<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057941_0001"/>
COMING TUESDAY:<lb/>
Gloria Leonard, adult film star and publisher of High<lb/>
Society, will be on campus Tuesday with Delores<lb/>
Alexander to debate about pornography. Clay<lb/>
Deanhardt has an interview with Leonard Tuesday.<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
WZMB celebrated its 6th birthday Tuesday. See<lb/>
page 9.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Pirates look to regroup and get back on the winning<lb/>
track with games at home this weekend. See page<lb/>
12.<lb/>
Gfoe lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. h2 No. 34<lb/>
Thursday, February 4,19SS<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
SGA Cabinet handles issues of campus concern<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Stall V-i!er<lb/>
From minority affairs to cam-<lb/>
p is pul ic safety, from health<lb/>
services to school beautification,<lb/>
the SGA cabinet is trying to stay<lb/>
on the ball, according to SG A chief<lb/>
itaft Anthom Porcclli.<lb/>
r the fall semester, the cabi-<lb/>
net assisted SGA president Scott<lb/>
Thomas in formulating plans on<lb/>
the parking issue, the recreation<lb/>
center issue earlier Sunday hours<lb/>
for Joyner Library and ether is-<lb/>
sues facing ECU students. Porcclli<lb/>
said<lb/>
lie said one of the cabinet<lb/>
members, Angela Russ, in charge<lb/>
of student- academic affairs, has<lb/>
been successful in convincing the<lb/>
administration that Joyner Li-<lb/>
brary should open at noon on<lb/>
Sundays instead ol 1:00 p.m. Russ<lb/>
said if the students take advan-<lb/>
tage of the earlier opening that<lb/>
library hours will be changed to<lb/>
satisfy the need tor library time.<lb/>
Besides serving on several<lb/>
student committees and the Li-<lb/>
brary committee. Russ meets bi-<lb/>
vveckl) with William Blood-<lb/>
worth, vice-chancellor of aca-<lb/>
mic affairs, to discuss ways to<lb/>
improve academics, according to with a pass or fail final grade,<lb/>
Porcclli. Russ and Moodworth according to Porcclli.<lb/>
have been working on the feasi- For this semester, the most<lb/>
bility of a Pass-Fail class program pressing issues for the six member<lb/>
for ECU in which students would executive cabinet are in the areas<lb/>
be able to take between five and of minority participation in the<lb/>
six classes outside their major SGA, crime prevention on cam-<lb/>
pus and the beautification of FCU<lb/>
buildings, Porcclli said.<lb/>
In minority affairs, cabinet<lb/>
member Veronica Williams will<lb/>
be working with the Minority<lb/>
Student Organization to broaden<lb/>
other minorities in the SGA,<lb/>
Porcclli said. The declining per-<lb/>
centage of minorities on the ECU<lb/>
campus is one statistic which dis-<lb/>
turbs Porcclli, he said.<lb/>
On crime prevention, Paul<lb/>
the public voice of blacks and Pucket, cabinet member on public<lb/>
safety, and Porcclli are planning<lb/>
to distribute pamplets to educa-<lb/>
tion students on the need for pre-<lb/>
venting crime, according to<lb/>
Porcclli. Funding for the preven-<lb/>
tion project would come from a<lb/>
$9,000 Honor Board account.<lb/>
Porcclli said the Flonor Board<lb/>
account, which is slated for pro-<lb/>
grams which enhance crime pre-<lb/>
vention on campus, is made of<lb/>
collected fines levied by the<lb/>
Honor Board.<lb/>
The white signs in front of<lb/>
most ECU buildings are the con-<lb/>
cern of special projects cabinet<lb/>
member Dillion Kalkurst, accord-<lb/>
ing to Porcolli. Kalkurst, who is<lb/>
working with the campus beauti-<lb/>
fication committee, wants to have<lb/>
the signs replaced with attractive<lb/>
and more visible signs, Porcelli<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The cabinet member in<lb/>
charge of media affairs, Patti<lb/>
Kemmis, is trying to get a student<lb/>
column in The Daily Reflector,<lb/>
according to Porcelli. Porcelli said<lb/>
Kemmis has not been active on<lb/>
dealing with the East Carolinian<lb/>
on student issues.<lb/>
John Simon, the newest<lb/>
member of the executive cabinet,<lb/>
will be in charge of assisting Scott<lb/>
Inomas on student service issues.<lb/>
Student services include the infir-<lb/>
mary and the student residence<lb/>
association.<lb/>
Applications being taken<lb/>
for resident advisor jobs<lb/>
By STEPHANIE FOLSOM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This semester's SGA Cabinet includes, from left to right, Dillon Kalkhurst, Veronica Williams, John f you are looking for a job<lb/>
Simon, Paul Pucket, Angela Russ and Tony Porcelli. (Photo by Jon Jordan � Photolab)<lb/>
ROTC students plan for program end<lb/>
ByCLADEANHARDT<lb/>
Managing 1 ditor<lb/>
The news that ECU'S Air Force<lb/>
ROTC will fall victim to budget<lb/>
thin the next 18monthshas<lb/>
Ken met on campus with mixed<lb/>
emotions. Students and adults<lb/>
IVC makes plans<lb/>
Shawn Monaghan, 1988 Inter-<lb/>
Fraternity Council president and<lb/>
a member of the Sigma Phi Epsi-<lb/>
lon social fraternity, said plans tor<lb/>
the spring semester are underway<lb/>
since the recent installation of<lb/>
new officers.<lb/>
Hiis semester was the first<lb/>
semester that freshmen had to<lb/>
have an overall 2.0 grade point<lb/>
average to pledge a fraternity.<lb/>
Ruh went well, but since it is the<lb/>
first semester for this plan it will<lb/>
take a while for the plan to work<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Monaghan said a new frater-<lb/>
nity, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, has<lb/>
joined IFC. IFC also plans to estab-<lb/>
lish a rush committee, he said,<lb/>
with Administrative Vice Presi-<lb/>
dent Craig Stanley in charge.<lb/>
The new executive council<lb/>
members for 1988 are: president,<lb/>
Shawn Monaghan - Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon; executive vice president<lb/>
joe Prys - Delta Sigma Phi; admin-<lb/>
istrative vice president Craig<lb/>
Stanley - Alpha Sigma Phi, treas-<lb/>
urer, Dean Waters - Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau; and secretary, Mike Tinncs -<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha.<lb/>
Of the 125 students enrolled in<lb/>
the AFROTC this semester, Pat-<lb/>
ton said approximately 40 were<lb/>
upperclassmen in the advanced<lb/>
program who would graduate<lb/>
unaffected directly by the cut.<lb/>
That leaves about 85 students �<lb/>
involved in the program must light of the announcement and see<lb/>
now find some way of filling the that training continues. Still, on a<lb/>
gap left by the program's cancel- personal level, he said, "1 don't<lb/>
lation. agree with the decision to close<lb/>
"Most of the students' initial FCU or the other universities for<lb/>
indication is that they are looking that matter<lb/>
to transfer to another school He said he thought there might<lb/>
where they can complete ROTC be other ways than cutting the 30 40 of them sophomores whose<lb/>
Lt. Col. William Patton, the corps ROTC programs nationwide that next step is advanced training �<lb/>
commander, said Tuesday. the Air Force could have made up that will be affected by the<lb/>
1 would expect a couple will the money and met its budget. program's termination,<lb/>
discontinue and others will apply "When you start doing away Karen Fowler, a sophomore<lb/>
to Army ROTC he said. with the people, it starts to hurt nursing major, said she plans to<lb/>
Patton said his students were he said. transfer to another school with a<lb/>
taking the news well, considering<lb/>
the situation.<lb/>
"They're students, but they've<lb/>
also been in military training for<lb/>
anywhere from three weeks to 3-<lb/>
12 years he said. "And that<lb/>
training says we continue to do<lb/>
our job<lb/>
Cadet Col. George Farfour, the<lb/>
student corps commander,<lb/>
agreed. "As long as one person is .<lb/>
mary topic of discussion at this<lb/>
detachment. "They said we<lb/>
would have to make a choice be-<lb/>
tween the Air Force and ECU, and<lb/>
1 chose the Air Force she said.<lb/>
"I think it's unfair. Very unfair<lb/>
she said of the decision to cut the<lb/>
program. "We do a lot of work<lb/>
and now it's like they're pulling<lb/>
the rug out from under us<lb/>
Fowler said she and other stu-<lb/>
dents are afraid their class credits<lb/>
might not transfer from here to<lb/>
See STUDENTS, page 2<lb/>
Proposed budget includes<lb/>
rent increase for repairs<lb/>
By K1MEEY EDER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Tine proposed residence hall<lb/>
. udget for 1988-89 was the pri-<lb/>
here we still have a mission, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But, Farfour said, the Air<lb/>
Force's decision is a hard apple to<lb/>
swallow.<lb/>
"All the cadets are bewildered<lb/>
about it he said. "To a lot of<lb/>
them the AFROTC is like a home,<lb/>
and when you tell them it's going<lb/>
to be gone, it's like a death in the<lb/>
family because it's so much a part<lb/>
of what they do<lb/>
Farfour said that as a profes-<lb/>
week's meeting of the Student<lb/>
Residents Association.<lb/>
Guest speaker Dean Carolyn<lb/>
Fulghum, presented the pro-<lb/>
posal which included a recom-<lb/>
mended $-40 increase1 in dormo-<lb/>
tory rent.<lb/>
This increase<lb/>
is necessary,<lb/>
tor housing � it is a self-support-<lb/>
ing budget. These reserves would<lb/>
be used in the future to perform<lb/>
necessary maintenance and make<lb/>
desired improvements in resi-<lb/>
dence halls.<lb/>
Fulghum noted that 'The resi-<lb/>
dence halls are old and they need<lb/>
major renovations<lb/>
She also said housing funds are<lb/>
watched very closely in order to<lb/>
eliminate waste. The increase in<lb/>
room rent was recommended<lb/>
sional and as corps commander, nQ <lb/>
his job is to maintain morale in<lb/>
Fulghum said, in order to build because "We are trying to hold it<lb/>
funds in the housing de- (costs) as low as possible, but we<lb/>
are needing to do major repairs<lb/>
and we cannot do this on a year to<lb/>
year operating budget she said.<lb/>
reserve<lb/>
partment<lb/>
nccessarv<lb/>
She said reserves are<lb/>
in the housing budget<lb/>
It was noted that of the 16<lb/>
schools in the UNC system, ECU<lb/>
ranked 14th in housing rates.<lb/>
Also, it was noted that all or al-<lb/>
most all of the other universities<lb/>
have raised or are raising housing<lb/>
costs. Appalachain State is said to<lb/>
be raising dormitory costs by $100<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
The council also discussed the<lb/>
long-standing controversial issue<lb/>
of Pirate Walk. President Thomas<lb/>
Denton remarked that the pro-<lb/>
pram has not been properly run<lb/>
since the 1985-86 school year.<lb/>
Public Saf tey has proposed to take<lb/>
over the project, utilizing the stu-<lb/>
dent reserves.<lb/>
Students have mixed reactions to<lb/>
plan for nation-wide AIDS testing<lb/>
ByTONTPAGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
it's a good idea, and a lot could be think people would do it out ot<lb/>
learned Eakin also stressed that curiosity just to know how many<lb/>
Some ECU students have the university identity should not cases arc on the average campus,<lb/>
mixed emotions about a recent be given, and great deal of care Another student who wished to<lb/>
proposal by the Surgeon General shold be taken in conducting the remain unnamed said, "I think<lb/>
to conduct aids screening tests on tests. it's a waste of the taxpayers<lb/>
college campuses. ECU student Julie Chamberlain money to conduct an expensive<lb/>
The proposal calls for screening said in regards to the testing, "I survey that won't probably reach<lb/>
every student of a major U.S. uni- think it would probably be an its full potential due to lack of<lb/>
versity to help determine the inci- expensive study to conduct but if participation. If people really<lb/>
dents of AIDS among young they did do it, I would participate want to know about AIDS then<lb/>
for the sake of research they should take the time and<lb/>
In contrast student Joey Jenkins precautions to simply educate<lb/>
said "I don't think many people themselves. After all, their money<lb/>
would do it just because it is a bought the literature and adver-<lb/>
hassle and no one would want tisements � they should read it<lb/>
j'I can understand why the anyone to think they had AIDS. I<lb/>
Surgeon General would want to wouldn't do it because its no ones' The plan for AIDS screening has<lb/>
conduct the screening and as long business and I don't like needles not been confirmed partly due to<lb/>
as it is on a voluntary basis, I think Student Christy Bowen said, "I the cries of civil libertarians<lb/>
adults. The screening would be<lb/>
anonymous and would probably<lb/>
take place sometime this spring.<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin re-<lb/>
sponded to the proposal by<lb/>
which pays approximately $1,500<lb/>
per semester and improves your<lb/>
skills in dealing with other<lb/>
people, then Janet Johnson says<lb/>
you should consider a job as a<lb/>
resident advisor.<lb/>
Johnson, the West Campus area<lb/>
coordinator, said applications<lb/>
and information are now avail-<lb/>
able at any residence director's or<lb/>
area coordinator's office. Also,<lb/>
information can be obtained from<lb/>
the department of residence life<lb/>
office in 214 Whichard Building.<lb/>
The application deadline is Feb.<lb/>
16.<lb/>
Johnson said a series of RA<lb/>
mini-sessions will be held to an-<lb/>
swer the questions of prospective<lb/>
RAs. Sessions scheduled for the<lb/>
upcoming week are: Feb. 8, Cot-<lb/>
ten Lobby, 4:30 p.m Feb. 9, Jarvis<lb/>
Lobby, 4:30 p.m AycockConfer-<lb/>
ence Room, 5:30 p.m Belk Base-<lb/>
ment, 5 p.m Scott Conference<lb/>
Room, 6 p.m Clement Lobby,<lb/>
4:30 p.m White Lobby, 5 p.m<lb/>
Feb. 10, Slay Lobby, 5 p.m Urn-<lb/>
stead Lobby, 5:30 p.m Greene<lb/>
Lobby, 4:30 p.m Jones Basement,<lb/>
5 p.m Fletcher Lobby, 5 p.m<lb/>
Garrett Lobby, 7 p.m and Feb. 11,<lb/>
Tyler Lobby, 5 p.m.<lb/>
RAs arc selected for their ability<lb/>
to help students, Johnson said.<lb/>
She said the department of Resi-<lb/>
dence Life and Housing "tries to<lb/>
get a balanced staff. We need all<lb/>
kinds of people to serve all the<lb/>
different kinds of students<lb/>
RAs are responsible for helping<lb/>
to maintain a safe, comfortable,<lb/>
friendly, academic atmoshpere<lb/>
for approximeately 50 students<lb/>
on a floor. RAs serve many roles<lb/>
including that of administrator,<lb/>
good informational source,<lb/>
friend, peace maker, and pro-<lb/>
grammer of activities, Johnson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
To qualify as a resident advisor<lb/>
you must be enrolled as a full time<lb/>
student, have a minimum grade<lb/>
point average of 2.2, and be a<lb/>
Sophomore or above in class<lb/>
standing. You must have a clear<lb/>
judicial record, have a time sched-<lb/>
ule that is free of committments<lb/>
which would conflict, and get<lb/>
clearance by the Financial Aid<lb/>
Office. It is also encouraged that<lb/>
students show some leadership<lb/>
ability while at ECU through<lb/>
House Council, committees,<lb/>
clubs, or other organizations.<lb/>
Johnson said there are several<lb/>
personal benefits involved with<lb/>
being an RA. You get to meet a lot<lb/>
of different people, hold a leader-<lb/>
ship position, and, when avail-<lb/>
able, have a private room at semi-<lb/>
private rates. Johnson said skills<lb/>
learned as an RA are also valuable<lb/>
in the workplace.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057941_0002"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARYS 1988<lb/>
Destruction big problem, says public safety<lb/>
The destruction andor larceny<lb/>
of Campus (University) property<lb/>
is one of the most severe crime<lb/>
problems facing campuses na-<lb/>
tionwide. Unfortunately, East<lb/>
Carolina University is no excep-<lb/>
tion. The problem of vandalism<lb/>
andor larceny of University<lb/>
(state) property particularly in<lb/>
residence halls has become a ma-<lb/>
jor problem at East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity. The Department of Public<lb/>
Safety and the Department of<lb/>
Residence Life and Housing have<lb/>
joined forces to make this our<lb/>
number one priority this<lb/>
semester. We feel that with vour<lb/>
J<lb/>
help and cooperation, we can<lb/>
reduce or eliminate this particular<lb/>
crime problem on the East Caro-<lb/>
lina University Campus. We have<lb/>
made it our number one pTiority.<lb/>
Won't you?<lb/>
The act of vandalism andor<lb/>
larceny of University property<lb/>
can have many negative conse-<lb/>
Pirate Police<lb/>
Line<lb/>
by<lb/>
Capt. Keith Knox<lb/>
quences including inconven-<lb/>
ience, safety hazards, extra custo-<lb/>
dial and housing staff time, mo-<lb/>
rale problems a well as financial<lb/>
and psychological costs.<lb/>
We know that the majority of<lb/>
these acts are committed bv a few<lb/>
who live in the residence halls<lb/>
themselves. (Those guilty you<lb/>
know who you are.) The remain-<lb/>
der is committed by visitors or by<lb/>
those known to residents of that<lb/>
building, these crimes very sel-<lb/>
dom go unwitnessed, with no one<lb/>
having knowledge as to who did<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Unfortunately, those few who<lb/>
do commit these criminal acts<lb/>
often go unpunished. That is<lb/>
where you, the innocent student,<lb/>
must bear the burden of cost in<lb/>
increased housing or student fees<lb/>
to pay for someone else's actions.<lb/>
Why let this continue and possi-<lb/>
bly cost you financially, emotion-<lb/>
ally, and physically. Someof these<lb/>
acts such as tampering with fire<lb/>
alarms or equipment could cost<lb/>
you your life. Is it not time to make<lb/>
these irresponsible few pay for<lb/>
their own actions?<lb/>
1 believe that sudents can some-<lb/>
times police themselves better<lb/>
that anyone else if they will just<lb/>
try by applying peer pressure. Let<lb/>
those irresponsible few know that<lb/>
you are no longer going to pay for<lb/>
their actions. Together we can<lb/>
make our campus a safe place to<lb/>
live, work, and play as well as one<lb/>
that we will be proud of. If you see<lb/>
or know of someone vandalizing<lb/>
or stealing University property<lb/>
report it immediately.<lb/>
Pirate Crime Busters will pay a<lb/>
reword up to $1,000 for informa-<lb/>
tion that leads to the arrest or<lb/>
administrative referral of those<lb/>
responsible for vandalism andir<lb/>
larceny of University (State)<lb/>
property or any other crime<lb/>
committed on the East Carolina<lb/>
University Campus. The amount<lb/>
of the reward paid will be deter-<lb/>
mined by the value of the infor-<lb/>
mation given and severity of the<lb/>
crime. Crime Busters wants your<lb/>
information and not your name.<lb/>
Call Pirate Crime Busters at 757-<lb/>
Remember keeping quiet<lb/>
doesn't pay, it costs<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
KarenPasch ha9 been named<lb/>
the new president of the Student<lb/>
Union. This information was<lb/>
printed incorrectly in Tuesday's<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
6266.<lb/>
Stevens claims Greenville as permanent home<lb/>
ney, and also as a faculty member<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Having to deal with "a deluge<lb/>
of federal regulations" affecting<lb/>
higher education has been the<lb/>
most difficult part of his job, says<lb/>
in the School of Business and in<lb/>
correctional science.<lb/>
"It's been a fabulous experi-<lb/>
ence, both professionally and<lb/>
vens said. "We have lived in<lb/>
many places but there is no place<lb/>
the retiring university attorney of from the standpoint of the people<lb/>
I've worked with on campus and<lb/>
in the comunity Stevens said.<lb/>
A much-decorated U.S. Air<lb/>
Force officer, Stevens and his<lb/>
wife, Willa, "followed our son to<lb/>
college and settled in Greenville<lb/>
in 1970. Stevens retired after 21<lb/>
years of active duty in the Air<lb/>
better<lb/>
home,<lb/>
way<lb/>
than Greenville to call<lb/>
We feel very much that<lb/>
Fast Carolina University.<lb/>
Since he became the<lb/>
university's first full-time attor-<lb/>
ney in the lQ70s, there have been<lb/>
at least 10 "major pieces of federal<lb/>
islation" dealing with higher<lb/>
education, Dr. David B. Stevens<lb/>
explained in an interview.<lb/>
Tins has been no easy task he<lb/>
In the community, Stevens<lb/>
plans to continue active involve-<lb/>
ment in the Kiwanis Club, which<lb/>
he has served as president and as<lb/>
a district officail, the Pitt-<lb/>
Greenville Chamber of Com-<lb/>
merce and as a director of the N.C.<lb/>
Aeronautical Museum which he<lb/>
id. "I've been involved in help- to a faculty post at ECU.<lb/>
interpret these regulations In the intervening years, he has<lb/>
d guidelines and in implement- served under four ECU chancel-<lb/>
. them throughout the univer- lors and became ECU's first uni-<lb/>
versity attorney. The amount of<lb/>
Mc ens is ending 17 and a half legal work involved in admini-<lb/>
irs of service to ECU as an stration of a growing institution<lb/>
administrative officer, beginning demanded it, he says.<lb/>
equal opportunity program "Now, we're going to make<lb/>
rector, university attorney-ad- Greenville our home � perma-<lb/>
isor and later university attor- nently, 'til death do us part Ste-<lb/>
Students prepare for program's end<lb/>
Continued from page 1 Patton said the commissioned<lb/>
other schools in some cases, and officers that teach the ROTC<lb/>
that the Air Force is not going to coursesatECU will be transferred<lb/>
help change that. to some other part of the service,<lb/>
"It's like they're telling us we explaining that all come from dif-<lb/>
have to graduate in four years (or ferent areas and that there are no<lb/>
face a possible loss of commis- officers permanently assigned to<lb/>
sion) but they're not going to help teach ROTC.<lb/>
us transfer credit she said. The Air Force became a sepa-<lb/>
Freshman Jon Wilkinson said rate part of the armed services in<lb/>
he felt the sophomores are hurt 1947. ECU's ROTC program was<lb/>
the most by the decision, because chartered in 1948, making it one of<lb/>
they have already spent a year the oldest in the nation, and is<lb/>
and a half getting through the celebrating it's 40th year on cam-<lb/>
ogram here. pus this year. It will be a bitter-<lb/>
No w they're going to have to sweet celebration.<lb/>
Force and accepted appointment helped originate.<lb/>
Stevens said he and his wife will<lb/>
take "several weeks" of leisurely<lb/>
give it up or transfer to maybe<lb/>
their second choice school he<lb/>
said. Wilkinson said he will either<lb/>
transfer or mavbe join the Army<lb/>
