<?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="00057828_0001"/>
f<lb/>
'<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
?ft l?tiBt (HutfxlMnti<lb/>
Serving (he East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.60 No C ?<lb/>
Wednesday, July 9, 1986<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
Educational Reform<lb/>
Encouraged At ECU<lb/>
Record Enrollment<lb/>
JB HUMBERT Th fcas'Carolinian<lb/>
ECU has an enrollment of 3,753 students for the second session of summer school the lamest se<lb/>
cond session enrollment since 1978. First session enrollment also was the greatest in eight vears Se<lb/>
cond session enrollment was up 250 sH-dents from last year and total campus enrollment'for'both<lb/>
1986 summer sessions was 8,641.<lb/>
ByMIKELl PWICK<lb/>
News Kdltor<lb/>
The Carnegie Task Force on<lb/>
Teaching as a Profession ushered<lb/>
in a second wave of educational<lb/>
reform with its report after the<lb/>
inital wave precipitated by a Na-<lb/>
tion At Risk report.<lb/>
Charles Coble, dean of the<lb/>
School of Education, said ECL'<lb/>
needs to be in a leading role in<lb/>
North Carolina during the second<lb/>
wave of educational reform bas-<lb/>
ed on ECU's long history of hav-<lb/>
ing an effective teacher education<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Coble said ECU is earning its<lb/>
role by having a faculty that has a<lb/>
strong commitmeni to developing<lb/>
itself. He also said the alumni in<lb/>
the field wani ECU to develop its<lb/>
leadership role.<lb/>
Liberty Celebration Held In New York<lb/>
By CAROLYN DRISCOLL<lb/>
Sttff Writer<lb/>
This 4th of July weekend a<lb/>
four day celebration in honor of<lb/>
the rededication of the Statue of<lb/>
Liberty took place in New York.<lb/>
The grounds of Liberty Island,<lb/>
closed off to the public for two<lb/>
years while this one hundred year<lb/>
old lady had been undergoing<lb/>
repairs was finally reopened.<lb/>
The Statue was given to the<lb/>
U.S. in 1886 by France and has<lb/>
served to greet the thousands of<lb/>
immigrants who have since<lb/>
poured into this country mainly<lb/>
by way of Ellis Island.<lb/>
The celebration in her honor<lb/>
this weekend kicked off Thurs-<lb/>
day evening with opening<lb/>
ceremonies on Governor's Island<lb/>
amid celebrities and dignitaries,<lb/>
from the Reagan's to Francios<lb/>
Mitterand, President of France,<lb/>
to Frank Sinatra, Elizabeth<lb/>
Taylor, and Lee lococca. Reagan<lb/>
officially lit the Statue's torch<lb/>
after giving a brief speech. In ad-<lb/>
dition, thousands of immigrants<lb/>
across the country were sworn in<lb/>
as U.S. citizens via satellite.<lb/>
While this was taking place, 22<lb/>
tall ships from around the world<lb/>
began to gather in the harbor.<lb/>
Along with many smaller ships,<lb/>
they took part in Operation Sail<lb/>
on the Fourth. This ships, some<lb/>
having sailed halfway around the<lb/>
world, represented 20 nations<lb/>
ranging from Denmark to<lb/>
Uruaguav.<lb/>
The Parade of Sail took the<lb/>
tall ships from the harbor near<lb/>
the Hudson River, which<lb/>
separates New Jersey from<lb/>
Manhatten, up to the tip of the<lb/>
Island and (hen back to their<lb/>
various berths.<lb/>
This provided a majestic sight<lb/>
for the millions gathered along<lb/>
the shores of Manhattan and the<lb/>
eastern shore of New Jersey.<lb/>
In addition, the battleship<lb/>
Iowa with President Reagan and<lb/>
Secretary of the Navy John<lb/>
Lehman aboard, headed a naval<lb/>
review of seven classes of ships<lb/>
from aircraft carriers to smaller<lb/>
coastal patrol craft in what was<lb/>
called a display of international<lb/>
naval night.<lb/>
As the Naval Review and<lb/>
Operation Sail winded to a close,<lb/>
the streets of Lower Man tten<lb/>
(blocked off to all traffic from<lb/>
Thursday to Sunday night) quick-<lb/>
ly filled as throngs of spectators<lb/>
gathered to await the fireworks.<lb/>
The display called "Big Bang"<lb/>
was launched from 40 barges en-<lb/>
circling the tip of Manhatten<lb/>
Island. Thirty minutes long, it us-<lb/>
ed 40,000 projectiles, some of<lb/>
which were said to be larger than<lb/>
many artillerv shells. In fact, this<lb/>
display made use of an 18-inch<lb/>
firework shell, said to be the<lb/>
largest one ever used in the I s<lb/>
Called the "most spectacular<lb/>
fireworks displav ever seer, in<lb/>
America il ernhrauled viewus<lb/>
on both sides of the Hudson. The<lb/>
show was truly staggering with<lb/>
the skyscrapers in the foreground<lb/>
and the Statue in the harbor<lb/>
showered in red, white, blue, and<lb/>
gold rays of fire.<lb/>
Saturday, July 5 marks the of-<lb/>
ficial reopening of Liberty Island<lb/>
to the public for the first time in<lb/>
two years. Nancy Reagan was on<lb/>
hand at a ribbon cutting celebra-<lb/>
tion along with Walter Cronkite<lb/>
and Lee lococca.<lb/>
The tall ships, moored at<lb/>
various locations throughout<lb/>
New York and New Jersey were<lb/>
open all weekend to visitors.<lb/>
Lower Manhatten, stripped oi<lb/>
the hustle and bustle of Wall<lb/>
Street, was overtaken by a festive<lb/>
as vendors hawked<lb/>
food and souvenirs in the<lb/>
Downtown streets.<lb/>
Visitors c I to surge<lb/>
toward Batter) Park ; i a view oi<lb/>
the 1 adv as well as toward the<lb/>
1 ibertv Island ferry for an up-<lb/>
close encounter<lb/>
Sunday's even tx 7:00<lb/>
a.m. with the 1 ibcrty, riiathakm:<lb/>
a three-stage race ? swimming,<lb/>
bicycling, running ? trom the<lb/>
Statue oi Libert) to the I iberty<lb/>
Bell PI la<lb/>
"Liberty ? The Next One<lb/>
Hundred Years a two day con-<lb/>
ference oi academic, political,<lb/>
and legal experts, ended on Sun-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
That evening, a "sports<lb/>
salute" featuring mam oi 'he<lb/>
U.Ss best known sports figures<lb/>
was held at the Meadowlands<lb/>
Arena in New Jersev.<lb/>
Summer Slowdown<lb/>
Businesses Miss Students<lb/>
By BETH WHICKER<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
As the spring semester comes<lb/>
to a close most ECU students<lb/>
head for home. With the exit of<lb/>
the student population many<lb/>
down town businesses find their<lb/>
sales faltering during the summer<lb/>
slump.<lb/>
Nearly 65 percent of ECU<lb/>
students leave Greenville during<lb/>
the summer according to enroll-<lb/>
ment records, and downtown<lb/>
businesses report that they are af-<lb/>
fected by the student's departure.<lb/>
Some stores said their business<lb/>
with students dropped while their<lb/>
business with Greenville residents<lb/>
is on the upswing.<lb/>
Marsh's Surf and Sea formerly<lb/>
a downtown business recently<lb/>
moved to the Plaza in an attempt<lb/>
to attract business from<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifiedst<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
Sports7<lb/>
The art of progress is to<lb/>
preserve order amid change<lb/>
and to preserve change amid<lb/>
order.<lb/>
?Alfred H. Whitehead<lb/>
customers other than ECU<lb/>
students. "In the Plaza, we're<lb/>
catering to another crowd and<lb/>
ordering for everyone, not just<lb/>
students said Kendra Allgood,<lb/>
assistant manager.<lb/>
Salesclerk at UBE, Sue<lb/>
Stamats, said UBE is making up<lb/>
for its losses by selling goods to<lb/>
orientation students and students<lb/>
attending seminars on the cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
"Even though business is good<lb/>
we cut our Saturday hours in the<lb/>
summer from 10 a.m. until 1<lb/>
p.m said Stamats.<lb/>
Apple Records reported no<lb/>
staff cuts during the summer. In<lb/>
fact, according to salesperson<lb/>
George Stevens, the record store<lb/>
has added hours, staying open<lb/>
until 10 p.m. on weekends to<lb/>
cater to students visiting<lb/>
downtown night spots.<lb/>
"Since the blue law was repeal-<lb/>
ed we've been open on Sunday<lb/>
also Stevens said.<lb/>
Stevens added Apple Records<lb/>
would be moving to Charles<lb/>
Boulevard. "We expect our<lb/>
clientele will change from just<lb/>
college students<lb/>
Kevin Torris, manager of East<lb/>
Carolina Tanning Center explain-<lb/>
ed his business is seasonal and<lb/>
the summer slump was expected<lb/>
and planned for in advance.<lb/>
"Our employees are cut down<lb/>
in the summer when its slow. We<lb/>
hire extra people during our peak<lb/>
season which runs from January<lb/>
to May said Torris.<lb/>
According to Torris the Center<lb/>
sees as many as 100 people a day<lb/>
during the peak season. During<lb/>
the summer the center serves an<lb/>
average of 15 people per day.<lb/>
"You know you have to make<lb/>
money in your good season he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Even though the tanning center<lb/>
is located near campus a number<lb/>
of the Center's customers are not<lb/>
students but residents who work<lb/>
all day and can not get in the sun<lb/>
because of their hectic schedules.<lb/>
"We'd still have a hard time<lb/>
without the university said<lb/>
Torris.<lb/>
"This is our time for the towns<lb/>
people said Jerry Smith, owner<lb/>
of the Bicycle Post.<lb/>
"The general public starts<lb/>
riding bicycles in May when the<lb/>
students leave she added.<lb/>
According to Smith, this sum-<lb/>
mer's sales are up from previous<lb/>
summers due to the recent fitness<lb/>
craze and the switch from jogging<lb/>
to cycling.<lb/>
Nightlife has not been affected<lb/>
by the loss of students according<lb/>
to Jim Cook, a manager at<lb/>
Grog's.<lb/>
"There is no change in our<lb/>
business on Thursday, Friday,<lb/>
and Saturday night said Cook.<lb/>
"In the summer some students<lb/>
take easier classes and have more<lb/>
time to come out he added.<lb/>
"Finally, I'm encouraging the<lb/>
faculty here to be in situations<lb/>
where they can exercise leader-<lb/>
ship roles in reforming teacher<lb/>
education in this state Coble<lb/>
said.<lb/>
On specific points proposed by<lb/>
the Carnegie Task Force, Coble<lb/>
had much to say.<lb/>
The Carnegie Report calls for a<lb/>
six-year teacher preparation pro-<lb/>
gram. It drops the undergraduate<lb/>
education degree in favor of a<lb/>
graduate degree in education.<lb/>
Coble maintained there must<lb/>
be program improvement over<lb/>
lengthening the program.<lb/>
"Yes, I think we need more<lb/>
time to prepare effective<lb/>
teachers Coble said, "but we<lb/>
also need to prepare them in<lb/>
more effective ways than we have<lb/>
done in the past<lb/>
Coble said ECU would not<lb/>
unilateraliv switch to a six-year<lb/>
program because for a university<lb/>
that contributes 15 percent of all<lb/>
the teachers in the state, it would<lb/>
be a great "disservice" to the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Even if all the universities and<lb/>
colleges in North Carolina agreed<lb/>
to lengthen their programs to six<lb/>
vears. Coble predicts the univer-<lb/>
sities will stay with the four-year<lb/>
program.<lb/>
?- six-year teacher education<lb/>
program, said Coble, "carries a<lb/>
big economic price tag.<lb/>
Historically in this country we<lb/>
have not been willing to pay that<lb/>
price  Coble believed the na-<lb/>
tion's priorities are not in line<lb/>
with a nationwide six-year pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Coble did, though, come out in<lb/>
strong support of a national<lb/>
licensing board for teachers. The<lb/>
Carnegie Report recommends the<lb/>
formation of a national board for<lb/>
professional teaching standards<lb/>
to certify top teachers. This<lb/>
board, according to the report,<lb/>
would establish professional<lb/>
teaching standards and determine<lb/>
what teachers need to know<lb/>
academically and professionally<lb/>
and certify teachers who meet the<lb/>
requirements.<lb/>
In fact, Coble recommended to<lb/>
Chancellor Howell, who serves<lb/>
on a Task Force for Teacher<lb/>
Preparation, to establish a state<lb/>
licensing board for the teachers in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The main advantage to either a<lb/>
state or national board, said Co-<lb/>
ble, would be its effect on<lb/>
teachers' standards. Such a board<lb/>
would have the authority, and<lb/>
more important, the ability to en-<lb/>
force higher standards for<lb/>
teacher preparation.<lb/>
"A national licensing board<lb/>
would obviously have some effect<lb/>
on ECU in some program areas<lb/>
for some students Coble said.<lb/>
He added though, the pass rate<lb/>
for ECU students who have taken<lb/>
the NTE have been "in excess of<lb/>
90 percent for years<lb/>
If a national board sets more<lb/>
