column featuring<lb/>
from the student bod<lb/>
The columns printed in<lb/>
Campus Spectrum" will contain<lb/>
rent topics of concern to the cam-<lb/>
community or nation.<lb/>
he co urnns are restricted in con-<lb/>
? with -egard to rules of<lb/>
mer and decency. Persons sub-<lb/>
- lumns must be willing to<lb/>
"?-line" credit for their ef-<lb/>
entrys from ghost writers<lb/>
be published.<lb/>
Persons interested in participating<lb/>
seeking further information may<lb/>
tact Daniel Maurer, managing<lb/>
edii r I The East Carolinian at<lb/>
M66. or stop by our offices on<lb/>
the second floor of the Publications<lb/>
Bunding<lb/>
eace Prize<lb/>
trainer claiming he's the<lb/>
"We ma have fed the<lb/>
the flat ks But that horse could<lb/>
all published reports, Wiesel has<lb/>
fe Committee's short list for the<lb/>
nd this year members of the jury<lb/>
make a non-controversial<lb/>
Nar<lb/>
)f past winners, one<lb/>
:he'n' tuall) ? ?r Sme years it<lb/>
eward good deeds on a large scale,<lb/>
seems to honor political leadership.<lb/>
-? ns, like 1973, when it was awarded<lb/>
Kissinger and Le Due Tho, it has<lb/>
a ar prize than a peace prize.<lb/>
s a rather amorphous accolade ?<lb/>
?ral hall of fame for the indisputably de-<lb/>
the Nobel Peace Prize signifies it's<lb/>
ople lobby for it. Nobody seems quite<lb/>
Japanese prime minister Eisaku Sato won<lb/>
I r in 194, but it is well known that he<lb/>
blu- relations firm to help his campaign<lb/>
?m Carter, Armand Hammer and Indira<lb/>
W been among the more recent cam-<lb/>
Jo appear to have failed (so far) in drives<lb/>
he (Hammer reportedly sent Ann<lb/>
lade necklace with a note asking if she<lb/>
?'im get nominated.) Mohandas Gandhi<lb/>
Jigned for. and never got, the most<lb/>
pe on planet Earth.<lb/>
he prize has such prestige, it's a bit dis-<lb/>
1 discover that the winners actually<lb/>
N -body wants to think that the Mother<lb/>
I 'he world bid for earthly reward In<lb/>
fr Theresa never did campaign for the<lb/>
I , u Ut,Shc secms to th? excep-<lb/>
fiesel the rule.<lb/>
?V a former reporter-researcher at<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA, PA (CPS)-<lb/>
HalungU and without much suc-<lb/>
cess, black and white student<lb/>
croups on a handful of campuses<lb/>
have experimented with integra-<lb/>
tion in recent weeks.<lb/>
At the University of Penn-<lb/>
sylvania here, for example, a<lb/>
white student tried to join the<lb/>
Black Student League until final-<lb/>
Is being rebuffed last week.<lb/>
At Alabama, several black<lb/>
greek groups moved to the<lb/>
previousl) all-white fraternity<lb/>
row, and a black sorority admit-<lb/>
ted a white pledge. Mississippi's<lb/>
Black Student Union, hoping to<lb/>
improve campus race relations,<lb/>
appointed two white students to<lb/>
its board.<lb/>
But some whites and blacks on<lb/>
some of the campuses don't<lb/>
believe the experiments are worth<lb/>
doing, or ultimately workable.<lb/>
"The trend across the country<lb/>
is thai one person is accepted (in<lb/>
a fraternity or sorority) for a<lb/>
shon period of time, and then<lb/>
thej leave or drop out said<lb/>
University of Alabama President<lb/>
Joab Thomas upon hearing of a<lb/>
white student pledging a black<lb/>
sororit.<lb/>
Not Working<lb/>
 <lb/>
enn, freshman Sdne<lb/>
Thornbury applied for member-<lb/>
ship in the Black Student League<lb/>
iBSlin earh September.<lb/>
BSI leaders initially told<lb/>
I hornbury, who said she wanted<lb/>
join because she is "sincerely<lb/>
t ested" in helping advance<lb/>
black studenl causes, that they<lb/>
didn't want her.<lb/>
"Offering (Thornbury) a full<lb/>
membership would have changed<lb/>
rganization explains BSI<lb/>
spokewoman Traci Miller. "It<lb/>
have been a black<lb/>
group an longer.<lb/>
wouldn'i<lb/>
students'<lb/>
But alter some public con-<lb/>
troversy, the BSI ottered I'horn-<lb/>
h u r an associate<lb/>
membership BSI leaders then<lb/>
tld i decide just w hat an<lb/>
"associate member" could or<lb/>
could m d . .md rhornbun last<lb/>
week withdrew her application.<lb/>
"She realh wanted to cause<lb/>
rouivij yi the ranks Miller<lb/>
sa "SJnt proved ? by tracking<lb/>
?? when we offered her an<lb/>
associate membership<lb/>
Black studenl groups, of<lb/>
course, began to crop up on cam-<lb/>
puses in the late sixties, when<lb/>
mostly white colleges first began<lb/>
admitting minority students in<lb/>
large numbers.<lb/>
The new arrivals complained<lb/>
they telt isolated, out-of-place<lb/>
and ignored at the colleges, which<lb/>
often had to be forced by court<lb/>
orders to admit them.<lb/>
To promote their special con-<lb/>
cerns, protect their hard-won<lb/>
gains and, ultimately, to give<lb/>
themselves a social center of<lb/>
gravity, the black students often<lb/>
formed their own groups.<lb/>
"There's a profound rejection<lb/>
for (black students) in white<lb/>
schools says Barnard College<lb/>
psychology Prof. Jacqueline<lb/>
Fleming, who wrote a book call-<lb/>
ed "Blacks in College<lb/>
She says, "students don't ex-<lb/>
pect (the rejection), and it's very<lb/>
painful, so they retreat into black<lb/>
organizations<lb/>
But black student unions at<lb/>
Michigan State, Cal-Santa Bar-<lb/>
bara, Illinois State and Loyola-<lb/>
New Orleans, among others,<lb/>
struggled for members in the ear-<lb/>
ly eighties as black students<lb/>
began gravitating toward newly-<lb/>
robust minority fraternities for<lb/>
social sustenance.<lb/>
Minority fraternities and<lb/>
sororities, though, also have<lb/>
stayed to themselves.<lb/>
At the University of Illinois-<lb/>
Urbana, for example, "only one<lb/>
or two (black) greek organiza-<lb/>
tions choose even to belong to the<lb/>
lnterfraternity Council or the<lb/>
Panhellenic says Bruce Nesbitt,<lb/>
director of the Afro American<lb/>
Cultural Program.<lb/>
"They choose to have their<lb/>
own identity, but they do interact<lb/>
with non-black greeks on occa-<lb/>
sion. There is no one campus<lb/>
establishment blacks identify<lb/>
with. Most of their socializing<lb/>
outside of black-only groups is at<lb/>
house parties<lb/>
Alabama sociology Prof.<lb/>
Donald Muir, who has been<lb/>
surveying black-white race rela-<lb/>
tions for 20 years, contends social<lb/>
integration on American cam-<lb/>
puses has proceeded a lot more<lb/>
slowly than classroom integra-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Indeed, many blacks on<lb/>
predominantly white campuses<lb/>
now complain more about vague,<lb/>
social feelings of "discomfort"<lb/>
than oert racism.<lb/>
At Penn. "black students<lb/>
cen't restricted Miller reports,<lb/>
"but they don't always feel com-<lb/>
fortable. Feeling welcome on<lb/>
campus has been a problem<lb/>
At Illinois, blacks are "very<lb/>
aware of racism, but most choose<lb/>
to ignore it or adjust to it<lb/>
There are, in fact, plenty of<lb/>
reminders of racism on campus.<lb/>
Last spring, two Alabama<lb/>
white students burned a cross in<lb/>
front of a house on "sorority<lb/>
wtmmmumiHWiMWAwsss'MmxrHrssssss-sssss's's-ssswssss.<lb/>
DEBBIE:<lb/>
Thanks for<lb/>
the office<lb/>
time, one<lb/>
day we<lb/>
will get ou<lb/>
work done!<lb/>
?X -A -A "A &amp; Ar - "skr 4r &amp; Ly "A -4-<lb/>
gm T? x? -X" "T T "T T" T T "T T T "T "T<lb/>
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row" after a black sorority an-<lb/>
nounced it was relocating there.<lb/>
At Texas, two whites wearing<lb/>
Ronald Reagan masks tried to<lb/>
push a former Black Student<lb/>
Alliance president through an<lb/>
eigth-story residence hall win-<lb/>
dow.<lb/>
And at The Citadel last week,<lb/>
five white students accused of<lb/>
dressing in white sheets, yelling<lb/>
obscenities at a black student and<lb/>
burning a paper cross on his floor<lb/>
were suspended for the remainder<lb/>
of the year.<lb/>
Citadel officials set aside the<lb/>
suspension on the five's promise<lb/>
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"There have been no previous<lb/>
incidents here claims Citadel<lb/>
spokesman Ben Legare. "This is<lb/>
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tion as a cadet in a regimented en-<lb/>
vironment. A cadet's attitude is<lb/>
'when I put on that uniform, I'm<lb/>
cadet-gray, not black or white<lb/>
But the persistance of such in-<lb/>
cidents at other campuses has<lb/>
convinced many black student<lb/>
leaders they need to keep whites<lb/>
out of their groups, whether<lb/>
they're social fraternities or more<lb/>
political black student unions.<lb/>
Psychologically, Barnard's<lb/>
Fleming says, students are saying<lb/>
"The rest of the campus rejects<lb/>
us and won't let us in, so why<lb/>
should we let them in?"<lb/>
"Fraternities and sororities<lb/>
usually are dedicated to social life<lb/>
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2-PIECE PACK ? COMB.<lb/>
2 Pieces of Chicken<lb/>
1 Small Mashed Potato and Gravy<lb/>
1 Biscuit<lb/>
1 Medium Drink<lb/>
Expires Dec. 31, 1986<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
u (f ?<lb/>
kl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057863_0006"/><lb/>
'Hi EAS1 i Roi INiAN<lb/>
NOW MHl K IV 1986<lb/>
Roots, Conflicts And Influences Discussed<lb/>
Kl NrHvBu.v.u liberal modernisation mrwfel nl .k- ? L <lb/>
Orderl) poUticaJ and economic<lb/>
ogress and stabiUt) in Central<lb/>
lflka can come about onl bv<lb/>
reducing the influence ol .is tur<lb/>
bulenI nghtisi and lett.s. ex<lb/>
'remes, according to a noted<lb/>
nistonan.<lb/>
I fie historian, I), Ralph 1 ee<lb/>
Woodward Jr oi rulaneUnivei<lb/>
S1U- views thc roots ol present<lb/>
conflicts in Central America as<lb/>
considerably, more complex"<lb/>
'nan oft-described struggles he;<lb/>
ween conservative, right wing<lb/>
oligarchies and Marxist radicals.<lb/>
A: last Carolina University to<lb/>
deliver the annual 1 awrence 1<lb/>
Brewstei Lecture in History,<lb/>
Woodward said even the terms<lb/>
"conservative" and ?'liberal"<lb/>
nae rathe, different meanings in<lb/>
. entral America than in the<lb/>
I "iled Slates<lb/>
In the lecture rhursdav night,<lb/>
Woodward traced historical<lb/>
erspectives of conflicts and tur-<lb/>
noil that have wrecked the five<lb/>
eak Central American republics<lb/>
foi more than 150 years<lb/>
He tewed the erne .<lb/>
the c hristian Democrai pat ? as<lb/>
"a new force which otters a mid-<lb/>
dle ground or moderaiioi<lb/>
"1: (the v hristian Democrai<lb/>
party) is essentially a center right<lb/>
force, and both in terms of its<lb/>
leadei ship And philosophy .<lb/>
eaches back to 19th century con<lb/>
servatism with its connections to<lb/>
the church, its paternalistic con-<lb/>
cern tor the welfare of the poor,<lb/>
and its concept of corporate<lb/>
organization of society and<lb/>
politics V oodward said<lb/>
V oodward said "the m<lb/>
? is reality" foi the<lb/>
liberal modernization model ol<lb/>
the lasi KH) years in Central<lb/>
America "was the decline in stan-<lb/>
dard oi living toi most Central<lb/>
Americans.<lb/>
"Mv (he 1970s, there was<lb/>
widespread poverty And many ol<lb/>
the undesirable benefits of the<lb/>
liberal-capitalist development<lb/>
had Listened themselves on both<lb/>
rural and urban Nicaragua. It<lb/>
was in this environment that op-<lb/>
position to the Somoza dictatoi<lb/>
ship mounted following the 1972<lb/>
earthquake<lb/>
He said a militant group of lef-<lb/>
tists, dedicated to a social<lb/>
oriented revolution, eventually<lb/>
succeeded in leading a massive<lb/>
uprising that triumphed in 1979<lb/>
and allowed the Sandinistas to<lb/>
take over the country .<lb/>
