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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057945_0001"/>
COMING TUESDAY:<lb/>
Tipper Gore visits Greenville in campaign swing<lb/>
for husband. Clay Deanhardt has story Tuesday,<lb/>
MM?0.nMMMI<lb/>
HHHMMHKBNT<lb/>
mmmimmammmmmmm<lb/>
Carol gets off on Action Jackson. See review on<lb/>
page 9.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
ECU swim coach, Rick Kobe, is voted Coach of<lb/>
the Year by CAA. See page 13<lb/>
She ?a0i (Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 62 No. 38<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina camvus communitu since 1925.<lb/>
Thursday, February 18,1988 Greenville, NC 16 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Student Union needs new committee heads<lb/>
Bv STEPHANIE FOLSOM<lb/>
?Uti writer<lb/>
Karen Pasch, the newly elected<lb/>
1988-89 Student Union president,<lb/>
is calling tor more student in-<lb/>
volvement in her group as the due<lb/>
date tor committee head applica-<lb/>
The five -year plan<lb/>
tions nears.<lb/>
Pasch said the Student Union<lb/>
receives more money from each<lb/>
individual student than does the<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
and is responsible for the majority<lb/>
of activities on this campush.<lb/>
The Student Union is allotted a<lb/>
certain amount of each student's<lb/>
activity fees. Pasch said students<lb/>
who would like to have more<lb/>
input in how their money is used<lb/>
should get involved with the<lb/>
union.<lb/>
Applications for committee<lb/>
head positions will be accepted<lb/>
only through Friday, Pasch said.<lb/>
They can be picked up at the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
234. Applications to be a commit-<lb/>
tee member can be picked up<lb/>
Why school takes so long<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Tor various reasons, many col-<lb/>
lege students find that it is diffi-<lb/>
cult to graduate in four vears. On<lb/>
the ECU campus and other cam-<lb/>
puses, students often decide to<lb/>
graduate in five years or as it is<lb/>
popularly termed 'the five year<lb/>
plan<lb/>
As oi the spring semester of<lb/>
1988 ECU has a total of 2,910<lb/>
seniors, according to William<lb/>
Melton, the director of Institu-<lb/>
tional Research for ECU. Of the<lb/>
almost 3,000 seniors, 1,195 have<lb/>
tentatively applied for dradu-<lb/>
n. Helton said.<lb/>
The disparity in these figures<lb/>
means that 1,715 seniors are not<lb/>
graduating in four years or that<lb/>
they have not applied for gradu-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
There are many reasons why<lb/>
students decide not graduate in<lb/>
four years. The reasons range<lb/>
from a changing of major to tak-<lb/>
ing a lesser course load.<lb/>
Some students say that gradu-<lb/>
ating in four years would mean<lb/>
taking too many hours, too<lb/>
quickly. In order to spread out<lb/>
their course load so they will be<lb/>
able to concentrate on their sched-<lb/>
ule, they prolong their college<lb/>
carrcer to five years or more.<lb/>
"My relatives ask what I'm<lb/>
taking at ECU and my reply is Tm<lb/>
taking my time Dwayne Kemp<lb/>
Gilbert, a senior Industrial Tech-<lb/>
nology major, said.<lb/>
Other students choose to<lb/>
have part-time jobs to bear the<lb/>
finanicial burdens of college. Jeff<lb/>
Gibson, who has a part-time job in<lb/>
Greenville, takes an optimistic<lb/>
view of graduating in five years.<lb/>
"School is a learning experience,<lb/>
so why not learn as much as you<lb/>
can for as long as you<lb/>
canGibson, a senior Communi-<lb/>
cations major, said.<lb/>
According to Helton, 41 per-<lb/>
cent of students enrolled as fresh-<lb/>
SRA discusses intramural service<lb/>
men at ECU in 1982 graduated<lb/>
within the five years between<lb/>
1982 and 1987. Also 37.8 percent<lb/>
of the 1982 freshmen either trans-<lb/>
ferred toother schools or dropped<lb/>
out of school.<lb/>
In the five year follow-up by<lb/>
the Institutional Research, Helton<lb/>
found that 12.5 percent of the stu-<lb/>
dents from the same class were<lb/>
academically suspended. The<lb/>
study also found that 8.7 percent<lb/>
of the 1982 freshmen were still<lb/>
enrolled.<lb/>
Jimmy Patterson is in the 8.7<lb/>
percent of the that class which still<lb/>
enrolled at ECU. "I changed my<lb/>
major a couple of times, and I took<lb/>
a lot courses I didn't really need<lb/>
Patterson, a senior Industrial<lb/>
Technology major, said. Patter-<lb/>
son said that he has 175 credit<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
throughout the year.<lb/>
The Student Union has a pro-<lb/>
gram board made up of 11<lb/>
committees serving various stu-<lb/>
dent interests. These committees<lb/>
are: Special Events, which spon-<lb/>
sors events like Barefoot on the<lb/>
Mall and the upcoming Marcel<lb/>
Marceau performance; Major<lb/>
Concerts, which handled the An-<lb/>
ita Baker and Jimmy Buffet con-<lb/>
certs; Minority Arts, which hosts<lb/>
International Week and the Stu-<lb/>
dent Star Search Competition;<lb/>
Publicity, which takes care of<lb/>
public relations; Special Concerts,<lb/>
which books acts like the Flesh-<lb/>
tones; Forum, which handled the<lb/>
pornography debate; Films,<lb/>
which takes care of the weekly<lb/>
movies in Hendrix Theatre;<lb/>
Travel, which is handling the trips<lb/>
to New York, Hawaii, and the<lb/>
Bahamas; Visual Arts, which<lb/>
sponsors the Illumina Competi-<lb/>
tion; Coffeehouse, which spon-<lb/>
sors student bands; and Produc-<lb/>
tions, which sponsors the tree-<lb/>
trimming party, open house, and<lb/>
Mocktail Casino Nights.<lb/>
Pasch said those interested es-<lb/>
pecially in the communications<lb/>
and entertainment field should<lb/>
consider filling out an applica-<lb/>
tion. The GPA requirement for<lb/>
chairpersons is 2.25, and 2.0 for<lb/>
committee members.<lb/>
The amount of time you need to<lb/>
be a chairperson depends on the<lb/>
committee and how involved vou<lb/>
get, according to Pasch. Laura<lb/>
Salazar, current productions<lb/>
chairperson, said she spends "at<lb/>
least 4-6 hours a week calling<lb/>
people, meeting with advisors,<lb/>
and thinking about it (the pro-<lb/>
grams)<lb/>
Pasch said the training session<lb/>
for chairpersons, which will be<lb/>
scheduled for late March or early<lb/>
April, will cover stress and time<lb/>
management, recruitment, lead-<lb/>
ership skills, information on how<lb/>
to run meetings, and how to<lb/>
communicate effectively. During<lb/>
this training session the new<lb/>
chairpersons will be swom in.<lb/>
Pasch said that chairpersons do<lb/>
not receive a salary, but "there is<lb/>
enough compensation and<lb/>
enough benefits All chairper-<lb/>
sons get tickets for activities that<lb/>
the Student Union organizes.<lb/>
Memberson thecommittee which<lb/>
organized the event also get tick-<lb/>
ets.<lb/>
Pasch also said that the Student<lb/>
Union gives a person the chance<lb/>
to "deal with professional people<lb/>
in the working world. It relates to<lb/>
every major, every interest<lb/>
Salazar said that the Student<lb/>
Union is "well-organized and<lb/>
runs smooth but carries "a lot of<lb/>
responsibility<lb/>
By KIMLEY EDER<lb/>
stiff writer<lb/>
Nancy Mize from the depart-<lb/>
ment oi intramural-recreational<lb/>
services was the guest speaker at<lb/>
the meeting of the SRA council<lb/>
this Tuesday.<lb/>
The key issue discussion was<lb/>
whether or not to eliminate the<lb/>
residence hall structure from in-<lb/>
tramurals or not. Mize also ad-<lb/>
dressed the issue of lack of com-<lb/>
munication with the residence<lb/>
halls with regards to intramurals.<lb/>
She noted that participation in<lb/>
intramurals has not decreased,<lb/>
but more and more people are<lb/>
signing up as independents<lb/>
rather than through residence<lb/>
halls.<lb/>
The decrease in representaion<lb/>
was especially noticable in<lb/>
women'r residence halls. 'There<lb/>
has been a big decline in men's<lb/>
and co-rec but it is more signifi-<lb/>
cant in women's She said IRS is<lb/>
proposing that they abolish the<lb/>
residence hall structure and put<lb/>
the residence halls in with the<lb/>
independents.<lb/>
A proposal was brought forth to<lb/>
make the IRS representative for<lb/>
each dorm a member of the execu-<lb/>
tive house council. Mize said the<lb/>
IRS department would welcome<lb/>
any ideas that the students have to<lb/>
offer.<lb/>
A representative from West<lb/>
Campus announced that Chan-<lb/>
cellor Richard R. Eakin will speak<lb/>
in Green Hall lobby Wednesday,<lb/>
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. The chancel-<lb/>
lor is scheduled to speak about the<lb/>
athletic facilities and lighting on<lb/>
West Campus. All West Campus<lb/>
residents are welcome to come.<lb/>
Tickets for the Spring Dance are<lb/>
now available from any SRA<lb/>
member. The dance will be held<lb/>
on March 18 at the Holiday Inn,<lb/>
and the theme for the dance is<lb/>
"One Night in Bangkok Trans-<lb/>
portation for the dance will be<lb/>
provided by the SGA buses, and<lb/>
cost is $3person and $5couple<lb/>
for SRA cardholders and $4per-<lb/>
son and $7couple for non-card-<lb/>
holders.<lb/>
Historic film to be shown on public television<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
" Boogie-Woogie in Black and<lb/>
White an hour-long documen-<lb/>
tary program about an all-black<lb/>
musical featurette filmed in<lb/>
Greenville in 1947, will be broad-<lb/>
cast by the UNC Center for Public<lb/>
Television network Friday at 10<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Alex Albright of the East Caro-<lb/>
lina University English faculty is<lb/>
the program's writer and co-pro-<lb/>
ducer. "Boogie in Black and<lb/>
White" is part of special Black<lb/>
History Month programming<lb/>
scheduled by UNC-TV and is di-<lb/>
rected and co-produced bv Susan<lb/>
Massengale of the Center for<lb/>
Public TV staff.<lb/>
A surviving copy of the all-but-<lb/>
forgotten film was discovered at<lb/>
the Roxy Theatre in Greenville<lb/>
several years ago. Albright ar-<lb/>
ranged to have the rare film re-<lb/>
stored by the American Film Insti-<lb/>
tute and re-premiered on the ECU<lb/>
campus in 1986.<lb/>
The 26-minute-long film, made<lb/>
by two local white men, John<lb/>
Warner and William Lord, in-<lb/>
cludes "big band rhythm and<lb/>
blues, and burlesque music and<lb/>
dance routines, mostly per-<lb/>
formed by traveling entertainers.<lb/>
Several Greenville people ap-<lb/>
peared in the cast. The main char-<lb/>
acter is portrayed by the late Tom<lb/>
Foreman, a prominent member of<lb/>
Greenville's black community.<lb/>
Because of distribution prob-<lb/>
lems, the film was shown only a<lb/>
few times in the Carolinas, then<lb/>
laid aside and forgotten. Some of<lb/>
the performers themselves never<lb/>
saw it until its re-premiere four<lb/>
decades later.<lb/>
Since its rediscovery, "Pitch a<lb/>
Boogie-Woogie" has attracted<lb/>
considerable attention as a signifi-<lb/>
See DOCUMENTARY, page 2<lb/>
Sunny weather<lb/>
The weather in Greenville has been abnormally warm for February the last few days, as these<lb/>
volleyballers will attest to. Students across campus have taken advantage of the warm weather to<lb/>
get fresh air, exercise and maybe even a tan before Spring Break trips to the sandy beaches further<lb/>
south. (Photo by Hardy Alligood ? Photolab)<lb/>
Morgan Distinguished Alumni lecturer<lb/>
Robert Morgan<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Robert B. Morgan, director of<lb/>
the State Brueau of Investigation,<lb/>
and former U.S. senator, will<lb/>
serve as ECU's 1988 Distin-<lb/>
guished Alumni Lecturer March<lb/>
20-21. While on campus Morgan<lb/>
will also participate in Scholars<lb/>
Weekend activities.<lb/>
Morgan will deliver a public<lb/>
lecture entitled "On Politics, Civil<lb/>
Liberties and Ethics March 21 at<lb/>
8 p.m. in Ampitheatre 1010 of<lb/>
ECU's new general classroom<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Donald Y. Leggett, assistant to<lb/>
the vice chancellor for Institu-<lb/>
tional Advancement said, "We<lb/>
are honored that one of North<lb/>
Carolina's most respected and<lb/>
dedicated public servants will be<lb/>
on campus to address our stu-<lb/>
dents, potential ECU students<lb/>
and the local citizenry.<lb/>
"Robert Morgan is an experi-<lb/>
enced leader who has a wealth of<lb/>
information to share. I hope that<lb/>
the University and Greenville<lb/>
community will seize the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to meet and learn from this<lb/>
year's Distinguished Alumni Lec-<lb/>
turer<lb/>
Chancellor's home, meetings As a state senator Morgan<lb/>
with student and faculty leaders, worked for university status for<lb/>
class visitations, and the banquet, his alma mater and was a strong<lb/>
Morgan will participate in in- advocate for the establishment of<lb/>
formal meetings with campus the ECU Medical School and<lb/>
leaders, honor students and ECU School of Nursing.<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He has served as chairman of<lb/>
the ECU board of trustees and<lb/>
president of the alumni associa-<lb/>
tion. He received one of the<lb/>
university's first honorary doc-<lb/>
Ambassadors. He will specifi- Morgan graduated from East torate of letters degrees in 1975<lb/>
Alumni<lb/>
cally visit students and faculty in Carolina in 1947 with a bachelor's<lb/>
the Departments of Criminal Jus- degree in math and chemistry,<lb/>
tice and Political Science.<lb/>
"My undergraduate training in<lb/>
A native of Harnett County, math and chemistry was the most<lb/>
Morgan will address Scholars Morgan became director of the significant factor in whatever<lb/>
Weekend guests at a banquet SBI in 1985. During a lifetime of success I've had in law. I can't<lb/>
Sunday, March 20. The weekend political and legal work, Morgan recommend a better major for<lb/>
is arranged for top-ranking high has served four years as a clerk of pre-law students. The logic, rea-<lb/>
school juniors who visit the ECU court, 10 as a state senator, six as sorting and methodology of these ars Weekend or the public lecture<lb/>
campus to preview opportunities state attorney general, and six as curriculums provide excellent with Robert Morgan, contact the<lb/>
for honor students. The weekend a U. S. senator. He has also prac- preparation for the kind of think- ECU Office of Alumni Affairs at<lb/>
will include a reception at the ticed law in Lillington. ing required in law Morgan 757-6072.<lb/>
and the Outstanding<lb/>
Award in 1965.<lb/>
Morgan served in the U.S. Na vy<lb/>
in both World War II and the<lb/>
Korean Conflict. He has served in<lb/>
the U. S. Naval Reserves and the<lb/>
U. S. Air Force Reserves.<lb/>
For more information on Schol-<lb/>
<lb/>
- ? . ?<lb/>
4- ? - " <lb/>
-<lb/>
 - -1 ii ?jjtt iijui. in- r ?'???-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 18,1988<lb/>
Preparing students for fire with new policy<lb/>
How prepared are you in case of<lb/>
a fire? Don't let your education go<lb/>
up in smoke. A fire on Campus<lb/>
not only interrupts your educa-<lb/>
tion, it destroys property and can<lb/>
injure or kill people.<lb/>
How prepared are we on Cam-<lb/>
pus in residence halls? Not as well<lb/>
as we should be. Take for instance<lb/>
the new policy on tampering with<lb/>
fire alarms and equipment. The<lb/>
penalties may seem harsh, but are<lb/>
they really that harsh, when you<lb/>
really consider what is at risk?<lb/>
From Aug. 22 through Dec. 10,<lb/>
1987, there were 198 fire alarms<lb/>
responded to by Public Safety,<lb/>
only 18 were the result of acciden-<lb/>
tal fires or smoke. During this<lb/>
same period there were approxi-<lb/>
mately 25 fire extinguishers sto-<lb/>
len, and 52 maliciously dis-<lb/>
charged by vandals. There were<lb/>
83 glasses to fire extinguisher<lb/>
cabinets broken and 15 cabinets<lb/>
damaged by acts of vandalism.<lb/>
Are you really prepared in case<lb/>
of an actual fire? Maybe or maybe<lb/>
not. When the fire alarm goes off<lb/>
Pirate Police<lb/>
Line<lb/>
by<lb/>
Capt. Keith Knox<lb/>
in your building, do you evacuate<lb/>
or investigate? Most do not, even<lb/>
during fire drills, because the<lb/>
alarms go off so frequently they<lb/>
don't see the danger, since there<lb/>
simply has not been a major fire<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Have you become complacent<lb/>
in your response? It has gotten to<lb/>
the place it should remind us of<lb/>
the story about the little boy who<lb/>
cried wolf so often, that finally<lb/>
when there actually was a wolf,<lb/>
nobody responded to his call. Of<lb/>
course, when a fire alarm goes off<lb/>
Public Safety and Residence Life<lb/>
Staff are going to respond. How-<lb/>
ever, human nature takes over<lb/>
and after frequent false alarms<lb/>
they too, may become lax and do<lb/>
not respond as quickly as they<lb/>
should.<lb/>
If there was a fire in your room,<lb/>
do you know where to find the<lb/>
alarm stations andor fire<lb/>
extinguishers? If so, hopefully no<lb/>
one has stolen or discharged the<lb/>
fire extinguishers, thus making it<lb/>
impossible for yov. to extinguish a<lb/>
small fire before it becomes a<lb/>
major one.<lb/>
Always follow Campus fire<lb/>
rules, if you don't, your education<lb/>
could go up in smoke. Report<lb/>
those who tamper with fire<lb/>
alarms, fire detection devices, and<lb/>
fire fighting equipment immedi-<lb/>
ately to Public Safety at 757-6150<lb/>
or call Pirate Crimebusters at 757-<lb/>
6266. Remember: Fire prevention<lb/>
is everybody's business.<lb/>
Nedim dismissed, dog misuse<lb/>
(CPS) ? University of Califor- moved from it in January for giv-<lb/>
nia at Davis officials have dis-<lb/>
missed veterinary Prof. Nedim<lb/>
At about the same time, two "I don't like it when someone<lb/>
ing his students the option of re- University of North Florida stu- says you must kill to get a good<lb/>
fusing to perform any surgeries dents asked UN F'sDept. of Natu- grade Terry Powers told The<lb/>
they considered "unethical or ral Science to stop using live ani- Spinnaker, UNF's campus paper,<lb/>
immoral mals in an upper-level physiol- "Because of my beliefs, I'm being<lb/>
ogy class they are taking, and penalized.<lb/>
The teacher, a Dept. of Opthal- asserted they should not get bad<lb/>
mology spokesman said, hadn't grades solely because they re-<lb/>
Buyukmihci, who had taught gotten official permission to give fused to participate in the experi-<lb/>
the course since 1987 , was re- his students such a choice. ments.<lb/>
Buvukmihci as a "course leader<lb/>
J<lb/>
of a surgery class in which stu-<lb/>
dents operated on live, healthy<lb/>
animals as part of their course-<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Davis' Buyukmihci was repri-<lb/>
manded for trying to avoid penal-<lb/>
izing students for such feelings.<lb/>
SMje Cost Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
James F. J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Anne Leigh Mallory James Russo<lb/>
Adam Blankenshlp<lb/>
i<lb/>
Shari Clemens<lb/>
Edwards, King plead no contest to charges<lb/>
Theodore "Blue" Edwards 1986. ing stolen goods,<lb/>
and Tracy Clayton King, two for- Both Brown and Williams ' A no contest plea is not an<lb/>
mer ECU basketball players, pleaded guilty to two charges admission of guilt, but still carries<lb/>
pleaded no contest to charges of each of breaking and entering in the weight and penalty of a con-<lb/>
receiving stolen property in Pitt November. viction. The maxium sentence for<lb/>
County Superior Court Tuesday. Edwards pleaded no contest both Edwards and King is ten<lb/>
Edwards and Clayton along io one count of receiving stolen years. Both men were allowed to<lb/>
with two other former basketball goods in a plea bargin which dis- remain free on bond Tuesday.<lb/>
players, Howard Elliot Brown missed three counts of breaking The dorm thefts allegedly<lb/>
and John Aaron Williams, will be and entering. King, who was occurred during the Christmas<lb/>
sentenced March 28 in connection charged with four counts of<lb/>
with several Scott Dormitory breaking and entering, pleaded<lb/>
;reak-ins during Christmas of nocontestto two counts of receiv-<lb/>
Documentary features an<lb/>
all-black musical<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
break of 1986. Police officials esti-<lb/>
mate that $6,000 in property was<lb/>
stolen from several of the dorm<lb/>
rooms. The four were charged in<lb/>
early September in connection<lb/>
with the thefts.<lb/>
Ed wards is the only one of the<lb/>
four who is still enrolled at ECU.<lb/>
Buyukmihci repeatedly had<lb/>
asked Dept. of Ophthalmology<lb/>
officials to let him use cadavers of<lb/>
animals that had died of natural<lb/>
causes, terminally ill animals or,<lb/>
"as a last resort abandoned<lb/>
pound animals instead of live,<lb/>
healthy ones.<lb/>
The department refused his<lb/>
requests.<lb/>
George Cardinct, a member of<lb/>
the department's curriculum<lb/>
committee, said Buyukmihci's<lb/>
proposals were "contradictory"<lb/>
to what other faculty members<lb/>
wanted students to accomplish in<lb/>
the courses, and that once<lb/>
Buyukmihci decided to press his<lb/>
case anyway he'd begun, in the<lb/>
department's view, to use the<lb/>
class for his own "political pur-<lb/>
poses<lb/>
cant document of jazz history and<lb/>
black history. A copy of the film<lb/>
has been deposited in Library of<lb/>
Congress film archives, and Al-<lb/>
Fillmore Bell ana E. A. Eaton. Also<lb/>
interviewed are Greenville attor-<lb/>
ney Sam Underwood Jr local<lb/>
theatre manager Pervis Cohens,<lb/>
and two members of the ECU<lb/>
faculty: historian Donald Lennon<lb/>
and film scholar William<lb/>
Maria Bell<lb/>
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BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
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Phones757-6366757-6557<lb/>
757-6558757-6309<lb/>
J<lb/>
bright has arranged screenings at Stephenson. Local musician Bill<lb/>
several film festivals. Shepherd, who found the surviv-<lb/>
The TV documentary about the ing reel upstairs at the Roxy, ap-<lb/>
making and rediscovery of "Pitch pears in the program,<lb/>
a Boogie-Woogie" features brief Although the forgotten film's<lb/>
interviews witn some ot the origi- sound track was in poor condi-<lb/>
nal cast members: Beatrice Atkin- don, the film was in generally<lb/>
son of Greenville, former good shape when Shepherd un-<lb/>
Greenville residents Herman earthed it and first screened it on<lb/>
Forbes and the Rev. Dr. Joe Little, the Roxy's old carbon arc projec-<lb/>
and musicians from the sound tor. Like most films of the period,<lb/>
track band, the "Rhythm Vets it was shot on silver nitrate-based<lb/>
"The TV program gives a brief film stock and with age and de-<lb/>
cultural history of the film's set- compostion this material is likely<lb/>
ting ? the night club scene along to ignite under the heat of projec-<lb/>
what was known as The Block' on tion lights, Albright said. "This<lb/>
Albemarle Avenue during the<lb/>
30's and 40's Albright said.<lb/>
"During tobacco season both<lb/>
blacks and whites from miles<lb/>
around frequented the clubs and<lb/>
restaurants on The Block. Some of<lb/>
:he nation's leading jazz perform-<lb/>
ers appeared there, people like<lb/>
Lucky' Millinder, Earl Tatha'<lb/>
Hines and Billy Eckstine, along<lb/>
with traveling minstrel shows,<lb/>
such as Silas Green's minstrels<lb/>
The Block ? actuallv<lb/>
v.<lb/>
.?-<lb/>
phenomenon resulted in many<lb/>
movie theatre fires during the 30's<lb/>
and 40's he explained.<lb/>
"Warner and Lord shot the<lb/>
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zonverted sound stage in a to-<lb/>
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spliced with footage of traveling<lb/>
music acts Albright said.<lb/>
All-black cast revue films like<lb/>
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for distribution to movie theaters<lb/>
blocksof Albemarle rightoff West in black neighborhoods, he noted.<lb/>
Fifth ? is recalled in the show by These featurettes were scheduled<lb/>
proprieters of businesses in the along with standard Hollywood<lb/>
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Donald Lennon, director of the ECU Manuscript Collection, exam-<lb/>
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Rumple News Bureau)<lb/>
Pres. ca<lb/>
says he'<lb/>
( ONCORD H<lb/>
George Bush and Mid<lb/>
Dukakis pointed their campaigj<lb/>
southward after decisive J<lb/>
Hampshire victories, and<lb/>
Dole promised to counterattaj<lb/>
unless the vice president stoJ<lb/>
distorting the Dole re I<lb/>
Richard Gephardt said he vvai<lb/>
the race to stay.<lb/>
But Sen. Paul Simon ol lllinol<lb/>
third among Democrats in J<lb/>
1 iampshire after finishing seco<lb/>
in Iowa, said he will ha c to dfl<lb/>
out unless hecan v in next w eokl<lb/>
either South Dakota or Mini<lb/>
sota. Jesse Jackson said he had nl<lb/>
with former Arizona Gov. Bni<lb/>
Babbitt, who he said was an<lb/>
timg with" the question<lb/>
yhcthcr to continue<lb/>
Dole, the big Republican wl<lb/>
nor in Iowa last week, said I<lb/>
comeback victory in New i lard<lb/>
shire meant "he s the front ri<lb/>
ner.<lb/>
Asked on CBS what made tl<lb/>
difference in New Hampsha<lb/>
Dole renewed his accusatia<lb/>
against Bush, saying, 1 think tl<lb/>
negative advertising in ettef<lb/>
distorting the Pole record on ral<lb/>
mc taxes<lb/>
And he said in remarks tap<lb/>
tor ABC-TV, "Unless they vani<lb/>
get back on the straight and nl<lb/>
row and withdraw some c4 tl<lb/>
attacks, we're going to have<lb/>
counterattack<lb/>
Tuesday night Dole had<lb/>
cused Bush or "lying about<lb/>
record<lb/>
Bush, asked about that in<lb/>
interview taped for CBS IV si<lb/>
f I'm sorry he tools tH.it way<lb/>
 Were you lying? Bush vi<lb/>
Isked.<lb/>
j "No ho answered quietly<lb/>
I Bush won 38 percent of<lb/>
Republican vote and 11 d<lb/>
fates to the GOP convention<lb/>
(early complete returns I Viet<lb/>
t percent, of the vote and seJ<lb/>
delegates. They were followed!<lb/>
kep. lack Kemp ot New "i oj<lb/>
firmer Pcleware Gov. Pete<lb/>
Oflt and former tele ision ev<lb/>
ielist Pat Robertson.<lb/>
; Dukakis lived up to expotj<lb/>
Ictnsby carrying his neighborii<lb/>
kale by lb percentage poirj<lb/>
?vet Rep. Gephardt ot MissouT<lb/>
last week's winner in Iowa<lb/>
