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<pb facs="00057917_0001"/>
INSIDE<lb/>
Editorials?  4<lb/>
Entertainment ?<lb/>
SP?rts?.12<lb/>
Classifieds  <lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Andre Kole brought illusions to ECU Tuesday<lb/>
night? see ENTERTAINMENT, page 8.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
ECU football player profile: Mike Applewhite<lb/>
see SPORTS, page 12.<lb/>
Qfttz i?uzt (Hutalxniun<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 62 No. 11<lb/>
Thursday, October 1,1987<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
ECU judiciary subject of debate<lb/>
Bv TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Sljtl WntrT<lb/>
The ECU Honor Board, the<lb/>
court which Irit-s students<lb/>
charged with Honor Code viola-<lb/>
tions, is the subject oi heated do<lb/>
hate in the SGA.<lb/>
! he argument concerns<lb/>
. bother or not the board should<lb/>
have to wait for a court ot taw to<lb/>
resolve its charges against a stu<lb/>
dent before making its own rul-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
I nder the present system, for<lb/>
example, if a student is charged<lb/>
with a larceny on campus, the<lb/>
1 lonor Board has to wait for the<lb/>
resolution of anv concurrent<lb/>
i riminal charges in a court of law.<lb/>
A new bill debated in the SGA<lb/>
'legislature Monday, if passed,<lb/>
would give the Honor Board and<lb/>
the Review Board the power to<lb/>
decide on all violationsof theFCL'<lb/>
(ode ot Conduct, regardless of<lb/>
ponding public cases.<lb/>
Rut 40 percent of all offenses are<lb/>
actually decided bv the judiciary<lb/>
coordinator, according to Ronald<lb/>
P s;xier associate dean oi stu-<lb/>
dent hie. tSpoier is the judiciary<lb/>
 oordinator).<lb/>
Usually the student admits his<lb/>
guilt and Speier decides on a fine<lb/>
Md or assigns community serv-<lb/>
ice using previous cases as prece-<lb/>
dents, he said.<lb/>
Fines are placed in a judicary<lb/>
service fund, which last year to-<lb/>
taled $8000. 'The money in the<lb/>
fund is reverted back to usages<lb/>
which benefit the student, such as<lb/>
Alcohol Awareness Week<lb/>
Speier said.<lb/>
If the student pleads innocent,<lb/>
he appears in a pnmarv hearing<lb/>
with the student public defender<lb/>
and the student attorney general.<lb/>
There his case is assessed to see if<lb/>
it should go before the Honor<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
Selected bv an executive<lb/>
committee, the 7-student Honor<lb/>
Board hears cases oi violations of<lb/>
the Code of Conduct. The board<lb/>
decides on the guilt or innocence<lb/>
of the student.<lb/>
If the board decides the student<lb/>
is guilty, it passes judgment. It can<lb/>
impose punishments such as aca-<lb/>
demic probation, fines and even<lb/>
expulsion from school.<lb/>
The student may appeal the<lb/>
ruling to the Review Board, also a<lb/>
7-mcmber board which can re-<lb/>
verse decisions passed bv all<lb/>
boards except the Academic In-<lb/>
tegrity Board.<lb/>
(The integrity board hears cases<lb/>
in which a facultv member accus-<lb/>
ing a student of academic viola-<lb/>
tions elects to omit an interview<lb/>
by the Honor Board).<lb/>
The Review Board also inter-<lb/>
prets the SGA constitution and<lb/>
determines how the Honor Board<lb/>
applies the constitution to its rul-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
In addition to these two boards,<lb/>
there are other boards which rule<lb/>
on student misconduct in nthir<lb/>
areas of jurisdiction: the Resi-<lb/>
dence Hall House Council Board,<lb/>
the Intramural Recreational Serv-<lb/>
ices Advisory Council, the Stu-<lb/>
dent Residence Association Ap-<lb/>
peal Board.<lb/>
Speaking about the debated<lb/>
bill, Dr. Elmer Meyer, vice chan-<lb/>
cellor of student life, said the leg-<lb/>
islators need to question the pos-<lb/>
sibility of a double penalty for<lb/>
sentenced students. "Is a double<lb/>
penalty (punishment by both<lb/>
public and student courts) in<lb/>
minor cases really needed<lb/>
Meyer said.<lb/>
The double penalty principle<lb/>
calls for the Uni versity not to exer-<lb/>
cise its judicial power until the<lb/>
non-university case is over "un-<lb/>
less exceptional circumstances<lb/>
compel otherwise according to<lb/>
SGA law.<lb/>
Speier said the proposed bill<lb/>
would iron out this "exceptional<lb/>
circumstances" wording to allow<lb/>
See JUDICIAL, page 3<lb/>
Traditional telefund raises money<lb/>
Bv KAREN MANN<lb/>
Suit Vnter<lb/>
An annual fundraiser that has<lb/>
earned more than $100,000 for<lb/>
EC I in past vears will begin<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
The 10th Annual ECU Tele-<lb/>
fund, to be held at the Regional<lb/>
Development Institute in the Wil-<lb/>
lis Building, is part of the East<lb/>
(. arolina Univcrsitv's Annual<lb/>
Giving Program. The Telefund,<lb/>
which is sponsored by the Office<lb/>
tor institutional Advancement,<lb/>
will last tor five weeks and em-<lb/>
ploy over 300 student volunteers<lb/>
in its fund raising effort.<lb/>
"The Telefund is a tradition at<lb/>
ECU said Annual Giving Direc-<lb/>
tor Cindy Kittrell. "It builds<lb/>
goodwill for the school, and the<lb/>
alumni get a chance to find out<lb/>
what's going on here. It's a lot of<lb/>
tun for the volunteers, too<lb/>
The Annual Giving Program is<lb/>
designed to solicit funds each<lb/>
year from alumni and non-<lb/>
alumni. The money is used to<lb/>
enhance various programs on<lb/>
campus such as scholarships, fac-<lb/>
Pirate Walk is back in action<lb/>
By M. BL RBELLA<lb/>
Stall Vntrr<lb/>
The yellow jackets and sweat-<lb/>
shirts of Pirate Walk escorts will<lb/>
soon reappear on the ECU cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
Pirate Walk, an SGA service<lb/>
that provides escorts to students<lb/>
who have to walkoncampusafter<lb/>
dark, will begin operating Sun-<lb/>
day. Any student needing an es-<lb/>
cort across campus 8-12 p.m<lb/>
Sunday through Thursdav, can<lb/>
call the service.<lb/>
Pirate Walk, a service recom-<lb/>
mended by ECU Public Safety, is<lb/>
beginning its operation late in the<lb/>
semester due to lack of a director<lb/>
and volunteers. But now, under<lb/>
the leadership of Larry Murphv,<lb/>
several escorts and operators are<lb/>
ready to begin work on Sunday<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
"The delay was basically just<lb/>
the organizing of it Murphv<lb/>
said. "1 guess there wasn't any-<lb/>
body capable of the directors'<lb/>
)ob I just found out about it (the<lb/>
opening) last week<lb/>
Murphy gives Steve Brewer,<lb/>
assistant director, most of the<lb/>
credit for arranging Sunday<lb/>
night's volunteers.<lb/>
"He's been active already<lb/>
Murphy said. "He's already got-<lb/>
ten us some operators and walk-<lb/>
ers. He's really doing an excellent<lb/>
job<lb/>
Murphy, chosen from several<lb/>
volunteer candidates by Ross<lb/>
Renfro, SGA vice president, said<lb/>
he is ready "to make this the best<lb/>
Pirate Walk ever<lb/>
"Our purpose is if any girl<lb/>
should feels she needs to be es-<lb/>
corted from an area of campus to<lb/>
another, she'll call our operators,<lb/>
we'll call the walkers, and the<lb/>
walkers will escort her to her des-<lb/>
tination Murphy said.<lb/>
Pirate Walk escorts work on a<lb/>
volunteer basis. Murphy hopes to<lb/>
be able to enlist help from campus<lb/>
See PIRATE, page 3<lb/>
ulty research, emergency loans<lb/>
and student volunteer services.<lb/>
"Private gifts represent the dif-<lb/>
ference between being good and<lb/>
attaining the highest level of<lb/>
achievement Kittrell said. "The<lb/>
gifts enable the university to ex-<lb/>
pand its offerings and to enrich its<lb/>
many worthwhile programs<lb/>
Last year's Telefund netted over<lb/>
$160,000 for the university, she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I'm very pleased with the sup-<lb/>
port we've had over the last five<lb/>
years Kittrell said. "Many of the<lb/>
alumni we contact become major<lb/>
donors In 1985, Ronald Dowdy,<lb/>
an alumnus from Orlando, Fla<lb/>
donated $100,000 after being con-<lb/>
tacted during the Telefund.<lb/>
Kittrell credits the success of<lb/>
the Telefund to the student volun-<lb/>
teers. "We couldn't do it without<lb/>
the students' enthusiasm and<lb/>
support. People from other<lb/>
schools are very impressed with<lb/>
our volunteers system. When I<lb/>
tell them that we can get 300 stu-<lb/>
dents io help each vear thev ,ust<lb/>
can't believe it<lb/>
A meeting room of the student j<lb/>
Volunteers are recruited from<lb/>
over 30 different campus organi-<lb/>
zations including honor societies,<lb/>
fraternities, sororities and the<lb/>
dorms. The ECU Ambassadors,<lb/>
original operators of the Tele-<lb/>
fund, will be coordinating the<lb/>
event. Chancellor Eakin, his staff<lb/>
and several oi the deans will be<lb/>
assisting the volunteers on Oct. 14<lb/>
and 15.<lb/>
udiciary system (Photolab).<lb/>
Volunteers will meet nightly at<lb/>
the institute where 25 telephones<lb/>
will be set up for their use. While<lb/>
working they will receive a free<lb/>
long-distance phone call and din-<lb/>
ner. Movie passes, t-shirts and<lb/>
buttons will be given nightly to<lb/>
the volunteers who raise the most<lb/>
money. At the end of the Tele-<lb/>
fundcash prizes of $50, $100, and<lb/>
$150 will be awarded<lb/>
News Bureau).<lb/>
 student volunteer finds some space for herself at the 1985 ECU Telefund. (Tony Rumple ? ECU Mews Bureau).<lb/>
SRA proposes improvements for dorms<lb/>
LARRY MURPHY<lb/>
By KRIS REYER<lb/>
SUM Writer<lb/>
The Student Resident Associa-<lb/>
tion passed a motion to raise the<lb/>
room change fee from $5 to $15<lb/>
dollars at it's Tuesday meeting in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The extra $10 is to cover the cost<lb/>
the phone company charges to<lb/>
change its records which the uni-<lb/>
versity is now paying, according<lb/>
to Dean Carolyn Fulgham.<lb/>
Fulgham said the university has<lb/>
been paying these charges.<lb/>
The SRA also endorsed a sug-<lb/>
gestion to require returning stu-<lb/>
dents to sign up for dorm rooms<lb/>
the 3rd week in February instead<lb/>
of the traditional March sign-up<lb/>
period. This will give the staff a<lb/>
chance to get new students as-<lb/>
signed to rooms faster, possibly<lb/>
before their orientation, Fulgham<lb/>
said. Other reasons for the change<lb/>
suggested by Fulgham were:<lb/>
spring break, exams, elections,<lb/>
and end of year parties ? all of<lb/>
which make March a hectic<lb/>
month.<lb/>
The $60 deposit will still be<lb/>
required and the move won't<lb/>
change the June 1 cancelling<lb/>
deadline, Fulgham said.<lb/>
Mary Francis White enlisted the<lb/>
help of the SRA with Alcohol<lb/>
Awareness Week, which is Oct. 22<lb/>
? Oct 29. The SRA voted unani-<lb/>
mously to participate by way of a<lb/>
button campaign. There are to be<lb/>
contracts for students to sign,<lb/>
pledging they will not drink for<lb/>
the awareness week. Those who<lb/>
fulfill this contract will bring it<lb/>
back and receive a button that<lb/>
reads: "I did it for a week at ECU<lb/>
 other business at the meet-<lb/>
nthia D. Kittrell sought<lb/>
-pport for the 10th Annual ECU<lb/>
Telefund. Kittrell asked for the<lb/>
SRA members to enlist the help of<lb/>
students in residence halls to man<lb/>
the phones for one night a week<lb/>
for 5 weeks. She told the SRA that<lb/>
the first $1 million gift given this<lb/>
year would be used toward aca-<lb/>
demic excellence.<lb/>
The SRA's primary purpose is to<lb/>
See SRA, page 2<lb/>
1<lb/>
J<lb/>
?x<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 1,1967<lb/>
Less students qualify for federal finance aid Charges th<lb/>
(CPS) ? As the summer rolled<lb/>
on, Terilynnn Sanford began to<lb/>
panic. When the University of<lb/>
Texas junior didn't receive a letter<lb/>
confirming her Guaranteed Stu-<lb/>
dent Loan (GSL), as she had the<lb/>
previous 2 years, she called the<lb/>
financial aid office. This year, they<lb/>
told her, she didn't qualify.<lb/>
"1 can't go to school without a<lb/>
student loan she said.<lb/>
After some frustrating maneu-<lb/>
vering, Sanford finally was ap-<lb/>
proved for a GSL, and will con-<lb/>
tinue her education this year.<lb/>
Sanford is not the only student<lb/>
finding that getting a loan this<lb/>
year is much harder than last fall,<lb/>
observers around the country<lb/>
reported last week.<lb/>
As many as 20 percent of the<lb/>
students nationwide who got<lb/>
GSLs in 1986 won't be able to get<lb/>
them for this school year. Dr. A.<lb/>
Dallas Martin Jr. of the National<lb/>
Association of Student Financial<lb/>
Aid Administrators reported.<lb/>
The reasons can be found in the<lb/>
new federal Higher Education<lb/>
Act of 1986, most of which is just<lb/>
going into effect this fall.<lb/>
Those students, said Martin,<lb/>
must take out more expensive<lb/>
loans, such as parental loans, per-<lb/>
sonal bank loans, or Supplemen-<lb/>
tal Student Loans that come with<lb/>
higher interest rates and begin<lb/>
accruing interest soon after<lb/>
they're issued, compounding the<lb/>
rising cost of college education.<lb/>
"This is going to be a tough year<lb/>
for a lot of students said Univer-<lb/>
sity of Nebraska at Omaha finan-<lb/>
cial aid director Phil Shreves.<lb/>
Thirty-five percent of the UNO<lb/>
students who received GSLs last<lb/>
year, he estimated, won't receive<lb/>
GSLs this year. Of the remaining<lb/>
students, Shreves said, "only a<lb/>
few will have total eligibility<lb/>
To determine if a student could<lb/>
get a GSL in the past, financial aid<lb/>
counselors figured in the<lb/>
student's and parents' income,<lb/>
the number of dependents in the<lb/>
student's family and the number<lb/>
of children in that family that<lb/>
were in college.<lb/>
Now the new Higher Education<lb/>
Act requires the counselor to in-<lb/>
clude other money ? like home<lb/>
values and investments ? in de-<lb/>
ciding if the student needs a GSL.<lb/>
As a result of adding in the<lb/>
"other sources of income" to a<lb/>
family's wealth, many families<lb/>
look like they earn too much to<lb/>
qualify for the low-cost loans.<lb/>
"We've had more denials as<lb/>
GSL eligibility has gotten<lb/>
tighter said Don Davis of Texas'<lb/>
financial aid office.<lb/>
The Higher Education Act of<lb/>
1986 also raised the maximum<lb/>
annual GSL from $2,500 to $4,000.<lb/>
Particularly hurt by the new<lb/>
requirements, said Dan Daven-<lb/>
port of the University of Idaho<lb/>
financial aid office, are graduate<lb/>
students and older students.<lb/>
Income from teaching or re-<lb/>
search assistant jobs now is added<lb/>
to a student's assets when deter-<lb/>
mining GSL eligibility, Daven-<lb/>
port said, reducing or eliminating<lb/>
loans graduate students received<lb/>
in the past.<lb/>
"Nontraditional" students also<lb/>
must declare their spouse's in-<lb/>
come, also cutting or eliminating<lb/>
loans, he added.<lb/>
Despite the tighter GSL eligibil-<lb/>
ity requirements, Martin said the<lb/>
financial aid picture "looks pretty<lb/>
favorable since students still<lb/>
have access to other, though more<lb/>
expensive loans.<lb/>
"We thought we'd see a de-<lb/>
crease in total available funds<lb/>
Davis said. "But there's just as<lb/>
much money, and there are just as<lb/>
many students applying for aid.<lb/>
We've processed as many, or<lb/>
more, applications as we did last<lb/>
year<lb/>
"We're funded at the same lev-<lb/>
els as last year Davenport<lb/>
added.<lb/>
"Frankly, this is a more stable<lb/>
year than last year explained<lb/>
Colorado College financial aid<lb/>
Director Rodney Oto.<lb/>
Martin, however, contended<lb/>
that although the U.S. Depart-<lb/>
ment of Education continues to<lb/>
appropriate more money for stu-<lb/>
dent financial aid, students are<lb/>
not receiving as much assistance<lb/>
as tncy have in the past.<lb/>
Much of the actual dollar in-<lb/>
crease, he said, is used to pay off<lb/>
defaulters' loans.<lb/>
Changes in aid distribution<lb/>
have created "an increasing stu-<lb/>
dent indebtedness Martin said.<lb/>
The Pell Grant program, once the<lb/>
dominant form of federal student<lb/>
assistance, has been slashed.<lb/>
Loans are now the dominant<lb/>
form.<lb/>
"There's been no increase in<lb/>
true student aid said Martin.<lb/>
'This has not been a growth in-<lb/>
dustry. There are actually fewer<lb/>
dollars to go around<lb/>
"High-ability students from<lb/>
low-income families are not being<lb/>
served Martin continued.<lb/>
'That's a loss of talent we're not<lb/>
providing for. It's unfortunate<lb/>
Terilynn Sanford almost<lb/>
counted herself as one of the un-<lb/>
fortunate students who couldn't<lb/>
afford college this year. "1 was<lb/>
afraid I'd get shut out she said.<lb/>
But, with Davis' help, Sanford<lb/>
reapplied and will receive a GSL<lb/>
to continue her schooling.<lb/>
"I'm praying for that check to<lb/>
get here she said. "I haven't been<lb/>
able to buy books yet 'cause I only<lb/>
have $20 to my name at this<lb/>
point<lb/>
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - The Arch<lb/>
bishop of Canterbury, the most<lb/>
Rev. Robert Rundc, will meet<lb/>
with representatives of the Greek<lb/>
Orthodox and Coptic churches<lb/>
during a week-long visit to Egypt<lb/>
Runcie, the spiritual leader of<lb/>
the Church of England and the<lb/>
world's 70 million Anglicans, ar-<lb/>
rived here Monday.<lb/>
Operation ID helps deter dorm thieves<lb/>
Do you know the name brand of<lb/>
the television set you watch? The<lb/>
stereo system you listen to? The<lb/>
bicycle you ride or other valuable<lb/>
items you own?<lb/>
If not, you are not alone. Most<lb/>
people do not. Just knowing this<lb/>
helps, but that may not be enough<lb/>
to help police recover your prop-<lb/>
erty if it is stolen. Can you posi-<lb/>
Pirate Police<lb/>
Line<lb/>
By CAPTAIN KEITH KNOX ECU Public Safely<lb/>
rively identify that stolen item as<lb/>
yours? If not, neither can the po-<lb/>
lice or courts.<lb/>
How many Sony, Zenith, or<lb/>
whatever the brand name televi-<lb/>
sion sets are there on this campus,<lb/>
in the city, county or country?<lb/>
How about other valuables that<lb/>
could be stolen? Hundreds<lb/>
maybe even hundreds of thou-<lb/>
sands. Right! That is why it helps<lb/>
to provide authorities with posi-<lb/>
tive identification of your per-<lb/>
sonal property.<lb/>
Help campus police help you.<lb/>
Participate in Operation ID (Iden-<lb/>
tification) a program that helps<lb/>
deter thieves and burglars, assists<lb/>
in the arrest and prosecution of<lb/>
criminals and facilitates the re-<lb/>
turn of lost or stolen property. By<lb/>
marking (engraving) your valu-<lb/>
ables with your drivers license<lb/>
number preceded by the abbre-<lb/>
viation of the state (NCDL<lb/>
1234567) you positively identify<lb/>
that item as yours.<lb/>
This number is recognized by<lb/>
law enforcement agencies<lb/>
throughout the United States. In<lb/>
SRA executives listed<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
?provide a student force to work with<lb/>
the administration on such issues as<lb/>
housing, visitation policies and im-<lb/>
proved services for residence hall<lb/>
students, according to an SRA pam-<lb/>
phlet.<lb/>
The SRA executive officers arc.<lb/>
Thomas Denton ? president, Mark<lb/>
Carroll ? vice president, Deena<lb/>
Niewiadomski ? secretary, Louise<lb/>
Perreca ? treasurer. Heather Eber-<lb/>
wine ? publicity chairman.<lb/>
The ARC (Area Residence Coun-<lb/>
cil) officers are:<lb/>
?The Hill Mary Piland ? presi-<lb/>
dent, Roger Eaton ? trice president,<lb/>
Lisa Tariton ? treasurer, Melissa<lb/>
Sikes ? secretary.<lb/>
?Central Campus: Renee Fliner ?<lb/>
president, Tommy Arnold ? vice<lb/>
president, William Vood ? secre-<lb/>
tary, Tom Walters ? treasurer.<lb/>
?West Campus: Janet Batten ?<lb/>
president, Michelle Parkin ? vice<lb/>
president, Brenda Vaughan ? treas-<lb/>
urer, Amy Hinson ? secretary.<lb/>
The SRA meets at 4 p.m Tues-<lb/>
days, in Mendenhall Studen Center.<lb/>
usarviteXend<lb/>
$ Need Money $<lb/>
We pay Cash For Anything Gold or Silver<lb/>
Classrings<lb/>
Necklaces<lb/>
Braclets<lb/>
Coins, ect.<lb/>
And, We also buy Stero's, T.Vs,<lb/>
V.C.R.s, Furniture, Bikes, etc.<lb/>
Coin &amp; Ring Man<lb/>
10:00 5:00 (M-F)<lb/>
.10.00 3:00 Sat.<lb/>
400 S. Evans<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
REEL<lb/>
GOOI<lb/>
If you're hungry, if you're thirsty, or if you're just in the<lb/>
mood for a fun evening, come on over to CharleyO's.<lb/>
We're serving the freshest, most delicious seafood<lb/>
available. Along with mesquite grilled beef, poultry<lb/>
and pork ribs.<lb/>
Mesquite Grilling And A Whole Lot Mote.<lb/>
I liitiMi Inn Greenville ? 264 Hypass at I looker Rd ? 355-5000<lb/>
North Carolina it is also against<lb/>
the law to tamper, alter or remove<lb/>
serial numbers or owner applied<lb/>
numbers from property so<lb/>
marked.<lb/>
In addition, to help police and<lb/>
insurance claims you should<lb/>
make an inventory list of all your<lb/>
valuables and major possessions<lb/>
for future use in case of loss or<lb/>
theft. This list should include<lb/>
quantity, make, model, serial<lb/>
number (if there is one), a brief<lb/>
description (color, size, etc.) and<lb/>
value. Place a copy of this in a safe<lb/>
place, preferably not your home<lb/>
in case of fire or theft.<lb/>
Beginning October 6, from 2:30<lb/>
p.m. ? 7:00 p.m campus police<lb/>
will be going into residence halls<lb/>
on the ECU campus taking inven-<lb/>
tory of and marking valuables for<lb/>
Operation ID. Look for the<lb/>
Operation ID sign-up sheets in<lb/>
your residence hall. If you do not<lb/>
live on campus, but would like to<lb/>
join Operation ID, call your local<lb/>
police or sheriff's department.<lb/>
They will be glad to assist you.<lb/>
Remember, crime prevention<lb/>
begins with YOU!<lb/>
3tye iSort Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East 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/>
lOO 1494.05<lb/>
150199 3 95<lb/>
200 249 3 85<lb/>
250 and above 3 75<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in Addition to Regular Space Rate)<lb/>
One color and black$90.00<lb/>
Two colors and black 155.00<lb/>
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(CPS) ? Sen. Joseph Biden (D-<lb/>
Del.) may have been embarrassed<lb/>
by revelations that, as a student in<lb/>
1965, he cheated on a law school<lb/>
paper, but cheating remains<lb/>
widespread on American cam-<lb/>
puses today, various sources say<lb/>
Thirty to 50 percent of all col-<lb/>
lege students say they've cheated<lb/>
during their academic careers,<lb/>
researcher William Raffetto<lb/>
found in a Carnegie Commission<lb/>
report in 1985.<lb/>
Duke, Indiana, Pennsylvania<lb/>
and Georgia universities, among<lb/>
others, reported increases in the<lb/>
number of accusations ? though<lb/>
not necessarily offenses ? from<lb/>
the 1985-86 to'the 1986-87 school<lb/>
years<lb/>
At Duke M i<lb/>
ing increasi<lb/>
professors take<lb/>
demic dishorn-<lb/>
Student Life<lb/>
Twenty-three<lb/>
charged with ch<lb/>
1986-87 acaden<lb/>
14 werechargo<lb/>
and 12 were a<lb/>
during 1<lb/>
The in<lb/>
campuswide,<lb/>
down. VVa<lb/>
individual t I<lb/>
become more a<lb/>
lem.<lb/>
Biden<lb/>
Inflation takes a bite o<lb/>
(CPS) ? Despite five straight<lb/>
years of salary hikes, college<lb/>
teachers are a little poorer than<lb/>
their colleagues of 10 years ago.<lb/>
the Center for Education Statistics<lb/>
said last week.<lb/>
Inflation, the center ? the data-<lb/>
gathenng arm of the LS Dept. of<lb/>
Education ? said Sept. 17, has<lb/>
eaten up the salary gains of all<lb/>
college faculty members nation-<lb/>
wide except some of those teach-<lb/>
ing at private campuses.<lb/>
Inflation outran faculty salaries<lb/>
during the 1977-1981 school years<lb/>
by such a wide margin that col-<lb/>
lege teachers' buying power in<lb/>
1986 was 3-to-6 percent lower<lb/>
than it was in 1976-77.<lb/>
The center's report also shows<lb/>
that colleges continue to pay fac-<lb/>
ulty men "considerably" more<lb/>
Judicial branch<lb/>
powers reviewed<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
these cases prompt SG A heanngs<lb/>
before dispensation in a court of<lb/>
law. 'The current statement puts<lb/>
the burden on the university to<lb/>
justify why it's handling the case<lb/>
on campus Speier said.<lb/>
"This limits the jurisdiction of<lb/>
the boards to control the behavior<lb/>
of the students Speier said.<lb/>
On the powers of the judicial<lb/>
boards, Meyer said the boards<lb/>
Should decide on it's power to<lb/>
hear cases. "(The judicary) should<lb/>
define the cases it would like to<lb/>
hear Mever said.<lb/>
Pirate Walk begins<lb/>
first step of semester<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
fraternities and sororities.<lb/>
"We're hoping to get the greeks,<lb/>
and anyone else, involved<lb/>
Murphy said. "1 guess it would be<lb/>
to an advantage to get fraternities<lb/>
and sororities to applv Pirate<lb/>
Walk to their communitv serv-<lb/>
ices<lb/>
Murphy plans to organize the<lb/>
Pirate Walk so it runs smoother<lb/>
than in past years. He hopes this<lb/>
will entice students to use its serv-<lb/>
ices more, preventing possible<lb/>
campus crime.<lb/>
"Hopefully everyone will use<lb/>
it Murphy said. "It'sa very good<lb/>
program especially in the sense<lb/>
it's useful to the ladies of ECU<lb/>
The Pirate Walk escort service<lb/>
number is: 757-6616.<lb/>
than women<lb/>
professor S<lb/>
women in l1<lb/>
more in ;<lb/>
The av<lb/>
regar :<lb/>
compared t i<lb/>
iPa<lb/>
W1C<lb/>
b<lb/>
Thu:<lb/>
Drafi<lb/>
$1.50 adm. for guys<lb/>
65 tails &amp; I<lb/>
10 Dra<lb/>
Fri Sat. - Sun All wee!<lb/>
Oct. 21 The Elbo will b<lb/>
$1.00 Hi balls<lb/>
<lb/>
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m ?ymmt am I  ?? '<lb/>
J<lb/>
?f W?? Vi ?? ii i mniiwtn iMO'f n???wm??D?<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 1,1987<lb/>
inance aid<lb/>
aness, Martin said<lb/>
t program, once the<lb/>
n of federal student<lb/>
,v Kvn slashed<lb/>
w the dominant<lb/>
vn no increase in<lb/>
aid said Martin<lb/>
Kvn a growth in<lb/>
are actually fewer<lb/>
roun 4<lb/>
 students from<lb/>
- are not being<lb/>
irtin continued<lb/>
ent we're not<lb/>
rtunate<lb/>
Santord almost<lb/>
? .is one of the un<lb/>
couldn t<lb/>
- vear 1 was<lb/>
-<lb/>
But, with Davis help, Sanford<lb/>
reapplied and will receive a GSL<lb/>
to continue her schooling.<lb/>
"I'm praving for that check to<lb/>
get here, she said, "lhaven'tbeen<lb/>
able to bu Wnks vet cause I only<lb/>
have $20 to my name at this<lb/>
point<lb/>
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - The Arch-<lb/>
bishop of Canterbury, the most<lb/>
Re Robert Runcie, will meet<lb/>
with representatives of the Greek<lb/>
lAthodov and Coptic churches<lb/>
during a week long visit to Egypt.<lb/>
Runcie, the spiritual leader of<lb/>
the Church of England and the<lb/>
world s 70 million Anglicans, ar-<lb/>
rived here Monday.<lb/>
iEaut (ftarottttiati<lb/>
 s?rae 1925<lb/>
. Director of Advertising<lb/>
lvertislng Representlves<lb/>
sso Shan Clemens<lb/>
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Charges that students are cheating on the rise<lb/>
(CPS) ? Sen. Joseph Biden (D-<lb/>
Delmay have been embarrassed<lb/>
by revelations that, as a student in<lb/>
1965, he cheated on a law school<lb/>
paper, but cheating remains<lb/>
widespread on American cam-<lb/>
puses today, various sources say.<lb/>
Thirty to 50 percent of all col-<lb/>
lege students say they've cheated<lb/>
during their academic careers,<lb/>
researcher William Raffetto<lb/>
found in a Carnegie Commission<lb/>
report In 1985.<lb/>
Duke, Indiana, Pennsylvania<lb/>
and Georgia universities, among<lb/>
others, reported increases in the<lb/>
number of accusations ? though<lb/>
not necessarily offenses ? from<lb/>
the 1985-86 to'the 1986-87 school<lb/>
years.<lb/>
At Duke, accusations of cheat-<lb/>
ing increase when individual<lb/>
professors take steps to curb aca-<lb/>
demic dishonesty, said Dean of<lb/>
Student Life Sue Wasiolek.<lb/>
Twenty-three students were<lb/>
charged with cheating during the<lb/>
1986-87 academic year, she said;<lb/>
14 were charged the previous year<lb/>
and 12 were accused of cheating<lb/>
during 1984-85.<lb/>
The increase is not due to a<lb/>
campuswide, organized crack-<lb/>
down, Wasiolek said, but because<lb/>
individual faculty members have<lb/>
become more aware of the prob-<lb/>
lem.<lb/>
Biden, who recently dropped<lb/>
his candidacy for the Democratic<lb/>
presidential nomination ? ad-<lb/>
mitted Sept. 17 that he'd turned in<lb/>
a paper as a first-year law student<lb/>
at Syracuse University in 1965<lb/>
that included 5 pages lifted di-<lb/>
rectly from a published law re-<lb/>
view article.<lb/>
Biden also misrepresented his<lb/>
academic record during a recent<lb/>
campaign appearance, according<lb/>
to Newsweek. Biden reportedly<lb/>
said he graduated in the top half<lb/>