"( uriously then, in Nicaragua,<lb/>
by U.S. standards, the liberal<lb/>
1'aitv had become the more con<lb/>
servative ol the two patties,<lb/>
whereas the Conservative Party<lb/>
represented a more progressive,<lb/>
20th century position he said<lb/>
In his lecture. Woodward said<lb/>
examination of the conser-<lb/>
i ive tradition suggests that its<lb/>
roots in C entral America "run<lb/>
very deep and have provided<lb/>
greatei continuity in the politics<lb/>
Mid societies ol the region than is<lb/>
commonly recognized<lb/>
He described this as a history<lb/>
ol oligarchies descended from<lb/>
Spanish c onquistadores lighting<lb/>
hold onto their political and<lb/>
economic i ntrol and being<lb/>
challenged by middle and work-<lb/>
ing classes B and large, he said.<lb/>
; adei ship : th Mai xisi<lb/>
moveme , . g from an<lb/>
emei ninu tn .<lb/>
ass sii uggle<lb/>
the origin of much of the crises<lb/>
has become important in the 20th<lb/>
century Woodward said.<lb/>
Woodward said that rural<lb/>
masses gained little from moder-<lb/>
nization and in most cases suf-<lb/>
fered a decline in standard of liv-<lb/>
ing. As epidemic diseases were<lb/>
eradicated, there was rapid<lb/>
growth of population without in-<lb/>
crease in real wages.<lb/>
"But the growth of exports<lb/>
and accompanying moderniza-<lb/>
tion of the cities, development of<lb/>
transportation and other in-<lb/>
dustries related to international<lb/>
trade contributed to the growth<lb/>
of small, but significant, middle<lb/>
classes in the cities.<lb/>
The oligarchies jealously<lb/>
guarded their economic and<lb/>
political power, refusing to share<lb/>
it with the emerging middle<lb/>
classes he said. Because elec-<lb/>
tions were almost alwavs rigged,<lb/>
"the middle and working classes<lb/>
turned to revolution to bring<lb/>
about reform<lb/>
'The old conservative parties<lb/>
largelv disappeared I heir former<lb/>
members and their descendants<lb/>
went into exile, or joined the<lb/>
liberals. The liberals dominated<lb/>
C entral America tor about a cen<lb/>
fury, "but in their failure to k<lb/>
cept the sort ol social dem?H.ratK<lb/>
modifications to capitalism<lb/>
occurred in Western Europe an<lb/>
North America, rspr<lb/>
following ihe ' neat Depre-<lb/>
they became known a- '<lb/>
vatives' oi . wingi<lb/>
mosi ? f the w<lb/>
vv odwai d said<lb/>
Snowskiing As An<lb/>
Activity<lb/>
Course<lb/>
FISHBONE<lb/>
In Concert In Memorial Gym<lb/>
SAT. NOV. 15<lb/>
9:00 P.M.<lb/>
53.00 In Advance, $5.00 At Door<lb/>
Sponsored by Departments of<lb/>
Health, Physical Education,<lb/>
Recreation ? Safety<lb/>
? Earn Academic Credit<lb/>
? Attend Pre-Ski Classes<lb/>
? Take Ski Trip to Steamboat Springs<lb/>
Resort, Colorado over Spring Break!<lb/>
( ourses A vailable:<lb/>
PHYE 1150 Beginning Snowskiing<lb/>
PHYE 1151 Intermediate Snowskiing<lb/>
PHYE 1152 Advanced Snowskiing<lb/>
All interested persons call Karan Israel. Ski Coordinator<lb/>
355-6215<lb/>
WE'VE MOVED!<lb/>
We're in the new building, fa . Ki .? ?? . . it.<lb/>
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES<lb/>
Haircuts $4 00 Jrl ?  :  ? ? . ? <lb/>
REG $400 ECU "I<lb/>
! $3.00 HAIRCUT <lb/>
Expires 12 27 86<lb/>
PI i M I'tONf M(l ms K ,?N,  s , I<lb/>
I1<lb/>
All services performed endusivelv bv students<lb/>
No appo.ntment neressarv Senuv Sationa:l accredited<lb/>
OMtchelh<lb/>
 MONDAY "J i?<lb/>
J II rKI l(<lb/>
AiRSTfLlNG<lb/>
to 5 M<lb/>
1(1 to v M<lb/>
"vn hi n to 4<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
ECU Music Therapy Club<lb/>
The ECU Music Therapy Club is sponsoring a<lb/>
panel discussion on Monday, Nov. 17, from<lb/>
4:30-5:30 in Room 101 of the School of<lb/>
Music. A.J. Fletcher Building. The topic will<lb/>
be, 'Interdisciplinary Dialogue: Rehabilita-<lb/>
tion Counseling, Therapeutic Recreation, and<lb/>
Music Therap Featured Guests are Rev.<lb/>
James Martin, Director of Therapeutic<lb/>
Recreation of the Baptist Children's Homes<lb/>
oi North Carolina, and Dr. Paul Alston, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of Rehabilitation Studies at ECU.<lb/>
The panel discussion is free and open to the<lb/>
public, and refreshments will be provided.<lb/>
CAcademy<lb/>
il'i rlinKIn HIm1 wy<lb/>
CO KROCERINC TO<lb/>
VC" ? IU:illlL.M rOOU<lb/>
DOtJHi<lb/>
Ml M<lb/>
UAKV.J1J<lb/>
fast ?aroliiu Slmbersitp<lb/>
 ? i i 111 111 ? 11 ofB4<lb/>
? i ? 11111 ??Y AY f<lb/>
I 1 I I I J ? j ! I .<lb/>
11 ? i 1111 ?Yi an i<lb/>
niuuii<lb/>
THE<lb/>
SAVINGS<lb/>
We have tr ? est selec-<lb/>
"? and pr ice in town<lb/>
on C 'Kegs Ot Beer<lb/>
Reserve . . ?<lb/>
6 703<lb/>
Kroner Deli Dinner Specials<lb/>
5pm-7pm<lb/>
ALLYOU<lb/>
CAN EAT<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
Eat In<lb/>
Jrders<lb/>
()nl!<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Serve n' Save<lb/>
Lunch Meat<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
99<lb/>
ViY.Y.Y, . : VAW? ' ? i.ii<lb/>
 111. i. 11111<lb/>
tii 11111111111<lb/>
11111.11111 i 11 <lb/>
11.1111111111.<lb/>
Mlliuiiiiim<lb/>
I i 11 11 i i i 1111<lb/>
?.w. llUMltllllii<lb/>
i i i i i 11 i i t i i i p "h ? HV? i i i i 11 i<lb/>
i. 11 ? i. . i , iY -v  ' ? ? ? 1111 ? i ??<lb/>
-lllllli.l u, r-?-?N lll.lil.ll<lb/>
1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 I I 1 I<lb/>
1 i . i i i ; i i i i i i m ??<lb/>
? i ? 11 i i ,2lC ki  ? ? 1111111<lb/>
i i i i i i<lb/>
i i i i i i t .<lb/>
 i i i i t i i : l l ;<lb/>
 I I 1 l l l 1 1 X I I<lb/>
1 I ? I I 1 1 I 1 1 1 . .<lb/>
 1 t I 1 t 1 1 1 1 1 1<lb/>
' I I 1 I I 1 I I 1 1 I t<lb/>
"iiKikiiiiit<lb/>
MonFried Chicken<lb/>
Tues. -Spaghetti<lb/>
WedTacos<lb/>
Thurs. Deep Dish<lb/>
I asagna<lb/>
Your Food Dollars (Jo turther it hrnx.r:<lb/>
FAMILY SIZE<lb/>
Tetley 24<lb/>
Tea Bags  bo<lb/>
LIMIT 2 WITH $1<lb/>
ADD l PURCMASF<lb/>
990<lb/>
Ltr<lb/>
NRB<lb/>
PEPSI FREE OR<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
99<lb/>
( JWabrtgax<lb/>
6 Binneaa ?<lb/>
?n ?lrabcrf)an (Cfjnstmas east<lb/>
f<lb/>
QUARTERS<lb/>
Parkay <lb/>
Margarine . . . PLkbg 49?<lb/>
USDA Choice Heavy<lb/>
Western Grain Fed Beef<lb/>
DORITOS<lb/>
Tortilla<lb/>
Chips .<lb/>
11<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
$- 19<lb/>
DECEMBER 3-6, 1986 7:OO p m<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
MULTI-PURPOSE ROOM<lb/>
TICKETS BY ADVANCE SALES ONLY<lb/>
CONTACT THE CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE<lb/>
(919) 757-6611, EXT. 266<lb/>
A STUDENT UNION<lb/>
PRODUCTIONS COMMITTEE PRESENTATION<lb/>
Cube Steak<lb/>
$1.99 lb.<lb/>
Boneless<lb/>
Chuck Roast<lb/>
$1.38 lb.<lb/>
DELMONTE CUT OR FRENCH STYLE<lb/>
GREEN BEANS CREAM STYLE<lb/>
OR WHOLE KERNEL<lb/>
Corn, Peas, or<lb/>
I Green Beans<lb/>
i<lb/>
2 79<lb/>
Natural Light<lb/>
or Coors Beer<lb/>
$9.99<lb/>
Suitcases<lb/>
24<lb/>
VHS Video Movie Rentals<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
$<lb/>
oz cans<lb/>
. 24 Hour<lb/>
E? wml W?t?i<lb/>
Hundred ot tmvorttm moWti<lb/>
to chooso from!<lb/>
,?- Multigrain<lb/>
0 Bread<lb/>
69c<lb/>
EXTRA FANCY WASHINGTON<lb/>
STATE GOLD OR<lb/>
f Red Delicious<lb/>
ji Apples<lb/>
59c<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POUC v<lb/>
Eacn of these aavertispo<lb/>
itpms is required to op<lb/>
readily avanaoie for sale in<lb/>
eacn Kroger Savon enceot<lb/>
as specifically noted in tnis<lb/>
ad if we do run out of ?n<lb/>
item we win offer you your<lb/>
cnoice of a comparaoie<lb/>
item when avauaoie<lb/>
reflecting tne same say<lb/>
mgs or a ramenech wnicn<lb/>
win entitle you to pur<lb/>
chase trie advertised item<lb/>
at tne advertised price<lb/>
within 50 days Only one<lb/>
vendor coupon win be ac<lb/>
repteo per item<lb/>
JUMBO<lb/>
SIZE<lb/>
<lb/>
o Krogering<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd Creenvi<lb/>
'Mr rASW (MKJIINI<lb/>
i<lb/>
r-tjin Ml 1.1?<lb/>
I ickets for tfe .<lb/>
'Sou! Man' I<lb/>
-<lb/>
N H<lb/>
. i<lb/>
Today's<lb/>
Ren<lb/>
"B <lb/>
i<lb/>
-<lb/>
Dei<lb/>
' res B<lb/>
i<lb/>
:<lb/>
?<lb/>
because<lb/>
u<lb/>
? ;?<lb/>
Ves<lb/>
iheir h -<lb/>
exhibits have<lb/>
-<lb/>
certa:<lb/>
er<lb/>
' u: her . .<lb/>
with the<lb/>
alueN <lb/>
i<lb/>
heat concern; .<lb/>
people's" pr <lb/>
the mid<lb/>
the "funnj i<lb/>
heen the dor<lb/>
Saturda mornii <lb/>
The prime-time B<lb/>
changed the face<lb/>
morning tube s<lb/>
Space<lb/>
were in tod<lb/>
Mcia!ed with s<lb/>
hone-cru?.hing<lb/>
"iolence" va- :he<lb/>
word which opened :he do<lb/>
'he pressure groups<lb/>
Things changed 5 -<lb/>
Now a hero could no<lb/>
Mllian He couldn't even<lb/>
him. And shooting a<lb/>
question, much to the chaf<lb/>
Race Bannon who had his gun<lb/>
lifted when "Johnn Ques ?a<lb/>
moved to Saturdav morniri<lb/>
prime time<lb/>
The reasoning was simple a<lb/>
child might actualh slug another<lb/>
<pb facs="00057863_0007"/><lb/>
i a<lb/>
cussed<lb/>
i<lb/>
IHI MSIAROI NIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
ViVlMHI R<lb/>
i'agr<lb/>
New Play Entertains<lb/>
I , . f N ??. - 1 H<lb/>
Harold and the boys' is now playing at McGinni rheatre through Saturday All perform ,<lb/>
Ihe play stars (from left to right) urtis lee Jones, Scot Slusarick and Sidnes S Morton<lb/>
he pla are 4 for students, and S5 tor the general public<lb/>
1) SV NS()Ngins a friendly aftcn debate with Sam.however, tl e talei ed 'hese people would<lb/>
Ihe discussion, .oncer<lb/>
ten iocial reformers, continues onCurtis Jones' Sa<lb/>
any levels between the the threeimpressive I he a. I<lb/>
i ters through 'he aftervKide range f drama<lb/>
lHally's offstage alcoholicfrom happv g tcky to 1<lb/>
i the ha1 embarassing father intrudes ? friendship drawing defen-?? .lass harneis between he andwisdi imi lisgust and Scot Slusai ? g as<lb/>
servarrial 1 y. H i j<lb/>
imor, and the intin m<lb/>
betw eei Ha . vmeriority wa<lb/>
Willie givi :it<lb/>
? - Musterdl s a<lb/>
Harold? ?<lb/>
? reography a Weeks should be n i ' tyle and ffectivene gnil especialK since dis the a .  ? tradu -<lb/>
?i i<lb/>
. i edi c Winchi ii face<lb/>
: r wl-k as a f 1 <lb/>
1 '<lb/>
11 Mml<lb/>
?Konarsl<lb/>
??<lb/>
Soul Man' Lacks Rhythm<lb/>
Hs 1 1) I i (Ml C tl<lb/>
tli idinj<lb/>
irea. H<lb/>
i<lb/>
?H<lb/>
 a  Jill. i u<lb/>
 ould.<lb/>
Sei M i II . pati <lb/>
rishbone. A 1 os ngeles-based band ?? ill be performing their uni-<lb/>
que form ot musu Saturday night at Memorial o. m I i kets are<lb/>
available at theentral 1 it k??; ' lenhall.<lb/>
Southern Magazine<lb/>
'1 N III?: . I<lb/>
- 1i1<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? uthen Mago<lb/>
'? ?:? i I<lb/>
md<lb/>
tern MagazineW ? 1 A<lb/>
? ??? -s a<lb/>
 Nouthei founder ol Vrka<lb/>
w eeks, ;2 ? ect. w mb<lb/>
n ? hai u<lb/>
1- see SOI 1H1KM Hv pap I<lb/>
today's Cartoons Are Seen As Bad Influence On Children<lb/>
l 1 11 M DDIw nrKUm KaiI.An rt  <lb/>
t MM HHKKIs<lb/>
-J19<lb/>
Multigrain<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
69<lb/>
Red Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
0<lb/>
59<lb/>
'BO<lb/>
I<lb/>
 Ms is<lb/>
 a i<lb/>
. I. More<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
? children's<lb/>
en individuality<lb/>
 feeling<lb/>
heii "yo<lb/>
gran ng during<lb/>
i ; u that point,<lb/>
mima irtooi<lb/>
rvatinj ipl<lb/>
me tune Batman series<lb/>
irday<lb/>
,b? Supei heros like<lb/>
? and the Impossible<lb/>
?nd it anything is<lb/>
h supei ' it's<lb/>
rushinj ? lence<lb/>
was the magic<lb/>
I whi ? ipened the doot foi<lb/>
? essure groups<lb/>
rhings .hanged significantly<lb/>
a a hero could not punch a<lb/>
in He couldn'1 even trip<lb/>
im And shooting was out ol the<lb/>
n, much to the chagrin ol<lb/>
