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<pb facs="00057829_0001"/>
?te i?nzt (HutolMnn<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.60 Nod- CL<lb/>
Wednesday, July 16, 1986<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulations.000<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Community Programs<lb/>
Planned For Future<lb/>
Howell Reflects<lb/>
J B HUMBERT The Ei) Carolinian<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell will be retiring in 1987. During Howell's reign as Chancellor ECU became<lb/>
known as one of the most recognized schools in the south and added to it's facilities the ECU Medical<lb/>
School. See related story page 1.<lb/>
Study Abroad<lb/>
By MIKE LUDWICK<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
In the upcoming years, ECU<lb/>
will strive to adapt its existing<lb/>
programs to better serve eastern<lb/>
North Carolina and even the na-<lb/>
tion, said Chancellor John<lb/>
Howell in an interview Friday.<lb/>
Howell said serving the people<lb/>
around an institution and prepar-<lb/>
ing students in those institutions<lb/>
is the key to surviving in the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
"We are at a transition stage in<lb/>
higher education Howell said,<lb/>
"We have to prepare our<lb/>
students to solve problems our<lb/>
professors don't even know-<lb/>
exist<lb/>
"This is a tall order he add-<lb/>
ed, but if ECU does this well then<lb/>
eastern North Carolina will<lb/>
flourish. Howell said if eastern<lb/>
North Carolina flourishes then<lb/>
ECU will flourish.<lb/>
"ECU is attuned to eastern<lb/>
North Carolina and its people<lb/>
he said, "We want our professors<lb/>
to go out in the community and<lb/>
offer their expertise<lb/>
Applied research is the majori-<lb/>
ty of the research conducted at<lb/>
ECU explained Howell. Applied<lb/>
research is applying one's<lb/>
knowledge to a situation. "We<lb/>
need to do a lot of it for eastern<lb/>
North Carolina Howell said.<lb/>
When Howell became<lb/>
Chancellor in 1982 there was a lot<lb/>
of in-state opposition to ECU.<lb/>
Howell said, though, that this<lb/>
situation is now coming to an<lb/>
end.<lb/>
"What we have had<lb/>
throughout our history is some<lb/>
fiery opposition by people who<lb/>
thought they would be disadvan-<lb/>
taged by the advancement of<lb/>
ECU Howell said.<lb/>
The last big battles, Howell ex-<lb/>
plained, were over ECU's univer-<lb/>
sity status and it's Medical<lb/>
School.<lb/>
"There is a change in opinion<lb/>
about ECU ? not in excellence<lb/>
he said. Howell added in the last<lb/>
five years the faculty has publish-<lb/>
ed the same amount as had been<lb/>
published in the preceeding 10<lb/>
years. In other words, the facul-<lb/>
ty's publication rate has doubled.<lb/>
Howell is optimistic abou the<lb/>
future too. He said ECU has<lb/>
established itself, has a wide<lb/>
range of programs, and commit-<lb/>
ted faculty and students.<lb/>
"We have a solid foundation<lb/>
for the future Howell said,<lb/>
"and we have the mind set to<lb/>
develop<lb/>
Another importan factor,<lb/>
Howell said, is the attitude of the<lb/>
students. "Students come here to<lb/>
get an education he said,<lb/>
"They come to prepare<lb/>
themselves for a career and this<lb/>
See ECU Page 2.<lb/>
Italian Exchanges Planned<lb/>
By HEI'H WHICKER<lb/>
Vivian! Se?N rdiior<lb/>
Be. fall ECU will<lb/>
rec-yea an of in-<lb/>
struct with the<lb/>
Universitj ??? Fi il<lb/>
Eugene Ryan, dean of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences, described the program<lb/>
as "an exchange agreement<lb/>
which provides for the develop-<lb/>
ment of cultural and academic<lb/>
relationships between the two in-<lb/>
stitutions.<lb/>
Ryan explained the idea to<lb/>
a program arcd in-<lb/>
struction has been in the making<lb/>
for four years. During the pro-<lb/>
cess oi developing the program<lb/>
he met with officials oi the<lb/>
Italian campus in planning the<lb/>
final details of the project.<lb/>
'We wanted to develop closer<lb/>
ties with this program and Fer-<lb/>
rara was the logical choice said<lb/>
Ryan.<lb/>
lor several years ECU has<lb/>
sponsored a summer school pro-<lb/>
gram in Ferrara, where American<lb/>
students spend several weeks at<lb/>
the Italian campus, participating<lb/>
in arts, humanities, and social<lb/>
science classes which emphasize<lb/>
European culture in general and<lb/>
Italian culture in particular.<lb/>
"We planned to get a group<lb/>
together this year, but due to ter-<lb/>
rorism abroad, there wasn't<lb/>
enough interest Ryan said.<lb/>
In the past two years students<lb/>
have visited Italy through the<lb/>
summer exchange program.<lb/>
"It's a great program for<lb/>
undergraduate students studying<lb/>
the arts, science, or history.<lb/>
Graduate students can benefit by<lb/>
doing research in Italy com-<lb/>
mented Ryan.<lb/>
Not only will the exchange pro-<lb/>
gram be offered to students but<lb/>
to administrators, librarians, and<lb/>
technical staff as well.<lb/>
The program includes the ex-<lb/>
change oi publications and spon-<lb/>
sorship of occasional "joint<lb/>
symnposia The agreement will<lb/>
be in force for three years.<lb/>
ECU will gain much from the<lb/>
program with the University of<lb/>
Ferrara. According to Ryan ECU<lb/>
will add another dimension to its<lb/>
curriculum by offering the ex-<lb/>
change program with the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Ferrara.<lb/>
"In coming years, a number of<lb/>
students will experience life in a<lb/>
different culture ? Firsthand<lb/>
Ryan said.<lb/>
Rapist's Death Scheduled<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (UP1) ?<lb/>
Convicted murderer and rapist<lb/>
John Rook is scheduled to be ex-<lb/>
ecuted Sept. 19 for the 1980 slay-<lb/>
ing of Raleigh nurse, Ann Marie<lb/>
Roche.<lb/>
Judge Robert Farmer set the<lb/>
date in a 15-minute hearing Tues-<lb/>
day in Wake County Superior<lb/>
Court, where Rook, 27, was con-<lb/>
victed and sentenced six years ago<lb/>
for the kidnapping, rape and<lb/>
murder of Roche. Roche was<lb/>
beaten with a tire iron, slashed<lb/>
with a fishing knife, run over by a<lb/>
car and left to die in an isolated<lb/>
field.<lb/>
Rook had been scheduled to<lb/>
die by lethal injection Valentine's<lb/>
Day this year, but the Supreme<lb/>
Court granted him a stay of ex-<lb/>
ecution Feb. 10 ? the third time<lb/>
his execution date had been<lb/>
postponed.<lb/>
The new execution date was set<lb/>
after the Supreme Court denied<lb/>
Rook's appeal July 7. State law<lb/>
requires an execution date to be<lb/>
set 60 to 90 days after the<lb/>
Superior Court hearing.<lb/>
Two death row inmates have<lb/>
been executed in North Carolina<lb/>
since the death penalty was<lb/>
remstituted in 1976.<lb/>
David Rudolf, Rook's at-<lb/>
torney, has said he believes the<lb/>
issues raised in his client's appeal<lb/>
have merit. Rudolf had hoped to<lb/>
argue before the Supreme Court<lb/>
that a taped confession was il-<lb/>
legally obtained and therefore<lb/>
unreliable. He also claimed the<lb/>
trial judge erred in instructing the<lb/>
jury and that death penalty op-<lb/>
ponents were systematically ex-<lb/>
cluded from the jury.<lb/>
Rudolf also planned to argue<lb/>
Rook was an abused child, who<lb/>
the stale failed to help. As part of<lb/>
the appeals process, Rudolf in-<lb/>
troduced as evidence that Rook<lb/>
would have qualified as a Willie<lb/>
M child. In 1980, state officials<lb/>
agreed to provide appropriate<lb/>
treatment and education for such<lb/>
problem children.<lb/>
Rudolf also had argued in<lb/>
Rook's case that the death penal-<lb/>
ty discriminated against the<lb/>
murderers of white victims.<lb/>
Before adjourning for a three-<lb/>
month break, the Supreme Court<lb/>
last week decided to review<lb/>
whether the death penalty is im-<lb/>
posed in a racially discriminatory<lb/>
way as presented in a Georgia<lb/>
case.<lb/>
Based on that ruling, Rudolf<lb/>
asked Farmer to hold off the ex-<lb/>
ecution date until after Oct. 6,<lb/>
when the Supreme Court is<lb/>
scheduled to reconvene.<lb/>
Extreme Caution, Awareness Cited In Rape Prevention<lb/>
By LYNN WEAVER<lb/>
Maff Writer<lb/>
Recent studies by the<lb/>
Behavioral Science Unit of the<lb/>
FBI Academy in Virginia, made<lb/>
it clear that there is no valid in-<lb/>
formation about what women<lb/>
can do to defend themselves dur-<lb/>
ing a sexual attack Doctors inter-<lb/>
viewed men who had raped ten or<lb/>
more women and results were not<lb/>
only surprising, but also con-<lb/>
tradictory.<lb/>
The rapists advice to women<lb/>
was so different that the doctors<lb/>
decided it could be hazadous to<lb/>
offer the advice.<lb/>
Although the results to the<lb/>
study seemed negative, Lt. Keith<lb/>
Knox, Crime Prevention officer<lb/>
at ECU Public Saftey and Officer<lb/>
James Tripp, Juvenile Division<lb/>
of the Greenville Police Depart-<lb/>
ment, both feel there are actions<lb/>
that can be taken.<lb/>
They agree the use of general<lb/>
caution and alertness can help<lb/>
prevent the risk of being attack-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Considering the recent rapes in<lb/>
the Greenville area, women are<lb/>
advised to keep alert to where the<lb/>
rapes have taken place and use<lb/>
extreme caution in these areas.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifieds10<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features6<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
Win if you can, lose if you<lb/>
must, but learn to take your<lb/>
whippings without a whimper.<lb/>
? Walter Camp<lb/>
Knox and Tripp advise women<lb/>
to use general safety tips such as;<lb/>
don't travel alone at night, keep<lb/>
doors and windows locked, and<lb/>
be alert.<lb/>
Another tip they add is to keep<lb/>
keys in hand when walking,<lb/>
because if needed they could be<lb/>
used as a weapon in self defense.<lb/>
Even when extreme caution is<lb/>
used, women still have a chance<lb/>
of being attacked.<lb/>
National studies state that one<lb/>
out of every three women is sex-<lb/>
ually assaulted.<lb/>
When a woman is attacked she<lb/>
should keep her thoughts straight<lb/>
and reflect on any self defense<lb/>
tactics that could be used in her<lb/>
particular situation.<lb/>
According to May Lystead,<lb/>
chief of the National Center for<lb/>
the Prevention and Control of<lb/>
Rape, there is little truth to the<lb/>
myth that resistance will increase<lb/>
a woman's risk of being injured.<lb/>
Lystead states, "Two new<lb/>
studies found that women who<lb/>
resisted an attack were more like-<lb/>
ly to escape, with only slight<lb/>
bodily injury<lb/>
She added women who acted<lb/>
passively and cried made<lb/>
themselves look unappealing and<lb/>
defenseless, which made their at-<lb/>
tackers seem more powerful. In<lb/>
short submissive victims are more<lb/>