I In other comments toda<lb/>
? -Dukakis, who won by a <lb/>
inargin in a state bordering <lb/>
lachusetts where he is the govJ<lb/>
lor, said on ABC-TV that he Q<lb/>
jlso do well in the South, whsj<lb/>
Jominatcs the Super TuoN.il<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 18,1988 3<lb/>
Students protest presence<lb/>
of CIA recruits on campus<lb/>
Carol Creech, left, community schools coordinator for the Tarboro City Schools, gives Dawn Robertson<lb/>
information about Tarboro Schools during the Education Careers Day held on campus. (Photo by Tony<lb/>
Rumple ? News Bureau)<lb/>
Pres. candidate Gephardt<lb/>
says he's in race to stay<lb/>
CONCORD, N.H. (AD ?<lb/>
George Bush and Michael<lb/>
Dukakis pointed their campaigns<lb/>
southward after decisive New<lb/>
Hampshire victories, and Bob<lb/>
Dole promised to counterattack<lb/>
unless the vice president stops<lb/>
"distorting the Dole record<lb/>
Richard Gephardt said he was in<lb/>
the race to stay.<lb/>
But Sen. Taul Simon oi Illinois,<lb/>
third among Democrats in New<lb/>
1 lampshire after finishing second<lb/>
in Iowa, said he will have to drop<lb/>
out unless he can win next week in<lb/>
either South Dakota or Minne-<lb/>
sota, fesse Jackson said he had met<lb/>
with former Arizona Gov. Bruce<lb/>
Aibbitt, who he said was "wres-<lb/>
tling with" the question of<lb/>
?-hether to continue.<lb/>
Dole, the big Republican win-<lb/>
ner in Iowa last week, said Bush's<lb/>
comeback victory in New Hamp-<lb/>
shire meant "he's the front-run-<lb/>
ner<lb/>
Asked on CBS what made the<lb/>
difference in New Hampshire,<lb/>
Dole renewed his accusations<lb/>
against Bush, saying, "I think the<lb/>
negative advertising, in effect,<lb/>
distorting the Dole record on rais-<lb/>
ing taxes<lb/>
And he said in remarks taped<lb/>
for ABC-TV, "Unless they want to<lb/>
get back on the straight and nar-<lb/>
row and withdraw some of their<lb/>
attacks, we're going to have to<lb/>
counterattack<lb/>
Tuesday night, Dole had ac-<lb/>
cused Bush of "lying about my<lb/>
record<lb/>
Bush, asked about that in an<lb/>
interview taped for CBS-TV, said,<lb/>
fl'm sorry he feels that way<lb/>
; Were vou lying? Bush was<lb/>
$sked.<lb/>
; "No he answered quietly.<lb/>
I Bush won 38 percent of the<lb/>
Republican vote ? and 11 dele-<lb/>
gates to the GOP convention ? in<lb/>
nearly complete returns. Dole had<lb/>
J9 percent of the vote and seven<lb/>
delegates. They were followed by<lb/>
feep. jack Kemp of New York,<lb/>
former Dcleware Gov. Pete du<lb/>
font and former television evan-<lb/>
gelist Pat Robertson.<lb/>
: Dukakis lived up to expecta-<lb/>
fions by carrying his neighboring<lb/>
jtate by 16 percentage points<lb/>
4ver Rep. Gephardt of Missouri,<lb/>
last week's winner in Iowa.<lb/>
I In other comments today:<lb/>
I -Dukakis, who won by a big<lb/>
margin in a state bordering Mas-<lb/>
sachusetts where he is the gover-<lb/>
nor, said on ABC-TV that he can<lb/>
jlso do well in the South, which<lb/>
jominates the Super Tuesday<lb/>
primaries on March 8. "People in<lb/>
fie South aren't voting for a ZIP<lb/>
fode; they're voting for the presi-<lb/>
dent of the United States he<lb/>
aid.<lb/>
-Simon said on NBC-TV he<lb/>
would have to win next week,<lb/>
otherwise, I'm going to have to<lb/>
withdraw You just can't con-<lb/>
tinue to run second and third<lb/>
-Gephardt said on ABC that<lb/>
whoever remains in the race, he<lb/>
himself will "do well because<lb/>
we're connecting with the voters<lb/>
on my ideas<lb/>
-Rep. Jack Kemp of New York,<lb/>
who beat our former television<lb/>
evangelist Pat Robertson and<lb/>
former Dcleware Gov. Pete du<lb/>
Pont for third place among the<lb/>
Republicans, said his showing<lb/>
proved his standing among the<lb/>
conservatives who form the base<lb/>
for himself, du Opnt and<lb/>
Robertson.<lb/>
-Robertson, on the other hand,<lb/>
said, "This was a small spread<lb/>
between Jack and me He<lb/>
added, "New England is not my<lb/>
natural constituency. . . . Going<lb/>
into the South, it's a different ball<lb/>
game<lb/>
"On to the South, where we're<lb/>
going to rise again exclaimed a<lb/>
euphoric Bush late Tuesday<lb/>
night. He won a solid victory<lb/>
after seeing his earlier 20-point<lb/>
lead in the polls melt in New<lb/>
Hampshire after his embarrass-<lb/>
ing third-place finish in Iowa<lb/>
behind Dole and Robertson.<lb/>
Read<lb/>
The<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
ALBANY, N.Y. (CPS) ? Eight<lb/>
State University of New York<lb/>
(SUNY) at Albany students were<lb/>
charged with trespass for staging<lb/>
a sit-in to protest a Central Intelli-<lb/>
gence Agency recruiter's pres-<lb/>
ence on campus.<lb/>
The 8 were part of a larger<lb/>
group of about 75 students from<lb/>
SUNY-Albany, Rensselaer Poly-<lb/>
technic Institute, Union College,<lb/>
Hobart College, SUNY-Buffalo,<lb/>
SUNY-Purchase and the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Rhode Island who turned<lb/>
out to block the CIA recruitment<lb/>
Feb. 8.<lb/>
A weekend national meeting at<lb/>
Rutgers University in New Jersey,<lb/>
an Albany lecture by former CIA<lb/>
agent John Stockwell the day be-<lb/>
fore, and an allegedly broken<lb/>
promise fueled student anger at<lb/>
the CIA's recruiting, sources said.<lb/>
Demonstrators demanded the<lb/>
release of "The Albany 3 stu-<lb/>
dents arrested during an October,<lb/>
1987 CIA visit to the campus, and<lb/>
asserted administrators had<lb/>
promised them they would stall<lb/>
CIA recruiting until SUNY-Al-<lb/>
bany reviewed its policy.<lb/>
Vice President Mitchell Living-<lb/>
ston, demonstrator Danella<lb/>
Korotzer said, had promised in<lb/>
October that "the CIA will not be<lb/>
allowed to be on this campus until<lb/>
the issue is cleared up<lb/>
Livingston replied, "no morato-<lb/>
rium was ever declared<lb/>
"The issue was put before a<lb/>
committee, and they came out<lb/>
with a view that it would be inap-<lb/>
propriate to change our policy<lb/>
said President Vincent O'Leary.<lb/>
Some of the students, fresh<lb/>
from the Rutgers meeting where<lb/>
about 700 students from around<lb/>
the country gathered to try to<lb/>
coordinate nationwide campus<lb/>
leftist activities and where anti-<lb/>
CIA sentiments ran high, held a<lb/>
rally denouncing CIA "crimes<lb/>
marched outside Livingston's<lb/>
office, and then occupied<lb/>
O'Leary's office.<lb/>
"We have a duty under the<lb/>
Nuremberg Principle (which held<lb/>
people are legally obliged not to<lb/>
follow 'immoral' orders) to try to<lb/>
prevent crimes against humanity<lb/>
being carried out by the CIA<lb/>
explained student Kathy Manley.<lb/>
"We want the CIA off our cam-<lb/>
pus" because SUNY is "com-<lb/>
plicit" in CIA activities subver-<lb/>
sion in other parts of the world,<lb/>
added student Nick Schneir.<lb/>
University police arrested the<lb/>
protesters when they refused to<lb/>
leave O'Leary's office after clos-<lb/>
ing hours.<lb/>
Students who had job inter-<lb/>
views did get to talk with the CIA<lb/>
official, who was somewhat hid-<lb/>
den away at the remote Alumni<lb/>
House. The prospective CIA<lb/>
employees, however, had had to<lb/>
be escorted to their interviews by<lb/>
police.<lb/>
No injuries were reported, but<lb/>
several demonstrators com-<lb/>
plained of being picked up by<lb/>
police and thrown into the snow.<lb/>
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Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Daniel Maurer, cmiah<lb/>
Clay Deanhardt, h?i z?<lb/>
JAMES F.j. MCKEE, PinctorofAdotrUmng<lb/>
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Mac Clark, Bs.?M??jer<lb/>
February 18,1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
0?ew fe door<lb/>
Committees need accountability<lb/>
There is an unwritten policy<lb/>
within ,he Student Government<lb/>
Association that committee votes<lb/>
and discussions on important bills<lb/>
and resolutions are taken behind<lb/>
closed doors. It is a policy that is both<lb/>
illegal and dangerous.<lb/>
As it stands now, when a bill or<lb/>
resolution comes before a commit-<lb/>
tee, the sponsors of the measure are<lb/>
allowed to state their case before the<lb/>
committee. They then leave the<lb/>
room while the committee discusses<lb/>
and votes on the measure. The same<lb/>
process is followed in appropria-<lb/>
tions, where student groups present<lb/>
their funding requests and then<lb/>
leave while their requests are being<lb/>
discussed.<lb/>
In a free society such as ours, it is<lb/>
important that legislative action on<lb/>
all levels be open to inspection by<lb/>
the public. It is so important that<lb/>
North Carolina and other states<lb/>
have open meetings laws which<lb/>
require that all such decisions be<lb/>
made publicly, and that records be<lb/>
kept of all such decisions.<lb/>
According to the North Carolina<lb/>
Open Meetings Law, "each official<lb/>
meeting of a public body shall be<lb/>
open to the public, and any person is<lb/>
entitled to attend such a meeting<lb/>
The law goes further to say that<lb/>
public bodies include a number of<lb/>
councils and commissions as well as<lb/>
school administrative boards<lb/>
and any body which "exercises or is<lb/>
authorized to exercise a legislative,<lb/>
policy-making, quasi-judicial, ad-<lb/>
ministrative, or advisory function<lb/>
While the SGA Constitution does<lb/>
not violate this law, it seems that<lb/>
through tradition, SGA practice<lb/>
does. It is a tradition that must be<lb/>
stopped.<lb/>
But the SGA is not fully to blame<lb/>
for this. The student body, through<lb/>
complacency, has allowed this prac-<lb/>
tice for several years. Students need<lb/>
to be more aware of their rights and<lb/>
exercise them to hold the SGA ac-<lb/>
countable for its actions.<lb/>
This has become an important is-<lb/>
sue now especially in light of<lb/>
Monday's meeting of the Student<lb/>
Welfare Committee. While the<lb/>
committee holds that the sponsors<lb/>
of the Cultural Center resolution<lb/>
understood what language prob-<lb/>
lems they had with the measure, the<lb/>
sponsors claim they were never told<lb/>
specifically what the problems<lb/>
were.<lb/>
Had the sponsors been allowed to<lb/>
be present during the debate and<lb/>
vote, they would fully understand<lb/>
the problems with the resolution<lb/>
and may have been able to reword it<lb/>
and re-submit it for approval. As it<lb/>
stands, the actions of the committee<lb/>
have the appearance of being more<lb/>
narrow-minded than they might<lb/>
have been.<lb/>
Records should be kept of commit-<lb/>
tee votes, and student legislators<lb/>
should be held accountable for their<lb/>
speech and actions. In order for that<lb/>
to happen, students need to recog-<lb/>
nize and exercise their rights as citi-<lb/>
zens and members of the university<lb/>
community.<lb/>
The open meetings policy needs to<lb/>
be implemented, made a part of the<lb/>
SGA Constitution, and followed to<lb/>
the letter in the future.<lb/>
Committee chair responds to editorial<lb/>
Reviva<lb/>
The ECU Christian Fellowship,<lb/>
Singleton, is a well-established,<lb/>
God-fearing group of young pe<lb/>
love the l.ord with all their heai<lb/>
soul, but who also live sacrificial<lb/>
God's glory.<lb/>
Their purpose is to preach Jesul<lb/>
dedication, and responsiveness t<lb/>
; often leads them to iacc hard rxj<lb/>
L will proudly say - with teary eyi<lb/>
endure for a night, but joy come<lb/>
Joy is given to us by God. It lias I<lb/>
ontinual giving, and that dema<lb/>
ness, and ultimately a death to se<lb/>
Jhan that new life which we find ?<lb/>
of sin. It is in Christ and thn<lb/>
mystery of joy is made equivale<lb/>
tery of the resurrection<lb/>
J Cont<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In light of last issue's article, edito-<lb/>
rial, and cartoon concerning the reso-<lb/>
lution on the rebuilding of the Le-<lb/>
donia S. Wright Afro-American Cul-<lb/>
tural Center, I feel that I must clarify a<lb/>
few issues:<lb/>
First, the resolution in its modified<lb/>
form read a bit differently than re-<lb/>
ported: "Whereas: The present Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center is inade-<lb/>
quate; and Whereas: The present<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural Center is not<lb/>
representativp of what its name indi-<lb/>
cates; and Whereas: The East Carolina<lb/>
University is in the process of campus<lb/>
beautification; Be it therefore re-<lb/>
solved: That the Student Government<lb/>
Association of East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity supports the university's efforts<lb/>
in transforming the Ledonia S.<lb/>
Wright Afro-American Cultural Cen-<lb/>
ter<lb/>
Second, yes, there were indeed<lb/>
problems with the wording of the<lb/>
resolution itself ? even in its modi-<lb/>
fied form. The resolution called for no<lb/>
renovation of the present "Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center" into "a<lb/>
true cultural center It instead called<lb/>
vaguely for "transformations for<lb/>
"rebuilding As presented to the<lb/>
committee, the author and colleagues<lb/>
hoped for support in transforming<lb/>
today's center into a place to display<lb/>
ECU students' diverse minority heri-<lb/>
tage. The resolution itself, however,<lb/>
called for no such conversions: It<lb/>
mentioned solely the "Afro-Ameri-<lb/>
can students not all minority stu-<lb/>
dents which include Hispanics, Ar-<lb/>
abics, Orientals (to name a few) as<lb/>
well as the Afro-Americans.<lb/>
Third, the matter at hand seemed to<lb/>
be a priority type thing ? not top-<lb/>
priority, however. The majority of the<lb/>
committee members, indeed "repre-<lb/>
senting all of the students on cam-<lb/>
pus felt that their support was<lb/>
needed elsewhere first on an issue<lb/>
where money is involved (university<lb/>
funds, not SGA funds). Funding for<lb/>
this center might take money needed<lb/>
for campus-wide renovations that<lb/>
would affect all students, not just<lb/>
minorities. Such a project, among<lb/>
others, is the renovation of campus<lb/>
parking. The committee as a whole<lb/>
never totally opposed the resolution.<lb/>
Fourth, the presenters ? author<lb/>
and colleague ?of the resolution<lb/>
were present at the committee meet-<lb/>
ing and were made aware of the dis-<lb/>
crepancies in the resolution. When<lb/>
asked what amendments they<lb/>
wanted to make, they made but one: a<lb/>
choice. When asked if they wished to<lb/>
postpone voting on the resolution for<lb/>
a week, they again made a choice ?<lb/>
not to wait.<lb/>
Fifth, the rapport maintained in the<lb/>
committee meeting was one of a very<lb/>
friendly nature. Yes, heated discus-<lb/>
sion permeated the room, but no<lb/>
negative signs of debate ever tran-<lb/>
scended: I refer, as last issue's cartoon<lb/>
did, to prejudice. By no meansdidany<lb/>
commi t tee member or presenter seem<lb/>
out-to-get his so-called opponent.<lb/>
The issue was never made and still is<lb/>
not considered a true racial issue. It<lb/>
was simply a matter of intent. A fair<lb/>
and open-minded debate took place.<lb/>
The outcome simply happened to be<lb/>
"unfavorable" ? as suggested by the<lb/>
resolution's being placed on the unfa-<lb/>
vorable calendar.<lb/>
In conclusion, I might suggest that<lb/>
next time anyone ? reporter, legisla-<lb/>
tor, or other interested party-desires<lb/>
to create such a spread on an issue<lb/>
that he make himself available at the<lb/>
committee meeting as well as at the<lb/>
SGA meeting in order that he will be<lb/>
aware of and then tell the full story.<lb/>
Kelly Jones<lb/>
Chairman<lb/>
Student Welfare Committee<lb/>
Editor's note: In order to present a fair<lb/>
and balanced editorial page, the editons<lb/>
board makes every attempt to contactd<lb/>
the people involved in a given issue. As<lb/>
students, it would be impossible tor us <lb/>
attend every organizational meeting on<lb/>
campus. The East Carolinian does havei<lb/>
representative at the SGA meetings, ant<lb/>
he is responsible for relaying to the stofl<lb/>
what goes on there.<lb/>
Jones was contacted Monday by Tht<lb/>
East Carolinian, as was Linwoo<lb/>
Carlton, the sponsor of the resolution in<lb/>
question, in order to get both sides of the<lb/>
issue. A copy of the bill, which was<lb/>
printed verbatim in the editorial in ques-<lb/>
tion, was read to Jones who agreed that if<lb/>
was what the committee voted on. Carlton<lb/>
gave us that copy of the resolution.<lb/>
In addition, Carlton and other support-<lb/>
ers of the resolution have told The Ex<lb/>
Carolinian that no one on the Stuirt<lb/>
Welfare committee told them the ad<lb/>
proolem with the resolution's langnx<lb/>
until after it was reported by The Ed<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
Student feels cartoon incites racist emotions<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I would personally like to tell all<lb/>
people that are directly involved with<lb/>
the publication of The East Carolinian<lb/>
that you have reached a verv low<lb/>
point in printing Barbour's editorial<lb/>
cartoon Tuesday. To depict the Stu-<lb/>
dent Welfare Committee as members<lb/>
of the KKK and the Cultural Center<lb/>
Rebuilding Bill as a hung black, is a<lb/>
direct "spit in the face" to all the stu-<lb/>
dents of ECU.<lb/>
The Student Welfare Committee<lb/>
has taken a bold and intelligent step to<lb/>
promote the rich heritage of all mi-<lb/>
norities at ECU. This low point in<lb/>
decision making by training journal-<lb/>
ist professionals shows their igno-<lb/>
rance and immature views of racism.<lb/>
Each day there are steps made to<lb/>
improve race relations in this country,<lb/>
but it is racist overtones that make<lb/>
those important steps of progress?<lb/>
meaningless. As editors, don't join<lb/>
that group that promotes meaning-<lb/>
less progress.<lb/>
So editors and illustrator Barbour,<lb/>
what's next? A Lynching!<lb/>
Michael Ward<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Bonehead bad<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
An an English major, I loathe to<lb/>
bastardize a fellow writer, but I admit<lb/>
that I have had quite enough. In the<lb/>
past, I have quietly put up with<lb/>
Chippy Bonehead's article. Usually,<lb/>
after reading Chippy's article of the<lb/>
day, I calmly put the paper down and<lb/>
think to myself, "O.K the next time I<lb/>
read this paper, Chippy is going to<lb/>
come up with something both tasteful<lb/>
and humourous More issues are<lb/>
printed. I give him some slack and<lb/>
again, I think, "Maybe next time<lb/>
This routine went on, and on, and on.<lb/>
Until finally, today, I read a word that<lb/>
was so utterly tasteless, I felt com-<lb/>
pelled to voice my opinion. May I<lb/>
refresh your memory on that particu-<lb/>
lar word? Cream.<lb/>
Chipper, Chipper, Chipper - please<lb/>
acquire some tact, my friend.<lb/>
Granted, most people enjoy your ar-<lb/>
ticle and I do too, sometimes. Your<lb/>
word choice is extremely unbecom-<lb/>
ing of the profession from which you<lb/>
hail. I know your persona is supposed<lb/>
to come off as "radical and cool but<lb/>
your word choice is oh, so "uncool It<lb/>
seems the more "cool" you feel you<lb/>
are, the more "uncool" you actually<lb/>
become.<lb/>
By no means am I asking for the<lb/>
abolition of your article. I just want<lb/>
you to realize that if you desire to<lb/>
establish a name for yourself, you<lb/>
can't employ these repulsive little<lb/>
words.<lb/>
Paige Hales<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
English<lb/>
Black history<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
February is designated as Black<lb/>
History Month. This is a time set aside<lb/>
to celebrate and give tribute to black<lb/>
history.<lb/>
I encourage everyone, especially<lb/>
black students, to start this month and<lb/>
continue throughout learning more<lb/>
about African-Americans.<lb/>
For the black students, in studying<lb/>
your history you will be able to un-<lb/>
derstand yourself and your true self.<lb/>
Your true self being your African self<lb/>
and your American self. In better<lb/>
understanding yourself, you will be<lb/>
able to understand the society in<lb/>
which you live. This will allow you to<lb/>
reach your full potential as an Afri-<lb/>
can, an American and a human being.<lb/>
To those students who feel they are<lb/>
not of African descent in studying<lb/>
African-American history you will<lb/>
have made a step toward harmony<lb/>
between you and the entire commu-<lb/>
nity. You will be developing as a full<lb/>
individual.<lb/>
I challenge students to not just<lb/>
study Martin Luther King, ? though<lb/>
a great man. Learn about some of<lb/>
those African American sisters and<lb/>
brothers not often mentioned ?<lb/>
Emmitt Till, Mose Wright, W.E.B.<lb/>
Dubois, Charles Drew, Marcus<lb/>
Garuey, Madame C.J. Walker.<lb/>
Not only look at those in the past<lb/>
but educate yourselves and others<lb/>
about those of today ? Dr. Benjamin<lb/>
Chavis, Dr. Mae C. Jemison, John H.<lb/>
Johnson, Nelson Mandela and Win-<lb/>
nie Mandela.<lb/>
Students, as you enter Joyner Li-<lb/>
brary remember, a "man without his<lb/>
history is like a tree without roots<lb/>
Valeria Lassiter<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Sommers responds<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In response to Stephen Cooper, I<lb/>
would like to first say that I'm glad<lb/>
that students are taking notice of the<lb/>
important issues we are debating in<lb/>
the SGA.<lb/>
Stephen, your point about the<lb/>
poppy seeds, if true, is a great point.<lb/>
In fact, it is the kind of point that needs<lb/>
to be raised. What I'm saying is if you<lb/>
want to take a position, fine. If you can<lb/>
change my opinion by having a better<lb/>
and more thought out opposing posi-<lb/>
tion, great! I'm ready to be convinced.<lb/>
However, do not label my current<lb/>
convictions by stigmatizing them lib-<lb/>
eral orconservative or whatever. This<lb/>
type of debate is by definition name<lb/>
calling and thus shallow.<lb/>
Take this pointer Stephen and con-<lb/>
tinue to take positions. But this name<lb/>
calling only makes you look foolish.<lb/>
Steve Sommers<lb/>
SGA Day Rep<lb/>
Contra vote right<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In letter to the editor last week,<lb/>
Justin Sturz boldly proclaimed that<lb/>
the House of Representatives' deci-<lb/>
sion to cut off contra aid was "Proba-<lb/>
bly the most incredibly ignorant and<lb/>
tragic decision of this decade<lb/>
I found this statement not only to be<lb/>
impulsive and inappropriate but<lb/>
completely inaccurate as well.<lb/>
 I won't pretend to believe that our<lb/>
Congress hasn't made any bad deci-<lb/>
sions over the years. Even our Con-<lb/>
gress, one of the greatest and most<lb/>
distinctive institutions in the world, is<lb/>
prone to bad decisions. However, I<lb/>
wasn't aware that any of their deci-<lb/>
sions, even the bad ones, were "in-<lb/>
credibly ignorant They do represent<lb/>
we the people, so what does that<lb/>
make us?<lb/>
The more I think about Sturz's<lb/>
comment on our "ignorant" congress,<lb/>
the more I think of how incredible<lb/>
oblivious to the whole situation Sturz<lb/>
must be.<lb/>
I must admit that in the past I have<lb/>
supported giving aid to the Contras.<lb/>
Evidently I was in the majority be-<lb/>
cause Congress has voted in favor of<lb/>
sending money to the Contras. What<lb/>
I was opposed to was the manner in<lb/>
which it was done.<lb/>
Sometimes other impulsive Ameri-<lb/>
cans have thought the best way to get<lb/>
money to the Contras was by dealing<lb/>
arms to terrorists? or was that the<lb/>
Iranians? or are those two actually<lb/>
one in the same? By the way, who did<lb/>
get that money? Its taken more than<lb/>
Sherlock Holmes and Watson to fig-<lb/>
ure that one out.<lb/>
Needless to say, the aid essentially<lb/>
did serve its original purpose because<lb/>
it forced the Sandanistas to the bar-<lb/>
gaining table, which was, as I under-<lb/>
stand, our original goal. Our job is<lb/>
done, at least temporarily, so lets back<lb/>
out before we box ourselves in.<lb/>
Finally, I would like to address<lb/>
Sturz's comment about the many<lb/>
"useful idiots" on this campus. Once<lb/>
again another unfortunate and erro-<lb/>
neous comment has been made.<lb/>
Sounds to me as though he's from the<lb/>
same mold as the well-known narrow<lb/>
minded Pat Robertson. I thought all<lb/>
of those prople went to Oral Roberts<lb/>
University or something. In the fu-<lb/>
ture, Sturz, try not to overindulge<lb/>
yourself in criticism of this fine uni-<lb/>
versity which I have grown to admire<lb/>
and appreciate.<lb/>
C<lb/>
A<lb/>
M<lb/>
P<lb/>
U<lb/>
S<lb/>
Clay Walker<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
English<lb/>
F<lb/>
O<lb/>
R<lb/>
U<lb/>
M<lb/>
To the editor<lb/>
Tmu' will prove that Congress<lb/>
decision to cut off military a<lb/>
.the Contras was a tragic mis!<lb/>
Roger Miranda, the Sandii I<lb/>
 leader who defected not long<lb/>
; has made some startling n<lb/>
; -lions that are really a metaphor<lb/>
! -cal slap-in-the-face to liberal j<lb/>
others who are anti-Contra, pr<lb/>
Sandinista.<lb/>
Miranda has revealed and th<lb/>
 Sandinistas have confirmed th?<lb/>
! they ? Surprise ? have n<lb/>
j intention of complying with th<lb/>
Anas Peace Plan Soviet an<lb/>
Cuban advisers have told th<lb/>
Sandinistas that they can b<lb/>
j deceive the U.S. (that Is, liberal!<lb/>
and certain others in the U.Sthc<lb/>
never fooled conservatives) b<lb/>
j cooling the rhetoric about build<lb/>
i ing a Marxist state and talking<lb/>
j instead, of "democracy "plura<lb/>
! ism and "reform And i<lb/>
course, the liberals have swal<lb/>
lowed their lies hook, line, anc<lb/>
sinker.<lb/>
Miranda and conservative<lb/>
how can the Sandinistas, rev:<lb/>
thinking oi peace when at th<lb/>
j same time in the back of then<lb/>
? minds they're thinking about crej<lb/>
I a ting the most powerful arrnv i<lb/>
I Latin America (600,GQG) ?rtvrmj<lb/>
!ltfvatijr?uEnert t ha tontvnn<lb/>
Mbsr armies irr Latm ATMi-icl<lb/>
S have?<lb/>
We're npt talking about caj<lb/>
1 guns and water pistols. We<lb/>
; talking about self-propelled a:<lb/>
i.ierv, MiG-21 high-performand<lb/>
! aircraft, new 400-ton ships for thj<lb/>
I navy, additional Mi-25 Hind-<lb/>
 helicopterss, Mi-17 Hip heli j<lb/>