Rdie Bannon who had his gun<lb/>
d when "Johnny Quest" was<lb/>
moved to Saturday morning from<lb/>
prime time.<lb/>
The reasoning as simple a<lb/>
child might actually slug another<lb/>
M <lb/>
a a kid<lb/>
i<lb/>
.<lb/>
. ;  R<lb/>
.<lb/>
? iractei N ipe I hei<lb/>
a ho w ill<lb/>
I.<lb/>
hat it the<lb/>
? -a orks ga e<lb/>
?<lb/>
.<lb/>
Now t's the 'tunny<lb/>
ome undei<lb/>
tippers.<lb/>
Nowadays, foi example, .<lb/>
.?. hunters aiming a<lb/>
. , it Daffy Dui k! In one<lb/>
i B igs and Daffy keep cha<lb/>
? e 'hunting signs' on ea<lb/>
from duck to rabbit sea<lb/>
v -tu- end, Daffy asks Buj<lb/>
? 'Say. w hat seas m is this i eally <lb/>
i this point, Bugs reveals a<lb/>
? 'du ason" sign and sevi<lb/>
hunters emerge from the bushes<lb/>
and blow Dut fy away. He<lb/>
returns, bur ned to a gun<lb/>
vdered crisp, and tells Bugs,<lb/>
"I hate you<lb/>
Ihe above is the original vet<lb/>
 roday, the scene ol the<lb/>
inters shooting Daffy has been<lb/>
pped out so the following<lb/>
scene in which he tells Bugs, "1<lb/>
u no longer makes any<lb/>
sense w hatsoev ei<lb/>
What is the message the cen<lb/>
sors are hindering here? It's<lb/>
a ' ? ?ng to shoot a diK k ' )i do<lb/>
they think a child might see<lb/>
somebody walking around in a<lb/>
duck suit, think "aha" A man<lb/>
sized duck just like on cartoons!<lb/>
Think I'll shoot him "ome to<lb/>
think ol it, I guess this sort ol<lb/>
thing happens all the time.<lb/>
But the worst thing the<lb/>
pressure groups do is turn car<lb/>
loons into a soap box from which<lb/>
to preach their 'social gospel<lb/>
C haracters must act only through<lb/>
committee, thev must only ap<lb/>
proach a problem by teamwork,<lb/>
 V<lb/>
 A<lb/>
1<lb/>
ng the prol<lb/>
dly iracters g<lb/>
igl pei a rial crises dr.d 1<lb/>
ay "Rob . a<lb/>
view<lb/>
isy pi<lb/>
?<lb/>
 mima<lb/>
.<lb/>
epis ? 'Rol teel bad<lb/>
?  k a ? "G.l Joe" oi "He<lb/>
i a ' ? <lb/>
Macek<lb/>
the series, are ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
"Robot<lb/>
series , a<lb/>
ild Networl<lb/>
? i Nctw<lb/>
Saturday i - t ?<lb/>
?'?<lb/>
B .<lb/>
Ttainly a<lb/>
I<lb/>
11 seems i h <lb/>
Sal n da ? morning<lb/>
.<lb/>
ke the a<lb/>
Aatcl tw dimensi nal<lb/>
? and; u<lb/>
expi ession is a<lb/>
I<lb/>
ivei<lb/>
f r i g I<lb/>
I have i<lb/>
merchandising<lb/>
dising being a in<lb/>
? m d'etre.<lb/>
1 wonder it the censoi s a<lb/>
really tt ying to protect themse<lb/>
from the children 1'er hap- i<lb/>
projec I theii ow n guilt feelinj<lb/>
' heii offspi tng At any i ai<lb/>
not only insult a child's<lb/>
telligent e bui see 11 I ,t<lb/>
potential Frankensteins<lb/>
waiting foi the slightest sugges<lb/>
tion to send them runn<lb/>
amock. What a depressing wa<lb/>
looking at the woi Id<lb/>
1 should mention that a few<lb/>
Saturday morning programs<lb/>
managed to rise above the restl ic-<lb/>
tion. er v tew Ironically. one ol<lb/>
the country's most populai cai<lb/>
toon series in teims both ol<lb/>
viewers and merchandising is the<lb/>
violent "Robotech '<lb/>
The lengthv series deals with a<lb/>
From The Not So ?ght<lb/>
Revenge On The Professors<lb/>
B PAI MOl.l.OY<lb/>
f-nlrftai<lb/>
1 guess we ,ill know what<lb/>
time ol year it is, don't we<lb/>
gang? "tes, ves, 1 know. The<lb/>
Holidays are right around the<lb/>
proverbial corner, the air has<lb/>
taken on a slight chill; and<lb/>
thanks to all the women in<lb/>
tight sweaters, it's becoming<lb/>
fun to walk to class.<lb/>
Bu ?? importantly, what<lb/>
ly matte's this week, what<lb/>
I've been continually<lb/>
salivating about for the past<lb/>
two months is "Teacher<lb/>
Evaluation Week<lb/>
Yeah. "Teacher Evaluation<lb/>
Week Don vou get it? For<lb/>
this one week ? or at least two<lb/>
ds out ol this one week ?<lb/>
we can plav God.<lb/>
For two days, forty-eight<lb/>
hours, or 2,880 minutes, we<lb/>
control the destination of a<lb/>
single professor like a video<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Say, Einstein, you said<lb/>
simply because my waterbed<lb/>
exploded and caused an unex-<lb/>
pected rip-tide on Fifth Street,<lb/>
that I am unexcused? Well 1<lb/>
don't understand you very<lb/>
well in class, pal; I'm sending<lb/>
you back to Remedial Speech.<lb/>
What's that you said? 1<lb/>
didn't put enough thought in-<lb/>
to my Thesis Statement; I<lb/>
strayed from my original line<lb/>
of thought and I used a<lb/>
hyphen instead of a dash? And<lb/>
for that you gave me an "F"?<lb/>
Jeepers Creepers, even Nix-<lb/>
on got a pardon. But that's all<lb/>
right, I'll simply pencil in<lb/>
"Strongly Disagree" for ques-<lb/>
tion number 4: "The professor<lb/>
uses adequate sentence struc-<lb/>
ture and brushes daily<lb/>
As a matter of fact, 111 even<lb/>
embellish on it. Afterall, 1<lb/>
have poetic license. Sol only is<lb/>
the professor monosyllabic at<lb/>
his best, and an extra from<lb/>
Quest For Fire at his worst, he<lb/>
is mean, wears a suit and tie,<lb/>
and probably likes Prince.<lb/>
Seed I say more?<lb/>
Are you starting to realize<lb/>
the power the sheer om-<lb/>
nipotence of your position as a<lb/>
student?<lb/>
If you're a freshman, take it<lb/>
slowly. Heady stuff like this<lb/>
can result in curvature of the<lb/>
spine, if you don't know how<lb/>
to control it.<lb/>
My advice is to start with a<lb/>
grad student who's being a<lb/>
severe weenie. Don't try to<lb/>
break him in half at first; work<lb/>
your way up.<lb/>
Then, when you get to a<lb/>
biology professor with a bad<lb/>
case of "You-Spaak-<lb/>
SpokeB-To4tli a ?<lb/>
ream him. It's ftin, it's<lb/>
and the best part is: nobody<lb/>
knows that you wrote it.<lb/>
If you're a sophomore, you<lb/>
must also be careful. I have a<lb/>
friend who was put in traction<lb/>
because she let her imagina-<lb/>
tion get out of hand.<lb/>
However, if you're a junior<lb/>
or a senior (or a dinosaur, like<lb/>
me), feel free to test y our skills<lb/>
as a creative writer.<lb/>
The following is one of my<lb/>
favorites: The professor has<lb/>
absolutely no grasp on realitw<lb/>
She claims she has been saved<lb/>
by Ernest Angley, that Meister<lb/>
Brau really does taste like<lb/>
Budweiser and that Ronald<lb/>
Reagan is the Anti-Christ.<lb/>
No Chairman in his right<lb/>
mind would keep someone like<lb/>
that on his faculty. Just think,<lb/>
in five minutes you've gotten<lb/>
her fired, depleted her sense of<lb/>
self-worth and ruined her<lb/>
career. That'll teach her to<lb/>
give you a pop quiz in Psvch<lb/>
1050 on the Friday before Fall<lb/>
Break.<lb/>
Of course, there will be<lb/>
times when you stumble across<lb/>
a professor who's actually<lb/>
pretty cool ? not anybodv<lb/>
youVTtap a keg with, but a<lb/>
teacher with whom you are on<lb/>
a first-name basis.<lb/>
ikaJCjtapacaiicritique for<lb/>
I faaaoa that if<lb/>
<pb facs="00057863_0008"/><lb/>
us<lb/>
sed<lb/>
UH FAS1 ARui INIAN<lb/>
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Entertainment<lb/>
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-ts tor th, plas art- S4 for students and S5 tor tht general public,<lb/>
begins a friendly afternoon<lb/>
debate with Sam.<lb/>
I he discussion, concerning<lb/>
social reformers, continues<lb/>
main levels between the the three<lb/>
characters through the atter<lb/>
noon Halh offstage alcoholic<lb/>
and em harassing father intrudes<lb/>
? friendship drawing defen-<lb/>
sive class barriers between he and<lb/>
'the servant<lb/>
rhe humor, and the intimate<lb/>
ship between Hally . Sam<lb/>
and Willie give extraordinary<lb/>
orce i limai I Master<lb/>
Harold<lb/>
il choreograph) hv<lb/>
Patri la Weeks should be noted<lb/>
style and effectiveness<lb/>
recognition is especially<lb/>
tti( piav<lb/>
not frequei irtist<lb/>
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tring in this praise<lb/>
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Fine stage<lb/>
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Steei wl  ? ed ? - ac<lb/>
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lia hat Met iinnis<lb/>
Without 11<lb/>
'Soul Man' Lacks Rhythm<lb/>
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however, the tal<lb/>
these people would<lb/>
si<lb/>
Curtis J<lb/>
impressue I he a<lb/>
wide range<lb/>
from happ.  ?<lb/>
wisdom to disgust a<lb/>
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vincing as the pretei i is ad ies<lb/>
cent, Hallv His a '<lb/>
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Specia<lb/>
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superla<lb/>
H? KI) IHM1H<lb/>
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S- 19<lb/>
? Multigrain<lb/>
? Bread<lb/>
69<lb/>
Red Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
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eligible black a<lb/>
? Howell d sguises hin<lb/>
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Set Mt II page X<lb/>
fishbone, A I os Angeles-based hand  ill ht- performing their uni-<lb/>
que form ol iiuisu Saturday night at Memorial om rickets are<lb/>
?bailable ai (heentral fickel I iffit e in Mendenhall.<lb/>
Southern Magazine<lb/>
i I'l S mth brims <lb/>
u a ters, entertaining<lb/>
tngu ige, and a fascinatii <lb/>
mes s -Idid history<lb/>
trp dive rial ins fron<lb/>
tck-wa tcks in Miss<lb/>
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A ts own igazme<lb/>
tthern Magazine<lb/>
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S itherners I:<lb/>
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.aid I w eeks. 32, editor I<lb/>
" e ig  ine 'That's what our<lb/>
is about It's a<lb/>
nagazine I v h<lb/>
.and<lb/>
drous reg<lb/>
Somewhat<lb/>
Southern Hagazint<lb/>
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Leveri11 as t h<lb/>
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I oday's Cartoons Are Seen As Bad Influence On Children<lb/>
MH H H-KKs<lb/>
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even<lb/>
aw Si<lb/>
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trip at<lb/>
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gnificam bat<lb/>
mtrol fot<lb/>
wrest led<lb/>
?? also dealing<lb/>
i children's<lb/>
? eii individuality<lb/>
? began feeling the<lb/>
theii "y oung<lb/>
programming during<lb/>
Up to that point,<lb/>
u umal" cartoon I a I<lb/>
: minating staple ol<lb/>
rnings<lb/>
rime Batman series<lb/>
fao f the Saturday<lb/>
stipt-r heros like<lb/>
, j the Impossible<lb/>
nd it anything is<lb/>
. th supei heros it's<lb/>
rushing s iolencc<lb/>
was the magic<lb/>
I wl ' ipened the dooi foi<lb/>
in groups<lb/>
? anged significantly<lb/>
v a hei ould not punch a<lb/>
He couldn'l even trip<lb/>
nd shooting was out of the<lb/>
 much to the chagrin of<lb/>
Bannon who had his gun<lb/>
: when "Johnny guest" was<lb/>
ved to Saturday morning from<lb/>
e time.<lb/>
The reasoning was simple: a<lb/>
d might actually slug another<lb/>
i ' get hi n his<lb/>
I ai ? He and<lb/>
'I nc le' Race.<lb/>
isored the 'human' anima<lb/>
ei ? ipe I ire some<lb/>
a ' will never<lb/>
? ed i me I Sal n das moi n<lb/>
taunc tics' ' 'defenders"<lb/>
admil . he t reatis e ;<lb/>
i ? w oi ks gave into ev ei <lb/>
demand, she would still I<lb/>
lething ??, complain il<lb/>
Now it's the 'funny animals'<lb/>
a ? . i have come undei<lb/>
censoi 's snippers.<lb/>
Nowadays, foi example,<lb/>
,au' even show hunters aiming a<lb/>
gun at Daffy Duck' In one t ai<lb/>
n Hugs and Daffy keep chang<lb/>
ing the 'hunting signs' on ea<lb/>
? ? ei from duck to i abbii season<lb/>
At the end, Daffy asks Hues.<lb/>
' 'Su, w hat season is this really ?<lb/>
At this point. Hugs reveals a<lb/>
"duck season" sign and several<lb/>
