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<pb facs="00058085_0001"/>
FEATURES<lb/>
ECU Summer Theater's last production still has<lb/>
flaws, see page 7.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
The Redskins are worried about Dexter Manley's<lb/>
3 rug test results, see page 9.<lb/>
She iEaHt Carolinian<lb/>
Vol.63 No. 11<lb/>
Wednesday, July 27,1988<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Matthews settles into job as vice chancellor<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Sorting through an abundance<lb/>
of untiled papers on his desk. Dr.<lb/>
Alfred T. Matthews, the new vice<lb/>
rhancellor for student life, said he<lb/>
is glad to be in the south again.<lb/>
In his seventh day at ECU,<lb/>
Matthews said he still trying to<lb/>
get settled and trying to settle his<lb/>
tile cabinet. For the coming<lb/>
semester Mn,fKf?w$.said "I really<lb/>
do desire to improve the quality<lb/>
of student life and provide the<lb/>
kinds of services which arc essen-<lb/>
tial for students to learn about<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
Matthews said he will evalu-<lb/>
ate all areas of student life at ECU<lb/>
before deciding if any of the stu-<lb/>
dent services need to be altered.<lb/>
Insurance protects fire loss<lb/>
By GREER BOWEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In light of the Langston Park<lb/>
Apartment fire, area real estate<lb/>
brokers say there are many ways<lb/>
renters can protect themselves<lb/>
fromproperty loss.<lb/>
Mac Hines of Dawson and<lb/>
Hines Reality said the most im-<lb/>
portant way a tendant can protect<lb/>
themselves is to read the lease.<lb/>
Hines said that if you can't under-<lb/>
stand the lease take the lease to<lb/>
someone else who can.<lb/>
Most leases are written in a<lb/>
standard form. A Nash county<lb/>
lease agreement has this written<lb/>
in it. The lease holder shall not be<lb/>
liable for any damage to any per-<lb/>
son a thing, however occuring, by<lb/>
gas, electricity, fire, water, ice,<lb/>
snow, storm, or sewage This<lb/>
clause is very often included in<lb/>
rental agreements.<lb/>
Mr. Hines said to remember<lb/>
that "A landlord isn't always a<lb/>
realtor This is important to<lb/>
remember. Anvone can rent land,<lb/>
it takes no special degree or li-<lb/>
cense to rent land. But a true real-<lb/>
tor has a professional designa-<lb/>
tion. It is like the difference be-<lb/>
tween an accountant and a C.P. A.<lb/>
A C.P.A. has had more educa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
"I wouldn't feel obligated to<lb/>
reimburse the renter but I would<lb/>
help to relocate them in our com-<lb/>
plex or some other complex<lb/>
Hines said. "I would tell my chil-<lb/>
dren to read the lease and have<lb/>
renters insurance Hines contin-<lb/>
ued.<lb/>
Renter's insurance is an asset in<lb/>
many situations. Renter's insur-<lb/>
ance can cover fire, lighting,<lb/>
windstorm, hail, smoke, falling<lb/>
objects, explosion, vandalism,<lb/>
riot, theft, water escape, freezing<lb/>
of plumbing and many other situ-<lb/>
ations. This type of insurance is<lb/>
available from almost anv insur-<lb/>
ance company.<lb/>
Vicky Hardy of State Farm said<lb/>
that rental insurance is less expen-<lb/>
sive than most peple realize. Even<lb/>
though many parents have a<lb/>
homeowner's policy that will<lb/>
cover their children at college,<lb/>
most do not.<lb/>
When obtaining an insurance<lb/>
policy for an apartment is a good<lb/>
idea make a list of all your per-<lb/>
sonal belongings. "If you figure<lb/>
that you have X amount of jeans at<lb/>
X amount of dollars, a T.V soga,<lb/>
bed and dresser, you'll soon find<lb/>
out your worth a great deal more<lb/>
than you ever would have imag-<lb/>
ined said Hardy. She said that<lb/>
even if you purchased all belongs<lb/>
at yard sales, you should apraise<lb/>
your belongs based on their re-<lb/>
placement value.<lb/>
Taking photographs of each<lb/>
room in your house is also a good<lb/>
idea. That way if your home is<lb/>
vandalised, you can more easily<lb/>
asses the damages.<lb/>
Diffent types of apartment cost<lb/>
different amounts to issue. Apart-<lb/>
ment made of wood are most ex-<lb/>
pensive. If you apartment has a<lb/>
fire alarm and bolt locks, it costs<lb/>
less. Generally, to insure an apart-<lb/>
ment for 20,000, you will pay be-<lb/>
tween$9and$12.00a month. This<lb/>
covers to apartment $127.00 a<lb/>
year.<lb/>
This policy can be easily trans-<lb/>
ferred to almost any town if you<lb/>
get your insurance with a national<lb/>
company. State Farm requires a<lb/>
$20 deposit and can bill you either<lb/>
quarterly or scmiannually. If you<lb/>
havecar insurance, it is possible to<lb/>
pay both in one payment.<lb/>
Many students don't realize<lb/>
that it is not the responsibilty of<lb/>
the apartment owner to re-<lb/>
mibursc renters in the event of<lb/>
any damages to the renters prop-<lb/>
erty. Therefore, these students<lb/>
risk a great deal of money because<lb/>
they are unprepared.<lb/>
"I'm sure there will be some<lb/>
changes, but I don't prccicve any<lb/>
problems at this point Mat-<lb/>
thews said.<lb/>
In describing the role he will<lb/>
play on campus, Matthews said it<lb/>
will be an active one. "My style is<lb/>
one that I will be in and around<lb/>
almost everything that goes on<lb/>
Matthews said.<lb/>
Matthews has been the chief<lb/>
student life administrator at Slip-<lb/>
pery Rock for the past eight years<lb/>
and previously served for 10<lb/>
years as dean of student life at<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth Univer-<lb/>
sity, Richmond, Va.<lb/>
In hislO years at VCU, Mat-<lb/>
thews said he became fond of the<lb/>
southern culture. He said he en-<lb/>
joys the south and southern tradi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
With a PhD in higher educa-<lb/>
tion from Indiana University,<lb/>
Matthews has more than 25 years<lb/>
of experience in student counsel-<lb/>
ing, research and administration<lb/>
on both large and small cam-<lb/>
puses. He served three years as<lb/>
coordinator of student personnel<lb/>
services at the University of Wis-<lb/>
consin-Madison before moving to<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth.<lb/>
At Wisconsin, Matthews met<lb/>
Dr. Elmer Meyer who was also an<lb/>
administrator with the univer-<lb/>
sity. Now twenty years later,<lb/>
Matthews succeeds Meyer as the<lb/>
ECU vice chancellor of student<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Speaking of his job, Matthews<lb/>
said "I really enjoy it. It is a very<lb/>
challenging job, but also a very<lb/>
rewarding one. You deal with all<lb/>
the great things of the university,<lb/>
but you also deal with the trage-<lb/>
1<lb/>
Dr. Alfred T. Matthews, the new vice chancellor of student life,<lb/>
is busy organizing his new office in Whichard Building (Photo<lb/>
by Jon Jordan?Photolab).<lb/>
dies, the deaths of students and studcnts. He said he be concerned<lb/>
mistakes with "How to get people in-<lb/>
volved, how to let the students<lb/>
Matthew's main objective know of the opportunities they<lb/>
however is to improve the life of have<lb/>
Pit bull catches and attacks rental truck<lb/>
Student Store book reservation<lb/>
plan angers competition<lb/>
YORK, S.C (AP) ? Harold Rov<lb/>
King's pit bull has answered the<lb/>
questions of what a dog would do<lb/>
if it ever caught a car ? and it's<lb/>
cost him plenty.<lb/>
Angel, King's pit bull, is in the<lb/>
dog house because she chewed<lb/>
holes in the tires of a service van<lb/>
that visited her master's house.<lb/>
"It was just like being in 'Jaws<lb/>
said Paul Dougherty, the passen-<lb/>
ger in the Rental Express van<lb/>
whose tires were bitten by the 2-<lb/>
ycar-old dog Thursday.<lb/>
Dougherty and Robert Cooper<lb/>
had come to King's house to re-<lb/>
pair a stereo and were just pulling<lb/>
away when Angel bolted after<lb/>
<lb/>
v?tfl<lb/>
In the heat of July, students are often tempted to take a dip in<lb/>
the fountain in front of Wright Auditorium. (Photo by Ellen<lb/>
Murphy ?Photolab).<lb/>
them, snapping the latch on her<lb/>
chain.<lb/>
"I felt the back end of the van<lb/>
swaying Cooper said. "I heard<lb/>
the air seeping from the tire<lb/>
Moments later the GMC Van-<lb/>
dura sat squarely on four flat<lb/>
steel-belted radial tires. Each had<lb/>
a 1-to 3-inch gash.<lb/>
Cooper and Dougherty refused<lb/>
to get out of the van while Angel<lb/>
was still there. They blew the horn<lb/>
until King came to their rescue. As<lb/>
they examined the damage, An-<lb/>
gel sat squarely at the end of a<lb/>
shorter leash, cowering as King<lb/>
looked disapprovingly at her.<lb/>
After destroying five other car<lb/>
tires and one motorcycle tire this<lb/>
year, Angel slipped into a high-<lb/>
risk category Thursday. His in-<lb/>
surance company warned his ei-<lb/>
ther the dog or her inclusion in a<lb/>
homeowner's policy must go,<lb/>
King said.<lb/>
"She's definitely in the dog<lb/>
house King said. "She know<lb/>
she's being punished. Each time<lb/>
she's bitten, I've drug her back to<lb/>
that chain<lb/>
King said the trigger was that<lb/>
the pair left the engine on the van<lb/>
running. The dog only attacks<lb/>
tires of vehicles that have engines<lb/>
running.<lb/>
"She loves to ride but as soon as<lb/>
you let her out and the motor is<lb/>
running, she goes after the tires<lb/>
said King. "The motor's got eve-<lb/>
rything to do with it<lb/>
The rental workers were almost<lb/>
in the dog house, too.<lb/>
They're always pulling pranks<lb/>
on their bosses, but this time it<lb/>
seemed they'd gone too far.<lb/>
Owner Joey Bray and manager<lb/>
Brett Carncshad planned to repri-<lb/>
mand the two for "yanking us<lb/>
around<lb/>
Then they discovered the dog-<lb/>
cats-tires story was real.<lb/>
By HENRY BOARDMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Last May the ECU Student Store<lb/>
began a new program urging in-<lb/>
coming freshman to reserve their<lb/>
books for the fall semester with<lb/>
them.<lb/>
In an information package sent<lb/>
to all new students in May, the<lb/>
Student Store informed all incom-<lb/>
ing freshmen they could send a<lb/>
refundedable $10 deposit to re-<lb/>
serve books for next semester.<lb/>
When the new students arrive at<lb/>
school in August they could sim-<lb/>
ply walk in and pick up their<lb/>
books.<lb/>
Opposition to the plan has<lb/>
come from the independently<lb/>
owned University Book Ex-<lb/>
change, the Student Store's only<lb/>
competition for the ECU textbook<lb/>
market. The U.B.E. learned of the<lb/>
program when students mistak-<lb/>
enly called them instead of the<lb/>
Student Store with questions<lb/>
about reserving their books.<lb/>
The owners of the U.B.E. claim<lb/>
that the Student Store is playing<lb/>
on the freshmen's ignorance of<lb/>
the book buying situation at ECU.<lb/>
By sending out the letter weeks<lb/>
prior to orientation before most<lb/>
freshmen learn of the existence of<lb/>
the U.B.E. claims that students<lb/>
might be spending more money<lb/>
than they need to by reserving<lb/>
new books when used ones are<lb/>
available elsewhere.<lb/>
On June 17, Don and Jack Ed-<lb/>
wards, owners of the U.B.E sent<lb/>
a letter toChanccllorEakincalling<lb/>
the Student Store's notice to the<lb/>
freshmen "both a misrepresenta-<lb/>
tion of textbook buying proce-<lb/>
dures and unfair competition<lb/>
against the private sector<lb/>
Michael Coston, manager of the<lb/>
ECU Student Store, says that<lb/>
about a third of the incoming<lb/>
freshmen (over 1,000) have al-<lb/>
ready reserved their books, most<lb/>
of the students who came to orien-<lb/>
tation. He says the most favorable<lb/>
reaction comes from the parents<lb/>
who arc relieved to know that<lb/>
their children will have books in<lb/>
the fall. When asked if he plans to<lb/>
offer the program next year Cos-<lb/>
ton says he's not sure.<lb/>
Don Edwards said he has met<lb/>
with Dr. Eakin and John Bell,<lb/>
ECU's Business Manager, who<lb/>
say the program would not be<lb/>
attempted again. Still, Edwards<lb/>
fears being stuck with hundreds,<lb/>
maybe thousands of used text-<lb/>
books this fall. He would like to<lb/>
see either the Student Store re-<lb/>
fund all those who sent in a de-<lb/>
posit and discontinue the pro-<lb/>
gram or send another letter to the<lb/>
incoming freshment fairly ex-<lb/>
plaining the book buying situ-<lb/>
ation at ECU and offering a re-<lb/>
fund to those who want one.<lb/>
The book reservation program<lb/>
wouldbasicallyonly affect availa-<lb/>
bility of freshman-level survey<lb/>
courses books like English 1100,<lb/>
Psychology 1050, and Biology<lb/>
1050 (which is using a new book in<lb/>
the Fall). Both stores have large<lb/>
stocks of used books, such as<lb/>
Psychology and English, both of<lb/>
which the U.B.E. hardly carries<lb/>
new anymore.<lb/>
Used books may be requested<lb/>
from the Student Stores until<lb/>
stocks are depleted, at which<lb/>
times new books will be held for<lb/>
new students. However, new<lb/>
books may be reserved at any<lb/>
time if the student or parent de-<lb/>
sires.<lb/>
Similar programs also exist at<lb/>
the Universities of South Caro-<lb/>
lina, Tennessee, and Missouri.<lb/>
Coston points to these programs<lb/>
as justification and worth copying<lb/>
to better serve ECU students<lb/>
while Edwards notes in the letter<lb/>
to Dr. Eakin that, "all of these<lb/>
campuses nave strong private<lb/>
stores that have flourished be-<lb/>
cause they have provided the<lb/>
students with a wide selection of<lb/>
products and fair prices<lb/>
Rural women ignore breast lumps<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Women living in rural areas<lb/>
tend to ignore early warning signs<lb/>
of and delay medical treatment<lb/>
for breast cancer, a sugeon at the<lb/>
ECU of Medicine believes.<lb/>
Dr. Donald Lannin, associate<lb/>
professor of surgery and director<lb/>
of the ECU Breast Clinic, will at-<lb/>
tempt to understand the reasons<lb/>
for the delay through a three-year<lb/>
study funded by a $240,000 grant<lb/>
from the American Cancer Soci-<lb/>
ety. The award is the largest ever<lb/>
given to ECU by the non-profit<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
Lannin said the research project<lb/>
will include extensive studies of<lb/>
psychological factors, indigenous<lb/>
cultural beliefs and the social<lb/>
support networks of women in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina. The re-<lb/>
search will be conducted coopera-<lb/>
tively with Drs. Holly Matthews,<lb/>
associate professor anthropology,<lb/>
and James Mitchell, associate<lb/>
professor ot sociology.<lb/>
"It appears that the incidences<lb/>
of late stage breast cancer are sig-<lb/>
nificantly higher in rural women<lb/>
than in urban women Lannin<lb/>
said. "We hope to determine why<lb/>
women living in rural areas<lb/>
where poverrty levels tend to be<lb/>
more intense often refuse treat-<lb/>
ment when cancer is detected or<lb/>
wait until it is in an incurable<lb/>
stages before seeking medical<lb/>
help<lb/>
<pb facs="00058085_0002"/><lb/>
TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 27,1988<lb/>
How to cope with the stress of exam time<lb/>
Exams are coming up soon ?<lb/>
how can I cope with the stress of<lb/>
studying?<lb/>
Exams are among the first of a<lb/>
long line of events you'll encoun-<lb/>
ter during you lifetime that will<lb/>
cause you to feel stress. If only<lb/>
makes sense that you should learn<lb/>
how to handle or cope with these<lb/>
situations now, so you will be<lb/>
better prepared for life after col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
We first need to understand<lb/>
what stress is before we can learn<lb/>
how to cope with it. There are<lb/>
many definitions for the word<lb/>
stress, but for the purpose of this<lb/>
article we shall define stress as<lb/>
"the reaction of your mind and<lb/>
body to any situation that is new,<lb/>
threatening, or exciting<lb/>
Stress is one of the major disad-<lb/>
vantages of today's complex soci-<lb/>
ety. The more the world develops<lb/>
and advances the higher the stress<lb/>
levels are for its inhabitants. We<lb/>
experience stress our entire lives;<lb/>
in school we feel it to make good<lb/>
grades, at work we feel it to pcr-<lb/>
orm well, and in close relation-<lb/>
ships we feel it to keep the rela-<lb/>
tionship fresh and exciting. These<lb/>
are only a few of the things that<lb/>
cause stress in our lives.<lb/>
To help people deal with the<lb/>
complex and stressful world of<lb/>
today many techniques of coping,<lb/>
or coping strategies as they are<lb/>
called, have been developed.<lb/>
They range from simple breath-<lb/>
ing techniques to self-hypnosis.<lb/>
They vary in complexity and ef-<lb/>
fectiveness, but all have one thing<lb/>
in common: they reduce the<lb/>
individual's stress level by relax-<lb/>
ing hisher mind and body.<lb/>
Health Column<lb/>
by<lb/>
Rob Mcllwain<lb/>
One of the first things to re-<lb/>
member when coping with stress<lb/>
is that you're not alone. Everyone<lb/>
feels stress, so don't feel like<lb/>
you're the only one. When the<lb/>
pressure of that upcoming final<lb/>
gets to be too much, put up your<lb/>
books and go visit a friend. Talk<lb/>