likely to be raped and the resis-<lb/>
tant victims were more likely to<lb/>
escape.<lb/>
Although the FBI's studies are<lb/>
contradictory, they have to be<lb/>
taken into account. The men who<lb/>
had raped mass amounts of<lb/>
women proved to have many dif-<lb/>
ferent motives and ideas about<lb/>
the rapes and the victims.<lb/>
"Some of the rapists said, 'Tell<lb/>
them to scream, fight, and claw<lb/>
like hell but others said, 'Tell<lb/>
women to give in, because the<lb/>
guy is going to rape her no matter<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
what he has to do states the<lb/>
report.<lb/>
Knox explained there are many<lb/>
different factors involved with<lb/>
each situation. Specific advice<lb/>
can not be given to women unless<lb/>
a specific situation can be made.<lb/>
Victims should try to figure out<lb/>
the rapist's motives and then<lb/>
decide which approach they<lb/>
should take, whether it be<lb/>
resistance or submission.<lb/>
Surviving a sexual attack is the<lb/>
most important thing to<lb/>
remember.<lb/>
When followed, the above ad-<lb/>
vice could help prevent an attack.<lb/>
If by chance a rape happened<lb/>
to occur here are some steps to<lb/>
follow:<lb/>
?The victim should try to gather<lb/>
her thoughts, stay calm and get to<lb/>
a safe place. Call or alert so-<lb/>
meone that help is needed. The<lb/>
Police Department is available to<lb/>
help. A victim is not obligated to<lb/>
prosecute.<lb/>
?If the authorities have not<lb/>
already been notified, report the<lb/>
attack as soon as possible. If<lb/>
there is physical injury go im-<lb/>
mediately to a local hospital. Do<lb/>
not change your clothing or clean<lb/>
yourself off. Do not apply<lb/>
medication.<lb/>
?Victims are advised to receive<lb/>
pregnancy and venereal disease<lb/>
testing.<lb/>
?Even if the woman decides not<lb/>
to prosecute, she should seek<lb/>
psychological counseling. (in<lb/>
Greenville rape victims can call<lb/>
the Pitt County Mental Health<lb/>
Center at 752-7151 or East<lb/>
Carolina Student Counselina<lb/>
Center at 757-6661.)<lb/>
Most victims will be advised to<lb/>
prosecute, but just reporting the<lb/>
sexual assault is a vital step in fin-<lb/>
ding and arresting the rapist.<lb/>
Knox stated although it may<lb/>
be difficult for the victim, thev<lb/>
????,?<lb/>
might include some small detail<lb/>
of information about the attack<lb/>
that would help the police locate<lb/>
the rapists.<lb/>
A rapist will usually repeat his<lb/>
sexual attacks against women.<lb/>
"Virtually there has never been<lb/>
a one time rapist added Knox.<lb/>
Considering the increasing<lb/>
amount of local rapes, people<lb/>
should know how to report a sex-<lb/>
ual assault or rape they might<lb/>
hear or see. Citizens should give<lb/>
their precise location, who they<lb/>
are and the phone number of the<lb/>
phone the call is being made on.<lb/>
The witness should describe the<lb/>
individual as completely as possi-<lb/>
ble, which will help with locating<lb/>
the rapist for arrest.<lb/>
"If you come upon an actual<lb/>
sexual assault or rape taking<lb/>
place, start shouting as loud as<lb/>
possible while approaching the<lb/>
scene cautiously advises Knox.<lb/>
Get as good of a mental<lb/>
description as possible of what is<lb/>
happening and of the rapist. The<lb/>
witness should also try to gain<lb/>
other's attention, by either call-<lb/>
ing the police or alerting<lb/>
neighbors.<lb/>
Knox alerts people to, "If you<lb/>
see any woman being grabbed or<lb/>
pushed and she seems reluctant<lb/>
inform the law enforcement<lb/>
agencies, because this report<lb/>
could possibly prevent a rape<lb/>
from actually taking place<lb/>
Rapes can easily be prevented<lb/>
either by the women themselves<lb/>
or by another citizen.<lb/>
Dress Rehearsal<lb/>
i ? HUMBERT -Th?e??tCro(ini?n<lb/>
Boniu Williams and Olivia Scott, costume assistants are shown above working on a "mock-up" of a<lb/>
costume to be used during the East Carolina Playhouse production of " Greater Tuna The produc-<lb/>
tion is scheduled to run July 28 through August 2.<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057829_0002"/><lb/>
y<lb/>
(HI 1 M i R(U IM-W<lb/>
Jll Y 16. 1986<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Summer Games<lb/>
Ushers Needed<lb/>
ECU's Expansion<lb/>
i.<lb/>
<lb/>
?. ?<lb/>
. ??<lb/>
. <lb/>
ii the ?ir$i a<lb/>
-<lb/>
??? ?. -f ? ested see<lb/>
' t ' ? r A' ? . ? ' - T hf<lb/>
1 '? Q ' ' ?' Oca" h ai a, st-?- ?' en<lb/>
???? A s. . -g. A i1 A<lb/>
"?? rhesig up sheets are located ? " ??<lb/>
.?? board I ei K rooti n.<lb/>
Mess . ? ? ??  ? h ding I H ? ' ?'<lb/>
qutremei is are posted ?? " sigi up sheet'<lb/>
Please . I ?? -? a v<lb/>
Watermelon Feast<lb/>
? ? ? <lb/>
Chinese Language I.<lb/>
? .  ?  ? ? ? . esi . ? ?<lb/>
 us ?ti dv - ' ?? '<lb/>
Tfinjg vo seeVi" o let v  ' fl<lb/>
n 'he d?S skills of i lerstai ? ? - speak<lb/>
S reading and writ g ????? " <lb/>
 be able to understand oat eseand<lb/>
sir vi-s as a excellent prepare'<lb/>
ed study or for a pi -i a<lb/>
wl ? understanding ot Chma s ess<lb/>
' ?. ???. will be 'a  ' ' ? ?  ? ?<lb/>
Unjfv ' im 1 OG pn<lb/>
Brewsipr C30?<lb/>
Japanese Language<lb/>
 . ?<lb/>
'?? At A  ,<lb/>
icadi<lb/>
?<lb/>
: " ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
1  ' " v<lb/>
( ontinued From Pay,? '<lb/>
makes a good educational set<lb/>
ting<lb/>
Howell added the Med School<lb/>
will continue to grow<lb/>
He said the Med Sch<lb/>
hospital h.a ??? ompleted<lb/>
theii tits! phase, "die basics<lb/>
and w ill mm expand<lb/>
v mg vs it h an expand ?<lb/>
medical park, he said. will K<lb/>
developmeni ol all the periferial<lb/>
setKCs thai grow up along side a<lb/>
major medical pai H well<lb/>
this will nol only improve<lb/>
As H I grows. Howell -?<lb/>
plained, the fund raisinj<lb/>
a E l will have to continue<lb/>
 nl in die iasi tew vear- I<lb/>
'?rsines realized tl I<lb/>
need ? money<lb/>
?(<lb/>
How<lb/>
and slatted an instltutioi<lb/>
H ?-<lb/>
?<lb/>
Mi H iwell' ? ? live<lb/>
a ? e univei<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Voice<lb/>
l(i you think state, local, or na-<lb/>
tional governments should<lb/>
legislate morals?<lb/>
<lb/>
M9W<lb/>
s.<lb/>
JL.?<lb/>
 N.?-<lb/>
1 auricHillis<lb/>
Senior, Socu H?rA<lb/>
V- ausea peihou<lb/>
set?<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT JULY 19 AT SAV A CENTER IN GREENVIl LE<lb/>
WE RESE<lb/>
IESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES aa'Bt aflLWS<lb/>
waiikwmisi:<lb/>
pumis<lb/>
OIIALITYTW<lb/>
and ??<lb/>
Plus Jouble 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 Week Food<lb/>
Store Ad With You. We Will Match Like Items ov Eqral Quality.<lb/>
Richard Pond<lb/>
Senior. History<lb/>
"Yes, there should be a basis<lb/>
and it should start with the<lb/>
government instead of a tree-tor -<lb/>
DUKE'S<lb/>
W Mayonnaise<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL ??? jfaPLV -1<lb/>
PURCHASE AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE M ? ? ?"<lb/>
L 3T i or<lb/>
CORN ? NACHO ? COOL RANCH<lb/>
Doritos Tortilla Chips<lb/>
i69<lb/>
Mark Pepper<lb/>
Junior, Physical Education<lb/>
"No. The reason is 1 think my<lb/>
parents brought me up right to<lb/>
where I can choose my own<lb/>
morals<lb/>
FLAV O-RICH ,?o<lb/>
Gallon Milk<lb/>
58<lb/>
gal.<lb/>
jug<lb/>
1<lb/>
REGULAR ? LIGHT<lb/>
Old Milwaukee<lb/>
ctn of<lb/>
12 oz.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY 7 A.M.?11 RM. WEHM 703 GREENVILLE BLVD. ? OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
North (<lb/>
Fit<lb/>
41 V<lb/>
1 hr ft run<lb/>
N?BJ<lb/>
w<lb/>
10<lb/>
<pb facs="00057829_0003"/><lb/>
I HF EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 16. 1986<lb/>
ECU's Expansion<lb/>
1 t-rom Page 1.As ECU grows. Howell ex-<lb/>
ducational set-plained, the fund raising efforts<lb/>
at EC I will have to continue.<lb/>
c Med SchoolOnly in the last few years have<lb/>
; gro?universities realized that they<lb/>
e Med School andneed to raise private money.<lb/>
a . inpleted??Onlv in the last tew years<lb/>
the basksHowell said, "have we organized<lb/>
and slatted an institution to raise<lb/>
expandingmonev<lb/>
will be theHowell, who plans to retire in<lb/>
the perifena!1987, said ihe one unique aspect<lb/>
g side aoi his tenure as Chancellor has<lb/>
i k Howell Naidbeen Mrs Howell's involvement<lb/>
? ovewith the universitv<lb/>
i econom)<lb/>
!??<lb/>
too<lb/>
Jouble Coupons<lb/>
or details.<lb/>
ISED<lb/>
NVILLE<lb/>
 Bring Current Week Food<lb/>
qidl Quality:<lb/>
J<lb/>
s<lb/>
lt<lb/>
WESTERN GROWN JUMBO<lb/>
Cantaloupes<lb/>
III<lb/>
PLUMP RIPE<lb/>
Blueberries<lb/>
0<lb/>
pint<lb/>
basket<lb/>
99<lb/>
MMj V- REGULAR OR BUTTER FLAVOR<lb/>
&amp; Crisco Shortening<lb/>
T 4?.iT ?E Of VOUR CHOICE WITH AN <lb/>
AfcO?TIONAL HJCHA$? AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
liscoflL p<lb/>
I Shorten<lb/>
M L- 1<lb/>
Shortening!<lb/>
29<lb/>
FLAV-O-RICH V2<lb/>
Gallon Milk<lb/>
gal.<lb/>
jug<lb/>
1<lb/>
58<lb/>
pck'<lb/>
'REGULAR-LIGHT<lb/>
Old Milwaukee<lb/>
11 ctn. of<lb/>
12 oz.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
BiVOOPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
North Carolinian Named As Candidate<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) ? A<lb/>
black North Carolina<lb/>
businessman, who may become<lb/>
the next U.S. Ambassador to<lb/>
South Africa, draws high marks<lb/>
from the unlikely duo of the Rev.<lb/>
Jesse Jackson, a Democrat, and<lb/>
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.<lb/>
Robert Brown, a former Nixon<lb/>
White House aide who runs a<lb/>
public relations firm in High<lb/>
Point, N.C won praise from<lb/>
both the left and right Monday as<lb/>
government sources confirmed he<lb/>
is a candidate for the job.<lb/>
"1 know Bob Brown and have<lb/>
known him for years said the<lb/>
arch-conservative Helms. "Cer-<lb/>
tainly I would welcome a chance<lb/>
to support him<lb/>
Jackson, a civil rights leader<lb/>
and 1984 Democratic presidential<lb/>
candidate, called Brown "a de-<lb/>
cent man with integrity and great<lb/>
ability. If, in fact, appointing<lb/>
him as ambassador is a forerun-<lb/>
ner of a change of policy, h<lb/>
would be a step in the right direc-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
But Randall Robinson, co-<lb/>
chairman of the Free South<lb/>
Africa Movement and a leading<lb/>
critic of the administration's<lb/>
policy toward the racially torn<lb/>
nation, dismissed the idea of ap-<lb/>
pointing Brown as a public rela-<lb/>
tions tactic.<lb/>
"I don't think it serves any<lb/>
useful purpose to put a black face<lb/>
on what is perceived globally and<lb/>
particularly in South Africa to be<lb/>
an anti-black policy Robinson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Brown, 51, is a Republican<lb/>
who has participated in the State<lb/>
Department's Working Group on<lb/>
