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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058084_0001"/>
COMING NEXT WEEK:<lb/>
We wind up the summer session with our last paper.<lb/>
Be here for the end of summer issue, with special<lb/>
features in news, entertainment and sports.<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
ECU Summer Theater's third production still<lb/>
lacks Broadway finesse, see page 7.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Profile on basketball star Reed Lose, see page 9.<lb/>
QUre i:aHt (Earoltman<lb/>
Vol. 63 o. 10<lb/>
Wednesday, July 20,1988<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Dr. Mever retires,<lb/>
remembers ECU<lb/>
By Cl A DEANHARDT<lb/>
General Manager<lb/>
Sitting behind Ins temporal)<lb/>
 in 111 Ragsdalc, Dr. Elmer<lb/>
t r looks like a man about to<lb/>
11 L .<lb/>
Meyer is dressed in slacks and<lb/>
a short sleeve button-down. Cone<lb/>
is the suit and tie that formerly ac-<lb/>
? ipanicd a visit to his office in<lb/>
' .hard Building. Still til<lb/>
is that indefatiguable<lb/>
liich has become a much a<lb/>
?: !e or as he is of the uni-<lb/>
ty. Students know him bo-<lb/>
use i that pipe, which he often<lb/>
carries clinched in the left side of<lb/>
ith as he walks the univer-<lb/>
 roui ds.<lb/>
i fl ice in Ragsdalc is<lb/>
M  r s temporary headquai I<lb/>
he officially leaves the ui<lb/>
. rsit on August 18. He moved<lb/>
Alfred<lb/>
ias the<lb/>
ncellor for stud<lb/>
there<lb/>
V ' ,1.1-<lb/>
W when Dr.<lb/>
can !iis dutic<lb/>
vr na;<lb/>
tried to make tl<lb/>
:? e as v mfortable as possible,<lb/>
 painl ngs by his wife lining<lb/>
 . ' isidea painti i I i<lb/>
Viim vvhon Vie ett Wisconsin for<lb/>
(<lb/>
ell University main- years<lb/>
The theme of the painting,<lb/>
h is also a parallel for the<lb/>
s I il sophies, is "Students<lb/>
ink for themselves '<lb/>
nts have been the m<lb/>
? Meyer's career since he<lb/>
masanadmissii mscoun-<lb/>
at Carroll College in Febru-<lb/>
I 50 1 le later worked for the<lb/>
room he's going to be happier in<lb/>
the classroom<lb/>
Meyer says his goals for his<lb/>
new job were originally geared to-<lb/>
ward getting the department or-<lb/>
ganized and molding the depart-<lb/>
ments into a corporate whole.<lb/>
"The kev for me all these years<lb/>
lias been maintaining flexibility<lb/>
and responsiveness to student<lb/>
nee Is lie sa) s.<lb/>
? ? nt division<lb/>
i I student life sex nencompassed<lb/>
from the intramural<lb/>
leparl nl to public safety to<lb/>
dining services. Meyer had to face<lb/>
the problem of organizing all<lb/>
those different interests into one<lb/>
division, and then managing<lb/>
them properly to insure that stu-<lb/>
dent services would grow and<lb/>
? ind with the university.<lb/>
" lhev didn't have staff meet-<lb/>
ings, so we started staff meetings.<lb/>
They didn't have budgets. We<lb/>
made sure each department de-<lb/>
veloped their own budget. It was<lb/>
a bottom up approach rather than<lb/>
a t. ?p dow n Meyer sa) s.<lb/>
M yer says they also began<lb/>
 nutcs from staff'<lb/>
See MEYER, p.igc 2<lb/>
Smith to become<lb/>
vice-chancellor<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
Staff Wnier<lb/>
The first assistant vice chancel-<lb/>
lor for student life and minority<lb/>
affairs will join the administrative<lb/>
staff oi ECU on August 15, 1988.<lb/>
Dr. Larry T. Smith comes to<lb/>
ECU from a post as associate dean<lb/>
of students for programs and ac-<lb/>
tivities and director of minority<lb/>
affairs at Knox College in<lb/>
C lalesburg, Illinois.<lb/>
Smith has a PhD in higher<lb/>
education administration and<lb/>
supervision, which he received<lb/>
from Howling Creen State L'ni-<lb/>
versitv in Ohio. He received his<lb/>
"We are delighted to have a<lb/>
person of Dr. Smith's caliber and<lb/>
credentials become our first assis-<lb/>
tant vice chancellor and director<lb/>
of minority affairs Meyers ? id.<lb/>
Meyer headed a search<lb/>
committee which conducted a<lb/>
national search to fill the new<lb/>
position.<lb/>
"It (the position) will involve<lb/>
I v I pment of programs and<lb/>
activities of interest to minority<lb/>
students bv advising student or-<lb/>
ganizations and assisting with<lb/>
student arientation Meyer said<lb/>
He added, "Smith will also<lb/>
dcvclopa peer mentor program at<lb/>
Dr. Elmer Mever retires this month from his post of vice chancell-<lb/>
or of student life which he has held since 1979. (Photo by Kllen<lb/>
Murph)?Photolab).<lb/>
master's degree in college student ECU and work with university<lb/>
personnel from Bowling Green.<lb/>
1 le later held a teaching fellow-<lb/>
ship and a graduate assistants<lb/>
post in the office of the vice presi-<lb/>
dent for student affairs and devel-<lb/>
opment at Bowling Green.<lb/>
Smith is a 1978 cum laude<lb/>
undergraduate in English from<lb/>
Johnson C. Smith University, in<lb/>
Charlotte.<lb/>
Smith's appointment as ECL"s<lb/>
assistant vice chancellor for stu-<lb/>
dent life and minority affairs was<lb/>
announced by Dr. Elmer E. Meyer<lb/>
jr retiring vice chancellor for<lb/>
student life.<lb/>
committees on matters of minor-<lb/>
it)- student life and support serv-<lb/>
ices<lb/>
The following is a question and<lb/>
answer session with Dr. Larry T.<lb/>
Smith, the first vice chancellor of<lb/>
minority affairs.<lb/>
Trustees elect chair, pass drug policy, hike fines<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
i?i 1 .i,tir<lb/>
ECL 's Board i'i Trustees<lb/>
elected a new chairman, adopted<lb/>
a new drug policy nd raised<lb/>
 of Wisconsin system parking fines in Friday's meeting<lb/>
Cornell University be- on campus.<lb/>
just, Max oyncr Sr a Greenville<lb/>
?rncll<lb/>
to ECL<lb/>
tees also passed a new parking<lb/>
 iolation for illegal parking on a<lb/>
private lot - a fine of $15.<lb/>
Joyner, a 1956 ECU graduate<lb/>
from the business school, has a<lb/>
been a member of the trustees<lb/>
since a 1985 appointment by Gov.<lb/>
Jim Martin. I le is a former presi-<lb/>
dent of Pirate Club and the<lb/>
In<lb/>
throne,<lb/>
i:<lb/>
CU<lb/>
games. It will be the largest struc-<lb/>
ture east oi Raleigh according to<lb/>
Joyner who said, "Presently we<lb/>
don't have a building oi this<lb/>
magnitude in eastern North Caro-<lb/>
lina<lb/>
Tlie UNC mandated drug<lb/>
policy requires each of the 16<lb/>
UNC institutions to implement<lb/>
for a period to be determined<lb/>
individually. During probation,<lb/>
the offender must submit to a<lb/>
drug education and counseling<lb/>
program, complete a term oi<lb/>
community service and consent<lb/>
to regular drug testing.<lb/>
Second offenders oi drug pos-<lb/>
session will be expelled and ic-<lb/>
was going<lb/>
massive institutional<lb/>
. Then Chancellor, Tho-<lb/>
?wcr was making struc-<lb/>
busincssman, replaces Thomas<lb/>
Bennett as chairman after his one Alumni Association as well as a programs to educate, counsel and ulty and staff will be discharged<lb/>
year term expired. member of ECU Foundations, rehabilitate students, faculty and from their jobs.<lb/>
Trustees voted to accept the Joyner is presently on the BT&amp;T staff affected by drug abuse. The<lb/>
L NC's Board oi Governors drug Leadership board. police also takes a strict stand on<lb/>
rural changes to the university's policv which sets new penalities Planning for the future, Joyner trafficking and possession of ille-<lb/>
administrative system. Part of for drug possession, drug testing said the trustees will be studying gal drugs by students, faculty and<lb/>
s included th requirements and improvements possible locations for a new re- staff.<lb/>
in substance abuse education. gional center as soon as the fund- The trafficking penalization is<lb/>
Violators of campus parking ing for the land is allocated. Two broken into two drug groups.<lb/>
weeks ago, the N.C. Assembly Students convicted of peddling<lb/>
passed a $500,000 funding meas- heroin, mescaline, cocaine, am<lb/>
Q: What is your impression of<lb/>
ECU?<lb/>
A: The atmosphere of the uni-<lb/>
versity seems to be warm and<lb/>
open to the idea of establishing an<lb/>
office of minoritv affairs. An at-<lb/>
mosphere like ECU isa promising<lb/>
environment for this type of pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Q: What convinced you to ac-<lb/>
cept this position?<lb/>
A: It was the university's atti-<lb/>
tude, and care that it seems to<lb/>
have for its students, and their<lb/>
needs. I can build on that type of<lb/>
excitement.<lb/>
Q: Did you observe any posi-<lb/>
tive things about student life ac-<lb/>
tivities andor the administrative<lb/>
awareness of student life acitivi<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
A: Yes. It is evident to me that,<lb/>
East Carolina University sees that<lb/>
the area of minority students<lb/>
n ol the Division oi Student<lb/>
I ife, which every other major<lb/>
university in the state had already<lb/>
I nc Meyer has been the only<lb/>
r I be vice-chancellor of that<lb/>
It (the change) brought to-<lb/>
icr all those units that are<lb/>
"crncd v. ith the non-academic<lb/>
: lent Meyer saysas<lb/>
?mpties and refills one of two<lb/>
-desk. "And if the stu-<lb/>
happier outside the class-<lb/>
restrictions will have to pay ap-<lb/>
proximately twice oi existing<lb/>
fines in the fall semester. Over-<lb/>
time parking violations were<lb/>
raised from $2 to $5 while fines for<lb/>
parking outside of a permitted<lb/>
area jnd littering were hiked from<lb/>
$5 to $10.<lb/>
Violations for parking a unreg-<lb/>
istered vehicile on campus were<lb/>
d( uibled from10 to $20. The trus-<lb/>
ure which will allow the trustees phetamine, methaqualine will be in support of the measure<lb/>
to purchase the necessary land for<lb/>
the center.<lb/>
Speaking of the regional cen-<lb/>
ter, Joyner said the trustees will be<lb/>
acting "in the very near future<lb/>
Joyner said the center would be<lb/>
able to house 10,000 people for<lb/>
conventions and ECU basketball<lb/>
Fire rages at apartments<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
News I J itur<lb/>
Faulty wiring is the possible<lb/>
 e of a tire at an Greenville<lb/>
irtment complex which de-<lb/>
 yi ! eight units, left several<lb/>
tudents homeless and inju-<lb/>
? ? c tennant Friday, officials<lb/>
: M mday.<lb/>
( ne of the building's resi<lb/>
?  William Slade, was treated<lb/>
ii I r leased Friday from Pitt<lb/>
I iunty Memorial Hospitial f r<lb/>
tment of fM'c burns. Slade<lb/>
rred the burns when he<lb/>
ki? ked down the door of his burn<lb/>
ing apartment in attempts to save<lb/>
ins di .?<lb/>
Walking around the burnt car-<lb/>
iss "i building C at Langston<lb/>
' ii V apartments Monday, city<lb/>
and state inspectors said they<lb/>
have ruled out the possibility of<lb/>
n as the cause of the fire.<lb/>
After the investigation Cliff<lb/>
Wetherington of the Greenville<lb/>
11 Department said, "There is<lb/>
no indication that the fire was<lb/>
intentionally set, while possible<lb/>
trical failure may be the cause<lb/>
but not definitely<lb/>
Fire officials say they respon-<lb/>
sed to a 6:()7 p.m. call Friday at the<lb/>
apartments located off of Stancil<lb/>
Drive. Fire fighters from Eastern<lb/>
Pines and Wintervilie were called<lb/>
to assist Greenville personnel<lb/>
because ot the intense heat, ac-<lb/>
cording to Captain James Tyndell<lb/>
of the Greenville Fire Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Wetherineton said the fire<lb/>
But on his return trip from the<lb/>
grocery store he saw smoke bil-<lb/>
lowing high in the sky. "I wasn't<lb/>
gone longer than 15 minutes and<lb/>
C was ablaze all the way to the<lb/>
roof Patterson said.<lb/>
Eyewitness Britton Bvrd said<lb/>
the fire raged quickly on the ply-<lb/>
wood exterior of the building. "I<lb/>
walked outside about 6 p.m. and<lb/>
expelled from school which tac-<lb/>
ulty and staff members will be<lb/>
discharged from their jobs.<lb/>
For the first offense oi traffick-<lb/>
ing, marijuana, pentobarbital<lb/>
codeine the minium penalty will<lb/>
be suspension from school or<lb/>
employment for one semester or<lb/>
its equivalent.<lb/>
First time offenders on charges<lb/>
of illegal drug possession will be<lb/>
suspended for one semester. Fol-<lb/>
lowing the first offense, the per-<lb/>
son will be placed on probation<lb/>
Joyner agreed with the new-<lb/>
drug policy because it is compa-<lb/>
rable to policies in the real world.<lb/>
"When a student graduates from<lb/>
ECU, they will have to be tested in growth can be strengthened. So,<lb/>
the work place Joyner said. they look the initiative, without<lb/>
The trustee's adoption of the the students having to demand<lb/>
drug policy comes five months that they (ECU) do something to<lb/>
after the SG A passed a resolution help improve racial awareness for<lb/>
students, faculty, towns-people,<lb/>
and the community.<lb/>
Q: Do you have any sugges-<lb/>
tions that could improve student<lb/>
life activities and or minority- af-<lb/>
fairs at ECU?<lb/>
A: I have gotten the impression<lb/>
from some of the students that 1<lb/>
In other business, the trustees<lb/>
named James Hailock the new<lb/>
dean of the ECU school of Medi-<lb/>
cine. Hailock replaces retiring<lb/>
William Laupus as dean. Hailock<lb/>
is presently with the All<lb/>
Children's Hospitial for the Col<lb/>
lege oi Medicine at St. Peterburg have spoken too that, white and<lb/>
Fla. black leaders on ECU's campus<lb/>
Also, SGA president Larry do not work together. I would like<lb/>
Murphy took oath on the board, to get te student leaders and<lb/>
The SGA president is tradition- members of these groups to work<lb/>
n .i r-tTr, j (t ?, together, to achieve meaningful<lb/>
ally on the ECU Board of Trustees. qq<lb/>
started in the wall ceiling of the the fire burned fast, really fast,<lb/>
kitchen area of apartment C-17 Byrd said<lb/>
and quickly spread to the adjoin-<lb/>
ing units. Fire officials estimate<lb/>
the blaze caused $200,000 in prop-<lb/>
erty l(sS.<lb/>
Wetherington said the fire<lb/>
spread in the span of 15 minutes,<lb/>
engulfing the entire building. He<lb/>
said the start of the fire's spread<lb/>
was probably undetectable be-<lb/>
cause it was sparked in the wall<lb/>
and ceiling.<lb/>
Eyewitness James F. Patterson<lb/>
Jr who lives in complex F, said he<lb/>
drove bv complex C at approxi-<lb/>
mately 550 p.m. and saw no indi-<lb/>
cation of a fire. "1 didn't see any<lb/>
smoke, nor smell any Patterson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to The Daily Re-<lb/>
flector, residents Tom Staple,<lb/>
Brian Freeze and Chris San-<lb/>
tevsanio jumped to safety from<lb/>
the balconies of their second story<lb/>
apartments.<lb/>
Tyndell said fire units stayed<lb/>
at the scene until early Saturday<lb/>
morning to dounce the smoulder-<lb/>
ing remains. "An unit was there<lb/>
all night to stop hot spots caused<lb/>
by falling debris from flaring up<lb/>
Tyndell said.<lb/>
An inspector from the State<lb/>
Bureau of Investigation said the<lb/>
investigation is over. "We are<lb/>
pretty much through. We don't<lb/>
deal with the fire codes, just the<lb/>
intent of fire<lb/>
Because of the extreme heat of Friday's fire at one of the Langston Park Apartment buildings, fire<lb/>
personnel from area departments were called in to assist the Greenville Fire Department. Inspectors say<lb/>
faulty electrical wiring may have caused the blaze. (Photo by Ellen Murphy?Photolab).<lb/>
<pb facs="00058084_0002"/><lb/>
COMING NEXT WEEK:<lb/>
We wind up the summer session with our last paper.<lb/>
Be here for the end of summer issue, with special<lb/>
features in news, entertainment and sports.<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
ECU Summer Theater's third production still<lb/>
lacks Broadway finesse, see page 7.<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Profile on basketball star Reed tosc, see page 9,<lb/>
Mt<lb/>
Ularulintan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol.63 No. 10<lb/>
Wednesday, July 20,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Dr. Meyer retires,<lb/>
remembers ECU<lb/>
By CLAY DEANHARDT room he's going to be happier in<lb/>
General Manager the ClaSSrOOm<lb/>
Sitting behind his temporary Meyer says his goals for his<lb/>
desk in 111 Ragsdale, Dr. Elmer new job were originally geared to-<lb/>
Meyer looks like a man about to ward getting the department or-<lb/>
retire. ganized and molding the depart-<lb/>
Mcycr is dressed in slacks and ments into a corporate whole,<lb/>
a short sleeve button-down. Gone "The key for me all these years<lb/>
is the suit and tie that formerly ac- has been maintaining flexibility<lb/>
companied a visit to his office in and responsiveness to student<lb/>
Whichard Building. Still there,<lb/>
though, is that indefatiguable<lb/>
pipe which has become a much a<lb/>
part of Meyer as he is of the uni-<lb/>
versity. Students know him be-<lb/>
needs he says.<lb/>
The once non-existent division<lb/>
of student life soon encompassed<lb/>
everything from the intramural<lb/>
department to public safety to<lb/>
cause of that pipe, which he often dining services. Meyer had to face<lb/>
carries clinched in the left side of<lb/>
his mouth as he walks the univer-<lb/>
sity grounds.<lb/>
The office in Ragsdale is<lb/>
Meyer's temporary headquarters<lb/>
until he officially leaves the uni-<lb/>
versity on August 18. He moved<lb/>
there Monday when Dr. Alfred<lb/>
the problem of organizing all<lb/>
those different interests into one<lb/>
division, and then managing<lb/>
them properly to insure that stu-<lb/>
dent services would grow and<lb/>
expand with the university.<lb/>
"They didn't have staff meet-<lb/>
ings, so we started staff meetings.<lb/>
Matthews began his duties as the They didn't have budgets. We<lb/>
new vice-chancellor for student made sure each department de-<lb/>
life, vcloped their own budget. It was<lb/>
Meyer has tried to make the a bottom up approach rather than<lb/>
office as comfortable as possible, a top down Meyer says,<lb/>
with paintings by his wife lining Meyer says they also began<lb/>
the walls aside a painting given to distributing minutes from staff<lb/>
Smith to become<lb/>
vice-chancellor<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING "We are delighted to have a<lb/>
'staff wer person of Dr. Smith's caliber and<lb/>
The first assistant vice chancel- credentials become our first assis-<lb/>
lor for student life and minority tant vice chancellor and director<lb/>
affairs will join the administrative of minority affairs Meyers said.<lb/>
staff of ECU on August 15,1988. Meyer headed a search<lb/>
Dr. Larry T. Smith comes to committee which conducted a<lb/>
ECU from a post as associate dean national search to fill the new<lb/>
of students for programs and ac- position.<lb/>
tivities and director of minority<lb/>
affairs at Knox College in<lb/>
Galesburg, Illinois.<lb/>
'It (the position) will involve<lb/>
development of programs and<lb/>
activities of interest to minority<lb/>
Wm when he left Wisconsin for<lb/>
Cornell University many years<lb/>
ago. The theme of the painting,<lb/>
which is also a parallel for the<lb/>
man's philosophies, is "Students<lb/>
should think for themselves<lb/>
Students have been the main<lb/>
focus of Meyer's career since he<lb/>
first began as an admissions coun-<lb/>
See MEYER, page 2<lb/>
Dr. Elmer Meyer retires this month from his post of vice chancell-<lb/>
or of student life which he has held since 1979. (Photo by Ellen<lb/>
Murphy?Photolab).<lb/>
Smith has a PhD in higher students by advising student or-<lb/>
education administration and ganizations and assisting with<lb/>
supervision, which he received student aricntation Meyer said,<lb/>
from Bowling Green State Uni- He added, "Smith will also<lb/>
versity in Ohio. He received his develop a peer mentor program at<lb/>
master's degree in college student ECU and work with university<lb/>
personnel from Bowling Green. committees on matters of minor-<lb/>
He later held a teaching fellow- ity student life and support scrv-<lb/>
ship and a graduate assistants ices<lb/>
post in the office of the vice presi-<lb/>
dent for student affairs and devel-<lb/>
opment at Bowling Green.<lb/>
Smith is a 1978 cum laude<lb/>
undergraduate in English from<lb/>
Johnson C. Smith University, in<lb/>
Charlotte.<lb/>
Smith's appointment as ECU'S<lb/>
assistant vice chancellor for stu-<lb/>
dent life and minority affairs was<lb/>
announced by Dr. Elmer E. Meyer<lb/>
Jr retiring vice chancellor for<lb/>
student life.<lb/>
The following is a question and<lb/>
answer session with Dr. Larry T.<lb/>
Smith, the first vice chancellor of<lb/>
minority affairs.<lb/>
Trustees elect chair, pass drug policy, hike fines<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
ECU'S Board of Trustees<lb/>
tees also passed a new parking games. It will be the largest struc- for a period to be determined<lb/>
violation for illegal parking on a ture east of Raleigh according to individually. During probation,<lb/>
selor at Carroll College in Febru- elected a new chairman, adopted<lb/>
ary, 1950. He later worked for the a new drug policy and raised<lb/>
University of Wisconsin system parking fines in Friday's meeting<lb/>
and then Cornell University be<lb/>
fore coming to ECU in August,<lb/>
1979.<lb/>
In 1979 ECU was going<lb/>
through massive institutional<lb/>
changes. Then Chancellor, Tho-<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
private lot - a fine of $15.<lb/>
Joyner, a 1956 ECU graduate<lb/>
from the business school, has a<lb/>
been a member of the trustees<lb/>
since a 1985 appointment by Gov.<lb/>
Max Joyner Sr a Greenville Jim Martin. He is a former presi-<lb/>
businessman, replaces Thomas dent of Pirate Club and the<lb/>
Bennett as chairman after his one Alumni Association as well as a<lb/>
year term expired. member of ECU Foundations.<lb/>
Joyner who said, "Presently we the offender must submit to a<lb/>
don't have a building of this drug education and counseling<lb/>
magnitude in eastern North Caro- program, complete a term of<lb/>
Una community service and consent<lb/>
The UNC mandated drug to regular drug testing,<lb/>
policy requires each of the 16 Second offenders of drug pos-<lb/>
UNC institutions to implement session will be expelled and fac-<lb/>