rigorous standards than the NTE,<lb/>
Coble said the pass rate might<lb/>
lower somewhat but maintained<lb/>
that such a pass rate for a pro-<lb/>
gram as large as ECU's is "in-<lb/>
dicative of a strong student<lb/>
body<lb/>
Another advantage oi a na-<lb/>
tional or state board, said Coble,<lb/>
is such a board would enjoin ac-<lb/>
countability on the educational<lb/>
system.<lb/>
He warned, however, some<lb/>
people oppose a national board<lb/>
because it could lead the profes-<lb/>
sion in a direction that does not<lb/>
serve the best interests of the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
A national board would not<lb/>
address the conditions of<lb/>
teaching or could come under the<lb/>
influence of the Federal govern-<lb/>
ment or some other agencv, said<lb/>
Coble.<lb/>
Information Sought On Rape<lb/>
By LYNN WEAVER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Early Sunday morning a recent<lb/>
graduate of ECU was abducted at<lb/>
the BB&amp;T teller machine outside<lb/>
Mendenhall and raped.<lb/>
The assailant forced the co-ed<lb/>
to walk some distance off campus<lb/>
before she was attacked.<lb/>
The suspect, 22-23 years old, is<lb/>
between 57" and 5'8" of<lb/>
medium build. He has tapered<lb/>
brown hair, brown eyes, and a<lb/>
mustache with a day's growth of<lb/>
beard around the chin. The<lb/>
suspect was wearing bluejeans,<lb/>
which were new, and a white shirt<lb/>
with one inch blue and white<lb/>
stripes. He also had a slight body<lb/>
oder.<lb/>
Campus Security asked anyone<lb/>
who has any information concer-<lb/>
ning this incident to please con-<lb/>
tact them at 757-6150 or call<lb/>
Detective Janice Harris at the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department at<lb/>
752-3342. Callers will not have to<lb/>
reveal their identity.<lb/>
"This case is of great concern<lb/>
to the victim and the University<lb/>
Police as well as the university<lb/>
community. We ask for complete<lb/>
cooperation in the investigation<lb/>
of this tragic incident said<lb/>
Johnny Rose, chief of Police at<lb/>
ECU. He added that this is i<lb/>
cooperative investigation bet<lb/>
ween the Greenville Police<lb/>
Department and ECU.<lb/>
Lieutenant Keith Knox said,<lb/>
"The best advice (in preventing a<lb/>
rape) is for women to constantly<lb/>
be aware of their surroundings no<lb/>
matter where they are and to con-<lb/>
duct their affairs during hours<lb/>
when other people are likely to be<lb/>
present and individual<lb/>
vulnerability is less likely<lb/>
Eventhough women use proper<lb/>
caution, said Knox, if put in a<lb/>
vunerable position it could hap-<lb/>
pen to anyone.<lb/>
See ECU Page 2.<lb/>
Business As Usual<lb/>
JB MUl?T-T?.iHC,rolmIM<lb/>
Many downtown businesses have reported their sales down due to students leaving the Greenville<lb/>
area at the close of the Spring semester. Some stores have cut back on employees and operating hours<lb/>
in an effort to counter the slow summer season. However, some area merchants at. laying open<lb/>
longer and catering to local customers to revive the faltering sales.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
 AMP<lb/>
? -<lb/>
. - <lb/>
' <lb/>
<pb facs="00057828_0002"/><lb/>
1 Ml I -M i AROl INKS<lb/>
Jl'l V s. 1V86<lb/>
'<lb/>
Earthquake Jolts California<lb/>
I iikc to camp during the sum-<lb/>
e Ktc there an special<lb/>
ns should know about<lb/>
avoid snake and tick bites'<lb/>
N .i?r . becomes a common<lb/>
. eptiles come out ol<lb/>
state during the<lb/>
summet months. Most<lb/>
flici painful bites<lb/>
lered het ei I he are<lb/>
poisonous<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
The Healtholumn H<lb/>
Man !eha Vilams<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
? ? . ?? md<lb/>
A<lb/>
-<lb/>
A<lb/>
u<lb/>
 v . ater. Cora<lb/>
-<lb/>
rh<lb/>
e sur iv ai rale<lb/>
i rate for ictims of<lb/>
poisonous snakebite has improv<lb/>
ed drasticalh with some ex<lb/>
stating the rate as high .1- 98 pet<lb/>
cent I his is due primal il t<lb/>
easiei access to health ai<lb/>
fat lities. Rememl<lb/>
snakebites are no<lb/>
?<lb/>
11 and<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? . ude<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
dif-<lb/>
?- loctor il<lb/>
i ? ?? td .1 ei<lb/>
:are<lb/>
nake nfec lion<lb/>
ECU Graduate<lb/>
Raped Sunday<lb/>
 ontinued From Page I.<lb/>
Kno iaid, "I nfortunatel).<lb/>
ience indicates<lb/>
trongly that ne piece<lb/>
? e valid in<lb/>
' eual<lb/>
1 ssa 1 a<lb/>
? ?? aid<lb/>
Knox, ?? adapt<lb/>
tnce to the en-<lb/>
vironment in winch the attack is<lb/>
occurring and the success of the<lb/>
resistance behavior depends<lb/>
largely on the victim's ability to<lb/>
effectivel applv it.<lb/>
l.e most important unknown<lb/>
triable to consider is the type ol<lb/>
i) confront and the<lb/>
motivation that underlies his sex-<lb/>
ual attack, said Knox<lb/>
He added an attack is less like-<lb/>
ly to occur it a women denies a<lb/>
possible assailant the opportunity<lb/>
to catch her off guard, with no<lb/>
protection, route of escape, or<lb/>
the abihtv to attrac attention.<lb/>
fl<lb/>
SP<lb/>
PA I 1 SPRINGS, Calif. (UPI)<lb/>
A fi 0 earthquake jolted<lb/>
Southern California early today,<lb/>
shaking buildings, sparking fires<lb/>
and knocking oui power to more<lb/>
than 100,000 homes from San<lb/>
Diego to northern Los Angeles<lb/>
('ountj<lb/>
No majoi structure damage or<lb/>
serious injuries were immediate!)<lb/>
reported from the quake, which<lb/>
11 2:21 a.m. It was fell foi<lb/>
it JO seconds and was<lb/>
centered some 12 miles northwest<lb/>
ol Palm Springs, said Dennis<lb/>
Meredith, spokesman tor the<lb/>
seismology lab at thealifornia<lb/>
I nstitute oi reel . . in<lb/>
Pasadena.<lb/>
Meredith said it registe<lb/>
on the Rkliter scale<lb/>
"he quake was fell as fat away<lb/>
as Las Vegas, Nev JO0 miles<lb/>
northeast of I os ngeles, and<lb/>
apparently ignited a fire<lb/>
ted a glass shop in c athedral ?<lb/>
neat Palm Springs. It also caused<lb/>
a landslide that triggered a ca<lb/>
cident on a highway leading<lb/>
Palm Springs and two brush fires<lb/>
were spat ked<lb/>
lines in Riversi<lb/>
aid<lb/>
Electi icity as<lb/>
. hout Southern (<lb/>
including to some 10 -?<lb/>
in the Palm Spring S<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
npany spokesman sa<lb/>
"Ii .ounded lit<lb/>
lid Ed Kibbey. a<lb/>
rep Palm Springs, 1 lei<lb/>
severa<lb/>
fell after the inita ken ol<lb/>
Riv<lb/>
it<lb/>
?.<lb/>
?B3ffli!KS<lb/>
aMUf?<lb/>
Double Coupons<lb/>
See store 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<lb/>
Week Food Store Ad With You. We Will Match Like Items ar Equal Quality.<lb/>
FRESH FRYER<lb/>
Leg Quarters<lb/>
(limit four<lb/>
'packs)<lb/>
v?<lb/>
DOUBLE Q IN OIL OR WATER<lb/>
Chunk<lb/>
Light<lb/>
Tuna<lb/>
V .??  I AN "<lb/>
PURCAst ft!<lb/>
 -? I<lb/>
6.5 02.<lb/>
can<lb/>
48<lb/>
c<lb/>
iM<lb/>
XrJ<lb/>
ljr<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
US DA CHOICE CUBED<lb/>
Beef Steak<lb/>
U.S.D.A.<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
m<lb/>
WE'VE GONE PLUM CRAZY<lb/>
RED-BLACK-PURPLE GREEN<lb/>
Juicy Plums<lb/>
c<lb/>
? I. <lb/>
lb.<lb/>
99<lb/>
I<lb/>
UMTTWO ?HTH AN AOOmONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
DUKE S<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
r 780<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
LUNCHEON MEAT<lb/>
Armour Treet<lb/>
12 02.<lb/>
can<lb/>
I LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
REGULAR CR LIGHT<lb/>
Old Milwaukee<lb/>
rff, ctn. of<lb/>
LJ 12<lb/>
12oz.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
3<lb/>
99<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETIES<lb/>
CRISPY N TASTY<lb/>
Jeno's Pizza<lb/>
10 oz.<lb/>
pkg.<lb/>
REGULAR OR BUTTER FLAVOR<lb/>
Crisco Shortening<lb/>
LJUT ONE OF YOUR CHOICC WITH AN<lb/>
Tl ki if ?<lb/>
? it, ?<lb/>
A&amp;P CHILLED<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
64 oz.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
11<lb/>
0<lb/>
FLAV-O-RICH<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
V2 gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY 7 A.M11 RIV1. SSStfft 703 GREENVILLE BLVD. ? OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
?? I<lb/>
Waldhei<lb/>
Ca<lb/>
!)?<lb/>
,hM<lb/>
nor in<lb/>
M j<lb/>
I ht<lb/>
Mar'<lb/>
1 nru B,<lb/>
h<lb/>
Milton Mathenx<lb/>
Senior, Mori. - ?<lb/>
"Yes, txv<lb/>
state emp . ? ec5 -<lb/>
.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057828_0003"/><lb/>
alifornia<lb/>
Ruth Bahlei said a glass<lb/>
? was tuned in a blaze. She<lb/>
said se of the fire was not<lb/>
?av related to<lb/>
1lake Probably a rup-<lb/>
S hop sustained an<lb/>
O in .me.<lb/>
 ickedabi idge on<lb/>
oad into<lb/>
ggering a oar<lb/>
njuries were<lb/>
Mike Mc-<lb/>
Paln Sp rigs police.<lb/>
? ? I<lb/>
HOBS<lb/>
f<lb/>
100<lb/>
Double Coupons<lb/>
ISED<lb/>
IVILLE<lb/>
:ems. Bring Current<lb/>
ir Equal Quality.<lb/>
FRESH RIPE NEW JERSEY<lb/>
Plump<lb/>
i<lb/>
lit<lb/>
ONE PLUM CRAZY <lb/>
RED-BLACK-PURPLE-GREEN<lb/>
Juicy Plums<lb/>
0<lb/>
 f? <lb/>
lb.<lb/>
99<lb/>
REGULAR OR BUTTER FLAVOR<lb/>
Crisco Shortening<lb/>
UHTT ONE OF YOUR CHOICE WITH AN<lb/>
AOOmOMAL PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
A&amp;P CHILLED<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
64 oz. m<lb/>
ctn. W<lb/>
ii<lb/>
10<lb/>
FLAV-O-RICH<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
V2 gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
? i <lb/>
? TV<lb/>
BLVDOPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 9, I98ft<lb/>
Waldheim Wins Socialist Post<lb/>
VIENNA (UP1) - Former U.N.<lb/>
Secretary General Kurt<lb/>
Waldheim, ignoring the furor<lb/>
over allegations of a Nazi past,<lb/>
was sworn in as Austria's sixth<lb/>
president today and called for a<lb/>
"renewed resolution" against<lb/>
anti-Semitism.<lb/>
Waldheim, ill for two weeks<lb/>
with a stomach ailment, took the<lb/>
oath of office for the largely<lb/>
ceremonial post in the gilded hall<lb/>
of Parliament.<lb/>
"I swear that 1 will observe the<lb/>
laws of the republic and do my<lb/>
duty after my best knowledge and<lb/>
conscience so help me God he<lb/>
said, voluntarily adding the last<lb/>
words.<lb/>
Parliament was heavily guard-<lb/>
ed by police in anticipation of<lb/>
possible trouble from anti-<lb/>
Waldheim protestors but there<lb/>
were no reports of incidents.<lb/>
On the floor of Parliament,<lb/>
however, many members of the<lb/>
Socialist Party wore black ties in<lb/>
protest of Waldheim, the first<lb/>
president not backed by the rul-<lb/>
ing Socialists since World War II.<lb/>
He is the sixth president of the<lb/>
Austrian republic.<lb/>
"As president of Austria, 1<lb/>
don't want to be anything but the<lb/>
first servant of the state<lb/>
Waldheim, 67, said in his half-<lb/>
hour inauguration address. "I<lb/>
want to be the president of all<lb/>
Austrians<lb/>
Waldheim made no mention of<lb/>
charges from the World Jewish<lb/>
Congress that he was involved in<lb/>
wartime atrocities, including the<lb/>
deportations of thousands of<lb/>
Jews to death camps during the<lb/>
Nazi occupation of Yugoslavia.<lb/>
He brought up anti-Semitism<lb/>
during his inauguration speech,<lb/>
saying, "The 'never again' that<lb/>
the Austrians swore on the<lb/>
mounds of the Second World<lb/>
War refers today not only to the<lb/>
terrors of the Holocaust. It refers<lb/>
also to the terrible spirit that<lb/>
Campus Voice<lb/>
Do you think Gov. Martin<lb/>
should be the highest paid gover-<lb/>
nor in the nation? CurrenUy,<lb/>
Martin makes $98,196 a year.<lb/>
The General Assembh has pro-<lb/>
posed a five percent increase in<lb/>
Martin's pa to coincide with a<lb/>
state employees raise of six per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
I<lb/>
caused these terrors, namely the<lb/>
spirit of anti-Semitism.<lb/>
"It must be, therefore, out dai-<lb/>
ly renewed resolution to see and<lb/>
treat each citizen in our country<lb/>
of whatever race, religion or<lb/>
belief, as brother or sister he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
After the swearing in, about<lb/>
1,000 people watched and clap-<lb/>
ped politely as Waldheim made<lb/>
his way on foot under the tradi-<lb/>
tional "parade of flags" atop the<lb/>
monument for the heroes of two<lb/>
world wars.<lb/>
He went to Hofburg, the<lb/>
presidential palace, where he was<lb/>
to host a dinner later.<lb/>
A few blocks away at Vienna's<lb/>
main square, a wooden "Trojan<lb/>
horse" about 20 feet high wear-<lb/>
ing a swastika and the brown cap<lb/>