 ters, armored personnel carrier<lb/>
? self-propelled howitzers, AK-4"<lb/>
 anti-tank weapons, and surface<lb/>
; to air missiles. Tine Sandin<lb/>
don't plan to export bananas: thel<lb/>
t plan to export communist revoh<lb/>
! tion! This is what they have a<lb/>
 mitted and this is reality, my hi<lb/>
S oral friends, When will you wak<lb/>
! up?<lb/>
Either we support the Contra<lb/>
now before it's too late, or we<lb/>
have to send our own troop<lb/>
down to Central America. Whj<lb/>
j will it be1<lb/>
Michael David Madid<lb/>
FreshmaJ<lb/>
Political Sciend<lb/>
Yxfre<lb/>
C4!<lb/>
Ill<lb/>
philosophical<lb/>
ramifications of<lb/>
Victor FrankTs<lb/>
"Existential<lb/>
Vacuum?<lb/>
? And you re<lb/>
still smoking:<lb/>
s l)pjrtm-nl ?" Hralth A. Human S?vk<lb/>
RACK<lb/>
BRANDE1<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
Open Mi<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
?? mmmmaMiiup<lb/>
?m<lb/>
tm ? i n i ? <lb/>
4ff W:Jjrf?'?"<lb/>
Mi?)???? ?n? imtr??-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0005"/><lb/>
editorial<lb/>
n. I might suggest that<lb/>
inyone reporter, legisla-<lb/>
cr interested party-desires<lb/>
h a spread on an issue<lb/>
nake himself available at the<lb/>
meeting as well as at the<lb/>
neeting in order that he will be<lb/>
and then tell the full story.<lb/>
Kelly Jones<lb/>
Chairman<lb/>
dent Welfare Committee<lb/>
? :cr to present a fair<lb/>
rial ige the editorial<lb/>
: mai s ? mpt to contact all<lb/>
fiven issue. As<lb/>
? ssible tor us to<lb/>
 ? nal meeting on<lb/>
he East :un does have a<lb/>
the SGA meetings, and<lb/>
 ng to the staff<lb/>
here<lb/>
i Monday by The<lb/>
.t Carolinian, as was Linwood<lb/>
sp nsor of the resolution in<lb/>
n in order to get both sides of the<lb/>
A : r of the bill, which was<lb/>
nted verbatim in the editorial in ques<lb/>
05 read is fonts sho agreed that it<lb/>
tedon.Carlton<lb/>
t us thai c tpy the resolution.<lb/>
aril mand other support-<lb/>
ion have told The East<lb/>
man that no one on the Student<lb/>
them the exact<lb/>
the resolution's language<lb/>
it was reported by The East<lb/>
tions<lb/>
I would like to address<lb/>
comment about tne many<lb/>
il idiots" on this campus. Once<lb/>
another unfortunate and erro-<lb/>
comment has been made.<lb/>
Is to me as though he's from the<lb/>
jmold as the well-known narrow<lb/>
ed Pat Robertson. I thought all<lb/>
se prople went to Oral Roberts<lb/>
arsiry or something. In the fu-<lb/>
Sturz, try not to overindulge<lb/>
Slf in criticism of this fine uni-<lb/>
y which I have grown to admire<lb/>
?preaate.<lb/>
Clav Walker<lb/>
J<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
English<lb/>
F<lb/>
O<lb/>
R<lb/>
U<lb/>
M<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 18,1988 5<lb/>
Revival service features charismatic speakers<lb/>
WlofnnUic h,riSl11in F?u,W!hT' by J0SCPh J?y is a rcality oi spirit. It shares in the spirits' of Jesus: there is teaching, preaching, singing, praise, The guest evaneelist for Saturdav niahi will h?<lb/>
rJSV.lteWished, forward-moving, immortality and yet it provides a source of strength laughter, celebration. When they come together it's  J - " <lb/>
od-tcanng group of young people who not only to the mortal. Because it is able to transcend even the<lb/>
love the Lord with all their heart, mind, body and most tryings of suffering (problems, trials, tribula-<lb/>
soul, but who also live sacrificial lives ? daily ? for tions, death) they cannot extinguish its' illuminating<lb/>
God'sglory. flamc. &amp;<lb/>
Their purpose is to preach Jesus. Their committal,<lb/>
Elder Norbert Simmons from Goldsboro. The guest<lb/>
like new-found love: They exalt one another, they evangelist for Sunday morning will be Minister<lb/>
share each others burdens, they love each other with Maugn Roundtree of Wilson. This one nieht revival<lb/>
the love of' has been sir-named Joy Night and what a joyous<lb/>
However, the fellowship is only one of several<lb/>
Christian organizations on campus, yet all of these<lb/>
ieve<lb/>
occasion it will be: singing, praying, preaching,<lb/>
praises<lb/>
3 Joy is given to us by God. It has to be awakened by<lb/>
. continual giving, and that demands self-forgetful-<lb/>
riess, and ultimately a death to self. It is nothing less<lb/>
Jhan that new life which we find in losing the old life<lb/>
7 of sin. It is in Christ and through him that the<lb/>
mystery of joy is made equivalent even to the mys-<lb/>
tery of the resurrection.<lb/>
enjoying the very presence of Christ upon hisher<lb/>
individual life. He (Christ) seems to have given each<lb/>
of them ?in a very unique way ? a sense of control,<lb/>
a sense of purpose, a sense of direction and they are<lb/>
like candles that sit upon hills. They cannot be hid-<lb/>
den.<lb/>
Every Thursday night at 6:00 p.m. at the Ledonia<lb/>
Wright Cultural Center they meet to lift up the name<lb/>
FOCUS<lb/>
By<lb/>
Steven Pierce<lb/>
Contra decision wrong<lb/>
We are walking by faith ? and because of that<lb/>
faith ? we arc believing that God will do nothing<lb/>
less than He has already promised to do through His ??<lb/>
word. Acting upon that faith, we have put together All are invited to come and be a part as we share<lb/>
one night campus revival (Saturday, 7 p.m. Jenkins together in this Holy Ghost-filled service. It is sure to<lb/>
Auditorium) followed up by a Sunday morning be a blessing and a night to remember,<lb/>
campus service (10:30 a.m.). If you don't have joy, you can leap for it, but<lb/>
remember that the measure of your intimacy with<lb/>
Christ is exactly the measure of your joy. A life of<lb/>
serving God is pure joy because God is joy and in<lb/>
giving yourself to God, you are giving yourself to<lb/>
joy. Come and be ye filled<lb/>
To the editor<lb/>
per year 1977-1981), homcless-<lb/>
w!mC UiU1 pr.?VCiK Con?ross' Conservative attack dramatiafiy during the<lb/>
decision to cut ott military aid to vvll,a'1 ??"? v auaa<lb/>
?<lb/>
(the Contras was a tragic mistake.<lb/>
Roger Miranda, the Sandinista<lb/>
.leader who defected not long ago,<lb/>
?has made some startling revela-<lb/>
tions that arc really a metaphori-<lb/>
cal slap-in-the-face to liberals and<lb/>
others who are anti-Contra, pro-<lb/>
Sandinista.<lb/>
Miranda has revealed and the<lb/>
-Sandinistas have confirmed that<lb/>
Surprise ? have no<lb/>
same period. More important, the<lb/>
To the editor: Reagan housing cuts had<lb/>
Mary Elizabeth Davis' Jan. 28 absolutely no effect on the basic<lb/>
otter, "liberal responds was full trend in public housing construc-<lb/>
of misconceptions and un-<lb/>
founded allegations concerning<lb/>
the conservative agenda.<lb/>
I would like to respond to one<lb/>
particular statement she made.<lb/>
She assserts that there are "over<lb/>
three million homeless people in<lb/>
the United States She goes on to<lb/>
j intention ot complying with the imply that conservatives are not<lb/>
Anas Peace Plan. Soviet and willing to do anything about the<lb/>
C uban advisers have told the<lb/>
Sandinistas that they can better<lb/>
deceive the U.S. (that is, liberals<lb/>
and eertai n others in the U.S they<lb/>
never fooled conservatives) by-<lb/>
cooling the rhetoric about build-<lb/>
ing a Marxist state and talking,<lb/>
instead, of "democracy "plural-<lb/>
ism and "reform And, of<lb/>
course, the liberals have swal-<lb/>
lowed their lies hook, line, and<lb/>
sinker.<lb/>
Miranda and conservatives ask,<lb/>
how can the Sandinistas really be<lb/>
thinking of peace when at the<lb/>
same time in the back of their<lb/>
minds they're thinking about cre-<lb/>
ating the most powerful army in<lb/>
illing to do anything<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Now Davis calls herself "An-<lb/>
other Bleeding Heart Liberal<lb/>
tion as far as new units being<lb/>
completed until 1985.<lb/>
Indeed, in the first four years of<lb/>
the Reagan Administration (1981-<lb/>
4), the government completed<lb/>
111,195 new housing units ? a<lb/>
stunning 170 increase over the<lb/>
first four years of the Carter<lb/>
Administration (1977-1980) when<lb/>
3nly 41,198 were completed.<lb/>
While this sudden 1980s explo-<lb/>
sion in new units was enacted<lb/>
under Carter, no one can say "a<lb/>
helping that tiny number. But we<lb/>
wish that liberals would quit dra-<lb/>
matically exaggerating the situ-<lb/>
ation in a pitiful attempt to make<lb/>
us look like we don't care, when<lb/>
we do.<lb/>
Stephen Cooper<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Democrat 1 don't question her shortage of public housing<lb/>
sincere desire to help the home-<lb/>
less and poverty stricken of this<lb/>
country. However, it is important<lb/>
to note that the liberal Democrat<lb/>
"war on poverty" has been a total,<lb/>
glaring failure. The welfare sys-<lb/>
tem, as set up by liberal Demo-<lb/>
crats, has not only not alleviated<lb/>
poverty in this country: it has in<lb/>
fact created even more poverty<lb/>
However, the purpose of this<lb/>
letter is not to the examine the<lb/>
'auses of the failures of the liberal<lb/>
'war on poverty it is to show<lb/>
Latin America (bcXXOOtj ah-armviowBa"ws' assertion fcat there<lb/>
arev?three million . homeVess<lb/>
j withimarreument thata&amp;raxjauhe<lb/>
j iHher am-ries irt Latwr-Ajfiferlca ??<lb/>
 have?<lb/>
We're npt talking about cap<lb/>
I guns and water pistols. We're<lb/>
s talking about self-propelled ail-<lb/>
l.fery, MiG-21 high-performance<lb/>
i aircraft, new 400-ton ships for the<lb/>
I navy, additional Mi-25 Hind-D<lb/>
 helicopterss, Mi-17 Hip helicop-<lb/>
 ters, armored personnel carriers,<lb/>
self-propelled howitzers, AK-47s,<lb/>
anti-tank weapons, and surface-<lb/>
to air missiles. The Sandinistas<lb/>
don't plan to export bananas: thev<lb/>
plan to export communist revolu-<lb/>
; tion! This is what they have ad-<lb/>
 mittcd and this is reality, my lib-<lb/>
 oral friends, When will you wake<lb/>
I UP?<lb/>
Either we support the Contras<lb/>
I now before it's too late, or we'll<lb/>
I have to send our own troops<lb/>
! down to Central America. What<lb/>
J will it be?<lb/>
Michael David Hadley<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Y)ifre<lb/>
astute end<lb/>
Amerfcsns is mcoffecr ?"<lb/>
First of all, I've never heard the<lb/>
figure "three million" before. The<lb/>
general claim made by liberals is<lb/>
that there are two million.<lb/>
Furthermore, a new Depart-<lb/>
ment of Agriculture study con-<lb/>
firms that there are only 300,000<lb/>
homeless Americans in the U.S<lb/>
caused the sudden rise in "home-<lb/>
lessness Particularly when, in<lb/>
the four years that the liberal<lb/>
hyped this problem the hardest<lb/>
(1982-5), we were completing<lb/>
new housing units at an annual<lb/>
rate of 24,450, nearly 2.4 times the<lb/>
10,300-a-year rate during the Car-<lb/>
ter years. And even though future<lb/>
new construction has been re-<lb/>
duced by Reagan, the total num-<lb/>
ber of people receiving direct rent<lb/>
subsidies has risen from less than<lb/>
4 million in 1981 to over 6 million<lb/>
now. Even though the rate of<lb/>
growth of housing spending has<lb/>
slowed, total housing assistance<lb/>
has still risen 46 in constant<lb/>
dollars since 1981, an average of<lb/>
6.4 per year ? far faster than the<lb/>
economy as a whole.<lb/>
So blaming Regan (i.e. conser-<lb/>
vatives) for the sudden rise in<lb/>
homelessness is not merely base-<lb/>
less, it's a mean-spirited attempt<lb/>
TAXPAYERS<lb/>
with dependents<lb/>
HERE'S A TAX TIP:<lb/>
Beginning with your 1987 income<lb/>
tax return that you will file in<lb/>
1988, you generally must list social<lb/>
security numbers tor dependents<lb/>
who are at least five years old by<lb/>
the end of 1987. If any of your<lb/>
dependents do not have this<lb/>
number, get an application form<lb/>
today from the Social Security<lb/>
office in vour area.<lb/>
iMi4ii?<lb/>
ONLY 60 SEMESTER<lb/>
CREDIT HOURS<lb/>
NEEDED FOR OCS.<lb/>
If you have 60 accredited semester hours, and can achieve a<lb/>
high score in a special aptitude test, you could be just 22 weeks<lb/>
from earning the gold bars of a second lieutenant in the Army<lb/>
Reserve. And ready to take on your first Reserve leadership assign-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Quality, and you'll attend an 8-week Basic Training Course,<lb/>
then goon to a 14-week Officer Candidate School (OCS) which<lb/>
will challenge you both mentally and physically. When you gradu-<lb/>
ate, you'll receive your commission as an officer in the Army<lb/>
Reserve, and continue training in a branch Officer Basic Course.<lb/>
Then you'll return home to serve in a nearby Reserve unit?usually<lb/>
one weekend a month and two weeks annual training.<lb/>
It's a great opportunity to gain the skills and begin the practice<lb/>
ot the kind ot leadership and management prized so highly by civil-<lb/>
ian employers.<lb/>
You need nor have completed vour degree, just have bC semes-<lb/>
ter hours and a lot of ability and confidence, to quality.<lb/>
It you're interested in OCS, call:<lb/>
SFC Munroe or SSG Hamilton<lb/>
756-9695<lb/>
ARMY RESERVE.<lb/>
BEALLYOUCANBE.<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
-? CLIP THIS COUPON<lb/>
georges<lb/>
hair designers<lb/>
Pale isn't your color.<lb/>
Klafsun Suntanning Beds<lb/>
less than t wo-tcn ths"of' fpcrcen t exploit reaTpain anTsuf ferirTg J'?l" Tamrdnys -1LH? 2J:2PJ TOJJrOOPM<lb/>
Get An Early Start On<lb/>
Your Spring Break Tan.<lb/>
10 Visits Regularly $40<lb/>
NOW ONLY $35.00<lb/>
This Special Expires 2-29-88<lb/>
of the nation<lb/>
Of all the liberal attacks on<lb/>
Reagan, none has been more ri-<lb/>
diculous than the claim that Re-<lb/>
agan suddenly drove tens of thou-<lb/>
sands out of their homes into the<lb/>
streets and the backs of cars for<lb/>
shelter becase of a "massive cut-<lb/>
back" in the housing budget.<lb/>
You see, what liberals won't<lb/>
admit is that, despite the spiral of<lb/>
public housing construction dur-<lb/>
ing Carter's term (average of 18<lb/>
for political purposes.<lb/>
Finally, surveys show that only<lb/>
a small fracton of the homeless<lb/>
today are in that condition for<lb/>
economic reasons. The vast ma-<lb/>
jority (90t) are homeless either<lb/>
because of the tragic devastation<lb/>
of drug and alcohol addiction, or<lb/>
because they have been driven<lb/>
out of mental institutions.<lb/>
Less than two-tenths of 1 per-<lb/>
cent of Americans are homeless.<lb/>
Sure, we conservatives are for<lb/>
SKI INTO SPRING WITH GREAT<lb/>
SAVINGS<lb/>
?o<lb/>
iBwnsii<lb/>
philosophical<lb/>
ramilications of<lb/>
Victor Frankls<lb/>
"Existential<lb/>
Vacuum?<lb/>
? And youre<lb/>
still smoking?<lb/>
I s Dt-piilme nl ?t Helllh &amp; Humjn Siiv n i<lb/>
wrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr'wiw<lb/>
:??:??:?:???:??:?:?:???:?.?????????<lb/>
SPRINGTIME IN LONDON<lb/>
10 Days &amp; Nights in England<lb/>
Depart: 6:25 p.m. Mon May 9<lb/>
from RaleighDurham airport<lb/>
Return: 7:35 p.m. Fri May 20<lb/>
to RaleighDurham airport<lb/>
Transportation: Delta Airlines<lb/>
Hotel: Ladbroke Hotel, Hyde Park, London<lb/>
Price per person: $1200 for Dbl. occupancy<lb/>
EgaiUiiifi; March 1. 1988<lb/>
for more info;<lb/>
Call Mendenhall Student Center (757-6611)<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES,<lb/>
j BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
I Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
TAKE AN<lb/>
E-X-T-R-A<lb/>
?All Nordica &amp; Salomon Boots 20 Off<lb/>
?All Skis &amp; Poles At Great Savings!<lb/>
?Ski Packages As Low As v299?95<lb/>
(Skis, Boots. Bindings &amp; Poles)<lb/>
?All Men's &amp; Ladies' Ski Wear 20-50 Off<lb/>
(includes coats, jackets, pants, bibs, &amp; sweaters)<lb/>
?Sky R Turtlenecks V 1 ? 95 (wMe quantities last)<lb/>
?Wool Rich Men's &amp; Ladies 40 Off<lb/>
?Men's After-Ski Boots As Low As s29.95<lb/>
?Ladies' After-Ski Boots 20-50 Off<lb/>
We Are A Complete Certified Ski Repair Shop<lb/>
Gordon's Golf<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Open MonS<lb/>
 Sunday 1-6<lb/>
10 off<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(EXCEPT AIGNER. NIKE AND REEBOK)<lb/>
&amp; Ski Shop<lb/>
200 E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
I Hours: 10-6 Mon, - Thurs<lb/>
10-7 Fri 9-6 Sat Also by Appt 756-1003<lb/>
? at ???i iiN i?i ? m ?<lb/>
a,? ia ?,?ni ?fcn?Mi?.p? -ii m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0006"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 18,1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
BRODrS FOR MEN is searching for<lb/>
part-time sales associates. Enthusiastic<lb/>
individuals who enjoy fashion and have a<lb/>
flexible school sechedule should apply in<lb/>
person, Brody's, Carolina East Mall, M-<lb/>
W, 2-4 p.m.<lb/>
ARE YOU A COLLEGE STUDENT in<lb/>
need of spending money? Brody's is ac-<lb/>
cepting applications for part-time sales<lb/>
associates who can work flexible hours.<lb/>
Positions available in the jewelryjuniors<lb/>
department. Apply in persoi Brody's,<lb/>
Carolina East Mall, M-YV. 2-4 p.m.<lb/>
RESIDENT COUNSELOR, interested in<lb/>
those with human service background<lb/>
wishing to gain 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/>
ASSISTANT MANAGER-We are look<lb/>
ing for an outgoing, dependable person<lb/>
for a full-time assistant manager's posi-<lb/>
tion. Must be able to lift heavy furniture.<lb/>
Apply in person, M-F, 10 a.m5 p.m. at<lb/>
Galleria, The Plaza. Absolutely NO<lb/>
phone calls.<lb/>
SUMMER CAMP Counselors-men and<lb/>
women; generalists and specialists: Two<lb/>
overnight 8 week camps in New York's<lb/>
Adirondack Mountains have openings<lb/>
for tennis, waterfront (WS1, ALS, sailing,<lb/>
skiing, small crafts), all team sports,<lb/>
gymnastics, artscrafts, pioneering,<lb/>
music, photography, drama, dance, and<lb/>
nurses who love fun and children. Write<lb/>
to: Professor Robert S. Gersten, Brant<lb/>
Lake Camp, 84 Leamington Street, Lido<lb/>
Beach, NY, 11561.<lb/>
CAPE HATTER AS, N.C. . . Summer<lb/>
help needed at Emily's Soundside Resta-<lb/>
ruant. Available positions for busers,<lb/>
waiters, waitresses and kitchen help. Will<lb/>
train! To start May 15th thru August 20th.<lb/>
Housing available! Call 919-987-2383<lb/>
(collect).<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/>
12-4 hours work per day, 7days a week.<lb/>
Located 12 miles outside of town. Call Jov<lb/>
-Foster at 746-2588, 746-3513 or 758-2399.<lb/>
FOUR STAR<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
? ? <lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
PERSONNEL<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
REQUIREMENTS:<lb/>
Must be at least 18.<lb/>
Must have own car. a valid<lb/>
driver's license &amp;<lb/>
insurance.<lb/>
Must have clean, neat appear-<lb/>
ance.<lb/>
WAGEWS:<lb/>
Our drivers average S6 to $10<lb/>
per hour with salary, tips &amp;<lb/>
cash commission (paid daily.)<lb/>
BENEFITS:<lb/>
Paid vacation.<lb/>
Promotion from within.<lb/>
APPLY IN PERSON<lb/>
FOUR STAR PIZZA<lb/>
114 E. 10th Greenville, NC<lb/>
CABIN COUNSELORS and instructors<lb/>
(male and female) for Western North<lb/>
Carolina 8 week children's camp. Over 30<lb/>
activities including Water Ski, Tennis,<lb/>
1 leated swimming pool, Go-karts, 1 lik-<lb/>
ing. Art . . . Room, meals, salary and<lb/>
travel. Experience not necessary. Non-<lb/>
smoking students write for application<lb/>
brochure: Camp Pinewood, 20205 N. E. 3<lb/>
Court, Miami. Florida, 33179.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Part-time interior de-<lb/>
sign student-send resume to: Designer,<lb/>
3010 East 10th Street, Greenville, N.C<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Experienced, Pro-<lb/>
fessional Service includes proofreading,<lb/>
spelling and grammatical corrections<lb/>
and low rates  . call after 5:30 p.m. 355-<lb/>
2090.<lb/>
HAVING A PARTY and need a deejay?<lb/>
I charge $100.00 per party with no time<lb/>
limit on the music. Call 752-4251.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24<lb/>
hours in and out. Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages. SDF<lb/>
Professional Computer Services, 106 East<lb/>
5th Street (beside Cubbies) Greenville,<lb/>
N.C, 753-3694.<lb/>
MID WINTER BOP: The original is still<lb/>
here. Old wax. New wax. The TRASH-<lb/>
MAN DJ Service. Approved by thou-<lb/>
sands. Discover it. Bashes, formals, mix-<lb/>
ers, socials, etcdial 752-3587 anytime.<lb/>
Many thanx.<lb/>
CLASS ACT Limousines: Don't drink<lb/>
and drive Party in style Call: 757-3240.<lb/>
ATTENTION DJ NEEDERS: Want to<lb/>
feel the music, instead of just hearing it?<lb/>
Want to dance fast, slow, hard, dirty?<lb/>
Want reliable, punctual, and professional<lb/>
service? Call Sound Mixtures, 752-4916<lb/>
and ask for Bob.<lb/>
FOR SALE<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 thev last. Call Phil or Troll<lb/>
at 830-1447 or 757-1007.<lb/>
TROLLS TUX AND TEES: Don't pay<lb/>
high prices for your formal wear, try<lb/>
Troll's Tux and Tees 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 at<lb/>
wholesale prices; buy from a direct dealer<lb/>
at 752-4589, David Dupree, and skip the<lb/>
jewelers high prices.<lb/>
AMINO ACIDS: Are you working out<lb/>
hard? Then your body needs amino acid<lb/>
supplements. Ultimate nutrition brand<lb/>
amino acids, 1600 mgs. Cheapest price<lb/>
ever, $18.00 per bottle, 2for S34.00. Call<lb/>
Steve at 758-9644.<lb/>
CAN YOU BUY jeeps, cars, 4 x 4's seized<lb/>
in drug raids for under $100.00? Call for<lb/>
facts today. 602-837-3401 ext. 711.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Classical glass surfboard, 5 ft.<lb/>
8 in. Custom made, extra light weight,<lb/>
three colors, with leash and collar, good<lb/>
condition. $150.00, Call 758-6998.<lb/>
TRAILOR FOR SALE: Two bedroom,<lb/>
one bath, $2,900.00. Call 758-3228.<lb/>
1986 HONDA INTERCEPTOR VF500F:<lb/>
Last year for this model, like new. Meticu-<lb/>
lously maintained, original owner. Only<lb/>
8300 miles. Oil changed every 2,000<lb/>
miles. I lelmet and brand new 1 londa<lb/>
cover included. $2995.00 Call Bruce at<lb/>
752-2008.<lb/>
Spring Break<lb/>
1988<lb/>
Dive PenneKamp<lb/>
in Key Largo, Fla.<lb/>
$425.00<lb/>
For information &amp;<lb/>
Registration call the<lb/>
Rum Runner<lb/>
Dive Shop<lb/>
758-1444<lb/>
ONE OR TWO roommates needed to<lb/>
share townhousc in Wildwood Villas.<lb/>
Call Julie at 752-4781.<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT: 3rd and Eastern<lb/>
street, close to campus. $250.00 a month.<lb/>
Available immediately. Please call 355-<lb/>
6193 and ask for Melissa.<lb/>
TOWNHOUSE APARTMENT for rent<lb/>
No security deposit. Fully carpeted.<lb/>
Central heat and air. Call 757 6423 days,<lb/>
919-975-2481 evenings (call collect).<lb/>
NEED A ROOMMATE to share a two<lb/>
bedroom apartment very very close to<lb/>
campus. $165.00month (utilities in-<lb/>
cluded) Call 830-5131 after 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Large, 3 bed<lb/>
room house located 2 blocks from cam-<lb/>
pus. $150.00 per month plus 13 utilities.<lb/>
Non-smoker. Call 758-7245, leave mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
3101 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Rivergate Shopping Center<lb/>
757-0207<lb/>
3 Month Sun Capsule<lb/>
Membership $100.00<lb/>
(limited to 20 people)<lb/>
2 Month Solo Firm<lb/>
Toning Bed Membership<lb/>
$100.00<lb/>
(limited to J 0 people)<lb/>
20 Visits to Sun Capsule<lb/>
$45.00<lb/>
20 Visits to Toning Bed<lb/>
$50.00<lb/>
First come. First Served<lb/>
so call Today!<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
?All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
?And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E. 5th Strict<lb/>
?Ux ated Near ECU<lb/>
?Near Mjor Shopping Centers<lb/>
?Across From highway Iitrol Station<lb/>
Umtted Oder - $275 a month<lb/>
Contact J T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7S15 or h:0- 1937<lb/>
Office oj.cn - Apt 8. 12 - 5:30 p m.<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clean and quiet one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, enerjy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers. r-vrrs. cable IV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only SI95 a month. 6<lb/>
month lease. MOBILE HOME RENTALS ?<lb/>
couples or singles. Apartment and mobile<lb/>
homes In Azalea Gardens near Hrook Valley<lb/>
County Club.<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
Permanent Wave Special<lb/>
$28.95<lb/>
Good Through Feb. 29 uMh coupon<lb/>
Ask for Rhonda Dale<lb/>
or Verna Shirley.<lb/>
757-0207<lb/>
R1NGGOLD TOWERS: Apartments for<lb/>
rent. Furnished. Contact Hollie Si-<lb/>
monowich at 752-2865. NOTICE:<lb/>
"Whole semester free" mentioned in<lb/>
previous ad did not apply to Ringgold<lb/>
Towers!<lb/>
INTERESTED IN living off campus<lb/>
during the summer? Need responsible,<lb/>
female roommate, 12 rent, 12 utilities,<lb/>
free deposit! If interested, call 756-3690,<lb/>
please call back if no answer.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: Male, female, non-<lb/>
smoker would like to share large house 1<lb/>
12 blocks from campus. Washerdryer.<lb/>
Fully furnished. Single roomdouble<lb/>
room. If you would like to see the house,<lb/>
please call Ronnie at 757-0202leave mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
SHARRONN, Hey you big Love God-<lb/>
dess, that jacu.zi is looking better and<lb/>
better every day. This weekend at Top<lb/>
"Sail" Beach definitely will be our best<lb/>
one, YET! Submitively Yours, James.<lb/>
DR. BETSY HARPER: congratulations!<lb/>
we never thought you could do it. Your<lb/>
old office is empty and your i ?w office is<lb/>
clean. Enjoy the rest of the semester ?<lb/>
your favorite students.<lb/>
J.M.P.K Just a little note to let you know,<lb/>
that my love for you will continue to<lb/>
grow. The past two years have been really<lb/>
great, and 1 must say-you make the per-<lb/>
&amp;&amp; feet mate! Dinner at Chico's tonite!<lb/>
Happy Anniversary! All my love<lb/>
j Greenie.<lb/>
WANDA, you are the joy of mv life. I lope<lb/>
we can be together soon because 1 LOVE<lb/>
YOU Lenny.<lb/>
RAFTERS: Tuesday night is rock 'n roll<lb/>
night, free admission, S.25 draft.<lb/>
JOHN, 11APPY BELATED B1RT11DAY! I<lb/>
LOVE YOU! LOOKING FORWARD TO<lb/>
CRAVEN CO. ANN.<lb/>
SAE HAPPY HOUR at the Dbo. Friday<lb/>
from 4-7. $2.00 Teas-why drive anywhere<lb/>
