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<pb facs="00057913_0001"/>
INSIDE<lb/>
Editorials?tttmtm 4<lb/>
Entertainment?7<lb/>
Sports????? 11<lb/>
Classifieds??ng<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
First ECU Gospel Choir album ever has been<lb/>
released ? see ENTERTAINMENT, page 7.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Pirates look to a victory Saturday as a key to door<lb/>
of success ? see SPORTS, page 11,<lb/>
Stfre i?ust (ftamlmiatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 62 No. 7<lb/>
Thursday, September 17,1987<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Chancellor says image suffering<lb/>
after rough weeks for university<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin makes a point during a Wednesday after-<lb/>
noon interview.<lb/>
By ANDY LEWIS<lb/>
Now Kditor<lb/>
What has been happening to<lb/>
ECU's image?<lb/>
"A measure of a university is how<lb/>
it responds to events which are not<lb/>
favorable according to Chancellor<lb/>
Richard R. Eakin.<lb/>
The events in the past few weeks<lb/>
such as the post-game incident at the<lb/>
ECU-North Carolina State Univer-<lb/>
sity fwtball game, the Biltmorc<lb/>
Street mishap and the arrests of three<lb/>
ECU basketball players have nega-<lb/>
tively influenced public perception of<lb/>
the university, Eakin said in an in-<lb/>
terview Wednesday.<lb/>
In the first part of a two-part series,<lb/>
Eakin speaks about the Carter-Finlcy<lb/>
stadium incident. In the second part,<lb/>
Eakin addresses other issues and<lb/>
explains where he thinks ECU<lb/>
should go from here.<lb/>
The tearing down of the goal<lb/>
posts and a fence and the damage<lb/>
to shrubbery caused by over-<lb/>
zealous fans at Carter-Finley sta-<lb/>
dium Sept. 5 was "inappropri<lb/>
ate" and "unacceptable" ac-<lb/>
cording to Chancellor Eakin.<lb/>
Eakin said he has apologized to<lb/>
NCSU's chancellor for the inci-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
"I personally don't believe that<lb/>
this (incident) should be a reason<lb/>
to discontinue the series Eakin<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"1 hope and 1 trust that both we<lb/>
and North Carolina State can,<lb/>
being "entirely fair" and "objec-<lb/>
tive" to "unduly harsh and <lb/>
critical<lb/>
He added, "In particular, there<lb/>
were a apuple of editorials that I<lb/>
thought  missed the mark and<lb/>
made some rather broad and<lb/>
sweeping allegations about this<lb/>
university (that were not cor-<lb/>
 our institution has been victimized<lb/>
by the behavior of a few<lb/>
?Chancellor Richard R. Eakin<lb/>
upon reflection, decide upon a<lb/>
course of action which will in-<lb/>
deed resume the football series<lb/>
between the two universities<lb/>
NCSU officials have decided to<lb/>
place a one-vear moratorium on<lb/>
the ECU-NCSU football series.<lb/>
Speaking to the issue of press<lb/>
coverage of the event, Eakin said<lb/>
the reporting has ranged from<lb/>
rect)<lb/>
Eakin refused to comment<lb/>
about specific editorials.<lb/>
Eakin said many people have<lb/>
suggested to him that TV and<lb/>
newspaper accounts of the inci-<lb/>
dent could be used as evidence to<lb/>
bring some of the students re-<lb/>
sponsible for the damage before<lb/>
the honor board.<lb/>
"I have problems with that<lb/>
Eakin said. "I just simply don't<lb/>
believe it's possible, given the<lb/>
chaos that we saw there, that one<lb/>
could with any degree of reliabil-<lb/>
ity make the judgment that just<lb/>
because someone was on the field<lb/>
that that individual was guilty of<lb/>
destructive behavior andor vio-<lb/>
lence<lb/>
Eakin said he believes that<lb/>
"indivduals also do have funda-<lb/>
mental rights that we at the uni-<lb/>
versity cannot trample upon. So<lb/>
I'm trying to do mv best to respect<lb/>
everyone's rights, but at the same<lb/>
time make it clear that we will not<lb/>
tolerate mob violence<lb/>
Eakin also said he does not<lb/>
believe the cheerleaders contrib-<lb/>
uted either intentionallv or<lb/>
unintentionally to violent behav-<lb/>
ior after the game.<lb/>
"I think that in manv respects,<lb/>
many people in this whole epi-<lb/>
sode have been victims; and a lot<lb/>
of us have been victims in the<lb/>
sense that we, our institution has<lb/>
been victimized by the behavior<lb/>
of a few people<lb/>
Greenville, ECUofficials meet, propose plan<lb/>
By CLAY DEANHARDT streets on that day, making three hason between thecity police and who will soon contact the city head of the police record! d.vi- warded to lWhoU SMtnn c?H<lb/>
Managing Kditor<lb/>
Acommitteeofcityand univer-<lb/>
sity officials met Sept. 2 and pro-<lb/>
posed three plans to prevent inci-<lb/>
dents like the one on Biltmore<lb/>
Street on Aug. 29, according to<lb/>
Greenville interim assistant po-<lb/>
lice chief Nelson Staton.<lb/>
Greenville police broke up an<lb/>
unauthorized block party involv-<lb/>
ing ECU students on Biltmore<lb/>
Street between Fifth and Fourth<lb/>
IFC focuses on<lb/>
1987 rush<lb/>
By TONT PAGE<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
Rush was the topic at the top of<lb/>
the Inter-Fraternity Council's<lb/>
agenda for their Tuesday meet-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Thisyear a new rush policy was<lb/>
implemented requiring rushees<lb/>
to have a grade point average of<lb/>
2.0. This change in policy was met<lb/>
with a change in the overall rush<lb/>
process.<lb/>
The new rule means first<lb/>
semester freshmen cannot re-<lb/>
cieve bids for membership in a<lb/>
fraternity. However, they are al-<lb/>
lowed to rush and attend all rush<lb/>
functions, according to Brooke<lb/>
Stonesifer, president of IFC.<lb/>
"We believe the new rule will<lb/>
improve rush in the long run. We<lb/>
feel we will be getting more ma-<lb/>
ture freshmen who have adapted<lb/>
to college. This will improve<lb/>
everyone's GPA overall said<lb/>
Stonesifer.<lb/>
There will also be a "Fall Rush<lb/>
Week" in November for inter-<lb/>
ested freshmen to attend. This<lb/>
will give them a second opportu-<lb/>
nity to be exposed to the fraterni-<lb/>
ties of their choice. The dates of<lb/>
Fall rush will be announced in the<lb/>
East Carolinian and interested<lb/>
students can sign up outside the<lb/>
student store.<lb/>
IFC will also be sponsoring<lb/>
along with the Panhellinic<lb/>
committee a Basketball Blowout<lb/>
Sept 22-23. Proceeds from the<lb/>
function will go to the Ronald<lb/>
McDonald House. "Everyone is<lb/>
reminded to bring their quarters<lb/>
to class and shoot some hoop in<lb/>
front of the student store. By<lb/>
making three shots you can qual-<lb/>
ify to win $100 or various gift<lb/>
certificates said Stonesifer.<lb/>
arrests in the process. Some stu-<lb/>
dents feel police used unneces-<lb/>
sary force in making the arrests.<lb/>
Staton referred to the first pro-<lb/>
posal as a mutual aid agreement.<lb/>
It would allow Greenville police<lb/>
to authorize ECU public safety<lb/>
officers to make arrests off cam-<lb/>
pus in specific situations, Staton<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The second proposal would<lb/>
prevent officers from being<lb/>
forced to make arrests in all but<lb/>
extreme cases, he said. Under this<lb/>
plan, city police would collect<lb/>
student identification cards and<lb/>
turn in the names to university<lb/>
officials. The students must then<lb/>
free those officials and possiblv<lb/>
the Honor Board, Staton said.<lb/>
Staton said the final plan in-<lb/>
volved the use of an officer from<lb/>
public safety that would serve as<lb/>
his department. This officer<lb/>
would accompany city police on<lb/>
city calls where students were<lb/>
involved, he said.<lb/>
According to Staton, the pres-<lb/>
ence of a public safety officer<lb/>
might make student identifica-<lb/>
tion easier while providing a<lb/>
university representative that<lb/>
students might respond to better<lb/>
than they do to Greenville police.<lb/>
Present at the Sept. 2 meeting<lb/>
were Staton, interim police chief<lb/>
Randy Nichols, the Greenville<lb/>
city attorney, SGA President<lb/>
Scott Thomas, Associate Dean of<lb/>
Students Ron Speier, Public<lb/>
Safety Director Joe Calder, Chief<lb/>
of public safety johnny Rose and<lb/>
other university officials, Staton<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The proposals are being in-<lb/>
spected by university attorneys.<lb/>
attorney with their verdict on the<lb/>
plan's viability, he said.<lb/>
"I think they are going to be<lb/>
kind of proactive measures<lb/>
rather than reactive Staton said,<lb/>
noting he thought the proposals<lb/>
were sound and would be effec-<lb/>
tive.<lb/>
Staton said other issues also<lb/>
were discussed at the meeting.<lb/>
He said the committee agreed<lb/>
alcohol played a large part in the<lb/>
Biltmore incident. Because many<lb/>
students can no longer drink<lb/>
downtown since the changing of<lb/>
the drinking age last year, Staton<lb/>
said, the committee felt the num-<lb/>
ber of private parties with alcohol<lb/>
was going to rise.<lb/>
Another issue the group dis-<lb/>
cussed was applying for noise<lb/>
and block party permits, he said.<lb/>
According to Brenda Saulter,<lb/>
poll<lb/>
sion, organizers of the Biltmore<lb/>
party applied for a noise permit<lb/>
but were rejected because thev<lb/>
did not meet qualifications for<lb/>
application.Shesaid theorganiz-<lb/>
ers picked up an application for a<lb/>
permit to block off the street, but<lb/>
never returned it.<lb/>
Staton said students had that<lb/>
application at the partv site,<lb/>
completed and signed "Chief Big<lb/>
Mouth" where the proper au-<lb/>
thorization signature would<lb/>
have been.<lb/>
An internal investigation into<lb/>
the students' allegations of un-<lb/>
necessary force is near comple-<lb/>
tion, Staton said.<lb/>
He said witnesses ave been<lb/>
interviewed on tape and that<lb/>
transcripts from those tapes are<lb/>
nearing completion now. The<lb/>
transcripts will then be for-<lb/>
An ECU student avoids watching as he gives blood Wednes-<lb/>
day. The Air Force ROTC sponsored blood drive is continuing<lb/>
today on the second floor of Mendenhall Student Center. 400<lb/>
pints is the goal.<lb/>
irded to Nicnols, Staton said.<lb/>
"If we do find that some inap-<lb/>
propriate action was taken v- UT<lb/>
officers  d<lb/>
would not be public  i<lb/>
tion he said.<lb/>
According to Staton, Nichols<lb/>
met with fraternity and sorority-<lb/>
leaders soon after the Sept 2<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
'They discussed how to not<lb/>
have incidents like the Biltmore<lb/>
See GROUP, page 3<lb/>
Faculty Senate<lb/>
begins search<lb/>
By JEANETTE HERRERA<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Faculty Senate Tues-<lb/>
day nominated seven people to<lb/>
beon the search committee which<lb/>
will select the new vice chancellor<lb/>
for academic affairs.<lb/>
During the meeting at Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center, the sen-<lb/>
ate nominated seven faculty<lb/>
members to be on the committee.<lb/>
Chancellor Richard R. Eakin will<lb/>
pick three of the seven and two<lb/>
others of his own choice to serve<lb/>
on the committee.<lb/>
The seven nominees are Carl<lb/>
Adler, Conner Atkeson, Larrv<lb/>
Hough, Ruth Katz, Holly<lb/>
Mathews, Judith Sadler, and Don<lb/>
Sexauer.<lb/>
Eakin commented at the meet-<lb/>
ing that William Blood worth has<lb/>
been doing an excellent job as<lb/>
acting Vice Chancellor. Eakin<lb/>
noted that any major position<lb/>
opening will be opened to appli-<lb/>
cants nationwide.<lb/>
Eakin began his speech by<lb/>
saying he was determined to<lb/>
keep coverage of the ECU-NCSU<lb/>
game balanced and reasoned.<lb/>
Efforts to find the person who<lb/>
injured the officer after the game<lb/>
have been unsuccessful so far,<lb/>
Eakin said. He also commented<lb/>
that "we have been treated in a<lb/>
way that is unfair and he later<lb/>
made reference to an editorial<lb/>
written in a Greensboro paper.<lb/>
Other election results at the<lb/>
meeting went as follows: Emily<lb/>
Boyce and Larry Hough were<lb/>
elected to the Due Process<lb/>
Committee; James Bruner and<lb/>
Tinsley Yarbrough were elected<lb/>
to the Hearing Committee; Bea<lb/>
Chauncey and Ted Ellis were<lb/>
elected to the Reconsideration<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
A<lb/>
 I<lb/>
Ia<lb/>
Wk - -i? : if' iji.j?i m<lb/>
J<lb/>
-s-<lb/>
'??- -?-h0m <lb/>
if i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057913_0002"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
A<lb/>
. <lb/>
. Tl IE FAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 17,1987<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Seminars scheduled<lb/>
(ECU News Bureau) ? The<lb/>
"st Carolina University Divi-<lb/>
sion of Continuing Education<lb/>
will sponsor four non-credit<lb/>
seminars beginning today-<lb/>
Introduction to Stained Class<lb/>
will be instructed bv Rick Hall,<lb/>
owner of the Class Shop, Sept. 17<lb/>
Nov. 19 from 7-9:30 p.m. in<lb/>
lenkins Building on the ECU<lb/>
campus. This course will intro-<lb/>
duce the basics of the art of<lb/>
stained glass. There will be a<lb/>
material and equipment fee due<lb/>
at the first clas.s meeting.<lb/>
Beginning Piano for Adults<lb/>
will be held in Fletcher Music<lb/>
Center Sept. 17-19 from 6:30-7:30<lb/>
p.m. Students may learn to plav<lb/>
familiar tunes in a short time. No<lb/>
prior experience is necessary and<lb/>
a text is required.<lb/>
CPK: The Race for Life will be<lb/>
Sept. 19 from 9-4 p.m. in Memo-<lb/>
rial Gym. David White, Assistant<lb/>
1 lealth, P.E Recreation and<lb/>
Safety professor will instruct this<lb/>
course. American Red Cross cer-<lb/>
tification is required.<lb/>
Sailing and Cruising Instruc-<lb/>
tion will be Sept. 19-20atSailcraft<lb/>
Marina, Oriental, N.C. from Sat<lb/>
10 a.m. - Sun 4 p.m. Sailing and<lb/>
navigation will be taught by Til-<lb/>
ton Wilcox, professor in the<lb/>
School of Business. The class will<lb/>
be limited to six applicants.<lb/>
For more information, write or<lb/>
call the ECU Division of Continu-<lb/>
ing Education, 757-6143,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
A lumna joins ECU<lb/>
(ECU News Bureau) ? Dr. Jo-<lb/>
seph Campinha-Bacote, formerly<lb/>
psychiatricmental health nurse<lb/>
consultant at Roanokc-Chowan<lb/>
1 lospital, Ahoskie, has joined the<lb/>
Fast Carolina University School<lb/>
of Nursing as an assistant profes-<lb/>
sor.<lb/>
An alumna of the University of<lb/>
Rhode Island, Campinha-Bacote<lb/>
holds a master's degree in psychi-<lb/>
Middle-aged men color hair<lb/>
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) ?<lb/>
A large number of middle-aged<lb/>
men say they think it is acceptable<lb/>
tor men over age 40 to adjust their<lb/>
physical appearance to make<lb/>
themselves look younger.<lb/>
The study of 1,000 men con-<lb/>
ducted by lust for Men shampoo<lb/>
and haircoloring found nearly 70<lb/>
percent endorsed the idea of cos-<lb/>
metic surgery for men.<lb/>
Nearly half the group agreed<lb/>
with the statement that, "It's OK<lb/>
for men to color their hair rather<lb/>
than leaving it gray The firm<lb/>
says other research indicates that<lb/>
10 percent of America's gray-<lb/>
haired men already color their<lb/>
hair.<lb/>
Honored alumna to speak<lb/>
An ECU graduate who has re-<lb/>
ceived the Pulitzer Prize is to be<lb/>
the keynote speaker at the North<lb/>
Carolina Honors Association's<lb/>
state convention, to be held on<lb/>
campus Friday.<lb/>
The association is comprised of<lb/>
all the honors programs in the<lb/>
state, and the theme ot this year's<lb/>
meeting i Honors and Your<lb/>
Future ' Dr David Sanders, Eng-<lb/>
lish professor .nd director of the<lb/>
Honors Program is president-<lb/>
elect of NCHA and host of the<lb/>
meeting, according to a press re-<lb/>
lease.<lb/>
The keynote address will be<lb/>
delivered at 10 a.m. in Menden-<lb/>
hall 244 by Rick Atkinson. Dep-<lb/>
uty National EditorSFTheWash-<lb/>
ington Post. Atkinson is also the<lb/>
onlv Pulitzer Prize winner that<lb/>
ECU has ever graduated, accord-<lb/>
ing to the press release.<lb/>
At 11 a.m. the Associate Dean<lb/>
of the School of Medicine at<lb/>
LNC-Chapel Hill, Dr. William E.<lb/>
Bakewell Jr will discuss admis-<lb/>
sion to professional schools.<lb/>
Strategies for gaining employ-<lb/>
ment in the business world, op-<lb/>
portunities in cooperative educa-<lb/>
tion and the changing role of<lb/>
honors programs and their direc-<lb/>
tor are other topics to be covered<lb/>
at the convention.<lb/>
A detailed schedule is posted<lb/>
outside the English Department<lb/>
Office (Austin 124). The registra-<lb/>
tion fee is$5 ($10 with luncheon).<lb/>
All Honors students are urged to<lb/>
attend. If you have anv questions<lb/>
about the meeting or the Honors<lb/>
Program, contact David Sanders,<lb/>
Ragsdale 212 (757-6373).<lb/>
JUDSON H. BLOUNT, III<lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW<lb/>
D H and Traffic Offenses<lb/>
12. I ee Building<lb/>
'111 asl I hird Street<lb/>
1 ireenville. NC 27835<lb/>
Telephone:<lb/>
(919)758-8555<lb/>
ii<lb/>
J<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
)<lb/>
o (<lb/>
A T,<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
TEA PARTY"<lb/>
Every Friday<lb/>
? $2.00 Iced Teas<lb/>
?FREE x<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
5-7 PM<lb/>
?No<lb/>
Cover<lb/>
Charge<lb/>
S?L W Transit<lb/>
Authority<lb/>
Sheraton Greenville<lb/>
203 W. Greenville Blvd. ? 355-2666<lb/>
o<lb/>
o -?<lb/>
?M? iiiiwiw?'?<lb/>
h W99m ioiw wmmnnwin<lb/>
atricmental health nursing from<lb/>
Texas Women's University and a<lb/>
PhD in nursing from the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Virginia.<lb/>
The new ECU faculty member<lb/>
has more than 13 years of clinical<lb/>
experience in psychiatric nursing<lb/>
at an alcohol treatment center<lb/>
and has been a privately practic-<lb/>
ing therapist.<lb/>
Her research, reported in nu-<lb/>
merous journal articles and pro-<lb/>
fessional presentations, has in-<lb/>
cluded studies of family support<lb/>
needs for intensive care patients<lb/>
and implications of "voodoo ill-<lb/>
ness" for mental health.<lb/>
Campinha-Bacote received an<lb/>
American Nurses Association<lb/>
Clinical Fellowship Award two<lb/>
years ago and was recognized for<lb/>
outstanding research at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Virginia.<lb/>
At ECU, she will teach clinical<lb/>
psychiatricmental health nurs-<lb/>
ing to senior student and com-<lb/>
munitymental healm nursing to<lb/>
graduate students.<lb/>
NewTaxLaw<lb/>
TIP<lb/>
To help you understand the new<lb/>
t.ix Liu , the IRS has two new<lb/>
publications. Publication 920<lb/>
explains changes aflfct nng<lb/>
individuals and Publication 921<lb/>
explains changes affecting<lb/>
businesses. Both are free. Ask tor<lb/>
one at .my IKS office or call the<lb/>
IKS Tax Forms number in your<lb/>
phone book<lb/>
Wheelchair sports to be held<lb/>
(PCMH press release) ? The<lb/>
Regional Rehabilitation Center at<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
will be one of ten hosts nation-<lb/>
wide to co-sponsor the National<lb/>
Wheelchair Athletic Association<lb/>
for a two-day wheelchair sports<lb/>
workshop.<lb/>
To be held Sept. 19-20 at East<lb/>
Carolina University's Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, the free workshop will<lb/>
present general information and<lb/>
hands-on experience on five<lb/>
wheelchair sports by some of the<lb/>
top athletes in each sport.<lb/>
The workshops will be held on<lb/>
Saturday, Sept. 19, from 8a.Hv to<lb/>
6 p.m. and on Sunday, Sept. 20,<lb/>
from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. This<lb/>
workshop is free and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Co-hosts for the two-day event<lb/>
are the National Wheelchair Ath-<lb/>
letic Association, Pitt Countv<lb/>
Memorial Hospital's Regional<lb/>
Rehabilitation Center, the Spinal<lb/>
Cord Injury Association and the<lb/>
East Carolina University Intra-<lb/>
mural Athletic Department.<lb/>
For more information about<lb/>
registration and local accommo-<lb/>
dations, call Jim Barrett at the<lb/>
Regional Rehabihtaton Center at<lb/>
551-4329.<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
UM0MU<lb/>
-4 PuMi w. . w of tit ?ra<lb/>
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Serving the Easf Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
James F. J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representives<lb/>
Anne Leigh Mallory James Russo Shari Clemens<lb/>
Pete Fernald Maria Bell<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY RATES<lb/>
0 49 Coulumn inches $4.25<lb/>
50-99 4.15<lb/>
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COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
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One color and blackS90.00<lb/>
Two colors and black 155.00<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
5,000 or less06 each<lb/>
5,001-10.000055 each<lb/>
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Monday -Friday<lb/>
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Robert H. Bork, answering sena-<lb/>
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preme Court seat, says his critics<lb/>
shouldn't assume he would reject<lb/>
privacy claims, rule against mi<lb/>
noririesorendawoman'srightto<lb/>
an abortion.<lb/>
Bork's message Tuesday, the<lb/>
first day of hisconfirmation hear-<lb/>
ings, was that he's neither liberal<lb/>
