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<pb facs="00057921_0001"/>
INSIDE<lb/>
EditorialsM?m <lb/>
Entertainment?? 7<lb/>
SportsM ' j<lb/>
Classifieds?m$<lb/>
ENTTERTAINMENT<lb/>
ECU students make plans to renovate downtown<lb/>
areas ? see ENTERTAINMENT, page 7.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Can the Pirates do it again? ? see SPORTS, page 10.<lb/>
Qftlt Safit damltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. b2 No. 15<lb/>
Thursday, October 15,1987<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Police assailant from NCSU<lb/>
identified and charged<lb/>
By ANDY LEWIS<lb/>
Law enforcement officials said<lb/>
they will arrest the man charged<lb/>
with assaulting a public safety<lb/>
officer at the melee alter the Sept.<lb/>
5 ECU-North Carolina State Uni-<lb/>
versity football game.<lb/>
Keith Douglas Philbeck, 21, of<lb/>
Cary is to be charged today with<lb/>
assaulting Inspector Robert W.<lb/>
Malason, according to NCSU<lb/>
Public Safety Captain Laura Rey-<lb/>
nolds.<lb/>
Philbeck has never been a stu-<lb/>
dent at either ECL or NCSU, offi-<lb/>
cials said.<lb/>
People from both Greenville<lb/>
and Raleigh identified Philbeck to<lb/>
police officials alter various me-<lb/>
dia made available videotape's<lb/>
and photographsoi who had been<lb/>
seen on top of a goalpost at the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The material was filmed after<lb/>
ECU's32-14 victory over NCSU at<lb/>
Carter-Finley Stadium, where<lb/>
over 2,000 tans spilled onto the<lb/>
field and caused an estimated<lb/>
$7 200 to the stadium.<lb/>
v-u.c . .dcuUii)ijiupi.cU a man<lb/>
assaulting Malason. The same<lb/>
man apparently then scaled a<lb/>
g( wlpost and waved to a crowd of<lb/>
football tans below.<lb/>
Two ECL' students identified<lb/>
Philbeck as the suspect Friday,<lb/>
according to ECL Public Safety<lb/>
Captain Keith Knox. Both stu-<lb/>
dents identified Philbeck after<lb/>
seeing a story and a picture in The<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
The warrant, which charges<lb/>
Legislation<lb/>
changes role,<lb/>
honor board<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Stilt Writer<lb/>
With the passage of new legisla-<lb/>
tion by the SGA Monday that will<lb/>
change the role of the 1 lonor<lb/>
Board, it remains to be seen how<lb/>
the Board's extended power will<lb/>
affect students.<lb/>
The Honor Board can now hear<lb/>
and reach judgement on all cases<lb/>
which involve violations of the<lb/>
code of conduct. Prior to the new-<lb/>
legislation, the Honor Board had<lb/>
to wait for judgment to be passed<lb/>
in a court of law before it could act<lb/>
on the case.<lb/>
"The major effect of this will be<lb/>
that the boards will have to re-<lb/>
view more cases said Dr. Elmer<lb/>
Meyer, vice chancellor of student<lb/>
lite.<lb/>
Ronald Speier, associate dean of<lb/>
student life, said he did not think<lb/>
the extended power of the Honor<lb/>
Board would cause a decrease in<lb/>
campus crime. Speier said it<lb/>
would make the students more<lb/>
responsible to upholding the<lb/>
codes of conduct.<lb/>
Both Meyer and Speier thought<lb/>
the board is competent to make<lb/>
just decisions. "1 can't see them<lb/>
changing their attitudes for deter-<lb/>
mining appropriate sanctions<lb/>
Speier said.<lb/>
Meyer said it was too early to<lb/>
tell if more cases will be appealed<lb/>
to the office of the dean of student<lb/>
life as a result of the new legisla-<lb/>
tion. He said only a few cases have<lb/>
been appealed to this person in<lb/>
the last decade.<lb/>
"This was the most important<lb/>
piece of legislation to come<lb/>
through the SGA in quite a long<lb/>
time said Bennett Eckert,<lb/>
speaker of the legislature. "It will<lb/>
hold students more responsible<lb/>
for theiracfions to the university<lb/>
Eckert said.<lb/>
Philbeck with assault, inflicting<lb/>
serious injury, came as the result<lb/>
of a cooperative investigation<lb/>
between ECU and NCSU public<lb/>
safety departments, Knox said.<lb/>
One ECU student called Pirate<lb/>
Crime Busters and identified<lb/>
Philbeck Friday, Knox said. The<lb/>
other student snowed ECU Public<lb/>
Safety officers a 1984 Sanderson<lb/>
High School (of Raleigh) year-<lb/>
book that included Philbeck's<lb/>
picture, Knox said.<lb/>
The student viewed a videotape<lb/>
of the incident in Knox's office<lb/>
and positviely identified Philbeck<lb/>
as the assailant, Knox said.<lb/>
Reynolds said her office had<lb/>
made arrangements with<lb/>
Philbeck's lawyer to serve the<lb/>
warrant today.<lb/>
Vice chancellor search begins<lb/>
Bv ED WILKERSON<lb/>
Suff Wnltr<lb/>
The search for a new vice chan-<lb/>
cellor of academic affairs for ECU<lb/>
began Tuesday when Chancellor<lb/>
Richard R. Eakin announced the<lb/>
appointment of Dr. Carl Adler to<lb/>
chair a search committee.<lb/>
Eakin made the announcement<lb/>
at the meeting of the ECU Faculty<lb/>
Senate. The position was left open<lb/>
when Dr. Angelo Volpe became<lb/>
president of Tennessee Techno-<lb/>
logical University in July.<lb/>
Adler, a professor and chair-<lb/>
man of the physics department,<lb/>
will head a five member commit-<lb/>
tee in conducting a national<lb/>
search to fill the position.<lb/>
The committee will begin ad-<lb/>
vertising in national academic<lb/>
media beginning in November,<lb/>
according to an ECU News Bu-<lb/>
reau press release.<lb/>
In addition to Adler, Eakin<lb/>
named Dr. Holly Mathews of<lb/>
sociology and anthropology, Dr.<lb/>
Conner Atkeson of the historv<lb/>
department, Dr. Clinton Down-<lb/>
ingof the School of Education and<lb/>
Dr. Edward Levinc, dean of the<lb/>
School of Art.<lb/>
Janice Faulkner, director of the<lb/>
North Carolina Humanities<lb/>
Council, spoke to the Senate re-<lb/>
garding grant funding awarded<lb/>
by the council, which totals ap-<lb/>
proximately $600,000 annually.<lb/>
University departments which<lb/>
qualify represent any of the hu-<lb/>
manities or educational disci-<lb/>
plines.<lb/>
"The primary purpose of the<lb/>
grants is to engage university<lb/>
scholars with the public commu-<lb/>
nity Faulkner said. "The Hu-<lb/>
manities Council will continue to<lb/>
aid in funding of public programs<lb/>
and educational student forums<lb/>
The proposed expansion of<lb/>
Mcndenhall student center was<lb/>
reviewed at the meeting. Con-<lb/>
struction is slated to begin by<lb/>
November of this year, according<lb/>
to director Rudolph Alexander,<lb/>
who said a total of 31,000 square<lb/>
feet will be added to the building,<lb/>
expanding all 3 levels.<lb/>
The construction, according to<lb/>
Alexander, will add a cafeteria<lb/>
with a seating capacity of 400,<lb/>
additional student government<lb/>
offices, a student multi-purpose<lb/>
room and an elaborate "great<lb/>
room" which will be utilized for<lb/>
buffet dinners, the accomodation<lb/>
of public speakers and presenta-<lb/>
tion of theater productions.<lb/>
Dr. Elmer Meyer, Vice Chancel-<lb/>
lor of Student Life, commented on<lb/>
the growth of the university's<lb/>
student work-study program.<lb/>
The program's directors evalu-<lb/>
ate individual student financial<lb/>
status and then offer assistance in<lb/>
locating employers who have<lb/>
advertised openings for employ-<lb/>
ment positions.<lb/>
Work-study employers include<lb/>
both public and private factions<lb/>
on-campus and in the surround-<lb/>
ing Greenville area, according to<lb/>
Pam Spell, Assistant Director of<lb/>
Student Services and employ-<lb/>
ment. Spell commented the "475<lb/>
students received checks on the<lb/>
last payroll, a marked increase in<lb/>
the number of students involved<lb/>
at this time last year<lb/>
The ECU Alumni Telefund was<lb/>
brought to the attention of the<lb/>
senate members in an effort to<lb/>
boost the amount of $45,000 cur-<lb/>
rently raised.<lb/>
see TELEFUND, page 2<lb/>
Marie Farr, Linda Godwin and Linda Could (left to right) at the "Women in tne 21st Cei.turv" program<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center Wednesday (Jon Jordan, Photolab).<lb/>
Godwin experiences NASA<lb/>
By TO NT PAGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
NASA astronaut Linda God win<lb/>
was the keynote speaker at the<lb/>
Women'?Forum Committee pro-<lb/>
gram entitled "Women of the 21 st<lb/>
century Wednesday in Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center.<lb/>
Godwin spoke on her experi-<lb/>
ences in the NASA space program<lb/>
and encouraged students in the<lb/>
science and math fields to pursue<lb/>
their interests. "If you take some-<lb/>
thing that is challenging that you<lb/>
like then there is no limit to what<lb/>
you can do in that field Godwin<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Godwin talked about her at-<lb/>
tempts to get into the space pro-<lb/>
gram before being accepted and<lb/>
added, "Enjoy what you are<lb/>
doing and don't stop trying to get<lb/>
what you want<lb/>
Godwin presented a slide se-<lb/>
ries on the space program and<lb/>
also addressed questions from the<lb/>
audience. Among the questions<lb/>
asked were those pertaining to the<lb/>
progress of the space shuttle.<lb/>
Godwin expressed sorrow to the<lb/>
colleagues lost in the Challenger<lb/>
disaster and said major im-<lb/>
provments will be made in the<lb/>
area of hardware and test and<lb/>
check-out. Godwin said most of<lb/>
the training procedures will re-<lb/>
main the same except for extra<lb/>
manuevcrs in the crew escape<lb/>
system.<lb/>
"We should see a launch by<lb/>
1988, hopefully in June Godwin<lb/>
said.<lb/>
After recieving her doctorate<lb/>
degree in 1982, Godwin went to<lb/>
work for NASA as a flight officer.<lb/>
In 1985 she was selected as an<lb/>
astronaut candidate and missions<lb/>
specialist for space shuttle flight<lb/>
crews.<lb/>
Godwin was one of many<lb/>
speakers who participated in the<lb/>
program, "Women of the 21st<lb/>
Century on Wednesday. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Linda Gould, chairper-<lb/>
son for the Women's forum, the<lb/>
program went exceptionally well.<lb/>
"We had a great turnout. Hope-<lb/>
fully students were able to gain<lb/>
knowledge from the speakers and<lb/>
at the same time become inter-<lb/>
ested and more familiar with our<lb/>
organization Gould said.<lb/>
Gould said the main objectivcof<lb/>
the day was to educate students<lb/>
about some of their life choices<lb/>
and give them encouragement to<lb/>
continue their education and pur-<lb/>
sue their goals.<lb/>
Throughout the day various<lb/>
speakers addressed the topics of<lb/>
service organizations, govern-<lb/>
ment, education and business.<lb/>
Some of the speakers included, Jo<lb/>
Ann Eakin from the chancellor's<lb/>
office; Sandra Babb, secretary for<lb/>
the Board of Trustees, Jeanne<lb/>
Meiggs, superintendent for Cur-<lb/>
rituck County Schools; Sissy<lb/>
Gamble from the ECU school of<lb/>
Medicine and Glenda Steele, vice<lb/>
president of NCNB, who came in<lb/>
from Concord.<lb/>
Marie Farr, a professor for the<lb/>
Women Studies Program. Lk<lb/>
tated the dav's events and s?<lb/>
"Every talk was a learning experi-<lb/>
ence. The speakers addressed<lb/>
important women's issues and<lb/>
talked about career choices a-<lb/>
well as the personal choices in<lb/>
volved. All together we had about<lb/>
300 people attend throughout the<lb/>
day. It was a great success<lb/>
Kennerle discuses Contra<lb/>
effects on Nicaragua<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
A man who said he has seen the<lb/>
U.S. backed Contras terrorize and<lb/>
kidnap their fellow Nicaraguan<lb/>
people in the war zones of the<lb/>
Central American country spoke<lb/>
in Greenville Tuesday night.<lb/>
Peter Kemmcrle, who spent<lb/>
two-and-onc-half years in Nicara-<lb/>
gua as a peace volunteer, told an<lb/>
audience of 30 at the Baptist Stu<lb/>
land mine. The priest was return-<lb/>
ing from a trip to a settlement,<lb/>
where he had transported seed<lb/>
and agricultural tools to farmers,<lb/>
when the truck was mined,<lb/>
Kemmerle said. Kemmerle said<lb/>
'Tiie Contras are solving<lb/>
terror in the countryside of<lb/>
deTn'atteeqpaier Nicaragua. They are kid-<lb/>
in the war torn country. napping and murdering the<lb/>
"The Contras are sowing terror<lb/>
Peter Kemmerle speaks at the Baptist Student Union Tuesday about<lb/>
his experiences in Nicaragua (Ester Norton, Photolab).<lb/>
in the countryside of Nicaragua.<lb/>
They arc kidnapping and mur-<lb/>
dering the civilian people<lb/>
Kemmcrle said.<lb/>
The Contras, the rebel army<lb/>
armed and trained by U.S. Army<lb/>
advisors, have been fighting the<lb/>
established Sandista regime since<lb/>
1981, Kemmerle said. The Sandin-<lb/>
istas came to power after the wake<lb/>
of the 1979 Nicaraguan revolution<lb/>
in which the dictator, Samosa was<lb/>
ousted from office.<lb/>
Kemmerle described several<lb/>
accounts of the Contras terroriz-<lb/>
ing and kidnapping civilians. In<lb/>
one incident, Kemmerle said,<lb/>
Contra soldiers stopped a pick-up<lb/>
truck. Later, Kemmcrle found out<lb/>
that the man arrested was a school<lb/>
teacher. The man was never seen<lb/>
again, according to Kemmerle.<lb/>
"Often the Contras would kid-<lb/>
nap a man and his entire family<lb/>
would feel threatened<lb/>
Kemmerle said. He said threat-<lb/>
ened families usually left their<lb/>
land and moved into a sen ta mien-<lb/>
tos, or resettlement villages,<lb/>
where the civilians would have<lb/>
some shelter against such attacks.<lb/>
As a volunteer with Witness for<lb/>
Peace, an organization with a<lb/>
commitment to non violence,<lb/>
Kemmerle said he traveled to 13<lb/>
resettlement villages. The volun-<lb/>
teers gave construction materials<lb/>
to the people in these villages to<lb/>
build houses, schools and sewage<lb/>
systems, according to Kemmerle.<lb/>
He said while he was in the<lb/>
town of Rio Blanco, a Catholic<lb/>
priest was killed as the truck he<lb/>
was driving was blown up by a<lb/>
civilian people'<lb/>
Kemmerle<lb/>
Peter<lb/>
he believed the Contras set the<lb/>
mine.<lb/>
Kemmerle said the Contras tar-<lb/>
geted school teachers and health<lb/>
workers as occupations which<lb/>
they thought would undermine<lb/>
the rebel effort. They also attack<lb/>
rural peasant settlements,<lb/>
Kemmerle said.<lb/>
"The principle attack of the<lb/>
Contras is on people who have no<lb/>
choice Kemmerle said of the<lb/>
peasant settlements.<lb/>
Kemmerle said the Contras are<lb/>
concentrating more on fighting<lb/>
the civilians than the Sandinistas.<lb/>
'They never attacked seriously<lb/>
any military instalation<lb/>
Kemmerle said.<lb/>
Most of the Contra officers are<lb/>
former national guardsmen, who<lb/>
were members of Samosa's army,<lb/>
according to Kemmerle. He said<lb/>
the foot soldiers were usually<lb/>
sons of disgruntled landowners<lb/>
who had lost land after the 1979<lb/>
revolution.<lb/>
In some cases the Contras kid-<lb/>
napped men to Honduras where<lb/>
they were trained to fight in the<lb/>
militia against their will, accord-<lb/>
ing to Kemmerle. He talked with<lb/>
men who had been to Honduras<lb/>
and escaped from the Contras, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"The Reagan Administration is<lb/>
way out of line in supporting the<lb/>
Contras. We need to condemn the<lb/>
action of aid to this group<lb/>
Kemmerle said.<lb/>
A<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057921_0002"/><lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 15, 1987<lb/>
Wornom endowment pays recipient's tuition<lb/>
(ECU News Bureau) ? Samuel<lb/>
J. Wornom III of Sanford, N.C<lb/>
and his wife have endowed one of<lb/>
the prestigious University Schol-<lb/>
ars Awards at East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity. The awards arc endowed<lb/>
at $40,000 and, through interest<lb/>
income, provide full tuition and<lb/>
fees for a recipient's entire four<lb/>
years at ECU.<lb/>
Wornom co-founded The Pan-<lb/>
trv, Inc a chain of 480 conven-<lb/>
ience stores employing 3,000<lb/>
people in five states. He recently<lb/>
sold his interest in that company<lb/>
and founded Nouveau Invest-<lb/>
ments, Inc a multi-diversified<lb/>
investment company.<lb/>
"Sam Wornom's leadership<lb/>
abilities in the business commu-<lb/>
nity have enabled him to reach the<lb/>
top of his profession said James<lb/>
L. Lanier Jr ECU vice chancellor<lb/>
for Institutional Advancement.<lb/>
School stores honor Dowdy<lb/>
(ECU News Bureau) ? The<lb/>
ECU Student Stores will be<lb/>
nanuxi in honor of alumnus<lb/>
Ronald E. Dowdy to signify ap-<lb/>
preciation of Dowdy's leadership<lb/>
as an advocate and benefactor of<lb/>
the university, ECU officials an-<lb/>
nounced Tuesday.<lb/>
The stores, which include the<lb/>
campus bookstore and two snack<lb/>
bars will be named for Dowdy at<lb/>
a formal ceremony at 9 a.m Oct.<lb/>
31, in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Ron Dowdy's allegiance to his<lb/>
alma mater is a source of pride<lb/>
said Dr. Richard R. Eakin, ECU<lb/>
chancellor. "His steadv support<lb/>
has permitted East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity to provide students with<lb/>
opportunities that would other-<lb/>
wise not have been possible. We<lb/>
are proud to be able to recognize<lb/>
Mr. Dowdy's contributions<lb/>
A self-made millionaire.<lb/>
Dowdy is an entrepreneur in<lb/>
Orlando, Fla who has prospered<lb/>
through real estate development<lb/>
and investments. At ECU he<lb/>
worked his way through school<lb/>
by providing a laundry delivery<lb/>
service to students and by book-<lb/>
ing dance bands for local shows.<lb/>
He recei ved a bachelor's degree in<lb/>
accounting in 1966.<lb/>
Dowdy gave a $100,000 chal-<lb/>
lenge gift in 1985-86. Through the<lb/>
annual giving program, his gift<lb/>
was matched by alumni contribu-<lb/>
tors for a total of $200,000. He has<lb/>
also pledged $25,000 to the School<lb/>
of Business Golden Anniversary<lb/>
Campaign.<lb/>
Dowdy is an Alexandria, Va<lb/>
native. He was a member of the<lb/>
Air Force ROTC at East Carolina.<lb/>
After graduation he entered the<lb/>
Air Force as a second lieutenant<lb/>
and served for five years as a<lb/>
navigator and bombardier for the<lb/>
Strategic Air Command in Viet<lb/>
Nam.<lb/>
"Sam recognizes the signifi-<lb/>
cance of a university experience.<lb/>
He wants this investment to be an<lb/>
incentive for talented young lead-<lb/>
ers to stretch their limits and excel<lb/>
in new ways Lanier said.<lb/>
University Scholars are chosen<lb/>
on the basis of superior academic<lb/>
and leadership capabilities<lb/>
through a competitive selection<lb/>
process.<lb/>
Wornom is a 1965 ECU gradu-<lb/>
ate with an AB degree in Business<lb/>
Administration and his wife is<lb/>
also an ECU graduate.<lb/>
"I would hope that the recipient<lb/>
of a University Scholars Award<lb/>
would not only be academically<lb/>
outstanding, but would shine as a<lb/>
motivated student leader in other<lb/>
SRA discuses alcohol awareness<lb/>
BV KRIS REYER<lb/>
S??il WriW<lb/>
The Student Residence Hall<lb/>
Association dealt with finaliza-<lb/>
tion of the button campaign plans<lb/>
for Alcohol Awareness Week at<lb/>
its Tuesday meeting.<lb/>
Students can sign contracts<lb/>
pledging not to drink Oct. 25-30<lb/>
according to Thomas Denton,<lb/>
president. The group agreed to<lb/>
have sign ups in each ARC area<lb/>
and the Student Store on Oct. 22-<lb/>
- -?<lb/>
 "i<lb/>
It they fulfill their contracts,<lb/>
Denton said, they can turn them<lb/>
in to the directors of their resi-<lb/>
dence halls or the Student Store (<lb/>
in the case of non-residents). In<lb/>
return for their contracts for an "I<lb/>
Did It For a Week at ECU" button.<lb/>
The SRA also approved a mo-<lb/>
tion to put $b00 more into the<lb/>
student loan fund, bringing the<lb/>
total to $1500, according to Louise<lb/>
Perreca, treasurer. This fund is<lb/>
available for small loans up to $25<lb/>
with a SRA card and student I.D<lb/>
said Perreca. The loan must be<lb/>
paid back within a month and<lb/>
mav be applied for at 214<lb/>
Whichard, stated Perreca.<lb/>
The association furthered plans<lb/>
on a pig pickin' to be held Nov. 7,<lb/>
before the last home game. It<lb/>
agreed on a cost of $5 a plate<lb/>
which will include Bar-B-Q,<lb/>
chicken, field peas, boiled pota-<lb/>
toes, combread and tea. Seconds<lb/>
will be free, Denton said.<lb/>
Perreca announced plans to try<lb/>
to form a NRHH Chapter at ECU.<lb/>
The NRHH (National Residence<lb/>
Hall Honorary) is a connection<lb/>
between RA's and hall represen-<lb/>
tatives, stated Perreca. The or-<lb/>
ganization will promote such<lb/>
thingsashallrepresentativeof the<lb/>
week and program of the month'<lb/>
contests, said Perreca. Member-<lb/>
ship is a lifetime thing; once you<lb/>
move out of your residence hall<lb/>
you are an alumni, stated Perreca.<lb/>
Mary Piland, president of the<lb/>
Hill area, announced plans to try<lb/>
to get more sand on the beach on<lb/>
the hill and nets on the tennis<lb/>
courts.<lb/>
A representative from Scott<lb/>
announced plans for a breakfast<lb/>
before the last home football<lb/>
game and the possibilities of<lb/>
fund-raisers for new vacuum<lb/>
cleaners for the residence halls<lb/>
and a VCR for Scott.<lb/>
This weekend, members of the<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi fraternity will be in<lb/>
Greenville assisting the Pitt-<lb/>
Greenville Crime stoppers in<lb/>
their telethon to raise money for<lb/>
the crime fighting program.<lb/>
According to Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
President Dillion Kalkhurst, the<lb/>
fraternity members will be help-<lb/>
ing by answering phones and<lb/>
taking pledges during the tele-<lb/>
thon. Kalkhurst said the fratcr-<lb/>
nity will also donate $500 to the j<lb/>
telethon.<lb/>
Council focuses onfall rush<lb/>
Bv TON1 PAGE<lb/>
Staff Wriwr<lb/>
Fall rush week was the focus of<lb/>
attention at Wednesday's Inter-<lb/>
Fraternal Council meeting.<lb/>
Fall rush week will be held Nov.<lb/>
15-19 and is open to those stu-<lb/>
dents interested in joining a fra-<lb/>
ternity who were not eligible the<lb/>
first semester. According to coun-<lb/>
cil President Brooke Stonesifer, no<lb/>
bids will be given at this time. The<lb/>
rush merely an opportunity for<lb/>
interested persons to get a second<lb/>
look at the fraternities of their<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
"1 think the program should be<lb/>
benificial to the guys interested in<lb/>
rushing next semester because it<lb/>
wil 1 gi vc them double exposure to<lb/>
the fraternities and they will be<lb/>
able to meet more people this<lb/>
way Stonesifer said.<lb/>
Students who are interested in<lb/>
fall rush week can sign up in front<lb/>
of the student store the week prior<lb/>
to rush week. Each fraternity <lb/>
house will havea scheduled event j<lb/>
each night, and at end of the week <lb/>
a party will be held for the pro-<lb/>
spective pledges at the Sigma Tauj<lb/>
Gamma house, according to<lb/>
Stonesifer.<lb/>
Also discussed at the IFC meet-<lb/>
ing was the issue of Halloween I<lb/>
clean up. This year the fraternities <lb/>
will have close to 50 members I<lb/>
assisting the Greenville Public<lb/>
Works Department in cleaning up<lb/>
the downtown area after the tra-<lb/>
ditional Halloween celebration<lb/>
takes place, Stonesifer said.<lb/>
Ron Speier, IFC faculty advisor,<lb/>
stressed having fun while still<lb/>
maintaining control. "Let's have a<lb/>
good time but try and avoid any<lb/>
problems Speier said.<lb/>
Telefund pushing 'Pass the Buck' slogan<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
The 1987Telefund, managed by<lb/>
annual giving director Cindy<lb/>
Kittrell, is pushing its slogan of<lb/>
"Pass the Buck" in hopes of rais-<lb/>
ing more money than last year<lb/>
before its November 12th termi-<lb/>
nation date. "All proceeds are<lb/>
intended for the purpose of aca-<lb/>
demic enrichment according to<lb/>
Program Assistant Swen Van-<lb/>
Baars.<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin will direct the<lb/>
allocation of telefund proceeds to<lb/>
campus activities Womom said.<lb/>
Womom is a member of the<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees, the ECU<lb/>
Foundation Board of Directors<lb/>
and the Chancellor's Society. He<lb/>
also hasbcen on the Alumni Asso-<lb/>
ciation Board of Directors, and he<lb/>
is a plank member and an endow-<lb/>
ment member of the Pirate Club.<lb/>
In 1981 Womom received the<lb/>
ECU Outstanding Alumni Award<lb/>
for his professional contributions<lb/>
to the business community.<lb/>
Womom and hiscompany have<lb/>
long supported ECU. They pro-<lb/>
vided the lead gift of $100,000 to<lb/>
begin the 1986-87 School of Busi-<lb/>
ness Golden Anniversary Cam-<lb/>
paign, a drive which raised over<lb/>
$2 million.<lb/>
Chancellor Richard R. Eakin<lb/>
said, "It is because of the commit-<lb/>
ment of alumni like Sam and<lb/>
Sandy Wornom that the Univer-<lb/>
sity Scholars Awards have been<lb/>
made possible. They arc continu-<lb/>
ing the tradition of service they<lb/>
experienced as ECU students<lb/>
while creating the legacy for<lb/>
tomorrow's alumni<lb/>
As a native of Hampton, Va<lb/>
Wornom recognizes the extent of<lb/>
ECU'S outreach. "East Carolina<lb/>
has come a long way in a rela-<lb/>
tively short period of time. The<lb/>
university has always meant a lot<lb/>
to the people of eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, but the best is yet to<lb/>
come he said.<lb/>
"People far beyond the borders<lb/>
of our state are hearing about East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Wornom's wife, the former<lb/>
Sandra Leonard of Faycttcville,<lb/>
was also a business ma jor a t ECU<lb/>
She is involved with organiza-<lb/>
tions which seek a medical break<lb/>
through for Alzheimer's Disease<lb/>
She also supports educational<lb/>
programs for learning disabled<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The Womoms have two daugh<lb/>
ters ? Lesley, a junior at Central<lb/>
Carolina Technical College in<lb/>
Sanford, and Laurie, a senior at<lb/>
Lee County Senior High School<lb/>
The Womoms are members of<lb/>
Jonesboro Heights Baptist<lb/>
Churcru<lb/>
sucn causes as student scholar-<lb/>
ships, academic research and the<lb/>
continued support of the ECU<lb/>
allumni foundation.<lb/>
Senate Chairman Atkeson ac-<lb/>
knowledged the death of Dr.<lb/>
Edward Ryan, Professor of Biol-<lb/>
ogy, who passed away Saturday,<lb/>
October 10th. Dr. Ryan, who re-<lb/>
ceived his doctorate from The<lb/>
University of Hawaii in 1959, had<lb/>
been a professor of biology at<lb/>
ECU since 1965. He was acting <lb/>
chairman of the biology depart-<lb/>
ment from 1978-81.<lb/>
HAIR AND FASHION REVIEW<lb/>
WED OCT. 21,1987<lb/>
P A " (f4 9:30 P.M. Scott's<lb/>
r<lb/>
Ciotking<lb/>
750<lb/>
DRAFT<lb/>
3tye Cast (Earolinimi<lb/>
Si-ruing the IZast Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
James F. J. McKee. Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representlves<lb/>
Anne Leigh Mallory James Russo Shari Clemens<lb/>
Pete Fernald Maria Bell<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY RATES<lb/>
0 49 Coulumn inches S4 25<lb/>
50 99 4.15<lb/>
100-1494.05<lb/>
150 199 3.95<lb/>
200 249 3.85<lb/>
2SO and above 3.75<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in Addition to Regular Space Rate)<lb/>
One color and blackS9O.0O<lb/>
Two colors and black 155 00<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
5.OO0 or ess06 each<lb/>
5.001 10.000055 each<lb/>
10.001 -12.00005 each<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday Friday<lb/>
10:00 5:00 P.M.<lb/>
PHONES737t366<lb/>
757-6557 757-6366<lb/>
757-6558 757-6309<lb/>
Trustees v<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
WAKE FOREST (AP) ? Con-<lb/>
servative trustees at Southeastern<lb/>
Baptist Theological Seminary<lb/>
won a daylong series of clashes<lb/>
with moderates, seizing control of<lb/>
a panel that oversees the hiring of<lb/>
professors and forcing a closed-<lb/>
door meeting with the seminary<lb/>
president over his objections.<lb/>
"I am viscerally opposed to this<lb/>
kind of a closed meeting Presi-<lb/>
dent W. Randall Lolley said Tues-<lb/>
day before a 14-10 vote to meet in<lb/>
secret. "If you vote for a closed<lb/>
session. 111 obey ? I won't be<lb/>
fired for insubordination ? but<lb/>
we don't need to go behind closed<lb/>
doors to do God's work<lb/>
Lolley said secrecy would exac-<lb/>
erbate the tension between the<lb/>
students and faculty and the con-<lb/>
servatives. 'The trust level is<lb/>
zilch. There are people on campus<lb/>
who don't trust you. You don't<lb/>
trust them<lb/>
The Re lames R. DeLoach, a<lb/>
conservative from Houston<lb/>
elected vice president of the board<lb/>
Monday, proposed the pmate<lb/>
meeting. He said the board<lb/>
needed to discuss Lollev's role<lb/>
and relationship with the board<lb/>
"The Bible  talks about if you<lb/>
have something to bnng up with<lb/>
your brother to go to him in pri-<lb/>
vate said William D. Delahoyde.<lb/>
a Raleigh conservative. He said<lb/>
reporters might "distort the<lb/>
words we sav" if allowed to hear.<lb/>
William R. Lonis, a Morrison,<lb/>
Colo conservative, said he did<lb/>
not want "boos and hollering"<lb/>
from the students, faculty and<lb/>
alumni who packed the meeting<lb/>
and have voiced staunch opposi-<lb/>
tion to the fundamentalists.<lb/>
A group of students at first re-<lb/>
fused to leave, then did so at<lb/>
Lollev's urging. About two dozen<lb/>
stood outside the room singing<lb/>
hymns until the doors were reo-<lb/>
pened.<lb/>
N'o action was taken in the one-<lb/>
hour closed meeting, Lolley said<lb/>
afterward, and he and the trustees<lb/>
refused to say what was dis-<lb/>
cussed.<lb/>
The conservatives brushed<lb/>
aside protests of outnumbered<lb/>
moderates on<lb/>
edly cast vote!<lb/>
control over thel<lb/>
nary with rapid<lb/>
the opposition.<lb/>
"They are<lb/>
over Richard<lb/>
who has led fa<lb/>
the fundament<lb/>
E. Leon SmitJ<lb/>
tor from Go<lb/>
seeking the p<lb/>
Baptist State<lb/>
senbed thecoruj<lb/>
as "religious p<lb/>
"It looks like<lb/>
nrs- are wint<lb/>
"We may suttJ<lb/>
time But trustfj<lb/>
truth being tai<lb/>
seminary or an<lb/>
Baptist congxej<lb/>
Baptist spir<lb/>
On tlu<lb/>
semi-annual<lb/>
conservative<lb/>
Fall b<lb/>
Fall bi ?<lb/>
weekend<lb/>
to the beach,<lb/>
where at all '<lb/>
-<lb/>
that thn i<lb/>
Yes, these arj<lb/>
or female, wl<lb/>
blind who<lb/>
aris<lb/>
Fail break<lb/>
great time<lb/>
to get caught<lb/>
seen by a<lb/>
ting on tl<lb/>
not be t<lb/>
who all<lb/>
not wanl<lb/>
These are t<lb/>
some re i -<lb/>
the victim, it<lb/>
ness, it d<lb/>
it? "i ou or so<lb/>
could be his<lb/>
about it!<lb/>
What ever<lb/>
good neighr.<lb/>
in general?<lb/>
 Crime stoppers hold<lb/>
The Pitt-Greenville Crime Stop-<lb/>
pers Committee will hold a tele-<lb/>
thon Oct. 17 and 18 to raise money<lb/>
for the crime-fighting program,<lb/>
according to a press release.<lb/>
The telethon will be televised<lb/>
live on cable channels 7 and 9 and<lb/>
will feature live local entertain-<lb/>
ment as well as pretaped music<lb/>
videos featuring local Pitt County<lb/>
community leaders and citizens<lb/>
lip-svneing to popular new and<lb/>
old songs, the press release states.<lb/>
The telethon will run like an old<lb/>
radio request show, with viewers<lb/>
calling in and pledging $25 to<lb/>
have their favorite music videos<lb/>
reshown. For a $50 pledge, con-<lb/>
tributors can receive a videocas-<lb/>
sette containing all the music vid-<lb/>
eos, according to the press release.<lb/>
Pitt-Greenville Crime Stoppers,<lb/>
the press release states, was initi-<lb/>
ated by the Pitt-Greenville Cham-<lb/>
ber of Comr<lb/>
Theconcepd<lb/>
simple ? ci<lb/>
special Crii<lb/>
number<lb/>
inforn<lb/>