else?<lb/>
MICHELLE DARK: Happy Birthday to<lb/>
someone who deserves the absolute best!<lb/>
You are a great sister and friend! Love in<lb/>
DZ and me, Kathie. P.S Thanks for all<lb/>
your scheming! really hope it pays off<lb/>
SIG EPS AND THEIR COCKTAIL<lb/>
DATES ? take your vitamins, get some<lb/>
sleep, eat your Wheaties, and drink some<lb/>
milk.<lb/>
K.B. Happy Anniversary! You are the<lb/>
greatest S.C.<lb/>
THE NEW DELI is the place to jam! Catch<lb/>
the sounds of SOUL TRAIN with UV<lb/>
PROM Friday, and flat out jam to<lb/>
KNOCKED OUT LOADED Saturday.<lb/>
Don't forget about open mike nights on<lb/>
Tuesdays and "Dead" nights Wednes-<lb/>
days.<lb/>
"WHAT'S YOUR NAME"? If you had<lb/>
your group photo made for the Bucca-<lb/>
neer you need to send us a list of all<lb/>
current members names and the group<lb/>
name ASAP! Thanks!<lb/>
HARD ROCK fans unite! Come sec<lb/>
Roulette, a band in the Van HalenBon<lb/>
JoviDokken vein, live at Susie's Tree-<lb/>
house, Tuesday, February 23 at 9:30.<lb/>
Come hoist a few and rock with party<lb/>
band, Roulette.<lb/>
LISA MARIE, even Gary I Iart got a sec-<lb/>
ond chance! I don't want any "monkey<lb/>
business I only want some time with<lb/>
you! JPA.<lb/>
PICA'S: Celebrating early made this<lb/>
Valentines a special one, the superlatives<lb/>
that were given added to the fun. Truth or<lb/>
fieiton, lots of people were surprised,<lb/>
guilt could be seen in everyone's eyes. We<lb/>
had a great time and hope ya'll did too,<lb/>
next semester should be even better-we<lb/>
look forward to partying with you Love,<lb/>
the Sigmas.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA INTRAMURAL<lb/>
FELLAS: Keep up the good work fellas,<lb/>
your doin' us proud. . . . The Brothers of<lb/>
the daddy frat, PIKA.<lb/>
PIKA PLEDGES: Yo Etas The weekend<lb/>
is coming hope ya'll packed some clean<lb/>
drawers and tube socks. Big Brother is<lb/>
watchin.<lb/>
HEY BUTCH AND BUBBS: Thanks so<lb/>
much for the yummy dinner. . . great<lb/>
friends, great food, what more could we<lb/>
ask for? We love ya'll! The Matails.<lb/>
ADTT AND AZD: Thanks for the giggin<lb/>
stranger mixers, we had a blast. Your Pika<lb/>
dates.<lb/>
SANDY-grab your pail and shovel, The<lb/>
Band of Oz is finally returning to the Attic<lb/>
this Friday.<lb/>
TO THE Valentine Dates of the ADTTs,<lb/>
Friday night was a blast, because of you<lb/>
guvs we had fun with our strangers til the<lb/>
end of the night, we must admit our<lb/>
"Valentines" were out of sight! Love, the<lb/>
ADTTs.<lb/>
GUYS ? thanks so much for the "con-<lb/>
cern I'm feeling much better, but still<lb/>
can't make it to the phone  Dr. Jones,<lb/>
your prescription really helped in my<lb/>
speedy recovery! Love, Paige.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY-Ladies Night at Rafters.<lb/>
Ladies admitted in free from 830-10:30.<lb/>
SI.00 wine coolers, $.25 draft.<lb/>
TKE<lb/>
Ringgirl<lb/>
Competition<lb/>
March 3<lb/>
at the Attic.<lb/>
For More<lb/>
Information<lb/>
Call 758-7144<lb/>
Prizes awarded for<lb/>
1st, 2nd &amp; 3rd place.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
TO THE NEW SISTERS of Alpha Delta<lb/>
Pi. . . Mary Kay Beck, Pam Berry, Kris<lb/>
Boone, Gwyn Branch, Kim Cauthen,<lb/>
Lorie Conger, Laura Connolly, Julie<lb/>
Crawford, Nell Van Den Dungen, Connie<lb/>
Glover, Liz Grant, Yohanne Hancock,<lb/>
Dorothy Harris, Paige Houser, Andi<lb/>
I luff, Adrienne Jackson, Megan Keane,<lb/>
Beth Lamm, Cahterine Lee, Tara<lb/>
McClure, Kelly Morton, Jenny Naujoks,<lb/>
Amy Pope, Becki Powers, Jill Shallcross,<lb/>
Sonia Turner, Cara Vallas Congratu-<lb/>
lations. . we knew you could do it We<lb/>
love you, your sisters.<lb/>
SIG EPS HEADING TO MYRTLE<lb/>
BEACH: Fact one: Willie has no date ?<lb/>
so don't let him near yours. Fact two: if<lb/>
your date gets sick ? she will be verbally<lb/>
abused and left in Myrtle Beach Fact<lb/>
three: if you snake my date ? I'll borrow<lb/>
I Jester's snake and beat you to death Fact<lb/>
four: let's all GED off ? and drive v)ber<lb/>
Lally.<lb/>
WITH CHAMPAGNE AND BUBBLE<lb/>
BATH ? strawberries and whipped<lb/>
cream; the Sig Eps head to Myrtle Beach<lb/>
? could this be obscene7 Rum, vodka,<lb/>
bourbon aplenty; if you need protection<lb/>
? Morgan has many Rumple Mmtc<lb/>
and schnapps, b-hits abound; better<lb/>
watch your date if Z's around 1 lave a safe<lb/>
trip ? don't drink and drive; your family<lb/>
will be happy if you arrive alive<lb/>
ALL GONG SHOW PARTICIPANTS<lb/>
?you must have a description and the<lb/>
number of people in your act bv Mon-<lb/>
day. Practice, practice, practice.<lb/>
KRISSYAND SHARI ? be ready for an<lb/>
awsome weekend James and Mike<lb/>
MKG ? measure what7?? Good luck<lb/>
interviewing. "The fast man "<lb/>
CATHERINE STOREY ? What s haP<lb/>
pening.<lb/>
ROOM ASSIGNMENTS<lb/>
Students enrolled Spring Semester<lb/>
1988 who plan to return to East Carolina<lb/>
University FaU Semester 1988 and who<lb/>
wish to be guaranteed residence hall<lb/>
housing will be required to reserve rooms<lb/>
during the week of Feb. 22-26. Prior to<lb/>
reserving a room, a student must make an<lb/>
advance room payment of $60. These<lb/>
payments, which must be accompanied<lb/>
by housing applicationscontracts will<lb/>
be accepted in the Cashier's Office begin-<lb/>
ning Feb. 18th. Applications for students<lb/>
living off campus may be picked up in<lb/>
Room 201 beginning February 16. Room<lb/>
reservations are to be made in the respec-<lb/>
tive residenc hall offices according to the<lb/>
following schedule. Students who wish<lb/>
to return to the same rooms they pres-<lb/>
ently occupy must reserve rooms on<lb/>
Monday, Feb. 22 - 8:30 a.m. to 1230 p.m.<lb/>
and 130 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. and Tuesday,<lb/>
Feb. 23 - 830 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Students<lb/>
who wish to return to the same buildings<lb/>
in which they reside but different rooms<lb/>
will be permitted to reserve rooms on<lb/>
Tuesday, fob. 23 - 130 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
All other returning students will be per-<lb/>
mitted to reserve rooms on a first-come<lb/>
basis on Wednesday, Feb. 24, Thursday,<lb/>
Feb. 25 and Friday, Feb. 26 - 830 a.m. to<lb/>
1230 p.m. and 13p p.m. to 4:00 p.m. The<lb/>
residence hall rental rate has not been set<lb/>
for the 1988-89 School Year. However, we<lb/>
do anticipate a small increase in the rental<lb/>
rate for the 1988-89 School Year.<lb/>
CATHOLIC CENTER<lb/>
The Lenten season has begun. Make a<lb/>
rcwolution to atten daily mass during<lb/>
Lent Mon. 12:10 pjn Blessed Sacrament<lb/>
Chapel Tues. 8:00 a.m. B.S. Chapel. Wed.<lb/>
530 pjn. Newman Center. Thur. 7:00 a.m.<lb/>
&amp;BS ChapeL Fri. 12:10 pjn. B.S. Chapel.<lb/>
Sat M0 am. B.S. Chapel. Sun. 11:30 am.<lb/>
at the Bk. Bldg. Rm. 103,9:00 pjn. at the<lb/>
Center Come and worship this Thurs.<lb/>
ft30 pjn- ibr more information call New-<lb/>
x at 757-3760 or Teresa Lee at 752-9910.<lb/>
MIME<lb/>
The Student union Special Events<lb/>
Committee presents the world's greates<lb/>
mime-Marcel Marceau-on Wednesday,<lb/>
March 2nd, at 8:00 p.m. in Wright Audito-<lb/>
rium. For tickets, contact the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall, 757-6611, ext.<lb/>
266. Office hours are 11:00 a.m6:00 p.m<lb/>
Monday-Friday.<lb/>
ADVOCATE TRAINING<lb/>
An Advocate Training Program will be<lb/>
offered by the Pitt County Family Vio-<lb/>
lence Program beginning Februray 18,<lb/>
1988 for those interested in exploring vol-<lb/>
unteer or career opportunities in crisis<lb/>
counseling in a family violence shelter<lb/>
program. The course will be conducted by<lb/>
professionals in the fields of domestic vio-<lb/>
lence, law enforcement, social work,<lb/>
counseling, law and the judicial system.<lb/>
All classes, except a courtroom session,<lb/>
will be held at the ECU Allied Health<lb/>
Building, Room 212. Sessions are sched-<lb/>
uled for the evenings of February 18, 23,<lb/>
and 25 from 7:00-9:00 p.m. and Saturday,<lb/>
February 20 and 27 from 9:00 a.m3:00<lb/>
p.m. Reservations are needed by Wednes-<lb/>
day, February 17,1988 and may be made by<lb/>
telephone to Volunteer Coordination<lb/>
Mary a Hare, 757-3328. There is no<lb/>
charge for the course.<lb/>
EPISCOPAL FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Communion will be held at 5:30 at St.<lb/>
Paul's Church one block towards the river<lb/>
from Garrett Dorm on 4th Street. Service is<lb/>
informal dress. Call Allen Manning for<lb/>
more information at 758-1440.<lb/>
AMA MEMBERS<lb/>
The American Marketing Association<lb/>
is having its spring semester wine and<lb/>
cheese social in room 244, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, Thursday Feb. 18th at 4:00<lb/>
p.m. The key-note speaker, William Free-<lb/>
love (owner of 13 McDonald franchises)<lb/>
will begin the social with a presentation.<lb/>
Members and guest are invited.<lb/>
NASWCORSQ<lb/>
Wanted: Social Work Criminal Justice<lb/>
majors and intended majors, to attend<lb/>
meetings. He!d the 2nd and 4th Monday<lb/>
each month, at 4:00 p.m in Allied Health<lb/>
bldg room 110.<lb/>
AI<lb/>
Amnesty International meets every 4th<lb/>
Wednesday at 8 p.m. at St. Paul's Epis-<lb/>
copal Church, 401 E. 4th St on the upper<lb/>
floor from the 4th St. entrance. Next meet-<lb/>
ing, Feb. 24.<lb/>
LIBRARY SCIENCE<lb/>
Library Science classes start soon:<lb/>
March 1 (for Tues. - Thurs. classes), and<lb/>
March 2 (for Mon. - Wed. classes). Atten-<lb/>
dance will taken the first day.<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
The next SAM meetin is scheduled for<lb/>
Tuesday, Feb. 232rd. Grady Strickland<lb/>
from Carolina Telephone will give a pres-<lb/>
entation titled "Free Enterprise We'll<lb/>
also discuss plans for the rest of the<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
SAVE THOSE WRAPPERS<lb/>
Deposit all empty Sticklets Natural<lb/>
Flavor Gum packs and Doritos Brand<lb/>
Cool Ranch flavor tortilla chip bags in the<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/>
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 CLINIC<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 pjn. 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/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
The ECU College Republicans will<lb/>
meet every Tuesday night in room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall at 7 p.m. Call758-5775 or 752-<lb/>
3587.<lb/>
ROBERTSON<lb/>
Students who would like to help with<lb/>
getting M.G. "Pat" Robertson elected<lb/>
President, contact Justin Sturz at 758-2047.<lb/>
Organizational meeting will be held soon.<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 fall 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/>
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 p.m. 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/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
Prime Time, sponsored by Campus<lb/>
Crusade for Christ, meets every Thursday<lb/>
at 7:30 pjn. in Brewster C-103. Everyone is<lb/>
welcome.<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/>
OFF CAMPUS JOBS<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/>
INTERVIEW WORKSHOP<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/>
INTRAMURAL<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/>
FERRARA1988<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/>
APrtcisJon.<lb/>
Announces its<lb/>
Grand Opening<lb/>
on<lb/>
March 1st<lb/>
in Greenville<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-2800<lb/>
For more information call:<lb/>
751-1993<lb/>
m<lb/>
Wanted:<lb/>
Boxers Register<lb/>
Now for TKE<lb/>
boxing<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
March 29, 30 &amp; 31<lb/>
Call<lb/>
752-6032<lb/>
758-7144<lb/>
N.C. SYMPHONY<lb/>
"Roberta Peters, soprano, will be the<lb/>
featured soloist with the N.C Symphony<lb/>
on Wednesday, March 16 at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. This final concert of<lb/>
the 1987-88 N.C. Symphony Series is<lb/>
made possible by the Pitt Co' N.C. Sym-<lb/>
phony chapter and Burroughs-Wellcome<lb/>
Co. Tickets are currently available at<lb/>
Mendenhall Ticket Office (757-6611)<lb/>
EROS, the female principle of love,<lb/>
unity, peace, manifests itself in the Equal<lb/>
Rights Organization of Students at ECU<lb/>
The purpose of EROS is to educate, organ-<lb/>
ize and act in accordance with the female<lb/>
experience and women's issues. Meetings<lb/>
are Tuesdays, 5:00 Austin 308. For info.<lb/>
call 758-3645 or 752-7998.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
Students who wish to obtain financial<lb/>
aid for overseas education may apply f?r<lb/>
a Rivers Scholarship. The application<lb/>
deadline is March 15,1988. For more info<lb/>
contact the Office of International Studies<lb/>
and Scholarship in Brewster A-117.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA P<lb/>
yet your car washed by the pledges of<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi on February 20th, at the Fuel<lb/>
Dox on 10th and 264. Thecost will be$2.00.<lb/>
 PERFORMING ARTS<lb/>
The 1988-1989 Performing Arts Series is<lb/>
sponsoring the following events: The<lb/>
Ohio Ballet, Wynton Marsalis, The Acting<lb/>
Company, The Atlanta Symphony, PH1-<lb/>
LADANCO, The N.Y. Gilbert and Sulli<lb/>
van Players in Pirates of Penzance, The<lb/>
Polish National Radio Orchestra. CABA<lb/>
RET, The ECUNC Symphonies in con<lb/>
cert with SPECIAL GUEST PIANIST<lb/>
KAREN SHAW, and Nadja Salerno-Son-<lb/>
nenberg. For a brochure detailing the<lb/>
events contact the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall 757-?lL ext. 266. Office<lb/>
Frid7 ?U:00 ??m-00 p1' Mondy"<lb/>
Way.<lb/>
College<lb/>
(CPS)?College activists across<lb/>
the country, who have long ral-<lb/>
lied to keep Central Intelligence<lb/>
Agency officials from recruiting<lb/>
on their campuses, now seem to<lb/>
be trying to make the agencv the<lb/>
major focus of their political ener-<lb/>
gies.<lb/>
At a meeting of 600-some activ-<lb/>
ists from around the country at<lb/>
Rutgers University in New Jersey<lb/>
Feb. 5-7, for example, students<lb/>
pledged to organize national anti-<lb/>
CIA rallies at campuses April 23.<lb/>
A few days later, on Feb. 8, stu-<lb/>
dents from five colleges around<lb/>
Albany, N.Y protested against<lb/>
CIA recruiters at the State Univer-<lb/>
sity of New York at Albanv.<lb/>
During January and fall term,<lb/>
students at the universities of<lb/>
North Carolina at Charlotte,<lb/>
Washington, Vermont, New<lb/>
Hampshire, Iowa, Minnesota,<lb/>
California-Los Angeles and Santa<lb/>
Barbara, as well as at Brown Uni-<lb/>
versity, demonstrated against the<lb/>
spy agency.<lb/>
Activists say the success of the<lb/>
anti-apartheid movement on U.S<lb/>
campuses and increased publicitv<lb/>
about the CIA's subversive role in<lb/>
Central America have moved<lb/>
some students to take on a new<lb/>
course.<lb/>
"The divestment movement<lb/>
has slowed a bit because most<lb/>
U.S. appn<lb/>
(CPS) ? Moving to enc 20<lb/>
years of trying to force 10, mostlv<lb/>
southern, states to desegrate their<lb/>
state colleges, the U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Education approved to the "sub-<lb/>
slantial progress" they'd made in<lb/>
bringing minorities into their<lb/>
campus systems.<lb/>
U.S. Secretary of Education<lb/>
William Bennett, at a Washing-<lb/>
ton, D.C. news conference Feb. 10,<lb/>
said four states ? Arkansas,<lb/>
North Carolina, South Carolina<lb/>
and West Virginia ? were finally<lb/>
in "full compliance" with civil<lb/>
rights laws the federal govern-<lb/>
ment had been trying to force<lb/>
them to follow since 1969, when it<lb/>
sued 10 states that kept their<lb/>
campuses racially segregated.<lb/>
Bennett gave six other states<lb/>
Heterosexuals<lb/>
campus AIDS<lb/>
(CPS) ? Heterosexual collegei<lb/>
students don't seem to be heecing<lb/>
campus efforts to teach them how<lb/>
to avoid getting AIDS (acquiredl<lb/>
immune deficiency syndrome <lb/>
some of the doctors at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Texas at Austin health<lb/>
center say.<lb/>
Nevertheless, on Feb. 1 the<lb/>
Centers for Disease Control<lb/>
(CDC) in Atlanta issued guide-<lb/>
lines urging that schools start<lb/>
those efforts as early as elemen-<lb/>
tary school.<lb/>
In college, however, IT Dx<lb/>
Scott Spear, citing evidence that<lb/>
students are still contracting ch-<lb/>
lamydia ? another sexually comi<lb/>
municated disease ? at the sam<lb/>
rate thev were in 1986, concludes<lb/>
J<lb/>
students just aren't listening.<lb/>
"So far as we can tell Speai<lb/>
said, "behavior has not changed '<lb/>
"I guess it's like other risk;<lb/>
people take smoking, drinking<lb/>
and driving Austin AIDS social<lb/>
worker Traci Hiller told The DaihJ<lb/>
Texan, the UT campus paper<lb/>
"You know what the risks are, bu<lb/>
you're in college, having fun an<lb/>
not thinking about dying<lb/>
Yet at a mid-January AIDS corJ<lb/>
ference at Mankato State Univerl<lb/>
sity in Minnesota, Rep. Allej<lb/>
Quist accused colleges of actualh<lb/>
encouraging the spread of AID'<lb/>
by having an "Alternative Lif<lb/>
styles Office" for gay students.<lb/>
Quist said the office, by coui<lb/>
5a<lb/>
Still"1<lb/>
When you fill out your Form<lb/>
W-4 or W-4A. "Employee's<lb/>
Withholding Allowance<lb/>
Certificate remember:<lb/>
If you can be claimed on vour<lb/>
parent's or another person's tax<lb/>
return, you generally cannot be<lb/>
exempt from income tax<lb/>
withholding. To get it right, reaj<lb/>
the instructions that came with<lb/>
your Form W-4 or W-4 A<lb/>
??-Vr ?-<lb/>
?? -?in ??<lb/>
?-e<lb/>
? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0007"/><lb/>
n<lb/>
I<lb/>
t THE NEW SISTTRS of Alpha Delta<lb/>
Man Jv Beck, Pam Berry, Kris<lb/>
ine Cvwn Branch. Kim Cauthen,<lb/>
wigef Laura Connolly, Julie<lb/>
. .in UVn Dungen, Connie<lb/>
117 tyrant Whanne Hancock<lb/>
arris Paige Houser, Andi<lb/>
? A : kson Megan Keane,<lb/>
Cahterine Lee, Tara<lb/>
v . Morton, lonnv Naujoks,<lb/>
- vk; IVrs lill Shallcross,<lb/>
 ara alias Congraru-<lb/>
m ou could do it We<lb/>
- -vrs<lb/>
, IPs HEADING TO MYRTLE<lb/>
ehas no date ?<lb/>
wi:r- Fact two: if<lb/>
she will bo verbally<lb/>
in Myrtle Beach. Fact<lb/>
dale ? 111 borrow<lb/>
ou to death. Fact<lb/>
and drive sober.<lb/>
kMPAGNI AND BUBBLE<lb/>
- and whipped<lb/>
Myrtle Beach<lb/>
e? Rum, vodka,<lb/>
need protection<lb/>
Rumple Mintze<lb/>
- iNnind. better<lb/>
? : lave a safe<lb/>
rive your family<lb/>
ve ah e<lb/>
-HOW PARTICIPANTS<lb/>
? - ? ption and the<lb/>
- act bv Mon-<lb/>
?ractke<lb/>
? WD "? K1 vv rojdv tor an<lb/>
i Mike<lb/>
vxi luck<lb/>
man<lb/>
rORE What's hap-<lb/>
APreciskM<lb/>
mounces its<lb/>
Grand Opening<lb/>
on<lb/>
March 1st<lb/>
in Greenville<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-2800<lb/>
re information call:<lb/>
751-1993<lb/>
4t '<lb/>
Wanted:<lb/>
Boxers Register<lb/>
I Now for TKE<lb/>
boxing<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
March 29, 30 &amp; 31<lb/>
Call<lb/>
752-6032<lb/>
758-7144<lb/>
VC. SYMPHONY<lb/>
" eters, soprano, will be the<lb/>
? the N C. Symphony<lb/>
lay, March 16 at 8 p m. in<lb/>
im This final concert of<lb/>
W N.C Svmphonv Series is<lb/>
ie possible by the Pitt Co N.C. Sym-<lb/>
aptef and Burroughs-Wellcome<lb/>
kets are currentlv available at<lb/>
nhall Ticket Office (757-6611)<lb/>
JS. the female principle of love,<lb/>
peace, manifests itself in the Equal<lb/>
ts Organization of Students at ECU.<lb/>
be purpose of EROS is to educate, organ-<lb/>
ic and act in accordance with the female<lb/>
?penence and women's issues. Meetings<lb/>
re Tuesdays, 5:00 Austin 308. For info.<lb/>
"8-3645 or 752-7998<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
Students who wish to obtain financial<lb/>
r overseas education may apply for<lb/>
Rivers Scholarship The application<lb/>
leadline is March 15,1988. For more info.<lb/>
kntact the Office of International Studies<lb/>
Jnd Scholarship in Brewster A-117.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
-t your car washed by the pledges of<lb/>
d Sigma Pi on February 20th, at the Fuel<lb/>
x on 10th and 264. Thecost will be$2.00.<lb/>
PERFORMING ARTS<lb/>
The 1988-1989 Performing Arts Series is<lb/>
Iponsoring the following events: The<lb/>
hioBall t, Wynton Marsalis, The Acting<lb/>
mpanv, The Atlanta Symphony, PHI-<lb/>
ADANCO, The N.Y. Gilbert and Sulli-<lb/>
ran Ravers in Pirates of Penzance, The<lb/>
Polish National Radio Orchestra, CABA-<lb/>
iET, The ECUNC Symphonies in con-<lb/>
ert with SPECIAL GUEST PIANIST<lb/>
JAREN SHAW, and Nadja Salerno-Son-<lb/>
kenberg For a brochure detailing the<lb/>
h ents contact the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
MendenhalL 757-66U, ext. 266. Office<lb/>
hours are 11:00 ajn6.K30 pjn Monday-<lb/>
pndav.<lb/>
College activists focus on CIA<lb/>
(CPS)?College activists across<lb/>
the country, who have long ral-<lb/>
lied to keep Central Intelligence<lb/>
Agency officials from recruiting<lb/>
on their campuses, now seem to<lb/>
be trying to make the agency the<lb/>
major focus of their political ener-<lb/>
gies.<lb/>
At a meeting of 600-some activ-<lb/>
ists from around the country at<lb/>
Rutgers University in New Jersey<lb/>
Feb. 5-7, for example, students<lb/>
pledged to organize national anti-<lb/>
CIA rallies at campuses April 23.<lb/>
A few days later, on Feb. 8, stu-<lb/>
dents from five colleges around<lb/>
Albany, N.Y protested against<lb/>
CIA recruiters at the State Univer-<lb/>
sity of New York at Albany.<lb/>
During January and fall term,<lb/>
students at the universities of<lb/>
North Carolina at Charlotte,<lb/>
Washington, Vermont, New<lb/>
Hampshire, Iowa, Minnesota,<lb/>
California-Los Angeles and Santa<lb/>
Barbara, as well as at Brown Uni-<lb/>
versity, demonstrated against the<lb/>
spy agency.<lb/>
Activists say the success of the<lb/>
anti-apartheid movement on U.S.<lb/>
campuses and increased publicity<lb/>
about the CIA's subversive role in<lb/>
Central America have moved<lb/>
some students to take on a new<lb/>
course.<lb/>
'The divestment movement<lb/>
has slowed a bit because most<lb/>
major universities have di-<lb/>
vested said Marc D. Kenen, a<lb/>
University of Massachussetts<lb/>
graduate student and opponent<lb/>
of CIA recruiting at the Amherst<lb/>
campus. "The issues are very<lb/>
much related<lb/>
"They both have to do with<lb/>
university complicity with illegal<lb/>
and immoral actions, whether it<lb/>
be the CIA involvement in Cen-<lb/>
tral America and Southern Africa<lb/>
or U.S. government support of the<lb/>
South African regime<lb/>
"CIA links with apartheid are<lb/>
alive and well Carol Thompson,<lb/>
a University of Southern Califor-<lb/>
nia associate professor told a<lb/>
November Los Angeles anti-CIA<lb/>
crowd of about 50 people, noting<lb/>
the CIA swaps information with<lb/>
South Africa's intelligence<lb/>
agency.<lb/>
Critics charge the CIA has<lb/>
helped topple duly-elected gov-<lb/>
ernments in nations such as Chile<lb/>
and Guatemala, and promotes<lb/>
terrorism through its support of<lb/>
rebels in Central America and<lb/>
Africa.<lb/>
"The CIA should not exist at all<lb/>
because they've proven they can't<lb/>
stay within their legal limits<lb/>
said Ohio State alumnus Rick<lb/>
Theis during a November cam-<lb/>
pus rally.<lb/>
The agency's role in the Iran-<lb/>
contra scandal also has fueled<lb/>
anti-CIA activism, which first<lb/>
appeared in the 1960s as a result of<lb/>
U.S. military intervention in<lb/>
Southeast Asia, Cuba and the<lb/>
Dominican Republic. But it has<lb/>
only been in recent years ? and<lb/>
particularly in recent months ?<lb/>
that the anti-CIA movement re-<lb/>
ally has blossomed on campuses.<lb/>
"Anybody who watched televi-<lb/>
sion this summer knows the CIA<lb/>
is behind the contra war. They are<lb/>
the ones that are training the con-<lb/>
tras in terrorist tactics Western<lb/>
Michigan University minister<lb/>
Donald Van Hoeven told pro-<lb/>
testesters at a recent demonstra-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
At Louisiana State, students<lb/>
planted a mock graveyard out-<lb/>
side the school's career placement<lb/>
center, complete with crosses<lb/>
bearing the names of people<lb/>
killed by CIA-supported Nicara-<lb/>
guan rebels. At Brown, 200-mem-<lb/>
ber group called CIAO?CIA Off<lb/>
Campus ? checked out books<lb/>
from the university library that<lb/>
the agency helped finance or<lb/>
write.<lb/>
The CIA isn't retreating.<lb/>
'The First Amendment grants<lb/>
them the right to say what they<lb/>
want, and the First Amendment<lb/>
also grants us the right to recruit<lb/>
on campus. We are a legitimate<lb/>
U.S. approves college progress<lb/>
(CPS) ?Moving to enc. 20 Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Mis-<lb/>
years of trying to force 10, mostly souri, Oklahoma and Virginia ?<lb/>
southern, states to desegrate their until the end of 1988 to tell how<lb/>
state colleges, the U.S. Dept. of they'll complete specific projects<lb/>
Education approved to the "sub- ? mostly building improve-<lb/>
stantial progress" they'd made in menb and funding of minority<lb/>
bringing minorities into their<lb/>
campus systems.<lb/>
U.S. Secretary of Education<lb/>
William Bennett, at a Washing-<lb/>
ton, D.C. news conference Feb. 10,<lb/>
said four states ? Arkansas,<lb/>
North Carolina, South Carolina<lb/>
and West Virginia ? were finally failed to integrate their campuses.<lb/>
student recruiting efforts ? to rid<lb/>
themselves of "the remnants of<lb/>
segregation<lb/>
In its 1969 legal assault on states<lb/>
Last week, Bennett readily con-<lb/>
ceded none of the states had met<lb/>
the goals a federal court set for the<lb/>
states in 1978: to enroll more<lb/>
minority students at traditionally<lb/>
white campuses, hire more mi-<lb/>
nority teachers and administra-<lb/>
tors and improve facilities at his-<lb/>
torically black campuses.<lb/>
Yet "all of the 10 states have<lb/>
that still segregated their colleges, made significant and substantial<lb/>
the federal government won the progress in desegregating their<lb/>
right to cut off funds to states that<lb/>
in 'full compliance" with civil<lb/>
rights laws the federal govern-<lb/>
ment had been trying to force<lb/>
them to follow since 1969, when it<lb/>