nor conservatn<lb/>
only in his<lb/>
should not ere,<lb/>
The nominee!<lb/>
friend and t M<lb/>
tions that ram<lb/>
ingsasa ?<lb/>
sor and his deal<lb/>
the US (<lb/>
Was! ii .?? ?<lb/>
Soviet treaty claims pr<lb/>
WASHIGTON (AP) - US<lb/>
and Soviet officials meeting in<lb/>
pre-summit talks are making<lb/>
muted claims of progress toward<lb/>
a landmark treaty to ban interme-<lb/>
diate-range nuclear missiles<lb/>
The unfinished accord was<lb/>
back on the table today in a sec-<lb/>
ond round of talks between Sec-<lb/>
retary of State George P. Shultz<lb/>
and Soviet Foreign Minister<lb/>
Eduard A Shevardnadze.<lb/>
Their goal was to pare down<lb/>
their differences over a schedule<lb/>
for phasing out the missiles and<lb/>
over U.S. warheads on West Ger-<lb/>
man rockets, so the treaty could<lb/>
be in shape for signing at a super-<lb/>
power summit in Washington bv<lb/>
year's end<lb/>
"I think both sides feel prettv<lb/>
much the same way Shultz said<lb/>
at a White House news confer-<lb/>
ence Tuesday "And that is we<lb/>
should work hard to prepare it<lb/>
carefully. And that's what we are<lb/>
doing<lb/>
Shevardnadze, meanwhile,<lb/>
said later that "we achieved<lb/>
greater understanding" on nu-<lb/>
clear issues, although manv to be<lb/>
dealt with in the treaty remained<lb/>
unresolved.<lb/>
"We are still working on it<lb/>
Shevardnadze said at the end oi<lb/>
seven hoursof talks. "We do have<lb/>
the desire, but what will happen<lb/>
is difficult to predict<lb/>
Reflecting the apparent good<lb/>
feelings, Shultz and Shevard-<lb/>
nadze embarked Tuesday night<lb/>
with their wives on a dinner<lb/>
cruise down the Potomac River<lb/>
aboard, J JJS. NatVV yacht as-<lb/>
5tgje4 -to"jHJ? chiefof pavai<lb/>
operations.<lb/>
Teams of U.S. and Soviet ex-<lb/>
perts were left behind in Wash-<lb/>
ington to grapple over arms con-<lb/>
trol problems and such bilateral<lb/>
issues as security problems at the<lb/>
American Embassy in Moscow.<lb/>
A third, mixed group goes to<lb/>
work today on human rights.<lb/>
"The atmosphere is verv good<lb/>
for making progress a senior<lb/>
U.S. official said late Tuesdav at<lb/>
the White h<lb/>
On M<lb/>
Shevardr<lb/>
negotiate<lb/>
a treatv<lb/>
coir<lb/>
the elimi<lb/>
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laur<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 17, 1987<lb/>
Judge Bork says critics assume too much<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) <lb/>
Robert H. Bork, answering sena-<lb/>
tors who would deny him a Su-<lb/>
preme Court seat, says his critics<lb/>
shouldn't assume he would reject<lb/>
privacy claims, rule against mi-<lb/>
norities or end a woman's right to<lb/>
an abortion.<lb/>
Bork's message Tuesday, the<lb/>
first day of his confirma tion hear<lb/>
mgs, was that he's neither liberal<lb/>
nor conservative, but predictable<lb/>
only in his belief that judges<lb/>
should not create new law.<lb/>
The nominee was peppered, by<lb/>
friend and foe alike, with ques-<lb/>
tions that ranged over his writ-<lb/>
ings as a Yale Law School profes-<lb/>
sor and his decisions as a judge on<lb/>
the U.S. Court of Appeals in<lb/>
Washington. When he returns<lb/>
Soviet treaty claims progress<lb/>
WASHIGTON (AP) ? U.S.<lb/>
and Soviet officials meeting in<lb/>
pre-summit talks are making<lb/>
muted claims of progress toward<lb/>
a landmark treaty to ban interme-<lb/>
diate-range nuclear missiles.<lb/>
The unfinished accord was<lb/>
back on the table today in a sec-<lb/>
ond round of talks between Sec-<lb/>
retary of State George P. Shultz<lb/>
and Soviet Foreign Minister<lb/>
Eduard A. Shevardnadze.<lb/>
Their goal was to pare down<lb/>
their differences over a schedule<lb/>
for phasing out the missiles and<lb/>
over U.S. warheads on West Ger-<lb/>
man rockets, so the treaty could<lb/>
be in shape for .gr. 6 at a super-<lb/>
power summit in Washington by<lb/>
year's end.<lb/>
"I think both sides feel pretty<lb/>
much the same way Shultz said<lb/>
at a White House news confer-<lb/>
ence Tuesday. "And that is we<lb/>
should work hard to prepare it<lb/>
carefully. And that's what we are<lb/>
doing<lb/>
Shevardnadze, meanwhile,<lb/>
said later that "we achieved<lb/>
greater understanding" on nu-<lb/>
clear issues, although many to be<lb/>
dealt with in the treaty remained<lb/>
unresolved.<lb/>
"We are still working on it<lb/>
Shevardnadze said at the end of<lb/>
seven hoursof talks. "Wedohave<lb/>
the desire, but what will happen<lb/>
is difficult to predict<lb/>
Reflecting the apparent good<lb/>
feelings, Shultz and Shevard-<lb/>
nadze embarked Tuesday night<lb/>
with their wives on a dinner<lb/>
cruise down the Potomac River<lb/>
aboard. Jl JS. Navy yacht as-<lb/>
signed tcT'tiie' chiefof navd!<lb/>
operations.<lb/>
Teams of U.S. and Soviet ex-<lb/>
perts were left behind in Wash-<lb/>
ington to grapple over arms con-<lb/>
trol problems and such bilateral<lb/>
issues as security problems at the<lb/>
American Embassy in Moscow.<lb/>
A third, mixed group goes to<lb/>
work today on human rights.<lb/>
"The atmosphere is very good<lb/>
for making progress a senior<lb/>
U.S. official said late Tuesday at<lb/>
the White House. "I think they<lb/>
are serious about making prog-<lb/>
ress. I think our feeling is they<lb/>
came prepared to resolve issues<lb/>
On Monday, just before<lb/>
Shevardnadze's talks began, U.S.<lb/>
negotiators in Geneva presented<lb/>
a treaty draft to their Soviet<lb/>
counterparts. It outlined steps for<lb/>
the elimination of longer-range<lb/>
U.S. and Soviet missiles and<lb/>
launchers within three years and<lb/>
shorter-range Soviet missiles in<lb/>
one year.<lb/>
Also, President Reagan said,<lb/>
the U.S. document contained<lb/>
"the most stringent verification<lb/>
regime of any arms control agree-<lb/>
ment in history<lb/>
Asked on Tuesday for an ap-<lb/>
praisal, Shevardnadze said<lb/>
Moscow had not had a chance to<lb/>
review the draft thoroughly. But,<lb/>
he said, "it looked like things<lb/>
would work out according to a<lb/>
U.S. official who paraphrased the<lb/>
Soviet minister.<lb/>
The official, like the others<lb/>
quoted here, spoke only on con-<lb/>
dition he not be named.<lb/>
Earlier Tuesday, Shevard-<lb/>
nadze and Shultz signed an<lb/>
agreement calling for nuclear risk<lb/>
reduction centers in the Soviet<lb/>
and U.S. capitals.<lb/>
Group meets<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Street incident reoccur he said.<lb/>
Staton said the meeting cov-<lb/>
ered proper procedures for ob-<lb/>
taining necessary permits for<lb/>
large parties, city ordinances thaT<lb/>
would govern such parties and<lb/>
the role of the police when those<lb/>
ordinances were being violated.<lb/>
Four or five permits were is-<lb/>
sued for the following weekend,<lb/>
and there was no trouble at any of<lb/>
the parties, Staton said. "I think<lb/>
they (the fraternities and sorori-<lb/>
ties) represented the student<lb/>
body very well he said. "To my<lb/>
knowledge we had no problems<lb/>
whatsoever<lb/>
today, Bork will be asked to re-<lb/>
turn to those subjects in greater<lb/>
detail.<lb/>
Bork repeatedly made the<lb/>
point that he often opposed court<lb/>
decisions on civil rights, privacy,<lb/>
women's rights and even abor-<lb/>
tion on grounds that justices cre-<lb/>
ated new rights without any con-<lb/>
stitutional basis.<lb/>
"I am not by any means alone"<lb/>
in that view, he said, denying that<lb/>
he opposed basic civil rights and<lb/>
civil liberties.<lb/>
And Bork said he would give<lb/>
"much careful thought" before<lb/>
overturning Supreme Court<lb/>
precedent, because "it is one<lb/>
thing as a legal theorist to criticize<lb/>
the reasoning of a prior decision.<lb/>
 It is another and more serious<lb/>
thing altogether for a judge to<lb/>
ignore or overturn a prior deci-<lb/>
sion<lb/>
He told a supporter, Sen. Strom<lb/>
Thurmond, R-S.C, "The law<lb/>
should not be  shifting every<lb/>
time the personnel of the Su-<lb/>
preme Court changes<lb/>
Women's groups fear Bork<lb/>
would become the swing vote in<lb/>
overturning Roe vs. Wade, the<lb/>
ruling that permitted a woman to<lb/>
Tave an abortion.<lb/>
But when Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-<lb/>
Utah, a Bork supporter, sug-<lb/>
gested to the judge that it is not<lb/>
certain he would vote to overturn<lb/>
the decision, the witness replied,<lb/>
"That is true<lb/>
Bork had his roughest mo-<lb/>
ments with Sen. Edward M. Ken-<lb/>
nedy, D-Mass.<lb/>
"Your clock on civil rights<lb/>
seems to have stopped in 1954<lb/>
Kennedy said. He noted Bork's<lb/>
opposition in 1963 to portions of<lb/>
the landmark civil rights law that<lb/>
passed the next year.<lb/>
Bork said he has long since<lb/>
changed his mind about the legis-<lb/>
lation.<lb/>
Bork also acknowledged his<lb/>
criticism of a Supreme Court rul-<lb/>
ing invalidating poll taxes, a<lb/>
device critics said was used to<lb/>
exclude blacks froru voting. He<lb/>
said there was insufficient evi-<lb/>
dence in that case that the poll tax<lb/>
"was applied discriminatorily<lb/>
Committee Chairman Joseph<lb/>
R. Biden Jr D-Del reminded<lb/>
Bork that he also was critical of a<lb/>
1965 court ruling that invalidated<lb/>
a Connecticut law which prohib-<lb/>
ited use of contraceptives?even<lb/>
by married couples in their<lb/>
homes.<lb/>
Bork said he disagreed with<lb/>
the court's reasoning because it<lb/>
creates a "free-floating right of<lb/>
privacy" and added he was not<lb/>
defending a state's right to ban<lb/>
contraceptives.<lb/>
"What I objected to was the<lb/>
way in which the right of privacy<lb/>
was created Bork said.<lb/>
Bork struck back at critics who<lb/>
used his articles written as a pro-<lb/>
fessor to predict how he would<lb/>
rule on the Supreme Court.<lb/>
"As a professor, 1 felt free to<lb/>
engage in philosophical writ-<lb/>
ing he said. "As a judge you<lb/>
can't be as speculative<lb/>
'In the classroom, nobody gets<lb/>
hurt. In a courtroom, somebody<lb/>
always gets hurt<lb/>
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3<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 17, 1987<lb/>
Judge Bork says critics assume too much<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ?<lb/>
Robert H. Bork, answering sena-<lb/>
tors who would deny him a Su-<lb/>
preme Court seat, says his critics<lb/>
shouldn't assume he would reject<lb/>
privacy claims, rule against mi-<lb/>
norities or end a woman's right to<lb/>
an abortion.<lb/>
Bork's message Tuesday, the<lb/>
first day of his confirmation hear-<lb/>
ings, was that he's neither liberal<lb/>
nor conservative, but predictable<lb/>
only in his belief that judges<lb/>
should not create new law.<lb/>
The nominee was peppered, by<lb/>
friend and foe alike, with ques-<lb/>
tions that ranged over his writ-<lb/>
ings as a Yale Law School profes-<lb/>
sor and his decisions as a judge on<lb/>
the U.S. Court of Appeals in<lb/>
Washington. When he returns<lb/>
Soviet treaty claims progress<lb/>
WASHIGTON (AP) ? U.S.<lb/>
and Soviet officials meeting in<lb/>
pre-summit talks are making<lb/>
muted claims of progress toward<lb/>
a landmark treaty to ban interme-<lb/>
diate-range nuclear missiles.<lb/>
The unfinished accord was<lb/>
back on the table today in a sec-<lb/>
ond round of talks between Sec-<lb/>
retary of State George P. Shultz<lb/>
and Soviet Foreign Minister<lb/>
Eduard A. Shevardnadze.<lb/>
Their goal was to pare down<lb/>
their differences over a schedule<lb/>
for phasing out the missiles and<lb/>
over U.S. warheads on West Ger-<lb/>
man rockets, so the treaty could<lb/>
be in shape for signing at a super-<lb/>
power summit in Washington by<lb/>
year's end.<lb/>
"I think both sides feel pretty<lb/>
much the same way Shultz said<lb/>
at a White House news confer-<lb/>
ence Tuesday. "And that is we<lb/>
should work hard to prepare it<lb/>
carefully. And that's what we are<lb/>
doing<lb/>
Shevardnadze, meanwhile,<lb/>
said later that "we achieved<lb/>
greater understanding" on nu-<lb/>
clear issues, although many to be<lb/>
dealt with in the treaty remained<lb/>
unresolved.<lb/>
"We are still working on it<lb/>
Shevardnadze said at the end of<lb/>
seven hours of talks. "We do have<lb/>
the desire, but what will happen<lb/>
is difficult to predict<lb/>
Reflecting the apparent good<lb/>
feelings, Shultz and Shevard-<lb/>
nadze embarked Tuesday night<lb/>
with their wives on a dinner<lb/>
cruise down the Potomac River<lb/>
aboard, Jk JJ.S. Navy yacht as-<lb/>
signed to ffip. chiefW naval<lb/>
operations.<lb/>
Teams of U.S. and Soviet ex-<lb/>
perts were left behind in Wash-<lb/>
ington to grapple over arms con-<lb/>
trol problems and such bilateral<lb/>
issues as security problems at the<lb/>
American Embassy in Moscow.<lb/>
A third, mixed group goes to<lb/>
work today on human rights.<lb/>
'The atmosphere is very good<lb/>
for making progress a senior<lb/>
U.S. official said late Tuesday at<lb/>
the White House. "I think they<lb/>
are serious about making prog-<lb/>
ress. I think our feeling is they<lb/>
came prepared to resolve issues<lb/>
On Monday, just before<lb/>
Shevardnadze's talks began, U.S.<lb/>
negotiators in Geneva presented<lb/>
a treaty draft to their Soviet<lb/>
counterparts. It outlined steps for<lb/>
the elimination of longer-range<lb/>
U.S. and Soviet missiles and<lb/>
launchers within three years and<lb/>
shorter-range Soviet missiles in<lb/>
one year.<lb/>
Also, President Reagan said,<lb/>
the U.S. document contained<lb/>
"the most stringent verification<lb/>
regime of any arms control agree-<lb/>
ment in history<lb/>
Asked on Tuesday for an ap-<lb/>
praisal, Shevardnadze said<lb/>
Moscow had not had a chance to<lb/>
review the draft thoroughly. But,<lb/>
he said, "it looked like things<lb/>
would work out according to a<lb/>
U.S. official who paraphrased the<lb/>
Soviet minister.<lb/>
The official, like the others<lb/>
quoted here, spoke only on con-<lb/>
dition he not be named.<lb/>
Earlier Tuesday, Shevard-<lb/>
nadze and Shultz signed an<lb/>
agreement calling for nuclear risk<lb/>
reduction centers in the Soviet<lb/>
and U.S. capitals.<lb/>
Group meets<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Street incident reoccur he said.<lb/>
Staton said the meeting cov-<lb/>
ered proper procedures for ob-<lb/>
taining necessary permits for <lb/>
large parties, city ordinances that<lb/>
would govern such parties and<lb/>
the role of the police when those<lb/>
ordinances were being violated.<lb/>
Four or five permits were is-<lb/>
sued for the following weekend,<lb/>
and there was no trouble at any of<lb/>
the parties, Staton said. "1 think<lb/>
they (the fraternities and sorori-<lb/>
ties) represented the student<lb/>
body very well he said. "To mv<lb/>
knowledge we had no problems<lb/>
whatsoever<lb/>
today, Bork will be asked to re-<lb/>
turn to those subjects in greater<lb/>
detail.<lb/>
Bork repeatedly made the<lb/>
point that he often opposed court<lb/>
decisions on civil rights, privacy,<lb/>
women's rights and even abor-<lb/>
tion on grounds that justices cre-<lb/>
ated new rights without any con-<lb/>
stitutional basis.<lb/>
"I am not by any means alone"<lb/>
in that view, he said, denying that<lb/>
he opposed basic civil rights and<lb/>
civil liberties.<lb/>
And Bork said he would give<lb/>
"much careful thought" before<lb/>
overturning Supreme Court<lb/>
precedent, because "it is one<lb/>
thing as a legal theorist to criticize<lb/>
the reasoning of a prior decision.<lb/>
 It is another and more serious<lb/>
thing altogether for a judge to<lb/>
ignore or overturn a prior deci-<lb/>
sion<lb/>
He told a supporter, Sen. Strom<lb/>
Thurmond, R-S.C, "The law<lb/>
should not be  shifting every<lb/>
time the personnel of the Su-<lb/>
preme Court changes<lb/>
Women's groups fear Bork<lb/>
would become the swing vote in<lb/>
overturning Roe vs. Wade, the<lb/>
ruling that permitted a woman to<lb/>
"nave an abortion.<lb/>
But when Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-<lb/>
Utah, a Bork supporter, sug-<lb/>
gested to the judge that it is not<lb/>
certain he would vote to overturn<lb/>
the decision, the witness replied,<lb/>
"That is true<lb/>
Bork had his roughest mo-<lb/>
ments with Sen. Edward M. Ken-<lb/>
nedy, D-Mass.<lb/>
"Your clock on civil rights<lb/>
seems to have stopped in 1954<lb/>
Kennedy said. He noted Bork's<lb/>
opposition in 1963 to portions of<lb/>
the landmark civil rights law that<lb/>
passed the next year.<lb/>
Bork said he has long since<lb/>
changed his mind about the legis-<lb/>
lation.<lb/>
Bork also acknowledged his<lb/>
criticism of a Supreme Court rul-<lb/>
ing invalidating poll taxes, a<lb/>
device critics said was used to<lb/>
exclude blacks from voting. He<lb/>
said there was insufficient evi-<lb/>
dence in that case that the poll tax<lb/>
"was applied discriminatorily<lb/>
Committee Chairman Joseph<lb/>
R. Biden Jr D-Del reminded<lb/>
Bork that he also was critical of a<lb/>
1965 court ruling that invalidated<lb/>
a Connecticut law which prohib-<lb/>
ited use of contraceptives?even<lb/>
by married couples in their<lb/>
homes.<lb/>
Bork said he disagreed with<lb/>
the court's reasoning because it<lb/>
creates a "free-floating right of<lb/>
privacy" and added he was not<lb/>
defending a state's right to ban<lb/>
contraceptives.<lb/>
"What I objected to was the<lb/>
way in which the right of privacy<lb/>
was created Bork said.<lb/>
Bork struck back at critics who<lb/>
used his articles written as a pro-<lb/>
fessor to predict how he would<lb/>
rule on the Supreme Court.<lb/>
"As a professor, I felt free to<lb/>
engage in philosophical writ-<lb/>
ing he said. "As a judge you<lb/>
can't be as speculative<lb/>
"In the classroom, nobody gets<lb/>
hurt. In a courtroom, somebody<lb/>
always gets hurt<lb/>
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ABOUT OUR<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057913_0005"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
?.<lb/>
s<lb/>
?<lb/>
?J?e Ea0t (Earnliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Daniel Maurer, cwm<lb/>
Clay Deanhardt, M?.r,t r,?<lb/>
r?r LEW1S'   ,1MMY McKEE'?? f ?i<lb/>
?IM CHANDLER ANTHONY MARTIN, ? m?,ct<lb/>
JESSK A STANLEY, r? m Meg Need, ,am Cirf <lb/>
SI ILL TON BRYANT. ? MlKE IJPCHURCH, p, m?<lb/>
UEBBIE STEVENS, v? NORWOOD MCDOWELL, ah rw.<lb/>
September, 17, 19P7<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Legislature begins well<lb/>
The 1987-88 ECU Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association convened for the<lb/>
tirst time Monday as legislators<lb/>
were sworn in by Attorney General<lb/>
Lisa Williamson.<lb/>
It's now time to get down to busi-<lb/>
ness.<lb/>
The legislature should be com-<lb/>
mended for taking swift action to<lb/>
make reparations for the destruc-<lb/>
tion following the North Carolina<lb/>
State ? ECU football game. The<lb/>
committee formed to look into the<lb/>
matter should act just as swiftly to<lb/>
repair the damage done to the<lb/>
university's image and to improve<lb/>
relations with NCSU.<lb/>
It seems appropriate to use stu-<lb/>
dent funds that might have been<lb/>
allocated to some other project to<lb/>
pay for damages, although once<lb/>
again the good of the many must pay<lb/>
for the actions of the few.<lb/>
This committee, or possibly a<lb/>
separate one, should also investi-<lb/>
gate what further steps can be taken<lb/>
to insure nothing like this happens<lb/>
again. One solution might be the<lb/>
threat of punitive action against fu-<lb/>
ture trouble makers, backed up with<lb/>
concrete proposals to implement<lb/>
such action in the future.<lb/>
The election of Ben Eckert to a<lb/>
second term as speaker of the house<lb/>
is also a prudent move. Eckert has<lb/>
proven himself to be a fair and<lb/>
knowledgable man of good charac-<lb/>
ter? the SGA could have no better<lb/>
leader for the challenges of the new<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
Chief among these challenges is<lb/>
rebuilding our school image, which<lb/>
has been damaged greatly as of late.<lb/>
It will take a concerted effort by the<lb/>
SGA along with other student and<lb/>
administrative leaders to gain back<lb/>
some of the esteem lost in the last<lb/>
few weeks and start ECU moving<lb/>
again along the road to prominence.<lb/>
Any reperations made to NCSU are<lb/>
only the first step.<lb/>
In addition to image repair, the<lb/>
SGA must concentrate on election<lb/>
reforms. Never again must elections<lb/>
be disputed on charges of inept<lb/>
operations and possible ethical vio-<lb/>
lations among representatives of the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Indeed, the SGA has a long trail to<lb/>
blaze over the next nine months. As<lb/>
ECU grows, so does its problems<lb/>
and the need for strong, effective<lb/>
leadership.<lb/>
With a relatively new chancellor, a<lb/>
new SGA executive branch, a vet-<lb/>
eran speaker and a fresh legislature,<lb/>
it will be interesting to see in wtrarfc<lb/>
form, if any , that leadership<lb/>
emerges.<lb/>
No WS Ftttfot?.<lb/>
PoTiTTHfpfli<lb/>
Americans ignore Afghan i stan<lb/>
because of poor news coverage<lb/>
Forum rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Publica-<lb/>
tions Building, across from the entrance<lb/>
of foyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and clas-<lb/>
sification, address, phone number and<lb/>
signature of the authoris). Letters are<lb/>
limited to two typewritten pages, double<lb/>
spaced or neatly printed. All letters are<lb/>
subject to editing for brevity, obscenity<lb/>
and libel, and no personal attacks will be<lb/>
permitted. Students, faculty and staff<lb/>
