<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058075_0001"/>
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS!<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes all students back to<lb/>
campus for the summer. We will appear<lb/>
Wednesdays from now on.<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
"Colors" has a few flaws. See page 9.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
ECU signs two golf recruits. See page 12.<lb/>
QEhe SaHt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 1<lb/>
Friday, May 20,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Edwards tells graduates<lb/>
. to look toward the future<lb/>
Douglas Edwards, retired newsman for the Columbia Broadcast-<lb/>
ing System, said at graduation that this year's seniors could he a<lb/>
bright surprise for the future. (Jon Jordan Photolab)<lb/>
Book an family life by ECU professor<lb/>
By CLAY DEANHARDT career minded, more pragmatic,<lb/>
General Manage more practical than the preceding<lb/>
The graduating class oi more generation of college graduates,<lb/>
than 1,500 East Carolina Univer- "You have also vet to be heard<lb/>
sitv students were told during from. You are not the vocal gen-<lb/>
commensement, May 7, to keep eration that graduated in the late<lb/>
an eye toward the future and to 60s and early 70s he said.<lb/>
remember that "being nice isn't Edwards said he recently read<lb/>
bad" by Douglas Edwards, the an article in which today's college<lb/>
first network television news graduates were called "nice and<lb/>
anchoranda pioneer in the broad- lie didn't think it was meant as a<lb/>
casting field. compliment. However, he said,<lb/>
Drawing from his 46years with he thought it was a good thing to<lb/>
the Columbia Broadcasting Svs- be nice in the 80s.<lb/>
tern, Edwards told the graduates "You will prove you are more<lb/>
they hold the promise of the fu- than nice he said.<lb/>
ture despite criticism from some "That you are also caring and<lb/>
that their generation is motivated progressive and-dare I sav the<lb/>
by self interest and greed. word- radical<lb/>
"Much of our hope in the future Many oi the outspoken gradu-<lb/>
lepends on you he said. ates of the 60s, Edwards said,<lb/>
"You are different from the col- settled into material values<lb/>
lege graduates of a decade or quickly when they faced the<lb/>
more ago. You are said to be more world outside of college, he said<lb/>
there are less expectations placed<lb/>
on this generation of graduates,<lb/>
and that thev may end up doing<lb/>
more.<lb/>
"In the years ahead you're<lb/>
going to surprises I suspect.<lb/>
you are going to make enormous,<lb/>
significant contributions to this<lb/>
world. Your political and soda!<lb/>
creativity is ahead oi you, not<lb/>
behind you as u seems to be with<lb/>
so many of the 60s activists i<lb/>
certainly hope ml"<lb/>
believing the future would auto-<lb/>
matically take care oi today's<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
He said the answer to many<lb/>
problems facing the world lies in<lb/>
communication- in sharing<lb/>
knowledge, feelings and experi-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
"We all talk too much and<lb/>
rommunicate too little he said.<lb/>
noting that often violence is a<lb/>
misguided effort to communi-<lb/>
cate.<lb/>
"In the years ahead you're going to surprise us, I<lb/>
suspect You are going to make enormous, signifi-<lb/>
cant contributions to tJiis world. Your political<lb/>
and social creativity is ahead of you<lb/>
� Douglas F.dwards<lb/>
I C t News Mu rv�u<lb/>
Recent writings on a variety ol<lb/>
family-related issues are included<lb/>
in "Families in Transition: An<lb/>
Annoted Bibliography" by Fast<lb/>
Carolina University faculty mem-<lb/>
ber Judith DeBoard Sadler. The<lb/>
book is scheduled for publication<lb/>
this mi'nth by Archon Books of<lb/>
Connecticut.<lb/>
The 251-page hardcover vol-<lb/>
ume surveys published matcri i<lb/>
on such topics as single-parent-<lb/>
ing, step-families, faster families,<lb/>
teenage-parent families, homo-<lb/>
sexual relationships, child cus-<lb/>
I 'dv and visitation, "latchkey"<lb/>
children, commuting couples and<lb/>
other issues dealing with changes<lb/>
in family configurations during<lb/>
the past two decades.<lb/>
The book is recommended for<lb/>
those with a professional or per-<lb/>
sonal interest in family issues,<lb/>
particularly social workers, coun-<lb/>
' : mber of "tradi-<lb/>
tional" two-parent families.<lb/>
' No longer is the nuclear family<lb/>
predominant in this country<lb/>
Ms. Sadler says. "As a result, the<lb/>
American family is in a state of<lb/>
transition.<lb/>
" There are now single-parent<lb/>
families, I pfamilics, dual earner<lb/>
fa mil : d cummutcr families.<lb/>
 he n ; s families confront<lb/>
ide lat hkkids, day care,<lb/>
- u : 'dv. child supp rt, displaced<lb/>
homemakers, teen-ace prec-<lb/>
nancv.<lb/>
ntal kidnapping, sur-<lb/>
id homo<lb/>
sex-<lb/>
;ate parent<lb/>
ual parent<lb/>
Altl  � a number ii social<lb/>
and economh f rces" have<lb/>
brougl t ab ut 11 inge in the<lb/>
structure ol ics, Ms. Sadler<lb/>
says, the family unit retains its<lb/>
important role in society.<lb/>
 1<lb/>
�re than<lb/>
sciors,<lb/>
ittorne<lb/>
md articles, including<lb/>
fiction and nonfiction<lb/>
children, alone with 40<lb/>
-<lb/>
the tie<lb/>
major<lb/>
ducators, ministers and<lb/>
0G books<lb/>
some 100<lb/>
books tor<lb/>
films and<lb/>
audio or video cassettes are sur-<lb/>
veyed in the Sadler bibliography.<lb/>
While some publications were<lb/>
designed for professionals, many<lb/>
were intended for tho general<lb/>
reader, among them articles form<lb/>
mass-market magazines.<lb/>
In a pre-publication review,<lb/>
Hamilton I. McCubbin, dLn of<lb/>
the University oi Wisconsin's<lb/>
I ol Family Resources and<lb/>
imcr Sciences, said Sadler's<lb/>
. ill emerge as a classic in<lb/>
1 and establish itself as a<lb/>
reference document tor<lb/>
family scholars<lb/>
Judity Sadler, an associate pro-<lb/>
f( sor ol library and information<lb/>
studies at E( U, precedes her bib-<lb/>
liography with an introduction<lb/>
explaining changes in the make-<lb/>
upof family units. The percentage<lb/>
of families that fit the traditional<lb/>
concept of two parents with chil-<lb/>
dren is on the decline across the<lb/>
nation, while divorce rates have<lb/>
risen sharply.<lb/>
She cited current statistics:<lb/>
Approximately 75 percent of<lb/>
divorced women and 3 percent<lb/>
of divorced men remarry, and<lb/>
remarriages have a 50 percent<lb/>
"survival rate<lb/>
� About half a million adults<lb/>
become stepparents each year in<lb/>
the U.S. with between a third and<lb/>
a sixth of all children in the U.S.<lb/>
having at least one stepparent.<lb/>
� It is likely that by 1990 the<lb/>
number of stepfamilies and<lb/>
single-parent households will be<lb/>
i to several indexes,<lb/>
.hides an appendix<lb/>
In additn<lb/>
the book 1!<lb/>
listing names and addresses of<lb/>
numerous i rganizations and as-<lb/>
sociations tl it otter information<lb/>
and support to families and to<lb/>
those vv<lb/>
work with families.<lb/>
After a few delays because of technical problems, Chancellor<lb/>
Eakin addressed the crowd of parents and students assembled at<lb/>
the May 7 graduation ceremony. (Jon Jordan � Photolab)<lb/>
Speaking on the politics ot the<lb/>
election year, Edwards said<lb/>
Saturday's graduates would be<lb/>
charged with reforming an elec-<lb/>
tion system that hasn't boon<lb/>
working weel lately.<lb/>
"We are a country in which the<lb/>
idea of majority rule has been<lb/>
replaced by the fact of minority<lb/>
rule he said. Edwards said some<lb/>
way needed to be found to get<lb/>
more people to vote and that<lb/>
campaign spending needed to be<lb/>
controlled to allow more people<lb/>
to run for public office.<lb/>
Edwards said he could foresee<lb/>
great advances in technology in<lb/>
the near future, some resulting<lb/>
from the peaceful fallout oi Star<lb/>
Wars technology 1 le said re-<lb/>
search into the futuristic defencse<lb/>
shield could benefit other re-<lb/>
search into a cure for cancer, pro-<lb/>
tection for rain forests from acid<lb/>
rain and astronomy- along with<lb/>
numerous other fields.<lb/>
But, Edwards said, the key to<lb/>
the future is in dreams and com-<lb/>
munication.<lb/>
"We must not stop with dreams<lb/>
or stop dreaming them he said.<lb/>
"Dreams are the touchstone of<lb/>
our characters. For you, at the<lb/>
beginning oi your careers, this is<lb/>
the time for dreams, to try and live<lb/>
the life that you have imagined<lb/>
He warned, though, that gradu-<lb/>
ates must not fall into the trap of<lb/>
"What is truly unfortunate is<lb/>
the final result he saiei.<lb/>
"For violence never unites us;<lb/>
violence onlv separates vis from<lb/>
each other<lb/>
In closing, Edwards told the<lb/>
1-CL graduates he wished them<lb/>
glory in th future<lb/>
Edwards also addressed the<lb/>
families and friends that sup-<lb/>
ported the students in their quests<lb/>
for degrees, commending tham<lb/>
for dedication. Approximately<lb/>
15,000 people-many more than<lb/>
officials had expected- attended<lb/>
the ceremony in Ficklen Stadium,<lb/>
which had been delayed for sev-<lb/>
eral minutes because oi technical<lb/>
difficulties with the speaker sys-<lb/>
tem.<lb/>
There were also more students<lb/>
walking through the graduation<lb/>
sevices than had been expected,<lb/>
forcing approximately 30 to stand<lb/>
through the event.<lb/>
The University Award, the<lb/>
highest award given to graduat-<lb/>
ing seniors at ECU, was presented<lb/>
to Jamie Allen and Susan Benson,<lb/>
both of Greenville. Both non-tra-<lb/>
ditional, adult students complet-<lb/>
ing degrees in education and ac-<lb/>
counting, respectively-<lb/>
Following Edward's speech,<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Richard R. Eakin<lb/>
conferred degrees ranging from<lb/>
doctors in philosophy to bacca-<lb/>
laureate degrees.<lb/>
Rapist stabbed by victim<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
News ! litnr<lb/>
A 22-year old Kinston man has<lb/>
been charged with the first degree<lb/>
rapeofaE U female student in an<lb/>
incident which occurred April 25<lb/>
in 'ones Residen e I fall.<lb/>
Maurice vr uell, who is not<lb/>
an ECU student, was also charged<lb/>
with attempted rape, assault on a<lb/>
female and breaking and entering<lb/>
a (ones room.xouell's bond was<lb/>
set at $85,000.<lb/>
(n April 25, ECU PublicSafery<lb/>
responded to a telephone call at<lb/>
4:23 a.m. saving that a fight was<lb/>
taking place in ones dorm. The<lb/>
suspect was apprehended 45<lb/>
minutes later after officers of both<lb/>
Public Safety and Greenville Po-<lb/>
lice put on a search.<lb/>
According to Public Safety<lb/>
Chief Johnny Rose, Crouell alleg-<lb/>
edly held a female at knife point<lb/>
while raping her, an act which<lb/>
qualifies for first degree rape. The<lb/>
Kinston man also alledgely at-<lb/>
tempted to rape the female's<lb/>
roomate.<lb/>
Rose said Crouell entered a<lb/>
locked exterior door to the dorm<lb/>
early the momingof the 25th after<lb/>
a Jones resident opened the door<lb/>
for him. The outside doors to<lb/>
Jones, like doors to other ECU<lb/>
residence halls, are locked at a<lb/>
curfew hourof 2a.m.on the week-<lb/>
ends. Residents and authorized<lb/>
personnel are the only persons the suspect.<lb/>
of the dorm try hitting her.<lb/>
Rose said the first floor RA<lb/>
chased the suspect from the dorm.<lb/>
Rose also said the RA identified<lb/>
the man and was "instrumental in<lb/>
the detection and apprehension of<lb/>
allowed to enter the dorm after<lb/>
curfew.<lb/>
Crouell allegedly entered the<lb/>
two females' second floor dorm<lb/>
room by force after one of the<lb/>
women answered the door.<lb/>
During the rape one of the<lb/>
females stabbed Crouell with a<lb/>
knive in his shoulder blade. After<lb/>
being apprehended, Crouell was<lb/>
treated at Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital for a laceration on his<lb/>
shoulder.<lb/>
Rose said a Jones resident<lb/>
ad visor heard a commotion on the<lb/>
second floor and entered the<lb/>
room while the suspect was rap-<lb/>
ing one of the females. Rose said<lb/>
the RA's actions "probably kept<lb/>
the two victims from being seri-<lb/>
ously hurt<lb/>
After being intcrupted by the<lb/>
RA, Crouell fled from the room<lb/>
and assaulted a female in the hall<lb/>
Crouell was apprehended by<lb/>
the Greenville Police in a garage<lb/>
behind 1007 Forbes St. shortly<lb/>
afterwords.<lb/>
Rose said the Jones resident<lb/>
who initially allowed Crouell into<lb/>
the dormitory was evicted from<lb/>
the dorm for his actions.<lb/>
The rape brings to light the<lb/>
seriousness of allowing<lb/>
unauthorized persons into a dor-<lb/>
mitory, Rose said. Rose asked<lb/>
dorm residents to practice pre-<lb/>
caution when opening the locked<lb/>
outside doors for anyone. "Be<lb/>
very suspicious of any activity<lb/>
Rose said.<lb/>
Joseph Caldcr, director of<lb/>
Public Safety, said the incident<lb/>
was the first rape to occur inside<lb/>
an ECU dormitory in his 19 years<lb/>
at ECU. Caldcr said rapes in past<lb/>
have taken place off campus or The sentiments of many graduates were expressed by this cap<lb/>
outside of campus buildings. addressed to Dad and Mom. (Jon Jordan � Photolab)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0002"/><lb/>
TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 20, lSS<lb/>
12 steps to rape prevention<lb/>
Mv roommate was raped a few<lb/>
days ago. What can I do to help<lb/>
her and what can 1 do to prevent<lb/>
this from happening to me?<lb/>
If vou or a friend are a victim of<lb/>
sexual assault vou should do the<lb/>
following:<lb/>
1. Co to a safe place.<lb/>
2. Preserve all physical evi-<lb/>
dence Do not shower, bathe or<lb/>
douche. Save the clothing you<lb/>
were wearing.<lb/>
3. Call the police or campus<lb/>
security immediately. It is up to<lb/>
you to file a complaint.<lb/>
4. Call someone for support.<lb/>
5. Co to the hospital emergency<lb/>
room for medical and evidence<lb/>
collection.<lb/>
It is normal for the victim in<lb/>
recovery from sexual assault to<lb/>
have a wide variety ot feelings.<lb/>
Some ot these include:<lb/>
- Fear ot being alone or oi the<lb/>
attacker returning.<lb/>
- Anger at herself and the assail-<lb/>
ant<lb/>
- Humiliation.<lb/>
- Guilt.<lb/>
HEALTH COLUMN<lb/>
By<lb/>
DONNA STOWE<lb/>
- Shame.<lb/>
- IVpression.<lb/>
- Mood swings.<lb/>
- Unusually silent or talkative.<lb/>
- Repression or denial of the<lb/>
event.<lb/>
While no one is immune to sex-<lb/>
ual crimes there are va s to pre-<lb/>
vent this from happening to you.<lb/>
The North Carolina Department<lb/>
of Crime control and Public Safety<lb/>
has released guidelines to help<lb/>
women in protecting themselves<lb/>
against sexual assault. Sexual as-<lb/>
sailants are like their victims in<lb/>
that also come from all arc-as of<lb/>
society and there is no formula tor<lb/>
predicting who may be a potential<lb/>
threat. Because of this, we should<lb/>
treat strangers with caution until<lb/>
they have earned our trust. This<lb/>
extra caution is not rude or offen-<lb/>
sive but smart and safety con-<lb/>
scious. If a person is genuinely<lb/>
interested in your feelings and<lb/>
well being they will understand<lb/>
your caution. I lere is a list of basic<lb/>
strategies a woman can use to<lb/>
make herself less vulnerable to<lb/>
assault.<lb/>
- Know whom you are dating<lb/>
and stay in public areas with other<lb/>
people.<lb/>
- let someone you trust know<lb/>
where you are going and how<lb/>
long you will begone.<lb/>
- Realize you have the right to<lb/>
set your sexual limits and these<lb/>
limits may change at any time.<lb/>
Communicate these limits<lb/>
clearly.<lb/>
- He assertive. If something<lb/>
happens vou do not like, stand up<lb/>
tor your personal rights.<lb/>
- Limit the use of alcohol and<lb/>
drugs so vou can keep a clear<lb/>
head.<lb/>
- In the home make sure all<lb/>
doors, windows and locks are<lb/>
secure with durable hinges and<lb/>
peep holes.<lb/>
r<lb/>
ounties fight against waste treatment plant<lb/>
riTTSRORO. N.C.(AP)- Some<lb/>
Chatham and lee countv resi-<lb/>
dents don't want a hazardous<lb/>
waste treatment plant located in<lb/>
their area, and they met Wednes-<lb/>
day to figure out ways to tight the<lb/>
proposal.<lb/>
We need to hold hands and<lb/>
stick this one out together, and I<lb/>
think we can beat it Chatham<lb/>
resident Lisa B. Howell told the<lb/>
crowd oi about 150 at the<lb/>
Chatham County District Court-<lb/>
room. "The state and federal gov-<lb/>
ernment are not going to take care<lb/>
oi us. We need to take care oi<lb/>
ourselves<lb/>
The North Carolina 1 hazardous<lb/>
Waste Treatment Commission<lb/>
announced earlier this month that<lb/>
it was considering a site near the<lb/>
banks ol the ; Vep River for an<lb/>
incinerat r and treatment facility.<lb/>
The Peep River Ironis part ot the<lb/>
border between Chatham and Lee<lb/>
counties.<lb/>
"We're real concerned about it<lb/>
because1 it is on the river Cather-<lb/>
ine M. Cameron, on organizer ot<lb/>
the meeting, told the News and<lb/>
Observer ot Raleigh before the<lb/>
gathering. 'A good share ot<lb/>
Chatham County is down river<lb/>
from the possible site of the facil-<lb/>
ity. It there's air pollution from<lb/>
incinerator stacks, we would re-<lb/>
ceive our share ot that<lb/>
Chatham County Planning<lb/>
Board Chairman William W. Dow<lb/>
and Mrs Cameron were among<lb/>
the leaders oi n earlier unsuc-<lb/>
cessful tight to stop a surface coal<lb/>
mining operation near the<lb/>
Chatham County side of the Deep<lb/>
River. Dow said the residents al-<lb/>
ready had seen too many scars left<lb/>
on their region bv mismanagemnt<lb/>
of industrial waste.<lb/>
"It just goes on and on Dow<lb/>
said in an interview before the<lb/>
meeting. "But the good thing<lb/>
about Chatham County is that<lb/>
we'll stand up and fight<lb/>
The tract being considered b<lb/>
state officials covers almost four<lb/>
square miles, with about two<lb/>
miles oi river frontage. The state<lb/>
has been negotiating the purchase<lb/>
ot the land, which is valued at<lb/>
about $822,000.<lb/>
- Always have adequate light-<lb/>
ing around entrances and hall-<lb/>
ways.<lb/>
- Never open your door to<lb/>
anyone vou do not know.<lb/>
- Ask for an I.D. from repair<lb/>
men and if you do allow them in,<lb/>
have a friend with you.<lb/>
- Give no indication that you<lb/>
live alone, or that you are a fe-<lb/>
male, on your mailbox or in the<lb/>
phone book.<lb/>
- Always be alert to what is<lb/>
going on around vou and act as-<lb/>
sertively.<lb/>
Rape, or sexual assault, is one of<lb/>
the oldest crimes in history. Sex-<lb/>
ual assault is any forced sexual<lb/>
activity that is against the<lb/>
persons's will. The force may be<lb/>
physical, or mental and emotional<lb/>
pressure. Contrary to popular<lb/>
belief, rape is a crime oi power<lb/>
and anger, not passion. Anyone<lb/>
can be a victim, regardless oi age,<lb/>
race, appearance, or social stand-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
It is encouraging to know that<lb/>
most assault situations do not<lb/>
result in rape because women<lb/>
have been observant and acted<lb/>
quickly. We are safer when we act<lb/>
to avoid riskv situations, but even<lb/>
with precautions, sexual assault<lb/>
can still occur. If you or a friend<lb/>
are a victim of sexual assault,<lb/>
report it and seek counseling<lb/>
from the Rape Crisis Center, the<lb/>
Counseling Center on campust<lb/>
the Student 1 lealth Service. These<lb/>
servicescan help you, your family<lb/>
and friends deal with the after-<lb/>
math ot rape. They understan<lb/>
and are there to help.<lb/>
LOW COST<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
Abortion from U " 18 wwkj �t �dd�lon�l com Prejiwncy<lb/>
Te� Birth Control �nd Problem I�gni�cy Coupling, For<lb/>
further inlorrrution. all 832-OSA5 (toll hw numb�r 1-S00-<lb/>
532-SW4)b�"Iwenl��-m.��d5p m. w�ekd�. Gcnil�M�<lb/>
�Lj tvatUbW<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HlAlJBj<lb/>
ORGANlZA-nOHS<lb/>
Some<lb/>
ZUjt Caist ataroltoian<lb/>
Sen'Um the Exist CanAUw campus canxnuuuty since 1925<lb/>
James F. J. McKcc. Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton Sl0tt Makey<lb/>
Richard Alan Cook Spencer Meymai<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY RATES<lb/>
O 49 Column Inches S4 '2r)<lb/>
50-99<lb/>
LOO 149 <lb/>
1T0 L99<lb/>
4 05<lb/>
I �<lb/>
200 240 <lb/>
250 and above ' 7")<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in Addition to Regular Space Ra<lb/>
One color Mid Nji.W<lb/>
Two colors and black<lb/>
5,000 or less<lb/>
5.001-1<lb/>
; �<lb/>
Inverts<lb/>
59 �<lb/>
' .� each<lb/>
 c -a�.h<lb/>
5� n.h<lb/>
BUSINESS H()l RS:<lb/>
Monday-Frida<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Phones<lb/>
757-6366757-6557<lb/>
757-6558757-6309<lb/>
Two lovely co-eds bask in the afternoon sun and discuss their plans for the evenini; in between<lb/>
classes Tuesday. (Photo by Ellen Murphy�Photolab)<lb/>
Shoe Outlet<lb/>
752-2332<lb/>
Mon. - Sat. 9 -6<lb/>
3 Blocks From Campus<lb/>
50-75 Saving On Men's Brand<lb/>
Name Factory Returned Shoes<lb/>
<lb/>
Incredible<lb/>
Prices<lb/>
Brand Name Silk Ties S5.00<lb/>
Nice Dress Ties S2.00<lb/>
Sharp Suspenders S5.00<lb/>
Shoes in stock:<lb/>
Bass, Sperry Top Siders,<lb/>
Bostonian, Spot Built, Pony,<lb/>
Puma, Allen Edmonds,<lb/>
Nine-West.<lb/>
Also have ladies shoes<lb/>
All new 1st quality<lb/>
Have To See<lb/>
To Believe<lb/>
PUTT-PUTT<lb/>
GOLF COURSES<lb/>
Of Greenville<lb/>
E. 10th St. Ext.<lb/>
I<lb/>
1 hw students<lb/>
bx academy o<lb/>
758-1820<lb/>
OPEN DAILY<lb/>
AT NOON<lb/>
SUNDAY-1 P.M.<lb/>
J<lb/>
&amp;X EC.fcr<lb/>
WIN UP TO<lb/>
$50.00 CASH<lb/>
EACH &amp; EVERY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
DURING<lb/>
TOURNAMENT NIGHT<lb/>
AT 8 P.M.<lb/>
FREE PRACTICE &amp; FREE PIZZA<lb/>
BEGIN AT 7 P.M.<lb/>
PIZZA COURTESY OF DOMINOS PIZZA.<lb/>
3 Levels Of Hay<lb/>
So All Can Compete<lb/>
Fro Amateur Novice<lb/>
'All Firs Time Players Play In Novice Division<lb/>
All Others Play in Division Detcrmi �<lb/>
For Info Come By or Call Rick at 758-1820 <lb/>
Jc E.C.lT St ude"rspecial c"<lb/>
fe $1.00 off ui<lb/>
g Entry Fee PQ<lb/>
2 aHdEXjU.LD. Required � NJ<lb/>
HD<lb/>
ITS ALMOST<lb/>
HERE!<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
MAY 25-28<lb/>
1st Annual<lb/>
Greater<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Amateur<lb/>
Putters Open<lb/>
Win Over $1,500.00<lb/>
In Fantastic Prizes<lb/>
including a complete set of<lb/>
Ping Irons, Season Passes,<lb/>
$200.00 Gift Certificates and<lb/>
more  ENTER TODAY.<lb/>
Field Limited To 1st 54 Entrants<lb/>
Ask About Special E.C.U.<lb/>
Discount On Entry Fee.<lb/>
J<lb/>
These two itndenta i � Biak<lb/>
enjoying a qu;et n nenl<lb/>
Murphy � Phn<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 20,1988<lb/>
LOW COST<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12thWEEKOF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
L from 13 to M v� sadldoael cost Piegaaacy<lb/>
K-th Control ��d Problem Pwgsasey "misaslaf, For<lb/>
jvfornuaon. all C2-0S3S ftoB km nuntar 1400-<lb/>
)brtwwn9�m�id5pmwtkdiy,r�a��laaae<lb/>
lavatUbW.<lb/>
.t�GH WOMIN MUCH<lb/>
QRGANIZA1<lb/>
aroltafcm<lb/>
rfXU community since 1925.<lb/>
Hrector of Advertising<lb/>
epresentatives<lb/>
Scott Makev<lb/>
Spencer Meymandi<lb/>
VERTISING<lb/>
$4.25<lb/>
4.15<lb/>
4.05<lb/>
3.95<lb/>
3.85<lb/>
3.75<lb/>
TISING RATES<lb/>
Regular Space Rale)<lb/>
$90.00<lb/>
155.00<lb/>
rts<lb/>
6 each<lb/>
55�each<lb/>
5 each<lb/>
i HOURS:<lb/>
-Friday<lb/>
00 p.m.<lb/>
�6366757-6557<lb/>
-6558757-6309<lb/>
Xcfi<lb/>
I<lb/>
Classic<lb/>
eA<lb/>
ii<lb/>
<lb/>
vd-?<lb/>
c.5000<lb/>
MOST<lb/>
E!<lb/>
ing<lb/>
5-28<lb/>
nual<lb/>
ter<lb/>
tulle<lb/>
eur<lb/>
Open<lb/>
1,500.00<lb/>
ic Prizes<lb/>
iplete set of<lb/>
ison Passes,<lb/>
;rtificates and<lb/>
:r TODAY.<lb/>
st 54 Entrants<lb/>
Miial E.C.U.<lb/>
lEntry Fee.<lb/>
���<lb/>
m<lb/>
tx:<lb/>
<lb/>
Some don't celebrate birthday<lb/>
(CPS) � It's almost the U.S.<lb/>
Department of Education's birth-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
But not everyone is celebrating<lb/>
the 10th anniversary of the agency<lb/>
that coordinates all the federal<lb/>
government's education pro-<lb/>
grams, from student aid to library<lb/>
support.<lb/>
"The creation of a cabinet post<lb/>
for education has been a contrib-<lb/>
uting factor in the decline of edu-<lb/>
cation said Douglas Alexander<lb/>
of citizens for Educational Free-<lb/>
dom, a conservative education<lb/>
lobby.<lb/>
Ronald Reagan, of course, ran<lb/>
for the presidency in 1980 pledg-<lb/>
ing to dismantle the then-new<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Reagan and many fellow con-<lb/>
servatives, however, have come<lb/>
to tolerate the creature, while<lb/>
many of those who hailed its leg-<lb/>
islative birth in 1979 complain it's<lb/>
never had a chance to do any<lb/>
good.<lb/>
"It's not as bad as it could have<lb/>
been conceded Gordon Jones of<lb/>
the Heritage Foundation, a con-<lb/>
servative think tank which helped<lb/>
create much of the<lb/>
administration's education pol-<lb/>
icy.<lb/>
Jones, who added the founda-<lb/>
tion still opposes a cabinet-level<lb/>
education department, credited<lb/>
the administration for making it<lb/>
bearable so far.<lb/>
"We've had a Repuiblican<lb/>
president who's sensible about<lb/>
education he asserted. "And<lb/>
(Sec. William) Bennett has kept<lb/>
the department from doing (alot)<lb/>
of damage<lb/>
The ever-quotable Bennett, in<lb/>
fact, has come to color most ob-<lb/>
servers' opinion of whether or not<lb/>
it was a good idea to create a<lb/>
department. Those who like him<lb/>
now tend to tolerate, if not en-<lb/>
dorse, the agency. Those who<lb/>
don't like Bennett, appointed in<lb/>
1984, don't like Bennett, ap-<lb/>
pointed in 1984, don't like the<lb/>
department.<lb/>
"The present incumbent said<lb/>
Charles Saunders of the Ameri-<lb/>
can Council on Education (ACE),<lb/>
"gives us sufficient cause to ques-<lb/>
tion the department's worth<lb/>
"Most educators look at the<lb/>
Department of Education as a<lb/>
negative force added Jerry<lb/>
Roschwalb of the National Asso-<lb/>
ciation of State Universities and<lb/>
Land-Grant Colleges, who sup-<lb/>
ported creating the department in<lb/>
1978.<lb/>
Roschwalb contended that be-<lb/>
cause "the department came into<lb/>
existence at the end of the Carter<lb/>
administration, there was no<lb/>
chance to see what its creators<lb/>
would have done<lb/>
"In came the Reagan admini-<lb/>
stration, whose stated goal was to<lb/>
destroy the department. They<lb/>
couldn't do it because of political<lb/>
pressure, but they set the depart-<lb/>
ment in so many negative ways<lb/>
it's been dead for the last 8 years<lb/>
The department, for example,<lb/>
asked Congress for 7 consecutive<lb/>
years to slash federal spending for<lb/>
student aid, campus housing, col-<lb/>