programs to educate, counsel and ulty and staff will be discharged<lb/>
rehabilitate students, faculty and from their jobs.<lb/>
Q: What is your impression of<lb/>
ECU?<lb/>
A: The atmosphere of the uni-<lb/>
versity seems to be warm and<lb/>
open to the idea of establishing an<lb/>
office of minority affairs. An at-<lb/>
mosphere like ECU is a promising<lb/>
environment for this type of pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Q: What convinced you to ac-<lb/>
cept this position?<lb/>
A: It was the university's atti-<lb/>
tude, and care that it seems to<lb/>
have for its students, and their<lb/>
needs. I can build on that type of<lb/>
excitement.<lb/>
Q: Did you observe any posi-<lb/>
tive things about student lite ac-<lb/>
tivities andor the administrative<lb/>
awareness r?f student life activi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
A: Yes. It is evident to me that,<lb/>
Trustees voted to accept the Joyner is presently on the BT&amp;T staff affected by drug abuse. The Joyner agreed with the new<lb/>
mas Brewer was making struc- UNC's Board of Governors drug Leadership board. policy also takes a strict stand on drug policy because it is compa-<lb/>
tural changes to the university's policy which sets new penalities Planning for the future, Joyner trafficking and possession of ille- rablc to policies in the real world. East Carolina University sees that<lb/>
administrative system. Part of for drug possession, drug testing said the trustees will be studying gal drugs by students, faculty and "When a student graduates from the area of minority students<lb/>
those changes included the crea- requirements and improvements possible locations for a new re- staff. ECU, they will have to be tested in growth can be strengthened. So,<lb/>
tion of the Division of Student in substance abuse education. gional center as soon as the fund- The trafficking penalization is the work place Joyner said. they iook the initiative, without<lb/>
Life, which every other major Violators of campus parking ing for the land is allocated. Two broken into two drug groups. The trustee's adoption of the the students having to demand<lb/>
university in the state had already restrictions will have to pay ap- weeks ago, the N.C. Assembly Students convicted of peddling drug policy comes five months that they (ECU) do something to<lb/>
done. Meyer has been the only proximatcly twice of existing passed a $500,000 funding meas- heroin, mescaline, cocaine, am- after the SG A passed a resolution help improve racial awareness for<lb/>
man to be vice-chancellor of that<lb/>
division.<lb/>
"It (the change) brought to-<lb/>
gether all those units that are<lb/>
concerned with the non-academic<lb/>
life of the student Meyer says as<lb/>
he empties and refills one of two<lb/>
pipes on his desk. "And if the stu-<lb/>
dent is happier outside the class-<lb/>
fines in the fall semester. Over-<lb/>
time parking violations were<lb/>
ure which will allow the trustees phetamine, methaqualine will be in support of the measure.<lb/>
raised from $2 to $5 while fines for<lb/>
parking outside of a permitted<lb/>
to purchase the necessary land for expelled from school which fac-<lb/>
the center. ulty and staff members will be<lb/>
Speaking of the regional cen- discharged from their jobs.<lb/>
area and littering were hiked from ter, Joyner said the trustees will be For the first offense of traf fick-<lb/>
$5 to $10. acting "in the very near future ing, marijuana, pentobarbital<lb/>
Violations for parking a unreg- Joyner said the center would be codeine the minium penalty will<lb/>
istercd vehicile on campus were able to house 10,000 people for be suspension from school or<lb/>
doubled from $10 to $20. The trus- conventions and ECU basketball<lb/>
In other business, the trustees<lb/>
named James Hallock the new<lb/>
dean of the ECU school of Medi-<lb/>
cine. Hallock replaces retiring<lb/>
William Laupus as dean. Hallock<lb/>
the All<lb/>
students, faculty, towns-people,<lb/>
and the community.<lb/>
Oj Do you have any sugges-<lb/>
tions that could improve student<lb/>
life activities and or minority af-<lb/>
fairs at ECU?<lb/>
A: I have gotten the impression<lb/>
from some of the students that I<lb/>
Fire rages at apartments<lb/>
is presently with<lb/>
Children's Hospitial for the Col<lb/>
emnloyment for one semester or lege of Medicine at St. Peterburg have spoken too that, white and<lb/>
its equivalent. Fla. black leaders on ECU's campus<lb/>
First time offenders on charges Also, SGA president Larry do not work together. I would like<lb/>
of illegal drug possession will be Murphy took oath on the board, to get te student leaders and<lb/>
suspended for one semester. Fol- The SGA president is tradition- members of these groups to work<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Fire officials say they respon- But on his return trip from the<lb/>
sod to a 6:07 p.m. call Friday at the grocery store he saw smoke bil-<lb/>
apartments located off of Stancil lowing high in the sky. 'T wasn't<lb/>
Faulty wiring is the possible Drive. Fire fighters from Eastern gone longer than 15 minutes and<lb/>
cause of a fire at an Greenville Pines and Winterville were called C was ablaze all the way to the<lb/>
apartment complex which de- to assist Greenville personnel roof Patterson said,<lb/>
stroyed eight units, left several because of the intense heat, ac-<lb/>
ECU students homeless and inju- cording to Captain James Tyndell Eyewitness Britton Byrd said<lb/>
ried one tennant Friday, officials of the Greenville Fire Depart- the fire raged quickly on the ply-<lb/>
said Monday. ment. wood exterior of the building. "I<lb/>
One of the building's resi- Wetherington said the fire walked outside about 6 p.m. and<lb/>
dents, William Slade, was treated started in the wall-ceiling of the the fire burned fast, really fast<lb/>
and released Friday from Pitt kitchen area of apartment C-17 Byrd said.<lb/>
County Memorial Hospitial for and quickly spread to the adjoin- According to The Daily Re-<lb/>
treatment of face burns. Slade ing units. Fire officials estimate flector, residents Tom Staple,<lb/>
incurred the burns when he the blaze caused $200,000 in prop-<lb/>
kicked down the door of his burn- erty loss.<lb/>
ing apartment in attempts to save Wetherington said the fire<lb/>
his dog. spread in the span ofl5 minutes, apartments.<lb/>
Walking around the burnt car- engulfing the entire building. He Tyndell said fire units stayed<lb/>
cass of building C at Langston said the start of the fire's spread at the scene until early Saturday<lb/>
Park apartments Monday, city was probably undetectable be- morning to dounce the smoulder-<lb/>
and state inspectors said they cause it was sparked in the wall ing remains. "An unit was there<lb/>
have ruled out the possibility of and ceiling. all night to stop hot spots caused<lb/>
arson as the cause of the fire. by falling debris from flaring up<lb/>
After the investigation Cliff , Eyewitness JarrF. Patterson Tyndell said.<lb/>
Jr who lives in complex F, said he An inspector from the State<lb/>
drove by complex C at approxi- Bureau of Investigation said the<lb/>
? S P P? 1?1 ? . .?  . ?rm <lb/>
lowing the first offense, the per- aiiy0n the ECU Board of Trustees. SH'ST meaningful<lb/>
son will be placed on probation J goals as a whole.<lb/>
Brian Freeze and Chris San-<lb/>
tevsanio jumped to safety from<lb/>
the balconies of their second story<lb/>
Wetherington of the Greenville<lb/>
Police Department said, "There is<lb/>
no indication that the fire was<lb/>
intentionallv set, while possible<lb/>
electrical failure may be the cause<lb/>
but not definitely<lb/>
mately550p.m.andsawnoindi- investigation is over. "We are<lb/>
cation of a fire. "I didn't see any pretty much through. We don't Because of the extreme heat of Friday's fire at one of the Langston Paik Apartment buildings, fire<lb/>
smoke, nor smell any Patterson deal with the fire codes, just the personnel from area departments were called in to assist the Greenville Fire Department Inspectors say<lb/>
41 " faulty electrical wiring may have caused the blaze. (Photo by Ellen Murphy?Photolab).<lb/>
said.<lb/>
intent of fire<lb/>
<pb facs="00058084_0003"/><lb/>
2 T? !C EAST ARQLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 20,1988<lb/>
Meyer helps Matthews through transition<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
meetings to all the different de-<lb/>
partments so they could keep up<lb/>
with what was going on in stu-<lb/>
dent life.<lb/>
After the initial struggle to get<lb/>
the division off the ground, Meyer<lb/>
and his staff began concentrating<lb/>
on bettering student services on<lb/>
campus. Meyer says the most im-<lb/>
portant thing his division has<lb/>
worked on is building mutual<lb/>
respect between the students and<lb/>
the faculty.<lb/>
Just last week Meyer estab-<lb/>
lished a conference committee on<lb/>
human relations made up of stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty. The committee<lb/>
will work on a plan to educate the<lb/>
university in important matters<lb/>
such as sexual relations, race rela-<lb/>
tions and overall tolerance. He<lb/>
believes it is important that ECU<lb/>
take the lead in improving rela-<lb/>
tions among the university com-<lb/>
munity, especially in view of the<lb/>
tide of campus intolerance which<lb/>
is sweeping across the country.<lb/>
"I think it (the need for the<lb/>
committee) has been made neces-<lb/>
sary recently. It's a sign of the<lb/>
times he says.<lb/>
Despite that, Meyer says the<lb/>
students here have made prog-<lb/>
ress over the years, "When I first<lb/>
came there were problems be-<lb/>
cause the students weren't work-<lb/>
ing together. The paper was tak-<lb/>
ing often everybody. The student<lb/>
government had some preten-<lb/>
tious people in it. The whole tone<lb/>
of it has changed for the better<lb/>
over the years, and the student<lb/>
leaders certainly have improved.<lb/>
'This past year has been one of<lb/>
the best ? well, the best as far as<lb/>
issue orientation ? for the stu-<lb/>
dent legislature since I've been<lb/>
here. I have always tried to pro-<lb/>
voke that, because nobody can do<lb/>
it alone. The students need to<lb/>
express their views he says.<lb/>
Among the other accomplish-<lb/>
ments of his division, Meyer lists<lb/>
establishing a full-time coordina-<lb/>
tor for Handicapped Student<lb/>
Services, the renovation of Jones<lb/>
Cafeteria (the College Hill Dining<lb/>
Hall), assisting the SGA in the<lb/>
establishment of a SGA Fine Arts<lb/>
Board and planning the construc-<lb/>
tion of the Mendenhall addition,<lb/>
which he says has been in the<lb/>
works since 1980.<lb/>
While there is still work left to<lb/>
do (he is leaving behind an "Un-<lb/>
finished Business" list), Meyer<lb/>
says the division of student life<lb/>
and the students themselves have<lb/>
come a long way in nine years.<lb/>
"It's just such a pleasure to see<lb/>
? well, those people who were<lb/>
here in '79 and are still here now<lb/>
recognize it more than others, ?<lb/>
the changes that have been<lb/>
made he says, lighting his pipe<lb/>
once more.<lb/>
As he leaves, Meyer says he<lb/>
sees bright things for the future of<lb/>
ECU, and hopes it will continue to<lb/>
READ THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
LOW COST<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREC'AXCY<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to 18 weeks at additional cosJ.Prcgnar.c-v Test. Birth<lb/>
Control, utd Problem PrepuncjrCouaseting, For further information,<lb/>
call 832-0535 (toll free number. 1-800-532-5384) between 9am and 5<lb/>
p.m. weekdjys. General anesthesia available<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
99V<lb/>
Used Furniture<lb/>
BuySellTrade<lb/>
752-3223<lb/>
Beside the<lb/>
Railroad Depot<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
CHICK-FIL-A<lb/>
SANDWICH<lb/>
BUY ANY CHICK-FIL-A VALUE MEAL? and get a free Chick-<lb/>
fiA Sandwich. Value Meals? include 1 or 2 Chick-fil-A Sandwiches or 8 or<lb/>
Unpack of Chick-fil-A Nuggets,? Waffle Potato Fries? and coleslaw. Coupon not<lb/>
good with any other offer. One coupon per person per visit. Closed Sundays.<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
X<lb/>
HILTON INN<lb/>
CREENVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
POOL PARTY!<lb/>
FREE POOLSIDE PICNIC<lb/>
WITH THE LADIES OF<lb/>
RIO!<lb/>
?Summer Time<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
$2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
of Beer<lb/>
Wednesdays<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Weather<lb/>
Permitting<lb/>
355-5000<lb/>
develop as a regional institution,<lb/>
drawing support from the region<lb/>
and later returning that support<lb/>
through education and other<lb/>
services.<lb/>
For Meyer, the immediate fu-<lb/>
ture includes a move to Washing-<lb/>
ton D.C, where he will live with<lb/>
his wife, Nancy, full-time again<lb/>
for the first time in five years. The<lb/>
two have had a commuting mar-<lb/>
riage since she moved from<lb/>
Greenville to the Washington<lb/>
area to begin an interior design<lb/>
business.<lb/>
Meyer will help with the busi-<lb/>
ness end of her operations while<lb/>
he winds down from his duties at<lb/>
ECU and begins work as an edu-<lb/>
cational consultant.<lb/>
For now, though, Meyer will<lb/>
continue to smoke his pipes in his<lb/>
Ragsdale office, helping Mat-<lb/>
thews make the transition to life at<lb/>
ECU. Soon he will take his last last day.<lb/>
vacation days to make the move You'll find him there, in 111,<lb/>
to Washington, but he'll be back: a waiting for fiveo'clock, collar (in-<lb/>
state law requires employees to at buttoned, enjoying his last pipe at<lb/>
least show up for work on their ECU.<lb/>
3Wje Caiat QtarnUnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
James F. J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey Spencer Meymandi<lb/>
Richard-Alan Cook Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY RATES<lb/>
0 49 Column inches$4.25<lb/>
50-994.15<lb/>
100-1494.05<lb/>
150 199 3.95<lb/>
200-2493.85<lb/>
250 and above3.75<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in Addition to Regular Space Rale)<lb/>
One color and black$90.00<lb/>
Two colors and black155.00<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
5,(X)0 or less6tf each<lb/>
5.001 - 10,0005.5 each<lb/>
10,001 -P.000 5 each<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Phone:<lb/>
.757-6366757-6557<lb/>
757-6558757-6309<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 beef served with snow<lb/>
sauce. Toasted bread and peas and teriyaki sauce<lb/>
Parmesan cheese$4.55 on nee $5.45<lb/>
Fettuccini Alfredo Egg<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 Thinly sked ham<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 30 a m to 2 p m daily, except Sunday<lb/>
Annabdlc's<lb/>
V RESTAURANT &amp; PUB<lb/>
RESTAURANT &amp; PUB<lb/>
The Plaza ? Greenville Blvd ? 756 0315<lb/>
Hours: 11:30am-11 pm, Mon Thurs ,<lb/>
11 30am Midnight Fn Sat ,<lb/>
1 2Noon 11pm Sun<lb/>
<lb/>
Lets have some<lb/>
VI<lb/>
CHATAHAM SLICED<lb/>
Big Top<lb/>
Bologna<lb/>
1<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
89<lb/>
12-Pk.<lb/>
12 Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
$<lb/>
j ASSORTED VARIETIES<lb/>
BigK<lb/>
Soft Drinks<lb/>
499<lb/>
<lb/>
ZT-t KROGER 1-LB PKG<lb/>
DINNER OR REGULAR<lb/>
All Meat<lb/>
Franks<lb/>
BUY ONE<lb/>
GET ONE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
RAGU HOMESTYLE<lb/>
Spaghetti<lb/>
Sauce <lb/>
32<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
990<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Pimento<lb/>
Cheese.<lb/>
14<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
Cup<lb/>
990<lb/>
REFRESHING<lb/>
Sealtest<lb/>
Lemonade.<lb/>
Gal<lb/>
Ctn<lb/>
590<lb/>
iSLs<lb/>
s tp V<lb/>
SOUTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Jumbo M 44<lb/>
OLDE ITALIAN<lb/>
BRAND DELUXE OR<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETIES<lb/>
Light 'n<lb/>
Lively Yogurt<lb/>
$<lb/>
Ct.<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
-39<lb/>
a<lb/>
I<lb/>
3<lb/>
16<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Pies<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
NATURAL FLAVOR<lb/>
Deluxe<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
CORNED BEEF<lb/>
PASTRAMI OR<lb/>
DougmJes<lb/>
Roast Beef<lb/>
$<lb/>
-188<lb/>
$<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
449<lb/>
Items and Prices Effective<lb/>
Sun. July 17, 1988 thru<lb/>
Sat. July 23 1988<lb/>
<lb/>
4" .?? St ' 1<lb/>
-? ????? ??.?-? t '??? ??- ?? HP<lb/>
? t ' ?? -r v. - - r, ?c- ? ?<lb/>
Coyrl?Kt 1M<lb/>
Hrofef 4a On<lb/>
Quantity HtfMt ltf?r???<lb/>
Nona Sot To Dealer<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd Greenville<lb/>
)<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
&amp; i<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
Fire writers from Creep<lb/>
Langston Park Apartmenj<lb/>
Parking stil<lb/>
By CREERBOW1<lb/>
rhis till wher<lb/>
pun hase parl<lb/>
will tv m :<lb/>
The pri<lb/>
bo $50 for<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
raised from<lb/>
dollars a wee!<lb/>
tions will also<lb/>
that tn kcl tocosl<lb/>
that sru I nts  p -<lb/>
s ickcr ? ? ? ?<lb/>
tanl ? - rof the tr<lb/>
All traffic vi<lb/>
five dollars<lb/>
freshman decal<lb/>
 is<lb/>
e erp pularum I 1<lb/>
- - j.<lb/>
These fee increas<lb/>
 .<lb/>
;asi istol<lb/>
parkii<lb/>
help t!<lb/>
fora pos : ? ?<lb/>
ing d( cks c st am<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
The tr ? c<lb/>
new ? ? ? ?<lb/>
? - ? .<lb/>
We will b<lb/>
rtz  have a<lb/>
istered<lb/>
? ? ?w<lb/>
?<lb/>
of the larger pi<lb/>
fie office,<lb/>
habil <lb/>
in it parkiog  1<lb/>
1 Gcrtz said that "he tr.?<lb/>
has numerous ways I<lb/>
3<lb/>
.?<lb/>
Fresh Gi<lb/>
i pk<lb/>
All Peps:<lb/>
Natural Lighl<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
$4.9<lb/>
12Pack  i<lb/>
Dudley Farmj<lb/>
Apple Juice<lb/>
$1.7<lb/>
Gall " <lb/>
Prices Effective V<lb/>
Store Hours: Sun.<lb/>
MonSat. 8 a.m. -<lb/>
Mastercard 6 Visa Acceptc.<lb/>
W1C - food Stamp NUB<lb/>
Quantity Rights<lb/>
211 Jarvis<lb/>
2 Blocks Frl<lb/>
<pb facs="00058084_0004"/><lb/>
on<lb/>
Un<lb/>
1 11 find him there, in 111,<lb/>
g for five o'clock, collar un-<lb/>
enjoying his last pipe at<lb/>
. J ?<lb/>
T<lb/>
lABELLE'S<lb/>
XPRESS<lb/>
pie on the go1<lb/>
refreshed<lb/>
ik Teriyaki<lb/>
.<lb/>
$5.45<lb/>
If -am &amp; Swiss<lb/>
iwich<lb/>
S3.95<lb/>
 &amp; Cheese Sandwich<lb/>
$3.95<lb/>
tl'RANT &amp; PUB<lb/>
s<lb/>
KROGER 1-LB PKG<lb/>
DINNER OR REGULAR<lb/>
All Meat<lb/>
Franks<lb/>
BUY ONE<lb/>
GET ONE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Gal<lb/>
Ctn<lb/>
59<lb/>
uz<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
KEEBLER<lb/>
Tato<lb/>
Skins<lb/>
99<lb/>
:ORNED BEEF<lb/>
PASTRAMI OR<lb/>
ughties<lb/>
st Beef<lb/>
449<lb/>
IRS EVERYDAY<lb/>
ivd Creenvil<lb/>
3<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
?<lb/>
JULY 20.1988<lb/>
Eiy by a W0j&amp;<lb/>
t<lb/>
TiTIC<lb/>
Fire fighters from Greenville, Winterville and i'inetops fight a blaze which consumed building C of<lb/>
Lamston Park Apartments Friday (Photo by Ellen Murphy?Photolab).<lb/>
Parking sticker fees and violation fines hiked<lb/>
fenders. Tlacing a tag on a unregistered vehicle laws until<lb/>
student's file is effective. Thctraf- the first day of class said Gcrtz.<lb/>
fie office can also go through the Butonceclasscsbegin,alllawsare<lb/>
Department of Motor Vehicles strictly enforced. Daytime offi-<lb/>
and find the registered owner if ccrs are policemen and Gertz said<lb/>
not registered with the traffic of- that traffic violations are what<lb/>
fice. they deal with most. "But after 4<lb/>
After a vehicle has received p.m. it's a different campus said<lb/>
three tickets within 12 months, Gertz.<lb/>
the vehicles can lose parking Decals can be purchased as<lb/>
privileges but usually the traffic early as August 8. Gertz encour-<lb/>
office will not go that far. Afterthe ages students and staff to buy<lb/>
By GREER BOWEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This fall when students go to<lb/>
purchase parking stickers, there<lb/>
will be many surprised students.<lb/>
The price of parking stickers will<lb/>
be $50 for all students and staff<lb/>
and private stickers will cost SI 50.<lb/>
Temporary stickers have been<lb/>
raised from one dollar to three<lb/>
dollars a week. Parking viola-<lb/>
tions will also cost more. "We felt<lb/>
that tickets needed to cost more so<lb/>
that students will purchase the<lb/>
dickers said Pat Gcrtz, the assis-<lb/>
tant director of the traffic office.<lb/>
All traffic violations that for-<lb/>
merly cost two dollars arc now<lb/>
five dollars. No parking and<lb/>
freshman decal violations will<lb/>
now be $10 as will littering. The<lb/>
ever popular unregistered vehicle<lb/>
violation is now $20.<lb/>
These fee increases will go to<lb/>
help maintain existing parking<lb/>
facilities as well as to finance new<lb/>
parking areas. The rise in fees can<lb/>
help the traffic office save monev<lb/>
for a possible parking deck. Park-<lb/>
ing decks cost anywhere from<lb/>
53,000 to $6,000 a space to build.<lb/>
The traffic office has added a<lb/>
new fine to the list, a five dollar fee<lb/>
for tickets not paid within 10days.<lb/>
"We will be enforcing this said<lb/>
(iertzWe have about 240 unreg-<lb/>
istered vehicles on the towing list<lb/>
right now<lb/>
Unregistered vehicles are one<lb/>
of the larger problems for the traf-<lb/>
fic office. Many offenders are<lb/>
habitual, and continuously park<lb/>
in staff parking areas. -<lb/>
Gertz said that the tfafflo4ncV<lb/>
has numerous ways to find of-<lb/>
sixth ticket of a registered vehicle,<lb/>
the student is sent a letter explain-<lb/>
ing that their paarking is being<lb/>
monitored. Unregistered ve-<lb/>
hicles are then placed on the tow-<lb/>
ing list.<lb/>
"We don't usually enforce the<lb/>
early. This can help prevent wait-<lb/>
ing in long lines.<lb/>
On August 17, the traffic office<lb/>
will temporarily move to Men-<lb/>
dcnhall to register vehicles. "This<lb/>
building is just too small for large<lb/>