writing letters for this page are reminded<lb/>
that they are limited to one every two<lb/>
weeks. The deadline for editorial material<lb/>
is 5p.m. Friday for Tuesday's edition and<lb/>
5 p.m. Tuesday for Thursday's edition.<lb/>
3<lb/>
i-<lb/>
?<lb/>
O<lb/>
D<lb/>
a,<lb/>
E<lb/>
u<lb/>
In addition to the "Campus Forum"<lb/>
section of the editorial page, The East<lb/>
Carolinian features the "Campus<lb/>
Spectrum This is an opinion column<lb/>
by guest writers from the student<lb/>
body and faculty. The columns<lb/>
printed in the "Campus Spectrum"<lb/>
will contain current topics of concern<lb/>
to the campus, community or nation.<lb/>
The columns are restricted in con-<lb/>
tent only with regard to rules of gram-<lb/>
mar and decency. Persons submitting<lb/>
columns must be willing to accept by-<lb/>
line credit for their efforts, as no en-<lb/>
tries from ghost writers will be pub-<lb/>
lished.<lb/>
Persons interested in participating<lb/>
or seeking further information may<lb/>
contact the managing editor of The<lb/>
East Carolinian at 757-6366, or stop by<lb/>
our offices on the second floor of the<lb/>
PublicationsBuilding<lb/>
How many people do you know who can tell you what<lb/>
happened at KentState University in 1970? 1 happen to know<lb/>
.if no one who doesn't have at least so me vague notion of what<lb/>
transpired on that fateful day during a protest of the Vietnam<lb/>
war. But if you were to ask these people about what happened<lb/>
atSuriya High School on April 29,1980,1 would imagine that<lb/>
not one person could raise hisher hand and tell you.<lb/>
On this day in Kabul, the capitol city of Afghanistan, 70<lb/>
people were killed when a Soviet general instructed his men<lb/>
to open fire upon a crowd of student demonstrators. Why do<lb/>
so few people in America know about it, when so many know<lb/>
of the Kent State "massacre"?<lb/>
The answer lies in the fact that this event and others like it<lb/>
have received little or no news coverage. The reasons range<lb/>
from "the public just doesn't care" to "we simply can't get our<lb/>
camera crews into Afghanistan But regardless of the rea-<lb/>
sons why, the effect is the same: The American public knows<lb/>
very little about what is going on in Afghanistan.<lb/>
Campus Spectrum<lb/>
by<lb/>
Brian Haskins<lb/>
JWc ir.Amttr.ica have a dangerous dependancy upon televi-<lb/>
sion arid print media for our understanding of what goes on<lb/>
in the world around us. If an event is not covered, the public<lb/>
knows next to nothing about it, and the effect is one of the<lb/>
public turning its back on it as being too unimportant a news<lb/>
item to be brought to our attention.<lb/>
The war in Afghanistan is just such a case. That war has<lb/>
been raging for seven years now, and 1 personally have seen<lb/>
one hour-long special (by CBS), and four brief mentions about<lb/>
t in news broadcasts. That is less than one brief glimpse at<lb/>
what is going on in a year. What in ij i -ssion does this lack of<lb/>
coverage give to the Afghan people? Do we care1 Hell no, we<lb/>
would rather hear about Oliver North.<lb/>
"Virtually every conceivableatrocity every known crime<lb/>
of war ? is taking place in Afghanistan today and on a scale<lb/>
so vast it defies imagination ? Jeri Laber, Executive Direc-<lb/>
tor of Helsinki Watch.<lb/>
Five million people, one third of Afghanistan's population,<lb/>
have fled to neighboring Pakistan and Iran. Approximately<lb/>
two million Afghans have been killed, and 45,000 children<lb/>
have been taken into the Soviet Union to grow and learn so<lb/>
that they may one day return to run the puppet government<lb/>
of the country of their birth.<lb/>
The Soviet Union has been able to wage a war in silence,<lb/>
removed from world public opinion. The Soviet Union will<lb/>
not tell the world what is going on. The names of Salisbury<lb/>
t-llsberg, Berrigan, and the Chicago Seven of the Soviet Union<lb/>
would appear, if at all, on tombstones, not on the front page<lb/>
of "Pravdalf our news media will not inform us, noone will,<lb/>
and the cries of millions of Afghans will fall on deaf ears.<lb/>
"I regTet that I cannot be with you, but we have almost run<lb/>
out of food and medical supplies. In addition, I have no<lb/>
blankets for my men ?and winter is onlv a few months<lb/>
away. After four years of fighting one ot the world s great<lb/>
super powers, our only victory hasbeenlo escape totaldefeat.<lb/>
Even if the rest of the world continues to ignore our cause we<lb/>
will fight on. For we are fighting not onlv for ourselves but for<lb/>
all mankind. We are fighting for freedom and human dignity<lb/>
and the right to worship the God of our choice. I urge vou to<lb/>
tell the world of our plight and send whatever help vou can.<lb/>
God bless you for caring enough to read mv letter - George<lb/>
Washington, Valley Forge, September, 1780 aQ we forgot-<lb/>
ten our own heritage?<lb/>
American education will not<lb/>
respond correctly to market<lb/>
GrtTr&amp;hfrvvcUfAW&amp;- A7&amp;emue syv.<lb/>
fT5 GOlNQ<lb/>
LONGWEBK<lb/>
IMWMs<lb/>
By ANDREW SULLIVAN<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
In 1960 a year at an average private<lb/>
college cost around $2,000. Now it costs<lb/>
around $15,000. The cost of a private col-<lb/>
lege education has doubled in 27 years.<lb/>
And it's getting worse.<lb/>
In economic terms, it makes little sense.<lb/>
Colleges face declining enrollment as<lb/>
baby boomers work their way out of the<lb/>
system. Meanwhile, job-hunting Ph.D.s<lb/>
have been in huge oversupply. If the<lb/>
market were operating properly, this<lb/>
should mean colleges are getting<lb/>
cheaper.<lb/>
So where's the catch? Universities<lb/>
claim they're just catching up with rising<lb/>
costs, having fallen behind during the<lb/>
1970's. Salaries and benefits of faculty<lb/>
and administrators still stand just below<lb/>
the comparative levels of 1970.<lb/>
Capital investment suspended 10 years<lb/>
ago has been increased to compensate in<lb/>
the boom 1980's. And the huge expan-<lb/>
sions of past decades are now accelerat-<lb/>
ing operating costs. Add to this Reagan's<lb/>
reduction in federal aid to students as<lb/>
well as tighter state budgets for student<lb/>
aid, and it's easy to see why colleges have<lb/>
been passing their costs on to parents.<lb/>
But what are students getting for their<lb/>
parents' money? One answer: A declin-<lb/>
ing proportion of time spent on the fun-<lb/>
damentals of a liberal education.<lb/>
The academic industry, as the recent<lb/>
Boyer Report on undergraduate educa-<lb/>
tion pointed out, is increasingly geared to<lb/>
a professionalized faculty and away from<lb/>
students. Faculty members, through a<lb/>
tenure system that prizes a journal article<lb/>
over good teaching, are under increasing<lb/>
pressure to keep pumping out books.<lb/>
The costs cut two ways. First, at vast<lb/>
expense, libraries must keep track of the<lb/>
mounds of articles.Second, less time and<lb/>
effort are devoted to teaching. Many re-<lb/>
gret this paper chase, but remain re-<lb/>
signed to it in order to get tenure. Others,<lb/>
often more gifted teachers - or more<lb/>
committed to a particular college than to<lb/>
a national "discipline" - become disen-<lb/>
chanted. Either way, students suffer.<lb/>
This is not to argue against serious re-<lb/>
search. It's simply to point out that the<lb/>
journal junkies are now in control. There<lb/>
are, for example, some 142 periodicals<lb/>
now available in the United States on the<lb/>
subject of sociology.<lb/>
At a rough count, assuming only three-<lb/>
quarters of these journals get near the<lb/>
libraries of colleges, and that there are<lb/>
about five articlesan issue, there are some<lb/>
600 articles on sociology produced, pur-<lb/>
chased and placed on the shelf every<lb/>
three months. That's 2,400 a year.<lb/>
Does anybody read them? And this<lb/>
massive output has coincided with a<lb/>
decline in student interest in the subject.<lb/>
It's no accident: Where teaching is ne-<lb/>
glected, disciplines suffer.<lb/>
The sciences have a better argument for<lb/>
the publishing mania, but the footnotes-<lb/>
culture of the arts is a symptom of the<lb/>
trend toward relativism and specializa-<lb/>
tion in America's academy. Once unitary<lb/>
truths are scorned, there's no reason to<lb/>
distinguish between the important and<lb/>
the trivial in education.<lb/>
The result is all too often a retreat into<lb/>
irrelevance. It took Allan Bloom to bring<lb/>
the point home in "The Closing of the<lb/>
American Mind The massive popular-<lb/>
i ty of the book (and the widespread indif-<lb/>
ference serious academics have shown to<lb/>
it) testifies to the chord it has struck: The<lb/>
scholarly vocation has lost its core pur-<lb/>
pose in fragmented overprofessioanlism.<lb/>
The calling of the academic life to the risk<lb/>
of self-reflection, or even of a spiritual<lb/>
journey, is increasingly an anachronistic<lb/>
joke. It shouldn't be.<lb/>
This is where the book burning comes<lb/>
in, but this time the periodicals go first.<lb/>
Halting irrelevant production is the op-<lb/>
posite of censorship. If sa way to save the<lb/>
purpose of undergraduate education.<lb/>
Colleges should devise a voluntary code<lb/>
of practice for reform. Here are a few<lb/>
immodest proposals to start with.<lb/>
1 Get professors back into the class-<lb/>
room. A primary condition for tenure<lb/>
w<lb/>
mmmmsm&amp;mmmmmmwmm i f i ' "<lb/>
I<lb/>
should be at least three years of under-<lb/>
graduate teaching, with students s as-<lb/>
sessments of their teachers as admissible<lb/>
evidence. Professors should be required<lb/>
to teach at least four courses a vear, and<lb/>
all tenured faculty should be limited to<lb/>
one paid academic conference every two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Set a maximum salary for administra-<lb/>
tors at $10,000 less than the highest-paid<lb/>
faculty. This will discourage brain-drain<lb/>
start from Europe and the corporation<lb/>
mentality of many Ivy League admini-<lb/>
strations. Finally, set a limit of six years<lb/>
funding for completion of a Ph.D. This<lb/>
would discourage universities from re-<lb/>
taining graduate studentsas cheap teach-<lb/>
ing labor.<lb/>
2. Ban all publication of Ph.D. theses<lb/>
and limit professors to one book pub-<lb/>
lished every 10 years. Students might<lb/>
publish underground lists of teachers<lb/>
who've produced more than five books in<lb/>
the last 10 years. (Kant was paid by the<lb/>
number of students who turned up for<lb/>
class. His first book didn't appear until he<lb/>
was 57. It was "The Critique of Pure<lb/>
Reason)<lb/>
Libraries should keep the number of<lb/>
new boks acquired to the number thev<lb/>
bought annually 30 years ago. Each de-<lb/>
partment should be allowed only five<lb/>
peroidicals a year in its field.<lb/>
3. Cut the backslapping and prof-<lb/>
speak. All acknowledgments sections at<lb/>
the beginning of books should be limited<lb/>
to six names or less, forewords by other<lb/>
academics have to go, along with most<lb/>
collections of old articals. Footnotes<lb/>
should be kept to two a page, of no more<lb/>
than two lines each.<lb/>
For extra economy, an anti-jargon<lb/>
board should be set up. Among the<lb/>
ground rules, the word "dysfunction"<lb/>
should not appear more than three times<lb/>
on the same page; and the term<lb/>
"postmodern" should henceforth be<lb/>
shortened to "recent If that doesn't get<lb/>
you more Barthes for the buck, nothing<lb/>
will.<lb/>
h<lb/>
an<lb/>
ith<lb/>
United<lb/>
nomic<lb/>
irboi<lb/>
-<lb/>
Treaty to r<lb/>
MONTREAL (AP) I<lb/>
ing a last-minute compromise<lb/>
between the United Si<lb/>
European countries 4'<lb/>
were set today to a n<lb/>
tone treaty on redu ii .<lb/>
rofluorocarbons that dan ig ?<lb/>
Earth's ozone<lb/>
The last remainii<lb/>
the global agreem. nt was<lb/>
come late Tuesda<lb/>
agreement betweei<lb/>
States and European i<lb/>
Community on how the trading<lb/>
bloc would be b<lb/>
Subject to final approval<lb/>
by a plenary session I - ? ?<lb/>
from Burki: i Fa<lb/>
Union, the ??<lb/>
Convicts shovel aspha<lb/>
70 cents a day to sen<lb/>
DURHAM (AP) Sh<lb/>
steaming asphalt in v.<lb/>
heat would be work hat lei<lb/>
even for the best of l i<lb/>
But imagine earning 7<lb/>
not an hour, but a da<lb/>
That's right, 70 cents i<lb/>
For the state corn I i<lb/>
system's convict lab t I r<lb/>
wages haven't kept up <lb/>
tion for quite some time<lb/>
The convicts, howevei<lb/>
knowledge that pal<lb/>
holes, trimming the right<lb/>
and flagging traffic is<lb/>
they can do to serve -<lb/>
"We work because  reti<lb/>
to help somebody else<lb/>
George Sanders who v. rks<lb/>
the Guess Tnsor pris i<lb/>
road-mending crew kirks<lb/>
hey, I paid mv debt<lb/>
The crew from Guess F i I<lb/>
Tnson is one of a number I '? ' -<lb/>
honor-grade road en ? - perat<lb/>
ing from minimum-s ??. ?<lb/>
ons throughout the 5)<lb/>
Workers toil under the su - rk-i<lb/>
sion of a Department ol 11<lb/>
portationsuper. -<lb/>
not under armed guard<lb/>
In some areas, howevei in-<lb/>
mates work under the g<lb/>
overseen bv armed prison<lb/>
guards<lb/>
A.s ht raWcd a yv?cV? of aspVvaH<lb/>
smooih and pfossv black Super-<lb/>
visor Charles Westbr ks :<lb/>
crew works on all the numbered<lb/>
highways in Durham Count)<lb/>
In his 30 years of supen<lb/>
prison crews, Westbrook said i<lb/>
one had walked awav from a<lb/>
 V<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
lirees<lb/>
crew he supervised until eai<lb/>
this vear<lb/>
Two inmates left the crew<lb/>
that occasion, he said, but I<lb/>
were recaptured.<lb/>
Gary Newkirk, Guess Road<lb/>
pnson supervisor said ira r<lb/>
roads is only one of the man)<lb/>
inmates perform.<lb/>
They also do laundrv for Wake<lb/>
Countv Medical Cent - is<lb/>
as jobs inside the pri? n serving<lb/>
as janitors, cooks and barbers<lb/>
Though some mediun<lb/>
tody prisoners work on tht r<lb/>
under the gun, the leg irons a<lb/>
SU prevents<lb/>
roommate wars<lb/>
GEORGETOWN, T (C<lb/>
There ma v be ways to prevent the<lb/>
low-level "roommate wars<lb/>
college students often find them-<lb/>
selves in during the fa when<lb/>
thev arrive to move in with<lb/>
strangers, savs Pr ane Morgan<lb/>
Bost of Southwestern Universit)<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Southwestern rather than<lb/>
making random room ass<lb/>
ments. tries to match roommates<lb/>
who have similar lifestyles st<lb/>
habits, musical tastes and other<lb/>
interests.<lb/>
Bost, counseling director at SI<lb/>
suggests that even before they<lb/>
meet, prospective roommates<lb/>
can talk on the phone<lb/>
'Thev can get to know some<lb/>
basic things about each other is<lb/>
one a partier and the a studier?<lb/>
How much will the stereo ho<lb/>
played!1"<lb/>
Bost says some students de-<lb/>
velop a "contract" that sets<lb/>
ground rules for the living situ-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
This can help roomie- avoid<lb/>
problems or work them ou t when<lb/>
they occur, Bost said.<lb/>
Once on campus and in their<lb/>
rooms, students are required to<lb/>
live with their roommates tor two<lb/>
weeks. If problems develop dur-<lb/>
ing that time, student advisors<lb/>
will help resolve the situation.<lb/>
After two weeks, the students<lb/>
may ask for new accomodations<lb/>
"The important thing is that<lb/>
each person leam to live with the<lb/>
other Bost said.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
HTV ss<lb/>
WSA<lb/>
t<lb/>
Why Pa<lb/>
Savi<lb/>
dies 14KI<lb/>
A .1<lb/>
3XX03X?<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;?<lb/>
7 Dianv I<lb/>
lit t<lb/>
frx S M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057913_0006"/><lb/>
Afghanistan<lb/>
iws coverage<lb/>
s less than one brief glimpse at<lb/>
r What impassion does this lack of<lb/>
pie? Do we care? Hell no, we<lb/>
r orth<lb/>
it) overs'known crime<lb/>
ai istan today and on a scale<lb/>
Jeri labor. Executive Direc-<lb/>
"ustan's population,<lb/>
ind Iran Approximately<lb/>
e been killed, and 45,000 children<lb/>
iet Union to grow and learn so<lb/>
?turn to run the puppet government<lb/>
rth.<lb/>
to wage a war in silence,<lb/>
inion. The Soviet Union will<lb/>
on. The names of Salisbury,<lb/>
Seven of the Sov iet Union<lb/>
tones, not on the front page<lb/>
ill not inform us, no one will,<lb/>
bans will fall on deaf ears.<lb/>
ou, but we have almost run<lb/>
pplies. In addition, I have no<lb/>
winter is only a few months<lb/>
Juing one of the world's great<lb/>
? has been to escape total defeat<lb/>
mtinues to ignore our cause we<lb/>
ng not only for ourselves but for<lb/>
for freedom and human dignity<lb/>
the G ?d of our choice. I urge you to<lb/>
ht an send whatever help you can.<lb/>
?nough to read my letter ? George<lb/>
St ptember, 1780. Have we forgot-<lb/>
n will not<lb/>
o market<lb/>
is re-<lb/>
that the<lb/>
here<lb/>
three-<lb/>
ir the<lb/>
H there are<lb/>
ire some<lb/>
xiuced, pur-<lb/>
shelf every<lb/>
pching is ne-<lb/>
umentfor<lb/>
notes-<lb/>
lptom of the<lb/>
Id specializa-<lb/>
"nce unitary<lb/>
on to<lb/>
iportant and<lb/>
retreat into<lb/>
X)m to bring<lb/>
 g of the<lb/>
e popular-<lb/>
read mdif-<lb/>
ive shown to<lb/>
Is struck: The<lb/>
its core pur-<lb/>
essioanlism.<lb/>
ife to the risk<lb/>
If a spiritual<lb/>
nachronistic<lb/>
ung comes<lb/>
cals go first<lb/>
n is the op-<lb/>
y to save the<lb/>
education,<lb/>
juntary code<lb/>
are a few<lb/>
with.<lb/>
the class-<lb/>
for tenure<lb/>
should be at least three years of under-<lb/>
;raduate teaching, with students's as-<lb/>
sessments of their teachers as admissible<lb/>
evidence. Professors should be required ;<lb/>
to teach at least four courses a year, and ?<lb/>
all tenured faculty should be limited to ,<lb/>
one paid academic conference every two ?<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Set a maximum salary for administra- j<lb/>
tors at 510,000 less than the highest-paid<lb/>
faculty. This will discourage brain-drain<lb/>
start from Europe and the corporation<lb/>
mentality of many Ivy League admini- :<lb/>
-?rations Finally, sei a limit of six years' ,<lb/>
ling for completion of a Ph.D. This<lb/>
would discourage universities from re- I<lb/>
taming graduatestudentsascheap teach<lb/>
ing labor. <lb/>
2. Ban all publication of Ph.D. theses I<lb/>
and limit professors to one book pub-<lb/>
lished every 10 years. Students might i<lb/>
publish underground lists of teachers i<lb/>
who've produced more than five books in i<lb/>
the bst 10 years. (Kant was paid by the I<lb/>
number of students who turned up for i<lb/>
class. His first book didn't appear until he<lb/>
was 57. It was "Tho Critique of Pure <lb/>
Reason) <lb/>
Libraries should keep the number of ,<lb/>
new boks acquired to the number they<lb/>
bought annually 30 years ago. Each de- f<lb/>
partment should be allowed only five ;<lb/>
peroidicals a year in its field. i<lb/>
3. Cut the backslapping and prof<lb/>
speak. All acknowledgments sections at -<lb/>
the beginning of books should be limited ?<lb/>
to six names or less, forewords by other ;<lb/>
academics have to go, along with most<lb/>
collections of old articals. Footnotes.<lb/>
should be kept to two a page, of no more <lb/>
than two lines each.<lb/>
For extra economy, an anti-jargon;<lb/>
board should be set up. Among the;<lb/>
ground rules, the word "dysfunction"<lb/>
should not appear more than three times<lb/>
on the same page; and the term<lb/>
"postmodern" should henceforth be<lb/>
shortened to "recent " If that doesn't get<lb/>
you more Barthes for the buck, nothing<lb/>
will.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 17,1987<lb/>
Treaty to reduce ozone damage<lb/>
MONTREAL (AD ? Follow-<lb/>
ing a last-minute compromise<lb/>
between the United States and<lb/>
European countries, 46 nations<lb/>
were set today to conclude a his-<lb/>
toric treaty on reducing chlo-<lb/>
rofluorocarbons that damage the<lb/>
Earth's ozone<lb/>
The last remaining hurdle to<lb/>
the global agreement was over-<lb/>
come late Tuesday, with an<lb/>
agreement between the United<lb/>
States and European Economic<lb/>
Community on how the trading<lb/>
bloc would be treated.<lb/>
Subject to final approval today<lb/>
by a plenary session of 46 nations,<lb/>
from Burkina Faso to the Soviet<lb/>
Union, the Montreal Protocol on<lb/>
protecting the ozone layer will Friends of the Earth.<lb/>
reduce the use of chlorofluoro- Chlorofluorocarbons are used<lb/>
carbonsby 50 percent in a 10-year in aerosols, refrigerators, air con-<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Lee Thomas, administrator of<lb/>
the U.S. Environmental Protec-<lb/>
tion Agency, said he would seek<lb/>
early Senate ratification. He<lb/>
termed the accord "in the best<lb/>
interests of the world and the<lb/>
United States<lb/>
Environmental groups hailed<lb/>
the agreement as a giant step for-<lb/>
ward, but warned that future<lb/>
data may indicate a 50-percent<lb/>
cut is too little, too late.<lb/>
"It's very important that the<lb/>
signatories remain ready to re-<lb/>
convene said Geoffrey Webb of<lb/>
ditioners, insulation, foam cups<lb/>
and foam-filled furniture, and are<lb/>
vital to industries employing<lb/>
more than 1 million people<lb/>
worldwide.<lb/>
Environmentalist hope that<lb/>
DuPont, Britain's ICI and other<lb/>
major chemical companies will<lb/>
develop safer forms of chlo-<lb/>
rofluorocarbons or substitutes<lb/>
cases of skin cancer a year.<lb/>
The accord aims at freezing<lb/>