in thi<lb/>
press ?<lb/>
Call<lb/>
bers to<lb/>
Thev do<lb/>
IK<lb/>
court, and<lb/>
rewards ot<lb/>
formation <lb/>
arrest, the prf<lb/>
rviore ir<lb/>
given inform<lb/>
pers in the<lb/>
press relcasi<lb/>
CnmeStopp<lb/>
in 4or arres<lb/>
$1,000,000 ml<lb/>
pro pert v bel<lb/>
cording to thj<lb/>
r<lb/>
Win : you till out oui f ? -<lb/>
V-4 oi W-4A, "Employee's<lb/>
Withholding Allow a<lb/>
Col fi ?te remember:<lb/>
It you can be claimed<lb/>
parent oi inothet pel ? '<lb/>
return, you generalh cannoi<lb/>
exempt " " tax<lb/>
withholding I"o get it right.<lb/>
the instructions that came w<lb/>
vow FonnW-4oi U IA<lb/>
i?E3Ui<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
5th St. i<lb/>
Entranced<lb/>
Now (j Sat.<lb/>
Open 5r?E <lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
?The<lb/>
C0Me<lb/>
n<lb/>
87<lb/>
?Tax Ul<lb/>
for mer<lb/>
HA<lb/>
r i r- n<lb/>
presents<lb/>
LOUII<lb/>
JOHN!<lb/>
JR. I<lb/>
"SHOWTl<lb/>
PERSON <lb/>
AMERICA<lb/>
(WO WCHKAgD '<lb/>
<pb facs="00057921_0003"/><lb/>
INSIDE<lb/>
Editorials?4<lb/>
Entertainment??7<lb/>
Sports11<lb/>
Classifieds?6<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
ECU students make plans to renovate downtown<lb/>
areas ? see ENTERTAINMENT, page 7.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Can the Pirates do it again? ? see SPORTS, page 10.<lb/>
She lEaat daraltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. b2 No. 15<lb/>
Thursday, October 15,1987<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Police assailant from NCSU<lb/>
identified and charged<lb/>
Bv AND LEWIS<lb/>
Law enforcement officials said<lb/>
the) will arrest the man charged<lb/>
with assaulting a public safety<lb/>
officer at the melee after the Sept.<lb/>
5 ECU-North Carolina State Uni-<lb/>
versity football game.<lb/>
Keith Douglas Philbeck, 21. of<lb/>
Carv is to be charged today with<lb/>
assaulting Inspector Robert W.<lb/>
Malason, according to NCSU<lb/>
Public Safety Captain Laura Rey-<lb/>
nolds.<lb/>
Philbeck has never been a stu-<lb/>
dent at either ECl or NCSU.offi-<lb/>
cials said.<lb/>
People from both Greenville<lb/>
and Raleigh identified Philbeck to<lb/>
police officials after various me-<lb/>
dia made available videotapes<lb/>
and photographs ol who had been<lb/>
seen on top of a goalpost at the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The material was filmed alter<lb/>
ECU's32-14 victor) overNCSUat<lb/>
Carter! inlev Stadium, where<lb/>
over 2,000 tans spilled onto the<lb/>
field and caused an estimated<lb/>
0 n<lb/>
Philbeck with assault, inflicting<lb/>
serious injury, came as the result<lb/>
of a cooperative investigation<lb/>
between ECU and NCSU public<lb/>
safety departments, Knox said.<lb/>
One ECU student called Pirate<lb/>
Crime Busters and identified<lb/>
Philbeck Friday, Knox said. The<lb/>
other student snowed ECU Public<lb/>
Safety officers a 1984 Sanderson<lb/>
assaul tine<lb/>
High School (of Raleigh) year-<lb/>
book that included Philbcck's<lb/>
picture, Knox said.<lb/>
The student viewed a videotape<lb/>
of the incident in Knox's office<lb/>
and positviely identified Philbeck<lb/>
as the assailant, Knox said.<lb/>
Reynolds said her office had<lb/>
made arrangements with<lb/>
Philbcck's lawyer to serve the<lb/>
warrant today.<lb/>
Vice chancellor search begins<lb/>
the stadium.<lb/>
l)c ?.t)U ?i nun<lb/>
ilason The same<lb/>
man apparently then scaled a<lb/>
? st and waved to a crowd of<lb/>
ball tans below.<lb/>
Two ECL students identified<lb/>
Philbeck as the suspect Friday,<lb/>
according to ECU Public Safety<lb/>
captain Keith Knox. Both stu-<lb/>
dents identified Philbeck after<lb/>
seeing a story and a picture in The<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
Hie warrant, which charges<lb/>
Legislation<lb/>
changes role,<lb/>
honor board<lb/>
Bv TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Stall Hnw:<lb/>
With the passage of new legisla-<lb/>
tion bv the SG -V Monday that will<lb/>
change the role of the Honor<lb/>
Board, it remains to be seen how<lb/>
the Board's extended power will<lb/>
affect students.<lb/>
The 1 lonor Board can now hear<lb/>
and reach judgement on all cases<lb/>
which involve violations ot the<lb/>
code of conduct. Prior to the new-<lb/>
legislation, the Honor Board had<lb/>
to wait tor judgment to be passed<lb/>
i n a court oi la w before it could act<lb/>
on the case.<lb/>
"The major effect of this will be<lb/>
that the boards will have to re-<lb/>
view more cases said Dr. Elmer<lb/>
Mover, vice chancellor of student<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Ronald Speicr, associate dean of<lb/>
student life, said he did not think<lb/>
the extended power of the Honor<lb/>
Board would cause a decrease in<lb/>
campus crime. Speier said it<lb/>
would make the students more<lb/>
responsible to upholding the<lb/>
codes of conduct.<lb/>
Both Meyer and Speier thought<lb/>
the board is competent to make<lb/>
just decisions. "1 can't see them<lb/>
changing their attitudes for deter-<lb/>
mining appropriate sanctions<lb/>
Speier said.<lb/>
Mover said it was too early to<lb/>
tell if more cases will be appealed<lb/>
to the office of the dean of student<lb/>
life as a result of the new legisla-<lb/>
tion. He said only a few cases have<lb/>
been appealed to this person in<lb/>
the last decade.<lb/>
"This was the most important<lb/>
piece of legislation to come<lb/>
through the SGA in quite a long<lb/>
time said Bennett Eckert,<lb/>
speaker of the legislature. "It will<lb/>
hold students more responsible<lb/>
for their actions to the university<lb/>
Eckert said.<lb/>
Bv ED WILKERSON<lb/>
Stall Wnltt<lb/>
The search for a new vice chan-<lb/>
cellor of academic affairs for ECU<lb/>
began Tuesday when Chancellor<lb/>
Richard R. Eakin announced the<lb/>
appointment of Dr. Carl Adler to<lb/>
chair a search committee.<lb/>
Fakin made the announcement<lb/>
at the meeting of the ECU Faculty<lb/>
Senate. The position was left open<lb/>
when Dr. Angelo Volpe became<lb/>
president of Tennessee Techno-<lb/>
logical University in July.<lb/>
Adler. a professor and chair-<lb/>
man oi the physics department,<lb/>
will head a five-member commit-<lb/>
tee in conducting a national<lb/>
search to fill the position.<lb/>
The committee will begin ad-<lb/>
vertising in national academic<lb/>
media beginning in November,<lb/>
according to an ECU News Bu-<lb/>
reau press release.<lb/>
In addition to Adler, Eakin<lb/>
named Dr. Holly Mathews of<lb/>
sociology and anthropology, Dr.<lb/>
Conner Atkeson of the history<lb/>
department. Dr. Clinton Down-<lb/>
ing of the School of Education and<lb/>
Dr. Edward Lcvinc, dean of the<lb/>
School of Art.<lb/>
Janice Faulkner, director of the<lb/>
North Carolina Humanities<lb/>
Council, spoke to the Senate re-<lb/>
garding grant funding awarded<lb/>
by the council, which totals ap-<lb/>
proximately $600,000 annually.<lb/>
University departments which<lb/>
qualify represent any of the hu-<lb/>
manities or educational disci-<lb/>
plines.<lb/>
"The primary purpose of the<lb/>
grants is to engage university<lb/>
scholars with the public commu-<lb/>
nity Faulkner said. "The Hu-<lb/>
manities Council will continue to<lb/>
aid in funding of public programs<lb/>
and educational student forums<lb/>
The proposed expansion of<lb/>
Mendenhall student center was<lb/>
reviewed at the meeting. Con-<lb/>
struction is slated to begin by<lb/>
November of this year, according<lb/>
to director Rudolph Alexander,<lb/>
who said a total of 31,000 square<lb/>
feet will be added to the building,<lb/>
expanding all 3 levels.<lb/>
The construction, according to<lb/>
Alexander, will add a cafeteria<lb/>
with a seating capacity of 400,<lb/>
additional student government<lb/>
offices, a student multi-purpose<lb/>
room and an elaborate "great<lb/>
room" which will be utilized for<lb/>
buffet dinners, the accomodation<lb/>
of public speakers and presenta-<lb/>
tion of theater productions.<lb/>
Dr. Elmer Meyer, Vice Chancel-<lb/>
lor of Student Life, commented on<lb/>
the growth of the university's<lb/>
student work-study program.<lb/>
The program's directors evalu-<lb/>
ate individual student financial<lb/>
status and then offer assistance in<lb/>
locating employers who have<lb/>
advertised openings for employ-<lb/>
ment positions.<lb/>
Work-study employers include<lb/>
both public and private factions<lb/>
on-campus and in the surround-<lb/>
ing Greenville area, according to<lb/>
Pam Spell, Assistant Director of<lb/>
Student Services and employ-<lb/>
ment. Spell commented the "475<lb/>
students received checks on the<lb/>
last payroll, a marked increase in<lb/>
the number of students involved<lb/>
at this time last year<lb/>
The ECU Alumni Telefund was<lb/>
brought to the attention of the<lb/>
senate members in an effort to<lb/>
boost the amount of $45,000 cur-<lb/>
rently raised.<lb/>
see TELEFUND, page 2<lb/>
Marie Farr, Linda Godwin and Linda Cuuld (left to right) at the "Women in tne 21st Cei.tury" program<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center Wednesday (Jon Jordan, Photolab).<lb/>
Godwin experiences NASA<lb/>
By TON! PAGE<lb/>
Sufi Writer<lb/>
NASAastronaut Linda Godwin<lb/>
was the keynote speaker at the<lb/>
Women'iForum Committee pro-<lb/>
gram entitled "Women of the 21 st<lb/>
century Wednesday in Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center.<lb/>
Godwin spoke on her experi-<lb/>
ences in the N AS A space program<lb/>
and encouraged students in the<lb/>
science and math fields to pursue<lb/>
their interests. "If you take some-<lb/>
thing that is challenging that you<lb/>
like then there is no limit to what<lb/>
you can do in that field Godwin<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Godwin talked about her at-<lb/>
tempts to get into the space pro-<lb/>
gram before being accepted and<lb/>
added, "Enjoy what you are<lb/>
doing and don't stop trying to get<lb/>
what you want<lb/>
Godwin presented a slide se-<lb/>
ries on the space program and<lb/>
also addressed questions from the<lb/>
audience. Among the questions<lb/>
asked were those pertaining to the<lb/>
progress of the space shuttle.<lb/>
Godwin expressed sorrow to the<lb/>
colleagues lost in the Challenger<lb/>
disaster and said major im-<lb/>
provments will be made in the<lb/>
area of hardware and test and<lb/>
check-out. Godwin said most of<lb/>
the training procedures will re-<lb/>
main the same except for extra<lb/>
manucvers in the crew escape<lb/>
system.<lb/>
"We should see a launch by<lb/>
1988, hopefully in June Godwin<lb/>
said.<lb/>
After recicving her doctorate<lb/>
degree in 1982, Godwin went to<lb/>
work for NASA as a flight officer.<lb/>
In 1985 she was selected as an<lb/>
astronaut candidate and missions<lb/>
specialist for space shuttle flight<lb/>
crews.<lb/>
Godwin was one of many<lb/>
speakers who participated in the<lb/>
program, "Women of the 21st<lb/>
Century on Wednesday. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Linda Gould, chairper-<lb/>
son for the Women's forum, the<lb/>
program went exceptionally well.<lb/>
"We had a great turnout. Hope-<lb/>
fully students were able to gain<lb/>
knowledge from the speakers and<lb/>
at the same time become inter-<lb/>
ested and more familiar with our<lb/>
organization Gould said.<lb/>
Gould said the main objective of<lb/>
the day was to educate students<lb/>
about some of their life choices<lb/>
and give them encouragement to<lb/>
continue their education and pur-<lb/>
sue their goals.<lb/>
Throughout the day various<lb/>
speakers addressed the topics of<lb/>
service organizations, govern-<lb/>
ment, education and business.<lb/>
Some of the speakers included, jo<lb/>
Ann Eakin from the chancellor's<lb/>
office; Sandra Babb, secretary for<lb/>
the Board of Trustees; Jeanne<lb/>
Meiggs, superintendent for Cur-<lb/>
rituck County Schools; Sissy<lb/>
Gamble from the ECU school of<lb/>
Medicine and Glenda Steelc, vice<lb/>
president of NCNB, who came in<lb/>
from Concord.<lb/>
Marie Farr, a professor for the<lb/>
Women Studies Program, tacili<lb/>
tated the day's events and said,<lb/>
"Every talk was a learning experi-<lb/>
ence. The speakers addressed<lb/>
important women's issues and<lb/>
talked about career choices a<lb/>
well as the personal choices in-<lb/>
volved. All together we had about<lb/>
300 people attend throughout the<lb/>
day. It was a great success<lb/>
Kennerle discuses Contra<lb/>
effects on Nicaragua<lb/>
Peter Kemmerle speaks at the Baptist Student Union Tuesday about<lb/>
his experiences in Nicaragua (Ester Norton, Photolab).<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A man who said he has seen the<lb/>
U .S. backed Contras terrorize and<lb/>
kidnap their fellow Nicaraguan<lb/>
people in the war zones of the<lb/>
Central American country spoke<lb/>
in Greenville Tuesday night.<lb/>
Peter Kemmerle, who spent<lb/>
two-and-one-half years in Nicara-<lb/>
gua as a peace volunteer, told an<lb/>
audience of 30 at the Baptist Stu-<lb/>
dent Union about his experiences<lb/>
in the war torn country.<lb/>
"The Contras are sowing terror<lb/>
in the countryside of Nicaragua.<lb/>
They are kidnapping and mur-<lb/>
dering the civilian people<lb/>
Kemmerle said.<lb/>
The Contras, the rebel army<lb/>
armed and trained by U.S. Army<lb/>
advisors, have been fighting the<lb/>
established Sandista regime since<lb/>
1981, Kemmerle said. The Sandin-<lb/>
istas came to power after the wake<lb/>
ofthel979Nicaraguanrevolution<lb/>
in which the dictator, Samosa was<lb/>
ousted from office.<lb/>
Kemmerle described several<lb/>
accounts of the Contras terroriz-<lb/>
ing and kidnapping civilians. In<lb/>
one incident, Kemmerle said,<lb/>
Contra soldiers stopped a pick-up<lb/>
truck. Later, Kemmerle found out<lb/>
that the man arrested was a school<lb/>
teacher. The man was never seen<lb/>
again, according to Kemmerle.<lb/>
"Often the Contras would kid-<lb/>
nap a man and his entire family<lb/>
would feel threatened<lb/>
Kemmerle said. He said threat-<lb/>
ened families usually left their<lb/>
land and moved into asenta mien-<lb/>
tos, or resettlement villages,<lb/>
where the civilians would have<lb/>
some shelter against such attacks.<lb/>
As a volunteer with Witness for<lb/>
Peace, an organization with a<lb/>
commitment to non violence,<lb/>
Kemmerle said he traveled to 13<lb/>
resettlement villages. The volun-<lb/>
teers gave construction materials<lb/>
to the people in these villages to<lb/>
build houses, schools and sewage<lb/>
systems, according to Kemmerle.<lb/>
He said while he was in the<lb/>
town of Rio Blanco, a Catholic<lb/>
priest was killed as the truck he<lb/>
was driving was blown up by a<lb/>
land mine. The priest was return-<lb/>
ing from a trip to a settlement,<lb/>
where he had transported seed<lb/>
and agricultural tools to farmers,<lb/>
when the truck was mined,<lb/>
Kemmerle said. Kemmerle said<lb/>
'The Contras are sowing<lb/>
terror in the countryside of<lb/>
Nicaragua. They are kid-<lb/>
napping and murdering the<lb/>
civilian people' ? Peter<lb/>
Kemmerle<lb/>
he believed the Contras set the<lb/>
mine.<lb/>
Kemmerle said the Contras tar-<lb/>
geted school teachers and health<lb/>
workers as occupations which<lb/>
they thought would undermine<lb/>
the rebel effort. They also attack<lb/>
rural peasant settlements,<lb/>
Kemmerle said.<lb/>
"The principle attack of the<lb/>
Contras is on people who have no<lb/>
choice Kemmerle said of the<lb/>
peasant settlements.<lb/>
Kemmerle said the Contras are<lb/>
concentrating more on fighting<lb/>
the civilians than the Sandinistas.<lb/>
'They never attacked seriously<lb/>
any military instalation<lb/>
Kemmerle said.<lb/>
Most of the Contra officers arc<lb/>
former national guardsmen, who<lb/>
were members of Samosa's army,<lb/>
according to Kemmerle. He said<lb/>
the foot soldiers were usually<lb/>
sons of disgruntled landowners<lb/>
who had lost land after the 1979<lb/>
revolution.<lb/>
In some cases the Contras kid-<lb/>
napped men to Honduras where<lb/>
they were trained to fight in the<lb/>
militia against their will, accord-<lb/>
ing to Kemmerle. He talked with<lb/>
men who had been to Honduras<lb/>
and escaped from the Contras, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"The Reagan Administration is<lb/>
way out of line in supporting the<lb/>
Contras. We need to condemn the<lb/>
action of aid to this group<lb/>
Kemmerle said.<lb/>
<lb/>
 H. - -??- '<lb/>
"i<lb/>
lii<lb/>
r<lb/>
 J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057921_0004"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
n<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
S<lb/>
Tl iE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 15,1987<lb/>
Wornom endowment pays recipient's tuition<lb/>
(ECU News Bureau) ? Samuel<lb/>
J. Wornom 111 of Sanford, N.C<lb/>
and his wife have endowed oneof<lb/>
the prestigious University Schol-<lb/>
ars Awards at East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity. The awards arc endowed<lb/>
at $40,00(1 and, through interest<lb/>
income, provide full tuition and<lb/>
fees for a recipient's entire four<lb/>
years at ECU.<lb/>
Wornom co-founded The Pan-<lb/>
try, Inc a chain of 480 conven-<lb/>
ience stores employing 3,000<lb/>
people in five states. He recently<lb/>
sold his interest in that company<lb/>
and founded Nouveau Invest-<lb/>
ments, Inc a multi-diversified<lb/>
investment company.<lb/>
"Sam Wornom's leadership<lb/>
abilities in the business commu-<lb/>
nity have enabled him to reach the<lb/>
top of his profession said James<lb/>
L. Lanier Jr ECU vice chancellor<lb/>
for Institutional Advancement.<lb/>
School stores honor Dowdy<lb/>
(ECU News Bureau) ? The<lb/>
ECU Student Stores will be<lb/>
named in honor of alumnus<lb/>
Ronald E. Dowdy to signify ap-<lb/>
preciation of Dowdy's leadership<lb/>
as an advocate and benefactor of<lb/>
the university, ECU officials an-<lb/>
nounced Tuesday.<lb/>
The stores, which include the<lb/>
campus bookstore and two snack<lb/>
bars, will be named for Dowdy at<lb/>
a formal ceremony at 9 a.m Oct.<lb/>
31, in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Ron Dowdy's allegiance to his<lb/>
alma mater is a source of pride<lb/>
said Dr. Richard R. Eakin, ECU<lb/>
chancellor. "His steady support<lb/>
has permitted East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity to provide students with<lb/>
opportunities that would other-<lb/>
wise not have been possible. We<lb/>
are proud to be able to recognize<lb/>
Mr. Dowdy's contributions<lb/>
A self-made millionaire,<lb/>
Dowdy is an entrepreneur in<lb/>
Orlando, Fla who has prospered<lb/>
through real estate development<lb/>
and investments. At ECU he<lb/>
worked his way through school<lb/>
by providing a laundry delivery<lb/>
service to students and by book-<lb/>
ing dance bands for local shows.<lb/>
He received a bachelor's degree in<lb/>
accounting in 1966.<lb/>
Dowdy gave a $100,000 chal-<lb/>
lenge gift in 1985-86. Through the<lb/>
annual giving program, his gift<lb/>
was matched by alumni contribu-<lb/>
tors for a total of $200,000. He has<lb/>
also pledged $25,000 to the School<lb/>
of Business Golden Anniversary<lb/>
Campaign.<lb/>
Dowdy is an Alexandria, Va<lb/>
native. He was a member of the<lb/>
Air Force ROTC at East Carolina.<lb/>
After graduation he entered the<lb/>
Air Force as a second lieutenant<lb/>
and served for five years as a<lb/>
navigator and bombardier for the<lb/>
Strategic Air Command in Viet<lb/>
Nam.<lb/>
SRA discuses alcohol awareness<lb/>
Bv KRIS REYER<lb/>
StMlt Wnttr<lb/>
The Student Residence Hall<lb/>
Association dealt with finaliza-<lb/>
tion of the button campaign plans<lb/>
tor Alcohol Awareness Week at<lb/>
its Tuesday meeting.<lb/>
Students can sign contracts<lb/>
pledging not to drink Oct. 25-30<lb/>
according to Thomas Dcnton,<lb/>
president. The group agreed to<lb/>
have sign ups in each ARC area<lb/>
and the Student Store on Oct. 22-<lb/>
It they fulfill their contracts,<lb/>
Dcnton said, they can turn them<lb/>
in to the directors oi their resi-<lb/>
dence halls or the Student Store (<lb/>
in the case oi non-residents). In<lb/>
return tor their contracts for an "I<lb/>
Did It For a Week at ECU" button.<lb/>
The SRA also approved a mo-<lb/>
tion to put $600 more into the<lb/>
student loan fund, bringing the<lb/>
total to S1500, according to Louise<lb/>
Perreca, treasurer. This fund is<lb/>
available for small loans up to $25<lb/>
with a SRA card and student I.D<lb/>
said Perreca. The loan must be<lb/>
paid back within a month and<lb/>
may be applied for at 214<lb/>
Whichard, stated Perreca.<lb/>
The association furthered plans<lb/>
on a pig pickin' to be held Nov. 7,<lb/>
before the last home game. It<lb/>
agreed on a cost of $5 a plate<lb/>
which will include Bar-B-Q,<lb/>
chicken, field peas, boiled pota-<lb/>
toes, cornbread and tea. Seconds<lb/>
will be free, Dcnton said.<lb/>
Perreca announced plans to try<lb/>
to form a NRHH Chapter at ECU.<lb/>
The NRHH (National Residence<lb/>
Hall Honorary) is a connection<lb/>
between RA's and hall represen-<lb/>
tatives, stated Perreca. The or-<lb/>
ganization will promote such<lb/>
things as hall representative of the<lb/>
week and program of the month'<lb/>
contests, said Perreca. Member-<lb/>
ship is a lifetime thing; once you<lb/>
move out of your residence hall<lb/>
you are an alumni, stated Perreca.<lb/>
Mary Piland, president of the<lb/>
Hill area, announced plans to try<lb/>
to get more sand on the beach on<lb/>
the hill and nets on the tennis<lb/>
courts.<lb/>
A representative from Scott<lb/>
announced plans for a breakfast<lb/>
before the last home football<lb/>
game and the possibilities of<lb/>
fund-raisers for new vacuum<lb/>
cleaners for the residence halls<lb/>
and a VCR for Scott.<lb/>
This weekend, members of the<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi fraternity will be in<lb/>
Greenville assisting the Pitt-<lb/>
Greenville Crime stoppers in<lb/>
their telethon to raise money for<lb/>
the crime fighting program.<lb/>
According to Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
President Dillion Kalkhurst, the<lb/>
fraternity members will be help-<lb/>
ing by answering phones and<lb/>
taking pledges during the tele-<lb/>
thon. Kalkhurst said the frate-<lb/>
nity will also donate $500 to the<lb/>
telethon.<lb/>
Council focuses onfall rush<lb/>
By TON!PAGE<lb/>
Staff Wnm<lb/>
Fall rush week was the focus of<lb/>
attention at Wednesday's Inter-<lb/>
Fraternal Council meeting.<lb/>
Fall rush week will be held Nov.<lb/>
15-19 and is open to those stu-<lb/>
dents interested in joining a fra-<lb/>
ternity who were not eligible the<lb/>
first semester. According to coun-<lb/>
cil President BrookeStoncsifer, no<lb/>
bids will be given at this time. The<lb/>
rush merely an opportunity for<lb/>
interested persons to get a second<lb/>
look at the fraternities of their<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
"I think the program should be<lb/>
benificial to the guys interested in<lb/>
rushing next semester because it<lb/>
will give them double exposure to<lb/>
the fraternities and they will be<lb/>
able to meet more people this<lb/>
way Stonesifer said.<lb/>
Students who are interested in <lb/>
fall rush week can sign up in front<lb/>
of the student store the week prior<lb/>
to rush week. Each fraternity<lb/>
house will have a scheduled event<lb/>
each night, and at end of the week<lb/>
a party will be held for the pro<lb/>
spective pledges at the Sigma Tau<lb/>
Gamma house, according to<lb/>
Stonesifer.<lb/>
Also discussed at the IFC meet-<lb/>
ing was the issue of Halloween<lb/>
clean up. This year the fraternities<lb/>
will have close to 50 members<lb/>
assisting the Greenville Public<lb/>
Works Department in cleaning up<lb/>
the downtown area after the tra-<lb/>
ditional Halloween celebration<lb/>
takes place, Stonesifer said.<lb/>
Ron Speier, IFC faculty advisor,<lb/>
stressed having fun while still<lb/>
maintaining control. "Let's have a<lb/>
good time but try and avoid any<lb/>
problems Speier said.<lb/>
Telefund pushing 'Pass the Buck' slogan<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
The 1987Telefund, managed by<lb/>
annual giving director Cindy<lb/>
Kittrell, is pushing its slogan of<lb/>
"Pass the Buck" in hopes of rais-<lb/>
ing more money than last year<lb/>
before its November 12th termi-<lb/>
nation date. "All proceeds are<lb/>
intended for the purpose of aca-<lb/>
demic enrichment according to<lb/>
Program Assistant Swen Van-<lb/>
Baars.<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin will direct the<lb/>
allocation of telefund proceeds to<lb/>
sucn causes as student scholar-<lb/>
ships, academic research and the<lb/>
continued support of the ECU<lb/>
allumni foundation.<lb/>
Senate Chairman Atkeson ac-<lb/>
knowledged the death of Dr.<lb/>
Edward Ryan, Professor of Biol-<lb/>
ogy, who passed away Saturday,<lb/>
October 10th. Dr. Ryan, who re-<lb/>
ceived his doctorate from The<lb/>
University of Hawaii in 1959, had<lb/>
been a professor of biology at<lb/>
ECU since 1965. He was acting <lb/>
chairman of the biology depart-<lb/>
ment from 1978-81.<lb/>
"Sam recognizes the signifi-<lb/>
cance of a university experience.<lb/>
He wants this investment to be an<lb/>
incentive for talented young lead-<lb/>
ers to stretch their limits and excel<lb/>
in new ways Lanier said.<lb/>
University Scholars are chosen<lb/>
on the basis of superior academic<lb/>
and leadership capabilities<lb/>
through a competitive selection<lb/>
process.<lb/>
Womom is a 1965 ECU gradu-<lb/>
ate with an AB degree in Business<lb/>
Administration and his wife is<lb/>
also an ECU graduate.<lb/>
"I would hope that the recipient<lb/>
of a University Scholars Award<lb/>
would not only be academically<lb/>
outstanding, but would shine as a<lb/>
motivated student leader in other<lb/>
campus activities Womom said.<lb/>
Womom is a member of the<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees, the ECU<lb/>
Foundation Board of Directors<lb/>
and the Chancellor's Society. He<lb/>
also hasbeen on the Alumni Asso-<lb/>
ciation Board of Directors, and he<lb/>
is a plank member and an endow-<lb/>
ment member of the Pirate Club.<lb/>
In 1981 Womom received the<lb/>
ECU Outstanding Alumni Award<lb/>
for his professional contributions<lb/>
to the business community.<lb/>
Wornom and hiscompany have<lb/>
long supported ECU. They pro-<lb/>
vided the lead gift of $100,000 to<lb/>
begin the 1986-87 School of Busi-<lb/>
ness Golden Anniversary Cam-<lb/>
paign, a drive which raised over<lb/>
$2 million.<lb/>
Chancellor Richard R. Eakin<lb/>
said, "It is because of the commit-<lb/>
ment of alumni like S?m and<lb/>
Sandy Wornom that<lb/>
sity Scholars Awards i<lb/>
made possible. They are continu-<lb/>
ing the tradition of service they<lb/>
experienced as ECU students<lb/>
while creating the legacy for<lb/>
tomorrow's alumni<lb/>
As a native of Hampton, Va<lb/>
Womom recognizes the extent of<lb/>
ECU's outreach. "East Carolina<lb/>
has come a long way in a rela-<lb/>
tively short period of time. The<lb/>
university has always meant a lot<lb/>
to the people of eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, but the best is yet to<lb/>
come he said.<lb/>
"People far beyond the borders<lb/>
of our state are hearing about East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Wornom's wife, the former<lb/>
Sandra Leonard of FayettevilK-<lb/>
was also a business major at ECU.<lb/>
She is involved with organize<lb/>
tions which seek a medical break<lb/>
through for Alzheimer's Disease<lb/>
She also supports educational<lb/>
programs for learning disabled<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The Womoms have two daugh<lb/>
ters ? Lesley, a junior at Central<lb/>
Carolina Technical College in<lb/>
Sanford, and Laurie, a senior at<lb/>
Lee County Senior High School<lb/>
The Womoms are members oi<lb/>
Jonesboro Heights Baptist<lb/>
Church<lb/>
HAIR AND FASHION REVIEW<lb/>
WED OCT. 21,1987<lb/>
P A B qf: 9:30 P.M. Scott's<lb/>
V Clothing<lb/>
DRAFT<lb/>
w<lb/>
207 S. W.<lb/>
GREEWILLE<lb/>
BLVD.<lb/>
355-5000<lb/>
Club<lb/>
(HI?t ?art Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
James F. J. McKec. Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representives<lb/>
Anne Leigh Mallory James Russo Shari Clemens<lb/>
Pete Fernald Maria Bell<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY KATES<lb/>
O 49 Coulumn inches ;j o;<lb/>
50 99 , 1C<lb/>
100 149<lb/>
 4 On<lb/>
150 199 Qt-<lb/>
200 249 3<lb/>
2f0 and above <lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in Addition to Regular Space Rate)<lb/>
One color and block S0 00<lb/>
Two colors and black .155 00<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
5.O00 or less06 each<lb/>
5.001-10.000055 each<lb/>
10.001-12.00005t,1(h<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS;<lb/>
Monday Friday<lb/>
PHONES 10:00-5.00 I'M<lb/>
 7j7-s366<lb/>
757-6557 757366<lb/>
 757-6558 757-6309<lb/>
?1<lb/>
MtawqgtiMi<lb/>
m"mlmlm<lb/>
???f.O JIM <lb/>
?t ?<lb/>
Trustees<lb/>
WAKE FOREST (AP) - Con-<lb/>
servative trustees at Southeastern<lb/>
Baptist Theological Seminary<lb/>
won a daylong series of clashes<lb/>
with moderates, seizing control ot<lb/>
a panel that oversees the hiring of<lb/>
professors and forcing a closed-<lb/>
door meeting with the seminary<lb/>
president over his objections<lb/>
"I am visceral!y Opposed to this<lb/>
kind of a closed meeting Presi-<lb/>
dent W. Randall Lolley said 1 ues-<lb/>
day before a 14-10 vc e to meet in<lb/>
secret "If you vote U r a dosed<lb/>
session, I'll obey I von't be<lb/>
fired for insubordinatuu - but<lb/>
we don't need to go behind closed<lb/>
doors to do God's work<lb/>
Lolley said secrecy would exac-<lb/>
erbate the tension between the<lb/>
students and faculty and the con-<lb/>
servatives 'The trust level i<lb/>
zilch. There are people on campus<lb/>
who don t trust you. You don't<lb/>
trust them "<lb/>
The Rev lames R DeLoach, a<lb/>
conservative from Hous<lb/>
elected vice president oi the board<lb/>
Monday, proposed the private<lb/>
meeting He said the board<lb/>
needed to discuss Lollev's role<lb/>
and relationship with the board<lb/>
"The Bible  talks about if you<lb/>
have something to bnng up with<lb/>
your brother to go to him in pri-<lb/>
vate said William D. Delahoyde,<lb/>
a Raleigh conservative. He said<lb/>
reporters might "distort the<lb/>
words wc say" if allowed to hear.<lb/>
William R. Lonis, a Morrison,<lb/>
Colo conservative, said he did<lb/>
not want "boos and hollering<lb/>
from the students, faculty<lb/>
alumni who packed the meeting<lb/>
and have voiced staunch opposi-<lb/>
tion to the fundamentalist<lb/>
A group of students at first re-<lb/>
fused to leave, then did so at<lb/>
Lolley's urging. About two dozen<lb/>
stood outside the room singing<lb/>
hymns until the doors were reo-<lb/>
pened.<lb/>
No action was taken in the one-<lb/>
hour closed meeting, Lolley said<lb/>
afterward, and he and the trustees<lb/>
refused to say what was dis-<lb/>
cussed.<lb/>
The conservatives brushed<lb/>
aside protests of outnumbered<lb/>
moderatl<lb/>
edlv cas<lb/>
control i<lb/>
nary wif<lb/>
the opp<lb/>
"Thevl<lb/>
over R<lb/>
who ha<lb/>
the func<lb/>
E Leo!<lb/>
tor froij<lb/>
seeking<lb/>
Baptist<lb/>
senbed t<lb/>
as "reli<lb/>
"It tool<lb/>
ness arc<lb/>
"We ma<lb/>
time. Bu<lb/>
truth bej<lb/>
seminarl<lb/>
Bap, ?<lb/>
Baptist<lb/>
Onthcj<lb/>
semi-an<lb/>
Fa,<lb/>
I<lb/>
weekenc<lb/>
to the<lb/>
where at<lb/>
break fi<lb/>
 e i<lb/>
? omaj<lb/>
blind i<lb/>
arises<lb/>
? m<lb/>
seen bv<lb/>
tingon t<lb/>
not I i<lb/>
who <lb/>
not want<lb/>
These<lb/>
ness<lb/>
u" You<lb/>
could b<lb/>
about it<lb/>
Wr<lb/>
d nej<lb/>
in gener<lb/>
Crime stoppers hoi<lb/>
The Pitt-Greenville Crime Stop-<lb/>
pers Committee will hold a tele-<lb/>
thon Oct. 17 and 18 to raise monev<lb/>
for the crime-fighting program,<lb/>
according to a press release.<lb/>
The telethon will be televised<lb/>
live on cable channels 7 and 9 and<lb/>
