<?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="00058079_0001"/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
COMING NEXT WEEK:<lb/>
Ah exclusive look at freshmen orientation, where are<lb/>
c oming from and what are they looking for.<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
The blistering movie scene at Mendenhall reviewed<lb/>
on page 7.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
A profile on b-ball player, Kenny Murphy, once<lb/>
walk on, now scholarship recipient, page 10.<lb/>
Stoe<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol.63 No. 5<lb/>
Wednesday, June 15,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Matthews to become new vice chancellor<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Dr. Alfred T. Matthews, vice<lb/>
president for student afairs at<lb/>
Slippery Rock University in Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, will become vice chan-<lb/>
cellor for student life at ECU effec-<lb/>
tive July 1.<lb/>
Ma tthe ws, 55, has been the chief<lb/>
student life administrator at Slip-<lb/>
pery Rock for the past eight years<lb/>
and previously served for 10 years<lb/>
as dean of student life at Virginia<lb/>
Commonwealth University,<lb/>
Richmond, Va.<lb/>
With a PhD in higher education<lb/>
from Indiana University, Mat-<lb/>
thews has more than 25 years of<lb/>
experience in student counseling,<lb/>
research and administration on<lb/>
both large and small campuses.<lb/>
He served three years as coordina-<lb/>
tor of student personnel services<lb/>
at the University of Wisconsin-<lb/>
Madison before moving to Vir-<lb/>
ginia Commonwealth.<lb/>
One of matthews's four chil-<lb/>
dren, Andy, 18, is a student at the<lb/>
University of North Carolina -<lb/>
Chapel Hill. Another, Laura, 24, is<lb/>
a graduate of the University of<lb/>
Virginia and a son, Peter, 23, is a<lb/>
graduate of the U.S. Naval Acad-<lb/>
emy.<lb/>
At ECU, Matthews will succeed<lb/>
Dr. Elmer E. Meyer Jr who is<lb/>
retiring after eight and a half years<lb/>
as vice chancellor for student life.<lb/>
The ECU vice chancellorship in-<lb/>
cludes administrative authority<lb/>
and oversight for student serv-<lb/>
ices, residence life and housing,<lb/>
public safety, student financial<lb/>
aid, student health services, intra-<lb/>
mural-recreational services, din-<lb/>
ing services, the university<lb/>
unions, counseling center, career<lb/>
plainning and placement and the<lb/>
program for hearing-impaired<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Matthews's appointment was<lb/>
announced by Dr. Richard R.<lb/>
Eakin, ECU chancellor, upon<lb/>
approval by the UNC Board of<lb/>
Governors.<lb/>
pleased to have Dr. Matthews<lb/>
join us at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity Eakin said. "His experience<lb/>
as a chief student life officer and<lb/>
his understanding of the needs of<lb/>
students at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
Devon Francis takes time out from his busy schedule to call a friend<lb/>
from a phone on the mall. (Photo by Ellen Murphy�Photolab)<lb/>
Faculty of Health Sciences<lb/>
granted tenure, promotions<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Twenty-five faculty members in<lb/>
the ECU Division of Health Sci-<lb/>
ences have been granted tenure<lb/>
and 17 received promotions rang-<lb/>
ing from assistant professor to<lb/>
professor, vice chancellor William<lb/>
E. Laupus announced.<lb/>
The Health Sciences Division<lb/>
includes the Schools of Allied<lb/>
Health Sciences, Medicine, Nurs-<lb/>
ing, and the Health Sciences Li-<lb/>
brary.<lb/>
Faculty members granted ten-<lb/>
ure are Elbert D. Glover (Commu-<lb/>
nity Health), Donald Holbert<lb/>
(Biostatistics and Epidemiology),<lb/>
and Susan C. Speer and Margaret<lb/>
K. Stangohr (Health Sciences Li-<lb/>
brary). Among those granted ten-<lb/>
ure in the School of Medicine are<lb/>
Drs. Harry G. Adams (Medicine),<lb/>
C. Christopher Bremer (Family<lb/>
Medicine), James L. Finley (Clini-<lb/>
cal Pathology and Diagnostic<lb/>
Medicine), Donald J. Fletcher<lb/>
(Anatomy), William W. Fore<lb/>
(Medicine), Roberta S. Gray (Pe-<lb/>
diatrices), Jerry G. Gregory (Psy-<lb/>
chiatric Medicine), J. Peter Harris<lb/>
(Pediatrics), Charles L. Knupp<lb/>
(Medicine), Donald R. Lannin<lb/>
(Surgery), Jacqueline F. McGinly<lb/>
(Anatomy), Richard H. Ray<lb/>
(Physiology), Mclvin S. Swanson<lb/>
(Surgery) and Edward L.<lb/>
Treadwell (Medicine).<lb/>
sity equip him well for this impor-<lb/>
tant position<lb/>
Eakin said that Dr. Meyer, a<lb/>
former dean of students and assis-<lb/>
tant vice president at Cornell<lb/>
University, "has made a signifi-<lb/>
cant contribution to the student<lb/>
life area at ECU<lb/>
ECU has an on-campus student<lb/>
population of approximately<lb/>
15,000.<lb/>
Matthews was recommended<lb/>
for the ECU appointment by a<lb/>
search committee headed by Pam<lb/>
Penland, assistant director of ath-<lb/>
letics for academics. His student<lb/>
life experience includes 20 years<lb/>
as a senior administrator and 10<lb/>
years as a chief student affairs<lb/>
officer, and 18 years of his experi-<lb/>
ence has been at large, compre-<lb/>
hensive universities.<lb/>
Matthews is a graduate of<lb/>
Northern Colorado University at<lb/>
Greeley, Colo having a<lb/>
bachelor's degree in physical<lb/>
education and a master's in edu-<lb/>
cational psychology. He received<lb/>
the PhD at Indiana in 1967 for<lb/>
research on the evolution of stu-<lb/>
dent participation in university<lb/>
governance.<lb/>
Dr. Alfred T. Matthews<lb/>
Long distance choice for down east<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
We have had to choose between<lb/>
Coke and Pepsi, Ford end GM,<lb/>
Burger King and McDonalds,<lb/>
now the choice of which long dis-<lb/>
tance service joins in.<lb/>
Recently all telephone owners<lb/>
in Eastern North Carolina were<lb/>
mailed a flier from Carolina Tele-<lb/>
phone Long Distance asking them<lb/>
to choose CTLD as their long dis-<lb/>
tance service. Actually, CTLD is<lb/>
one of an estimated 50 in the state<lb/>
and even more so, one of at least a<lb/>
thousand in the nation, said<lb/>
Cindy Sincula of AT &amp;T.<lb/>
Long distance companies are<lb/>
grouped in two categories: pri-<lb/>
mary, the companies which own<lb/>
the actual lines, and secondary,<lb/>
smaller companies that lease the<lb/>
lines, said Sincula.<lb/>
It used to be if you had long<lb/>
distance service you went with<lb/>
AT&amp;T because they held a mo-<lb/>
nopoly on phone lines. Now, with<lb/>
the advent of satellite communi-<lb/>
cation, microwave technology,<lb/>
and fiberoptic transmission the<lb/>
field of communication, namely<lb/>
long distance telephone calls, has<lb/>
blossomed into one of America's<lb/>
fastest growing industries.<lb/>
This article will examine three<lb/>
long distance companies:<lb/>
(AT&amp;T)-American Telephone<lb/>
and Telegraph, (BTI)-Business<lb/>
Telecom Incorporated, and<lb/>
(CTLD)-Carolina Telephone<lb/>
Long Distance. Each firm offers<lb/>
basically the same benefits:<lb/>
cheaper rates, high quality sound<lb/>
in the calls, and better customer to<lb/>
company relations.<lb/>
AT&amp;T is clearly the giant of the<lb/>
long distance industry. They have<lb/>
been in business for over 100<lb/>
years and have the advantage of<lb/>
Bell Laboratories working for<lb/>
them, according to Sincula.<lb/>
This company operates not only<lb/>
in the United States and its territo-<lb/>
ries, but also internationally. They<lb/>
have 250 locations which can be<lb/>
directly dailed to throughout the<lb/>
world. This means you can diall-<lb/>
plus the international code the<lb/>
number desired, and get through.<lb/>
Sincula, a representative for<lb/>
AT&amp;T said, "No matter where<lb/>
you are, if they have a telephone<lb/>
service,we can get your call<lb/>
through<lb/>
The calling card is also a part of<lb/>
the AT&amp;T service. This card<lb/>
makes the phone available even in<lb/>
the event of an emergency. One<lb/>
particular feature that separates<lb/>
AT&amp;T from the rest is that thev are<lb/>
regt:l?.led by the Federal Commu-<lb/>
nications Commission and the<lb/>
Public Utilities Commission. Be-<lb/>
cause they are regulated, they are<lb/>
not subject to rate increases im-<lb/>
posed by the state.<lb/>
The smaller, independent com-<lb/>
petitor, for example is BTI. This<lb/>
tirm is located in Raleigh and has<lb/>
service to every state and all coun-<lb/>
tries.<lb/>
Their pitch is that they are<lb/>
cheaper than the giants like<lb/>
AT&amp;T, FON,and U.S.Sprint, ac-<lb/>
cording Janice Whitmore, a<lb/>
spokesperson for BTI. BTI charges<lb/>
by the half minute as opposed to<lb/>
the minute.This means that if a<lb/>
call is one minute and 10 seconds<lb/>
long, the charge will be for a min-<lb/>
ute-and-half and not a full two<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
BTI has been in business for six<lb/>
years and serves over 60,000<lb/>
people. Whitmore said, "We treat<lb/>
our customers more like indi-<lb/>
viduals. It'seasier to do that when<lb/>
the company is smaller<lb/>
BTI is a secondary leaser,<lb/>
meaning they rent fiber optic lines<lb/>
from AT&amp;T which gives the cus-<lb/>
tomer high quality sound in their<lb/>
calls. They do not offer calling<lb/>
card service, but since they are<lb/>
affiliated with AT&amp;T, an AT&amp;T<lb/>
calling card will work.<lb/>
The middleman is a company<lb/>
like Carolina Telephone Long<lb/>
Distance, a subsidiary of UTS-<lb/>
United Telephone Service. They<lb/>
offer service to Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina and claim to be the<lb/>
"Home Team" because they are<lb/>
the only long distance company<lb/>
that is based in the eastern part of<lb/>
the state, the home office being in<lb/>
Tarboro.<lb/>
A feature of this service is<lb/>
single billing. All charges, long<lb/>
distance, local, and taxes are in-<lb/>
cluded in a single bill. Also, CTLD<lb/>
boasts of one call for all services<lb/>
like maintenance, billing, and<lb/>
customer questions.<lb/>
Thev to, argue competitive<lb/>
rates. With CTLD, there will be<lb/>
about a five percent decrease in<lb/>
your charges.<lb/>
"I feel people will go with us<lb/>
because we plan to keep the<lb/>
money here in this part of the<lb/>
state. From Tarboro to the coast<lb/>
we are the "Home Team and<lb/>
when people do business with<lb/>
someone close to home they tend<lb/>
to feel more comfortable about it<lb/>
said Al Colev, a spokesperson for<lb/>
CTLD.<lb/>
In the School of Nursing tenure<lb/>
was granted to Genevievc M.<lb/>
Bartol, Bonnie W. Duldt and Eu-<lb/>
nice C. Messier.<lb/>
Promoted to professor in the<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences<lb/>
are Elbert D. Glover (Community<lb/>
Health) and Donald Holbert (Bi-<lb/>
ostatistics and Epidemiology). In<lb/>
the School of Medicine Drs. Ed-<lb/>
ward G. Flickinger (Surgery) and<lb/>
George J. Kasperek (Biochemis-<lb/>
try) were named professor.<lb/>
Frances Eason, Mary Kirkpatrick<lb/>
and Mary Ann Rose, all of the<lb/>
School of Nursing were promoted<lb/>
to professor.<lb/>
Medical school faculty mem-<lb/>
bers named to associate professor<lb/>
are Drs. James L. Finley (Clinical<lb/>
Pathology and Diagnostic Medi-<lb/>
cine), Donald J. Fletcher and Jac-<lb/>
queline F. McGinty (Anatomy),<lb/>
budesh Kataria (Pediatrics), Char-<lb/>
les L. Knupp and Edward L.<lb/>
Treadwell (Medicine), Donald R.<lb/>
Lannin (Surgery) and Harold J.<lb/>
May (Family Medicine).<lb/>
Those promoted to assistant<lb/>
professor are Phyllis N. Horns of<lb/>
the School of Nursing and, in the<lb/>
School of Medicine, Raja N. Khuri<lb/>
of Medicine and Physiology,<lb/>
Robert D. Myers of Pharmacology<lb/>
and Psychiatric Medicine, and<lb/>
Albert L. Wiley of Radiation On-<lb/>
cology.<lb/>
Signs to be replaced<lb/>
The familiar rectangular signs<lb/>
in front of campus buildings will<lb/>
be replaced in the near future,<lb/>
according to ECU'S business<lb/>
manager, John Bell.<lb/>
Recently, name posts were<lb/>
erected outside of Rawl and<lb/>
Flanagan buildings. The posts are<lb/>
possible alternatives to existing<lb/>
signs, said Bell.<lb/>
"At this point we are just ex-<lb/>
perimenting with signage said<lb/>
Bell.<lb/>
Bell said the name posts are<lb/>
the most simple of the signs pro-<lb/>
posed for construction. However,<lb/>
there are some problems with the<lb/>
expertimental name posts be-<lb/>
cause the longer building names<lb/>
can't be painted on the posts.<lb/>
Bell said planning for the sign<lb/>
change has been in the works<lb/>
since April after the Campus<lb/>
Beautification Committee's re-<lb/>
port was released. The<lb/>
committee's report recom-<lb/>
mended the replacement of the<lb/>
signs to Chancellor Eakin.<lb/>
He said there is a possibility of<lb/>
contracting a commericial sign<lb/>
company for the job if problems<lb/>
with funding can be overcome.<lb/>
Without pinpointing a set<lb/>
date, Bell said he would like to see<lb/>
the sign replacement be com-<lb/>
pleted by fall semester.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058079_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROUN1 AN<lb/>
IUNE15,1988<lb/>
Jury awards settlement in smoking case<lb/>
NEWARK, NJ. (AP) � A jury<lb/>
awarded a smoker's widower<lb/>
$400,000, the first damages or-<lb/>
dered for disease caused by ciga-<lb/>
rettes, but cleared tobacco compa-<lb/>
nies of conspiring to mislead the<lb/>
public about smoking's dangers.<lb/>
The widower's lawyer said the<lb/>
verdict boded well for future<lb/>
cases against cigarette makers.<lb/>
However, the attorney for the<lb/>
when Congress ordered health<lb/>
warnings on cigarette packs. Mrs.<lb/>
Cipollone later used brands by<lb/>
Lorillard and Phillip Morris,<lb/>
smoking even after having part of<lb/>
her lung removed in 1981.<lb/>
Liggett attorneys promised an<lb/>
appeal, cipollone's lawyers said<lb/>
they would ask the judge to over-<lb/>
turn the decision not to award<lb/>
posthumous damages to Mrs.<lb/>
smoker lawsuits have gone to ju-<lb/>
ries and the other cases withered<lb/>
in the face of the well-heeled to-<lb/>
bacco industry's legal forces.<lb/>
"All I know is that we're not<lb/>
another notch in their gun said<lb/>
Edcll.<lb/>
"This jury, as every jury has documents they said chronicled context,<lb/>
before, found that people have the the inner workings of the indus- The defense managed to bio. i<lb/>
freedom to smoke and if they<lb/>
make that choice they are respon-<lb/>
sible for it<lb/>
I believe that it is a victory for<lb/>
try. For many anti-smoking many of Cipollone's claims, in<lb/>
forces, disclosure of these docu- eluding contentions that cigarettt<lb/>
ments into evidence was a victory, companies could be blamed for<lb/>
The documents spoke of a<lb/>
gentleman's agreement" not to<lb/>
her Cipollone siad. "It wasn't<lb/>
But some said the damages 100 percent. I'm glad that we won .docanccrrcsearch, of an industry<lb/>
awarded might not be enough to partial, but it's a start "strategy" to create "doubt about<lb/>
company ordered to pay damages Cipollone<lb/>
said he regarded the award as The $35 billion tobacco industry<lb/>
"sympathy" for the bereaved mounted an elaborate defense�<lb/>
husband of Rose Cipollone, who one analyst put the cost at $50<lb/>
died of lung cancer after smoking million � to avoid a judgment<lb/>
one and a half packs a day for 40 mat might unleash a flood of<lb/>
years. multimillion-dollar lawsuits. Re<lb/>
The U.S. District Court jury action to the verdict, which fol<lb/>
Monday exonerated the cigarette lowed five days of deliberations,<lb/>
makers Liggett Group Inc Loril-<lb/>
encourage other lawsuits.<lb/>
"Are you going to sue if all<lb/>
you're going to get is $400,000?"<lb/>
asked tobacco industry analyst<lb/>
Allan Kaplan of Merrill Lynch in<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
Financial markets were closed<lb/>
when the verdict came in but<lb/>
Kaplan predicted no long-term nerabiliry<lb/>
negative impact on tobacco increase in<lb/>
The jurors in the four-month<lb/>
trial would not discuss the verdict<lb/>
other than to say the process was<lb/>
"emotional" and "nerve wrack-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Anti-smoking groups viewed<lb/>
the verdict as a first step.<lb/>
It "destroys the myth of invul-<lb/>
and should lead to an<lb/>
such lawsuits, said<lb/>
the health charge without actually<lb/>
denying it" and of a research pro-<lb/>
gram designed "so that (the) re-<lb/>
sults cannot harm" the industry.<lb/>
The companies denied the state-<lb/>
ments in the documents, saying<lb/>
they represented the views of<lb/>
individuals and were taken out of<lb/>
illnesses in smokers unaware ol<lb/>
the dangers after the 1966 warn<lb/>
ings, that the risk of cigarettes<lb/>
outweighed their usefulness and<lb/>
that the companies knew<lb/>
should have known of a safer waj<lb/>
to make cigarettes.<lb/>
