<?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="00058078_0001"/>
:OMING NEXT WEEK:<lb/>
A look into the new building signs.<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
A review of Rambo III, see page 7.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
'88 - '89 Pitate hoopsters look tough, see page 9.<lb/>
albe<lb/>
(Tarultnian<lb/>
Vol.63 No. 4<lb/>
Wednesday, June 8,1988<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Sports Medicine complex to better programs<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
Assistant New Editor<lb/>
The ECU Sports Medicine<lb/>
Physical Education Complex is<lb/>
going to be the newest, most<lb/>
modem, and best equipped facil-<lb/>
ity in the state, if not the country.<lb/>
This latest edition to ECU will<lb/>
be a three-story, 82,000 square<lb/>
foot building which will house<lb/>
even department in the sports<lb/>
medicine and physical education<lb/>
programs. The new building will<lb/>
provide for more classroom space<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum because fac-<lb/>
ultv offices will be moved next<lb/>
door.<lb/>
Rod Compton, Director of<lb/>
Sports Medicine, said, "This is not<lb/>
a football facility for Art Baker and<lb/>
the Pirates, even though many<lb/>
people think like that. The facility<lb/>
will house the perfect marriage<lb/>
between academics and athletes<lb/>
He also said that ECU can now<lb/>
offer a masters in sports medicine<lb/>
because of the new building and<lb/>
expansion of the sports medicine<lb/>
program.<lb/>
The first floor of the complex<lb/>
will be geared mainly towards<lb/>
ECU athletic teams. It will contain<lb/>
men's and women's locker rooms.<lb/>
equipment rooms, the weight<lb/>
training facility, team examina-<lb/>
tion rooms, and therapy rooms.<lb/>
Also 18-19 pre-game taping sta-<lb/>
tions, as opposed to eight now in<lb/>
Scales Fieldhousc, will be built.<lb/>
Highlighting the first floor will<lb/>
be the hydro therapy room. This<lb/>
particular room will house several<lb/>
whirlpools and an 'Aqua Art a<lb/>
seven-foot-decp pool for athletes<lb/>
who have injuries that will not<lb/>
allow them to walk. When using<lb/>
this, athletes are strapped in a<lb/>
harness, which is secured to the<lb/>
four walls of the tank. While sus-<lb/>
pended in the water, they can<lb/>
then work on injuries without<lb/>
putting pressure on the disabled<lb/>
limb.<lb/>
Also on the ground floor will be<lb/>
a hot and cold treatment rooms,<lb/>
electro-stimulation therapy, and a<lb/>
office which can be used for ear,<lb/>
nose and throath examination.<lb/>
The distinct feature about the<lb/>
therapy rooms is a glass cubicle<lb/>
from which an operator can con-<lb/>
trol everything occuring in the<lb/>
area. In case of emergency all the<lb/>
machines can be turned off at<lb/>
once, as opposed to fumbling<lb/>
around for the right switch.<lb/>
Located on the second floor will<lb/>
be coaches offices, academic<lb/>
counseling, classrooms, a com-<lb/>
puter lab, and the Letterman<lb/>
Lounge. There are four amphi-<lb/>
theater style classrooms which<lb/>
scat 160 people. Each room is di-<lb/>
vided by a partition. When the<lb/>
partition is removed, the classes<lb/>
become two large rooms, seating<lb/>
80 people each. The Letterman<lb/>
Lounge, which is used for recruit-<lb/>
ing purposes, will seat 90-100<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Offices of athletic administra-<lb/>
tion, external affairs, public rela-<lb/>
tions, and the sports information<lb/>
director will be on the third floor.<lb/>
The human performance lab is<lb/>
also c p the third floor. This labora-<lb/>
tory is where underwater per-<lb/>
formance, blood and pulmonary<lb/>
testing will take place. Dr. Ken<lb/>
Karr will head-up the bio-me-<lb/>
chanical laboratory where ath-<lb/>
letes are video taped, then each<lb/>
frame of the tape is broken down<lb/>
and analyzed on a computer.<lb/>
The sports medicine complex is<lb/>
located between Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum and the practice football<lb/>
field. The structure will be brick<lb/>
with plenty of window space.<lb/>
Inside will be decorated in grays,<lb/>
earth tones, and highlighted in<lb/>
purple and gold. Landscaping, a<lb/>
part of the near seven-million-<lb/>
dollar budget, will surround the<lb/>
complex with flowering shrub-<lb/>
bery and trees.<lb/>
Compton said, "In 98 percent of<lb/>
colleges around the nation the<lb/>
department of sports medicine<lb/>
and physical education do not get<lb/>
takes away from the other. Well,<lb/>
here its different, we have always<lb/>
cooperated with each other, and I<lb/>
think being together will reinforce<lb/>
this.<lb/>
Since the building ran under<lb/>
budget, the extra money was<lb/>
spent on state-of-the-art equip-<lb/>
ment. Many of the weight ma-<lb/>
chines are computer operated and<lb/>
controlled. The therapy rooms are<lb/>
the most modern in the state and<lb/>
probably the country.<lb/>
The projected date of comple- Construction workers are pouring the foundation posts for the<lb/>
tion is mid-summer 1989, just in Sports Medical Complex. The complex will hold 81,000 square<lb/>
time for the fall sports season. feet of area. (Photo by Jon Jordan�Photolab)<lb/>
ECU professor evaluates super summit<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Ncwi Editor<lb/>
In the aftermath of the fourth<lb/>
summit between Mikhail S. Gor-<lb/>
bachev and President Reagan,<lb/>
political scholars are assessing the<lb/>
outcome of the Moscow summit.<lb/>
An ECU political scientist on U.S<lb/>
Soviet relations said while the<lb/>
summit produced nothing new,<lb/>
the meeting between the super-<lb/>
powers did provide for improved<lb/>
relations.<lb/>
"I'd characterize the summit as<lb/>
productive in establishing a more<lb/>
normal business-like relationship<lb/>
between the U.S. and the<lb/>
U.S.S.R said Dr. Maurice Si-<lb/>
mon, coordinator of ECU'S Office<lb/>
of International Studies.<lb/>
While the Moscow summit<lb/>
didn't produce any new break<lb/>
throughs in superpower bargain-<lb/>
ing, Simon said "both sides estab-<lb/>
lished a foundation of mutual<lb/>
respect and prehaps even friendli-<lb/>
ness which should carry over until<lb/>
the end of next year<lb/>
Before Reagan departed<lb/>
Moscow for London last Wednes-<lb/>
day, he said "we must not stop<lb/>
here of the summit. Gorbachev,<lb/>
the Soviet Communist Party Gen-<lb/>
eral Secretary, said their meetings<lb/>
were "a blow to the foundationsof<lb/>
the Cold War<lb/>
Simon said the latest summit<lb/>
constrast to the 'new cold war' of<lb/>
arms build up on both sides dur-<lb/>
ing Reagan's first term. With the<lb/>
ratification of the INF treaty and<lb/>
the START agreement, which if<lb/>
signed would reduce fifty percent<lb/>
of the nuclear arsenals, Simon<lb/>
feels Gorbachev and Reagan have<lb/>
made moderate progress towards<lb/>
ending the cold war.<lb/>
But Simon said in order for the<lb/>
START to reduce the build up of<lb/>
arms, first the superpowers must<lb/>
overcome several obstacles. He<lb/>
said the START accords would<lb/>
reach fruitation "if the many<lb/>
complex and techinical issues in-<lb/>
cluding verification, air and sea<lb/>
cruise missiles and other matter<lb/>
can be resolved<lb/>
In the closing days of the Re-<lb/>
agan adminstration, the<lb/>
President's dreams for the sicnine<lb/>
of START may come true, but if<lb/>
Reagan doesn't sign the arms<lb/>
treaty than Simon predicts the<lb/>
next President will. Simon said<lb/>
the accords would be completed<lb/>
in the first 18 months of the next<lb/>
U.S. adminstration because "Gor-<lb/>
bachev and the new president will<lb/>
want to keep up the momentum<lb/>
and present new avenues to re-<lb/>
ducing nuclear weapons<lb/>
But Simon questions<lb/>
Gorbachev's 'shakey7 future as a<lb/>
Soviet leader. The upcoming June<lb/>
conference of the Soviet party will<lb/>
be crucial to Gorbachev's consoli-<lb/>
dation of power, according to<lb/>
Simon. He said the Soviet leader<lb/>
will have to wheel his political<lb/>
power to institute his economic<lb/>
and social reforms.<lb/>
On endeavors to bring to light<lb/>
the issue of human rights, Reagan<lb/>
visited with several religious<lb/>
groups in the Soviet Union who<lb/>
were disenchanted with the<lb/>
country's lack of freedom. "The<lb/>
Soviets fall short of Western stan-<lb/>
dards on human rights Simon<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Athough Reagan has a built a<lb/>
working relationship with the<lb/>
Soviets in the recent years, the<lb/>
President has not changed his<lb/>
view that the U.S.S.R. is an adver-<lb/>
sary of the U.S said Simon.<lb/>
"While he still doesn't claim the<lb/>
Soviets to be an evil empire he<lb/>
said adding "the Soviets (to Re-<lb/>
agan) are an adversary we must<lb/>
have limited and growing coop-<lb/>
eration with for common con-<lb/>
cern<lb/>
Projecting for the future, Si-<lb/>
mon said he predicts that the<lb/>
Soviets will pursue even closer<lb/>
relations with Western Europe<lb/>
and Japan on the coat tails of the<lb/>
improved U.S. relations. Simon<lb/>
predicts that theSo' iets will try to<lb/>
break the silence I tween China<lb/>
in improving relations with<lb/>
the Asian country.<lb/>
On the American end, the next<lb/>
president will increase the<lb/>
strengthen relations with the So-<lb/>
viets and forge forth towards new<lb/>
agreements.<lb/>
Edgecombe withdraws site plan<lb/>
By STEVE SOMMERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
As a result of citizen and industrial pressures, the<lb/>
Edgecombe County Board of Commissioners with-<lb/>
drew their proposal to volunteer 3,000 acres of<lb/>
Edgecombe County to the state for a waste manage-<lb/>
ment park. The announcement was made before<lb/>
what was initially a hostile crowd Monday night at<lb/>
Edgecombe Community College.<lb/>
The gathering of approximately 800 was at what<lb/>
originally intended to be a public hearing on the<lb/>
matter. Instead, the board's chairperson, Tom P.<lb/>
Bardin jr. delivered a prepared speech including the<lb/>
announcement of the withdraw.<lb/>
Barden said the decision was greatly influenced by<lb/>
a resolution issued by the Tarboro Edgecombe Asso-<lb/>
ciation of Manufactures. The resolution, Bardin<lb/>
explained to the disruptive audience, opposed<lb/>
measures to place the waste management park in<lb/>
Edgecombe and it also called for a referendum.<lb/>
However, Barden continued, there is "no existing<lb/>
legal authority to hold a referendum<lb/>
The Edgecombe proposal was brought to the<lb/>
county commissioners for consideration by N.C.<lb/>
State Representative, Josephus L. Mavretic.<lb/>
Mavretic said he made the proposal because he felt<lb/>
the site would significantly enhance the county's<lb/>
economic activity and school system.<lb/>
In an incentive package, Gov. Jim Martin and the<lb/>
governor's Waste Management Board offered the<lb/>
county approximately $5 million a year in revenues<lb/>
for the use of the landfill and the treatment facilities.<lb/>
This money, according to an information flyer<lb/>
distributed by Edgecombe officials would be used<lb/>
nesses and elected officials of Edgecombe County<lb/>
and eastern North Carolina<lb/>
The release further said the group has "banded<lb/>
together to reflect the views of the citizens of Edge-<lb/>
combe county" which they believe are not being<lb/>
portrayed by the county commissioners.<lb/>
In a letter issued to the comissioncrs, the group<lb/>
'The stuff has got to go somewhere. What are you going to do, dump it in ditches or something? Right now we<lb/>
have low-level nuclear waste and our society is going to continue to generate it<lb/>
Ernie Larkin, President of the Pamlico Tar River Foundation<lb/>
"to solve the NashRocky MountEdgecombe<lb/>
school problem Also the package would include<lb/>
"at least 300 new high paying blue-collar jobs for<lb/>
Edgecombe citizens according to the tlyer.<lb/>
The flyer also said that U.S. 64 Interstate to<lb/>
Bethel would be completed by January 1993 under<lb/>
the plan. In order to transport the waste, "Interstate<lb/>
connector and rail spur to Waste Management Park<lb/>
and all utilities provided by the state<lb/>
The Monday night hearing was preceeded by a<lb/>
rally organized by citizen organizat , such as the<lb/>
waste dump opposition group, Citi? ns for Democ-<lb/>
racy and Safety. Leaders of the group said that the<lb/>
group "is a coalition of citizens, organizations, busi-<lb/>
demanded "that the Edgecombe commissioners<lb/>
participate in an intensive regional study of the<lb/>
environmental and ecomomic impacts of the pro-<lb/>
posed waste site The letter wasalso.signed by eight<lb/>
other organizations including The Sierra Club, The<lb/>
Conservation Council of North Carolina, and the<lb/>
Town of Princeville.<lb/>
In response to Monday night's activity, an Edge-<lb/>
combe county citizen said, "It impressed me very<lb/>
much like a football game instead of a display of<lb/>
democracy. In any event the outcome was favor-<lb/>
able<lb/>
Also in response to the commisioners change of<lb/>
heart and the extremely will attended hearing, Dan<lb/>
Vause, a citizen of nearby Greene county, com-<lb/>
mented "Maybe this type of resistence will make a<lb/>
ripple effect to the source of the problem. Simply<lb/>
nuclear energy is not a viable alternative<lb/>
Ernie Larkin, the president of the Pamlico Tar<lb/>
River Foundation, said when asked if he expected<lb/>
the proposal withdrawal, "Hell no, I didn't expect it.<lb/>
I think it's a good decision by the commissioners.<lb/>
They saw what people had to say and they re-<lb/>
ponded to it. What else could you have asked of<lb/>
them(however) the state needs these facilities, if it<lb/>
is the end of it here, I don't know<lb/>
In further comments Larkin said, "The stuff has<lb/>
got to go somewhere. What are you going to do,<lb/>
dump it in diches or something?Right now we<lb/>
have low-level nuclear waste and our society is<lb/>
going to continue to generate it. Our society has<lb/>
decided that we are doing it<lb/>
"Is it better to develope a treatment center or<lb/>
dump it in a ditch somewhere? Clearly you have to<lb/>
have a facility. What our quarrel has been is the way<lb/>
the Edgecombe commissioners went about volun-<lb/>
teering this land<lb/>
Larkin continued to explain that the sites are<lb/>
usually chosen in an orderly way and the Edge-<lb/>
combe commissioners'short-circuited' that process.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058078_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 8,1988<lb/>
Legislators try to land supercollider<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP)�House weekend. But they tiled several final site is scheduled to be named tion process. But he said he would million that Congress was 1.5 percentof indirect overhead of<lb/>
Speaker Liston Ramsey Friday major bills, including Gov. Jim in November. advise any ligislator who asked committed to the SSC. Tom Drew defense contractors' bids, Drew<lb/>
campared the superconducting Martin's plan for consolidating Martin has requested $340,000 him for advice to vote against the of the Durham-based Phoenix said, and is expected to generate<lb/>
super collider to a new Mercedes- state environmental agencies and through the end of year so the $15 million this year. Communications, which is han- $1 billion to $3 billion a year if<lb/>
Benz�he'd like to have both but restoring a sales tax discount for state can stay in the running for "I'd say don't do it Ramsey dling public relations for the proj- passed,<lb/>
nor at any cost. merchants abolished last year. the project. He also included in his said after the meeting. "It's too ect, said Rep. Tim Valentine, D-<lb/>
"I don't object to pursuing it (the Sen. Ken Royall, D-Durham, budget $15 million so the state early N.C and Sen. Terry Sanford, D-<lb/>
SSC). I just want to know what it's Rep. Jack Hunt, D-Cleveland, and could begin land acquisition if it But Ramsey said he would like N.C are working on a bill that<lb/>
going to cost Ramsey said after Sen. Aaron Plyler, D-Union, also were selected. would create a super science fund<lb/>
legislative leaders met with state attended the meeting, along with Originally, land acquisition was the super collider to be placed in for projects such as the super col-<lb/>
officials handling North Lt. Gov. Bob Jordan. expected to begin in January if North Carolina. lider.<lb/>
Carolina's application for the William Dunn, the state project North Carolina were chosen, "I hope we can land that thing; The money would come from<lb/>
"No state would undertake<lb/>
land acpuisition without absolute<lb/>
assurance it would be built on that<lb/>
site Dunn said.<lb/>
The estimated cost of the super<lb/>
collider is $4.4 billion.<lb/>
proton-smasher.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the House and<lb/>
Senate held brief sessions and<lb/>
conducted no substantive busi-<lb/>
ness before heading home for the<lb/>
director for the super collider, Dunn said. But because of the<lb/>
gave legislators a history of the federal budget it's expected to be<lb/>
state's application. North Caro- delayed until July, he said.<lb/>
Una is now of seven sites under Ramsey said he believed the<lb/>
consideration for the SSC, and a state would continue the applica-<lb/>
Time for shades, shorts, and a good buddy to share the Greenville heat with. While this June day swelters<lb/>
and students run for the A.C this girl and her pet enjoy the warmth on western campus. (Photolab)<lb/>
Food poisoning can occur in summer<lb/>
I like to go on picnics in the<lb/>
summer. What's the best way to<lb/>
keep from getting food poison-<lb/>
ing?<lb/>
Picnics are a fun and inexpen-<lb/>