will feature live local entertain-<lb/>
ment as well as pretaped music<lb/>
videos featuring local Pitt Countv<lb/>
community leaders and citizens<lb/>
lip-syncing to popular new and<lb/>
old songs, the press release states<lb/>
The telethon will run like an old<lb/>
radio request show, with viewers<lb/>
calling in and pledging $25 to<lb/>
have their favorite music videos<lb/>
reshown. For a $50 pledge, con-<lb/>
tributors can receive a videocas-<lb/>
sette containing all the music vid-<lb/>
eos, according to the press release.<lb/>
Pitt-Greenville Crime Stoppers,<lb/>
the press release states, was initi-<lb/>
ated by the Pitt-Greenville Cham-<lb/>
laf-IlUENl<lb/>
ber<lb/>
"Th.<lb/>
simple<lb/>
special<lb/>
number,<lb/>
informal!<lb/>
in the v<lb/>
press <lb/>
Ca<lb/>
bers t<lb/>
Thev (<lb/>
court, ai<lb/>
reward- j<lb/>
tormatioi<lb/>
arrest, th<lb/>
More<lb/>
given mtl<lb/>
pers in tf<lb/>
press rel<lb/>
CnmeStf<lb/>
in 406<lb/>
$1,00<lb/>
proper! vl<lb/>
cording<lb/>
When you fill out youi 1<lb/>
W-4oi W-4AEmployee's<lb/>
 ithholding Allowance<lb/>
Certil remember:<lb/>
s tax<lb/>
retuii :alh .jnni be<lb/>
exemr' " to<lb/>
withholding 1<lb/>
the instructions thai came with<lb/>
voui Form W-4oi W ? <lb/>
iMMMl<lb/>
,00<lb/>
Full<lb/>
So d<lb/>
$20(<lb/>
$<lb/>
<pb facs="00057921_0005"/><lb/>
f s tuition<lb/>
pl? far beyond the borders<lb/>
state arc hearing about East<lb/>
I niversit)<lb/>
Womom's wife, the former<lb/>
Sandra 1 eonard ot Fayettcville,<lb/>
siness major at ECU.<lb/>
- involved with organiza-<lb/>
ms vl- eeka medical break. -<lb/>
? Alzheimer s Disease.<lb/>
supports educational<lb/>
- tor learning disabled<lb/>
noms have twodaugh-<lb/>
t .1 junior at Central<lb/>
rucal College in<lb/>
auric a senior at<lb/>
Lee( unh Senior High School.<lb/>
are members of<lb/>
? : ? ghts baptist<lb/>
Caat Carolinian<lb/>
ing<lb/>
resentives<lb/>
?ISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
737 ts366<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
Sliced<lb/>
Lunchmeat<lb/>
S-J39<lb/>
,0 Red Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
58c<lb/>
Jiffy<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
79<lb/>
?SHS<lb/>
Loaf<lb/>
BAKED FRESH<lb/>
Italian<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
59<lb/>
'<lb/>
OPEN 2a HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Bivd Cree<lb/>
DAY)<lb/>
nville I<lb/>
s <lb/>
i m"<lb/>
T ? PAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
(XTOBER 15,1987<lb/>
Trustees vs. moderates<lb/>
WAKE FOREST (AD ? Con-<lb/>
servative trustees at Southeastern<lb/>
Baptist Theological Seminary<lb/>
won a daylong series of clashes<lb/>
with moderates, seizing control of<lb/>
a panel that oversees the hiring ot<lb/>
professors and forcing a closed<lb/>
door meeting with the seminary<lb/>
president over his objections.<lb/>
I am viseerally opposed to this<lb/>
kind of a closed meeting Presi-<lb/>
dent W. Randall Lolley said Tues-<lb/>
day before a 14-10 vote to meet in<lb/>
secret. "If vou vote for a closed<lb/>
session, I'll obey I won't be<lb/>
fired for insubordination ? but<lb/>
we don't need to go behind closed<lb/>
d.xrs to do God's work<lb/>
Lolley said secrecy would exac-<lb/>
erbate the tension between the<lb/>
students and faculty and the con-<lb/>
servatives. "The trust level is<lb/>
moderates on the board, repeat-<lb/>
edly cast votes solidifying their<lb/>
control over the 37-year-old semi-<lb/>
nary with rapidity that stunned<lb/>
the opposition.<lb/>
"Thev dre prepared to take<lb/>
over Richard Hester, a professor<lb/>
who has led faculty resistance to<lb/>
the fundamentalists, said.<lb/>
E. Leon Smith, a moderate pas-<lb/>
tor from Coldsboro who is<lb/>
seeking the presidency of the<lb/>
Baptist State Convention, de-<lb/>
scribed the conservatives' actions<lb/>
as "religious persecution<lb/>
"It looks like the forces of dark-<lb/>
ness are winning Smith said.<lb/>
"We may suffer for a period of<lb/>
time. But trustees cannot prevent<lb/>
truth being taught, either by the<lb/>
seminary or among members of a<lb/>
Baptist congregation  The true<lb/>
zilch. There are people on campus Baptist spirit will prevail<lb/>
who don't trust vou. You don't<lb/>
trust them<lb/>
The Rev lames R. DeLoach, a<lb/>
conservative from Houston<lb/>
elected vice president ot the board<lb/>
Monday, proposed the private<lb/>
meeting He said the board<lb/>
needed to discuss Lollev's role<lb/>
and relationship with the board.<lb/>
"The Bible  talks about if you<lb/>
have something to bring up with<lb/>
your brother to go to him in pri-<lb/>
vate said William D. Dclahoyde,<lb/>
a Raleigh conservative. He said<lb/>
reporters might "distort the<lb/>
words we say" it allowed to hear.<lb/>
William R. Lords, a Morrison,<lb/>
Colo conservative, said he did<lb/>
not want boos and hollering"<lb/>
from the students, faculty and<lb/>
alumni who packed the meeting<lb/>
and have voiced staunch opposi-<lb/>
tion to the fundamentalists.<lb/>
A group of students at first re-<lb/>
fused to leave, then did so at<lb/>
Lollev s urging. About two dozen<lb/>
stood outside the room singing<lb/>
hymns until the doors were reo-<lb/>
pened .<lb/>
No action was taken in the one-<lb/>
hour closed meeting, Lollev said<lb/>
afterward, and he and the trustees<lb/>
refused to sav what was dis-<lb/>
cussed.<lb/>
The conservatives brushed<lb/>
aside protests of outnumbered<lb/>
On the second day of a crucial,<lb/>
semi-annual meeting, the board's<lb/>
conservative majority voted to:<lb/>
?Replace committee assign-<lb/>
ments proposed by the outgoing<lb/>
Nominating Committee with an<lb/>
alternate list that gives conserva-<lb/>
tives a 4-1 majority on the power-<lb/>
ful Instructional Committee. That<lb/>
committee has a key role in hiring<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
?Adjust the policy on selecting<lb/>
new faculty in a manner that gives<lb/>
the president more influence and<lb/>
the faculty less. Some moderates<lb/>
have voiced fear the board will<lb/>
replace Lolley, which conserva-<lb/>
tives strongly deny.<lb/>
?Accept for discussion a con-<lb/>
troversial report issued by the<lb/>
Southern Baptist Convention's<lb/>
"Peace Committee a group ap-<lb/>
pointed to reconcile differences<lb/>
between moderates and conser-<lb/>
vatives.<lb/>
The report was referred to the<lb/>
new, conservative-dominated<lb/>
Executive Committee for study<lb/>
Chancellor Richard R. Eakin makes an appearance at the ECU Telefund Wednesday. The Telefund,<lb/>
which is being held in the Alumni Center, has earned more than $100,000 in previous vears. The<lb/>
fundraiser is scheduled to continue for a few more weeks U'hotolab).<lb/>
Fall break for students, big break for thieves says Capt. Knoxy public safety<lb/>
Fall break is upon us. This<lb/>
weekend you may be going home,<lb/>
to the beach, etc or maybe no-<lb/>
where at all. You may be taking a<lb/>
break from school, but you can bet<lb/>
that thieves won't.<lb/>
Yes, these are the persons, male<lb/>
or female, who will steal you<lb/>
blind when the opportunity<lb/>
arises.<lb/>
Fall break time to some thieves<lb/>
is a great time. They are less likely<lb/>
to get caught in the act. Even if<lb/>
seen bv someone, the thief is bet-<lb/>
tingon the odds that someone will<lb/>
not be the police, but instead one<lb/>
who allows them to get away by<lb/>
not wanting to get involved.<lb/>
These arc the people who for<lb/>
some reason feel that, "If I am not<lb/>
the victim, it's none of my busi-<lb/>
ness, it doesn't affect me Or does<lb/>
it? You or someone you care for<lb/>
could be his next victim. Think<lb/>
about it!<lb/>
What ever happened to being a<lb/>
good neighbor, friend, or citizen<lb/>
in general? It seems that today's<lb/>
criminals are betting that you<lb/>
won't be. Believe it or not, many<lb/>
are winning because of it.<lb/>
Enough about that, what other<lb/>
things are the thieves always bet-<lb/>
ting on? He's betting on you, the<lb/>
potential victim to make things<lb/>
easy for him. What do you mean<lb/>
make it easy for him? For starters,<lb/>
easy for him to get at your valu-<lb/>
Pirate Police<lb/>
Line<lb/>
By Captain Keith Krox<lb/>
Ttt Public S?rty<lb/>
ablcs. A window, transom, or<lb/>
door left unlocked or poorly se-<lb/>
cured is one way.<lb/>
Just how easy is it to get into<lb/>
your room, apartment, or home?<lb/>
Do you lock up each time you<lb/>
leave and double check it to make<lb/>
sure it's secure?<lb/>
How about being able to see<lb/>
your valuables from the outside?<lb/>
Are your curtains, blinds, etc.<lb/>
closed or valuables out of sight?<lb/>
Do you own a VCR, TV, stereo<lb/>
system, camera, computer, ex-<lb/>
pensive jewelry, or leave money<lb/>
lying around? These are top items<lb/>
on the thief's list.<lb/>
If stolen, could you positively<lb/>
identify them? The thief is betting<lb/>
that you can not. Thieves do not<lb/>
like marked items (Operation ID)<lb/>
because they can be traced and<lb/>
not easily pawned or fenced<lb/>
Thieves that are known to vou<lb/>
are betting that vou will not sus-<lb/>
pect them. They mav already<lb/>
have knowledge as to what vou<lb/>
own and where it's kept. Would<lb/>
you be surprised at who will<lb/>
steal?<lb/>
Whv not surprise him if he<lb/>
breaks in? Take your valuables<lb/>
that are most likely targets of theft<lb/>
with you. Maybe hide them, bet-<lb/>
ter still, leave them with a trusted<lb/>
friend or relative.<lb/>
you say. The thief is betting you<lb/>
will think just that You must ask<lb/>
yourself, "How much trouble is it<lb/>
going to be to replace those valu-<lb/>
ables it stolen?" Some sentimen-<lb/>
tal or one-of-a-kind items stolen<lb/>
can never be replaced<lb/>
Remeber: Crime prevention<lb/>
begins with OL ' And the thief is<lb/>
beting that it won't! Who's going<lb/>
to win this bet?<lb/>
?PX?J LOW COST<lb/>
ftH ' ' M'liJL ABOKTIOSSCP<lb/>
B Bjm TO 12lh WEEK OF<lb/>
FU M ? rJ PREGNANCY<lb/>
m W&amp;FiB<lb/>
klrrfTVUhrJHMj<lb/>
rm j. . A ? t<lb/>
?H "? - vv; rvtwrfR 9 rn nd - r " ??u  v<lb/>
'J m ' YrW I ht"?L4 tV? a ' .i<lb/>
frj RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
rBlli?liiB -tK ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
Crime stoppers hold telethon<lb/>
The Pitt-Greenville Crime Stop-<lb/>
pers Committee will hold a tele-<lb/>
thon Oct. 17 and 18 to raise monev<lb/>
tor the crime-fighting program,<lb/>
according to a press release.<lb/>
The telethon will be televised<lb/>
live on cable channels 7 and 9 and<lb/>
will feature live local entertain-<lb/>
ment as well as pretaped music<lb/>
videos featuring local Pitt Countv<lb/>
community leaders and citizens<lb/>
lip-syncing to popular new and<lb/>
old songs, the press release states.<lb/>
The telethon will run like an old<lb/>
radio request show, with viewers<lb/>
calling in and pledging $25 to<lb/>
have their favorite music videos<lb/>
reshown. For a $50 pledge, con-<lb/>
tributors can receive a vidcocas-<lb/>
sette containing all the music vid-<lb/>
eos, according to the press release.<lb/>
Pitt-Green villc Crime Stoppers,<lb/>
the press release states, was initi-<lb/>
ated by the Pitt-Greenville Cham-<lb/>
RESUMES<lb/>
Professional Resume Composition<lb/>
Atlantic Personnel Services<lb/>
209 Commerce Street, Suite B<lb/>
10 discount with this ad<lb/>
355-7931<lb/>
ber of Commerce in Sept 1983.<lb/>
The concept of Crime Stoppers is<lb/>
simple ? citizens can call the<lb/>
special Crime Stoppers telephone<lb/>
number, 758-7777, and provide<lb/>
information on criminal activity<lb/>
in the county according to the<lb/>
press release.<lb/>
Callers are issued code num-<lb/>
bers to guarantee anonymity.<lb/>
They do not have to appear in<lb/>
court, and they are paid cash<lb/>
rewards of up to $1,000 if the in-<lb/>
formation provided leads to an<lb/>
arrest, the press release states.<lb/>
More than 1,000 callers have<lb/>
given information to Crime Stop-<lb/>
pers in the past 3 12 years, the<lb/>
press release states. To date,<lb/>
Crime Stopper calls have resulted<lb/>
in 406 arrests with more than<lb/>
$1,000,000 in narcotics and stolen<lb/>
property being recovered, ac-<lb/>
cording to the press release.<lb/>
MACK ROOM<lb/>
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And, Wc also buy Stcro's. T.Vs,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057921_0006"/><lb/>
?IB Saat (Earnliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Daniel Maurer, r??iM?p<lb/>
Clay Deani iardt, MuPt &amp;?<lb/>
Andy Lewis, n?g? James F.J. McKee, iw ?<lb/>
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Si ielton Bryant, w,?r ?m Mike Upci iurci i, numrji h.<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, s Joi in W. Medlin, m dm,<lb/>
October 15,1 "87<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Pago 4<lb/>
Students'rights<lb/>
Passage of bill is a threat<lb/>
The passage oi the SGA bill giving<lb/>
more sweeping power to the judicial<lb/>
branch is a foolhardy threat to the<lb/>
rights of students as individuals and<lb/>
students. It is a threat the university<lb/>
should not be able to make.<lb/>
The new measure allows a student<lb/>
charged with a crime to be tried bv<lb/>
the university's 1 Ionor Board before<lb/>
being declared guilty by a court of<lb/>
law. The board can, if it finds the<lb/>
student guilty, punish the student in<lb/>
accordance with university policy.<lb/>
One small group becomes judge,<lb/>
jury and executioner.<lb/>
Much has been made, by this<lb/>
newspaper and others, of the prob-<lb/>
lem of double jeapordv, or trying<lb/>
and punishing a student twice for<lb/>
the same offense.<lb/>
The responses to this charge were<lb/>
technically correct: Double jeapordv<lb/>
does not apply in these cases be-<lb/>
cause the I Ionor Board is not a court<lb/>
of law. However, a sense o( the<lb/>
double jeapordv idea is applicaple,<lb/>
and the "What if" question can not<lb/>
be written off as easily as some<lb/>
would like to.<lb/>
The "What if" question basically<lb/>
runs like this: What if a student is<lb/>
found guilty by the Honor Board<lb/>
and later determined not guilty by a<lb/>
court of law? We all, after allhave<lb/>
the right to presumption of inno-<lb/>
cence before being proven guilty.<lb/>
Many, including Dr. Ron Speier,<lb/>
associate dean for student affairs,<lb/>
say the question is irrelavant. In a<lb/>
lobbying effort before Monday's<lb/>
SGA meeting, Speier distributed a<lb/>
paper which stated that in the time<lb/>
he has been at ECU nothing of the<lb/>
sort has ever happened.<lb/>
He goes on to say that many times<lb/>
a person plea bargains or his case is<lb/>
thrown out because of a technicality,<lb/>
neither which confirm innocence.<lb/>
The many are wrong. The question<lb/>
is relavant, but for different reasons<lb/>
than the ones they defend against.<lb/>
We do not question the integrity or<lb/>
the ability of the Honor Board to<lb/>
make fair decisions based on their<lb/>
knowledge. We do question if the<lb/>
board has enough legal knowledge<lb/>
to render decisions in some cases,<lb/>
and if defendants will get proper<lb/>
representation in those cases.<lb/>
What if a student is found not<lb/>
guiltv by the courts after being<lb/>
found guilty by the board? Speier's<lb/>
counterpoint is not a good one. As a<lb/>
matter of a fact it makes a strong<lb/>
point against the passage of the bill.<lb/>
Let's say that the court throws out<lb/>
a case on a technicality ? usually<lb/>
because the rights of the defendant<lb/>
have been violated in some real way.<lb/>
Some say the person could still be<lb/>
guilty, and therefore open to pun<lb/>
ishment by the university.<lb/>
True, the student could have<lb/>
committed the offenses. But if his<lb/>
rights are violated in proving that,<lb/>
then what right does the university<lb/>
have to punish him or her? Does the<lb/>
Honor Board have some power that<lb/>
makes it immune to the same con<lb/>
straints that bind the American judi<lb/>
rial system? Does the SGA think that<lb/>
it can improve the judicial process<lb/>
by ignoring the resul t of 200 years of<lb/>
judicial evolution in the protection<lb/>
of individual rights?<lb/>
Far from being irrelavant, the<lb/>
"What if" question is crucial to the<lb/>
heart of the issue. It seems that the<lb/>
rights of students as individuals and<lb/>
as citizens are threatened by the new<lb/>
legislation.<lb/>
True, nine times out of ten, or<lb/>
maybe 99 out of 100, this is not going<lb/>
to happen. The I Ionor Board and the<lb/>
courts will reach the same decision,<lb/>
and no one's rights will have been<lb/>
violated. It is that one case that we<lb/>
are concerned with, not only for the<lb/>
protection of the individual but also<lb/>
for the protection of the university,<lb/>
which could be sued should it se-<lb/>
verely punish a person that the<lb/>
courts find innocent.<lb/>
Yes, the university has a right to<lb/>
protect itself, and an obligation to<lb/>
protect its students, from students<lb/>
who commit illegal acts on and off<lb/>
campus. However there has to be a<lb/>
better plan than one which is this<lb/>
drastic and this sweeping.<lb/>
It seems that, in the interest of<lb/>
individual rights, the Honor Board<lb/>
should not be allowed to try crimi-<lb/>
nal cases until the courts are finished<lb/>
with them. Moving any sooner en-<lb/>
dangers the rights of the student and<lb/>
possibly the legal stand of the uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
Whatever plan is finally enacted, it<lb/>
should first be reviewed by the uni-<lb/>
versity attorney to insure that ECU<lb/>
could not be held liable for any<lb/>
posible outcomes. As far as we<lb/>
know, this has not been done.<lb/>
We suggest the bill be reconsid-<lb/>
ered and a serious study be done<lb/>
into alternative measures. The pos-<lb/>
sible violation of student rights, no<lb/>
matter how slight, is a matter not to<lb/>
be taken lightly. "What if" ques-<lb/>
tions can not be dismissed since the<lb/>
"What ifs" of today often become<lb/>
tomorrow's headlines.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Britain ? U.S. share poverty<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
While visiting East Carolina to lec-<lb/>
ture on health care systems in Great<lb/>
Rritain, I read the 1st and 6th October<lb/>
issues of The East Carolinian which<lb/>
included articles on how poverty re-<lb/>
stricts personal lives. I thought of an<lb/>
organization in Britain, the Child<lb/>
Poverty Action Group. Started in<lb/>
1967, it is now one of the most re-<lb/>
spected pressure groups in the coun-<lb/>
trv. When it came into being, one of its<lb/>
sponsors, an English peer, said that it<lb/>
would be pointless asking for a seven<lb/>
year subscription to be authorized<lb/>
because poverty would have been<lb/>
eradicated, and the Group made re-<lb/>
dundant, long before then. Yet today<lb/>
the CPAG is handling more cases<lb/>
than ever before. More than that, it<lb/>
feels that those for whom it is fighting<lb/>
are under even greater threat than at<lb/>
any previous time.<lb/>
In Britain, the attitude of the gov-<lb/>
ernment to poor people, to disabled<lb/>
people, to defenseless people, is hard-<lb/>
ening and becoming increasingly<lb/>
judgmental. The concept of collective<lb/>
responsibility is being replaced by an<lb/>
ethos of personal and individual re-<lb/>
sponsibility. To be poor is to be a<lb/>
failure, inadequate and undeserving.<lb/>
In a major speech last month, the<lb/>
Secretary of State for Social Services,<lb/>
John Moore, said "Everyone knows<lb/>
the sullen apathy of dependence and<lb/>
can compare it with the sheer delight<lb/>
of personal achievement<lb/>
Fine words, but with an unemploy-<lb/>
ment rate of 80 percent in some areas,<lb/>
with few vocational rehabilitation<lb/>
schemes for people with disabilities,<lb/>
with childcare facilities at a premium<lb/>
for single mothers (my own countv,<lb/>
with a population of 1.6 million has 30<lb/>
places), what chance have these<lb/>
people of ever getting ou t of poverty?<lb/>
If one was pushed off a high building,<lb/>
being told to learn to flv on the way<lb/>
down would be of little use.<lb/>
The speech attracted an outcry<lb/>
from the left, particularly in the light<lb/>
;f recent very high pay awards to<lb/>
"top" people ? judges, generals, civil<lb/>
servants ? and tax cuts, put forward<lb/>
as "incentives<lb/>
"Why is it asked the leader of the<lb/>
opposition, "the rich are given more<lb/>
as incentives to work and the poor are<lb/>
given less, for exactly the same rea-<lb/>
son<lb/>
-?-<lb/>
Asa nation, Britain hasa centuries-<lb/>
old tradition of nurturing the weak<lb/>
and supporting the vulnerable. The<lb/>
philosophical changes which have<lb/>
taken place over the last few years<lb/>
have shamed manv of us and caused<lb/>
organizations such as CPAG to be<lb/>
even more determined to ensure that<lb/>
the poor are not trampled underfoot.<lb/>
Judith Oliver<lb/>
Parliamentary Liaison Officer,<lb/>
BASW<lb/>
London, England<lb/>
Buckley comments on 'Bork screw'<lb/>
Coming out of the Senate chamber last Wednesday, three or<lb/>
four Republican senators were asked about the disposition of<lb/>
the Bork case. Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas gritted his teeth and<lb/>
said he was made uncomfortable by senators "who cheated in<lb/>
college" challenging the probity of Robert Bork. That is very<lb/>
tough, and not pleasant, talk, but it reflects the indignation,<lb/>
not to say fury, felt by many who witnessed the democratic<lb/>
and intellectual travesty over the last month. A big lesion has<lb/>
opened up within America.<lb/>
Norman Podhoretz, the influential editor of Commentary<lb/>
magazine, speaks of it as a form of civil war. Listen to this: "In<lb/>
spite of murderous pressures, many (intellectuals) could not<lb/>
bring themselves to join a lynch mob, even one dressed in<lb/>
academic robes, but a disgracefully large number could and<lb/>
did. Leading this mob was Professor Laurence H. Tribe of<lb/>
Harvard, who constructed the tortured rationale for disquali-<lb/>
fying Bork on ideological grounds alone. If that is now the<lb/>
name of the game, then no quarter should be given by conser-<lb/>
vatives to any liberal a future Democratic president might<lb/>
nominate to the Supreme Court, beginning with Professor<lb/>
Tribe himself. But hoisting Tribe and his ilk by their own<lb/>
petard will come later. For now, conservatives will have to<lb/>
figure out new ways of responding to the lesson of the Bork<lb/>
nomination, which is that the war against them and their<lb/>
ideas has heated up again and that it is being conducted as<lb/>
nothing less than a war to the death<lb/>
The most adroit examination of what is called "The Bork<lb/>
Screw" was done in The New Republic by Andrew Sullivan.<lb/>
He begins by quoting the artist Robert Rauschenberg, whose<lb/>
pop is better on canvas than in print: "In my defensive<lb/>
research of Bork I have discovered a compulsive insistence on<lb/>
the letter of the law  Comments Sullivan: "As anti-Bork<lb/>
hysteria goes, Rauschenberg's was moderate. Apart from the<lb/>
Supreme Court nominee's worrying legalism,<lb/>
Rauschenberg's only other concern was the fate of human<lb/>
civilization: "The Supreme Court is a final discriminating<lb/>
force to guide us into the future of global concerns What he<lb/>
failed to mention, of course, were the fetus funerals. Accord-<lb/>
ing to Planned Parenthood'S media package, if Judge Bork is<lb/>
nominated, there'll be no end to the little coffins. People for<lb/>
the American Way restricted itself to the slightlv worrying<lb/>
chance that the day after Bork gets on the court, mass sterili-<lb/>
zations could be imposed. Their ads begin: "The nomination<lb/>
of Robert Bork hascaused a lot of controversy. And hasa lot<lb/>
ol people worried. With good reason. But don't takcourword<lb/>
for it. You be the judge  'STERILIZING WORKERS <lb/>
BILLING CONSUMERS FOR POWER THEY NEVER GOT<lb/>
NO PRIVACY  TURN THE CLOCK BACK ON CIVIL<lb/>
RIGHTS?  NO DAY IN COURT<lb/>
On The Right<lb/>
bv<lb/>
William F. Bucklev Jr.<lb/>
Mr. Sullivan summarizes: "In a complex summary oi the<lb/>
constitutional arguments behind the carefully selected cases,<lb/>
the ad's climax hardly leaves the reader dangling in philo-<lb/>
sophic midair: 'Judge Bork has consistently ruled against the<lb/>
interests of people Anyone for animal rights?"<lb/>
Mr. Sullivan bores in. "If you'd naively planned on a sex life<lb/>
after Bork, Planned Parenthood had news for vou: Tiobert<lb/>
Bork's Position on Reproductive Rights? YOU DON'T HAVE<lb/>
ANY In another flyer, they added: 'STATE-CONTROLLED<lb/>
PREGNANCY? It's not as farfetched as it sounds Carrying<lb/>
Bork's position to its logical end, 'states could  impose<lb/>
family quotas for population purposes, make abortion a<lb/>
crime, or sterilize anyone they choose And senators wonder<lb/>
why the polls show a drift away from the Bork nomination<lb/>
It's the genital gap<lb/>
Proven Reaganomics formula under attack<lb/>
People who only a few years ago were lamenting<lb/>
a miscreated front called Reaganomics are nowa-<lb/>
days looking about to find, retroactively, flaws in the<lb/>
grand design. An instructive example of this took<lb/>
place on the David Brinklcy hour on Sunday. Rep.<lb/>
jack Kemp, identified beyond any other man with<lb/>
the retreat from high marginal tax rates, and associ-<lb/>
ated therefore with the idea of supply-side econom-<lb/>
ics, was being given a hard time by Sam Donaldson<lb/>
and George Will.<lb/>
G.W. began by probing two points. Supply-side<lb/>
economics had promised that it would encourage<lb/>
the propensity to save; in fact, the American people<lb/>
are saving less now than they ever saved before.<lb/>
Second, how is it that our deficit is so large when it<lb/>
was promised that for every dollar in reduced taxes,<lb/>
there would arise a corresponding dollar in govern-<lb/>
ment revenues from energized industrial activity?<lb/>
Kemp did not handle the challenge with preci-<lb/>
sion, which is a pity since he is vastly instructed in<lb/>
the general subject.<lb/>
Concerning the rate of savings, it is true that the<lb/>
United States' 3 percent savings rate is miserable in<lb/>
comparison with, for instance, that of West Ger-<lb/>
many (12 percent) and Japan (16 percent). In the<lb/>
years beginning with the first tax reduction law of<lb/>
1981, savings have dropped from 6.7 percent to the<lb/>
present rate.<lb/>
The reasons for this are obvious, and less obvious.<lb/>
People tend to save in order to finance the major<lb/>
contingencies in life. The first of these is medical<lb/>
health, and here the governments, state and local,<lb/>
and the insurance companies have, with Medicare,<lb/>
Medicaid, Blue Cross and the like, substantially<lb/>
removed the public fear of running out of money to<lb/>
pay the doctor.<lb/>
The cost of living in retirement is greatly reduced<lb/>
by Social Security, indexed for inflation. It is unfair to<lb/>
point out that the stability of Social Security is in<lb/>
doubt: The public correctly assumes that there will<lb/>
be no default in it.<lb/>
The one major item to worry about is the education<lb/>
of one's children. The costs of non-public colleges<lb/>
are huge. But in the last few years, grants from state<lb/>
and federal sources, and help from the colleges<lb/>
themselves, have eased the problem, even though<lb/>
the young doctor, lawyer or professor can find<lb/>
himself $100,000 in debt.<lb/>
Now at the other end you have first the spectacular<lb/>
rise in the stock market. It is a minority that benefits<lb/>
directly from that rise (47 million buy and sell shares<lb/>
in their own name); but many more millions have<lb/>
interests in pension plans that have benefited from<lb/>
the rise in the stock market. During the past 10 years,<lb/>
stocks have increased in value by 217 percent.<lb/>
And then there is the rise in the value of housing.<lb/>
In 1977, the median value of a single family house<lb/>
was $36,000. In 1983, it was $59,000. It's probably<lb/>
more than $75,000 now.<lb/>
One can see that the father of a family who sees 13<lb/>
percent of his income going into Social Security, 10<lb/>
percent into a pension fund, 2 percent into medical<lb/>
insurance and 25 percent into a house mortgage<lb/>
payment, on top of which he saves an additional 3<lb/>
percent ? that man thinks himself to be prudently<lb/>
managing his money.<lb/>
Now, thisconcededly is not as in days gone by. But<lb/>
our concern for savings has traditionally been less<lb/>
because we worry about the indigent elderly than<lb/>
because we worry about the shortage of capital.<lb/>
But there is no shortage of capital at the moment.<lb/>
This, granted, is significantly owing to the flow of<lb/>
capital from abroad, as one would expect, given the<lb/>
trade imbalance. The strategic impact of foreign<lb/>
capital invested in the United States isn't obvious to<lb/>
- - II ifw Milieu llMi<lb/>
i'Wiwi s?4lm&amp;?i0l&amp;4llittm6m??H??W '<lb/>
most economists. It is obvious that our unemploy-<lb/>
ment rate continues to decrease ? and all of this<lb/>
notwithstanding the shibboleth about Americas<lb/>
failure to save.<lb/>
There are other reasons than merely economic in<lb/>
favor of saving. Husbandry of a kind helps the<lb/>
character, though it is thought vaguely un-Ameri-<lb/>
can not to consume. We consume greatly on credit,<lb/>
as we know, but that credit is based in most cases on<lb/>
realistic estimates of earning power. The call for<lb/>
increased savings, in the light of the experience of the<lb/>
past few years, is rather the call of the ethics profes-<lb/>
sor than the economics professor.<lb/>
By William F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
Su pplytdehasTone?rcTryveT!?Tnosevho<lb/>
predicted that additional revenues would exactly<lb/>
equal taxes diminished were not scientists ? they<lb/>
were the voodoo men. And they should not be<lb/>
3uoted back at such as Kemp, who never made the<lb/>
ollar-to-dollar prediction. All that Kemp said was<lb/>
that we should go in a particular direction. We have;<lb/>
and the republic is better off for it.<lb/>
m<lb/>
Reagan st<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan, sounding resigned<lb/>
to defeat on Robert H Bork's<lb/>
nomination to the supreme court,<lb/>
vows that any new candidate he<lb/>
picks will upset liberal opponents<lb/>
"just as much<lb/>
Reagan's statement Tuesday<lb/>
drew quick cnticism from Senate<lb/>
Majonty Leader Robert Byrd, D-<lb/>
W. Va, who warned that harsh<lb/>
comments from the president<lb/>
could jeopardize his next nomi-<lb/>
nee<lb/>
"It's not h4<lb/>
Reagan's st<lb/>
this kind 01<lb/>
coming out 1<lb/>
Byrd said<lb/>
"engage in<lb/>
ness" the ne:<lb/>
endangered!<lb/>
Meanwhill<lb/>
and Republij<lb/>
the timing o<lb/>
nothing wa'<lb/>
New course offered<lb/>
for social studies tech<lb/>
(ECU News Bureau) ? A new 5300 ha<lb/>
course for social studies teachers, si<lb/>
surveying the civilizations of Af- hers<lb/>
rica, India, China, Japan and the informa-<lb/>
Middle East, has been developed 'ndia, iapal<lb/>
at ECU and will be offered in the East Gowi<lb/>
spring semester G 0 wen<lb/>
Through the Department of Wilbun<lb/>
History, two specialists in non- be instruct<lb/>
western cultures will conduct the which will<lb/>
course, "Comparative History of nesda<lb/>
Non-Western Civilizations in the spring<lb/>
answer to the increasing demand in January<lb/>
for such surveys begin V<lb/>
Dr. Robert Gowcn, former coor-<lb/>
dinator of the ECU Asian Studies Cow en. '<lb/>
program and director of the ern histol<lb/>
state's Japan Center East, said the extensively<lb/>
offering "is a unique course being former coor<lb/>
offered for the first time in eastern Studies cor<lb/>
North Carolina and perhaps the at the Lni<lb/>
whole state tersrand in<lb/>
