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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057951_0001"/>
COMING TUESDAY:<lb/>
SGA candidates will present their platforms<lb/>
Tuesday, as The East Carolinian also will make its<lb/>
annual candidate endorsement.<lb/>
?NTERTAINMENT:<lb/>
Rocket Music takes off. See page 10.<lb/>
??"<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Connecticut clobbers the Pirates. See page 15.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Jj m?.ABOtt<lb/>
BA ST PATRICKS<lb/>
She 2ast Caroltmatrl<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol.62 No. 44<lb/>
Thursday, March 17,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
18 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
SGA Candidate Profiles<lb/>
President<lb/>
Bartlett says faculty needs<lb/>
better relations with students<lb/>
By I-aMLEY EDER<lb/>
Suit Writer<lb/>
Senior psychology major Mi-<lb/>
chael Bartlett, an SGA legislator<lb/>
and the delegate chairman for the<lb/>
NC Student Legislature, has filed<lb/>
as a candidate for SGA president.<lb/>
One oi his primary goals if<lb/>
elected, he said, is to establish<lb/>
better relationships between ECU<lb/>
faculty and students. He would<lb/>
like to open the lines of communi-<lb/>
cation between the two groups,<lb/>
by becoming a sort of mediator for<lb/>
them. He proposed to do this by<lb/>
establishing relationships with<lb/>
the ECU facultv senate and the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Bartlett said he would like to<lb/>
build a better network of commu-<lb/>
nication between the student<lb/>
body and the SGA. He proposed<lb/>
taking opinion polls of students<lb/>
on certain topics that are of inter-<lb/>
est, to question individuals<lb/>
around campus and to get an<lb/>
"ordinary" student's opinion<lb/>
about a topic. He said that he<lb/>
would like to give the students a<lb/>
chance to voice their opinion on a<lb/>
See BARTLETT, page 2<lb/>
SGA should learn to stress<lb/>
concrete decisions, Singh says<lb/>
By DENA BOYETTE<lb/>
Surf Writer<lb/>
Amar Singh, who serves on the<lb/>
?GA StwAeiU V4 etf are Committee,<lb/>
is the junior class president run-<lb/>
ning for SGA president.<lb/>
Singh stressed he wanted the<lb/>
SGA to become more service ori-<lb/>
ented. He said sometimes in the<lb/>
past, the SGA got too caught up in<lb/>
abstract ideas and that now was<lb/>
the time to deal in concrete deci-<lb/>
sions. Singh said he also wanted<lb/>
to see the SGA serve not onlv the<lb/>
university, but the community as<lb/>
well. He would like to become<lb/>
more involved in charities such as<lb/>
The March of Dimes, the Heart-<lb/>
fund, etc. He stressed the impai-<lb/>
tance of civic ideas, such as these.<lb/>
"What you take from society, you<lb/>
should give back he said.<lb/>
In discussing the university's<lb/>
parking problem, Singh said it is<lb/>
not fair for students to pay an<lb/>
increase in parking fees now<lb/>
when it will only benefit future<lb/>
students two and three vcars<lb/>
down the road. Singh also said the<lb/>
SGA should be involved in more<lb/>
See SINGH, page 2<lb/>
Murphy promotes diversity,<lb/>
communication in next SGA<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Assistant Newt Editor<lb/>
SGA Presidential candidate<lb/>
Larry Murphy said he wants to<lb/>
bridge the lines of communica-<lb/>
tion between ECU students and<lb/>
the SGA.<lb/>
If elected Murphy said he<lb/>
would distribute a brochure<lb/>
which lists the services, such as<lb/>
rentals, loans, and bus lines,<lb/>
which the SGA provides for the<lb/>
students out of student fees. "I<lb/>
don't believe that the students re-<lb/>
alize all the services the SGA has<lb/>
to offer Murphy said.<lb/>
To create a stronger minor-<lb/>
ity voice within the SGA, Murphy<lb/>
proposes expanding the respon-<lb/>
siblities of the minority cabinet<lb/>
position. He said the expanded<lb/>
minority position would foster a<lb/>
better line of communication<lb/>
between minority groups and the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
As the chairman of the<lb/>
Screening and Appointments<lb/>
Committee for the '87?'88 school<lb/>
year, Murphy said that he has<lb/>
tried allow a diversity of legisla-<lb/>
tors to enter the SGA. As presi-<lb/>
dent, he said he would continue to<lb/>
See MURPHY, page 8<lb/>
Vice President<lb/>
Jones calls for more safety<lb/>
regulations at the university<lb/>
Thompson wants students to<lb/>
be excited about the SGA<lb/>
By DENA BOYETTE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Kelly Jones is a junior throwing<lb/>
her hat into SGA vice presidential<lb/>
race. Chairman of the SGA Stu-<lb/>
dent Welfare Committee and a<lb/>
member on other university<lb/>
boards and committees, she was<lb/>
freshman class president.<lb/>
Jones said she really enjoys<lb/>
working with students. She com-<lb/>
mented that even back in high<lb/>
school, she knew when she<lb/>
started college she wanted to be-<lb/>
come involved in student govern-<lb/>
ment. "The vice president job has<lb/>
a lot to do with public relations. I<lb/>
just love working with students<lb/>
and being on committees she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Jones said there arc some<lb/>
changes that she would like to see<lb/>
come about on the campus. "I<lb/>
would like a new lighting policy,<lb/>
an update of the lighting system<lb/>
She did not like it when Pirate<lb/>
Walk came to a stand still this<lb/>
year, "1 would like to see the Pi-<lb/>
rate Walk get moving again She<lb/>
believes that new safety condi-<lb/>
tions on campus should be looked<lb/>
into.<lb/>
See JONES, page 2<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
AssL News Editor<lb/>
Greg Thompson says he is<lb/>
excited.If elected SGA President,<lb/>
Thompson said he would bring<lb/>
fair representation to the SGA,<lb/>
have more student input in the<lb/>
legislature, and reinstitute the<lb/>
Pirate Walk.<lb/>
"Let's get excited about the<lb/>
SGA Thompson said about<lb/>
what he feels has been a lack of<lb/>
enthusiasm by students outside<lb/>
the student government. Th-<lb/>
ompson feels the lack of enthusi-<lb/>
asm about the SGA has stemmed<lb/>
from both a campus sense that<lb/>
students opinions are unheard in<lb/>
the SGA and a p.oblemof student<lb/>
apathy.<lb/>
In order to achieve fair repre-<lb/>
sentation in the SGA, Thompson<lb/>
said the SGA must end the elitist<lb/>
image it has held in recent years of<lb/>
being controlled by three or four<lb/>
people. Thompson said the SGA<lb/>
is paid out of student funds so it<lb/>
should serve the students, not just<lb/>
the whims of a select few.<lb/>
If elected, Thompson said he<lb/>
See THOMPSON, page 7<lb/>
Shore wants a broader role<lb/>
for SGA vice president<lb/>
By STEPHAINE FOLSOM<lb/>
Stilt Writer<lb/>
Carol Shore, SGA secretary and<lb/>
candidate for vice president, said<lb/>
she would like to broaden the vice<lb/>
presidency and get Pirate Walk<lb/>
started again.<lb/>
Shore, a junior education major,<lb/>
said she has been working with<lb/>
current SGA vice president, Ross<lb/>
Renfrow, and knows what is in-<lb/>
volved with the job and how SGA<lb/>
works. She said she would like the<lb/>
vice president to be more of an<lb/>
asset in working with the presi-<lb/>
dent. She said. "The vice presi-<lb/>
dent could take care of the little<lb/>
things for the president. Be his<lb/>
other hand<lb/>
Last year Shore worked on the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee and<lb/>
said that through the experience<lb/>
she knows more about where<lb/>
SGA's money comes from. She is<lb/>
also getting involved with the<lb/>
North Carolina Legislature.<lb/>
Shore said she would like to get<lb/>
Pirate Walk started again. "I<lb/>
See SHORE, page 2<lb/>
Nigerian professor speaks on<lb/>
constitutional development<lb/>
By TON! PAGE<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
Professor Oyeleyc Oyediran, a<lb/>
prominent Nigerian political sci-<lb/>
entist addressed faculty members<lb/>
and students Tuesday night on<lb/>
"The Influence of the U.S.<lb/>
Constitution on Constitutional<lb/>
and polilical Development in Ni-<lb/>
geria<lb/>
Oyediran is credited with<lb/>
many achievements including his<lb/>
participation in the Nigerian<lb/>
Constitution Drafting Commis-<lb/>
sion of 1975-1976 and his member-<lb/>
ship in the Political Bureau which<lb/>
examined constitutional and po-<lb/>
litical arrangements in Nigeria<lb/>
during 1986-1987.<lb/>
Oyediran, one of the "found-<lb/>
ing fathers" of Nigerian democ-<lb/>
racy compared the Nigerian<lb/>
constitution with the U.S. Wash-<lb/>
ington model noting the differ-<lb/>
ences yet focusing mainly on the<lb/>
parallels and the large amount of<lb/>
U.S. influence involved in the<lb/>
drafting of the Nigerian<lb/>
constitution.<lb/>
Oyelcye opened his talk in the<lb/>
lecture hall of the new building<lb/>
wi th the comment "That American<lb/>
constitutional experiment has<lb/>
made tremendous contribution to<lb/>
political development around the<lb/>
world is not an issue f( r debate.<lb/>
Support for this view or fact is<lb/>
shown by the influence of the<lb/>
American experiment around the<lb/>
world. The American constitu-<lb/>
tional experiment is political engi-<lb/>
neering at its best Oyediran also<lb/>
placed the importance on funda-<lb/>
mentals of the U.S. Constitution<lb/>
and said, "Through a system of<lb/>
checks and balances diversities in<lb/>
religious, race, and social and eco-<lb/>
nomic interests were wielded to-<lb/>
gether, and the experiment has<lb/>
lasted two hundred years<lb/>
Some of the established princi-<lb/>
pals Oyediran drew on were the<lb/>
products of many debates similar<lb/>
to that of our own founding fa-<lb/>
thers. Similar concepts such as a<lb/>
bicameral legislature, equal repre-<lb/>
See PROFESSOR, page 7<lb/>
Sommers calls for increased<lb/>
student activity on campus<lb/>
Nigerian prof essor Oyeleye Oyedian spoke Tuesday ab out the deve1<lb/>
opment of the Nigerian Constitution. (Jon Jordan ? Photolab)<lb/>
By STEPHANIE FOLSOM<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
Steve Sommers, a candidate for<lb/>
SGA vice president, said his cam-<lb/>
paign will focus on the need for<lb/>
students to have more interaction<lb/>
with each other, power or expres-<lb/>
sion, and decision making.<lb/>
Sommers, a junior political sci-<lb/>
ence major, said there needs to be<lb/>
more involvement between<lb/>
blacks and whites, and greeks and<lb/>
non-greeks. He said, "I would like<lb/>
to see more activities that blacks<lb/>
and whites can both get involved<lb/>
with. We need to break down the<lb/>
race barrier.<lb/>
"Also, there needs to be more<lb/>
cooperation and interplay be-<lb/>
tween greeks and people not in-<lb/>
volved in sororities and fraterni-<lb/>
ties He described himself as a<lb/>
"pluralist saying he is not anti-<lb/>
greek, but is not in a fraternity,<lb/>
either. He said: "I believe in join-<lb/>
ing groups. I've grown from my<lb/>
activities outside of class<lb/>
Another problem Sommers<lb/>
said he would like to address as<lb/>
vice president is parking. He said<lb/>
the problem needs to be taken<lb/>
care of now and he has a few<lb/>
ideas, such as priority or carpool<lb/>
parking on campus.<lb/>
There also needs to be "more<lb/>
avenues for freedom of expres-<lb/>
sion said Sommers. He said he<lb/>
supports the idea of a soap-box<lb/>
forum, because: "It gives people<lb/>
the chance to talk about things<lb/>
they don't like about the univer-<lb/>
sity. Students can make moves.<lb/>
Indirectly they're making deci-<lb/>
sions for themselves<lb/>
Sommers said he would like<lb/>
there to be a place for students to<lb/>
go and not feel restricted, like the<lb/>
tunnels at NC. State. He said if<lb/>
there was a place for free expres-<lb/>
sion then there would not be<lb/>
problems, such as with the ROTC<lb/>
sign.<lb/>
A lot of the changes Sommers<lb/>
said he has seen at ECU ha ve been<lb/>
out of the hands of the university<lb/>
and of the students. He said: "The<lb/>
new drinking age controls a lot.<lb/>
Within the SGA I would like to<lb/>
have more pull to find loopholes<lb/>
in the law<lb/>
See SOMMERS, page 2<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0002"/><lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17, 1988<lb/>
Health Service offers three STD seminars<lb/>
By LAURA SALAZAR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"We see STD's everyday, and<lb/>
we treat a lot of STDs said Liz<lb/>
Morgan, R.N B.S.N of the ECU<lb/>
Student Health Service. Morgan<lb/>
said that STDs are seen as a major<lb/>
problem at every campus in the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
The Student Health Service is<lb/>
offering classes on Sexually<lb/>
Transmitted Disease. The first<lb/>
class on chlamydia, gonorrhea,<lb/>
and syphilis was held Tuesday.<lb/>
According to Morgan, only two<lb/>
students attended. Morgan said<lb/>
that marketing for the classes<lb/>
began late and that most students<lb/>
probably weren't thinking about<lb/>
STD classes right after Spring<lb/>
Break.<lb/>
The next class will be March 22,<lb/>
in Room 116of the Student I lealth<lb/>
Service. To register, call 757-6841<lb/>
and ask for Barbara Pennell. This<lb/>
class will deal with herpes, vene-<lb/>
real qarts, NGU, and pubic lice.<lb/>
The final class will be March 29;<lb/>
Institute helps preserve cultural heritage<lb/>
ECU New Bureau<lb/>
GREENVILLE?The mission of<lb/>
the Institute for Historical and<lb/>
Cultural Research at East Caro-<lb/>
lina University is to help discover<lb/>
and preserve the cultural heritage<lb/>
of eastern North Carolina but its<lb/>
director envisions a wider role.<lb/>
Expanding our activities<lb/>
throughout the Southeast United<lb/>
States is a realistic expectation in a<lb/>
few years savs Dr. Henry C.<lb/>
Ferrell Jr ECU history professor<lb/>
and director of the institute.<lb/>
The institute is planned to serve<lb/>
as a clearinghgpuse to bring social<lb/>
sciences and humanities re-<lb/>
sources and expertise together to<lb/>
preserve the cultural heritage of<lb/>
the region which comprises<lb/>
roughly one-third of the state.<lb/>
Ferret savs it plans to work with<lb/>
Singh<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
social events, "I think we should<lb/>
provide more services like Bare-<lb/>
foot on the Mall he said.<lb/>
"I believe that Greek organiza-<lb/>
tions provide an invaluable serv-<lb/>
ice with their charity work<lb/>
Singh said. He wants to work<lb/>
closely with the Greek system, "I<lb/>
could better represent the Greek<lb/>
system as a whole, I would not be<lb/>
partial to one or the other of the<lb/>
Greek houses<lb/>
The last point that Amar<lb/>
wanted to make was that there<lb/>
were too many "ego boosters" in<lb/>
theSGA'spast.<lb/>
local historical associations,<lb/>
county commissions and other<lb/>
government and quasi-govern-<lb/>
mental organizations and agen-<lb/>
cies "to identify and develop proj-<lb/>
ects to reaffirm and restore our<lb/>
knowledge of the past<lb/>
Established originally as the In-<lb/>
stitute for Historical Research in<lb/>
Tobacco in 1972, a component<lb/>
which was renewed in 1978, it has<lb/>
now been revamped as to title and<lb/>
mission in the university's plan or<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
Under a new charter, the pur-<lb/>
Shore calls for<lb/>
more security<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
would hate for a rape or assault to<lb/>
happen before it starts again She<lb/>
said she hopes it will not take an<lb/>
incident to make people aware of<lb/>
the "things that go on for the pro-<lb/>
tection of students<lb/>
"I've noticed that securitv has<lb/>
been checking the dorms more<lb/>
and I think it should continue<lb/>
said Shore. She said she thinks<lb/>
there should be more campus<lb/>
securitv.<lb/>
Shore said, "Education and<lb/>
politics go hand and hand She<lb/>
said she feels she can get to more<lb/>
people, because she has been in-<lb/>
volved in many different areas on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Shore has worked on the legis-<lb/>
lature for the last two years and<lb/>
said she enjoys what she is doing.<lb/>
pose is described as the coordinat-<lb/>
ing of efforts that would "eventu-<lb/>
ally result in grant acquistions,<lb/>
publications, performances,<lb/>
symposia and collections of his-<lb/>
torical and cultural material it<lb/>
would serve as agent between<lb/>
those persons, agencies and gov-<lb/>
ernment units "desiring the serv-<lb/>
ices of scholars and students to<lb/>
discover, record and review the<lb/>
cultural and historical past<lb/>
Ferrell said the institute will<lb/>
also provide consultants for such<lb/>
projects including media produc-<lb/>
tions such as slide shows and live<lb/>
performaces such as outdoor dra-<lb/>
mas.<lb/>
"We have a lot of skills and<lb/>
know-how on our faculty Fer-<lb/>
rell said. Consultants and project<lb/>
teams may be drawn from such<lb/>
Sommers<lb/>
wants freedom<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
The drinking law and the mari-<lb/>
juana resolution passed in SGA<lb/>
make students more like crimi-<lb/>
nals, instead of less like them, said<lb/>
Sommers. The law "makes them<lb/>
lie, cheat, and forge drivers li-<lb/>
censes. Paternal laws have no<lb/>
business on law books, especially<lb/>
at the University level<lb/>
Sommers said: "I joined SGA<lb/>
because I was tired of seeing stu-<lb/>
dents being stepped on. Now I see<lb/>
students being stepped on more<lb/>
and more, and I want to do some-<lb/>
thing about that<lb/>
disciplines as anthropology,<lb/>
medicine, music, art, theatre art,<lb/>
and others, he said museums and<lb/>
archival preservation will be<lb/>
important parts of the work.<lb/>
In addition, he said, the insti-<lb/>
tute plans to be involved in short<lb/>
courses to provide instruction, in<lb/>
technical services and research<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
Administratively, the institute<lb/>
is a part of the program of the ECU<lb/>
Department of History, College of<lb/>
Arts and Sciences.<lb/>
Jones calls for<lb/>
cooperation<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
She would like to see the SGA<lb/>
work with Public Safety in mak-<lb/>
ing a booklet on crimes that hap-<lb/>
pen on campus and the possible<lb/>
punishment that can come about,<lb/>
"The rules are in the student<lb/>
handbook, but students do not<lb/>
take the time to read through the<lb/>
whole thing she said. Jones said<lb/>
the book would deal mainly with<lb/>
campus crimes.<lb/>
Jones wants to also address the<lb/>
current parking problem. She also<lb/>
wants more student input than in<lb/>
the past. Shr said if students have<lb/>
a question, she doesn't want them<lb/>
to hesitate to come and see her, "I<lb/>
want students to know that the<lb/>
vice presidents office is the place<lb/>
to go with a problem she said.<lb/>
AIDS and hepatitis will be dis-<lb/>
cussed. Classes arc limited to 20<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Morgan said similar classes will<lb/>
be offered to faculty and staff in<lb/>
April. She added that after evalu-<lb/>
ating the classes, a decision will be<lb/>
made whether classes will be of-<lb/>
fered for Fall.<lb/>
Morgan said that the classes<lb/>
consist of videos, slides of differ-<lb/>
ent STDs and their symptoms. She<lb/>
said, "The class is an hour long,<lb/>
but the length really depends on<lb/>
the questions the class asks. We<lb/>
have marketed these classes as<lb/>
discussion and not a lecture<lb/>
Morgan could not estimate the<lb/>
number of students the Student<lb/>
Health Service treats for STDs but<lb/>
she did say that chlamydia is the<lb/>
most frequently treated disease<lb/>
She added, "Chlamydia is a dis-<lb/>
ease people aren't aware of<lb/>
She said, "I hope we can get<lb/>
across to the student how very<lb/>
important this is  it's just a real<lb/>
concern that the nursing staff and<lb/>
the whole staff has here. We want<lb/>
people to be aware that these<lb/>
classes are being offered<lb/>
STD testing is available at the<lb/>
Student Health Services. Testing<lb/>
for all STDs is free, except for ch-<lb/>
lamydia testing, which is $5<lb/>
There is a fee for AIDS testing, but<lb/>
Morgan said that the Greenville<lb/>
Health Department does AIDS<lb/>
testing free of charge.<lb/>
Bartlett says students need defense for rights<lb/>
"Continued from page 1<lb/>
topic ? and have a better chance<lb/>
of being heard.<lb/>
Bartlett said he would also like<lb/>
to promote students' rights more.<lb/>
He feels that there are certain is-<lb/>
sues in which some students'<lb/>
rights are being infringed upon or<lb/>
?ven violated, and he feels pre-<lb/>
pared to speak out on these topics.<lb/>
In this area he is also prepared to<lb/>
get the popular student opinion,<lb/>
and take that opinion to the gov-<lb/>
erning bodies with him. 'There<lb/>
are a lot of things that people talk<lb/>
about that they don't like, but it<lb/>
never goes any farther than talk. I<lb/>
would like to do something about<lb/>
some of these thing he said.<lb/>
He said he also would like to<lb/>
upgrade the school's opinion in<lb/>
the public eye ? to downplay the<lb/>
image of ECU being known as a<lb/>
"party school" or a "second-rate<lb/>
college He feels these labels are<lb/>
misleading, and would like to<lb/>
attempt to do something about<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Another one of Bartlctt's major<lb/>
campaign issues is campus beau-<lb/>
Tification ? more specifically, the<lb/>
building of a bell tower on cam-<lb/>
pus. Bartlett said this campus<lb/>
should have a bell tower as a dis-<lb/>
tinguishing landmark, and that it<lb/>
would give the campus and the<lb/>
student body more of a sense of<lb/>
dignity and pride. He says that a<lb/>
bell tower is possible, and feasible<lb/>
both location-wise and finan-<lb/>
cially.<lb/>
Bartlett feels he is the most<lb/>
qualified candidate for the office<lb/>
of SGA president. He said that<lb/>
although he has not participated<lb/>
in a multitude of student activi-<lb/>
ties, he has put his all into those<lb/>
activities in which he has taken<lb/>
part. He feels his participation in<lb/>
the NC Student Legislature, in<lb/>
particular, has taught him some<lb/>
very important skills in the ways<lb/>
of debate, public speaking and<lb/>
communication. He said experi-<lb/>
ence in the NCSL has also taught<lb/>
him how to get things done ? he<lb/>
has interviewed, and set up<lb/>
committees for various projects.<lb/>
He said the NCSL has brought out<lb/>
a lot of leadership qualities in him.<lb/>
Finally, Bartlett said that he sees<lb/>
the presidency as a challenge, but<lb/>
a very desirable challenge. He<lb/>
said that he sees several areas in<lb/>
this campus that need to be<lb/>
worked on, and that he would like<lb/>
the privilege of serving this uni-<lb/>
versity as SGA president.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
PARADISE<lb/>
IJheMft<lb/>
Sttp MMO P?ret?<lb/>
Sttp Out n Style<lb/>
k<lb/>
r<lb/>
'SL<lb/>
329 Arlington<lb/>
Blvd.<lb/>
756-1579<lb/>
bure<lb/>
smart enough<lb/>
to calculate<lb/>
the size of a<lb/>
Hydrogen -<lb/>
atom.<lb/>
Andyou re ?<lb/>
still smoking?<lb/>
ATiTIC<lb/>
CdMedY<lb/>
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5th St. Entrance<lb/>
Now Open<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
ALL HAIR SERVICES<lb/>
MAKEUPMANICURES<lb/>
TANNING BEDS<lb/>
Tanning Bed Specials:<lb/>
1 Year of Unlimited Visits $100.00<lb/>
10 Visits $40.00<lb/>
1 Visit $6.00<lb/>
PETEY HATHAWAY, Owner<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
ICC WATER<lb/>
MANSION<lb/>
IICE WATER<lb/>
MANSION<lb/>
Wear Green<lb/>
Receive Free Pass<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
St. Patty's Day<lb/>
Hangover<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
The<lb/>
Usuals<lb/>
The<lb/>
Usuals<lb/>
Non Stop Patty Rock<lb/>
It's your chance to find out about<lb/>
VH-88W<lb/>
. u j. ii t.<lb/>
Lrvoiqqfi k urrt utwnhW<lb/>
<lb/>
b QR??k <lb/>
m<lb/>
e<lb/>
Sorority 1988 Fall Rush Interest Meeting<lb/>
Thursday, March 24, 1988<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Dress: Casual<lb/>
For More Information: 757-682<lb/>
PLYMOUTH ?<lb/>
CAREER SEARCH WORKSHOP<lb/>
lb<lb/>
HOWTORND<lb/>
THE RIGHT JOB<lb/>
? NEW CAREER OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
INTERVIEW TECHNIQUES<lb/>
DRESSING TIPS<lb/>
nu si mi n n<lb/>
CAREERS<lb/>
i<lb/>
General Workshop: Monday. March 21: 1:00 &amp; 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Jenkins Art Building Auditorium<lb/>
Co-sponsored by Career Planning and Placement Center, 8RA and CTA<lb/>
Career<lb/>
Have you thought about whal<lb/>
you plan to do when you get oul<lb/>
of college? Many students will <lb/>
enter the job market in hopes of<lb/>
finding that perfect job, the one<lb/>
that will lead them to a long an<lb/>
promising career in their chosei<lb/>
Distingui<lb/>
ECU New. ButTiL<lb/>
GREENVILLE? A scries 0<lb/>
seminars and workshops fc<lb/>
teachers and school administn<lb/>
tors will be presented at Ea<lb/>
Carolina University in March anj<lb/>
April by three scholars in the Di<lb/>
tinguished Visiting Scholars Pn<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Dr. Donald Cruickshank, a pre<lb/>
fessor of education at Ohio Stal<lb/>
University will open the series cJ<lb/>
March 24. Cruickshank will<lb/>
SRAs<lb/>
The SRA spring dance "<lb/>
Night in Bangogk" will be Fnc<lb/>
night in the Holodome at<lb/>
Holiday Inn. The dance will stl<lb/>
at 9 p.m. and will last until 1 a(<lb/>
There will be a live DJ, Ma<lb/>
Callahan from WRAL ra<lb/>
station in Raleigh, a cash bar.<lb/>
food. The SGA buses will<lb/>
providing transportation to<lb/>
Tuitio<lb/>
(CPS)?Tuition rates are goi<lb/>
up again next fall, but not quite<lb/>
steeply as they rose last yc<lb/>
observers say.<lb/>
Regents and trustees typia<lb/>
set tuitions durning their Janui<lb/>
and February board mectn<lb/>
where initial reports suggest i<lb/>
students will pay from 6 to<lb/>
percent more to go to college<lb/>
1988-89.<lb/>
Last week, for example, Dj<lb/>
 University trustees approve<lb/>
7.5 percent tuition hike at<lb/>
Madison, N.J school, while "<lb/>
versity of New Mexico Presu<lb/>
Gerald May announced lr<lb/>
would cost 10 percent in JulyJ<lb/>
It's good news to some obs<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
The rate of increase has<lb/>
moderating over the last<lb/>
years said Meredith Ludwij<lb/>
the American Association of Sj<lb/>
Colleges and Universif<lb/>
(AASCU), a Washington,<lb/>
coalition of public campus 1<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
"For the 1988-89 academic <lb/>
we're predicting tuition wil<lb/>
up 6 percent at public schools<lb/>
7 percent at private schoc<lb/>
explained Pat Smith of the Ai<lb/>
can Council of Education (Aj<lb/>
"But we're currently revising<lb/>
predictions, and if not!<lb/>
changes dramatically the rat<lb/>
increase for public college tu<lb/>
might even be lower than 6<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
Tuition costs skyrocket<lb/>
tween the 1976-77 and 19?<lb/>
academic years, noted Norj<lb/>
Brandt of the US. Departme<lb/>
: Education. During that pel<lb/>
? public school tuition increl<lb/>
j 130 percent. Private college!<lb/>
? tion rose 153 percent.<lb/>
But Brandt added ruitioi<lb/>
 been rising more slowly the<lb/>
? years.<lb/>
Still, national averages are<lb/>
; consolation to students at scl<lb/>
: that will be increasing theii<lb/>
3 tion by hefty percentages ne<lb/>
Michigan State and New<lb/>
? leans'Loyola University stu<lb/>
 face 10 percent hikes. Y(<lb/>
 stown State students will<lb/>
percent more.<lb/>
Thanks to an 85 percent<lb/>
 hike, it will cost most st<lb/>
more than $20,000 to go<lb/>
University of Southern Cal<lb/>
next year, which puts it<lb/>
same cost league as the<lb/>
most selective schools.<lb/>
While the general inflatij<lb/>
for the year is under 4<lb/>
Virginia's Mary B<lb/>
E College's tuition will rise<lb/>
cent, Missouri's Stp<lb/>
5 College's 7 percent an<lb/>
s Hampshire's Dart)<lb/>
College's 6.4 percent.<lb/>
Critics like U.S. Sec. of<lb/>
tion William Bennett, of.<lb/>
have been blasting cam<lb/>
pushing tuition up faster<lb/>
inflation rate, while ec<lb/>
reply Bennett is ignorii<lb/>
expensive it is to run a c<lb/>
sCos are high, but<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17,1988<lb/>
nars<lb/>
she did say that chlamydia is the<lb/>
most frequently treated disease.<lb/>
She added Chlamydia is a dis<lb/>
ease people aren't aware of<lb/>
said, I hope we can g<lb/>
across to the student how very<lb/>
important this is  it's just a real<lb/>
concern that the nursing staff and<lb/>
w hole staff has here. We want<lb/>
people to be aware that these<lb/>
issc s are being ottered<lb/>
STD testing is available at the<lb/>
dent Health Sen ices. Testing<lb/>
- Ds is free, except for ch-<lb/>
ng, which is $5.<lb/>
rhere i?? a fee tor AIDS testing, but<lb/>
Morgan said that the Greenville<lb/>
.partment does AIDS<lb/>
free ot charge.<lb/>
521 Cotanche St.<lb/>
I 757-1666<lb/>
,t i<lb/>
atrick's Day<lb/>
il7th<lb/>
Johnson<lb/>
f , JT<lb/>
en Melon Margarita<lb/>
on the rocks<lb/>
$2L25reg.3.25<lb/>
n Lime Margarita on<lb/>
the rocks<lb/>
$1.95 reg. 2.95<lb/>
at<lb/>
r?-A?$?r t<lb/>
iinoviivo<lb/>
I<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
X Meeting<lb/>
?zt04l<lb/>
988<lb/>
'e li lation: 757-6823<lb/>
ir<lb/>
I0P<lb/>
TO FIND<lb/>
RIGHTJOB<lb/>
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
IMES<lb/>
riEW TECHNIQUES<lb/>
SING TIPS<lb/>
SESENTKD m<lb/>
AREERS<lb/>
&amp; 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Center, SRA and CTA<lb/>
Career planning workshop to be held Mon.<lb/>
Have you thought about what<lb/>
you plan to do when you get out<lb/>
of college? Many students will<lb/>
enter the job market in hopes of<lb/>
finding that perfect job, the one<lb/>
that will lead them to a long and<lb/>
promising career in their chosen<lb/>
field or profession. However,<lb/>
have you thought about the<lb/>
process involved in getting that<lb/>
all-important first major job? Or<lb/>
maybe what a potential<lb/>
employer looks for in a potential<lb/>
employee?<lb/>
These topics and others will be<lb/>
covered at the Chrysler-<lb/>
Plymouth Career Search<lb/>
Workshop, which will be held<lb/>
Monday in Jenkins Auditorium.<lb/>
The program is being presented<lb/>
by Business Week Careers<lb/>
magazine and co-sponsored by<lb/>
Career Planning &amp; Placement, the<lb/>
SRA and CTA, and will hold<lb/>
presentations at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.<lb/>
Each presentation will cover the<lb/>
following material:<lb/>
1) Resume techniques, such as<lb/>
what to include and not include in<lb/>
a resume, and basic resume<lb/>
techniques.<lb/>
Distinguished scholars offer seminar<lb/>
ECU New Bureau<lb/>
GREENVILLE? A series of<lb/>
seminars and workshops for<lb/>
teachers and school administra-<lb/>
tors will be presented at East<lb/>
Carolina University in March and<lb/>
April by three scholars in the Dis-<lb/>
tinguished Visiting Scholars Pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Dr. Donald Cruickshank, a pro-<lb/>
fessor of education at Ohio State<lb/>
University will open the series on<lb/>
March 24. Cruickshank will do<lb/>
three presentations on "Reflective<lb/>
Teaching a teaching concept for<lb/>
which he is internationally<lb/>
known.<lb/>
His first presentation, a two-<lb/>
hour workshop, wil begin at 9<lb/>
p.m. in Room 129 of the Speight<lb/>
(EducationPsychology) Build-<lb/>
ing. At 1 p.m. he will discuss his<lb/>
teacher education reform propos-<lb/>
als and at 3 p.m. he will demon-<lb/>
strate a method for helping teach-<lb/>
ers improve the clarity of their<lb/>
presentations.<lb/>
Other speakers participating in<lb/>
the series include Dr. Jonathan<lb/>
Sher of the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill who will<lb/>