of Hitler's dreaded storm<lb/>
troopers was unveiled by New<lb/>
Austria, a group composed of<lb/>
young Socialists and Jews and<lb/>
several prominent Austrian ar-<lb/>
tists and writers.<lb/>
A banner proclaimed it was<lb/>
"the horse the world trusts" a<lb/>
reference to Waldheim's original<lb/>
campaign slogan, "the man the<lb/>
world trusts and charges that<lb/>
he rode with the S.A. Riding<lb/>
Corps in World War II.<lb/>
Waldheim denied he was a<lb/>
member of the S.A.<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Jce Cream<lb/>
321 tA?fr im mm<lb/>
This Coupon is good for<lb/>
5K OFF<lb/>
any Blend-in or Sundae<lb/>
Coupon Good Thru July 15th, 1986<lb/>
CUP THIS COUPONJ<lb/>
WWT1<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
llll<lb/>
:Adults$2005 'yf,<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
?" ??'<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
HldiU! Legal<lb/>
Eagles<lb/>
fatinee Only! Walt Disney's<lb/>
The Great<lb/>
Mouse Detective<lb/>
1:00, 3:00 ?G?<lb/>
5:00, 7:15, 9:30<lb/>
Robin Williams &amp; Peter O'Toole in<lb/>
Club Paradise<lb/>
?PG-13?<lb/>
Wanda Ollison<lb/>
Graduate, Ed. Administration<lb/>
"Personally, I think he should<lb/>
put the increase in the school<lb/>
system. The money would be bet-<lb/>
ter used<lb/>
Laurie Rogers<lb/>
Graduate, Counselor Ed.<lb/>
"1 don't see why he should be<lb/>
the highest paid, because we're<lb/>
not the largest state<lb/>
oVef Kod Lowe in<lb/>
? About Last Night<lb/>
2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:15 ? R-<lb/>
? ?i i i i urn<lb/>
? I. ??<lb/>
James Freeman<lb/>
Freshman, 1ath<lb/>
I think if the Legislature<lb/>
grants the Executive body a raise.<lb/>
I think it's ailright<lb/>
For An All-Ainencan Family Mealj<lb/>
STEERBURGER<lb/>
PLATTER<lb/>
BECAUSE YOU WANT<lb/>
AN ALL-AMERICAN<lb/>
FAMILY MEAL<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
5P<lb/>
Draft Nite<lb/>
THURSDAY, JULY 10th<lb/>
9:00-2:00 AM<lb/>
Admission $1.50 Guys $1.00 Ladies<lb/>
 First 25 Ladies Admitted FREE <lb/>
5C Draft A11 Nite<lb/>
t<lb/>
Lynne Becker<lb/>
Graduate, English<lb/>
"Well, I don't think it matters,<lb/>
it's irrelevant. You judge a man<lb/>
by what he does, because he has a<lb/>
tough job<lb/>
For Information Call:<lb/>
Sportsmen's Tavern, 758-0058<lb/>
Located Behind Riverside Oyster Bar<lb/>
720 V Greene St Greenville, NC<lb/>
Keith Marsil<lb/>
Graduate, Geology<lb/>
"No I don't think so, but I<lb/>
think the other employees should<lb/>
get a pay increase. I don't agree<lb/>
with him getting a pay raise at<lb/>
all<lb/>
lU lb. of sirloin<lb/>
proudly served<lb/>
with fries<lb/>
Milton Mttheny<lb/>
Senior, Marketing<lb/>
"Yes, because he is a state<lb/>
employee and I feel the other<lb/>
state employees should get a<lb/>
raise<lb/>
USDA CHOICE Sirloin,<lb/>
ground fresh daily and<lb/>
cooked-to-order. Sized to<lb/>
satisfy your hunger for this<lb/>
All-Amencan favorite.<lb/>
Fries included in our platter<lb/>
price. No charge for cheese,<lb/>
lettuce, and tomato. One<lb/>
great price when hunger<lb/>
strikes?the Western Steer<lb/>
Steerburger platter.<lb/>
Because You Want An All-American Family Meal<lb/>
<lb/>
?1<lb/>
Gordon's Coif &amp; Shi Shop<lb/>
264 By-Pass Next to Greenville TV.<lb/>
756-1003<lb/>
All Ladies Summer Apparel 50-60 OFF<lb/>
All Golf Bags 25 OFF<lb/>
All Tennis Shoes 25 OFF<lb/>
All Tennis Racquets Yi PRICE<lb/>
All Putters 25 OFF<lb/>
All Surlyn Covered Golf Balls $17.95Dozen<lb/>
Foot Joy Golf Gloves $9.95<lb/>
1rlEEBb1(YENNIs"SHOES?<lb/>
Wednesday July 9 Only!<lb/>
 Western Steer<lb/>
Family<lb/>
iSTEAKH0USE<lb/>
L?<lb/>
l 1986 Western Steer Mom n' Pop's Inc<lb/>
3005 East 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Draft Nite<lb/>
Thursday, Friday, &amp; Sunday, July 10, 11, &amp; 13, 1986<lb/>
Admission1.50 Guys 1.00 Ladies 1.00 Orientation Students<lb/>
Doors Open at 9:00 p.m till 2:00 a.m.<lb/>
1 K DRAFT<lb/>
ALL NITE<lb/>
mm4km ? ?????????<lb/>
? . ?<lb/>
 Bfc - ? 'f$- <lb/>
<pb facs="00057828_0004"/><lb/>
M<lb/>
uUjt Saat (Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Luvender, gwwm motm<lb/>
DAN1E1 M.M'Rl-R. Mmi q i <lb/>
Miki 1 I DW1CK, v?<lb/>
Scon O opi r. v<lb/>
John SHANNON,<lb/>
1)1 III VNI1 1 Johnson. .<lb/>
Sll FOI MAR, ? ?<lb/>
Anthony Martin, ?u ?? Mmv?<lb/>
Ml I i Nl EDHAM, - ??<lb/>
Shannon Short. ? - w?-w<lb/>
luu v, im<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Education<lb/>
On The Road To Reform<lb/>
On the toad to education reform.<lb/>
It sounds like an old Bing Crosby<lb/>
and Bob Hope picture, and in the<lb/>
pasl some may have considered it a<lb/>
running joke. Today, however, it<lb/>
has finally been given the serious<lb/>
consideration it deserves.<lb/>
With the recent release of "A Na-<lb/>
tion Prepared: Teachers for the 21st<lb/>
Century a report developed by<lb/>
the Carnegie Forum on Education<lb/>
and the Economy, educators have<lb/>
seen some hope for the future.<lb/>
1 as' week both the NEA (Na-<lb/>
tional Education Association) and<lb/>
the Ml (American Federation of<lb/>
Feachers) voted to support the first<lb/>
significant proposal on a list of<lb/>
radical reforms designed to raise<lb/>
'caching to the professional level.<lb/>
I asl Friday, members of both the<lb/>
NI and the AFT voted to back<lb/>
the Carnegie Forum's proposal to<lb/>
establish a national teacher cer-<lb/>
tification board.<lb/>
rhis teacher-dominated board<lb/>
would be responsible for setting<lb/>
nation-wide standards that teachers<lb/>
meet before they can be cer-<lb/>
.J.<lb/>
I his would mean individuals<lb/>
seeking teacher certification would<lb/>
be requited to take a new com-<lb/>
prehensive exam developed by the<lb/>
ird. Current teacher ex-<lb/>
given by the individual<lb/>
tend to be multiple choice<lb/>
tes al shed little or no light on<lb/>
teacher's competancy.<lb/>
Why is this such a significant step<lb/>
toward education reform? The<lb/>
answer is quite simple. Because<lb/>
acher certification is presently left<lb/>
the states, it has become close<lb/>
) impossible to raise standards<lb/>
nigh to have considerable effect<lb/>
?n the overall education picture. If<lb/>
certification standards were na-<lb/>
tional, then they could be raised<lb/>
with less difficult).<lb/>
However, there is a problem with<lb/>
the acceptance of this proposal by<lb/>
the NEA and AFT. They don't<lb/>
know when to leave well enough<lb/>
alone. Take the NEA for instance.<lb/>
According to the News and<lb/>
Observer the resolution the NEA<lb/>
adopted supports the concept of a<lb/>
voluntary, national certificaton<lb/>
process integrated with state boards<lb/>
that would do the actual screening.<lb/>
This gives the whole concept of a<lb/>
national board a very hollow and<lb/>
disappointing ring. If certification<lb/>
is made voluntary we'll be back to<lb/>
square one. Establishing higher<lb/>
teaching standards, the very reason<lb/>
why the board was proposed, will<lb/>
be difficult to achieve As it is some<lb/>
state certification tests are given<lb/>
very little weight. In fact, there<lb/>
have been cases in which people<lb/>
were hired even though they tailed<lb/>
the test miserably.<lb/>
Think of it this way. It is general-<lb/>
ly agreed that something mast be<lb/>
clone to raise 'caching standards<lb/>
and belter prepare this country's<lb/>
educators. At present the individual<lb/>
states are administering certifica-<lb/>
tion examinations. If the resolution<lb/>
adopted by the NEA goes into ef-<lb/>
fect, then it will be more of the<lb/>
same.<lb/>
True, the Carnegie Forum's<lb/>
recommendations may seem radical<lb/>
and far reaching, but to dilute them<lb/>
with senseless political compromise<lb/>
would mean future problems for<lb/>
our education system. It would only<lb/>
give us the appearance of having<lb/>
done something positive while in<lb/>
reality the problems will have<lb/>
grown worse.<lb/>
Russians Default On ABM Treaty<lb/>
j?xrP<lb/>
(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the final<lb/>
instalment of a three part editorial<lb/>
reviewing the ABM treaty. See our June<lb/>
25 and Julv 2 issues for the first two<lb/>
parts.)<lb/>
All the arguments with hair on their<lb/>
chest point to the advisability of dit-<lb/>
chng the ABM treaty. Briefly reviewed,<lb/>
they are:<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
B WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY<lb/>
1. Ever since 1972, the soviet Union<lb/>
has been aggressively engaged in self-<lb/>
protection, in violation ol the idea ol<lb/>
mutual assured vulnerability.<lb/>
2. Ever since 1972 ? up until Mr.<lb/>
Reagan's initiation of the Strategic<lb/>
Defense Initiative ? the tinted States<lb/>
has been inert, allowing a comp<lb/>
dissipation of its defensive potential.<lb/>
3. I he Soviet Union has violated<lb/>
treaty (by building its radar site ai<lb/>
Krasnoyarsk in Siberia)<lb/>
4 Our scientists should be tree to<lb/>
.bar or to rechart, a space-shield<lb/>
research program unencumbered bv<lb/>
any of the prohibitions, fancied or real,<lb/>
immposed bv the ABM treaty.<lb/>
It would all appear to be clear-cut,<lb/>
but there is a mvMique that surrounds<lb/>
treaties with the Soviet Union that<lb/>
touch on arms, and even people<lb/>
wonderfully situated to remark the<lb/>
deterioration in our position since sign-<lb/>
ing the ABM treaty have become choir-<lb/>
boys in the disarmament chorus. The<lb/>
best example of this is Ambassador<lb/>
Gerard Smith, who did much of the<lb/>
negotiating at the time the treaty was<lb/>
signed.<lb/>
Although he served public nonce on<lb/>
the Soviet Union, at the direction ot the<lb/>
Nixon administration, that any pro-<lb/>
longation of the ABM treaty, five years<lb/>
down the road, would probably not<lb/>
harmonize with U.S. interests, just<lb/>
recently he was writing nervously and<lb/>
sarcastically in The Washington Post<lb/>
deploring any consideration of repeal-<lb/>
ing the treatv he had said probably<lb/>
tuld be repealed if progress was not<lb/>
being made m the reduction of strategic<lb/>
weapon, back when the ABM treatv<lb/>
was signed And where there is Gerard<lb/>
Smith, there is bound to be Paul War<lb/>
?ike not tar behind, and then Robert<lb/>
M, Samara, and the whole disarma-<lb/>
ment iohbv that appears to be atraid ot<lb/>
everything save the mounting power o<lb/>
?tie Soviet Union a) :o bring off a I<lb/>
ke, and b) to defend itself aga<lb/>
retaliation<lb/>
Now it is generally supposed thai if<lb/>
moment should come when Gen.<lb/>
lames Abraham son, who is in charg<lb/>
M)l program, should approach the<lb/>
president, in the company of Caspar<lb/>
Weinberger, and sav we have reached a<lb/>
pom; beyond winch we simply can't<lb/>
travel so long as ABM is still on the<lb/>
books thai at that point, Mr Reagan<lb/>
would proceed to repeal the treatv.<lb/>
But there are difficulties here. The<lb/>
titst is thai the longer we go without<lb/>
repealing it, the more it will rise in sym-<lb/>
bolic importance, making it harder and<lb/>
harder to annul. Who is talking now<lb/>
about deploying the neutron bomb? Or<lb/>
aboul repealing the Helsinki Accords?<lb/>
Yet the arguments for the neutron<lb/>
bomb are as valid now as thev were<lb/>
when the arguments tor its deployment<lb/>
were made to Jimmy Carter. And the<lb/>
Helsinki pact is no longer anything but<lb/>
an exsuse for us to meet in a European<lb/>
capital for the purpose of reminding the<lb/>
Soviet Union that it has not lived up to<lb/>
its obligations. A waste of time.<lb/>
Nol only would Mr. Reagan fit<lb/>
harder in 1988 to repeal tne treatv i<lb/>
he'd find it to do now, following, s<lb/>
rip-snorting speech, on Soviet viola!<lb/>
? t the same treatv, he ought<lb/>
this: The choice mav not be his.<lb/>
Strategic Defense Initiative is a ;<lb/>
gram thai wili take manv Years ful<lb/>
explore, let alone deploy The tin.<lb/>
bound to come when we will nee<lb/>
test, and this we can't do under<lb/>
prevailing reading ot the ABM treatv<lb/>
I ? e successor to Mr. Reagan ma I<lb/>
Democrat pledged to. "respect a<lb/>
disarmament treaties" ;1 can heat I<lb/>
now). And ? who knows ? it migl<lb/>
be a Republican, maneuvered durii t<lb/>
.ampaign into pledging to keep<lb/>
?BM treatv alive.<lb/>
Certainly there would be shr;e I<lb/>
pain if we abandoned the ABM 'reatv<lb/>
If you get hooked on a placebo,<lb/>
going to have withdrawal sv:<lb/>
when they take away that placed<lb/>
the ABM treatv is worse merelv<lb/>
placebo. Under its hypnotic spe e<lb/>
have lost years during which we  .<lb/>
