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<pb facs="00057822_0001"/>
She<lb/>
(Earnlmtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.60 N 07-7<lb/>
Wednesday, June 4, 1986<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
High School Students<lb/>
Learn Leadership Skills<lb/>
Spinning The Tunes For ECU<lb/>
JIM LEUTGENS<lb/>
? East (. arolintna<lb/>
YYZMB disc jockey Mike Kelly works hard during his afternoon airshift to please his listeners.<lb/>
Under new rulings approved b the Media board disc jockeys at WZMB have been handed tighter<lb/>
rules to work under. See related story page 1.<lb/>
Speier Selected To Fill Post<lb/>
By JILL MORGAN<lb/>
Maff Writer<lb/>
Tiie Associate Dean of<lb/>
Students and Director of Student<lb/>
Services, Ronald P. Speier, has<lb/>
been elected vice?president of<lb/>
the American College Pennine!<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
rhe ACPA is a j:ision of the<lb/>
American Association of<lb/>
i out seling and Development<lb/>
7,000 college<lb/>
Students To<lb/>
In Ventures<lb/>
By Rl TV HARRINGTON<lb/>
staff Wnier<lb/>
EC I will be one of five sen<lb/>
state to participate i<lb/>
State-sponsored program for<lb/>
high school students.<lb/>
The Summer Ventures in<lb/>
Science and Mathematics pro-<lb/>
gram will allow for 110 high<lb/>
school Sophomores and Juniors<lb/>
to s:udv in the areas ot Math and<lb/>
Science for five weeks at ECU.<lb/>
Floyd Mattheis, Director of the<lb/>
Math-Science Education Center<lb/>
and Director of the Summer Ven-<lb/>
tures program at ECU, said the<lb/>
program, in its second year, will<lb/>
teach the students, "not the con-<lb/>
ventional subjects, like they're<lb/>
taught in high school<lb/>
According to Mattheis, the<lb/>
students will spend from June<lb/>
30th to August 1 at ECU. with<lb/>
several weekend field trips<lb/>
scheduled. The students will be<lb/>
housed in White dorm with stu-<lb/>
dent counselors who would show<lb/>
them different aspects of the<lb/>
Universitv.<lb/>
and university student affairs<lb/>
professionals. The members of<lb/>
ACPA represent the functional<lb/>
areas of student affairs, such as<lb/>
admissions, financial aid,<lb/>
counseling, career services, com-<lb/>
muter programs, residence life,<lb/>
student activities and health ser-<lb/>
vices. "1 will be co-ordinating 15<lb/>
commissions that are the func-<lb/>
tional areas of student affairs<lb/>
said Speier.<lb/>
Speier was installed at the AC-<lb/>
Participate<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Mattheis said 'he program will<lb/>
hopefully, "give the students a<lb/>
taste of college life, and we hope<lb/>
they like what they see here at<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Part of the appeal of -lie pro-<lb/>
gram is the incorporation of com-<lb/>
puters into the student's cur-<lb/>
riculum, which, Mattheis said.<lb/>
should interest the students, as<lb/>
well as give them something to<lb/>
augment their high school<lb/>
studies.<lb/>
Some of the classes offered to<lb/>
the students, who are chosen by<lb/>
their aptitude and their interest in<lb/>
the areas of math and science, in-<lb/>
clude Field Geology, Computer<lb/>
Techniques in the Chemistry<lb/>
Lab, 20th Century Physics, and<lb/>
Logic Programming?Computer<lb/>
Science.<lb/>
.Also included in the courses is<lb/>
a class in research, that will be<lb/>
held at the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine. Mattheis believes the<lb/>
incorporation of the Medical<lb/>
School will greatly help the pro-<lb/>
gram because of its extensive<lb/>
facilities.<lb/>
PA national conference this past<lb/>
April down in New Orleans. Says<lb/>
Speier. "1 am delighted to have<lb/>
been eleued bv over 7.000 of my<lb/>
colleagues<lb/>
speier came to ECU in the fall<lb/>
!S84. He has held the post of<lb/>
Dean of Student Affairs at La<lb/>
Roche College in Pittsburgh;<lb/>
ssociate Dean of Students at<lb/>
Radford University in Virginia;<lb/>
and Director of Campus Ac-<lb/>
tivities and Student Union at<lb/>
Ashland College.<lb/>
Speser holds a doctorate in<lb/>
i c a f i o n from Virginia<lb/>
Polytechnic Institute,<lb/>
and the MS in education from the<lb/>
State University of New York ?<lb/>
Genesco.<lb/>
By MIKE LUDWICK<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Three hundred junior and<lb/>
senior high school students will<lb/>
attend a leadership camp at ECU<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
Established by the 1985<lb/>
General Assembly, the<lb/>
Legislators' School for Youth<lb/>
Leadership Development is<lb/>
designed to develop leadership<lb/>
potential among North<lb/>
Carolina's high school students.<lb/>
The ECU Rural Education In-<lb/>
stitute will conduct two three-<lb/>
week sessions toward achieving<lb/>
that goal.<lb/>
The camp's purpose, said Roy<lb/>
Forbes, director of ECU's Rural<lb/>
Education Institute, "is to help<lb/>
those young students who<lb/>
teachers, principals, and school<lb/>
counselors identified as having<lb/>
leadership skills, and if given an<lb/>
opportunity can develop those<lb/>
skills<lb/>
Forbes said the Legislators'<lb/>
School is similar to the more<lb/>
renowned Governor's School but<lb/>
quite different in many respes<lb/>
Governor's School, which<lb/>
meets in Winston-Salem, is<lb/>
specifically designed for North<lb/>
Carolina's GT students and<lb/>
primarily involves classroom in-<lb/>
struction.<lb/>
The Legislators' School, ex-<lb/>
plained Forbes, is based upon an<lb/>
experience model. Moreover, the<lb/>
Legislators' School specifically<lb/>
excludes GT students.<lb/>
The school's major curricular<lb/>
thrust is to develop leadership,<lb/>
communication, and thinking<lb/>
skills.<lb/>
Forbes said all the planning has<lb/>
not been finalized, but the first<lb/>
four days students are at<lb/>
Legislators' School, they will at-<lb/>
tend basic introductory seminars.<lb/>
After the seminars, the<lb/>
students will participate in dif-<lb/>
ferent activities and extended<lb/>
field trips.<lb/>
The Rope Course is one of the<lb/>
many activities in which students<lb/>
will share. The rope course's<lb/>
purpose is to develop teamwork<lb/>
and enhance problem solving.<lb/>
Project directors present<lb/>
students with, various tactical<lb/>
problems, such as crossing a wide<lb/>
stream. The student's only tools<lb/>
are a length of rope, brainpower,<lb/>
and imagination. "It trams<lb/>
students to reahe that different<lb/>
situations need different solu-<lb/>
tions said Forbes.<lb/>
Destinations for the extended<lb/>
field Hips, said Forbes, includes<lb/>
Manteo, Ocracoke Island, and<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
On Ocracoke, students who are<lb/>
interested in photography will<lb/>
receive instruction and practical<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
A political day is scheduled tor<lb/>
the trip to Raleigh. Students will<lb/>
have a chance to meet state<lb/>
legislators and -ee close-up h<lb/>
the legislative process works<lb/>
Throughout the three-week<lb/>
camp, said Forbes, students will<lb/>
have the opportunity to develop<lb/>
video and or written reports on<lb/>
their travels and activiti<lb/>
Students selected for the<lb/>
Legislators' School were chosen<lb/>
at random from a pool created by<lb/>
nominations from teachers, prin-<lb/>
cipals, and counselors.<lb/>
According to Forbes, the<lb/>
legislation that created<lb/>
Legislators' School mandated a<lb/>
three-to-one ratio of rural to ur-<lb/>
ban students. Forbes said the<lb/>
students cl ittend ECU<lb/>
meet this criteria.<lb/>
The sessions are schedule<lb/>
June 22 to July 11 and Ju<lb/>
August 1.<lb/>
Western Carolina Univei<lb/>
Forbes said, is the other state<lb/>
universitv participating in the<lb/>
Legislators' School for Youth<lb/>
Leadership Developments<lb/>
Residents Endorse Death Penalty<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C.(UPI) ?<lb/>
Two-thirds of North Carolinians<lb/>
polled support the death penalty,<lb/>
and 37 percent believe it may be<lb/>
appropriate for capital crimes<lb/>
committed bv offenders less than<lb/>
18 years old, a survey says.<lb/>
Of the 585 respondents t<lb/>
Spring Carolina Poll, 67 percent<lb/>
said they favored the death penal-<lb/>
ty. 22 perceni were opposed and<lb/>
11 percent had no opinion.<lb/>
The results of the March<lb/>
survev were<lb/>
in 1984, when 65 percent ot the<lb/>
respondents said they favored the<lb/>
death pena.<lb/>
See NORTH Page J.<lb/>
Co-Op Program Useful In Job Search<lb/>
By PATRICK ON EIL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"But I do not have any ex-<lb/>
perience exclaims a young<lb/>
graduate. The door slams and the<lb/>
dejected job hunter slowly<lb/>
ambles to another job interview.<lb/>
This scene could have been avoid-<lb/>
ed if the graduate had been in-<lb/>
volved in a cooperative education<lb/>
program while in college.<lb/>
Co-oping, as it is commonly-<lb/>
called, is a program in which<lb/>
students receive career related<lb/>
work experience before gradua-<lb/>
tion, preferably with pay. There<lb/>
are two kinds of work<lb/>
assignments: parallel, in which a<lb/>
student works and attends school<lb/>
in the same term, and alternating,<lb/>
in which a student alternates<lb/>
semesters of full-time work and<lb/>
school.<lb/>
ECU's Cooperative Education<lb/>
program was created in 1975 on a<lb/>
five year federal grant. In 1980,<lb/>
the program showed impressive<lb/>
results and began to receive fun-<lb/>
ding through the university. In<lb/>
the 1985-86 fiscal year, the 657<lb/>
students in ECU's co-op program<lb/>
earned over $1.1 million in salary<lb/>
and more than 666 credit hours.<lb/>
Of those students in the co-op<lb/>
program only an extreme few do<lb/>
not graduate. Many others,<lb/>
however, are offered jobs before<lb/>
graduation, receiving higher pay<lb/>
and a higher starting position.<lb/>
Pay and experience are not the<lb/>
only rewards of co-oping. It also<lb/>
helps students discover the<lb/>
strengths and weaknesses in their<lb/>
abilities. Others realize why they<lb/>
are in school as they learn about<lb/>
the real world or discover they<lb/>
are no longer interested in<lb/>
something that had originally ap-<lb/>
pealed to them.<lb/>
Jane Maier, a coordinator of<lb/>
ECU's co-op program, believes<lb/>
the program offers more, "A co-<lb/>
op position will often tell you<lb/>
what you do not want to do<lb/>
She also explained some students,<lb/>
once exposed to the working en-<lb/>
viroment may even change their<lb/>
field of study.<lb/>
Employers of co-op students<lb/>
also reap benefits of the co-op<lb/>
program. The low cost of train-<lb/>
ing employees often creates a<lb/>
positive working atmosphere.<lb/>
Maier added the students work<lb/>
well for the employers as in-<lb/>
dicated in evaluations of the pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Cooperative Education has ex-<lb/>
isted since 1906 and was built on<lb/>
the ideals of earning a degree and<lb/>
work experience. ECU's co-op<lb/>
program offices are located in<lb/>
313 Rawl.<lb/>
According to Maier, "I reallv<lb/>
feel like we do change student's<lb/>
lives<lb/>
Campus Radio Station Reclarif ies Rules<lb/>
By BETH WHICKER<lb/>
ECU's campus radio station<lb/>
WZMB has reclarified its rules<lb/>