consumption at 1986 levels by<lb/>
1990, cutting consumption by 20<lb/>
percent by Jan. 1,1994, and reduc-<lb/>
ing consumption a further 30<lb/>
percent by Jan. 1,1999.<lb/>
Developing countries would<lb/>
have a 10-year grace period un-<lb/>
der the pact, and the Soviet Union<lb/>
would be allowed to expand<lb/>
production by opening plants it<lb/>
cannot cancel under its centrally<lb/>
FAMOUS<lb/>
mitRi<lb/>
FOR FAST, FR<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
PHONE 757-12<lb/>
OR 757-0731<lb/>
that don't destroy the protective planned economy, said Lang.<lb/>
Spaghetti or Lasagne<lb/>
with Garlic Bread and Salad<lb/>
(Not fu r deli very. <lb/>
wrn nB ?u iik bt<lb/>
mnrnfiuT<lb/>
BUY A LARGE PIZZA<lb/>
WITH 2 TOPPINGS<lb/>
AND<lb/>
GET 2 PITCHERS<lb/>
FOR 99 ?<lb/>
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$3.95<lb/>
Convicts shovel asphalt for<lb/>
70 cents a day to serve society<lb/>
DURHAM (AP) - Shovelling<lb/>
steaming asphalt in withering<lb/>
heat would be work hard enough<lb/>
even for the best of pay.<lb/>
But imagine earning 70 cents ?<lb/>
not an hour, but a day.<lb/>
That's right, 70 cents a day.<lb/>
For the state correctional<lb/>
system's convict labor force,<lb/>
wages haven't kept up with infla-<lb/>
tion for quite some time.<lb/>
The convicts, however, ac-<lb/>
knowledge that patching pot-<lb/>
holes, trimming the right of way<lb/>
and flagging traffic is something<lb/>
they can do to serve society.<lb/>
"We work because we're trying<lb/>
to help somebody else said<lb/>
George Sanders, who works on<lb/>
the Guess Prison prison unit's<lb/>
road-mending crew. "I can say,<lb/>
hey, I paid my debt<lb/>
The crew from Guess Road<lb/>
Prison is one of a number of<lb/>
honor-grade road crews operat-<lb/>
ing from minimum-security pris-<lb/>
ons throughout the state<lb/>
Workers toil under the supervi-<lb/>
sion of a Department of Trans-<lb/>
portation supervisor, but they are<lb/>
not under armed guard.<lb/>
In some areas, however, in-<lb/>
mates work "under the gun<lb/>
overseen bv armed prison<lb/>
guards.<lb/>
As he raked a patch of asphalt<lb/>
smctottvanti glossy black, Super-<lb/>
visor Charles Westbrook said the<lb/>
crew works on all the numbered<lb/>
highways in Durham County.<lb/>
In his 30 years of supervising<lb/>
prison crews, Westbrook said, no<lb/>
one had walked away from a<lb/>
crew he supervised until earlier<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Two inmates left the crew on<lb/>
that occasion, he said, but they<lb/>
were recaptured.<lb/>
Gary- Newkirk, Guess Road<lb/>
prison supervisor, said mending<lb/>
roads is only one of the many jobs<lb/>
inmates perform.<lb/>
They also do laundry for Wake<lb/>
County Medical Center, as well<lb/>
as jobs inside the prison, serving<lb/>
as janitors, cooks and barbers.<lb/>
Though some medium-cus-<lb/>
tody prisoners work on the roads<lb/>
under the gun, the leg irons and<lb/>
SU prevents<lb/>
roommate wars<lb/>
GEORGETOWN, TX (CPS) ?<lb/>
There may be ways to prevent the<lb/>
low-level "roommate wars" that<lb/>
college students often find them-<lb/>
selves in during the fall when<lb/>
they arrive to move in with<lb/>
strangers, says Dr. Jane Morgan<lb/>
Bost of Southwestern University<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Southwestern, rather than<lb/>
making random room assign-<lb/>
ments, tries to match roommates<lb/>
who have similar lifestyles, study<lb/>
habits, musical tastes and other<lb/>
interests.<lb/>
Bost, counseling director at SU,<lb/>
suggests that even before they<lb/>
meet, prospective roommates<lb/>
can talk on the phone.<lb/>
"They can get to know some<lb/>
basic things about each other: is<lb/>
one a partier and the a studier?<lb/>
How much will the stereo be<lb/>
played?"<lb/>
Bost says some students de-<lb/>
velop a "contract" that sets<lb/>
ground rules for the living situ-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
This can help roomies avoid<lb/>
problems or work them ou t when<lb/>
they occur, Bost said.<lb/>
Once on campus and in their<lb/>
rooms, students are required to<lb/>
live with their roommates for two<lb/>
weeks. If problems develop dur-<lb/>
ing that time, student advisors<lb/>
will help resolve the situation.<lb/>
After two weeks, the students<lb/>
may ask for new accomodations.<lb/>
'The important thing is that<lb/>
each person learn to live with the<lb/>
other Bost said.<lb/>
chains of books and movies are a<lb/>
thing of the past, Newkirk said.<lb/>
In the past, he said, more dan-<lb/>
gerous prisoners were put to<lb/>
work outside the prison walls<lb/>
with the fetters. Policy now,<lb/>
however, is to keep prisoners in<lb/>
close custody and maximum<lb/>
custody?the two levels above<lb/>
medium?within the walls.<lb/>
"You don't want to put some-<lb/>
body out there you think you<lb/>
might have to shoot if he tries to<lb/>
run off Newkirk said.<lb/>
Inmates who are considered<lb/>
reliable enough can leave mini-<lb/>
mum-security prisons like the<lb/>
Guess Road facility on work-re-<lb/>
lease to area employers or study<lb/>
at area schools and colleges,<lb/>
Newkirk said.<lb/>
Between 50 and 60 of the 144 or<lb/>
so inmates at the Guess Road<lb/>
prison are on work-release.<lb/>
Inmate Richard Culbreth was<lb/>
working on the road crew re-<lb/>
cently, but said he could be on<lb/>
work-release, earning a regular<lb/>
wage.<lb/>
The road crew pay isn't very<lb/>
good, but there's one good fringe<lb/>
benefit to working the roads,<lb/>
Culbreth said ? a one-day reduc-<lb/>
tion in the length of his five-year<lb/>
sentence for every day that it<lb/>
rains or the mercurv hits 95 de-<lb/>
grees.<lb/>
Westbrook estimated that the<lb/>
men had gotten about a month<lb/>
taken off their sentences during<lb/>
the past two summer months.<lb/>
ozone blanket that absorbs the<lb/>
sun's ultraviolet rays.<lb/>
Three percent to 7 percent of<lb/>
the ozone layer has already been<lb/>
depleted, and a 40-percent hole<lb/>
has been discovered over the<lb/>
Antarctic.<lb/>
The United States is the world's<lb/>
largest producer, responsible for<lb/>
30 percent. It banned chlo-<lb/>
rofluorocarbons in aerosols in<lb/>
1978 but the chemicals are more<lb/>
difficult to replace in other prod-<lb/>
ucts.<lb/>
According to the United Na-<lb/>
tions Environment Program, the<lb/>
sponsors of the conference, even<lb/>
a standstill in chlorofluorocarbon<lb/>
use will prevent 1.65 million<lb/>
DuPont is the world's largest<lb/>
manufacturer under the brand<lb/>
name Freon.<lb/>
Chlorofluorocarbon gases ?<lb/>
and their more potent variation,<lb/>
halons ? leak upward into the<lb/>
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atoms attack ozone, a gas com-<lb/>
posed of three oxygen atoms.<lb/>
Every 1 percent of ozone lost<lb/>
could lead to 5 percent more skin<lb/>
cancer cases on Earth, and cause<lb/>
damage to the eyes and immune<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Halons ? used to extinguish<lb/>
fires in military, computer and<lb/>
communications equipment ?<lb/>
cause up to 10 times as much<lb/>
damage as chlorofluorocarbons.<lb/>
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reg. 99? qt.<lb/>
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Free, &amp; Sugar Free Pepsi Free.<lb/>
EX. Fudge<lb/>
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3 Flavors to select from:<lb/>
Vanilla-Fudge-Peanut Butter<lb/>
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reg. $2.19<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057913_0007"/><lb/>
SEPTEMBER 17,1987<lb/>
News Digest<lb/>
spoken for<lb/>
Hn-Te general<lb/>
snahT15 N?rth Erica's<lb/>
thrt?? CnSCS Tuesday ?! the<lb/>
threat of nuclear attack bv a<lb/>
wn" or accident in slump-<lb/>
8 for President Reagan's Strate-<lb/>
gic Defense Initiative<lb/>
The warning came from Air<lb/>
rorceCen. John Piotrowski, com-<lb/>
mander of the North American<lb/>
Aerospace Defense Command<lb/>
and the U.S. Space Command.<lb/>
It an attack were imminent,<lb/>
? lotrowski is the general who<lb/>
would tell the president.<lb/>
His statements in Charlotte<lb/>
came as the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion increased lobbying for its so-<lb/>
called "star wars" system.<lb/>
If the system were in place SDI<lb/>
computers would make billions<lb/>
ot calculations per second and<lb/>
guide lasers and possibly atomic-<lb/>
particle beams to destroy incom-<lb/>
ing missiles.<lb/>
An August study by the Con-<lb/>
gressional Research Service esti-<lb/>
mated SDI could eventually cost<lb/>
$1 trillion, and scientists, con-<lb/>
gressional representatives and<lb/>
others are divided over whether<lb/>
it would work.<lb/>
Two weeks ago, Defense Secre-<lb/>
tary Caspar Weinberger said he<lb/>
intends to accelerate SDI research<lb/>
and hopes a minimal svstcm can<lb/>
be developed by the mid-1990s.<lb/>
The Reagan administration's<lb/>
principal argument for SDI has<lb/>
been that it would protect against<lb/>
a Soviet attack and serve as a<lb/>
bargaining tool for nuclear mis-<lb/>
sile treaties.<lb/>
Tuesday, Piotrowski expanded<lb/>
that rationale.<lb/>
'There is always the chance<lb/>
this nation could be attacked by a<lb/>
madman or by accident he told<lb/>
about 200 students at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina at Char-<lb/>
lotte.<lb/>
'There is always the chance<lb/>
that we could have a modern-day<lb/>
Hitler who would destroy what<lb/>
he could said Piotrowski. "If<lb/>
you've got oil money today, you<lb/>
can develop a ballistic missile.<lb/>
And if you can hire enough scien-<lb/>
tists, you can develop a nuclear<lb/>
warhead<lb/>
Save the pond?<lb/>
CONCORD, Mass. (AP) ? A<lb/>
conservation group trying to ban<lb/>
swimming and limit picnicking<lb/>
and hiking at Walden Pond,<lb/>
where Henry David Thoreau<lb/>
contemplated the simple life, has<lb/>
found itself at odds with the<lb/>
Massachusetts Audubon Society.<lb/>
The Walden Forever Wild<lb/>
Committee says swimmers are<lb/>
causing serious damage to the<lb/>
pond and its environs. But the<lb/>
society says the committee is<lb/>
pushing a political and symbolic<lb/>
issue, not an environmental one.<lb/>
In a letter written earlier this<lb/>
year and obtained recently by<lb/>
The Associated Press, society<lb/>
president Gerard A. Bertrand<lb/>
condemned committee chair-<lb/>
woman Mary P. Sherwood's<lb/>
"monomaniacal effort" to ban<lb/>
swimming at the site where<lb/>
Thoreau built a cabin in 1845. He<lb/>
lived there for more than two<lb/>
years before distilling his<lb/>
thoughts on nature and society<lb/>
into his 1854 book "Walden<lb/>
Bertrand, noting his Republi-<lb/>
can background, rejected allega-<lb/>
tions that he was opposing a ban<lb/>
"to curry political favor" with<lb/>
Gov. Michael S. Dukakis, a<lb/>
Democratic presidential hopeful.<lb/>
Accusing Ms. Sherwood of<lb/>
"unsubstantiated accusations of<lb/>
conspiracy he also denied alle-<lb/>
gations that water samples were<lb/>
tampered with to make condi-<lb/>
tions at the state-run sanctuary<lb/>
appear better than they are.<lb/>
Walden, about 15 miles west of<lb/>
Boston, has been used for swim-<lb/>
ming, fishing, hiking and con-<lb/>
templation for generations. By<lb/>
the 1960s, a concrete bathhouse<lb/>
and pier had been erected. They<lb/>
were later removed.<lb/>
For some, Walden is a shrine to<lb/>
Thoreau and his naturalist phi-<lb/>
losophy. For others, it's just an-<lb/>
other pond on a hot summer day.<lb/>
Statewide beach<lb/>
sweep this weekend<lb/>
GKhhNSBOKO (AP) ? North<lb/>
Carolinians planning to escape<lb/>
housework by heading to the<lb/>
beach this weekend could be-<lb/>
come involved in another kind of<lb/>
cleanup.<lb/>
Saturday is the date set for<lb/>
Beach Sweep, the first statewide<lb/>
coastal cleanup.<lb/>
"We want to pick up trash and<lb/>
change people's attitudes said<lb/>
Joanne Braun, who will oversee<lb/>
teams of volunteers working the<lb/>
project's Cape Lookout to Sneads<lb/>
Ferry leg.<lb/>
The message is clear, Braun<lb/>
says: Trash should be taken off<lb/>
the beach in picnic baskets. Boat-<lb/>
ers should stow it rather than<lb/>
throw it.<lb/>
Other kinds of litter reflect<lb/>
other sources of the problem.<lb/>
"We have the shipping lane off<lb/>
our coast, and the military said<lb/>
Peggy Tuett, who'll direct the<lb/>
Corolla to Ocracoke cleaup<lb/>
teams. One recent beach wash-up<lb/>
was a can of paint thinner bearing<lb/>
naval insignia, she said.<lb/>
A third project segment, super-<lb/>
vised by Andy Wood at the N.C.<lb/>
Aquarium at Fort Fisher,<lb/>
stretches from Sneads Ferry to<lb/>
Sunset Beach, near the South<lb/>
Carolina border.<lb/>
More beautiful beaches are the<lb/>
immediate payoff, Wood said,<lb/>
but the effort is more than an<lb/>
exercise in aesthetics.<lb/>
Each year, 100,000 mammals<lb/>
and 1 million sea birds die from<lb/>
encounters with discarded plas<lb/>
tics, said Kathryn Henderson at<lb/>
the N.C. Division of Coastal<lb/>
Management in Raleigh.<lb/>
Animals, tied up in discarded<lb/>
nets or floating strands of line,<lb/>
starve or drown. Sea turtles eat<lb/>
plastic bags, mistaking them for<lb/>
their favorite jelly fish. Once in-<lb/>
gested, the plastic kills the turtles<lb/>
by inhibiting digestion or by in-<lb/>
flating into a balloon that makes it<lb/>
impossible for turtles to dive for<lb/>
food.<lb/>
Selling safe sex<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
An Orange County mail-order<lb/>
company that sells sexually ex-<lb/>
plicit books and other erotic ma-<lb/>
terials has started including a<lb/>
flier on safe sex with each order.<lb/>
Adam &amp; Eve, a division of PHE<lb/>
Inc. and the nation's largest mail-<lb/>
order supplier of condoms, is<lb/>
trying to help its customers un-<lb/>
derstand the seriousness of<lb/>
AIDS, said Philip Harvey, the<lb/>
company's president.<lb/>
"It made sense to share infor-<lb/>
mation with the customer Har-<lb/>
vey said Tuesday. "We're simply<lb/>
doing our part to help slowly,<lb/>
gradually build adequate aware-<lb/>
ness of the problem<lb/>
The flier presents the effect<lb/>
AIDS has on the body, how the<lb/>
disease can be transmitted and<lb/>
how it can be avoided. It encour-<lb/>
ages people with more than one<lb/>
sex partner to reduce that num-<lb/>
ber to lower the risk of contract-<lb/>
ing acquired immune deficiency<lb/>
syndrome.<lb/>
"In any case, if you do have sex I<lb/>
with more than one person, the<lb/>
best line of defense is to use con-<lb/>
doms every time you have sexual<lb/>
intercourse the flier says.<lb/>
Harvey said Adam &amp; Eve offi-<lb/>
cials were especially aware of in-<lb/>
creasing concern about AIDS<lb/>
becauseof a 25 percent increase in<lb/>
condom sales during the past 18<lb/>
months.<lb/>
Get more protein,<lb/>
eat carbohydrates<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? To get<lb/>
more protein into your diet, eat<lb/>
more carbolv drates.<lb/>
Harvard rutritionist Virginia<lb/>
Aronson says most of us eat too<lb/>
much protein. Although our<lb/>
bodies break protein down for<lb/>
fuel, it's a wasteful source of en-<lb/>
ergy.<lb/>
Eating extra carbohydrates ? a<lb/>
natural fuel ? will free your body<lb/>
to use the protein to repair<lb/>
muscles. That's protein's best<lb/>
role, says the Reebok Aerobic<lb/>
Information Bureau.<lb/>
 National Tohf r F.rMm<lb/>
The National Teacher Examinations-<lb/>
Core Battery Tests?will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Saturday, Oct 24, 1987. Applica-<lb/>
tion blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to the Educational Testing Service,<lb/>
Box 911-R, Princeton, NJ 08541d. Applica-<lb/>
tions must be postmarked no later than<lb/>
sept. 21, 1987. Get your application from<lb/>
the Testing Center, Rm 105 Speight, ECU<lb/>
Baptist StudpnUIrnqn<lb/>
All students are invited to dinner on<lb/>
Monday nights. Dinner starts at 5:30 and<lb/>
the cost is $2 00. At 7:00 we have our<lb/>
worship service.<lb/>
Sigma Gamma Epsilon<lb/>
Earth Sciences Honor Society presents<lb/>
speaker series: Sept. 17, "Depositional<lb/>
Environments of Miocene Sediments fron<lb/>
the N.C continental shelf'at 300 pm ;<lb/>
Sept. 24, "Geology of Centrla Guatemala"<lb/>
at 3:00 pm; Oct. 1, "Academic computing<lb/>
at ECU"at 3:00 pm ; and Oct 9, "Earth<lb/>
science education in the National Parks"<lb/>
at 2:00 pm<lb/>
ECU Paddling Club<lb/>
Meetings have been scheduled every<lb/>
Tuesday night at 900 pm during the fall<lb/>
semester Kayak and canoe techniques<lb/>
will be held at the Memorial Gym pool on<lb/>
the 1st, 3rd and 5th Tuesdays of each<lb/>
month. Regular dub meetings will be held<lb/>
on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays. All inter-<lb/>
ested students , staff and faculty are wel-<lb/>
come. Contact Jim 1 lix (6764 day and 756-<lb/>
2970 evenings) for detail.<lb/>
Women Soccer Club<lb/>
All girls interested in playing on the<lb/>
ECU Womens soccer club team should<lb/>
contact Renee at 355-4644 Immediately<lb/>
Attention all Students<lb/>
BASKETBALL BLOWOUT to support<lb/>
the Ronald McDonald House around the<lb/>
Student Store Sept. 23-25. You mav win<lb/>
$100. Sponsored by Panhellenic and IFC<lb/>
University Unions<lb/>
1 CXipht To Ik- In Pictures will be part of<lb/>
a dinner-theatre production on Thursday,<lb/>
Oct. 8, and Friday Oct. 9 at 6:30 pm in<lb/>
Mcndenhall Student Center Auditorium.<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale at the central ticket<lb/>
office in Mcndenhall Tickets are $10 00<lb/>
for students and $16.00 for all others. Call<lb/>
for your tickets, 757-6611 ext. 266. No tick-<lb/>
ets will be sold at the door<lb/>
Interviewing Workshops<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Service in the Bloxon House is offering<lb/>
one hour sessions to help vou in develop-<lb/>
ing better interviewing skills. Sessions<lb/>
will be held in the Career Planning Room<lb/>
at 3:00 pm on Tuesday Sept 15and2.00on<lb/>
Thurs. Sept. 17. Other programs will be of-<lb/>
fered on Sept 21 at 3:00 pm<lb/>
Resume Help<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement Service<lb/>
is offering a resume workshop in Wed.<lb/>
Sept 16 at 3:00 and Thurs Sept 17 at 4:00<lb/>
pm. The first 20 to come in will receive<lb/>
workbooks and worksheets Other pro-<lb/>
grams will be offered on Sept 22 at 300<lb/>
pm.<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse<lb/>
Committee is holding open auditions to<lb/>
all bands interested in performing for up<lb/>
coming events sponsered by the Coffee-<lb/>
house Auditions will be Thurs. Sept. 24,<lb/>
at 7:30 pm in the Coffeehouse; ground<lb/>
floor of Mendenhall. Sign up no later than<lb/>
Tuesday Sept 22 at Mendenhall.<lb/>
Continuing Education<lb/>
Personal development non-credit<lb/>
courses are being offered: Guitar Unlim-<lb/>
ited Nov. 3, Advanced Macros for Lotus 1-<lb/>
2 3 Dec 5, Scuba Dec 28, Skin Diving and<lb/>
Snorkeling Dec 28. In 1988, Hawaii vaca-<lb/>
tionScuba Dive. For more information,<lb/>
call 757-6143<lb/>
You're Invited<lb/>
Welcome Minority Pre-Med Reception<lb/>
Thursday, Sept 17 at 6:00pm at the School<lb/>
of Mediane Brody 2W40 Transportation<lb/>
provided from Mendehall For More in-<lb/>
formation call 551-2085 or 551 2500.<lb/>
ECU Wrestling Club<lb/>
Anyone interested in wrestling this<lb/>
year on the ECU club team please rail<lb/>
Tommy Lepppert at 752 1660 for more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha<lb/>
There is a Pi Sigma Alpha meeting at<lb/>
5:00 on Thursday, September 17 All<lb/>
members should attend.<lb/>
Continuing Education<lb/>
Representatives of Walt Disnev World<lb/>
will be at ECU on September 29 &amp; 30 to<lb/>
recruit students for positions during<lb/>
spring semester Contact the office of<lb/>
Cooperative Education in the Rawl Build<lb/>
ing for further details<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Students with a GPA of 3.3 or higher<lb/>
and have completed between 32 and <lb/>
credit hours are invited to attend Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi's meeting on September 22 at<lb/>
7:30 pm in room 103 of the Biology build<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Coral Reef Divg Club<lb/>
People interested in )oining ECU's<lb/>
Coral Reef Dive Club should call Glenn or<lb/>
Rob at 752-4399 lor more information<lb/>
Pre-Physical Therapy<lb/>
Any sophomore (or higher) wanting to<lb/>
make application to the Physical Therapv<lb/>
program for May 1988 must go to the P T<lb/>
Department (Aliied Health Bclk Build<lb/>
ing) to confirm eligibility to apply To be<lb/>
eligible, you must be able to complete all<lb/>
general college and physical therapv pre<lb/>
requisites by the end of spring semester<lb/>
18 and have a competitive GPA Contact<lb/>
the PT Dept bv mid September to con<lb/>
firm eligibility and receive the I' T admiv<lb/>
sion packet and application for the Allied<lb/>
Health Professions Admission Test<lb/>
Completed admission packet must bo<lb/>
returned bv November 1, IW7 Applica-<lb/>
tion deadline for the Al 1PAT in 101687<lb/>
ECU Lacrosse<lb/>
There is a players meeting Thursday<lb/>
Sept. 17 at 4:00 m Memorial Gym for all<lb/>
members and for those who are inter-<lb/>
ested. Call Chns at 757-0305 if unable to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
"Prime Time"<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ sponsors<lb/>
Prime Time every Thursday at 7 30 pm in<lb/>
Brewster C-103<lb/>
Andre' Knle<lb/>
Illusionist Andre Kole will be at ECU<lb/>
September 29th at 7J0 pm in Wnght<lb/>
Auditorium Tickets are on sale at Men-<lb/>