numbers of people Gertz said.<lb/>
Ihfi. ?<lb/>
CoMcdY<lb/>
ZONE<lb/>
VVF.D<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
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Pasterfield &amp;<lb/>
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SATURDAY<lb/>
Gibralter<lb/>
HOMEMADE<lb/>
CE CREAM<lb/>
Greenville.NC<lb/>
HANK'S HOMEMADE<lb/>
Ice Cream, Frozen Yogurt,<lb/>
and Sorbet<lb/>
321 E 10th St Greenville (Next to Wendy's)<lb/>
758-0000<lb/>
50 OFF DRINK<lb/>
FLOATS, SHAKES,<lb/>
MALTEDS<lb/>
50's Weekend July 23-24!<lb/>
Bop on by our soda-shop<lb/>
for a keen tasting malted.<lb/>
Expires 7-26-88<lb/>
HOMEMADE<lb/>
CE CREAM<lb/>
Greenville.NC<lb/>
HANK'S HOMEMADE<lb/>
Ice Cream, Frozen Yogurt,<lb/>
and Sorbet<lb/>
321 E. 10th St. Crecnvillc (Next to Wendy's)<lb/>
758-0000<lb/>
25 OFF ANY ITEM<lb/>
IN THE STORE<lb/>
E.C.U. day is July 22"d! Wear<lb/>
your school colors for a special<lb/>
deal.<lb/>
Expires 7-26-88<lb/>
UAGE<lb/>
Donna<lb/>
Edwards<lb/>
owner<lb/>
Bring in this ad for a 15 Discount<lb/>
on a purchase of $10 or more<lb/>
with valid E.C.U. I.D.<lb/>
55 Gallon Combo<lb/>
Tank, Light, Hood<lb/>
$Qfi24<lb/>
Kj This month only<lb/>
WEEKLY FISH SPECIALS!<lb/>
Our Marine Room has all the fish and marine<lb/>
life Tfftr-nce$for ap?rfcct SftItwaWr1mk; ? '<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058084_0005"/><lb/>
alije iEaat (Earnltman<lb/>
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Mac Clark, mm Mmaer<lb/>
July 20,1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Passing the torch<lb/>
Meyer leaves legacy for Matthews<lb/>
With the retirement of Dr. Elmer advising the SGA, the Student<lb/>
Meyer as the vice-chancellor for Union and the Media Board, among<lb/>
Student Life (see related story page other organizations. We expect he<lb/>
1), the mantle of working for the stu- will be fair in dealing with these<lb/>
dents of the university has been groups and hope he will continue<lb/>
passed to Dr. Alfred Matthews. Meyer's tradition of standing up for<lb/>
Matthews brings a strong back- the rights of ECU students,<lb/>
ground in student affairs to a job Some of Meyer's unfinished busi-<lb/>
which requires both administrative ness, including plans to create an<lb/>
and creative skills. At ECU he will be emergency service for times when<lb/>
called upon to build on the founda- the Infirmary is closed, and moving<lb/>
tions Meyer has left behind after the -presently wheelchair-inacces-<lb/>
nine years of establishing student sible Handicapped Services offices<lb/>
services. to a better locale are also framework<lb/>
Among the many tasks Matthews Matthews can build on.<lb/>
must face, stemming the rising tide But however long Meyer's<lb/>
of intolerance and racism on univer- shadow may linger at ECU, Mat-<lb/>
sity campuses across the country thews will ultimately need to prove<lb/>
must be a high priority. ECU, with himself with creative ideas and en-<lb/>
the largest minority population of ergy. We have no doubt he will do<lb/>
any predominately white school in this.<lb/>
North Carolina, should be at the<lb/>
forefront of measures to insure It is a sad time for the students of<lb/>
mutual respect among its students, this university, but it is also a time to<lb/>
Establishing that movement will be look ahead with optimism and sup-<lb/>
an important part of Matthews' job. port for our newest ally in the ad-<lb/>
Matthews is also responsible for ministration.<lb/>
TvfP&amp;xsc<lb/>
?trc ax iH(Yf<lb/>
Union dissenters don't get fair shake<lb/>
As an author and writer, 1 am presumptively in favor of Hcrschensohn explained to Ins listeners the importar<lb/>
writers' causes, and about some of these I have expressed decision of the Supreme Court, handed down on June 2<lb/>
myself; for instance, that kooky application of the 1986 tax law<lb/>
that deprives the author of the right to deduct his expenses<lb/>
except as income flows in from his work product. I pause to<lb/>
add that authors are in an entirely neglected way major public<lb/>
philanthropists, whether they like it or not. Because their<lb/>
books go to libraries and there readers by the tens of millions<lb/>
can pull out books and read them free of charge. If the library<lb/>
exacts a fee, no part of it goes to the writer. Enough said.<lb/>
But a few weeks ago I learned of a young writer who was<lb/>
asked to do a script for television. He welcomed the proscpec-<lb/>
tive income and the literary challenge. But ? lo, he must not<lb/>
do this. Why? Because, hisliterary agent advised him, to write<lb/>
for the entertainment industry during the strikcof the Writers<lb/>
Guild of America could result in a boycott down the line. The<lb/>
agent went on to say that such a boycott could be made all but<lb/>
invisible.<lb/>
But however imperceptibly, the Writers Guild of America<lb/>
might, to use age-old terminology, blacklist him as a strike-<lb/>
breaker. My young friend turned down the commission.<lb/>
Belter to endure temporary economic disappointment than to<lb/>
risk lifelong discrimination.<lb/>
The strike by the Writers Guild, which has all but paralyzed<lb/>
thecntertainment industry, isa struggle over how to share the<lb/>
proceeds of sales. The writers want a larger share of residuals<lb/>
from foreign sales, and I am 100 percent on their side, exuber-<lb/>
antly faithful to my profession. But as a thinker-writer (as<lb/>
such, I sometimes think, a member of a distinctive minority),<lb/>
1 am also aware that unless publishers make money, they go<lb/>
bankrupt, even as newspapers have gone bankrupt by the<lb/>
hundreds in recent years.<lb/>
Accordingly, the bargaining process has got to accommo-<lb/>
Harrv Beck, a member of the Communications Workers i<lb/>
America, had complained to the courts that he was r<lb/>
forced to pay union dues that went substantially to sup<lb/>
causes with Which he was not in sympathy. The arithn<lb/>
was done, and it transpired that 79 percent of dues o<lb/>
by the CWA went into lobbying for labor legislation, ai<lb/>
participating in various events, including political event<lb/>
which Harry Beck had no sympathy at all.<lb/>
The Supreme Court, in a landmark decision, ruled I<lb/>
Beck's obligation to his union was restricted to contribi<lb/>
his share of what they call the "financial core' ol ui<lb/>
expense, i.e that money spent by the union on colk<lb/>
bargaining and related work. The court declared that mem<lb/>
hers of unions that didn't want to subsidize the social goals I<lb/>
the unions could quit the unions without tear ot retalial<lb/>
provided they continued to pay that part of union dues th tl<lb/>
went into union activity professionally designed to protect<lb/>
On the Right<lb/>
By<lb/>
William F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
union members's rights.<lb/>
And so, en that broadcast, Bruce 1 lerschensohn announced<lb/>
his resignation, effective noon on that day, from his own<lb/>
union, the American Federation of Television and Radio<lb/>
Artists, did exactly that lOyeaisago, protesting the impinge-<lb/>
ment on the right of a television and radio commentator<lb/>
whose job it is to discuss public rssuesDy a union mat could<lb/>
order him to go on strike, as A1TRA twice did, within mem-<lb/>
date the dissenters' vote. The last offer of the producers was orv' causing people like Walter Cronkite to disappear fron<lb/>
roundly defeated by a vote of the Writers Guild. But one-<lb/>
quarter of the writers voted to accept the producers' terms.<lb/>
And the question arises: Just what arc the rights of dissenting<lb/>
members of a striking union?<lb/>
On July 8, a broadcaster of distinguished credentials went<lb/>
n the air in Los Angeles with an important announcement,<lb/>
ruce Hcrschensohn is a commentator and a sometime dircc-<lb/>
the airwaves, leaving a nation disoriented<lb/>
Buckley vs. AFTRA leaned heavily on the First Amend-<lb/>
ment. The Hcrschensohn resignation does not. It leans on th.<lb/>
right of the individual to dissent from extraneous activities of<lb/>
his union. The Supreme Court has said that he may not legally<lb/>
be discriminated against. And this means that writers who,<lb/>
for whatever reason, choose to leave the Writers Guild, pav<lb/>
tor of documentaries, and he came close to winning the their professional dues and proceed to work on terms agree<lb/>
Republican nomination for senator in 1986,able to them, are free to do so. Any complaints here?<lb/>
In addition to the "Campus Forum"<lb/>
section of the editorial page, The East<lb/>
Carolinian features the "Campus<lb/>
Spectrum This is an opinion column<lb/>
by guest writers from the student<lb/>
body and faculty. The columns<lb/>
printed in the "Campus Spectrum"<lb/>
will contain current topics of concern<lb/>
to the campus, community or nation.<lb/>
The columns are restricted in con-<lb/>
tent only with regard to rules of gram-<lb/>
mar and decency. Persons submitting<lb/>
columns must be willing to accept by-<lb/>
line credit for their efforts, as no en-<lb/>
tries from ghost writers will be pub-<lb/>
lished.<lb/>
Persons interested in participating<lb/>
or seeking further information may<lb/>
contact the managing editor of The<lb/>
East Carolinian at 757-6366, or stop by<lb/>
our offices on the second floor of the<lb/>
Publications Buildine.<lb/>
TmUeaWTwo rypewntrenpT<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
rules<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Publica-<lb/>
tions Building, across from the entrance<lb/>
ofjoyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and clas-<lb/>
sification, address, phone number and<lb/>
signature of the authoris). Letters are<lb/>
spaced or neatly printed. All letters are<lb/>
subject to editing for brevity, obscenity<lb/>
and libel, and no personal attacks will be<lb/>
permitted. Students, faculty iiri staff<lb/>
writing letters for this page are reminded<lb/>
that they are limited to one every two<lb/>
weeks. The deadline for editorial mater<lb/>
is 5 p.m. Friday for Tuesday's edition and<lb/>
5 p.m. Tuesday for Thursday's edition.<lb/>
Bush attacks Dukakis' old Pledge of Allegiance veto<lb/>
By MICHAEL KINSLEY<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
The Pledge of Allegiance was invented in 1892 as<lb/>
part of a promotional campaign by a magazine<lb/>
called "Youth's Companion The original instruc-<lb/>
tions called for the hand to be removed from the<lb/>
heart and extended outward at the word "flag but<lb/>
this bit of stage business was dropped during World<lb/>
War II as being overly reminiscent of the Nazi salute.<lb/>
Although the Pledge was once described as "a<lb/>
masterpiece of concise English it is clearly inferior<lb/>
? both as poetry and as philosophy ? to the other<lb/>
sacred texts of American democracy, such as the<lb/>
Declaration of Independence, the preamble to the<lb/>
constitution, and even the lyrics of "America the<lb/>
Beautiful<lb/>
Generations of schoolchildren have proven their<lb/>
indifference to what little meaning the Pledge con-<lb/>
tains by butchering its text: "one nation under<lb/>
guard "the republic for Richard Stands etc. Be-<lb/>
fore the words "under God" were added in 1954, a<lb/>
familiar joke involved the child who pledged alle-<lb/>
giance to "one naked individual<lb/>
What, then, is George Bush's point in trying to<lb/>
make an issue of the fact that 11 years ago Governor<lb/>
Michael Dukakis vetoed a bill requiring recitation of<lb/>
the Pledge every morning in Massachusetts school-<lb/>
rooms? Bush says this shows that he and Dukakis<lb/>
have a different "approach to values Is Bush at-<lb/>
tempting to suggest that Dukakis doesn't believe in<lb/>
"liberty and justice tor all?" 1 dare Bush to say so. If<lb/>
not, what ? exactly ? is his point? That an America<lb/>
where people arc forced to recite words they don't<lb/>
believe is superior to an Amcraica where they<lb/>
aren't?<lb/>
In 1943, the Supreme Court held that students<lb/>
could not be required to recite the Pledge. Although<lb/>
it was wartime, the court managed ? as today's<lb/>
Republican strategists apparently cannot ? to reject<lb/>
empty nationalism in favor of what America really<lb/>
stands for.<lb/>
Justice Robert Jackson's majority opinion is far<lb/>
more eloquent than the Pledge of Allegiance. "Free-<lb/>
dom to differ is not limited to things that do not<lb/>
matter much he wrote. And, "a Bill of Rights which<lb/>
guards the individual's right to speak his own<lb/>
mind" does not permit "publicauthoritics to compel<lb/>
him to utter what is not in his mind<lb/>
Dukakis vetoed the mandatory Pledge law be-<lb/>
cause he thought it was unconsititutional. Before<lb/>
acting, he got an advisory opinion from the Massa-<lb/>
chusetts Supreme Judicial Court, which held 5-to-2<lb/>
? with three Republicans in the majority ? that the<lb/>
law denied teachers their First Amendment rights<lb/>
by requiring them to lead the Pledge, even if stu-<lb/>
dents were not required to participate.<lb/>
But this is a farcically small point one way or<lb/>
another. At bottom, Michael Dukakis undoubtly not<lb/>
only shares the sentiments of the Pledge of Alle-<lb/>
giance but favors reciting them as often as possible.<lb/>
And at bottom George Bush undoubtedly would not<lb/>
wish to force anyone to recite the Pledge who consci-<lb/>
entiously objects to it.<lb/>
So what is at stake here is not "values but rather<lb/>
the tiniest technicality, stretched to cover one naked<lb/>
individual who is running for president with noth-<lb/>
ing better in which to clothe his ambition.<lb/>
Much the same can be said of Bush's other cheap<lb/>
shot, about Massachusetts' prison furlough pro-<lb/>
gram. Republicans, Bush honks, "don't let murder-<lb/>
ers out on vacations to terrorize innocent people <lb/>
Dukakis owes the people of the United States an<lb/>
explanation of why he supported this outrageous<lb/>
program<lb/>
In fact, the Massachusetts program was started<lb/>
under a Republican governor, Frank Sargent. Forty-<lb/>
two states have similar programs. California had<lb/>
one under Governor Reagan.<lb/>
Only Massachusetts' program, until recently,<lb/>
gave furloughs to first-degree murderers sentenced<lb/>
to life in prison without parole. That, indeed, is a<lb/>
difference. But does Bush honestly believe that the<lb/>
difference between giving furloughs to first-degree<lb/>
murderers sentenced to life with parole and giving<lb/>
furloughs to first-degree murderers sentenced to life<lb/>
without parole (a matter the federal government has<lb/>
nothing to do with in any event) is what the presi<lb/>
dency of the United States ought to turn on?<lb/>
Bush's attempts to appeal to the brutish side of the<lb/>
American voter are inept, besides being demagogic<lb/>
because he makes such an unconvincing thug. Who<lb/>
on earth advised this consummate Yale man ?<lb/>
member of the pseudosecret, supersnob Skull and<lb/>
Bones society ? to make an issue of the fact that<lb/>
Dukakis studied and taught at Harvard? How dumb<lb/>
can you get?<lb/>
For what it's worth, 1 larvard (where Dukakis at-<lb/>
tended law school) has always been less elitist, more<lb/>
open to the rest of American socity ? had more<lb/>
Michael Dukakises and fewer George Bushes ?<lb/>
than Yale. But in fact, Dukakis went to college at<lb/>
Swarthmore, an academically stringent but scrupu-<lb/>
lously unsnobbish Quaker school. Someone like<lb/>
oeorge Bush never would have gone to<lb/>
Swarthmore, even in he could have gotten in.<lb/>
Dukakis and the court may Weil be wrong. It's not<lb/>
clear that the law in question (which was passed<lb/>
over the veto but has never been enforced) actually'<lb/>
requires any particular teacher to lead the Pledge<lb/>
against his or her will.<lb/>
I<lb/>
iNelso<lb/>
; JOHANNESBURG, South A:<lb/>
lica (AP) - Anno red cars n<lb/>
through black townships and al<lb/>
toadblock went upoutsideaCa xf<lb/>
?own prison as police braced f i<lb/>
the 70th birthday Monda<lb/>
jailed black leader Nelson M<lb/>
dela.<lb/>
; Celebrations, protest- and<lb/>
Church services were planned i<lb/>
t least 30 countries and <lb/>
Baden issued statemet <lb/>
?emning the imprisonm<lb/>
leader of the outlawed<lb/>
National Congress<lb/>
; But in South Africa, police ha<lb/>
fanned events related t<lb/>
Mandela's birthday<lb/>
? Organizers nevcrtl<lb/>
fciled a church service in (<lb/>
? own today and a news j<lb/>
Ince in Johannes<lb/>
planned to boycott si<lb/>
Lome areas. Ho w<lb/>
refused to grant perm<lb/>
Outdoor gatherii<lb/>
Were scheduled.<lb/>
? Organizers an<lb/>
minute concert Sund<lb/>
I<lb/>
at the Universit) ipt<lb/>
jhat a 11 rac ted a m. stl y bI<lb/>
Cnce of about 500. But .<lb/>
banned the concert al<lb/>
Students pro<lb/>
during week<lb/>
CHAPELHIl I ,NX<lb/>
Student activism is alh<lb/>
tingbetter, according to<lb/>
Undents wh<lb/>
jJniversity of North!ai<lb/>
Cnapel Hill this weel<lb/>
tabtish a national netw. ?- I<lb/>
crease their overall t<lb/>
Wearing T-shirts ui<lb/>
end to South African ?'?<lb/>
and to injustice in V. i I<lb/>
dents for Georgia I<lb/>
traveled to Chapel H<lb/>
Unity Meeting, a I<lb/>
National Student<lb/>
held in February at Rutg<lb/>
pcrsitv in New lersev<lb/>
ECU SocioU<lb/>
iproduces ne<lb/>
News Release<lb/>
So logy faculty at ECL" ha<lb/>
prepared a new brochure<lb/>
describes their two degre<lb/>
crams. The B.A. degree isa<lb/>
nal liberal arts pre.<lb/>
students planning care<lb/>
areas as social research<lb/>
analysis, criminal justic<lb/>
raphv, human service- bu<lb/>
nad commerce it is al jo a<lb/>
background for stud<lb/>
to enter professional -<lb/>
as law and business as v.<lb/>
graduate study in sociology<lb/>
Two years ace a new degtt cj<lb/>
applied socioiog) was add<lb/>
This B.S. program eliminal<lb/>
foreign language require j<lb/>
and places greater emphas<lb/>
research and computer skjj<lb/>
theoretical application;<lb/>
preparations for w erk in g ,<lb/>
ipent, business, industry ai<lb/>
vate research organizatk<lb/>
According to Mary Schv<lb/>
Applied Sociology Direct<lb/>
new program responds to si I<lb/>
concerns about career relevaf<lb/>
and training. Mar<lb/>
mer students had difficult <lb/>
ing the two-year foreign lar -j<lb/>
requirement. Schultz rep I<lb/>
"Those who did often oa<lb/>
plained that it didn't help then<lb/>
the ob market. So we've del<lb/>
oped a program that if I<lb/>
more practical skills and a tf<lb/>
work placement<lb/>
Dr. John Maiolo, departtfl<lb/>
chair, was instfumental in del<lb/>
oping the applied program<lb/>
reports that he is quite sati<lb/>
csaaa??If<lb/>
? !???<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058084_0006"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
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Vi<lb/>
THH CAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY201988<lb/>
u , w,fcy<lb/>
drshake<lb/>
i<lb/>
On the Right!<lb/>
By<lb/>
Buckley Jr.<lb/>
rum<lb/>
rules<lb/>
ce veto<lb/>
like<lb/>
gone to<lb/>
ttcn in<lb/>
be wnng. It's ni it<lb/>
n (which was 1 ?<lb/>
t been enfoi tally<lb/>
achcr to lead tiv. Pledge<lb/>
Nelson Mandela turns 70<lb/>
IANNESBI RG, South Ai-<lb/>
. (AP) Armored ears rolled<lb/>
through black townships and a<lb/>
Iblock wont up outside a Cape<lb/>
I n prison as police braced for<lb/>
h birthday Monday oi<lb/>
 black leader Nelson Man<lb/>
v elebrations, protests and<lb/>
rch services were planned in<lb/>
least 30 countries and world<lb/>
rs issued statements con-<lb/>
ning the imprisonment of the<lb/>
ler ot the outlawed African<lb/>
iongrcss.<lb/>
?uth Atnca. police have<lb/>
i events related to<lb/>
. i.i sbirthday.<lb/>
; mi; ers nc erthelcss sched-<lb/>
 church service in Cape<lb/>
; day and a news confer<lb/>
ohanncsburg. Blacks also<lb/>
d to boycott schools in<lb/>
?? as However, police have<lb/>
grant permission for<lb/>
gatherings and none<lb/>
duled.<lb/>
ers arranged a last-<lb/>
i i ncert Sunday afternoon<lb/>
: i ersity of Cape Town<lb/>
icteda mostly black audi-<lb/>
? : about 500. But police<lb/>
d the concert about two<lb/>
hours after it began and people<lb/>
left the campus peacefully.<lb/>
Previous police orders had pro<lb/>
hibitcd a separate concert in Cape<lb/>
Town as well as music festivals in<lb/>
ohanncsburg and Durban and a<lb/>
host of other birthday-related<lb/>
events in honor of Mandela, who<lb/>
most of the nation's 2h million<lb/>
blacks consider their leader.<lb/>
Meanwhile, security forces,<lb/>
some in armored vehicles, pa-<lb/>
trolled the country's major black<lb/>
townships, though there were no<lb/>
reports of violence. Police also set<lb/>
up several roadblocks, including<lb/>
one outside Cape Town's<lb/>
Pollsmoor Prison, where Man<lb/>
dela is held.<lb/>
In the past week, more than 30<lb/>
people involved in birthday<lb/>
events in the Cape Town area<lb/>
have been arrested.<lb/>
Mandela's wife, Winnie, re-<lb/>
jected a go ernment offer to have<lb/>
a six-hour visit with her husband<lb/>
on his birthday deciding to focus<lb/>
attention on other prisoners hold<lb/>
for anti-apartheid activities, said<lb/>
the family's attorney, Ismail<lb/>
Ayob.<lb/>
The visit, which would have<lb/>
been the couple's longest reunion<lb/>
since Mandela was jailed 26years<lb/>
ago, was a special concession by<lb/>
prison authorities, who normally<lb/>
grant only 40 minute visits.<lb/>
Mrs. Mandela is probably the<lb/>
world's best known and most in-<lb/>
fluential prisoner, and his birth-<lb/>
day has drawn worldwide atten-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The countries whose govern-<lb/>
ments have called for Mandela's<lb/>
release in the past few days in-<lb/>
clude- Britain, Japan, West Ger-<lb/>
many East Germany, Canada,<lb/>
Italy, Sv itzerland, Denmark, Fin-<lb/>
land, Iceland, Norway and Swe-<lb/>
don.<lb/>
The Italian Embassy in Pretoria<lb/>
said it had imported a copy of<lb/>
director Bernardo Bertolucci's<lb/>
film, 'The I ast Emperor' be-<lb/>
cause Mandela asked if he could<lb/>
sec it.<lb/>
World heavyweight boxing<lb/>
champion Mike 1 son sent Man-<lb/>
di la the boxing gloves he used in<lb/>
iting challenger Michael<lb/>
Spinks last month.<lb/>
o, about 50,000 letters oi<lb/>
support from Dutch anti-apart-<lb/>
heid activists were delivered this<lb/>