An innovative course. History Africa<lb/>
Few male teac<lb/>
on elementary<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM (AP) ?<lb/>
Education officials say a combina-<lb/>
tion of low salanes and tradition<lb/>
has kept most men out of elemen-<lb/>
tary education, where 91 percent<lb/>
of the teachers are women.<lb/>
"Elementary school teachers<lb/>
have the image of not onl v being a<lb/>
tcmcher; tr mother says<lb/>
Stephen A. Thornton, a teacher at<lb/>
Parkland High School in Win-<lb/>
ston-Salemand chairman of a task<lb/>
force examining wh jo few men<lb/>
become elementary teachers.<lb/>
The tast force, formed by the<lb/>
North Carolina Association of<lb/>
Educators, also will look at the<lb/>
effect the male teacher shortage<lb/>
has on children.<lb/>
"That was a main concern ?<lb/>
not having a male role model in<lb/>
the elementary school, especially<lb/>
today with single-parent homes<lb/>
Thornton told the Winston-Salem<lb/>
Journal.<lb/>
Nationally, 31 percent of the<lb/>
teachers are men. Fourteen per-<lb/>
cent of the elementary school and<lb/>
50 percent of the secondary school<lb/>
teachers are men.<lb/>
In North Carolina the figures<lb/>
are even lower. At the secondary<lb/>
level, 37 percent of the teachers<lb/>
are men, and overall 21 percent of<lb/>
them are men.<lb/>
J. Waco knott, a teacher at Kim-<lb/>
berly Park Alternative School, has<lb/>
been teaching for 13 years and is<lb/>
one of only two male teachers at<lb/>
the school.<lb/>
"Elementary is pretty much a<lb/>
woman's world' Knott said. 'It's<lb/>
a little bit strange at times.  It can<lb/>
be lonely<lb/>
Knott said he chose to work<lb/>
with elementary school students<lb/>
TAXPAYERS<lb/>
with dependents<lb/>
HERE'S A TAX TIP<lb/>
Beginning ?uh out I ? ?com<lb/>
tax return (hat vow wil<lb/>
1WH. vou gcncralb mm ? ?? ?<lb/>
security numbers tot dependent<lb/>
who arc at least five yean old" b<lb/>
the end of IW7 If an ofyow<lb/>
dependent1, do not har this<lb/>
number, get an application form<lb/>
todav from the Social SecuntJ<lb/>
office in vour area<lb/>
because ot<lb/>
eageme<lb/>
definite lad<lb/>
"There is:<lb/>
attached ta<lb/>
teachers<lb/>
the men tall<lb/>
bihtics suc<lb/>
some reas<lb/>
children is 1<lb/>
role<lb/>
Male teacl<lb/>
administratil<lb/>
cause thev<lb/>
can't afford<lb/>
"I Keel like<lb/>
the incom<lb/>
family 1 WC4J<lb/>
what I do<lb/>
Coaching<lb/>
sues that the<lb/>
ine.<lb/>
"A lot of<lb/>
ing are havj,<lb/>
agreement!<lb/>
Thornton<lb/>
teach, you<lb/>
Looking<lb/>
something<lb/>
tion, Thorntc<lb/>
of what mei<lb/>
the task fore<lb/>
vev ol male<lb/>
L<lb/>
Crl<lb/>
Centr;<lb/>
Greeni<lb/>
0<lb/>
J<lb/>
Co:<lb/>
S<lb/>
E<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
i <lb/>
<pb facs="00057921_0007"/><lb/>
fa<lb/>
e poverty<lb/>
pay awards to<lb/>
udges generals, civil<lb/>
md tax uts, put forward<lb/>
is it asked the leader of the<lb/>
the rich arc given more<lb/>
rk and the poor are<lb/>
 ictl) the same rea-<lb/>
Britain has a centurics-<lb/>
on of nurturing the weak<lb/>
'fvrtm; the vulnerable. The<lb/>
changes which have<lb/>
act over the last tew vears<lb/>
imed many of us and caused<lb/>
- such as (.TAG to be<lb/>
mined to ensure that<lb/>
I trampled underfoot.<lb/>
Judith Oliver<lb/>
Parliamentary Liaison Officer,<lb/>
BASVV<lb/>
1 ondon, England<lb/>
1 'Boric screw<lb/>
 en the fetus funerals. Accord-<lb/>
media package, if Judge Bork is<lb/>
I : the little coffins. People for<lb/>
' the slightly worrying<lb/>
- on the court, mass sterili-<lb/>
icira Is begin: "The nomination<lb/>
ntrm ersy. And has a lot<lb/>
t don't takeour word<lb/>
I R1LIZING WORKERS <lb/>
IWER rHE EVERGOT<lb/>
IE CLOCK BACK ON CIVIL<lb/>
he Right<lb/>
b<lb/>
William F. Bucklev Jr.<lb/>
lr a ci mtiplcx summary of the<lb/>
lind the carefully selected cases,<lb/>
reader dangling in philo-<lb/>
rk 1 iistentl) ruled against the<lb/>
? r ai imal rights?"<lb/>
.id naivelv planned on a sex life<lb/>
Tent hood had news for vou: 'Robert<lb/>
; ights? YOU DON'T HAVE<lb/>
-I TE-CONTROLLED<lb/>
irfctched as it sounds Carrying<lb/>
al end, 'states could  impose<lb/>
n purposes, make abortion a<lb/>
c they choose And senators wonder<lb/>
Irift away from the Bork nomination.<lb/>
er attack<lb/>
momists It is<lb/>
ntinues t<lb/>
n'KH<lb/>
decrease<lb/>
is that our unemploy-<lb/>
and all of this<lb/>
ng the shibboleth about America's<lb/>
There are other reasons than merely economic in<lb/>
r f saving Husbandry of a kind helps the<lb/>
aracter, though it is thought vaguely un-Ameri-<lb/>
nol to consume. We consume greatly on credit,<lb/>
but that credit is based in most caseson<lb/>
realistic estimates of earning power. The call for<lb/>
increased savings, in the light of the experience of the<lb/>
past few years, is rather the call of the ethics profes-<lb/>
sor than the economics professor.<lb/>
By William F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
has done pretty well. Those who<lb/>
predicted that additional revenues would exactly<lb/>
equal taxes diminished were not scientists ? they<lb/>
were the voodoo men. And they should not be<lb/>
quoted back at such as Kemp, who never made the<lb/>
dollar-to-dollar prediction. All that Kemp said was<lb/>
that we should go in a particular direction. We have;<lb/>
and the republic is better off for it.<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
A<lb/>
J<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 15,1987 5<lb/>
Reagan statement draws criticism from Byrd<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ? Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan, sounding resigned<lb/>
to defeat on Robert H. Bork's<lb/>
nomination to the supreme court,<lb/>
vows that any new candidate he<lb/>
picks will upset liberal opponents<lb/>
"just as much<lb/>
Reagan's statement Tuesday<lb/>
drew quick criticism from Senate<lb/>
Majority Leader Robert Byrd, D-<lb/>
W. Va who warned that harsh<lb/>
comments from the president<lb/>
could jeopardize his next nomi-<lb/>
nee.<lb/>
"It's not helpful Byrd said of<lb/>
Reagan's statement. "1 deplore<lb/>
this kind of remark, this tone<lb/>
coming out of the White House<lb/>
Byrd said if Reagan is going to<lb/>
"engage in innuendo and bitter-<lb/>
ness" the next nominee would be<lb/>
endangered.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Senate Democrats<lb/>
and Republicans skirmished over<lb/>
the timing of the Bork debate, but<lb/>
nothing was settled.<lb/>
New course offered at ECU<lb/>
for social studies teachers<lb/>
Reagan, abandoning the low-<lb/>
key tone suggested by Bork him-<lb/>
self on his nomination, derided<lb/>
tactics used against his nominee<lb/>
as "a political joke<lb/>
With the ranks of Bork's critics<lb/>
still growing in the senate ?<lb/>
reaching 54 with an anti-Bork<lb/>
declaration from Sen. Harry Reid,<lb/>
D-Nev. ? Reagan planned to talk<lb/>
about the nomination in an ad-<lb/>
dress late this afternoon from the<lb/>
Oval Office.<lb/>
Reagan, in a series of appear-<lb/>
ances in New Jersey on Tuesday,<lb/>
softened his rhetoric about Bork's<lb/>
opponents in one speech but then<lb/>
turned up the heat in a later ad-<lb/>
dress when a woman at a Repub-<lb/>
lican fund-raiser shouted, "We<lb/>
want Bork, too<lb/>
"You want Bork, too? So do I<lb/>
Reagan said in a resolute voice.<lb/>
Dropping the restrained ap-<lb/>
proach that aides said he adopted<lb/>
in deference to Bork's wishes, the<lb/>
president spoke with emotion<lb/>
about his embattled nominee.<lb/>
"Yes, Bork is staying in, and we<lb/>
know the odds are against getting<lb/>
enough people to turn around<lb/>
their vote Reagan continued.<lb/>
However, he said, "What's at<lb/>
issue here is not one man and<lb/>
what happened to him. What's at<lb/>
issue is that we make sure that the<lb/>
process of appointing and con-<lb/>
firming judges never again is<lb/>
turned into such a political joke<lb/>
Speaking over the applause of<lb/>
the audience, Reagan added,<lb/>
"And if I have to appoint another<lb/>
one, I'll try to find one that they'll<lb/>
object to just as much as they did<lb/>
for this one<lb/>
Back in Washington, Byrd cau-<lb/>
tioned against just such a move.<lb/>
In remarks on the Senate floor,<lb/>
Byrd scolded the administration<lb/>
for not listening to Democratic<lb/>
advice that Bork would becontro-<lb/>
(ECU News Bureau) ? A new<lb/>
course for social studies teachers,<lb/>
surveying the civilizations of Af-<lb/>
rica, India, China, Japan and the<lb/>
Middle East, has been developed<lb/>
at ECU and will be offered in the<lb/>
spring semester.<lb/>
Through the Department of<lb/>
History, two specialists in non-<lb/>
western cultures will conduct the<lb/>
course, "Comparative History of<lb/>
Non-Western Civilizations in<lb/>
answer to the increasing demand<lb/>
for such surveys.<lb/>
Dr. Robert Gowen, farmer coor-<lb/>
dinator of the ECU Asian Studies<lb/>
program and director of the<lb/>
state's Japan Center East, said the<lb/>
offering "is a unique course being<lb/>
offered for the first time in eastern<lb/>
North Carolina and perhaps the<lb/>
whole state<lb/>
"An innovative course. History<lb/>
5300 has been developed in re-<lb/>
sponse to the need of social stud-<lb/>
ies teachers for broad background<lb/>
information about Africa, China,<lb/>
mdia, Japan and the Middle<lb/>
East Gowen said.<lb/>
Gowen and Dr. Kenneth<lb/>
Wilbum of the history faculty will<lb/>
be instructors for the course<lb/>
which will be offered each Wed-<lb/>
nesday, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m during<lb/>
the spring semester which begins<lb/>
in January. Pre-registration will<lb/>
begin Nov. 9.<lb/>
Gowen, a specialist in far east-<lb/>
ern history, has traveled<lb/>
extensively in Asia. Wilbum is a<lb/>
former coordinator of the African<lb/>
Studies committee and a lecturer<lb/>
at the University of the Witwa-<lb/>
tersrand in Johannesburg, South<lb/>
Africa.<lb/>
Colleges fail segregation goals<lb/>
versial, saying Reagan "could<lb/>
have saved Judge Bork  a trau<lb/>
matic experience<lb/>
"It's important that the ad mini<lb/>
stration listen to the counsel of<lb/>
some of the people in this body<lb/>
before it sends up another norm<lb/>
nee Byrd said.<lb/>
Bork, a constitutional scholar,<lb/>
had raised fears among critics<lb/>
who said his hardline views<lb/>
would tip the ideological balance<lb/>
of the high court. Opponents<lb/>
spent millions of dollars on televi<lb/>
sion spots and advertisements<lb/>
attacking Bork's philosophy.<lb/>
Few male teachers<lb/>
on elementary level<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM (AP) ?<lb/>
Education officials say a combina-<lb/>
tion of low salaries and tradition<lb/>
has kept most men out of elemen-<lb/>
tary education, where 91 percent<lb/>
of the teachers are women.<lb/>
"Elementary school teachers<lb/>
have the image of not only being a<lb/>
Stephen A. Thornton, a teacher at<lb/>
Parkland High School in Win-<lb/>
ston-Salem and chairman of a task<lb/>
force examining wh) jo few men<lb/>
become elementary teachers.<lb/>
The tast force, formed by the<lb/>
North Carolina Association of<lb/>
Educators, also will look at the<lb/>
effect the male teacher shortage<lb/>
has on children.<lb/>
"That was a main concern ?<lb/>
not having a male role model in<lb/>
the elementary school, especially<lb/>
today with single-parent homes<lb/>
Thornton told the Winston-Salem<lb/>
Journal.<lb/>
Nationally, 31 percent of the<lb/>
teachers are men. Fourteen per-<lb/>
cent of the elementary school and<lb/>
50 percent of the secondary school<lb/>
teachers are men.<lb/>
In North Carolina the figures<lb/>
are even lower. At the secondary<lb/>
level, 37 percent of the teachers<lb/>
are men, and overall 21 percent of<lb/>
them are men.<lb/>
J. Waco knott, a teacher at Kim-<lb/>
berly Park Alternative School, has<lb/>
been teaching for 13 years and is<lb/>
one of only two male teachers at<lb/>
the school.<lb/>
"Elementary 's pretty much a<lb/>
woman's world Knott said. "It's<lb/>
a little bit strangeat times It can<lb/>
be lonely<lb/>
Knott said he chose to work<lb/>
with elementary school students<lb/>
because of their receptivity and<lb/>
eagerness. But he admits there is a<lb/>
definite lack of prestige in his job.<lb/>
"There is somewhat of a stigma<lb/>
attached to elementary school<lb/>
teachers he said. "In high school<lb/>
the men take on other responsi-<lb/>
bilities such as coaching.  For<lb/>
some reason working with little<lb/>
children is considered a woman's<lb/>
role<lb/>
Male teachers often end up in<lb/>
administrative positions, not be-<lb/>
cause they want but because they<lb/>
can't afford not to, Knott said.<lb/>
"1 feel like it was more or less for<lb/>
the income he said. "If I had a<lb/>
family I would not be able to do<lb/>
what I do<lb/>
Coaching is another of the is-<lb/>
sues that the task force will exam-<lb/>
ine.<lb/>
"A lot of men going into teach-<lb/>
ing are having to sign coaching<lb/>
agreements to be hired<lb/>
Thornton said. "If you want to<lb/>
teach, you have to coach<lb/>
Looking at men's concerns is<lb/>
something new for the associa-<lb/>
tion, Thornton said. To get an idea<lb/>
of what men think the issues are,<lb/>
the task force is conducting a sur-<lb/>
vey of male teachers.<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ? North<lb/>
Carolina's community college<lb/>
system has failed to meet federal<lb/>
desegregation goals established<lb/>
in 1978, but has demonstrated<lb/>
"varying degrees of progress" in<lb/>
achieving certain affirmative ac-<lb/>
tion goals, U.S. officials have<lb/>
found.<lb/>
Accourding to reports released<lb/>
this month, the 58-campus system<lb/>
has failed to live up to a commit-<lb/>
ment to boost the number of<lb/>
blacks enrolled in programs lead-<lb/>
ing to transfers to four-year col-<lb/>
leges.<lb/>
At the same time, however,<lb/>
systemwide enrollment of blacks<lb/>
in all programs reached target<lb/>
levels for most of the current dec-<lb/>
ade, slipping somewhat in 1985.<lb/>
Officials for the U.S. Depart-<lb/>
ment of Education pointed to<lb/>
imporvements in course comple-<lb/>
tion rates for blacks, hiring of new<lb/>
black faculty members and boost-<lb/>
ing black membership on govern-<lb/>
ing boards for community and<lb/>
technical colleges in North Caro-<lb/>
lina.<lb/>
In most cases, however, the<lb/>
advances fell below goals set out<lb/>
in the desegregation plan under<lb/>
review by the department's Of f ice<lb/>
of Civil Rights.<lb/>
"We obviously have got to do a<lb/>
better job Bob Scott, president of<lb/>
Danny Tavlor &amp; Co<lb/>
? designer accessories<lb/>
? ready to wear<lb/>
? made to order<lb/>
Eastgate Plaza<lb/>
2800 E. 10th St.<lb/>
830-5341<lb/>
t)ANm<lb/>
"Let Us Dress You Up<lb/>
This Halloween"<lb/>
Vintage Clothing,<lb/>
Jewelry, &amp; Collections<lb/>
116 E. 5?h Street<lb/>
919-752-1750<lb/>
TAXPAYERS<lb/>
with dependents<lb/>
HERE'S A TAX TIP:<lb/>
Beginning with your 1987 income<lb/>
tax return that you will file in<lb/>
l')KK. vou generally must list social<lb/>
security numbers for dependents<lb/>
who are at least five years old by<lb/>
the end of 1987. If any of your<lb/>
dependents do not have this<lb/>
number, get an application form<lb/>
today from the Social Security<lb/>
office in your area.<lb/>
? Local and Out of Town Newpapers<lb/>
Full selection of 1988 Calendars <lb/>
'Greeting Cards For All Occasions<lb/>
Central Book and News<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Open 7 Days A Week<lb/>
Coming October 29th<lb/>
SteveStreeter<lb/>
to Speak to<lb/>
E.C.U. Students<lb/>
toMwi<lb/>
v<lb/>
the community colleges system,<lb/>
told the News and Observer of<lb/>
Raleigh Tuesday. Scott said it was<lb/>
uncertain what action civil rights<lb/>
authorities might take after they<lb/>
review the state's effort.<lb/>
"A lot is going to hinge on<lb/>
whether we have made a good-<lb/>
faith effort" in the eyes of the offi-<lb/>
cials, said Scott, a former gover-<lb/>
nor.<lb/>
The state community college<lb/>
system is among higher educa-<lb/>
tion systems in 10 states, most of<lb/>
them in the South, where desegre-<lb/>
gaton plans have lapsed but are<lb/>
under review by the civil rights<lb/>
office. The office is expected to<lb/>
rule later this year on the states'<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
The U.S. House Government<lb/>
Operatons Committee earlier this<lb/>
month issued a report sharply<lb/>
critical of the U.S. Justice<lb/>
Department's Office of Civil<lb/>
Rights' vigor in enforcing deseg-<lb/>
regation plans.<lb/>
The committee based much of<lb/>
its criticism on a report on North<lb/>
Carolina's community college<lb/>
plan prepared by the Department<lb/>
of Education regional office in<lb/>
Atlanta.<lb/>
The reported said only about<lb/>
$700,000 had been spent on efforts<lb/>
to boost black enrollment in the<lb/>
college transfer programs.<lb/>
ONE-STOP<lb/>
COPY SHOP<lb/>
We copy, collate, and bind.<lb/>
We make enlargements, reductions,<lb/>
transparencies, and overlays.<lb/>
We take passport and I.D. photos.<lb/>
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supplies.<lb/>
We are open early, open late, and open<lb/>
weekends.<lb/>
We are your one-stop business copying<lb/>
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ART compETion<lb/>
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Open to current ECU<lb/>
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Limit of 5 pieces per artist<lb/>
2-D work must be ready<lb/>
to hang, framed or matted<lb/>
and acetated<lb/>
A completed entry form<lb/>
must accompany<lb/>
each piece.<lb/>
A $1.00 entry fee per piece<lb/>
3-D work must be self<lb/>
supporting<lb/>
CATEGORIES<lb/>
Ceremics, Illustration, Photography, Design, Mixed Media,<lb/>
Printmaking, Drawing, Painting and Sculpture.<lb/>
ENTRY DATE.<lb/>
October 15,1987<lb/>
Bring entries to Mendenhall Rm 244<lb/>
from 9-5 p.m.<lb/>
PRIZES<lb/>
Best in Show $130.00<lb/>
First Place per category $30.00<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
art i cQBcro hop<lb/>
SM SOUTH COMNCHC ??T<lb/>
MMlf. ICC. 27?M<lb/>
art j( camera hop<lb/>
n SOUTH COTAHCHt STTWt<lb/>
rat-<lb/>
?.?<lb/>
?? ?? - - - rniirirr rilflf irwrirm u<lb/>
 ?(b- ????<lb/>
<pb facs="00057921_0008"/><lb/>
THE CAST CAROLINIAN nr-r?.r, ,c ?e7<lb/>
r A<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS $15,000$95,000'vr.<lb/>
Also Cruisoships Travel Hotels 805-<lb/>
687-6000 Ext OJ 1166 tor current )obs<lb/>
TRAVEL EIELD OPPORTUNITY Gam<lb/>
valuable marketing experience while<lb/>
earning money Campus representatives<lb/>
needed immodiatelv tor Spring Break<lb/>
trips to Florida. Call Campus Marketing<lb/>
at I 800 282 6221.<lb/>
MOOrS FOR MEN has full time and<lb/>
part time sales associates positions for<lb/>
enthusiastic fashion forward individu-<lb/>
als Ket.ul clothing experience is required<lb/>
Hctter than average starting salarv. Ap-<lb/>
pl in person body's Personnel director,<lb/>
Carolina last Mall M-W, from 2 4 p m<lb/>
BROPVS has part time sales associates<lb/>
positions tvir enthusiastic, outgoing indi<lb/>
vuiiols who enjoy working with voung<lb/>
contemporary junior fashions Good sal-<lb/>
aiv Apply in person. Brody's Personnel<lb/>
Director Carolina East Mall M-W, from<lb/>
2 4 p tn<lb/>
W 11 P-MAIE MODELS. Interviews<lb/>
will bo on Saturday, October 24 from 2-5<lb/>
p m aiui Monday, October 26 from 5-9<lb/>
p m at the Bolk 5 Training room, Caro-<lb/>
lina Fast Mall No previous experience<lb/>
nocossurv<lb/>
CAMPUS TRAVEL REPRESENTA-<lb/>
TIVE needed to promote Spring Break<lb/>
tour to Honda Cam money, free travel,<lb/>
and outstanding marketing experience.<lb/>
Call Inter Campus Programs I 800-433-<lb/>
7747<lb/>
A LEADING CLOTHING RETAILER<lb/>
needs a full time office associate to work<lb/>
M 1 from 9 f. Individual must be accu-<lb/>
rate and possess skills in accounting<lb/>
bookeeping Saalarv based one experi-<lb/>
ence Good salarv and benefits package<lb/>
Applv in person or call for interview ap-<lb/>
pointment Judith C Simon, Brady's Per<lb/>
sonnet Director M-W, 2 4 p m 756 2224<lb/>
GREENHOUSE TECHNICIANS<lb/>
NEEDED tor part-time employment<lb/>
nexible hours Weekends and after<lb/>
school Call 756-0879<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: Color TV like new' S125 00<lb/>
antique dresser make offer Emerson Ste-<lb/>
reo TapePhonoTuner S5000. 738-<lb/>
7M3<lb/>
THE EMPORIUM has all types of used<lb/>
furniture. pMMlsy and much more. Dirt<lb/>
cheap 705 Dickinson Ave across from<lb/>
the License Plate Agency Tuesdav-Fri<lb/>
da from 12 00-6:00, Saturdav from 10:30-<lb/>
5 30. Call 830-5288.<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Call Cindy at 757-0398<lb/>
anv time after 5:00 p.m. Low rates include<lb/>
proofreading, spelling and grammatical<lb/>
corrections, professioanl service 10 years<lb/>
experience- IBM TYPING.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICES<lb/>
758-8241 or 758-5488. Ask for Susan.<lb/>
PINK FLOYD TICKETS 2 pair Call 522<lb/>
0478. <lb/>
W86 HONDA CR250R Dirt Bike Never<lb/>
Raced Helmet and gloves available. 20<lb/>
hours riding time Excellent condition.<lb/>
Motorcycle trailer also available $1,900.<lb/>
Call 355-7812 after 6 pm. or leave message.<lb/>
BUY EEL SKIN accessories at wholesale<lb/>
prices Wallets, checkbook covers, key<lb/>
chains, pocketbooks, bells, and any other<lb/>
col products Don't hesitate to call David<lb/>
Dupree at 752-4589.<lb/>
TIRED OF PAYING HIGH PRICES AT<lb/>
THE JEWELRY STORE? Well stop Buy<lb/>
14K gold at wholesale prices. Gold brace-<lb/>
lets, necklaces, rings and precious gems<lb/>
Styles like herringbone, rope, and nugget<lb/>
Call David Dupree at 752-4589<lb/>
NEED SUNGLASSES? Buv the best made<lb/>
Ray-Bans at wholesale prices. Call David<lb/>
Dupree at 752-4589.<lb/>
IS IT TRUE that you can buv jeeps for $44<lb/>
through the U.S. government?Get the facts<lb/>
today! Call 1 312-742-1142 Ext 5271-A.<lb/>
TYPING: Term papers, resumes, thesis,<lb/>
etc Cheap rates (on Xerox word proces-<lb/>
sor) Call Becky from 830-500 p m. at 758-<lb/>
1161 after 5:00 p m. 752-1321.<lb/>
FOR SALE Freezer and refrigerator,<lb/>
dryer and range $100 00 each Good condi-<lb/>
tion guaranteed Call 746-2446.<lb/>
FOR SALE - Discount prices on dance and<lb/>
exercise wear Visit our Bodv Boutique at<lb/>
Total Eclipse 422 Arlington Blvd 355-<lb/>
3531.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL BUT NOT<lb/>
EXPENSIVE! Progressive Data Services<lb/>
offers professional word processing to<lb/>
students and professionals Term papers,<lb/>
dissertations, themes, reports and much<lb/>
more as low as $1 75 per page (Please call<lb/>
for quote on your project) Price includes<lb/>
printing on high quality bond paper and<lb/>
spelling verification against a 50,000 word<lb/>
electronic dictionary Ask about our spe-<lb/>
cial offers COMING SOON LASER<lb/>
PRINTING SYSTEM Call Mark at 757<lb/>
3440 after 700 p.m. for free information.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSINGIetter quality or<lb/>
laser printing Rush jobs accepted 752<lb/>
1933<lb/>
ELECTROLYSIS (permanent removal<lb/>
of unwanted hair) by Barbara Venters.<lb/>
People who understand electrolysis will<lb/>
not wax. tweeze or use electronic t weez-<lb/>
methodCall 830-0962 for free consulta<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERCVICES: We offer tyr<lb/>
ing and photocopying services. We also<lb/>
sell 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 Services, 106<lb/>
East 5th Street (beside Cubbies)<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 752-3694.<lb/>
PICK UP AND DELIVERY of term<lb/>
papers, thesis, resumes to be typed. IBM<lb/>
wordprocessing by professional with 13<lb/>
years experience. Letter quality print<lb/>
and professional editing. Call Nanette<lb/>
in Grifton at 1 524 5241 Cheap- call the<lb/>
best service!<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
utilities paid $250.00 per month. Lease<lb/>
and deposit required. 758-1274 after 5:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS Apartments for<lb/>
rent - furnished. Contact Hollie Si-<lb/>
monowich at 752-2865.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
ers or any other temporary method.<lb/>
Isn't it time to rrv the permanent<lb/>
WANTED Roommate or roommates<lb/>
to share 2 bedroom apt. at Tar River<lb/>
Estates. Male or female Call 752-3032<lb/>
ROOMATE WANTED: To share 3<lb/>
bedroom, 2 bath, microwave, furnished<lb/>
Cathedral ceiling, ceiling fan, washer-<lb/>
dryer 13 rent and utilities. Call 758-<lb/>
4481 or 747 3980.<lb/>
NEAR CAMPUS 3 bedroom with den,<lb/>
garage $315.00or 4 bedroom for $375.00.<lb/>
752-1375 Homelocators Small Fee.<lb/>
UTILITIES PAID, 1 bedroom $205 00 or<lb/>
2 bedroom $295 00 Now or January<lb/>
752-1375. I lomelocators Small Fee.<lb/>
FOR RENT Spend Fall Break or any<lb/>
upcoming weekend in Atlantic Beach!<lb/>
Nice beach house for rent, central heat<lb/>
and air, good location, sleeps six. Call<lb/>
Stephanie - 757-6563 or evenings 756-<lb/>
7846.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED: very<lb/>
nice 2 bedroom, 1 1 2 bath townhouse,<lb/>
rent $157.50; 12 utilities; 1.5 miles from<lb/>
campus; nice neighborhood; private<lb/>
yard, pool; dishwasher; microwave<lb/>
757-a316.<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED. Heat,<lb/>
air and water included. Available now.<lb/>
Call Sharon at 355-5706 or Julie at 758<lb/>
1507<lb/>
WF WANTED to share 2 BR apartment<lb/>
at Tar River Estates. Pay 13 rent, 13<lb/>
utilities Will have own private room<lb/>
Call Karen or Lisa at 758-0700<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT, 3 bedroom, bath<lb/>
and half, 2 porches, pecan tree and utili-<lb/>
ties. I louses, nice yard, 15 minutes from<lb/>
Crecnville. $100 00 deposit, $200 00<lb/>
monthly 756-2446 or 753-2878.<lb/>
1 BEDROOM, upstairs apartment avail-<lb/>
able October 1 3 blocks from campus AH<lb/>
HAPPY ANNIVERSARY ! Thanks for<lb/>
the best year we are going to share to-<lb/>
gether and for the happiest year of my<lb/>
life I LOVE YOU ROBBIE' Love Always<lb/>
Lisa<lb/>
TO FJC 111: Thanks so much for cocktail. I<lb/>
hope you enjoyed it as much as I did but<lb/>
sometimes I wish I'd never meant vou -<lb/>
AWB J<lb/>
ROBB HUTCHISON: Happy Birthday<lb/>
Sweetness Love, T.<lb/>
BONNIE ARMENTROUT: Happy Be-<lb/>
lated Birthday! Teresa H.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to the new Sis-<lb/>
ters of Alpha Omicron Pi: Rachel Barger,<lb/>
Elizabeth Beany, Eileen Gealy, Patty<lb/>
Clandcr, Stephanie Patton, Heidi<lb/>
Schafcr, Tracy Voss.<lb/>
BETA KAPPAS OF ALPHA OMICRON<lb/>
PI: You guys really "Styled and Profiled"<lb/>
at Cocktail 87 Everything looked great<lb/>
We love ya! The Sisters of Alpha Omicron<lb/>
Pi r<lb/>
MANY THANKS to all the participants<lb/>
in the AOTT Dunking booth It was a<lb/>
definate success. Your help was greatly<lb/>
appreciated. The Pledges of AOTT<lb/>
HEIDI S. You're the best little sister<lb/>
anyone could ever have. Congratulations<lb/>
on your initiation, I'm so proud of you.<lb/>
Thank-you for all of your help last week<lb/>
I hope your keys get returned! Alpha<lb/>
Love, Leslie<lb/>
LOST: 5 mo. old kitten Gray tabby with<lb/>
white face and stomach. Lost on Eastern<lb/>
Street Saturday night, October 9 (he got<lb/>
out of the house - if you took him home<lb/>
because he was lost, please return him -<lb/>
we love and miss him so muchReturn to<lb/>
213-A Eastern or call 752-9111<lb/>
TICKETS FOR LAMBDA CHI<lb/>
ALPHA'S Pre-Halloween bash with<lb/>
AAE arc now on sale at the student store.<lb/>
S.V00 Limited amount of tickets<lb/>
TO THOSE WE KNOW IN AYCOCK,<lb/>
We have and will still enpy; playing fris-<lb/>
bee, watching football, beach music, the<lb/>
pyromanlacs, yelling across the way, fro-<lb/>
zen beers, and partying all night<lb/>
Thanks for the good times 7th floor<lb/>
Clement Hall.<lb/>
TO C.C AND G.W. in Aycocfc Lets party<lb/>
with the TIME Love ya. Marsupial<lb/>
BERRY: Thanks for a rocking Homecom-<lb/>
ing! Too bad you couldn't 'rogue' on the<lb/>
high school chick, oh well Had a great<lb/>
time anyway! Thanks again! Love ya,<lb/>
Tracy.<lb/>
MONDAY NITES are not boring any<lb/>
more. All beer lovers! All hotdog lovers!<lb/>
All popcorn lovers! All football lovers<lb/>
The Sheraton has East Carolina's biggest<lb/>
Monday nite football party in Greenville!<lb/>
$2.00 pitchers of draft, the hotdog bar is<lb/>
free, and all the popcorn you can cram in<lb/>
your mouth. Six-foot television with 3<lb/>
26" monitors make us East Carolina's<lb/>
most sophisticated video bar Drawing at<lb/>
halftime for free footballs<lb/>
ACIE- Couldn't have had a better date for<lb/>
homecoming. Let's cut the rug again<lb/>
sometime. Do you eat lettuce when you<lb/>
have a buzz. Have a good break Thanks<lb/>
again for a great time Liz.<lb/>
MELISSA-You're the best! I love you'<lb/>
Bobby.<lb/>
ADPi LIZ : Happy late birthday, you<lb/>
wild woman! You're the greatest! Love,<lb/>
Your big Sis, Stephanie<lb/>
HAPPY 89TH BIRTHDAY ZETA TAU<lb/>
ALPHA! Founded Oct. 15, 1898<lb/>
GET N AS-TEA - at "Off the Cuff" lounge<lb/>
every Friday with $2 00 Long Island Ice<lb/>
Teas. All nite long Free pizza 6-7 pm Big<lb/>
Al playing hi energy rock and roll PS<lb/>
Halloween Eve will be the biggest "treat"<lb/>
of all<lb/>
THETA CHI - 1 lomecoming was a blast<lb/>
The Alumni were too wild. And who<lb/>
gave daydog that cheese platter? Gross,<lb/>
so give some to the sheriff Hey, homegiri<lb/>
G.F. Nice pledge pin, Dave Be prepared<lb/>
for retaliation. We a partied hard (except<lb/>
for Mitch), but what's new By the way,<lb/>
what are we going to do with a five foot<lb/>
?88?<lb/>
MEN OF CARRETT - Once again thanks<lb/>
for all your support during homecoming<lb/>
Sec Delbert I told you everything would<lb/>
bcokay Thanks Jay George and Jeff the<lb/>
Secret Service couldn't havedone it better<lb/>
and they probably wouldn't have<lb/>
brought me candy! I love you! Paige<lb/>
LOST - "Gasoline" blue jean jacket<lb/>
Reward offered If found call 355 7481<lb/>
R - Homecoming was a blast and you<lb/>
were a great date Amanda<lb/>
K.P.R. - AOH PLEDGE: Thanx for mak<lb/>
ing the homecoming weekend that much<lb/>
more fun. I hope you have a great fall<lb/>
break and whenyou're home remember,<lb/>
get some sleep. Thinking of you, A Sig Ep<lb/>
Friend<lb/>
CHI OMEGA SISTERS: Twas the night<lb/>
before homecoming and all through the<lb/>
house, not a sister was stirring not a lite<lb/>
night to be found. The sisters were<lb/>
nestled all snug in their beds with<lb/>
dreams of KAs, Phi Taus and TKEs (to<lb/>
name a few) danced through their heads<lb/>
When all of thesuddent there arouse such<lb/>
a clatter, the pledges were here! That was<lb/>
the matter! Five minutes to get ready,<lb/>
where were we going' To the best kid<lb/>
napping bash the Chi Os could have had<lb/>
We got you up early Not knowing what<lb/>
was in sight, but we did it because we love<lb/>
you and we did it right Love, the Chi ()<lb/>
Pledges<lb/>
INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP: Please join us' Wednes<lb/>
day nights at 7 00 pm Speight 129 Fun<lb/>
Food Fellowship Teaching<lb/>
ATrENTION: Don't forget Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta's happy hour every Wednesday<lb/>
night at Pant ana's It's the best excus. f ?<lb/>
missing Thursday's classes'<lb/>
LIFE IS SWEET because of the fnends we<lb/>
have made And the things which in<lb/>
common we share We want to live n<lb/>
not because of ourselves, but because of<lb/>
the ones who would care It's living and<lb/>
doing for somebody else On that all of<lb/>
We s splendor depends And the joV of ,1<lb/>
all when we count it all up, is found in (he<lb/>
making of friends Alpha Mu's<lb/>
TO NANCY JO. the ?1 pledge trainer<lb/>
your Alpha Mu pledge class r,allv appre<lb/>
cutes the love and support you have<lb/>