lege libraries, black colleges and<lb/>
civilian research. It asked for<lb/>
some cuts in excess of 50 percent,<lb/>
and recommended whole pro-<lb/>
grams be junked.<lb/>
"If anything, (the department's)<lb/>
been regressive charged How-<lb/>
ard Carroll of the National Educa-<lb/>
tion Association (NE A), the teach-<lb/>
ers union that helped elect candi-<lb/>
date Jimmy Carter in 1976 in re-<lb/>
turn for a promise to create the<lb/>
department. "It's been a disaster<lb/>
The NE A, however, was among<lb/>
the few who didn't think it would<lb/>
be a disaster in 1978.<lb/>
Even many educators fretted<lb/>
that creating a separate depart-<lb/>
ment of Education from out of the<lb/>
old U.S. Dept. of Health, Educa-<lb/>
tion &amp; Welfare � which had<lb/>
administered most higher ed pro-<lb/>
grams � would isolate college<lb/>
programs, making them vulner-<lb/>
able to budget cuts and political<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Conservatives feared a seperate<lb/>
department would metastasize<lb/>
into a bureaucratic monster that<lb/>
would put state and local educa-<lb/>
tion administrators under a fed-<lb/>
eral thumb, stifling creativity and<lb/>
local will.<lb/>
Everyone's worst fears, more-<lb/>
over, seem to have come true.<lb/>
The NEA's Carroll sees the<lb/>
department forcing schools "to<lb/>
set us back to some good old days<lb/>
that were never very good<lb/>
The conservative Alexander<lb/>
contended, "Part of the reason<lb/>
American education has become<lb/>
inflexible and noncreative and<lb/>
stagnant is that it's been bureau-<lb/>
cratized<lb/>
The department, he said, has<lb/>
taken opportunities for innova-<lb/>
tion out of the hands of local edu-<lb/>
cators. "It's a Soviet style of edu-<lb/>
cation. It's un-American. It's Bol-<lb/>
shevik<lb/>
The Heritage Foundation's<lb/>
Jones concurred. "It's just too<lb/>
bureaucratized. They just keep<lb/>
adding layers of bureaucrats<lb/>
"That's simply not true coun-<lb/>
tered department spokesman<lb/>
Michael Jackson. "In fact, the<lb/>
number of employees decreased<lb/>
from 7,400 when President Re-<lb/>
agan took office to 4,400 last<lb/>
year The department, he said, is<lb/>
one of the most streamlined agen-<lb/>
cies in the federal government<lb/>
department<lb/>
Alexander also thought educa-<lb/>
tion has indeed become a political<lb/>
football. "The warfare over its<lb/>
agenda has been terrible for the<lb/>
children<lb/>
A 1987 General Accounting<lb/>
Office report also concluded the<lb/>
department has the highest per-<lb/>
centage�almost half�of politi-<lb/>
cal appointees in top decision-<lb/>
making positions.<lb/>
"As excellent a secretary of<lb/>
Yvmotudents receive grants<lb/>
by academy of physicians<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Two students at the East Caro-<lb/>
lina University School of MEdi-<lb/>
cine were among four national<lb/>
recipients of research grants<lb/>
sponsored by the American<lb/>
Academy of Family Physicians,<lb/>
the nation's largest medical spe-<lb/>
cialty organization.<lb/>
Yates and Barbara Lennon,<lb/>
third-year medical students at<lb/>
ECU, were each awarded a $2,500<lb/>
grant to investigate current topics<lb/>
in family medicine.<lb/>
The awards, supported by a<lb/>
special fund from the Family<lb/>
Health Foundation of America,<lb/>
are given annually to provide<lb/>
opportunities for students to<lb/>
pursue research interests under<lb/>
the direction of family physicians<lb/>
practicing in an office-based set-<lb/>
ting.<lb/>
Lennon, a Bladenboro native,<lb/>
will investigate adjustments of<lb/>
physicians' fees based on pa<lb/>
tients' abilities to pay for medical<lb/>
services, while his wife, Barbara,<lb/>
formerly of Thomasville, will<lb/>
study the current status of family<lb/>
practice in North Carolina as well<lb/>
as changes over the last five years.<lb/>
They will conduct their re-<lb/>
search under the direction of Dr.<lb/>
James Jones, professor and chair-<lb/>
man of the ECU Department of<lb/>
Family Medicine, and Dr. Frank<lb/>
H. Lawler, assistant professor in<lb/>
the department.<lb/>
These two students are making the best of summer school by<lb/>
enjoying a quiet moment in the sun between classes. (Ellen<lb/>
Murphy � Fhotolab)<lb/>
Education (as) we've had in Wil-<lb/>
liam Bennett Alexander sighed,<lb/>
"it still doesn't justify creating a<lb/>
cabinet position for education<lb/>
Now that there is a 10-year-old<lb/>
cabinet position for education,<lb/>
however, few are willing to get rid<lb/>
of it completely.<lb/>
"If s important to have educa-<lb/>
tion issues represented at the cabi-<lb/>
net level the ACE's Saunders<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We'll never get out of the<lb/>
morass we're in now without help<lb/>
from the federal government<lb/>
the NEA' Carroll argued. "The<lb/>
bottom line is more funding.<lb/>
Many states are unwilling or<lb/>
don't have the resources to im-<lb/>
prove education<lb/>
"The federal govenment<lb/>
Saunders added, "needs to be-<lb/>
come the major partner in sharing<lb/>
the costs<lb/>
Both Jones and Alexander<lb/>
would decrease the department's<lb/>
role in funding and policy mak-<lb/>
ing. Alexander wants states,<lb/>
working with local education and<lb/>
parents' groups, to make school<lb/>
systems more sensitive to local<lb/>
concerns.<lb/>
The federal government, he<lb/>
said, should issue vouchers to<lb/>
parents, redeemable for their<lb/>
children's education at the school<lb/>
� public or private � of their<lb/>
choice. "There would be a new<lb/>
partnership between parents and<lb/>
teachers. The only losers would<lb/>
be the overbureaucratized<lb/>
teacher's unions<lb/>
"I'd close the rest down. There's<lb/>
a lot of intelligent, well-meaning<lb/>
people at Education, but they're<lb/>
just not needed<lb/>
Backstage Hair Studio<lb/>
1005 Hamilton St.<lb/>
752-9578<lb/>
Mon Sat.<lb/>
9-6<lb/>
i � VALUABLE COUPON � I<lb/>
� EC<lb/>
2 Medium<lb/>
with Cheese<lb/>
and One<lb/>
Topping<lb/>
00<lb/>
$o<lb/>
Expires 5-31-88<lb/>
L<lb/>
�ai aw VALUABLE COUPON � �<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
EcJ<lb/>
I<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
BUY ONE<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
GET ONE FREE!<lb/>
Buy any size pizza at<lb/>
regular price, get Identical 1<lb/>
pizza FREE! <lb/>
756-7256 757-1212 J<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
S)Jim�@mm<lb/>
I � VALUABLE COUPON ���<lb/>
Price varies depending on ete and number<lb/>
of topping ordered. Vahd with coupon at<lb/>
participating Little Caesar<lb/>
Carry Out Only<lb/>
Expires 5-31-88<lb/>
FREE PIZZA!<lb/>
BUY ONE PIZZA, GET ONE FREE!<lb/>
PIZZA MENU<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
On) Horn<lb/>
Two Kami<lb/>
Tnras Rsfrs<lb/>
Uttle Caesar Special<lb/>
mmmfmw, lfcaf�waw��. Own<lb/>
an<lb/>
8pc<lb/>
5.35<lb/>
6.05<lb/>
0.75<lb/>
7.46<lb/>
8.51<lb/>
MQ<lb/>
10 pc<lb/>
7.10<lb/>
8.00<lb/>
890<lb/>
8.80<lb/>
10.80<lb/>
LG<lb/>
12pc<lb/>
9.50<lb/>
10.60<lb/>
11.70<lb/>
12.80<lb/>
14.10<lb/>
CAESARS SANDWICHES<lb/>
Tuna Mat<lb/>
i Sub <lb/>
Extra barm over 3 .70 .90 1.10<lb/>
�Extra ChaaM 1.50 2.00 2.50<lb/>
CHOOSE FROM THESE TOPPINGS<lb/>
Ham and Cheese.<lb/>
Vegetarian<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
Toaaad<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
AnHpasto<lb/>
.2.76<lb/>
.2.36<lb/>
.2.36<lb/>
.2.36<lb/>
SM<lb/>
1.19<lb/>
1.39<lb/>
1.39<lb/>
MO LG<lb/>
2.39 3.69<lb/>
2.89 4.68<lb/>
2.89 4.69<lb/>
CHOOSE FROM THESE TOPPINGS<lb/>
�aJa� ������ua<lb/>
i. mcucMKu. mot rtmn<lb/>
�alwaWt M<lb/>
Vlpw<lb/>
Cowry GeJheW<lb/>
MB.<lb/>
LITER<lb/>
as<lb/>
SPECIALTIES<lb/>
Freshly Baked Crazy Bread<lb/>
Crazy Sauce<lb/>
OKAlfD<lb/>
Teas<lb/>
757-1212<lb/>
or oub nkw rron<lb/>
Ceaser<lb/>
aMj<lb/>
1.19<lb/>
m<lb/>
.86<lb/>
�TILLAT-<lb/>
Freak<lb/>
756-7256<lb/>
When you motet pnra this 000 � p" " � �homsjIi.<lb/>
Open for Lunch at 11 a.m.<lb/>
321 E. 10th St. 758-000<lb/>
HANK'S ICE CREAM, FROZEN<lb/>
YOGURT, AND SORBET<lb/>
is Greenville's National<lb/>
award winning ice cream<lb/>
store. Enjoy the taste of<lb/>
Hank's super premium ice<lb/>
cream without paying the<lb/>
price in calories!<lb/>
Hank's Frozen Yogurt has<lb/>
only 99 calories per 4 ounce<lb/>
serving yet it has the- taste-ftRd<lb/>
consistancy of old fashioned<lb/>
hard ice cream.<lb/>
Hank's Sorbet is a<lb/>
delicious blend of fruit juice,<lb/>
. sugar and water.<lb/>
You can enjoy Hank's Sorbet<lb/>
in a refreshing Buccaneer<lb/>
Blizzard, to cool you off on<lb/>
those hot summer days.<lb/>
You can get Hank's Ice<lb/>
Cream, Frozen Yogurt and<lb/>
Sorbet in a variety of<lb/>
delicious flavors.<lb/>
Stop in for a FREE taste<lb/>
today at Hank's Ice Cream,<lb/>
Frozen Yogurt, and Sorbet on<lb/>
East 10th Street,<lb/>
beside Wendy's.<lb/>
� ������ ail Clip-N-Save ��������<lb/>
Hank's Ice Cream, Frozen<lb/>
Yogurt, and Sorbet<lb/>
321E. 10th St.<lb/>
75WXM0 <lb/>
Buy 1 Blend-in<lb/>
"ST Get 1 FREE<lb/>
$2.29<lb/>
"r<lb/>
1 coupon per order good thru 53188<lb/>
� ���� Qip-N-Save ������<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0004"/><lb/>
ST<lb/>
VS I P<lb/>
K OF<lb/>
, YAJVC1<lb/>
� � � I -A-n��Lnx For<lb/>
�� n J rr�r 1 -800-<lb/>
. n i. neialanaa-<lb/>
clGH WOMEN'S HIAl9B<lb/>
ORGANIZATK)!<lb/>
Some don't celebrate birthday<lb/>
SarolittUui<lb/>
n<lb/>
ng<lb/>
andi<lb/>
-M<lb/>
iCrS) It's almost the U.S.<lb/>
�epartmont of Education's birth<lb/>
a<lb/>
But not mer one is celebrating<lb/>
Ithanniversan of theagen <lb/>
rdinates all the federal<lb/>
sent s education pro<lb/>
-indent aid tolibrarv<lb/>
' ci iti of a abinef post<lb/>
n has boon a contrib<lb/>
decline of edu<lb/>
.las Alexander<lb/>
' i : ducational i ree<lb/>
nservative education<lb/>
�x<lb/>
� ain of i ourse ian<lb/>
deiu in 19S0 pit I<lb/>
. tie the then new<lb/>
: many fellow eon<lb/>
 ev er ha e CO me<lb/>
euro while<lb/>
: ,nn<lb/>
:<lb/>
:<lb/>
lation a v<lb/>
n k hich helped<lb/>
of the<lb/>
- education pol<lb/>
e tounda<lb/>
i - a cabinet level<lb/>
irtnn<lb/>
&amp;iP<lb/>
Ne<lb/>
<lb/>
n dited<lb/>
lad a Repuiblican<lb/>
� s sensible about<lb/>
asserted. 'Arid<lb/>
Bennett has kept<lb/>
: alot)<lb/>
m tl in<lb/>
�<lb/>
�  � tl � �<lb/>
� ite a<lb/>
ki hmi<lb/>
if nof en-<lb/>
igenq tvho<lb/>
 . nted in<lb/>
'84, � netl ap-<lb/>
: the<lb/>
L "All<lb/>
�n <lb/>
"gives us sufficient cause to ques-<lb/>
tion the department's worth<lb/>
"Most educators look at the<lb/>
Department of Education as a<lb/>
negative force added ferry<lb/>
Roschwalbof the National Asso-<lb/>
ciation of State Universities and<lb/>
Land-Grant Colleges, who sup-<lb/>
ported creating the department in<lb/>
1978.<lb/>
Roschwalb contended that be-<lb/>
cause "the department came into<lb/>
existence at the end of the Carter<lb/>
administration, there was no<lb/>
chance to sec what its creators<lb/>
w ould have done<lb/>
In came the Reagan admini-<lb/>
stration, whose stated goal was to<lb/>
destroy the department. They<lb/>
couldn't do it because oi political<lb/>
pressure, but they set the depart-<lb/>
ment in so main- negative ways<lb/>
it s boon dead for the last 8 years<lb/>
The department, tor example,<lb/>
askedCongress tor 7" consecutive<lb/>
 ears to slash federal spending for<lb/>
student aid, campus housing, col-<lb/>
libraries, black colleges and<lb/>
civilian research. It asked for<lb/>
some cuts in excess of 50 percent,<lb/>
and recommended whole pro-<lb/>
grams be junked.<lb/>
"If any thing, (the department's)<lb/>
been regressive charged How-<lb/>
ard Carroll of the National Educa-<lb/>
tion Association (NE A), the teach-<lb/>
ers union that helped eleet candi-<lb/>
date immy Carter in 1976 in re-<lb/>
turn for a promise to create the<lb/>
department. "It'sbeen a disaster<lb/>
The NEA, however, was among<lb/>
the few who didn't think it would<lb/>
be a disaster in LC$.<lb/>
Even many educators fretted<lb/>
that creating a separate depart-<lb/>
� : Education from out of the<lb/>
old t S. Dept of Health, Educa-<lb/>
tion v Welfare which had<lb/>
administered most higher ed pro-<lb/>
ms would isolate college<lb/>
� � in s making them vulner-<lb/>
able to budget cuts and political<lb/>
ncs.<lb/>
i, Conservatives feared a seperate<lb/>
irtment would metastasize<lb/>
into a bureaucratic monster that<lb/>
would put state and local educa-<lb/>
tion administrators under a fed-<lb/>
mb, stifling creativity and<lb/>
local will.<lb/>
Everyone's worst tears, more-<lb/>
over, seem to have come true.<lb/>
The NEA's Carroll sees the<lb/>
department forcing schools "to<lb/>
set us back to some good old days<lb/>
that were never very good<lb/>
The conservative Alexander<lb/>
contended, "Tart of the reason<lb/>
American education has become<lb/>
inflexible and noncreative and<lb/>
stagnant is that it's been bureau-<lb/>
era ti zed<lb/>
The department, lie said, has<lb/>
taken opportunities tor innova-<lb/>
tion out of the hands of local edu-<lb/>
cators, "it's a Soviet style of edu<lb/>
cation. It's un-American. It's Bol-<lb/>
shevik<lb/>
The Heritage Foundation's<lb/>
Kmes concurred. "It's just loo<lb/>
bureaucratized. They just keep<lb/>
.uiding layersol bureaucrats<lb/>
'That's simply not true coun-<lb/>
tered department spokesman<lb/>
Michael lackson. "In fact, the<lb/>
number of employees decreased<lb/>
from 7,400 when President Re-<lb/>
agan took office to 4,400 last<lb/>
year The department, he said, is<lb/>
one of the most streamlined agen-<lb/>
cies in the federal government<lb/>
department<lb/>
Alexander also thought educa-<lb/>
tion has indeed become a political<lb/>
football. " The warfare over its<lb/>
agenda has been terrible for the<lb/>
children<lb/>
A 1987 General Accounting<lb/>
Office report also concluded the<lb/>
department has the highest per-<lb/>
centage� almosthalf of polite<lb/>
cal appointees in top decision-<lb/>
making positions.<lb/>
"As excellent a secretary of<lb/>
Education (as) we've had in Wil-<lb/>
liam Bennett Alexander sighed,<lb/>
"it still doesn't justify creating a<lb/>
cabinet position tor education<lb/>
Now that there is a 10-year-old<lb/>
cabinet position for education,<lb/>
however, few are willing to get rid<lb/>
of it completely.<lb/>
"It's important to have educa-<lb/>
tion issues represented at thecabi-<lb/>
net level the ACE's Saunders<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We'll never get out of the<lb/>
morass we're in now without help<lb/>
from the federal government<lb/>
the NEA' Carroll argued. "The<lb/>
bottom line is more funding.<lb/>
Many states are unwilling or<lb/>
don't have the resources to im-<lb/>
pr e edueatu in<lb/>
" I he federal government<lb/>
Saunders added, "needs to be-<lb/>
come the major partner in sharing<lb/>
the ci �sts<lb/>
Both (ones and Alexander<lb/>
w ould det rt mm' the department's<lb/>
role in funding and policv mak<lb/>
ing Alexander want states,<lb/>
working with local education and<lb/>
parents' groups, to make school<lb/>
systems more sensitive to local<lb/>
concerns.<lb/>
I he federal government, he<lb/>
said, should issue vouchers to<lb/>
parents, redeemable for their<lb/>
children's education at the school<lb/>
public or private of their<lb/>
choice. "There would be a new<lb/>
partnership between parents and<lb/>
teachers. I he only losers would<lb/>
be the overbureaucratized<lb/>
teacher's unions<lb/>
"I'd close the rest down. There's<lb/>
a lot oi intelligent, well-meaning<lb/>
people at Education, but they'rp<lb/>
just not needed<lb/>
Backstage Hair Studio<lb/>
1005 Hamilton St.<lb/>
752-9578<lb/>
Mon Sat.<lb/>
9-6<lb/>
Two students receive grants<lb/>
by academy of physicians<lb/>
11<lb/>
ir r iti nai<lb/>
: - crants<lb/>
c Ami rican<lb/>
v 1"<lb/>
nn n.<lb/>
MOST<lb/>
Ef<lb/>
ing<lb/>
5-28<lb/>
iual<lb/>
i� �<lb/>
ville<lb/>
eur<lb/>
Open<lb/>
1,500.00<lb/>
c Prizes<lb/>
set of<lb/>
: i I 'asses.<lb/>
nes and<lb/>
i DAY.<lb/>
Entrants<lb/>
rial ECU.<lb/>
ntry Fee.<lb/>
e current topics<lb/>
'<lb/>
� Iip :� .1 by a<lb/>
m the Family<lb/>
f mi rica,<lb/>
I r �. idc<lb/>
�r students to<lb/>
pursue research interests under<lb/>
the dii ' n of family physicians<lb/>
practii ing in an office-based set-<lb/>
n, a Bladcnboro native,<lb/>
will investigate adjustments oi<lb/>
physicians' fees based on pa-<lb/>
' : Is'abilities to pay for medical<lb/>
� . . �  while his wife, Barbara,<lb/>
� �� rly of Thomasville, will<lb/>
�  the current status of family<lb/>
in orth Carolina as well<lb/>
. -so or the last five years.<lb/>
They will conduct their re-<lb/>
search under the direction (if Dr.<lb/>
James Jones, professor and chair-<lb/>
man of the ECU Department of<lb/>
Family Medicine, and Dr. Frank<lb/>
1 Lawlcr, assistant professor in<lb/>
the department.<lb/>
Clara S. Vann<lb/>
Mona VanNortwick '<lb/>
Angle Walker<lb/>
Hair Styling<lb/>
Textured Cuts<lb/>
Body Waves<lb/>
Hi-Lights<lb/>
Color - Tints<lb/>
Nails � Tips<lb/>
Manicure<lb/>
Pedicure<lb/>
Walk Ins Welcome<lb/>
New Location 10th &amp; Hamilton St Behind Flower Basket<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
I EC<lb/>
! 2 Medium!<lb/>
I �<lb/>
J Pizzas <lb/>
i with Cheese i<lb/>
Mi m VALUABLE COUPON � �<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
EC"<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I � BUY ONE !<lb/>
I<lb/>
i and One<lb/>
Topping<lb/>
00<lb/>
$8<lb/>
I<lb/>
X- PIZZA j<lb/>
GET ONE FREE! I<lb/>
Buy any size pizza at I<lb/>
regular price, get identical (<lb/>
pizza FREE!<lb/>
I<lb/>
1756-7256 757-1212 <lb/>
 Expires 5-31 -88 <lb/>
Lb ��� �<lb/>
IV.i r vanes dcx-nhr.g on size anil number<lb/>
of loppings ordered Valid with coupon at<lb/>
participating lje Caesars<lb/>
Carry Out Only<lb/>
Expires 5-31-88<lb/>
VALUABLE COUIXJN<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
VAl.LAM.ECOl'PON<lb/>
FREE PIZZA!<lb/>
BUY ONE PIZZA, GET ONE FREE!<lb/>
THnnASTCAROIJV � N<lb/>
<lb/>
PI77A MFNll<lb/>
Che�se<lb/>
One Item<lb/>
Two Hems<lb/>
Three herns<lb/>
Uriie Caesars Special<lb/>
8 pc<lb/>
535<lb/>
6 05<lb/>
0 75<lb/>
7 45<lb/>
851<lb/>
MQ<lb/>
10 pc<lb/>
7.10<lb/>
800<lb/>
890<lb/>
980<lb/>
1090<lb/>
12pc<lb/>
950<lb/>
10 60<lb/>
11.70<lb/>
1280<lb/>
14 10<lb/>
CAESARS SANOWCMES<lb/>
Tuna Mell2 76<lb/>
Italian Sub2 36<lb/>
Ham and Cheese2 36<lb/>
Extra Items over 3- 70 90 1 10<lb/>
�Extra Cheese 150 2 00 2 50<lb/>
CHOOSE FROM THESE TOPPINGS<lb/>
I'IWUlN U�ftlUS ONii MAM HA' I � X' ft<lb/>
"AiiAN iAUSAGf OHM H Pf PPt US ANC � V X HOI T PW M rtWGJi<lb/>
9 �. � �1 5 J" � X �  .<lb/>
Vegetarian<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
Tossed<lb/>
G'eek<lb/>
Antipasto<lb/>
SM<lb/>
1 19<lb/>
1 39<lb/>
1 39<lb/>
MD<lb/>
239<lb/>
2 89<lb/>
2 89<lb/>
236<lb/>
LG<lb/>
3 69<lb/>
4 69<lb/>
4 69<lb/>
CHOOSE FROM THESE TOPPiNGS<lb/>
These two students .ire making the best of summer school by<lb/>
enjoying a quiet moment in the sun between classes. (Ellen<lb/>
Murphy � Photolab)<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
Coca COU Owl Cok.�<lb/>
Cfwy C�<lb/>
SM<lb/>
55<lb/>
MJ2<lb/>
66<lb/>
LITER<lb/>
95<lb/>
SPECIALTIES<lb/>
Freshly Baked Crazy Bread<lb/>
A tr a' ioB ��- ntpc S��<lb/>
Cra?y Sauce<lb/>
r g- rv-�-1 (�-���- (<lb/>
1 19<lb/>
86<lb/>
P-�� ����- B � -ng rf-W t-wr- fMu m'<lb/>
� 3 � w �ga k � g-o � Mm<lb/>
ORAND OPE1VINO OF OUR NEW STORE<lb/>
llnlverilty Square Shopping Center<lb/>
(East Tenth Street at Greenville Blvd.)<lb/>
757-1212<lb/>
AND WE RE STILL AT<lb/>
323 Arlington Hlvd<lb/>
LAcroa from farm FreahJ<lb/>
756-7256<lb/>
WHpfi vou moke piizn this tood, one just isn't enough<lb/>
Open for Lunch at 11 a.m.<lb/>
321 E. 10th St. 758-000<lb/>
HANK'S ICE CREAM, FROZEN<lb/>
YOGURT, AND SORBET<lb/>
is Greenville's National<lb/>
award winning ice cream<lb/>
store. Enjoy the taste of<lb/>
Hank's super premium ice<lb/>
cream without paying the J<lb/>
price in calories!<lb/>
Hank's Frozen Yogurt has<lb/>
only 99 calories per 4 ounce<lb/>
serving yet it has the taste and<lb/>
consistancy of old fashioned<lb/>
hard ice cream.<lb/>
Hank's Sorbet is a<lb/>
delicious blend of fruit juice.<lb/>
simar and water.<lb/>
You can enjoy Hank's Sorbet<lb/>
in a refreshing Buccaneer<lb/>
Blizzard, to cool you oi( on<lb/>
those hot summer days.<lb/>
You can set Hank's Ice<lb/>
Cream, Frozen Yogurt and<lb/>
7 <lb/>
Sorbet in a variety of<lb/>
delicious flavors.<lb/>
Stop in for a FREE taste<lb/>
today at Hank's Ice Cream.<lb/>
Frozen Yogurt, and Sorbet on<lb/>
East 10th Street.<lb/>
beside Wendy's.<lb/>
� �������i Clip-N-Save ��������<lb/>
Hankfs Ice Cream, Frozen<lb/>
Yogurt, and Sorbet<lb/>
321 E. 10th St<lb/>
758 (VHV<lb/>
Maximum<lb/>
Value<lb/>
$2.29<lb/>
Buy 1 Blend-in<lb/>
Get 1 FREE<lb/>
1 coupon per order good thru 53188<lb/>
� ���� Clip-N-Save ������<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0005"/><lb/>
QJJte iEaat (Earaltman<lb/>
fimumtv i�it W23<lb/>
Clay Deanhardt, cnMi.<lb/>
Carol Wetherington, mpH uh<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, Director �AWumi<lb/>
Tim Hampton, <lb/>
Tim Chandler, �&amp;��<lb/>
Jot in Carter, f w.<lb/>
Michelle England, &amp;����,��<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, ����<lb/>
Jeff Parkerm<lb/>
TOM FURR, Circutoion A1�uj�r<lb/>
Mike Upchurch, m m�,<lb/>
JOI IN W. MEDLIN, Art CWor<lb/>
MAC CLARK, Business Manager<lb/>
May 20,19S8<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Summertime<lb/>
Time for students to<lb/>
recoup or regroup<lb/>
?<lb/>
For many, summertime means the<lb/>
end of another school year; the<lb/>
break needed to recoup and regroup<lb/>
your senses before running into the<lb/>
fall semester. For some, it's the time<lb/>
to bring the academic hours up to<lb/>
par, while raising the GPA and tuck-<lb/>
ing some work experience under the<lb/>
belt. For others, summer school at-<lb/>
tendance is mandatory: academic<lb/>
probation, scholarship limitations<lb/>
and low GPAs are just three reasons.<lb/>
A lot of students are in summer<lb/>
sessions because they want to be<lb/>
here. Thoughts of moving on, get-<lb/>
ting ahead, raising the grades and<lb/>
self-enrichment act as incentives for<lb/>
the truly ambitious.<lb/>
There are also students who have<lb/>
to be in Greenville because the time<lb/>
has come to do or die. No one likes<lb/>
the idea of failing out, and summer<lb/>
sessions provide needed opportuni-<lb/>
ties for students on the brink. One<lb/>
summer session can pull a student<lb/>
out of the hole. Two sessions can<lb/>
put a student back on the right path.<lb/>
Last, ihere are students who have<lb/>
chosen to make Greenville their<lb/>
home until they get out of college.<lb/>
Most hold jobs and stay here to work<lb/>
during the summer. These students<lb/>
find they can pass free time while<lb/>
getting hours out of the way by at-<lb/>
tending summer school.<lb/>
Summer session can be a realoly<lb/>
fun time, but it can turn into a bad<lb/>
situation if we do not act responsi-<lb/>
bly. Summer school schedules are<lb/>
somewhat more lenient than regular<lb/>
schedules, but if students do not use<lb/>
their spare time wisely, GPA's can<lb/>
go down, money is wasted and en-<lb/>
try into fall semester can become a<lb/>
grim procedure.<lb/>
Be responsible. Enjoy the barbe-<lb/>
que parties, road trips to the beach<lb/>
and dance the night away. But know<lb/>
your limits! Put your priorities in<lb/>
their correct order, and with some<lb/>
serious concentration and determi-<lb/>
nation, summer can be fun and<lb/>
rewarding: a time worth looking<lb/>
forward to next year.<lb/>
"Sigma House" story response<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I am writing in response to the ar-<lb/>
ticle printed in your April 12,1988<lb/>
editon entitled "Sigma house a part<lb/>
of history written by Jeanie Wheby.<lb/>
The City of Greenville Planning<lb/>
Office and the Greenville Historic<lb/>
Properties Selection Committee ap-<lb/>
preciates your coverage of the local<lb/>
historic designation of the Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma house.<lb/>
Although the governmental spon-<lb/>
sored preservation effort is only two<lb/>
years old and has not yet attracted<lb/>
that much citizen support, it is not for<lb/>
the lack of properties which are wor-<lb/>
thy of local recognition.<lb/>
I feel the article may mislead the<lb/>
public into thinking that Greenville is<lb/>
in short supply of architecturally.<lb/>
culturally, and historically significant<lb/>
structures. Admittedly, over the last<lb/>
forty years Greenville has lost many<lb/>
such structures but through the City's<lb/>
efforts, private support, and media<lb/>
coverage this trend can be abated.<lb/>
The City will continue to designate<lb/>
historic properties in the future and<lb/>
we would like to continue to work<lb/>
with The East Carolinian in further<lb/>
information about our organization<lb/>
and how East Carolina Universitv<lb/>
may become involved, feel free to call<lb/>
me during normal working hours at<lb/>
830-4506.<lb/>
Tamara Schatz<lb/>
Planning Technician<lb/>
City of Greenville<lb/>
CTrQAeuht�uwrrgfgruag 9t<lb/>
Quotations manufactured<lb/>
by Speakes discussed<lb/>
w assistants Resiemep m seckmRtes Resmev.MQ<lb/>
7DpApg5 R5S(GAieP,�IGU55S ITS OOST M WM,teW�$,<lb/>
 3Sfr :Mrewp�ifAjWz owneofwruae<lb/>
AA<lb/>
By HELMUT SONNENFELDT<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
The uproar about Larry Speakes' acknowledgment that he<lb/>
manufactured presidential quotations at a superpower sum-<lb/>
mit is especially amusing to those of us who have been<lb/>
involved in preparations for summits. A key task in those<lb/>
preparations is the writing of communiques or "joint state-<lb/>
ments" that purport to recount what occurcd in the discus-<lb/>
sions among world leaders. These documents arc written<lb/>
mostly or even entirely before the event, by staffers who later<lb/>
may or may not participate in the actual discussions. They are<lb/>
eventually approved for release at high levels, but the in-<lb/>
volvement of those whose words they purportedly record is<lb/>
generally minimal.<lb/>
In the 1970 when I was in the communique-drafting<lb/>
business for U.SSoviet summit meetings, we had no precise<lb/>
idea what President Nixon and Secretary Brezhnev would<lb/>
say to each other on the various topics that both sides agreed<lb/>
should be on the agenda. But under instruction to accentuate<lb/>
the positive, before each encounter we labored with our<lb/>
Soviet counterparts on a string of paragraphs noting accom-<lb/>
plishments on every subject. We had the sides agreeing to<lb/>
improve relations, giving primary attention to reducing the<lb/>
danger of nuclear war, attaching great importance to a host of<lb/>
projects, taking note of favorable developments, welcoming<lb/>
agreements already reached and confirming their intention to<lb/>
conclude others.<lb/>
The Nixon-and-Ford-cra communiques generally used<lb/>
collective nouns like "the sides" and "the parties" rather than<lb/>
implying that the leaders themselves had discussed every<lb/>
item on the agenda. However, as the art of the communique<lb/>
evolved, the language became ritualistic, and often the docu-<lb/>
' mcntsdiscusscdmattersthathadnotcomcupatall. . .icmost<lb/>