weekend to the Mandela home in<lb/>
.oto township outside<lb/>
Johannesburg.<lb/>
Mandela was jailed in 1962 for<lb/>
leaving the country illegally and<lb/>
inciting unrest. While serving a<lb/>
five- ear term, he was sentenced<lb/>
to life imprisonment in 1964 for<lb/>
sabotage and plotting the over-<lb/>
throw of the white minority gov-<lb/>
ernment.<lb/>
Most black South Africans have<lb/>
never seen Mandela or heard him<lb/>
speak because it is illegal to pub-<lb/>
lish his picture or quote his words<lb/>
in South Africa. Yet he has be-<lb/>
come the embodiment of black<lb/>
resistance to apartheid.<lb/>
Bv all accounts, Mandela is in<lb/>
good physical and mental health<lb/>
and closely watches political de-<lb/>
velopments. He reads uncen-<lb/>
sored newspapers and is ex-<lb/>
pected to earn an advanced law-<lb/>
degree later this year through<lb/>
correspondence courses.<lb/>
 fowever, the goverment main-<lb/>
tains that Mandela must first re-<lb/>
nounce violence, and Mandela<lb/>
has said he will do so only if the<lb/>
ANC is no longer banned and if<lb/>
the segregationist system (it<lb/>
apartheid is dismantled.<lb/>
Students protest South Africian apartheid, Nicaragua<lb/>
during weekend gathering at UNC? Chapel Hill<lb/>
( HAPELHILL,N.C.(AP) Todd Merman a conference<lb/>
ent activism is alive and get ?  r said the network ? <lb/>
rding to about 100 multiracial and multi-issue. Il<lb/>
nts who gathered at the students form a unified gi<lb/>
of North, Carolina at they can channel the inert isii<lb/>
I Hill this weekend to es- interest in activism arid create a<lb/>
-h a national network to in- more powerful front he said.<lb/>
tl eir overall effectiveness. Can you imagine if, instead<lb/>
ng r-shirts urging an of a protestat thePit (a gatheri<lb/>
th African Apartheid place in front of the student un .<lb/>
added foel end of the Reagan era is contribut-<lb/>
 mizer. "We ing to the increase in activism.<lb/>
I ha litical cffei tiv? ru ss<lb/>
"It's OK to care and haveanopin-<lb/>
Christii Kell; an organizer ion to act ethically and morally<lb/>
. ference said the she said.<lb/>
in Nicara;<lb/>
at<lb/>
<lb/>
i e hai<lb/>
I<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
ic<lb/>
ua, stu  v . . v v ?j<lb/>
Georgia to California protest at even Pit<lb/>
hapel Hill for The versify across the <lb/>
I - . a follow-up to the asked.<lb/>
Student Convention 'f all students nationally<lb/>
a me act ? ii linst Star V ai ??<lb/>
and nuclear w apons then we'n<lb/>
try at Rutgers I<lb/>
New f rsov.<lb/>
F( l) Sociology department<lb/>
produces new brochure<lb/>
News Release with the number ol students n<lb/>
gy faculty at ECU have termg the new program. "We<lb/>
la new brochure which have about 30 B.S. majors that'<lb/>
- their two degree pr t Ai. ? an n i as we ? pe ted<lb/>
? degree isa tradi Mow we rued to emphasize n<lb/>
v anting and retaining qualit)<lb/>
students<lb/>
Schultz ha . . : in d a detailed<lb/>
handb r for the applied pn<lb/>
j ram. It is designed to pro id<lb/>
formation about curri ulum<lb/>
requirements, the field oi applied<lb/>
jnA career opportui<lb/>
ties, and preparatii m tor the field<lb/>
placement coui so.<lb/>
Copies oi the brochure are<lb/>
available from the Sociology and<lb/>
Anthropolgy Department office<lb/>
Brewster Bldg Fourth Floor A<lb/>
Wing), or (.all 757 6883. 1 or infor-<lb/>
mation about the applied sociol-<lb/>
ogy program and handbook, ci i<lb/>
tact Marty Schult; . n ?? I ,<lb/>
Bldg A -in ), or call 756 5 3<lb/>
?fc ? ??<lb/>
SP0RTSW0RLD<lb/>
Every Tuesday College Night<lb/>
from 8:00 to 11:00<lb/>
$1.50 with college I.D. .5CK skate rental<lb/>
SPORTSWORLD<lb/>
104 E. REDBANKS RD.<lb/>
 756-6000<lb/>
GREAT STEAKS<lb/>
AT A GREAT PRICE!<lb/>
rai arts program tor<lb/>
lannii n ex rsin such<lb/>
. il i arch and data<lb/>
? tal justice, demi g-<lb/>
nan services, bu -mess<lb/>
t is also a useful<lb/>
II . ? ts scekine<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
Wed. &amp; Thurs. Soecial<lb/>
7 Round-Up<lb/>
6 oz. Sirloin with Potato Bar,<lb/>
Salad Bar, Hot Bar,<lb/>
Sundae Bar and drink<lb/>
Only $4.99<lb/>
Reg. $5.99<lb/>
-iu<lb/>
 well as<lb/>
il 'Study in so i I -<lb/>
' cars ago, a new degree in<lb/>
g) was added.<lb/>
B S program eliminates the<lb/>
?n language requirement<lb/>
i j gn ater emphasis on<lb/>
in h and computer skills,<lb/>
rctical aj plic itions ai<lb/>
? r v ork in c .<lb/>
- ? lusti md <lb/>
h organizations.<lb/>
 to Mary Schult,<lb/>
I S ciology Director, the<lb/>
? . ram responds to student<lb/>
? ut career relevance<lb/>
Many of our for-<lb/>
i had difficulty meet-<lb/>
year foreign language<lb/>
? " s. hultz reported.<lb/>
o did. often com-<lb/>
mit it didn't help thorn in<lb/>
market. So we've devel-<lb/>
program that includes<lb/>
it tical skills and a field<lb/>
icement<lb/>
hn Maiolo, department<lb/>
as instrumental in devel-<lb/>
? e applied program. He<lb/>
that he is quite satisfied<lb/>
New &amp; Improved Salad,<lb/>
Hot &amp; Dessert Bar<lb/>
Only<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
FREE - Dessert Bar<lb/>
With All Entries<lb/>
Take-Outs Okay<lb/>
GIVE BLOOD<lb/>
I1<lb/>
ail<lb/>
KW-NM!<lb/>
10 Discount On<lb/>
Regular Priced Items<lb/>
With Student I.D.<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St. - 758-2712<lb/>
i?a<lb/>
Stactiusti<lb/>
6C<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
4 SHIRTS $036<lb/>
CLEANED W y<lb/>
for mm<lb/>
. on must be presented<lb/>
ith shirt order<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
G<lb/>
E T SET TO SWEAT<lb/>
THE SEARCH IS ON FOR AMERICA'S<lb/>
Super Fun!<lb/>
.<lb/>
Super Challenge!<lb/>
Super Prizes!<lb/>
alists: Cash and merchi ?<lb/>
? expense paid - ? nweek gc iwayl ltd<lb/>
- . i il ii I 11 " !? i  - - rs: S2,3O0 cash ir! more'<lb/>
Hilton Inn Greenville355-5000<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 9:00 P.M. STARTING JULY 20TH.<lb/>
SUMMER AIRFARE<lb/>
BARGAINS<lb/>
iii<lb/>
2'CAGO $183<lb/>
DALLAS<lb/>
NEW YORK s128??<lb/>
Newark<lb/>
B?STON<lb/>
l 8050<lb/>
LOS ANGELES s308??<lb/>
ATLANTA s16800 N<lb/>
READ THE FINE PRINT<lb/>
- a rfares areO ? -   rates! - . e. NC cum ntlyia effect for tm - i r <lb/>
' ' ' rcments apply. Rates shown ai<lb/>
? - ? ?<lb/>
I I<lb/>
TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
714 E. Greenville Blvd. ?Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
355-5075<lb/>
RACK ROOM<lb/>
SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
it's CHRISTMAS in JULY<lb/>
FOUR BIG DAYS!<lb/>
Thurs Fri Sat and Sun.<lb/>
TAKE AN<lb/>
E?X?T?R?A<lb/>
10?c<lb/>
0 OFF<lb/>
ALL OUR LOW SALE PRICES<lb/>
ALREADY REDUCED<lb/>
UP<lb/>
TO<lb/>
70?c<lb/>
0<lb/>
FURTIIER MARKDOWNS have been taken on<lb/>
hundreds oi pairs oi summer shoes for the entire<lb/>
family. Save now on sandals, huaraches, espadriues,<lb/>
DRESS &amp; CASUAL SI IOCS, PLUS HANDBAGS AND ACCESSORIES.<lb/>
CLIP STORE COUPON<lb/>
AND SAVE AN EXTRA 10<lb/>
RACK ROOM COUPON 32EC<lb/>
TAKE AN<lb/>
E-X-T-R-A<lb/>
ON OUR<lb/>
EVERYDAY<lb/>
LOW PRICES<lb/>
PLUS ALL OUR<lb/>
SUMMER SALES PRICES<lb/>
EXCEPT NIKE, REEBOK AND KEDS<lb/>
COUPON GOOD THURS. - SUN.<lb/>
July 21-25. 1988<lb/>
<pb facs="00058084_0007"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 20, 1988<lb/>
i?rA?acwty<lb/>
fair shake<lb/>
rs tl portant<lb/>
n une 29.<lb/>
s ?'? i kcrs ol<lb/>
 being<lb/>
. to support<lb/>
ai ithmctic<lb/>
fdu i collected<lb/>
. and lo<lb/>
cal events, foi<lb/>
. union<lb/>
n on c llectivc<lb/>
it mem-<lb/>
tlgoalsoi<lb/>
: ' iliation,<lb/>
du s that<lb/>
I to protect<lb/>
On the Right<lb/>
By<lb/>
liam F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
? - nannounced<lb/>
?  day, from his ?n<lb/>
)i Television and Radio<lb/>
rotesting the impinge<lb/>
: radio commentator<lb/>
iu - ?' it<lb/>
: I within mem<lb/>
iisappear from<lb/>
?? the ? r ? mend-<lb/>
snot. It leans on the<lb/>
us activities of<lb/>
maynotlegall)<lb/>
ii ? that write r who,<lb/>
ie Writers Guild, pay<lb/>
iten icrec-<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
rules<lb/>
ntty<lb/>
ce veto<lb/>
? ith parole and giving<lb/>
irderers sentenced to life<lb/>
(vernmenl has<lb/>
nt) is what the presi<lb/>
turn on?<lb/>
 leofthf<lb/>
' magogicj<lb/>
tl ie Who<lb/>
i ei n b Skull and<lb/>
in is u ol the fa t that<lb/>
tat! Jarvard7 How dumb<lb/>
orth, Harvard (where Dukakis at-<lb/>
becn less elitist, more<lb/>
American socity ? had more<lb/>
rid fewer George Bushes -<lb/>
tact, Dukakis went to college at<lb/>
icademically stringent but scrupu-<lb/>
h Quaker school. Someone like<lb/>
never would have gone to<lb/>
k n in he could have gotten in.<lb/>
I lie court may well be wrong. It's not<lb/>
in question (which was passed<lb/>
it has never been enforced) actually<lb/>
articular teacher to lead the Pledge<lb/>
?t will.<lb/>
Nelson Mandela turns 70<lb/>
IOHANNESBURG, South Af-<lb/>
rica (AP) ? Armored cars rolled<lb/>
through black townships and a<lb/>
roadblock went up outside a Cape<lb/>
town prison as police braced for<lb/>
the 70th birthday Monday of<lb/>
jailed black leader Nelson Man-<lb/>
dela.<lb/>
Celebrations, protests and<lb/>
church services were planned in<lb/>
at least 30 countries and world<lb/>
jeaders issued statements con-<lb/>
demning the imprisonment of the<lb/>
jcader of the outlawed African<lb/>
National Congress.<lb/>
But in South Africa, police have<lb/>
banned events related to<lb/>
Mandela's birthday.<lb/>
Organizers nevertheless sched-<lb/>
uled a church service in Cape<lb/>
Tow n today and a news confer-<lb/>
ence in lohannesburg. Blacks also<lb/>
planned to boycott schools in<lb/>
some areas. However, police have<lb/>
el used to grant permission for<lb/>
outdoor gatherings and none<lb/>
u ere scheduled.<lb/>
Organizers arranged a last-<lb/>
mi nute concert Sunday afternoon<lb/>
at the University of Cape Town<lb/>
that attracted a mostly black audi-<lb/>
tive oi about 500. But police<lb/>
banned the concert about two<lb/>
hours after it began and people<lb/>
left the campus peacefully.<lb/>
Previous police orders had pro-<lb/>
hibited a separate concert in Cape<lb/>
Town as well as music festivals in<lb/>
Johannesburg and Durban and a<lb/>
host of other birthday-related<lb/>
events in honor of Mandela, who<lb/>
most of the nation's 26 million<lb/>
blacks consider their leader.<lb/>
Meanwhile, security forces,<lb/>
some in armored vehicles, pa-<lb/>
trolled the country's major black<lb/>
townships, though there were no<lb/>
reports of violence. Police also set<lb/>
up several roadblocks, including<lb/>
one outside Cape Town's<lb/>
Pollsmoor Prison, where Man-<lb/>
dela is held.<lb/>
In the past week, more than 30<lb/>
people involved in birthday<lb/>
events in the Cape Town area<lb/>
have been arrested.<lb/>
Mandela's wife, Winnie, re-<lb/>
jected a government offer to have<lb/>
a six-hour visit with her husband<lb/>
on his birthday, deciding to focus<lb/>
attention on other prisoners held<lb/>
for anti-apartheid activities, said<lb/>
the family's attorney, Ismail<lb/>
Ayob.<lb/>
The visit, which would have<lb/>
been the couple's longest reunion<lb/>
since Mandela was jailed 26 years<lb/>
ago, was a special concession by<lb/>
prison authorities, who normally<lb/>
grant only 40-minute visits. ,<lb/>
Mrs. Mandela is probably the<lb/>
world's best known and most in-<lb/>
fluential prisoner, and his birth-<lb/>
day has drawn worldwide atten-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The countries whose govern-<lb/>
ments have called for Mandela's<lb/>
release in the past few days in-<lb/>
clude: Britain, Japan, West Ger-<lb/>
many, East Germany, Canada,<lb/>
Italy, Switzerland, Denmark, Fin-<lb/>
land, Iceland, Norway and Swe-<lb/>
den.<lb/>
The Italian Embassy in Pretoria<lb/>
said it had imported a copy of<lb/>
director Bernardo Bertolucci's<lb/>
film, "The Last Emperor be-<lb/>
cause Mandela asked if he could<lb/>
see it.<lb/>
World heavyweight boxing<lb/>
champion Mike Tyson sent Man-<lb/>
dela the boxing gloves he used in<lb/>
defeating challenger Michael<lb/>
Spinks last month.<lb/>
Also, about 50,000 letters of<lb/>
support from Dutch anti-apart-<lb/>
heid activists were delivered this<lb/>
weekend to the Mandela home in<lb/>
the Soweto township outside<lb/>
Johannesburg.<lb/>
Mandela was jailed in 1962 for<lb/>
leaving the country illegally and<lb/>
inciting unrest. While serving a<lb/>
five-year term, he was sentenced<lb/>
to life imprisonment in 1964 for<lb/>
sabotage and plotting the over-<lb/>
throw of the white minority gov-<lb/>
ernment.<lb/>
Most black South Africans have<lb/>
never seen Mandela or heard him<lb/>
speak because it is illegal to pub-<lb/>
lish his picture or quote his words<lb/>
in South Africa. Yet he has be-<lb/>
come the embodiment of black<lb/>
resistance to apartheid.<lb/>
By all accounts, Mandela is in<lb/>
good physical and mental health<lb/>
and closely watches political de-<lb/>
velopments. He reads unccn-<lb/>
sorcd newspapers and is ex-<lb/>
pected to earn an advanced law<lb/>
degree later this year through<lb/>
correspondence courses.<lb/>
However, the goverment main-<lb/>
tains that Mandela must first re-<lb/>
nounce violence, and Mandela<lb/>
has said he will do so only if the<lb/>
ANC is no longer banned and if<lb/>
the segregationist system of<lb/>
apartheid is dismantled.<lb/>
Students protest South Africian apartheid, Nicaragua<lb/>
during weekend gathering at UNO? Chapel Hill<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Student activism is alive and get-<lb/>
ting better, according to abouU 00<lb/>
Students who gathered at the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill this weekend to es-<lb/>
tablish a national network to in-<lb/>
crease their overall effectiveness.<lb/>
Wearing T-shirts urging an<lb/>
end to South African Apartheid<lb/>
and to injustice in Nicaragua, stu-<lb/>
dents for Georgia to California<lb/>
traveled to Chapel Hill for The<lb/>
Unity Meeting, a follow-up to the<lb/>
National Student Convention<lb/>
held in February at Rutgers Uni-<lb/>
versity in New lersev.<lb/>
Todd Morman, a conference<lb/>
organizer, said the network was<lb/>
multiracial and multi-issue. If<lb/>
students form a unified group,<lb/>
they can channel the increasing<lb/>
interest in activism and create a<lb/>
more powerful front, he said.<lb/>
"Can you imagine if, instead<lb/>
of a protest at the Pit (a gathering<lb/>
place in front of the student union<lb/>
at UNC-Chapel Hill), if there is a<lb/>
protest at every Pit at every uni-<lb/>
versity across the country?" he<lb/>
asked.<lb/>
"If all students nationally<lb/>
became active against Star Wars<lb/>
and nuclear weapons, then we're<lb/>
going to he heard added loci end of the Reagan era is con tribut-<lb/>
Segal, another organizer. "We ing to the increase in activism,<lb/>
will have political effectiveness<lb/>
"It's OK to care and have an opin-<lb/>
Christine Kelly, an organizer ion to act ethically and morally<lb/>
of the Rutgers conference, said the sc said.<lb/>
ECU Sociology department<lb/>
produces new brochure<lb/>
Every Tuesday College Night<lb/>
from 8:00 to 11:00<lb/>
$1.50 with college I.D. .50 skate rental<lb/>
SPORTSWORLD<lb/>
104 E. REDBANKS RD.<lb/>
 756-600O<lb/>
News Release<lb/>
So ology faculty at ECU have<lb/>
prepared a new brochure which<lb/>
i ribes their two degree pro-<lb/>
grams. The B.A. degree is a tradi-<lb/>
tion il liberal arts program for<lb/>
students planning careers in such<lb/>
areas as social research and data<lb/>
analysis, criminal justice, demog-<lb/>
raphy, human services, business<lb/>
had commerce. It is also a useful<lb/>
with the number of students en-<lb/>
tering the new program. "We<lb/>
have about 30 B.S. majors that's<lb/>
twice an many as we expected.<lb/>
Now we need to emphasize re-<lb/>
cruiting and retaining quality<lb/>
students<lb/>
Schultz has prepared a detailed<lb/>
handbook for the applied pro-<lb/>
gram. It is designed to provide<lb/>
information about curriculum<lb/>
ickground for students seeking requirements, the field of applied<lb/>
sociology and career opportuni-<lb/>
to enter professional schools such<lb/>
:s law and business as well as<lb/>
graduate study in sociology.<lb/>
Two years ago, a new degree in<lb/>
applied sociology was added.<lb/>
'his B.S. program eliminates the<lb/>
foreign language requirement<lb/>
and places greater emphasis on<lb/>
research and computer skills,<lb/>
theoretical applications, and<lb/>
preparations for work in govern-<lb/>
ment, business, industry, and pri-<lb/>
ate research organizations.<lb/>
According to Mary Schultz,<lb/>
pplied Sociology Director, the<lb/>
program responds to student<lb/>
mcerns about career relevance<lb/>
nd training. "Many of our for-<lb/>
mer students had difficulty mect-<lb/>
ng the two-year foreign language<lb/>
.invment Schultz reported.<lb/>
rhose who did, often com-<lb/>
plained that it didn't help them in<lb/>
he job market. So we've dcvel-<lb/>
i a program that includes<lb/>
e practical skills and a field<lb/>
k placement<lb/>
Dr. John Maiolo, department<lb/>
chair, was instrumental in devel-<lb/>
oping the applied program. He<lb/>
reports that he is quite satisfied<lb/>
ties, and preparation for the field<lb/>
placement course.<lb/>
Copies of the brochure are<lb/>
available from the Sociology and<lb/>
Anthropolgy Department office<lb/>
(Brewster Bldg Fourth Floor-A<lb/>
Wing), or call 757-6883. For infor-<lb/>
mation about the applied sociol-<lb/>
ogy program and handbook, con-<lb/>
tact Marty Schultz (Brewster<lb/>
Bldg A-401), or call 756-8930.<lb/>
GIVE BLOOD<lb/>
CLtANm<lb/>
II II1<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
4 SHIRTS $036<lb/>
CLEANED W M ww<lb/>
for mm<lb/>
This coupon must be presented<lb/>
with shirt order<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
T SET TO SWEAT?<lb/>
THE SEARCH IS ON FOR AMERICA S<lb/>
Super Fun!<lb/>
Hi action for both contestants and spectators. This competition will leave everyone breathless!<lb/>
Super Challenge!<lb/>
A national fitness challenge with the ladies competiting in aerobic competition.<lb/>
Super Prizes!<lb/>
Weekly Finalists: Cash and merchandise prizes. I.ocal Winners: $500 cash<lb/>
PLUS an expense paid one week get-away to the National Super Bodies<lb/>
Finals in beautiful Pensacola, Florida National Winners $2,500 cash . and morell<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 9:00 P.M. STARTING JULY 20TH.<lb/>
ilton lr n Greenville355-5000<lb/>
SUMMER AIRFARE<lb/>
BARGAINS<lb/>
Jfc<lb/>
J0KL<lb/>
DALLAS $228<lb/>
00<lb/>
NEW YORK $128??<lb/>
Newark<lb/>
BOSTON<lb/>
I805?<lb/>
LOS ANGELES $308??<lb/>
ATLANTA $168?<lb/>
READ THE FINE PRINT<lb/>
These airfares are the lowest roundirip rates from Greenville. NC currently in effect for travel. Space is<lb/>
limited and travel restrictions and advance purchase requirements applv. Rates shown arc for off peak<lb/>
travel Fares on other days are slightly higher Once purchased, your ticket'cannot be changed nor refunded<lb/>
Fares are subject to change at anytime. Most fares now rec re 7-14 davs advance purchase<lb/>
TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
714 E. Greenville Blvd. ?GreermTk, NC 27834 ,<lb/>
355-5075<lb/>
RACK ROOM<lb/>
SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
it's CHRISTMAS in JULY<lb/>
FOUR BIG DAYS!<lb/>
Thurs Fri Sat, and Sun.<lb/>
TAKE AN<lb/>
E?X?T?R?A<lb/>
10?c<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
ALL OUR LOW SALE PRICES<lb/>
ALREADY REDUCED<lb/>
70?c<lb/>
FURTHER MARKDOWNS have been taken on<lb/>
hundreds of pairs of summer shoes for the entire<lb/>
family. Save now on sandals, huaraches, espadriues,<lb/>
DRESS &amp; CASUAL SI IOES, PLUS IIANDBAGS AND ACCESSORIES.<lb/>
CLIP STORE COUPON<lb/>
AND SAVE AN EXTRA 10<lb/>
RACK ROOM COUPON 32EC<lb/>
TAKE AN<lb/>
E-X-T-R-A<lb/>
ON OUR<lb/>
EVERYDAY<lb/>
LOW PRICES<lb/>
PLUS ALL OUR<lb/>
 SUMMER SALES PRICES<lb/>
'EXCEPT NIKE, REEBOK AND KEDS<lb/>
coupon cood thurs. - sun.<lb/>
July 21-25. 1988<lb/>
<pb facs="00058084_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 20, 1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
DO YOU LOOK GOOD IN A BIKINI?<lb/>
We need models for a Legs video. Excep-<lb/>
tional earnings. Apply in person only!<lb/>
Promotions Unlimited, 1902-A Charles<lb/>
Street, inside the Insurance Center, right<lb/>
across from the Pirates Chest. M-F, 1-4<lb/>
p.m. You must be 18-36 yrs. old 5ft. to 5ft.<lb/>
- 8in. tall Weight must be proportional<lb/>
with height<lb/>
HIRING ? Federal government )obs in<lb/>
vour area and overseas. Many immediate<lb/>
openings without waiting list or test. $15-<lb/>
U8,000 Phone Call refundable (602) 838-<lb/>
888S Ext. 5285.<lb/>
BE ON TV ? Manv needed for commer-<lb/>
cials. Casting info, (1) 805-687-6000 Ext.<lb/>
1166.<lb/>
FOUR STAR PIZZA ? is now hiring<lb/>
drivers and inside personnel for the fall<lb/>
semester Driver must be 18 years or<lb/>
older, have a car and insurance. Mini-<lb/>
mum wage plus commission and tips.<lb/>
Applv in person at 1154 East 10th Street.<lb/>
2 STUDENTS wanted to answer tele-<lb/>
phone for local business ? mornings and<lb/>
afternoons. Call 75b-3241 for interview.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer tvping<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24<lb/>
hours in and out. Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages. We<lb/>
repair computers and printers also. Low-<lb/>
est hourly rate in town. SDF Professional<lb/>
Computer Services, 106 East 5th Street<lb/>
(beside Cubbies) Greenville, NC 752-<lb/>
3694.<lb/>
IS IT TRUE ? you can buy jeeps for $44<lb/>
through the U.S. government? Get the<lb/>
facts today! Call 1-312-742-1142 Ext.<lb/>
5271 A.<lb/>
FOR SALE ? twin bed ? mattress, box<lb/>
spring ? like new; and head board set,<lb/>
$75.00 or best offer. Call 758-3751.<lb/>
RED HOT ? bargains! Drug dealers'<lb/>
cars, boats, planes repo'd. Surplus. Your<lb/>
area Buyers Guide. (1) 805-687 6000- Ext.<lb/>
1166.<lb/>
FOR SALE ? IBM Selectric (non-correct-<lb/>
ing) typewrite; recently cleaned; excellent<lb/>
mechanical condition, $50.00 Call 752-2174<lb/>
after 6 p.m. evenings.<lb/>
FOR SALE ? Matching dresser, with<lb/>
mirror, night table and headboard with<lb/>
frame mattress and box spring. $350.00 or<lb/>
best offer.<lb/>
FOR SALE ? 5 speed girls Schwinn Earth<lb/>