They contended that Mr;<lb/>
Cipollone knew the risks but<lb/>
chose to smokeanvwav<lb/>
lard Inc and Philip Morris Inc. of<lb/>
conspiring to mislead the public<lb/>
about smoking's dangers, and re-<lb/>
jected punitive damages.<lb/>
Instead, it decided Liggett<lb/>
failed to warn abou the dangers of<lb/>
cigarettes and violated its prom-<lb/>
ise, or "express warranty to<lb/>
produce a safe product.<lb/>
stocks<lb/>
focused on its potential impact on "Plaintiff attorneys cannot be<lb/>
hundreds of such cases pending encouraged by the small size of<lb/>
Richard Daynard, a Northeastern<lb/>
University law professor who<lb/>
runs the Tobacco Products Liabil-<lb/>
around the nation.<lb/>
Cipollone's attorneys said the<lb/>
decision showed the tobacco in-<lb/>
dustry is not invincible.<lb/>
"Any time a jury awards a<lb/>
$400,000 verdict, I don't think you<lb/>
can take it too lightly, particularly<lb/>
in a situation where five years ago<lb/>
It awarded Antonio Cipollone, people thought we were crazy<lb/>
a 64-year-old retired cable splicer, and when for the past 30 yeras<lb/>
damages on the warranty claim people have failed said Marc Z.<lb/>
the award, which pales in com- ity Project, a support group for<lb/>
parison to the $3 million they litigation against tobacco compa-<lb/>
spent in time and money to try this nies.<lb/>
case said a joint statement from To support the contention that<lb/>
Peter Bleakley of Philip Morris Liggett violated its promise to<lb/>
and Robert Northrip of Lorillard, consumers of a safe product, Edcll<lb/>
both New York based. introduced advertisements for<lb/>
"the fact that the jury awarded Liggett's cigarettes from the<lb/>
no damages to Mrs. Cipollone was 1950s.<lb/>
but not for failure to warn the<lb/>
public because his wife was 80<lb/>
percent responsible for contract-<lb/>
ing the disease that killed her in<lb/>
1984 at age 58.<lb/>
Liggett faced additional claims<lb/>
because it manufactured the<lb/>
Chesterfields and L&amp;Ms that Mrs.<lb/>
Cipollone smoked before 1966,<lb/>
Edell, Cipollone's lawyer.<lb/>
Speaking today on CBS-TV's<lb/>
"This Morning" program, Edell<lb/>
said: 'This is the first case to be<lb/>
won by the plaintiff. We'll get it<lb/>
better the next time  a better<lb/>
verdict, a bigger verdict. We'll<lb/>
recover on other claims<lb/>
Fewer than a dozen of about 300<lb/>
a clear signal from the jury that<lb/>
smoking is a matter of personal<lb/>
choice nad responsibility said<lb/>
Alan Hilburg, smokesman for<lb/>
Durham, N.C � based Liggett.<lb/>
One featured actress Rosalind<lb/>
Russell with the text reading:<lb/>
"Rosalind Russell says L&amp;M Fil-<lb/>
ters are Just What the Doctor<lb/>
Ordered Others said: "Nose,<lb/>
Liggett attorney Donald cohn "�and cccfcssR�r�anS,Not<lb/>
said today, also on CBS' "This<lb/>
Morning he regarded the award<lb/>
as "sympathy" for cipollone, who<lb/>
pursued the lawsuit he had filed<lb/>
with his wife in 1983.<lb/>
Adversely AFfected By Smoking<lb/>
Chesterfields and "Play Safe,<lb/>
Smoke Chesterfields<lb/>
Cipollone's attorneys also intro-<lb/>
duced numerous secret corporate<lb/>
COLLATION<lb/>
IS NOT A DIRTY WORD . . .<lb/>
(Ka la shan. ka-) 1. the act. process, or<lb/>
result of gathering (the sections of a book)<lb/>
together in proper order for binding<lb/>
IT'S OUR BUSINESS<lb/>
We specialize in duplicating and binding<lb/>
multiple page documents<lb/>
"Ninja" warrior escapes from prison<lb/>
FAYETTEVILLE (AP) � Six was being held on charges of designed with a bar withing a bar.<lb/>
detainees, including an ex-soldier killing a woman, injured himself He later said that type of construc-<lb/>
facing a possible death sentence while falling from the fourth floor tion was not used in the bar the<lb/>
for killing two people while he and was recaptured and taken to inmated sawed through.<lb/>
dressed as a "Ninja" warrior, es- Cape Fear Valley Medical Center,<lb/>
caped from jail, and five remained authorities said.<lb/>
at large today, authorities said. The five other included Jeffrey<lb/>
Two of the escapees face first- Karl Meyer, who confessed to the<lb/>
degree murder charges, but one of stabbing deaths of Paul Kutz Sr<lb/>
the two was quickly recaptured, 68, and his wife, Janic Kutz, 62.<lb/>
authorities said. Meyer, a 21-year-old former<lb/>
The detainees used a hacksaw soldier at Fort Bragg, pleaded<lb/>
blade late Sunday to cut through guilty to the December 1986 mur-<lb/>
cell bars, knocked out a fourth- ders, and was to appear in Supe-<lb/>
floor window at the Cumberland rior Court today for a continu-<lb/>
County Jail and lowered them- ation of the sentencing phase of<lb/>
selves on a rope made of his trial. He faces the death pen-<lb/>
bedshects, authorities said. alty or life in prison.<lb/>
He said the six were assigned to<lb/>
Cell Block F in the jail's top floor,<lb/>
where they are allowed into a<lb/>
common area during the day, but<lb/>
are locked in individual cells at<lb/>
night.<lb/>
-e-<lb/>
j<lb/>
FAST COPIES FOR FAST TIMES<lb/>
We are open early &amp; late<lb/>
Next to Chico's in Georgetown Shops<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
S3-<lb/>
The breakout occurred minutes<lb/>
before the 11 p.m. lockdown,<lb/>
when the inmates are returned to<lb/>
their cells and locked in for the<lb/>
night, officials said.<lb/>
The escape apparently was<lb/>
The slayings came to be known<lb/>
as the "Ninja" murders because<lb/>
Meyer and accused accomplice<lb/>
Mark E. Thompson, another for-<lb/>
mer soldier at Fort Bragg, alleg-<lb/>
Charles Minnick, 22, of Hope<lb/>
lete have some<lb/>
10<lb/>
&amp;.<lb/>
?<lb/>
2P<lb/>
spotted by a Fayetteville police Mills, held on charges of second<lb/>
officer, who noticed someone degree burglary, first-degree sex<lb/>
drop from the center, Sheriff's offense and common law robbery;<lb/>
Department spokesman Harold and Rick A. Wilson, 30, of Hope<lb/>
Little said. Mills, held on charges of felony<lb/>
"If s just a matter of time. I think breaking and entering.<lb/>
we'll catch them pretty soon he Little had said escape by sawing<lb/>
said. through the bars was supposed to<lb/>
Frederick Glenn Evans, 20. who be impossible because the cells are<lb/>
Would Y0u)o<lb/>
or $1000.00?<lb/>
Round 2<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Nights<lb/>
Beginning<lb/>
June 14th<lb/>
Starts at<lb/>
10:00 p.m.<lb/>
CAROL KtAPRIDE<lb/>
ftOLOGNA<lb/>
CAROLINA PRIDE<lb/>
SLICED<lb/>
All Meat<lb/>
Bologna<lb/>
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OR DIET<lb/>
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12-Pk<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
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Wieners<lb/>
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Large<lb/>
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16<lb/>
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 Every Friday<lb/>
OLDE ITALIAN<lb/>
BRAND DELUXE OR<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
KROGER NATURAL<lb/>
FLAVOR<lb/>
Deluxe<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
DOUGHTIES<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
Beef<lb/>
22<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
PlM<lb/>
Vt<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
399<lb/>
At Charley O's Bar<lb/>
At The Hilton Inn - Greenville<lb/>
�Summer-Time Special<lb/>
Pitchers Of Beer<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
(Wednesday &amp; Friday's Only)<lb/>
Items mmJ �Hm� IfUcthr<lb/>
Sun. Jvm 12, ItM thru<lb/>
Sa4.JuiMlt,1tM<lb/>
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OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd Greenville<lb/>
Penta<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - A tof J<lb/>
Pentagon official admits the milt<lb/>
tary faces a tough obstacle in thej<lb/>
drug was � itself<lb/>
For starters, there are surveil-<lb/>
lance planes with cracked wingsj<lb/>
supersonic fighters that could fali<lb/>
from the sky while tailing slow<lb/>
moving drug planes, and military<lb/>
police whose training does ncn<lb/>
include reading suspects then<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
Nonetheless, the Joint Chiefs<lb/>
Staff an? preparing battle plans f 01<lb/>
an escalated anti-drug effort bs<lb/>
the military. Marine It. Gen<lb/>
Stephen G. Olmstead tuld<lb/>
House Government Opera)<lb/>
subcommittee on Fno.<lb/>
As deputy assistant secretary)<lb/>
defense1 for drug po<lb/>
Hero ina<lb/>
ABERDEEN PRO '<lb/>
GROUND<lb/>
sergeant decorated for h -<lb/>
Vietnam was sentenced ti<lb/>
years in prison and ord<lb/>
charged for passing mil<lb/>
documents to an FBI agent p<lb/>
as a Soviet spy.<lb/>
The military jury that cor<lb/>
and sentenced Sgt Daniel V<lb/>
Richardson.42, fined him Sv �<lb/>
demoted him and stripped him<lb/>
his Armv pension.<lb/>
Richardson, whose 1<lb/>
the Armv include two and a 1<lb/>
tours of duty in Vietnam, a<lb/>
mendation for heroism <lb/>
there and other hoi<lb/>
begin serving the prison j<lb/>
immediately.<lb/>
"i'm still takir<lb/>
right now the Oakland, I<lb/>
native said. "My law. <lb/>
ad ised me not to say ai<lb/>
this time<lb/>
The jurv found Richardso<lb/>
guiltv oi selling un j<lb/>
pages from a military mam: .<lb/>
describing circuitry in the N<lb/>
tank on fan. 13, but m I d hi<lb/>
of a charge that he met with tl<lb/>
FBI agent Ian. 14 and a<lb/>
S1,5 00 d o w n p a y m e n t<lb/>
Pharmaculogis<lb/>
(CV Vtwl Burriu<lb/>
An ECU School oi M <lb/>
pharmacologist has be<lb/>
awarded a major National Cani<lb/>
Institute grant to help d<lb/>
why tumor cells become re -<lb/>
to several drugs commonly usj<lb/>
in cancer treatment.<lb/>
The five-year invest<lb/>
which NCI has awarded - - I<lb/>
is expected to provide p -<lb/>
with alternative approaeli<lb/>
cancer treatment said Dr. 1<lb/>
othanNyce assistant profes<lb/>
the Department of Pharmac <lb/>
and chief investigator for fl-<lb/>
eet.<lb/>
The development ol di<lb/>
sistance in tumor cells ol patiej<lb/>
undergoing chemotherap) is<lb/>
of the" most important proble<lb/>
facing oncologists and car<lb/>
search scientists today, he sa<lb/>
According to Nvcc most a<lb/>
monly used cancer drugs miti<lb/>
kill rapidly growing cancer t<lb/>
in patients, but with I<lb/>
use their therapeutic benei j<lb/>
dine.<lb/>
Nvce believes he may hi<lb/>
identified the basic mol j<lb/>
anomaly underlying the de<lb/>
men! oi drug resistance.<lb/>
He will work closoh with H<lb/>
oncologists Drs Spencer j<lb/>
Charles Scarantmo and C<lb/>
GREA'<lb/>
AT A<lb/>
FREE - Dessert Bar<lb/>
With All Entries<lb/>
Take-Outs Okay<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058079_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
IUNE1S.1W8<lb/>
ase<lb/>
P defense managed to block<lb/>
of Cipollone's claims, in<lb/>
ontentions that cigarette<lb/>
lipanies could be blamed for<lb/>
ses in smokers unaware of<lb/>
rs after the 1966 warn<lb/>
that the risk of cigarettes<lb/>
icd their usefulness and<lb/>
companies knew or<lb/>
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tfa <lb/>
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knew the risks but<lb/>
nokeam w a<lb/>
noN<lb/>
WORD<lb/>
ss, or<lb/>
' I DOOk)<lb/>
SINESS<lb/>
ding<lb/>
PY<lb/>
ast times<lb/>
J<lb/>
� nShops<lb/>
00<lb/>
t'm<lb/>
� KROGER<lb/>
 All Meat<lb/>
El Wieners<lb/>
Pkq<lb/>
99<lb/>
J<lb/>
Gal<lb/>
. Ctn<lb/>
59c<lb/>
1<lb/>
- 7<lb/>
MITCHUM<lb/>
t Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
$<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
49<lb/>
DOUGHTIES<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
Beef<lb/>
$<lb/>
399<lb/>
t� PC ;�<lb/>
� .y "<lb/>
MMM � ' �� ' � <lb/>
� � �vtwm '�� 1<lb/>
� - '� �� "��" . V� � �-��� flu.� - �- ��<lb/>
IURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
Blvd Greenville<lb/>
D<lb/>
Pentagon is not prepared for war on drugs<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) � A top<lb/>
Pentagon official admits the mili-<lb/>
tary faces a tough obstacle in the<lb/>
drug was � itself.<lb/>
For starters, there are surveil-<lb/>
lance planes with cracked wings,<lb/>
supersonic fighters that could fall<lb/>
trom the sky while tailing slow-<lb/>
moving drug planes, and military<lb/>
police whose training does not<lb/>
include reading suspects their<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
Nonetheless, the Joint Chiefs of<lb/>
Staff are preparing battle plans for<lb/>
an escalated anti-drug effort by<lb/>
the military, Marine Lt. Gen.<lb/>
Stephen G. Olmstead told a<lb/>
House Government Operations<lb/>
subcommittee on Fridav.<lb/>
As deputy assistant secretary of<lb/>
defense for drug policy and en-<lb/>
forcement, Olmstead is respon-<lb/>
sible for coordinating the<lb/>
military's anti-drug effort, which<lb/>
was ordered by Congress in legis-<lb/>
lation authorizing Defense De-<lb/>
partment spending programs.<lb/>
Olmstead said that use of air-<lb/>
borne warning planes is the only<lb/>
immediate way to detect smug-<lb/>
gler aircraft flying over the U.S<lb/>
Mcxican border.<lb/>
That's where the military's<lb/>
problems begin.<lb/>
Navy E2C surveillance planes,<lb/>
one of three types of detection<lb/>
aircraft that could be used, are "in<lb/>
bad trouble with cracked wing<lb/>
problems the general said.<lb/>
Thirty-four planes in the fleet of<lb/>
85 arc currently out of service, he<lb/>
testified.<lb/>
"The Navy has a major rehabili-<lb/>
tation problem he added. "I'm<lb/>
not sure any would be available.<lb/>
We have just reduced the force by<lb/>
a drastic number the past year<lb/>
The Coast Guard and Customs<lb/>
Service each have two E2C's on<lb/>
anti-drug patrols, but they face<lb/>
the same wing problems and may<lb/>
be gounded.<lb/>
Another solution is the Air<lb/>
Force AW ACS, a much larger<lb/>
surveillance plane.<lb/>
But Olmstead said that the Air<lb/>
Force has only 33 AW ACS on ac-<lb/>
tive missions, a third of them<lb/>
overseas. Of the 22 in the United<lb/>
States, he said, the initial estimate<lb/>
is that five or six would be needed<lb/>
each day to cover the U.SMexi-<lb/>
can border.<lb/>
It costs $9,400 an hour to<lb/>
operate such a plane, Olmstead<lb/>
said, adding that the AW ACS and<lb/>
the carrier-based E2C are far too<lb/>
sophisticasted to be operated eco-<lb/>
nomically for anti-drug missions.<lb/>
Olmstead did acknowledge<lb/>
that the land-based Navy P-3 sur-<lb/>
veillance plane is a good option.<lb/>
The plane is used by the Coast<lb/>
Guard and the Customs Service in<lb/>
anti-drug patrols.<lb/>
Committee Chairman Glenn<lb/>
English, D-Okla then asked if the<lb/>
military could provide combat<lb/>
aircraft � such as the F-l 4, F-15, F-<lb/>
16, F-18 and F-4 � to intercept<lb/>
drug smugglers.<lb/>
Olmstead said using such<lb/>
planes to follow slow-moving<lb/>
drug planes would cause them to<lb/>
stall and fall out of the sky.<lb/>
The general also said that mili-<lb/>
tary police are not trained to per-<lb/>
form civilian arrests. "They're not<lb/>
concerned with civil rights and<lb/>
Miranda (reading a defendant his<lb/>
rights when arrested)<lb/>
And, Olmstead said, to have the<lb/>
military seal the borders against<lb/>
air and sea smugglers, as some<lb/>
lawmakers are demanding, the<lb/>
armed forced would have to "stop<lb/>
everything else we're doing He<lb/>
estimated that just to seal the<lb/>
ground border with Mexico<lb/>
would take between 20,000 and<lb/>
40,000 troops.<lb/>
Olmstead was asked by Rep<lb/>
Bill Grant, D-Fla if the Navy<lb/>
would have to cut back its mili<lb/>
tary mission by increasing drug<lb/>
patrols.<lb/>
"Yes, I suspect it would the<lb/>
general said.<lb/>
Hero indicted for spying<lb/>
ABERDEEN PROVING<lb/>
GROUND, Md. (AP) � An Army<lb/>
sergeant decorated for heroism in<lb/>
Vietnam was sentenced to 10<lb/>
years in prison and ordered dis-<lb/>
charged for passing military<lb/>
documents to an FBI agent posing<lb/>
as a Soviet spy.<lb/>
The military jury that convicted<lb/>
and sentenced Sgt. Daniel Walter<lb/>
Richardson, 42, fined him$36,000,<lb/>
demoted him and stripped him of<lb/>
his Army pension.<lb/>
Richardson, whose 19 years in<lb/>
the Army include two and a half<lb/>
tours of dutv in Vietnam, a com-<lb/>
mendation for heroism while<lb/>
there and other honors, was to<lb/>
begin serving the prison term<lb/>
immediately.<lb/>
"I'm still taking care of business<lb/>
right now the Oakland, Calif<lb/>
native said. "My lawyers have<lb/>
advised me not to say anything at<lb/>
this time<lb/>
The jury found Richardson<lb/>
guilty of selling unclassified<lb/>
pages from a military manual and<lb/>
describing circuitry in the Ml<lb/>
tank on Jan. 13, but acquitted him<lb/>
of a charge that he met with the<lb/>
FBI agent Jan. 14 and accepted a<lb/>
$1,500 down payment on a<lb/>
$50,000 deal before his arrest that<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Richardson contended<lb/>
throughout his wceklong court-<lb/>
martial at this Army base nearly<lb/>