hunters emerge from the bushes<lb/>
and blow Daffy away. He<lb/>
i etui ns, burned 10 a gun<lb/>
powdered crisp, and tells Bugs,<lb/>
' '1 hate on "<lb/>
I he above is the original vei<lb/>
sion lodas, the scene of the<lb/>
hunters shooting Daffy has been<lb/>
snipped out so the following<lb/>
scene in which he tells Bugs, "I<lb/>
hale you no longer makes am<lb/>
sense w hatsoevet<lb/>
What is the message the cen-<lb/>
sors are hindering here? It's<lb/>
wrong to shoot a duck? )i do<lb/>
thes think a child might see<lb/>
somebodv walking around in a<lb/>
duck Milt, think "aha! A man<lb/>
sied duck just like on cartoons!<lb/>
Think I'll shoot him Come to<lb/>
think of it, I guess this sort oi<lb/>
thing happens all the time.<lb/>
But the worst thing the<lb/>
pressure groups do is turn car-<lb/>
toons into a soap box from which<lb/>
to preach their 'social gospel<lb/>
Characters must act only through<lb/>
committee, they must only ap-<lb/>
proach a problem by teamwork,<lb/>
I<lb/>
see<lb/>
?<lb/>
e ssai<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
ting the problem head<lb/>
; Cl aracters -<lb/>
igl pei sonal crises and 1<lb/>
ive ? sa "Robotech" gives a<lb/>
i istic view of love rela-<lb/>
: - han ? I ei fantasy pro-<lb/>
Dallas or Dy nast ?<lb/>
I igl the animation is<lb/>
1, sou only have to wa<lb/>
episode r "R back<lb/>
bac k witl "G.l Joe" or "He-<lb/>
Ma ' see its comparitive<lb/>
i .<lb/>
C a:<lb/>
Macek and box<lb/>
Harmoney-Gold<lb/>
the series, a I v. <lb/>
accomodation foi sei<lb/>
and beyond the cal<lb/>
"Roh<lb/>
series.<lb/>
could survive Netv<lb/>
jramri g w <lb/>
wr a ten I pole. B at's<lb/>
. ay Ne'w . pref<lb/>
burving their head<lb/>
ective Saturday mornii c sa<lb/>
nd an<lb/>
V : .<lb/>
. ;<lb/>
lioned b i<lb/>
Bug Bui vasi<lb/>
1 hoi can il<lb/>
rtainh acted on<lb/>
cience<lb/>
ies b yni thinkinj<lb/>
muc h as clobbet inj I s<lb/>
It seems those pressu<lb/>
Sal irday morning programming<lb/>
a theii cl fdren<lb/>
like the animatedhai<lb/>
watel two dimensional i<lb/>
manipulated b someone el<lb/>
hand; theii only meai<lb/>
expression is aw occasional gla<lb/>
bhnk of the eyes I he hwell<lb/>
overtones of this situati<lb/>
fi ightening.<lb/>
I have no pi oblem witl .<lb/>
merchandising theii chaia .1<lb/>
 have a problem with mei c I<lb/>
dising being a cartoon's only<lb/>
raison d'etre.<lb/>
I wondei it the censoi s ai<lb/>
really trying to protect themsel<lb/>
from the hildren. Perha<lb/>
project then own guilt feelings on<lb/>
their offspring. At any rate, they<lb/>
not only insult a child's in<lb/>
telligence but see children as<lb/>
potential Frankensteins jusl<lb/>
waiting toi the slightest sugges<lb/>
tion to send them tunning<lb/>
amock. What a depressing way ol<lb/>
looking at the woi Id.<lb/>
I should mention that a tew<lb/>
Saturday morning programs<lb/>
managed to rise above the restric-<lb/>
tion. Very few. Ironically, one of<lb/>
the country's most popular cai<lb/>
toon series in terms both oi<lb/>
viewers and merchandising is the<lb/>
violent "Robotech<lb/>
The lengths series deals with a<lb/>
From The Not So ffjghj<lb/>
Revenge On The Professors<lb/>
B PAT MOI I OY<lb/>
hnicrlaiiunml hdttw<lb/>
I guess we all know what<lb/>
time of ear it is, don't we<lb/>
gang' .es, yes, I know. The<lb/>
Holidays are right around the<lb/>
proverbial corner; the air has<lb/>
taken on a slight chill; and<lb/>
thanks to all the women in<lb/>
tight sweaters, it's becoming<lb/>
fun to walk to class.<lb/>
But more importantly, what<lb/>
reallv matters this week, what<lb/>
I've been continually<lb/>
salivating about for the past<lb/>
two months is "Teacher<lb/>
Evaluation Week<lb/>
Yeah. "Teacher Evaluation<lb/>
Week Don't you get it? For<lb/>
this one week ? or at least two<lb/>
days out of this one week ?<lb/>
we can play God.<lb/>
For two days, forty-eight<lb/>
hours, or 2,880 minutes, we<lb/>
control the destination of a<lb/>
single professor like a video<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Say, Einstein, you said<lb/>
simply because my waterbed<lb/>
exploded and caused an unex-<lb/>
pected rip-tide on Fifth Street,<lb/>
that I am unexcused? Well I<lb/>
don't understand you very<lb/>
well in class, pal; I'm sending<lb/>
you back to Remedial Speech.<lb/>
What's that you said? I<lb/>
didn't put enough thought in-<lb/>
to my Thesis Statement; I<lb/>
strayed from my original line<lb/>
of thought and I used a<lb/>
hyphen instead of a dash? And<lb/>
for that you gave me an "F"?<lb/>
Jeepers Creepers, even Nix-<lb/>
on got a pardon. But that's all<lb/>
right, I'll simply pencil in<lb/>
"Strongly Disagree" for ques-<lb/>
tion number 4: "The professor<lb/>
uses adequate sentence struc-<lb/>
ture and brushes daily<lb/>
As a matter of fact, 111 even<lb/>
embellish on it. Afterall, 1<lb/>
have poetic license. Not only is<lb/>
the professor monosyllabic at<lb/>
his best, and an extra from<lb/>
Quest For Fire at his worst, he<lb/>
is mean, wears a suit and tie,<lb/>
and probably likes Prince.<lb/>
Need I say more?<lb/>
Are you starting to realize<lb/>
the power the sheer om-<lb/>
nipotence of your position as a<lb/>
student?<lb/>
If you're a freshman, take it<lb/>
slowly. Heady stuff tike this<lb/>
can result in curvature of the<lb/>
spine, if you don't know how<lb/>
to control it.<lb/>
My advice is to start with a<lb/>
grad student who's being a<lb/>
severe weenie. Don't try to<lb/>
break him in half at first; work<lb/>
your way up.<lb/>
Then, when you ?n to a<lb/>
biology professor wih a bad<lb/>
case of "You-Spaak-Wham-<lb/>
Spokeo-To4tli atf ? g?ft<lb/>
ream him. It's fta, it's easy<lb/>
and the best part is: nobody<lb/>
knows that you wrote it.<lb/>
If you're a sophomore, you<lb/>
must also be careful. I have a<lb/>
friend who was put in traction<lb/>
because she let her imagina-<lb/>
tion get out of hand.<lb/>
However, if you're a junior<lb/>
or a senior (or a dinosaur, like<lb/>
me), feel free to test your skills<lb/>
as a creative writer.<lb/>
The following is one of my<lb/>
favorites: The professor has<lb/>
absolutely no grasp on realm<lb/>
She claims she has been saved<lb/>
by Ernest Angtey, that Mets <lb/>
Brau really does taste like<lb/>
Budweiser and that Ronani<lb/>
Reagan is the Anti-Christ.<lb/>
No Chairman in his right<lb/>
mind would keep someone like<lb/>
that on his faculty. Just think<lb/>
in five minutes you've gotten<lb/>
her fired, depleted her sense of<lb/>
self-worth and ruined her<lb/>
career. That'll teach her to<lb/>
give you a pop quiz in Psvch<lb/>
1030 on the Friday before Fall<lb/>
Of course, there wvll be<lb/>
times when you stumble acroM<lb/>
?J "ho's actually<lb/>
teacher with whom you Br- <lb/>
a first-name basis. Utrt0n<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057863_0009"/><lb/>
-??EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 13, i986<lb/>
Magazine Of The South I<lb/>
Now A Reality Of Future<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
successful local magazines in<lb/>
Arkansas.<lb/>
Despite a wide gully of dif-<lb/>
ference in politics - - Weeks is a<lb/>
former McGovernite, while<lb/>
leveritt started conservative<lb/>
newspapers as a high school and<lb/>
college student ? the two found<lb/>
common ground. Each envision-<lb/>
ed a magazine by the South, of<lb/>
the South and for the South that<lb/>
went beyond the recipes and<lb/>
gardening tips of other Southern<lb/>
Publications, and delved into the<lb/>
odd charms and heated issues of<lb/>
the region often missed by na-<lb/>
tional reports.<lb/>
"The South has tended to be<lb/>
reflected in the press through a<lb/>
Northern lens Leveritt said.<lb/>
"We want to change that and<lb/>
provide our readers with a<lb/>
singularly southern vision<lb/>
Said Weeks, "We're much<lb/>
more sophisticated than we're<lb/>
given credit for being by the non-<lb/>
south media<lb/>
Weeks and leveritt spent<lb/>
almost a decade dreaming,<lb/>
scheming and wondering if such a<lb/>
magazine would fly.<lb/>
They had good reason for<lb/>
trepidation. Successful regional<lb/>
magazines are rare. The simple<lb/>
fact is that regions often have lit-<lb/>
tle more than geography as a<lb/>
common interest.<lb/>
"Southerners are very indepen<lb/>
dent, yet they stick together<lb/>
Weeks said. "If it can be done<lb/>
anywhere in America on a major<lb/>
scale, it can be done in the<lb/>
South<lb/>
After a good deal of research<lb/>
and soul-searching, Leveritt and<lb/>
Weeks went looking for money.<lb/>
They found friendly ears and<lb/>
deep pockets at Stephens Inc. of<lb/>
Little Rock, the largest invest-<lb/>
ment banker in the south, which<lb/>
is betting to the tune of $700<lb/>
million dollars that Southerners<lb/>
will pay to read up on their<lb/>
heritage.<lb/>
The magazine's circulation<lb/>
department blanketed the South<lb/>
over the summer with subscrip-<lb/>
tion offers to more than 6 million<lb/>
of the 13-state region's 28 million<lb/>
households. More than 200,000<lb/>
subscribers signed up for the<lb/>
premier October issue.<lb/>
Leveritt, who says the project<lb/>
is on course financially, predicts<lb/>
a profit within four years and ex-<lb/>
pects circulation to top 1 million.<lb/>
Southern is fact and fiction,<lb/>
sports and politics, religion and<lb/>
humor, home and travel, food<lb/>
and drink ? "with the accent on<lb/>
drink Weeks says. Creators of<lb/>
the magazine like to say it will<lb/>
evolve into a Southern cross bet-<lb/>
ween "The New Yorker" and<lb/>
"Texas Monthly<lb/>
Its first issue featured an essay<lb/>
on Southern storytelling (in-<lb/>
cluding a pull-out phonograph<lb/>
record made by one storyteller),<lb/>
an elegey oq the disappearance of<lb/>
mules, a preview of the South in<lb/>
the 21st century and a biting story<lb/>
on the trials of Louisiana Gov.<lb/>
Edwin Edwards, Headlined "Red<lb/>
Beans and Vice<lb/>
Molloy<lb/>
Takes No<lb/>
Prisoners<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
they'll let someone like me call<lb/>
them by their given names,<lb/>
they can take jab in the funny<lb/>
bone.<lb/>
At times the professor seems<lb/>
distant ? almost as if he's not<lb/>
mentally present. His sudden<lb/>
mood swings lead me to<lb/>
believe he's not totally<lb/>
masculine, as does his habitual<lb/>
out-loud giggling. However,<lb/>
he does have good rhythm,<lb/>
and he's easy to dance with.<lb/>
I'll give him a 75.<lb/>
But I do wish he 'd stop ask-<lb/>
ing us to call him "Shirlev. "<lb/>
Circle K Is Not A Ranch<lb/>
Circle K Is . . .<lb/>
THE ?<lb/>
TOTAL<lb/>
?;?<lb/>
L?B<lb/>
COLLEGE<lb/>
EXPERIENCE<lb/>
Why not find out more about how<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
can benefit by becoming an active member<lb/>
of ECU Circle K!<lb/>
All interested students are invited to attend an<lb/>
"All About Circle K Seminar"<lb/>
Sunday, November 16, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Room 248 Mendenhall<lb/>
Refreshments wilt be serxed<lb/>
Find out whv Circle K is<lb/>
THE TOTAL COLLEGE EXPERIENCE<lb/>
inm?re 2" InfJtution Of Higher Learning<lb/>
Falls Far Too Short On The Entertainment<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
One thing that works pretty<lb/>
well for Soul Man is its depiction<lb/>
of a man who suddenly has to<lb/>
deal with others' prejudices<lb/>
towards black people as well as<lb/>
his own.<lb/>
The gags are for the most part<lb/>
predictable, but in spite oi' this,<lb/>
they are occasionally funny simp-<lb/>
ly by virtue of outrageousnss.<lb/>
The acting is not poor, but never<lb/>
especially good.<lb/>
Where the film runs into real<lb/>