Crusier. Red, like new. Includes Kryp-<lb/>
tonite lock. $250.00 or best offer.<lb/>
washer and drier. Rent ? $150.00 and 12<lb/>
utilities. Call 757-6366 between 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
and 5:30 p.m. 758-2231 other times. Ask<lb/>
for Spencer.<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT ? $16500 per<lb/>
month. Utilities included. Near ECU<lb/>
Campus. Call 758-1274 after 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATED WANTED ? to share<lb/>
large 3 bedroom 2 bath house with fenced<lb/>
yard. You'll get private master bedroom<lb/>
with bath. Pets considered. $195.00<lb/>
month and 12 utilities. Mark 756-3762.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED ? to<lb/>
share duplex. $75.00 rent and 1 3 utilities,<lb/>
smokers welcome, Call after 5:00 p.m. 752-<lb/>
5279.<lb/>
WANTED ? non-smoking female room-<lb/>
mate to share townhousc at Sedgcfield. 2<lb/>
miles from campus. Call 1-703-667-6S92.<lb/>
752-<lb/>
RINGOLD TOWERS CONDO for RINGGOLD TOWERS: furnished apts.<lb/>
sale. B-unit, 2nd floor, fullv furnished. Tax for rent Call Hollie Simonwkh<lb/>
market value $43,730.00. Make me an offer 2S65.<lb/>
. 919-787-1378.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS ? Apts for rent<lb/>
Furnished. Contact 1 lollie Simonowich at<lb/>
752-2865.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED ? for 2<lb/>
bedroom condo. Personal bedroom,<lb/>
microwave, T.V Stereo, VCR, cable.<lb/>
PANTANA BOB'S ? Enhancing vour<lb/>
summer with drink specials every night<lb/>
GROG'S ? THE LATE NIGHT PLACE<lb/>
TO BE E1GI IT NIGI ITS A WEEK. July 21,<lb/>
Summer Slim Slide $$$$$<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE ? Larger than dorm-size<lb/>
refrigerator. Onlv used for one year.<lb/>
Good condition. Please call 830-0492 and<lb/>
leave a message.<lb/>
A Beautiful ilacc to Live<lb/>
? All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
?And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2b?E5thSipr?<lb/>
? Located Near ECU<lb/>
? Across From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
Unruled offer-S275 a month<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy WYiarra<lb/>
756-7815 or 830-i 937<lb/>
Office open - Apt. 8,12-530 p jn.<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS-<lb/>
Clean ar.d qu;et one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles onlv. $1$? a month, 6 month<lb/>
lease MOBrLE I lOME RENTALS - couples or<lb/>
single Apartment and mobile homes in Azalea<lb/>
Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy William<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
Medical Students<lb/>
The United States Navy is looking for applicants for<lb/>
two, three, &amp; four year medical scholarships. These<lb/>
scholarships cover the full school-related expenses of<lb/>
your medical education, as well as providing a per-<lb/>
sonal allowance of $650 per month while you are in<lb/>
school.<lb/>
To qualify you must:<lb/>
Be a U. S. citizen<lb/>
Beenrolled in an AMA approved Medical<lb/>
school, or AOA approved school of Osteopathy<lb/>
Meet academic qualifications<lb/>
Be physically qualified<lb/>
Applications for scholarships are accepted each fall.<lb/>
To learn more about Navy medical scholarships, with<lb/>
no obligation, simply give me a call:<lb/>
Contact HMC Norm Rogers<lb/>
1-800-662-7568<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SUMMER LIBRARY HOURS<lb/>
Mondays - Thursdays 8:00 a.m. - 11:00<lb/>
p.m Fridays 8:00 a.m. - 6:00p.m Satur-<lb/>
days 9:00 a'm. - 6:00 p.m Sundays 12:00<lb/>
noon - 11:00 p.m. The Media Resources<lb/>
Center will be open: Mondays - Thurs-<lb/>
days 8.00 a.m. -9.30 p.m Fridays 8:00 a.m.<lb/>
- 5:00 p.m Saturdays 1.00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m<lb/>
Sundays 12 noon - 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
CO-OP SUMMER FALL<lb/>
Three jobs ? Congressional Office,<lb/>
Washington, DC. June ? August. Salary:<lb/>
SI000.00month. Student must have gen-<lb/>
eral office skills and some experience with<lb/>
word processing. Short hand skills de-<lb/>
sired. Also, Tampa Electric Company,<lb/>
Tampa, Florida. Fall semester. Salary:<lb/>
SI 135.00month. Word processing<lb/>
courses andor word processing experi-<lb/>
ence required. Will be expected to return<lb/>
to job Summer 1989 if work is satisfactory.<lb/>
Salary will increase. Finally, Positions<lb/>
available in the Nags Head area begin-<lb/>
ning June 1, 1988. Salary: S4hour, 30-40<lb/>
hrs.wk. I lousing available near worksite<lb/>
- S50.00veck. Students must have 2.5<lb/>
GPA. Will receive $500 scholarshipsti-<lb/>
pend for college expenses when returning<lb/>
to school in the fall. For all these positions,<lb/>
contact Ruth Peterson, 757-6979, immedi-<lb/>
ately. Students may apply at Co-op office,<lb/>
2028 CC building<lb/>
5KRUN<lb/>
Faculty, staff and students are encour-<lb/>
aged to register for the summer 5K walk<lb/>
run July 20, at 8:00 p.m. at Bunting Track.<lb/>
For additional information, call 757-6387.<lb/>
MCAT<lb/>
Candidates planning to take the Medi-<lb/>
cal College Admission Test on Saturday,<lb/>
September 17, 1988, are strongly re-<lb/>
minded to have their registration post-<lb/>
marked by August 19, 1988. The late reg-<lb/>
istration receipt deadline is September 2,<lb/>
1988. Applications are available in the<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight Building, Room<lb/>
105, East Carolina University.<lb/>
PERSONAL ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Employment opportunities are avail-<lb/>
able to students who are interested in be-<lb/>
coming personal care attendants to stu-<lb/>
dents in wheel chairs. Past experiences are<lb/>
desired but not required. Applications<lb/>
will be taken for employment during the<lb/>
Fall and Spring Semesters 1988-1989. If<lb/>
interested, contact: Office of Handi-<lb/>
capped Student Services, 212 Whichard<lb/>
Building, East Carolina University, 757-<lb/>
6766.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY COMMITTEES<lb/>
Applications arc now being accepted<lb/>
for students wishing to serve on Univer-<lb/>
sity Committees for the 198S-89 school<lb/>
year. Applications are available at the<lb/>
following Locations: Office of the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life, 204,<lb/>
Whichard Building- Mcndenhall Student<lb/>
Center Information Desk; SCA f<lb/>
Mcndenhall Student Center; and<lb/>
dence 1 lall Directors' Offices.<lb/>
The University greatly appreciates the<lb/>
efforts of those studnets who have served<lb/>
in the past and hopes that students will<lb/>
continue their interest and participation.<lb/>
Questions about University Committees<lb/>
and memberships may be directed to the<lb/>
Office of the Vice Chancellor for Student<lb/>
Life (757-6541).<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
All students: there are still a few copies<lb/>
of the 1983-1986 yearbooks left at our of-<lb/>
fice. If you would like to receive a copy,<lb/>
just come by the Publications Building and<lb/>
pick one up.<lb/>
WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you are work study eligible for 2nd<lb/>
Summer Session andor Tall Semester,<lb/>
you are encouraged to contact the Coop<lb/>
office about off-campus placements. Call<lb/>
757-6979 of come by the General Class-<lb/>
room Building.<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now accepting<lb/>
applications for the position of Production<lb/>
Manager. Applicants should have prior<lb/>
newspaper experience, management skills,<lb/>
computer experience, and ability to type.<lb/>
Duties will include Classifieds and Announce-<lb/>
ments sections of The East Carolinian, hiring<lb/>
and management of typesetters and layout<lb/>
artist, and care of the archival storage area.<lb/>
Please apply In person at The East Carolinian<lb/>
offices, located in the Publications Building,<lb/>
M-F 10 a.m. ? 5 p.m.<lb/>
SAV A CENTER<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
On Manufacturer's Cents-Off Coupons. See Store For Details. Prices Effective Sun July 17<lb/>
Thru Sat July 23,1988. Quantity Rights Reserved. Not Responsible for Typographical Errors.<lb/>
2n<lb/>
U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BONELESS<lb/>
Top Round<lb/>
London Broil<lb/>
FIELDALE GRADE A<lb/>
Fresh Ground<lb/>
Beef<lb/>
ik.<lb/>
FRESH.ASSORTED<lb/>
Pork<lb/>
Chops<lb/>
1.88<lb/>
U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED<lb/>
Top Round<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
i<lb/>
5 lbs.<lb/>
or more<lb/>
89<lb/>
SMITHFIELD?GWALTNEY<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
Sliced<lb/>
Bacon Pkg<lb/>
1.49<lb/>
California<lb/>
Carrots bag<lb/>
89<lb/>
FARMLAND<lb/>
FIRST OF THE SEASON?CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Smoked 4 QA Bartlett<lb/>
Sausage Ii55 Pears<lb/>
79<lb/>
EXTRA LARGE?2 12 DIA.<lb/>
Southern<lb/>
Peaches<lb/>
LOCALLY GROWN<lb/>
Vine Ripe<lb/>
Tomatoes<lb/>
JUICY CALIFORNIA SUPERIOR WHITE<lb/>
Grapes<lb/>
1.49<lb/>
LIPTON?ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
Coolside<lb/>
Salads lz<lb/>
REG. OR DOUBLE STUF<lb/>
Oreo<lb/>
Cookies 2p2R0gz<lb/>
1.09<lb/>
2.19<lb/>
REGULAR OR LIGHT<lb/>
Old Milwaukee 12<lb/>
Beer cans<lb/>
SALAD DRESSING<lb/>
Wishbone<lb/>
Lite<lb/>
3.89<lb/>
79"<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
DELICIOUS<lb/>
Northern<lb/>
Bath Tissue<lb/>
Red Glo<lb/>
Tomatoes<lb/>
LuniOnt<lb/>
Mhwiwri Purctasc<lb/>
4 roll<lb/>
pkg.<lb/>
TAB?SPRITE?CAFFEINE FREE?REGULAR OR DIET<lb/>
Coca<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
78<lb/>
Limit 2 with a<lb/>
$10 minimum purchase<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS<lb/>
Flav-0-Rich<lb/>
Ice Cream V<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
Kimiw tease<lb/>
14.5 OZ.<lb/>
24<lb/>
40 OFF LABEL<lb/>
Surf<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
MfflHIWIII PlKtfBM<lb/>
42 OZ.<lb/>
box<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
QUARTERS<lb/>
Parkay 2<lb/>
Margarine Xt<lb/>
$1<lb/>
CHICKEN ALA KING?SALS STEAMCREAM CHIP BEEF OR<lb/>
Banquet 2 yg0<lb/>
Boil N Bags PV9;<lb/>
TASTEMAKER by J.P. Stevens<lb/>
 This Week <lb/>
Hand<lb/>
nana aqq<lb/>
Towels J<lb/>
13 X13<lb/>
Wash 079<lb/>
Cloths mm<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd Greenville<lb/>
Here (!<lb/>
nd pi<lb/>
Rod<lb/>
Hv v I<lb/>
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had .<lb/>
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th;<lb/>
ml:<lb/>
v! n <lb/>
the pai ?<lb/>
nvir<lb/>
?<lb/>
initials on<lb/>
ficall)<lb/>
Moore m ?<lb/>
self, subseqi<lb/>
barrassmenl<lb/>
while KWW I<lb/>
bally foi his n<lb/>
valous, embarrass<lb/>
believe it wasgei -<lb/>
that the audience<lb/>
slightly rehabil I<lb/>
After the firs! 1<lb/>
thai MaroUa was .<lb/>
something ; ut<lb/>
<pb facs="00058084_0009"/><lb/>
ONS<lb/>
?s Effective Sun July 17<lb/>
for Typographical Errors.<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
rk<lb/>
ops<lb/>
88<lb/>
89<lb/>
a<lb/>
: ib<lb/>
rag<lb/>
kSON?CALIFORNIA<lb/>
79<lb/>
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Ripe<lb/>
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90<lb/>
Ions<lb/>
:ans<lb/>
02<lb/>
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3.89<lb/>
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ICIOUS<lb/>
Glo<lb/>
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FF LABEL<lb/>
urgent<lb/>
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by J.P. Stevens<lb/>
Week <lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
399<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
279<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
I HI- I-AS I'1 AROI INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JULY 20, 1988 page 7<lb/>
Performance lacking push<lb/>
By CLAY DEANHARDT<lb/>
Ceneral Manager<lb/>
The ECU Summer Theatre's<lb/>
third offering of this year ? and<lb/>
its second musical ? was nearly<lb/>
free of the technical problems that<lb/>
marred the first production, but<lb/>
still lacked the final push that<lb/>
would have made the show com-<lb/>
petitive with professional Broad-<lb/>
way fare.<lb/>
"Diamond Studs" is a musical<lb/>
rendering of the life of Jesse<lb/>
James. First performed in Chapel<lb/>
Hill, it is really a series of musical<lb/>
vignettes about James' life, trac-<lb/>
ing his path from 16-year-old sol-<lb/>
dier in the Civil War to his even-<lb/>
tual death at the hands of one of<lb/>
his own gang.<lb/>
Jamesistreateciasa kind ofhero<lb/>
through most of the show, and<lb/>
comes across as a gentleman des-<lb/>
perado. Missing from the real life<lb/>
James, but then blood doesn't go<lb/>
over well in musicals.<lb/>
The musical is entertaining<lb/>
enough, and director Edgar<lb/>
Loessin and choreographer Ma-<lb/>
vis Ray have made the most of the<lb/>
stage and costuming in present-<lb/>
ing a quick, normally fast-paced<lb/>
portrait of the James Gang.<lb/>
Hut the show has some inherent<lb/>
problems in that there is no real<lb/>
tension to the story. The slick<lb/>
production numbers and well-<lb/>
choreographed dance scenes just<lb/>
aren't enough to make up for the<lb/>
lack of a dramatic thread through-<lb/>
out the play, and it is easy to lose<lb/>
one's interest in the fare by the<lb/>
end of the production.<lb/>
Grant Goodeve stars as Jesse<lb/>
James and does a good job por-<lb/>
traying James the rebellious 16-<lb/>
year old and James the aging<lb/>
outlaw. He is slick and suave<lb/>
enough to be believable as the<lb/>
anti-hero that has captured the<lb/>
imagination of so many people<lb/>
for so long.<lb/>
Goodeve can also sing, which is<lb/>
definitely a plus in a musical. The<lb/>
only place he seemed to have any<lb/>
trouble was with the last number,<lb/>
"Cakewalk into Kansas City<lb/>
when his vocals just weren't<lb/>
strong enough to overshadow or<lb/>
even highlight the festivities tak-<lb/>
ing place on the rest of the stage.<lb/>
Other highlight performances<lb/>
included Graham Pollock as both<lb/>
Cole Younger and Zerclda James<lb/>
(Jesse's mother); Steven Williford<lb/>
(who directed "Cat on a Hot Tin<lb/>
Roof") as Bob Ford, the man who<lb/>
finally kills James, and Stuart<lb/>
Maxwell in a brief but comical<lb/>
appearance as Poncho Villa.<lb/>
The technical glitches that<lb/>
plagued "Jerry's Girls" were<lb/>
solved for the most part by hav i<lb/>
the performers carry micro-<lb/>
phones with them on the si<lb/>
when the- sang, which is visual<lb/>
annoying but much better on the<lb/>
ears.<lb/>
Watch out, though, when<lb/>
male leads get together to<lb/>
Individually they sing quite w<lb/>
together they are in seri<lb/>
trouble.<lb/>
The costuming and set dc<lb/>
for "Diamond Studs" are fa.<lb/>
tic. The entire musical takes <lb/>
on one stage set, a saloon, w ith<lb/>
even the benefit oi a curtain<lb/>
makes for some interesting<lb/>
tumc changes and also pro<lb/>
for some of the best mom<lb/>
the show as performer- con<lb/>
and off the stage to play I<lb/>
parts.<lb/>
HOSy Tanya Tucker, play Hard Times<lb/>
By PAUL DUNN<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Here Giant Goodeve gives it his all while portraying the infamou<lb/>
lessejames. V:t admirable pei vnce it was, bringing pro-<lb/>
found professionalism and style to the EC I 's Summer Theatre.<lb/>
"1 li there you guys, this is<lb/>
Tanya Tucker and 1 had a great<lb/>
audience tonight and it wasoneof<lb/>
the best we have ever had. They<lb/>
were really super! It was a little<lb/>
warm out there and the sound<lb/>
system was awful bad, but we<lb/>
hope to come back some day and<lb/>
give them a really great show with<lb/>
a great sound system. I hope they<lb/>
were pleased and 1 hope we can<lb/>
come back soon, " country and<lb/>
western vocalist Tanya Tucker<lb/>
commented after her show Friday<lb/>
night at I laid Times.<lb/>
Heart of Stone and Tanya<lb/>
Tucker tans began lining up at the<lb/>
door at 6 p.m. battling outside<lb/>
tempatures that were almost<lb/>
Rod Stewart rocks the Dome<lb/>
BvMK HA I I BAR III I I<lb/>
OUt!<lb/>
fitti<lb/>
fore<lb/>
ispnere Dccausi<lb/>
it isovei K(k1 St?.<lb/>
mpcratures insid<lb/>
ings<lb/>
! 'can !<lb/>
Som<lb/>
wa rt. A ffer n i year<lb/>
audieru es . Rockin' Kv<lb/>
brant and oung<lb/>
Performing before<lb/>
house, Stewart left the<lb/>
like his tour title, "Oul<lb/>
Opening w ith ! is c<lb/>
"1 o-1 in You  th<lb/>
audienceon theedj<lb/>
wweu<lb/>
throughout the evening-<lb/>
Stewart, who began performing<lb/>
in the 60's, played an array of the<lb/>
ngs that made him famous.<lb/>
i in- like, ' ! to You Think I'm<lb/>
w and "The Best Days of My<lb/>
i if v ? re just a irw from his il-<lb/>
lustrious list oi classics.<lb/>
Aftera getting warmed-up with<lb/>
4 k I his new releases, Stewart<lb/>
t - d mio a wiLi<lb/>
" wi'TPms classic ballad,<lb/>
"Maggie Mae With the electric-<lb/>
its- flowing through the crowd,<lb/>
Stewart then manipulated the<lb/>
masses with an excellently cho-<lb/>
reographed show that included<lb/>
ev er hit imaginable.<lb/>
1 he spontaneous and energetic<lb/>
stage including the tops of the guitarist, Andy Taylor, formerly<lb/>
speakers.Drawmgon thecrowd's oi Duran Duran, was nothing<lb/>
energy, Stewart repeatedly short of sensational and drummer<lb/>
leaped on and off the speakers Tony Brock also performed an<lb/>
positioned at the corners of the admirable set.<lb/>
stage. These actions and his boy-<lb/>
ish air intensified the audience's<lb/>
responses.<lb/>
This was an indication of the<lb/>
organization oi the "Out of Or-<lb/>
der" tour. Stewart strategically<lb/>
positioned his performances so as<lb/>
to bring the evening to a climactic<lb/>
head. And while the word "Pas-<lb/>
sion" echoed through the Dome,<lb/>
it was evident that he had done<lb/>
just that.<lb/>
Now, of course Stewart<lb/>
couldn't have been so exciting<lb/>
ut utilized every inclof the without a supporting cast. Lead<lb/>
But probably the biggest asset<lb/>
for Stewart and the aura of the<lb/>
concert was the saxophone, trom-<lb/>
bone and trumpet players. They<lb/>
ga vc the songs and show a certain<lb/>
character and added the essential<lb/>
element needed for a well-<lb/>
rounded performance.<lb/>
After over two hours of exuber-<lb/>
ant rock-n-roll, the concert came<lb/>
to a dramatic end and everyone<lb/>
understood why Stewart has been<lb/>
such a hot item for the past two<lb/>
decades.<lb/>
'Arthury proves disappointing<lb/>
unbearable. The early concert<lb/>
J<lb/>
goers were expecting to be let in at<lb/>
8 p.m. but were required to stand<lb/>
outside until 8:45 p.m. This was<lb/>
due to a late sound check needed<lb/>
by Tucker's band, not the club,<lb/>
Hard Times.<lb/>
When the doors were opened,<lb/>
the crowd had one thing on their<lb/>
minds. All they wanted was to<lb/>
charge and take control of the few<lb/>
tables that were available. The<lb/>
chances were slim and so only the<lb/>
quickest of the quick got lucky.<lb/>
At exactly 9:30 p.m the deejay<lb/>
blasted over the house system, "<lb/>
Ladies and gentlemen, will you<lb/>
please make welcome North<lb/>
Carolina's premiere country<lb/>
music band, the Heart of Stone. "<lb/>
Randell Nelson, lead vocalist<lb/>
and guitarist, excited the over-<lb/>
heated and anxious crowd with<lb/>
his opening lyrics, " I've got no<lb/>
reason now for going home <lb/>
and at the completion of the first Palmer let his steel guitar<lb/>
song, Nelson summed up the big talking and oh, how this man<lb/>
thoughts of many eager audience could make it talk<lb/>
members. " We're glad to have Over on the crowded . -<lb/>
you all here tonight and we're beck left corner of the stage, Lewi<lb/>
sorry you all had a long wait folks, Baker was thumping away at the<lb/>
but sometimes that's the way it bass. Baker seemed to be a perl<lb/>
goes tionist because oi his int<lb/>
The crowd began to get into the checking of his sound qualit)<lb/>
groove when HOS played the this is one of the many reas<lb/>
song, "Train which is recog- is so good,<lb/>
nized as the band's crowd partici- Thedrum-meister ol I<lb/>
pation song. A rather large, is the young Linn V.<lb/>
middle aged woman with bed- definitely kept the band it<lb/>
room shoes sticking out of her beat.<lb/>
1000 country music-1<lb/>
ies took their toll on the audit i<lb/>
and especially the pc I<lb/>
Nelson was so thirsty fr<lb/>
dehydration that he hum i usl<lb/>
announced he would tal<lb/>
from anybody that didn't have<lb/>
AIDS. Nelson's wish was gi n I<lb/>
and the show continued<lb/>
The crowd really a<lb/>
song, " Heart of Stone " that will<lb/>
be the title cut for the bar<lb/>
and near future album.<lb/>
Lynn Parker, guitarist, ro<lb/>
his chance to impress the audi-<lb/>
ence with his Ricky Skaggs gual-<lb/>
ity voice, and impress<lb/>
Parker is a more laid I<lb/>
former than Nelson, who is defi<lb/>
nitelv labeled the "Mr. I tcite-<lb/>
ment" of the band and has a oicc<lb/>
that sounds very similar I<lb/>
mighty Hank Williams, J:<lb/>
an even wider pitch ran.<lb/>
The seemingly emotionk -<lb/>
BY CAROL WETHER1NG fON<lb/>
I tii.re? 1 .<lb/>
A<lb/>
en,<lb/>
readers,<lb/>
it<lb/>
the salisf) ing nu in<lb/>
i riginal.<lb/>
Ai lluir 11" p<lb/>
at ross the ountr)<lb/>
nately, here in C In<lb/>
After "Arthur,<lb/>
li - e with the v i<lb/>
Dm lie) Mi re ai<lb/>
Arthur Bach and<lb/>
: ? . .<lb/>
IK<lb/>
UU<lb/>
an<lb/>
n i<lb/>
i in ?<lb/>
iitol MI<lb/>
Ai<lb/>
ia i iv<lb/>
K ll U iil<lb/>
II i7a M<lb/>
mm<lb/>
i. n m u<lb/>
,i<lb/>
<lb/>
CH :<lb/>
. Mt!<lb/>
;ora<lb/>
, Oprah<lb/>
?re and<lb/>
irclj too hard fi ra<lb/>
I tin v. on Id ridi I<lb/>
Aitliui " fhis is no e<lb/>
tion. A few weeks agi<lb/>
Winfrey featured Mo<lb/>
Minnelli on her afternnon talk<lb/>
show. I lere they openly admitted<lb/>
that they had received numerous<lb/>
. rip! - lo n ad ir m v iri ; i writ<lb/>
ers. I hey also admitted that none<lb/>
had been good enough to even<lb/>
consider.<lb/>
Maybe they should have passed<lb/>
this one over, u 11<lb/>
'1 he opening oi the<lb/>
introduces us to the<lb/>
From here the plot builds. We<lb/>
find out that Susan Johnson's fa-<lb/>
ther, (remember him?), has en-<lb/>
acted a pretty devious plan to ruin<lb/>
the Bach family if Arthur doesn't<lb/>
divorce Linda and marry his<lb/>