you could say of their accuracy as historical record is that they<lb/>
were not inconsistent with what was or might have been said.<lb/>
Indeed, by including a matter in the communique, reference<lb/>
to it in the actual meetings could become superfluous. Re-<lb/>
agan-era summit communiques are generally produced in<lb/>
much the same way. But nowadays the practice is to attribute<lb/>
the views and attitudes recounted directly to the "leaders" or<lb/>
specifically to the president and the general secretary.<lb/>
The most recent summit communique, from the Washing-<lb/>
ton summit last December, actually was in part what it<lb/>
purported to be: a record of agreements reached during the<lb/>
summit. It had the leaders issuing detailed instructions to<lb/>
their arms control negotiators. Obviously these instructions<lb/>
were not worked out by the leaders themselves, but they were<lb/>
the result of on-the-spot bargaining by seniorexperts, not<lb/>
canned in advance. This approach has turned out to have<lb/>
some disadvantages. The sides have found it impossible to<lb/>
agree on the precise meaning of the passages dealing with<lb/>
observance of the ABM Treaty.<lb/>
Statesmen long ago agreed that if communiques are not<lb/>
produced at least in rough draft before they meet, most of the<lb/>
time at their conferences will be taken up with this job.<lb/>
Advance drafting will thus undoubtedly remain the vogue.<lb/>
And so will the mild deception whereby events and state-<lb/>
ments are recorded before they take place. And some may not<lb/>
occur at all but will remain recorded because the parties<lb/>
would have been content to have tham occur.<lb/>
Perhaps there should be a Speakes Rule according to which<lb/>
no press agent may ever attribute to his master something the<lb/>
latter has not actually uttered or at least approved. But<lb/>
summit communiques should be held to a rather less rigorous<lb/>
standard-orelse this useful art formof diplomacy would have<lb/>
to be retired to the archives.<lb/>
<lb/>
What's going on with the Noriega deal?<lb/>
When Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts was<lb/>
shown on the "CBS Evening News" last Thursday<lb/>
night commenting on the hypothetical deal with<lb/>
Gen. Manuel Noriega (the United States drops its<lb/>
indictments against him, he leaves Panama), he was<lb/>
quoted merely as shouting out, Teddy-Kennedy-<lb/>
booster style, "That will prove that CRIME PAYS<lb/>
What you get from the "CBS Evening News" is more<lb/>
like the sound of conflict than the causes of it. In a<lb/>
sense, that is the mirror of reality: The Democrats are<lb/>
already doing what they can to discredit any deal<lb/>
with Noriega as iniquitous, an invitation to con-<lb/>
tempt for the law.<lb/>
To be sure, Howard Baker, chief of staff of the<lb/>
White House, was quoted. He said two things. The<lb/>
first, that no deal had been made "that I knew of<lb/>
The second, that if the United States actually suc-<lb/>
ceeded in getting Noriega to leave Panama, in ex-<lb/>
change for dropping the two Florida counts (the<lb/>
chances of trying Noriega in Florida are about the<lb/>
same as trying Idi Amin in New Delhi), that was<lb/>
"pretty good plea bargaining Over to Michael<lb/>
Dukakis, who expressed clerical outrage; on to Jesse<lb/>
Jackson, who acted as though to drop a charge<lb/>
against someone was on the order of repealing the<lb/>
Constitution. He said that cither Noriega was guilty<lb/>
or he was not guilty.<lb/>
Down, Jesse. Every day, in your Chicago, and our<lb/>
New York, the prosecution drops, or lowers, charges<lb/>
against street versions of Noriega. The projected<lb/>
deal with Noriega has nothing to do with whether he<lb/>
is guilty or not. It has to do with realpolitik, and no<lb/>
one who runs for president (or for district attorney)<lb/>
should be entirely ignorant of it. In point of fact,<lb/>
these pols practice realpolitik every day.<lb/>
As ever, we have God to thank for Robert MacNeil<lb/>
and James Lehrer, who come on as an encyclopedia<lb/>
to a tabloid, giving the viewer SOME idea of what is<lb/>
going on. And lo! there was Kerry, in from the<lb/>
balcony where he was shouting to the Democratic<lb/>
mob, back to the seminar. His principle co-guest was<lb/>
Sen. Richard Lugar. They are, respectively, the<lb/>
incumbent chairman of the Foreign Relations sub-<lb/>
committee that deals with narcotics, and senator<lb/>
who was the chairman of the Foreign Relations<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Lugar led off by saying that the raw exchange �<lb/>
indictment dropped, Noriega out of Panama � just<lb/>
plain didn't solve enough problems. Lugar wants to<lb/>
know: What does the opposition in Panama feel<lb/>
about the arrangement? What future guarantees do<lb/>
we have against Norciga attempting to come back to<lb/>
Panama, or perhaps controlling it from exile? And<lb/>
what about Honduras? What docs Honduras think<lb/>
about it? And what about other Latin American<lb/>
countries? What we ought to do with all this, said<lb/>
Lugar, is build Panamanian democracy! (Talk about<lb/>
building the Panama Canal! That only cost 20,000<lb/>
lives.)<lb/>
Then Kerry came in, and get this. In fact, said<lb/>
Kerry, sounding like the dean of international stud-<lb/>
ies at Georgetown, we have not used aeainst<lb/>
Panama "a full panoply of sanctions The flash-in-<lb/>
the-pan economic embargo and freezing of funds<lb/>
was something that, as we saw, Noriega easily with-<lb/>
stood. We should have done more, enough to un-<lb/>
nerve Noriega and cause his ouster.<lb/>
Such as?<lb/>
Such as threatening him with the use of force. If<lb/>
necessary, we should be prepared, said Kerry, a<lb/>
Democrat from Massachusetts, to use American<lb/>
military force against Noriega.<lb/>
And Lugar agreed. Two other guests, one a<lb/>
member of the opposition in Panama, one an aca-<lb/>
demic, were consulted. How would the Panamani-<lb/>
ans feel about it? The opposition leader said they<lb/>
would greet U.S. Marines with flowers. It's true that<lb/>
Fidel Castro and Augusto Pinochet have both<lb/>
warned against the use of American force, but they<lb/>
are both tyrants, are they not? no wonder they<lb/>
deplore the use of the military. The academic said<lb/>
not so fast; Noriega has been careful not to molest the<lb/>
Panama Canal or to mutilate U.S. citizens: How<lb/>
would we fare elsewhere in the world, using Ma-<lb/>
rines to protect a Panamanian base, when negotiat-<lb/>
ing for bases in, e.g Spain, the Philippines and<lb/>
Greece?<lb/>
On the Right<lb/>
by<lb/>
William F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
But it was an emancipating moment. The same<lb/>
senator transformed from the objurgative mode in<lb/>
CBS to the reflective mode on PBS, saying: We<lb/>
should threaten US. force, and be prepared to use it.<lb/>
Kerry for president?<lb/>
A coll<lb/>
(CPS) � This is it. The Big<lb/>
you're graduating from coll<lb/>
The lilting strains of 'Pompi<lb/>
cumstance" fillyourcars Shil<lb/>
uneasily in your oversized<lb/>
robe and mortar board, it d�<lb/>
on you that you have spent a<lb/>
the first 5 years of your<lb/>
school.<lb/>
The valedictorian rises t:<lb/>
podium. The sun appears<lb/>
behind the clouds and th<lb/>
perature beneath your robd<lb/>
to 120 degrees O J<lb/>
phrases drift from the<lb/>
"bright futures"  "we mi<lb/>
we shall"  "the promisi<lb/>
morrow"  "the<lb/>
mankind" <lb/>
An elbow ii �<lb/>
You stand, walk to the <lb/>
cept the sheepskin to tl<lb/>
muffled squeak<lb/>
and march off into th<lb/>
Everybody is all<lb/>
familv smiles The) have<lb/>
degrees. Thee<lb/>
- Vi ce Chance<lb/>
search<lb/>
A nationals trcht<lb/>
vice chance r I -<lb/>
fairs at East C ti i Ui<lb/>
will be re-op ed in the I<lb/>
Dr. Richard R. Eakin,<lb/>
chancellor, said that the<lb/>
which began last O<lb/>
appointment.�: tl mei<lb/>
faculty search c<lb/>
been completed with<lb/>
a candidate to contract<lb/>
As a result, the search<lb/>
closed, Dr. Eakin said,<lb/>
search will begin during<lb/>
semester<lb/>
The position is that<lb/>
university's chief acadenj<lb/>
cer. Dr. Eakin said that q<lb/>
ham A. Bloodworth, pi<lb/>
and chairman oi the En;<lb/>
partment, has agreed to<lb/>
serving as acting vice chj<lb/>
for academic affairs un<lb/>
30,1989, "at which tr.w<lb/>
chancellor for academic<lb/>
expected to commence c<lb/>
Bloodworth has servej<lb/>
ing vice chancellor vii<lb/>
summer when Dr. A:1<lb/>
Volpc resigned to h i<lb/>
dent oi Tennessee Tech<lb/>
sitv in Cookeville, Tei<lb/>
the search committc<lb/>
screened approximat<lb/>
dates nominated for thd<lb/>
vitcd three final <lb/>
interviews in Mar<lb/>
The three finalists<lb/>
Wright State Ur<lb/>
ton, Ohio. Apr<lb/>
University in B<lb/>
State University in K;<lb/>
NEApushfi<lb/>
education<lb/>
(CPS) � Congress I i -<lb/>
ered creating a cabinet-<lb/>
partment for education<lb/>
A mere 131 bills later<lb/>
assented to creating a dej<lb/>
in 1979.<lb/>
Candidate imray C i<lb/>
made the department a<lb/>
promise in l0" repo<lb/>
return for election help<lb/>
National Education i<lb/>
CNEA), the teacher- fad<lb/>
occupied almost 3 p<lb/>
delegate seats at the 1H<lb/>
cratic convention.<lb/>
"It was one ot V<lb/>
in 1976 admitsNEA <lb/>
Howard Carroll. "But<lb/>
education should ha S<lb/>
the president, and 0<lb/>
post. It surprised the<lb/>
naturally, we were pka<lb/>
Carter signed the A<lb/>
into law on Oct. 17 I<lb/>
Hufstedler, a federal j<lb/>
California, was named<lb/>
Shortly before the ti<lb/>
tion was approved<lb/>
Rep.RonPauhR-Tev<lb/>
a bill to dismantle the i<lb/>
and effectively end<lb/>
education programs<lb/>
the Republican<lb/>
Convention's platfor<lb/>
aged the department'<lb/>
In 1980, Preside<lb/>
vowed to abolish the i<lb/>
But his Secretary of<lb/>
Terrel Bell, resisted 1<lb/>
did Congress and infl<lb/>
cation lobbyists.<lb/>
When Bell quit in 11<lb/>
appointed William<lb/>
succeed him, also ct<lb/>
with dismantling the'<lb/>
Bennett's fiery rhc�<lb/>
conservative supporj<lb/>
however, convmcec1<lb/>
drop the idea of at<lb/>
department, Benncttl<lb/>
lackson said.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0006"/><lb/>
 ! . . VR  �<lb/>
� � -<lb/>
)nse<lb/>
tured<lb/>
d<lb/>
deal?<lb/>
: they<lb/>
i that<lb/>
� both<lb/>
 :� r they<lb/>
i lemic said<lb/>
i tthe<lb/>
How<lb/>
rid, i ii g M i<lb/>
when neg tiat-<lb/>
jf hilippines and<lb/>
On the Right<lb/>
by<lb/>
am F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
 moment. The same<lb/>
n the objui. - � mode in<lb/>
vie on PBS, saying: We<lb/>
and be prepared to use it.<lb/>
"<lb/>
A college degree, so what?<lb/>
O<lb/>
(CPS) lThisisit rheBigDay,<lb/>
vou're graduating from college<lb/>
1 he lilting strains ot Pomp v ir<lb/>
 umstance' fill your ears. Shifting<lb/>
uneasil) in your oversized black<lb/>
obe nd mortar board it dawns<lb/>
�n you that you have spent all but<lb/>
first 5 years ot our life in<lb/>
 hool.<lb/>
valedictorian rises to the<lb/>
dium The sun appears from<lb/>
d the clouds and the tem-<lb/>
i iture beneath your robe rises<lb/>
to 120 degrees Occasional<lb/>
rases drift from the stage:<lb/>
ght futures" "we must and<lb/>
shall "the promise ot to<lb/>
� rrow the very future ot<lb/>
mankind'<lb/>
n elbow sinks into your ribs<lb/>
stand, walk to the stage, ac<lb/>
cept the sheepskin to the distant,<lb/>
muffled squeals ot your family<lb/>
d march oft into the future,<lb/>
ervbody is all smiles. Your<lb/>
I imih smiles. They have college<lb/>
� ees Thecabdriversmilcs. 1 Ic<lb/>
Vi ce Chancellor<lb/>
search<lb/>
A national search toselecta new<lb/>
ice chancellor for academic af-<lb/>
iirs at East Carolina University<lb/>
pened in the fall,<lb/>
ard R. Eakin, ECU<lb/>
: said that the search<lb/>
I began last October with<lb/>
�� intmentofa five mi mix i<lb/>
ilt search mmittee "has<lb/>
mpleted without bring<lb/>
indidate to contract. '<lb/>
has ,) college degree. At the res-<lb/>
taurant the hostess smiles. She<lb/>
has a college degree. The waiter<lb/>
has a college degree. So does the<lb/>
bus boy, the cook and the bar-<lb/>
tender.<lb/>
Afterwards, caught in traffic,<lb/>
you'll see the only person who's<lb/>
smiling who doesn't have a col-<lb/>
lege degree. 1 le's the Roto Kooter<lb/>
man in the red van. 1 le's smiling<lb/>
because he barely finished high<lb/>
school, but Still manages to rake in<lb/>
$38,000 a year.<lb/>
You begin to suspect it's all an<lb/>
elaborate joke. Still, you rest as-<lb/>
sured that the future is all yours.<lb/>
Tut it's time to choose that future<lb/>
bv choosing a career.<lb/>
You must choose 1 of 2 mutu-<lb/>
ally exclusive goals: You want to<lb/>
save the world, or you want to<lb/>
own the world By choosing the<lb/>
first, you'll work longer hours<lb/>
than Mother Theresa (and tor less<lb/>
pav), but within 20 years you'll<lb/>
have a nice little louse in the<lb/>
suburbs<lb/>
By choosing the latter you'll<lb/>
disappear into the bowels ot a<lb/>
major corporation, but within 10<lb/>
vears voti'll have a nice little<lb/>
house in the subur bs.<lb/>
What can ou expect v hen you<lb/>
take the plunge into the real<lb/>
world" Expect to be bored. Expect<lb/>
to be appalled. Expect to trv to do<lb/>
something about it.<lb/>
You'll find yourself asking, "Is<lb/>
this all there is1 (let up in the<lb/>
morning, battle your way<lb/>
through rush hour traffic, spend<lb/>
S hours in an office where even<lb/>
house plants won't grow, and<lb/>
then battle your way home, catch<lb/>
sometv and dropoff to sleep. This<lb/>
is why 1 spent most of my life<lb/>
doing homework?"<lb/>
It's helpful to think of your col-<lb/>
lege education as a small down<lb/>
payment on the rest of your lite.<lb/>
And it's reassuring to know that<lb/>
you've got that comprehensive<lb/>
knowledge of loth century<lb/>
French literature to help you out<lb/>
when the going get; tough.<lb/>
Surprisingly enough, very few<lb/>
jobs require you to write a term<lb/>
paper, footnote correctly, cite<lb/>
your sources, apply differential<lb/>
calculus, explain tlie structure ol a<lb/>
monocotyledenous plant, de-<lb/>
scribe the importance of the Ruhr<lb/>
Valley to kaiser Wilhelm II or<lb/>
expound upon the theories ot<lb/>
Freud nd lung vis-a-vis<lb/>
Skinner's behaviourism.<lb/>
More useful job skills, actually,<lb/>
are the ability to operate a Xerox<lb/>
machine, wear clean clothes, fol-<lb/>
low orders nd appear enthusias-<lb/>
tic about sales promotions.<lb/>
Other helpful skills are learning<lb/>
to balance checkbooks, frv eggs,<lb/>
vacuum rugs and diagnose sexu-<lb/>
ally transmitted diseases.<lb/>
"No you sav. "There has to be<lb/>
more! You promised<lb/>
Well, there is. There's love. And<lb/>
a bill. There's marriage, and a<lb/>
whole pile of little bills. There's<lb/>
the house, and one great big re-<lb/>
current bill. There are children,<lb/>
and a blizzard of bills. There's the<lb/>
future. Please enclose remittance<lb/>
before June 23, 1988, or service<lb/>
will be terminated.<lb/>
Forget the future. Hunk about<lb/>
now, college graduate. Run<lb/>
around while you still can (,o for<lb/>
it California, Katmandu it<lb/>
doesn't matter.<lb/>
Spend at least 5 vears screwing,<lb/>
around.<lb/>
It's important. 1 he rest of vour<lb/>
life is programmed. The bills can<lb/>
wiat. as will that middle manage<lb/>
ment position. Forget wh.it<lb/>
they've taught you. Forget what<lb/>
thee told you you're supposed to<lb/>
be doing.<lb/>
1 ind out for yourself, land<lb/>
yourself. Be yourself. And have<lb/>
seme tun.<lb/>
VOICE YOUR<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
WKIII IN UK<lb/>
ro mi i)ii k<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS<lb/>
BIl l.Y E.CR1 1H<lb/>
<lb/>
D I rs Par Bldg 1<lb/>
tan)<lb/>
Gi nvill N.C 27834<lb/>
2D PROFESSK )NAL( iOURTl SY OFF<lb/>
ON ALL GLASS! -<lb/>
TRANSPC RTATION PR ii ED BY<lb/>
GREAT BUS<lb/>
OPEN MONDAY T 0<lb/>
ryykan Appointments can 1 it other<lb/>
� ii<lb/>
hours -plea<lb/>
:<lb/>
After all, there's always room<lb/>
n my park bench. And there's<lb/>
always graduate sch<lb/>
i <lb/>
As a re<lb/>
:It, the search will be<lb/>
- in said. A new<lb/>
�in during the tall<lb/>
is<lb/>
that<lb/>
�i h,<lb/>
Adcmc etti-<lb/>
1 that Pr. Wil-<lb/>
  prof or<lb/>
f the English de-<lb/>
ll ' ' i<lb/>
� vi . 'Hor<lb/>
r,<lb/>
ie<lb/>
or<lb/>
 � �� a .<lb/>
: -ii afi a<lb/>
pected to commence dutti<lb/>
dworth has served as act-<lb/>
ig vi e chancellor since last<lb/>
hen Pr. Angclo A.<lb/>
; become presi-<lb/>
- � '� f Tennes Tech I nivcr-<lb/>
kevil rm.<lb/>
 � search ommittee which<lb/>
re pproximat candi-<lb/>
il s r minatcd tor tl ' m-<lb/>
 ree finalists for campus<lb/>
� , ,vs in March and .April.<lb/>
three finalists vv i fr �m<lb/>
� State University in 1 ay-<lb/>
� j  ; in State<lb/>
� tvinBooi md  ichita<lb/>
SEA push for<lb/>
education<lb/>
Congress first consid-<lb/>
� : reatii g a cabinet-level de-<lb/>
n tment for education in 1853.<lb/>
� mere 131 bills later, longress<lb/>
� I to creating a department<lb/>
. 7 .<lb/>
: late immv � arter had<lb/>
l, the department a campaign<lb/>
r � ise in 1976, reportedly in<lb/>
turn for election help from the<lb/>
� il Education Association<lb/>
the tea hers union that<lb/>
upied almost 5 percent ol the<lb/>
eats at the 1976 1 )emo-<lb/>
onvention.<lb/>
i ne ol I; A's priorities<lb/>
ImitsNEA spokesman<lb/>
 ,rd i irroll. "But he agreed<lb/>
:�  i : ul 11 �ve the ear ol<lb/>
president, and created the<lb/>
it. It surprised the NT"A, but<lb/>
� � . ere pleased<lb/>
t�ned the department<lb/>
i v n �- t. 17, 1979. Shirley<lb/>
ifstcdler, a federal judge from<lb/>
 alifornia, was named secretary.<lb/>
before the final legisla<lb/>
n was approved, however,<lb/>
p Ron Paul (R-Tex) introduced<lb/>
i bill to dismantle the department<lb/>
md effectively end all federal<lb/>
. lucationprograms. Andin 1980,<lb/>
the Republican National<lb/>
nvention's platform encour-<lb/>
1 the department's demise.<lb/>
In 1980, President Reagan<lb/>
owed to abolish the department<lb/>
but his Secretary of Education,<lb/>
ierrel Bell, resisted the idea, as<lb/>
lid Congress and influential edu-<lb/>
cation lobbyists.<lb/>
When Bell quit in 1984, Reagan<lb/>
ippointed William Bennett to<lb/>
succeed him, also charging him<lb/>
with dismantling the department.<lb/>
Bennett's fiery rhetoric and the<lb/>
conservative support is attracted,<lb/>
however, convinced Reagan to<lb/>
drop the idea of abolishing the<lb/>
department, Bennett aide Michael<lb/>
Jackson said.<lb/>
u<lb/>
BEAUTIFUL FULL COLOR<lb/>
COLOR COPIES<lb/>
Beautiful full color copies<lb/>
from any original print or :35mm slide.<lb/>
We can enlarge up to 11 x 17"�use your<lb/>
imagination and give us a try!<lb/>
Of course�we do the standard print shop<lb/>
operations�plus a whole lot more!<lb/>
DESKTOP PUBLISHING � PHOTO-TYPESETTING<lb/>
BROCHURES � MAGAZINES � PROGRAMS � BOOKS<lb/>
CALENDARS � POSTERS � DECALS � BUMPER STICKERS<lb/>
COMPLETE PRINTING AND BINDING OPERATIONS<lb/>
MORGAN<lb/>
PRINTERS, Inc.<lb/>
Parents, grandparents and relatives watch with pride as the ECU graduates flow into I acklen<lb/>
Stadium for commencement. (Photo by Jon Jordan-Photolab)<lb/>
llll'i<lb/>
Corner Red Banks Rd. &amp; Evans St.<lb/>
GREENVILLE. X.C.<lb/>
PHONE<lb/>
355-5588<lb/>
Dare to be<lb/>
different!<lb/>
Clothing &amp; Jewelry<lb/>
that express you!<lb/>
MonSat. 10-6<lb/>
919 A. Rcdbanks Rd. Thurs. 10-8<lb/>
Arlington Village<lb/>
756- II 68<lb/>
 ecome BaC�<lb/>
yt Let Us Serve You! "<lb/>
f<lb/>
We Will Gladly Cash Your Checks From Home!<lb/>
rBienvenidos Estudiantes<lb/>
� Mexican Dinner &amp;<lb/>
Luncheon Specials<lb/>
�Margaritas &amp; 9 Brands<lb/>
of Mexican Beer<lb/>
�Open 7 Days<lb/>
For Lunch &amp; Dinner<lb/>
Fresh Leg<lb/>
QuarterFryer<lb/>
n 39 C<lb/>
Great For Cookouts!<lb/>
Coca Cola or<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
$2.69<lb/>
2 o. cans pkg. ol 12<lb/>
Busch Beer<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
Assorted Varieties<lb/>
Frozen Jeno's<lb/>
Pizzas<lb/>
I �' oz.<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
99 <lb/>
Coca Cola<lb/>
�99<lb/>
Ground Fresh Several<lb/>
Time- Daily<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
51b. pkg<lb/>
or more<lb/>
99 <lb/>
Great For Cookouts!<lb/>
White Cloud<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
79 <lb/>
1? oz. cans<lb/>
iSsMB<lb/>
Come for the food, stay for the fun.<lb/>
12 pack<lb/>
From Our'DeU<lb/>
Fresh hicken Salad - '<lb/>
Fresh Pimento i esc lb. �<lb/>
Fresh Ham Salad lb. S3.99<lb/>
Virginia Baked Ham lb S2 99<lb/>
Provolonc Cheese lb x � '<lb/>
4 roll pkg.<lb/>
Limit 2 with<lb/>
$10.00 food order<lb/>
excluding advertised specials<lb/>
Additional pkgs. 99c<lb/>
Extra Nice<lb/>
Broccolli<lb/>
All 2 I iterProduc<lb/>
Assorted Varieties<lb/>
Fresh-n-Good<lb/>
Cookies<lb/>
6oz.pkg. 2 pkg.<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
Hot Bar<lb/>
Greenville's Best<lb/>
large<lb/>
bunch<lb/>
49 <lb/>
lb. v jl .yy<lb/>
Snow White<lb/>
Mushrooms<lb/>
994<lb/>
521 (otanche 757-1666<lb/>
Sales Dates: Wed. May is- Sat. May 21<lb/>
Store I lours: Sun. 1-6 p.m.<lb/>
MonSat. 8 a.m. - Spin.<lb/>
Mastn ard 6 Visa A<lb/>
C - Food Stamps Wei m<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
211 Jarvis Street<lb/>
2 Blocks From E.C.U.<lb/>
OVEPTON&amp;<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0007"/><lb/>
3<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 20,1988<lb/>
o<lb/>
'i<lb/>
I<lb/>
-A<lb/>
TI<lb/>
n<lb/>
y<lb/>
o<lb/>
v.<lb/>
b<lb/>
'owse<lb/>
t historically significant<lb/>
Idmittcdly, over the last<lb/>
(recnville has lost many<lb/>
5 but through the City's<lb/>
Kte support, and media<lb/>
trend can be abated.<lb/>
 continue to designate<lb/>
rties in the future and<lb/>
to continue to work<lb/>
at Carolinian in further<lb/>
bout our organization<lb/>
1st Carolina University<lb/>
involved, feel free to call<lb/>
)rmal working hours at<lb/>
Tamara Schatz<lb/>
Tlanning Technician<lb/>
Citv of Greenville<lb/>
.11<lb/>
i<lb/>
C<lb/>
A college degree, so what?<lb/>
(CPS) � This is it. The Big Day, has a college degree. At the res- to be appalled. Expect to try to do Other helpful skills are learning<lb/>
you're graduating from college, taurant, the hostess smiles. She something about it. to balance checkbooks, fry eggs,<lb/>
The lilting strains of Tomp Cir- has a college degree. The waiter You'li find yourself asking, "Is vacuum rugs and diagnose sexu-<lb/>
cumstance" fill your ears. Shifting has a college degree. So does the this all there is? Get up in the ally transmitted diseases,<lb/>
uneasily in your oversized black bus boy, the cook and the bar- morning, battle your way "No you say. "There has to be<lb/>
robe and mortar board, it dawns r der. through rush-hour traffic, spend more! You promised<lb/>
on you that you have spent all but Afterwards, caught in traffic, 8 hours in an office where even Well, there is. There's love. And<lb/>
the first 5 years of your life in you'll see the only person who's house plants won't grow, and a bill. There's marriage, and a<lb/>
school. smiling who doesn't have a col- then battle your way home, catch whole pile of little bills. There's<lb/>
The valedictorian rises to the lege degree. He's the Roto-Rooter some tv and drop off to sleep. This the house, and one great big re-<lb/>
podium. The sun appears from man in the red van. He's smiling is why I spent most of my life current bill. There are children,<lb/>
behind the clouds and the tern- because he barely finished high doing homework?" and a blizzard of bills. There's the<lb/>
perature beneath your robe rises school, but still manages to rake in It's helpful to think of your col- future. Please enclose remittance<lb/>
to 120 degrees. Occasional $38,000 a year. lege education as a small down before June 23, 1988, or service<lb/>
You begin to suspect it's all an payment on the rest of your life, wl be terminated,<lb/>
elaborate joke. Still, you rest as- And it's reassuring to know that Forget the future. Think about<lb/>
sured that the future is all yours, you've got that comprehensive<lb/>
But it's time to choose that future knowledge of 16th century<lb/>
by choosing a career. French literature to help you out<lb/>
,   w  You must choose 1 of 2 mutu- when the going gets tough.<lb/>
You stand, walk to the stage, ac- ' ally exclusive goals: You want to Surprisingly enough, very few<lb/>
cept the sheepskin to the distant, save the world, or you want to jobs require you to write a term<lb/>
muffled squeals of your family own the world. By choosing the paper, footnote correctly, cite<lb/>
and march off into the future. first, you'll work longer hours your sources, apply differential ��1Jri;fjllI�1LU.  ��.��<lb/>
Everybody is all smiles. Your than Mother Theresa (and for less calculus, explain the structure of a wiat, as will that middle manage-<lb/>
family smiles. They have college pay), but within 20 years you'll monocotyledenous plant, de- ment position. Forget what<lb/>
degrees. The cab driver smiles. He have a nice little house in the scribe the importance of the Ruhr they've taught you. Forget what<lb/>
suburbs. Valley to Kaiser Wilhelm II or they told you you're supposed to<lb/>
By choosing the latter you'll expound upon the theories of be doing<lb/>
disappear into the bowels of a Freud and Jung vis-a-vis<lb/>
major corporation, but within 10 Skinner's behaviourism,<lb/>
years you'll have a nice little More useful job skills, actually,<lb/>
house in the subur bs. are the ability to operate a Xerox<lb/>
What can you expect when you machine, wear clean clothes, fol-<lb/>
take the plunge into the real low orders and appear enthusias-<lb/>
world? Expect to be bored. Expect tic about sales promotions.<lb/>
tured<lb/>
d<lb/>
,?,<lb/>
j<lb/>
?<lb/>
I historical record is that they<lb/>
as or might have been said,<lb/>
the communique, reference<lb/>
become superfluous. Re-<lb/>
arc generally produced in<lb/>
lys the practice is to attribute<lb/>
I directly to the "leaders" or<lb/>
the general secretary.<lb/>
unique, from the Washing-<lb/>
pially was in part what it<lb/>
.�merits reached during the<lb/>
ing detailed instructions to<lb/>
)bviously these instructions<lb/>
Irs themselves, but they were<lb/>
jning by seniorexpcrts, not<lb/>
lach has turned out to have<lb/>
(have found it impossible to<lb/>
f the passages dealing with<lb/>
tat if communiques are not<lb/>
before they meet, most of the<lb/>
Ibe taken up with this job.<lb/>
loubtcdly remain the vogue,<lb/>
whereby events and statc-<lb/>
ikc place. And some may not<lb/>
corded because the parties<lb/>
c tham occur.<lb/>
akcsRulc according to which<lb/>
1 to his master something the<lb/>
or at least approved. But<lb/>
;held to a rather less rigorous<lb/>
brmof diplomacy would have<lb/>
deal?<lb/>
opposition leader said they<lb/>
nes with flowers. It's true that<lb/>
ugusto Pinochet have both<lb/>
of American force, but they<lb/>
they not? no wonder they<lb/>
military. The academic said<lb/>
is been careful not to molest the<lb/>
 mutilate U.S. citizens: How<lb/>
here in the world, using Ma-<lb/>
amanian base, when negotiat-<lb/>