visit on April 11. He will address<lb/>
the issue of "Preparing for the<lb/>
Real N.C. Schools<lb/>
Dr. Cecil Mercer of the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Florida, will conclude the<lb/>
series on April 20. he wil discuss<lb/>
"Teaching Students with Learn-<lb/>
ing Problems<lb/>
The Distinguished Visiting<lb/>
Scholars Program is aprt of a<lb/>
combined effort by ECU, Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College, Elizabeth City<lb/>
State University and N.C.<lb/>
Wesleyan College to bring out-<lb/>
standing visiting sacholars to<lb/>
education faculties. The program<lb/>
is funded by the University of<lb/>
North Carolina Board of Fover-<lb/>
nors.<lb/>
2) Cover letters, which can<lb/>
sometimes be a deciding factor in<lb/>
whether or not you get an<lb/>
interview.<lb/>
3) Interviewing, developing<lb/>
good interviewing skills,<lb/>
stressing the importance of<lb/>
proper appearance and eye<lb/>
contact.<lb/>
4) The importance of good<lb/>
follow-up techniques.<lb/>
The program will include<lb/>
videos and workshops on how<lb/>
not to get a job, how to do a self-<lb/>
assement, and how to maintain a<lb/>
positive attitude. Students<lb/>
should remember, however, that<lb/>
the workshop is not just for<lb/>
graduating seniors ? it is open to<lb/>
all students, and can be just as<lb/>
helpfel to the freshman or<lb/>
sophomore looking that summer<lb/>
job as to that senior seeking a full-<lb/>
time position with a successful<lb/>
firm. Career-seeking skills are<lb/>
always useful, no matter what<lb/>
type of job you are looking!<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
SRA semi-formal this weekend<lb/>
The SRA spring dance "One<lb/>
Night in Bangogk" will be Friday<lb/>
night in the Holodome at the<lb/>
Holidav Inn. The dance will start<lb/>
at 9 p.m. and will last until 1 a.m.<lb/>
There will be a live DJ, Marty<lb/>
Callahan from WRAL radio<lb/>
station in Raleigh, a cash bar, and<lb/>
food. The SGA buses will be<lb/>
providing transportation to and<lb/>
from the dance from 9 p.m. to 1<lb/>
a.m. The bus will depart on the<lb/>
hour from West Campus, at the<lb/>
Mendcnhall bus stop, at 10 past<lb/>
the hour from the parking lot of<lb/>
Umstead dorm, and from the hill<lb/>
at 20 after the hour.<lb/>
Tickets are still available from<lb/>
house council vice presidents for<lb/>
$3person and $5couple for<lb/>
SRA cardholders. Also, radio<lb/>
stations WZMB and WRQR will<lb/>
be giving away tickets to three<lb/>
callers. Be sure to get your tickets,<lb/>
as the dance promises to be a lot of<lb/>
fun!<lb/>
There will be a mandatory<lb/>
candidates meeting for everyone<lb/>
running for SRA offices March 24<lb/>
at 6 p.m. in room 221 Mendcnhall.<lb/>
There will be a mystery prize<lb/>
awarded to the Residence Hall<lb/>
that has the highest percentage of<lb/>
voter turnout in the SRA<lb/>
elections.<lb/>
In other announcements, the<lb/>
West Area games will be held<lb/>
April 5 from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. West<lb/>
Campus will also have a health<lb/>
fair on April 12.<lb/>
Tuition rises across the nation<lb/>
(CPS)?Tuition rates are going<lb/>
up again next fall, but not quite as<lb/>
steeply as they rose last year,<lb/>
observers say.<lb/>
Regents and trustees typically<lb/>
set tuitions durning their January<lb/>
and February board meetings,<lb/>
where initial reports suggest most<lb/>
students will pay from 6 to 10<lb/>
percent more to go to college in<lb/>
1988-89.<lb/>
Last week, for example, Drew<lb/>
 University trustees approved a<lb/>
7.5 percent tuition hike at the<lb/>
Madison, N.J school, while Uni-<lb/>
versity of New Mexico President<lb/>
Gerald May announced UNM<lb/>
would cost 10 percent in July.<lb/>
It's good news to some observ-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
The rate of increase has been<lb/>
moderating over the last few<lb/>
years said Meredith Ludwig of<lb/>
the American Association of State<lb/>
Colleges and Universities<lb/>
(AASCU), a Washington, D.C<lb/>
coalition of public campus lead-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
"For the 1988-89 academic year,<lb/>
we're predicting tuition will go<lb/>
up 6 percent at public schools and<lb/>
7 percent at private schools<lb/>
explained Pat Smith of the Ameri-<lb/>
can Council of Education (ACE).<lb/>
"But we're currently revising our<lb/>
predictions, and if nothing<lb/>
changes dramatically the rate of<lb/>
increase for public college tuition<lb/>
might even be lower than 6 per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
Tuition costs skyrocketed be-<lb/>
tween the 1976-77 and 1986-87<lb/>
academic years, noted Norman<lb/>
Brandt of the U.S. Department of<lb/>
Education. During that period,<lb/>
public school tuition increased<lb/>
130 percent. Private college tui-<lb/>
tion rose 153 percent.<lb/>
But Brandt added tuition has<lb/>
been rising more slowly the last 2<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Still, national averages are little<lb/>
consolation to students at schools<lb/>
that will be increasing their tui-<lb/>
tion by hefty percentages next fall.<lb/>
Michigan State and New Or-<lb/>
leans' Loyola University students<lb/>
face 10 percent hikes. Young-<lb/>
stown State students will pay 11<lb/>
percent more.<lb/>
Thanks to an 85 percent tuition<lb/>
hike, it will cost most students<lb/>
more than $20,000 to go to the<lb/>
University of Southern California<lb/>
next year, which puts it in the<lb/>
same cost league as the nation's<lb/>
most selective schools.<lb/>
While the general inflation rate<lb/>
for the year is under 4 percent,<lb/>
Virginia's Mary Baldwin<lb/>
College's tuition will rise 8 per-<lb/>
cent, Missouri's Stephens<lb/>
College's 7 percent and New<lb/>
Hampshire's Dartmouth<lb/>
College's 6.4 percent.<lb/>
Critics like U.S. Sec. of Educa-<lb/>
tion William Bennett, of course,<lb/>
have been blasting campuses for<lb/>
pushing tuition up faster than the<lb/>
inflation rate, while educators<lb/>
reply Bennett is ignoring how<lb/>
expensive it is to run a college.<lb/>
"Costs are high, but colleges<lb/>
aren't ripping us off either sid<lb/>
Brandt.<lb/>
The costs of goods and services<lb/>
colleges buy, said Julianne Still<lb/>
Thrift of the National Association<lb/>
of Independent Colleges and<lb/>
Universities (NAICU), have in-<lb/>
creased faster than consumer<lb/>
goods the government monitors<lb/>
when determining inflation rates.<lb/>
Utility rates, maintenance and<lb/>
construction costs have risen dra-<lb/>
matically in recent years, she said,<lb/>
and colleges have no other choice<lb/>
but to pass those costs on to stu-<lb/>
dents as state and federal govern-<lb/>
ments chip in less money than in<lb/>
the past.<lb/>
"State legislatures were willing<lb/>
to let tuition rise to improve or<lb/>
protect the quality of their institu-<lb/>
tions. But they don't want to raise<lb/>
taxes (to raise more money to help<lb/>
colleges pay for the improve-<lb/>
ments) ACE's Smith observed.<lb/>
But states facing economic<lb/>
problems in recent years have<lb/>
"been doing better said Ludwig,<lb/>
and as state funding increases,<lb/>
tuition hikes decrease.<lb/>
Colleges also used the early '80s<lb/>
? a period of low inflation ?<lb/>
increase faculty and staff salaries.<lb/>
Between 1973 and 1981, faculty<lb/>
members have lost 28 percent of<lb/>
their actual spending power, said<lb/>
Thrift, and even after the recent<lb/>
increases, few have regained past<lb/>
spending power.<lb/>
Most schools, said Ludwig,<lb/>
feel the salary increases and capi-<lb/>
tal improvement projects of re-<lb/>
cent years will be enough to tide<lb/>
them over for a while, and, com-<lb/>
bined with higher state funding,<lb/>
tuition will stabilize.<lb/>
Despite a shrinking pool of 18-<lb/>
to -24 year olds, college enroll-<lb/>
ment continues to increase as<lb/>
more minorities, women and<lb/>
older men attend college. But the<lb/>
new students cost more to edu-<lb/>
cate.<lb/>
"The competition between<lb/>
schools for students has increased<lb/>
dramatically, and schools need to<lb/>
improve their quality and equip-<lb/>
ment to retain them said Thrift.<lb/>
"Increased enrollment Brandt<lb/>
agreed, "may not be a boon for all<lb/>
schools<lb/>
Campuses also need to raise<lb/>
tuition to get money to provide<lb/>
financial aid to their poorer stu-<lb/>
dents, he said.<lb/>
"Institutions now have to offer<lb/>
aid from their own sources" be-<lb/>
cause the federal government no<lb/>
longer supplies enough money to<lb/>
get students through college,<lb/>
Brandt contended.<lb/>
"They're taking from the rich to<lb/>
ivc to the poor<lb/>
Brandt reported federal student<lb/>
aid supplied $15.9 billion to stu-<lb/>
dents during the 1985-86 school<lb/>
year, but, thanks to inflation, it<lb/>
bought about $1 billion less edu<lb/>
cation than a decade earlier.<lb/>
5W? Slut ffiarnltaten<lb/>
Serving the Exist Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
James F. J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Anne Leigh Mallory James Russo<lb/>
Shari Clemens Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Maria Bell<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTI ILY RATES<lb/>
0 49 Column inches$4 25<lb/>
50-994.15<lb/>
100-1494.05<lb/>
150-1993.95<lb/>
200-2493.85<lb/>
250 and above3.75<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in Addition to Regular Space Rale)<lb/>
One color and black$90.00<lb/>
Two colors and black155.00<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
5.000 or less6g each<lb/>
5.001 - 10,0005.5?each<lb/>
10,001-12,000 5c each<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Phones<lb/>
.757-6366757-6557<lb/>
757-6558757-6309<lb/>
FEED 4<lb/>
FOR$7.<lb/>
HIGH-TECH HASN'T<lb/>
MADE US LOSE OUR TOUCH,<lb/>
As an Army Nurse, you'll be introduced to some of<lb/>
the most advanced technology available. But that won't<lb/>
keep you from working with your patients on a one-to-one<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
You'll be an integral part of the Army health care<lb/>
team: top-quality professionals who share the same high<lb/>
goals with you. In fact, among Army nurses, 99 hold<lb/>
BSN degrees and over 25 have Masters.<lb/>
The Army Nurse Corps. Highly advanced, highly<lb/>
rewarding. Get in touch with us, by calling your local<lb/>
Army Nurse Corps Recruiter today.<lb/>
Sgt 1" Class Crocker<lb/>
467-2500 (call collect) or 1-800-662-7473<lb/>
ARMY NURSE CORPS.<lb/>
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
i<lb/>
i'<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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i<lb/>
i<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i'<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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r<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
i'<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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i<lb/>
$1.75<lb/>
2 PIECES OF CHICKEN (Original Recipe or Extra Crispy)<lb/>
1 MASHED POM) AND GRAVY<lb/>
1 BISCUIT<lb/>
for only $1.75 with this coupon. Limit one package per coupon, four coupons<lb/>
per customer. Good on combination orders only. Customer pays all applicable<lb/>
sales tax. Coupon Expires: March 31,1988<lb/>
Kentucky fried Chicken ?<lb/>
1.75<lb/>
2 PIECES OF CHICKEN (Original Recipe or Extra Crispy)<lb/>
1 MASHED POTATO AND GRAVY<lb/>
1 BISCUIT<lb/>
. .for only $1.75 with this coupon, limit one package per coupon .four coupons<lb/>
per customer. Good on combination orders only. Customer pays all applicable<lb/>
sales tax. Coupon Expires: March 31,1988<lb/>
Kentucky Fried Chicken<lb/>
1.75<lb/>
2 PIECES OF CHICKEN (Original Recipe or Extra Crispy)<lb/>
1 MASHED POTATO AND GRAVY<lb/>
1 BISCUIT<lb/>
 .for only1.75 with this coupon. Limit one package per coupon, four coupons<lb/>
per customer. Good on combination orders only. Customer pays all applicable<lb/>
sales tax.Coupon Expires: March 31,1988<lb/>
Kentucky ftied Chicken<lb/>
$<lb/>
2 PIECES OF CHICKEN (Original Recipe or Extra Crispy)<lb/>
i MASHED POTATO AND GRAVY<lb/>
1 BISCUIT<lb/>
 for only $1.75 with this coupon, limit one package per coupon, four coupons<lb/>
per customer. Good on combination orders only. Customer pays all applicable<lb/>
sales tax. Coupon Expires: March 31,1988<lb/>
1.75<lb/>
Kentucky Fried Chicken<lb/>
Coupons Good at: Greenville. Tarboro, Wilson, Goldsboro,<lb/>
Wllliamston, Jacksonville, and Kins ton.<lb/>
-? p<lb/>
I fc?JH ?Mli ??)?<lb/>
"?"?-  I? ????"J??l"l<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0004"/><lb/>
Uftfz Saat QlutBlimun<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Daniel Maurer, - ??- L<lb/>
Clay Deanhardt, mm<lb/>
James F.l. McKee, iwhuhtfAdmtm<lb/>
Tim Chandler, ?Wr? u.<lb/>
Joi in Carter, mm ea<lb/>
Mici ielle England, cm? m,<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, s?.<lb/>
JEFF PARKER,toaHt?i?<lb/>
TOM FURR, QmfaliM .KUiuger<lb/>
Mike Upci iurci t, p. u<lb/>
JOHNW. MEDUN,vwd???<lb/>
Mar ch 17 1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Endorsements<lb/>
How we decide<lb/>
With SGA elections approaching will be based on a consensus, or it<lb/>
next week, it is almost time for The none can be reached, by majority<lb/>
East Carolinian to make its annual<lb/>
candidate endorsements.<lb/>
Last year there was great contro-<lb/>
versy over the endorsement, and<lb/>
many accused the newspaper of<lb/>
being a "biased rag To the con-<lb/>
vote. It is that endorsement which<lb/>
you will see in Tuesday's paper.<lb/>
Remember, the endorsement is the<lb/>
opinion of the entire board, but it in<lb/>
many ways reilects the opinions of a<lb/>
large number of students. The mem<lb/>
v<lb/>
ALL X IMP WAS ATT A PASH OF 'GLASNOSVI<lb/>
'<lb/>
trarv, candidate endorsements are bers of the editorial board, because<lb/>
an important part of a newspapers of their jobs, often know a great deal<lb/>
function. In a situation such as ours, about what goes on within the uni-<lb/>
where the campaign time is so short, versity and what issues are impor-<lb/>
the candidate endorsement be- tant. This is an educated decision,<lb/>
comes even more important as a not a popularity contest. Indeed, the<lb/>
suggestion or recommendation for board is offering a service to the<lb/>
our next campus leader. student body since it is one of the<lb/>
However, it is important that the few groups of students that will sit<lb/>
student body understands how this down with each candidate, indi<lb/>
endorsement will be obtained. viduallv. for 30 minutes to Question<lb/>
The Editorial Board of The East them on important campus issues.<lb/>
Carolinian (the general manager,<lb/>
managing editor, news editor, fea-<lb/>
tures editor and sports editor) has<lb/>
Bonehead reaps some ironic praise<lb/>
The endorsements on Tuesda<lb/>
will contain more than a simple<lb/>
scheduled interviews with all the statement oi whom the board de<lb/>
presidential and vice presidential cides to support It will also contain<lb/>
candidates Each candidate will be the reasons for that endorsement<lb/>
asked to make a short presentation, and try to present a fair picture oi th?<lb/>
followed by questioning from tru<lb/>
board.<lb/>
When all the interviews are com-<lb/>
plete, the board will meet again and<lb/>
decide on which candidates to en-<lb/>
dorse for each office. The decision<lb/>
candidates endorsed<lb/>
It is the hope oi the board that In<lb/>
explaining these procedures in ad-<lb/>
vance, the controversy that raged<lb/>
across the campus last year can be<lb/>
averted.<lb/>
B&amp;T IT, 6?0R6?<lb/>
Ml I<lb/>
NEW DESIGN FOR<lb/>
MOUNT RUSHMOREW88S&amp;?<lb/>
GEPHARPT<lb/>
mmfiSmmtimmS&amp;i? iwmc f&amp;rnjur-svAj -<lb/>
i<lb/>
SGA Legislator supports Jones forVP?' d? ?????piy 'a<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I cannot tell you how pleased I am<lb/>
that the editors of this newspaper<lb/>
include such witty, insightful, infor-<lb/>
mative and stimulating articles as<lb/>
those by the wonderful writer,<lb/>
Chippy Bonehead.<lb/>
These articles are not only enter-<lb/>
taining, but newsworthy as well.<lb/>
What informed, educated citizen<lb/>
would miss this bi-weekly informa-<lb/>
tion? 1 anxiously await, thumbs twid-<lb/>
dling and heart skipping, by the<lb/>
Publications Building each time The<lb/>
Fast Carolinian is published. And<lb/>
the humor! What can I say? It defi-<lb/>
nitely gets three "ha's" on the ha<lb/>
scale. (The "palsied tongues" of "old,<lb/>
wierd, flabby" people, for example.)<lb/>
In addition, Chippy is more insight-<lb/>
ful and stimulating regarding social<lb/>
matters than Abigail will ever be. I,<lb/>
for one, will always follow his advice:<lb/>
Laugh at fat girls' poetry, and avoid<lb/>
helping people with Alzheimer's dis-<lb/>
ease. And I will always, always con-<lb/>
sider suicide when I have a problem.<lb/>
I realize I am probably the only one<lb/>
who adores this brilliant writer; so,<lb/>
please don't ever remove this column<lb/>
from The East Carolinian. If you did,<lb/>
you would surely lose advertisers<lb/>
and readers, as well as journalists<lb/>
who are acquiring valuable experi-<lb/>
ence by writing for such a prestigious,<lb/>
honorable student newspaper<lb/>
Angela Lingerfclt Bland<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
English<lb/>
ROTC Backlash<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I would like to respond to Gary<lb/>
Sanderson's letter, which fervently<lb/>
defended ROTC and the Armed<lb/>
Forces of the United States of America.<lb/>
First of all, I feel that 1 must make it<lb/>
known to all that I am not a Commu-<lb/>
nist. My father, a LtC. in the U.S.<lb/>
Army, lost his homeland, Hungary,<lb/>
during their revolution in 1956.1 have<lb/>
visited communist Hungary and at-<lb/>
tended almost a semester of medical<lb/>
school there in an American-backed<lb/>
school and left due to security reasons<lb/>
for my father. I witnessed commu-<lb/>
nism and the problems it causes a<lb/>
nation firsthand and would not want<lb/>
to reside in a communist country.<lb/>
However, the "minority" who at-<lb/>
tack armed forces, which is not as<lb/>
small as some may think does not do<lb/>
so because we are ignorant to the<lb/>
Communists' forceful methods of<lb/>
obtaining power. We condemn armed<lb/>
forces, of any nation, because of moral<lb/>
reasons.<lb/>
Morality is what makes us human<lb/>
beings and allows us to share the earth<lb/>
without killing each other. We learn<lb/>
from early childhood to negotiate, or<lb/>
as Sesame Street taught us, to compro-<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I am writing this letter in support of<lb/>
SGA vice-presidential candidate<lb/>
Kelly Jones. I am qualified to write<lb/>
such a letter because I serve on the<lb/>
committee which she chairs - the Stu-<lb/>
dent Welfare Committee. Kelly<lb/>
worksdiligentlyasourchairanddoes<lb/>
not sit idly when nothing is sent to our<lb/>
committee for review; she, instead,<lb/>
pounds the pavement looking for<lb/>
matters of importance to the students<lb/>
and brings these matters before our<lb/>
group. Under her able leadership, our<lb/>
committee has sponsored several<lb/>
resolutions: a resolution supporting a<lb/>
mandatory test before official drop<lb/>
date policy, now before the faculty<lb/>
senate; a resolution supporting the<lb/>
repainting of the street in front of the<lb/>
student store; a resolution supporting<lb/>
not paving the marching band field,<lb/>
which is used by many, many stu-<lb/>
dents, and recently passed by ac-<lb/>
anyone who defends ROTC or the<lb/>
armed forces is a child; I am simply<lb/>
making a point. Without a compro-<lb/>
claimation, a resolution supporting mise, known in more adult terms as a<lb/>
the updating of the campus lighting treaty, the earth would be a battle-<lb/>
system. Kelly, in fact, authored two of ground and not the life sheltering<lb/>
these resolutions - testing and light- resource that it was meant to be. Cer-<lb/>
ing, so obviously she makes things for tainly the Communists have learned<lb/>
us to do and, in so doing, works for the same moral lessons that we have<lb/>
the students. or they would have killed each other<lb/>
I cannot think of a better place for a off by now.<lb/>
vice-president to start than as Student That brings me to another moral<lb/>
Welfare chair. After serving as chair, issue, that of taking another's life.<lb/>
Kelly surely has a feel for the needs When one learns useful skills in the<lb/>
and concerns of the students; such an military, heshe is taught to target<lb/>
idea is necessary in order to be a sue- threatening military installations with<lb/>
cessful vice-president. as few civilian casualties as possible.<lb/>
Join me in supporting the best can- Realize that these few hundred or<lb/>
didatc - the most qualified candidate thousand civilian casualties are actu-<lb/>
- for the job of SGA vice-president, ally human beings with families, jobs,<lb/>
Vote Kelly Jones on Wednesday, dreams and aspirations much like<lb/>
March 23. yours.<lb/>
In Hungary I observed that the<lb/>
John Howard majority of the population was not<lb/>
Freshman communist, though they may be reg-<lb/>
 Business istered as such. They did not hold<lb/>
communist ideals or care to uphold<lb/>
them. If we bomb these "Commu-<lb/>
nists how will they ever be able to<lb/>
change their stifling governments?<lb/>
Dead men and women and children<lb/>
cannot make changes.<lb/>
I feel sad for those who feel that the<lb/>
only job opportunities they have in<lb/>
our nation, the nation which you so<lb/>
rightfully defend, would have to turn<lb/>
to an employment which trains them<lb/>
to take others' lives. If we do have<lb/>
such an unemployment problem in<lb/>
our country, then where is all the<lb/>
money coming from to fund and<lb/>
build our large armed forces and<lb/>
missile supply. It seems to me that<lb/>
killing people to some is just an in-<lb/>
dustry, a job market.<lb/>
I end by reiterating that I am not a<lb/>
Communist. I also do not feel that I<lb/>
should lead a life filled with fear and<lb/>
intimidation because life to me is a<lb/>
positive not a negative experience. I<lb/>
merely do not see the point in killing,<lb/>
when there are peaceful alternatives.<lb/>
And for those of you who feel that I<lb/>
am naive or too trusting of the Com-<lb/>
munists, I have one thing to say: The<lb/>
future of our planet can go in two<lb/>
directions: destruction or reconcili-<lb/>
ation. You decide.<lb/>
One more thing I, too, hope the<lb/>
vandalist is caught.<lb/>
Tonya Batizv<lb/>
English<lb/>
US is Defenseless<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
The United States is completely<lb/>
defenseless against any nuclear at-<lb/>
tack, whether accidental or deliber-<lb/>
ate. Did you know this? We are com-<lb/>
pletely defenseless! Does this fact<lb/>
scare you? Or do you just try to cope<lb/>
with it by shutting it out of your<lb/>
mind?<lb/>
Imagine the following two scenar-<lb/>
ios: 1. You're watching the six o'clock<lb/>
news one evening and suddenly a<lb/>
special bulletin interrupts the usual<lb/>
show. The President is on TV. He<lb/>
says, "I'm deeply saddened by and<lb/>
regret that I have to tell you about<lb/>
what has just occurred. The USSR<lb/>
fired 100 ICBMs toward the U.S. fif-<lb/>
teen minutes ago, and they will hit us<lb/>
in fifteen minutes. Millions and mil-<lb/>
lions of you will be annihilated, and<lb/>
we can do nothing to stop this from<lb/>
occurring. However, rest assured and<lb/>
take heart at the fact that we retaliated<lb/>
ten minutes ago and that in twenty<lb/>
minutes, our missiles will incinerate<lb/>
millions of Russian citizens. Good<lb/>
night<lb/>
Given our present "defensive" pol-<lb/>
icy, Mutual Assured Destruction<lb/>
(MAD), the scenario above could<lb/>
very well become reality. The U.S. has<lb/>
followed this policy since 1972. Con-<lb/>
trast this scene of despair, doom,<lb/>
destruction, and death with the fol-<lb/>
lowing scenario which would occur if<lb/>
the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI)<lb/>
Space Shield were deployed and<lb/>
ready:<lb/>
2. You're watching the six o'clock<lb/>
news one evening and suddenly a<lb/>
special bulletin interrupts the usual<lb/>
show. The President is on TV. He<lb/>
says, "The USSR fired 100 ICBMs<lb/>
toward the U.S. fifteen minutes ago.<lb/>
However, we citizens of the U.S. can<lb/>
take heart and rest assured at the fact<lb/>
that virtually all of those missiles will<lb/>
be destroyed in mid-air over the At-<lb/>
lantic and Pacific oceans. No retali-<lb/>
ation on our part will be necessary<lb/>
and thus no Russian citizens will be<lb/>
killed. Thank God for SDI. Millions of<lb/>
people, Americans and Russians<lb/>
alike, would be dead in twenty min-<lb/>
utes if it were not for its defensive<lb/>
protection. Good night<lb/>
How could anyone be against pro-<lb/>
tecting thiscountry and our lives with<lb/>
bUI? Who could be against defending<lb/>
oursckes against horrible death and<lb/>
destruction I'll tell von who liberals<lb/>
Some liberals say, "use SDI as a<lb/>
bargaining chip Others sav, "SDI<lb/>
needs at least ten more years of re-<lb/>
search, so meanwhile let's extend the<lb/>
MAI Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty of<lb/>
197? TTiis will promote 'arms control'<lb/>
and it won t hurt us because bDI isn't<lb/>
ready to build anyway As usual,<lb/>
liberals are wrong and dangerously<lb/>
so.<lb/>
Liberals attack SDI by making the<lb/>
following six claims:<lb/>
1. SDI will not work.<lb/>
False. On lune 10,1984, our Defense<lb/>
Department sent a missile up into<lb/>
space at 10,000 miles per hour where<lb/>
it scored a bull's-eye at a height of 100<lb/>
miles against another missile travel-<lb/>
ing at 10,000 miles per hour. This feat<lb/>
proved that we can accomplish the<lb/>
intercept, the most difficult part of the<lb/>
SDI system, right now! Thus the rest<lb/>
of SDI can be built and deployed in<lb/>
the near future.<lb/>
2. SDI won't be perfec<lb/>
Nothing's perfect, oi eoas?, W.<lb/>
SDI will certainly be more nearly<lb/>
perfect than any treaty. Even if SDI<lb/>
were only 90 perfect, that would<lb/>
provide real deterrence and therefore<lb/>
give us 100 protection. It the Soviets<lb/>
knew that nine, eight, or even seven<lb/>
out of every ten of their missile force<lb/>
would be shot down, leaving our<lb/>
missiles mostly undamaged, the So-<lb/>
viets wouldn't shoot any oi their<lb/>
missiles at us.<lb/>
3. SDI is too expensive.<lb/>
False. SDI will cost only about $30<lb/>
billion over the next seven vears. This<lb/>
figure compares favorably with the<lb/>
$40 billion we now spend to continue<lb/>
maintenance and modernization of<lb/>
the offensive nuclear missiles re-<lb/>
quired by our current MAD strategy.<lb/>
4. SDI would be useless because the<lb/>
Soviets would "overwhelm it with<lb/>
more offensive missiles.<lb/>
False. In order for the Soviets to<lb/>
build enough additional missiles to<lb/>
get through our SDI space shield, they<lb/>
would have to beef up their missile<lb/>
arsenal to ten times its present size.<lb/>
This would involve the building of<lb/>
5,000 additional ICBMs at a cost of $5<lb/>
trillion. And that is impossibly costly:<lb/>
the Soviets simply don't have the<lb/>
money.<lb/>
5. SDI would violate the MAD ABM<lb/>
Treaty of 1972.<lb/>
False. The 1972 ABM Treaty prohib-<lb/>
its onlv ar.ti-Ticjjp defenses that<lb/>
were "currcmiy' in use at the tune.<lb/>
The Soviets absolutely refused to<lb/>
limit future systems. In'fact, the Sovi-<lb/>
ets have been working on their own<lb/>
SDI since 1969 and have spent 15<lb/>
times more money on it than we have!<lb/>
6. SDI needs ten more years of re-<lb/>
search. Let's extend the MAD ABM<lb/>
Treaty during that time.<lb/>
False. This is a deliberate delaying<lb/>
tactic by liberals who are curiously<lb/>
comfortable with the concept of keep-<lb/>
ing the U S completely undefended.<lb/>
Look, SDI shouldn't be a partisan<lb/>
issue. We all need to be protected<lb/>
from nuclear disaster, liberals and<lb/>
conservative alike. I sincerely would<lb/>
like to know why in the world liberals<lb/>
are against a defensive system that<lb/>
would save millions of lives? I<lb/>
thought liberalsDemocrats were<lb/>
supposed to represent the "compas-<lb/>
sionate party<lb/>
SDI is a non-nuclear defensive sys-<lb/>
tem which destroys only weapons,<lb/>
not people ut's deploy SDI before<lb/>
llt?ntQ- Lct's?pbuilding bombs<lb/>
ho i " ? ,ets ? Protecting<lb/>
the lives of millions with solid defen<lb/>
sive deterrence. Let's deploy SDI<lb/>
now! r '<lb/>
The<lb/>
ar<lb/>
fo<lb/>
if<lb/>
I Hrd <lb/>
?Me<lb/>
the c<lb/>
?The<lb/>
quesq<lb/>
?Ther<lb/>
audie<lb/>
College Republicans<lb/>
This<lb/>
date<lb/>
the<lb/>
uni<lb/>
i<lb/>
V ? m ?,)?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17,1988<lb/>
NOT J<lb/>
lie praise<lb/>
be against defending<lb/>
orriblc death and<lb/>
II von who-liberals.<lb/>
use SDI as a<lb/>
Hhcrs say. "SDI<lb/>
nore years of re-<lb/>
le let's extend the<lb/>
Missile Treatv of<lb/>
to arms control'<lb/>
:vcauseSDIisn t<lb/>
d anyway As usual,<lb/>
g and dangerously<lb/>
- SDI by making the<lb/>
rk.<lb/>
m our Defense<lb/>
: a missile up into<lb/>
miles per hour where<lb/>
ve at a height of 100<lb/>
another missile travel-<lb/>
- per hour. This feat<lb/>
an accomplish the<lb/>
difficult part of the<lb/>
: now! Thus the rest<lb/>
lilt and deployed in<lb/>
be perfect<lb/>
x:nci:t, A course, but<lb/>
. be more nearly<lb/>
treaty. Even if SDI<lb/>
perfect, that would<lb/>
renee and therefore<lb/>
lection. If the Soviets<lb/>
ght, or even seven<lb/>
ry tei I their missile force<lb/>
town, leaving our<lb/>
ndamaged, the So-<lb/>
In't shoot anv of their<lb/>
J<lb/>
expensive.<lb/>
cost only about $30<lb/>
next seven vears. This<lb/>
-<lb/>
favorably with the<lb/>
. o now spend to continue<lb/>
nance and modernization of<lb/>
ive nuclear missiles re-<lb/>
ur current MAD strategy.<lb/>
aid be useless because the<lb/>
d overwhelm" it with<lb/>
- missiles.<lb/>
rder for the Soviets to<lb/>
additional missiles to<lb/>
a r SDI space shield, they<lb/>
e to beef up their missile<lb/>
ton times its present size.<lb/>
d involve the building of<lb/>
b iditional ICBMs at a cost of $5<lb/>
And that is impossibly costly:<lb/>
nets simply don't have the<lb/>
I would violate the MAD ABM<lb/>
t-of 1972.<lb/>
The 1972 ABM Treaty prohib-<lb/>
rr ilc defenses that<lb/>
rurrcnuy in use at the tune.<lb/>
viets absolutely refused to<lb/>
future systems. In fact, the Sovi-<lb/>
e been working on their own<lb/>
jince 1969 and have spent 15<lb/>
Imore money on it than we have!<lb/>
DI needs ten more years of rc-<lb/>
Lct's extend the MAD ABM<lb/>
 during that time.<lb/>
e. This is a deliberate delaying<lb/>
by liberals who are curiously<lb/>
)r table with the concept of keep-<lb/>
r I completely undefended.<lb/>
kk, SDI shouldn't be a partisan<lb/>
We all need to be protected<lb/>
nuclear disaster, liberals and<lb/>
frvative alike. I sincerely would<lb/>
i know why in the world liberals<lb/>
gainst a defensive system that<lb/>
save millions of lives? I<lb/>
;ht liberalsDemocrats were<lb/>
)sed to represent the "compas-<lb/>
e party<lb/>
is a non-nuclear defensive sys-<lb/>
.hich destroys only weapons,<lb/>
rople. Let's deploy SDI before<lb/>
b late. Let's step building bombs<lb/>
pll people; lef s start protecting<lb/>
fes of millions with solid defen-<lb/>
ietcrrence. Let's deploy SDI<lb/>
College Republicans<lb/>
HEAR THE<lb/>
CANDIDATES SPEAK!<lb/>
The Media Board and<lb/>
The East Carolinia<lb/>
are sponsoring a candidate<lb/>
forum Monday from 2 p.m.<lb/>
until 4:30 p.m. on the mail.<lb/>
? Members of the campus media will ask<lb/>
the candidates questions.<lb/>
?The candidates will be allowed to ask<lb/>
questions of each other.<lb/>
?There will be a questioning period for the<lb/>
audience, also.<lb/>
This may be your only chance to meet the candi-<lb/>
dates before Wednesday's elections, so don't miss<lb/>