bitchy daughter, who, by the way,<lb/>
is running a tacky-art museum.<lb/>
Flow's that for a hearty plot?<lb/>
From there, Arthur and Linda<lb/>
proceed to rent a really raunchy<lb/>
apartment, (the likes of those<lb/>
found in The Emerald City), and<lb/>
go into a state of poverty. Linda<lb/>
waitresses at her old hangout and<lb/>
Arthur attempts to find a job after<lb/>
Linda tells him to, get this, GROW<lb/>
UP. When did Arthur's immatur-<lb/>
theplotwego. Minnelli ity become a problem?!?<lb/>
laughingly tells Arthur, in posh After getting fired from a job,<lb/>
restaurant, that she can't have Arthur decides to give up. Di-<lb/>
children. At this news Arthur, vorce Linda, marry that Johnson<lb/>
who presumably wants to be- girl, and get his 750 million back.<lb/>
Now comes the dumbest part of<lb/>
it hoy were we wrong.<lb/>
Next Moore and Minnelli give<lb/>
i a cute, love-inspired couple<lb/>
ith a lot of money. 750 million to<lb/>
? c tact They joke around,<lb/>
iddle, provide lots of inane con-<lb/>
'rsation and just plain mushy-<lb/>
M ore is as intoxicated as<lb/>
 : and Minnelli has gained<lb/>
: lo top Has off, his jokes<lb/>
just aren't funny anymore. Sure,<lb/>
lie got in a few good one-liners,<lb/>
but it they were lost in the awk-<lb/>
ward feeelings emanating from<lb/>
most oi the scenes. There are<lb/>
s m funny moments with the<lb/>
butler, but, hey, when they're not<lb/>
1 lobson, how funny can they be?<lb/>
The adoption comes through,<lb/>
Linda has her own parade-party<lb/>
when Arthur comes like a knight<lb/>
in a black limo to take her home,<lb/>
butshe has some news for Arthur.<lb/>
See 'ARTHUR' page 8<lb/>
pocket book (I ASSUME she was<lb/>
preparing for the standing) was<lb/>
clapping to the beat as gallons of<lb/>
sweat poured from her body.<lb/>
Into the fifth song, Nelson<lb/>
played a demanding, up-beat,<lb/>
guitar solo that stunned the audi-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
The overwhelming 90 degree<lb/>
plus heat from the climate and the<lb/>
Heart of Stone continued I<lb/>
excite the audience, wl :our<lb/>
aging them to join in. .<lb/>
audience did so. especi ill) dur<lb/>
ing HOS's final tune of the eve-<lb/>
ning, " Rolling cm the River "<lb/>
At 10:50 p.m Tuckei<lb/>
began another anno) ing but nec-<lb/>
SeeTUCKl R' page B<lb/>
movie re-<lb/>
liquor-sod-<lb/>
come a father, replies, "That<lb/>
sucks Now, what is wrong with<lb/>
this picture?? Maybe the pro-<lb/>
ducer thought that was funny,but<lb/>
this sure was an awkward mo-<lb/>
ment for the women in the audi-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
But they don't stop there. Then,<lb/>
w hile dam ing in the middles of a you like the ghost-flashback-idea,<lb/>
restaurant, they decide to adopt. From here, Arthur decides not<lb/>
From there we are thrown into an to give up, but to fight Johnson<lb/>
interview with an adoption and the shrew. He digs up some<lb/>
the whole movie. Hobson ap-<lb/>
pears. You find yourself saying<lb/>
"What the hell?" Anyway, he<lb/>
gives Arthur some fatherly advice<lb/>
and Arthur, in turns, gives on-<lb/>
lookers, in a park, a drunken eye-<lb/>
ful. It has it's moments, I guess, if<lb/>
Pickin' the Bones<lb/>
Bonehead fights record execs<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff CD Mooch<lb/>
campus. To get that kind of from behind the 45 sectiion He<lb/>
money I'd have to start raiding the beckoned me over and told me to<lb/>
snack machines and the change shout his name in the most mek-<lb/>
machine in the library too. dramatic fashion I could manage<lb/>
I looked around helplessly. I felt Right there in the record store. I<lb/>
as if some stablizing factor in the yelled, ' Cho-co-winity<lb/>
den Arthur. I le's riding through agency representative who blows old grimy,nasty information with<lb/>
reenville<lb/>
oii Arthur's drinking problem an intent to blackmail the old<lb/>
and practically assures the Bachs geezer. In the confrontation<lb/>
that they arc excellent parent scene, Arthur also quit drinking,<lb/>
material and that they will, after One thing leads to another,<lb/>
an indeterminable wait, rccieve a Arthur slugs Johnson, and the<lb/>
child Now your mind is really problems are resolved and we<lb/>
blown! also get the feeling that Arthur has<lb/>
From there we are catapulted gained some respect from these<lb/>
into a baby store, where perhaps bigwigs who had previously felt<lb/>
the funniest scene, involving a he was a no-good, shiftless waste,<lb/>
stuffed, floppy cat and a wagon Now it's clear sailing. Arthur<lb/>
believe it was general consensus takes place. We have to watch gets his money back, plans to get<lb/>
that the audience was expecting a them giggle, frolick and act totally Linda back, who has left him after<lb/>
slightly rehabilitated Arthur, inane, while spending indiscrimi- a visit from the pirhana, and is<lb/>
After the first movie, it seemed nate amounts of money on a child once again affluent. The best<lb/>
that Marolla was going to do that they don't even have yet and thing about aH of this;is ARTHUR<lb/>
something positive for Arthur, are not sure they will get.<lb/>
the park in New York, having a<lb/>
merry,drunken time, accosting a<lb/>
fellow affluent, KWW, (liehad his<lb/>
initials on his car door), in a teri<lb/>
Really stupid scene. We watch<lb/>
Moore make a spectacle' of him-<lb/>
self, subsequently wringing em-<lb/>
barrassment from the crowd<lb/>
while KWW berates Arthur ver-<lb/>
bally for his misconduct and fri-<lb/>
valous, embarrassing attitude<lb/>
NO LONGER DRINKS<lb/>
I knew this was going to hap-<lb/>
pen.<lb/>
X, one of the former Greatest<lb/>
Bands in North America (things make up of the planet had just "paleyellow cardboard cut out o a<lb/>
went to hell after Billy Zoom quit), careened spacewards and died of lightning bolt came down, trans-<lb/>
releases a double live Lp. Aside explosive decompression. CDs forming me into Captain Bone-<lb/>
from the Star Search Winners were supposed to have stopped head!<lb/>
album, I can't think of a more this kind of madness. With the wisdom of ALF, I real-<lb/>
appropriate record to be the first What could I do? Write a letter ized there was only one thing to<lb/>
compact disc I own. to Warner Brothers? No. No, they do. And it wasn't the purchasing<lb/>
Not that I own a CD player or don't care if some bonehead in of frozen yogurt. I flew to Holly-<lb/>
anything. Being the face of pov- North Carolina gets ripped off. wood, and located the executive<lb/>
erty (and the shoulders, arms and Even if he is the biggest X fan in responsible for dropping three<lb/>
legs too), I have to be friends with the world. songs off of what could have beer<lb/>
people who own CD players. But Picket the record stores? I like the most boss CD of all time.<lb/>
I figure it's an even trade ? my East Coast, and while Record<lb/>
sparkling personality and com- Bar? can go to hell, I don't have With the speed of a slim, non-<lb/>
pany in exchange for a few hours the resources to hit three record smoking, kind of crabby typeset<lb/>
a day of illegally taping CDs with- stores at one time. Besides, it's not ter, I locked him in the nearest<lb/>
out prior written consent really their fault orange pick-up truck I saw. 1<lb/>
So I'm looking at the back cover Write a column about it? Well, equipped it with Jensen? speak-<lb/>
of the CD, "X Live at the Whiskey yeah. But even the fame, fortune ers and an Alpine? CD player.<lb/>
A Go Go on the Fabulous Sunset and free toilet paper that I possess<lb/>
Strip And I see a sentence that as The Most Famous Bonehead on<lb/>
sends my vertabrae snapping. campus isn't enough to combat<lb/>
"Due to time limitations, the the recording industry,<lb/>
following songs are not included<lb/>
on the CD package They've had years to perfect<lb/>
I was stunned. How can they their capitalist techniques of blind Rick Astley CD, Jammed it into<lb/>
leave off three songs? What do greed and slimy indifference. I've the car player and pressed play.<lb/>
they expect a college student only been doing it for a year or so. Then I flew off, leaving him to his<lb/>
already the fingernails of poverty, So. I had fust about gotten to the fate.<lb/>
to do? Buy the CD for the sound point of giving up. I was going to The next time I looked in on hi m<lb/>
quality, and the Lp or cassette for just bend over and let the record with the vision of Mom, I saw him<lb/>
the last three songs? companies violate me. What the soil driving around, drooling and<lb/>
My god, I already subsist off the hell. Maybe I could get some t- muttering, "never gonna give you<lb/>
change I find in the coin return shirts made. up.J<lb/>
slots of the Cokefr machines ort Then, an old wizard appeared t. Justice is served.<lb/>
I welded the doors shut and fi t-<lb/>
ted the windows with unbreak-<lb/>
able glass. Before 1 flew back<lb/>
home, I stopped off at the CD<lb/>
store.<lb/>
I purchased (X forgive me) the<lb/>
<pb facs="00058084_0010"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
V<lb/>
TH E FAST CARPI INI AN<lb/>
JULY 20, 1QS8<lb/>
Tucker rocks Hard Times club<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
cssary sound check that would<lb/>
v ausc a delay of 25 minutes.<lb/>
IT WAS FINALLY TIME!<lb/>
lucker's band came onto the<lb/>
stage and started pining without<lb/>
a singer. Curiosity hovered but it<lb/>
helped create a grand entrance.<lb/>
Voices were shouting, " Where's<lb/>
Tanya?"<lb/>
1 he crowd let out another in-<lb/>
credible roar as the very sew,<lb/>
country music performer entered<lb/>
and danced around on stage.<lb/>
Tucker went immediately into her<lb/>
opening number, "I wonder what<lb/>
 ou're doing tonight ?"<lb/>
Tucker was wearing a glamor-<lb/>
ous, green halter top that was<lb/>
trimmed in black. She had on<lb/>
black tights that were covered by<lb/>
a black ruffled mini skirt. Around<lb/>
her waist was a shiny western belt<lb/>
that sent out laser beams of light.<lb/>
She continued her show with the<lb/>
tast paced tune, "Any Otter Love.<lb/>
"I'm really glad to be here to-<lb/>
night and I am now going to carry<lb/>
you all back a few years. 1 always<lb/>
do this song for all the men in the<lb/>
audience from all the gals.<lb/>
Women, " teased Tucker before<lb/>
she Sting, " 1 Don't Believe My<lb/>
Heart Can Stand Another You. "<lb/>
Tucker then played another<lb/>
crowd favorite tune, "What's<lb/>
Your Momma's Name Child<lb/>
Feedback was a problem for her<lb/>
band that wasn't a hassle for the<lb/>
Heart of Stone band. This was due<lb/>
to her band's late arrival. Her<lb/>
band was to supposed to arrive at<lb/>
the club by noon to set up and<lb/>
complete a sound check. The<lb/>
members didn't show up until six<lb/>
and one half hours after noon.<lb/>
At the completion of "What's<lb/>
Your Momma's Name Child ?"<lb/>
Tucker noticed the band and her-<lb/>
self had to cover one car to hear<lb/>
themselves sing. She couldn't<lb/>
stand it anymore.<lb/>
"Is it possible to get the highs<lb/>
turned down in the house? Can<lb/>
you get the highs down? It's really<lb/>
hard tor us to hear up here, but it<lb/>
doesn't really matter because<lb/>
we're going to have fun anyway<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Knowing she was on a roll,<lb/>
Tucker said Isn't it hot in here<lb/>
tonight? That's alright too, be-<lb/>
cause we can sweat together<lb/>
Tucker continued talking to the<lb/>
crowd telling them about some<lb/>
events that had been going on<lb/>
with her. She said she had just<lb/>
completed shooting a Roger<lb/>
Miller Television Special on the<lb/>
Mississippi Queen, floating down<lb/>
the Mississippi River. The show is<lb/>
to be aired October 4.<lb/>
"We didn't know if we were<lb/>
going to finish the trip because the<lb/>
water level was so low, but we<lb/>
made it, " said Tucker.<lb/>
The female vocalist also told<lb/>
about her near adventure to<lb/>
GreenvilleSouth Carolina instead<lb/>
of North Carolina for the concert.<lb/>
" What a mistake that would of<lb/>
been. My daddy caught me at the<lb/>
Atlanta airport and told me I was<lb/>
headed for the wrong Greenville.<lb/>
I am so glad I got the right plane<lb/>
and city. "<lb/>
Tucker then dedicated another<lb/>
one of her hits to the audience.<lb/>
The crowd responded well to,<lb/>
"Love Me Like You Used To. "<lb/>
"You're a beautiful audience<lb/>
and I can't thank ya'll enough. We<lb/>
are going to be in North Carolina<lb/>
about ten more times, "said<lb/>
Tucker.<lb/>
"I would like to take ya'll back<lb/>
to 1972 when I had my very first<lb/>
hit record. It has given me a ' 'if<lb/>
wonderful opportunities that I<lb/>
would have never have had, '<lb/>
said a sentimental Tucker.<lb/>
As she sang " Delta Dawn" the<lb/>
audience sang along. About mid-<lb/>
way the song, Tucker stopped<lb/>
singing and stuck her mic out<lb/>
towards the audience and let<lb/>
them take over.<lb/>
After performing the "San An-<lb/>
tonio Stroll" and other hits,<lb/>
Tucker made her grand finale<lb/>
with, "When I die may not go to<lb/>
1 leaven. "<lb/>
Tucker told the audience she<lb/>
loved them,saluted and then ex-<lb/>
ited the stage. All the anger from<lb/>
heat and delay was all forgotten.<lb/>
It was a night to remember.<lb/>
OUR RESUMES<lb/>
MAKE A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE<lb/>
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having a clean professional looking resume by AccuCopy<lb/>
Our resume packages let you choose between photo-<lb/>
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<lb/>
THE RESUME PEOPLE<lb/>
Next to Chicos in the Georqetown Shops<lb/>
Kellerman takes on two new roles this summer<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AD ? The<lb/>
ever-versatile Sally Kellerman<lb/>
appears this summer in two di-<lb/>
 ergent movie roles: as a film ac-<lb/>
tress shattered by the end of her<lb/>
marriage, and as operator of a<lb/>
. ar-games school for women.<lb/>
Is there anything Kellerman<lb/>
can't do? Apparently not. When<lb/>
she isn't playing her wide range of<lb/>
acting roles,you might find her in<lb/>
. cal stage plays, doing voice-<lb/>
overs for commercials and car-<lb/>
toons or singing her own brand of<lb/>
bluesy music in New York and<lb/>
1 lollywood night spots.<lb/>
Kellerman recently chatted<lb/>
about her life at the Hollywood<lb/>
Hills home she shares with her<lb/>
produccr-husband onathan<lb/>
krane and a pair of friendly dogs.<lb/>
1 ler blond beauty remains un-<lb/>
touched as she nears 50, and she<lb/>
talks more level-headedly than<lb/>
you would expect from seeing her<lb/>
in eccentric film roles.<lb/>
She currently appears in<lb/>
"Someone to Love which has<lb/>
drawn raves from some review-<lb/>
ers for its free-form, humanistic<lb/>
qualities It's another idiosyn-<lb/>
cratic film from Henry Jaglom.<lb/>
"Henry and the character he<lb/>
plays in the movie had the idea of<lb/>
finding out why various friends<lb/>
oi his were alone on Valentine's<lb/>
Day Kellerman said. "He in-<lb/>
vited them all to a theater (the<lb/>
Mavfair in Santa Movica). He said<lb/>
I'd be a movie star who just left her<lb/>
husband. That was it.<lb/>
"So wcall arrived, and he asked<lb/>
questions and had us think about<lb/>
our characters. It was essentially<lb/>
improvised, and he ended up in<lb/>
the editing room putting it all<lb/>
together. People say, 'Oh, it's<lb/>
real But it wasn't really real<lb/>
Kellerman first impressed the<lb/>
film world as I lot Lips Houlihan<lb/>
in the landmark comedy, "M-A-S-<lb/>
H which brought her a 1970<lb/>
Academy nomination as support-<lb/>
ing actress.<lb/>
"After 'M-A-S-H' 1 was out to<lb/>
prove that I was not just Hot Lips<lb/>
but I could be a million other<lb/>
people. So I looked for the most<lb/>
serious drama I could find she<lb/>
said. "I tried to dodge around but<lb/>
I often ended up with roles that<lb/>
were not Hot lips but were this<lb/>
kind of zany, kookie, larger-than-<lb/>
life character<lb/>
Sally Kellerman was born in.<lb/>
Long Beach but grew upin the San<lb/>
Fernando. Valley, "before they<lb/>
raped the land and before smog "<lb/>
Then she attended Hollywood<lb/>
Vh School.<lb/>
RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS<lb/>
Arthur' still a drunk<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
4<lb/>
But where does it all end? It all<lb/>
ends with a poignant scene just<lb/>
after they have returned to their<lb/>
posh house. The servants all greet<lb/>
them and Arthur's butler and<lb/>
valet, a stiff old dude, plays a joke<lb/>
on Arthur. I Icre is a chokingly,<lb/>
soft moment that stands out of the<lb/>
script nicely. But I won't tell you<lb/>
what inc:<lb/>
i. luiidv luu'<lb/>
thing happens here.<lb/>
The directing of the movie is<lb/>
sufficient and the casting was<lb/>
once again, excellent. But the plot<lb/>
and storyline failed. What a<lb/>
disappointment. If you have seen<lb/>
"Arthur, "but have not seen<lb/>
"Arthur 11" yet, don't do it Your<lb/>
great memories of the original<lb/>
will become warped and you'll be<lb/>
sorry.<lb/>
OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS ON THESE<lb/>
DOORS FIRST.<lb/>
7hy9 Because Army ROTC reaches you<lb/>
loader ship ar.ri . 3U<lb/>
need for success  ? .  : ?<lb/>
ARMY ROTC<lb/>
THE SMARTEST COLLEGE<lb/>
COURSE Y01 CAN TAKE.<lb/>
For Further Information Contact<lb/>
Capt. Steve L. Jone<lb/>
(Erwin Hall) 757-6967<lb/>
M2T35<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
Comics that can punch into your chest and pull your heart out so fast it'll be the last thing you see before you<lb/>
By Friedrich The Law<lb/>
die<lb/>
HV Rfcit)<lb/>
v:t7'<lb/>
t-K.<lb/>
.<lb/>
.<lb/>
?.  r ? 1  ??<lb/>
y- y ? o-? (Tv<lb/>
 '??' : NDi -y 9&amp;&amp;Tm4<lb/>
i,<lb/>
he<lb/>
it m -m<lb/>
( ,i :n piis C 1)111 i( s<lb/>
L THIS AIN'T ME WCsi<lb/>
BUT XT'LL DO<lb/>
Arm Fall-Off Boy<lb/>
STILL IN CAPTIVITY ?<lb/>
"reuoiA LeGioNHefsces)<lb/>
TheU'l<lb/>
Bruce Lee,<lb/>
Jeff Parker Look-a-like<lb/>
Yo yo homeboys and homegirls. Here's another chilly-fresh comics page that is so stupid-def it'll<lb/>
make you laugh hard enough to damage an organ. Once again there is Classic Law (but with no<lb/>
mutants), Campus Comics has an implied dirty joke if you look hard enough, and Friedrich snuch<lb/>
"titties" in Overkill again. He did it so artfully that I decided to spell his name right this week. We<lb/>
wish him good luck biking to Raleigh this weekend, and don't forget to take along the Junior<lb/>
Woodchuck's Manual. And last but not least, I still have my license! HAAAAA See you all next weeK<lb/>
for the last edition of Li'l Pirate Comix and the wrap-up of the Arm Fall-Off Boy story, before we com?<lb/>
back in the Fall bigger and better than ever. Scoal.<lb/>
AKPB<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
 Kitty no habla espanol I L<lb/>
 SCfX US INTO 7HS<lb/>
1fcAPtANlN0W I GueSS<lb/>
WELL ALL PIS. I CANT<lb/>
THNKQfAWAY TO<lb/>
?SCAPe.AHtl?ALL<lb/>
HAV5 TOTALLY ,<lb/>
aseizss foue&amp;'j<lb/>
Hit t<lb/>
Lose k<lb/>
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?<lb/>
5<lb/>
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Ultimat<lb/>
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looking<lb/>
t ByGREERBO<lb/>
H? ?<lb/>
vmrruV frispet ' is K<lb/>
j abular club sj it 1<lb/>
: na in the past I<lb/>
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iff)<lb/>
? s the Ir<lb/>
vgar th<lb/>
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Gjliytona Beach Fla<lb/>
t&amp;e Natior tl C<lb/>
val. The I<lb/>
?ring the<lb/>
ijiv ak. Thel<lb/>
$k'h mdi idual v i k<lb/>
8tober to<lb/>
tther- <lb/>
8?nt of the Iral<lb/>
locks forward to tl -<lb/>
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Spar Li-t schcx<lb/>
15 i - .<lb/>
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fip er neiej<lb/>
Wisconsin m<lb/>
foment t<lb/>
.W nn? ?- ta to savor<lb/>
$iit, it was the last<lb/>
for quite a while.<lb/>
?n the v n<lb/>
victory oi bn<lb/>
rriftnbers oi tl s<lb/>
basketball team wc i<lb/>
r&amp;e in an incident in a v'<lb/>
Vs. hotel room<lb/>
j"he three later were<lb/>
lri-a trial filled with ?<lb/>
si?rn But the notoriet)<lb/>
bvinning for Minnesota<lb/>
islunong the nation<lb/>
 Irsities.<lb/>
! With 4493 undcrgra<lb/>
gHiduate students and<lb/>
eliension students the Mini<lb/>
sola campus spraw 5 r bJ<lb/>
bAkks oi the Mississippi Rr<lb/>
iimr downtown Minneapx -<lb/>
ilie misdeeds, impro j<lb/>
aa embarrassments<lb/>
n$t 31 months were dizzying j<lb/>
$-The men's basketball to<lb/>
Ws placed on probation by<lb/>
Nlliional Collegiate Athletic .<lb/>
station for numberous intrj<lb/>
twobs, mostlv over Us recruitinj<lb/>
student athletes.<lb/>
jP University President il<lb/>
Vcller resigned in a scandal o<lb/>
mind reds oi thousands of doll<lb/>
spent on his official residence<lb/>
? Keller's interim replacenul<lb/>
<pb facs="00058084_0011"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
E A<lb/>
IMOb<lb/>
I <lb/>
ff<lb/>
<lb/>
I ill I SI t K( l INI N<lb/>
????Mi<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Jl 20, 1988 page 9<lb/>
,ose looks foward to a winning season<lb/>
Inmate team<lb/>
ByCRKER BOWEN<lb/>
surrwdui<lb/>
"1 just can't wait to get<lb/>
started said Reed Lose. I ose isa<lb/>
junior on the basketball team and<lb/>
with new confidence he looks<lb/>
forward to the season starting.<lb/>
1 ose came to East Carolina from<lb/>
Camp llill Pennsylvania and<lb/>
even though he misses the snow<lb/>
he is happy with his college<lb/>
choice. Lose decided to come to<lb/>
East Carolina because he liked the<lb/>
people and the area. As a child<lb/>
Lose played basketball, football,<lb/>
and baseball but decided to con<lb/>
cent rate on basketball.<lb/>
lose is majoring in 1 lotel and<lb/>
Restaurant management, but he<lb/>
said that he really doesn't want to<lb/>
! tart at the bottom. "1 just don't<lb/>
want to have to deal with too<lb/>
main boscs he said. Lose be<lb/>
lieves that he could be h tppy here<lb/>
without basketball, but that it<lb/>
adds a great deal to his coll .<lb/>
cart er<lb/>
Playing college basketball is<lb/>
ver) demanding. During the<lb/>
season, Lose says that he goes to<lb/>
class, practice,study hall and then<lb/>
he goes to bed and does it all over<lb/>
again. "We don't have time tor<lb/>