f Spain, the Philippines and<lb/>
On the Right<lb/>
by<lb/>
am F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
Jncipating moment. The same<lb/>
from the objurgative mode in<lb/>
e mode on PBS, saying: We<lb/>
force, and be prepared to use it.<lb/>
�)<lb/>
1<lb/>
ni<lb/>
m<lb/>
�M<lb/>
<lb/>
)<lb/>
"D<lb/>
ni<lb/>
H<lb/>
:i<lb/>
H<lb/>
0<lb/>
)<lb/>
M<lb/>
6<lb/>
<lb/>
D<lb/>
JG<lb/>
iV<lb/>
iB<lb/>
,T<lb/>
ib<lb/>
'6<lb/>
Z<lb/>
�i<lb/>
T<lb/>
J<lb/>
4<lb/>
-�<lb/>
VOICE YOUR<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
WRITE A LETTER<lb/>
TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
phrases drift from the stage:<lb/>
"bright futures"  "we must and<lb/>
we shall"  "the promise of to-<lb/>
morrow"  "the very future of<lb/>
mankind" <lb/>
An elbow sinks into your ribs.<lb/>
now, college graduate. Run<lb/>
around while you still can. Go for<lb/>
it � California, Katmandu � it<lb/>
doesn't matter.<lb/>
Spend at least 5 years screwing<lb/>
around.<lb/>
It's important. The rest of your<lb/>
life is programmed. The bills can<lb/>
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS<lb/>
Vi ce Chancellor<lb/>
search<lb/>
Find out for yourself. Find<lb/>
yourself. Be yourself. And have<lb/>
some fun.<lb/>
BILLY E. CREECH<lb/>
OPTICIAN &amp; MANAGER<lb/>
Doctors Park, Bldg. 1<lb/>
Stantonburg Road<lb/>
Greenville, N.C 27834<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
(919) 752-4018<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
A national search to select a new<lb/>
vice chancellor for academic af-<lb/>
fairs at East Carolina University<lb/>
will be re-opened in the fall.<lb/>
Dr. Richard R. Eakin, ECU<lb/>
chancellor, said that the search<lb/>
which began last October with<lb/>
appointment of a five-member, all<lb/>
faculty search committee 'has<lb/>
been completed without bringing<lb/>
a candidate to contract<lb/>
As a result, the search will be<lb/>
closed, Dr. Eakin said. "A new<lb/>
search will begin during the fall<lb/>
semester<lb/>
The position is that of the<lb/>
university's chief academic offi-<lb/>
cer. Dr. Eakin said that Dr. Wil-<lb/>
liam A. Bloodworth, professor<lb/>
and chairman of the English de-<lb/>
partment, has agreed to continue<lb/>
serving as acting vice chancellor<lb/>
for academic affairs until June<lb/>
30,1989, "at which time a vice<lb/>
chancellor foiacadcrnte affairs �-<lb/>
expected to commence duties<lb/>
Bloodworth has served as act-<lb/>
ing vice chancellor since last<lb/>
summer when Dr. Angelo A.<lb/>
Volpe resigned to become presi-<lb/>
dent of Tennessee Tech Univer-<lb/>
sity in Cookeville, Tenn.<lb/>
The search committee which<lb/>
screened approximately 90 candi-<lb/>
dates nominated for the post in-<lb/>
vited three finalists for campus<lb/>
interviews in March and April.<lb/>
The three finalists were from<lb/>
Wright State University in Day-<lb/>
ton, Ohio. Appalachian State<lb/>
University in Boone, and Wichita<lb/>
State University in Kansas.<lb/>
NEA push for<lb/>
education<lb/>
(CPS) � Congress first consid-<lb/>
ered creating a cabinet-level de-<lb/>
partment for education in 1853.<lb/>
A mere 131 bills later, Congress<lb/>
assented to creating a department<lb/>
in 1979.<lb/>
Candidate Jimmy Carter had<lb/>
made the department a campaign<lb/>
promise in 1976, reportedly in<lb/>
return for election help from the<lb/>
National Education Association<lb/>
(NEA), the teachers union that<lb/>
occupied almost 5 percent of the<lb/>
delegate seats at the 1976 Demo-<lb/>
cratic convention.<lb/>
"It was one of NEA's priorities<lb/>
in 1976 admits NEA spokesman<lb/>
Howard Carroll. "But he agreed<lb/>
education should have the ear of<lb/>
the president, and created the<lb/>
post. It surprised the NEA, but<lb/>
naturally, we were pleased<lb/>
Carter signed the department<lb/>
into law on Oct. 17,1979. Shirley<lb/>
Hufstedler, a federal judge from<lb/>
California, was named secretary.<lb/>
Shortly before the final legisla-<lb/>
tion was approved, however,<lb/>
Rep. Ron Paul (R-Tex) introduced<lb/>
a bill to dismantle the department<lb/>
and effectively end all federal<lb/>
education programs. And in 1980,<lb/>
the Republican National<lb/>
Convention's platform encour-<lb/>
aged the department's demise.<lb/>
In 1980, President Reagan<lb/>
vowed to abolish the department.<lb/>
But his Secretary of Education,<lb/>
Terrel Bell, resisted the idea, as<lb/>
did Congress and influential edu-<lb/>
cation lobbyists.<lb/>
When Bell quit in 1984, Reagan<lb/>
appointed William Bennett to<lb/>
succeed him, also charging him<lb/>
wi th dismantling the department.<lb/>
Bennett's fiery rhetoric and the<lb/>
conservative support is attracted,<lb/>
however, convinced Reagan to<lb/>
drop the idea of abolishing the<lb/>
department, Bennett aide Michael<lb/>
Jackson said.<lb/>
After all, there's always room<lb/>
on my park bench. And there's<lb/>
always graduate school.<lb/>
'79 <lb/>
20 PROFESSIONAL COURTESY OFF<lb/>
ON ALL GLASSES<lb/>
TRANSPORTATION PROVIDED BY<lb/>
GREAT BUS<lb/>
OPEN MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 9-5:30<lb/>
rayban Appointments can be made at other VUARNEt<lb/>
frames hours - please call in advance frames<lb/>
Parents, grandparents and relatives watch with pride as the ECU graduates flow into Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium for commencement. (Photo by Jon Jordan-Photolab)<lb/>
�briAUWUL yULL color�<lb/>
COLOR COPIES<lb/>
Beautiful full color copies<lb/>
from any original print or 35mm slide.<lb/>
We can enlarge up to 11" x 17"�use your<lb/>
imagination and give us a try!<lb/>
Of course�we do the standard print shop<lb/>
operations�plus a whole lot more!<lb/>
DESKTOP PUBLISHING � PHOTO-TYPESETTING<lb/>
BROCHURES � MAGAZINES � PROGRAMS � BOOKS<lb/>
CALENDARS � POSTERS � DECALS � BUMPER STICKERS<lb/>
COMPLETE PRINTING AND BINDING OPERATIONS<lb/>
� MORGAN<lb/>
� PRINTERS, Inc.<lb/>
PHONE<lb/>
355-5588<lb/>
Corner Red Banks Rd. &amp; Evans St<lb/>
GKEENVTTJ.E. N.C.<lb/>
Dare to be<lb/>
different!<lb/>
Clothing &amp; Jewelry<lb/>
that express you!<lb/>
MonSat. 10-6<lb/>
919 A. Redbanks Rd. Thurs. 10-8<lb/>
Arlington Village<lb/>
756-1058<lb/>
 ecome Back<lb/>
j Let Us Serve You! " ,<lb/>
t<lb/>
We Will Gladly Cash Your Checks From Home!<lb/>
Fresh Leg<lb/>
QuarterFryer<lb/>
,�. 39 <lb/>
Great For Cookouts!<lb/>
JBienvenidos Estudiantes!<lb/>
�Mexican Dinner &amp;<lb/>
Luncheon Specials<lb/>
�Margaritas &amp; 9 Brands<lb/>
of Mexican Beer<lb/>
�Open 7 Days<lb/>
For Lunch &amp; Dinner<lb/>
Coca Cola or<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
$2.69<lb/>
12 oz. cans pkg. of 12<lb/>
Assorted Varieties<lb/>
Frozen Jeno's<lb/>
1012 oz.<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
99 $<lb/>
Coca Cola<lb/>
99 <lb/>
All 2 Liter Products<lb/>
Busch Beer<lb/>
Ground Fresh Several<lb/>
Times Daily<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
51b. pkg<lb/>
or more<lb/>
� It<lb/>
r<lb/>
Great For Cookouts!<lb/>
White Cloud<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
Assorted Varieties<lb/>
Fresh-n-Good<lb/>
Cookies<lb/>
6oz.pkg. 2 pkg.<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
12 oz. cans<lb/>
12 pack<lb/>
Come for the<lb/>
I stay for the fun.<lb/>
Ifrom Our (Deti<lb/>
I Fresh Chicken Saladlb. $3.99<lb/>
1 Fresh Pimento Cheeselb. $2.99<lb/>
Fresh Ham Saladlb. $3.99<lb/>
IVirginia Baked Hamlb. $2.99<lb/>
iProvolone Cheeselb. $2.79<lb/>
4 roll pkg.<lb/>
Limit 2 with<lb/>
$10.00 food order<lb/>
excluding advertised specials<lb/>
Additional pkgs. 99l<lb/>
.79 ?<lb/>
Extra Nice<lb/>
Broccolli<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
Hot Bar<lb/>
Greenville's Best<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
large<lb/>
bunch<lb/>
49<lb/>
Snow White<lb/>
Mushrooms<lb/>
12oz.<lb/>
Fkg-<lb/>
99 $<lb/>
521 CoUnche 757-1666<lb/>
Sales Dates: Wed. May 18- Sat. May 21<lb/>
Store Hours: Sun. 1-6 p.m.<lb/>
MonSat. 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.<lb/>
Mastercard &amp; Visa Accepted<lb/>
WC-Food Stamps Welcome<lb/>
j Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
211 Jarvis Street<lb/>
2 Blocks From E.CU.<lb/>
OVEPTON&amp;<lb/>
SiprntfM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0008"/><lb/>
IE I .V-l i ARO! INI N<lb/>
MAi 20 l�88<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Ml 1 PW AN I I D<lb/>
SI UDI I . AM1U S M G R<lb/>
I lours 15-20 h<lb/>
school year S,<lb/>
merits Soph i<lb/>
t<lb/>
oi we k  the hill<lb/>
v SI wf Roq<lb/>
uties on i ampus rep<lb/>
rcscntativc for top fortune � mpany.<lb/>
Applicant must be res croath �<lb/>
and .i so startc i Sales m irkotii<lb/>
ind a plus Forward resume to (<lb/>
1930 hestnutSl 9thflooi Philadelphia.<lb/>
Pa 19103 A ; Ann Bradv<lb/>
UA I MPI in Ml 1 M I<lb/>
K VIN! E 20K.SAL1 2 �<lb/>
Y IC1 20K, ENGIr<lb/>
 VN M R1  or par!<lb/>
nc positions. Lowest I .<lb/>
otnpare! 101W 14<lb/>
�s I3�3 low fee personnel service<lb/>
Bl ON t<lb/>
als Castii<lb/>
rV 1166<lb/>
III I P '<lb/>
'<lb/>
M Professional Computer Services, lOo<lb/>
! i 5th Street (beside Cubbies)<lb/>
i n ilk NC 752 J694<lb/>
I OR SA1 I<lb/>
Rl D Hi�1 B VRGAINS! Drug dealers'<lb/>
ears boats planes repo'd Surplus. Your<lb/>
area Ruyers Cuidi 1 805-6S7-6OO0 Ext.<lb/>
si;<lb/>
FOR SAI.I equi ment I acoi<lb/>
masl : � rurbo Hex), snorkle gloves,<lb/>
 fe, dive ivuti li and bag.<lb/>
� ' � 0. all imm al !35<lb/>
" i 1 111 e r 6 p. m<lb/>
K i I  nd I iph et niibi<lb/>
' " I.adi� �  ten spi ed bike<lb/>
'301<lb/>
KINGOI I) rOWl RS ' : sale<lb/>
I? unit 2nd floor, fully I d Tax<lb/>
' � � . ; ' : Make me an of I i<lb/>
rWO BEDROOM DUPLEX � carpet,<lb/>
stove, refrig. quiet neighborhood. Near<lb/>
campus. Avail June 1 1 year lease and dep.<lb/>
S200mo. 752-3778.<lb/>
2 ROOMMATES WAN III) MALE OR<lb/>
FEMALE NONSMOKER 5 bedroom<lb/>
house wthree full baths. Call Luke or<lb/>
Steve at 758-0312<lb/>
S60.00AVEEK per person, beach house in<lb/>
Myrtle Beach. Ocean View, 100 v.irds to<lb/>
beach, near Pavillion. Phone 1-803-626-<lb/>
lMl)7.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
DAVID KOON '88 Congral<lb/>
swei (heart I am so pp id : �<lb/>
NEW DELI WANTS YOI<lb/>
� �<lb/>
11 Clist.I<lb/>
I OK Kl 1<lb/>
SI RVK IIS Ok II KRI I)<lb/>
UOKI1 PROCI SSI ' P I'll. I It<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES<lb/>
! I M 1 1 R H)MM I I II D to<lb/>
I blocks from<lb/>
ntral C .<lb/>
rver 12 utilities Call aftei<lb/>
-<lb/>
Ilt)l SI MALI WAN LED to si<lb/>
I �. I. Call 35<lb/>
I I M l 1 RO IMM I I NEEDED !M<lb/>
MED1ATEIV hod apt 1 2<lb/>
: to. Prefer<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SI MM! K I IBRARA<lb/>
U1 Ks<lb/>
t mi n .n m o<lb/>
:<lb/>
  May WS8<lb/>
p.m.al ted Mel ciist<lb/>
t, Croei<lb/>
'<lb/>
S( HOI VRSHIP<lb/>
tain I<lb/>
ilucal . I<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
i ' .<lb/>
.<lb/>
Townhouses For Rent:<lb/>
Best Deal In Town<lb/>
KINGSTON<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
� by owner<lb/>
� need 2 male students<lb/>
�furnished<lb/>
�2 levels<lb/>
�2 12 baths<lb/>
�air conditioned<lb/>
�pool &amp; clubhouse<lb/>
�excellent condition<lb/>
�SI50 per person<lb/>
�owner will pay .ill utilities except<lb/>
phone &amp; cable<lb/>
� 1 eai lease<lb/>
Phone 703-560-8779 call<lb/>
collect if interested<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
�All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
�And Ready To Kent<lb/>
UNIVERSTIY APARTMENTS<lb/>
?hn I . 5thStRe<lb/>
�Ixx-Jtod Near ECU<lb/>
� Across From I Iihway Patrol station<lb/>
Limited otter $27S a month<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommv Williams<lb/>
7S�7S15or8.W937<lb/>
Office open - Apt 8, 12 v.lOpm<lb/>
�AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clean and quid one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV<lb/>
Couples or singles only SlS a month, 6 monh<lb/>
lease. MOH1I EHOME RKN'I ALS - couples or<lb/>
singles Apartmrnt and mobile homes In AjU j<lb/>
(. .ardens near Brtvik Valley (njntry Club<lb/>
Contact J I or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756 "hi 5<lb/>
KILLER AIRFARES<lb/>
London 294 Shannon<lb/>
Tans Aimsterd<lb/>
Rome 339 Budap<lb/>
Brussels 319 Ath<lb/>
Geneva ; Copenha<lb/>
Munich 339 Frankl<lb/>
Rio Haml<lb/>
"studlit and il<lb/>
! !�  � � � ichei<lb/>
'Atlanta<lb/>
1-800-876-7776<lb/>
Council Travel Services 104-577-1678<lb/>
Fares sul Ho<lb/>
DARKROOM TECHNICIAN<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now accepting<lb/>
applications for the position of<lb/>
Darkroom Technician<lb/>
Applications will be received<lb/>
Monday, May 23 through<lb/>
Wednesday, May 25 from 2 - 4 p.m.<lb/>
Apply at The East Carolinian Office, Publication Building, (In Front ol Joyncr I.il<lb/>
ECU r<lb/>
science<lb/>
Disabled<lb/>
?<lb/>
"WS�<lb/>
4.�j<lb/>
t<lb/>
s<lb/>
IN TRAM<lb/>
"8M<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
, A<lb/>
V - 7<lb/>
'n<lb/>
V V<lb/>
,i �<lb/>
j<lb/>
Tm.<lb/>
y.<lb/>
9k<lb/>
f<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
K<lb/>
N<lb/>
� A "7<lb/>
<lb/>
:ttlv<lb/>
v m<lb/>
AND THEY VOTED<lb/>
On January 6,1988, this world-class panel of seafood lovers<lb/>
voted North Carolina as having the best, the tastiest, and the most<lb/>
delicious seafood in the world.<lb/>
This renowned group of world travellers includes Olympic,<lb/>
NASCAR, NCAA, and World Series champions, and a host of<lb/>
civic leaders who have enjoyed seafood from London to Tokyo,<lb/>
and from New York to Paris.<lb/>
Like you, they're experts on good seafood. They've found<lb/>
that nobody fixes it better than the chefs here at home. So enjoy!<lb/>
NORTH CAROIJNA,FIRST IN FISH.<lb/>
-<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
A<lb/>
� 1988 JVC. Travel &amp; Tourism<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0009"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 20, 1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
STUDENT CAMPUS MANAGER<lb/>
I lours: 13-20 hours per week For the full<lb/>
school year. Salary: $100wk. Require-<lb/>
ments Soph Jr. Duties: on campus rep-<lb/>
resentative for top fortune 500 company.<lb/>
Applicant must be responsible, creative;<lb/>
and a self-starter. Salesmarketing back-<lb/>
ground a plus. Forward resume to: CD.<lb/>
1930 Chestnut St 9th floor, Philadelphia.<lb/>
Pa, 19103, ATTN: Ann Brady.<lb/>
A A A EMPLOW1ENT � MANAGER<lb/>
TRAINEE20K, SALES RFP21K,<lb/>
IOFF1CL  20K, ENGINEER30K.<lb/>
1ANY MORE' Permanent full or part<lb/>
time positions. Lowest fee in Greenville<lb/>
Compare! 101W. 14th Street, Suite 203,<lb/>
738-1393. low fee personnel service.<lb/>
BE ON TV � Many needed tor commer-<lb/>
cials. Casting info: 1-805 687-6000, Ext.<lb/>
TV-1166.<lb/>
HELP WANTED - Four Star Pizza is<lb/>
hiring delivers personnel for our<lb/>
Greenville, NC store. Drivers must be 18<lb/>
years or older, have own car, and insur-<lb/>
ance. Hourly pi.is commissh n and tips.<lb/>
Apply in person at 111 Last 10th Street.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERRED<lb/>
WORD PitOCESS'NG AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We otter typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software va A computer diskettes. 24 hours<lb/>
in and out. Guaranteed typing on paper up<lb/>
to 20 hand written pages. We repair com-<lb/>
puters also. Lowest hourly rate in town.<lb/>
SDF Professional Computer Services, 106<lb/>
East 5th Street (beside Cubbies)<lb/>
Greenville, NC 752-3694.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
RED HOT BARGAINS! Drug dealers'<lb/>
cars, boats, planes repo'd. Surplus. Your<lb/>
area. Buyers Guide. 1-805-687-6000 Ext.<lb/>
S-llb6<lb/>
FOR SAFE � Dive equipment: Dacor<lb/>
mask, fins (Turbo Flex), snorkle, gloves,<lb/>
booties, dive knife, dive watch, and bag.<lb/>
Used twice $100.00. Call Jimmy at 355-<lb/>
7354 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
RCA TV, Radio and Phonograph combi-<lb/>
nation $75.00, Ladies 26" ten-speed bike<lb/>
$80.00, Twin Mattress and box spring $50.<lb/>
McGregor Downs, 758 7304.<lb/>
RlNCOl.D TOWERS � Condo for sale<lb/>
� B-unit, 2nd floor, fully furnished. Tax<lb/>
market-value, $43,730. Make me an offer.<lb/>
919-787-1378.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMA I L WANTED � to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom house, 3 blocks from<lb/>
campus - $130.00 a month, central AC,<lb/>
washer and dryer. 12 utilities. Call alter<lb/>
7:00 p.m. � 758-7068.<lb/>
HOUSEMATE WAN I ED  to share<lb/>
contempory home wpool. Call 355-6686<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED IM-<lb/>
MEDIATELY � Furneshed apt. 12 utili-<lb/>
ties, Rent 157.50mo. Prefer rtonsmokcr.<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM DUPLEX � carpet,<lb/>
stove, refrig. quiet neighborhood. Near<lb/>
campus. Avail. June 1.1 year lease and dep.<lb/>
$200mo. 752-5778.<lb/>
2 ROOMMATES WANTED MALE OR<lb/>
FEMALE NONSMOKER � 5 bedroom<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SUMMER LIBRARY HOIKS<lb/>
Mondays - Thursdays 8:00 am. - 11:00<lb/>
p.m Fridays 8:00 am. - 6:00p m Satur-<lb/>
days 9:00 am. - 6:00 p.m Sundays 12.00<lb/>
noon - 11:00 p.m. The Media Resources<lb/>
Center will be open: Mondays - Thurs-<lb/>
days 8:00 a jn 930 p.m Fridays 8:00 a an.<lb/>
-5:00 p.m Saturdays 1:00p.m. - 6:00 p.m<lb/>
Sundays 12 noon - 9:00 p m.<lb/>
CHILD A1 )VOCACY<lb/>
Fran Kertesz will speak on Parents in<lb/>
Special Education � the parents' role in<lb/>
developing a special education program,<lb/>
and how to become a better advocate for<lb/>
house wthree full baths. Call Luke or<lb/>
Steve at 758-0312.<lb/>
S60.00AVEEK per person, beach house in<lb/>
Myrtle Beach. Ocean View, 100 yards to<lb/>
beach, near Pavillion. Phone 1-803-626-<lb/>
9197.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
DAVID KOON '88 . . . Congratulations<lb/>
sweetheart I am so proud of you All my<lb/>
love, Crista.<lb/>
NEW DELI WANTS YOU to jam all sun<lb/>
mer with the best music around. BOOGIE<lb/>
down Saturday with the BOOMERS, the<lb/>
RHINOCEROSES, and ANCELK<lb/>
Cl !OIR. Be there or miss out, it's the pre-<lb/>
BOOCIE jam.<lb/>
your child. Wednesday, May 25, 1988,<lb/>
7:30 p.m. at Saint lames United Methodist<lb/>
Church, 2000 E. Sixth Street, Greenville,<lb/>
NC. Tins program should interest parents<lb/>
or professionals working with children<lb/>
with special needs<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
Students who wish to obtain financial<lb/>
aid for overseas education may apply lor<lb/>
a Rivers Scholarship. The next applk ation<lb/>
deadline is July I, 1988. For further infor-<lb/>
mation contact the Office of International<lb/>
Studies and Scholarships in the Gcrneral<lb/>
Classroom building, room 1002,757-6769.<lb/>
Townhouses For Rent:<lb/>
Best Deal In Town<lb/>
KINGSTON<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
� by owner<lb/>
�need 2 male students<lb/>
�furnished<lb/>
�2 levels<lb/>
�2 12 baths<lb/>
�air conditioned<lb/>
�pool &amp; clubhouse<lb/>
�excellent condition<lb/>
� $150 per person<lb/>
� owner will pay all utilities except<lb/>
phone &amp; cable<lb/>
� 1 year lease<lb/>
Phone 703-560-8779 call<lb/>
collect if interested<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
� All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
� And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSTIY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
� Located Near ECU<lb/>
�Across From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
Limited offer-5275 a month<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 or 830-1937<lb/>
Office open - Apt. 8,12-5 JO p.m.<lb/>
�AZALEA GARDENS-<lb/>
Clean and quiet one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. $195 a month, 6 month<lb/>
lease. MOBILE HOME RENTALS - couples or<lb/>
singles. Apartment and mobile homes in Azalea<lb/>
Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
KILLER AIR<lb/>
London294Shannon<lb/>
Paris299Amsterdam<lb/>
Rome339Budapest<lb/>
Brussels319Athens<lb/>
Geneva349Copenhagen<lb/>
Munich339Frankfurt<lb/>
Rio350Hamburg<lb/>
FARES<lb/>
tt<lb/>
279<lb/>
319<lb/>
339<lb/>
359<lb/>
339<lb/>
339<lb/>
339<lb/>
Helsinki 369<lb/>
Stockholm 339<lb/>
Zurich<lb/>
Tokyo<lb/>
Bangkok<lb/>
Sydney<lb/>
Taipei<lb/>
349<lb/>
399<lb/>
476<lb/>
509<lb/>
420<lb/>
�Student and Youth Fares, Each Way Based on a Round Trip Purchase Plus Sup<lb/>
Discounts for Teachers and Adults, Some Restriction Apply<lb/>
'Atlanta Departures Plus 1 undreds of Fares from YOUR Q FY<lb/>
1-800-876-7776<lb/>
Council Travel Services 404-577-1678<lb/>
Fares subject to change without notice, phis taxes and ni-irtr fees<lb/>
DARKROOM TECHNICIAN<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now accepting<lb/>
applications for the position of<lb/>
Darkroom Technician<lb/>
Applications will be received<lb/>
Monday, May 23 through<lb/>
Wednesday, May 25 from 2 - 4 p.m.<lb/>
Apply at The East Carolinian Office, Publication Building. (In Front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
ECU rel<lb/>
science<lb/>
1CL cv I 1U. ;cu<lb/>
A comparison of science I<lb/>
crs in Japan tot! the I'm<lb/>
Slates will be made in a <lb/>
study by n -h an  i<lb/>
Una University<lb/>
The study, supported<lb/>
National Science Found<lb/>
aimed at lean i<lb/>
japan do better in s<lb/>
youngsters in Amc ri<lb/>
DrCharles R. (<lb/>
the ECl : Educal i<lb/>
Or. Floyd I ' '<lb/>
 ith Ed<lb/>
�<lb/>
ng educal<lb/>
and Japan<lb/>
They say tl<lb/>
�<lb/>
Disabled<lb/>
 surra<lb/>
�<lb/>
related<lb/>
a $1<lb/>
Wellcome<lb/>
lina I niv(<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
� ?nce i v<lb/>
firsl<lb/>
S ence Institute I r I<lb/>
r. Da<lb/>
��<lb/>
ai �<lb/>
II<lb/>
st trgent<lb/>
I i<lb/>
� <lb/>
9<lb/>
1 I<lb/>
s<lb/>
INTRAMl<lb/>
First<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
3-on-3 Basketbal<lb/>
J&amp;<lb/>
t<lb/>
4 � ;3<lb/>
T<lb/>
fcw<lb/>
yi<lb/>
?<lb/>
s<lb/>
l'y jlf.<lb/>
cF<lb/>
�Lf<lb/>
lx s3P�<lb/>
AND THEY VOTED,<lb/>
On January 6,1988, this world-class panel of seafood lovers<lb/>
voted North Carolina as having the best, the tastiest, and the most<lb/>
delicious seafood in the world.<lb/>
This renowned group of world travellers includes Olympic,<lb/>
NASCAR, NCAA, and World Series champions, and a host of<lb/>
civic leaders who have enjoyed seafood from London to Tokyo,<lb/>
and from New York to Paris.<lb/>
Like you, they're experts on good seafood. They've found<lb/>
that nobody fixes it better than the chefs here at home. So enjoy!<lb/>
NORTH GROUNA,FIRST IN FISH.<lb/>
Tennis Single;<lb/>
Volleyball<lb/>
Putt-Putt Golf<lb/>
Home Run Derbl<lb/>
5k Walk Run<lb/>
Secoi<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
Co-Ree Water Pd<lb/>
Golf Classic<lb/>
Free Throw Con<lb/>
5k WalkRun<lb/>
� 1988 N.C. Travel Ar Tourism<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0010"/><lb/>
THE CAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 20,1988<lb/>
all sum-<lb/>
LIC<lb/>
ARES<lb/>
;��<lb/>
AN<lb/>
�.)<lb/>
il<lb/>
Ihl 1TY<lb/>
�V<lb/>
ECU researchers compare<lb/>
science teachers in study<lb/>
I C U New. s Ittiicau<lb/>
A comparison of science teach-<lb/>
ci s in apan to those in the United<lb/>
States will be made in a two-year<lb/>
Study by researchers at East Caro-<lb/>
lina University.<lb/>
The study, supported by the<lb/>
itional Science Foundation, is<lb/>
aimed at learning why children in<lb/>
apan do better in science that<lb/>
youngsters in America.<lb/>
Pr. Charles R. Coble, dean of<lb/>
the ECU School of Education and<lb/>
Dr. Floyd E. Mattheis of the Sci-<lb/>
. e-Math Education Center will<lb/>
study the preparation and con-<lb/>
tinuing education of American<lb/>
and Japanese science teachers.<lb/>
They say that wile there are some<lb/>
known differences in the way the<lb/>
two countries prepare science<lb/>
teachers, no substantive study of<lb/>
these differences has been done.<lb/>
A $34,850 grant from the Na-<lb/>
tional Science Foundation will<lb/>
support the project. Coble and<lb/>
Mattheis will present their find-<lb/>
ings at a major U.S. and Japan<lb/>
conference on science education<lb/>
meeting in Hawaii in 1990.<lb/>
In a related study completed<lb/>
almost two years ago the re-<lb/>
searchers from ECU and educa-<lb/>
tors from Hiroshima University<lb/>
in Japan compared 3,300 middle<lb/>
grade students from Morth Caro-<lb/>
lina with 4,500 Japanese stuends.<lb/>
1 he Japanese youngsters scored<lb/>
"significantly higher with reaon-<lb/>
ing and integrated process skills"<lb/>
than their counterparts in the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Differences in the type of in-<lb/>
struction and priority given to<lb/>
elementary school science were<lb/>
believed to account for much of<lb/>
the variance, the researchers said.<lb/>
They recommended strengthen-<lb/>
ing science education in elemen-<lb/>
tary grades in the United States.<lb/>
In the current research a com-<lb/>
parative study of the pre-service<lb/>
and in-service education of teach-<lb/>
ers of science at the elementary,<lb/>
junior high and senior high levels<lb/>
in the U.S. and Japan will be<lb/>
made. The findings will be made<lb/>
available to educators and leaders<lb/>
in both nations.<lb/>
Coble is a former professor of<lb/>
Science Education at ECU. Mat-<lb/>
theis is a former professor and<lb/>
chairman of the Department of<lb/>
Science Educaiton. Both arc au-<lb/>
thors of textbooks and articles<lb/>
about teaching.<lb/>
Plastics, plastics are the key to the future. Graduates file out of Ficklen stadium while a professor<lb/>
shakes the hand of one of the many entering the employment line. (Photo by Jon Jordan�I'hotolab)<lb/>
Disabled students begin program<lb/>
U t Sci<lb/>
� s tuirvau<lb/>
A summer research program<lb/>
disabled students seeking sci-<lb/>
:elated careers has received<lb/>
gift from the Burroughs<lb/>
Icomc Co. The program will<lb/>
this summer at East Caro-<lb/>
a University and will involve<lb/>
pants in two five-week<lb/>
�<lb/>
research program, also<lb/>
: U d by a $4 0 National<lb/>
rice Foundation (NSF) grant,<lb/>
first externally-funded ac-<lb/>
 of ECU's ncwly-establiched<lb/>
1 .nee Institute for the Disabled.<lb/>
David Lunncy, professor of<lb/>
mi try, is director of the Insti-<lb/>
and said the Burroughs<lb/>
v gift would help meet<lb/>
st urgent need including<lb/>
I c its and stipends to the<lb/>
h of the participating stu-<lb/>
dents will ocriorm research un-<lb/>
der the direction of an ECU fac-<lb/>
ultv member, matched on the<lb/>
basis of the student's field of inter-<lb/>
est and qualifications. Lunney<lb/>
said research projects are sched-<lb/>
uled in chemisrty, physics, geol-<lb/>
ogy and biology.<lb/>
In addition to research, the pro-<lb/>
gram will include lectures and<lb/>
visits by scientists with disabili-<lb/>
ties. Lunney said formal lectures,<lb/>
informal discussions and social<lb/>
activities are planned for each<lb/>
visit by a guest lecturer.<lb/>
Student selection and planning<lb/>
of project activities was admini-<lb/>
stered by a five-person advisory<lb/>
committee which includes Todd<lb/>
A. Blumcnkoph, a Burroughs<lb/>
Wellcome organic chemist; James<lb/>
11. Maguire, a medicinal chemist<lb/>