ROTC Program at ECU.<lb/>
"We the Air Force have had just<lb/>
great support here from the chan-<lb/>
cellor and Dean (Eugene) Ryan<lb/>
and really the whole faculty and<lb/>
campus Patton said.<lb/>
9<lb/>
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w<lb/>
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En)oy a Valentine's Day buffet brunch at CharleyO's.<lb/>
Features include carved roast beef and baked ham, grilled<lb/>
chicken, seafood and fresh vegetables. Or choose from<lb/>
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out Start it off at check-in with champagne, fresh fruit<lb/>
and chocolate fondue. Indulge yourselves with in-room<lb/>
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pillow And you'll wake up Valentine's morning with<lb/>
complimentary coffee and a newspaper.<lb/>
$52.00 double occupancy<lb/>
Take Advantage of Our Valentine's Packages<lb/>
The Loving Couple at CharleyO's and preferred<lb/>
admission to Rio!�$17.99 per person<lb/>
�Room for two, preferred admission to Rio and<lb/>
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�Room for two. The Loving Couple for two at CharleyO's,<lb/>
and preferred admission to Rio!�$86.00 per couple<lb/>
referred admission to Rio and Valentine's Day Brunch<lb/>
f?<lb/>
"i<lb/>
'Room for two. The Loving Couple for two atTharleyO's,<lb/>
preferred admission to Rio and<lb/>
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'Room available for an additional night for $25.00 per couple<lb/>
'All prices subject to taxes and gratuity<lb/>
HILTON INN<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
207 S.W. Greenville Blvd. Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
For Reservations and Information<lb/>
Call. (919) 355-5000<lb/>
X<lb/>
vacation in the Florida Keys. "It<lb/>
will be the first time I've ever been<lb/>
anvwhere that I didn't feel hur-<lb/>
J<lb/>
ried he said.<lb/>
Steven's successor as university<lb/>
attorney, former associate state<lb/>
attormey general Ben Gibson<lb/>
Irons of Raleigh, assumed his<lb/>
duties at ECU Jan. 25.<lb/>
Aycock vandalized<lb/>
Destroying a west wing Aycock<lb/>
bathroom, vandals die! an est<lb/>
mated $750 worth of damage,<lb/>
according to ECU Public Safety.<lb/>
Capt. Keith Knox said three<lb/>
bathroom stalls were torn down<lb/>
and the west lobby door was<lb/>
smashed out, leaving a $200 re-<lb/>
pair bill.<lb/>
Knox said the Jan. 23 rampage<lb/>
may lea ve some students disinter-<lb/>
ested until they realize its their<lb/>
tuition which foots the bill lead-<lb/>
ing to higher dorm costs or some<lb/>
other university sponsored privil-<lb/>
ege<lb/>
On Nov. 21 someone ripped<lb/>
and kicked the water coolers and<lb/>
hot water cut of fs to three sinks off<lb/>
the wall. A bathroom stall was<lb/>
also demolished leading to an<lb/>
estimated 4500 dollars of damage<lb/>
to the 3rd floor of Umstead. The<lb/>
ECU Crime Buster arc offering<lb/>
$250 up front for information<lb/>
leading to arrest in the Umstead<lb/>
incident and up to $1,000 for in-<lb/>
formation in both cases.<lb/>
�t?e �at (Earolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Camliia campus coninuinlty stnr 1925<lb/>
James F. J. McKee. Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representative<lb/>
Anne Leigh Mallory James Russo<lb/>
Shari Clemens Adam Blankenshlp<lb/>
Maria Bell<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY RATKS<lb/>
0 49 Column Inches4 25<lb/>
50 99 4 ,5<lb/>
100 149 4 05<lb/>
150 199 <lb/>
200 249 <lb/>
250 and abovt<lb/>
3 85<lb/>
3 75<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
( barge in Addition w Regular Space Rate)<lb/>
One color and blackS�H) 00<lb/>
Two colors aiui black<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
5.000 or less <lb/>
5.001 10,(XX)<lb/>
10,001-12,000<lb/>
155 00<lb/>
r� each<lb/>
5 5� each<lb/>
5� each<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Phones757-6366757-6557<lb/>
757-6558757-6309<lb/>
� Items and Prices<lb/>
Mm MWi Sun. Jan. 31,1981<lb/>
� (I 1 � Sat. Feb. 6, 1988<lb/>
KroaerNafvon<lb/>
Effective<lb/>
988 thru<lb/>
(�"� O ?� �o.�<lb/>
��'HO ���,<lb/>
MMIJM�i. m w<lb/>
k m L V Kre��r ��� On<lb/>
� ��b Wor�� Sold To O<lb/>
Rotorved<lb/>
Ooalon<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd � Greenville<lb/>
)<lb/>
Tobacd<lb/>
X<lb/>
VNDREWS 5.C -��<lb/>
sdate grew up with bobao<lb/>
ra ed his tamji,<lb/>
in�J tiil depends on<lb/>
s - -�.� sme<lb/>
�e<lb/>
 quit sm v<lb/>
I hate to iv<lb/>
mcco farmer ' ' - <lb/>
lust ca moke lidn<lb/>
agree with me '<lb/>
sda e ires <lb/>
est M vv ws<lb/>
in the, heart fS<lb/>
acco armntr)  -� �<lb/>
irtu - f<lb/>
-  � � .<lb/>
rocs aga -<lb/>
 loca<lb/>
�a V -��<lb/>
�<lb/>
Somt<lb/>
.�ne<lb/>
proceeds � : schools a<lb/>
ils ind pro � ied .�<lb/>
run - i<lb/>
. �  �ed - <lb/>
� ieS<lb/>
bacco - � �<lb/>
nan. . <lb/>
: � �.<lb/>
' V ' v j ' "�<lb/>
Jl , ' . v � � .<lb/>
ism v.<lb/>
km losses<lb/>
vides : ��<lb/>
lassa<lb/>
<lb/>
.N-  p�SM<lb/>
'  -<lb/>
� rginia Soi<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
iith smoking - .<lb/>
ices<lb/>
 sscx r-<lb/>
5oi<lb/>
- - and . -� i �� passed<lb/>
ices i - . � t the .�<lb/>
?rs No<lb/>
Kentuck) and ssee<lb/>
prod. .<lb/>
-v eved to ; �. pass<lb/>
1 ung w<lb/>
report difrk<lb/>
di every devel nertt<lb/>
The restrictions range<lb/>
rrohibtftuftg distribgflfe<lb/>
rette samples to mandating; no<lb/>
smoking sections i res<lb/>
.ir.vi public b<lb/>
And though no stata a <lb/>
strictioRS on jvi - � k<lb/>
passed in any ot l<lb/>
st.ues proposals are pend<lb/>
many<lb/>
It's a disturbing trend ' .<lb/>
no question about it ' avi staj<lb/>
Son rttomas Smith P<lb/>
and landlord to about 40 a<lb/>
tobacco. 'Butldon tthinkitspet<lb/>
the end ot the industn<lb/>
Indeed, just look at a<lb/>
inunities that don t haw su<lb/>
ordmanees s.id Brennan Mor.<lb/>
pokeswoman tor the robaej<lb/>
Institute the Washington<lb/>
trade association for U S cigait<lb/>
manufacturers.<lb/>
I'm not ure that a trick<lb/>
duces a significant trend J<lb/>
Moran said. " on will find man<lb/>
many more communities i. <lb/>
smoking restrictions than w<lb/>
smoking restrictions<lb/>
Still. Ms. Moran said<lb/>
smoking acti ists have chosei<lb/>
concentrate their energies on<lb/>
local level, a sign that more ct<lb/>
munitiesrnay beconsideringsi<lb/>
ordinance? svn<lb/>
"1 don't think it going to<lb/>
away very easily she said<lb/>
Joseph Shakes chairman ol<lb/>
history department at 1 ranj<lb/>
Marion College in Florence j<lb/>
more obennt; note in the actioj<lb/>
The main thing thi says is tl<lb/>
then4 are great numbers ot<lb/>
even in the Tobacco Bolt ho<lb/>
this as a health issue instead orl<lb/>
economic issue he said 1 thi<lb/>
it's a signal tor the tobacco farni<lb/>
that thev can t count cm the pixj<lb/>
Kick home<lb/>
Increasingly, the farmers c<lb/>
relv on consumers either<lb/>
Tobacco production and a<lb/>
sumption have been tailing mi<lb/>
their peak in 1981. In that ear<lb/>
nation's farmers hare!<lb/>
974,000 acres to produce 2 bill)<lb/>
pounds of tobacco, according<lb/>
the Tobacco Institute<lb/>
But only five years later d<lb/>
duct ion had dropped 40 per J<lb/>
to 12 billion pounds and acre!<lb/>
had shrunk to 547,200<lb/>
Similarly, m 1980, shghtK m<lb/>
than a third of the U S. populal<lb/>
smoked. By 1986, that figure<lb/>
dropped to slightly more tl<lb/>
one-fourth, according to hgi<lb/>
from the Office of Smoking<lb/>
Health, part of the U.S. Cente j<lb/>
Disease Control<lb/>
In South Carolina alone,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057941_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 4,1988 3<lb/>
fety<lb/>
Remember � keeping quiet<lb/>
oesn't pay, it costs.<lb/>
"orrection<lb/>
KarenPasch has been named<lb/>
v new president of the Student<lb/>
ion This information was<lb/>
rinted incorrectly in Tuesday's<lb/>
he Fast Carolinian.<lb/>
aroltufaJ!<lb/>
tity since 1925.<lb/>
r of Advertising<lb/>
�esentatlves<lb/>
James Russo<lb/>
Vdam Blankenship<lb/>
KRTISING<lb/>
S4 25<lb/>
4 15<lb/>
4 05<lb/>
3.95<lb/>
3 85<lb/>
3.75<lb/>
IM, RATES<lb/>
Rate'<lb/>
to �<lb/>
155 00<lb/>
64 each<lb/>
5 each<lb/>
� each<lb/>
;l Rv<lb/>
idav<lb/>
1 p.m.<lb/>
S6 757-6551<lb/>
558 56309<lb/>
I<lb/>
), 'J l<lb/>
<lb/>
Y<lb/>
ROGER<lb/>
in<lb/>
12<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
99C<lb/>
ED<lb/>
S<lb/>
to<lb/>
s<lb/>
MOOREsl<lb/>
FRESH BAKED<lb/>
Italian<lb/>
f Bread<lb/>
59�<lb/>
�tOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
lie Blvd - Creenvilie<lb/>
Tobacco farmer quits smoking<lb/>
ANDREWS, S.C (AP) � Bobby<lb/>
Tisdale grew up with tobacco,<lb/>
raised his family on its profits,<lb/>
and still depends on the harvest of<lb/>
its sweet-smelling leaves for in-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
But he's quit smoking it.<lb/>
"I hate to say that, being a to-<lb/>
bacco farmer Tisdale, age 60,<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"1 just can't smoke. It didn't<lb/>
agree with me<lb/>
Tisdale lives about five miles<lb/>
west of Andrews, a small commu-<lb/>
nity in the heart of South Carolina<lb/>
tobacco country, where horizons<lb/>
of rich brown topsoil belie the<lb/>
area's poverty.<lb/>
The seed of his dilemma pitting<lb/>
economics against health is not as<lb/>
isolated as his location, though. A<lb/>
hardy breed, it's sprouting today<lb/>
throughout the region that tradi-<lb/>
tionally embraced tobacco.<lb/>
Some three centuries after its<lb/>
commercial introduction, after its<lb/>
proceeds built schools and hospi-<lb/>
tals and provided economies for<lb/>
entire communities, tobacco has<lb/>
increasingly outlived its welcome<lb/>
in the South.<lb/>
Tobacco still means money,<lb/>
some $156 million annually in<lb/>
South Carolina alone. And to<lb/>
many communities, the musical<lb/>
chant of tobacco auctioneers<lb/>
marks summer's zenith.<lb/>
But studies linking smoking<lb/>
and second-hand smoke to cancer<lb/>
and other illnesses have caused<lb/>
widespread reexamination of<lb/>
tobacco's once unassailable posi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Of the top six tobacco-produc-<lb/>
ing states, the bottom three �<lb/>
Virginia, South Carolina and<lb/>
Georgia � have communities<lb/>
with smoking regulation ordi-<lb/>
nances, state offices of the Ameri-<lb/>
can Lung Association report. In<lb/>
South Carolina, at least four coun-<lb/>
ties and one city passed ordi-<lb/>
nances, all within the last year.<lb/>
In the others � North Carolina,<lb/>
Kentucky and Tennessee, in order<lb/>
of their production � none are<lb/>
believed to have passed yet,<lb/>
though Lung Association offices<lb/>
report difficultv in keeping track<lb/>
of every development.<lb/>
The restrictions range from<lb/>
prohibiting distribjtfbn of ciga<lb/>
rctte samples to mandating non-<lb/>
smoking sections in restaurants"<lb/>
and public buildings.<lb/>
And though no statewide re-<lb/>
strictions on adult smoking have<lb/>
passed in any of the major tobacco<lb/>
states, proposals are pending in<lb/>
many.<lb/>
"It's a disturbing trend. There's<lb/>
no question about it said state<lb/>
Sen. Thomas Smith, D-Florence<lb/>
and landlord to about 40 acres of<lb/>
tobacco. "But I don't think it spells<lb/>
the end of the industry<lb/>
Indeed, just look at all the com-<lb/>
munities that don't have such<lb/>
ordinances, said Brennan Moran,<lb/>
spokeswoman for the Tobacco<lb/>
Institute, the Washington-based<lb/>
trade association for U.S. cigarette<lb/>
manufacturers.<lb/>
"I'm not sure that a trickle pro-<lb/>
duces a significant trend Ms.<lb/>
Moran said. "You will find many,<lb/>
many more communities without<lb/>
smoking restrictions than with<lb/>
smoking restrictions<lb/>
Still, Ms. Moran said, anti-<lb/>
smoking activists have chosen to<lb/>
concentrate their energies on the<lb/>
local level, a sign that more com-<lb/>
muni ties may be considering such<lb/>
ordinances soon.<lb/>
"I don't think it's going to go<lb/>
away very easily she said.<lb/>
Joseph Stukes, chairman of the<lb/>
history department at Francis<lb/>
Marion College in Florence, sees a<lb/>
more sobering note in the actions.<lb/>
"The main thing this says is that<lb/>
there are great numbers of us,<lb/>
even in the Tobacco Belt, who see<lb/>
this as a health issue instead of an<lb/>
economic issue he said. "I think<lb/>
it's a signal for the tobacco farmer<lb/>
that they can't count on the people<lb/>
back home<lb/>
Increasingly, the farmers can't<lb/>
rely on consumers either.<lb/>
Tobacco production and con-<lb/>
sumption have been falling since<lb/>
their peak in 1981. In that year, the<lb/>
nation's farmers harvested<lb/>
974,000 acres to produce 2 billion<lb/>
pounds of tobacco, according to<lb/>
the Tobacco Institute.<lb/>
But only five years later, pro-<lb/>
duction had dropped 40 percent<lb/>
to 12 billion pounds and acreage<lb/>
had shrunk to 597,200.<lb/>
Similarly, in 1980, slightly more<lb/>
than a third of the U.S. population<lb/>
smoked. By 1986, that figure had<lb/>
dropped to slightly more than<lb/>
one-fourth, according to figures<lb/>
from the Office of Smoking and<lb/>
Health, part of the U.S. Center for<lb/>
Disease Control.<lb/>
In South Carolina alone, the<lb/>
annual per capita consumption of<lb/>
cigarettes among adults has<lb/>
dropped almost 10 packs over a<lb/>
recent five-year period, reaching<lb/>
126.6 in 1986, the last year for<lb/>
which figures are available.<lb/>
Historians and anti-smoking<lb/>
groups agree the South's reluc-<lb/>
tance to pass smoking regulations<lb/>
is undoubtedly tied to tobacco's<lb/>
economic roots.<lb/>
Duke University, for one,<lb/>
would not have reached the<lb/>
prominence it has without the<lb/>
revenue of Bull Durham and<lb/>
other tobacco products sold by<lb/>
James B. Duke. His $40 million<lb/>
endowment in 1924 transformed<lb/>
forests around Durham, N.C<lb/>
into one of the South's pre-emi-<lb/>
nent universities.<lb/>
But Robert Durden, professor<lb/>
of history at Duke, notes with<lb/>
irony that in the Duke University<lb/>
Hospital the endowment has<lb/>
helped create, cigarettes are not<lb/>
sold.<lb/>
Still, he believes the change of<lb/>
mind thoughout the South is in-<lb/>
dicative of the region's general<lb/>
laggardly pace in adopting na-<lb/>
tional trends.<lb/>
"Sooner or later. I think the<lb/>
South reflects the same set of ideas<lb/>
that go on in the rest of the coun-<lb/>
try Durden said. "We don't live<lb/>
in a cocoon<lb/>
Greenville Mayor Bill Work-<lb/>
man, whose city's smoking ordi-<lb/>
nance went into effect this month,<lb/>
agrees.<lb/>
The Greenville ordinance pro-<lb/>
hibits smoking in almost all pub-<lb/>
lic places, including most restau-<lb/>
rants, offices, and government<lb/>
buildings.<lb/>
'Workman says his city is<lb/>
known for textiles, not tobacco,<lb/>
and people in his area are less<lb/>
worried about tobacco's eco-<lb/>
nomic impact.<lb/>
"We're a little more cosmopoli-<lb/>
tan in our outlook here he said.<lb/>
But to supporters of smoking<lb/>
ordinances, bans anywhere in the<lb/>
South are especially sweet.<lb/>
"It's great when it happens in<lb/>
the South because they're up<lb/>
against a lot of resistance said<lb/>
Hildy Dillon, program associate<lb/>
with the American Lung Associa-<lb/>
tion office in New York City.<lb/>
"The tobacco industry is there,<lb/>
and it's very difficult for legisla-<lb/>
tion to get passed she said. "If s<lb/>
a real victory when it gets<lb/>
passed<lb/>
While smoking's public policy<lb/>
debate continues in council halls<lb/>
and state legislatures, the per-<lb/>
sonal and economic dilemma<lb/>
tobacco presents is never far a way<lb/>
for Tisdale, the Andrews farmer.<lb/>
Tisdale also grows corn and<lb/>
beans in some 700 acres of farm-<lb/>
land spread throughout the re-<lb/>
gion. But he says the profitable 15-<lb/>
acre tobacco crop is vital to his<lb/>
family's livelihood.<lb/>
"It's a matter of my survival,<lb/>
that's why I plant tobacco Tis-<lb/>
dale said.<lb/>
But, he's asked, isn't that the<lb/>
same reason he stopped smok-<lb/>
ing?<lb/>
The farmer hesitates before re-<lb/>
sponding.<lb/>
"I reckon so<lb/>
Read the sports<lb/>
page in The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
Simply the best<lb/>
GREENVILLE RECREATION<lb/>
AND PARKS DEPARTMENT<lb/>
POOL MANAGER<lb/>
The Greenville Recreation and Parks<lb/>
Department is now accepting applications<lb/>
for a Pool Manager at its City Outdoor<lb/>
Pool. Applicant must have Water Safety<lb/>
Instructor Certificate and 2 years of pool<lb/>
management experience. Applications may<lb/>
be picked up at the City Personnel Office,<lb/>
located on corner of 5th and Washington<lb/>
Streets. For more information,<lb/>
contact<lb/>
Charles Williams, 830-4555.<lb/>
Love Lines<lb/>
Send a message of love to someone you care about.<lb/>
Deadline for this special section is Wed. Feb. 10th<lb/>
at Noon.<lb/>
Absolutely no exeptions.<lb/>
Fill out a classified ad form at The East Carolinian<lb/>
and write "Love Lines" at the top.<lb/>
Love Lines will appear in the Feb. 11 edition of<lb/>
The East Carolinian.<lb/>
1 dollar for the first 25 words. 5 cents for each additional word,<lb/>
FIZZ The newest gathering place in town.<lb/>
Tonight - Thur. Feb. 4th Sat. Feb. 6th<lb/>
� O 10 p.m. - 1 a.m. 10 p.m. - 1 a.m.<lb/>
7 n Featuring Featuring<lb/>
� q Klee Liles Mark Johnson<lb/>
Acoustic Rock, playing the best of<lb/>
James Tavlor and Jimmv Buffett<lb/>
Come in for music and<lb/>
dinner &amp; enjoy the best<lb/>
charbroiled food in town.<lb/>
&amp; PRIVATE PARTIES AND ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
110 EAST 4TH ST. 919-752-5855<lb/>
Our three-year and<lb/>
two-year scholarships won't<lb/>
make college easier.<lb/>
Just easier to pay for.<lb/>
Even if you didn't start college on a scholarship, you<lb/>
could finish on one. Army ROTC Scholarships<lb/>
pay for full tuition and allowances for educational<lb/>
tees and textbooks. Along with up to $1,000<lb/>
a year. Get all the facts.<lb/>
For Further Information Contact:<lb/>
Captain Steve L. Jones<lb/>
(Erwin Hall) 757-6967<lb/>
ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Remco East. Inc.<lb/>
announces that<lb/>
LANGSTON PARK<lb/>
APARTMENTS is now<lb/>
under New Ownership.<lb/>
The complex will undergo<lb/>
renovations (interior and<lb/>
exterior) with many<lb/>
improvements planned for<lb/>
1988!<lb/>
Contact Remco East,<lb/>
Inc. for rental<lb/>
information<lb/>
758-6061<lb/>
1109 Charles Blvd.<lb/>
(Between Krispy Kreme &amp; Dominoes)<lb/>
GRAND<lb/>
OPENING<lb/>
Thursday - Friday - Saturday<lb/>
� 1. 00 OFF All LP's &amp; Cassettes<lb/>
$2.00 OFF mi cds<lb/>
-FREE VIDEO CLUB-<lb/>
Drive Thru Window<lb/>
Open nitely 'til 9:00<lb/>
<lb/>
Less than a Dime<lb/>
and open til Nine<lb/>
We're your one-stop copy shop with more services available than you will find at any copy shop anywhere.<lb/>
Color Copies � Blueprinting � Laser Type Copies up to 36" x 40" � Office Supplies<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
open Mrty open late open six daysACCU S3COPY<lb/>
Located in Next to CNcos RestaDowntown Greenville urant in the Georgetown Shop6<lb/>
<lb/>
- - -<lb/>
MH.i� � .df<lb/>
-4th 4to i  <lb/>
� �. ?.�?�. i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057941_0004"/><lb/>
�tie �afit (ftarnltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Daniel Maurer, ceM-n<lb/>
Clay Deani iardt, ajs mm,<lb/>
JAMES F.J. kkEE, Overt o Advertising<lb/>
TlM Q IANDLER, SfrMirftn<lb/>
John Carter rm i rn.<lb/>
Michelle England, oaiJMuirr<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, smmmm<lb/>
February 4 1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Jeff Parker-? w<lb/>
TOM FDRR,Cir,wi-iu.nA-nJXT<lb/>
Mike Urci iurci i, prtum suger<lb/>
JOl IN VV. MEDL1N, An nrec��<lb/>
Mac Clark, &amp;�&amp; Mmger<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Wolf pack<lb/>
NCSU afraid of the Pirates<lb/>
The Wolfpack are on the run. team is expected to be much im-<lb/>
What other explanation can there proved next year, the basketball<lb/>
be tor the recently announced deci- team is playing better than anyone<lb/>
sion to cancel the State-ECU base- thought they could and have high<lb/>
ball contests this season? hopes for 1988-89 and our baseball<lb/>
NCSU officials are using the ex- team has been among the nation's<lb/>
cue that they are concerned about best for the last several years,<lb/>
fan violence. Malarkey. There has A victory for ECU in any contest<lb/>
never been fan problems at an ECU- with State is a statement of assertive-<lb/>
State baseball game, and they are not ness and of maturity. It is analogous<lb/>
going to start this year. to the little brother that returns<lb/>
The game is also a good match for home to clobber his older siblings in<lb/>
xth teams, forcing both to play a family fight: we have everything to<lb/>
:heir very best to come out with a gain, State has everything to lose.<lb/>
victory. It is also a game oi rivalry, And losing is what has been hap-<lb/>
md school spirit is high at the con- pening in recent years. The Pirate<lb/>
ests. athletic program is coming into its<lb/>
So we have to wonder why NCSU own at last, and NCSU officials do<lb/>
would want to cancel the games this not want it to be at their expense,<lb/>
sear. Like the aging prize-fighter who<lb/>
The answer is ob ious. schedules only weak opponents,<lb/>
ECU'S athletic program is grow- NCSU is afraid to play us any longer<lb/>
ing stronger every day. The football in their ring or ours.<lb/>
The rational of Hart<lb/>
TheseRepublic revived the argument about the private<lb/>
Things got awfully interesting awfully lives of public people. In the toughest of his<lb/>
Black history important<lb/>
fast after Gary Hart's Dec. 15 redeclaration<lb/>
of his candidacy.<lb/>
As theater. Hart's re-entry was great.<lb/>
News is onlv television's hobbv; comedv<lb/>
and drama are its business. The comedy<lb/>
was a bit tired, but the drama was down-<lb/>
right compelling: soap opera, romance,<lb/>
suspense, horror, domestic melodrama,<lb/>
Westerns.<lb/>
As political guerrilla tactics, Hart's re-<lb/>
entry was brilliant. When the storm broke<lb/>
last May, Hart had to withdraw. Better to<lb/>
quit and let the liaison stories sputter out<lb/>
and the anti-press reaction take hold unmo-<lb/>
lested. Hart meant it when he left the race,<lb/>
but he wouldn't have behaved all that dif-<lb/>
post-announeement interviews, the one<lb/>
with Jim Lehrer of TBS, the candidate stuck<lb/>
to his new insistence that his private life is<lb/>
no one else's business:<lb/>
LEHRER: Now why isn't it anyone else's<lb/>
business?<lb/>
HART: Because it isn't. It hasn't been the<lb/>
business of the American public for 200<lb/>
years, and it isn't today.<lb/>