much eKe because' we travel a<lb/>
lot said 1 ose.<lb/>
I ose was the offensh c player<lb/>
ol the year last year and was on<lb/>
the all tournament team oi the<lb/>
Musk- City Invitational of Van-<lb/>
derbilt University as well. But he<lb/>
said he had doubts as a freshman.<lb/>
1 wasn't sure that 1 could com<lb/>
pete on the college level Hut<lb/>
with the support ol his family and schooloranything, 1 know I could<lb/>
the encouragment of the coaching count on any of my coachs 1 ose<lb/>
staff. Lose has no doughts now. added.<lb/>
"My Mom used to help me shot This year Lose thinks that the<lb/>
free throws and my Dad even team will win the Conference<lb/>
started a booster program at my championship. "I came off a<lb/>
high school Lose said. Lose's pretty good year and I want to<lb/>
parents have been more than just<lb/>
supportive. "My parents have<lb/>
been to see every away game in<lb/>
the conference except Wilming-<lb/>
ton Lose said. This type of sup-<lb/>
contribute as much, as I can to the<lb/>
team Lose Mid. Blue Edwards,<lb/>
Jeff Kelly and Lose are the only<lb/>
returning starters but with six<lb/>
new recruits and new found team<lb/>
port carries over to the coaches as confidence, Lose looks for a great<lb/>
well.<lb/>
Lose spoke very highly of<lb/>
1 lead Coach Mike Steele and the<lb/>
entire basketball coaching staff.<lb/>
I o c was involved in the basket-<lb/>
ball program under coach Harri-<lb/>
son and said that even though he<lb/>
thinks a great deal of 1 larrison.he<lb/>
believes Steele has had a great<lb/>
influence on the team. "1 didn't<lb/>
interact with Coach Harrison as<lb/>
much 1 do with the coachs now<lb/>
Lose said.<lb/>
"Coach Steele is a family man<lb/>
and we have gotten to know his<lb/>
family I ose said. "Weeven go to<lb/>
his house he added. Lose says<lb/>
that coach Sleek' encourages the<lb/>
team members to be complete<lb/>
people and will even let team<lb/>
members live anywhere they<lb/>
want to on campus. "A lot of ath-<lb/>
letes don't have that option said<lb/>
Lose<lb/>
According to lose, Coach<lb/>
Steele is there for the players<lb/>
whenever they need him. " Coach<lb/>
Steele told us 'You're not here for<lb/>
basketball. ou're here to get your<lb/>
degree It 1 had a problem in<lb/>
year. Hie recruits are going to be<lb/>
an asset to the team, Losebelie es<lb/>
"The recruits are all well know -nin<lb/>
their comuni ties and should add a<lb/>
lot<lb/>
Lose is also Add to have Blue<lb/>
back. "Blue is the hi t and now<lb/>
that he's ba k i won't beexpe I<lb/>
to be as much of a s. orer, I<lb/>
said. But tins de?. not damper<lb/>
Lose's spirits He believes this<lb/>
vear will be tl e team I I<lb/>
Lose says that Coach Steeh<lb/>
let them become a one man team<lb/>
I hats net how coach Steele<lb/>
W( rks 1 ose said<lb/>
Everyone is expet ting<lb/>
great things to m the team<lb/>
I ose believes that a.Ids <lb/>
because "You can talk all you<lb/>
want but you still have to go out<lb/>
Md do It "<lb/>
looking<lb/>
for<lb/>
vou<lb/>
. t ar<lb/>
ire f)<lb/>
 port<lb/>
round and<lb/>
loan<lb/>
por-<lb/>
also<lb/>
? save<lb/>
Lit or<lb/>
le they<lb/>
I a tour-<lb/>
on<lb/>
I start a<lb/>
. men<lb/>
nt the<lb/>
? sport<lb/>
mpete<lb/>
im level<lb/>
. ist be a<lb/>
I lurley<lb/>
- fast .nd<lb/>
i tru tured<lb/>
aid<lb/>
1 lurley. Each team has seven men.<lb/>
The field is sot up like a football<lb/>
held. Ultimate is not a contact<lb/>
sport ,nd you can't run with the<lb/>
frisbce. "You must have a pivot<lb/>
foot, like in basketball <lb/>
Hurley. Games are played to<lb/>
15,17, or 19 points and there is no<lb/>
time limit.<lb/>
0 s ore, v ou must<lb/>
catch the frisbce in our<lb/>
opponent's endone. If the Iris-<lb/>
bee is droped or a throw is not<lb/>
completed, the other team gains<lb/>
control.<lb/>
Hurley encourages any inter<lb/>
ited students to come out during<lb/>
a practice, "lust because you can't<lb/>
throw a frisbce is no reason not to<lb/>
try out said Hurley. Team<lb/>
members are very understanding<lb/>
of new players. "We all under-<lb/>
stand that you have to start some-<lb/>
where, we were all in the same<lb/>
spot<lb/>
I'r.u ti( es in the tall will be held<lb/>
en ! ucsday, Thursday, and Sun-<lb/>
day afternoons in the field at the<lb/>
bottom oi the hill. Oi course ev-<lb/>
eryone that comes to a practice<lb/>
will not travel with the team<lb/>
1 lurley said that the people who<lb/>
keep coming out travel with us<lb/>
niversiiv of Minnesota continues<lb/>
their downhill slide into scandal<lb/>
igiar-<lb/>
ine article<lb/>
? ? -r<lb/>
n<lb/>
ise-<lb/>
of them in the<lb/>
under Coach<lb/>
resigned alter the rape<lb/>
i<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
: itn s<lb/>
?<lb/>
'<lb/>
at) offi lal<lb/>
es of swin-<lb/>
. . ing it to ath-<lb/>
ilar athletic<lb/>
.? as tired.<lb/>
be unprece-<lb/>
. univ( rsitics.<lb/>
. li nt i 1 the<lb/>
ling B( tards<lb/>
ind , re-<lb/>
. " ' 'is skid<lb/>
"They would<lb/>
r de ils E ery-<lb/>
.i to them at<lb/>
'? '?<lb/>
si I<lb/>
isn't clear.<lb/>
? be more difficult<lb/>
I fun tion in ,n<lb/>
I i<lb/>
m because the<lb/>
? the Mis .<lb/>
Is, imj<lb/>
.<lb/>
rtths were dizz<lb/>
- ? n's I'm .ketball t<lb/>
.i . I oi<lb/>
ilolli giate Al<lb/>
on i for nu nberous infrui<lb/>
mostlyover its re i uitii<lb/>
fcudent<lb/>
rsil I ident I<lb/>
wod in a si andal i<lb/>
Is of th us mds i f dollars<lb/>
 is ffi ial rcsidi i<lb/>
i sinterim n pla ement.<lb/>
to be looking<lb/>
: : a lot more<lb/>
 ist said.ale.<lb/>
rape charges,<lb/>
in Km-king over<lb/>
houlder.<lb/>
 ? I later that vear<lb/>
I athletic depart<lb/>
nit 'nt had tl ference's lowest<lb/>
nation from 1978<lb/>
tl<lb/>
! v is still rvi I<lb/>
' NM A A lines<lb/>
! t ? investigate re<lb/>
the NCAA an<lb/>
 ii ilations, most<lb/>
isketball program<lb/>
im Dutcher, who<lb/>
trial.<lb/>
In the same month, Keller re-<lb/>
signed after a six-week contro-<lb/>
versy over university financial<lb/>
management. It was sparked by<lb/>
his SI.5 million renovation ol the<lb/>
official residence at more than<lb/>
twice the budgeted amount.<lb/>
Keller also approved a $21H 1,1 N Hl<lb/>
remodeling oi his offices, includ-<lb/>
ing a $15,822 mahogany desk and<lb/>
credenza. 1 le eventually paid tor<lb/>
them himself.<lb/>
Students picketed the mansion<lb/>
and a local radio stations's ditty<lb/>
referred to Keller as the "Renova-<lb/>
tion Man His "Commitment to<lb/>
Locus" plan to upgrade some<lb/>
programs, cut others dnd reduce<lb/>
enrollment by 8,(XK), was mock<lb/>
ingly referred to as "Commitment<lb/>
to Furniture<lb/>
A widening probe turned up a<lb/>
$221 million reserve fund Critics<lb/>
called it a slush fund, and it<lb/>
rankled professors whose pro-<lb/>
grams had been targeted for<lb/>
elimination and angered some<lb/>
contributors and alumni, who<lb/>
quit giving.<lb/>
When Sauer took over the<lb/>
president's duties, he remained in<lb/>
lus own home, accepted a used<lb/>
desk and set out to mend fences.<lb/>
I hen the plagiarism scandal hit<lb/>
him while he was applying for the<lb/>
presidency of North Dakota State<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Park offers tips<lb/>
for better games<lb/>
By NEEDHAM I'RK<lb/>
surr Writer<lb/>
There vou are, amidst the green<lb/>
rass with lavish woods and spar-<lb/>
kling ponds all around. You're<lb/>
eyeing two squirrels p!a fully<lb/>
chasing each other w ith a harmo-<lb/>
nious background oi bird- chirp<lb/>
ing in the distance, when sud-<lb/>
denly some clod knocks a ball<lb/>
only a few feet away. Anger<lb/>
surges through your entire bod)<lb/>
because it comes back to vou that<lb/>
.<lb/>
tl<lb/>
fast cart it makt s the<lb/>
woi th w hile.<lb/>
Now is the time tor the I<lb/>
ti n to tx cm - the ! I Be sure<lb/>
and give <lb/>
friendl) tips Tell them I<lb/>
their tee real high in tl and.<lb/>
therefore causing the b ill t<lb/>
straight up. The next hole the<lb/>
sure to know vou were joking and<lb/>
practically burv the tee causing<lb/>
the club to dig a I enough<lb/>
to throw a coffin in.<lb/>
you're searching for your third First off, Select an op<lb/>
lost ball of the day (each costing<lb/>
$1.50). If you throw a new one out<lb/>
it will cost vou a stroke (stroke is<lb/>
golf terminology for "point" but<lb/>
in somethiscan actually "cause" a<lb/>
stroke), and if you are not quick<lb/>
making up your mind vou could<lb/>
get beaned by the ball t s, me<lb/>
impatient player tr ing to play at<lb/>
the speed of sound s they can get<lb/>
sauced at the clubhouse.<lb/>
Who was first to proclaim golf<lb/>
"relaxing" or a "gentleman's<lb/>
sport"? Perhaps they were the<lb/>
ancestors of those ou see with a<lb/>
shiny new set of clubs each ear<lb/>
because their old ones got<lb/>
wrapped around a tree in an an-<lb/>
gered frenzy. 1 personally adore<lb/>
the game of golf not for its relaxa-<lb/>
tion or its competition but be-<lb/>
cause it's fun to have a temper<lb/>
tantrum every once in a while.<lb/>
Take for example a typical da)<lb/>
around the ol' golf course. Lirt<lb/>
off, select an opponent whose<lb/>
never played before or at least<lb/>
someone who really stinks at the<lb/>
l .ii.e and has no chance e: beat<lb/>
ing you. Alter shelling out your<lb/>
entire savings for that week as a<lb/>
green fee, or claiming your uncle<lb/>
owns the joint and playing tor<lb/>
free, rent a cart - the most exciting<lb/>
asrx ct of golf. If you get a good<lb/>
portent whoso never<lb/>
played before <lb/>
Some pel ;<lb/>
process r . I<lb/>
toasted It's a pr.<lb/>
suitable tor mar<lb/>
ally prefer being mi -<lb/>
sober. Another tip is to be on I<lb/>
leek, ut  r tru . . COJ -<lb/>
they're a couple of rough lo -<lb/>
guys wearing plaid pants Md<lb/>
green sweaters who work in the<lb/>
pro shop. They w ill d<lb/>
from the start that ou are tree:<lb/>
and m-ist upon following <lb/>
around and finding a reas - I<lb/>
lecture.<lb/>
After a couple . : h urs a s?<lb/>
of 72 is obtained; not bad t?<lb/>
holcsofg ? .<lb/>
tood and back to the se<lb/>
When you get toaboi :  I<lb/>
hole it's pi<lb/>
it hopeless and sj 11<lb/>
the day doing d nuts<lb/>
and searcl for lost I<lb/>
on I<lb/>
Finally, when it'sovei it's I<lb/>
to get intoxicated it you're n<lb/>
already. Then it's time to st<lb/>
sa ing up tor the nt el tu<lb/>
you hope w ill come -<lb/>
around the course.<lb/>
After he apologized to the Uiv-<lb/>
ersity oi Minnesota regents, they<lb/>
gave him a unanimous vote oi<lb/>
confidence. North Dakota State<lb/>
since has asked him to renew his<lb/>
application for the presidency.<lb/>
Sauer's troubles were followed<lb/>
by the athletic department com-<lb/>
ing under further investigation.<lb/>
Luther Darville, former acting di-<lb/>
rector of the school's Office of<lb/>
Minority and Special Student<lb/>
Affairs, was indicted in May on<lb/>
three counts of felony theft by<lb/>
swindle.<lb/>
Darville has fled to his native<lb/>
Bahamas nd authorities have<lb/>
started extradition proceedings.<lb/>
University officials acknowl-<lb/>
edge that the turnover among top<lb/>
personnel has caused problems,<lb/>
but they say the school is running<lb/>
more smoothly than might be<lb/>
expected.<lb/>
' I think the fact is that the<lb/>
univenstv is being will-governed<lb/>
by the interim people said<lb/>
David Lebedott, chairman of the<lb/>
University oi Minnesota Board of<lb/>
Regents.<lb/>
David Merkowitz, spokesman<lb/>
for the American Council oi Edu-<lb/>
cation, said he couldn't recall any<lb/>
other university having so many<lb/>
problems recently.<lb/>
Still, Merkowitz said, "I am<lb/>
absolutely sun" a university like<lb/>
Minnesota w ith 45,(XY) students is<lb/>
going to survive these things<lb/>
c;<lb/>
Ballesteros edges to<lb/>
British Open win<lb/>
LYTHHAM, England (AH<lb/>
eve ballesteros ot Spain birdied<lb/>
the lhth hole with the help oi a<lb/>
magnificent iron shot that hit the<lb/>
flagstick, and won his third Brit-<lb/>
ish Open title by two strokes over<lb/>
Nick Price today.<lb/>
It was match-play condition<lb/>
through the final 18 holes, with<lb/>
Trice nd Ballesteros playing to-<lb/>
gether stroke for stroke until le.<lb/>
And it wasn't over until Bab<lb/>
lesteros scrambled from behind<lb/>
the 18th green with another in-<lb/>
credible iron shot to save par w ith<lb/>
a two-inch putt<lb/>
Ballesteros finished at 11 -under<lb/>
par 23,<lb/>
with a tinal round of 6<lb/>
under 65, the lowest IS holes of<lb/>
the weather plagued tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
TheSpaniard won his first open majot victor)<lb/>
here in 1979, and it was loth hole<lb/>
heroics that lifted him to victory<lb/>
that time too.<lb/>
Price, the Zimbawean who led<lb/>
after the second and third rounds,<lb/>
left a 12-foot birdie putt short and<lb/>
to the right on No. lb. He then<lb/>
bogeyed the final hole, tying for a<lb/>
last-ditch birdie, and finished at<lb/>
69-275.<lb/>
Nick Ealdo oi Inland, last<lb/>
vear's winner, shot an even par 71<lb/>
and finished third at 5 under 279.<lb/>
Faldo, who turned 31 as the open<lb/>
had its first today finish ever, won<lb/>
last year with a round of 18 pars,<lb/>
but had three birdies and three<lb/>
fcogevs this time.<lb/>
Two Americans Fred v<lb/>
and Gary Koch finished a:<lb/>
under 281. Beth shot ; . r 68s<lb/>
on the final day, withCoupl<lb/>
under before taking b at the<lb/>
17th and 18th<lb/>
Sandy I yleofScotland the 1985<lb/>
champion w ho started the day at<lb/>
4-under par. also taded in the late<lb/>
going, taking a boge) sen No 17<lb/>
and a double boge) 6 on the final<lb/>
hole to finish at l-under283 ?<lb/>
a round ot 4<lb/>
In 1979, the last time the open<lb/>
was played at the Royal 1 wham<lb/>
and ST. Annes GoM Club Bal-<lb/>
lesteros was a T2 year old who<lb/>
alroadv had led the IV.A Lure<lb/>
pean Lour m menev winnnings<lb/>
but still was looking tor his first<lb/>
He got it in the open that year<lb/>
pla ing a shot out of a parking lot<lb/>
on the 16th hole tor a birdie 3 and<lb/>
went on to victory<lb/>
rhe parking lot was out ol<lb/>
bounds this year, but Ballesteros<lb/>
never came near it Tied with<lb/>
Price at 10 under as they teed ofi<lb/>
for the 16th hole his tec shot was<lb/>
right in the middle ot the fairway,<lb/>
and his second shot almost was<lb/>
right in the middle ot the hole.<lb/>
It hit the stick and stoppec<lb/>
dead Ballesteros tapped in. anc<lb/>
never looked back.<lb/>
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By Racer X<lb/>
AM YOU ?<lb/>
0<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JULY 20,1988 page 9<lb/>
Lose looks toward to a winning season<lb/>
Ultimate team is<lb/>
looking for you<lb/>
ByGREERBOWEN<lb/>
SUIT Writer<lb/>
"I just can't wait to get<lb/>
started said Reed Lose. Lose is a<lb/>
junior on the basketball team and<lb/>
with new confidence he looks<lb/>
forward to the season starting.<lb/>
Lose came to East Carolina from<lb/>
Camp Hill Pennsylvania and<lb/>
even though he misses the snow<lb/>
he is happy with his college<lb/>
choice. Lose decided to come to<lb/>
East Carolina because he liked the<lb/>
people and the area. As a child<lb/>
Lose played basketball, football,<lb/>
and baseball but decided to con-<lb/>
centrate on basketball.<lb/>
Lose is majoring in Hotel and<lb/>
Restaurant management, but he<lb/>
said that he really doesn't want to<lb/>
start at the bottom. "I just don't<lb/>
want to have to deal with too<lb/>
many boscs he said. Lose be-<lb/>
lieves that he could be happy here<lb/>
without basketball, but that it<lb/>
adds a great deal to his college<lb/>
career.<lb/>
Playing college basketball is<lb/>
very demanding. During the<lb/>
season, Lose says that he goes to<lb/>
class, practice, study hall and then<lb/>
he goes to bed and does it all over<lb/>
again. "We don't have time for<lb/>
much else because we travel a<lb/>
lot said Lose.<lb/>
Lose was the offensive player<lb/>
of the year last year and was on<lb/>
the all tournament team of the<lb/>
Music City Invitational of Van-<lb/>
derbilt University as well. But he<lb/>
said he had doubts as a freshman.<lb/>
"I wasn't sure that I could com-<lb/>
pete on the college level But<lb/>
with the support of his family and<lb/>
the encouragment of the coaching<lb/>
staff, Lose has no doughts now.<lb/>
"My Mom used to help me shot<lb/>
free throws and my Dad even<lb/>
started a booster program at my<lb/>
high school Lose said. Lose's<lb/>
parents have been more than just<lb/>
supportive. "My parents have<lb/>
been to see every away game in<lb/>
the conference except Wilming-<lb/>
ton" Lose said. This type of sup-<lb/>
port carries over to the coaches as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
Lose spoke very highly of<lb/>
Head Coach Mike Steele and the<lb/>
entire basketball coaching staff.<lb/>
Lose was involved in the basket-<lb/>
ball program under coach Harri-<lb/>
son and said that even though he<lb/>
thinks a great deal of Harrison, he<lb/>
believes Steele has had a great<lb/>
influence on the team. "I didn't<lb/>
interact with Coach Harrison as<lb/>
much I do with the coachs now<lb/>
Lose said.<lb/>
"Coach Steele is a family man<lb/>
and we have gotten to know his<lb/>
family Lose said. "We even go to<lb/>
his house he added. Lose says<lb/>
that coach Steele encourages the<lb/>
team members to be complete<lb/>
people and will even let team<lb/>
members live anywhere they<lb/>
want to on campus. "A lot of ath-<lb/>
letes don't have that option said<lb/>
Lose.<lb/>
According to Lose, Coach<lb/>
Steele is there for the players<lb/>
whenever they need him. "Coach<lb/>
Steele told us 'You're not here for<lb/>
basketball, you're here to get your<lb/>
degree If I had a problem ii<lb/>
school or anything, I know I could<lb/>
count on any of my coachs Lose<lb/>
added.<lb/>
This year Lose thinks that the<lb/>
team will win the Conference<lb/>
championship. "I came off a<lb/>
pretty good year and I want to<lb/>
contribute as much as I can to the<lb/>
team Lose said. Blue Edwards,<lb/>
Jeff Kelly and Lose are the only<lb/>
returning starters but with six<lb/>
new recruits and new found team<lb/>
confidence, Lose looks for a great<lb/>
year. The recruits are going to be<lb/>
an asset to the team, Lose believes.<lb/>
"The recruits are all well known in<lb/>
their comuni ties and should add a<lb/>
lot<lb/>
Lose is also glad to have Blue<lb/>
back. "Blue is the best and now<lb/>
that he's back I won't be expected<lb/>
to be as much of a scorer Lose<lb/>
said. But this does not damper<lb/>
Lose's spirits. He believes this<lb/>
year will be the teams best yet.<lb/>
Lose says that Coach Steele won't<lb/>
let them become a one man team.<lb/>
Thats not how coach Steele<lb/>
works Lose said.<lb/>
Everyone is expecting<lb/>
great things from the team, and<lb/>
Lose believes that adds pressure<lb/>
because "You can talk all you<lb/>
want but you still have to go out<lb/>
and do it<lb/>
By GREER BOWEN<lb/>
"&amp;frUr'ur mm<lb/>
late frisbee has oecomc a<lb/>
papular club sport at East Caro-<lb/>
lina in the past few years. The<lb/>
:rates, the East Carolina ultimate<lb/>
have no unitorms and there are no<lb/>
fU&amp;L anyone can ojgy. The sport-<lb/>
SrTbe played year round and<lb/>
there are no referees.<lb/>
The team receives funding from<lb/>
the university as well as transpor-<lb/>
ter has become a nationaly rec- tation for their trips. They also<lb/>
?ajftized team. For the past two have fund raisers and try to save<lb/>
. irs the Irates have gone to the money by either camping out or<lb/>
"ational Competition, where this staying with friends while they<lb/>
vgkr they tied for fifth place. travel. The Irates do host a tour-<lb/>
fhe Irates spent spring break in namcnt once a semester here on<lb/>
Cfcytona Beach Fla. competing in campus<lb/>
Hurley. Each team has seven men.<lb/>
The field is set up like a football<lb/>
field. Ultimate is not a contact<lb/>
a practice. "Just because you can't<lb/>
throw a frisbee is no reason not to<lb/>
try out said Hurley. Team<lb/>
9b National Collegate Sports The men's team helped start a sport and you can't run with the members are very understanding<lb/>
?stival. The festival was held women's team and the women<lb/>
$King the three weeks of spring competed in the tournament the<lb/>
ak. The teams that won during men hosted this spring<lb/>
jija h individual week will meet in<lb/>
(It sober to compete against each<lb/>
qher. Gary Hurley, vice presi-<lb/>
dent of the Irates, says the team<lb/>
gDks forward to this trip.<lb/>
?The Irates were voted club of<lb/>
ir last school year. Being a club<lb/>
it's advantages over being a<lb/>
iiversity team. The players<lb/>
Hurley said he enjoys the sport<lb/>
because it allows you to compete<lb/>
on an individual and a team level<lb/>
at the same time. "It must be a<lb/>
team effort said Hurley. Hurley<lb/>
said that the game moves fast and<lb/>
is full of action.<lb/>
The game is like a "structured<lb/>
version of frisbee football said<lb/>
frisbee. "You must have a pivot of new players. "We all under-<lb/>
stand that you have to start some-<lb/>
where, we were all in the same<lb/>
spot<lb/>
Practices in the fall will be held<lb/>
on Tuesday, Thursday, and Sun-<lb/>
day afternoons in the field at the<lb/>
bottom of the hill. Of course ev-<lb/>
foot, like in basketball said<lb/>
Hurley. Games are played to<lb/>
15,17, or 19 points and there is no<lb/>
time limit. To score, you must<lb/>
catch the frisbee in your<lb/>
opponent's endzone. If the fris-<lb/>
bee is droped or a throw is not<lb/>
completed, the other team gains eryone that comes to a practice<lb/>
control. will not travel with the team.<lb/>
Hurley encourages any inter- Hurley said that "the people who<lb/>
ested students to come out during keep coming out travel with us<lb/>
IJniversity of Minnesota continues<lb/>
their downhill slide into scandal<lb/>
ss<lb/>
gMINNEAPOLIS (AP) ? The<lb/>
st-second basketball victory<lb/>
f&amp;er neighboring Big Ten rival<lb/>
fjfisconsin in 1986 was a proud<lb/>
foment for the Univeristy of<lb/>
Minnesota to savor. As it turned<lb/>
?it, it was the last proud moment<lb/>
fee quite a while.<lb/>
&amp;n the morning after the 67-65<lb/>
voctory of Jan. 23, 1986, three<lb/>
numbers of the Golden Gophers<lb/>
basketball team were accused of<lb/>
ripe in an incident in a Madison<lb/>
Ws hotel room.<lb/>
?The three later were acquitted<lb/>