10 miles northeast of Baltimore<lb/>
that he was not trying to sell out<lb/>
his country, but was trying to<lb/>
catch a spy to impress his superi-<lb/>
ors.<lb/>
He was convicted of attempted<lb/>
espionage, stealing government<lb/>
property, the unauthorized sale<lb/>
of government property and fail-<lb/>
ure to report an attempt by an<lb/>
unauthorized person to obtain<lb/>
classified imformation, but was<lb/>
cleared of a second count of at-<lb/>
tempted espionage.<lb/>
Richardson was demoted from<lb/>
class E5 sergeant to an El, cutting<lb/>
his pay in half until his discharge,<lb/>
which will become effective after<lb/>
the sentence is reviewed.<lb/>
slaying of his son and was<lb/>
troubled by alcoholism, depres-<lb/>
sion and gambling problems.<lb/>
Richardson's stepbrother,<lb/>
Frank Workman, testified that he<lb/>
believed the defendant's account.<lb/>
"He did it to catch a spy, it's plain<lb/>
and simple<lb/>
Prosecutors portrayed<lb/>
Richardson as a greedy, vengeful<lb/>
man who was willing to jeopard-<lb/>
ize national security for money.<lb/>
"He has an anti-social personal-<lb/>
ity said the chief prosecutor,<lb/>
Capt. Wellington T. Matthews Jr.<lb/>
"He's a crook. He's a criminal<lb/>
According to testimony,<lb/>
Richardson phoned the Soviet<lb/>
Embassy in Washington in July<lb/>
1986. Eighteen months later, the<lb/>
FBI agent called him, psing as a<lb/>
Soviet operative.<lb/>
Richardson had been demoted<lb/>
from instructor in the Tank Turret<lb/>
Division at the proving ground to<lb/>
supervisor of the tool room for<lb/>
repeatedly failing to show up for<lb/>
work.<lb/>
"I figured that I needed to do<lb/>
something to get everybody off<lb/>
my back, so I called the Russian<lb/>
Embassy, to try to get a KGB<lb/>
agent Richardson testified<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
"It seemed like everything I<lb/>
tried to do right, it got screwed<lb/>
up he said. "I felt that I was<lb/>
under so much pressure all the<lb/>
time, I felt like I was going to<lb/>
explode from the inside out<lb/>
pharmacologist .aarjled for work �<lb/>
-1� �<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
An ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
pharmacologist has been<lb/>
awarded a major National Cancer<lb/>
Institute grant to help determine<lb/>
why tumor cells become resistant<lb/>
to several drugs commonly used<lb/>
in cancer treatment.<lb/>
The five-year investigation for<lb/>
which NCI has awarded $400,000<lb/>
is expected to provide physicians<lb/>
with alternative approaches to<lb/>
cancer treatment, said Dr. Jon-<lb/>
othan Nyce, assistant professor in<lb/>
the Department of Pharmacology<lb/>
and chief investigator for the proj-<lb/>
ect.<lb/>
"The development of drug re-<lb/>
sistance in tumor cells of patients<lb/>
undergoing chemotherapy is one<lb/>
of the most important problems<lb/>
facing oncologists and cancer re-<lb/>
search scientists today he said.<lb/>
According to Nyce, most com-<lb/>
monly used cancer drugs initially<lb/>
kill rapidly growing cancer cells<lb/>
in patients, but with continued<lb/>
use their therapeutic benefits de-<lb/>
cline.<lb/>
Nyce believes he may have<lb/>
identified the basic molecular<lb/>
anomaly underlying the develop-<lb/>
ment of drug resistance.<lb/>
He will work closely with ECU<lb/>
oncologists Drs. Spencer Raab,<lb/>
Charles Scarantino and C. Tato<lb/>
Holbrook over the next several<lb/>
years to develop methods to block<lb/>
drug resistance in patients under-<lb/>
going chemotherapy.<lb/>
 Nyce's grant is known as a Na-<lb/>
tional Institutes of Health FIRST<lb/>
award (for First Independent Re-<lb/>
search Support and Transition).<lb/>
Presented to promising new in-<lb/>
vestigators status, said Robert<lb/>
Franke, director of the Office of<lb/>
Sponsored Programs at ECU.<lb/>
Nyce joined the School Of<lb/>
Medicine faculty las May.<lb/>
A SIANLEY KUBRICK RLM O<lb/>
JACK NICHOLSON SHELLEY DUVALL<lb/>
MINING �KING<lb/>
STANLEYKUBRICKDIANEJOHNSON<lb/>
SMiran iSia<lb/>
Cl�AME$<lb/>
M II1<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
4 SHIRTS fcO<lb/>
CLEANED J<lb/>
36<lb/>
This coupon must be presented<lb/>
with shirt order<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
GREAT STEAKS<lb/>
AT A GREAT PRICE!<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. Special<lb/>
5 11 oz. Sirloin<lb/>
Potato Bar<lb/>
Sundae Bar<lb/>
$5.49<lb/>
Daily Specials<lb/>
10 Discount On<lb/>
Regular Priced Items<lb/>
With Student I.D.<lb/>
Also Featuring<lb/>
New &amp; Improved Salad,<lb/>
Hot &amp; Dessert Bar<lb/>
�nly $3.99<lb/>
IMERYX<lb/>
FURNITURE DEPOT<lb/>
Used Furniture<lb/>
BuySellTrade<lb/>
752-3223<lb/>
Beside the<lb/>
Railroad Depot<lb/>
GIVE BLOOD<lb/>
Read<lb/>
the<lb/>
t Classifieds<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
1'laj.a Shopping Ctr 756 0088<lb/>
Now Showing<lb/>
BIG BUSINESS<lb/>
BIG<lb/>
FigjDAY THE 13�<lb/>
Ends Thurs. June 16<lb/>
Starting Fridau<lb/>
RED HEAT<lb/>
starring<lb/>
Arnold Schwarzenegger<lb/>
'ParkJTheatre<lb/>
Ends Thurs. June 16th<lb/>
Men And A BabyJ<lb/>
Starting Friday<lb/>
School Daze<lb/>
MARATHON<lb/>
RESTAURANTS<lb/>
Greek Owned &amp; Operated Since 1979<lb/>
Delivery Menu<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
GREEK DISHES<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
oJLJLyo<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
GREEK PASTRIES<lb/>
'Best Deal in Town"<lb/>
Mon. - Fri. 4-10<lb/>
Sat. 11-10<lb/>
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WEDNESDAY<lb/>
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THURSDAY<lb/>
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MANNAKIN<lb/>
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99 Highballs<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Smith's 1 Rock Show<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
THE<lb/>
USUALS<lb/>
Free Membership<lb/>
For Guest<lb/>
INTRAMURAL<lb/>
RECREATIONAL<lb/>
Take The<lb/>
AEROBIC<lb/>
CHALLENGE<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
AEROBICS<lb/>
FITNESS CLASS SCHEDULE<lb/>
SUMMER 1988<lb/>
FREE - Dessert Bar<lb/>
With All Entries<lb/>
Take-Outs Okay<lb/>
Regstration Dates<lb/>
June 22-24<lb/>
Cost Per Session<lb/>
$7.50Students<lb/>
$15.00Faculty-Staff<lb/>
Session Dates<lb/>
June 27 - July 28<lb/>
Cost Per Drop-in Class<lb/>
$1.00Students<lb/>
$2.00Faculty-Staff<lb/>
Days<lb/>
1. Mon. &amp; Wed<lb/>
2. Tues. &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
3. Sun.<lb/>
4. Mon. &amp; Wed.<lb/>
5. Tues. &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
Times<lb/>
5:15-6:15 p.m.<lb/>
4:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
3:004:00 p.m.<lb/>
(Drop-in Only)<lb/>
TONING<lb/>
4:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
5:15-6:15 p.m.<lb/>
Locations<lb/>
MG108<lb/>
MG108<lb/>
MC108<lb/>
MG108<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
SUPRCLASS<lb/>
An innovative 90 minute workout incorporating weights as light resistance for<lb/>
muscular strength and endurance, in addition to a 30 minute aerobic component. Cost<lb/>
per session is $11 00Students and $18.00Faculty and Staff (Summer Sessions Only).<lb/>
MG108<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St - 758-2712<lb/>
I All classes are available on a drop-in basis with purchase of a ticket. Mon. fcWjd 2ooj, m. mg ios <lb/>
Tickets are available in 204 Memorial Gymnasium, Monday - Friday BUY ONE - GET ONE FREE<lb/>
RiYl a m SOO n m I For a limited time only buy one drop in ticket and get one class FREE.<lb/>
 o.uu a.m. j.w p.m. q n 2Q4 Memorlal Gymnasium Monday Friday. 8 a.m.<lb/>
5 pjn. for redemption of BUY ONE GETpNE FREE. JjxglresJuljr 2&amp; 1988J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058079_0004"/><lb/>
Stye �aat (ftarnltnian<lb/>
Serving the Ernst Caroline campus community since I92S<lb/>
Clay Deanhardt, g��,�<lb/>
Carol Wetherington, .��� e<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, &amp;� ,<lb/>
Tim Hampton. n�w &amp;�-<lb/>
Tim Chandler, sp. &amp;�<lb/>
John Carter, tetm E�v�r<lb/>
Michelle England, oM�rr<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, s<lb/>
Jeff Parkerj <lb/>
Tom FuRR,c,rt�,M-ui�<lb/>
Mike Upchurch, ���(. m-<lb/>
John W. Medlin, ah dm<lb/>
MACCLARK, MNiltaq.<lb/>
June 15,1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Signposts unwanted<lb/>
Beautification attempt fails first try<lb/>
Campus beautification. When the<lb/>
term beautification is mentioned,<lb/>
the idea that usually follows is<lb/>
"removing potential eyesores and<lb/>
replacing them with organic substi-<lb/>
tutes for instance . . . plants per-<lb/>
haps? Not very often does the con-<lb/>
cept of digging up what little cam-<lb/>
pus ground there is to put in a sign-<lb/>
post come to mind.<lb/>
By now, most of the faculty and<lb/>
students of summer session have<lb/>
seen the new markers in front of<lb/>
Flanagan and Rawl. Oddly enough,<lb/>
it seems that the names of the build-<lb/>
ings are already displayed on signs<lb/>
in front of them. Upon looking at the<lb/>
face of the buildings, a careful ob-<lb/>
server might even notice that the<lb/>
names are shown in large steel let-<lb/>
ters, too. Why then, does the Univer-<lb/>
sity feel it necessary to insult our<lb/>
intelligence by giving us the names<lb/>
in triplicate?<lb/>
Even as markers, the new signs<lb/>
wouldn' t be so useless except for the<lb/>
fact that they happen to be very<lb/>
unsightly. The black letters on white<lb/>
fencepost look more like something<lb/>
that would be put up temporarily<lb/>
while actual signs are being made.<lb/>
Perhaps such markers fit into the<lb/>
environment of the backroads at<lb/>
Atlantic Beach, but they would<lb/>
hardly mesh with the look of up-to-<lb/>
date architecture such as the new<lb/>
general classroom building<lb/>
So what does the Campus Beautifi-<lb/>
cation Committee believe the signs<lb/>
are adding? If the markers were<lb/>
designed in such a way that they<lb/>
conveyed a more distinguished<lb/>
look, such as engraved plates, they<lb/>
would be a welcome addition to the<lb/>
buildings. Such signs would be<lb/>
more asthetically pleasing and pro-<lb/>
vide a nice "constant" to East<lb/>
Carolina's myriad of building types.<lb/>
Of course, the committee may not<lb/>
have the funds for these elegant<lb/>
nameplates. If that is true, then the<lb/>
funds should be used to improve the<lb/>
existing signs, or in some other area<lb/>
altogether. It is not being too high-<lb/>
handed to suggest that any pro-<lb/>
posed additions either be done first<lb/>
class or not all, especially when the<lb/>
look of our campus is concerned.<lb/>
That is, after all, the idea behind<lb/>
creating a beautification committee.<lb/>
Of course, these two signposts are<lb/>
only being displayed on a trial basis.<lb/>
If the general public doesn't receive<lb/>
them well, they will soon disappear<lb/>
in favor of a better alternative. If no<lb/>
one says anything however, mem-<lb/>
bers of this university will soon be<lb/>
seeing them all over campus. Hope-<lb/>
fully the money that would go to<lb/>
making the rest of these signposts<lb/>
will be channelled into some actual<lb/>
beautification, and these existing<lb/>
blemishes will be removed to leave<lb/>
room for grass again<lb/>
Why all the Noriega fuss?<lb/>
Tell me again: How exactly did it<lb/>
become so urgent that we dislodge<lb/>
General Noriega? Everyone's using the<lb/>
same word to describe the results of this<lb/>
four-month-long exercise in late-impe-<lb/>
rial slapstick: "fiasco See, among oth-<lb/>
ers, "The Panama Fiasco" Washington<lb/>
Post; "The Noriega Fiasco" New York<lb/>
Times; "Anatomy of a Fiasco"<lb/>
Newsweek.<lb/>
Fiasco it surely is. But how on earth<lb/>
did booting Noriega out of Panama<lb/>
become a top priority of American for-<lb/>
eign policy in the first place? The gen-<lb/>
eral is no prize, for sure, but on any list<lb/>
of the world's least attractive heads of<lb/>
government measured by job per-<lb/>
formance, if not complexion he<lb/>
wouldn't even make the top 10. He' not<lb/>
even on the varsity squad of Latin<lb/>
American human rights abusers.<lb/>
Noriega was running a capitalist<lb/>
economy until we wrecked it. He has no<lb/>
aggressive designs on neighboring<lb/>
countries (our chief accusation against<lb/>
the Sanndinistas of Nicaragua). He has<lb/>
more than abided by the terms of the<lb/>
Panama Canal Treaty, which gives us a<lb/>
substantial military presence in the<lb/>
middle of his country. Supposedly<lb/>
we're only supposed to be there to de-<lb/>
fend the canal, but we've used our facil-<lb/>
ities there for far more ambitious mili-<lb/>
tary operations, without a peep of pro-<lb/>
test from the landlord.<lb/>
Noriega's role in drug dealing and<lb/>
other corruption was no secret to any-<lb/>
one who cared before this year. Mem-<lb/>
bers of the administration now say there<lb/>
was no hard evidence of Noriega's drug<lb/>
dealing and money laundering until he<lb/>
indicted by a Miami grand jury on Feb.<lb/>
4. In fact, the evidence against Noriega<lb/>
has been harder for years than the<lb/>
scanty evidence that led President Re-<lb/>
agan to denounce the Sandinistas re-<lb/>
peatedly for drug dealing - evidence he<lb/>
used as a justification for the contra was.<lb/>
But the folly is not limited to the Re-<lb/>
aganites. On television the other night<lb/>
there was an amazing scene. Assistant<lb/>
Secretary of State Elliot Abrams, the<lb/>
administration's most enthusiastic<lb/>
Central American warrios, was discuss-<lb/>
ing the Panama situation at a press<lb/>
conferennce outside a Capitol Hill hear-<lb/>
ing room.<lb/>
Abrams was making vague and cau-<lb/>
tious references to preserving all our<lb/>
options. Then Sen. Chris Dodd stepped<lb/>
up the the microphone to declare that<lb/>
this might even mean sending in the<lb/>
Marines. Chris Dodd! This is the man<lb/>
who led the Democratic opposition to<lb/>
contra aid. Now here he is virtually<lb/>
endorsing, not just aid to indigenous<lb/>
rebels (of whos there are none), but di-<lb/>
rect American military intervention to<lb/>
overthrow a government that no one<lb/>
could seriously describe as more op-<lb/>
pressive than Nicaragua's.<lb/>
The formula seems to have been<lb/>
something like this. Take one grand-<lb/>
standing prosecutor who decides to<lb/>
indict an unprosecutable foreign head<lb/>
of state. Add a seasonal media relapse<lb/>
into drug hysteria. Stir in an assistant<lb/>
secretary of state looking for a cheap<lb/>
Philiippines-style triumph with which<lb/>
to restore his tattered reputation. Top it<lb/>
off with Democratic pols happy to use<lb/>
any stick to beat the administration.<lb/>
Add George Bush to taste. Et voila! Nev-<lb/>
ertheless, it's a mighty peculiar recipe,<lb/>
and in the end the souffle seems to have<lb/>
fallen anyway.<lb/>
Although the Reagan administration<lb/>
has most of the egg on it's face, and<lb/>
rightly so, the Democrats deserve more<lb/>
embarrassment than they've so far suf-<lb/>
fered. Presidential condidate Michael<lb/>
Dukakis says the inability to dispose of<lb/>
Noriega demonstrates failed leadership<lb/>
at the Reagan White House. But what,<lb/>
exactly, would he do differently?<lb/>
The Democrats can't be serious in<lb/>
their hints about using American<lb/>
troops. Start a war? With Panama? That<lb/>
would betray every value the Demo-<lb/>
crats supposedly have been defending<lb/>
in their opposition to Reagan's contra<lb/>
war in Nicarague. Not to mention the<lb/>
catastrophic effect on our relations with<lb/>
the other Latin American nations,<lb/>
which arc united � from Castro's Cuba<lb/>
to Pinochet's Chile � in opposing even<lb/>
the economic war we've been running<lb/>
unsuccessfully to pressure Noriega out.<lb/>
If we really were in the mood for an<lb/>
actual, bloodshed-type war, either<lb/>
Cuba or Chille would have been a more<lb/>
worthy target. In fact, the United States<lb/>
is not about to start a war against any<lb/>
country more threatening than Gre-<lb/>
nada. Maybe we should have thought of<lb/>
that before we started huffing and puff-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Reagan bombards the Soviet Union on fair human rights, charms Soviet college students<lb/>
By FRED BARNES<lb/>
THE NEW REPUBLIC<lb/>
By Fred Bames<lb/>
One of Richard Nixon's pieces<lb/>
of wisdom, passed on to President<lb/>
Reagan several years ago, is that<lb/>
you get better publicity when you<lb/>
go to the other guy's country for a<lb/>
summit. The summit in Moscow,<lb/>
Reagan's fourth in 40 months<lb/>
(after, Geneva, Reykjavik and<lb/>
Washington), was far and away<lb/>
his best. He dozed off twice in<lb/>
public events, droned on in his<lb/>
speeches about movies he'd seen,<lb/>
and made a bad joke about Rus-<lb/>
sian dissidents being "disagree-<lb/>
able But he still managed to<lb/>
dominate.<lb/>
At this summit, the private<lb/>
meetings were less important<lb/>