at UNC-Chapel Hill, and James E.<lb/>
Mitchell, a doctoral candidate in<lb/>
the School of Forestry and Envi-<lb/>
ronmental Studies at Duke Uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
"Projects like this one are<lb/>
needed in order to bring more<lb/>
disabled people into science-re-<lb/>
lated careers Lunney said. "In<lb/>
our project we hope that exposure<lb/>
to hands-on scientific research<lb/>
will help us to recruit a few disa<lb/>
bled students into the sciences, to<lb/>
strengthen the training of a few<lb/>
others who are already commit-<lb/>
ted to scientific and technical ca-<lb/>
reers, and to improve the chances<lb/>
of completing rigorous technical<lb/>
curricula for both groups by in-<lb/>
creasing their motivation, confi-<lb/>
dence and self-esteem.<lb/>
"Theultimategoal is to increase<lb/>
the number of qualified disabled<lb/>
students who successfully enter<lb/>
productive and rewarding ca-<lb/>
reers in science and technology<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Newman<lb/>
Catholic Student Center<lb/>
953 East Tenth St.<lb/>
Greenville. N.C. 27836<lb/>
Phone: 757-3760<lb/>
757-1991<lb/>
Campus Mass Schedule<lb/>
Summer session - Sunday 11:30 a.m.<lb/>
8:30 p.m.<lb/>
Fall - Sunday 11:30 a.m. Bio. Bldg. rm 103<lb/>
8:30 p.m. at the Newman Center<lb/>
For more information about these and other programs,<lb/>
call or visit the center daily between<lb/>
8:30 a.m. and 11:00 p.m.<lb/>
Fr. Paul Vaeth, Chaplain and Campus Minister<lb/>
PAID ADVERTISMKiVi<lb/>
INTRAMURAL - RECREATIONAL SERVICES<lb/>
SUMMER SESSIONS SIZZLE<lb/>
INTRAMURAL CALENDAR<lb/>
First Summer Session<lb/>
Evnt Registration<lb/>
SoftballMay 23<lb/>
(4:00 P.M. MG 102)<lb/>
3-on-3 BasketballMay 25<lb/>
(4:00 P.M. MG 102)<lb/>
Tennis SinglesMay 25<lb/>
(4:30 P.M. MG 102)<lb/>
VolleyballJune 1<lb/>
(4:00 P.M. MG 102)<lb/>
Putt-Putt GolfJune 7<lb/>
(4:00 P.M. MG 102)<lb/>
Home Run DerbyJune 7<lb/>
(5:00 P.M. Softball Field)<lb/>
5k WalkRunJune 13<lb/>
(8:00 P.M. Bunting Track)<lb/>
Second Summer Session<lb/>
SoftballJune 29<lb/>
(4:00 P.M. MG 102)<lb/>
Co-Rec Water PoloJuly 6<lb/>
(4:00 P.M. MG 102)<lb/>
Golf ClassicJuly 11<lb/>
(4:00 P.M. MG 102)<lb/>
Free Throw ContestJuly 18<lb/>
(3:00 P.M. MG)<lb/>
5k WalkRunJuly 20<lb/>
(8:00 P.M.)<lb/>
 tea<lb/>
am00<lb/>
I j2<lb/>
4 i:Pf<lb/>
� V<lb/>
<lb/>
INFORMAL RECREATION<lb/>
1:00 p.m.<lb/>
6:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium<lb/>
MonFri11:30 a.m.<lb/>
Mon. -Thurs3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sun1:00 p.m.<lb/>
Weight Rooms<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mon. - Thurs10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Fri10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sun1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mingcs<lb/>
Mon. - Thurs2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
PHYSICAL FITNESS PROGRAMS<lb/>
Fitness Classes<lb/>
Registration Dates Session Dates<lb/>
May 16-19 May 18-June 17<lb/>
June 22-24 June 27-July 28<lb/>
Aerobics<lb/>
4:00-5:00 P.M. MG 108Tues. &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
5:15-6:15 P.M. MG 108Mon. 6k Wed.<lb/>
3:00-4:00 P.M. MG 108Sun.<lb/>
Toning<lb/>
4:00-5:00 P.M. MG 108Mon. &amp; Wed.<lb/>
5:15-6:15 P.M. MG 108Tues. &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
COST PER SESSION<lb/>
$7.50studeius $15.00Facultystaff<lb/>
COST PER DROP-IN CLASS<lb/>
$1.00students $2.00Faeulty<lb/>
All classes arc available on a drop-in basis with presentation of a<lb/>
drop-in ticket and valid identification. Stop by 204 Memorial Gymna-<lb/>
sium to purchase a drop-in ticket and pick up a class schedule.<lb/>
Supra Class<lb/>
An innovative 90 minute workout incorporating weights as light<lb/>
resistence for muscular strength and endurance in addition to a 30<lb/>
minute aerobic componenet. Registration is required and sessions are<lb/>
the same as all other fitness classes. Cost per session is SI 1students<lb/>
and S18 facu 1 ty - staff.<lb/>
Tues. &amp; Thurs2:30-4:00 P.M.<lb/>
Swimming Pools<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Mon. - Fri7:00 a.m.<lb/>
Mon. - Fri11:30 a.m.<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
Mon. - Fri4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sun1:00 p.m.<lb/>
8:00 a.m.<lb/>
1:30 p.m.<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Hours may vary in accordance with department pro-<lb/>
grams. Valid ECU identification is required for admit-<lb/>
tance to facilities.<lb/>
Equipment Room Hours<lb/>
Memorial Gym 115<lb/>
Mon. - Thurs10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Fri10:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
SatClosed<lb/>
Sun1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
PAID ADVERTISMENT<lb/>
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REGARDING ANY<lb/>
OF THE PROGRAMS AND SERVICES OFFERED DROP BY<lb/>
204 MEMORIAL GYM OR CALL 757-6387<lb/>
OUTDOOR RECREATION OPPORTUNTIES<lb/>
First Summer Session<lb/>
Activity Registration Pre-Trip Meeting Trip Dates(s)<lb/>
Canoe Outing 516-520 521<lb/>
Whitewater Raft. 516-531 Tues. 67 610.11.12<lb/>
Bike Hike 516-62 65<lb/>
Hang Gliding 516-526 Tues. 531 65<lb/>
Second Summer Session<lb/>
Backpacking 622-75 Tues. 75 78.9,10<lb/>
Canoe Outing 622-712 716<lb/>
Hang Gliding 622-712 724<lb/>
Outdoor Recreation Center<lb/>
Hours of Operation<lb/>
Monday 130 P.M. - 5:30 P.M.<lb/>
Tuesday ThursdayClosed<lb/>
Friday1:30 P.M. - 5:30 P.M.<lb/>
Saturday Closed<lb/>
Sunday1:00 P.M. - 5:00 P.M.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0011"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MA1! 20 1988<lb/>
Program helps businesses<lb/>
RALIEGH(AP) Small and<lb/>
medium sized companies strug-<lb/>
gling to create new jobs in 91 rural<lb/>
counties will have a new source oi<lb/>
financing under a $100 million<lb/>
loan program backed bv the<lb/>
state's Rural Economic Develop-<lb/>
ment Center.<lb/>
What we seek to do today is<lb/>
provide dollars to entrepreneurs<lb/>
with good ideas William Friday,<lb/>
the chairman of the center, said<lb/>
Wednesday-<lb/>
The North Carolina Enterprise<lb/>
Corp. will combine investments<lb/>
from banks, savings and loans,<lb/>
utilities and other businesses,<lb/>
plus funds from state govern<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
By pooling their resources and<lb/>
spreading nk. the investors will<lb/>
be able to provide seed capital tor<lb/>
companies that could nor obtain<lb/>
convential financing, officials<lb/>
�aid.<lb/>
"Until now, if a local bank could<lb/>
not meet all the financing needsof<lb/>
a sound business idea it had to say<lb/>
no said Vincent 1 owe lr presi-<lb/>
dent-elect ot the North Carolina<lb/>
Bankers Association and vice-<lb/>
chairman of the rural center<lb/>
Now, the bank has ,j place to<lb/>
turn<lb/>
1 le likened the new corporation<lb/>
to the North Carolina Reinsur-<lb/>
ance Facility, through which in-<lb/>
surance companies provide auto<lb/>
liability coverage to high-risk<lb/>
divers who cannot get one firm to<lb/>
insure them.<lb/>
North Carolina's rural<lb/>
communities have suffered in re-<lb/>
cent years in contasl to the boom<lb/>
experienced by the state's urban<lb/>
centers, largely because of the<lb/>
decline in traditional manufactur-<lb/>
ing employment and small farms.<lb/>
The North Carolina bnterpnse<lb/>
Corp. will target loans and invest-<lb/>
ments toward the c)l counties<lb/>
without a city of 50,000 people or<lb/>
more, said Billy Ray 1 all, presi-<lb/>
dent oi the Rural Economic De-<lb/>
velopment Center. Hans call tor it<lb/>
to begin operating by the end oi<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Mom loans probably would be<lb/>
m the $100,000 to S2tX).tX0 range,<lb/>
but the cororation could make<lb/>
loans up to $1 million, Lowe said.<lb/>
Friday, the former University of<lb/>
North Carolina president, said he<lb/>
hoped the new coroporation<lb/>
would grow beyond its $100 mil-<lb/>
lion start-up size.<lb/>
The $100 million will consist of<lb/>
$20 million in stock purchases by<lb/>
businesses, $20 million in state<lb/>
investments and $60 million es-<lb/>
tablished through lines oi credit<lb/>
from participating financial insti-<lb/>
tutions.<lb/>
Under current state law, tax-<lb/>
payer dollars can be used only tor<lb/>
investments with successful track<lb/>
records. State Treasure 1 larlan<lb/>
Boyles said he would ask the<lb/>
Legislature next month for per-<lb/>
mission to invest in the new cor-<lb/>
poration. The investmants could<lb/>
take the form of common stock,<lb/>
preferred stock or debentures, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Legislature will not make<lb/>
direct appropriations to the cor-<lb/>
poration, Friday said.<lb/>
When news reports oi the im-<lb/>
peding announcement surfaced<lb/>
last week,Gov. lim Martin said he<lb/>
could not support the used ot<lb/>
taxpayer money for the financing<lb/>
pool.<lb/>
After details ot the plan were<lb/>
made public Wednesday, guber-<lb/>
natorial spokesman Jim Sughure<lb/>
issued a cautious statemant sav-<lb/>
ing the loan fundmight be ac-<lb/>
ceptable to Governor Martin<lb/>
o<lb/>
�v?<lb/>
freshmen in b's' down from<lb/>
942 in 1980 the typical 2-year<lb/>
school registered 7" first-year<lb/>
students,a 19.8 percent dropfrom<lb/>
the 1980 average of 964 students.<lb/>
"Bringing more part-time stu-<lb/>
dents on indicates colleges and<lb/>
universities are marketing them-<lb/>
selves aggressively to people who<lb/>
already have jobs or wish to be<lb/>
retrained Gams added.<lb/>
This excited ECU graduate has decided to share the thrill with some friends as she lets the bubbly<lb/>
spray at commencement May 7. (Thotos by Ion Jordan, Photolab)<lb/>
Beached whale finds new home<lb/>
r<lb/>
StCLCUUStl<lb/>
FORT F1SHFR. N.C. AP)-<lb/>
- phia, an orphan pygmy sperm<lb/>
� �. I ale that washed ashore with its<lb/>
n ther in Long Reach, has been<lb/>
� �wn to a new home in Florida,<lb/>
where it should survive, marine<lb/>
expert say.<lb/>
The calf, which was maned<lb/>
Sophia before aquarium workers<lb/>
learned it w as a male, spent Tues-<lb/>
day night tied to a stretcher and<lb/>
was released into a pond behind<lb/>
the North Carolina Aquarium<lb/>
Inesday mornii<lb/>
It - stable now. c. �nsideringit's<lb/>
out ot the water, away from its<lb/>
mother, and had to ride in a truck<lb/>
and stay on a stretcher all night<lb/>
said Paul Harrington, the curator<lb/>
: the aquarium at Fort fisher.<lb/>
We got his circulation going by<lb/>
running him through the water a<lb/>
little<lb/>
The calf and a 10-foot female<lb/>
whale beached about 2:15 pan.<lb/>
tesday. The larger whale was<lb/>
 � � an unknown cause.<lb/>
 � ternarians killed the whale,<lb/>
uh was sent tot he Smith-<lb/>
nstitution in Washington,<lb/>
where a nccropsv will be per-<lb/>
formed.<lb/>
Sophia ate small herring and<lb/>
small portions ot squid Wednes-<lb/>
day. He had eaten about three<lb/>
pounds oi food bv noon with<lb/>
aquarium employees helping his<lb/>
appetite by placing the food up to<lb/>
his mouth. Staffers were trying to<lb/>
keep the calf relaxed to allow the<lb/>
food to digest properly.<lb/>
A veterinarian injected the<lb/>
whale, which was slightly injured<lb/>
in the beaching, with antibiotics<lb/>
and itamins.<lb/>
On Wednesday right, YVRAL-<lb/>
n hired an airplane to take So-<lb/>
phia to a new home at Sea World<lb/>
near Orlando, Fla. The mammal<lb/>
was expected to arrive in Florida<lb/>
earlv today.<lb/>
Harrington said thecalf showed<lb/>
no signs oi disease or severe in-<lb/>
jury. It has some minor cuts and<lb/>
bruises. Barnacles and crusted<lb/>
pilings may have contributed to<lb/>
those lacerations Harrington<lb/>
said<lb/>
Experts could only guess what<lb/>
may have caused the whales to<lb/>
beach. Pygmy sperm whales are<lb/>
not common in the area, and are<lb/>
usually found in temperate and<lb/>
topical waters worldwide. More<lb/>
timid than most vvhales, pygmy<lb/>
sperm whales usually travel in<lb/>
pods of 10, Harrington said.<lb/>
"The mother whale might have<lb/>
been hurt or disoriented Frank<lb/>
Schwartz, a member of the West-<lb/>
ern Atlantic Whale Consortium,<lb/>
told the Wilmington Morning<lb/>
Star in a telephone interview from<lb/>
Morehead City. "Of course the<lb/>
young one will always stav with<lb/>
the mother<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
4 So $036<lb/>
� FOR Em<lb/>
1 This coupon must be Dresented<lb/>
With Shirt order<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
r<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Watch for it<lb/>
LEADING EDGE<lb/>
Model D<lb/>
Complete System<lb/>
with Printer<lb/>
$1195<lb/>
?is"sssw iv�<lb/>
Includes:<lb/>
Leading Edge Model D<lb/>
� IBM PC XT compatible<lb/>
� 2 - 360k floppy drives<lb/>
� 51 2k RAM<lb/>
� Monochrome monitor<lb/>
� 20 month warranty<lb/>
Leading Edge Wordprocessor<lb/>
� 80.000 word spelling corrector<lb/>
Citizen I80D printer<lb/>
� 180 characters per second<lb/>
� Graphics &amp; Near Letter Quality<lb/>
System Starter Kit<lb/>
� I box diskettes<lb/>
� all software stalled<lb/>
� printer cable<lb/>
� 500 sheets clean tear paper<lb/>
S &amp; R Computer Associates, Inc.<lb/>
530 Cotanche Street<lb/>
Downtown Greenville (Next to Bicycle Post)<lb/>
757-3279<lb/>
Open til 9 p.m. The Plaza<lb/>
$2.00 Off<lb/>
All Haircuts<lb/>
This Ad<lb/>
"It seems to be pretty consistent<lb/>
with the administration's ideas<lb/>
Sughrue said. "The proposal<lb/>
would limit the state's involvc-<lb/>
mant to a treasurer's investment<lb/>
That's much better than using<lb/>
appropriated funds. The fact that<lb/>
the funds would operate as a pri-<lb/>
vate corporation is also a point in<lb/>
its factor<lb/>
It. Gov. Rob Jordan, who ap-<lb/>
pointed the commission that con-<lb/>
ceived the idea of the Rural Eco-<lb/>
nomic Development Center,<lb/>
hailed the creation of the North<lb/>
Carolina Enterprise Corp say-<lb/>
ing it would foster "growth from<lb/>
within" the state.<lb/>
"This proposal is an outstand-<lb/>
ing example of how the public<lb/>
and private sector can work to-<lb/>
gether.<lb/>
More freshmen,<lb/>
part-timers<lb/>
(CPS) An increasing number<lb/>
I freshmen at public college1- .ire<lb/>
part-timers, the college Beard<lb/>
reported May (��.<lb/>
In its annual survey ot who is<lb/>
v;oing to college, the New York-<lb/>
based education group found<lb/>
freshman enrollments declined<lb/>
between 0 and 1986, but that<lb/>
half of he drop occurred in one<lb/>
year: between 1985 and '86.<lb/>
Two-year colleges, moreover,<lb/>
held a harder time attracting first-<lb/>
year students than four-year<lb/>
schools, spokeswoman Janice<lb/>
C lams noted.<lb/>
While the typical 4-year col<lb/>
cges enrolled an average ot 872<lb/>
OUR RESUMES<lb/>
MAKE A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE<lb/>
Get a competitive edge m- today s tough job market by<lb/>
having a clean professional-looking resume by AccuCopy<lb/>
Our resume packages let you choose between photo<lb/>
typesetting, laser printing, or basic typewriter originals<lb/>
In addition, we offer the widest range of paper and<lb/>
envelope choices in the area<lb/>
FAST COPIES<lb/>
FOR FAST TIMES<lb/>
H<lb/>
fa i I<lb/>
�<lb/>
24-hour service available<lb/>
open early, open late<lb/>
open six days a week<lb/>
-<lb/>
J<lb/>
THE RESUME PEOPLE<lb/>
Next to Chicos in the Georgetown Shops<lb/>
Expires June 30<lb/>
MARATHON<lb/>
RESTAURANTS<lb/>
Greek Owned &amp; Operated Since 1979<lb/>
Delivery Menu<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
GREEK DISHES<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
GREEK PASTRIES<lb/>
'Best Deal in Town"<lb/>
Mon. - Fri. 4-10<lb/>
Sat. 11-10<lb/>
752-0326<lb/>
or<lb/>
752-3753<lb/>
560 Evans St.<lb/>
Pris<lb/>
t<lb/>
u<lb/>
INTRODUCING A<lb/>
CHECKING ACCOUNT<lb/>
THAT WILL ONLY<lb/>
COST YOU THIS<lb/>
MUCH A MONTH.<lb/>
PLANTERS BASELINE CHECKING<lb/>
NO Minimum tlpnt�<lb/>
You don l luu' lo keep two months of grocer) mones lied up in<lb/>
minimum balance requirements with Planters Basdinehei king<lb/>
In fact, this account Mill cost vou less than a i hickeu dinner fast<lb/>
$ per month with no minimum balance required<lb/>
lOFtllChadu<lb/>
Unlewair first 10 checks of even month free (Six Mr check<lb/>
charge applies on! to additional checks)<lb/>
Ualiaiitad Heaters areaa1" Withdrawals<lb/>
An) timcyiHi get a last minute dinner imitation and need evtra<lb/>
cash no matter what time of the da or night nisi drop b anv of<lb/>
our Planters (ireen 24 hour automated telkr mai hun s and use<lb/>
your Planters Green Card There's no charge V matter bow mam<lb/>
Baseline Checking withdrawals and deposiLs you make<lb/>
Your Planters (ireen (ard can also be used at other ATMs that<lb/>
are part of the Relay "system And the sen ice charge for a Rela<lb/>
transaction is u.t SfH (most other banks charge between <lb/>
and$l)<lb/>
Come visit your local Planters Bank to open your Baseline<lb/>
Checking account today And go ahead and splurge a link tonight<lb/>
Planters<lb/>
Bank a<lb/>
n<lb/>
In civ<lb/>
"Oui<lb/>
s<lb/>
�<lb/>
3) TTv<lb/>
Youi<lb/>
� fimbuk<lb/>
5) The<lb/>
Total!)<lb/>
6) Living<lb/>
Epic<lb/>
7. Thin V,<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0012"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
TT IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 20,1988<lb/>
Program helps businesses<lb/>
RALIEGH(AP)�Small and<lb/>
medium-sized companies strug-<lb/>
gling to create new jobs in 91 rural<lb/>
counties will have a new source of<lb/>
financing under a $100 million<lb/>
loan program backed bv the<lb/>
stale's Rural Economic Develop- divers who cannot get one firm to<lb/>
ment Center.<lb/>
"What we seek to do today is<lb/>
provide dollars to entrepreneurs<lb/>
with good ideas William Friday,<lb/>
the chairman of the center, said<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
The North Carolina Enterprise<lb/>
Corp. will combine investments<lb/>
from banks, savings and loans,<lb/>
utilities and other businesses,<lb/>
plus funds from state govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Bv pooling their resources and<lb/>
spreading risk, the investors will<lb/>
be able to provide seed capital for<lb/>
companies that could nor obtain<lb/>
convential financing, officials<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Until now, if a local bank could<lb/>
not meet all the financing needs oi<lb/>
a sound business idea it had to say<lb/>
no said Vincent Lowe lr presi-<lb/>
dent-elect of the North Carolina<lb/>
Bankers' Association and vice-<lb/>
chairman of the rural center.<lb/>
"Now, the bank has a place to<lb/>
turn The $100 million will consist of<lb/>
He likened the new corporation $20 million in stock pu chases by<lb/>
to the North Carolina Reinsur- businesses, $20 million in state<lb/>
ancc Facility, through which in- investments and $60 million es-<lb/>
surance companies provide auto tablished through lines of credit<lb/>
liability coverage to high-risk from participating financial insti-<lb/>
tutions.<lb/>
Under current state law, tax-<lb/>
payer dollars can be used only for<lb/>
investments with successful track<lb/>
records. State Treasure Harlan<lb/>
Boyles said he would ask the<lb/>
Legislature next month for per-<lb/>
mission to invest in the new cor-<lb/>
insure them.<lb/>
North Carolina's rural<lb/>
comminities have suffered in re-<lb/>
cent vcars in contast to the boom<lb/>
experienced by the state's urban<lb/>
centers, largely because of the<lb/>
decline in traditional manufactur-<lb/>
ing employment and small farms, poration. The investmants could<lb/>
The North Carolina Enterprise<lb/>
Corp. will target loans and invest-<lb/>
ments toward the 91 counties<lb/>
without a city oi 50,000 people or<lb/>
more, said Billy Ray Hall, presi-<lb/>
dent of the Rural Economic De-<lb/>
velopment Center. Hans call for it<lb/>
take the form of common stock,<lb/>
preferred stock or debentures, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Legislature wall not make<lb/>
direct appropriations to the cor-<lb/>
poration, Friday said.<lb/>
When news reports of the im-<lb/>
to begin operating by the end of peding announcement surfaced<lb/>
this year. List week, Gow Jim Martin said he<lb/>
Most loans probably would be could not support the used of<lb/>
in the $100,000 to $200,000 range,<lb/>
but the cororation could make<lb/>
loans up to $1 million, Lowe said.<lb/>
Friday, the former University of<lb/>
North Carolina president, said he<lb/>
hoped the new coroporation<lb/>
would grow beyond its $100 mil-<lb/>
lion start-up size.<lb/>
taxpayer money for the financing<lb/>
pool.<lb/>
After details of the plan were<lb/>
made public Wednesday, guber-<lb/>
natorial spokesman Jim Sughure<lb/>
issued a cautious statcmant say-<lb/>
ing the loan fundmight be ac-<lb/>
ceptable to Governor Martin<lb/>
"It seems to be pretty consistent<lb/>
with the administration's ideas<lb/>
Sughrue said. "The proposal<lb/>
would limit the state's involve-<lb/>
mant to a treasurer's investment.<lb/>
That's much better than using<lb/>
appropriated funds. The fact that<lb/>
the funds would operate as a pri-<lb/>
vate corporation is also a point in<lb/>
its factor<lb/>
Lt. Gov. Bob Jordan, who ap-<lb/>
pointed the commission that con-<lb/>
ceived the idea of the Rural Eco-<lb/>
nomic Development Center,<lb/>
hailed the creation of the North<lb/>
Carolina Enterprise Corp say-<lb/>
ing it would foster "growth from<lb/>
within" the state.<lb/>
"This proposal is an outstand-<lb/>
ing example of how the public<lb/>
and private sector can work to-<lb/>
gether.<lb/>
More freshmen,<lb/>
part-timers<lb/>
(CPS) � An increasing number<lb/>
of freshmen at public colleges are<lb/>
part-timers, the college Board<lb/>
reported May 6.<lb/>
In its annual survey of who is<lb/>
going to college, the New York-<lb/>
based education group found<lb/>
freshman enrollments declined<lb/>
between 1980 and 1986, but that<lb/>
half of the drop occurred in one<lb/>
vear: between 1985 and '86.<lb/>
Two-year colleges, moreover,<lb/>
had a harder time attracting first-<lb/>
year students than four-year<lb/>
schools, spokeswoman Janice<lb/>
Gams noted.<lb/>
While the typical 4-ycar col-<lb/>
leges enrolled an average of 872<lb/>
freshmen in 1986 � down from<lb/>
942 in 1980 � the typical 2-year<lb/>
school registered 773 first-year<lb/>
students, a 19.8 percent drop from<lb/>
the 1980 average of 964 students.<lb/>
"Bringing more part-time stu-<lb/>
dents on indicates colleges and<lb/>
universities are marketing them-<lb/>
selves aggressively to people who<lb/>
already have jobs or wish to be<lb/>
retrained Gams added.<lb/>
This excited ECU graduate has decided to share the thrill with some friends as she lets the bubbly<lb/>
spray at commencement May 7. (Photos by Jon Jordan, Photolab)<lb/>
Beached whale finds new home<lb/>
FORT FISHER, N.C. (AP)-<lb/>
Sophia, an orphan pygmy sperm<lb/>
whale that washed ashore with its<lb/>
mother in Long Beach, has been<lb/>
flown to a new home in Horida,<lb/>
where it should survive, marine<lb/>
experts say.<lb/>
The calf, which was maned<lb/>
Sophia before aquarium workers<lb/>
learned it was a male, spent Tues-<lb/>
day night tied to a stretcher and<lb/>
was released into a pond behind<lb/>
the North Carolina Aquarium<lb/>
Wednesday morning.<lb/>
"It's stable now, considering it's<lb/>
out of the water, away from its<lb/>
mother, and had to ride in a truck<lb/>
and stay on a stretcher all night<lb/>
said Paul Barrington, the curator<lb/>
of the aquarium at Fort Fisher.<lb/>
"We got his circulation going by<lb/>
running him through the water a<lb/>
little<lb/>
The calf and a 10-foot female<lb/>
whale beached about 2:15 p.m.<lb/>
Tuesday. The larger whale was<lb/>
dying of an unknown cause.<lb/>
Veternarians killed the whale,<lb/>
which was sent tot he Smith-<lb/>
sonian Institution in Washington,<lb/>
where a nceropsv will be per- beach. Pygmy sperm whales are<lb/>
formed. not common in the area, and are<lb/>
Sophia ate small herring and usually found in temperate and<lb/>
small portions oi squid W;ednes- topical waters worldwide. More<lb/>
day. He had eaten about three timid than most whales, pygmy<lb/>
pounds of food by noon with sperm whales usually travel in<lb/>
aquarium employees helping his pods of 10, Barrington said.<lb/>
appetite bv placing the food up to<lb/>
his mouth. Staffers were trying to<lb/>
keep the calf relaxed to allow the<lb/>
food to digest properly.<lb/>
A veterinarian injected the<lb/>
"The mother whale might have<lb/>
been hurt or disoriented Frank<lb/>
Schwartz, a member of the West-<lb/>
ern Atlantic Whale Consortium,<lb/>
told the Wilmington Morning<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
whale, which was slightly injured Star in a telephone interview from<lb/>
in the beaching, with antibiotics<lb/>
and vitamins.<lb/>
On Wednesday right, WRAL-<lb/>
TV hired an airplane to take So-<lb/>
phia to a new home at Sea World<lb/>
near Orlando, Ha. The mammal<lb/>
was expected to arrive in Horida<lb/>
early today.<lb/>
Barrington said the calf showed<lb/>
no signs of disease or severe in-<lb/>
jury. "It has some minor cuts and<lb/>
bruises. Barnacles and crusted<lb/>
pilings may have contributed to<lb/>
those lacerations Barrington<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Experts could only guess what<lb/>
may have caused the whales to<lb/>
Morehead City. "Of course the<lb/>
young one will always stay with<lb/>
the mother<lb/>
4 SHIRTS �f<lb/>
CLEANED W M<lb/>
for mm<lb/>
36<lb/>
OUR RESUMES<lb/>
MAKE A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE<lb/>
Get a competitive edge in todays tough job market by<lb/>
having a clean professional-looking resume by AccuCopy<lb/>
Our resume packages let you choose between photo-<lb/>
typesetting, laser printing, or basic typewriter originals.<lb/>
In addition, we offer the widest range of paper and<lb/>
envelope choices in the area<lb/>
FAST COPIES<lb/>
FOR FAST TIMES<lb/>
� 24-hour service available<lb/>
� open early, open late<lb/>
� open six days a week<lb/>
THE RESUME PEOPLE<lb/>
nail:<lb/>
BO �<lb/>
1EK<lb/>
'(<lb/>
s tl<lb/>
)9<lb/>
i9<lb/>
19<lb/>
9<lb/>
'6<lb/>
)9<lb/>
:o<lb/>
Next to Chicos in the Georgetown Shops<lb/>
MARATHON<lb/>
RESTAURANTS<lb/>
Greek Owned &amp; Operated Since 1979<lb/>
Delivery Menu<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
GREEK DISHES<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
GREEK PASTRIES<lb/>
"Best Deal in Town"<lb/>
Mon. - Fri. 4-10<lb/>
Sat. 11-10<lb/>
752-0326<lb/>
or<lb/>
752-3753<lb/>
560 Evans St.<lb/>
This coupon must be presented<lb/>
with shirt order<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
<lb/>
georges<lb/>
hair designers<lb/>
r<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
 Watch for It<lb/>
Complete System<lb/>
LEADING EDGE wlth PHnter<lb/>
Model D $1195<lb/>
Includes: <lb/>
Leading Edge Model D<lb/>
� IBM PCXT compatible<lb/>
� 2 - 360W floppy drives<lb/>
� 512k RAM<lb/>
� Monochrome monitor<lb/>
� 20 month warranty<lb/>
Leading Edge Wordprocessor<lb/>
� 80.000 word spelling corrector<lb/>