given us We'll do our very best to add as<lb/>
much as we can to Alpha Delta Pi Love<lb/>
the Alpha Delta PI pledges<lb/>
LOST - my mind and mv bra at SiE Ed<lb/>
happy hour. Wed n.ght a. Tequila'bar It<lb/>
found please bring to happy hour next<lb/>
Wed for reward Betty Sue<lb/>
WOW! - It was the b.gges. one yet! Fn<lb/>
days at the SHERATON TEA PARTY<lb/>
ust keeps on gcttlng bgger <lb/>
SIC EPs 1 lave a safe fall break<lb/>
GREEKS! CREEKS! CREEKS! TLA off<lb/>
your weekend at the East Carolina Tea<lb/>
lartv 16 oz Long Island Ice Teas served<lb/>
in a mason jar. that vou get to keep $" 00<lb/>
refills all nite long Free Pia SJpja Hi<lb/>
energy rock and roll by big Al The<lb/>
Sheraton's "Off the Cuff Lounge<lb/>
SOME BARS CHARGE 3 some bars are<lb/>
free If I pa,d Id be Pd If 1 had 3. I'd<lb/>
get me a lea East Carolina Tea Party"<lb/>
Sheraton "Qfl the Cuff. ' Fridays starting<lb/>
at 5 pm<lb/>
TOTAL FOR HOMECOMING WEEK-<lb/>
END- 10 kegs, appro 200 fifths of liq-<lb/>
uor from Sat night, 540 bodies of cham<lb/>
pange. 6 or more bushes, 20 or more<lb/>
dates' 1 sweater. 1 tooth. 1 flot.7!uch??<lb/>
1 window, and approx SOT) handovers<lb/>
ANITA BAKES Now 1 at Minges Col<lb/>
hseum Contact the C cntral Ticket Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
What do the 33,000 freshmen enrolled<lb/>
in Army ROTC last year know that you<lb/>
don V The Army Reserve Officers' Train-<lb/>
ing Corps Tor more information about<lb/>
the ECU Army Reserve Officers' Training<lb/>
Corps Program, call Capt Alvin J Mitch-<lb/>
ell at 757 rWr.7 or c.974, or drop by Erwin<lb/>
Hall, room 319.<lb/>
AIR FORCE<lb/>
Scholarships av ailabtc Find out if you<lb/>
qualify Take the Air Force Officer Quali-<lb/>
fying Test on 22 Oct (Thursat 1 p.m.<lb/>
Great job opportunities with salaries to<lb/>
match For more info, stop by Wright<lb/>
Annex, third floor, and speak with Capt.<lb/>
I louston or call 757-6597.<lb/>
FREE LESSONS<lb/>
The ECU Karate Qub is offenng FREE<lb/>
beginning Karate Lessons Thurs, Oct. 15<lb/>
at 800 pm. in Memorial Gvm (dance<lb/>
roorr, downstairs) Karate lessons taught<lb/>
under direction of Bill McDonald, 7th<lb/>
Degree Black Belt<lb/>
BACCHUS<lb/>
BACCIIUS will meet Thurs. night. Oct<lb/>
15 at 730 in Mendenhall, room 242.<lb/>
BUSINESS S-ninFNrrs<lb/>
The Amencan Marketing Association<lb/>
ls hosting a presentation on "International<lb/>
Marketing with an emphasis on the Chi-<lb/>
nese Market The presentation will be<lb/>
held at 3:00 p.m. Oct. 15 (Thurs.) in Raw!<lb/>
Browning Room Chancellor Dr. Eakin<lb/>
will be present and he looks forward to<lb/>
meeting all of you.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi members may pick up<lb/>
tickets for the raffle from Dr. Dunlop,<lb/>
Brcwster A -317 Deadline for tickets is the<lb/>
Nov. 7 meeting at 700 p.m Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
? GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi is holding a raffle to<lb/>
help raise money for travel expenses to<lb/>
National Convention Pnzes include: (1st)<lb/>
prize SI00 gift certificate to Belk's; (2nd)<lb/>
prize $75 gift certificate to Overton's<lb/>
Sporting Goods; and (3rd) prize $50 gift<lb/>
certificate to Record Bar. Tickets are 50<lb/>
cents each and may be picked up in<lb/>
Brewster A-317 or from any GBP member.<lb/>
CCA<lb/>
Clothing &amp; Textiles meeting on Oct.<lb/>
22nd in Old Joyner Auditorium (in the<lb/>
library) room 221; 4:45 p.m.?refresh-<lb/>
ments, 5:00 pm.?speaker. Speaker is<lb/>
Russ P. Consaul, Mgr. of Executive Re-<lb/>
cruitment, Miller and Rhodes, who will be<lb/>
speaking on "A Career in Retailing: It May<lb/>
Be For You Everyone is invited.<lb/>
DISCOVER INJC. SJAIM<lb/>
The Student Union Travel Committee<lb/>
presents the opening traveladventure<lb/>
film, Discovering Spain, on Thurs, Oct.<lb/>
15th in 1 lendrix Theatre at 8:00 p.m Tick-<lb/>
ets for this film are limited, but are avail-<lb/>
able at the Central Ticket Office, Menden-<lb/>
hall, 757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
T MAJRifJALeiNNJEES<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale for Madriea<lb/>
Dinners to be held Dec. 2-5 at 7:00 p m in<lb/>
Mendenhall. Tickets are $10 for ECU stu-<lb/>
dents and $16 for all others Contact Cen-<lb/>
tral Ticket Office for more info 757-6611<lb/>
ext. 266. '<lb/>
DIVE CLUB<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 Glenn or Rob.<lb/>
EDUCATION MAJORS<lb/>
l he School of Education, in conjunction<lb/>
with Campus Ministries, is sponsoring a<lb/>
WorkStudy trip to Mexico during Spring<lb/>
Break (March 6-13, 1988). Opportunities<lb/>
to observe and teach at a local school are<lb/>
available. A minimum level of "survival"<lb/>
Spanish is required. For applications and<lb/>
more info contact the Office of the Dean<lb/>
m Speight Bldg room 154.<lb/>
HANDICAPPED STUDENTS<lb/>
A recruiter from the U.S. Dept. of De-<lb/>
fense will be on campus on Nov. 18 to<lb/>
interview you for summer or permanent<lb/>
employment. Please contact Caroline<lb/>
Smith, Co-op office, 757-6979 for more<lb/>
info.<lb/>
NEON EXHIBIT<lb/>
The Student Union Visual Arts<lb/>
Committee is sponsoring The Magic of<lb/>
Neon a Smithsonian Institute Traveling<lb/>
Exhibition, Sept. 29-Oct. 16 in Menden-<lb/>
nall. Register for over $200 worth of neon<lb/>
prizes to be awarded.<lb/>
WYCUFFFBANQUrT<lb/>
Wyciiffe Assodates, the lay ministry of<lb/>
Wydiffe Bible Translators, will soon be<lb/>
hosting a banquet in this area to celebrate<lb/>
twenty years of involving lay people in<lb/>
missions. The banquet will begin at 7:00<lb/>
p m. on Oct. 20 at Sheraton, Greenville.<lb/>
Tickets to this important event are compli-<lb/>
mentary, and an offering will be taken.<lb/>
Tickets and information can be obtained<lb/>
from Larry &amp; Robin Bass by calling (919)<lb/>
830-1612. The evening will feature the<lb/>
sharing of exciting firsthand experiences<lb/>
from a Wydiffe missionary, a complimen-<lb/>
tary dinner, audiovisual presentation,<lb/>
Christian fellowship, and full details on<lb/>
the many ways that lay people can be-<lb/>
come directly involved in Bible transla-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA,<lb/>
There will be a meeting on October 21 at<lb/>
3:00 in room R3Q2. Speaking on the subject<lb/>
of interviewing will be Robert Bowman<lb/>
from Burroughs Welcome.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
There will be a mandatory meeting<lb/>
October 27 at 7:00 p.m. in Jenkins Audito-<lb/>
rium. Dues must be paid and lack of atten-<lb/>
dance will result in the individual proba-<lb/>
tion of members.<lb/>
INTRAMIIRALS<lb/>
The Department of intramural-Recrea-<lb/>
tional Services has a Backpacking Trip<lb/>
planned for the weekend of October 23<lb/>
25. Registration for this trip will be taken<lb/>
in 204 Memorial Gym from 8:00 a.m. to<lb/>
6:00 p.m through October 16.<lb/>
campus r.nti.srrMrrs<lb/>
There will be a New Member Pinning<lb/>
Ceremony on Thursday, October 15 in<lb/>
Mendenhall at 7:00 pm. For more infor<lb/>
mation, call Katie at 752-8960 or Nancv at<lb/>
551-2583.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
There will be a car wash on October 24<lb/>
from 9:00 a an. to 4:00 p.m. at the Fuel Doc<lb/>
on 10th St and 264 The cost is $2 00 per car<lb/>
 FILMS CQMMITTFF<lb/>
Hie free samples of Studio Line Hair<lb/>
Products are now available for all those<lb/>
who attended the sneak preview of "Baby<lb/>
Boom Bring Screeen Pass or movie pro-<lb/>
gram to Mendenhall, room 210 or 234<lb/>
Monday-Friday from 8.00 a.m-5.00 p m<lb/>
Offer expires Friday, October 30.<lb/>
ECusuRFcnm<lb/>
tv-U burfing Qiampionshop will be<lb/>
held the weekend of October 24. All surf-<lb/>
ers planning to go to Cape Hatteras for<lb/>
Fall Break contact Johnny Ghee or Robert<lb/>
Hurst for information. There will be a<lb/>
meeting on Wednesday, October 21 in<lb/>
room 248 Mendenhall at 5:30.<lb/>
 PM ALPHA TT.FTA<lb/>
There will be a cookout on October 30<lb/>
from 5:00 p.mU30 p.m. for members and<lb/>
guests at the picnic area near Memorial<lb/>
Gym. The cost is $1 50 for members and<lb/>
$2.50 for guests For more information<lb/>
about Phi Alpha Theta Honor Society in<lb/>
History, contact the ECU History Depart<lb/>
ment<lb/>
ECU COMPUTER CLUB<lb/>
There will be a meeting in Austin 223 on<lb/>
Thursday at 3:00 pm Guest speaker will<lb/>
be Ernie Marshburn, manager of Aca-<lb/>
demic Computing All interested stu<lb/>
dents and faculty welcome<lb/>
ECU POETRY FOELM<lb/>
There will be a meeting at 8:00 p m in<lb/>
Mendenhall room 248 Those wishing to<lb/>
have their work discussed should bnng 8<lb/>
10 copies of each poem Meeting open to<lb/>
public, observers welcome<lb/>
CXX2PmATL?Em<lb/>
The Institute of Government Summer<lb/>
Intern Program urges students to learn<lb/>
more about summer jobs by attending a<lb/>
meeting on October 27, at 2 00 p.m. in 302<lb/>
Rawl A representative from IOG will be<lb/>
available to discuss a 10-week into nship<lb/>
with various state agencies located in<lb/>
Raleigh All applicants must be of sopho-<lb/>
more, junior, or senior status anc must be<lb/>
returning to school after completing the<lb/>
internship. For more information, call the<lb/>
Co-op office at 757-6979<lb/>
FOREIGN STTinFNTS<lb/>
International Students and interested<lb/>
members are encouraged to come and<lb/>
vote in the election of officers on Wednes-<lb/>
day October 14, 1987 at 5:00 pm. at the<lb/>
international I louse on 306 E 9th Street<lb/>
'Copter gets ticket<lb/>
The sight of slick new Army<lb/>
helicopters landing at Embry-<lb/>
Riddle Aeronautical U. in Day-<lb/>
tona Beach, Fla isn't all that<lb/>
unusual, as the armed forces<lb/>
regularly drop in to try to impress<lb/>
and recruit the aviation special-<lb/>
ists the school produces.<lb/>
But on Sept. 14 Army recruiters<lb/>
unknowingly landed a UH-60<lb/>
Blackhawk helicopter in a storm<lb/>
of campuswide grumpiness<lb/>
caused by a new set of strict park-<lb/>
ing regulations, which had stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty upset and wor-<lb/>
ried about where they were going<lb/>
to park to attend classes.<lb/>
To have precious parking<lb/>
spaces consumed by a helicopter<lb/>
was apparently too much for a<lb/>
campus cop, reported Paul Nova-<lb/>
cek, editor of The Avion, the<lb/>
university's paper.<lb/>
When the recruiters returned to<lb/>
the helicopter, they found it had<lb/>
been ticketed for violating the<lb/>
new parking regulations.<lb/>
'Hot' items selling<lb/>
The National Association of<lb/>
College Stores, which from its<lb/>
office in Oberlin, Ohio, tracks<lb/>
sales at campus bookstores, re-<lb/>
ported in its most recent bulletin<lb/>
that it expects the following items<lb/>
to be big sellers among students<lb/>
this fall:<lb/>
The Couch Potato, "a soft<lb/>
brown pillow (that) is on<lb/>
everyone's 'musf list to keep the<lb/>
TV watched while classes are in<lb/>
session Corona Beer t-shirts, a<lb/>
$25 alarm clock shaped like a soft-<lb/>
ball that you turn off by hurling<lb/>
against a wall, no-smoking neck-<lb/>
ties and hairstyles with "the 'Les<lb/>
Miserables' waifish look de-<lb/>
scribed as something that "takes<lb/>
lots of mousse to achieve the un-<lb/>
combed, ringleted, mussed look<lb/>
Campus stores nationwide,<lb/>
meanwhile, sold $1 million worth<lb/>
of Domino Pizza Noid t-shirts<lb/>
during the first 5 days they were<lb/>
offered. Coming soon: Pizza Noid<lb/>
dolls.<lb/>
New awards given<lb/>
The National Organization for<lb/>
Women's Legal Defense and<lb/>
Education Fund Sept. 28 awarded<lb/>
U.S. Secretary of Education Wil-<lb/>
liam Bennett a "Lifetime Under-<lb/>
achievement Award" for install-<lb/>
ing a policy that withholds from<lb/>
pregnant teenagers education<lb/>
funds set aside for single parents<lb/>
and homemakers.<lb/>
Also given a facetious "Silver<lb/>
Snail Award Oregon Gov. Neil<lb/>
Goldschmidt, who once said that<lb/>
Title LX ? the law that forbids<lb/>
discrimination on the basis of<lb/>
gender? had led to "mediocrity"<lb/>
in Oregon intercollegiate sports.<lb/>
Fixing grades<lb/>
In 1985, the University of Geor-<lb/>
gia endured a long, embarrassing<lb/>
public trial for effectively fixing<lb/>
the grades of some football play-<lb/>
ers so they could remain eligible<lb/>
to play.<lb/>
Since the UGa, like a number of<lb/>
schools, has strained to tout the<lb/>
accomplishments of its "student-<lb/>
athletes" ? athletes who also do<lb/>
well in class ? loudly.<lb/>
So it convinced the Atlanta<lb/>
Journal-Constitution to run an<lb/>
Aug. 30 feature on player Kim<lb/>
Stephens, who in his fourth year<lb/>
already has earned an undergrad<lb/>
degree in math and math educa-<lb/>
tion and is working on hi s masters<lb/>
in business administration.<lb/>
For a photo to accompany the<lb/>
article, Stephens posed in front of<lb/>
a chalkboard on which he had<lb/>
written a quadratic equation.<lb/>
He wrote it incorrectly.<lb/>
Helping vagrants<lb/>
Two local off-campus groups?<lb/>
the Hillsborough Street Mer-<lb/>
chants Association and the Uni-<lb/>
versity Neighborhood Planning<lb/>
Council ? have voted to ask<lb/>
North Carolina State students not<lb/>
to be so kind.<lb/>
Students and faculty members<lb/>
apparently give money to va-<lb/>
grants often enough to have won<lb/>
the campus a reputation as a<lb/>
charitable place that, in turn, has<lb/>
attracted more vagrants to the<lb/>
area.<lb/>
But some of the vagrants use the<lb/>
money to get drunk, can be abu-<lb/>
sive to passersby and cause cus-<lb/>
tomers to avoid the businesses<lb/>
across the street from the campus<lb/>
"It's a social problem said<lb/>
NCSU spokesman AJ Lamer, who<lb/>
hopes to channel students' larg-<lb/>
esse into local charities and soup<lb/>
kitchens comfortably distant<lb/>
from the business district.<lb/>
Vagrants don't limit them-<lb/>
selves to N- -th Carolina State.<lb/>
<lb/>
? ???? , ?WW ? ,? a<lb/>
THFFASTt Allot INIAN<lb/>
ECU enviro<lb/>
class to reno<lb/>
By MICHELLE SHEERAN<lb/>
Slid Knie,<lb/>
A group of ECU environmental<lb/>
design students, k-d by Dr. Ab<lb/>
dul Shaktxir Farhadi, is planning<lb/>
to renovate the downtown an a<lb/>
of two North Carolina towns<lb/>
'I he students are from Farhadi 's<lb/>
Preservation, Revitalization and<lb/>
Adaptive Re-use Studio, where<lb/>
they study architecture, interior<lb/>
design, landscape and urban<lb/>
planning<lb/>
The Department of Natural<lb/>
Resources and Cornmunit) de-<lb/>
velopment (NRCD) recently con-<lb/>
tacted Farhadi to have his class<lb/>
design plans lor the renovati<lb/>
Plymouth and Hertford.<lb/>
Farhadi said the two main ob<lb/>
jeetiyes of the project are to re-<lb/>
vitalize the area and to recreate<lb/>
the look the buildings originally<lb/>
had.<lb/>
He said the people in these<lb/>
communities felt restoring the<lb/>
downtown areas would create<lb/>
more business and promote a<lb/>
better economy<lb/>
In preparation for the project<lb/>
Farhadi had his students ?<lb/>
the history of the two towns The<lb/>
students later went to Hertford to<lb/>
study<lb/>
dimensai<lb/>
Am<lb/>
the) J<lb/>
UOk f<lb/>
I lien t<lb/>
.<lb/>
pia.<lb/>
tiu-old t:<lb/>
stud<lb/>
because<lb/>
with<lb/>
Hv<lb/>
Indents<lb/>
enovatii<lb/>
"S ?<lb/>
Farl 1<lb/>
k ed oi<lb/>
vatkij<lb/>
teenth Sti<lb/>
low-cost<lb/>
Fifteen!<lb/>
Fleetwoo<lb/>
By JOHN T. CARTER<lb/>
teaturr tditor<lb/>
Fleetwood Mac is twenty years<lb/>
old this year. Juniors in the big<lb/>
music college of life. And for the<lb/>
past ten years, their major has<lb/>
been mystique with a double<lb/>
minor in pop sensibility.<lb/>
I hey gave the crowd what u<lb/>
wanrpd, a greatest hits concert,<lb/>
Friday night at the Smith Center<lb/>
in Chapel Hill Buttons and shirts<lb/>
proclaimed "The Mac is Bavk"<lb/>
and even minus Lindsay Buck-<lb/>
ingham, it was.<lb/>
Critics are continuously saying<lb/>
the band has lost its driving force<lb/>
with Buckingham and that re-<lb/>
placement guitarists Biliv<lb/>
Burnette and Rick Vito are the<lb/>
rock equivalent of football scabs<lb/>
Well, you can't really argue<lb/>
with that, but when listening to<lb/>
the Mac you have to realize a few<lb/>
things. One is, this is not a band<lb/>
that ever claimed to have integ<lb/>
rite, musical or otherwise<lb/>
The other is, when you were in<lb/>
junior high school, punk wasn't<lb/>
around and your choices were<lb/>
pretty much limited to Fleetwood<lb/>
Mac and ACDC. The tirst<lb/>
'Acorn lady'<lb/>
County; tru<lb/>
albums v<lb/>
you alwai<lb/>
So it '<lb/>
mystique<lb/>
grade ier<lb/>
are like i<lb/>
Stevie "ij<lb/>
Witho<lb/>
ham and I<lb/>
the Mac<lb/>
when thi<lb/>
1976 VYitl<lb/>
that pair<lb/>
rests on t<lb/>
vide the iq<lb/>
And tha<lb/>
playing t<lb/>
solo Lp<lb/>
Mc<lb/>
seems e of<lb/>
its future<lb/>
Nicks<lb/>
sing and<lb/>
Her<lb/>
?<lb/>
"Tar. :<lb/>
proved th<lb/>
nes with<lb/>
always<lb/>
other hon<lb/>
men m as<lb/>
ahties cai<lb/>
BYRSON CUT, N.C. (AD -<lb/>
Authorities say a skeleton found<lb/>
in the Nantahala Gorge over the<lb/>
weekend may be the remains of a<lb/>
mysterious woman who had<lb/>
lived along the Appalachian Trail<lb/>
since last year and was known<lb/>
only as the "aam lady<lb/>
The only identification found<lb/>
on the body was a 1984 Georgia<lb/>
fishing license issued to Gwen<lb/>
Collette Ratic in Mount Airy, Ga<lb/>
and a food stampapplication. The<lb/>
name was also found in one of<lb/>
several Bibles and on religious<lb/>
tracts inside her plastic covered<lb/>
tent, said Swain County Sheriff<lb/>
Ray Cline.<lb/>
Swain County authorities be-<lb/>
lieve the woman died in lune. Her<lb/>
remains, discovered by a hiker<lb/>
Saturday, have been sent to the<lb/>
state medical examiner in Chapel<lb/>
Hill to determine the cause of<lb/>
death and a positive identifica-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The mystery of the acorn lady<lb/>
began in September 1986 when<lb/>
Clay County Sheriff Tony Woody<lb/>
received a call that a woman with<lb/>
no money or food was sleeping<lb/>
under the High Bridge on Lake<lb/>
Chatuge She had come there<lb/>
pushing a bicycle loaded with her<lb/>
belongings.<lb/>
Woody told The Asheville Gti-<lb/>
zen he anf<lb/>
found the M<lb/>
the bn<lb/>
starved dovl<lb/>
Ms RaticI<lb/>
thonties shl<lb/>
term fob ad<lb/>
earlier in thj<lb/>
She clan<lb/>
so she packl<lb/>
the bicvele<lb/>
North Carol<lb/>
Woodv aj<lb/>
her to the ia<lb/>
gave herdr<lb/>
over her tor <lb/>
was strongc<lb/>
She stavt<lb/>
family for<lb/>
she moved<lb/>
In Octot<lb/>
constructiol<lb/>
Duke of the I<lb/>
Nantahala<lb/>
Ms. Ratic caij<lb/>
lachian Trail<lb/>
She was<lb/>
because sh<lb/>
spring wat<lb/>
acorns.<lb/>
Ms. RaticI<lb/>
reporter Kc<lb/>
years old ai<lb/>
some work<lb/>
ing out str<lb/>
trash<lb/>
.1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057921_0009"/><lb/>
tmeconi<lb/>
?' n the<lb/>
&amp; .1 peal<lb/>
drams oi KAs Phi Taus and TKEs (to<lb/>
name a few) danced through thoir heads.<lb/>
hon allot thesuddent there arouse such<lb/>
a clatter, the pledges were here' That was<lb/>
the matter' Five minutes to get ready,<lb/>
where were we going' To the host kid<lb/>
napping bash the v'hi IV could have had<lb/>
We cot you up earl) Not knowing what<lb/>
I .is in Mght hut we did it tvvaux' we love<lb/>
d it right 1 ove, the Chi O<lb/>
lriKKMM CHRISTIAN<lb/>
(Hi OWSHIP Please iom us' Wednes-<lb/>
day mgl ? pjn Speight 129 Fun-<lb/>
iod-1 vsl p Teaching<lb/>
VU llON<lb/>
'rget Alpha Xl<lb/>
?rv Wednesday<lb/>
e Nt excuse tor<lb/>
 I At<lb/>
i great rail<lb/>
(?member<lb/>
lot vou, ASigEp<lb/>
1IR ISSWEI r because ol the friendsm?<lb/>
hav nude And the things which in<lb/>
???? share We want to live on,<lb/>
s? ol ourselves but because of<lb/>
ps M ho would care It s living and<lb/>
? somebod) else (n that all of<lb/>
nds And the jov of it<lb/>
ill up istoundinthe<lb/>
fc Mpha Mil s<lb/>
TO NANO fO the ?! pledge trainer,<lb/>
' '?" -1 ? ? pledge class really appre<lb/>
and support vou have<lb/>
ay er N-st to add as<lb/>
an to Alpha Vita Pi Love,<lb/>
i Pi pledges<lb/>
1 OS1 m mind and mv bra at Sig Ep<lb/>
hour Wed night at Tequila bar. It<lb/>
- bring to happv hour next<lb/>
ward Bottv SUe<lb/>
WOW! Il was the biggest one vet' Fn-<lb/>
it the SI D RATON TLA PARTY<lb/>
" " fti"g bigger Cast Caro<lb/>
to 1 a m at the Sheraton's<lb/>
JFP<lb/>
SIC 1 Ps 1 lave a sale tall break<lb/>
(.Kirks' CREEKS! GRFFKS! TEA off<lb/>
weekend at the East Carolina Tea<lb/>
Part)  a Long Island Ice Teas served<lb/>
jar, that you get to keep S2 (X)<lb/>
rig Free Pizza 6-7 pjn Hi<lb/>
ck and roll by big Al The<lb/>
? - "Ofl the Cufl lounge'<lb/>
- Ml BARS CHARGE 3 some bars arc<lb/>
13, I'd bePd if I had 3, I'd<lb/>
gel me .i lea East Carolina Tea Partv"<lb/>
eCuff Fridays starting<lb/>
rOTM FOR HOMECOMING WEEK-<lb/>
rP Kegs approx 200 fifths of liq-<lb/>
uor from Sat night, 540 bottles of cham-<lb/>
pange, 6 or more bushes, 20 or more<lb/>
dates?.  sweater 1 tooth. 1 fl.ut. 7?uches.<lb/>
f window and appro VIO hangovers.<lb/>
 K Kl K V<lb/>
. 1 at Wmges Col<lb/>
ntral Ticket Office,<lb/>
enter<lb/>
COLTS<lb/>
LMA PI<lb/>
IMMUTI<lb/>
A3<lb/>
my Ghee or Robert<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
. (Vtober 21 in<lb/>
530<lb/>
for members and<lb/>
rea near Memorial<lb/>
cost is $1.50 tor members and<lb/>
six For more information<lb/>
l Theta 1 lonor Society in<lb/>
?ntact the ECU 1 listory Depart-<lb/>
ECLCOMPUTERQJLIB<lb/>
There will be a meeting in Austin 223 on<lb/>
Thur.sdav at 3 00 p m Guest speaker will<lb/>
Marshburn, manager of Aca-<lb/>
demic C ompuhng All interested stu<lb/>
dents and faculty welcome<lb/>
1 CL POLTRY FORUM<lb/>
tx j meeting at 8 00 p m. in<lb/>
? ??m 2-18 Those wishing to<lb/>
their ? rk liscussed should bring 8-<lb/>
i : poem Meeting open to<lb/>
bserv ers wel . mc<lb/>
COOPERATIVE ED.<lb/>
Institute or Government Summer<lb/>
tern Program urges students to learn<lb/>
? t iboul summer nibs bv attending a<lb/>
meeting on October 27 at 2 (X) p.m. in 302<lb/>
resent itive from KXi will be<lb/>
liscuss a 10-week internship<lb/>
? ?? i- b stal agencies located in<lb/>
ir's must be of sopho-<lb/>
m r rsa - status and must be<lb/>
ifter completing the<lb/>
in: r more information, call the<lb/>
fficeat 757-1<lb/>
FOREIGN STUDENTS<lb/>
International Students and interested<lb/>
members are encouraged to come and<lb/>
vote in the election of officers on Wednes-<lb/>
day (Vtober 14. 1987 at 5 00 p m at the<lb/>
international ' louse on VKi F 9th Street.<lb/>
Ites who also do<lb/>
ludly.<lb/>
the Atlanta<lb/>
hon to run an<lb/>
jon player Kim<lb/>
his fourth year<lb/>
an undergrad<lb/>
id math educa-<lb/>
Jg on his masters<lb/>
istration.<lb/>
accompany the<lb/>
osed in front of<lb/>
which he had<lb/>
ic equation.<lb/>
rrectly.<lb/>
igrants<lb/>
ipus groups?<lb/>
th Street Mer-<lb/>
and the Uni-<lb/>
lood Planning<lb/>
voted to ask<lb/>
North Carolina State students not<lb/>
to be so kind.<lb/>
Students and faculty members<lb/>
apparently give money to va-<lb/>
grants often enough to have won<lb/>
the campus a reputation as a<lb/>
charitable place that, in turn, has<lb/>
attracted more vagrants to the<lb/>
area.<lb/>
But some of the vagrants use the<lb/>
money to get drunk, can be abu-<lb/>
sive to passersby and cause cus-<lb/>
tomers to avoid the businesses<lb/>
across the street from the campus.<lb/>
"It's a social problem said<lb/>
NCSU spokesman AI Lanier, who<lb/>
hopes to channel students' larg-<lb/>
esse into local charities and soup<lb/>
kitchens comfortably distant<lb/>
from the business district.<lb/>
Vagrants don't limit them-<lb/>
selves to North Carolina State.<lb/>
THFEASTCAROMNIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
OCTOBER 15, 19K7 Page 7<lb/>
ECU environmental design<lb/>
class to renovate N.C. towns<lb/>
By MICHELLE SHEERAN<lb/>
SUH Writer<lb/>
A group of ECU environmental<lb/>
design students, led by Dr. Ab-<lb/>
dul-Shakoor Farhadi, is planning<lb/>
to renovate the downtown areas<lb/>
of two North Carolina towns.<lb/>
The students are from Farhadi's<lb/>
Preservation, Revitalization and<lb/>
Adaptive Re-use Studio, where<lb/>
they study architecture, interior<lb/>
design, landscape and urban<lb/>
planning.<lb/>
The Department of Natural<lb/>
Resources and Community De-<lb/>
velopment (NRCD) recently con-<lb/>
tacted Farhadi to have his class<lb/>
design plans for the renovation of<lb/>
Plymouth and Hertford.<lb/>
Farhadi said the two main ob-<lb/>
jectives of the project are to re-<lb/>
vitalize the area and to recreate<lb/>
the look the buildings originally<lb/>
had.<lb/>
He said the people in these<lb/>
communities felt restoring the<lb/>
downtown areas would create<lb/>
more business and promote a<lb/>
better economy<lb/>
In preparation for the project,<lb/>
Farhadi had his students study<lb/>
the history of the two towns. The<lb/>
students later went to Hertford to<lb/>
study the buildings and their<lb/>
dimensions inside and out.<lb/>
After completing the study,<lb/>
they made preliminary plans and<lb/>
took them the Hertford city hall.<lb/>
Then they surveyed towns-<lb/>
people, discovering what they<lb/>
liked and disliked about the<lb/>
plans.<lb/>
Students in the program said<lb/>
they have found that objections to<lb/>
the renovations were few because<lb/>
the community wants to preserve<lb/>
the old tradition. Farhadi said the<lb/>
students went to such lengths<lb/>
because he believes in designing<lb/>
with the people, not for the<lb/>
people.<lb/>
He said the renovation process<lb/>
will be costly Before the subcon-<lb/>
tractors can begin to renovate, the<lb/>
tudents will estimate the cost of<lb/>
enovatingeach building. Thecit-<lb/>
s hope to obtain donations and<lb/>
tans from the government,<lb/>
Farhadi said.<lb/>
Farhadi said his classes last year<lb/>
worked on two other projects, the<lb/>
renovation of old houses on Four-<lb/>
teenth Street and the designing of<lb/>
low-cost housing for Greenville.<lb/>
Fi fteen students arc in the class,<lb/>
and two students are presently<lb/>
working on the project, he said.<lb/>
Farhadi said he enjoyed work-<lb/>
ing with his students and tries to<lb/>
help them find a job when they<lb/>
graduate. Last year twelve stu-<lb/>
dents that graduated with con-<lb/>
centrations in evnironmental de-<lb/>
sign found jobs immediately with<lb/>
Farhadi's help.<lb/>
Jo Leichte, an environmental<lb/>
design student working on the<lb/>
project, said she enjoys working<lb/>
on these projects. "It is something<lb/>
that the town wants done and<lb/>
through my resources can be<lb/>
done she said.<lb/>
She has been working since the<lb/>
beginning of the semester on the<lb/>
project, which has been in prog-<lb/>
ress for almost one year. She said<lb/>
she is looking forward to working<lb/>
in Plymouth because of the inte-<lb/>
rior design to bedone in the build<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
Farhadi said all the main street<lb/>
buildings will be renovated in<lb/>
Hertford. He said subcontractors<lb/>
will clean and repair buildings,<lb/>
replace aluminum awnings with<lb/>
canvas ones and install glass win-<lb/>
dows.<lb/>
BEFORE- Existing downtown building in Hertford. Dr. Abdul-Shakoor Farhadi's environmental<lb/>
design class made studies to plan renovations.<lb/>
1 &amp; t -Vi.<lb/>
HIIIHIIWI<lb/>
? ?  .   .?<lb/>
AFTER-Proposed re-creation of the building's original facade. Subcontractors will replace aluminum<lb/>
awnings with canvas, install glass to give the building its traditional look.<lb/>
FleetwoodMac attack losing mystique, power<lb/>
By JOHN T. CARTER<lb/>
teaturrs Iditor<lb/>
Fleet wood Mac is twenty years<lb/>
old this year. Juniors in the big<lb/>
music college of life. And for the<lb/>
past ten years, their major has<lb/>
been mystique with a double<lb/>
minor in pop sensibility.<lb/>
Ihev gave the crowd what it<lb/>
wanted, a greatest hits concert,<lb/>
Friday night at the Smith Center<lb/>
in Chapel Hill. Buttons and shirts<lb/>
proclaimed "The Mac is Back"<lb/>
and even minus Lindsay Buck-<lb/>
ingham, it was.<lb/>
Critics are continuously saying<lb/>
the band has lost its driving force<lb/>
with Buckingham and that re-<lb/>
placement guitarists Billy<lb/>
Burnotte and Rick Vito are the<lb/>
rock equivalent of football scabs.<lb/>
Well, you can't really argue<lb/>
with that, but when listening to<lb/>
the Mac you have to realize a few<lb/>
things. One is, this is not a band<lb/>
that ever claimed to have integ-<lb/>
rity, musical or otherwise.<lb/>
The other is, when you were in<lb/>
junior high school, punk wasn't<lb/>
around and your choices were<lb/>
pretty much limited to Fleetwood<lb/>
Mac and ACDC. The first<lb/>
albums you ever pay lor arc ones<lb/>
vou always associate with.<lb/>
So if you buy into the Mac<lb/>
mystique, as hundreds of eighth<lb/>
grade females do, dressed as they<lb/>
are like Franklin Mint replicas of<lb/>
Stevie Nicks, it was a good show.<lb/>
Without doubt it was Bucking-<lb/>
ham and Nicks who jumpstarted<lb/>
the Mac truck onto the charts<lb/>
when they joined the band in<lb/>
1976. With the positive clamp of<lb/>
that pair of cables gone, the focus<lb/>
rests on the negative end to pro-<lb/>
vide the juice.<lb/>
And that shedid. With the band<lb/>
playing two songs off of Nicks's<lb/>
solo Lp's and none off Christine<lb/>
McVie's or Mick Fleetwood's, it<lb/>
seems even the Mac knows where<lb/>
its future hits lie.<lb/>
Nicks didn't do anything but<lb/>
sing and wear foot-high heels.<lb/>
Her stage presence suffered, be-<lb/>
short of musical hooks. The<lb/>
"Tango in the Night" album<lb/>
proved they can rehash past glo-<lb/>
ries with the best of them. What<lb/>
always set this band above the<lb/>
other homogenized Top 40 fresh-<lb/>
men was how hard their person-<lb/>
alities came across in their tunes.<lb/>
When you heard a McVie song,<lb/>
you knew you would get melo-<lb/>
dies and some greeting card lyr-<lb/>
ics. Nicks stings were character-<lb/>
ized by horror movie background<lb/>
music and Ouija board words.<lb/>
Buckingham tried anything so he<lb/>
could be the weirdest guy in the<lb/>
band.<lb/>
On this tour, none of this is get-<lb/>
ting across. It's a parody; the old-<lb/>
est divorced couple in rock, their<lb/>
friend the nasty drummer and a<lb/>
middle aged coke addict pretend-<lb/>
ing to be seventeen. Add two<lb/>
unknown and unexciting guitar-<lb/>
ists and "The Mac is Back<lb/>
The tour will continue and a<lb/>
new album is being planned. But<lb/>
where the Mac used to sav,<lb/>
"Chains  keep us together, "<lb/>
right now they're only bound by<lb/>
Stevic's lace.<lb/>
cause she couldn't do her trade-<lb/>
mark Dance of Usclessness wear-<lb/>
ing those shoes.<lb/>
But her voice is still strong and it<lb/>
roused fans everytime she came<lb/>
back to the stage after one of her<lb/>
wardrobe changes. Especially<lb/>
powerful was the almost spoken<lb/>
rendition of "Has Anyone Ever<lb/>
Written Anything for You set<lb/>
starkly against McVie's drifting<lb/>
piano notes.<lb/>
The band played the breadth of<lb/>
its history. Starting with "Don't<lb/>
Stop" and 'The Chain" to "Seven<lb/>
Wonders" and "Little Lies they<lb/>
hit everything except several of<lb/>
their landmark hits.<lb/>
Most noticeable among the<lb/>
missing in action were "Sara<lb/>
"Hold Me" and Buckingham's<lb/>
'Tusk Also lost in Mac limbo<lb/>
was Nicks' most intelligent ballad<lb/>
"Landslide" and (thankfully)<lb/>
"Big Love<lb/>
The "Mirage" album was ig-<lb/>
nored except for a pathetic, coun-<lb/>
trified "Gypsy The song's nos-<lb/>
talgic quality wassheared in favor<lb/>
of a heavier guitar.<lb/>
Bassist John McVie was casual<lb/>
throughout, supporting all the<lb/>
songs with solid work. A naughty<lb/>
drum solo by Mick Fleetwood<lb/>
drew laughter and hard applause.<lb/>
The new guys were spotlighted<lb/>
each time Nicks ran to the dress-<lb/>
ing room. Bumettc's blues riffs<lb/>
were nice and Vito played a for-<lb/>
gettable pop tune. Their overall<lb/>