South Africa. He could not be<lb/>
reached for comment Monday,<lb/>
but a spokeswoman stressed he<lb/>
was "not job hunting<lb/>
The administration is review-<lb/>
ing its South African policy in the<lb/>
wake of escalating racial violence<lb/>
and a state of emergency imposed<lb/>
on the nation by the white-<lb/>
minority regime in Pretoria.<lb/>
Secretary of State George<lb/>
Shultz is expected to detail the<lb/>
policy review July 23 in congres-<lb/>
sional testimony, but officials<lb/>
have said President Reagan plans<lb/>
to stand by his policy of "con-<lb/>
structive engagement" ? leaving<lb/>
diplomatic channels and U.S. in-<lb/>
vestment in South Africa intact in<lb/>
order to retain influence.<lb/>
White House and State Depart-<lb/>
ment spokesmen declined to com-<lb/>
ment on whether Brown would be<lb/>
tapped to succeed Ambassador<lb/>
Herman Nickel, a former jour-<lb/>
nalist.<lb/>
If appointed and approved by<lb/>
the Senate, Brown would not be<lb/>
the First black diplomat in South<lb/>
Africa. The U.S. consul general<lb/>
in Capetown, John Ferguson, is<lb/>
black, as are several foreign am<lb/>
basadors.<lb/>
In Atlanta, Mayor Andrew<lb/>
Young, controversial ambasadoi<lb/>
to the United Nations during the<lb/>
Carter administration, said<lb/>
Brown had his "highest endorse-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
"I can't think of anybody<lb/>
more qualified to represent this<lb/>
country in such a difficult situa-<lb/>
tion Young said. "In fact, he is<lb/>
probably the only person Jesse<lb/>
Helms and I could both<lb/>
endorse<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Jce Cream<lb/>
Financial A wards Reduced For Fall<lb/>
WASHINGTON, DC (I PS)<lb/>
? About 290.(XX students won't<lb/>
get Pell Grants and another<lb/>
500.000 will get smaller grants<lb/>
during the next school year if the<lb/>
U.S. Dept. of Education persist<lb/>
in believing in a number that<lb/>
many education lobbyists sa) jusl<lb/>
isn't accurate.<lb/>
The department expects<lb/>
students wil! qualify tor some<lb/>
$369 million more in Pel! Gi<lb/>
than Congress appropriated for<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
As a result, the depai<lb/>
says it'll start reducing and even<lb/>
eliminating Pell Gram awards<lb/>
starting at the end of June in<lb/>
order to keep within its budget.<lb/>
Bui the American Council on<lb/>
Education last week said the<lb/>
"shortfall" is probably closer to<lb/>
S million than to $369 million.<lb/>
1: so, fewer students would<lb/>
fer aid cuts.<lb/>
It ACE calculated that the<lb/>
governmenl had used $3 -is<lb/>
billion oi its !98 fiscal vear Pell<lb/>
Cirani htuige! through May, while<lb/>
I ducation Dept. estimated it<lb/>
speni $3 75 billion.<lb/>
"We are skeptical oi their (the<lb/>
My boyfriend lias a "bad.<lb/>
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himself. How can 1 keep the same<lb/>
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It's estimated that 8 oul ol 10<lb/>
Americans will have a bak in-<lb/>
jury sometime during theii lives<lb/>
The Health Coiutnn By<lb/>
Man Flesha Adams<lb/>
Preventing back injuries .an be<lb/>
as simple as learning proper lif-<lb/>
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eliminating excess bod weight,<lb/>
strengthening neglected back<lb/>
muscles, and adopting good<lb/>
posture habits at work, home,<lb/>
and plav.<lb/>
Proper lifting includ<lb/>
?Get a firm footing. Keep your<lb/>
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?Bend your knees. Don't bend<lb/>
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?Tighten your stomach muscles.<lb/>
Abdominal muscles support your<lb/>
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?Lift with your legs. Let your<lb/>
powerful leg muscles do the work<lb/>
of lifting, not your weaker back<lb/>
muscles.<lb/>
?Keep the load close to your<lb/>
body; the closer it is to your<lb/>
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your back.<lb/>
?Keep your back upright.<lb/>
Whether lifting or putting down<lb/>
the load, don't add the weight of<lb/>
your body to the load. Avoid<lb/>
twisting because it can cause in-<lb/>
jury.<lb/>
Other ways to decrease the<lb/>
possibility of back injuries in-<lb/>
clude:<lb/>
? Reduce stress. Your spine is<lb/>
sensitive to muscular tension that<lb/>
builds up during a stress-filled<lb/>
day. i earn to relax and unwind.<lb/>
? 1 ose weight. The farther a<lb/>
ellj juts out in front, the<lb/>
more force it puts on the back.<lb/>
? 1 xercise. Eight) percent of<lb/>
back pain can be traced to lack of<lb/>
exercise.<lb/>
? Avoid sitting for long periods<lb/>
of time. Gel up, stretch and walk<lb/>
around occasionally.<lb/>
? At your desk, work at a com-<lb/>
fortable height that doesn't make<lb/>
you slouch or reach.<lb/>
? S eeping rests the back Use a<lb/>
firm mattress. Sleep on youi side<lb/>
with kees bent or on your back<lb/>
th our knees elevated.<lb/>
Education Depts) estimates<lb/>
ays Patricia Smith of the At 1<lb/>
"They have been wrong several<lb/>
times before<lb/>
"We mst want to hold their<lb/>
feet to the fire she adds.<lb/>
The department remains un-<lb/>
bowed. "We are holding to our<lb/>
estimate says spokesman Bob<lb/>
Jamroz.<lb/>
The Education Department<lb/>
uses past financial data to project<lb/>
how much money it needs for<lb/>
Medical<lb/>
Receives<lb/>
H Rl STY HARRINGTON<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
I wo tacuity members from the<lb/>
ECU school of medicine have<lb/>
been awarded research grants<lb/>
from the North Carolina<lb/>
Biotechnology Center for pro-<lb/>
jects that seem "promising" in<lb/>
the fact that they may increase<lb/>
the state's economy through their<lb/>
findings in the biotechnical field.<lb/>
Henry Stone and E.J.<lb/>
Stellwag, both oi the ECU<lb/>
Medical School, were awarded<lb/>
$25,000 and $18,500 respectively<lb/>
for their proposed research pro-<lb/>
tects.<lb/>
Stone's research project, entitl-<lb/>
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Protein involves the develop-<lb/>
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Consequently, "If the<lb/>
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money Smith reports.<lb/>
School<lb/>
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of this vaccine, besides being a<lb/>
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disease, will also be a help to fur-<lb/>
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In his proposed project,<lb/>
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to isolate microorganisms that<lb/>
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Stellwag plans to add these<lb/>
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see if they are able to replace cur-<lb/>
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This could affect the detergent<lb/>
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July 16. 1986<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Pornography<lb/>
Meese Commission On The Warpath<lb/>
Hr Sr? Rrpuh'u<lb/>
In the conservative dialectic that defines<lb/>
the Reagan counterrevolution, the report<lb/>
of the Meese commission ? known of-<lb/>
ficially as the Attorney General's Commis-<lb/>
sion on Obscenity and Pornography ? is<lb/>
designed to be the antithesis of its<lb/>
ancestor, the notorious 1970 report of the<lb/>
federal Commission on Obscenity and<lb/>
Pornography.<lb/>
The two reports and the two commis-<lb/>
sions are indeed antithetical, and not only<lb/>
in the ways Meese intended. If the old<lb/>
commission was the federal equivalent of<lb/>
Playboy, the new one is the equivalent of<lb/>
Hustler ? low-budget, weak on fact-<lb/>
checking, unsubtle, and fascinated bv the<lb/>
perverse.<lb/>
The 1970 commission had a budget of $2<lb/>
million, a staff of 22. and two years to<lb/>
complete its mission. That mission, as<lb/>
defined by Congress, was to analyze the<lb/>
obscenity laws, to study the effects on the<lb/>
public of the traffic in obscenity and por-<lb/>
nography, and. if necessary, to recom-<lb/>
mend ways to "regulate effectively the<lb/>
flow of such traffic The 1970 commis-<lb/>
sion sponsored a wide range of original<lb/>
research by reputable scholars,<lb/>
psychologists, and universities.<lb/>
The 1986 commission, by contrast, had<lb/>
a budget of $400,000 (the equivalent in<lb/>
1970 dollars of around $150,000). a staff<lb/>
of nine, and one year to complete its mis-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
That mission, as defined by Ed Meese,<lb/>
was to study the impact of pornography<lb/>
and to recommend "more effective ways in<lb/>
which the spread of pornography could be<lb/>
contained The 1986 commission spon-<lb/>
sored no original research, and its con-<lb/>
sultants were mostly policemen and an-<lb/>
tiporn activists.<lb/>
By all accounts the 1970 commission ap-<lb/>
proached its duties with an open mind.<lb/>
Two or three of its 18 members had taken<lb/>
public positions on pornography, but the<lb/>
rest had not.<lb/>
The 1986 commission has been stacked<lb/>
to prevent unwelcome surprises. Of its 11<lb/>
members, six have well-established public<lb/>
records of supporting government action<lb/>
against sexy books and films. One of the<lb/>
commissioners, for example, is a Fran-<lb/>
ciscan priest who has condemned Dr. Ruth<lb/>
Westheimer, the chirpy radio sex adviser,<lb/>
for advocating orgasms in premarital sex.<lb/>
The Meese commission lacked the finan-<lb/>
cial and staff resources of its predecessor.<lb/>
but since its conclusions were preordained,<lb/>
it didn't really need them.<lb/>
The Meese report will recommend a long<lb/>
list of stern measures. They include chang-<lb/>
ing obscenity laws to make any second of-<lb/>
fense a felony rather than a misdemeanor,<lb/>
with a mandatory one-year jail term; pro-<lb/>
secuting the producers of porn films under<lb/>
the prostitution laws (because the actors<lb/>
are paid for their work); changing the<lb/>
forfeiture laws to permit the government<lb/>
to confiscate the assets of any business<lb/>
found in violation of the federal obscenity-<lb/>
laws (allowing, for example, the seizure of<lb/>
a whole convenience store for the sale of a<lb/>
single dirty magazine); and a big enforce-<lb/>
ment push, including the appointment of a<lb/>
"high-level" Justice Department task<lb/>
force on obscenity cases.<lb/>
Where the pornography in question is<lb/>
too mild to bring the obscenity laws into<lb/>
play, the report somewhat cautiously<lb/>
recommends "private action" ?<lb/>
picketing, boycotts, and the like.<lb/>
The Meese commission will encourge the<lb/>
kind of local crusaders for decency who<lb/>
are forever trying to bar supposedly dirty<lb/>
books from schools and libraries. One<lb/>
doesn't need to exaggerate the likely im-<lb/>
pact of this sort of thing to understand that<lb/>