and procedures in an effort to<lb/>
upgrade its programming and<lb/>
level of professionalism among<lb/>
the student employees.<lb/>
General Manager Jeff Chester<lb/>
updated the old rules and added<lb/>
new regulations which were<lb/>
designed to combat new pro-<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifieds8<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
Sports7<lb/>
The teacher is the real<lb/>
soldier of democracy. Others<lb/>
can defend it, hut only he can<lb/>
make it work.<lb/>
?Omar Bradley<lb/>
blems WZMB would encounter<lb/>
in its future.<lb/>
The rules were approved by the<lb/>
Media Board at the end of the fall<lb/>
semester. "We're screening the<lb/>
applicants more carefully now.<lb/>
We're looking for students with a<lb/>
serious professional attitude<lb/>
toward broadcasting said<lb/>
Chester.<lb/>
Chester stated the station has<lb/>
been monitored closely for the<lb/>
last month due to the May inci-<lb/>
dent in which a student disc<lb/>
jockey used explicit language<lb/>
during the station's permanent<lb/>
wave program.<lb/>
"Under the new regulations,<lb/>
new employees and guest<lb/>
speakers will be made aware of<lb/>
station policy concerning what<lb/>
can and cannot be said or ex-<lb/>
pressed on the air said Chester.<lb/>
EMsc jockeys will be required to<lb/>
follow the scheduled programing<lb/>
and rotation schedules. No devia-<lb/>
tion from the listed programing<lb/>
will be allowed.<lb/>
According to Chester only<lb/>
authorized and current WZMB<lb/>
staff will be allowed in the station<lb/>
after 5:30 pm unless the situation<lb/>
warrants and prior permission<lb/>
has been obtained from the<lb/>
General Manager or Program<lb/>
Director. The policy holds also<lb/>
for weekend hours.<lb/>
"This WZMB's office is a<lb/>
business office, it's small, with<lb/>
groups of people in here things<lb/>
could possilby get out of hand<lb/>
said Chester.<lb/>
Under the new rulings, Chester<lb/>
explained a guest in the station<lb/>
after regular business hours is the<lb/>
responsibility of the staff<lb/>
member who brought him in.<lb/>
"The staff member is solely<lb/>
responsible for their guest's<lb/>
behavior. This includes any theft<lb/>
or damages the guest could inflict<lb/>
on the station states Chester.<lb/>
According to the new rulings,<lb/>
WZMB's front door will be lock-<lb/>
ed at 5:30 pm everyday.<lb/>
The new ruling also states no<lb/>
more than two people will be<lb/>
allowed in the control room<lb/>
unless the situation warrants<lb/>
otherwise.<lb/>
Announcers at WZMB are re-<lb/>
quired to be licensed by the FCC.<lb/>
Announcers on the air are<lb/>
responsible for all activities<lb/>
which take place in the control<lb/>
room studio during the time that<lb/>
he or she is signed on the log ac-<lb/>
cording ?o the new regulations.<lb/>
According to Chester, pro-<lb/>
cedure for disturbances pertain-<lb/>
ing to WZMB will be handled by<lb/>
university officials or outside<lb/>
agencies not taking action before<lb/>
contacting the General Manager.<lb/>
If the General Manager cannot be<lb/>
reached the official or agency<lb/>
should contact the Program<lb/>
Director, Chief Engineer or Pro-<lb/>
duction Manager in that order.<lb/>
University officials and ap-<lb/>
propriate personnel will be issued<lb/>
these names, addresses and<lb/>
phone numbers at the beginning<lb/>
of each semester.<lb/>
"Students who do not adhere<lb/>
to these new rules and regulations<lb/>
will receive appropriate punish-<lb/>
ment said Chester.<lb/>
The Great Search<lb/>
JtM LEUTGENS<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
??- w? vasm? mm<lb/>
Finding a job after graduation isn't easy, it can be quite a chore<lb/>
for the unprepared student with no experience. Students who co-op<lb/>
may And employers knocking down their doors before graduation.<lb/>
See related story page 1.<lb/>
mm m .?-<lb/>
- . ? . ,<lb/>
 ' - ?f -<lb/>
.? K j - ? -<lb/>
 W 9<lb/>
??. - - - - ?m' 'm'm-<lb/>
4 gamm<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057822_0002"/><lb/>
I HI t.ASI c'AKOl INIAN<lb/>
JUNE 4, 1986<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
BIBLE TALK<lb/>
a practical, mformai d.scuss.or, of me B,<lb/>
ble ? applied to our lives todey Guy, ?<lb/>
Garret,  ,? Coec m Jarv.s  JV?<lb/>
iOed Librer, inroom H?at9 ? Th?f,?<lb/>
?vary Tuasday Everyone waicome!<lb/>
What is the best wa to net a<lb/>
safe" simian?<lb/>
Getting that perfect suntan is a<lb/>
summertime goal foi main of us,<lb/>
before you spend all youi time<lb/>
soaking up the rays, however,<lb/>
there are a few things thai are<lb/>
good to know.<lb/>
I iv lo avoid tanning from 10<lb/>
to 2 pm when the sun is the<lb/>
most intense 1 he burning com<lb/>
pom til ?' sunlighl and ultraviolet<lb/>
light is not filtered h clouds, so<lb/>
it is possible to gel tanned and<lb/>
also burnt oi a cloud) da)<lb/>
re are now sunscreens that<lb/>
.u screen oui harmful UV light<lb/>
PABA i Par a minobenzoic<lb/>
acid) compounds range from 1<lb/>
111 w e ito 2 5 power;<lb/>
'he Healtholumn H<lb/>
Vfar Htsha Adams<lb/>
e !5 powet will totalh block<lb/>
iV lightwith 1 p. iv?( a ii<lb/>
1- lighi I he powers<lb/>
e alsoreferred to as the Sun<lb/>
ion Faci m<lb/>
; tpresents a multiple of the I<lb/>
lakes t1 get a minimal sunburn<lb/>
i youskin You should ' that often a sunburn show up until hours hav v- m ei ' mside<lb/>
Everyjlexions and kin type tha id should use a SP1 of<lb/>
rk haired and darkei SPI ol : Sevi - are now watei pi i p Bi i; e s ire :? ? , watei ? at " skiing, w nid r swimming, the water screens are a musi' tion can cause reactions<lb/>
-?.sed to sun Women on<lb/>
.ime, an<lb/>
ed areas Other drugs<lb/>
itivity are<lb/>
a ipazine.<lb/>
a ?e any quest i ns about<lb/>
are taking, ask a<lb/>
trmacisi or othei I ea<lb/>
i he worst thing about sum ex-<lb/>
ore is that damag( kii<lb/>
builds up. Physicians arc<lb/>
? effects or sui . ? -are<lb/>
iecutive year ski;<lb/>
itl t and tout Ft?<lb/>
Trade Surplus<lb/>
Threatens Ties<lb/>
rOKYO (I PI I ! e Japanese<lb/>
? ernmeni today called tor a<lb/>
"Major change of course" in the<lb/>
try's export-oriented<lb/>
economy, warning its huge trade<lb/>
surplus threatens ties with other<lb/>
nations and hinders global pro-<lb/>
sperity.<lb/>
But in an annual white paper.<lb/>
the Ministry of International<lb/>
Irade and Industry also backed<lb/>
away from predictions the trade<lb/>
surplus would begin to show a<lb/>
decline by late tins year, saving<lb/>
the impact of the rising yen<lb/>
would not be reflected until 1987,<lb/>
I he report, the ministry's chief<lb/>
policy statement, showed a mark<lb/>
ed departure in tone with blunt<lb/>
acknowledgements that Japan<lb/>
faces isolation unless it takes a<lb/>
more responsible global role.<lb/>
I he stunting of growth in the<lb/>
1 S economy has meant it can<lb/>
no longer fuel world expansion<lb/>
alone, the report asserted.<lb/>
"The party sponsored bv the<lb/>
U.S. economy is over said<lb/>
Mill Research Director Ryuhei<lb/>
Wakasugi.<lb/>
The report reflected the first<lb/>
official endorsement of findings<lb/>
by a private panel, appointed last<lb/>
year by Prime Minister Yasuhiro<lb/>
Nakasone, that urged a restruc-<lb/>
turing of Japan's economy away<lb/>
from its postwar reliance on ex-<lb/>
ports toward an emphasis on<lb/>
domestic consumption.<lb/>
Japan posteu a record $56<lb/>
billion overall' trade surplus in<lb/>
1985. The surplus with the<lb/>
United States was a record $49.7<lb/>
billion, increasing calls in Con-<lb/>
gress for retaliation or protec-<lb/>
tionist legislation.<lb/>
main years of sunning. l<lb/>
radiation can cause recurrence o<lb/>
herpes, both oral and genital,<lb/>
which can be prevented by using<lb/>
hp sunscreen and avoiding pro<lb/>
longed exposure. I exposure<lb/>
can also cause solat keratosis,<lb/>
which is a noncancerous growth<lb/>
on skin but has a low chance of<lb/>
becoming malignant Enjoy youi<lb/>
time m the sun but please<lb/>
remembei to use moderation<lb/>
The Student Health t entei ha<lb/>
a brochure on "sunning" that<lb/>
provides more detailed informa<lb/>
tion about medication sensitivity<lb/>
and sun protection factors, t all<lb/>
as at 757-6841 or drop bv it you<lb/>
need more information.<lb/>
EATING DISORDERS<lb/>
The Eating Disorders Suppor' Cup for<lb/>
women wtn Potimia anorexia nervo?a or<lb/>
buiimareiea will continue trus lurnmer Ses<lb/>
sioni will Be neio on Mar 27 June 10. ana<lb/>
June ?4 from 4 5 p m in room 120 at the Vu<lb/>
den' Healtn Ser yie<lb/>
NO NEWS<lb/>
IS BAD NEWS<lb/>
SLEEPING BAGS<lb/>
s. Titm: COTS. SHOVl<lb/>
ACK PACKS TEHeTS. COTS. SHOVELS H?"<lb/>
CKS. M?SS KITS. CANTEENS. FATIGUES<lb/>
ITS. RAINWEAR TSMWTS ENAMELW,<lb/>
?DISHES WORK CLOTHES. 2100 DIFFERENT ITU<lb/>
?rowaejr W '<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1M1S.I<lb/>
Give a hoot.<lb/>
Don't pollute.<lb/>
?rest Service, I LS.D.A.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UF<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
Si95 Abortion from 13 to 18 weeks at addi-<lb/>
tional cost Pregnancy Test. Birth Coouol, and<lb/>
Problem Pregnancy Counseling For further<lb/>
information call 832-0535 (ToU Free "Number<lb/>
1-800-532-534) between 9 AM and 5 PM<lb/>
weekdays<lb/>
HaJMN WOMIM-S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
OftOAMOATlOMa<lb/>
? 17 Wat Mirpaai b<lb/>
.MC<lb/>
: CONTACT LENSES <lb/>
Tequila Bar Weekly Specials<lb/>
Sunrise Sunday:<lb/>
Xfelo-Mondays: .<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
Toasty-Tuesday: .<lb/>
Wednesday: Si 75 Pirates one Vtuitm<lb/>
Tonic Thursday:<lb/>
Fried Friday: Get - ; <lb/>
menl hour 4:30, end the night u<lb/>
Saturday Mght Specials<lb/>
"HouseDrink' iequtla Blues<lb/>
(Look for our new "Lagoon" Bur)<lb/>
Located Outside i i<lb/>
TEQUILA m<lb/>
BAR<lb/>
Ca<lb/>
Vo<lb/>
109 E. 5in St<lb/>
752S9.<lb/>
<lb/>
9IO5.OO DAILY WEAR<lb/>
V 145.00 EXTENDED WEAR<lb/>
?e: e ji<lb/>
?<lb/>
we kit ano 1 .v<lb/>
kOD<lb/>
1 PA<lb/>
oPTOMerwc<lb/>
?Y?CAR?C?KT?R<lb/>
i J T.DtonAnne, eenv.ile NC 27834<lb/>
Ji 228 Greenv iii I ?10Wvs 0<lb/>
9 '<lb/>
9 I<lb/>
i'<lb/>
s ?<lb/>
' I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
2 Pieces of Chicken<lb/>
(Original Recipe" or<lb/>
Extra Crispy-v<lb/>
1 Small Mashed Potato<lb/>
&amp; Gravy<lb/>
1 Biscuit<lb/>
1 Medium Drink<lb/>
rovpos<lb/>
OR<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
6 Kentucr ,<lb/>
Kentucky Fries<lb/>
1 Large Drink<lb/>
i i la<lb/>
We Do Chicken Right<lb/>
Expires 8-20-86<lb/>
CO KROCERINC FOR ALL YOUR<lb/>
"  Party<lb/>
-C'Ol PON<lb/>
Needs!<lb/>
Mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
BUDVVEISER OR<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
Light<lb/>
12$<lb/>
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Campus<lb/>
Voice<lb/>
Do ou feel that during summer school you learn the material as<lb/>
well as ou would during a regular semester, or do you feel summer<lb/>
school is too condensed?<lb/>
?'?  ?<lb/>
North Carolinians<lb/>
FavorDeath Penalty<lb/>
Paula Portie<lb/>
Fashion Merchandising, Senior<lb/>
"I'm taking .i d splaj class<lb/>
which is a 1 ects so I<lb/>
1 think it's too condensed<lb/>
Don Stroud<lb/>
Finance. Senior<lb/>
"1 feel you learn the material<lb/>
better because it's at a faster pace<lb/>
because you don't have time to<lb/>