about anything, but at least for a<lb/>
few minutes, try to put your exam<lb/>
out of your mind, and just enjoy<lb/>
your friend's company. The odds<lb/>
arc heshe is having similar feel-<lb/>
ings and would also appreciate a<lb/>
break from the books. You will<lb/>
feel much more relaxed and able<lb/>
to study afterwards.<lb/>
Talking is one of the simplest<lb/>
and yet most effective coping<lb/>
strategies there is. Another simple<lb/>
yet effective technique is deep<lb/>
breathing. Close your eyes, clear<lb/>
your mind of all thoughts, and<lb/>
take two or three deep cleansing<lb/>
breaths. It is quick, easy, simple,<lb/>
and yet it is very effective. You<lb/>
might want to try it while your arc<lb/>
sitting at your desk studying.<lb/>
Exercise is also a great way to<lb/>
relieve tension or stress. A good<lb/>
workout will do wonders for re-<lb/>
lieving the stress you are feeling.<lb/>
A brisk walk will help tremen-<lb/>
dously.<lb/>
The coping strategies I've men-<lb/>
tioned arc but the tip of the ice-<lb/>
berg. There are far too many to<lb/>
mention, so it's up to each of you<lb/>
to find what works best. I bowl to<lb/>
relievo stress; all the fi nitrations !<lb/>
am feeling are taken away by<lb/>
knocking down the pins. It really<lb/>
hclpsmc to relax (and increase my<lb/>
score, too!)<lb/>
If you are having trouble cop<lb/>
ing, the Student Health Center<lb/>
and the Counseling Center arc<lb/>
excellent campus resources. In-<lb/>
formation, counseling, and<lb/>
classes are available.<lb/>
Elvis on wheels museum<lb/>
DURHAM (AP) ? If you've<lb/>
run out of Elvis shampoo ? or<lb/>
lost your salt and pepper shakers<lb/>
memorializing the King ? the<lb/>
Elvis Presley Museum on Tour is<lb/>
the place to look for replace-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Hundreds of die-hard fans<lb/>
flocked to the display at<lb/>
Northgate mall over the week-<lb/>
end to see everything from a<lb/>
beat-up flashlight to a white Rolls<lb/>
Royce once owned by the King of<lb/>
Rock n' Roll.<lb/>
"It's the first time I've seen<lb/>
some of these things Nelda<lb/>
Suggs said. Like many Elvis fans, way he dressed<lb/>
my mother, who is dead now, she<lb/>
liked him, and she was particular<lb/>
about her music Ms. Suggs<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Big studded belts and big stud-<lb/>
ded rings were popular items on<lb/>
display. One display case held<lb/>
several pairs of Elvis' sunglasses<lb/>
and even pieces of a pair of Elvis'<lb/>
sunglasses.<lb/>
But the most popular item in<lb/>
the museum was one of Elvis's<lb/>
white outfits ? this one was<lb/>
called Starburst.<lb/>
"I like his outfit, his white out-<lb/>
fit Ms. Suggs said. "I liked the<lb/>
shirts, jackets, towels, hats,<lb/>
shampoo, crceme rinse, lotion,<lb/>
can huggers, family tree, plates,<lb/>
cups, mugs, glasses, salt and<lb/>
pepper shakers, a video tape of<lb/>
Elvis's television appearances<lb/>
and a 15-inch Elvis doll that<lb/>
sings.<lb/>
A postcard was the least expen-<lb/>
sive thing?50 cents. The 15-inch<lb/>
Elvis doll was the most expensive<lb/>
thing ?$179.95.<lb/>
"It's a pity that he had to die the<lb/>
way he did Suggs said. "But<lb/>
there was so much pressure on<lb/>
him. He couldn't walk the streets.<lb/>
I believe he went to K mart and had<lb/>
it specially opened for him. Other-<lb/>
wise too many people would<lb/>
bother him.<lb/>
"There will never be another one<lb/>
like him Ms. Suggs said. 'There<lb/>
was something that he had that I<lb/>
liked<lb/>
one of her dreams is to go to<lb/>
Graccland, Elvis' home in Mem-<lb/>
phis.<lb/>
"I went to see a lot of his mov-<lb/>
ies said Ms. Suggs, 52. "We still<lb/>
look at his movies on TV, and we<lb/>
still play his records.<lb/>
"I never met nobody who<lb/>
didn't like to hear him sing. Even<lb/>
Wedged between the Rolls<lb/>
Royce and the museum's display<lb/>
cases was a large squatc of tables<lb/>
holding all types of Elvis souve-<lb/>
nirs: postcards, pins, pen, license<lb/>
plates, ashtrays, bumper stickers,<lb/>
key chains, lighters, playing<lb/>
cards, pictures, posters, photo<lb/>
albums, jewelry, car shades, tee-<lb/>
Man afflicted with sneezing<lb/>
attacks after making love<lb/>
Arson suspected in fire<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) ? A fire<lb/>
that caused more than $1 million<lb/>
damage to the federal courthouse<lb/>
here may have been deliberately<lb/>
set, an FBI spokesman said today.<lb/>
Samples of charred flooring<lb/>
taken from the office of U.S. Dis-<lb/>
trict Court Judge Eugene Gordon<lb/>
after Thursday's fire "revealed an<lb/>
accelerant  which would indi-<lb/>
cate arson said Dan Wozniak, a<lb/>
supervisor at the FBI office in<lb/>
Greensboro.<lb/>
building's air conditioning sys-<lb/>
tem and damaged part of its elec-<lb/>
trical system, officials said.<lb/>
As a result, four employees in<lb/>
the criminal and jury sections of<lb/>
the clerk's office were scheduled<lb/>
to pack up and move Tuesday to<lb/>
the clerk's office of the federal<lb/>
courthouse in Winston-Salem,<lb/>
said Joseph P. Crcckmorc, U.S.<lb/>
clerk of court in Greensboro.<lb/>
The criminal section handles<lb/>
records and files of the U.S.<lb/>
He declined to speculate on a Attorney's office and cases in<lb/>
motive for the fire, saying authori- which criminal charges have been<lb/>
ties would conduct an arson<lb/>
invsestigation.<lb/>
Additional tests to confirm the<lb/>
findings would be conducted at<lb/>
the FBI's crime laboratory in<lb/>
Washington, D.C he said.<lb/>
Meanwhile, employees of the<lb/>
U.S. Clerk of Court's office here<lb/>
will temporarily abandon their<lb/>
smoke-damaged offices for<lb/>
cleaner ones in downtown Win-<lb/>
ston-Salem, officials said.<lb/>
The fire, which left court files<lb/>
covered with soot at the federal<lb/>
courthouse, also destroyed the<lb/>
filed.<lb/>
About eight workers in the<lb/>
clerk's civil section will be moved<lb/>
to U.S. Bankruptcy Court in<lb/>
Greensboro, while another six<lb/>
employees, mostly administra-<lb/>
tive, will stay where they are,<lb/>
Crcekmore said.<lb/>
No one was injured in the blaze.<lb/>
Smoke and water damage were<lb/>
severe throughout the building,<lb/>
officials said.<lb/>
Investigators have said the fire<lb/>
appeared to have been sparked<lb/>
accidentally.<lb/>
OHie North flip-flopping<lb/>
trail, says Walsh<lb/>
CLEMSON,S.C.(AP)<lb/>
in the nose, a doctor told a man<lb/>
afflicted by attacks of sneezing<lb/>
after lovemaking.<lb/>
A nose spray recommended by<lb/>
a California doctor in a question-<lb/>
and-answer section of the Journal<lb/>
of the American Medical Associa-<lb/>
tion has given a 60-year-old man<lb/>
relief and should clear up his<lb/>
problems, his family doctor said.<lb/>
"He would have four to five<lb/>
sneezes starting at about one<lb/>
minute after. As soon as they fin-<lb/>
ished lovemaking, his wife would<lb/>
run and get a box of Kleenex<lb/>
said Dr. William H. Hunter of his<lb/>
60-ycar-old patient, who had<lb/>
what appeared to be an allergy for<lb/>
about two years.<lb/>
In describing the man's symp-<lb/>
toms in JAMA, Hunter wrote,<lb/>
'This is the most unusual prob-<lb/>
lem I have ever been presented<lb/>
with by a patient<lb/>
The sneezing is probably due to<lb/>
a condition called vasomotor<lb/>
rhinitis, "a fairly common syn-<lb/>
drome" in which the nasal pas-<lb/>
sages are chronically swollen,<lb/>
responded Dr. Jeffrey A. Wald of<lb/>
San Diego in last week's issue of<lb/>
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WASHINGTON (AP) ? Iran-<lb/>
Contra prosecutor Lawrence<lb/>
Walsh says Oliver North is trying<lb/>
to turn his trial from a criminal to<lb/>
a political one and should not be<lb/>
allowed to use politics to win a<lb/>
six-month delay.<lb/>
North's activities to have con-<lb/>
veyed even informal or implicit<lb/>
approval<lb/>
Had Walsh found Reagan re-<lb/>
sponsible for authorizing North's<lb/>
activities, the prosecutor would<lb/>
Walsh urged U.S. District Judge have been unable to charge North<lb/>
Gerhard Gesell on Monday to re-<lb/>
ject North's motion for a delay<lb/>
until after the presidential elec-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"Having failed in several at-<lb/>
tempts to avoid completely the<lb/>
trial of this case, while proclaim-<lb/>
ing his innocence in speeches, the<lb/>
defendant Oliver L. North is now<lb/>
grasping at teh criminal<lb/>
defendant's maneuver of last re-<lb/>
sort ? delay Walsh said.<lb/>
"This trial in particular should<lb/>
not be held hostage to a media<lb/>
which the defendant himself has<lb/>
strenously sought to inflame<lb/>
Walsh said in a brief filed with<lb/>
U.S. District Judge Gerhard<lb/>
Gesell.<lb/>
Walsh also rebutted North's<lb/>
contention that his actions had<lb/>
been approved.<lb/>
"The government knows of no<lb/>
presidential decision that North<lb/>
can point to as authorizing his<lb/>
activities Walsh said, adding:<lb/>
"The govcrment also is not aware<lb/>
of any superior, except North's<lb/>
co-conspirators (Robert C.)<lb/>
McFarlanc and (John M.) Poin-<lb/>
dcxtcr, who knew enough about<lb/>
in March with defrauding the<lb/>
United States because North<lb/>
would have been acting with the<lb/>
necessary presidential approval.<lb/>
i<lb/>
c<lb/>
a<lb/>
V<lb/>
a<lb/>
I<lb/>
(<lb/>
1<lb/>
F<lb/>
t<lb/>
s<lb/>
b<lb/>
t<lb/>
E<lb/>
K<lb/>
S<lb/>
E<lb/>
ii<lb/>
ir<lb/>
oi<lb/>
W<lb/>
<lb/>
w<lb/>
IZ<lb/>
hi<lb/>
St<lb/>
w<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
sa<lb/>
or<lb/>
vi<lb/>
v<lb/>
A<lb/>
th<lb/>
af<lb/>
d(<lb/>
ii<lb/>
ru<lb/>
w<lb/>
sa<lb/>
8<lb/>
sti<lb/>
th<lb/>
tic<lb/>
on<lb/>
ch<lb/>
Five<lb/>
WILMINGTON (AP) <lb/>
kilograms of cocaine were<lb/>
cepted by undercover<lb/>
agents and three nun belie<lb/>
bo connected to major druj<lb/>
tickers were denied b<lb/>
after their arrest a dav a<lb/>
authorities said<lb/>
Agents seized the o<lb/>
ued at S2 million, after arm<lb/>
unmarked cars and si <lb/>
from the air by hclicoptd<lb/>
arrested the men<lb/>
on the upper level of a Wii<lb/>
ton downtown part<lb/>
overlooking the Ca <lb/>
Paul Andn .v Pavlofl<lb/>
cisco Javier Ruiz-Tai<lb/>
Amador Alexis Bra: <lb/>
26, a Venuzelan citiz<lb/>
charged with i<lb/>
i ontrolled sul law!<lb/>
could face life in pr<lb/>
million in firw<lb/>
A ling 1<lb/>
plaints filed in U <lb/>
Thursday, the thi<lb/>
been cl :<lb/>
distribute cocaii<lb/>
 ocaine, ii<lb/>
racketeering and i<lb/>
ting. SV. o other j<lb/>
in cust k3 .<lb/>
Iran,<lb/>
BAGH 'AD, Ira<lb/>
claimed Iraqi tr ps :<lb/>
ther into Iranian tei t<lb/>
a Unite d I tl team ari<lb/>
Tehran to d<lb/>
the Persian Gulf i i<lb/>
Iraq, after a seri<lb/>
attacks during th<lb/>
nied the claim and<lb/>
moving its forces out 1<lb/>
won  take itsdispul I<lb/>
gaining table<lb/>
Meanwhile, <lb/>
eration Army of Iran, al<lb/>
backed forced f<lb/>
Ayatohllah Ruhollah Kl<lb/>
claimed its forces ha I<lb/>
Iranian t<lb/>
95 miles into Iran.<lb/>
In New York,<lb/>
both countries were J<lb/>
meet Wedne ith I<lb/>
rotary-General )u,ir J<lb/>
Cucllar to discuss an end<lb/>
year-old gulf war.<lb/>
A separate team of I<lb/>
ers arrived in Tehran<lb/>
begin working on the tl<lb/>
aspects of a truce I t. ?<lb/>
Vadset, the team leader<lb/>
will explore ways to im<lb/>
and num.tain a ceas I<lb/>
Islamic Republic N<lb/>
said<lb/>
Tlu- agei <lb/>
prus said the seven<lb/>
would remain in Tehran<lb/>
days, then fly to I<lb/>
Another team of L<lb/>
already in Tehran to d<lb/>
the status of prison j<lb/>
The peace moves wei<lb/>
possible after Iran anj<lb/>
July IS that it a<lb/>
resolution calling for a cj<lb/>
Iraq accepted the rcj<lb/>
shortly after it was adj<lb/>
July 1987<lb/>
But Miice then. Iraq h.j<lb/>
to take as mane Iranian<lb/>
as possible, saying it<lb/>
more than 8 000 in thre<lb/>
attacks that began Frida<lb/>
entlv as a bargaining ch<lb/>
peace talks<lb/>
A communique cam.<lb/>
official Iraqi News Ag?<lb/>
Iraqi troops would<lb/>
drawn in line with ourj<lb/>
policy that we have no<lb/>
ambitions in Iran<lb/>
Announcers on 5<lb/>
teleb isien said troops i<lb/>
back today from Qa?<lb/>
Sumarand Sar-? Pol-e<lb/>
on the central war fi !<lb/>
Typesettj<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Sunday)<lb/>
and<lb/>
Tuesda:<lb/>
If You can<lb/>
lyou can ty<lb/>
East Carol!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058085_0003"/><lb/>
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the ti us trations 1<lb/>
taken away b<lb/>
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ultnfan<lb/>
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Tt IE CAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
1ULY27, 1988<lb/>
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Five kilos of coke found in drug bust<lb/>
WILMINGTON (AP) ? Five<lb/>
kilograms of cocaine were inter-<lb/>
cepted by undercover drug<lb/>
agents and three men believed to<lb/>
be connected to major drug traf-<lb/>
fickers were denied bond Friday<lb/>
after their arrest a day earlier,<lb/>
authorities said.<lb/>
Agents seized the cocaine, val-<lb/>
ued at $2 million, after arriving in<lb/>
unmarked cars and swooping in<lb/>
from the air by helicopter, the<lb/>
arrested the men just after noon<lb/>
on the upper level of a Wilming-<lb/>
ton downtown parking deck<lb/>
overlooking the Cape Fear River.<lb/>
Paul Andrew Pavloff, 26, Fran-<lb/>
cisco Javier Ruiz-Tarafa, 24, and<lb/>
Amador Alexis Brand-Maigucl,<lb/>
26, a Venuzelan citizen, are<lb/>
charged with violating federal<lb/>
v ontrollcd substance laws. Each<lb/>
could face life in prison and $4<lb/>
million in fines.<lb/>
According to criminal com-<lb/>
plaints filed in U.S. District court<lb/>
Thursday, the three men have<lb/>
been charged with conspiracy to<lb/>
distribute cocaine, distributing<lb/>
cocaine, interstate travel to aid in<lb/>
racketeering and aiding and abet-<lb/>
ting. Two other people were also<lb/>
in custody late Thursday, said<lb/>
Assistant U.S. Attorney Rocco<lb/>
deGrasse.<lb/>
During their initial court ap-<lb/>
pearance Friday, federal Magis-<lb/>
trate Karen Paden Boyle ex-<lb/>
plained the charges and advised<lb/>
the men of their rights to have<lb/>
lawyers present during any fu-<lb/>
ture questioning or court pro-<lb/>
ceeding.<lb/>
All three men said they planned<lb/>
to hire lawyers. When deGrasse<lb/>
said the government was pre-<lb/>
pared to put on evidence to sup-<lb/>
port a motion to have the defen-<lb/>
dants held without bond, the<lb/>
magistrate continued the hearing<lb/>
until 9:30 a.m. Tuesday to allow<lb/>
the men time to prepare a defense.<lb/>
Pavloff is believed to be the<lb/>
source of a two-kilogram cocaine<lb/>
shipment seizeci April 18 during a<lb/>
raid in Wilmington in which three<lb/>
people were arrested at a Market<lb/>
Street motel, court records show.<lb/>
Among those arrested in April<lb/>
was Curtis Ray Johnson of New<lb/>
Hanover Countv. Johnson was<lb/>
indicted on a drug trafficking<lb/>
charge last May and was charged<lb/>
under the federal continuing<lb/>
criminal enterprise statute which<lb/>
carries a minimum 10-ycar sen-<lb/>
tence without parole and a maxi-<lb/>
mum life sentence.<lb/>
Authorities believe Johnson is a<lb/>
key drug ring organizer in the<lb/>
Wilmington area in charge of at<lb/>
least five other people involved in<lb/>
the ring, according to the indict-<lb/>
ment under which he is charged.<lb/>
However, according to docu-<lb/>
ments filed with the court Thurs-<lb/>
day, Johnson provided drug<lb/>
agents with much of the informa-<lb/>
tion that led to the arrest and<lb/>
seizures Thursday.<lb/>
After Johnson's arrest in April,<lb/>
drug agents recorded numerous<lb/>
telephone conversations between<lb/>
Johnson and Pavloff. Asa result of<lb/>
those conversations, Pavloff was<lb/>
to have traveled to Wilmington<lb/>
on July 1 to deliver two kilograms<lb/>
of cocaine, but Pavloff aborted the<lb/>
trip on that day, the criminal<lb/>
complaints say.<lb/>
Pavloff later got in touch with<lb/>
Johnson and arranged another<lb/>
delivery of five kilograms of co-<lb/>
caine, court records said.<lb/>
Agents with a special task force<lb/>
of State Bureau of Investigation<lb/>
and federal Drug Enforcement<lb/>
Aministrative officer kept close<lb/>
surveillance on the two men<lb/>
throughout the day and night on<lb/>
Wednesday. An undercover fed-<lb/>
eral drug agent was present with<lb/>
Johnson during conversations<lb/>
they had with Pavloff and a man<lb/>
identified in the complaint as<lb/>
"Frank" during that time, the<lb/>
documents say.<lb/>
During those conversations,<lb/>
agents learned that a third man,<lb/>
identified in the complaint only as<lb/>
John Doe, was to travel to<lb/>
Wilmington from Miami on<lb/>
Thursday bringing five kilograms<lb/>
of cocaine.<lb/>
Agents tracked the man as he<lb/>
arrived in Wilmington Thurday.<lb/>
When officers arrested him and<lb/>
the other two men at the parking<lb/>
deck, they found two kilograms of<lb/>
cocaine in the trunk of his car and<lb/>
three kilograms under the back<lb/>
seat, said New Hanover County<lb/>
Sheriff Joseph McQueen Jr. The<lb/>
car was impounded.<lb/>
"This is an operation we've<lb/>
been working on for several<lb/>
months McQueen said. Agents<lb/>
with the city-county vice and<lb/>
narcotics unit and the federal<lb/>
bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and<lb/>
Firearms also participated in the<lb/>
operation, McQueen said.<lb/>
Officials said undercover<lb/>
agents used $110,000 in negotia-<lb/>
tions with the suspected drug<lb/>
dealers. All of the money has been<lb/>
recovered, McQueen said.<lb/>
"It's still hot said DeGrasse,<lb/>
who had been working on the<lb/>
case for months but had just hap-<lb/>
pened to arrive in Wilmington<lb/>
Thursday to begin work on other<lb/>
unrelated cases.<lb/>
"It's a very sensitive investiga-<lb/>
tion he said. "I really didn't<lb/>
think it was going to happen this<lb/>
fast<lb/>
U.S. Magistrate Karen Boyle<lb/>
denied bond to the three men<lb/>
during a hearing Firday.<lb/>
'tte,<lb/>
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Iran, Iraq may end eight year war<lb/>
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) ? Iran<lb/>
claimed Iraqi troops pushed fur-<lb/>
ther into Iranian territory today as<lb/>
a United Nations team arrived in<lb/>
Tehran to discuss a truce between<lb/>
the Persian Gulf enemies.<lb/>
Iraq, after a series of sweeping<lb/>
attacks during the weekend, de-<lb/>
nied the claim and said it was<lb/>
moving its forces out of Iran and<lb/>
would take its dispute to the bar-<lb/>
gaining table.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the National Lib-<lb/>
eration Army of Iran, an Iraqi-<lb/>
backed forced opposed to<lb/>
Ayatohllah Ruhollah Khomeini,<lb/>
claimed its forces had taken two<lb/>
Iranian towns and had marched<lb/>
95 miles into Iran.<lb/>
In New York, diplomats for<lb/>
both countries were preparing to<lb/>
meet Wednesday with U.N. Sec-<lb/>
rotary-Goneral Javier Perez de<lb/>
Cucllar to discuss an end to the 8-<lb/>
ycar-old gulf war.<lb/>
A separate team of U.N. ad is<lb/>
ers arrived in Tehran today to<lb/>
begin working on the technical<lb/>
aspects of a truce. Lt. Gen. Martin<lb/>
Vadset, the team leader, said he<lb/>
will explore ways to implement<lb/>
and maintain a cease-fire, Iran's<lb/>
Islamic Republic News Agency<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The agency, monitored in Cy-<lb/>
prus, said the seven officials<lb/>
would remain in Tehran for three<lb/>
days, then fly to Baghdad.<lb/>
Another team of U.N. experts is<lb/>
already in Tehran to determine<lb/>
the status of prisoners of war.<lb/>
The peace moves were made<lb/>
possible after Iran announced<lb/>
July 18 that it accepted a U.N.<lb/>
resolution calling for a cease-fire.<lb/>
Iraq accepted the resolution<lb/>
shortly after it was adopted in<lb/>
July 1987.<lb/>
But since then, Iraq has sought<lb/>
to take as many Iranian prisoners<lb/>
as possible, saying it captured<lb/>
more than 8,000 in three days in<lb/>
attacks that began Friday, appar-<lb/>
ently as a bargaining chip during<lb/>
peace talks.<lb/>
A communique carried by the<lb/>
official Iraqi News Agency said<lb/>
Iraqi troops would "be with-<lb/>
drawn in line with our declared<lb/>
policy that we have no territorial<lb/>
ambitions in Iran<lb/>
Announcers on state-run Iraqi<lb/>
telelvision said troops would pull<lb/>
back today from Qasr-e Shirin,<lb/>
Sumar and Sar-e Pol-e Zahab, all<lb/>
on the central war front.<lb/>
A military spokesman said on<lb/>
Baghdad radio today that Iraqi<lb/>
forces had pulled out of Gilan-e<lb/>
Gharfo in the morning and would<lb/>
soon withdraw from the other<lb/>
towns.<lb/>
But the Iranian news agency<lb/>
said Iraqi troops thrust further<lb/>
into Iran early today and tried to<lb/>
take the town of Karand, 35 miles<lb/>
from the border, and the nearby<lb/>
town of Eslamabad.<lb/>
It said Iranian fighters launched<lb/>
a counter-offensive and pushed<lb/>
the Iraqis out of Karand, killing or<lb/>
wounding hundreds, with the<lb/>
help of residents.<lb/>
lt said the Iraqis still held<lb/>
Eslamabad but Iranian forces<lb/>
were battling to free the town in<lb/>
"heavy fighting<lb/>
The deputy speaker of the Ira-<lb/>
nian Parliament, Mehdi Karrubi,<lb/>
announced the legislature was to<lb/>
be "temporarily closed so that the<lb/>
deputies may go to the war<lb/>
fronts the Islamic Republic<lb/>
News Agency reported.<lb/>
In Baghdad, Information Minis-<lb/>
ter Latif Jeassem called the Iranian<lb/>
claims "lies and fabrications" and<lb/>
re-asserted that Iraq planned to<lb/>
complete its pullout on the central<lb/>
front today.<lb/>
A spokesman in Baghdad for<lb/>
the National Liberation Army, an<lb/>
alliance of anti-Khomeini exile<lb/>
groups, claimed it took Karand.<lb/>
Large numbers of Iranian<lb/>
troops in the area defected to the<lb/>
opposition army, bringing their<lb/>
weapons and equipment, said the<lb/>
spokesman, Alircza Jafarzadch.<lb/>
1 le sud "several divisions" of<lb/>
the army were 95 miles inside Iran<lb/>
and heading toward the provin-<lb/>
cial capital of Bakhtaran.<lb/>
The conflicting claims could not<lb/>
be independently confirmed.<lb/>
Perez de Cucllar said Monday<lb/>
in New York that he will meet<lb/>
separately with Iranian Foreign<lb/>
Minister Ali Akbar Velayati and<lb/>
his Iraqi counterpart Tariq Aziz.<lb/>
He said Iran is not yet prepared to<lb/>
have direct talks with its enemy,<lb/>
but the U.N. chief said he may<lb/>
suggest direct meetings later.<lb/>
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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ? Doc-<lb/>
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Without the transplant, the girl<lb/>
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If she gets the transplant, her<lb/>
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Rae Lynn's four siblings and<lb/>
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registry. Most of those registered<lb/>
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Rae Lynn, who lives with her<lb/>
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Tuesdays<lb/>
If You can type,<lb/>
you can typeset.<lb/>
Apply at TKc<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
mwsMz<lb/>
SP0RTSW0RLD<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/>
756-6000<lb/>
RESERVE OFFICERS'TRAINING CORPS<lb/>
THE MORE YOU USE TOUR HEAD,<lb/>
THE MORE MONET<lb/>
TOUCAN GET FOR COLLEGE.<lb/>
Up to $4000 a year. Just enroll in Army<lb/>
ROTC at college and serve part-time in<lb/>
the Army Reserve or National Guard.<lb/>
ARMY ROTC<lb/>
THE SMARTEST COLLEGE<lb/>
COURSE T0U CAN TAKE.<lb/>
Contact: Cpt. Steve L. Jones<lb/>
(Erwin Hall) 757-6967<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Coming Attractions<lb/>
Wednesday, July 27<lb/>
Watermelon Feast and<lb/>
Seed Spitting Contest<lb/>
University Mall - 3 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday, July 28<lb/>
Rock-A-Bowl<lb/>
MSC Bowling Center - 2:00 - 4:30 p.m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058085_0004"/><lb/>
STite 3EaHt daraltmatt<lb/>
Clay Deani iardt, n mi b<lb/>
Ci up Carter, Mmagmg vm<lb/>
JAMES F.J. MCKEE, Director ofAJvertvang<lb/>
Tim Hampton, n r-<lb/>
DOUG 0 INSON, Co Sports U.to,<lb/>
Carol Weti ierington. r?-r? ?,??,<lb/>
Michelle England,omt<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, sm??<lb/>
Paul Dunn, coSport,u,tor<lb/>
JEEP PARKER,si?f nusfr?to,<lb/>
TOM FURR, CircuirtiOTi Mawjjer<lb/>
Mike Upci iurch, production Manage<lb/>
John W. Medlin, mmmm<lb/>
MAC CLARK, Mm Manager<lb/>
July 27.1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Books<lb/>
- Students may have reservations<lb/>
The beginning of the school year is<lb/>
never without its frustrations. One<lb/>
major hassle that every student, new<lb/>
or returning, has to face is the book<lb/>
buying process. This year, in 3 move<lb/>
designed to cut down on some of the<lb/>
confusion and crowds, the Student<lb/>
Store has allowed incoming fresh-<lb/>
men to sign up in a book reservation<lb/>
program.<lb/>
The process assures freshmen and<lb/>
their parents that they will have the<lb/>
texts they need without having to<lb/>
run around. This idea is laudable,<lb/>
though there are a few bugs in the<lb/>
system, the main one being that it<lb/>
will most likely cut down on the<lb/>
number of used texts available for<lb/>
transfer students and upperclass-<lb/>
men trying to finish general college<lb/>
requirements.<lb/>
Though the Student Store em-<lb/>
phatically states that all students<lb/>
will have no problem getting the<lb/>
book they need for classes, the fact<lb/>
remains that the supply of used text-<lb/>
book s in the freshmen survey<lb/>
courses will no doubt dwindle<lb/>
amazingly on the first day of school.<lb/>
Y??3<lb/>
Admittedly, many parents may<lb/>
wish for their sons and daughters to<lb/>
reserve only new books. But with<lb/>
prices so high for books, even some<lb/>
of the used ones, parents willing to<lb/>
pay for brand new texts being in the<lb/>
majority seems unlikely.<lb/>
The 10 dollar deposit required to<lb/>
hold the books also seems a bit<lb/>
much, especially for books where<lb/>
that may be almost or more than half<lb/>
the price. Since the deposit goes<lb/>
toward the price of the text, it is not<lb/>
unreasonable, but varying rates<lb/>
might be considered if the program<lb/>
continues.<lb/>
The program will no doubt be a<lb/>
help to incoming freshmen, one less<lb/>
thing they have to contend with.<lb/>
Although it seems that the students<lb/>
who came to orientation will have<lb/>
an unfair advantage over those who<lb/>
didn't or the rising upperclassmen,<lb/>
the benefits ot having a large chunk<lb/>
oi the freshman population not<lb/>
crowding the bookstore on the first<lb/>
day of school should help put the<lb/>
whole situation in perspective.<lb/>
who framed<lb/>
QNNIES<lb/>
AfclNET?<lb/>
H6S A CARTOON MARAC7?A<lb/>
IH AN AIL 7J0 RSM, WRCP?<lb/>
NO! WAfTA MlWT(THERE'S<lb/>
&amp;EEH A MISTAKE! YOU CANT<lb/>
-po THIS- I'LL TAKE ANOTHER<lb/>
ELECTIVE- CHAN6E Mi MAJOR1,<lb/>
HO- (S0 VdTTtteREAL<lb/>
WORLP-AEEeee<lb/>
saow.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN EDITORIAL CARTOONISTCRADUATEsChnauy!)<lb/>
One more T-shirt letter<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I challenge anyone who owns a<lb/>
"STOP AIDS" T-shirt to burn it. This<lb/>
product is, in my opinion, blatantly<lb/>
obscene. Webster's Dictionary de-<lb/>
fines obscenity as "something dis-<lb/>
gusting to the senses: repulsive My<lb/>
visual sense is appalled at the sight of<lb/>
such rubbish.<lb/>
Also, the apostle Paul wrote in<lb/>
hphesians 5 that there should not<lb/>
even be a "hint" of obscenity among<lb/>
Christ's followers. Since Justin Sturz<lb/>
identified himself as a Christian, then<lb/>
perhaps I am justified in saying that 1<lb/>
have set the stage for an intelligent<lb/>
and logical rebuttal to Mr. Sturz's<lb/>
latest extrapolation on the issue.<lb/>
I must agree with Evan Lightncr's<lb/>
comment printed on June 22 that<lb/>
states "there is no excuse for this form<lb/>
of callous, immoral ignoranceoutside<lb/>
some kind of sadistic, perverted,<lb/>
rabid, homophobia Would Jesus<lb/>
Christ wearan obscene "STOP AIDS"<lb/>
T-shirt? Of course not! Who thought<lb/>
of the idea to create such a shirt any-<lb/>
way? It certainly was not a man in-<lb/>
spired by the teachings of Jesus<lb/>
Christ.<lb/>
So why must Justin Sturz say that<lb/>
the opposers of the "STOP AIDS" T-<lb/>
shirts are "absurd and illogical?" The<lb/>
Holy Bible tells me to uphold stan-<lb/>
dards of moral decency and respect-<lb/>
fulness.<lb/>
Obviously, the depiction of two<lb/>
figures having anal intercourse<lb/>
tradicts these standards, thus, the<lb/>
product is unacceptable and sk<lb/>
be banned.<lb/>
As I stated in an earlier letter,<lb/>
"AIDS is not something to be mockc A<lb/>
but something which demands tear<lb/>
ful discernment I agree with Mr<lb/>
Sturz that we miibt educate pc ple<lb/>
about the psycho-social aspects<lb/>
AIDS, but we must also work on our<lb/>
apathetic attitudes towards the .<lb/>
tims. Without compassion and ui<lb/>
fish concern for those who are dying<lb/>
I hate to think of how God lookson us<lb/>
all.<lb/>
David McCrear)<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
English<lb/>
Jackson has to face disappointment<lb/>
The moment is approaching when Jesse Jackson and Mi-<lb/>
chael Dukakis will effect whatever it is they are going to effect<lb/>
during the Democratic convention. Mere is what is discernible<lb/>
from the event as of Sunday night.<lb/>
Dukakis is ever so lightly attempting ever so firmly to make<lb/>
it clear to the American public that he is something less than<lb/>
Jesse Jackson's manservant, while giving, when appropriate,<lb/>
the impression that historically he probably ought to be.<lb/>
This has been done by one or two maneuvers with undeni-<lb/>
able meaning. Primary among them was the choice of Lloyd<lb/>
Bentsen as a running mate. This was, in traditional language,<lb/>
the decision to "balance" the ticket. He did this adroitly by<lb/>
summoning the historical precedent of John F. Kennedy.<lb/>
It is important to remember that in Democratic official<lb/>
history, John F. Kennedy could do no wrong. So that his<lb/>
choice of Lyndon Johnson as vice presidential candidate was<lb/>
right, irrespective of a) whether JFK was a good president, or<lb/>
b) whether Johnson was a good vice president and later,<lb/>
president.<lb/>
But more important was Dukakis' clear message that he<lb/>
was rejecting the ideological association the public has<lb/>
tended to make between him and Jackson. Both are in-<lb/>
dusputable big government spenders, joint allies in the war<lb/>
against resourceful anti-communist international strategy,<lb/>
and soft on almost every point in which the interests of the<lb/>
Soviet Union and the United States collide.<lb/>
Given that in political discourse what matters is the impres-<lb/>
sion conveyed, as distinguished from objective reality,<lb/>
Dukakis scored: His position on national and world affairs is,<lb/>
somehow, "different" from that of Jesse Jackson. Hard-boiled<lb/>
analysts of the tendency of the positions of both gentlemen<lb/>
win conclude, in the fleeted phrase of columnist Joe Sobran,<lb/>
that the difference between their leftward marches is a math i<lb/>
of velocity rather than substance.<lb/>
Then there was the question of how Jackson was advise I<lb/>
the decision to go with Bentsen. dearie the reverend's I<lb/>
ings were hurt. Dukakis' excuse was oi the kind that app<lb/>
to men of affairs: The message didn't get through as plan:<lb/>
and what do you know, the reverend heard about Bent<lb/>
some time after 200 million lesser Americans heard about<lb/>
through the media.<lb/>
Dukakis went only so far as to say that he had planned U<lb/>
Jackson be the first man to hear, but he was wondcrl<lb/>
philosophical about the deadline being missed. As it I<lb/>
valentine he sent to his mother arrived not on Feb. 14 but <lb/>
Feb. 15 ? so the post office doesn't always deliver on time,s<lb/>
what else is new?<lb/>
On the Right<lb/>
By<lb/>
William F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
The reaction of Jackson was not easy. 1 le spoke in clippt.<lb/>
hcrioc tones to the press, then crushed into his high d<lb/>
sonal mode in speaking to his general qudiences, i n w 11<lb/>
bellowed his defiance of the fate in accents that sought t<lb/>
sound like King Lear inveighing against the behavior ol i<lb/>
two treacherous daughters, but left most ol the wo:<lb/>
confused as most of the world tends to be when tr ing to I<lb/>
Jesse Jackson as the architect of concrete alternatives.<lb/>
Bush introduces Ms. Rosy Scenario again<lb/>
By SUSAN IRVING<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
George Bush plans to campaign against Michael<lb/>
Dukakis by portraying him as a tax raiser. Bush, by<lb/>
contrast, promises to submit a balanced federal<lb/>
budget within three years of taking office, and to do<lb/>
so without any tax increases. Furthermore, Bush<lb/>
declares he will do this without touching Social<lb/>
Security, and without cutting defense spending.<lb/>
Bush's magic elixir is something he calls a "flexible<lb/>
freeze That sounds fairly painless, and Bush has<lb/>
kept it nice and vague. But if Bush is to keep his<lb/>
promise about taxes, he will have to severely cut<lb/>
programs that are important to a lot of voters.<lb/>
According to the Congressional Budget Office, if<lb/>
defense and most domestic programs are increased<lb/>
with inflation while programs like Social Security,<lb/>
Medicare, and farm price supports continue as in<lb/>
current law, the deficit in fiscal 1993 will be $139<lb/>
billion. (Without a $97 billion Social Security surplus<lb/>
- more than double this year's - the deficit wiuld be<lb/>
$236 billion.)<lb/>
How does Bush propose to wipe out that $139<lb/>
billion deficit? He divides the job between two old<lb/>
friends from the early days of the Reagan admini-<lb/>
stration: Ms. Rosy Scenario and Mr. Magic Asterisk<lb/>
(both coinages of David Stockman).<lb/>
Rosy Scenario takes care of about $66 billion. In<lb/>
19S1 Rosy told us we could "grow our way out of the<lb/>
deficit She was wrong. This time Rosy's emphasis<lb/>
is on interest rates. She tells us that long-term interest<lb/>
rates in 1993 will be 4.5 percent. This is almost three<lb/>
points lower than cither the CBOor private forecast-<lb/>
ers expect, and it saves a great deal of money in<lb/>