denhall - students $2 00, public $5.00.<lb/>
Intermediate Education<lb/>
Any Intermediate Education maprs<lb/>
are invited to attend a meeting on Mon-<lb/>
day, September 21st at 430 p.m. in<lb/>
Speight 312.<lb/>
fall Retreat<lb/>
The Presbyterian and Methodist Cam<lb/>
pus Ministries will sponsor a retreat to<lb/>
Camp Albermarle for relaxation and serv<lb/>
ice this weekend The topic will be "Mary<lb/>
and Martha, Peter and Jesus, You and<lb/>
Me " Call 752-7240 for more infomaoon<lb/>
SQCWCJ<lb/>
Applicants for fall admission to the<lb/>
SOCW7CJ Program must have truned in<lb/>
their application for admission and com<lb/>
pleted their first faculty interview by<lb/>
October 14. 1987 The time and location of<lb/>
the second interview with Gartman will<lb/>
be announced for the end of Oct Applj<lb/>
cants must have an overall GPA of 2 5 to<lb/>
apply<lb/>
Biology Club<lb/>
The Biology Qub will is having a car<lb/>
wash Sat Sept 26th from 9 a m. to 12 Of!<lb/>
noon at the Burger King on 10th St The<lb/>
cost is $2 00 per car<lb/>
Blood Drive<lb/>
Sponsored by AFROTC Sept 16andl7<lb/>
from 12 00-6 00 Room 244 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Give the gift of life<lb/>
University Unions<lb/>
Tickets are on sale now for Madngal<lb/>
Dinners to be held December 2-5, at<lb/>
700pm in Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Tickets are$10 00 for ECU students and<lb/>
$16 OOforall others For more information<lb/>
call the centra! ticket office at 757-6611<lb/>
ext. 266<lb/>
BACCHUS<lb/>
Come join BACCHUS (Boosting Alco-<lb/>
hol Consciousness Concerning The<lb/>
1 iealth of University Students) Thursday<lb/>
night. Sept 17 at 7 30 in Mendenhall Rm<lb/>
8F<lb/>
Attention Students<lb/>
The cut-off date for ECU Gospel Choir<lb/>
membership is Sept 22 Don't delay<lb/>
Come now<lb/>
Sophomores<lb/>
Take the first step next summer toward<lb/>
a commission as an Army officer It all<lb/>
??tarts with summer camp at Fort kjiox<lb/>
Kentuck v Vou may be eligible to compete<lb/>
for a two-year Army ROTC scholarship<lb/>
The six week camp pavs approximately<lb/>
$8 ? 00 For more information call <lb/>
6967 or contact Captain .Mncheii at the<lb/>
CCU Military Science Department Rm<lb/>
319Erwin Hall<lb/>
L'nLviriirLLjiiojis<lb/>
The North Carokna Shakespeare Festi-<lb/>
val will present A Midsummer Nights<lb/>
Dream on Wednesday, Sept 23, Mt 8:00<lb/>
pm Tickets are on safe now at the ceutrar<lb/>
ticket office in Mendenhall Student Co.<lb/>
ter For more information call 757-6611.<lb/>
ext 266<lb/>
Nursing Students<lb/>
In order to receive vour nursing pin by<lb/>
Dec orders must be placed in the Student<lb/>
Stores no later than Sept 18,1987 Orders<lb/>
should be placed at the jewlery counter<lb/>
Continuing Education<lb/>
Continuing Education is offering per<lb/>
sonal development non-credit courses<lb/>
through the month of Oct : Intermediate<lb/>
Lotus 1-2-3 Oct 10, Advising Real estate<lb/>
Clients Oct. 13, Coping with stress on the<lb/>
job Oct 13, Introduction to Wordstar Oct<lb/>
17, and Lotus 1-2-3 Functions and Formu-<lb/>
las Oct. 24. For more info call 757-6143<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: To share 2<lb/>
bedroom apartment Private room,<lb/>
shared bath, $110month, 13 utilities<lb/>
Non-smoker, non-drinker, serious stu-<lb/>
dent preferred. Call 355-3759.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: (MF) Private<lb/>
room avail. Tar River Ests. Call Sandy or<lb/>
Lisa 758-6950.<lb/>
ONE BEDROOM: Special Tar River Es-<lb/>
tates: $150 off 1st month rent when sign-<lb/>
ing a 12 month lease or the option to sign<lb/>
a 9 month lease. 1400 Willow St. 1 752-<lb/>
4225.<lb/>
TIRED OF YOUR ROOMMATE? Call<lb/>
your Daddy then call me. One bedroom<lb/>
condo at Ringgold Towers. Priced to sell.<lb/>
Call Bob Rains at Caldwell Banker W.G.<lb/>
Blount and Associates 756-3000 days or<lb/>
355-2394 nights.<lb/>
RINGOLD TOWERS - Apts for rent;<lb/>
furnished. Contact Hollie Simonowich<lb/>
752-2865.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To share 2 bed-<lb/>
room apartment. Private room $135 per<lb/>
month and 12 utilities. Call 756-9248.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To share a 2<lb/>
bedroom apt. 5 blocks from campus. Pri-<lb/>
vate room $120mo. and 1 2 utilities. Call<lb/>
752-2310 between 2.30 and 4:30 daily.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR ALL THE STUDENTS: Whomissed<lb/>
the Grand Opening Extravaganza Open-<lb/>
ing at Jenni K. Jewelry bring your ECU<lb/>
I.D. and receive 30 off all sterling Jew-<lb/>
elry: 608 Arlington Blvd. Suite E 355-<lb/>
6714<lb/>
CHEAP ROUNDTRIP AIRFARE: To<lb/>
NYC. This ticket is 50.00 off Super Saver<lb/>
price. For more info about this flight call<lb/>
756-7397 or 758-1061 ask for Greg<lb/>
Thaxton.<lb/>
INVEST IN YOUR FUTURE- Invest in a<lb/>
computer from IMEX International. We<lb/>
have sales &amp; service. Several configura-<lb/>
tions available. For yours, call 758-8395<lb/>
today.<lb/>
ELECTROLYSIS: (Permanent removal<lb/>
of unwanted hair) Big Barbara Venteis.<lb/>
People who understand electrolysis will<lb/>
not wax weeze or use electronic tweezer<lb/>
on any other temperary method. Isn't it<lb/>
time to try the permanent method. Call<lb/>
830-0962 for free consultation.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT HOMES. Delinquent<lb/>
tax property. Repossessions. 805-687-<lb/>
6000 Ext. L-1166.<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Call Cindy - 757-0398<lb/>
Call anytime after 5:00 p.m. Low rates<lb/>
include: proofreading, spelling and gram-<lb/>
matical corrections; professional service.<lb/>
10 years experience IBM TYPING.<lb/>
DISK JOCKIE: The imitations are simply<lb/>
that. TRASHMAN DJ service, golden<lb/>
grooversbody movers, new wax, new<lb/>
wave, top 40, any mixer, social. Bar<lb/>
Mitzpha; pool party, etc Contact 752-<lb/>
3587. Having a party and need a DJ?<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24 hours<lb/>
in and out. Guaranteed typing on paper<lb/>
up to 20 hand written pages. SDF Profes-<lb/>
sional Computer Services, 106 East 5th<lb/>
Street (Beside Cubbies) Greenville, N.C<lb/>
752-3694.<lb/>
PICK UP AND DELIVERY: Of term<lb/>
papers, theses, resumes to be typed. IBM<lb/>
wordprocessing by professional with 13<lb/>
years experience. Letter quality print and<lb/>
professioanl editing. Call Nanette in<lb/>
Griffon at 1-524-5241 Cheapcall - the best<lb/>
service!<lb/>
HANK'S HOMEMADE ICE CREAM<lb/>
Join us after class, for lunch dinner, or<lb/>
desert The perfect place to enjoy your<lb/>
favorite ice cream with your favorite<lb/>
friend Open til 11 00 p.m. (We're right<lb/>
beside Wendy's on East 10th Street).<lb/>
NEED A DJ: For your next party? I play<lb/>
top 40 and dance. I'll beat Morgan or<lb/>
anyother DJ's price. Call Mark at 752-4251.<lb/>
IS IT TRUE: You Can Buy Jeeps for $44<lb/>
through the U.S. government? Get the<lb/>
facts today! Call 1-312-742-1142 Ext. 5271-<lb/>
A.<lb/>
ICE CREAM CAKESDelicious, deco-<lb/>
rated and personalized with ANY mes-<lb/>
sage. If you can think or it, we can write it<lb/>
Hanks Homemade Ice Cream, 321 E. 10th<lb/>
Street (between Wendy's and<lb/>
McDonald's).<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
WANTED: Students interested in babysit-<lb/>
ting. Mostly on week-ends. Transporta-<lb/>
tion necessary. Call Mrs. Dunn at 355-<lb/>
6852.<lb/>
WHY BAKE? Try an ice cream cake!<lb/>
Hank's Homeade Ice Cream. 758-0000<lb/>
321 E. 10th St Greenville.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Disabled Student needs<lb/>
morning assistant in dressing and groom-<lb/>
ing. Salary negotiable. Contact Marty 752-<lb/>
2994.<lb/>
BELVOIR MANUFACTURING<lb/>
NEEDS: Part-time, energetic student for<lb/>
afternoons M-F. contact Mark Koehler,<lb/>
758-9710.<lb/>
JOIN IN OUR CELEBRATIONOur<lb/>
newest mud pie YUM YUM YUM<lb/>
YUM.<lb/>
TUTOR NEEDED: For Acct. 2521 and<lb/>
DSd 2223. Please call Lori at 752-73 and<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
BRODY's has pan-time sales associates<lb/>
positions for engthusiastic, out going<lb/>
individuals who enjoy working with<lb/>
young contemporary fashions. Good Sal-<lb/>
ary. Apply in person, Brody's Personnel<lb/>
Director, Carolina East mall M-W 2-4 p.m.<lb/>
DESK CLERKS: The Holiday INN<lb/>
Greenville is accepting applications for<lb/>
postitions at front desk. Experience pre-<lb/>
ferred, excellent starting pay. Must apply<lb/>
in person, no phone calls pie<lb/>
MACKENZIE SECURITY: Is seeking<lb/>
students to work as part-time, weekend<lb/>
security guards. Good Pay! Must have<lb/>
dependable transportation to work<lb/>
MUST have telephone. MUST NOT have<lb/>
police record. Apply in person at 1127<lb/>
South Evans Street. 758-2174.<lb/>
BRODY'S FOR MEN: Has full-time and<lb/>
part-time ?iles associates postitions, for<lb/>
enthusiastic, fashion forward individu-<lb/>
als. Retail Clothing experience is required.<lb/>
Better than average starting salary. Apply<lb/>
in person, Brody's Personnel Director,<lb/>
Carolina East Mall M-W 2-4 pm.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
INTER VARSITY CHRISIAN FELLOW-<lb/>
SHIP: Please Join US! Wednesday Night's<lb/>
in Speight 129 at 7:00 pm. - Fun - Fellow-<lb/>
ship - Food - Teaching <lb/>
EVERYONE: BASKETBALL BLOWOUT<lb/>
to support the Ronald McDonald House -<lb/>
be around the Student Store Sept. 23-25.<lb/>
You may win $100! sponsored by<lb/>
Panhellenic and IFC<lb/>
DID YOU READ ART'S PERSONALS?<lb/>
If so, call the Central Ticket Office at 757-<lb/>
6611, ext. 266, for a chance to win free<lb/>
tickets for the N.C. Shakespeare Festival<lb/>
production of A Midsummer Night's<lb/>
Dream. Be sure to mention one of the<lb/>
characters in the ad, and leave your name<lb/>
and phone number. All entries must be in<lb/>
?-y 6.00 p.m. Tuesday, September 22. The<lb/>
Drawing will be held at 9:00 a.m. Wednes-<lb/>
day, September 23rd. You need not be<lb/>
present to win.<lb/>
CORAL REEFERS: General meeting<lb/>
Thurs. 917 at 7p.m. in the multi-purpose<lb/>
room at Mendenhall! Be there to discuss<lb/>
going down!<lb/>
SIG EPS - What the heck! Chancellors cup<lb/>
4??<lb/>
ECU Did you know that the very best<lb/>
ICE CREAM in the nation is right here in<lb/>
Cieenville? It's Hank's Homemade Ice<lb/>
Cream on 10th Street right beside<lb/>
Wendy's<lb/>
SIG EPS - Let's party on the lawn for the<lb/>
Illinois game<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: We would like to wish our<lb/>
BETA PI pledges good luck on a raging<lb/>
semester! Lorraine Andre, Maggie<lb/>
Comwath, Jennifer Carpenter, Karen<lb/>
Cope, Kirsten Eakes, Trich Frazier, Tncia<lb/>
Gough, Jennifer Joumegan, Melinda<lb/>
Lentine, Kathie McIIale, Marney McKee,<lb/>
Charlotte Moffit, Robin Morrison, Karen<lb/>
Rrevost, Melanie Queen, Lizzy Rand,<lb/>
Melissa Richardson, Stephanie Ryan,<lb/>
Tanya Smythe, Laurie Sodano, Diane<lb/>
Spencer, Lori Stephenson, Shelley<lb/>
Sumner, Kathie Ulrich, and Melinda<lb/>
Walker. We're excited about having each<lb/>
one of you as our future sisters.<lb/>
PHI BETA SIGMA - There will be a Sigma<lb/>
Dove interest meeting at 7:00 p.m. w<lb/>
Room 221 Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 17, 1987. Blue Phi<lb/>
THE OMEGA PSI PHI Fraternity Inc<lb/>
will have a party at the Cultural Center ori<lb/>
Friday Sept. 18th from 9:00 p.m. to 2:00<lb/>
LACROSSE - There will be a players<lb/>
meeting today for all interested in playing<lb/>
fall lacrosse. Memorial Gym downstairs<lb/>
at 4:00. If you can not attend call Chris<lb/>
757-0305.<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA PSI would like to sin-<lb/>
cerely thank all students who participated<lb/>
in last weekend's activities at the Wiz II<lb/>
and the Cultural Center. The Nupes.<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI little sister rush<lb/>
September 22 and 23. Be there!<lb/>
LOST: Guy's class ring. If found please<lb/>
call 752-7253 ask for Paris. $Reward$.<lb/>
ATTENTION all Seniors and Juniors!<lb/>
Your 1985-86 yearbook is here and can be<lb/>
pitked up at the Buccaneer office in the<lb/>
Publications Building.<lb/>
AZD's: Thanks a lot girls for one helluva<lb/>
good time, the bus was rockin' and the<lb/>
cabin was rollin the neighbors hated to<lb/>
admit it, but even they had a good time<lb/>
let's do it again, the PIKAS.<lb/>
THETA CHI: It all began around mid-<lb/>
night and continued right into daylight<lb/>
The pool brought a great BIG SPLASH to<lb/>
our Pref-Night Bash Thanks for the fun<lb/>
and great time - we'll get dark shirts next<lb/>
time Was it a dream'v Love, the Zeta's<lb/>
ROBIN, will you let him stop you from<lb/>
getting to know me' Slap me quick! Ken<lb/>
PHI TAU'S: Thanks so much for a great<lb/>
Pref-party The luau really made us feel<lb/>
like natives. Hoped ya'll enjoyed the subs'<lb/>
Love, the sisters and pledges of Chi<lb/>
Omega.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: A little late but definitely<lb/>
not forgotten. Hey Alpha Sigs - Partying<lb/>
'til we didn't recall wasn't hard to do but<lb/>
now that it's all over we're psvehed to do<lb/>
it again with you' Shred it right, boys:<lb/>
HCEHCS - How does a rendezvous on the<lb/>
19th sound?<lb/>
LESLIE Your doing a great job at PT.<lb/>
Keep up the Kood work. AIM<lb/>
AMANDA Congratulations! Your year<lb/>
has only begun. I know you'll do a supper<lb/>
job! AIM. VY<lb/>
LAMDA CHI'S Thanks for inviting us<lb/>
over for rush. We can't wait to party with<lb/>
you and your new pledges! Love, the<lb/>
AZD's.<lb/>
PHI TAUS - Spectators wc will not be for<lb/>
everyone must tee to see how hilarious it<lb/>
will be to watch all the AZDs Try to be<lb/>
golfers with all the rest - and will succeed<lb/>
to be the BEST ARe you ready? Love, the<lb/>
AZ's.<lb/>
ART is still desperate! I don't know what<lb/>
to do! Oberon has slipped Demetrius a<lb/>
love potion (9) and the situation is worse<lb/>
Now Titania is in love with an ass. Where<lb/>
is Puck when I need him. Meet me at<lb/>
Wright Auditorium for A Midsummer<lb/>
Night's Dream Wednesday, September<lb/>
23, at 8 p.m. Signed, 100 Natural Art.<lb/>
TMFEASTCAtOIINlAN<lb/>
New album re<lb/>
by the Gospel<lb/>
By CRETCHEN JOLRMGAN<lb/>
 Stiff Kntct<lb/>
The ECU gospel choir is selling<lb/>
their first contemporary good<lb/>
album ? "Land Called Glory<lb/>
for $8.<lb/>
The 10 recorded songs, includ-<lb/>
ing "Nothing But the Blood<lb/>
"He'll Make Everything Alright<lb/>
and "Hold On were written and<lb/>
composed by choir director Gre-<lb/>
gory Horton<lb/>
The choir began to learn and<lb/>
practice the songs in September ot<lb/>
1986. In January the album was<lb/>
recorded live in Wright Audito-<lb/>
rium by Megar Sound Studios<lb/>
from Bailey, N.C.<lb/>
There are approximately 12<lb/>
members in the choir, all 1<lb/>
students, who participated in the<lb/>
recording In addition to the tradi-<lb/>
tional choir accompaniments<lb/>
(organ and piano), keyboard.<lb/>
drums and bass guitar were used.<lb/>
The album cover is a nature<lb/>
scene which refers to the album s<lb/>
title<lb/>
Since its release in July, "Its<lb/>
selling great said choir member<lb/>
and past president. Sheila<lb/>
Woo ten.<lb/>
Choir members are distributing<lb/>
the 1500 albums among students,<lb/>
faculty, friends and family. All<lb/>
profits made from the h. nd raiser<lb/>
will help the choir financially for<lb/>
their special tours.<lb/>
During spring break, the choir<lb/>
is tentatively planning to perform<lb/>
in parts of New York, Philadel-<lb/>
phia, Washington, D.C , Virginia<lb/>
and Maryland.<lb/>
This first album may be just the<lb/>
beginning for bigger and better<lb/>
fund raisers in the future savs<lb/>
Wooten.<lb/>
Radio stations in North Caro-<lb/>
lina and Virginia are plavinc the<lb/>
"lia??rCjiHecr Glory '<lb/>
Wooten said evervbodv had<lb/>
albumasucc<lb/>
was record <lb/>
trom thr ?<lb/>
the Culturd<lb/>
hind th.<lb/>
The albui<lb/>
more a wan<lb/>
and as a r I<lb/>
have pined<lb/>
Wooten<lb/>
The<lb/>
Hov<lb/>
trib .<lb/>
duct.<lb/>
the<lb/>
'en.<lb/>
jhe<lb/>
some ot the<lb/>
bic teacher<lb/>
their <lb/>
A- . I<lb/>
hap<lb/>
on ca<lb/>
The ch(<lb/>
from<lb/>
a -<lb/>
tund rais<lb/>
port<lb/>
said V<lb/>
Men<lb/>
see wh,<lb/>
instead are<lb/>
reach th <lb/>
The ch<lb/>
area. The vpc<lb/>
and schools<lb/>
munities.<lb/>
)<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ij<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
s <lb/>
?X<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Ice Cream! Hank's<lb/>
Homade Ice Cream Hank's Homeade Ice<lb/>
Cream<lb/>
Facul<lb/>
ECU's School of Art artist-m -residence Dtorr<lb/>
Monday at 7:30 p.m. in lenkins Auditorium<lb/>
A painter, pnntmaker and Rlrnrruki w<lb/>
in Richmond, Ky. He graduated ? Ml . MM I<lb/>
and exhibits nationally Halbnxks i lea "Huai<lb/>
He will discuss the evolution ot idea- <lb/>
Examples of Halbrook s work are ptew<lb/>
Faculty Exhibit, which ends Nturi4 ?? ?<lb/>
employing both 3-D illusion and nvxiekv v v!<lb/>
the edges of the painting surtace pcei?acvM n?rxe<lb/>
Jenkins Auditonum and Gra tt va.V<lb/>
information call 757-tvVV.<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'?.???i'ipg??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057913_0008"/><lb/>
cements<lb/>
tail Retreat<lb/>
md Methodist Carrt-<lb/>
s wW sponsor a retreat to<lb/>
relaxation and scrv-<lb/>
. ipK- will be "Mary<lb/>
lesus. You and<lb/>
 ? r more intomahon<lb/>
SQCM CJ<lb/>
m tail admission to the<lb/>
igram must have rruned in<lb/>
m fat admission and com<lb/>
- interview by<lb/>
The time and location o<lb/>
? with Cartman will<lb/>
the end of (.Vt AppU<lb/>
verd:iC,rAoi2.5to<lb/>
Biology Club<lb/>
? will is having a car<lb/>
'? m9a.m to 12 00<lb/>
King on IvXh St The<lb/>
 0 pet car<lb/>
Blood Drive<lb/>
Sept 16andl7<lb/>
? - - T44 Mendenhall<lb/>
ve the gift of life<lb/>
versify L'nions<lb/>
w tor Madngal<lb/>
?ecetnber 2-5, at<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
1 I students and<lb/>
l ire in formation<lb/>
? ? " ice at 757-6611,<lb/>
WCHUS<lb/>
Boosting Alco-<lb/>
? rcermng The<lb/>
dents) Thursday<lb/>
: Vcrtdenhall Rm.<lb/>
Students<lb/>
CU Gospel Choir<lb/>
22 Don't delay<lb/>
nQI?5<lb/>
? ? summer toward<lb/>
v officer It all<lb/>
p at Fort Knox,<lb/>
"ble to compete<lb/>
TC scholarship<lb/>
? approximately<lb/>
rmation, call 757-<lb/>
n Mitchell at the<lb/>
Department, Rm<lb/>
nivgrsity Unions<lb/>
ai lina Shakespeare Fesb-<lb/>
A Midsummer Nights<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept 23, at :00<lb/>
ire on sale now at the central<lb/>
r Mendenhall Srudert Ofl7<lb/>
e information call 757-6611,<lb/>
Nursing Students<lb/>
. tve vour nursing pin bv<lb/>
-t be placed in the Student<lb/>
than sept 18, 1987 Orders<lb/>
i a: the lewlery counter<lb/>
uing.FduCjatioji<lb/>
n is offering per-<lb/>
rment non-credit courses<lb/>
1 Intermediate<lb/>
? vising Real estate<lb/>
ping vth stress on the<lb/>
? n to Wordstar Oct<lb/>
tions and Forrrtu-<lb/>
; info ca:i757-6143<lb/>
around mid-<lb/>
? daylight.<lb/>
LASH to<lb/>
ml for the fun<lb/>
irt shirts next<lb/>
? i the Zeta's<lb/>
? : .ou from<lb/>
?quick'Ken.<lb/>
much for a great<lb/>
illy made us feel<lb/>
edya  eninved the subs!<lb/>
rs and pledges of Oii<lb/>
: a, ? ?? ate but definitely<lb/>
rha Sigs Partying<lb/>
rasri t hard to do but<lb/>
- we're psvehed to do<lb/>
? i Shred it right, boys:<lb/>
! low does a rendezvous on the<lb/>
doing a great job at P.T.<lb/>
? . d? rk AIM<lb/>
AMANDA r :ratulations! Your year<lb/>
I Know you'll do a supper<lb/>
1 MDAHI'S Thanks for inviting us<lb/>
?"? e can t wait to party with<lb/>
a new pledges! Love, the<lb/>
I 5<lb/>
PHITAUS Spectators we will not be for<lb/>
rle must tee to see how hilarious it<lb/>
? watch all the AZD"s Try to be<lb/>
rs with all the rest and will succeed<lb/>
to be the BEST ARe you ready7 Love, the<lb/>
in the<lb/>
' r one hciluva<lb/>
 j- r ickin' and the<lb/>
lire neighbors hated to<lb/>
 thev had a good time,<lb/>
? AS<lb/>
ART is still desperate! I don't know what<lb/>
to do' Oberon has slipped Demetrius a<lb/>
lot e potion (9) and the situation is worse.<lb/>
Titania is in love with an ass. Where<lb/>
k when I need him Meet me at<lb/>
Wright Auditorium for A Midsummer<lb/>
Night s Dream Wednesday, September<lb/>
21 at 8 p m Signed, 100 Natural Art.<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Ice Cream! Hank'a<lb/>
Homade Ice Cream Hank's Homeade Ice<lb/>
Cream<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 17,1987 Page 7<lb/>
New album released<lb/>
by the Gospel Choir<lb/>
Bv C.RETCHEN JOURNIGAN<lb/>
Suit Wntcr<lb/>
I he ECU gospel choir is selling<lb/>
r lirst contemporary gospel<lb/>
album ? "Land Called Glory" ?<lb/>
$8.<lb/>
"he 10 recorded songs, includ-<lb/>
ing "Nothing But the Blood<lb/>
He'll Make Everything Alright"<lb/>
and Hold On were written and<lb/>
imposed by choir director Gre-<lb/>
gory Horton.<lb/>
The choir began to learn and<lb/>
practice the songs in September of<lb/>
1986. In anuary the album was<lb/>
recorded live in Wright Audito-<lb/>
rium bv Megar Sound Studios<lb/>
m Bailey, N.C.<lb/>
There are approximately 125<lb/>
members in the choir, all ECU<lb/>
students, who participated in the<lb/>
i ecording. In addition to the tradi-<lb/>
nal choir accompaniments<lb/>
-i;an and piano), keyboard,<lb/>
drums and bass guitar were used.<lb/>
The album cover is a nature<lb/>
scene which refers to the album's<lb/>
title.<lb/>
Since its release in ulv, "Its'<lb/>
selling great said choir member<lb/>
and past president, Sheila<lb/>
Wooten.<lb/>
Choir members are distributing<lb/>