of his law school class, but actu-<lb/>
ally finished 76th in a class of 85.<lb/>
Biden reportedly also said he at-<lb/>
tended law school on a full schol-<lb/>
arship, but actually received a<lb/>
partial scholarship based on fi-<lb/>
nancial need, the magazine said.<lb/>
When caught in 1965, Biden<lb/>
convinced the law school to let<lb/>
him take the course again.<lb/>
"I did something very stupid 23<lb/>
years ago Biden said in a Wash-<lb/>
ington, D.C press conference last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
But Biden might not have been<lb/>
allowed to retake the course if he<lb/>
was a student today.<lb/>
Wasiolek said an ethics review<lb/>
board may show mercy to an<lb/>
undergraduate for Biden's of-<lb/>
fense, but, for law school stu-<lb/>
dents, "ignorance is not an accept-<lb/>
able defense. Law students are<lb/>
expected to know how to footnote<lb/>
a research paper<lb/>
Schools, in fact, are more vig-<lb/>
ilant in watching students these<lb/>
days.<lb/>
Indeed, on Aug. 31 the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Texas's Measurement and<lb/>
Evaluation Center boasted that its<lb/>
new practice of photographing<lb/>
students had helped decreased<lb/>
cheating on placement exams.<lb/>
Texas also okayed, without<lb/>
endorsing, a teaching assistant's<lb/>
practice of searching students'<lb/>
backpacks as they enter his class<lb/>
to take tests.<lb/>
Yale suspended 8 students<lb/>
Sept. 4 for the fall semester for<lb/>
allegedly cheating on a take-<lb/>
home physics exam last spring.<lb/>
Inflation takes a bite out of faculty salaries<lb/>
(CPS) ? Despite five straight<lb/>
years of salary hikes, college<lb/>
teachers are a little poorer than<lb/>
their colleagues of 10 years ago,<lb/>
the Center for Education Statistics<lb/>
said last week.<lb/>
Inflation, the center ? the data-<lb/>
gathenng arm of the U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Education ? said Sept. 17, has<lb/>
eaten up the salary gains of all<lb/>
college faculty members nation-<lb/>
wide except some of those teach-<lb/>
ing at private campuses.<lb/>
Inflation outran faculty salaries<lb/>
during the 1977-1981 school years<lb/>
by such a wide margin that col-<lb/>
lege teachers' buying power in<lb/>
1986 was 3-to-6 percent lower<lb/>
than it was in 1976-77.<lb/>
The center's report also shows<lb/>
that colleges continue to pav fac-<lb/>
ulty men "considerably" more<lb/>
Judicial branch<lb/>
powers reviewed<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
these cases prompt SG A hearings<lb/>
before dispensation in a court of<lb/>
law. 'The current statement puts<lb/>
the burden on the university to<lb/>
justify why it's handling the case<lb/>
on campus Speier said.<lb/>
"This limits the jurisdiction of<lb/>
the boards to control the behavior<lb/>
of the students Speier said.<lb/>
On the powers of the judicial<lb/>
boards, Meyer said the boards<lb/>
should decide on it's power to<lb/>
hear cases. "(The judicary) should<lb/>
define the cases it would like to<lb/>
hear Meyer said.<lb/>
Pirate Walk begins<lb/>
first step of semester<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
fraternities and sororities.<lb/>
"We're hoping to get the greeks,<lb/>
and anyone else, involved<lb/>
Murphy said. "I guess it would be<lb/>
to an advantage to get fraternities<lb/>
and sororities to applv Pirate<lb/>
Walk to their community serv-<lb/>
ices<lb/>
Murphy plans to organize the<lb/>
Pirate Walk so it runs smoother<lb/>
than in past years. He hopes this<lb/>
will entice students to use its serv-<lb/>
ices more, preventing possible<lb/>
campus crime.<lb/>
"Hopefully everyone will use<lb/>
it Murphy said. "It's a very good<lb/>
program especially in the sense<lb/>
it's useful to the ladies of ECU<lb/>
The Pirate Walk escort service<lb/>
number is: 757-6616.<lb/>
than women, giving male full<lb/>
professors $4,600 more than<lb/>
women in 1976-77 and $4,500<lb/>
more in 1985-86.<lb/>
The average faculty member,<lb/>
regardless of rank, makes about<lb/>
the same in constant dollars as 10<lb/>
years ago: $32,400 in 1985-86<lb/>
compared with $32,600 in 1976-<lb/>
77.<lb/>
The center also found the gap<lb/>
between faculty salaries for pub-<lb/>
lic and private universities con-<lb/>
tinued to widen.<lb/>
While public campuses paid<lb/>
their teachers 4.9 percent less than<lb/>
private campuses paid their fac-<lb/>
ulty members in 1976-77, the dif-<lb/>
ference had grown to 9.1 percent<lb/>
in 1986-87.<lb/>
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ndi . ? . i. i? ?? ? ?  ? -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0004"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 1,1987<lb/>
inance aid<lb/>
dness Martin said<lb/>
t program, once the<lb/>
n of federal student<lb/>
lhas been slashed<lb/>
n the dominant<lb/>
?n no increase in<lb/>
iui said Martin<lb/>
t been a growth in<lb/>
l actual!) fewer<lb/>
around<lb/>
students trom<lb/>
 are not being<lb/>
Hartin continued<lb/>
t talent ve re no!<lb/>
niortunate<lb/>
anford almost<lb/>
as one of the un<lb/>
r?K uhn . nilHn t<lb/>
But, with Davis' help, Sanford<lb/>
reapplied and will receive a GSL<lb/>
to continue her schooling.<lb/>
'I'm praying for that check to<lb/>
get here shesaid " I haven't been<lb/>
able to buv books yet cause I only<lb/>
have S-0 to my name at this<lb/>
point<lb/>
CAIRO Egypt (AP)- The Arch-<lb/>
bishop of Canterbury, the most<lb/>
Ke Robert Runcie, will meet<lb/>
with representatives of the Greek<lb/>
Orthodox and Coptic churches<lb/>
during a week-long visit to Egypt<lb/>
Runcie, the spiritual leader of<lb/>
the c hurch of Fngland and the<lb/>
world's 70 million Anglicans, ar-<lb/>
med here Monday.<lb/>
?ast Carolinian<lb/>
pus mity MJiz-p 1925<lb/>
 J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representives<lb/>
sso Shari Clemens<lb/>
Maria Bell<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
$4 25<lb/>
4 15<lb/>
4 05<lb/>
3 95<lb/>
385<lb/>
3 75<lb/>
OLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
 Idition 1 ? Space Rate)<lb/>
oo<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
"57 6557<lb/>
7S 7 ?558<lb/>
737-t?366<lb/>
757 6366<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
t<lb/>
V<lb/>
I<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
SERVE N SAVE<lb/>
Sliced<lb/>
Lunchmeat<lb/>
s129<lb/>
Kq<lb/>
19c<lb/>
KROGER HOMESTYLE<lb/>
Spaghetti<lb/>
Sauce <lb/>
32<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
99?<lb/>
KEEBLER<lb/>
Soft Batch<lb/>
Cookies<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
?J39<lb/>
KELLOGS<lb/>
Rasin<lb/>
Bran<lb/>
20<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Box<lb/>
189<lb/>
'<lb/>
OPEN 2a HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd - Greenville<lb/>
)<lb/>
Charges that students are cheating on the rise<lb/>
(CPS) ? Sen. Joseph Biden (D-<lb/>
Del.) may have been embarrassed<lb/>
by revelations that, as a student in<lb/>
1965, he cheated on a law school<lb/>
paper, but cheating remains<lb/>
widespread on American cam-<lb/>
puses today, various sources say.<lb/>
Thirty to 50 percent of all col-<lb/>
lege students say they've cheated<lb/>
during their academic careers,<lb/>
researcher William Raffetto<lb/>
found in a Carnegie Commission<lb/>
report in 1985.<lb/>
Duke, Indiana, Pennsylvania<lb/>
and Georgia universities, among<lb/>
others, reported increases in the<lb/>
number of accusations ? though<lb/>
not necessarily offenses ? from<lb/>
the 1985-86 to'the 1986-87 school<lb/>
years.<lb/>
At Duke, accusations of cheat-<lb/>
ing increase when individual<lb/>
professors take steps to curb aca-<lb/>
demic dishonesty, said Dean of<lb/>
Student Life Sue Wasiolek.<lb/>
Twenty-three students were<lb/>
charged with cheating during the<lb/>
1986-87 academic year, she said;<lb/>
14 werecharged the previousyear<lb/>
and 12 were accused of cheating<lb/>
during 1984-85.<lb/>
The increase is not due to a<lb/>
campuswide, organized crack-<lb/>
down, Wasiolek said, but because<lb/>
individual faculty members have<lb/>
become more aware of the prob-<lb/>
lem.<lb/>
Biden, who recently dropped<lb/>
his candidacy for the Democratic<lb/>
presidential nomination ? ad-<lb/>
mitted Sept. 17 that he'd turned in<lb/>
a paper as a first-year law student<lb/>
at Syracuse University in 1965<lb/>
that included 5 pages lifted di-<lb/>
rectly from a published law re-<lb/>
view article.<lb/>
Biden also misrepresented his<lb/>
academic record during a recent<lb/>
campaign appearance, according<lb/>
to Newsweek. Biden reportedly<lb/>
said he graduated in the top half<lb/>
of his law school class, but actu-<lb/>
ally finished 76th in a class of 85.<lb/>
Biden reportedly also said he at-<lb/>
tended law school on a full schol-<lb/>
arship, but actually received a<lb/>
partial scholarship based on fi-<lb/>
nancial need, the magazine said.<lb/>
When caught in 1965, Biden<lb/>
convinced the law school to let<lb/>
him take the course again.<lb/>
"1 did something very stupid 23<lb/>
years ago Biden said in a Wash-<lb/>
ington, DC, press conference last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
But Biden might not have been<lb/>
allowed to retake the course if he<lb/>
was a student today.<lb/>
Wasiolek said an ethics review<lb/>
board may show mercy to an<lb/>
undergraduate for Biden's of-<lb/>
fense, but, for law school stu-<lb/>
dents, "ignorance is not an accept-<lb/>
able defense. Law students are<lb/>
expected to know how to footnote<lb/>
a research paper<lb/>
Schools, in fact, are more vig-<lb/>
ilant in watching students these<lb/>
days.<lb/>
Indeed, on Aug. 31 the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Texas's Measurement and<lb/>
Evaluation Center boasted that its<lb/>
new practice of photographing<lb/>
students had helped decreased<lb/>
cheating on placement exams.<lb/>
Texas also okayed, without<lb/>
endorsing, a teaching assistant's<lb/>
practice of searching students'<lb/>
backpacks as they enter his class<lb/>
to take tests.<lb/>
Yale suspended 8 students<lb/>
Sept. 4 for the fall semester for<lb/>
allegedly cheating on a take-<lb/>
home physics exam last spring.<lb/>
Inflation takes a bite out of faculty salaries<lb/>
(CPS) ? Despite five straight<lb/>
years of salary hikes, college<lb/>
teachers are a little poorer than<lb/>
their colleagues of 10 years ago,<lb/>
the Center for Education Statistics<lb/>
said last week.<lb/>
Inflation, the center ? the data-<lb/>
gathering arm of the U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Education ? said Sept. 17, has<lb/>
eaten up the salary gains of all<lb/>
college faculty members nation-<lb/>
wide except some of those teach-<lb/>
ing at private campuses.<lb/>
Inflation outran faculty salaries<lb/>
during the 1977-1981 school years<lb/>
by such a wide margin that col-<lb/>
lege teachers' buying power in<lb/>
1986 was 3-to-6 percent lower<lb/>
than it was in 1976-77.<lb/>
The center's report also shows<lb/>
that colleges continue to pay fac-<lb/>
ulty men "considerably" more<lb/>
Judicial branch<lb/>
powers reviewed<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
these cases prompt SGA hearings<lb/>
before dispensation in a court of<lb/>
law. 'The current statement puts<lb/>
the burden on the university to<lb/>
justify why it's handling the case<lb/>
on campus Speier said.<lb/>
"This limits the jurisdiction of<lb/>
the boards to control the behavior<lb/>
of the students Speier said.<lb/>
On the powers of the judicial<lb/>
boards, Meyer said the boards<lb/>
should decide on it's power to<lb/>
hear cases. "(The judicary) should<lb/>
define the cases it would like to<lb/>
hear Meyer said.<lb/>
Pirate Walk begins<lb/>
first step of semester<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
fraternities and sororities.<lb/>
"We're hoping to get the greeks,<lb/>
and anyone else, involved<lb/>
Murphy said. "I guess it would be<lb/>
to an advantage to get fraternities<lb/>
and sororities to apply Pirate<lb/>
Walk to their community serv-<lb/>
ices<lb/>
Murphy plans to organize the<lb/>
Pirate Walk so it runs smoother<lb/>
than in past years. He hopes this<lb/>
will entice students to use its serv-<lb/>
ices more, preventing possible<lb/>
campus crime.<lb/>
"Hopefully everyone will use<lb/>
it Murphy said. "It's a very good<lb/>
program especially in the sense<lb/>
it's useful to the ladies of ECU<lb/>
The Pirate Walk escort service<lb/>
number is: 757-6616.<lb/>
than women, giving male full<lb/>
professors $4,600 more than<lb/>
women in 1976-77 and $4,500<lb/>
more in 1985-86.<lb/>
The average faculty member,<lb/>
regardless of rank, makes about<lb/>
the same in constant dollars as 10<lb/>
years ago: $32,400 in 1985-86<lb/>
compared with $32,600 in 1976-<lb/>
77.<lb/>
The center also found the gap<lb/>
between faculty salaries for pub-<lb/>
lic and private universities con-<lb/>
tinued to widen.<lb/>
While public campuses paid<lb/>
their teachers 4.9 percent less than<lb/>
private campuses paid their fac-<lb/>
ulty members in 1976-77, the dif-<lb/>
ference had grown to 9.1 percent<lb/>
in 1986-87.<lb/>
Show Tonight<lb/>
Beverly Hills Cop 2 -R-<lb/>
End Of The Line -PG-<lb/>
Hell Raiser -R-<lb/>
Starts Friday<lb/>
No Way Out<lb/>
Like Father, Like Son<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
ROBOCOP<lb/>
Starts Friday<lb/>
DRAGNET<lb/>
? ANY FOOT LONG SANDWICH m 2J0HE U 2&amp;HE<lb/>
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We bake our buns fresh and hot. Then we make the<lb/>
biggest, freshest and most delicious foot long sand-<lb/>
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Vie S$&amp;J Jfkwitiv<lb/>
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THE PLAZA- 756-2110<lb/>
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With purchase nf .i 22 oz soft drink Not valid with other coupons or<lb/>
offers At participating stores only Expires October 15, 1987<lb/>
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presents<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
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RHYTHM &amp; BLUES AND DANCE<lb/>
18 yr olds welcome!<lb/>
Doors Open at 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
Phone: 756-6401<lb/>
Located In Carolina East Center<lb/>
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$1.50 adm. for guys Free for ladies til 12<lb/>
65tails &amp; wine coolers<lb/>
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Fri Sat. - Sun All weekend Memberships $1.06<lb/>
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Bring in this ad<lb/>
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j<lb/>
ftlmmm ??T?? m ? m m? ??, m m ?"<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0005"/><lb/>
?te East Olarnltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Daniel Maurer, c??miM??,?.<lb/>
Clay Deani jardt, m, fjm<lb/>
Andy Lewis, ta v AMES F.j. mcKee, dmam,<lb/>
IIM C 1ANDLER, s rw ANTl iONY MARTIN, B??o?, M<lb/>
jot in Carter.  w Meg Need, iAM CmiiUium <lb/>
Shelton Bryant, ?w? MiKE upchurch, pvc, m?<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, w jqhn W. Medlin, m, dw,<lb/>
October 1, 1987<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
MR.PRgaP?A)L,CA0<lb/>
P?R$(AA) SotP <lb/>
Nffciidr?<lb/>
<lb/>
77 e judiciary<lb/>
Bill would violate rights<lb/>
The proposed SGA bill that would<lb/>
allow the Honor Board to try stu-<lb/>
dents before the students appear in a<lb/>
court of law is at best foolhardy and<lb/>
at worst a danger to civil liberties.<lb/>
It is true that the judicial processes<lb/>
of the SGA needs better defining;<lb/>
however, the bill authored by John<lb/>
Simon would give students on the<lb/>
Honor Board too much control over<lb/>
a fellow student's future.<lb/>
A simple example brings out an<lb/>
obvious flaw in the bill. Suppose a<lb/>
student is convicted of theft by the<lb/>
Honor Board and is punished with<lb/>
expulsion or a fine of some sort.<lb/>
Later this student is found innocent<lb/>
by a court of la w. It is too late to bring<lb/>
the student back to school even<lb/>
though he may not be guilty.<lb/>
This poses another interesting<lb/>
problem. Within the university,<lb/>
which ruling would take prece-<lb/>
dence? Obviously, if a court found<lb/>
the student innocent, he or she could<lb/>
sue for re-admittance to the univer-<lb/>
sity, thus overturning the decision<lb/>
of the Honor Board. This university<lb/>
hnot be placed in such a vicari-<lb/>
Sfcmft position simply for the sake of<lb/>
judicial clarification.<lb/>
The bill may not solve that many<lb/>
problems anyway. Dr. Ron Speier,<lb/>
associate dean of student life, said 90<lb/>
percent of all honor code violation<lb/>
cases are decided by himself when<lb/>
the student initially pleads guilty to<lb/>
the violations. Only 10 percent of the<lb/>
cases ever come before the Honor<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
The question of students deciding<lb/>
penalties for other students is not an<lb/>
issue in this matter. As peers and as<lb/>
adults, students have enough ma-<lb/>
turity and prudence, in most cases,<lb/>
to render sound decisions based on<lb/>
available information.<lb/>
The question that arises is that of<lb/>
mistakes. It looms heavy on the<lb/>
horizon. Can the honor board really<lb/>
punish someone whom a profes-<lb/>
sional group of people later find<lb/>
innocent? Is it right for this person to<lb/>
suffer at the hands of the board<lb/>
when it seems obvious that civil<lb/>
jurisprudence will take precedent<lb/>
over that of the university?<lb/>
More importantly, is the student<lb/>
being subjected to the evil of double<lb/>
jeapordy ? a threat from which we<lb/>
are protected by the U.S.<lb/>
Constitution?<lb/>
It seems so. Action taken after a<lb/>
trial has been held is action taken<lb/>
and punishment made within house<lb/>
for an offense that has been<lb/>
commited. Action taken before a<lb/>
trial may be punishment made for<lb/>
no offense at all.<lb/>
The reverse is also true. What<lb/>
happens if the Honor Board finds a<lb/>
defendant not guilty, and then a<lb/>
court finds him guilty? Is this person<lb/>
then subject to penalty from the<lb/>
university? We would hope not.<lb/>
It seems, very simply, that this<lb/>
proposal is not thought out well.<lb/>
There are too many possible prob-<lb/>
lems for a bill like this.<lb/>
The SGA should create a commit-<lb/>
tee to look into ways of improving<lb/>
our judicial system. If the committee<lb/>
finds the system needs more real<lb/>
power, then any further proposals<lb/>
should be investigated and debated<lb/>
carefully before any action is taken.<lb/>
As it stands now, the proposal<lb/>
Simon authored seems to be a viola-<lb/>
tion of student's rights as citizens no<lb/>
matter how you look at it.<lb/>
to ee osep im<lb/>
0APAM65? CARS<lb/>
"WARS GOING<lb/>
to Be ptiMPep<lb/>
on -rue u.s,<lb/>
M P0TTVW6<lb/>
AM5RICAN<lb/>
TR00R5W<lb/>
THewppte<lb/>
OFTHe<lb/>
IRAN-<lb/>
IRAQ<lb/>
WAR<lb/>
T&amp; PROTECT<lb/>
KUWAITI<lb/>
SHIPS THAT<lb/>
AR?<lb/>
CARRVW6<lb/>
opgeoit<lb/>
TDJAPAW<lb/>
ivWVlH<lb/>
iVOnlCAMWOfiWM<lb/>
WRMCARAeUAW<lb/>
The draft<lb/>
<lb/>
SSPfnSesrTTrIf<lb/>
Bork has right to seat on high court<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Where docs Bork get off thinking<lb/>
that a judge in the Supreme Court has<lb/>
the right to have opinions that are<lb/>
different from Congress? Doesn't he<lb/>
know that everyone is for abortions<lb/>
and for continued Affirmative Ac-<lb/>
tion? Besides, who is he to have such<lb/>
an opinion? Doesn't he know that this<lb/>
is a democracy? Where does he think<lb/>
he is, the Soviet Union?<lb/>
Besides, who is President Reagan to<lb/>
recommend such a person? Who does<lb/>
he think he is? He only won the last<lb/>
two elections by a landslide. That<lb/>
dwsn't give him the right to try to<lb/>
make the Supreme Court more con-<lb/>
servative. Besides, Senators like Jo-<lb/>
seph R. Biden, who seems to have the<lb/>
problem of people not being able to<lb/>
destinguish his own words from<lb/>
those of others, should be more able to<lb/>
decide who should be on the Supreme<lb/>
Court.<lb/>
Sounds a little silly doesn't it. But<lb/>
these are many of the arguments that<lb/>
some are making to keep Judge Bork<lb/>
off the Supreme Court. Aren't they<lb/>
the same people that just this summer<lb/>
said Lt. Colonel Oliver North should<lb/>
listen to those against aid to the Con-<lb/>
tras and not call those against his<lb/>
ideas communist sypathisers or in<lb/>
this case a radical right wing ideolo-<lb/>
gist. Maybe they should practice<lb/>
what they preach.<lb/>
What they said is right. We in<lb/>
America have the right to have differ-<lb/>
ent opinions. This is what has made<lb/>
this nation great because we take the<lb/>
time listen to others' views and con-<lb/>
cerns. Isn't this what a democracy like<lb/>
ours is really like?<lb/>
Should someone be able to turn a<lb/>
person down in a job just because of<lb/>
their political views. Is this something<lb/>
that we want to establish? All I am<lb/>
saying is that when deciding on such<lb/>
an important job as a Supreme Court<lb/>
Associate Justice, shouldn't we be<lb/>
looking at qualifications and get the<lb/>
best qualified for such an important<lb/>
job. Instead of just what they think on<lb/>
one or two issues. For that might<lb/>
produce a Supreme Court that is<lb/>
afraid to make tough decision neces-<lb/>
sary to keep our democracy going.<lb/>
For we don't want a Supreme Court<lb/>
that is a mirror image of Congress so<lb/>
much that they aren't capable of<lb/>
checking on Congress to insure that<lb/>
Congress doesn't violate the<lb/>
Constitution. Fc. if the Supreme<lb/>
Court is not capable of properly using<lb/>
judicial review, Congress gains more<lb/>
powerful leaning to their almost<lb/>
absolute power over our national<lb/>
government. Absolute power cor-<lb/>
rupts absolutely.<lb/>
Michael Hadley<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
The cabinet<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I am sure that both students and<lb/>
faculty have read about the Student<lb/>
Government Association Executive<lb/>
Cabinet, and probably did not fully<lb/>
understand the purpose and goal of<lb/>
the body.<lb/>
The 1987-88 Executive Cabinet ? is<lb/>
created by Scott Thomas, SGA I<lb/>
dent, with the goal of expanding the<lb/>
visibility and responsiveness of t:<lb/>
SGA Executive Branch. The dut: ?<lb/>
the SGA President are becomirv; si<lb/>
vast, it is becoming difficult f ?<lb/>
person to be reponsi veto t he needs :<lb/>
students. That is where the cabii<lb/>
begins.<lb/>
The cabinet is basically a polio<lb/>
planning and information bod) : i<lb/>
the SGA President, he cabinet will<lb/>
be working closely with several or-<lb/>
ganizations, committees, ECU ad-<lb/>
ministration, media, SGA Legisla-<lb/>
tures, and the communities v<lb/>
surround ECU.<lb/>
The cabinet is composed of ambi-<lb/>
tious, responsive and experienced<lb/>
students who will play a key role in<lb/>
assisting Scott Thomas in providing a<lb/>
professional administration. I can<lb/>
speak for each cabinet member when<lb/>
I say that we are dedicated to the<lb/>
success of the Student Government<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Any person who feelsYw or sYvant m<lb/>
need the services of the SGA F i<lb/>
rive Branch, or who would like to<lb/>
make a comment or suggestion, is<lb/>
encouraged to contact Scott Thomas<lb/>
or myself.<lb/>
I would like to encourage each stu-<lb/>
dent to play an active role in<lb/>
organizations and make his or her<lb/>
valuable contribution to the success<lb/>
of ECU.<lb/>
Anthony D. Porcelli<lb/>
Chief oi Staff<lb/>
SGA Executive Cabinet<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Guilty stick doesn't apply in cases of<lb/>
poverty when you just can't help it<lb/>
By RUTH MOOSE<lb/>
Special to The EaM Carolinian<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/>
ofjoyncr 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 5 p.m. Friday for Tuesday's edition and<lb/>
5 p.m. Tuesday for Thursday's edition.<lb/>
Campus Spectrum<lb/>
rules<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
rules<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/>
in Brooklyn" was devoured sitting in a wild cherry tree in the<lb/>
South. I learned poverty can live in cities. Beforel'd thought<lb/>
1 overty is a stick the world beats you with and when the only country kids knew what it was like to live on "not enough<lb/>
world no longer uses that stick, you use it on yourself. There's My father worked all his life. He didn't make a living wage<lb/>
always the shame that somehow you did something to deserve My mother worked; she worked in school cafeterias a sock mill<lb/>
this; that somehow you brought this social disease upon your- a grocery store, and took in sewing on the side She had five<lb/>
seIf some simple act and there you areguilty. children. My grandmother lived with us, pieced quilts and<lb/>
If one is guilty of being born ma certain time and place and to helped can summer vegetables. Rent for our five room house<lb/>
certain parents, then the stick fits. But one is not. Words like cost my father a week's wages. Food cost another week's wages<lb/>
chance and destiny don't help, even as an adult. The "If Only" Utilities another. We didn't own a car until I was in high school<lb/>
game can be played over and over again and it doesn't help My father walked or got rides to work, mother too. We didn't<lb/>
01 p- ?  , , ,  have indoor toilet until I was in junior high. No telephone. No<lb/>
Poverty smells like a kerosene stove. It feels like wearing television. We didn't miss the last iwo There were books and<lb/>
somebody else's clothes. It hurts like walking in shoes that fit books always helped me through anv time anv situation'<lb/>
someone else first. It tastes and looks like liver mush. I didn't go to college until I was 45 though I was an honor roll<lb/>
Wi learn phrases like "Make do" and "Do without the student in high school, most of the time straight A's and worked<lb/>
latter more than the former. The former is good times. Good half days then, too. No one talked scholarships to me In the<lb/>
times had hope and laughter. They were summer when you Fifties, girls in Southern mill towns got married made babies<lb/>
were warm all over and the garden gave good things to eat. At my 25th high school reunion, I saw us still mostly the same<lb/>
Fruits were free from trees and wild berries from the roadsides, the Haves still had, and the poor had half a dozen kids<lb/>
Those days you beleived everyone was equal. grandkids. Education had moved a few to the middle class.<lb/>
Diligence, a few more, but I could have drawn a neat line<lb/>
?through the town that's still divided by more than the railroad<lb/>
tracks.<lb/>
Poverty still stands on those tracks, looks across, up and<lb/>
down, for a way out. Poverty is always being on the edge of<lb/>
good things going on. You are never allowed to join in. You<lb/>
don't ask. Even for events that are free. You stand in the<lb/>
shadows and accept. That's the worst poverty of all accept-<lb/>
ing. r K<lb/>
Poverty is the color of a bruise; a birthmark on your soul.<lb/>
(Editor's Note: Ruth Moose of Albemarle, Rt. 2, is a poet and<lb/>
short story writer. She has published stories in Atlantic<lb/>
Monthly, Redbook, Ohio Review, Sou th Carolina Review New<lb/>
It was only when you went in stores that you discovered Delta Review, Yankee, Greensboro Review, and other places A<lb/>
different and learned to say very early to salesclerks, especially collection of short stories, 'The Wreath Ribbon Quilt " recently<lb/>
in "dime stores "I'm only looking The chance you could buy was published by St. Andrews Press. She is currently poctrv<lb/>
was small, most times none. But looking was free and full of editor of Arts Journal, and recently was the recipient of a PEN<lb/>
dreaming. Awardand a Fellowship to the University of Utah VVnter at<lb/>
If there are dreams, then poverty lossens its rope a little. You Work Series. She has published two poetry collections "To<lb/>
learn this from literature. Gertie Nevels in "The Dollmaker" Survive" and "Finding Things In the Dark ' and individual<lb/>
could give dreams because she had one herself. "A Tree Grows poems have appeared in numerous magazines)<lb/>
Poverty<lb/>
Scourge of the '80s<lb/>
,<lb/>
Man jailed<lb/>
MADISON, Wis (CIS) A<lb/>
University of Wisconsin law stu<lb/>
dent has become the only Amen<lb/>
can in prison for refusing to regis<lb/>
ter with the Selective Service Sys<lb/>
tern<lb/>
Gillam Kerley, 2b, who enti<lb/>
a plea of "not guilty by reasi<lb/>
sanity was sentenced to three<lb/>
years at Leavenworth Federal<lb/>
Penitentiary and fined $10,001<lb/>
Kerley served as the executive<lb/>
director of the Washington ba<lb/>
Committee Against Registration<lb/>
and the I r:<lb/>
While ser<lb/>
John Shaba<lb/>
tinuing cr<lb/>
"aiding, ah<lb/>
ing" other<lb/>
The law<lb/>
18-year-old <lb/>
names and<lb/>
Selective sH<lb/>