federal interest payments. Giver '?eccnt Federal<lb/>
Reserve actions and the need cep attracting<lb/>
foreign investment to finance the deifict, this mam-<lb/>
moth decline seems unlikely.<lb/>
But let's accept this wildly ptimistic forecast.<lb/>
Where docs the other $73 billion come from? In<lb/>
Stockman's early budgets, to make the numbers add<lb/>
up, he would add here and there an - the "magic<lb/>
asterisk" - which stood for "additional savings to be<lb/>
proposed Bush's "flexible freeze" is like<lb/>
Stockman's "magic asterisk" with this difference:<lb/>
He doesn't even concede that some cuts will be<lb/>
required. But we can figure it out.<lb/>
Budgets arc subject to the iron laws of arithmetic.<lb/>
To balance the budget, outlays must equal revenues.<lb/>
Since revenues in fiscal 1993 are expected to be<lb/>
$1,261 billion, a balanced budget required outlays of<lb/>
no more than $1,261 billion. Outlays come in several<lb/>
categories: interest, Social Security, defense and "all<lb/>
other<lb/>
Bush has tole us that Social Security will remain<lb/>
untouched ($303 billion), that defense will grow<lb/>
with inflation ($346 billion), and that interest will be<lb/>
calculated under the rosy scenario ($142 billion).<lb/>
That leaves a simple subtraction problem: 1,261<lb/>
minus 303 minus 346 minus 142 equals 470. That is<lb/>
the amount available for "all other" spending: $470<lb/>
billion.<lb/>
Every year the CBO computes how much spend-<lb/>
ing would be if no laws were changed and discre-<lb/>
tionary programs increased with inflation. This is<lb/>
called the "baseline For "entitlement" programs<lb/>
like Social Security, Medicare, farm price supports<lb/>
and pensions, you count the number of eligible<lb/>
people and calculate their benefits to get the total<lb/>
program costs.<lb/>
For other government activities, like environ-<lb/>
mental protection or health research, programs like<lb/>
EPA or health research or economic development<lb/>
grants, you simply index last year's spending for<lb/>
inflation. The current policy baseline estimate for<lb/>
"all other" spending in fiscal 1993 is $543 billion, or<lb/>
13 percent. How's he gonna do it?<lb/>
If you're not going to touch defense and Social<lb/>
Security, and you've already made wildly optimistic<lb/>
assumptions about interest payments, the only big-<lb/>
ticket item left is Medicare. Medicare is the fastest<lb/>
growing domestic program in the budget, and it<lb/>
grows much faster than inflation - from $80 billion in<lb/>
1988 to a projected $137 billion in 1993.<lb/>
Holding Medicare's total growth rate to inflation<lb/>
means cutting each person's benefits, perhaps radi-<lb/>
cally. To hold Medicare to the growth rate of general<lb/>
inflation, it must be cut by 30 percent in 1993. The<lb/>
unimaginable radical step of doubling the current<lb/>
monthly premium Medicare recipients pay (don't<lb/>
call it a tax increase!) would bring in 51 o billion. A.lot<lb/>
but hardly enough.<lb/>
What else? Total clmination of federal economic<lb/>
development projects would save $3.4 billion. <lb/>
drastic cut in federal transpotation aid might sav<lb/>
$2.6 billion. Forget about grants for wastewa'<lb/>
treatment plants tocomply with the Clean Water Ao<lb/>
and you can save $1.2 billion.<lb/>
And then ther are benefit programs. There is a feu<lb/>
billion to be saved by tightening up on disibilitx<lb/>
rules for veterans, reducing price guarantees for<lb/>
farmers, delaying unemployment benefits, freezing<lb/>
federal civilian pay, and so on. But if Bush wishes to<lb/>
propose these cuts, he should have to do so and take<lb/>
the heat.<lb/>
A dozen or so steps of this sort might save up to $<lb/>
billion, far short of budget balance. The numbers ca n<lb/>
work - if rosy scenario comes true, if deep cuts are<lb/>
made in various programs, and if all other programs<lb/>
are held at their 1989 spending levels. But this would<lb/>
mean no increases for education, for health research<lb/>
for drug programs, for environmental protection<lb/>
for anything in government. In fact, it would be vcr<lb/>
hard not to have to cut these programs.<lb/>
For Bush to announce that he has a plan called a<lb/>
"flexible freeze" - and that it can balance the budget<lb/>
without raising taxes and without causing any other<lb/>
sort of undue pain - is excessively dishonest even bv<lb/>
the standards set by Bush's mentor, Ronald Reagan<lb/>
1<lb/>
9<lb/>
!<lb/>
M<lb/>
<lb/>
y<lb/>
it<lb/>
B<lb/>
4<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
Si<lb/>
Arm<lb/>
MOSCOW (AP)<lb/>
munist Party leadership i<lb/>
nia today sharply cnticiz<lb/>
ists who led a six-mor<lb/>
paign to annex an Arm<lb/>
gion in a neighboring rei<lb/>
The party position, ouj<lb/>
the newspaper Pravda,<lb/>
an unusually harsh lint<lb/>
those pressing for Armei<lb/>
trol of Nagorno-Kar.<lb/>
mostly Armenian en<lb/>
neighboring Azerbaijan<lb/>
Coming after a hardhr<lb/>
by Soviet leader Mikhail<lb/>
bachev in which he rejectl<lb/>
cally motivated claims, if<lb/>
Tanning<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - fi<lb/>
about the possible hazarc<lb/>
ning machines, state offi<lb/>
proposed rules that j<lb/>
late tanning salons in<lb/>
hna.<lb/>
The state Radiation pj<lb/>
Commission approve<lb/>
regulations Friday <lb/>
require the tanning saloi<lb/>
signs warning, "Dangei<lb/>
traviolct Radiation and<lb/>
ing the health hazards o)<lb/>
posure. Protective c<lb/>
would be mandated'<lb/>
The proposed rules aid<lb/>
set standards for cquipi<lb/>
A bran<lb/>
moved<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP<lb/>
newly built retiremei<lb/>
must be moved - structi<lb/>
pants and all - because<lb/>
of construction errors thj<lb/>
it too close to the street;<lb/>
rials say.<lb/>
But its owners claii<lb/>
made the first mistake<lb/>
"We really got a raw<lb/>
the city said Sanford<lb/>
co-owner of the nine-ro<lb/>
on Westdale Place that<lb/>
its first residents th<lb/>
A city zoning code enl<lb/>
officer erroneously<lb/>
building permit v k I<lb/>
the- house ?uid<lb/>
from the property lint<lb/>
actually should have bo<lb/>
city officials admit.<lb/>
But by the time it <lb/>
pletcd in 1988, the hon<lb/>
Plane w<lb/>
damages<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM<lb/>
Employees returned to<lb/>
manufacturing plant hi<lb/>
day despite a gaping hi<lb/>
roof caused by a pf<lb/>
crashed and exploded<lb/>
killing all four people al<lb/>
"Everything's back tj<lb/>
believe it or not said a<lb/>
operator at the Jepsv<lb/>
Corp. plant who decline<lb/>
her name.<lb/>
The single-engine Pirj<lb/>
kee went down about'<lb/>
Friday, soon after takinj<lb/>
nearbv Smith-Reynoldj<lb/>
authorities said. It<lb/>
through the roof of a bui<lb/>
houses the plants<lb/>
operation. Not employ<lb/>
injured.<lb/>
Jepson Burns make<lb/>
seat covers.<lb/>
"It (the hole in the<lb/>
quite a shock for some<lb/>
not heard of the incid<lb/>
the operator. "They ha<lb/>
over there today, patchj<lb/>
The aircraft's engil<lb/>
wings, torn fusilage<lb/>
pieces of the wreckage!<lb/>
lected fromt he buildinf<lb/>
and hauled on a faltbe.<lb/>
the airport next door,<lb/>
Powell, and investigate<lb/>
National Transportatij<lb/>
Board in Atlanta.<lb/>
"The engine by itsel<lb/>
tact Powell said' "The<lb/>
tions of the aircraft<lb/>
pieces<lb/>
He said and NTSB inl<lb/>
remained on the scene<lb/>
For the<lb/>
Feaj<lb/>
Picl<lb/>
The<lb/>
<pb facs="00058085_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 27,1988<lb/>
exiTfl<lb/>
iT<lb/>
 ? ? ?<lb/>
(i .rM<lb/>
:watexfinau.y!)<lb/>
er<lb/>
: con-<lb/>
? the<lb/>
,  - ould<lb/>
an er,<lb/>
kcd<lb/>
fear-<lb/>
Mr.<lb/>
pie<lb/>
5 Of<lb/>
ur<lb/>
. ic-<lb/>
I unscl-<lb/>
lying,<lb/>
11 ks onus<lb/>
ary<lb/>
junior<lb/>
.lish<lb/>
ointment<lb/>
i 1  ttl r<lb/>
. idvisedol nd'sfeel<lb/>
<lb/>
i m<lb/>
<lb/>
ii :  oul<lb/>
w.id mi dtol 1<lb/>
II: : rf U11)<lb/>
1 As it the<lb/>
(not14 but oil "<lb/>
me <lb/>
On the Right<lb/>
By<lb/>
llliam F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
in clip -i,<lb/>
; &amp; a-<lb/>
 hich be<lb/>
I :o<lb/>
r ot I.IS<lb/>
rid .is<lb/>
trtor.x<lb/>
aizain<lb/>
,r 6billion. A 1m<lb/>
ral cconom<lb/>
: 3 4 billion<lb/>
;I tati n lid might sa?<lb/>
rt grants for wastewalr<lb/>
 :npthe Clean Water At<lb/>
grams. There is a fe?A<lb/>
ing up on disibiliy<lb/>
rans, rcducing price guarantees f?r<lb/>
'ing unemployment benefits, treen g<lb/>
 j n. But it Bush v tshesto<lb/>
cuts, he should have to do so and lal?<lb/>
Armenian annex criticized 5<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
MOSCOW (AP) ? The Com-<lb/>
munist Tarty leadership in Arme-<lb/>
nia today sharply criticized activ-<lb/>
ists who led a six-month cam-<lb/>
paign to annex an Armenian re-<lb/>
gion in a neighboring republic.<lb/>
The party position, outlined in<lb/>
designed to show pro-annexation<lb/>
activities they could no longer<lb/>
count on high-level support.<lb/>
Armenia's parliament voted in<lb/>
June to annex Nagorno-Kara-<lb/>
bakh.<lb/>
Azerbaijani authorities op-<lb/>
the newspaper Pravda, reflected posed the change, and the Krem-<lb/>
an unusually harsh line against<lb/>
those pressing for Armenian con-<lb/>
trol of Nagorno-Karabakh, a<lb/>
mostly Armenian enclave in<lb/>
neighboring Azerbaijan<lb/>
? . sort might save up to )<lb/>
;ct balance. The numbers carl<lb/>
icenario comes true, if deep cuts are<lb/>
grams, and if all other programs<lb/>
lr 1989 spending levels. But this would<lb/>
reducation, for health research,<lb/>
'ams, for environmental protection,<lb/>
vernment. In fact, it would be vei y<lb/>
fe to cut these programs.<lb/>
inouncc that he has a plan called a<lb/>
- and that it can balance the budget<lb/>
ig taxes and without causing any other <lb/>
rain - is excessively dishonest even by<lb/>
set by Bush's mentor, Ronald Reagan.<lb/>
lin last week deemed annexation<lb/>
"impossible<lb/>
Pravda reported that party<lb/>
leaders in Armenia met Monday<lb/>
to discuss "the instigatory charac-<lb/>
tory, politically harmful speeches standstill for two months began<lb/>
and urged  all the ideological subsiding Monday, when Tass<lb/>
agencies to launch effective ef- said 78 percent of the region's<lb/>
forts to expose the anti-people workers showed up at their jobs,<lb/>
character  of the activists Both the state-run media and<lb/>
Pravda reported. activists in Stepanakert, Na-<lb/>
Armenians account for about gorno-Karabakh's central city,<lb/>
three-quarters of Nagorno- reported Monday that the strikes<lb/>
Karabakh's 162,000 residents, and were over and business was pro-<lb/>
thcy have complained of mis- cccding at a normal pace.<lb/>
Coming after a hardline speech tcr of speeches at meetings" held<lb/>
by Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gor- in Yerevan, the Armenian capital,<lb/>
bachev in which he rejected ethni- The Armenian leaders "con-<lb/>
cally motivated claims, it seemed demmed the extremist, instiga-<lb/>
treatment by the government of<lb/>
Azerbaijan, which is predomi-<lb/>
natly Moslem. Most Armenians<lb/>
are Christians.<lb/>
Labor unrest that brought Na-<lb/>
gorno-Karabakh to a virtual<lb/>
UmtvdttftMj<lb/>
Some have vowed to continue<lb/>
the fight for annexation, but cen-<lb/>
tral authorities have made it clear<lb/>
that a tougher stance will be taken<lb/>
by police in future demonstra-<lb/>
tions or work stoppages.<lb/>
Tanning machines to be regulated by officials<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? Concerned<lb/>
about the possible hazards of tan-<lb/>
ning machines, state officials have<lb/>
proposed rules that would regu-<lb/>
late tanning salons in North Caor-<lb/>
lina.<lb/>
The state Radiation Protection<lb/>
Commission approved draft<lb/>
regulations Friday that would<lb/>
require the tanning salons to post<lb/>
signs warning, "Danger ? Un-<lb/>
traviolct Radiation and describ-<lb/>
ing the health hazards of overex-<lb/>
posure. Protective eye wear also<lb/>
would be mandated.<lb/>
The proposed rules also would<lb/>
set standards for equipment and<lb/>
require salons to register with the<lb/>
state. Salons would be prohibited<lb/>
from implying in the advertise-<lb/>
ments that registration isaformof<lb/>
state approval.<lb/>
The commission decided two<lb/>
years ago to consider regulating<lb/>
tanning salons because of concern<lb/>
by doctors that the radiation in the<lb/>
booths, like sunshine, may harm<lb/>
the eyes and skin.<lb/>
Dermatologists say the untravi-<lb/>
olct radiation that turns the skin<lb/>
brown is the same whether it<lb/>
comes from the sun or lights in a<lb/>
tanning booth, sometimes caus-<lb/>
ing skin cancer if exposure contin-<lb/>
ues over a long period.<lb/>
Untraviolct rays come in "A"<lb/>
and "B" wavelengths. The "B"<lb/>
variety ? the shorter of the two ?<lb/>
sunburns the top layer of skin.<lb/>
The "A" rays penetrate deeper,<lb/>
making melanin, a dark pigment,<lb/>
rise to the skin surface and turn it<lb/>
brown.<lb/>
Unlike the sun, tanning equip-<lb/>
ment gives off mostly "A" rays,<lb/>
eliminating the sunburn fear. But<lb/>
some plysicians have suggested<lb/>
the absence of sunburn pain may<lb/>
lull people into using the tanning<lb/>
equipment longer and more fre-<lb/>
quently than advisable.<lb/>
The proposed regulations will<lb/>
be published in the State Register<lb/>
this fall, followed by a public<lb/>
hearing and written comments. If<lb/>
all goes according to schedule, the<lb/>
commission could adopt the<lb/>
regulations at its next meeting,<lb/>
tentatively set for Feb. 24, officials<lb/>
said.<lb/>
David Adams, inspector with<lb/>
the state radiation protection sec-<lb/>
tion, said the draft rules had been<lb/>
circulated among tanning bed<lb/>
manufacturers and by and large,<lb/>
"they suppport some regulation<lb/>
and guidelines<lb/>
A brand new retirement home will have to be<lb/>
moved because it's too close to street<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) ? A<lb/>
newly built retirement home<lb/>
must be moved - structure, occu-<lb/>
pants and all - because of a series<lb/>
of construction errors that placed<lb/>
it too close to the street, city offi-<lb/>
cials say.<lb/>
But its owners claim the city<lb/>
made the first mistake.<lb/>
"We really got a raw deal from<lb/>
the city said Sanford Mauldin,<lb/>
co-owner of the nine-room home<lb/>
on VVestdale Place that admitted<lb/>
its first residents this spring.<lb/>
A city zoning code enforcement<lb/>
officer erroneously signed a<lb/>
building permit ia 1987, sayjng<lb/>
the House hpuld fcevttfc ?5r fmk<lb/>
from the property line when if<lb/>
actually should have been 30 feet,<lb/>
city officials admit.<lb/>
But by the time it was com-<lb/>
pleted in 1988, the home was 14<lb/>
feet closer to the street than it<lb/>
should have been - exceeding<lb/>
even the dimensions set in error,<lb/>
said Archie Andrews,<lb/>
Greensboro's chief of code en-<lb/>
forcement.<lb/>
That's too much, the Greens-<lb/>
boro Board of Adjustment de-<lb/>
cided Mondav, and ordered the<lb/>
house removed from or relocated<lb/>
on the lot.<lb/>
"On each thing that's issued<lb/>
there's probably an error made<lb/>
someplace or another Andrews<lb/>
said. "We accept a small percent-<lb/>
age of errors. But in this one case<lb/>
. bcpihrr2 appeared ttiJpQajTfcb-<lb/>
?n?l numbfr of terrors; m ,1<lb/>
could not explain it<lb/>
An attorney for the owners,<lb/>
James Shepherd, said they would<lb/>
appeal the city's decision to<lb/>
Guilford District Court.<lb/>
The order is likely to be stayed<lb/>
until the appeals case is deter-<lb/>
mined, Andrews said.<lb/>
Mauldin, a general contractor<lb/>
with 25 years experience, and<lb/>
Brenda Brown, a social worker for<lb/>
15 years, planned to open a center<lb/>
for elderly and handicapped<lb/>
people.<lb/>
When he was issued the permit<lb/>
for the home, Mauldin says, the<lb/>
street it was built on, VVestdale<lb/>
Place, did not reach Mauldin's<lb/>
property.<lb/>
City inspectors told him the<lb/>
street would not be extended -<lb/>
eliminating ihenecd for a specific<lb/>
distance between the "Structure<lb/>
and property line, Mauldin says.<lb/>
But then the inspectors issued a<lb/>
stop-work order for the structure<lb/>
because there was no street. In-<lb/>
spectors told Mauldin the street<lb/>
would have to be extended past<lb/>
his property before the house<lb/>
could open,but allowed construc-<lb/>
tion to continue while the street<lb/>
was extended, city officials said.<lb/>
Neither side then realized the<lb/>
building would be too close to the<lb/>
street, officials said.<lb/>
One neighborhood rcisdent<lb/>
who does not want the home on<lb/>
his small, dead-end street was<lb/>
jubilant at the outcome.<lb/>
"We're paying taxes for people<lb/>
to protect us said Ed Lynch. "We<lb/>
want other people to profit from<lb/>
this and understand that this<lb/>
could happen in their neighbor-<lb/>
lho6&amp;3<lb/>
Subscribe<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
Plane wreck kills four,<lb/>
damages manufacturer<lb/>
RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM (AP) ?<lb/>
Employees returned to work at a<lb/>
manufacturing plant here Mon-<lb/>
day despite a gaping hole in the<lb/>
roof caused by a plane that<lb/>
crashed and exploded in pieces<lb/>