it will be real enough for the<lb/>
schoolteachers and librarians forced to<lb/>
choose between their consciences and their<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
Finally, the commmission will probably<lb/>
succeed in its goal of encouraging local<lb/>
prosecutors to do their worst. Given the<lb/>
commission's loose definition of harmful<lb/>
pornography and the advent of the Rehn-<lb/>
quist Supreme Court, their worst might<lb/>
ultimately turn out to be quite bad.<lb/>
The commission's report will be widely<lb/>
reau, because even a government book<lb/>
about sex is still a book about sex. And it's<lb/>
especially irresistible if it's as fat, as<lb/>
obsessed with kink, and as full of inadver-<lb/>
tent humor as this one.<lb/>
A final apposite example of the last:<lb/>
After a long section on the problem of<lb/>
"underprosecution the commissioners<lb/>
conclude, "We urge that many of the<lb/>
specific recommendations we suggest be<lb/>
taken seriously<lb/>
How wonderfully lame. The logically re-<lb/>
quired corollary of course, would be this:<lb/>
"We urge that some of the recommenda-<lb/>
tions we suggest not be taken seriously<lb/>
Though insufficiently inclusive, this<lb/>
seems wise.<lb/>
I'M 60AI6 007-77J P0WPBR Mr N0SBSMBM SEAT,<lb/>
Political Protocol<lb/>
A Politician By Any Other Name<lb/>
Jimmy Carter was in the news last<lb/>
week ? he walked out on an affair in<lb/>
Zimbabwe featuring an excoriation by<lb/>
Zimbabwe's foreign minister of the<lb/>
United States for our failure to declare<lb/>
war on South Africa.<lb/>
Last Monday, the former president,<lb/>
who had flown to Chicago to build<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
By WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY<lb/>
Might Makes<lb/>
another low-income house, was on the<lb/>
"Today" show, explaining that it<lb/>
wasn't what the foreign minister had<lb/>
said about U.S. policy toward South<lb/>
Africa ? Carter agreed with all that ?<lb/>
it was the circumstances in which the<lb/>
criticisms were made (Fourth of July,<lb/>
bad manners, that sort of thing).<lb/>
But what arrested attention wasn't<lb/>
Jimmy Carter's views on South Africa,<lb/>
which are the same as Amy's. It was<lb/>
that Bryant Gumbel. the sophisticated<lb/>
and trend-smart anchorman of the "To-<lb/>
day" show, twice referred to Jimmv<lb/>
Carter as "Mr. Carter<lb/>
If this is indeed a trend ? the re-<lb/>
republicanization of America ? then it<lb/>
is very much worth paying attention to.<lb/>
It happens that I knew Herbert Hoover,<lb/>
and in the half-dozen times I was with<lb/>
him, I heard no one refer to him as<lb/>
"Mr. President He was either "Mr.<lb/>
Hoover" or "Chief<lb/>
 The tradition is of long standing.<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson could not wait until<lb/>
he could once again be called "Mr. Jef-<lb/>
ferson The antagonism of the Foun-<lb/>
ding Fathers to titles and all that titled<lb/>
British foppery stuff deeply influenced<lb/>
idiomatic usage.<lb/>
My impression is that it was Harry-<lb/>
Truman who more or less let it be<lb/>
known that he expected to be called Mr.<lb/>
President until the day he died. For all<lb/>
the hoopla about his origins as a man of<lb/>
the people, Harry Truman was the most<lb/>
rank-conscious president in memory.<lb/>
Twenty years after the event he was<lb/>
still riled that Gen. MacArthur did not<lb/>
initiate, or else did not reciprocate ?<lb/>
something ? when they met on Wake<lb/>
Island to discuss the Korean War.<lb/>
That kind of thing is the mark of in-<lb/>
security, and if President Carter has<lb/>
given out the word that he wishes from<lb/>
now on to be "Mr. Carter then that is<lb/>
a healthy development. One likes to<lb/>
think that Cincinnatus, after turning his<lb/>
sword back into a plowshare, told his<lb/>
fellow Romans they could stop ailing<lb/>
him "Dictator just plain Cincinnati<lb/>
would do.<lb/>
The protocols are not fixed on the<lb/>
matter. And as often as not, they are set<lb/>
not by the principal, but by courtiers<lb/>
Not necessarily for ignoble reasons, but<lb/>
in search of courtesv<lb/>
I can think of two people who call the<lb/>
office 1 work in. If the call is announced<lb/>
by their secretay or telephone operator,<lb/>
one learns that "ambassador" so and s,<lb/>
is calling. If ambassador so and so is<lb/>
calling himself (herself), then one hears,<lb/>
"This is Mr. X calling, or this is Mrs. Y<lb/>
calling<lb/>
Some people, for reasons that don't<lb/>
necessarily relate to vanity, retain their<lb/>
titles generations after they exercised<lb/>
the appropriate office. Thus the late<lb/>
Gov. Charles Edison was Gov. Edison<lb/>
30 years after he was governor.<lb/>
One runs into people who occupy.<lb/>
many offices one has to pause-<lb/>
wonder which honorific they prefer:<lb/>
Elliot Richardson could be called am-<lb/>
bassador (Great Bntian), Mr. Attonie<lb/>
General, or Mr. Secretary (secretarv oi<lb/>
HEW, secretary of defense). He goes b<lb/>
Mr. Richardson.<lb/>
Nelson Rockefeller preferred<lb/>
"Governor" even when he was Mr<lb/>
Vice President, Mr. Vice President con-<lb/>
suming, as it does, a most egregious<lb/>
number of syllables.<lb/>
The case for permanent titles can still<lb/>
be made. John Adams once remarked<lb/>
that a country is better off draining per-<lb/>
sonal ambition through titles than<lb/>
through power. But of course titles are<lb/>
for the most part utter phony balonev in<lb/>
any serious sense.<lb/>
G.K. Chesterton said in effect that six<lb/>
men are given a pick and a shovel, and<lb/>
the one who finds coal becomes Lord<lb/>
Northumberland. It continues to mean<lb/>
a great deal in Britain: to conservatives<lb/>
because they want to reaffirm their<lb/>
belief in The System (thus Harold Mac-<lb/>
millan finally relented, at age 90, and<lb/>
accepted a hereditary earldom and<lb/>
Winston Churchill, who could have<lb/>
been made. h. qui<lb/>
red)<lb/>
And socialists like beca<lb/>
within a ver put<lb/>
to like personal p<lb/>
ake recent 1 I<lb/>
Wilson as Sir Haroid. ai<lb/>
leader of the H<lb/>
fted gertol<lb/>
reeling me, "I ord V<lb/>
Of com c I wa .<lb/>
the balance<lb/>
glad, if he wanre<lb/>
( arter Mr Presid<lb/>
kesr seen<lb/>
?hile at it. he c<lb/>
a and<lb/>
name: James<lb/>
Buckley is Editor<lb/>
prestigious poliu <lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
In addition to the<lb/>
Forum" section<lb/>
Page. The bv c a<lb/>
established the "Campu -<lb/>
This is an opinion column<lb/>
gues: writers from the<lb/>
and faculty. The cc<lb/>
the "Campus Spectrum" w<lb/>
current topk<lb/>
pus. community or nan<lb/>
The columns are restric ed<lb/>
tent only with regard<lb/>
grammer and decencv. Pe:<lb/>
mitting columns must he ?<lb/>
accept "by-ime" credit I<lb/>
torts, as no entrys from ghosi <lb/>
will be published.<lb/>
Persons interested in particip<lb/>
or seeking further inforn a<lb/>
contact Daniel Maurer, ma:<lb/>
ednor of The East c a<lb/>
757-6366, or stop bv our ofl .<lb/>
the second floor of the Pub .<lb/>
Building<lb/>
Tkt Mm IfefaMk<lb/>
"We can expect Qaddafi to go all out in seeking<lb/>
revenge. We have not seen the end of thisThe<lb/>
use of such force is much more likely to promote<lb/>
and expand terrorismWhat we've really done<lb/>
is weaken the moderate, pro-American factions<lb/>
within the Libyan eliteNo onediscerns light<lb/>
at the end of the tunnel or believes that this latest<lb/>
escalation of violence is more than another loop in<lb/>
an endless cycle of war in which Colonel Qaddafi is<lb/>
only one, minor, if temporarily prominent, figure<lb/>
These sentiments are what a high-ranking FBI of-<lb/>
fical, an editorial writer for the Nation, a professor<lb/>
of government and Middle East specialist at Har-<lb/>
vard, and the leader of the British Labour Party<lb/>
had in common as the smoke cleard from Tripoli.<lb/>
What they have in common now is little embarrass-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
It seems that the immediate fears of even the<lb/>
Reagan administration were premature. Its most<lb/>
realistic expectation ? a short-term wave of<lb/>
retaliatory terroist activity ? simply has not hap-<lb/>
pened. The opposite has: since the raid, State<lb/>
Department sources report a major decline in the<lb/>
number of terrorist incidents against Americans.<lb/>
In the three and a half months since, there have<lb/>
been two wounded and two murders. Of the two<lb/>
deaths, one was an immediate reprisal in Beirut and<lb/>
one an unconnected death in kidnap custody in Col-<lb/>
ombia.<lb/>
It can't be proven that the raid deterred terrorism<lb/>
that would have otherwise occurred. But it can no<lb/>
longer be said that retaliation inevitably escalates<lb/>
the level of violence. If the raid was supposed to<lb/>
deter, these figures could hardly be better.<lb/>
Still, most opposition to the raid was not based<lb/>
simply on a fear of reprisal. Critics pointed to the<lb/>
splits in the Atlantic alliance that unilateral in-<lb/>
 Since the raid (on Tripoli),<lb/>
State Department sources<lb/>
report a major decline in the<lb/>
number of terrorist incidents<lb/>
against Americans.<lb/>
tervention would allegedly precipitate, to the<lb/>
counterproductive impact the attack would have<lb/>
within Libya, and to the impossibility of striking ef-<lb/>
fectively at a vast network of terrorism, mostly<lb/>
perpetrated from Damascus and MoscowOn all<lb/>
three counts, the case has gotten weaker as the days<lb/>
have gone by.<lb/>
In Europe, anti-American rhetoric has been<lb/>
suspended by a flurry of antiterrorist activity. The<lb/>
trench, for example, condemned the raid but<lb/>
somehow managed at the Tokyo summit to approve<lb/>
a tough antiterrorist communique of a kind they<lb/>
had rejected at all previous top-level meetings.<lb/>
Italian prime minister Craxi's protestations were<lb/>
followed by a move to transfer Italy's oil<lb/>
dependence from Libya to Nigeria and the North<lb/>
Sea, just as the Reagan administration had been<lb/>
urging him to do. These shifts were complemented<lb/>
by three breakthroughs: the conviction of the<lb/>
Brighton bombers in Britain, the Achille Lauro trial<lb/>
in Italy, and the slow easing of the French hostage<lb/>
crisis in Lebanon.<lb/>
Even the long-delayed Anglo-American extradi-<lb/>
tion treaty finally passed the Senate. If all this ac-<lb/>
tivity represents a "crisis in the alliance we could<lb/>
do with more of them.<lb/>
The real surprise of the last few weeks, though,<lb/>
has been Libya itself. The predicted upsurge of na-<lb/>
tional unity behind Qaddafi has failed to<lb/>
materahzc. Instead, his disappearance and subse-<lb/>
quent blustering and incoherent televised addresses<lb/>
point to an acceleration in his decline.<lb/>
He was both personally shaken and politically<lb/>
destabilized by the affair. Qaddafi has retreated in-<lb/>