L: You don't think it speaks to the ques-<lb/>
tion of judgment as to what a person would<lb/>
do as a candidate for president of the United<lb/>
States?<lb/>
H: Jim, if 1 may call you Jim, let's reverse<lb/>
th logic. Does it suggest that because<lb/>
Ronald Reagan used poor judgment on<lb/>
ferently had he been plotting his return Irangate, that therefore he's unfaithful to<lb/>
from Elba all along.<lb/>
His timing was perfect. The day of the<lb/>
New Hampshire deadline, in time for the<lb/>
evening news, Gary Hart leapt, arms out-<lb/>
stretched, from the balcony to the apron of<lb/>
the stage. Ta-da! His supernova of publicity<lb/>
engulfed the week before the holiday break.<lb/>
But it is as psychotherapy that Hart's<lb/>
decision nvkes most sense. He has often<lb/>
said that office-seeking is something he can<lb/>
take or leave. After the collapse he could<lb/>
have started a new life. But he didn't.<lb/>
When Ed Bradlev asked Hart on "60<lb/>
his wife?<lb/>
L: I don't understand what vou mean.<lb/>
Well, I understand what he means, and he<lb/>
has a point. The two realms, public and<lb/>
private, are distinct and ought to be kept<lb/>
that way. Misbehavior in the one does not<lb/>
necesarily entail misbehavior in the other.<lb/>
But Hart goes further, implicitly arguing<lb/>
that the individual soul � one's character<lb/>
� is itself correspondingly divisible. Many<lb/>
people balk at accepting, let alone admir-<lb/>
ing, such a radical internal dissociation.<lb/>
This is the hard nub of truth beneath all the<lb/>
Minutes" about the days following his moralizing about "the character issue.<lb/>
withdrawal from the race, he replied:<lb/>
"Worst period of my life. Worst period of<lb/>
my life. Worst period of my life You could<lb/>
see the relief washing over him. He says<lb/>
he's running because he thinks his ideas are<lb/>
better, but at the same time he implicitly<lb/>
admits that his real reasons for running are<lb/>
existential and psychological. Consider this<lb/>
Hart asks us to accept, and admire, an<lb/>
analogous split between "politics as usual<lb/>
� that is, politics � and "ideas His ideas<lb/>
are fine, and he expresses them more<lb/>
cognently than ever. But he is wrong to<lb/>
insist that he be judged on them alone, in<lb/>
isolation from any assessment of his ability<lb/>
to carry them out in our messy political<lb/>
exchange from the "60 Minutes" interview: system.<lb/>
BRADLEY: How long are you in this<lb/>
race?<lb/>
HART: For the duration.<lb/>
B: And if the voters say no, Gary, we don't<lb/>
want you?<lb/>
H: I'm gone. I'm out. This is not a dog-in-<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
The month of February has been<lb/>
designated as Black History Month.<lb/>
Black Americans have a rich heritage<lb/>
of which they can be proud of. The<lb/>
United States would not be the great<lb/>
nation that it is today without the<lb/>
important contributions of blacks.<lb/>
Blacks have come a long way from<lb/>
the bondage of slavery. There was<lb/>
once a time, some 200 years ago, when<lb/>
blacks were forcibly placed in the<lb/>
lowest status category of any society<lb/>
� slavery. Blacks were once deprived<lb/>
of the most fundamental educational<lb/>
opportunities. They were also law-<lb/>
fully prevented from exercising their<lb/>
right to vote.<lb/>
However, with strength, determi-<lb/>
nation, and an invincible faith in God,<lb/>
the black race rose up victorious over<lb/>
the institution of slavery. Later on in<lb/>
history, some 20 years ago, blacks<lb/>
found themselves in another era of<lb/>
oppression. Although the physical<lb/>
chains were no longer present, there<lb/>
remained the invisible chains of ra-<lb/>
cism, prejudice, and segregation. But<lb/>
through the civil rights movement,<lb/>
blacks overcame.<lb/>
Many Americans do not realize the<lb/>
great contributions that blacks have<lb/>
made to society. Lt. Benjamin O.<lb/>
Davis Jr. was the first black American<lb/>
to graduate from the US Military<lb/>
Academy at West Point in 1936. Dr.<lb/>
W. Montague Cobb, nationally and<lb/>
internationally known anatomist and<lb/>
physical anthropologist, helped per-<lb/>
fect the standard color plate of the<lb/>
anatomy of the heart. Dr. Daniel Hale<lb/>
Williams performed the first open<lb/>
heart surgery on July 10, 1983. Ira<lb/>
Aldridge achieved fame as a star of<lb/>
Shakesperian dramas and as an emi-<lb/>
nent tragedian. Zora Neale Hurston<lb/>
was placed "in the front ranks of<lb/>
American writers" for her mastery of<lb/>
folklore. These are just a few of the<lb/>
many great black Americans who<lb/>
have excelled in various areas.<lb/>
Looking back on the history of<lb/>
black Americans, as compared to the<lb/>
advancements that have been made<lb/>
today, the question that Fredrick<lb/>
Douglass asked, "What shall we do<lb/>
with the Negro?" no longer has to be<lb/>
posed.<lb/>
Blacks have fought for their rightful<lb/>
place in society. They have excelled in<lb/>
business, education, medicine, poli-<lb/>
tics, and many other areas. Blacks<lb/>
even have the opportunity to hold the<lb/>
highest elected office in the US, as<lb/>
exhibited by Rev. Jesse Jackson's bid<lb/>
In boasting of a campaign free of such<lb/>
encumbrances as alliances to be built and a for the presidency. The black dream<lb/>
staff to be administered, Hart is partly just need not be a dream deferred, but<lb/>
making a virtue of necessity. But he is<lb/>
plainly glad to be rid of all that<lb/>
The campaign a candidate runs is a mini-<lb/>
the-manager operation. I know when I'm ature mock-up of the government he would<lb/>
not wanted. give us. Do we really want a government<lb/>
B: What would you do with the rest of free of "politics"? It's hard to argue with a<lb/>
your life? slogan like "Let the people decide but do<lb/>
H: Oh, there are a lot of things I could do. we really want a quasi-plebiscitary govern-<lb/>
B: But I mean, if there a lot of things you ment in which the president, seen as a dis-<lb/>
could do with your life, you could have embodied generator of ideas, communes<lb/>
done them without getting back in the race, directly with "the people" without the in<lb/>
H: Yeah, but now I will know. Now I will tervening institutional cushions of Con-<lb/>
know. Otherwise I would never have gress, the press and the political process?<lb/>
known. It's that simple. How would you Whether he wants to or not, Hart is calling<lb/>
like to go through the rest of your life hav- into question the legitimacy of politics it<lb/>
ing a major unanswered question? This self,<lb/>
way, I'll have it answered. I happen to think that Hart got a raw deal<lb/>
B: And those who say that you got back in last May. He got engulfed in a story of<lb/>
because you need the voters more than the private passion and family intrigue, and<lb/>
voters need Gary Hart? now, however unfairly, he can't get loose<lb/>
H: Let the voters decide that. I mean, I'm from it.<lb/>
taking certain risks. The voters can say no. Hart wants to provoke our thinking<lb/>
But even if they say no, I'll feel better about about public policy, but all he does is roil<lb/>
myself than if I'd just sat up there on that our feelings about love and sex and the<lb/>
mountain, wondering. drama of family life � subjects, as Hart is<lb/>
There it is: He's running so he can feel the first to insist, that don't belong in the<lb/>
better about himself. It's not the highest political arena. Hart stirs the wrong kind oi<lb/>
motive in the world, but it's not the basest passions, and that is why he won't, an<lb/>
either. But what has all this got to do with probably shouldn't, be president. It's har<lb/>
who ought to be president of the United to imagine a more ironical denouement fo<lb/>
States? Not a thing.<lb/>
rather, a dream kept alive by today's<lb/>
black society until "justice rolls down<lb/>
like waters and righteousness like a<lb/>
mighty stream<lb/>
Constance Foster<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Conservative<lb/>
responds<lb/>
To the editor<lb/>
In response to Mary Elizabeth<lb/>
Davis's letter (Jan. 28, "Liberal re-<lb/>
sponds"), I'd like to say I'm pleased<lb/>
that the liberals are finally willing to<lb/>
stop their name-clouding and issue<lb/>
clouding. That is, assuming we don't<lb/>
hear anymore liberal, McCarthyish<lb/>
tirades like the one that came from<lb/>
Bern McCrady not long ago.<lb/>
Davis' letter was a refreshing<lb/>
change. Nevertheless, it was full of<lb/>
error and misrepresentation.<lb/>
Davis: "Cons priorities, many mili-<lb/>
tary oriented, are wasteful and un-<lb/>
necessary I wonder if Davis knows<lb/>
that the U.S. is virtually completely<lb/>
unprotected against any nuclear at-<lb/>
tack, whether intentional or acciden-<lb/>
tal? Sure, we conservatives are for<lb/>
cleaning up wasteful spending in<lb/>
defense allocations just like in any<lb/>
other area. But liberals don't seem to<lb/>
realize that if the U.S. becomes the<lb/>
victim of Communist nuclear back-<lb/>
mail and intimidation, it won't matter<lb/>
how many social programs we have<lb/>
or much we spend on governement<lb/>
entitlement programs. National de-<lb/>
fense should be our No. 1 priority.<lb/>
One of the top conservative priorities<lb/>
is the as-soon-as-possible deploy-<lb/>
ment of the Strategic Defense Initia-<lb/>
tive. This system destroys weapons,<lb/>
not people, and is desperately needed<lb/>
in case of nuclear attack. In 1984, we<lb/>
proved that we could perform the<lb/>
most difficult part of the SDI system:<lb/>
the rest is just waiting to be built.<lb/>
Conservatives cannot understand<lb/>
why liberals want to get rid of or at<lb/>
least greatly reduce our offensive<lb/>
weapons, and yet don't want to put a<lb/>
defensive system in their place! Lib-<lb/>
eral feedback wanted here.<lb/>
Davis: 'The penal system's goal in<lb/>
the status quo is rehabilitation, not<lb/>
punishment Well, the "status quo"<lb/>
is liberal and it is wrong. Such an<lb/>
emphasis on "rehabilitation" has re-<lb/>
sulted in a liberal Supreme Court re-<lb/>
leasing dangerous criminals back<lb/>
onto the streets to commit more<lb/>
crimes. Why? Because those crimi-<lb/>
nals passed the rehabilitation test of<lb/>
the "status quo Just and fair punish-<lb/>
ment fitting of the crime is the logical<lb/>
deterrent to crime, not some idealized<lb/>
and often unrealized promise of<lb/>
"rehabilitation Why not rape and<lb/>
murder someone when you'll get out<lb/>
in a few years on parole because you<lb/>
fooled everyone into thinking you<lb/>
had been "rehabilitated"?<lb/>
Davis: "Liberals are pro-choice, not<lb/>
pro-abortion Well, it depends on<lb/>
whose "choice" liberals are talking<lb/>
about. Why don't the babies have any<lb/>
say in the matter? Why do liberals<lb/>
deny them their right to life, as stated<lb/>
in the Constitution? Why do libs deny<lb/>
them their right to personhood as<lb/>
whites once denied the personhood<lb/>
of blacks? Liberals say they're not<lb/>
prejudiced, but, in the case of un-<lb/>
wanted pregnancy, they are always<lb/>
prejudiced against the baby!<lb/>
Conservatives are pro-choice: they<lb/>
believe the woman should have the<lb/>
right not to choose to have sex, and<lb/>
they believe that the mother should<lb/>
have the choice whether or not to put<lb/>
her baby up for adoption. But they do<lb/>
not consider the murder of an inno-<lb/>
cent person to be a justifiable option.<lb/>
Davis: "Logically, we shouldn't<lb/>
fund the Contras Incredible! Even<lb/>
after the Sandinistas themselves have<lb/>
admitted that they have no intentions<lb/>
of complying with the Arias Peace<lb/>
Plan, but father that they plan to help<lb/>
spread Communism throughout<lb/>
Central America�even after this has<lb/>
become known, the libs are still<lb/>
against aiding the Contras!<lb/>
O.K libs, if we don't aid the Con-<lb/>
tras, how should we combat the<lb/>
Communist threat in Central Amer-<lb/>
ica? Instead of letting the Contras<lb/>
fight for us, should we send our own<lb/>
boys down there?<lb/>
Stephen Clegg<lb/>
134 Garrett<lb/>
Senior, Marketing<lb/>
Molloy annoys reader<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
O.K. Pat. So when are you returr<lb/>
to your former spot in The East Caro-<lb/>
linian now held by the not-so-famed<lb/>
Chippy Bonchead? Obviously, your<lb/>
talents are being wasted in the sp irts<lb/>
section. Such a fact is evident now<lb/>
that you have really pissed me off<lb/>
with your scorn of my beloved Re-<lb/>
dskins.<lb/>
When last I saw you (at you barn-<lb/>
burner of a party) I knew you picked<lb/>
the Broncos, but detested the<lb/>
'Skins? I never received such a hint<lb/>
in your drunken attempt of a conver-<lb/>
sation. It is unfortunate that vou don't<lb/>
recognize true class when vou see if<lb/>
by way of 42-10.<lb/>
Don't worry, you're not the only<lb/>
one who has fallen into this blind<lb/>
abyss. I have three roommates, one a<lb/>
Raiders fan, one a Dallas ran, and one<lb/>
that just doesn't give a damn about<lb/>
sports in general. So my days before<lb/>
the Super Bowl were packed full of<lb/>
pregame celebration. But after the<lb/>
Redskins proved themselves 1<lb/>
thought the skeptics would lighten<lb/>
up. I forgot about vou, Pat, 1 really<lb/>
did.<lb/>
Did this Washington franchise, that<lb/>
has been to four Super Bowls in my<lb/>
lifetime, tick you off to the point<lb/>
where you have to refer to Doug<lb/>
Williams as "Leon Spinks in dis-<lb/>
guise The man has overcome tre-<lb/>
mendous adversity to have reached<lb/>
the MVP status that he so rightly<lb/>
deserved in XXII. Referring to the<lb/>
man's speech as if it reflected his intel-<lb/>
ligence is really unfair. How many<lb/>
quarterback were smart enough to<lb/>
lead their team to the grandest of all <lb/>
games. I don't recall Danny White<lb/>
completing such a feat.<lb/>
Then you so graciously attempted<lb/>
to tell us that Charles Mann, Dave<lb/>
Butz, and Dexter Manley went to<lb/>
Williams' same charm school. This<lb/>
seems to be an honest attempt at in-<lb/>
sulting the intelligence of football<lb/>
players everywhere. Because I'm the<lb/>
proud owner of a 1978 Buick station<lb/>
wagon. I think I can say that your<lb/>
article was more weighted down with<lb/>
cow dung to be heavier than "Big<lb/>
Dave" and my car.<lb/>
I guess I'll get to my point. Pat, your<lb/>
article wasn't bad if you're not a<lb/>
Redskin fan. I guess I could learn to<lb/>
like the article if I wasn't so biased.<lb/>
The truth of the matter is I hate to<lb/>
listen to humbled Dallas fans cry ing<lb/>
over another one of their team's sub-<lb/>
par seasons. Next year, the 'Skins may<lb/>
not reach the big game. But I'll be<lb/>
enjoying another such article about<lb/>
the next Super Bowl champions<lb/>
because it sure as hell won't be Dallas.<lb/>
See you at your next party, Tat.<lb/>
Well, who cares? The next one's on<lb/>
me. It will be like a post-Super Bowl<lb/>
celebration. In the meantime, I hope<lb/>
your dreams are haunted by Dennis<lb/>
and Royce, both sporting a long-<lb/>
stemmed paint brush. Hail to the<lb/>
Redskins!<lb/>
Dal Edwards<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
History<lb/>
By reviving his campaign, Hart has also<lb/>
Gary Hart, the hyperrational candidate of<lb/>
ideas.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Godre<lb/>
LUMBERTON (AP) � HI<lb/>
mond Godrey didn't expect<lb/>
spend his day at the office M<lb/>
day hiding under a desk talkinj<lb/>
the governor's office by phont<lb/>
But when two armed Ameni<lb/>
Indiansburst into the office to<lb/>
Robesonian newspaper, Godf<lb/>
became the governor's se<lb/>
source of information from int<lb/>
the barricaded newspaper offi<lb/>
The other hostages thou<lb/>
Godfrey had run out a back d<lb/>
with other newspaper empll<lb/>
ees, but he had slipped intf<lb/>
darkened office during the f)<lb/>
confused moments of the ta<lb/>
over.<lb/>
"I backed slowly into the re<lb/>
and pulled door shut said<lb/>
32-year-old government repo<lb/>
"I left the light off, locked th ;<lb/>
and grabbed the phone<lb/>
Before Godfrey called the <lb/>
ernor, he made some other c<lb/>
"The first thing 1 did was<lb/>
911, but all I got was a recon<lb/>
two times he said. "I said<lb/>
heck with that and 1 called<lb/>
Hatcher ovet<lb/>
for cause, s<lb/>
PEMBROKE (AP) � Pei<lb/>
who knew Eddie Hatcher well I<lb/>
he took over a newspaper ofj<lb/>
for a cause, not to hurt peopl(<lb/>
"He sees things are done wr<lb/>
in the county and nobodv hasl<lb/>
guts to do anything about<lb/>
Jeannette Oxendine, owner of<lb/>
Prospect Beauty Shop m Pi<lb/>
broke, said Tuesday, the day al<lb/>
Hatcher and Timothy Jacobs t<lb/>
over The Robesonian newspaj<lb/>
in Lumberton.<lb/>
"There's a lot of things that<lb/>
smothered in this county � s<lb/>
of the ways people die<lb/>
Oxendine said. "There'sbeen<lb/>
of instances we don't know v<lb/>
happened<lb/>
"He's not foolish said Che<lb/>
Sampson, another acquaints<lb/>
of Hatcher. Sampson works<lb/>
printing store located next to<lb/>
Carolina Indian Voice, a wei<lb/>
newspaper for which Hatl<lb/>
often wrote.  He's smart,<lb/>
talking brains. Eddie ain't<lb/>
He's got a lot to say and he nJ<lb/>
to be heard<lb/>
Wanda Godwin never<lb/>
Hatcher but believes in his a<lb/>
She was interviewed Moi<lb/>
morning after visiting her<lb/>
band, Harold, in the counh<lb/>
located next to The Robes<lb/>
newspaper. On Friday, her<lb/>
band was sentenced to serve<lb/>
life sentences and 12 yeai<lb/>
three sex convictions.<lb/>
"I've seen prejudices in thel<lb/>
enforecement agency, the c<lb/>
system and the county gov<lb/>
ment she said. "He's (her<lb/>
band) had trouble with the a<lb/>
his life. I'm not saying he<lb/>
angel, I'm just saying he's<lb/>
persecuted. He could have hj<lb/>
gang slaying and not got<lb/>
much time<lb/>
Godwin said upper-mid<lb/>
class Indians and blacks get a<lb/>
fine with the whites in the coi<lb/>
it's poor people with little edl<lb/>
tion who are mistreated ant<lb/>
nored. "People in power dd<lb/>
listen to them and they take<lb/>
vantage of their ignorance<lb/>
win said. "I think things w<lb/>
better (after this incident) KvJ<lb/>
it will shed light to those<lb/>
have ignored it in the past.<lb/>
open their eyes to what is gou<lb/>
m this county<lb/>
Others in this small tow<lb/>
about 3,500 where Hatcher<lb/>
Jacobs lived said thev<lb/>
shocked that Hatcher woul<lb/>
involved in hostage-taking<lb/>
Alvernor Jacobs said he gl<lb/>
know and like Hatcher J<lb/>
Hatcher played piano for his<lb/>
pel group at Mount Hebron<lb/>
Will Baptist Church.<lb/>
"Eddie was a fine felll<lb/>
Jacobs recalled. "I can't imJ<lb/>
what happened. He was sincj<lb/>
his playing and he was sinc<lb/>
his belief and he tried to d<lb/>
best he could. I was realh<lb/>
prised when I turned on the I<lb/>
and heard the name<lb/>
Hatcher<lb/>
"He was just as nice as ca<lb/>
alsways had that happy-go-1<lb/>
smile Annie Pearl, a Lub<lb/>
dian who owns a tiny quid<lb/>
- � � � .  t V4 � .�<lb/>
MtMMglMRI'HM't')r' '�vwhW<lb/>
<pb facs="00057941_0005"/><lb/>
EY CANCELLED<lb/>
T. THEY'RE<lb/>
T START A<lb/>
THE FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARYS 1968 5<lb/>
rtant<lb/>
Stephen Clogg<lb/>
134 Garret!<lb/>
Senior, Marketing<lb/>
�v annoys reader<lb/>
en are von returning<lb/>
pot in The East Caro-<lb/>
the not-so-t'amed<lb/>
Obviously, your<lb/>
ng . asted m the sports<lb/>
id is evident now<lb/>
e really pissed me off<lb/>
m et my beloved Re-<lb/>
� ou (at you bam-<lb/>
I knew you picked<lb/>
- but detested the<lb/>
. or received such a hint<lb/>
ken attempt of a conver-<lb/>
natethat voudon t<lb/>
ss when vou see if<lb/>
you're not the only<lb/>
leu into this blind<lb/>
ree roommates: one a<lb/>
i Dallas fan, and one<lb/>
give a damn about<lb/>
So mv days before<lb/>
a ere packed full of<lb/>
n. But after the<lb/>
ved themselves 1<lb/>
- would lighten<lb/>
vou, Tat, I really<lb/>
-<lb/>
ton franchise, that<lb/>
per Bowls in my<lb/>
tick you off to the point<lb/>
ou have to refer to Doug<lb/>
i as "Leon Spinks in dis-<lb/>
The man has overcome tre-<lb/>
s adversitv to have reached<lb/>
V status that he so rightly<lb/>
ved m XXII. Referri the<lb/>
i speech as if it reflected his intel-<lb/>
unfair. How manv<lb/>
erback were smart enough to<lb/>
heir team to the grandest of all j<lb/>
1 don't recall Dannv White<lb/>
' ting such a feat.<lb/>
?n graciously attempted<lb/>
is that Charles Mann, Dave<lb/>
nd Dexter Manlev went to<lb/>
ime charm school. This<lb/>
test attempt at in-<lb/>
Bg � intelligence oi football<lb/>
er where. Because I'm the<lb/>
. . ner of a 1978 Buick station<lb/>
r. I think I can sav that your<lb/>
c was more weighted down with<lb/>
be heavier than "Big<lb/>
" and mv car.<lb/>
11 get to my point. Pat, your<lb/>
e wasn't bad if you're not a<lb/>
in fan. I guess I could learn to<lb/>
he article if I wasn't so biased.<lb/>
nth of the matter is 1 hate to<lb/>
to humbled Dallas fans crving<lb/>
another one of their team's sub-<lb/>
?asons. Next year, the'Skins may-<lb/>
each the big game. But I'll be-<lb/>
ing another such article about<lb/>
Super Bowl champions<lb/>
iso it sure as hell won't be Dallas.<lb/>
you at your next party, Pat.<lb/>
who cares? The next one's on<lb/>
t will be like a post-Super Bowl<lb/>
ration. In the meantime, I hope<lb/>
dreams are haunted by Dennis<lb/>
Royce, both sporting a long-<lb/>
med paint brush. Hail to the<lb/>
kins!<lb/>
Dal Edwards<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
History<lb/>
im<lb/>
Godrey spends unexpected day<lb/>
Clip-N-Save<lb/>
wife at her office<lb/>
At first, Godfrey's wife Karen<lb/>
didn't believe what her husband<lb/>
was telling her.<lb/>
She said, 'Ray, you are sick<lb/>
LUMBERTON (AP) � Ray-<lb/>
mond Godrey didn't expect to<lb/>
spend his day at the office Mon-<lb/>
day hiding under a desk talking to<lb/>
the governor's office by phone.<lb/>
But when two armed American Godfrey said in an interview<lb/>
Indians burst into the office to The<lb/>
Robesonian newspaper, Godfrey<lb/>
became the governor's secret<lb/>
source of information from inside<lb/>
the barricaded newspaper office.<lb/>
The other hostages thought<lb/>
Godfrey had run out a back door<lb/>
with other newspaper employ-<lb/>
ees, but he had slipped into a<lb/>
"I told them they weren't<lb/>
threatening anyone and that I<lb/>
At one point, Godfrey said he<lb/>
climbed on top of a bookcase and<lb/>
didn't see any explosives, which into tha small space between the<lb/>
they claimed they had Godfrey ceiling and a drop ceiling in an<lb/>
said. effort to find an escape route.<lb/>
'I Crouched silently under the "I thought This is it. This is the<lb/>
told herlisten to me. I can't stay desk of the paper's accounting day you are going to die" he said.<lb/>