sued 10 states that kept their<lb/>
campuses racially segregated.<lb/>
JBcnnett gave six other states ?<lb/>
M t 1<lb/>
systems of public higher educa-<lb/>
tion Bennett said in effectively<lb/>
calling off federal pressure on the<lb/>
states.<lb/>
"Each has done all or most of<lb/>
what it committed to do includ-<lb/>
Various courts imposed dead<lb/>
lines through the years for schools<lb/>
to desegregate but, while occa-<lb/>
sionally approving some state<lb/>
efforts, kept giving other states ing spending an estimated $240<lb/>
more time to meet the descgrega- million to renovate historically<lb/>
tion goals. black colleges, Bennett said.<lb/>
Not everyone, apparently, is<lb/>
convinced.<lb/>
Even the week before Bennett<lb/>
made his announcement, Ameri-<lb/>
CampilS AIDS edllCatlOn n Council on Education Presi<lb/>
 dent Robert Atwell complained<lb/>
(CPS) ? Heterosexual college seling gay students, effectively colleges have "hit the wall" in<lb/>
students don't seem to be heeding condones homosexuality and their efforts to integrate.<lb/>
campus efforts to teach them how sodomy, according to the MSU ?ur ovvni fatigue,<lb/>
to avoid getting AIDS (acquired Reporter<lb/>
fleterbsexuals not heeding<lb/>
immune deficiency syndrome),<lb/>
some of the doctors at the Univer-<lb/>
sitv of Texas at Austin health<lb/>
J<lb/>
center say.<lb/>
Nevertheless, on Feb. 1 the<lb/>
Centers for Disease Control<lb/>
'You wouldn't have a center for<lb/>
the Ku Klux Klan Quist report-<lb/>
edly said.<lb/>
In its guidelines to help schools<lb/>
develop AIDS programs without<lb/>
'encouraging" any kind of sexual<lb/>
(CDC) in Atlanta issued guide- activity, the CDC suggested<lb/>
lines urging that schools start schools stress abstinence outside<lb/>
those efforts as early as elemen- marriage as the best way of avoid-<lb/>
tary school.<lb/>
In college, however, UT Dr.<lb/>
Scott Spear, citing evidence that<lb/>
students are still contracting ch-<lb/>
lamydia ? another sexually com-<lb/>
municated disease ? at the same<lb/>
rate they were in 1986, concluded<lb/>
students just aren't listening<lb/>
Atwell said Feb. 2, "has been ac-<lb/>
centuated by an administration<lb/>
that has not seen equity issues as<lb/>
important<lb/>
He blasted the "steady down-<lb/>
turn" in the number of black stu-<lb/>
dents in colleges as evidence of<lb/>
"backsliding not progress.<lb/>
Black student enrollment na-<lb/>
tionwide actually has declined in<lb/>
recent years, the Dept. of<lb/>
Education's own figures suggest,<lb/>
and scores of public campuses ?<lb/>
the University of New Hamp-<lb/>
shire, Farleigh Dickenson, Penn<lb/>
goals this school year.<lb/>
ing the disease, but that they urge<lb/>
sexually active students to use<lb/>
condoms.<lb/>
There is evidence, of course,<lb/>
that such AIDS education pro-<lb/>
grams have changed students'sex State Mississippi State Tennes-<lb/>
habits see, Nebraska and the California<lb/>
A recent University of Wiscon- State University system, among<lb/>
"So far as we can tell Spear sin survey, for example, reported ?there - have launched new<lb/>
said, "behavior has not changed that 56 percent of the students minority student recruiting<lb/>
"I guess it's like other risks polled use condoms more than in dl<lb/>
people take smoking, drinking the past. Two-lhirds of the stu-<lb/>
and driving Austin AIDS social dents who said they had multiple<lb/>
worker TraciHiller told The Daily sexual partners during the last<lb/>
Texan, the UT campus paper, year said the fear of AIDS has<lb/>
"You know what the risks are, but forced them to have relations with<lb/>
you're in college, having fun and fewer partners<lb/>
not thinking about dying<lb/>
Yet at a mid-January AIDS con-<lb/>
ference at Mankato State Univer-<lb/>
sity in Minnesota, Rep. Allen<lb/>
Quist accused colleges of actually<lb/>
encouraging the spread of AIDS<lb/>
by having an "Alternative Life-<lb/>
styles Office" for gay students.<lb/>
Quist said the office, by coun-<lb/>
on the beach<lb/>
3<lb/>
?<lb/>
When you fill out your Form<lb/>
W-4 or W-4A, "Employee's<lb/>
Withholding Allowance<lb/>
Certificate remember:<lb/>
If you can be claimed on your<lb/>
parent's or another person's tax<lb/>
return, you generally cannot be<lb/>
exempt from income tax<lb/>
withholding. To get it right, read<lb/>
the instructions that came with<lb/>
your Form W-4 or W-4 A.<lb/>
FT. LAUDERDALE'5 PREMIERE<lb/>
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employer of the U.S. govern-<lb/>
ment said Sharon Foster, a<lb/>
spokeswoman for the agency.<lb/>
Most schools agree. "Students<lb/>
want them here said Jerry<lb/>
Houser of Southern Cal's Career<lb/>
Development Center. "The CIA<lb/>
has received a very good response<lb/>
from USC students. They've been<lb/>
here for years<lb/>
At Colby College in Maine, stu-<lb/>
dents objected to a November<lb/>
Faculty Senate resolution to keep<lb/>
the CIA off campus, claiming, as<lb/>
campus College Republicans<lb/>
Chairman John Whitacre put it,<lb/>
"it's pedantic of the professors to<lb/>
try and decide for us, to become<lb/>
our conscience. It's our choice to<lb/>
take (the CIA) up on it or not<lb/>
"The CIA was here as a poten-<lb/>
tial employer of our students and<lb/>
alumni, and we normally provide<lb/>
space and the opportunity for<lb/>
interviews for those who have<lb/>
positions for our graduates said<lb/>
Henry Johnson, vice president for<lb/>
student services at the University<lb/>
of Michigan, the site of a recent<lb/>
protest.<lb/>
Activists, though, claim credit<lb/>
for the CIA cancelling recruiting<lb/>
visits to the University of Colo-<lb/>
rado and Brown, where past<lb/>
demonstrations have been par-<lb/>
ticularly hostile.<lb/>
The agency also suffered a set-<lb/>
back at the University of Califor-<lb/>
nia-Santa Barbara, after a Novem-<lb/>
ber protest that resulted in the<lb/>
arrests of 38 students who op-<lb/>
posed the appointment of a CIA<lb/>
officer to a temporary faculty<lb/>
position.<lb/>
The university rescinded the<lb/>
appointment and instead named<lb/>
George Chritton, the veteran CIA<lb/>
agent, as a visiting fellow with no<lb/>
teaching duties.<lb/>
"We see all this as a kind of<lb/>
turning of the tide said Joe<lb/>
Iosbaker, a University of Illinois-<lb/>
Chicago student and member of<lb/>
the Progressive Student Network,<lb/>
a national left-wing political<lb/>
group. "Students are beginning to<lb/>
win victories in this battle<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 18,1968 7<lb/>
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(they're funnv!)<lb/>
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for the 1988-89 Term<lb/>
Applications Available At The<lb/>
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GET INVOLVED ON ONE OF THE FOLLOWING COMMITTEES:<lb/>
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?Public Relations<lb/>
and Publicity<lb/>
?Special Concerts<lb/>
?Special Events<lb/>
?Travel<lb/>
?Visual Arts<lb/>
Deadline to Apply: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1988<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057945_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 18,1988<lb/>
Student left activists gather<lb/>
PISCATAVVAY, N.J. (CPS) ?<lb/>
Nearly 700 student activists from<lb/>
85 campuses gathered at Rutgers<lb/>
University Feb. 5?7 to form a<lb/>
leftist political movement to hnng<lb/>
about social change.<lb/>
The students discussed, and<lb/>
they decided to delay, establish-<lb/>
ing a new national college net-<lb/>
work to coordinate student activ-<lb/>
ism on issues such as CIA recruit-<lb/>
ing on campus, U.S. foreign pol-<lb/>
k, secret military research.<lb/>
South Africa, racism and sexism,<lb/>
and the cost oi higher education.<lb/>
Many of the delegates came to<lb/>
the meeting hoping to form a new<lb/>
student group reminiscent of Stu-<lb/>
dents for a Democratic Society<lb/>
(SDS). which helped oreanize the<lb/>
anti?war movement of the<lb/>
1960s.<lb/>
While the students at the N.i<lb/>
tional Student Convention '88<lb/>
ultimately did urge the creation ot<lb/>
a movement to realize our vision<lb/>
of equality and substantive de-<lb/>
mocracy and rail against "corpo-<lb/>
rate and military dominance<lb/>
they were unable to agree on a<lb/>
constitution for a now group.<lb/>
"We believe it's time to forgo a<lb/>
more united student lett so that<lb/>
we can be heard by those who do<lb/>
lead this country said Rutgers<lb/>
junior Stuart Eimer, a conference<lb/>
organizer. "Historically students<lb/>
have played a leading role in<lb/>
bringing about change. We feel<lb/>
the time is riht<lb/>
'We're not looking for ways to<lb/>
organize postcard writing cam-<lb/>
paigns to congressmen in the<lb/>
event we invade Nicaragua'<lb/>
explained University of Califor-<lb/>
nia Santa Barbara senior Sara<lb/>
Nelson. "We're looking for direct<lb/>
action. The system that we live in<lb/>
is not suitable to our needs<lb/>
Hut before risking alienating<lb/>
some students with a constitution<lb/>
that may not be suitable to their<lb/>
needs, the delegates decided to<lb/>
meet in regional meetings<lb/>
through the spring to hammer<lb/>
down a consensus platform, then<lb/>
meet again next fall to write a<lb/>
constitution and statement oi<lb/>
purpose.<lb/>
Activists say the fledgling or-<lb/>
Students feel pinch of new loans<lb/>
(CrS) ? The first crop of stu-<lb/>
dents to feel the pinch of the new,<lb/>
tighter Guaranteed Student Loan<lb/>
tGSL) rules is encountering con-<lb/>
fusion and frustration, aid offi-<lb/>
cials on manv campuses report.<lb/>
The rules themselves went into<lb/>
effect last fall, after most of the<lb/>
loans for fall term had been made.<lb/>
Some students who are just now<lb/>
dent should receive a (SI .<lb/>
By examining other forms oi<lb/>
income, manv students and their<lb/>
families are too weal flu to qualify<lb/>
for the low-cost loans Some ob-<lb/>
servers predicted as main as TO<lb/>
percent of those students who<lb/>
receivedGSLslast year would not<lb/>
be eligible for the loans tins year.<lb/>
To add to the confusion, the U.S.<lb/>
add a step to the GSI process next<lb/>
vear by requiring recipients to<lb/>
undergo loan counseling. The<lb/>
Education Department will work<lb/>
getting loans for the current term Department of Education will<lb/>
are feeling the pinch.<lb/>
At the University oi Nebraska-<lb/>
Omaha, for example, manv stu-<lb/>
dents still don't understand the<lb/>
new eligibility requirements, fi-<lb/>
nancial aid Director ). Philip<lb/>
Shreves said. "One thing I can say<lb/>
about the changes is that it will be<lb/>
difficult to explain to students<lb/>
why they are or aren't eligible<lb/>
Studentsat Southwest Missouri<lb/>
State University were apparently<lb/>
so confused by the new eligibility<lb/>
rules that rumors of financial aid<lb/>
cuts swept the campus in January.<lb/>
To determine it a student was<lb/>
eligible for a GSL in the past, fi-<lb/>
nancial aid counselors examined<lb/>
student and parents' income, the<lb/>
number oi dependents in the<lb/>
student's family, and the number<lb/>
oi children in that familv attend-<lb/>
ing college.<lb/>
Now, under the federal Higher<lb/>
Education Act of 1986, most of<lb/>
which went into effect last fall,<lb/>
counselors must look at other<lb/>
forms of revenue and holdings ?<lb/>
such as real estate and invest-<lb/>
ments ? before deciding if a stu-<lb/>
More control<lb/>
due to law<lb/>
(CPS) ? The recent U.S. Su-<lb/>
preme Court decision giving high<lb/>
school principals more control<lb/>
over student papers has embold-<lb/>
ened at least one college adminis-<lb/>
trator to threaten to try to put a<lb/>
college newspaper under his con-<lb/>
trol.<lb/>
Edward A. Wagner, chairman<lb/>
of the Board of Governors of Pima<lb/>
Community College in Tucson,<lb/>
Ariz called for Pima administra-<lb/>
tors to put the college's newspa-<lb/>
per "back on the right track<lb/>
"In (view) of the recent Su-<lb/>
preme Court decision, we as the<lb/>
board have the right to edit or not<lb/>
to edit Wagner asserted.<lb/>
The court, however, specifically<lb/>
excluded college papers from its<lb/>
January ruling, which said school<lb/>
officials could "regulate the con-<lb/>
tent" of high school papers run as<lb/>
for-credit courses just as they can<lb/>
regulate the content of other<lb/>
classes offered in the schools.<lb/>
The decision already has led<lb/>
officials at high schools in Iowa<lb/>
City, IA and Cupertino, Cal to<lb/>
try to censor stories out of their<lb/>
student papers. At Pima, Wagner<lb/>
seemed to regret trying to apply<lb/>
the decision to his campus almost<lb/>
as soon as he proposed it.<lb/>
"What am I saying,?" he contin-<lb/>
ued. "I don't want to get into the<lb/>
censoring business<lb/>
At least one other board mem-<lb/>
ber agreed. Wagner, said Mark<lb/>
Webb, is trying to "intimidate"<lb/>
the paper. "The Aztec Press<lb/>
should be published without in-<lb/>
terference of any kind he said.<lb/>
Wagner said the Aztec Press,<lb/>
Pima's student newspaper, needs<lb/>
greater guidance from school offi-<lb/>
cials because of "shoddy report-<lb/>
ing He proposed that profes-<lb/>
sional journalists "help our stu-<lb/>
dents by giving advice on writing<lb/>
positive stories<lb/>
"I don't want to hold it over<lb/>
their heads. I'm in no way imply-<lb/>
ing we should censor. I'm saying<lb/>
that loud and clear. We should<lb/>
look at the program Wagner<lb/>
said.<lb/>
vx ith colleges and lending institu-<lb/>
tions "to make sure students<lb/>
understand their obligations<lb/>
said spokesman I eo Paszkicwicz.<lb/>
Paszkiewicz hopes counseling<lb/>
will decrease the numbers of stu-<lb/>
dents who default on GSLs after<lb/>
they graduate. GSL defaulters<lb/>
now owe $1.6 billion, he said. "It's<lb/>
a real problem. We're trying a lot<lb/>
ot different things to get loans<lb/>
repaid ,<lb/>
ganization ? which they have not<lb/>
yet named ? really can't ape the<lb/>
student movement of the '60s.<lb/>
"This is the '80s, and that's what<lb/>
we have to stress said Eimer.<lb/>
"Different issues and different<lb/>
history<lb/>
But the students ? most of<lb/>
whom were toddlers in the late<lb/>
'60s ? did receive support and<lb/>
encouragement from veteran po-<lb/>
litical activists, including poet<lb/>
Allen Ginsburg, Abbie Hoffman,<lb/>
and rock singer Steven Van<lb/>
Zandt.<lb/>
The '60s, said Van Zandt, a for-<lb/>
mer member of Bruce<lb/>
Springsteen's E Street Band and<lb/>
producer of the anti-apartheid<lb/>
album "Sun City "was the<lb/>
awakening of what I think is a<lb/>
revolution The Rutgers' con-<lb/>
vention, he added, "is another<lb/>
step in that revolution<lb/>
Past student movements,<lb/>
Hoffman told students, were<lb/>
hampered by infighting, a mis-<lb/>
take he hopes won't mar the<lb/>
1980s' student movement. "Being<lb/>
right isn't enough said<lb/>
I loffman. "You have to work<lb/>
hard with lots of cooperation "<lb/>
page in The East<lb/>
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Monday ? Tuesday ? Thursday ? Friday<lb/>
5:30 Evening Prayer<lb/>
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One order will be discussed each week.<lb/>
66 Mom says the<lb/>
house just isn't the<lb/>
same without me,<lb/>
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The 64-vear old :<lb/>
has thrilled audiences for rrn<lb/>
than four decades<lb/>
famous whi te face a nd g<lb/>
hisonlv props. Marceau<lb/>
howling wind, tame - 5,wa<lb/>
a tightrope, gets<lb/>
subway and climbs<lb/>
interminable staircase<lb/>
The artist's life was tur<lb/>
with experiences trom v<lb/>
This is Marcel Marceau, that<lb/>
annoying things on this pM<lb/>
tolerable. He'll be on this ve<lb/>
"i?"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0009"/><lb/>
ring place In town.<lb/>
bruary 20th<lb/>
in. - 1 a.m.<lb/>
e Liles<lb/>
c rock featuring<lb/>
nes Taylor<lb/>
tuny Bnffctt<lb/>
Sat 110 E Fourth St.<lb/>
Ml ABC Permits<lb/>
- ind Entertainment<lb/>
T. PAUL'S<lb/>
PISCOPAL<lb/>
CHURCH<lb/>
401 E 4th St.<lb/>
EDULE<lb/>
m. 11:00 a.m.<lb/>
day ? Friday<lb/>
b Eucharist<lb/>
nt Fellowship Supper<lb/>
bam 'Ministers of the<lb/>
frsorts; Priests; Deacons;<lb/>
discussed each week.<lb/>
ir Mom is far<lb/>
lean you can't be<lb/>
Mill share the love<lb/>
n AT&amp;T Long<lb/>
plan you think to<lb/>
ks the peace and<lb/>
iissesyou.Sogo<lb/>
?r Mom a call. You<lb/>
room later. Reach<lb/>
omeone?<lb/>
it choice.<lb/>
I<lb/>
k<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
FEBRUARY 18,1988 Page 9<lb/>
'Action' could teach Rambo<lb/>
By CAROL WETHERINGTON<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
Action Jackson. Action Jackson.<lb/>
rherc could be no better title for<lb/>
this movie The movie literally<lb/>
cushed with action form the word<lb/>
go, AND NEVER STOPPED!<lb/>
Hying glass, stealthy maneuvers<lb/>
and unbelievable murder tactics<lb/>
grabbed the viewers' attention,<lb/>
strangled it and didn't let go!<lb/>
Jericho "Action" Jackson, a<lb/>
tough Detroit cop, was played by<lb/>
Carl Weathers, whom we have<lb/>
seen in "Rocky" (ALL of them!),<lb/>
"Semi-Tough" and his most<lb/>
recent, "Predator But this one<lb/>
takes the cake.<lb/>
The movie opened with a<lb/>
sccrctary-and-boss-in-the-office<lb/>
scene, only to be interrupted by<lb/>
bodies busting through the<lb/>
windows. Maybe that doesn't<lb/>
sound too dramatic to you, but<lb/>
then, to top it all off, you had to<lb/>
find the intruders.<lb/>
From there, fists never stopped<lb/>
flying, blood flowed from<lb/>
wounds inflicted in the weirdest<lb/>
ways, cars were smashed, anger<lb/>
raged and Vanity kept on<lb/>
shooting up.<lb/>
That's right, and you heard it<lb/>
here first: Vanity portrayed a<lb/>
JUNKIE. YES! And she was<lb/>
damned good at it, too. Her<lb/>
singing was in her style, of course,<lb/>
while her wardobe was in no<lb/>
News Stand hosting comic<lb/>
book convention in G-ville<lb/>
Nostalgic Press Release<lb/>
The Nostalgia News Stand of<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina is ten<lb/>
years old this month. Eastern<lb/>
Carolina's first comic book store<lb/>
opened for business in February<lb/>
1978 in the same Dickinson<lb/>
Avenue address where it now<lb/>
operates.<lb/>
To celebrate the shop's<lb/>
anniversary, Lawrence is holding<lb/>
a comic book collector's<lb/>
convention on Saturday at the<lb/>
Greenville Holidav Inn on US 13<lb/>
and 264. The show will also<lb/>
feature baseball cards and<lb/>
records.<lb/>
The show starts at 10 a.m. and<lb/>
last until 4 p.m. Admission is free.<lb/>
There will be free gifts to all who<lb/>
attend and door prizes will be<lb/>
given away in each of the three<lb/>
catagories.<lb/>
Any one interested in collecting<lb/>
any of the featured items or any<lb/>
other kind of popular culture item<lb/>
is invited to attend. There will be a<lb/>
number of dealers buying, selling<lb/>
and trading thousands of comic<lb/>
bdoks, cards and records.<lb/>
(The show will also feature a<lb/>
cdbple of favorite North Carolina<lb/>
comic book artists. Raleigh's Matt<lb/>
Feazell, the king of the mini-<lb/>
comics and creator of such<lb/>
popular characters as<lb/>
Cynicalman, Antisocialman,<lb/>
Stupid boy and others will be<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Jimmy Lyle of Waynesville,<lb/>
artist on "Escape to the Stars" and<lb/>
a recent updating of the Thunder<lb/>
Agents called "T.H.U.N.D.E.R<lb/>
will also be present, Both artists<lb/>
will offer copies of their works,<lb/>
original artwork and sketches for<lb/>
sale. They will be happy to meet<lb/>
with any aspiring artists and look<lb/>
at their work.<lb/>
After the show, there will be a<lb/>
party at the Nostalgia News Stand<lb/>
with free cake and drink and more<lb/>
door prizes. It will start at 5:30<lb/>
p.m. For more info call Charles<lb/>
Lawrence at 758-6909.<lb/>
style. It must be admitted that<lb/>
even though I did expect some<lb/>
poor acting from her, she did hold<lb/>
her own. But then, how much<lb/>
"own" could a person of her<lb/>
caliber have?<lb/>
Dellaplane, a murderous auto<lb/>
tycoon, was played by Craig<lb/>
Nelson. Remember him? He was<lb/>
Sarnac in "Call to Glory" and the<lb/>
alcoholic father from<lb/>
"Poltergeist Yeah, that's the<lb/>
one! Talk about one mean xxxxx!<lb/>
The only thing I can really rag<lb/>
on just happens to be one of the<lb/>
most important things in the<lb/>
movie. It was a little hard to<lb/>
follow the conflict; not a lot, just<lb/>
enough.<lb/>
You were so caught up in the<lb/>
action by the time the plot was<lb/>
revealed that you had to<lb/>
concentrate too hard to catch the<lb/>
main ideas. It did help knowing<lb/>
that the bad guy was an auto<lb/>
corporation magnate out to gain<lb/>
power any way he could, which is<lb/>
revealed at the beginning of the<lb/>
movie.<lb/>
I won't tell you anymore life-<lb/>
shattering details - you'll just<lb/>
have to go see it! I can assre that it<lb/>
will be worth your time.<lb/>
This is Carl Weathers and Vanity, in James Bond Promo Picture Hell.<lb/>
They star in the new action-thriller, "Action Jackson Not that this<lb/>
was the name of a toy back in the 60s, or Jesse Jackson's new<lb/>
nickname.<lb/>
Wood was an eccentric director<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
L Staff Writer<lb/>
Edward Wood, Jr. - author,<lb/>
director, transvestite, and lover of<lb/>
women. Can there be any doubt<lb/>
he was one of Hollywood's most<lb/>
eccentric characters?<lb/>
Unfortunately, Wood is as<lb/>
obscure as he is colorful and it<lb/>
seems fitting on the tenth<lb/>
anniversary of his death that we<lb/>
come not to bury him (no one<lb/>
knows what happened to his<lb/>
body any way) but to praise him. If<lb/>
you arc unfamiliar with Wood, let<lb/>
me warn you: this is a case of truth<lb/>
stranger than fiction.<lb/>
Wood can be considered one of<lb/>
the first wave of movie fans who<lb/>
became a pro out of a genuine love<lb/>
of the medium. Unfortunately,<lb/>
Hollywood did not esteem Wood<lb/>
as a fair-haired child in the way<lb/>
they did later fans who turned<lb/>
pros like Lucas and Spielberg.<lb/>
Perhaps the fact that his output<lb/>
tended toward the kinky with<lb/>
such titles as "The Sinster Urge"<lb/>
and "The Bride and the Beast"<lb/>
had something to do with this.<lb/>
Tine epitome of this aspect of<lb/>
Wood's career is the movie, "Glen<lb/>
or Glenda" (1953), a thinly veiled<lb/>
autobiographical piece.<lb/>
Wood played (under a<lb/>
pseudonym) the title character<lb/>
and his wife of the time played his<lb/>
fictional fiance, Barbara. The<lb/>
story concerns an unhappy<lb/>
transvestite's desire to come out<lb/>
of the closet. He agonizes over<lb/>
whether to tell his girl about his<lb/>
habits before the wedding "  or<lb/>
hit her between the eyes with it<lb/>
after (wards) when it might be<lb/>
too late for either of them<lb/>
In elegant tones worthy of<lb/>
Thomas Hardy, Wood decries the<lb/>
arbitrariness of social standards<lb/>
of the time. "The title of this can<lb/>
only be labeled 'Behind Locked<lb/>
Doors Give this man satin<lb/>
undies, a dress, a sweater, and a<lb/>
skirt  and he can be more of a<lb/>
credit to his community and his<lb/>
government because he is happy<lb/>
In a touching moment, Barbara<lb/>
takes off her angora sweater and<lb/>
hands it to Glen after he has<lb/>
confessed. In real life, Wood was<lb/>
also fond of angora as well as<lb/>
pants suits and lingerie.<lb/>
According to one of his co-<lb/>
workers, it was not unusual to<lb/>
walk into Wood's home and find<lb/>
him in lingerie, smoking a cigar,<lb/>
and typing out his next project.<lb/>
Unfortunately, Hollywood<lb/>
politics make strange bedfellows<lb/>
 yes, stranger than Wood<lb/>
himself. His executive producer<lb/>
for "Bride of the Monster" was a<lb/>
meat packing plant owner.<lb/>
He insisted the film make a<lb/>
statement against nuclear arms.<lb/>
Wood wanted the climax to be a<lb/>
life-death struggle between evil<lb/>
scientist, Bela Lugosi and his<lb/>
mutant octopus but was obliged<lb/>
to insert stock footage of an<lb/>
atomic blast totally out of story<lb/>
context. Verily, there is no art by<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
When Wood received financial<lb/>
backing from a Baptist Church for<lb/>
"Graverobbers From Space they<lb/>
had their own demands: all of the<lb/>
cast had to be baptized (Wood's<lb/>
friend and ex-wrestler, Tor<lb/>
Johnson, was so large he had to be<lb/>
baptized in a swimming pool. He<lb/>
also had a habit of cracking<lb/>
Wood's toilet seat. But I digress<lb/>
).<lb/>
The title, which was somehow<lb/>
considered sacreligious, must be<lb/>
changed. Thus, was born the<lb/>
classic, "Plan Nine From Outer<lb/>
Space the infamous worst<lb/>
movie ever made.<lb/>
You can't exactly say Wood's<lb/>
carrer went downhill after "Plan<lb/>
Nine A better metaphor would<lb/>
be "the bottom fell out He spent<lb/>
most of his latter years turning out<lb/>
such fictions as "Scream Your<lb/>
Bloody Head Off "The<lb/>
Whorehouse Horror" (I'm not<lb/>
making this up) and "The Fall of<lb/>
the Balcony of Usher<lb/>
In 1978, Wood and his second<lb/>
wife were kicked out of their<lb/>
home and subsequently had their<lb/>
possessions stolen. A friend took<lb/>
them in and Ed died there of heart<lb/>
failure while watching a football<lb/>
game on TV. Like the brain of<lb/>
Kennedy and the bones of Moses,<lb/>
the location of Wood's corpse is a<lb/>
mystery.<lb/>
As Wood's wife said: "Eddie <lb/>
believed in what he was doing. He<lb/>
was sincere A minor character<lb/>
from "Plan Nine" sums up, then<lb/>
Wood's epitaph in one word:<lb/>
"Tragic<lb/>
That mime guy is COming SOOn Saar will present slide lecture Monday night<lb/>
ECU' News Bureau<lb/>
Mime artist Marcel Marceau<lb/>
will perform at Wright<lb/>
Auditorium March 2, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The 64-year old pantomimist<lb/>
has thrilled audiences for more<lb/>
than four decades. With his<lb/>
famous white face and gestures as<lb/>
hisonly props, Marceau fights the<lb/>
howling wind, tames lions, walks<lb/>
a tightrope, gets lost in the<lb/>
subway and climbs an<lb/>
interminable staircase.<lb/>
The artist's life was turbulent<lb/>
with experiences from which his<lb/>
stage interpretations are drawn.<lb/>
Born into a Jewish family in<lb/>
Strasbourg, France, Marceau<lb/>
spent the war years fighting n<lb/>
the side of the Free French. His<lb/>
father disappeared at the hands of<lb/>