than Reagan's public appear-<lb/>
ances. In them, he had one thing<lb/>
on his mind, human rights. He<lb/>
harped on the subject and turned<lb/>
the four days in Moscow into a<lb/>
human-rights summit. The Sovi-<lb/>
ets hated, none more than spokes-<lb/>
man Gennady Gerasimov, who<lb/>
sneered publicly at Reagan. But<lb/>
the White House gambled that<lb/>
Gorbachev himself wouldn't get<lb/>
his back up, and he didn't. "He<lb/>
wanted the Moscow summit to be<lb/>
a success, so he swallowed the<lb/>
human rights stuff said a senior<lb/>
Reagan aide.<lb/>
A little-known pastime of<lb/>
Reagan's is keeping track of So-<lb/>
viet dissidents. He has a personal<lb/>
rooting interest in eight or 10 dis-<lb/>
sident families, including those of<lb/>
Abe Stolar, an American citizen<lb/>
who lives in Moscow because he<lb/>
can't get his Russian wife out, and<lb/>
Tatyana Zieman, a Jewish re-<lb/>
fusenik. Both Stolar and Zieman<lb/>
sat at Reagan's table at Spaso<lb/>
House, the American<lb/>
ambassador's residence in<lb/>
Moscow and the scene of an<lb/>
extraordinary event on day two<lb/>
of the summit. On live TV, Reagan<lb/>
listened to three dissidents and<lb/>
then spoke himself. His aides<lb/>
thought a session at Spaso House<lb/>
would be less provocative than a<lb/>
Reagan visit to a dissident's<lb/>
home. Maybe it was. Nonetheless<lb/>
it occurred a dozen blocks or so<lb/>
from the Kremlin, the heart of<lb/>
darkness. That was provocative<lb/>
enough.<lb/>
Reagann was embarrassed by<lb/>
the adoration the dissidents<lb/>
showered on him. He blushed. He<lb/>
thinks of these people as heroes.<lb/>
Yet they were so noisy in passing<lb/>
the name cards they found on the<lb/>
tables to Reagan for his autograph<lb/>
that Jack Matlock, the American<lb/>
ambassador, had to ask them to<lb/>
stop. They were distracting from<lb/>
the speakers.<lb/>
Reagan pitched for religious<lb/>
freedom in a visit to Danilov<lb/>
Monastery. He delivered a long<lb/>
quote about church bells from<lb/>
exiled novelist Aleksandr Solz-<lb/>
henitsyn, not exactly the faavorite<lb/>
writer of Soviet authorities. The<lb/>
next day he told a lunch gathering<lb/>
aat the House of Men of Letters<lb/>
that he hopes Solzhenitsyn will<lb/>
soon be "published in the land he<lb/>
loves At that event Reagan<lb/>
nodded off while the head of the<lb/>
cinematographers' union talked<lb/>
up the creative fruits of socialism.<lb/>
Reagan awakened in time to<lb/>
address the interesting question<lb/>
of how his acting background had<lb/>
helped him in politics. After<lb/>
learning to get "inside" different<lb/>
characters he played, he said, he<lb/>
started "listening  to the ca-<lb/>
cophonous voices of ordinary<lb/>
people and trusting those mil-<lb/>
lions of people, keeping out of<lb/>
their way, not trying to act the all-<lb/>
wise and all-powerfull, not letting<lb/>
government act that way<lb/>
Dissident historian Roy<lb/>
Medvedev liked Reagan better<lb/>
than the two Soviets who spoke at<lb/>
the lunch for writers and artists.<lb/>
"The Soviet cultural figures talk<lb/>
like politicians he said. "Reagan<lb/>
talked like a person of culture<lb/>
Students at Moscow State were<lb/>
the toughest audience Reagan<lb/>
encountered. They sat stone-<lb/>
faced as he extolled economic<lb/>
freedom and denounced "gov-<lb/>
ernment planners He got no<lb/>
applause and one laugh during<lb/>
the 32-minute speech. The laugh<lb/>
came when he told of a woman<lb/>
who recited a folk legend to a lazy<lb/>
bureaucrat. "When a baby is born,<lb/>
an angel comes down from<lb/>
heaven and kisses it on one part of<lb/>
the body Those kissed on the<lb/>
hand are handyment, those of the<lb/>
forehead are clever. "And I've<lb/>
been trying to figure out where<lb/>
the angel kissed you so that you<lb/>
should sit there for so long and do<lb/>
nothing Reagan answered ques-<lb/>
tions for 30 minutes after his<lb/>
speech. The students were<lb/>
charmed.<lb/>
Gorbachev raised hardly a peep<lb/>
of protest about Reagan's human<lb/>
rights campaign. Finally, at his<lb/>
June 1 press conference, Gor-<lb/>
bachev said he was "not-filled<lb/>
with admiration" for Reagan's<lb/>
"propaganda gambits" on human<lb/>
rights. Snide criticism was orches-<lb/>
trated by Gerasimov. He noted<lb/>
his"sense of satisfaction that we<lb/>
learned President Reagan, who<lb/>
has not visited libraries very of-<lb/>
ten, has read the full text of<lb/>
Gorbachev's Terestoika (It<lb/>
took Reagan six months.) Gerasi-<lb/>
mov said Reagan was talking<lb/>
about the human rights situation<lb/>
as it existed under Stalin, not<lb/>
under Gorbachev.<lb/>
Gerasimov had a cleverer strat-<lb/>
egy at the daily briefing he con-<lb/>
ducted along with Fitzwater. He<lb/>
called of questioners who chal-<lb/>
lenged the Reagan line on human<lb/>
rights. How dare Reagan attack<lb/>
the Soviets when he's invading<lb/>
Nicaragua? asked the guy from<lb/>
Radio Sandino. Gerasimov also<lb/>
made sure Fitzwater was asked<lb/>
about a delegation of American<lb/>
Indians in Moscow to publicize<lb/>
their claim of human rights<lb/>
abuses by Reagan. Not surpris-<lb/>
ingly, one of the students at<lb/>
Moscow State asked Reagan<lb/>
about the Indian protesters.<lb/>
Never heard of them, Reagan<lb/>
said. But it might have "been bet-<lb/>
ter, he added, if Indians hadn't<lb/>
gone to their "preservations, or<lb/>
reservations, I should say<lb/>
Soviet security forces punctu-<lb/>
ated Reagan's point about human<lb/>
rights. When the president was<lb/>
surrounded by well-wishers dur-<lb/>
ing an impromptu visit to the<lb/>
Arbat shopping area on day one,<lb/>
Soviet guards attacked reporters<lb/>
and cameramen who tried to stay<lb/>
close to Reagan. Later, Soviet<lb/>
guards tried to bar the American<lb/>
press from the monastery. They<lb/>
relented when a White House<lb/>
advance man threatened to keep<lb/>
the Soviet press out of Reagan's<lb/>
meeting with dissidents. At that<lb/>
event, the Soviets took no<lb/>
chances. They taped the proceed-<lb/>
ings inside, and then photo-<lb/>
graphed dissidents individually<lb/>
as they left. For Gobo's sake, Re-<lb/>
agan backed away from his "evil<lb/>
empire" charge. But I'll bet he<lb/>
didn't really mean it.<lb/>
Mr. Reagan changes mind about empire<lb/>
At 27, he was an agricultural economist with<lb/>
Moscow's Institute of Economics and a university<lb/>
lecturer. But Josef Stalin looked kindly on him dur-<lb/>
ing the Great Purge, and instead of shooting or<lb/>
exiling him, sent him as chief of the U.S. division of<lb/>
the People's Commissariat of Foreign Af faiirs. From<lb/>
there he went as counselor at the Soviet Embassy in<lb/>
Washington, becoming ambassador in 1943. In 1946<lb/>
he went to the United Nations Security Council and<lb/>
established the Soviet tradition of vetoing any<lb/>
moves designed to promote peace with freedom. In<lb/>
1946 he became deputy foreign minister. And<lb/>
Stalin's approval of him made him a candidate for<lb/>
the Central Committee of the Communist Party. He<lb/>
became first deputy foreign minister in 1949 and<lb/>
foreign minister in 1957. He was directly involved in<lb/>
the diplomatic and military action against the stu-<lb/>
dents in Budapest, serving under Nikita<lb/>
Khrushchev. Under Leonid Brezhnev, he presided<lb/>
over the great purge of the Prague Spring in Czecho-<lb/>
slovakia in 1968.<lb/>
Andrei Andreyevich Gromyko is now the presi-<lb/>
dent of the Soviet Union, and the first person to greet<lb/>
President Ronald Reagan as he descended from Air<lb/>
Force One at Vnukovo Airport on Sunday.<lb/>
The itinerary of Mr. Reagan might have been<lb/>
conceived by the Brothers Grimm. No fairy tale<lb/>
could have made the trip more regally satisfying.<lb/>
The rich decor was courtesty of dead czars, the last<lb/>
one executed by someone in honor of whom a Rus-<lb/>
sian City is named. The grand paintings and decora-<lb/>
tions were done by European and Russian masters of<lb/>
the 18th and 19th centuries. The children were<lb/>
trained to sing American folk songs in English. And<lb/>
beginning with Gorbachev himself, the Russian<lb/>
court was choreographed to sing, if every now and<lb/>
then with a touch of diffidence, the praises of peace<lb/>
and co-existence. Ronald Reagan lectured to the<lb/>
intellectuals about an obscure episode in an obscure<lb/>
Russian novel and received a standing ovation. It<lb/>
was a dream, it was nirvana, it was�mind blowing.<lb/>
There was that one terribly sour not, sounded day<lb/>
after day. Every time Mr. Reagan looked especially<lb/>
pleased, especially satisfied, especially carried away<lb/>
by the gemutlichkeit of it all, you would hear a voice,<lb/>
and always that voice would ask the same question:<lb/>
ON THE RIGHT<lb/>
BY<lb/>
WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY<lb/>
"Is this what you called the evil empire, Mr. Presi-<lb/>
dent?"<lb/>
"What was that about the evil empire, Mr. Presi-<lb/>
dent?"<lb/>
'Tell us about the evil empire, Mr. President<lb/>
Finally, worn down by this hectoring over his<lb/>
melodramatic excess of years gone by, Mr. Reagan<lb/>
said: "I was talking about another empire<lb/>
We sinners believe because we were taught to<lb/>
believe and do give internal assent to the mandate, to<lb/>
forgive, 70 times seven times. But Mr. Reagan is<lb/>
 engaged now not in forgiveness, but in what George<lb/>
Orwell called vaporization. Big Brother decides to<lb/>
change a historical or a present fact, and evidence<lb/>
inconveniencing to the new thesis is simply made to<lb/>
� disappear.<lb/>
Run the fingers lightly over the globe, pausing to<lb/>
step at outposts of the Soviet empire. In Nicaragua,<lb/>
using Soviet arms, they are promoting war and<lb/>
aggression and drafting 17-year-olds while suffer-<lb/>
Mr. Reagan does well to encourage changes in the<lb/>
Soviet system. Something wildly exciting is indeed<lb/>
going on in the Soviet system. But to greet it as if it<lb/>
were no longer evil is on the order of changing our<lb/>
entire position toward Adolf Hitler on receiving the<lb/>
news that he has abolished one extermination camp.<lb/>
The Soviet Union has a very long way to go before it<lb/>
brings reasonable freedom to those who live under<lb/>
it. But we sow only confusion when we retract the<lb/>
statement that it is evil to support the systematic<lb/>
suppression of human rights everywhere your<lb/>
empire reaches. Gorbachev may be the spokesman<lb/>
for what is being attempted within the Soviet em-<lb/>
pire, but Gromyko continues as president of what<lb/>
continues to be an evil empire.<lb/>
Camp<lb/>
(CPS) � Newsweek on Cai<lb/>
pus, one of the biggest colk<lb/>
newspaper "inserts" in the coi<lb/>
try, last week announced that<lb/>
would soon stop publishii<lb/>
while Campus Voice, probaq<lb/>
the slickest magazine aimed<lb/>
college students, said it will tra<lb/>
form itself into a wall poster.<lb/>
The changes, some observ<lb/>
said, might help the finances<lb/>
student newspapers because tj<lb/>
"inserts" � so called becai<lb/>
Ironcl<lb/>
Washington, D.C � Artifal<lb/>
from the Civil War ironclad U.S<lb/>
MONITOR will somedav havi<lb/>
permanent home in North CaJ<lb/>
llina thanks to the efforts of<lb/>
state's first district Congt<lb/>
Walter B. Jones.<lb/>
The House Merchant<lb/>
and Fisheries Committee, wh<lb/>
'is chaired by Congressman Joij<lb/>
today agreed to Mr. Jones'<lb/>
jposal to direct the National<lb/>
ranic and Atmospheric Admj<lb/>
-stration (NOAA) to provide<lb/>
Ipropriate artifacts from<lb/>
4<lb/>
Kollar app<lb/>
ECU N'cvw Bureau<lb/>
Joanne M. Kollar, former!<lb/>
�publications officer at Penn bl<lb/>
University, has been appon<lb/>
director of the Office of Publ:<lb/>
A ions at ECU.<lb/>
Kollar, catalog editor at<lb/>
State for the past eight yej<lb/>
served as acting director and<lb/>
versify editor in hte departmerl<lb/>
publications at Penn State din<lb/>
1987. As catalog editor, she edj<lb/>
and produced six university<lb/>
logs and Penn State's commej<lb/>
ment programs and was alsc<lb/>
sponsible for production of ol<lb/>
publications as assigned.<lb/>
"We are delighted to hai<lb/>
person of Joanne's talent anc<lb/>
to ina<lb/>
Youngsters ti<lb/>
attend sessio<lb/>
ECU Ntwi Bureau<lb/>
Nearly 300 middle and s<lb/>
dary pupils, mostly from<lb/>
schools, have been selected<lb/>
tend the third annual Legisl<lb/>
School for Youth Developing<lb/>
ECU in three-week sessioi<lb/>
ginning June 19 and July 10.<lb/>
Emphasis during the result<lb/>
sessions will be focused on<lb/>
oping leadership, cnhai<lb/>
communication skills and<lb/>
ducing the young people tcj<lb/>
experiences. The statewide<lb/>
gram was authorized by thi<lb/>
General Assembly in an atj<lb/>
to develop leadership amoi<lb/>
state's rural youth.<lb/>
A similar program is hel<lb/>
300 young people from the<lb/>
em half of the state at Wj<lb/>
Carolina University in C<lb/>
hee. Divided by educatu<lb/>
gions, the program at ECU<lb/>
students from 31 countiesai<lb/>
at WCU from 49 counties<lb/>
The legislation specific<lb/>
the program be designed ti<lb/>
dents from rural, isolated<lb/>
with a ratio of rural to urbc<lb/>
dents of at least three to onej<lb/>
tions of the students were<lb/>
random from nomination!<lb/>
mitted by teachers, couif<lb/>
principals, parents and pel<lb/>
the various communities<lb/>
The students who atte<lb/>
participate in a program ol<lb/>
shops, lectures, field trips<lb/>
nars, films, musical progra<lb/>
recreational activities.<lb/>
Dates of the sessions are<lb/>
- July 7 for rising 10th tj<lb/>
12th graders and July 10 tj<lb/>
July 28 for nsing eighth t<lb/>
ninth graders.<lb/>
Names and home addre<lb/>
county, of the students<lb/>
for sessions at ECU this sj<lb/>
are as follow: (Note that<lb/>
of the preponderance ol<lb/>
addresses, the students n1<lb/>
dress may differ from the<lb/>
county of residence).<lb/>
The East Carolii<lb/>
<pb facs="00058079_0005"/><lb/>
liLATCSAST<lb/>
'AR M &amp;RLS<lb/>
Hxrwer.<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
IUNE15,1988<lb/>
t<lb/>
.<lb/>
ft: 't<lb/>
fuSS:<lb/>
?<lb/>
re his tattered reputation. Top it<lb/>
(ratic pels happy to use<lb/>
boat the administration.<lb/>
; sh to taste. Et voila! Nev-<lb/>
s t's .? mighty peculiar recipe,<lb/>
rnd the souffle seems to have<lb/>
e Reagan administration<lb/>
the egg on it's face, and<lb/>
- the Democrats deserve more<lb/>
i ont than they've so far suf-<lb/>
' condidate Michael<lb/>
. s tic inability to dispose of<lb/>
monstratcs failed leadership<lb/>
� White House. But what,<lb/>
i he do differently?<lb/>
rats can't be serious in<lb/>
hints about using American<lb/>
-t a war? With Panama? That<lb/>
cverv value the Demo-<lb/>
have been defending<lb/>
n to Reagan's contra<lb/>
. Not to mention the<lb/>
i on our relations with<lb/>
Latin American nations,<lb/>
ted � from Castro's Cuba<lb/>
hile � in opposing even<lb/>
mic war we've been running<lb/>
v to pressure Noriega out.<lb/>
were in the mood for an<lb/>
hed-type war. either<lb/>
or Chille would have been a more<lb/>
I f irget In fact, the United States<lb/>
t about to start a war against any<lb/>
ttry more threatening than Gre-<lb/>
' ' be we should have thought of<lb/>
we started huffing and puff-<lb/>
lege students<lb/>
their claim of human rights<lb/>
.ses bv Reagan. Not surpris-<lb/>
ingly, one of the students at<lb/>
scow State asked Reagan<lb/>
about the Indian protesters.<lb/>
Never heard of them, Reagan<lb/>
said. But it might have "been bet-<lb/>
ter, he added, if Indians hadn't<lb/>
gone to their "preservations, or<lb/>
reservations, I should say<lb/>
Soviet security forces punctu-<lb/>
ated Reagan's point about human<lb/>
rights. When the president was<lb/>
surrounded bv well-wishers dur-<lb/>
ing an impromptu visit to the<lb/>
Arbat shopping area on day one,<lb/>
Soviet guards attacked reporters<lb/>
and cameramen who tried to stay<lb/>
close to Reagan. Later, Soviet<lb/>
guards tried to bar the American<lb/>
press from the monastery. They<lb/>
relented when a WTiite House<lb/>
advance man threatened to keep<lb/>
the Soviet press oul of Reagan's<lb/>
meeting with dissidents. At that<lb/>
event, the Soviets took no<lb/>
chances. They taped the proceed-<lb/>
ings inside, and then photo-<lb/>
graphed dissidents individually<lb/>
as they left. For Gobo's sake, Re-<lb/>
agan backed away from his "evil<lb/>
empire" charge. But I'll bet he<lb/>
didn't rcallv mean it.<lb/>
ire<lb/>
?rs lightly over the globe, pausing to<lb/>
of the Soviet empire. In Nicaragua,<lb/>
is, they are promoting war and<lb/>
drafting 17-year-olds while suffer-<lb/>
oes well to encourage changes in the<lb/>
-mething wildly exciting is indeed<lb/>
ISoviet system. But to greet it as if it<lb/>
evil is on the order of changing our<lb/>
.vard Adolf Hitler on receiving the<lb/>
abolished oncextcrmination camp,<lb/>
kn has a very long way to go before it<lb/>
!e freedom to those who live under<lb/>