the opportunity! Take a part in the future of your<lb/>
university. Attend the forum Monday and vote<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17,1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
SECRETARYOFFICE MANAGER.<lb/>
Parthme positions, whol?sale firm needs<lb/>
self-motivated, aggressive person with<lb/>
pleasant professional voice to answer<lb/>
phones, handle orders, filing, typing,<lb/>
correspondence, and word processing.<lb/>
Excellent working conditions. Send<lb/>
resume to: CMS. P.O. Box 2987-0987,<lb/>
Green ville, NC 27836.<lb/>
ARE YOU A COLLEGE STUDENT<lb/>
looking for summer employment and<lb/>
available to begin working now? Are you<lb/>
enthusiastic, dependable and excited<lb/>
about working in a fashion environment?<lb/>
Brody's and Brody's for Men have part-<lb/>
time openings for individuals able to<lb/>
work flexible hours. Apply at Brody's,<lb/>
Carolina East Mall, M-W, 2 until 4pm.<lb/>
WANTED - Lead singer for band. Must<lb/>
have good range. We have some good<lb/>
connections. Call 752-6867 after 10 p.m.<lb/>
CHILD CARE NEEDED for 7 yr old girl<lb/>
Car a must. Non-smoker. Call 752-1421<lb/>
alter 6p.m.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Part time Director of<lb/>
Music Responsibilities include directing<lb/>
adult and children choirs, hand bell choir,<lb/>
and organist for worship services. Send<lb/>
resume to Good Shepherd Lutheran<lb/>
Church, 811 E. Mulberry St Goldsboro,<lb/>
NC 27530. Phone 1-735-0128.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS. Also cruiseships.<lb/>
SI 5.000-95,400vr. Now Hiring! 320<lb/>
openings! (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. OJ-1166.<lb/>
WANTED: Ccach for a summer<lb/>
swimteam, late May until Aug 7. Must<lb/>
have experience or have been a member<lb/>
of a swimteam. Applicant could attend<lb/>
summer school from 1 l-3p.m if desired.<lb/>
For more info: Contact BiU Flowerin-823-<lb/>
5111-w- or mail resume to Tarboro Swim<lb/>
Cub. P,0, Box 1301, Tarboro, N.C 27886.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Waiters and<lb/>
waitresses for restaurant near Atlantic<lb/>
beach Apply 218 Front St. Beaufort, NC.<lb/>
BOOK BUYER-EARN WHILE YOU<lb/>
LEARN! Make vou own hours. Be vour<lb/>
own boss. Buy books for local book<lb/>
company. Respond to Carolina Book<lb/>
Services! Box 2151, Greenville, NC 27836.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Part-time interior<lb/>
design student-send resume to:<lb/>
Designer, 3010 East 10th Street,<lb/>
Greenville. NC<lb/>
PART TIME SALES assoc. needed<lb/>
immidiately. Must be dependable,<lb/>
outgoing, and able to move furniture. 20<lb/>
hours weekly. Consisting of evenings<lb/>
and week-ends. Apply in person at<lb/>
Galleria, the Piazza. ABSOLUTELY NO<lb/>
PHONE CALLS.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
ARE YOU READY FOR A COMPLETE<lb/>
MAKEOVER? New York trained hair<lb/>
stylist will design a hair cut and style to<lb/>
compliment your facial features. Joanne's<lb/>
Professional Image. 756-1945. Call<lb/>
between 3:00-8:00pm. Students half<lb/>
price<lb/>
TYPING AND WORD PROCESSING.<lb/>
Letter quality laser printing. Rush jobs<lb/>
accepted. Designer Type 752-1933.<lb/>
TOP QUALITY TYPING: Papers $1.50<lb/>
page, Resumes written and typed $15.00.<lb/>
Call Joy after 6:00 pm at 758-7423.<lb/>
NEED MONEY FOR COLLEGE? Free<lb/>
information on loans and scholarships<lb/>
available for undergraduate and<lb/>
graduate students. Write Scholastic<lb/>
Financial Services, 202 Arlington Blvd<lb/>
Suite D Greenville. State year in school.<lb/>
AIRBRUSH ARTWORKS got a rad idea<lb/>
and want it on a T-shirt? I lot colors and<lb/>
artwork reproduced w Airbrush<lb/>
Artwork! T-Shirt, Sweatshirts, Banners.<lb/>
Handpainted one of a kind art work<lb/>
(won't wash out). Professionally<lb/>
airbrushing 1980-1988 recently came up<lb/>
from Daytona, Fla. Paul Hill 752-0607.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND<lb/>
PHOTOCOPYING SERVICES: We<lb/>
offer typing and photocopying services.<lb/>
We also sell software and computer<lb/>
diskettes. 24 hours in and out.<lb/>
Guaranteed typing on paper up to 20<lb/>
hand written pages. SDF Professional<lb/>
Computer Services, 106 East 5th<lb/>
Street(beside Cubbies) Greenville, NC<lb/>
752-3694.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: Stereo System, Marantz<lb/>
Amp and speakers, Pioneer deck, dual<lb/>
turntable. Techniques tuner, $400.00 or<lb/>
best offer. Call 795-4014 after 7:30 pm.<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. 757-1007 or 830-<lb/>
1447.<lb/>
WATERBED: For sale kingsize waterbed<lb/>
comes complete temp control, semi<lb/>
waveless matress and 2 sets of sheets!<lb/>
Call John 752-3919 or 355-7473 $150.00.<lb/>
SALT WATER AQUARIUM FOR<lb/>
SALE: 30 gallons - Includes all necessary<lb/>
equipment (filters, coral, hood, lights,<lb/>
heater) $200.00 call 758-8010.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS CONDO FOR<lb/>
SALE: B-unit, 2nd floor, fully furnished.<lb/>
Tax market value $43,730.00Make me an<lb/>
offer. 919-787-1378.<lb/>
LARGE, DORM-SIZED SEARS<lb/>
refrigerator with freezer; excellent<lb/>
condition $100.00. Call 752-2474 after 5:30<lb/>
pm.<lb/>
LOFT FOR SALE: Walnut stained, great<lb/>
condition, easy to put together (8 pieces),<lb/>
easy to store, only $50.00 Call Donna at<lb/>
758-9827.<lb/>
5BUCKS ? just 5 bucks will get you the<lb/>
hottest spring break tee shirt. Call Trolls<lb/>
Tux &amp; Tees at 757-1007.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Daybed, white with brass<lb/>
accents. $70.00. Call Pam at 830-1215.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE.<lb/>
Available now. $300 per month. Central<lb/>
heat and air. Fully carpeted. Pool. 757-<lb/>
6423 days, 919-975-2481 evenings (call<lb/>
collect).<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT $125.00 per month<lb/>
plus deposit. Available April 1st Phone<lb/>
Art at 757-3543 after 5:00 p.m. Near<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
OPEN MINDED ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: Your best<lb/>
bet! Only $150 monthly, no utilities. Very,<lb/>
very close to campus. Call 830-5199.<lb/>
1lurrv!<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS: Aprs for rent.<lb/>
Furnished. Contact I lollieSimonowich at<lb/>
752-2865.<lb/>
WANTED: Roomate to share large 3<lb/>
bedroom home on Atlantic Beach with<lb/>
young professional couple. Fullv<lb/>
furnished except your bedroom. $200.00<lb/>
plus half utilities. Call 247-3692 after 7:00<lb/>
pm.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE NEEDED: ASAP<lb/>
toshare two bedroom townhouse in quiet<lb/>
area. Will have own room. Rent $125.00<lb/>
plus 1 3 utilities. Call 355-4647.<lb/>
GOING TO SUMMER SCHOOL? 2-3<lb/>
female, non-smoker roomatcs needed by<lb/>
May 1 to share apartment convenient to<lb/>
campus. $147.50 for private room or<lb/>
$73.75 for shared. AC, cable, pool,<lb/>
laundry. Call Carla at 758-6837.<lb/>
NEED A NEW HOME? Share 2 bed2<lb/>
bath, $145.00 plus utilities, 10 minute<lb/>
commute. Call Michael at 756-2491.<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live.<lb/>
?All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
?And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMEN S<lb/>
2899 K. 5th Street<lb/>
?Located War ECO<lb/>
?Near Mjor Shopping C liters<lb/>
?Across I'rom Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
Limited Offer - $275 a month<lb/>
Contact ?) T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 o. 830-1937<lb/>
Ome open - Apt 8. 12 - 5.30 p.m.<lb/>
?AZALEA GATDENS<lb/>
Clean and quiet one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. $195 a month. 6<lb/>
month lease. MOBII-E HOME RENTALS -<lb/>
couples or singles. Apartment and mobile<lb/>
homes tn Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley<lb/>
County Club.<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
SAE HAPPY HOUR at the Clbo, Friday 4-<lb/>
7; 2 dollar teas?why dance anywhere<lb/>
else?<lb/>
CAROL SHORE: SCA Vice-President,<lb/>
vote Wednesday, March 23rd with<lb/>
student I.D.<lb/>
THE OMEGA PSI PHI FRATERNITY<lb/>
INC. extends a warm welcome to<lb/>
everyone to attend their annual "Royal<lb/>
Omega Ball" March 19,1988 at the I lUton<lb/>
Inn at 9:00 pm. Admission is $3.00 single'<lb/>
and $5.00 couple in advance, $4.00 single<lb/>
at the door and $6.00 couple at the door.<lb/>
APPLICATIONS FOR MARSHALLS<lb/>
are now being accepted in Room 214<lb/>
Whichard Building. You must have a 3.0<lb/>
GPA and be a junior at the end of the 1988<lb/>
Spring Sememcster. Last day to apply is<lb/>
March 23.<lb/>
SIG EPS ? Can't wait to " lop, Skip, and<lb/>
Go Naked" on St. Patty's day. Love the<lb/>
Alpha Phis.<lb/>
ALPHA PHIS ? Be ready to "Hop, Skip,<lb/>
and Go Naked" Thursday night ? Sig<lb/>
Eps. P.S. don't forget to wear green<lb/>
somewhere on your body.<lb/>
THE LADIES OF DELTA SIGMA<lb/>
T11ETA SOROITY INC. invites you to<lb/>
party at the Unlimited Touch, Thursday<lb/>
March 17th at I0pm-2am, $100 with<lb/>
college I.D.<lb/>
KEITH, SURPRISE! HAPPY<lb/>
BIRTHDAY "OLD MAN The Big 22 is<lb/>
finally here. But guess whatI still love<lb/>
ya! From:me! (your secret admirer).<lb/>
JUSTIN'TIME: Come down and drink a<lb/>
few brews and let us knock your socks<lb/>
off at the New Deli tonight at 10:00.<lb/>
ROCK AND ROLL.<lb/>
TO THE BAHAMIAN AZD'S, TKE'S<lb/>
AND MIKE PATRICK: Churchill's was<lb/>
"HOT, HOT, HOT the drinks were<lb/>
'TINY-WINY but Hey Monwe be<lb/>
jammin Love, Harriet and Elizabeth.<lb/>
HOPE EVERYONE HAD A GREAT<lb/>
SPRING BREAK Welcome back. Just<lb/>
think only 26 more days of classes! Love,<lb/>
the Sigmas.<lb/>
TRP. JRN: I'm so happy you arc finally<lb/>
close by. But always remember that I will<lb/>
love you no matter where you are You<lb/>
are the BEST I lighways 17 and 43 will<lb/>
see a lot of me. I love you, Ann.<lb/>
TAFFY: You are great! Cheer up, because<lb/>
"Boo-Boo" and I love you very much!<lb/>
Love, Bananer.<lb/>
"IN THE DARK" A series of frank<lb/>
discussions on sexually transmitted<lb/>
diseases. Presented by the ECU Student<lb/>
I lealth Services Nursing Staff. March<lb/>
22nd and 29th from 3pm to 4pm at the<lb/>
Student Health Service, room 116<lb/>
Register by calling 757-6841 ask for<lb/>
Barbara Pennell (8-5 pm).<lb/>
CARNIVALE CRUISERS: We left at ?<lb/>
for Miami and got there in record time!<lb/>
We finally boarded our ship, but notl<lb/>
before going through the customs hnej<lb/>
The bedrooms were nice, the bathrooms!<lb/>
were, well, small, but oh those stewardj<lb/>
were above them all. Mine were "Vo<lb/>
man" and "Dag" and they really had the<lb/>
Caribbean dance in the bag. The meals!<lb/>
that we had ranged from a Mexican buffet!<lb/>
to Italian night to surf and turf. The drinks!<lb/>
we had began with bloody marys and!<lb/>
daiquiris in the sun, then rum punch and!<lb/>
tequilla at night for some drunken fun <lb/>
The first and the last nights were the!<lb/>
rockiest of all, enough to make you<lb/>
stumble into a wall For those that got sick J<lb/>
and used the white bags, Dramamine lsl<lb/>
what you should have had I hop, ()1) aH<lb/>
have great memories of the cruise and<lb/>
that your pictures are great because this-<lb/>
was the best Spring Break of 1988 KeepiT<lb/>
touch. Love, Shanyour Chaperone)<lb/>
NATALIE AND HELEN: Had a great<lb/>
time partying with vou on the cruise<lb/>
Hope to see you both at happy hour<lb/>
Friday. Love, Shan<lb/>
SIG EPS ? As vi hi h'at the buzzer by oneJ<lb/>
we found that "Nutsc Holts" werelotefj<lb/>
fun. From thumpers to Little Ceaser<lb/>
rings, we slammed shots and made the<lb/>
Bud truck sing Some had to end the night<lb/>
early due to test, others went to Mike's to<lb/>
continue the party quest The night wjH,<lb/>
definitely be one to remember AC iPis and<lb/>
Sig Eps ? 1; Tequila &amp; Rumpiemintz -<lb/>
Surrender Love the AOPis<lb/>
VOTE LARRY MURPHY for SCA<lb/>
President Wednesday March23rd Brine<lb/>
a student I D. 5<lb/>
The Fizz<lb/>
present<lb/>
KLEE LILES<lb/>
on St. Patrick's Day - tonight<lb/>
Irish Coffee $2.50<lb/>
Saturday, March 19th<lb/>
Mark Johnson<lb/>
Drink Specials: Fireballs<lb/>
&amp; Mai Tais.<lb/>
LARRY MURPHY<lb/>
for SGA President<lb/>
Vote Wednesday. March 23<lb/>
Bring Student ID<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
EKQS<lb/>
The Equal Rights Organization for stu-<lb/>
dents will meet today at 5:00 in Brewster<lb/>
B-101 to ratify the conshtutuion and plan<lb/>
a fund raiser. All interested persons in-<lb/>
vited to attend. For more information, call<lb/>
758-35645 or 746-6049.<lb/>
SLAP<lb/>
All General College students who have<lb/>
indicated a desire to major in Speech-<lb/>
Language and Auditory Pathology and<lb/>
have R. Muzzarelli as their advisor are to<lb/>
meet on Wednesday, March 23 at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. in Brewster D101. Advising for early<lb/>
registration will take place at that time.<lb/>
Others interested in SLAP should contact<lb/>
the department-757-6961.<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
Ms. Melissa Haid, a visiting artist, will<lb/>
conduct a multi-media workshop with<lb/>
clay, paper, and slumped glass on March<lb/>
14-18 in Jenkins Art Building. Ms. Haid will<lb/>
present a slide lecture on March 16 at 7:30<lb/>
in J -1327 of recent work. A work by Ms.<lb/>
Haid will be completed during the work-<lb/>
shop and will be donated to the perma-<lb/>
nent collection in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center or Kate Lewis Gallery. The work-<lb/>
shop is sponsored by the Ceramics Guild,<lb/>
The Visual Art Forum, and The SGA. The<lb/>
public is invited to attend. Workhop<lb/>
hours will be from 8:00-12:00 noon the 14-<lb/>
18 in J-143.<lb/>
?CA<lb/>
Fellowship of Christian Athletes will<lb/>
meet every Tuesday at 9:30 at the Pirate<lb/>
Club. Coaches, athletes, and others are<lb/>
welcome to attend.<lb/>
GAYCOMMITTNJTTY<lb/>
Greenville Gay Community is a group<lb/>
formed last fall to meet the needs of the<lb/>
gay and lesibian Community in<lb/>
Greenville. The group meets every othber<lb/>
week at different locations in Greenville.<lb/>
For more information please call and ask<lb/>
for Charley at 752-2675.<lb/>
RESUME WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Service in the Bloxton House is offering<lb/>
one hour programs on beginning a res-<lb/>
ume for your job search. Handouts and<lb/>
samples will be given out to the first 20<lb/>
people to come to each session. No sign up<lb/>
required. These sessions are held in the<lb/>
Career Planning Room on March 3,16, and<lb/>
22 at 3:00 p.m. For those who have already<lb/>
written a resume and wish to have a res-<lb/>
ume critiqued, separate programs are<lb/>
listed at the office.<lb/>
INTER VIEW WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Service in the Bloxton House is offering<lb/>
one hour sessions to aid you in developing<lb/>
better interviewing skills. A film and dis-<lb/>
cussion of how to interview on and off<lb/>
campus will be shared. These sessions are<lb/>
held in the Career Planning Room on<lb/>
March 2,15, and 24 at 300 p.m.<lb/>
CQQfcEB<lb/>
Students holding North Carolina Real<lb/>
Estate Sales license are neede for positions<lb/>
with major resort developer located in NC<lb/>
mountains, for more information contact<lb/>
Cooperative Education, 2nd floor, New<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
CHILDHOOD Q I IB<lb/>
Do you know what makes a good<lb/>
teacher? The answer to this question and<lb/>
many more will be answered at our<lb/>
version of the "Donahue" show on March<lb/>
23 at 4:00 in Speight 129. Have you<lb/>
questions ready for our distinguished<lb/>
guests. The information they share with<lb/>
us will be important for our future.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHT<lb/>
The National Gamma Beta Phi Honor<lb/>
Society will hold a meeting Mach 22 at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. in Jenkins Auditorium. Attendance<lb/>
is required.<lb/>
PHI ALPHA THFTA<lb/>
There will be an informal discuaaion<lb/>
with Professor Ronald Robinson of Balliol<lb/>
College, Oxford Mon. march 21st at 1:00<lb/>
p.m. in the Todd Room. Refreshments will<lb/>
be served. Also, nominations for 1988-<lb/>
1989 chapter officers will bve held Wed.<lb/>
March 23rd at 3:00 p.m. in the Todd Room.<lb/>
All members urged to attend this very<lb/>
important meeting.<lb/>
BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
Biology club meeting 3-21-88 in BN-109<lb/>
5-530 pizza break, 530 begin regular<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
SCHOOL OF MUSIC;<lb/>
The Department of University Unions<lb/>
and The School of Music present The<lb/>
American Chamber Players on<lb/>
Wednesday, March 23rd, at 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre. This ensemble consists<lb/>
entirely of srtists who have already<lb/>
performed together with great distinction<lb/>
as members of the library of Congress'<lb/>
Summer Chamber Festival. For ticket<lb/>
information contact: The Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhall Student Center, phon<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266. Office hours are<lb/>
Monday through Friday, 11:00 a.m6:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
BRASS OUINTFT<lb/>
The Department of University Unions<lb/>
presents The Empire Brass, America's<lb/>
finest brass quintet, on Friday, April 8,<lb/>
1988, at 8:00 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
This group's repertoire of over 300 works<lb/>
is unparalleled in diversity and quality.<lb/>
SPECIAL NOTE: There will be an<lb/>
opportunity for you to meet The Empire<lb/>
Brass following their performance at East<lb/>
Carolina University. For further<lb/>
information on the reception contact:<lb/>
WTEB Radio, Craven Community<lb/>
College, P.O. Box 885, New Bern, N.C<lb/>
28560, or call (919) 638-3434. For further<lb/>
ticket information contact: The Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, phone 757-6611, ext. 266. Office<lb/>
hours are Monday-Friday, 11:00 a.m6:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
STRESS<lb/>
Coping with stress: A free mini class<lb/>
offered by the East Carolina University<lb/>
Counseling Center for students: You can-<lb/>
identify sources of stress, make positive<lb/>
changes, manage your response to<lb/>
stressful situations, learn to relax,<lb/>
improve self confidence. March 22,24,29,<lb/>
and 31 in 329 Wright Building from 4-5<lb/>
p.m. No advance registration is required.<lb/>
Call or stop by the Counseling Center for<lb/>
further information. (316 Wright<lb/>
Building; 757-6661).<lb/>
CAMPUS GIRL SCOUTS<lb/>
Tuesday meeting at 1:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall. Your girl scout cookies are<lb/>
in. For further information call Nancy<lb/>
Ludwig at 758-6701 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
Making a Major Decision Group: This<lb/>
program is designed to aid students in<lb/>
choosing an academic major in a small<lb/>
group format. Each participant will also<lb/>
receive individual aid from the group<lb/>
leader if desired. Group participants will<lb/>
increase self knowledge of their interests,<lb/>
values and abilities; learn how these relate<lb/>
to majors and career areas at ECU; and<lb/>
narrow their options through a systematic<lb/>
career decision making process. The<lb/>
Major Decision Group will meet: March<lb/>
21, 23, 25 in 329 Wright Building, from 4-<lb/>
5 p.m.(attend all three meetings).<lb/>
Although advance registration is not<lb/>
required, we would appreciate advance<lb/>
notification of interest to insure that we<lb/>
have adequate materials on hand. Please<lb/>
contact the Counseling Center in 316<lb/>
Wright Building (757-6661) for further<lb/>
information or to let us know you plan to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
STUDENT RFGISTR ATTOM<lb/>
General College students should<lb/>
contact their advisers the week of March<lb/>
21-25 to make arrangements for academic<lb/>
advising for first and second summer<lb/>
sessions and fall semester, 1988. Early<lb/>
registration will begin March 28 and end<lb/>
April 4.<lb/>
MARSHALLS<lb/>
Applications are not being accepted in<lb/>
room 214 Whichard Building. You must<lb/>
have a 3.0 and be a junior at the end of the<lb/>
1988 spring sememster. Last day to apply<lb/>
is March 23.<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
Volunteers are needed to help with the<lb/>
1988 Greenville-Pitt County Special<lb/>
Olympics Games which will be held on<lb/>
Friday April 15, 1988, at E.B. Aycock<lb/>
Junior High School in Greenville.<lb/>
Volunteers must be able to work from 9:00<lb/>
a.m. to 2:00p.m. If you are interested, you<lb/>
need to attend a volunteer training session<lb/>
in Biology 103 on Tuesday, April 12 at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. For more information, call Leslie<lb/>
Wooles at 830-4551.<lb/>
UP IN SMOKE<lb/>
A program for students, faculty, and<lb/>
staff will be offered on Monday, March 21,<lb/>
1988 from 3 - 4 p.m. at the Student Health<lb/>
Services, Room 116. The program will<lb/>
teach techniques for stopping smoking<lb/>
and is presented by the Student Health<lb/>
Promotion Assistant, Kevin Hagen. For<lb/>
registration or more information, contact<lb/>
Barbara Pennell at 757-6841:<lb/>
ACCOUNTING SOCT.FTY<lb/>
The accouting society will hold its<lb/>
monthly meetin on Monday, March 21 at<lb/>
4 pjn. in the Mendenhall Multi-purpose<lb/>
room. Donna Cannon from Weyerhauser<lb/>
will speak on cost accounting.<lb/>
Nominations for new officers will take<lb/>
place. If you are interested in becoming an<lb/>
officer, leave your name, phone number,<lb/>
and office desired in the accoutin<lb/>
department office.<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
A speaker from Businessweek<lb/>
magazine is coming on March 21 at 3:30<lb/>
p.m. to talk to all SAM members about<lb/>
resumes and career planning. We'll meet<lb/>
in room 1032 in the new classroom<lb/>
building. Election of new officers will also<lb/>
be discussed.<lb/>
SUMMER INTERNSHIP<lb/>
There will be interviews for summer<lb/>
internships at 7:00 on Thursday March 17<lb/>
in Mendenhall, Rm. 247. All majors<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
KERYGMA<lb/>
A Bible study for those who are serious<lb/>
about studying tie Bible. Weekly meet-<lb/>
ings (tentatively Tues. afternoon) will be<lb/>
scheduled to accomodate those who are<lb/>
interested. Kerygma is an interdenomina-<lb/>
tional program sponsored by Presbyte-<lb/>
rian Campus Ministry. For more infor.<lb/>
Call Mike at 752-7240.<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
There will be meetings every Thursday<lb/>
at 6:00 in the culture center. Everybody<lb/>
welcome.<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/>
SEJ2<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 $2.0C<lb/>
at the door, $1.50 in advance. Call 758-2030<lb/>
for reservations. Sponsored by Presbyte-<lb/>
rian and Methodist Campus Ministries.<lb/>
ECU FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
There will be practice every Tuesday,<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday at 2:30 on In-<lb/>
tramural Fields 5 and 6 behind Minges<lb/>
Colliseum and on Sunday at 2:00. New<lb/>
players welcome.<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
Prime Time, sponsored by Campus<lb/>
Crusade for Christ, meets every Thursday<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. in Brewster C-103. Everyone is<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Friday nights are ALIVE more than<lb/>
ever before! Join us at Jenkins Auditorium<lb/>
(Art Building) at 8:00 p.m. Every FRIDAY<lb/>
NIGHT for Christian Fellowship and<lb/>
Bible teaching where JESUS IS LORD!<lb/>
SPRING SEM. GRAPS.<lb/>
Caps and gowns should be picked up in<lb/>
the Student Stores, Wright Building,<lb/>
March 22,23,24,1988. These are yours to<lb/>
keep providing the graduation fee has<lb/>
been paid. For those receiving the Masters<lb/>
Degree the fee pays for your cap and<lb/>
gown, but there is an extra fee of $12.50 for<lb/>
your hood. Announcements are available<lb/>
in the Student Stores, Wright Building.<lb/>
CHAMBER MUSIC<lb/>
The 1988-1989 Chamber music Series<lb/>
attractions include: Buswell-Parnas-Lu-<lb/>
visi Trio, National Gallery of Art Vocal<lb/>
Ensemble, Tokyo String Quartet, and<lb/>
OREGON. For a brochure detailing the<lb/>
events, contact the Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, 757-6611, ext.<lb/>
266. Office hours are 11:00 a.m6:00 p.m<lb/>
Monday-Friday. This series is co-spon-<lb/>
sored by the Department of University<lb/>
Unions and the School of Music.<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, PHI-<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, 757-6611, ext. 266. Office<lb/>
hours are 11:00 a.m6.00 p.m Monday-<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
CONTINUING ED<lb/>
The following Personal Development<lb/>
Courses will be held: Money Matters<lb/>
(starts March 15); Guitar (starts March 15);<lb/>
Scuba (starts March 15); Drawing with<lb/>
Colored Pencils (starts March 17), Begin-<lb/>
ning Calligraphy (starts May 19). Contact<lb/>
Continuing Education, Erwin Hall for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
CONTINUING ED.<lb/>
The following Personal Development<lb/>
Courses will be held: Money Matters<lb/>
(starts March 15); Guitar (starts March 15);<lb/>
Scuba (starts March 15); Drawing with<lb/>
Colored Pencils (starts March 17); Begin-<lb/>
ning Calligraphy (starts May 19). Contact<lb/>
Continuing Education, Erwin Hall for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
NASWCQRiQ<lb/>
Wanted: Social Work ' Criminal justice<lb/>
majors and intended majors, to attend<lb/>
meetings. 1 leld the 2nd and 4th Monday<lb/>
each month, at 4:00 p m in Allied Health<lb/>
bldg, room 110.<lb/>
COOPERATIVE ED,<lb/>
The Co-op Education office is now lo-<lb/>
cated on the second Boor of the new<lb/>
General Classroom Buiidng, Room 2028.<lb/>
Students interested in the program<lb/>
should attend a co-op information semi-<lb/>
nar. For specific seminar times, dates and<lb/>
locations, please check the ECU Calendar<lb/>
of Events or call the co-op office at 757-<lb/>
6979. All students are ebgab'e to Co-op.<lb/>
JOB HUNTING? Come to sec us at our<lb/>
new locaticn<lb/>
SLAP<lb/>
All General College students who have<lb/>
indicated a desire to maior in Speech-<lb/>
Language and Auditory Pathology and<lb/>
have R. Muzzarelli as their advisor are to<lb/>
meet on Wednesday, March 23 at 5K3B<lb/>
p.m. in Brewster DHL Advising for early<lb/>
registration will take place at that time.<lb/>
Others interested in SLAP should contact<lb/>
the department-757-6961.<lb/>
OUTDOOR THERAPY<lb/>
Worshop sponsored bv the LSS-S and<lb/>
LSS 4700, March 19, 9:00-4:00 at River Park<lb/>
North. Lunch included. Open to student?<lb/>
(S12.50) and professionals ($25.00) Pre-<lb/>
register and pre-pay by March 9th at th?<lb/>
LSS Building. Limited to 30 participants.<lb/>
WOMEN'S FRISBEE CLUB'<lb/>
Practice will be held Tuesday, YVednc<lb/>
day and Thursday from 3:30 until, at trW<lb/>
bottom of College Hill. All interested<lb/>
players should attend. Those who havj<lb/>
received forms need to have them con<lb/>
pleted and ready to turn in.<lb/>
COLLEGE RFPUBI JCANS<lb/>
The ECU College Republicans wil<lb/>
meet every Tuesday night in room 22<lb/>
Mendenhall at 7 p.m. Call 758-5775 or 751<lb/>
3587.<lb/>
The<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Required read in<lb/>
for the serious student.<lb/>
Sex p<lb/>
(rCPS) ? One fraternity vw<lb/>
banished from the University q<lb/>
Rochester for allegedly holding I<lb/>
group sex party, while the Un<lb/>
versity of Pennsylvania sus<lb/>
pended one of its houses for hn<lb/>
ing strippers to perform at a part)<lb/>
The incident at Penn, moreove<lb/>
threatened to escalate into a cor.<lb/>
flict between campus Jewish an<lb/>
black groups<lb/>
Rochester administrator)<lb/>
banned the Theta Delta Chi housj<lb/>
hrlOycarsm the wake of a Febnj<lb/>
ury party in which 8 student<lb/>
reportedly had sex with l,appai<lb/>
ently consenting, woman<lb/>
The 19-year-old woman, whosi<lb/>
Reaga<lb/>
(CPS) ? President R(<lb/>
vowed March 3 to veto a bill th?<lb/>
would make it harder for college<lb/>
to discriminate en the has<lb/>
gender, race, age or ph)<lb/>
abilities.<lb/>
But Republican Senate V<lb/>
nd presidential cand I<lb/>
Robert Dole (R-Kan) warne<lb/>
Congress probable would oveJ<lb/>
ride the veto.<lb/>
Profes<lb/>
5<lb/>
?<lb/>
jentaion in the Senate, dire<lb/>
fcion of the president along vm<lb/>
Impeachment powers are four<lb/>
JWithin the Nigerian constitutiol<lb/>
The strong power oi the Sena<lb/>
nd the judicial powers are ah<lb/>
bbvious reflections of the Amei<lb/>
can principal of checks and be<lb/>
ances.<lb/>
According to Oyediran, the<lb/>
has been an outcry for a nei<lb/>
constitution in Nigeria since 19"<lb/>
and for civilian rule after the mij<lb/>
Thompson to<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
would open the SCJA so that st<lb/>
ient opinions would be heard<lb/>
bills being considered on the le<lb/>
islative floor. In the past. T<lb/>
ompson said the SGA has not<lb/>
lowed students to express the<lb/>
view points.<lb/>
As Minority Student Organ<lb/>
zation president, Thompson sai<lb/>
that during some SGA mcetind<lb/>
he was not granted speakin<lb/>
privileges to explain incomn<lb/>
legislation concerning the MSC<lb/>
Thompson said that as pre<lb/>
dent he would be on the studen<lb/>
side, unlike past SGA prcsider<lb/>
who he said were on the suit<lb/>
with the administration. AnothJ<lb/>
idea Thompson said is to install<lb/>
suggestion box near the SGA d<lb/>
fice for students to register thc<lb/>
remarks.<lb/>
As a resident advisor<lb/>
Fletcher Dormitory, Thomps<lb/>
said he has seen the need for t<lb/>
reactivation of the Pirate W'a<lb/>
escort service which became J<lb/>
funct earlier this school yej<lb/>
Thompson said he is tor a studel<lb/>
workstudy program for Pirai<lb/>
Walk in which a six escort sta<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ad<lb/>
jjpt ?"?<lb/>
-jjfr '? ? i?' -??<lb/>
 miwy wnjM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17,1988<lb/>
Ul CRUISERS Wo lett at <lb/>
: Ihere in record time<lb/>
d our ship, but not<lb/>
 the customs line!<lb/>
? the bathrooms!<lb/>
? oh thos stewards<lb/>
Mine wore "v0<lb/>
id the) really had the<lb/>
the bjo. The meals!<lb/>
a Mexican buffetl<lb/>
md turf Thednnks<lb/>
?od) marvs and!<lb/>
rum punch and<lb/>
si me drunken tun<lb/>
its were thej<lb/>
to make you<lb/>
ee that got sickl<lb/>
- Dramamine is I<lb/>
?d I hope u all<lb/>
nes : the cruse and<lb/>
real because this<lb/>
?" Keepii,<lb/>
perone).<lb/>
1 1 <lb/>
a v;roat<lb/>
n tho cruise<lb/>
P) hour<lb/>
'? b) one-<lb/>
Ceasa<lb/>
d made tho<lb/>
 :ho night<lb/>
Mike's to<lb/>
he night will<lb/>
VOPksand<lb/>
nplemintz ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
? Ml RPin for SGA<lb/>
- rd Brine;<lb/>
LARRY MURPHY<lb/>
for SGA. President<lb/>
Vote Wednesday. March 23<lb/>
Bring Student ID<lb/>
I<lb/>
SASW CQRSQ<lb/>
. Criminal justice<lb/>
rs to attend<lb/>
and 4th Monday<lb/>
? ed Health<lb/>
Sex parties ax fraternities<lb/>
frS) ? One fraternity was<lb/>
banished from the University of<lb/>
Rochester for allegedly holding a<lb/>
group sex party, while the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Pennsylvania sus-<lb/>
pended one of its houses for hir-<lb/>
ing strippers to performata party.<lb/>
The incident at Penn, moreover,<lb/>
threatened to escalate into a con-<lb/>
flict between campus Jewish and<lb/>
black groups.<lb/>
Rochester administrators<lb/>
banned the Theta Delta Chi house<lb/>
tor 10 years in the wake of a Febru-<lb/>
ary party in which 8 students<lb/>
reportedly had sex with 1, appar-<lb/>
ent! v consenting, woman.<lb/>
The 19-year-old woman, whose<lb/>