off<lb/>
Eric Hughes<lb/>
Banking, Senior<lb/>
"&amp; el course I'm tak-<lb/>
ild ave already eat ned<lb/>
n a erial, so with this course<lb/>
s ? at I'm supposed<lb/>
Continued hrom Page 1.<lb/>
Phil Meyer, a University ol<lb/>
North Carolina journalism pro<lb/>
lessor in charge ol the poll, said<lb/>
I"uesday that the results in 1984<lb/>
and 1986 were statistically the<lb/>
same, since the margin ol error in<lb/>
the survey wa 5 percent.<lb/>
Asked if they thought tht-<lb/>
death penalty was evei v<lb/>
propriate tor people less than 18<lb/>
years old, 37 percent said yes, 44<lb/>
percent said it would never be ap<lb/>
propriate and 19 rx<lb/>
respond.<lb/>
"wo o' the 56 inmates on<lb/>
North Carolina's death row were<lb/>
in 18 hey<lb/>
committed then crimes.<lb/>
Fhe 1984 ask<lb/>
respondents il they favored the<lb/>
death penal ? '<lb/>
1s yeaj s old.<lb/>
The percentage ol North<lb/>
c arolinia I he<lb/>
penalty was smal<lb/>
numbers oi S lerners supp 1<lb/>
ting it in .1 January 19 !up<lb/>
Poll. In 1 a survey, "4 per,<lb/>
of the Southernei<lb/>
penalty. 19 percent were <lb/>
and 8 pei<lb/>
The p 55<lb/>
ol Re: ? supported<lb/>
death p pared 62<lb/>
ONSOUDATED<lb/>
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percent of the Democrats and in-<lb/>
dependents.<lb/>
Fewer blacks than whites and<lb/>
ver women than men favored<lb/>
death penalty A 77 percen-<lb/>
tage ol the male respondents<lb/>
favored it, compared to 58 per-<lb/>
ceni ol the women. Of whites, 75<lb/>
ent favored it, compared to<lb/>
28 percent of the blacks.<lb/>
Other demographic differences<lb/>
such as area oi residence or<lb/>
church attendance - did not ap-<lb/>
pear to be statistically significant<lb/>
in the poll, said Meyer.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
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Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
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June 4, :s?Sr<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
77 e Press<lb/>
Does It Hurt As Much As Help?<lb/>
More often than not, the press<lb/>
has criticized the government for<lb/>
withholding information from the<lb/>
American public. They call<lb/>
themselves the watchdog of the<lb/>
people, as well they should be. But<lb/>
in their zealous crusade to bring the<lb/>
truth to the people, it seems they<lb/>
have, too often, made a bad situa-<lb/>
tion worse.<lb/>
A prime example is Time<lb/>
magazine's June 2 article on the<lb/>
abuse of Crack, a new and more<lb/>
dangerous form of cocaine that is<lb/>
smoked rather than snorted.<lb/>
Granted, the story was insightful.<lb/>
The horrors of the highly adictive<lb/>
drug and the increased number of<lb/>
young people using it shocked us.<lb/>
We did think, however, that the<lb/>
explanation of how crack is made<lb/>
was unnecessary. There are too<lb/>
many irresponsible people out there<lb/>
who, unaware of the consequences,<lb/>
will attempt the recipe courtesy of<lb/>
Time. This may result in additional<lb/>
addicts or possibly severe bodily<lb/>
harm.<lb/>
Other instances in which the<lb/>
public has been over-informed in-<lb/>
clude the time President Reagan<lb/>
ordered an anti-commando Delta<lb/>
Force to the Mediterranean during<lb/>
the TWA 847 hijacking last sum-<lb/>
mer. Once the press released the<lb/>
story and the terrorists were tipped<lb/>
off, the rescue mission had to be<lb/>
scrubbed.<lb/>
Did this information prove to be<lb/>
necessary? Some say yes. We say<lb/>
no.<lb/>
So why would the press insist on<lb/>
printing this type of information?<lb/>
They say it's the "public's right to<lb/>
know<lb/>
Bull shit. They print these stories<lb/>
to boost ratings, increase listener-<lb/>
ship, or help circulation. In short,<lb/>
they do it to make money, to give<lb/>
their careers a shot in the arm or<lb/>
just to scoop the other guy.<lb/>
Many members of the press stress<lb/>
professional journalism. We stress<lb/>
ethical journalism. Another exam-<lb/>
ple of what we consider unethical,<lb/>
aside from such publications as the<lb/>
en York Post, is printing names<lb/>
of minors.<lb/>
Time was guilty of this in their<lb/>
article on crack when they publish-<lb/>
ed the name of a 16-year-old who<lb/>
murdered a relative in order to get<lb/>
money for the drug.<lb/>
Here at The East Carolinian, it is<lb/>
our policy not to print the names of<lb/>
minors, even though the law says<lb/>
we can. We also respect the request<lb/>
of ECU's campus police to<lb/>
withhold the names of rape victims<lb/>
as well.<lb/>
Other newspapers have similar<lb/>
policies. Recently, the Daily Reflec-<lb/>
tor received a report that a four-<lb/>
year-old was molested. If the<lb/>
Reflector were adhering to Time's<lb/>
editorial policy (as far as we can tell<lb/>
by the crack story) the child's name<lb/>
would have been published.<lb/>
Naturally, the Reflector declined.<lb/>
At The East Carolinian, it is the<lb/>
judgement of the editorial staff to<lb/>
decide whether or not to publish a<lb/>
name, or in Time's case, whether<lb/>
we should describe roughly how to<lb/>
make a dangerous drug.<lb/>
Naturally, we make mistakes ?<lb/>
sometimes. But for the most part,<lb/>
we are here for the students, not for<lb/>
our careers, increasing advertising<lb/>
revenue or boosting our meager cir-<lb/>
culation. If we, a simple student<lb/>
publication, refuse to tolerate<lb/>
unethical journalism, why<lb/>
shouldn't the professionals?<lb/>
Loose Lips Just A Part Of Policy<lb/>
By FRED BARNES<lb/>
PW Nr- tLrpmUi<lb/>
OOCKf MTaI.<lb/>
NCHfr.MEA<lb/>
SBlCE! THE FINAL FRONTIER! THE?E ARE TriE VoYAGES<lb/>
of THE UNMANNEP PRo&amp;e "compromise. " rrs<lb/>
MISSION To EXPLORE gTRAUGE tfEW WORLPS, To SEEK<lb/>
OUT NEW LIFE ANP NEW CIVILIZATIONS ? WTHcUT<lb/>
WAVING to ASK ANYSoPY To TAKE ANY RtSKg?To<lb/>
Go WHERE MAN ? No LONGER B?LP ENotJSH To Qo<lb/>
oms HAPe<lb/>
CM6G)A?DSbU<lb/>
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Nothing extraordinary on the<lb/>
Washington news front on Tuesday,<lb/>
April 19. Only the normal volume of<lb/>
leaks. The Associated Press, quoting<lb/>
"Pentagon sources reported that the<lb/>
administration had dispatched a third<lb/>
aircraft carrier to the Mediterranean,<lb/>
where Libya's been acting up.<lb/>
The h York Times disclosed a<lb/>
foreign policy zag by 'he Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration, namely a plan to terminate<lb/>
the American military alliance with New<lb/>
Zealand if that country bars visits by<lb/>
nuclear-armed or nuclear-powered<lb/>
ships. This information was attributed<lb/>
to unnamed "State Department of-<lb/>
ficials<lb/>
The Wall Street Journal, meanwhile,<lb/>
reported that a confidential Pentagon<lb/>
study had raised doubts about the cost-<lb/>
effectiveness of the Lavi, the new jet<lb/>
fighter that Israel is developing with<lb/>
U.S. financing.<lb/>
Oh, yes, Tuesday, April 19, was also<lb/>
the day that Michael E. Pillsbury got<lb/>
canned as assistant under secretary of<lb/>
defense for policy planning. The firing<lb/>
offense: leaking sensitive national<lb/>
security information to the press.<lb/>
Pillsbury was accused of informing<lb/>
the Washington Post and columnists<lb/>
Evans and Novak of the<lb/>
administration's decision, privately<lb/>
reached and never announced, to send<lb/>
Amencan-made Stinger missiles to an-<lb/>
ticommunist rebels in Angola and<lb/>
Afghanistan.<lb/>
Defense officials told the Vh York<lb/>
Times that Pillsbury had flunked a lie<lb/>
detector test when asked about the<lb/>
Stinger leak. The Pentagon was feeling<lb/>
downright huffy. "Sen: jr policymakers<lb/>
had become increasingly irritated by the<lb/>
appearance of information in the press<lb/>
about Libya and a large variety of the<lb/>
administration's covert programs the<lb/>
Times was told.<lb/>
President Reagan rails against leakers<lb/>
at his nationally televised press con-<lb/>
ferences. Nevertheless, the firing of<lb/>
Pillsbury is world-class hypocrisy. I<lb/>
haven't the slightest idea whether<lb/>
Pillsbury leaked or not. But suppose he<lb/>
did. If every leaker in the adminstration<lb/>
were to get the Pillsbury treatment,<lb/>
Reagan would have to fire practically his<lb/>
entire Cabinet and senior staff, and<lb/>
possibly resign himself.<lb/>
No administration really opposes i<lb/>
unofficial, anonymous disclosure<lb/>
government information ("leaks")<lb/>
What every administration opposes are<lb/>
leaks that don't serve its own purposes<lb/>
If the political system in the Soviet<lb/>
Union is built on lies, as Reagan is fond<lb/>
of reminding us, his own administration<lb/>
is built on leaks. O.K O.K. No! entirely<lb/>
built on leaks, but an incredible amount<lb/>
of information is conveyed to the<lb/>
.American public through leaks. And<lb/>
guess who does most of the leaking,<lb/>
especially of national security ini<lb/>
maiton such as an aircraft carrier move<lb/>
ment, a policy shit: on New Zealand, or<lb/>
an evaluation of a jel fighter? Seni<lb/>
ficials at the White House, Pentag<lb/>
State Department, and CIA, ho.<lb/>
These are the same folks who are i <lb/>
"increasingly irritated" b) leaks<lb/>
Libya and covert aid to anticommui<lb/>
guerrillas<lb/>
There are three type- ol leaks<lb/>
policy leaks, what might be called a<lb/>
policy leaks, and old-fashioned<lb/>
tongue leaks.<lb/>
Policy leaks are handled<lb/>
ficials or by their surrogates. I hese leak -<lb/>
are designed to promote an administra-<lb/>
tion policy. High government offu<lb/>
spend hours every day plotting I w l<lb/>
affect the "spin or presentation,<lb/>
news stories. The strategic leak is a key<lb/>
part of "spin control<lb/>
After Reagan decided in April to con-<lb/>
tinue adherence to the SAI I II ti<lb/>
scrapping two Poseidon submarines.<lb/>
several reporters at the State Depai<lb/>
ment were quickly informed. There was<lb/>
no public announcement, only leakec<lb/>
formation, just as in the Stinger case in<lb/>
which Pillsbury is accused. The same<lb/>
was true of the shift in policy toward<lb/>
New Zealand.<lb/>
Yes, there's a legitimate distinction<lb/>
between leaks of delicate national securi-<lb/>
ty information and leaks of less sensitive<lb/>
stuff. But the biggest jeopardier of na-<lb/>
tional security is the administration<lb/>
itself.<lb/>
The classic example oi a vital govern-<lb/>
ment secret is information about<lb/>
military movements ? troop<lb/>
deployments, plane departures, warship<lb/>
formations. When the press disclosed<lb/>
last summer that the anti-commando<lb/>
Delta Force had been sent to the<lb/>
Mediterranean dm<lb/>
itsell I ? ?<lb/>
una ted.<lb/>
It's<lb/>
Israe figrn<lb/>
i<lb/>
Pet ? lls Wi<lb/>
American fun linj<lb/>
I leaks,<lb/>
i g to do w i11<lb/>
? subvei<lb/>
bably '<lb/>
-<lb/>
ill<lb/>
at ex . iman 1<lb/>
Most ofi<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Rep . .<lb/>
 <lb/>
?- i<lb/>
the<lb/>
wa . In his case<lb/>
<lb/>
a as the<lb/>
The A g<lb/>
?s ? md Cuba ?<lb/>
the truth anyway<lb/>
Stingers being used<lb/>
V with  osi " tng -<lb/>
men; would like<lb/>
cern was how the informal i <lb/>
C:i the poiitica: debate in th<lb/>
rather than how it might<lb/>
military g a - ibi ?ad<lb/>
Anyway, reporters c<lb/>
 .<lb/>
ed about<lb/>
they were put into use S<lb/>