sive way to enjoy the summer as<lb/>
and deviled eggs, are kept cold<lb/>
(below 40 degrees F.) until it is<lb/>
time to cat. Meats and eggs should<lb/>
be thoroughly cooked. Drinking<lb/>
(or eating) raw eggs is a prime<lb/>
method of getting a salmonella<lb/>
GIVE BLOOD<lb/>
it's great he said. "But not at any<lb/>
cost<lb/>
Dunn said the state's commit-<lb/>
ment to the project included $140<lb/>
million in transportation im-<lb/>
provements, of which $60 million<lb/>
was already in the highway plan.<lb/>
It also includes $10 million over 30<lb/>
years for additional educational<lb/>
funds, the bulk of which would go<lb/>
to the University of North Caro-<lb/>
lina system for items such as re-<lb/>
cruiting physics professors.<lb/>
But Royall pointed out that the<lb/>
Legislature cannot appropriate<lb/>
money for 30 years and that any<lb/>
request for money for the UNC<lb/>
system would have to come from<lb/>
the UNC Board of Governors.<lb/>
The state has proposed that the<lb/>
53-mile underground tunnel be<lb/>
located in Durham, Granville and<lb/>
Person counties. Eight-thousands<lb/>
acres of surface land would be<lb/>
required for the project, although<lb/>
Dunn said above-ground activi-<lb/>
ties would be limited on only a<lb/>
small part of that land.<lb/>
A total of $360 million had been<lb/>
requested from Congress this year<lb/>
for the SSC, but it appears that<lb/>
only $100 million will be appro-<lb/>
priated this year, all for research<lb/>
and development. Originally, $80<lb/>
million was requested for re-<lb/>
search and development, Dunn<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But Jordan said the state would<lb/>
need a clearer sicnal than $100<lb/>
(Hilt East (Earalfman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
James F. J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey Spencer Meymandi<lb/>
Richard-Alan Cook Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY RATES<lb/>
0-49 Column inchesS4.25<lb/>
50-994.15<lb/>
100-1494.05<lb/>
150-199 3.95<lb/>
200-2493.85<lb/>
250 and above3.75<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in Addition to Regular Space Rate)<lb/>
One color and black$90 00<lb/>
Two colors and black155.00<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
5.000 or less6c each<lb/>
5.001 - 10.0005.5c each<lb/>
10,001-12,000 5�each<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Phones<lb/>
,757-6366757-6557<lb/>
757-6558757-6309<lb/>
long as foods served do not harbor infection, so be sure to cook your<lb/>
or promote the growth of bacteria, eggs first.<lb/>
Contrary to popular belief, store In addition, don't let perishable<lb/>
bought mayonnaise does not pro- foods sit at room temperature<lb/>
more than two hours, less time is<lb/>
-������������ better! Don't smell or taste foods<lb/>
to see if it's spoilcd-if you have a<lb/>
HEALTH COLUMN question, throw it away.<lb/>
By MARY ELESHA<lb/>
ADAMS<lb/>
mote food poisoning. In fact,<lb/>
mayonnaise may actually retard<lb/>
the growth of bacteria because of<lb/>
the vinegar it contains.<lb/>
Salmonella organisms cause<lb/>
food poisoning and gastroenteri-<lb/>
tis. The best way to avoid Salmo-<lb/>
nella infections is to make sure you shou,d consult your health<lb/>
cold foods, such as fried chicken carc Providcr for treatment.<lb/>
Symptoms of food poisoning<lb/>
include diarrhea within 2-48<lb/>
hours after ingesting the organ-<lb/>
ism, gas, fever, nausea, vomiting,<lb/>
and headaches. If you should<lb/>
develop these symptons, you<lb/>
should try to drink as many liq-<lb/>
uids as possilbe to prevent dehy-<lb/>
dration and eat only foods that are<lb/>
blank. The symptoms may indi-<lb/>
cate other illness as well, if they do<lb/>
no clear up within 24-48 hours,<lb/>
NVouldV<lb/>
Yor $1OOO.O0?<lb/>
Round 2<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Nights<lb/>
Beginning<lb/>
June 14th<lb/>
Starts at<lb/>
10:00 p.m.<lb/>
 T The Club<lb/>
r<lb/>
Lets have some<lb/>
t0<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
SERVE N SAVE<lb/>
Sliced<lb/>
Lunchmeat<lb/>
m<lb/>
REGULAR<lb/>
OR DIET<lb/>
Big K<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
12-Pk<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
-99<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
All Meat<lb/>
Wieners<lb/>
KROGER GRADE A<lb/>
Large<lb/>
Eggs<lb/>
D02.<lb/>
49<lb/>
SELECTED VARIETIES<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
Le Menu 1�z12<lb/>
Dinnersbox<lb/>
$199<lb/>
REFRESHING<lb/>
Sealtest<lb/>
Lemonade.<lb/>
T<lb/>
r<lb/>
SWEET, RIPE<lb/>
California<lb/>
Cantaloupe<lb/>
Ea.<lb/>
OLDE ITALIAN<lb/>
BRAND DELUXE OR<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Crescent<lb/>
Rolls<lb/>
DORITOS BRAND<lb/>
Tortilla<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
Every Friday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
At Charley O's Bar<lb/>
At The Hilton Inn - Greenville<lb/>
- Appearing<lb/>
June 10th<lb/>
E.G. Peters<lb/>
10:00 p.m.<lb/>
Summer-Time Special<lb/>
Pitchers Of Beer<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
(Wednesday &amp; Friday's Only)<lb/>
KROGER NATURAL<lb/>
FLAVOR<lb/>
Deluxe<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
Ea.<lb/>
10 OUNCE BOWL<lb/>
&amp; 4 x 4 SANDWICH<lb/>
Soup and<lb/>
Sandwich<lb/>
049<lb/>
1n � <lb/>
v<lb/>
Item and Price Effective<lb/>
tun. June 5, 1988 thru<lb/>
Sat. June 11, 1M8<lb/>
lie vnniMtMiiail<lb/>
wmm eer ewf tat � eecaat m�<lb/>
� M '� �w � w aaei ea eat eM<lb/>
<lb/>
 aai in waj jpe a tm tmk aw<lb/>
ga aaaai W am � ��<lb/>
a� �� (<lb/>
iaa�taa)�<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd - Greenville<lb/>
-<lb/>
�<lb/>
- 5<lb/>
I<lb/>
�3<lb/>
s<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
Is<lb/>
� r<lb/>
�h<lb/>
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� tl<lb/>
Syste<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)�So<lb/>
ticated weapon-system cox<lb/>
crs are vulnerable to" vi r u<lb/>
"like business and personal<lb/>
putcr, but experts say effort<lb/>
fight such software sabot a g(<lb/>
barely bevond the plan<lb/>
stages.<lb/>
Viruses�actually small sti<lb/>
of computer code�cant i<lb/>
Hy inserted into softv.<lb/>
grams, where thev mav lit'<lb/>
mant for months or years<lb/>
causingcomputers, and the i<lb/>
ons they help control t<lb/>
wire.<lb/>
"Software attack, often be<lb/>
ned out with the aid ot<lb/>
placed insiders, is emer.<lb/>
coherent new tvpe of S) j<lb/>
offensive warfare S I<lb/>
man, a Yale University -<lb/>
professor, and Paul R<lb/>
mathematician, wrote r<lb/>
the military electi<lb/>
nal.<lb/>
"Itcanlx<lb/>
race and tin fi<lb/>
field to affect n I<lb/>
outcomes, but ala i p a j<lb/>
artces i pi ���� i r they w:<lb/>
"strike key civilian I<lb/>
electronic fu<lb/>
financial and data comm<lb/>
tions, air trafl rttrol si<lb/>
Shanty to<lb/>
burned<lb/>
NEW HAVEN, Coni<lb/>
Yale University alumnus<lb/>
of torching a campu -<lb/>
built to - � apart J<lb/>
he'd once worked in f<lb/>
according to a man wh(<lb/>
him down.<lb/>
"In mv opinion he a<lb/>
edged he had done it ar <lb/>
because he had strong I<lb/>
this and felt alumni shoui<lb/>
their say Dr. Michael L. i<lb/>
said Sunday. "Heals -<lb/>
given Yale a lot oi moneyl<lb/>
Cbarnev, a Boston <lb/>
L and class of 1968 1 thi<lb/>
ft jogging across the camr<lb/>
! dav morning he saw a r<lb/>
' ning away from the I<lb/>
"1 veiled 'fire' a<lb/>
i him Chamey said<lb/>
tan suit, tie and<lb/>
: chich he took ofi as I<lb/>
Charnev said he <lb/>
� Dr. Elwood D. Bi<lb/>
courtyard of one of ale<lb/>
tial colleges, where the :j<lb/>
: political discus<lb/>
: Africa, apartheid and<lb/>
 vestment policu -<lb/>
Bracey who app<lb/>
: visiting the campus I<lb/>
weekend, said<lb/>
: three months at a<lb/>
hospital and was a<lb/>
: eran, Chamey -<lb/>
Bracey, oi West<lb/>
Flawaschaigedwit<lb/>
arson in the fire that dest<lb/>
shantytown, named Wi<lb/>
: dela Citv after I<lb/>
: Mandela, the jail dS I<lb/>
: anti-apartheid<lb/>
: Bracey, 56 3 Yale<lb/>
: was freefon $50,000 bor<lb/>
: arraignment today in N<lb/>
: Superior Court. He co<lb/>
: reached tor comment<lb/>
despite attempts b<lb/>
locate him at hotels<lb/>
Sue Ellen Apte actir<lb/>
of the Palm Beach Count<lb/>
 Society described<lb/>
popular docti<lb/>
He s a wi pectl<lb/>
cian. not the type<lb/>
would do someth j<lb/>
have repercuss<lb/>
"He's not hot-tempere<lb/>
la<lb/>
TAXPAYERS<lb/>
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Required reading-<lb/>
The East Carol<lb/>
Wal<lb/>
<pb facs="00058078_0003"/><lb/>
TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
1UNE8,1988 3<lb/>
: Systems prone to virus<lb/>
<lb/>
I i rect overhead of<lb/>
rontractors bids, Drew<lb/>
Y expected to generate<lb/>
to 53 billion a vear if<lb/>
tate would undertake<lb/>
uisition without absolute<lb/>
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WASHINGTON (AD�Sophis-<lb/>
ticated weapon-system comput-<lb/>
ers are vulnerable to "viruses" just<lb/>
like business and personal com-<lb/>
puter, but experts say efforts to<lb/>
fight such software sabotage are<lb/>
barely beyond the planning<lb/>
stages.<lb/>
Viruses�actually small strings<lb/>
of computer code� -can be stealth-<lb/>
ily inserted into software pro-<lb/>
grams, where they may lie dor-<lb/>
mant for months or years before<lb/>
causingcomputers, and the weap-<lb/>
ons they help control to go hay-<lb/>
wire.<lb/>
"Software attack, often best ear-<lb/>
ned out with the aid of well-<lb/>
placed insiders, is emerging as a<lb/>
coherent new type of systematic<lb/>
offensive warfare Scott A. Boor-<lb/>
man, a Yale University sociology<lb/>
professor, and Paul R. Levitt, a<lb/>
mathematician, wrote recentlv in<lb/>
the military electronics journal<lb/>
Signal.<lb/>
"It can be waged far removed in<lb/>
space and time from any battle-<lb/>
field to affect not only combat<lb/>
outcomes, but also peacetime bal-<lb/>
ances of power they wrote. It can<lb/>
"strike key civilian targets, such as<lb/>
electronic funds transfer, other<lb/>
financial and data communica-<lb/>
tions, air traffic control systems<lb/>
Shantytown<lb/>
burned<lb/>
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AD�A<lb/>
Yale University alumnus accused<lb/>
of torching a campus shantvtown<lb/>
built to protest apartheid said<lb/>
he'd once worked in South Africa,<lb/>
according to a man who chased<lb/>
him down.<lb/>
"In my opinion he acknowl-<lb/>
edged he had done it and he did it<lb/>
because he had strong feelings on<lb/>
this and felt alumni should have<lb/>
their say Dr. Michael L. Charney<lb/>
said Sunday. "He also said he had<lb/>
given Yale a lot of money<lb/>
Charney, a Boston psychiatrist<lb/>
� and class of 1968, said that while<lb/>
�-Jogging across the campus Sun-<lb/>
day morning he saw a man run-<lb/>
ning away from the fire.<lb/>
"I yelled 'fire' and ran after<lb/>
him Charney said. "He was in a<lb/>
tan suit, tie and his class button,<lb/>
chich he took off as he ran<lb/>
Charney said he caught the man<lb/>
Dr. El wood D. Bracev, in the<lb/>
courtyard of one of Yale's residen-<lb/>
tial colleges, where the two had a<lb/>
political discussion about South<lb/>
Africa, apartheid and Yale's in-<lb/>
vestment policies.<lb/>
Bracev, who apparently was<lb/>
visiting the campus for alumni<lb/>
weekend, said he'd worked for<lb/>
three months at a South African<lb/>
hospital and was a Vietman vet-<lb/>
eran, Charney said.<lb/>
Bracev, of West Palm Beach,<lb/>
Fla was charged with first degree<lb/>
arson in the fire that destroyed the<lb/>
shantvtown, named Winnie Man-<lb/>
dela City after the wife of Nelson<lb/>
Mandela, the jailed South African<lb/>
anti-apartheid leader.<lb/>
Bracev, 56, a 1958 Yale gradua te,<lb/>
was frec'on $50,000 bond pending<lb/>
arraignment today in New Haven<lb/>
Superior Court. He could not be<lb/>
reached for comment Sunday,<lb/>
despite attempts by telephone to<lb/>
locate him at hotels.<lb/>
Sue Ellen Apte, acting director<lb/>
of the Palm Beach County Medical<lb/>
: Society, described Bracey as a<lb/>
popular doctor.<lb/>
"He's a well-respected physi-<lb/>
cian, not the type of person who<lb/>
would do something that might<lb/>
have repercussions Apte said.<lb/>
"He's not hot-tempered<lb/>
and even the vote-tallying ma-<lb/>
chinery at the heart of the demo-<lb/>
cratic process<lb/>
Within the last year, vinises<lb/>
have "infected" computers a<lb/>
NASA, the National Oceanic and<lb/>
Atmospheric Administration, in-<lb/>
formation systems on Capitol<lb/>
Hill. George Washington Univer-<lb/>
sity and Hebrew University in<lb/>
Jerusalem.<lb/>
Tactics that can be used to dis-<lb/>
rupt computer operations in-<lb/>
clude:<lb/>
Viruses, essentially small pro-<lb/>
grams that can hide in the<lb/>
computer's operating system,<lb/>
giving orders that range from a<lb/>
relatively benign message that<lb/>
flashes on the screen to destruc-<lb/>
tion of data files or erasure of<lb/>
disks. A virus differs from other<lb/>
sabotage in that it clones itself and<lb/>
spreads.<lb/>
"Trojan horses programs that<lb/>
look and act like normal ones but<lb/>
contain hidden commands that<lb/>
eventually take effect and cause<lb/>
havoc.<lb/>
"Logic bombs small sets of<lb/>
instructions surreptitiously en-<lb/>
tered into other software, where<lb/>
they remain undetected and inac-<lb/>
tive until the computer arrives at a<lb/>
certain result during normal com-<lb/>
putation.<lb/>
"Time bombs which go into<lb/>
action at a set date and time.<lb/>
The supersecret National Secu-<lb/>
ritv Agcncv, based at Fort Meade,<lb/>
Md is responsible for safeguard-<lb/>
ing the security of U.S. govern-<lb/>
ment computer systems. It has set<lb/>
up the National Computer Secu-<lb/>
rity Center at Fort Meade to help<lb/>
the military, defense contractors<lb/>
and other private companies cope<lb/>
with software warfare and other<lb/>
threats to vital computer systesm.<lb/>
Michael Harrison, a computer<lb/>
science professor at the University<lb/>
TAXPAYERS<lb/>
with dependents<lb/>
Beginning with your 1987 income<lb/>
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kvk aflMHH<lb/>
Required reading<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Watch for it<lb/>
of California at Berkeley, said the<lb/>
center has developed criteria for<lb/>
"trusted computer system evalu-<lb/>
ation.  This is a practical attempt<lb/>
to decide what systems are more<lb/>
trustworthy than others<lb/>
Boorman and Levitt said much<lb/>
more needs to be done to develop<lb/>
effective technical countermea-<lb/>
sures, and to alert military com-<lb/>
manders as well as civilian man-<lb/>
agers. "Strategic, tactical and lo-<lb/>
gistic planning to meet the soft-<lb/>
ware warfare challenge remains<lb/>
in its infancy in many cases they<lb/>
wrote.<lb/>
Ted Lewis, a computer science<lb/>
professor at Oregon State Univer-<lb/>
sity said that "certainly anyone<lb/>
with an undergraduate degree in<lb/>
computer science could go in and<lb/>
mess up the programs of a weap-<lb/>
ons delivery system or an acing<lb/>
package, either one<lb/>
Boorman and Levitt wrote that<lb/>
the military threat of software<lb/>
malfunction was illustrated dur-<lb/>
ing the 1982 Falklands war, when<lb/>
an unintentional flaw surfaced in<lb/>
guidance software controlling the<lb/>
Sea Wolf missile system used by<lb/>
British warships for air defense. It<lb/>
"proved unable to cope with a<lb/>
combat situation that arose when<lb/>
two Argentine aircraft attacked<lb/>
along closely parallel courses.<lb/>
Faced with the dilemma of which<lb/>
aircraft to shoot at first .the soft-<lb/>
ware simply shut down the de-<lb/>
fense system<lb/>
In their Signal article, Boorman<lb/>
and Levitt argued that "software<lb/>
saboteurs may be far easier to<lb/>
recruit�and far harder to iden-<lb/>
tify, prosecute and convict�than<lb/>
traditional saboteurs"<lb/>
Paul Abrahams, president of<lb/>
the New York-based Association<lb/>
for Computing Machinery, said,<lb/>
"The problem of detection is ex-<lb/>
ceedinly difficult<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058078_0004"/><lb/>
2JiB iEafii (Eartfliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Clay Deanhardt, cmiMt"<lb/>
Carol Wetherington, mm em<lb/>
JAMES FJ. MCKEE, Dmcioraf Advertamg<lb/>
Tum Hampton, ncwi Ed�or<lb/>
Tim Chandler, sp� em<lb/>
John Carter, F-h�� w<lb/>
Michelle England, om-uiw<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, <lb/>
June 8.1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
JEFF PARKER,Sf�r WutTor<lb/>
TOM FURR, Circulation Meujer<lb/>
Mike Upchurch, production ms<lb/>
JOHN W. MEDLIN, Art Director<lb/>
Mac Clark, gM�aM�uF<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Proposal ousted<lb/>
Five million wasn 't enough<lb/>
I<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;BQ(Jfc. s(f9tr 7?fE �ASTOouMN<lb/>
For the past few weeks, this The<lb/>
East Carolinian has carried news of<lb/>
the Edgecombe County Waste<lb/>
Management Park Proposal. Edge-<lb/>
combe, Pitt, Martin counties and<lb/>
communities therein were called on<lb/>
to protect the peace of mind, secure<lb/>
the future for the young, and defend<lb/>
the overall health of the citizens in<lb/>
these counties.<lb/>
And they responded. Concerned<lb/>
citizens joined together and fought<lb/>
the actions of the Edgecombe county<lb/>
commissioners, Representative<lb/>
Mavretic and other figures who<lb/>
were trying so hard to get the plant.<lb/>
Many felt there were having a fatal<lb/>
problem slammed onto their shoul-<lb/>
ders, with insufficient time to make<lb/>
educated decisions.<lb/>
Approximately 800 angry citizens<lb/>
attended the proposal meeting held<lb/>
Monday night at Edgecombe Com-<lb/>
munity College. The crowd drew<lb/>
great attention to themselves; show-<lb/>
ing their intent to act.<lb/>
This is what America is all about.<lb/>