performance with the group<lb/>
wasn't too swift, but they have to<lb/>
be commended for learning the<lb/>
Mac repetoire in one month.<lb/>
Though the audience obvi-<lb/>
ously wanted more, the group<lb/>
only did two encores. It was later<lb/>
discovered that Nicks was sick<lb/>
and this could be the reason for<lb/>
their short second set.<lb/>
The entire Mac came out first lo<lb/>
do a weak "Go Your Own Way"<lb/>
? a song they need to take to<lb/>
heart. Then Christine cameout for<lb/>
a sap-filled but well played piano<lb/>
solo.<lb/>
Fleetwood Mac has never been<lb/>
ECU News Bureau - Documen-<lb/>
tary films concerning graphic and<lb/>
performance arts will be screened<lb/>
today and Oct. 22 in East Carolina<lb/>
University's Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Center Auditorium.<lb/>
Both screenings, scheduled for<lb/>
noon, are part of the ECU School<lb/>
of Art's Thursday Lunchtime<lb/>
Movie series and are about one<lb/>
hour in length.<lb/>
Showing today are<lb/>
"Wordswede a film about a<lb/>
north German artists' colony<lb/>
'Acorn lady' remains found in Macon<lb/>
County; true identity still a mystery<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
BYRSON CUT, N.C. (AP) -<lb/>
Authorities say a skeleton found<lb/>
in the Nantahala Gorge over the<lb/>
weekend may be the remains of a<lb/>
mysterious woman who had<lb/>
lived along the Appalachian Trail<lb/>
since last year and was known<lb/>
only as the "acorn lady<lb/>
The only identification found<lb/>
on the body was a 1984 Georgia<lb/>
fishing license issued to Gwcn<lb/>
Collette Ratic in Mount Airy, Ga<lb/>
and a food stamp application. The<lb/>
name was also found in one of<lb/>
several Bibles and on religious<lb/>
tracts inside her plastic covered<lb/>
tent, said Swain County Sheriff<lb/>
Ray Cline.<lb/>
Swain County authorities be-<lb/>
lieve the woman died in June. Her<lb/>
remains, discovered by a hiker<lb/>
Saturday, have been sent to the<lb/>
state medical examiner in Chapel<lb/>
Hill to determine the cause of,<lb/>
death and a positive identifica-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The mystery of the acorn lady<lb/>
began in September 1986 when<lb/>
Clay County Sheriff Tony Woody<lb/>
received a call that a woman with<lb/>
no money or food was sleeping<lb/>
under the High Bridge on Lake<lb/>
Chatuge. She had come there<lb/>
pushing a bicycle loaded with her<lb/>
belongings.<lb/>
Woody told The Asheville Citi-<lb/>
zen he answered the call and<lb/>
found the woman huddled under<lb/>
the bridge. "She was about<lb/>
starved down when I found her<lb/>
Ms. Ratic told Clay County au-<lb/>
thorities she had ended a long-<lb/>
term job as a personal servant<lb/>
earlier in the year near Helen, Ga.<lb/>
She claimed she had no family,<lb/>
so she packed her belongings on<lb/>
the bicycle and started out for<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Woody and his deputies took<lb/>
her to the jail where they fed her,<lb/>
gave her dry clothes and watched<lb/>
over her for several days until she<lb/>
was stronger.<lb/>
She stayed with a deputy's<lb/>
family for several weeks. Then<lb/>
she moved on.<lb/>
In October 1986 Forest Service<lb/>
construction supervisor Tom<lb/>
Duke of the Wayah District of the<lb/>
Nantahala National Forest found<lb/>
Ms. Ratic camping near the Appa-<lb/>
lachian Trail in Macon County.<lb/>
She was called the acorn lady<lb/>
because she was subsisting on<lb/>
spring water, flour cakes and<lb/>
acoms.<lb/>
Ms. Ratic told Franklin Press<lb/>
reporter Ken Sexton she was 54<lb/>
years old and had hoped to get<lb/>
some work along the way clean-<lb/>
ing out streams and picking up<lb/>
trash.<lb/>
She was " a tall, frail, grand-<lb/>
motherly lady Sexton said.<lb/>
Local agencies in Macon<lb/>
County attempted to help Ms.<lb/>
Ratic, but she refused, telling au-<lb/>
thorities she preferred to live in<lb/>
the woods.<lb/>
"She was very self-sufficient.<lb/>
She had a mind of her own and the<lb/>
outdoors was her world said<lb/>
Frances Slagle, a staff member of<lb/>
the Macon Program for Progress.<lb/>
"We called her the acorn lady<lb/>
because she loved ground-up<lb/>
acorns for coffee<lb/>
Everyone who remembered<lb/>
Ms. Ratic Tuesday said she de-<lb/>
tested any governmental assis-<lb/>
tance, but would accept coffee<lb/>
and cigarettes from individuals.<lb/>
She told them she loved the ani-<lb/>
mals in the forest and she felt safe<lb/>
in the woods.<lb/>
Nancy and Tom Duke took her<lb/>
into their home during a snow-<lb/>
storm early in 1987.<lb/>
"She said she had no family<lb/>
Mrs. Duke said Tuesday. "She<lb/>
said one night at the dinner table<lb/>
that she once lived in Atlanta in 'a<lb/>
beautiful house' with her family,<lb/>
she claimed she had two children<lb/>
the government killed. She<lb/>
wouldn't say anything else, but<lb/>
she once mentioned a sister.<lb/>
"I don't think she was always<lb/>
poor. The way she presented her-<lb/>
self, talked and ate, 1 think that at<lb/>
one time she was in a good home<lb/>
- a very good home. Her manners<lb/>
and all impressed me. I think she<lb/>
was well educated<lb/>
Ms. Ratic returned to her camp<lb/>
near the Appalachian Trail. And<lb/>
as the winter wore on and the<lb/>
weather became colder authori-<lb/>
ties again became concerned<lb/>
about her. Macon county depu-<lb/>
ties, rescue squad members and<lb/>
wildlife officers hiked into her<lb/>
camp one extremely cold night<lb/>
and had to practically force her to<lb/>
leave.<lb/>
Ranger Ronnie Raum of the<lb/>
Wayah District of the Nantahala<lb/>
National Forest said Ms. Ratic's<lb/>
tent had nearly collapsed from the<lb/>
snow and she was huddled under<lb/>
some plastic with a candle to keep<lb/>
warm.<lb/>
Her last contact with Forest<lb/>
Service and county officials was<lb/>
sometime in late March or April.<lb/>
Then she dropped out of sight.<lb/>
When Swain County deputies<lb/>
Steve Cloer and Roger DeHart<lb/>
arrived at her camp Saturday they<lb/>
couldn't tell whether the body<lb/>
was that of a man or woman. All<lb/>
that remained was a skelton.<lb/>
Inside her tent, which was cov-<lb/>
ered with sheets of clear and black<lb/>
Art films to show at Jenkin's<lb/>
known as the residence of painter<lb/>
Paula Modersohn-Beckcrand the<lb/>
poet Rilke; "Pina Bausch and the<lb/>
Wuppcrtal Dance Theatre a<lb/>
rehearsal work featuring Pina<lb/>
Bausch choreography of "The<lb/>
Rite of Spring" and "Dada and<lb/>
Neo-Dada photo-collages of<lb/>
John Heartfield.<lb/>
Scheduled for Oct. 22 arc "Emil<lb/>
Nolde" and "A Portrait of Paula<lb/>
M odersohn- Becker<lb/>
All screenings in the art series<lb/>
are free and open to the public.<lb/>
ECU drummers in 'top 12'<lb/>
ECU News Bureau - Six mem-<lb/>
bers of East Carolina University's<lb/>
"Marching Pirates" marching<lb/>
band have concluded a season of<lb/>
touring across the nation with<lb/>
U.S. Drum and Bugle Corps<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
The tours ended recently in<lb/>
Whitewater, Wise, at the Drum<lb/>
Corps International World<lb/>
Championships; all corps repre-<lb/>
sented by members of the March-<lb/>
ing Pirates made the "top<lb/>
twelve<lb/>
ECU band members participat-<lb/>
ing were Todd Brewer of Fairfax,<lb/>
Va ECU's head drum major, who<lb/>
performed with the "Garfield<lb/>
Cadets" corps; Scotty Sells of<lb/>
Richfield and Bucky Cross of<lb/>
Creedmoor, performers with the<lb/>
"Spirit of Atlanta Matt Minick of<lb/>
Raleigh, member of the "Garfield<lb/>
Cadets Nick Holland of<lb/>
Pittsboro, member of the "Sky<lb/>
Ryders and Jeff Weaver of Ron-<lb/>
ccverte, West Va member of the<lb/>
"Bridgemen<lb/>
"While traveling three months<lb/>
provides participating students a<lb/>
chance to tour dozens of states<lb/>
and compete almost nightly,<lb/>
these students, consequently, re-<lb/>
turn to ECU and provide strength<lb/>
and leadership to the band said<lb/>
Marching Pirates director Dr.<lb/>
Thomas Goolsby.<lb/>
The "top twelve" is selected<lb/>
from among several hundred<lb/>
competing corps, each with ap-<lb/>
proximately 128 members, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Opera tryouts start Oct. 21<lb/>
ECU News Bureau - Auditions<lb/>
for the February production of<lb/>
the East Carolina University<lb/>
Opera Theater will be held Oct.<lb/>
21-22 from 7:30 until 10 p.m. in<lb/>
Room 269 of the Fletcher Music<lb/>
Center at ECU.<lb/>
Auditions are open to any<lb/>
interested persons. Singers<lb/>
should be prepared to sing<lb/>
something of their choice for<lb/>
solo roles; those auditioning for<lb/>
the chorus do not need to<lb/>
prepare a special piece. An<lb/>
accompanist will be provided.<lb/>
The full-length opera produci-<lb/>
ton will be presented Feb. 11-14.<lb/>
Further information is available<lb/>
from Dr. Clyde Hiss, director of<lb/>
the ECU Opera Theatre, at 757-<lb/>
6851.<lb/>
plastic, was a calendar. I ne days<lb/>
had been crossed out on the calen-<lb/>
dar until June 14, Rag Day - a<lb/>
Sundav.<lb/>
"She loved theoutdoors. I don't<lb/>
think she would have starved. She<lb/>
wanted to live outside Slagle<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Ms. Ratic didn't leave much<lb/>
behind. She had less than $1 in<lb/>
change, her blue Monarch bike,<lb/>
some herbs, the Bibles, assorted<lb/>
clothing including a green pair of<lb/>
WWn 5 !ubDer boots given her in<lb/>
Macon County, several plastic<lb/>
sacks filled with litter she appar-<lb/>
ently picked up in the woods and<lb/>
her tattered tent. The deputies<lb/>
also found a receipt for $25 from<lb/>
where she bought the bicycle in<lb/>
Mount Airy, Ga.<lb/>
"She never bothered anybody.<lb/>
In fact, nobody really remembers<lb/>
her dine said. "I'd sure like to<lb/>
make sure who she is<lb/>
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LONDON (AP) Actor Simon<lb/>
Vard has rcturnt-d home from a<lb/>
Hospital and says he can't re al<lb/>
iOW he suffered a fractured skull<lb/>
Ward, 45, best known for hi<lb/>
tamng role in the Richard Atten<lb/>
orough film "Young Winston,<lb/>
aid Tuesday he believes h<lb/>
Hacked Oct 1 in or around his<lb/>
Jorth London Home Hi-<lb/>
ound unconcious bv his<lb/>
Uexandra, in their li me r<lb/>
Scotland Yard vud it is trying to<lb/>
letermine whether Ward<lb/>
ttacked<lb/>
"It is hkelv that he vsav' sa<lb/>
K)lice spokesman, speaking<lb/>
mymouslv in keeping v ?<lb/>
sh custom "There is<lb/>
lishaving Ken attacked and<lb/>
nquines are continuing<lb/>
Ward said he wa ing<lb/>
Bmefromaperforma<lb/>
jondon's theater disti<lb/>
e first assumed hi<lb/>
iter stepping thi<lb/>
ioor because there ???? i<lb/>
)US signs of injur<lb/>
He said he developed<lb/>
Field is comfortabh<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Sail ,<lb/>
?as fared well on the choppj -<lb/>
f stardtm, but she says it<lb/>
akes guts to put her -a ?rk bt I i<lb/>
he public.<lb/>
The productive  idem)<lb/>
ward-winning actress i- ab<lb/>
odeliver a babv in DtvcmK-r and<lb/>
as two new romantic ct?me<lb/>
:omingout: "Surrender out this<lb/>
veek; and "Punchline out early<lb/>
lext vear<lb/>
"Some people sav that corned)<lb/>
sharder she said. "Probabiv it -<lb/>
larder because when vou<lb/>
ou fall so broadly - without am-<lb/>
iort of saving grace When you<lb/>
all in drama it seems a little m. ire<lb/>
graceful. When vou fall in com-<lb/>
?dy, you splat<lb/>
Such insight is squeezed from a<lb/>
lfetime spent in show business<lb/>
as the daughter of Paramount<lb/>
actress MaRgie Field Mahoney;<lb/>
the" sr'c!paa'urtfr of Toot Mfa-<lb/>
honey, a star of Westerns and two<lb/>
Tarzan films; and now, as the wife<lb/>
of producer Alan Greisman<lb/>
"Retch "Modem Pr<lb/>
and " night. Mother)<lb/>
Field also seems entrench?<lb/>
her domestic role with her i<lb/>
rropped hair and casual m<lb/>
tity clothes - the flip side ot her<lb/>
:<lb/>
and )<lb/>
goes av ,i ?.<lb/>
Such<lb/>
frailties have<lb/>
the - ?<lb/>
UnttdiMw<lb/>
FEELING LOW<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
Why not come by the REAL Crisis Interver.d<lb/>
E. lOth St; or call 758 HELP. For Free Co: .<lb/>
Ing or Assistance.<lb/>
Our Volunteers and Staff are on duty 24<lb/>
?round. In order to assist you in virtually an<lb/>
you might have. Our longstanding goal has<lb/>
preserve and enhance the quality of life for y<lb/>
xn unity.<lb/>
Licensed And Accredlte<lb/>
C6tt'?<lb/>
foanehA<lb/>
Grot"<lb/>
Quali<lb/>
"HAT 2 SWEATERS TLailflck<lb/>
OR SKIRTS CLEANE Dj g<lb/>
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i 3RD PAIR CLEANED j<lb/>
Bv FRIEDRICH<lb/>
THE VAMPIRE<lb/>
by Mklver<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
I Efcpiirs October 31. L9?<lb/>
 Coupon must be presented with incoming<lb/>
CORVERl<lb/>
First Wachovia is looking<lb/>
few good students for mal<lb/>
merit trainee positions in<lb/>
Recruiters will be on cam<lb/>
November 3,1987. Contai<lb/>
Career Planning and Plat<lb/>
Office for an interview or<lb/>
information.<lb/>
 FIRST<lb/>
WACHOVII<lb/>
An Equal Opportunity EmpLj<lb/>
?. .<lb/>
  ? M iMfMROMMi<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
CKTOBER15.1987<lb/>
People in the news<lb/>
LONDON (AP) - Actor Simon<lb/>
Ward has returned home from a<lb/>
hospital and says he can't recall<lb/>
how he suffered a fractured skull.<lb/>
Ward, 45, best known for his<lb/>
tarring role in the Richard Atten-<lb/>
vrough film "Young Winston<lb/>
viid Tuesday he believes he was<lb/>
ittacked Oct. 1 in or around his<lb/>
Morth London Home. He was<lb/>
found unconcious by his wife,<lb/>
Alexandra, in their living room.<lb/>
Scotland Yard said it is trying to<lb/>
determine whether Ward was<lb/>
,i stacked.<lb/>
It is likely that he was said a<lb/>
vlice spokesman, speaking an-<lb/>
nvmously in keeping with Brit-<lb/>
ish custom. "There is no proof of<lb/>
tus having been attacked and our<lb/>
inquiries arc continuing<lb/>
Ward said he was returning<lb/>
me from a performance in West<lb/>
ondon's theater district and that<lb/>
"ie first assumed he had fainted<lb/>
it'ter stepping through his front<lb/>
door because there were no obvi-<lb/>
us signs of injuries.<lb/>
He said he developed severe<lb/>
eadaches three days later and<lb/>
that a brain scan revealed a frac-<lb/>
tured skull and a large blood clot.<lb/>
Ward underwent surgery to<lb/>
remove the clot and had 24 metal<lb/>
staples inserted in his skull to<lb/>
close the wound, said Colin<lb/>
Boakes of Charing Cross Hospi-<lb/>
tal.<lb/>
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Ro-<lb/>
sanne Cash's rock-swing song<lb/>
"Hold On" was the winner of<lb/>
BMI's Robert . Burton Award,<lb/>
given to the country music song<lb/>
played most often by broadcast-<lb/>
ers, company officials an-<lb/>
nounced.<lb/>
Paul Overstreet was named<lb/>
Songwriter of the Year for his<lb/>
songs "No Place Like Home<lb/>
"OnThcOthcr Hand "One Love<lb/>
At a Time "You Can't Stop<lb/>
Love" and "You're Still New to<lb/>
Me<lb/>
Tree Publishing Co. won Pub-<lb/>
lisher of the Year honors, BMi said<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Citation of Achievement<lb/>
awards were given to writers<lb/>
and 75 publishers in recognition<lb/>
of popularity in country music at<lb/>
a ceremony Tuesday evening.<lb/>
The awards are based on the<lb/>
number of broadcast perform-<lb/>
ances for the period of April I,<lb/>
1986, through March 31,1987.<lb/>
BMI is a composer, songwriter<lb/>
and music publishing company<lb/>
performing rights organization<lb/>
that collects and distributes per<lb/>
formance royalties.<lb/>
BENTONVI1.LF, Ark. (AP) -<lb/>
Billionaire Sam Walton had no<lb/>
comment about being placed at<lb/>
the top of Forbes magazine's list<lb/>
of 400 richest Americans for the<lb/>
third-straight year.<lb/>
"Absolutely mine' Jim Von<lb/>
Gremp, spokesman for Walton's<lb/>
Wal-Mart Store chain, said Tues-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Forbes said Monday that<lb/>
Walton's holdings were worth<lb/>
$8.6 billion.<lb/>
BEVERLY HILLS. Ca.lif. (AP)<lb/>
Jack Valenti, head of the Motion<lb/>
Picture Industry Association of<lb/>
America, is warning of a televi-<lb/>
sion programming monopoly.<lb/>
Valenti noted Tuesday that a<lb/>
Justice Department consent de-<lb/>
cree requiring networks to use<lb/>
some independent produciton<lb/>
will expire in 1990.<lb/>
"At that time, all three networks<lb/>
will be free to produce and own<lb/>
l(K) percent of all their 22 hours of<lb/>
weekly prime-time program-<lb/>
ming he said at a meeting of the<lb/>
1 loUywood Radio and Television<lb/>
Society.<lb/>
One network executive dis-<lb/>
agreed with Valenti. "The only<lb/>
network produced show on pn-<lb/>
metime right now is 'Moonlight-<lb/>
ing' on ABC said John Agoglia,<lb/>
NBC executive vice president for<lb/>
business affairs. Angoglia said he<lb/>
doubted the networks want to<lb/>
dominate produciton and said he<lb/>
saw no trend toward that.<lb/>
IRVING, Texas (AP) - Televi-<lb/>
Field is comfortable with her role as mother<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Sally Field<lb/>
has fared well on the choppv sea<lb/>
of stardom, but she says it still<lb/>
takes guts to put her work before<lb/>
;he public.<lb/>
The productive Academy<lb/>
Award-winning actress is about<lb/>
to deliver a baby in December and<lb/>
has two new romantic comedies<lb/>
coming out: "Surrender out this<lb/>
week; and "Punchline out early<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
"Some people say that comedy<lb/>
is harder she said. "Probably it's<lb/>
harder because when you fall,<lb/>
you fall so broadly - without any<lb/>
sort of saving grace. When you<lb/>
tall in drama it seems a little more<lb/>
graceful. When you fall in com-<lb/>
edy, you splat<lb/>
Such insight is squeezed from a<lb/>
lifetime spent in show business.<lb/>
as the daughter of Paramount<lb/>
actress Maggie Field Mahoncy;<lb/>
the sftpaluftter-6f tr4J&amp;<lb/>
honey, a star of Westerns and two<lb/>
Tarzan films; and now, as the wife<lb/>
of producer Alan Greisman<lb/>
"Fletch "Modem Problems"<lb/>
ind " 'night, Mother)<lb/>
Field also seems entrenched in<lb/>
her domestic role with her close-<lb/>
cropped hair and casual mater-<lb/>
nity clothes - the flip side of her<lb/>
provacati ve pose on the cover of a<lb/>
1986 Playboy magazine. Alreadv<lb/>
the mother of Peter, 17, and Eli, 14,<lb/>
she plans to "play it by ear" about<lb/>
ending her next maternity leave.<lb/>
"Even in the past, I would only<lb/>
do a picture every one to two<lb/>
years she said, "i did two pic-<lb/>
tures this year, which was<lb/>
unusual for me<lb/>
What's it like to go back onto the<lb/>
set after such a hiatus?<lb/>
"It's always hard she said.<lb/>
"And every actor I've ever talked<lb/>
to feels this way<lb/>
"You always, the first day of<lb/>
shooting, are a nervous wreck.<lb/>
You're trembling all over, be-<lb/>
cause you're saying, '1 once knew<lb/>
how todo this but I've forgotten it<lb/>
now she said. "Then you get up<lb/>
and you start to work and it sort of<lb/>
goes away<lb/>
Such admissions of human<lb/>
' frail ties have brougkiiher grief in<lb/>
the past. Critics and fans alike<lb/>
groaned after she gushed during<lb/>
her 1985 Oscar acceptance speech:<lb/>
"You like me! You really like me<lb/>
But in an August interview,<lb/>
Field's own favorite actress,<lb/>
Katharine Hepburn, expressed a<lb/>
similar revelation. Hepburn said<lb/>
she was surprised that the audi-<lb/>
ence was not out to shoot her after<lb/>
she sang in the 1970 Broadway<lb/>
production of "Coco<lb/>
"It was a warm  discovery to<lb/>
me. And I thought, 'They must<lb/>
like me. That's why they're here<lb/>
After hearing I lepburn's re-<lb/>
marks, Field laughed heartily.<lb/>
"Aha! There it is! She said it much<lb/>
more clearly than I did. 1 lad I said<lb/>
that, 1 wouldn't be in trouble<lb/>
Starting Friday<lb/>
The Pick-up ArtIst-PG-13<lb/>
Starring Molly Ringwald<lb/>
Like Father. Like Son-PG-13<lb/>
Starring Dudley Moore<lb/>
Surrender-PG<lb/>
Starring Sally Field<lb/>
House II-R-<lb/>
$1.50 All Times<lb/>
?a<lb/>
umt?ewmi<lb/>
FEELING LOW? "<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
Why not come by the REAL Crisis Intervention Center: 312<lb/>
E. lOth St; or call 758-HELP. For Free Confidential Counsel-<lb/>
ing or Assistance.<lb/>
Our Volunteers and Staff are on duty 24 hrs. a day. year<lb/>
around, in order to assist you in virtually any problem area<lb/>
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Licensed And Accredited By The State of North Carolina<lb/>
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BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
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Starts Friday<lb/>
BIG SHOTS<lb/>
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Now PlaylBg????5<lb/>
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Starts Friday<lb/>
TOUGH GUYS DON'T DANCE<lb/>
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2:00-4:30-7:00-9:20<lb/>
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?eineh&amp; Since l935 j<lb/>
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I Expires October 31. 1987 corner of iothevans <lb/>
I Coupon must be presented with incoming order<lb/>
Italian<lb/>
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638-B East Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27858<lb/>
10-6 Monday-Saturday<lb/>
355-7473<lb/>
Sott Contact Lenses<lb/>
First Wachovia is looking for a<lb/>
few good students for manage-<lb/>
ment trainee positions in banking.<lb/>
Recruiters will be on campus on<lb/>
November 3,1987. Contact the<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Office for an interview or further<lb/>
information.<lb/>
FIRST<lb/>
WACHOVIA<lb/>
An Equal Opportunity Employer<lb/>
Includes:<lb/>
LensesCare KitFollow-up Care<lb/>
For 30 Days<lb/>
Eye Exam Additional<lb/>
OPTOMCmiC<lb/>
?Y?CAR?C?MT?R?AD<lb/>
Dr. John C Molnar<lb/>
The Plaza Mall 756 9771<lb/>
Bring Student I.D.<lb/>
sion evangelist Jerry Falwell is<lb/>
keeping a close watch on the foot<lb/>
ball career of Kelvin Edwards, a<lb/>
Dallas Cowboys wide receiver<lb/>
who graduated from Falwell's<lb/>
Liberty University in Lynchburg,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
Edwards said he was in his<lb/>
hotel room Sunday night after the<lb/>
Cowboys' 41-22 victory over the<lb/>
Philadelphia Eagles when Falwell<lb/>
telephoned him.<lb/>
"Or. Falwell said that he an-<lb/>
nounced my name in c .urch that<lb/>
morning Edwards said. "He<lb/>
said everybody started cheering<lb/>
in church. 1 said, 'Wait a minute!<lb/>
People were cheering for me in<lb/>
church?<lb/>
Edwards has scored three<lb/>
touchdowns and set up three oth-<lb/>
ers while playing for the<lb/>
Cowboy's replacement team dur-<lb/>
ing the NFL players' strike.<lb/>
Told that Falwell has taken an<lb/>
interest in one of his most talented<lb/>
replacements, Cowboys Coach<lb/>
Tom Landry said Monday, "That<lb/>
would help. We'll take all the help<lb/>
we can get<lb/>
1NGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)<lb/>
John McEnroe says television in<lb/>
trades more on tennis matches<lb/>
than on football or baseball games<lb/>
and that this is the reason behind<lb/>
his two-month suspension from<lb/>
the Nabisco Grand Prix tennis<lb/>
circuit.<lb/>
A television boom mike, de-<lb/>
signed to pick up the sound of the<lb/>
tennis ball, captured him swear-<lb/>
ing during the U.S. Open last<lb/>
month.<lb/>
There shouldn't be one of<lb/>
those mikes on the court McEn<lb/>
roe said Monday night after a 6-2,<lb/>
fv3 victory over Miloslav Mecir in<lb/>
the Ma helm Challenge Series.<lb/>
"Some things shouldn't be<lb/>
heard for the sake of everybody<lb/>
and for the spectators he said<lb/>
Fall Savings<lb/>
STEREO CONCEPTS IS<lb/>
proud to announce the addition<lb/>
of Polk Audio to our<lb/>
many fine lines!<lb/>
Come &amp; Hear If hat You've Het-n Missing!<lb/>
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803 HARDEE ROAD<lb/>
Across From t-rnon Park Mall<lb/>
KINSTON PHONE 323-3? 7<lb/>
r<lb/>
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EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
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Every Friday<lb/>
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5-7 PM<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057921_0012"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
JHE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBFR 15, 1987<lb/>
Harvard glass flowers a blooming attraction<lb/>
CAMBRIDGE. Mae AP . lr. tenth nl M ;u l ? . . . ?"<lb/>
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - In<lb/>
'924, Marianne Moore began a<lb/>
poem by recalling something her<lb/>
father once said: "Superior people<lb/>
never make long visits, have to be<lb/>
shown Longfellow's grave or the<lb/>
glass flowers at Harvard<lb/>
Long visits are still the curse of<lb/>
the well situated, and<lb/>
Longfellow's grave, at Mount<lb/>
Auburn Cemetery in this univer-<lb/>
sity town, remains onlv a modest<lb/>
attraction. But the glass flowers at<lb/>
the Harvard Botanical Museum<lb/>
now rank as the university's big-<lb/>
gest tourist attraction.<lb/>
The fragile beauties - 847 repli-<lb/>
cas of 780 species - were fashioned<lb/>
into likfelike color and form by<lb/>
father and son artisans from Dres-<lb/>
den for use as teaching aids in<lb/>
botany classes.<lb/>
The plants range from uncom-<lb/>
plicated (lowers such as the morn<lb/>
ing glory to a cactus with nary a<lb/>
spike missing and a stem of gold -<lb/>
enrod with hundreds of flower-<lb/>
ing heads averaging about one-<lb/>
tenth of an inch long<lb/>
The displays include a section<lb/>
aptly known around the museum<lb/>
as "rotten fruit created for the<lb/>
study of disease. Most of the ex-<lb/>
hibits are surrounded by their key<lb/>
pollination parts, and many<lb/>
plants are detailed right down to<lb/>
their thread-thin roots - all in<lb/>
glass.<lb/>
Model one, an orchid, arrived<lb/>
100 years ago, and model 847, an<lb/>
apricot in flower was delivered in<lb/>
1936, shortly before the death of<lb/>
Rudolf Blaschka, who did the fi-<lb/>
nal work on the project he had<lb/>
begun with his father, Leopold.<lb/>
A following for this rare blend<lb/>
of art and science has been build-<lb/>
ing steadily and quietly over the<lb/>
years, and now more than 100,000<lb/>
people a year come to sec the<lb/>
Blaschka handicraft.<lb/>
The attraction has grown<lb/>
largely through word-of-mouth,<lb/>
enhanced by widely circulated<lb/>
murmunngs that the flowers<lb/>
were born of a secret formula the<lb/>
Blaschkas took to their graves<lb/>
The exhibit's inconspicuous<lb/>
location on the third floor of a<lb/>
cluster of little museums - there is<lb/>
no sign outside the building indi- what one would bring at auction<lb/>
ios palm-like cogollo and the rat<lb/>
A plant lent to Corning after the pineapple, include little mounds<lb/>
flood was insured for $20,000, and of broken glass. Visitors, in an-<lb/>
- probably a fraction of gling for better views, have con<lb/>
'Mi!J K i  i-t . ? . .i ?? a ? ?<lb/>
eating the flowers are inside -<lb/>
makes every first trip to sec the<lb/>
flowers a small adventure that<lb/>
adds to the anticipation.<lb/>
The flowers travel occasionally,<lb/>
always with the special care they<lb/>
is the only value ever put on the<lb/>
flowers. The Blaschkas ended up<lb/>
being paid roughly $250 per<lb/>
plant.<lb/>
Museum officials are beginning<lb/>
to talk about such mundane<lb/>
Ware and her mother decided to<lb/>
finance the project in honor of<lb/>
Charles Eliot Ware, Harvard class<lb/>
of 1834.<lb/>
Whatever happens, the mys-<lb/>
tique of the flowers will continue,<lb/>
even though the secret of their<lb/>
creation was long ago made pub-<lb/>
have been given since first being things during what has become<lb/>
sent from Germany in elaborately somcthingofasummcrofreckon-<lb/>
stuffed crates the Blaschkas de-<lb/>
veloped for their other main line<lb/>
of work, glass marine specimens.<lb/>
Three of the flowers once went<lb/>
on loan to Japan. The package was<lb/>
ticketed as "Mr. Box" and pro-<lb/>
vided a seat in the first-class sec-<lb/>
tion of an airplane, next to their<lb/>
keeper. Another group was taken<lb/>
to New York 10 years ago in two<lb/>
hearses.<lb/>
In 1972, six of the flowers on loan<lb/>
to the corning Glass Words were<lb/>
destroyed in a flood, and no one<lb/>
could estimate the extent of the<lb/>
ing for the world's most precious<lb/>
mimic garden. New caretakers<lb/>
are needed because Richard<lb/>
Evans Schultes recently retired as<lb/>
museum director, and William A.<lb/>
Davis, who tended the flowers<lb/>
after the death of Louis C. Bier-<lb/>
weiler, their custodian for more<lb/>
than 60 years, is ailing and also<lb/>
recently retired.<lb/>
Time, sonic booms and fluctua-<lb/>
tions in humidity have worn<lb/>
some of the paint and produced<lb/>
some hairline cracks and break-<lb/>
age. Some displays, such as the<lb/>
tributed to the flaking by bump-<lb/>
ing the cherry wood and glass<lb/>
cases holding the flowers.<lb/>
The recent addition of air-con-<lb/>
ditioning will control the climate he bv Leopold Blaschka<lb/>
and arrest deterioration. Still, a<lb/>
few flowers will need repairs. "The only way to become a<lb/>
The museum will meet with glass modeler of skill, I have often<lb/>
glass experts over the next few said to people, is to get a good<lb/>
months and is considering more great-grandfather who loved<lb/>
modern lighting and some other<lb/>
cosmetic changes in the sur-<lb/>
roundings.<lb/>
There also will be talk of how to<lb/>
raise donations, the first major<lb/>
quest for money since Mary Lee<lb/>
glass; then he is to have a son with<lb/>
like tastes; he is to be your grand-<lb/>
father. He in turn will have a son<lb/>
who must, as your father, be pas-<lb/>
sionately fond of glass You, as his<lb/>
son, can then try your hand<lb/>
'Beloved ' a haunted and haunting novel<lb/>
HWYORK(AP)-Thcrmhl.sh- onlv mavmafp ?wj?. u uitv.  . . .<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)- The publish<lb/>
crs oi Toni Morrison's spellbind-<lb/>
ing new book, "Beloved are call-<lb/>
ing it her Great American novel.<lb/>
Hut the author chafes at the notion<lb/>
that she set out to create a work<lb/>
bearing such an impressive onus.<lb/>
"No, I wasn't trying to write the<lb/>
great American anything Mor-<lb/>
rison said in a recent interview.<lb/>
But I think the story is a great<lb/>
American subject<lb/>
Hie subject is slavery, and is<lb/>
presented in "Beloved" in its<lb/>
many degrading forms and un-<lb/>
mitigated horror. "Imagine the<lb/>
Holocaust she said in her soft,<lb/>
careful voice. "Now imagine it<lb/>
lasting for 200 years<lb/>
"Beloved" tells the tale of Sethc,<lb/>
an escaped slave from Kentucky,<lb/>
struggling to survive in post-Cavi<lb/>
War Ohio in a house haunted bv<lb/>
the ghost of her dead baby. Her<lb/>
two sons have fled the vexatious<lb/>
spirit; her remaining moodv<lb/>
daughter considers the ghost her<lb/>
onty playmate<lb/>
Along comes Paul D a slave<lb/>
from the plantation from which<lb/>
Sethe escaped; he brings with him<lb/>
a flood o(memoriesand discover-<lb/>
ies that add to Sethe's pain. But he<lb/>
provides her with much-needed<lb/>
companionship and drives away<lb/>
the spirit. Or so it appears. Soon<lb/>
afterwards, a mysterious young<lb/>
woman who can't remember her<lb/>
past comes to live with them. She<lb/>
calls herself Beloved, the one<lb/>
word that Sethe could afford to<lb/>
have carved on the tombstone for<lb/>
her dead child.<lb/>
Morrison, 56, is the author of<lb/>
four other novels, including 'Tar<lb/>
Bay and "Song of Solomon<lb/>
which won the 1978 National<lb/>
Book Critics Circle Award for fic-<lb/>
tion. A play, "Dreaming<lb/>
Emmett was produced last vear.<lb/>
Although her earlier works<lb/>
have earned her much acclaim,<lb/>