gradually have dug our way oi.<lb/>
mutual assured destruction tha COB-<lb/>
tinues to serve as the spinal c ?lu<lb/>
our deterrent posture. Those wh.<lb/>
n the ABM treatv as an instru<lb/>
that contains the Soviet Union a<lb/>
should be) struck dumb by the mere<lb/>
mention of Krasnoyarsk, an almost ex-<lb/>
hibitionists violation of the treatv bv<lb/>
the Russians. Yet the superstition sur-<lb/>
vives that we should never renounc<lb/>
treatv that a) is made with the S<lb/>
Union, and b) deals with arms.<lb/>
But Ronald Reagan is a genuine<lb/>
leader. And he should now free us from<lb/>
that grave strategic millstone around<lb/>
our neck.<lb/>
An Economic Look At Abortion;<lb/>
Fetuses To Bid For Their Lives<lb/>
WAITTHINK We'P MTWR HAVE OUR LAVJPER PRBeWr,<lb/>
Editorial Columnist Wanted:<lb/>
The East Carolinian is presently seeking regular student columnists to<lb/>
represent opposing points of view. Interested parties may stop by our<lb/>
offices in the publications building or call 757-6366.<lb/>
Ike Not KrpubiH<lb/>
(EDITOR'S OTE: The most influential intellectual move-<lb/>
ment in legal scholarship today is called "law and<lb/>
economics. " Coming out of the University of Chicago, it uses<lb/>
economic analysis in novel ways to address legal and moral<lb/>
issues. One of Us leading adherents, former Chicago pro-<lb/>
fessor Antonin Scalia, has just been nominated by President<lb/>
Reagan to the Supreme Court. Because of the importance of<lb/>
this school of thought, and because of the continuing anguish<lb/>
of the abotion issue, The East Carolinian has chosen to<lb/>
publish the following essay, which originally appeared in the<lb/>
legal journal Constitutional Commentary and then reprinted<lb/>
in The New Republic<lb/>
Abortion is customarily approached as a matter involving<lb/>
rights, either of the mother or of the unborn fetus. It is not<lb/>
surprising that such a crude form of analysis has failed to pro-<lb/>
duce any definitive solution, or that the subject has remained<lb/>
highly controversial. As usual, economic analysis is a far<lb/>
more subtle and sophisticated analytical tool.<lb/>
Abortion is a classic example of market failure. One of the<lb/>
interested parties, the fetus (or, under another philosophical<lb/>
view, the person whom the fetus would become if the abor-<lb/>
tion did not take place) is in no position to enter into an arms-<lb/>
length transaction. The adult into whom the fetus would have<lb/>
grown might value his life al a higher amount than the parents<lb/>
value the abortion. If the fetus had access to the potential<lb/>
assets it could acquire as an adult, and if it had the bargaining<lb/>
abilities of an adult, it might well be able to afford to pay the<lb/>
parents enough to persuade them not to have an abortion.<lb/>
Under these circumstances, allowing the abortion is<lb/>
economically inefficient. A temporal market barrier prevents<lb/>
the economically efficient solution from being attained.<lb/>
The solution, however, is not a ban on abortions but the<lb/>
creation of a market. A representative could be appointed on<lb/>
behalf of the fetus to bid against the parents on the abortion<lb/>
decision. Since most fetuses have no assests, they would<lb/>
presumably have to borrow against their future earnings. If<lb/>
the parents win the bidding war, they could have the abor-<lb/>
tion, but must pay their winning bid into the Fetal Bank. If<lb/>
the fetus wins, it is allowed to be born, but some share of its<lb/>
future earnings would be paid to the Bank. Funds in the Bank<lb/>
could be used for loans to fetuses; any excess would be<lb/>
available either for redistribution (under a liberal regime), or<lb/>
perhaps even better, could be invested in embryonic in-<lb/>
dustries.<lb/>
Some objections might be raised to this scheme,<lb/>
rigorous analysis shows them to be unfounded. One<lb/>
counterargument is that the poor would be unable to have<lb/>
abortions, since they would not be able to outbid their<lb/>
fetuses. But the children of the poor generally have low<lb/>
potential earning capacities; therefore, the fetuses of the poor<lb/>
would also be in low income brackets. Impoverished fetuses<lb/>
would be able to borrow relatively little money, and hence<lb/>
would be on an equal footing with their equally impoverished<lb/>
parents.<lb/>
Another possible objection is the existence of externalities<lb/>
Allowing an abortion offends pro-life individuals. The<lb/>
answer is that they too might enter the bidding, along with<lb/>
pro-choice advocates, those who wished to adopt the<lb/>
children, those favoring zero population growth, and others<lb/>
A more serious objection is that some parents might<lb/>
dishonestly claim that they intended to get abortions, only as<lb/>
a way of forcing their fetuses to bid against them and thereby<lb/>
capturing a share of the fetus's future earnings. If the fetus's<lb/>
bid were paid to the parents, this would be a potentially<lb/>
serious problem. It is preferable, therefore, for the fetus's<lb/>
earnings to be paid only to the Bank, thus eliminating the in-<lb/>
centive.<lb/>
One advantage of this free-market approach is that it mir-<lb/>
rors some common beliefs about when abortion is more rp-<lb/>
propriate, or at least more understandable. Fetuses with<lb/>
genetic defects would have low earnings potential, and thus<lb/>
would often be outbid by their parents. Also, the longer the<lb/>
pregnancy continues, the shorter the period for which the<lb/>
fetus would need to borrow the money; hence, the discounted<lb/>
present value of the fetus's future earnings would rise sharp-<lb/>
ly. An abortion late in pregnancy could easily require a parent<lb/>
to bid thousands of dollars more than an abortion early in<lb/>
pregnancy. Also, since the decision to abort would be expen-<lb/>
sive, there would be a strong incentive for those who do not<lb/>
desire children to use contraception.<lb/>
Unlike any other proposed approach to the abortion issue,<lb/>
this approach gives full weight to the interests of both the<lb/>
fetus and the parents. True, those who believe in choice may<lb/>
be disconcerted that such a fundamental choice must be paid<lb/>
for, while those who are pro-life may be offended that fetuses<lb/>
must bid for their lives. Still, as Milton Friedman has told us<lb/>
more than once, "there's no free lunch<lb/>
IHl t ASIAKOt<lb/>
Good Times<lb/>
In Downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
By PAT MOI.I.OY<lb/>
?Utul I jtr?ikr ?4ll?<lb/>
Greenville is noti iriousl) I<lb/>
during the summer<lb/>
lack of students However<lb/>
need not be true this sun<lb/>
Nightclubs and lounges <lb/>
ing an assortment of ei<lb/>
ment, ranging from<lb/>
comedy to hard-core ? ? ?<lb/>
i -?!1<lb/>
Periodically, throug<lb/>
remainder of the summer ?<lb/>
and the ensuing semestei<lb/>
East Carolinian will print a li<lb/>
the various eniertainmc<lb/>
ings in Greenville H ;<lb/>
this list will be<lb/>
you search for that one thii<lb/>
help you bea' the I eai and<lb/>
doldrums<lb/>
The Attic Pr bably h<lb/>
ville's most populat<lb/>
Regularly featured at The V<lb/>
are heavy metal and main-stream<lb/>
rock bands. <lb/>
will play; and Thursday i t<lb/>
can rock out with Pi<lb/>
The eranda ?<lb/>
Ramada Inn. This<lb/>
geared toward the n<lb/>
N? i leans with 1 knees,<lb/>
and no bare feet. Howe<lb/>
you're into dance muv<lb/>
forty. Players will be feature<lb/>
til Saturday night, rhe<lb/>
starts at 9:30.<lb/>
Wrong Way orrigans<lb/>
Bad Cinema<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
Briit-direct<lb/>
priceof SI 1<lb/>
sold f1<lb/>
.<lb/>
fhe1<lb/>
<lb/>
No Escap<lb/>
What is a Lousy Lock-In'1 It's<lb/>
the Student Union Films <lb/>
mittee's way of getting stud<lb/>
to appreciate the quality<lb/>
regularly scheduled Mendenhall<lb/>
films.<lb/>
The Films Committee has<lb/>
together three of<lb/>
world's gr e at e s: cii en<lb/>
disasters. Students pa $3<lb/>
come to the movies. If they leave<lb/>
after the first movie, thev will be<lb/>
refunded S1; after the second<lb/>
and after the third, the entire<lb/>
T-shirts will be given<lb/>
first 100 survivors of the I ousy<lb/>
Lock-In.<lb/>
Following are three<lb/>
world's lousiest movies, beginn-<lb/>
ing at 9 p.m<lb/>
Plan Sine From Outer Space<lb/>
This picture won the award as<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
D W<lb/>
I<lb/>
I ht t <lb/>
People<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
 <lb/>
M<lb/>
'Foreigner<lb/>
The East Carolina Summer<lb/>
Theatre bills its second produc-<lb/>
tion of the season. The<lb/>
Foreigner, as "two hours of<lb/>
foolishness about shenanigans in<lb/>
the backwoods of Georgia and<lb/>
it will star television veteran Jerry<lb/>
verDorn. Monday through Satur-<lb/>
day, July 14-19 at 8:15 p.m with<lb/>
special man nee performances on<lb/>
Wednesday, July 16 and Satur-<lb/>
day, July 19, both a; 215 p.m. in<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre.<lb/>
Jerry verDorn is taking time<lb/>
off from playing the continuing<lb/>
role of Ross Marler on the CBS<lb/>
daytime television drama. The<lb/>
Guiding Light, a part he has held<lb/>
for six years. Mr. verDorn is also<lb/>
an experienced Broadway actor,<lb/>
having performed with Liza Mi<lb/>
nelli in Are You Sow, Have You<lb/>
Ever Been and with Jack Tanner<lb/>
in Man and Superman. He has<lb/>
played leading roles on the stage<lb/>
of many of the country's major<lb/>
regional theatres, and he is in<lb/>
great demand by large U.S. cor-<lb/>
porations as a television<lb/>
spokesman promoting Sears,<lb/>
Johnson and Johnson, Sports 11-<lb/>
lusisted. Sure, and many others<lb/>
<lb/>
Phoem <lb/>
in I I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I he rorei<lb/>
 5 w<lb/>
1 j I<lb/>
from tl I<lb/>
where I<lb/>
the da I<lb/>
Children<lb/>
wav d?<lb/>
theatru<lb/>
where he hi<lb/>
Marcel Ma<lb/>
anc<lb/>
England,<lb/>
much of hi<lb/>
to his twi<lb/>
are also i<lb/>
Wilsor<lb/>
at New <lb/>
qum Hv<lb/>
McAlono<lb/>
director-pr<lb/>
tally. appej<lb/>
in the Nef<lb/>
 adies In<lb/>
Gish.<lb/>
Also feal<lb/>
Joey Pollf<lb/>
Mr. Pollol<lb/>
veteran (<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
: &amp;&amp; <lb/>
? ?<lb/>
. ?? . ? i ?? ?<lb/>
??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057828_0005"/><lb/>
q r?"<lb/>
3<lb/>
i<lb/>
klvV<lb/>
WRON AMP 5AMPRA M).<lb/>
ABM Treaty<lb/>
Mi Reagan find it<lb/>
e treaty than<lb/>
 ? wing, say, a<lb/>
S ?iel eolations<lb/>
igl ' to consider<lb/>
be his. The<lb/>
?? ? - is a pro-<lb/>
a's t ally to<lb/>
"he time is<lb/>
will need to<lb/>
under the<lb/>
. ABM treaty.<lb/>
Mi Reagan may be a<lb/>
peel all our<lb/>
(1 can hear it<lb/>
ws' ? it might<lb/>
ered during<lb/>
Keep the<lb/>
e shrieks of<lb/>
BM treaty.<lb/>
, you are<lb/>
iwa svmptoms<lb/>
acebo. But<lb/>
rel) than a<lb/>
. spell we<lb/>
? ? , we might<lb/>
 of the<lb/>
at con-<lb/>
amn of<lb/>
mho look<lb/>
strument<lb/>
in are (or<lb/>
the mere<lb/>
? an almost ex-<lb/>
' e reaty by<lb/>
superstition sur-<lb/>
ever renounce a<lb/>
ide with the Soviet<lb/>
th arms.<lb/>
Reagan is a genuine<lb/>
lid now free us from<lb/>
. ; millstone around<lb/>
At Abortion;<lb/>
ITheir Lives<lb/>
be raised to this scheme, but<lb/>
them to be unfounded. One<lb/>
the pour would be unable to have<lb/>
? tld not be able to outbid their<lb/>
: the poor generally have low<lb/>
eretore. the fetuses of the poor<lb/>
a income brackets. Impoverished fetuses<lb/>
relatively little money, and hence<lb/>
ng with their equally impoverished<lb/>
sible objection is the existence of externalities.<lb/>
abortion offends pro-life individuals. The<lb/>
at they too might enter the bidding, along with<lb/>
I advoca those who wished to adopt the<lb/>
se favoring zero population growth, and others.<lb/>
erious objection is that some parents might<lb/>
I laim that they intended to get abortions, only as<lb/>
tetuses to bid against them and thereby<lb/>
e fetus's future earnings. If the fetus's<lb/>
?: parents, this would be a potentially-<lb/>
preferable, therefore, for the fetus's<lb/>
paid<lb/>
the Bank, thus eliminating the in-<lb/>
ns free-market approach is that it mir-<lb/>
beliefs about when abortion is more ap-<lb/>
more understandable. Fetuses with<lb/>
?ould have low earnings potential, and thus<lb/>
ti be outbid by their parents. Also, the longer the<lb/>
nunues, the shorter the period for which the<lb/>
uid need to borrow the money; hence, the discounted<lb/>
ae of the fetus's future earnings would rise sharp-<lb/>