L.S's militi<lb/>
There is i4<lb/>
tration i<lb/>
Amnesty is<lb/>
LONDON (AP) Amnesty<lb/>
International, issuing its annual<lb/>
report on human rights today,<lb/>
accused the Soviet Union of harsh<lb/>
treatment of political prisoners<lb/>
and criticized the United States<lb/>
for permitting the death penalty<lb/>
The Nobel Prize-winning<lb/>
group said it had received reports<lb/>
of human rights abuses in 129<lb/>
nations last year.<lb/>
"Although it learned of fewer<lb/>
political arrests, Amnestv Inter<lb/>
national was disturbed that the<lb/>
Soviet authorities continued to<lb/>
imprison many citizens whose<lb/>
conscience had led them to dis-<lb/>
sent peacefully from official poli-<lb/>
cies, and to apply compulsor)<lb/>
psychiatric measures to others<lb/>
the survey said<lb/>
"There was no reduction in the<lb/>
number of capital offenses; at<lb/>
least eight people were executed<lb/>
and Amnestv International<lb/>
learned of a further 17 sentenced<lb/>
to death the report said of the<lb/>
Soviet Union.<lb/>
The London-based group,<lb/>
which opposes the death penalty<lb/>
said 18 people were executed in<lb/>
U.S. prisons in 1986, bringing the<lb/>
number killed since the 1976 rein-<lb/>
statement of the death penalty to<lb/>
68. A record 1,838 prisoners were<lb/>
on death row as of Dec. 20 last<lb/>
year, it said.<lb/>
Amnesty International also<lb/>
reported<lb/>
in the Ln<lb/>
treated<lb/>
Th<lb/>
men<lb/>
Th(<lb/>
sands<lb/>
lights abu<lb/>
dratt cad(<lb/>
tries<lb/>
ire<lb/>
Am- ?<lb/>
Ml:<lb/>
eluded t<lb/>
use ot amj<lb/>
punishmer<lb/>
The - :<lb/>
worl<lb/>
larlv in N<lb/>
ern Europe!<lb/>
iticall<lb/>
awav reh<lb/>
nun<lb/>
World<lb/>
sn t<lb/>
39 countnc<lb/>
tenced to<lb/>
said<lb/>
only doci<lb/>
that the &amp;d<lb/>
tainlv hic'n<lb/>
TYu<lb/>
Private colleges band toge<lb/>
(AP) ? For the first time, North<lb/>
Carolina's 37 private colleges and<lb/>
universities are banding together<lb/>
to promote themselves and some<lb/>
of their better-known alumni.<lb/>
Gov. Jim Martin, "As The<lb/>
World Turns" star Eileen Fulton,<lb/>
Olympic gold medalist Nancv<lb/>
Hogshead and golfer Arnold<lb/>
Palmer, all graduates of private<lb/>
colleges or universities in North<lb/>
Carolina, will be featured in a new<lb/>
advertising campaign by the col-<lb/>
leges.<lb/>
"This campaign is intended to<lb/>
remind the people of this state<lb/>
that some very successful people<lb/>
got their start at our independent<lb/>
colleges said John T. Henley,<lb/>
president of the N.C Center for<lb/>
Independent Higher Education.<lb/>
The campaign is sponsored by<lb/>
the center, a nonprofit organiza-<lb/>
tion that conducts research and<lb/>
promotional activities for the in-<lb/>
dependent colleges and universi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Its theme is "Success begins<lb/>
with Independents<lb/>
"This is our first cooperative<lb/>
effort Hope Williams, executive<lb/>
director of the center, told the<lb/>
Greensboro News &amp; Record<lb/>
"This campaign is one way of<lb/>
focusing on all the independent<lb/>
colleges<lb/>
The first ad appeared in Sep-<lb/>
tember issue of North Carolina<lb/>
magazine, which is published by<lb/>
the N.C Citizens for Business and<lb/>
Industry.<lb/>
The issue also features an article<lb/>
about the independent college<lb/>
sector and a profileof each institu-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Featured in the first ad are<lb/>
Martin, who graduated from<lb/>
Davidson College, and Miss<lb/>
mir<lb/>
grad<lb/>
graduati<lb/>
Greensbi rl<lb/>
in future al<lb/>
Also apf<lb/>
are the nj<lb/>
VAVSSVSA'M<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
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stort<lb/>
Octi<lb/>
75<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
50 c<lb/>
Sl.OO<lb/>
RACK<lb/>
i BRANDED SHO!<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
I Memorial Drive<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Xpen MonSat. 10-<lb/>
Sunday 1-6<lb/>
'?WWWMW<lb/>
IW<lb/>
??. ? .?y '?' uliiiiinn ajti. .??? .UBiiixw .<lb/>
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TO PROTECT<lb/>
KUWAITI<lb/>
SHIPS THAT<lb/>
AR?<lb/>
CARR9A16<lb/>
OP&amp;OIL<lb/>
TD JAPAN<lb/>
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on high court<lb/>
Pinet was<lb/>
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g the<lb/>
" ss of the<lb/>
I he duties of<lb/>
becoming so<lb/>
fu nit tor ne<lb/>
n the ne ds of<lb/>
c the cab<lb/>
on bod) for<lb/>
cabinet will<lb/>
several or-<lb/>
- ECl ad-<lb/>
'? I i gisla-<lb/>
lities which<lb/>
mposed of ambi-<lb/>
and experienced<lb/>
play a key role in<lb/>
-mas in providing a<lb/>
istrarion. i can<lb/>
t member when<lb/>
are dedicated to the<lb/>
? nt Governmenf<lb/>
0 feels he or shocnav<lb/>
- of the SGA Execu-<lb/>
r vvho would like to<lb/>
imcnt 01 stion, is<lb/>
ntact Scott Thomas<lb/>
? encourage each stu-<lb/>
ike his or her<lb/>
to the success<lb/>
Anthony D. Porceili<lb/>
Chief of Staff<lb/>
SGA Executive Cabinet<lb/>
rum<lb/>
ply in cases of<lb/>
t can't help it<lb/>
is devoured sitting in a wild cherry tree in the<lb/>
rty can live in cities. Before, I'd thought<lb/>
-hat it was like to live on "not enough<lb/>
fe. lie didn't make a living wage.<lb/>
?rked in school cafeterias, a sock mill,<lb/>
and took in sewing on the side. She had five<lb/>
other lived with us, pieced quilts, and<lb/>
? getabies. Rent for our five room house<lb/>
r s wages. Food cost another week's wages.<lb/>
I dn town a car until I was in high school.<lb/>
- i or got ndes to work, mother too. We didn't<lb/>
ilet until I was in junior high. No telephone. No<lb/>
1 didn't miss the last two. There were books; and<lb/>
nelped me through any time, any situation.<lb/>
jto college until I was 45 though I was an honor roll<lb/>
y school, most of the time straight A's and worked<lb/>
In, too No one talked scholarships to me. In the<lb/>
Southern mill towns got married, made babies.<lb/>
jigh school reunion, 1 saw us still mostly the same;<lb/>
had, and the poor had half a dozen kids,<lb/>
ration had moved a few to the middle class.<lb/>
. more, but I could have drawn a neat line<lb/>
wn that's still divided by more than the railroad<lb/>
ttl stands on those tracks, looks across, up and<lb/>
vay out Poverty is always being on the edge of<lb/>
kung on. You are never allowed to join in. You<lb/>
ken for events that are free. You stand in the<lb/>
accept. That's the worst poverty of all accept-<lb/>
he color of a bruise; a birthmark on your soul.<lb/>
)te: Ruth Moose of Albemarle, Rt. 2,is a poet and<lb/>
;nter. She has published stories in Atlantic<lb/>
Ibook, Ohio Review, South Carolina Review, New<lb/>
1 Yankee, Greensboro Review, and other places. A<lb/>
Vrt stories, 'The Wreath Ribbon Quilt recently<lb/>
' by St. Andrews Press. She is currently poetry<lb/>
Journal, and recently was the recipient of a PEN<lb/>
Fellowship to the University of Utah Writer at<lb/>
She has published two poetry collections, 'To<lb/>
'Finding Things In the Dark and individual<lb/>
jppeared in numerous magazines).<lb/>
THE EAST r AROLIN1AN OCTOBER 1.1W7 S<lb/>
The draft<lb/>
Clip-N-Save<lb/>
Man jailed for not registering<lb/>
MADISON, Wis. (CPS) - A<lb/>
University of Wisconsin law stu-<lb/>
dent has become the only Ameri-<lb/>
can in prison for refusing to regis-<lb/>
ter with the Selective Service Sys-<lb/>
tem. J<lb/>
Gillam Kerley, 26, who entered<lb/>
a plea of "not guilty by reason of<lb/>
sanity was sentenced to three<lb/>
years at Leaven worth Federal<lb/>
Penitentiary and fined $10,000.<lb/>
Kerley served as the executive<lb/>
director of the Washington-based<lb/>
Committee Against Registration<lb/>
and the Draft (CARD).<lb/>
While sentencing Kerley, Judge<lb/>
John Shabaz cited Kerley's "con-<lb/>
tinuing criminal activities" in<lb/>
"aiding, abetting and encourag-<lb/>
ing" other draft resisters.<lb/>
The law, of course, requires all<lb/>
18-year-old males to submit their<lb/>
names and other information to<lb/>
Selective Service, which runs the<lb/>
U.Ss military drafts.<lb/>
There is no draft now, but regis-<lb/>
tration opponents say the 1978<lb/>
registration law makes a draft<lb/>
possible and encourages the U.S.<lb/>
to risk war.<lb/>
CARD'S acting executive direc-<lb/>
tor, Zoltan Grossman, said the<lb/>
judge was attempting to make a<lb/>
political example of Kerley to in-<lb/>
timidate other anti-draft organiz-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
John Russell of the U.S. Depart-<lb/>
ment of Justice denied the govern-<lb/>
ment "singles out those who are<lb/>
vocally against registering for the<lb/>
draft Selective Service "ran-<lb/>
domly picks people to see if they<lb/>
are registered said Russell, "and<lb/>
Justice has no stepped-up effort to<lb/>
prosecute. We try to encourage<lb/>
people to comply<lb/>
Grossman said CARD has ap-<lb/>
plied to Amnesty International<lb/>
and the United Nations Commis-<lb/>
sion on Human Rights, urging<lb/>
Kerley's adoption as a prisoner of<lb/>
conscience. CARD has initiated a<lb/>
'campaign to free Gillam Ker-<lb/>
ley<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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LONDON (AD ? Amnesty<lb/>
International, issuing its annual<lb/>
report on human rights today,<lb/>
accused the Soviet Union of harsh<lb/>
treatment of political prisoners<lb/>
and criticized the United States<lb/>
for permitting the death penalty.<lb/>
The Nobel Prize-winning<lb/>
group said it had received reports<lb/>
of human rights abuses in 129<lb/>
nations last year.<lb/>
"Although it learned of fewer<lb/>
political arrests, Amnesty Inter-<lb/>
national was disturbed that the<lb/>
Soviet authorities continued to<lb/>
imprison many citizens whose<lb/>
conscience had led them to dis-<lb/>
sent peacefully from official poli-<lb/>
cies, and to apply compulsory<lb/>
psychiatric measures to others<lb/>
the survey said.<lb/>
"There was no reduction in the<lb/>
number of capital offenses: at<lb/>
least eight people were executed<lb/>
and Amnesty International<lb/>
learned of a further 17 sentenced<lb/>
to death the report said of the<lb/>
Soviet Union.<lb/>
The London-based group,<lb/>
which opposes the death penalty,<lb/>
said 18 people were executed in<lb/>
U.S. prisons in 1986, bringing the<lb/>
number killed since the 1976 rein-<lb/>
statement ofthe death penalty to<lb/>
68. A record 1,838 prisoners were<lb/>
on death row as of Dec. 20 last<lb/>
year, it said.<lb/>
Amnestv International also<lb/>
reported complaints of prisoners<lb/>
in the United States being ill-<lb/>
treated.<lb/>
The 129 nations listed by the<lb/>
independent group make up<lb/>
four-fifths of the United Nations<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
The 400-page report cited thou-<lb/>
sands of examples of alleged<lb/>
rights abuses, from the jailing of<lb/>
draft evaders in European coun-<lb/>
tries to government-sanctioned<lb/>
torture and killings in Latin<lb/>
America, Africa, Asia and the<lb/>
Middle East.<lb/>
Alleged atrocities cited in-<lb/>
cluded the massare of more than<lb/>
150 prisoners by Peruvian secu-<lb/>
rity forces, the execution by ston-<lb/>
ing of eight people in Iran and the<lb/>
use of amputations as a judicial<lb/>
punishment in Saudi Arabia.<lb/>
The report also accused the<lb/>
world's richest nations, particu-<lb/>
larly in North America and West-<lb/>
ern Europe, of ignoring the plight<lb/>
of political refugees and turning<lb/>
away refugees in increasing<lb/>
numbers.<lb/>
Worldwide, 743 prisoners were<lb/>
known to have been executed in<lb/>
39 countries and 1,272 were sen-<lb/>
tenced to death in 67, the report<lb/>
said. It said the figures represent<lb/>
only documented executions and<lb/>
that the actual number was "cer-<lb/>
tainly higher<lb/>
The 1987 survey gives a coun-<lb/>
try-by-country accounting of<lb/>
work hy Amnesty International's<lb/>
more than 500,000 volunteers last<lb/>
year. It said omission of some<lb/>
countries did not necessarily indi-<lb/>
cate an absence of human rights<lb/>
violations but could reflect a lack<lb/>
of information.<lb/>
The survey noted improve-<lb/>
ments during 1986 in the human<lb/>
rights records of several coun-<lb/>
tries, notable the Philippines,<lb/>
Uganda, Zimbabwe, Zaire and<lb/>
Guatemala, but it did not attempt<lb/>
to identify a worldwide trend.<lb/>
In a report on alleged ill treat-<lb/>
ment of prisoners in the United<lb/>
States, the survey said Amnesty<lb/>
International had expreessed<lb/>
concern to U.S. authorities over<lb/>
the death of Vinson Harris, who<lb/>
perished near a federal prison in<lb/>
Butner, N.C.<lb/>
"A North Carolina coroner es-<lb/>
tablished that Vinson Harris had<lb/>
died of asphyxiation after guards<lb/>
had tightly wrapped his head,<lb/>
neck and face in bandages while<lb/>
he was being transported by bus<lb/>
to a federal prison in March 1986<lb/>
it said.<lb/>
The survey also reported alle-<lb/>
gations that inmates of the peni<lb/>
tentiary at Marion,III were<lb/>
beaten by guards during a "lock-<lb/>
down" in November 1983 follow<lb/>
ing the killing of two prison<lb/>
guards by inmates.<lb/>
Private colleges band together to promote themselves<lb/>
(AP) ? For the first time. North<lb/>
Carolina's 37 private colleges and<lb/>
universities are banding together<lb/>
to promote themselves and some<lb/>
of their better-known alumni.<lb/>
Gov. Jim Martin, "As The<lb/>
World Turns" star Eileen Fulton,<lb/>
Olympic gold medalist Nancy<lb/>
Hogshead and golfer Arnold<lb/>
Palmer, all graduates of private<lb/>
colleges or universities in North<lb/>
Carolina, will be featured in a new<lb/>
advertising campaign by the col-<lb/>
leges.<lb/>
"This campaign is intended to<lb/>
remind the people of this state<lb/>
that some very successful people<lb/>
got their start at our independent<lb/>
colleges said John T. Henley,<lb/>
president of the N.C. Center for<lb/>
Independent Higher Education.<lb/>
The campaign is sponsored by<lb/>
the center, a nonprofit organiza-<lb/>
tion that conducts research and<lb/>
promotional activities for the in-<lb/>
dependent colleges and universi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Its theme is "Success begins<lb/>
with Independents<lb/>
"This is our first cooperative<lb/>
effort Hope Williams, executive<lb/>
director of the center, told the<lb/>
Greensboro News &amp; Record.<lb/>
'This campaign is one way of<lb/>
focusing on all the independent<lb/>
colleges<lb/>
The first ad appeared in Sep-<lb/>
tember issue of 'orth Carolina<lb/>
magazine, which is published by<lb/>
the N.C Citizens for Business and<lb/>
Industry.<lb/>
The issue also featuresan article<lb/>
about the independent college<lb/>
sector and a profileof each institu-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Featured in the first ad are<lb/>
Martin, who graduated from<lb/>
Davidson College, and Miss<lb/>
Hogshead, a 1984 Olympic swim-<lb/>
ming gold medalist and Duke<lb/>
graduate. Palmer, a Wake Forest<lb/>
graduate, and Ms. Fulton, of<lb/>
Greensboro College, will appear<lb/>
in future ads.<lb/>
Also appearing in the first ad<lb/>
are the names of William Earl<lb/>
Britt, chief U.S. judge for Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina, who graduated<lb/>
from Campbell University; D.<lb/>
Wayne Calloway, chairman of<lb/>
Pepsico corp Wake Forest Uni-<lb/>
versity; Vicki Chastain, mayor of<lb/>
Marietta, Ga Queens College;<lb/>
U.S Rep. Howard Coble, R-N.C.<lb/>
W<lb/>
I<lb/>
Visual Arts Committee Presents<lb/>
The Magic of Neon<lb/>
Exhibition<lb/>
For more information, contact the<lb/>
Student Union at 757-6611, ext. 210<lb/>
1<lb/>
j<lb/>
BALLOON SALE<lb/>
Place your<lb/>
order in front<lb/>
ofthe student<lb/>
store from<lb/>
October lst-6th<lb/>
75 - Latex<lb/>
$2.00 - Mylar<lb/>
501 - Delivery<lb/>
$1.00 - Delivery by Clown<lb/>
Organizations call 752-1048<lb/>
For Large Quanity Rate<lb/>
Sponsored by Leisure Systems Studies<lb/>
RACK ROOM,<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
TAKE AN<lb/>
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Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
Open MonSat. 10-9<lb/>
Sunday 1-6<lb/>
10<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(EXCEPT AIGNER. NIKE AND REEBOK)<lb/>
The report added: "Amnesty<lb/>
International wrote to the (U.S.)<lb/>
authorities expressing concern<lb/>
thatU.S. militaryassistancctothc<lb/>
irregular armed forces (Conras)<lb/>
opposing the government of<lb/>
Nicaragua may have contributed<lb/>
directly to killings, abduction and<lb/>
torture by those forces<lb/>
Commenting on soviet leader<lb/>
Mikhail Gorbachev's policy of<lb/>
Glasnost, or openness on selected<lb/>
topics, the survey welcomed<lb/>
plans to publish Soviet crime sta-<lb/>
tistics regularly for the first time<lb/>
since 1934.<lb/>
But it said conditions in prison<lb/>
and collective labor colonies<lb/>
where most prisoners of con-<lb/>
science were held remained poor.<lb/>
"Prisoners were kept on mo-<lb/>
notonous, meager rations with<lb/>
only rudimentary medical care,<lb/>
and had to meet excessively high<lb/>
work targets often involving<lb/>
heavy physical labor it said.<lb/>
 PARTY <lb/>
ANIMALS<lb/>
830-1823<lb/>
Balloons Delivered<lb/>
in Costumes<lb/>
Gorilla - Grams<lb/>
Gator - Grams<lb/>
Penguin for Hire J<lb/>
Clip-N-Save<lb/>
United tttew<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
Why not come by the REAL Crisis Intervention Center: 312<lb/>
E. 10th St; or call 758-HELP. For Free Confidential Counsel-<lb/>
ing or Assistance.<lb/>
Our Volunteers and Staff are on duty 24 nra. a day, year<lb/>
around, in order to assist you in virtually any problem area<lb/>
you might have. Our longstanding goal has always been to<lb/>
preserve and enhance the quality of life for you and our com-<lb/>
munity.<lb/>
Licensed And Accredited By The State of North Carolina<lb/>
m&amp;<lb/>
CHILDtEN,<lb/>
ANYTIME<lb/>
THEATfttS<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
756-3307 ? Grunnvillw Squarti Shopping Cinilnt<lb/>
All Movies Starting Friday<lb/>
ROLLING VENGEANCE<lb/>
f?ot pH R<lb/>
1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00<lb/>
NIGHTMARE AT SHADOW WOODS<lb/>
Rated R<lb/>
1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00<lb/>
CANT BUY ME LOVE<lb/>
Rated PG-13<lb/>
1 00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00<lb/>
STUDIO LINE<lb/>
Presents a<lb/>
Special College<lb/>
Preview<lb/>
r,<lb/>
O<lb/>
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UNITED ARTISTS PRESENTS<lb/>
DIANE KEATON In<lb/>
A NANCY MEYERSCHARLES SHYER PRODUCTION 'BABY BOOM-<lb/>
HAROLD RAMIS SAM WANAMAKER and SAM SHEPARD as JEFF COOPER<lb/>
MUSIC BY BILL CONTI Director of Photography WILLIAM A. FRAKER, A.S.C.<lb/>
Written by NANCY MEYERS &amp; CHARLES SHYER<lb/>
Produced by NANCY MEYERS Directed by CHARLES SHYER<lb/>
PG r??T ?? swssnD ? : Ik<lb/>
KTMCS<lb/>
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6th - 8:00 P.M.<lb/>
HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
Sponsored By Student Union Films Committee<lb/>
FREE STUDIO LINE SAMPLES<lb/>
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i010tu0ttlf?- ??.? ???w?nl rfWW Oumi??Km?.u?MW?W m? ?<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBFB 1<lb/>
1987<lb/>
A<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
HELP WANTED - Recphonist needed<lb/>
?or Drs office. Part-time in the after<lb/>
noons 1-5 p.m. 5 days a week. Good with<lb/>
the public and a fast learner Call 757-<lb/>
WA1TRESS, WAITERS, BANQUET<lb/>
SERVICE PERSONNEL, COOKS. The<lb/>
Hobday Inn Greenville is now hiring for<lb/>
the above positions Good working con-<lb/>
ditions, excellent benefits. Applications<lb/>
being accepted M-F9am - 5pm. No phone<lb/>
calls please. 702 S. Memorial Drive.<lb/>
TELEMARKETERS needed for Home<lb/>
Improvement Company 20 hours per<lb/>
week l-5pm M-F or 5-9pm Sun. - Th.<lb/>
Desire assertive, mature persons who<lb/>
need to work. Call 355-7108 between 1-<lb/>
8pm.<lb/>
MAKE QUICK MONEY! Earn $25 to $50<lb/>
per car buying customer sent to me Call<lb/>
Herab for details 355-5099<lb/>
PICTURE FRAMERS NEEDED. Full<lb/>
and Part-time positions available Experi-<lb/>
ence helpful but not necessary Apply in<lb/>
person only at Susan's Gallery, 1413-A<lb/>
South Evans Street<lb/>
BROD VS for men has full time and part<lb/>
time sales associates positions, for enthu<lb/>
siashc, fashion forward individuals. Re-<lb/>
tail Clothing experience is required Bet-<lb/>
ter than average starting salary Apply in<lb/>
perosn, Brody's Personnel Director,<lb/>
Carolina East Mall M-YV 2-4pm.<lb/>
BRODVS has part time sales associates<lb/>
positions for enthusiastic, out going in-<lb/>
duviduals who enjoy working with<lb/>
young contemporary Junior Fashions<lb/>
Good salary. Apply in person, Brods<lb/>
Personnel director, Carolina East Mall M-<lb/>
W, 2-4pm.<lb/>
A LEADING CLOTHING RETAILER<lb/>
needs a full-time office associate to work<lb/>
M-F 9 6. Individual must be accurate and<lb/>
posses skills in accountingbookkeep-<lb/>
ing Salary based on experience Good<lb/>
salary and benefits package Apply in<lb/>
person or call for interview appointment<lb/>
Judith C Simon, Brodv's Personnel Di-<lb/>
rector M W 2-4pm 756-2224.<lb/>
GREENHOUSE TECHNICIANS<lb/>
needed for part time employment Flex-<lb/>
ible hours Weekends and after school<lb/>
Call 756-0879.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,040<lb/>
$59"30vr. Now Hiring Call 805-687-<lb/>
6000 Ext R-1166 for current federal list.<lb/>
AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight Atten-<lb/>
dants, Travel Agents, Mechanics, Cus-<lb/>
tomer Service. Listings. Salaries to S50K<lb/>
Entry level positions Call 805-687-6000<lb/>
Ext A-1166.<lb/>
STOCKBROKER TRAINEE College<lb/>
Grad, Opportunity for hardworking, en-<lb/>
thusiastic individual, Send rusume to. P.O.<lb/>
Box 8814 Virginia Beach, VA 23450.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1980 Mazda Rx7, 5 speed, air<lb/>
conditioning, sun roof, am-fm cassette<lb/>
stereo. For more information contact Lisa<lb/>
at 758731.<lb/>
AIRBRUSHED T-SHIRTS &amp; other items<lb/>
professionally done Custom one of a kind<lb/>
?rt work Call Paul 752-2321 Also Tiedved<lb/>
T-Shirts. r<lb/>
ADOPT A PLANT Hants never wet the<lb/>
floor or eat your new Reeboks! Come to the<lb/>
Biology Club Plant Sale and adopt the<lb/>
perfect "pet See the announcement sec-<lb/>
tion for more information.<lb/>
STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF: Lowest<lb/>
prices, highest quality diskettes $.95 each,<lb/>
$9.0010. Guaranteed with sleeves, hubs,<lb/>
tabs included. Only from IMEX Oder<lb/>
Today. Call 758-8395.<lb/>
FOR SALE - Couch and chair, bed rue<lb/>
Call 752-6597. <lb/>
FOR SALE: Dance and Exercise Wear at<lb/>
discount prices. Visit our Rody Boutique at<lb/>
Total Eclipse - 422 Arlington Blvd 355<lb/>
3531.<lb/>
TUXEDO RENTALS. Low prices, high<lb/>
quality Special Fraternity and Sorority<lb/>
rates. Door to Door Service. Complete line<lb/>
of tuxedos from $40 and up. Troll's Tux<lb/>
and Tee's 757-1007 or 758-0763.<lb/>
HALLOWEEN TS. While they last get<lb/>
your Halloween '87 t-shirt We also carry<lb/>
Stop Aids and Stickin' the Pack. Or we will<lb/>
make any t shirt for any ocassion Call<lb/>
Troll's Tux and Tee's 757-1007 or 758<lb/>
0763.<lb/>
FOR SALE. Trek 400 Series Racing Bike 23<lb/>
inch frame. Price negotiable Call Danny<lb/>
ON A TIGHT BUDGET?? Try our "meal<lb/>
deal " -14 lb hamburger, hot roast beet<lb/>
chick fellet, or pizzaburger - with fries and<lb/>
drink $2.49 -Lasagna (or spaghetti)<lb/>
with salad and garlic bread 'only $3 95<lb/>
757-0731 or 757-1278 Famous Pizza -10th &amp;<lb/>
Evans (Specials not for delivery).<lb/>
LOVE JEWELRY? Call for your invita<lb/>
rion to a private showing of high quali t v.<lb/>
low cost costume jewelry If interested,<lb/>
you can host a show yourself and re<lb/>
ceive FREE jewelry Ask for Barbara at<lb/>
752-3152 between 9-5 M-F, and 756-8709<lb/>
at other hours<lb/>
TYPING AND WORD PROCESSING:<lb/>
Two copies for the pnee of one! From<lb/>
$150 a page. Also, custom signs, ban<lb/>
ners and greeting cards 752-9637<lb/>
ary. Ask about our special offers<lb/>
COMING SOON LASER PRINTING<lb/>
SYSTEM Call Mark at 757 3440 after<lb/>
7:00 p.m. for free information.<lb/>
NEED TYPING! Call758 1161 until 5 00<lb/>
PM Call 758 2119 after 5:00p.m.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSINGlctter quality<lb/>
or laser printing Rush Jobs accodpted<lb/>
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KA'S: Thanks for having us over Satur<lb/>
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are great and We Love You. Love, The<lb/>
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TRI SIGS, What away to start the<lb/>
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SIC EP PLEDGES: Troy, Chns, Ted &amp;<lb/>
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Night was an absolute blast1 You guys are<lb/>
great and I know you'll give your 110<lb/>
during pledging Good Luck Love Ya<lb/>
KP, A DZ.<lb/>
SIG EPS AND PI KAPPS You guys<lb/>
raged at the ECU Tea Party See you again<lb/>
Friday at 5 p.m. For $2 Iced Teas!<lb/>
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CHI OMEGAS - Thanks for making our<lb/>
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5 pm. every Friday at the Sheraton.<lb/>
TIM, HAPPY LATE BIRTHDAY! Hope<lb/>
you enjoyed last night as much as we did<lb/>
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ZBT BROTHERS: Just wanted to let you<lb/>
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past weekend It was a great party Love<lb/>
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COME AND HEAR the dynamic<lb/>
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Educators lend advice<lb/>
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BOSTON (AP) - Educators,<lb/>
including former University of<lb/>
North Carolina president William<lb/>
Friday, say they are taking their<lb/>
case for a more ethical, racially<lb/>
balanced and competitive nation<lb/>
to the presidential candidates of<lb/>
both parties.<lb/>
A commission of 32 higher<lb/>
education leaders plans to play an<lb/>
active role in the 1988 presidential<lb/>
campaign by briefing all the can-<lb/>
didates on a wide range of educa-<lb/>
tion and policy issues. Racial<lb/>
equality, economic competitive-<lb/>
ness and ethical standards must<lb/>
be stressed in college classrooms<lb/>
to flourish in the world at large,<lb/>
the educators said Tuesday.<lb/>
"Our purpose was to develop<lb/>
an agenda which a new president<lb/>
might find help in shaping his or<lb/>
her program for Congress, " said<lb/>
Friday, chairman of the Commis-<lb/>
sion on National Challenges in<lb/>
Higher Education, known as the<lb/>
Friday Commission.<lb/>
Higher education has tried to<lb/>
influence past political platforms,<lb/>
but participants say the<lb/>
cxrnrnission's efforts mark the<lb/>
first coordinated attempt to de-<lb/>
velop national education policy.<lb/>
Commission members, includ-<lb/>
ing Harvard University President<lb/>
Derek Bok and Ernest Boyer of the<lb/>
Carnegie Foundation, met over<lb/>
the past year, a time when elations<lb/>
between higher education and the<lb/>
Reagan administration were<lb/>
rocky at best and hostile at worst.<lb/>
Friday said the commission's<lb/>
goal is to re-establish a partner-<lb/>
ship between academia and gov-<lb/>
ernment "We had that partner-<lb/>
ship in the '60s and 70s. It isn't<lb/>
there today he said in a tele-<lb/>
phone interview Tuesday.<lb/>
"What has been a very success-<lb/>
ful long-term relationship since<lb/>
World War II between the federal<lb/>
Washington-based organization<lb/>
represents 54 of the nation's most<lb/>
prominent colleges and universi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Although the 25-page report<lb/>
will discuss the need for more<lb/>
federal spending on education,<lb/>
including an increase in student<lb/>
loan funding, Friday said: "This<lb/>
paper is not a shopping list.<lb/>
"It will obviosly take federal<lb/>
funding to do some of these<lb/>
things he said. "But the empha-<lb/>
sis will be on the institutions look-<lb/>
ing at themselves and saying<lb/>
'we've got to do some things<lb/>
too 6<lb/>
The report is still in draft form,<lb/>
but Friday said its broad outlines<lb/>
are already clear. In addition to<lb/>
equal opportunity, competitive-<lb/>
ness and ethics, the report will<lb/>
recommend:<lb/>
? Broader efforts to secure peace<lb/>
and international order in the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
?Better relations between gov-<lb/>
ernment, pnvate enterprise and<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
?Cleaning up the environment,<lb/>
improving health care and tack-<lb/>
ling substance abuse, illiteracy<lb/>
and uneven distribution of<lb/>
wealth.<lb/>
Friday said higher education<lb/>
has had a rocky relationship with<lb/>
the Reagan administration. But he<lb/>