nly confusion when we retract the<lb/>
t is evil to support the systematic<lb/>
human rights everywhere your<lb/>
Gorbachev may be the spokesman<lb/>
attempted within the Soviet em-<lb/>
rko continues as president of what<lb/>
m evil empire.<lb/>
Campus Voice magazine changed to poster<lb/>
(CPS) � Newsweek on Cam-<lb/>
pus, one of the biggest college<lb/>
newspaper "inserts" in the coun-<lb/>
try, last week announced that it<lb/>
would soon stop publishing<lb/>
while Campus Voice, probably<lb/>
the slickest magazine aimed at<lb/>
college students, said it will trans-<lb/>
form itself into a wall poster.<lb/>
The changes, some observers<lb/>
said, might help the finances of<lb/>
student newspapers because the<lb/>
"inserts" � so called because<lb/>
they are printed and published<lb/>
elsewhere, and then shipped to<lb/>
campus, where they're literally<lb/>
inserted into the student papers<lb/>
� often carried lucrative ads that<lb/>
otherwise might have been in the<lb/>
campus publications.<lb/>
"National advertising lineage<lb/>
in college papers is down to less<lb/>
than 50 percent of what we got 3-<lb/>
4 years ago reports Dave<lb/>
Adams, president of the College<lb/>
Media Advisors and faculty advi-<lb/>
sor to the Kansas State Collegian.<lb/>
"Many of the ads in the supple-<lb/>
ments are full-color slick ads that<lb/>
campus papers can't carry<lb/>
Adams conceded, "but they may<lb/>
be dividing the national advertis-<lb/>
ing dollar<lb/>
Newsweek on Campus, how-<lb/>
ever, will stop trying to divide it<lb/>
after its September, 1988, issue,<lb/>
said Diane Pearson of the Wash-<lb/>
ington Post, Inc Newsweek's<lb/>
parent corporation.<lb/>
She cited increased postal and<lb/>
paper costs as well as increased<lb/>
competition as the reasons.<lb/>
"When Newsweek On Campus<lb/>
was introduced there were 5<lb/>
publications Pearson ex-<lb/>
plained. "Now there are more<lb/>
than 14. It's a very crowded mar-<lb/>
ket<lb/>
Newsweek On Campus never<lb/>
broke even in the six years of its<lb/>
existence, said Pearson, and the<lb/>
higher costs didn't bode well for<lb/>
pushing it over the top in the near<lb/>
future.<lb/>
So, in order "to protect the<lb/>
quality of Newsweek" itself, the<lb/>
company's directors voted April<lb/>
11 to close Newsweek On Cam-<lb/>
pus and a specialized sister publi-<lb/>
cation called Newsweek On<lb/>
Health.<lb/>
"We're not giving up on the<lb/>
:ollege market, though. We'll re-<lb/>
turn to campus in the fall with<lb/>
special subscription offers to<lb/>
Newsweek Pearson promised.<lb/>
Newsweek on Campus lasted<lb/>
longer than most of the college<lb/>
inserts and supplements, said Jim<lb/>
Omastiak, publisher of Whittle<lb/>
Publications, the Knoxville,<lb/>
Tenn.�based firm that puts out<lb/>
Campus Voice.<lb/>
Ironclad relic finds home in N.C.<lb/>
Washington, D.C. � Artifacts<lb/>
from the Civil War ironclad U.S.S.<lb/>
MONITOR will someday have a<lb/>
permanent home in North Caro-<lb/>
lina thanks to the efforts of the<lb/>
-state's first district Congressman<lb/>
Walter B. Jones.<lb/>
The House Merchant Marine<lb/>
and Fisheries Committee, which<lb/>
" is chaired by Congressman Jones,<lb/>
today agreed to Mr. Jones' pro-<lb/>
�posal to direct the National Occ-<lb/>
.anic and Atmospheric Admini-<lb/>
stration (NOAA) to provide ap-<lb/>
propriate artifacts from the<lb/>
MONITOR for display in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
"A MONITOR museum in<lb/>
North Carolina is important to the<lb/>
state and especially to the people<lb/>
of the Outer Banks who have his-<lb/>
torical tics to this shipwreck that<lb/>
lies so close to our shore. While 1<lb/>
had an agreement with the former<lb/>
head of NOAA to make certain<lb/>
items available, his departure<lb/>
from that post made it necessary<lb/>
to put the understanding we had<lb/>
into statutory language Chair-<lb/>
man Jones explained.<lb/>
Specifically, the Jones plan di-<lb/>
rects NOAA to develop � in<lb/>
consultation with the state of<lb/>
North Carolina � a plan for the<lb/>
permanent display of artifacts<lb/>
within six months after enact-<lb/>
ment. The plan shall, among other<lb/>
things, identify possible display<lb/>
sites and suitable artifacts, and<lb/>
suggest an interpretative plan for<lb/>
display.<lb/>
The requirements of the Jones<lb/>
plan do not affect the designation<lb/>
of the Mariners Museum in New-<lb/>
port News, Virginia, as the princi-<lb/>
pal museum for MONITOR arti-<lb/>
facts.<lb/>
The Jones plan was added to a<lb/>
reauthorization of the National<lb/>
Marine Sanctuaries program<lb/>
under consideration by the<lb/>
Committee. The Sanctuaries pro-<lb/>
gram was established in 1972 to<lb/>
provide recognition and compre-<lb/>
hensive protection to marine re-<lb/>
sources of special national signifi-<lb/>
cance. The MONITOR was the<lb/>
first of seven sites that have thus<lb/>
far received this designation.<lb/>
HANKS ICE CREAM,<lb/>
FROZEN YOGURT,<lb/>
 AND SORBET<lb/>
HOMEMADE<lb/>
CE CREAM<lb/>
Greenville.NC<lb/>
BUY 1 GET<lb/>
1 FREE<lb/>
BLEND IN<lb/>
Exp. 6-21-88<lb/>
Kollar appointed ECU publications director<lb/>
ECU Ncwn Bureau<lb/>
Joanne M. Kollar, formerly a<lb/>
publications officer at Penn State<lb/>
University, has been appointed<lb/>
director of the Office of Publica-<lb/>
tions at ECU.<lb/>
Kollar, catalog editor at Penn<lb/>
State for the past eight years,<lb/>
served as acting director and uni-<lb/>
versity editor in hte department of<lb/>
publications at Penn State during<lb/>
1987. As catalog editor, she edited<lb/>
and produced six university cata-<lb/>
logs and Penn State's commence-<lb/>
penence said James L. Lanier,<lb/>
Jr ECU vice chancellor for insti-<lb/>
tutional advancement. "The Penn<lb/>
State program is recognized as<lb/>
one of the top in the country and<lb/>
we are confident that she will help<lb/>
improve our external publicat-<lb/>
ions and make them more consis-<lb/>
tent in presenting ECU's posi-<lb/>
tion Lanier said.<lb/>
Kollar, born in North Braddock,<lb/>
Pa grew up in Franklin, Pa and<lb/>
received a BA degree in English<lb/>
from Bucknell University in 1971.<lb/>
She received an MA in journalism<lb/>
ment programs and was also re- at Penn State University in 1978.<lb/>
ponsible for production of other She joincd the Pcnn Statc publica-<lb/>
publications as assigned. tions department as a proofreader<lb/>
"We are delighted to have a in 1976 and was appointed an<lb/>
person of Joanne's talent and ex- t.djtor jn 1978.<lb/>
1, tfit ')��� � )fi'j ti y iiyj ���.��<lb/>
Youngsters to<lb/>
attend session<lb/>
ECU Nw� Bureau<lb/>
Nearly 300 middle and secon-<lb/>
dary pupils, mostly from rural<lb/>
schools, have been selected to at-<lb/>
tend the third annual Legislators'<lb/>
School for Youth Development at<lb/>
ECU in three-week sessions be-<lb/>
ginning June 19 and July 10.<lb/>
' Emphasis during the residential<lb/>
sessions will be focused on devel-<lb/>
oping leadership, enhancing<lb/>
communication skills and intro-<lb/>
ducing the young people to new<lb/>
experiences. The staiewidc pro-<lb/>
gram was authorized by the 1985<lb/>
General Assembly in an attempt<lb/>
to develop leadership among the<lb/>
state's rural youth.<lb/>
A similar program is held for<lb/>
300 young people from the west-<lb/>
ern half of the state at Western<lb/>
Carolina University in Cullow-<lb/>
hee. Divided by education re-<lb/>
gions, the program at ECU draws<lb/>
students from 51 countiesand that<lb/>
at WCU from 49 counties.<lb/>
The legislation specified that<lb/>
the program be designed for stu-<lb/>
dents from rural, isolated areas<lb/>
with a ratio of rural to urban stu-<lb/>
dents of at least three to one. Selec-<lb/>
tions of the students were made at<lb/>
random from nominations sub-<lb/>
mitted by teachers, counselors,<lb/>
principals, parents and persons in<lb/>
the various communities.<lb/>
The students who attend will<lb/>
participate in a program of work-<lb/>
shops, lectures, field trips, semi-<lb/>
nars, films, musical programs and<lb/>
recreational activities.<lb/>
Dates of the sessions are June 19<lb/>
- July 7 for rising 10th through<lb/>
12th graders and July 10 through<lb/>
July 28 for rising eighth through<lb/>
ninth graders.<lb/>
Names and home addresses, by<lb/>
county, of the students selected<lb/>
for sessions at ECU this summer<lb/>
are as follow: (Note that because<lb/>
of the preponderance of rural<lb/>
addresses, the students mail ad-<lb/>
dress may differ from the actual<lb/>
county of residence).<lb/>
Serving as acting director and partmcntal budget and super-<lb/>
universitv editor from February vised a full-time professional staff<lb/>
until August of last year, Kollar of 11 employees and four part-<lb/>
was involved in implementing a time employees,<lb/>
graphic identity system and su- The Penn State department of<lb/>
pervised the editing, design and publications office edits and pub-<lb/>
production of Penn State's publi- lishes more than 1,000 publi-<lb/>
cations. She administered a de- tions each year.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$205 Abortion from 13 lo 18 weeks at<lb/>
additional cost. Pregnancy Test, Birth Control,<lb/>
and Problem Pregnancy Counseling. For<lb/>
further information, call 832-0533 (toll free<lb/>
number: 1-800-532-5384) between 9 a.m. and 5<lb/>
p.m. weekdays tieneral anesthesia available.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
CATCH THE ANNABELLE'S<lb/>
LUNCHTIME EXPRESS<lb/>
It's our special quick lunch menu for people on the go!<lb/>
Just choose your favorite and you'll be refreshed<lb/>
and on your way in no time<lb/>
Spaghetti a generous Steak Teriyaki Our special<lb/>
portion of pasta with meat cut of Deef served wrth src <lb/>
sauce Toasted bread and peas and teriyaki sauce<lb/>
Parmesan cheese $4.55 on nee b.4b<lb/>
Uot3W�V<lb/>
Joanne M. Kollar<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
Why not co.ne by the REAL Crisis Intervention Center: 312<lb/>
E. 10th St; or call 758 HELP. For Free Confidential Counsel-<lb/>
ing or Assistance.<lb/>
Our Volunteers and Staff are on duty 24 hrs. a day. year<lb/>
around, in order to assist you in virtually any problem area<lb/>
you might have. Our longstanding goal has always been to<lb/>
preserve and enhance the quality of life for you and our com-<lb/>
munity.<lb/>
Licensed And Accredited By The Slate of North Carolina<lb/>
t- cc<lb/>
Fettuccini Alfredo<lb/>
pasta with a sauce of butter,<lb/>
Parmesan and Romana<lb/>
cheese $4.75<lb/>
With Chicken<lb/>
With Shrimp<lb/>
$6.75<lb/>
$7.75<lb/>
Hot Ham &amp; Swiss<lb/>
Sandwich VfMff sliced em<lb/>
with Swiss cheese on grilled rye<lb/>
bread, plus fries $3.95<lb/>
Steak &amp; Cheese Sandwich<lb/>
Our steak sandwich with<lb/>
melted Provolone cheese.<lb/>
plus fries . $3.95<lb/>
Express lunches are served from 11 30am to 2 p m daily, except Sunday<lb/>
Aflnabelle's<lb/>
V V RESTAURANT &amp; PUB<lb/>
The Plaza � Greenville Bivd � 7560315<lb/>
Hours: 11 30am-11pm, MonThurs<lb/>
11:30am-Midnight Fri Sat ,<lb/>
12Noon-11 pm Sun<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
Summer Savings<lb/>
w'<lb/>
UM<lb/>
FINE DINING<lb/>
Sheraton Greenville<lb/>
Open"<lb/>
Monday-Saturday 10-9<lb/>
Sunday 1-6<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(Except Algner. Nike and Reebok)<lb/>
3C3WfSTGHtCNVii.il SOot.E��D GREENVIllE<lb/>
The hospitality people of ITT<lb/>
REENVillE NOATH CAACXIN 9'9MS26�<lb/>
Weekday Buffet<lb/>
 i<lb/>
$3<lb/>
IncCudes:<lb/>
95 Soup<lb/>
Salads<lb/>
L<lb/>
Mon. - Fri.<lb/>
11:30 - 2:30<lb/>
Leo's is located<lb/>
in the Sheraton<lb/>
The East<lb/>
ist Carolinian <lb/>
203 West Greenville<lb/>
Blvd Greenville,<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
2Entries<lb/>
0iot-cDessert<lb/>
Cakes &amp; (Pies<lb/>
Carved oast<lb/>
pund Of Beef<lb/>
355-2666<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Coming Attractions'<lb/>
Thursday, June 16<lb/>
Rock - A - Bowl<lb/>
MSC Bowling Center - 2 p.m. - 4:30 p.m<lb/>
Thursday, Tune 16<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
University Mall - 9 p.m.<lb/>
Upcoming Events<lb/>
Monday, June 20 Movie: The Shining<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre - 9 p.m.<lb/>
�Thursday, June 16 Rock - A - Bowl<lb/>
MSC Bowling Center - 2 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
i-J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058079_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CARPI IN! AN<lb/>
UNI 15, 1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
IF YOU ARE A MUSICVOICE MAJOR<lb/>
jnd would like to put you voice to work<lb/>
and mako some cash this summer then<lb/>
call 355-0355 and ask tor Dena<lb/>
FEMALE RESIDENT COUNCILOR<lb/>
interested in those with human service<lb/>
background wishing to gain valuable<lb/>
experience in the field No Monetar)<lb/>
Compensation, howver room utilities<lb/>
and phono provided Call Mary Smith,<lb/>
Real Crisis Center 758 1IELP<lb/>
PART-TIME HELPNE1 DI D to work<lb/>
in optical lab No experience necessary.<lb/>
We will tram vou Will work around stu<lb/>
dent schedule Call 752 4018 and ask for<lb/>
manager for an interview Good working<lb/>
conditions<lb/>
HIRING Federal government iobs m<lb/>
your area and o ersoas. Main immediate<lb/>
openings without waiting list or test. 515<lb/>
68 000 Phone call refundable (6 12) 838-<lb/>
8885 Ext. 5285<lb/>
HUP WWII D � Ladies, it you are<lb/>
between IS "5h vrs old, enjo showing<lb/>
yourlegs then call 756-6163 M Fbetween<lb/>
1 p.m. and 4 pjn. for an interview and<lb/>
screen test It vou are i h sen �. id o pro<lb/>
tion work pa) s up toS25<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
PROFESSIONAl IM'INC SERVIC1<lb/>
' IS 188 758 8241 Call<lb/>
INDI PI ND ANT CAB SERVICE � Call<lb/>
355 5034 in evenings "Good rates Call<lb/>
lames tor a ride<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AM) THOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer tvping<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24<lb/>
hours m 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 Past 5th Street<lb/>
(beside Cubbies) Greenville, NC 752-<lb/>
3694<lb/>
NEW OFFICE SUITES<lb/>
counts. 758-1983.<lb/>
Faculty dis-<lb/>
FORSALE<lb/>
ROOMATE NEEDED � to share apt. in<lb/>
Wilson Acres. Pay 13 rent in 2 bedroom<lb/>
apt. July 1 - August 30only. Call soon. Toni<lb/>
830-3822.<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. S97.00 a month, 13<lb/>
utilities. Near clubhouse, pool, laundry<lb/>
room. Quiet neighborhood. Call 355-0355.<lb/>
IS II mil vou can but jeeps for S14<lb/>
through the US Government? Get the<lb/>
facts today! Call 1-312 742-1142 Ext. 5271-<lb/>
,<lb/>
CAN YOU BUY JIEPS, Cars, 4X4's<lb/>
Seized in drug raids for under $100.00<lb/>
Call tor tacts todayd. 602-837-3401. P.t.<lb/>
711<lb/>
FOR RENT � Two bedroom duples, 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. 1 2 bath, 157.50 and 1 2 utili-<lb/>
ties, 112 miles from campus, dishwasher,<lb/>
pK)l, microwave, very nice, available July<lb/>
or August, 757-0316.<lb/>
1 R SA1 E Schwinn Cruiser Supreme 5<lb/>
speed I ike New included is a Kryptonite RINGGOLD TOWERS � Apts. for rent<lb/>
Security Lock $200.00 or best otter. Call Furnished. Contact 1 lollie Simonowich at<lb/>
Karen al 758 2861<lb/>
�75.1.7<lb/>
52-2865.<lb/>
RINGOI D rOWlRSCONDO� for sale.<lb/>
B unit, 2nd floor, fully furnished. Ta<lb/>
n irk�: valueS43,730.00. Make me an offer<lb/>
919 787 1378.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
THE NEW DELI WANTS YO'J to come<lb/>
out and jam to the best music around.<lb/>
Friday catch ROBERT KIRKLAND AND<lb/>
Tl IE 11ANKS, and on Saturday don't miss<lb/>
NOBLE SAVAGES.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SUMMER LIBRARY HOURS CO-OP SUMMER FALL ATTENTION ALL IRATES<lb/>
Mondays Fhursdavsfi i.m 11 iH) Three jobs Congressional Office,<lb/>
p rn . Fridays 8 10 a.m 6:00p Satur Washington. DC une � August Salary;<lb/>
days 9 lOa.m 6 lp.m Sundays 12 0 $1000.00 month. Student must have gen-<lb/>
noon - 11:00 p.rri The Med i R - urces eraloffi skills and some experience with<lb/>
Center will tx i �er M ndays - Thurs- word processing Short hand skills de<lb/>
da-s i.rn � "� p.n Fridays8 � a.m sired Mso Tampa Electric Company,<lb/>
5 D.m Saturdays 1 Onm - r�m fampa Fl rida. Pall semester Salary:<lb/>
p m<lb/>
Facult<lb/>
to regisl<lb/>
13 al - �<lb/>
5K WALKRUN<lb/>
stall and si tents an<lb/>
' i i ural 5K run hine<lb/>
� al E inti b Track<lb/>
SI 135<lb/>
once r<lb/>
:<lb/>
,tt<lb/>
and<lb/>
i Word processing<lb/>
Na<lb/>
HANG GLIDING<lb/>
Lvervone is invited to register tor a<lb/>
mmer hang gliding adventure trip to<lb/>
s Head NC une 22 July 12<lb/>
MINORITY ADU1 IS<lb/>
 ECU festin center is r ed ne mi-<lb/>
v'r word processing experi-<lb/>
i Will be expected to return<lb/>
: I 89ifwi rk is satisfactory.<lb/>
increase finally, Positions<lb/>
availa the Nags Head area begin<lb/>
I 1988 Salar) S4hour, 3O40<lb/>
�available near worksite<lb/>