The statement read by the commit-<lb/>
tee Monday night was prepared<lb/>
ahead of time, but it is a good feeling<lb/>
knowing that the voices of the citi-<lb/>
zens helped make the decision. A<lb/>
round of applause must be sent out<lb/>
to those who spent hours on the tele-<lb/>
phone, distributing press releases<lb/>
and educating the public about the<lb/>
pros and cons of this proposal.<lb/>
The waste management park was<lb/>
not wanted by a majority and be-<lb/>
cause the public spoke up, Edge-<lb/>
combe County will not be labelled<lb/>
"just another waste dump Con-<lb/>
cerned citizens can breath easy<lb/>
again, knowing that for the time<lb/>
being at least, out backyards will<lb/>
stay free of hazardous waste.<lb/>
Some citizens of Edgecombe<lb/>
County may mourn the loss of the<lb/>
five million dollars a year, but there<lb/>
are even more who feel safety and<lb/>
democracy were worth more than<lb/>
five million dollars, and did some-<lb/>
thing about it.<lb/>
Changes are occurring in<lb/>
the Soviet Union today<lb/>
Every time a ReaganGorbachov<lb/>
summit is held, our news media inun-<lb/>
dates us with news about the Soviet<lb/>
Union; how they live, what they think,<lb/>
how long their lines are for food and<lb/>
clothing, their news media, etc. Even<lb/>
though it may be slightly tiring for a few<lb/>
days, it can only turn out to be a positive<lb/>
thing in the long run. There is so much<lb/>
misunderstanding and fear between<lb/>
our two peoples that anything that<lb/>
shines the light of understanding be-<lb/>
tween us can be very helpful indeed.<lb/>
All three networks, as well as inde-<lb/>
pendents like CNN, broadcast from<lb/>
inside Russiam and Cjarlcs Kuralt even<lb/>
gave us his own version of "on the Road<lb/>
in Russia If you payed attention even<lb/>
slightly, instead of letting your eyes<lb/>
glaze over every time you heard the<lb/>
word "USSR" or "Moscow you<lb/>
couldn't help to gain a greater insight on<lb/>
the Russian people, instead of just hear-<lb/>
ing all the bad things their government<lb/>
did. That is the main problem with<lb/>
negotiating treaties with Russia, we are<lb/>
dealing with their government whereas<lb/>
they are dealing with our people.<lb/>
Until the Russian government is a<lb/>
true representative of their people we<lb/>
will be dealing with each other on two<lb/>
different planes, two entirely separate<lb/>
playing fields. We have a system of<lb/>
checks and balances, but the Politburo<lb/>
has no one to answer to but themselves.<lb/>
The trouble comes when so many<lb/>
people confuse the nature of the Russian<lb/>
government with the personality of the<lb/>
Russian people. The two couldn't be<lb/>
further apart. They are just people, like<lb/>
us. The only reason they have such a<lb/>
terrible government is because they<lb/>
were born with one that happens to be<lb/>
extremely sow to change, and hard to<lb/>
get anything done at all, due to the struc-<lb/>
ture of the government and it's residual<lb/>
effects on the entire society.<lb/>
Even though Russia is run by a gigan-<lb/>
tic bureaucracy and is slow to change, in<lb/>
and more economic reform (Pcr-<lb/>
cstroika) than ever before. I have been<lb/>
hearing more and more criticism from<lb/>
the inside, and they are talking about<lb/>
giving more authority and responsibil-<lb/>
ity to local regions, even if that means<lb/>
taking it away somewhat from that<lb/>
huge bureaucratic machine.<lb/>
The biggest difference between their<lb/>
bureaucratic machine and our bureau-<lb/>
cratic machine, aside from the represen-<lb/>
tational aspect, is that ours is more oper<lb/>
and accessible and therefore quicker tc<lb/>
change due to changing circumstances<lb/>
and ideas. The change in the Soviet<lb/>
Union may be at a much slower pace,<lb/>
but it is there nevertheless. Don't let that<lb/>
fact lull you into a false sense of security,<lb/>
though. Until some sort of representa-<lb/>
tion by the people is set up in the USSR,<lb/>
it will remain a closed society where<lb/>
people are afraid to speak out too much.<lb/>
Let me give you an example of how<lb/>
much they have changed in the last 40<lb/>
years. My mother wasborn to a German<lb/>
architect and a Ukrainiun woman living<lb/>
in the Ukraine. The revolution came<lb/>
and went around them, and because my<lb/>
father was a "preferred citizen" he was<lb/>
issued a card which enabled him to buy<lb/>
commodities such as milk, meat and<lb/>
eggs without waiting in lines for hours<lb/>
at a time. So much for a "classless soci-<lb/>
ety Doctors, lawyers and party mem-<lb/>
bers were also issued such privileges.<lb/>
My grandfather saw the atrocities<lb/>
committed in the name of Communism<lb/>
and applied for emigration. They felt<lb/>
that if he wanted to back to his home<lb/>
country, he must not like them, there-<lb/>
fore they decided they did not like him<lb/>
and told him to pack his bags. What they<lb/>
did not tell him was to bring very warm<lb/>
clothes. You see, they sent him and his<lb/>
oldest son (my uncle) to Siberia. It kind<lb/>
of reads like a made-for-tv movie,<lb/>
the last few years we have witnessed<lb/>
more change in the Soviet Union than at<lb/>
any time since the Russian Revolution.<lb/>
Today you see more openness (Glasnot)<lb/>
doesn't it? Well, to make a long story<lb/>
short, my mother made her way to<lb/>
Germanyand caught the last year of<lb/>
Hitler) where she met my Dad (who's<lb/>
family goes back 10 generations in<lb/>
Georgia); he came to Germany with the<lb/>
US occupation force. They met, mar-<lb/>
ried, and lived happily ever after. The<lb/>
point is that today the situation is<lb/>
changed. To get sent to Siberia you have<lb/>
to do more than apply for emigration,<lb/>
you have to be a political dissident or<lb/>
such.<lb/>
CAMPUS SPECTRUM<lb/>
BY<lb/>
MIKE HIGHSMITH<lb/>
Even though the Russian people are<lb/>
just regular folks like us, their<lb/>
government's iron fist policies are the<lb/>
harsh realities our country has had to<lb/>
deal with for so long. We have found<lb/>
out the hard way that we can't play<lb/>
mamby pamby with them. We have to<lb/>
be just as shrewd as them, I just wish we<lb/>
didn't have to play the same political<lb/>
game with them. Besides we can't play<lb/>
them as well as they can, so they have<lb/>
the advantage. My prediction is that the<lb/>
USSR is bound for change, or else the<lb/>
internal pressure would eventually<lb/>
cause another revolution. Communism<lb/>
by its very nature causes laziness and<lb/>
waste, without a pay-per-effort eco-<lb/>
nomic situation people will just not<lb/>
work as hard or produce as much. I may<lb/>
be optimistic about the eventual change<lb/>
in the Communist structure, but it is<lb/>
only because of my basic optimism<lb/>
towards humanity. I give us as a species<lb/>
more credit than to think it would allow<lb/>
a government like that to thrive for too<lb/>
long. I just hope I'm right.<lb/>
re?<lb/>
Bush strategy to define Dukakis:<lb/>
By FRED BARNES<lb/>
THE NEW REPUBLIC<lb/>
George Bush suffers from too much definition, not<lb/>
to little. He's Gerald Ford without pizazz, as colum-<lb/>
nist Mark Shields put it. (Michael Dukakis is Jimmy<lb/>
Carter without humor.) Bush says to type, a hyper-<lb/>
active unexciting klutz.<lb/>
Reagan's substance has rubbed off on Bush, but<lb/>
not his style. There's no magic in Bush's perform-<lb/>
ance as a campaigner. He's failed to master any of<lb/>
Reagan's stump specialities. Bush's funniest line is<lb/>
the one about wanting to be known as the "educa-<lb/>
tion president But he's not joking when he says it.<lb/>
The conventional wisdom that Bush still has a lot<lb/>
of defining of himself to do sholdn't be taken seri-<lb/>
ously. True, his advisers pay lip service to ots cruical<lb/>
to Bush's chances of gaining ground on Dukakis. But<lb/>
we've heard this before.<lb/>
The Bush strategy is to define Dukakis. "It is very<lb/>
hard to elect George Bush in an election that focuses<lb/>
primarily on George Bush argues Rep. Gingrich of<lb/>
Georgia, now a conservitive stalwart of the Bush<lb/>
campaign'It is remarkably easy to elect George<lb/>
Bush in an election that focuses primarily on Mike<lb/>
Dukakis<lb/>
Bush has already likened Dukakis to Jimmy Car-<lb/>
ter, which isn't a compliment In speeches in April<lb/>
and May, Bush said that "Carter hangs over the<lb/>
Democrats like a shadow, an unwanted reminder of<lb/>
the failure of their policies that last time they were in<lb/>
power Dukakis, he said, is "trying to sell that same<lb/>
old Democratic bill of goods. More taxes, More<lb/>
spending. More govenment control over your lives<lb/>
Thaf s only for starters. The tough stuff probably<lb/>
won't come until the fall, the thrust being that<lb/>
Dukakis is a leftist whose views ans values clash<lb/>
with those of most Americans. "Dukakis wants to be<lb/>
known as the Northern Liberal Jimmy Carter'says<lb/>
Gingrich. "We're going to prove he's the left of<lb/>
George McGovem<lb/>
Richard Bond, Bush's deputy campaign manager,<lb/>
cites'Brookline syndrome, the personification of<lb/>
brie-and-chablis sensibility as amajor issue against<lb/>
Dukakis. Dukakis lives in the Boston suburb of<lb/>
Brookline. A Bush campaign aide said the decision at<lb/>
the Brookline town meeting in 1984 to dispense with<lb/>
the Pledge of Allegiance will be used against<lb/>
Dukakis, as will Dukakis' veto of legisation requir-<lb/>
ing the pledge to be recited on public schools each<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The Bush plan also calls for debunking Dukakis'<lb/>
role in the "Massachuttes miracle zinging his for-<lb/>
eign policy views as isolationist, and attacking his<lb/>
controversial program of giving prisoners, even<lb/>
murdersm weekend furloughs.<lb/>
One reason th e Bush campaign won't go full bore<lb/>
yet is money. What's of the $27 million that can be<lb/>
spent legally in the primaries must be saved to<lb/>
finance the Bush operation at the Republican Natinal<lb/>
Convention in August.<lb/>
Still, Bush and his adivsers are alarmed at the<lb/>
favorable imperssion Dukakis is creating with only<lb/>
Jesse Jackson as his Democratic opponent. "He looks<lb/>
like a moderate beating Jesse Jackson every week<lb/>
complains Bond.<lb/>
Worse, moderate and conversative Democrats are<lb/>
voting for Dukakis in the primaries to thawart<lb/>
Jackson. These include many "Reagan Democrats<lb/>
who voted for Reagan in 1980 and 1984. Bush can't<lb/>
win this year unless he holds on to a sizable chunk of<lb/>
them, and tarring Dukakis as a leftist may help.<lb/>
A theory voiced by dissident Bushies is that now is<lb/>
the time to confront Dukakis with examples of past<lb/>
leftism. Dukakis must face Denocratic primary vot-<lb/>
ers in a few more states, appear before the national<lb/>
convention in July, and also appease Jesse Jackson.<lb/>
This makes it difficult to repudiate his past ans scoot<lb/>
to the center.<lb/>
Bush himself doesn't seem to but it, nor do most of<lb/>
his top campaign aides. "Bush has his own internal<lb/>
time clock says Bond. There's a risk that by going<lb/>
easy on Dukakis now, Bush will fall so far behind<lb/>
he'd never be able to make up the ground. This<lb/>
happened to Ford in 1976. But Bush stategists figure<lb/>
the risk is small.<lb/>
What's odd about the clamor for BUsh to define<lb/>
himself os that if s hard to find an issue on which he<lb/>
doesn't have a position. After more that seven years<lb/>
of touting Reagan's policies, he's pretty well de-<lb/>
fined. Except for ame relatively minor points Bush is<lb/>
the same as Reagan. What he lacks is Reagan's<lb/>
passion for conservative stands. Bush is a lukewarm<lb/>
Reagan.<lb/>
While satisfying conservatives, Bush hasn't been<lb/>
adroit enough to get credit from the press for emerg-<lb/>
ing from the president's shadow. If he palyed up his<lb/>
small differences with Reagan, he might. But he's<lb/>
been amazingly unobtrusive.<lb/>
When Bush finally trumpeted a difference he was<lb/>
stupidly shortsighted. In his May 18 speech, he<lb/>
saidI won't bargain with terrorists, and I won't<lb/>
bargain with drug dealers either, whether they're on<lb/>
VS. or foreign soil<lb/>
His office made sure the world knew he was<lb/>
talking about Noriega. Then word leaked that Bush<lb/>
was lobbying Reagan to give up any idea of drop-<lb/>
ping drug smuggling charges against Noriega. This<lb/>
was hardly a profile in courage.<lb/>
Reagan went along happily with Bush's apostasy<lb/>
on Noriega. Bush has virtual carte blanche with him.<lb/>
The only trouble Reagan caused was by trying too<lb/>
hard to be helpful. When he got a draft of his May 11<lb/>
speech endorsing Bush, Reagan tossed out all the<lb/>
paragraphs of biographical boilerplate about the<lb/>
veep.<lb/>
Instead, he hand wrote a passage on a yellow legal<lb/>
pad saying he'd do anything necessary to get Bush<lb/>
elected. The new passage was brief and none too<lb/>
fulsome, and reporters treated the endorsement as<lb/>
halfhearted. Reagan was thunderstruck.<lb/>
There's a simple way for Reagan to make it up to<lb/>
Bush. He can lead the attack on Dukakis this fall as<lb/>
a dangerous lefty. Campaigning side-by-side with<lb/>
Bush will only make Bush seem smaller. But cam-<lb/>
paigning noisily against Dukakis across the South<lb/>
and in ethnic enclaves inthe North might win over<lb/>
Reagan Democrats. No doubt Reagan's willing. All<lb/>
Bush has to do is ask.<lb/>
Cong<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)<lb/>
gress was fulfilling a deficil<lb/>
tion agreement with PH<lb/>
Reagan when it passed a $)<lb/>
lion federal budget for fisc<lb/>
but a hefty deficit remail<lb/>
spending priorities have<lb/>
shifted.<lb/>
The budget, approved<lb/>
House last month and the)<lb/>
on Monday by 58-29, sn<lb/>
deficit of nearly SI42 bilhol<lb/>
not counting sales of govci<lb/>
Five-oldl<lb/>
I suspend<lb/>
MARION, N C I �<lb/>
year-old street preach I<lb/>
Bible verses outside his<lb/>
struck a sheriff's deput<lb/>
and had to be carried<lb/>
after he was suspend<lb/>
day of school, officials <lb/>
McDowell County Sh(<lb/>
Haynes said Matthew<lb/>
struck Lt John Lite once in<lb/>
during the incident at<lb/>
Elementary Schc<lb/>
Matthew returned I<lb/>
from a 10-dav suspt I<lb/>
began preaching iust ins<lb/>
school's exit gate Friday<lb/>
according to reports "<lb/>
Ohio, Nev<lb/>
propose a<lb/>
COLUMBUS, Ohio (.<lb/>
governors oi Ohio and N<lb/>
today proposed anal<lb/>
that would sharply redi<lb/>
rain while protecting the<lb/>
of the coal-producing I<lb/>
New York Cow Marie<lb/>
and Ohio Gov. Richan<lb/>
recommended in a joint <lb/>
a 10-million-ton reductid<lb/>
fus dioxide emissions fro<lb/>
sources by the year<lb/>
proposal also would<lb/>
$900 million a year to firtf<lb/>
50 percent of the capital<lb/>
The plan will be prci<lb/>
Congress as an amendmj<lb/>
Clean Air Act. Cuoi<lb/>
Celeste, both Democn<lb/>
thev will push the agreei<lb/>
compromise to the othej<lb/>
tive proposals in Was<lb/>
bogged down in regionall<lb/>
to control acid rain.<lb/>
Sulfus dioxide emisstf<lb/>
the burning oi coal h<lb/>
blamed as a major cau�<lb/>
rain, which environment<lb/>
is destroying waters an<lb/>
lands in the North.<lb/>
the sulfur dioxide coi<lb/>
coal-burning power plaj<lb/>
the Ohio River.<lb/>
New York is one or<lb/>
Northeastern states mv<lb/>
U.S. Circuit Court of Apl<lb/>
in Washington againstj<lb/>
Evironmental Protectioi<lb/>
The states are prote<lb/>
EPA's refusal to r<lb/>
pollution control plan;<lb/>
Michigan, Indiana.<lb/>
Tennessee, West Viq<lb/>
nois to reduce su<lb/>
emissions in those stated<lb/>
The plan calls tor red<lb/>
sulfur dioxide emissio:<lb/>
phases: 3.3 million ton<lb/>
another 4 5 million -<lb/>
and another 2 millioi<lb/>
2003.<lb/>
states would receive<lb/>
million to pay tor the CO<lb/>
pliance. More than two<lb/>
paid bv the oil mdusti<lb/>
third bv federal official;<lb/>
luters themselves woul<lb/>
raise about $900 million<lb/>
deal.<lb/>
The agreement woul<lb/>
tablish a 10-year $2.5<lb/>
panded clean coal tt<lb/>
program to achieve redl<lb/>
sulfur dioxide and nitrcj<lb/>
emissions. That money<lb/>
handed out on the basi:<lb/>
cent matching grants!<lb/>
demonstrations of nef<lb/>
ogy-<lb/>
In the joint statcmei<lb/>
said, "It is imperative to<lb/>
impasse that now exisi<lb/>
gress<lb/>
Celeste's press secretj<lb/>
Phillips, said the govei<lb/>
ers the agreement "a<lb/>
tween preserving jobs<lb/>
ing up the environmcnl<lb/>
But a state senator tr<lb/>
richest coal county,<lb/>
Robert Nay from<lb/>
County, said the agrc<lb/>
"hard slap across th�<lb/>
Ohio's coal miners<lb/>
Nay said he was u<lb/>
<pb facs="00058078_0005"/><lb/>
Public<lb/>
opinion<lb/>
�<lb/>
ing in<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 8, 1988<lb/>
i<lb/>
day<lb/>
�V<lb/>
-(Glasnot)<lb/>
vo a long story<lb/>
vr way to<lb/>
ast year of<lb/>
I )ad (who's<lb/>
g ncrations in<lb/>
'many with the<lb/>
met, mar-<lb/>
ker alter. The<lb/>
o situation is<lb/>
- ia you have<lb/>
emigration,<lb/>
al dissident or<lb/>
MPUS SPECTRUM<lb/>
BY<lb/>
UKE HIGHSMITH<lb/>
Russian people are<lb/>
r � Iks like us, their<lb/>
n fist policies are the<lb/>
untry has had to<lb/>
r - We have found<lb/>
way that we can't play<lb/>
th them. We have to<lb/>
em, I just wish we<lb/>
ay the same political<lb/>
m Besides we can't play<lb/>
. can, so they have<lb/>
red .tion is that the<lb/>
nd for change, or else the<lb/>
' would eventually<lb/>
dution. Communism<lb/>
nature causes laziness and<lb/>
�per-effort eco-<lb/>
ple will just not<lb/>
- produce as much. I may<lb/>
it the eventual change<lb/>
munist structure, but it is<lb/>
� my basic optimism<lb/>
nanity. I give us as a species<lb/>
than to think it would allow<lb/>