name was not released, attends a<lb/>
college in Ohio. Rochester admin-<lb/>
istrators said they may contact the<lb/>
woman's college about further<lb/>
disciplinary action.<lb/>
On March 4, Penn suspended<lb/>
all-white, predominately Jewish<lb/>
Zeta Beta Tau for 1 12 years for<lb/>
holding a September party at<lb/>
which 2 hired strippers, both<lb/>
black, performed.<lb/>
Some audience members<lb/>
shouted racial epithets as they<lb/>
danced and engaged in "sexually<lb/>
explicit acts<lb/>
ZBT's members issued a public<lb/>
apologv and offered to make a<lb/>
donation to the campus women's<lb/>
center, but Penn President Shel-<lb/>
don Hackney suspended the<lb/>
house anyway, adding that "be-<lb/>
havior that dehumanizes any<lb/>
individual or group will not be<lb/>
tolerated<lb/>
At the same time, the Daily<lb/>
Pennsylvanian, the campus pa-<lb/>
per, received a death threat<lb/>
against Conrad Tillard, head of<lb/>
the Organization of Black Con-<lb/>
sciousness at the school.<lb/>
Tillard quickly blamed the an-<lb/>
onymous threat on the radical<lb/>
Jewish Defense League ? which<lb/>
denied it sent the note ? and re-<lb/>
lated it to a Feb. 29 rally at which<lb/>
he called for ZBT's ouster.<lb/>
Black and Jewish students<lb/>
argued publicly in 1986 when<lb/>
Tillard's previous group brought<lb/>
Nation of Islam leader Louis Far-<lb/>
rakhan. whose anti-Zionist<lb/>
preachings often spill over into<lb/>
criticisms of Jewish theology as<lb/>
wrong and Jewish people as unsa-<lb/>
vory, to speak at campus.<lb/>
But Rabbi Howard Alperg of<lb/>
Penn's Jewish Campus Activities<lb/>
Board condemned Tillard for<lb/>
promoting, without evidence, the<lb/>
ZBT affair as an echo of the 1986<lb/>
tensions.<lb/>
"The Jewish community does<lb/>
not support what happened at<lb/>
ZBT added Daniel Gamulka<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Ice Cream<lb/>
 and frozen yogurt <lb/>
 321 East 10th Street. Greenville<lb/>
758-4896<lb/>
ITS GIRL SCOUT COOKIE TIME<lb/>
STOP IN<lb/>
Buy Any Girl Scout Cookie Item<lb/>
Get the 2nd Half Price<lb/>
Good Thru March 23, 1988<lb/>
Miociinum<lb/>
Value<lb/>
$1.20<lb/>
Maximum<lb/>
Vuluc<lb/>
$1.20<lb/>
Reagan threatens to veto bill<lb/>
(CPS) President Reagan<lb/>
vowed March 3 to veto a bill that<lb/>
would make it harder for colleges<lb/>
to discriminate on the basis of<lb/>
gender, race, age or physical dis-<lb/>
abilities<lb/>
But Republican Senate leader<lb/>
and presidential candidate<lb/>
Robert Dole (R-Kan) warned<lb/>
Congress probably would over-<lb/>
ride the veto.<lb/>
The controversy surrounds<lb/>
Congress's effort to overturn the<lb/>
U.S. Supreme Court's 1984 Grove<lb/>
City College decision, in which<lb/>
the court said laws prohibiting<lb/>
sex discrimination applied only to<lb/>
the specific program that directly<lb/>
got federal funds.<lb/>
Previously, whole campuses<lb/>
had to prove they didn't discrimi-<lb/>
nate if just one of their programs<lb/>
took federal funds.<lb/>
In February, the U.S. Senate<lb/>
passed a bill explicitly making<lb/>
entire colleges subject to anti-bias<lb/>
laws, and the House approved it<lb/>
March 2.<lb/>
But, as the bill was sent to the<lb/>
White Flouse for the president's<lb/>
signature, presidential aide Gary<lb/>
Bauer warned President Reagan<lb/>
would veto it.<lb/>
Reagan, Bauer explained, be-<lb/>
lieved the bill gave the federal<lb/>
government too much power<lb/>
over colleges and states, which<lb/>
could lose their federal funding if<lb/>
they were found to discriminate.<lb/>
In reply, Dole, on the campaign<lb/>
trail, said there were enough<lb/>
votes in Congress to override a<lb/>
veto. Vetoes can be overridden if<lb/>
two-thirds of the senators dis-<lb/>
agree with the president.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
DIVISION OF STUDENT LIFE<lb/>
AND<lb/>
COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF MINORITIES<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
A NATIONAL VTOEOCONFERENCE<lb/>
LIVE-VIA-SATELLITE<lb/>
Professor draws constitution<lb/>
i RACISM<lb/>
CAMPUS<lb/>
TOWARD AN AGENDA FOR ACTION<lb/>
i RATTVEEP.<lb/>
e is now lo-<lb/>
- ? the new<lb/>
dng Room 2028<lb/>
1 in the program<lb/>
rotation semi-<lb/>
aur times, dates and<lb/>
ECU Calendar<lb/>
ffiee at 757-<lb/>
!e to Co-op<lb/>
; ?: us at our<lb/>
SLAP<lb/>
rs who have<lb/>
in Speech-<lb/>
Pathology and<lb/>
- advisor are to<lb/>
M r : 23 at 5:00<lb/>
" vising for early<lb/>
toe at that time.<lb/>
d contact<lb/>
OUTDOOR THERAPY<lb/>
the LSS-S and<lb/>
I ? at River Parif<lb/>
(pen to students<lb/>
rofes SZ 00). Pre-<lb/>
March 9th at the<lb/>
I articipants.<lb/>
WOMEN'S 1 RI SB IE CLUB j<lb/>
sday.Wedn<lb/>
.ntil, at th<lb/>
??? Hill All interest<lb/>
rhose who hav<lb/>
. forms need to have them con<lb/>
md readv to turn in<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS!<lb/>
ECU College Republicans wif<lb/>
rery Tuesday night in room 22"<lb/>
tt7 pjn Call 758 775 or 75!<lb/>
he<lb/>
rolinian<lb/>
equired readin<lb/>
serious student.<lb/>
sontaion in the Senate, direct elec-<lb/>
feon of the president along with<lb/>
impeachment powers are found<lb/>
Within the Nigerian constitution.<lb/>
The strong power of the Senate<lb/>
and the judicial powers are also<lb/>
pbvious reflections of the Ameri-<lb/>
can principal of checks and bal-<lb/>
ances.<lb/>
According to Ovediran, there<lb/>
has been an outcry tor a new<lb/>
constitution in Nigeria since 1973<lb/>
and for civilian rule after the mili-<lb/>
tary came to power in 1966 as the<lb/>
result of a decaying political sys-<lb/>
tem. For the next 10 years Nigeria<lb/>
was engulfed in a series of crises<lb/>
? killing with strong ethnic bias,<lb/>
inconclusive constitutional con-<lb/>
ferences, counter-coup, and<lb/>
worst oi all civil war. The recon-<lb/>
struction of Nigeria resulted in<lb/>
the geographical entity of Nigeria<lb/>
but the cry for civil rule went<lb/>
unheard and promises of the<lb/>
armed forces of democracy went<lb/>
Thompson to open the SGA<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
would open tVe SCA so tHat stu-<lb/>
dent opinions would be heard on<lb/>
bills being considered on the leg-<lb/>
islative floor. In the past, Th-<lb/>
ompson said the SGA has not al-<lb/>
lowed students to express their<lb/>
view points.<lb/>
As Minority Student Org ini-<lb/>
zation president, Thompson said<lb/>
that during some SGA meetings<lb/>
he was not granted speaking<lb/>
privileges to explain incoming<lb/>
jslation concerning the MSO.<lb/>
Thompson said that as presi-<lb/>
dent he would be on the students<lb/>
side, unlike past SGA presidents<lb/>
who he said were on the side<lb/>
with the administration. Another<lb/>
idea Thompson said is to install a<lb/>
suggestion box near the SGA of-<lb/>
fice for students to register their<lb/>
remarks<lb/>
As a resident advisor of<lb/>
Fletcher Dormitory, Thompson<lb/>
said he has seen the need for the<lb/>
reactivation of the Pirate Walk<lb/>
-scort service which became de-<lb/>
funct earlier this school year<lb/>
Thompson said he is for a student<lb/>
workstudy program for Pirate<lb/>
Walk in which a six escort staff<lb/>
would be payed, unlike the failed<lb/>
escort service which had unpaid<lb/>
staff. He said 80 percent of the<lb/>
Pirate Walk staff's pay would be<lb/>
paid by the state.<lb/>
Thompson said other<lb/>
schools within the UNC system<lb/>
have incorporated similar escort<lb/>
services in which the staffs are<lb/>
paid and he feels that ECU needs<lb/>
to have such a plan to ensure the<lb/>
safety of students walking home<lb/>
late at night.<lb/>
The workstudy early regis-<lb/>
tration petitions should also be<lb/>
reinstated, Thompson aid. A<lb/>
few students abusing tne regis-<lb/>
tration petitions is not a good<lb/>
reason to stop the program, he<lb/>
said. Ending the petition pro-<lb/>
gram, Thompson said, was an-<lb/>
other case of the adminstration<lb/>
not listening to student view<lb/>
points.<lb/>
On the parking problem,<lb/>
Thompson said he is for giving<lb/>
commuters the choice of pur-<lb/>
chasing a $50 parking sticker and<lb/>
parking in the assigned areas, or<lb/>
choosing not to bay a sticker and<lb/>
parking in the lots at Minges and<lb/>
Allied Health and having<lb/>
shuttles to transport the com-<lb/>
muters to campus.<lb/>
unfulfilled. In 1979 however, the<lb/>
new military administration of<lb/>
General Murtala Mohammed<lb/>
declared to return Nigeria to civil<lb/>
rule. For Oyediran arid others the<lb/>
next four year interval was full of<lb/>
activities one of which was the<lb/>
making of the Nigerian<lb/>
constitution of 1979.<lb/>
Even the selection of the draf-<lb/>
ters was consistent with that of the<lb/>
U.S. founding fathers. Oyediran<lb/>
was one of fifty selected of differ-<lb/>
ent ideological stands and back-<lb/>
grounds. The men were selected<lb/>
by representation of each state,<lb/>
and were of learned disciplines<lb/>
such as law, political science and<lb/>
other social sciences.<lb/>
While it is obvious that the<lb/>
U.S. model was used as an outline<lb/>
in the drafting of the Nigerian<lb/>
constitution, the history and en vi-<lb/>
ronment of Nigeria kept the coun-<lb/>
try from producing a carbon copy<lb/>
of the U.S. constitution. In a ques-<lb/>
tion-answer period, Oyediran<lb/>
addressed the issue of ethnic dif-<lb/>
ferences which have alway pre-<lb/>
vented a meeting of the minds in<lb/>
Afrjca<lb/>
S3<lb/>
A?uA MAKES Aa? M0??<lb/>
SOC'AU-Y- COKISCIO US <lb/>
OULO LEAXH f0M-<lb/>
INIAKJ 11<lb/>
SiOAJ?i<lb/>
TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1988<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER, ROOM 244<lb/>
11:30 A.M. - 12:45 P.M.<lb/>
- HISTORICALCONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVE<lb/>
12:45 P.M. - 1:45 P.M.<lb/>
- DISCUSSION BREAK<lb/>
1:45 P.M. - 3:00 P.M.<lb/>
- ELEMENTS OF SUCCESSFUL MODELS BUILDING AN<lb/>
AGENDA FOR ACTION<lb/>
Sales Position<lb/>
Available<lb/>
The Eas t Caro linian<lb/>
now accepting applications<lb/>
for advertising sales<lb/>
representatives.<lb/>
Requirements:<lb/>
Previous Sales Experience<lb/>
excellent Communication Skills<lb/>
Jood Organizational Skills<lb/>
st Have Own Transportation<lb/>
Jasic Computer Knowledge<lb/>
Apply in Person atThe East Carolinian<lb/>
Please Include Resume<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
(In Front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
Must be ready to start training April 1st.<lb/>
No Phone Calls Please!<lb/>
mtmmmwmm0mmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17,1988<lb/>
U.S. students trail in education<lb/>
(CPS) ?U.S. students trail their<lb/>
foreign counterparts in science<lb/>
knowledge, placing almost last in<lb/>
achievement tests given in 17 na-<lb/>
tions, according to a major new<lb/>
study.<lb/>
Another report released last<lb/>
week determined that most<lb/>
young kids ? regardless of coun-<lb/>
try ? believe the earth is flat.<lb/>
The Second International Sci-<lb/>
ence Study (ISS) found American<lb/>
students in the fifth, ninth and<lb/>
12th grades performed poorly<lb/>
compared to students from other<lb/>
countries. U.S. students, the ISS<lb/>
found, finished last or almost last<lb/>
in biology, physics, chemistry and<lb/>
other sciences.<lb/>
In fact, many U.S. students per-<lb/>
formed no better than it they<lb/>
would have guessed the answers.<lb/>
"I'm not surprised said Dr.<lb/>
Michael McCormick, the biology<lb/>
department chairman at<lb/>
Montclair State College (N.J.).<lb/>
"The United States is ignorant in<lb/>
many areas compared to other<lb/>
nations<lb/>
"The data paint a dismal picture<lb/>
of science education in the United<lb/>
States today said Bassam<lb/>
Shakhashiri of the National Sci-<lb/>
ence Foundation.<lb/>
The study, conducted by the<lb/>
International Association for the<lb/>
Evaluation of Education Achieve-<lb/>
ment, ranked U.S. fifth-graders<lb/>
eighth among 15 countries in<lb/>
overall science knowledge.<lb/>
Ninth-graders finished 15th out<lb/>
of 17 nations, while American<lb/>
high school seniors enrolled in<lb/>
advanced science classes finished<lb/>
last in tests administered to more<lb/>
than 200,000 students in 7,500<lb/>
schools worldwide between 1983<lb/>
and 1986.<lb/>
Children from Japan, Korea,<lb/>
Holland, Hungary, England and<lb/>
Singapore generally recorded the<lb/>
best scores.<lb/>
Although American educators<lb/>
agree U.S. students ai e not receiv-<lb/>
ing the science education other<lb/>
nations provide, they're wary of<lb/>
the study itself.<lb/>
"I'd like to see how it was con-<lb/>
ducted said Vincent Sindt, the<lb/>
director of the University of<lb/>
Robert Morgan featured<lb/>
speaker at scholars weekend<lb/>
EC L Newt Bureau<lb/>
GREENVILLE?More than 100<lb/>
top-ranking high school juniors<lb/>
will visit East Carolina University<lb/>
March 19-21 for the university's<lb/>
annual Scholars Weekend.<lb/>
The students, from high schools<lb/>
across North Carolina and Vir-<lb/>
mformation about scholarships Building<lb/>
available to academically gifted<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The Hon. Robert B. Morgan,<lb/>
director of the State Bureau of<lb/>
Investigation and former U.S<lb/>
Wyoming Science and Math<lb/>
Teaching Center. "If the test just<lb/>
measured the quick recall of facts,<lb/>
let 'em have it. If it was a measure<lb/>
of how students think or reason,<lb/>
then I'd be worried<lb/>
"There are a lot of statistical<lb/>
problems said McCormick.<lb/>
Education in the United States, he<lb/>
said, is mandatory, while other<lb/>
nations don't require all children<lb/>
to attend school.<lb/>
Consequently, all U.S. testtak-<lb/>
crs were competing against only<lb/>
the most academically talented<lb/>
students in foreign countries.<lb/>
Still, there are those who say<lb/>
American attitudes about educa-<lb/>
tion have a lot to be desired. "In<lb/>
some countries, education is a<lb/>
special treat, a privilege that's<lb/>
respected said McCormick.<lb/>
Sindt cited low teacher salaries<lb/>
and even selfish parents as rea-<lb/>
sons.<lb/>
"Some parents arc more willing<lb/>
to spend money on a new color<lb/>
television than help provide for<lb/>
their children's education<lb/>
U.S. students, particularly at<lb/>
the college level, see education as<lb/>
Scholars Weekend participants a means towards a high-paying<lb/>
are recommended by high school carcer without value of its own,<lb/>
principals and guidance counsel-<lb/>
ors. Selected students must rank<lb/>
in the top five percent of their<lb/>
junior class and have at least a 3.5<lb/>
senator, will address the students<lb/>
at a banquet on Sunday evening, grade point average,<lb/>
ginia, will be visiting the campus Morgan will deliver a public ad-<lb/>
to preview opportunities at ECU dress as the 1988 Distinguished ECU offers scholarships for<lb/>
tor honor students. While on Alumni Lecturer on Monday, $3,000 $1,500, and $1,000 a year to<lb/>
campus thev will visit classes, March 21, at 8 p.m. in Room 1010 high school students who excel<lb/>
attend social events and receive ot ECU's new General Classroom academically.<lb/>
Bork charges students are<lb/>
leftist than heft<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS)? America when university atti- Bork, who credits his convcr-<lb/>
Stdl smarting from his 1987 rejec- tudos varied so much from the sion to conservatism to being<lb/>
tion as a U.S. Supreme Court general public's attitude Bork, upset by student politics during<lb/>
nominee, Robert Bork last week who now speaks regularly on the 1960s, added that law schools<lb/>
charged American students were college campuses, said on a Cable ? which supplied many of the<lb/>
more left-wing than ever. News Network (CNN) rv show witnesses who testified against<lb/>
- -?<lb/>
Tibetan Lama speaks<lb/>
Tuesday in Mendenhall<lb/>
The Venerable KhenpoKarthar "A Christian coming to hear<lb/>
Rinpoche, Tibetan Una and Bud- him would find much that issimi-<lb/>
dhist will speak on The Path of lar to the teachings in Christian-<lb/>
Wisdom and Compassion at 8 ity he said. "He owns no mate-<lb/>
p.nv Tuesday. rial possessions. Anything that is<lb/>
I he event will take place in given to him he gives away "<lb/>
room 244 of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center and is co-sponsored by the Tru C .recnviile visit is part of a<lb/>
ECU Buddhist Meditation and tour of North and South America.<lb/>
Study Group and the Greenville Khenpo Rinpoche is the official<lb/>
Karma Thegsum Choling. American respresentative of H.H.<lb/>
According to Byron Coulter, the Gyalwa Karmapa, head of the<lb/>
Advisor of the ECU group and Karma Kagyu lineage of Tibetan<lb/>
Co-ordinator of the Greenville K Buddhism. He is the abbot of the<lb/>
&amp; C, the lecture is designed to Karma Trivana Dharmachakra<lb/>
generate compassion. Monastery in Woodstock, N.Y.<lb/>
Murphy stresses relations<lb/>
Continued from page 1 ball games. He also would like to<lb/>
start a leadership seminar for the<lb/>
support fair equality in the sru- SGA which he feels would be<lb/>
dent government. invaluable.<lb/>
On community relations, Murphy, who is presently<lb/>
Murphy said that one of his pri- the president of Tau Kappa Epli-<lb/>
orities as president would be to son fraternity, said he would like<lb/>
ha ve more studen t organizations to recieve broad campus support<lb/>
involved. Murphy said that ac- rather than individual organiza-<lb/>
tivities such as the post Hallow- tional support. "I am hoping that<lb/>
een street clean-up, preformed by the Greeks will support me, but I<lb/>
several fraternities last year, is would like a good balance of<lb/>
? also were far to'the<lb/>
general public.<lb/>
He told viewers of the<lb/>
and Novak" CNN show he was<lb/>
encouraged by the stirrings of<lb/>
conservative law student groups<lb/>
like the Federalist Society, and<lb/>
hoped some of the society's<lb/>
members would go into teaching<lb/>
at law schools where "they will<lb/>
rectify the balance (with liberal<lb/>
professors) if they can get jobs<lb/>
McCormick said. "The desire to<lb/>
get an education is limited in this<lb/>
country. People get educated to<lb/>
get money, not knowledge, and so<lb/>
they're not getting the broad<lb/>
education other students dc<lb/>
In a separate study, the Smith-<lb/>
sonian Institution found most<lb/>
children ? at least until they're<lb/>
about 10 years old ?believe the<lb/>
earth is flat.<lb/>
Almost 50 percent of the U.S.<lb/>
and Israeli 4th-grade children in<lb/>
the Smithsonian study, which<lb/>
appeared in the latest issue of<lb/>
"Science and Children" maga-<lb/>
zine, still believed in a flat earth.<lb/>
The reason, study authors Alan<lb/>
Lightman and Philip Sadler theo-<lb/>
rized, had less to do with bad<lb/>
schools than with the way chil-<lb/>
dren develop.<lb/>
Children, they wrote, often<lb/>
can't reconcile "what they are told<lb/>
about their world and what thev<lb/>
see with their own eyes.<lb/>
53?cr'r- 4th gtSdecfild .<lb/>
- to haye much less trouble gmsp<lb/>
'Evans ing thc conccP of a round earth<lb/>
they added.<lb/>
Mf<lb/>
Read<lb/>
the<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS!<lb/>
For Your Summer Storage Needs<lb/>
Call<lb/>
Economy Mini-Storage<lb/>
757-0373<lb/>
300 Farmer's St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
Discount To All Students<lb/>
one example of successful com<lb/>
munity involvement.<lb/>
Looking towards the fall of<lb/>
1988, Murphy said as President he<lb/>
would try to create an atmosphere<lb/>
of student involvement. "My ma-<lb/>
jor goal is have total campus in-<lb/>
volvement within the SGA, mean-<lb/>
ing all sectors groups to be in-<lb/>
volved in the student government<lb/>
so that there will be more commu-<lb/>
nications of issues Murphy said.<lb/>
On student involvement,<lb/>
Murphy said that students have<lb/>
the ability to change the ECU<lb/>
reputation. "I would like to see<lb/>
ECU recognized as an academic<lb/>
institution, not sucn a hick<lb/>
school Murphy said.<lb/>
Amoung Murphy's other<lb/>
ideas are plans to create an ex-<lb/>
ceptable student recreation cen-<lb/>
ter proposal and to create better<lb/>
student turn-out to Pirate basket-<lb/>
Read the sports<lb/>
Ipage in The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
Simply the best.<lb/>
student support<lb/>
LOW COST<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
Abortion from 13 to 18 weeks at additional coat. Pregnancy<lb/>
Tat, Birth Control ?nd Problem Pregnancy Counseling, For<lb/>
further information, call 832-0535 (toil free number 1-800-<lb/>
532-5384) between 9 a jn. and 5 p.m. weekday. General anes-<lb/>
thesia available.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
I MM III MINIM<lb/>
SGA ELECTIONS<lb/>
Mill<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
i i i i ii i i<lb/>
SGA EXECUTIVE OFFICERS<lb/>
Will be held on<lb/>
1 ' ? ? ? ' ' ' UU ' ? ' ? t i i i t i i i i<lb/>
Wednesday. March 23<lb/>
i i i i i r i i i i i m i<lb/>
between<lb/>
i i i i i i i i i i i i i i<lb/>
9:00 a.m. &amp; 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
' ' ' ?????III I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I (<lb/>
HAVE YOUR STJJDENT<lb/>
iiiii i i i i i i i i ii i i -<lb/>
ACTIVITY<lb/>
LJJ<lb/>
'III I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M I I I i I I I I M I I I I .til<lb/>
SRA SEM-fWAL DAWCE<lb/>
MARCH 18,<lb/>
 pro lam in-fa. Holiday Jnr<lb/>
Ui-rh fln SRA Cord<lb/>
fjt,4-hou a SKA Cord<lb/>
islndk 4?. tout<lb/>
cV4 avo.lblc <lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
1988 FACULTYSTAFFSTUDENT<lb/>
BILLIARDS TOURNAMENT<lb/>
TUESDAY. MARCH 22,1988<lb/>
6:30 P.M. MSC MULTI-PURPOSE ROOM<lb/>
REGISTER IN MSC BILLIARDS CENTTR<lb/>
BY MONDAY. MARCH 21 AT 5:00 PM<lb/>
REGISTRATION: FREE<lb/>
TROPHIES AWARDED FOR<lb/>
FIRST, SECOND, AND THIRD PLACE<lb/>
FOUR STAR<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
???? ?MA V1<lb/>
Fast FREE <lb/>
DwffvwryzZ<lb/>
tTthin Solmures<lb/>
758-3300<lb/>
1 14 East Tenth Street<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
STORE HOURS<lb/>
SUN -THU 11 AM-1AM<lb/>
FRI -SAT 1 1 Am-2AM<lb/>
WE ACCEPT CHICKS<lb/>
? FROM NO DM  '? ?" . -3: <lb/>
PIZZA FROM FOUR STAB PIZZA fCXJ<lb/>
?'? LI OECE.ETWO p c-c<lb/>
ONE SPEOAt  PP<lb/>
"WO HOT DEUC ' ?  ?'? TM<lb/>
cULl PORT  ; "?-? PBESMEST<lb/>
PCSS B.E NGREC ? '?' ?"<lb/>
T0PP(NGS<lb/>
OU CAN ORDER TWO ? -<lb/>
pizzas or two ? ; ? ????"<lb/>
T0PP'NG PlZZAJ ' ? ' ?<lb/>
?. ? ?<lb/>
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE TAX<lb/>
10"10"14"14"<lb/>
DOUBLCZZSINGLEDOUBLEZZSINGLE<lb/>
16 SlicesS Slices24 Slices12 Slices<lb/>
7.205.1010.257.25<lb/>
8.205.6011.758.25<lb/>
9.206.1013.259.25<lb/>
10.206.6014.7510.25<lb/>
11.207.1016.2511.25<lb/>
12.207.6017.7512.25<lb/>
$1.00 each add ?w-? .it ion a! slice$1 SO each additional slice<lb/>
14 TASTY ITEMS<lb/>
TO CHOOSE FROM<lb/>
tm,rImausace' ham ground chuck, bacon, pineapple.<lb/>
T! UCk CRUST, ONIONS, GREEN PEPPERS, IIOT PEPPERS ANCIIOVIES<lb/>
MUSI 1RCXMS, OLIVES, EXTRA CIIEESE '<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
1 Item<lb/>
2 Items<lb/>
3 Items<lb/>
4 Items<lb/>
5 Items<lb/>
' ? ?m auumonai slice<lb/>
Four Star Pizza Deluxe<lb/>
5 ITEMS FOR THE PRICE OF 4<lb/>
PEPPERONI, SAUSAGE, MUSHROOMS, ONIONS<lb/>
AND GREEN PEPPERS<lb/>
NO SUBSTITLrnO.VIS<lb/>
Big 12" Subs. $4.50<lb/>
HOT OR COLD<lb/>
ITALIAN, I JAM &amp; CI IEESE, ROAST BEEF &amp; CI IEESE, MEATBALL<lb/>
Four Star Pizza Super Deluxe<lb/>
9 ITEMS FOR THE PRICE OF 5<lb/>
PEPPERONI, SAUSAGE, MUSHROOMS, GROUND CHUCK ONIONS<lb/>
GREEN PEPPERS, BLACK OLIVES, HOT PEPPERS AND EXTTIA hKfW<lb/>
NO SUBSTITUTIONS tXTRA CHEESE<lb/>
Diet Pizza (10" Only)<lb/>
0<lb/>
SLICED TOMATOES, MUSHROOMS, GREEN PEPPERS ONIONS Rl Ar<lb/>
OIJVI5 A PARMI3AN CHEESE ' JNlUN BLACK<lb/>
OPTIONAL TOPPINGS. PINEAPPLE HOT PEPPERS<lb/>
"???. 758-1<lb/>
SIX PACK<lb/>
OF COKE<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
(with mtf Dmfe? pun rmae)<lb/>
ONE COUPON PER ORDER<lb/>
ICOUPON EXPIRES 5-1-S.<lb/>
-aca&amp;r<lb/>
99<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Greenville I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
25<lb/>
coupon<lb/>
I LUNCH<lb/>
I OR DINNER<lb/>
 SPECIAL ANY<lb/>
 TWO ITEM<lb/>
110" PIZZA<lb/>
? PLUS 2 COKES ONLY<lb/>
IONB COUPON PER ORDER<lb/>
738-3300<lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
I Any Big 12"<lb/>
 I Sub Plus<lb/>
V I 1 Coke<lb/>
I only<lb/>
13 Italian, Roast Beef 4 Ch<lb/>
save 85 Ham at Cheeae, Meatball<lb/>
We Keserve the right ? ?.?<lb/>
758-33P? 7585301<lb/>
Greenville gg Greenville!<lb/>
? LUNCH -??Eaf<lb/>
firij OR DINNER<lb/>
VlUJ SPECIAL ANY<lb/>
? TWO ITEM<lb/>
114" PIZZA<lb/>
IMi<lb/>
$6I<lb/>
save si mM PLUS 4 COKES ONLY<lb/>
We Reserve the right" ONE COUPON PHI CHEWS We<lb/>
$00!<lb/>
I<lb/>
nTODmBa toUnJou<lb/>
?<lb/>
Writi<lb/>
ECU Newt Bureau<lb/>
GREENVILLE - Public <lb/>
teachers who participate n<lb/>
I oastaJ PlainsWntingProjc.<lb/>
summer are likelv to find tl<lb/>
selves "teaching each often<lb/>
to teach writing according<lb/>
project's co-director.<lb/>
A basic assumption of the<lb/>
oel is "that teachers should<lb/>
teachers how to t ich writiru<lb/>
that the best teachers of w<lb/>
are writers themselves sa<lb/>
Patkrk Bizzaro of East Cai<lb/>
I niversify.<lb/>
"We' re going to ask the tea)<lb/>
themselves to give presenta<lb/>
and, also, they will do a cons<lb/>
able amount of writing<lb/>
selves Bizzaro said<lb/>
Up to 25 teachers from gral<lb/>
Racia<lb/>
(CPS) ? Tensions betil<lb/>
v lute and minority student;<lb/>
nued to worsen on a numb<lb/>
( ampuses the first week I<lb/>
At Rodgers Stateolle<lb/>
Claremont, Okla white<lb/>
school students injured abe<lb/>
Middle Eastern college stucj<lb/>
in a series of attacks and<lb/>
March 3.<lb/>
A hit-and-run accident,<lb/>
gi! ns, rocks and eggs were u!<lb/>
the rioting, which reportl<lb/>
began with an argument bet1<lb/>
1 of the collegians and a gro<lb/>
For the finest<lb/>
Coverage of<lb/>
Pirote Athletic,<lb/>
Read<lb/>
The First<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
TH<lb/>
F<lb/>
M<lb/>
Facilit<lb/>
Co-ed Ai<lb/>
Machine:<lb/>
Dressingl<lb/>
Showers<lb/>
Sauna.<lb/>
This<lb/>
?hw??ri wiLnuaan m ?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17, 1988<lb/>
.4 i?<lb/>
w<lb/>
SRA C?d<lb/>
r 1 SKA Cori<lb/>
ok 4J a. couplt<lb/>
RSIT<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
V AMENT<lb/>
i 22,1988<lb/>
I ROOM<lb/>
UPS CENTER<lb/>
 I 5:00 P.M.<lb/>
N<lb/>
OR<lb/>
;K)P.4CE<lb/>
RDER<lb/>
P P ZZA ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
TH<lb/>
A<lb/>
CLUDETAX<lb/>
r<lb/>
TIMS<lb/>
I ROM<lb/>
I1<lb/>
-TLE,<lb/>
ANCHOVIES<lb/>
<lb/>
114"<lb/>
SINGLE<lb/>
 s<lb/>
.7.25<lb/>
- 25<lb/>
<lb/>
10 25<lb/>
1125<lb/>
25<lb/>
<lb/>
luxe<lb/>
)F4<lb/>
n<lb/>
' ' TBALL<lb/>
per Deluxe<lb/>
- ONIONS),<lb/>
D EXTRA CHEESE.<lb/>
nlv)<lb/>
0<lb/>
TRS, ONIONS, BLACK<lb/>
coupon immih<lb/>
758-35001<lb/>
Greenville I<lb/>
Any Big 12"<lb/>
pub Plus<lb/>
l Coke<lb/>
ir?i<lb/>
$4<lb/>
25<lb/>
I<lb/>
? i jr. Roast Bnf&amp;Q<lb/>
- r JUiri &amp; Ch?w?. Meatball<lb/>
? m We R?rv the nghtf<lb/>
? to Umit our delivery ?re<lb/>
coupon<lb/>
-tii.<lb/>
r aeuvery tmm<lb/>
T33O0<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
LCH -SEtf<lb/>
K PINNER<lb/>
'EC1AL ANY<lb/>
WO ITEM<lb/>
14" PIZZA<lb/>
US 4 COKES ONLY savh<lb/>
laCOLTUKnUCmXM WrRnrmtkt<lb/>
-a?B toUtrourd<lb/>
$qoo<lb/>
Writing project will teach teachers to write<lb/>
ECU New Bureau<lb/>
GREENVILLE - Public school<lb/>
teachers who participate in the<lb/>
( oastal riains Writing Project this<lb/>
summer are likely to find them-<lb/>
selves "teaching each others how<lb/>
to teach writing according to the<lb/>
project's co-director.<lb/>
A basic assumption of the proj-<lb/>
cct is "that teachers should teach<lb/>
teachers how to U ch writing and<lb/>
thai the best teachers of writing<lb/>
are writers themselves says Dr.<lb/>
Patick Bizzaro of East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
We re going to ask the teachers<lb/>
themselves to give presentations<lb/>
kd, also, they will do a consider-<lb/>
able amount of writing them-<lb/>
selves Bizzaro said.<lb/>
L'p to 25 teachers from grades K<lb/>
through 12 will be accepted for<lb/>
the writing project program at<lb/>
ECU which includes a four week<lb/>
institute on campus July 5 - 29 and<lb/>
a follow-up program during the<lb/>
1988-89 school year.<lb/>
Teachers who are accepted will<lb/>
receive a $400 stipend, tuition and<lb/>
fees for six hours in graduate<lb/>
credit at ECU in English or educ-<lb/>
tion, and materials on teaching<lb/>
writing.<lb/>
Teachers from schools in the<lb/>
northeast North Carolina educa-<lb/>
tion district are invited to apply<lb/>
for the Coastal Plains Writing<lb/>
Project fellowships. Applications<lb/>
should be sent to Bizzaro in the<lb/>
Department of English, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27858, and must<lb/>
include a one-page description of<lb/>
how writing is used in the class-<lb/>
room and an explanation of spe-<lb/>
cific successful activites. Signa-<lb/>
ture or letter of support form the<lb/>
applicant's local supervisor must<lb/>
accompany the application. Ap-<lb/>
plications are requested by April<lb/>
15.<lb/>
The Coastal Plains Writing<lb/>
Project is part of the statewide<lb/>
North Carolina Writing project<lb/>
funded by the State Board of<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
Bizzaro, associate professor of<lb/>
English and director of the Writ-<lb/>
ing Center at ECU for the past five<lb/>
years, also headed ECU's Writing<lb/>
Across the Curriculum program.<lb/>
He will co-direct the Coastal<lb/>
<lb/>
Plains Writing Project with Dr.<lb/>
Joanna Mink, assistant professor<lb/>
of English and Director of Writing<lb/>
Programs at Atalantic Christian<lb/>
College in Wilson.<lb/>
"There really is a lot of interest<lb/>
in this program Bizzaro said. "It<lb/>
is going to satisfy some real needs,<lb/>
our teachers want to know how to<lb/>
teach writing he said.<lb/>
He added that he expects "the<lb/>
best ideas will come from the<lb/>
teachers themselves - teachers<lb/>
giving ideas to each other by the<lb/>
sharing of ideas<lb/>
Participants will earn graduate<lb/>
credit of three semester hours in<lb/>
writing and three semester hours<lb/>
in teaching of writing.<lb/>
Activities will include writing<lb/>
of all kinds, from journals to for-<lb/>
mal postition papers; presenta-<lb/>
tions by faculty and qualified<lb/>
consultants; demonstrations of<lb/>
effective teaching strategies, peer<lb/>
group responsing and editing;<lb/>
professional readirig and weekly<lb/>
social activities. Participants will<lb/>
be required to attend fall weekend<lb/>
workshops.<lb/>
Bizzaro said that the combined<lb/>
effort will make it possible "to<lb/>
reach as many teachers as pos-<lb/>
sible in this large geographical<lb/>
area, to continue the excellent<lb/>
work begun by personnel at At-<lb/>
lantic Christian College, and to<lb/>
award graduate credit from<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
He said that over the past three<lb/>
years, ECU faculty have con-<lb/>
ducted workshops in Pitt County<lb/>
for teachers K-12, focusing on<lb/>
teaching writing as a process and<lb/>
on using writing for purposes of<lb/>
learning.<lb/>
He added, "We believe that<lb/>
prospective teachers are most apt<lb/>
to learn how to teach writing not<lb/>
only by writing themselves, but<lb/>
also by observing and learning<lb/>
form other teachers actively in-<lb/>
volved in the promoting of read-<lb/>
ing and writing skills<lb/>
Racial tensions on the rise<lb/>
(CPS) Tensions between<lb/>
w hite and minority students con-<lb/>
tinued to worsen on a number of<lb/>
 ampuses the first week of March.<lb/>
At Rodgers State College in<lb/>
Claremont, Okla white high<lb/>
school students injured about 20<lb/>
Middle Eastern college students<lb/>
in a series of attacks and fights<lb/>
March 3.<lb/>
A hit-and-run accident, pellet<lb/>
ns, rocks and eggs were used in<lb/>
the rioting, which reportedly<lb/>