S50 week Students must have 2.5<lb/>
GPA. Will receive S500 scholarshipsti-<lb/>
pend tor college exj crises when returning<lb/>
ti s hi -  �. the fall For all these positions,<lb/>
. : R ith Peterson 757-6979, immedi-<lb/>
�  tsm r a plj tC op office,<lb/>
2 28 G building<lb/>
call<lb/>
P<lb/>
�I the test I<lb/>
ng Center tr<lb/>
57 6811<lb/>
MHMRi<lb/>
BACKPACKING<lb/>
it 3 12 staff and students are invited<lb/>
I tr a -  mei Backpacking<lb/>
ict th 22 ' � 2 IMemorialGym.<lb/>
�r For more information call 757-6387.<lb/>
Ultimate is not dead. CometJn down to<lb/>
the bottom of the hill Tuesdays, Thurs-<lb/>
days, and Sundays at 6:00 p.m. Get ready<lb/>
to get horizontal. Anyone interested in<lb/>
Fnsbce is welcome<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
Faculty, staff and students are invited<lb/>
to register for intramural Softball June 29<lb/>
at 4:00 p.m. in MG 102. For additional in-<lb/>
formation call 757-6387.<lb/>
CANOE OUTING<lb/>
Faculty, staff and students are invited<lb/>
to register for a canoe outing. June 22 - July<lb/>
12 in 204 Memorial Gymnasium. For addi-<lb/>
tional information, call 758-6387.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
Students who wish to obtain financial<lb/>
aid tor 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/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
�All New 2"Bedroom<lb/>
� And Ready To Rent �<lb/>
l iLRSin APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 r 3th Street<lb/>
� Ixxjted Neai ECU<lb/>
�Across From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
 ;mtet! Offer $275 a month<lb/>
Contact J. T. or Tommy Wilkams.<lb/>
756-7815 or 830-1437<lb/>
Office open - Apt. 8,12 - 5 JO p m<lb/>
�AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clean and quiet one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, energy efficient, free water anJ<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles on!v. $N5 a month, 6 month <lb/>
teas. MOffil E I iOME RE.VI ALS � couples or<lb/>
singles. Apartment and mobile homes in A. ;a I<lb/>
C'ardcns near Brook ViHey Country C lul<lb/>
C ontact i T. or Tommv Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
Individimlrthoug<lb/>
Like a circlein a rectangle, each of us nas<lb/>
to be unique. Individual thought. FreedoN<lb/>
of expression.<lb/>
Express yourself in The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Positions are now open for editors, staff<lb/>
writers, production manager and layout<lb/>
artists<lb/>
The experience, the friends, they can't bj<lb/>
beat.<lb/>
Team e: <lb/>
y today<lb/>
SIT BACK<lb/>
Youve just advertised in (illC tOSt (Earoltmatt<lb/>
P2�<lb/>
SAV-A-CENTER<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
On Manufacturer's Cents-Off Coupons. See Store For Details. Prices Effective Sun June 12<lb/>
Thru Sat June 18,1988. Quantity Rights Reserved. Not Responsible for Typographical Errors<lb/>
SHADY BROOK�HOTEL STYLE<lb/>
Fresh Young<lb/>
Turkey Breast<lb/>
5-9 lb.<lb/>
avg.<lb/>
U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BONELESS<lb/>
Chuck Shoulder<lb/>
London Broil<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
JAMESTOWN<lb/>
Sliced<lb/>
Bacon<lb/>
JAMESTOWN<lb/>
Sliced<lb/>
Bologna Pkg<lb/>
99<lb/>
99<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Red Flame<lb/>
Seedless Grapes<lb/>
High In<lb/>
Vitamin C<lb/>
PLUMP &amp; JUICY<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Blueberries<lb/>
pint<lb/>
basket<lb/>
1.59<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH MO PURCHASE<lb/>
Fab Laundry<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
REGULAR OR LIGHT<lb/>
Michelob 12<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
1.28<lb/>
6.49<lb/>
MTN. DEWcPEPSI FREE�REGULAR OR DIET<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
HOMOGENIZEDVITAMIN D<lb/>
Silverbrook<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
Limit Two<lb/>
With<lb/>
10 Purchase<lb/>
1.78<lb/>
QUARTERS<lb/>
Blue Bonnet<lb/>
Margarine 1pk�gz<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
Banquet<lb/>
Fried Chicken 2p8k�gz<lb/>
39<lb/>
2.69<lb/>
SELECTED VARIETIES�STOUFFER'S<lb/>
Lean<lb/>
Cuisines 11r<lb/>
1.49<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
Danish Pork<lb/>
Riblets<lb/>
89<lb/>
PERDUE GRADE 'A'<lb/>
Fresh Chicken<lb/>
Drumsticks or Thighs<lb/>
LUSCIOUS JUICY�LARGE<lb/>
Honeydew<lb/>
Melons each<lb/>
2.49<lb/>
CONTAINS VITAMIN C�CALIK,<lb/>
Black<lb/>
Raspberries<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
PLUMP &amp; JUIC<lb/>
California<lb/>
Red Plums<lb/>
990<lb/>
PREMIUM<lb/>
California<lb/>
Apricots<lb/>
3APDE.N SiENCr STYLE " t:Ns'�<lb/>
Del Monte 2<lb/>
Vegetables<lb/>
79<lb/>
DELICIOUS<lb/>
A&amp;P Pork 3<lb/>
&amp; Beans<lb/>
i<lb/>
REGULAR OR BUTTER FLAv<lb/>
Crisco<lb/>
Shortening<lb/>
Limit One With<lb/>
10 Purchase<lb/>
1.98<lb/>
WHITE OR ASSORTED<lb/>
Cottonelle<lb/>
Bath Tissue<lb/>
Limit One With<lb/>
10 Purchase<lb/>
4 roll<lb/>
pkg.<lb/>
MONEY<lb/>
ORDERS<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/>
I HI<lb/>
Mend<lb/>
This is a picture from '<lb/>
hit movies bcinu<lb/>
4Star Trek: I<lb/>
Shakespeare<lb/>
LOS AN(<lb/>
classical ad r<lb/>
credits Shakesp<lb/>
him on the<lb/>
Enterprx<lb/>
A year ag Si<lb/>
asCapt. loarv!<lb/>
Trek: The Next Genei<lb/>
more familiar<lb/>
and Paduar -<lb/>
IGingons<lb/>
was virtuall) a n<lb/>
"The r<lb/>
the 'Star Tre k<lb/>
because of the actor's<lb/>
youneverknow win<lb/>
he says.<lb/>
A friend asked St<lb/>
some dramatic extract!<lb/>
ary lecture at UCLA<lb/>
audience was<lb/>
who had been a pi<lb/>
original "Star Trek<lb/>
series and was ca;<lb/>
Television's new<lb/>
ries.<lb/>
"Allegedly, he tui<lb/>
wife and said. 'We haw<lb/>
our captain -<lb/>
"Well, it took six<lb/>
got the role. I wenl<lb/>
don and was h<lb/>
revival of "Wh Afi<lb/>
ginia Woolf intc<lb/>
I had, 1 wouldn : �<lb/>
returned to 1<lb/>
and got an offer<lb/>
"It surprised -<lb/>
other offer I've h id<lb/>
unusual tor an Er<lb/>
involved in an Ami<lb/>
ries. Certainly one<lb/>
cult-Jike following<lb/>
Trek<lb/>
Stewart was vag<lb/>
with Star Trek<lb/>
watched it with<lb/>
tween matinee and e e i<lb/>
formances at<lb/>
Shakespeare<lb/>
The new Star  k<lb/>
launched last Sc<lb/>
into orbit in the ratings I<lb/>
Safan makcs<lb/>
LOS ANGELES V i<lb/>
poser Craig Safan was - 1<lb/>
the nght sound to expi j<lb/>
feeling oi NBC's Che i -<lb/>
"One of the most <lb/>
things a film composer doi<lb/>
come up with a sound ter a<lb/>
ect he said. "Every movi<lb/>
television show sounds <lb/>
After reading the first so j<lb/>
'Cheers' the sound came to n<lb/>
"1 said I wanted an instrui<lb/>
that sounds like a bar<lb/>
Burrows, who s the director<lb/>
one of the executive prodti<lb/>
suggested a clarinet. Then it cl<lb/>
to me: Woody Allen playing<lb/>
clarinet at 3 a.m. in a bad ban. J<lb/>
not slick. They're not tryirJ<lb/>
impress anyone. It's just Wcj<lb/>
Allen and a few guvs plaj<lb/>
because thev love to play'<lb/>
Safan writes the backgrd<lb/>
music for "Cheers He didf<lb/>
write the theme song that<lb/>
the show.<lb/>
"We do the music for 'Choc:<lb/>
a studio said Safan. "I pla<lb/>
piano<lb/>
Safan has composed the thl<lb/>
<pb facs="00058079_0007"/><lb/>
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THE EAST CAROI INI AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JUNE 15,1988 Page 7<lb/>
Mendenhall movies are summer highlights<lb/>
ByJIMSHAMLIN<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
Movie madness continues at<lb/>
Mendenhall during the summer<lb/>
sessions. Scheduled so far are four<lb/>
outstanding films.<lb/>
"The Lost Boys" started off the<lb/>
madness Monday. The movie,<lb/>
played by a cast of unknows,<lb/>
portrays a single woman and her<lb/>
two teenage sons who are making<lb/>
a new life for themselves with<lb/>
their bizarre grandfather in a<lb/>
modern coastal town.<lb/>
The four of them, along with a<lb/>
pair of pint-size mercenaries from<lb/>
a comic book store, fight for their<lb/>
lives against a coven of vampires<lb/>
who dispel many beliefs about<lb/>
their classical counterparts. Aside<lb/>
from the trite humor and melo-<lb/>
drama, the film is well worth see-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The terror continues on June 20<lb/>
with "The Shining a classical<lb/>
horror film based on the story<lb/>
written by Stephen King in his<lb/>
pre-hack days, when his material<lb/>
was worth reading. Starring Jack<lb/>
Nicholson and Shelley Duvall,<lb/>
two actors who have never played<lb/>
a bad role, it is a definite must-see<lb/>
for fans of gothic horror.<lb/>
"The Secret of My Success a<lb/>
critically acclaimed film starring<lb/>
Michael J. Fox, shows on June 25.<lb/>
It is about a young man who seeks<lb/>
his fortune in New York through<lb/>
the most unconventional meth-<lb/>
ods ever conceived.<lb/>
On his way top the top, he is<lb/>
caught in a quadrangle of love,<lb/>
the chaos of the ci ty, and a danger-<lb/>
ous double-identity. With its in-<lb/>
tricately interwoven plotlines and<lb/>
hilarious incidents, this film is,<lb/>
perhaps, the comedy of the dec-<lb/>
ade.<lb/>
Showing on July 11 is "Jagged<lb/>
Edge starring Jeff Bridges and<lb/>
Glenn Close. It is a gripping<lb/>
drama about a man accused of<lb/>
brutally murdering his wife.<lb/>
This film has everything: ro-<lb/>
mance, action, humor, and a sur-<lb/>
prise ending whose startling ef-<lb/>
fect is second only to "Angel<lb/>
Heart It is well written, convinc-<lb/>
ingly portrayed, and marvelously<lb/>
produced.<lb/>
These four films represent a<lb/>
cross-section of the best movies of<lb/>
the decade, and are well worth<lb/>
seeing. Showings are at Hendrcx<lb/>
Theater at 9 p.m. on their<lb/>
respective dates, and admission is<lb/>
free to all ECU students with<lb/>
current activity stickers.<lb/>
Chapman's debut album proves her to be the<lb/>
best new artist for 1988 9 and possibly beyond<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This is a picture from "Jagged Edge a movie starring Glenn Close and Jeff Bridges. It is only one of the<lb/>
hit movies being shown at Mendenhall this summer.<lb/>
'Star TrekiTNG' captain more familiar with<lb/>
Shakespearean roles than starship command<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AD � British<lb/>
classical actor Patrick Stewart<lb/>
credits Shakespeare with putting<lb/>
him on the bridge of the Starship<lb/>
Enterprise.<lb/>
A year ago, Stewart, who stars<lb/>
as Capt. Jean-Luc Picard on "Star<lb/>
Trek: The Next Generation was<lb/>
more familiar with Richard III<lb/>
and Paduans than Mr. Spock and<lb/>
Klingons. "Beam me up Scotty<lb/>
was virtually a mystery.<lb/>
"The role has made me part of<lb/>
the 'Star Trek' legend, and it's<lb/>
because of the actor's adage that<lb/>
vou never know who's out there<lb/>
he savs.<lb/>
A friend asked Stewart to read<lb/>
some dramatic extracts at a liter-<lb/>
ary lecture at UCLA, and in the<lb/>
audience was Robert Justman,<lb/>
third-highest rated syndicated<lb/>
show, behind "Wheel of Fortune"<lb/>
and "Jeopardy The original se-<lb/>
ries, which ran three years on<lb/>
NBC in the 1960s, is frequently the<lb/>
highest-rated off-network syndi-<lb/>
cated show. The four "Star Trek"<lb/>
movies have taken in nearly $350<lb/>
million. Nearly four million vide-<lb/>
ocassettes of the series episodes<lb/>
and the movies have been sold.<lb/>
On a recent visit to a television<lb/>
festival in Cannes, France, he<lb/>
learned the show's power. "I was<lb/>
entirely unknown in the city he<lb/>
says. "But onejpight I went with<lb/>
many others to visit the American<lb/>
aircraft carrier Eisenhower. I was<lb/>
immediately recognized by a<lb/>
young officer. I was soon sur-<lb/>
rounded by crewmen. They had<lb/>
weaving sheds in the bottom and<lb/>
sheep on the hills he says.<lb/>
"When I was 121 started spending<lb/>
my evenings rehearsing and per-<lb/>
forming. Nobody thought it<lb/>
unusual. It didn't become<lb/>
unusual until I turned profes-<lb/>
sional<lb/>
After he was cast as the captain<lb/>
of the new Enterprise, a lot of<lb/>
discussion went into how he<lb/>
should sound. He experimented<lb/>
with various accents, finallv set-<lb/>
tling on a standard Enlish accent.<lb/>
'We continue to have disagree-<lb/>
ments about how certain words<lb/>
arc pronounced he says.<lb/>
"I'm the director of a teaching<lb/>
group at Santa Barbara and I fre-<lb/>
l, u V T(7� " , y , '� -V quently hear student actors say<lb/>
who had been a producer ot the all seen the show in Virginia and thcy should U5C a Brjtjsh <lb/>
tar thcir families scnt thcm forShakcspcare.Ipointoutthatin<lb/>
ong<lb/>
scries and was casting Paramount<lb/>
Television's new syndicated sc-<lb/>
ries.<lb/>
"Allegedly, he turned to his<lb/>
wife and saidWe have just found<lb/>
our captain Stewart says.<lb/>
"Well, it took six months before I<lb/>
got the role. 1 went back to Lon-<lb/>
don and was hoping to take a<lb/>
revival of 'Who's Afraid of Vir-<lb/>
ginia Woolf into the West End. If<lb/>
1 had, I wouldn't be here today. I<lb/>
returned to Los Angeles to read<lb/>
and got an offer<lb/>
ipes.<lb/>
was an overwhelming experi-<lb/>
ence<lb/>
Prior to "Star Tek Stewart wj -<lb/>
relatively unknown in this coun-<lb/>
trv. He was in the movies "Excali-<lb/>
bur" and "Dune" and the TV<lb/>
miniseries "1, Claudius Fie<lb/>
played Karla, the head of the KGB<lb/>
in the miniseries based on two<lb/>
John LeCarre novels, "Smiley's<lb/>
People" and "Tinker, Tailor,<lb/>
Spy Most of his acting experi-<lb/>
ence, however, has been on the<lb/>
stage. He is particularly associ-<lb/>
Shakespeare's time the accent<lb/>
was close to today's American<lb/>
accent<lb/>
Pickin'the Bones "<lb/>
album comes through her guitar tune Was having mountains o'<lb/>
strumming and low-key vocals, nothing at birth<lb/>
not by hysterical yelling and re- It's amazing how much opti-<lb/>
Okay. She looks and sounds corded whining. mism she retains in songs like<lb/>
like Joan Armatrading. She writes Chapman is a sure bet for Best "Fast Car" and "Across the Lines"<lb/>
lyrics like (dare we compare?) New Artist of 1988, if critics de- considering how depressing the<lb/>
Dylan, and plays guitar just like cide her unashamed folk singer topicsare. But especially in "Car<lb/>
that Vega woman. So how much image is more happening than she keeps looking forward,<lb/>
of Tracy Chapman's debut album Terrence Trent's delusions of While her social and political<lb/>
is uniquely her Princehood. songs ARE entertaining, her<lb/>
Well, I think the essential Tracy The album is cut after cut of strength lies in her ballads.<lb/>
is her ability to write and play simple pleasures. From the single They're filled with social rele-<lb/>
songs about social and personal "Fast Car" to the commercially vance anyway. But "Baby Can I<lb/>
topics and make them entertain- unplayable 'Talkin' Bout a Revo- Hold You" and "For My Lover"<lb/>
ing stories. Let's face it, shit like lution every song showcases her show where the real problems are<lb/>
"Born in a Paranoid, Militarily- talent. - love, lust and all their accompa-<lb/>
Obsessed Country" may have a The best song on the Lp is with-<lb/>
message, but it's boring. out a doubt, "For My Lover Her<lb/>
And I can't see Tracy agonizing voice surges every time she re-<lb/>
over the "identity" of her song's peats the lines 'Two weeks in a<lb/>
characters in an interview like the Virginia jailFor my lover20,000<lb/>
Blue Jean God. I think Tracy dollar bailFor my lover but she<lb/>
probably puts herself in every holds back until the last refrain,<lb/>
song. Then she lets loose. If s not a<lb/>
She may not live every expert- violent explosion, but her voice<lb/>
ence she sings, but you can tell and her guitar subtly let you<lb/>
she's lived all the emotions be- know this is the climax you've<lb/>
hind them. They aren't your basic been listening for. A few more<lb/>
Debbie'T write about my big songs like this, and MTV will shut<lb/>
sister's boyfriends, since my par- down.<lb/>
ents control me way too much for<lb/>
me to have a life of my own" "Mountains o'Things" is a wry<lb/>
Gibson emotions either. tune concerning all things yup-<lb/>
They're more like journalistic pie. It also manages to sideswipe<lb/>
observations of fucked-up love religion and snobbery along the<lb/>
affairs, family responsibilities way. Especially amusing is the<lb/>
and prejudice. The feeling in the line 'Those whose sole misfor-<lb/>
nying obsessions.<lb/>
I haven't seen a bad review for<lb/>
this album yet. I can't see how<lb/>
there could be, unless the re-<lb/>
viewer owned a lot of Rick Astley<lb/>
12-inch singles. The only criticism<lb/>
raised has been that Chapman<lb/>
jumped on the folk bandwagon<lb/>
after Suzanne Vega's success last<lb/>
year with "Luka<lb/>
Well, there are worse band wag-<lb/>
ons to ride on. And "Woman With<lb/>
a Guitar" hasn't exactly become a<lb/>
cliche yet.<lb/>
It probably will be soon. But as<lb/>