to seclusion before and managed to survive, but his<lb/>
recent addresses have been greeted with what must<lb/>
be ominous public indifference.<lb/>
The impact on Hafez al-Assad of Syria is much<lb/>
more difficult to gauge. It is undoubtedly too much<lb/>
to expect that his denunciations of international ter-<lb/>
rorism on his recent trip to Greece (after bear-<lb/>
"ugging Papandreou at the Athens airport) were<lb/>
any less cynical than usual, but they may just reflect<lb/>
new calculations of American resolve.<lb/>
In any case, for the moment at least, Assad has<lb/>
more pressing priorities than terrorism, the collapse<lb/>
ot his own economy under the pressure of falling oil<lb/>
prices and serious domestic disorder (inch<lb/>
bomb attacks) make adventurism less seductive<lb/>
And Soviet support is not as reliable as i ona<lb/>
was. The Sov.et SA5 missiles, which Ass<lb/>
rely upon for Synan defense, performed poorl) in<lb/>
m i "V thC S?V,ets look are to to?"<lb/>
? uS Libya after the raid<lb/>
I he West may yet be subject to retaliatory<lb/>
moves. But ,n the aftermath of Tripoli, one central<lb/>
lnJ(S'?n remain&amp;- Direct m.l.tarv intervention<lb/>
SUfrT,Sm ?an have an mediate and<lb/>
S ? 'r " Ca,n b?'h instantI' dr and. over a<lb/>
2v?'lme' ? th balance ,n diplomacy and<lb/>
security against the momentum of terrorism.<lb/>
"F???10"3! arumenI dist.guishing between<lb/>
rorismr Z" approaches to ter-<lb/>
TrirSi ZrZ 3 a'SC dichoto" The lesson of<lb/>
amnLi t m,hlary Strikes and constitutional<lb/>
clusivTaI nHeg,CS' far fr?m Wn? ?"allv ex-<lb/>
clusive are indispensable complements.<lb/>
beleaLr"1 nat,?n ?f Regies reminds<lb/>
calculation! ?k lerronst Power. Terrorists make<lb/>
the cllrlf- Ut thC COStS of thc" activities, and<lb/>
these calculations can be changed by force.<lb/>
bv - ? demonstrates that regaining the initiative<lb/>
the m ?hV StnkC may hc,P ??r t"at hinder<lb/>
ed to annZ terCf,CSSentiai' Prcss ? are us-<lb/>
ihe ?SJ ? ?" dKf?r ,h0S? stiU unain about<lb/>
month ho ih ' thC UnCasy calm of th t few<lb/>
months should carry at leat some moral weight.<lb/>
Charlie Baker 'Jem verF? <lb/>
suits concerning his mol<lb/>
and is plaving tonigi<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
?<lb/>
myste<lb/>
Hot Spo<lb/>
Bv Kl ST HAKKIM.ION<lb/>
To heli<lb/>
formed ?.<lb/>
udapt<lb/>
input re nan;<lb/>
men<lb/>
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 1 he tti<lb/>
vane<lb/>
of C entaur<lb/>
I da Mannekin<lb/>
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dav The Bill I ver! Blue B<lb/>
and Messablues<lb/>
Sumn<lb/>
miss<lb/>
N1<lb/>
there, tl e Sheraton f<lb/>
Dow n<lb/>
Ramada tranda<lb/>
will host J Daddv<lb/>
this weeli<lb/>
throui x: <lb/>
M<lb/>
! ?eL?r<lb/>
Irai<lb/>
Summer Movie<lb/>
Muppets<lb/>
B ED I()MI( H<lb/>
?ter "1<lb/>
several Muppt<lb/>
Darkn uai. <lb/>
Henson and<lb/>
next1" w hai<lb/>
wonderful fa<lb/>
Bowie and Jei<lb/>
Bv the wa)<lb/>
this time in<lb/>
Mont) Python, a;<lb/>
produce! j .<lb/>
heard of named George<lb/>
In Labyrinth, a<lb/>
named Sarah (Connelly) w<lb/>
in frustration that<lb/>
brother betaken bv Gob<lb/>
is horrified when he in fa.<lb/>
taken by Jareth (Bowie), the ?<lb/>
Goblin King She seel<lb/>
baby brother back and<lb/>
transported to Jareth's w<lb/>
where she must get through the<lb/>
Labyrinth that surrounds<lb/>
Jareth's castle before her brother<lb/>
is himself turned into a goblin<lb/>
Labyrinth is at times very fun<lb/>
ny- Henson takes his penchai<lb/>
pteK<lb/>
m, T ?? - ? ? ' ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057829_0005"/><lb/>
9PH<lb/>
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offices on<lb/>
ublica<lb/>
n Terrorism<lb/>
let (including<lb/>
luctivc.<lb/>
e as ii once<lb/>
 sad has to<lb/>
ed poorly in<lb/>
distance<lb/>
retaliatory<lb/>
one ventral<lb/>
intervention<lb/>
ediate and sus-<lb/>
and, over a<lb/>
nacy and<lb/>
rism.<lb/>
anci i?<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
beieag<lb/>
in<lb/>
S ushing between<lb/>
' approaches to ter-<lb/>
The lesson of<lb/>
kes and constitutional<lb/>
. Ur from being mutually ex-<lb/>
li pensablc complements.<lb/>
'rategies reminu<lb/>
nere is nothing uniquely<lb/>
vincible about terrorist power. Terrorists make<lb/>
calculations about the costs of their activities, and<lb/>
these calculations can be changed by force.<lb/>
it also demonstrates that regaining the initiative<lb/>
by a sure military strike may help rather that hinder<lb/>
the more mundane, if essential, pressure we are us-<lb/>
ed to applying. And for those still uncertain about<lb/>
the ethics of force, the uneasy calm of the last few<lb/>
months should carry at leat some moral weight.<lb/>
ltd l AS! (ARl)l INIAN<lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
JULY 16. 1986 Page 5<lb/>
Play Wins Ovations<lb/>
Charlie Baker (Urn verDore) listens politely while Owen Musser (Stuart Ward) taunts him with in-<lb/>
sults concerning his mother. 1 he Foreigner' is a presentation of the East Carolina Summer Theatre<lb/>
and playing tonight, Ihurvdav, i ridav and Saturda nights at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Bv JOHN SHANNON<lb/>
Simon Suggs says, "It is good<lb/>
to be shifty in a new country<lb/>
Charlie Baker, The Foreigner's<lb/>
hero played by Jerry verDorn,<lb/>
assures us that the motto still<lb/>
holds true.<lb/>
The premise of this tightly<lb/>
structured comedy is established<lb/>
in the first scene: a British Army<lb/>
demolitions expert, "Froggy"<lb/>
I.eSueur (Joes Pollock), has<lb/>
come to Georgia, presumably on<lb/>
some mission, and convinced<lb/>
Charlie Baker to come along and<lb/>
stay a tew days in an inn Froggy<lb/>
knows. Baker was reluctant to<lb/>
go, because even though his wife<lb/>
doesn't like him and thinks he's<lb/>
boring, he has been keeping her<lb/>
company in the hospital as she's<lb/>
been given just six months to live.<lb/>
Since Baker is extremely anx-<lb/>
ious about making conversation<lb/>
with strangers. Froggy tells the<lb/>
proprietess of the inn that Charlie<lb/>
is really "Char-u-lee a<lb/>
"foreigner" who neither speaks<lb/>
nor understands English. Before<lb/>
Charlie can back out of the<lb/>
scheme he has overheard<lb/>
something he shouldn't have, and<lb/>
decides that it's in his interest to<lb/>
remain a foreigner.<lb/>
From then on the play becomes<lb/>
steadily funnier. As Charlie<lb/>
grows into the role of the<lb/>
foreigner, scenes of genuine<lb/>
hilarity abound: Jay Theriault, as<lb/>
the simple but lovable Ellard<lb/>
Sims, eats breakfast with Charlie,<lb/>
who apes every move Sims makes<lb/>
until the two end up dancing like<lb/>
crazed monkeys and Betty Meeks<lb/>
(the proprietess, played by<lb/>
Kathleen Claypool) breaks in on<lb/>
them ? "Ellard, stop making<lb/>
fun of Charlie's foreign prac-<lb/>
tices<lb/>
When Charlie and the<lb/>
loathsome redneck Owen Musser<lb/>
(convincingly portrayed by Stuart<lb/>
Ward) are alone together, Charlie<lb/>
capitalizes on Musser's<lb/>
superstitious hatred of foreigners<lb/>
by pretending to cast a spell, flut-<lb/>
tering his fingers and mumbling<lb/>
about "when the bees come<lb/>
down Musser flees, and brings<lb/>
back the Reverend David Lee (a<lb/>
descendant of Robert E. Lee<lb/>
played by Holt Wilson) to witness<lb/>
the "voodoo talk Charlie in-<lb/>
sists that all he said was, "Will<lb/>
you please calm down?"<lb/>
The element of surprise is im-<lb/>
portant to this comedy; to reveal<lb/>
too much would spoil it. Suffice<lb/>
it to say that Rev. Lee is trying to<lb/>
deceive nearly everyone, in-<lb/>
cluding Catherine Smms (Molly<lb/>
Fix), whom he plans to man .<lb/>
her money.<lb/>
There is no doubt that this play<lb/>
rates high on the humor scale. It<lb/>
takes a special kind of funniness<lb/>
to make this reviewer laugh out<lb/>
loud and repeatedly in a crowded<lb/>
place, and although it's easier<lb/>
when everyone else is laughing,<lb/>
that's not why one laughs here<lb/>
The puns and gags were well-<lb/>
paced and well-delivered, Jerry<lb/>
verDorn was altogether unpredic-<lb/>
table, and the surprise ending left<lb/>
me feeling a bit loony hut<lb/>
pleasantly satisfied<lb/>
The rest of the audience felt the<lb/>
same way, judging from the stan-<lb/>
ding ovation.<lb/>
Theatre Season Continues With 'Deathtrap'<lb/>
ll<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
M<lb/>
?<lb/>
wit twi addi<lb/>
pei '? imane e: ? 2:15<lb/>
vv ednesday<lb/>
I - and 26. in McGinnis<lb/>
are<lb/>
? ? and 1 sepl<lb/>
Mascolo. Runyeon is best known<lb/>
? his continuing role as Steve<lb/>
Andropoulous n the CBS series,<lb/>
1 Ihe World Turns He is also<lb/>
implished film and stage<lb/>
actor. His major motion picture<lb/>
credits include Sudden Death and<lb/>
Hot Spots In Greenville<lb/>
Bv R HXKRIM.ION<lb/>
? vour<lb/>
a<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
?<lb/>
? -<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
V l he Attii<lb/>
Ii esday <lb/>
( entaur On Thu<lb/>
heavj Morriah.<lb/>
Mannekm<lb/>
with ?rbc)<lb/>
Ihe Bili I yerly Blues Band<lb/>
Mess a hi ties<lb/>
Mid<lb/>
B .<lb/>
the 1<lb/>
Sheraton Mell-<lb/>
Down . ? <lb/>
V erandd<lb/>
Jo lHdd eve<lb/>
thtough Saturday<lb/>
Of( (enter will plav at the New Deli Friday night.<lb/>
week IW's continues us Friday nighi I his<lb/>
ntertainment with the<lb/>
t omedj one n Wednesday and<lb/>
1)1 John Moore and his famed<lb/>
Beach Party Saturdav night.<lb/>
New Deli will kick out the yup-<lb/>
pies this weekend and bring in<lb/>
foul bands: Nocturnal Emissions<lb/>
from Chapel Hill will open the<lb/>
weekend Friday night for local<lb/>
band Off (enter; then on Satur-<lb/>
y outhful Terminal<lb/>
Depression will open f u Soul<lb/>
I rain in what promises to be a<lb/>
rollicking evening.<lb/>
V Mat's hot'<lb/>
lave to be Ofl<lb/>
My choice would<lb/>
Center at the Deli<lb/>
will be theii<lb/>
last live show tor a good while,<lb/>
but inside information has it that<lb/>
Off Center is planning a re-union<lb/>
in the fall a' a benefit foi an<lb/>
unknown cause. The band's<lb/>
latest accomplishment, besides<lb/>
having Nocturnal Emissions as<lb/>
an opening act, is to submit a<lb/>
tape to a contest which could put<lb/>
them on a compilation album.<lb/>
The members include a guy nam-<lb/>
ed Morad Rowshan-araghi on<lb/>
bass guitar (reportedly strung<lb/>
with Roto-sound strings); Scott<lb/>
Patterson on drums; John Shan-<lb/>
non on guitar; and David Blount<lb/>
on guitar, keyboard and vocals.<lb/>
Holero. and New York<lb/>
theatergoers have seen him in Ihe<lb/>
Birds As a result of his wide<lb/>
spread popularity, he has ap-<lb/>
peared on all three major televi-<lb/>
sion networks, having been inter-<lb/>
viewed on The Today Show,<lb/>
Good Morning America and The<lb/>
Phil Donahue Show.<lb/>
Co-starring with Runyeon in<lb/>
Deathtrap will be Joseph<lb/>