Pillsburv crime1 He sp ?<lb/>
and without ol<lb/>
dav he departed the Defense<lb/>
Department. I chatted with a young con-<lb/>
servative who haJ  j from<lb/>
conferring in Angola with th m-<lb/>
munist rebels. Had the Stingers gotten<lb/>
there0 1 asked. Oh sure, he out<lb/>
on. You couldn<lb/>
Battling Ho-Hum Anti-Terrorism<lb/>
The Israeli ambassador to the United Nations is, as most<lb/>
Israelis are on the vital questions, strictly no-nonsense on the<lb/>
matter of terrorism. His recently published book, Terrorism:<lb/>
How the West Can Win, has a sad-fascinating provenance. It<lb/>
almost slips the memory, so much has happened since, that in<lb/>
1976 an Air France plane was hijacked and taken to Uganda.<lb/>
What followed was the legendary Entebbe raid. A<lb/>
squadron of Israeli airplanes set out in the dead of night. Mis-<lb/>
sion: rescue the passengers of the airplane. They did this, but<lb/>
of course there were a few casualties. One of them was Lt.<lb/>
Jonathan Netanyahu.<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
In his memory the Jonathan Foundation was founded. It is<lb/>
an Israeli think-tank devoted to devising means of combating<lb/>
terrorism. And the book by the dead man's brother, Ben-<lb/>
jamin, is a keenly edited report of the most recent meeting of<lb/>
the Jonathan Foundation, in Washington in 1984.<lb/>
It becomes important, along the line, to define terrorism.<lb/>
Netanyahu's definition is a very good start. He defines ter-<lb/>
rorism as "the deliberate and systematic murder, maiming<lb/>
and menacing of the innocent to inspire fear for political<lb/>
ends<lb/>
Flashback. In 1973, at the United Nations, the U.S. delega-<lb/>
tion, myself included, struggled to get the General Assembly<lb/>
to deplore terrorism in a comprehensive way. The great wind-<lb/>
bag of the U.N. in those days, and indeed in every day in the<lb/>
quarter-century in which he figured in the U.Ns history, was<lb/>
Jamil Baroody, the ambassador of Saudi Arabia.<lb/>
I kid you not when I tell you that he offered the following<lb/>
amendment to the simpler definition of terrorism backed by<lb/>
the United States and a few allies. The resolution, Am-<lb/>
bassador Baroody said, should read, "Measure to Prevent<lb/>
Terrorism and Other Forms of Violence Which Endanger or<lb/>
Take Innocent Human Lives or Jeopardize Fundamental<lb/>
Freedoms, and Study of the Underlying Causes ol 1<lb/>
Forms of Terrorism and Acts of Violence Which 1<lb/>
Misery, Frustration, Grievance, and Despair and Vv<lb/>
Cause Some People to Sacrifice Human Lives, Inclu<lb/>
Their Own in an Attempt to Effect Radical Changes "<lb/>
Well, that will buy you a franchise rue<lb/>
McDonald's, if you are Burger King. And, of course<lb/>
movement to condemn terrorism in a comprehensive wav<lb/>
ed, even as it continues to fail today The measure of the<lb/>
failure isn't the U.Ns paralysis (the U.N. is forever paralyz-<lb/>
ed on important questions)<lb/>
It is the apparent paralysis of the free world to make com-<lb/>
mon cause, the explosive example of which came when, in<lb/>
April, the United States did take modest action against<lb/>
Gadhafi in Libya, only to awaken the next day to pro-<lb/>
nouncements in West Europe that gave the impression that we<lb/>
had bombed not Libya, but England, France. Spain, Italv<lb/>
and West Germany, and maybe even Bethlehem.<lb/>
Netanyahu believes it is a challenge of focus. His point is<lb/>
that it is creepingly self-evident that there is no excuse for ter-<lb/>
rorism, and that terrorism can't be dealt with by dilettantes.<lb/>
He says it right out: 1) No concessions: never acquiesce in ter-<lb/>
rorist demands. 2) No appeasement of easygoing countries<lb/>
that tolerate transient terrorists, let alone resident terrorist<lb/>
training. 3) Insist on common policies among allies (he<lb/>
means, obviously, try to insist). 4) Diplomatic sanctions<lb/>
(close down the appropriate embassies). 5) Economic sanc-<lb/>
tions against terrorist sanctuaries, including bovcott and em-<lb/>
bargo.<lb/>
This commentator sees Ambassador Netanyahu, and raises<lb/>
him one. What are we going to do about the Soviet Union? It<lb/>
is, by all the authors who contribute to his volume, concede<lb/>
that the Soviet Union is, really, the principal engine or, bet-<lb/>
ter, nuclear power reactor behind international terrorism.<lb/>
So does that leave us chopping off the hydra's coils, leaving<lb/>
the head forever immune? Ah, but that is the challenge of the<lb/>
era, the challenge of how to deal with the evil empire<lb/>
Buckley vs. L<lb/>
In Defen<lb/>
44-yeai<lb/>
-<lb/>
On The Rig hi<lb/>
Bv VMJ i (AM F H! K<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
Syria's A<lb/>
Bv l)MU<lb/>
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v. d<lb/>
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5<lb/>
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Jevs<lb/>
Desc s ;<lb/>
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k<lb/>
ma?<lb/>
Turk. K<lb/>
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be<lb/>
destroyed i ebai<lb/>
Thus<lb/>
the sma<lb/>
mun<lb/>
or military<lb/>
underclass rhe<lb/>
Arab landlords<lb/>
Alawites were so pv V or<lb/>
hired out their daug<lb/>
cities, a deeply si a i eful pra<lb/>
Aiawites<lb/>
When Syna became an indepci<lb/>
naturallv the Sunn: trabs who<lb/>
Ironically, discrimination served<lb/>
next quarter centurj<lb/>
Exclusion reinforced the<lb/>
at the same time that it ke.<lb/>
struggles then raging among v u<lb/>
nis repeatedly purged one a<lb/>
ranks<lb/>
This ascent culminated in reb<lb/>
Alawite officers came to power i<lb/>
government ever In a coup d'e<lb/>
fighting around the residence ol<lb/>
strongman, Assad's MippOi<lb/>
outcome.<lb/>
The impact oi the Aiawr.cs a<lb/>
- ? ? -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057822_0005"/><lb/>
y<lb/>
Of Policy<lb/>
aim-<lb/>
.tten<lb/>
hout<lb/>
-Terrorism<lb/>
? I hose<lb/>
1 ;e in<lb/>
uding<lb/>
. the<lb/>
?? is fail-<lb/>
.f the ralyz-<lb/>
a e om-<lb/>
 :n, in<lb/>
against<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
? impression that we<lb/>
d, France, Spain, Italy<lb/>
? B ' ehem.<lb/>
His point is<lb/>
a use for ter-<lb/>
by dilettantes,<lb/>
never acquiesce in ter-<lb/>
easemeni I easygoing countries<lb/>
resident terrorist<lb/>
jmmon among allies (he<lb/>
I 4) Diplomatic sanctions<lb/>
i pnate embassies). 5) Economic sanc-<lb/>
a manes, including boycott and em-<lb/>
I ees Ambassador Netanyahu, and raises<lb/>
le e going to do about the Soviet Union? It<lb/>
li rs who contribute to his volume, concede<lb/>
lion is, really, the principal engme or, bet-<lb/>
r reactor, behind international terrorism.<lb/>
us chopping off the hydra's coils, leaving<lb/>
r.mune? Ah. but that is the challenge of the<lb/>
of how to deal with the evil empire.<lb/>
THl l AS! AROl INJAN<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
JUNE 4, 1986<lb/>
Buckley vs. Liberals ? A$mn<lb/>
In Defense Of An Honorable Man<lb/>
"he resistance to Daniel Mamon as<lb/>
iudgc is mostly ideological oppor-<lb/>
tunism, but there is an odor there of<lb/>
lething else, and that is the war of the<lb/>
secularists against religion.<lb/>
First things first. Daniel Manion is a<lb/>
44 seai-old lawyer who has tried more<lb/>
han 30 cases, is a member of a small<lb/>
irm, was an active legislator, and is a<lb/>
,in greatly admired personally. He is a<lb/>
eran of the Vietnam War, a sometime<lb/>
c senator who quit his office to<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
By WILLIAM F.BUCKLEY JR.<lb/>
te his energies to fighting multiple<lb/>
sis, which he conquered; a genial,<lb/>
id-humored, intelligent man who has<lb/>
gorousl) expressed himself on public<lb/>
Lies, and has done so intelligently and<lb/>
;sponsibly.<lb/>
Now there are two obvious factions<lb/>
 his confirmation as a federal<lb/>
idge ro begin with, there is what one<lb/>
night call the Big Firm Legal Lobby.<lb/>
These are the legal heavies who dis-<lb/>
.?ndidate for the judiciary who<lb/>
pracl ced in a firm with fewer than<lb/>
K partners. They cannot find suffi-<lb/>
iit judicial cosmopolitanism out in the<lb/>
in the little firms.<lb/>
lustice Department's answer on<lb/>
lis question is that the "Mh Ciruit to<lb/>
ch President Reagan has named<lb/>
Manion already has its share of<lb/>
professors and lawyers who have<lb/>
en involved in federal casework, and<lb/>
. a well-balanced judiciary should in-<lb/>
ide lawyers from outside the great<lb/>
: ipolises<lb/>
second faction is just plain<lb/>
. His opponents do not like it<lb/>
that Manion, a conservative, should be<lb/>
designated to the court. Some senators<lb/>
are remarkably frank on the subject.<lb/>
"1 think you are a decent and<lb/>
honorable man a ranking Democratic<lb/>
member of the Senate Judiciary Com-<lb/>
mittee said to Manion at his second<lb/>
hearing, "but I do not think I can vote<lb/>
for you because of your political views<lb/>
that is a senator who is sworn to defend<lb/>
the Constitution, which gives to the<lb/>
president the perogative of naming<lb/>
judges. You can't slide a piece of tissue<lb/>
paper between the political views of<lb/>
Daniel Manion and Ronald Reagan, and<lb/>
Reagan's political views were applauded<lb/>
by 60 percent of the American people<lb/>
only two years ago.<lb/>
The opponents of Daniel Manion<lb/>
reason that if they succeed in blocking<lb/>
his nomination, that would be the first<lb/>
time a Reagan nominee was turned<lb/>
down. If it can happen once, some<lb/>
senators reason, then perhaps a coalition<lb/>
of liberal Democrats and liberal<lb/>
Republicans can build a Berlin Wall bet-<lb/>
ween the White House and the judiciary<lb/>
? never mind the Constitution.<lb/>
But a third faction is moved, or so it<lb/>
would seem, by a passionate desire to<lb/>
punish someone who has disagreed with<lb/>
the Supreme Court in its various rulings<lb/>
progressively excluding religion from the<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
When the Supreme Court voted (by a<lb/>
narrow margin of 5-4) against permit-<lb/>
ting the display of the Ten Command-<lb/>
ments in the public schools of Kentucky,<lb/>
then-state Sen. Daniel Manion joined<lb/>
with an overwhelming majority of<lb/>
Democrats and Republicans in the In-<lb/>
diana Senate to propose a voluntary<lb/>
display of the Ten Commandments in<lb/>
the public schools.<lb/>
His critics hae whooped and hollered<lb/>
over this one, maintaining that it was a<lb/>
flagrant act of contumacy, an invitation<lb/>
of defiance of the Supreme Court. But<lb/>
the proposed bill specified, "If this sec-<lb/>
tion is determined to be unconstitu-<lb/>
tional, all copies of the Ten Command-<lb/>
ments displayed by authority of this sec-<lb/>
tion shall be immediately removed when<lb/>
the judgement becomes final There<lb/>
was no hint there of any appetite to<lb/>
subvert the judiciary.<lb/>
Moreover, the court's church-state<lb/>
rulings are, by the concession of almost<lb/>
everyone, utter chaos. (Moynihan, 1979:<lb/>
"In Wolman v. Walter (1977), Mr.<lb/>
Justice Blackmun on behalf of the court<lb/>
found it constitutional to provide non-<lb/>
public-school pupils with 'books but<lb/>
unconstitutional to supply them with<lb/>