on the phone. I want you to call manger, Godfrey also dictated the "I thought about my kids. I began<lb/>
captors' list of demands.<lb/>
the police<lb/>
After getting through to Lum-<lb/>
berton police, Godfrey described<lb/>
the intruders, their weapons and<lb/>
other details. Then he had a brain-<lb/>
storm.<lb/>
I heard what they were saying<lb/>
"I told them to have the gover-<lb/>
nor to sign something and send it<lb/>
down to Lumberton' he said.<lb/>
darkened office during the first about wanting to talk to the gov<lb/>
confused moments of the take-<lb/>
over.<lb/>
"I backed slowly into the room<lb/>
and pulled door shut said the<lb/>
32-year-old government reporter.<lb/>
"I left the light off, locked the door<lb/>
and grabbed the phone<lb/>
ernor, so I called his office he<lb/>
said. "We kept an open line the<lb/>
whole time<lb/>
Godfrey provided the State<lb/>
Bureau of Inverstigation with<lb/>
vital deatils about the scene in the<lb/>
Before Godfrey called the gov- adjacent room, including his ob-<lb/>
emor, he made some other calls, scrvations on the mental and<lb/>
physical condition of Eddie<lb/>
"The first thing 1 did was dial Hatcher and Timothy Jacobs, who<lb/>
911, but all 1 got was a recording were charged with hostage-tak-<lb/>
two times he said. "1 said the ing and possession of sawed off<lb/>
heck with that and I called my shotguns.<lb/>
Hatcher overtakes paper<lb/>
for cause, say townspeople<lb/>
PEMBROKE (AP) � People store outside of town who knew<lb/>
who knew Eddie Hatcher well say Hatcher only as a customer, told<lb/>
he took over a newspaper office the Fayetteville Observer,<lb/>
for a cause, not to hurt people. "Every time I met him he was<lb/>
"He sees things are done wrong talking about church  . I'm<lb/>
in the county and nobody has the shocked, God knows I am<lb/>
guts to do anything about it' "The whole thing threw me off<lb/>
Jeannette Oxendine, owner of the when I heard about it said Glenn<lb/>
Prospect Beauty Shop in Pern- Locklear, owner of Glenn's Quick<lb/>
broke, said Tuesday, the day after Stop below the apartment<lb/>
Hatcher and Timothy Jacobs took Hatcher has lived the past two<lb/>
over The Robesonian newspaper months. "I never thought he<lb/>
in Lumberton. would do something like that. I<lb/>
"There's a lot of things that get ncvcr heard him use any type of<lb/>
smothered in this county � some bad language or talk out of the<lb/>
to believe I had to get out<lb/>
Godfrey stayed put for more<lb/>
than 10 hours until negotiations<lb/>
succeeded and he and the other<lb/>
hostages were set free.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Hank's Homemade Ice Cream<lb/>
and frozen yogurt<lb/>
321 East 10th Street. Greenville<lb/>
(Next to Wendy's)<lb/>
758-4896<lb/>
V<lb/>
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River Bluff Apartments<lb/>
2 Bd. Townhouses Temporarily Reduced to<lb/>
$295 month and Security Deposit of<lb/>
only $100 for 1 and 2 Bedrooms.<lb/>
�Fully Carpeted<lb/>
�Large Pool<lb/>
�Free Cable<lb/>
�ECU Bus Service<lb/>
�1 Bd. Garden Apts. Available<lb/>
10th Street Ext. to Riverbluff Rd. (1.5 miles from Campus)<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
This coupon good for<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
Your Valentine's Ice Cream Cake.<lb/>
We'll Write Your Greetings FREE.<lb/>
Order Today!<lb/>
Good Thru 2-14-88<lb/>
What Sweeter Way To Say I Love You!<lb/>
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"FT LAUDERDALE OR BUST'<lb/>
SPRING BREAK 1988<lb/>
Why Pay Hotel Prices &amp; Just Get A Room??<lb/>
For only $19.00 per person per -nite we offer you a<lb/>
1-Bedroom or 2-Bedroom Apartment, large Efficiency or<lb/>
Studio unit with full Furnished Kitchens.<lb/>
Pool - BBQ - Cable TV Bike Rentals<lb/>
Want to know more? Contact Debbie &amp; Ed Gold at:<lb/>
Venetian Court Apartments<lb/>
59-71 Isle of Venice<lb/>
Ft. Lauderdale, Fl 33301<lb/>
Or call 1-800-543-2006<lb/>
of the ways people die Ms.<lb/>
Oxendine said. "There's been a lot<lb/>
of instances we don't know what<lb/>
happened<lb/>
"He's not foolish said Cherry<lb/>
Sampson, another acquaintance<lb/>
of Hatcher. Sampson works at a<lb/>
printing store located next to The<lb/>
Carolina Indian Voice, a weekly<lb/>
newspaper for which Hatcher<lb/>
often wrote.  He's smart. I'm<lb/>
talking brains. Eddie ain't crazy.<lb/>
He's got a lot to say and he needs<lb/>
to be heard<lb/>
Wanda Godwin never met<lb/>
Hatcher but believes in his cause.<lb/>
She was interviewed Monday<lb/>
morning after visiting her hus-<lb/>
band, Harold, in the county jail<lb/>
located next to The Robesonian<lb/>
newspaper. On Friday, her hus-<lb/>
band was sentenced to serve two<lb/>
life sentences and 12 years on<lb/>
three sex convictions.<lb/>
"I've seen prejudices in the law<lb/>
enforecement agency, the court<lb/>
system and the county govern-<lb/>
ment she said. "He's (her hus-<lb/>
band) had trouble with the law all<lb/>
his life. I'm not saying he's an<lb/>
angel, I'm just saying he's been<lb/>
persecuted. He could have had a<lb/>
gang slaying and not got that<lb/>
much time<lb/>
Godwin said upper-middle<lb/>
class Indians and blacks get along<lb/>
fine with the whites in the county,<lb/>
it's poor people with little educa-<lb/>
tion who are mistreated and ig-<lb/>
nored. "People in power do not<lb/>
listen to them and they take ad-<lb/>
vantage of their ignorance God-<lb/>
win said. "I think things will be<lb/>
better (after this incident) because<lb/>
it will shed light to those who<lb/>
have ignored it in the past. It will<lb/>
open their eyes to what is going on<lb/>
m this county<lb/>
Others in this small town of<lb/>
about 3,500 where Hatcher and<lb/>
Jacobs lived said they were<lb/>
shocked that Hatcher would be<lb/>
involved in hostage-taking.<lb/>
Alvemor Jacobs said he got to<lb/>
know and like Hatcher when<lb/>
Hatcher played piano for his gos-<lb/>
pel group at Mount Hebron Free<lb/>
Will Baptist Church.<lb/>
"Eddie was a fine fellow<lb/>
Jacobs recalled. "I can't imagine<lb/>
what happened. He was sincere in<lb/>
his playing and he was sincere in<lb/>
his belief and he tried to do the<lb/>
best he could. I was really sur-<lb/>
prised when I turned on the news<lb/>
and heard the name Eddie<lb/>
Hatcher<lb/>
"He was just as nice as can be,<lb/>
alsways had that happy-go-lucky<lb/>
smile Annie Pearl, a Lubee In-<lb/>
dian who owns a tiny quick-stop<lb/>
way or anything like that.<lb/>
Gifts Only<lb/>
For The<lb/>
Romantic<lb/>
At Heart<lb/>
DAPPER<lb/>
DAN'S<lb/>
116 E. 5th St. � 752-1750<lb/>
Vintage Clothing,<lb/>
Jewelry, Collectibles,<lb/>
Antiques<lb/>
HastCarplina<lb/>
Playhouse<lb/>
1987-88<lb/>
Season<lb/>
presents<lb/>
LiHian Helfman's adaptation<lb/>
of Jean AnouihVs<lb/>
LJt<lb/>
FEBRUARY 10-13<lb/>
8:15 pm<lb/>
Genera! Public: $5 00<lb/>
ECU Students: $4 00<lb/>
"The ever-fascinating<lb/>
story of Joan of Arc"<lb/>
� NY. Times<lb/>
CALL:<lb/>
757-6390<lb/>
McGINNIS THEATRE<lb/>
(Comer of Fifth &amp; Eastern)<lb/>
800 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
752-1907<lb/>
MonThurs.<lb/>
11:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.<lb/>
FriSat.<lb/>
11:00 a.m1:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
11:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m.<lb/>
Monday:<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
Sunday:<lb/>
BLOODY MARY BLUES DAY<lb/>
Bloody Marys and Screwdrivers $1.95<lb/>
TOAST YOUR TUESDAY OFF<lb/>
House Brand Highballs for $1.95<lb/>
RD3TACULAR 5-9 P.M.<lb/>
All You Can Eat Beef Ribs  $7.95<lb/>
Includes Slaw, Potatoe and Bread<lb/>
Draft Beer For $1.00 Mug, $4.50 Pitcher<lb/>
HOPS AND SCHNAPPS<lb/>
Bottle Beers $1.00. All Schnapps Shots $1.00<lb/>
PRIME TIME"<lb/>
Prime Rib. Darryl's Cut $12.95, Regular $9.95<lb/>
RESTAURANT'S EMPLOYEE APPRECIATION DAY<lb/>
Drink Specials � Live Entertainment by E.G. Peters<lb/>
 u<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Fosdickfs<lb/>
All You Care To Eat<lb/>
Flounder<lb/>
$5.95<lb/>
Lunch Guarantee<lb/>
10 MIN. SERVICE ON LUNCHEON<lb/>
FRIED SHRIMP FROM TIME YOU<lb/>
PLACE YOUR ORDER OR THE<lb/>
NEXT ONE IS ON US.<lb/>
MON. THRU FRI.<lb/>
DAWIONA<lb/>
TEXAN<lb/>
W MTV Uteot mttm<lb/>
01 Seu�<lb/>
 featuring Qaytona's hottest Spring Break hotels<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
TRAVELOOGE<lb/>
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TRAVELOOGE<lb/>
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CUREKOC<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
CARRIAGE HOUSE<lb/>
YOUR TRIP INCLUQf S.<lb/>
Driving Package<lb/>
Without Transportation <lb/>
Quad Occupancy"<lb/>
fuif Package<lb/>
W�h Transportation a<lb/>
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Full Package<lb/>
With Transportation <lb/>
Five Per Room W<lb/>
THE BEST OF EVERYTHING TO<lb/>
<lb/>
-zZWii<lb/>
FOSDICKS<lb/>
1890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
2903 S. Evans St.<lb/>
Takeout Orders; 7WMW <lb/>
135<lb/>
205<lb/>
195<lb/>
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INSURE YOU THE BEST SPRING BREW<lb/>
Best Hotel-<lb/>
Guaranteed<lb/>
you know where you will be<lb/>
staying an this trip<lb/>
(with other trips??)<lb/>
Best location in<lb/>
Oaytona<lb/>
Sen t let a poor location ruin ,<lb/>
im the Oaytona strip ;s<lb/>
23 miles long!)<lb/>
Shouting Distance<lb/>
from Everything<lb/>
The top bars, restaurants, txpus mi<lb/>
free ewKarts (not a taxi ritfs<lb/>
sway like other trips)<lb/>
Top of the Line<lb/>
Luxury<lb/>
For Hie meet i<lb/>
trip h ftansa.<lb/>
To Sign Up<lb/>
Or For More Info<lb/>
Go by 214 or<lb/>
Slay Dorm or Call<lb/>
Lisa<lb/>
at 758-8888 <lb/>
or Megan<lb/>
at 758-8887<lb/>
Meet At Slay Dorm Lobby January 21st at 5 p.m. for more details<lb/>
Pool Beck<lb/>
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The MMtt stoatst pen in<lb/>
 so might has t chuptr trip<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057941_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARYS 1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
MALE STRIPPERS needed to do stnp-a<lb/>
grams and bachelorette parties in the<lb/>
Greenville area. Experienced strippers<lb/>
need onlv apply Party Animals, 830-<lb/>
1813<lb/>
PART-TIME position open for delivery<lb/>
person. Must be able to work from 2:00 to<lb/>
6:30 p.m. MonFri. Appply at Factory<lb/>
Mattress and Waterbeds, Greenville<lb/>
Blvd next to the Plaza<lb/>
RESIDENT COUNSELOR: Interested in<lb/>
those with Human Service background<lb/>
washing to gam valuable experience in<lb/>
the field. No monetary compensation,<lb/>
however room, utilities and phone pro-<lb/>
vided. Call Marv Smith, the REAL Crisis<lb/>
Center. 758-HELP<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING applications for<lb/>
counselors, a waterfront director, and<lb/>
assistant swim instructors. Friendly Day<lb/>
Cam p is a summer camp for mentally and<lb/>
phvsicallv handicapped children and<lb/>
adults. Please write or call: The Speical<lb/>
Populations Program, P.O. box 50,<lb/>
Raleigh. N.C 27602, (19 755-6832.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Part time Interior<lb/>
Design Student-send resume to: De-<lb/>
signer, 3010 East 10th Street, Greenville,<lb/>
C.<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANT in<lb/>
exchange for free room and board in a<lb/>
nice 2 bedroom, 2 bath house. Will need 3<lb/>
1 2-4 hours work per day, 7 davs a week.<lb/>
Located 12 miles outside of town. Call Joy<lb/>
Foster at 746-2588, 746-3513 or 758-2399!<lb/>
BUCCANEER NEEDS someone to assist<lb/>
photographer during portraits. Feb. 8-12<lb/>
�Ml Feb. 15-19. Everyday between 9-5.<lb/>
Minimum wage. If interested, call 757-<lb/>
6501<lb/>
COUNSELOR POSITIONS ACTIVITY<lb/>
SPECIALISTS. CAMP STARLIGHT in<lb/>
STARLIGHT, PA now has openings for<lb/>
qualified, outgoing upperclassmen<lb/>
women as cabin counselors, leadersin-<lb/>
structors in most Activity Areas: land<lb/>
sports tennis, gymnastics, swimming<lb/>
sailing, canoeing, water skiing, nature,<lb/>
music, drama, stage, arts &amp; crafts; work-<lb/>
ing with a mature staff of 100 counselors<lb/>
from the US. and England on a 385 acre<lb/>
campus with excellent facilities, 623-8<lb/>
23 Internships encouraged. Write 18<lb/>
Clinton St Malverne, NY. 11565 or call<lb/>
516 599-5239 or call the ECU Co-op office<lb/>
757-6079.<lb/>
BE ON T.V. Manv needed for commeri-<lb/>
cials. Details. (1" 805-687-6000 Ext. TV 1166.<lb/>
ANYONE INTERESTED In writing for<lb/>
the Buccaneer Yearbook, please call 757-<lb/>
6501 or stop by the Buccaneer office. A full-<lb/>
time position may be considered.<lb/>
GREENVILLE RECREATION AND<lb/>
PARTKS DEPARTMENT SPRING IN-<lb/>
DOOR SOCCER COACHES. The<lb/>
Greenville Recreation and Parks Depart-<lb/>
ment is recruiting for indoor soccer<lb/>
coaches. The program will begin in March<lb/>
and the hours of work will vary, 3:30-9:00<lb/>
p.m Monday through Friday and 10:00<lb/>
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on Saturdays, working<lb/>
approximately 20 hours per week. The<lb/>
program will last about eleven weeks.<lb/>
Some soccer background is required. You<lb/>
will need to teach soccer fundamentals,<lb/>
team play, and strategies to youngsters<lb/>
ages 5 through 15. Rate of pay will $3.55 to<lb/>
$3.85 per hour. Minimum age is 16. Contact<lb/>
Ben James at 830-4543 for more informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
ENERGETIC, IMAGE CONSCIOUS<lb/>
individual wpleasant personality<lb/>
wanted to do light secretarial work. Must<lb/>
have own transportation. Hours nego-<lb/>
tiable. Apply in person, Friday, Feb 5th,<lb/>
between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. At Beverly<lb/>
Manor, Apt 1-A, 1108 E. 10th St<lb/>
Greenville � no calls please.<lb/>
DISABLED graduate student needs part-<lb/>
time physical assistant. Contact Marty at<lb/>
752-2994.<lb/>
PORNOGRAPY DFBATF<lb/>
Pom star Gloria Leonard will be debat-<lb/>
ing the founder of Women Against Por-<lb/>
nography on Feb. 9 at 8 p.m. in Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre. Some of the issues to be dis-<lb/>
cussed will be sexual oppression vs. artis-<lb/>
tic freedom. Tickets infor available at the<lb/>
Central Ticket office in Mendenhall. 757-<lb/>
6611 ext. 266. Sponsored by the Student<lb/>
Union Forum Committee<lb/>
EROS<lb/>
EROS, The female spiritual or psycho-<lb/>
logical principle of love, unity, and peace,<lb/>
manifests itself in the Equal Rights Or-<lb/>
ganization of Students here at ECU. Meet-<lb/>
ings will be held on Wednesdays at 5 p.m<lb/>
in Austin 308. All interested persons are<lb/>
invited to attend. For more info, call 758-<lb/>
3645 or 752-7998.<lb/>
ASSERTIVENESS<lb/>
A three part workshop offered to stu-<lb/>
dents at no cost by the University Coun-<lb/>
seling Center will be held Jan. 28 and Feb.<lb/>
4 &amp; 11. All three sessions will be con-<lb/>
ducted from 3-4 P.M. in 312 Wright<lb/>
Building. Learn how to express your-<lb/>
selves directly and openly and sharpen<lb/>
your interpersonal skills. Please call the<lb/>
Counseling Center at 757-6661 for Regis-<lb/>
tration.<lb/>
DIVE CLUB<lb/>
There will be a meeting on Thurs. Feb.<lb/>
4at7p.m. Li Mendenhall rooms8D, E,and<lb/>
F. We are Key West Bound. Those inter-<lb/>
ested should join us at the meeting. Every-<lb/>
one is invited.<lb/>
KERYGMA<lb/>
A Bible study for those who are serious<lb/>
about studying the Bible. Weekly meet-<lb/>
ings (tentatively Tues. afternoon) will be<lb/>
scheduled to accomodate those who are<lb/>
interested. Kerygma is an interdenomina-<lb/>
tional program sponsored by Presbyte-<lb/>
rian Campus Ministry. For more infor.<lb/>
Call Mike at 752-7240.<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
The Coffeehouse is holding auditions<lb/>
for interested bands and musicians to<lb/>
perform in the Coffeehouse Underground<lb/>
- Mendenhall. Registration forms may be<lb/>
obtained in Rm. 234 Mendenhall. Audi-<lb/>
tions will by Friday, Feb. 5 at 8 pm. Free<lb/>
admission - open to the public<lb/>
SAVE THOSE WRAPPERS<lb/>
Deposit all empty Socklets Natural<lb/>
Flavor Gum packs and Doritos Brand<lb/>
Cool Ranch flavor tortilla chip bags in the<lb/>
FOUR STAR PIZZA<lb/>
� �<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
DELIVERY PERSONNEL NEEDED<lb/>
REQUIREMENTS: Must be at least 18. Must have own car, a valid driver's license &amp; insurance. Must have clean, neat appear ance. WAGEWS: Our drivers average S6 to S10 per hour with salary, tips &amp; cash commission (paid daily.) BENEFITS: Paid vacation. Promotion from within. APPLY IN PERSON FOUR STAR PIZZA 114 E. 10th Greenville. NC<lb/>
Wanted:<lb/>
Boxers Register<lb/>
Now for TKE<lb/>
boxing<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
March 29, 30,31.<lb/>
Call<lb/>
752-6032<lb/>
758-7144<lb/>
BUSINESS SERVICES<lb/>
VALENTINES DAY Party Animals<lb/>
Balloons delivered in costume Fun! Fun!<lb/>
Fun! Ask about student specials. 830-1823.<lb/>
SOUND MIXTURES DJ. Service is back<lb/>
in Greenville! Back with more equipment,<lb/>
more experience, and even better sound<lb/>
quality. For more information, don't hesi-<lb/>
tate to call Bob at 752-4916.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24 hours<lb/>
in and out. Guaranteed typing on paper up<lb/>
to 20 hand written pages. SDF Professional<lb/>
computer Services, 106 East 5th Street<lb/>
(beside Cubbies) Greenville, N.C. 752-<lb/>
3694.<lb/>
MID WINTER BOP: The original is still<lb/>
here. Old Wax. New Wax. The<lb/>
TRASHMAN D.J. service. Approved by<lb/>
thousands. Discover it. Bashes, formals,<lb/>
mixers, socials, etc. . . . dial 752-3587 any-<lb/>
time. Many thanx.<lb/>
ECU-For the best tan-the best service-the<lb/>
best deal-start spring break early. Call<lb/>
California Tanning today at 355-7858.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
COMPUTERSOFTWARE<lb/>
DISKETTES from IMEX INTERNA-<lb/>
TIONAL. February special 10 off any<lb/>
PC system. Word Perfect 5.0 only<lb/>
$277.50; soft-sectored diskettes with<lb/>
reinforced ring, DS, DD only 9.50 per 10<lb/>
Box. Call IMEX at 758-8395<lb/>
IS IT TRU YOU can buy jeeps for S44<lb/>
through the U.S. government? Get the<lb/>
facts today! Call 1-312-742-1142 Ext. 5271-<lb/>
A.<lb/>
FOR SALE - 1979 Sunbird-runs-only<lb/>
S300.00. Call 752-7481, leave message.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK 1988. South Padre or<lb/>
Daytona Deluxe Condos or Hotel ac-<lb/>
commodation starting at low $149.00 per<lb/>
person for 7 nights. Call 1-800-222-4139.<lb/>
Transportation available.<lb/>
1982 HONDA CIVIC. Excellent condi-<lb/>
tion. 5-speed, AC, AMFM. One owner.<lb/>
S2500.00. Call 756-6675 after 6, 559-5158<lb/>
8 to 5.<lb/>
CAN YOU BUY Jeeps, Cars, 4 x 4 s<lb/>
Seized in drug raids for under $100.00?<lb/>
Call for facts today. 602-837-3401 Ext. 711.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Electronic typewriter, ex-<lb/>
cellent condition. Great for student use.<lb/>
$35.00. Call 757-3895, evenings.<lb/>
RED HOT bargains! Drug dealers' cars,<lb/>
boats, planes repo'd. Surplus. Your<lb/>
area. Buvers Guide. (1) 805-687-6000 Ext.<lb/>
S-1166.<lb/>
heater, liner and frame. Call Dan at 756-<lb/>
9694 or 758-1626.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ski America's largest ski<lb/>
resort "Heavenly Valley" Lake Tahoe.<lb/>
For Spring Break. Have one five-con-<lb/>
secutive day pass remaining - worth<lb/>
$150.00, asking $100.00. Valid through<lb/>
May-Call Ray 757-0313!<lb/>
CANCUN MEXICO - (1) round trip<lb/>
ticket from Atlanta for March 6-13. Beat<lb/>
Florida's early March chills and enjoy<lb/>
cheap Mexican beer . . . among other<lb/>
things. Call Thomas at 758-8406.<lb/>
APPLE PERSONAL phone modem,<lb/>
3001200 Baud, brand new, never been<lb/>
used. Paid $315.00, asking $250.00 or best<lb/>
offer. 758-6091.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK T'SHIRTS: If you<lb/>
thought the Halloween shirts were hot,<lb/>
wait until you see the Spring Break '88 t's.<lb/>
Get them while they last. Call Phil or Troll<lb/>
at 83a 1447 or 757-1007.<lb/>
TROLLS TUX AND TEES: Don't pay<lb/>
high prices for your formal wear, try<lb/>
Troll's Tux and Tee's for your formal<lb/>
needs. Traditional and designer models.<lb/>
Special fraternity rates. Call 757-1007 or<lb/>
830-1447.<lb/>
BUY 14K GOLD bracelets and necklaces<lb/>
at wholesale prices; buy from a direct<lb/>
dealer at 752-4589 - David Duprce, and<lb/>
Skip the Jewelers High Prices.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share<lb/>
nice, 2 bedroom apartment on Library<lb/>
Street. $125.00 a month. Includes heat and<lb/>
cable - plus 12 electricity. Call 752-7796.<lb/>
Keep trying!<lb/>
NEED MALE ROOMMATE to share 2<lb/>
bedroom Village Green Apartment.<lb/>
$148.00 a month plus one-half utilities.<lb/>
Call 752-2546.<lb/>
ROOM AVAILABLE: near campus for a<lb/>
female; non-smoker. Call 757-1798.<lb/>
ROOMMATE(S) WANTED for 3 bed<lb/>
room house; fenced in yard, 15 minutes<lb/>
from campus, pets ok, rent and utilities<lb/>
reasonable, lots of storage space.<lb/>
Call 758-6998.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: female, non-<lb/>
smoker. Must be neat and responsible.<lb/>
$150.00 per month, plus 12 utilities, 3<lb/>
blocks from campus. Call 758-7245.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
$147.50 per month, fully furnished apart-<lb/>
ment, within driving distance from cam-<lb/>
pus. Call 355-6730, leave message.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to share 3 bed<lb/>
room apartment. $98.00 a month, 13<lb/>
utilities. Call Gary or Steve at 758-1573.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED. 13<lb/>
rent, 13 utilities, 3 bedroom apartment. 1<lb/>
bath and 12 bath. 13 deposit required.<lb/>
Tar River Estates. Call Tommie at 752-<lb/>
1321.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS: apartments for<lb/>
rent. Furnished. Contact Hollie Si-<lb/>
monowich at 752-2865.<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
� All New �<lb/>
�And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E 5th Street<lb/>
� Iocated Near ECU<lb/>
�Near Major Shopping Centers<lb/>
�Across From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
limited OfTer - $275 a month<lb/>
Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756 7815 or 830 1937<lb/>
Office open - Apt 8. 12 - 530 p m<lb/>
�AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clean and quiet one bedroom furnished<lb/>
 apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. $195 a month. 6<lb/>
month lease. MOBILE HOME RENTALS -<lb/>
couples or singles. Apartment and mobile<lb/>
 homes In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley<lb/>
County Club.<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
BEVERLY MANOR APARTMENTS<lb/>