nt like that to thrive for too<lb/>
I'm right.<lb/>
kis ?<lb/>
btrusive.<lb/>
� trumpeted a difference he was<lb/>
Jted. In his May 18 speech, he<lb/>
pin with terrorists, and I won't<lb/>
lealers either, whether they're on<lb/>
sure the world knew he was<lb/>
�ga. Then word leaked that Bush<lb/>
an to give up any idea of drop-<lb/>
ig charges against Noriega. This<lb/>
e in courage.<lb/>
lg happily with Bush's apostasy<lb/>
is virtual carte blanche with him.<lb/>
?agan caused was by trying too<lb/>
Vhen he got a draft of his May 11<lb/>
ash, Reagan tossed out all the<lb/>
graphical boilerplate about the<lb/>
'rote a passage on a yellow legal<lb/>
anything necessary to get Bush<lb/>
jssagc was brief and none too<lb/>
lers treated the endorsement as<lb/>
was thunderstruck.<lb/>
iv for Reagan to make it up to<lb/>
ie attack on Dukakis this fall as<lb/>
ampaigning side-by-side with<lb/>
e Bush seem smaller. But cam-<lb/>
tinst Dukakis across the South<lb/>
(res inthe North might win over<lb/>
No doubt Reagan's willing. All<lb/>
Congress true to deficit pact<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)-Con- assets, which aren't counted un-<lb/>
gresswasfulfillingadeficitrcduc- der the Gramm-Rudman budget<lb/>
tion agreement with President balancing law.<lb/>
Reagan when it passed a $1.1 tril- The president's Office of Man-<lb/>
lion federal budget for fiscal 1989, agement and Budget says higher<lb/>
cal 1993. afraid there's miles to ge before<lb/>
'This is a paltry, pathetic and we sleep<lb/>
completely meaningless rcduc- The spending ply.<lb/>
tion (of the deficit) during times of Within total spending levels for<lb/>
economic prosperity com- military, foreign aid and domestic<lb/>
election.<lb/>
but a hefty deficit remains and interest rates combined with gov- plained Sen. William Armstrong, programs that were set by last<lb/>
spending priorities have already ernment bail-outs of banks could R-Colo. "We're just putting the fall's agreement with Reagan, the<lb/>
shifted. drive the deficit higher. whole problem off until after the budget envisions increased fed-<lb/>
eral spending on the space pro-<lb/>
gram, education, AIDS research,<lb/>
fighting drugs, and other election-<lb/>
year priorities.<lb/>
But the resolution itself is non-<lb/>
binding, acting only as a guide for<lb/>
production of the annual spend-<lb/>
ing legislation for running the<lb/>
government. And because of the<lb/>
delays, the House and Senate<lb/>
have been moving ahead with the<lb/>
regular spending bills that stray<lb/>
from the budget's priorities.<lb/>
The Senate Appropriations<lb/>
Committee voted to include less<lb/>
money for education and space<lb/>
programs, shifting those funds to<lb/>
energy and interior agencies.<lb/>
"We urge the appropriations<lb/>
committee to follow our lead and<lb/>
support the nation's future<lb/>
The budget, approved by the It is gets above $146 billion,<lb/>
House last month and the Senate OMB is required to order auto- Senate Budget Committee<lb/>
on Mondav by 58-29, shows a matic, across-the-board spending chairman Lawton Chiles, D-Fla<lb/>
deficit of nearly $142 billion when cutsiscal 1989, which are designed conceded: "We've taken some<lb/>
not counting sales of government to force a balanced budget by fis- steps in the right direction, but I'm<lb/>
Five-old-year preacher hits cop,<lb/>
suspended from school ten days<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
HANKS<lb/>
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BUY 1, GET 1 FREE<lb/>
(Any Girl Scout Cookie Item)<lb/>
Coupon good while supplies last<lb/>
MARION, N.C. (AP)�A 5-<lb/>
year-old street preacher shouting<lb/>
Bible verses outside his school<lb/>
struck a sheriff's deputy Friday<lb/>
and had to be carried off campus<lb/>
after he was suspended on the last<lb/>
day oi school, officials said.<lb/>
McDowell County Sheriff Bob<lb/>
Havnes said Matthew Strode<lb/>
struck Lt. John Lite once in the face<lb/>
during the incident at Eastfield<lb/>
Elementary School.<lb/>
Matthew returned to school<lb/>
from a 10-day suspension and<lb/>
began preaching just inside the<lb/>
school's exit gate Friday morning,<lb/>
according to reports from the<lb/>
sheriffs department and the move his son from campus.<lb/>
school Strode said he wanted to sec the<lb/>
Principal Jim Corst asked the paperwork on the<lb/>
suspension<lb/>
kindergartener to come into tin<lb/>
building, but he refused. Gorsl<lb/>
then told the boy he was sus-<lb/>
pended and asked Matthew to<lb/>
come with him. The boy contin-<lb/>
ued to preach and spun away<lb/>
from Gorst when the principal<lb/>
tried to escort him into the build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Lite and Gorst talked first with<lb/>
the boy's father, David Strode,<lb/>
who said he was told by the dep-<lb/>
uty that his son had been sus-<lb/>
pended. Lite asked Strode to re-<lb/>
be fore he asked his son to leave.<lb/>
Strode said school officials<lb/>
huddled again with the deputy,<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
SUB sTnTion i;<lb/>
'A Complete Weal On A Bun<lb/>
who then picked up the boy and through increased funding for<lb/>
carried him to his father's arms. science and space programs said<lb/>
Ohio, New York governors<lb/>
propose acid rain policy<lb/>
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)�The<lb/>
governors of Ohio and New York<lb/>
todav proposed a national policy<lb/>
that would sharply reduce acid<lb/>
rain while protecting the interests<lb/>
of the coal-producing states.<lb/>
New York Gov. Mario Cuomo<lb/>
and Ohio Gov. Richard Celeste<lb/>
recommended in a joint statement<lb/>
a iO-million-ton reduction in sul-<lb/>
fus dioxide emissions from utility<lb/>
sources by the year 2003. The<lb/>
proposal also would authorize<lb/>
$90") million a year to finance up to<lb/>
50 percent of the capital costs.<lb/>
The plan will be proposed to<lb/>
Congress as an amendment to the<lb/>
Clean Air Act. Cuomo and<lb/>
Celeste, both Democrats, said<lb/>
they will push the agreement as a<lb/>
compromise to the other legisla-<lb/>
tive proposals in Washington,<lb/>
bogged down in regional fighting,<lb/>
to control acid rain.<lb/>
Sulfus dioxide emissions from<lb/>
the burning of coal have been<lb/>
blamed as a major cause of acid<lb/>
rain, which environmentalists say<lb/>
is destroying waters and wood-<lb/>
lands in the Northeast. Much of<lb/>
the sulfur dioxide comes from<lb/>
al-burning power plants along<lb/>
the Ohio River.<lb/>
New York is one of the eight<lb/>
Northeastern states involved in a<lb/>
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals suit<lb/>
in Washington against the U.S.<lb/>
Evironmental Protection Agency.<lb/>
The states are protesting the<lb/>
EPA's refusal to revise the air<lb/>
pollution control plans of Ohio,<lb/>
Michigan, Indiana, Kentucky,<lb/>
Tennessee, West Virginia and Illi-<lb/>
nois to reduce sulfur dioxide<lb/>
emissions in those states.<lb/>
The plan calls for reductions in<lb/>
sulfur dioxide emissions in three<lb/>
phases: 3.5 million tons by 1993,<lb/>
another 4.5 million tons by 1998<lb/>
and another 2 million tons by<lb/>
2003.<lb/>
States would receive about $900<lb/>
million to pay for the cost of com-<lb/>
pliance. More than two-thirds be<lb/>
paid by the oil industry' and on-<lb/>
third by federal officials. The pol-<lb/>
luters themselves would have to<lb/>
raise about $900 million under the<lb/>
deal.<lb/>
The agreement would also es-<lb/>
tablish a 10-year, $2.5 billion ex-<lb/>
panded clean coal technology<lb/>
program to schieve reductions in<lb/>
sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide<lb/>
emissions. That money would be<lb/>
handed out on the basis of 50 per-<lb/>
cent matching grants to fund<lb/>
demonstrations of new technol-<lb/>
In the joint statement, Cuomo<lb/>
said, "It is imperative to break the<lb/>
impasse that now exists in Con-<lb/>
gress<lb/>
Celeste's press secretary, Debra<lb/>
Phillips, said the governor consid-<lb/>
ers the agreement "a balance be-<lb/>
tween preserving jobs and clean-<lb/>
ing up the environment<lb/>
But a state senator from Ohio's<lb/>
richest coal county, Republican<lb/>
Robert Nay from Belmont<lb/>
County, said the agreement is a<lb/>
"hard slap across the face" of<lb/>
Ohio's coal miners.<lb/>
Nay said he was upset that a<lb/>
deal by Celeste an acid rain might<lb/>
conflict with the Ohio<lb/>
Legislature's endorsement last<lb/>
week of a resolution calling on<lb/>
that slate's congressional delega-<lb/>
tion to oppose the Clean Air Act<lb/>
and tighter sulfur dioxide emis-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
Ohio Environmental Protection<lb/>
Strode's two sons have been<lb/>
suspended five times each be-<lb/>
cause of incidents related to the<lb/>
preaching and shouting of scrip-<lb/>
ture. Ten-year-old Duffcy Strode<lb/>
stood outside the school gate Fri-<lb/>
day morning and joined his<lb/>
brother in preaching.<lb/>
Strode's wife Robin, and 6-year-<lb/>
old daughter Pepper were not at<lb/>
the gate. Pepper has been sus-<lb/>
pended four times.<lb/>
"They change the rules over<lb/>
there every day Strode said of<lb/>
the incident. Strode said when he<lb/>
was asked to come inside, he<lb/>
asked that a witness go with him,<lb/>
a man named Barry Weaver, who<lb/>
was with him outside the gate.<lb/>
Strode said when school offi-<lb/>
cials said Weaver would have to<lb/>
wait outside, he then refused to go<lb/>
inside.<lb/>
In the past, each time one of the<lb/>
Strode children has been sus-<lb/>
Chilcs, who had pushed hard for<lb/>
that new spending.<lb/>
GORDON'S<lb/>
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said the lawsuit is not involved in building with school officials to<lb/>
the agreement process the suspension papers<lb/>
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&amp; Nca Rocky Mount<lb/>
� to do four<lb/>
� - ��� e<lb/>
: �  eet<lb/>
ite r52 5222<lb/>
$<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
er<lb/>
Let Us Serve You!<lb/>
We Will Cladlv Cash Your Checks From Home!<lb/>
<lb/>
Grade A I visit 0ur<lb/>
"Whole Frvers Hot Bar an aiad Bar<lb/>
57. $1.99<lb/>
Bounty Towels<lb/>
Giant Roll<lb/>
per lb.<lb/>
59 r<lb/>
Packers Label<lb/>
Blended Sugar<lb/>
99 <lb/>
4.4 oz.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
Limit One At This Price<lb/>
White Cloud<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
Limit 2 with<lb/>
$10.00 Food<lb/>
Order<lb/>
excluding advertised specials<lb/>
Imperial<lb/>
Charcoal<lb/>
$1.59<lb/>
101b. Bag<lb/>
Richfood Soft Drinks<lb/>
All Flavors<lb/>
Pepsi Products<lb/>
99 <lb/>
All 2 Liter Products<lb/>
Richfood<lb/>
Bacon<lb/>
99 $<lb/>
12 oz. pkg<lb/>
4 roll pkg<lb/>
Limit 2<lb/>
89 <lb/>
3 Liter<lb/>
Bottles<lb/>
Jiffy Pop<lb/>
Microwave<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
California<lb/>
Seedless White<lb/>
Grapes<lb/>
1012<lb/>
box<lb/>
Grapes<lb/>
99$ 99<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Sales Dates: Wed. Jane 8 - Sat June 11<lb/>
Store Hours: Sun. 1-6 p.m.<lb/>
MonSat. 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.<lb/>
Mastercard &amp; Visa Accepted<lb/>
VVC - Food Stamps Welcome<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
211 Jarvis Street<lb/>
2 Blocks From E.C.U.<lb/>
OVEDTON&amp;<lb/>
gfpm&amp;<lb/>
<pb facs="00058078_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
UNE 8,1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
IF YOU ARE A MUSICVOICE MAJOR<lb/>
and would like to put you voice to work<lb/>
and make some cash this summer then<lb/>
call 355-0355 and ask for Dena.<lb/>
HELP WANTED � need salesperson to<lb/>
work mornings at Carpet Bargain Center.<lb/>
1009 Dickinson ave. Apply in person<lb/>
between 8 am and 1 p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE RESIDENT COUNCELOR �<lb/>
Interested in those with human service<lb/>
background wishing to gain valuable<lb/>
experience in the field. No Monetary<lb/>
Compensation, however room, utilities<lb/>
and phone provided. Call Mary Smith,<lb/>
Real Crisis Center 758-11ELP.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE:<lb/>
758-5488, 758-8241. Call Susan.<lb/>
INDEPENDANT CAB SERVICE � Call<lb/>
355-5034 in evenings. "Good rates Call<lb/>
lames for a ride.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24<lb/>
hours in and out. Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages. We<lb/>
repair computers and printers also. Low-<lb/>
est hourly rate in town. SDF Professional<lb/>
Computer Services, 106 East 5th Street<lb/>
(beside Cubbies) Greenville, NC 752-<lb/>
3694.<lb/>
IS IT TRUE you can but jeeps for $44<lb/>
through the US Government? Get the<lb/>
facts today! Call 1-312-742-1142 Ext. 5271-<lb/>
A.<lb/>
FOR SALE � 5-drawer dresser with<lb/>
matching mirror. Good condition.<lb/>
$125 00. 758-8249, ask for Susan.<lb/>
FOR SALE � Queen size waterbed full<lb/>
accessories. Includes new sheets, never<lb/>
been used. Must sell. Call Pat 830-4737.<lb/>
FOR SALE � Queen size waterbed<lb/>
$110.00. Must sell fast. Small desk $30.00<lb/>
Call Jen-y at 758-2681.<lb/>
CAN YOU BUY JEEPS, Cars, 4X4's<lb/>
Seized in drug raids for under $100.00<lb/>
Call for facts today. 602-837-3401. Ext.<lb/>
711.<lb/>
FOR SALE � Schwinn Cruiser Supreme 5<lb/>
speed. Like New included is a Kryptonite<lb/>
Security Lock. $200.00 or best offer. Call<lb/>
Karen at 758-2861.<lb/>
RINGOLD TOWERS CONDO � for<lb/>
sale. B-unit, 2nd floor, fully furnished. Tax<lb/>
market value $43,730.00 Make me an offer.<lb/>
919-787-1378.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED � for 3<lb/>
bedroom townhouse. Washer, dryer, pool<lb/>
tennis courts. $145.00 plus 13 utilities.<lb/>
355-4834.<lb/>
NEED A PLACE TO LIVE THIS SUM-<lb/>
MER � Roommate needed to share 2<lb/>
bedroom townhouse. $97.00 a month, 1 3<lb/>
utilities. Near clubhouse, pool, laundry<lb/>
room. Quiet neighborhood. Call 355-0355.<lb/>
FOR RENT � Two bedroom duplex, car-<lb/>
pet, stove, refrig. Walk to ECU Campus.<lb/>
Avail now. 195.00mo. Lease. 752-5778.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED � Twin<lb/>
Oaks, 2 bdr. 12 bath, 157.50 and 12 utili-<lb/>
ties, 112 miles from campus, dishwasher,<lb/>
pool, microwave, very nice, available July<lb/>
or August, 757-0316.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS � Apts. for rent<lb/>
Furnished. Contact Hollie Simonowich at<lb/>
752-2865.<lb/>
2 ROOMATES WANTED � Male or<lb/>
female NON-SMOKER. 5 bedroom house<lb/>
wthrec full baths. Call Luke or Steve at<lb/>
758-0312.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
NEW OFFICE SUITES<lb/>
counts. 758-1983.<lb/>
Faculty dis-<lb/>
ROOMATE NEEDED � to share apt. in<lb/>
Wilson Acres. Pay 1 3 rent in 2 bedroom<lb/>
apt. Julv 1 - August 30 only. Call soon. Toni<lb/>
830-3822.<lb/>
NEW DELI IS STILL THE PLACE � to<lb/>
find the finest live rock and roll jammin'<lb/>
bands in Greenville. Catch the sounds of<lb/>
VALENCE Friday, the band Saturday is<lb/>
still to be announced, but don't let that<lb/>
discourage you. It's bound to be some-<lb/>
thing kick-ass. See ya there.<lb/>
BIG AL � Your mail is piling up and your<lb/>
plants are dying. Please come home.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SUMMER LIBRARY HOURS<lb/>
Mondays - Thursdays 8:00 a.m. -11:00<lb/>
p.m Fridays 8:00 a.m' - 6:00p.m Satur-<lb/>
days 9.00 a'm. - 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.m9:30 p.m Fridays 8:00 a.m.<lb/>
- 5:00 p.m Saturdays 1:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m<lb/>
Sundavs 12 noon - 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
5K WALKRUN<lb/>
Faculty, staff and students are invited<lb/>
to register for an intramural 5K run. June<lb/>
13 at 8:00p.m. at Bunting Track.<lb/>
HANG GLIDING<lb/>
Everyone is invited to register for a<lb/>
summer hang gliding adventure trip to<lb/>
Nags 1 lead, NC. June 22 - July 12.<lb/>
CO-OP SUMMER FALL<lb/>
Three jobs � Congressional Office,<lb/>
Washington, DC. June � August. Salary:<lb/>
$1000.00month. Student must have gen-<lb/>
eral office skills and some experience with<lb/>
word processing. Short hand skills de-<lb/>
sired. Also, Tampa Electric Company,<lb/>
Tampa, Florida. Fall semester. Salary:<lb/>
$1135.00month. Word processing<lb/>
courses andor word processing experi-<lb/>
ence required Will be expected to return<lb/>
to job Summer 1989 if work is satisfactory.<lb/>
Salary will increase. Finally, Positions<lb/>
available in the Nags Head area begin-<lb/>
ning June 1, 1988. Salary: $4hour, 30-40<lb/>
hrs.wk. Housing available near worksite<lb/>
- $50.00week. Students must have 2.5<lb/>
GPA. Will receive $500 scholarshipsti-<lb/>
pend for college expenses when returning<lb/>
to school in the fall. For all these positions,<lb/>
contact Ruth Peterson, 757 6979, immedi-<lb/>
ately. Students may apply at Co-op office,<lb/>
2028 GC building.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
Students who wish to obtain financial<lb/>
aid for overseas education may apply for<lb/>
a Rivers Scholarship. The next application<lb/>
deadline is June 15,1988. For further infor-<lb/>
mation contact the Office of International<lb/>
Studies and Scholarships in the Gerneral<lb/>
Classroom building, room 1002, 757-6769.<lb/>
MINORITY ADULTS<lb/>
The ECU Testing center is needing minor-<lb/>
ity adults to take a new intelligence test.<lb/>
The test battery will take about 3 12<lb/>
hours. A token payment will be paid at the<lb/>
end of the test. If interested, contact the<lb/>
Testing Center in Speight, Room 105, or<lb/>
call 757-6811.<lb/>
BACKPACKING<lb/>
Faculty, staff and students are invited<lb/>
to register for a summer Backpacking<lb/>
Trip. June 22 - July 5 in 204 Memorial Gym.<lb/>
For more information call 757-6387.<lb/>
SIT BACK<lb/>
<lb/>
you7e Sst a1"eTnTed in alje tast Carolinian<lb/>