trouble is the script by Carol<lb/>
Black. A comedy film isn't<lb/>
necessarily supposed to be utterly<lb/>
feasible, but Soul Man jusl stret-<lb/>
ches our suspension of disbelief.<lb/>
We are expected to believe<lb/>
wealthy parents would refuse to<lb/>
pay for their son's education. We<lb/>
are supposed to believe that just<lb/>
when Howell's character needs<lb/>
this scholarship, his beach<lb/>
bum tanning scientist friend ac-<lb/>
cident!) discovers a pill that will<lb/>
turn white people black. Finally<lb/>
? and most absurd ? we are<lb/>
supposed to believe that anybodv<lb/>
would actually think Howell is<lb/>
black, rather than a white person<lb/>
in make-up.<lb/>
Even all of this would not be<lb/>
asking for too much if the movie<lb/>
ever gave us reason for stretching<lb/>
our imagination so far. but<lb/>
despite a few funny moments<lb/>
Soul Man just isn't worth the<lb/>
time or trouble.<lb/>
BUt Eaat (Sarnlfnian<lb/>
is now accepting applications<lb/>
for the following position:<lb/>
General Manager<lb/>
for the Spring Semester<lb/>
Apply in person at the Media Board<lb/>
Secretary's Office on the second floor<lb/>
of the Publications Building<lb/>
between 10 AM and 5 PM.<lb/>
CHRISTMAS IN NOVEMBER<lb/>
Over 200 Christmas presents <lb/>
through the month of November<lb/>
91.3 FM<lb/>
vifcd<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
?3<lb/>
?<lb/>
JOIN THE SPIRIT AND CALL<lb/>
757-6913<lb/>
When you hear them sleigh bells<lb/>
ringin' be the right caller<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
WZMB wishes to thank these area merchants<lb/>
JMSr<lb/>
Sunshine Video, Inc.<lb/>
TWfs Nightlife<lb/>
Substation II<lb/>
Spice of Life<lb/>
Deiner's Bakery<lb/>
A Cut Above<lb/>
Hank 9s Ice Cream<lb/>
Sheir Hair Design<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
for making a November Christmas possible<lb/>
ECU Special Concerts Committee<lb/>
Hooters<lb/>
ECU Play House<lb/>
Campus Pizza and Subs<lb/>
University Rentals<lb/>
Fabricate Too<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
Wrong Way Corrigans<lb/>
Chinatown Express<lb/>
Your Local Budweiser Distributor<lb/>
Marsh's Surf &amp; Sea<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
Pizza Hut<lb/>
Grogs<lb/>
Tequila Bar<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Simply Elegant Caterers<lb/>
(LOOM COUNTY<lb/>
7MBB i HOTfHNb<lb/>
no Ntmnfx,<lb/>
'fO?7 WOP h- <lb/>
yUMf COULPP0 ? n.<lb/>
ins 7wav pju <lb/>
COMIC W Hgm<lb/>
Jr<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
UcA. CM?iP ?-<lb/>
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Sports<lb/>
NOVFMBER 13, lVgA<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
wimmers Unbeaten<lb/>
Pirates Down Richmond<lb/>
s<lb/>
??<lb/>
J ? HUMBERT - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
jJ<lb/>
I hi- nun<lb/>
B HUMBERT - ECU Pho?o L.b<lb/>
Prate Gridders Take On Bearcats<lb/>
As Seniors Bow Out In Ficklen<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
? ?-N?o?i? Mllor<lb/>
The men's and women's swim<lb/>
teams remained perfect as both<lb/>
squads won handily over con-<lb/>
ference foe Richmond in Minges<lb/>
Natatorium Tuesday, giving both<lb/>
teams a 2-0 record.<lb/>
The men, behind double win-<lb/>
ners Andy Jeter and Mark<lb/>
Mazuzan, topped the Spiders<lb/>
118-82 while triple winner Caycee<lb/>
Pouce and double winner Robin<lb/>
Wicks led the women to a 125-82<lb/>
win.<lb/>
Freshman Jeter won the 100-<lb/>
and 200-meter freestyles while<lb/>
senior Poust won the 200-meter<lb/>
individual medley, the 200-meter<lb/>
backstroke and swam a leg on the<lb/>
400-meter medley relay.<lb/>
Freshman Mazuzan won the one-<lb/>
and 3-meter diving while<lb/>
freshman Wicks took the<lb/>
200-meter butterfly and was part<lb/>
of the winning 400-meter medley<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"The whole team swam real<lb/>
weB said ECU coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe. "This is one of the best<lb/>
performances in an early meet<lb/>
since 1 have been here. We beat<lb/>
one of the better conference<lb/>
teams in Richmond and we really<lb/>
couldn't be happier at this point.<lb/>
"We swam much faster than<lb/>
we did against Furman Kobe<lb/>
added. "We were expecting a<lb/>
close meet, but it just wasn't to<lb/>
be. We are exactly where we want<lb/>
to be at this point of the season<lb/>
The women will be at William<lb/>
&amp; Mary Friday while both squads<lb/>
will be at home a week later to<lb/>
battle UNC-Charlotte on Nov. 22<lb/>
at 2 p.m.<lb/>
Men's Summarv<lb/>
400-Medlev Relav ECU (Pistono. Ken<lb/>
nedy, Fleming. Brown) 3 43 44<lb/>
1000 Free: George Edelman (R) 9 47.82;<lb/>
David Killeen (ECU) 953.32. Andv Lewis<lb/>
(ECU) 10.10 41<lb/>
200 Free: Jeter (ECU) 1:47.53; Andv<lb/>
Johns (ECU) 1 48 29; Matt Pecca (Ri<lb/>
1:44.63<lb/>
50 Free: Roto Fleming (ECU) 22 42. Pat<lb/>
Sanderson (R) 22:68; Jeff Brown (ECU)<lb/>
22:81<lb/>
200 IM: Patrick Brennan (ECU) 2 02.08.<lb/>
Tsge Pistono (ECU) 202 23. John<lb/>
Sloven (R) 2:03.54<lb/>
1 Meter Diving: Mazuzan (ECU) 125 95.<lb/>
Chris Berger (R) 93.05; David Ovenon<lb/>
(ECU) 203 54<lb/>
200 Flv: Kevin Hidalgo (ECU) 1 59 43.<lb/>
John Sloven (R) 2:04.85; Can. Green<lb/>
2:01.12<lb/>
100 Free Jeter (ECU) 49 63; Pat Sander<lb/>
son (R) 48.82. Matt Roca (R) 50.02<lb/>
200 Back Tvge Pistono (ECU) 205.0;<lb/>
Clav D'Aughtrv (ECU) 2:07.05; Patrick<lb/>
Williams (ECU) 2:07.33<lb/>
500 Free George Edelman (Ri 4:48.57;<lb/>
Patrick Brennan (ECU) 452.18; Ajidv<lb/>
1 ewis (ECU) 4:57 34<lb/>
3-Meter Diving. Maaizan (ECU) 154 75;<lb/>
David Ovenon (ECU) 163 55<lb/>
200 Breast David Hallman (R) 2 26 08<lb/>
Charles Keiso 2 24 58 Roto Fleming<lb/>
(ECU) 2 V 37 (Exhibition)<lb/>
400-Free Relav Richmond (O'Brien.<lb/>
Daughtrv. Roca. Edelman) 3 20 43<lb/>
W omen s Sum mars<lb/>
400-Medle Relav ECU (Poust. Phi a<lb/>
Wicks, Childers) 4 09 83<lb/>
1000 Free Pam Wilhanks (EC I <lb/>
1044 83; Scotia Miller (ECU 11:01 <lb/>
Kristin Olsen (R) U 01 1<lb/>
200 Err- Susan Wager (R) I J7 7; Jen<lb/>
nifer Dolan (ECU) 1 59 4. Pa' () ki<lb/>
(ECU) 2:01.73<lb/>
50 Free Patti Walsh, (EC I , ;n. Do-<lb/>
Hall (Ri 26 45. Betsv Beausang Ri ft<lb/>
200 IM Poust (ECU) 2 15 33. 1 e -<lb/>
W,lson (ECU) 2 P 89; Debbie Delhi<lb/>
ingut (R) 2 19 16<lb/>
1 Meter Diving Aiene S:ngea.J (M<lb/>
126 95; Sherrv Campbei; (EC L 112 5. D<lb/>
Robinson R( 153 25<lb/>
200 Flv W.cks (ECU) 2 14 2' Ryai<lb/>
Philyaw (ECU) 2 16 95. Susan Aufu<lb/>
(ECU) 2 18 96<lb/>
100 Free Susan Wager (Ri 54 25. Paa<lb/>
W,lbanks (ECU) 56 99; Pan W<lb/>
(ECU) 56 82<lb/>
200 Back Poust (ECU) 2 15 9. Ginge:<lb/>
Carrick (ECU) 2 20 4. I on ivin?<lb/>
(ECU) 2:21 5'<lb/>
500 Free Pat OUen (ECU) 5 1" 26. Jen<lb/>
n.fer Dolan (EC li 22 18; Kristin CXse<lb/>
(ECU) 5 25 17<lb/>
3-Meter Divmg Sherrv Campbell (ECU)<lb/>
146 95. D Robinson (R) 41 85. Rene<lb/>
Seech (ECU) 133.3<lb/>
200 Breast Debbie Deliaingui (R<lb/>
2 3181; Jennv Decker Ri 2 39 02<lb/>
Sozanne Hill (R) 2 54 92<lb/>
400-Free Relav Richmond (Wagr-<lb/>
Meissner. Elder. Kistien 3 4' 1<lb/>
Bj 1IM( HANOI FR<lb/>
&amp; Ki( K McCORMAC<lb/>
rl, Unlrrr,<lb/>
M ai<lb/>
- will have<lb/>
to pia in<lb/>
Sal day . v hen<lb/>
incinnatj Bcar-<lb/>
' two college<lb/>
. ti e thai Cincin-<lb/>
? L esfo  .til :eam ed in Ficklen<lb/>
setson Pirate<lb/>
Bak?' his week-<lb/>
ce. "Ai their f ? good this ? c were<lb/>
1 was still lm-<lb/>
vathe played<lb/>
. . .1' urrentl) 5-5.<lb/>
eatedVirginia Tech<lb/>
S 1  ' I  .I(45-38),<lb/>
V ichita State State (45-14). ave been to<lb/>
28-481Kentucky<lb/>
sate (17-23),<lb/>
(13-45)and Auburn<lb/>
1 (<lb/>
( incinnati share<lb/>
? opponents. For<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
lhur. No. 13, 1982<lb/>
Ra "Boom Boom" Mancinil<lb/>
knocks out Korean challenger!<lb/>
Duk Koo Kim in the fourteenth<lb/>
round on national television to<lb/>
retain his lightweight title. Kim<lb/>
collapses after the match and<lb/>
dies a tew days later, sparking aI<lb/>
review of the sport that leads toj<lb/>
the American Medical Associa-<lb/>
tion's 1984 recommendation I<lb/>
ihat boxing be banned.<lb/>
those who like to compare scores.<lb/>
Auburn defeated the Pirates 45-0<lb/>
w hile Penn State downed ECU by<lb/>
a 17-42 score. The Pirates will<lb/>
close their season on Thanksgiv-<lb/>
ing against Miami (Fla.)<lb/>
This week's game is an impor-<lb/>
tant one for Cincinnati according<lb/>
to coach Dave Currey. because a<lb/>
win would mean the first winning<lb/>
season for the Bearcats since<lb/>
1982.<lb/>
"Our kids really want this<lb/>
win Curre said. "The seniors<lb/>
want verv badlv to finish on a<lb/>
winning note ? a winning<lb/>
record<lb/>
Despite ECU'S 1-8 record,<lb/>
Currey refuses to take the Pirates<lb/>
lightlv.<lb/>
"They (ECU) could very easily<lb/>
be 3-6 Currey said. "They've<lb/>
(ECU) had two games decided in<lb/>
the closing moments, and one of<lb/>
them was taken from them on a<lb/>
bad call<lb/>
The Bearcats feature running<lb/>
back Reggie Taylor, a two-time<lb/>
All-America honorable mention<lb/>
selection, who has run for over<lb/>
4.000 yards in his career. He is<lb/>
currently fifth in the nation in<lb/>
rushing with 1,221 yards for an<lb/>
average of 122.1 per game.<lb/>
"It is very unusual for him<lb/>
(Taylor) to be held under 100<lb/>
yards in a gamecoach Baker<lb/>
said. "He is excellent at breaking<lb/>
tackles<lb/>
Another weapon in the Bear-<lb/>
cats' offensive attack is junior<lb/>
quarterback Danny McCoin. He<lb/>
holds the school completion<lb/>
record with 360 and is present I v<lb/>
second in career passing yardage.<lb/>
The quarterback situation for<lb/>
'he Pirates has once again change<lb/>
in this week's contest.<lb/>
True-freshman Charlie Libret-<lb/>
to, who guided the Pirates to a<lb/>
go-ahead touchdown in the<lb/>
Southern Mississippi game, will<lb/>
replace red-shirt freshman Travis<lb/>
Hunter.<lb/>
libretto, who started the first<lb/>
six games for ECU this season,<lb/>
had been replaced in the line-up<lb/>
by Hunter. But, he was put in for<lb/>
Hunter during the final minute of<lb/>
the Southern Miss game to mount<lb/>
one final drive for the Pirates.<lb/>
Libretto came through on the<lb/>
drive as he capped it off with a<lb/>
21-yard touchdown pass to<lb/>
freshman Walter Wilson for his<lb/>
first touchdown pass as a col-<lb/>
legian.<lb/>
The Pirates benefitted from<lb/>
last week's open date, as<lb/>
tailbacks Reggie McKinney and<lb/>
Brian McPhatter will be back in<lb/>
the lineup after missing action<lb/>
due to injuries.<lb/>
The game, designated "Fan<lb/>
Appreciation Day will mark<lb/>
the final home appearance for the<lb/>
16 seniors on the football team.<lb/>
As previously mentioned, this<lb/>
Saturday has been designated<lb/>
"Fan Appreciation Day All<lb/>
fans entering the stadium will<lb/>
receive a certificate thanking<lb/>
them for their loyal support of<lb/>
the Pirates. In addition, a Honda<lb/>
Elite 80 scooter will be given<lb/>
away.<lb/>
In addition to the Marching<lb/>
Pirates, the halftime show will be<lb/>
highlighted by the Cincinnati<lb/>
marching band. This marks the<lb/>
first time in a number of years<lb/>
that a visiting band has appeared<lb/>
in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
London, Aloia Senior Pirates<lb/>
KLLBN MURPHY - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Senior Pirates' Gary London (7) and Joe Aloia (25)<lb/>
Basketball Exhibition<lb/>
Charlie Harrison's 1986-87<lb/>
Pirate basketball team will make<lb/>
then debut tonight (Thurs.) in an<lb/>
exhibition game against the<lb/>