said the report is an attempt to<lb/>
influence future policy, not criti-<lb/>
cize past or present leaders.<lb/>
"We're not pointing the finger at<lb/>
anybody he said,<lb/>
government and colleges and uni-<lb/>
versities has fallen into despair in<lb/>
the last decade or so said Robert<lb/>
M. Rosenzweig, president of the<lb/>
Association of American Univer-<lb/>
sities.<lb/>
Rosenzweig was not himself a<lb/>
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MADRIGAL DINNER;<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale tor Madrigal<lb/>
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757-0731 or 757-1278 Famous Pizza 10th &amp;<lb/>
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LOVE JEWELRY? Call for your in vita<lb/>
tiontoapnvate showing of high quality.<lb/>
low cost costume jewelry If interested,<lb/>
you can host a show yourself and re<lb/>
ceive FREE jewelry Ask for Barbara at<lb/>
752-3152 between 9-5 M-F, and 756-8709<lb/>
at other hours<lb/>
TYPING AND WORD PROCESSING:<lb/>
Two copies for the price of one! From<lb/>
$150 a page. Also, custom signs, ban<lb/>
ners and greeting cards 752 97<lb/>
PERSONAL COMPUTER<lb/>
TUTORING! Learn to use a PC! (There<lb/>
are dozens available on campus.) In-<lb/>
structions and free word processing<lb/>
software 752-9ex37.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL BUT NOT<lb/>
EXPENSIVE! Progressive Data Services<lb/>
offers professional word processing to<lb/>
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pers, dissertations, themes, reports and<lb/>
much more as low as $1 75 per page<lb/>
(Please call for quote on your project )<lb/>
Price includes printing on high quality<lb/>
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against a 50,000 word electronic diction<lb/>
ary Ask about our special offers<lb/>
COMING SCXN - LASER PRINTING<lb/>
SYSTEM Call Mark at 757 3440 after<lb/>
7:00 p.m. for free information.<lb/>
NEED TYPING! Call 758 1161 until 500<lb/>
PM CaU 758 2119 after 5:00p m<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING letter quality<lb/>
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OUR COMPANY, DELTA IMACES,<lb/>
wil produce a professional TV. News,<lb/>
Resume tape for you at a resonalbe<lb/>
price Your voice and stand-ups profess<lb/>
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dreds of news directors, consultants and<lb/>
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your area soon Call for further informa-<lb/>
tion 919933 8929<lb/>
ELECTROLYSIS (permanent removal<lb/>
of unwanted hair) bv Barbara Venters<lb/>
People who understand electrolysis will<lb/>
not wax, tweeze or use electronic<lb/>
tweezer or any other temperary<lb/>
method Isn't it time to try the perma<lb/>
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DISKJOCKIE- The imitations are sim<lb/>
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golden griKversbody movers, new<lb/>
wax, new wave, top 40, any mixer, soi<lb/>
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Contact 752 3587 I laving a party and<lb/>
need a DJ'<lb/>
SIG EP"s Don't forget the car wash on<lb/>
Sat. and the party Sat night<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24<lb/>
hours in and out Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages SDF<lb/>
Professional Computer Seravices, 106<lb/>
Easl th Street (Beside Cubbies)<lb/>
Greenville, NC 752-3694.<lb/>
PICK UP AND DELIVERY of term pa<lb/>
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wordpnvessing bv professional with 13<lb/>
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ONE BEDROOM SPECIAL Tar River.<lb/>
Estates: $150 off 1st month rent when<lb/>
signing a 12 month lease or the option to,<lb/>
sign a 9 month lease 1400 Willow St 1<lb/>
752-4225.<lb/>
WANTED Roommate or roommates<lb/>
wanted to share 2 bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Tar River Estates Preferably female. Call<lb/>
Todd at 752 3032.<lb/>
NEEDED: Female to share 2 bedroom<lb/>
apt $125 mo l 2 utilities 3 blocks from<lb/>
campus 7589381<lb/>
1 BEDROOM upstairs apartment avail<lb/>
able October 1 3 blocks from campus. All<lb/>
utilities paid $250 per month Lease &amp;<lb/>
Deposit required 7581274 after 5:00 pm<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS: Apis for Rent<lb/>
furnished Contact I lollie Simonowich<lb/>
752-2865.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
KA'S: Thanks (or having us over Satur-<lb/>
day night of Parents Weekend You guys<lb/>
are great and We Love You Love, The<lb/>
Sigmas.<lb/>
KAPPA SIGS: Polyester was great, we<lb/>
love partying with ya'll, whenever we get<lb/>
together v e always have a ball You were<lb/>
dressed to impress in your clothes worth<lb/>
a dime, let's do it again soon, it gets bette<lb/>
every time Love, The Sigmas.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS To Natalie<lb/>
Moore 1987 1988 Homecoming Repre-<lb/>
sentative of Sigma Sigma Sigma Good<lb/>
Luck! Love, The Sigmas.<lb/>
TRI SIGS, What away to start the<lb/>
semester. Rumple mint and Polyester<lb/>
Shaking and Baking and Thro win Down,<lb/>
you girls really know how to rock this<lb/>
town. We couldn't believe how fun it was<lb/>
Tn Sigs, Kappa Sigs, and a killer Buzz"<lb/>
Love, The Kappa Sigs.<lb/>
AZD PLEDCES: Don't forget about the<lb/>
cookout tonitc at 7:00 pm Be ready to<lb/>
party with the sisters alter the meeting.<lb/>
SIG EP PLEDGES: Troy, Chris. Ted &amp;<lb/>
Steve It's late, but I know you'll under<lb/>
stand Partying with you all Induction<lb/>
Night was an absolute blast1 You guvs are<lb/>
great and I know you'll give your 110<lb/>
during pledging Cotxi Luck Love Ya<lb/>
KP, A DZ<lb/>
SIG EPS AND PI KAPPS You guys<lb/>
raged at the ECU Tea Party. See you again<lb/>
Friday at 5 p.m. For $2 Iced Teas!<lb/>
CREEKS, CREEKS Tea-off" your<lb/>
weekend, Fridays 5 p.m. until close with<lb/>
16 oz. Long Island Iced Teas served in a<lb/>
mason jar for only $2 Rock at Rol and<lb/>
High Energy Dance Music. Sheraton's<lb/>
Off the Cuff Lounge<lb/>
CHI OMEGAS - Thanks for making our<lb/>
ECU Tea Party a smash Tea-off" time is<lb/>
5 pm. every Friday at the Sheraton<lb/>
TIM, HAPPY LATE BIRTHDAY! Hope<lb/>
you enjoyed last night as much as we did<lb/>
We love you - Traci it Theb.<lb/>
ZBT BROTHERS: Just wanted to let you<lb/>
guys know how much fun we had this<lb/>
past weekend It was a great party Love<lb/>
your Little Sisters<lb/>
COME AND HEAR the dynamic<lb/>
speaker, Hon Shirley Chisholm, speak<lb/>
on "Women and Work in America: Then<lb/>
and Now Monday, October 17th at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Hendrix Theater. Tickets are $2<lb/>
students, $3 facultystaff, $5 public<lb/>
door Sponsored by Student Union Fo-<lb/>
rum Committee ?<lb/>
FRESH AND HOT Call for fast free<lb/>
delivery Buy a Urge pizza, get 2 liter<lb/>
coke FREE Buy a small pizza, get 2 dnnks<lb/>
FREE Call Now - Famous Pizza 757 1278<lb/>
or 757-0731.<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL BEER LOVERS: $99<lb/>
pitches with large pizza EVERY<lb/>
NIGHT Famous Pizza - Corner 10th<lb/>
Evans 757 1278 or 757-0731<lb/>
I MADE SOME HEADWAY on whether<lb/>
it is spelled THEATER or THEATRE A<lb/>
friend told me that the French spell it K<lb/>
and the Americans spell it ER It would be<lb/>
tutu nice if you could help me out m<lb/>
this. Meet me at Wright Auditorium lor<lb/>
the North Carolina Dance Theater on<lb/>
Monday, October 5?h, at 8 00 p m I'll be<lb/>
wearing the red carnation Signed, lOO<lb/>
Natural "Art<lb/>
ATTENTION: Don't forget Alpha X,<lb/>
Delta's Happy Hour Every Wednesday<lb/>
night at Pantana's - It's the BEST excuse<lb/>
for missing Thursday's classes'<lb/>
SIC EPS: The Happy I lour Wednesday<lb/>
at Tequila Bar was a blast, has anyone<lb/>
seen my hose7 Betty Sue<lb/>
Free 8-Pack O<lb/>
"il-A Nuggets!<lb/>
OfcT A rfW.F. 8 PACK OF OIK k h<lb/>
PURCHASE ONT OF OCR CHICK F1L A<lb/>
NCGG rrs WTTH TH IS CO! IPON<lb/>
Meal. Include Chick ftl A Sandwich, or Chick fll A Nu?M. W.IW- PouUo tort- n<lb/>
 Coupon no.jK.dwHh.nyoO.nW One coupon person per vTkTsun<lb/>
I nirnllna rir m?rll<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
S.1: J Ahoruon from 13 to 18 week. ?i .ddmon.1 cod<lb/>
Pregnancy lest. Birth Control, and ProMctn Pre?ji?ncy<lb/>
Counseling For further information, call 32OS35 (toll<lb/>
frrc nurr.hcr 1 -ROD S12 s 4) baween 9am and 5 p.m.<lb/>
weekday! General anesthesia available<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ao:aiji7atiauc<lb/>
Educators lend advice<lb/>
to pres. campaign<lb/>
BOSTON (AP) - Educators,<lb/>
including former University of<lb/>
North Carolina president William<lb/>
Friday, say they are taking their<lb/>
case for a more ethical, racially<lb/>
balanced and competitive nation<lb/>
to the presidential candidates of<lb/>
both parties.<lb/>
A commission of 32 higher<lb/>
education leaders plans to play an<lb/>
active role in the 1988 presidential<lb/>
campaign by briefing all the can-<lb/>
didates on a wide range of educa-<lb/>
tion and policy issues. Racial<lb/>
equality, economic competitive-<lb/>
ness and ethical standards must<lb/>
be stressed in college classrooms<lb/>
to flourish in the world at large,<lb/>
the educators said Tuesday.<lb/>
"Our purpose was to develop<lb/>
an agenda which a new president<lb/>
might find help in shaping his or<lb/>
her program for Congress, " said<lb/>
Friday, chairman of the Commis-<lb/>
sion on National Challenges in<lb/>
Higher Education, known as the<lb/>
Friday Commission.<lb/>
Higher education has tried to<lb/>
influence past political platforms,<lb/>
but participants say the<lb/>
commission's efforts mark the<lb/>
first coordinated attempt to de-<lb/>
velop national education policy.<lb/>
Commission members, includ-<lb/>
ing Harvard University President<lb/>
Derek Bok and Ernest Boyer of the<lb/>
Carnegie Foundation, met over<lb/>
the past year, a time when elations<lb/>
between higher education and the<lb/>
Reagan administration were<lb/>
rocky at best and hostile at worst.<lb/>
Friday said the commission's<lb/>
goal is to re-establish a partner-<lb/>
ship between academia and gov-<lb/>
ernment. "We had that partner-<lb/>
ship in the '60s and 70s. It isn't<lb/>
there today he said in a tele-<lb/>
phone interview Tuesday.<lb/>
"What has been a very success-<lb/>
ful long-term relationship since<lb/>
World War II between the federal<lb/>
Washington-based organization<lb/>
represents 54 of the nation's most<lb/>
prominent colleges and universi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Although the 25-page report<lb/>
will discuss the need for more<lb/>
federal spending on education,<lb/>
including an increase in student<lb/>
loan funding, Friday said: "This<lb/>
paper is not a shopping list.<lb/>
"It will obviosly take federal<lb/>
funding to do some of these<lb/>
things he said. "But the empha-<lb/>
sis will be on the institutions look-<lb/>
ing at themselves and saying<lb/>
'we've got to do some things<lb/>
too ?<lb/>
The report is still in draft form,<lb/>
but Friday said its broad outlines<lb/>
are already clear. In addition to<lb/>
equal opportunity, competitive-<lb/>
ness and ethics, the report will<lb/>
recommend:<lb/>
? Broader efforts to secure peace<lb/>
and international order in the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
?Better relations between gov-<lb/>
ernment, private enterprise and<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
?Cleaning up the environment,<lb/>
improving health care and tack<lb/>
ling substance abuse, illiteracy<lb/>
and uneven distribution of<lb/>
wealth.<lb/>
Friday said higher education<lb/>
has had a rocky relationship with<lb/>
the Reagan administration. But he<lb/>
said the report is an attempt to<lb/>
influence future policy, not criti-<lb/>
cize past or present leaders.<lb/>
"We're not pointing the finger at<lb/>
anybody he said,<lb/>
government and colleges and uni-<lb/>
versities has fallen into despair in<lb/>
the last decade or so said Robert<lb/>
M. Rosenzweig, president of the<lb/>
Association of American Univer-<lb/>
sities.<lb/>
Rosenzweig was not himself a<lb/>
rommission member, but his<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/>
WWi you mokt pizza this ooori on? wst isn't anmanii -<lb/>
; LATE NfTE APPETITE? ?MBfeHm S<lb/>
immm I BUY ONE I<lb/>
JV PIZZA I<lb/>
 GET ONE Mil<lb/>
Buy any size<lb/>
pizza at regular pnee, get<lb/>
identical pizza FREE!<lb/>
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8:00 pm-l 1:30 pm<lb/>
(Medium ste cheese pha 2 ttemaj<lb/>
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va?a -?r couock- at oart.coating i!i Canan<lb/>
Oe ccuoor oe customer Cany Out Ovy<lb/>
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?d (Mat?ititrwaimpawmmQtifcCai<lb/>
rrxCCk?-k Expires: 10-31.57<lb/>
Buy any size<lb/>
pizza at regular price, get<lb/>
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NOUMIT<lb/>
Expires 9 30-8<lb/>
I<lb/>
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;iu lunt'S x. OiUUiS t)t<lb/>
single family homes, we can find a place for<lb/>
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SMALL MEDIUMLARGE<lb/>
8 pc 10 pc12 pc<lb/>
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iFVtmn.? Muv.?m Gnv<lb/>
Extra Items over J<lb/>
'Extra Cheese<lb/>
? I'HOOSr KtOM TrSSl TCWUNt.S<lb/>
?Tt?t,?, Must? f?ir? Urn &amp;?.?, (?<lb/>
 P??IW?. NrhlT??'twSSr,JC<lb/>
 Own ? JHw<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
Coca Cola. Diet Coke Sma? Mecium<lb/>
Sprite MeSo YeJow. 5S 66<lb/>
Cherry Coke<lb/>
70<lb/>
150<lb/>
90<lb/>
200<lb/>
I 10<lb/>
2S0<lb/>
kCavr,<lb/>
Liter<lb/>
95<lb/>
SMA11 Mf nil M<lb/>
1 19 2 <lb/>
I J9<lb/>
; n<lb/>
v IK ? V- f R ?M 'Ht Si ?(???:?,<lb/>
323 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
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CAESARS SANDWICHES"<lb/>
Tun Melt<lb/>
hafcar Sub<lb/>
Ham and Cheese<lb/>
Vegetarian<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
Tossed<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
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SPECIALTIES<lb/>
Freshly Baked Crazy Bread"<lb/>
aiud? ????, v.?, ?. l?, a 4 p<lb/>
Crazy Sauce<lb/>
p?ufv MnaAnai aaaaiu<lb/>
Am.? ???hU Jin iii,iim<lb/>
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HOURS: SUN-THU 11 AM-12 MIDNIGHT<lb/>
FRI-SAT 11 AMI AM<lb/>
Looking for an exciting and challenging<lb/>
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Station to Station Collect<lb/>
 - ,?<lb/>
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CRIMINAL JUb IJ(. 1<lb/>
???raged toregMtweari, Ms semesta<lb/>
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"vrru Take advantage ,i.<lb/>
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Stop by 312 Raw! forinJ ? ??, ,<lb/>
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mart Itts important to plan ahead a,<lb/>
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Anyone interested in .<lb/>
n me club tea<lb/>
eppert at 7 )660 Old 1<lb/>
bers welcome!<lb/>
PJVf.CLLB<lb/>
I' you enjoy scuba diving and sm<lb/>
in ft then you n?.d , ,<lb/>
COMMIT U'QSlTIQNb<lb/>
Apphcahons are now being accepted<lb/>
or students wishing to serve<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
ear Nineteen student a<lb/>
'(-?' ' ommittees will . , .<lb/>
AIDSEd Ad Hot Advisory<lb/>
OrugEd (1). Canvassing A .<lb/>
ampus (1), Internationa Student A<lb/>
Residence Life (1 off-campus) Rest<lb/>
denl Sums Appeals 0 , Status of M.non<lb/>
ta t Health Services (2) Ca<lb/>
? I ? nbhumg VA l).urricti<lb/>
turn . i ley Computer (2). General<lb/>
 Libraries (1) and Tea<lb/>
Applications .<lb/>
foil twing locations Iffi<lb/>
the Vice I hanceHor lor Student<lb/>
Whichard. Mendenhall Informa<lb/>
tesk; SGA Office. Mendenhall, and I<lb/>
" Mall Directors Ofl<lb/>
rt "it Universitv fommin. .<lb/>
berships ma U directed to rJv<lb/>
the Vir Cham ellor for Stude: ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
RV5 De.<lb/>
R343 Maul<lb/>
R223 Alial<lb/>
to Kuth j<lb/>
den<lb/>
d<lb/>
?? 7<lb/>
:<lb/>
("HAITER<lb/>
itors<lb/>
iejv.i ?<lb/>
ng pr?<lb/>
vou nuv in<lb/>
D,<lb/>
MADRIGAL DlN.NhRS<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale for Madrigal<lb/>
!nners to be held Dec 2-3 at 7 00 p m in<lb/>
Mendenhall Tickets are $10 for ECU stu-<lb/>
dents and $16 tor all others Now is the<lb/>
time to order your tickets, as thev always<lb/>
sell quickly C all the Central Ticket Of-<lb/>
.it 757-6611, ext. 266<lb/>
NEIL SIMON PLA<lb/>
1 OUGHT TO BE IN PICTURES . pl<lb/>
by Neil Simon will be part of a dinner-<lb/>
theatre production on Thurs , Oct 6 and<lb/>
Fn Oct 9 at 6:30 p m m the Mendenhall<lb/>
Auditorium Tickets are $10 (or ECU stu<lb/>
dents and $16 for all others Call the C i<lb/>
tral Ticket Office for tickets at 7 6(<lb/>
ext 266 AH tickets are b advance sales<lb/>
jjo tickc, . will be sold at the door<lb/>
I ?? Vic. ? 4  j<lb/>
SlufeWsrxoriSfoncTiir'<lb/>
vx- holding an organizational meeting at<lb/>
Wed . Sept Vi in Mendenhall<lb/>
The<lb/>
en!s th<lb/>
ith at<lb/>
Offict<lb/>
pm Mot<lb/>
jr.<lb/>
Mendi<lb/>
r Com<lb/>
ing The n <lb/>
scum ? ? - ? I<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
ERESHJ<lb/>
The ' J<lb/>
irs :wt and tr<lb/>
arshij. trr;<lb/>
.K1X.t.x. Mil<lb/>
are invited tj<lb/>
Wed . CVt<lb/>
Forfuithi <lb/>
6967 or 697<lb/>
STUDENT SPECK<lb/>
APPLIANCI<lb/>
Perfect fol<lb/>
&amp; apai<lb/>
rJlNCH<lb/>
REFRK<lb/>
 &amp; M1C1<lb/>
-4 ?Call for me<lb/>
 I hottero<lb/>
-T. C group<lb/>
LApp&amp; lcofids.<lb/>
204 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Open Mon. Sat. 10:00 a.m. 9.1<lb/>
Get Ready For the<lb/>
SPIRIT. Let Apple Record:<lb/>
Select costumes, masks,<lb/>
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ized Halloween Appearai<lb/>
our Catalog to order Youi<lb/>
characters - From Pirate's<lb/>
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today!<lb/>
Oh Yeh! Don't Forget<lb/>
"BOO<lb/>
i ???<lb/>
j<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 1, 1987<lb/>
1 KAPPS ou guvs<lb/>
rea Party Sit? you again<lb/>
01 s: Iced Teas!<lb/>
?I KS 1 i tt" vour<lb/>
is 5 p m until dose with<lb/>
d ivi Tt ?'red in a<lb/>
v $2 Rock Rol and<lb/>
e Musk SherjUn v<lb/>
ks :or making our<lb/>
i t" time is<lb/>
Sheraton<lb/>
IV BIRTHDAY! Hope<lb/>
' as m uch as we did<lb/>
I'rao &amp; Thob<lb/>
anted to let ou<lb/>
un we had this<lb/>
d) namio<lb/>
'im speak<lb/>
k Then<lb/>
17th at 8<lb/>
;ets are $2<lb/>
- h<lb/>
rum Committee.<lb/>
FRESH AND HOT Call for fast free<lb/>
delivery. Buy a large pizza, get 2-liter<lb/>
coke FREE Buv a small pizza, get 2 drinks<lb/>
FREE Call Now - Famous Pizza 757-1278<lb/>
or 757-0731.<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL BEER LOVERS: $.99<lb/>
pitches with large pizza EVERY<lb/>
NIGHT Famous Pva Corner 10th-<lb/>
Evans 757 1278 or 757-0731<lb/>
1 MADE SOME HEADWAY on whether<lb/>
it is spelled THEATER or THEATRE. A<lb/>
tnend told me that the French spell it RE<lb/>
and the Americans spell it ER It would be<lb/>
tu tu nice if vou could help me out on<lb/>
this Meet me at Wnght Auditorium for<lb/>
the North Carolina Dance Theater on<lb/>
Monday October 5th, at 8 00 p m I'll be<lb/>
wearing the red carnation Signed, 100<lb/>
Natural "Art"<lb/>
ATTENTION. Don't torget Alpha Xi<lb/>
Deltas Happv Hour Every Wednesday<lb/>
night at Pantana's It's the BEST excuse<lb/>
tor missing Thursday s classes!<lb/>
SIC EPS: The Happy Hour Wednesday<lb/>
at Tequila Bar was a blast, has anyone<lb/>
seen mv hose1 Betty Sue.<lb/>
Nuggets<lb/>
e 8-Pack Of Chick-Fil-A Nuggets!<lb/>
, m- s ufl t red s pack of chick fiua<lb/>
. (gtta w.fllr Potato Frit1 and colr?la<lb/>
? pcsaan trt vu Cki Sundays<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
?Al<lb/>
?-s?-?<lb/>
TE APPETITE? !<lb/>
MUM PIZZAS<lb/>
Onry<lb/>
When you make pizza this good, dim just isn't mough<lb/>
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236<lb/>
SMALL MEDIUM LARGE<lb/>
1 19 2 3" 3?<lb/>
: W 289 469<lb/>
1M<lb/>
Srt Mfciur- Lrter<lb/>
66 9S<lb/>
igton Blvd.<lb/>
irorr, Farm Fresh)<lb/>
"aPFCIAl TIF S<lb/>
Fresruv. ? Crav Bread<lb/>
A ?. Bm ??r ? (<lb/>
Cw. ?-?<lb/>
I ? 289<lb/>
it KYMNGS<lb/>
? - ? K ?<lb/>
1 19<lb/>
nCiHW<lb/>
36<lb/>
756-7256<lb/>
)LRS: SUN-THU 11 AM-12 MIDNIGHT<lb/>
FRI-SAT 11 AMI AM<lb/>
ihallenging<lb/>
' Many Air<lb/>
pilots and<lb/>
m.<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
9724<lb/>
K.AlWOJnK<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CBJ-MiNALJUSTlCE<lb/>
SOCWCRIM JUSTICE MAJORS are<lb/>
encouraged to register early this semester<lb/>
with the Cooperative Education Office in<lb/>
Rawl 312 Act early to meet the deadlines<lb/>
for sping andor summer, career related<lb/>
employment Take advantage of Federal,<lb/>
State, or private industry opportunities<lb/>
op by .312 Rawl for info on the nu<lb/>
merous nurse extern programs as well as<lb/>
other opportunities for summer employ-<lb/>
ment It is important to plan ahead and act<lb/>
early to meet certain deadlines<lb/>
WBr:5TLJNjCLL!B<lb/>
Anyone interested in wrestling this<lb/>
vear on the club team please call Tom<lb/>
! oppert at 752 1660 Old and new mom<lb/>
bers welcome!<lb/>
riim<lb/>
If you enjoy scuba diving and snorkel<lb/>
ing, then you need to join ECU's Coral<lb/>
Reef Dive Club For more info call 752<lb/>
4399 and ask for Qenn or Rob.<lb/>
COMMITTED POSITIONS<lb/>
Applications are now being accepted<lb/>
for students wishing to serve on Univer<lb/>
sity Committees for the 198788 school<lb/>
vear Nineteen student positions are<lb/>
open Committees with vacancies are<lb/>
AIDS Ed , Ad Hoc Advisory (1), Alcohol<lb/>
Drug Ed (1), Canvassing Soliciting on<lb/>
Campus (1), International Student Affairs<lb/>
(1), Residence Life (1 off-campus), Resi<lb/>
dent Status Appeals (1), Status of Minori<lb/>
ties (2), Student Health Services (2), Ca<lb/>
reer Ed. (1), Continuing Ed (1), Curricu-<lb/>
lum (2), Faculty Computer (2), General<lb/>
College (1), Libraries (1), and Teaching<lb/>
Effectiveness (1). Applications are avail<lb/>
able at the following locations: Office of<lb/>
the Vice Chancellor for Student Life, 204<lb/>
Whichard; Mendenhall Information<lb/>
Desk; SGA Office, Mendenhall; and Resi<lb/>
dence Hall Directors' Offices Questions<lb/>
about University Committees and mem<lb/>
berships may be directed to the Office of<lb/>
the Vice Chancellor for Student Life (757<lb/>
K541V<lb/>
MAPBIGAL!L&amp;S<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale for Madrigal<lb/>
Dinners to be held Dec 2-5 at 7:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Tickets are S10 for ECU stu-<lb/>
dents and SI 6 for all others Now is the<lb/>
time to order your tickets, as thev always<lb/>
sell quickly Call the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
at 757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
NEIL SIMON PLAY<lb/>
1OUC1 IT TO BE IN PICTURES, a play<lb/>
by Neil Simon will be part of a dinner-<lb/>
theatre production on Thurs Oct. 8 and<lb/>
Fri Oct 9 at 6:30 p.m. in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Auditorium. Tickets are $10 for ECU stu-<lb/>
dents and S16 for all others. Call the Cen-<lb/>
tral Ticket Office for tickets at 757-6611,<lb/>
ext 266. All tickets are by advance sales,<lb/>
(jjo tickets will be sold at the Joox<lb/>
3 SlilfesfeconontcTrXT'acTir<lb/>
be holding an organizational meeting at<lb/>
830, Wed , Sept. 30 in Mendenhall. -<lb/>
SDLFiPS<lb/>
Students interested in making applica-<lb/>
tion for School of Business Scholarships<lb/>
should secure forms from one of the fol<lb/>
lowing department offices: Accounting<lb/>
R325; Decision Sciences - R238; Finance -<lb/>
R343; Management RI37; Marketing<lb/>
R223. All applications must be submitted<lb/>
to Ruth Jones (Rawl 334), Chairman of<lb/>
School of Business Scholarship Commit<lb/>
tee, by October 16. 1987. Students may<lb/>
apply for one or more of the scholarships<lb/>
listed below (even when funding is pend-<lb/>
ing)<lb/>
UNIVERSITY BOOK EXCHANGE:<lb/>
$500, Academic merit. NCNB: $500, Aca<lb/>
demic merit J. FRED HAMBLEN: S350;<lb/>
Academic excellence in business law<lb/>
course and good citizenship. CREDIT<lb/>
WOMEN INTERNATIONAL: $200; Fi-<lb/>
nancial need, scholarship, and citizen-<lb/>
ship Recipient must have graduated from<lb/>
public or private high school in Pitt<lb/>
County. (Funding is pending- you may<lb/>
make application.) CAMERON<lb/>
BROWNFIRST UNION SCHOLAR<lb/>
SHIP for a deserving student specializing<lb/>
in finance, economics, real estate, or ac-<lb/>
counting 3 at $500 each (Funding is pend<lb/>
ing; you may make application.) AC<lb/>
COUNTING MAIORS ONLY: LATNEY<lb/>
W. PITTARD MEMORIAL: Annual earn<lb/>
ings of established corpus; scholarship,<lb/>
citizenship, and need. Permanent resi-<lb/>
dence of a candidate for this scholarship<lb/>
must be in Eastern North Carolina (East of<lb/>
Highway 195) or any county west of<lb/>
Highway 1-9j in which Pittard and Perry,<lb/>
lnc , maintains an office. ACCOUNTING<lb/>
MAIORS ONLY - RALEIGH DURHAM<lb/>
CHAPTER INSTITUTE OF INTERNAL<lb/>
AUDITORS $350; recipient must have at<lb/>
least 3 00 GPA, must have completed 12<lb/>
semester hours of accounting, and must<lb/>
have expressed strong interest in internal<lb/>
auditing profession. (Funding is pending,<lb/>
you may make applicationDECISION<lb/>
SCIENCE MAIORS ONLY - GRANT<lb/>
FOR DECISION SCIENCES MAJORS<lb/>
$125; scholarship, need, and citizenship.<lb/>
FINANCE MAIORS ONLY - ARCHIE R.<lb/>
BURNETTE: $600; Academic excellence<lb/>
and citizenship.<lb/>
PANCETHEATRE<lb/>
The Dept. of University Unions pres-<lb/>
ents the N.C. Dance Theatre, Mon Oct.<lb/>
5th at 8:00 pm. in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Tickets are on sale at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhall, from 11:00 a.m. - 6:00<lb/>
pm. MonFri. For further info call 757-<lb/>
6611. ext. 266.<lb/>
THE FIXX<lb/>
Major Concerts Committee is sponsor-<lb/>
ing The FIXX in concert in Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum, Oct 8th at 8:00 Tickets are on sale at<lb/>
Mendenhall. The prices are $7 for stu-<lb/>
dents and $9 for the general public.<lb/>
FRESHMENSOPHOMORFS<lb/>
The Military Science Dept. is beginning<lb/>
its two and three-year Army ROTC Schol-<lb/>
arship campaign. All students who are<lb/>
MMW ri n Army ROTGScholarship<lb/>
are invited to attend an info, session or<lb/>
Wed , Oct. 7 at 6 p.m. in room 210 Ex win<lb/>
For further info , call Capt. Mitchell at 757-<lb/>
6967 or 6974<lb/>
STUDENT SPECSAL!<lb/>
APPLIANCE CABINETS<lb/>
Fterfect for dorm rooms<lb/>
&amp; apartments<lb/>
r-JlNCUJDEsl,<lb/>
REFRIGERATOR<lb/>
&amp; MICRQWaVlS<lb/>
 Call for more information<lb/>
iJ, group<lb/>
758-0641<lb/>
I 104 CLARK STREET<lb/>
oApp. "ocofidg<lb/>
204 E. 5th St. 758-1427<lb/>
Open Mon. - Sat. 10:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
Get Ready For the Halloween<lb/>
SPIRIT. Let Apple Records Help You<lb/>
Select costumes, masks, make-up,<lb/>
and accessories For Your Personal-<lb/>
ized Halloween Appearances. Use<lb/>
our Catalog to order Your Favorite<lb/>
characters - From Pirate's costumes<lb/>
to Spuds MacKenzie masks! See us<lb/>
today!<lb/>
Oh Yeh! Don't Forget to say<lb/>
"BOO<lb/>
??whiiWiiii?????. ir ?i?wi<lb/>
<lb/>
!10Li<lb/>
Plant Sale i Ne ECU Biology Club will<lb/>
be sponsoring ?? sale Thurs Oct. 1<lb/>
and Fri Oct. 2. Th - ale will take place in<lb/>
the Biology Greenhouse, room BS-111<lb/>
from 7.V) a.m. to 1 ?0 p.m.<lb/>
LD MONTH<lb/>
October is Learning Disabilities Month<lb/>
in N.C. The Pitt County Association for<lb/>
Children and Adults with Learning Dis-<lb/>
abilities (ACLD) will meet Tues Oct. 6 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. at St. James United Methodist<lb/>
Church, 2000 E. Sixth St Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
This an open meeting. For more info<lb/>
contact Debra Kerawalla at 756-2584.<lb/>
NAVIGATORS<lb/>
FLIGI IT 730! Come and join us for fun,<lb/>
fellowship, and Bible study. Thurs. nights<lb/>
at 7:30 in Biology 103.<lb/>
LECTURE<lb/>
HON SHIRLEY CHISHOLM will be<lb/>
lecturing on "Women and Work in Amer-<lb/>
ica; Then and Now The lecture will<lb/>
begin at 8 p.m. in Hendrix Theater on<lb/>
Mon, Oct. 12. Tickets are $2 for students,<lb/>
$3 for facultystaff, and $5 for the public<lb/>
and at the door. Tickets are on sale now at<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The Gamma Beta Phi National Ilonor<lb/>
Society will have a meeting on Oct 6 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Jenkins Auditorium. Attendance<lb/>
is required and dues must be paid by Oct.<lb/>
20.<lb/>
POETRY FORUM<lb/>
The ECU Poetry Forum will meet in<lb/>
Mendenhall 248 at 8 p m Thurs Oct. 1.<lb/>
aai<lb/>
The Student Council for Exceptional<lb/>
Children will have a meeting on Thurs<lb/>
Oct. 1 in Speight in room 211 Please At-<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
BACCHUS<lb/>
Come join Bacchus (Boosting Alcohol<lb/>
Consciousness Concerning Health of<lb/>
University Students) Thurs night, Oct 1<lb/>