these neo-Chapmans and Vegas<lb/>
flood the nightclubs, I'll just save<lb/>
my money and sit home with this<lb/>
Lp. And wait for her next one<lb/>
"It surprised me more than any ated with the Royal Shakespeare<lb/>
other offer I've had. I thought it Co.<lb/>
unusual for an English actor to be<lb/>
involved in an American TV se-<lb/>
ries. Certainly one with a large<lb/>
cult-Jike following like 'Star<lb/>
Trek<lb/>
Stewart was vaguely familiar<lb/>
with "Star Trek He sometimes<lb/>
watched it with his children be-<lb/>
tween matinee and evening per<lb/>
formances at the<lb/>
Shakespeare Theater<lb/>
The new "Star Trek" series,<lb/>
launched last September, blasted<lb/>
into orbit in the ratings. It's the<lb/>
He also taches at the University<lb/>
of California at Santa Barbara.<lb/>
Stewart's wife, Sheila Falconer,<lb/>
is a choreographer who staged<lb/>
"The Wizard of Oz" in London. A<lb/>
son is a student at the California<lb/>
Institute for the Arts. A daughter<lb/>
is in school in England.<lb/>
He grew up in Yorkshire, in a<lb/>
Royal town called Mirfield, which sup-<lb/>
ports 12 drama clubs with a popu-<lb/>
Sir Bonehead goes on a quest for six<lb/>
impossible things to do before breakfast<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Qucatcr<lb/>
art school theater department,<lb/>
women's studies stair and the<lb/>
East Carolinian advertising de-<lb/>
partment like me so much they all<lb/>
would send me lots of gifts.<lb/>
I set about at once. Marrying<lb/>
lation of 11,000.<lb/>
"It was a typical mill town with<lb/>
Safari makes 'Cheers' music<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) � Com- music for ABC's "Supercarner '<lb/>
poser Craig Safan was looking for and "Amazing Stories He wrote<lb/>
the right sound to express the music for such TV movies as<lb/>
feeling of NBC's "Cheers "Samaritan: The Mitch Snyder<lb/>
"One of the most important Story "Timeslalkcrs" and "Get-<lb/>
things a film composer does is ting Married and more recently<lb/>
come up with a sound for a proj- the theatrical feature "Stand and<lb/>
ect he said. "Every movie and Deliver<lb/>
television show sounds different.<lb/>
After reading the first script of<lb/>
'Cheers' the sound came to me.<lb/>
"I said I wanted an instrument<lb/>
that sounds like a bar. Jimmy<lb/>
Burrows, who's the director and<lb/>
one of the executive producers<lb/>
suggested a clarinet. Then it came<lb/>
to me: Woody Allen playing the<lb/>
clarinet at 3 a.m. in a bad band. It's<lb/>
not slick. They're not trying to<lb/>
impress anyone. It's just Woody JJSJJfjg<lb/>
Allen and a few guys playing<lb/>
because they love to play<lb/>
Safan writes the background<lb/>
music for "Cheers He did not<lb/>
write the theme song that opens<lb/>
the show.<lb/>
"We do the music for 'Cheers' at<lb/>
a studio said Safan. "I play the<lb/>
You can't write about it unless<lb/>
you live it first So, in order to<lb/>
provide you, the reader, with<lb/>
some humor and enlightenment Ms. Burstyn was probablythe<lb/>
this week, I went on a quest. easiest thing. She'd heard of me<lb/>
This is the story of that quest. It and all it took was a phone call<lb/>
is called, apprpriately "The Quest from my good friend Aim Jiltian<lb/>
for Six Impossible Things To Do to set us up.<lb/>
Before Breakfast The title, for The marriage was finished by<lb/>
the unread in the audience, comes 10 am I was getting hungry, but I<lb/>
uncontrollably and the computer<lb/>
nerd in the second row started<lb/>
' I slipped out among the com-<lb/>
motion and headed for my next<lb/>
feat<lb/>
other two "doo-wah'd" in the<lb/>
background.<lb/>
On the second floor, I found a<lb/>
large Garfield� stuck to the win-<lb/>
dow by those little suction cups<lb/>
Although I was nearly faint from<lb/>
I met Youcia, Chance and Tow- hunger, I managed to violate that<lb/>
anda in Farm Fresh. Yo-Yo was<lb/>
all she had to do was sing, and I<lb/>
wasn't from Dance Party USA.<lb/>
� The other two were eager to go,<lb/>
so we bought them some match-<lb/>
little stuffed pussy cat in 36 differ<lb/>
ent ways, 10 of which are cur-i<lb/>
rently unknown to mankind,<lb/>
even Mickey Rourke<lb/>
The girls sang an upbeat dance<lb/>
number about my latest triumph,<lb/>
est teat before breakfast.<lb/>
Summoning all the various<lb/>
department heads of all the<lb/>
groups that hate me so incredibly<lb/>
much to the conference room of<lb/>
Ordinarilv, Safan records most<lb/>
of his music in the little studio in<lb/>
the converted garage behind his<lb/>
home. He works primarily with<lb/>
electronics, but may find a tune in<lb/>
anything from a plastic water<lb/>
bottle to his son's xylophone.<lb/>
from one of the incredibly helpful resolved not to eat until ML w? " sePxed into a ballad about<lb/>
and informative books in the tasks were completed. But the to Zg!5f �? what was to be my last and great<lb/>
"Hitchiker's Guide To The Gal- nine months neccesary for the talSSf? f? ?Ut<lb/>
axy" series. gestation of our child was u tohttWadKWia.Theaonghada<lb/>
Somewhere in there it says that hard part. 'rSSf611<lb/>
if you've done six impossible Luckily, a head appeared on the lTOfyPwlwiO <lb/>
things before breakfast, why not wall of the chapel as we walked ty l f �venous. "ten<lb/>
ftop it off with dinner at the Res- out It said that he wastheCod of ,�J' : Mendenhall, I asked them nicely<lb/>
taurant at the End of the Universe, contrived plot devices, and he �fc � � NlS� WH5$m. to be my friends. Many blunt ob-<lb/>
Having always wanted to hang would be glad to slip Ellen fc$St4 her oil the cheek �d tok jects sailed across the room, and<lb/>
out at such a happening place, I through a little time warp and get htxT&amp;Hty iofce twmeeafff.The Yo-Yo, ran out, screaming into the<lb/>
figured I'd do the Six Impossible her back by about noon. g�l Wfa&amp; fcsawnfttg and then late afternoon.<lb/>
Things, and some way or another I thanked him for the favor and � about the Joys of father- Chance and Towanda stuck by<lb/>
I'd get to the End of the Universe, jetted back to the Emerald City to aood and the impending doom me, and sang a ditty about my<lb/>
So, before breakfast, I made a start working on my next thing. about to be visited upon the vile courage in facing such over-<lb/>
list of what had to be the most I got to class two minutes late, banking establishment whelming odds alone. But I had<lb/>
impossible tasks I could perform. This in itself was enough to en- IkiiewttiwiAItakealongtime an ace up my sleeve<lb/>
Although daunting, the list rage my prof. But I needed gpn fc pertonally biff everyone who I told the garnered Anti-Boners<lb/>
helped me focus on the job ahead, hopping and skipping about m a worked Mt 1$aehw4a �pe that my infamy was all a sham. I<lb/>
1) Marry Ellen Burstyn so that jolly manner. ; dairy since feefer me Awe In<lb/>
we could have a kid and name it I sent many mental commands GW vflte atone. But I had allot-<lb/>
"Nuts or "Cherry to hinvbut he shrugged them off. ted an hour and a half for it<lb/>
piano.<lb/>
Safan has composed the theme<lb/>
mimic sounds. I used a water<lb/>
bottle for a conga. I recorded it<lb/>
and played it back<lb/>
through the computer. The guiro<lb/>
is a gourd with little ridges you<lb/>
sera pe wi th a piece of wood. I took<lb/>
a lag bolt and scaped wood along<lb/>
the threads and recorded it digi-<lb/>
tally in the Synclavier. You can<lb/>
record every possible sound into<lb/>
the computer. That's how you<lb/>
turn a lag bolt into a percussion<lb/>
instrument<lb/>
2) Drive my teacher so insane Finally, I nesortecMO t� lia<lb/>
that he would begin dancing honored trick of staring Steadily<lb/>
around the class singing, "What a at the clock for the next 30 min-<lb/>
ium, what a cut, stick a finger up utes. <lb/>
your butt" in a loud grating voice. Unable to cope with the fact that<lb/>
3) Hire three black girls to walk hecould ru)tholdmyatte�tion,he<lb/>
around with me andsing about started gibbering wildly, Now,<lb/>
my Bfe as crucial events occurred, with his mental defenses down, tl<lb/>
hist like in "Little Shop of Hor- was easy to hypnotise<lb/>
rors started dancing, and<lb/>
4) Biff the entire staff of around the podium.<lb/>
Wachovia� upside the head. He began singjng, and<lb/>
5) Rape and otherwise degrade hi aims up and "<lb/>
perfectly innocent stuffed ani- students, &amp;t(jj<lb/>
nnal belonging to a fat girl.<lb/>
Andnumhprsixwat-MaVh, horror. One<lb/>
car waa about to be towed<lb/>
told them I spent many nights<lb/>
reading poetry, that I owned a<lb/>
black Siouxie and the Banshees<lb/>
tee shirt, that I felt Sylvia Platri<lb/>
ZS aauLZ goddess and that ALF was<lb/>
���M?t? Weed a bastion for intellectual<lb/>
entranced bjr the gprw nee- hanatm<lb/>
They believed me, and show<lb/>
ered me with money and gifts.<lb/>
So, laden with cash (and a two<lb/>
for one coupon for the Restaurant<lb/>
at the End of the Universe�a gift<lb/>
fromd�ArtSchoolIthink)Itook<lb/>
Charke and Towanda to the Res-<lb/>
taurant for a much needed<lb/>
branch. Ellen met us there, and a<lb/>
Mod time was had by all. And all<lb/>
faore breakfast Imagine that<lb/>
<pb facs="00058079_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
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800<lb/>
890<lb/>
9 80<lb/>
10 90<lb/>
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200<lb/>
LG<lb/>
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950<lb/>
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14 10<lb/>
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25C<lb/>
CAESARS SANOWCHES-<lb/>
Tuna Met<lb/>
Italian Sb<lb/>
Ham and Cheese<lb/>
Vegetarian<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
Tossed<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
Antpasto<lb/>
SM<lb/>
1 19<lb/>
1 39<lb/>
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2 39<lb/>
2 89<lb/>
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2 76<lb/>
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LG<lb/>
3 69<lb/>
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CHOOSE FROM THESE TOPPINGS<lb/>
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CHOOSE FROM THESE TOPP N<lb/>
SPECMLTES<lb/>
Freshly B.ieJ C'azy Bread<lb/>
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GRAND OPENING OF OUR NEW STORE<lb/>
University Square Shopping Center<lb/>
;F.�it Tenth Street at Greenville lUvd.)<lb/>
757-1212<lb/>
AND WE KE ST1LX AT<lb/>
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Whrn won mokp piun this uood oi- just in t �notiqh<lb/>
Open for Lunch at: 11 a.m.<lb/>
wceo<lb/>
'Comics that just get stuck anywhere these people feel like it"<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
Bv FREIDRIC1<lb/>
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Arm Fall-Off Boy<lb/>
Master of the Page TheLyi<lb/>
ATTHCLO&amp;SHMUT, I6UAMA BOY<lb/>
HAS ABUS!<lb/>
J�fT US A NCT&amp;!<lb/>
by Racer X<lb/>
VIHO'S VOLDMps<lb/>
&amp;Jj<lb/>
VILLAINS Of LITTLE<lb/>
OK NO PQveZS<lb/>
Vootie, loyal Fun-N-Gamcs readers. Yes, there's another stupid greeting because noone will send me<lb/>
in any better ones. You'll notice that the column grew a little. Perhaps we will recapture the former<lb/>
glory of having a whole page during the summer! Naahhh.<lb/>
Anyway, we are in for more Armless adventures, bigger than usual! How about that. And you don't<lb/>
pay a damn thing for all this, you lucky souls. Racer X works his fingers to the bone, and who<lb/>
appreciates this? Why, the Arm Fall-Off Boy Fan Club of course!<lb/>
Many of the members have recieved their first club newsletter, and this week we are running an<lb/>
updated roll call for those members who have recently joined. The first meeting of the fan club will be<lb/>
announced soon, during which many important decisions will be made. Or at least the membership will<lb/>
get soused.<lb/>
Hopefully talks will begin soon with WZMB about producing the proposed Arm Fall-Off Boy radio<lb/>
show, making Arm our first bi-media hero. The membership is going to have get behind this, however,<lb/>
to keep up the quality that makes Arm the legend he is. Anyone who wishes to join this prestigious<lb/>
organization, drop off a dollar with your name and phone number attached at the East Carolinian, in<lb/>
care of Jeff Parker. And now, the updated roll call. Vootie.<lb/>
M6ANUHIL6, AT TH� HlD&amp;eM I<lb/>
'HA-HA f IN A ftW HOURS <lb/>
rfc� MIL &amp;ABLS TO teSTRW<lb/>
THE LOSS H OUR tR5At<lb/>
, eN�AieSf(ev�hJ THOUOH<lb/>
' TH�i P0? 'NOM US') ?<lb/>
V<lb/>
V<lb/>
The updated<lb/>
Arm Fall-Off Boy Fan Club<lb/>
Summer 1988<lb/>
Official Lackeys<lb/>
Paul Dunn Sven VanBaars<lb/>
Alex Maiola Jon Jordan<lb/>
Racer X -Creator Stacy Hickman Jennifer Pearson<lb/>
Allan Guy Earlvis Hampton<lb/>
Doug Johnson<lb/>
Steve Reid<lb/>
McKay Sundwall<lb/>
Micah Harris<lb/>
Tom Gurganus<lb/>
Carol Wetherington<lb/>
Jennifer Vandenburg<lb/>
Sharon Goodwin<lb/>
Mur<lb/>
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Clemens <lb/>
Roger CU n<lb/>
and in the<lb/>
Clemc -<lb/>
Award w<lb/>
and nine m<lb/>
as the Yanke -<lb/>
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Uw Mast, said<lb/>
who d cm Mod -<lb/>
had three RBI<lb/>
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: � �<lb/>
Padres<lb/>
coach i<lb/>
Th. -<lb/>
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word- a '<lb/>
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wore I i<lb/>
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first<lb/>
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THE EASTCAROl INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JUNE 15, 1988 Page 9<lb/>
Murphy touted as a defensive specialist<lb/>
By PAUL DUNN<lb/>
SportiWriler<lb/>
Augusl,14,1966 will go down in<lb/>
the history books at East Carolina<lb/>
University. Kenny "Special-K"<lb/>
Murphy was the first born boy of<lb/>
Ann.j R. Murphy. Twenty-one<lb/>
years later, Kenny was to walk<lb/>
onto the ECU court and catch the<lb/>
attention of Coach Mike Steele.<lb/>
Kenny received a challenge in<lb/>
his 11 th grade of high school that<lb/>
would change his direction in life<lb/>
and thus greatly benefit the<lb/>
basketball program and<lb/>
University at East Carolina.<lb/>
Peer pressure from one of<lb/>
Kenny's "homeboys" set up the<lb/>
competition for the two young<lb/>
men to try out for the Northern<lb/>
Durham High School basketball<lb/>
team. (Durham, N.C.) After much<lb/>
hard work and struggle, Kenny<lb/>
made the team by filling in the<lb/>
13th and final spot. Kenny, not<lb/>
only, met the challenge by making<lb/>
the team, but his friend got cut<lb/>
after the first practice.<lb/>
Kenny stated, "Looking back, I<lb/>
really owe that guy a 'thank you'<lb/>
because I would have never tried<lb/>
out for the team without his<lb/>
nagging. I didn't think I was good<lb/>
enough. I was only 5'6" in the 10th<lb/>
grade but I gained a little more<lb/>
confidence in the 11 th grade when<lb/>
I grew 8" in less than a year<lb/>
Near the end of his senior year,<lb/>
Kenny received another big<lb/>
challenge in his basketball career.<lb/>
The starling point guard had been<lb/>
injured and Kenny was required<lb/>
to step in and fill the position. He<lb/>
averaged six points and six assists<lb/>
per game and dominated the<lb/>
defensive end for his high school<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Murphy, by his own admission,<lb/>
didn't turn many heads in high<lb/>
school.<lb/>
The senior season was coming<lb/>
to an end and it was time to make<lb/>
a choice concerning his college<lb/>
plans. Murphy chose to attend<lb/>
college at A&amp;T.<lb/>
Murphy stated, "I was going to<lb/>
try and walk on to the team but<lb/>
then being a freshman, I was<lb/>
hesitant. I decided I would wait a<lb/>
year and play intramurals<lb/>
instead Murphy's team lost only<lb/>
one game that season, and that<lb/>
was the championship game.<lb/>
After a short stay at A&amp;T,<lb/>
Murphy decided it just wasn't the<lb/>
place for him. His college road<lb/>
would now lead him to East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Murphy said, "I chose ECU<lb/>
because someone from A&amp;T had<lb/>
told me that they (ECU) had a J.V.<lb/>
team. I was going to play that for<lb/>
a year then hopefully play with<lb/>
the big boys. I guess they fooled<lb/>
me about the J.V. team Murphy<lb/>
also said, "I had heard that ECU<lb/>
was a really good school<lb/>
academically<lb/>
After becoming a student and<lb/>
finding out that there wasn't a JV<lb/>
program at ECU, Murphy<lb/>
thought his chances of playing<lb/>
college ball were over. Murphy<lb/>
commented, "I never dreamed I<lb/>
would now be playing basketball<lb/>
for ECU<lb/>
Feeling a bit awkward about the<lb/>
mistake of the plan he had laid<lb/>
out, he decided to return to the<lb/>
intramural program. Murphy<lb/>
organized his team, "Get Fresh<lb/>
Crew" and helped lead them to<lb/>
two consecutive All-Campus<lb/>
ECU Intramural Championships.<lb/>