tion late in pregnancy could easily require a parent<lb/>
lousands of dollars more than an abortion early in<lb/>
:y. Also, since the decision to abort would be expen-<lb/>
would be a strong incentive for those who do not<lb/>
lidren to use contraception.<lb/>
any other proposed approach to the abortion issue,<lb/>
iach gives full weight to the interests of both the<lb/>
the parents. True, those who believe in choice may<lb/>
icerted that such a fundamental choice must be paid<lb/>
e those who are pro-life may be offended that fetuses<lb/>
r their lives. Still, as Milton Friedman has told us<lb/>
n once, "there's no free lunch<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
JULY 9, 1986 Page<lb/>
Good Times<lb/>
In Downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
By PATMOLLOY<lb/>
Greenville is notoriously drab<lb/>
during the summer months for<lb/>
;ack of students. However, that<lb/>
need not be true this summer.<lb/>
Nightclubs and lounges are offer-<lb/>
ing an assortment of entertain-<lb/>
ment, ranging from stand-up<lb/>
comedy to hard-core rock 'n'<lb/>
roll.<lb/>
Periodically, throughout the<lb/>
remainder of the summer session<lb/>
and the ensuing semesters, the<lb/>
East Carolinian will print a list of<lb/>
the various entertainment offer-<lb/>
ings in Greenville. Hopefully,<lb/>
this list will be of assistance as<lb/>
you search for that one thing to<lb/>
help you beat the heat and the<lb/>
doldrums.<lb/>
The Attic ? Probably Green-<lb/>
ville's most popular rock club.<lb/>
Regularly featured at The Attic<lb/>
are heavy metal and main-stream<lb/>
rock bands. Tonight. Centaur<lb/>
will play; and Thursday night you<lb/>
can rock out with Prisoner.<lb/>
The Veranda ? Located in the<lb/>
Ramada Inn. This lounge is<lb/>
geared toward the mature crowd.<lb/>
No jeans with holes in the knees,<lb/>
and no bare feet. However, if<lb/>
you're into dance music or top<lb/>
forty. Players will be featured un-<lb/>
til Saturday night. The music<lb/>
starts at 9:30.<lb/>
Wrong Way Corrigans ?<lb/>
Bad Cinema<lb/>
Full House Signals Approval<lb/>
Of Summer Season Opening<lb/>
?Brice Street will play Friday at the Attic, for a special admission<lb/>
price of $2 for members until 10. Certain canned beverages will be<lb/>
sold for .50<lb/>
Although entertainment is not<lb/>
regularly presented at Corrigans,<lb/>
this Thursday you can find Chip<lb/>
Franklin mixing a fine comedic<lb/>
sense with his musical skills. Be<lb/>
sure to wear your collar, dudes.<lb/>
The New Deli ? A long stan-<lb/>
ding home of the New Music<lb/>
bands. The New Deli also<lb/>
features some straight-ahead<lb/>
rock 'n roll. Proof of this can be<lb/>
found Saturday night, when<lb/>
former members from Jack and<lb/>
The Cadillacs. Flat Duo Jets and<lb/>
Southern Culture on The Skids<lb/>
(all Raleigh bands) come together<lb/>
as Chip and The Munx. This<lb/>
band plays mainstream rock<lb/>
cover tunes combined with<lb/>
original songs.<lb/>
TW's ? This club came along<lb/>
at the right time. On Wednesday<lb/>
nights, two national comedians<lb/>
are featured, along with drink<lb/>
specials. Entry is S2 until 9:30.<lb/>
and a friend gets in free.<lb/>
If the nightlife scene doesn't<lb/>
turn you on, there's always Hen-<lb/>
dnx Theatre. Monday, at 3:30<lb/>
and 9:30, E.T. will be shown<lb/>
The theatre is fully air condition-<lb/>
ed, and it's free to students with<lb/>
valid activity cards and their<lb/>
friends ? all the more reason to<lb/>
boogie over and catch the show<lb/>
My pick o this week's litter is<lb/>
The Attic. This weekend will<lb/>
feature the "Back to Back Party<lb/>
Attack with Brice Street play-<lb/>
ing mainstream rock mixed with<lb/>
a jazz sound on Friday night, and<lb/>
Skip Castro playing their horn-<lb/>
filled dance rock 'n' roll on<lb/>
Saturda night.<lb/>
Brice Street is extremely well<lb/>
known along the East Coast<lb/>
performing cover tunes with un-<lb/>
canny precision, and Skip Castro<lb/>
is known foi their arihtv to pack<lb/>
use consistently.<lb/>
 ?w ?' en, it aftet all this you<lb/>
still can't find something to in-<lb/>
terest you, 1 suggesi you call the<lb/>
paramedics ? you're eithei in a<lb/>
coma oi dead<lb/>
By JOHN SHANNON<lb/>
The Summer Theatre at ECU<lb/>
has earned a reputation for ex-<lb/>
cellence that has assured an am-<lb/>
ple turnout for its productions.<lb/>
This season will be no different,<lb/>
judging from Monday night's<lb/>
sold out performance of Ladies<lb/>
In Retirement<lb/>
Of course, reputation alone<lb/>
could not account for the success<lb/>
of the Summer Theatre's opening<lb/>
show this season. The full house<lb/>
responded overwhelmingly to<lb/>
fine acting by seasoned profes-<lb/>
sionals, made possible by a<lb/>
technically adept production<lb/>
which allowed the actors freedom<lb/>
to concentrate on their art.<lb/>
Most notable were the perfor-<lb/>
mances of Micheal 1 earned and<lb/>
Holt Wilson, both of whom are<lb/>
experienced stage performers<lb/>
despite being better known to the<lb/>
world as television personalities.<lb/>
In the role of Ellen Creed,<lb/>
I earned portrays an attractive<lb/>
Victorian dame who's lost<lb/>
whatever wealth she had, and<lb/>
since turned to keeping house for<lb/>
a I ntner showgirl, Leonara Fiske<lb/>
(Ionia Rowe) Ellen Creed<lb/>
murders f iske so that her eccen-<lb/>
tric sisters mav come and live<lb/>
with her. The majority of the plot<lb/>
revolves around Ellen's growing<lb/>
sense of conscience.<lb/>
Learned deftly combines the<lb/>
roles of a caring sister and a<lb/>
vicious murderess, all the while<lb/>
providing a foil for the heavy-<lb/>
handed cut-ups of Albert Feather<lb/>
(Holt Wilson). Learned's skills as<lb/>
an actress are most evident in<lb/>
Ellen's ongoing rivalry with<lb/>
Albert, as each tries to be more<lb/>
"clever" than the other.<lb/>
Wilson also gives a strong per-<lb/>
formance, in the role of a street-<lb/>
wise petty criminal who suspects<lb/>
Ellen's crime. Albert wants to get<lb/>
a "piece of the pie" for himself<lb/>
and, as he claims, for the clean-<lb/>
ing girl Lucy (MaryKate Cunn-<lb/>
ingham), whom he intends to<lb/>
marry. Wilson's bravado is<lb/>
seldom whole-hearted; a barely<lb/>
masked fear seems to hover<lb/>
behind it, and justifiably so, as<lb/>
we discover in the last scene.<lb/>
One of the most appealing of<lb/>
the play's many strong points is<lb/>
the interplay between the Fiske<lb/>
sisters, and especially between<lb/>
Louisa and Emily, played by<lb/>
Mavis Ray and Hazel Stapleton,<lb/>
respectively. These two "odd<lb/>
birds" provide the most gratify-<lb/>
ing moments of humor in a play<lb/>
which (no fault of the actors)<lb/>
ambles a bit slowlj<lb/>
When Ellen has gone<lb/>
at one point, foi instan e I<lb/>
and Emilv share<lb/>
with Albert, and tK<lb/>
are comically unaffe<lb/>
Alberts obvious attempt<lb/>
them in a game<lb/>
Over-all, the pace ,<lb/>
quick, helped along al ?<lb/>
by the fine perl<lb/>
Tonia Rowe, whi<lb/>
Fiske sentimentalic<lb/>
girl life, playing<lb/>
Mikado on the piano; M<lb/>
austerely appropriate<lb/>
of Sister Theresa, a nui<lb/>
nearby prior <lb/>
prick Ellen's<lb/>
periodically; and Maryi<lb/>
ningham, whose d<lb/>
Lucy Gilham showed<lb/>
by the contrast oi her<lb/>
to be usually mean<lb/>
artificial.<lb/>
A word is also due<lb/>
Edgar Loessin, as<lb/>
costumers, set desigi ?<lb/>
technicians and<lb/>
managed to coordii<lb/>
plicated sequel<lb/>
changes so thai<lb/>
smooth<lb/>
transparency, ai<lb/>
off without a hit<lb/>
No Hype At Eno Fest<lb/>
No Escape From Lock-In<lb/>
What is a Lousy Lock-In? It's<lb/>
the Student Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee's way of getting students<lb/>
to appreciate the quality of the<lb/>
regularly scheduled Mendenhall<lb/>
films.<lb/>
The Films Committee has put<lb/>
together three of what may be the<lb/>
world's greatest cinematic<lb/>
disasters. Students pay $3 to<lb/>
come to the movies. If they leave<lb/>
after the first movie, ihey will be<lb/>
refunded Si; after the second, S2;<lb/>
and after the third, the entire $3.<lb/>
T-shirts will be given to the<lb/>
first 100 survivors of the Lousy<lb/>
Lock-In.<lb/>
Following are three of the<lb/>
world's lousiest movies, beginn-<lb/>
ing at 9 p.m<lb/>
Plan Sine From Outer Space<lb/>
This picture won the award as<lb/>
The Worst Film o All. Plan Mne<lb/>
was Bela Lugosi's last film. He<lb/>
died before the film was com-<lb/>
pleted, an act oi mercy that<lb/>
spared him the embarrassment of<lb/>
Mewing this prize turkey ol<lb/>
turkeys. The ingenious Edward<lb/>
D. Wood, universalh regarded as<lb/>
the worst director ever, replaced<lb/>
Lugosi with an unemployed<lb/>
chiropractor, a ridiculous<lb/>
substitution that fits in with the<lb/>
mindless dialogue, cardboard<lb/>
sets, and idiotic direction that<lb/>
distinguishes Plan Mne as a film<lb/>
below all other films.<lb/>
The Attack Of The Mushroom<lb/>
People<lb/>
Winner of the Golden Turkey<lb/>
Award for Worst Vegetable<lb/>
Movie of All Time, Mushroom<lb/>
People has built up a loyal cult<lb/>
following among bad film<lb/>
fanatics. The story concerns<lb/>
seven nierrv Japanese tourists<lb/>
wl ose yacht is blown oU course<lb/>
to a mysterious island. There thev<lb/>
discover a strange fungus that<lb/>
slowly tunis them into walking<lb/>
oms. This horror classic<lb/>
was directed h Isnoshiro Honda<lb/>
who gave us such films as him;<lb/>
Kong Escapes, Monster Zero,<lb/>
and Godzilla's Revenge.<lb/>
The Terror From Tiny Town<lb/>
A true camp classic and must-<lb/>
see film for anv movie fan, Ter-<lb/>
ror From Tiny Town is the first,<lb/>
and thankfully the last, all<lb/>
midget, musical western. Easily<lb/>
one of the most bizarre films ever<lb/>
conceived.<lb/>
Bv DAVID McGINNESS<lb/>
I he 1986 Eno River Festival,<lb/>
held July 4 and 5, saw the coming<lb/>
together of many styles of North<lb/>
Carolina crafts, music and peo-<lb/>
ple.<lb/>
The two-day festival was heid<lb/>
at the Eno Rivet State Park in<lb/>
Durham, and proceeds went<lb/>
towards the purchasing of more<lb/>
land for the park.<lb/>
Although in sheer numbers the<lb/>
crowds were impressive, the at-<lb/>
mosphere was friendly. It was<lb/>
kind of like hanging out at the<lb/>
park with a few thousand of your<lb/>
est friends<lb/>
The festival featured crafts<lb/>
such as pottetv, weaving, hand-<lb/>
made jewelry and silkscreening,<lb/>
but for many the main attraction<lb/>
was the music.<lb/>
Among over 25 groups perfor-<lb/>
ming at the three stages set up in<lb/>
the park were several from<lb/>
T-astern North Carolina and two<lb/>
from right here in Greenville.<lb/>
Lightnin' Wells performed a<lb/>
solo act of R and B tunes with<lb/>
guitar and harmonica that had a<lb/>
real Down East flavor. With a<lb/>
crafty gleam in his eye, he pluck-<lb/>
ed out a tune called "Honey Just<lb/>
Allow Me One More Chance<lb/>
the theme of which you can pret-<lb/>
ty well figure out. Then, just to<lb/>
let the folks know, he said,<lb/>
"Blues  they ain't all about<lb/>
your girlfne i leavin' ya and<lb/>
stuff like that<lb/>
Close to the end of his set,<lb/>
Wells did a tune called "Come<lb/>
On If You're Comin which<lb/>
went something like: "She's a big<lb/>
hefty mama, got big hefty legs;<lb/>
walks like she's walkin on soft<lb/>
boiled eggs<lb/>
Just as Wells was finishing his<lb/>
set at around 6 p.m the<lb/>
Amateurs were getting ready to<lb/>
do their thing on one of the other<lb/>
stages.<lb/>
Under the watchful eye of Bill<lb/>
"Shep" Sheppard, who sported<lb/>
some interesting, neon-orange<lb/>
plastic, John Lennon-styie specs,<lb/>
the Amateurs poured out their<lb/>
reggae-rock to an appreciative<lb/>
audience. Their music varied<lb/>
from a fluid, mellow easiness to a<lb/>
high energv. g<lb/>
dance power.<lb/>
At the beg<lb/>
people were just<lb/>
taking it in. Bu<lb/>
seems to happ ??<lb/>
Amateurs peri<lb/>
started getting up :<lb/>
By the time the gi oup ;<lb/>
out "Black Magic V<lb/>
over one hundred .<lb/>
dancing, includii g -<lb/>
would periodically .<lb/>
the air and come<lb/>
totally wrapped <lb/>
Finally, around<lb/>
people packed themse<lb/>
buses for the ride home. M<lb/>
the ones I was with wer<lb/>
for a couple of more hoi<lb/>
One thing that mad<lb/>
formances truly entertaii<lb/>
the artists' personal involve<lb/>
in their crafts. These p-<lb/>
weren't just going thro: g<lb/>
motions; they hone .<lb/>
giving pleasure to an appre<lb/>
audience. There was no<lb/>
commercialism or hype ! i<lb/>
plain folks doing wha<lb/>
best.<lb/>
'Foreigner'Attracts Soap Stars<lb/>