Express yourself; Write a letter to the Editor<lb/>
Lnae.<lb/>
SAV A CENTER<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
On Manufacturer's Cents-Otf Coupons. See Store For Details. Prices Effective Sun June 5 Thru<lb/>
Sat June 11,1988. Quantity Rights Reserved. Not Responsible for Typographical Errors<lb/>
GROUND FRESH SEVERAL TIMES DAILY<lb/>
Fresh Regular<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
5 lbs.<lb/>
or more<lb/>
PERDUEGRADE A<lb/>
Fresh Quartered<lb/>
Chicken Breasts<lb/>
1.19<lb/>
JAMESTOWN<lb/>
Sliced<lb/>
Bacon Pkg<lb/>
All Meat<lb/>
Franks pkg<lb/>
99<lb/>
99<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Red F'ame<lb/>
Seedless Grapes<lb/>
High In<lb/>
Vitamin C<lb/>
99<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES�REG. OR THICK &amp; SPICY<lb/>
Kraft Barbecue<lb/>
Sauce<lb/>
VERMICELLI OR<lb/>
89<lb/>
Creamettes 3 $4<lb/>
Spaghetti I� 1<lb/>
Limit One With<lb/>
'10 Purchase<lb/>
TROPICANA<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
1.19<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS�A&amp;P<lb/>
Swiss Style 3 $4<lb/>
Yogurt �� w I<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS<lb/>
Rich &amp; Creamy<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
half gal<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETIES<lb/>
Banquet<lb/>
Dinners <lb/>
2.39<lb/>
99<lb/>
U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED<lb/>
Boneless Beef<lb/>
Chuck Steak<lb/>
1.89<lb/>
SMITHFIELD�GOLD LABEL<lb/>
Fresh Pork<lb/>
Picnic<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Trim<lb/>
LUSCIOUS�JUICY�LARGE 5 SIZE<lb/>
Honeydew<lb/>
Melons each<lb/>
2.49<lb/>
CONTAINS VITAMIN C<lb/>
Black<lb/>
Raspberries p�g2<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
PLUMP &amp; JUICY<lb/>
California<lb/>
Red Plums<lb/>
99<lb/>
PREMIUM<lb/>
California<lb/>
Apricots<lb/>
UMIT THREE WITH �0 PURCHASE<lb/>
P&amp;Q Sandwich<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
$1<lb/>
TRADITIONAL�THICK &amp; HEARTY.GARDEN STYLE<lb/>
SeSpa,hn�1.08<lb/>
REGULAR OR LIGHT<lb/>
Kraft<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
limit One With<lb/>
10 Purchase<lb/>
98<lb/>
WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS<lb/>
White Cloud<lb/>
Bath Tissue<lb/>
Limit One With<lb/>
10 Purchase<lb/>
4 roll<lb/>
pkg.<lb/>
U.S.<lb/>
Postage<lb/>
Stamps<lb/>
Now<lb/>
Available<lb/>
At Post Office Prices<lb/>
PRICES GOOD IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
AT 703 GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY AT 7:00 A.M. TO 11:00 P.M.<lb/>
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 7:00 A.M. - 12 MIDNIGHT<lb/>
'Ram<lb/>
By JIM SHAMLIN<lb/>
Suft VSfT<lb/>
"Rambo III" is the scqi<lb/>
"Rambo, First Blood Part<lb/>
which is the sequel to<lb/>
Blood Rambo (Sylvest <lb/>
lone) has been living man<lb/>
tarv ever since he -<lb/>
POVVs from Vietnam ii J<lb/>
movie.<lb/>
He finds out that hi i<lb/>
and mentor, Colonal<lb/>
(Richard Crenr<lb/>
hired by the Sovi<lb/>
stan, so he leaves the I<lb/>
the aid of a lil i<lb/>
heads across ll<lb/>
of Trautman.<lb/>
Like its prequ<lb/>
chock full<lb/>
fights, helicopter !<lb/>
hand-to-hand con<lb/>
this is what the F<lb/>
all about, ai<lb/>
thing to pass '<lb/>
Under<lb/>
'Krush<lb/>
PnTSBURGI<lb/>
just one seasoi<lb/>
Law Blair Ui<lb/>
carved out a tidy r<lb/>
in the hit sho<lb/>
brash, young att rr<lb/>
Rollins<lb/>
rxmldn't ask I -<lb/>
- and that's an<lb/>
mei<lb/>
out of college three j I<lb/>
hav band workii <lb/>
is p irl of it. A<lb/>
- npts Hk. �<lb/>
A. Law I mean worli i<lb/>
ist<lb/>
"These I of th I<lb/>
give you sometl <lb/>
and 1 th -<lb/>
And then the i j<lb/>
that the public and J<lb/>
vnjoy the show<lb/>
Underwood 23, was<lb/>
recently to pick i<lb/>
arts degree from C <lb/>
University.<lb/>
He cast I<lb/>
rated. Em�  -<lb/>
season as a "j<lb/>
of Harvard  aw �� j<lb/>
ambition oc<lb/>
him acres-<lb/>
and even ethics<lb/>
"He's been real -<lb/>
said Rick Walia<lb/>
executive producer I<lb/>
to fit in. Then <lb/>
anv difficulty makiri g<lb/>
ot the enesemble<lb/>
Underwood - rtg<lb/>
lawyerlike in a go! I <lb/>
shirt and pleated b<lb/>
that's one o: the mail <lb/>
between himsi <lb/>
plays.<lb/>
"The difference betwo<lb/>
one like onathan J<lb/>
myself is Jonathan<lb/>
arrogance and extreme<lb/>
dence in himself and<lb/>
Teriod. 1 think it s a d<lb/>
between that and having<lb/>
confidence that you cai<lb/>
plish what you believe<lb/>
said.<lb/>
His fast track to stardc<lb/>
monv to that kind of deej<lb/>
Inspired by his older<lb/>
interest in acting Uni<lb/>
began performing at <lb/>
ters while in junior<lb/>
He entered Carnegie<lb/>
prestigious drama depaj<lb/>
the fall of 19S2 as a musicl<lb/>
major, but dropped out<lb/>
through his junior year<lb/>
Underwood went to r<lb/>
where he eventually lanl<lb/>
in the rap film "Krushf<lb/>
with Sheila E. and on<lb/>
soap opera "One Life to<lb/>
1986, he was cast as a<lb/>
parolee in the CBS senei<lb/>
town<lb/>
The show was cancels<lb/>
episodes and for the fit<lb/>
his short career. Under<lb/>
unemployed.<lb/>
Underwood did a 1<lb/>
shows, then auditioned<lb/>
mer for "L.A. Law Tl<lb/>
producers, including<lb/>
producer Stephen Bochl<lb/>
negie Mellon alumnus.<lb/>
add a black attorney to<lb/>
viewers' request.<lb/>
"1 don't feel as if he ii<lb/>
dressing because theJ<lb/>
ing a full, fleshed-outj<lb/>
(who) happens to<lb/>
<pb facs="00058078_0007"/><lb/>
R<lb/>
NS<lb/>
live Sun. June 5 Thru<lb/>
jographical Errors.<lb/>
GRAIN FED<lb/>
s Beef<lb/>
teak<lb/>
9<lb/>
OLD LABEL<lb/>
Pork<lb/>
IGE 5 SIZE<lb/>
2.49<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
.UICY<lb/>
rnia<lb/>
urns<lb/>
0<lb/>
irma<lb/>
sots<lb/>
3<lb/>
24 oz<lb/>
loaves<lb/>
$!<lb/>
RTY�GARDEN SFYLE<lb/>
1.08<lb/>
�R LIGHT<lb/>
ft<lb/>
naise<lb/>
0<lb/>
RTED COLORS<lb/>
Cloud<lb/>
le<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JUNE 8,1988 Page 7<lb/>
'Rambo III' is just more of the same thing<lb/>
ByJIMSHAMLIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Rambo III" is the sequel to<lb/>
"Rambo, First Blood Part Two<lb/>
which is the sequel to "First<lb/>
Blood Rambo (Sylvester Stal-<lb/>
lone) has been living in a monas-<lb/>
tary ever since he rescued the<lb/>
POWs from Vietnam in the last<lb/>
movie.<lb/>
He finds out that his only friend<lb/>
and mentor, Colonal Trautman<lb/>
(Richard Crenna) has been cap-<lb/>
tured by the Soviets in Afghani-<lb/>
stan, so he leaves the East, enlists<lb/>
the aid of a little arab brat, and<lb/>
heads across the desert in search<lb/>
of Trautman.<lb/>
Like its prequels, "Rambo III" is<lb/>
chock full of explosions, gun-<lb/>
fights, helicopter battles, and<lb/>
hand-to-hand combat. Of course,<lb/>
this is what the Rambo trilogy is<lb/>
all about, and plot is simply some-<lb/>
thing to pass the time between<lb/>
spectacular combat scenes.<lb/>
As usual, there is a smattering<lb/>
of blue-collar humor and dry one-<lb/>
liners, such as "I'm your worst<lb/>
nightmare another line that<lb/>
Ronald Reagan can use in a politi-<lb/>
cal speech somewhere.<lb/>
Filming was done on location in<lb/>
Arizona, Thailand, and Isreal. In<lb/>
Isreal, the filming was done near<lb/>
the unstable Jordanian border.<lb/>
There were threats of kidnapping<lb/>
Stallone and over 90 reported ter-<lb/>
rorist actions in the vicinity.<lb/>
One involved a firefight within<lb/>
150 yards of the cast's hotel. There<lb/>
was even an occasion when Isreali<lb/>
soldiers had to defend the movie<lb/>
set from a band of three Jordanian<lb/>
terrorist groups.<lb/>
As fate would have it, nobody<lb/>
got hurt and the film was com-<lb/>
pleted on schedule. One could<lb/>
argue either way about the effect<lb/>
of this instability upon the pro-<lb/>
duction.<lb/>
Once a good movie has been<lb/>
made, its sequels can only attempt<lb/>
the quality of the original movie.<lb/>
"First Blood" was, admittedly, a<lb/>
pretty good film. "Rambo" sold<lb/>
out for action and left the plot<lb/>
behind.<lb/>
Opinions split about the second<lb/>
film; some called it a thrilling<lb/>
adventure movie, others called it<lb/>
boring and poorly written.<lb/>
"Rambo III" is much the same as<lb/>
"Rambo and viewers' opinions<lb/>
will inevitably be the same.<lb/>
Rambites (those who liked<lb/>
"Rambo") will say that it was a<lb/>
thrilling adventure, and that it<lb/>
kept them on the edge of their<lb/>
seats. Anti-Rambitcs will say that<lb/>
the movie has a plot that is thin to<lb/>
the point of translucency and that<lb/>
the action scenes were utterly<lb/>
unrealistic.<lb/>
Rambites will hail the movies<lb/>
stunning special effects. In mak-<lb/>
ing the film, the crew trashed<lb/>
three helicopters.<lb/>
Working on the film were over a<lb/>
dozen stunt men, four stunt<lb/>
horses, and a double handful of<lb/>
"expert" coordinaters, one of<lb/>
whom was World Middleweight<lb/>
Kickboxing Champion Harold<lb/>
Diamond. Anti-Rambites will say<lb/>
that all the explosions and action<lb/>
scenes merely obscured the scen-<lb/>
ery.<lb/>
Rambites will claim that it is a<lb/>
timely movie about an American<lb/>
hero who rescues his friend from<lb/>
communist clutches in Afghani-<lb/>
stan. Anti-Rambites will be quick<lb/>
to mention that Stallone spent the<lb/>
Vietnam era in Sweden, teaching<lb/>
soccer at a girl's school, and the<lb/>
film is poorly timed, as the Rus-<lb/>
sians are presently pulling out of<lb/>
Afghanistan.<lb/>
Rambites will claim that Stal-<lb/>
lone portrayed John Rambo, the<lb/>
half-Indian, half-German pro-<lb/>
tagonist, well. Anti-Rambites will<lb/>
be amazed that the Rambites used<lb/>
a three-syllable word, and then<lb/>
ask them what they know about<lb/>
good acting anyway.<lb/>
Lastly, Rambite critics will pro-<lb/>
claim that "Rambo III" is the ad-<lb/>
venture film of the summer, and<lb/>
that no avid cinemite should miss<lb/>
it. Anti-Rambites will say that it<lb/>
isn't worth seeing, even at a mati-<lb/>
nee, and that they'll watch a docu-<lb/>
mentary on Arts and Entertain-<lb/>
ment Network when the film hits<lb/>
cable.<lb/>
Underwood goes from the<lb/>
'Krush Groove' to law firm<lb/>
GHT<lb/>
PITTSBURGH (AP) � After<lb/>
just one season on NBC's "L.A.<lb/>
Law Blair Underwood has<lb/>
carved out a tidy niche for himself<lb/>
in the hit show's ensemble cast as<lb/>
brash, young attorney Jonathan<lb/>
Rollins.<lb/>
"I couldn't ask for anything<lb/>
better, and that's an understate-<lb/>
ment' said Underwood. 'To be<lb/>
out of college three years and to<lb/>
have a job and working as an actor<lb/>
is part of it. And then working<lb/>
with scripts like the quality of rL.<lb/>
A. Law I mean working with the<lb/>
cast<lb/>
"These actors, all of them, will<lb/>
give you something to play off of,<lb/>
and I think that shows on camera.<lb/>
And then the icing on the cake is<lb/>
that the public and critics alike<lb/>
enjoy the show<lb/>
Underwood, 23, was in town<lb/>
recently to pick up a belated fine<lb/>
arts degree from Carnegie Mellon<lb/>
University.<lb/>
He joined the cast of the high-<lb/>
rated, Emmy-winning series last<lb/>
season as a sophisticate fresh out<lb/>
of Harvard Law whose mega-<lb/>
ambition occasionally pushes<lb/>
him across the lines of decorum<lb/>
and even ethics.<lb/>
"He's been real well received<lb/>
said Rick Wallace, the show's co-<lb/>
executive producer. "He seemed<lb/>
to fit in. There didn't seem to be<lb/>
any difficulty making him a part<lb/>
of the cnesemble<lb/>
Underwood, looking very un-<lb/>
lawyerlike in a gold chain, striped<lb/>
shirt and pleated trousers, said<lb/>
that's one of the main differences<lb/>
between himself and the part he<lb/>
plays.<lb/>
"The difference between some-<lb/>
one like Jonathan Rollins and<lb/>
myself is Jonathan has a type of<lb/>
arrogance and extreme confi-<lb/>
dence in himself, and that's it.<lb/>
Period. I think it's a difference<lb/>
between that and having faith and<lb/>
confidence that you can accom-<lb/>
plish what you believe in he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
His fast track to stardom is testi-<lb/>
mony to that kind of deep belief.<lb/>
Inspired by his older brother's<lb/>
interest in acting, Underwood<lb/>
began performing at dinner thea-<lb/>
ters while in junior high school.<lb/>
He entered Carnegie Mellon's<lb/>
prestigious drama department in<lb/>
the fall of 1982 as a musical theater<lb/>
major, but dropped out midway<lb/>
through his junior year.<lb/>
Underwood went to New York<lb/>
where he eventually landed roles<lb/>
in the rap film "Krush Groove"<lb/>
with Sheila E. and on the ABC<lb/>
soap opera "One Life to Live In<lb/>
1986, he was cast as a streetwise<lb/>
parolee in the CBS series "Down-<lb/>
town<lb/>
The show was canceled after 13<lb/>
episodes and for the first time in<lb/>
his short career, Underwood was<lb/>
unemployed.<lb/>
Underwood did a few guest<lb/>
shows, then auditioned last sum-<lb/>
mer for "L.A. Law The show's<lb/>
producers, including executive<lb/>
producer Stephen Bochco, a Car-<lb/>
negie Mellon alumnus, decided to<lb/>
add a black attorney to the cast at<lb/>
viewers' request.<lb/>
"I don't feel as if he is window<lb/>
dressing because they are creat-<lb/>
ing a full, fleshed-out character<lb/>
(who) happens to be black<lb/>
Underwood said. "As opposed to<lb/>
writing a black character who's<lb/>
going to say, 'Yo, Yo, Yo, we're<lb/>
gonna go to court now you<lb/>
know, stereotype<lb/>
With the role have come atten-<lb/>
tion and fame, including being<lb/>
named by a popular magazine as<lb/>
one of America's sexiest bache-<lb/>
lors.<lb/>
His family strives through con-<lb/>
stant contact to keep him humble,<lb/>
however, said Underwood. Even<lb/>
though he lives in Los Angeles<lb/>
and his parents arc in Petersburg,<lb/>
Va they're on the phone almost<lb/>
daily.<lb/>
His father, Frank Sr 56, a re-<lb/>
tired Army colonel, serves as his<lb/>
manager, His brother, Frank Jr<lb/>
26, an "artist-slash-writer-slash-<lb/>
actor has written an adventure-<lb/>
action story Underwood hopes to<lb/>
produce.<lb/>
Pictured here are Sylvester Stallone and Richard Crenna as Rambo and Trautman in the new hit<lb/>
filmRambo III The film shows pop hero John Rambo invading Afghanistan to rescue his only<lb/>
friend. With friends like these  the State Department doesn't need any enemies.<lb/>
Run proves that it really is his house<lb/>
BY CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
SUrff B Boy<lb/>
"We've had a whole lot of su-<lb/>
perstars on this stage here tonight.<lb/>
But I want y'all to know one thing.<lb/>
This is�MY HOUSE<lb/>
So Run said. And so it was,<lb/>
Sunday night at the Charlotte<lb/>
Coliseum, the second floor of the<lb/>
"Run's House" tour. Despite val-<lb/>
iant efforts by the rest of the rap-<lb/>
pers, Public Enemy, Kool Moe<lb/>
Dee, DJ Jazzy Jeff and The Fresh<lb/>
Prince and EU, this building re-<lb/>
mained under Run's control all<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Public Enemy were the first in<lb/>
effect. Despite a strong version of<lb/>
"My Uzi Weighs A Ton their set<lb/>
was kind of dull. Chuck D. came<lb/>
on too strong with the anti-drug,<lb/>
anti-violence messages.<lb/>
Flavor-Flave lightened things<lb/>
up, but the highlight of all their<lb/>
cuts was Terminator X's scratch-<lb/>
ing. I'm surprised they didn't<lb/>
play "Sophisticated Bitch but<lb/>
like all the other acts, they are<lb/>
probably getting tired of playing<lb/>
their hit singles over and over.<lb/>
Kool Moe Dee busted out next.<lb/>
He had a lot more to say to the<lb/>
crowd, especially concerning his<lb/>
feud with LL Cool J. To be fair, he<lb/>
didn't dis LL bad, but it was obvi-<lb/>
ous he enjoyed the loud audience<lb/>
support in his court.<lb/>
He did "How Ya Like Me<lb/>
Now a rocking "Wild, Wild<lb/>
West and a fresh preview of his<lb/>
new single that's coming out next<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Jazzy Jeff, The Prince and<lb/>
Ready Rock B. came out next. The<lb/>
stories about Jeff's driving experi-<lb/>
ences fell kind of flat even with<lb/>
Ready Rock's sound effects.<lb/>
But Jeff and Ready Rock's<lb/>
"Human Jukebox vs. Scratching"<lb/>
battle was amazing. You haven't<lb/>
lived until you've seen Ready<lb/>
Rock hold his own against two<lb/>
turntables.<lb/>
The duo had the deffest danc-<lb/>
ers of all the acts, but Kool Moe<lb/>
Dee's run a close second. Rap<lb/>
concerts don't depend on the<lb/>
special effects popmeisters like<lb/>
David Bowie need.<lb/>
Groups either have body-<lb/>
guards standing around looking<lb/>
oad, or have dancers. That may<lb/>
have been one of Public Enemy's<lb/>
failings, they had no dancers and<lb/>
the guards kept pointing guns at<lb/>
the audience.<lb/>
But The Fresh Prince's ladv and<lb/>
her two companions had some of<lb/>
the roughest moves since that<lb/>
second or third Janet Jackson<lb/>
video.<lb/>
Jeff and the Prince did their big<lb/>
hit, "Parents Just don't Under-<lb/>
stand and mixed it in with the<lb/>
earlier and structurally similar<lb/>
hit, "Girls are Nothing But<lb/>
Trouble<lb/>
EU came out and framed a reg-<lb/>
gae-tinged song with instrumen-<lb/>
tal and reprise versions of "Da<lb/>
Butt They were the only group<lb/>
that used instruments during the<lb/>
show, and they showed the crowd<lb/>
how glad they were to be back in<lb/>
the Queen City by tossing shirts<lb/>
and hats into the crowd.<lb/>
By this time, the crowd on the<lb/>
floor was crushed up against the<lb/>
stage. After EU went off stage, it<lb/>
took a while for the roadies to<lb/>
strike the stage and set up for Run-<lb/>
DMC.<lb/>
But it was worth the wait.<lb/>
"Beats to the Rhvme" started<lb/>
playing, while descending plat-<lb/>
forms brought Dee and JamMas-<lb/>
ter Jay down to the stage. Run<lb/>
climbed down a metal ladder and<lb/>
Porno films are no longer in dem<lb/>