at 730 in Mendenhall, room 242.<lb/>
RESUME WORSHpp<lb/>
A resume workshop is being offered at<lb/>
the Career Planning and Placement Serv<lb/>
ice on Thurs Oct 1 and Fri Oct. 2 at 3<lb/>
p.m. at the Bloxton House. Worksheets<lb/>
and workbooks will be supplied.<lb/>
ORCHESTRA<lb/>
The Dept. of University Unions pres-<lb/>
ents the TONKVENSTLER ORCIIESTRA<lb/>
OF VIENNA on Tues, Oct 13 at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium Tickets are now on<lb/>
sale at Central Ticket Office, Mendenhall,<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
DISCOVERING SPAIN<lb/>
The Student Union Travel Committee<lb/>
presents the opening TRAVEL-ADVEN<lb/>
TURE film, Discovering Spain, on Thurs<lb/>
Oct. 15 in Hendrix Theatre at 8:00 p.m<lb/>
Tickets for this film are limited, but still<lb/>
available. For further info contact the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, Mendenhall, 757-<lb/>
6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS<lb/>
The Pitt County Juvenile Services Resti<lb/>
tution Program needs volunteers to su-<lb/>
pervise and interact with juveniles as they<lb/>
perform various work activities within<lb/>
the community. You may volunteer any<lb/>
number of hours per week Mon. through<lb/>
Sat. Volunteers need to be available four<lb/>
to six hours per month. For further info<lb/>
call 752 1811, ext 419.<lb/>
 BODY FAT ASSFSSMFNT<lb/>
You can have your percent body fat<lb/>
measured (free of charge) in a matter of<lb/>
minutes. I need Caucasian male subjects<lb/>
between 18 and 30 years of age for my<lb/>
thesis research study. If you meet these<lb/>
criteria, please call immediately All<lb/>
measurements will be made at the 1 luman<lb/>
Performance Lab (room 113) in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum Call Kimberly Eastman Zirkle<lb/>
at 758 2933 anytime TODAY' If not there,<lb/>
leave name and number and call will be<lb/>
returned A.S.A.P.<lb/>
SWIM MEET<lb/>
The Dept. of Intramural -Recreational<lb/>
Services will be sponsoring the annual<lb/>
swim meet. Registration will take place at<lb/>
7 p.m in Bio-102. All swimmers are urged<lb/>
to participate.<lb/>
VT1ALL<lb/>
Registration for co-rec water basketball<lb/>
will be held Oct 7 at 6 pm. in Brewster D-<lb/>
103. All faculty, staff and students are<lb/>
welcome to participate.<lb/>
NAACf<lb/>
The East Carolina Chapter of th<lb/>
NAACP will have a meeting Thurs , Oct<lb/>
1st at Mendenhall. Persons interested in<lb/>
chairing a committee should be present.<lb/>
Upcoming events will be announced also.<lb/>
ERASI<lb/>
The ERASE (Eastern Regional All<lb/>
Support and Education) Group will hold<lb/>
its monthly meeting in First Presbyterian<lb/>
Church on corner of Elm and 14th at 8 p.m<lb/>
Tues , Oct 6 If you're interested in AIDS<lb/>
education at the community level or help-<lb/>
ing persons with AIDS, or just want to<lb/>
know more for your own peace of mind,<lb/>
call Jerry at 757 3990 or Stan at 7568453 to<lb/>
get info<lb/>
ENVIRONMENTAL<lb/>
Environmental Health majors are en<lb/>
couraged to register with the Cooperative<lb/>
Ed. Office in 312 Rawl and to consider the<lb/>
Career-Related work experiences avail-<lb/>
able with the Federal and State Govern<lb/>
ments as well as private industry Don't<lb/>
miss the application deadlines<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
We will be having a regular meeting<lb/>
Wed , Oct 7 in R302 at 3 00 p m New<lb/>
members are still welcome ?Business<lb/>
and Business Education Majors.<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
Intramural one on one basketball wi.l<lb/>
hold its registration Oct 7 at 7 pm in<lb/>
Brewster DKB For more info, call 757<lb/>
6387.<lb/>
Plant Sale<lb/>
ECU Biology Club<lb/>
Thurs. Oct. 1<lb/>
Fri. Oct. 2<lb/>
7:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Biology Greenhouse<lb/>
Room Sill<lb/>
? <lb/>
if,<lb/>
<lb/>
The Pitt<lb/>
County Fair<lb/>
(Fastest Growing Fair in N.C.)<lb/>
will be in Greenville<lb/>
with its giant exposition<lb/>
all next week.<lb/>
The Largest Midway<lb/>
East of Raleigh.<lb/>
Watch Next Tuesday's<lb/>
Paper for details.<lb/>
CO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
TEA PARTY"<lb/>
Every Friday<lb/>
? $2.00 Iced Teas<lb/>
FREE N<lb/>
V<lb/>
o<lb/>
en, c<lb/>
Sheraton Greenville<lb/>
203 W. Greenville Blvd. ? 355-2666<lb/>
CROW'S NEST<lb/>
Reasonable Prices<lb/>
Complete Breakfast,<lb/>
Lunch and<lb/>
Dinner Meals<lb/>
Open 24 Hours a Day<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
Monday, Tuesday, &amp; Wednesday<lb/>
7 a.m7 p.m.<lb/>
Wear Something with E.C.U.<lb/>
letters or colors and get:<lb/>
Cheese Omelet $2.00<lb/>
with choice of grits, hashbrowns, &amp; toast<lb/>
Student Special $2.00<lb/>
with 3 Pancakes, 2 eggs &amp; a meat.<lb/>
Enjoy the game room &amp; large screen TV.<lb/>
Corner of 10th &amp; Charles St.<lb/>
758-2446<lb/>
0<lb/>
???'<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0010"/><lb/>
THf 1 Mil VHOI INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
CXTOBER 1. 1987 Pago 8<lb/>
Kole amazes audience at ECU<lb/>
By GRETCHEN JOURNIGAN<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
"I stand here in amazement and<lb/>
wonder how 1 do that says fa-<lb/>
mous illusionist, Andre Kole.<lb/>
Kole performed many of his<lb/>
own illusions Wednesday night<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium. Through<lb/>
his work asan entertainer, he tells<lb/>
others his spiritual testimony.<lb/>
As the light bulb disappeared<lb/>
from under the red silk scarf, Kole<lb/>
explained how Jesus Christ rose<lb/>
from the grave Faster morning in<lb/>
order to save man from sin.<lb/>
"Religions are a dime a dozen<lb/>
but Christianity is a relationship<lb/>
with God said Kole.<lb/>
He performed other original il-<lb/>
lusions such as "the crazy lady"<lb/>
and "the Bermuda Triangle<lb/>
Kole appeared to cut his assis-<lb/>
tant, Cathy, into three pieces<lb/>
without blood shed and Kole<lb/>
himself disappeared from a trian-<lb/>
gular box.<lb/>
Oscar, the mind reading duck,<lb/>
performed a card trick with a<lb/>
volunteer from the audience.<lb/>
As Kole walked around the<lb/>
audience, he collected coins from<lb/>
people's noses and ears into his<lb/>
tin can.<lb/>
He also made a replica of the<lb/>
Statue of Liberty disappear from<lb/>
the stage by removing a purple<lb/>
curtain which covered it.<lb/>
Sophomore Michael Holton<lb/>
said, "The show itself was really<lb/>
entertaining and unexplainable<lb/>
but the spiritual aspects of his life<lb/>
testimony were outstanding<lb/>
Pitt County fair opens Oct. 5<lb/>
By GRFTCHFN JOURNIGAN<lb/>
Opening its 68th season Oct. 5,<lb/>
the Pitt County legion Agricul-<lb/>
tural Fair will feature creative<lb/>
exhibits, thrilling rides and<lb/>
grandstand shows.<lb/>
Organizations in Pitt and sur-<lb/>
Andre Kole brought illusion and spiritual testimony to F.CV in his<lb/>
performance in Wright Auditorium Tuesday night.<lb/>
Pro wrestling missing action<lb/>
ByCHIPFYBONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Wnter<lb/>
The floor of the Rose high<lb/>
svhool gvm is smothered in card-<lb/>
board. The bulletin board in the<lb/>
hall yellsout "Math is Fun in red<lb/>
v instruction paper. Jaycoes are<lb/>
selling three ounce cups o( Sprite.<lb/>
Obviously, it must be the set-<lb/>
ting for a night of professional<lb/>
wrestling.<lb/>
On the card tonight are some ot<lb/>
the  well, medium names in the<lb/>
sport. Names like Gorgeous<lb/>
limmy Garvin. Lazertron. Thud-<lb/>
erfoot One and Two. Nothing in,<lb/>
say, Cyndi Lauper's class. But<lb/>
still, it's a real live pro wrestling<lb/>
event here in Greenville.<lb/>
Who showed up at the match?<lb/>
Kids. Kids that watch a lot of<lb/>
"ALF Kids that spend 10 bucks<lb/>
on black t-shirts with Magnum<lb/>
TA's face and upper body on<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Parents. Parents who are so<lb/>
tired of watching thai furry little<lb/>
bastard from space that they tork<lb/>
out nine dollars a head to get<lb/>
away from the television set Nine<lb/>
dollars to take the kids to see<lb/>
overweight, nearly naked men<lb/>
with masks pick each other oil the<lb/>
floor by their tights<lb/>
Moms who wish they could use<lb/>
the sleeper hold on the kids. Dads<lb/>
who are audibly distressed when<lb/>
Garvin's girlfriend walking<lb/>
mannequin Previous doesn't en<lb/>
ter the building.<lb/>
Old people Old people who<lb/>
didn't mind watching "AITand<lb/>
have used their Efferdent mone)<lb/>
to buy a ticket that allows them to<lb/>
attempt to sleep while over 85<lb/>
kids are screaming "Chokehold!<lb/>
Strangler<lb/>
Fat girls. Fat girls in lighl t<lb/>
shirts who stomp their feet, buck<lb/>
ling the already weak bleachers,<lb/>
when the Italian Stallion wiggles<lb/>
his embroidered underwear at<lb/>
them<lb/>
And what goes on at the center,<lb/>
in the middle of the canvas stage?<lb/>
A lot of yelling. A lot of abuse<lb/>
directed at the blatantly ignorant<lb/>
referee, because he didn't see that<lb/>
mean bad guy pull the 310 pound<lb/>
good guy's hair. Awww.<lb/>
Wrestlers di veout of the ring an<lb/>
average of two times a bout. Every<lb/>
time, four Greenville police slide<lb/>
up the aisies, presumably to keep<lb/>
the kids from spilling their drinks<lb/>
on the fighters.<lb/>
Only once did a wrestler get<lb/>
knocked into the seats. A little<lb/>
rednecked kid kicked him, but a<lb/>
cop saw it and the kid got booted<lb/>
from the gym.<lb/>
Current favorites this season<lb/>
are Lazertron and. theMod Squad.<lb/>
I -aze dresses like the old Japanese<lb/>
Godzilla-fighter, Ultra Man, and<lb/>
he does a lot of somersaults in the<lb/>
ring. Rumors abound that he is<lb/>
See WRESTLING, page 10<lb/>
rounding counties will exhibit<lb/>
special inbterests in agriculture,<lb/>
industry, science, art and educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Agricultural exhibits will in-<lb/>
clude "prize" livestock.<lb/>
The W.C. Eagles Farm<lb/>
Homc,ead,famed village, will<lb/>
exhibit ideas pertaining to family<lb/>
life as related to agriculture, edu<lb/>
cation and general family living at<lb/>
the turn of the century and be-<lb/>
yond.<lb/>
Making its 32nd appearance at<lb/>
the Pitt County Fair, Amuse-<lb/>
ments of America will provide<lb/>
over 30 rides, shows, funhouscs<lb/>
and concessions.<lb/>
Special appearances includes<lb/>
Herriotfs European Trained Ani-<lb/>
mal Circus owned by John Hcr-<lb/>
riot, former Ringling Brothers,<lb/>
Barnum and Bailey ringmaster.<lb/>
Circus shows are free with gen-<lb/>
eral aadmission and will present<lb/>
two 45 minute shows nightly<lb/>
Tuesday through Saturday. It is<lb/>
being sponsored by Coca Cola<lb/>
bottling Company and Domino's<lb/>
Pizza, both of Greenville.<lb/>
Also, featured with the circus<lb/>
will be Commerfords Petting Zoo<lb/>
and Circus Menagarie that is free.<lb/>
The fair is presenting a new<lb/>
auto thrill show, "Hollywood<lb/>
Stunt Worid dreeted by-ahc<lb/>
famed Jack Kotchman.<lb/>
At the grandstand, other thrill<lb/>
shows will include The Monster<lb/>
Beech Nut Crusher which will be<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday nights<lb/>
at 7 p.m also free with general<lb/>
admisssion.<lb/>
The Buck Swamp Kicking<lb/>
Cloggers will present a free folk<lb/>
festival on the fair midway en-<lb/>
trance, from Monday through<lb/>
Friday nights at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Midway music will be pro-<lb/>
vided by the antique carnival<lb/>
band organ, "Carrousel Queen"<lb/>
during the week.<lb/>
Fair Manager Elvy K. Forrest<lb/>
said that preparations have been<lb/>
under way since the first of the<lb/>
vear to make this fair the best ever.<lb/>
Thursday, Oct. 8, ECU and Pitt<lb/>
Community College students will<lb/>
See FAIR, page 10<lb/>
The master illusionist has enter-<lb/>
tained the globe through 7 world<lb/>
tours during his career He has<lb/>
traveled extensively through cit<lb/>
ies in Japan and India.<lb/>
Kole doesn't claim to have su<lb/>
pernatural powers He said "Any<lb/>
8 year-old could perform my illu-<lb/>
sions with 15 years of practice<lb/>
Kole said, 'There's not much to<lb/>
be said but a lot to be seen<lb/>
He is a consultant for David<lb/>
Copperfield and has worked with<lb/>
other professionals in his field of<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Kole has written books explain-<lb/>
ing why and how he invented his<lb/>
famous illusions and his spiritual<lb/>
testimony , "Miracles or Magic?"<lb/>
He is a staff member of Campus<lb/>
Crusade for Chnst<lb/>
Joe Shrader, member of the<lb/>
crusade, said that Kole is a unique<lb/>
individual and he presented good<lb/>
Christian entertainment for the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
During Kole's career, he was<lb/>
once involved with the Federal<lb/>
Trade Commission proving that<lb/>
psychic surgeons in other coun-<lb/>
tries created false illusions of<lb/>
healing the terminally ill<lb/>
Kole's show was sponsonxi bv<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ, In-<lb/>
ter-Varsity, and Navigators.<lb/>
'The Principal' lacks a realistic ruler<lb/>
By CHRIS MITCHELL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Christopher Cain's "The Princi-<lb/>
pal" promotes itself as a realisic<lb/>
view into a problem high school.<lb/>
Although the film's realism is<lb/>
questionable, Cain has directed a<lb/>
film full of interesting characters<lb/>
and excellent camera usage.<lb/>
"The Principal's" drawing<lb/>
power comes from actors James<lb/>
Bolushi and LouisGossett Jr. Crit-<lb/>
ics have favored Bolushi for vari-<lb/>
ous supporting roles in comedv<lb/>
while Gossett has won both criti-<lb/>
cal acclaim as well as Academy<lb/>
and Emmy awards.<lb/>
The film centers on Belushi as<lb/>
Rick Latimer, an educator fixed in<lb/>
a frat lifestyle. Latimcr's attitude<lb/>
has destroyed his marriage and<lb/>
his career. As the school board<lb/>
realizes Latimcr's position, they<lb/>
straddle him with Brandel High.<lb/>
Latimer accepts the position of<lb/>
principal at the city's most-feared<lb/>
high school.<lb/>
Brandel High has flourished by<lb/>
having the most delinquents<lb/>
shuffled from other schools and<lb/>
the most fearful teachers who<lb/>
have fallen to educating only<lb/>
those who want to be educated.<lb/>
Latimer soon understands school<lb/>
policies through the head of secu-<lb/>
rity,JakePhillps(Gossett)? poli-<lb/>
cies that allow Brandel to expel<lb/>
students only if thev comit felo-<lb/>
nies. The school's location and<lb/>
student body have eventually<lb/>
adusted school policies to the<lb/>
standared of an education in Be<lb/>
ruit.<lb/>
Much of the film's characters<lb/>
and actions deal in extremes. La-<lb/>
timer attempts to make THF BIG<lb/>
DIFFERENCE in turning around<lb/>
the attitudes of students ami<lb/>
teachers. The film's theme takes<lb/>
tough love to the limits. "The<lb/>
Principal" bringsout nearly every<lb/>
parent's nightmare in Brandel<lb/>
types. Disrespect for teachers and<lb/>
other students, vandalism, illegal<lb/>
drugs and violence fill the school.<lb/>
To what extent Brandel is rypi<lb/>
cal is hard to determine; the media<lb/>
Again, The Principal" takes<lb/>
place in an impoverished part of<lb/>
the city where crime brings the<lb/>
biggest profits. If the film does not<lb/>
exaggerate the problems just to<lb/>
obtain the price of a ticket, then<lb/>
why do the hoods bother to con-<lb/>
tinue school? Why not get out into<lb/>
the real world of crime a few years<lb/>
early?<lb/>
Also, "The Principal" does not<lb/>
fall into the rut of pulling down<lb/>
the sheets to get its R rating. (The<lb/>
language and violence provide<lb/>
the R.) Litimer does not get in-<lb/>
volved with the history teacher to<lb/>
provide an overused romantic<lb/>
subplot. Instead the story follows<lb/>
Latimer tring to make the Big<lb/>
Difference ? helping the few<lb/>
students that really want to learn.<lb/>
There are no "good" students at<lb/>
dominate the film as much as the<lb/>
characters. Violence and potential<lb/>
riots require various camera<lb/>
angles and movements edited<lb/>
together so that action is dynamic<lb/>
and understood. The final chase<lb/>
scene in the girl's showers winds<lb/>
through a maze of stalls, swinging<lb/>
doors and water pipes.<lb/>
"The Principal" relies on a fast-<lb/>
moving plot and intense charac-<lb/>
ters. Only the question of realism<lb/>
hampers the film but overall pro-<lb/>
vides a longer look into the worst<lb/>
of schools, longer than most news<lb/>
shows allot.<lb/>
Rick Latimer (Jim Belushi) tries to help a student out in "The Princi-<lb/>
pal, now playing at the Plitt Theaters.<lb/>
have recognized such extremes as Brandel, only a few who want a<lb/>
being common to many urban<lb/>
high schools. Is the film's degree<lb/>
of extremes realistic? Students sell<lb/>
and use drugs in the hallway,<lb/>
students assault the principal and<lb/>
one student openly pulls a gun on<lb/>
him. Such blatant acts are treated<lb/>
as extreme for the principal and<lb/>
the audience; never does anyone<lb/>
notify the police or punish the stu-<lb/>
dents. The attempted rape of a<lb/>
teacher is the exception, yet the<lb/>
student never showed any reason<lb/>
for the assault<lb/>
better life but still make mistakes.<lb/>
Perhaps the only casting flaw<lb/>
might be Rae Dawn Chong as<lb/>
Miss Orozco, the history teacher.<lb/>
She is just a little too clean, too<lb/>
pretty, too naive to be a teacher-<lb/>
smart at Brandel High. The core of<lb/>
the talent rests with the actors<lb/>
portraying students. Most use<lb/>
"The Principal" to showcase<lb/>
skills barely exposed in a few-<lb/>
other films.<lb/>
The editing and set design<lb/>
From the Not So Right<lb/>
Pat lost without Mon. football<lb/>
ByPATMOLtOY<lb/>
Fall TV prediction: Video rentals the deal<lb/>
ByMICAH HARRIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the tradition of tabloids at<lb/>
better check-out counters all over<lb/>
the world, the East Carolinian is<lb/>
proud to present its 1987 Fall-TV<lb/>
preview.<lb/>
William Conrad, former fat<lb/>
detective, "Cannon is back 15<lb/>
years later in "Jake and the Fat<lb/>
Man Former "Riptide" star, Will<lb/>
Penny, plays Jake. Conrad<lb/>
playswell, let's just say the char-<lb/>
acters will each be more readily<lb/>
identifiable than "Starsky and<lb/>
Hutch 1 would tell you to keep<lb/>
an eye out for this show, but with<lb/>
Conrad on the program, that<lb/>
would beakintoanadmonition to<lb/>
not trip over a beached whale.<lb/>
"P.M. Magazine" will attempt<lb/>
to appeal to more of 2020's audi<lb/>
ence while maintaining its family<lb/>
orientation. Look for typical seg-<lb/>
ments on hang-gliding, Vanna<lb/>
White and stamp collecting to<lb/>
play along side new material on<lb/>
gay brothels, inmates on death's<lb/>
row and the mentally disturbed.<lb/>
On Fridays, CBS is running<lb/>
"Beauty and the Beast" starring<lb/>
"Terminator" babe, Linda Hamil-<lb/>
ton. Similar to "St. Elsewhere's"<lb/>
star William Daniels loaning his<lb/>
voice to "K.I.T.T" on "Night<lb/>
Rider "Golden Girls star, Bea<lb/>
Arthur will loan her face to the<lb/>
Beast.<lb/>
PBS will reportedly "put the fun<lb/>
back in" "Wall Street Week"<lb/>
when Candid Camera's Alan<lb/>
Funt, joins the staff. Look for a lot<lb/>
of whoopee cushions, talking<lb/>
mailboxes and fake doggy do-do<lb/>
to be interspersed among those<lb/>
Dow-Jones averages.<lb/>
Trying to top last year's "it was<lb/>
only a dream" leg-pull opening,<lb/>
"Dallas" producers have come up<lb/>
with something to both surprise<lb/>
the fans and remind the cast<lb/>
they're not indispensable.<lb/>
While that ol' beautiful<lb/>
dreamer, Pam Ewing, snoozes<lb/>
during her hospital recovery, her<lb/>
latent psychic powers warp real-<lb/>
ity, turning the "Dallas" charac-<lb/>
ters into the cast from her favorite<lb/>
show, "Leave It To Beaver Bar-<lb/>
See FALL, page 10<lb/>
My life has been hell. And if s<lb/>
not your bask, everyday, fire-<lb/>
and-brimstone, burn-forever<lb/>
type of hell, either. Mine is worse.<lb/>
It all started two weeks ago,<lb/>
when I learned the players of the<lb/>
NFL were planning to strike if<lb/>
their monetary demands were not<lb/>
met.<lb/>
"Fairenough I thought, "If the<lb/>
guy next to me was raking in $1.3<lb/>
million per year to throw a foot-<lb/>
ball, and I was paid only $870,000<lb/>
to catch it, I guess I'd tell those<lb/>
unreasonable idiots in the front<lb/>
office to stuff their cash, too.<lb/>
After all, integrity is the name of<lb/>
that game.<lb/>
Next came Monday night, and<lb/>
the understanding that my<lb/>
newly-purchased waveless wa-<lb/>
terbed was not. This revelation<lb/>
came to me after I downed 14<lb/>
shots of Cuervo Gold, three<lb/>
Bud weisers, one Margarita and a<lb/>
taco. Not at the same time.<lb/>
My apparent discomfort on<lb/>
Tuesday morning did not elicit<lb/>
much sympathy from professors,<lb/>
thougha few did remark that they<lb/>
appreciated the sun glasses I wore<lb/>
throughout class.<lb/>
The glasses, inddentally, were<lb/>
donated bv mv mommafr. Cnr-<lb/>
don, who spent much of that<lb/>
Tuesday surgically attached to an<lb/>
oxygen tank ? the result of<lb/>
spending Monday night surgi-<lb/>
cally attached to a keg. My, but<lb/>
we're all getting old.<lb/>
Survival is the name of that<lb/>
game.<lb/>
On Wednesday, I developed<lb/>
such a craving for Chinese food I<lb/>
would have killed anything re-<lb/>
sembling a wonton. Exactly what<lb/>
a wonton is, nobody knows; but<lb/>
then, I was going to eat until I<lb/>
found one.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the restaurant at<lb/>
which I conducted my search<lb/>
seemed to have even less knowl-<lb/>
edge than I about the all-elusive<lb/>
wonton. I'm not certain, but I<lb/>
could swear my Moo Goo Gai Pan<lb/>
was nothing more than a melted -<lb/>
down can of Cheese Whiz with a<lb/>
healthy dose of mustard.<lb/>
My waiter did little to alleviate<lb/>
the stress I was feeling. "Sir, I'm<lb/>
sure if s just a slightly different<lb/>
style than what you're used to. I<lb/>
think you'll enoy it if you give ita<lb/>
chance<lb/>
My philosophy is simple: either<lb/>
the food is Chinese, or it ain't<lb/>
Style simply doesn't fit into my<lb/>
philosophy. I expressed as much<lb/>
to mv friendly waiter, who one<lb/>
again insisted I give it a whirl<lb/>
"Fine I 3aid, "why don't you<lb/>
waddle over there and get me a<lb/>
Chinese fork so 1 can try this<lb/>
glop<lb/>
The doctor released me on Sat-<lb/>
urday, with strict orders to neve?<lb/>
again mix mustard with Cheese<lb/>
Whiz. "That shif 11 kill ya, boy<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
I spent the rest of that Saturday<lb/>
lying around the house and turn-<lb/>
ing off the television whenever a<lb/>
Kraft Cheese commercial ap-<lb/>
peared.<lb/>
1 don't even know the name to<lb/>
that game.<lb/>
Finally, Sunday rolled around.<lb/>
And, as promised, the guys were<lb/>
simply not going to play any ball.<lb/>
I spent the afternoon watching<lb/>
Martina Navrattlova (you try to<lb/>
spell it) and Stephi Graff chase a<lb/>
ball around a court for a couple of<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
All was not lost, though. 1 found<lb/>
that by sucking up a few golden<lb/>
sodas, and then standing on my<lb/>
head while watching television,<lb/>
notonlydid I get an amazing look<lb/>
up Steffi's skirt, but Martina bears<lb/>
a mean likeness to Lawrence<lb/>
Taylor.<lb/>
If s the truth, I swear to God<lb/>
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Finally, Sunday rolled around<lb/>
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simply not going to play any ball.<lb/>
I spent the afternoon watching<lb/>
Martina Navratilova (you try to<lb/>
spell it) and Stephi Graff chase a<lb/>
ball around a court for a couple of<lb/>
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All was not lost, though. I found<lb/>
that by sucking up a few golden<lb/>
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head while watching television,<lb/>
not only did I get an amazing took<lb/>
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JO THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 1, 1987<lb/>
Dinner Theatre shows Simon<lb/>
Neil Simon's "I Ought To Be In<lb/>
Pictures" will be served up as<lb/>
Dinner-Theatre on October 8th<lb/>
and 9th at &amp;30 p.m. in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center. This play,<lb/>
called "a finely tuned blend of<lb/>
hilantv and honesty will be<lb/>
Staged by the Alpha-Omega Play-<lb/>
ers of Rockport, Texas. This is the<lb/>
same troupe that has staged such<lb/>
hits as "The Good Doctor "Any<lb/>
Wednesday" and "Last of The<lb/>
Red Hot Lovers" previously at<lb/>
Hast Carolina University's Din-<lb/>
ner-Theatre.<lb/>
Simon's credits read like a<lb/>
who's who of American theatre.<lb/>
He has penned such blockbusters<lb/>
as "Barefoot in the Park "Chap-<lb/>
ter Two "Biloxi Blues "Prom-<lb/>
ises, Promises 'The Goodbye<lb/>
Girl" and "The Odd Couple "I<lb/>
Ought To Be In Pictures" is a<lb/>
unique father-daughter relation-<lb/>
ship of discovery.<lb/>
The author charms hisaudience<lb/>
with a delightful combination of<lb/>
humor and poignancy by de-<lb/>
picitng a fading Hollywood<lb/>
scriptwriter who walked out on<lb/>
his Brooklyn wife and two chil-<lb/>
dren 16 years before. The plot<lb/>
unfolds when his 19-year-old<lb/>
tomboy daughter drops in on him<lb/>
out of the clear, blue California<lb/>
sky.<lb/>
The Department of University<lb/>
Unions will sponsor the Dinner-<lb/>
Theatre. Tickets for this event<lb/>
may be purchased at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center, East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity, Greenville, N.C 27858-<lb/>
4353, or by calling (919) 757-6611,<lb/>
ext. 266. Office hours are 11:00<lb/>
a.m6:00p.m Monday through<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Dinner-Theatre ticket prices are<lb/>
$16.00 for general public and<lb/>
$10.00 for ECU students. For tick-<lb/>
ets and further information, write<lb/>
or call the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
during business hours.<lb/>
Playhouse leaves it to 'Jane<lb/>
Greenville ? Leave it to<lb/>
lane the musical with Jerome<lb/>
Kern melodies that became a New<lb/>
York hit in 1920 and again in 1959,<lb/>
will open the East Carolina Play-<lb/>
house 1987-88 season. Perform-<lb/>
ances will be October 7, 8, 9, 10<lb/>
and 12intheMcGinnisTheatreon<lb/>
the East Carolina University cam-<lb/>
pus at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
"Leave it to Jane" is one of the<lb/>
most enduring favorites of<lb/>
American theatrical history. It<lb/>
first gained popularity in 1904 asa<lb/>
straight comedy by George Ade,<lb/>
called "The College Widow<lb/>
Around 1920 its tale of a campus<lb/>
flirt's interference in the football<lb/>
rivalry of two mid-western col-<lb/>
leges was turned into the present<lb/>
musical by the redoubtable trio of<lb/>
Bolton, Wodehouse and Kern -<lb/>
Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse<lb/>
taking care of the book and lyrics<lb/>
and Jerome Kem, who was later to<lb/>
compose the tunes for "Show-<lb/>
boat supplying the music.<lb/>
The rivals in "Leave it to lane"<lb/>
are two fictitious institutions<lb/>
called Atwater and Bingham Col-<lb/>
leges. Things look poorly for dear<lb/>
old Atwater as the fall term be-<lb/>
gins, because Bingham is due to<lb/>
field an awesome new quarter-<lb/>
back named Billy Bolton. But as<lb/>
Bolton passes through town on<lb/>
his way to enroll at Bingham, of<lb/>
which his father is a fanatically<lb/>
loyal alumaui, he is lured by Jane<lb/>
Witherspoon, the flirtatious "col-<lb/>
lege widow" daughter of<lb/>
Atwater's president, to switch to<lb/>
her daddy's team.<lb/>
The invincible Bolton is all set to<lb/>
score touchdown after touch-<lb/>
down for good old Atwater when<lb/>
his father turns up for the big<lb/>
game. Outraged at seeing his son<lb/>
wearing the wrong-colored jer-<lb/>
sey, Papa tries to stop the game.<lb/>
Romantic and athletic complica-<lb/>
tions keep the play's plot bub-<lb/>
bling and the songs bouncing.<lb/>
Performances of "Leave it to<lb/>
Jane" will take place October 7,8,<lb/>
9, 10 and 12 at 8:15 p.m. in the<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre in the Messick<lb/>
Theatre Arts Center, corner of<lb/>
Fifth and Eastern Streets, on the<lb/>
East Carolina University campus.<lb/>
Season tickets for the 1987-88<lb/>
season will be available through<lb/>
October 12. For only $20.00 you<lb/>
receive one reserved seat ticket<lb/>
for all five Playhouse produc-<lb/>
tions. Along with "Leave it to<lb/>
lane the Playhouse will include:<lb/>
"Lovers and Other Strangers"<lb/>
? November 18-21<lb/>
"The Lark" ? February 10-13<lb/>
"Terra Nova" ? March 28-31<lb/>
EC Dance Theatre ? April 15,<lb/>
16, 18, and 19<lb/>
Single tickets for "Leave it to<lb/>
Jane" will go on sale September 30<lb/>