killing all four people aboard.<lb/>
"Everything's back to normal,<lb/>
believe it or not said a telephone<lb/>
operator at the Jepson Bums<lb/>
Corp. plant who declined to giver<lb/>
her name.<lb/>
The single-engine Piper Chero-<lb/>
kee went down about 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Friday, soon after taking off from<lb/>
nearby Smith-Reynolds Airport,<lb/>
authorities said. It plunged<lb/>
through the roof of a building that<lb/>
houses the plant's sewing<lb/>
operation. Not employees were<lb/>
injured.<lb/>
Jepson Burns makes airplane<lb/>
seat covers.<lb/>
"It (the hole in the roof) was<lb/>
quite a shock for some (who had<lb/>
not heard of the incident) said<lb/>
the operator. "They have a crew<lb/>
over there today, patching it up<lb/>
The aircraft's engine, broken<lb/>
wings, torn fusilage and other<lb/>
pieces of the wreckage were col-<lb/>
lected fromt he building Saturday<lb/>
and hauled on a faltbed trailer to<lb/>
the airport next door, said Phil<lb/>
Powell, and investigator with the<lb/>
National Transportation Safety<lb/>
Board in Atlanta.<lb/>
"The engine by itself was in-<lb/>
tact Powell said. "The other por-<lb/>
tions of the aircraft were in<lb/>
pieces<lb/>
He said and NTSB investigator<lb/>
remained on the scene Monday,<lb/>
examining the plane for signs of<lb/>
malfunction and talking to wit-<lb/>
nesses who saw the aircraft fall<lb/>
from the sky.<lb/>
But he said it may be a week<lb/>
before federal officials have com-<lb/>
piled a preliminary report on the<lb/>
accident. However, witnesses<lb/>
have reported hearing the plane<lb/>
sputter as it rose into the sky, lead-<lb/>
ing investigators to speculate its<lb/>
engine might have stalled.<lb/>
Given the relatively small hole<lb/>
in the manufacturing company's<lb/>
roof and the downward angle of<lb/>
the plane wreckage, the aircraft<lb/>
apparently nose-dived - consis-<lb/>
tent with stalled-cngine acci-<lb/>
dents, federal officials have said.<lb/>
The victims - pilot Roger Fran-<lb/>
klin Nance, 39 and his wife, Bobbi<lb/>
Jean Templcton Nance, 37; Lynn<lb/>
Powell, 40, and his wife, Sandra<lb/>
Powell, 38 - were headed to<lb/>
Myrtle Beach, S.C for a weekend<lb/>
trip, authorities said.<lb/>
Friends described Nance as an<lb/>
extremely careful pilot.<lb/>
"He was never afraid to fly. He<lb/>
loved to fly said Buddy Boben-<lb/>
der, a close friend of the pilot<lb/>
Carol Huff, a secretary who<lb/>
works at a law office across the<lb/>
hall from the Powell's shop, said<lb/>
she and one of the victims, Ms.<lb/>
Powell, had talked before the<lb/>
flight about the safety of small<lb/>
planes.<lb/>
"She was talking about how<lb/>
ever, very careful Roger was - that<lb/>
she had no qualms at all about<lb/>
going up with him Ms. Huff<lb/>
said.<lb/>
000 ?4<lb/>
YOUR UNCLE WANTS<lb/>
TO PAT FOR COLLEGE. RUT ONLY<lb/>
IF YOU'RE GOOD ENOUGH.<lb/>
Army ROTC scholarships pay full tuition<lb/>
and provide an allowance for fees and<lb/>
textbooks. Find out if you qualify.<lb/>
ARMY ROTC<lb/>
L<lb/>
THE SMARTEST COLLEGE<lb/>
COURSE TOUCAN TAKE.<lb/>
Contact: Cpt. Steve L. Jones<lb/>
(Erwin Hall) 757-6967<lb/>
For the latest in ECU News,<lb/>
Features and Sports,<lb/>
Pick up your copy of<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
COLLATION<lb/>
IS NOT A DIRTY WORD . . .<lb/>
(Ka la shan. ka-) 1. the act, process, or<lb/>
result of gathering (the sections of a book)<lb/>
together in proper order for binding.<lb/>
IT'S OUR BUSINESS<lb/>
We specialize in duplicating and binding<lb/>
multiple page documents<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
Why not co.ne by the REAL Crisis Intervention Center: 312<lb/>
E. 10th St; or call 758 HELP. For Free Confidential Counsel-<lb/>
ing or Assistance.<lb/>
Our Volunteers and Staff are on duty 24 hrs. a day. year<lb/>
around. In order to assist you In virtually any problem area<lb/>
you might have. Our longstanding goal has always been to<lb/>
preserve and enhance the quality of life for you and our com-<lb/>
munity.<lb/>
Licensed fin-id Accredited By The State of North Carolina<lb/>
GREAT STEAKS<lb/>
AT A GREAT PRICE!<lb/>
'<lb/>
Wed. &amp; Thurs. Special<lb/>
7 Round-Up<lb/>
6 oz. Sirloin with Potato Bar,<lb/>
Salad Bar, Hot Bar,<lb/>
Sundae Bar and drink<lb/>
Only s4.99<lb/>
Reg S5.99<lb/>
Also Featurine<lb/>
New &amp; Improved Salad,<lb/>
Hot &amp; Dessert Bar<lb/>
?nly$3.99<lb/>
FREE - Dessert Bar<lb/>
With All Entries<lb/>
Take-Outs Okay<lb/>
Dail<lb/>
107c Discount On<lb/>
Regular Priced Items<lb/>
With Student I.D.<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St. - 758-2712<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Morehead Marketplace<lb/>
4952 Arendell Street<lb/>
Morehead City<lb/>
TT?<lb/>
PRE-INVENTORY<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
7<lb/>
i<lb/>
THURS FRI. AND SAT. ONLY!<lb/>
THE SALE EVERYONE WAS WAITING FOR"<lb/>
RJRTI IUR REDUCTIONS<lb/>
IIAVE BEEN MADE FOR<lb/>
TI US GREAT SALE TO<lb/>
CLEAR AS MUCH<lb/>
MERCHANDISE AS<lb/>
POSSIBLE BEFORE<lb/>
INVENTORY. GREAT<lb/>
SWINGS ON SHOES FOR<lb/>
THE ENTIRE FAMILY PLUS<lb/>
HANDBAGS AND<lb/>
ACCESSORIES.<lb/>
SAVE UP TO<lb/>
3 BIG DAYS TO SAVE<lb/>
The winning car number<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Summer 500<lb/>
in Pocono, PA on<lb/>
Sunday, July 24th was<lb/>
CAR9<lb/>
I<lb/>
FAST COPIES FOR FAST TIMES<lb/>
We are open early &amp; late (Next to Chico's in Georgetown Shops)<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
If you have this number on a specially marked<lb/>
bottle cap or can and you also have a cap or can<lb/>
with a "NASCAR 100" or "NASCAR 500" logo,<lb/>
you've won $100 or $500!<lb/>
If you have just the winning car number, you've<lb/>
won a Burger King WhopperR!<lb/>
Next NASCAR race is the Talladega<lb/>
500 in Talladega, AL on<lb/>
Sunday, July 31st.<lb/>
Make sure you, your family and friends keep<lb/>
collecting those specially marked caps and<lb/>
cans from Pepsi-Cola" products!<lb/>
Pepsi is a registered trademark ot PepsiCo. Inc<lb/>
j 11988 Registered Trademark ot Burger King Corp<lb/>
'968 Geographic Marketing Group<lb/>
<pb facs="00058085_0006"/><lb/>
6 Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 27, 1968<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
HELP WANTED<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/>
Apply in person at 1154 East 10th Street.<lb/>
WANTED ? energetic and TALENTED<lb/>
ambitious artist with design, layout, il-<lb/>
lustration and photographic capabilities.<lb/>
Copywriting experience helpful. Please<lb/>
submit Resume to 2803 Evans Street, Suit<lb/>
129, Greenville, NC 27834.<lb/>
PART-TIME POSITION - available in<lb/>
medical office. Typing skills needed. 758-<lb/>
5000.<lb/>
PART-TIME SALESPERSON ?<lb/>
needed. Apply in person at Carpet Bar-<lb/>
gain Center. 1009 Dickinson Ave. No<lb/>
phone calls.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS ? Also Cruiseships.<lb/>
$10,000 ? $105,000yr. Now hiring! List-<lb/>
ings! 1-805-6S7-6000 Ext. 1166.<lb/>
2 STUDENTS wanted to answer tele-<lb/>
phone for local business ? mornings and<lb/>
afternoons. Call 756-3241 for interview.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24<lb/>
hours in and out. Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages. We<lb/>
repair computers and printers also. Low-<lb/>
est hourly rate in town. SDF Professional<lb/>
Computer Services, 106 East 5th Street<lb/>
(beside Cubbies) Greenville, NC 752-<lb/>
3694.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE ? IBM Selectric (non-correct-<lb/>
ing) typewriter; recently cleaned; excel-<lb/>
lent mechanical condition, S50.00 Call<lb/>
752-2474 after 6 p.m. evenings.<lb/>
5-SPEED Jamis Boss Cruiser. Exc. Condi-<lb/>
tion. $190.00 neg. Must Sell 752-1048.<lb/>
SLEEPER COUCH for sale Good condi-<lb/>
tion. $65 00 or best offer. Must sale, mov-<lb/>
ing soon! Give it a look! Call Dan 752-<lb/>
6781.<lb/>
FOR SALE ? 5 piece living room suite.<lb/>
Excellent condition. Call Margi, 757-0316<lb/>
FOR SALE ? Matching dresser, with<lb/>
mirror, night table and headboard with<lb/>
frame mattress and box spring. S350.00 or<lb/>
best offer 756-7784.<lb/>
FOR SALE ? 5 speed girls Schwinn Earth<lb/>
Crusier. Red, like new. Includes Kryp-<lb/>
tonite lock. $250.00 or best offer 756-7784.<lb/>
RINGOLD TOWERS CONDO ? for<lb/>
sale. B-unit, 2nd floor, fully furnished. Tax<lb/>
market value $43,730.00. Make me an offer.<lb/>
919-787-1378.<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT ? $165 00 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 1 2 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/>
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED ? 4 BR<lb/>
townhouse, washer-dryer, personal room.<lb/>
Rent $125.00 and 14 utilities at 32<lb/>
Wildwood Villas. Call 752-5329 after 4.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED ? for<lb/>
August. Great location close to campus. 1 <lb/>
2 utilities. Call 752-2192 in the afternoon.<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT in fully furnished<lb/>
house available in August. Very Close to<lb/>
campus. Call 757-3027 or (Raleigh) 1-847-<lb/>
9147 or 1-848-0563.<lb/>
J.C. BOWES, 2903-F CEDER CREEK RD<lb/>
758-2377. No deposit, month to month. 2<lb/>
bedroom townhouse to share amoung 2<lb/>
people, 1 12 baths, 12 utilities, $187.50<lb/>
mo. rent, non-smoker, 14 mile from hos-<lb/>
pital. Pool, tennis courts, no pets, great for<lb/>
medical student, grad student or profes-<lb/>
sional.<lb/>
NEEDED ?2 male roommates, non-<lb/>
smokers, to share 3 bedroom at; at Planta-<lb/>
tion Apts. 13 utilities, 13 rent, available<lb/>
August 1st. Call Sammy 355-5610.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS: furnished apts.<lb/>
for rent. Call 1 lollie Simonwich ? 752-<lb/>
2865.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
GROG'S ? TI IE LATE NIC! IT PLACE<lb/>
TO BE EIGI IT NIG1 ITS A WEEK. July<lb/>
28, tropical night.<lb/>
BOO, WHERE ARE YOU? Lost kitten,<lb/>
black and white 12 week old male, vicin-<lb/>
ity of 5th and Library Street, 717. If<lb/>
found, please call Joan, 757-6338. Re-<lb/>
ward Offered.<lb/>
noscoe<lb/>
GRf-pplQ<lb/>
SHOES<lb/>
FULL AND PART TIME SALES<lb/>
MANAGER TRAINEES<lb/>
Opportunity for better than average<lb/>
pay with room for advancement.<lb/>
?I lealth and life insurance<lb/>
?Incentive bonuses<lb/>
?Paid vacations and holidays<lb/>
?Pension plan<lb/>
?Employee discounts<lb/>
?Flexible hours<lb/>
Immediate openings, experience help-<lb/>
ful but will train. Apply in person at<lb/>
The Plaza or Carolina East Mall.<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
?All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
?And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UN1VERSTIY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899F. SthS?iwt<lb/>
?Ixvalpd Near F.CU<lb/>
? Across From 1 lighway Patrol Station<lb/>
Limited o(fer-S275 a month<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 or 830-1937<lb/>
Office open - Apt. 8,12-5 JO p m.<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS'<lb/>
Clean and quiet one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, oble TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only $195 a month, 6 month<lb/>
lease. MOBILE HOME RENTALS - couples or<lb/>
singles. Apartment and mobile homes in Azilra<lb/>
Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy William<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS ? Apts. for rent<lb/>
Furnished. Contact I lollie Simonowich at<lb/>
752-2865.<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/>
Be enrolled in an AM A 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/>
ECU Joyner Library will be extending<lb/>
hours during the exam period, July 25 ?<lb/>
July 28. The library's hours will be short-<lb/>
ened during the summer break, I luly 29-<lb/>
August 21. During the summer break<lb/>
hours will be as follows: M-F 8 a.m. ? 5<lb/>
p.m. Closed Saturday and Sunday.<lb/>
CO-OP SUMMER FALL<lb/>
Three jobs ? Congressional Office,<lb/>
Washington, DC. June ? August. Salary:<lb/>
SlDOOOOmonth. Student must have gen-<lb/>
eral office skills and some experience with<lb/>
word processing. Short hand skills de-<lb/>
sired. Also, Tampa Dcctric Company,<lb/>
Tjmpa, Florida. Fall semester. Salary:<lb/>
$1135 00month. Word processing<lb/>
courses and or 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 1 lead area begin-<lb/>
ning June 1, 1988. Salary: $4hour, 30-40<lb/>
hrs wk. I lousing available near worksite<lb/>
- 550.00week. Students must have 2.5<lb/>
GI'A. Will receive 5500 scholarshipsti-<lb/>
pend for college expenses when returning<lb/>
to school in the fall. For all these positions,<lb/>
am tact Ruth Peterson, 757-6979, immedi-<lb/>
ately. Students may apply at Co-op office,<lb/>
2028 GC building.<lb/>
BIKE RACE<lb/>
The VVashington-to-Goose Creek Bike<lb/>
Race will be part of Washington's Sum-<lb/>
mer Festival event again this year. The 27<lb/>
mile race will be held on Saturday, July 30<lb/>
and is being sponsored by the Beaufort<lb/>
County Hospital and the Bicycle Post.<lb/>
Cash prizes will be awarded to first, sec-<lb/>
ond, and third place winners in three cate-<lb/>
gories: men, women, and veterans (over<lb/>
the age of 35). All participants will receive<lb/>
a T-shirt. The entry fee is 510.00 and refis-<lb/>
tration begins at 8:00 a.m. at the Bcaufor t<lb/>
County Hospital in Washington. Race<lb/>
begins at 9:30 a.m. For more information<lb/>
or to register in advance, contact Richard<lb/>
Young at 919-946-9363.<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/>
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 comeby the Publications Building and<lb/>
pick one up.<lb/>
WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you are work study eligible for 2nd<lb/>
Summer Session andor Fall Semester,<lb/>
you are encouraged to contact the Co-op<lb/>
office about off-campus placements. Call<lb/>
757-6979 of come by the General Class-<lb/>
room Building.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY COMMITTEES<lb/>
Applications are now being accepted<lb/>
fi r students wishing to serve on Univer-<lb/>
sity Committees for the 1988-89 school<lb/>
year. Applications are available at the<lb/>
following Locations: Office of the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life, 204,<lb/>
Whichard Building; Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Information Desk; SGA Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center; and Resi-<lb/>
dence I 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/>
ECU FOOTBALL WALK-ON TRY-OUT<lb/>
Registration will be held Aug. 23rd from 12:00 p.m. ? 3 p.m. and<lb/>
Aug. 24th from 10:30 a.m. ?12:30 p.m. at Scales Fieldhouse. Try-<lb/>
outs will begin Aug. 24th at 1:30 p.m. in front of Scales Field-<lb/>
house. Bring work-out gear and shoes for grass. Please be on<lb/>
time and bring student ID.<lb/>
CS2?<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/>
U.S.O.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BONELESS<lb/>
Top Round<lb/>
London Broil<lb/>
FIELDALE GRADE A'<lb/>
Fresh Ground<lb/>
FRESH?ASSORTED<lb/>
Pork<lb/>
Chops<lb/>
1.88<lb/>
US.DA CHOICE GRAIN FED<lb/>
Top Round<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
5 lbs.<lb/>
or more<lb/>
89<lb/>
'?v<lb/>
SMITHFIELD?GWALTNEY<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
Sliced<lb/>
Bacon<lb/>
FARMLAND<lb/>
1.49<lb/>
California<lb/>
Carrots big<lb/>
89<lb/>
FIRST OF THE SEASON?CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Smoked A 0t Bartlett<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
Pears<lb/>
79<lb/>
LOCALLY GROWN<lb/>
Vine Ripe<lb/>
Tomatoes<lb/>
JUICY CALIFORNIA SUPERIOR WHITE<lb/>
Grapes<lb/>
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V<lb/>
<pb facs="00058085_0007"/><lb/>
THE EASTCAROI INI AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JULY 27, 1988 Page 7<lb/>
R<lb/>
NS<lb/>
lective Sun . July 17<lb/>
graphical Errors.<lb/>
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8<lb/>
GRAIN FED<lb/>
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JUAN?CANARY OR<lb/>
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'Steel Magnolias' is proof of fine acting<lb/>
' ' ?????????????? rr-ci?r1 imnnrlinl mo rnmic nKlfin trio<lb/>
CLAY DEANHARDT<lb/>
Cencral Manager<lb/>
The ECU Summer Theatre<lb/>
opened its final show of the sea-<lb/>
son Monday with a superb per-<lb/>
formance of Robert Herring's<lb/>
"Steel Magnolias a comic and<lb/>
poignant look at the intertwined<lb/>
lives of six women in the deep<lb/>
south.<lb/>
The play is set in a beauty shop the next scene, eight months after<lb/>
crcasingly important role. Comic cuscs on the efforts of the women<lb/>
moments center on relationships to help M'Lynn and come to grips<lb/>
between husbands and wives, on their own with the death of one<lb/>
traditional women's roles and the of their group,<lb/>
independence of living alone. The all-woman cast of this play<lb/>
Dramatically the play turns turns in a sterling performance,<lb/>
around the life of Shelby. Open- pulling off comic and dramatic<lb/>
ing before the marriage, the play roles with equal ease. Under the<lb/>
reveals that Shelby has been careful direction of director<lb/>
warned not to have children be- Robert Caprio, the women give<lb/>