(CPS)�It was a scene repeated<lb/>
on hundreds of campuses:<lb/>
University of Missouri at Co-<lb/>
lumbia students picketed the<lb/>
campus showing of a pom movie<lb/>
in this case "The Opening of<lb/>
Beethoven" �one night in<lb/>
y April, and then retired to a<lb/>
nearby auditorium for a heated<lb/>
debate between Gloria Leonard<lb/>
pi&amp;Usher of "Higher Society"<lb/>
and Delores Alexan-<lb/>
founder of Women Against<lb/>
y-<lb/>
 news however, is that<lb/>
scene hasn't been repeated on<lb/>
many campuses during the<lb/>
987-88 school year,<lb/>
m short, pom films are beconv<lb/>
ng scarcer on VS. campuses.<lb/>
Observers think ifs because of<lb/>
ncreaaing competition from<lb/>
Videotaped sex movies, a creep<lb/>
ng fear of controversy, changing<lb/>
tastes and maybe even<lb/>
student consciousness.<lb/>
The scarcity, asserts National<lb/>
anization of Women's<lb/>
Junior Bridge, is<lb/>
to all the work done over the<lb/>
all organiztions in the<lb/>
movement to point out<lb/>
file fun ends and me harm<lb/>
attribute it to money,<lb/>
pick the films that wiS<lb/>
am violent films like 'Robocop<lb/>
AtArizonaStateDmversity,the<lb/>
most successful campus money-<lb/>
makers mis year have been "the<lb/>
Gods Must Be Crazy "ta<lb/>
Samba1 "ttaSum and "Attack<lb/>
of the Kilter Tomatoes reported<lb/>
activities advisor Rosalyn Munk.<lb/>
Nationwide, the most popular<lb/>
movie rentals at ce&amp;<lb/>
been "River's Bdge<lb/>
A Dog "Kkyaanfsqatei<lb/>
She's Gotta Have It said Amy<lb/>
Heller of New Yorker Kims,<lb/>
which distributes second-rut<lb/>
films.<lb/>
Ifs a fa cry fiom Ibe control<lb/>
versy and anger that attended<lb/>
movies like "Wanda Whips Watt<lb/>
Street "Debbie Does Dallas<lb/>
"Deep Throat" and blue movie<lb/>
"Students added Don Haley,<lb/>
a publicist tor several Los Angeles<lb/>
X-rated movie theaters, "don't<lb/>
ha veto go to a theateror a campus<lb/>
showing. They go straight to the<lb/>
video store<lb/>
Videos, shown at home, also<lb/>
relieve students of the embarass<lb/>
ment of being seen at the mote<lb/>
om showings at campus<lb/>
stores, Munk added, "there's no<lb/>
big mystery about these things<lb/>
now<lb/>
With the mystery gone and the<lb/>
titillation readily available in<lb/>
video stores, the controversy has<lb/>
been harder to generate.<lb/>
Yet some film sponsors com-<lb/>
plain they need the controvery to<lb/>
attract campus audiences.<lb/>
"Anotherfrat showed a double<lb/>
feature of pom films recenuy<lb/>
said Rick Rgftra,presidentof the<lb/>
Northern fitinios University Tau<lb/>
sponsored a "Deep tSloat<lb/>
screening last September. "There<lb/>
was no protest, so they didn't get<lb/>
as large a Srowd as we got with<lb/>
protesters<lb/>
Gordon Schell, Tuamefs new<lb/>
film advisor, said the most contro-<lb/>
versy he's faced was last spring,<lb/>
when his group announced it was<lb/>
Mary � provoked Catholic pro-<lb/>
tests at the universities of Okla-<lb/>
homa (twice), Kansas,<lb/>
Dakota and Nebraska,<lb/>
other schools, to become the<lb/>
year's most cesured film.<lb/>
No one is sure what the general<lb/>
student taste is governed by,<lb/>
Lehigbs Sacarakis shrugged.<lb/>
She does know ifs getting<lb/>
touchier. The biggest controvers<lb/>
she's encountered mis year was<lb/>
about whether to advertise a stu-<lb/>
The Big Easy.<lb/>
The students who work<lb/>
Sacarakis chose the tame stili<lb/>
"We don't vant to deal<lb/>
those <lb/>
Archer of the<lb/>
pulled the curtain down as the<lb/>
song segued into "Run's House<lb/>
The marquis lights behind the<lb/>
stage lit up and spelled out "RUN,<lb/>
" as dry ice smoke flooded across,<lb/>
bringing the bodyguards out on<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
Rub and Dee stalked back and<lb/>
forth across the stage, whipping<lb/>
out the words to "Run's House"<lb/>
and "Rock Box Jay eventually<lb/>
drifted to another set of turntables<lb/>
on top of the marquis lights for<lb/>
"Walk This Way "Mary, Mary"<lb/>
and "It's Tricky<lb/>
Most of the cuts they played<lb/>
came off the "Raising Hell" Lp<lb/>
and the new release, 'Tougher<lb/>
Than Leather The abbreviated<lb/>
"Rock Box" was the only thing<lb/>
thev did off their first album, and<lb/>
"King of Rockexcept for the title<lb/>
track, was all but ignored.<lb/>
Their set was the longest by far<lb/>
of anyone else's. Since the head-<lb/>
lined (and have more albums than<lb/>
anybody else) they had more lee-<lb/>
way of what cuts they wanted to<lb/>
do during the show.<lb/>
Run sounded strong through-<lb/>
out the show, evidently com-<lb/>
pletely recovered from his col-<lb/>
lapsed lung from a years or so ago.<lb/>
Both bovs have lost weight since<lb/>
the days of "Raising Hell but<lb/>
Run is again chubbing up.<lb/>
Their set featured the most<lb/>
pyrotechnics I've seen since Kiss<lb/>
took off their make up. The best<lb/>
effect was the shower of sparks<lb/>
that exploded upward after "My<lb/>
Adidas<lb/>
For the finale, they did "King of<lb/>
Rock When they hit the lines,<lb/>
'To burn my house You must<lb/>
use fire two giant columns of<lb/>
fire spit up from both ends of the<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
The rest of the rappers and their<lb/>
posses came out after that, and<lb/>
milled around on stage as Run<lb/>
and Dee finished the song. After<lb/>
an hour and a half of Run-DMC,<lb/>
and two hours of short sets split<lb/>
between the other acts, the con-<lb/>
cert was over.<lb/>
Run only made one mistake<lb/>
during his tenure as host of his<lb/>
house. He told the audience, T<lb/>
don't see one motherfucker in the<lb/>
house fighting I guess he wasn't<lb/>
watching the scuffle over at the<lb/>
soundboard.<lb/>
The situation looked for a while<lb/>
like it was going to escalate. But,<lb/>
aside from that one incident, the<lb/>
crowd, though hyped, was<lb/>
pumped up for a good time.<lb/>
And you can't blame the host<lb/>
for doing his job.<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JUNES, 1988 Page 7<lb/>
'Rambo III' is just more of the same thing<lb/>
By JIM SHAMLIN<lb/>
 Staff Writer<lb/>
"Rambo III" is the sequel to<lb/>
"Rambo, First Blood Part Two<lb/>
which is the sequel to "First<lb/>
Blood Rambo (Sylvester Stal-<lb/>
lone) has been living in a monas-<lb/>
tary ever since he rescued the<lb/>
POWs from Vietnam in the last<lb/>
movie.<lb/>
He finds out that his only friend<lb/>
and mentor, Colonal Trautman<lb/>
(Richard Crenna) has been cap-<lb/>
tured by the Soviets in Afghani-<lb/>
stan, so he leaves the East, enlists<lb/>
the aid of a little arab brat, and<lb/>
heads across the desert in search<lb/>
oi Trautman.<lb/>
Like its prequels, "Rambo III" is<lb/>
chock full of explosions, gun-<lb/>
fights, helicopter battles, and<lb/>
hand-to-hand combat. Of course,<lb/>
this is what the Rambo trilogy is<lb/>
all about, and plot is simply some-<lb/>
thing to pass the time between<lb/>
spectacular combat scenes.<lb/>
As usual, there is a smattering<lb/>
of blue-collar humor and dry one-<lb/>
liners, such as "I'm vour worst<lb/>
nightmare another line that<lb/>
Ronald Reagan can use in a politi-<lb/>
cal speech somewhere.<lb/>
Filming was done on location in<lb/>
Arizona, Thailand, and Isrcal. In<lb/>
Isreal, the filming was done near<lb/>
the unstable Jordanian border.<lb/>
There were threats of kidnapping<lb/>
Stallone and over 90 reported ter-<lb/>
rorist actions in the vicinity.<lb/>
One involved a fircfight within<lb/>
150 yardsof the cast's hotel. There<lb/>
was even an occasion when Isreali<lb/>
soldiers had to defend the movie<lb/>
set from a band of three Jordanian<lb/>
terrorist groups.<lb/>
As fate would have it, nobody<lb/>
got hurt and the film was com-<lb/>
pleted on schedule. One could<lb/>
argue either way about the effect<lb/>
of this instability upon the pro-<lb/>
duction.<lb/>
Once a good movie has been<lb/>
made, its sequels can only attempt<lb/>
the quality of the original movie.<lb/>
"First Blood" was, admittedly, a<lb/>
pretty good film. "Rambo" sold<lb/>
out for action and left the plot<lb/>
behind.<lb/>
Opinions split about the second<lb/>
film; some called it a thrilling<lb/>
adventure movie, others called it<lb/>
boring and poorly written.<lb/>
"Rambo III" is much the same as<lb/>
"Rambo and viewers' opinions<lb/>
will inevitably be the same.<lb/>
Rambites (those who liked<lb/>
"Rambo") will say that it was a<lb/>
thrilling adventure, and that it<lb/>
kept them on the edge of their<lb/>
seats. Anti-Rambitcs will say that<lb/>
the movie has a plot that is thin to<lb/>
the point of translucency and that<lb/>
the action scenes were utterly<lb/>
unrealistic.<lb/>
Rambites will hail the movies<lb/>
stunning special effects. In mak-<lb/>
ing the film, the crew trashed<lb/>
three helicopters.<lb/>
Working on the film were over a<lb/>
dozen stunt men, four stunt<lb/>
horses, and a double handful of<lb/>
"expert" coordinates, one of<lb/>
whom was World Middleweight<lb/>
Kickboxing Champion Harold<lb/>
Diamond. Anti-Rambites will say<lb/>
that all the explosions and action<lb/>
scenes merely obscured the scen-<lb/>
ery.<lb/>
Rambites will claim that it is a<lb/>
timely movie about an American<lb/>
hero who rescues his friend from<lb/>
communist clutches in Afghani-<lb/>
stan. Anti-Rambites will be quick<lb/>
to mention that Stallone spent the<lb/>
Vietnam era in Sweden, teaching<lb/>
soccer at a girl's school, and the<lb/>
film is poorly timed, as the Rus-<lb/>
sians are presently pulling out of<lb/>
Afghanistan.<lb/>
Rambites will claim that Stal-<lb/>
lone portrayed John Rambo, the<lb/>
half-Indian, half-German pro-<lb/>
tagonist, well. Anti-Rambitcs will<lb/>
be amazed that the Rambites used<lb/>
a three-syllable word, and then<lb/>
ask them what thev know about<lb/>
J<lb/>
good acting anyway.<lb/>
Lastly, Rambite critics will pro-<lb/>
claim that "Rambo III" is the ad-<lb/>
venture film of the summer, and<lb/>
that no avid cinemite should miss<lb/>
it. Anti-Rambites will say that it<lb/>
isn't worth seeing, even at a mati-<lb/>
nee, and that they'll watch a docu-<lb/>
mentary on Arts and Entertain-<lb/>
ment Network when the film hits<lb/>
cable.<lb/>
Underwood goes from the<lb/>
'Krush Groove' to law firm<lb/>
CHT<lb/>
PITTSBURGH (AP) � After<lb/>
just one season on NBC's "L.A.<lb/>
Law Blair Underwood has<lb/>
carved out a tidy niche for himself<lb/>
in the hit show's ensemble cast as<lb/>
brash, young attorney Jonathan<lb/>
Rollins'<lb/>
"I couldn't ask for anything<lb/>
better, and that's an understate-<lb/>
ment said Underwood. "To be<lb/>
out of college three years and to<lb/>
have a job and working as an actor<lb/>
is part of it. And then working<lb/>
with scripts like the quality of rL.<lb/>
A. Law I mean working with the<lb/>
cast<lb/>
"These actors, all of them, will<lb/>
give you something to play off of,<lb/>
and I think that shows on camera.<lb/>
And then the icing on the cake is<lb/>
that the public and critics alike<lb/>
. ujoy the show<lb/>
Underwood, 23, was in town<lb/>
recently to pick up a belated fine<lb/>
arts degree from Carnegie Mellon<lb/>
University.<lb/>
He joined the cast of the high-<lb/>
rated, Emmy-winning series last<lb/>
season as a sophisticate fresh out<lb/>
of Harvard Law whose mega-<lb/>
ambition occasionally pushes<lb/>
him across the lines of decorum<lb/>
and even ethics.<lb/>
"He's been real well received<lb/>
said Rick Wallace, the show's co-<lb/>
executive producer. "He seemed<lb/>
to fit in. There didn't seem to be<lb/>
any difficulty making him a part<lb/>
of the enesemble<lb/>
Underwood, looking very un-<lb/>
lawyerlike in a gold chain, striped<lb/>
shirt and pleated trousers, said<lb/>
that's one of the main differences<lb/>
between himself and the part he<lb/>
plays.<lb/>
"The difference between some-<lb/>
one like Jonathan Rollins and<lb/>
myself is Jonathan has a type of<lb/>
arrogance and extreme confi-<lb/>
dence in himself, and that's it.<lb/>
reriod. I think it's a difference<lb/>
between that and having faith and<lb/>
confidence that you can accom-<lb/>
plish what you believe in he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
His fast track to stardom is testi-<lb/>
mony to that kind of deep belief.<lb/>
Inspired by his older brother's<lb/>
interest in acting, Underwood<lb/>
began performing at dinner thea-<lb/>
ters while in junior high school.<lb/>
He entered Carnegie Mellon's<lb/>
prestigious drama department in<lb/>
the fall of 1982 as a musical theater<lb/>
major, but dropped out midway<lb/>
through his junior year.<lb/>
Underwood went to New York<lb/>
where he eventually landed roles<lb/>
in the rap film "Krush Groove"<lb/>
with Sheila E. and on the ABC<lb/>
soap opera "One Life to Live In<lb/>
1986, he was cast as a streetwise<lb/>
parolee in the CBS series "Down-<lb/>
town<lb/>
The show was canceled after 13<lb/>
episodes and for the first time in<lb/>
his short career, Underwood was<lb/>
unemployed.<lb/>
Underwood did a few guest<lb/>
shows, then auditioned last sum-<lb/>
mer for "L.A. Law The show's<lb/>
producers, including executive<lb/>
producer Stephen Bochco, a Car-<lb/>
negie Mellon alumnus, decided to<lb/>
add a black attorney to the cast at<lb/>
viewers' request.<lb/>
"I don't feel as if he is window<lb/>
dressing because they are creat-<lb/>
ing a full, fleshed-out character<lb/>
(who) happens to be black<lb/>
Underwood said. "As opposed to<lb/>
writing a black character who's<lb/>
going to say, 'Yo, Yo, Yo, we're<lb/>
gonna go to court now you<lb/>
know, stereotype<lb/>
With the role have come atten-<lb/>
tion and fame, including being<lb/>
named by a popular magazine as<lb/>
one of America's sexiest bache-<lb/>
lors.<lb/>
His family strives through con-<lb/>
stant contact to keep him humble,<lb/>
however, said Underwood. Even<lb/>
though he lives in Los Angeles<lb/>
and his parents are in Petersburg,<lb/>
Va they're on the phone almost<lb/>
daily.<lb/>
His father, Frank Sr 56, a re-<lb/>
tired Army colonel, serves as his<lb/>
manager, His brother, Frank Jr<lb/>
26, an "artist-slash-writer-slash-<lb/>
actor has written an adventure-<lb/>
action story Underwood hopes to<lb/>
produce.<lb/>
Pictured here are Sylvester Stallone and Richard Crenna as Rambo and Trautman in the new hit<lb/>
film'Rambo III The film shows pop hero John Rambo invading Afghanistan to rescue his only<lb/>
friend. With friends like these  the State Department doesn't need any enemies.<lb/>
Run proves that it really is his house<lb/>
BY CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
SUffli Bov<lb/>
"We've had a whole lot of su-<lb/>
perstars on this stage here tonight.<lb/>
But I want y'all to know one thing.<lb/>
This is�MY HOUSE<lb/>
So Run said. And so it was,<lb/>
Sunday night at the Charlotte<lb/>
Coliseum, the second floor of the<lb/>
"Run's House" tour. Despite val-<lb/>
iant efforts by the rest of the rap-<lb/>
pers, Public Enemy, Kool Moe<lb/>
Dee, DJ Jazzy Jeff and The Fresh<lb/>
Prince and EU, this building re-<lb/>
mained under Run's control all<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Public Enemy were the first in<lb/>
effect. Despite a strong version of<lb/>
"My Uzi Weighs A Ton their set<lb/>
was kind of dull. Chuck D. came<lb/>
on too strong with the anti-drug,<lb/>
anti-violence messages.<lb/>
Flavor-Flave lightened things<lb/>
up, but the highlight of all their<lb/>
cuts was Terminator X's scratch-<lb/>
ing. I'm surprised y didn't<lb/>
play "Sophisticate . itch but<lb/>
like all the other acts, they are<lb/>
probably getting tired of playing<lb/>
their hit singles over and over.<lb/>
Kool Moe Dee busted out next.<lb/>
He had a lot more to say to the<lb/>
crowd, especially concerning his<lb/>
feud with LL Cool J. To be fair, he<lb/>
didn't dis LL bad, but it was obvi-<lb/>
ous he enjoyed the loud audience<lb/>
support in his court.<lb/>
He did "How Ya Like Me<lb/>
Now a rocking "Wild, Wild<lb/>
West and a fresh preview of his<lb/>
new single that's coming out next<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Jazzy Jeff, The Prince and<lb/>
Readv Rock B. came out next. The<lb/>
J<lb/>
stories about Jeff's driving experi-<lb/>
ences fell kind of flat even with<lb/>
Ready Rock's sound effects.<lb/>
But Jeff and Ready Rock's<lb/>
"Human Jukebox vs. Scratching"<lb/>
battle was amazing. You haven't<lb/>
lived until you've seen Ready<lb/>
Rock hold his own against two<lb/>
turntables.<lb/>
The duo had the deftest danc-<lb/>
ers of all the acts, but Kool Moe<lb/>
Dee's run a close second. Rap<lb/>
concerts don't depend on the<lb/>
special effects popmeisters like<lb/>
David Bowie need.<lb/>
Groups either have body-<lb/>
guards standing around looking<lb/>
bad, or have dancers. Thai may<lb/>
have been one of Public Enemy's<lb/>
failings, they had no dancers and<lb/>
the guards kept pointing guns at<lb/>
the audience.<lb/>
But The Fresh Prince's lady and<lb/>
her two companions had some of<lb/>
the roughest moves since that<lb/>
second or third Janet Jackson<lb/>
video.<lb/>
Jeff and the Prince did their big<lb/>
hit, "Parents Just don't Under-<lb/>
stand and mixed it in with the<lb/>
earlier and structurally similar<lb/>
hit, "Girls are Nothing But<lb/>
Trouble<lb/>
EU came out and framed a reg-<lb/>
gae-tinged song with instrumen-<lb/>
tal and reprise versions of "Da<lb/>
Butt They were the only group<lb/>
that used instruments during the<lb/>
show, and thev showed the crowd<lb/>
how glad they were to be back in<lb/>
the Queen City by tossing shirts<lb/>
and hats into the crowd.<lb/>
By this time, the crowd on the<lb/>
floor was crushed up against the<lb/>
stage. After EU went off stage, it<lb/>
took a while for the roadies to<lb/>
strike the stage and set up for Run-<lb/>
DMC.<lb/>
But it was worth the wait.<lb/>
"Beats to the Rhyme" started<lb/>
playing, while descending plat-<lb/>
forms brought Dee and JamMas-<lb/>
ter Jay down to the stage. Run<lb/>