and are priced at $10.00 for the<lb/>
general public, $8.00 for ECU stu-<lb/>
dents, and $8.00 for groups of ten<lb/>
or xuufe , ant .jn.  Vi. rWMWI<lb/>
All tickets may be charged on<lb/>
VISA or Mastercard by telephon-<lb/>
ing the box office (919) 757-6390,<lb/>
or may be purchased at the<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre Box office from<lb/>
10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday<lb/>
through Friday and until 8:3C<lb/>
p.m. on performance days.<lb/>
These three performers are rehearsing a scene from "I Ought to Be In Pictures tl e Nei<lb/>
be performed at a dinner theater Oct. 8 and 9 at Mendenhall.<lb/>
FBI suspected Hemingway, others, of leftist conspiracies<lb/>
Houston writes about youth<lb/>
Skip the rather philosophically-<lb/>
fuzzy prologue to this collection<lb/>
of pieces of "more or less true<lb/>
recolections o( kinship" and<lb/>
move right into "Prunepickcr<lb/>
Author James D. Houston re-<lb/>
ally shines here as he details the<lb/>
way he was - or says he was - back<lb/>
in 1951 and trying to cam a spot on<lb/>
the football team at a small Texas<lb/>
college.<lb/>
"In the America of my vouth,<lb/>
the curse of being too small was<lb/>
that you could not go out for foot-<lb/>
ball he ruefully recalls. "The<lb/>
curse of being six-foot-two was<lb/>
out for football, for fear your very<lb/>
manhood would be questioned<lb/>
Urged on by "my favorite and<lb/>
most influential uncle, who be-<lb/>
lieved in football with all his heart<lb/>
and never had the chance to<lb/>
play Houston gave the game his<lb/>
best shot. But his heart wasn't in it<lb/>
and he dropped out under cir-<lb/>
cumstances that the reader will<lb/>
find both funny and sad.<lb/>
A variety of other pieces in "The<lb/>
Men in My Life" deal with men<lb/>
Houston has encountered and<lb/>
who have influenced him one<lb/>
way or another as he has pro-<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)-Ernest<lb/>
Hemingway, Tennessee Wil-<lb/>
liams, Norman Mailer and doz-<lb/>
ens of other American authors<lb/>
were placed under FBI surveil-<lb/>
lance because of writings or ac-<lb/>
tivities deemed subversive, ac-<lb/>
cording to two magazine articles.<lb/>
Herbert Mitgang, writing in<lb/>
The New Yorker, and Natalie<lb/>
Robins, whose article appears in<lb/>
The Nation, based the articles on<lb/>
FBI files they obtained separately<lb/>
under the Freedom of Informa-<lb/>
tion Act.<lb/>
Mitgang's article in the October<lb/>
5 issue said writers under surveil-<lb/>
lance by the FBI included Sinclair<lb/>
Lewis and Pearl Buck, criticized<lb/>
for promoting black civil rights;<lb/>
John Steinbeck, accused of tar-<lb/>
nishing the nation's image, and<lb/>
Truman Capote, deemed a sup-<lb/>
porter of the Cuban revolution.<lb/>
Other authors named were<lb/>
Thomas Wolfe, Carl Sandburg,<lb/>
Nelson AlgTen, John Dos Passos,<lb/>
William Faulkner, Thornton<lb/>
? w?deTmr wjffrTWUttHwn<lb/>
ingway was considered by the FBI<lb/>
to be a drunk with possible Com-<lb/>
munist leanings, Mitgang said.<lb/>
Although the documented sur-<lb/>
veillance occurred from the 1930s<lb/>
to the 1960s, Mitgang concluded<lb/>
that "apparently the practice is<lb/>
continuing" - a charge vehe-<lb/>
mently denied Tuesday by an FBI<lb/>
spokesman.<lb/>
None of the more than 50 writ-<lb/>
ers whose files were obtained was<lb/>
convicted of any crime attributed<lb/>
to them by the FBI or other federal<lb/>
agency, The New Yorker article<lb/>
said.<lb/>
that you could not avoid going gressed through the years.<lb/>
Fall TV falls back 20 years<lb/>
Cont. from page 8<lb/>
bara Billingsley as Miss Ellie,<lb/>
Tony Dow as Bobby Ewing, Ken<lb/>
Osmond as J.R. and Jerry Mathers<lb/>
as Cliff Barnes. Turns out it's all<lb/>
just another plot of J.Rs to get<lb/>
Bobby "to give him the business<lb/>
Pleased with the response to<lb/>
their "Dukes of Hazzard" mara-<lb/>
thon during Festival '87, PBS will<lb/>
now run the episodes on a regular<lb/>
basis. This is good news to<lb/>
"Dukes" fans as it saves them<lb/>
from getting up to change chan-<lb/>
nels to watch "Master Piece The-<lb/>
atre<lb/>
You may have heard that Don<lb/>
Johnson will marry a rock singer<lb/>
on "Miami Vice Actually, it'll be<lb/>
Wrestling unsatisfing sport<lb/>
a contemporary gospel singer<lb/>
played by Tammy Bakker. The<lb/>
storyline has the '80's Gable and<lb/>
Lombard meeting during a con-<lb/>
cert. Johnson's Crockett rescues<lb/>
Bakker when she hits a high note<lb/>
and her facial make-up cracks.<lb/>
Quickly grabbing a "paint by<lb/>
numbers" set, Crockett saves her<lb/>
face. Literally.<lb/>
Ignoring Tubb's warnings<lb/>
('That woman be a Jezebel"),<lb/>
Johnson rushes headlong into a<lb/>
steamy romanceuntil Bakker<lb/>
misunderstands Johnson's liason ?<lb/>
with a beautiful Narc at a Florida m<lb/>
hotel. g<lb/>
Final Fall-TV prediction: Video- <lb/>
rentals will be up during <lb/>
weeknights this autumn. " (f<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
TheNationarticleincludesalist<lb/>
of 134 writers whose files were<lb/>
released to Ms. Robins, who is<lb/>
preparing a book on the subject.<lb/>
Several of the writers on her list<lb/>
are still alive and include E.L.<lb/>
Doctorow, Mailer, Elizabeth<lb/>
Hard wick, Howard Fast, Kay<lb/>
Boyle and William F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
Ms. Boyle told the Washington<lb/>
Post on Tuesdy that when she saw<lb/>
her file, she was surprised to dis-<lb/>
cover "that I had a love affair with<lb/>
Ezra Pound - when I was 10 years<lb/>
old<lb/>
According to Ms. Robins' ar-<lb/>
ticle, to be released Friday in the<lb/>
October 10 issue of The Nation,<lb/>
poet Edna St. Vincent Millaycame<lb/>
to the bureau's attention when<lb/>
she entered a "free trip to Russia"<lb/>
contest sponsored bv a group<lb/>
trying to raise $40,000 to buy trac-<lb/>
tors for Soviet peasants.<lb/>
Mitgang and Ms. Robins said<lb/>
the timing of the articles was coin-<lb/>
cidental.<lb/>
FBI spokesman Bill Carter said<lb/>
the agency no longer has the time<lb/>
or the inclination to conduct such<lb/>
surveillance.<lb/>
These days, Carter said, "The<lb/>
only time the FBI investigates an<lb/>
individual or a group for domes-<lb/>
tic security issues is if they've<lb/>
created a violation of federal law,<lb/>
or if they've conspired to commit<lb/>
a specific violation of federal laws<lb/>
under FBI jurisdiction<lb/>
"Expressing their constitu-<lb/>
tional right to dissent is not a vio-<lb/>
lation of federal law he said.<lb/>
The FBI wrote in 1942 that<lb/>
Hemingway was of "question-<lb/>
able" sobriety and later incor-<lb/>
JUDSON H. BLOUNT, III<lb/>
ATTORNEY AT LAW<lb/>
D WI and Traffic Offenses<lb/>
Suite 12, Lee Building<lb/>
111 East Third Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27835<lb/>
(9<lb/>
Telephone:<lb/>
19)758-8555<lb/>
m<lb/>
Cont from page 8<lb/>
really Kurt Thomas.<lb/>
The Mod Squad are two greasy,<lb/>
pale and very rotund biker types.<lb/>
They spent most of their match<lb/>
asking the ref if he knew whether<lb/>
the Italian Stallion had "come to<lb/>
wrestle or come to dance" as they<lb/>
hopped around in their comer.<lb/>
Each bout would begin with the<lb/>
referee trying to get the oppo-<lb/>
nents to shake hands. It didn't<lb/>
each other in the neck and pulling Q<lb/>
masks to one side. ?<lb/>
The main match, G rvin and 2<lb/>
Jimmy Valiantfa wild looking old J<lb/>
man with a pony tail for a beard) f<lb/>
vs. the New Breed(a California ?<lb/>
marine who dressed like Laz- ?<lb/>
ertron and a fat Hawaiian dude) gj<lb/>
lasted three and a half minutes. ?)<lb/>
Thafs all. Maybe three minutes Q<lb/>
forty-five, tops. And then every- <lb/>
body got ready to leave. Kids got<lb/>
even happen once. But half of the their Rock and Roll Express pen- ?<lb/>
guys ended up with one or the nants from Mom and Dad's seats ?<lb/>
other's head between their crotch<lb/>
After not shaking, the wrestlers<lb/>
would walk around and scream at<lb/>
everything for a few minutes.<lb/>
When the 13 year olds in the<lb/>
upper bleachers would start<lb/>
shouting, "Boooorrring the<lb/>
e,  0 ?<lb/>
fighters would start punching watching "ALF<lb/>
and then they all went home to 9<lb/>
watch "Falcon Crest ?<lb/>
America is a scary place. People 5<lb/>
get paid to lose competitions and J<lb/>
people pay to go see them, over <lb/>
and over again.<lb/>
It's enough to make you start<lb/>
? EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY 9<lb/>
????f AND THE ??<lb/>
m DEPARTMENT OF UNIVERSITY UNIONS ??<lb/>
 PRESENT THE A<lb/>
Alpha-Omega Players<lb/>
In<lb/>
A DINNER-THEATRE PRESENTATION<lb/>
OF<lb/>
Neil Simon's<lb/>
I OUGHT TO<lb/>
BE IN<lb/>
PICTURES<lb/>
A Fin?ty Tuned Blend of Hilarity and Honesty<lb/>
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8<lb/>
AND<lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
AUDITORIUM 244<lb/>
Dinner: 6:30 p.m. Curtain: 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Advance Salaa Only, No Tickets At The Door<lb/>
ECU. STUDENTS $10.00<lb/>
ALL OTHERS $16.00<lb/>
FOR TICKETS CALL: THE CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE<lb/>
757-6611, EXT. 266<lb/>
A NATIONAL TOURING COMPANY<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
9<lb/>
rectly labeled him as a "specialty<lb/>
writer" for a Communist newspa-<lb/>
per, The Daily Worker.<lb/>
Another FBI memorandum<lb/>
conceded there was no informa-<lb/>
tion "which would definitely tie<lb/>
him with the Communist Party<lb/>
but added, "His views are liberal<lb/>
and he may be inclined favora<lb/>
bly to Communist political phi<lb/>
losophy<lb/>
I $2.00<lb/>
Introducing<lb/>
" NEW ,<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
752-1444<lb/>
PIZZA and<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
$2.00'<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
g $2.00 off Any Large<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
? COUPON<lb/>
BAU$CH &amp; LOMB<lb/>
I<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
Wayfarer<lb/>
$31.95plus TAX<lb/>
Large Metal Sunglass<lb/>
$37.95plus tax<lb/>
Up<lb/>
SINGLE VISION<lb/>
LENSES<lb/>
$12.95<lb/>
3 00 spr<lb/>
2 jG<lb/>
LINE<lb/>
BIFOCALS<lb/>
S39.95<lb/>
? FLAT TOi<lb/>
We Can Make Arrangements<lb/>
To Have Your Eyes Examined Today!<lb/>
Evening Appointments Available<lb/>
Call 752-1446<lb/>
PROGRESSIVE<lb/>
NO-LINE BIFOCALS<lb/>
$79.95<lb/>
Up to f or 3 00 sph,<lb/>
up to 2 00 cyl, to 3 00 odd<lb/>
ONE HOUR SERVICE<lb/>
SINGLE VISION ? GLASS ? PLASTJC<lb/>
ONE DAY SEBVICt ON BIFOCALS<lb/>
OFFER GOOD THRU OCT. 10. 1987<lb/>
CLEAR VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
2484 STANTONSBURG ROAD<lb/>
STANTON SQUARE 752-1446<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
? COUPON<lb/>
0<lb/>
Represenative at the Student Stores<lb/>
Oct. 6, 7,&amp; 8 9:00 a.m. - 4: p.m.<lb/>
v<lb/>
provide<lb/>
?n-<lb/>
Gere stops film,<lb/>
welcomes Dalai<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Richard<lb/>
Cere a discipleo( the Dalai Lama,<lb/>
interrupted filming a movie in<lb/>
Iowa to introduce the Tibetan<lb/>
Budhist leader at a news confer-<lb/>
ence announcing creation of a<lb/>
culture center in New York.<lb/>
"1 can't believe this is happen-<lb/>
ing Gere, star of "American<lb/>
Gigolo" and "An Officer and A<lb/>
Gentleman blurted Mondav as<lb/>
he introduced the Dalai Lama,<lb/>
who wore traditional maroon and<lb/>
gold robes.<lb/>
The spiritual leader of 6 million<lb/>
Buddhists was completing a 10-<lb/>
dav tour of the United States<lb/>
Gere is chairman of the board of<lb/>
Tibet House, a center to focus<lb/>
American attention on the cul-<lb/>
tural and religious heritage of<lb/>
Tibet.<lb/>
Fair starts up<lb/>
Cont. from page 8<lb/>
be admitted for $1.50 with student<lb/>
identification.<lb/>
Senior Citizen Day, Oct. 7, all<lb/>
senior citizens will be admitted<lb/>
free from 1-3 p.m.<lb/>
General admission is $3 for<lb/>
adults, children free until 6 p.m.<lb/>
Weeknights after 6 p.m. and on<lb/>
Sarurdav children will be admit-<lb/>
ted for $1.50.<lb/>
Oct. 5 and 8, a $7 wristband<lb/>
allows any fair patron to unlim-<lb/>
ited rides on the midway.<lb/>
On Oct. 6, fairgoers with a $1 -off<lb/>
coupon obtained by the purchase<lb/>
of Coke or a Domino's Pizza de-<lb/>
livery will be able to buy the spe-<lb/>
cial wristband for only $6.<lb/>
Wild Kingdom will appear tonight at<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Kodak unveils Edu<lb/>
to be forum for ph<lb/>
Eastman Kodal ? ?<lb/>
histor) pal ? n i<lb/>
graphi educat<lb/>
through) iut the i ?untr<lb/>
and a number of other I n<lb/>
asa star<lb/>
To help expand th<lb/>
support toedui itoi<lb/>
programs and refii<lb/>
Kodak has appoint<lb/>
graph editors t Kodal<lb/>
Educat! ? '? :<lb/>
council will maV<lb/>
tions n programs si rtsoi<lb/>
k.viak in supporl<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Ruth Unzicker i il man-<lb/>
ager of marketing and ice presi<lb/>
dent of Kodak's Professional<lb/>
Photography Division, says that<lb/>
by establishing the council,<lb/>
Kodak has strengthened its<lb/>
commitment to photographic<lb/>
education.<lb/>
"The Council will<lb/>
forum for all phot<lb/>
present their sug<lb/>
ideas directly to our key<lb/>
Rochester Unzicker ?<lb/>
expect this council to !<lb/>
!directlink,allowingplv<lb/>
; tors to contact Kodak<lb/>
Unzicker says Koc<lb/>
going programs an - with<lb/>
the photo education community<lb/>
will be significantly improved b<lb/>
the council because now ai<lb/>
can present an idea :<lb/>
member and have<lb/>
by kodak<lb/>
The con<lb/>
meet Nov. 16-17in . ara<lb/>
Calif.<lb/>
Members of the council and<lb/>
their addresses if you wish to<lb/>
write to them are<lb/>
-Dan Biferie, Southeast Center<lb/>
for Photographic Studies Dav-<lb/>
tona Beach Communitv G llce<lb/>
cago, JL<lb/>
err)<lb/>
ment,<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
For<lb/>
matit<lb/>
757<lb/>
<lb/>
J jam l"l'a '<lb/>
"i" mm 'iiwm?i<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0014"/><lb/>
fures the Neil Simon play to<lb/>
eftist conspiracies<lb/>
and<lb/>
d definitely tie<lb/>
-?nunit Tartv<lb/>
.wsare liberal'<lb/>
n he inclined favora-<lb/>
munist political phi-<lb/>
ludocliit lilt<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
444<lb/>
RA and<lb/>
- V Us.<lb/>
0 off Any Large<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
BAUSCH 4 LOMB<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
-arge Metal Sunglass<lb/>
$37.95Piu<lb/>
s tax<lb/>
i.<lb/>
? ranganwnti<lb/>
y?s Examined Today'<lb/>
?n.nls Aail?bie<lb/>
52-1446<lb/>
SINGLE VISION<lb/>
LENSES<lb/>
S' 2 95<lb/>
LINE<lb/>
BIFOCALS<lb/>
S39 95<lb/>
PROGRESSIVE<lb/>
NO-LINE BIFOCALS<lb/>
S79 95<lb/>
ONE HOUR SERVICE<lb/>
SINGLE ViS?ON ? 3LASS ? PLASTIC<lb/>
0? DA SEPVlCfc ON BIFOCALS<lb/>
:R GOOD THRU OCT. lO, 1987<lb/>
R VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
.TANTONSBURG ROAD<lb/>
ANTON SQUARE 752-1446<lb/>
? COUPON<lb/>
enative at the Student Stores<lb/>
6, 7,&amp; 8 9:00 a.m. - 4: p.m.<lb/>
f -981 AflOvW CM Rap<lb/>
?I<lb/>
'?<lb/>
i.<lb/>
3<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
x<lb/>
e<lb/>
Wild Kingdom will appear tonight at the Attic, bringing their brand of charged rock and roll to<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Kodak unveils Education Advisory Council<lb/>
to be forum for photography enlightenment<lb/>
Eastman Kodak Co. has a long<lb/>
history oi participation in photo-<lb/>
graphic education projects<lb/>
throughout the country via grants<lb/>
and a numlxT of other forms of<lb/>
assistance.<lb/>
lb help expand the company's<lb/>
support to educators, improve its<lb/>
programs and refine its priorities,<lb/>
kodak has appointed 12 photo-<lb/>
graphic editors to a new kodak<lb/>
.cation Advisory Council.The<lb/>
council will make recommenda-<lb/>
tions on programs sponsored hv<lb/>
kodak in support of photo educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Ruth Unzicker, general man-<lb/>
ager of marketing and vice presi-<lb/>
dent or kodak's Professional<lb/>
Photography Division, savs that<lb/>
bv establishing the council,<lb/>
kodak has strengthened its<lb/>
commitment to photographic<lb/>
education.<lb/>
"The Council will provide a<lb/>
torum for all photo educators to<lb/>
present their suggestions and<lb/>
ideas directly to our key people in<lb/>
Rochester L'nzicker savs. "We<lb/>
expect this council to serve as a<lb/>
direct link,allowingphotoeduca-<lb/>
' tors to contact Kodak<lb/>
I nzicker says kodak"s on-<lb/>
ing programs and contact with<lb/>
the photo education community<lb/>
will be significantly improved by<lb/>
the council because "now anyone<lb/>
can present an idea to a concil<lb/>
member and have it considered<lb/>
!n kodak<lb/>
The council is scheduled to<lb/>
meet Nov. 16-17 in Santa Barbara,<lb/>
Calif.<lb/>
Members of the council and<lb/>
their addresses if you wish to<lb/>
write to them are:<lb/>
-Dan Biferie, Southeast Center<lb/>
for Photographic Studies, Day-<lb/>
tona Beach Community College,<lb/>
Gere stops film,<lb/>
welcomes Dalai<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Richard<lb/>
Gere, a disciple of the Dalai Lama,<lb/>
interrupted filming a movie in<lb/>
Iowa to introduce the Tibetan<lb/>
Budhist leader at a news confer-<lb/>
ence announcing creation of a<lb/>
culture center in New York.<lb/>
"1 can't believe this is happen-<lb/>
ing Gere, star of "American<lb/>
Gigolo" and "An Officer and A<lb/>
Gentleman blurted Monday as<lb/>
he introduced the Dalai Lama,<lb/>
who wore traditional maroon and<lb/>
gold robes.<lb/>
The spiritu 1 leader of 6 million<lb/>
Buddhists was completing a 10-<lb/>
day tour of the United States.<lb/>
Gere is chairman of the board of<lb/>
Tibet Ho -e, center to focus<lb/>
American attention on the cul-<lb/>
tural and religious heritage of<lb/>
Tibet.<lb/>
Fair starts up<lb/>
Cont from page 8<lb/>
be admitted for $1.50 with student<lb/>
identification.<lb/>
Senior Citizen Day, Oct. 7, all<lb/>
senior citizens will be admitted<lb/>
free from 1-3 p.m.<lb/>
General admission is $3 for<lb/>
adults, children free until 6 p.m.<lb/>
Weeknights after 6 p.m. and on<lb/>
Sarurday children will be admit-<lb/>
ted for $1.50.<lb/>
Oct. 5 and 8, a $7 wristband<lb/>
allows any fair patron to unlim-<lb/>
ited rides on the midway.<lb/>
On Oct. 6, fairgoers with a $1 -off<lb/>
coupon obtained by the purchase<lb/>
of Coke or a Domino's Pizza de-<lb/>
livery will be able to buy the spe-<lb/>
cial wristband for only $6.<lb/>
1200 West Volusia Ave Davtona<lb/>
Beach, FL 32104<lb/>
-Phillip S. Block, International<lb/>
Center of Photography, 1130 Fifth<lb/>
Ave New York, NY 10128<lb/>
-Ernest H. Brooks II, Brooks<lb/>
Institute, 801 Alston Rd Santa<lb/>
Barbara, CA 93108<lb/>
-Kathleen Collins, School of<lb/>
Photographic Arts &amp; Sciences,<lb/>
Rochester Institute of Technol-<lb/>
ogy, One Lomb Drive, Rochester,<lb/>
NY 14623<lb/>
-Fred Dcmarest, S.I. Newhouse<lb/>
School of Communications,<lb/>
Syracuse University, Svracure,<lb/>
NY 13244-2100<lb/>
-Benedict J. Fernandez, Depart-<lb/>
ment of Photography, Parsons<lb/>
School of Design, 66 Fifth Ave<lb/>
New York, NY 10011<lb/>
-Frederick E. Hutton, Art Cen-<lb/>
ter College of Design, 1700 Lika<lb/>
St Pasadena, CA 91103-1999<lb/>
-William Kuykcndall, School of<lb/>
Journalism, University of Mis-<lb/>
souri-Columbia, Box 838, Colum-<lb/>
bia, MO 65205<lb/>
-John Mulvanv, Columbia Col-<lb/>
lege, 600 S. Michigan Ave Chi-<lb/>
cago, 1L 60505<lb/>
-Jerry Uclsmann, Art Depart-<lb/>
ment, University of Florida,<lb/>
Gainesville, FL 32611<lb/>
-Cheryl Younger, Film in the<lb/>
Cities, 2388 University Ave St.<lb/>
Paul, MN 55114<lb/>
-Ann Zelle, American Univer-<lb/>
sity, Mary Greydon Center, 400<lb/>
Massachusetts Ave Washing-<lb/>
ton, DC 20016<lb/>
Eastman Kodak's representa-<lb/>
tive on the council is Ken Lasiter.<lb/>
That's a prestigious list. If you<lb/>
are a photo educator with an idea<lb/>
or suggestion, now you know<lb/>
who to contact. As a side benefit<lb/>
for any youngster considering a<lb/>
career in photography, you now<lb/>
have a list of some of the better<lb/>
photography schools in the coun-<lb/>
try.<lb/>
On another note, although it's<lb/>
only autumn, photographic<lb/>
manufacturers are already begin-<lb/>
ning their Christmas promotions.<lb/>
Visit your local photo store and<lb/>
look for special bargains on film,<lb/>
rebates, special pricing on photo<lb/>
greeting cards and sweepstakes.<lb/>
Kodak is now offering specials<lb/>
on its photo greeting card line into<lb/>
which photos can be inserted.<lb/>
Kodak is also offering a 3-for-2<lb/>
special on poster prints made<lb/>
from the same negative or trans-<lb/>
parency.<lb/>
Both Kodak and Fuji now have<lb/>
- or will have - film specials on<lb/>
display.<lb/>
Both are also offering special<lb/>
sweepstakes. "Fuji Helps You See<lb/>
the USA" has prizes ranging from<lb/>
rebates to airline tickets. In No-<lb/>
vember, Kodak will announce its<lb/>
"Go for the Gold" sweepstakes in<lb/>
connection with its line of battery<lb/>
products. This sweepstakes offers<lb/>
a chance at a $25,000 grand prize<lb/>
including a trip for four to the<lb/>
1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary,<lb/>
Canada.<lb/>
Watch your local newspaper for<lb/>
details.<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
PREGNANCY CENTER<lb/>
The Center i$ open<lb/>
Mon Tues, &amp; Wed. Fri. 9 a.m. - 7 p.m.<lb/>
9 a.m2 p.m. &amp; by appointmenj<lb/>
For an appointment or more infor-<lb/>
mation, call 24-Hour Helpline,<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
111 East Third Street - The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Test-<lb/>
Confldentlal Counseling<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 1, 1987<lb/>
11<lb/>
Carson celebrates 25th year<lb/>
with show and first biography<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Johnny<lb/>
Carson's 25th anniversary as host<lb/>
of NBC's "Tonight Show" will be<lb/>
marked with the usual prime-<lb/>
time special - and publication of<lb/>
an unauthorized biography.<lb/>
Carson, along with sidekick Ed<lb/>
McMahon and band leader Doc<lb/>
Severinsen, will appear on a 90-<lb/>
minute retrospective Thursday,<lb/>
the anniversary date.<lb/>
The book, "Carson: The<lb/>
Unauthorized Biography by<lb/>
Paul Corkery and published by<lb/>
Randt &amp; Co is a look not only at<lb/>
Carson's time on the show but his<lb/>
entire life and career, as well as his<lb/>
four marriages.<lb/>
Corkery, a former reporter for<lb/>
the Los Angeles Herald Examiner<lb/>
and People magazine, said he first<lb/>
became interested in Carson after<lb/>
seeing him in the rarefield and<lb/>
wealthy social whirl of Bel Air.<lb/>
Corkery said he had "astonish-<lb/>
ing luck" getting interviews with<lb/>
Carson's first three wives. "Wife<lb/>
No. 3, Joanna, had never given an<lb/>
interview before on their life to-<lb/>
gether he said in a telephone<lb/>
interview from New York. "His<lb/>
first wife, Jody, had not been in-<lb/>
terviewed in 25 years. It took us<lb/>
six months to find her. His second<lb/>
wife, Joanne, is more accessible.<lb/>
The first and third wives gave<lb/>
some great insight into the man<lb/>
Publicity-shy Carson was not<lb/>
Aaron, Reese to<lb/>
perform for Fisk<lb/>
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -<lb/>
Baseball great Hank Aaron will<lb/>
attend a fund-raiser to benefit an<lb/>
art gallery at Fisk University, his<lb/>
wife says.<lb/>
Singer Delia Reese will perform<lb/>
at the Fisk Jubilee Gala on Oct. 7<lb/>
aboard Opryland's General<lb/>
Jackson showboat.<lb/>
The Van Vechten Gallery<lb/>
houses the Alfred Steiglitz Collec-<lb/>
tion, donated to the university by<lb/>
artist Georgia O'Keefe, Steiglitz's<lb/>
wife.<lb/>
interviewed. The 256-page book<lb/>
is the first biography of Carson,<lb/>
although several other books are<lb/>
rumored to be in preparation.<lb/>
Much is made of the fact that it<lb/>
is an unauthorized biography.<lb/>
However, there's little in the book<lb/>
that is not already public knowl-<lb/>
edge. It appears to have been<lb/>
written largely from previously<lb/>
published material.<lb/>
Corkery's book offers little in-<lb/>
sight into Carson or the phenome-<lb/>
non of his appeal and staying<lb/>
power. It does deal with his failed<lb/>
marriages and a few other legal<lb/>
problems he's had, but the overall<lb/>
tone of the book is laudatory.<lb/>
Corkery notes Carson's emer-<lb/>
gence as political commentator,<lb/>
but skips any critical appraisal of<lb/>
his place in television or the<lb/>
American culture.<lb/>
From the Kennedys to Nixon to<lb/>
Reagan, through all the traumatic<lb/>
upheavals, Carson has been there<lb/>
with a quip.<lb/>
In an interview for his 20th<lb/>
anniversary, Carson said, "I think<lb/>
The Tonight Show' is really a<lb/>
kind of chronology of what the<lb/>
hell has happened in this country.<lb/>
It's topical. It's every day. It has to<lb/>
do with comedy. It has to do with<lb/>
what's happening politically and<lb/>
socially in this country<lb/>
He declined to be interviewed<lb/>
for his silver anniversary.<lb/>
A generation has grown up<lb/>
since Carson took over "The To-<lb/>
night Show" on Oct. 1, 1962. The<lb/>
country has changed. And Car-<lb/>
son, of course, has changed. He<lb/>
has gained enormous confidence<lb/>
and developed an instinct for the<lb/>
right comment. And when a joke<lb/>
doesn't go over, he is still able to<lb/>
milk laughs by his reaction or<lb/>
comeback line.<lb/>
His show is at the top of the<lb/>
ratings, although young peopk<lb/>
now turn to David Letterman<lb/>
who follows Carson on NBC, for<lb/>
their nightly humor. Not to<lb/>
worry, Carson owns the Letter<lb/>
man show.<lb/>
On Fnday night, NBC will re-<lb/>
run "The Tonight Show" from<lb/>
Feb. 13, 1973. The show, with<lb/>
George Burns, Carl Reiner and<lb/>
Sammy Davis Jr is considered<lb/>
one of Carson's best.<lb/>
IF YOU'RE PAVING MORE<lb/>
THAN THIS FOR COPIES<lb/>
YOU'RE GETTMG BUFFALOED<lb/>
At Kinko s we offer the highest qualm copies at a verv low<lb/>
price Try Kinkos For great copies And great deals<lb/>
kinkes<lb/>
Great copies. Great people.<lb/>
321 E. Tenth Street<lb/>
752-0875<lb/>
Monday- Friday<lb/>
7:00am- 10.00pm<lb/>
Saturd3<lb/>
9:00am-6 00pm<lb/>
East Carolina University Student Union<lb/>
Major Concerts Committee presents:<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
FIXX<lb/>
Thursday, October 8th, 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
MINGES COLISEUM<lb/>
Tickets:<lb/>
$7.00 students<lb/>
$9.00 general public<lb/>
Tickets on sale<lb/>
Central Ticket Office<lb/>
Sept. 24th.<lb/>
f i<lb/>
MM<lb/>
mmiwtmtmmm<lb/>
A<lb/>
?j<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0015"/><lb/>
THEEASTCAROMNIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBER 1, 1987 Page 12<lb/>
Hard-hitting Vinson Smith<lb/>
helps to pace Pirate defense<lb/>
By CAROLYN j<lb/>
Sport Writer<lb/>
A hard-hitting linebacker on<lb/>
the held or a down-to-earth guy<lb/>
ott the field, either way you see<lb/>
him, Vinson Smith isn't going to<lb/>
change.<lb/>
The6T221 lb. senior defensive<lb/>
leader is off to another great year.<lb/>
I le leads the Pirates with 46 total<lb/>
tackles, 18 of which were unas-<lb/>
sisted. Smith also has made two<lb/>
fumble recoveries, one intercep-<lb/>
tion and one quarterback sack.<lb/>
With this kind of aggressive<lb/>
play and success one would think<lb/>
it has gone to Smith's head, but<lb/>
according to his friends, he's<lb/>
hasn't changed a bit since he came<lb/>
to ECU.<lb/>
"A lot of people let their talent<lb/>
go to their head, Vinson isn't like<lb/>
that He'll always just be Vinson<lb/>
said senior teammate Ron Gil-<lb/>
liard.<lb/>
According to defensive coordi-<lb/>
nator linebacker coach Les Her-<lb/>
nn, he won't accept Smith any<lb/>
other way.<lb/>
"1 want him to grow not only as<lb/>
a football player but as a person.<lb/>
Vinson is down-to-earth and his<lb/>
way of getting along with people<lb/>
is going to take him a long way in<lb/>
lite.<lb/>
Smith said that Herrin has been<lb/>
a part of making him a better<lb/>
person.<lb/>
"He's tough and he pumps us<lb/>
up. We've adoped his agressive-<lb/>
ness and his attitude<lb/>
Smith has certainly benefitted<lb/>
from this attitude combined with<lb/>
his talent. After being redshirted<lb/>
position. 1 know that he is as good<lb/>
as me and I know there are other<lb/>
guys that are as good as me<lb/>
Coach Herrin said no matter<lb/>
irtSsatd about Smith, he'll al-<lb/>
ways be a good plaver that as a<lb/>
coach he won't forget.<lb/>
The Statesville native's best<lb/>
game so far this year was against<lb/>
Illinois.<lb/>
That could have been a great<lb/>
win tor us said Smith. "We gave<lb/>
the fans a good game. We keep<lb/>
them on their seats<lb/>
Smith's performance was one<lb/>
reason for Illinois fans to take<lb/>
notice of the Pirate squad. He<lb/>
in 1983, he had 18 tackles during<lb/>
his freshman season as a Pirate.<lb/>