causeof her diabetic condition. In outstanding performances and<lb/>
the pace never lags. Caprio has a<lb/>
in Chinquapin, Louisiana. It<lb/>
opens on an April morning before<lb/>
the wedding of Shelby Eatcnton,<lb/>
and then follows the lives of its<lb/>
characters over a 31 month pe-<lb/>
riod.<lb/>
h Williamson and Ann Hearing Lincoln share an intimate moment during<lb/>
I heater's production of "Steel Magnolias a comedy by Robert Hailing.<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
Truvy joncs owns the beauty maturely. The birth has weak<lb/>
shop, which she opens on Satur- ened her, though, and she is going<lb/>
days just for her three special through dialysis treatment be<lb/>
customers, Clairee Belcher,<lb/>
M'Lynn Eatcnton (Shelby's<lb/>
mother) and Ouiser Bourdeaux.<lb/>
Annelle Dupuy-Dcsoto begins<lb/>
working with Jones as an assistant<lb/>
and soon becomes a part of the<lb/>
little group that revolves around<lb/>
the beauty shop.<lb/>
The comic elements of the play<lb/>
concentrate on the efforts of the<lb/>
women to survive in the modern<lb/>
era in which women play an in-<lb/>
thc wedding, Shelby announces good sense of the stage and uses it<lb/>
she has become pregnant any- to its fullest, but also knows when<lb/>
way. the action must be slowed to<lb/>
The second act opens 18 months emphasize a dramatic moment.<lb/>
later, and Shelby has had her Ruth Williamson and Julia<lb/>
child, although it was born pre- Curry are outrageously funny in<lb/>
their respective roles as Truvv<lb/>
and Ouiser. Williamson has an<lb/>
excellent sense of timing and a<lb/>
cause her kidneys have failed. She good sense of how the body can<lb/>
is at the beauty shop to get a hair-<lb/>
cut before she has a transplant<lb/>
operation the next day: M'Lynn is<lb/>
giving Shelby one of her kidneys,<lb/>
experiencing, as she puts it, a<lb/>
chance to give her daughter life<lb/>
twice.<lb/>
In the final scene Shelby has<lb/>
passed away. The transplant had<lb/>
failed, and continued dialysis had<lb/>
finally gone awry. The scene fo-<lb/>
emphasize comedy. Curry, as a<lb/>
boisterous, rich widower, man-<lb/>
ages to be loud, obnoxious and<lb/>
subtle all at the same time, which<lb/>
is not an easy feat.<lb/>
Turning in a charming and<lb/>
comic performance as Clairee is<lb/>
Anne Dearing Lincoln, who<lb/>
played Big Mamma in the<lb/>
See STLLL, page 8<lb/>
ECU Summer Theatre has great season<lb/>
summers plays. While soap<lb/>
opera and television stars may be<lb/>
bigger name draws, it has consis-<lb/>
tently been true that the stage<lb/>
regulars have turned in brighter<lb/>
and more consistent perform-<lb/>
ances. Oiten, it appears, television<lb/>
personalities don't have the thea-<lb/>
ter experience it takes to really<lb/>
pull off a live performance.<lb/>
cuth Williamson, I aura Linney and Julia Curry gossip at the hairdresser's during the smash play, "Steel<lb/>
Magnolias The ECU production is the last one to be shown before the movie version is filmed.<lb/>
Drivin' and CryiiV do Chapel Hill<lb/>
CLAY DEANHARDT<lb/>
Cencral Manager<lb/>
This week's performance of<lb/>
"Steel Magnolias closing the<lb/>
1988 Summer Theatre season, is<lb/>
the cherry on top of a delicious<lb/>
summer season. This season has<lb/>
provided a wide range of enter-<lb/>
tainment from the powerful "Cat<lb/>
on a Hot Tin Roof to the musical<lb/>
revue of "Jerry's Girl the musi-<lb/>
cal revelry of "Diamond Studs"<lb/>
and the comic poignancy of this<lb/>
final production.<lb/>
All in all this has been a positive<lb/>
and growing season for the thea-<lb/>
ter, although technical problems<lb/>
with the musicals must be solved<lb/>
if producer Edgar Loessin wants<lb/>
to keep musical fans happy.<lb/>
After two years of reviewing<lb/>
Summer Theatre productions and performance came not from Kim<lb/>
a lifetime of watching the theater Zimmeror A.C. Weary, but North<lb/>
grow, this season seemed to be a Carolina's own Graham Pollock,<lb/>
year in which Loessin hit on a another broadway veteran,<lb/>
succesful combination of "Steel Magnolias" with a cast<lb/>
elements which could help the composed entirely of theater vet-<lb/>
theater stand out even further erans, is another example of how<lb/>
from other professional regional these pertormcrs are much more<lb/>
theaters. suited for the ECU stage.<lb/>
The first is the use of more regu- The trend is obvious. It may be<lb/>
lar theater performers in the time for Loessin to consider shitt-<lb/>
ing his star focus to the broadwa;<lb/>
stage. While he may sacrifice the<lb/>
box office draw oi a well-known<lb/>
name, the bettered reputation and<lb/>
increase in theater profcssioi<lb/>
ism should more than make u<lb/>
the loss.<lb/>
Another positive trend in this<lb/>
25th year of the theater is the<lb/>
emphasis on Southern plays and<lb/>
Take, for example, last year's playwrights. "Diamond Studs<lb/>
productionof "BusStop Neither was written and first performed<lb/>
of the show's "name" stars, Cath- m Chapel Hill, while Robert<lb/>
erine Bach or Grant Snow (?),<lb/>
could command the stage or the<lb/>
audience's attention. It took an<lb/>
outstanding performance by<lb/>
ECU's own Donald Biehn,a stage<lb/>
veteran, to make the show even<lb/>
worth seeing.<lb/>
And in this year's production of<lb/>
"Cat On A Hot Tin Roof" the star<lb/>
Harling's "Steel Magnolias is<lb/>
concentrated on the life of south-<lb/>
ern gentility. "Cat On a Hot Tin<lb/>
Roof is one of Tennesee Wil-<lb/>
liams' finest plays, and nothing<lb/>
else needs to be said to establish<lb/>
those credentials.<lb/>
As a matter oi a fact, "Jerry's<lb/>
Girls" was the only play withouta<lb/>
true southern connection. This<lb/>
emphasis on southern life and<lb/>
culture is a something the theater<lb/>
should continue to concentrate<lb/>
on. It is more engaging for this<lb/>
audience, and the theater can also<lb/>
often provide a deeper under-<lb/>
standing oi southern lifestyles<lb/>
and heritage.<lb/>
See THEATRE'page 8<lb/>
ADAM HI ANKENSHIP<lb/>
. . -<lb/>
1 )ri . k Cr) ing, D &amp; C, the<lb/>
I ? underground music,<lb/>
r i ime ou want to<lb/>
.imply and completely<lb/>
? ? the walls down at the infa-<lb/>
I its radle in Chapel Hill<lb/>
. ht.<lb/>
II talk about them in a bit,<lb/>
I now 1 want to explain<lb/>
? i fii ? : bind (for respect<lb/>
tiled a warm up<lb/>
I its own share of hard<lb/>
grippii g Michele Malone<lb/>
is jusl re ro ker from hot-<lb/>
WZMB Top 13<lb/>
1) Skeeters "Wine, Women<lb/>
I Walleye" - DB Records<lb/>
rhe Pedaljets - "Today, To-<lb/>
rwilight Records<lb/>
le Green - "15 Dry den" -<lb/>
DB Records<lb/>
4) Cat Heads - "Submarine" -<lb/>
is Records<lb/>
5)1 "A Promise is a Prom-<lb/>
ise" - Ace of 1 learts Records<lb/>
 Guanan Batsz - "Rouh<lb/>
i" - Revolver<lb/>
7) ohn Felice and the Low-<lb/>
downs Nothing Pretty Ace ok<lb/>
Hearts<lb/>
- larti (onesUsedGuitars -<lb/>
A&amp;M Records<lb/>
9)1 he last - "ConfessionSST<lb/>
Records<lb/>
10) Ranking Roger - "Radical<lb/>
DepartureIRS Records<lb/>
ID Gear Daddies - "Let's Go<lb/>
Scared" - Gark Records<lb/>
12) Ramones - "Ramoncsma-<lb/>
nia" -Sire Records<lb/>
13) Raul Kelly and the Messen-<lb/>
gers - "Under the Sun" - A&amp;M<lb/>
Records<lb/>
lanta that would be worth paying<lb/>
the cover for. 1 ler talent as a<lb/>
singer with a voice sounding not<lb/>
unlike NC's own Fetchin Bones<lb/>
and guitar licks that rivaled many<lb/>
of the undergrounds newest<lb/>
bands. 1 am sure that you will be<lb/>
hearing some on our own WZMB.<lb/>
Let me set the scene, ZMB's<lb/>
Matt James and I all pie-eyed and<lb/>
standing next to the stage oogling<lb/>
the croud and to our dismay we<lb/>
spotted the newspapers own<lb/>
Chip Bonehead and ex radio<lb/>
magnate Dangerous Dave Elliot.<lb/>
Then on came not the usual three<lb/>
but four of the most talented per-<lb/>
formers to ever walk on the stage<lb/>
at the Cradle. The fourth I came to<lb/>
find out was there to take some of<lb/>
the responsiblity of the lead guitar<lb/>
off the leader of the band Kevin<lb/>
Kinney.<lb/>
The start of the show was with<lb/>
two all acoustic songs that lulled<lb/>
the crowd into a music uphoria.<lb/>
Then on came the barrage that<lb/>
brought the usual pathetically<lb/>
pompous and notoriously Chapel<lb/>
Hill gang down, and so it was for<lb/>
the rest of the show. One cannot<lb/>
say this or that song was the best,<lb/>
but merit should given to Whis-<lb/>
per Tames The Lion, Scarred But<lb/>
Smatter, and Powerhouse which<lb/>
was dedicated to NC's own<lb/>
Snatches of Pink. These songs<lb/>
brought the mesmorized crowd<lb/>
to a fevered frenzy.<lb/>
That show was the last time that<lb/>
D&amp;C will play at the Cradle be-<lb/>
cause (as this reporter overheard)<lb/>
is shutting down due to landlord<lb/>
problems. Its was surprising to<lb/>
me that D&amp;C didnt knock the<lb/>
walls down anyway, t-rts start<lb/>
supporting the bands that do<lb/>
come here and maybe we can<lb/>
become the next music hub for the<lb/>
great new music that abounds to-<lb/>
diy.<lb/>
Pickin' the Bones<lb/>
Pray to St. Mary of the Cacti<lb/>
Phat-ass rock-n-roll<lb/>
STEVE SOMMERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
They claim to be the phattest ass<lb/>
rock and roll band and I didn't see<lb/>
anyone at Susie's Thursday night,<lb/>
who was not convinced of it.<lb/>
Simply, Rosebud, who's from<lb/>
Richmond, worked the crowd, of<lb/>
over a one hundred, T into a<lb/>
rockin roarin and drunkin'<lb/>
frenzy. Susie's managment said it<lb/>
was the largest crowd for a band<lb/>
they have ever had.<lb/>
Within five minutesof their first<lb/>
set, the police were there telling<lb/>
the band to turn it down while the<lb/>
crowd wanted them to turn it up.<lb/>
Even if you don't like to throw<lb/>
down to a loud band, you would<lb/>
at the very least had to say, "but<lb/>
damn, they arc tight And damn,<lb/>
with all the musical shifts, stops<lb/>
and power drops they were tight.<lb/>
Like the diversity of the bands<lb/>
they have played with, driving<lb/>
and crying, Live Skull and SNFU<lb/>
just to name a few, Rosebud's<lb/>
style has become nearly impos-<lb/>
sible to pigeon hole. If your into<lb/>
metal, punk or just good ol' R &amp; R,<lb/>
they are the band for you. Just like<lb/>
Susie's attracts all kinds, so does<lb/>
Rosebud. You can get a taste of<lb/>
them on WZMB, so just call in a<lb/>
request.<lb/>
For Greenville, Thursday's<lb/>
See 'ROSEBUD' page 8<lb/>
BY CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Apologlzer<lb/>
(According to the American<lb/>
Heritage Dictionary, an apology<lb/>
is either a "statement of ac-<lb/>
knowledgement expressing re-<lb/>
gret or asking pardon for a fault or<lb/>
offense or a "formal justification<lb/>
or defense I have been asked to<lb/>
apologize. So I will. Probably not<lb/>
I how they expect me to, though.<lb/>
Apparently, a certain record<lb/>
store didn't like what I told them<lb/>
they could do in my last column.<lb/>
Or more specifically, where to go.<lb/>
Well, they called my boss (Sim-<lb/>
ply amazing, isn't it. I've had two<lb/>
promotions and there's still some-<lb/>
one higher up than me.) and he<lb/>
informed me that my remark was<lb/>
in bad taste and I should apolo-<lb/>
gize.<lb/>
I It's scary how much has<lb/>
changed since First Amendment<lb/>
Lad died in that horrible typeset-<lb/>
ting accident.<lb/>
Let's review the situation. In my<lb/>
distraught state over the Infa-<lb/>
mous X CD Controversy, I told<lb/>
this  this advertiser, that they<lb/>
could go to hell. Of course, in my<lb/>
very next paragraph, I let them<lb/>
know that I really didn't think it<lb/>
was their fault that some armpit of<lb/>
a record executive left three songs<lb/>
off of the "X ? Live at the Whis-<lb/>
key a Go-Go on the Fabulous<lb/>
Sunset Strip" CD.<lb/>
But  for some reason, both<lb/>
Record Bars? in this Emerald Ci ty<lb/>
complained. Kinda makes you<lb/>
think something  fishy is going<lb/>
on. Like maybe  and this is<lb/>
purely conjecture here  like<lb/>
jpjYJffiJfaSY Pp navc something<lb/>
to do with this devious plot.<lb/>
Awwvv, you say. You're just<lb/>
being paranoid so you can get out<lb/>
of apologizing. You're just saying<lb/>
that, Bonehead.<lb/>
Well, maybe. Maybe I'm just<lb/>
jealous because they wouldn't<lb/>
give me a part-time job, or promo<lb/>
albums to review.<lb/>
So to avoid being slanderous,<lb/>
libelous and all those other things<lb/>
that give my boss and the director<lb/>
of advertising the willies, let's just<lb/>
go onto another subject.<lb/>
 Let it be known that my formal<lb/>
justification or defense is for mv<lb/>
actions is  If telling national re-<lb/>
tail chains to go to hell is in bad<lb/>
taste, then I think they need to<lb/>
come up with an apology for<lb/>
overpriced vinyl and ever-de-<lb/>
creasing choice in their music<lb/>
bins.<lb/>
Anyway. That aside, 1 have<lb/>
much to write about concerning<lb/>
DWI adventures. Friday night,<lb/>
drivin' n' cryin' the Greatest Band<lb/>
in North America played. Nc<lb/>
doubt you'll read the review<lb/>
above.<lb/>
After three or four Schlitz Malt<lb/>
Liquor Bulls? (A company I just<lb/>
can't see myself telling to go tc<lb/>
hell) Complain A Lot Lass and<lb/>
myself rode to Chapel Thrill. Af-<lb/>
ter one or two beers at the Cat's<lb/>
Cradle (an establishment that gets<lb/>
hotter than hell), we drove home.<lb/>
Outside Highway 55, a patrol-<lb/>
man stopped Complain A Lot for<lb/>
weaving. 1 mentioned to the offi-<lb/>
cer that she hadn't been weaving,<lb/>
just a quick crochet number, but<lb/>
that comment was not well re-<lb/>
ceived.<lb/>
We were driven to the patrol<lb/>
station. Appropriately enough,<lb/>
we cried the whole way there.<lb/>
Inside, Complain A Lot was sub-<lb/>
jected to some really silly tests ol<lb/>
balance and coordination. As one<lb/>
of her knees crumpled under the<lb/>
strain of juggling two bottles ol<lb/>
White-Out and a typewriter while<lb/>
ringing the 7-Up? jingle (a song<lb/>
hat is as annoying as hell), 1 tried<lb/>
o explain that she couldn't dv<lb/>
hat when she was sober<lb/>
The officer (who looked re-<lb/>
markably like the father on the hit<lb/>
IA' show "Gimme A Break1<lb/>
glared at me and asked Complain<lb/>
A Lot Lass to write something tor<lb/>
a handwriting sample. She asked<lb/>
me what to write. My suggestion<lb/>
was, 'The highway patrol is a<lb/>
bunch of doo-doo heads from the<lb/>
lowest circle oi hell but she just<lb/>
scribbled, 'What can we say? 1<lb/>
wasdnvin' n' cryin<lb/>
We called Mama Bonehead to<lb/>
come get us. On the way home we<lb/>
were treated to a lecture on the<lb/>
evils of beer and gold station<lb/>
wagons, a comment on the fact<lb/>
that she always knew we were<lb/>
headed straight to hell, and a<lb/>
Dolby? stereo tape of her labor<lb/>
pains.<lb/>
Complain A Lot's ultra reli-<lb/>
gious parents had her committed<lb/>
to a convent, where she now prays<lb/>
a lot to Saint Mary of the Cacti She<lb/>
also grows collards, which she<lb/>
sells to raise money for Cactus<lb/>
Aid, a benefit concert for those<lb/>
without low-moisture, desert<lb/>
vegetation in their backyard.<lb/>
I am currently in jail for libel.<lb/>
What can I say? It really was<lb/>
drivin' and crvin<lb/>
<pb facs="00058085_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 27, 1988<lb/>
Summer Theatre closes out a great season<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
theater's production of "Cat On A<lb/>
Hot Tin Roof Lincoln proves<lb/>
again that she can be the epitome<lb/>
of the southern rich while main-<lb/>
taining a humorous, human side<lb/>
that gives a hint of the unusual to<lb/>
her characters.<lb/>
Debbie Shirley, a recent prod-<lb/>
uct of the ECU theater depart-<lb/>
ment, shows a wide range in de-<lb/>
veloping the character of Annclle<lb/>
from a nervous, distraught<lb/>
women to a self-assured born-<lb/>
again Christian.<lb/>
In the two key dramatic roles,<lb/>
Laura Linney as Shelby and<lb/>
Amanda Muir as M'Lynn portray<lb/>
well the emotions that play across<lb/>
women's lives over the course of<lb/>
such a stressful period. Linney<lb/>
seems more adept and comfort-<lb/>
able in her role, but that could be<lb/>
due to the fact that Muir had to<lb/>
step into her role as a last minute<lb/>
replacement for Sara Croft. She<lb/>
seemed a little tentative in the<lb/>
beginning of the play, but ap-<lb/>
peared more in the flow in time<lb/>
for the powerful shift in the last<lb/>
scene.<lb/>
All this takes place on another<lb/>
impeccable stage design, proving<lb/>
once again that the visual reputa-<lb/>
tion of the Summer Theatre is well<lb/>
earned.<lb/>
"Steel Magnolias" is a wonder-<lb/>
ful look into the complexities of<lb/>
life as an '80's woman. In many<lb/>
ways it accomplishes what Muriel<lb/>
Resnick tried to do with her pre-<lb/>
mier of "Let's Lunch" during the<lb/>
last theater season, but with more<lb/>
craft and subtlety.<lb/>
Production on the "Steel<lb/>
Magnolia" movie featuring stars<lb/>
ranging from Dolly Parton to<lb/>
Olympia Dukakis and Darryl<lb/>
Hannah has begun production, so play.<lb/>
ECU was lucky to be able to pro- And it's a good last chanc n.?-<lb/>
duce this play. The rights are no play is quick, bright and witt)<lb/>
longer being sold for production a good example of the pr I<lb/>