Blue Edwards (senior, ECU<lb/>
Basketball) approached Murphy<lb/>
a while back and told him that a<lb/>
new coach was coming, Mike<lb/>
Steele, and that he should try out<lb/>
fcr the team as a walk-on.<lb/>
Murphy s?.id, "I decided to give<lb/>
it a try. I was a nervous wreck, at<lb/>
first, until Coach Dan Bell<lb/>
(Assistant Coach) told me to chill<lb/>
out. Coach Bell came to me later<lb/>
and told me again to relax because<lb/>
I was going to be part of the team.<lb/>
I couldn't wait to call my mother<lb/>
and tell her the news. I owe it all to<lb/>
my mother. I LOVE THAT<lb/>
LADY<lb/>
Murphy also stated "My entire<lb/>
family has been supportive &amp; the<lb/>
coaching staff is like my second<lb/>
family. Coach Steele is a tough but<lb/>
caring man. With him, you get the<lb/>
entire package. He wants you to<lb/>
Clemens stunned by NY Yanks<lb/>
The New York Yankees beat<lb/>
Roger Clemens on the ground<lb/>
and in the air.<lb/>
Clemens, a two-time Cy Young<lb/>
Award winner, gave up 15 hits<lb/>
and nine runs, both career highs,<lb/>
as the Yankees defeated the Bos-<lb/>
ton Red Sox 12-6 Monday night.<lb/>
Nine of the 15 hits were ground-<lb/>
ball singles. Clemens also gave up<lb/>
Jack Clark's three-run homer.<lb/>
"We got bloops, choppers and<lb/>
�. tUe blast said Dave Winfieid,<lb/>
who doubled, singled twice and<lb/>
had three RBI. "Maybe he was<lb/>
missing one mile-an-hour on his<lb/>
fastball. Those things happen, but<lb/>
he's still the best pitcher in the<lb/>
league<lb/>
Elsewhere, it was Baltimore 6,<lb/>
Detroit 4; Cleveland 8, Toronto 6;<lb/>
Chicago 4, Minnesota 1; Milwau-<lb/>
kee 3, Seattle 1, and Kansas City 5,<lb/>
California 3.<lb/>
Clemens started the game with<lb/>
a league-leading 1.82 earned run<lb/>
average and left with a 2.37 mark.<lb/>
He struck out five, raising his<lb/>
major league-leading total to 140.<lb/>
It was the right-hander's third<lb/>
consecutive home loss.<lb/>
'The guys scored some runs. I<lb/>
just didn't do my job siad Qe-<lb/>
YTiefis, who pitched 6 2-3trtnings.<lb/>
"I didn't have velocity, move-<lb/>
ment or location. Those are three<lb/>
things needed to win<lb/>
Rafael Santana led an 18-hit at-<lb/>
tack with three singles and his<lb/>
second homer, a three-run shot in<lb/>
the ninth. Jose Cruz and Claudcll<lb/>
Washington had three hits each.<lb/>
Okay, let's face it. Summer school is a pain. You know it. I know it. And fortunately for us, the Intramura.<lb/>
Recreations Service (IRS) knows it, too That's why they have slated an exciting and fun-filled variety of<lb/>
events for the up-coming summer session.<lb/>
You can choose from any of the following events:<lb/>
EVENT REGISTRATION DATES<lb/>
Softball June 29,4pm<lb/>
Co-Rec Water Polo July 6,4pm<lb/>
Golf Classic July 11,4pm<lb/>
Freethrow Contest July 18,4pm<lb/>
5k WalkRun July 20,4pm<lb/>
The IRS will also offer students a chance to enjoy the great outdoors, sponsoring a backpacking excursion<lb/>
(Registration June 22-July 5), a canoe outting (Registration June 22-July 12), and a hang gliding trip<lb/>
(Registration June 22-Julyl2).<lb/>
Registration for all of the events will be held in Memorial Gym 102.<lb/>
For more information contact the IRS offices at 757-6443.<lb/>
Padres doing good deeds, playing well for new head<lb/>
coach and manager McKeon; 10 out of 16 games<lb/>
The San Diego Padres can't<lb/>
explain the difference since Jack<lb/>
McKeon took over as manager in<lb/>
words, so they're doing it in<lb/>
deeds.<lb/>
When Larry Bowa was fired as<lb/>
manager on May 28, the Padres<lb/>
were 16-30 and 11 12 games<lb/>
behind first-place Los Angeles in<lb/>
the National League West.<lb/>
McKeon, who also is the team's<lb/>
general manager, has won 10 of 16<lb/>
since taking over and has moved<lb/>
the Padres within eight games of<lb/>
first.<lb/>
The Padres followed their<lb/>
three-game sweep of the Dodgers<lb/>
over the weekend with a 7-3 vic-<lb/>
tory over the San Francisco Giants<lb/>
on Monday night at Jack Murphy<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
Mark Davis preserved Eric<lb/>
Show's victory with his 10th save<lb/>
in 10 opportunities and also hit a<lb/>
two-run homer.<lb/>
"I haven't changed my style<lb/>
and the club hasn't changed since<lb/>
Jack took over Davis said.<lb/>
"Larry used me and Jack's using<lb/>
me. Essentially that's all I ask.<lb/>
We're just doing the little things<lb/>
better<lb/>
Elsewhere in the NL, it was<lb/>
Pittsburgh 8, Chicago 0; Philadel-<lb/>
phia 5, Montreal 2; Houston 6,<lb/>
Atlanta 5; and New York 2, St.<lb/>
Louis 1 in 12 innings. Los Angeles<lb/>
and Cincinnati were not sched-<lb/>
uled.<lb/>
The Padres beat Mike Krukow<lb/>
despite the right-hander's fifth<lb/>
career homer, a one-out shot off<lb/>
Show in the third. Show, 5-6,<lb/>
pitched 7 2-3 innings and allowed<lb/>
four hits before giving way to<lb/>
Davis.<lb/>
Leading 5-3 in thrt eighth, Tim<lb/>
Flannery walked d two outs<lb/>
later Davis hit his first major-<lb/>
league homer.<lb/>
With the score tied 2-2, Roberto<lb/>
Alomar led off the bottom of the<lb/>
third with his fifth homer. The<lb/>
Padres added two more in the<lb/>
fifth on Carmelo Martinez's two-<lb/>
run double.<lb/>
The Giants took a 1-0 lead in the<lb/>
first on Will Clark's 16th homer,<lb/>
but the Padres came back to take a<lb/>
2-1 advantage in the second.<lb/>
Keith Moreland, Martinez and<lb/>
Flannery hit consecutive singles<lb/>
for one run, and Martinez scored<lb/>
the second run of the inning when<lb/>
shortstop Matt Williams bobbled<lb/>
Dickie Thon's grounder.<lb/>
Pirates 8, Cubs 0<lb/>
Bob Walk continued his pitch-<lb/>
ing mastery over Chicago and<lb/>
Bobby Bonilla and Barry Bonds<lb/>
each hit their 14th home run as<lb/>
Pittsburgh defeated the Cubs at<lb/>
Wrigley Field.<lb/>
Walk, 7-4, pitched his first<lb/>
complete game and shutout of the<lb/>
season despite a 15-mph wind<lb/>
blowing out. He allowed eight<lb/>
hits, struck out five and walked<lb/>
four.<lb/>
Phillies 5, Expos 2<lb/>
Chris James, Luis Guayo and<lb/>
Mike Young each hit solo home<lb/>
runs as Philadelphia beat Mon-<lb/>
treal at Veterans Stadium and<lb/>
snapped the Expos' four-game<lb/>
winning streak.<lb/>
Shane Rawley, 5-6, pitched a<lb/>
seven-hitter and struck out seven.<lb/>
Hubie Brooks had three hits for<lb/>
the Expos, including the 1,000th<lb/>
of his career.<lb/>
Astros 6, Braves 5<lb/>
Denny Walling's eighth-inning<lb/>
single scored Kevin Bass from<lb/>
second base to break a 5-5 tie as<lb/>
Houston beat Atlanta at the As-<lb/>
trodome.<lb/>
Juan Agosto, 3-0, got the victory<lb/>
with one inning of relief. Nolan<lb/>
Ryan started for the Astros and<lb/>
struck out eight in seven innings<lb/>
Jo regain the NL lead from team-<lb/>
mate Mike Scott. Ryan has 97 and<lb/>
Scott is second with 96.<lb/>
Mets 2, Cardinals 1<lb/>
Switch-hitter Lee Mazzilli<lb/>
broke an 0-for-13 slump as a right-<lb/>
handed hitter when he singled<lb/>
home the winning run in the 12<lb/>
inning to lift New York over visit-<lb/>
ing St. Louis and snap the Mets'<lb/>
five-game losing streak.<lb/>
Mazzilli bounced a single over<lb/>
charging third baseman Tom<lb/>
Lawless that easily scored How-<lb/>
ard Johnson from second base<lb/>
with none out.<lb/>
Starter Larry McWilliams of the<lb/>
Cardinals and David Cone of the<lb/>
Mets were brilliant, yet neither<lb/>
got a decision. Cone and winner<lb/>
Rany Myers combined to hold the<lb/>
Cardinals to just one hit.<lb/>
excel academically as well as<lb/>
athletically<lb/>
"Winning the CAA<lb/>
Championship is the team goal,<lb/>
and my personal goal is to be the<lb/>
best defensive player on the<lb/>
team stated Murphy.<lb/>
The 6-3,170 lb. senior forward is<lb/>
excited about the 1988-89 season.<lb/>
The one game he can not wait to<lb/>
play is the home game this season<lb/>
against James Madison. "I<lb/>
especially want that game<lb/>
becair of lefty Driesell. That<lb/>
man w i ten k k king a job, said he<lb/>
didn t want to come to ECU<lb/>
because we wouldn't leave the<lb/>
"too strong" CAA Conference.<lb/>
Now the man has gone to James<lb/>
Madison, which is in the same<lb/>
conference. That night is going to<lb/>
be even more special for the fans<lb/>
Murphy said, "t knew I could<lb/>
play, but I didn't know I could<lb/>
start. Now, I have earned a<lb/>
scnolarshipand that will help out<lb/>
me and my family. Mom told me<lb/>
to never give up. She said as long<lb/>
as I try as hard as I can and put<lb/>
forth my best effort, good things<lb/>
will happen<lb/>
Wallace takes<lb/>
Riverside win<lb/>
DAYTONA BEACH, Ha. (A<lb/>
� Rusty Wallace used his victory<lb/>
in Sunday's stock-car race at Riv-<lb/>
erside (Calif.) International Race-<lb/>
way to ease past Dale Earnhardt<lb/>
and take a four-point lead in the<lb/>
NASCAR Winston Cup stand-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
Wallace's edge, 1790-1786, is<lb/>
the closest in NASCAR history<lb/>
after the first 12 races of a season.<lb/>
Previously, that distinction had<lb/>
belonged to Bobby Allison's 30-<lb/>
poini lead over Darrell Waltrip<lb/>
after the first dozen runs in 1979.<lb/>
"The lead is the lead, and it sure<lb/>
beats anything else there is<lb/>
Wallace said after Sunday's<lb/>
Budweiser 400. "But as close as it<lb/>
is, it's not going to change our<lb/>
strategy by any means. Look what<lb/>
happened in 1979<lb/>
Richard Petty, who trailed by<lb/>
199 pointsafter the first 12 racesof<lb/>
the 1979 season, came back to win<lb/>
the Winston Cup championship<lb/>
that season. This year, six drivers<lb/>
are within 182 points of first place.<lb/>
Terry Labonte moved into the<lb/>
third in the Winston Cup stand-<lb/>
ings with 1,702 points, followed<lb/>
byBillP'i, rt 56;St '<lb/>
lin, l,b7; Allison, l,ouo, Ken<lb/>
Schrader, 1,531; Bobby Hillin,<lb/>
1,478; Geoff Bodine, 1,474; and<lb/>
Phil Parsons. 1 46Q.<lb/>
The Sunday victory was<lb/>
Wallace's first of the year and<lb/>
made him the ninth different win-<lb/>
ner this season. The modem day<lb/>
Winston Cup record is 13 differ-<lb/>
ent winners in a season, while the<lb/>
all-time record is 16 different win-<lb/>
ners.<lb/>
Labonte leads the circuit in<lb/>
money-winnings with $476,910,<lb/>
followed by Earnhardt ($433,895);<lb/>
Davey Allison ($405,375); Bobbv<lb/>
Allison ($398,990); Elliott<lb/>
($323,525); Waltrip ($316,360);<lb/>
Marlin ($267,475); Neil Bonnett<lb/>
($256, 710); and Pasons<lb/>
($250,760).<lb/>
The tour next moves to Pocono<lb/>
(Pa.) International Raceway for<lb/>
Sunday's 500-mile run. Qualify-<lb/>
ing for the 500-mile race at the 25-<lb/>
mile triangular-shaped track is<lb/>
scheduled Friday.<lb/>
Following Pocono, the Winston<lb/>
Cup teams move to Michigan In-<lb/>
ternational Speedway for a 400<lb/>
miler, then to Daytona Interna-<lb/>
tional Speedway for the Fire-<lb/>
cracker 400.<lb/>
Sunday's race in Pocono will be<lb/>
sponsored by Miller High Life.<lb/>
Hornets win toss to assure getting 8th pick<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) � The Char-<lb/>
lotte Hornets selected the eighth<lb/>
pick in the regular NBA draft June<lb/>
28 by winning a coin toss at the<lb/>
commissioner's office Monday.<lb/>
The Miami Heat, losers in the<lb/>
coin flip, will pick first in the ex-<lb/>
pansion draft and ninth in the<lb/>
regular draft.<lb/>
As the winner of the toss, Char-<lb/>
lotte had the option of the eighth<lb/>
pick in the college draft or No. 1<lb/>
choice in the expansion draft.<lb/>
Hornet vice president and gen-<lb/>
eral manager Carl Scheer said the<lb/>
decision was influenced by their<lb/>
philosophy to "build a young<lb/>
team through the college draft<lb/>
The ceremony, which took<lb/>
under two minutes, was decid-<lb/>
edly downscale in comparison to<lb/>
the NBA draft and draft lottery,<lb/>
which are broadcast live on televi-<lb/>
sion. Miami Heat managing part-<lb/>
ner Lewis Schaffel explained the<lb/>
lack of hype by comparing the<lb/>
coin toss to the lotteries which de-<lb/>
termined the rights to Patrick<lb/>
Ewing and David Robinson.<lb/>
The first seven picks for the<lb/>
college draft were determined<lb/>
May 21 by a lottery among the<lb/>
teams that didn't make the play-<lb/>
offs. After Charlotte and Miami,<lb/>
the 10th through 25th choices will<lb/>
be made in reverse order of the<lb/>
teams' regular-season records.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058079_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
IUNE15.1988<lb/>
Williams short of 20<lb/>
player of the year in North Caro-<lb/>
lina last season, averaged 31<lb/>
points and 12 rebounds.<lb/>
Williams's troubles in the class-<lb/>
room began in his sophomore<lb/>
year at Northeastern. He decided<lb/>
to transfer to Fork Union Military<lb/>
Academy in Virginia for his junior<lb/>
year, saying the disciplined at-<lb/>
moshpere would improve his<lb/>
study habits.<lb/>
Officials said Williams did<lb/>
improve in prep school, but his<lb/>
performance slipped when he<lb/>
returned to Elizabeth City for his<lb/>
senior year.<lb/>
Williams has been trying un-<lb/>
successfully to reach 700 on the<lb/>
Scholastic Aptitude Test � the<lb/>
minimum score for freshman eli-<lb/>
gibility in college as set by the<lb/>
NCAA. North Carolina Coach<lb/>
Dean Smith has said he would ask<lb/>
the UNC Board of Admissions to<lb/>
admit Williams as an exception if<lb/>
the recruit failed to make the 700<lb/>
score.<lb/>
W1NSTON-SALEM (AP) �<lb/>
Kenny Williams, this year's top<lb/>
basketball recruit at North Caro-<lb/>
lina, did not graduate last week<lb/>
with his high school class.<lb/>
Williams, a 6-9 forward from<lb/>
Elizabeth City, did not have the 20<lb/>
credits required for graduation by<lb/>
the North Carolina Board of Edu-<lb/>
cation and is considered to still be<lb/>
a senior at Northeastern High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
Carl Harris, basketball coach at<lb/>
Northeastern, said, "Kenny did<lb/>
not meet the criteria for gradu-<lb/>
ation. He came close, but he just<lb/>
didn't have enough credits<lb/>
Harris said he could not say<lb/>
how much work Williams needs<lb/>
to earn a diploma. The Williams<lb/>
family has asked that no other<lb/>
information be released, Harris<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Harris said published reports<lb/>
that Williams failed the state corn-<lb/>
potency test required for gradu-<lb/>
ation were not true.<lb/>
Williams, The Associated Tress<lb/>
Brown leaves Kansas to take<lb/>
head coach postion for Spurs<lb/>
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) - statement released through the<lb/>
Larry Brown has resigned as school's sports information office.<lb/>
Kansas basketball coach to be- "And it was a very difficult dcci-<lb/>
come head coach of the San Anto- sion to leave. I can't believe that<lb/>
nio Spurs of the NBA, the univer- �Y collc8c coach in thc country<lb/>
sitv announced Monday. has a bcttcr situation than I did at<lb/>
Brown, 47, guided the fay- KU- And lm S?"1' �� ?<lb/>
hawks to thc NCAA college bas-<lb/>
ketball championship this past<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Media reports in San Antonio<lb/>
have said Brown was offered a<lb/>
S3.5 million, five-year contract.<lb/>
"Kansas has been a very special<lb/>
place to inc Brown said in a<lb/>
and the chancellor for that<lb/>
'The offer at San Antonio was<lb/>
simply a once-in-a-lifctime op-<lb/>
portunity which I couldn't turn<lb/>
down Brown said in the state-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Chaney named as head coach<lb/>
of NBA fs Houston Rockets<lb/>
HOUSTON (AP) � Don<lb/>
Chaney, chosen for his ability to<lb/>
communicate with his players,<lb/>
was named head coach of the<lb/>
1 louston Rockets on Monday.<lb/>
Chaney, a former University of<lb/>
Rouge, La. to team with Elvin<lb/>
Haves and lead the Houston Cou-<lb/>
J<lb/>
gars to the NCAA College Einal<lb/>
Four two straight vears, the last in<lb/>
1968.<lb/>
Chancy played for the Boston<lb/>
Celtics in the NBA and was head<lb/>
Houston player and former head<lb/>
coach of the Los Angeles Clip- coachof the Los Angeles Clippers<lb/>
was the early favorite to and had two assistant coach as-<lb/>
pers,<lb/>
replace Bill Fitch, fired June 6 after<lb/>
five seasons with thc Rockets.<lb/>
"It's a dream come true<lb/>
Chaney said.<lb/>
Rockets general manager Ray<lb/>
Patterson said Chaney had the<lb/>
qualities to fit the Rockets' needs.<lb/>
Chaney, the eighth coach in the<lb/>
21-year history of the franchise,<lb/>
signed a multi-year contract.<lb/>
Chanev rame out of Baton<lb/>
signments with the Detroit Pis-<lb/>
tons and this season with the At-<lb/>
lanta Hawks.<lb/>
The Rockets hope Chaney's<lb/>
skills as a communicator will<lb/>
soothe angry feelings created by<lb/>
last season's turmoil.<lb/>
The Rockets finished last season<lb/>
with a 15-17 record over their final<lb/>
32 games and lost three of four<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>