As a sophmore, Smith continued<lb/>
to improve with 42 tackles, 30 of<lb/>
which were unassisted, and he<lb/>
made two interceptions.<lb/>
Last year, Smith led the Pirates<lb/>
in tackles with 116, 64 of them<lb/>
unassisted. He also had a fumble<lb/>
recovery and a sack.<lb/>
These records show why Smith<lb/>
has been tagged by many as being<lb/>
one of the finest linebackers to<lb/>
Vinson Smith<lb/>
play at ECU.<lb/>
Smith says he doesn't feel that<lb/>
special.<lb/>
"A friend taught me to play that<lb/>
came a way with 15 tackles and one<lb/>
fumble recovery.<lb/>
A rematch of another edge of<lb/>
the seat game will be coming up<lb/>
this Saturday, as the Pirates travel<lb/>
to West Virginia. Last year's game<lb/>
ended when West Virginia scored<lb/>
with just six seconds left in the<lb/>
game, to pull out a 24-21 victory.<lb/>
"A lot of guys think we have<lb/>
something to prove when we go<lb/>
to West Virginia said Smith. "I<lb/>
don't think we have to prove<lb/>
anything. We played hard last<lb/>
year so we just have to go up there<lb/>
and play even better<lb/>
During Smith's career, his top<lb/>
sta tist ical game of each season has<lb/>
been against Southern Missis-<lb/>
sippi. As a freshman he had one<lb/>
individual tackle and three assists<lb/>
against SMU. The next year,<lb/>
Smith made five unassisted tack-<lb/>
les and one sack. Again in 1987,<lb/>
Southern Mississippi was the vic-<lb/>
tim of a Vinson Smith attack as he<lb/>
made 13 tackles. Eight of them<lb/>
were unassisted, one was for a<lb/>
lose and there was one quarter-<lb/>
back sack.<lb/>
Last years Southern Mississippi<lb/>
contest was another tough loss for<lb/>
the Pirates. Smith says he isn't<lb/>
waiting for SMU to have his best<lb/>
game of the season.<lb/>
"I go into every game trying to<lb/>
play my best game because you<lb/>
never know when it might be<lb/>
your last said Smith. "This<lb/>
year's Southern Mississippi game<lb/>
will be a big game, not only be-<lb/>
cause of my track record and last<lb/>
years outcome but because it will<lb/>
be my last game as a Pirate<lb/>
Applewhite glad to be playing<lb/>
football in Pirate uniform now<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Motivated, determined and sat-<lb/>
isfied.<lb/>
Thats East Carolina's Mike<lb/>
Applewhite in a nutshell. The 6-4,<lb/>
270 pound defensive end from<lb/>
Henderson, N.C. believes he has<lb/>
his priorities and his heart in the<lb/>
right place.<lb/>
Applewhite has dedicated him-<lb/>
self to play at a high level of inten-<lb/>
sity. He is driven by personal trag-<lb/>
edy.<lb/>
While he was attending Vance<lb/>
Senior High School a few years<lb/>
ago, two of Applewhite's very<lb/>
close friends, Michael Clayton<lb/>
and William Watkins, lost their<lb/>
lives. Applewhite says their<lb/>
deaths were difficult for him to<lb/>
accept. His way to cope was to<lb/>
dedicate every football game he<lb/>
played to them.<lb/>
"I feel like that it is something<lb/>
that I can do to keep them in my<lb/>
memory says Applewhite. "Our<lb/>
friendship was just too short and 1<lb/>
just want to do it (dedicate games)<lb/>
to remember Michael and Wil-<lb/>
liam. They meant an awful lot to<lb/>
me. I don't like to talk about it (the<lb/>
deaths) a lot because it is just too<lb/>
painful for me, so that is why I try<lb/>
to show how much they meant to<lb/>
me by dedicating my career to<lb/>
them<lb/>
Applewhite says he is also<lb/>
motivated by his grandmother,<lb/>
Armilla Mack, who raised him<lb/>
from the time he was a toddler.<lb/>
"She always gave me the best of<lb/>
everything, the best that anybody<lb/>
could possibly ever want he<lb/>
says. "I want to make a success<lb/>
out of myself whether in profes-<lb/>
sional football or in the business<lb/>
world so that 1 can give back to her<lb/>
just part of the many things she<lb/>
gave to me<lb/>
Applewhite is trying to prepare<lb/>
himself for life after football.<lb/>
Entering this semester, the busi-<lb/>
ness administration major had an<lb/>
overall grade point a verage of 3.0.<lb/>
But, make no mistake about it,<lb/>
football is Applewhite's chosen<lb/>
career. The sophomore in four<lb/>
games this season has racked up a<lb/>
total of 16 tackles.<lb/>
"I think I have the potential to<lb/>
do it (play professionally) says<lb/>
Applewhite. "By my last year not<lb/>
being until 1990, I definitely feel<lb/>
like I have a shot<lb/>
ECU coach Art Baker agreed<lb/>
with Applewhite's assessment of<lb/>
his potential.<lb/>
"Mike's potential is really awe-<lb/>
some Baker says. "He has all the<lb/>
attributes to be a great defensive<lb/>
player. He has the speed (4.95 in<lb/>
the 40 yard dash) and the<lb/>
strength. Of course, he needs to<lb/>
become a great college player<lb/>
first. But, we expect him to im-<lb/>
prove along the way, afterall, he<lb/>
has been out of football for two<lb/>
vears<lb/>
Mike Applewhite<lb/>
Applewhite originally signed a<lb/>
scholarship with North Carolina<lb/>
following an All-Star career at<lb/>
Vance. After one year at UNC, he<lb/>
became disenchanted and at-<lb/>
tempted to transfer to Virginia<lb/>
However, UNC officials would<lb/>
not release him to another ACC<lb/>
school and he ended up at ECU.<lb/>
"I learned a whole lot from that<lb/>
situation (the changing of<lb/>
schools) says Applewhite. "It<lb/>
wasa very difficult timeof my life.<lb/>
There were some technical rules<lb/>
that were broken by Virginia and<lb/>
of course the fact that it would<lb/>
look bad for a person to transfer<lb/>
from one conference school to<lb/>
another also figured in. But, I<lb/>
don't really think about it any-<lb/>
more because it is something that<lb/>
happened in the past. 1 feel like<lb/>
that I am better off with the ECU<lb/>
program. And my main concern<lb/>
now is winning games here<lb/>
However, it is natural to won-<lb/>
der if Applewhite is fully satisfied<lb/>
since ECU was never his first<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
"I am happy with the program<lb/>
here says Applewhite. 'The<lb/>
main reason I chose ECU was<lb/>
because of the coaching philoso-<lb/>
phy.<lb/>
"I was looking for a coach that I<lb/>
would be able to relate to both<lb/>
mentally and physically contin-<lb/>
ued Applewhite. "And in Donnie<lb/>
Thompson (defensive line coach),<lb/>
I found that. He is the best coach<lb/>
that I've ever had for teaching<lb/>
good technique.<lb/>
"And, I also liked coach Baker a<lb/>
lot continued Applewhite. "He<lb/>
has great values and he cares for<lb/>
each one of his players as people<lb/>
not just as football players<lb/>
And Applewhite, although a<lb/>
dominant force on the field, is ob-<lb/>
viouslv much more than just a<lb/>
football player.<lb/>
VanSant named to new post<lb/>
Dr. Henry VanSant has been<lb/>
named associate athletic director<lb/>
for internal affairs at East Caro-<lb/>
lina, ECU athletic director Ken<lb/>
Karr announced.<lb/>
VanSant, who will official!v<lb/>
begin his duties today, has been<lb/>
the Pirates' administrative assis-<lb/>
tant to the athletic director for the<lb/>
past two years.<lb/>
The Hampton, Va native wasa<lb/>
center and linebacker for ECU<lb/>
teams from 1959-1961. He was the<lb/>
1960 recipient of the E.E. Raw<lb/>
outstanding student-athlete<lb/>
award. He was an assistant foot-<lb/>
Netters rally for win<lb/>
East Carolina's Lady Pirate vol-<lb/>
leyball team rallied from a 2-1<lb/>
deficit to defeat UNC-Wilming-<lb/>
tonTuesday night in MingesColi-<lb/>
seum.<lb/>
The 3-2 victory over the Lady<lb/>
Seahawks raises East Carolina's<lb/>
record to 3-5 and gives the netters<lb/>
their first conference victory of<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
Kris McKay and Jemma Holley<lb/>
combined for 20 of ECU's 48 kills.<lb/>
Friday, the Lady Pirates depart<lb/>
for Winthrop, SC for the<lb/>
Winthrop volleyball Invivational.<lb/>
At the tournament ECU will meet<lb/>
host Winthrop college, UT-<lb/>
Chatanooga and Campbell Uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
The next home match will be<lb/>
Tuesday Oct. 6 at 7 p.m. when The<lb/>
Lady Pirates host Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian College.<lb/>
ball coach for the Pirates from<lb/>
1962-1970.<lb/>
He was ECU's freshman coach<lb/>
from 1962-1966, as his squad was<lb/>
the only undefeated freshman<lb/>
team in ECU history. He also as-<lb/>
sisted head coach Clarence<lb/>
Stasavich as ECU won back-to-<lb/>
back Tangerine Bowl titles in 1954<lb/>
and 1955.<lb/>
VanSant was also a head foot-<lb/>
ball coach at the high school level<lb/>
in North Carolina, as well as head<lb/>
coach at Cuilford College and<lb/>
Lenoir-Ryne College.<lb/>
VanSant received his under-<lb/>
graduate degree and Master's<lb/>
Degree from ECU in 1961 and<lb/>
1962.<lb/>
VanSant received his doctoral<lb/>
degree from the University of<lb/>
Alabama in 1975.<lb/>
ECU booters hope to regroup<lb/>
Ruggers rout Appalachian St.<lb/>
By GEORGE OSBORNE<lb/>
Sporb) Writer<lb/>
Halfway through a disappoint-<lb/>
ing season, head coach Charlie<lb/>
Harvey and the ECU soccer team<lb/>
are still trying to put together a<lb/>
winning combination.<lb/>
ECU, 1-8 overall and 0-5 in the<lb/>
CAA, will travel to Wilmington in<lb/>
search of its first conference vic-<lb/>
tory Friday. UNC-W was the only<lb/>
team that ECU defeated last year<lb/>
in the conference, but the<lb/>
Seahawks are much-improved<lb/>
over last season whereas the Pi-<lb/>
rates have fallen on hard times.<lb/>
Most recently, UNC-W took<lb/>
American University to a score-<lb/>
less tie and loss to Navy in over-<lb/>
time. As with any ECU-UNC-W<lb/>
contest, the Seahawks will be<lb/>
fired up when the Pirates come to<lb/>
town.<lb/>
"If we could give UNC-W a<lb/>
good game and beat them, the<lb/>
momentum would help us a lot<lb/>
said Harvey.<lb/>
The Pirates, battered by CAA<lb/>
opponents in the last month, do<lb/>
By EARL HAMPTON<lb/>
Sport Writer<lb/>
The ECU Rugby defeated the<lb/>
Mountainneers of Appalachian<lb/>
by the score of 36-3. Bob Eason<lb/>
ignited the club with three first-<lb/>
half scores.<lb/>
"We juked them, we had total<lb/>
dominance of the game, and I<lb/>
want to credit the B team with<lb/>
excellent play said head coach<lb/>
Ralph Campano.<lb/>
Eason, the veteran scrum<lb/>
player, broke the club record for<lb/>
individual scoresenroute to what<lb/>
Eason termed "my best game<lb/>
ever<lb/>
The Mountaineers, who have<lb/>
an experienced club with consid-<lb/>
erable bulk, were held to a 30<lb/>
meter penalty kick as their only<lb/>
score. The hot weather, ECU<lb/>
Rugby players said, was a factor<lb/>
in the Appalachian downfall.<lb/>
The Ruggers lead 18-0 at<lb/>
halftime after Mike Brown as-<lb/>
sisted Eason for three scores and<lb/>
Philip Ritchie added a power-run<lb/>
score. One of Eason's scores came<lb/>
off a 40-meter sprint from mid-<lb/>
field.<lb/>
In second-half action, Ritchie<lb/>
scored off a broken play and<lb/>
Brown's converatn was good,<lb/>
24-0 ECU. Albert Redbush scored<lb/>
from a loose ball off the rook after<lb/>
a 15-meter run. Mike Purrel ran<lb/>
the ball in for the final score of 36-<lb/>
3.<lb/>
In the second game, the ECU<lb/>
Rugby B team defeated Appala-<lb/>
chian 6-0. "The B team is contrib-<lb/>
uting more to this team than ever<lb/>
expected Campano said.<lb/>
Campano extended an invita-<lb/>
tion to all persons interested in<lb/>
playing Rugby. "All ECU stu-<lb/>
dents are eligible and its never too<lb/>
late, he said.<lb/>
The undefeated ruggers will<lb/>
Bob Tobtani (number 9) of the ECU rugby team prepares to level the<lb/>
oppenent during the Pirates 36-3 victory over Appalachian Saturday.<lb/>
have some breaks in the schedule.<lb/>
In October, ECU will face the likes<lb/>
of St. Andrews and Greensboro<lb/>
College, teams that the Pirates<lb/>
have traditionally beaten.<lb/>
"A conservative guess would<lb/>
be that we could go five of seven<lb/>
in the month of October said<lb/>
Harvey. "But the way we've been<lb/>
playing, who knows?"<lb/>
ECU's team stats are dismal.<lb/>
The Pirates have been shut-out six<lb/>
times this season and have only<lb/>
six regular-season goals as a team.<lb/>
Pirate opponents score an<lb/>
average of 33 goals against them<lb/>
for a total of 30 on the season.<lb/>
In the spite of the number of<lb/>
goals against, offense or lack of it,<lb/>
has been a major problem for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
"A problem that we have is our<lb/>
front runners said Harvey. "I've<lb/>
tried different combinations,<lb/>
moving mid-fielders up, backs<lb/>
up, everything but moving the<lb/>
goalkeeper up front<lb/>
Being only halfway through a<lb/>
season means that there is still<lb/>
time. Time to spark an offense and<lb/>
salvage a season. With the trip<lb/>
south Friday, the Pirates may be<lb/>
able to find the solution to their<lb/>
problems and get on the winning<lb/>
track.<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
W(<lb/>
ECU at West Virginia<lb/>
Auburn at North Carolina<lb/>
Arkansas at T( L<lb/>
Virginia at Clemson<lb/>
Honda at LSU<lb/>
Miami (H.) at Ha. State<lb/>
Ga. Tech at N.C State<lb/>
Ohio St at Illinois<lb/>
Mich. St. at Iowa<lb/>
South Carolina at Nebraska<lb/>
Intramur<lb/>
and h<lb/>
have<lb/>
away<lb/>
Spec<lb/>
team<lb/>
1<lb/>
The Intramural Sport calendar<lb/>
continues to heat up as teams play<lb/>
their final game for the month of<lb/>
September.<lb/>
In co-rec Softball action, two top<lb/>
ranked teams went to war and<lb/>
played for the co-rec softball title<lb/>
inagameotherwiseknovN rtas<lb/>
game of the year Sumptin Spe-<lb/>
rial kept their undefeated record<lb/>
with a combination of base hits<lb/>
Crum searchi<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C (AP) -<lb/>
North Carolina's Dick Crum mav<lb/>
feel more like band conductor this<lb/>
weekend instead of football coach<lb/>
against No. 6 Auburn after an-<lb/>
other week of "musical<lb/>
tailbacks<lb/>
Crum is searching for some<lb/>
healthy runn.rs. Starter Torin<lb/>
Dom and reserve Kennard Mar-<lb/>
tin are still nursing injuries and<lb/>
are "very questionable" for<lb/>
Saturday's 1 p.m. game. Senior<lb/>
Eric Starr sTSlatedrtD stett'at"<lb/>
tailback, Crum said at this weekly<lb/>
news conference Tuesday<lb/>
"If we had to play today, neither<lb/>
one of them (Dorn and Martin)<lb/>
would play Crum said. Dorn stil<lb/>
has a sore ankle he suffered in a<lb/>
season-opening victory over Illi-<lb/>
nois, while Martin has a slightly<lb/>
pulled hamstring, said Sports In-<lb/>
formation Director Rick Brewer.<lb/>
"Our problem is we v plaved<lb/>
musical tailbacks Crum said<lb/>
A near-record crowd of more<lb/>
than 50,000 is expected at Kenan<lb/>
Staduim for Saturday's game.<lb/>
North Carolina officials said.<lb/>
From <lb/>
King<lb/>
horn.<lb/>
road for<lb/>
wears you <lb/>
nice to be i<lb/>
The Tar<lb/>
0 to top-r<lb/>
defeating'<lb/>
Naw 45- <lb/>
games. Thd<lb/>
are coming<lb/>
10th-ranke<lb/>
" With add<lb/>
quarterbac<lb/>
putting th?<lb/>
but Crum<lb/>
be changul<lb/>
Auburn s<lb/>
"When vj<lb/>
Auburn th<lb/>
you miss th<lb/>
and put nc<lb/>
" ou<lb/>
you try t.<lb/>
son<lb/>
Crum sa<lb/>
balanced of<lb/>
best defe<lb/>
"icomparj<lb/>
DRESS F<lb/>
SOPH<lb/>
It you're enrolled in the second ear of a con<lb/>
degree from an accredited college unoersm<lb/>
ing our junior and senior ears of college til<lb/>
least 18 but not more than 25 years old. be a If<lb/>
for the Baccalaureate Degree Commissioning<lb/>
side of North Carolina I 800-528-813<lb/>
CONTACT Lt BoatJ<lb/>
Naw Re<lb/>
October<lb/>
Career<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
navy?<lb/>
LEAD THE<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
!<lb/>
i<lb/>
 J<lb/>
V<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m ?!?<lb/>
????<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0016"/><lb/>
'age 12<lb/>
 to be playing<lb/>
e uniform now<lb/>
?pare<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I) Kite<lb/>
Apple hite originally signed a<lb/>
scholarship with North Carolina<lb/>
following an All-Star career at<lb/>
 ance After one year at UNC, he<lb/>
became disenchanted and at-<lb/>
tempted to transfer to Virginia.<lb/>
However, UNC officials would<lb/>
not release him to another ACC<lb/>
school and he ended up at ECU.<lb/>
i learned a whole lot from that<lb/>
situation (the changing of<lb/>
schools says Applewhite. "It<lb/>
was a very difficult timeofmylife.<lb/>
rhere were some technical rules<lb/>
that were broken bv Virginia and<lb/>
oi course the tact that it would<lb/>
look bad tor a person to transfer<lb/>
o conference school to<lb/>
another also figured in. But, I<lb/>
thmk about it any-<lb/>
because it is something that<lb/>
happened in the past. 1 feel like<lb/>
I am better oft with the ECU<lb/>
n And my main concern<lb/>
ling games here<lb/>
ivever, it is natural to won-<lb/>
tvhite is fully satisfied<lb/>
L was never his first<lb/>
im happy with the program<lb/>
here says Applewhite. "The<lb/>
mam reason i chose ECU was<lb/>
because ol the coaching philoso-<lb/>
phy<lb/>
king for a coach that 1<lb/>
to relate to both<lb/>
mentally and physically contin-<lb/>
ued Applewhite. "And in Eonnie<lb/>
Tiompson (defensive line coach),<lb/>
1 found that. He is the best coach<lb/>
that I ve ever had for teaching<lb/>
hnique.<lb/>
liked coach Baker a<lb/>
( ntinued Applewhite. "He<lb/>
 values and he cares for<lb/>
ne of his ph. .vrs as people<lb/>
isl as football players<lb/>
And Applewhite, although a<lb/>
-ant force on the field, is OD-<lb/>
much more than just a<lb/>
plaver.<lb/>
F tonew post<lb/>
hleh<lb/>
win<lb/>
L 1 -<lb/>
Uni-<lb/>
ill be<lb/>
coach for the Tirates from<lb/>
2-1970.<lb/>
He was ECL's freshman coach<lb/>
from 1962-1966, as his squad was<lb/>
the only undefeated freshman<lb/>
in ECU history. He also as-<lb/>
d head coach Clarence<lb/>
:vich as ECU won back-to-<lb/>
hack Tangerine Bowl titles in 1954<lb/>
VanSant was also a head foot-<lb/>
h at the high school level<lb/>
rth C arolina, as well as head<lb/>
h at Cuilford College and<lb/>
ir-Ryne College.<lb/>
VanSant received his under-<lb/>
graduate degree and Master's<lb/>
ree from ECU in 1961 and<lb/>
tnt received his doctoral<lb/>
Torn the University of<lb/>
ima in 1975.<lb/>
pe to regroup<lb/>
ore-<lb/>
:<lb/>
i ks vt 11 be<lb/>
? ttescome to<lb/>
E MC-W a bc-at them, the Id help us a lot<lb/>
ittered by CAA i iabt month, do<lb/>
me breaks in the schedule.<lb/>
'her, ECU will facethelikes<lb/>
of St. Andrews and Greensboro<lb/>
College, teams that the Pirates<lb/>
have traditionally beaten.<lb/>
"A conservative guess would<lb/>
be that we could go five of seven<lb/>
in the month of October said<lb/>
Harvey "But the way we've been<lb/>
playing, who knows?"<lb/>
ECU's team stats are dismal.<lb/>
The Pirates have been shut-out six<lb/>
times this season and have only<lb/>
six regular-season goalsasa team.<lb/>
Pirate opponents score an<lb/>
average of 3.3 goals against them<lb/>
for a total of 30 on the season.<lb/>
In the spite of the number of<lb/>
goals against, offense or lack of it,<lb/>
has been a major problem for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
"A problem that we have is our<lb/>
front runners said Harvey. "I've<lb/>
tried different combinations,<lb/>
moving mid-fielders up, backs<lb/>
up, everything but moving the<lb/>
goalkeeper up front<lb/>
Being only halfway through a<lb/>
season means that there is still<lb/>
time. Time to spark an of fense and<lb/>
salvage a season. With the trip<lb/>
south Friday, the Pirates may be<lb/>
able to find the solution to their<lb/>
problems and get on the winning<lb/>
track.<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 1, 1987 13<lb/>
Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
ECU at West Virginia<lb/>
Auburn at North Carolina<lb/>
Arkansas at TCU<lb/>
Virginia at Clemson<lb/>
Florida at LSU<lb/>
Miami (Fl.) at Fla. State<lb/>
Ga. Tech at N.C. State<lb/>
Ohio St. at Illinois<lb/>
Mich. St. at Iowa<lb/>
South Carolina at Nebraska<lb/>
BRIAN BAILEYDEAN BUCHAN<lb/>
WNCT-TV Sports DirectorECU Sports Information<lb/>
Ust Week:Lut Week:<lb/>
(7-3)(6-4)<lb/>
OverallOverall:<lb/>
(29-11)(28-12)<lb/>
ECUECU<lb/>
AuburnAuburn<lb/>
ArkansasArkansas<lb/>
ClemsonClemson<lb/>
LSULSU<lb/>
Florida StateMiami (Fl.)<lb/>
N.C. StateGa. Tech<lb/>
Ohio StateOhio State<lb/>
IowaIowa<lb/>
NebraskaNebraska<lb/>
TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Lul Week:<lb/>
(6-4)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(28-12)<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
PAT MOLLOY<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Lml Week:<lb/>
(6-4)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(25-15)<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
Aubum<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Dr. RICHARD EAKIN<lb/>
ECU Chancellor<lb/>
lml Week<lb/>
(5-5)<lb/>
Overall.<lb/>
(20-20)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Miami (Fl.)<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Intramurals calendar beginning to heat up<lb/>
The Intramural Sport calendar<lb/>
continues to heat up as teams play<lb/>
their final game for the month of<lb/>
September.<lb/>
In co-rec Softball action, two top<lb/>
ranked teams went to war and<lb/>
played for the co-rec softball title<lb/>
in a game otherwise known as 'the<lb/>
game of the year Sumptin' Spe-<lb/>
cial kept their undefeated record<lb/>
with a combination of base hits<lb/>
and home runs any squad would<lb/>
have been proud of and came<lb/>
away with a close win over the<lb/>
Syndicate.<lb/>
In the eight inning contest,<lb/>
Special's Ricky Fischer drove in<lb/>
teammate Sonya Dub ree to clinch<lb/>
the 4-3 victory. No doubt that the<lb/>
Syndicate will be back later to try<lb/>
and rob their foes of the all cam-<lb/>
pus championship title.<lb/>
In other softball action, the<lb/>
Homers defeated Silent Attack 12-<lb/>
6, while the Executioners out-<lb/>
lasted DDID 11-9.<lb/>
Coming up on the Intramural<lb/>
Sport Calendar of events will be a<lb/>
new and exciting activity for all<lb/>
those individuals and teams<lb/>
wanting a little 'payback' for a<lb/>
loss they have encountered.<lb/>
Challenge day has been set up<lb/>
as an opportunity for teams or<lb/>
individuals to challenge ar-<lb/>
Crum searching for tailbacks<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) -<lb/>
North Carolina's Dick Crum may<lb/>
feel more like band conductor this<lb/>
weekend instead of football coach<lb/>
against No. 6 Auburn after an-<lb/>
other week of "musical<lb/>
tailbacks<lb/>
Crum is searching for some<lb/>
healthy runners. Starter Torin<lb/>
Dom and reserve Kennard Mar-<lb/>
tin arc still nursing injuries and<lb/>
are "very questionable" for<lb/>
Saturday's 1 p.m. game. Senior<lb/>
trie Starr sT slatedrtD stattaV<lb/>
tailback, Crum said at this weekly<lb/>
news conference Tuesday.<lb/>
"If we had to play today, neither<lb/>
one of them (Dorn and Martin)<lb/>
would play Crum said. Dorn stil<lb/>
has a sore ankle he suffered in a<lb/>
season-opening victory over Illi-<lb/>
nois, while Martin has a slightly<lb/>
pulled hamstring, said Sports In-<lb/>
formation Director Rick Brewer.<lb/>
"Our problem is we've played<lb/>
musical tailbacks Crum said.<lb/>
A near-record crowd of more<lb/>
than 50,000 is expected at Kenan<lb/>
Staduim for Saturday's game,<lb/>
North Carolina officials said.<lb/>
"From our point of view, we're<lb/>
looking forward to getting<lb/>
home Crum said. "Being on the<lb/>
road for three weeks kind of<lb/>
wears you out and I think it will be<lb/>
nice to be at home . . <lb/>
The Tar Heels are 3-1, losing 28-<lb/>
0 to top-ranked Oklahoma, and<lb/>
defeating Georgia Tech 30-23 and<lb/>
Navy 45-14 in their last three road<lb/>
games. The Tigers are 2-0-1 and<lb/>
are coming off a 20-20 tie with<lb/>
lOth-ranked Tennessee.<lb/>
" With a depleted running attack,<lb/>
quarterback Mark Maye could be<lb/>
putting the ball in the air more,<lb/>
but Crum said his offense won't<lb/>
be changing much to counter<lb/>
Auburn's deadly pass rush.<lb/>
"When you play a team like<lb/>
Auburn that is good defensively,<lb/>
you miss the boat if you go in there<lb/>
and put new plays in he said.<lb/>
"You've got to execute the things<lb/>
you try to throughout the sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Crum said Aubum features a<lb/>
balanced offense and "one of the<lb/>
best defenses in the country<lb/>
"I compare them very favorably<lb/>
to Oklahoma Crum said.<lb/>
'They're certainly a powerful<lb/>
football team<lb/>
With the loss of All-American<lb/>
tailback Brent Full wood to the<lb/>
National Football League, Crum<lb/>
said the burden of the Tiger of-<lb/>
fense now falls on senior quarter-<lb/>
back Jeff Burger, who has com-<lb/>
pleted 44 of 64 passes for 587<lb/>
yards in Auburn's first three con-<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
"He's (Burger) really mobile<lb/>
and hasastrongarm'Crumsaid.<lb/>
"People tend to downplay their<lb/>
rushing game, but I think it's<lb/>
pretty solid Crum added. "I<lb/>
think everybody tries to compare<lb/>
their tailbacks to Fullwood and<lb/>
(former Heisman Trophy winner)<lb/>
Bo Jackson. They've got good,<lb/>
solid runners<lb/>
Tiger coach Pat Dye, former<lb/>
coach at East Carolina, will be<lb/>
making his appearance at Kenan<lb/>
Staduim since 1979, when the Pi-<lb/>
rates tied the Tar Heels 24-24.<lb/>
DRESS FOR SUCCESS.<lb/>
SOPHOMORES<lb/>
If you're enrolled in the second year of a college program leading to an associate or baccalaureate<lb/>
degree from an accredited collegeuniversity, you could be earning more than $1,000 a month dur<lb/>
ing your junior and senior years of college for a total of $24,000 by graduation. You must he at<lb/>
least 18 but not more than 25 years old, be a US Citizen and have a 3.0 GPA. To see if you qualify<lb/>
for the Baccalaureate Degree Commissioning Program (BDCP) Call: 1-800-662-72317419 or out<lb/>
side of North Carolina 1-800-528-8713<lb/>
CONTACT Lt. Boatright<lb/>
Navy Representative<lb/>
October 6<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement Office<lb/>
V NAVY OFFICER.<lb/>
?  - s'<lb/>
 ?ICr ??  ???"  - Ll<lb/>
LEAD THE ADVENTURE.<lb/>
group of students to a game of<lb/>
their choice. The Department of<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Services<lb/>
will provide all officials needed,<lb/>
equipment, and reserve any play-<lb/>
ing site deemed necessary.<lb/>
Registration for this one day<lb/>
event will be held Wednesday,<lb/>
Oct. 14 in room 104-A Memorial<lb/>
Gym from 11 a.m6 p.m. The event<lb/>
will take place Thursday, Oct. 22<lb/>
from 4 p.m8 p.m. at the site of<lb/>
your choice.<lb/>
If you feel that you owe some-<lb/>
body or some team SOME-<lb/>
THING, challenge them to a per-<lb/>
sonal grudge match, but remem-<lb/>
ber, this activity is just for fun.<lb/>
Registration for physical Fit-<lb/>
ness aerobic, aquarobic and ton-<lb/>
ing classes is upcoming in mid-<lb/>
October. You can sign up to 'work<lb/>
your body' Oct. 13-16 in room 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
A fee of $10 for students and $12<lb/>
for staff had been charged. For a<lb/>
complete class schedule, drop by<lb/>
room 204 Memorial Gym or call<lb/>
757-6387 for more information.<lb/>
For additional information re-<lb/>
garding any of the programs and<lb/>
services offered by the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Services drop by room 204 Memo-<lb/>
rial Gym or call 757-6387.<lb/>
Read the Fearless Football<lb/>
Forecast every Thursday in the<lb/>
r<lb/>
?JJ 1L<lb/>
o o<lb/>
311<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
GOOD<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
TOO!<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
ANY MEAL<lb/>
At<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
NOT GOOD<lb/>
WITH OTHER<lb/>
COUPONS<lb/>
1890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
756-2011<lb/>
,2903 S. Evans St<lb/>
expires December 31. 1987j<lb/>
uoacvansoi expires December c. 1, li<lb/>
GOOD<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
TOO!<lb/>
5903 S. Evans St<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
YOUR NEXT<lb/>
MEAL<lb/>
At<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
NOT GOOD<lb/>
WITH OTHER<lb/>
COUPONS<lb/>
756-20111<lb/>
jo c . cvciins oi expires December 31, 1987j<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
2903 S. Evans St.<lb/>
Takeout Orders; 756-2011<lb/>
? !???? I iKi<lb/>
!??? m '? mum ?i ?? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
h<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0017"/><lb/>
'age 12<lb/>
 to be playing<lb/>
e uniform now<lb/>
rcparc<lb/>
had an<lb/>
St <lb/>
n four<lb/>
.i u p a<lb/>
:nt<lb/>
i:<lb/>
Applewhite originally signed a<lb/>
scholarship with North Carolina<lb/>
following an All-Star career at<lb/>
Vance. After one year at UNC, he<lb/>
became disenchanted and at-<lb/>
tempted to transfer to Virginia.<lb/>
However. UNC officials would<lb/>
not release him to another ACC<lb/>