Mascolo, who is also in the soon-<lb/>
to-be-released motion picture<lb/>
Heat, with Bun Reynolds His<lb/>
other film credits include Jaws 2<lb/>
and Sharkey's Machine Mascolo<lb/>
is ttie host of "Inside Soaps a<lb/>
syndicated television talk show.<lb/>
Other television appearances by<lb/>
Mr. Mascolo include "Hill Street<lb/>
Blues" and " Days Of Our<lb/>
I ives<lb/>
Also appearing in Deathtrap<lb/>
will be area favorite and Broad-<lb/>
was . mole and television veteran<lb/>
m hei own right. Mavis Ray. Ray<lb/>
also appeared in the tits; East<lb/>
Carolina Summer Theatre pro-<lb/>
duction this season, ladies In<lb/>
Retirement, with Michael Learn-<lb/>
ed, and received excellent<lb/>
reviews.<lb/>
Homicide and humor are the<lb/>
kev ingredients of Deathtrap,<lb/>
which is a suspense-thriller about<lb/>
a mystery writer with a problem.<lb/>
He hasn't had a hit in 17 years<lb/>
and announces that he's willing<lb/>
to commit murder to remedy the<lb/>
situation. The story begins with<lb/>
the writer's discovery of a sure-<lb/>
tire hit written by one of his<lb/>
students in a college seminar. His<lb/>
intention is first to collaborate<lb/>
with the student and, if<lb/>
necessary, kill him and steal the<lb/>
story.<lb/>
Out of the proposal emerges a<lb/>
tangle of homicidal schemes,<lb/>
plots and counter-plots that also<lb/>
involve a European clairvoyant<lb/>
and a pompous New England<lb/>
lawyer. Ah this transpires in an<lb/>
attractive Conneticut countrv<lb/>
home decorated mainly with<lb/>
grizzly murder weapons that are<lb/>
souvenirs of the writer's early<lb/>
stage successes<lb/>
The humor in the plav is an<lb/>
essential ingredient. Playwright<lb/>
Levin has given his characters<lb/>
jewels of dialogue that dart in<lb/>
and out of the story line, such as,<lb/>
"Cathy loves Vassar, and Vassal<lb/>
versa and "Nothing recedes<lb/>
like success Diane Judge ol the<lb/>
V. Y. Daily es reviewed<lb/>
Deathtrap when it opened in New<lb/>
York in 1978 and wrote, "One o<lb/>
the funniest, most heavenly,<lb/>
entertaining evenings I've spent<lb/>
in years. 1 laughed when 1 wasn't<lb/>
smiling, and chuckled when J<lb/>
wasn't marveling. I screamed<lb/>
twice, and once was so scared my<lb/>
bottom raised at least fout inches<lb/>
from my seat<lb/>
Tickets are still available for<lb/>
most evening performances and<lb/>
may be purchased at<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Poor Man's Olympics<lb/>
Try Your Luck And Skill<lb/>
Summer Mo vie<lb/>
Muppets Make Funny Film<lb/>
B PAT MOLLOY<lb/>
wiimi Ijfnlttn tdllo<lb/>
On Thursday, July 24, the<lb/>
ECU Student Union will sponsor<lb/>
the Mendenhall Olympics. The<lb/>
even: is open to all currently<lb/>
enrolled FC'L students, currently<lb/>
employed ECU faculty, staff,<lb/>
and their dependents 13 years and<lb/>
older.<lb/>
Ihe events are as follows:<lb/>
I able lennis - Ihe person who<lb/>
scores the most number of legal<lb/>
hits in a one-minute time period<lb/>
will be declared winner.<lb/>
Milliards ? The participant<lb/>
who can clear a 15 ball table the<lb/>
quickest with two or less fouls<lb/>
wins this event.<lb/>
Bowling ? Competitors will<lb/>
bowl one ball on ten consecutive<lb/>
lanes with the highest scorer win-<lb/>
ning the event.<lb/>
Trivia ? For this event, the<lb/>
Trivia video game will be used.<lb/>
The person scoring highest wins<lb/>
the event.<lb/>
Galaga ? Again, a video game<lb/>
will be utilized (thanks Rick) to<lb/>
determine the winner of this<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Ring Toss ? Eight rings will be<lb/>
tossed, and the high-scorer will<lb/>
win this contest. 10 points will be<lb/>
awarded for a direct hit, 5 points<lb/>
if the ring is leaning on the peg.<lb/>
and two points it the ring is<lb/>
touching the base.<lb/>
Darts ? Contestants will<lb/>
throw a full set ol darts one time<lb/>
The highest scorer will win.<lb/>
The top five scorers in each<lb/>
event will receive ribbons and<lb/>
points toward the overall top<lb/>
three scores. First, second and<lb/>
third place winners will receive<lb/>
medals.<lb/>
Contestants must register by<lb/>
Tuesday, July 22 in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards Center.<lb/>
There is no registration fee.<lb/>
Video participants must pro<lb/>
vide their own quarters.<lb/>
B El) IOMl( H<lb/>
Niaff U nie<lb/>
fn ? fhe M SI v<lb/>
and the<lb/>
Dark rstal. we mighl a-k Jim<lb/>
?<lb/>
U next is abyrinth, a<lb/>
urring David<lb/>
Bow . I mnelly<lb/>
By and company"<lb/>
ludes I erry Jones ol<lb/>
m, and an executive<lb/>
producei you just might have<lb/>
i ol tianfJ George I ucas<lb/>
In labyrinth, a young girl<lb/>
named Sarah (Connelly) wishes<lb/>
in frustration that her little<lb/>
her be taken bv Goblins, ana<lb/>
?rrified when he in fact is<lb/>
taken by Jareth (Bowie), the<lb/>
Goblin King. She seeks to get her<lb/>
baby brother back and is<lb/>
transported to Jareth's world<lb/>
where she must get through the<lb/>
Labyrinth that surrounds<lb/>
Jareth's castle before her brother<lb/>
is himself turned into a goblin.<lb/>
labyrinth is at times very fun-<lb/>
ny. Henson takes his penchant<lb/>
creating entirely new worlds<lb/>
and infuses into it the tongue-in-<lb/>
cheek humour that was missing in<lb/>
The Dark Crystal. Some of this<lb/>
can be accredited to the<lb/>
screenplay by Terry Jones, who<lb/>
has brought a Pythonesque style<lb/>
to muppet humour, but up until<lb/>
The Dark Crystal, the Muppets<lb/>
have always been funny anyway.<lb/>
Speaking of Muppets, those in<lb/>
 abyrinth are all brand new,<lb/>
created for the movie They range<lb/>
from a talkative worm (cater-<lb/>
pillar?to a 15-foot animated suit<lb/>
o armor. Henson has really out-<lb/>
done himself with these muppets,<lb/>
which were operated by as many<lb/>
as five people at a time. Sarah's<lb/>
main sidekick in labyrinth is a<lb/>
wrinkled little gnome named<lb/>
Hoggle, whose eyes anc face<lb/>
movements seem a miracle. A<lb/>
particularly endearing character<lb/>
is Sir Didymus, a small fox<lb/>
terrier-knight with the voice of a<lb/>
gentleman and the heart of a lion.<lb/>
Didymus is wonderfully<lb/>
courageous; at one point he tells<lb/>
enemies who've surrounded him<lb/>
that if they surrender they will be<lb/>
treated well.<lb/>
Also, long-time muppet fans<lb/>
will be happy to see that Henson<lb/>
has finally perfected the giant<lb/>
muppet in Ludo, an incredibly<lb/>
life-like eight foot tall creature<lb/>
that looks something like an<lb/>
orangutan. Previously, Henson's<lb/>
giant muppets have looked<lb/>
scarcely better than the guy in the<lb/>
Scoobie-Doo suit at Carowinds,<lb/>
but in Ludo the idea finally<lb/>
comes together.<lb/>
Also bringing a large reservoir<lb/>
of talent to Labyrinth is David<lb/>
Bowie, who has written five<lb/>
original songs for the film. His<lb/>
songs are great; his acting more<lb/>
than adequate (though not his<lb/>
best).<lb/>
What makes Labyrinth such<lb/>
good fantasy, however, is that it<lb/>
provides adult wit and humour<lb/>
without losing an overall tone of<lb/>
innocent heroism. No matter how<lb/>
much you laugh at the antics of<lb/>
these characters, you will believe<lb/>
in them, and what's more you'll<lb/>
root for them. Go see Labyrinth<lb/>
'Labyrinth' star David Bowie, as Jareth, tells co-star Jennifer Connelly (Sarah) that she only has lj<lb/>
hours to rescue her baby brother, who has been taken by goblins under Jareth's command. The<lb/>
goblins are played by muppets under Jim Henson s command. 'Labyrinth' is currently playing at the<lb/>
Plaza Cinemas.<lb/>
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vances by professors, but ad-<lb/>
ministrators "would usually<lb/>
prefer to have students cope<lb/>
privately" rather than<lb/>
acknowledge the problem.<lb/>
Glamour magazine says.<lb/>
One in six female former<lb/>
psychology students who<lb/>
responded to a nationwide<lb/>
I niversity of Missouri study last<lb/>
year reported having sex with her<lb/>
professor, very often her thesis<lb/>
ad-isor or her supervisor, the<lb/>
magazine reported Monday.<lb/>
Of those who had sex with pro-<lb/>
fessors, 28 percent said they fell<lb/>
coerced when it happened and,<lb/>
when they reflected on the inci-<lb/>
dent, the number leaped to 51<lb/>
percent,<lb/>
"Thirty-one percent of the<lb/>
women reported sexual advances<lb/>
from a professor while in<lb/>
graduate school said<lb/>
psychologist Joseph Thorpe.<lb/>
"Some acknowledged the pass ?<lb/>
others didn't, and 45 percent of<lb/>
the 31 percent said that when thev<lb/>
refused sexual propositions they<lb/>
received some punitive action<lb/>
Thorpe and graduate student<lb/>
Robert Glasser sent surveys to<lb/>
1.04" women and recieved 464<lb/>
; espouses.<lb/>
The article also cited a 19S4 In-<lb/>
diana University national survey<lb/>
that found 25 percent ol all<lb/>
female graduate students could<lb/>
expect sexual harassment from<lb/>
either a facult) member or an ad-<lb/>
i<lb/>
??. ??-?? -? . ????.?-? jfc<lb/>
ministrator during their college<lb/>
years.<lb/>
In addition, a 1983 Harvard<lb/>
University student survey found<lb/>
41 percent of female graduate<lb/>
students suffered some form 1<lb/>
sexual harassment from a faculty<lb/>
member or administrator during<lb/>
their college years, the magazine<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But some women questioned<lb/>
b Glamour praised mutually<lb/>
desired sex between students and<lb/>
teachers and others interpreted a<lb/>
sexual advance from a person<lb/>
with authority as a chance tor<lb/>
gam. the magazine said.<lb/>
"It the deal is a lay for an A.<lb/>
then that's what I'll do these<lb/>
women say,<lb/>
reported.<lb/>
the magazine<lb/>
But students who object to sex-<lb/>
ual harassment often are ignored,<lb/>
the magazine said.<lb/>
"Administrators would usualK<lb/>
prefer to have students cope<lb/>
privately said Cynthia Enloe,<lb/>
professor ol government and<lb/>
coordinator of women's studies<lb/>
at Clark University in Worcester,<lb/>
Mass.<lb/>
he Casl Carolina Summer I heat re<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Now You Know<lb/>
(UPI) ? The heaviest non-<lb/>
diseased human brain on record<lb/>
was that of Russian author Ivan<lb/>
Sergeyvich Turgene at 4 pounds<lb/>
6.9 ounces. An average adult<lb/>
male brain weighs 3 pounds 2 2<lb/>
ounces.<lb/>
Ira L<lb/>
evin s<lb/>
DEATHTRAP<lb/>
Monday ? Saturday. July 21 ? 26. 8:15 pm<lb/>
Wednesday &amp; Saturday, July 23 &amp; 26, 2:15 pm<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre 5tl ?. ? Gree- . ? <lb/>
For Reservations: 757-6390<lb/>
COMING ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
Thursday, July 17, 1986<lb/>
3:00 p.m. FREE<lb/>
Watermelon Feast<lb/>
Central Campus Outdoor Mall<lb/>
Monday, July 21, 1986<lb/>
3:30 p.m.<lb/>