she is at her finest in "Beloved<lb/>
The language is as rich as any-<lb/>
thing by William Faulkner and<lb/>
the tale is as poignant as Alice<lb/>
Walker's "The Color Purple<lb/>
Morrison's deft pacing and her<lb/>
talent in weaving riveting flash-<lb/>
backs into the suspenscful ongo-<lb/>
ing story make for mesmerizing<lb/>
reading.<lb/>
"Beloved" is based in part on a<lb/>
true account of an escaped slave<lb/>
named Margaret Garner who<lb/>
decided to kill her child rather<lb/>
ihan see it return to bondage. "I<lb/>
didn't document that woman's<lb/>
life said Morrison. "I simply<lb/>
took a small portion of it and in-<lb/>
vented another life for her<lb/>
She was asked if Sethe loved her<lb/>
children too much, and<lb/>
Morrison's response sums up the<lb/>
bitter irony that is at the heart of<lb/>
the book.<lb/>
"I think Sethe was obsessive<lb/>
about those children because it<lb/>
encompassed her perception of<lb/>
herself she said. "Because slave<lb/>
women were not permitted deci-<lb/>
sion making, deciding anything<lb/>
about their children, so that what<lb/>
she is doing is claiming that right<lb/>
in this very grotesque, excessive<lb/>
way . . . (She) is saying, 'I am the<lb/>
mother; I can decide what hap-<lb/>
pens to them which is what the<lb/>
slaveholders said about her "<lb/>
THERE'S A LOT<lb/>
OF CHATTER<lb/>
ABOUT OUR<lb/>
CHOWDER<lb/>
Roasted CorrK rahnvat Chowder<lb/>
t mc nn in and ttvsome ll II bowl vim mvi<lb/>
Hilt'<lb/>
RESTALRANT bA?k<lb/>
(.1.<lb/>
ypass<lb/>
ALCOHOL AWARENESS WEEK<lb/>
Thursday, October 22<lb/>
9 P.Mtil<lb/>
Friday, Qctabex23<lb/>
8 P.M10 P.M.<lb/>
Sunday, Qclobej; 25<lb/>
3 P.M. and 8 P.M.<lb/>
Monday, October 26<lb/>
7 P.M10 P.M.<lb/>
Tuesday, October 27<lb/>
8:30 P.M9:30 P.M.<lb/>
Wednesday. Qctnhpr 28<lb/>
7 P.M9 P.M.<lb/>
"Combo Night"<lb/>
Special on Non-alcoholic<lb/>
beverages<lb/>
Refreshments<lb/>
Circus<lb/>
$5.00 Public<lb/>
$3.00 ECU Students<lb/>
Oktoberfest<lb/>
German Festival<lb/>
Various Charges for Food<lb/>
"Risk Management"<lb/>
Speaker: Representative from<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon Headquarters<lb/>
Sponsored by the Interfraternity<lb/>
Council<lb/>
"Lite Nile"<lb/>
Alcohol Awareness Information<lb/>
Fair<lb/>
The Attice, Grogs, Chico's<lb/>
Corrigans, The Elbow<lb/>
Rafters, Darryls, Hooters<lb/>
Mendenhall Coffee House<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Tyler Resident Hall<lb/>
Lobby<lb/>
Old Joyner Library<lb/>
Room 221<lb/>
Fletcher Residence Hall<lb/>
Lobby<lb/>
Thursday, October 28<lb/>
7:30 P.M9:00 P.M.<lb/>
BACCUS Meeting Mendenhall<lb/>
Featuring: Steve Streeter Room 244<lb/>
National Representative for<lb/>
SAAD, Student Against Drunk<lb/>
Driving<lb/>
Introduction by:<lb/>
Walter B.Jones, Jr.<lb/>
House of Representatives<lb/>
The kevs to<lb/>
All programs open to<lb/>
ECU Students, Faculty<lb/>
and Staff. Unless indi-<lb/>
cated, no fee.<lb/>
responsible decisions<lb/>
free (fre) adj. Given or provided without charge or cost,<lb/>
such as the travel services of ITG Travel Center, at the Plaza<lb/>
in Greenville. We charge you only the amount of your<lb/>
tickets there is no service charge. We'll get those low fares<lb/>
for you that the airlines advertise, and we'll explain all the<lb/>
fine print. And sometimes we'll even find great rates that<lb/>
you've never heard of, because we shop all available<lb/>
airlines. Call ITG Travel Center for your next trto 355-<lb/>
5075. F'<lb/>
hMrJ&amp;<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
SUDAN TEMPLE <lb/>
AND<lb/>
ECU STUDENT UNION<lb/>
SPECIAL EVENTS COMMITTEE<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
The Royal Hanneford's<lb/>
Shrine Circus<lb/>
ECU Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Sunday, October 25th<lb/>
3:00 p.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
$3.00 ECU students $5.00 all others<lb/>
A11 tickets will be $5.00 at the door<lb/>
Advance Tickets now on sale at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Qflfeg,<lb/>
11 a.m. - 6 p.m<lb/>
Monday - Friday,<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
iHf f am akn r<lb/>
ca v u.<lb/>
Iej?x?i<lb/>
Inexperience<lb/>
By PAT MOLLOV<lb/>
?i?Unt Spurts Iditor . . ,<lb/>
. .  ?  b I<lb/>
ihe East Carolina menba .<lb/>
ball team is going to be under tre-<lb/>
mendous stress this year as<lb/>
open with no returning Start -<lb/>
only two players with an)<lb/>
time whatsoever (6-3 s :<lb/>
guard Reed Lose, and 5-9<lb/>
guard Jet! Kelly ? and onl. -<lb/>
has started in a coUegial<lb/>
before), and a new head<lb/>
Pirate head coach Miki Si<lb/>
Opens basketball practio I i<lb/>
1987-88 season today reali;<lb/>
there a re two limiting fact rs<lb/>
Which he must contend: then<lb/>
an obvious lack of size on t!<lb/>
rate squad, and an e.<lb/>
severe lack of experience.<lb/>
When Steele got the nod to re-<lb/>
place former head coach Q<lb/>
Harrison in April, there were at<lb/>
least four players returning 1 <lb/>
up this season. However<lb/>
clearing house of the acad<lb/>
ally ineligible and shedc.<lb/>
players facing non-acad( n<lb/>
Ctblems, Steele found hirns<lb/>
rrung a whole new basketba<lb/>
?fogram within the span of tvo<lb/>
months.<lb/>
Theodore Blue" Edwards was<lb/>
(fee most recent player on the Pi-<lb/>
pe starting roster to be rek<lb/>
cause oi off-the-court prob-<lb/>
lems.<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin announced<lb/>
today that the star forward, who<lb/>
t ifferaged just over 14 points per<lb/>
me, would be suspended for<lb/>
year because of his involve-<lb/>
En't in the theft of over $6,000<lb/>
creos and other equipment in a<lb/>
iversity residence hall on Dec<lb/>
of last year. (See related stop. I<lb/>
Ul legal trouble aside Steele<lb/>
ive for those three. (Kelly,<lb/>
tse, and Hill), the rest of the<lb/>
ivers are new, leaving major<lb/>
tes in experience and height.<lb/>
te tallest player for the Pirates i -<lb/>
ior Dominique Martin a t<lb/>
insfer from Lake Sumter Junior<lb/>
is u<lb/>
Harris<lb/>
Mik,<lb/>
dwards to sit<lb/>
teodore "Blue" Edwards, the<lb/>
iing returning scorer and rv-<lb/>
lnder for East Carolina's bas-<lb/>
tball team, has been declared<lb/>
eligible for varsity play during<lb/>
1987-88 season due to an m-<lb/>
ction of the school's student<lb/>
Je.<lb/>
iwards was charged, along<lb/>
th three former ECU basketball<lb/>
lyers, in connection with the<lb/>
ft of more than $6,000 in stc-<lb/>
and other equipment in a<lb/>
iversity residence hall on Dec.<lb/>
26, 1986<lb/>
Edwards,<lb/>
Walstonburg i-<lb/>
to trial Ocl -<lb/>
trict Court.<lb/>
"In consultatij<lb/>
Director Ken ka<lb/>
OOadl Mike Steel<lb/>
that Theodore (I<lb/>
not eligible for<lb/>
ing the academic<lb/>
infractions of tl<lb/>
ECU chanceUo<lb/>
said in a prepai<lb/>
i<lb/>
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I HI I AST t'AROl INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBER 15, 1987 Page 11<lb/>
Pirates try to keep momentum<lb/>
rolling Saturday at Va. Tech<lb/>
Inexperience dots hoopsters<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports I dilur<lb/>
Can the Pirates do it again?<lb/>
That is a question being<lb/>
bounced around this week by<lb/>
nearly everyone close to the ECU<lb/>
football team following last<lb/>
week's 56-28 romp over Cincin-<lb/>
nati.<lb/>
Pirate head coach Art Baker<lb/>
knows the task will be difficult<lb/>
this week when his squad takes<lb/>
the field against Virginia Tech for<lb/>
the first time in 31 years Saturday<lb/>
in Blacksburg, Va. Virginia Tech<lb/>
won the lone meeting between the<lb/>
two schools 37-2.<lb/>
"Sometimes it is very difficult to<lb/>
prepare a team after a day like we<lb/>
had Saturday, particularly on<lb/>
Saturday Baker said. "All of a<lb/>
sudden, you begin to feel like you<lb/>
are pretty good and that you do<lb/>
not have to work as hard.<lb/>
"1 think it will be a tough job on<lb/>
the coaches this week continued<lb/>
Baker. "We have no reason to go<lb/>
in there expecting anything but a<lb/>
tough ball game<lb/>
Virginia Tech will no doubt be<lb/>
hungry for a win Saturday as first-<lb/>
year coach Frank Bcamer's squad<lb/>
has played well this season, but<lb/>
have only managed a 1-4 record<lb/>
thus far.<lb/>
Among the losses for the Hok-<lb/>
ies this season are a 22-10 loss to<lb/>
nationally-ranked Clemson, a 14-<lb/>
13 heartbreaking loss to arch-rival<lb/>
Virginia, a 35-21 loss to nation-<lb/>
ally-ranked Syracuse and a 40-10<lb/>
drubbing at South Carolina last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
The lone victory thus far for<lb/>
Virginia Tech came at the expense<lb/>
of Navy, 31-11.<lb/>
Last season, the Hokies posted a<lb/>
By PAT MOLLOY<lb/>
si.tjnt Sports Kditor<lb/>
iJ"ho Eait Carolina men'sbaskct-<lb/>
ball team is going to be under tre-<lb/>
mendous stress this year as they<lb/>
open with no returning starters,<lb/>
only two players with any game<lb/>
time whatsoever (6-3 sophomore<lb/>
guard Reed Lose, and 5-9 junior<lb/>
guard Jeff Kelly ? and only Kelly<lb/>
has started in a collegiate game<lb/>
before), and a new head coach.<lb/>
Pirate head coach Mike Steele<lb/>
'pens basketball practice for the<lb/>
1987-88 season today realizing<lb/>
there are two limiting factors with<lb/>
which he must contend: there is<lb/>
an obvious lack of size on the Pi-<lb/>
rate squad, and an even more<lb/>
severe lack oi experience.<lb/>
When Steele got the nod to re-<lb/>
place former head coach Charlie<lb/>
' larnson in April, there were at<lb/>
least four players returning to suit<lb/>
up this season. However, after<lb/>
clearing house of the academi-<lb/>
cally ineligible and shedding<lb/>
players facing non-academic<lb/>
problems, Steele found himself<lb/>
forming a whole new basketball<lb/>
program within the span of two<lb/>
months.<lb/>
Theodore "Blue" Edwards was<lb/>
the most recent player on the Pi-<lb/>
rate starting roster to be released<lb/>
because of off-the-court prob-<lb/>
lems.<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin announced<lb/>
today that the star forward, who<lb/>
averaged just over 14 points per<lb/>
amc, would be suspended for<lb/>
one year because of his involve-<lb/>
ment in the theft of over $6,000 in<lb/>
tereos and other equipment in a<lb/>
university residence hall on Dec.<lb/>
26 of last year. (See related story).<lb/>
All legal trouble aside, Steele<lb/>
us<lb/>
Save for those three, (Kelly,<lb/>
Lose, and Hill), the rest of the<lb/>
players are new, leaving major<lb/>
gaps in experience and height,<lb/>
rhe tallest player for the Pirates is<lb/>
junior Dominique Martin, a 6-6<lb/>
transfer from Lake Sumter Junior<lb/>
College.<lb/>
- Wu.)ki,nJ?onny Murphy, at 6-3,<lb/>
i? the only other junior on the<lb/>
team besides Martin and Kelly.<lb/>
And except for Lose and Hill, who<lb/>
are both entering their sopho-<lb/>
more years, the remainder of the<lb/>
Pirate basketball team are fresh-<lb/>
men.<lb/>
Steele isu.so concerned with the<lb/>
height oi his squad ? the tallest<lb/>
member is6-5 Stanley Love. "Like<lb/>
the Marines, we're looking for a<lb/>
few good men ? tall, good men<lb/>
iniid Steele.<lb/>
But Steele has good feelings<lb/>
about the people in his program<lb/>
now. "We feel good about the kids<lb/>
in our program. We just finished a<lb/>
six-week running program, and<lb/>
everyone showed improvement.<lb/>
Our weight program also showed<lb/>
great improvement.<lb/>
Displaying obvious concern<lb/>
must find a way to win basketball<lb/>
games despite his three-returner<lb/>
handicap. Another Pirate who<lb/>
returns, but has yet to see any<lb/>
playing time is Gus Hill, a 6-3<lb/>
sophomore who was recruited by<lb/>
Harrison.<lb/>
9-2-1 record and came away with<lb/>
the championship of the Peach<lb/>
Bowl. However, gone from that<lb/>
squad are two prize running<lb/>
backs, Maurice Williams and<lb/>
Eddie Hunter, who combined for<lb/>
1,901 yards rushing. Both backs<lb/>
were drafted to play in the NFL.<lb/>
With Williams and Hunter<lb/>
absent, the Hokie ground attack<lb/>
has been limited to only 440 yards<lb/>
total through the first five games.<lb/>
To put that into context, it is 60<lb/>
yards fewer than the Pirates<lb/>
amasses in last week's contest<lb/>
against Cincinnati.<lb/>
The Hokies leading rusher this<lb/>
season is freshman jon Jeffries.<lb/>
Jeffries has totaled 195 yards on 39<lb/>
carries thus far.<lb/>
Leading the Virginia Tech of-<lb/>
fense this year is returning starter<lb/>
Erik Chapman from his quarter-<lb/>
back position. Chapman, who<lb/>
threw for 1,627 yards last season<lb/>
and had only six interceptions the<lb/>
entire season has already thrown<lb/>
eight interceptions and has been<lb/>
sacked 20 times.<lb/>
Baker said that he did not feel<lb/>
like those stats were revealing of<lb/>
the way Chapman can play.<lb/>
"He is a very fine quarterback<lb/>
Baker said. "A lot of the problems<lb/>
they are having is because of inex-<lb/>
perience along the of fensi ve line<lb/>
Baker said that the main<lb/>
weapon Chapman will try to util-<lb/>
ize through the air will be tight<lb/>
end Steve Johnson, who has<lb/>
hauled in 20 catches this season<lb/>
for 200 yards.<lb/>
Heading into the contest, the<lb/>
Hokies have been the general fa-<lb/>
vorite on betting lines with about<lb/>
a touchdown margin of victory<lb/>
expected. But, that doesn't seem<lb/>
to bother sophomore comerback<lb/>
Ricky Torain.<lb/>
"The media and fans get down<lb/>
on us a lot Torain said. "It both-<lb/>
ers us to open up the paper and<lb/>
read that we aren't supposed to<lb/>
win, but it also makes us work<lb/>
that much harder to prove that we<lb/>
can win. We know what weareca-<lb/>
pable of. We just have to go out<lb/>
and prove it<lb/>
Torain also said he felt the, Pi-<lb/>
rates would be ready for the game<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
"We know it will be tough, but<lb/>
if we work hard and concentrate<lb/>
we know we can win Torain<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Baker agreed that concentra-<lb/>
tion could play a big part in a<lb/>
possible Pirate victory.<lb/>
"1 have been telling our players<lb/>
all along that if we eliminate our<lb/>
turnovers there is no telling how<lb/>
good we could be Baker said.<lb/>
"And after what we did Saturday<lb/>
(ECU had no turnovers) I know<lb/>
that is true<lb/>
According to Baker, the Pirates<lb/>
have passed one test, now a new<lb/>
test awaits this weekend<lb/>
"I thought our players and our<lb/>
coaches handled the adversity (of<lb/>
the 49-0 loss to West Virginia)<lb/>
well last week Baker said. "This<lb/>
week, we will sec how we can<lb/>
handle success<lb/>
Although Baker sees the games<lb/>
as a difficult one to win, he also<lb/>
sees a win as necessary if the Pi-<lb/>
rates plan to keep their goal of<lb/>
having a winning season.<lb/>
"I think it will be a tough foot-<lb/>
ball game, but I also think it is a<lb/>
vital football game for our sea-<lb/>
son Baker said.<lb/>
Mike Steele<lb/>
Hill has not seen any action to<lb/>
date because of a knee injury;<lb/>
however, he is expected to play<lb/>
some this season.<lb/>
"Gus' knee is better and he has<lb/>
lost 20 pounds, too said Steele,<lb/>
"1 thinkhe'll have a chance to help<lb/>
over the academic status of the Pi-<lb/>
rates, Steele pointed out that at<lb/>
least one member of the coaching<lb/>
staff eats breakfast with the team<lb/>
each morning. "This gets them<lb/>
started off right said Steele.<lb/>
"They arc going to classes and<lb/>
making good grades. This is a<lb/>
positive step for us<lb/>
This positive feeling is carrying<lb/>
over into recruitment. Steele, who<lb/>
recently brought five new recruits<lb/>
to campus, trusts in his players<lb/>
enough to let them handle the re-<lb/>
cruits.<lb/>
"1 have enough confidence in<lb/>
this team to let them take over the<lb/>
recruits. And I'll be talking with<lb/>
them about the recruits. What<lb/>
they have to say will be important.<lb/>
We don't want kids who won't fit<lb/>
in here. If there is no chemistry, it<lb/>
won't work<lb/>
We're not going to sign some-<lb/>
one just to sign them early. We<lb/>
want to make sure we're getting<lb/>
someone who can come in here<lb/>
and help us<lb/>
But Steele is still looking for<lb/>
help in the form of walkons, and<lb/>
will be holding tryouts today. He<lb/>
feels the whole team will be en-<lb/>
thusiastic about playing.<lb/>
"1 think our team is going to be<lb/>
enthusiastic. Our freshmen are<lb/>
excited about being here. Hope-<lb/>
fully, that excitement will lead to<lb/>
good play, and not mass confu-<lb/>
sion which usually goes along<lb/>
with inexperience<lb/>
And when it comes to winning<lb/>
basketball games and talking<lb/>
about what his teams' wonlost<lb/>
record will be like, Steele speaks<lb/>
realistically. "I don't know what it<lb/>
will be like. We'll just try to win as<lb/>
many as we can<lb/>
VOifotHps past volleybwallers<lb/>
By GEORGE OSBORNE<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
East Carolina mounted a last<lb/>
game rally but couldn't hold off<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth losing<lb/>
to the Rams 3-2 in volleyball ac-<lb/>
tion Tuesday night in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
The loss drops the Lady Pirates<lb/>
to 8-10 for the season. VCU im-<lb/>
proved to 6-16.<lb/>
ECU started out hot taking the<lb/>
Rams 15-11 in the first game but<lb/>
cooled in the next two losing 7-15<lb/>
and 3-15.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates came back in<lb/>
the fourth game routing VCU 15-<lb/>
2 to tie the match at two games<lb/>
apiece.<lb/>
Virginia commonwealth took<lb/>
the lead in the final game, but<lb/>
ECU rallied scoring seven<lb/>
unanswered points before losing<lb/>
15-10.<lb/>
Kris McKay and Debbie Tate<lb/>
paced the Lad'v Pirates with seven<lb/>
kills each. ECU had 13 team<lb/>
blocks to the Rams six.<lb/>
"We looking to play more con-<lb/>
sistently head coach Imogene<lb/>
Turner said. "We have flashes of<lb/>
brilliance but then we fall back<lb/>
and get behind<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will resume<lb/>
conference play this weekend<lb/>
when they host C AA rivals James<lb/>
Madison and William and Mary.<lb/>
The matches will be played in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum Friday and Sat-<lb/>
urday.<lb/>
"We will have to be ready to<lb/>
play this weekend. JMU and Wil-<lb/>
liam and Mary will both come in<lb/>
here fired up and ready Turner<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Booters win second of year<lb/>
By GEORGE OSBORNE<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
East Carolina got its second<lb/>
soccer win of the season defeating<lb/>
St. Andrews 3-1 Monday.<lb/>
The win improved the Pirates<lb/>
record to 2-10 and halted a four-<lb/>
game losing streak.<lb/>
ECU scored early in the first half<lb/>
on a penalty kick by sweeper<lb/>
Larry Bennett. Fifteen minutes<lb/>
later at the 23 minute mark Roy<lb/>
Andersch kicked one in on an<lb/>
assist from Larry Bennett.<lb/>
St. Andrews' Ben Krauss scored<lb/>
at the37minute mark to make it 2-<lb/>
1 ECU at the half.<lb/>
Jeff Kimc scored on a pass from<lb/>
Steve McCarthy with 10 minutes<lb/>
left in the match to seal it for the<lb/>
Pirates at 3-1.<lb/>
"We played a good first half but<lb/>
were weak in the second half<lb/>
head coach Charlie Harvey said.<lb/>
"In order to win more we are<lb/>
going to have to play a complete<lb/>
game<lb/>
The Pirate defense held St.<lb/>
Andrews to just seven shots at<lb/>
goal and ECU goaltender Scott<lb/>
McColough made just two saves.<lb/>
"Scott has come in and done a<lb/>
real good job for us at goal Har-<lb/>
vey said. "He has improved a<lb/>
great deal<lb/>
ECU'S offense spent most of the<lb/>
day on the St. Andrews side of the<lb/>
field taking 34 shots.<lb/>
"We hope to have good prac-<lb/>
tices this week and go into<lb/>
Friday's match strong Harvey<lb/>
said.<lb/>
East Carolina will host the Elon<lb/>
Fighting Christians Friday, at 3<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Edwards to sit out basketball this season<lb/>
Theodore "Blue" Edwards, the<lb/>
leading returning scorer and re-<lb/>
bounder for East Carolina's bas-<lb/>
ketball team, has been declared<lb/>
ineligible for varsity play during<lb/>
the 1987-88 season due to an in-<lb/>
fraction of the school's student<lb/>
code.<lb/>
Edwards was charged, along<lb/>
with three former ECU basketball<lb/>
players, in connection with the<lb/>
theft of more than $6,000 in ste-<lb/>
reos and other equipment in a<lb/>
university residence hall on Dec.<lb/>
26,1986.<lb/>
Edwards, a senior from<lb/>
Walstonburg, is scheduled to go<lb/>
to trial Oct. 23 in Pitt County Dis-<lb/>
trict Court.<lb/>
"In consultation with Athletic<lb/>
Director Ken Karr and basketball<lb/>
coach Mike Steele, I have decided<lb/>
that Theodore (Blue) Edwards is<lb/>
not eligible for varsity play dur-<lb/>
ing the academic yearasa result of<lb/>
infractions of the student code<lb/>
ECU chancellor Richard Eakin<lb/>
said in a prepared statement.<lb/>
ECU officials refused to com-<lb/>
ment on any of the details of the<lb/>
suspension, citing the provisions<lb/>
of the Privacy Act.<lb/>
"Hopefully, after he sits out this<lb/>
year and does all the things that<lb/>
are required of him, that there will<lb/>
be a chance that he will come back<lb/>
and finish his career at East Caro-<lb/>
lina Steele said in a news confer-<lb/>
ence Monday.<lb/>
"The only thing I can say is that<lb/>
Blue Edwards has done every-<lb/>
thing that we asked of him. He's<lb/>
been a good person and the kind<lb/>
of guy that I want in my program.<lb/>
We just have to hope that Blue will<lb/>
do everything he has to and I be-<lb/>
lieve he will<lb/>
Edwards, the lone returning<lb/>
starter from last year's 12-16 team,<lb/>
averaged 14.4 points and 5.6 re-<lb/>
bounds a game last season. He<lb/>
was a second team All-American (Photo by Mar Startari)<lb/>
at Louisburg Junior College dur- pi.ate sweeper Larry Bennett got his first goal of the season against St<lb/>
ing the 1985-86 season. Andrews, Monday.<lb/>
mmmmmmmi0miimmimm<lb/>
M M MM<lb/>
?mmmmmmmmmrm<lb/>
?sjm?nt ?nn<lb/>
 ?V w4<lb/>
<pb facs="00057921_0014"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
?22 IE E&amp;SL CAROLINIAN (OCTOBER 15, 1<lb/>
987<lb/>
I<lb/>
y<lb/>
y<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
:<lb/>
i<lb/>
?'<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
i.<lb/>
?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
?SsSS?JSJr<lb/>
sscw<lb/>
Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
GAMtS<lb/>
ECU at Virginia Tech<lb/>
Tennessee at Alabama<lb/>
Texas at Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn at Georgia Tech<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M at Baylor<lb/>
UNC at N.C. State<lb/>
Iowa at Michigan<lb/>
Maryland at Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska at Oklahoma St.<lb/>
Perm State at Syracuse<lb/>
DEAN "THE DREAM"<lb/>
BUCHAN<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
Lul Wrrk;<lb/>
(7-3)<lb/>
Ovrrall:<lb/>
(42-18)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Baylor<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
BRIAN "BOO BOO"<lb/>
BAILEY<lb/>
WNCT-TV Sports Director<lb/>
Utf Wctk.<lb/>
(5-5)<lb/>
Overall<lb/>
(41-19)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Baylor<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Syracuse<lb/>
TIM "RAPPIN'TIMMYC<lb/>
CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Lul Week:<lb/>
(6-4)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(41-19)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
PAT "NO STRESS ME1STER'<lb/>
MOLLOY<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Lot Week<lb/>
(5-5)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(37-23)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Baylor<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Dr. RICHARD "THE BOSS'<lb/>
EAKIN<lb/>
ECU Chancellor<lb/>
UM Week.<lb/>
(5-5)<lb/>
Overall<lb/>
(32-28)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
i.<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
y<lb/>
i<lb/>
:<lb/>
.S?r!?-SJSS,<lb/>
I wins prove they can win big games on road<lb/>
DETRJOT(AP) -The Minnesota<lb/>
Twins found winning on the road<lb/>
wasn't so difficult if you hit the<lb/>
road with a full head oi steam.<lb/>
The Twins great hope now is<lb/>
that they can take the same for-<lb/>
mula they used to beat the Detriot<lb/>
Tigers in the American League<lb/>
Playoffs and win the World Series<lb/>
with it.<lb/>
Tom Brunansky keyed a four-<lb/>
run Minnesota second inning<lb/>
with a two-run double and belted<lb/>
a home run to start a three-run<lb/>
ninth inning Monday as the<lb/>
Twins beat the Tigers 9-5, win-<lb/>
ning thebest-of-sevenseries4-l to<lb/>
advance to their first World Series<lb/>
in 22 years.<lb/>
Minnesota third baseman Gary<lb/>
Gaetti, who was named most<lb/>
valuable player for the series, set<lb/>
the tone in Game 1 when he hom-<lb/>
ered his first two at-bats.<lb/>
Thai got the Twins rolling and<lb/>
they never slowed.<lb/>
The Twins, whose 36-25 record<lb/>
in the Metrodome was the best<lb/>
home record in baseball, won<lb/>
both playoff games there before<lb/>
their frenzied fans, who waved<lb/>
their "homer hankies and Min-<lb/>
nesota used that momentum to<lb/>
beat Detriot twice in Tiger Sta-<lb/>
dium.<lb/>
"Tins is a tough place to plav<lb/>
Gaetti said. "You can get rattled<lb/>
here pretty easily. Butopening the<lb/>
series in Minnesota helped relieve<lb/>
the tension and we knew after<lb/>
winning the first two games, we<lb/>
would return to Minnesota any-<lb/>
way<lb/>
Twins Manager Tom Kelly said<lb/>
Gaetti's two opening-game hom-<lb/>
ers, and the Minnesota fans' reac-<lb/>
tion the them, set the tone for his<lb/>
young ballclub.<lb/>
"1 think it showed the rest of the<lb/>
guys that we were capable of<lb/>
doing some damage said Kelly,<lb/>
the sixth rookie manager and<lb/>
third in the AL to win a playoff<lb/>
title since the inception of divi-<lb/>
sional play in 1969. "If Gary can<lb/>
hit the ba'll out of the park off<lb/>
Doyle Alexander, then maybe the<lb/>
rest of us can get something<lb/>
going, too.<lb/>
"That was the big key to getting<lb/>
us going on the right foot<lb/>
Another key factor was the way<lb/>
the underdog Twins shut down<lb/>
the Tigers big guns. Detriot's key<lb/>
hitters - Alan Trammell, Darrell<lb/>
Evans and Kirk Gibson - were<lb/>
never a factor.<lb/>
"Those early games gave them<lb/>
confidence said Trammell, who<lb/>
could only contribute a 4-for-20<lb/>
performance. "At the same time,<lb/>
we had guys like me who were<lb/>
going into slumps<lb/>
"To me, that was the key to this<lb/>
series<lb/>
Evans, the 40-year-old veteran<lb/>
who has become the Tigers<lb/>
unofficial captain, also made<lb/>
three errors in the series, plus a<lb/>
crucial base-running blunder<lb/>
which might have cost Detriot the<lb/>
fourth game.<lb/>
"It's not one or two people<lb/>
Evans said. "This has been a club<lb/>
where everybody has contrib-<lb/>
uted. There are no big stars here.<lb/>
"You shouldn't be surprised at<lb/>
Minnesota. They're a good<lb/>
ballclub. They didn"t let us get<lb/>
away with any mistakes. I just<lb/>
wish we had plaved a little bit<lb/>
better.<lb/>
The Tigers starting pitchers,<lb/>
thought by many to be Detriot's<lb/>
biggest advantage, didn't win a<lb/>
game. The only Detriot victory<lb/>
went to rookie Mike Henneman,<lb/>
in relief, after Pat Sheridan hit a<lb/>
surprise two-run homer in the<lb/>
eighth inning of Game 3.<lb/>
"They just beat us up Detriot<lb/>
Manager Sparky Anderson said.<lb/>
"They beat us up with offenseand<lb/>
defense and everything.<lb/>
"It started when we opened. We<lb/>
should never have opened. They<lb/>
just jumped right on us. There was<lb/>
no turning point<lb/>
As fate would have it, the World<lb/>
Series begins in the Metrodome<lb/>
on Saturday night, the first time it<lb/>
has ever been played indoors. The<lb/>
San Francisco Giants lead the<lb/>
National League playoffs 3-2 with<lb/>
Game 6 scheduled for tonight in<lb/>
St. Louis.<lb/>
Only the 1973 New York Mets<lb/>
who went 82-79, had a worse<lb/>
regular-season mark than<lb/>
Minnesota's 85-77 and still mad?<lb/>
it to the World Series.<lb/>
But in a short series, as the<lb/>
Twins proved against Detriot,<lb/>
regular-season records don't<lb/>
guarantee victory.<lb/>
Call your mummy<lb/>
?t<lb/>
-t<lb/>
r<lb/>
f,<lb/>
.<lb/>
v<lb/>
E,<lb/>
I ?-<lb/>
W<lb/>
? f<lb/>
You remember. She was<lb/>
always there when you were<lb/>
frightened. And if you go!<lb/>
hurt, she was standing by<lb/>
with bandages. Wouldn't it<lb/>
feel good to talk to your<lb/>
mother again right now?<lb/>
Calling over AT&amp;T Long<lb/>
Distance Service probably<lb/>
costs less than you think, tot)<lb/>
And if you have am questions<lb/>
about AT&amp;T rates or sen ice.<lb/>
a customer service repre-<lb/>
sentative is always standing<lb/>
bv to talk to you. lust call<lb/>
1800 222 0300.<lb/>
Sure, your schoofwork and<lb/>
your friends keep you busy.<lb/>
But call home and find out<lb/>
what she's wrapped up in.<lb/>
AT&amp;T<lb/>
The right choice.<lb/>
J ana Col??o Meet the Muma<lb/>
198 Untr?rsat City Sjudi?, Inc. <lb/>
- tf?4? fey M?rct??ni8 Cofp<lb/>
?r(e?,loc.<lb/>
lIBWAWr<lb/>
Intramura<lb/>
competil<lb/>
the nil<lb/>
sports such as<lb/>
or basketball<lb/>
Aind iv. <lb/>
at thus point w<lb/>
Club In the<lb/>
 n nj<lb/>
collegia ti<lb/>
first <lb/>
s<lb/>
The Sport Club Program, an<lb/>
integral part of the Department ot<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Serv<lb/>
ices, may at times be unidentih<lb/>
able to students of the University<lb/>
due to the nature of the program<lb/>
However, Sportlubs are nut<lb/>
NCAA sanctioned events, nor arc<lb/>
they intramural sports scheduled<lb/>
within the IRS calendar ol ew<lb/>
Rather, Sport Clubs are grouj<lb/>
students interested in competing<lb/>
bn the state regional and national<lb/>
level in a variety ol sports not<lb/>
offered through the E L Atl<lb/>
department<lb/>
These activities maj<lb/>
unusual to the averaj<lb/>
husiast but arc- none the less as<lb/>
NFL players u<lb/>
R05EMONT,  for the n<lb/>
second week in a row, tta striking<lb/>
'FL players union has con<lb/>
with a plan that may avert mas<lb/>
defections.<lb/>
But once again, the owners mav<lb/>
reject the plan setting up a third<lb/>
week of games plaved bv replace<lb/>
Bias' mother beh<lb/>
son accomplish<lb/>
WAYNE. Neb (AP) - Loni<lb/>
Bias, the mother of the late<lb/>
University of Maryland bas-<lb/>
ketball star Len Bias, said<lb/>
Monday she believes her<lb/>
accomplished more bv dving<lb/>
than he would have by living<lb/>
"I believe that Cod tools Len<lb/>
to save so manv other young<lb/>
people Mrs. Bias said. "Len<lb/>
hasdonemore in death forthis<lb/>
nation than he could have ever<lb/>
done in life<lb/>
Mrs. Bias spoke in an mter-<lb/>
$ view before giving a speech to<lb/>
y students and faculty at Wayne<lb/>
? State College of Nebraska dur-<lb/>
6 ing Alcohol Awareness Week.<lb/>
jf She said people need to real-<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
and I<lb/>
vers<lb/>
about, ??<lb/>
and . 1<lb/>
in our I<lb/>
She called<lb/>
ful your<lb/>
Bia<lb/>
tion in ;<lb/>
hew t? <lb/>
I<lb/>
)regon enters<lb/>
<lb/>
Ifter 17 year hi<lb/>
Oklahoma, Nebraska and Mi-<lb/>
i remained 1-2-3 in the Associ-<lb/>
ed Tress college football poll for<lb/>
e third week in a row todav<lb/>
hile Notre Dame fell out of the<lb/>
p Ten and Oregon made the<lb/>
nkings for the first time in 17<lb/>
ars.<lb/>
Oregon, No. lb this week, last<lb/>
peared in the AT poll oi o 9<lb/>
70, when the ducks were 6-3.<lb/>
jcv have had onlv three win-<lb/>
ting seasons in the last le years,<lb/>
Hit are 4-1 atter defeating Wash-<lb/>
Igton and Southern California in<lb/>