irtia trial filled with sorid testi-<lb/>
ntpny. But the notoriety was only<lb/>
banning for Minnesota, which<lb/>
lamong the nation's largest uni-<lb/>
versities.<lb/>
;With 44,293 undergraduate and<lb/>
graduate students and 18,000<lb/>
ej$ension students, the Minne-<lb/>
sota campus sprawls over both<lb/>
bjiks of the Mississippi River<lb/>
nit downtown Minneapolis.<lb/>
he misdeeds, improprieties<lb/>
an embarrassments over the<lb/>
njt 31 months were dizzying:<lb/>
-The men's basketball team<lb/>
vfe placed on probation by the<lb/>
ional Collegiate Athletic As-<lb/>
iation for numberous infrac-<lb/>
ts, mostly over its recruiting of<lb/>
sjjodent athletes.<lb/>
??- University President Ken<lb/>
Jjtllcr resigned in a scandal over<lb/>
mind reds of thousands of dollars<lb/>
spent on his official residence.<lb/>
?Keller's interim replacement,<lb/>
Richard Sauer, admitted plagiar-<lb/>
izing part of a magazine article<lb/>
while applying for a job else-<lb/>
where.<lb/>
? A former university official<lb/>
was indicted on charges of swin-<lb/>
dling money and giving it to ath-<lb/>
lcsc; the school's popular athletic<lb/>
director, Paul Gicl, was fired.<lb/>
The troubles may be unprece-<lb/>
dented among major universities.<lb/>
Robert L. Gale, president of the<lb/>
Association of Governing Boards<lb/>
of Universities and Colleges, re-<lb/>
calls discussing Minnesota's skid<lb/>
with colleagues. 'They would<lb/>
say, Those poor devils. Every-<lb/>
thing has happened to them at<lb/>
once<lb/>
The long-term effect isn't clear.<lb/>
"It is going to be more difficult<lb/>
for the university to function in an<lb/>
autonomous fashion because the<lb/>
Legislature is going to be looking<lb/>
over their shoulder a lot more<lb/>
than it has in the past said Gale.<lb/>
After the 1986 rape charges,<lb/>
many people began looking over<lb/>
the univeristy's shoulder.<lb/>
A Big Ten report later that year<lb/>
said the men't athletic depart-<lb/>
ment had the conference's lowest<lb/>
rate of graduation from 1978<lb/>
through 1983.<lb/>
While the school was still reel-<lb/>
ing from the report, NCAA inves-<lb/>
tigators arrived to investigate re-<lb/>
cruiting.<lb/>
In March, the NCAA an-<lb/>
nounced 40 rule violations, most<lb/>
of them in the basketball program<lb/>
under Coach Jim Dutcher, who<lb/>
resigned after the rape trial.<lb/>
In the same month, Keller re-<lb/>
signed after a six-week contro-<lb/>
versy over university financial<lb/>
management. It was sparked by<lb/>
his $15 million renovation of the<lb/>
official residence at more than<lb/>
twice the budgeted amount.<lb/>
Keller also approved a $200,000<lb/>
remodeling of his offices, includ-<lb/>
ing a $15,822 mahogany desk and<lb/>
credenza. He eventually paid for<lb/>
them himself.<lb/>
Students picketed the mansion,<lb/>
and a local radio stations's ditty<lb/>
referred to Keller as the "Renova-<lb/>
tion Man His "Commitment to<lb/>
Focus" plan to upgrade some<lb/>
programs, cut others and reduce<lb/>
enrollment by 8,000, was mock-<lb/>
ingly referred to as "Commitment<lb/>
to Furniture<lb/>
A widening probe turned up a<lb/>
$221 million reserve fund. Critics<lb/>
called it a slush fund, and it<lb/>
rankled professors whose pro-<lb/>
grams had been targeted for<lb/>
elimination and angered some<lb/>
contributors and alumni, who<lb/>
quit giving.<lb/>
When Sauer took over the<lb/>
president's duties, he remained in<lb/>
his own home, accepted a used<lb/>
desk and set out to mend fences.<lb/>
Then the plagiarism scandal hit<lb/>
him while he was applying for the<lb/>
presidency of Norm Dakota State<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Park offers tips<lb/>
for better games<lb/>
By NEEDHAM PARK<lb/>
SUV Writer<lb/>
There you are, amidst the green<lb/>
grass with lavish woods and spar-<lb/>
kling ponds all around. You're<lb/>
eyeing two squirrels playfully<lb/>
chasing each other with a harmo-<lb/>
nious background of birds chirp-<lb/>
ing in the distance, when sud-<lb/>
denly some clod knocks a ball<lb/>
only a few feet away. Anger<lb/>
surges through your entire body<lb/>
because it comes back to you that<lb/>
you're searching for your third<lb/>
lost ball of the day (each costing<lb/>
$1.50). If you throw a new one ou t<lb/>
it will cost you a stroke (stroke is<lb/>
golf terminology for "point" but<lb/>
in some this can actually "cause" a<lb/>
stroke), and if you are not quick<lb/>
making up your mind you could<lb/>
get beaned by the ball of some<lb/>
impatient player trying to play at<lb/>
the speed of sound so they can get<lb/>
sauced at the clubhouse. "ST<lb/>
Who was first to proclaim golf<lb/>
"relaxing" or a "gentleman's<lb/>
sport"? Perhaps they were the<lb/>
ancestors of those you see with a<lb/>
shiny new set of clubs each year<lb/>
because their old ones got<lb/>
wrapped around a tree in an an-<lb/>
gered frenzy. I personally adore<lb/>
the game of golf not for its relaxa-<lb/>
tion or its competition but be-<lb/>
cause it's fun to have a temper<lb/>
tantrum every once in a while.<lb/>
Take for example a typical day<lb/>
around the ol' golf course. First<lb/>
off, select an opponent whose<lb/>
never played before or at least<lb/>
someone who really stinks at the<lb/>
game and has no chance of beat-<lb/>
ing you. After shelling out your<lb/>
entire savings for that week as a<lb/>
green fee, or claiming your uncle<lb/>
owns the joint and playing for<lb/>
free, rent a cart - the most exciting<lb/>
aspect of golf. If vou get a good<lb/>
fast cart it makes the whole thing<lb/>
worth while.<lb/>
Now is the time for the real ac-<lb/>
tion to begin - the betting. Be sure<lb/>
and give your opponent some<lb/>
friendly tips. Tell them to stick<lb/>
their tee real high in the ground,<lb/>
therefore causing the ball to go<lb/>
straight up. The next hole they're<lb/>
sure to know you were joking and<lb/>
practically bury the tee causing<lb/>
the club to dig a hole big enough<lb/>
to throw a coffin in.<lb/>
First off, select an op-<lb/>
ponent whose never<lb/>
played before<lb/>
Some people by r.ow are in the<lb/>
process of getting good and<lb/>
toasted. It's a process that may be<lb/>
suitable for many, but I person-<lb/>
ally prefer being miserably stone<lb/>
sober. Another tip is to be on the<lb/>
-lookout for the golf cops. Usually,<lb/>
they're a couple of rough looking<lb/>
guys wearing plaid pants and<lb/>
green sweaters who work in the<lb/>
pro shop. They will determine<lb/>
from the start that you are trouble<lb/>
and insist upon following you<lb/>
around and finding a reason to<lb/>
lecture.<lb/>
After a couple of hours a score<lb/>
of 72 is obtained; not bad for nine<lb/>
holes of golf. Then its off for some<lb/>
food and back to the second nine.<lb/>
When you get to about the twel fth<lb/>
hole it's probably time to declare<lb/>
it hopeless and spend the rest of<lb/>
theday doing donuts with the cart<lb/>
and searching for lost balls to sell<lb/>
on the black market.<lb/>
Finally, when it's over, it's time<lb/>
to get intoxicated, if you're not<lb/>
already. Then it's time to start<lb/>
saving up for the next time which<lb/>
you hope will come soon. See you<lb/>
around the course.<lb/>
After he apologized to the Uiv-<lb/>
ersity of Minnesota regents, they<lb/>
gave him a unanimous vote of<lb/>
confidence. North Dakota State<lb/>
since has asked him to renew his<lb/>
application for the presidency.<lb/>
Sauer's troubles were followed<lb/>
by the athletic department com-<lb/>
ing under further investigation.<lb/>
Luther Darville, former acting di-<lb/>
rector of the school's Office of<lb/>
Minority and Special Student<lb/>
Affairs, was indicted in May on<lb/>
three counts of felony theft by<lb/>
swindle.<lb/>
Darville has fled to his native<lb/>
Bahamas and authorities have<lb/>
started extradition proceedings.<lb/>
University officials acknowl-<lb/>
edge that the turnover among top<lb/>
personnel has caused problems,<lb/>
but they say the school is running<lb/>
more smoothly than might be<lb/>
expected.<lb/>
1 think the fact is that the<lb/>
univeristy is being will-governed<lb/>
by the interim people said<lb/>
David Lebedoff, chairman of the<lb/>
University of Minnesota Board of<lb/>
Regents.<lb/>
David Mcrkowitz, spokesman<lb/>
for the American Council of Edu-<lb/>
cation, said he couldn't recall any<lb/>
other university having so many<lb/>
problems recently.<lb/>
Still, Merkowitz said, 1 am<lb/>
absolutely sure a university like<lb/>
Minnesota with 45,000 students is<lb/>
going to survive these things<lb/>
Ballesteros edges to<lb/>
British Open win<lb/>
LYTHHAM, England (AP) ?<lb/>
Seve Ballesteros ofSpain birdied<lb/>
the 16th hole with the help of a<lb/>
magnificent iron shot that hit the<lb/>
flagstick, and won his third Brit-<lb/>
ish Open title by two strokes over<lb/>
ick Price today.<lb/>
It was match-play condition<lb/>
through the final 18 holes, with<lb/>
Price and Ballesteros playing to-<lb/>
gether stroke for stroke until 16.<lb/>
And it wasn't over until Bal-<lb/>
lesteros scrambled from behind<lb/>
the 18th green with another in-<lb/>
credible iron shot to save par with<lb/>
a two-inch putt<lb/>
Ballesteros finished at 11 -under<lb/>
par 273, with a final round of 6-<lb/>
under 65, the lowest 18 holes of<lb/>
the weather-plagued tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The Spaniard won his first open<lb/>
here in 1979, and it was 16th hole<lb/>
heroics that lifted him to victory<lb/>
that time too.<lb/>
Price, the Zimbawean who led<lb/>
after the second and third rounds,<lb/>
left a 12-foot birdie putt short and<lb/>
to the right on No. 16. He men<lb/>
bogeyed the final hole, tying for a<lb/>
last-ditch birdie, and finished at<lb/>
ijtt275.<lb/>
Nick Faldo ol Enland, last<lb/>
year's winner, shot an even-par 71<lb/>
and finished third at 5-undcr 279.<lb/>
Faldo, who turned 31 a the open<lb/>
I had its first today finish ever, won<lb/>
year with a round of IS para,<lb/>
t had three birdies and three<lb/>
thiitinifr<lb/>
Two Americans, Fred Couples<lb/>
and Gary Koch, finished at 3-<lb/>
undcr 281. Both shot 3-under 68s<lb/>
on the final day, with Couples 5-<lb/>
undcr before taking bogeys at the<lb/>
17th and 18th.<lb/>
Sandy Lyleof Scotland, the 1985<lb/>
champion who started the day at<lb/>
4-under par, also faded in the late<lb/>
going, taking a bogey-5 on No. 17<lb/>
and a double-bogey 6 on the final<lb/>
hole to finish at 1-under 283, with<lb/>
a round of 74.<lb/>
In 1979, the last time the open<lb/>
was played at the Royal Lytham<lb/>
and ST. Annes Golf Club, Bal-<lb/>
lesteros was a 22-year-old who<lb/>
already had led the PGA Euro-<lb/>
pean Tour in money winnnings<lb/>
but soil was looking for his first<lb/>
major victory.<lb/>
He got it in the open that year,<lb/>
playing a shot out of a parking lot<lb/>
on the 16th hole for a birdie-3 and<lb/>
went on to victory.<lb/>
The parking lot was out ol<lb/>
bounds this year, but Ballesteros<lb/>
never came near it Tied with<lb/>
Price at 10 under as they toed off<lb/>
for the 16th hole, his tee shot was<lb/>
right in the middle ol the fairway,<lb/>
and his second shot almost was<lb/>
right m trie middle of the hole.<lb/>
It hit the stick and stoppoc<lb/>
dead. Ballesteros tapped in,<lb/>
never looked bark.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058084_0013"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
10<lb/>
1 HE LAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 20,1988<lb/>
NASCAR teams return to Allison crash site<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) ? Interest<lb/>
in Bobby Allison's health has inten-<lb/>
sified in recent days as NASCAR<lb/>
Winston Cup teams prepare to<lb/>
make their second visit of the<lb/>
season to the track where the vet-<lb/>
eran driver almost died in a crash<lb/>
last month.<lb/>
Several top competitors have<lb/>
indicated that returning to the<lb/>
Pocono, Pa track will be espe-<lb/>
cially hard because they'll be<lb/>
11 linking about Allison during the<lb/>
running of this weekend's AC<lb/>
Spark Plug 500.<lb/>
"It's hard for me to put Bobby<lb/>
out of my mind said three-time<lb/>
Winston Cup champion Darrell<lb/>
Waltrip, who had sizzling runs<lb/>
with Allison for the title on four<lb/>
occasions. "I dwell on how he"s<lb/>
doing when I'm away from the<lb/>
track<lb/>
"We had our troubles between<lb/>
us, but that was a long time ago<lb/>
Richard Petty told The Charlotte<lb/>
Observer. "I've been missing<lb/>
Bobby because with him out I<lb/>
haven't had anybody to argue<lb/>
with. But I know all of us arc going<lb/>
to be thinking of him, specifically<lb/>
when we run this time at Pocono<lb/>
Meanwhile, members of<lb/>
Allison's family said they "fully<lb/>
expect" the injured star to resume<lb/>
his stock car racing career if he<lb/>
wishes.<lb/>
"There is no reason to expect<lb/>
anything else Tom Kincaid,<lb/>
Allison's brother-in-law, said.<lb/>
"We anticipate a 100 percent re-<lb/>
covery<lb/>
"However, we're venturing a<lb/>
guess when it will be that Bobby<lb/>
will drive again. No one can<lb/>
Kincaid spoke after a Thursday<lb/>
visit with Allison, 50, at the Le-<lb/>
high Valley Medical Center in<lb/>
Allentown, Pa where Allison has<lb/>
been hospitalized since a crash<lb/>
June 19 at the Miller 500 at<lb/>
Pocono.<lb/>
A spokesperson for Allison's<lb/>
Stavola Brothers team said the<lb/>
operation is "working on the as-<lb/>
sumption that Bobby probably<lb/>
won't be back in 1988 and is<lb/>
planning on Mike Alexander<lb/>
driving the No. 12 Buick the rest of<lb/>
the season "or until Allison is<lb/>
ready<lb/>
Alexander, the NASCAR Busch<lb/>
Series Grand National (sports-<lb/>
man) points leader, has filled in<lb/>
fore Allison in the two races since<lb/>
the Pocono accident.<lb/>
"Bobby started physical ther-<lb/>
apy Thursday, and he had an-<lb/>
other session Friday said Kin-<lb/>
caid, who is married to Allison's<lb/>
sister, Cindy. "We're not sure<lb/>
what is involved  not even Judy<lb/>
(Allison's wife) or Davey (his son,<lb/>
who is also a Winston Dup driver)<lb/>
have been in to watch the proce-<lb/>
dure during the therapy.<lb/>
"But I can tell everyone that has<lb/>
been so wonderful in caring about<lb/>
Bobby that his doctors are<lb/>
absolutely excited about his prog-<lb/>
ress.<lb/>
Allison was the 1983 Winston<lb/>
Cup champion and is third on<lb/>
NASCAR's all-time victory list<lb/>
with 84 triumphs, trailing only<lb/>
Petty with 200 and David Pearson<lb/>
with 105. He has been the circuit's<lb/>
most popular driver six times. He<lb/>
won the sport's biggest race, the<lb/>
Daytona 500, in February,<lb/>
extending his superlative as the<lb/>
oldest Winston Cup victor.<lb/>
Allison suffered contusions of<lb/>
the brain, a broken shoulder, bro-<lb/>
ken ribs, abdominal trauma and a<lb/>
broken leg in the accident, which<lb/>
occurred after a faulty tire blew<lb/>
out. I le lapsed in and out of con-<lb/>
sciousness and was on the critical<lb/>
list for several days. He remains in<lb/>
guarded condition.<lb/>
But a hospital spokesman said<lb/>
Friday that Allison "Is respond-<lb/>
ing consistently to commands, his<lb/>
vital signs are stable and he con-<lb/>
tinues to show improvement<lb/>
overall<lb/>
Kincaid said Allison, who has<lb/>
been visited b y racing rivals such<lb/>
as Dale Earnhardt, Rusty Wallace,<lb/>
Phil Parsons and Mario Andretti,<lb/>
is "fully alert now<lb/>
I le conceded that communica-<lb/>
tion with allison continues to be<lb/>
with hand signals. "Bobby hasn't<lb/>
yet regained his speech, but doc-<lb/>
tors are expectant that he will<lb/>
Kincaid said.<lb/>
Festival brought benefits<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? The U.S.<lb/>
Olympic Festival held in North<lb/>
Carolina last year brought intan-<lb/>
gible benefits to the state that will<lb/>
prove more important than its<lb/>
isible contributions, officials<lb/>
say.<lb/>
Perhaps the festival's biggest<lb/>
residual is credibility.<lb/>
Hill Carrow Jr last year the<lb/>
chief executive officer of North<lb/>
Carolina Amateur Sports, the lo-<lb/>
cal organizing committee, said<lb/>
the festival had boosted the state's<lb/>
reputation in amateur athletics.<lb/>
"I definitely see the festival as<lb/>
the beginning, not the end Car-<lb/>
row said. "It was the departure<lb/>
point<lb/>
Ken Smith, now executive di-<lb/>
rector of NCAS, said the amateur<lb/>
athletic world had looked on<lb/>
North Carolina merely as a state<lb/>
that produced outstanding bas-<lb/>
ketball and golf.<lb/>
'But as far as diving or gymnas-<lb/>
tics, people just didn't think that<lb/>
we were that interested Smith<lb/>
said. But after the festival, sports<lb/>
officials around the world know<lb/>
that there is interest in North<lb/>
Carolina in hosting many differ-<lb/>
ent events<lb/>
Short-term benefits of that<lb/>
change are evident. This year the<lb/>
state has been the site for an exhi-<lb/>
bition volleyball match between<lb/>
the United States and Cuba, an<lb/>
exhibition baseball game between<lb/>
Team USA and Taiwan, plus<lb/>
Olympic trials in canoe-kayak,<lb/>
boxing and taekwondo. The na-<lb/>
tional championships in canoe-<lb/>
kayak will be held at Lake<lb/>
Wheeler outside of Raleigh in<lb/>
August.<lb/>
Next year, the pace will<lb/>
quicken. The national swimming<lb/>
championships will be March 22-<lb/>
25 in Chapel Hill, the synchro-<lb/>
nized swimming national cham-<lb/>
pionships will be March 30 - April<lb/>
2 at N.C. Central University and<lb/>
the national diving champion-<lb/>
ships will be July 27-30 in Raleigh.<lb/>
Next year's national gvmnas-<lb/>
tics championship could go to the<lb/>
Smith Center in Chapel Hill,<lb/>
where the largest audience to at-<lb/>
tend a gymnastics compeitition in<lb/>
the United States watched the<lb/>
festival's women's competition.<lb/>
In 1990, Duke University will be<lb/>
the site for the NCAA outdoor<lb/>
track and field championships.<lb/>
North Carolina has a shot at get-<lb/>
ting a natioal figure skating cham-<lb/>
pionship in the next few years,<lb/>
too, Smith says.<lb/>
"We are now in the enviable<lb/>
position of having national gov-<lb/>
erning bodies (federations that<lb/>
govern each of the various sports)<lb/>
contacting us to ask if they can<lb/>
return to North Carolina to hold<lb/>
this or that meet said Allen<lb/>
Keep, communications director ot<lb/>
NCAS.<lb/>
"We are having to turn some<lb/>
down. Next year, for example, we<lb/>
have so many major events al-<lb/>
ready scheduled that it would be<lb/>
difficult to add many more<lb/>
NCAS officials also hope that<lb/>
more multisport events such as<lb/>
the festival can be lured.<lb/>
World University Games offi-<lb/>
cials have asked that NCAS to<lb/>
make a bid to host the 1993 event.<lb/>
The World University Games,<lb/>
with 12 to 15 sports, are open to<lb/>
every country in the world and, in<lb/>
Europe, are regarded as the sec-<lb/>
ond most prestigious amateur<lb/>
sporting event. They have never<lb/>
been held in the United States,<lb/>
Recp says.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema.<lb/>
Plaza Shopping Ctr. 756 0088<lb/>
Now Showing<lb/>
BAMBI<lb/>
ARTHUR II<lb/>
COMING TO<lb/>
AMERICA<lb/>
starring Eddie Murphy<lb/>
Joyner set new world record mark<lb/>
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ? Two<lb/>
years ago, Florence Griffith<lb/>
Joyner was an overweight secre-<lb/>
tary. Now, she's the fastest<lb/>
woman in the world.<lb/>
sprinter Sunday by winning her<lb/>
semifinal heat in 10.70 and taking<lb/>
the final in 10.61, with Ash ford<lb/>
finishing second in both races.<lb/>
"I don't think Horence's per-<lb/>
Griffith Joyner set a world rec- formance Saturday makes things<lb/>
ord of 10.49 seconds, in winning a<lb/>
qualifying heat Saturday at the<lb/>
U.S. Olympic Trials, then showed<lb/>
it was no fluke by beating the<lb/>
previous record-holder, Evelyn<lb/>
Ashford, in the semifinals and the<lb/>
final on Sunday.<lb/>
Carl Lewis, Jackie Joyner-<lb/>
Kerscc, Edwin Moses, Willie<lb/>
Banks and Mary Decker Slaney<lb/>
a!? ? gave fans at the Indiana Uni-<lb/>
v rsity Track and Field Stadium<lb/>
viosions of Olympic gold with<lb/>
weekend victories.<lb/>
But it was Griffith Joyner who<lb/>
stole the show.<lb/>
Prior to her record-setting run,<lb/>
she posted a wind-aided 10.60<lb/>
that was below the existing world<lb/>
rxcrd of 10.76 set by Ashford in<lb/>
Switzerland shortly after winning<lb/>
an Olympic gold for the Unites<lb/>
States.<lb/>
There was controversy over her<lb/>
world-record performance, be-<lb/>
cause the wind gauge showed an<lb/>
uncharacteristic 0.00 reading. At<lb/>
the same time, the wind reading at<lb/>
the triple jump area was over the<lb/>
allowable 2.0 meters per second<lb/>
for record consideration.<lb/>
But she laid to rest any doubts<lb/>
that she was a world-class<lb/>
WMWM<lb/>
easier on the rest of us said<lb/>
Gwcn Torrence, who also earned<lb/>
a trip to Seoul by placing third in<lb/>
the final. "10.49' is so incredibly<lb/>
fast that I don't think it will be<lb/>
broken for decades. I think we can<lb/>
think about 10.76 or 10.79, but I<lb/>
really don't see 10.49 as being<lb/>
approachable<lb/>
Lewis, 27, took the first step<lb/>
toward duplicating his 1984 feat<lb/>
of winning four Olympic golds<lb/>
Saturday by winning the men's<lb/>
100 with a wind-aided 9.78 time<lb/>
? the fastest time ever in that<lb/>
event, but not eligible for recrod<lb/>
consideration.<lb/>
Starts Friday<lb/>
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atermelon Feast and<lb/>
Seed Spitting Contest<lb/>
University Mall - 3 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday, Tulv 21<lb/>
Rock-A-Bowl<lb/>
MSC Bowling Center - 2:00 - 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
Upcoming Events<lb/>
Wednesday, July 27 Watermelon Feast<lb/>
University Mall - 3 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday, July 28 Rock-A-Bowl<lb/>
MSC Bowling Center - 2:00 - 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
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' iow autbhai'maywot wautaau ?0" CHUWt" a MMUK1MW<lb/>
OMK1.NAL SOUNDTRACK A W?ILABCE ON AWSTA BKOTOS CHROME CASSIS ANC COMPACT WSCS<lb/>
CATCH THE EXCITEMENT JULY 22 AT THEATRES EVERYWHERE!<lb/>
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