the Gestapo.<lb/>
After the war, Marceau began<lb/>
studies in Charles Dullin's School<lb/>
of Dramatic Art at the Sarah<lb/>
Bernhardt Theatre in Paris. His<lb/>
stage career was launched in 1947.<lb/>
Since then, Marceau has<lb/>
appeared throughout the world<lb/>
in live and televised<lb/>
performances. In the U.S. he has<lb/>
appearances on the Max Liebman<lb/>
"Show of shows as well as on<lb/>
programs hosted by Johnny<lb/>
Carson, Merv Griffin, Dinah<lb/>
Shore and others.<lb/>
Tickets to the Marcel Marceau's<lb/>
performance are available from<lb/>
the campus Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
open weekdays from 11 a.m. until<lb/>
6 p.m. Tickets are $14 each for the<lb/>
general public, $7 for youth.<lb/>
Ticket reservations (by major<lb/>
credit card) and further<lb/>
information are available from<lb/>
the Ticket Office, telphone (919)<lb/>
757-6611.<lb/>
School of Art Press Release<lb/>
New York based artist, Alison<lb/>
Saar, will present a slide-lecture<lb/>
on her work on Monday at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in Jenkins Auditorium. The<lb/>
lecture is sponsored by Gray Art<lb/>
Gallery at ECU'S School of Art in<lb/>
connection with the current<lb/>
exhibit "Enigmatic Inquiry"<lb/>
which features the work of Saar,<lb/>
Richard Reese and Italo Scanga.<lb/>
Saar's work derives from what<lb/>
she calls the "underground<lb/>
mysticism and magic" of<lb/>
ordinary people and objects and is<lb/>
expressed in various forms<lb/>
including beaded wall haneines.<lb/>
HH I ??I1<lb/>
'Justar<lb/>
small frescoes, wood-carved<lb/>
figures, sculptural constructions<lb/>
and large scale drawings.<lb/>
Her exhibition record includes<lb/>
one-person shows with Jan Baum<lb/>
Gallery in Los Angeles, the<lb/>
Monica Knowlton Gallery in New<lb/>
York, the Metropolitan Museum<lb/>
of Art in New York, the<lb/>
Washington Project for the Arts in<lb/>
Washington, D.C. and is currently<lb/>
represented by the Zeus-Trabia<lb/>
Gallery in New York.<lb/>
Saars work is represented in<lb/>
several notable collections such as<lb/>
the Metropolitan Museum of Art<lb/>
Museum in Newark, New Jersey<lb/>
and the Studio Museum in<lb/>
Harlem, New York.<lb/>
She has also served as Artist-In-<lb/>
Residence at the Studio Museum<lb/>
in Harlem, New York and at the<lb/>
Roswell Museum and Art Center,<lb/>
Roswell, New Mexico.<lb/>
In addition to her lecture, Saar<lb/>
will visit classrooms and<lb/>
individual studios at the School of<lb/>
Art thru Tuesday. The Gray Art<lb/>
Gallery whose exhibit "Enigmatic<lb/>
Inquiry" displays several pieces<lb/>
of Saar's work, has been funded<lb/>
by the North Carolina Arts<lb/>
il to produce a cataloj<lb/>
was<lb/>
?tTiTmiT.i i i , Time for a little srnacteel of<lb/>
?<lb/>
Weil. I got some mail on the something. Let s<lb/>
nial Page. Seems some of as thang<lb/>
O0endedlmylastinisve. Boney agreed. $&amp;s he<lb/>
more of this Mr, Pansy<lb/>
mast business. No more of<lb/>
 it tasteful mis weefc,<lb/>
r?" Words are words.<lb/>
I happen to place certain<lb/>
ds in a certain order, and it<lb/>
f sornething you'd rather not<lb/>
about, men this is not the<lb/>
to<lb/>
a<lb/>
back on page four.<lb/>
mMM that mime guy. Mimes are probably the most<lb/>
annoying things on this plane of existence, but Marcel is fairly<lb/>
tolerable: He'll be on this very campus on March 2.<lb/>
&amp;aj<lb/>
up a<lb/>
wmmmm$m0<lb/>
??- ?? .???-? 1 1?l?H SjSVfSyj<lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
rilEEASl CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 18,1988<lb/>
t<lb/>
Bandstand fan clubs are still in existence<lb/>
LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) - In<lb/>
1955, 8-year-old David Frees<lb/>
discovered "American<lb/>
Bandstand rtteshow was then 3<lb/>
years old broadcast daily from<lb/>
south Philadelphia bv a local<lb/>
station and hosted by a local disc<lb/>
key, Bob Horn.<lb/>
By the time American<lb/>
Handstand' hit the national<lb/>
airwaves 13 months later, Dick<lb/>
Clark and his cast of dancing<lb/>
regulars were whipping Frees<lb/>
and the rest of the 1 lowdy Doody<lb/>
generation into a jitterbugging,<lb/>
bunm. -hopping frenzy.<lb/>
A mere wink or smile from one<lb/>
oi the saddle-shoed, poddle-<lb/>
skirted girls whirling around the<lb/>
Bandstand" dance floor could<lb/>
reduce him to a puddle of<lb/>
adolescent longing.<lb/>
Fed.n. at 40 Frees still thinks<lb/>
the show has a good beat, he can<lb/>
dance to it and he gives it a 98 on<lb/>
a scale of 100.<lb/>
1 ie is the president and founder<lb/>
of the American Bandstand Fan<lb/>
Club, which has 836 members in<lb/>
L nited States, one member in<lb/>
nee, one in England and one in<lb/>
apan.<lb/>
Tom Stepanchak, publicity<lb/>
director for Dick Clark<lb/>
ductions in Burband, Calif<lb/>
said that as far as he or Clark<lb/>
as. Frees' fan club is the only<lb/>
"Bandstand" club<lb/>
aining<lb/>
Ym're<lb/>
smart enough<lb/>
to calculate<lb/>
the size ofa<lb/>
Ffydrogen<lb/>
atom.<lb/>
And you're<lb/>
still smoking?<lb/>
U.S. Department of Health &amp; Human Service<lb/>
Frees has become somewhat of<lb/>
a national authority on<lb/>
"American Bandstand He was<lb/>
interviewed about his<lb/>
longstanding infatuation with the<lb/>
show for the book "The History of<lb/>
American Bandstand by<lb/>
Michael Shore with Dick Clark.<lb/>
Frees' house is kind of a<lb/>
"Bandstand" Hall of Fame,<lb/>
packed with memorabilia from<lb/>
the show's prc-California<lb/>
heyday.<lb/>
Two Dick Clark dolls - grinning<lb/>
that familiar grin - rest on a chair<lb/>
and a shelf in the living room of<lb/>
Frees and his housemate, Richard<lb/>
Burker. On the bar stools are<lb/>
stacks of magazines from the '50s<lb/>
and early '60s, including issues of<lb/>
Teen magazine's "Bandstand<lb/>
Blast" and "My Bandstand<lb/>
Buddies<lb/>
And on the room's paneled<lb/>
walls are blown-up photos of old<lb/>
"Bandstand" dancers, a 1973<lb/>
photo of Pop Singer with<lb/>
"Bandstand" kid Marlenc<lb/>
Mizanin and a long-haired Frees,<lb/>
autographed by Clark, and<lb/>
framed issues of 16 Magazine's<lb/>
"Your Secret Bandstand Album<lb/>
Frees, the divorced father of a<lb/>
17-year-old daughter who<lb/>
watches "American Bandstand"<lb/>
but prefers "Dancin' On Air is<lb/>
an outgoing, chatty man who<lb/>
seems to have discovered Clark's<lb/>
formula for vouthful looks.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
Clad in a purple "Bandstand<lb/>
Boogie" T-shirt and designer<lb/>
jeans, he sat on a crushed velvet<lb/>
couch in his living room and<lb/>
explained his unflagging<lb/>
affection for "American<lb/>
Bandstand<lb/>
"It was just a period of my life<lb/>
that 1 liked and I want to keep it<lb/>
alive. Some people collect rocks, I<lb/>
collect 'Bandstand Frees said,<lb/>
glancing around his<lb/>
memorabilia-filled home.<lb/>
Asa youngster, Frccsdidn't live<lb/>
far from south Philly,but he never<lb/>
attended a "Bandstand" show<lb/>
because his parents were afraid to<lb/>
let him take the train into the city<lb/>
by himself. By the time he had<lb/>
turned 16 and could drive, the<lb/>
show had moved to California.<lb/>
He joined his first "Bandstand"<lb/>
fan club in 1960, a club devoted to<lb/>
the Jiminez sisters. When the<lb/>
president of the club went off to<lb/>
college, she sold the club's<lb/>
membership list and materials to<lb/>
Frees for $10.<lb/>
Eventually, Frees took on a<lb/>
nuber of clubs, each one<lb/>
promoting a different<lb/>
"Bandstand" regular.<lb/>
In 1967, Frees was drafted into<lb/>
the Army. A month before his<lb/>
tour of duty ended in Vietnam, he<lb/>
broke a leg making an emergency<lb/>
jump from a helicopter. He was<lb/>
sent to recuperate in a<lb/>
Philadelphia hospital. Many of<lb/>
the old "Bandstand" regulars<lb/>
were still in Philly and one of<lb/>
them - Doris Olsen, who had<lb/>
written to Frees wficn he was in<lb/>
Vietnam - visited him in the<lb/>
hospital.<lb/>
When he was released, Frees<lb/>
returned to his parents' home to<lb/>
reclaim his memorabilia. To his<lb/>
horror, much of it had been<lb/>
ruined by water from a leaky attic<lb/>
roof.<lb/>
A lesser fan might have<lb/>
surrendered, but Frees wrote to<lb/>
fan club members and former<lb/>
"Bandstand" kids, asking for any<lb/>
memorabilia they could spare.<lb/>
From his pen pals came<lb/>
magazines, snapshots and<lb/>
enough "Bandstand" kid glossies<lb/>
to fill five scrapbooks.<lb/>
In 1970, Frees consolidated his<lb/>
individual fan clubs into one<lb/>
national club, offering members -<lb/>
for a lifetime fee of $10 - pen pal<lb/>
lists, membership cands,<lb/>
souvenir 45-rpm records,<lb/>
"Bandstand" kid photographs<lb/>
and an annual newsletter,<lb/>
"Bandstand Boogie named for<lb/>
the "Bandstand" theme song<lb/>
lyrics by Barry Manilow.<lb/>
As he'd done throughout the<lb/>
'60s, Frees continued to<lb/>
correspond with old<lb/>
"Bandstand" regulars. In 172,<lb/>
Marlene Mizanin invited him to<lb/>
her Philadelphia home for a party<lb/>
to celebrate Ivette jiminez'<lb/>
birghday.<lb/>
Through Mizanin, he went on<lb/>
to meet other aging "Bandstand"<lb/>
kids in the Philadelphia area.<lb/>
"They all think it's pretty neat<lb/>
that someone wants to keep the<lb/>
whole thing alive said Frees. "I<lb/>
think it's something that deserves<lb/>
to be alive. It was an important<lb/>
part of our history <lb/>
LOW COST<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to 18 wwks at addition! ccxt I'rrgrunry<lb/>
lest. Birth Control, and Problem Pregnancy Counseling, lor<lb/>
further information, call 832-OS3S (toll free njmber 1-800-<lb/>
532-S3&amp;4) between 9 d m. and Sp m weekda)s General anes-<lb/>
thesia available<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
PlAa SMf IH<lb/>
Tickets only $2 for<lb/>
first hour daily.<lb/>
Three Men and A<lb/>
Baby - PG<lb/>
For Keeps - PG 13<lb/>
Wall Street - R<lb/>
Perk Ihectre<lb/>
AXEL FOLEY<lb/>
IS BACK<lb/>
BACK WHERE<lb/>
HE OOESNT<lb/>
BELONG<lb/>
EDDIE MURPHY Wt <lb/>
I3IEVIE12LYJ-UJ-I-S J-r<lb/>
I<lb/>
Fatal Beauty<lb/>
R<lb/>
$1.50 All Times<lb/>
the HEAFS BACK ON<lb/>
nim iPnui???wnn1'34fia m ???- -ru ? dFr'i<lb/>
-? ? n ??-1 an- ? c i xma av:mtm k a i ?<lb/>
Playing Thurs. Feb. 18th -<lb/>
Sun. Feb. 21st<lb/>
8:00 p.m. - Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
60's Rock - Heavy Metal<lb/>
Justin Time<lb/>
At The UNDERGROUND<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Friday, February 19th<lb/>
Downstairs<lb/>
at Mendenhall<lb/>
gather ins place<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
Adults $25?,tn<lb/>
5:30<lb/>
CHILDREN <lb/>
ANYTIME $250J<lb/>
UCCANNER MOVIES<lb/>
756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
( ATED R Cher in<lb/>
MOON STRUCK<lb/>
1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20<lb/>
C RATKD R<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ACTION JACKSON<lb/>
3:15-5:15-7:15-9:15<lb/>
RATED R<lb/>
<lb/>
hr-<lb/>
SHOOT TO KILL<lb/>
2:00-4:30-7:00<lb/>
FED R Held over 3rd Big Week<lb/>
THE SERPENT AND THE RAINBOW<lb/>
Matinee 1:15 and evening 9:20<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC.<lb/>
Wanted:<lb/>
Margarita Villian<lb/>
Last Seen at Chico's<lb/>
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10 AM-9 PM<lb/>
EVERYTHING<lb/>
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REG. STORE HOURS<lb/>
M0NWEP.1QAM-7PM<lb/>
THURSSAT.10AM-9PM<lb/>
SUN. 1 PM-6 PM<lb/>
GPKNVIUf.NC<lb/>
Reward Offered:<lb/>
Great Satisfaction From Wearing<lb/>
this New T-Shirt on Sale Now at<lb/>
Chico's<lb/>
LADIES'<lb/>
CLOTHING<lb/>
VISIT OTHER HI-LITES IN YOUR TRAVELS IN NC &amp; SC<lb/>
: i<lb/>
? LANCASTER, SC<lb/>
? FLORENCE, SC<lb/>
? BENNETTSVULE, SC<lb/>
? ROCKINGHAM, NC<lb/>
? lUMIIRTON, NC<lb/>
? FAYETTEVILLE, NC<lb/>
? SPRING LAKE, NC<lb/>
? WALLACE, NC<lb/>
? WHITEVILIE, NC<lb/>
? WILMINGTON, NC<lb/>
? MIDWAY PARK, NC<lb/>
? ATLANTIC BEACH, NC<lb/>
? NEW BERN, NC<lb/>
? KINST0N, NC<lb/>
? WINSTON SALEM, NC<lb/>
? GREENSBORO, NC<lb/>
? GRAND OPENING<lb/>
DURHAM, NC<lb/>
MARCH 3. ma<lb/>
ldl<lb/>
SEA LEVEL, N.C (AP) - H<lb/>
been years since the u<lb/>
Diamond City existed, but<lb/>
town is still alive in the memo<lb/>
pf 94-year-old Nellie Mora<lb/>
"My grandfather was<lb/>
whaler says Mrs Morse, no<lb/>
resident at Sea Level Hospid<lb/>
Extended Care Facility rj<lb/>
name was John Stvron. In th(<lb/>
days you had to have unsmka)<lb/>
equipment, because if the<lb/>
had a calf, it would fight I<lb/>
Crazy. But it would tight<lb/>
life, anyway<lb/>
"My grandfather had a li<lb/>
knoll he tailed a 'lookout . !<lb/>
He would look for a little s<lb/>
the water. He could recognize<lb/>
way the water moved<lb/>
whale. Then he would run -<lb/>
camp, where his sons would be<lb/>
the lookout for him "<lb/>
"They'd get the cannon an<lb/>
out and shoot the whale wit<lb/>
small bomb, which<lb/>
explode in the thing a<lb/>
practically paralyze it<lb/>
while, it didn't have the stn<lb/>
to fight<lb/>
They continued I<lb/>
until it was dead 5<lb/>
little calf would swim r<lb/>
its mother's side. But the<lb/>
have to be very old to be<lb/>
sufficient, and eventually the<lb/>
would swim oii<lb/>
Mrs. Morse left Diamoi <lb/>
whaling communitv<lb/>
Shackleford Banks, at ?<lb/>
"I was the only child<lb/>
"I left Diamond' City for a<lb/>
school. But they had a terril<lb/>
storm there. Houses were wasl<lb/>
awav. Evcntuallv everyboj<lb/>
left"<lb/>
The incredibi<lb/>
Top 13 alburi<lb/>
WZMB'sTopl?<lb/>
1. Firehose "If'n" SST<lb/>
2.Gunclub "MotherJuno"<lb/>
Rino Records<lb/>
3. Sisters of Mercy "Floodlaij<lb/>
Elektra Records<lb/>
4. Jerry Harrison "Ca<lb/>
Gods" Sire Records<lb/>
JpMidnite Oil "Diesel &amp; Dt<lb/>
Columbia Records<lb/>
6. The Triffids "Calenti<lb/>
Island Records<lb/>
7. Arms Akimbo "This Is<lb/>
That Cher c<lb/>
BEVERLY HILLS. Calif.<lb/>
The contest for best actr<lb/>
including such div<lb/>
contenders as Lillian Gish<lb/>
Cher, appeared the<lb/>
competitive as the film<lb/>
focused on today's 60th am<lb/>
Academy Award nominatioi<lb/>
Nominees in 2? categoj<lb/>
ranging from best picture to<lb/>
cartoon, were to be read!<lb/>
Shirlev MacLaine, an O<lb/>
winner for "Terms<lb/>
Endearment and Acad<lb/>
president Robert Wise a wii<lb/>
for "West Side Story" and<lb/>
Sound of Music<lb/>
Three hundred mi<lb/>
representatives and a small aj<lb/>
of publicists were expecte<lb/>
attend the pre-d<lb/>
announcements at the Be1<lb/>
Hills headquarters or<lb/>
Academv of Motion Picti<lb/>
and Sciences.<lb/>
The nominations<lb/>
scheduled at 3:30 a.m. rST so<lb/>
could be earned live bv J<lb/>
"today' "CBS Morning f<lb/>
ABC's" "Good Morning Ame<lb/>
Mid Cable News Network.<lb/>
Bonehead h<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
?Bonehead, eyes strained<lb/>
tearching out clues to the k<lb/>
Of New Orleans,<lb/>
hungrilv'Boss<lb/>
? Inside the Brightly Lit Hard<lb/>
die boys quiered the staff 01<lb/>
prte biscuits would be<lb/>
bailable. Upon hearing tha<lb/>
kre indeed available that<lb/>
loment, the Hungry Fi<lb/>
ept for Joy.<lb/>
Many food items<lb/>
rocured and the guys sea<lb/>
it a suitable Place to Coi<lb/>
Mscuits. "What more ironic!<lb/>
ien the very parking lot nj<lb/>
place in which we work<lb/>
teked.<lb/>
Bonehead, being<lb/>
isagreeable sort, just<lb/>
Bogus They pulled int<lb/>
llegal parking lot next to tr<lb/>
uth Building and started<lb/>
jyway.<lb/>
By the time Bonehead<lb/>
n the second Bacon am<lb/>
?! finny ?m ? ?<lb/>
? 9'BmB9IBB0Bjt9mJ ????"??? I ?????? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0011"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
Till: EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 18, 1988 11<lb/>
fence lOld lady remembers stuff in her hometown<lb/>
SEA LEVEL. N.C. (AP - It w ? . . . . ,<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
GANIZATIOHS<lb/>
Metal<lb/>
me<lb/>
D<lb/>
?-??? I<lb/>
19th<lb/>
airs<lb/>
JL v ?? ?l. 1 .1X CX JL X<lb/>
I f<lb/>
8, 1988<lb/>
9 PM<lb/>
IC &amp; sc<lb/>
? NEW BERN, NC<lb/>
? KiNSTON, NC<lb/>
? W'NSTON SALEM NC<lb/>
? GREENSBORO, NC<lb/>
? GRAND OPENINO<lb/>
DURHAM, NC<lb/>
ARCH 3, 1983<lb/>
 LEVEL, N.C (AP) - It has<lb/>
vn years since the town of<lb/>
iamortd Citv existed, but the<lb/>
iou n i still alive in the memories<lb/>
t 94 year-old Nellie Morse.<lb/>
H grandfather was a<lb/>
laler says Mrs. Morse, now a<lb/>
aient at Sea Level Hospital's<lb/>
tended Care Facility. "His<lb/>
ame was lohn Styron. In those<lb/>
a s you had to have unsinkable<lb/>
quipment, because it the whale<lb/>
ad a calf, it would tight like<lb/>
az) But it would tight for its<lb/>
fe anyway<lb/>
My grandfather had a little<lb/>
ioll he called a 'lookout place.<lb/>
c would look for a little swell in<lb/>
c w ater. He could recognize the<lb/>
a the water moved over the<lb/>
hale. Then he would run back to<lb/>
mp where his sons would boon<lb/>
okout for him<lb/>
rhey'd get the cannon and go<lb/>
it and shoot the whale with a<lb/>
Tall bomb, which would<lb/>
ode in the thing and<lb/>
pT ticall) paralyze it. After a<lb/>
w it didn't have the strength<lb/>
tc<lb/>
) continued to shoot it<lb/>
ui it was dead. Sometimes a<lb/>
lit i. calt would swim right up to<lb/>
it mother s side. But thev don't<lb/>
ha e to be verv old to be self-<lb/>
su ficient, and eventually the calf<lb/>
Wid swim off<lb/>
Mrs Morse left Diamond Citv, a<lb/>
Whaling communitv on<lb/>
ickletord Banks, at age 5.<lb/>
I was the only child she says.<lb/>
left Diamond Citv for a better<lb/>
SChool. But thev had a terrible<lb/>
Sfe rm there. Houses were washed<lb/>
Stvav. Eventually everybody<lb/>
lef<lb/>
The people'who left Diamond<lb/>
City settled all over, Camp Glenn,<lb/>
Harker's Island, all around. The<lb/>
Moreheaders didn't like the<lb/>
people from Diamond City<lb/>
coming in. I'll tell you why. It was<lb/>
envy. They were of British<lb/>
descent, and they had talent to<lb/>
offer. They were boat builders,<lb/>
bricklayers, lighthouse workers,<lb/>
musicians<lb/>
"That still exists on Harker's<lb/>
Island. You ask a man there, 'Can<lb/>
you build a boat?' He'll say, 'What<lb/>
do want?' And he'll get his<lb/>
pencil<lb/>
Miss Nellie, who was born<lb/>
Nellie Russell, left Diamond City<lb/>
so she could attend a Methodist<lb/>
school, a "church school the<lb/>
same year her mother died. And<lb/>
her father, she says, was never<lb/>
around.<lb/>
"My grandparents were the<lb/>
only parents 1 ever had, but I<lb/>
didn't have it easy, because thev<lb/>
were old she says. "I've<lb/>
supported myself since I was 9<lb/>
In 1963, after her husband died,<lb/>
Miss Nellie returned from<lb/>
Norfolk, Va to Marshallberg.<lb/>
After 15 years there, she moved<lb/>
into Sea Level Hospital. But she<lb/>
has lost barely a step.<lb/>
"I'm the oldest one here, except<lb/>
for one man she says. "They say<lb/>
he's 100 and his mind isas good as<lb/>
ever<lb/>
Miss Nellie spends her time<lb/>
crocheting bedspreads for her<lb/>
triends and for the nurses, and she<lb/>
likes to read.<lb/>
"I like to read cowboy stories,<lb/>
especially L'Amour. And I read<lb/>
Reader's Digest, but always the<lb/>
Bible first. I don't like these love<lb/>
stories, and I hate the idiot box. TV<lb/>
has ruined our. youngsters<lb/>
Mrs. Morse says one of her<lb/>
grandfathers was a Hancock, a<lb/>
relative of John Hancock, the first<lb/>
man to sign the Declaration of<lb/>
Independence. She dismisses the<lb/>
importance, saying "anyone can<lb/>
sign a piece of paper<lb/>
Miss Nellie's relatives were<lb/>
actually uninvited guests of the<lb/>
folks at the Diamond City. But<lb/>
then again, everyone at Diamond<lb/>
The incredibly boss WZMB<lb/>
Top 13 album chart is here<lb/>
jft'ZMB sTop 13<lb/>
1. Firehose "If n" SST<lb/>
2.Gunclub "MotherJuno" Red<lb/>
Rino Records<lb/>
3. Sisters of Mercy "Floodland"<lb/>
Hektra Records<lb/>
4. crry Harrison "Casual<lb/>
Cods" Sire Records<lb/>
5. Midnite Oil "Diesel &amp; Dust"<lb/>
Columbia Records<lb/>
6. The Triffids "Calenture"<lb/>
Island Records<lb/>
1 Arms Akimbo "This Is Not<lb/>
The Late Show" 688 Records<lb/>
8. Accelerators "The<lb/>
Accelerators" Profile Records<lb/>
9. Cave Bvkers on Acid " Drill<lb/>
Your Own Hole"<lb/>
10. Robin Hitchcock "Globe of<lb/>
Frogs" Realitivity Records<lb/>
11. John Kroth "Midnite<lb/>
Snack" Hope well Records<lb/>
12. Voice Farm "F" Ralph<lb/>
Records<lb/>
13. Top Will Eat Itself "Box<lb/>
Frenzv" Rough Trade<lb/>
hat Cher chick wins more<lb/>
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) -<lb/>
.e contest for best actress,<lb/>
deluding such diverse<lb/>
ntenders as Lillian Gish and<lb/>
her, appeared the most<lb/>
cc ipetitive as the film would<lb/>
fc tsed on today's 60th annual<lb/>
cademy Award nominations.<lb/>
Nominees in 23 categories,<lb/>
nging from best picture to best<lb/>
noon, were to be read bv<lb/>
hirley MacLaine, an Oscar<lb/>
rinner for "Terms of<lb/>
dearment and Academv<lb/>
resident Robert Wise, a winner<lb/>
- West Side Story" and "The<lb/>
und of Music<lb/>
Three hundred media<lb/>
presentauves and a small army<lb/>
M publicists were expected to<lb/>
ittend the pre-dawn<lb/>
nouncements at the Beverly<lb/>
ills headquarters of the<lb/>
cademy of Motion Picture Arts<lb/>
nd Sciences.<lb/>
The nominations were<lb/>
heduled at 5:30 a.m. PST so they<lb/>
ould be carried live by NBC's<lb/>
odav "CBS MOiTiing Show<lb/>
BC's "Good Morning America"<lb/>
d Cable News Network.<lb/>
In a year that most critics<lb/>
considered less than scintillating,<lb/>
the leaders for best picture<lb/>
appeared to be "Broadcast<lb/>
News "The Last Emperor<lb/>
"Hope and Glory<lb/>
"Moonstruck" and "Empireof the<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
Reversing a trend of recent<lb/>
years, the actress contest seemed<lb/>
to be the tightest. Among the<lb/>
front-runners: Glenn close for<lb/>
"Fatal Attraction Holly Hunter,<lb/>
"Broadcast News Cher,<lb/>
"Moonstruck Sally Kirkland,<lb/>
"Anna Miss Gish, 'The Whales<lb/>
of August Sarah Miles, "Hope<lb/>
and Glory Maggie Smith, "The<lb/>
Lonely Passion of Judith Hcarne<lb/>
In the best actor category, two<lb/>
stars seemed to be competing<lb/>
with themselves. Jack Nicholson<lb/>
has been praised for both "The<lb/>
Witches of Eastwick" and<lb/>
"Ironwced with "Eastwick"<lb/>
likely to bring him a nomination.<lb/>
Michael Douglas received<lb/>
acclaim for his performances in<lb/>
both "Fml Attraction" and "Wall<lb/>
Street<lb/>
onehead has<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
Bonehead, eyes strained from<lb/>
searching out clues to the location<lb/>
New Orleans, said<lb/>
lungnlv'Boss<lb/>
Inside the Brightly Lit Hardee's,<lb/>
the boys quiered the staff on the<lb/>
tune biscuits would be made<lb/>
available. Upon hearing that they<lb/>
were indeed available that Very<lb/>
Nloment, the Hungry Friends<lb/>
wept for Joy.<lb/>
Many food items were<lb/>
procured and the guys searched<lb/>
out a suitable Place to Consume<lb/>
 Biscuits. "What more ironic place<lb/>
! then the very parking lot next to<lb/>
the place in which we work?" Jeff<lb/>
asked.<lb/>
Bonehead, being the<lb/>
disagreeable sort, just said,<lb/>
"Bogus They pulled into the<lb/>
illegal parking'lot next to the Old<lb/>
South Building and started eating<lb/>
anvway.<lb/>
By the time Bonehead started<lb/>
on the second Bacon and Egg<lb/>
City was uninvited, so they fit<lb/>
right in.<lb/>
"They were two young<lb/>
Englishmen according to Miss<lb/>
Nellie, "and they got tired of the<lb/>
blue blook thing. So they saved<lb/>
bread and water. Then they<lb/>
sneaked on a boat that was to sail<lb/>
for America, and they hid down<lb/>
in the bilge.<lb/>
"The deal was that if the boat<lb/>
was 40 miles offshore (away from<lb/>
the shores of England) and thev<lb/>
were caught, the boat couldn"t<lb/>
turn around. They ate all their<lb/>
bread and water. Thev were<lb/>
hungry, so they came up and<lb/>
luckily, they were more than 40<lb/>
miles away from England. Thev<lb/>
were made cabin boys to wait<lb/>
tables for captains and keep the<lb/>
dining rooms clean<lb/>
"The ship was loaded with<lb/>
lumber. There was a storm and<lb/>
they hit the Diamond City, Cape<lb/>
Lookout I ighthouse. The ship<lb/>
was wrecked. The Coast Guard<lb/>
went to the ship and brought the<lb/>
men ashore. The two bovs were<lb/>
J<lb/>
also saved<lb/>
"And the deal was that the<lb/>
company that owned the ship had<lb/>
to pay the way back home for the<lb/>
people who were shipwrecked<lb/>
she said. "The Captain and the<lb/>
crew went home, but the two boys<lb/>
stayed and married there at<lb/>
Diamond City. That was the<lb/>
beginning of all of us<lb/>
adventures Jp<lb/>
Biscuit, a sound was heard. It was<lb/>
a plinking sound. It sounded like<lb/>
a ferret with a collar on being<lb/>
placed into the blender.<lb/>
Jeff, the Smart One, recognized<lb/>
the sound. "It's hailing. It's<lb/>
hailing golf balls out there<lb/>
Bonehead swallowed the<lb/>
mashed up hash brown in his<lb/>
mouth quickly so as not to be rude<lb/>
when he said, "Cliche Attack<lb/>
The hail pelted down for nearly 15<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
After the Business End of God's<lb/>
Wrath had finished descending<lb/>
on the two, they drove home to<lb/>
get a good night's sleep before<lb/>
their 9:15 classes.<lb/>
The end. Okay, so it wasn't that<lb/>
exciting, but the title itself told<lb/>
you that.<lb/>
Anyway. I'll be back next week<lb/>
if I'm not lynched by the East<lb/>
Carolinia Fat Girls Who Write<lb/>
Really Bad Poetry Association.<lb/>
And a big "Thanks to the boss<lb/>
dudes at WZMB who play Drivin'<lb/>
and Crvin' tunes for me.<lb/>
A Mardi Gras of Savings!<lb/>
It's Plardi Gras time<lb/>
whale of a time .and a<lb/>
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PREVIOUSLY FROZEN- ?'?"<lb/>
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Limn JWO With Add J $W.<lb/>
99<lb/>
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SEE STORE FOR DETAILS<lb/>
WE SELL U.S. POSTAGE STAMPS AT POST OFFICE PRICES<lb/>
We Sell American Express Money Orders 25c Ea.<lb/>
ff ' t .V, t l LU UTMRUFEB 20 1988 QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
1212 oz. can ctn.<lb/>
L<lb/>
Prices Good In Greenville, N.C. At 703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open Sunday 7 a.m. - 11 p.m. Mon. - Sat. 7 a.m. - 12 midnight<lb/>
taa -0 ?<lb/>
 S-l ?- -m, m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0012"/><lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 18,1988<lb/>