Recessive weeks<lb/>
Oklahoma's 44- victory over<lb/>
fcxas enabled the Sooners to<lb/>
(tmain No. 1 in their quest to<lb/>
ecome the first team ever to hold<lb/>
ic top spot from the preseason<lb/>
rough postseason poll. The<lb/>
iooners received 47 oi bO first-<lb/>
lace votes and 1.184 of a possible<lb/>
XI points from a nationwide<lb/>
fcne! oi sports writers and<lb/>
Vrtscasters.<lb/>
Nebraska, which has been the<lb/>
fcnner-up in even, poll this sea-<lb/>
n, crushed Kansas 34-2 and re-<lb/>
ived seven first-place ballots<lb/>
id 1,122 points. The other six<lb/>
st-place votes went to Miami,<lb/>
friich beat Maryland 4b-lb and<lb/>
rned 1,111 points.<lb/>
Last week, Oklahoma s lead<lb/>
er Nebraska and Miami was46-<lb/>
6 in first-place votes and 1,183-<lb/>
120-1,112 in points.<lb/>
Notre Dame, No. 4 last week.<lb/>
? upset by Pitt 30-22 and<lb/>
pped to 11 th place Mean-<lb/>
ile, Florida State pounded<lb/>
uthem Mississippi 61-10 and<lb/>
pod past Auburn from sixth<lb/>
ce to fourth with 935 points,<lb/>
burn remained fifth with 934<lb/>
ints following a 48-15 tnumph<lb/>
or Vandcrbilt<lb/>
U climbed from seventh to<lb/>
th with 901 points by rallying<lb/>
defeat Georgia 26-23. Clemson<lb/>
t Virginia 38-21 and moved up<lb/>
m eighth to seventh with 880<lb/>
ints.<lb/>
ennessce was idle but im-<lb/>
ved from 10th place to eighth<lb/>
th 752 points. UCLA, another<lb/>
m which had the weekend off,<lb/>
ped from 11th to ninth with<lb/>
ints. Ohio State, No. 9 last<lb/>
, lost to Indiana 31-10 and<lb/>
N<lb/>
Round<lb/>
defending na<lb/>
Tenn State. T<lb/>
the Top Ten<lb/>
season recei<lb/>
beating Rut?<lb/>
The S<lb/>
Notre I<lb/>
Svr.K IS)<lb/>
Ohio - <lb/>
gan State and I<lb/>
Last v e -<lb/>
Alabama, Ge<lb/>
Florid<lb/>
kansas<lb/>
But Michiga<lb/>
State 17-11, Ar<lb/>
to Washingto<lb/>
bama dropped<lb/>
Memphi-<lb/>
Michigan ta<lb/>
Twenty after<lb/>
absence while<lb/>
Top Twenty for<lb/>
the final<lb/>
hadn't beaten<lb/>
last 31 meeting<lb/>
Top<lb/>
1. Okalhoma <lb/>
2. Nebraska C<lb/>
3. Miami. Fla.<lb/>
4 Florida Stat<lb/>
5. Auburn<lb/>
6 LSU<lb/>
7. Clemson<lb/>
8. Tennessee<lb/>
9. UCLA<lb/>
10 PennS<lb/>
11. Notre Dam<lb/>
12 Oklahoma<lb/>
13 Syracuse<lb/>
14 Florida<lb/>
15. Arkansas<lb/>
lb Oregon<lb/>
17 Ohio State<lb/>
IS. Georgia<lb/>
19. Michigan St<lb/>
20. Indiana<lb/>
Other recei vil<lb/>
sota 79, Michil<lb/>
State 73, Wake<lb/>
Washington 41<lb/>
South Carolinal<lb/>
Kentucky 10,<lb/>
4. Iowa 3, Bosto<lb/>
A&amp;M1.<lb/>
'J'<lb/>
- -???st '<lb/>
A<lb/>
i<lb/>
 u<lb/>
<pb facs="00057921_0015"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 15, 1<lb/>
987<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
y<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
?C-0-vs?v.<lb/>
?Wv?.Vl-W<lb/>
sssssssssssssssssssseseessmeaasesssseseeassssssssss<lb/>
Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
ECU at Virginia Tech<lb/>
Tennessee at Alabama<lb/>
Texas at Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn at Georgia Tech<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M at Baylor<lb/>
UNC at N.G State<lb/>
Iowa at Michigan<lb/>
Mary land at Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska at Oklahoma St.<lb/>
Perm State at Syracuse<lb/>
DEAN "Till.DREAM"<lb/>
BUCHAN<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
Lut Mtaife<lb/>
(7-3)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(42-18)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Baylor<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Fenn State<lb/>
BRIAN "BOO BOO"<lb/>
BAILEY<lb/>
WNCT-TV Sports Director<lb/>
U?t Wrrk:<lb/>
(5-5)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(41-19)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Baylor<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Syracuse<lb/>
TIM "RAPPIN' TIMMYC"<lb/>
CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Uui Week:<lb/>
(6-4)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(41-19)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
PAT "NO STRESS MEISTER'<lb/>
MOLLOY<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Lai Week:<lb/>
(5-5)<lb/>
Overall:<lb/>
(37-23)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Baylor<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Pcnn State<lb/>
Dr. RICHARD THE BOSS'<lb/>
EAKIN<lb/>
ECU Chancellor<lb/>
Lax Week<lb/>
(5-5)<lb/>
Overall.<lb/>
(32-28)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
j<lb/>
!<lb/>
.ssv??.vsssssssv.??<lb/>
Twins prove they can win big games on road<lb/>
DETRIOT(AP) The Minnesota<lb/>
Twins found winning on the road<lb/>
wasn't so difficult if you hit the<lb/>
road with a full head oi steam.<lb/>
The Twins great hope now is<lb/>
that they can take the same for-<lb/>
mula they used to beat the Dctriot<lb/>
figcrs in the American league<lb/>
Playoffs and win the World Series<lb/>
with it.<lb/>
Tom Brunansky keyed a four<lb/>
run Minnesota second inning<lb/>
with a two-run double and belted<lb/>
a home run to start a three-run<lb/>
ninth inning Monday as the<lb/>
Twins beat the Tigers 9-5, win-<lb/>
ning thebest-of-sevenseries4-l to<lb/>
advance to their first World Scries<lb/>
in 22 years.<lb/>
Minnesota third baseman Garv<lb/>
Gaetti, who was named most<lb/>
valuable player for the series, set<lb/>
the tone in Game 1 when he hom-<lb/>
ered his first two at-bats.<lb/>
That got the Twins rolling and<lb/>
they never slowed.<lb/>
The Twins, whose 56-25 record<lb/>
in 'the Metrodomc was the best<lb/>
home record in baseball, won<lb/>
both playoff games there before<lb/>
their frenzied fans, who waved<lb/>
their "homer hankies and Min-<lb/>
nesota used that momentum to<lb/>
beat Detriot twice in Tiger Sta-<lb/>
dium.<lb/>
"This is a tough place to play<lb/>
Gaetti said. "You can get rattled<lb/>
here pretty easily. But opening the<lb/>
series in Minnesota helped relieve<lb/>
the tension and we knew after<lb/>
winning the first two games, we<lb/>
would return to Minnesota any-<lb/>
way<lb/>
Twins Manager Tom Kelly said<lb/>
Gaetti's two opening-game hom-<lb/>
ers, and the Minnesota fans' reac-<lb/>
tion the them, set the tone for his<lb/>
young ballclub.<lb/>
"1 think it showed the rest of the<lb/>
guys that we were capable of<lb/>
doing some damage said Kelly,<lb/>
the sixth rookie manager and<lb/>
third in the AL to win a playoff<lb/>
title since the inception of divi-<lb/>
sional play in 1969. "If Gary can<lb/>
hit the ball out of the park off<lb/>
Doyle Alexander, then maybe the<lb/>
rest of us can get something<lb/>
going, too.<lb/>
"That was the big key to getting<lb/>
us going on the right foot<lb/>
Another key factor was the way<lb/>
the underdog Twins shut down<lb/>
the Tigers big guns. Detriot's key<lb/>
hitters - Alan Trammell, Darrell<lb/>
Evans and Kirk Gibson - were<lb/>
never a factor.<lb/>
"Those early games gave them<lb/>
confidence said Trammell, who<lb/>
could only contribute a 4-for-20<lb/>
performance. "At the same time,<lb/>
we had guys like me who were<lb/>
going into slumps<lb/>
"To me, that was the key to this<lb/>
series<lb/>
Evans, the 40-year-old veteran<lb/>
who has become the Tigers<lb/>
unofficial captain, also made<lb/>
three errors in the series, plus a<lb/>
crucial base-running blunder<lb/>
which might have cost Detriot the<lb/>
fourth game.<lb/>
"It's not one or two people<lb/>
Evans said. "This has been a club<lb/>
where everybody has contrib-<lb/>
uted. There are no big stars here.<lb/>
"You shouldn't be surprised at<lb/>
Minnesota. They're a good<lb/>
ballclub. They didn"t let us get<lb/>
away with any mistakes. I just<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
wish we had played a little bit<lb/>
better.<lb/>
The Tigers starting pitchers,<lb/>
thought by many to be Detriot's<lb/>
biggest advantage, didn't win a<lb/>
game. The only Detriot victory<lb/>
went to rookie Mike Uenneman,<lb/>
in relief, after Pat Sheridan hit a<lb/>
surprise two-run homer in the<lb/>
eighth inning of Game 3.<lb/>
"They just beat us up Detriot<lb/>
Manager Sparky Anderson said.<lb/>
"They beat us up with offense and<lb/>
defense and everything.<lb/>
"It started when we opened. We<lb/>
should never have opened. They<lb/>
just jumped right on us. There was<lb/>
no turning point<lb/>
As fate would have it, the World<lb/>
Series begins in the Metrodomc<lb/>
on Saturday night, the first time 11<lb/>
has ever been played indoors. The<lb/>
San Francisco Giants lead the<lb/>
National League playoffs 3-2 with<lb/>
Game 6 scheduled for tonight in<lb/>
St. Louis.<lb/>
Only the 1973 New York Mcts,<lb/>
who went 82-79, had a worse<lb/>
regular-season mark than<lb/>
Minnesota's 85-77 and still made<lb/>
it to the World Series.<lb/>
But in a short series, as the<lb/>
Twins proved against Detriot,<lb/>
regular-season records don't<lb/>
guarantee victory.<lb/>
Call your mummy<lb/>
'fr<lb/>
p??<lb/>
v?<lb/>
r!<lb/>
 -<lb/>
"<lb/>
F?s<lb/>
m.<lb/>
V"<lb/>
,y<lb/>
r nxS Cott?Ho Meet tha Mummy<lb/>
198 U?rv?rsl G?y Sudlc?. Inc.<lb/>
' - ftMKtby M?rcha?KHeimj Cor fi<lb/>
rte?,roc<lb/>
18MT?T<lb/>
You rememlxfr. She was<lb/>
always there when you were<lb/>
frightened. And if you got<lb/>
hurt, she was standing by<lb/>
with bandages. Wouldn't it<lb/>
feel good to talk to your<lb/>
mother again right now?<lb/>
Calling over AT&amp;T Long<lb/>
Distance Service probabry<lb/>
costs less than you think, tot <lb/>
.And if you have any questions<lb/>
about AT&amp;T rates or service,<lb/>
a customer service repre-<lb/>
sentative is always standing<lb/>
by to talk to you. lust call<lb/>
1800 2220300.<lb/>
Sure, your schoolwork and<lb/>
your friends keep you busy<lb/>
But call home and find out<lb/>
what she's wrapped up in.<lb/>
AT&amp;T<lb/>
The right choice.<lb/>
Intramura<lb/>
the n,<lb/>
Sports such as<lb/>
or basketball<lb/>
Aii<lb/>
mt to<lb/>
the p<lb/>
 as ??<lb/>
collegiate teanf<lb/>
The Sport Club Program, an<lb/>
integral part of the Department of<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Sen<lb/>
ices, may at times be unidentiti<lb/>
able to students of the University<lb/>
due to the nature of the program<lb/>
However, Sport Clubs an i I<lb/>
NCAA sanctioned events, norare<lb/>
they intramura! sp rts scheduled<lb/>
within the IRS calendar of events<lb/>
Rather, Sport Clubs are grout<lb/>
btudents interested in competing<lb/>
on the state, regional and nati<lb/>
level in a vane rts not<lb/>
offered through th Athletic<lb/>
(Department<lb/>
Thest may<lb/>
unusual to the average ;<lb/>
thusiast but are none tP<lb/>
NFL players u<lb/>
ROSEMONT, 11! - Fi rthe<lb/>
second week in a row, the strik<lb/>
NFL players union has com<lb/>
(with a plan that may avert mass<lb/>
defections.<lb/>
But once again, the owners ma)<lb/>
reject the plan, setting up a third<lb/>
week oi garner played bv repl i<lb/>
Bias' mother bel<lb/>
son accomplish<lb/>
WAYNE, Neb. CAP) - I <lb/>
Bias, the mother of the late<lb/>
University of Marvland bas-<lb/>
ketball star Pen Bias, said<lb/>
Monday she believes hi. -<lb/>
accomplished more by dying<lb/>
than he would have bv living<lb/>
"I believe that God took Pen<lb/>
to save so manv other young<lb/>
people Mrs. Bias said. "Pen<lb/>
hasdone more in death for this<lb/>
nation than he could have ever<lb/>
done in life<lb/>
Mrs. Bias spoke in an inter-<lb/>
view before giving a speech to<lb/>
$ students and faculty at Wayne<lb/>
&amp; State College of Nebraska dur-<lb/>
? ing Alcohol Awareness Week<lb/>
She said people need to real-<lb/>
Bje?, - . - - -<lb/>
Dregon enters<lb/>
fter 17 year hil<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
an<lb/>
ver<lb/>
about<lb/>
am:<lb/>
in our I<lb/>
St<lb/>
ful .<lb/>
Bias d<lb/>
Celtics in tli<lb/>
Oklahoma, Nebraska and Mi-<lb/>
tmi remained 1-2-3 in the Associ-<lb/>
led Press college football poll for<lb/>
he third week in a row today<lb/>
rhile Notre Dame fell out oi the<lb/>
'op Ten and Oregon made the<lb/>
nkings for the first time in 17<lb/>
ars.<lb/>
Oregon, No. lo this week, L<lb/>
peared in the AP poll of No 9<lb/>
70, when the ducks were f<lb/>
ey have had only threx win-<lb/>
ing seasons in the last lo years<lb/>
t are 4-1 after defeating Wash-<lb/>
gton and Southern California in<lb/>
ccossive weeks.<lb/>
Oklahoma's 44- victory over<lb/>
xas enablexl the Sooner to<lb/>
main No. 1 in their quest to<lb/>
ome the first team ever to hold<lb/>
top spot from the preseason<lb/>
rough postseason poll. The<lb/>
ners received 47 ci 60 first-<lb/>
ce votes and 1,184 of a possible<lb/>
!00 points from a nationwide<lb/>
nel ot sports writers and<lb/>
rtscasters.<lb/>
Nebraska, which has been the<lb/>
nner-up in every poll this sea-<lb/>
n, crushed Kansas 34-2 and re-<lb/>
ved seven first-place ballets<lb/>
d 1,122 points. The other six<lb/>
?st-place votes went to Miami,<lb/>
uch beat Marvland 46-16 and<lb/>
irned 1,111 points.<lb/>
ist week, Oklahoma s lead<lb/>
rer Nebraska and Miami was46-<lb/>
in first-place votes and 1,183-<lb/>
120-1,112 in points,<lb/>
sotre Dame. No. 4 last week<lb/>
is upset by Titt 30-22 and<lb/>
pped to 11th place Mean-<lb/>
?ule, Florida State pounded<lb/>
uthem Mississippi W-10 and<lb/>
iped past Auburn from sixth<lb/>
?ce to fourth with 935 points.<lb/>
lburn remained fifth with 934<lb/>
ints following a 48-15 triumph<lb/>
frer Vanderbilt.<lb/>
U climbed from seventh to<lb/>
tth with 901 points by rallving<lb/>
defeat Georgia 26-23. Clemson<lb/>
it Virginia 38-21 and moved up<lb/>
m eighth to seventh with 880<lb/>
Mnts.<lb/>
Tennessee was idle but im-<lb/>
)ved from 10th place to eighth<lb/>
fth 752 points. UCLA, another<lb/>
im which had the weekend off,<lb/>
iped from 11th to ninth with<lb/>
ints. Ohio State, No. 9 last<lb/>
lost to Indiana 31-10 and<lb/>
Pen- 5<lb/>
the Top Ten<lb/>
seas<lb/>
i<lb/>
Syrac a<lb/>
S<lb/>
gan Stat<lb/>
Past to i ?<lb/>
car. Al<lb/>
Alabama. (<lb/>
Florid<lb/>
kansas<lb/>
But '<lb/>
State 17-11 I<lb/>
to Washingt<lb/>
bam di I<lb/>
Memphis S<lb/>
Mkhiga <lb/>
Twenty a)<lb/>
absence i<lb/>
Top Twenty to<lb/>
the final 1979<lb/>
hadn t boa<lb/>
last 31 meet i<lb/>
Top<lb/>
1. Ok<lb/>
2. Nebraska<lb/>
3. Miami Fla<lb/>
4 ? rid<lb/>
5 -uburn<lb/>
em son<lb/>
in r<lb/>
"nn -<lb/>
11. Notre P<lb/>
12 Oklahoma<lb/>
13 Syracuse<lb/>
14. Florida<lb/>
15. Arkansas<lb/>
lev Oregon<lb/>
17. Ohio State<lb/>
18. Georgia<lb/>
19. Michigan St<lb/>
20. Indiana<lb/>
Other receivil<lb/>
sota 79. Michi<lb/>
State 73, Wake<lb/>
Washington 41<lb/>
South Carolinal<lb/>
Kentucky 10,<lb/>
4, Iowa 3, Bosto<lb/>
A&amp;M 1.<lb/>
<lb/>
N i<lb/>
'i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057921_0016"/><lb/>
??,??v"<lb/>
St<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
Di RICHARD THEBOSS'<lb/>
1 AKIN<lb/>
ECU Chancellor<lb/>
(5-5)<lb/>
Ovr-?.<lb/>
(32-28)<lb/>
is -WM<lb/>
 V 5'?? fc?<lb/>
hi din<lb/>
kc Forest? <lb/>
Nebraska?<lb/>
Pcnn State t<lb/>
s on road<lb/>
markthan<lb/>
- 71 made<lb/>
-? .as the<lb/>
against IVtnot,<lb/>
sondon't<lb/>
iy<lb/>
II<lb/>
m<lb/>
lightened And it you g l<lb/>
hurt, she was si E?by<lb/>
? bandages W uldn't it<lb/>
theragain right now<lb/>
TT1, <lb/>
istance Service pr ba<lb/>
ink '<lb/>
tn questii ns<lb/>
i " ice.<lb/>
ro-<lb/>
tative is a i - standing<lb/>
bvtotalk u ?you Just call<lb/>
1 800 222-0300<lb/>
Sure, ur - I and<lb/>
vour friends keep you busy.<lb/>
Hut call home and find out<lb/>
what she's wrapped up in<lb/>
AT&amp;T<lb/>
The right choice.<lb/>
t-mmmm<lb/>
wmmmmmm<lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 15, 1987 13<lb/>
Intramural clubs now in full gear for fall<lb/>
The Sport Club Program, an<lb/>
integral part oi the Department of<lb/>
ntramural-Recreational Serv-<lb/>
ices may at times be unidentifi-<lb/>
able to students ot the University<lb/>
due to the nature oi the program<lb/>
! iowever, Sport Clubs are not<lb/>
NJ A - sanctioned events, nor are<lb/>
they intramural sports scheduled<lb/>
w ithin the IKS calendar ot events.<lb/>
Rather, Sport Clubs are groups ot<lb/>
students interested in competing<lb/>
the state, regional and national<lb/>
 in a variety oi sports not<lb/>
Ifered through the ECU Athletic<lb/>
partment.<lb/>
1 best activities may seem<lb/>
usual to the average sport en-<lb/>
ist but are none the less as<lb/>
competitive and at times more so<lb/>
than the more recognizeable<lb/>
sports such as baseball, football,<lb/>
or basketball.<lb/>
A individual club worth noting<lb/>
at this point would be the Karate<lb/>
Club In the past the karate club<lb/>
has won national acclaim as a<lb/>
collegiate team boasting several<lb/>
first-place rankings.<lb/>
The club has participated in<lb/>
several local, state, and national<lb/>
tournaments in both style and<lb/>
fighting. The key to their success<lb/>
is sponsor, instructor, advisor Bill<lb/>
McDonald. McDonald has been<lb/>
the leader of the club for the past<lb/>
12 years<lb/>
Tonight, in room 108 Memorial<lb/>
Gym, Bill McDonald and several<lb/>
members of the club, will offer a<lb/>
free class to all ECU students. The<lb/>
course will serve as a registration<lb/>
meeting to answer questions and<lb/>
explain the course. The course<lb/>
will be comprised of sell defense<lb/>
karate, competition sport karate<lb/>
and physical fitness.<lb/>
The meeting will be held at 8:00<lb/>
p.m. and all students are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Several other Club Sports are<lb/>
open for participation by faculty,<lb/>
staff and students of the Univer-<lb/>
sity. For more information re-<lb/>
garding any of the Club Sports<lb/>
available or if there is an interest<lb/>
in starting a new club, contact Pat<lb/>
Cox at 757-6387<lb/>
Have you still got that old fris-<lb/>
bee from your high school years?<lb/>
Nowisthetimeforyou togetyour<lb/>
disc out of the closet and head out<lb/>
to the frisbee golf course for a<lb/>
round of unusual golf action. No<lb/>
need for a caddie, golf cart or<lb/>
money for green fees. The frisbee<lb/>
golf course is free for all members<lb/>
of the University community.<lb/>
One of the finest courses of it's<lb/>
kind located on the East coast,<lb/>
East Carolina's own 18-hoIe<lb/>
course is located directed along<lb/>
highway 264 adjacent to the var-<lb/>
sity softball field.<lb/>
Funding for the course was<lb/>
provided by the SG A, the Frisbee<lb/>
Disc Sport Club and the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Services.<lb/>
The course consists of 18 'hole<lb/>
poles' and accompanying T<lb/>
markers, hole 'layouts' and rules<lb/>
signs. The course was developed<lb/>
and installed by members of the<lb/>
Frisbee Disc Club<lb/>
Take advantage oi one of the<lb/>
most unique facilities available<lb/>
for recreational enjoyment on the<lb/>
Fast Coast.<lb/>
'WMMxmMMBWMH<lb/>
NFL players union trying to avoid mass defections this week<lb/>
ROSEMONT, 111. (AP) - For the ment players and those who<lb/>
. i. nd week in a row, the striking choose to cross the picket line.<lb/>
F1 players union has come up "No lack Donlan, executive<lb/>
.vith a plan that may avert mass director of the NFL Management<lb/>
ctions. Council replied early today when<lb/>
But once again, the owners may asked if he thought the council's<lb/>
ject the plan, setting up a third executive committee would ap-<lb/>
iveek of games played by replace- prove the proposal when it met<lb/>
Bias' mother believes <lb/>
son accomplished<lb/>
WAYNE, Neb. (AP) - Lonise<lb/>
Bias the mother oi the late<lb/>
I niversity of Maryland bas-<lb/>
ketball star Len Bias, said<lb/>
Monday she believes her son<lb/>
accomplished more by dying<lb/>
than he would have bv living<lb/>
1 believe that God took Len<lb/>
? tii save so many other young<lb/>
people Mrs Bias said. "Len<lb/>
 has done more in death for this<lb/>
I nation than he could have ever<lb/>
? done in life<lb/>
. Mrs. Bias spoke in an inter-<lb/>
v view before giving a speech to<lb/>
v students and faculty at Wayne<lb/>
y State College ot Nebraska dur-<lb/>
A ing Alcohol Awareness Week.<lb/>
 She said people need to real-<lb/>
git??-??-??. .?<lb/>
le that there is a drug and<lb/>
alcohol problem among young<lb/>
people.<lb/>
"Many people expect me to<lb/>
come and eulogize my son. It's<lb/>
quite thecontrary she said. "I<lb/>
come with a message about life<lb/>
and that no matter what ad-<lb/>
verse circumstances come<lb/>
about, we must rise above it<lb/>
and go on. We must keep hope<lb/>
in our hearts<lb/>
She called her son a "beauti-<lb/>
ful young man<lb/>
Bias died of cocaine intoxica-<lb/>
tion in une 1986, shortly after<lb/>
he was selected bv the Boston<lb/>
Celtics in the National Basket-<lb/>
ball Association draft.<lb/>
this afternoon in New York.<lb/>
The new plan emerged from a<lb/>
six-hour meeting Monday of the<lb/>
28 player representatives.<lb/>
The players would agree to re-<lb/>
turn while a federal mediator<lb/>
tried to resolve the dispute for six<lb/>
weeks. If that failed, it would then<lb/>
go to binding arbitration.<lb/>
"We think this is a fair way to<lb/>
end the dispute said Gene Up-<lb/>
shaw, executive director of the<lb/>
NFL Players Association, who<lb/>
announced the new plan. But the<lb/>
owners want no part of general<lb/>
arbitration, although it's possible<lb/>
they might be willing to submit<lb/>
such economic issues to an arbi-<lb/>
trator.<lb/>
"I've told Gene many times that<lb/>
we won't go to arbitration and I<lb/>
don't think we'll do it this time<lb/>
Donlan said.<lb/>
Tex Schramm, president of the<lb/>
1 Villas Cowboys, a key member of<lb/>
the Management Council's<lb/>
Committee, also doubted the pro-<lb/>
posal would be approved.<lb/>
"We're not going to put the fu-<lb/>
ture of the NFL in the hands of an<lb/>
arbitrator he said.<lb/>
If the owners do reject the play-<lb/>
ers' proposal - which also de-<lb/>
manded that the 1982 contract be<lb/>
honored, that striking players<lb/>
remain on the roster, and player<lb/>
reps and alternates be protected -<lb/>
the question is how many pla vers<lb/>
will cross the picket line? Last<lb/>
week, there were 37 defections,<lb/>
fewer than expected after a Mon-<lb/>
day meeting of player reps at the<lb/>
same O'Hare Airport hotel in<lb/>
which the players seemed to back<lb/>
off their demand for free agency.<lb/>
That led to six days of negotia-<lb/>
tions that broke off Sunday with<lb/>
free agency still a major obstacle<lb/>
to settlement of the three-week<lb/>
walkout.<lb/>
Monday's meeting took place in<lb/>
the face of reports that the 37 de-<lb/>
fections of last week might triple<lb/>
or quadruple this week, particu-<lb/>
larly on teams such as the Wash-<lb/>
ington Redskins, Chicago Bears,<lb/>
Oregon enters top 20<lb/>
after 17 year hiatus<lb/>
Oklahoma, Nebraska and Mi-<lb/>
ami remained 1-2-3 in the Associ-<lb/>
ated Tress college football poll for<lb/>
the third week in a row today<lb/>
while Notre Dame fell out of the<lb/>
Top Ten and Oregon made the<lb/>
rankings for the first time in 17<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Oregon, No. 16 this week, last<lb/>
appeared in the AP poll of Nov. 9,<lb/>
when the ducks were 6-3.<lb/>
1 hey have had only three win-<lb/>
ning seasons in the last 16 years,<lb/>
but are 4-1 after defeating Wash-<lb/>
ington and Southern California in<lb/>
(essive weeks.<lb/>
Oklahoma's 44-9 victory over<lb/>
Texas enabled the Sooners to<lb/>
remain No. 1 in their quest to<lb/>
become the first team ever to hold<lb/>
the top spot from the preseason<lb/>
through postseason poll. The<lb/>
Sooners received 47 of 60 first-<lb/>
place votes and 1,184 of a possible<lb/>
1,200 points from a nationwide<lb/>
panel of sports writers and<lb/>
sportscasters.<lb/>
Nebraska, which has been the<lb/>
runner-up in every poll this sea-<lb/>
son, crushed Kansas 54-2 and re-<lb/>
ceived seven first-place ballots<lb/>
and 1,122 points. The other six<lb/>
first-place votes went to Miami,<lb/>
;which beat Maryland 46-16 and<lb/>
banted 1,111 points.<lb/>
Last week, Oklahoma's lead<lb/>
over Nebraska and Miami was 46-<lb/>
8-6 in first-place votes and 1,183-<lb/>
1,120-1,112 in points.<lb/>
Notre Dame, No. 4 last week,<lb/>
-was upset by Pitt 30-22 and<lb/>
dropped to 11th place. Mean-<lb/>
?while, Florida State pounded<lb/>
Southern Mississippi 61-10 and<lb/>
jumped past Auburn from sixth<lb/>
?placc to fourth with 935 points.<lb/>
Auburn remained fifth with 934<lb/>
points following a 48-15 triumph<lb/>
over Vanderbilt.<lb/>
LSU climbed from seventh to<lb/>
sixth with 901 points by rallying<lb/>
do defeat Georgia 26-23. Clemson<lb/>
beat Virginia 38-21 and moved up<lb/>
from eighth to seventh with 880<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Tennessee was idle but im-<lb/>
proved from 10th place to eighth<lb/>
with 752 points. UCLA, another<lb/>
team which had the weekend off,<lb/>
jumped from 11th to ninth with<lb/>
713 points. Ohio State, No. 9 last<lb/>
week, lost to Indiana 31-10 and<lb/>
fell to No. 17.<lb/>
Rounding out the Top Ten is<lb/>
defending national champion<lb/>
Penn State. The Nittany Lions, in<lb/>
the Top Ten for the first time all<lb/>
season, received 606 points after<lb/>
beating Rutgers 35-21.<lb/>
The Second Ten consists of<lb/>
Notre Dame, Oklahomc State,<lb/>
Syracuse, Florida, Arkansas, Ore-<lb/>
gon, Ohio State, Georgia, Michi-<lb/>
gan State and Indiana.<lb/>
Last week, it was UCLA, Michi-<lb/>
gan, Arizona State, Penn State,<lb/>
Alabama, Georgia, Syracuse,<lb/>
Florida, Oklahoma State and Ar-<lb/>
kansas.<lb/>
But Michigan lost to Michigan<lb/>
State 17-11, Arizona State bowed<lb/>
to Washington 27-14 and Ala-<lb/>
bama dropped a 13-10 shocker to<lb/>
Memphis State.<lb/>
Michigan State cracked the Top<lb/>
Twenty after a three-week<lb/>
absence while Indiana made the<lb/>
Top Twenty for the first time since<lb/>
the final 1979 poll. The Hoosiers<lb/>
hadn't beaten Ohio State in their<lb/>
last 31 meetings.<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
PREGNANCY CENTER<lb/>
 The Center Is Open<lb/>
Mon Tues, &amp; Wed. Fit 9 a.m. p.m.<lb/>
9 a.m. - 2 p.m. &amp; by appointment<lb/>
For an appointment or more infor<lb/>
mation, call 24-Hour Helpline,<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
1 1 1 East Third Street - The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville. N. C.<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Test-<lb/>
Confidential Counseling<lb/>
Tom Togs Factory Outlet<lb/>
1900 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
Next Warehouse Sale Oct. 26th - Nov. 7th<lb/>
I-Yatunng Fashionable Fall Merchandise, Casual Wear, and Famous Brands.<lb/>
Everything In Store Facept Hosiery<lb/>
1st Ouahty?OverrunsCcoutsSelected Irregular<lb/>
<lb/>
L Ftmous Stmes Thai Ve Cannot Mentionjftu3Ui<lb/>
"nmm<lb/>
Irocadero Tank Tops, Tank Dresses, Bicycle Pants, Walk Shorts, Mini Skirt &amp; Tops<lb/>
lams Camp Shirts. Shorts, Slacks. lillovers &amp; The Original T-Shirts. 100 Cotton (Unisex)<lb/>
Panama lack T-shirt<lb/>
H you are a newcomer to town, we invite you to visit our store at 1900 Dickinson Avenue. If you are going to<lb/>
beach at Morehead City, visit our new location on Hwy 70 (just across from Bojangles.)<lb/>
Mwy. 64 East Between<lb/>
Bethel and Tarboro<lb/>
Conctoe, N.C.<lb/>
We Also Wholesale<lb/>
WedSat.9-S<lb/>
Hwy. 70 West<lb/>
Morehead City, N.C.<lb/>
Wed. - Sat9-5<lb/>
Mastercard &amp; Visa Accepted<lb/>
Top 20<lb/>
1.0kalhoma(47)5-0-0<lb/>
2. Nebraska (7)5-0-0<lb/>
3. Miami, Fla. (6)4-0-0<lb/>
4. Florida State5-1-0<lb/>
5. Auburn4-0-1<lb/>
6. LSU5-0-1<lb/>
7. Clemson5-0-0<lb/>
8. Tennessee4-0-1<lb/>
9. UCLA4-1-0<lb/>
10. Pcnn State5-1-0<lb/>
11. Notre Dame3-1-0<lb/>
12. Oklahoma State5-0-0<lb/>
13. Syracuse5-0-0<lb/>
14. Florida4-2-0<lb/>
15. Arkansas4-1-0<lb/>
16. Oregon4-1-0<lb/>
17. Ohio State3-1-1<lb/>
18. Georgia4-2-0<lb/>
19. Michigan State3-2-0<lb/>
20. Indiana4-1-0<lb/>
J<lb/>
Other receiving votes: Minne-<lb/>
sota 79, Michigan 77, Arizona<lb/>
State 73, Wake Forest 58, Pitt 48,<lb/>
Washington 41, Air Force 33,<lb/>
South Carolina 31, Alabama 10,<lb/>
Kentucky 10, Baylor 9, Wyoming<lb/>
4, Iowa 3, Boston College 2, Texas<lb/>
A4M1.<lb/>
i r  ?? wm<lb/>
? .<lb/>
? -?,? <lb/>
0 I o o c ? <lb/>
?tl- &amp;i$?!???? V'fKtf'<lb/>
? ??! l<lb/>
P&amp;!&amp;1 j ?? ??<lb/>
Restaurant ? Sundries<lb/>
(Now Open Under the New Management of Pescatore's, Inc.)<lb/>
Try our Old-Fashioned Soda Fountain!<lb/>
sfc<lb/>
S<lb/>
Old Fashioned Milkshakes<lb/>
Choice of Flavors<lb/>
Chocolate, Vanilla, Strawberry,<lb/>
Pineapple, Cherry 95C<lb/>
Ice Cream Sundaes<lb/>
Chocolate85<lb/>
Pineapple85<lb/>
Strawberry85<lb/>
Walnut95<lb/>
Chocolate Nut1.05<lb/>
Banana Spits<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
Sodas<lb/>
Chocolate80<lb/>
Pineapple80<lb/>
Strawberry80<lb/>
Vanilla80<lb/>
Cherry80<lb/>
Hours: Monday - Friday 6:45 a.m5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday 7:45 a.m5:30 p.m.<lb/>
CLOSED SUNDAYS<lb/>
Saturday Special:<lb/>
Cheeseburger, French Fries, &amp; Medium Drink $1.99<lb/>
11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Saturdays only<lb/>
416 Evans St<lb/>
752-3131<lb/>
New York Giants and Cleveland<lb/>
Browns, who so tar have re-<lb/>
mained solidlv on strike. So far,<lb/>
133 of the 1,585 players under<lb/>
union jurisdiction have returned<lb/>
to work.<lb/>
In announcing the new plan,<lb/>
Upshaw raised the possibility<lb/>
that rejection by the owners<lb/>
would mean a season-long strike.<lb/>
"1 would say if the owners de-<lb/>
cline this, then we're out for the<lb/>
duration, out for the year he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But rejection todav also would<lb/>
raise the possibility of mass defec-<lb/>
tions by the reporting date<lb/>
Wednesday as players face the<lb/>
prospect of losing their fourth<lb/>
paycheck of the season - one quar-<lb/>
ter of their yearly salary.<lb/>
Among expected to join re-<lb/>
placement plavcrs was last<lb/>
season's league MVP, Lawrence<lb/>
Taylor of the Giants.<lb/>
The New York Times, quoting a<lb/>
source close to the All-Pro line-<lb/>
backer, reported today that Tay-<lb/>
lor would return to the Giants on<lb/>
Wednesday. Tlie newspaper said<lb/>
it could not reach Taylor for con-<lb/>
firmation, but quoted his Hous-<lb/>
ton-based agent, Gary Kovaes, as<lb/>
saying there was a "strong<lb/>
chance" his client would cross the<lb/>
picket line in time to play and be<lb/>
paid for this week<lb/>
The owners, meanwhile, are<lb/>
feeling their own pressure.<lb/>
While attendance was up from<lb/>
last week's tirst strike games, in-<lb/>
cluding 61,230 Monday night at<lb/>
Mile High Stadium, where Den-<lb/>
ver beat the Los Angeles Raiders<lb/>
30-14, television ratings contin-<lb/>
ued to decline.<lb/>
In overnight ratings from 15<lb/>
cities for Sunday's games, NBC<lb/>
had a 10.2, a drop of 13 percent<lb/>
from lastSunday, while CBS drew<lb/>
a 13.(S rating ior its first regional<lb/>
games and 10.7 for the second<lb/>
games, a decrease oi 14 percent.<lb/>
P A R A D S E<lb/>
. fro -4z s<lb/>
Srw  ?Sty9<lb/>
329 Arlington<lb/>
Blvd.<lb/>
756-1579<lb/>
ALL HAIR SERVICES<lb/>
MAKEUP-MANICURES<lb/>
TANNING BEDS<lb/>
20 Discount Off Any Service.<lb/>
Good Through 10-31-87<lb/>
PETEY HATHAWAY, Owner<lb/>
"ii-in ?wi<lb/>
mmmmn<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057921_0017"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 15, 1987<lb/>
THE LOCAL CHAPTER<lb/>
OF ZENITH<lb/>
COMPUTER NERDS<lb/>
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DISCOVER SHELDON'S SECRET TO COMPUTER NERD SUCCESS. GET A ZENITH<lb/>
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VISIT YOUR NEARBY ZENITH CAMPUS CONTACT TODAYI<lb/>
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5555 Oakbrook Parkway<lb/>
1-800-237-7590<lb/>
r?NiTH<lb/>
data<lb/>
systems<lb/>
THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON<lb/>
C 1967. Zenith Data Systems<lb/>
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r-MHI?miMmmi0t?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057921_0018"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>