the 1500 albums among students.<lb/>
faculty, tnends and family. All<lb/>
profits made from the fund raiser<lb/>
will help the choir financially for<lb/>
their special tours.<lb/>
During spring break, the choir<lb/>
is tentatively planning to perform<lb/>
in parts of New York, Philadel-<lb/>
phia, Washington, D.C Virginia<lb/>
and Maryland.<lb/>
This first album may be just the<lb/>
beginning for bigger and better<lb/>
fund raisers in the future says<lb/>
Wooten.<lb/>
Radio stations in North Caro-<lb/>
lina and Virginia are playing the<lb/>
Land Called Glory<lb/>
wooten said everybody had<lb/>
worked together to make the<lb/>
album a success. Before the album<lb/>
was recorded, the choir practiced<lb/>
from three to four times a week in<lb/>
the Cultural Center, located be-<lb/>
hind the Student Health Center.<lb/>
The album has made people<lb/>
more aware of the gospel choir,<lb/>
and as a result some new students<lb/>
have joined the group, says<lb/>
Wooten.<lb/>
The choir thanked Chancellor<lb/>
Howell for helping with the con-<lb/>
tribution of $2,000 for album pro-<lb/>
duction<lb/>
"We've sold almost over half of<lb/>
the albums since July said<lb/>
Wooten.<lb/>
She also said that she had sold<lb/>
some of the gospel music to aero-<lb/>
bic teachers who uses the music in<lb/>
their exercise classes.<lb/>
As sales increase, the choir an-<lb/>
ticipates to reorder the recording<lb/>
on cassette tapes.<lb/>
The choir will perform music<lb/>
from the album in Hendrix Thea-<lb/>
ter on Sept. 29. The free show will<lb/>
begin at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Albums will be sold at the pro-<lb/>
motional concert.<lb/>
"The album has made the fac-<lb/>
ualty and students pull together<lb/>
in love and unity said Wooten.<lb/>
She also said that through the<lb/>
fund raiser she had made great<lb/>
tnends and that when she gradu-<lb/>
ates this year, she will miss the<lb/>
choir greatly.<lb/>
"So far, everyone has sup-<lb/>
ported us bv buying the album<lb/>
said Wooten.<lb/>
Members arc not competing to<lb/>
see who can sell the most, but<lb/>
instead are working together te<lb/>
reach their goal.<lb/>
The choir is also active in the<lb/>
area. They perform at area schools<lb/>
and schools in neighboring com-<lb/>
munities.<lb/>
Members of the ECU Gospel Choir are shown here recording their music by the group's director, Gregory Hoton, costs $8 and is avail-<lb/>
first album last spring. The album, which features some original able from any choir member.<lb/>
It's a hassle<lb/>
Parking is major campus pain<lb/>
By LAURA SALAZAR<lb/>
Stjff Vntrr<lb/>
Vulgar language  short pa-<lb/>
tience  tardiness to class<lb/>
dented fenders  careful reading<lb/>
of signs  these are all symptoms<lb/>
of a disease called "Couldn't find<lb/>
a parking space<lb/>
Driving around all day looking<lb/>
for a space is like trying to cor-<lb/>
rectly answer a Trivial Pursuit<lb/>
question about Robert Bork's<lb/>
nomination to the Supreme<lb/>
Court.<lb/>
Am 1 eettinc the ixiint across?<lb/>
it's such a hassle to park on cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
When a space is found, it usu-<lb/>
ally requires expertise maneuver-<lb/>
ing and a graduate course<lb/>
inParallel parking 1521 'ITiis is<lb/>
especially true when a car doesn't<lb/>
have power steering. Girls who<lb/>
have cars without power steering<lb/>
.ire easv to spot. They're the ones<lb/>
with eight inch biceps.<lb/>
Once thecar is properly parked,<lb/>
a sigh of relief is extolled.<lb/>
Then, when you finally go back<lb/>
to retrieve your-mechanical mar-<lb/>
vel, memory J aps? oct uts a nd the<lb/>
car is nowhere to be found.<lb/>
Faculty art<lb/>
Darryl Hallbrook's "Loaf at D. Boon Hat"<lb/>
ECU's School of Art artist-in-residence Darryl Halbrooks will present a slide-lecture on his work on<lb/>
Monday at 7:30 p.m. in Jenkins Auditorium.<lb/>
A painter, printmaker and filmmaker, Halbrooks is also professor of art at Eastern Kentucky University<lb/>
in Richmond Ky. He graduated with a master's degree in fine art from Southern Illinois University in 1972<lb/>
and exhibits nationally. Halbrooks is teaching at the School of Art for the fall semester as artist-in-residence.<lb/>
He will discuss the evolution of ideas in his prints, drawings, and paintings.<lb/>
Examples of Halbrook's work are presently on view at Gray Art Gallery as a part of the School of Art<lb/>
Faculty Exhibit which ends Saturday. His paintings show a strong interest in abstract spacial relationships<lb/>
employing both 3-D illusion and modeled color techniques. The effect is heightened as Halbrooks reshapes<lb/>
the edges of the painting surface producing pieces which blur the boundaries of sculpture and painting.<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium and Gray Art Gallery are located in the Jenkins Fine Arts Center. For more<lb/>
information call 757-6336.<lb/>
It's as dark as tar outside and<lb/>
every car looks the same. It takes<lb/>
the entire night to find out that the<lb/>
car was towed because the left<lb/>
front tire was 2.5 inches over the<lb/>
white line.<lb/>
Face it, there just is nowhere to<lb/>
park. When a space becomes va-<lb/>
cant, automobiles rush to the<lb/>
space like it holds the cure for<lb/>
AIDS.<lb/>
It's always funny to watch a car<lb/>
accidentlv bump, dent or smash<lb/>
into another car. The driver casu-<lb/>
ally does a ISO of the premises to<lb/>
check for any possible narcs in the<lb/>
vicinity.<lb/>
Some drivers cannot parallel<lb/>
park. This, "Non-parallel parking<lb/>
syndrome is characteristic of an<lb/>
extra P chromosome under an<lb/>
electron scanning microscope.<lb/>
Try as they might, the "PP"<lb/>
drivers continue their futile at-<lb/>
tempt to properlv align their ve-<lb/>
hicles in the "TP" fashion.<lb/>
Since lack of parking space is as<lb/>
frequent as an acne break-out, my<lb/>
suggestion is to build a HOV<lb/>
(high occupancy vehicle) parking<lb/>
garage adjacent to the new build-<lb/>
ing under construction. Bv the<lb/>
way, there are no parkjug spaces<lb/>
for the new building.<lb/>
MTV awards no one saw on the boob tube<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
The MTV' Video Awards were<lb/>
handed out last Friday in a show<lb/>
based in Burbank, Calif. The show<lb/>
spanned both the continent, the<lb/>
Atlantic, and something of three<lb/>
hours. . .and still all the awards<lb/>
couldn't make it in the air time.<lb/>
We of The East Carolinian Enter-<lb/>
tainment page are proud to get the<lb/>
scoop on these obscure, but no<lb/>
less prestigious, music video<lb/>
awards.<lb/>
Best performance by a plucked<lb/>
chicken in a music video: The<lb/>
dancing plucked chickens in<lb/>
"Sledgehammer<lb/>
Conservation Award for most<lb/>
creative recycling in a video:<lb/>
Cyndi Lauper's newspaper skirt<lb/>
in "True Colors<lb/>
Best performance by a drag art-<lb/>
ist in a video: Michael Jackson in<lb/>
"Nasty" (his second year running<lb/>
in this category).<lb/>
Jim and Tammv Bakker<lb/>
Award: 'True Colors" by Cyndi<lb/>
Lauper.<lb/>
Best video commercial for<lb/>
album not available in any stores:<lb/>
The Chuck Wagon Gang's<lb/>
Golden Greats.<lb/>
Best video performance by an<lb/>
artist who is only sixteen: Debbie<lb/>
Gibson.<lb/>
Clearasil Award for video most<lb/>
likely to be watched bv kids with<lb/>
pimples: Anything bv Bon Jovi.<lb/>
Best mascara in a music video:<lb/>
Tie: Madonna and Nick Rhodes.<lb/>
Best duct: Run-D.M.C. and<lb/>
Cristy Lane for "One Day At A<lb/>
Time" (rap version).<lb/>
Best performance bv a sub-<lb/>
human: Billy Idol.<lb/>
Video artist who'd look at home<lb/>
on a motorcycle, flanked by Hell's<lb/>
Angels: The Grateful Dead's<lb/>
Gerry Garcia.<lb/>
Video most likely to be only<lb/>
shown at three o'clock in the<lb/>
morning: Anything bvYokoOno.<lb/>
From the Not So fight<lb/>
Molloy reads fan mail<lb/>
By PAT MOLLOY<lb/>
AMUtanl Sportj Erfiwr<lb/>
Author's note: To thoze<lb/>
whom I ophended in my last<lb/>
ardikte bymisspetSng the word<lb/>
'Reebok t offer my cinserest<lb/>
apofagees. It is my moist fer-<lb/>
vent wish that know harm has<lb/>
come to you or your tuvd onez<lb/>
stemming from this catostrofk<lb/>
event.<lb/>
From the time 1 began this col-<lb/>
umn three years ago, I have re-<lb/>
ceived mail from people asking<lb/>
very intimate questions.<lb/>
I usually answer these ques-<lb/>
tions personally, feeling it is my<lb/>
respon- sibiliry to my readers.<lb/>
However, over the summer,<lb/>
such an assortment of mis-<lb/>
guided, off-the-wall tetters piled<lb/>
up, I simply can't afford the post-<lb/>
age. Hence, I'll answer them as<lb/>
best I can in my own forum.<lb/>
The first letter begins nicely<lb/>
enough, but notice how the au-<lb/>
thor strays into shades of Liber-<lb/>
ace:<lb/>
Dear Pat:<lb/>
! read your column all the<lb/>
tune and think you're a very<lb/>
funny person. I heard some-<lb/>
where that you're really mel-<lb/>
low and like Jimmy Buffet if<lb/>
this is true. I'd sure like to<lb/>
spend some time with you<lb/>
over a weekend. Could this<lb/>
happen?<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Chock<lb/>
Dear Chuck<lb/>
I am an hilarious person. I<lb/>
think listening to Jimmy<lb/>
Buffett while I toss back a cold<lb/>
brew is as close to heaven as a<lb/>
man can get without having to<lb/>
cease respiration. I also hap-<lb/>
pen to own a gun the size of<lb/>
most third-world countries,<lb/>
and would not hesitate to use<lb/>
it should you escape from<lb/>
Behriew.<lb/>
Mellowing out nicely.<lb/>
thanks.<lb/>
Pat MoUoy<lb/>
Ah, the injustice of it all. Of<lb/>
course, not all my correspon-<lb/>
dence is so, uh, forward. Some-<lb/>
times the people who write me<lb/>
are hying to say things between<lb/>
the lines. In these instances, I rely<lb/>
on my keen knowledge of the<lb/>
human animal to distinguish<lb/>
anger from anguish:<lb/>
Dear Pat:<lb/>
You are an insidious moron,<lb/>
incapable of any thought<lb/>
process not beginning below<lb/>
your beltline. As a humorist.<lb/>
you are second even to the<lb/>
creator of "Blondie And as for<lb/>
your writing m generaL lVe<lb/>
been more enthused about<lb/>
reading maps. Should you,<lb/>
after college, entertain the<lb/>
idea of a career in journalism,<lb/>
please consider that Andy<lb/>
Rooney went into television. It<lb/>
will be much appreciated.<lb/>
Spare us all.<lb/>
Richard Head<lb/>
Dear Dick:<lb/>
I mean that.<lb/>
From here we drift into the<lb/>
truly bizzarre. I used to think mat<lb/>
people who write letters like the<lb/>
following were from places<lb/>
where Red Man and overalls are<lb/>
the norm. However, after receiv-<lb/>
ing this particular work of art,<lb/>
I'm convinced of it.<lb/>
Dear Pat:<lb/>
I sure like your show. You're<lb/>
about the funniest dude on<lb/>
the tube. And that sweet<lb/>
thang that turns tetters aint<lb/>
half bad, neither. Say. boy, do<lb/>
them Daimat ion statues bite?<lb/>
And tell me somethin. sor,<lb/>
about that woman Vanna. Are<lb/>
those mombos real, or what?<lb/>
Dang if you aint a hoot.<lb/>
Pm Pullin' for ya, boy,<lb/>
Jim Valvano.<lb/>
Athletic Director<lb/>
NCSli<lb/>
DearJtm:<lb/>
No. Vanna's mombos i<lb/>
not real rm sorry I had to be<lb/>
ttoeone totellyou, but rmsure i<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057913_0009"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THEE AS i A ROUN1A N<lb/>
SI IM'l MKl'K 17, lsS7<lb/>
New books reviewed<lb/>
Michael Jackson is a concert smash in Japan<lb/>
The Man Who Robbed the<lb/>
Pierre By Ira Berkow An<lb/>
theneum. 310 Pages. $17.95.<lb/>
It you find yourself staring al<lb/>
the same, familiar titles in the<lb/>
mystery section oi your book<lb/>
store, take a turn over to the non-<lb/>
fiction section tor Ira Berkow's<lb/>
Ihe Man who Robbed the IV<lb/>
erre<lb/>
I he reader who cnjo s the ami-<lb/>
able rogue will find the characters<lb/>
in this real life caper as colorful as<lb/>
they would want A cut above the<lb/>
nal thugsol the police blotter,<lb/>
 Comfort is the kind oi<lb/>
who tips the hotel employ<lb/>
v- left bound and gagged in a<lb/>
l ted vault<lb/>
1 ans ol the police procedural<lb/>
ol will find a fine story ol how<lb/>
?e is real!) broken. A piece of<lb/>
k here and a stupid mistake<lb/>
c and the biggest hotel rob-<lb/>
bery in histor) is solved.<lb/>
I here s no surprise ending 1 he<lb/>
- is history and the reader<lb/>
???show it is going to turn out<lb/>
characters, thedeta d<lb/>
Ol the heists and<lb/>
kov? s skills as a ston teller<lb/>
keep the reader's interest as we<lb/>
follow Comfort as he grows from<lb/>
voung hood to master criminal.<lb/>
- nlike the criminals ol fiction,<lb/>
1 omfort is a family man w ho lies<lb/>
to his wife when he leaves home<lb/>
d calls home on New<lb/>
the night before he<lb/>
nsin cash and jewels<lb/>
from one of New York Cit) smosl <lb/>
isive hot! Is wit<lb/>
fhal was Comfort's iol<lb/>
body vanished. And though it<lb/>
wasn't known at the time, a fe-<lb/>
male friend of the bookkeeper<lb/>
had disappeared earlier and<lb/>
probably also had been slain.<lb/>
The publisher promotes 'The<lb/>
CBS Murders" by Richard Ham-<lb/>
mer as a story of "greed and vio-<lb/>
lence in New York's Diamond<lb/>
District That it was and then<lb/>
some.<lb/>
Bui it was the killing of the three<lb/>
C BS men, all innocent of anything<lb/>
except trying to aid a woman in<lb/>
distress, that horrified New York-<lb/>
ers beyond measure.<lb/>
It led the mayor and top city<lb/>
officials to order no resource<lb/>
spared in snaring the perpetrator<lb/>
tast. let it was to prove not so<lb/>
easily done. It came very near<lb/>
being the perfect crime.<lb/>
In time, however, an appalling<lb/>
tale of multimillion-dollar<lb/>
swindles in the jewelry industry<lb/>
was to unfold.Some of the revela-<lb/>
tions were so astounding as to be<lb/>
near unbelievable<lb/>
1 Jammer has dime a superb job<lb/>
of pulling all the incredible facets<lb/>
ol the bizarrecase together in such<lb/>
a way as to deep the reader truly<lb/>
spellbound<lb/>
Frank Stilley<lb/>
For The Al<lb/>
"g dead. The sum total of these<lb/>
factors is one great piece of story-<lb/>
telling. '<lb/>
Barker has proved to be some-<lb/>
thing more than a writer. He is a<lb/>
student oi human nature. His<lb/>
characters are studies of the intri-<lb/>
cate workings oft he human mind.<lb/>
His plot and subplots twist and<lb/>
dance between mankind's most<lb/>
private thoughts and its most<lb/>
dreaded nightmares.<lb/>
'The Damnation Game" is rep-<lb/>
resentative oi science fiction at its<lb/>
best. It evokes both fear and<lb/>
thought Hns work accomplishes<lb/>
what good sci-fi should. Gamble<lb/>
on this sure thing.<lb/>
William<lb/>
Associ<lb/>
at" )? fastello<lb/>
ciated Press<lb/>
TOKYO (AP) - Michael Jackson<lb/>
"moon-walked gyrated and<lb/>
postured through 16 songs before<lb/>
a sell-out crowd of 38,000 frenzied<lb/>
fans at a baseball stadium Satur-<lb/>
day night, making his first concert<lb/>
appearance in more than four<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The singer drew shrieds of<lb/>
"Mai-ke-ru the Japanese pro-<lb/>
nunciation of Michael, as he<lb/>
sailed through his array of styl-<lb/>
ized poses, karete kicks and his<lb/>
trademark moon-walking ? slid-<lb/>
ing backward while appearing to<lb/>
move forward.<lb/>
"Ordinary people just can't<lb/>
move like that. It's superhuman.<lb/>
Nobody has talent like that said<lb/>
Atsuko Nogi, 22.<lb/>
The 29-year-old American su<lb/>
Iperstar dazzled the crowd of<lb/>
Sturdy Cotton Duck<lb/>
Flip Chairs<lb/>
vofue 49.99<lb/>
mostly Japanese at Korakuen Sta- with Jackson, changing into doz-<lb/>
dium with an array of special ef- ens of different costumes ranging<lb/>
fects during the nearly two-hour from spacemen decked out with<lb/>
extravaganza. But thedancesteps fiber-optic lights to ghouls<lb/>
and all but two of the songs were It took a while for Jackson to<lb/>
largely recycled, vintage Jackson warm the crowd up. Early at-<lb/>
standards. tempts to have the audience sing<lb/>
About 700 lights, 100 speakers, along fell flat But most of the<lb/>
two 24-by-18 foot screens and audience was on its feet and roar-<lb/>
three lasers using 40 mirrors cre-<lb/>
ated a set at times reminiscent of a<lb/>
Steven Spielberg movie. Jackson's<lb/>
spokesmen refused to disclose the<lb/>
cost of the production.<lb/>
Four dancers, four singers and<lb/>
seven musicians shared the ;<lb/>
ing before the finale.<lb/>
It was thefirst showof Jackson'<lb/>
13-conccrt Japan tour and kicked<lb/>
off a world solo tour that will take<lb/>
him to Australia, New Zealand,<lb/>
Europe and the United States<lb/>
,&amp;<lb/>
W<lb/>
High density foam<lb/>
 ??  <lb/>
cotton duck in assorted<lb/>
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" The Damnation C ?ame<lb/>
live barker. Ace Putnam<lb/>
Ri<lb/>
$18.95.<lb/>
?nc wins when gambling<lb/>
with a demon in Clive Barker's<lb/>
thriller, he I damnation Game<lb/>
No one that is. except the reader<lb/>
rhisisa dark fantas) alx ul the Friday 13th Parts 1, 2. &amp; 3<lb/>
y<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
PLAZA SHP CTB 756O0M<lb/>
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RACK ROOM<lb/>
:v<lb/>
.K<lb/>
A' HILLS COI<lb/>
Cm<lb/>
mi<lb/>
In the dark days at the end i!<lb/>
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; tsei a demon and won. He'd never real-<lb/>
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The roles ol good and evil shut<lb/>
 from character to character. The<lb/>
icl characters reveal their complex<lb/>
" indana natures as the story unfolds. The<lb/>
"? ?'? red as a - intricate!) twisting Mot iss a<lb/>
keeper p  ? tta cairn i upon the reader.<lb/>
ihotto barker creates a hellish land<lb/>
scape that he populates with the<lb/>
damned thedyingand thcwalk-<lb/>
R<lb/>
I hat wasn t al<lb/>
IF YOU GET<lb/>
HAY FEVER OR<lb/>
ASTHMA<lb/>
IN THE FALL<lb/>
vviiifei<lb/>
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-Jin?s braitht i, u lit, into r?k " iKofn-rt <lb/>
Calmer New York Times<lb/>
The latest findings to music and video<lb/>
THE PLAZA ? CAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
Thomas Clancv wri<lb/>
said 1<lb/>
he in<lb/>
?<lb/>
.<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)- Tom Clancv<lb/>
was an English major in college<lb/>
but he earned his living as an in<lb/>
suranceagent until his first novel,<lb/>
"The Hunt for Red G tobrr h<lb/>
came a best seller in 198S<lb/>
The book, which was publ;<lb/>
by the Naval Institute f'n-<lb/>
Annapolis, Md , has sold more<lb/>
than 300,000 copies in hard.<lb/>
and 3 million in paperback Itwaj<lb/>
based on newspaper articles in<lb/>
the mid-1970s about a S.<lb/>
stroyer whose crew ur<lb/>
fully attempted to defect k<lb/>
den<lb/>
Oancy's latest novel. "Patriot<lb/>
Games was published<lb/>
weeks after his sevond r,<lb/>
"Red Storm Rising appear<lb/>
paperback<lb/>
"Red Storm Rising ' ba<lb/>
scenario for a war game<lb/>
published in 1986 It wad<lb/>
hardcover bestseller lists foi<lb/>
nearly a year and hj <lb/>
than 1 million copies<lb/>
sales are expected to b<lb/>
millions.<lb/>
"Empire Lanes" selli<lb/>
ST. CLOUD, Vh.in <lb/>
ing once been an aspir ?<lb/>
himself, Peter Gross has n<lb/>
grudge against the world ol<lb/>
art. He just seems to en .<lb/>
ing his nose at it once in a u<lb/>
Gross, a 29-year-old St (<lb/>
native, former St. John's Univer-<lb/>
sity student and now a residi - I<lb/>
Duluth, is the creator of the<lb/>
comic book series, "En<lb/>
Lanes and is owner of its i<lb/>
formed, five-person publishing<lb/>
company. Northern Lights Pub-<lb/>
lishing Inc. based in Duluth.<lb/>
Gross' family moved from St<lb/>
Cloud to Bloomington when he<lb/>
was 5 years old. He later lived in<lb/>
Chicago, where he dropped<lb/>
high school to attend an al<lb/>
tive school. He then enrolled at St<lb/>
John's in 1975 as a fine arts n<lb/>
before moving on to graduate<lb/>
school at the University of Wis-<lb/>
consin-Superior.<lb/>
Gross said he had first learned<lb/>
to draw from reading Batman,<lb/>
Superman and Spiderman comics<lb/>
as a child, but had wanted to be a<lb/>
serious artist for as long as he<lb/>
could remember. <lb/>
"It was just apflSSIHIe job op-<lb/>
tion, lie said of the comics<lb/>
"I always considered myself an<lb/>
artist first, and I thought somedav<lb/>
I'd do a comic book just beca<lb/>
always wanted to do one"<lb/>
These priorities quid<lb/>
changed, however, when c r<lb/>
left Wisconsin-Superior and<lb/>
ized making a living as an .<lb/>
wasn't that easy.<lb/>
Swallowing his artistic ambi-<lb/>
tions, he returned to his first love<lb/>
-comics.<lb/>
Gross got one pb through Mar-<lb/>
vel Comics after sending them<lb/>
some samples of his work. But he<lb/>
got discouraged by the length ot<lb/>
time it took to hear back from<lb/>
them and to get paid.<lb/>
"I thought I'd be better off just<lb/>
trying my own stones he sa;d<lb/>
"And I improved immenselv the<lb/>
day I decided tc do w hat I w anted<lb/>
to do instead of what I thought the<lb/>
company wanted to do<lb/>
What he wanted to do was cre-<lb/>
ate and publish a series that<lb/>
wasn't "super-hero stuff had a<lb/>
little more of "an '80s look to it<lb/>
and had a little more meaning<lb/>
qui<lb/>
Tht<lb/>
- you re i<lb/>
book artist!<lb/>
"P<lb/>
arc.<lb/>
thinl<lb/>
but<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
in <lb/>
Th<lb/>
Draft<lb/>
Ladies Frei<lb/>
65c t<lb/>
Frl<lb/>
4:00 7:00<lb/>
85 Tal<lb/>
Sir<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
s HWMMW<lb/>
IvI?i<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057913_0010"/><lb/>