Brisbane Bullets.<lb/>
Tipoff is at 7:30, and student<lb/>
tickets can be picked up one hour<lb/>
before game time at the Minges<lb/>
Ticket Office with a valid student<lb/>
ID and.activity card.<lb/>
The Bullets, from Australia,<lb/>
are currently undefeated against<lb/>
Division-1 oponents. This will be<lb/>
the last warm-up for the Pirates<lb/>
before they open the season on<lb/>
Nov. 29 in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
against Edinboro University.<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Sport, Write,<lb/>
On most football teams, you'll<lb/>
hear them called strong safeties,<lb/>
but at ECU, they proudly wear<lb/>
the name 'Pirates ECU's top<lb/>
two men at this secondary posi-<lb/>
tion are seniors Gary London and<lb/>
Joe Aloia.<lb/>
Approaching their last home<lb/>
game, both have taken time to<lb/>
look back at their team, the<lb/>
season and their careers at ECU.<lb/>
For London, ECU football has<lb/>
been good to him. A true senior<lb/>
leader, London said that the fact<lb/>
that Saturday will be his last<lb/>
home game hasn't hit him yet. He<lb/>
hopes that this won't be his last<lb/>
season of football as he wishes<lb/>
for the chance to play profes-<lb/>
sionally.<lb/>
"Football has prepared me for<lb/>
just about anything in life Lon-<lb/>
don said. "I've learned how to<lb/>
deal with hard times and you<lb/>
can't get much harder than this<lb/>
London, a fourth-year senior,<lb/>
started in a few games his<lb/>
freshman year and has found the<lb/>
starting position a familiar one<lb/>
ever since.<lb/>
The 6-2 'Pirate' remembers his<lb/>
favorite game, which was his first<lb/>
collegiate start against Temple in<lb/>
1983.<lb/>
"I was excited because it was<lb/>
the first time I was starting. 1 was<lb/>
ready, but a little scared to be<lb/>
playing in front of all those peo-<lb/>
ple London said. "When we<lb/>
got there it was raining and our<lb/>
fans were about the only ones<lb/>
there. That took a lot of pressure<lb/>
off me and I had a great game<lb/>
that I will never forget<lb/>
London's freshman year also<lb/>
gave the Hampton, Va resident<lb/>
some funny memories that he's<lb/>
sure never to forget. "We were<lb/>
playing Miami and at the end of a<lb/>
play, I was on the bottom of the<lb/>
pile. Everyone was pushing and<lb/>
kicking. As everyone got up, so-<lb/>
meone kept kicking me Lon-<lb/>
don explained. "I was ready to<lb/>
jump up and go to it until I saw<lb/>
that it was a huge offensive<lb/>
lineman. Needless to say, I let<lb/>
him slide<lb/>
The communications major<lb/>
has seen many changes since his<lb/>
freshman year. He said he was<lb/>
proud of the way the team has<lb/>
stuck together through so many<lb/>
coaching staff changes. Because<lb/>
his personal goals involved team<lb/>
goals, London hasn't met all his<lb/>
expectations of the season. But<lb/>
with some adjustments, he is still<lb/>
looking to make the best of this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Joe Aloia is also a senior<lb/>
Pirate The five-year senior<lb/>
walk-on feels he's been lucky to<lb/>
have worked with teammate Garv<lb/>
London. Said Aloia, "We've<lb/>
gone through hard times but have<lb/>
enjoyed a lot of good times too "<lb/>
The 5-10 New Jersey native.<lb/>
Aloia has made manv close<lb/>
friends while at ECU and that's<lb/>
made the long road worth it<lb/>
because, "they will be my friends<lb/>
forever.<lb/>
Aloia has spent most of his<lb/>
time waiting patiently for a big<lb/>
break. He sees most of his play<lb/>
mg time on the specialty teams<lb/>
Aloia s had the opportunity to<lb/>
paverThndagainS,SOmc1<lb/>
Players. These opportunities have<lb/>
been this non-scholarship<lb/>
athlete's rewards. "Plaving<lb/>
against the big name teams is<lb/>
great Aloia said. "You get the<lb/>
chance to see just how good they<lb/>
are He feels this is what has<lb/>
made his career at ECU so ex<lb/>
citing and memorable.<lb/>
One of his well remembered<lb/>
encounters came against former<lb/>
ECU player Jody Shuliz. "I was<lb/>
blocking Jody when he came<lb/>
across with a forearm to mv<lb/>
cnin Aloia explained. "Not on-<lb/>
gJ cut m' chin, but it<lb/>
,ike?rmIeboul fiv? f?t inio<lb/>
the backfield<lb/>
To Aloia, that's what playing<lb/>
football ,s all about - practicing<lb/>
hard and playing tough. He<lb/>
hopes to teach this if he coaches<lb/>
in the future.<lb/>
But in the immediate future.<lb/>
Gary London and Joe Aloia are<lb/>
looking for big things to happen<lb/>
?n their last two games as they go<lb/>
out just as they normally do <lb/>
giving it their all.<lb/>
Jn<lb/>
Intramuri<lb/>
Co-Rec Cageball<lb/>
Se'en ,can rd m the<lb/>
new Intramural ? R<lb/>
Cageball. Ali teams r <lb/>
si fu"andpd f,he?<lb/>
which differs from traditional<lb/>
volleyball. If you arc intern<lb/>
participating in agehaii. keep an<lb/>
eve out for info-<lb/>
hours which .<lb/>
for this sp.<lb/>
3 On 3 Basketball<lb/>
3 on 3 B, .<lb/>
week with ai<lb/>
ncipating Tea-<lb/>
well in the ?<lb/>
The Fellow v. the Get <lb/>
and the Akj ?? r Ski<lb/>
Racquetball<lb/>
Tournament<lb/>
Racque-Ha<lb/>
tion got un<lb/>
 vember 10 a1 V ? .<lb/>
courts. A larj.<lb/>
ticipants guai<lb/>
petition. M5 ma<lb/>
the open ai<lb/>
sions and lei<lb/>
for the<lb/>
division, c ns will tM<lb/>
crowned rhurs Nov. 2<lb/>
luck to all r<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
Point Leaders<lb/>
As of N .<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
THE FRATERN<lb/>
SION is be<lb/>
Epsilof -<lb/>
: p<lb/>
ChancdloT :<lb/>
running<lb/>
IN-THE- MI S trt<lb/>
DENT DIVISION ?<lb/>
are t<lb/>
is I<lb/>
-<lb/>
The <lb/>
Trophy S<lb/>
INDEPENDENT DIVTS1 S<lb/>
Sigma Ph ?<lb/>
are leadr <lb/>
with 23? points<lb/>
sehind are<lb/>
points, c a<lb/>
Goldenhear-<lb/>
Scott Hall<lb/>
MEN'S RESIDENCI DIM<lb/>
SION with 2?<lb/>
closely by Gam Ha<lb/>
In the CO REC RES<lb/>
DIVISION, the B ?<lb/>
omen are lead<lb/>
total of 318 p<lb/>
last year's trc<lb/>
I msiead. who ha<lb/>
-42 points.<lb/>
The WOMEN S RES<lb/>
DlMSION points race -<lb/>
close with Fleming a<lb/>
points, folio<lb/>
Hall with 70 po<lb/>
TheSORORITH -<lb/>
lle of their own h ZeU<lb/>
Alpha leading w. 2 7 p<lb/>
followed by Delta 2a<lb/>
Points. Las: ear-<lb/>
the Alpha Phs- are staj t<lb/>
ith 186 points<lb/>
Beginning<lb/>
Weight Training<lb/>
orkshop<lb/>
Beginning we gh<lb/>
workshops are being "ered I<lb/>
individuals interests. 'nmg<lb/>
juP muscles and c:ee<lb/>
greater physical strengtk and er<lb/>
lurance. The three less<lb/>
workshops will introduce<lb/>
l,cipants learn a fundarr<lb/>
toutine for total bod) de<lb/>
"Km. The workshop, mi be<lb/>
idd Nov. 7, 18. and 20,<lb/>
5:30-6:30 p.m. in Memorial<lb/>
gymnasium weight room ?<lb/>
f the event is $2.00 for studen:<lb/>
ind $3.00 f .aff. Regira:<lb/>
fB begin N?.  10. and will run<lb/>
trough the 13 from 9:00 a -<lb/>
?00 p.m. in 204 Memorial Gvm<lb/>
sium. Register earlv. &amp;<lb/>
forkshop is limited to only 16 '<lb/>
rticipants.<lb/>
; y<lb/>
?ti0mmmmwBmwmm? ??" " ?<lb/>
jf b<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057863_0012"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
tl<lb/>
ichmond<lb/>
usk<lb/>
lor<lb/>
R ' 26 tV.<lb/>
1458 R I lemmg<lb/>
R Bnen,<lb/>
 omen's sunim?r<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? aw<lb/>
? 82<lb/>
1 I<lb/>
? R 16 f<lb/>
Deiha<lb/>
67<lb/>
R<lb/>
Ran<lb/>
- ? -<lb/>
41 85. Ren<lb/>
-<lb/>
'11<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
?P<lb/>
?emembered<lb/>
' rmer<lb/>
j ?? "I was<lb/>
 he came<lb/>
"ea-rn ? , mv<lb/>
plained "Noi on<lb/>
"hin, bur i;<lb/>
' ve feei into<lb/>
 ?, that's what playing<lb/>
l about - practicing<lb/>
 and playing tough. He<lb/>
to teach this if he coaches<lb/>
tuture.<lb/>
But in the immediate future<lb/>
tn London and Joe Alo.a are<lb/>
Ming for big thmgs to happen<lb/>
I'heir last two games as they go<lb/>
just is they normally do m-<lb/>
f'ng it their all.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Intramural-<lb/>
I Hfc EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 13. 1986<lb/>
11<lb/>
Intramural Action Highlights<lb/>
Co-Rec Cageball<lb/>
vv en teams participated in the<lb/>
new Intramural activity CoRec<lb/>
1 eball. All teams enjoyed the<lb/>
:nnd,u? and pace of the game<lb/>
n A7 from "aditional<lb/>
vHevball. If you are interested in<lb/>
partu.pat.ng in Cageball, keep an<lb/>
eve out tor informal recreation<lb/>
hours wfuch will be designated<lb/>
this sport.<lb/>
3 On 3 Basketball<lb/>
1 on .1 Basketball began this<lb/>
'ku,th a total of 47 teams par-<lb/>
bating. Teams expected to do<lb/>
I m the tournament include-<lb/>
he Fellows, the Get Fresh Crew<lb/>
the AKkdimik Skholars.<lb/>
Racquetball<lb/>
Tournament<lb/>
Racquetball singles competi-<lb/>
got underway Monday,<lb/>
November 10 at Minges Colisium<lb/>
rts, A large turnout of par-<lb/>
ents guarantees stiff corn-<lb/>
on 36 men are bracketed in<lb/>
open and intermediate divi-<lb/>
and seven women are vying<lb/>
the championship in their<lb/>
vision. Champions uill be<lb/>
rowned Thurs Nov. 20. Good<lb/>
? o all participants.<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
Point Leaders<lb/>
V of Nov. 11. the leaders in<lb/>
caniational race are as<lb/>
HE FRATERNITY DIVI-<lb/>
S being led by Tau Kappa<lb/>
with 348 points; Sigma<lb/>
silon (the defending<lb/>
lor's Trophy winner) is<lb/>
. a close second with 336<lb/>
IN I Hfc MEN'S INB&amp;PEN-<lb/>
DENt DIVISION the Alcholics<lb/>
eading the way with 181<lb/>
nts followed by last year's<lb/>
winner, Arm ROTC,<lb/>
itl 161 points.<lb/>
defending Chancellor's<lb/>
winner in the WOMEN'S<lb/>
INDEPENDENT DIVISION,<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon Goldenhearts,<lb/>
Jing in the point battle<lb/>
233 points. Following<lb/>
nd are the Enforcers with 159<lb/>
Can anyone catch the<lb/>
?idenhearts? Onlv time will tell.<lb/>
v " Hall is leading the<lb/>
MEN'S RESIDENCE DIVI-<lb/>
?N with 239 points, followed<lb/>
sel by Garrett Hall with 202.<lb/>
he COREC RESIDENCE<lb/>
ISION, the Belk men and<lb/>
?'ien are leading the way with a<lb/>
'al of 318 points followed by<lb/>
vear's trophy winners,<lb/>
instead, who have accumulated<lb/>
242 points.<lb/>
The WOMEN'S RESIDENCE<lb/>
DIVISION points race is running<lb/>
?se with Fleming leading with<lb/>
points, followed by White<lb/>
Hall with 70 points.<lb/>
The SORORITIES are in a bat-<lb/>
tle of their own with Zeta Tau<lb/>
Vpha leading with 217 points,<lb/>
 Mowed by Delta Zeta's with 187<lb/>
nts. last year's trophy winner<lb/>
'he Alpha Phi's are staying close<lb/>
!th 186 points.<lb/>
Beginning<lb/>
Weight Training<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
Beginning weight training<lb/>
workshops are being offered to<lb/>
individuals interested in firming<lb/>
up muscles and developing<lb/>
greater physical strength and en-<lb/>
durance. The three session<lb/>
workshops will introduce par-<lb/>
ticipants learn a fundamental<lb/>
routine for total body develop-<lb/>
ment. The workshops will be<lb/>
held Nov. 17, 18, and 20,<lb/>
5:30-6:30 p.m. in Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium weight room. Cost<lb/>
of the event is $2.00 for students<lb/>
and $3.00 f" taff. Registration<lb/>
will begin Nl . 10, and will run<lb/>
through the 13 from 9:00 a.m. to<lb/>
4:00 p.m. in 204 Memorial Gym-<lb/>
nasium. Register early, as this<lb/>
workshop is limited to only 16<lb/>
participants.<lb/>
Exercise For The Holidays<lb/>
Drop-In Aerobics<lb/>
Days<lb/>
Mon &amp; Wed<lb/>
Mon &amp; Wed<lb/>
Mon &amp; Wed<lb/>
Mon &amp; Wed<lb/>