began with an argument between<lb/>
I of the collegians and roup of<lb/>
the high schoolers. Police arrested<lb/>
a 17-year-old for attacking a for-<lb/>
eign student with a baseball bat.<lb/>
At Ramapo College in<lb/>
Mahwah, N.J housing chief<lb/>
Ronald L. Bollhcimer reported on<lb/>
the same day that as many as 20<lb/>
dorm residents failed to sign a<lb/>
card saying racism was unaccept-<lb/>
able at Ramapo.<lb/>
Bollheimer wasn't sure if the<lb/>
"15 to 20" students who didn't<lb/>
sign the cards, distributed as part<lb/>
of a school-wide anti-racism pro-<lb/>
gram in the wake of a December<lb/>
fight between black and white<lb/>
students, were actively resisting<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
Students who refused to sign<lb/>
the card could be kicked out of<lb/>
their dorms, he added.<lb/>
For the finest<lb/>
Coverage oj<lb/>
Pirate Athletics<lb/>
Read<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now accepting applications<lb/>
for the position of assistant credit manager<lb/>
River Bluff Apartments<lb/>
2 Bd. Townhouses Temporarily Reduced to<lb/>
$295month and Security Deposit of only<lb/>
$100 for 1 and 2 Bedrooms. Sign up now for<lb/>
summer school and fall semester while<lb/>
rates still in effect.<lb/>
?Fully Carpeted<lb/>
?Large Pool<lb/>
?Free Cable<lb/>
?ECU Bus Service1.5 miles from Campus<lb/>
Three Month Leases Available For Summer School<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
10th Street Ext. to Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
Requirments:<lb/>
Excellent Communications Skills<lb/>
Good Organizational Skills<lb/>
Must have Own Transportation<lb/>
Basic Computer Knowledge<lb/>
Apply in Person at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
No Phone Calls Please!<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
PREGNANCY CENTER<lb/>
The Center Is Open<lb/>
Mon Tues, &amp; Wed. Fit 9 a.m. - 7 p.m.<lb/>
9 a.m. - 2 p.m. &amp; by appointment<lb/>
For an appointment or more infor-<lb/>
mation, call 24-Hour Helpline,<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
111 East Third Street - The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Test-<lb/>
Confidential Counseling<lb/>
f.f.<lb/>
V-<lb/>
THIS ST. PATRICK'S DAY GET<lb/>
AND SAVE SOME GREEN!<lb/>
NO<lb/>
if<lb/>
y<lb/>
?<lb/>
FULL FAGILI<lb/>
<lb/>
j<lb/>
Facilities &amp; Programs Offered Include:<lb/>
Co-ed Aerobics, Hot Mineral Whirlpool, Dynacam Weight<lb/>
Machines, Wolf System Sunbed, Stationary Bikes, Private<lb/>
Dressing Rooms, Outdoor Running Courses, Private Tile<lb/>
Showers, Exercise Rooms, Wet Steam Room, Desert Dry<lb/>
Sauna.<lb/>
This offer is for Two Weeks Only<lb/>
1cGl<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
best health club value.<lb/>
SOUTH PARK SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
GREENVILLE 7567991<lb/>
Pfj?PH?'H<lb/>
i ummm<lb/>
itmt&amp;0f6mii01 aniiM mi Tp' w i<lb/>
?-?-<lb/>
?-?.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0010"/><lb/>
THE EASTCAROl INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
MARCH 17, 1988 Page 10<lb/>
"iiiwHiiiiy'<lb/>
Students open music store<lb/>
ii?M.ii,iiiiiiiiiiiiii?'?.(fci???wiiiiiruiiM'iM<lb/>
By DEENA NIEWIADOMSKI<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
On February 16, 1983, two<lb/>
former East Carolina University<lb/>
students opened a music store.<lb/>
Allan and Legare Hinds started<lb/>
Rocket Music.<lb/>
Legare, an art student, had been<lb/>
in the business at another music<lb/>
store. The idea came when that<lb/>
music store was going out of<lb/>
business and she teamed up with<lb/>
Allan Hinds who had been a<lb/>
history ma jor a t ECU and also had<lb/>
attended Florida International<lb/>
University.<lb/>
In May of 1983, Allan and<lb/>
Legare were married. During its<lb/>
first year of being open, Rocket<lb/>
Music had a third partner, Jim<lb/>
"Boot Blanton and was located<lb/>
two doors down the street from<lb/>
Susie's. A year and a half later,<lb/>
they moved to their present<lb/>
location.<lb/>
In the five years since Rocket<lb/>
Music opened, it has seen<lb/>
businesses move out of the<lb/>
downtown area and into the<lb/>
malls. The Hinds would like to see<lb/>
commerce come back downtown.<lb/>
They would like to see businesses<lb/>
opening and Rocket Music<lb/>
expanding.<lb/>
Rocket Music's clientele are for<lb/>
the most part repeat customers.<lb/>
The Hinds see the main reason for<lb/>
people not getting involved in<lb/>
New Deli changes hands;<lb/>
owners excited about future<lb/>
BY HENRY BOARDMAN<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
The New Deli changed hands<lb/>
on Monday, Frcbruary 15.<lb/>
Russell Ebelherr, Grady Smith<lb/>
and Ron Everett bought the<lb/>
downtown restaurantnighclub<lb/>
This is a picture of Rocket Music downtown. It's a really boss place because they saw a lot of potential<lb/>
to get instruments. In fact, I bought my harmonica there. (Photo by in . Grady and Ron, who also<lb/>
Hardv Aligood) own Scott's Cleaners,and Russell,<lb/>
PBS sponsors Festival f88<lb/>
BY MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
Stall Writer<lb/>
PBS's annual pledge drive,<lb/>
Festival '88, is currentlv in full<lb/>
swine. I don't know about vou,<lb/>
but I can't remember the last time<lb/>
I saw such a carnival of TV<lb/>
viewing. "MacNeil-Lehrer<lb/>
Newshour. "Wallstreet<lb/>
Week wow, sort of takes your<lb/>
breath away, doesn't it? It's just a<lb/>
regular three-ring circus on UHF<lb/>
channel 25, and you can still get in<lb/>
o the fun! Pop some corn, gather<lb/>
rft and the RH aro-mHcl -Hie TV,<lb/>
antf step under the" big fop<lb/>
without leaving home.<lb/>
During Festival '88, TBS will<lb/>
rerun their acclaimed "Dukes of<lb/>
 lazzard for Literacy" special in<lb/>
which Uncle Jesse comes to grips<lb/>
with his inability to read: "I don't<lb/>
need no book learnin he<lb/>
protests. "One X on the jug means<lb/>
fuel for the General Lee. Two X's<lb/>
means com squeezins, and three<lb/>
X's means my urine specimen for<lb/>
the countv nurse  or was that<lb/>
two X's?"<lb/>
Inhonorof the 10th anniversary<lb/>
of the death of transvestite-<lb/>
director Edward Wood, Jr PBS<lb/>
has prepared a special edition of<lb/>
"Hollvwood Legends" to give us<lb/>
a poignant up-close look at the<lb/>
man in high heels who gave the<lb/>
world the Golden Turkey Award<lb/>
winner for Worst Film Ever<lb/>
Made: "Plan Nine From Outer<lb/>
Space<lb/>
To top off their tribute to<lb/>
Wood,Jr "Masterpiece Theater"<lb/>
will present a colorized version of<lb/>
Wood's autobiography, "Glen or<lb/>
Glenda Host Alistar Cooke<lb/>
points out that "GlenorGlenda's"<lb/>
screenplay rivals James Joyce's<lb/>
"Portrait of the Artist as a Young<lb/>
Man" for innovative narrative<lb/>
technique.<lb/>
"Compare says Cooke , "this<lb/>
famous passage by Joyce: "Once<lb/>
upon a time, and a very good time<lb/>
it was, there was a moocow<lb/>
coming down along the road<lb/>
andmet a nicens little boy<lb/>
named babv tuckoo to Wood's<lb/>
"Glen or Glenda" stream of<lb/>
consciousness narrative: "Beware<lb/>
of the big green dragon that sits on<lb/>
your doorstep! He eats little boys!<lb/>
Puppy dog tails! Big fat snails!<lb/>
Beware! Take care! Beware<lb/>
"If Wood had written "Glen or<lb/>
Glenda" as a novel as Joyce did<lb/>
"Portrait of the Artist Cooke<lb/>
concludes, "no one would read it,<lb/>
either<lb/>
On "The Victory Garden Mr.<lb/>
Howard Keel shows how he<lb/>
successfully transplanted the<lb/>
tropical man-eating N'Gamba<lb/>
plant to his New York climate.<lb/>
"It's not the soil or weather that<lb/>
makes the difference Keel<lb/>
explains, "but a steady flow of<lb/>
nameless transients<lb/>
On "What's Cooking Julia<lb/>
Child takes takes on celebrity<lb/>
euest cook Wendy Richter in<lb/>
chocolate mousse wrestling.<lb/>
Afterwards, Child demostrates<lb/>
that properly prepared flatulence<lb/>
when expelled, can be for the<lb/>
appetite what an aphrodisiac is<lb/>
for lovemaking.<lb/>
Mr. Rogers has a special with<lb/>
guest star Emanuelle Lewis.<lb/>
Lewis and Rogers take the trollev<lb/>
to the neighborhood of make-<lb/>
believe. There they join in a<lb/>
retelling oi Hansel and Gretal<lb/>
which ends with Lewis being<lb/>
thrust into a microwave oven. As<lb/>
the screaming Lewis bubbles<lb/>
against the oven's window.<lb/>
Mister Rogers,King Friday, and<lb/>
all the neighborhood of make<lb/>
believe puppets watch on: their<lb/>
faces twitching masses of<lb/>
See MICAH, page 13<lb/>
who worked for seven years in his<lb/>
parents' restaurant in New Jersey,<lb/>
are three friends who wanted to<lb/>
get into the food business. They<lb/>
don't want to change things that<lb/>
are making money, like<lb/>
Wednesday's Dead Night, but<lb/>
they do see room for<lb/>
improvement.<lb/>
They want to bring together the<lb/>
two personalities of the Deli. By<lb/>
day, it's a lunch spot for<lb/>
downtown businessmen, while at<lb/>
night it's Greenville's only haven<lb/>
for those of us deadheads and<lb/>
punks who really enjoy new<lb/>
music that's not Top 40 pop.<lb/>
A big change the guys have in<lb/>
mind will be to introduce liquor to<lb/>
the New Deli, maybe as soon as<lb/>
March 17. As long as food sales<lb/>
don't go below 51 of the total<lb/>
income, state law won't require<lb/>
the Deli to become a private club,<lb/>
a status owners and customers<lb/>
alike wish to avoid- - hence, the<lb/>
new push in the dinner trade.<lb/>
Most people don't know, that<lb/>
the Deli is, and has been, open for<lb/>
dinner as well as lunch. They're<lb/>
thrilled with the steady lunch<lb/>
crowd they get every day but<lb/>
would like to see a lot more<lb/>
people, especially ECU students,<lb/>
at New Deli for dinner.<lb/>
One reason for the slower<lb/>
dinner business may be the fact<lb/>
that bands often set up as early as<lb/>
6:00 p.m. which tends to<lb/>
discourage a leisurely dinner. So,<lb/>
the guys will try to get the bands<lb/>
to set up as late as 8:00,if<lb/>
possible,in order to maintain a<lb/>
dining ambiance.<lb/>
See NEW, page 13<lb/>
music is, as Legare puts it,<lb/>
"getting over the fear of trying<lb/>
Once that task is completed, the<lb/>
interest grows.<lb/>
Allan and Legare have a<lb/>
daughter, Robbie, who is three,<lb/>
and a son, John Allan, who is nine<lb/>
months. Legare and Allan have<lb/>
allowed their children to pursue<lb/>
their interests in music.<lb/>
Robbie has already begun<lb/>
playing the drums and keyboard.<lb/>
Legare plays the guitar and Allan<lb/>
plays the guitar and harmonica.<lb/>
Asa student at ECU, Allan sang in<lb/>
the choir.<lb/>
One hundred years ago the<lb/>
building which is home to Rocket<lb/>
Music was a carriage shop. Today<lb/>
it is a family business.<lb/>
With the aid of Bill<lb/>
1 lollingsworth doing repairs and<lb/>
service to the equipment, Rocket<lb/>
Music is a "musician's store" that<lb/>
sellsand services instruments and<lb/>
rents PA systems.<lb/>
Last Christmas, Rocket had an<lb/>
advertisement aired on MTV. The<lb/>
Hinds feel that MTV has been<lb/>
good for sales because it makes<lb/>
high school age kids especially<lb/>
band conscious of instruments<lb/>
seen in their favorite videos.<lb/>
In five years, the music shop<lb/>
whose music name came out of a<lb/>
session of "throwing" names<lb/>
around has turned into a<lb/>
successful business that caters<lb/>
mainly to people 14 to 30 years of<lb/>
age. Their clientele ranges from<lb/>
people who play because of<lb/>
doctor recommended therapy to<lb/>
those who plav for pure<lb/>
enjoyment.<lb/>
Earlvis has pretty good time in Fla.<lb/>
BY EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Pretty Good Writer<lb/>
Key West, Florida? This is the<lb/>
talc of seven college students who<lb/>
in search oi the perfect buzz spent<lb/>
they Spring Break in the southern<lb/>
most point of the U.S. Like sailors,<lb/>
they drank and smoked and sang.<lb/>
Like the Atlanta Braves, they all<lb/>
struck out.<lb/>
The setting. Pink, pink, pink.<lb/>
Key West is splashed with pink.<lb/>
Piftk hotels, ii'inl o?sos Sun<lb/>
pink people. Even the taxi cabsare<lb/>
pink.<lb/>
High and hungry for munch-<lb/>
food, we entered a pink<lb/>
restaurant with pink table clothes<lb/>
and sat down. After ordering, we<lb/>
became a little suspicous when<lb/>
the waiter asked, "Did you want<lb/>
extra mayo on that roast beef?"<lb/>
Damn fag.<lb/>
Yes, the rumors of Key West are<lb/>
true, fags run rampant in gay<lb/>
Old people ruin<lb/>
Florida for natives<lb/>
By HENRY BOARDMAN<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
Some observations from the<lb/>
East Carolinian's crack Florida<lb/>
corrcspondant<lb/>
People who live in Florida face<lb/>
many invaders, including of<lb/>
course, the yearly influx of<lb/>
rowdy, obnoxious Spring<lb/>
Breakers. This plague they can<lb/>
deal with for several reasons.<lb/>
First, Natives kind of envy them<lb/>
 who wouldn't want that much<lb/>
sex. Also, Breakers bring ungodly<lb/>
amounts of money with them and<lb/>
tend to drink themselves into<lb/>
blind stupors.<lb/>
The pickings are easy for those<lb/>
who know were to look. They also<lb/>
come regular as clockwork, every<lb/>
spring, then ? and this is<lb/>
important ? they go away.<lb/>
This brings us to the more<lb/>
unwelcome intruder ? Old<lb/>
People. Like Samurai Fatman<lb/>
commercials, they never go away.<lb/>
They come from New York and<lb/>
New Jersey  never to return.<lb/>
They are deviously obnoxious,<lb/>
unlike the average Breaker who,<lb/>
after puking in your yard, usually<lb/>
leaves. Old eople won't puke, but<lb/>
they'll stick around and tell you<lb/>
how to clear up your crabgrass.<lb/>
Now, I don't mean to knock<lb/>
senior citizens in paricular, they<lb/>
perform many valuable and<lb/>
useful tasks in society like ahh<lb/>
well, somebody has to get all that<lb/>
money we put into Social<lb/>
Security, right?<lb/>
Anyway, they have lots of<lb/>
values ? really, I just don't feel<lb/>
like writing them all down right<lb/>
now. The thing is that they all end<lb/>
up in Florida.<lb/>
I've found that native<lb/>
Floridians systematically fight<lb/>
every offending characteristic of<lb/>
their unwelcome invaders.<lb/>
The sense of sight is the first to<lb/>
go. Old people compensate for<lb/>
this by wearing the brightest<lb/>
colors possible, especially in the<lb/>
area of green.<lb/>
I believe that there exist in the<lb/>
jungle of Retirement Villages<lb/>
several heretofore undiscovered<lb/>
shades of green just waiting for<lb/>
some art geek to brave the wilds<lb/>
and name.<lb/>
To counteract these lethal color<lb/>
schemes the Natives are never<lb/>
without their shades. Protection<lb/>
against the putrid pastel pinks,<lb/>
greens, purples, yellows and<lb/>
aquas (yes, aqua lives on in the<lb/>
Sunshine State courtesy of the<lb/>
Miami Dolphins) is absolutely<lb/>
necessary if any quality of life is to<lb/>
be maintained.<lb/>
Many incumbants now opt for<lb/>
those sunglasses that make<lb/>
everything the same kind of<lb/>
orangey-brown. This guards<lb/>
against the violent nausea<lb/>
incurred when a woman in lemon<lb/>
yellow shoes, lime green pants,<lb/>
red blouse, pink shawl, and blue<lb/>
hair with a purple bow crosses<lb/>
your path. This often happens.<lb/>
Hearing follows quickly<lb/>
behind, which is why old folks<lb/>
TALK VERY VERY LOUD.<lb/>
The modern solution to the<lb/>
noise pollution problem is, of<lb/>
course, the Walkman. This was a<lb/>
welcome invention for those who<lb/>
had tired of the old method of<lb/>
protection ? never removing<lb/>
wax from the ears which, besides<lb/>
being fairly unhealthy, smelled<lb/>
pretty bad.<lb/>
And smell is the last sense to<lb/>
go. The solution? Hit that<lb/>
perfume like there's no<lb/>
tomorrow. Old people also tend<lb/>
See OBSERVATIONS, page 12<lb/>
herds of butt-hole surfers in this<lb/>
resort island. Rail-thin AIDS fall-<lb/>
out victims stand dying on every<lb/>
street corner just waiting for<lb/>
someone to, well use your<lb/>
imagination.<lb/>
Walking down the main street,<lb/>
Du val, we witnessed a long line of<lb/>
feminine-looking poop shooters<lb/>
standing in front of the Pink<lb/>
Palace Theather. Some of the<lb/>
potential movie watchers were<lb/>
dressed in leather tights, while<lb/>
others were blatant homos in<lb/>
drag. A by-stander in the rear end<lb/>
of the line said, "It is packed in<lb/>
there to which Jack added'Just<lb/>
like fudge We were in tears.<lb/>
Back when boys were boys<lb/>
and men were men.<lb/>
All fags and pink aside, we had<lb/>
a good time in Key West, a <lb/>
pretty good time.<lb/>
The sun set. I think it was Key<lb/>
West's own Ernest Hemingway<lb/>
who said it best?"The Sun Also<lb/>
Sets The whole town shuts<lb/>
down and heads for Mallory<lb/>
Docks to watch the great ball of<lb/>
fire slowly drip its colors into the<lb/>
crests of the horizon.<lb/>
On the dock there arc Jugglers,<lb/>
tight rope walkers, men in<lb/>
straight jackets, men in chains and<lb/>
men rolling around in broken<lb/>
glass; all those kinds of sane<lb/>
things to do for a living.<lb/>
Sun set refreshments ranged<lb/>
from jumbo shrimp to fresh<lb/>
squeezed lemon aid. There was<lb/>
the fudge lady who screamed<lb/>
"Hot fudge, it'll burn your buns,<lb/>
Good fudge<lb/>
Or how about the man selling<lb/>
Pretty Good pop corn. In addition<lb/>
to a sign atop the cart saying<lb/>
Pretty Good Pop Corn, he would<lb/>
periodically say "It's  pretty<lb/>
good pop corn<lb/>
Accomodations. For the first<lb/>
night we got a room at the Red<lb/>
Rooster Inn, a bombed fall-out<lb/>
shelter that the building inspector<lb/>
should have condemned had he<lb/>
not been payed off. Our room<lb/>
with the spectacular gravel<lb/>
parking lot view was the size of an<lb/>
Aycock dorm room.<lb/>
Staggering home later that<lb/>
night, we planned to torch<lb/>
another bowl and guzzle a few<lb/>
nVtrcOM'MWs, tnifc tnteh to tftit<lb/>
dismayed chagrin the room was<lb/>
locked. Little did we know that<lb/>
the hotel room would be locked,<lb/>
the hotel room would be locked.<lb/>
"Whose got the key? Lumpy<lb/>
asked Pugslcy.<lb/>
"Jack and Buck do Pugsley<lb/>
Adams, snap, snap, answered.<lb/>
We kicked and pounded on<lb/>
the Wells-Fargo hotel door until<lb/>
our hands bled. We cussed every<lb/>
curse word known to mankind.<lb/>
Jack and Buck were passed out<lb/>
and unconsiously deaf with the<lb/>
shiny keys in their pockets.<lb/>
The five locked out losers with<lb/>
bloody fits found lounge chairs<lb/>
where we slumbered by the pool.<lb/>
We were pissed as shit.<lb/>
On Sunday, day 2-for those of<lb/>
you keeping a reader's diary, we<lb/>
blew off the Red Cock Inn and<lb/>
landed at the Spanish Gardens, or<lb/>
was it Spanish Moss or Spanish<lb/>
Fly? The Spanish hotel was across<lb/>
from the Blue Marlin Hotel which<lb/>
See EARLVIS, page 11<lb/>
Pickin' the fat off the bones<lb/>
I barely escaped with my life'<lb/>
By CHIPPY CHAPSnCK<lb/>
It was Friday night before<lb/>
fceak. I had finished some term<lb/>
papers on the computers lit me<lb/>
ld East Carolinian offices, I<lb/>
ocked the door and headed out<lb/>
into the night,<lb/>
I unlocked my bike and salon it<lb/>
when I heard the noise, it was the<lb/>
heavy, pounding scrape of a size<lb/>
19 sneaker on the cement. I<lb/>
whirled around nervously.<lb/>
Suddenly, they were aB over<lb/>
ne! Arms roughly the size of<lb/>
oiph Lundrgren's, yet strangely<lb/>
oose and flabby m the biceps,<lb/>
threw me roughly to the<lb/>
pavement<lb/>
Harsh and high pitched<lb/>
laughter mocked me as I<lb/>
to sit up. A lam loot<lb/>
pushed me down "You're<lb/>
finished in this town, Bonepridkr<lb/>
I looked at the circle ?f my<lb/>
The ECU Association<lb/>
FatarisWhoWriteBed Poetry<lb/>
been lying in wftit for me.<lb/>
Dressed in pink, stretched out<lb/>
WmmB<lb/>
weapon, a Kmart brand bike<lb/>
chain, was wrested from my<lb/>
hand by the other two.<lb/>
I managed to punch the red<lb/>
haired one as she reached around<lb/>
to tie my wrists, but the blow had<lb/>
no effect against the cellulite<lb/>
plating that armored her stomach.<lb/>
They dragged me to the<lb/>
diggings of the Mendenhall<lb/>
Reflecting Pool. I was pushed<lb/>
down into the mud and half<lb/>
carried back to the metal fence. A<lb/>
couple of mem started up a<lb/>
bonfire they had built.<lb/>
The others gagged me with the<lb/>
latest issue at Panful Revelations,<lb/>
their bimonthly poetry journal.<lb/>
They secured me to the fence and<lb/>
started taking off their clothes.<lb/>
I shuddered as they bared their<lb/>
bodies. Even in darkness, the<lb/>
many obscene folds oi their pale<lb/>
flesh shone in the streetlight. My<lb/>
stomach yawned in terror.<lb/>
Surely, they wouldn't <lb/>
couldn't do what I dared not even<lb/>
contemplate. I'd drunkenly<lb/>
violated a few land whales in my<lb/>
time, but mis  this was<lb/>
streaked each others bodies wit<lb/>
ferocious warlike symbols, the<lb/>
most common being a styiizec<lb/>
broken bone.<lb/>
The fire roared up and mey<lb/>
began dancing around it, as if to<lb/>
summon some forgotten goddess<lb/>
of Unashamed Emotion<lb/>
Expression.<lb/>
Their obese breasts usua<lb/>
drooped in gravity's painful<lb/>
as they agonized through<lb/>
boring, petty lives. Now<lb/>
slapped and flopped against<lb/>
ribcage, beating in time to the<lb/>
avenging lyrics of Pat Benatar.<lb/>
The music slowly faded away.<lb/>
They began moving slowly<lb/>
toward me, murmuring<lb/>
something. The murmuring grew<lb/>
louder and more distinct as they<lb/>
crawled slowly towards me.<lb/>
The words began to make sense.<lb/>
They were chanting their po?<lb/>
at me! The words are almost.<lb/>
disgusting to print, but I have t&amp;<lb/>
overcome my own pain in order<lb/>
to warn the public.<lb/>
Thepoem went, The nights we<lb/>
shared in a peertywhite tower<lb/>
iovm the wo9$i<lb/>
Teach<lb/>
Public school teachers vj<lb/>
participate in the Coastal PL<lb/>
Writing Project this summer<lb/>
likely to find thcmsel<lb/>
"teaching each other how to to<lb/>
writing according to<lb/>
projects' co-director.<lb/>
A basic assumption of<lb/>
project is "that teachers <lb/>
teach teachers how to<lb/>
writing and that the best lead<lb/>
of writing are writ<lb/>
themselves says Dr Pati<lb/>
Bizzaro of Hast Caro<lb/>
University.<lb/>
"We're going to ask the ti<lb/>
themselves to give presentati<lb/>
and, also, they will d<lb/>
considerable amount of wril<lb/>
themselves Bizzaro said.<lb/>
Stars<lb/>
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -<lb/>
star-studded AIDS benefit<lb/>
Elizabeth Taylor raised <lb/>
for education and research,<lb/>
organizers hope the gala<lb/>
repeated elsewhere.<lb/>
"We've had the most prr<lb/>
funds raised (for AIDS) at this<lb/>
function than anv other pla.<lb/>
the country benefit spokesi<lb/>
Charles Cinnamon said<lb/>
Sunday's "An Extraordmj<lb/>
Evening with Elizabeth Taj<lb/>
and Friends<lb/>
"We want it to be the protot<lb/>
for the rest of the country<lb/>
Earlvis h<lb/>
West and<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
was of course was not pamj<lb/>
blue but pink.<lb/>
At the Blue Marlin a few nij<lb/>
later we par tied with some ECI<lb/>
Pi IappaJC-Mart girls. They vg<lb/>
couTa.only ask questions to el<lb/>
other, it was called the questi(<lb/>
game, how original.<lb/>
One of our crew, Pee<lb/>
thought he had the hang<lb/>
questions game so he ejaculal<lb/>
"You have big giant titties h<lb/>
of the girls.<lb/>
Even though Pee Wee los<lb/>
game because he mad<lb/>
statement instead of posin<lb/>
question, his words were<lb/>
voted the statement of the wi<lb/>
Bars. Sloppy Joe's was<lb/>
Joe's had a singer who said<lb/>
you believe all fags shoul<lb/>
Bonehead<lb/>
Attacked!<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
since you left<lb/>
That's all I heard as I blaj<lb/>
out. The construction woi<lb/>
found me Monday, drooling<lb/>
 writhing in the mud. As I be<lb/>
more coherent, 1 tried to ex<lb/>
what happened.<lb/>
There was no proof of it. 1<lb/>
home and tried to recover<lb/>
today, walking to class, I<lb/>
mud stained bra size<lb/>
F(lab)snagged on the tl<lb/>
fluttering limply in the bree<lb/>
Switching<lb/>
The Ben Hecht-Ch<lb/>
MacArthur plav "The<lb/>
Page" has enjoyed a long cai<lb/>
films. Adolphe Menjou anl<lb/>
O'Brien starred in the 193l<lb/>
directed by Lewis Milestoi<lb/>
produced by Howard Hugfl<lb/>
Howard Hawks had'<lb/>
brilliant idea of changinj<lb/>
reporter to a woman, anv<lb/>
Girl Friday" was a hit in 194J<lb/>
Cary Grant and Rosalind Rj<lb/>
Billy Wilder went back<lb/>
1920s era with Walter M,<lb/>
and Jack Lemmon in 1973.<lb/>
Now comes "Swil<lb/>
Channels It is pattemc<lb/>
"His Girl Friday with<lb/>
Reynolds as the demonic<lb/>
and Kathleen Turner as h<lb/>
reporter and ex-wife<lb/>
something new has been<lb/>
television.<lb/>
Changing frcm a Cl<lb/>
newspaper to a satellite<lb/>
network does surprising<lb/>
damage to the timeless<lb/>
Page" plot. If anythinj<lb/>
deadline urgency is<lb/>
pronounced, given<lb/>
rornpetitive nature of TV<lb/>
Oh well, 'The Front Paj<lb/>
survive.<lb/>
-?frMMnMtMamSHR<lb/>
?fi? ?' ' ?? ?i 'omBumghi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0011"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 17,19M 11<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
tore<lb/>
a i egare puts it,<lb/>
the tear of trying<lb/>
- completed, the<lb/>
d I ocare have a<lb/>
Robbie who is three.<lb/>
John Allan who is nine<lb/>
ire and Allan have<lb/>
children to pursue<lb/>
?ests in music<lb/>
ha already begun<lb/>
ledrumsand keyboard<lb/>
ivs the guitar and Allan<lb/>
tar and harmonica<lb/>
Mian sang in<lb/>
years ago the<lb/>
- home to Rocket<lb/>
irriageshop Today<lb/>
. ness<lb/>
aid of Pill<lb/>
 repairs and<lb/>
Liipment, Rockel<lb/>
tore that<lb/>
rumentsand<lb/>
? docket had an<lb/>
n MTV. The<lb/>
M I" has Kvn<lb/>
se it makes<lb/>
especially<lb/>
instruments<lb/>
- ?  id(<lb/>
music shop<lb/>
came out of a<lb/>
names<lb/>
rned into a<lb/>
caters<lb/>
i rs ?<lb/>
rang - ??<lb/>
? ius<lb/>
led therap)<lb/>
? r pure<lb/>
Fla.<lb/>
bow! and guzzle a few<lb/>
d Wffs but murh ti air<lb/>
m Araa<lb/>
- now that<lb/>
I - ked,<lb/>
ked<lb/>
umpv<lb/>
? I Pugsley<lb/>
?nap answered.<lb/>
d and pounded on<lb/>
hotel door until<lb/>
I We cussed every<lb/>
wn to mankind,<lb/>
d Buck were passed out<lb/>
ously deaf with the<lb/>
n their pockets.<lb/>
ked out losers with<lb/>
ind lounge chairs<lb/>
lmbered by the pool.<lb/>
hit<lb/>
? : ?? ? Jay 2-for those of<lb/>
: a reader's diary, we<lb/>
Red Cock Inn and<lb/>
t the Spanish Gardens, or<lb/>
Moss or Spanish<lb/>
n i sh hotel was across<lb/>
Blue Martin Hotel which<lb/>
ee IARLVIS, page 11<lb/>
d a<lb/>
my life'<lb/>
each others bodies with<lb/>
us warlike symbols, the<lb/>
common being a sryiizec<lb/>
fnbone.<lb/>
fire roared up and they<lb/>
dancing around it, as if to<lb/>
wn some forgotten goddess<lb/>
Unashamed Emotional<lb/>
BOfl.<lb/>
obese breasts usually<lb/>
in gravity's painful pull<lb/>
agonized through their<lb/>
petty lives. Now they<lb/>
I and flopped against their<lb/>
2;e, beating in time to the<lb/>
;ing lyrics of Pat Benatar.<lb/>
music slowly faded away.<lb/>
began moving slowly<lb/>
Ird me, murmuring<lb/>
thing. The murmuring grew<lb/>
and more distinct as they<lb/>
1 slowly towards me.<lb/>
I words began to make sense.<lb/>
 were chanting their poems<lb/>
' The words are almost loo<lb/>
sting to print, but I have to<lb/>
me my own pain in order<lb/>
i the public.<lb/>
poem went, "The nights we<lb/>
1iai peaiiywhite tower<lb/>
?moHes form the words 1<lb/>
BQNEHEAD, pay It<lb/>
1<lb/>
Teachers learn Writing through Project<lb/>
Public school teachers who<lb/>
participate in the Coastal Plains<lb/>
Writing Project this summer are<lb/>
likely to find themselves<lb/>
teaching each other how to teach<lb/>
writing according to the<lb/>
projects' co-director.<lb/>
A basic assumption of the<lb/>
project is "that teachers should<lb/>
teach teachers how to teach<lb/>
writing and that the best teachers<lb/>
of writing are writers<lb/>
themselves says Dr. Patrick<lb/>
Bizzaro of East Carolina<lb/>
I niverstity.<lb/>
We re going to ask the teachers<lb/>
themselves to give presentations<lb/>
and, also, they will do a<lb/>
considerable amount of writing<lb/>
themselves Bizzaro said.<lb/>
Up to 25 teachers from grades K<lb/>
through 12 will be accepted for<lb/>
the writing project program at<lb/>
ECU which includes a four week<lb/>
institute on campus July 5-29 and<lb/>
a follow-up program during the<lb/>
1988-89 school year.<lb/>
Teachers who arc accepted will<lb/>
receive a $400 stipend, tuition and<lb/>
fees for six hours in graduate<lb/>
credit at ECU in English or<lb/>
Education, and materials on<lb/>
teaching writing.<lb/>
Teachers from schools in the<lb/>
northeast North Carolina<lb/>
education district are invited to<lb/>
apply for the Coastal Plains<lb/>
Writing Project fellowships.<lb/>
Applications should be sent to<lb/>
Bizzaro in the Ecpartment of<lb/>
English, ECU, and must include a<lb/>
one-page description of how<lb/>
writing is used in the classroom<lb/>
and an explanation of specific<lb/>
successful activities.<lb/>
Signature of letter of support<lb/>
from the applicant's local<lb/>
supervisor must accompany the<lb/>
application. Applications are<lb/>
requested by April 15.<lb/>
The Coastal Plains Writing<lb/>
Project is part of the statewide<lb/>
North Carolina Writing project<lb/>
funded by the State Board of<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
Bizzaro, associate professor of<lb/>
English and director of the<lb/>
WritingCenter at ECU for the past<lb/>
five years, also headed ECU's<lb/>
Writing Across the Curriculum<lb/>
program.<lb/>
He will co-direct the Coastal<lb/>
Plains Writing Project with Dr.<lb/>
Joanna Mink, assistant professor<lb/>
of English and Director of Writing<lb/>
Programs at Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College in Wilson.<lb/>
"There really is a lot of interest<lb/>
in this program Bizzaro said "It<lb/>
is going to saitsfy some real needs.<lb/>
Our teachers want to know how<lb/>
to teach writing he said.<lb/>
He added that he expects "the<lb/>
best ideas will come from the<lb/>
teachers themselves ? teachers<lb/>
giving ideas to each other by the<lb/>
sharing of ideas<lb/>
Participants will earn graduate<lb/>
credit of three semester hours in<lb/>
writing and three semester hours<lb/>
in teaching of writing.<lb/>
Activities will include writing<lb/>
of all kinds, from journals to<lb/>
formal position papers;<lb/>
presentations by faculty and<lb/>
qualified consultants;<lb/>
demonstrations of effective<lb/>
teaching strategies, peer group<lb/>
responsing and editing:<lb/>
professional reading and weekly<lb/>
social activities. Participants will<lb/>
be required to attend fall weekend<lb/>
workshops.<lb/>
Bizzaro said that the combined<lb/>
effort will make it possible "to<lb/>
reach as many teachers as<lb/>
possible in this large geographical<lb/>
area, to continue the excellent<lb/>
work begun bv personnel at<lb/>
Atlantic Christian College, and to<lb/>
award graduate credit from<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
He said that over the past three<lb/>
years, ECU faculty have<lb/>
conducted workshops in Pitt<lb/>
County for teachers K-12,<lb/>
focusing on teaching writing as a<lb/>
process and on using writing for<lb/>
purposes of learning.<lb/>
He added, "We believe that<lb/>
prospective teachers are most apt<lb/>
to learn how to teach writing not<lb/>
only by writing themselves, but<lb/>
also by observing and learning<lb/>
from other teachers actively<lb/>
involved in the promoting of<lb/>
reading and writing skills<lb/>
Stars host benefit for AIDS<lb/>
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) ? A<lb/>
star-studded AIDS benefit led by<lb/>
Elizabeth Taylor raised $2 million<lb/>
tor education and research, and<lb/>
organizers hope the gala will be<lb/>
repeated elsewhere.<lb/>
We've had the most private<lb/>
funds raised (for AIDS) at this one<lb/>
function than any other place in<lb/>
the country benefit spokesman<lb/>