now leasing spacious 2 bedroom units<lb/>
with large living room and dining area.<lb/>
New carpet, new wallpaper in kitchen<lb/>
and bath. Range and refrigerator pro-<lb/>
vided. Central heatair, coldhot water<lb/>
and basic cable t.v. included in rent. As<lb/>
low as $335.00 per month. Call 756-5155<lb/>
days, 746-2098 evenings for appoint-<lb/>
ment. <lb/>
ECU: For the best tan - The best service<lb/>
- The best deal - start Spnng Break early.<lb/>
Call California Tanning today at 355-<lb/>
7858.<lb/>
SCHWINN PRELUDE 23' Columbus<lb/>
frame diacompe braking, sugino crank,<lb/>
SIS gearing and weinman rims. 8<lb/>
months old. $325.00 neg. Call Chris at<lb/>
752-5157.<lb/>
WATERBED $100.00. Complete with<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: $125.00 per month.<lb/>
No deposit. On campus bus route. 1.2<lb/>
miles from campus. Call 1-800-682-1331<lb/>
or 758-2948. Ask for William.<lb/>
TWO ROOMMATES NEEDED to share<lb/>
room in Wild wood Villas. $125.00 each<lb/>
plus utilities. Call Julie at 752-4781.<lb/>
FOR RENT: condo, 2 bedroom, 112 bath,<lb/>
fireplace, washer and dryer, like new<lb/>
Shuttle bus access. Only $355.00 a month!<lb/>
Call 946-3981.<lb/>
JIM MORRISON - It's been over a year<lb/>
and a half since the Back Doors have been<lb/>
to the Attic - a year and a half to long.<lb/>
AOPI: Super Sunday at Grog's was<lb/>
rockin' as Washington was rollin We<lb/>
parried til the end so let's do it again!<lb/>
Love, Theta Chi.<lb/>
SHUG A VERY- would send you a floral<lb/>
bouquet-but you haven't taken a vow of<lb/>
silence. We are outta control - Honey. PS.<lb/>
What happened this weekend?<lb/>
MHB-AKA Carol, Fats- We need you -<lb/>
our father figure! I'm glad we're friends-<lb/>
the original Debbie.<lb/>
DELTA SIG: Superbowl was a blast -<lb/>
pledge get me a bear and a a garrotte!<lb/>
Congratulations to all the new guys!<lb/>
Todd-how many hits!? Faircloth-sodal<lb/>
maybe? Jamie, what about Brotherhood?<lb/>
AAAAAAAAGGGHHH Reggie-<lb/>
WORD?<lb/>
THETA CHI: How 'bout those skins? The<lb/>
AOPi's had a great time watching the<lb/>
Superbowl at Grog's with you! Let's<lb/>
make it an annual event<lb/>
TOM: A long-distance message from the<lb/>
one who loves you the most. The week-<lb/>
end was great! I can't wait to see you in<lb/>
three. Love-The Bitch.<lb/>
DENNIS HOCUTT: Hey! Hope this<lb/>
semester is going well for you! We miss<lb/>
seeing you around! Give us a call, ok7<lb/>
Love, Kathie and Ann.<lb/>
RUSH CHI ALPHA OMEGA, The fra-<lb/>
ternity for eternity" a Christian social fra-<lb/>
ternity. Social 9.30, Saturday, February 6<lb/>
209 A E. 14th Street Call for more infor<lb/>
mation or rides. 758-4695.<lb/>
KA BROTHERS AND LITTLE<lb/>
SISTERS Super Bowl was a blast. Lot's<lb/>
party again Thrusday at 8 00 We're<lb/>
downtown bound.<lb/>
ARE WOMEN exploited through por<lb/>
nography or is it an art form which pro<lb/>
vides freedom of expression, protected<lb/>
under the Constitution7 Come mh? the<lb/>
fiery debate between porn star and I hrf,<lb/>
Society publisher, Gloria Leonard vs<lb/>
founding member of N O.W. and<lb/>
Women Against Pornography, Dolores<lb/>
Alexander on February 9 at 8 00 p m in<lb/>
I lendrix Theatre Tickets are $1 (X) stu-<lb/>
dents, $4 00 facultystaff, and $5 Ofj.<lb/>
public. Available at central ticket ofl<lb/>
Mendenhall. Sponsored by the Student<lb/>
Union Forum Committee<lb/>
THE NEW DELI WANTS YOU to ,am<lb/>
like you aint jammed before' Catch the<lb/>
infamous Bad Checks with the Flat Duo<lb/>
Jets on Thursday, and don't dare miss<lb/>
Widespread Panic on Fridav, and come<lb/>
hear Roily Gray and Sunfire Saturday<lb/>
mon<lb/>
SIG EPS � Hey Mike Wyies, Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi lake wasn't that bad was j See a at<lb/>
brotherhood Alex<lb/>
GARY HART for President-let the<lb/>
people decide! You can participate m his<lb/>
grass roots campaign for the N.C. Presi-<lb/>
dential Pnmarv on March 8th For anv<lb/>
questions or further information call Bob<lb/>
at 758-2570.<lb/>
YES, HAPPY CAMPERS, it's time agam<lb/>
to rejoice. The Red 1 louse is inviting you<lb/>
for another night of Karma and fun, and<lb/>
the celebration will last til the dawn of the<lb/>
sun. No birthdays this time, but, we now<lb/>
have a I lappv Camper Tree, and on Sat-<lb/>
urday, the 6th, Babs, Bev and Cina are<lb/>
having another bash, so party with us and<lb/>
you'll see! Donations<lb/>
COME SEE THE star of the X rated film<lb/>
classic "Misty Beethoven Glona Le-<lb/>
onard, defend pornography, while the<lb/>
founder of Women Against Pornogra-<lb/>
phy, Dolores Alexander, condmnsit This<lb/>
hot debate will take place in Hendnx<lb/>
Theatre, February th at 8.00 p.m. Tickets<lb/>
are $3.00-studcnts, 4.00-facultystaff,<lb/>
$5.00-public Available at central ticket<lb/>
office, Mendenhall Sponsored bv. Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Forum Committee.<lb/>
NECKLACE FOUND near Garten and<lb/>
Fletcher dorms Please call 756-2082.<lb/>
(Randy).<lb/>
SIG EPS � see ,a at the happy hour at<lb/>
Grog's, the formal date panic has begun.<lb/>
Does Gloria Leonard have a date7 Maybe<lb/>
maddog will come back and take her<lb/>
PHI TAUS: Happy Founders' Day - con-<lb/>
gratulations for being part of a thriving<lb/>
fraternity for the last 26 vears Indeed, "A<lb/>
Legend For All Times<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
U. S. College Comedy Competition dis-<lb/>
plays located in the Student Book Store<lb/>
lobby and Mendenhall. ECU could win a<lb/>
free comedy concert if we collect the most<lb/>
wrappers.<lb/>
PIANIST<lb/>
The ECU Performing Arts Series pres-<lb/>
ents internationally acclaimed pianist<lb/>
Eugene Istomin on Thurs, Feb. 11, at 8pm<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium. A trio formed with<lb/>
Isaac Stern, Leonard Rose, And Mr. Is-<lb/>
tomin collected a Grammy Award in 1971<lb/>
for Best Chamber Music Performance.<lb/>
Ticketscan be purchased at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter, or by calling 757-6611 ext. 266.<lb/>
JAZZ<lb/>
The Performing Arts Series at ECU is<lb/>
proud to present Richard Stoltzman and<lb/>
Woody Herman's Thudering Herd in, "A<lb/>
Tribute to Woody on Thurs. Feb. 11 at<lb/>
8:00pm in Wright Auditorium. Under the<lb/>
direction of Frank Tiberim, the Thunder-<lb/>
ing Herd will perform many of the works<lb/>
with which it is associated. From "Cal-<lb/>
donia to "Ebony Concerto Tickets can<lb/>
be purchased at the Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. 757-6611 ext.<lb/>
266.<lb/>
BALLET<lb/>
The Atlanta Ballet will perform in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium on Tues, Feb. 16, at<lb/>
8pm. Included in the evening's program<lb/>
are two new works: "Reflections For by<lb/>
Artistic director Robert Barnett and an<lb/>
untitled work by Lisa De Ribere. Tickets<lb/>
available at Central Ticket Office in Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center.<lb/>
RACOUETBALL<lb/>
Registration for intramural racquetball<lb/>
doubles will be held February 10 at 6 p.m<lb/>
in MG102. For more information call 757-<lb/>
6387.<lb/>
CHALLENGE DAY<lb/>
Registration for Intramural Challenge<lb/>
Day wil be held on March 2 from 11 p.m6<lb/>
p.m. in MG 104-A. For more information<lb/>
call 757-6387.<lb/>
BACKPACKING CLINTC<lb/>
Registration for the Intramural Out-<lb/>
door Recreation Backpacking Clinic will<lb/>
be from Feb. 8-Feb. 22. The Activity date<lb/>
will be on Feb. 24 at 6 p.m. For more<lb/>
information call 757-6387.<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
There will be meetings every Thursday<lb/>
at 6.00 in the culture center. Everybody<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
CRISIS INTFRVFNTTOM<lb/>
We need your experience. Your<lb/>
achievements in everyday situations can<lb/>
be useful to others. Earn that feeling of<lb/>
accomplishment. Real Crisis Center is<lb/>
recruiting volunteer crisis counselors. We<lb/>
wil be offering training classes in this<lb/>
enriching field beginning February 8. call<lb/>
758-HELP or come by 312 East 10th Street.<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
The ECU College Republicans will<lb/>
meet every Tuesday night in room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall at 7 p.m. Call 758-5775 or 752-<lb/>
3587.<lb/>
ROBERTSON<lb/>
Students who would like to help with<lb/>
getting MG. "Pat" Robertson elected<lb/>
President, contact Justin Sturz at 758-2047.<lb/>
Organizational meeting will be held soon.<lb/>
EDUCATION MAJORS<lb/>
This year the ECU School of Education<lb/>
and the Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Service will be offering a Career Day for<lb/>
ECU students in addition to regular on-<lb/>
campus interviewing. Some students wil<lb/>
explore future full-time employment op-<lb/>
tions and many underclassmen may ex-<lb/>
plore possible careers in various geo-<lb/>
graphical areas. Over 50 school systems<lb/>
will be set up at tables in Rooms 244 and<lb/>
221 of Mendenhall on that day. All stu-<lb/>
dents in the education field are invited to<lb/>
participate in the Education Careers Day.<lb/>
Mark your calendars for February 16,1988.<lb/>
CQFFEEHQUSE<lb/>
Applications are being accepted for<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee members. Any-<lb/>
one is eligible to apply. Come by 234<lb/>
Mendenhall for more details.<lb/>
ART MAJORS<lb/>
The Student Union Special Events<lb/>
Committee is looking for students to draw<lb/>
characarures during Barefoot On The<lb/>
Mall. We will pay $100.00 apiece to the two<lb/>
best characature artists we find. Those<lb/>
interested in auditioning please contact<lb/>
Lynn Jobes at the Student Union Program<lb/>
office at 757-6611, ext 272.<lb/>
COOPERATIVE ED.<lb/>
Would you like to spend the summer of<lb/>
fall in Florida? Walt Disney World will be<lb/>
on campus to recruit students for summer<lb/>
or fail semesters. Students from all majors<lb/>
are encouraged to participate. Merchan-<lb/>
dise, food, and attractions, among other<lb/>
positions, are available. Representatives<lb/>
will be at ECU on February 22 and 23.<lb/>
Contact the office of Cooperative Educa-<lb/>
tion in Rawl Building for further details.<lb/>
CAMPUS GIRL SCOUTS<lb/>
New mating schedule: Every Tuesday<lb/>
at 6:00 p.m. in Mendenhall. We will wel-<lb/>
come new members. Call Nancy at 551-<lb/>
2583 from 8:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
ECHO will have its first business meet-<lb/>
ing on Thursday, February 4 at 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
in the Honors Lounge in Ragsdale. Elec-<lb/>
tions will be held and activities for the<lb/>
semester will be planned.<lb/>
SEP<lb/>
Students for Economic Democracy will<lb/>
meet every Sunday from 7:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall 8-D. For more information,<lb/>
call 758-9760 or 746-6049.<lb/>
CAMPUS MINISTRIES<lb/>
Worship God and celebrate Commun-<lb/>
ion this Wednesday night at 5:00 pjn. at<lb/>
the Methodist Student Center. Also avail-<lb/>
able: all-you-can-eat meal which is $2.00<lb/>
at the door, $1.50 in advance. Call 758-2030<lb/>
for reservations. Sponsored by Presbyte-<lb/>
rian and Methodist Campus Ministries.<lb/>
ECU FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
There will be practice every Tuesday,<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday at 2:30 on In-<lb/>
tramural Fields 5 and'6 behind Minges<lb/>
Colliseum and on Sunday at 2:00. New<lb/>
players welcome.<lb/>
COOPERATIVE ED.<lb/>
If you are work-study eligible, you may<lb/>
be interested in a job off-campus this<lb/>
semester or in the summer or fall of 1988.<lb/>
Please contact the Cooperative Education<lb/>
office, 312 Rawl Building, for further in-<lb/>
formation.<lb/>
GARY HART<lb/>
You can participate in Gary Hart's<lb/>
grass roots campaign for the N.C Presi-<lb/>
dential Primary on March 8. For any ques-<lb/>
tions or further information, please call<lb/>
Bob at 758-2570.<lb/>
NAACZ<lb/>
The ECU chapter of the NAACP will be<lb/>
held on Thursday, February 4, 1988 in the<lb/>
Cultural Center at 5:00. All committee<lb/>
chairpersons should be present in addi-<lb/>
tion to all interested students.<lb/>
rh6 FSlloTsr<lb/>
The Rho Epsilon chapter of ECU wel-<lb/>
comes Craig Ralph to ECU. Mr. Ralph of<lb/>
Ralph At Associates will be giving a pres-<lb/>
entation on Corporate and Commercial<lb/>
Real Estate. All Rho Epsilon members and<lb/>
intersted students and faculty are encour-<lb/>
aged to attend on Monday, February 8 at<lb/>
5:00 p.m in room 212 mendenhall.<lb/>
PRIME TTMF<lb/>
Prime Time, sponsored by Campus<lb/>
Crusade for Christ, meets every Thursday<lb/>
at 730 p.m. in Brewster C-103. Everyone is<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
BLACK HISTOHy MONTi<lb/>
Program on sucess and leadership,<lb/>
guest speaker, step show. Mayor Ed Car-<lb/>
ter, refreshments, special music. 730 pm<lb/>
Tuesday 9,1988, Jenkins.<lb/>
INTERVIEW WORK?HOp<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Service in the Bloxton House is offering<lb/>
these one hour sessions to aid you in<lb/>
developing better interviewing skills. A<lb/>
film and discussion of how to interview<lb/>
on and off campus will be shared. These<lb/>
sessions are held in the Career Planning<lb/>
Room on Feb. 1 at 3pm and 7pm and on<lb/>
Feb. 4,10,18, and 23 at 3pm.<lb/>
INTRAMimAI,S<lb/>
The Department of Intramural-Recrea-<lb/>
tion Services and the Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Center is sponsoring a Canoe Clinic on<lb/>
Feb. 16 and 18. Registration for this trip<lb/>
will be taken in 204 Memorial Gym from<lb/>
8:00 am to 5:00 pm through Feb. 15.<lb/>
FERRARA 19fiq<lb/>
There are still openings for participants<lb/>
in ECU's Summer Program in Ferrara<lb/>
Italy. Cost is $1,725 and includes round'<lb/>
trip airfare, hotels, and travel in Italy. For<lb/>
additional information contact the Office<lb/>
of the Dean, Arts and Sciences, Brewster<lb/>
A-102, 757-6249.<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
Coping with stress? A free mini class<lb/>
offered by the East Carolina University<lb/>
Counseling Center for Students. Feb. 9,11,<lb/>
16, and 18.329 Wright Building from 3-4<lb/>
pm. Call or stop by the Counseling Center<lb/>
for more information (757-6661).<lb/>
AMAFMA MeeiiNG<lb/>
The American Marketing Association<lb/>
in congunctton with The Financial Man-<lb/>
agment Association will be holding its<lb/>
I of the semester on Thurs-<lb/>
day, Feb. 4. The meeting will be held at<lb/>
4:30 in rm. 221 in old Jovner Library-<lb/>
Chuck Wilson from Wachovia Bank and<lb/>
Trust will speak on the topic of "Banking<lb/>
as a Marketing Career<lb/>
WRESTLING CLUB<lb/>
The wrestling dub has started practice<lb/>
for the Spring Semester in preparation for<lb/>
the IRS Tournament. If interested come by<lb/>
Memorial Gym in room 108. Practice ev<lb/>
ery Monday and Wednesday night from<lb/>
8-9 pm. For more information call Tommy<lb/>
Leppert at 752-1660.<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
Making a Major Decision Group This<lb/>
program is designed to aid students in<lb/>
choosing an academic major in a small<lb/>
group format. Each participant will also<lb/>
receive individual aid from the group<lb/>
leader if desired. Group participants will<lb/>
increase self knowledge of their interests,<lb/>
values and abilities; learn how these relate<lb/>
to majors and career areas at ECU; and<lb/>
narrow their options through a systematic<lb/>
career decision makin process. The Major<lb/>
Decision Group will meet: February 8,10,<lb/>
12 at 3-4 pm in 329 Wright Building. For<lb/>
more information call 757-6661.<lb/>
V )UTC<lb/>
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Kirk talks to hostage takers<lb/>
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Phil Kirk<lb/>
with two<lb/>
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personal safety be guaranteed. Martin was notified of the situ- amensty<lb/>
"He told me in a friendly way that ation around 10 am as he was Hatcher did insist that he not be<lb/>
he  had enough friends that if preparing to fly to Charlotte for a jailed in Wake, Cumberland,<lb/>
:<lb/>
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't "I just had to<lb/>
tru it me Kirk said,<lb/>
�ventually be-<lb/>
tch other on a<lb/>
anything happened to him 1 scheduled appearance. He<lb/>
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"1 have to admit 1 shed a few the offices of the Highway Patrol<lb/>
tears Kirk said. "1 got real emo- commander near the Legislative<lb/>
tional about it. There were times Building.<lb/>
when I really felt some people Shortly thereafter, Kirk placed<lb/>
were going to be killed the first of five telephone calls to<lb/>
Hatcher and Timothy Jacobs, the hostage takers,<lb/>
members of the Lumbee tribel Coached by Martin, State Bu-<lb/>
finally who said they wanted to call at- reau of Investigation deputy di-<lb/>
tention to law-enforcement cor- rector Charles Dunn and others,<lb/>
ruption in Robeson county, had Kirk hammered out the four-<lb/>
demanded to talk directly with<lb/>
Martin.<lb/>
The governor declined on the<lb/>
advice of law enforcement ofti-<lb/>
point agreement that resolved the<lb/>
crisis 10 hours after it started.<lb/>
The negotiations were helped<lb/>
bv the nature of the conditions<lb/>
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s ttlement to<lb/>
crisis, said<lb/>
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cials who warned that the hostage Hatcher set for ending the siege,<lb/>
takers might react violently if Kirk said.<lb/>
Martin told them their demands<lb/>
were unacceptable.<lb/>
1 latcher and Jacobs might have said,<lb/>
concluded that "that was the end "He wanted somebody to listen<lb/>
in<lb/>
Orange and Guilford counties.<lb/>
When Kirk told him the Orange<lb/>
jail was in Hillsborough, Hatcher<lb/>
asked whether that was an "ultra-<lb/>
conservative" area.<lb/>
"1 said, TMo, that's near Chapel<lb/>
Hill Kirk said. "He said, 'Oh<lb/>
year, that's where I want to go<lb/>
His lengthy conversations with<lb/>
Hatcher convinced Kirk that their<lb/>
actions were not "just a publicity<lb/>
stunt<lb/>
"I really got the impression that<lb/>
they did not feel they had been<lb/>
heard before and that's why they<lb/>
picked the newspaper office he<lb/>
said. Hatcher and Jacobs "are<lb/>
very sincere individuals who<lb/>
Roses are red<lb/>
Violets are blue<lb/>
For someone sweet<lb/>
A portrait of<lb/>
you.<lb/>
Portraits are a gift of love<lb/>
so special only you can give them.<lb/>
Call for Appointment<lb/>
Special Valentine's Packages Available<lb/>
Portraits by<lb/>
Ugh school stabbing victim<lb/>
lized after school bus fight<lb/>
D- An 18-<lb/>
ro student<lb/>
ed ruesday<lb/>
ith stab w - he received in a<lb/>
� ! bus, and a<lb/>
te has been<lb/>
lit in the inci-<lb/>
rd, a student<lb/>
lion Cen-<lb/>
condition<lb/>
ill lospital<lb/>
ind arm. He<lb/>
pm Mori-<lb/>
on a school<lb/>
tiney, 16, was<lb/>
ult with a<lb/>
i ting serious<lb/>
�g a weapon<lb/>
remains in<lb/>
ail in lieu of<lb/>
Byrd punched Gainey in the<lb/>
jaw, police said, and Christopher<lb/>
Williamson, the bus driver, sepa-<lb/>
rated the two youths. Then<lb/>
Gainey pulled out what Smith<lb/>
described as a "big" knife, and<lb/>
Byrd was stabbed, Smith and<lb/>
police said.<lb/>
Both teenagers will be sus-<lb/>
pended, said Dr. ohn A. Eber-<lb/>
hart, superintendent oi the<lb/>
Greensboro City Schools. An in-<lb/>
vestigation into the stabbing is<lb/>
"I don't think we received any have strong, strong feelings, they<lb/>
unreasonable demands Kirk just want to be heard<lb/>
Kirk, 43, a native of Salisbury,<lb/>
has a lengthy political resume:<lb/>
state legislature, Cabinet officer in<lb/>
two governors' administrations,<lb/>
congressional aide.<lb/>
But asked what had most pre-<lb/>
pared him for Monday's chal-<lb/>
lenge, he mentioned his experi-<lb/>
ence as a classroom teacher: "tak-<lb/>
ing things in sequential order,<lb/>
trying to reason with somebody<lb/>
Also, he said, as state secretary<lb/>
of human resources he encoun-<lb/>
tered "numerous persons ��� whe<lb/>
were challenges to deal with<lb/>
He tried to react cautiously tc<lb/>
the hostage takers' occasionally<lb/>
belligerent remarks. "That was<lb/>
probably the biggest fear, that 1<lb/>
would say the wrong word<lb/>
INSTANT REPLAY<lb/>
The Plaza, Greenville � 355-5050<lb/>
continuing.<lb/>
The youths are enrolled at<lb/>
Gillespie Park, a school for city<lb/>
students who have serious disci-<lb/>
pline problems or are slow learn-<lb/>
ers, Eberhart said. They are in an<lb/>
extended day program that al-<lb/>
lows them to attend classes be-<lb/>
tween 2 and 8 pm.<lb/>
"We're dealing with a school of<lb/>
last resort Eberhart said.<lb/>
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 Ht<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057941_0008"/><lb/>
�. . I<lb/>
� . �- � i<lb/>
Red tide losing grip on commercial fisheries<lb/>
,  ��. . - <lb/>
��<lb/>
<lb/>
ekscK �-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057941_0009"/><lb/>
� THBBASTOslCJUMAN<lb/>
fosnjAimwsi<lb/>
Red tide losing grip on commercial fisheries<lb/>
THE EAST O<lb/>
WILMINGTON (AP) � The<lb/>
toxic red tide is losing its grip on<lb/>
North Carolina's coastal waters,<lb/>
but state officials say it is still too<lb/>
early to tell if the costly plague has<lb/>
departed permanently.<lb/>
William Hogarth, director of<lb/>
the state Division of Marine fish-<lb/>
eries, predicted Tuesday that the<lb/>
tide could fall below levels con-<lb/>
sidered toxic � 5,000 organisms<lb/>
per liter of water � by Sunday.<lb/>
'lust looking at whats going on<lb/>
vou have to be encouraged'<lb/>
Hogarth said. The counts inside<lb/>
are definitely declining all the<lb/>
time<lb/>
"Hopefully in the next week or<lb/>
so all the counts will be down<lb/>
below the level we're concerned<lb/>
with he said. "I'm betting on<lb/>
Sunday to be the day<lb/>
Steady north winds, until this<lb/>
weekend, apparently pushed the<lb/>
tide south. For the past two weeks<lb/>
the tide has ebbed in the northern<lb/>
reaches of a 200-mile area closed<lb/>
to shellfishing, said George Gi-<lb/>
lbert, assistant supervisor of the<lb/>
N.C. Shellfish Sanitation Divi-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Late last week, tests showed the<lb/>
algae was gone from the northern<lb/>
limit at Avon on Hatteras Island,<lb/>
to Atlantic on Core sound, a dis-<lb/>
tance of 45 miles. Despite south<lb/>
winds that have blown since Fri-<lb/>
day, driving temperatures into<lb/>
the 70s, the tide did not move back<lb/>
north, Gilbert said.<lb/>
"We were kind of holding our<lb/>
breaths on tliat Gilbert said. "I<lb/>