climbed down a metal ladder and<lb/>
Porno films are no longer in demand<lb/>
(CPS)�It was a scene repeated<lb/>
cm hundreds of campuses:<lb/>
University of Missouri at Co-<lb/>
lumbia students picketed the<lb/>
campus showing of a porn movie<lb/>
j in this case The Opening of<lb/>
Misty Beethoven"�one night in<lb/>
early April, and then retired to a<lb/>
auditorium for a heated<lb/>
te between Gloria Leonard<lb/>
publisher of "Higher Sodety<lb/>
and Delor es Alexan-<lb/>
founder of Women Aga inst<lb/>
phy.<lb/>
�g news, however, is that<lb/>
scene hasn't been repeated on<lb/>
ery many campuses during the<lb/>
987-88 school year.<lb/>
In short, pom films are becom-<lb/>
scarcer on VS. campuses,<lb/>
ers mink it's because of<lb/>
creasing competition from<lb/>
taped sex movies, a creep<lb/>
rear of controversy, changin g<lb/>
tastes and maybe even<lb/>
student consciousness.<lb/>
The scarcity, asserts National<lb/>
anization of Women's<lb/>
Junior Bridge, is<lb/>
rdne to all the work done over the<lb/>
fears by all organiztiorta m the<lb/>
women s movement to point out<lb/>
where the fun ends and the harm<lb/>
attribute it to money.<lb/>
most a'<lb/>
Sacarakis of<lb/>
Pennsylvania, which<lb/>
The<lb/>
are violent films like 'Robocop<lb/>
AtAri2ona$tateUniversity,me<lb/>
most successful campus money<lb/>
makers this year have been "The<lb/>
Gods Must Be Crazy' "La<lb/>
Bamba "Dim Sum and "Attack<lb/>
of the Kilter Tomatoes reported<lb/>
activities advisor Rosalyn Munk.<lb/>
Nationwide, the most popular<lb/>
movie rentals at colleges have<lb/>
been "River's Edge "My Life As<lb/>
A Dog "Koyaatusoatsi" and<lb/>
She's Gotta Have It said Amy<lb/>
Heller of New Yorker Rims,<lb/>
which distributes second-rut<lb/>
films.<lb/>
If s a far cry from the contro-<lb/>
versy sxvi anger that attended<lb/>
movies like "Wanda Wraps Wall<lb/>
Street "Debbie Does Dallas<lb/>
"Deep Throat" and blue movie<lb/>
"Students added Don Haley,<lb/>
a publicist for several Los Angeles<lb/>
X-rated movie theaters, "don't<lb/>
have to go to a theater or a campus<lb/>
showing. They go straight to the<lb/>
video store<lb/>
Videos, shown at home, also<lb/>
relieve students of the embarass<lb/>
ment of being seen at the more<lb/>
public porn showings at campus<lb/>
mmseries.<lb/>
"We'd lose about half me audi<lb/>
ence in 20 minutes Ross recalls<lb/>
of his days of sponsoring dirty<lb/>
movies at Tulane Uni<lb/>
iney wereuiwappyur<lb/>
sed at being lf<lb/>
filled their desire to see wnat this<lb/>
kind of movie was about?<lb/>
With so much pom<lb/>
stores, Munk added, "there's no<lb/>
big mystery about these things<lb/>
now<lb/>
With the mystery gone and the<lb/>
tttiHation readily available in<lb/>
video stores, the controversy has<lb/>
been harder to generate.<lb/>
Yet some film sponsors com-<lb/>
plain they need the controvery to<lb/>
attract campus audiences.<lb/>
"Another frat showed a double<lb/>
feature of porn films recently<lb/>
said Rick Ptghini, president of the<lb/>
Northern IHinios University Tau<lb/>
Kappa Epsilon chapter, which<lb/>
sponsored a "Deep Throat"<lb/>
screening last September. "There<lb/>
was no protest, so wey didn'tget<lb/>
as large a crowd as we got with<lb/>
protesters"<lb/>
Gordon Schell, Tualne's new<lb/>
film advisor, said the most contro-<lb/>
versy he's faced was last spring,<lb/>
when his group announced it was<lb/>
showing 5The Ro y Horror Pic-<lb/>
ture Show" instead of a pom<lb/>
movie, thus provoking a spate of<lb/>
protest calls to his office.<lb/>
festivals at the unrVersities of<lb/>
Chicago and Tennessee, at Louisi-<lb/>
ana State and Galtfotnlilttstile<lb/>
of Technology, at DePaul and ht-<lb/>
eratty hundreds of other schools<lb/>
Mary � provoked Catholic pro-<lb/>
tests at the universities of Okla-<lb/>
homa (twice), Kansas, North<lb/>
Dakota and Nebraska, among<lb/>
other schools, to become me<lb/>
year's most cesured film.<lb/>
No one is sure what the general<lb/>
student taste is governed by,<lb/>
Lehigh's Sacarakis shrugged.<lb/>
She does know ifs getting<lb/>
touchier. The biggest controversy<lb/>
she's encountered mis year wa�<lb/>
about whether to advertise a stu-<lb/>
dent film series with a<lb/>
from the movie "The<lb/>
ables" or a more erotic stifl from<lb/>
"The Big Easy<lb/>
The students who work wiml<lb/>
Sacarakis chose the tame stut<lb/>
"We don't want to deal with<lb/>
those problems" said Leslie<lb/>
Archer of the University of CalN<lb/>
fomia-Davis's $H Club, which<lb/>
used to raisemoriey by showing<lb/>
"Misty BeeuteveaJF<lb/>
These days. Archer<lb/>
club would screer "<lb/>
releases, not contro<lb/>
HellerofNewYoi<lb/>
pulled the curtain down as the<lb/>
song segued into "Run's House<lb/>
The marquis lights behind the<lb/>
stage lit upand spelled out "RUN,<lb/>
" as dry ice smoke flooded across,<lb/>
bringing the bodyguards out on<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
Rub and Dee stalked back and<lb/>
forth across the stage, whipping<lb/>
out the words to "Run's House"<lb/>
and "Rock Box Jay eventually<lb/>
drifted to another set of turntables<lb/>
on top of the marquis lights for<lb/>
"Walk This Way "Mary, Mary"<lb/>
and "It's Tricky<lb/>
Most of the cuts they played<lb/>
came off the "Raising Hell" Lp<lb/>
and the new release, "Tougher<lb/>
Than Leather The abbreviated<lb/>
"Rock Box" was the only thing<lb/>
they did off their first album, and<lb/>
"King of Rock'except for the title<lb/>
track, was all but ignored.<lb/>
Their set was the longest by far<lb/>
of anvone else's. Since they head-<lb/>
lined (and have more albums than<lb/>
anybody else) they had more lee-<lb/>
way of what cuts they wanted to<lb/>
do during the show.<lb/>
Run sounded strong through-<lb/>
out the show, evidently com-<lb/>
pletely recovered from his col-<lb/>
lapsed lung from a years or so ago.<lb/>
Both boys have lost weight since<lb/>
the days of "Raising Hell but<lb/>
Run is again chubbing up.<lb/>
Their set featured the most<lb/>
pyrotechnics I've seen since Kiss<lb/>
took off their make up. The best<lb/>
effect was the shower of sparks<lb/>
that exploded upward after "My<lb/>
Adidas<lb/>
For the finale, they did "King of<lb/>
Rock When they hit the lines,<lb/>
'To bum my house You must<lb/>
use fire two giant columns of<lb/>
fire spit up from both ends of the<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
The rest of the rappers and their<lb/>
posses came out after that, and<lb/>
milled around on stage as Run<lb/>
and Dee finished the song. After<lb/>
an hour and a half of Run-DMC,<lb/>
and two hours of short sets split<lb/>
between the other acts, the con-<lb/>
cert was over.<lb/>
Run only made one mistake<lb/>
during his tenure as host of his<lb/>
house. He told the audience, "1<lb/>
don't see one motherfucker in the<lb/>
house fighting I guess he wasn't<lb/>
watching the scuffle over at the<lb/>
soundboard.<lb/>
The situation looked for a while<lb/>
like it was going to escalate. But,<lb/>
aside from that one incident, the<lb/>
crowd, though hyped, was<lb/>
pumped up for a good time.<lb/>
And you can't blame the host<lb/>
for doing his job.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058078_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 8, 1Q88<lb/>
Campus Comics<lb/>
x Always cone early<lb/>
TO ?EX A, parkin<lb/>
SPAce N&amp;XT TO M<lb/>
CLASS.<lb/>
r use. rue. elxtka<lb/>
Tle TO CATCH UP<lb/>
ON 5CHOOLWORK.<lb/>
SOUflPS UKE As<lb/>
eooo IDEA TO<lb/>
BUT POrtT YOU TWNKH'30<lb/>
rV. (S OveRDO�H&amp; T<lb/>
JKJ5T A LI ITLT<lb/>
Arm Fall Off Boy<lb/>
Bv RACER X<lb/>
�The Li'l<lb/>
Ahoy, crew! (I know that sounds gay, but I'm trying to come up with a new greeting,<lb/>
everyone's tired of "What it is) This week, THRILL to new Hubie action in<lb/>
"Overkill CHILL to those manic depressive students in "Campus Comics<lb/>
SPILL to the new adventures of "The Law" and his new villain, Bubblebutt,<lb/>
or whatever they call him. And get ready, this week begins the first<lb/>
CONTINUING adventure of the most popular hero on campus, ARM FALL-OFF BOY! Oh, and for all you fan club members, sorry about the delay in your buttons and posters.<lb/>
The posters will be done by the end of the week (if I can find that damn picture I drew) and the buttons-next week maybe? We will also list the roll call again next week, so there.<lb/>
I also need a new "word" to end with. Feel free to send in suggestions. Sayonara!<lb/>
The Student Place To<lb/>
SELL Anything<lb/>
AXD ALSO<lb/>
The Place To Buy<lb/>
Everything<lb/>
?Faded Levi Jeans<lb/>
Worn &amp; Weary$3.95 Up<lb/>
'Great "T" Shirts$1.95 up<lb/>
�Beautiful Shirts &amp; Tops$3.95 up<lb/>
Beach Wear<lb/>
Dress Wear<lb/>
etc.<lb/>
Used But LUce New<lb/>
Electric Irons, Toasters, Toaster Ovens,<lb/>
VCR's, Stereos, T.Vs<lb/>
At<lb/>
Great Savings<lb/>
"Bronson's -<lb/>
Treasure Chest"<lb/>
(Coin &amp; Ring Man &amp; Clothes Man) j<lb/>
Corner 4th &amp; Evans<lb/>
10:00 - 5:00 M-F 7RI) QQfifi<lb/>
10:00 - 3:00 Sat. i OA'OOOU<lb/>
SGA New<lb/>
Student<lb/>
rientation<lb/>
Dax<lb/>
Any Campus<lb/>
Organization Wishing<lb/>
To Participate<lb/>
In SGA's<lb/>
New Student<lb/>
Orientation<lb/>
Program (NSICO)<lb/>
Please Contact SGA Offices<lb/>
at 757-6611 ext. 218<lb/>
Dates: June 13,16, 20, 27, 30<lb/>
July 7<lb/>
Pirat<lb/>
C<lb/>
Pirate sophomore point u<lb/>
his cat-quick speed and ab<lb/>
E. Mcr<lb/>
Eugene McNeill imprc<lb/>
his 1987 NCAA appeararl<lb/>
took sixth place m I <lb/>
NCAA Track am<lb/>
Championships in Euger<lb/>
McNeill, who finis!<lb/>
last year, ran a 20 -1 in<lb/>
meter finals on Fnda<lb/>
The race, one of th<lb/>
challenging oi<lb/>
produced a new NCAJ<lb/>
and Field record as<lb/>
Daniels of Miss - pi Stj<lb/>
the race in 19 v 7 9 ndsf<lb/>
McNeill also ran wit <lb/>
100-meter relay team.<lb/>
s which consisted of Euj<lb/>
I Drugs<lb/>
e<lb/>
5�<lb/>
w<lb/>
NEW YORK<lb/>
basketball star Spend r <lb/>
says his cocaine add I<lb/>
his career and mania<lb/>
him to hire a mobster to<lb/>
Paul VVesthead after <lb/>
suspended Havwood dul<lb/>
1979-80 NBA finals<lb/>
"I left the (Los Angi<lb/>
and drove oii in my Rj<lb/>
night thinking one th <lb/>
Westhead must die H<lb/>
says in a first-person artii<lb/>
? his cocaine addiction<lb/>
I week's Teople ma g&amp;z<lb/>
Baseba<lb/>
<lb/>
��<lb/>
Greenville's Tom Mc<lb/>
leading pitcher on Roj<lb/>
School's unbeaten baset<lb/>
announced lat month<lb/>
plans to play baseh.<lb/>
Carolina University am<lb/>
coach Gary Overt on neel<lb/>
Move, a right-hand. I<lb/>
perfect 9-0 with four save<lb/>
time including an earl<lb/>
average of less than 2 Q<lb/>
who is also a fine hit<lb/>
Linkst<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNS<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
Most golf coaches w<lb/>
worried about the proj<lb/>
I fielding a team consn<lb/>
 primarily freshmer<lb/>
sophomores for the fl<lb/>
� season. But for East<lb/>
 Head Coach Hal Morns<lb/>
I has guided the riratesl<lb/>
I consecutive conference r<lb/>
I was recently inducted<lb/>
sGolf Coaches Assocw<lb/>
; America Hall of Fame, th<lb/>
I squad, with a few chang(<lb/>
j the same one that captj<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Assj<lb/>
 (CAA) conference cham<lb/>
 during the spring golf<lb/>
The only player fj<lb/>
I year's squad that willj<lb/>
 returning for the fall s<lb/>
I Chris Reilly, who gTadl<lb/>
� the spring. Reilly<lb/>
Academic All-Americai<lb/>
experience and leaders!<lb/>
missed by the younger j<lb/>
the team.<lb/>
 "When you have a yoi<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058078_0010"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
By REID<lb/>
&amp;w<lb/>
� v.s II<lb/>
<lb/>
M<lb/>
fTsii<lb/>
r JiJ<lb/>
1 TrlAT r<lb/>
.N<lb/>
A7<lb/>
v fSfo<lb/>
I<lb/>
BvRACERX<lb/>
'Ijust wrSr<lb/>
9M TO SC<lb/>
Be CMTtiUED<lb/>
 <lb/>
md posters.<lb/>
- 50 there.<lb/>
on<lb/>
shing<lb/>
t<lb/>
0)<lb/>
Offices<lb/>
218<lb/>
0, 27, 30<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
IUNE8. 1988 Page 9<lb/>
Pirate hoopsters look for big year on court<lb/>
Pirate sophomore point guard Jimmy Hinton hopes to continue to excite Pirate fans in MInges Coliseum with<lb/>
his cat-quick speed and ability to nab opponent's pockets of the basketball. (File Photo)<lb/>
E. McNeill improves on finish<lb/>
Eugene McNeill improved on<lb/>
his 1987 NCAA appearance as he<lb/>
took sixth place in this year's<lb/>
NCAA Track and Field<lb/>
Championships in Eugene, Or.<lb/>
McNeill, who finished seventh<lb/>
last year, ran a 20.61 in the 200-<lb/>
meter finals on Friday.<lb/>
The race, one of the most<lb/>
challenging of the meet,<lb/>
produced a new NCAA Track<lb/>
and Field record as Lorenze<lb/>
Daniels of Mississippi State won<lb/>
the race in 19.87 seconds.<lb/>
McNeill also ran with the 4 x<lb/>
100-meter relay team. The team,<lb/>
which consisted of Eugene and<lb/>
Lee McNeill, Ike Robinson and<lb/>
Junior Robinson, was among one<lb/>
of the fastest fields ever to<lb/>
compete in the championships.<lb/>
Although they took a first-place<lb/>
finish at the IC4 A Championships<lb/>
two weeks ago, the team did not<lb/>
advance past Thursday's NCAA<lb/>
preliminaries.<lb/>
Last year the team brought<lb/>
home a fourth-place finish from<lb/>
the NCAA's. All-American Lee<lb/>
McNeill also, surprisingly, did<lb/>
not advance to the finals in the 100<lb/>
meters.<lb/>
McNeill, who has advanced to<lb/>
the finals for the past three years,<lb/>
including a seventh-place finish<lb/>
last year, finished third in his<lb/>
preliminary heat. The top eight<lb/>
times went on to compete in the<lb/>
finals, but McNeill's 10.38 was<lb/>
only the tenth best.<lb/>
McNeill's best time of the year<lb/>
was his 10.26 which qualified him<lb/>
for 'he NCAA's.<lb/>
Lee and Eugene McNeill's<lb/>
competing for this season did not<lb/>
end with the NCAA's. The duo<lb/>
will compete as members of the<lb/>
Mazda Track Club at the TAC<lb/>
Championships to be held later<lb/>
this year in Tampa Fl. June 23-25.<lb/>
� CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
By PAUL DUNN<lb/>
Spoils Writer<lb/>
The 1988-89 Mens Pirates<lb/>
basketball season guarantees to<lb/>
"Rock Down" the house.<lb/>
Coming off an 8-20 record last<lb/>
season, with a squad consisting<lb/>
mostly of freshman and<lb/>
sophmores, the 1988-89 "Steele-<lb/>
workers" will earn their much<lb/>
wanted RESPECT.<lb/>
The recruiting class was the first<lb/>
for the second year coaching staff<lb/>
as Steele was forced to sign last<lb/>
years class after April signing<lb/>
date.<lb/>
The ECU team will experience<lb/>
new growth with the signing of<lb/>
six outstanding recruits.<lb/>
"We are extremely pleased with<lb/>
the group of young men and we<lb/>
know that we filled much of our<lb/>
needs Steele said. "We needed<lb/>
players with size, who were fine<lb/>
athletes and could shoot the<lb/>
basketball. Dan Bell and Chris<lb/>
Benetti (ECU assistant coaches)<lb/>
did an excellent job of finding<lb/>
young men who would fit into<lb/>
our program both academically<lb/>
and athletically<lb/>
The freshman recruits are<lb/>
Casey Mote (6-7, 185, Demorest,<lb/>
Ga.); Jeff Perlich (6-2, 185,<lb/>
Huntsville, AD; and Broke Bryant<lb/>
(6-9, 230, Huntsville, Al.).<lb/>
Mote was the all-time leading<lb/>
scorer in school history at<lb/>
Haversham Central High School<lb/>
in Demorest, Ga. He averaged<lb/>
20.3 points, 10.5 rebounds and<lb/>
shot 63 percent form the field<lb/>
during his senior year. He was<lb/>
named to the all-area team and<lb/>
was ab all-star at two different<lb/>
B.C. All-Star Camps in Georgia<lb/>
and Alabama.<lb/>
Perlich was the second-leading<lb/>
scorer in the Indiana high school<lb/>
ranks last season as ne averaged<lb/>
32 points p� game for<lb/>
Chururubusco ! ;h School in<lb/>
Fort Wayne. He is named the<lb/>
Fort Wayne player of the year and<lb/>
has been chosen for several<lb/>
prestigious post-season all-star<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Schercr and Bryant both came<lb/>
to ECU after playing together at<lb/>
Grissom High School in<lb/>
Huntsville. Scherer was named<lb/>
the player of the year in<lb/>
Alabama's hughest rated 6A<lb/>
classification.<lb/>
Schercr was also a first team all-<lb/>
state selection and most valuable<lb/>
player in the city of Huntsville in<lb/>
leading Grissom to the Alabama<lb/>
state champioship. He averaged<lb/>
20.6 points per game, while<lb/>
connecting on 82 percent of his<lb/>
free throws and 55 percent of his<lb/>
three-point field goals.<lb/>
Bryant was the post man for the<lb/>
state championship Grissom<lb/>
squad as he averaged 19 points<lb/>
and 9.3 rebounds, while<lb/>
connecting on 81 percent of his<lb/>
free throws and 58 percent form<lb/>
the field. He was named the most<lb/>
valuable player of the state<lb/>
tournament as he averaged 29<lb/>
points, eight rebounds and three<lb/>
blocks during the three games.<lb/>
Two junior college transfers<lb/>
that will be wearing the purple<lb/>
and gold. They are; Jerome Obey<lb/>
(6-6, 225, from Calhoun<lb/>
Community College in Decatur,<lb/>
Al.) and Kevin Staples (6-5, 205.<lb/>
from Southern J.C. in<lb/>
Birmingham, Al.).<lb/>
Obey was a highly-recruited<lb/>
selection from Calhoun<lb/>
Community College, where he<lb/>
averaged 17 pionts, 8.2 rebounds<lb/>
and had 98 blocked shots last<lb/>
season. The 6-6, 225 pounder led<lb/>
his Williamston (W.Va.) High<lb/>
School team to the state<lb/>
championships durng his senior<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Staples won two different slam-<lb/>
dunk contests at B.C. All-Star<lb/>
Camps in Georgia and Alabama<lb/>
and helped lead his Logan<lb/>
(W.Va.) High School team to<lb/>
back-to-back state<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
Some returning players that<lb/>
will bring much needed<lb/>
leadership to the team includes an<lb/>
alluminating list.<lb/>