Charles Cinnamon said of<lb/>
Sunday's "An Extraordinary<lb/>
Evening with Elizabeth Taylor<lb/>
and Friends<lb/>
"We want it to be the prototype<lb/>
for the rest of the country<lb/>
The series of $2,500-a-platc<lb/>
South Florida dinner parties fell<lb/>
short of its $3 million goal,<lb/>
although its "grand finale" of<lb/>
champagne and dessert at the<lb/>
Fountaincbleau Hilton Hotel was<lb/>
sold out.<lb/>
Ms. Taylor urged the crowd,<lb/>
which included Brooke Shields,<lb/>
Marlee Matlin, Margaux<lb/>
Hemingway, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Ed<lb/>
Asner and Lynn Redgrave, to do<lb/>
more.<lb/>
"Go out there and get your next-<lb/>
door neighbor involved she<lb/>
said. "Put your money where<lb/>
your mouth is<lb/>
"We're talking about the living<lb/>
who and dying, and it's getting<lb/>
closer to all of us Ms. Taylor<lb/>
said, likening the fear of the<lb/>
disease to the tenacles of an<lb/>
x:topus.<lb/>
"How do you cope with those<lb/>
families who reject their beloveds<lb/>
(AIDS victims) need<lb/>
compassion and understanding.<lb/>
People may say money can't by<lb/>
compassion, but money can buy<lb/>
health<lb/>
The fund-raiser featured a<lb/>
dozen black- tie parties from Palm<lb/>
arlvis has a boss vacation in Key<lb/>
West and even remembers the trip<lb/>
Beach to Miami Beach, all given in<lb/>
the homes of celebrities or<lb/>
community leaders.<lb/>
Ms. Taylor, who became<lb/>
involved with AIDS issues in<lb/>
1984, chairs the non-profit<lb/>
American Foundation for AIDS<lb/>
Research, a research and<lb/>
education group that will share<lb/>
the benefit's proceeds.<lb/>
Read<lb/>
The<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
LA5T CHAMCE!<lb/>
TO GET TttOtS TZOtmrS<lb/>
ne<lb/>
-it I SudervH;<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
was of course was not painted<lb/>
bhiebut pink.<lb/>
At the Blue Marlin a few nights<lb/>
later we partied with some ECU's<lb/>
PI Kappa K-Mart girls. They were<lb/>
f?itoui?. tf4Srg-u?c v?hef? you n<lb/>
could only ask questions to each<lb/>
Other, it was called the questions<lb/>
game, how original.<lb/>
One of our crew, Pee Wee,<lb/>
thought he had the hang of the<lb/>
questions game so he ejaculated,<lb/>
ou have big giant titties to one<lb/>
of the girls.<lb/>
Even though Pee Wee lost the<lb/>
game because he made a<lb/>
statement instead of posing a<lb/>
question, his words were still<lb/>
voted the statement of the week.<lb/>
Bars. Sloppy Joe's was cool.<lb/>
Joe's had a singer who said "Do<lb/>
you believe all fags should be<lb/>
Bonehead<lb/>
Attacked!<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
since you left<lb/>
That's all I heard as I blacked<lb/>
out. The construction workers<lb/>
found me Monday, drooling and<lb/>
writhing in the mud. As I became<lb/>
more coherent, I tried to explain<lb/>
what happened.<lb/>
There was no proof of it. I went<lb/>
home and tried to recover. But<lb/>
today, walking to class, I saw a<lb/>
mud stained bra size 38-<lb/>
F(lab)snagged on the fence<lb/>
fluttering limply in the breeze.<lb/>
Switching<lb/>
The Ben Hecht-Charlcs<lb/>
MacArthur play "The Front<lb/>
Page" has enjoyed a long career in<lb/>
films. Adolphe Menjou and Pat<lb/>
O'Brien starred in the 1931 talks<lb/>
directed by Lewis Milestone and<lb/>
produced by Howard Hughes.<lb/>
Howard Hawks had the<lb/>
brilliant idea of changing the<lb/>
reporter to a woman, and "His<lb/>
Girl Friday" was a hit in 1940 with<lb/>
Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell.<lb/>
Billy Wilder went back to the<lb/>
1920s era with Walter Matthau<lb/>
and Jack Lemmon in 1973.<lb/>
Now comes "Switching<lb/>
Channels It is patterned after<lb/>
"His Girl Friday with Burt<lb/>
Reynolds as the demonic editor<lb/>
and Kathleen Turner as his star<lb/>
reporter and ex-wife. But<lb/>
something new has been added:<lb/>
television.<lb/>
Changing from a Chicago<lb/>
newspaper to a satellite news<lb/>
network does surprisingly little<lb/>
damage to the timeless "Front<lb/>
Page" plot. If anything, the<lb/>
deadline urgency is more<lb/>
pronounced, given the<lb/>
competitive nature of TV news.<lb/>
Oh well, 'The Front Page" will<lb/>
survive.<lb/>
lined up and shot point blank?"<lb/>
The bar went crazy in applauding<lb/>
approval. The singer then said<lb/>
"Majority rules in my country<lb/>
Captain Tony's?laid back<lb/>
sweet breeze bar with billions of<lb/>
"It was a three hour tour, a three<lb/>
hour tour<lb/>
Greyhound tracks?A bunch of<lb/>
old men in Hawaiian shirts<lb/>
yelling at animals running<lb/>
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Ultra Tanning<lb/>
Booth<lb/>
ScwtkMutk<lb/>
103 Eastbrook DrS 758-7570<lb/>
Tanning<lb/>
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business cards starpled to Jhe lighting and the old men have<lb/>
small coronaries as they rip up<lb/>
their losing tickets and say<lb/>
"Geez After five races, our 30-1<lb/>
long shot won. Sweet.<lb/>
"Didn't need no welfare<lb/>
state<lb/>
The College Rover couldn't<lb/>
leave Key West without a small<lb/>
memento, so on the last day I went<lb/>
to Sloppy Joe's to buy a tee-shirt. I<lb/>
smirked when the lady told me<lb/>
the only color they had was pink.<lb/>
What the hell, I bought it anyway.<lb/>
"Gee, our old LaSalle ran<lb/>
walls ? Hemingway- use to get<lb/>
sloshed at Tony's, according to<lb/>
Tony who use to serve him beers<lb/>
way back when.<lb/>
Rick's?a mall bar. Girls<lb/>
climbed the walls, all nice and tan,<lb/>
all hot and wanton. With oak bats<lb/>
tarred and swinging, our seven<lb/>
man line came up to bat.<lb/>
Cup adjusted, our lead off<lb/>
hitter, Pee Wee entered the batters<lb/>
box. Fast ball. Curve ball. "Pee<lb/>
Wee, can you call me a cab And<lb/>
the youngest strikes out.<lb/>
Later in the same inning, after great<lb/>
the others on our team choose to T?i? a a t i j<lb/>
walk, the determined Pee Wee ?fJ3fT Award?Jack, a student<lb/>
returned to the batters box. Swing of NSU, :for being a jackass, a<lb/>
. jack of all trades, for using Ajax as<lb/>
CheA swing fouled off. "Pee suntan lotionfor jacking up the<lb/>
Wee close the door on your way car, for spending jack, for<lb/>
out The youngest strikes out watching Billy Jack, and mostly<lb/>
twice in the same inning. fjin8? f n ? , n. ,<lb/>
Foley's Square-another mall a Striking Out On Fat Girls<lb/>
bar. Lefty Gil comes to the plate. Award-Pugsley Adams,snap<lb/>
You know Vin, he usually hits snaP-<lb/>
pretty good off this pitcher. Well Stealing Bikes Award-Co<lb/>
Joe, Gil is batting .313 against this winners. Buck and Pee Wee.<lb/>
screw ball thrower. kT AwardIt <lb/>
After fouling off pitches for good Noodles<lb/>
three hours in the dug-out of Struck Out In A Pick Up Truck<lb/>
Puesley's pick up truck, Lefty Gil Award?Gil.<lb/>
is out on strikes, Those werc the daVs-<lb/>
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wpnimm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THEFASr CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17, 1988<lb/>
is<lb/>
Old people live for 100 years<lb/>
On the wall of the room where<lb/>
lesse Fhtllips and Maude<lb/>
Finnison spend much of their<lb/>
time these days hangs a yellowing<lb/>
photograph of their parents,<lb/>
Shaw and Pansy Phillips<lb/>
rhey the ones built this house<lb/>
when we was children. Maude<lb/>
saysot their farm home just inside<lb/>
Moore County near the Chatham<lb/>
County line. Wc vo Kvn here<lb/>
100 years last 25th of February<lb/>
Few people can claim to have<lb/>
lived in the same h. . c for a<lb/>
century but esse Fhillips can,<lb/>
andhissister Maude mighthave<lb/>
it she hadn't married Norman<lb/>
Finnison in 1920. She moved over<lb/>
near 1 ligh falls with her husband<lb/>
and lived there until he died in<lb/>
lu3 soon after the deaths of her<lb/>
parents and then she moved back<lb/>
to her family home with her<lb/>
Maude who never had<lb/>
children, will be 103 Wednesday.<lb/>
se, s ho never married, turned<lb/>
?st Sept. 1. They are the<lb/>
? 5 aw and Pansy Phillips'<lb/>
Idren.<lb/>
"I had tour sisters Jesse savs.<lb/>
I'm the onlv brother, but every<lb/>
one of them had a brother<lb/>
f le just trying to pull one on<lb/>
you, Warns Maude. There was<lb/>
? us children<lb/>
"Well, that's what I told him,<lb/>
Maude Jesse interjects.<lb/>
Although they bicker with<lb/>
some regularity, Maude and Jesse<lb/>
get along fine together without<lb/>
help.<lb/>
Jesse doesn't like it, but he does<lb/>
most of the cooking. "I can cook<lb/>
steak all light, and you don't need<lb/>
a knife to eat it with. Cut it with a<lb/>
fork. Cook it right slow for an<lb/>
hour and it'll be tender<lb/>
Maude still bakes her famous<lb/>
pound cakes (up until a couple of<lb/>
years ago, she still churned her<lb/>
own butter for them). She<lb/>
crochets, too, sews some of her<lb/>
own clothes and still quilts.<lb/>
"Only I 1xut quit she says oi<lb/>
her quilting. "I've make one or<lb/>
two this winter. I've pieced two<lb/>
here lately, but l hadn't quilted<lb/>
em yet<lb/>
Maude has been in a hospital<lb/>
only once in her life. That was<lb/>
three years ago when she had<lb/>
some fainting spells, and the<lb/>
doctor put her in a couple of days<lb/>
for tests. Jesse hasn't had anv<lb/>
serious health problems for more<lb/>
than 30 years.<lb/>
"Our health's been awfully<lb/>
good, 'Maude says. "I get out and<lb/>
piddle around and he docs.too.<lb/>
He still drives<lb/>
I drove to Carthage and back<lb/>
'Black Lizard' about losers?<lb/>
KE1 EY, Calif. (AP) - The<lb/>
characters who inhabit Black<lb/>
ird books are contemporary<lb/>
rs struggling through scenes<lb/>
?ling middle oi hell<lb/>
n Earth<lb/>
ugh that may not spur<lb/>
- of readers to rush out to<lb/>
buy one. Black Lizard co-<lb/>
Barry Gifford and Don<lb/>
s report their dark suspense<lb/>
novels nevertheless have become<lb/>
g hit, with sales approaching<lb/>
nil lion this year.<lb/>
m re not worried that tans of<lb/>
traditional mysteries or gothic<lb/>
romances shun the harsh titles<lb/>
such as "A Ticket to Hell "The<lb/>
Alcoholics "Swamp Sister" or<lb/>
"A Moment to Prey<lb/>
I don't read mysteries, I don't<lb/>
know anything about mysteries<lb/>
I can't read them said Gifford,<lb/>
ntending most are poorly<lb/>
ten and focus primarily on<lb/>
advancing the plot. Black Lizard<lb/>
books may contain a mystery, but<lb/>
many don't include a corpse or<lb/>
even a crime, he said.<lb/>
As the editor who selects the<lb/>
Black Lizard lineup, Gifford has<lb/>
(car vision o what fits and what<lb/>
doesn't, and he has no intention oi<lb/>
trying to attract the fainthearted.<lb/>
These thrillers are "not just<lb/>
hard-bmled. They're books with a<lb/>
certain psychological edge he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to Gifford and Ellis,<lb/>
Black Lizard has become so<lb/>
successful that major publishing<lb/>
companies are trying to imitate<lb/>
the innovations of the small<lb/>
Creative Arts company that has<lb/>
carried the Black Lizard imprint<lb/>
Observations<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
to generate their own peculiar<lb/>
odor if you know what I mean.<lb/>
Most of them know too, so they<lb/>
douse themselves daily in the<lb/>
fumes to cover it up. The<lb/>
fragrences usually mix however,<lb/>
creating something totally new ?<lb/>
a Formaldahyde Flatulence No. 5<lb/>
kind of thing.<lb/>
The winning weapon for the<lb/>
nasal front was found by a group<lb/>
of far-seeing international<lb/>
entrepreneurs with the audacity<lb/>
to disregard the law.<lb/>
After a few months of cocaine<lb/>
therapy, the native's nose is<lb/>
completely unresponsive to all<lb/>
smells.<lb/>
Like the Walkman, cocaine<lb/>
offers fringe benefits. The natives<lb/>
found that they could reduce that<lb/>
unproductive sleep time by more<lb/>
than half. Their lives suddenly<lb/>
seemed so full, so alive. Besides,<lb/>
Florida was getting too crowded<lb/>
for those quiet, solitary moments<lb/>
of thought.<lb/>
I don't know yet if these defense<lb/>
mechanisms are intentional or<lb/>
not. They probably just evolved<lb/>
out of necessity, but maybe<lb/>
there's a secret Bureau of Old<lb/>
People Protection in Tallahassee<lb/>
to welcome new residents under<lb/>
60 and inform them of the hard,<lb/>
cold facts.<lb/>
Either way, life is good in<lb/>
Florida. The old people totter<lb/>
around oblivious to the natives<lb/>
who, wired for sound and speed,<lb/>
pay them no heed.<lb/>
since 1983.<lb/>
That's when Gifford was<lb/>
browsing in a Pans bookstore and<lb/>
discovered a stack oi Jim<lb/>
Thompson and Harry<lb/>
VVhittington novels, many of<lb/>
them the same dark 25-cent<lb/>
paperbacks that he loved to read<lb/>
as a kid hanging out in a Tampa,<lb/>
Fla drugstore.<lb/>
While the books' popularity<lb/>
had plunged in the United States<lb/>
since the '50's, they remained a<lb/>
strong favorite with the French,<lb/>
who have shown steady<lb/>
appreciation oi the "serie noire"<lb/>
storyline of such authors as<lb/>
Thompson, Whittington and<lb/>
David Goodis.<lb/>
"It best represents the vision of<lb/>
America that the French like to<lb/>
retain Gifford said. "It's kind oi<lb/>
like the Wild West<lb/>
Filmmaker Francois Truffaut<lb/>
claimed Goodis as one of his<lb/>
favorites, filming the writer's<lb/>
"Shoot the Piano Player Goodis<lb/>
also wrote "Dark Passage and<lb/>
did the screenplay as well for the<lb/>
Humphrey Bogart-Lauren Bacall<lb/>
film. Gifford's own "Port<lb/>
Tropique" is in pre-production<lb/>
for a movie.<lb/>
He said his friend, best-selling<lb/>
novelist Elmore Leonard,<lb/>
routinely calls to suggest Black<lb/>
Lizard nab a certain new author or<lb/>
novel. "It's become a writers'<lb/>
series as well Gifford said.<lb/>
Black Lizard books are easy to<lb/>
spot. In assition to the trademark<lb/>
lizard logo taken from a Peruvian<lb/>
stone rubbing and strategically<lb/>
placed on each cover, most of the<lb/>
novels also feature haunting,<lb/>
lurid cover designs by San<lb/>
Francisco artist Jim Kirwin.<lb/>
The covers have become so<lb/>
successful that contrary to the old<lb/>
maxim, some people judge Black<lb/>
Lizard books by their covers and<lb/>
buy them for that reason alone.<lb/>
this morning all by myself' Jesse<lb/>
says. "Didn't have a bit oi trouble.<lb/>
Went over there and got a haircut<lb/>
and looked after some business<lb/>
Jesse had to get his license<lb/>
renewed just before he turned<lb/>
100. He make the mistake oi<lb/>
carrying along the glasses he uses<lb/>
for reading.<lb/>
"They're just magnifying<lb/>
glasses from the dime store he<lb/>
says. The examiner insisted he use<lb/>
them to take the eye test.<lb/>
"I said, '1 can't do anyting<lb/>
with glasses on They said<lb/>
'Buddy, you've missed five<lb/>
questions and you're only<lb/>
allowed three They said, 'Come<lb/>
back in a week or two and trv<lb/>
again So I went back without my<lb/>
glasses. I passed all right. 1 lad no<lb/>
trouble the last time. Just anytime<lb/>
I want to go anywhere, I go<lb/>
"He's been to Carthage today<lb/>
Maude says.<lb/>
"Yes, 1 told him that a while<lb/>
ago Jesse loudly tells his sister<lb/>
with a touch of impatience.<lb/>
"Well, I didn't know "She<lb/>
forgets things Jesse says. "Can't<lb/>
hear. Mv hearing's bad, too<lb/>
As a young man, Jesse took up<lb/>
farming with his father. Later, he<lb/>
switched to carpentry. When he<lb/>
was nearly 40, he started making<lb/>
wooden caskets in a shed on the<lb/>
farm. At first he made them to<lb/>
order for counties to use in pauper<lb/>
burials but found business slow<lb/>
and started selling to funeral<lb/>
homes.<lb/>
Jesse sold the casket business in<lb/>
1955 and retired. After that he and<lb/>
Maude started spending their<lb/>
winters in Bradonton. Fla 2nd<lb/>
they continued until a few years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
"I got where I'd rather stay at<lb/>
home Maude says. "I didn't<lb/>
want to go, but I believe he'd a<lb/>
went yet<lb/>
"Yeah, 1 liked it down there in<lb/>
the winter. I'd love to went this<lb/>
past winter, but Maude couldn't<lb/>
go. I'd've been a going every<lb/>
winter if I could<lb/>
When he was 85, Jesse decided<lb/>
tha he wanted to see more of the<lb/>
world. I le made three trips to<lb/>
Europe and one to Hawaii. His<lb/>
most recent trip was to the Virgin<lb/>
Islands about eight years ago.<lb/>
Maude never went with him. "I<lb/>
don't go on plane she says.<lb/>
Neither Jesse nor Maude ever<lb/>
watched TV, but last month<lb/>
Maude decided that she wanted<lb/>
one and they bought their first set,<lb/>
a 13-inch color model. It sits silent<lb/>
most of the time.<lb/>
"That picture changing keeps<lb/>
messing my head and eyes up<lb/>
lesse says.<lb/>
"If it's preachin I like to watch<lb/>
that Maude says. "But I've not<lb/>
looked at it enough to learn what's<lb/>
on it. He says it messes his head<lb/>
up<lb/>
"Well, Maudie, I told him that<lb/>
Jesse says with a touch of<lb/>
exasperation.<lb/>
"I told you I don't hear and<lb/>
understand good Maude says<lb/>
with a smile.<lb/>
PlaAi Cinema<lb/>
Playing Thurs.<lb/>
March 17th-Sun. 20th<lb/>
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?<lb/>
East Carolina <lb/>
InframuralBiKJweiser<lb/>
Competition<lb/>
REGISTRATION WILL BE HELD<lb/>
for students, faculty and stafl<lb/>
MARCH 23<lb/>
7:00PM MG 102<lb/>
ALL PARTICIPANTS<lb/>
RECEIVE FREE T-SHIRTS<lb/>
?-? FOUR EXCITING EVENTS<lb/>
?fr-fr 2 MEN &amp; 2 WOMEN PER TEAM<lb/>
THE EVENTS WILL BE HELD<lb/>
NIGHTLY MARCH 27, 28, 29<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 7S7-63S7<lb/>
Lane<lb/>
Lan ?<lb/>
pan<lb/>
for .<lb/>
sna <lb/>
?<lb/>
IT.<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
it<lb/>
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b<lb/>
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be<lb/>
in ?<lb/>
that<lb/>
bloc<lb/>
David Lee<lb/>
LOS W<lb/>
in Da<lb/>
of toys<lb/>
surfb<lb/>
featur<lb/>
a regi:<lb/>
blue E<lb/>
But this is ?<lb/>
vacatior I -<lb/>
rock star<lb/>
scream Ifsa<lb/>
pla ?<lb/>
t audiences tor the r<lb/>
months in ar<lb/>
to New ? ? ?<lb/>
"Mus<lb/>
sounds ri ?<lb/>
music it is<lb/>
intervk a<lb/>
music -<lb/>
thunc t<lb/>
floorb<lb/>
the heave ns. S<lb/>
rolling<lb/>
what's a wa<lb/>
to surl<lb/>
Rol<lb/>
his<lb/>
"Sk Si i<lb/>
includi -<lb/>
Paradise<lb/>
has<lb/>
Th(<lb/>
spoke ab<lb/>
bee<lb/>
Sitting in<lb/>
rehears i<lb/>
tied b a -<lb/>
cameilace <lb/>
shirt<lb/>
loo<lb/>
?<lb/>
pati<lb/>
ceilinj<lb/>
w ai '<lb/>
but ad<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
Cont<lb/>
The ?<lb/>
customers<lb/>
expand the<lb/>
ma pi<lb/>
combinati<lb/>
I or new<lb/>
the bands I<lb/>
Dch's stapli<lb/>
the bigger<lb/>
and Saturdays<lb/>
the Usua<lb/>
seemed I<lb/>
owners-they<lb/>
and othei<lb/>
MicaluP.<lb/>
Continued fi <lb/>
impassioned<lb/>
teeth dripping a h<lb/>
PBS will also air "<lb/>
Family I hi<lb/>
his usual money n <lb/>
Danny cons Rei<lb/>
investing into a j<lb/>
brothels Imagine<lb/>
when Keith h <lb/>
customer! I tsar<lb/>
errors. Yes, Danny Par<lb/>
Chippy "K OUld<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0013"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17,1988<lb/>
13<lb/>
NG:<lb/>
Jackets and<lb/>
ar<lb/>
ys Buying:<lb/>
old or Silver<lb/>
ndition<lb/>
lection of<lb/>
tressed,<lb/>
leans.<lb/>
MAN<lb/>
GET<lb/>
:opy<lb/>
people<lb/>
sit<lb/>
'<lb/>
pies<lb/>
J<lb/>
GEE7 &amp; WINE<lb/>
ES<lb/>
' '<lb/>
L BE HELD<lb/>
23<lb/>
102<lb/>
MMTS<lb/>
-SHIRTS<lb/>
3 EVENTS<lb/>
N PER TEAM<lb/>
BE HELD<lb/>
!7, 28, 29<lb/>
IU 757-6387<lb/>
Lance Co. makes changes in recipe<lb/>
lance Inc the Charlotte<lb/>
i ompany that clings fiercely to its<lb/>
old-fashioned image, has made<lb/>
one of its boldest moves in<lb/>
decades - chaning the formulas<lb/>
tor some of Us cookie and cracker<lb/>
snacks.<lb/>
some of these formulas have<lb/>
been absolutely sacrosanct.<lb/>
rhey've been untouched tor 50<lb/>
years says 1 ance Vice President<lb/>
True Gwynn.<lb/>
lust the thought of changing<lb/>
what our corporate fathers did<lb/>
puts teeth on edge<lb/>
But the company is confident<lb/>
it s not repeating Coca-Cola's<lb/>
New Coke blunder.<lb/>
By removing contents that<lb/>
increase levels of cholesterol -<lb/>
animal tats, such as lard, beet fat<lb/>
and tallow, and tree oils, such as<lb/>
cocounut, palm and palm kernel<lb/>
oil - I.ance hopes its products will<lb/>
be more appealing to health-<lb/>
minded consumers.<lb/>
It's the largest single change<lb/>
we've make to our products in the<lb/>
history ot the company says<lb/>
lance President A. F. "Pete"<lb/>
Sloan.<lb/>
"We think it will be very<lb/>
significant, but you never know<lb/>
"A large majority ot people that<lb/>
buy our products don't grab them<lb/>
and read the ingredients<lb/>
Gwynn said. "But we wanted to<lb/>
be responsive because we sell a lot<lb/>
of our products to schools and<lb/>
state institutions, and dieticians<lb/>
were telling us, 'You fellas need to<lb/>
be sensitive to what's happening<lb/>
in the world We've tried to do<lb/>
that<lb/>
1 ligh levels of cholesterol in the<lb/>
bloodstream clog arteries and<lb/>
contribute to heart attacks.<lb/>
Ingredients such as oils derived<lb/>
from cottonseed sov, rapeseed<lb/>
and canola replaced the animal<lb/>
and tree oil. The company also<lb/>
added nutritional information<lb/>
about the contents to its packages.<lb/>
The cracker-sandwich snacks<lb/>
that have been changed account<lb/>
for between 0 and 70 percent oi<lb/>
the company's revenue which<lb/>
were$380 million in the fiscal year<lb/>
ended Dec. 31, Gwynn says.<lb/>
Lince, one of the country's<lb/>
leading snack makers, produces<lb/>
150 lines oi cracker, potato chip,<lb/>
candy and peanut products at a<lb/>
231-acre, six building complex in<lb/>
Charlotte that employs 1,700<lb/>
people.<lb/>
The change wasn't made<lb/>
quickly. The company spent two<lb/>
years working to alter the<lb/>
formulas without changing the<lb/>
products' taste. The first of the<lb/>
new products were put in stores<lb/>
in December, though some old-<lb/>
formula products may be in<lb/>
stores through midsummer.<lb/>
"We did taste tests and taste<lb/>
tests savs Gwynn. "From the<lb/>
little bit of crude market research<lb/>
we did with our customers, we<lb/>
found their message was, 'If you<lb/>
want to tinker with it, for gosh<lb/>
sakes don't change the taste and<lb/>
don't alter the price<lb/>
And while the company is<lb/>
proud oi the changes, don't<lb/>
expect Lance to abandon it low-<lb/>
key style to promote them.<lb/>
Unlike most large consumer<lb/>
product companies that spend<lb/>
millions on advertising, the<lb/>
closest thing Lance has to<lb/>
advertisements are billboards on<lb/>
its tractor trailers.<lb/>
Instead, Lance plans to rely on<lb/>
its 2,400 member, 3b state sales<lb/>
force to spread the word. Lance<lb/>
held the first sessions to instruct<lb/>
sales personnel about the new<lb/>
products last weekend. The<lb/>
company does admit to sending<lb/>
letters explaining the changes to<lb/>
42,000 dieticians.<lb/>
Hie new ingredients cost more,<lb/>
but the company won't say how<lb/>
much. Costs of oils and tats are a<lb/>
small percentage of the<lb/>
company's ingredients costs, say<lb/>
Interstate Securities analyst Kay<lb/>
Norwood.<lb/>
The cost oi the change -<lb/>
laboratory tests, taste testing an<lb/>
minor equipment alterations -<lb/>
was less that $1 million, Gwynn<lb/>
says. No price increases are<lb/>
planned.<lb/>
The hang in ingredients is<lb/>
Lance's second recent more to<lb/>
attract health-minded<lb/>
consumers. Following the<lb/>
national trend toward healthy<lb/>
foods, the company in 1985<lb/>
purchased Nutrition Pak Corp a<lb/>
granola snack maker in Mebane.<lb/>
bill Oliver, an analyst with<lb/>
Equitable Securities Corp. in<lb/>
Nashville, says the change isn't<lb/>
likely to boost sales or earnings a<lb/>
great deal.<lb/>
"I think this is a positive thing<lb/>
for them Oliver savs. "I don't<lb/>
think the whole population that<lb/>
buys Lance products is<lb/>
necessarily that health conscious,<lb/>
but 1 do believe a certain segment<lb/>
will appreciate it<lb/>
Phillip 1 .ance, a Charlotte coffee<lb/>
salesman, launched the company<lb/>
in 1913 when he ordered 500<lb/>
pounds of peanuts for a farmer<lb/>
who decided he could not use<lb/>
them. Lance roasted the peanuts<lb/>
in his oven at home and sold them<lb/>
in bags. In the 1920s, he began<lb/>
making peanut butter and<lb/>
spreading it on crackers.<lb/>
GIVE BLOOD<lb/>
(The<lb/>
?ast Carolinian<lb/>
ride,<lb/>
lotivation,<lb/>
xperience,<lb/>
riends.<lb/>
Apply today.<lb/>
v<lb/>
David Lee Roth goes on tour<lb/>
LOS ANGELES IAP) - The child<lb/>
in David Lee Roth is taking plenty<lb/>
of toyson this trip: a 28-foot living<lb/>
surfboard; a hugh banner<lb/>
featuring bikini-clad women; and<lb/>
a regulation-size, red, white and<lb/>
blue Everlast boxing ring.<lb/>
But this is no ordinary summer<lb/>
?vacation for the shaggy-haired<lb/>
rock star with the trademark<lb/>
, scream. It's a concert tour, and the<lb/>
I playthings are meant to wow<lb/>
I audiences for the next nine<lb/>
' months in arenas from Australia<lb/>
to New York.<lb/>
"Music should look like it<lb/>
sounds, no matter what kind of<lb/>
music it is Roth said in a recent<lb/>
interview. "A lot of times this<lb/>
music soulds like something<lb/>
thundering up out of the<lb/>
floorboards or raining down from<lb/>
the heavens. Sometimes it's like<lb/>
rolling waves of sound. And<lb/>
what's a wave without somebody<lb/>
to surf it?"<lb/>
Roth, 32, it touring to promote<lb/>
his third solo album,<lb/>
"Skyscraper The record, which<lb/>
includes the single, "Just Like<lb/>
Paradise marks the first time he<lb/>
has tried on the producer's hat.<lb/>
The comic book-like showman<lb/>
spoke about his tour before it<lb/>
began March 4 in Lakeland, Fla.<lb/>
Sitting in the second row of a<lb/>
rehearsal hall, his long blond hair<lb/>
tied back into a ponytail, wearing<lb/>
camoflage pants and a torn T-<lb/>
shirt, he was careful not to reveal<lb/>
too many of the act's surprises.<lb/>
"During the band's moment of<lb/>
patriotism, I climb a ladder to the<lb/>
ceiling of the arena - Jeez, I don't<lb/>
want to give it all away he said,<lb/>
but added, "It's death-defying<lb/>
stuff<lb/>
Roth's hometown is<lb/>
Bloomington, Ind but he moved<lb/>
to Pasadena, Calif when he was<lb/>
about 12 and has lived there ever<lb/>
since. He began his career after<lb/>
meeting Eddie and Alex Van<lb/>
Halen and Michael Anthony at<lb/>
Pasadena City College. The four<lb/>
formed Van Halen,a band that set<lb/>
the standard for many heavy-<lb/>
metal bands, with Eddie's<lb/>
innovative guitar playing and ?<lb/>
Roth's wild-man antics.<lb/>
The group split up in 19S3, and<lb/>
Roth moved on to a solo career.<lb/>
His new band includes lead<lb/>
guitarist Steve Vai, bass guitarist<lb/>
Billy Sheehan, drummer Gregg<lb/>
Bissonette and keyboardist Brett<lb/>
Tuggle.<lb/>
Roth's international tour will<lb/>
include some of the old Van Halen<lb/>
standards, in addition to his solo<lb/>
efforts, including a remake of the<lb/>
Beach Boy's "California Girls"<lb/>
and the bluesy "Just a Gigolo<lb/>
In his spare time, Roth climbs<lb/>
mountains, as seen on the "Just<lb/>
Like Paradise" video in which he<lb/>
scales a 3,000-foot-high vertical<lb/>
wall oi granite. He said he got the<lb/>
climbing bug as a boy scout.<lb/>
Climbing is a kind of therapy<lb/>
tor him: "You know, the most<lb/>
scariest place you can put<lb/>
yourself in has the most calming<lb/>
effect<lb/>
Roth is also in tercsted in marital<lb/>
arts, receiving a black belt in<lb/>
karate about nine years ago. At<lb/>
one point he experimented with<lb/>
kick boxing. These days, he<lb/>
incorporates both disciplines in<lb/>
his stage show.<lb/>
New Deli has new owners<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
They want to keep their steady<lb/>
customers but they also want to<lb/>
expand the Deli's appeal-which<lb/>
may prove to be a tricky<lb/>
combination.<lb/>
For now at least, they'll stick to<lb/>
the bands that have been the<lb/>
Deli's staple. They want to keep<lb/>
the bigger circuit bands to Fridays<lb/>
and Saturdays. The turnout for<lb/>
the Usuals show last week<lb/>
seemed to impress the new<lb/>
owners-they want to have them<lb/>
and other local bands play more<lb/>
often on weeknights.<lb/>
No radical changes are planned<lb/>
on the menu, although they will<lb/>
introduce more appetizers and<lb/>
(gasp!) french fries soon. They'll<lb/>
paint the "puke" green walls, they<lb/>
say, and eventually expand the<lb/>
upstairs. Maybe they'll change<lb/>
the look of the front window too,<lb/>
but that's all in the future.<lb/>
For now though they're just<lb/>
getting the feel of the business and<lb/>
the general attitude seems to be if<lb/>
it ain't broke, don't fix it.<lb/>
Let's hope it ain't broke.<lb/>
Micah, PBS and Festival '88<lb/>
Continued from page TO M-MJf ?$??<lb/>
impassioned flesh; their pointed Parker will be answering phonos<lb/>
teeth dripping a hot slaver during this seamen?.<lb/>
PBS will also air "The Partridge All this, plus more specials you<lb/>
Family: The Lost Episodes Up to paid to watch on Showtime last<lb/>
his usual money making hi-jinks, year, more 70's British TV shows,<lb/>
Danny cons Reuban into more fat, bald, but still bold'60's<lb/>
investing into a chain of gay folk singers in concert; all<lb/>
brothels Imagine their surprise interspersed with episodes of<lb/>
when Keith shows up as a paying "The Jim and Tammy Show" and<lb/>
customer! It's a regular comedy of "I ovc Connection Festival '88 is<lb/>
errors. Yes, Danny Partridge fans, a virtual video carnival, and<lb/>
Chippy "Could'vc Be-n !csidcs, it's free.<lb/>
JN ft<lb/>
THIS ST. PATRICK'S DAT,<lb/>
DINE TO A DIFFERENT DRUMMER<lb/>
AP<lb/>
SAV A CENTER<lb/>
Tht freshest way to Save<lb/>
BEAUTIFULLY<lb/>
HAND DECORATED<lb/>
Cordelia<lb/>
Stoneware<lb/>
This Week's Feature: SAUCER<lb/>
BLUET OR<lb/>
E5URT1E1<lb/>
PATTERNS<lb/>
with ever) 3 pun hase<lb/>
69<lb/>
MARKET FRESH ? 3 LBS. OR MORE<lb/>
Ground i<lb/>
Beef<lb/>
Corned<lb/>
Green<lb/>
Beans<lb/>
Chicken2<lb/>
Noodle<lb/>
alte i ? ? ? ?<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
Saltines<lb/>
99<lb/>
3 400<lb/>
69<lb/>
69<lb/>
Tea<lb/>
Evaporated j<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
Apple<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
.AN ?'??<lb/>
Pork &amp;<lb/>
Beans<lb/>
109<lb/>
39"<lb/>
Boneless<lb/>
Round Roast<lb/>
Fryer<lb/>
Drumsticks<lb/>
Shoulder<lb/>
London Broil<lb/>
Boneless<lb/>
Smoked Ham<lb/>
2<lb/>
59<lb/>
499<lb/>
499<lb/>
FR1 v! CRISP<lb/>
(ireen<lb/>
Cabbage<lb/>
Hydroponic<lb/>
Lettuce<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Tom-Ah-Toes<lb/>
rAN<lb/>
California<lb/>
Lemons<lb/>
99<lb/>
429<lb/>
5 990<lb/>
A&amp;P CHILLED<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
r980<lb/>
Limit One With Add I $10 Purchase<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS<lb/>
Sunday Best<lb/>
Roasters<lb/>
69<lb/>
JUICY BLACK ? RED OR<lb/>
White Grapes<lb/>
77?<lb/>
40 OFF LABEL<lb/>
RICH ? MELLOW<lb/>
Tide<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
42 oz<lb/>
box<lb/>
Limit One With Add I S'O Purchase<lb/>
HOMOGENIZED<lb/>
Flav-O-Rich 459<lb/>
12 Milk 1<lb/>
BETTy CROCKER Au GRATlN OR<lb/>
Scalloped<lb/>
Potatoes <lb/>
HEINZ<lb/>
Ke9 ?' 990<lb/>
Eight O'clock<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
1 lb<lb/>
Limn One With Add i $10 Purchase<lb/>
USDA CHOICE ? CENTER CUT<lb/>
Corned Beef<lb/>
Brisket<lb/>
TENDER<lb/>
California<lb/>
Asparagus<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
790<lb/>
?.    ? Rf SH<lb/>
Ocean Perch J99<lb/>
Fillets<lb/>
69"<lb/>
Ketchup<lb/>
3?<lb/>
PACKERS LABEL<lb/>
Crinkle Cut 449<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
A&amp;P FROZEN<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
3<lb/>
399<lb/>
car<lb/>
89"<lb/>
FARMFRI HI N<lb/>
Catfish<lb/>
Fillets<lb/>
SEALITE Ft . - ? ?<lb/>
Crab Meat Q99<lb/>
Blend <lb/>
? ;harcoa -  ?' <lb/>
A&amp;P Charcoal f<lb/>
Briquets ?m<lb/>
 VOLT 1 PK OP ?<lb/>