Citizen I SOD printer<lb/>
� 180 characters per second<lb/>
� Graphics &amp; Near Letter Quaky<lb/>
System Starter Kit<lb/>
� I box diskettes<lb/>
� all software installed<lb/>
� printer cable<lb/>
� 500 sheets clean tear paper<lb/>
S &amp; R Computer Associates, Inc.<lb/>
530 Cotanche Street<lb/>
Downtown Greenville (Next to Bicycle Post)<lb/>
757-3279<lb/>
V<lb/>
tfS<lb/>
�<lb/>
V<lb/>
-t!<lb/>
MTR0DUCINGA<lb/>
CHKKING ACCOUNT <lb/>
THATWUONDT<lb/>
COST YOUTHS<lb/>
MUCH A MONTH.<lb/>
PLANTERS BASEUNICHKKMG<lb/>
I Open til 9 p.m. The Plaza<lb/>
0766'OfF<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
All Haircuts<lb/>
With This Ad<lb/>
Expires June 30<lb/>
You don't haw to keep two months of grocery money tied up in<lb/>
minimum balance requirements with Planters Baseline Checking<lb/>
In fact, this account will cost you less than a chicken dinner, just<lb/>
$3 per month with no minimum balance required<lb/>
lOFtfldMdu<lb/>
Write your first 10 checks of every month free (SO per check<lb/>
charge applies only to additional checks)<lb/>
Any time you get a last minute dinner imitation and need extra<lb/>
cash - no matter what time of the day or night - just drop by any of<lb/>
our Planters Green 24-hour automated teller machines and use<lb/>
your Planters Green Card There's no charge No mailer how many<lb/>
Baseline Checking withdrawals and deposits you make<lb/>
Your Planters Green Card can also be used at other ATMs that<lb/>
are part of the Rday"system. And the service charge for a Relay<lb/>
transaction is just SOt (most other banks charge between S�<lb/>
and$L)<lb/>
Come visit your local Planters Bank to open your Baseline<lb/>
Checking account today And go ahead and splurge a little tonight<lb/>
Planters<lb/>
Bank<lb/>
UK<lb/>
"Co<lb/>
fails<lb/>
Hv IU)I W<lb/>
�<lb/>
Frid<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
1<lb/>
�<lb/>
did <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
Prir<lb/>
By i�T 1 <lb/>
f -<lb/>
I<lb/>
a<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
i<lb/>
c �<lb/>
�<lb/>
not<lb/>
Ho<lb/>
ho <lb/>
the pol<lb/>
Burl<lb/>
launched b<lb/>
Incr<lb/>
1) Campej<lb/>
"Our Bclovi<lb/>
Sweetheart<lb/>
2) Velvet<lb/>
 Enigma<lb/>
3) The Ra<lb/>
Your Rcgrci<lb/>
4) Timbu<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
5) The Yi<lb/>
'Totally L<lb/>
6) Living<lb/>
Epic<lb/>
aJMaJl<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0013"/><lb/>
ES<lb/>
CE<lb/>
sum-<lb/>
XIIE<lb/>
, the<lb/>
:lic<lb/>
pre-<lb/>
1 job market by<lb/>
AccuCopy<lb/>
between photo-<lb/>
Titer originals.<lb/>
It of paper and<lb/>
opyJ<lb/>
k'ME PEOPLE<lb/>
o<lb/>
ON<lb/>
TS<lb/>
b ince 1979<lb/>
HES<lb/>
ES<lb/>
RIES<lb/>
own<lb/>
tt<lb/>
Fri. 4-10<lb/>
t. 11-10<lb/>
-0326<lb/>
or<lb/>
-3753<lb/>
Evans St.<lb/>
c v<lb/>
4?W,<lb/>
jpin<lb/>
bktnu<lb/>
lui<lb/>
;ira<lb/>
hq if<lb/>
I many<lb/>
mn<lb/>
Planters<lb/>
Bank.<lb/>
R<lb/>
THE EASTCAROi INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
MAY 20,1988 Page 9<lb/>
"Colors a worthy effort,<lb/>
fails due to plot problems<lb/>
4<lb/>
By CAROL WHTHERINGTON<lb/>
m vwcinc; roiTOR<lb/>
A 16 year-old youth died and two<lb/>
ompanions were seriously wounded<lb/>
Friday morning in an exchange of<lb/>
gunfire near Crenshaw Boulevard<lb/>
i nd the San la Monica Freeway in Los<lb/>
ngeles that left (heir stolen ear<lb/>
riddled with wore than forty bullets.<lb/>
Police believe that the<lb/>
i ncidentrepresents an escalation in<lb/>
: ing warfare.<lb/>
A police source said that two So-<lb/>
viet wade AK-47 rifles were recov-<lb/>
red nearbyTony Massengale, as<lb/>
istani director of the Community<lb/>
� Services Gaud Project, said he<lb/>
� not suprised that the youths have<lb/>
spohisticated<lb/>
. 'aponry "You're talking about<lb/>
�'  � that exceeds (that of) our<lb/>
. law enforcement and, in some<lb/>
- he National Guard<lb/>
The Los Angeles Times<lb/>
August 8, 1987<lb/>
I )ocs anyone remember the old<lb/>
"Dirty Harry" movie in which<lb/>
Harry's partner was a woman<lb/>
rookie? Yeah, well, "Colors" is<lb/>
done in the same style.Nothing<lb/>
new in the plot department, but it<lb/>
did address a very shocking issue<lb/>
- street gangs.<lb/>
II is a fact that there are approxi-<lb/>
matelv600 street canesboastinga<lb/>
membership of over 70,000 in the are uncovered in a shocking way,<lb/>
greater Los Angeles area. Direc- thanks to Hopper's fine directing,<lb/>
tor Dennis 1 lopper and producer The use of colors by the gangs,<lb/>
Robert Solo are shining a bright which dates back to the beginning<lb/>
and truthful light on this escalat- of gang fighting, carries much<lb/>
ing problem, and the stark truth of symbolism in "Colors hence the<lb/>
the movie is enough to excuse the name. The screen is constantly<lb/>
conflict between Sean Perm, play- flooded with plaid shirts all in<lb/>
ing McGavin,and Robert Duvall, blue or all in red or some other<lb/>
ft<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
a<lb/>
playing 1 lodges.<lb/>
McGavin is the cocky, tough<lb/>
rookiecop bent on proving that he<lb/>
is a no-nonsense man with muscle<lb/>
to back up his defiling mouth.<lb/>
1 lodges, on the other hand, is<lb/>
the seasoned cop with one eye on<lb/>
his pension and the other eye on<lb/>
the rising violence produced from<lb/>
gang warfare.<lb/>
"Colors" takes the viewer into<lb/>
the LA. streets, to the backdoors<lb/>
oi fighting gangs and hoodlums.<lb/>
Only now, the fighting has<lb/>
changed. Rumbles are a thing oi<lb/>
the past. 1 lopper draws on the fact<lb/>
that kids, some as young as 13, are<lb/>
wiping out gang members with<lb/>
Uzi submachine guns and Soviet<lb/>
made AK-47 rifles.<lb/>
The days of guns, broken bottle-<lb/>
necks and chains are long gone.<lb/>
The use oi high-tech weaponry is<lb/>
blatant throughout the movie, as<lb/>
is the use oi drugs. The drugs<lb/>
usage is not a new concept, but the<lb/>
drug dealing is. Many truths con-<lb/>
cerning the use of children in the<lb/>
transporting and selling oi drugs<lb/>
color that set the gangs apart.<lb/>
Hopper uses actual gang mem-<lb/>
bers in many of the scenes. More<lb/>
than once, Hopper found himself<lb/>
having to replace a gang member<lb/>
that was killed the night before<lb/>
shooting. Many of the young chil-<lb/>
dren and even some of the girls<lb/>
used in the movie had actual con-<lb/>
nections with thegangsin theL.A.<lb/>
area.<lb/>
See "COLORS page 10<lb/>
hrten<lb/>
ii<lb/>
(amlfs<lb/>
?n finta<lb/>
Pictured here are Sean Penn and Robert Duvall as they discipline a young street urchin in the movie<lb/>
"Colors a film about gang warfare in L.A The movie also focusus on the relationship between the<lb/>
two policemen as they combat the gang problem in their own unique wavs<lb/>
Run-PMC mess up the mix<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
I citurvs 1 dltnr<lb/>
"Radio Station,<lb/>
on vacation<lb/>
wonder where Run is,<lb/>
Damn, be patient<lb/>
from you, holmes. But you and Not that I want y'all to start<lb/>
Dee and Jay are back. With a new repeatin' yourselves, but I'd<lb/>
Lp that may or may not be the rather pop "King of Rock" in the<lb/>
soundtrack to your long awaited deck than this cassette. "Leather"<lb/>
movie, "Tougher Than Leather seems like y'ali are tiying to make<lb/>
Thing is, this album ain't really an album full of beach-rap, 70s<lb/>
cial (and what's the deal with that<lb/>
anvhow? You don't reallv need<lb/>
money that bad do ya?) it is the<lb/>
smoothest and simplest song.<lb/>
That's the key, you know, just<lb/>
cause you got access to million<lb/>
tougher than leather. The songs dinosaur-rap, psychedelic-rap � dollar equiptment and producers<lb/>
Well<lb/>
couple<lb/>
it's kinda hard. It's been r.<lb/>
of vears since we heard<lb/>
ain't tough, the rhymes aren't<lb/>
fresh hmmm. Maybe it is a stale<lb/>
kind of tough.<lb/>
Prince poses nude; shocks K-Mart<lb/>
even ragtime-rap.<lb/>
What happened to plain old<lb/>
rap? Or rock rap? Have the<lb/>
Beasties intimidated vou? Have<lb/>
the Fat Boys? I hate to think it, but<lb/>
it would just be another example<lb/>
of the lackeys rising up and get-<lb/>
don't mean you have to dub a<lb/>
rhyme to death. "Papa Crazv"<lb/>
and "They Call Us Run-DMC"<lb/>
both get swamped under all the<lb/>
special effects.<lb/>
"Marv, Mary" is fun stuff.<lb/>
"Mary, Mary Why you bug-<lb/>
By STEVE SOMM1 RS<lb/>
St.lit U:M<lb/>
Prince poses in the<lb/>
cover of his ne<lb/>
"Lovesexy Becaus<lb/>
mart and Wal-mart -<lb/>
sell it- .Billboard V.<lb/>
�rin�21vS?ll<lb/>
BJrotners seem to a<lb/>
album is going to s<lb/>
So, the way 1 see<lb/>
candy-ass stores li<lb/>
won't make anv m<lb/>
bufl i n the<lb/>
w record<lb/>
: this, K-<lb/>
tores won't<lb/>
 and<lb/>
�that this<lb/>
� 1 sell big.<lb/>
 I'm glad<lb/>
like Wal-mart<lb/>
noney oii this<lb/>
ke our funky<lb/>
!<lb/>
get down and sha<lb/>
butt record.<lb/>
The sir ;1 ' Alphabet St cer-<lb/>
tainly has the potential to do at<lb/>
least as u ell as his other hits. Like<lb/>
only Prim c can do, "Alphabet St<lb/>
puts you in that sex mood with<lb/>
sweat dripping off your brow.<lb/>
The rest oi the record does the<lb/>
same. When 1 listen to it, 1 often<lb/>
find myself doing these thrust<lb/>
movements that if! really thought<lb/>
about what 1 was doing, I'd get<lb/>
really embarrassed. But I'm usu-<lb/>
ally so into it, 1 don't care. This is,<lb/>
however, only a superficial<lb/>
aanalysis of what Prince is up to.<lb/>
He greets us in the beginning ot<lb/>
hisrecord by saying, " elcome to<lb/>
the new powergeneration. The<lb/>
reason my voice is so clear is be-<lb/>
c mse there is no smack in my<lb/>
brain<lb/>
Even though we all know now<lb/>
that cicarcttcs are the bij<lb/>
ler among the drugs, we have to<lb/>
be honest with ourselves. Some<lb/>
drugs are effectively keeping<lb/>
some communities down<lb/>
suggest love not drugs.<lb/>
1 here are also a lot oi references<lb/>
to a heaven and a hell, a god and a<lb/>
djcvil. JJieseare brics, fron the<lb/>
Urst cjrt i NoiV"ljagt tber is a<lb/>
devil because he talks so loud. He<lb/>
makes you do things your friends<lb/>
do, ban ;out with the crowd. But<lb/>
my Lord he's so quiet when he<lb/>
calls your name<lb/>
This, 1 suppose, is enough to<lb/>
think oi Prince as a funky Cat<lb/>
Stevens. The more you listen<lb/>
though, the more you have to<lb/>
agree. Like Prince I believe "We<lb/>
need love and honesty, peace and<lb/>
harmony<lb/>
1 believeIt's time for new edu-<lb/>
cation, the former rules don't<lb/>
apply. We need a power structure<lb/>
that breeds production instead of<lb/>
jacks who vandalize<lb/>
When he says "Nuclear Ban<lb/>
never stays in tune. Theyallknow<lb/>
the words but the music is<lb/>
doomed he has legitimate ideas.<lb/>
As a people we must "Dance On,<lb/>
Dance On" to a better world.<lb/>
But don't let all this make you<lb/>
think that Prince doesn't have the<lb/>
the female singers on the record)<lb/>
and the last couple lines are bold.<lb/>
"U jerk your body like a horny<lb/>
Prince pony would. Now run tell your<lb/>
mama about that Also, remem-<lb/>
ber again, he doesn't wear any<lb/>
clothes on the front cover.<lb/>
So, if your looking for a funky<lb/>
record to spend your summer<lb/>
with, one that has hope, love, and<lb/>
controversy on it, get "Lovesexy"<lb/>
by Prince. You won't regret it. It's<lb/>
hot, lyrically and musically and<lb/>
furthermore. Sheila E. is back on<lb/>
drums.<lb/>
Prihce recalls "The<lb/>
By STEVE SOMMERS<lb/>
SUf f Writer<lb/>
The song "When 2 R in Love<lb/>
originally was intended to be HS<lb/>
leased on "The Black Album" but<lb/>
In the past few months Prince found its release on "Lovesexy<lb/>
las made two records, but only One can only speculate why<lb/>
ane has been released. Prince decided to pull "The Black<lb/>
"Lovesexy" which contains the Album" and release "Lovesexy<lb/>
single "Alphabet St is about a Prince has not made any detailed<lb/>
week old and now in stores. comments on the matter.<lb/>
The other record The Black The band on "Lovesexy" is the<lb/>
Album was printed and accord- same band that Prince took on his<lb/>
ing to Warner Brothers (the dis- European tour, where "The Black<lb/>
tributor for Prince's label Paisley Album" has other players. Some<lb/>
Park) has claimed to have de- say the tone of the unrelcased<lb/>
stroyed all pressings on a request<lb/>
made by Prince.<lb/>
However, many bootlegs have<lb/>
made their way to streets in some<lb/>
larger cities. The Record Ex-<lb/>
change in Richmond, Virginia has<lb/>
bootleg copies for $100 a piece.<lb/>
Tape to tape dubbing copies have<lb/>
been reportedly found here in<lb/>
album was not what the Minne-<lb/>
sota song writter wanted for get-1<lb/>
eral public consumption. There-<lb/>
fore he released the much more<lb/>
hopeful "Lovesexy;<lb/>
Three radio stations on tip<lb/>
westcoast, including the San<lb/>
Fransico based KSOL has broad-<lb/>
casted the controversial "Black<lb/>
Album Warner Brothers imme-<lb/>
ting more famous than the mas- gin'?Mary, Mary I need your<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
'Took a little break,<lb/>
for goodness sake.<lb/>
Gotta chill, get ill,<lb/>
cold fishin' bv the lake.<lb/>
Take my brain off rappin'<lb/>
'member what's happenin' <lb/>
Well, that's cool. Now you've<lb/>
comeback and it's time to get cold<lb/>
huggin And "Miss Elaine" is<lb/>
good,straightforward heavy<lb/>
beats and guitar.<lb/>
I can understand v'all wantin'<lb/>
to experiment. Especially Jay.<lb/>
There's a lot he can do with all<lb/>
those records. But it wasn't the<lb/>
special sound effects that made<lb/>
"Rock Box" and "Caw �1 Rock it<lb/>
and COcky. Just remember there's Like This?" such gr<lb/>
It was the experiments in words<lb/>
and the guitar riffs. Are the good<lb/>
old days already over?<lb/>
I hope not. I keep trying to keep<lb/>
this album in context. "It must be<lb/>
a soundtrack. It must be a sound-<lb/>
track I say. But then "Ragtime"<lb/>
comes on.<lb/>
It has pretty much the best<lb/>
rhymes and story. But you both<lb/>
power.ul stuff on this sound too much like that wimpy<lb/>
Dana Dane. And those horns.<lb/>
It's just a bad match up. It's like<lb/>
one red Adidas and one white<lb/>
one. It ain't balanced.<lb/>
You got nothing to prove <lb/>
except that you can keep finding<lb/>
the right groove. So you skipped<lb/>
around too much this time. It ain't<lb/>
scratched permanent. I hope.<lb/>
a line between cocky and preten-<lb/>
tious.<lb/>
It's chill to have songs like<lb/>
"Beats to the Rhyme" where you<lb/>
reprise your signature songs. But<lb/>
things like "They Call Us Run-<lb/>
DMC" and "How'd Ya Do It Dee"<lb/>
are just overkill.<lb/>
But I don't mean to be dissin'<lb/>
you in public like this. There's<lb/>
some .<lb/>
record.<lb/>
"Run's House" is still the shit,<lb/>
even though we heard that way-<lb/>
back in "Krush Groove The new<lb/>
mix is tough, but nothing surpris-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The deffest song has to be<lb/>
"Beats to the Rhyme Even if it is<lb/>
the track on that Coke� commer-<lb/>
Publishers fight AIDS<lb/>
sgest kil-<lb/>
of Tipper Gore and Ed Mecse<lb/>
cringe with sanctimonious em-<lb/>
ban asment. Prince prints the<lb/>
words io Cat's rap (Cat is one ot<lb/>
This June the publishing indus- publishing do its sharer-<lb/>
Some thought it was crazy at<lb/>
Nashville, Tenn.(AP)-Louis<lb/>
Gossett Jr. and LeYar burton,<lb/>
reunited for the first time since the<lb/>
blockbuster 1977 miniseries<lb/>
"Roots predict the Christmas<lb/>
sequel will become a classic in<lb/>
itself, a kind of American answer<lb/>
to Charles Dickens' "A Christmas<lb/>
Carol<lb/>
"I think it's very wonderful to<lb/>
be able to anticipate sitting down<lb/>
with my loved ones and watching<lb/>
not only the Dickens classic, but<lb/>
'Roots Christmas' as well, and<lb/>
hopefully year after year. It has<lb/>
the potential to be a classic said<lb/>
Burton, 31, whose career was<lb/>
launched bv the miniseries 12<lb/>
I At east some of the material on diatelymademestationmail�irl try will join the fight against AIDS<lb/>
1 I. first, and others called it brave,<lb/>
but within one year Alyson � the<lb/>
founder of Alyson Publications in<lb/>
Boston, a publisher of mainly r;ay<lb/>
and lesbian books�had rccicved<lb/>
major commitments of funds and<lb/>
other contributions from such<lb/>
sources as The Book of the Month<lb/>
Club. The list of people and or-<lb/>
ganizations who have endorsed<lb/>
Producer Mark Wolper, the son which will suggest "specific ways the project includes over 20<lb/>
of executive producer David L. that average individuals can help members of Congress<lb/>
Wolper, said the sequel evolved make a difference in stopping This is the live<lb/>
"Roots" Xmas special made<lb/>
�ears ago.<lb/>
"This is as close to Dickens as<lb/>
we can get in an American story<lb/>
Gossett said on a break in filming<lb/>
on the grounds of the Hermitage,<lb/>
the plantation home of President<lb/>
Andrew Jackson. "This is ours<lb/>
and we should cherish it. It's our<lb/>
American classic<lb/>
"Roots" still ranks as the high-<lb/>
est-rated miniseriesever,and Part<lb/>
8 was the third highest-rated tele-<lb/>
vision show in history, according<lb/>
to A.C. Nielsen.<lb/>
The two-hour sequel, schedu-<lb/>
aled to air Dec.11 on ABC, also<lb/>
stars Avery Brooks, Shaun Cas-<lb/>
sidv, Michael Learned and Kate<lb/>
rThe Black Album" is elsewhere, copies of the record back to them. 1 with "You Can Do Something<lb/>
'� ai"ul About AIDS a paperback book<lb/>
that will be given away � free of<lb/>
charge � in bookstores across the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
The book will contain 45 chap-<lb/>
ters by a vast array of celebrities,<lb/>
well-known writers, politicians,<lb/>
union leaders � even a high<lb/>
school class in Vermont � each of<lb/>
Incredible WZMB Top 13<lb/>
1) Camper Van Beethoven -<lb/>
"Our Beloved Revolutionary<lb/>
Sweetheart" - Virgin<lb/>
2) Velvet Elvis - "Velvet Elvis<lb/>
 Enigma<lb/>
3) The Rave Ups - " Book of<lb/>
Your Regrets " - Epic<lb/>
4) Timbuk 3 - "Eden Alley" -<lb/>
FRS<lb/>
5) The Young Fresh Fellows -<lb/>
'Totally Lost" - Frontier<lb/>
6) Living Colors - "Vivid" -<lb/>
ThinVYnitfRflrm-thg<lb/>
Mulgrew.<lb/>
The story was written bv David<lb/>
Lyre based on an outline by Alex<lb/>
Haley, who grew up in the small<lb/>
western Tennessee town of Hen<lb/>
ning and wrote the Pulitzer Prize<lb/>
winning book "Roots" after trac-<lb/>
ing his ancestry 200 years.<lb/>
In the sequel, Kunta Kinte<lb/>
(Burton) and fiddler (Gossett)<lb/>
clandestinely plan to lead a group<lb/>
of slaves to freedom on Christmas<lb/>
Eve in 1770.<lb/>
Gossett, who in 1982 won an<lb/>
Academy Award for his support-<lb/>
ing role in "An Officer and a<lb/>
Gentleman said he expected a<lb/>
new generation to discover<lb/>
"Roots" through the sequel.<lb/>
"It'sa new kindof audience, the<lb/>
America has evolved<lb/>
from his father's idea that there<lb/>
were too few black Christmas<lb/>
shows.<lb/>
The film's budget is about $4<lb/>
million, expensive for a two-hour<lb/>
television movie, said Bernie<lb/>
Sofronski, co-executive producer.<lb/>
In comparision, the last 12 hours<lb/>
of "Roots" cost $6 million, he said.<lb/>
Burton said the quality of the<lb/>
script convinced him he should<lb/>
participate in the sequel. Before<lb/>
this, he said, he avoided roles<lb/>
similar to Kunta Kinte.<lb/>
"For the first five years of my<lb/>
career, I did whatever I felt was<lb/>
stopping<lb/>
AIDS.<lb/>
The story behind this book is<lb/>
one of several "firsts Its publica-<lb/>
tion will mark the first time that<lb/>
the publishing industry as a<lb/>
whole has moblized behind a<lb/>
social issue and exercised its con-<lb/>
siderable power to influence the<lb/>
American culture by funding and<lb/>
supporting a single project.<lb/>
It will also be the first book ever<lb/>
given away on such a grand scale,<lb/>
absolutely free, without serving<lb/>
Aid' or the<lb/>
'Farm Aid' of the publishing in-<lb/>
dustry Alyson says; "It's a mas-<lb/>
sive effort to raise the public's<lb/>
consciousness about this terrible<lb/>
disease by showing people ex-<lb/>
actly what they can do to fight it. I<lb/>
think that those who decide to join<lb/>
that fight will find, as I did, that<lb/>
they are both surprised and grati-<lb/>
fied by the enthusiasm and sup-<lb/>
port they will rccicve from oth-<lb/>
ers<lb/>
Sasha Alyson undertook his<lb/>
first publishing venture in 1968,at<lb/>
the age of 16, when he started an<lb/>
young people that maybe ncccssary in order to create dis<lb/>
Spanish Cave" - Frontier<lb/>
8) Soul Asylum - "Sometime<lb/>
to Return" - A&amp;M<lb/>
9) Dancing Hoods  Hallelu-<lb/>
iah Anyway" - Relativity<lb/>
10) Joan Jett &amp; The Blackhearfc<lb/>
- "Up Your Alley" - Blackheart<lb/>
11) Bar-B-Q Killers - "ComeLy<lb/>
- Twilight<lb/>
12) Toni Childs  Union" -<lb/>
A&amp;M<lb/>
tancc between Kunta and LeVar<lb/>
he said. "Five years ago, the<lb/>
13) The Witnesses  Scene of<lb/>
the Crime" - Raizer<lb/>
I<lb/>
as a premium or as incentive t<lb/>
buy something else.<lb/>
It is also the story of how a small underground newspaper in his<lb/>
company � one that few people high school, which earned articles<lb/>
had ever heard of�succeeded in about the Vietnam War, the draft,<lb/>
: , , - lU , mobilizingboththegiantsandthe race discrimination, student<lb/>
, w i , � y fu l V ciwaniriniKindiistrv nchts, and other issues the official<lb/>
thought of playing the character "�2Ed marketm? student publicaiton ignored.<lb/>
again and perhaps forever and to join in producing, marketing, r o .<lb/>
inextricably linking LeVar and and distributing a single product SlfLS?<lb/>
Kunta was a lot more scary. - all for free. "f suspended ��"�<lb/>
"I don't feel the fear so much of The project's coordinator, but for Alyson i was �iy the<lb/>
never being able to step out of the Sasha Alyson, concicved the idea Tg ?f ?? "<lb/>
shadow of Kunta for the book when a publishing be marked by boldness and a clear<lb/>
Burton has shed the image in a friend asked a poignant n<lb/>
successful new role as a member questionFashion, cntertain-<lb/>
thc chance to win anybody's pri- of the crew in the syndicated tele- ment, music: all our fellow indus-<lb/>
mary, much less running or think- vision scries "Star Trek: The Next tries in the Arts have found a way<lb/>
ing about it? The consciousness of Generation to help fight AIDS. How can<lb/>
couldn't have grasped what the<lb/>
show about the first time Gos-<lb/>
sett said.<lb/>
"It's very special , very spiri-<lb/>
tual<lb/>
"It's even better because of, 1<lb/>
guess, the mutual growth of all of<lb/>
us and the growth of America<lb/>
especially he said.<lb/>
"Twelve years ago, do you<lb/>
think Jesse Jackson would have<lb/>
In 1977 Alyson founded a book<lb/>
distribution company, Carrier<lb/>
See AIDS, page 10<lb/>
.<lb/>
MNM��<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0014"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
10<lb/>
Till EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 20,1988<lb/>
"Rambo" author has very<lb/>
lucrative deal with movie<lb/>
productions of character<lb/>
m�Mmfmm&amp;<lb/>
�V YORK (AD-English pro-<lb/>
sor David Morrell had been<lb/>
thinking about the returning vet-<lb/>
erans in his classes, and about a<lb/>
World War 11 hero, when he be-<lb/>
gan work in 1969 on his first<lb/>
novel.<lb/>
Published in 1972, "First Blood"<lb/>
had an angry hero named Rambo.<lb/>
Ten years later it became a movie<lb/>
starring Sylvester Stallone.<lb/>
"The original intent was that<lb/>
the first novel would be an anti-<lb/>
war novel to make vivid what it<lb/>
would be like to have a war in the<lb/>
United States like whal was going<lb/>
on in Asia, how senseless it was<lb/>
Morrell said.<lb/>
A secondary theme was the<lb/>
stress suffered by returning veter-<lb/>
ans.<lb/>
The inspiration came from vet-<lb/>
erans in his classes, Morrell said,<lb/>
and from the life oi Audio<lb/>
Murphy, the actor who was<lb/>
America's most decorated CA in<lb/>
World War II.<lb/>
"Audio Murphy had done a<lb/>
film called To 1 Icll and back' in<lb/>
which he dramatized his experi-<lb/>
ences in the war Morrell said,<lb/>
before his death in ls71, he had<lb/>
begun a book talking about the<lb/>
problems he had after coming<lb/>
home, Morrell added.<lb/>
The movie version of "First<lb/>
Blood" was generally faithful to<lb/>
the book. Both told of a fight<lb/>
which began with a small-town<lb/>
sheriff leaning on an unkempt<lb/>
drifter and ended with a town in<lb/>
flames from the rage of a single<lb/>
Vietnam veteran.<lb/>
In the book, Rambo's body<lb/>
count exceeded 2( including<lb/>
some National Guardsmen shot<lb/>
in retreat. In the film, he killed<lb/>
two or three.<lb/>
Rambo ended the book lull oi<lb/>
bullet holes and with his head<lb/>
blown off by his former com-<lb/>
manding officer. In the movie, he<lb/>
walked off in handcuffs, ready for<lb/>
sequels.<lb/>
Morrell doesn't mind at all. In<lb/>
fact, he wrote books based on the<lb/>
first sequel, "Rambo: First Blood<lb/>
Tart 11 and the upcoming<lb/>
"Rambo III" as well as the first<lb/>
draft of the script for "Rambo 111<lb/>
"Rambo II" was not only a<lb/>
much bigger film than "Rambo I<lb/>
but it made the character part of<lb/>
the nation's political vocabulary.<lb/>
"I sort of have to chuckle at that,<lb/>
that 1 should have invented a<lb/>
character whose name has en-<lb/>
tered the language Morrell said.<lb/>
"As I look back in my lifetime, I<lb/>
guess the only novelist who did<lb/>
the same is Jascph Heller with<lb/>
'Catch-22<lb/>
Morrell owns stock in Carolco,<lb/>
the production company that<lb/>
bought the film and merchandis-<lb/>
ing rights for Rambo.<lb/>
"I have profit participation in<lb/>
the pictures, and I do have profit<lb/>
participation in the merchandis-<lb/>
ing, and I also get a flat fee when-<lb/>
ever they make a feature said the<lb/>
author, who came to New York<lb/>
with Stallone and co-star Richard<lb/>
Crenna to promote the film.<lb/>
"And, as you might expect, it's<lb/>
been lucrative<lb/>
Morrell owns the literary copy-<lb/>
right, so he gets the lion's share of<lb/>
book profits. "Rambo: First Blood<lb/>
Part II" was a best seller even<lb/>
before the film came out.<lb/>
Morrell's "Brotherhood of the<lb/>
Rose a book without Rambo,<lb/>
was picked up by NBC-TV as the<lb/>
basis fora mini-series planned for<lb/>
next season.<lb/>
"First Blood" was written while<lb/>
Morrell was earning a doctorate at<lb/>
Penn State University, and he<lb/>
went on to teach at Iowa State<lb/>
University before becoming a<lb/>
full-time writer in 1986.<lb/>
One of the ironies of the Rambo<lb/>
phenomenon is that neither Mor-<lb/>
rell nor Stallone had any part in<lb/>
the Vietnam War. Born in Can-<lb/>
ada, Morrell was 23 when he came<lb/>
to the United States in 1967. And<lb/>
like Stallone, he was something of<lb/>
a tough kid.<lb/>
"My father died in the Second<lb/>
World War. I never knew the<lb/>
man said Morrell, who grew up<lb/>
in Kitchener-Waterloo near<lb/>
Toronto. "I was raised by my<lb/>
mother, who was a single parent<lb/>