until after the movie has been re- sional level the ECU Summet<lb/>
leased, so this is one of the last Theatre can reach when ever)<lb/>
chances for the public to see the thing comes together.<lb/>
'Steel Magnolias9 still plagued by<lb/>
bad technical sound problems<lb/>
Robert Plant burns down the side<lb/>
By EARL HAMPTON<lb/>
News editor<lb/>
While the members of the band<lb/>
quietly stirred on the darkened<lb/>
stage, the crowd held Bicsa flicker<lb/>
and screamed for the next song.<lb/>
After three minutes of greased<lb/>
anticipation - with the walls of the<lb/>
arena strarting to sweat - the<lb/>
audience released a surging moan<lb/>
as the one and only voice erupted<lb/>
in a slow, low drone with words<lb/>
"lnthccvening<lb/>
Legend Robert Plant, former<lb/>
lead singer of super group Led<lb/>
Zepplin, rocked the Greensboro<lb/>
Coliseum last Tuesday with a<lb/>
plethora of jams ranging from<lb/>
songs of f his recent release - "Now<lb/>
and Zen" to old Zeppelin classics.<lb/>
Plant played for two hours after<lb/>
opening band Cheap Trick fired<lb/>
up the near sell-out crowd of<lb/>
11,000.<lb/>
If one word could characterize<lb/>
Plant's performance it would be -<lb/>
teasing, but teasing with a good<lb/>
connotation. Plant is quite aware<lb/>
of the Zeppelin legacy that is now<lb/>
embossed on a third generation of<lb/>
Zep freaks.<lb/>
And he uses this to his ad-<lb/>
vatage. Plant injected familiar<lb/>
phrases of Zep pumpers into his<lb/>
row songs. The ending of "Cool<lb/>
1 all One" is one cxamr Ic of this.<lb/>
During the middle of one song,<lb/>
Plant sang "Na Na Nana Nana<lb/>
Nanana" - the chorus of "The<lb/>
Ocean but didn't sing any<lb/>
words from the song. In between<lb/>
songs, Plant would say "Puuush"<lb/>
in attempts to get the crowd to say<lb/>
"Puuush" back. "Puuush" is a<lb/>
phrase Plant has used in at least<lb/>
two songs.<lb/>
Dressed in a pink tee shirt, black<lb/>
vest and black jeans, Plant tanta-<lb/>
lized the women folk in the crowd<lb/>
(Earl, you sexist). Electric fans<lb/>
pushed his long blond hair in the<lb/>
static air. During "I'm in the<lb/>
Mood for a Mclodv some front-<lb/>
rowers gave the singer a dozen of<lb/>
roses.<lb/>
"In the evening off of<lb/>
Zeppelin's "In "Through the Out<lb/>
Door was the first of four Zep<lb/>
songs Plant played during the<lb/>
show. Another Zep tune, "Misty<lb/>
Mountain Hop brought the<lb/>
house down in what this reviewer<lb/>
felt was the best song of the con-<lb/>
cert. Needless to say, the wooden<lb/>
risers near the floor were bounc-<lb/>
ing to the riffs of the "Misty<lb/>
Mountain Hop<lb/>
During the first encore, Plant<lb/>
came out with "Communication<lb/>
Breakdown Zep's first big hit off<lb/>
the 1969 introduction of Led Zep-<lb/>
plin One. Unfortunately, the<lb/>
third generation of high school-<lb/>
aged Zep rockers acted like they<lb/>
had never heard the classic rune.<lb/>
Plant also played Black<lb/>
Country Woman" from "Physi-<lb/>
cal Graffitti Guitarist Doug<lb/>
Boyle, on his first tour to the U.S<lb/>
played an acoustic guitar solo<lb/>
which Jimmy Page would have<lb/>
been proud of. Although Zeppe-<lb/>
lin freaks in the crowd were<lb/>
teased with bits of other songs,<lb/>
they were throughly satisfied<lb/>
with the four songs Plant choose<lb/>
to perform.<lb/>
His first set mainly consisted of<lb/>
tunes on two of his solo albums,<lb/>
"Pictures at Eleven" and "Prin-<lb/>
ciples of the Moment "Other<lb/>
Arms" and "The Big Log" were<lb/>
notable highlights between the<lb/>
singer's trashing of the mike.<lb/>
Plant, with a voice texture<lb/>
sometimes compared to blues<lb/>
singers, throated John Lee<lb/>
Hooker's blues jammer<lb/>
"Dimples" and played the hell out<lb/>
of the song's harmonica solo.<lb/>
From his new release, Plant<lb/>
made the crowd estatic with<lb/>
"Why" and climaxed his encore<lb/>
with the widely heard "Tall, Cool<lb/>
One Keyboardist Phil<lb/>
Johnstone, who is partly respon-<lb/>
sible for the resurgence of the Zep<lb/>
riffs in Plant's solo work, dis-<lb/>
played that he can throw down<lb/>
with vocals in the "Tall Cool<lb/>
One Johnstone, who co-wrote<lb/>
many of the songs on "Now and<lb/>
Zen with his shaggy black hair<lb/>
surprisingly looks like a young<lb/>
Jimmy Page.<lb/>
The concert brought out a senti-<lb/>
mental clement of the Earl.<lb/>
Throughout the concert Earl<lb/>
combed the audience looking for<lb/>
a girl friend of long ago who<lb/>
turned me on to Robert Plant. All<lb/>
the eye combing was to no avail,<lb/>
but I felt like Cindy was there<lb/>
somewhere in the coliseum,<lb/>
somewhere as I dissected the<lb/>
principles of the moment from<lb/>
many years past.<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
On the downside, the theater<lb/>
needs to find a way to solve the<lb/>
technical problems that plagued<lb/>
this year's musical productions. It<lb/>
is simply inexcusable in a profes-<lb/>
sional theater that the audience<lb/>
sometimes cannot hear the vocals<lb/>
and that the lead performers can-<lb/>
not carry their own weight in the<lb/>
musical.<lb/>
The theater seems to be at its<lb/>
'Midnight<lb/>
hot movie<lb/>
From "It Happened One Night"<lb/>
to "Planes, Trains and Automo-<lb/>
biles the road picture has been a<lb/>
Hollywood fixture. So you think<lb/>
all the freshness has gone?<lb/>
Wrong. Here comes "Midnight<lb/>
Run with more twists and turns<lb/>
and better scenerv than Route 66.<lb/>
What elevated "Midnight Run"<lb/>
out of the ordinary is an ingen-<lb/>
ious, witty script by George Gallo,<lb/>
slam-bang direction by Martin<lb/>
Brest and a superior cast, headed<lb/>
by Robert DeNiro and Charles<lb/>
Grodin.<lb/>
DeNiro is not exactly a private<lb/>
investigator. He's a bounty<lb/>
hunter from Los Angeles, an ex-<lb/>
cop reduced to tracking down<lb/>
deadbcats and bringing them to<lb/>
justice. Lawfully or otherwise, it<lb/>
doesn't matter. Bailbondsman Joe<lb/>
Pantoliano gives him a daunting<lb/>
assignment: bring back an ac-<lb/>
countant, Charles Grodin, who is<lb/>
in danger of skipping out on his<lb/>
huge bail.<lb/>
best when it avoids musicals and<lb/>
sticks with comedy and drama,<lb/>
but the musicals are often more in<lb/>
demand and more fun to watch.<lb/>
It's a problem Loessin is going to<lb/>
have to solve if the Summer The-<lb/>
atre is to keepgrowingas it has the<lb/>
last 25 years.<lb/>
But it shouldn't be too much for<lb/>
Loessin or the rest o( the theater<lb/>
staff to manage. The quality of the<lb/>
Summer Theatre productions in-<lb/>
creases yearly, and this season's<lb/>
shows promise ot good things t.<lb/>
come. The ECU Summer 1 heatn<lb/>
is a credit to the ECl' community<lb/>
and the eastern part of North<lb/>
Carolina. It deserves the commu-<lb/>
nity support and recognition it<lb/>
receives, but theater workers<lb/>
must not forget that (in em ilk i-<lb/>
still a long way from Broad<lb/>
and it's going to take a lot tut rV<lb/>
to get somewhere closer to the<lb/>
bright lights of the big cit)<lb/>
Run' to be super<lb/>
using a great cast<lb/>
Grodin is not just any account-<lb/>
ant. He embezzled $15 million<lb/>
from a Las Vegas crime boss<lb/>
(Dennis Farina), giving the for-<lb/>
tune to charity. All DeNiro has to<lb/>
do is locate his quarry in New<lb/>
York and return him to Los Ange-<lb/>
les in five days. Easy: Not when<lb/>
Grodin is also wanted by the FBI<lb/>
and is targeted for execution bv<lb/>
Farina, and claims he is unable t<lb/>
fly.<lb/>
Setting off cro-s countr<lb/>
DeNiro finds himself bedc ileda<lb/>
every stop by government a<lb/>
and Mafia hit men Then he fact,<lb/>
another hazard: anothei Fount<lb/>
hunter he has doul i, ros :<lb/>
John Ashton.<lb/>
'Rosebud' plays in Greenville<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
show was a good sign. It's been a<lb/>
long summer without bands.<lb/>
Hopefully this will get the ball<lb/>
moving again and we will start to<lb/>
see more bands coming throught<lb/>
Greenville. According to the<lb/>
grapevine, bands like the Bad<lb/>
Checks, Slurpeeeec (formerly<lb/>
Soul Train), and Contoocook Line<lb/>
are looking to come back to our<lb/>
fine town and are talking about<lb/>
playing Susie's. Greenville has<lb/>
traditionally been a place bands<lb/>
like to play, and right n . it looks<lb/>
like the little pizzaria on Fifth and<lb/>
Cotanche is the place. I ook tor it<lb/>
this fall.<lb/>
Also, look for the return it<lb/>
Rosebud. Susie's manager, Sumo<lb/>
Best, put it best, v. hen she said i<lb/>
only was Rosebud the best land<lb/>
Susie's has e er had. but tlu a<lb/>
"kicked as . And tL.it i- exactly<lb/>
what they did, kicked our Phat<lb/>
ass.<lb/>
WEED<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
GOOD LUCK AND BEST WISHES DAVID B ARBOUR<lb/>
The Law<lb/>
By Friedrich<lb/>
Campus Comics : The Finale<lb/>
GOING TO SCHOOL<lb/>
THE 2NDTNE u<lb/>
AROUND rtAS3EEN<lb/>
rLjrof FON<lb/>
XT'5 STILL GREAT<lb/>
TO L-0-5T A,FTEfe<lb/>
rrte- IHcomiNO<lb/>
PRE5HMNBNE-S!<lb/>
"BUT WHEN T<lb/>
TAWNEt ON ME.<lb/>
X'M THE SrtAE.<lb/>
A6E AS A LOTOF<lb/>
Ttt?lfc PARENTS<lb/>
PERVERT(<lb/>
<lb/>
Wbll, mat be: it rs<lb/>
TIME TO AIOVE on<lb/>
(quickly!<lb/>
HOP! HOP! ?" <lb/>
Arm Fall-Off Boy<lb/>
(WSXS THB0ODS<lb/>
Of TRAGEDY, arm.<lb/>
The<lb/>
Cheshire<lb/>
Illustrator<lb/>
Hola, babies! Que' happenin We are now drawing to the close of a really bland summer and the end of<lb/>
these' bloody half-page comics. Unfortunately we also must bid adieu to long-time artist and compadre<lb/>
David Barbour. Dave has been doing Campus Comics an extremely long time and has been turning out<lb/>
the great, ever controversial editorial cartoons. He will be sorely missed (especially since I'll have to<lb/>
do the editorial toons now). Goodbye, Dave ol' buddy, I only wish I had more space to devote to you.<lb/>
And now for the Gvand Cheesy Ending of Arm- well, you know. I'm burnt out on the damn strip. Be done<lb/>
with it already. WORD! " <lb/>
By Racer X<lb/>
COMB BACK FOR Yfl '<lb/>
CAUSe i srru jjrrA &amp; <lb/>
, H?N?ieR AS<lb/>
TOLD IN IhZCLD DAYS M<lb/>
AlbAYS CA? TO TAKC V?<lb/>
H?ZOAkAV.tytAM<lb/>
BHtoecoMe rox you<lb/>
EX W)CHiJy hm?&amp;&amp;5V<lb/>
 k r tf!S<lb/>
UOff BOY'<lb/>
I<lb/>
R weekilater, ourpdufqjyounjj<lb/>
hero returned and got bacfhis<lb/>
arms. A year later, he returned<lb/>
and rescued his friends.<lb/>
IHt <lb/>
edski<lb/>
NEW YORK (Al<lb/>
igton Redskins are in tl<lb/>
out the Dexter Manl .<lb/>
hon, and as tar as Gei i<lb/>
ger Bobby Beathard<lb/>
?mod, no news is bad n<lb/>
"We're in the dark<lb/>
(formation Beathard<lb/>
,iv. "We don't ki <lb/>
cpect. 1 think we'll ha<lb/>
bout our bus<lb/>
t<lb/>
Beathard i<lb/>
fter Mank y and 1<lb/>
b Woolf, m ?<lb/>
bmrriissioncrPel<lb/>
ur on Frid<lb/>
Rozclle ha<lb/>
om training camp I<lb/>
Biker<lb/>
they o<lb/>
B PAl I t ' W<lb/>
tt  -?<lb/>
Highlij<lb/>
Prance bie e!e ra.<lb/>
television and a ?<lb/>
Saul, "Lex k at all<lb/>
bi ycles<lb/>
There were dcfinil<lb/>
tr. m, tor it look. :<lb/>
Europe as crui;<lb/>
but thi ?<lb/>
a think the Tour d<lb/>
is something? I<lb/>
si aid glaive at I<lb/>
East Carolina and th<lb/>
ing neighborhood str<lb/>
I'm not exactly sure wh i<lb/>
Irwh) so many rx<lb/>
st.irt riding bil<lb/>
dav that 1 dne. 1 see m i<lb/>
more of them<lb/>
and sidewalks for a<lb/>
v.ouid like to think this was<lb/>
name ot exercise i<lb/>
t. n.<lb/>
it was .mj  .<lb/>
had to d  <lb/>
 ?w, you havefD kccpneet<lb/>
i itfor drunk driv<lb/>
out for middle aged<lb/>
tr ing to bike th(<lb/>
l rcall) enjoy thei<lb/>
US bo<lb/>
By PAUI PI NN<lb/>
-<lb/>
r: Kt - - k a<lb/>
fS. OK mpicbovir.<lb/>
Ibarely madeand pi<lb/>
read tor the Games in v<lb/>
The accomplishm nt<lb/>
d been much harder:<lb/>
teammates Ridd -<lb/>
pdrew Maynard wh<lb/>
in twice during fj<lb/>
ke the squad V thrw i<lb/>
th decisions to ?? i<lb/>
lei's bracket onto the teai<lb/>
Bank's w inning d<lb/>
ppson, the OK mrj eti<lb/>
n, was koudl) bo<lb/>
to?ered crowd<lb/>
ed on his hrst d<lb/>
fopsvn. banks was req<lb/>
tm both match<lb/>
jfcuild have been the ma<lb/>
ntinv; the IS<lb/>
Olympic hi<lb/>
NiW YORK (.A<lb/>
ton s basketball coach John I<lb/>
npson has some small inj?<lb/>
orrv about doesn t know<lb/>
ie next cut will be mad<lb/>
k ants to make suree eryone<lb/>
.os that only the IY<lb/>
is vet to select its team tor the<lb/>
fepul Games<lb/>
fWe're having two-a-day i<lb/>
Orkouts right nou and thej<lb/>
ong pretty well, Thornpe<lb/>
Kiki Friday in a telephone confer<lb/>
hnfce call from Georgetown Uni<lb/>
?rsits in Washington D.C<lb/>
vhere the camp will run until<lb/>
iug. tv<lb/>
Ve gp from 930 until 11 ;<lb/>
he morning and 3 30 to5:301n t he<lb/>
Jitlemoon The morning session is<lb/>
defensively oriented and wc<lb/>
 ork on offense in the atterr<lb/>
"Most ot the kids are working<lb/>
iard and getting into what we<lb/>
want from them. 1 don't want to<lb/>
safe anyone looks particularK<lb/>
go?i because we are worki:<lb/>
structural things. 1 vmII saj<lb/>
though, no one is looking excep<lb/>
tionally poor.M<lb/>
There are a few players Th<lb/>
ornpson hasn't had much ot a<lb/>
chance to look at since the camp<lb/>
<pb facs="00058085_0009"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
eason<lb/>
s a good last . ha nee The<lb/>
- bi ightand v ittv and<lb/>
example of the profes-<lb/>
? el the E( l' Summer<lb/>
ach w hen e ery<lb/>
I e ther.<lb/>
vjued by<lb/>
lems<lb/>
j Lthings to t 1 heatre t ECU ommunity i : ii 1 i r v orth mmu-j : : nition it workers<lb/>
h r? cn ille is Bn ad?ay t w rk ; to (he<lb/>
super<lb/>
bat cast<lb/>
?te to<lb/>
intry,<lb/>
d a I<lb/>
I agents<lb/>
face;<lb/>
 Greenville<lb/>
'? ifthand<lb/>
I for it<lb/>
lui n of<lb/>
r. Susie<lb/>
lid not<lb/>
i st band<lb/>
that is exactly<lb/>
? i our Phat<lb/>
H RE1D<lb/>
M<lb/>
J<lb/>
 sn<lb/>
y<lb/>
K<lb/>
i H<lb/>
V 1<lb/>
By Racer X<lb/>
S0LQN6tSNSnlL<lb/>
:0MB BACK FOR Yfl'<lb/>
:mse , sru jjrrA &amp;r MY<lb/>
1<lb/>
YpOHt uf<lb/>
m<lb/>
a<lb/>
WeeK Liter, ourpduKy young<lb/>
r i returned and got back his<lb/>
A. mttrCater, he returned<lb/>
 rescued his friends.<lb/>
TJfETD<lb/>
FHt- FASTCAROl 1NIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JULY 27,1988 Page 9<lb/>
Redskins in the dark concerning Manley<lb/>
N EW YORK (AP) ? The Wash-<lb/>
igton Redskins are "in the dark"<lb/>
.ibout the Dexter Manley situ-<lb/>
ation, and as far as General Man-<lb/>
ager Bobby Beathard is con-<lb/>
ned, no news is bad news.<lb/>
We're in the dark, we have no<lb/>
formation Beathard said Fri-<lb/>
ly. "We don't know what to<lb/>
ipect 1 think we'll have to go<lb/>
ut our business expecting the<lb/>
vorst<lb/>
Beathard made his comments<lb/>
ifl r Manley and his attorney,<lb/>
- Woolf, met with NFL<lb/>
mmissioner Pete Rozellc for an<lb/>
uron Friday.<lb/>
ozelle had "excused" Manley<lb/>
m training camp to discuss<lb/>
what the league described as a<lb/>
"personal matter<lb/>
Earlier this week, The Washing-<lb/>
ton Tost reported that traces of a<lb/>
"minor" substance had been<lb/>
found in Mauley's urine during a<lb/>
physical examination. Manley<lb/>
underwent rehabilitation for an<lb/>
alcohol problem in 1987.<lb/>
It was the second discussion<lb/>
with Rozellc this year for Manley,<lb/>
who had been due to report today<lb/>
to the Redskins' training camp.<lb/>
"Commissioner Rozelle told<lb/>
Manley that he wanted to review<lb/>
additional information and that<lb/>
he would contact him during the<lb/>
next few days NFL. spokesman<lb/>
Joe Browne said in a statement.<lb/>
"Pending this review, Manley is<lb/>
excused from attending the Re-<lb/>
dskins' training camp<lb/>
Manley had little comment af-<lb/>
terward, other than to say, "It was<lb/>
a nice meeting<lb/>
"It's a private matter Woolf<lb/>
said. "They asked us to keep it<lb/>
quiet. They're looking for infor-<lb/>
mation<lb/>
Asked if drugs were involved,<lb/>
Woolf replied: "It's a confidential<lb/>
matter<lb/>
"By Monday he said, "I think<lb/>
the whole thing will be resolved<lb/>
It can't be too soon for Redskins<lb/>
coach Joe Gibbs.<lb/>
"I just hope it get resolved he<lb/>
said at the Redskins' training<lb/>
camp in Carlisle, Pa. "I've had no<lb/>
contact with the league. To the<lb/>
best of my knowledge, neither has<lb/>
anyone else on the Redskins. 1<lb/>
would like to talk to Dexter, but I<lb/>
didn't want to call him earlier<lb/>
when everyone was bothering<lb/>
him<lb/>
Woolf said earlier this week he<lb/>
believed Manlcy's previous meet-<lb/>
ing with Rozellc addressed cer-<lb/>
tain rumors surrounding the life-<lb/>
style of the seven-year veteran.<lb/>
"I never said I was a Boy Scou t<lb/>
Manley told WJLA-TV in Wash<lb/>
ington earlier this week. "I've<lb/>
been a Boy Scout at times, but I've<lb/>
also done things on my own<lb/>
"With Dexter Manley there's<lb/>
always so many rumors Woolf<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"There are rumors he's been<lb/>
seen in this hospital, rumors he's<lb/>
been seen in other cities at certain<lb/>
times. I le's such a visable person,<lb/>
such a public figure<lb/>
The 30-year-old defensive end<lb/>
made a name for himself long<lb/>
before he made the Pro Bowl in<lb/>
1986. His outlandish quotes and<lb/>
brash style made him a media<lb/>
darling.<lb/>
But Manlcy's private life often<lb/>
belied the smile he wore in public.<lb/>
In March 1987 he checked himself<lb/>