Duracell<lb/>
Batteries<lb/>
 ?  - -<lb/>
Halsa J<lb/>
Shampoo<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
69<lb/>
OO<lb/>
Ail VARIETIES<lb/>
Lay's<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
REG OR STRIPED CHIPS AHOY<lb/>
COOKIES (2 OZ PKG 1 79)<lb/>
Nabisco<lb/>
Nilla Wafers<lb/>
SAVE to s3.60<lb/>
When you buy 12 Quarts of<lb/>
Quaker State<lb/>
041<lb/>
'11.88<lb/>
9 t i<lb/>
-1.20<lb/>
09 DUMDMM<lb/>
QUAKER STATE WITH OSX<lb/>
FIGHTS ENGINE WEAR AND TEAR<lb/>
ASSORTED YOGURTS<lb/>
Light N'<lb/>
Lively<lb/>
PILLSBURY<lb/>
Crescent<lb/>
Rolls<lb/>
6 159<lb/>
REG OR EXTRA THICK<lb/>
Velveeta<lb/>
8oz<lb/>
can<lb/>
1<lb/>
09<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
Shredded<lb/>
Mozzarella<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
79<lb/>
IMPORTED 60<lb/>
Brie<lb/>
49<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Products<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle<lb/>
990<lb/>
FRESH BAKED<lb/>
French<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
4<lb/>
1.29<lb/>
DISPOSABLE<lb/>
Bic<lb/>
Shavers<lb/>
o 100<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
ROLL ON<lb/>
Secret 2 JOO<lb/>
Deodorant<lb/>
pkgs<lb/>
3<lb/>
l i.oaves<lb/>
SEE STORE FOR DETAILS<lb/>
WE SELL U.S. POSTAGE STAMPS AT POST OFFICE PRICES<lb/>
WE SELL AMERICAN EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS AT25EACH<lb/>
PRICES GOOD IN GREENVILLE, N.C. open sunoay 700 Am to 11 00p.m.<lb/>
AT 703 GREENVILLE BLVD. MON0AY ?"u $ATUR0AY 7 ?? A M ,2 mDHt0HT<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE MAR 13 THRU MAR 19. 1988 QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED<lb/>
Miller, Miller<lb/>
Lite Beer<lb/>
12 oz. 24 Party Pack Cans<lb/>
$9.89<lb/>
V. . , ,<lb/>
, ?" i v ?  " ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?.mmff ? ??HmwW<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0014"/><lb/>
Ti IE LAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17,1988 13<lb/>
JYING:<lb/>
Jackets and<lb/>
ar<lb/>
ys Buying:<lb/>
old or Silver<lb/>
? ndition<lb/>
?<lb/>
I cction of<lb/>
;sed,<lb/>
i heans.<lb/>
5Mill<lb/>
v:h<lb/>
GET<lb/>
:opy<lb/>
'S<lb/>
<lb/>
people.<lb/>
pies<lb/>
It<lb/>
?E?ft &amp; WINE<lb/>
BE HELD<lb/>
23<lb/>
102<lb/>
4NTS<lb/>
-SHIRTS<lb/>
iEVENTS<lb/>
N PER TEAM<lb/>
BE HELD<lb/>
!7, 28, 29<lb/>
Lance Co. makes changes in recipe<lb/>
1 ance Inc the Charlotte<lb/>
company that clings fiercely to its<lb/>
old-fashioned image, has made<lb/>
one of its boldest moves in<lb/>
decades - chaning the formulas<lb/>
tor some of its cookie and cracker<lb/>
snacks.<lb/>
Some of these formulas have<lb/>
been absolutely sacrosai t.<lb/>
They've been untouched for 50<lb/>
years says Lance Vice President<lb/>
Price Gwynn.<lb/>
lust the thought of changing<lb/>
what our corporate fathers did<lb/>
puts teeth on edge<lb/>
But the company is confident<lb/>
il s not repeating Coca-Cola's<lb/>
New Coke blunder.<lb/>
By removing contents that<lb/>
increase levels of cholesterol -<lb/>
animal tats, such as lard, beef fat<lb/>
and tallow, and tree oils, such as<lb/>
cocounut, palm and palm kernel<lb/>
oil - Lance hopes its products will<lb/>
be more appealing to health-<lb/>
minded consumers.<lb/>
It's the largest single change<lb/>
we've make to our products in the<lb/>
history of the company says<lb/>
1 ance President A. F. "Pete"<lb/>
Sloan.<lb/>
"We think it will be very<lb/>
significant, but you never know<lb/>
"A large majority of people that<lb/>
buy our products don t grab them<lb/>
and read the ingredients<lb/>
Gwynn said. "But we wanted to<lb/>
be responsive because we sell a lot<lb/>
of our products to schools and<lb/>
state institutions, and dieticians<lb/>
were telling us, 'You fellas need to<lb/>
be sensitive to what's happening<lb/>
in the world We've tried to do<lb/>
that<lb/>
1 ligh levels of cholesterol in the<lb/>
bloodstream clog arteries and<lb/>
contribute to heart attacks.<lb/>
Ingredients such as oils derived<lb/>
from cottonseed, soy, rapeseed<lb/>
and canola replaced the animal<lb/>
and trek? oil. Hie company also<lb/>
added nutritional information<lb/>
about the contents to its packages.<lb/>
The cracker-sandwich snacks<lb/>
that have been changed account<lb/>
for between 60 and 70 percent of<lb/>
the company's revenues, which<lb/>
were$380 million in the fiscal year<lb/>
ended Dec. 31, Gwynn says.<lb/>
Lance, one of the country's<lb/>
leading snack makers, pr iduces<lb/>
150 lines of cracker, potato chip,<lb/>
candy and peanut products at a<lb/>
231-acre, six building complex in<lb/>
Charlotte that employs 1,700<lb/>
people.<lb/>
The change wasn't made<lb/>
quickly. The company spent two<lb/>
years working to alter the<lb/>
formulas without changing the<lb/>
products' taste. The first oi the<lb/>
new products were put in stores<lb/>
in December, though some old-<lb/>
formula products may be in<lb/>
stores through midsummer.<lb/>
"We did taste tests and taste<lb/>
tests says Gwynn. "From the<lb/>
little bit oi crude market research<lb/>
we did with our customers, we<lb/>
found their message was, 'If you<lb/>
want to tinker with it, for gosh<lb/>
sakes don't change the taste and<lb/>
don't alter the price<lb/>
And while the company is<lb/>
proud of the changes, don't<lb/>
expect Lance to abandon it low-<lb/>
key style to promote them.<lb/>
L'nlike most large consumer<lb/>
product companies that spend<lb/>
millions on advertising, the<lb/>
closest thing Lance has to<lb/>
advertisements are billboards on<lb/>
its tractor trailers.<lb/>
Instead, Lance plans to rely on<lb/>
its 2,400 member, 36-state sales<lb/>
force to spread the word. Lance<lb/>
held the first sessions to instruct<lb/>
sales personnel about the new<lb/>
products last weekend. The<lb/>
company does admit to sending<lb/>
letters explaining the changes to<lb/>
42,000 dieticians.<lb/>
The new ingredients cost more,<lb/>
but the company won t say how<lb/>
much. Costs of oils and tats are a<lb/>
small percentage oi the<lb/>
company's ingredients i osts, say<lb/>
Interstate Securities analyst Kay<lb/>
Norwood.<lb/>
The cost of the change -<lb/>
laboratory tests, taste testing an<lb/>
minor equipment alterations -<lb/>
was less that $1 million, Gwynn<lb/>
says. No price increases are<lb/>
planned.<lb/>
The hang in ingredients is<lb/>
Lance's second recent more to<lb/>
attract health minded<lb/>
consumers. Following the<lb/>
national trend toward healthy<lb/>
foods, the company in 1985<lb/>
purchased Nutrition-PakCorpa<lb/>
granola snack maker in Mebane.<lb/>
bill Oliver, an analyst with<lb/>
Equitable Securities Corp. in<lb/>
Nashville, says the change isn't<lb/>
likely to boost sales or earnings a<lb/>
great deal.<lb/>
"I think this is a positive thing<lb/>
for them Oliver savs. "I don't<lb/>
think the whole population that<lb/>
buys Lance products is<lb/>
necessarily that health conscious,<lb/>
but I do believe a certain segment<lb/>
will appreciate it<lb/>
Phillip Lance, a Charlotte coffee<lb/>
salesman, launched the company<lb/>
in 1911 when he ordered H)<lb/>
pounds oi peanuts for a farmer<lb/>
who decided he could not use<lb/>
them. Lance roasted the peanuts<lb/>
in his oven at home and sold them<lb/>
in bags. In the 1920s, he began<lb/>
making peanut butter and<lb/>
spreading it on crackers.<lb/>
(JIVE BLOOD<lb/>
(The<lb/>
last Carolinian.<lb/>
ride,<lb/>
lotivation,<lb/>
:xperience,<lb/>
fiends.<lb/>
Apply today.<lb/>
N<lb/>
David Lee Roth goes on tour<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The child<lb/>
in David Lee Roth is taking plenty<lb/>
of toyson this trip: a 2S-foot flving<lb/>
surfboard; a hugh banner<lb/>
featuring bikini-clad women; and<lb/>
a regulation-size, red, white and<lb/>
blue Everlast boxing ring.<lb/>
But this is no ordinary summer<lb/>
.vacation for the shaggy-haired<lb/>
rock star with the trademark<lb/>
scream. It's a concert tour, and the<lb/>
I playthings are meant to wow<lb/>
I audiences for the next nine<lb/>
 months in arenas from Australia<lb/>
to New York.<lb/>
"Music should look like it<lb/>
sounds, no matter what kind of<lb/>
music it is Roth said in a recent<lb/>
interview. "A lot oi times this<lb/>
music soulds like something<lb/>
thundering up out of the<lb/>
floorboards or raining down from<lb/>
the heavens. Sometimes it's like<lb/>
rolling waves of sound. And<lb/>
what's a wave without somebody<lb/>
to surf it?"<lb/>
Roth, 32, it touring to promote<lb/>
his third solo album,<lb/>
"Skyscraper Hie record, which<lb/>
includes the single, "Just Like<lb/>
Paradise marks the first time he<lb/>
has tried on the producer's hat.<lb/>
The comic book-like showman<lb/>
spoke about his tour before it<lb/>
began March 4 in Lakeland, Fla.<lb/>
Sitting in the second row of a<lb/>
rehearsal hall, his long blond hair<lb/>
tied back into a pony tail, wearing<lb/>
camoflage pants and a torn T-<lb/>
shirt, he was careful not to reveal<lb/>
too many of the act's surprises.<lb/>
"During the band's moment of<lb/>
patriotism, I climb a ladder to the<lb/>
ceiling of the arena - jeez, I don't<lb/>
want to give it all away he said,<lb/>
but added, "It's death-defying<lb/>
stuff<lb/>
Roth's hometown is<lb/>
Bloomington, Ind but he moved<lb/>
to Pasadena, Calif when he was<lb/>
about 12 and has lived there ever<lb/>
since. Me began his career after<lb/>
meeting Eddie and Alex Can<lb/>
Halen and Michael Anthony at<lb/>
Pasadena City College. The four<lb/>
formed Van Halen,a band that set<lb/>
the standard for many heavy-<lb/>
mctaJ bands, with Eddie's<lb/>
innovative guitar playing and<lb/>
Roth's wild-man antics.<lb/>
The group split up in 19S3, and<lb/>
Roth moved on to a solo career.<lb/>
His new band includes lead<lb/>
guitarist Steve Vai, bass guitarist<lb/>
billy Shcehan, drummer Gregg<lb/>
Bissonettc and keyboardist Brett<lb/>
Tuggle.<lb/>
Roth's international tour will<lb/>
include some of the old Van Halen<lb/>
standards, in addition to his solo<lb/>
efforts, including a remake of the<lb/>
Beach Bov's "California Girls"<lb/>
and the bluesy "just a Gigolo<lb/>
In his spare time, Roth climbs<lb/>
mountains, as seen on the "Just<lb/>
Like Paradise" video in which he<lb/>
scales a 3,000-foot-high vertical<lb/>
wall oi granite. He said he got the<lb/>
climbing bug as a boy scout.<lb/>
Climbing is a kind of therapy<lb/>
for him: "You know, the most<lb/>
scariest place you can put<lb/>
yourself in has the most calming<lb/>
effect<lb/>
Roth isalso in tercsted in marital<lb/>
arts, receiving a black belt in<lb/>
karate about nine years ago. At<lb/>
one point he experimented with<lb/>
kick boxing. These days, he<lb/>
incorporates both disciplines in<lb/>
his stage show.<lb/>
New Deli has new owners<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
They want to keep their steady<lb/>
customers but they also want to<lb/>
expand the Deli's appeal-which<lb/>
may prove to be a tricky<lb/>
combination.<lb/>
For now at least, they'll stick to<lb/>
the bands that have been the<lb/>
Deli's staple. They want to keep<lb/>
the bigger circuit bands to Fridays<lb/>
and Saturdays. The turnout for<lb/>
the Usuals show last week<lb/>
seemed to impress the new<lb/>
owners-they want to have them<lb/>
and other local bands play more<lb/>
often on wceknights.<lb/>
No radical changes arc planned<lb/>
on the menu, although they will<lb/>
introduce more appetizers and<lb/>
(gasp!) french fries soon. They'll<lb/>
paint the "puke" green walls, they<lb/>
say, and eventually expand the<lb/>
upstairs. Maybe they'll change<lb/>
the look of the front window too,<lb/>
but that's all in the future.<lb/>
For now though they're just<lb/>
getting the feel of the business and<lb/>
the general attitude seems to be if<lb/>
it ain't broke, don't fix it.<lb/>
Let's hope it ain't broke.<lb/>
Micah, PBS and Festival '88<lb/>
Continued ft- page 10 ?d ,eff ngggJU<lb/>
impassioned flesh; their pointed Parker will be answering phonos<lb/>
teeth dripping a hot slaver during this seamen.<lb/>
PBS will also air "The Partridge All this, plus more specials you<lb/>
Family: The Lost Episodes Up to paid to watch on Showtime last<lb/>
his usual money making hi-jinks, year, more 70's British TV shows,<lb/>
Danny cons Reuban into<lb/>
investing into a chain of gay<lb/>
brothels. Imagine their surprise<lb/>
when Keith shows up as a paying<lb/>
customer! It'sa regular comedy of<lb/>
errors. Yes, Danny Partridge fans,<lb/>
Chippv "Could've Bern<lb/>
more fat, bald, but still bold '60's<lb/>
folk singers in concert; all<lb/>
interspersed with episodes of<lb/>
"The Jim and Tammy Show" and<lb/>
"1 oveConnection Festival'88is<lb/>
a virtual video carnival, and<lb/>
lesidcs, it's free.<lb/>
THIS ST. PATRICK'S DAT,<lb/>
DINE TO A DIFFERENT DRUMMER<lb/>
SAV A CENTER<lb/>
Corned<lb/>
Beef<lb/>
Green<lb/>
Beans<lb/>
Chicken2<lb/>
Noodle<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
Saltines<lb/>
A&amp;P CHILLED<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
Limit One With Add I $10 Purchase<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
Scott<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS<lb/>
Sunday Best<lb/>
Roasters<lb/>
69<lb/>
California 5 QQ0<lb/>
Lemons 57<lb/>
JUICY BLACK ? RED OR<lb/>
White Grapes<lb/>
77?<lb/>
40 OFF LABEL<lb/>
Tide<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
42 02<lb/>
box<lb/>
Limit One With Add I S'O Purchase<lb/>
Limit Two With Add I $10 Purchase<lb/>
RICH ? MELLOW<lb/>
Eight O'Clock<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
USDA CHOICE ? CENTER CUT<lb/>
Corned Beef<lb/>
Brisket<lb/>
TENDER<lb/>
California<lb/>
Asparagus<lb/>
Limit One With Add I $10 Purchase<lb/>
HOMOGENIZED<lb/>
Flav-O-Rich<lb/>
12 Milk<lb/>
BLTT - ?? - : ?? ? iRATIN O<lb/>
Scalloped<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
HEINZ<lb/>
KegO'<lb/>
Ketchup<lb/>
32 oz<lb/>
459<lb/>
R<lb/>
69<lb/>
99"<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
PACKERS LABEL<lb/>
Crinkle Cut<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
A&amp;P FROZEN<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
79<lb/>
1<lb/>
49<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
can<lb/>
89<lb/>
NORTH -?" ?????'<lb/>
Ocean Perch 599<lb/>
Fillets <lb/>
FAR<lb/>
Catfish<lb/>
Fillets<lb/>
SEALITE Fl OKED<lb/>
Crab Meat fJ99<lb/>
Blend<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
99<lb/>
 HAR( - ? - '? - " '<lb/>
A&amp;P Charcoal 9n 099<lb/>
Briquets dm<lb/>
Duraceli 4gg<lb/>
Batteries<lb/>
Halsa<lb/>
Shampoo<lb/>
3<lb/>
00<lb/>
Ail VARIETIES<lb/>
Lay's<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
REG OR STRIPED CHIPS AHOY<lb/>
COOKIES (2 OZ PKG 1 79)<lb/>
Nabisco<lb/>
Nilla Wafers<lb/>
SLICED TO ORDER<lb/>
Boiled<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
6to<lb/>
99<lb/>
DELI ? CHEESE ? BAKERY iTEMS<lb/>
AVAILABLE IN SOME STORES<lb/>
SAVE "Z 3.60<lb/>
When you buy 12 Quarts of<lb/>
Quaker State "ST<lb/>
'11.88<lb/>
-2.40<lb/>
-1.20<lb/>
69'<lb/>
Mb<lb/>
QUAKER STATE WITH OSX<lb/>
FIGHTS ENGINE WEAR AND TEAR<lb/>
ASSORTED YOGURTS<lb/>
Light N' <lb/>
Lively fc<lb/>
PILLSBURY<lb/>
Crescent<lb/>
Rolls 8can<lb/>
59<lb/>
REG OP EXTRA THICK<lb/>
Velveeta 479<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
Slices<lb/>
1<lb/>
IMPORTED 60?o<lb/>
Brie<lb/>
ID<lb/>
459<lb/>
1<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
09<lb/>
Shredded 44Q<lb/>
Mozzarella<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Products<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle<lb/>
99C<lb/>
FRESH BAKED<lb/>
French<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
1.29<lb/>
DISPOSABLE<lb/>
Shavers 1? 1<lb/>
ROLL ON<lb/>
Secret 2 OOO<lb/>
Deodorant '??<lb/>
3<lb/>
i oaves<lb/>
SEE STORE FOR DETAILS<lb/>
WE SELL U.S. POSTAGE STAMPS AT POST OFFICE PRICES<lb/>
WE SELL AMERICAN EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS AT250EACH<lb/>
I PRICES GOOD IN GREENVILLE, N.C. open Sunday 7 oo am to 11 00 p.m.<lb/>
AT 703 GREENVILLE BLVD. MON0AY ?"u SATURDAY 7 ?? A M ,2 <lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE MAR 13 THRU MAR 19. 1988 QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.<lb/>
Miller, Miller<lb/>
Lite Beer<lb/>
12 oz. 24 Party Pack Cans<lb/>
$9.89<lb/>
 hit11111111 M)flW?WW1l?"r <lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0015"/><lb/>
THh<lb/>
Walkin' The Plank<lb/>
'0 5oi KiCK:N frit. SAIOOM F&amp;R.<lb/>
i wepitoriKEA! Mo lite rb &amp;f ?'??<lb/>
I "AMAfP5 WfioilOPZP O'JiSA -iU?tf.<lb/>
- y<lb/>
jtiCS Fftri A SaotfAs a CoM? <lb/>
"Go on and pick up the Nova, Junior<lb/>
By A GUY<lb/>
w, m a b ? bes gamw Tma ?m r ?<lb/>
Of 00? BWCM- MAC? &amp;?A fgyj<lb/>
fj00ie$ At Y? UP, OC M'COUStA <lb/>
fyffer mf ctiAst ya &amp;pAtt -rte w j<lb/>
the mother of Superman's love child<lb/>
Orpheus:Nightwalker<lb/>
Randall, X Uea-civjou. ?ccear<lb/>
s-fffi Con tie<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
By FRIEDRICH<lb/>
? " ?'M ??-???? ? ? ??<lb/>
'<lb/>
W c dfcE HE<lb/>
6&amp;hBV<lb/>
 W<lb/>
<lb/>
What it is. This is JeffI want to be Arm-Fall-Off Boy" Parker. Sorry I couldn't bring the Undercover )<lb/>
Cats to you this week. I had to write short stories from Mickey Spillane hell and get this bitchin' <lb/>
Florida Tan. Right, Bonehead? Word T"<lb/>
THE LAW<lb/>
The Law is the protector of the innocent, defender<lb/>
of truth, justice and the<lb/>
Campus Police way.<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE<lb/>
The 1 is the evil<lb/>
arch nemesis of<lb/>
the Law. He has I<lb/>
a much vaunted j<lb/>
fetish for one<lb/>
dollar bills. ,<lb/>
just want to tell our readers how happy I'll be when skin cancer causes your face to fall off and <lb/>
hang by a single skin peel, and you won't be able to draw those cats anymore. Then I'll have the Fu,<lb/>
F Games page all to myself. Bwah ha ha ha ha ha. At least I got laid over Break. Boss<lb/>
THE BIGG<lb/>
The Biee is a MARBLE? comics character, whose powers<lb/>
include the mutant powers of bigness, strength and loves<lb/>
to pose down in a studly fashion. Eats wimpy DZ? comics<lb/>
characters for lunch.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Pirate Comix<lb/>
Finger<lb/>
Puppets<lb/>
DIRECTIONS:<lb/>
1) Cut along the dotted<lb/>
lines. Don't snort 'em!<lb/>
2) Use a sharp object<lb/>
(Careful Kids! Get Mom<lb/>
andDadtohelp)tomake<lb/>
slits where the legs of thi<lb/>
puppets are.<lb/>
3) Stick index and bird<lb/>
finger through. Have<lb/>
hours of fun making<lb/>
the characters fight<lb/>
steal and pose in bikini<lb/>
contests.<lb/>
LETTERS!<lb/>
We want your letters!<lb/>
Yes, we at the Fun N<lb/>
Games page really<lb/>
want to read your<lb/>
comments on the comics.<lb/>
Well print ANYTHING!<lb/>
Well, almost Word.<lb/>
Connecticut pitcher Cr<lb/>
Caudio cooled off East Caroliri<lb/>
hot bats Tuesday as the vistd<lb/>
Huskies handed the Pirates a ll<lb/>
defeat on what was the.<lb/>
afternoon oi the baseball si j<lb/>
While Gaudio and reliever i<lb/>
Allen were hat fling Pirate hittt<lb/>
ECU starter Gary Smith v<lb/>
touched with five hit and six n<lb/>
in just over two innings. T1<lb/>
other ECU hurlers sa . a tion<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
s<lb/>
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X<lb/>
ECU'S top seed, Jon Methorn,<lb/>
session. (Photo courtts fclCL<lb/>
Lacross<lb/>
By CAROL WETHERINGT<lb/>
A?istint Kr,?uiT? Vii:Kr<lb/>
ECU's athletic departm<lb/>
has had quite an expene:<lb/>
during the past week. Hoi<lb/>
College's Champion Lacit<lb/>
team out oi Geneva.New <lb/>
has been ECU's guests, havi<lb/>
been invited down bv our o<lb/>
coach, Duke Whelan.<lb/>
Hobart College, vi<lb/>
usually travels to Universitj<lb/>
Florida for their outdoor spd<lb/>
training between semesu<lb/>
found themselves with a<lb/>
problem this year. Florida - bi<lb/>
fell later than I lobart s But n<lb/>
worrv. Coach Whelan, who-<lb/>
been associated with Ho<lb/>
College for years, invited Hoi<lb/>
down. Hobart flew dof<lb/>
anticipating the warmer m ee<lb/>
for some strong, serious prac<lb/>
before the spring season.<lb/>
????<lb/>
rA<lb/>
l?2V<lb/>
"?<lb/>
W!<lb/>
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<lb/>
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Billy King hopes to help<lb/>
Tournament. The Blue Devil<lb/>
in Chapel Hill. (File Photo)<lb/>
Hinifi'fii<lb/>
I HP lM1llll<lb/>
mmmt0iV<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057951_0016"/><lb/>
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m<lb/>
H&amp;N<lb/>
Pirate Comix<lb/>
Finger<lb/>
ets<lb/>
Pupp<lb/>
DIRECTIONS:<lb/>
1) Cut along the dotted<lb/>
lines. Don't snort'em!<lb/>
2) Use a sharp object<lb/>
(Careful Kids! Get Mom<lb/>
andDadtohelphomake<lb/>
slits where the legs of th<lb/>
puppets are.<lb/>
3) Stick index and bird<lb/>
finger through. Have<lb/>
hours of fun makirt.<lb/>
the characters fight,<lb/>
steal and pose in bikini<lb/>
contests.<lb/>
LETTERS!<lb/>
We want your letters!<lb/>
Yes, we at the Fun N<lb/>
Games page really<lb/>
wnt to read your<lb/>
comments on the comics.<lb/>
We'll print ANYTHING!<lb/>
Well, almost Word.<lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MARCH 17,1988 Page 15<lb/>
Connecticut rips ECU; gains revenge for loss<lb/>
Connecticut pitcher Craig<lb/>
Gaudio cooled off East Carolina's<lb/>
hot bats Tuesday as the visiting<lb/>
1 luskies handed the Pirates a 10-2<lb/>
defeat on what was the coldest<lb/>
afternoon of the baseball season.<lb/>
While Gaudio and reliever Jim<lb/>
Allen were baffling Pirate hitters,<lb/>
ECU starter Gary Smith was<lb/>
touched with five hitsand six runs<lb/>
in just over two innings. Two<lb/>
other ECU hurlers saw action in a<lb/>
four-run Huskie third inning,<lb/>
including sophomore Johnathon<lb/>
Jenkins, who lasted five and one-<lb/>
thirds inning.<lb/>
Connecticut, 4-1 including wins<lb/>
over George mason and Vermont,<lb/>
got a game-opening triple by<lb/>
Brian Specyalski. After Scott<lb/>
Reimold walked, Marcelino<lb/>
Sellas ripped a Smith slider over<lb/>
the Harrington Field fence to give<lb/>
the Huskies a 3-0 lead they would<lb/>
nevr relinquish.<lb/>
Things got worse for ECU, now<lb/>
11-4 for the year.<lb/>
Connecticut ripped four singles<lb/>
in its first five at bats to start the<lb/>
third frame off of Smith and<lb/>
reliever Tim Langdon. Two more<lb/>
walks were issued before Jenkins<lb/>
was brought in to pitch perhaps<lb/>
his finest outing of his young<lb/>
career.<lb/>
Jenkins, who walked none and<lb/>
struck out three, did make one<lb/>
mistake in the fourth ? a solo<lb/>
home run to Andy Walker to give<lb/>
the Huskies out of the Big East<lb/>
Conference an 8-0 lead.<lb/>
The Pirates avoided being shut<lb/>
out for the only time this season<lb/>
when freshman Steve Godin<lb/>
singled home David Ritchie and<lb/>
Jay McGraw with two outs in the<lb/>
sixth inning. No other Pirate base<lb/>
runner got past the second sack<lb/>
the remainder of the blistery<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Jenkins gave up an unearned<lb/>
run in the eighth, and freshman<lb/>
pitcher John White issued a walk<lb/>
and two hits for another run in the<lb/>
top of the ninth to give the<lb/>
Huskies a 10-2 advantage.<lb/>
Allen came to the mound as a<lb/>
relief pitcher in the ninth to sit the<lb/>
Pirates down in order.<lb/>
Godin, Calvin Brown, John<lb/>
Adams and John Thomas each<lb/>
went l-for-4 at the plate for ECU.<lb/>
Sellas and Walker had two hits<lb/>
each, including solo home runs,<lb/>
for Connecticut. The Huskies will<lb/>
battle Duke and Wisconsin in<lb/>
Durham this week.<lb/>
The Pirates will begin Colonial<lb/>
Athletic Association this<lb/>
weekend with a doubleheadcr on<lb/>
Saturday at UNC-Wilmington's<lb/>
Brooks Field. ECU will also<lb/>
square off against the Seahawks<lb/>
for a single game on Sunday.<lb/>
Men netters topple Captains for 10th<lb/>
ECU's men's tennis team third consecutive victory, Jon Cole defeated the Pirates number<lb/>
improved its record to 10-6 for the McLamb, who moved up into the one doubles team of Campanaro<lb/>
season Monday as they defeated third spot for the Pirates, also won and Wayne Barber, but ECU took<lb/>
Christopher Newport, 8-1. over Sam Jackson, 6-1,6-0. the next two matches from the<lb/>
The Pirates number one player, The Pirates' John Taylor, Mike Captains.<lb/>
Jon Melhorn, defeated Newports' Amick and Pat Campanaro were Amick and Todd Sumncr<lb/>
Doug Goulding in three sets, 7-6, also victorious in singles action teammed up to knock off Allen<lb/>
3-6, 6-1, as the Pirates swept<lb/>
through the singles matches.<lb/>
Playing in the number two<lb/>
position, David Shell beat the<lb/>
Captains' Matt Allen 6-1, 6-1.<lb/>
As the Pirates rolled to their<lb/>
for ECU.<lb/>
ECU took wins in two of the<lb/>
three doubles matches with the<lb/>
Captains also.<lb/>
Newports' Goulding and Rush<lb/>
and Brian Fleishman, 6-2, 7-6.<lb/>
To round the Pirates eighth win<lb/>
of the day, John Tilghman and<lb/>
Tim Morris won 6-1,6-2, over the<lb/>
Captains' Jackson and Matt<lb/>
Hansen.<lb/>
The Pirates will travel to Mount<lb/>
Olive on Wednesday and<lb/>
Thursday as they take on Mount<lb/>
Olive and High Point College.<lb/>
The Pirates will then take a<lb/>
break on Friday, after a<lb/>
cancellation with the University<lb/>
of Wisconsin-Lacrosse, and<lb/>
return home on Saturday in a 1<lb/>
p.m. match with the Falcons of<lb/>
Pfeiffcr.<lb/>
? CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Dream Team impresses Ima Reck<lb/>
by garnering Intramural hoop title<lb/>
Could IMA Reck be dreamin' or<lb/>
did the football team really put<lb/>
together a championship team?<lb/>
Just kidding. A big<lb/>
congratulations to the Dream<lb/>
Team on winning the all campus<lb/>
basketball title.<lb/>
The Dream Team held off<lb/>
Dream Team didn't have the<lb/>
game in the bag until hotshot Ed<lb/>
Fowler left the game with five<lb/>
fouls. Fowler took game-high<lb/>
scoring honors, tossing in 19<lb/>
points. Teammate Karlus Artis<lb/>
had 12.<lb/>
Earlier Tuesday, the women's<lb/>
V<lb/>
?&amp;?<lb/>
ECU'S top seed, Jon Melhorn, shows his form during a recent practice<lb/>
session. (Photo courtesy ECU imports Information) ??<lb/>
Sarcoidosis Tuesday night to take all-campus title went to the No<lb/>
the title, 46-42. The winners used a Names, who were 29-26 winners<lb/>
balanced scoring attack against over Delta Zeta. Terry Lynch and<lb/>
their opponents. Darren Bynum Jacqueline Ferrell both had six<lb/>
led the way with 11 points, and points to lead the winners.<lb/>
James Singletary tossed in 10.<lb/>
Junior Robinson and Jarrod<lb/>
The "Hard Hat" award of the<lb/>
tournament goes to Jody Hite of<lb/>
the No Names.<lb/>
The 1988 pre-season softball<lb/>
tournament is set for this<lb/>
weekend. Fifteen teams have<lb/>
signed up for action, which gets<lb/>
under way this afternoon at 4<lb/>
o'clock. The finals are set for<lb/>
Sunday at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Teams signed up for<lb/>
competition include Sigma Phi<lb/>
Moody had six each. However the- -lea Del<lb/>
Melissa Lord and Holly Condrey Epsilon, Big Hanging Pieces, TKE<lb/>
had 12 and 11, respectively, to "A Dirty Dozen, Sumthin<lb/>
Aycock Newtons, TKE "B<lb/>
Garrett Bandits, Renegades, Do<lb/>
Wrongs, Fried City D &amp; D, Misfits,<lb/>
Exyerminators, The Talking Bats.<lb/>
All games will be played behind<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Co-Rec super sports is here<lb/>
again Registration for this two<lb/>
man, two woman events opens<lb/>
March 23 at 7 p.m. in Memorial<lb/>
Gym, Room 102. All participants<lb/>
will receive a free t-shirt. Four<lb/>
events are scheduled for<lb/>
competition nightly from March<lb/>
27-29. Co-Rec super sports is<lb/>
SpecilScott Beer Chuggers, being sponsored by Budweiser<lb/>
Lacrosse team hosts Hobart<lb/>
By CAROL W ETHER IN G TON<lb/>
As?iatant Kcaturrt Editor<lb/>
ECU's athletic department<lb/>
has had quite an experience<lb/>
during the past week. Hobart<lb/>
College's Champion Lacrosse<lb/>
team out of Gcneva,New York,<lb/>
has been ECU's guests, having<lb/>
been invited down by our own<lb/>
coach, Duke Whelan.<lb/>
Hobart College, who<lb/>
usually travels to University of<lb/>
Florida for their outdoor spring<lb/>
training between semesters,<lb/>
found themselves with a small<lb/>
problem this year. Florida's break<lb/>
fell later than Hobart's. But not to<lb/>
worrv. Coach Whelan, who has<lb/>
been associated with Hobart<lb/>
College for years, invited Hobart<lb/>
down. Hobart flew down,<lb/>
anticipating the warmer weather<lb/>
for some strong, serious practice<lb/>
before the spring season.<lb/>
And practice they got. For<lb/>
the most part, the weather was<lb/>
accomodating, the ground was<lb/>
suitable and the fellas got outside<lb/>
for their first real outdoor<lb/>
practice. One trainer remarked<lb/>
that the guys have been practicing<lb/>
indoors for nearly two months,<lb/>
and that it's been a real strain. (I<lb/>
didn't see any strain.)<lb/>
Watching Hobart practice,<lb/>
then later watching the guys<lb/>
scrimmage with our team, it was<lb/>
easy to see how ECU could benefit<lb/>
from such an experience. Many of<lb/>
Hobart's players attend Hobart<lb/>
on lacrosse scholarships, so you<lb/>
know they're good. In watching<lb/>
the two teams play, it was easy to<lb/>
see why Hobart has been the<lb/>
National Champions eight years<lb/>
straight. Their strong skill, acute<lb/>
awareness and an intense<lb/>
devotion to the game was<lb/>
constantly evident. The players<lb/>
responded well to the firm<lb/>
coaching of Dave Urick, who's<lb/>
whole countenance was evidence<lb/>
that Lacrosse is more than just a<lb/>
game to him.<lb/>
Standing on the sidelines<lb/>
with ECU's finest, it was not hard<lb/>
to recognize respect. The talk that<lb/>
floated among the players ranged<lb/>
from discussion about various<lb/>
plays and maneuvers to<lb/>
exclamations that displayed<lb/>
individual admiration. Let's hope<lb/>
our boys take this great tutorial<lb/>
opportunity to make our lacrosse<lb/>
season a winning one.<lb/>
Coach Urick wishes to<lb/>
thank ECU for their tremendous<lb/>
hospitality and really appreciates<lb/>
the use of the university's<lb/>
facilities. From here, Hobart will<lb/>
be going straight into a<lb/>
tournament, and Coach Urick - ??<lb/>
says he feels pretty good about it The East Carolina lacrosse team played host to Hobart College for a scrimmage game this week. Hobart College<lb/>
thanks to their visit to ECU. is the defending national champion in lacrosse. (Photo by Hardy Alii good ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Duke hopes for success in Dean Dome<lb/>
Billy King hopes to help Duke soar to the national title in the NCAA<lb/>
Tournament. The Blue Devils open play in the tourney at the Dean Dome<lb/>
in Chapel Hill. (FUe Photo)<lb/>
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - Kevin<lb/>
Strickland and Billy King like the<lb/>
idea of Duke opening the NCAA<lb/>
tournament in a place where<lb/>
they've never been welcome<lb/>
before - at the University of North<lb/>
Carolina's Dean E. Smith Center.<lb/>
The Blue Devils, 24-6, and<lb/>
seeded second in the East Region,<lb/>
play Boston University in a first-<lb/>
round game Thursday night.<lb/>
"I'm really excited about it<lb/>
Strickland said Monday at Duke's<lb/>
Cameron Indoor Stadium. "It will<lb/>
give more of our fans a chance to<lb/>
come out and support us. And it<lb/>
will cut down on travel<lb/>
The Smith Center is in Chapel<lb/>
Hill, N.C, some 10 miles from the<lb/>
Duke campus.<lb/>
"The fact we don't have to<lb/>
travel is the biggest thing King<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We've just played three tough<lb/>
games and a lot of the guys are<lb/>
mentally tired and physically<lb/>
tired<lb/>
The idea of calling the Dean<lb/>
Dome home is a strange twist for<lb/>
the fifth-ranked Duke Blue<lb/>
Devils.<lb/>
"If s never been an advantage<lb/>
before for a Duke team to play at<lb/>
Chapel Hill Duke Coach Mike<lb/>
Krzyzewski said at a news<lb/>
luncheon Monday. "We don't<lb/>
have too great a record there<lb/>
Coach mike Jarvis, in his third<lb/>
season at Boston University, isn't<lb/>