"BODY HEAT"<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Thursday, July 24, 1986<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Olympics<lb/>
3:00 p.m. in Recreation Area<lb/>
Free registration by Tuesday, July 22, 1986<lb/>
in Billiards Center<lb/>
Test Your Skill At:<lb/>
Billiards, Table Tennis, Bowling, Video<lb/>
Games, Darts, and Ring Toss<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Notes<lb/>
t<lb/>
ho<lb/>
Jackson Homers<lb/>
PI) ? Bu Jackson hi! I<lb/>
me run as a pro Sunday The<lb/>
Memphis Chicks' righl fielder<lb/>
connected in the first inning t<lb/>
a man aboard In four other plate<lb/>
appearances, he flied -salIc-<lb/>
ed, struck out and product<lb/>
sacrifice fly. In 14 game.<lb/>
Jackson is bar<lb/>
homer and four rbi's. He has<lb/>
seven hits in : 14<lb/>
games. He has walke<lb/>
and struck out 24<lb/>
Quotes of the I)a<lb/>
"I don't think some guy<lb/>
themselve- hard enougl v ?<lb/>
mentioning names, I'm tire<lb/>
people saying<lb/>
how hot it is. I'm<lb/>
hear people sav thev have a<lb/>
toe, their shoulder<lb/>
gives a flying cow .hip l! vou're<lb/>
hurt, go on the disbabled I<lb/>
Detroit outfielder K ?<lb/>
said about<lb/>
"We're definitely<lb/>
division Hopefully,<lb/>
thquakc<lb/>
to the i ? ??<lb/>
perfect<lb/>
rig now<lb/>
manage: Steve Be<lb/>
Padre rr ved <lb/>
of 'he first-place Giai<lb/>
same dav an ear<lb/>
Southern C a<lb/>
Overlooked People<lb/>
Despite leading the -i <lb/>
.579 sluggi<lb/>
ranking in the<lb/>
runs (20), rbi's (61) ai 1<lb/>
percentage (.407), M<lb/>
first baseman Kent Hrl ?<lb/>
not in H<lb/>
Game because Mai <lb/>
fiowser selected Doi M<lb/>
of the Yank B i<lb/>
Eddie Murray v a<lb/>
ly Joyner i Calil<lb/>
Al 's Oil Can Boyd<lb/>
Dykstra were overlooke<lb/>
Smith C enter As Host<lb/>
North Carolina'a Dcd:<lb/>
Smith Center has been re<lb/>
mended to host firsi a a second-<lb/>
round play in the 1988 N <lb/>
men's basketball tournament<lb/>
The NCAA's men's baske<lb/>
committee made recomme<lb/>
lions for the first tw<lb/>
regional action at a<lb/>
Monterev. Cain . last week.<lb/>
The Greensboro C<lb/>
also recommended<lb/>
and second-round i<lb/>
1989 tourney.<lb/>
Poly nice Loses Scholarship<lb/>
Virginia center (ld<lb/>
has lost his<lb/>
Atlantic Coast v. onference s<lb/>
has rescinded I<lb/>
the 6-11 star, who was :<lb/>
of stealing a sei f stei<lb/>
phones<lb/>
Pols nice ca<lb/>
he qualities foi asch lars<lb/>
ed on need.<lb/>
Zoe!<lb/>
u<lb/>
Major League St<lb/>
I.AM<lb/>
National I eague<lb/>
W-l Pet<lb/>
New Yorkvy;<lb/>
Montreal46 '?-<lb/>
Philadelphia42<lb/>
Chicago$6-48<lb/>
St. Louis6 ;<lb/>
PittsburghJ <lb/>
WISTW-lI!<lb/>
San Francis48-40<lb/>
Houston?r-i!<lb/>
San Diego4- -I'<lb/>
Atlanta4jt<lb/>
Cincinnati40 44<lb/>
Los Angeles40-48<lb/>
American1 faun<lb/>
EAMw 1Pd<lb/>
BostonS4V?r?44<lb/>
New Yorkv)<lb/>
Cleveland is)u<lb/>
Baltimore46 41<lb/>
Toronto4" 4?<lb/>
Detroit4t 444sM<lb/>
Milwaukee41 4?<lb/>
WESTNN I.<lb/>
California4S s)<lb/>
Texas4' 41<lb/>
Chicago4t? 46.s<lb/>
Kansas City404S<lb/>
Seattlets si?<lb/>
Minnesotat ' <lb/>
? OaklandU S6s<lb/>
'??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057829_0007"/><lb/>
fes Women<lb/>
an A.<lb/>
 at I'll do<lb/>
o sex<lb/>
? iored(<lb/>
iialK<lb/>
cope<lb/>
ia 1<lb/>
and<lb/>
Josepr<lb/>
v"<lb/>
ffiHTRAP<lb/>
21-26, 8:15 pm<lb/>
f 23 &amp; 26. 2:15 pm<lb/>
757-6390<lb/>
FACTIONS<lb/>
986<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
n Feast<lb/>
Dor Mai!<lb/>
986<lb/>
EAT"<lb/>
ieatre<lb/>
24, 1986<lb/>
Student<lb/>
ympics<lb/>
reation Area<lb/>
-2, 1986<lb/>
kill At:<lb/>
, Bowling, Video<lb/>
d Ring Toss<lb/>
gathering place<lb/>
THE EASTC AROl 1NIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JULY 16. 1986<lb/>
Page I<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
-<lb/>
Notes<lb/>
Jackson Homers<lb/>
(I PI) ? Bo Jackson hit his first<lb/>
home run as a pro Sunday. The<lb/>
Memphis Chicks' right fielder<lb/>
connected in the first inning with<lb/>
a man aboard. In four other plate<lb/>
appearances, he flied out, walk-<lb/>
ed, struck out and produced a<lb/>
sacrifice fly. In 14 games,<lb/>
Jackson is batting .140 with a<lb/>
homer and four rbi's. He has<lb/>
Nt'en hits in 52 at-bats over 14<lb/>
cames. He has walked four times<lb/>
and struck out 24.<lb/>
Quotes of the Day<lb/>
"I don't think some guys push<lb/>
hemselves hard enough. Without<lb/>
mentioning names, I'm tired of<lb/>
people saying they're hurt and<lb/>
now hot it is. I'm hurt, too. I<lb/>
hear people say they have a sore<lb/>
toe, their shoulder is stiff, who<lb/>
olives a flying cow chip0 If you're<lb/>
hurt, go on the disbabled list<lb/>
Detroit outfielder Kirk Gibson<lb/>
said about his teammates.<lb/>
"We're definitely in the right<lb/>
division. Hopefully, the next ear-<lb/>
:hquake doesn't slide San Diego<lb/>
to the East Coast. We're in<lb/>
perfect position geographically<lb/>
ight now said San Diego<lb/>
manager Steve Boros after his<lb/>
Padres moved within three games<lb/>
of the first-place Giants on the<lb/>
same day an earthquake hit<lb/>
Southern California.<lb/>
Overlooked People<lb/>
Despite leading the AL with a<lb/>
579 slugging percentage and<lb/>
ranking in the top six in home<lb/>
runs (20), rbi's (61) and on-base<lb/>
percentage (.407), Minnesota<lb/>
first baseman Kent Hrbek was<lb/>
not in Houston for the All-Siai<lb/>
Game because Manager Dick<lb/>
Howser selected Don Mattingly<lb/>
of the Yankees and Baltimore's<lb/>
Eddie Murray to join starter W al-<lb/>
ly Joyner of California. However<lb/>
AL's Oil Can Boyd and NL's I en<lb/>
Dykstra were overlooked as well<lb/>
Smith Center As Host<lb/>
North Carolina'a Dean E.<lb/>
Smith Center has been recom-<lb/>
mended to host first- and second -<lb/>
round play in the 1988 NCAA<lb/>
men's basketball tournament.<lb/>
The NCAA's men's basketball<lb/>
committee made recommenda-<lb/>
tions for the first two rounds and<lb/>
regional action at a meeting in<lb/>
Monterey, Calif last week.<lb/>
The Greensboro Coliseum was<lb/>
also recommended to host first-<lb/>
and second-round action in the<lb/>
1989 tourney.<lb/>
Polynice Loses Scholarship<lb/>
Virginia center Olden Polynice<lb/>
has lost his scholarship. The<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference school<lb/>
has rescinded the scholarship of<lb/>
the 6-11 star, who was convicted<lb/>
of stealing a set of stereo head-<lb/>
phones.<lb/>
Polynice can stay in school if<lb/>
he qualifies for a scholarship bas-<lb/>
ed on need.<lb/>
Defending Champs Struggle<lb/>
Rookies Performing Well<lb/>
Heisman Trophy winner Bo Jackson chose pro baseball over the NFL<lb/>
Zoeller's Game Back<lb/>
W II I IAMSBURG, Va. (UPI) -<lb/>
Fuzzy Zoeller's golf game is back<lb/>
on again, thanks to a feu weeks<lb/>
o.<lb/>
Zoeller won his third tourna-<lb/>
ment of the year over the<lb/>
weekend, capturing the S500.000<lb/>
Busch Golf Classic by two<lb/>
strokes, to stamp himself as one<lb/>
of the favorites for the upcoming<lb/>
British Open.<lb/>
"1 like to think there's more to<lb/>
come the 34-year-old Zoeller<lb/>
said. "I'm still a young man and<lb/>
figure I've got a lot of golf left<lb/>
Zoeller's win in the Busch,<lb/>
which pushed his earnings to<lb/>
S332.883 for the year, came in his<lb/>
first tournament since the U.S.<lb/>
Open in June.<lb/>
"1 took a couple of weeks off<lb/>
after the Open (where he tied for<lb/>
15th), then figured it was time to<lb/>
get busy again said Zoeller, the<lb/>
winner of the 1979 PGA and the<lb/>
1984 U.S. Open.<lb/>
Zoeller's Busch win was, as<lb/>
usual, a hit with the crowd.<lb/>
"When you play with Fuzzy,<lb/>
especially on the weekend, you<lb/>
have to expect a large and noisy<lb/>
crowd said Joev Sindelar, who<lb/>
played in the same threesome<lb/>
with Zoeller Sunday. "But he<lb/>
never lets it get out of hand<lb/>
Zoeller said he is still occa-<lb/>
sionally troubled by his back but<lb/>
is not letting it affect his golf.<lb/>
"I have gradually learned to<lb/>
live with it he said. "I've learn-<lb/>
ed that I can't afford to do much<lb/>
practicing, that I have to take it<lb/>
easy except when I'm actually<lb/>
playing a competitive round.<lb/>
Zoeller was one o' the few big<lb/>
names to play in the tournament.<lb/>
Many of the top pros took the<lb/>
week off to prepare for the<lb/>
British Open, which opens<lb/>
tomarrow at Turnberry.<lb/>
"We keep Imping we can get a<lb/>
better date said a tournament<lb/>
official. "So far, even though we<lb/>
have the purse up to S5(X),000,<lb/>
and will add another SI 12,000<lb/>
next year, it's been hard to get the<lb/>
sort of field we'd like to have.<lb/>
"Too many o the top goiters<lb/>
feel it's too much to play here this<lb/>
week and then rush to the British<lb/>
Open the official said.<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
AND<lb/>
RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
SporU Mi lor i<lb/>
As Major League Baseball<lb/>
takes it's traditional mid-season<lb/>
All-Star break, both of the defen-<lb/>
ding league champions are strug-<lb/>
gling to regain last year's form.<lb/>
The St. Louis Cardinals,<lb/>
defending champions in the Na-<lb/>
tional League, are in next to last<lb/>
place in the Eastern division with<lb/>
a woeful 36-50 record. They lead<lb/>
last place Pittsburgh by only one-<lb/>
half game, and are a distant 24<lb/>
games behind the division-<lb/>
leading Mets.<lb/>
The defending World Cham-<lb/>
pion Kansas City Royals are do-<lb/>
ing only slightly better than their<lb/>
cohorts from Missouri. With a<lb/>
40-48 record, the Royals trail<lb/>
America, League West leader<lb/>
California by eight-and-a-half<lb/>
games.<lb/>
While last year's pennant win-<lb/>
ners are struggling, so to are the<lb/>
other division winners from last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The defending Western Divi-<lb/>
sion Champion Los Angeles<lb/>
Dodgers, who have been<lb/>
hampered by a number of in-<lb/>
juries, are currently in last place<lb/>
in the National League West. The<lb/>
Dodgers trail the surprising San<lb/>
Francisco Giants by eight games<lb/>
in a division that any of the teams<lb/>
could win if they get hot during<lb/>
the final half of the season.<lb/>
Last season's champion in the<lb/>
American League East is also<lb/>
struggling to regain their cham-<lb/>
pionship form. The Toronto Blue<lb/>
Jays are in fifth place in arguablv<lb/>
baseball's toughest division (AL<lb/>
East), trailing the Boston Red<lb/>
Sox bv 10-and-a-half games.<lb/>
While the favorites have not<lb/>
fared so well thus far, there have<lb/>
been a number of good perfor-<lb/>
mances by teams not expected to<lb/>
contend.<lb/>
In addition to division leading<lb/>
Boston and San Francisco, the<lb/>
Cleveland Indians and Texas<lb/>
Rangers have also played well.<lb/>
The Rangers have led the AL<lb/>
West for most of the season, and<lb/>
currently trail California by only<lb/>
one-and-a-half games. Cleveland<lb/>