OM-rkill<lb/>
Rv FKIEDRICH<lb/>
The All-Dave Edition of<lb/>
The Cutting Edge of Humor"<lb/>
Boss Rebuses, man<lb/>
The Upside-down answers:<lb/>
aSeqqiQ aSe q3<lb/>
qoog izbn sioog z ?0"M<lb/>
Super hard Boss Rebus<lb/>
saeus Xqooa sauus 3?a o?fl<lb/>
mi h<lb/>
Pirate he<lb/>
large cro<lb/>
ByTIMCHANDU R<lb/>
Sportj liit or<lb/>
East Carolina's chances I<lb/>
upset victory over C oloni<lb/>
Athletic Association lead in!<lb/>
Richmond University Saturd<lb/>
night in Minges Coliseum .<lb/>
possiblv rest in the hand<lb/>
fan'<lb/>
"We will need a big i<lb/>
a lot of enthusiasm head I<lb/>
Mike Steele said<lb/>
(Richmond) are though! j<lb/>
best team in the confer<lb/>
we could sure use all th i<lb/>
enthusiasm we coul I j<lb/>
fans.<lb/>
"Our guys (play r u<lb/>
to have to fight it oul I i<lb/>
continued. "It would<lb/>
upset for us if we coul I<lb/>
Richmond b j<lb/>
with a game to be p<lb/>
James Madison I<lb/>
Greenville. The<lb/>
currently 7-3 in the<lb/>
standings. The Pira- ire7-l<lb/>
the year and 3-8 in the ?<lb/>
0SJ,<lb/>
W$jF w<lb/>
Senior forward Alma BetheaJ<lb/>
Coliseum Monday night. The<lb/>
Charlie<lb/>
Charlie Can has beei<lb/>
assoicate athletic dir<lb/>
external relations at<lb/>
Carolina, ECU athleti"<lb/>
Dave Hart announced<lb/>
Carr. 41, will be the<lb/>
director of the ECU Ed<lb/>
Foundation (FirateClu<lb/>
oversee all external an<lb/>
the athletic depart-<lb/>
assumes the duties held b<lb/>
for the past two years<lb/>
Carr was the athlel<lb/>
Mississippi State from<lb/>
before he chose tor<lb/>
Carolina and enter <lb/>
Mark! Where the heck is "Hellion?" Has it been swallowed up by the bells? Or did 7$<lb/>
Tiffany get ya? And don't tell us Anisa isn't your babe! We know the scoop. Are youfcj ?<lb/>
embarrassed yet? This will teach you to try and cross  (melodramatic pause)<lb/>
The PIRATE COMIX PAGE WORD!<lb/>
Mini<lb/>
By Jeff "We'll leave the light on<lb/>
for ya" Parker<lb/>
What it is. Hello everyone in<lb/>
cartoonland, I am the master of<lb/>
this page, Jeff "Who is this Drivin'<lb/>
and Cryin' person anyway?"<lb/>
Parker, the most dangerous man<lb/>
on campus. Ha. I didn't get one<lb/>
nicknames<lb/>
at the New Deli meetings. 1 don't<lb/>
know what the strip is about, but<lb/>
neither does he so its okay.<lb/>
The Law is one of our new strips<lb/>
that is shocking the world. 1 hired<lb/>
this guy because he's a genius and<lb/>
he's married and needs the bucks.<lb/>
Every week someone in his strip<lb/>
commits a crime, and The Law<lb/>
stomps them into a smudge.<lb/>
Neat, huh?<lb/>
funny strip, and i f you think it is, Inside Joke is another new strip<lb/>
?TfflS youesi? The List is really thafsreally bos, 1 guess the artist<lb/>
Cartoons would come help me cool, and so is the wnter,even<lb/>
out. They're all almost always though he wears sweaters with<lb/>
That way lies  Madness<lb/>
late because the artists and<lb/>
writers wait until the last minute<lb/>
to do them. Tragic, isn't it?<lb/>
First there's Walkin' the Plank.<lb/>
This is done by some greek who<lb/>
just shows up at the cartoonist<lb/>
that Chippy Spoonfed always meetings to get free beer. Then he<lb/>
r(lr nn XZ expects me to just reprint one of<lb/>
his old strips so he'll get paid for<lb/>
Charlie Brown on them. Good<lb/>
lookin' jerk, be careful.<lb/>
Then there is strip with some<lb/>
cats in it. Every story in it rips off<lb/>
something, but its the coolest<lb/>
is cool, we never see him actually<lb/>
turn the strip in. Except when he<lb/>
comes around trying to sell us<lb/>
those Shirts From Hell. We<lb/>
always just say'Nooo, my<lb/>
brother<lb/>
its next to the bosscst section ever,<lb/>
Fun-N-Games! This strip is full of<lb/>
humor,and shows that theartist is<lb/>
heavily influenced by Love<lb/>
Connection host Chuck Woolery.<lb/>
Bitchin<lb/>
Maybe this column shook up all<lb/>
those smug artists. Yeah, they got<lb/>
to all run wild under the reign of<lb/>
the legendary Shclton, but now<lb/>
I'm whipping them all into shape.<lb/>
And what about me, anyway?<lb/>
The position of Staff Illustrator is<lb/>
far more important than it ever<lb/>
has been this year.<lb/>
I've got a really radical office of<lb/>
my own with a couch in it, found<lb/>
HMMM<lb/>
CAST CAKOUAti<lb/>
FSAWRBS Afe'<lb/>
-R<lb/>
1<lb/>
Pictured here are the co-creators<lb/>
of Fun-N-Games?, Jeff, "Dear<lb/>
Mr. Jesus" Parker and the<lb/>
Bonehead. They hope everyone<lb/>
enjoys this edition of the<lb/>
Fun-N-Games? with a biscuit<lb/>
by myself and the world's coolest ar?d medium Mr. Pibb.<lb/>
roommate, Dave. Can anyone else<lb/>
boast that? I'd like to close with<lb/>
sticks on me<lb/>
?Boneheaded note: Yes you<lb/>
did.<lb/>
Since I've been deling<lb/>
introspective today, and since<lb/>
Alan Guy thought he was too<lb/>
good to turn in a strip. I'm oing<lb/>
relate to you some things that just<lb/>
need to be said to fill up space.<lb/>
Lets discuss these things called<lb/>
this week. Bwah hah-ha-ha-ha! It<lb/>
is a funny strip though, and<lb/>
Johnny Hart, who does B.C. likes<lb/>
it. Let's just all kiss Mr. Guy's lint-<lb/>
encrusted toes, shall we?<lb/>
Next to that is Orpheus, the<lb/>
deepest strip ever written. Horror<lb/>
fans like this a lot. It's not a very<lb/>
Campus Comics is one of those<lb/>
strip everTand only the hippest strips I'm often scared to print, personal comments that no<lb/>
people read it. I wish there were because the artist is the most one else will get.<lb/>
controversial man on campus.<lb/>
Just the other day I saw some<lb/>
good ol' boys chasing him in a<lb/>
pickup, swinging ropes. I think<lb/>
more strips like this. This guy<lb/>
must be a babe magnet. (Editor's<lb/>
note: Bwah-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!)<lb/>
Hellion. "From the name you<lb/>
would think it was a serious<lb/>
horror strip. But its not, its a zany<lb/>
madcap strip done by my<lb/>
Boncmciscr, enjoyed Mardi<lb/>
Gras, let's do that Boj thing.<lb/>
Earl vis, that Mohawk is boss.<lb/>
Carol gets off on Action Jackson.<lb/>
Everyone, that is, except One<lb/>
pickle juice scum that neglected<lb/>
A to turn in their comic<lb/>
 J strips this week.<lb/>
I'll offer this guy sanctuary, Gary, Tm still looking for a ride to<lb/>
because I'm the most dangerous Honda,bigguy.Steph P stay this<lb/>
man on campus. weekend and give my life<lb/>
Ust is Overkilland dont think meaning. And Dave, "I think I<lb/>
the artist likes being last, either.<lb/>
unofficial assistant. Once in a ?? meaning<lb/>
while his pal helps him, even the artist likes being last, either done g?t blood all over myself<lb/>
thoughthisartistdoesn'tshowup Butsomebodvhastobethere,and whatiHs.<lb/>
You know who<lb/>
you two are.<lb/>
Bv EARLVIS HAMP1<lb/>
The tonj? ?????<lb/>
Have you ever r<lb/>
minaturc basket<lb/>
downtown bars?<lb/>
In this addition<lb/>
rover, we will tell)<lb/>
best minaturc ba-<lb/>
in Greenville. His r <lb/>
Hager.<lb/>
Hager's dav <lb/>
After attendmc his one<lb/>
fifth-vear ECU nw<lb/>
downtown. Loaded<lb/>
quarters, he positions<lb/>
front of the game be hasp<lb/>
Shooting rapidly at the<lb/>
he demonstrates w<lb/>
him Greenville's besl -<lb/>
In his first game<lb/>
Hager had a hot scores-<lb/>
Most plavers would he<lb/>
with a 76, but Hap<lb/>
discontent. With a<lb/>
expression drawn on hi<lb/>
explains his problem.<lb/>
much back spin on the<lb/>
The minaturc b<lb/>
shoohng game allows<lb/>
shoot as many balls ay<lb/>
within a 40-second nY<lb/>
Made baskets count twi<lb/>
' "??i? am i mtpwp"?<lb/>
st ? m<lb/>
nrwM<lb/>
?im?"r - ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0013"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
2?S<lb/>
EVER I<lb/>
?y<lb/>
j <lb/>
s<lb/>
ORI! T<lb/>
FEATURES Af?<lb/>
-90J5 , PS??tV<lb/>
ear<lb/>
?he<lb/>
? everyone<lb/>
edition of the<lb/>
with a bisci<lb/>
d medium Mr. Pibb.<lb/>
that is, except the<lb/>
We juice scum that neglected<lb/>
to turn in their comic<lb/>
strips this week.<lb/>
ou know who<lb/>
you two are.<lb/>
pooh,<lb/>
I HI l-ASI CAKOI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
i ; H - 1988 Page H<lb/>
Pirate head man Steele hopes to see<lb/>
large crowd when Pirates host Spiders<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
s ports I ilitor<lb/>
Fastarolina's chances tor an<lb/>
upset victory over Colonial<lb/>
thletic Association leading<lb/>
mond University Saturday<lb/>
hi in Minges Coliseum could<lb/>
isibly rest inthchandsof Pirate<lb/>
fan<lb/>
We will need a big crowd with<lb/>
: ol enthusiasm head coach<lb/>
Steele said. 1 hev<lb/>
hmond) are thought to be the<lb/>
Ivsl team in the conference and<lb/>
ould surcuseall the help and<lb/>
i nthusiasm wc could get from the<lb/>
l kir guys (players) are going<lb/>
?a e to fight it out too Steele<lb/>
tinned. "It would be a great<lb/>
jet tor us it we could win "<lb/>
Richmond boosts a 17-6 record<lb/>
with a game to be played against<lb/>
tes Madison before it comes to<lb/>
enville. The Spiders are<lb/>
rently 7-3 in the conference<lb/>
standings. The Piratesare 7-16 tor<lb/>
 ear and 3-8 in the CAA.<lb/>
The Pirates will have to control<lb/>
a ti loot performers for the Spiders<lb/>
it they hope to control the game<lb/>
m the tempo.<lb/>
Peter Woolfolk, who leads the<lb/>
CAA infield goal percentage with<lb/>
a 58 percent clip, is averaging 18.9<lb/>
points inside for the Spiders,<lb/>
while pulling down 8.?- rebounds<lb/>
per game. Wool folk's scoring<lb/>
mark is third in the conference<lb/>
standings, while his rebounding<lb/>
total is second in the league.<lb/>
C aiards Rodney Rice nd Ken<lb/>
Atkinson will also give the Pirate<lb/>
defenders problems. Rice is<lb/>
averaging 12.3 points per game<lb/>
and connecting on 4? percent of<lb/>
his 3-pointers, which is second<lb/>
best in the conference.<lb/>
Atkinson is in second place in<lb/>
the league in assists by averaging<lb/>
5.1 dish outs per contest.<lb/>
The Pirates will be able to<lb/>
counter with Gus Hill, who is<lb/>
second in the lead in scoring<lb/>
averaging 19.3 points per contest<lb/>
and 10th in rebounding with 5.2,<lb/>
and Reed 1 ose, who is sixth in the<lb/>
lead in scoring with 14.7 points<lb/>
per game and fourth in the CAA<lb/>
with a 51.7 field goal percentage.<lb/>
"1 want us to be in the game<lb/>
heading into the last few<lb/>
minutes Steele said. "If we are<lb/>
there then we will have a<lb/>
chance to win it<lb/>
The Pirates game against the<lb/>
Spiders is set to tipoff at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
in Minges.<lb/>
The Pirates will also be in action<lb/>
again on Monday, Feb. 22 when<lb/>
they play host to non-conference<lb/>
foe Atlantic Christian College in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. ECU will then<lb/>
take to the road on Wednesday,<lb/>
Feb. 24 to battle William &amp; Mary<lb/>
before returning home on<lb/>
Saturday Feb. 27 to play UNC-<lb/>
Wilmintonin the final game of the<lb/>
regular season.<lb/>
CAA tabs Kobe<lb/>
East Carolina head swimming<lb/>
coach Rick Kobe was voted the<lb/>
men's swimming coach Coach of<lb/>
the Year during the Colonial<lb/>
Athletic Association Swimming<lb/>
and Diving Championships at the<lb/>
U.S. naval Academy last<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Kobe was voted to accept the<lb/>
honor by his fellow coaching<lb/>
counterparts in the CAA.<lb/>
Kobe's squads have put<lb/>
together impressive meets in each<lb/>
of the three CAA championships<lb/>
beginning with the 1986 meet in<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
Kobe has compiled an overall<lb/>
men's and women's dual meet<lb/>
record of 97-46 since becoming<lb/>
head coach at ECU in 1982. Kobe's<lb/>
men's squads have won 43 of 68<lb/>
dual meets. The freshmen class<lb/>
fielded by Kobe this season<lb/>
proved to be one of the most<lb/>
talented in the history of the<lb/>
school's swimming program<lb/>
leaving optimism for even more<lb/>
success in the future for Kobe and<lb/>
ECU swimming.<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
over Jame<lb/>
center Stank- Love<lb/>
s Madison last week<lb/>
"???Mte'Sd<lb/>
rips down a rebound in the Pirates' win<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Ladies hoping for good finish<lb/>
Senior foi<lb/>
( oliseum<lb/>
ward Alma Be<lb/>
Monda night<lb/>
thea, shown he<lb/>
. The Pirates w<lb/>
East Carolina's women's<lb/>
basketball team hopes to end a<lb/>
four-game losing streak when it<lb/>
takes to the road to battle<lb/>
Richmond on Saturday and<lb/>
William &amp; Marv on Mondav in<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
action.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, 8-16 overall<lb/>
and 2-7 in the CAA, are hoping to<lb/>
regroup before entering the<lb/>
league tournament March 10-12<lb/>
at American University.<lb/>
ECU is currently in sixth place<lb/>
in the seven-team league and<lb/>
enters the final 10 days of the<lb/>
regular season jockeying for<lb/>
position for the tournament. The<lb/>
top seed in the conference<lb/>
tournament will receive an<lb/>
opening-round bye, while seeds<lb/>
four and five will face each other<lb/>
in the opening round. Seeds two<lb/>
and seven and seeds three and six<lb/>
re in earlier action this season, participated in her last game in Minges will meet in the other first-round<lb/>
ere defeated in that contest by American University. contests.<lb/>
Richmond's Lady Spiders n<lb/>
currently riding a six game<lb/>
winning streak with a game<lb/>
scheduled against league-leading<lb/>
and nationally-ranked lames<lb/>
Madison on tap tonight. The Lady<lb/>
Spiders, 1" 6ovcrall and 4-3 in the<lb/>
CAA, last loss came during its<lb/>
two-game road . thro<lb/>
North Carolina when they lost to<lb/>
both East Carolina and UN<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
Laurie Governor leads I<lb/>
Spider's attack with 13.8 points<lb/>
and ninen bx 1imds per game. m<lb/>
Bryant is averaging 13.1, while<lb/>
Dana Pappas is scoring 12u<lb/>
points per contest.<lb/>
The Lady Tribe of William v<lb/>
Marv had lost six straight con tests<lb/>
heading into Wednesday night's<lb/>
game against George Mason. The<lb/>
Tribe, 7-13 overall and 1-6 in<lb/>
conference play, will also battle<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington before the<lb/>
Pirates come to town Monday.<lb/>
Th? e lost 83 67 to ames<lb/>
Madisn in it most recent outing<lb/>
ireer-high 31 p intsb<lb/>
ins. Evans currently<lb/>
Is the Tribe in - ring with<lb/>
7 points a game, v hile Debbie<lb/>
le is adding 11 5 points and<lb/>
- n : mds.<lb/>
The Lad i tes 54-46 less to<lb/>
American Monday in Minj<lb/>
iseum marked the final home<lb/>
game vi the year for the team. It<lb/>
- marked the final home game<lb/>
in the coliseum tor senior forward<lb/>
Alma Bethea of Goldsboro.<lb/>
Bethea will finish her career<lb/>
among ECU'S all-time top<lb/>
scorers, rebounders and in<lb/>
blocked sh ts Bethea has<lb/>
currently scored 1,120 career<lb/>
points, pulled down 64 caroms<lb/>
and blocked 62 shots.<lb/>
The Pirates will wind up their<lb/>
season after the two-game road<lb/>
swing to Virginia with a visit to<lb/>
Wilmington's Trask Coliseum on<lb/>
Feb. 27<lb/>
Charlie Carr named to spot in athletic dept. by Dave Hart<lb/>
 i?iu?:?iJUAUr.trmilic it I IMP lOirnine his Y.irl 1.?. ore.inization.<lb/>
Charlie Carr has been named<lb/>
assoicate athletic director for<lb/>
external relations at Hast<lb/>
Carolina, ECU athletic director<lb/>
Dave 1 lart announced Tuesday.<lb/>
Carr. 41, will be the executive<lb/>
director oi the ECU Educational<lb/>
Foundation (Pirate Club) and will<lb/>
oversee all external areas within<lb/>
the athletic department. He<lb/>
assumes the duties held by 1 lart<lb/>
for the past two years.<lb/>
Carr was the athletic director at<lb/>
Mississippi State from 1985-1987<lb/>
before he chose to return to North<lb/>
. arolina and enter private<lb/>
business.<lb/>
"I'm extremely happy to be<lb/>
back home and to have this<lb/>
opportunity at East Carolina<lb/>
Carr said. "I had originally<lb/>
planned to stay out of athletics for<lb/>
a while, but the opportunity to<lb/>
work with Dave Hart and the<lb/>
chance to head the Pirate Club<lb/>
was too enticing.<lb/>
"There is tremendous potential<lb/>
in the future of ECU'S program,<lb/>
and under the new leadership of<lb/>
Chancellor (Richard) Eakin, as<lb/>
well as the new direction in the<lb/>
athletic department, there is a<lb/>
great future ahead<lb/>
Prior to becoming athletic<lb/>
director at MSU, Carr was an<lb/>
associate athletic director at<lb/>
North Carolina from 1978-1985.<lb/>
During that enure, the Tar Heels<lb/>
experienced great success in their<lb/>
total athletic program.<lb/>
Carr was an assistant football<lb/>
coach at UNC from 1971-1975 and<lb/>
later coached at Rice Univeristy<lb/>
from 1975-1978.<lb/>
"We're very happy to announce<lb/>
th hiring of Charlie Hart said.<lb/>
"He brings a wealth of experience<lb/>
to the job and he has roots in this<lb/>
market area of North Carolina<lb/>
and Virginia<lb/>
A native of Virginia Beach, VA,<lb/>
Carr played football and baseball<lb/>
at UNC, earning his<lb/>
undergraduate degree in 1<lb/>
and his master's degree in 19"<lb/>
He played two<lb/>
professional baseba<lb/>
k Mets organization.<lb/>
Carr is married to the former<lb/>
? Harrington oi Lumberton,<lb/>
Slam dunk time arrives in IRS<lb/>
jte-3<lb/>
- ,<lb/>
Miniature basketball king<lb/>
ere<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
1 he College Rover<lb/>
1 lave you ever noticed those<lb/>
in.nature basketball games in<lb/>
downtown bars?<lb/>
In this addition of the college<lb/>
rover, we will tell you about the<lb/>
it minature basketball shooter<lb/>
in Greenville. His name is Paul<lb/>
1 lager.<lb/>
t lager's day starts at 11 a.m.<lb/>
After attending his one class, the<lb/>
fifth-year ECU senior walks<lb/>
downtown. Loaded with<lb/>
quarters, he positions himself in<lb/>
front of the game he has perfected.<lb/>
Shooting rapidly at the small rim,<lb/>
he demonstrates why people call<lb/>
him Greenville's best shooter.<lb/>
In his first game of the day,<lb/>
1 lager had a hot score of 76 points.<lb/>
Most players would be satisfied<lb/>
with a 76, but Hager seems<lb/>
discontent. With a preturbed<lb/>
expression drawn on his face, he<lb/>
explains his problem, "I put too<lb/>
much back spin on the ball<lb/>
The minature basketball<lb/>
shooting game allows players to<lb/>
shoot as many balls at the hoop<lb/>
within a 40-second time frame.<lb/>
Made baskets count two points in<lb/>
the first 20 seconds and three<lb/>
points during the final 20 seconds.<lb/>
It a player scores 30 or beyond in<lb/>
the initial time frame, then an<lb/>
additional 30 seconds is allotted.<lb/>
A score of 92 last week is<lb/>
1 lager's best accomplishment to<lb/>
date. But the young man majoring<lb/>
in business feels he can break his<lb/>
own record.<lb/>
In revealing his game secret,<lb/>
Hager says "It's all in the quick<lb/>
release as he motions a fast<lb/>
breaking of the wrist. He says the<lb/>
faster a player can shoot the ball<lb/>
the more attempts he will have to<lb/>
score.<lb/>
I lager says he acquired a quick-<lb/>
release style of shooting from<lb/>
playing playground basketball<lb/>
against taller opponents who<lb/>
called him pee-wce. "1 was<lb/>
always the shortest one on the<lb/>
court, so 1 had to develop a form<lb/>
that wouldn't get blocked he<lb/>
said. Besides basketball, Hager<lb/>
says the quick release comes in<lb/>
handy in water sports.<lb/>
Hager developed his shooting<lb/>
accuracy in an unlikely place; the<lb/>
den of his house. "Back before<lb/>
someone invented ncrf basketball<lb/>
me and my brothers used to shoot<lb/>
a tennis ball into a tin can we<lb/>
nailed in the den wall Hager<lb/>
said. Ever since then Hager has<lb/>
been nailing shots.<lb/>
After spending a daily three<lb/>
dollars on the game, Hager has<lb/>
scored three times in the 80's and<lb/>
six times in the 60's and 70's. 1<lb/>
asked Hager if his basketball<lb/>
shooting habit wasn't a little<lb/>
expensive.<lb/>
"Well, you know college rover,<lb/>
1 win all the money back when<lb/>
people bet against me. just ask my<lb/>
friend Earl who I took twenty<lb/>
bucks from last week Hager<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In evaluating the games<lb/>
downtown, Hager said that the<lb/>
game at the Sports Pad is<lb/>
probably the kindest. "The one at<lb/>
the Sports Pad will give you more<lb/>
rolls as opposed to the one at<lb/>
Pantana's he said.<lb/>
If you see a guy shooting<lb/>
baskets downtown who looks like<lb/>
he isn't old enough to be in the<lb/>
bar, remember that's Paul Hager,<lb/>
the minature basketball shooting<lb/>
king. And don't bet against him.<lb/>
By IMA RECK<lb/>
Intramural Recreational Service<lb/>
It's showtime at the I.R.S<lb/>
Men and women will be flying<lb/>
through the air at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum with the greatest of ease<lb/>
in the Slam Dunk Competition.<lb/>
Registration will be held on<lb/>
Monday, Feb. 22, while<lb/>
preliminary competition gets<lb/>
under way on Tuesday, Feb. 23.<lb/>
The grand slam finals are set for<lb/>
Thrusday, Feb. 25 in Minges.<lb/>
Men will showboat their dunks<lb/>
on a regulation 10-foot goal;<lb/>
however, the women will be<lb/>
jammin' on an 8-foot basket. This<lb/>
will be the first-ever slam dunk<lb/>
competition involving the girls,<lb/>
so come on out!<lb/>
Each slam dunk competitor will<lb/>
be allowed five attempts and will<lb/>
receive points for each dunk<lb/>
based on three criteria: (a)<lb/>
difficulty, 1-10 range;<lb/>
creativity, 1-10 range; and<lb/>
success of dunk, 1 point<lb/>
basket.<lb/>
Once again, registration<lb/>
men and women is Monday, Feb<lb/>
22.<lb/>
4 p. m. at Memorial Gym, Room<lb/>
204. The actual event will take<lb/>
place on Sunday, Feb. 28 from 6<lb/>
p.m. until 10 p.m. in Minges.<lb/>
Don't forget! Time is running<lb/>
out for all you wrestlers.<lb/>
Registration is Wednesday, Feb.<lb/>
24. Officials are also needed for<lb/>
Wrestling competition, the clinic<lb/>
is set for Wednesday, Feb. 24 at v<lb/>
p.m. in Memorial Gym.<lb/>
IMA REC is wrecked It is true<lb/>
that nasty rumor, that the Stcelers<lb/>
of the Faculty, Staff League<lb/>
scored 96 points The details<lb/>
coming up m ruesday's edition ol<lb/>
the East Carolinian. Don't miss<lb/>
it<lb/>
(b)<lb/>
(c)<lb/>
for<lb/>
for<lb/>
More action is coming up for<lb/>
Minges Coliseum - the Fitness<lb/>
Olympics on Sunday, Feb. 28. The<lb/>
Fitness Olympics will be a team<lb/>
event for coeds, men and women,<lb/>
with each team consisting of four<lb/>
to six members. Events include<lb/>
the stationary bicycle race,<lb/>
human wheel barrow relay,<lb/>
balloon relay, and frisbec obstacle<lb/>
course relay.<lb/>
Registration will be held on<lb/>
Monday, Feb. 22 from 9 a.m. untill<lb/>
Man or machine? ? Norwood Davis (10) of Mantronix goes up for two in<lb/>
a recent IRS basketball game as teammate Shane Wells (5) awaits a<lb/>
possible rebound.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0014"/><lb/>
?i<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 18,1988<lb/>
B oilermakers still riding on top of poll<lb/>
m<lb/>
't<lb/>
The best in hoops<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
?f Sports Editor<lb/>
Maryland-Baltimore County conference-leading Pittsburgh.<lb/>
Monday 99-77 behind 20 points ?????<lb/>
from center Charles Shackleford. 15. LOYOLA MARYMOUNT<lb/>
Shackleford erupted for 16 of his (20-3) ? I have overlooked the<lb/>
points in the second half as the Lions long enough. A pair of wins<lb/>
Wolfpack broke open a 10-point over the weekend gave me all the<lb/>
halftime game with a quick 21-8 proof 1 needed to include them in Monay night 85-83 behind<lb/>
1. PURDUE (21-2) ? The<lb/>
Boilermakers continued to roll in<lb/>
the Big Ten alone at the top of the<lb/>
heap Mondav night bv disposing<lb/>
ot top 20 foe Iowa 73-66. Troy<lb/>
Lewis led the way in the victory<lb/>
for the Boilers with 20 points.<lb/>
Turdue coach Gene Keady had<lb/>
said earlier in the week that he felt<lb/>
the Boilermakers would have to<lb/>
keep the Hawkeyes from scoring<lb/>
80 points in order to win the game.<lb/>
Good call coach.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
2. TEMPLE (21-1) ? The Owls<lb/>
got a victory Tuesday night over<lb/>
Penn State by the skin of their<lb/>
teeth. The Nittany Lions played<lb/>
hard in Philly before finally<lb/>
tailing to the Owls, 50-49, thanks<lb/>
to a 3-point play by freshman-<lb/>
sensation Mark Macon, who<lb/>
finished the game with 2b points,<lb/>
in the waning seconds. Macon<lb/>
Saturday by bumping off<lb/>
Alabama 82-68. The win gives<lb/>
Kentucky a 10-3 SEC mark.<lb/>
Winston Bennett paced the wav<lb/>
with 25 points, many oi which<lb/>
could be credited to guard Ed<lb/>
Davender. Davendcr set a career-<lb/>
high mark in the contest by<lb/>
dishing out 10 assists. Kentucky<lb/>
was back on the hardwood<lb/>
Wednesday against Tennessee.<lb/>
9. PITTSBURGH (18-3) ? The<lb/>
Panthers survived a scare from<lb/>
Providence Tuesday night before<lb/>
holding on for a 87-8b win.<lb/>
Freshman fason Matthews drilled<lb/>
a pair of 3-pointers in the last<lb/>
minute o play to lift the Panthers<lb/>
to victory. Charles Smith paced<lb/>
the win with 33 points on 12-of-13<lb/>
shooting from the field. The<lb/>
Panthers were also victorious<lb/>
Saturday when they knocked off<lb/>
spurt at the outset of the second<lb/>
half. The Wolfpack also pulled off<lb/>
an impressive win Saturday<lb/>
when they knocked off Louisville<lb/>
101-89 on national television.<lb/>
Vinny Del Negro led the way with<lb/>
29 points, while Chucky Brown<lb/>
added 23 and Shackleford 20.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
12. MICHIGAN (20-4) ? The<lb/>
the poll. Friday, the victim for the<lb/>
Lions was Santa Clara as they<lb/>
cruised to a 108-89 victory. And<lb/>
on Saturday, Hank Gathers<lb/>
pumped in 18 points and pulled<lb/>
down 11 boards to pace a 118-109<lb/>
win over San Francisco. The duo<lb/>
of wins pushed Loyola's mark to<lb/>
10-0 in the West Coast Athletic<lb/>
back in action last night on the<lb/>
road against Alabama.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
19. BRADLEY (17-4) ? The<lb/>
Braves slipped past Drake<lb/>
38<lb/>
points from Hersey "All-World"<lb/>
Hawkins. Hawkins, in fact,<lb/>
scored the winning points in the<lb/>
contest by tipping in a missed free<lb/>