don't want to say anything and<lb/>
miss again, but we re optimistic<lb/>
that at last a trend has been estab-<lb/>
lished. Right now we're in pretty<lb/>
good shape<lb/>
Tuesday, water tests off Cape<lb/>
Lookout showed no red tide al-<lb/>
gae.<lb/>
Althought the northern waters<lb/>
are clear of the algae, it will take a<lb/>
month to six weeks before oysters<lb/>
purge themselves to toxips Gi-<lb/>
lbert said.<lb/>
Ford "Bud" Cross, director of<lb/>
the Southeast fisheries Center of<lb/>
the National Marine Fisheries<lb/>
Servcice, in Beaufort, said an off-<lb/>
shore reservoir of algae appar-<lb/>
ently has moved south, perhaps<lb/>
due to cold weather that brought<lb/>
snow to the area a few weeks ago.<lb/>
"But if we got sustained with<lb/>
winds for a long period of time I<lb/>
think it coukj fmvp fesrk � p�i<lb/>
us Cross said. "We have to toke<lb/>
it day by day<lb/>
The state estimates that the tide<lb/>
has caused a minimum of $25<lb/>
million damage to the economy,<lb/>
mostly in losses to restaurants,<lb/>
hotels, fishing piers and other<lb/>
coastal businesses.<lb/>
The commercial fishing indus-<lb/>
try alone has lost about $5.5 mil-<lb/>
lion, by state estimates.<lb/>
If the tide continues to disperse,<lb/>
Hogarth said, tourism will escape<lb/>
harm. Counts must be between<lb/>
5,000 and 10,000 parts per liter for<lb/>
the toxins to irritate the eyes, nose<lb/>
and throat.<lb/>
"When it gets warm the public<lb/>
is going to come to the beach. That<lb/>
temptations is there, " Hogarth<lb/>
said. "If s going to take a lot longer<lb/>
to get people eating seafood<lb/>
again<lb/>
Gov. Jim Martin announced<lb/>
Tuesay that state government is<lb/>
establishing a relief fund to help<lb/>
fishermen grounded by the red<lb/>
tide make citus leet.<lb/>
The Council o� State allocated<lb/>
$120,000 from its contingency and<lb/>
emergency budget to start the<lb/>
fund and Martin said he was<lb/>
appealing to North Carolina citi-<lb/>
zens for donations.<lb/>
The governor described the<lb/>
fund as a stopgap that would not<lb/>
solve all the victims' problems but<lb/>
would help them cope with their<lb/>
inability to harvest shellfish in<lb/>
areas infested with the toxic algae.<lb/>
"This is a program where the<lb/>
checks are written directly to the<lb/>
creditor �the landlord, the bank,<lb/>
whoever it is Martin said. Many<lb/>
fishermen have resisted taking<lb/>
public assistance but are relenting<lb/>
in state officials also announced<lb/>
that applications centers would<lb/>
be opened in eight coastal loca-<lb/>
tions to probide additional help<lb/>
for people suffering the economic<lb/>
impact of the red tide.<lb/>
Centers will open Thursday in<lb/>
Morehead City, Swan Quarter,<lb/>
S wansboro, Sneads Ferry, Sloop<lb/>
Point Wilmington and Bolivia.<lb/>
Those locations will remain open<lb/>
Friday, and a location in Frisco<lb/>
also will be available.<lb/>
The relief fund program will be<lb/>
carried out largely on the local<lb/>
level, according to joe Myers, di-<lb/>
rector of the state Division of<lb/>
Emergency Management<lb/>
Funds wfflbearibcated under a wfflbe among the<lb/>
formula based on the pqcentage memwnv <lb/>
ofcyster,damaiidscJtopfishmg JJ?T<lb/>
peniutsissuedineachcountyand unable to piw�<lb/>
the number of applicants. ?nf!SK<lb/>
Myers said officials in each befof<lb/>
county would be asked to set up mer<lb/>
committees and open offices to Safety, wtuch wiD<lb/>
receive requests for help. Repre- statefund.<lb/>
sentativesof agencies and groups � �'���iiiisjisiirsn<lb/>
thathavet�entelpmgthefisher- W?<lb/>
inen-churches, (Se Red Cross, 'JnT<lb/>
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klffiifffl�<lb/>
HHiV 9<lb/>
em.� �� itii �� Till i T JHIiimi �saai flsHastadsl<lb/>
Open wiy. open am<lb/>
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I 10th Street 910 7B2-087S<lb/>
ntby 7i00�m - ICfcOOpm Saturday 0:00am � &amp;00pm<lb/>
A3P<lb/>
the radio station wi<lb/>
difference, had i<lb/>
�Mifuverxry pauiy at<lb/>
Tuesday night. Despite<lb/>
of hot Triangle ba<lb/>
ekit, the party was a bias<lb/>
itly the band cancel!<lb/>
to their having oversche<lb/>
themselves; i.e. they could<lb/>
from where they w<lb/>
get to where they had<lb/>
next night if thev stop<lb/>
ttic.<lb/>
is left wondering why thi<lb/>
t know this earlier, but lik<lb/>
� the Attic's schedule car<lb/>
ns lead hectic lives. A<lb/>
they don't own ma<lb/>
oneh<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
9CU1 Writer<lb/>
award season is upon<lb/>
ylden Globe, the Americ<lb/>
Be Award, the Crammys,<lb/>
Irs, and, exclusive to The<lb/>
b�linian, the Sweet Bipj<lb/>
�wd of Dubious Achievern<lb/>
culture. And now, the<lb/>
please<lb/>
il Tackiness in Advertis<lb/>
mstd goes to Donna Rice for 1<lb/>
Nfo Excuses" jeans commerc<lb/>
fclendidly embodies whaj<lb/>
Ifalent and less scruples<lb/>
rin bid for the top. I expect to I<lb/>
Iweet Wi<lb/>
Greenvill<lb/>
SA1<lb/>
may look like a<lb/>
nt, but a closer look<lb/>
, Sweet Willy's Surf ShopJ<lb/>
reet Willy's owners<lb/>
and Billy Farrington<lb/>
an old, graffiti cow<lb/>
g and transformed it in<lb/>
 lete, hard-core surf<lb/>
rding to Drum.<lb/>
said, "As far as my b<lb/>
is concerned, I feel<lb/>
wille is the center poin<lb/>
surf community. Si<lb/>
Tilly's sells active wear as we<lb/>
irf gear Drum said that<lb/>
stomers' ages range from 11<lb/>
-years-old.<lb/>
Sweet Willy's opened Nov.<lb/>
7, after a major overt<lb/>
and Farrington did al<lb/>
recarpeting, rewiring,<lb/>
ther repairs in about<lb/>
mths, according to<lb/>
from Emerald<lb/>
is a builder by trade.<lb/>
Drum said, The name S<lb/>
iWiuys came from a brick<lb/>
that me and one of my fri<lb/>
used to know. We used to c<lb/>
Sweet William, then we<lb/>
ened it to Sweet Willy<lb/>
The "shaka" symbol thatl<lb/>
 Couch TVip<lb/>
ty CAROL WETHERING1<lb/>
"TheCbuchTripWhatki<lb/>
titie is mat for a movie? Wh<lb/>
you mink of when you<lb/>
"couch trip"? Do you em<lb/>
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nmmmm<lb/>
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JUCV CALIFORNIA<lb/>
GENUMEOAHO<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
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Ice<lb/>
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FESTYLES<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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30H0 � 10W30<lb/>
10W40 � 20W50<lb/>
Havoline<lb/>
Motor Oil<lb/>
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JLS<lb/>
M. TO 11:00 P.M.<lb/>
00 A.M12 MIDNIGHT<lb/>
Till KS I AROI INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
;<lb/>
WZMB celebrates sixth<lb/>
anniversary at the Attic<lb/>
ByCHIPP BONEHEAD<lb/>
Who duln't e a 1 Hi rt<lb/>
WZMB, the radio station with<lb/>
the unique difference, had it's<lb/>
sixth anniversary party at the<lb/>
ttic rucsday night. Despite the<lb/>
cancellation ol hot Triangle band.<lb/>
the Veldt, the party was a blast.<lb/>
Apparently the band cancelled<lb/>
due to their having oversched-<lb/>
uled themselves; i e. they couldn't<lb/>
get here from where they were<lb/>
and then get to where they had to<lb/>
go the next night it they stopped at<lb/>
ttic.<lb/>
One is let t wondering why they<lb/>
didn t know this earlier, but like it<lb/>
sa son the Attic's schedule cards,<lb/>
musicians lead hectic lues. And<lb/>
sometimes thev don't own maps.<lb/>
It started off with the Bond, a threw WZMB tee-shirts out to the<lb/>
band from Greenville. Although audience. Not one was thrown<lb/>
thev did terrible things to one ol towards me, even though they<lb/>
my favorite R.E.M. songs, 1 won't must have known I would write<lb/>
crack on them too hard. bad things about them it they<lb/>
They started out kind of weak didn't give me one. So  Had, bad<lb/>
but by the end of their set, had things about WZMB. There you<lb/>
worked up a respectable sweat, go.<lb/>
Also covered by the bond were<lb/>
a loiodoo Gurus classic and a<lb/>
couple oi Guadalcanal Diar)<lb/>
songs. In between, thev played<lb/>
original numbers.<lb/>
After their set, WZMB person-<lb/>
alities gave out prizes. A lot o<lb/>
prizes. Prizes included tree piz-<lb/>
zas, passes to the Attic and a<lb/>
Dcwey Stevens mirror.<lb/>
After the drawing tor prizes<lb/>
was completed, the Mb crew<lb/>
Then the Amateurs played.<lb/>
They are a rock-slash-reggae<lb/>
band. They sot the crowd to dam-<lb/>
me, Thev started out wi<lb/>
th<lb/>
"Johnny B. Goode" and never let<lb/>
up alter that.<lb/>
1 only have one suggestion for<lb/>
next year though: Get Drivin' and<lb/>
Cryin the Greatest Band In<lb/>
North America to play. Hey, I'll<lb/>
see that even it I don't get a tee-<lb/>
shirt.<lb/>
Shown here is VVZMB's Dangerous Dave Elliot gives out some prizes at WZMB's sixth anniversary pai tv<lb/>
at the Attic. He didn't give me anything, and I'll get him for this. Watch out Dave. (Photo by that hoss<lb/>
Thomas Walters of ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Bonehead takes Sweet Bippy for comic books<lb/>
Bv MIC AH HARRIS<lb/>
Statt VNnti-r<lb/>
rhc award season is upon us:<lb/>
the Golden Globe, the American<lb/>
Music Award, the Grammys, the<lb/>
Oscars, and. exclusive to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, the Sweet Bippy<lb/>
Award of Dubious Achievement<lb/>
in pop culture. And now, the en-<lb/>
velopes please <lb/>
Total Tackiness in Advertising<lb/>
Award goes to Donna Rice for her<lb/>
No Excuses" jeans commercial.<lb/>
Rice splendidly embodies what a<lb/>
little talent and less scruples can<lb/>
do in bid for the top. 1 expect to see<lb/>
her hi a Wendy's drive-through<lb/>
window any day now.<lb/>
The Irwin Allen Award for TV<lb/>
Science Fiction with 1 lash and no<lb/>
Substance goes to Gene Roden-<lb/>
berrv for "Star Trek: The Next<lb/>
Generation Rodenberry also<lb/>
gets the "Billy Mummcmorial<lb/>
Award: for making teen-ager<lb/>
Wesley Crusher the gosh-wow<lb/>
whiz kid that bails the crew out<lb/>
every other weeek. 1 Unv did Kirk<lb/>
and Spock ever survive for three<lb/>
years without a teen-ager to point<lb/>
out their mistakes?<lb/>
The "Below Contempt Award"<lb/>
goes to whoever started the trend<lb/>
oi pulling teen-age girls out oi the<lb/>
high school chorus and giving<lb/>
them record contracts. Their<lb/>
songs are incredibly derivative<lb/>
and add nothing to the already re-<lb/>
petitive air waves (pop music<lb/>
lyric writing can be compared to<lb/>
generations oi inbreeding among<lb/>
the Ceasars).<lb/>
Who cares if Debbie Gibson has<lb/>
written over a hundred songs?<lb/>
The three she's released are just<lb/>
plain bland. .<lb/>
"Most Offensive Sappiness in<lb/>
the Name oi a Good Cause<lb/>
iweet Willie's teaches<lb/>
Greenville how to surf<lb/>
Bv LAURA SALAZAR<lb/>
5lf! Viruu<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
building at 207 East Fifth<lb/>
look hke a typical<lb/>
� but a closer look re-<lb/>
-  eet Willy's Surf Shop.<lb/>
I Willy's owners Jeff<lb/>
md Billy Farnngton have<lb/>
n an old, graffiti covered<lb/>
ding and transformed it into a<lb/>
mplete, hard-core surf shop<lb/>
trding to Drum.<lb/>
. Yum said, "As far as my busi-<lb/>
is is concerned, I feel that<lb/>
enville is the center point of<lb/>
surf community. Sweet<lb/>
lly's sells active wear as well as<lb/>
rf gear Drum said that his<lb/>
ustomers' ages range from 13 to<lb/>
.ears-old.<lb/>
Sweet Willy's opened Nov. 14,<lb/>
?rhaul.<lb/>
pears on his business card means<lb/>
hang loose" in surfer terms.<lb/>
Drum said, "The shaka sign<lb/>
means 'to plav' in sign language <lb/>
and it just makes you smile when<lb/>
you say it. You just have to use1<lb/>
your imagination Drum said he<lb/>
wants people to associate the<lb/>
shaka sign with Sweet Willy's.<lb/>
Aside from surfing and manag-<lb/>
ing the surf shop. Drum also goes<lb/>
to area schools to teach water<lb/>
safety to seventh and eighth grad-<lb/>
ers. Drum said, "1 basically try to<lb/>
prepare the kids for going to the<lb/>
beach  you know, water safety<lb/>
and how to deal with rip tides<lb/>
Drum said that he and Harring-<lb/>
ton like to push the sport of surf-<lb/>
ing. Both owners have been surf-<lb/>
ing for about 17 years, according<lb/>
to Drum. Drum also said that<lb/>
Tower Source gets this hands-<lb/>
down for "Dear Mr. Jesus As I<lb/>
hear this small child sing about "a<lb/>
little girl beaten black and blue"<lb/>
and how her mommy beats her<lb/>
too, I get big, wet tears in my eyes<lb/>
 for all the wrong reasons. This<lb/>
s'mg makes you want to go out,<lb/>
find a small child, and hug her <lb/>
until she stops breathing.<lb/>
The "Who Needs You Anyhow,<lb/>
Lindsey? Award" goes to Lindsey<lb/>
Buckingham, former Fleetwood<lb/>
Mac member. Buckingham, who<lb/>
has considerable merit in the stu-<lb/>
dio, is the most merely adequate<lb/>
guitarist I've heard. With the new<lb/>
line-up Fleetwood Machas finally<lb/>
come together as a band.<lb/>
'ihe Marvel Comics Money<lb/>
Grubbing Award gees to  v<lb/>
else? DC Comics t r their a n<lb/>
tent ripping off of the market<lb/>
they've irnercd. Their<lb/>
"Millenium" mini-series with its<lb/>
infinite ' i n iss- 0 ers" into regular<lb/>
titles was well within the price<lb/>
range of the prospective 9 -15 year<lb/>
old buwrs  provided they �<lb/>
mowing lawns and took up lar-<lb/>
ceny.<lb/>
Worst Casting of a lames Bond<lb/>
ft�?<lb/>
. )87, after a major ovei<lb/>
tm and Farnngton did all oi skateboarding is more popular in<lb/>
the recarpeting, rewiring, and Greenville.<lb/>
ther repairs in about nine<lb/>
months, according to Drum.<lb/>
Viginallv from Emerald Isle,<lb/>
rum is a builder by trade.<lb/>
Drum said, 'The name Sweet<lb/>
Willy's came from a brick mason<lb/>
that me and one oi my friends<lb/>
 d to know. We used to call him<lb/>
Sweet William, then we short-<lb/>
ened it to Sweet Willy<lb/>
The "shaka" svmbol that ap-<lb/>
According to Drum, future<lb/>
plans include several tanning<lb/>
beds and possibly an aerobics<lb/>
class. Drum said that he would<lb/>
have Wolff Systems tanning beds<lb/>
along with a lounge where stu-<lb/>
dents could meet and relax. Drum<lb/>
said, "I want to put in a large-<lb/>
screen television, maybe a shave<lb/>
ice machine and comfortable<lb/>
chairs. 1 want to create a very nice<lb/>
'Couch Trip' kin to flying carpets or what??<lb/>
By CAROL WETHERINGTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
flving carpets, magic lamps and Aykroyd and Charles Grodin, is<lb/>
figure that there is now a trav- honestly a "trip Aykroyd, who<lb/>
"The Couch Trip What kind of elling couch? Well, if you do, you is known for his dry wit and sar-<lb/>
title is that for a movie? What do are wrong, wrong, wrong. castic humor failed in this movie.<lb/>
you think of when you hear "The Couch Trip" an Orion<lb/>
"couch trip"? Do yo' envision production, starring Dan<lb/>
If you're a skaterat or just like these boss lookin' boards, go down to Sweet Willie's Surf Shop on Fifth<lb/>
Street. I like that one on the right no above that, the one with Tim Chandler's face on it. Yeah, that one.<lb/>
(Photo by - look people, this guys photos are just the deal. This guy is a photo god, I'm telling you -<lb/>
Thomas Walters of the ECU Photolab).<lb/>
atmosphere  one that students<lb/>
will tell their friends about<lb/>
Drum added that the tanning<lb/>
salon would be by appointment<lb/>
only and that ECU surf club<lb/>
would get the first chance at lim-<lb/>
ited memberships to the salon.<lb/>
Drum's philosophy is, in order<lb/>
to run a good business, you have<lb/>
to be honest and do your best.<lb/>
. illain: Joe Don Baker as the ille-<lb/>
gal arms salesman in "The Living<lb/>
Daylights Baker brings all the<lb/>
range of a used car dealer to the<lb/>
p.irt.<lb/>
lernblv Trendy catch phrase<lb/>
s to the critics for the term<lb/>
"dramedy" to describe shows like<lb/>
"Slap Maxwell As everyone<lb/>
knows, a dramedy is a camel, not<lb/>
a sub genre.<lb/>
"The Most Creative Evangel-<lb/>
ism Technique Award" goesno,<lb/>
not to Jim Bakkerbut to "Power<lb/>
Connection a group oi muscle<lb/>
bound ministers who bend metal<lb/>
bars m their mouths, snap hand-<lb/>
cuffs, etc. as part of their message<lb/>
1 don't doubt their integrity, but<lb/>
having the camera zoom-in on a<lb/>
hulk as he utters the banzai cry:<lb/>
"For lesus Christ" and proceeds<lb/>
to bend steel in his hands is just<lb/>
plain sill v.<lb/>
Finally, the "Largest Back Issue<lb/>
Collection of Superman Family-<lb/>
Comics in the World" goes to the<lb/>
Fast Carolinian's own Chippy<lb/>
Bonehead. A dubious achieve-<lb/>
ment to be sureTake a bow,<lb/>
Chip.<lb/>
Bands wanted<lb/>
The Bond  Moody Dudes <lb/>
Sylve  What do these bands have<lb/>
in common? They've all per-<lb/>
formed at the Coffeehouse in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
According to Karen Mann,<lb/>
chairperson of the Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee, audi-<lb/>
tions for next semesters' bands<lb/>
will be Friday at 7:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Coffeehouse.<lb/>
Mann said that last semester,<lb/>
out of seven bands, four were<lb/>
See YO, page 10<lb/>
Pickin' the Bones<lb/>
No awards, just throw the keg<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Superman'� P�l<lb/>
my life was endangered, all I reading was open to us. However,<lb/>
wanted was a cool Bud Light" after several hits from the Seventh<lb/>
I'd also like to take this space to Strangest bong I've ever seen, we<lb/>
introduce the new assistant fea- realized that the Paranoid factor<lb/>
See COUCH, page 10<lb/>
S<lb/>
Tloictureis from "The Couch Trip a really stupid movie that has nothing to do with furniture at all,<lb/>
except that like most films, it has some in it for actors tositin.Thisphoto(notbytheinsanelyboss Thomas<lb/>
Walters sadly) shows Mary Gross and Charles Grodin gawking.<lb/>
Okay. The secret's out, thanks<lb/>
to the traitorous Jeff "I'll just re-<lb/>
print something" Parker. I really tureseditor(see,myadd�dwork), would prohibit this,<lb/>
do have almost every back issue the very boss, Carol Wethering- Instead, we areued sexual<lb/>
of -Superman Family And I ton. She's cool, even though we equality with a g! who wouki<lb/>
don't cire. I have my reasons. had to censor this column so her notbelieve that the Alarj Alda Age<lb/>
Now people aregoing to think I mom could read it. over and stole a pint from my<lb/>
runhornZputonthenfw Tiffany Well, having defended my n'tittMotM.m.<lb/>
cassette sAgle, eat Pringles, bite honor and other introductory WhentheBuffet Sfd<lb/>
on my toenafls and reread my buUhockeyremember, we are a from the show, aU I was capable of<lb/>
tacky 70s comic books. CLEAN column), I turn now to doing was knocking over<lb/>
maybeldoallthat.btttifs this week's subject, the strange lamrwhhidui wuhacertam<lb/>
no reason to win a Sweet Bippy Bunett party I went to last week. undemaWestyleK<lb/>
award At least I use panel bo� I don't like Buffett anyway. Not much else is left in the<lb/>
de t myScTs a Give me Drivin' and Cryin' any mnemonic circuits of the evening.<lb/>
Taribbte week. But free alcohol is, after all, I emied up facedown on the hard-<lb/>
ImSSuy did you hear alcoholl didn't pay for. wood floors.The next morning 1<lb/>
mcioeniauy, ara you resu JUonev's worth A awoke to find the ferret biting a<lb/>
about the newspaper m Lumber- And I got m money s worm, a naiiohrv<lb/>
ton that got held hostage? A keg and roughly two gallons of ll�too close to my naughty<lb/>
friend of a friend of mine had a Pepe Lopez. We did run out of Pa . . . �i��rin�<lb/>
great scheme for getting famous limes though. If people aren't JJJ<lb/>
when he got hddostage. If we lying to me, 1 put the lime peels in i � JSShiS<lb/>
ever got held hostage hSe at the theljender in their place. ���,LSjSK<lb/>
East Carolinian, I'd steal his idea. I hlartily apologize to Max and � ?� � Ue<lb/>
As we still have not been seiged anyone else that actually tried to �e" f'X�? 'uLSt I<lb/>
andaskedtoprintmorefourietter drink what came out of that S'�Unf<lb/>
wordsJwillsVealhisideaanduse blender. shUtelypaytasphalt 1<lb/>
it to try and get a cheap laugh. About one quarter of the keg J'SSSJnJ'J<lb/>
HelgurelktwheWcap- later, most everybody left for the Sw�bS5S2SS<lb/>
torsaUowedthehostagestospeak concert. Except for me, who �!�iiS�T?ff? T�1<lb/>
,tothemedia,hewouIdsay hewas sensed more Jwrty possibilities byakegofNahiralin this filming,<lb/>
6ne he just wanted a Budwetser. elsewhere. So, along with that ��� 5 'S22I<lb/>
I He bought that when he finally party maniac, who knows who he "? uf �f. w-f� T �ck<lb/>
got released, Budweiser would is, we sought the answer to the Swayasewgdnutintnqpam-<lb/>
pay him lots of money to be their nesnon'What do people do "SJJSl n, ta<lb/>
spokesperson. when they aren't going to Buffett <lb/>
He even thought ol a commer- ; oneerts? X<lb/>
dafcoulw Theoption of going to a poetry<lb/>
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10<lb/>
ROI IN! W<lb/>
1 1 BRUAR 1 lSvS<lb/>
Weiss prints expensive book<lb/>
He wanted to settle some ac<lb/>
counts, rhe bicentennial ot the<lb/>
American Declaration of Inde<lb/>
pendence had come and gone But<lb/>
the Constitution s 200th birthday<lb/>
was coming up<lb/>
 eissdecided to make the lo c<lb/>
A book possible that would<lb/>
contain reproductions oi the<lb/>
handwritten Declaration<lb/>
Constitution and Bill oi Rights. It<lb/>
uld have an amplifying text,<lb/>
rtts oi the period and an<lb/>
tract lithograph triptych b<lb/>
the American artist Paul Jenkins.<lb/>
I rv printed on vellum<lb/>
k � te magiste<lb/>
hooks oi the Middle<lb/>
c spentSl millionacquir-<lb/>
meticulously selected sheep<lb/>
Avkrovd loses<lb/>
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fi a few<lb/>
v hat if thev were in the<lb/>
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plaved bv<lb/>
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'Accord release, he<lb/>
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I hope he did<lb/>
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Matthau, por-<lb/>
;arden variety<lb/>
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make you<lb/>
Martin<lb/>
Mai tie bit of<lb/>
everv emotion vou i imag-<lb/>
inte-<lb/>
nce that s  ,<lb/>
nder it the ricketv old wheels<lb/>
hcadevei - A turnii<lb/>
s w c cam � pet to<lb/>
Once again<lb/>
n a movie<lb/>
� pecial.<lb/>
- score<lb/>
-<lb/>
J<lb/>
Yo bands<lb/>
skm from all ovei the world and<lb/>
then processing it b am ient hand<lb/>
methods<lb/>
ITie type was set b) hand jtistas<lb/>
Ben rankhn would have done it<lb/>
Francois De Ros, 1m didn't<lb/>
speak or read a word oi English<lb/>
sot the letters one b one filing<lb/>
them down if they didn t til Rien<lb/>
he printed the v ellum pages indi<lb/>