is seven games over five hundred<lb/>
with a 46-39 record and is only<lb/>
nine games out of first place.<lb/>
Without a doubt, the most<lb/>
dominating team in 1986 has<lb/>
been the Amazin' Mets. Not only-<lb/>
are they leading second-place<lb/>
Montreal by 13 games in the NL<lb/>
East, but have placed four<lb/>
starters (and a reserve) in the All-<lb/>
Star lineup.<lb/>
While the Mets have been the<lb/>
most dominating team, Bosox<lb/>
pitcher Roger Clemens (15-2,<lb/>
2.48 era) has been doing it in-<lb/>
dividually ? taken the majors by<lb/>
storm. Clemens, with his over-<lb/>
powering fastball won his first 14<lb/>
games, and set a major league<lb/>
record striking out 20 batters in<lb/>
one contest.<lb/>
Rookie sensation Jose Canseco<lb/>
heads the AL hitters with 23<lb/>
home runs and 78 runs batted in.<lb/>
However. Canseco was denied a<lb/>
starting position on th American<lb/>
League team by Dave Win field.<lb/>
Winfield is currently terrorizing<lb/>
AL pitching with a .232 batting<lb/>
average (which is sure to have<lb/>
Dwight Gooden shaking in his<lb/>
boots, huh&amp;).<lb/>
Another first-year standout is<lb/>
California first baseman W'ally<lb/>
Joyner. Joyner is the first rookie<lb/>
in the history of baseball to start<lb/>
in an All-Star game. However, he<lb/>
is deserving of the honor as he<lb/>
has 20 homers and 72 rbi's with a<lb/>
.297 batting average.<lb/>
Leading the American League<lb/>
in hitting is the ever-present<lb/>
Wade Bcggs. Boggs, who recent-<lb/>
ly has been in a slump after the<lb/>
death of his mother, has flirted<lb/>
with the .400 mark and is current-<lb/>
ly hitting .363.<lb/>
Heading the National League<lb/>
pitchers is the Mets" Sid Fer-<lb/>
nandez (yes. El Sid) with a 12-2<lb/>
record and a 2.67 era. Gooden is<lb/>
next with a 10-4 mark and a 2.77<lb/>
era. With Met starters Bobby<lb/>
Ojeda and Ron Darling currently<lb/>
sporting 10-2 and 9-2 records<lb/>
respectively, the Mets could be<lb/>
the first team since the 1969<lb/>
Orioles to have four 20-game<lb/>
winners on one team.<lb/>
Houston's Mike Scott leads the<lb/>
majors in K's with 167.<lb/>
Leading the hitting department<lb/>
is Leti Dykstra of you guessed it<lb/>
? the Mets. However, Dykstra,<lb/>
who is hitting .349, may not get<lb/>
enough at bats to qualify for the<lb/>
league crown since he platoons<lb/>
with Mookie Wilson in center-<lb/>
field.<lb/>
If Dykstra falters, All-Star out-<lb/>
fielder Tony Gwynn is right on<lb/>
his heels with a .341 batting<lb/>
average.<lb/>
Just as in the American<lb/>
League, a rookie is leading the<lb/>
National League in homeruns.<lb/>
Astro first-baseman Glenn Davis<lb/>
has 20 homeruns. and leads Phil-<lb/>
ly third-baseman Mike Schmidt<lb/>
by one homer.<lb/>
Schmidt is leading the league in<lb/>
rbi's with 66, leading the Mets<lb/>
Gary Carter by a single rbi.<lb/>
Check the bottom of the page<lb/>
for both the National and<lb/>
American League standings<lb/>
through the All-Star break.<lb/>
Houston Taking Pride In City<lb/>
MajorLeagueStandings<lb/>
National League<lb/>
FASTW-LPet.GB<lb/>
New York59-25.702<lb/>
Montreal46-38.54813<lb/>
Philadelphia423.49417.5<lb/>
Chicago368.42923<lb/>
St. Louis36-50.41924<lb/>
Pittsburgh35-50.41224.5<lb/>
WESTW-LPet.GB<lb/>
San Francisco48-40.545?<lb/>
Houston47-41.5341<lb/>
San Diego453.5113<lb/>
Atlanta426.4776<lb/>
Cincinnati404.4766<lb/>
Los Angeles408.4558<lb/>
American League<lb/>
EASTW-LPet.GB<lb/>
Boston56-31.644<lb/>
New York50-39.5627<lb/>
Cleveland46-39.5419<lb/>
Baltimore46-41.52910<lb/>
Toronto4743.52210.5<lb/>
Detroit43-44.49413<lb/>
Milwaukee4145.47714.5<lb/>
WESTW-LPet.GB<lb/>
California48-39.552?<lb/>
Texas4741.5341.5<lb/>
Chicago4046.4657.5<lb/>
Kansas City4048.4558.5<lb/>
Seattle39-51.43310.5<lb/>
Minnesota37-51.42011.5<lb/>
Oakland34-56.37815.5<lb/>
HOUSTON (UPI) ? Housto-<lb/>
nians have taken to wearing their<lb/>
pride on their shirts these das<lb/>
That's how far down in the<lb/>
dumps people are around here.<lb/>
When Texans have to weat<lb/>
T-shirts telling everybody that<lb/>
they're proud, you know<lb/>
something is wrong.<lb/>
Yet T-shirts with the slogan<lb/>
"Houston Proud" are a common<lb/>
garb worn by the local citizenry.<lb/>
This is definitely a city with a<lb/>
complex, and it's a good idea<lb/>
major-league baseball chose it to<lb/>
host the 57th All-Star Game.<lb/>
Forget the grim fact the game<lb/>
will be played indoors for the se-<lb/>
cond straight year. You can't<lb/>
play baseball outside in the sum-<lb/>
mer here anyway. If the heat<lb/>
doesn't suffocate you, mos-<lb/>
quitoes big enough to wear a<lb/>
leash will devour you.<lb/>
This is the perfect place for<lb/>
baseball's midseason carnival<lb/>
because this is a city badly in need<lb/>
of a party. There is trouble in a<lb/>
place many people believed was<lb/>
paradise only five years ago.<lb/>
Signs of decay are everywhere.<lb/>
Taxis, which once sprinted back<lb/>
and forth to the airport to collect<lb/>
the hordes of dreamers coming to<lb/>
seek their fortune, now sit idly by<lb/>
the curbs.<lb/>
Skycrapers, which once had<lb/>
waiting lists for occupancy, now<lb/>
stand empty in the downtown<lb/>
area. One estimate states there<lb/>
are 64 such vacant buildings, un-<lb/>
fortunate monuments to more<lb/>
prosperous times.<lb/>
"We are in a very serious reces-<lb/>
sion right now admits Jim Mc-<lb/>
Conn, the city's mayor during the<lb/>
boom years from 1978-81 and<lb/>
now an assistant vice president of<lb/>
marketing for the Houston<lb/>
Sports Association.<lb/>
"A lot of people have lost their<lb/>
jobs. We are a city closely tied to<lb/>
the petroleum industry and when<lb/>
the price of oil dropped so<lb/>
drastically it really hit us hard<lb/>
Lost jobs lead to lost pride and<lb/>
McConn sees the All-Star Game<lb/>
as an important step in helping<lb/>
Houstonians feel good about<lb/>
themselves again.<lb/>
"The All-Star Game is going to<lb/>
help McConn said, "and 1<lb/>
don't mean just from the money<lb/>
it brings into our economy, l<lb/>
don't think anybody gets too big<lb/>
or sophisticated to host an event<lb/>
like this.<lb/>
"It stimulates interest not only<lb/>
in sports, but it does something<lb/>
for the psyche. Houstonians can<lb/>
say, 'hey, here we are hosting an<lb/>
important event like this And<lb/>
you don't even have to be a<lb/>
sports fan to be caught up in it<lb/>
Sports already has helped con-<lb/>
siderably in these troubled times,<lb/>
McConn said.<lb/>
The Rockets, led by Akeem<lb/>
Olajuwon and Ralph Sampson,<lb/>
reached the NBA finals and<lb/>
baseball's Astros are challenging<lb/>
for first place in the National<lb/>
League West.<lb/>
Later this month the city will<lb/>
play host to the National Sports<lb/>
a<lb/>
Festival, which brings together<lb/>
the nation's best amateur athletes<lb/>
in varied competition.<lb/>
"Sports, especially winning<lb/>
sports teams, has a way of taking<lb/>
people's minds off their<lb/>
troubles McConn said. "It<lb/>
turns a town on. This past winter<lb/>
the Rockets were the major topic<lb/>
of conversation no matter where<lb/>
you went "<lb/>
McConn also is hoping the All-<lb/>
Star Game will get people's<lb/>
minds attuned to baseball again.<lb/>
Despite their solid first-half per-<lb/>
formance, the Astros have not<lb/>
been doing well at the box office.<lb/>
"The success of the Rockets<lb/>
really hurt the baseball atten-<lb/>
dance in the beginning o the<lb/>
year McConn said. "When the<lb/>
baseball season started, the<lb/>
basketball playoffs were in full<lb/>
force and everyone was tuned in-<lb/>
to the Rockets. The Ail-Star<lb/>
Game, because of all the hoopla<lb/>
See SPORTS, page 8<lb/>
Lefty" Recalls All-Star Memories<lb/>
HOUSTON (UPI) ? Vernon<lb/>
Louis "Lefty" Gomez, who<lb/>
started five of the first six AU-<lb/>
Star Games and won three, draws<lb/>
one of his fondest memories from<lb/>
his first at-bat in the mid-summer<lb/>
classic.<lb/>
Gomez, a lifetime .147 hitter,<lb/>
drove in the first run in Ail-Star<lb/>
Game history.<lb/>
"You know, as lousy a hitter<lb/>
as I was he said, "I drove in the<lb/>
first run in an All-Star Game. I<lb/>
think probably 800 people<lb/>
fainted<lb/>
It was the second inning of the<lb/>
1933 game and, with one out,<lb/>
Jimmv Dykes and Joe Cronin<lb/>
drew walks off loser "Wild" Bill<lb/>
Hallahan of the St. Louis Car-<lb/>
dinals.<lb/>
Rick Ferrell lined out for the<lb/>
second out before Gomez drilled<lb/>
a single over shortstop Dick<lb/>
Bartell to score Dykes.<lb/>
Gomez also threw the first<lb/>
pitch in the initial All-Star Game,<lb/>
which was held in Chicago.<lb/>
"I don't remember whether it<lb/>
was a ball or a strike said the<lb/>
76-year-old Gomez before the<lb/>
workouts by the American and<lb/>
National League teams.<lb/>
"Mr. Mack and Mr. McGraw<lb/>
were the managers then Gomez<lb/>
said, still respectful of<lb/>
Philadelphia Athletics owner-<lb/>
manager Connie Mack and New<lb/>
York Giants manager John<lb/>
McGraw.<lb/>
"I remember before the first<lb/>
game, Mr. Mack gathered us all<lb/>
together and told us, 'Gentlemen,<lb/>
we're out to win. Maybe some of<lb/>
you won't get in the game.<lb/>
Maybe you will. But we want to<lb/>
win<lb/>
"They didn't score off me in<lb/>
the three innings I pitched. Babe<lb/>
Ruth hit a home run and made a<lb/>
spectacular catch<lb/>
Gomez, who was elected to the<lb/>
Hall of Fame in 1972 with a<lb/>
lifetime regular-season record of<lb/>
189-102 with a 3.34 ERA in 14<lb/>
seasons, compiled quite a mark in<lb/>
All-Star and World Series com-<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
He was 6-0 in seven ap-<lb/>
pearances covering five World<lb/>
Series and 3-0 in five All-Star<lb/>
Games.<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
Wed. July 16, 1941<lb/>
Joe DiMaggio has three hits<lb/>
against Cleveland to extend his<lb/>
hitting streak to a new 56-game<lb/>
record, considered by many to<lb/>
be the most impressive in all of<lb/>
sports. The streak is finally<lb/>
snapped the following day.<lb/>
Look for articles previewing the 19S6 version of Art Baker's<lb/>
Pirates in upcoming editions of The East Carolinian.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057829_0008"/><lb/>
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Unless there is a sudden<lb/>
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People here are worried al<lb/>
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McConn said "A loi<lb/>
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Apply in person at the<lb/>
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You can master the basics of<lb/>
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Classes now forming and include <lb/>
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215 E. Fourth Street<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057829_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>