The East Carolina Summer<lb/>
Theatre bills its second produc-<lb/>
tion of the season, The<lb/>
Eoreigner, as "two hours of<lb/>
foolishness about shenanigans in<lb/>
the backwoods of Georgia and<lb/>
it will star television veteran Jerry<lb/>
verDorn, Monday through Satur-<lb/>
day, July 14-19 at 8:15 p.m with<lb/>
special matinee performances on<lb/>
Wednesday, July 16 and Satur-<lb/>
day, July 19, both at 2:15 p.m. in<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre.<lb/>
Jerry verDorn is taking time<lb/>
off from playing the continuing<lb/>
role of Ross Marler on the CBS<lb/>
daytime television drama. The<lb/>
Guiding Light, a part he has held<lb/>
for six years. Mr. verDorn is also<lb/>
an experienced Broadway actor,<lb/>
having performed with Liza Min-<lb/>
nelli in Are You Now, Have You<lb/>
Ever Been and with Jack Tanner<lb/>
in Man and Superman. He has<lb/>
played leading roles on the stage<lb/>
of many of the country's major<lb/>
regional theatres, and he is in<lb/>
great demand by large U.S. cor-<lb/>
porations as a television<lb/>
spokesman promoting Sears,<lb/>
Johnson and Johnson, Sports Il-<lb/>
lustrated, Sure, and many others.<lb/>
Among his international credits<lb/>
he counts the leading role in A<lb/>
Phoenix to Frequent at the<lb/>
George Bernard Shaw Festival in<lb/>
London. VerDorn is a graduate<lb/>
of the Studio of Performing Arts<lb/>
in London and of Moorhead<lb/>
State University in Minnesota.<lb/>
Appearing with VerDorn in<lb/>
The Foreigner will be Holt<lb/>
Wilson, who is on loan to the<lb/>
East Carolina Summer Theatre<lb/>
from the ABC television network<lb/>
where he stars as Bruce Emery on<lb/>
the daytime series All My<lb/>
Children. Mr. Wilson's Broad-<lb/>
way debut was in the current Neil<lb/>
Simon hit Biloxi Blues. His<lb/>
theatrical training was in Paris<lb/>
where he had a scholarship at the<lb/>
Marcel Marceau School of Mime<lb/>
and at Oxford University in<lb/>
England. Mr. Wilson attributes<lb/>
much of his natural acting talents<lb/>
to his two famous parents, who<lb/>
are also in show business: Julie<lb/>
Wilson, currently holding court<lb/>
at New York's famous Algon-<lb/>
quin Hotel, and Michael<lb/>
McAloney, the Irish actor-<lb/>
director-producer, who, inciden-<lb/>
tally, appeared some 30 years ago<lb/>
in the New York production of<lb/>
Ladies In Retirement with Lillian<lb/>
Gish.<lb/>
Also featured in the cast will be<lb/>
Joey Pollock and Jay Theriault.<lb/>
Mr. Pollock is an area native and<lb/>
veteran of several East Carolina<lb/>
Summer Theatre seasons. He is<lb/>
also currently serving as the<lb/>
director of the outdoor drama,<lb/>
Black beard. Knight of the Black<lb/>
Flag in Bath.<lb/>
Theriault has been performing<lb/>
in New York City for the past<lb/>
three years; however, he is a<lb/>
Jay Theriault<lb/>
native of Raleigh. His Off-<lb/>
Broadway credits include roles in<lb/>
Bus Stop, Pirates of Penzance<lb/>
and Life with Father.<lb/>
Written by Larry Shue, The<lb/>
Foreigner was the winner of two<lb/>
Obie Awards and two Outer Cir-<lb/>
cle Awards in 1985 as Best New<lb/>
American Play and Best Off-<lb/>
Broadway Production. Even<lb/>
though the show is still enjoying<lb/>
its very successful New York run,<lb/>
the East Carolina Summer<lb/>
I heat re received special produc-<lb/>
tion rights as a professional<lb/>
theatre.<lb/>
The comic story of The<lb/>
foreigner revolves around a<lb/>
pathologically shy Englishman<lb/>
who seeks solace from a<lb/>
miserable, failed marriage. He is<lb/>
escorted to a Georgia fishing<lb/>
lodge by "Froggy" LeSueur, a<lb/>
boisterous corporal and demoli-<lb/>
tion expert. Once in the<lb/>
backwoods of Georgia, the<lb/>
Englishman persuades the locals<lb/>
that he speaks no English, and<lb/>
gabs away in something that<lb/>
sounds like pidgin Polish with a<lb/>
dash of bogus Bulgarian. He then<lb/>
proceeds to get involved in<lb/>
preposterous goings-on which in-<lb/>
volve a scheme by the Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan to set up headquarters in the<lb/>
lodge, exposing a fraudulent<lb/>
minister, solving his own per-<lb/>
sonality problems and, finally,<lb/>
getting the girl. After seeing The<lb/>
Foreigner, Holly Hill of the Lon-<lb/>
don Times wrote that the play<lb/>
"sweeps audiences from joy to<lb/>
euphoria. It is an adorable com-<lb/>
edy, beautifully crafted, in-<lb/>
genious and hilarious<lb/>
Tickets are still available for<lb/>
most evening performances,<lb/>
Monday through Saturday, and<lb/>
for the two special matinee per-<lb/>
formances (Wednesday and<lb/>
Saturday at 2:15 p.m.), and may<lb/>
be purchased at McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Taking time off from his role as Brace Emery on ABC's 'All M<lb/>
Children Holt Wilson U currently appearing in 'Ladies In Retire<lb/>
ment and will also appear in the East Carolina Summer Theatre<lb/>
production of 'The Foreigner July 14 through 19 at 8:15 p m<lb/>
with two special matinees on July 16 and 19 at 2:15 p.m. in McGin-<lb/>
nis Theatre.<lb/>
"<lb/>
?- , , V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057828_0006"/><lb/>
1 HI t AS I (. AKUl ll <lb/>
uny, i86<lb/>
Summer Readirt2<lb/>
BLOOM COUNTY<lb/>
by Berke Breathed<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
JUiJ<lb/>
? v  f ?-?<lb/>
" - <lb/>
r-<lb/>
J(J5T7h75 (MX IV<lb/>
Uteft36ftgC?V<lb/>
?1MKV0U<lb/>
.?-?ME<lb/>
I I<lb/>
 , ,<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
? .<lb/>
-<lb/>
W :? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
??<lb/>
 .<lb/>
?<lb/>
??? ? ?<lb/>
- v - <lb/>
V<lb/>
-r<lb/>
?. . v. r-<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
, V<lb/>
<lb/>
'a<lb/>
-J?L<lb/>
?! 1. ?mtttiak<lb/>
.? r&amp;tmt&amp;i a ?<lb/>
 Jr I ?. ? <lb/>
<lb/>
-? r?<lb/>
 ? . .<lb/>
M? ?'<lb/>
- ? ?<lb/>
.l j<lb/>
I. r<lb/>
n-r-r-i.<lb/>
i<lb/>
'<lb/>
r t X<lb/>
<lb/>
?-i ,<lb/>
<lb/>
?V <lb/>
n f<lb/>
- <lb/>
?<lb/>
? . m<lb/>
l<lb/>
 - r<lb/>
m<lb/>
? -<lb/>
<lb/>
'A<lb/>
smusmm <lb/>
6N(-<lb/>
11<lb/>
Man-O-Stick<lb/>
. A.RRELL&amp; JOHNSON<lb/>
THE if i,W.LY ilAStYmoUTfa<lb/>
By SoveLove<lb/>
.<lb/>
ft<lb/>
d<lb/>
z,<lb/>
' ? ??<lb/>
Undercover Cats<lb/>
By PARKER<lb/>
. r ??<lb/>
i .v N<lb/>
N - VIED<lb/>
B?"Ci. t J? '<lb/>
' "? -J,S at<lb/>
-<lb/>
Wfo-vti?, -&amp;S A<lb/>
p- . ?<lb/>
??g<lb/>
i <lb/>
Best Stories Anthologized<lb/>
(UPI) ? Debra Spark wrote that<lb/>
her only criterion for selecting the<lb/>
stories in 20 Inder 30 was<lb/>
lealousy. The collection includes<lb/>
the 20 best stories by writers<lb/>
under 30 years of age.<lb/>
"Any story I enjoyed well<lb/>
enough to wish I had written I in-<lb/>
cluded Sparks wrote in her in-<lb/>
troduction.<lb/>
The characters in these short<lb/>
stones will live with the reader<lb/>
long after the cover is closed on<lb/>
the last page.<lb/>
In "Judgment Kate Wheeler<lb/>
shocks with her startling descrip-<lb/>
tion of life on the farm for<lb/>
Mayland Thompson and his wife,<lb/>
Linda. Mayland likes young girls,<lb/>
!hat's how he wound up with Lin-<lb/>
da, daughter of his late wife. I in-<lb/>
da, tor sonie reason, doesn't like<lb/>
c and she doesn't particularly<lb/>
like Mayland.<lb/>
Though you get the feeling the<lb/>
two deserve each other, you also<lb/>
feel the hopelessness of their<lb/>
situation. Wheeler arttully<lb/>
develops her story, keeping the<lb/>
reader off balance.<lb/>
Linda and Mayland are not the<lb/>
only characters that hae staying<lb/>
power.<lb/>
Jn "The Raising" I e<lb/>
Allison Wilson adds a new twisl<lb/>
to a very old story. Mrs. Eastman<lb/>
thinks she's going to adopt Dai<lb/>
ryl, 13, away from an orphanage<lb/>
and turn him into a lawyei<lb/>
Though she's portrayed a<lb/>
bossy know-it-all, you wind up<lb/>
feeling sorry for her amid all of<lb/>
her misperceptions<lb/>
?nn Patchett's "All Little I<lb/>
ored Children Should Play the<lb/>
Harmonica" will leave you with a<lb/>
child's eye view ot happiness that<lb/>
deserves a second look<lb/>
This anthology is a must<lb/>
ne who wants to keep up<lb/>
with the best of America's young<lb/>
writers or just enjoy some g<lb/>
writing.<lb/>
Debra Spark, 24, was first<lb/>
published in Esquire. She wa<lb/>
born in Boston and now hold- a<lb/>
"eaching-Writing Fellowship at<lb/>
the Iowa Vvr;rer Workshop,<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
752-<lb/>
7303<lb/>
JULY<lb/>
9 WED<lb/>
Centaur<lb/>
10 THUR<lb/>
PRISONER<lb/>
11 FRI<lb/>
12 SAT<lb/>
SHIP ytTKD<lb/>
JERRY-<lb/>
verDORN<lb/>
known as<lb/>
Ross Marler<lb/>
on CBS's<lb/>
The Guiding Light<lb/>
appearing in<lb/>
yf.<lb/>
m<lb/>
Monday-Saturday<lb/>
July 14-19 ? 8:15 pm<lb/>
The<lb/>
??ard-Winning<lb/>
Hilarious Comedy1<lb/>
N<lb/>
Special Matinee Performances<lb/>
Wednesday &amp; Saturday<lb/>
July 16 &amp; 19 ? 2:15 pm<lb/>
I he t i-1 ii Summc r I heat re<lb/>
McGinn s Theatre<lb/>
Greeny ? N rtt<lb/>
FOR RESERVATIONS: 757-6390<lb/>
COMING ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
Thursday, July 10, 1986<lb/>
WORST MOVIE<lb/>
LOCK-IN<lb/>
9:00 p.m. Mendenhall Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
Free Refreshments and Popcorn<lb/>
$3 00 admission REFUNDABLE if vou SIT<lb/>
THROUGH ALL THREE MOVIES:<lb/>
1.<lb/>
2.<lb/>
3.<lb/>
m<lb/>
vniur U illj<lb/>
James Madisoi<lb/>
dunk si<lb/>
King Becker<lb/>
H DON Kl !<lb/>
?<lb/>
drear)<lb/>
comp<lb/>
N<lb/>
unbe<lb/>
6-4, 6 -<lb/>
Wl<lb/>
hims<lb/>
doub<lb/>
can '<lb/>
se p<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
High-Tech S<lb/>
t UK t iPl <lb/>
Sports ei<lb/>
softbal<lb/>
t ?<lb/>
to reta<lb/>
game<lb/>
W<lb/>
all the ??<lb/>
ecu ?<lb/>
botentia<lb/>
$40 '??<lb/>
fenth<lb/>
turers ? Ha<lb/>
The<lb/>
the : .?<lb/>
lioned<lb/>
the Ai: i<lb/>
lion, will r?<lb/>
dureo h<lb/>
plae:v :<lb/>
of leagues<lb/>
"We<lb/>
forms<lb/>
)ther ev c<lb/>
ace<lb/>
spaldmg, a o<lb/>
the man vs<lb/>
tmcrica's firs ba<lb/>
Fixe yeajs<lb/>
lillion in develop- .<lb/>
jone into :he pnv<lb/>
"ournament Plus B<lb/>
ndered such lol<lb/>
velocity, compressioi<lb/>
?nd aerodynamics in tus<lb/>
'hat they sa <lb/>
players' lament oct ripj<lb/>
:hes, torn leatfi<lb/>
Jballs.<lb/>
Despite the p?<lb/>
lame, players interviewed in 1 s<lb/>
d mi<lb/>
,ner<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057828_0007"/><lb/>
s Anthologized<lb/>
options.<lb/>
Patchett's "All IntleCoi-<lb/>
 Children Should Play the<lb/>
Harmonica" will leave you with a<lb/>
Id's eve view o happiness that<lb/>
rves a second look<lb/>
- antholog) is a must for<lb/>
tie who wants to keep up<lb/>
besi of mericas voung<lb/>
si enjoy some good<lb/>
Spark, 24. was first<lb/>
I squire She was<lb/>
and now holds a<lb/>
i VrN iting fellowship at<lb/>
? w orkshop.<lb/>
HI<lb/>
<lb/>
Aw ,nning<lb/>
i ous Comedy'<lb/>
' 5 pm<lb/>
Performances<lb/>
y &amp; Saturday<lb/>
2 15 pm<lb/>
ATIONS: 757-6390<lb/>
TRACTIONS<lb/>
10, 1986<lb/>
MOVIE<lb/>
K-IN<lb/>
se Room<lb/>
opcorn<lb/>
9LI ' . ov Sf<lb/>
REE MO If s.<lb/>
Outer Space"<lb/>
Town"<lb/>
iMushroom<lb/>
rst OO<lb/>
y 14, 1986<lb/>
a<lb/>
IF<lb/>
heatre<lb/>
MMMi<lb/>
uL<lb/>
I - 0r 4t <lb/>
I HI I AST I AROl INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JULY 9. 1986<lb/>
Page?<lb/>
Senior Plaver Profiled<lb/>
Grady Optimistic For Hoopsters<lb/>
Senior William Gradv (40) soars to the hoop for two against CAA foe<lb/>
lames Madison last vear in Minges Coliseum. Gradv. who prefers the<lb/>
'liink shot, used the glass due to (he situation.<lb/>
By JANET SIMPSON<lb/>
Syorti Writer<lb/>
For quite some time now a<lb/>
debateable point in the world of<lb/>
sports is when does basketball<lb/>
season officially starts? Whether<lb/>
you believe it's October 15, or<lb/>
late November, everyone agrees<lb/>
that the preparation began long<lb/>
before.<lb/>
William 'Shady' Grady, one of<lb/>
the six seniors on this year's<lb/>
Pirate basketball squad, knows<lb/>
all about off-season work. Along<lb/>
with his summer-school classes,<lb/>
Grady is spending his share of<lb/>
time working out.<lb/>
Lifting weights, running, and<lb/>
playing basketball itself, are all<lb/>
part of his routine.<lb/>
Three days a week, Grady can<lb/>
be found amongst the weights at<lb/>
the ECU Strength Complex. "We<lb/>
lift on Monday, Wednesday, and<lb/>
Fridav stated Grady. "I think<lb/>
lifting weights really helps me,<lb/>
especially when it comes down to<lb/>
the last five minutes of the game<lb/>
and you need that extra push<lb/>
The running portion of his<lb/>
routine is something Grady really<lb/>
believes in. "1 do a lot of running<lb/>
to help my calf muscles, helping<lb/>
me jump higher he informed.<lb/>