for quite a while, and was forced<lb/>
to give me up at times to a foster<lb/>
home.<lb/>
"Larcr-we didn't have very<lb/>
much money, we didn't get a<lb/>
phone until I was 12-1 spent most<lb/>
of my time in back alleys with<lb/>
street gangs. The guys I hung<lb/>
around with went to prison. I<lb/>
became a professor<lb/>
His salvation was the TV show,<lb/>
"Route 66 Morrell identified<lb/>
with George Maharis' streetwise<lb/>
character, and he wrote a fan let-<lb/>
ter to scries writer Sterling Sil-<lb/>
liphant.<lb/>
Silliphant's reply, encouraging<lb/>
his young correspondent to take a<lb/>
stab at writing, is framed and<lb/>
hanging on a wall at home in Iowa<lb/>
City, Morrell said.<lb/>
The Rambo books, he said, deal<lb/>
in some serious issues but are<lb/>
basically escapism.<lb/>
"Life for most people is at best<lb/>
boring, and I use boring almost an<lb/>
existential sense as Sartre docs in<lb/>
'Nausea where it weighs you<lb/>
down and you have a powerful<lb/>
sense of what is my reason for<lb/>
getting up this morning?"<lb/>
As his 15-ycar-old son lay dying<lb/>
oi cancer last year, Morrell said<lb/>
books helped him survive.<lb/>
"I'd be sitting there for like eight<lb/>
hours at a time, and I would be<lb/>
readine a book bv mv friend<lb/>
Stephen King. And I don't know<lb/>
if I could have stayed sane for<lb/>
those eight houre if it hadn't been<lb/>
for Steve<lb/>
"I could not have read John<lb/>
Updike under those circum-<lb/>
stances. It would have been too<lb/>
real Morrell said. "What<lb/>
needed to do was get out of that<lb/>
roomand an a s�ensc�4et out of my<lb/>
head - and Steve did it for me. So<lb/>
if I can do that for somebody else,<lb/>
I think I've performed a social<lb/>
function<lb/>
"he<lb/>
last Carolinian.<lb/>
tide,<lb/>
lotlvatioh,<lb/>
ixperience,<lb/>
rlends.<lb/>
Apply today.<lb/>
<lb/>
"Colors" gives an accurate picture of gang life<lb/>
� r I C. .� O B n( ViL L-i f!imranni'e 1'H VV.lit until it rnmrc nn in thr<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
Another good move on<lb/>
 topper's part was the casting.<lb/>
Penn and Duvall worked well ,<lb/>
creating just enough conflict to<lb/>
carry off the inner plot and, at the<lb/>
same time, expose the raw, hu-<lb/>
man side of both actors. Tenn has<lb/>
played in movies of this sort be-<lb/>
fore, but his acting is honed to a<lb/>
sharpness that has, until now,<lb/>
remained dormant.<lb/>
One of the best scenes in the film<lb/>
is after the climactic shootout that<lb/>
costs Hedges his life. McGavin<lb/>
shows he has learned something<lb/>
about the job when he tries to pass<lb/>
on some of Hodges' knowledge<lb/>
on to his new, hotheaded partner.<lb/>
The movie's best asset was the<lb/>
soundtrack. It was great! Thanks<lb/>
to Ice-T, Salt and Pepa, Los Lobos,<lb/>
Big Daddy Kane, Rick James, Erik<lb/>
B. and Rakim and many others,<lb/>
"Colors" carries one of the livliest<lb/>
soundtracks imaginable for a<lb/>
movie of this sort. The music is<lb/>
strong, tough, fast-paced with<lb/>
just enough softness and heart to<lb/>
appeal to everyone. The big<lb/>
winner is the title track, "Colors<lb/>
which was written and per-<lb/>
formed by Ice-T .<lb/>
In filming "Colors Hopper<lb/>
used a sharp eve to spot the ideal<lb/>
street locations. Most of the shoot-<lb/>
ing was done on location, which<lb/>
gave the viewer a special surprise1.<lb/>
Many muralled walls in L.A. were<lb/>
used as backgrounds. One par-<lb/>
ticular wall displayed a painting<lb/>
o! Nikki Giovanni's I'd wait until it comes out in tnc<lb/>
poem"Dreams It was a bcauti- video store before I'd spend $4.50<lb/>
fill piece obviously done by an to see it at the theater. Penn and<lb/>
actual street "militant perhaps Duvall have both played in better<lb/>
one such as Giovanni's poem movies. In the Micah Harris tradi-<lb/>
talks about. tion, I rate this movie 3 catheads.<lb/>
Overall, this movie was okay.<lb/>
�a<lb/>
lUnttad<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
Why not com by th� REAL Crisis Intsrvsntlon Csntsr 312 E.<lb/>
10th St; or call 7S8-HELP, For Frso Confidential Counseling or As-<lb/>
�itt�i��<lb/>
Our Voluntsors snd Staff srs on duty 24 hrs. s day, yaar around,<lb/>
in ordsr to assist you in virtually any probJam arsa you might hava.<lb/>
Our longstanding goal has always boon to prasarvs snd anhsnes<lb/>
tha quality of Ufa for you and our community.<lb/>
Ltc�nMd And Accredited By Th� Stat North Carolina<lb/>
t<lb/>
UDS book is<lb/>
distributed<lb/>
Continued from page c<lb/>
Pigeon, to meet the needs of small<lb/>
progressive and feminist publish-<lb/>
ers in the U.S. and Great Britain,<lb/>
and 1979 he began publishing<lb/>
books under his own imprint,<lb/>
Ah son Publications.<lb/>
AJyson Publications has been<lb/>
active'in the fight against AIDS<lb/>
since 1982, when it published the<lb/>
first! book to deal with the issue,<lb/>
The Advocate Guide to Gay<lb/>
Health and the company is<lb/>
donating one third of its mail<lb/>
order income during the month of<lb/>
March 1988 to the People with<lb/>
AIDS Coalition and the American<lb/>
Federation for AIDS Research.<lb/>
FOUR STAR<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
� � � �<lb/>
SB<lb/>
peli81<lb/>
65<lb/>
.3300<lb/>
Hoof- ajl - t<lb/>
�S<lb/>
��<lb/>
r<lb/>
coupon�<lb/>
758-3300<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
2 SMALL PIZZAS<lb/>
(16 Slices � 1 Item)<lb/>
PLUS 2 COKES<lb/>
OI$LY $8.20<lb/>
�Sjvc $7 15 When Buying Doubles<lb/>
One Cou pen Per Vi:ia w. r �� �<lb/>
Coupon F.xpircs<lb/>
7-188<lb/>
�aw m �� aai coupon aw aaai aaw<lb/>
300 f 758-3300<lb/>
� . Greenville .<lb/>
I I ANY BIG 12" SUB I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
PLUS 1 COKE<lb/>
$4.25<lb/>
Save $.85<lb/>
One Coupon Per Pizza<lb/>
ires<lb/>
coupon<lb/>
Toiio-jieu. f 1 Coupon I.�pires ToLauio, �<lb/>
DriA. M 7-1-88 w-r- M<lb/>
� aaai aa aa� at �� COUDOn a aaai a�<lb/>
AWUMjOfAMtAL <lb/>
105 Airport Rd.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
(919)758-0327<lb/>
FAMILY RESTAURANTS<lb/>
I <lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
1<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
VILLAGE<lb/>
MALPASS MUFFLER<lb/>
See Us For<lb/>
All Your<lb/>
Automotive<lb/>
Needs<lb/>
2616 East 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
758-7676<lb/>
Donna<lb/>
Edwards<lb/>
owner<lb/>
Bring in this ad for a 15 Discount<lb/>
on a purchase of $10 or more<lb/>
with valid E.C.U. I.D.<lb/>
20 Gallon Aquarium<lb/>
Long with Hood &amp; Light<lb/>
 rj This month only<lb/>
WEEKLY FISH SPECIALS!<lb/>
Our Marine Room has all the fish and marine<lb/>
life you'll need for a perfect Saltwater tank.<lb/>
511 Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834 Phone 756-9222<lb/>
At the<lb/>
Bingo-Ice<lb/>
Cream Party<lb/>
Tuesday, May 24 and Tuesday, June 7.<lb/>
3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center - Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
FREE ICE CREAM � FUN &amp; GAMES � PRIZES<lb/>
Sponsored by Student Union Events Committee<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
-<lb/>
:<lb/>
�:<lb/>
MENDENHALL BOWNLING CENTER<lb/>
SUMMER OPERATING SCHEDULE<lb/>
Monday - Friday - 2:00 - 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
EXTENDED HOURS<lb/>
2:00 - 10:30 P.M.<lb/>
JUNE 13, 20, 27, JULY 27<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS: FACULTYSTAFF DAY<lb/>
BOWL ONE GAME, GET SECOND GAME AT 12 PRICE<lb/>
THURSDAYS: ROCK - A - BOWL<lb/>
BOWL TO TODAY'S HOTTEST HITS<lb/>
FRIDAYS: RENT - A - LANE<lb/>
RENT - A- LANE FOR $4.00 PER HOUR<lb/>
ROCK - A - BOWL<lb/>
EVERY THURSDAY THIS SUMMER<lb/>
2:00 - 4:30 P.M.<lb/>
BOWL TO TODAYS HOTTEST HITS<lb/>
LIVE D.J.<lb/>
I<lb/>
5<lb/>
<lb/>
�:<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
d?<lb/>
<lb/>
GV<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
sCrv<lb/>
s<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
ia<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
 tinipus C iimu -<lb/>
OKA LASS, THr<lb/>
CHAPVFRn 3 THRU<lb/>
ANP W 'LL l1Ut<lb/>
TUESDAY. WMt M<lb/>
pAreR is rvt IN<lb/>
 <lb/>
CON<lb/>
v<lb/>
-i<lb/>
�H<lb/>
irit<lb/>
t Jl<lb/>
?v<lb/>
K<lb/>
i)<lb/>
a<lb/>
-T-<lb/>
11<lb/>
b<lb/>
I I<lb/>
-A<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0015"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 20,1988<lb/>
,1ILY RESTAURANTS<lb/>
�5l<lb/>
FFLER<lb/>
ee Us For<lb/>
All Your<lb/>
utomotive<lb/>
Needs<lb/>
tsl  0th Street<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
8-7676<lb/>
nna<lb/>
A-arils<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
or more<lb/>
I.D.<lb/>
arium<lb/>
Light<lb/>
ft-Q" " J<lb/>
rty<lb/>
, June 7m<lb/>
Room<lb/>
� PRIZES<lb/>
Cf<lb/>
ENTER<lb/>
EDULE<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
WL<lb/>
�<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
�<lb/>
0<lb/>
s<lb/>
r �<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
g n<lb/>
? n<lb/>
 I<lb/>
I 1)<lb/>
o<lb/>
fa<lb/>
D<lb/>
ir<lb/>
�<lb/>
� a<lb/>
:r<lb/>
I<lb/>
� r<lb/>
5<lb/>
2 �<lb/>
1'<lb/>
i:<lb/>
1<lb/>
am pus Comics<lb/>
OKAY LASS, THIS AiELE.VNP RfAD<lb/>
C HAPTFRS 3 THRU c, vNDAV H THRU 7,<lb/>
ANP W'LL HAVE OUR FlKSV JUI<lb/>
luesrAY. REMenREHh your terw<lb/>
PAPER ts T�Of IN JWEEKs<lb/>
2<lb/>
X D LIKE JO 3&amp;T W ttANPS<lb/>
OtHTHE- SUCKER THArTOi.n<lb/>
nt SUMMER SCHOOL WASXLA(D IsAcw'<lb/>
b<lb/>
Arm Fall Off Bov<lb/>
ByRACER<lb/>
The Li'l<lb/>
T  "V<lb/>
'ARM, IP UKE YOLi to AA�er A<lb/>
AMNiy HAWSHAKElAt<lb/>
Aj<lb/>
MW3<lb/>
�N<lb/>
What it is, readers. As you can see, summer has cut down Fun-N-Games to<lb/>
a measly half-page! But we will try to balance that out by giving you quality<lb/>
humor, such as the latest adventure of Arm Fall-Off Bov!<lb/>
WHOA' IbUCSS VIE<lb/>
A 6R�AT TEAM,<lb/>
ARM FALL-OFF BW<lb/>
SUMMER !8S<lb/>
CONCERTS ON THE MALL<lb/>
$NEED CASH?$<lb/>
We Buy &amp; Sell<lb/>
ANYTHING &amp; EVERYTHING<lb/>
$ 1CLOTHES 1 - MUST BE NICE! ESPECIALLY JEANS, CASUAL<lb/>
&amp; SPORT CLOTHES<lb/>
$ UEWELRYI - ANY GOLD OR SILVERREGARDLESS OF<lb/>
CONDITION)<lb/>
$ SMALL APPLIANCES! - microwaves, fans, irons.<lb/>
TOASTERS, HOT PLATES, ETC<lb/>
$ 1ELECTRONICSI - t.v stereo, c.d v.c.r etc.<lb/>
$<lb/>
- MUST BE IN GOOD CONDITION.<lb/>
(Girls - We are now buying nice costume<lb/>
jewelry and nice lingerie!)<lb/>
REMEMBER!<lb/>
When You Need Cash<lb/>
Sell To Coin &amp; Ring Man!<lb/>
When You Need To Buy Anything,<lb/>
Save On "Like New" at Coin &amp; Ring Man<lb/>
Q�<lb/>
CLOTHES<lb/>
At<lb/>
10:00-5:00 M-F<lb/>
10:00-3:00 Sat.<lb/>
The Coin &amp; Ring Man<lb/>
400 S. Evans St.<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0016"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Pirates hopes in CAA tourney<lb/>
dashed by Pats and Spiders<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Spoils Editor<lb/>
East Carolina's hopes of<lb/>
winning its second straight<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
baseball championship were<lb/>
dashed last Saturday when the<lb/>
Pirates were trounced 15-2 in the<lb/>
loser's bracket of the tournament<lb/>
by Richmond.<lb/>
The loss was the second straight<lb/>
for the Pirates, who opened the<lb/>
tourney, which is played at the<lb/>
Diamond in Richmond, with a<lb/>
solid 9-1 victory over William &amp;<lb/>
Mary.<lb/>
The problem for the Pirates in<lb/>
the contest came in the pitching<lb/>
department as Brian Berckmann,<lb/>
who started the game and took<lb/>
the loss, went only one-plus<lb/>
inning, giving up three runs<lb/>
before he was removed.<lb/>
Johnathon Jenkins then got the<lb/>
call and he gave up seven runs,<lb/>
three earned, in one and one-<lb/>
thirds inning of pitching as the<lb/>
Spiders went on a eight-run tear<lb/>
in the third frame.<lb/>
Richmond added four more<lb/>
runs to close out the scoring in the<lb/>
contest and placed a few more<lb/>
nails in the Pirates coffin.<lb/>
The sixth-seeded Spiders, on<lb/>
Linksters pick up<lb/>
signees Thursday<lb/>
East Carolina Universitv head<lb/>
golf coach Hal Morrison<lb/>
announced the signings of two<lb/>
high school seniors for the<lb/>
program next year.<lb/>
Douglas Hoey, from Dearborn<lb/>
Mich and Donnie Cooper, from<lb/>
Knoxville, Tenn are the two<lb/>
signees.<lb/>
Hoey was the medalist this year<lb/>
at the Michigan PGA Junior<lb/>
Tournament and finished 16th<lb/>
overall at the PGA National<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
"He's (Hoye) very good and he<lb/>
wins about everything up there<lb/>
(Michigan) Morrison said.<lb/>
"He's also an honor student. He is<lb/>
going to graduate as<lb/>
valedictorian of his class with a<lb/>
3.98 grade-point-average and<lb/>
attend the medical school here<lb/>
(E�U)<lb/>
Cooper, who attended Hall's<lb/>
High School, was the 1988<lb/>
Tennessee state high school<lb/>
champion.<lb/>
"Cooper is a very strong golfer<lb/>
and I feel that he has a lot of<lb/>
potential here at ECU Morrison<lb/>
said<lb/>
Needless to say, with the<lb/>
credentials these two golfers<lb/>
possess, Morrison is pleased to<lb/>
have them aboard.<lb/>
"I think these two are as good of<lb/>
golfers as we could have hoped to<lb/>
get Morrison said. "Both of<lb/>
them are good enough to play in<lb/>
our top three or four right off I<lb/>
believe.<lb/>
"I feel fortunate that we got<lb/>
both of them Morrison said. " I<lb/>
was going after three golfers that I<lb/>
felt were top notch and I had said<lb/>
that if I got just one of them that I<lb/>
would be very fortunate and I am<lb/>
just real pleased to get both<lb/>
Morrison also said he hopes to<lb/>
sign a third golfer, a junior college<lb/>
transfer from Florida, to a<lb/>
scholarship within the next week.<lb/>
� TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
the other hand, got a solid<lb/>
performance from Don Rehman,<lb/>
who hurled all nine innings on the<lb/>
mound giving up eight hits to<lb/>
push his record to 6-4 for the year.<lb/>
The Pirates only scoring of the<lb/>
contest came in the first inning<lb/>
when Calvin Brown walked and<lb/>
scored all the way from first on a<lb/>
double to left by Jay McGraw.<lb/>
After McGraw had moved to<lb/>
third on the throw to the plate at<lb/>
home, he scored on a bunt single<lb/>
by John Adams.<lb/>
In the Pirates first loss of the<lb/>
tournament, George Mason<lb/>
ripped 12 hits to pull away to an<lb/>
easy 10-2 victory.<lb/>
Jim Richbourg was the main<lb/>
cog at the plate for the Patriots as<lb/>
he picked up a quartet of RBI's<lb/>
with a pair of hits.<lb/>
Also aiding George Mason was<lb/>
Kevin Kobylinski and James<lb/>
Timbers as each collected three<lb/>
hits each.<lb/>
The Pirates again broke out to<lb/>
the lead in the first inning when<lb/>
David Ritchie scored on a run-<lb/>
scoring single by Brown.<lb/>
The Patriots battled back with a<lb/>
pair of runs in the second to lead 2-<lb/>
1.<lb/>
The Pirates managed to tic the<lb/>
score in the third inning when<lb/>
Brown delivered an RBI double to<lb/>
center to score catcher Chris<lb/>
Cauble. ECU, however, would<lb/>
not see the lead again.<lb/>
The Patriots exploded for five<lb/>
runs in the fourth inning to grab a<lb/>
7-2 lead and from there, they<lb/>
never looked back.<lb/>
Jake Jacobs picked up the loss<lb/>
for the Pirates as he went three<lb/>
and one-third innings gave up<lb/>
seven hits and seven runs.<lb/>
The tournament results for the<lb/>
young Pirate squad brought their<lb/>
season to a close with a final mark<lb/>
of 33-14 being posted. The Pirates<lb/>
will return everybody from this<lb/>
year's squad next season except<lb/>
for senior first baseman Jay<lb/>
McGraw and senior pitcher Gary<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
i v<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
i<lb/>
li<lb/>
The Pirate baseball team's season came to a close last weekend with a pair of losses in the Colonial Athletic<lb/>
Association baseball tournament. In the above photos, which were taken earlier this year, Calvin Broun (top<lb/>
photo) tries to leg out a play at first base at Harrington Field and senior slugger Jay McGraw prepare to swat<lb/>
a pitch. The baseballers wound up the season with a 33-14 mark. (File Photos)<lb/>
Impressive list developing for Eastern Carolina golf event<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
There is already quite an<lb/>
impressive list of stars set to join<lb/>
Michael Jordan for the fourth<lb/>
annual Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Celebrity Golf Classic scheduled<lb/>
for June 19 at the Greenville<lb/>
Countrv Club.<lb/>
J<lb/>
According to tournament<lb/>
heads, this year's tournament<lb/>
may just be the biggest one yet.<lb/>
One reason for that could be<lb/>
linked to the change in timing for<lb/>
the tournament.<lb/>
In year's past, the tourney has<lb/>
been held in the fall when a lot of<lb/>
stars had little time set aside in<lb/>
their schedules to make guest<lb/>
appearances. The obvious answer<lb/>
to that was to move the date of the<lb/>
event up some.<lb/>
Among those stars who have<lb/>
already promised to appear at the<lb/>
tournament along with Jordan are<lb/>
Kim Zimmer, star on "The<lb/>
Guiding Light" soap opera; A.C<lb/>
Weary, television and movie star;<lb/>
Ron Wooten, New England<lb/>
Patriots football player; Bob<lb/>
Debardelaben, weather man for<lb/>
WRAL-TV, and Leslie Nielson,<lb/>
television and movie star.<lb/>
Also, Dudley Bradley, former<lb/>
All-American for North Carolina<lb/>
and current New York Nets<lb/>
basketball player; Claude Atkins,<lb/>
Sheriff Lobo on television and<lb/>
movie star; Mike Caldwell,<lb/>
former pro baseball player; Dinah<lb/>
Goodman, former actress on Hee<lb/>
Haw, and Tim Culbretson, owner<lb/>
of Cinema Sports and actor, who<lb/>
has appeared in such movies as<lb/>
Star Trek II, Cannery Row and<lb/>
television shows Hill Street Blues<lb/>
and The Love Boat.<lb/>
Also, Mike Steele, ECU head<lb/>
basketball coach; Gary Overton,<lb/>
ECU head baseball coach; Billy<lb/>
Packer, CBS Sports basketball<lb/>
commentator; Dr. Richard Eakin,<lb/>
ECU Chancellor, and Chris<lb/>
Shinkle, ABC Sports<lb/>
commentator, and Thad Dabcr of<lb/>
Durham, who hold the record for<lb/>
the one-club championship.<lb/>
And the list is still growing,<lb/>
according to tournament officials,<lb/>
who just last week announced<lb/>
that the Golfing Gorilla would<lb/>
attend. The gorilla has made<lb/>
appearnaces on national<lb/>
television and at professional<lb/>
golfing events. The gorilla is said<lb/>
to be golf's answer to the San<lb/>
Diego Chicken.<lb/>
"We are still waiting to hear<lb/>
from many more stars from<lb/>
television, motion picture and<lb/>
professional athletes said Joe<lb/>
Clark, Golf Classic Chairman.<lb/>
"But the response has been<lb/>
phenomenal<lb/>
All funds from the tournament<lb/>
go towards the operating<lb/>
expenses of the new Ronald<lb/>
McDonald House of Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina in Greenville.<lb/>
For more information about the<lb/>
event phone 757-1241.<lb/>
Mason wins CAA<lb/>
Tracksters pick up pair of second spots<lb/>
East Carolina's men's track<lb/>
team picked up a pair of second-<lb/>
place finishes last Saturday at the<lb/>
Wolfpack Twilight Invitational<lb/>
track and field meet held at North<lb/>
Carolina State University.<lb/>
In the 200-meter run, the<lb/>
Pirates' Eugene McNeill picked<lb/>
up a red ribbon by stepping across<lb/>
the finish line with a clocking of<lb/>
20.6.<lb/>
The other second-place medal<lb/>
brought back to Greenville came<lb/>
in the form of the Pirates' 400-<lb/>
meter relay team, which posted a<lb/>
time of 39.81 to better the NCAA<lb/>
Division I qualifying standard<lb/>
and make the team eligible for the<lb/>
U.S. Olympic Trials.<lb/>
Also at the meet, former NCAA<lb/>
champion Rosalind Council<lb/>
easily qualified for the U.S.<lb/>
Olympic Trials when she won the<lb/>
100-meter hurdles in 13.21<lb/>
seconds The N.C. State men's 400-<lb/>
meter relay team also qualified for<lb/>
the Olympic Trials in the event,<lb/>
while the Lady Wolfpack 1,600-<lb/>
metcr relay team also bettered<lb/>
NCAA Division I qualifying<lb/>
standards with their<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
Council, a former track star at<lb/>
Auburn, won her event by more<lb/>
than five seconds when she<lb/>
dipped under the qualifying<lb/>
standard of 13.68 seconds.<lb/>
Two other athletes also<lb/>
qualified for the July 15-23 trials in<lb/>
Indianapolis that will determine<lb/>
the U.S. track and field team for<lb/>
the 1988 Olympics.<lb/>
Joan Nesbit, a former NCAA<lb/>
All-America at North Carolina,<lb/>
won the women's 3,000-meter run<lb/>
in 9:08.72 and North Carolina<lb/>
State's Terry Reese won the men's They included Appalachian<lb/>
110-meter hurdles in 13.78<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
Several other athletes qualified<lb/>
for various NCAA<lb/>
championships at the meet also.<lb/>
State's Warren Posey, who<lb/>
bounded 53-5 in the triple jump,<lb/>
and N.C. State's Bob Henes, who<lb/>
ran the men's 500 meters in<lb/>
13:54.49.<lb/>
The ECU men's 400-meter relay team brought home a second-place finish Saturday from a meet held at N.C.<lb/>
State that qualified them for the U.S. Olympic Trials in Indianapolis in July. (File Photo)<lb/>
(AP) � George Mason's<lb/>
pitching staff hurled the Patriots<lb/>
to the Colonial Athletic<lb/>
Association baseball<lb/>
championship, allowing<lb/>
Richmond only two runs in the<lb/>
final game of the tournament.<lb/>
"Every pitch was important<lb/>
said George Mason coach Bill<lb/>
Brown after the Patriots held off<lb/>
the Spiders 4-2 last Sunday. "Our<lb/>
defensive play is what carried us<lb/>
through<lb/>
Frank Laviano, 5-1, took the<lb/>
win after giving up one run in six<lb/>
innings of work on the mound.<lb/>
Rob Larrick came in and picked<lb/>
up his first save, as well as<lb/>
catching a line drive off the bat of<lb/>
Greg Harding in the ninth inning.<lb/>
The Patriots' John Styles, who<lb/>
shut out top-seeded James<lb/>
Madison 2-0 Saturday, was<lb/>
selected as the tournament's Most<lb/>
Valuable Player.<lb/>
In the Saturday victory over the<lb/>
Dukes, Dayton Moore knocked in<lb/>
one George Mason run and<lb/>
scored the other one and the<lb/>
Patriots tagged James Madison<lb/>
pitcher Dana Allison with his first<lb/>
loss of the season.<lb/>
Styles, who allowed only five<lb/>
hits, took advantage of his team's<lb/>
two unearned runs in the cigth<lb/>
inning to improve his record to 4-<lb/>
4 for the year.<lb/>
Allison, who also only gave up<lb/>
five hits for the Dukes, struck out<lb/>
nine in dropping to 12-1 for the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"It was a total team effort<lb/>
Styles said. "There was no one<lb/>
person that won this, no one<lb/>
person that came through all the<lb/>
time. We did it, we all played<lb/>
together and this is great<lb/>
In an afternoon game, the<lb/>
Spiders defeated George Mason,<lb/>
who came out of the winner's<lb/>
bracket, 7-6 to force a second<lb/>
game. Richmond, seeded sixth<lb/>
heading into the tournament, had<lb/>
surprised James Madison with a<lb/>
6-3 victory Saturday to put the<lb/>
Spiders in the final round.<lb/>
"I told our kids I'm real proud<lb/>
of you said Richmond head<lb/>
coach Ronnie Atkins after<lb/>
Sunday's games. "It hadn't been<lb/>
the best of years but you gave me<lb/>
100 percent and peaked when you<lb/>
had to<lb/>
"We got lucky Brown said.<lb/>
"You have to remember that this<lb/>
was an all new infield from last<lb/>
year. Going into the season they<lb/>
had only played together for<lb/>
about two weeks. I'm really<lb/>
proud of them ;<lb/>
The Patriots, 34-25-1, scored<lb/>
twice in the first inning on a two- '<lb/>
run single by Rod Billingsley.<lb/>
Richmond scored in the second<lb/>
to cut the lead to 2-1. The Patriots m<lb/>
added single runs in the fifth and<lb/>
sixth innings. Kevin Kobylinski's<lb/>
sacrifice fly in the fifth and an RBI<lb/>
single by Chris Lawrence<lb/>
accounted for the Patriots' final<lb/>
runs.<lb/>
The Spiders chalked up their<lb/>
final run of the game thanks to an<lb/>
unearned run in the eighth<lb/>
inning.<lb/>
Richmond starter Chris<lb/>
Wagner, 3-5, went the first seven<lb/>
innings and took the loss.<lb/>
ACC<lb/>
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C.<lb/>
The ACC basketball tour<lb/>
is coming back to Charloti<lb/>
Paul Buck, who i<lb/>
Charlotte 20 years ago v,<lb/>
tournament was last heU<lb/>
couldn't be happier, call<lb/>
ACC tournament "tl,<lb/>
the business<lb/>
"I always say you i<lb/>
hold this in the mi<lb/>
Pacific ocaean at 4 o'cloc<lb/>
morning and fill it up<lb/>
director of muni.<lb/>
Charlotte. "You cou<lb/>
the job<lb/>
The league - V<lb/>
representatives, a<lb/>
recommend a.<lb/>
athletic dire(<lb/>
unanimously W(<lb/>
IheACCbasketba .<lb/>
the new 23,50<lb/>
Coliseum in the<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
ACC offici<lb/>
possible I<lb/>
Citrus Bowl<lb/>
reached during I<lb/>
annual spi<lb/>
concluded W<lb/>
The Charl tl<lb/>
officially open<lb/>
have to wait unl<lb/>
its first ACC I<lb/>
"We arc<lb/>
Commissioner<lb/>
said of the d<lb/>
tournament in Cl<lb/>
like we got<lb/>
got a good d<lb/>
Thetoum<lb/>
Oriole<lb/>
like th<lb/>
(AP) � Hired 1:<lb/>
sitting back er i :  i<lb/>
interim mana ;ei<lb/>
Orioles. Then the teai <lb/>
well like the Baltirr <lb/>
"For a while, wht<lb/>
8-2, 1 thought thai<lb/>
Hendricks. filling in foi<lb/>
Frank Robinsi n<lb/>
hospitalized with a rup<lb/>
I thought we had ti<lb/>
where we wanl<lb/>
Before the Oi<lb/>
their sixth vi<lb/>
Hendricks saw<lb/>
Angels rally : - I<lb/>
final two innings<lb/>
the game wher<lb/>
charging catch t I<lb/>
by Johnny Ra<lb/>
"I'm drained<lb/>
after Baltim - B<lb/>
Wednesday ni<lb/>
thought 1 suffered in tl<lb/>
In other A <lb/>
games, it was<lb/>
Milwaukc. tori<lb/>
1; Clew land Zc<lb/>
4; To rent.<lb/>
Minnesota 2. Tito<lb/>
York game was p<lb/>
rain.<lb/>
Baltimore t<lb/>
eight walk- and j<lb/>
by loser Mike<lb/>
"We had some 1 <lb/>
and I guess I bn J<lb/>
too Hendricks -<lb/>
know what was j<lb/>
He usualh pitches<lb/>
us<lb/>
The On - a<lb/>
the sixth inning<lb/>
on four walks, a s<lb/>
misjudged line drive<lb/>
into a three-run d<lb/>
A walk to �<lb/>
single by Cal<lb/>
intentional wall I<lb/>
loaded the bases. 1<lb/>
none out in the <lb/>
Larrv Sheets dro<lb/>
with a eound<lb/>
Jim Dwyer was<lb/>
walked to load tl j<lb/>
The second run w)<lb/>
when Witt walkj<lb/>
Tettlcton. One out<lb/>
Ripken's line dro<lb/>
bounced past chili<lb/>
three-run double.<lb/>
The five-run outbil<lb/>
The East Ca<lb/>
Pick ii<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0017"/><lb/>
TOE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 20. 1988<lb/>
13<lb/>
nial U hie tic<lb/>
( al in Brown i top<lb/>
a pr parr to swat<lb/>
ent<lb/>
�<lb/>
istern<lb/>
utthe<lb/>
:aa<lb/>
-i all the<lb/>
methe<lb/>
a son,<lb/>
rvr's<lb/>
cond<lb/>
1sixth<lb/>
. had<lb/>
ith a<lb/>
tie<lb/>
: r ud<lb/>
I head<lb/>
after<lb/>
tdn't been<lb/>
ive me<lb/>
 n said.<lb/>
r that this<lb/>
: fr m last<lb/>
rt tl<lb/>
r for<lb/>
� really<lb/>
A 25-1, sci �<lb/>