Gus Hill, (unior, will be<lb/>
returning to fill his old shoesat the<lb/>
forward position. Hill was first-<lb/>
team all-conference and New-<lb/>
comer of the year last season.<lb/>
Second leading scorer of last<lb/>
season, Reed Lose, junior, returns<lb/>
for the guard position.<lb/>
Kenny Murphy, senior;<lb/>
impressive walk-on, returns to<lb/>
carry out his highly needed<lb/>
defensive skills.<lb/>
Jeff Kelly, senior, will give the<lb/>
Pirates some valuable time at the<lb/>
guard position.<lb/>
Blue Edwards, senior, will be<lb/>
wearing the high tops this season,<lb/>
after sitting out one season due to<lb/>
ineligibility.<lb/>
Assistant coach, Dan Bell,<lb/>
stated, "We are expecting big<lb/>
things out of Blue. Blue is a great<lb/>
player and we are looking<lb/>
forward to his needed<lb/>
contributions<lb/>
Coach Bell also stated, "We<lb/>
have a strong team and staff. If we<lb/>
can get the students and fans out<lb/>
to ONE game; I guarantee they<lb/>
will be back. We want to fill<lb/>
Minges with roaring supportive<lb/>
fans. Its time we get some<lb/>
RESPECT. ECU mens basketball<lb/>
is HERE!<lb/>
"Drugs ruined Hay wood's life<lb/>
With coach at hand, Hornets<lb/>
turn attention to personnel<lb/>
 . . . .  r. , , . ,  � j- � ic<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)�Ex-<lb/>
basketball star Spencer Haywood<lb/>
says his cocaine addiction ruined<lb/>
his career and marriage, and led<lb/>
him to hire a mobster to kill coach<lb/>
Paul Westhead after Westhead<lb/>
suspended Haywood during the<lb/>
1979-80 NBA finals.<lb/>
"I left the (Los Angeles) Forum<lb/>
and drove off in my Rolls that<lb/>
night thinking one thought�that<lb/>
: Westhead must die Haywood<lb/>
says in a first-person article about<lb/>
his cocaine addiction in this<lb/>
week's People magazine. "I drove<lb/>
through the streets plotting the<lb/>
man's murder<lb/>
"In the heat of anger and the<lb/>
daze of coke, I phoned an old<lb/>
friend of mine in Detroit. . .a<lb/>
genuine certified gangster . We<lb/>
say down and figured it<lb/>
out.Westhead lived in Palos<lb/>
Verdes, and we got his street<lb/>
address. We would sabotage his<lb/>
car, mess with his brake lining<lb/>
But the mother of the former<lb/>
Olympic basketball star<lb/>
persuaded him not to go through<lb/>
with the plot against Westhead,<lb/>
then coach of the Los Angeles<lb/>
Lakers.<lb/>
During the finals against the<lb/>
Philadelphia 76ers, Haywood<lb/>
passed out at a practice after a<lb/>
night of smoking cocaine; that<lb/>
was followed by an argument<lb/>
with teammates Jim Chones and<lb/>
Brad Holland. Westhead<lb/>
responded with the suspension<lb/>
following Game 3.<lb/>
The Lakers went on o win the<lb/>
NBA title under Westhead, who<lb/>
now coaches basketball at Loyola-<lb/>
Marymount University<lb/>
Baseballers add Moye to team<lb/>
Greenville's Tom Moye, the<lb/>
leading pitcher on Rose High<lb/>
School's unbeaten baseball team,<lb/>
announced last month that he<lb/>
plans to play baseball for East<lb/>
Carolina University and head<lb/>
coach Gary Overton nect spring.<lb/>
Moye, a right-hander, was a<lb/>
perfect 9-0 with four saves at press<lb/>
time including an earned run<lb/>
average of less than 2.00 Moye,<lb/>
who is also a fine hitter, has<lb/>
helped the Rampants to 21<lb/>
consecutive victories prior to<lb/>
entering the state 4A playoffs in<lb/>
late May.<lb/>
"We are very pleased to sign an<lb/>
outstanding student-athlete in<lb/>
TOm Moye said Overton, who<lb/>
will enter his fifth season in the<lb/>
spring. "We are projecting him to<lb/>
become one of the starters in our<lb/>
rotation<lb/>
Moye is Overton's only signee<lb/>
thus far, but he expects to sign ar<lb/>
least one more prospect to a grant<lb/>
this month. The Pirates lose only<lb/>
two seniors off of the 1988 team<lb/>
that finished 33-14.<lb/>
Rose High's David Danieals, a<lb/>
teammate of Moye, will also play<lb/>
for the Pirates in the spring.<lb/>
Daniels signed a grant to play for<lb/>
the ECU football team in April,<lb/>
and will play both sports.<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) � Now<lb/>
that the Charlotte Hornets have<lb/>
landed a coach, officials are<lb/>
turning their attention to filling<lb/>
the roster for the NBA expansion<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Already, the names of Utah's<lb/>
Kelly Tripucka and Seattle's Tom<lb/>
Chambers have surfaced as<lb/>
possible acquisitions, Gene<lb/>
Littles, director of player<lb/>
personnel, told The Charlotte<lb/>
Observer.<lb/>
Littles said Thursday that<lb/>
Tripucka might be easier to<lb/>
acquire, having been hurt and<lb/>
seeing little playing time at Utah.<lb/>
But Littles said the Hornets would<lb/>
probably have to assume most of<lb/>
a salary reportedly as high as<lb/>
$900,000 per season.<lb/>
Chambers is available through<lb/>
the new free-agency stipulations<lb/>
of the collective bargaining<lb/>
agreement, but he has said in<lb/>
recent weeks that he would rather<lb/>
stay with the SuperSonics, a<lb/>
contender, than go to a lesser team<lb/>
for slightly more money.<lb/>
Hornets coach Dick Harter said<lb/>
he may be more interested in the<lb/>
expansion draft than with an<lb/>
eighth or ninth pick in the rookie<lb/>
draft. The Hornets and the Miami<lb/>
Heat will flip a coin in two weeks,<lb/>
with the winner deciding<lb/>
whether to take the first pick<lb/>
between the two teams in the<lb/>
expansion draft or the higher pick<lb/>
in the rookie draft.<lb/>
Carl Scheer, Hornets' vice<lb/>
president, said he'd rather have<lb/>
three of the top five players<lb/>
available in the expansion draft<lb/>
than the eighth and 33rd picks<lb/>
overall in the college draft.<lb/>
While few details of Harter's<lb/>
contract were available at the<lb/>
announcement Thursday, The<lb/>
Charlotte Observer in its Friday<lb/>
editions quoted unidentified<lb/>
sources as saying it stipulates a<lb/>
two-year deal and some<lb/>
compensation if he doesn't<lb/>
continue with the club after two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The pact also reportedly<lb/>
contains retirement benefits, a<lb/>
morality clause establishing<lb/>
standards of behavior and<lb/>
character and a stipulation that<lb/>
Harter be available for civic<lb/>
appearances. In addition to a<lb/>
salarv, Harter reportedly will be<lb/>
provided with a car and will be<lb/>
given the opportunity to appear<lb/>
on a radio or television talk show<lb/>
Harter's s<lb/>
revealed but N BA sources iu ute<lb/>
newspaper a first-time h�d<lb/>
coach currently makes aobut<lb/>
$200,000 a season.<lb/>
S<lb/>
Linksters to field young, quality team<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
Most golf coaches would be<lb/>
worried about the prospect of<lb/>
fielding a team consisting of<lb/>
primarily freshmen and<lb/>
sophomores for the fall golf<lb/>
season. But for East Carolina<lb/>
Head Coach Hal Morrison, who<lb/>
has guided the Pirates to two<lb/>
consecutive conference titles and<lb/>
was recently inducted into the<lb/>
Golf Coaches Association of<lb/>
America Hall of Fame, this young<lb/>
squad, with a few changes, will be<lb/>
the same one that captured the<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
(CAA) conference championship<lb/>
during the spring golf season.<lb/>
The only player from this<lb/>
year's squad that will not be<lb/>
returning for the fall season is<lb/>
Chris Reilly, who graduated in<lb/>
the spring. Reilly was an<lb/>
Academic All-American, and his<lb/>
experience and leadership will be<lb/>
missed by the younger players on<lb/>
the team.<lb/>
"When you have a young team,<lb/>
nobody will step up and take the<lb/>
lead. Chris was a good leader, and<lb/>
he was good for the younger<lb/>
players. His leadership ability<lb/>
will be missed Morrison said.<lb/>
"We played primarily freshmen<lb/>
this year, and I think that<lb/>
inexperience was our biggest<lb/>
drawback. In the fall all of the<lb/>
players will have a year's<lb/>
experience, and I think that this<lb/>
will help us out, but we will still be<lb/>
a young team he added.<lb/>
Returning for the Pirates in the<lb/>
fall will be Team Captain Mark<lb/>
Hidlay, Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College transfer Tee Davis,<lb/>
Francis Vaughn, Simon Moye,<lb/>
Jeff Craig, and Paul Garcia.<lb/>
Morrison expects Hidlay to lend<lb/>
to the team the leadership and the<lb/>
experience that the young squad<lb/>
will need. Also returning will be<lb/>
John Maginnis, who did not play<lb/>
during the spring season, but will<lb/>
be participating in the fall.<lb/>
There will also be some much<lb/>
needed and much welcomed new<lb/>
faces on the team, thanks to a<lb/>
fruitful recruiting effort by the<lb/>
Pirate coaching staff. Donnie<lb/>
Cooper, out of Knoxville, Tenn is<lb/>
a high school state golf champion,<lb/>
as is Doug Hoey from Dearborn,<lb/>
Mich. Hoey also captured the<lb/>
State Junior Championship, a feat<lb/>
which impressed Morrison.<lb/>
"Most of the time, freshmen<lb/>
don't come in and start playing<lb/>
immediately, but we expect<lb/>
Cooper and Hoey to step right in<lb/>
and start for us he said.<lb/>
Other recruits that may have an<lb/>
immediate impact on the Pirate<lb/>
line-up are Travis Wolfe, who<lb/>
placed second in the Virgina high<lb/>
school golf championship, and<lb/>
Lennie Boyett, the only in-state<lb/>
recruit, from Zebulon.<lb/>
The Pirate golfers are slated to<lb/>
participate in four tournaments<lb/>
during the fall season. According<lb/>
to Morrison, all of the<lb/>
tournaments that ECU<lb/>
participates in consist of a field of<lb/>
18 to 20 teams, which gives the<lb/>
Pirates an opportunity to tee up<lb/>
with some of the top teams in the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
The first of these tournaments<lb/>
will be the John Ryan Memorial<lb/>
Tournament held at Duke<lb/>
University, where the Pirates will<lb/>
meet teams from Duke, UNC,<lb/>
N.C. State, Wake Forest,<lb/>
Richmond, South Carolina, and<lb/>
Georgia Tech.<lb/>
The Pirates will then travel to<lb/>
the prestigous Augusta National<lb/>
Golf Course in Georgia to play in<lb/>
the Augusta Invitational, where<lb/>
they will challenge such teams as<lb/>
Georgia, Tennessee, and<lb/>
Kentucky, among others.<lb/>
Then it's on to the Seascape<lb/>
Invitational at Nags Head, which<lb/>
is, according to Morrison, "like a<lb/>
conference tournament for us<lb/>
because most of the teams from<lb/>
the CAA will be participating,<lb/>
along with Temple, Maryland,<lb/>
and Old Dominion.<lb/>
The linksters will close out the<lb/>
season with the Hargrove Davis<lb/>
Invitational, being held at<lb/>
Cambell University.<lb/>
The ECU golf team will try to defend its two-year hold on the CAA golf<lb/>
title with a young band of linksters next year. (File Photo)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058078_0011"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
JUNE 8, 1988<lb/>
Wilander half<lb/>
PARIS (AP)� He's halfway to if anybody will get there It's still quarterfinals, has been No. 1 since court backhand passing shop,<lb/>
accomplishing what no man has possible but it's still a dream winning the 1985 U.S Open "He was really like a<lb/>
done in 19 years but Mats Also in the running for the Wilander ws ranked No. 3 bulldozer, Leconte said. All the<lb/>
Wilander says winning the Grand Grand Slam this year is Steffi Graf, coming into Paris, but his victory time I was coming to the net he<lb/>
Slam is "still a dream" who won the women's title is expected to push him past was passing me. 1 played poorly,<lb/>
Wilander, showing why many Saturday by blowing out 17-year- countryman Stefan Edbcrg into<lb/>
consider him the world's best clay old Natalia Zvereva of the Soviet the No. 2 spot,<lb/>
court player, dominated France's Union 6-0, 6-0 in the most one- In Sunday's final, Wilander<lb/>
Henri Leconte7-5,6-2,6-1 Sunday sided final in French Open used his counter-punching style<lb/>
to capture the French Open for his history. Australia's Margaret to frustrate Leconte i<lb/>
but he made made me play<lb/>
badly<lb/>
Leconte also hurt himself by<lb/>
serving poorly and making<lb/>
numerous unforced errors,<lb/>
VILLAGE<lb/>
Donna<lb/>
Edwards<lb/>
owner<lb/>
second Grand Slam title of the Court in 1970, was. the last<lb/>
year. He won the Australian Open woman to win the four major<lb/>
in January. tournaments in the same year.<lb/>
Fellow Swede Bjorn Borg in Wilander said winning the<lb/>
1980 was the last man to win the French Open enabled him to<lb/>
first two legs of the Grand Slam, accomplish one goal,<lb/>
but the last to win all four "What's important to me is that<lb/>
tournaments in the same year was I've won two Grand Slam<lb/>
17,500 fans hoping to see him mostly on his backhand. In<lb/>
become the first Frenchman since contrast, Wilander connected on<lb/>
Rod Laver in 1969. Next up is<lb/>
Wimbledon starting June 20,<lb/>
followed by the U.S. open in late<lb/>
August.<lb/>
"Everybody's always on the<lb/>
way (to the Grand Slam)<lb/>
Wilander said after winning his<lb/>
third title on the slow red clay of<lb/>
Roland Garros. "But I don't know<lb/>
tournaments in a row Wilander<lb/>
said. "I've never done that before.<lb/>
Now I have to win Wimbledon<lb/>
and the U.S. Open<lb/>
The 23-year-old Swede also<lb/>
served notice that he could be<lb/>
ready to challenge Ivan Lendl for<lb/>
the No. 1 ranking. Lendl, who lost<lb/>
to Jonas Svcnsson in the<lb/>
Friendly golf round<lb/>
winds up in lawsuit<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) � A<lb/>
friendly round of golf has led to a<lb/>
lawsuit filed by one golfer against<lb/>
a member of his foursome, whose<lb/>
ball ricocheted off a tree and<lb/>
struck him in the face.<lb/>
The accident last September left<lb/>
former Guilford College baseball<lb/>
coach Stuart T. Maynard blind in<lb/>
one eve. A lawsuit filed Friday in<lb/>
Guilford Superior Court on<lb/>
behalf of Maynard seeks more<lb/>
than $10,000 in damages from his<lb/>
golfing buddy, Gwyn Franklin of<lb/>
Greensboro.<lb/>
According to the suit, Franklin<lb/>
tried to hit his ball through a<lb/>
dense growth of trees toward the<lb/>
13th green at Longview Golf<lb/>
Course just west of Greensboro.<lb/>
The ball, about 200 yards from the<lb/>
green, ricocheted off a tree and<lb/>
struck Maynard in the face.<lb/>
Franklin was negligent, the<lb/>
lawsuit alleges, because he did<lb/>
not give Maynard proper<lb/>
.sarning before he hit the ball.<lb/>
Franklin also should have known<lb/>
that if he hit the ball, it would<lb/>
likely ricochet wildly and hit<lb/>
someone playing in the adjacent<lb/>
fairway, the suit said.<lb/>
"The defendant is not a skilled<lb/>
golfer, and he knew or should<lb/>
have known that he had no<lb/>
probability of driving his golf ball<lb/>
��BHrVVS.<lb/>
When you fill out your Form<lb/>
W-4 or W-4A, "Employee's<lb/>
Withholding Allowance<lb/>
Certificate remember:<lb/>
If ou can be claimed on your<lb/>
parent's or another person's tax<lb/>
return, you generally cannot be<lb/>
exempt from income tax<lb/>
withholding. To get it right, read<lb/>
the- instructions that came with<lb/>
your Form W-4 or W-4A.<lb/>
iTJMMU<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$205 Abortion from 13 to 18 weeks at<lb/>
addmonal cost. Pregnancy Tesi, Birth Control,<lb/>
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number: 1-800-532-5384) between 9 a.m. and 5<lb/>
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Yannick Noah in 1983 to win the<lb/>
title.<lb/>
Leconte served for the first set at<lb/>
5-4,but double-faulted, made two<lb/>
backhand errors and blew a<lb/>
backhand volley to give Wilander<lb/>
the break. The Swede then held<lb/>
serve at love and broke again in<lb/>
the next game, hitting a forehand<lb/>
passing shot into the open court to<lb/>
close out the set.<lb/>
"The first set was very<lb/>
important Wilander said. "If he<lb/>
had been able to win it, he would<lb/>
have had the crowd on his side<lb/>
Leconte never was in the match<lb/>
the rest of the way. He rushed the<lb/>
net whenever he could, but<lb/>
Wilander was invariably in<lb/>
perfect position to rip a cross-<lb/>
97 percent of his first serves.<lb/>
Leconte, always second to<lb/>
Noah in the hearts of French<lb/>
tennis fans, got no help from the<lb/>
crowd, many of whom whistled<lb/>
in displeasure at his unforced<lb/>
errors.<lb/>
Bring in this ad for a 15 Discount<lb/>
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through a thick stand of trees the<lb/>
lawsuit says.<lb/>
Maynard, 69, said he had no<lb/>
hard feelings toward Franklin.<lb/>
And Franklin said he was hoping<lb/>
to play golf with Maynard again.<lb/>
"We're looking forward to<lb/>
when he can play golf with us<lb/>
again said Franklin, a retiree.<lb/>
"We play every day, but he<lb/>
(Maynard) hasn't been playing<lb/>
recently. I guess he wants to get<lb/>
this settled before he starts<lb/>
playing again<lb/>
Beside the<lb/>
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Medical Students<lb/>
The United States Navy is looking for applicants for<lb/>
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To qualify you must:<lb/>
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Meet academic qualifications<lb/>
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Applications for scholarships are accepted each fall.<lb/>
To learn more about Navy medical scholarships, with<lb/>
no obligation, simply give me a call:<lb/>
Contact HMC Norm Rogers<lb/>
1-800-662-7568<lb/>
History has proven that size and strength alone do not<lb/>
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These Goliaths, with mammoth advertising budgets,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058078_0012"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>