"When 1 was in high school I ran<lb/>
track and that helped my jump-<lb/>
ing ability<lb/>
Gradv also thinks that playing<lb/>
ball in the summer does improve<lb/>
one's individual game.<lb/>
"1 feel that if you play as much<lb/>
ball as you can in the summer<lb/>
that it will definitely help you<lb/>
play hard and to our best ability<lb/>
everyday when we come out on<lb/>
the court, we should have a very<lb/>
good season<lb/>
Grady also seems to have his<lb/>
head together as well as his game.<lb/>
A good attitude is half the battle<lb/>
and Grady definitely has that.<lb/>
"I'm going into this year with<lb/>
a more confident attitude<lb/>
stated Grady. "Not as far as be-<lb/>
ing the main man, I just want to<lb/>
be a contributer. I want to be part<lb/>
of the team and help them have a<lb/>
winning season. If it comes down<lb/>
for me to just rebound, to play<lb/>
during the summer, I think the<lb/>
transaction should be easy for<lb/>
him commented Grady.<lb/>
"Leon is the type of player that<lb/>
always picks you up continues<lb/>
Grady. "He will definitely be a<lb/>
factor. When Leon plays good,<lb/>
the whole team plays well.<lb/>
"Marchell is a great player and<lb/>
he's going to be our catalyst this<lb/>
year said Grady. "When we<lb/>
need a cruical basket or need<lb/>
somebody who can handle the<lb/>
pressure, we would probably go<lb/>
to Marchell<lb/>
ECU has a special place in<lb/>
William Shady' Grady<lb/>
commented Grady. "It will let<lb/>
you know what you're capable of<lb/>
doing and what you need to work<lb/>
on.<lb/>
"It doesn't matter who you're<lb/>
playing with, whether they're bet-<lb/>
ter than me or not quite as good<lb/>
as I am Grady added, "I will<lb/>
still play hard so I won't get into<lb/>
any bad habits<lb/>
Grady seems quite excited in<lb/>
terms of the upcoming season<lb/>
and the success of the 1986-87<lb/>
Pirates. "I feel really good about<lb/>
going into my senior year<lb/>
stated Gradv. "I feel that if we<lb/>
'l7 feel really good about going into my senior<lb/>
year. I feel that if we play hard and to our best<lb/>
ability everydaywe should have a very good<lb/>
 ?William Grady<lb/>
season.<lb/>
defense, or to stop their best<lb/>
player; that's what I'll do. I'll do<lb/>
whatever it takes to motivate my<lb/>
teammates or help us win<lb/>
Grady's confident attitude<lb/>
doesn't stop at his own doorstep<lb/>
though, it also extends to his<lb/>
senior teammates. He thinks the<lb/>
Keith Sledge move to big guard<lb/>
will go well, that Leon Bass will<lb/>
definitely be a factor this season,<lb/>
and that Marchell Henry will be<lb/>
the team's clutch performer.<lb/>
"If Keith gets confidence in his<lb/>
ball-handling and works hard all<lb/>
King Becker Repeats At Wimbledon<lb/>
B DON Kl I I 11)1,1<lb/>
Sfjxru U rilrr<lb/>
I e Wimbledon 1 awn 11<lb/>
I its<lb/>
?<lb/>
- th the 10<lb/>
te of 1 ibertv, ?<lb/>
?  Wi nbled<lb/>
? symbc ol i Ire<lb/>
n, which lies in<lb/>
. oung<lb/>
compete on the Centre (. ou<lb/>
front of Royalty and the ?<lb/>
millions tor the n - .eted<lb/>
.rown in the history ol I<lb/>
For Boris Beckei .i; d Ma<lb/>
Navratilova, the V<lb/>
dream is<lb/>
f a realitv, leel<lb/>
year old, red-headed W<lb/>
? with a<lb/>
in his eyes, capture<lb/>
Wimbledon . tie in<lb/>
unbelievable fashion Sunday be<lb/>
ng Ivan Lendl ol<lb/>
C zechoslovakia straigl i sets,<lb/>
6-4, 6 3, 7-5.<lb/>
w ? at's more, Beckei proved to<lb/>
himself and to everyone<lb/>
doubted, that he is mature and<lb/>
handle pressure (saving three<lb/>
x Milts in a row again ?' i jndl),<lb/>
and that his 1985 Wimbledon vic-<lb/>
tory was no fluke, hut, in fact,<lb/>
as iusi the beginning,<lb/>
r ven though Bed ci has not<lb/>
. other major even<lb/>
two Wimbledon crowns are sure<lb/>
to place turn high in the history<lb/>
hooks, while his boyish hand-<lb/>
someness and daring athleticism<lb/>
deep in the hearts of<lb/>
people tl '? ovei Because<lb/>
big, the materializa-<lb/>
? his vision represents the<lb/>
success for<lb/>
everyone who has a dream oi his<lb/>
A <lb/>
I : Ivan 1 endl, W imbledon<lb/>
been a difficult test. This was<lb/>
his first final in what has proven<lb/>
to he something o a nightmare<lb/>
e past losing once in<lb/>
round, and another time<lb/>
round.<lb/>
I e vear 1 endl shunned the<lb/>
at w imbledon altogethei.<lb/>
e was allergic to it. He<lb/>
didn't seem o have anv problem<lb/>
on the fairways, so it must have<lb/>
been something about that<lb/>
Wimbledon grass. To his credit.<lb/>
1 end! 'ias matured on the sur-<lb/>
face, learning to play the serve<lb/>
and volley game crucial to winn-<lb/>
ing there, but he nildn't find an<lb/>
answei to Becker's tremendous<lb/>
serve, which was clocked at 156<lb/>
riipri during the tournament. At<lb/>
one point m the third set, Becker<lb/>
aced I endl three straight times,<lb/>
literally blowing the ball by his<lb/>
opponent.<lb/>
But Becker's opponents had to<lb/>
deal with more than just his blaz-<lb/>
ing servt. and timely passing<lb/>
shots, especially on return of<lb/>
serve as one after another tried in<lb/>
vain to take the net. For you see,<lb/>
Becker was somehow destined,<lb/>
fated to win Wimbledon again.<lb/>
1 ime after time he talked of this<lb/>
incredible tingling sensation that<lb/>
ran from the court through his<lb/>
feel and up into his legs and body<lb/>
and into his playing arm and<lb/>
hand, charging it. He felt he<lb/>
couldn't lose, saving "AH during<lb/>
the tournament. I felt very good<lb/>
out there. It seems to be my<lb/>
court " And indeed Becker was<lb/>
the king Sunday and Wimbledon<lb/>
was his court.<lb/>
Almost stealing the show from<lb/>
King Boris was the Queen, Mar-<lb/>
tina Navratilova, who raced away<lb/>
with her record-tying fifth con-<lb/>
secutive Wimbledon singles title<lb/>
and seventh overall with a<lb/>
straight set victory over Hana<lb/>
Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia.<lb/>
7-6, 6-3.<lb/>
Only Suzanne Lenglen, the<lb/>
1920's French star has won as<lb/>
many Wimbledon's in a row.<lb/>
Hana, the graceful shotmaker,<lb/>
disposed of Chris Evert Lloyd in<lb/>
the semifinals to keep the finals<lb/>
from being another Martina and<lb/>
Chris showdown, which I, for<lb/>
one, was very pleased to see hap-<lb/>
pen. And the women gave<lb/>
viewers an aggressive, fast-paced<lb/>
match. Martina's quickness and<lb/>
courage made the difference as<lb/>
she continually took Hana's se-<lb/>
cond serve to the net and won the<lb/>
critical first set tiebreaker. In<lb/>
turn, foiling the jinx which Hana<lb/>
had on her, having won six of<lb/>
eight previous tiebreakers against<lb/>
the world's No. 1 player.<lb/>
Like Becker, Navratilova was<lb/>
not about to let this one get away,<lb/>
having played two weeks of<lb/>
tough matches to gel to the<lb/>
finals. She was intense and utter-<lb/>
ly humorless on crucial points,<lb/>
winning every time she got a<lb/>
break, and she never relinquished<lb/>
her lead once it was established.<lb/>
Navratilova had more than<lb/>
singles business to take care of<lb/>
though. She was also seeking to<lb/>
win the women's doubles with<lb/>
Pam Shriver and the mixed<lb/>
doubles with Heinz Gunthardt of<lb/>
See NAVRATILOVA. page 8<lb/>
High-Tech Softball Won't Turn Mushy<lb/>
HK OPEE, Mass (i pi,<lb/>
Sports enthusiasts ted up with<lb/>
oftballs that turn mushy bv the<lb/>
fifth inning are experimenting<lb/>
with a new high-tech ball molded<lb/>
to retain its shape for an entire<lb/>
game.<lb/>
While batters belt the ball with<lb/>
.ill -he power they can muster, ex-<lb/>
ecutives at Spalding are eying the<lb/>
potential profits of cracking the<lb/>
S40 million annual business cur<lb/>
rently controlled bv manufac-<lb/>
turers in Haiti and the Far East.<lb/>
Ihev claim their innovation,<lb/>
he first molded soft ball sanc-<lb/>
tioned for tournament piay bv<lb/>
he Amateur Softball Associa-<lb/>
tion, will relieve frustrations en-<lb/>
dured by the nation's 40 million<lb/>
players in hundreds of thousands<lb/>
of leagues.<lb/>
"We think our softball per-<lb/>
forms more consistently than any<lb/>
other ever produced said Jack<lb/>
Lacey, vice president of<lb/>
Spalding, a company named after<lb/>
the man who manufactured<lb/>
America's first baseball in 1876.<lb/>
Five years of study and Si<lb/>
million in development costs have<lb/>
gone into the production of<lb/>
Tournament Plus. Researchers<lb/>
pondered such lofty concerns as<lb/>
velocity, compression, resiliency<lb/>
and aerodynamics in turning out<lb/>
what they say is the answer to<lb/>
players' laments over ripped stit-<lb/>
ches, torn leather and lopsided<lb/>
balls.<lb/>
Despite the popularity of the<lb/>
game, players interviewed in Los<lb/>
Angeles, Phoenix, Memphis, Ft<lb/>
1 auderdale and Boston all shared<lb/>
the same gripes. The imported<lb/>
balls lasted only about four inn-<lb/>
ings before losing their roundness<lb/>
and consistency, becoming hard<lb/>
to hit ovals.<lb/>
"The softballs went dead<lb/>
Lacey said. "A batter who hit a<lb/>
homer in the first inning couldn't<lb/>
be confident of doing it again in<lb/>
the fifth" because of the altered<lb/>
state of the ball.<lb/>
Switching to a new ball<lb/>
becomes costly for leagues, with<lb/>
tournament caliber softballs<lb/>
costing about $8 each. Players<lb/>
who did switch complained no<lb/>
two balls were exactly the same.<lb/>
The most popular softballs us-<lb/>
ed in tournaments are the hand-<lb/>
stitched leather exports from<lb/>
Haiti with cork centers made in<lb/>
the United States. Cheaper mold-<lb/>
ed balls from Taiwan are not of a<lb/>
high enough quality to be deemed<lb/>
suitable for tournaments.<lb/>
"Baseball is an instance where<lb/>
handmade doesn't mean better<lb/>
Lacey said. "In terms of<lb/>
payability, handmade means less<lb/>
consistency. Players get used to<lb/>
the feel of a ball in the second or<lb/>
third inning, and it's frustrating<lb/>
to have to switch to another or<lb/>
continue playing with one losing<lb/>
its shape and feel<lb/>
The survey results were turned<lb/>
over to a team of product<lb/>
developers. "Having identified<lb/>
consumer need, we wanted a ball<lb/>
that would perform exactly the<lb/>
same in the seventh inning as in<lb/>
the first Lacey said, "one that<lb/>
wouldn't let a team down in the<lb/>
critical late innings<lb/>
"Our research and develop-<lb/>
ment folks tried out all different<lb/>
kinds of bonding agents and<lb/>
materials, finally deciding upon a<lb/>
molded construction with a<lb/>
polyurethane core and a new syn-<lb/>
thetic called zinthane around it<lb/>
Impressed with the success of<lb/>
the soft cover in Spalding's Tour<lb/>
Edition golf ball, developers<lb/>
found zinthane maintained com-<lb/>
pression without scuffing on<lb/>
baseballs as well. Since there are<lb/>
no seams, there's no tearing. And<lb/>
there is a gritty texture that<lb/>
makes it easy to grip.<lb/>
Independent tests show the ball<lb/>
outperforms every leading sofi-<lb/>
ball in its retention of compres-<lb/>
sion, an essential measuring stick<lb/>
of durability, Lacey said.<lb/>
Players in New York, Vermont<lb/>
and Masachusetts are testing the<lb/>
latest addition to the softball<lb/>
scene, and initial results are en-<lb/>
couraging.<lb/>
Designers even kept tradition<lb/>
in mind in designing the white<lb/>
surface by including stitch marks<lb/>
that are purely cosmetic.<lb/>
"Consumer perception is im-<lb/>
portant Lacey said. "We<lb/>
wanted the ball to look like the<lb/>
ones people are used to seeing<lb/>
Grady's life as well as his heart.<lb/>
"When I leave here I want people<lb/>
to know where East Carolina is. I<lb/>
don't want this to be just like any<lb/>
other school, 1 want this school<lb/>
to be special commented<lb/>
Grady.<lb/>
"This place is so nice and I had<lb/>
a very easy time adjusting.<lb/>
Everyone treated me nice and<lb/>
now I'm at the point where I feel<lb/>
I owe this town something. I tee!<lb/>
that if we aren't successful this<lb/>
year that things just wouldn't feel<lb/>
right<lb/>
Morrison Named<lb/>
ECU Golf Coach<lb/>
ssivliMrt! RrorU<lb/>
There will be a new man in<lb/>
charge of the ECU golf team next<lb/>
year. Hal Morrison, a veteran<lb/>
collegiate golf coach with 12<lb/>
NCAA AU-Americans to his<lb/>
credit, will take over for one-year<lb/>
coach Don Sweeting, Dr. Ken<lb/>
Karr, director of athletics, an-<lb/>
nounced last week.<lb/>
Morrison comes to ECU after<lb/>
serving as the head coach at<lb/>
Methodist College in Fayetteville.<lb/>
However, he is best known for<lb/>
his head coaching work while at<lb/>