8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 17, 1987<lb/>
New books reviewed<lb/>
"The Man Who Robbed the<lb/>
Pierre Bv Ira Bcrkow. An-<lb/>
theneum. 310 Pages. $17.95.<lb/>
If you find yourself staring at<lb/>
the same, familiar titles in the<lb/>
mvstery section of your book-<lb/>
store, take a turn over to the non-<lb/>
tktion section for Ira Berkow's<lb/>
The Man who Robbed the Pi-<lb/>
erre<lb/>
Ilie reader who enjoys the ami-<lb/>
able rogue will find the characters<lb/>
in this real life caper as colorful as<lb/>
they would want. A cut above the<lb/>
normal thugs of the police blotter,<lb/>
Bobby Comfort is the kind oi<lb/>
hood who tips the hotel employ-<lb/>
ees left hound and gagged ma<lb/>
depleted vault.<lb/>
fans of the police procedural<lb/>
school will find a fine story of how<lb/>
a case is really broken. A piece of<lb/>
luck here and a stupid mistake<lb/>
there and the biggest hotel rob-<lb/>
bery in history is solved.<lb/>
There's no surprise ending. The<lb/>
case is history and the reader<lb/>
knows how it is going to rum out.<lb/>
But the characters, the detailed<lb/>
plotting of the heists and<lb/>
Berkow's skills as a storvteller<lb/>
keep the reader's interest as we<lb/>
tollow Comfort as he grows from<lb/>
young hood to master criminal.<lb/>
L nlike the criminals of fiction,<lb/>
- omfort is a family man who lies<lb/>
 his wife when he leaves home<lb/>
body vanished. And though it ing dead. The sum total of these<lb/>
wasn known at the time, a fe- factors is one great piece of s torv<lb/>
male friend of the bookkeeper telling.<lb/>
had disappeared earlier and<lb/>
probably also had been slain.<lb/>
The publisher promotes 'The<lb/>
CBS Murders" by Richard Ham-<lb/>
mer as a story of "greed and vio-<lb/>
lence in New York's Diamond<lb/>
District That it was ? and then<lb/>
some.<lb/>
But it was the killing of the three<lb/>
CBS men, all innocent of anything<lb/>
except trying to aid a woman in<lb/>
distress, that horrified New York-<lb/>
ers beyond measure.<lb/>
It led the mayor and top city<lb/>
officials to order no resource<lb/>
spared in snaring the perpetrator<lb/>
- tast. Yet it was to prove not so<lb/>
easily done. It came very near<lb/>
being the perfect crime.<lb/>
In time, however, an appalling<lb/>
tale oi multimillion-dollar<lb/>
swindles in the jewelry industry<lb/>
was to unfold. Some of the revela-<lb/>
tions were so astounding as to be<lb/>
near unbelievable.<lb/>
Hammer has done a superb job<lb/>
of pulling all the incredible facets<lb/>
of the bizarre case together in such<lb/>
a way as to deep the reader trulv<lb/>
spellbound.<lb/>
Frank Stillev<lb/>
For The AP<lb/>
and calls home on ew<lb/>
ve. the night before he<lb/>
steals millions in cash and jewels<lb/>
from one of New York City'smost<lb/>
exclusive hotels.<lb/>
That was Comfort's job<lb/>
Berkow's is to apply his consider-<lb/>
By<lb/>
379<lb/>
skills<lb/>
S .is a ru<lb/>
us fascinating store.<lb/>
spa penman<lb/>
A<lb/>
Sam Bo) le<lb/>
isociated Press<lb/>
The CBS Murders<lb/>
Rich-<lb/>
ages.<lb/>
ard Hammer. Morrow. 220<lb/>
Slo.95.<lb/>
In the spring of 1982 New York<lb/>
City was gripped bv one ot the<lb/>
strangest, ugliest and most sensa-<lb/>
tional murder cases in the city's<lb/>
modern history.<lb/>
The victims were three men,<lb/>
respectable cil . and all em-<lb/>
ployees ot the Columbia Broad-<lb/>
casting System, and an attractive<lb/>
woman newly hired as a book-<lb/>
keeper bv a Manhattan camera<lb/>
service shop. They were all shot to<lb/>
death at a West Side parking lot.<lb/>
That wasn't all. The woman s<lb/>
The Damnation Game.<lb/>
Give Barker. Ace-Putnam<lb/>
Pages. SIS.95.<lb/>
No one wins when gambling<lb/>
with a demon in Clive Barker's<lb/>
thriller, "The Damnation Game<lb/>
No one, that is, except the reader.<lb/>
This is a dark fantasy about the<lb/>
hungers and frailties that drive<lb/>
the human animal. The storv fol-<lb/>
lows the life of a convicted thief<lb/>
who is hired to protect a captain of<lb/>
industry from his past. The ty-<lb/>
coon had once been a thief him-<lb/>
self.<lb/>
In the dark days at the end of<lb/>
World War II, the tycoon had<lb/>
gambled for mortal stakes with a<lb/>
demon and won. 1 le'd never real-<lb/>
ized that win or lose, he would<lb/>
still be called to pay in the end.<lb/>
The roles of good and evil shift<lb/>
from character to character. The<lb/>
characters reveal their complex<lb/>
natures as the store- unfolds. The<lb/>
intricately twisting plot casts a<lb/>
spell upon the reader.<lb/>
Barker creates a hellish land-<lb/>
scape that he populates with the<lb/>
damned, the dying and the walk-<lb/>
IF YOU GET<lb/>
HAY FEVER OR<lb/>
ASTHMA<lb/>
IN THE FALL<lb/>
xxMid<lb/>
-Free<lb/>
Exan<lb/>
?Tree<lb/>
Allergy<lb/>
unation<lb/>
medicines<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
?Open to men<lb/>
and women<lb/>
ages 18 or older<lb/>
?Free Skin<lb/>
Tesiirm<lb/>
Join Our Research Study<lb/>
Department of Family Medicine<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
551-4614<lb/>
" (l Vu di llcuxv PvomWoaJt '<lb/>
JEAN HOPPER<lb/>
BROKEROWNER<lb/>
Res. 919756-9142<lb/>
Whether it's Ririggdfd Towers Condon or<lb/>
single family homes, ye can find a place for<lb/>
Barker has proved to be some-<lb/>
thing more than a writer. He is a<lb/>
student of human nature. His<lb/>
characters are studies of the intri-<lb/>
cate workingsof the human mind.<lb/>
His plot and subplots twist and<lb/>
dance between mankind's most<lb/>
private thoughts and its most<lb/>
dreaded nightmares.<lb/>
'The Damnation Game" is rep-<lb/>
resentative of science fiction at its<lb/>
best. It evokes both fear and<lb/>
thought. This work accomplishes<lb/>
what good sci-fi should. Gamble<lb/>
on this sure thing.<lb/>
William J.Castello<lb/>
ciated I're<lb/>
Assoc<lb/>
ress<lb/>
Michael Jackson is a concert smash in Japan<lb/>
TOKYO (AP) - Michael Jackson mostly Japanese at Korakuen Sta- with Jackson, changing into doz-<lb/>
moon-walked gyrated and dium with an array of special ef- ens of different costumes ranging<lb/>
postured through 16 songs before fects during the nearly two-hour from spacemen decked out with<lb/>
a sell-outcrowd of 38,000 frenzied extravaganza. But thedancesteps fiber-optic lights to ghouls,<lb/>
fans at a baseball stadium Satur- and all but two of the songs were<lb/>
day night, making his first concert largely recycled, vintage Jackson<lb/>
appearance in more than four standards.<lb/>
years<lb/>
The singer drew shrieds of<lb/>
"Mai-ke-ru the Japanese pro-<lb/>
nunciation of Michael, as he<lb/>
sailed through his array of styl-<lb/>
ized poses, karete kicks and his<lb/>
trademark moon-walking ? slid-<lb/>
ing backward while appearing to<lb/>
move forward.<lb/>
Ordinary people just can't<lb/>
move like that. It's superhuman.<lb/>
Nobody has talent like that said<lb/>
Atsuko Nogi, 22.<lb/>
The 29-year-old American su-<lb/>
pcrstar dazzled the crowd of<lb/>
About 700 lights, 100 speakers,<lb/>
two 24-by-18 foot screens and<lb/>
three lasers using 40 mirrors cre-<lb/>
ated a set at times reminiscent of a<lb/>
Steven Spielberg movie. Jackson's<lb/>
spokesmen refused to disclose the<lb/>
cost of the production.<lb/>
Four dancers, four singers and<lb/>
seven musicians shared th<lb/>
It took a while for Jackson to<lb/>
warm the crowd up. Early at<lb/>
tempts to have the audience sing<lb/>
along fell flat. But most of the<lb/>
audience was on its feet and roar-<lb/>
ing before the finale.<lb/>
It was the first show of Jackson's<lb/>
13-cor ' -an tour and kicked<lb/>
off tour that will take<lb/>
him i . .vistralia, New Zealand,<lb/>
Europe and the United States.<lb/>
LATE SHOWS<lb/>
Friday 13th Parts 1. 2. &amp; 3<lb/>
See All 3 For $2.50<lb/>
STARTING FRIDAY<lb/>
HKLLRAISER -R-<lb/>
SUMMER HEAT-R-<lb/>
EVERLY HILLS COP D -R-<lb/>
STARTS FRIDAY<lb/>
ROBOCOP -R-<lb/>
$1.50 ALL TIMES<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
RACK ROOM<lb/>
TDE<lb/>
tw<lb/>
TAKE AN<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market E-X-T-R-A<lb/>
Memorial Drive 10 OFF<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
OPEN MON-SAT 10-9 (EXCEPT AIGNER. NIKE AND<lb/>
.SUNDAY 1- 6 REEBOK)<lb/>
1<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Liven upyour Listening with the Latest in Rock. Backed by our exclusive No Risk Guarantee.<lb/>
SLAT FARMERS<lb/>
The I'until t of Happiness etattftl<lb/>
San Diego band's third effort combines<lb/>
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plenty o! hot xintar. Includes "Dark Light"<lb/>
<lb/>
??"?'<lb/>
KMOA1WL<lb/>
A softer, more introspective <lb/>
approach marks this new collection<lb/>
from always-adventurous British favorites.<lb/>
$6.49<lb/>
LPorCS .<lb/>
Meet Danny Wilson<lb/>
UJC. trio mixes sweet M-ntimen! &amp; slick<lb/>
sophist icat ion in a perfect 50-50 Wend of Beach<lb/>
Boys &amp; Steely Dan Features the hit "Mary's<lb/>
Prayer<lb/>
tf"<lb/>
On Sale Through September 30th<lb/>
!? The Sound of Music -M-<lb/>
First album in three vears from group whose fl<lb/>
songs "brrathi mu hh into rock " (Rh-n CIX<lb/>
Palmer. New York Times)<lb/>
(Robert<lb/>
The'latestfindingsih' Music and video<lb/>
THE PLAZA ? CAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
Thomas Clancy wri<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Tom Clancy<lb/>
was an English major in college,<lb/>
but he earned his living as an in-<lb/>
surance agent until his first novel,<lb/>
The Hunt for Red October be<lb/>
came a best seller in 1985.<lb/>
The book, which was published<lb/>
by the Naval Institute Press of<lb/>
Annapolis, Md has sold more<lb/>
than 300,000 copies in hardcover<lb/>
and 3 million in paperback. It was<lb/>
based on newspaper articles in<lb/>
the mid-1970s about a Soviet de-<lb/>
stroyer whose crew unsuccess<lb/>
fully attempted to defect to Swe-<lb/>
den.<lb/>
Clancy's latest novel, "Patriot<lb/>
Games was published two<lb/>
weeks after his second novel,<lb/>
"Red Storm Rising appeared in<lb/>
paperback.<lb/>
"Red Storm Rising based on a<lb/>
scenario for a war game, was<lb/>
published in 1986. It wad on the<lb/>
hardcover best-seller lists for<lb/>
nearly a year and has sold more<lb/>
than 1 million copies. Paperback<lb/>
sales are expected to be in the<lb/>
millions.<lb/>
"It is rat!<lb/>
books are!<lb/>
said in a tell<lb/>
he insists,<lb/>
novel adj<lb/>
? and "a<lb/>
his work gl<lb/>
Clancy<lb/>
agent sho<lb/>
from Loyal<lb/>
Baltimore<lb/>
writing tici<lb/>
decided <lb/>
could be pj<lb/>
He no lo<lb/>
insurance<lb/>
land thai<lb/>
chased in<lb/>
Wanda s<lb/>
Thes<lb/>
much ot hj<lb/>
ing at hi'<lb/>
nth<lb/>
hoursa d.i<lb/>
fourth no<lb/>
to be fmi-<lb/>
year<lb/>
The<lb/>
rm suburb!<lb/>
"Empire Lanes" selli<lb/>
ST. CLOUD, Minn. (AP) - Hav-<lb/>
ing once been an aspinng artist<lb/>
himself, Peter Gross has no real<lb/>
grudge against the world of fine<lb/>
art. He just seems to enjoy thumb-<lb/>
ing his nose at it once in a while<lb/>
Gross, a 29-year-old St. Cloud<lb/>
native, former St. John's Univer-<lb/>
sity student and now a resident of<lb/>
Duluth, is the creator of the new<lb/>
comic book series, "Empire<lb/>
Lanes and is owner of its newly<lb/>
formed, five-person publishing<lb/>
company. Northern Lights Pub-<lb/>
lishing Inc. based in Duluth.<lb/>
Gross' family moved from St.<lb/>
Cloud to Bloomington when he<lb/>
was 5 years old. He later lived in<lb/>
Chicago, where he dropped out of<lb/>
high school to attend an alterna-<lb/>
tive school. He then enrolled at St.<lb/>
John's in 1975 as a fine arts major<lb/>
before moving on to graduate<lb/>
school at the University of Wis-<lb/>
consin-Superior.<lb/>
Gross said he had first learned<lb/>
to draw from reading Batman,<lb/>
Superman and Spiderman comics<lb/>
as a child, but had wanted to be a<lb/>
serious artist for as long as he<lb/>
could remember. ,?.? ? <lb/>
"It was just fy&amp;SSBtpb op-<lb/>
tion he said of Sfe comics<lb/>
"I always considered myself an<lb/>
artist first, and I thought somedav<lb/>
I'd do a comic book just because I<lb/>
always wanted to do one<lb/>
These priorities quicklv<lb/>
changed, however, when Gross<lb/>
left Wisconsin-Superior and real-<lb/>
ized making a living as an artist<lb/>
wasn't that easy.<lb/>
Swallowing his artistic ambi-<lb/>
tions, he returned to his first love<lb/>
-comics.<lb/>
Gross got one job through Mar-<lb/>
vel Comics after sending them<lb/>
some samples of his work. But he<lb/>
got discouraged by the length or<lb/>
time it took to hear back from<lb/>
them and to get paic<lb/>
"I thought I'd be better off just<lb/>
trying my own stories he said<lb/>
"And I improved immensely the<lb/>
day I decided to do what I wanted<lb/>
to do instead of what I thought the<lb/>
company wanted to do<lb/>
What he wanted to do was cre-<lb/>
ate and publish a series that<lb/>
wasn't "super-hero stuff had a<lb/>
little more of "an '80s look" to it<lb/>
and had a little more meaning<lb/>
than<lb/>
during a re<lb/>
Drawing<lb/>
gam'<lb/>
? .ndn.6<lb/>
penod anc<lb/>
Chka<lb/>
then<lb/>
alley<lb/>
Chk<lb/>
Gr<lb/>
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thieves i<lb/>
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But<lb/>
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but it's<lb/>
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in mv lifetq<lb/>
Gr,<lb/>
thing to a<lb/>
"Empire<lb/>
itself and<lb/>
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 is the first show ofJackson's<lb/>
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I solo tour that will take<lb/>
 tralia, New Zealand,<lb/>
and the I'mted States.<lb/>
Tuesday. September 29. 1987<lb/>
tO PM<lb/>
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EAST MALL<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 17, 1987<lb/>
Thomas Clancy writes adventure fiction with technical skill<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Tom Clancy<lb/>
was an English major in college,<lb/>
but he earned his living as an in-<lb/>
surance agent until his first novel.<lb/>
The Hunt for Red October be-<lb/>
came a best seller in 1985.<lb/>
The book, which was published<lb/>
by the Naval Institute Press of<lb/>
Annapolis, Md has sold more<lb/>
than 300,000 copies in hardcover<lb/>
and 3 million in paperback. It was<lb/>
based on newspaper articles in<lb/>
the mid-1970s about a Soviet de-<lb/>
stroyer whose crew unsuccess-<lb/>
fully attempted to defect to Swe-<lb/>
den.<lb/>
Clancy's latest novel, "Patriot<lb/>
Games was published two<lb/>
weeks after his second novel,<lb/>
Red Storm Rising appeared in<lb/>
paperback.<lb/>
"Red Storm Rising based on a<lb/>
scenario for a war game, was<lb/>
published in 1986. It wad on the<lb/>
hardcover best-seller lists for<lb/>
nearly a year and has sold more<lb/>
than 1 million copies. Paperback<lb/>
sales are expected to be in the<lb/>
millions.<lb/>
"It is rather amazing that all my<lb/>
books are best sellers Clancy<lb/>
said in a telephone interview. But,<lb/>
he insists, "anyone can write a<lb/>
novel adding that his computer<lb/>
? and "a superb editor" ? help<lb/>
his work go relatively smoothly.<lb/>
Clancy became an insurance<lb/>
agent shortly after graduating<lb/>
from Loyola College in his native<lb/>
Baltimore in 1969. He didn't start<lb/>
writing fiction until 1982, when he<lb/>
decided to write "something I<lb/>
could be proud of<lb/>
He no longer works at the small<lb/>
insurance agency in rural Mary-<lb/>
land that he and his wife pur-<lb/>
chased in 1980, although his wife,<lb/>
Wanda, still works there.<lb/>
These days, Clancy spends<lb/>
much of his time at home, work-<lb/>
ing at his computer. He starts at<lb/>
8:30 in the morning, putting in 4-6<lb/>
hours a day. He is working on his<lb/>
fourth novel, which is scheduled<lb/>
to be finished at the end of this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The walls of Clancy's office at<lb/>
his suburban home are lined with<lb/>
about 3,000 books, many of which<lb/>
reflect the author's life-long fasci-<lb/>
nation with technology. Clancy<lb/>
has been reading military books<lb/>
since childhood.<lb/>
"I mainly like technology, and<lb/>
the military has the nicest toys<lb/>
he says. However, Clancy adds,<lb/>
contrary to what his fans might<lb/>
think, not all of the books in his<lb/>
study are about weapons.<lb/>
Although his novels have been<lb/>
described as being filled with<lb/>
technical details about military<lb/>
hardware and weaponry, Clancy<lb/>
says "the technology is over-<lb/>
stated He says he would rather<lb/>
describe his books as being about<lb/>
"people in crisis<lb/>
For example, Clancy says one of<lb/>
the points he is trying to make in<lb/>
his latest novel is that "victims of<lb/>
terrorism aren't abstractions<lb/>
Jack Ryan, the hero of "Red<lb/>
October returns in "Patriot<lb/>
Games" to battle a renegade ter-<lb/>
rorist group.<lb/>
Clancy says the main questions<lb/>
the novel asks are: "What is ter-<lb/>
rorism? What are the terrorists<lb/>
after? What is their mehtodol-<lb/>
ogy? How should we deal with<lb/>
terrorism as a fact of life?"<lb/>
ECU HILLEL WELCOME YOU!<lb/>
ATTENTION JEWISH STUDENTS<lb/>
PLEASE ATTEND OUR OPENING<lb/>
GET-TOGETHER<lb/>
T MEETGREETEAT N<lb/>
at<lb/>
1420 E. 14th St.<lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17<lb/>
8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Call 830-1138 for infodirectionsrideetc.<lb/>
"Empire Lanes" sells well<lb/>
ST. CLOUD, Minn. (AP) - Hav-<lb/>
ing once been an aspiring artist<lb/>
himself, Peter Gross has no real<lb/>
grudge against the world of tine<lb/>
art. He just seems to enjoy thumb-<lb/>
ing his nose at it once in a while.<lb/>
Gross, a 29-year-old St. Cloud<lb/>
native, former St. John's Univer-<lb/>
sity student and now a resident of<lb/>
Duluth, is the creator of the new<lb/>
comic book series, "Empire<lb/>
Lanes and is owner of its newlv<lb/>
formed, five-person publishing<lb/>
company. Northern Lights Pub-<lb/>
lishing Inc. based in Duluth.<lb/>
Gross' family moved from St.<lb/>
Cloud to Bloomington when he<lb/>
was 5 years old. He later lived in<lb/>
Chicago, where he dropped out of<lb/>
high school to attend an alterna-<lb/>
tive school. He then enrolled at St.<lb/>
John's in 1975 as a fine arts major<lb/>
before moving on to graduate<lb/>
school at the University of Wis-<lb/>
consin-Superior.<lb/>
Gross said he had first learned<lb/>
to draw from reading Batman,<lb/>
Superman and Spiderman comics<lb/>
as a child, but had wanted to be a<lb/>
serious artist for as long as he<lb/>
could remember. ?- -<lb/>
"u was just ryas&amp;e&amp;iptfop?'<lb/>
tion he said of the comics.<lb/>
"1 always considered myself an<lb/>
artist first, and I thought someday<lb/>
I'd do a comic book just because I<lb/>
always wanted to do one<lb/>
These priorities quickly<lb/>
changed, however, when Gross<lb/>
left Wisconsin-Superior and real-<lb/>
ized making a living as an artist<lb/>
wasn't that easy.<lb/>
Swallowing his artistic ambi-<lb/>
tions, he returned to his first love<lb/>
- comics.<lb/>
Gross got one job through Mar-<lb/>
vel Comics after sending them<lb/>
some samples of his work. But he<lb/>
got discouraged by the length of<lb/>
time it took to hear back from<lb/>
them and to get paid.<lb/>
"I thought I'd be better off just<lb/>
trying my own stories he said.<lb/>
"And I improved immensely the<lb/>
day I decided to do what I wanted<lb/>
to do instead of what I thought the<lb/>
company wanted to do<lb/>
What he wanted to do was cre-<lb/>
ate and publish a series that<lb/>
wasn't "super-hero stuff had a<lb/>
little more of "an '80s look" to it<lb/>
and had a little more meaning<lb/>
than most comics do, he said<lb/>
during a recent visit to St. Cloud.<lb/>
Drawing on his interest in the<lb/>
game, "Dungeons &amp; Dragons<lb/>
his fondness for the medieval<lb/>
period and his familiarity with<lb/>
Chicago, Gross came up with<lb/>
"Empire Lanes<lb/>
"Empire Lanes" is the story of<lb/>
seven fantasy adventurers forced<lb/>
to flee their world by jumping<lb/>
through a magic hole that leads<lb/>
them into the back of a bowling<lb/>
alley on the south side ofl987<lb/>
Chicago.<lb/>
Gross wasn't sure how well the<lb/>
public would react to a storyline<lb/>
featuring characters named<lb/>
"Hammerioot" and "Erick the<lb/>
Clcrick mixing it up with<lb/>
thieves and punks in modern-day<lb/>
Chicago.<lb/>
But the first issue, which came<lb/>
out in December 1986, made a<lb/>
quick profit, selling 24,000 copies.<lb/>
The second sold 12,000 copies in<lb/>
two weeks.<lb/>
"When I started out, I was<lb/>
thinking to myself, 'Well, here<lb/>
goes the dreams of being an artist<lb/>
- you're just going to be a comic<lb/>
book artist .<lb/>
"But I'm starting to come<lb/>
around a little in my own way of<lb/>
thinking he said. "It's cheap art,<lb/>
but it's nice knowing 25,000<lb/>
people are going to read my comic<lb/>
book. If I was painting, 25,000<lb/>
people would never see my work<lb/>
in my lifetime<lb/>
Gross also hopes to say some-<lb/>
thing to a wider audience once<lb/>
"Empire Lanes" has established<lb/>
itself and he has and a chance to<lb/>
slow down the storyline.<lb/>
"Eventually, this comic book is<lb/>
going to be a vehicle for my views<lb/>
on life he said. "So I might be<lb/>
able to challenge political things<lb/>
in subtle, allegorical ways<lb/>
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With the  s<lb/>
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CHICAGO ? ! li<lb/>
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wrMHHMHi<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057913_0013"/><lb/>
TTITIIIIIIIITTTTT<lb/>