'instructional materials and equipment<lb/>
In other words, a book may be provided<lb/>
but not a map. The Court has yet to rule<lb/>
on atlases, which are books of maps)<lb/>
If you want to know whether the<lb/>
Supreme Court would have authorized<lb/>
the proposed Indiana law, you could as<lb/>
well consult a Ouija board as a panel of<lb/>
judicial scholars. But the forces of<lb/>
secularism are not easily appeased. They<lb/>
want Manion eaten alive by the lions.<lb/>
The Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, the<lb/>
longtime president of the University of<lb/>
Notre Dame, a political liberal and<lb/>
perhaps the most highly honored man in<lb/>
America (he has more honorary degrees<lb/>
than Herbert Hoover, the runner-up),<lb/>
has said of Manion: "I believe he will<lb/>
bring dedication, integrity, and a keen<lb/>
knowledge of the law to that position.<lb/>
His life has been one of service and com-<lb/>
mitment to justice. I beliee he will ex-<lb/>
hibit the same qualitites sitting on the<lb/>
federal bench, and that his appointment<lb/>
will be a strong one<lb/>
Syria's Assad Has Imperial Dream<lb/>
kes '<lb/>
.<lb/>
B DANIEL PIPES<lb/>
speech last February, President Hafez al-Assad of<lb/>
?utlined his policy toward the Golan Heights, the<lb/>
n region of Syria that was lost to Israel in 196<lb/>
lelis vs rk to put the Golan within their<lb/>
e warned, "we will work to put the Golan in the<lb/>
Syria and not on the borders As the most overt<lb/>
in some years ? it implied the annexation of all of<lb/>
Syria ? Assad's remark prompted strong verbal<lb/>
rom Israel.<lb/>
turn, made further warnings. Events since then<lb/>
ave nl made Syrian-Israeli hostilities more likely, and<lb/>
many observers now speculate that the two countries are<lb/>
g for war.<lb/>
fter the United States retaliated against Libya for ter-<lb/>
Berlin nightclub, it became clear that Syria had<lb/>
masterminded the attempt to blow up an El Al plane leaving<lb/>
London s evidence of Syrian complicity emerges, the<lb/>
likelihood of Israeli reprisal against Syria increases. But do<lb/>
Syria's hostile moves mean that it seeks war with Israel? Or is<lb/>
id indirectly trying to maneuver Israel to the bargaining<lb/>
;abie?<lb/>
Assessing Assad's motives poses many problems for the<lb/>
Syrian Arab Republic is one of the most tightly closed coun-<lb/>
in the Middle East. Even so, two points stand out.<lb/>
ke Israel's other neighbors, Syria still seeks to destroy the<lb/>
Jewish state. As the Syrain foreign minister, Abd al-Halim<lb/>
Knaddam, puts it, "liquidating the Zionist presence" is the<lb/>
only solution to the Arab-Israeli struggle.<lb/>
Second, Assad's bellicosity results not from strength but<lb/>
, weakness. He depends on anti-Zionism to reduce the<lb/>
tffection of the Syrian people from his regime.<lb/>
Describing the area east of the Mediterranean more than 50<lb/>
vears ago, the Syrian writer Omar Djabry noted the paradox<lb/>
that the region's distinctiveness lies precisely in the diversity<lb/>
ts population.<lb/>
With good reason, he dubbed ethnic heterogeneity the<lb/>
rademark of the Levant. In Syria, Arabic-speaking Sunni<lb/>
Moslems make up 50 percent of the population and minorities<lb/>
make up the other half. Islamic heresies ? Alawite, Druse,<lb/>
Yazidi ? constitute 16 percent. Christians, ten percent,<lb/>
divide into ten sects. Bedouins make up ten percent, and<lb/>
Turks, Kurds, Palestinians, and Shiites make up the rest.<lb/>
With a long history of ethnic hostilities, Syria could easily<lb/>
be engulfed in the kind of vicious enmities that have<lb/>
destroyed Lebanon.<lb/>
Thus the fact that Assad and most of his aides come from<lb/>
the small, isolated, impoverished, and despised Alawite com-<lb/>
munity has enormous importance.<lb/>
As poorly educated peasants lacking political organization<lb/>
or military strength, Alawites long formed an economic<lb/>
underclass. They typically worked farms belonging to Sunni<lb/>
Arab landlords, receiving only one-quarter of the produce.<lb/>
Alawites were so poor after World War 1 that they routinely<lb/>
hired out their daughters as domestics to Sunni Arabs in the<lb/>
cities, a deeply shameful practice among Moslems and<lb/>
Alawites.<lb/>
When Syria became an independent country in 1946, it was<lb/>
naturally the Sunni Arabs who dominated its political life.<lb/>
Ironically, discrimination served the Alawites well during the<lb/>
next quarter century.<lb/>
Exclusion reinforced the Alawite sense of ethnic solidarity<lb/>
at the same time that it kept them out of the ruinous power<lb/>
strugIes then raging among Sunni military officers. As Sun-<lb/>
nis repeatedly purged one another, Alawites rose through the<lb/>
ranks.<lb/>
This ascent culminated in February 1966, when a group of<lb/>
Alawite officers came to power in Syria's bloodiest change of<lb/>
government ever. In a coup d'etat marked by hand-to-hand<lb/>
fighting around the residence of Amin al-Hafiz, the former<lb/>
strongman, Assad's support for the rebels was decisive in the<lb/>
outcome.<lb/>
The impact of the Alawites' taking power can hardly be ex-<lb/>
aggerated. An Alawite ruling Syria is like an untouchable<lb/>
becoming maharaja in India or a Jew becoming c.ar in Russia<lb/>
? an unprecedented development shocking to the majority-<lb/>
population.<lb/>
Today, the observant traveler entering Syria for the first<lb/>
time is startled as he goes through passport control and sees a<lb/>
military map of the country on the wall, for this map contains<lb/>
several obvious anomalies. It shows the province of Hatay, a<lb/>
part of Turkey since 1939, included in Syria. It shows the<lb/>
Golan Heights under Syrian control, though it has been oc-<lb/>
cupied by Israel since 1967. Svria's boundaries with Lebanon<lb/>
and Jordan appear not as international borders but as<lb/>
something called "regional" borders. Israel does not even ex-<lb/>
ist on this map. Instead, there is a state called Palestine. And<lb/>
Palestine is separated from Syria by a line designated as a<lb/>
"temporary" border.<lb/>
The maps' inaccuracies reflect the Syrian government's<lb/>
profound unwillingness to accept the country's reduced size.<lb/>
They remember that until 1920 "Syria" referred to a cultural<lb/>
region that stretched from Anatolia to Egypt, from Iraq to<lb/>
the Mediterranean Sea.<lb/>
In terms of today's states, it comprised Syria, Lebanon,<lb/>
Israel, and Jordan, plus the Gaza Strip and Hatay. This larger<lb/>
area is now known as Greater Syria, to distinguish it from the<lb/>
Syrian state.<lb/>
The present borders within Greater Syria date back only to<lb/>
1918-23, when Great Britain and France divided the area into<lb/>
many new polities.<lb/>
The imperial powers created these polities with an eye to<lb/>
helping their friends in the area, most of whom were infidels.<lb/>
Palestine went to the Jews, Lebanon to the Marointes, small<lb/>
regions to the Alawites and Druse, and Jordan to a British<lb/>
protege, leaving Syria to the Sunnis. The Alawite and Druse<lb/>
districts were later incorporated into Syria. In the eyes of<lb/>
Syrian Sunnis, these were all usurpers who excluded them<lb/>
from their patrimony, the whole of Greater Syria.<lb/>
Although Greater Syria includes many regions, Palestine<lb/>
attracts most of Assad's attention. The reason is simple: there<lb/>
is no Palestinian polity ? only the state of Israel.<lb/>
Israelis are not Syrian, not Arab, and not Moslem. Indeed,<lb/>
they are Jews, and anti-Semitism has become a powerful<lb/>
political force in Syria during recent decades. Fighting Israel<lb/>
now symbolizes Arab and Moslem resolve. Strength will be<lb/>
achieved, many Arabs believe, through its destruction. Anti-<lb/>
Zionism is the operative part of Pan-Syrianism.<lb/>
Assad needs militant anti-Zionism for three reasons. First,<lb/>
minorities in the Arab world take little interest in the conflict<lb/>
against Israel. Maronites, Greek Orthodox, Druse, Shiites,<lb/>
Kurds, and Copts typically have more pressing concerns than<lb/>
whether Israel exists, expands, or disappears. So have the<lb/>
Alawites. Before coming to power in 1966, they ignored<lb/>
Israel.<lb/>
Second, rejecting the existence of Israel offers Assad a way<lb/>
to appeal to Sunni emotions. Sunnis have a special regard for<lb/>
Palestine; they felt most aggrieved by Israel's creation and<lb/>
they expect to inherit Palestine should Israel be eliminated.<lb/>
Finally, anti-Zionism provides a bludgeon to hold over<lb/>
Syria's neighbors and to enhance Assad's power in Middle<lb/>
East politics. Syrian leaders argue that as "the heart of<lb/>
Arabism and the lungs of the Palestinian resistance<lb/>
Damascus has historically guided the Arabs.<lb/>
Syria lead the fight against Zionism, showing the way to the<lb/>
other Arabs, including the Palestinians, and correcting them<lb/>
when they stray. Continuing the fight against Israel permits<lb/>
Assad to impose his will on the other Arabs.<lb/>
Assad so much needs Israel as an enemy he is willing to en-<lb/>
dure whatever costs anti-Zionism entails, including military<lb/>
defeat and economic sacrifice. So long as an Alawite-<lb/>
dominated Syrian regime faces widespread Sunni opposition,<lb/>
it profits by seeking Israel's destruction. The implication is<lb/>
clear: the Arab-Israeli conflict will continue so long as Hafez<lb/>
al-Assad rules in Damascus.<lb/>
CONSPIRACY THEORV 126<lb/>
WP5IRHAM5lRHAN,ieeHARVW<lb/>
OSWALD AMP JOHM HINCKLEV <lb/>
ALL HAVE ONE POWERFUL GROUP<lb/>
SPENDING MILLIONS TO HELP THEM<lb/>
OBTAIN GUNS ?<lb/>
?23 tfSSHkaos-<lb/>
f (F TEAMSTER<lb/>
&amp;0S5,JACK!?<lb/>
PRe556R,6ET5<lb/>
CONVICTED,<lb/>
wouiP W<lb/>
86 WILLING<lb/>
TDSERV6<lb/>
OUT HIS<lb/>
TERM? I<lb/>
CoUege Press Service<lb/>
HKW AftjtfW 0 A bit) ?N Ottsr A, WBH Afcueitort<lb/>
?? ?<lb/>
?" -??!? ff- ?? L , <lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057822_0006"/><lb/>
I HI- EASl t AKOI INIAN<lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
BLOOM COUNTY<lb/>
JUNE 4, 1986 Page eS<lb/>
Summer Flick<lb/>
Poltergeist II<lb/>
B EDTOSHACH<lb/>
sun Writer<lb/>
From Right: Cm T Nelson, Oliver Robins. Heather ORourke, JoBeth Williams, and psychic<lb/>
T angina Barroas idda Ruhmsteim are drawn into a climactic battle arkn ?<lb/>
'Poltergeist II: I he Other Side' ,n<lb/>
When it came out in 1982,<lb/>
Poltergeist had quite a bit going<lb/>
for it. It was well written, ex-<lb/>
tremely well directed, and it had<lb/>
great special effects.<lb/>
Now Poltergeist II is here and<lb/>
it has great special effects.<lb/>
Poltergeist II is set shortly after<lb/>
the first movie ended; the family<lb/>
that had been through so much<lb/>
has now taken up residence with<lb/>
Morn's mother. Dad seems to<lb/>
have given up the real estate<lb/>
business to sell vacuum cleaners<lb/>
and no, they still haven't bought<lb/>
another TV.<lb/>
Suddenly, things start getting<lb/>
very weird again. A preacher that<lb/>
could be a recent offering from<lb/>
ghoul-of-t hc-mont h starts<lb/>
following Carol Anne. An Indian<lb/>
shaman comes to live with the<lb/>
family and tames all the local<lb/>
butterflies. The house starts<lb/>
? nig. toys start Hying around,<lb/>
and soon little Carol Anne is tell-<lb/>
ing us "they're back . "<lb/>