East Tennessee State ? where he<lb/>
coached from 1958-1983. Among<lb/>
the top players under Morrison at<lb/>
ETSU were Bobby Wadkins,<lb/>
J.C. Snead and Mike Hulbert.<lb/>
Morrison led five ETSU teams<lb/>
into the NCAA championships<lb/>
after the Bucs joined the<lb/>
Division-I ranks in 1969. The<lb/>
Kingsport, Tenn native has<lb/>
twice coached top-ten finishers<lb/>
and his ETSU squad placed sixth<lb/>
and seventh in the nation in 1975<lb/>
and '76 respectively. Morrison<lb/>
has also been named conference<lb/>
coach-of-the-year on i0 occasi-<lb/>
sions in the Ohio Valley and<lb/>
Southern Conferences.<lb/>
Morrison was selected in 1975<lb/>
as a 1975 charter inductee into<lb/>
the ETSU Athletic Hall of Fame,<lb/>
and most recently inducted into<lb/>
the State of Tennessee Sports<lb/>
Hall of Fame in 1985.<lb/>
"I'm very excited to have the<lb/>
opportunity here at East<lb/>
Carolina Morrison said. "ECU<lb/>
has the potential to have a top-<lb/>
notch golf program and I'm<lb/>
looking forward to the<lb/>
challenge<lb/>
JB HUMIERT - The Eisl ClrMinun<lb/>
The Pirate golfers will have another new coach next year.<lb/>
Rozelle Implements Drug Testing<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
Wed, July 9,121<lb/>
A ruling by the director of<lb/>
 public saftey in Pittsburgh<lb/>
allows fans to keep any<lb/>
baseball hit into the stands.<lb/>
I Three fans had threatened to<lb/>
 sue when they were arrested for<lb/>
falling to return foul bafts to<lb/>
 the pitying field; only after the<lb/>
 ruling are they allowed to keep<lb/>
the souvc<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
And<lb/>
RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Spore Mltor<lb/>
In following up on last week's<lb/>
story concerning the question of<lb/>
mandatory drug testing, NFL<lb/>
commissioner Pete Rozelle sup-<lb/>
plied a sufficient answer by in-<lb/>
stituting a league-wide man-<lb/>
datory drug-testing program.<lb/>
The new policy will take effect<lb/>
at the start of the 1986 season ?<lb/>
with the players entering training<lb/>
camp.<lb/>
The random testing will be<lb/>
confidential and there is a sort of<lb/>
"three strikes and your're out"<lb/>
policy here. First, any player re-<lb/>
quiring hospitalization<lb/>
(rehabilitation, as more common-<lb/>
ly known) for substance abuse<lb/>
will be removed from the team's<lb/>
roster for 30 days and will receive<lb/>
one-half of his salary. A second<lb/>
hospitalization would mean<lb/>
removal from the team's roster<lb/>
for 30 days with no pay.<lb/>
If the player should relapse and<lb/>
test positive again, the player<lb/>
would be banned from the<lb/>
league. However, Rozelle added<lb/>
that "every individual case is dif-<lb/>
ferent" and that a player could<lb/>
apply to be reinstated after just<lb/>
one year.<lb/>
Under Rozelle's program,<lb/>
drugs to be tested for include: co-<lb/>
caine, marijuana, opiates, PCP,<lb/>
amphetamines and alcohol.<lb/>
The basis of the new plan is to<lb/>
remove the league office and<lb/>
member clubs from the ad-<lb/>
ministration of the testing and<lb/>
treatment aspects of the program<lb/>
as much as possible.<lb/>
However, a monkey wrench<lb/>
has been thrown into Rozelle's<lb/>
plans. The NFL Players Associa-<lb/>
tion will not accept the program<lb/>
because it represents an<lb/>
unauthorized change in the cur-<lb/>
rent collective bargaining agree-<lb/>
ment between the Players<lb/>
Association and the NFL<lb/>
Management Council which was<lb/>
ratified in 1982.<lb/>
"We simpiy cannot agree that<lb/>
Rozelle has the authority to<lb/>
unilaterally change the terms of<lb/>
out agreement NFLPA Presi-<lb/>
dent Gene Upshaw said. "The<lb/>
agreement reached in 1982 is final<lb/>
and binding on all parties, and its<lb/>
terms cannot be changed in mid-<lb/>
term except on consent<lb/>
Rozelle justified the basis of<lb/>
the new program, saying "You<lb/>
have to find out if there is a pro-<lb/>
blem before you can stop a major<lb/>
problem from developing. You<lb/>
need testing<lb/>
One point in the program will<lb/>
require that players undergo<lb/>
more frequent urine testing (in-<lb/>
cluding two unscheduled tests<lb/>
during the season) for every<lb/>
player in the league.<lb/>
Rozelle named chemical-<lb/>
treatment dependency expert Dr.<lb/>
Forest Tennant Jr as drug ad-<lb/>
visor and will be in charge of the<lb/>
program. Tennant said: "From a<lb/>
medical perspective I don't know<lb/>
how there can be a challenge (to<lb/>
the program)<lb/>
wH  1 r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057828_0008"/><lb/>
! Hi ! AMI AROUN1AN<lb/>
H 1 Y 9, 1986<lb/>
Navratilova Wins Fifth Title<lb/>
( ontinued from page 7<lb/>
Switzerland. Had she been suc-<lb/>
essful, she would have done<lb/>
a hat no one had done since BUlie<lb/>
(can King in 1973.<lb/>
First she teamed with Pam<lb/>
Shrivel to lake the doubles title in<lb/>
straight sets over Hana<lb/>
Vlandlikova and Wendy Turn-<lb/>
bull. But latei in the day with all<lb/>
the pressure on Gunthardl to per-<lb/>
form well foi Martina's sake, her<lb/>
opes were shattered as<lb/>
Vmericans Ken Rach and Kathy<lb/>
Ian beat them in an exciting<lb/>
highlighted by Jordan's<lb/>
ustlc and great volleying. Her<lb/>
iei 1 lach played up to stan-<lb/>
dards, a- tie is a premiere doubles<lb/>
specialist with Robert Seguso.<lb/>
Together they represent the U.S.<lb/>
Davis Cup Team<lb/>
All in all, it was an interna-<lb/>
tional finale as Mats Wilander<lb/>
and Joskim Nystrom rounded<lb/>
out the activities, taking the<lb/>
men's doubles title over<lb/>
Americans Gary Donnelly and<lb/>
Peter Fleming ? who proved<lb/>
that there is life after John P.<lb/>
McEnroe. Jr. With the Swedes,<lb/>
(who became the first of theirs n<lb/>
over 30 years to win the doubles<lb/>
crown), the American mixed<lb/>
doubles pair, the Czech-<lb/>
American women's duo, the all-<lb/>
Czech women's singles final, and<lb/>
the West German-<lb/>
Chechoslovakian men's singles<lb/>
final, Wimbledon '86 truly<lb/>
showcased the world's finest<lb/>
talent.<lb/>
The best athlete with the<lb/>
courage to dream takes the silver<lb/>
at the All England Club. There,<lb/>
two weeks of continual play<lb/>
wears down the grass creating<lb/>
bad bounces, and the prestige ol<lb/>
the title and the focus of the<lb/>
world create pressures and op-<lb/>
portunities unequalled elsewhere<lb/>
on the tour. Speed, strength,<lb/>
reflexes, and desire is what win-<lb/>
ners are made of at Wimbledon<lb/>
? not to mention forte. And for<lb/>
the others who showed<lb/>
remarkable progress and talent,<lb/>
ihe future is theirs if they keep<lb/>
dreaming big.<lb/>
2 Piece Chicken Combo<lb/>
(Original Recipe- or<lb/>
Extra CrispyTM<lb/>
1 Small Mashed Potato<lb/>
&amp; Gravy<lb/>
1 Biscuit<lb/>
1 Medium Drink<lb/>
cat pos<lb/>
OR<lb/>
6 Kentucky Nuggets<lb/>
Kentucky Fries<lb/>
1 Large Drink<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
We Do Chicken Right<lb/>
Expires 8-20-86<lb/>
-COUPON<lb/>
plus tax<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
(ORD PROCESSING We offer ex<lb/>
n typing resumes, theses<lb/>
ana term<lb/>
 i"anage and merge your<lb/>
? , ? ? ses into merged<lb/>
iopes or rolodex<lb/>
ar extremely<lb/>
? ? i ways offer a 15<lb/>
unl to ECU students.<lb/>
106 East Fifth Street<lb/>
RINGOLD TOWERS: Most conve<lb/>
ment location to campus' Fully fur<lb/>
rushed condos (except linens)<lb/>
priced from $30's S50 s Some owner<lb/>
financing available University<lb/>
Realty 355 5866<lb/>
FOR SALE: Window Fan $11 Ken<lb/>
more Efficiency Refngeratior $170<lb/>
Electric Burners $15 Compac'<lb/>
Cassette Player $7 752 1562<lb/>
FOR SALE : Bunk beds, sturdy pine<lb/>
and handmade $75 Call 752 0319<lb/>
OR SALE<lb/>
Trailer<lb/>
aryer<lb/>
S176 95<lb/>
wanted<lb/>
155'<lb/>
OR SALE ' true you can buy<lb/>
A4 through the u S<lb/>
' ? facts today!<lb/>
5271 -A<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Neec<lb/>
female roommate inon smoke<lb/>
siare a completely furnished<lb/>
3 bedroom 'ownhouse Share<lb/>
utilities Has washer dryer ano<lb/>
pool Call 752 5929 or 1 346 6916<lb/>
HUNGRY PIRATE<lb/>
The<lb/>
Biggest<lb/>
Burr it o!<lb/>
$2.75<lb/>
Served<lb/>
2-5 Weekdays<lb/>
11-5 Weekends<lb/>
7571666<lb/>
<lb/>
Kver Thursday Night Is<lb/>
TACO NIGHT<lb/>
Two Great Tacos for only. 99<lb/>
60 oz. Pitchers $1.99<lb/>
Offer Good From 7p.m11 p.m. ? Not Valid on Deliveries<lb/>
Every Tuesday Night Is<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
Free Delivery for $5.00 &amp; Over Purchases<lb/>
7 p.m. to 11 p.m.<lb/>
99C SUBS<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
Ham &amp; Cheese Bologna &amp; Cheese<lb/>
Ham, Salami &amp; Cheese Pepperont. Salami &amp; Cheese<lb/>
Turkey &amp;. Cheese Ham, Turkey &amp; Cheese<lb/>
NOT VALID ON DELIVERIES<lb/>
60 oz. pitchers $1.99<lb/>
includes tax<lb/>
ALL DAY FRIDAY<lb/>
32 oz. Bucket of Your Favorite Draft<lb/>
99C<lb/>
215 E. Fourth Street<lb/>
752-2183<lb/>
A<lb/>
BABYSITTERS: Babys rters need<lb/>
ed at various times for two children.<lb/>
Experience and own transportation<lb/>
required 756 2684<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Room<lb/>
mate to share 2 bedroom townhouse<lb/>
arge private bedroom AC cable.<lb/>
dus servicf I. . I n shed<lb/>
$145 month plus ul - ? , As for<lb/>
Jay 830 0486 or 752 3765<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED Respons.<lb/>
ble female rt rr ? ?te ta td to share<lb/>
2 bearoc n apt. ! " ano ?<lb/>
 ties Call 758 8051<lb/>
GrfJ<lb/>
lad<lb/>
Sa<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
rtce<lb/>
TUTOR<lb/>
752 2579<lb/>
' ' Ca<lb/>
1 Hi In 4? ABORTIONS I Aitfri TO 12th MA KM oi iri (, a '??? V weeks ai mr A Z&amp;t '? C unselinji 1.?? i unl ex inl i matii call S32-053? VTT RALEIGH WOMEN'S WJte- HEALTH f ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
FOUND NEAR AUSTIN: Lady S UK<lb/>
qoic ? " &amp;38 8<lb/>
desc<lb/>
PACKS. TOWS. COTS. SHOVELS.<lb/>
 MESS KITS CANTEENS. FATIGUES. V<lb/>
, RAINWEAR T-SHMTS. ENAMELWAAE<lb/>
. WORK CLOTHES. 2100 OFFERENT ITEMS<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE .<lb/>
11<lb/>
 aw. a ,m ?? ?h<lb/>
Special<lb/>
85 Item<lb/>
Salad and<lb/>
Hot Bar<lb/>
All You<lb/>
Can Eat<lb/>
$2<lb/>
4 yieat place try eatf<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
CO KROGERINC FOR ALL YOUR<lb/>
Tailgate Party<lb/>
Needs!<lb/>
A<lb/>
I I) X XJ( I<lb/>
CASE SALE<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
24<lb/>
12<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
999<lb/>
OLD FASHIONED<lb/>
Hand Dippin'<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
389<lb/>
01<lb/>
Pail<lb/>
OOQwOOCOC . OOCwRwwCx - - CutoCw.w.<lb/>
V,<lb/>
rx 1 mi<lb/>
X XJO t<lb/>
- X 1;<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
NR6<lb/>
COKE DIET COKE CHEW<lb/>
COKE CAFFEINE FREE OR<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
Classic<lb/>
M 15<lb/>
SWIFT CANNED<lb/>
Hostess<lb/>
Ham . . .<lb/>
CALIFORNIA CRISP CEBERG<lb/>
$698<lb/>
Head<lb/>
Lettuce<lb/>
48c<lb/>
BRIGHT<lb/>
Gallon<lb/>
Bleach f<lb/>
Ga<lb/>
39c<lb/>
USDA CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN<lb/>
GRAIN FED BEEF CENTERCUT<lb/>
BONELESS<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
98?<lb/>
SWEET JUICY<lb/>
KROGER GRADE A<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
California<lb/>
Nectarines<lb/>
49?<lb/>
VHS Video Movie Rentals<lb/>
Ea ???? ??? Mwrtal<lb/>
Hundred of tmvortto movimo<lb/>
to ehoomm from!<lb/>
REGULAR OR DIP STYLE<lb/>
Country Oven<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
$<lb/>
16<lb/>
Ox<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
?J58<lb/>
FRESH FRIED<lb/>
12 Pc Wishbone<lb/>
Fried Chicken<lb/>
12<lb/>
Pc<lb/>
Bkl<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Eacn of these advertised<lb/>
Items Is required to be<lb/>
readily available tor sale in<lb/>
each Kroger Sav on except<lb/>
as speclflcany noted In this<lb/>
ad tf we do run out of an<lb/>
Item we will offer you your<lb/>
choice of a comparable<lb/>
Item when available<lb/>
reflecting trie same sav<lb/>
logs or a ralncneck wnicn<lb/>
will entitle you to our<lb/>
crtase the advertised item<lb/>
at the advertised price<lb/>
within jo days Only one<lb/>
vendor coupon will be ac<lb/>
cepted per item<lb/>
csovgnt -lai<lb/>
?'09?f Sav or<lb/>
Ouantity ngnn tewvec<lb/>
Hon soia to oeaie<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd Greenville<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057828_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>