viduall) on a press that had been<lb/>
in his family since it had printed<lb/>
currenc) tor Napoleon<lb/>
rhe pages wore huge 22 b<lb/>
inches, and the books w ere bound<lb/>
in a tur red leather. Bronze<lb/>
medallions simulating tv o coins<lb/>
of the period were inlaid in the<lb/>
covers - week before deadline<lb/>
Weiss had a book, its spine beai<lb/>
ing the cold leal til;<lb/>
We the People<lb/>
The printing ran to . pit s<lb/>
In the fall, Weiss toured thi<lb/>
ted States, looking foi spon<lb/>
sors who would put his book on<lb/>
displ ly oi donate them to librar<lb/>
ks lo date, he says, 70 copies<lb/>
have K en sold and he has given<lb/>
five awa3<lb/>
I le hasn i made any money y t<lb/>
hut that ho says is not the pri<lb/>
mar) purpose The purpose is to<lb/>
get my feet back in America<lb/>
rhrough the long night of war<lb/>
ihe bo wondered when the<lb/>
Americans would come.<lb/>
Finally, ono summer day, tho<lb/>
did It was as he had dreamed.<lb/>
Riding their tanks like chargers,<lb/>
Tho werelikegods Wealltried<lb/>
I i get close to them<lb/>
i douard Weiss has never tor<lb/>
i otten that via in lc44 when the<lb/>
( ,1 s he had long a aitcd reached<lb/>
Pan 1 : in i freeing it from (or<lb/>
m in v u pat ion.<lb/>
v lany eai s latei that memoi<lb/>
and other emotional links to<lb/>
mcrica would prompt Weiss<lb/>
In  � a publisher, to offei<lb/>
Americans a book, a book like no<lb/>
NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING<lb/>
on the Proposed Widening of Evans Street from l()th<lb/>
street to Greenville Boulevard in Greenville<lb/>
Project 8.2220501 U-2007 Pitt County<lb/>
 . al<lb/>
inciK hanibci s,<lb/>
the<lb/>
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l<lb/>
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'�and m 1 sent foi state<lb/>
laUTtaitiing to the<lb/>
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.� urb<lb/>
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1 ii s�.( Envii i) O.T<lb/>
� ii th<lb/>
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nse, but she a I I I<lb/>
n 'he bar we<lb/>
we'll<lb/>
bad<lb/>
bands can obtain a<lb/>
� ition form from room 2-2<lb/>
ndenhall. There is no tee.<lb/>
Ferrera 1988<lb/>
May U - June 16<lb/>
Several openings still remain for<lb/>
participants in ECU'S summer<lb/>
program in Ferrera, Italy. The<lb/>
cost is $1,725 and includes<lb/>
round trip air fare, hotels, and<lb/>
all travel in Italy. For additional<lb/>
information, contact the Office<lb/>
of the Dean, Arts and Sciences,<lb/>
Brewster A-102. 757-6249.<lb/>
� - M<lb/>
TIRED OF THE<lb/>
CLASS STRUGGLE?<lb/>
TAKE TIMEOUT<lb/>
FOR YOUR PORTRAI1<lb/>
IN THE 1988 BUCCANEER<lb/>
� �.<lb/>
B8-i;<lb/>
'TS i . v - �oV' � �i' �. � �� �"  gCoWWH<lb/>
r-n �?&amp;<lb/>
-12 &amp; 1 5 lav<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
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�os a thank you It ,is s<lb/>
v ostly to produce the price would<lb/>
be $25,000 a cop<lb/>
Weiss' grandmother was an<lb/>
merican from New ()rleans who<lb/>
i.d mel his grandfather in France<lb/>
during World War 1 Their son,<lb/>
Edouard's father, became a snr<lb/>
. oon and studied tor a time in<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Attor the war, Edouard got a<lb/>
cholarship to Washington Uni-<lb/>
ersity in St. Louis whore Ins fa<lb/>
I her had studied.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
PlAASH (IH 7S6 00M vAHMii<lb/>
Three Men and A<lb/>
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fhe Times PG 13<lb/>
Wall Street R<lb/>
LOW COST<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO l2thWEEKOF<lb/>
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informjitton, all 832�35 (toll �r�r - - -�<lb/>
532S384)between9jn.mdS n- ��ekd�yGenen ��<lb/>
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RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATK) HS<lb/>
�<lb/>
1 Month - 30 Min. Limit 1 Per Day<lb/>
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1 Year - 30 Min. Limit 1 Per Day<lb/>
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The Salon<lb/>
il H<lb/>
Wolf I anmng Sv stem<lb/>
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rAdults $250til<lb/>
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756-3307 � Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
f<lb/>
RATED R Starts Friday<lb/>
THE SERPENT AND THE RAINBOW<lb/>
1:15 3:15 5:15 7:15-9:15<lb/>
RATED R Starts Friday<lb/>
THE PRINCIPAL<lb/>
2:00 4:30 7:00 9:30<lb/>
<lb/>
 RATED<lb/>
( TED<lb/>
Is Starts Friday<lb/>
EDDIE MURPHY RAW<lb/>
1:15 3:15 5:15-7:15 ():1 r<lb/>
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SHOOT TO KILL<lb/>
nilS SATURDAY AT 7:30 P.M<lb/>
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has its<lb/>
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3MU<lb/>
iBSMM<lb/>
no<lb/>
$mnjc�<lb/>
APPLICATION DEADLINE FOR<lb/>
FALL 1988 EMPLOYMENT:<lb/>
FEBRUARY 19, 1988.<lb/>
All new applicants should attend an<lb/>
organizational meeting in a residence hall<lb/>
during the week of 28-12.<lb/>
Februaiy 8 Cotlen Lobby 4:30 February<lb/>
February 9 .larvls I.obby 4:30 February<lb/>
February 9 Ayoock Conference Km 5:30 Februaiy<lb/>
Februaiy 9 Belk Basement 5:00 Februaiy<lb/>
Februaiy 9 Scott Conference Km 6:00 February<lb/>
Februaiy 9 Clement I-obby 4:30 Februaiy<lb/>
Februaiy 9 White Lobby 5:00 February<lb/>
10 Slav Lobby 5:00<lb/>
10 Umstead Lobby 5 30<lb/>
10 Greene Lobby 4 30<lb/>
lO.loncs Basement 5 00<lb/>
10 Fletcher Lobby 5 00<lb/>
10 Garrett Lobby 7:00<lb/>
1 1 Tyler Lobby 5 00<lb/>
For more information contact the Departmental office.<lb/>
214 Whichard. 757-6771. or any residence hall office.<lb/>
0r 1<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057941_0012"/><lb/>
LOW COST<lb/>
A30RTJ0NS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNAXCY<lb/>
Jn,from 13 to 18 wek� at additional coat Pregnancy<lb/>
I - Coatml and Problem Pregnancy lounaelinaj. For<lb/>
formation, call 832-0S3S itoll tree number 1-800-<lb/>
 between 9 a jtv and 5pm weekdays- General ane<lb/>
a liable<lb/>
IGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
616 E. Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
756-9221<lb/>
ItS S250'tn<lb/>
5:30<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
ANYTIME<lb/>
$2<lb/>
5<lb/>
m MOVIES<lb/>
Square Shopping Center<lb/>
D THE RAINBOW<lb/>
15-9:15<lb/>
<lb/>
INCIPAL<lb/>
7:00-9:30<lb/>
RPHY RAW<lb/>
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<lb/>
ev<lb/>
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TO KILL<lb/>
WAT 7:30 P.M.<lb/>
ISJ<lb/>
U<lb/>
JNE FOR<lb/>
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11988.<lb/>
attend an<lb/>
Jsidence hall<lb/>
8-12.<lb/>
Y 10 Slay Lobby 5:00<lb/>
v 10 Umstead Lobby 5:30<lb/>
10 Greene Lobby 4:30<lb/>
10 Jones Basement 5:00<lb/>
10 Fletcher Lobby 5:00<lb/>
lOGarrett Lobby 7:00<lb/>
11 Tyler Lobby 5:00<lb/>
artmental office,<lb/>
lencc hall office.<lb/>
Uilkin'The Plank<lb/>
fCfcA rAt 'no-ter rAPow Pie. ?<lb/>
By A GUY Orpheus: Nightwalker<lb/>
By GURGANUS and HARRIS<lb/>
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MOH7 n &amp;ox t(i.cci, fsoM<lb/>
PE-S PA�S6��( RipPuE, 60i4,<lb/>
AM'rl' SoPER.e0Wl.oMf4' TJ8&amp;<lb/>
fifes &amp;�p slacks topuw<lb/>
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AM irtf�UY6ErJrs- AM 'MTEERrV-rA<lb/>
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H"M0fcfcS 'ZACfVV LIKE.<lb/>
WAr<lb/>
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Here are YOUR responses to the<lb/>
Kill Danny Partridge "Contest:<lb/>
Sandy Dixon sent in this possi-<lb/>
bility: " Shirley walks in catching<lb/>
Danny and Rueben Kincaid in<lb/>
bed. Pulling out an UZI, Shirley<lb/>
peppers Danny's adolescent body<lb/>
with big gaping bullet holes. She<lb/>
then burns all the flesh off his<lb/>
body with carbolic acid, and then<lb/>
grinds his bones in with the Par-<lb/>
mesan cheese, sprinkling them on<lb/>
her next lasagna. Yum<lb/>
Ted DeFiglio offered this sce-<lb/>
nario: "Danny, while undergoing<lb/>
a kidney stone operation, wakes<lb/>
up, and causes the doctor to slip.<lb/>
The urethral probe then ripped<lb/>
his most vital organ in two. The<lb/>
loss of blood was too much, and<lb/>
he lost the organ. Nothing much<lb/>
changed in his sex life. After a<lb/>
long, frustrating life, he died - a<lb/>
virgin<lb/>
Toby Rothschilde wrote<lb/>
"Danny actually stowed away on<lb/>
the ill-fated Challenger shut-<lb/>
tlecraft mission. This was not dis-<lb/>
covered until last year when his<lb/>
freckles were found floating off<lb/>
the Florida coast. Fortunately, he<lb/>
was the only one who suffered,<lb/>
dying from friction<lb/>
Bruce Tickles gave us this:<lb/>
"Danny acquires every imagin-<lb/>
able virus while partying with the<lb/>
Bay City Rollers. Danny's body<lb/>
becomes a huge, sweltering pile of<lb/>
pus, and the Center for Disease<lb/>
Control people drop him into the<lb/>
core of a nuclear reactor Good<lb/>
one, Bruce.<lb/>
Thanks to ALL our readers for<lb/>
sending in all their suggestions.<lb/>
Jeff "I could Never Take the Place<lb/>
of Your Man" Parker liked<lb/>
Sandy's submission best, and<lb/>
Chippy "Happy Birthday,<lb/>
Micki Bonesplinter liked Toby's<lb/>
name the best.<lb/>
Danny be<lb/>
real dead<lb/>
Suck - � .)oct<lb/>
�-�'� - . A<lb/>
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know uiriee<lb/>
4-Q E.ewJ 4-h�<lb/>
Hellion<lb/>
By TIRRELL (pronounced air-borne) and Bonchcad<lb/>
Inside Joke<lb/>
By RIK<lb/>
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Overkill<lb/>
By FRIEDRICH<lb/>
HTHI-9 W�EK -AC -uOinJ UhLlX Ku AfJt<lb/>
H)BC irJ THC moti OF IrjflR Y&amp;A<lb/>
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AMI it -?$, Kiosofsy<lb/>
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The upside down answers:<lb/>
auois Xaupix auo?s 33u pi)<lb/>
uoijeiuoijuoo umjs vU0IJ U3�P " opuoj<lb/>
Here am creators of Pirate combe games o' fun,<lb/>
Superman-Jeff "He signed you, Bill! Now you're a Law"<lb/>
Parker and his pal Jimmy Olsen- Chippy bonehead, with<lb/>
speshul guest Bizarro Superman 1 Mark<lb/>
Tirrell. Them am crazy like earth peeples what like<lb/>
Donna summer.<lb/>
m urn�ii�,i.�w �w<lb/>
<pb facs="00057941_0013"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
FEBRUARYS 1988 Page 12<lb/>
Wildca<lb/>
Pirates look to rebound from defeats<lb/>
with home slate of weekend contests<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports r'dilor<lb/>
Sports Information reports<lb/>
The East Carolina men's<lb/>
basketball team will look to break<lb/>
a five-game losing streak as the<lb/>
Tirates play host to George Mason<lb/>
on Saturday and James Madison<lb/>
on Monday in Colonial Athletic<lb/>
Association action.<lb/>
Both games arc set to be played<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum with 7:30<lb/>
p.m. tipoffs planned.<lb/>
The Pirates dropped to 6-13<lb/>
overall and 2-5 in CAA action<lb/>
with road losses at CAA-foc<lb/>
UNC-VVilminton on Saturday<lb/>
and Campbell on Monday.<lb/>
The Pirates fell to UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington in the last second oi<lb/>
the contest, 71-69, while non-<lb/>
conference foe Campbell routed<lb/>
the Pirates on Monday in<lb/>
Fayetteville, 77-50.<lb/>
First-vear coach Mike Steele's<lb/>
team played Colonial rival UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington to a standoff before<lb/>
Seahawk forward Rov Walker<lb/>
J<lb/>
buried the two free throws after<lb/>
being fouled by the Pirates'<lb/>
Kenny Murphy with one second<lb/>
showing on the clock. The Pirates<lb/>
had a chance to seal the victory,<lb/>
but misfired on a shot with five<lb/>
seconds left in the game.<lb/>
Campbell broke open a 40-40 tie<lb/>
in the early going of the second<lb/>
half with outstanding shooting<lb/>
from Brad Childress and Henry<lb/>
Wilson to dispose of the Pirates.<lb/>
Childress connected on nine-of-<lb/>
10 shots, while Wilson was true on<lb/>
eight-of-nine from the floor.<lb/>
"We just hit 'The Wall Steele<lb/>
said after the loss at Campbell.<lb/>
"When you play as few players<lb/>
(seven) as we've been playing,<lb/>
and they give the type of all-out<lb/>
effort that they gave at<lb/>
Wilmington and in the first half<lb/>
against Campbell, they just didn't<lb/>
have anything left.<lb/>
"That, coupled with the fact<lb/>
that Campbell shot the lights out<lb/>
(64 percent for the game), adds up<lb/>
to a blowout. Now, we've got a<lb/>
few days off before gearing up for<lb/>
George Mason, and we certainly<lb/>
need it<lb/>
The Pirates' nucleus of seven<lb/>
players could be reduced to six for<lb/>
this weekend as point guard Jeff<lb/>
Kelly suffered a shoulder injury in<lb/>
the Campbell game. His status<lb/>
was listed as doubtful by the ECU<lb/>
Sports Medicine staff as of<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
George Mason will bring a 13-6<lb/>
mark into Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Saturday night following a 67-60<lb/>
win at home over Virginia<lb/>
Commonwealth on Monday.<lb/>
The Patriots are in a second-<lb/>
place tie with UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
in the Colonial race with a 5-2<lb/>
record, including a 77-63 win<lb/>
earlier this season over the Pirates<lb/>
in Fairfax, Va.<lb/>
In the earlier meeting, George<lb/>
Mason placed four players in<lb/>
double figures, led by junior<lb/>
Kenny Sanders' 22 points and 19<lb/>
from senior Brian Miller,<lb/>
including five-of-seven shooting<lb/>
from the 3-point line. The Pirates<lb/>
received a game-high 24-point<lb/>
effort from Gus Hill, while Reed<lb/>
Lose and Stanley Love each<lb/>
chipped in 13 points.<lb/>
ECU jumped out to a 25-20 lead<lb/>
in the first meeting, but were<lb/>
outscorcd 14-0 in the final seven<lb/>
minutes before intermission to<lb/>
trail 34-25 at halfrime.<lb/>
The meeting between the<lb/>
Pirates and the Patriots will mark<lb/>
the 15th meeting between the two<lb/>
schools, with George Mason<lb/>
currently holding a 10-4 lead in<lb/>
the series. The Patriots will enter<lb/>
Minges on a roll, as it has picked<lb/>
up six consecutive victories since<lb/>
a loss to Richmond last month.<lb/>
Likely starters for the Patriots<lb/>
include 6-5 Kenny Sanders, 6-4<lb/>
Brian Miller, 6-7 Robert Dykes, 5-<lb/>
10 Amp Davis and 6-3 Steve<lb/>
Smith. Sanders leads the Patriots<lb/>
in scoring with a 21.9 average a<lb/>
game, while Davis is averaging<lb/>
14.9 points a contest. Miller is also<lb/>
averaging in double figures with<lb/>
11.8 points as is Smith with a 10.2<lb/>
point average.<lb/>
James Madison will sport a new<lb/>
coach when the Dukes arrive in<lb/>
Minges on Monday night. Third-<lb/>
year coach John Thurston<lb/>
resigned late last week over a<lb/>
contract dispute and has been<lb/>
replaced on an interim basis by<lb/>
assistant coach Tom McCorry.<lb/>
ECU's lone road win thus far<lb/>
this season came last month as the<lb/>
Pirates claimed a 68-65 win over<lb/>
James Madison in Harrisonburg,<lb/>
Va. Gus Hill again led the way for<lb/>
the Pirates in that game with 24<lb/>
points and ECU connected on 24-<lb/>
of-29 free throws during the game<lb/>
in picking up its first CAA win.<lb/>
Lose also added 15 for the Pirates<lb/>
in the win, while the Dukes were<lb/>
paced by 16 points from Kennard<lb/>
Winchester.<lb/>
The meeting between the<lb/>
Pirates and the Dukes will be the<lb/>
16th in the series, with James<lb/>
Madison clinging to a 10-5 lead.<lb/>
Starters for the Dukes include6-<lb/>
5 Winchester, 6-4 Ralph Glenn, 6-<lb/>
5 Anthony Cooley, 6-0 Ben<lb/>
Gordan and 6-2 Robert Griffin.<lb/>
Winchester is the leading scorer<lb/>
for James Madison averaging 15.6<lb/>
points a contest, while Gordon is<lb/>
averaging 7.6 points.<lb/>
"It's been a while since we<lb/>
enjoyed that win last month<lb/>
Steele said. "We were 2-1 in the East Carolina head coach Mike Steele hopes to see better things from his<lb/>
league and now we're 2-5. That 6'13 basketball team this weekend when they host George Mason<lb/>
tells you a little of how important Saturday in a CAA matchup followed by another CAA game on Monday<lb/>
this weekend will be for us against James Madison. (Photo by Thomas Walters � ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Lady Pirates fall to Wolfpack, 72-64<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
Despite good shooting from the<lb/>
bench, East Carolina's women's<lb/>
basketball team could not<lb/>
overcome the efforts of the North<lb/>
Carolina State Lady Wolfpack,<lb/>
Tuesday night in a 72-64 loss at<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
After jumping out to a 2-0 start,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates fell behind early<lb/>
and never regained the lead<lb/>
throughout the game. The loss<lb/>
dropped the Lady Pirates season<lb/>
record to 8-13.<lb/>
With 2:40 remaining in the first<lb/>
half, ECU'S Alma Bethea<lb/>
converted a three point play after<lb/>
being fouled by the Wolfpack's<lb/>
Krista Kilburn. This pulled the<lb/>
Lady Pirates within one, 28-27.<lb/>
N.C. State scored eight<lb/>
unanswered points as the clock<lb/>
ran down to 29 seconds to play in<lb/>
the opening half. Grctta O'Neal<lb/>
Savage then hit a four-footer and<lb/>
with three seconds remaining<lb/>
Bethea made another shot to end<lb/>
the half with ECU trailing by<lb/>
seven, 38-31.<lb/>
During the second half, N.C.<lb/>
State gradually slipped away<lb/>
from the Lady Pirates.<lb/>
ECU was able to pull within<lb/>
four points of the Lady Wolfpack<lb/>
with 18:47 remaining in the game<lb/>
as Bethea hit two free throws<lb/>
making the score 40-36 in favor of<lb/>
the Wolfpack.<lb/>
N.C. State increased its lead to<lb/>
57-42 with 10:30 to go, on a layup<lb/>
by Gerri Manning, State's leading<lb/>
scorer for the game with 16 points.<lb/>
The Lady Pirate's Sandra Grace<lb/>
then drove inside making a layup<lb/>
with 5:52 remaining, cutting the<lb/>
N.C. State lead to 60-53.<lb/>
That was as close as the Pirates<lb/>
would get as N.C. State's lead<lb/>
grew to as many as 14 points, 72-<lb/>
58, with only 3:07 left in the game.<lb/>
ECU scored the last six points of<lb/>
the game as the Wolfpack hit a<lb/>
three-minute drought.<lb/>
Shots by Bethea, Grace, and<lb/>
two free throws by Rose Miller,<lb/>
ended the game 72-64 with the<lb/>
Pirates falling short of the victory.<lb/>
Bethea led the scoring for ECU<lb/>
with a game-high 21 points and<lb/>
eight rebounds. Coming off the<lb/>
bench, Miller and ChrisO'Conner<lb/>
also added 12 each.<lb/>
ECU's leading scorer for the<lb/>
season, Monique Pompili pulled<lb/>
down six rebounds but was<lb/>
unable to hit a field gqalin scYen ,<lb/>
attempts from the field ana<lb/>
finished the game without' any<lb/>
points.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will go on the<lb/>
road for back-to-back conference<lb/>
games. First, ECU will travel to ,<lb/>
George Mason on Saturday and<lb/>
then James Madison for<lb/>
Monday's game.<lb/>
Baseballers hoping for success in 1988<lb/>
Wendy Morton of the Lady Pirates drives for a score in earlier action this<lb/>
season against William &amp; Mary as teammate Monique Pompili looks on.<lb/>
By MIKE SMALL<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
Last year the East Carolina<lb/>
Pirate Baseball team won the<lb/>
CAA Tournament and went on to<lb/>
compete in the NCAA Regionals.<lb/>
When a team is so successful, you<lb/>
wonder how they can top their<lb/>
feats of a year ago. But the Pirates<lb/>
have set their sets on doing just<lb/>
that.<lb/>
Pirate head baseball coach<lb/>
Gary Overton says we'll be<lb/>
looking at most of the same faces.<lb/>
"This year's team is very<lb/>
comparable to last year's team<lb/>
said Overton. "We lost six seniors,<lb/>
and of those six, only two were<lb/>
contributing forces in conference<lb/>
and NCAA Tournament play<lb/>
One major plus to this year's<lb/>
team is depth.<lb/>
Overton says that the Pirates<lb/>
have more depth than they've had<lb/>
in quite a while. But obviously,<lb/>
what wins baseball games is<lb/>
pitching and defense.<lb/>
Returning for the Pirates is<lb/>
1987 conference tournament<lb/>
MVP Gary Smith. Smith is back<lb/>
and throwing well. Overton feels<lb/>
that the Pirates have a solid<lb/>
amount of depth to back Smith<lb/>
including Jake Jacobs, Brian<lb/>
Berkman, Johnathon Jenkins, Tim<lb/>
Langdon, and freshman Scott<lb/>
Stevens (who Overton says has<lb/>
the best arm on the team).<lb/>
"We've got a lot of depth in our<lb/>
pitching which is something that<lb/>
we haven't had in the past<lb/>
Overton said.<lb/>
Offensively, the Pirates don't<lb/>
have the explosivencss of years<lb/>
past, but with returners like Jay<lb/>
McGraw, Calvin Brown, John<lb/>
Thomas, John Adams, and Mike<lb/>
Andrews, they have a good<lb/>
offensive club.<lb/>
When asked about predicting<lb/>
the fate of the team, the coach said<lb/>
their number one goal is to "win<lb/>
the conference championship,<lb/>
and hopefully win the<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
Overton went on to say that<lb/>
James Madison, and Richmond<lb/>
will be the strong teams in the<lb/>
league. The coach downplaved<lb/>
ECU by saying that "We've giVcn<lb/>
those teams some trouble in the<lb/>
past and hopefully that will<lb/>
continue<lb/>
Look for the Pirates at the top of<lb/>
the hcep at the end of the season.<lb/>
Ima Reck raps Intramurals<lb/>
James Wear connected on 49-of-<lb/>
50 free throws Tuesday night to<lb/>
claim the 1988 IM-Rec Free Throw<lb/>
Championship. Wear ripped the<lb/>
nets for 40 straight before attempt<lb/>
41 rimmed out. He easily canned<lb/>
the remaining nine shots to lock<lb/>
up the title. John Golouski hit on<lb/>
44 of 50 shots to finish as runner-<lb/>
up.<lb/>
In the women's free throw<lb/>
compeitition, Melissa Cameron<lb/>
hit 36 out of 50 free throws to take<lb/>
first-place honors over defending<lb/>
champion Penny Steele. Melissa<lb/>
canned 20 in the first round of<lb/>
competition to wrap up the<lb/>
crown.<lb/>
Co-Rec Bowling is underway<lb/>
for all three leagues. Early<lb/>
favorites are Todd &amp; the<lb/>
Disciples, Wild &amp; Innocent, and<lb/>
the Scrags. Check out IMA<lb/>
RECK's TOP CO-REC BOWLING<lb/>
PICKS in Tuesday's edition of the<lb/>
East Carolinian. By the way, the<lb/>
complete first-round scores will<lb/>
also be there!<lb/>
Registration for Inner Tube<lb/>
Water Polo was held on<lb/>
Wednesday at Memorial Gym.<lb/>
IMA RECK will provide some<lb/>
insight in Tuesday's East<lb/>
Carolinian on which teams will<lb/>
make the biggest splash and<lb/>
which teams will drink the most<lb/>
pool water. Don't miss it! Tau<lb/>
Kappa Epsilon "A" is the<lb/>
defending champion.<lb/>
Racquetball doubles<lb/>