getting picky about North<lb/>
Carolina geography when asked<lb/>
about the location of the Terriers'<lb/>
first NCAA post-season<lb/>
appearance since 1983.<lb/>
"We don't consider it a quasi-<lb/>
home game for Duke. We<lb/>
consider it a home game for<lb/>
them Jarvis said by telephone<lb/>
from his campus office Monday.<lb/>
 Of course if the game were at<lb/>
Duke it could be worse. It being a<lb/>
home game for them doesn't<lb/>
make it any easier. The mountain<lb/>
just gets higher<lb/>
Krzyzewski said the game's<lb/>
location "is an advantage for us.<lb/>
Hopefully, it will outweigh the<lb/>
disadvantage of playing three<lb/>
tough games Friday, Saturday<lb/>
and Sunday<lb/>
"We need an advantage the<lb/>
way we feel said the Blue Devil<lb/>
coach.  It's an advantage we<lb/>
earned<lb/>
Duke earned the privilege of<lb/>
playing at Chapel Hill by<lb/>
defeating North Carolina 65-61 in<lb/>
the finals of the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference tournament Sunday.<lb/>
Arnie Ferrin, chairman of the<lb/>
NCAA selection committee, said<lb/>
in a televised interview Sunday<lb/>
that the winner of the ACC<lb/>
tournament was going to be<lb/>
seeded second in Chapel Hill and<lb/>
that the loser would have been<lb/>
sent to Salt Lake City regardless of<lb/>
the game's outcome.<lb/>
Boston University, 23-7, earned<lb/>
its berth in the NCAA tournament<lb/>
by winning the ECAC North<lb/>
Atlantic tournament. The Terriers<lb/>
use a three-guard offense that is<lb/>
led by Drederick Irving, who<lb/>
averaged 20.1 per game this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"They play good defensive,<lb/>
man-to-man Krzyzewski said.<lb/>
"They've got some good New<lb/>
York City players on the team.<lb/>
They can improvise and they play<lb/>
well together as a team<lb/>
Krzyzewski said the key to<lb/>
playing in the NCAA tournament<lb/>
is reducing a team's vision to "a<lb/>
four-team tournament<lb/>
The winner of the Duke-Boston<lb/>
University game will play the<lb/>
winner of the Notre Dame-<lb/>
Southern Methodist first-round<lb/>
game.<lb/>
When asked about playing in<lb/>
?<lb/>
5<lb/>
the East region, Krzyzewski<lb/>
couldn't overlook defending<lb/>
national champion Indiana, 1987<lb/>
runner-up Syracuse and top-<lb/>
ranked Temple.<lb/>
"Not only are there very<lb/>
talented teams in there, but they<lb/>
are talented veteran teams<lb/>
Krzyzewski said. "They have<lb/>
excellent tournament experience.<lb/>
You've got the two teams that<lb/>
played in the championship game<lb/>
last year. You've got the No. 1<lb/>
team in the country. . . . It's as<lb/>
tough as a region could be<lb/>
Krzyzewski, sounding a little<lb/>
hoarse, said the Blue Devil victory<lb/>
in the ACC tournament<lb/>
championship was "as tough ?<lb/>
game as I've been involved in, as<lb/>
player or coach, in terms of<lb/>
intensity<lb/>
"We did not allow ourselves to<lb/>
get tired Krzyzewski said.<lb/>
"With all the bumps and bruises<lb/>
everybody had, that was the key<lb/>
to the game<lb/>
 When something like that<lb/>
happens, when people pull<lb/>
together like that, it makes it that<lb/>
much more special<lb/>
Krzyzewski is trying to guard<lb/>
See DUKE page 16<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?? -<lb/>
? -Kd<lb/>
M4MB<lb/>
?MaMflk<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0017"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17,1988<lb/>
<lb/>
The best in hoops<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
won the title by holding off a stub-<lb/>
born UTEP team 79-75 in the fi-<lb/>
nals. Eric Leckner led the way for<lb/>
the Cowboys by pouring in 22<lb/>
points. The Cowboys face a stiff<lb/>
test this afternoon in the West<lb/>
regional when they face a runnin<lb/>
gunnin' Loyola Marymount team<lb/>
in first round action.<lb/>
? ? ? ??<lb/>
1. PURDUE (27-3) ? 1 know, I<lb/>
know. The Boilermakers lost a<lb/>
game while we were gone away<lb/>
on Spring Break. But since this is<lb/>
the final poll of the season I've got<lb/>
to stick with my preseason in-<lb/>
stincts and put the Boilermakers<lb/>
back at the top of the heap head-<lb/>
ing into the NCAA tourney. In its<lb/>
final game of the season, Purdue<lb/>
routed Minnesota 93-66 to finish<lb/>
atop the Big Ten Conference<lb/>
standings with a 16-2 mark. I<lb/>
don't think Temple could have<lb/>
wound up with that good of a<lb/>
mark in a conference as tough as<lb/>
Purdue's. Troy Lewis paced the<lb/>
win with 17 points, while senior<lb/>
teammates Melvin McCants and<lb/>
Everette Stephens chipped in 15<lb/>
each. The Boilermakers will open<lb/>
action in the tournament today<lb/>
against Fairleigh Dickinson in the<lb/>
Midwest Regional. This is Gene<lb/>
Kcady's best chance yet for a na-<lb/>
tional title, if he blows it this year<lb/>
he might not ever get as good of a<lb/>
shot.<lb/>
to help the Devils win their sec-<lb/>
ond tourney title in three years.<lb/>
The Blue Devils will open play<lb/>
today in the East Regional against<lb/>
the Terriers of Boston University.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
2. TEMPLE (29-1) ? The Owls<lb/>
rolled through the Atlantic 10<lb/>
Conference Tournament like they<lb/>
owned it last week. But, for the<lb/>
most part, they did own the con-<lb/>
ference this season as no team in<lb/>
the league was able to bump off<lb/>
the Owls. I'm still not certain<lb/>
about this team's chances in the<lb/>
tournament. They only played<lb/>
two tough road games (North<lb/>
Carolina and UNLV) and they<lb/>
lost one of those. But with John<lb/>
Chancy handing out the orders I<lb/>
guess anything is possible. The<lb/>
Owls will open play on Friday in<lb/>
the NCAA against the 64th seed<lb/>
? poor, defenseless Lehigh.<lb/>
3. ARIZONA (31-2) ? The<lb/>
Wildcats capped off a sweep of<lb/>
the Pac-10 Conference honors this<lb/>
season by pulling off a resound-<lb/>
ing 93-67 victory over Oregon<lb/>
State in the title contest. The ease<lb/>
that the Wildcats swept through<lb/>
the tourney emphasized just how<lb/>
far they are ahead of the rest of the<lb/>
league on the hardwood. Sean<lb/>
Elliot led the way to the victory<lb/>
with 20 points, while Anthony<lb/>
Cook fired in 19. The Wildcats<lb/>
open play on Friday against Cor-<lb/>
nell in the very tough West Re-<lb/>
gional.<lb/>
4. OKLAHOMA (30-3) ? The<lb/>
Sooners rounded out a sweep of<lb/>
the Big Eight Conference basket-<lb/>
ball titles by slipping past an<lb/>
improving Kansas State club 88-<lb/>
83 in the finals of the conference<lb/>
tournament. Stacey King led the<lb/>
way with an impressive 34-point<lb/>
performance. The Sooners have a<lb/>
good chance to make the Final<lb/>
Four in Kansas City, however, an<lb/>
off shooting night will send the<lb/>
runnin' and gunnin' Sooners back<lb/>
to the hotel where they will be<lb/>
packing their bags and heading<lb/>
back to Norman. Oklahoma<lb/>
opens as the top seed in the South-<lb/>
east Regional today against Ten-<lb/>
nessee-Chattanooga.<lb/>
5. DUKE (24-6) ? The Blue<lb/>
Devils snatched the privilege of<lb/>
playing in the Dean Dome in the<lb/>
opening two rounds of the<lb/>
NCAA's right out from under<lb/>
North Carolina's nose Sunday<lb/>
when they captured the ACC<lb/>
tournament title with a 65-61 vic-<lb/>
tory over the Heels. Danny Ferry,<lb/>
who was awarded the<lb/>
tournament's MVP award, scored<lb/>
19 points and hauled in 10 boards<lb/>
6. KENTUCKY (25-5) ? The<lb/>
Wildcats held off upset-minded<lb/>
Georgia 62-57 in the finals of the<lb/>
Soutcastern Conference Tourna-<lb/>
ment to sweep the league's regu-<lb/>
lar season and post-season titles<lb/>
for the season. Rex Chapman<lb/>
scored 23 points in the title game,<lb/>
which was the Wildcats 16th<lb/>
postseason title in the conference.<lb/>
Don't count out these guys on<lb/>
making a trip to the Final Four.<lb/>
The Wildcats hit the hardwood<lb/>
Friday with a first round Souteast<lb/>
Region game slated against<lb/>
Southern University.<lb/>
7. NORTH CAROLINA (24-6)<lb/>
?The Tar Heels just can't seem to<lb/>
beat Duke this season. The Heels<lb/>
lost their third contest of the year<lb/>
to the Blue Devils, 65-61, in the<lb/>
finals of the ACC tourney. And if<lb/>
you are supersticious at all don't<lb/>
plan on the Heels being in the<lb/>
Final Four. Dean Smith has never<lb/>
guided his team to the Final Four<lb/>
in a year that his club did not win<lb/>
the ACC Tournament. But all<lb/>
things must come to an end, right?<lb/>
The Heels have a tough road to<lb/>
plow in the West Regional with a<lb/>
first round game slated for later<lb/>
today against North Texas State.<lb/>
A win their sends Dean Smith's<lb/>
boys against the winner of the<lb/>
Wyoming-Loyola Marymount<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
8. SYRACUSE (25-8) ? The<lb/>
Orangemen have gotten hot at<lb/>
just the right time of the year.<lb/>
Over the weekend they survived<lb/>
the Big East foes to claim the tour-<lb/>
nament title with an easy 85-68<lb/>
victory over Villanova in the<lb/>
championship game. Stevie Th-<lb/>
ompson led the way to the victory<lb/>
with 25 points, while Sherman<lb/>
Douglas chipped in 24. The Or-<lb/>
angemen should not be over-<lb/>
looked as a possibility of making<lb/>
it to Kansas City to battle in the<lb/>
Final Four. Syracuse opens play in<lb/>
the East Regional today against<lb/>
North Carolina A&amp;T.<lb/>
12. LOYOLA MARYMOUNT<lb/>
(27-3) ? How this team was ever<lb/>
chosen to be the 10th seed in the<lb/>
West Region will always remain a<lb/>
mystery to me. Loyola rolled to its<lb/>
tourney title by running past<lb/>
Santa Clara 104-96 in the finals. A<lb/>
true test will come later today<lb/>
when Loyola opens play in the<lb/>
West Region against Wyoming. A<lb/>
victory there would probably<lb/>
mean a game against North Caro-<lb/>
lina and a headache for Dean<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
13. NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
STATE (24-7) ? Many people say<lb/>
that the Wolfpack has the bast<lb/>
chance of any ACC team to make<lb/>
the Final Four this year. I simply<lb/>
say that Charles Shackleford<lb/>
needs to do some alterations on<lb/>
his game "dress The Wolfpack<lb/>
lost a hard-fought contest to Duke<lb/>
73-71 in the ACC semifinals and<lb/>
were shipped to the Midwest<lb/>
Region where they will square off<lb/>
against Murray State in first<lb/>
round action on Friday. If<lb/>
"Shack" can put together some 40<lb/>
minute games in the tourney, the<lb/>
Pack will no doubt be tough to<lb/>
handle.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
14. BRADLEY (26-4) ? The<lb/>
Braves swept honors in their con-<lb/>
ference this year by knocking off<lb/>
Illinois State in the tourney finals.<lb/>
Hersey Hawkins and the rest of<lb/>
the Braves will now try to prove to<lb/>
the country that they are as good<lb/>
as they have been claiming to be<lb/>
all season. The first test in the<lb/>
NCAA tourney will be against<lb/>
Auburn today in the Midwest<lb/>
Region.<lb/>
ence mark reeling to 12-6. Iowa<lb/>
will hit the hardwood Friday in<lb/>
the opening round of the tourna-<lb/>
ment against Metro Conference<lb/>
foe Florida State in the West Re-<lb/>
gional.<lb/>
18. KANSAS STATE (22-8) ?<lb/>
Although the Wildcats lost to<lb/>
Oklahoma 88-83 in the Big Eight<lb/>
Conference Tournament finals,<lb/>
they proved they could play with<lb/>
the big boys and could make some<lb/>
noise during the NCAA Tourna-<lb/>
ment. In the Big Eight title game,<lb/>
Steve Henson pumped in 20<lb/>
points, while Mitch Richmond<lb/>
fired in 19 and Will Scott 17. The<lb/>
Wildcats will take to the court<lb/>
today against a pesky LaSalle<lb/>
team in the Midwest Regional.<lb/>
19. XAVIER (OHIO) (26-3) ?<lb/>
Xa vier rolled past Dick Vitale-less<lb/>
Detroit 122- in the Midwestern<lb/>
Collegiate Conference Tourna-<lb/>
ment championship game to head<lb/>
to the NCAA's with a head of<lb/>
steam. Byron Larkin, who copped<lb/>
the tourney's MVP award, was<lb/>
true for 38 points in the landslide<lb/>
victory. Xavier will play the Jay-<lb/>
hawks of Kansas Friday in the<lb/>
Midwest Regional's first round.<lb/>
20. INDIANA (19-9) ? Bobby<lb/>
Knight has got the Hoosiers hit-<lb/>
ting on all cylinders at just the<lb/>
right time. The Hoosiers rocked<lb/>
Iowa in the season finale by an<lb/>
impressive 116-89 margin. Keith<lb/>
Smart was the main man on the<lb/>
scoreboard with a career-high<lb/>
point total of 32, 24 of which he<lb/>
poured in during the first half.<lb/>
Dean Garrett also added 26, while<lb/>
freshman sensation jay Edwards<lb/>
checked in with 24. The Hoosiers<lb/>
will battle Colonial Athletic Asso-<lb/>
ciation champion Richmond in a<lb/>
first round East regional matchup<lb/>
on Friday.<lb/>
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15. NEVADA-LAS VEGAS<lb/>
(27-5) ? The Runnin' Rebels<lb/>
slipped and fell on their faces in<lb/>
the Pacific Coast Athletic Associa-<lb/>
tion Tournament semifinals when<lb/>
California-Irvine scored a 74-70<lb/>
stunning upset. The Rebels must<lb/>
now pick up the pieces, brush<lb/>
themselves off and polish their<lb/>
game up in time to meet South-<lb/>
west Missouri Friday in the West<lb/>
Region.<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
9. PITTSBURGH (23-6) ? The<lb/>
Panthers are falling off of late and<lb/>
preseason hopes of a national title<lb/>
are looking slim. The Panthers<lb/>
lost to Villanova in the Big east<lb/>
tourney semifinals by a 72-69<lb/>
count. Jerome "Backboard Pain"<lb/>
Lane and Co. will get things<lb/>
cranked up in the NCAA's on<lb/>
Friday when they play Eastern<lb/>
Michigan in a Midwest Regional<lb/>
showdown.<lb/>
10. MICHIGAN (24-7) ? The<lb/>
Wolverines closed out their sea-<lb/>
son in impressive style over the<lb/>
weekend by disposing of Ohio<lb/>
State 95-76. Glen "The Ice" Rice<lb/>
led all scorers in the game with 29<lb/>
points, while teammates Loy<lb/>
Vaught and Gary "General"<lb/>
Grant fired in 16 and 15 points<lb/>
respectively. The Wolverines<lb/>
were shipped out west to battle in<lb/>
the West Region with a first round<lb/>
matchup scheduled against a<lb/>
pesky Boise State club today.<lb/>
11. WYOMING (26-5) ? The<lb/>
Cowboys regrouped in the West-<lb/>
ern Athletic Conference Tourna-<lb/>
ment to gain the title and meet<lb/>
some of the preseason hopes and<lb/>
dreams of their fans. Wyoming<lb/>
16. ILLINOIS (22-9) ? The<lb/>
Illini closed out the season in fine<lb/>
fashion over the weekend by top-<lb/>
ping Northwestern 79-74. Ken<lb/>
Battle led the way with a 21-point<lb/>
performance, while Nick Ander-<lb/>
son filled up the rim with 17. The<lb/>
Illini was sent to the Southest<lb/>
Region, where they will open play<lb/>
up in the tourney on Friday<lb/>
against Texas-San Antonio.<lb/>
17. IOWA (22-9) ? The<lb/>
Hawkeyes slipped and fell in<lb/>
their final game of the season to an<lb/>
up-and-coming Indiana team by a<lb/>
depressing score of 116-89. The<lb/>
loss sent the Hawkeyes confer-<lb/>
Duke wants luck<lb/>
Continued from page 15<lb/>
his team from letting up after<lb/>
winning its second ACC<lb/>
tournament in three years.<lb/>
"A dropoff might be seen if<lb/>
you're not careful when you win a<lb/>
league championship and you're<lb/>
playing anybody, not just playing<lb/>
Boston University he said. <lb/>
There's just a tendency for all of us<lb/>
to savor a championship and not<lb/>
go on to the next thing<lb/>
Duke's tournament title came<lb/>
after the Blue Devils lost three of<lb/>
their final four regular-season<lb/>
games.<lb/>
1 really don't think this season<lb/>
has been a roller coaster. I don't<lb/>
think of this as that much of a<lb/>
turnaround Krzyzewski said.<lb/>
"This has been a really great<lb/>
year for us, winning 24 games. We<lb/>
have been a very consistent<lb/>
basketball team<lb/>
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MONEY<lb/>
SAVING<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
TAKE AN<lb/>
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cuxtvtrt day ixm i<lb/>
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v?<lb/>
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fi<lb/>
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A<lb/>
?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
RACK ROOM<lb/>
n?-<lb/>
?.vS<lb/>
cA<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
y -o5<lb/>
ft-<lb/>
<lb/>
Two<lb/>
NEW YORK (AT)<lb/>
Coach Lute Olson seesa It<lb/>
basketball teams in his hi<lb/>
player on both the fii<lb/>
second All-America team)<lb/>
Junior forward Sean Ell<lb/>
named to the first tel<lb/>
Monday and senior guarj<lb/>
Kerr was on the seconc<lb/>
Olson said having two plJ<lb/>
such high caliber has not<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
"The biggest thing is th?<lb/>
so completely unselfish<lb/>
don't care who scores<lb/>
said after learning the t wol<lb/>
from his second-ranked VI<lb/>
were chosen. "Individual!<lb/>
are the least of their cone<lb/>
it's interesting to see inc<lb/>
honors go with teai<lb/>
perform well and it's<lb/>
lesson for teams to learn, j<lb/>
joining Elliot on the firJ<lb/>
which was selected by<lb/>
member panel of sportj<lb/>
from the AP and its<lb/>
newspapers, were senior;<lb/>
Manning of Kansas,<lb/>
Hawkins of Brad lev an<lb/>
Grant of Michigan<lb/>
sophomore forward JR.<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Elliot averaged 19 pon<lb/>
5.8 rebounds for the WildcJ<lb/>
were ranked No. 1 for sv<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
"To me I can't imagine<lb/>
who could have done moi<lb/>
!<lb/>
The road<lb/>
Rrst round<lb/>
PdOt. .<lb/>
tFanaigrOlOirw .<lb/>
? Bayor 230<lb/>
? OaPau'<lb/>
?a23?<lb/>
-<lb/>
: I Sail (24-9.<lb/>
? Ki-ict i-ni<lb/>
Xavw 26 3<lb/>
1 -vma?n? 'SO<lb/>
? ??? t-  -1 ?:man Sum .2-?i rl 1 Ptosburqh (JVC,<lb/>
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? 0Tp? c' a; -Amcyc Conr kl 1 af.g- f - f<lb/>
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1 5 Gaergta Tacfi (21-)<lb/>
1 ?;low Suta 20-? ? f<lb/>
1 4 Indiana S-9<lb/>
J' 3Wcnmona 6 r<lb/>
1 sWsaour1ti?0j<lb/>
T' 2 kl 1 I Mtoda Mans ??-) t<lb/>
1 ???!??? flaH)<lb/>
? 2 3'tT Thin CN?x ?- k ? NgrOt Cuoina T ;j?-2; W<lb/>
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? 9 3' c ?" vxs ai Ciap? I4JLNC WJ ? ? Bo?w Unrwraftv -Z0- f<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
at home<lb/>
for four<lb/>
East Carolina's Softball<lb/>
will enter its longest hoi<lb/>
of the season this week wil<lb/>
games scheduled at Varisr<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
doubleheaders schedule<lb/>
North Carolina WeslevanJ<lb/>
Chapel Hill, Ohio Univers<lb/>
Louisburg College. All gai<lb/>
scheduled for 2 p.m. start;<lb/>
The Pirates are currentKl<lb/>
the season after pulling o<lb/>
victory over UNC-VVilminl<lb/>
the road Tuesday.<lb/>
Pirate slugger Micke;<lb/>
paced the way for ECU I<lb/>
victory with a triple<lb/>
homerun against the Sea<lb/>
Pirate hurler Jennifer Sagl<lb/>
up the win on the<lb/>
marking her third win<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The victory over the So<lb/>
snapped a three-game<lb/>
streak for the Pirates. ECUl<lb/>
0 decision to Eastern Con?<lb/>
Saturday. The loss to<lb/>
came on the heels of two <lb/>
a doubleheader against<lb/>
Marion on Friday.<lb/>
Frances Marion toppl<lb/>
Pirates 5-1 in the opening <lb/>
while taking a 3-1 decisk<lb/>
nightcap.<lb/>
The Pirates opened ti<lb/>
with seven consecutive v<lb/>
The first win of the year caj<lb/>
a 2-1 victory over Lander<lb/>
The Pirate sluggers w<lb/>
record winsoverGeorgia j<lb/>
5), Tennessee Tech (10-1),<lb/>
Michigan(l-O), Temple (7j<lb/>
0) and Coastal Carolina (4<lb/>
? TIM<lb/>
:??<lb/>
mm mm'<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0018"/><lb/>
N<lb/>
MARCH 17,1988<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17,1988 17<lb/>
1 White Bond)<lb/>
3PY<lb/>
loo<lb/>
?AST TIMES<lb/>
:kogetown shops)<lb/>
eak!<lb/>
r<lb/>
"T<lb/>
EPLAY<lb/>
 Service<lb/>
55-5050<lb/>
TfrSb"1<lb/>
N'LARGEMENT<lb/>
UM ot Any Color<lb/>
- irgemert Up To 11x14"<lb/>
-argument<lb/>
FREE mit Two<lb/>
.p ts? 2588<lb/>
He,<lb/>
Two stars no problem for 'Cats<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Arizona<lb/>
Coach Lute Olson sees a lesson for<lb/>
basketball teams in his having a<lb/>
player on both the first and<lb/>
second All-America teams.<lb/>
Junior forward Sean Elliott was<lb/>
named to the first team on<lb/>
Monday and senior guard Steve<lb/>
Kerr was on the second team.<lb/>
Olson said having two players of<lb/>
such high caliber has not been a<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
"The biggest thing is they're all<lb/>
so completely unselfish. They<lb/>
don't care who scores Olson<lb/>
said after learning the two players<lb/>
from his second-ranked Wildcats<lb/>
were chosen. "Individual honors<lb/>
are the least of their concern but<lb/>
it's interesting to see individual<lb/>
honors go with teams that<lb/>
perform well and it's a great<lb/>
lesson for teams to learn<lb/>
Joining Elliot on the first team,<lb/>
which was selected by a 20-<lb/>
member panel of sportswriters<lb/>
from the AP and its member<lb/>
newspapers, were seniors Danny<lb/>
Manning of Kansas, Hersey<lb/>
Hawkins of Bradley and Gary<lb/>
Grant of Michigan and<lb/>
sophomore forward J.R. Reid of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Elliot averaged 19 points and<lb/>
5.8 rebounds for the Wildcats who<lb/>
were ranked No. 1 for six weeks<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
"To me I can't imagine a player<lb/>
who could have done more for his<lb/>
team than what Sean has done for<lb/>
us Olson said. "We're sort of a<lb/>
team, with the exception of Sean,<lb/>
of role players and you better<lb/>
have one fantastic player to go<lb/>
with them, one who can create<lb/>
opportunities for himself and his<lb/>
team. He's probably the closest<lb/>
thing to Magic Johnson that's<lb/>
been around for awhile<lb/>
The 6-foot-10 Manning, named<lb/>
to the first team for the second<lb/>
straight year, managed a fine<lb/>
senior season despite injury and<lb/>
academic problems that plagued<lb/>
the Jayhawks.<lb/>
"I think he's had a phenomonal<lb/>
year considering we've had so<lb/>
many problems this year, and it's<lb/>
added extra responsibility to<lb/>
Danny, and he's done a<lb/>
tremendous job Kansas Coach<lb/>
Larry Brown said. "It's an honor<lb/>
to be a repeat choice and that<lb/>
doesn't happen too often<lb/>
Brown said Manning would be<lb/>
missed at Kansas for reasons<lb/>
other than his basketball ability.<lb/>
"I don't think it's possible to<lb/>
replace a player like Danny<lb/>
Brown said. "I'm thrilled that we<lb/>
had a chance to coach him and be<lb/>
with him. The next step will be to<lb/>
look back, see him play where he<lb/>
does in the future, and have<lb/>
unbelievable pride that we were<lb/>
part of it. You don't replace kids<lb/>
like him, but you benefit from<lb/>
having had him<lb/>
Manning, named Big Eight<lb/>
player of the year as a sophomore<lb/>
and junior, averaged 22.3 points<lb/>
and 8.9 rebounds this season.<lb/>
Hawkins, a 6-3 guard, enters<lb/>
tournament play with a 36.0<lb/>
scoring average, the highest since<lb/>
Freeman Williams of Portland<lb/>
State averaged 38.8 in 1977. He's<lb/>
also the first player to score 1,000<lb/>
points in a season since Williams<lb/>
11 years ago.<lb/>
"He's the consumate collegiate<lb/>
player because he has an absolute<lb/>
great demeanor for the game and<lb/>
has seen every type of defense<lb/>
thrown at him and he's<lb/>
unflappable, yet remarkably<lb/>
consistent, inasmuch as he's<lb/>
averaging 36 points Bradley<lb/>
Coach Stan Albeck said of<lb/>
Hawkins. "The honor is super<lb/>
and well-deserved as far as we're<lb/>
concerned because he not only<lb/>
elevated himself but our<lb/>
program<lb/>
Grant averaged 22 points and<lb/>
6.9 assists this year and led the Big<lb/>
Ten in steals three consecutive<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
"I think ifs a well-deserved<lb/>
honor not only because he was<lb/>
outstanding this year but he had a<lb/>
tremendous career Michigan<lb/>
Coach Bill Frieder said. "He's one<lb/>
of the few players over the years<lb/>
that was instrumental offensively<lb/>
and defensively game after game.<lb/>
He made the big plays<lb/>
defensively to turn games<lb/>
around. He shut down a lot of<lb/>
great players<lb/>
Reid enjoyed a solid sophomore<lb/>
season. The 6-9 forward averaged<lb/>
17.9 points and 8.7 rebounds<lb/>
while shooting 61 percent from<lb/>
the field.<lb/>
"He had an excellent year and<lb/>
has improved in all areas of his<lb/>
game from last season North<lb/>
Carolina Coach Dean Smith said.<lb/>
"Defenses on him have changed a<lb/>
great deal from last season and<lb/>
he's handled that well in doing<lb/>
what's best for the team<lb/>
Pittsburgh's Jerome Lane, who<lb/>
was voted to the third team as a<lb/>
sophomore last season, joined<lb/>
Kerr on the second team this year.<lb/>
Others on the second team were<lb/>
Temple freshman Mark Macon,<lb/>
Duke junior Danny Ferry and<lb/>
senior Jeff Grayer of Iowa State.<lb/>
The third team was Sherman<lb/>
Douglas of Syracuse, Fennis<lb/>
Dembo of Wyoming, Byron<lb/>
Larkin of Xavier, Ohio, Will<lb/>
Perdue of Vanderbil t and Michael<lb/>
Smith of Brigham Young.<lb/>
CUT IT OUT NOW!<lb/>
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Expires 4-2-88<lb/>
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Kansas City ? 1988<lb/>
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March 25 S 27 I<lb/>
? Emm Ucmsaa,22-7,<lb/>
Tacnpla (2S-i<lb/>
7 37 p m Fri a: -amord Conr<lb/>
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April 2<lb/>
? Gaorgrto?m (19-8)<lb/>
9 3Tsi c' a' -larttore Cor-<lb/>
slSU(i?-13) <lb/>
<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
 Gaorflia Tocn J21-8)<lb/>
i 0" p m -? a' rlajStiffj<lb/>
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Sunday<lb/>
2 37p-r Fn atHarfloro Corv<lb/>
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2 07 p rr Thurs at Clape miC<lb/>
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March 24 &amp; 26 I<lb/>
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Saturday<lb/>
12 j'ct Tlim Cnap Hi NC<lb/>
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- Skl (27-6)<lb/>
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Saturday<lb/>
NATIONAL<lb/>
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April 4<lb/>
NCAA<lb/>
2 37 prn Fn a Los Angeles<lb/>
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1141pm Fn at Los Angeies<lb/>
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1141pm Thurs at Sad Lake Dtv<lb/>
3t John's (22-11)<lb/>
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9-07 pm Thurs at Salt Lake City<lb/>
n?sa?.g4-s) <lb/>
Wyoming pn)<lb/>
4 37 p m Thurs at Salt Lake City<lb/>
LnyaH taarymrmm (27-3)<lb/>
207 pjn Thurs M Salt Lake C?y<lb/>
rltaa? ??H7-H)<lb/>
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1207 p m Thurs at Atlanta<lb/>
P"0)<lb/>
A? 37 p m Thurs at All<lb/>
1 Or?on mm (20-10)<lb/>
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1207 pm Fn a! Oncmnali<lb/>
2<lb/>
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9 37 p m Fn at GncmnaD<lb/>
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Softballers<lb/>
at home<lb/>
for four<lb/>
East Carolina's Softball team<lb/>
will enter its longest home series<lb/>
of the season this week with four<lb/>
games scheduled at Varisty Field.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates have<lb/>
doubleheaders scheduled with<lb/>
North Carolina Wesleyan, UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill, Ohio University and<lb/>
Louisburg College. All games are<lb/>
scheduled for 2 p.m. starts.<lb/>
The Pirates are currently 8-3 for<lb/>
the season after pulling out a 9-6<lb/>
victory over UNC-Wilmington on<lb/>
the road Tuesday.<lb/>
Pirate slugger Mickey Ford<lb/>
paced the way for ECU in the<lb/>
victory with a triple and a<lb/>
homerun against the Seahawks.<lb/>
Pirate hurler Jennifer Sagl picked<lb/>
up the win on the mound,<lb/>
marking her third win of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The victory over the Seahawks<lb/>
snapped a three-game losing<lb/>
streak for the Pirates. ECU lost a 8-<lb/>
0 decision to Eastern Connecticut<lb/>
Saturday. The loss to Eastern<lb/>
came on the heels of two losses in<lb/>
a doubleheader against Frances<lb/>
Marion on Friday.<lb/>
Frances Marion toppled the<lb/>
Pirates 5-1 in the opening contest,<lb/>
while taking a 3-1 decision in the<lb/>
nightcap.<lb/>
The Pirates opened the year<lb/>
with seven consecutive victories.<lb/>
The first win of the year came with<lb/>
a 2-1 victory over Lander.<lb/>
The Pirate sluggers went on to<lb/>
record winsoverGeorgia State(6-<lb/>
5), Tennessee Tech (10-1), Eastern<lb/>
Michigan (1-0), Temple (7-2 and 3-<lb/>
0) and Coastal Carolina (4-2).<lb/>
? TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
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Three Iterrs7.45<lb/>
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Extra Items over 3 .70 .90 1.10<lb/>
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CHOOSE FROM THESE TOPPINGS<lb/>
pep. tajsHnoous. omons, hms. bacon, oround met.<lb/>
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Tuna Mett2.76<lb/>
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SALADS SM MD LQ<lb/>
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Greek 1.39 2.89 4.69<lb/>
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per visit Not vabd with any other offers Cheese<lb/>
extra Tax extra where applicable.<lb/>
EXPIRES APRIL 15, 1988<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
50c<lb/>
THE PRICE OF ANY<lb/>
HOT STUFFED<lb/>
BAKED POTATO<lb/>
Valid only at Partidpauhg 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 APRIL 15, 1988<lb/>
75? OFF<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 APRIL 15, 1988<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
SANDWICH<lb/>
NOW ONLY<lb/>
$1.49<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 APRIL 15, 1988<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
20c<lb/>
REGULAR SIZE<lb/>
CHILI<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
20<lb/>
REGULAR SIZE<lb/>
CHILI<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 APRIL 15, 1988<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 APRIL 15, 1988<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
40 c i<lb/>
vm<lb/>
SINGLE<lb/>
HAMBURGER<lb/>
99?<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
94 c i<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
50c<lb/>
BIG CLASSIC<lb/>
COMBO<lb/>
752 OFF<lb/>
I Valid only at Participating Wendy's. Please present<lb/>
1 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 APRIL 15,1988<lb/>
Big Classic, Regular Fries, Medium Drink.<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 APRIL 15,1988<lb/>
SALAD<lb/>
Valid only at Participating Wendy's. Please present<lb/>
coupon when ordering. One coupon per Customer<lb/>
per visit. No' valid with any other offers. Cheese<lb/>
extra. Tax extra where applicable.<lb/>
EXPIRES APRIL 15,1988<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 APRIL 15, 1988<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
94c n<lb/>
BIG CLASSIC<lb/>
COMBO<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Big Classic, Regular Fries, Medium Drink.<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 APRIL 15, 1988<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
751 OFF<lb/>
!W<lb/>
SALAD<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 APRIL 15, 1988<lb/>
S A V E<lb/>
Wenny<lb/>
SINGLE<lb/>
HAMBURGER<lb/>
99?<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 APRIL 15,1988<lb/>
nnn<lb/>
??m4p<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
The best burgers<lb/>
in the business.<lb/>
???wmmmmmmmmm-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057951_0020"/>
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