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THE EAST C AROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEITEMBER17, 1987 Page 11<lb/>
Pirates look for boost in game<lb/>
against Illinois this weekend<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sport Fditor<lb/>
A repeat of 1983 could begin<lb/>
Saturday if the East Carolina foot-<lb/>
ball team could pull out a victory<lb/>
over Illinois.<lb/>
The Pirates will take to the road<lb/>
for the second time this season for<lb/>
their first ever confrontation<lb/>
against a Big Ten Conference<lb/>
opponent. Illinois will enter the<lb/>
game with a 0-2 mark after losses<lb/>
to North Carolina (34-14) and<lb/>
Arizona State (21-7).<lb/>
Even after last Saturday's 44-3<lb/>
drubbing to Florida State, which<lb/>
dropped the Pirates to 1-1, head<lb/>
coach Art Baker feels that this<lb/>
season could be as prospective as<lb/>
the 8-3 record recorded by the Pi-<lb/>
rates in '83.<lb/>
"What a lot of people don't real-<lb/>
ize is that we would have given<lb/>
Florida State a real good game had<lb/>
we not made the number of mis-<lb/>
takes that we did (the Pirates<lb/>
fumbled the ball 10 times, losing<lb/>
five and threw one interception)<lb/>
said Baker. "If we had not commit-<lb/>
ted those mistakes, I think a lot of<lb/>
people would have been sur-<lb/>
prised by the outcome<lb/>
Baker went on to say that the<lb/>
team as a whole did not seem to<lb/>
lose confidence after the defeat.<lb/>
'They realize that if they had not<lb/>
made the mistakes that were made<lb/>
we would have been in the game<lb/>
said Baker. "We had a real good<lb/>
Tuesday practice and the spirits<lb/>
are very good. I think that goes<lb/>
back to having good senior leader-<lb/>
ship on the team<lb/>
Baker doesn't want to leave the<lb/>
impression that the Pirates must<lb/>
win against Illinois Saturday, he<lb/>
just feels a victory would give the<lb/>
football program, asa whole,a big<lb/>
boost.<lb/>
"I think it (the Illinois game) is a<lb/>
crucial game for us in some re-<lb/>
spects said Baker. "In '83 we<lb/>
went to the mid west and won a big<lb/>
game over Missouri (13-6). That<lb/>
win made a tremendous impact on<lb/>
the entire football season and I feel<lb/>
like a win Saturday would have<lb/>
the same effect.<lb/>
"But continued Baker. "I don't<lb/>
like to think negative, but if we<lb/>
should lose I don't feel like it will<lb/>
distract from our season. But I do<lb/>
know that if we win only positive<lb/>
things could come from it<lb/>
The Pirate coaching staff was<lb/>
put at a disadvantage in the con-<lb/>
test even before gametime ar-<lb/>
rived. It seems that sending game<lb/>
films via the friendly skies people<lb/>
is not always the best way to go.<lb/>
The coaching staff usually spends<lb/>
all day Monday studving game<lb/>
film and preparing the game strat-<lb/>
egy, however the film was lost bv<lb/>
the airlines and did not arrive in<lb/>
Greenville until late Monday eve-<lb/>
ning.<lb/>
When the film did arrive, the<lb/>
coaches quickly saw that they<lb/>
were going to be up against a very<lb/>
big team in Illinois.<lb/>
"I am very impressed with them<lb/>
even though they are 0-2 said<lb/>
Baker. "They have a very big foot-<lb/>
ball team, by far the biggest foot-<lb/>
ball team that we have played<lb/>
against so far, and maybe the big-<lb/>
gest we will face all season<lb/>
Baker went on to say that he is<lb/>
sure that the Illini are just as eager<lb/>
to bounce back with a win as much<lb/>
as ECU is.<lb/>
"They are probably licking their<lb/>
chops thinking that they are going<lb/>
to pick up a win said Baker.<lb/>
They definitely played better in<lb/>
the Arizona State game than in the<lb/>
North Carolina game. We will<lb/>
have to cut out our mistakes and<lb/>
execute our offense well in order<lb/>
to win. But, I believe that we can<lb/>
doit<lb/>
Game notes: ECU and Illinois<lb/>
share two things in common head-<lb/>
ing into Saturday's game. Both<lb/>
teams opponents for the first two<lb/>
weeks went to post-season bowl<lb/>
games in 1986. ECU's first two<lb/>
opponents were N.C. State (Peach<lb/>
Bowl) and Florida State (AII-<lb/>
American Bowl). Illinois first two<lb/>
opponents were North Carolina<lb/>
(Aloha) and Arizona State (Rose).<lb/>
ECU and Illinois plav two of the<lb/>
top 25 toughest schedules in the<lb/>
nation, according to USA TODAY.<lb/>
The publication ranks the Pirates'<lb/>
schedule as the 19th toughest and<lb/>
the Illini's as the 25th.<lb/>
White wary of Pirate squad<lb/>
Joim&amp;iumte-j.lates sign-ups<lb/>
 I e outdoor Recreation Center<lb/>
a :n the Department of Intra-<lb/>
mural Recreation Services will be<lb/>
offering several 'Adventure<lb/>
? tor faculty, staff and stu-<lb/>
dents of the university. A day<lb/>
sailing trip has boon sched-<lb/>
uled tor Oct. 11. Participants will<lb/>
at 9 a.m. and sail away from<lb/>
Washington, N.C. The cost of $50<lb/>
ludes transporation, food and<lb/>
tain's fees. There is a maxi-<lb/>
mum limit of 6 participants so be<lb/>
sure to sign up today. Registra-<lb/>
tion will be be held Sept. 21-Sept.<lb/>
28 in the Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
(.enter located in Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Also scheduled on the Outdoor<lb/>
Recreation calender is a back-<lb/>
packing trip to the Uwharrie Na-<lb/>
tional Forest in Troy, N.C. This<lb/>
weekend adventure will be held<lb/>
Oct. 2-4. The cost of this trip will<lb/>
be 530, which covers food, trans-<lb/>
poration and equipment. Eqip-<lb/>
ment rental is also available<lb/>
through the Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
The Informal Recreation Pro-<lb/>
gram will be sponsoring a 'Well-<lb/>
ness Brown Bag Luncheon from<lb/>
noon until 1 p.m. Wednesday,<lb/>
Sept. 23. Mr. Jim Wright will be<lb/>
discussing how to Take the Mys-<lb/>
tery out of Selecting and Purchas-<lb/>
ing a Bicycle The luncheon will<lb/>
be held in Mendenhall room 221.<lb/>
Other Brown Bag Luncheons<lb/>
concentrating on a variety of<lb/>
other wellness related topics will<lb/>
be held throughout the semester.<lb/>
Due to the E.C.U. vs. Georgia<lb/>
Southern football game, Sept. 26,<lb/>
all recreational facilities will close<lb/>
Saturday. The Informal Recrea-<lb/>
tion Division would also like to<lb/>
announce that there will be no<lb/>
free swim noon hour this Satur-<lb/>
day,Sept. 19. A lifeguard training<lb/>
session will be held.<lb/>
The Department of Intramural-<lb/>
Recreation Services Intramural<lb/>
Sports flag football action is heat-<lb/>
ing up quickly as teams battle it<lb/>
out on the gridiron in search of the<lb/>
all campus title. In the women's<lb/>
division this week, Alpha Phi<lb/>
sneaked past Chi Omega in a last<lb/>
minute score attempt. The teams<lb/>
had to go into overtime with a<lb/>
scoreless deadlock and attempt to<lb/>
break the tie with a one shot pass-<lb/>
ing play. Alpha Phi came out on<lb/>
the winning end and took the<lb/>
victory 1-0.<lb/>
Registration for several intra-<lb/>
mural events will be taking place<lb/>
in the next few weeks. Co-rec<lb/>
cageball sign upsand will be held<lb/>
Sept. 23 at 6 p.m. in Brewstcr D-<lb/>
103. Home Run Derby and Rac-<lb/>
quetball singles registration will<lb/>
take place Sept. 30. The schedule<lb/>
of October events is highlighted<lb/>
by volleyball, soccer and the swim<lb/>
meet. Be sure to pick up your<lb/>
schedule in room 204 Memorial<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sporti Kditor<lb/>
"We'll have our hands full<lb/>
That is Illinois head coach Mike<lb/>
White's assessment of East Caro-<lb/>
lina as the two teams prepare for<lb/>
Saturday's football game, which is<lb/>
scheduled to begin at 3 p.m. CST.<lb/>
"East Carolina is the kind of<lb/>
team that, with the option, will<lb/>
reallv test us White said in an<lb/>
interview Wednesday. "That is<lb/>
something we need though be-<lb/>
cause there are a lot of good option<lb/>
teams in the Big Ten<lb/>
White said that although the<lb/>
Pirates were 2-9 for the past three<lb/>
seasons he is still wary of them.<lb/>
"I feel that East Carolina is a<lb/>
vastly improved team over what<lb/>
they have been the last couple of<lb/>
years said White. They are a<lb/>
team of speed, they are a team<lb/>
with nine starters back on defense,<lb/>
they are a team with some excel-<lb/>
lent athletes. Their quarterback,<lb/>
Tr-v Hunter, is excellent, their<lb/>
funoack Anthony Simpson and<lb/>
their tailback Reggie McKinney<lb/>
are all solid football players<lb/>
Even though the illini have lost<lb/>
their first two contests of the sea-<lb/>
son and finished 4-7 last season,<lb/>
White feels that his team is on the<lb/>
right track.<lb/>
"We're getting better said<lb/>
White. "We were awful against<lb/>
adversity in the first game against<lb/>
North Carolina. I think that was a<lb/>
carry over from the 4-7 record of a<lb/>
year ago. We had very little confi-<lb/>
dence, everyone was looking for<lb/>
somebod) ? ' ? t. ?? ? i. lone.<lb/>
"We rnadi a significant sti ide in<lb/>
that area this past week contin-<lb/>
ued White. "We reacted much<lb/>
better to adversity, we played<lb/>
much better quality football, the<lb/>
defense was pretty good, but there<lb/>
is still some of that mental tough-<lb/>
ness lacking<lb/>
White says that his team's "head<lb/>
is not in the sand" after losing the<lb/>
first two games of the year, i nstead<lb/>
he feels that the team is looking<lb/>
forward to playing East Carolina<lb/>
and taking on the test that the Pi-<lb/>
rates will present.<lb/>
"I just know that they (East<lb/>
Carolina) is a good football team<lb/>
said White. "They will run the<lb/>
option well. I expect a verv tough<lb/>
and challenging game.<lb/>
Now in his eighth year at Illi-<lb/>
is, Wb i u 1 ? J.i r<lb/>
-rJo at the Ik im.<lb/>
Gym.<lb/>
Pirate soccer team seeking victory<lb/>
East Carolina will go after it's<lb/>
first soccer win of the season this<lb/>
weekend at the North Carolina<lb/>
Wesleyan Invitational Tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The Pirates, 0-4 overall, will face<lb/>
Emory University Saturday and<lb/>
Salisbury State Sunday. Match<lb/>
time for both events is 2 p.m.<lb/>
ECU has had the whole week to<lb/>
prepare for the tournament after a<lb/>
tough weekend home stand. The<lb/>
Pirates lost two conference<lb/>
matches, George Mason and<lb/>
James Madison, and saw their<lb/>
conference record slide to 0-3.<lb/>
With the losses came improve-<lb/>
ment, especially in the offense.<lb/>
and head coach Charlie Harvey is both 2-0 the championship will be<lb/>
optimistic that the Pirates can declared by goals for and against<lb/>
come away with a victory. Harvey said. "What we have to do<lb/>
"If ECU and N.C. Weslcayn are is win and win decisively<lb/>
Student ticket pickup<lb/>
ECU students may pick up tick-<lb/>
ets for home football games Tues-<lb/>
day-Thursday 8 a.m5 p.m. the<lb/>
week of the game at Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum. Tickets are also available at<lb/>
the Mendanhall Central Ticket Of-<lb/>
fice Tuesday-Thursday between<lb/>
11 a.m6 p.m. Group tickets may<lb/>
be picked up Monday the week of<lb/>
the game at the Minges ticket of-<lb/>
fice only.<lb/>
All East Carolina University<lb/>
studentscan receiveone free ticket<lb/>
and one half-price ticket. In order<lb/>
to receive any ticket, students<lb/>
must present a valid university<lb/>
identification card and activity<lb/>
card.<lb/>
For further information con-<lb/>
cerning tickets for ECU athletic<lb/>
events contact the athletic ticket<lb/>
office at 757-6500.<lb/>
.JH <lb/>
rf????f0mrT4k ifrHWllll ?' j<lb/>
0idk?<lb/>
5k ?m,i&amp;MAL ? l" J-l  iSPM? mBesT<lb/>
1 7$rfl<lb/>
3 ? "l?A<lb/>
 w  ?<lb/>
m s?sf 4:<lb/>
The Pirate football team has been hard at work this week in practice preparing for Saturday's game against<lb/>
the University of Illinois. Saturday will be the first meeting between the two teams.<lb/>
Bears proved point against Giants in season opening win<lb/>
CHICAGO (AP) - Mike<lb/>
Tomczak, Dennis McKinnon and<lb/>
the Chicago Bears defense had<lb/>
something to prove. They did it<lb/>
with such vicious determination<lb/>
that they left the Super Bowl<lb/>
champion New York Giants<lb/>
dumbfounded.<lb/>
Tomczak threw touchdown<lb/>
passes of 42 and 56 yards, McKin-<lb/>
non came off of a one-year layoff<lb/>
with a team-record 94-yard punt<lb/>
return for a touchdown and the<lb/>
defense registered eight sacks for<lb/>
losses of 53 yards in a 34-19 rout of<lb/>
the Giants Monday night.<lb/>
The much-heralded battle of<lb/>
the two prevoius Super Bowl<lb/>
champions turned into a unex-<lb/>
pected rout.<lb/>
'Take away the blocked punt<lb/>
and the interception and what did<lb/>
they have?" said McKinnon, who<lb/>
sat out 1986 because of a knee<lb/>
surgery.<lb/>
In explaining his punt return,<lb/>
which eclipsed the previous team<lb/>
record of 89 yards by Ray<lb/>
"Scooter" McLean back in 1942,<lb/>
McKinnon said "I crawled for 20<lb/>
yards, made a move and hit the<lb/>
end zone. That play sealed the<lb/>
coffin<lb/>
It came shortly after Terry Ki-<lb/>
nard intercepted a Tomczak pass<lb/>
and returned it 70 yards for a<lb/>
touchdown that cut the Bears'<lb/>
lead to 24-13 and gave the Giants<lb/>
a brief ray of hope.<lb/>
"They beat us real good said<lb/>
Giants' Coach Bill Parcells. "We<lb/>
haven't been beat like that in a<lb/>
long time.  Their quarterback<lb/>
was excellent cosidering it was his<lb/>
first start in a game of this magni-<lb/>
tude<lb/>
The vaunted Giant defense did<lb/>
little to harass Tomczak, while the<lb/>
Bears were all over Giants quar-<lb/>
terback Phil Simms, who had his<lb/>
bell rung several times and twice<lb/>
had to leave the game to clear the<lb/>
cobwebs.<lb/>
Tomczak nevertheless was not<lb/>
sacked once and threw touch-<lb/>
down passes of 42 yards to Ron<lb/>
Morris and 56 yards to Willie<lb/>
Gault in the third quarter.<lb/>
Tomczak also sneaked a yard<lb/>
for a touchdown just before<lb/>
halftime and finished with 20<lb/>
completions in 34 attempts for 292<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
"The greatest thing about this<lb/>
game is we got the football season<lb/>
started said Bears Coach Mike<lb/>
Ditka, who apparently had his fill<lb/>
of the hype that centered around<lb/>
thecontest ever since the NFL first<lb/>
announced the 1987 schedule.<lb/>
The Giants took the opening<lb/>
kickoff and Simms quickly put the<lb/>
offense into gear as the Giants<lb/>
marched to the Chicago 10-vard<lb/>
line. Then came a sack by fodd<lb/>
Bell and Simms fumbled with<lb/>
Please see BEAR pagc n<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057913_0014"/><lb/>
12 THE CAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 17,<lb/>
1987<lb/>
Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
ECU at Illinois<lb/>
North Carolina at (la. I 'ech<lb/>
Florida at Alabama<lb/>
(Icorgia at Clemson<lb/>
West Va. at Maryland<lb/>
Mich State at Notre Dame<lb/>
Boston Coll. at Southern Cal<lb/>
Washington at Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
Va. lech at Virginia<lb/>
N.C. State at Wake Forest<lb/>
BRIAN BAILEY<lb/>
WNCT-TV Sports Director<lb/>
Laal Wrck.<lb/>
(7-3)<lb/>
Overall.<lb/>
(16-4)<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
DEAN BUCHAN<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
(6-4)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(15-5)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Last Weclc<lb/>
(8-2)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(15-5)<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Southern Cal<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
PAT MOLLOYDr. RICHARD EAKD<lb/>
Assistant Sports EditorECU Chancellor<lb/>
Laal Week.Laal Week<lb/>
(7-3)(6-4)<lb/>
OverallOverall<lb/>
(14-6)(12-8)<lb/>
Illinois North Carolina AlabamaECU Georgia Tech Alabama<lb/>
Clemson West Virginia Michigan State Southern Cal Washington Virginia TechClemson West Virginia Notre Dame Boston College Texas A&amp;M Virginia Tech<lb/>
Wake ForestN.C. State<lb/>
Oklahoma, Huskers<lb/>
remain 1,2 in poll<lb/>
Oklahoma and Nebraska, the<lb/>
cream ol the Big Eight Confer-<lb/>
ence, remained atop The Associ<lb/>
ated Press college football poll<lb/>
: da) alter posting their second<lb/>
straigl ti mincing victories.<lb/>
Okla ma received 5-4 first-<lb/>
tes and 1,193 points in the<lb/>
nations ideballotingbya panel of<lb/>
rts writers and broadcasters.<lb/>
other six first-place ballots<lb/>
went to Nebraska, which had<lb/>
1,127 points.<lb/>
Three Top Twenty teams<lb/>
tumbled after losing to other<lb/>
ranked squads. LCI.A. third a<lb/>
w eek ago bef( -re being overrun by<lb/>
Nebraska 42-33, dropped to 13th;<lb/>
in tell from ninth to 19th<lb/>
atter tailing to Notre Dame 26-7,<lb/>
and defending national cham-<lb/>
pion Penn State dropped from<lb/>
1 lth to 20th after losing to Ala-<lb/>
bama 24-13.<lb/>
With the victories, Notre Dame<lb/>
jumped from 16th a week ago to<lb/>
ninth, while Alabama. 19th last<lb/>
week, moved up to NO. 11.<lb/>
Moving up one spot to third<lb/>
was Auburn with 1,027 points.<lb/>
i ouisiana State, No. 6a week ago,<lb/>
Top 20<lb/>
1 Oklahoma (54)2-0-0<lb/>
2. Nebraska (6)2-0-0<lb/>
3. Auburn2-0-0<lb/>
4 LSI.2-0-0<lb/>
5. Ohio State1-0-0<lb/>
6. Miami, Ha.1-0-0<lb/>
7. Piorida State2-0-0<lb/>
S. Clemson2-0-0<lb/>
u Notre Dame1-0-0<lb/>
10. Washington2-0-0<lb/>
11. Alabama2-0-0<lb/>
12. Arkansas1-0-0<lb/>
13. UCLA1-1-0<lb/>
14. Tennessee3-0-0<lb/>
15. Arizona State1 -0-0<lb/>
16. Pittsburgh2-0-0<lb/>
17. Michigan St.1-0-0<lb/>
18. Georgia2-0-0<lb/>
19. Michigan0-1-0<lb/>
20. Penn State1-1-0<lb/>
Other receiving votes: Iowa 33,<lb/>
Boston College 25, Texas A&amp;M ,9'<lb/>
South Carolina 23, Syracuse 14<lb/>
Oklahoma St. 5, Indiana 3, Eastern<lb/>
Michigan 1, Florida 1, Oregon 1.<lb/>
Bears<lb/>
rip Giants<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Wilber Marshall recovering.<lb/>
The Bears were forced to punt,<lb/>
but it was blocked by Erik How-<lb/>
ard and Tom Hynn recovered in<lb/>
the end zone for a 7-0 New York<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
Kevin Butler kicked a 24-yard<lb/>
field goal for the Bears before the<lb/>
quarter ended and then the Bears<lb/>
took charge after that with the de-<lb/>
fense repeatedly sacking Simms.<lb/>
An 80-yard drive which ended<lb/>
with Tomczak's 1-yard sneak<lb/>
with :08 left in the half gave the<lb/>
Bears a 10-7 lead.<lb/>
On Chicago's second posses-<lb/>
sion in the second half, Tomczak<lb/>
hit Morris with a 42-yard touch-<lb/>
down pass. The next itme the<lb/>
Bears got the ball, he threw a 56-<lb/>
yard touchdown pass to Gault on<lb/>
the first play.<lb/>
jumped over Ohio State and<lb/>
moved into fourth place with 926<lb/>
points, Ohio State remained at<lb/>
No. 5 with 90S points.<lb/>
Rounding out the Top Ten are<lb/>
Miami of Florida, advancing one<lb/>
spot from seventh to sixth; No. 7<lb/>
Honda State, up from eighth<lb/>
place; No. 8 Clemson, up from<lb/>
10th; Notre Dame and NO. 10<lb/>
Washington, which moved up<lb/>
two spots from No. 12 a week ago.<lb/>
The Second Ten, in order, are<lb/>
Alabama, Arkansas, UCLA, Ten-<lb/>
nessee, Arizona Atate, Pitts-<lb/>
burgh, Michigan State, Georgia,<lb/>
Michigan and Fenn State.<lb/>
List week, Penn State led the<lb/>
Second Ten, followed by Penn<lb/>
State, Washington, Arkansas,<lb/>
Tennessee, Arizona State, Notre<lb/>
Dame, Michigan State, Pitts-<lb/>
burgh, Alabama and Georgia.<lb/>
Alabama's victory snapped<lb/>
Penn State's 13-gameoverall win-<lb/>
ning streak, the longest among<lb/>
major colleges. Boston College's<lb/>
11-gamc win streak is now the<lb/>
nation's longest.<lb/>
"1 hope people don't get too<lb/>
excited because we still got a long<lb/>
way to go said Bill Currv, who is<lb/>
in his first year as coach at Ala-<lb/>
bama.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
PATRIOTS VS. JETS - SEPT. 21st, 9:00 PM<lb/>
Soon to be the reasonably famous 'f?VN<lb/>
CASUAL DINING-FORMAI DRINKING<lb/>
( EARTY <lb/>
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FREEPHZAE<lb/>
The Student Union Special Concerts Committee<lb/>
Presents:<lb/>
GWAR<lb/>
IN CONCERT<lb/>
Sunday, Sept. 20th - 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Central Campus Mall<lb/>
Rain Location: Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
BUY ONE PIZZA. GET ONE FREE!<lb/>
PIZZA MENl<lb/>
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Extra Cheese 15Ct 200 2 50<lb/>
1 ??)-( m m ruts n ppin,s<lb/>
?; ?" v  ?- 1 ?? m Ma B  ot.Hjnciw du<lb/>
?   tVrw. V ?? Hi FVtw R's BiOhn<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
Cm a Cola. Diet Coke' Small Medium Liter<lb/>
Sprite" Melk. Yellow. ? 66 95<lb/>
Cherry Coke<lb/>
323 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
(across from Farm Fresh)<lb/>
CAESARS SANDWICHES"<lb/>
Tuna Melt<lb/>
Italian Sun <lb/>
Ham and Cheese <lb/>
Vegetarian<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
Tossed<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
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HOURS: SUN-THU 11 AM-12 MIDNIGHT<lb/>
FRI-SAT 11 AM-1 AM<lb/>
The Wash House<lb/>
10th And 14th St.<lb/>
Laimdramat - Dry Cleaning<lb/>
752-6117 758-6001<lb/>
Attendants - Snacks - Cable TV<lb/>
Present Coupon<lb/>
Expiration Date Sept. 30, 1987<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
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or Shirt Laundry<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057913_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>