throw by Luke Jackson with only<lb/>
two seconds showing on the<lb/>
clock. Hawkins also paced a 98-68<lb/>
Saturday win over Creighton<lb/>
with 25 points. Jackson set career-<lb/>
highs in that win with 19 points<lb/>
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Wolverines remained only one on the court Wednesday against and 17 caroms. Anthony jackson<lb/>
game out of first place in the Big Pepperdine. nelped the Braves with 10<lb/>
Ten Saturday by topping Bobby ?????<lb/>
Knight's resurgent Hoosiers 92- 16. MISSOURI (16-5) ? The<lb/>
72. The Wolverines are currently Tigers showed a lot of poise over<lb/>
l-2 in the conference. Michigan the weekend by knocking off<lb/>
broke open a close 40-38 game in Nevada-Las Vegas 81-79 on the<lb/>
the second half to mount the rout road. Derrick Chievous paced the<lb/>
behind 24 points from Gary Grant victory for Missouri with 26<lb/>
and 22 from Glen Rice. The points, while Byron Irvin added Norm Sloan's boys also ripped<lb/>
Wolverines were back in action 17. The resurgent Tigers were Mississippi State 69-52 over the<lb/>
back in action on the road last weekend. In the MSU game,<lb/>
night against Big Eight foe Iowa which was Sloan's 600th career<lb/>
State. A letdown in that game coaching win, Vernon Maxwell<lb/>
could prove detrimental to the led the way with 23 points.<lb/>
points and a dozen assists.<lb/>
20. FLORIDA (18-7) ? The<lb/>
Gators rolled past Miami (FT.) 83-<lb/>
73 Monday night in a non-<lb/>
conference, in-state showdown.<lb/>
last night against Minnesota.<lb/>
also paced the way for Temple Villanova 87-75 behind 17 points<lb/>
Saturday when it rolled past<lb/>
George Washington in a rout 92-<lb/>
hr. Macon pumped in 23 points,<lb/>
while Howard Evans followed<lb/>
with 17 points and a dozen assists.<lb/>
The win Sa turday gave the Owls a<lb/>
13-0 mark in "the Atlantic 10<lb/>
Conference. Next stop for Temple<lb/>
is on Tobacco Road Sunday when<lb/>
they will put their prestigious<lb/>
ranking on the line in the Dean<lb/>
Dome against North Carolina.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
3. OKLAHOMA (22-2) ? The<lb/>
Sooners got their revenge<lb/>
Saturday of an earlier loss to<lb/>
Kansas State bv pounding the<lb/>
Wildcats 112-95. All five starters<lb/>
for Oklahoma scored in double<lb/>
figures led by 21 points from<lb/>
Mookie Blaylock. Ricky Grace<lb/>
had 20 and Stacey King 19.<lb/>
Harvey Grant and Dave Seiger<lb/>
chipped in 18 each in the Sooner<lb/>
win. The win boosted the runnin'<lb/>
Sooners to 8-1 in the Big Eight.<lb/>
This team is literally unbeatable if<lb/>
its opponents try to run with<lb/>
them. The Sooners were back in<lb/>
action last night on the road at in-<lb/>
state rival Oklahoma State.<lb/>
4. ARIZONA (23-2) ? The<lb/>
Wildcats knocked off another<lb/>
patsy member of the Pac-10<lb/>
Sunday when they leveled<lb/>
Oregon State 77-62. Lute Olsen<lb/>
should think about transfering his<lb/>
team to another conference out<lb/>
west like the WAC if he wants<lb/>
some real competition for his<lb/>
team. Arizona will take back to<lb/>
the hardwood tonight when it<lb/>
meets Southern Cal on the road.<lb/>
5. NORTH CAROLINA (18-3)<lb/>
? The Tar Heels remained tied<lb/>
atop the standings in the ACC<lb/>
Sunday after surviving a scare<lb/>
from Virginia. The Heels, who<lb/>
trailed by as many as 17 points in<lb/>
the first half, rallied behind the<lb/>
shooting touch of Jeff Lebo to win<lb/>
64-58. Lebo led the team in scoring<lb/>
with 18 points, while pulling<lb/>
down eight caroms from his<lb/>
guard position. The Tar Heels<lb/>
were back in action last night in<lb/>
the Dean Dome trying to gain<lb/>
revenge for an earlier loss to Wake<lb/>
Forest.<lb/>
6. DUKE (18-3) ? The Blue<lb/>
Devils avenged their earlier loss<lb/>
to Maryland Saturday by winning<lb/>
in Cole Field House 90-83. The<lb/>
win kept the Devils locked in a tie<lb/>
for the top spot in the ACC with<lb/>
North Carolina. Both teams are 7-<lb/>
2 in conference action. Danny<lb/>
Ferry scored a career-high 33<lb/>
points to pace the win, while<lb/>
Robert Brickey chipped in 21 and<lb/>
Kevin Strickland 19. Duke was<lb/>
back in ACC action last night in<lb/>
Cameron Indoor Stadium against<lb/>
Virginia.<lb/>
7. BRIGHAM YOUNG (20-1)<lb/>
? The Cougars picked up win<lb/>
number 20 of the season Saturday<lb/>
by slipping past Colorado State<lb/>
86-80. The victory was paced by<lb/>
Michael Smith's 20 points and<lb/>
also 18 points from guard Jeff<lb/>
Chatman. The Cougars will get<lb/>
back into the heart of WAC play<lb/>
tonight when they travel to<lb/>
California to battle league foe San<lb/>
Diego State.<lb/>
? ?? ? ?<lb/>
8. KENTUCKY (18-3) ? The<lb/>
Wildcats chalked up their fifth<lb/>
win in a row and took control of<lb/>
the Southeastern Conference<lb/>
from Smith and 16 from Sean<lb/>
Miller. The Panthers are currently<lb/>
8-2 in the Big East race.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
10. NEVADA-LAS VEGAS<lb/>
(21-3) ? The Runnin' Rebels were<lb/>
knocked oil at home for only the<lb/>
fourth time in five years over the<lb/>
weekend by Missouri, 81-79. The<lb/>
Rebels, who rallied from a 44-32<lb/>
halftime deficit, were paced in<lb/>
their defeat by Gerald Paddio,<lb/>
who scored 17 points. The Rebels<lb/>
will return to PC A A action<lb/>
tonight when they host Utah State<lb/>
at home. Don't look for the Rebsto<lb/>
lose two in a row at home,<lb/>
especially considering who they<lb/>
are playing.<lb/>
13. SYRACUSE (18-6) ? The<lb/>
Orangemen lost to Georgetown<lb/>
for the second time this year over Tigers.<lb/>
the weekend 71-69. Syracuse blew<lb/>
an 11-point lead in the game in<lb/>
dropping to 7-4 in the Big East<lb/>
Conference race. Stcvie<lb/>
Thompson led the way for the<lb/>
Orangemen in defeat with 20<lb/>
points. Syracuse was trying to<lb/>
rebound and get back on the<lb/>
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14. GEORGETOWN (17-6) ?<lb/>
The Hoyas knocked off Villanova<lb/>
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points from Charles Smith and a<lb/>
dozen from Perry McDonald.<lb/>
Smith fired in 17 of his points in<lb/>
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defeated Syracuse for the seventh<lb/>
straight time Saturday in the<lb/>
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17. IOWA (17-7) ? The<lb/>
Hawkeyes rested over the<lb/>
weekend in anticipation of their<lb/>
meeting against top-ranked<lb/>
Purdue. The rest did little good,<lb/>
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? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
18. VANDERBILT (16-5) ?<lb/>
The Commodores pushed their<lb/>
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Vandy nailed nine-of-13 from the<lb/>
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11. NORTH CAROLINA while Smith added 17. The Hoyas Commodores in scoring with 17<lb/>
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In the past, referees<lb/>
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The new interpret!<lb/>
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Florida was awarded<lb/>
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Pirate fans to help in voting for NCAA team<lb/>
A nationwide balloting<lb/>
program, conducted by USA<lb/>
TODAY, that will allow college<lb/>
basketball fans to select an NCAA<lb/>
All-time Final Four Team will be<lb/>
included as one of the highlights<lb/>
of the 50th anniversary<lb/>
commemoration of the Division 1<lb/>
Basketball Championship.<lb/>
Pirate basketball fans can<lb/>
participate in the event by simply<lb/>
tilling out a ballot form on<lb/>
Saturday, Feb. 27 when the<lb/>
Pirates battle UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. in a CAA game in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
1 "he announcement of the ballot<lb/>
program was made jointly by the<lb/>
NCAA and USA TODAY,<lb/>
opening the anniversary<lb/>
celebration that will culminate<lb/>
with the Final Four in Kansas<lb/>
City's Kemper Arena, April 2-4<lb/>
1988.<lb/>
"The Final Four is one of the<lb/>
USA's most exciting and unifying<lb/>
events said USA TODAY<lb/>
president Tom Curley, "USA<lb/>
TODAY believes its association<lb/>
with the Final Four Foundation<lb/>
will boost the recognition of the<lb/>
enduring contributions of the<lb/>
colleges, the athletes and the<lb/>
NCAA<lb/>
ISA TODAY will feature fan<lb/>
Mloting each Tuesday in its<lb/>
sports section for a six-week<lb/>
period beginning February 9. In<lb/>
addition to the USA TODAY<lb/>
ballots, college basketball fans<lb/>
will have the opportunity to vote<lb/>
for their All-Time Team at<lb/>
selected games played by<lb/>
Division 1 institutions beginning<lb/>
in February.<lb/>
A blue ribbon panel of current<lb/>
and former collegiate basketball<lb/>
coaches and former chairmen of<lb/>
the NCAA Division 1 Men's<lb/>
Basketball Committee selected 50<lb/>
players to be listed on the ballots<lb/>
that will be distributed nationally<lb/>
and printed in USA TODAY. The<lb/>
50 players, 10 from each of the five<lb/>
decades the Final Four spans,<lb/>
were selected by the panel from<lb/>
more than 250 players who<lb/>
starred in the 49 NCAA<lb/>
tournaments. Each ballot also will<lb/>
include a write-in portion.<lb/>
The selections were made by<lb/>
four current head basketball<lb/>
coaches ? Denny Crum of<lb/>
Louisville, Jud Heathcote of<lb/>
Michigan State, Dean Smith of<lb/>
North Carolina and John<lb/>
Thompson fo Georgetown ? and<lb/>
four former collegiate coaches ?<lb/>
Joe B. Hall of Kentucky, Henry Iba<lb/>
of Oklahoma State, Pete Newell of<lb/>
California and John Wooden of<lb/>
UCLA. Also included on the<lb/>
panel were three former chairmen<lb/>
of the Division 1 Basketball<lb/>
Cammittee? Vic Bubas,<lb/>
Fenner nailed again<lb/>
Fo<lb/>
ormer University of North<lb/>
Carolina tailback Derrick Fenner<lb/>
was involved in a fight during a<lb/>
party at Duke University last<lb/>
weekend and was asked to leave<lb/>
the campus by public safety<lb/>
cers authorities said Tuesday.<lb/>
University police broke up a<lb/>
fight between Fenner and an<lb/>
identified UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
student about 1 a.m. Sunday<lb/>
during a fraternity party at the<lb/>
Mary Lou Williams Center for<lb/>
Black Culture, campus police Lt.<lb/>
Leu Wardcll told the News and<lb/>
Observer of Raleigh.<lb/>
No charges were brought<lb/>
ii? iii.n?h EeMM irVjCjonrwogtion with<lb/>
the fight, which police said<lb/>
apparently started with an<lb/>
argument over a woman.<lb/>
Wardcll said Fenner refused to<lb/>
leave the campus when officers<lb/>
first asked him to, but a friend<lb/>
later convinced him to go. Fenner<lb/>
could not be reached for<lb/>
comment.<lb/>
Wardcll said no action would<lb/>
be taken against Fenner in<lb/>
connection with the incident<lb/>
unless the UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
student objected.<lb/>
Fenner, of Oxon Hills, Md was<lb/>
charged in the June 2 shooting<lb/>
death of a teen-ager in what police<lb/>
described as a drug battle at a<lb/>
Crowds<lb/>
warned<lb/>
by NCAA<lb/>
An increase in unruly crowd<lb/>
behavior at college basketball<lb/>
games has led the NCAA to stiffen<lb/>
penalties for home teams who<lb/>
can't control unruly fans.<lb/>
Under a new interpretation of<lb/>
the rules, teams will be awarded<lb/>
two free throws and possession of<lb/>
the ball if their opponents' fans<lb/>
deliberately delay a game by<lb/>
throwing debris on the court. In<lb/>
the past, only one foul shot was<lb/>
awarded.<lb/>
The new interpretation stems<lb/>
from an incident in a game<lb/>
between Georgia State and<lb/>
Mercer University. In that game,<lb/>
Mercer got four foul shots on two<lb/>
technical fouls called against<lb/>
Georgia State fans and eventually<lb/>
won 80-78.<lb/>
Georgia State protested that<lb/>
only two foul shots should have<lb/>
been awarded and that resulted in<lb/>
the new interpretation.<lb/>
In the past, referees had been<lb/>
classifying such behavior as delay<lb/>
of the game, resulting in only one<lb/>
foul shot.<lb/>
The new interpretation was in<lb/>
force last Wednesday night as<lb/>
Honda was awarded four free<lb/>
throws and the ball after Georgia<lb/>
fans threw toilet paper paper and<lb/>
other debris on the Georgia<lb/>
Coliseum court with five seconds<lb/>
left and the Bulldogs up 71-41<lb/>
Dwayrte Schintzius hit all four<lb/>
shots, but the Gators missed a 3-<lb/>
pointer as time ran out and the<lb/>
Bulldogs won 71-65.<lb/>
Maryland apartment complex.<lb/>
The charge later was dropped<lb/>
after prosecutors said they had<lb/>
insufficient evidence.<lb/>
Fenner pleaded guilty last<lb/>
month to one count of cocaine<lb/>
possession in a plea agreement in<lb/>
Maryland. Under the agreement,<lb/>
the Maryland state attorney<lb/>
agreed to drop a weapons charge.<lb/>
Fenner had been arrested on the<lb/>
drug and weapons charges before<lb/>
his arrest in the slaying.<lb/>
Fenner, who lost his playing<lb/>
eligibility in late 1986 because of<lb/>
academic trouble, said last month<lb/>
he had been readmitted to UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill. But his attorneys say<lb/>
the step is conditional on his<lb/>
performance in correspondence<lb/>
courses he is taking now and<lb/>
classes he plans to take on the<lb/>
Chapel Hill campus this summer.<lb/>
commissioner of the Sun Belt<lb/>
Conference; Wayne Duke,<lb/>
commissioner of the Big Ten<lb/>
Conference; and Dave Gavitt,<lb/>
commissioner of the Big East<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
The panel members all have<lb/>
been associated with the NCAA<lb/>
tournament and all eight coaches<lb/>
have won at least one NCAA Final<lb/>
Four championship.<lb/>
Fans will vote for the five<lb/>
players they consider to be the<lb/>
best in Final Four history. The five<lb/>
players receiving the most votes<lb/>
will be recognized as All-Time<lb/>
Final Four team members, and the<lb/>
player receiving the most votes in<lb/>
each of the five decade will earn<lb/>
Player of the Decade honors.<lb/>
"We are pleased to join with<lb/>
USA TODAY in this fan-balloting<lb/>
program for college basketball's<lb/>
fiftieth anniversary season said<lb/>
NCAA Executive Director Dick<lb/>
Schultz. "All of those who follow<lb/>
college basketball and the Final<lb/>
Four will have an opportunity to<lb/>
actively participate in our<lb/>
celebration<lb/>
More than three million ballots<lb/>
will be produced for voting at<lb/>
Division 1 games in February and<lb/>
early March. Additional balloting<lb/>
will take place during first-round<lb/>
gamesofthe 1988 tournament. All<lb/>
balloting will be tabulated by<lb/>
USA TODAY and the NCAA's<lb/>
Final Four Foundation. The<lb/>
announcement of the All-Time<lb/>
Team and Players of the Decade<lb/>
will be made during the Fianl<lb/>
Four weekend.<lb/>
FINAL FOUR ALL-TIME<lb/>
NOMINEES<lb/>
(Years played in tournament are<lb/>
listed in parenthesis)<lb/>
1939-40's<lb/>
Ralph Beard, Kentucky (1948-<lb/>
49)<lb/>
Howie Dallmar, Stanford<lb/>
(1942)<lb/>
Dwight Eddlcman, Illinois<lb/>
(1949)<lb/>
Arnie Ferrin, Utah (1944)<lb/>
Alex Groza, Kentucky (1948-49)<lb/>
George Kaftan, Holy Cross<lb/>
(194748)<lb/>
Bob Kurland, Oklahoma A&amp;M<lb/>
0945-46).?-<lb/>
Jim Pollard, Stanford (1942)<lb/>
Ken Sailors, Wyoming (1943)<lb/>
Gerald Tucker, Oklahoma<lb/>
(1947)<lb/>
1950's<lb/>
Grid time change<lb/>
East Carolina's football game<lb/>
with defending national<lb/>
champion Miami has been moved<lb/>
to Oct. 29, 1988 to accomodate a<lb/>
televised scheduling change for<lb/>
the Hurricanes.<lb/>
The date change will allow the<lb/>
Hurricanes to host Florida State,<lb/>
the 1987 number-two ranked<lb/>
team, in a nationally-televised<lb/>
meeting in early September.<lb/>
The ECU-Miami game, which<lb/>
was orginally scheduled for Nov.<lb/>
12, will be played at 1:30 p.m. on<lb/>
Oct. 29 at the Pirates' Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium on the ECU campus.<lb/>
ECU'S 1988 home schedule<lb/>
includes the defending champ<lb/>
Hurricanes, the number four-<lb/>
ranked Syracuse Orangemen<lb/>
(Oct. 22) and 1987 Sun Bowl<lb/>
participant West Virginia (Oct. 8).<lb/>
Other home dates on the Pirate<lb/>
schedule include Tennessee Tech,<lb/>
Southern Mississippi and<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana.<lb/>
Less than a Dime<lb/>
and open til Nine<lb/>
We're your one-stop copy shop with more<lb/>
services available than you will find at any<lb/>
copy shop anywhere.<lb/>
Color Copies ? Blueprinting ? Laser Type<lb/>
Copies up to 36" x 40" ? Office Supplies<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
L<lb/>
open early<lb/>
open late<lb/>
open six days<lb/>
ACCU<lb/>
Located in Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Next to Chicos Restaurant in the Georgetown Shops<lb/>
Elgin Baylor, Seattle (1958)<lb/>
Wilt Chamberlain, Kansas<lb/>
(1957)<lb/>
Tom Gola, LaSalle (1954-55)<lb/>
K.C. Jones, San Francisco (1955)<lb/>
Clyde Lovellctte, Kansas (1952)<lb/>
Oscar Robertson, Cincinnati<lb/>
(1959-60)<lb/>
Guy Rodgers, Temple (1958)<lb/>
Len Rosenbluth, North<lb/>
Carolina (1957)<lb/>
Bill Russell, San Francisco<lb/>
(1955-56)<lb/>
Jerry West, West Virginia (1959)<lb/>
1960's<lb/>
Bill Bradley, Princeton (1965)<lb/>
Gail Goodrich, UCLA (1964-65)<lb/>
John Havlicek, Ohio State<lb/>
(1960-61-62)<lb/>
Elvin Hayes, Houston (1967-68)<lb/>
Walt Hazzard, UCLA (1962-64)<lb/>
Kareem-Adbul Jabbar, UCLA<lb/>
(1967-68-69)<lb/>
Jerry Lucas, Ohio State (1960-<lb/>
61-62)<lb/>
Jeff Mullins, Duke (1963-64)<lb/>
Cazzie Russell, Michigan (1964-<lb/>
65)<lb/>
Charlie Scott, North Carolina<lb/>
(1968-69)<lb/>
1970's<lb/>
Kent Benson, Indiana (1976)<lb/>
Larry Bird, Indiana State (1979)<lb/>
Jack Givens, Kentucky (1975-<lb/>
76)<lb/>
Earvin Johnson, Michigan State<lb/>
(1979)<lb/>
Marques Johnson, UCLA (1974-<lb/>
75-76)<lb/>
Scott May, Indiana (1976)<lb/>
David Thompson, North<lb/>
Carolina State (1974)<lb/>
Bill Walton, UCLA (1972-73-74)<lb/>
Sidney Wicks, UCLA (1969-70-<lb/>
71)<lb/>
Jamaal Wilkes, UCLA (1972-73-<lb/>
74)<lb/>
1980's<lb/>
Steve Alford, Indiana (1987)<lb/>
Johnny Dawkins, Duke (1986)<lb/>
Patrick Ewing, Georgetown<lb/>
(1982-84-85)<lb/>
Darrell Griffith, Louisville<lb/>
(1980)<lb/>
Michael Jordan, North Carolina<lb/>
(1982)<lb/>
Rodney McCray, Louisville<lb/>
(1980)<lb/>
Akecm Olajuwon, Houston<lb/>
(1983-84)<lb/>
Ed Pinckney, Villanova (1985)<lb/>
Isiah Thomas, Indiana (1981)<lb/>
James Worthy, North Carolina<lb/>
(1982)<lb/>
BLUE RIBBON PANEL:<lb/>
Denny Crum, Louisville<lb/>
Dean Smith, North Carolina<lb/>
Joe B. Hall, Kentucky<lb/>
Pete Newell, California<lb/>
Vic Bubas, Sun Belt Conference<lb/>
Dave Gavitt, Big East<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
Jud Heathcote, Michigan State<lb/>
John Thompson, Georgetown<lb/>
Henry Iba, Oklahoma A&amp;M<lb/>
John Wooden, UCLA<lb/>
Wayne Duke, Big Ten<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
ihhhh Clip-N-Save ????n<lb/>
Hank's Homemade let cream<lb/>
and frozen yogurt<lb/>
321 East 10th Street, Greenville <lb/>
 (Next to Wendy's)<lb/>
758-4896<lb/>
Buy 1 mini-or large sundae<lb/>
Get one 12 Price<lb/>
Your Choice of<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Ice Cream or<lb/>
9anf(s frozen yogurt<lb/>
Good Thru 2-22-88<lb/>
ft<lb/>
Clip-N-Save<lb/>
Presidents Day's Sale<lb/>
FLOOR LAMPS<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
J Bnte Brass<lb/>
Fan Pleat<lb/>
Torchiers<lb/>
jj $120 value<lb/>
y 63 high<lb/>
Soha Brass<lb/>
J Shell &amp; Tent<lb/>
Aajustabie<lb/>
Pharmacy Lamps<lb/>
$100 valuer <lb/>
Jack-N-Jill<lb/>
White Melamme<lb/>
Bookshelf Units <lb/>
Jack $90 value I v<lb/>
59.99<lb/>
Jill $60 value<lb/>
39.99<lb/>
"N<lb/>
ti?9?i2<lb/>
" ? 5?.<lb/>
Plus Much, Much More .<lb/>
An Stores Open Nightly &amp; Sundays ? Except Cameron Village<lb/>
RALEi&amp;H ? Cameron Village &amp; North Pidge DURHAM ? Northgate Mali<lb/>
GRIENVIUE ? The Piaja <lb/>
DRESS FOR SUCCESS.<lb/>
? - r f 1 J ifTf '<lb/>
As a Navy officer, pride and<lb/>
professionalism come with the<lb/>
territory. You also develop the<lb/>
potential that you know you have<lb/>
and gain leadership experience that<lb/>
builds success.<lb/>
In operations and management,<lb/>
in scientific and technical fields,<lb/>
you work with highly talented men<lb/>
and women committed to being the<lb/>
best.<lb/>
You'll get a solid starting salary<lb/>
and additional allowances that add<lb/>
even more to your income Plus,<lb/>
you'll get benefits like free medical<lb/>
and dental care, thirty days' paid<lb/>
vacation each vear, and<lb/>
opportunities for postgraduate<lb/>
education.<lb/>
To qualify, you must be a U.S.<lb/>
citizen no more than 28 years old.<lb/>
have a BA or BS degree, and pass<lb/>
an aptitude test and phvsical exam.<lb/>
Get a leadership and management<lb/>
opportunity that makes a big<lb/>
difference in any career. Call Navy<lb/>
Management<lb/>
Programs: 1-800-662-72317419 or<lb/>
outside N.C. 1-800-528-8713.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY STUDENTS<lb/>
CONTACT: NCI MITCH WELCH, Career Placement Office<lb/>
FEBRUARY 23, 1988<lb/>
OFFICER.<lb/>
Presents SPRING BREAK '88<lb/>
at the Luxurious<lb/>
We GUARANTEE you will stay at<lb/>
Daytonas BEST PARTY HOTEL!<lb/>
The HAWAIIAN INN - HOME OF THE<lb/>
HAWAIIAN LUAU ALSO<lb/>
New Jacuzzis Kitchenettes<lb/>
New Video Club Balcony wOcean View<lb/>
Indoor Heated Pod Cable T.V<lb/>
(only one in Daytona) Home of MTV<lb/>
Large Pool Deck with Bar<lb/>
NEW PRICES<lb/>
Quad Capacity Now Only 199<lb/>
5 Capacity Now Only $195<lb/>
6 Capacity Now Only 189<lb/>
U-Drive<lb/>
$149.00 Quad<lb/>
-DESIGNERS sponsors DAILY POOL PARTIES<lb/>
this year in association with COORS BEER<lb/>
-We leave ECU EARLY FRIDAY NIGHT, MARCH 4<lb/>
-Air-Conditioned, Modern MotorCoaches<lb/>
-Professional 24hr. staff" at the Hawaiian<lb/>
-Special one-day excursions<lb/>
-Car Rentals Available<lb/>
DESIGNERS IS NOT A "FLY BY NIGHT<lb/>
COMPANY' CALL US TODAY<lb/>
SoMwi MjM-jrm Btmaif<lb/>
to ttw SUM, SAMO and SUftF l<lb/>
Deadline February 23 Call Todd 758-9311 or Dave 757-3516<lb/>
wffcr ?<lb/>
m ??.  f??? <lb/>
? ?? ?ii'OwHi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0016"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
II<lb/>
OUR PHILOSOPHY<lb/>
IS TO SERVE YOU A<lb/>
HAMBURGER THAT'S<lb/>
BETTER THAN<lb/>
THE OTHER GUY'S.<lb/>
AND WE'RE PUTTING<lb/>
OUR MONEY WHERE<lb/>
YOUR MOUTH IS.<lb/>
BUY 1 SINGLE<lb/>
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v?2? FREE<lb/>
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BUY 1 SINGLE<lb/>
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i per G<lb/>
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BUY 1 SINGLE<lb/>
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FREE<lb/>
BUY 1 SINGLE<lb/>
HAMBURGER<lb/>
X GET ONE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
-V.<lb/>
? ? ??? Ml II<lb/>
<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
l<lb/>
l<lb/>
<lb/>
l<lb/>
BIG CLASSIC<lb/>
COMBO<lb/>
 -<lb/>
R Medium Drink.<lb/>
BIG CLASSIC<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Big Classic, Regular Fries, Medium Drink.<lb/>
Valid only at Participating Wend vs. Please pre<lb/>
upon when ordering. One coupon p i<lb/>
Not valid with any other offer? Chi<lb/>
tra. Tax extra where applicable.<lb/>
EXPIRES MARC! I 31, '<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
BIG CLASSIC<lb/>
COMBO<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
, Regular dium Drink.<lb/>
rt per Customer<lb/>
other offers. Cheese<lb/>
.<lb/>
31, 1988<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
.80<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
.80<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
.75<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
SANDWICH<lb/>
A, NOW ONLY<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
SANDWICH<lb/>
JiX NOW ONLY<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
75c OFF<lb/>
One CO mer<lb/>
?rti ipating Wendy's. Please present<lb/>
coupon when ordering. One coupon per Customer<lb/>
per visit. Not valid with any other offers Ch?<lb/>
extra. Tax extra where applicable<lb/>
EXPIRES MARCH 31, 1988<lb/>
THE PRICE OF A<lb/>
GARDEN FRESH<lb/>
SALAD<lb/>
?'? nd sent<lb/>
One coupon per Customer<lb/>
with any other offers. Cheese<lb/>
li .<lb/>
988<lb/>
BIG CLASSIC<lb/>
COMBO<lb/>
3 $1.99<lb/>
Big Classic, Regular Fries, Medium Drink.<lb/>
Valid only at Parti<lb/>
coupon when g. One coupon p.<lb/>
per visit. Not valid with anv<lb/>
extra Tax extra where app<lb/>
EXPIRES MARCH 31, I<lb/>
I<lb/>
c<lb/>
m<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
.75 <lb/>
75t OFF<lb/>
THE PRICE OF A<lb/>
GARDEN FRESH<lb/>
SALAD<lb/>
iraapahng <lb/>
coupon when ordering. One coupon per Ci<lb/>
per visit Not valid with anv other offers Ch?<lb/>
extra. Tax extra where applicable.<lb/>
EXPIRES MARCH 31, 1<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
.75<lb/>
752 OFF<lb/>
THE 'RICE OF ANY<lb/>
HOT STUFFED<lb/>
BAKED POTATO<lb/>
?paring Wendy's. Pfc -ent<lb/>
;x-in when ordering. One coupon per Customer<lb/>
per visit. Not uh any other offers. Cheese<lb/>
ipplicable.<lb/>
IRES MARCH 31,1988<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
.75<lb/>
75tf OFF<lb/>
li<lb/>
THE PRICE OF ANY<lb/>
HOT STUFFED<lb/>
BAKED POTATO<lb/>
Valid only at Participating Wendy's. Please present<lb/>
coupon when ordering. One coupon per Customer<lb/>
per visit. Not valid with any other offers. Cheese<lb/>
extra Tax extra where applicable.<lb/>
EXPIRES MARCH 31, 1988<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
.30<lb/>
REGULAR SIZE<lb/>
 CHILI<lb/>
Valid only at Participating Wendy's. Please present<lb/>
ipon when ordering. One coupon per Customer<lb/>
per visit Not valid with anv other offers. Cheese<lb/>
extra Tax extra where applicable.<lb/>
EXPIRES MARCH 31, 1988<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
.30<lb/>
REGULAR SIZE<lb/>
CHILI<lb/>
Valid only at Participating Wendy's Please pro-<lb/>
coupon when ordering. One coupon per Customer<lb/>
per visit. Not valid with any other offers Cheese<lb/>
extra. Tax extra where applicable.<lb/>
EXPIRES MARCH 31, 1988<lb/>
The best burgers<lb/>
in the business.<lb/>
? CnUft)<lb/>
T r T '111 !?,?? I<lb/>
pj)tiiiiii? i ? ? -? it m mn<lb/>
mmtimm<lb/>
mmQmmmm <lb/>
<pb facs="00057945_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>