 on a two-<lb/>
I Bi3 � gsley.<lb/>
 n the second<lb/>
ad to 2-1. The Patriots <lb/>
� ins in the fifth and<lb/>
gs Kevin Kobylinski's<lb/>
in the fifth and an RBI<lb/>
C hris Lawrence<lb/>
for the Patriots' final<lb/>
balked up their<lb/>
the game thanks to an<lb/>
run in the eighth<lb/>
� nd starter Chris<lb/>
 went the first seven<lb/>
d took the loss<lb/>
ACC hoops tourney heading to Charlotte<lb/>
MYRTLE BEACH, S. C. (AP) �<lb/>
The ACC basketball tournament<lb/>
is coming back to Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
Taul Buck, who was in<lb/>
Charlotte 20 years ago when the<lb/>
tournament was last held there,<lb/>
couldn't be happier, calling the<lb/>
ACC tournament "the greatest in<lb/>
the business<lb/>
1 always say you guys could<lb/>
hold this in the middle of the<lb/>
'acific ocaean at 4 o'clock in the<lb/>
morning and fill it up said Buck,<lb/>
director oi municipal buildings in<lb/>
Charlotte. "You could. We'll do<lb/>
the job<lb/>
The league's NCAA faculty<lb/>
representatives, acting cm a<lb/>
recommendation by the league's<lb/>
athletic directors, voted<lb/>
unanimously Wednesday to hold<lb/>
ACCbasketball tournament at<lb/>
the new 23,500-seat Charlotte<lb/>
Coliseum in the 1990 and 1991<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
ACC officials also discussed a<lb/>
possible football tie-in with the<lb/>
atrus Bowl, but no decision was<lb/>
reached during the league's<lb/>
innual spring meetings that<lb/>
ncludcd Wednesday.<lb/>
The Charlotte Coliseum will<lb/>
officially open Aug. 11 but will<lb/>
lave to wait until March 1990 for<lb/>
its Mrt ACC tournament.<lb/>
"We are delighted ACC<lb/>
Commissioner Gene Corrigan<lb/>
said oi the decision to hold the<lb/>
urnament in Charlotte. "We feel<lb/>
like we got a good deal and they<lb/>
t a good deal<lb/>
The tournament waslasihcldin<lb/>
Charlotte in the 1969-1970 season<lb/>
at the old 11,666-scat Charlotte<lb/>
Coliseum, which hosted three<lb/>
ACC tournaments before losing<lb/>
its chance at landing the event<lb/>
when Greensboro (N.C.)<lb/>
Coliseum was enlarged in 1971.<lb/>
Since then, only three sited �<lb/>
the 16,000-scat Greensboro<lb/>
Coliseum, the 16,541 -seat Omni in<lb/>
Atlanta and 19,400-seat Capital<lb/>
Centre in handover, Md � have<lb/>
held the tournament.<lb/>
The 1SS9 tournament will be in<lb/>
Atlanta, while Greensboro had it<lb/>
this past season<lb/>
Corrigan said the mam reason<lb/>
for picking the Charlotte<lb/>
Coliseum was its seating capacity.<lb/>
"The prospect of having 3,500<lb/>
more tickets than we would have<lb/>
at handover and at least 5,000<lb/>
more than we would have at<lb/>
Atlanta or Greensboro was<lb/>
something the athletic directors<lb/>
just couldnjt turn away from<lb/>
Corrigan said.<lb/>
The ACC considered putting<lb/>
the tournament in Charlotte for<lb/>
one, two and four years, Corrigan<lb/>
said. I le said the conference shied<lb/>
away from a four-vear<lb/>
commitment because that would<lb/>
have locked up the event for five<lb/>
years.<lb/>
North Carolina Athletic<lb/>
Director John Swofford said there<lb/>
was "no compelling reason" to go<lb/>
more than two years.<lb/>
The tournament has not been at<lb/>
the same site two years in a row<lb/>
since it was held in Greensboro<lb/>
from 1977-80.<lb/>
Greensboro officials presented<lb/>
a proposal to the league Tuesday,<lb/>
saying they planned to expand<lb/>
seating capacity to 23,000 before<lb/>
the 1992 tournament. Swofford<lb/>
said the Greensboro presentation<lb/>
"had some effect" on the league's<lb/>
decision to restrict its<lb/>
commitment to Charlotte to two<lb/>
years instead of four.<lb/>
But Swofford acknowledged it<lb/>
would be hard to go to a smaller<lb/>
arena after playing the<lb/>
tournament in Charlotte.<lb/>
"One of the concerns we'll<lb/>
eventually have after having the<lb/>
number of seats that each school<lb/>
will have in Charlotte is, how do<lb/>
you go back to a smaller arena?"<lb/>
Swofford said. "That's not to sav it<lb/>
J<lb/>
couldn't happen. But I think that's<lb/>
one of the concerns that we<lb/>
certainly have<lb/>
Leading up to the ACC<lb/>
meetings, there were reports the<lb/>
conference was looking at<lb/>
workingon a tie-in with the Citrus<lb/>
Bowl in Orlando, Fla.<lb/>
Clcmson defeated Penn State<lb/>
35-10 in this year's Cirtus Bowl.<lb/>
Corrigan said the experience at<lb/>
Orioles still acting<lb/>
like the same team<lb/>
(AP) � Elrod Hendricks was<lb/>
sitting back enjoying his stint as<lb/>
interim manager of the Baltimore<lb/>
Orioles. Then the team acted like,<lb/>
well  like the Baltimore Orioles.<lb/>
"For a while, when we were up<lb/>
8-2, I thought that was it said<lb/>
1 lendricks, filling in for manager<lb/>
"rank Robinson who is<lb/>
hospitalized with a ruptured disc.<lb/>
I thought we had them right<lb/>
where we wanted them<lb/>
Before the Orioles sewed up<lb/>
heir sixth victorv in 37 games,<lb/>
I lendricks saw the California<lb/>
Vngels rally for five runs in the<lb/>
final two innings and almost tie<lb/>
the game when lred Lynn made a<lb/>
irging catch of a sinking liner<lb/>
y Johnny Ray for the final out.<lb/>
"I'm drained I lendricks said<lb/>
ifter Baltimore's 8-7 victory<lb/>
Wednesday night. "And 1<lb/>
hough 11 suffered in the bullpen<lb/>
In other American League<lb/>
imcs, it was Detroit 3,<lb/>
'�' Uvaukce 1; Boston 4, Oakland<lb/>
I; Clev( land 2; Chicagod 1; Texas<lb/>
: fbronto 0; and Kansas City 8,<lb/>
Minnesota 2. The Seattle-New<lb/>
: rk game was postponed by<lb/>
Baltimore took advantage of<lb/>
' it walks and two wild pitches<lb/>
� r Mike Witt, 1-5.<lb/>
"We had some timely base hits,<lb/>
i I guess the walks helped,<lb/>
 Hendricks said. "I don't<lb/>
v. what was wrong with Witt.<lb/>
tie usually pitches well against<lb/>
us<lb/>
The Orioles snapped a 2-2 tie in<lb/>
iixth inning, scoring five runs<lb/>
n four walks, a single and a<lb/>
misjudged line drive that turned<lb/>
ntoa three-run double.<lb/>
A walk to Lynn, an infield<lb/>
-ingle by Cal Ripken and an<lb/>
intentional walk to Lddie Murray<lb/>
loaded the bases against Witt with<lb/>
none out in the Baltimore sixth.<lb/>
Larry Sheets drove in the first run<lb/>
with a goundour to second and<lb/>
Jim Dwyer was intentionally<lb/>
walked to load the bases again.<lb/>
The second run was forced in<lb/>
when Witt walked Mickey<lb/>
Tettleton. One out later, Bill<lb/>
Ripken's line drive to right<lb/>
hounced past chili Davis for a<lb/>
three-run double.<lb/>
The five-run outburst matched<lb/>
the biggest inning of the season<lb/>
for the Orioles.<lb/>
Lynn led oii the seventh with<lb/>
his fourth homer oi the season,<lb/>
increasing the ORioles' lead to 8-<lb/>
2. It proved to be the winning run.<lb/>
"But the Angels just kept<lb/>
coming back I lendricks said.<lb/>
Rookie Jose Bautista, a 23-year-<lb/>
old right bander making his<lb/>
second career start, gave up five<lb/>
hits in seven innings and retired<lb/>
11 straight batters in one stretch<lb/>
for his first major-league victorv.<lb/>
But he began the California eighth<lb/>
by walking Dick Schofield and<lb/>
giving up a single to Brian<lb/>
Downing. Reliever Doug Sisk<lb/>
came on and walked Mark<lb/>
Mcl.emore to load the bases.<lb/>
Walk' Jovner singled home two<lb/>
runs, and after Sisk walked Davis,<lb/>
Don Aase relieved, johnny Ray<lb/>
singled in MeLemore with<lb/>
California's fifth run before Aase<lb/>
halted the rally.<lb/>
The Angels scored two more<lb/>
runs in the ninth oii reliever Tom<lb/>
Nicdenfuer. Downing tripled but<lb/>
had to hold when MeLemore beat<lb/>
out an infield single. Jovner<lb/>
singled to right, scoring<lb/>
Downing, and MeLemore came<lb/>
home on Davis' groundout.<lb/>
Then Lynn came up with his<lb/>
game-ending catch.<lb/>
TAXPAYERS<lb/>
uithdepcndenti<lb/>
HHRF'S A TAX TIP:<lb/>
Beginning with your 18 income<lb/>
tax return that you will tile in<lb/>
l'Sh, you generally must list social<lb/>
security numhers tor dependents<lb/>
who are at least five years old by<lb/>
the end of 1987. If any of your<lb/>
dependents do not have this<lb/>
number, got an application torm<lb/>
todav from the Social Security<lb/>
office in sour area.<lb/>
IJM4MU<lb/>
 PuMli (mki at Mw MM<lb/>
the bowl by ACC and Clcmson<lb/>
officials led the league to look at a<lb/>
possible tie-in.<lb/>
He said league officials did<lb/>
discuss the matter this week but<lb/>
that they were not looking to<lb/>
make a decision in the near future.<lb/>
"There is not anything specific<lb/>
to discuss Corrigan said. "We<lb/>
just discussed it in a general way,<lb/>
about getting together with them;<lb/>
what their aspirations are and<lb/>
whether there would be a fit or<lb/>
not<lb/>
Corrigan said the league likes<lb/>
the bowl because it's on New<lb/>
Year's Dav, is shown on ABC and<lb/>
plans to increase the stadium<lb/>
seating capacitv from 52,000 to<lb/>
72,000 by 1990.<lb/>
" think that bowl is <lb/>
continually moving up a step<lb/>
Corrigan said. "(But) not all our<lb/>
coaches fell that it (a bowl tie-in)<lb/>
would be a good idea<lb/>
Clcmson coach Dannv fird gas<lb/>
said he doesn't like the idea of a<lb/>
bowl tie-in because of the<lb/>
restrictions it would place on the<lb/>
league, especially on a team with<lb/>
a chance at the national title.<lb/>
Clcmson won the national title<lb/>
in 1981.<lb/>
PARKER'S<lb/>
DINNERS INCLUDE Brunswick Stew, Cole Slaw<lb/>
Boiled Potatoes or French Fries and Corn Sucks<lb/>
PLATES INCLUDE Cole Slaw and Corn Sticks<lb/>
BARBECUE<lb/>
LARGE BARBECUE DINNER 4.00<lb/>
SMALL BARBECUE DINNER3.50<lb/>
larch; barbecue plate� oo<lb/>
SMALL BARBECUE PLATE3.5a<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
FRIED OR BARBECUED<lb/>
LARGE CHICKUN DINNER<lb/>
SMALL CHICKEN DINNER .<lb/>
"kllD LIVER PLATO <lb/>
COMBINATIONS<lb/>
 J5<lb/>
LARGE COMBINATION <lb/>
Barbecue and Chicken (While Meat)<lb/>
SMALL COM KIN ATION 3.90<lb/>
Bait cue and Chicken (Dark Mca:)<lb/>
FAMILY STYLE DINNERS(F.ach) 5.00<lb/>
INCLUDES Barbecue, Fried Chicken,<lb/>
Cole Slaw, Brunswick Stew, Boiled Potatoes<lb/>
and Corn Sticks<lb/>
CHILDREN Through 10 Years Old2.75<lb/>
Fntire Table Must Order Family Style<lb/>
No Doggie Bag From Family Style<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
FISH DINNER <lb/>
OYSTER fRY<lb/>
OYSTER STEW<lb/>
SHRIMP DINNLR <lb/>
ANY I WO COMBINA1 IONS SLAIOOD <lb/>
SEAFOOD PLATTER (Pish. Shrimp. Oysters).<lb/>
South Memorial Drive<lb/>
756-2388<lb/>
2020 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
758-9215<lb/>
In other action, the league:<lb/>
- Will change the lennis format<lb/>
fur league matches and the<lb/>
conference tournament, going<lb/>
from six singles and th:<lb/>
matches to tour singl I one<lb/>
doubles match next year.<lb/>
Corrigan said the change was<lb/>
being made in hopes ol<lb/>
shortening the l ngth of tennis<lb/>
matches, which can take t: .<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
"Our feeling wa this is<lb/>
nitcly an i xperiment It's not<lb/>
in anyway locked in concrete<lb/>
Corrigan said. "But it is a bold<lb/>
experiment. It's never been done<lb/>
" my knowledge during the<lb/>
n<lb/>
� nounced the ACC<lb/>
: rage is "basically"<lb/>
ted. The schedule is<lb/>
i be announced soon.<lb/>
ted to hold the volleyball<lb/>
rtt in Raleigh, N.C. next<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/>
LOth Street Ext. 1 700"4015<lb/>
'WELCOME BACK<lb/>
E.C.U. STUDENTS"<lb/>
i Hold these coupons o<lb/>
cP For Future Savings �<lb/>
4-Wheel Drum or<lb/>
� Front Disc Reline and<lb/>
� Rotor machined<lb/>
(withcoupon) tfrnSS<lb/>
� pDJ (with coupon)<lb/>
Wheel Alignment:<lb/>
$1588<lb/>
Winterize<lb/>
Servicine<lb/>
$17<lb/>
88<lb/>
(includes 1 Gal Antifaeeze)<lb/>
I Lubrication, Oil<lb/>
; Filter, Oil Change<lb/>
 tyJLD (with coupon)<lb/>
Used Tires<lb/>
$800<lb/>
4-Wheel Computer<lb/>
Balance and Rotate<lb/>
and up � �-i QS8 . .<lb/>
I Jly (with coupon)<lb/>
VISA-Master Card-Amor. ExpDiscover-Money Express<lb/>
COGGINS CAR CARE<lb/>
320 W. Greenville Blvd Greenville, N.C Phone 756-5244<lb/>
JfgJMSonfc<lb/>
500 W Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
355-2172<lb/>
2207 Nuese Blvd.<lb/>
New Bern<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
"We're doing our<lb/>
part to meet the<lb/>
student's budget"<lb/>
ECU Students Get 10 Off With I.D.<lb/>
LUNCH DINNER<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Pick it up<lb/>
�RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
I BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
' Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
(wDiscounl<lb/>
$3 591<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
(wDiseounl<lb/>
$4.49)<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
1 Open<lb/>
1 Monday-Saturday 10-9<lb/>
� Sunday 1-6<lb/>
Summer Savings<lb/>
10 OFF<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(Except Aigner. Nike and Reebok)<lb/>
Help Yourself Home<lb/>
Cooking<lb/>
ALL YOU CARE<lb/>
TO EAT!<lb/>
One Low Price Does It All!<lb/>
Entrees � Dessert � Salad Bar<lb/>
Vegetables � Drinks<lb/>
Great Food Within Your College Budget<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0018"/><lb/>
14 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
V Y2(l I �-<lb/>
Hornets battle in rare triple-header outing<lb/>
tue <lb/>
GREENSBORO (AD A. bad On his li i vintd<lb/>
case ol poison i came just in cap<lb/>
time tor eight year old I lal<lb/>
Clcndcnin to take in a rare<lb/>
baseball occurrence a triple-<lb/>
header I i rd :<lb/>
rhe tii eensboi o t lornets qui<lb/>
plaved three games against the Mis<lb/>
Columbia Mets Wednesday i<lb/>
"hat s illegal under the rules of<lb/>
the National Assot iation ol<lb/>
imets your frustrations, ho said.<lb/>
raphs Gourley said he never tires<lb/>
But the three other guys vv r n't J�ml 11 i di i game.<lb/>
 p " 1 an raul Murd said<lb/>
baseball. rhe team was sch dull d for a d ' '  rr) ! r '<lb/>
:n. ack The players enjoy it too, but double-header agaii t the Mets. said, is not a<lb/>
vjrankhil Vspotol some weren't so thrilled about Wednesday morning, players<lb/>
as he playing three games in one day, werecalledoutofbedat 10a.m. to<lb/>
said Joe Turek, who was called off play a third game. Iliey were<lb/>
the golf course this morning in expected on the field at noi n<lb/>
order to come in early and play "Most of the guys are tired,<lb/>
the afternoon game. said player AdamCasillas. "Tlv <lb/>
re you ran "I didn't mind so much because didn't expect to play. It took a lot<lb/>
� �<lb/>
Professional Baseball, said Kevin AN<lb/>
Carpenter, assistant general<lb/>
manager of the ! lornets.<lb/>
But the team got around those<lb/>
rules because one of the games<lb/>
was suspended after three<lb/>
innings Mondav night and the<lb/>
remainder of that game was<lb/>
plaved Thursda <lb/>
i 1  t lioie were - i<lb/>
and trn<lb/>
lot I was playing terrible he said, out of their sails when they hi u I<lb/>
I they've got 2 � � �'� �<lb/>
I ; � n't play tl<lb/>
that's something he<lb/>
"It tin  rerunning inthesti<lb/>
. oingn re tl in that<lb/>
 verthi lc -s, Angela Caj :<lb/>
�� d Shane I " '<lb/>
EXTRA LOW<lb/>
:<lb/>
piaveu.<lb/>
or tans like <lb/>
iuei '<lb/>
w,<lb/>
i<lb/>
-<lb/>
v as<lb/>
- �<lb/>
a is great<lb/>
;in m '<lb/>
� � d mine, v I<lb/>
s that<lb/>
� il lier, t lam l I<lb/>
�t( 1 him. "Vou<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
 rhursda - ill rnoon<lb/>
�� iusc he ,vas out of<lb/>
told him he wi<lb/>
v ml<lb/>
ird e<lb/>
the first<lb/>
.<lb/>
Kite hopes<lb/>
for big<lb/>
Texas luck<lb/>
:��<lb/>
� il 'al<lb/>
un in � �<lb/>
esob lattei<lb/>
r-i ir 68 in a pi<lb/>
 t tim<lb/>
tationj<lb/>
i 2 m<lb/>
am prelude to todax pcnii<lb/>
md I the 42nd spnngtii<lb/>
� il<lb/>
I �. rativc word,<lb/>
re d, is patience.<lb/>
"I need to be l ng on patience,<lb/>
id Kite, the f inner Uni crsity - �'<lb/>
Texas ace who freely admits he<lb/>
tries so hard to pale well in Texas<lb/>
that Iv tei Is to put too much<lb/>
pre � n him - I<lb/>
. , !   . � ' I !<lb/>
It �� - uli is Boi j twi c a<lb/>
vvii � � � re,  first provid I<lb/>
the formula tor conquering the<lb/>
Colonial u i I I<lb/>
you  a bi: patient.<lb/>
And you gotta have<lb/>
I :� You gotta ; '<lb/>
 hots, and its : �<lb/>
� just hit tl . � � � : i<lb/>
tta hit 'cm in I i hi ; ' i<lb/>
. � � casv I :<lb/>
� : '  . he said, adding<lb/>
�: � �. n i � .there<lb/>
� urnament in t! .�. rid<lb/>
: � � r win that tl nial.<lb/>
�  ild cl ne, this<lb/>
. : � c il I lid, lavishing<lb/>
: � . n the 7,096-yard, par 70<lb/>
kn la n fondl � i H ;ai i<lb/>
'�' . in honor ol fiv tii<lb/>
impion Ben 1 h �gan.<lb/>
aei I ty River<lb/>
ivout ranks ai i is<lb/>
� I . � � 11 is t to Ki I i 1<lb/>
hmc tear  ni l ' is third<lb/>
h land only a k Nick ms and<lb/>
for �'� il ' n i recr earning<lb/>
,11   i n-winner since<lb/>
ipturing th k 'mp r Open<lb/>
i n wn last year, kite urrently<lb/>
ran, i th on the mi nc I .t and<lb/>
; he is not at all<lb/>
unhappy with hi i game<lb/>
i m plav ing well he said,<lb/>
suggesting that he will be a<lb/>
Meanwhile, defending<lb/>
champion Keithlearwater sa) -<lb/>
his game is coming around ai i<lb/>
nothing would please him more<lb/>
than to win here again.<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
PRICES!<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef<lb/>
LONDON BROIL OR<lb/>
TOP ROUND ROAST<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Bottom<lb/>
ROUND ROAST<lb/>
&amp;��<lb/>
�<lb/>
77�w.<lb/>
Prices in this ad good thru<lb/>
Sunday, May 22, 1988.<lb/>
We Reserve The Right To Limit<lb/>
Quantities On All Hews<lb/>
tSfc<lb/>
$188<lb/>
Holly Farms<lb/>
i?<lb/>
QUARTERS<lb/>
Grade A<lb/>
"Lowest Price Of The Season"<lb/>
Genuine Georgia Grown<lb/>
VIDALIA ONIONS<lb/>
25 Lb. Bag<lb/>
<lb/>
8.99<lb/>
California<lb/>
STRAWBERRIES<lb/>
Quart<lb/>
if if<lb/>
Head - California<lb/>
ICEBERG LETTUCE<lb/>
Lb. - Red Ripe<lb/>
TOMATOES<lb/>
Pint<lb/>
GET IN<lb/>
SHAPE<lb/>
FOP. THE<lb/>
2 Liter<lb/>
PEPSI COLA<lb/>
Pepsi-Free, Wet Pepsi. Diet Pepsi-Free<lb/>
99�<lb/>
STATE GAMES<lb/>
Mtn. Dew, Diet Mtn. Dew<lb/>
Pkg. of 12 12 Oz. Cans<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
$279<lb/>
Pkg. of 6 12 Oz Cans Reg &amp; Lt<lb/>
EXTRA LOW PRICES<lb/>
Everyday<lb/>
Apple<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
99<lb/>
64 Oz. - White House<lb/>
Bama<lb/>
Grape Jelly Or<lb/>
JamApple Jelly<lb/>
99�<lb/>
Scot i<lb/>
Towels r<lb/>
69�<lb/>
Large Roll Assorted Decorator<lb/>
Flowers<lb/>
ig Country 1<lb/>
Biscuits m<lb/>
2$1<lb/>
Pillsburv<lb/>
10 Ct - Pillsbury Buttermilk<lb/>
Southern Style <lb/>
 BIB CDUNIRY<lb/>
Orange 1<lb/>
Delirjht I<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOOD I ION<lb/>
nscurrs � u -J<lb/>
Interstate<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
Half Gallon - Food Lion 10 Ju :e<lb/>
Light N' Lively<lb/>
Yoaurt<lb/>
J<lb/>
ab<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
$159<lb/>
3$1<lb/>
20 Oz. - Frozen Shoestring j<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Nankins<lb/>
m<lb/>
8 Oz - Assorted<lb/>
120 Ct<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0019"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
 -<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
14 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 20,1988<lb/>
Hornets battle in rare triple-header outing<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) � A bad<lb/>
case of poison ivy came just in<lb/>
time for eight-year-old Hal<lb/>
Clendenin to take in a rare<lb/>
baseball occurrence: a triple-<lb/>
header.<lb/>
The Greensboro Hornets<lb/>
played three games against the<lb/>
Columbia Mets Wednesday.<lb/>
That's illegal under the rules of<lb/>
the National Association of<lb/>
Professional Baseball, said Kevin<lb/>
Carpenter, assistant general<lb/>
manager of the Hornets.<lb/>
But the team got around those<lb/>
rules because one of the games<lb/>
was suspended after three<lb/>
innings Monday night and the<lb/>
remainder of that game was<lb/>
played Thursday afternoon, he<lb/>
said. Technically, there were 21<lb/>
2 games played.<lb/>
For fans like Clendenin,<lb/>
watching three games � or 2 12<lb/>
games � in one day is great.<lb/>
"I've seen 500 games in my life<lb/>
he said. "I started coming when I<lb/>
was three<lb/>
His father, Harry Clendenin,<lb/>
corrected him. "You started<lb/>
coming when you were less that<lb/>
one he said.<lb/>
Hal saw Thursday's afternoon<lb/>
game because he was out of<lb/>
school with poison iny. His father<lb/>
told him he would have to miss<lb/>
the third game because it was past<lb/>
his bed time. But Hal said he<lb/>
would "hot dog" his way into<lb/>
staying for the third game.<lb/>
"He usually gets his way with<lb/>
that his father said.<lb/>
After the first game, the<lb/>
Clcndenins spent the two-hour<lb/>
dinner break at the tec-ball<lb/>
practice of the Hornets' little<lb/>
league team. Harry Clendenin is<lb/>
the coach.<lb/>
Hal, who plays on his father's<lb/>
team and wants to be a<lb/>
professional baseball player,<lb/>
returned to the second game<lb/>
wearing a mock Hornets' outfit.<lb/>
Kite hopes<lb/>
for big I<lb/>
Tfexasluck<lb/>
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) �<lb/>
Texan Tom Kite says he's going to<lb/>
rclaz this week, take it easy, have<lb/>
a good time and maybe just win<lb/>
the $750,000 Colonial National<lb/>
Invitation golf tournament.<lb/>
"At least I hope so he said after<lb/>
firing a 2-under-par 68 in a pro-<lb/>
am prelude to today's opening<lb/>
round of the 42nd springtime<lb/>
Colonial classic.<lb/>
The operative word, he<lb/>
revealed, is patience.<lb/>
"I need to be long on patience<lb/>
said Kite, the former University of<lb/>
Texas ace who freely admits he<lb/>
tries so hard to paly well in Texas<lb/>
that he tends to put too much<lb/>
pressure on himself.<lb/>
"I think that's a little bit of what<lb/>
happened last week in Dallas he<lb/>
said, referring to an opening-<lb/>
round 75 that caused him to miss<lb/>
the cut in the Byron Nelson<lb/>
Classic.<lb/>
It was Julius Boros, twice a<lb/>
winner here, who first provided<lb/>
the formula for conquering the<lb/>
Colonial course. Said he:<lb/>
"Well, you gotta be patient.<lb/>
And you gotta have some<lb/>
experience here. You gotta hit<lb/>
different shots, and it's not<lb/>
enough to just hit the greens. You<lb/>
gotta hit 'cm in the right places<lb/>
Kite agrees.<lb/>
"But it's easy to put so much<lb/>
pressure on yourself that you<lb/>
can't play well he said, adding<lb/>
that, aside from the majors, there<lb/>
is no tournament in the world<lb/>
he'd rather win that the Colonial.<lb/>
"If I could choose one, this<lb/>
would be it he said, lavishing<lb/>
praise on the 7,096-yard, par 70<lb/>
course known fondly as Hogan's<lb/>
Alley in honor of five-time<lb/>
champion Ben Hogan.<lb/>
The rose-covered Trinity River<lb/>
layout ranks among the world's<lb/>
top courses, at least to Kite, a 10-<lb/>
time tour winner who is third<lb/>
behind only jack Nicklaus and<lb/>
Tom, Watson in career earnings.<lb/>
Although a non-winner since<lb/>
capturing the Kemper Open<lb/>
crown last year, Kite currently<lb/>
ranks 18th on the money list and<lb/>
maintains he is not at all<lb/>
unhappy with his game.<lb/>
"I'm playing well he said,<lb/>
suggesting that he will be a<lb/>
Meanwhile, defending<lb/>
champion Keith Clearwater says<lb/>
his game is coming around and<lb/>
nothing would please him more<lb/>
than to win here again.<lb/>
On his head sat a vintage Hornets<lb/>
cap complete with autographs<lb/>
under the visor.<lb/>
Across the staduim, Jack<lb/>
Gourlcy drank his beer. A spot of<lb/>
mustard marked his nose as he<lb/>
quietly watched the second game.<lb/>
His voice was hoarse from<lb/>
screaming during the first.<lb/>
'It's a place where you can<lb/>
he<lb/>
come enjoy yourself and get rid of I was playing terrible he said<lb/>
your frustrations he said. "But the three other guys weren't about the extra game<lb/>
Gourley said he never tires of happy Fn Paul Murdock said<lb/>
baseball. The team was scheduled for a doesn't fe sorry for the players.<lb/>
The players enjoy it too, but double-header against the Mcts. Baseball, he said, is not a<lb/>
some weren't so thrilled about Wednesday morning, players strenuous sport,<lb/>
playing three games in one day, were called out of bed at 10 a.m. to "If they've got 20-year-old boys<lb/>
said Joe Turek, who was called off play a third game. They were playing and they can't play three<lb/>
the golf course this morning in expected on the field at noon. games, that's something, hesaid.<lb/>
"Most of the guys are tired "If they were running in the street,<lb/>
said player Adam Casillas. "They they'd be doing more than that,<lb/>
didn't expect to play. It took a lot Nevertheless, Angela Capps,<lb/>
out of their sails when they heard whose boyfriend Shane Letteno double-header 3-0 and 4-0<lb/>
order to come in early and play<lb/>
the afternoon game.<lb/>
"I didn't mind so much because<lb/>
plays second base, said she<lb/>
doesn't expect a night out on the<lb/>
town after the games.<lb/>
"Usually, we at least make it out<lb/>
to dinner after the game she<lb/>
said. 'Tonight, I would gather,<lb/>
that he'd want to go to a drive-<lb/>
through restaurant and straight<lb/>
home to sleep<lb/>
Greensboro won the suspended<lb/>
game 5-4, and then swept the<lb/>
EXTRA LOW<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
PRICES!<lb/>
'�<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef<lb/>
LONDON BROIL OR :<lb/>
TOP ROUND ROAST<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Bottom<lb/>
ROUND ROAST<lb/>
vA- �O<lb/>
�<lb/>
" -5Cj�,<lb/>
� �-��:<lb/>
Prices in this ad good thru<lb/>
Sunday, May 22, 1988.<lb/>
We Reserve The Right To Limit<lb/>
Quantities On All Items<lb/>
$188<lb/>
Holly Farms<lb/>
ii<lb/>
QUARTERS I<lb/>
Grade A<lb/>
"Lowest Price Of The Season"<lb/>
Genuine Georgia Grown<lb/>
VIDALIA ONIONS<lb/>
10 l<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
25 Lb. Bag 8.99<lb/>
Head - California<lb/>
EBERG LETTUCE<lb/>
Lb - Red Ripe<lb/>
TOMATOES<lb/>
99�<lb/>
Dew, Diet Mtn. Dew <lb/>
Pt. tf12 - 12 Oz. Can<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
$279<lb/>
fk. tf 8 � 12 Oz.<lb/>
EXTRA LOW PRICES<lb/>
Everyday<lb/>
JFG<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
&amp;�<lb/>
64 0z. - White House<lb/>
32 Oz.<lb/>
ig Country j<lb/>
Biscuits W<lb/>
10 Ct. - PMsbury Buttermilk<lb/>
Southern Style<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Bama<lb/>
Grape Jelly Or<lb/>
JamApple Jelly<lb/>
Sturdyware<lb/>
Plates<lb/>
if<lb/>
2 Lb.<lb/>
nterstate<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
Half Gallon � Food Lion 10 Juice<lb/>
light N'lively<lb/>
Yoaurt<lb/>
20 Oz. - Frozen Shoestring<lb/>
r scot<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
Fab<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
Large Rod - Assorted Decorator<lb/>
42 Oz.<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Nankins<lb/>
Friskle's Buffet<lb/>
Cat Food<lb/>
6 0z. - Beef-Liver<lb/>
CourTurkey-GiWet<lb/>
<pb facs="00058075_0020"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>