Mon &amp; Wed<lb/>
Mon &amp; Th<lb/>
Mon &amp; Th<lb/>
Tu&amp;Th<lb/>
Tu&amp;Th<lb/>
Tu &amp;Th<lb/>
Tu&amp;Th<lb/>
Tu &amp;Th<lb/>
Tu&amp;Th<lb/>
Fri<lb/>
Fri<lb/>
Times<lb/>
4:005:<lb/>
5:006:<lb/>
4:305:<lb/>
6:007<lb/>
5:156<lb/>
4:005<lb/>
5:306<lb/>
6:457<lb/>
4:005<lb/>
5:156<lb/>
6:007<lb/>
6:007<lb/>
6:307<lb/>
4:005<lb/>
5:156<lb/>
00 p.m.<lb/>
00 p.m.<lb/>
30 p.m.<lb/>
:00 p.m.<lb/>
15 p.m.<lb/>
00 p.m.<lb/>
30 p.m.<lb/>
45 p.m.<lb/>
:00 p.m.<lb/>
.15 p.m.<lb/>
:00 p.m.<lb/>
:00 p.m.<lb/>
:30 p.m.<lb/>
:00 p.m.<lb/>
:15 p.m.<lb/>
Locations<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
Tyler<lb/>
Clement<lb/>
Fleming<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
White<lb/>
Green<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
Jones<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
Fletcher<lb/>
Tyler<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
Instructors<lb/>
Clare O'Connor<lb/>
Lori Stephenson<lb/>
Chris Day<lb/>
Vaun Tschieder<lb/>
Lucy Mauger<lb/>
Robin Morrison<lb/>
Patti Williams<lb/>
To be announced<lb/>
Theresa Hughes<lb/>
Mark Brunetz<lb/>
Lon Stephenson<lb/>
Lisa Goldberg<lb/>
Michelle Winiewicz<lb/>
Jennifer Reed<lb/>
Lucy Mauger<lb/>
Mon &amp; Wed<lb/>
Tu&amp;Th<lb/>
6:307:30 p.m.<lb/>
3:004:00 p.m.<lb/>
Tu &amp;Th<lb/>
5:306:30 p.m.<lb/>
Toning<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
Aquarobics<lb/>
MG Pool<lb/>
Mark Brunetz<lb/>
Clare O'Connor<lb/>
Robin Morrison<lb/>
Chris Dav<lb/>
ILLMMU?MY-CUWwliLrt<lb/>
Jarman's<lb/>
Stables Is<lb/>
cooperating with the Department<lb/>
of Intramrual-Recreation Ser-<lb/>
vices in providing opportunities<lb/>
for students, faculty and staff to<lb/>
enjoy the outdoor atmosphere<lb/>
while horseback riding. Oppor-<lb/>
tunities are available for trail<lb/>
riding with groups or individuals<lb/>
witn a trail guide upon request.<lb/>
? The trails consist o( farmland,<lb/>
contry roads and pleasant wood-<lb/>
ed areas.<lb/>
The stables open at 9:00 a.m. and<lb/>
close at dark during the fall for<lb/>
drop-in business. Group rides<lb/>
are provided for five dollars. Ad-<lb/>
vanced registration is required.<lb/>
Reservation can be made through<lb/>
the Outdoor Recreation Center at<lb/>
113 Memorial Gymnasium or<lb/>
calling 757-6387 during opera-<lb/>
tional hours.<lb/>
Cape Fear<lb/>
Canoe Trip<lb/>
A small group of rugged outdoor<lb/>
recreation enthusiasts enjoyed a<lb/>
canoe trip down the Cape Fear<lb/>
River on Sat Nov. 8. Nine par-<lb/>
ticipants braved the cold<lb/>
November weather (80 degrees)<lb/>
and frigid waters (72 degrees) for<lb/>
an enjoyable eight mile run frim<lb/>
Lillington to Erwin. Conditions<lb/>
were great for fun with the rapids<lb/>
and plenty of time for instruction<lb/>
from the more advanced pad-<lb/>
dlers. Participants were Michael<lb/>
Carey, Pat Cox, Jim Hix, Stan<lb/>
Jolly, Len Olson, Richard Penny,<lb/>
Anne Simonton, Pamela<lb/>
Soderstrom, and David<lb/>
Stanaland. Several of the par-<lb/>
ticipants were members of the<lb/>
newly organized paddling club.<lb/>
Individuals interested in outdoor<lb/>
trips, either as an individuals or<lb/>
group, please call the Outdoor<lb/>
Recreation Center at 757-6387.<lb/>
Intramural cageball (top) is<lb/>
becoming one of the most<lb/>
popular IRS activities as co-rec<lb/>
basketball (below) has always<lb/>
been.<lb/>
11:00<lb/>
12:00<lb/>
1:00 2<lb/>
1:00 2<lb/>
5:00 6<lb/>
12:00 p.m.<lb/>
1:00 p.m.<lb/>
:00 p.m.<lb/>
:00 p.m.<lb/>
:00 p.m.<lb/>
Weekend Drop in Classes<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
MG 108 (Tonine)<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
Vaun Tschieder<lb/>
Alternating<lb/>
Alternating<lb/>
Vaun Tschieder<lb/>
Michelle Winiewicz<lb/>
MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM:<lb/>
MWF<lb/>
M-W<lb/>
Sat<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
12 noon-2 p.m.<lb/>
3p.m10p.m.<lb/>
11 a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
12 noon-8 p.m.<lb/>
Club Sports<lb/>
MEMORIAL WEIGHT ROOM:<lb/>
MF 7a.m10p.m.<lb/>
S3' H a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Sun 12 noon-8 p.m.<lb/>
MEMORIAL<lb/>
POOL:<lb/>
M-F<lb/>
M-F<lb/>
M W I<lb/>
T-Th<lb/>
Sat<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
SWIMMING<lb/>
3-<lb/>
"a.m 8 a.m.<lb/>
12 noon-1:30 p.m.<lb/>
3 p.m10p.m.<lb/>
5 p.m. 10p.m.<lb/>
11 a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
12 noon-8 p.m.<lb/>
MINGES SWIMMING POOL:<lb/>
N1 w F 8 p.m10p.m.<lb/>
Sun 12 noon-5 p.m.<lb/>
MEMORIAL<lb/>
ROOM:<lb/>
M-F<lb/>
Sat<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
EQUIPMENT<lb/>
7 a.m 10 p.m.<lb/>
11 a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
12 noon- 8 p.m<lb/>
MINGES WEIGHT ROOM:<lb/>
M-F 3 p.m10pm.<lb/>
Sun 12 noon-5 p.m.<lb/>
On The Move<lb/>
The Club Sport Program finished<lb/>
a super fall season with good pro-<lb/>
gress in numerous clubs. The<lb/>
Frisbee Club held an on-campus<lb/>
tournament and competed in<lb/>
several off-campus tournaments.<lb/>
The Club's disc golf course<lb/>
received progressive usage in-<lb/>
creases to the point of needing an<lb/>
additional nine holes. The<lb/>
women's Soccer Club acquired<lb/>
the talents of a fine coaching-<lb/>
advisor team in Charles and<lb/>
Margret Harvey. STheclubalso<lb/>
managed to , ut together their<lb/>
largest fall roster in history which<lb/>
should provide some excellent<lb/>
talent for the 1987 spring season.<lb/>
The Paddling Club debuted this<lb/>
semester with initial involvement<lb/>
of 18 participants, composed<lb/>
mainly of faculty-staff. The club<lb/>
has planned to promote the sport<lb/>
through instruction and outings<lb/>
The Windsurfing Club gained a<lb/>
good following through strong<lb/>
leadership and much interest<lb/>
from the student population.<lb/>
The older, established clubs, such<lb/>
as Rugby, Lacrosse, Karate, and<lb/>
Surfing have continued regular<lb/>
practices and competitions<lb/>
throughout the fall. New clubs,<lb/>
such as Wrestling, Weightlifting,<lb/>
Cycling, and Archery, have<lb/>
begun a push for memberships<lb/>
and recognition. If you are in-<lb/>
terested in joining a sport club<lb/>
call 757-6387 for more informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
This holiday season,<lb/>
get thewiite Stuff"<lb/>
at the right price.<lb/>
Now you can get the competitive<lb/>
edge when classes begin in Januan With a<lb/>
Macintosh personal computer, and all the<lb/>
urxte extras<lb/>
We call it the Macintosh Write Stuff"<lb/>
bundle You'll call it a great deal' Because<lb/>
when you buv a Macintosh Write Stuff<lb/>
bundle before Januan 9, 1987, you 11 receive<lb/>
a bundle of extras?and save $250<lb/>
Not only will vou get your choice of a<lb/>
Macintosh S12K Enhanced or a Macintosh<lb/>
Plus, you II also get an Image Writer II<lb/>
printer, the perfect solution for producing<lb/>
near letter-quality term papers or reports.<lb/>
complete with graphs, charts, and<lb/>
illustrations<lb/>
Plus, you II get MacLightnmg.<lb/>
the premier spelling checker con<lb/>
taii<lb/>
thesaurus, medical or legal dictionaries<lb/>
Together with your faonte Macintosh word<lb/>
processing software, you can transform<lb/>
vour notes into the clearest, most letter<lb/>
perfect papers vou ever turned out And<lb/>
turned in on time<lb/>
Whats more, there a Macintosh<lb/>
Support Kit tilled with valuable accessories<lb/>
and computer care products from M <lb/>
Complete with all the things vou need to<lb/>
keep your Macintosh running long after<lb/>
? u- graduated<lb/>
Let us show you how to get through<lb/>
college better, faster, and smarter Stop in<lb/>
and see us for more information<lb/>
Outdoor Recreation Center<lb/>
The Outdoor Recreation Center Center will i-? .? i .<lb/>
wi? close Dee 5 1986 for .here- F??, ? eouZem J?s"<lb/>
mainder of the fall session. The ??????.<lb/>
25 OFF<lb/>
BACKPACKS<lb/>
TENTS<lb/>
SLEEPING<lb/>
This ticket is good for 25 OFF BAGS<lb/>
the price for<lb/>
"THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE"<lb/>
You oick the place,<lb/>
the time, and the activity.<lb/>
The OUTDOOR RECREATION CENTER<lb/>
will provide the gear CANOES<lb/>
at a 25 discount off<lb/>
the regular rates<lb/>
for equipment rentals<lb/>
if you present this ticket.<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES<lb/>
COOK SETS<lb/>
MARCH 16, 1987<lb/>
ACCESSORIES<lb/>
STUDENT STORES<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
t<lb/>
RIP<lb/>
U <lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057863_0013"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
IHt t AM c AROl IN IAN<lb/>
 ? MM K I . IW?n<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DONNA LUCASrTomorrow is your<lb/>
birthday gonna have a good time!<lb/>
Happy 20th) Catch one at your 12 keq<lb/>
Sig Ep birthday party! Don't worry<lb/>
' your roomie will pick you up if you<lb/>
do the ydob mals entrance! Lisa<lb/>
PARTY The 7th Annual CHILL<lb/>
THRILL Party at the Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
bouse is this Friday at 3 00 Two<lb/>
bands, prizes, and a jammm' time<lb/>
Don't miss it<lb/>
R.MARK: There is only one person<lb/>
that can touch the danger zone and<lb/>
return safely and that person is you.<lb/>
There are still a number of surprises<lb/>
left in store tor you. PS I love you.<lb/>
Suuieee<lb/>
GREEK MENWin a free keq of<lb/>
beer! Here's how 1st annual all<lb/>
greek post season football tourna<lb/>
"nnt Trophies to winners &amp; runner<lb/>
up Contact Diane 758 3752 or Phyihs<lb/>
746 2973 Support the enforcers<lb/>
E "OTTER" We met by chance and<lb/>
became close by fate Remember<lb/>
when i asked you out on our first<lb/>
date? The movie was fun and far<lb/>
from bland, it got so scary I asked if<lb/>
I could hold your hand Eleven<lb/>
weeks down, many more to come. I<lb/>
hope we have eleven more and then<lb/>
some Love JRB<lb/>
TO MS. RIGHT: I'm dying to get to<lb/>
know you better I'm not too late, am<lb/>
l7 How about a movie Saturday?<lb/>
DUTCH<lb/>
STOOD UP AND DESPERATE: Do<lb/>
you enjoy exquisite dining, excellent<lb/>
entertainment, ano dressing up? I<lb/>
have two tickets to Wright<lb/>
Auditorium's Re Opening on Nov 16<lb/>
and I need a date! You are unoer no<lb/>
obligation, just promised a great<lb/>
time. Anyone interested please call<lb/>
day or night 758 0578 and ask tor<lb/>
David All calls will be given equal<lb/>
consideration<lb/>
ROUX'S IN TOWN:lt's party<lb/>
weekend It's rounos of chair ana<lb/>
pizza Across the way it's two at a<lb/>
time and green. Melonballs X Tai<lb/>
late night, and I need a pin. Dogpiles<lb/>
wailering, jump on in! So come back<lb/>
soon and see your brother, once<lb/>
we've recovered enough for<lb/>
another!<lb/>
GREAT VOLLEYBALL GAME<lb/>
BETAS: Cheese, your bill is now<lb/>
$5 38 Brothers and Pledges<lb/>
CAROLYN DRISCOLL: Thanks for<lb/>
the help who am I going to yell at<lb/>
now? Get ready for Friday! t'Sqon<lb/>
na be a repeat of last year! Patti<lb/>
JENNIFER: ThaKs for selling my<lb/>
doughnuts! What a doiM Patt.<lb/>
JOHN RUSK: THANKS FOR THE<lb/>
PERSONml WE REALLY AP<lb/>
PRECIATE YOU THINKING OF<lb/>
US! PATTI AND ANNE<lb/>
TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE<lb/>
FORCE :Remember that we are all<lb/>
on a certain mission, et that mis<lb/>
sion has not been completed. Suc-<lb/>
cess is a journey not a destination.<lb/>
Thank you.<lb/>
TO THE BORN AGAIN VIRGIN<lb/>
Thanks for stealing my shdge! Only<lb/>
kidding Go for if! Love, Virgin 2.<lb/>
WANTED: Cute blond Homosexual<lb/>
male, dirty blond is alright Likes<lb/>