school and he ended up at ECU.<lb/>
1 learned a whole lot from that<lb/>
situation (the changing of<lb/>
ols says Applewhite. "It<lb/>
was a very difficult timeof my life.<lb/>
rhere were some technical rules<lb/>
that were broken bv Virginia and<lb/>
ol course the fact that it would<lb/>
 bad tor a person to transfer<lb/>
ne conference school to<lb/>
another also figured in. But, I<lb/>
t really think about it any-<lb/>
e because it is something that<lb/>
happened in the past. I feel like<lb/>
that I am better off with the ECU<lb/>
.ram And my main concern<lb/>
a - winning games here<lb/>
However, it is natural to won-<lb/>
der ppk white is fully satisfied<lb/>
IL as never his first<lb/>
choice<lb/>
"1 am happy with the program<lb/>
here sa - Applewhite. "The<lb/>
mam reason 1 chose ECU was<lb/>
because of the coaching philoso-<lb/>
"1 was looking tor a coach that I<lb/>
would be able to relate to both<lb/>
mentally and physically contin-<lb/>
ued Applewhite. "And in Donnie<lb/>
Thompson (defensive line coach),<lb/>
1 found that He is the best coach<lb/>
that I've ever had for teaching<lb/>
?A technique.<lb/>
d. 1 also liked coach Baker a<lb/>
continued Applewhite. "He<lb/>
;reat values and he cares for<lb/>
each one of his players as people<lb/>
as football players<lb/>
And Applewhite, although a<lb/>
dominant force on the field, is ob-<lb/>
much more than just a<lb/>
I player.<lb/>
to new post<lb/>
ilete<lb/>
win<lb/>
Uni-<lb/>
-h will be<lb/>
?i The<lb/>
hns-<lb/>
ach for the Pirates from<lb/>
2-1970.<lb/>
was ECU'S freshman coach<lb/>
62-1966, as his squad was<lb/>
the only undefeated freshman<lb/>
: ECU history. He also as-<lb/>
d head coach Clarence<lb/>
isavich as ECU won back-to-<lb/>
? Tangerine Bowl titles in 1954<lb/>
and 1953.<lb/>
VanSant was also a head foot-<lb/>
hat the high school level<lb/>
in North Carolina, as well as head<lb/>
h at Cuilford College and<lb/>
noir-Ryne College.<lb/>
VanSant received his under-<lb/>
graduate degree and Master's<lb/>
ree from ECU in 1961 and<lb/>
VanSant received his doctoral<lb/>
- from the University of<lb/>
ibama in 1975.<lb/>
pe to regroup<lb/>
Ion hard times<lb/>
a ill be<lb/>
b Pirates come to<lb/>
I MC-W a<lb/>
boat them, the<lb/>
Id help us a lot<lb/>
ittered by CAA<lb/>
ast month, do<lb/>
I Ij<lb/>
TiiLk<lb/>
res to level the<lb/>
lian Saturday.<lb/>
have some breaks in the schedule.<lb/>
In October, ECU will face the likes<lb/>
Andrews and Greensboro<lb/>
ege, teams that the Pirates<lb/>
have traditionally beaten.<lb/>
"A conservative guess would<lb/>
be that we could go five of seven<lb/>
in the month of October said<lb/>
Harvey. "But the way we've been<lb/>
playing, who knows?"<lb/>
ECU'S team stats are dismal.<lb/>
The Pirates have been shut-out six<lb/>
times this season and have only<lb/>
six regular-season goals asa team.<lb/>
Pirate opponents sco.e an<lb/>
average of 3.3 goals against them<lb/>
for a total of 30 on the season.<lb/>
In the spite of the number of<lb/>
goals against, offense or lack of it,<lb/>
has been a major problem for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
"A problem that we have is our<lb/>
front runners said Harvey. "I've<lb/>
tried different combinations,<lb/>
moving mid-fielders up, backs<lb/>
up, everything but moving the<lb/>
goalkeeper up front<lb/>
Being only halfway through a<lb/>
season means that there is still<lb/>
time. Time to spark anoffenseand<lb/>
salvage a season. With the trip<lb/>
south Friday, the Pirates may be<lb/>
able to find the solution to their<lb/>
problems and get on the winning<lb/>
track.<lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 1, 1987 13<lb/>
Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
ECU at West Virginia<lb/>
Auburn at North Carolina<lb/>
Arkansas at TCU<lb/>
Virginia at Clemson<lb/>
Florida at LSU<lb/>
Miami (Fl.) at Fla. State<lb/>
Ga. Tech at N.C. State<lb/>
Ohio St. at Illinois<lb/>
Mich. St. at Iowa<lb/>
South Carolina at Nebraska<lb/>
BRIAN BAILEY<lb/>
WNCT-TV Sports Director<lb/>
La Weak<lb/>
(7-3)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(29-11)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
DEAN BUCHAN<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
La Week:<lb/>
(6-4)<lb/>
Overall<lb/>
(28-12)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Miami (Fl.)<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Lut Week:<lb/>
(6-4)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(28-12)<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
PAT MOLLOY<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Lai Week<lb/>
(6-4)<lb/>
Overall.<lb/>
(25-15)<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Dr. RICHARD EAKIN<lb/>
ECU Chancellor<lb/>
LM Week<lb/>
(5-5)<lb/>
Overall<lb/>
(20-20)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Miami (Fl.)<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Ohio State<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Intramurals calendar beginning to heat up<lb/>
The Intramural Sport calendar<lb/>
continues to heat up as teams play<lb/>
their final game for the month of<lb/>
September.<lb/>
In co-rec softball action, two top<lb/>
ranked teams went to war and<lb/>
played for the co-rec softball title<lb/>
in a game otherwise known as 'the<lb/>
game of the year Sumptin' Spe-<lb/>
cial kept their undefeated record<lb/>
with a combination of base hits<lb/>
and home runs any squad would<lb/>
have been proud of and came<lb/>
away with a close win over the<lb/>
Syndicate.<lb/>
In the eight inning contest,<lb/>
Special's Ricky Fischer drove in<lb/>
teammate Sonya Dubree to clinch<lb/>
the 4-3 victory. No doubt that the<lb/>
Syndicate will be back later to try<lb/>
and rob their foes of the all cam-<lb/>
pus championship title.<lb/>
In other softball action, the<lb/>
Homers defeated Silent Attack 12-<lb/>
6, while the Executioners out-<lb/>
lasted DDID 11-9.<lb/>
Coming up on the Intramural<lb/>
Sport Calendar of events will be a<lb/>
new and exciting activity for all<lb/>
those individuals and teams<lb/>
wanting a little 'payback' for a<lb/>
loss they have encountered.<lb/>
Challenge day has been set up<lb/>
as an opportunity for teams or<lb/>
individuals to challenge ar-<lb/>
group of students to a game of<lb/>
their choice. The Department of<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Services<lb/>
will provide all officials needed,<lb/>
equipment, and reserve any play-<lb/>
ing site deemed necessary.<lb/>
Registration for this one day<lb/>
event will be held Wednesday,<lb/>
Oct. 14 in room 104-A Memorial<lb/>
Gym from 11 a.m6 p.m. The event<lb/>
will take place Thursday, Oct. 22<lb/>
from 4 p.m8 p.m. at the site of<lb/>
Crum searching for tailbacks<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) -<lb/>
North Carolina's Dick Crum may<lb/>
feel more like band conductor this<lb/>
weekend instead of football coach<lb/>
against No. 6 Auburn after an-<lb/>
other week of "musical<lb/>
tailbacks<lb/>
Crum is searching for some<lb/>
healthy runners. Starter Torin<lb/>
Dorn and reserve Kennard Mar-<lb/>
tin are still nursing injuries and<lb/>
are "very questionable" for<lb/>
Saturday's 1 p.m. game. Senior<lb/>
Eric Slarrt?? &amp;StedrtD startar<lb/>
tailback, Crum said at this weekly<lb/>
news conference Tuesday.<lb/>
"If we had to play today, neither<lb/>
one of them (Dorn and Martin)<lb/>
would play Crum said. Dorn stil<lb/>
has a sore ankle he suffered in a<lb/>
season-opening victory over Illi-<lb/>
nois, while Martin has a slightly<lb/>
pulled hamstring, said Sports In-<lb/>
formation Director Rick Brewer.<lb/>
"Our problem is we've played<lb/>
musical tailbacks Crum said.<lb/>
A near-record crowd of more<lb/>
than 50,000 is expected at Kenan<lb/>
Staduim for Saturday's game,<lb/>
North Carolina officials said.<lb/>
"From our point of view, we're<lb/>
looking forward to getting<lb/>
home Crum said. "Being on the<lb/>
road for three weeks kind of<lb/>
wears you out and I think it will be<lb/>
nice to be at home <lb/>
The Tar Heels are 3-1, losing 28-<lb/>
0 to top-ranked Oklahoma, and<lb/>
defeating Georgia Tech 30-23 and<lb/>
Navy 45-14 in their last three road<lb/>
games. The Tigers are 2-0-1 and<lb/>
are coming off a 20-20 tie with<lb/>
lOth-rankcd Tennessee.<lb/>
" Witha depleted running attack,<lb/>
quarterback Mark Maye could be<lb/>
putting the ball in the air more,<lb/>
but Crum said his offense won't<lb/>
be changing much to counter<lb/>
Auburn's deadly pass rush.<lb/>
"When you play a team like<lb/>
Auburn that is good defensively,<lb/>
you miss the boat if you go in there<lb/>
and put new plays in he said.<lb/>
"You've got to execute the things<lb/>
you try to throughout the sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Crum said Auburn features a<lb/>
balanced offense and "one of the<lb/>
best defenses in the country<lb/>
"I compare them very favorably<lb/>
to Oklahoma Crum said.<lb/>
'They're certainly a powerful<lb/>
football team<lb/>
With the loss of Ail-American<lb/>
tailback Brent Fullwood to the<lb/>
National Football League, Crum<lb/>
said the burden of the Tiger of-<lb/>
fense now falls on senior quarter-<lb/>
back Jeff Burger, who has com-<lb/>
pleted 44 of 64 passes for 587<lb/>
yards in Auburn's first three con-<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
"He's (Burger) really mobile<lb/>
and has a strong arm Crum said.<lb/>
"People tend to downplay their<lb/>
rushing game, but I think it's<lb/>
pretty solid Crum added. "I<lb/>
think everybody tries to compare<lb/>
their tailbacks to Fullwood and<lb/>
(former Heisman Trophy winner)<lb/>
Bo Jackson. They've got good,<lb/>
solid runners<lb/>
Tiger coach Pat Dye, former<lb/>
coach at East Carolina, will be<lb/>
making his appearance at Kenan<lb/>
Staduim since 1979, when the Pi-<lb/>
rates tied the Tar Heels 24-24.<lb/>
your choice.<lb/>
If you feel that you owe some-<lb/>
body or some team SOME-<lb/>
THING, challenge them to a per-<lb/>
sonal gTudge match, but remem-<lb/>
ber, this activity is just for fun.<lb/>
Registration for physical Fit-<lb/>
ness aerobic, aquarobic and ton-<lb/>
ing classes is upcoming in mid-<lb/>
October. You can sign up to 'work<lb/>
your body' Oct. 13-16 in room 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym. <lb/>
A fee of $10 for students and $12<lb/>
for staff had been charged. For a<lb/>
complete class schedule, drop by<lb/>
room 204 Memorial Gym or call<lb/>
757-6387 for more information.<lb/>
For additional information re-<lb/>
garding any of the programs and<lb/>
services offered by the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Services drop by room 204 Memo-<lb/>
rial Gym or call 757-6387.<lb/>
Read the Fearless Football<lb/>
Forecast every Thursday in the<lb/>
?if<lb/>
fl o<lb/>
O<lb/>
o<lb/>
v<lb/>
9<lb/>
<lb/>
DRESS FOR SUCCESS.<lb/>
SOPHOMORES<lb/>
If you're enrolled in the second year of a college program leading to an associate or baccalaureate<lb/>
degree from an accredited collegeuniversity, you could be earning more than $1,000 a month dur<lb/>
ing your junior and senior years of college for a total of $24,000 by graduation. You must be at<lb/>
least 18 but not more than 25 years old, be a US Citizen and have a 3.0 GPA. To see if you quahh<lb/>
for the Baccalaureate Degree Commissioning Program (BDCP). Call: 1-800-662-72317419 or out-<lb/>
side of North Carolina 1-800-528-8713.<lb/>
CONTACT: Lt Boatright<lb/>
Navy Representative<lb/>
October 6<lb/>
GOOD<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
TOO!<lb/>
$1.00 OF<lb/>
NOT GOOD<lb/>
WITH OTHER<lb/>
COUPONS<lb/>
ANY MEAL<lb/>
At<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890 SEAFOOD 756-201II<lb/>
03 SvanL expires December 31, 198<lb/>
3ood -I rio rw NOT GOOD<lb/>
Vyr-PH lUO jr r WITH OTHER<lb/>
'r YOUR NEXT COUPONS<lb/>
MEAL<lb/>
At<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890 SEAFOOD 756-20111<lb/>
1903 S. Evans St. expires December 31, 1987i<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
189? SEAFOOD<lb/>
V <lb/>
<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement Office<lb/>
NAVY OFFICER.<lb/>
Tu. -?<lb/>
I<lb/>
Md<lb/>
ADVENTURE.<lb/>
2903 S. Evans St.<lb/>
Takeout Orders; 756-2011<lb/>
mum<lb/>
 "?"?'?" m ?? inmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimmmmmmtmmm<lb/>
i mee?mm ? mmmmmimmmmm'<lb/>
vatntf<lb/>
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ir<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
 ??j<lb/>
?v<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0018"/><lb/>
14 THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER I. 1987<lb/>
Positions harden as NFL strike continues<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Positions arc<lb/>
continuing to harden as 'he NFL<lb/>
strike enters its ninth day, but<lb/>
word of possible picket-line<lb/>
crossings have started to spread.<lb/>
While union head Gene Up-<lb/>
shaw was continuing his cross-<lb/>
country tour Tuesday vowing to<lb/>
disrupt Sunday's games of re-<lb/>
placement players, the Manage-<lb/>
ment Council's executive<lb/>
committee was continuing to take<lb/>
a hard line , remaining adamant<lb/>
that it will in no way give up its<lb/>
control of the game by acceding to<lb/>
the players' demand for free<lb/>
agency.<lb/>
Meeting in New York, the coun-<lb/>
cil also formally announced that<lb/>
last week's missed games will not<lb/>
be made up. That will cost the<lb/>
1,585 players anywhere from<lb/>
$60,000 for the highest-paid su-<lb/>
perstars to $4,000 for minimum-<lb/>
salaried rookies.<lb/>
It was apparently money that is<lb/>
causing some of the league's big-<lb/>
ger names to indicate they might<lb/>
be crossing the picket lines.<lb/>
Among the players mentioned<lb/>
were Dallas' Danny White and<lb/>
Tony Dorsett and San Francisco's<lb/>
Joe Montana and Dwight Clark.<lb/>
No new negotiations were<lb/>
scheduled and none are planned<lb/>
until at least after this weekend's<lb/>
games, the first to be played by<lb/>
teams of castoffs and other free<lb/>
agents. Each side also formally<lb/>
filed complaints with the Na-<lb/>
tional Labor Relations Board as<lb/>
they said they would.<lb/>
Tuesday was also the final day<lb/>
that fans could get full refunds for<lb/>
season tickets and fans lined up at<lb/>
ticket windows around the nation<lb/>
to get back their money.<lb/>
Meanwhile, hundreds of ticket<lb/>
holders lined up at the New Eng-<lb/>
land box office, and although no<lb/>
official count was available, Patri-<lb/>
ots General Manager Patrick Sul-<lb/>
livan said his team appeared "to<lb/>
be leading the league right now"<lb/>
in refund tickets.<lb/>
Upshaw was in Atlanta and<lb/>
Elizabeth, N.J. to meet with<lb/>
members of striking teams from<lb/>
the area. He took a hard line in<lb/>
both places.<lb/>
"We don't advocate violence,<lb/>
but we do advocate doing<lb/>
whatever's necessary to stop<lb/>
these games, and we will do it<lb/>
Upshaw said after meeting with<lb/>
representatives of six teams in<lb/>
Atlanta.<lb/>
"We'll haunt those games<lb/>
Upshaw said. "They are really<lb/>
Dallas'<lb/>
White<lb/>
to play<lb/>
IRVING, Texas (AP) - Dallas<lb/>
quarterback Danny White<lb/>
crossed the picket line of striking<lb/>
Cowboys players early today,<lb/>
saying his reasons for doing so<lb/>
"are strictly private<lb/>
White, who lost $45,000 last<lb/>
week when he honored the play-<lb/>
ers' strike, slipped across the<lb/>
picket line at 7:50 a.m. as it was<lb/>
formed by late-arriving strikers.<lb/>
White joined veterans Randy<lb/>
White and Don Smerek. Also in<lb/>
the Cowboys' camp are two play-<lb/>
ers off the injured reserve, Chris<lb/>
Duliban and Johnny "Lam" Jones.<lb/>
Also expected to cross the<lb/>
picket lines this week were run-<lb/>
ning back Tony Dorsett, one of the<lb/>
most outspoken pro-union mem-<lb/>
bers of the team, and defensive<lb/>
end Ed Jones. Both received let-<lb/>
ters from cowboys management<lb/>
saying they would jeopardize<lb/>
their annuities if they didn't show<lb/>
up.<lb/>
Danny White informed the rest<lb/>
of the team during a meeting on<lb/>
Monday that because of financial<lb/>
problems he would have to cross<lb/>
the picket line later in the week<lb/>
and return to work.<lb/>
Dorsett said he received a letter<lb/>
from Cowboys President Tex<lb/>
Schramm on Tuesday that in-<lb/>
formed him he stands to lose a<lb/>
portion of his $6 milion annuity if<lb/>
he doesn't return soon.<lb/>
On Sunday, the Cowboys are<lb/>
scheduled to play the Jets in East<lb/>
Rutherford, N.J their first game<lb/>
since the National Football<lb/>
League Players Association an-<lb/>
nounced the strike Sept. 21.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
tearing down our product, and<lb/>
we don't like it<lb/>
Miami owner Joe Robbie,<lb/>
meanwhile, predicted before the<lb/>
owners' meeting that they would<lb/>
be even more united after<lb/>
Sunday'sgamesand added: "This<lb/>
fight is over control of football, it's<lb/>
not over money<lb/>
"Owners are not going to sur-<lb/>
render control of the games to the<lb/>
union he said.<lb/>
One game wiped out was the<lb/>
Giants at the Dolphins' new sta-<lb/>
dium, a privately financed edifice<lb/>
named for Robbie. The two teams<lb/>
had met just once previously.<lb/>
"I just had the biggest gate in<lb/>
the history of pro football wiped<lb/>
out Sunday, my team against the<lb/>
Super Bowl champions Robbie<lb/>
said. It seems to me just willful<lb/>
destruction to wipe out a game<lb/>
like that<lb/>
Hugh Culverhouse, owner of<lb/>
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and<lb/>
chairman of the executive<lb/>
committee, said after the meeting<lb/>
that the owners had voted to al-<lb/>
low any striking player who re-<lb/>
ports by the Friday before a game<lb/>
to be allowed to play that Sunday<lb/>
and be paid for the game.<lb/>
He also said the teams will be<lb/>
allowed a 55-player roster, with<lb/>
only 45 allowed to dress each<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
CBS and NBC have said they<lb/>
will televise their regular games<lb/>
Sunday, and ABC said it will<lb/>
broadcast next Monday night's<lb/>
game between the San Francisco<lb/>
49ers and the New York Giants.<lb/>
The networks have not said<lb/>
whether they will televise any<lb/>
further games, but Tex Schramm<lb/>
of the Dallas Cowboys said after<lb/>
Monday's management meeting<lb/>
that he believed that deals could<lb/>
be made with local stations if the<lb/>
networks pull out.<lb/>
In Philadelphia, Ed Manon,<lb/>
executive director of the Profes-<lb/>
sional Football Referees Associa-<lb/>
tion, said regular referees would<lb/>
work the replacement games.<lb/>
While emphasizing his associa-<lb/>
tion was not a union, Marion said:<lb/>
"If we don't work, we don't get<lb/>
paid<lb/>
EXTRA LOW<lb/>
PRICES!<lb/>
mim<lb/>
Fresh Whole Boneless - 5-7 Lbs. Avg.<lb/>
PORK LOINS ,sliced FREE!<lb/>
Fresh Whole<lb/>
PORK TENDERLOINS<lb/>
IVIERIOBgr<lb/>
tSe<lb/>
m-<lb/>
Fresh Crisp Iceberg<lb/>
LETTUCE<lb/>
Prices in this ad good thru<lb/>
Sunday, October 4, 1987.<lb/>
We Reserve The Right To Limit<lb/>
Quantities On All Items.<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Fresh Large Baking Potatoes<lb/>
Fresh Jumbo Yellow Onions<lb/>
 Fresh Sweet Potatoes<lb/>
w,r-<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Full Cut<lb/>
BONELESS<lb/>
ROUND STEAK<lb/>
Head <lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Tasty<lb/>
GWALTNEY<lb/>
BACONl<lb/>
SLICED BACON<lb/>
I&amp;H<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
Fresh Thompson<lb/>
SEEDLESS<lb/>
GRAPES<lb/>
JttftfflMf CtfD<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Breasts<lb/>
$118<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Holly Farms - Grade A<lb/>
Regular Or Family Pack<lb/>
Fresh Pan<lb/>
Trout<lb/>
$129<lb/>
Fresh Eastern Red,<lb/>
Gold Or Rome<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
Maxwell House<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
$299<lb/>
13 Oz. Vac. Bag - Decaffeinated ADEP<lb/>
Instant Decaffeinated<lb/>
Maxwell House Coffee s oz. 3.99<lb/>
EXTRA LOW PRICES<lb/>
Everyday<lb/>
<lb/>
8 Oz. - Creamy ItalianltallanLt. Creamy<lb/>
CucumberCreamy ButtermilkThousand<lb/>
IslandOil Free ItalianCreamy Cucumber<lb/>
It. Bacon I TomatoBacon A Tomato<lb/>
CatalinaFrenclilt. Catalinalt. French<lb/>
Peter Pan 18 Oz. ? SmoothCrunchy<lb/>
499?<lb/>
Oz. Ozark Valley - Turkey Chicken J<lb/>
Grape Jelly Or<lb/>
JamApple Jelly<lb/>
95 Oz. - PepperoniCombinationSausage<lb/>
Shredded 11 Food Lion<lb/>
Mozzarella! I Orange Juice<lb/>
$15979<lb/>
12 Oz. - Food Lion 12 Oz. ? Frozen Concentrate<lb/>
3$1<lb/>
 Ifc ? Oipfrt Beef<lb/>
?MfCMcfcftfUvtr<lb/>
<lb/>
 ? <lb/>
?<lb/>
. Mr-?.nr??MJT.?  . .  B n m f J(<lb/>
?MaMMMMWI<lb/>
??!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057917_0019"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 1, 1987<lb/>
Positions harden as NFL strike continues<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Positions are<lb/>
continuing to harden as the NFL<lb/>
strike enters its ninth day, but<lb/>
word of possible picket-line<lb/>
crossings have started to spread.<lb/>
While union head Gene l'p-<lb/>
shaw was continuing his cross-<lb/>
country tour Tuesday vowing to<lb/>
disrupt Sunday's games of re-<lb/>
placement players, the Manage-<lb/>
ment Council's executive<lb/>
committee was continuing to take<lb/>
a hard line , remaining adamant<lb/>
that it will in no way give up its<lb/>
control of thegame by acceding to<lb/>
the players' demand for free<lb/>
agency.<lb/>
Meeting in New York, the coun-<lb/>
cil also formally announced that<lb/>
last week's missed games will not<lb/>
be made up. That will cost the<lb/>
1,585 players anywhere from<lb/>
$60,000 for the highest-paid su-<lb/>
perstars to $4,000 for minimum-<lb/>
salaried rookies.<lb/>
It was apparently money that is<lb/>
causing some of the league's big-<lb/>
ger names to indicate they might<lb/>
be crossing the picket lines.<lb/>
Among the players mentioned<lb/>
were Dallas' Danny White and<lb/>
Tony Dorsett and San Francisco's<lb/>
Joe Montana and Dwight Clark.<lb/>
No new negotiations were<lb/>
scheduled and none are planned<lb/>
until at least after this weekend's<lb/>
games, the first to be played by<lb/>
teams of castoffs and other free<lb/>
agents. Each side also formally<lb/>
filed complaints with the Na-<lb/>
tional Labor Relations Board as<lb/>
they said they would.<lb/>
Tuesday was also the final day<lb/>
that fans could get full refunds for<lb/>
season tickets and fans lined up at<lb/>
ticket windows around the nation<lb/>
to get back their money.<lb/>
Meanwhile, hundreds of ticket<lb/>
holders lined up at the New Eng-<lb/>
land box office, and although no<lb/>
official count was available, Patri-<lb/>
ots General Manager Patrick Sul-<lb/>
livan said his team appeared "to<lb/>
be leading the league right now"<lb/>
in refund tickets.<lb/>
Upshaw was in Atlanta and<lb/>
Elizabeth, N.J. to meet with<lb/>
members of striking teams from<lb/>
the area. He took a hard line in<lb/>
both places.<lb/>
"We don't advocate violence,<lb/>
but we do advocate doing<lb/>
whatever's necessary to stop<lb/>
these games, and we will do it<lb/>
Upshaw said after meeting with<lb/>
representatives of six teams in<lb/>
Atlanta.<lb/>
"We'll haunt those games<lb/>
Upshaw said. "They are really<lb/>
Dallas'<lb/>
White<lb/>
to play<lb/>
IRVING, Texas (AP) - Dallas<lb/>
quarterback Danny White<lb/>
crossed the picket line of striking<lb/>
Cowboys players early today,<lb/>
saying his reasons for doing so<lb/>
"are strictly private<lb/>
White, who lost $45,000 last<lb/>
week when he honored the play-<lb/>
ers' strike, slipped across the<lb/>
picket line at 7:50 a.m. as it was<lb/>
formed by late-arriving strikers.<lb/>
White joined veterans Randy<lb/>
White and Don Smerek. Also in<lb/>
the Cowboys' camp are two play-<lb/>
ers off the injured reserve, Chris<lb/>
Duliban and Johnny "Lam" Jones.<lb/>
Also expected to cross the<lb/>
picket lines this week were run-<lb/>
ning back Tony Dorsett, one of the<lb/>
most outspoken pro-union mem-<lb/>
bers of the team, and defensive<lb/>
end Ed Jones. Both received let-<lb/>
ters from cowboys management<lb/>
saying they would jeopardize<lb/>
their annuities if they didn't show<lb/>
up.<lb/>
Danny White informed the rest<lb/>
of the team during a meeting on<lb/>
Monday that because of financial<lb/>
problems he would have to cross<lb/>
the picket line later in the week<lb/>
and return to work.<lb/>
Dorsett said he received a letter<lb/>
from Cowboys President Tex<lb/>
Schramm on Tuesday that in-<lb/>
formed him he stands to lose a<lb/>
portion of his $6 milion annuity if<lb/>
he doesn't return soon.<lb/>
On Sunday, the Cowboys are<lb/>
scheduled to play the Jets in East<lb/>
Rutherford, N.J their first game<lb/>
since the National Football<lb/>
League Players Association an-<lb/>
nounced the strike Sept 21.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
tearing down our product, and<lb/>
we don't like it<lb/>
Miami owner Joe Robbie,<lb/>
meanwhile, predicted before the<lb/>
owners' meeting that they would<lb/>
be even more united after<lb/>
Sunday'sgamesand added: "This<lb/>
fight is over control of football, it's<lb/>
not over money<lb/>
"Owners are not going to sur-<lb/>
render control of the games to the<lb/>
union he said.<lb/>
One game wiped out was the<lb/>
Giants at the Dolphins' new sta-<lb/>
dium, a privately financed edifice<lb/>
named for Robbie. The two teams<lb/>
had met just once previously.<lb/>
"I just had the biggest gate in<lb/>
the history of pro football wiped<lb/>
out Sunday, my team against the<lb/>
Super Bowl champions Robbie<lb/>
said. It seems to me just willful<lb/>
destruction to wipe out a game<lb/>
like that<lb/>
Hugh Culverhouse, owner of<lb/>
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and<lb/>
chairman of the executive<lb/>
committee, said after the meeting<lb/>
that the owners had voted to al-<lb/>
low any striking player who re-<lb/>
ports by the Friday before a game<lb/>
to be allowed to play that Sunday<lb/>
and be paid for the game.<lb/>
He also said the teams will be<lb/>
allowed a 55-player roster, with<lb/>
only 45 allowed to dress each<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
CBS and NBC have said they<lb/>
will televise their regular games<lb/>
Sunday, and ABC said it will<lb/>
broadcast next Monday night's<lb/>
game between the San Francisco<lb/>
49ers and the New York Giants.<lb/>
The networks have not said<lb/>
whether they will televise any<lb/>
further games, but Tex Schramm<lb/>
of the Dallas Cowboys said after<lb/>
Monday's management meeting<lb/>
that he believed that deals could<lb/>
be made with local stations if the<lb/>
networks pull out.<lb/>
In Philadelphia, Ed Manon,<lb/>
executive director of the Profes<lb/>
sional Football Referees Associa-<lb/>
tion, said regular referees would<lb/>
work the replacement games.<lb/>
While emphasizing his associa-<lb/>
tion was not a union, Marion said:<lb/>
"If we don't work, we don't get<lb/>
paid "<lb/>
EXTRA LOW<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
PRICES!<lb/>
Center Cut<lb/>
AMERI06(ur<lb/>
Fresh Whole Boneless - 5-7 Lbs. Avg.<lb/>
PORK LOINS (Sliced FREE!<lb/>
Fresh Whole<lb/>
PORK TENDERLOINS<lb/>
Fresh Crisp Iceberg<lb/>
LETTUCE<lb/>
I<lb/>
Prices in this ad good thru<lb/>
Sunday, October 4, 1987.<lb/>
We Reserve The Right To Limit<lb/>
Quantities On All Items.<lb/>
59<lb/>
Fresh Large Baking Potatoes<lb/>
Fresh Jumbo Yellow Onions<lb/>
 Fresh Sweet Potatoes<lb/>
Hpari<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Full Cut<lb/>
BONELESS<lb/>
ROUND STEAK<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
Fresh Thompson<lb/>
EEDLESS<lb/>
GRAPES<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Breasts<lb/>
$118t<lb/>
Holly Farms - Grade A<lb/>
Regular Or Family Pack<lb/>
Fresh Pan<lb/>
Trout<lb/>
$ 129<lb/>
Fresh t a si em ntm,<lb/>
Gold Or Rome<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
39<lb/>
EXTRA LOW PRICES<lb/>
Maxwell House<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
$299<lb/>
13 Oz. Vac. Bag Decaffeinated ADEP<lb/>
Instant Decaffeinated<lb/>
Maxwell House Coffee s oz. 3.99<lb/>
Everyday<lb/>
8 Oz. - Creamy Itallanrtalianlt. Creamy<lb/>
CucumberCreamy ButtermilkThousand<lb/>
Island011 Free ItalianCreamy Cucumber<lb/>
Lt. Bacon t TomatoBacon A Tomato<lb/>
CaUllnaFrenchLt. CatallnaLt. French<lb/>
Mr. P's<lb/>
sm Pizza<lb/>
4 99? 69?<lb/>
Peter Pan 18 Oz. ? SmoothCrunchy J I 7 0z. Ozark Valley - TurkeyChicken I I 9.5 0z. PepperoniComWnatienSausage<lb/>
Stokely<lb/>
Vegetables<lb/>
399?<lb/>
14 0z. - Cut Or French Style Green<lb/>
Beans15 Oz. ? Whole Kernel Or<lb/>
Cream Style Corn14.5 Oz. - Honey<lb/>
Pod Peas<lb/>
Grape Jelly Or<lb/>
Bama - 2 Lb.<lb/>
t t 1 I Shredded l f Food Lion<lb/>
JamApple Jelly Mozzarella 11 Orange Juice<lb/>
99 $159<lb/>
12 Oz. - Food Lion<lb/>
Dawn<lb/>
Deterqi<lb/>
42 0z.<lb/>
22 0z. - Dishwashing<lb/>
Pack<lb/>
14 0z.<lb/>
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X<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>