Poltergeist (the original) work-<lb/>
s well as it did because it gave<lb/>
us a family we could believe in;<lb/>
they could have been any<lb/>
American family. We saw kids<lb/>
at the breakfast table. We<lb/>
saw a little girl bury her pet bird<lb/>
in a cigar box.<lb/>
Poltergeist was well<lb/>
written, well directed<lb/>
and it had great special<lb/>
effects. Now Poltergeist<lb/>
II is here and it has<lb/>
great special effects.<lb/>
Because Poltergeist showed us<lb/>
these details, we could believe in<lb/>
the family it depicted. They were<lb/>
a common family surrounded by<lb/>
circumstances that were anything<lb/>
but common. If none of us had<lb/>
ever lived in a haunted house,<lb/>
after seeing that movie we knew<lb/>
what it was like. Poltergeist u.as<lb/>
sometimes scary, sometimes tun-<lb/>
ny and always credible.<lb/>
Apparentlv, somebody wasi<lb/>
watching.<lb/>
Poltergeist II spends very lil<lb/>
time uiakn us he! ?<lb/>
fan<lb/>
dons the idea<lb/>
unusual. u<lb/>
grandmother, we qu<lb/>
have p<lb/>
whv a whole<lb/>
has followed them hall<lb/>
the country. Poltergeist I!<lb/>
not especiallv belie<lb/>
seldom funny, b I<lb/>
were lots i I<lb/>
In Poltergeist II I I<lb/>
saw ten<lb/>
the i apped<lb/>
wagon; ;<lb/>
around, and a boy ittaci<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
better spec<lb/>
wa-<lb/>
it<lb/>
I ' -<lb/>
Nei<lb/>
excellent oi<lb/>
and n ??<lb/>
O'Rourke i <lb/>
eve-<lb/>
Oldei<lb/>
imp<lb/>
B<lb/>
e s p.<lb/>
Poltergeist II<lb/>
?<lb/>
? - ? Poltergeist II.<lb/>
Lahnn And Loftin Scheduled To Play Patio<lb/>
B DAVID BRADSHAW<lb/>
and<lb/>
JOHN sIJAWON<lb/>
B luced by<lb/>
the output<lb/>
v ovals<lb/>
their<lb/>
l<lb/>
;anv<lb/>
Bee<lb/>
I ree H isc<lb/>
V rong V<lb/>
rega I w e .<lb/>
re, people will<lb/>
heat rial the musics 'ear.<lb/>
Lahnn and Loftin is back. Theii<lb/>
w, scheduled for Thursday at<lb/>
3 p.m. on the patio<lb/>
Mendenhall, will mark their fifth<lb/>
appearance on the ECl .ampus.<lb/>
The duo have<lb/>
?<lb/>
. arc no: y<lb/>
hai ' ians are<lb/>
ters a- well.<lb/>
area<lb/>
?<lb/>
S it ? 'ern col-<lb/>
rcuit and beyond, playing<lb/>
at dozens of campuses from New<lb/>
York to Mississippi. A testimony<lb/>
'heir talent is the fact that at<lb/>
nearly all of their performances,<lb/>
they are asked for a return<lb/>
engagement.<lb/>
Chaz Lahnn, the duo's lead<lb/>
vocalist, also plays rhythm<lb/>
guitar, usuallv a twelve string<lb/>
acoustic. J.K. Loftin provides the<lb/>
bulk of instrumental texture<lb/>
the<lb/>
? ners<lb/>
ir from it.<lb/>
a p n i<lb/>
"tieir<lb/>
he pursuit of a unique<lb/>
sound which can<lb/>
d live by just the tw.<lb/>
imply<lb/>
Thev<lb/>
avaiiai<lb/>
. .<lb/>
and f<lb/>
reprod<lb/>
then<lb/>
The computers enhance and<lb/>
aid Lahnn and Loftin's m<lb/>
without creating the "plasl<lb/>
.ad that ma' tech bands<lb/>
of the eighties have. Lahnn and<lb/>
Loftin have consciously avoided<lb/>
the techno-pop -yndrome by a<lb/>
developing<lb/>
ap-<lb/>
- as<lb/>
al func-<lb/>
md<lb/>
?<lb/>
Vic-<lb/>
heir<lb/>
 on<lb/>
e North<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
Talent Sea 0f-<lb/>
? first<lb/>
tern United<lb/>
- lam<lb/>
ban . en?<lb/>
lly wens na.<lb/>
n and Loftin's<lb/>
- on a special<lb/>
produced as a<lb/>
' he North Carolina com-<lb/>
ind J K. Loftin<lb/>
are fied with<lb/>
stasis in their careers. ! fie two are<lb/>
now branching m perfor-<lb/>
ming by becoming, in all<lb/>
seriousness, educators. They<lb/>
nave held workshops and<lb/>
seminars on aspects of song-<lb/>
writing and performing with<lb/>
computer-controlled equipment,<lb/>
bringing knowledge of these new<lb/>
musical tools to college audiences<lb/>
who are most likely to benefit<lb/>
m and appreciate the mforma-<lb/>
Despite their interests on the<lb/>
side, Lahnn and Loftin are<lb/>
primarily performers. Their<lb/>
choice of covers reflects a wide<lb/>
range of influences, especially<lb/>
from artists of the sixties such as<lb/>
The Beatles; Steppenwolf; Pink<lb/>
Floyd; Emerson, Lake and<lb/>
Palmer; Crosby, Stills and Nash;<lb/>
and Bob Dylan. Their covers<lb/>
contemporary artists include such<lb/>
Bruce Spring<lb/>
Aga i will<lb/>
p r e s e n<lb/>
?<lb/>
'? EC I lei<lb/>
p.m. on the pal<lb/>
If it ra . n in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre, -v<lb/>
free.<lb/>
Prime Time Soap Scenario<lb/>
B J. D ID MATTHEWS<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
Restaurant In Rpvjpu,<lb/>
American Classics<lb/>
As most prime time soap opera<lb/>
fans know, the creators of the<lb/>
t BS series "Dallas in a last<lb/>
ditch effort to revive its show-<lb/>
back to the top of the Nielson<lb/>
ratings, have decided to bring<lb/>
back from parts unknown, Bob-<lb/>
by Ewing.<lb/>
A few days ago, I ran into Bob-<lb/>
by down along the banks of the<lb/>
Tar River. 1 was granted an inter-<lb/>
view by the revived oil tycoon on-<lb/>
ly because I was wearing a Lone<lb/>
Star Beer t-shirt. Here is what<lb/>
happened:<lb/>
Dave: "Yo Bobbv. What's up<lb/>
Holmes?"<lb/>
Bobby: "My nipples, Dave.<lb/>
It's cold as ice six feet under<lb/>
Dave: "I can't believe it Bob.<lb/>
Those bigwig city slickers out in<lb/>
Hollywood are actually going to<lb/>
revive a dead man for ratings,<lb/>
and ultimately, money<lb/>
Bobby: "For my next trick. I'll<lb/>
walk across the Tar River<lb/>
Dave: "Be for real, Bob.<lb/>
Seriously though, don't you<lb/>
think that all of this hocus pocus<lb/>
is in violation of your viewers'<lb/>
moral codes?"<lb/>
Bobby: "Our viewers have no<lb/>
morals, Dave<lb/>
Dave: "Oh yeah. Well, in the<lb/>
last episode, you ended up in the<lb/>
shower. How come?"<lb/>
Bobby: "Try living in a box<lb/>
that has cracks in it and see how<lb/>
clean you stay! It's a jungle down<lb/>
there<lb/>
Dave: "I see. So, are you plan-<lb/>
ning to surprise JR and Miss Elly<lb/>
like you did with Pam?"<lb/>
Bobby: "I'm going to scare of<lb/>
JR right out of his BVDs. As for<lb/>
mama, well the shock just might<lb/>
kill her. I sure hope we can rent<lb/>
that cas <lb/>
Dave: "I<lb/>
mean. Hey jm-<lb/>
:wing<lb/>
dmger<lb/>
Jan had I r j<lb/>
Bobbv. "Yea roo bad I<lb/>
couldn't s-e a:<lb/>
Hell, the only sound 1 . -ear<lb/>
over ail that cryin' a:<lb/>
tion was the clinking of ice cu<lb/>
in JR's drink<lb/>
Dave: "What  ? ke not<lb/>
being here on earth for a while<lb/>
Bobbv: "Weii. 1 don't know<lb/>
exactly where 1 was at, but it was<lb/>
great, k tike a haven<lb/>
Texans. Ai! the beer , uld<lb/>
drink, all the ribs you could eat.<lb/>
and a whole herd of fine thangs<lb/>
to hogtie! I've never 'Yeenaaed'<lb/>
so much in my life. Or is that<lb/>
death'1"<lb/>
Dave: "Sounds like a helluva<lb/>
rodeo to me, cow bo "<lb/>
See BOBS, page 7<lb/>
B PAT MOLLOY<lb/>
4mi?Iim rralurn f fct,?<lb/>
Reflecting back upon a meal<lb/>
eaten at See-Zes could be an<lb/>
afternoon-long event ? a plea-<lb/>
sant, afternoon-long event. See-<lb/>
Zes is a new restaurant located at<lb/>
100 fc. 10th St. (where Szechuan<lb/>
Gardens once stood), and the<lb/>
portions they serve are more than<lb/>
generous. They are also quite<lb/>
good.<lb/>
Seen from the outside, See-Zes<lb/>
(its name plucked from the utter-<lb/>
ings of the owner's seven-year-<lb/>
old son) looks more like a large,<lb/>
green warehouse than a<lb/>
restaurant; however, the<lb/>
semblance ends there. Inside is an<lb/>
atmosphere that would make<lb/>
even the grumpiest lunch-time<lb/>
mealer feel welcomed.<lb/>
Once inside, one may either be<lb/>
seated or order to go. If the deci-<lb/>
sion :s to be seated, a waitress will<lb/>
arrive with a smile and a menu of<lb/>
American cuisine ranging from a<lb/>
Maryland crabcake sandv<lb/>
($2.50) to a New Yorker hotdog<lb/>
? complete with relish, on.<lb/>
and mustard (Si).<lb/>
The ambience that See-Zes of-<lb/>
fers is almost as good as the food.<lb/>
The restaurant is remarkably<lb/>
clean, and there are no irritating<lb/>
people who push brooms by<lb/>
patrons while they dine. Indeed,<lb/>
there was no need for a broom.<lb/>
There was no need for dining<lb/>
music, either; the sound of con-<lb/>
versation between the other<lb/>
guests was sufficient.<lb/>
The other diners seemed to feel<lb/>
quite at home while they ate. en-<lb/>
joying very mellow bantering<lb/>
with the waitresses and the<lb/>
owner. The owner stopped by<lb/>
every table in order to check on<lb/>
the food and further assist the<lb/>
gUCsts.<lb/>
x dress code was<lb/>
People wore<lb/>
thes ranging from coat and tie<lb/>
and sandals. The<lb/>
folks in the sandals seemed more<lb/>
aptly suited for the experience<lb/>
than did the others. That is not to<lb/>
take away from the sense of<lb/>
cleanliness that one feels upon<lb/>
entering the restaurant.<lb/>
See-cs is reminiscent of the<lb/>
classic American deli restaurant.<lb/>
I heir menu features regional<lb/>
foods from all over the United<lb/>
States<lb/>
From Baltimore they have a<lb/>
cornbeef sandwich served with<lb/>
either rye or white bread($2.50).<lb/>
And of course they feature the<lb/>
now-famous Philly-steak sand-<lb/>
wich covered with melted cheese<lb/>
and onions($2.50).<lb/>
See SEE-ZES, page 7<lb/>
?'?i ?"?? witfM -imwmfrnj<lb/>
New Restaurant In Town ?mTC?- <lb/>
See-Zes, Greenville's newest restaurant, is located at 100 E.lOth Street Ooen WM.<lb/>
from 11:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m they are serving the finest in American cune" MCepl Sund?<lb/>
<lb/>
Man-O-Stick<lb/>
 <lb/>
See-Zes<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
Reviewed<lb/>
( ontinutd from page 6<lb/>
?<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
them,<lb/>
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may bite h<lb/>
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everything<lb/>
per<lb/>
-<lb/>
Ih; J m II a<lb/>
and call-in<lb/>
the student on a<lb/>
budj g j<lb/>
food and<lb/>
! 10<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
New<lb/>
SPECIE ! MARYLAND j CORN BEEF<lb/>
i ioTaste th subs ? cheese.<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
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s-r BOB'S, pa.<lb/>
?merlctn cuisine<lb/>
BLOOM COUNTY<lb/>
W<lb/>
by Berke Breathed<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JUNE 4, 1986 7<lb/>
-4 77<lb/>
M?i?x sum <lb/>
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Man-O-Stick<lb/>
By JARRELL &amp; JOHNSON<lb/>
Bob's Back<lb/>
In Dallas<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
Bobby: "Yup<lb/>
Dave: "Did you run into Jock<lb/>
while you were down there?"<lb/>
Bobby: "Sure did. Daddy's<lb/>
still the same, too. Still drinkin'<lb/>
and cussin and fightin and<lb/>
screwin' over his friends<lb/>
Dave: "What a man. Is he go-<lb/>
ing to come back on the show<lb/>
also?"<lb/>
Bobby: "When I asked him to,<lb/>
he threw his drink in my face. But<lb/>
after I apologized for making<lb/>
him spill his bourbon, he said he<lb/>
might reconsider on one condi-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Dave: "What's that?"<lb/>
Bobby: "If 'Oilcan his horse,<lb/>
can come back also and have a<lb/>
irot-on part on the show<lb/>
Dave: "Maybe they'll give him<lb/>
a part in a stampede<lb/>
Bobby: "The Can doesn't care<lb/>
what he does as long as he and JR<lb/>
aren't in a stable scene together<lb/>
Dave: "What's this I hear<lb/>
about that drama on ABC bring-<lb/>