champagne, not into the bar scene<lb/>
Just likes to be alone by the<lb/>
fireplace Please call me Ask for<lb/>
Barry Oliver 758 8265<lb/>
I CAN'T BELIEVE THIS The Jof<lb/>
frey II Dancers are coming to<lb/>
Wnght Auditorium on Tuesday,<lb/>
Nov 25 at 8 15 pm They are part of<lb/>
the most incredible ballet in the<lb/>
world the Joftrey Ballet from New<lb/>
York City And get this tickets are<lb/>
only $6 tor students at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office. See you at the ballet<lb/>
LOST: Late October SMALL<lb/>
female dog, short, straight black<lb/>
hair except browns around forearms<lb/>
and calves, distinguishing white<lb/>
area on nose and chest Reward of-<lb/>
fered for information 757 3666<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI:The time has come<lb/>
good boys and girls for the annual Pi<lb/>
Kappa tall formal. Each year we try<lb/>
to warn our dates that we might act<lb/>
a bit abnormal We won't attack,<lb/>
but then we might, there may even<lb/>
be a chicken fight Ano after we hit<lb/>
the floor to do the gator, most Pi<lb/>
Kapps begin to think about what<lb/>
might be happening later "I mean<lb/>
with the dates Some of us will want<lb/>
to hate her; some will want to date<lb/>
her ? some will want to mate her, and<lb/>
I am sure with such short notice<lb/>
some will have to weigh her. But<lb/>
when we wake for our dates<lb/>
sake "hopefully m her lap we all<lb/>
look to the sky and look in her eye<lb/>
ano say, "Thank Goo I'm a Pi<lb/>
Kapp" Have fun this weekend.<lb/>
Dillon prez. for 1 more wi ? ?.<lb/>
TOM:Thanks tor an unforgettable<lb/>
time at the formal. Room 146 will<lb/>
never be the same especially the<lb/>
bathroom! I hope we can oo it agam<lb/>
sometime. We'll have to experiment<lb/>
on that theory of yours. Love, Sarah<lb/>
K ATHY JOHNSON : Hello<lb/>
Sweetheart! Cur.ous? I'm just a guy<lb/>
who thinks you're the sweetest, pret<lb/>
tiest woman I've ever met. AHA!<lb/>
Cue No 1 We've met! it was short<lb/>
but that's all it took! Til Tuesday.<lb/>
JILL OPDYKE:Conqratulations on<lb/>
bemg chosen ambassador of the<lb/>
month You've done a qreat job!<lb/>
TO THE FELLAS IN SUITE<lb/>
lll:Monday night was great! Let's<lb/>
party again real soon Gooo luck on<lb/>
Saturday. We love ya Kimber &amp;<lb/>
Karen<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL ECU<lb/>
STUDENTS:Come part with Delta<lb/>
Zeta ana Beta Theta Pi, Wea , Nov<lb/>
19th at the TAVERN Starts around<lb/>
9,00 with 50 cent draft<lb/>
SIG E P BROTHERS,<lb/>
GOLDENHE ARTS, AND<lb/>
PLEDGES: Get ready for Camp<lb/>
Contentnea this Friday niaht. Be<lb/>
dehydrated enough to drink 10 kegs.<lb/>
It's going to be another one of those<lb/>
scary niqhts<lb/>
HAPPY 21st B DAY, DANAHave a<lb/>
great tune tonight terrorizing<lb/>
Greenville wish I could be with you!<lb/>
Love, your little sis. Judy<lb/>
PHIL AND DAVE Dinner was at<lb/>
6 00, Cocktails at 7 00. before we<lb/>
knew it we were as high as heaven<lb/>
One more sombrero dance, one<lb/>
more tequila shot, slack parfiers we<lb/>
are definitely not! We arrived at the<lb/>
club with a big bang, and everyone<lb/>
was so jealous cause our dates could<lb/>
hang Missing a strap and mmus the<lb/>
hose, whatever we did after that,<lb/>
God only knows Thanks for the<lb/>
memories and the tune together,<lb/>
we'll treasure them both, now and<lb/>
forever Love, your dates<lb/>
SO, YOU WANT TO BE A<lb/>
WRESTLER&amp;There will be an<lb/>
organizational meeting of the NEW<lb/>
ECU wrestling club in Room 102<lb/>
Memorial Gym, Nov 20 at 8 00 p.m<lb/>
Join us<lb/>
SORORITIES:The sale is upon us,<lb/>
Nov ,19th Biology 103 800 p m. Wear<lb/>
your letters for the prizes, and buy<lb/>
your personal Theta Chi slave now<lb/>
OKAY AOTT'S: Eight more days<lb/>
until RosebaH! ! !<lb/>
ALL STUDENTS THAT HAVE<lb/>
BEEN CLOSED OUT OF INDT 2660<lb/>
AND 2661: Please go by the Dean of<lb/>
Technology in 110 Ragsdale! To sign<lb/>
petition to open another section to<lb/>
day!<lb/>
COMMUNICATIONBROAD<lb/>
CASTING MAJORS: We have an<lb/>
organizational meeting for our NEW<lb/>
honor society (GPA 2 5 or above).<lb/>
Nov 19 (Wed), at 6 pm in Room 224<lb/>
Old JOyner Library We need you to<lb/>
get involved! Be there!<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
INTERIOR DESIGN STUDENTS:<lb/>
Part time work available in your<lb/>
field Call 758 2300 or stop by Larry's<lb/>
Carpetlano 3010 E 10th st ana fill<lb/>
out application.<lb/>
PART TIME: Warehouse workers<lb/>
apply fc Lai ' ? s Carpetland. 3010 E<lb/>
10th street<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
For the perfect duplex on Uth ST<lb/>
Only $140 a month plus 'j utilities<lb/>
Cali Susa- 758 4231<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Drivers nee:<lb/>
immediately for Campus Pizza &amp;<lb/>
Subs. No phone calls please.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
To share 2 beoroom apt $140 month<lb/>
and '2 utilities 4 blocks from cam-<lb/>
pus Non smoker preferred. Call<lb/>
Lor. 752 7396<lb/>
GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS:<lb/>
Need l or 2 female roommates for<lb/>
Dec 1 anc next semester! Great<lb/>
location, across from downtown!<lb/>
Practically on campus! All new<lb/>
paint and carpet Call 752 9245 Keep<lb/>
trying.<lb/>
WANTED: School representat <lb/>
for collegiate sporting compa<lb/>
Great pay Can collect<lb/>
1 813 346 2009<lb/>
COLLEGE STUDENTS: interested<lb/>
n ear ig ? free Spring Break in the<lb/>
Bahamas? Call CAMPUS TOURS.<lb/>
iNC at 305 523 TOUR<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: Brand new set of jobe<lb/>
ISOcni snow skis Never used or drill<lb/>
ed for binamqs $150 OBO. Call<lb/>
757 6491, before 5 pm or 756 9206<lb/>
after 5<lb/>
miiiiiiininmnmnmTTTTTT.mnniiiinTT<lb/>
j JPCheck Out These Prices!<lb/>
And Help Us Celebrate Our 9th Anniversary <lb/>
By Saving Lots of Dollars On I<lb/>
Well-Designed, First Quality Home Furnishings. ?<lb/>
 Sale Ends November 15th<lb/>
??BmaaiaMpi<lb/>
I Crystal Stemware<lb/>
IphotoAlbums' ! Storage Drawer umts ? - - - - Ce-amic Lamps" I Oyster By Flatware<lb/>
Milk Crates<lb/>
2.998<lb/>
1 9.99S24.99j<lb/>
me 29.99<lb/>
 i 1 <lb/>
ly ?!??????? A ???????jj)eMmr<lb/>
1 I She Ph ottw . ?  I ?<lb/>
Sola Sleepers<lb/>
Colored<lb/>
lore hie res<lb/>
TIME TO BOP DELIVER Contact<lb/>
the TRASHMAN, superlative DJ<lb/>
service, best known, most respected<lb/>
and most reasonable rates for for<lb/>
nials, semi private affairs and<lb/>
private parties. Dial 752 3587 Beach<lb/>
Muzak, RAR, Mid 60s, etc<lb/>
CHEAP TYPING: Reports, etc Call<lb/>
Anne at 752 3015 and leave a<lb/>
message<lb/>
TYPING AND WORD PROCESS<lb/>
ING: Experienced secretary wIBM<lb/>
computer a letter quality printer<lb/>
can fulfill all your typing and<lb/>
secretarial needs. Theses, business<lb/>
letters, resumes and mailing labels<lb/>
Call Donna at 355 6434<lb/>
ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETAR<lb/>
TIAL SERVICES: Providing full<lb/>
time typing services to students and<lb/>
faculty Experienced m thesis,<lb/>
research manuscripts and term<lb/>
papers Call 355 2950 for your typing<lb/>
needs<lb/>
TUXEDOS: Anyone needing formal<lb/>
wear this fall for any occassion<lb/>
please contact jon Reibel 757 0351<lb/>
20 TOP HITS LP s, 1 assertes, or<lb/>
compact disds are yours tor only SO<lb/>
cents each Buy one at regular pnee<lb/>
and receive additional selection tor<lb/>
only fifty cents Rock Pop Soul<lb/>
Country Jan it its solo in a record<lb/>
store, we have it too! You can save<lb/>
up to $200 or more! Satisfaction<lb/>
guaranteed or money back! Order<lb/>
now send only $10 for each Super<lb/>
Discount 20 Coupon Booklet to<lb/>
Down East Marketing, PO Box 190<lb/>
Ayden NC 28513<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: If Ou have<lb/>
papers, reports, etc that need to be<lb/>
typed 7588934 between 5 30 and<lb/>
9 30 p.m Very reasonable rates<lb/>
T YPING Done on a work processor<lb/>
with letter quality printer Years of<lb/>
experience l,pmg for students ano<lb/>
many more years of secretarial ex<lb/>
perience that can fulfill all your<lb/>
secretarial needs 50 000 word die<lb/>
tionary ano thesaurus, and profes<lb/>
SiOnal proofing for grammatical er<lb/>
'ors Low student pr.ces call Debbie<lb/>
at 355 7595<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SER<lb/>
VICE: Experienced, quality work<lb/>
i BM Selectnc typewriter Can Lanie<lb/>
Shive at 758 5301<lb/>
TYPING: Low rates Proofreading<lb/>
grammatical corrections 10 yea-v<lb/>
experience 757 0398 after 6pm<lb/>
ONSOLIDATLD<lb/>
rHIATRES<lb/>
All Seats $2.00 Everyday Til 5:30 PM<lb/>
BUCCAHEER MOVIE<lb/>
AenKinK Force SOU MAN<lb/>
tnds Todm R I Held (Kef Pf.n<lb/>
A,t<lb/>
? ? i i.i<lb/>
(Ian of theme<lb/>
Bear<lb/>
h nd 1 tda ft-<lb/>
KATZ PERSONALIZED COM<lb/>
PUTER DATING SERVICE: An<lb/>
nounces the opening of a new club m<lb/>
addition to its regular club Because<lb/>
of the large response from PROFES<lb/>
SIONAL SINGLES we will have a<lb/>
separate club for those people in<lb/>
terested in meeting other protes<lb/>
sionals. Call 355 7595 or write to PO<lb/>
Box 8003, Greenville. NC 27835<lb/>
KATZ PERSONALIZED COM<lb/>
PUTER DATING SERVICE Can<lb/>
help you find that someone special<lb/>
with whom to spend the holidays<lb/>
Whether you want a serious relation<lb/>
ship or just to meet many new<lb/>
friends we can help Everything con<lb/>
fidenfial and all referrals personally<lb/>
given. 355 7595<lb/>
ALL TYPING NEEDS: Lowest<lb/>
rates on campus include pro<lb/>
ofreading, spelling and gram<lb/>
matical corrections Over 10 years<lb/>
experience Call 757 0398 and leave<lb/>
message or call after 5 15 pm.<lb/>
$100 OF FREE GAS: Could you use<lb/>
r" Buy raffle tickets from KA l tt ?<lb/>
Sisters in front of the Student Store<lb/>
CAROLINA GULF<lb/>
1201 Dick W<lb/>
752-7270<lb/>
Best i ted Fires In ! wt u P L<lb/>
Det<lb/>
VISA M( (.Ml MIHIn HOKDIV<lb/>
Starts Tomorrow!<lb/>
WRQR<lb/>
Presents:<lb/>
Sorority Night<lb/>
Nov. 14th. All<lb/>
Sorority Members<lb/>
(any sorority)<lb/>
Admitted for onK<lb/>
94C<lb/>
23MM<lb/>
1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:1.<lb/>
War made him a<lb/>
man . . . Love<lb/>
made him a hero!<lb/>
Starts lomorroH<lb/>
"MATT DILLON REVEALS SOrMT<lb/>
TRUE GRITaugmenting his screen<lb/>
charisma with intense conviction<lb/>
?irm:e ttiilnmuu: Ptmrw<lb/>
MATT KB8 8ftttk<lb/>
MiD tmt warn<lb/>
DORM FOOD<lb/>
SURVIVAL KIT<lb/>
Serving West Greenville<lb/>
and ECU Campus<lb/>
? 1201 Charles Blvd<lb/>
758-6660<lb/>
Serving East Greenville<lb/>
? Rivergate Shopping Center<lb/>
752-6996<lb/>
? HOURS<lb/>
HAM 1AM Sun Thurs<lb/>
11AM ?AM Fn &amp; Sat<lb/>
Limited Delivery Areas<lb/>
Drivers carry less Than S20 00<lb/>
Got the Dorm Food Blues7 One<lb/>
call to Domino's Pizza will save<lb/>
you' We make and deliver hot,<lb/>
tasty, custom-made pizza in less<lb/>
than 30 minutes All you have to<lb/>
do is call' So skip the cafeteria<lb/>
Get your favorite pizza instead<lb/>
0fA(<lb/>
Weekday<lb/>
Special<lb/>
for Two<lb/>
$6.99<lb/>
Get asmai ' pizza<lb/>
witri your lavonte hi<lb/>
toppings and two cans I<lb/>
Coke" tor only $6 99<lb/>
Any time Mon thru iTu'S<lb/>
One coupon per pizza<lb/>
Expires 11'3086<lb/>
Not vana wvitn any<lb/>
other otter<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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J<lb/>
t&amp;<lb/>
DOMINO'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
DELIVERS<lb/>
FREE.<lb/>
'986 Domnoi p<lb/>
? mc<lb/>
<pb facs="00057863_0014"/>
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