registration is scheduled for<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 10 at 6 p.m. in<lb/>
room 102 Memorial Gym. Kim<lb/>
Adams and Ann Ellen are the<lb/>
favorites to take the women's title<lb/>
for the second consecutive year,<lb/>
while Pat Ricci and Kevin Plotkin<lb/>
are the men's defending<lb/>
champions. That's racquetball<lb/>
doubles, as in two partners in<lb/>
crime. IMA RECK forgot to<lb/>
mention the doubles part last time<lb/>
around.<lb/>
Congratulations to SCOTT<lb/>
ELLIS Scott is the first ever IM-<lb/>
Rec Equipment Giveaway<lb/>
winner! The giveaway is open to<lb/>
all faculty, staff and students. All<lb/>
you have to do is fill out a<lb/>
giveaway entry form and keep<lb/>
your fingers crossed. A drawing<lb/>
is held monthly for an array of<lb/>
recreational equipment,<lb/>
including basketballs, soccer<lb/>
balls, volleyballs, and tennis<lb/>
equipment. The next giveaway is<lb/>
Feb. 22. Make sure your name is in<lb/>
the hat. Entry forms are available<lb/>
in Memorial Gym, Room 204.<lb/>
Once again, a reminder about<lb/>
upcoming Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
activities. On Feb. 16 and 18 from<lb/>
8 p.m. -10 p.m a canoe clinic will<lb/>
be held at the Memorial Gym<lb/>
pool. The clinic will cover strokes<lb/>
used in canoeing, swamp rescue<lb/>
and other general information<lb/>
you need for a safe canoe trip.<lb/>
Registration is now open and will<lb/>
remain open until Feb. 15.<lb/>
A backpacking clinic is set for<lb/>
Feb. 24 at 6 p.m. in Memorial<lb/>
Gym, room 102. This clinic will<lb/>
cover tips on how to load your<lb/>
pack, meals for backpacking and<lb/>
general information to make you<lb/>
a better backpacker. Registration<lb/>
begins Feb. 8.<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
concerning these clinics, contact<lb/>
the Outdoor Recreation center.<lb/>
Okay, so you want more<lb/>
basketball. The big game so far<lb/>
this week was played on Monday<lb/>
night in the Fraternity "A"<lb/>
Trailblazers League. Sigma Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon, led by Tim Dunn's 26<lb/>
points and three other players in<lb/>
double figures, crushed Sigma<lb/>
Nu, 90-28. SAE used a keen<lb/>
outside shooting game and a<lb/>
height advantage to race to a<lb/>
commanding 40-8 lead at<lb/>
halftime. In other Frat A league<lb/>
action, Theta Chi downed Delta<lb/>
Sigma Phi, 40-37 and Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Psi beat Sigma Tau<lb/>
Gamma, 32-29.<lb/>
In the Men's Residence Hall "B"<lb/>
Nuggets League, the Scott Celtics<lb/>
are emerging as the team to beat.<lb/>
The Celtics used a triple threat of<lb/>
Daryl Bess, Derek Smith and Ken<lb/>
White to down the Bell Lakers. In<lb/>
other league contests, Jarvis West<lb/>
beat the Umstead Outlaws; the<lb/>
Umstead Convicts downed the<lb/>
Aycock Fightin' Cocks and the<lb/>
Belk Board Busters eased past the<lb/>
Scott Lucid Eyes.<lb/>
More scores coming up in<lb/>
Tuesday's East Carolinian. By the<lb/>
way, the Game of the Week . . .<lb/>
Sigma Alpha Epsilon versus Tau<lb/>
Kappa Epsilon  Monday at 10<lb/>
p.m. Minges Coliseum. IMA<lb/>
RECK says take the Sigmas,<lb/>
minus-15.<lb/>
Hfcyi<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
hoops<lb/>
champs<lb/>
Pictured above is Man tronix,<lb/>
the champion of this year's<lb/>
preseason Intramural<lb/>
Basketball Tournament.<lb/>
Pictued to the left is King of<lb/>
the Hill, the runner-up in the<lb/>
preseason event Both teams<lb/>
are still unbeaten in the<lb/>
regular season. (Photo by<lb/>
IMA RECK - Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services)<lb/>
1. ARIZONA � The<lb/>
proved Saturday thai - -<lb/>
anyway, they deserve I<lb/>
top-ranked team in the<lb/>
Behind 20 points fi m<lb/>
Tolbert and 1" from Kef<lb/>
the Wildcats beat a tough<lb/>
team 78-70. Also s -<lb/>
double figures for Lute<lb/>
boys were Anthem I<lb/>
and Sean Elliott with<lb/>
returns to action ir<lb/>
tough Fac-10 confer tome<lb/>
as they travel toStai pla<lb/>
Bv the wav, Sal<lb/>
upped Arizona s r rd 1 2<lb/>
making it the first I in<lb/>
20 victories this s. as -<lb/>
2. BRIGHAMOLNG -<lb/>
Cougars are tor n<lb/>
the onlv undefeated<lb/>
college team,<lb/>
anybody could d<lb/>
Mondav the victim for Bnc<lb/>
Young was T<lb/>
rolled to a 72-57 .<lb/>
points from cento- im Us<lb/>
and 19 points from for<lb/>
Chatman. Saturday<lb/>
had a different he <lb/>
victory over Air 1 -<lb/>
came in the form<lb/>
Toolson, who mad I<lb/>
3-pointcrs in set r<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
3. NEVADA-LAS VEGAS<lb/>
The Runnin Rebels<lb/>
run and hide fr rr<lb/>
opponents. Satu- 1<lb/>
rolled past Pacific ?2-67<lb/>
improve to 1 !M<lb/>
Rossum scored 17  mts<lb/>
Karl James added 16 ir<lb/>
rout Teammates Staee) <lb/>
and Richard Rob -<lb/>
Rebels on the boards<lb/>
rebounds each. The nev:<lb/>
for Tark's Sharks will be I rti<lb/>
against Cal-Irvine<lb/>
4. DUKE � The Blue Do.<lb/>
HOT. Monday, the Bl<lb/>
made mincemeat oi Clemson i<lb/>
101-63 rout, which raised<lb/>
record to 14-2 for tru seasoi <lb/>
used a 26-8 spurt in the fii<lb/>
cruise to a 54-26 lead Th. I<lb/>
history. Phil Henderson led rj<lb/>
way for the Blue Devils, who<lb/>
sitting atop the ACC standing<lb/>
with 18 points.<lb/>
5. PURDUE � Well my pick<lb/>
be the tops in the land fell la<lb/>
week in Bobby's house, but I st<lb/>
say that when the NCAj<lb/>
tournament rolls around later t!<lb/>
Boilermakers will sit at the to<lb/>
The 82-79 loss at Indiana dropp<lb/>
the Boilermakers to 17-2 tor tl<lb/>
season. Todd Mitchell led the w<lb/>
for Purduem the defeat, ho wev<lb/>
he missed a kev onc-and-<lb/>
the waning seconds when tl<lb/>
Boilers were only trailing by<lb/>
point. Purdue was back in actij<lb/>
last night against Wisconsin<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
6. OKLAHOMA � Okla<lb/>
rolled to an 18-2 mark Saturc<lb/>
behind an all-world pcrformai<lb/>
from Stacey King. King scores<lb/>
career-high 36 points and hauj<lb/>
in 21 rebounds in leading<lb/>
Sooners to a 96-91 victory c<lb/>
tough Iowa State Mo<lb/>
Blaylock also added 20 point!<lb/>
Billy Tubbs' gang. The Soonj<lb/>
had a tough test waitil<lb/>
Wednesday as thev had to tra<lb/>
to Kansas to meet the ayhaw<lb/>
7. TEMPLE � The Owls rol<lb/>
to a 16-1 record with<lb/>
impressive victory over a quaJ<lb/>
17-3 Rhode Island team on<lb/>
road Saturday Tim P�t<lb/>
career-high 27 points helped<lb/>
Owls garner a 77 70 victory<lb/>
keep the fans happv in Phi<lb/>
John Chanev's Owls will be b<lb/>
on the hardwood tonight ml<lb/>
Atlantic 10 Conference ma (<lb/>
against Duquosne<lb/>
UlXPfflERS<lb/>
umdepemtnts<lb/>
Beginning with vo.u I<lb/>
tax return �h� "� wtUttW n<lb/>
198ft, youprnrrilK ,u W<lb/>
wcunty MMftMl foi Tf �rf,r- '<lb/>
are at leaM fivr �� Old I<lb/>
of 19117 If any " �" rlrprn '�<lb/>
do not Havf tbi mimhrr rt an<lb/>
application f�rm trn� Um ?H-<lb/>
Social Secuntv nffur .n vour area<lb/>
W��SMHg<lb/>
<pb facs="00057941_0014"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 4,1988 13<lb/>
C<lb/>
<lb/>
0"<lb/>
it. better things from his<lb/>
the) host George Mason<lb/>
 game on Monday<lb/>
-EC! Photo Lab)<lb/>
72-64<lb/>
r the victory.<lb/>
?ring tor ECU<lb/>
gh 21 points and<lb/>
Is Coming oft the<lb/>
risCConner<lb/>
r tor the<lb/>
nique Pompili pulled<lb/>
rebounds but was<lb/>
hit a field goal m SOfea<lb/>
from the held and<lb/>
!houE ,<lb/>
 �on the<lb/>
ice<lb/>
Ail! travel to<lb/>
n Saturday and<lb/>
n for<lb/>
i 1988<lb/>
it predicting<lb/>
team, the coach said<lb/>
umber one goal is to "win<lb/>
inference championship,<lb/>
fully win the<lb/>
ly that<lb/>
nd Richmond<lb/>
: teams in the<lb/>
� h doivnplaved<lb/>
g that "We've given<lb/>
C tnmble in the<lb/>
fully that will<lb/>
5 at the top of<lb/>
id of the reason.<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
hoops<lb/>
champs<lb/>
PkturedaboeisMantronix,<lb/>
the champion of this year's<lb/>
preseason Intramural<lb/>
Basketball Tournament.<lb/>
Pictued to the left is King of<lb/>
the Hill, the runner-up in the<lb/>
preseason event. Both teams<lb/>
are still unbeaten in the<lb/>
regular season. (Photo by<lb/>
IMA RKCK - Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services!<lb/>
Wildcats overtake top position<lb/>
The best in hoops<lb/>
Bv TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
1. ARIZONA � The Wildcats 8. NORTH CAROLINA � Jeff<lb/>
proved Saturday that, for now Lebo put on a 3-point shooting<lb/>
anyway, they deserve to be the show Saturday in leading the Tar<lb/>
top-ranked team in the country. Heels to a 73-71 victory over<lb/>
Behind 20 points from Tom Georgia Tech. Lebo scored the Tar<lb/>
Tolbert and 17 from Steve Kerr, Heels last 15 points, all on 3-<lb/>
the Wildcats beat a tough Illinois pointers, to pull out the win. Lebo<lb/>
team 78-70. Also scoring in and J.R. Rcid shared<lb/>
� � � � � Wildcats are also sitting pretty in<lb/>
12. IOWA � The Hawkeyes the Big Eight conference race with<lb/>
routed Minnesota Saturday, 76- a 4-0 mark. Kansas State had to<lb/>
51, to push their record to 15-5 for take back to the court Wednesday<lb/>
the year. B.J. Armstrong led the to battle Iowa State in a league<lb/>
way for Iowa with 18 points, off of matchup,<lb/>
six 3-pointers. Armstrong also �����<lb/>
hauled in nine rebounds in the 17. St. JOHN'S�TheRedmen<lb/>
contest. A tough test against Big picked up win number 14 against<lb/>
Ten foe Michigan Wednesday only three losses Saturday by<lb/>
could either send the Hawkeyes<lb/>
up in the poll or reeling back.<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
13. SYRACUSE � The<lb/>
Orangemen continue their<lb/>
rollcrcoaster ride through the<lb/>
double figures for Lute Olsen's<lb/>
boys were Anthony Cook with 15<lb/>
md Sean Elliott with 13. Arizona<lb/>
returns to action in the not-so-<lb/>
tough Tac-10 conference tonight<lb/>
as they travel to Stanford to plav.<lb/>
By the way, Saturdav's victorv<lb/>
upped Arizona's record to 20-1,<lb/>
making it the first team to record<lb/>
20 victories this season.<lb/>
scoring<lb/>
honors in the game with 19 points<lb/>
each. The weekend victory<lb/>
improved North Carolina's<lb/>
record to 15-3. Dean Smith will<lb/>
thumping Scton Hall 58-55.<lb/>
Shelton Jones and Boo Harvey<lb/>
paved the way for the win with 15<lb/>
points each. The win marked the<lb/>
Redmen's 15th straight over<lb/>
Seton Hall. St. John's stay in the<lb/>
season. Sunday and Tuesday, the top 20 could be a short-lived one<lb/>
presents<lb/>
�<lb/>
Orangemen looked like an all-<lb/>
world team in picking up<lb/>
victories over Michigan and<lb/>
Providence. Rony Seikaly scored<lb/>
33 points and Derrick Coleman 18<lb/>
as it had to square off against<lb/>
Pittsburgh last night in a Big East<lb/>
game.<lb/>
put his team back on the court Sunday to pace Syracuse past<lb/>
tonight against Clemson on the<lb/>
road<lb/>
� � � �<lb/>
2. BRIGHAM YOUNG � The<lb/>
Cougars arc for real. At 16-0 and<lb/>
the only undefeated major-<lb/>
college team, I don't think<lb/>
anybody could deny that claim.<lb/>
Monday the victim for Brigham<lb/>
ing was Tulsa as the Cougars<lb/>
r ed to a 72-57 victory behind 21<lb/>
points from center Jim Usevitch<lb/>
and 19 points from forward Jeff<lb/>
.man. Saturday, the Cougars<lb/>
had a different hero in their 95-75<lb/>
victory over Air Force. The hero<lb/>
came in the form oi Andv<lb/>
Toolson, who made four-of-five<lb/>
-pointers in scoring 15 points.<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
3. NEVADA-LAS VEGAS �<lb/>
rhe Runnin' Rebels continue to<lb/>
run and hide from their<lb/>
opponents. Saturdav, the Rebels<lb/>
rolled past Pacific 92-67 to<lb/>
improve to 19-1 overall. Clint<lb/>
Rossum scored 17 points, while<lb/>
Karl 'ames added 16 in theTCAA<lb/>
rout Teammates Stacev Augmun<lb/>
and Richard Robinson led the<lb/>
Rebels on the boards with 11<lb/>
rebounds each. The next action<lb/>
for Tark's Sharks will be tonight<lb/>
against Cal-Irvine.<lb/>
9. KENTUCKY � LeRon Ellis<lb/>
is ready to play and he let it be<lb/>
known Sunday as he guided the<lb/>
Wildcats to a 78-69 victory over<lb/>
Notre Dame in Freedom Hall.<lb/>
Ellis, in making his first start of the<lb/>
Michigan 89-71, while Coleman<lb/>
led the way Tuesday with 20<lb/>
points in a 92-71 rout of<lb/>
Providence. The wins boosted the<lb/>
Orangemen to 16-5 for the season<lb/>
and made Jim Boehcim crack a<lb/>
semi smile.<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
14. VANDERBILT<lb/>
The<lb/>
year, scored 14 points, grabbed six Commodores are tough, enough<lb/>
said. Will Perdue knocked in 19<lb/>
points and yanked down 15<lb/>
rebounds Saturday as the<lb/>
Commodores routed SEC foe<lb/>
Florida 92-65. In the win,<lb/>
Vanderbilt went 23-for-23 from<lb/>
the charity stripe, amazing. The<lb/>
win boosted the Commodores to<lb/>
13-4. Vanderbilt was back playing<lb/>
rebounds and collected five steals<lb/>
in the win, which lifted Kentucky<lb/>
to 14-3 for the season. Kentucky<lb/>
was back in action last night<lb/>
against Mississippi.<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
10. PITTSBURGH<lb/>
Panthers, behind the<lb/>
touch of Charles Smith, topped<lb/>
The<lb/>
scoring<lb/>
Boston College Saturday, 73-67, again last night in a SEC matchup<lb/>
to improve to 15-2 for the season, against Mississippi State<lb/>
4. DUKE � The Blue Devils are<lb/>
HC M nday, the Blue Devils<lb/>
TrAdc rrTcerneat of Clemson in a<lb/>
101-63 rout which raised their<lb/>
record t I 4-2 for the season. Duke<lb/>
used a 2 v spurt in the first half to<lb/>
cruise to a 54-26 lead. The rest is<lb/>
history. Thil Henderson led the<lb/>
way for the Blue Devils, who are<lb/>
ng atop the ACC standings,<lb/>
with 18 points.<lb/>
5. PURDUE � Well my pick to<lb/>
be the tops in the land fell last<lb/>
week in Bobby's house, but I still<lb/>
say that when the NCAA<lb/>
tournament rolls around later the<lb/>
Boilermakers will sit at the top.<lb/>
The 82-79 loss at Indiana dropped<lb/>
the Boilermakers to 17-2 for the<lb/>
season. Todd Mitchell led the way<lb/>
for Purdue in the defeat, however,<lb/>
he missed a key one-and-one in<lb/>
the waning seconds when the<lb/>
Boilers were only trailing by one<lb/>
point. Purdue was back in action<lb/>
last night against Wisconsin.<lb/>
� ����<lb/>
6. OKLAHOMA � Oklahoma<lb/>
rolled to an 18-2 mark Saturday<lb/>
behind an all-world performance<lb/>
from Stacey King. King scored a<lb/>
career-high 36 points and hauled<lb/>
in 21 rebounds in leading the<lb/>
Sooners to a 96-91 victory over<lb/>
tough Iowa State. Mookie<lb/>
Blaylock also added 20 points for<lb/>
Billy Tubbs' gang. The Sooners<lb/>
had a tough test waiting<lb/>
Wednesday as they had to travel<lb/>
to Kansas to meet the Jayhawks.<lb/>
7. TEMPLE � The Owls rolled<lb/>
to a 16-1 record with an<lb/>
impressive victory over a quality<lb/>
17-3 Rhode Island team on the<lb/>
road Saturday. Tim Perry's<lb/>
career-high 27 points helped the<lb/>
Owls garner a 77-70 victory and<lb/>
keep the fans happy in Philly.<lb/>
John Chanes Owls will be back<lb/>
on the hardwood tonight in an<lb/>
Atlantic 10 Conference matchup<lb/>
against Duquesne.<lb/>
Smith fired in 25 points and<lb/>
hauled in 10 rebounds in the<lb/>
victorv which gave Pitt a 5-1<lb/>
mark in the Big East. The Panthers<lb/>
had another tough contest last<lb/>
night against league foe St. John's.<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
11. MICHIGAN � The<lb/>
Wolverines got rocked hard<lb/>
Sunday in the Carrier Dome as<lb/>
Syracuse pounded out a 89-71<lb/>
victorv. Garv Grant and Terry<lb/>
Mills led the way for Michigan,<lb/>
who slipped to 17-3, in defeat with<lb/>
22 and 21 points respectively. Bill<lb/>
Frieder's team could plunge<lb/>
further down the poll as<lb/>
Wednesdav they had to play Iowa<lb/>
and Purdue is also coming to<lb/>
town Saturdav. Onlv time will<lb/>
tell.<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
15. MISSOURI � The Tigers<lb/>
improved their record to 12-4<lb/>
Saturdav by knocking off<lb/>
Oklahoma State 86-72. Bvron<lb/>
Irvin led the way in the win with<lb/>
21 points, while Derrick Chievous<lb/>
came off the bench to score 20<lb/>
points and collect eight rebounds.<lb/>
Missouri was back on the court<lb/>
last night at home hosting<lb/>
Colorado.<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
16. KANSAS STATE � The<lb/>
Wildcats brought an end to<lb/>
Kansas' 55-game home winning<lb/>
streak Saturday by pulling off a<lb/>
72-61 victory. Mitch Richmond<lb/>
tossed in a game-high 35 points in<lb/>
the victory, which lifted Kansas<lb/>
State to 12-4 for the season. The<lb/>
sommm<lb/>
v<lb/>
from mm)<lb/>
TAXPAYERS<lb/>
with dependents<lb/>
Beginning with your 1987 income<lb/>
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1988, you generally must list social<lb/>
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� � � �<lb/>
18. FLORIDA � The Gators<lb/>
mid-season roll came to a<lb/>
screeching halt Saturday as<lb/>
Vanderbilt rolled past them for a<lb/>
92-65 win. The loss dropped the<lb/>
Gators to 15-5 for the season.<lb/>
Dwayne Schintzius led the way<lb/>
for the Gators, who fell to 6-2 in<lb/>
the SEC, with 23 points, while<lb/>
Vernon Maxwell added 19. The<lb/>
Gators were trying to rebound<lb/>
Wednesday with a SEC game on<lb/>
the road against Alabama.<lb/>
TCBV"<lb/>
Sweetheart Pies<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
19. GEORGETOWN � The<lb/>
Hoyas fell to 14-5 for the season<lb/>
Monday after suffering a 64-58<lb/>
defeat at the hands of Villanova.<lb/>
The loss leveled the Hoyas Big<lb/>
East record at 4-4. Mark Tillmon<lb/>
paced Georgetown in the loss<lb/>
with 24 points, while Charles<lb/>
Smith added 15. The Hoyas were<lb/>
never able to get closer than four<lb/>
in the second half of the contest.<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
20. ILLINOIS � The Fightin'<lb/>
Illini faltered to 14-6 Saturdav<lb/>
after falling to top-ranked<lb/>
Arizona on the road, 78-70.<lb/>
Lowell hamilton did everything<lb/>
he could in the second half to try<lb/>
to give the Illini a victory as he<lb/>
scored 21 points in the final 20<lb/>
minutes. Illinois will trv to bounce<lb/>
back from the loss tonight as they<lb/>
travel to Ohio State for a Big Ten<lb/>
battle.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057941_0015"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
14<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 4, W8S<lb/>
Basnight dunks wildly<lb/>
l AS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Jarvis<lb/>
Basnight remembers intercepting<lb/>
the pass and heading downcourt.<lb/>
He remembers seeing the<lb/>
backboard and a defender in his<lb/>
way.<lb/>
But at the point where Basnight<lb/>
takes a flying leap over the 6-toot-<lb/>
3 defender en route to a<lb/>
thunderous slam dunk, things get<lb/>
a little hazy for the Nevada-Las<lb/>
Vegas star.<lb/>
1 knew he was there and then<lb/>
he disappeared but 1 don't really<lb/>
remember what happened'<lb/>
Basnight said "Then 1 heard the<lb/>
crowd<lb/>
What he heard was a collective<lb/>
gasp from the 17,835 fans who<lb/>
couldn't believe what they had<lb/>
just seen during Saturday's game<lb/>
at UNLV's campus arena.<lb/>
This wasn't just some ordinary<lb/>
in-your-face slam dunk. It may-<lb/>
have been the first over-your-face<lb/>
slam dunk.<lb/>
What the 6-foot-8 UNLV senior<lb/>
did, literally, was vault over the<lb/>
head of Pacific's 6-3 lames<lb/>
Cleaves, who appeared to duck<lb/>
only an inch or two at the last<lb/>
minute but was otherwise erect<lb/>
when Basnight sailed over him.<lb/>
Cleaves was stationed about<lb/>
eight feet in front of the basket,<lb/>
just inside the lane, and preparing<lb/>
for the collision that would cost<lb/>
Basnight a charging foul. The<lb/>
collision never came.<lb/>
"He just kept risingand rising<lb/>
the astonished Cleaves said. "I<lb/>
knew he could jump but  I<lb/>
couldn't believe it<lb/>
Neither could UNLV Coach<lb/>
Jerry Tarkanian.<lb/>
Ruggers readying for Spring<lb/>
The Rugby Club which is<lb/>
coming off a 7-1 fall season is<lb/>
preparing for a strong spring<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Mackovic<lb/>
at Illinois<lb/>
CHAMPAIGN, 111. (AP) -<lb/>
Former Kansas City Chiefs Coach<lb/>
John Mackovic has been selected<lb/>
a the Illinois football coach,<lb/>
sources said Tuesday night.<lb/>
Peggy Tippett, wife of Illinois<lb/>
defensive coordinator Howard<lb/>
Tippett, said Athletic Director<lb/>
Neale Stoner called her husband<lb/>
and told him that Mackovic<lb/>
would get the job.<lb/>
Tippett also had been a<lb/>
candidate for the job.<lb/>
A University of Illinois source,<lb/>
who asked not to be identified,<lb/>
also confirmed that Mackovic had<lb/>
been selected.<lb/>
Earlier in the evening, the<lb/>
university announced that a<lb/>
decision on a new coach had been<lb/>
made but that the announcement<lb/>
would be delayed until<lb/>
Wednesday so that the candidate<lb/>
could be notified and could<lb/>
accept.<lb/>
The Ruggers had their best<lb/>
season in several years when they<lb/>
placed second in the state. The<lb/>
Club dropped a heart breaker in<lb/>
the state final to UNC-G, 8-6. But<lb/>
they plan to avenge that loss this<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
"Hie Spring Rugby Season is<lb/>
shorter than the fall but no less<lb/>
intense. Hie Club in planning<lb/>
trips to Wilmington and N.C.<lb/>
State for a big tournament that<lb/>
will include the two best teams<lb/>
from Virginia.<lb/>
In addition, two home games<lb/>
against Guilford College and the<lb/>
Marines. To top the season off, the<lb/>
Ruggers are planning a Big<lb/>
Alumni Match at the end of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The team will return all but two<lb/>
players from last semester's 7-1<lb/>
squad including a host of young<lb/>
talent. The Club is always looking<lb/>
for new members. Practice is<lb/>
Tuesday-Thursday at 4 p.m.<lb/>
behind the Allied Health<lb/>
building.<lb/>
All new players welcome. No<lb/>
experience necessary.<lb/>
Play Chico's Name Game<lb/>
Guess the name of the Senorita<lb/>
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�One Entry per<lb/>
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?Contest ends Feb.<lb/>
14th, 1988<lb/>
Want to Entertain People<lb/>
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Audition at the<lb/>
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Register in 234 Mendenhall<lb/>
i<lb/>
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gather ins place<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Receive Up To $1,600.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057941_0016"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>