ing back one of its deceased<lb/>
also?"<lb/>
Bobby: "You mean DieNasty?<lb/>
I think they're trying to bring the<lb/>
Rock back<lb/>
Dave: "Do you think he'll<lb/>
come back?"<lb/>
Bobby: "Only if he can por-<lb/>
tray a certain character that is<lb/>
special to him<lb/>
Dave: "What's the character's<lb/>
name?"<lb/>
Bobby: "King Pac-Man<lb/>
Dave: "Oh really?"<lb/>
Bobby: "Sure thing. And Jim<lb/>
Nabors gets to make a cameo ap-<lb/>
pearance anytime he pleases<lb/>
Dave: "Shazam! Well Bobby,<lb/>
what's ahead in the near future<lb/>
for you?"<lb/>
Bobby: "Money, of course.<lb/>
You don't think I'd come back to<lb/>
television just so I could get my<lb/>
mug on the cover of People<lb/>
Magazine, do you?"<lb/>
Dave: "You really kill me,<lb/>
Bob. Later dude<lb/>
Bobbv: "You know it<lb/>
See-Zes<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
Reviewed<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
The suhs that See-Zes offers<lb/>
being united as the "largest in<lb/>
Greenville and after seeing<lb/>
m, one might definitely be in-<lb/>
clined to agree with the pro-<lb/>
clamation, lor S2.50 one may<lb/>
select a small coldcut, steak,<lb/>
hamburger, Italian or spiced<lb/>
shrimp sub 1 lie large subs cost<lb/>
$4.00.<lb/>
Of course, the American fare<lb/>
includes pizza, also. And it comes<lb/>
at an agreeable price. For $4, one<lb/>
may bite into a 12" cheese pizza.<lb/>
And for an additional 65 cents, a<lb/>
topping can be added. The price<lb/>
for a large 16" pizza with<lb/>
everything is S 10.25 ? hot pep-<lb/>
pers are free.<lb/>
See-Ze- is open Monday<lb/>
through Saturday from 11 a.m.<lb/>
to 9 p.m and call-in orders are<lb/>
accepted. For the student on a<lb/>
budget who enjoys eating good<lb/>
d and much of it, this is a<lb/>
restaurant that must be visited.<lb/>
lllillllMIIIIIHIHIIIIIII!l!lllHI)lllllllllllllllilinnillilll!lllllllllljIHIIIIIIIIi!llilllllllinilllll!IIIIIIHIItlllllilLt<lb/>
Stock Clearance Sale<lb/>
IBM XT<lb/>
Regularly Now<lb/>
?(1) IBM lOmeg hard drive <lb/>
256K, (1) IBM 360K drive $3116 $2395 Cashl<lb/>
IBM XT<lb/>
256K, (2) IBM 360K drives $2056 1755 Cash!<lb/>
I IBM PC Portable<lb/>
J256K, (2) IBM 360K drives 1800 1 595 Cash<lb/>
Only 1 Left At This Price<lb/>
I Check Out Our New IBM PC Prices<lb/>
<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
scl.netrx v  ; <lb/>
Computer Game jjr Singles<lb/>
Don't drive. Call the Liberty Ride<lb/>
&amp; for more info call 758-5570.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
105 Airport Road<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
Tar Landing<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Fried<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
$599<lb/>
Crab Legs<lb/>
or<lb/>
Steamed Shrimp<lb/>
or combination of both<lb/>
COMING ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
EE<lb/>
IBM PC<lb/>
J256K, (2) IBM 360K drives 1596 1 295 Cash<lb/>
Plenty PC's Available<lb/>
B<lb/>
I Student Stores i<lb/>
 Wright Building (<lb/>
 East Carolina University <lb/>
ilUlllllllllinHHtlllllillllllllllllllllllllimillllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIHIIlllliillllilllllllllIIIMIIIIIIillllllHF<lb/>
CLIP COUPON<lb/>
See-ge's<lb/>
10<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
New To The Area<lb/>
SPECIAL SANDWICHES<lb/>
MARYLAND CRAB PHILLEY STEAK<lb/>
CORN BEEF 6 oz HAMBURGER<lb/>
10<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
10<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Taste the difference in our cold cut<lb/>
subs ? 16 slices of meat &amp; 4 slices of<lb/>
cheese. We also have pizzas with a<lb/>
northern flavor<lb/>
CLIP COUPON-<lb/>
10<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Thursday, June 5, 1986<lb/>
3:00 p.m. FREE!<lb/>
Lahnn and Loftin<lb/>
Concert on the Patio<lb/>
Rainsite: Hendrix<lb/>
Monday, June 9, 1986<lb/>
3:30 p.m. FREE<lb/>
with I.D<lb/>
Risky Business<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
?XHM&amp; OUT TO W?V VOU<lb/>
W m . m T<lb/>
- - ?? <lb/>
 ? ? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057822_0008"/><lb/>
HI I ASI K(INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
IRS Hour<lb/>
?V (MM!<lb/>
H M - ?? H??e ?<lb/>
New Records Set<lb/>
Bradley Wins Tournament<lb/>
golfer Mike Bradlev ?on the Durham mati<lb/>
week, setting tournament records alon the ?<lb/>
B KICK Mi(()RMA(<lb/>
i ? idii<lb/>
I he summer has gotten off to a<lb/>
d stari ' r Pirate golfer Mike<lb/>
Bradley, as he has won the<lb/>
Durham Amateut Golf Iourna-<lb/>
i em in addition to capturing<lb/>
Qualifying Medalist honors in the<lb/>
south Invitational.<lb/>
Bradley, a rising senior who<lb/>
been team MVP each of his<lb/>
ee years at ECU, set a tourna-<lb/>
i" winning the<lb/>
Din ateui with a five<lb/>
undei par total ol 208<lb/>
Bradley also set a tournament<lb/>
a single round when he<lb/>
:d the Duke golt course<lb/>
?pening round 67.<lb/>
idley 's rounds i ?1 67-70 7 I<lb/>
field, as the ncxi<lb/>
a as eighi stroke<lb/>
pace<lb/>
Bradle carried a six shoi lead<lb/>
sing round and no one<lb/>
an) closei<lb/>
I he v hole thing was a battle<lb/>
: place finis!<lb/>
5 ? use said. "The<lb/>
already won<lb/>
e Duke gol!<lb/>
pring AUii fall<lb/>
II petes in tour-<lb/>
e knew<lb/>
?und<lb/>
lead slip away<lb/>
? "1 was playing so good I fell<lb/>
like it would take a course record<lb/>
to beat me Bradley<lb/>
Mike Bradlev<lb/>
"Bel<lb/>
. .<lb/>
ler I He<lb/>
said thai nd f 71<lb/>
ild ii<lb/>
ope i ?<lb/>
71 s was t y . ? be j 1<lb/>
tgl<lb/>
H - a .<lb/>
Ste(<lb/>
D u r h a 11 Si<lb/>
posl. f 72-73-7!<lb/>
220<lb/>
Moran Wins First Criterium<lb/>
place<lb/>
1 arliei his summer, Hradiev<lb/>
Hired qualifying Meda<lb/>
honors in the prestigeous North-<lb/>
South An !<lb/>
Pinehurst's tamed number<lb/>
course.<lb/>
Bradley shot 70 "2 in the tw<lb/>
qualifv. . inds, !<lb/>
the low qualifier before I<lb/>
? rid of ma<lb/>
"My main goal wa<lb/>
'?? . fiers 1<lb/>
play Bradley said<lb/>
72-7<lb/>
ment lit<lb/>
it thrill. There t<lb/>
la<lb/>
? ' : ued. "Ii<lb/>
ap<lb/>
Brad ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
??<lb/>
He<lb/>
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.1<lb/>
le Ea<lb/>
' OTTCOl)<lb/>
<lb/>
?? pai :d to the and th<lb/>
st<lb/>
citing re re<lb/>
a lot of (<lb/>
Michael Paimer<lb/>
?<lb/>
sr I, II and III<lb/>
.id i eDuc<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
Veterans<lb/>
Jim Minder<lb/>
Bi own<lb/>
i J i eeuw<lb/>
Juniors<lb/>
? <lb/>
Mat! Kratzon<lb/>
Women<lb/>
Nagel<lb/>
I aurie V ai<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
Si<lb/>
The intramural department sponsors horseback riding for groups at<lb/>
reduced rates. For more information contact IKS.<lb/>
Celtics Down Rockets; In<lb/>
Driver's Seat For Remainder<lb/>
Alter the Boston Celtics took<lb/>
?so games of the NBA<lb/>
best-of-seven Championship<lb/>
Series, it looked as it" it would be<lb/>
ake-walk for the heralded men<lb/>
green. However, the Rockets<lb/>
squeaked out Came three and<lb/>
ked like they would be able to<lb/>
even the series at 2-2 ? due to<lb/>
their three-game homestand.<lb/>
By<lb/>
Scott Cooper<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Rick McCormac<lb/>
TV Side<lb/>
Indoor Sports<lb/>
Playing pool in Mendenhal) Student Center is one activity to help pass<lb/>
the time during summer school. Mendenhall also has a bowling alley<lb/>
for those who prefer to beat the heat in the air conditioning<lb/>
Not to be so. In the most bit-<lb/>
terly contested game of the series,<lb/>
a three-point field goal from all-<lb/>
everything Larry Bird was just<lb/>
enough to give the Celtics an in-<lb/>
surmountable 3-1 lead as they<lb/>
topped the Rockets, 106-103 last<lb/>
night in Houston.<lb/>
Although the Rockets have lost<lb/>
just three of 47 games (prior to<lb/>
last night) in the friendly confines<lb/>
of the 16,000 plus Summit, a<lb/>
scratch-and-claw Celtic squad<lb/>
would not be denied the win and<lb/>
another possible banner for<lb/>
Red's already banner-filled<lb/>
Boston Garden.<lb/>
However, the Celtics might<lb/>
have won the battle but the future<lb/>
belongs to the Rockets. Let's face<lb/>
it, this hasn't been such a great<lb/>
year for rockets anyway.<lb/>
With a talented twin towers as<lb/>
a foundation, Houston can't be<lb/>
far from a title or two. Ralph<lb/>
Sampson's emergence as a PTP<lb/>
(prime-time player) in the las'<lb/>
two games speaks for itself.<lb/>
Throughout last night's con-<lb/>
test. Houston crushed the<lb/>
boards, Sampson, Jim Peterson,<lb/>
and Mitchell Wiggins go: off on<lb/>
the glass<lb/>
However, you have to give<lb/>
credit, where credit is due. Bird.<lb/>
Kevin McHale, Robert Parnsh,<lb/>
Danny Ainge, Dennis Johnson.<lb/>
Bill Walton. Jerry Sichting and<lb/>
even Greg Kite did what it took.<lb/>
If wasn't terribly pretty, but<lb/>
Mews was right ? they're<lb/>
awesome.<lb/>
We're not saying the series is<lb/>
over or anything, but it does look<lb/>
good for the guys from the Nor-<lb/>
theast. Even with one game still<lb/>
remaining in Houston, the Celtics<lb/>
still have two home games re-<lb/>
maining (should the series go<lb/>
seven ? fat chance). Boston has<lb/>
won 42 consecutive games and<lb/>
has not been defeated in The<lb/>
Garden since the Blazers did it<lb/>
back in December of '85.<lb/>
Another convincing note is<lb/>
that the Celtics have won 15 NBA<lb/>
titles in 17 final-appearance at-<lb/>
tempts. In other words, they're a<lb/>
shoe-in. (Hey, Houston fans<lb/>
don't take this wrongly, we have<lb/>
to write stuff like this, you know<lb/>
? unbiased. But, if the unex-<lb/>
pected should occur, we'd be the<lb/>
happiest fellas around. In fact, if<lb/>
the Rockets win, save this article<lb/>
and we'll have a small celebration<lb/>
at Pat's ? he's a Celtics fan.)<lb/>
What makes the Celtics so darn<lb/>
good anyway? Is it Bird, K.C.<lb/>
Jones or just tradition? Probably<lb/>
all three.<lb/>
Boston has to be the Carolina<lb/>
? the NBA Nobody passe-<lb/>
ball that much, or that well. They<lb/>
epitomize the term "team con-<lb/>
cept Their unselfishness .?<lb/>
canny.<lb/>
"Unselfish. We're unsdfisl<lb/>
Bird said. "You see some<lb/>
selfishness around the league, but<lb/>
teams that do that don't get<lb/>
far<lb/>
Since Bird has won his third<lb/>
MVP award, he is undisputably<lb/>
the best in the business, although<lb/>
he dives for lose balls like a<lb/>
rookie trying to make the team.<lb/>
But does that make everyone else<lb/>
belter? According to former<lb/>
Celtic championship team<lb/>
member and current coach of the<lb/>
Milwaukee Bucks, Don Nelson,<lb/>
the answer is yes.<lb/>
"I hope all the other Celtics<lb/>
realize what a privilege it is for<lb/>
them tc play with Larry Bird<lb/>
Nelson said. "They are all very<lb/>
fortunate young men<lb/>
The hick from French Lick is<lb/>
nothing short of unbelievable.<lb/>
As far as K.C. Jones and tradi-<lb/>
tion go, they seem to go hand in<lb/>
hand ? due to the fact that Jones<lb/>
is a former Celtic and was a part<lb/>
of that winning tradition. But<lb/>
Jones definitely deserves his<lb/>
credit. He seems to get the BPP<lb/>
(best possible performance) from<lb/>
anyone he puts on the court. He<lb/>
also makes whatever lineup is in<lb/>
fit together like a perfect jigsaw<lb/>
puzzle.<lb/>
So it looks like this is another<lb/>
year for the lucky Shamrocks of<lb/>
the Boston Celtics. They proved<lb/>
without a doubt that they are the<lb/>
class of the NBA, at least for this<lb/>
year anyway.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
. . M( 11' M<lb/>
V"<lb/>
?<lb/>
" Has playing<lb/>
good I felt like<lb/>
would take q<lb/>
course record to<lb/>
beat me, M<lb/>
?Mike Bradi<lb/>
V<lb/>
?<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
Activities<lb/>
Offered<lb/>
'<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
w ed<lb/>
?;T'<lb/>
d <lb/>
?<lb/>
Wha l gi a<lb/>
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able<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
75-6387 ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
reg<lb/>
-<lb/>
Golf c i<lb/>
?-<lb/>
c. ountry (<lb/>
?Trail Rid<lb/>
available : . ps<lb/>
ti real coui<lb/>
;sis all the (u :<lb/>
tion Cento;<lb/>
These are jus! a few<lb/>
main a<lb/>
s summei Dro<lb/>
.iassc- are<lb/>
many hours are av .<lb/>
formal free play .<lb/>
( all Intra-Action 757-656:<lb/>
facility h o u r s<lb/>
Memorial Gym 204<lb/>
formation.<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
Wed. June 4,1974<lb/>
The Cleveland Indians try to<lb/>
entice fans to the ballpark with<lb/>
a .10 cent beer night promo-<lb/>
tion. In the ninth inning with<lb/>
the score tied 5-5, imniry fans<lb/>
come onto the playing fictd and<lb/>
disrupt the game. Fights break<lb/>
out between fans and players,<lb/>
and when order cannot be<lb/>
restored Cleveland forfeits to<lb/>
Texas. Several players and um-<lb/>
Pjreaare injured in uw melee<lb/>
(Djptte rumors, Mr. Cooper<lb/>
mnd Mr. McCormac had<lb/>
F with the incident,<lb/>
V not being able<lb/>
to the festivities.)<lb/>
Z?M)NAj<lb/>
M<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
ROC<lb/>
WAN<lb/>
-<lb/>
TAX<lb/>
1 Ot<lb/>
NEE<lb/>
!ALL<lb/>
A Ok<lb/>
reas<lb/>
?<lb/>
S&amp;c Pi<lb/>
. ba. ?<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
home 3 b<lb/>
and taKe ud pa : ts S<lb/>
FURNITURE FOR SALE<lb/>
cesser and ti<lb/>
conation Can -se S4.s<lb/>
FOR SALE hm<lb/>
air T-anresv A ??<lb/>
reoa r K ? we t ?<lb/>
women s 10 spee S<lb/>
<pb facs="00057822_0009"/><lb/>
rnament<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
nf<lb/>
I HF I AS I f AHOl INIAN.<lb/>
tfS Hours<lb/>
IMH(, POOI S<lb/>
GYM FREE PLA<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mon 1 huts 11 am-7 pm<lb/>
Fi ii am 6 pm<lb/>
s.i 11 am pm<lb/>
12 noon 5 pm<lb/>
ECU Football Update<lb/>
Next Week<lb/>
?"?"?"ppwp"<lb/>
i I KOIlMs<lb/>
MMIK Kl t Kl i:?)<lb/>
M(HI( KOI !<lb/>
- U V I IO<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
. j TO<lb/>
SORO<lb/>
enepqu conservation,<lb/>
lLl?lj,)!HiliW.iHlfi.il.IU rUJ ,???;???,???? J<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
STATE GAMES<lb/>
Of HObtHCA ft&amp;ttHA<lb/>
?<lb/>
PRICES EFFFCTIVF THROUGH SAT JUNF 7 AT SAv A ENTER N<lb/>
WF RESERVE THf ?? M ' . an' <lb/>
XSSSSSR WUfg<lb/>
and f?M J ?0V<lb/>
" iSee store<lb/>
Double Coupons<lb/>
for details'<lb/>
WE WILL MATCH ANY ADVERTISED<lb/>
GROCERY FEATURE PRICE IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
Excluding Meat, Produce, Deli, Bakery &amp; Continuity Bonus Items. Bring Current Week Food<lb/>
Store Ad With You. We Will Match Like Items or Equal Quality.<lb/>
f<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
Wed. June 4, 1974<lb/>
The Clevela<lb/>
entice fans to the b.<lb/>
a .10 cent beer night<lb/>
tion. In the ninth inm<lb/>
the score tied 5-5, unr fans<lb/>
S come onto the playing field and<lb/>
disrupt the game. Fights break<lb/>
out between fans and players,<lb/>
and when order cannot be<lb/>
restored Cleveland forfeit<lb/>
Texas. Several players and um-<lb/>
pires are injured in the melee<lb/>
(Despite rumors, Mr. Cooper<lb/>
and Mr. McCormac had<lb/>
nothing to do with the incident<lb/>
but they regret not being able<lb/>
to participate in the festivities )<lb/>
WXNTkJD<lb/>
-TED<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
ED:<lb/>
. ANTED FOR<lb/>
OOMMATE S<lb/>
SALL<lb/>
&amp;.<lb/>
U.S.DA CHOICE SHOULDER<lb/>
London Broil<lb/>
U.S.D.A.<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
flfflU<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
900<lb/>
MG<lb/>
ii<lb/>
? .? ? -? .<lb/>
?<lb/>
-opes or roto<lb/>
. . . ,<lb/>
a-is offer a 15<lb/>
ECU Si '<lb/>
Computer Co<lb/>
" S<lb/>
F OR SAL E 1982 ?<lb/>
<lb/>
' ike up pame' I H76.9! Call<lb/>
559<lb/>
FURNITURE FOR SALE<lb/>
i xm table Good<lb/>
ill 758 5489 after 5<lb/>
FOR SALE Heavy duty full Size<lb/>
. sag and<lb/>
? Jhl 26"<lb/>
s 10 speed, S75 Call 758 1454<lb/>
UFA' v BAH B<lb/>
Beef Spare Ribs<lb/>
Breast Quarters<lb/>
E SEM B Nl<lb/>
Leg of Lamb<lb/>
Pork Sausage<lb/>
E A I AMI, I PA' ?<lb/>
Fryer Leg Quarters<lb/>
Round Roast<lb/>
NA PRIDE MEAT OR BE! I<lb/>
Sliced Bologna<lb/>
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Round Steak<lb/>
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32 oz.<lb/>
i<lb/>
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AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
MARKET FRESH<lb/>
FIELD RIPENED JUMBO<lb/>
Ground Beef r Cantaloupes<lb/>
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rm<lb/>
GRADE A A&amp;P<lb/>
Medium Eggs<lb/>
FKfcH<lb/>
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2100<lb/>
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Budweiser $<lb/>
&amp;f2- 12 oz. Cans<lb/>
Save 5K<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
LIMIT TWO WITH AN ADDITIONAL PURCHASE<lb/>
AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE.<lb/>
high In<lb/>
vitamin C<lb/>
III<lb/>
SWEET RED RIPE<lb/>
rWatermelons<lb/>
half<lb/>
melon<lb/>
159<lb/>
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Salad Tomatoes<lb/>
s WHITE<lb/>
Mushrooms<lb/>
(REs- A RNIA<lb/>
Broccoli<lb/>
CUCUMBERS ? PEPPERS ? RADIS<lb/>
Mix or Match<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
12 PM<lb/>
Fried Chicken<lb/>
H SLAW- MACARONI OR<lb/>
Potato Salad<lb/>
Al PINE<lb/>
Swiss Cheese<lb/>
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IRGINIA<lb/>
IPS<lb/>
ib<lb/>
-joo -J29 -JOO -JOO O00 600 200 400111<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY 7 A.M11 RM.<lb/>
OPEN MON. 7 A.M.<lb/>
CLOSE SAT. 11 PM<lb/>
703 GREENVILLE BLVD. ? OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
<pb facs="00057822_0010"/><lb/>
r-<lb/>
10<lb/>
1 HI EASTC VROI INI N<lb/>
H M 4. IY8f<lb/>
Two Tennesee Gridders Declared Ineligible<lb/>
'ZT jo anend games only as a regular ?ould have given him priority ville and Gatl.nburg. from any association with The biggest problem that the<lb/>
KNOXVH LE, Term. (UPI)-<lb/>
rwo University of Tennessee<lb/>
otball players were declared in-<lb/>
jible and a public reprimand<lb/>
v?.as recommended for coach<lb/>
Johnny Majors for violations of<lb/>
NCAA regulations, school of-<lb/>
als said yesterday<lb/>
i: internal committee in-<lb/>
vestigating the Tennessee athletic<lb/>
program also recommended the<lb/>
school "eei all contact' with<lb/>
boosters and return an<lb/>
58,000 donation to one of those<lb/>
supporters.<lb/>
The interim report found<lb/>
evidence ol "six probable viola-<lb/>
?is but discovered no<lb/>
evidence of any violations con-<lb/>
cerning recruitment or cash given<lb/>
to athletes. The violations hap-<lb/>
pened in the areas ol "extra<lb/>
benefits" to athletes and im-<lb/>
use of admission passes to<lb/>
football games.<lb/>
wo playe - placekicker<lb/>
Kevei and linebacker Kel-<lb/>
ly 2 eglei were deemed ineligi-<lb/>
foi violating regulations<lb/>
g complementary game<lb/>
ses.<lb/>
Reveiz and Ziegler may<lb/>
abie to piav during the !9S6<lb/>
I he four-member univer-<lb/>
panel recommended IT pcti-<lb/>
the N( A to reinstate<lb/>
ittee released the<lb/>
:ument on its investigation,<lb/>
'ed ui February after<lb/>
aced<lb/>
t<lb/>
Scheurei h .haired I<lb/>
ressed at a news<lb/>
spon vva<lb/>
"? ei ? a gcd<lb/>
B<lb/>
I a "w<lb/>
epi . .<lb/>
? quarterb<lb/>
use of a car<lb/>
ooster Dr. Robert<lb/>
t. of Know<lb/>
? ee<lb/>
.<lb/>
?ied the car l<lb/>
? "<lb/>
? about the<lb/>
<lb/>
d repon may have been given<lb/>
'he 1982,<lb/>
Ma n and<lb/>
the arrange-<lb/>
neurer said the coach<lb/>
'ed it to Bob<lb/>
A w as athletic<lb/>
the time<lb/>
"He Ma ?k what he<lb/>
 ? was prudent action<lb/>
"He felt that he<lb/>
ad taken care - I he particular<lb/>
tter. We ? exception to<lb/>
and a he should<lb/>
?<lb/>
In 1<lb/>
urer said I<lb/>
plavers ?ple who were<lb/>
family members or students<lb/>
?tend one game. Reveiz allow-<lb/>
ed two people to attend the<lb/>
Alabama game on the com-<lb/>
plementary pass and Ziegler let<lb/>
people use the pass for the<lb/>
Vanderbilt contest, Scheurer<lb/>
said.<lb/>
rhe committee recommended<lb/>
the plavers give up their passes to<lb/>
the first three games of the 1986<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The committee suggested the<lb/>
miversity disassociate Overholt<lb/>
from the program, allowing him<lb/>
CHECK OUT THE.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
Woodsy Owl says<lb/>
No Noise Pollution Here!<lb/>
Give a hoot.<lb/>
Don't pollute.<lb/>
o attend games only as a regular<lb/>
ticket holder. The panel said<lb/>
verholt also let Robinson live in<lb/>
his house during the summer of<lb/>
184, another "extra benef<lb/>
violation.<lb/>
The committee also suggested<lb/>
Overholt's $8,000 donation that<lb/>
would have given him priority<lb/>
seating in the new basketball<lb/>
arena be returned. Also recom-<lb/>
mended disassociated from the<lb/>
program was booster Trent<lb/>
Richie, who has said he gave<lb/>
players free or reduced rates for<lb/>
rooms in his two motels in Knox-<lb/>
ville and Gatlinburg.<lb/>
The panel's eight recommenda-<lb/>
tions will be in a final report to<lb/>
UT President Ed Boling and<lb/>
Chancellor Jack Reese.<lb/>
Currently, the NCAA, or more<lb/>
specifically the CFA is trying to<lb/>
eliminate university booster clubs<lb/>
from any association with<lb/>
recruiting. With the past viola-<lb/>
tions charged to such schools as<lb/>
Texas Christian University and<lb/>
Florida, both coaches (Jim<lb/>
Wacker and Galen Hall, respec-<lb/>
tively) feel that something needs<lb/>
to be done<lb/>
The biggest problem that 'he<lb/>
NCAA is trying to iron-out is the<lb/>
enforcement of such new regula<lb/>
tions. The NCAA's investiga'<lb/>
staff is already greatly over ?<lb/>
ed, and unable to handle the vast<lb/>
amounts of alleged violation:<lb/>
intercollegiate athletes<lb/>
Fresh Daily<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
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5 Lb. Pack<lb/>
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<lb/>
Prices in<lb/>
this ad<lb/>
good thru<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
June 8.<lb/>
1986.<lb/>
iX<lb/>
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yf.<lb/>
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1.5 Liter - Lambrusco. Bianco. Rosato<lb/>
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Pkg. of 6 - 12 Oi. Cans Reg. &amp; Lt.<lb/>
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2 Liter ? Diet Pepsi. Pepsi-Free,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057822_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>