into the Hazelden Foundation, a<lb/>
drug and alcohol rehabilitation<lb/>
clinic in Minnesota, twodaysaftcr<lb/>
he checked himself into a District<lb/>
of Columbia hospital.<lb/>
He had entered the hospital at<lb/>
the insistence of his wife. Manley<lb/>
said he was being treated foralco-<lb/>
hol abuse at Hazelden, and said<lb/>
he attended Alcoholics Anony-<lb/>
mous meetings upon his release.<lb/>
During the Redskins' min-<lb/>
icamp in May, after reading of the<lb/>
$6-million contract Washington<lb/>
gave free agent linebacker Wilber<lb/>
Marshall, Manley implied he<lb/>
would fake a hamstring injury<lb/>
this summer if Beathard did not<lb/>
renegotiate his contract.<lb/>
Bikers need to learn that<lb/>
they don't own the world<lb/>
By PAUL DL'NN<lb/>
Co-Sporti Iditor<lb/>
ghlights of the recent Tour de<lb/>
ance bicycle race were on my<lb/>
ision and a friend of mine<lb/>
lid, "Look at all those people on<lb/>
j cics.<lb/>
There were definitely a lot of<lb/>
m, for it looked like half oi<lb/>
ope was cruising along.<lb/>
this didn't impress me.<lb/>
i think the Tour de France<lb/>
something?" I asked. "You<lb/>
uld glance at the campus of<lb/>
ist Carolina and the surround-<lb/>
ng neighborhood streets<lb/>
: m not cxactlv sure when, how<lb/>
i why so many people decided to<lb/>
tart riding bikes again, but each<lb/>
ay that I drive, I see more and<lb/>
i re of them out on the streets<lb/>
nd sidewalks for a cruise. I<lb/>
ould like to think this was in the<lb/>
mne of exercise or transporta-<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
It was complicated enough<lb/>
v hen you had to dodge jogger<lb/>
Now, you havelo kecp-fme-eye<lb/>
out for drunk drivers and another<lb/>
out for middle aged humans<lb/>
:r ing to bike their bellies off.<lb/>
1 really enjoy the rush of adrena-<lb/>
lin 1 receive when I'm walking<lb/>
down the sidewalk and hear the<lb/>
roar of those damn "Earth<lb/>
Cruiser" tires. The bikers don't<lb/>
seem to realize there is a fine for<lb/>
riding on the sidewalks on cam-<lb/>
pus, and the "big" men and<lb/>
women on campus who think the<lb/>
world revokes around faster<lb/>
when more parking tickets are<lb/>
given out, don't seem to enforce<lb/>
the law.<lb/>
The cyclists around here are<lb/>
quite smug. It 1 wire riding a bi-<lb/>
cycle on a busy street and a car<lb/>
pulled up behind me, I would do<lb/>
the sensible thing and pull to one<lb/>
side. Therear-ons for tins is simple<lb/>
Werea car to run into a bicycle, the<lb/>
car and the driver would most<lb/>
likely come out of the collision<lb/>
without a scratch. Well, maybe<lb/>
one oi two.<lb/>
The bicycle, on the other hand,<lb/>
would siittcr a severe bending<lb/>
and its rider would be lucky to be<lb/>
sitting up and taking bolid food in<lb/>
SJX.rTU-nthS<lb/>
fftrf most cyclists' around here<lb/>
ignore all that. I drive up behind<lb/>
them and they pretend I'm not<lb/>
there. It's as if they are<lb/>
sayingThis may seem like a<lb/>
busy road for vehicles, but it's<lb/>
really a very wide, asphalt bicycle<lb/>
path and you have no business on<lb/>
it<lb/>
Now I pull alongside cyclists,<lb/>
blow my horn, then roar past<lb/>
them, offcrcing a familiar hand<lb/>
gesture as I go by. It's as if I were<lb/>
saying, "May your private parts<lb/>
get caught in your spokes<lb/>
Also, why is it necessary for<lb/>
these overgrown Schwinnmeis-<lb/>
tcrs? to wear those bicycling out-<lb/>
fits? When I ride a bike, a pair of<lb/>
shorts or good ol' blue jeans are<lb/>
sufficiant.<lb/>
The other day, I drove to the<lb/>
store for beer (to consume when I<lb/>
returned home, not while I drove<lb/>
and thus risking a DWI) and I<lb/>
found myself behind a rather<lb/>
large girl riding a bike. Her black<lb/>
satin suit had stretched to roughly<lb/>
the proportions of a four-seat<lb/>
Mastcrcraft?.<lb/>
Flcr butt was so large, for a<lb/>
moment it blocked the rays of the<lb/>
sun. Bonehead would have yelled<lb/>
a t her a nd a sked i f she had wri t ten<lb/>
any bad poetry lately.<lb/>
There is hope, however. I read<lb/>
recently of a study that indicates<lb/>
males who wear their trousers too<lb/>
sst-V - ? " -J,?Iir<lb/>
?up ? .<lb/>
Scwhinnmeister Mac Clark must not realize that he can receive a10 fine for riding on campus sidewalks.<lb/>
(Photo by Jon Jordan, FCU Photo lab).<lb/>
tight may end up with very low As tight as those bicycle pants huggers"), there's a good chance<lb/>
sperm counts, and thus have a are (we affectionately refer to this generation of pcdallers may<lb/>
diffcult time fathering children. them and their wearers as "nut- be the last.<lb/>
US boxers make the final Olympic cuts<lb/>
By PAUL DUNN<lb/>
Sports Iditur<lb/>
Icie Banks took a look at the<lb/>
U.S. Olympic boxing team he had<lb/>
ust barely made and pronounced<lb/>
t ready for the Games in Seoul.<lb/>
The accomplishment couldn't<lb/>
iad been much harder for Bank's,<lb/>
tr teammates Riddick Bowe and<lb/>
Andrew Maynard, who all had to<lb/>
.via twice during the box offs to<lb/>
(fjake the squad. All three rallied<lb/>
w! t h decisions to venture from the<lb/>
?r's bracket onto the team.<lb/>
Bank's winning decision over<lb/>
I It pson, the Olympic trials cham-<lb/>
pion, was loudly booed by an<lb/>
atngered crowd. Banks was also<lb/>
booed on his first defeat over<lb/>
Hopson. Banks was required to<lb/>
vin both matches or Hopson<lb/>
Would have been the man repre-<lb/>
senting the U.S.<lb/>
Super hcavj weight, Bowe, also<lb/>
won his way onto the team by a<lb/>
narrow margin. Bowe's superior<lb/>
left jab was the ruling factor that<lb/>
conquered Army's, RobertSalters<lb/>
for the second day in a row.<lb/>
Considered to be the U.S. favor-<lb/>
ite for the light heavyweight gold<lb/>
in Seoul, Maynard won his sec-<lb/>
ond straight decision over Cole,<lb/>
who beat him in the Olympic<lb/>
trials in the quarterfinals.<lb/>
The fight, perhaps the most ac-<lb/>
tion-packed of the box-offs,<lb/>
topped a day of four fights in<lb/>
which 119 pound Kennedy McK-<lb/>
inney was the onlv trials winner.<lb/>
McKinney beat three-time U.S.<lb/>
Amateur champion Michael<lb/>
Collins, winning the fight with a<lb/>
big third round in which he<lb/>
stunned Collins on several occa-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
The U.S. team began training<lb/>
this week at Fort Bragg, N.C<lb/>
where they will train until it meets<lb/>
Canada's national team on Au-<lb/>
gust 13. The team will then pack<lb/>
up and make a new home at Fort<lb/>
Hauchuca, Arizona, for the final<lb/>
weeks of training before the<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Ray Mercer became the U.S.<lb/>
heavyweight hope by scoring a<lb/>
decision over Michael Bent of<lb/>
Cambridge Heights, N.Y.<lb/>
Mcrcer,the oldest member of<lb/>
the team at 27 years of age, used<lb/>
his over powering strcnght to win<lb/>
the trials, but had to rally in the<lb/>
thi rd round to beat Bent, who was<lb/>
on the 1987 Pan Am Games team.<lb/>
Army teammate, Anthony<lb/>
Hembrick had an even easier time<lb/>
of it. The middleweight won a<lb/>
spot on the team without having<lb/>
to fight in the box-offswhen his<lb/>
original opponent, William<lb/>
Guthrie, was disqualified alter Hembrick, stationed at Fort<lb/>
testing positive for drugs and<lb/>
substitute Darin Allen declined Bragg, joked in the ring with the<lb/>
referee while being officially<lb/>
an invitation to fight. named the wmncr inba walkove?<lb/>
Kenneth Gould, the reigning<lb/>
world welterweight champion,<lb/>
was expected to win and did so<lb/>
easily. Gould won all four of his<lb/>
fiehtstocarnabcrthon the team.<lb/>
Lights atWrigley Field rob it<lb/>
of its uniqueness and quality<lb/>
By LEWIS HOFFMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Olympic basketball team nears cuts<lb/>
NFW YORK (AP) ? Olympic<lb/>
-n's basketball coach John Th-<lb/>
apson has some small injuries to<lb/>
orry about, doesn't know when<lb/>
e next cut will be made, aiui<lb/>
1i its to make sure everyone real-<lb/>
3s that only the United States<lb/>
ft yet to select its team for the<lb/>
il Games.<lb/>
"We're having two-a-day<lb/>
orkouts right now and they're<lb/>
ing pretty well Thompson<lb/>
id Friday in a telephone confer-<lb/>
ce call from Georgetown Uni-<lb/>
rsity in Washington D.C<lb/>
here the camp will run until<lb/>
nig. 6.<lb/>
"We go from 9:30 until 11:30 in<lb/>
e morning and 3:30 to 5:30 in the<lb/>
ternoon. The morning session is<lb/>
I fensivcly oriented and we<lb/>
ork on offense in the afternoon.<lb/>
"Most of the kids are working<lb/>
ird and getting into what we<lb/>
????ant from them. I don't want to<lb/>
?y anyone looks particularly<lb/>
? d because we are working on<lb/>
ructural things. I will say,<lb/>
ough, no one is looking excep-<lb/>
onally poor<lb/>
There arc a few players Th-<lb/>
ompson hasn't had much of a<lb/>
chance to look at since the camp<lb/>
began on July 17.<lb/>
"There's been a lot of sprains,<lb/>
petty injuries Thompson said.<lb/>
"They're nothing serious but<lb/>
we're being cautious about those<lb/>
because some of the kids didn't<lb/>
anticipate the amount of running<lb/>
we would do<lb/>
The only specific minor injury<lb/>
Thompson mentioned were a<lb/>
groin pull suffered by Randolph<lb/>
Keys of Southern Mississippi and<lb/>
a sore throat thai caused Central<lb/>
Michigan's Dan Majerle to miss<lb/>
Friday's practices.<lb/>
The number of players partici-<lb/>
pating in the camp was lowered to<lb/>
20 on Wednesday when Duke's<lb/>
Danny Ferry left because of a knee<lb/>
injury he suffered before the camp<lb/>
in a pickup scrimmage.<lb/>
"Danny had some concerns<lb/>
about the fact if he were to go at<lb/>
the level of intesity we were going<lb/>
at he could do serious damage to<lb/>
his knee Thompson said. "He<lb/>
was totally unable to partake in<lb/>
anything we do. His injury is not<lb/>
very serious but it could turn into<lb/>
a serious injury arm 1 don't think it<lb/>
would be a wise decision for us or<lb/>
Danny<lb/>
Thompson then used Ferry's<lb/>
injury to strengthen his point that<lb/>
the U.S. team is the only one of the<lb/>
12 participating in Seoul that has<lb/>
yet to select its team.<lb/>
"We'll miss Danny's flexibility<lb/>
and passing ability but it was in<lb/>
his best interest not to go on<lb/>
Thompson said. "Every other<lb/>
team in the pools has been stru-<lb/>
ctcred. We're the only one with a<lb/>
team not chosen<lb/>
When that 12-man team will<lb/>
finally be chosen has not been<lb/>
decided.<lb/>
"We would like to see these<lb/>
players in certain situations.<lb/>
Now, we only see them in practice<lb/>
as opposed to games Thompson<lb/>
said. "Players cut themselves as<lb/>
opposed to coaches doing it. I<lb/>
would like to get down as soon as<lb/>
we can but I'm not in a hurry. I<lb/>
want to be as fair as we can, ide-<lb/>
ally it would be as soon as pos-<lb/>
sible<lb/>
The team will being a nine-<lb/>
game tour against teams of NBA<lb/>
players on Aug. 7 in Providence,<lb/>
R.I. and Thompson isn't sure how<lb/>
many of the 20 players will be<lb/>
around for those games.<lb/>
On August 8,1988, the Chicago<lb/>
Cubs host the Philadelphia Phil-<lb/>
lies at Wrigley field. The game<lb/>
will not be decisive in the pennant<lb/>
race; it probably won't figure in<lb/>
the playoff picture, yet it will be a<lb/>
game of historic moment. This<lb/>
date will be an easy one to remem-<lb/>
ber for those who remember such<lb/>
things: The Night The Lights<lb/>
Went On At Wrigley.<lb/>
Of all sporting vennes, perhaps<lb/>
the baseball park most strongly<lb/>
influences the games played<lb/>
within its confines. Variable upon<lb/>
variable add up to constitute the<lb/>
oft-touted homeficld advantage.<lb/>
Things such as prevailing winds,<lb/>
playing surfaces, backgrounds a<lb/>
hitter must read a pitch against,<lb/>
and a host of others all combine to<lb/>
give each park its own character,<lb/>
itsown personality. Each ballpark<lb/>
has ground rules unique to itself.<lb/>
For time out of mind Wrigley<lb/>
Field has operated under two<lb/>
rules: a ball lost in the ivy on the<lb/>
outfield walls is a double, and any<lb/>
game which runs into darkness<lb/>
will be called.<lb/>
On August 8, Wrigley Field<lb/>
comes out of the dark ages. At a<lb/>
projected cost of $5 million, six<lb/>
towers, connected by 33 miles of<lb/>
cable and conduit, will support a<lb/>
12,000 watt, 48-volt Common-<lb/>
wealth Edison system which will<lb/>
beam 250 footcandlesof light onto<lb/>
the infield and another 150<lb/>
footcandlcs into the outfield. Af-<lb/>
ter 74 years at the corner of Clark<lb/>
and Addison Streets in down-<lb/>
town Chicago, the Cubs will fi-<lb/>
nally play a home game at night.<lb/>
As innovations go, this is but a<lb/>
minor example of Technology<lb/>
Permeates Sport. (Opposing<lb/>
viewpoints may substitute "Per-<lb/>
meates" with either "Enhances"<lb/>
or "Invades"). In ballpark after<lb/>
ballpark, grass has given way to<lb/>
artificial turf. The proliferation of<lb/>
the covered stadium allows base-<lb/>
ball (or anything else, for that<lb/>
matter) lo be played year-round,<lb/>
in any weather, at any profitable<lb/>
time of day. Where the rumble of<lb/>
thunder has been shut out by the<lb/>
hum of 60-cycle aternating cur-<lb/>
rent, the raincheck has been re-<lb/>
placed by the dividend check.<lb/>
But not all the rationale bchinu<lb/>
the Wrigley improvement points<lb/>
toward profit. Night baseball at<lb/>
Wrigley Field will give the9-to-5<lb/>
working Cubs fan the opportu-<lb/>
nity to see the home team only<lb/>
eight times this season and eight-<lb/>
een next year. This additional<lb/>
demographic appeal, while con-<lb/>
venient for the day worker, can<lb/>
hardly be based on need for a fran-<lb/>
chise whose season attendance<lb/>
topped 2 million last weekend<lb/>
against the Dodgers. Still, one<lb/>
must wonder, wherc's the thrill of<lb/>
seeing the Cubs during the week<lb/>
without playing hooky? Isn't an<lb/>
afternoon's truancy at the<lb/>
ballpark a forgiveable sin?<lb/>
Many neighborhood residents<lb/>
roundly oppose the Wrigley im-<lb/>
provement. They fear the rise in<lb/>
mayhem and general rambunc-<lb/>
tiousness that wil probably ac-<lb/>
company 30-plus thousand base-<lb/>
ball fans into their neighborhood<lb/>
after dark. A major concern is<lb/>
noise. The din issuing forth from a<lb/>
late-inning thriller could well<lb/>
approximate the roar of a low-<lb/>
flying jet to a light sleeper living<lb/>
just one street away. When Harry<lb/>
Caray, perennial voice of the<lb/>
Cubs, leads the crowd in the tradi-<lb/>
tional version of "Take Mc Out To<lb/>
The Ball Game will the neigh-<lb/>
bors throw things and shout,<lb/>
"Keep it down, don't you know<lb/>
it's late!?"<lb/>
Baseball at Wrigley Field has<lb/>
been played in a fashion funda-<lb/>
mentally unchanged since the<lb/>
Mighty Casey struck out. On dirt<lb/>
and grass. In daylight. Although<lb/>
it still takes fertilizer and water to<lb/>
keep the infield green, and no one<lb/>
is measuring the out field walls for<lb/>
"Astro-Ivy night baseball<lb/>
breaks a link between Wrigley<lb/>
and tradition. In a spot which sf<lb/>
reflects the amcrican character as<lb/>
to be called Our National Pastime,<lb/>
exceptions and misfits are part of<lb/>
the game. Baseball, so human as<lb/>
to record error as a statistic, toler-<lb/>
ated the idea of the Last Park<lb/>
Without Lights so well that it<lb/>
seems a shame to deny it the<lb/>
opportunity.<lb/>
While night baseball at Wrigley<lb/>
Field gives something to Cubs'<lb/>
fans, it takes something away<lb/>
from baseball. In yet another<lb/>
standoff between progress and<lb/>
tradition, tradition has fallen.<lb/>
While day games will no doubt be<lb/>
well attended, there's bound to be<lb/>
at least one Cubs' fan shaking his<lb/>
head when The Lights Go On At<lb/>
Wrigley. This person will proba-<lb/>
bly misquote a Chicago Baseball<lb/>
Line nearly as old as Wrigley<lb/>
Field itself: "Say it ain't so<lb/>
<pb facs="00058085_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
Tim CAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 27, 1988<lb/>
Tarheel's Jordan stung by Proposition 48<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
North Carolina football coach<lb/>
Mack Brown says a year away<lb/>
from football will provide all-<lb/>
state running back Randy Jordan<lb/>
with a chance to solve his aca-<lb/>
demic woes.<lb/>
Jordan, a member of The Asso-<lb/>
ciated Press all-state team last<lb/>
season, is ineligible for oompei-<lb/>
tion this fall because he failed to<lb/>
meet the necessary academic re-<lb/>
quirements, Brown announced<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
"His year of athletic inactivity<lb/>
will give him ample time to spend<lb/>
on his studies and allow him to<lb/>
establish a solid base for his de-<lb/>
gree Brown said. "Obviously,<lb/>
this is both his and our ultimate<lb/>
goal<lb/>
"I am disappointed that I will<lb/>
not be able to play, " said Jordan,<lb/>
a 6-foot, ISO-pound running back<lb/>
from Warrenton. "However, I<lb/>
will use this opportunity to work<lb/>
on my academics and begin pur-<lb/>
suing a college degree<lb/>
Under NCAA guidelines, an<lb/>
incoming freshman must achieve<lb/>
a minimum of 700 on the Scholas-<lb/>
tic Aptitutde Test and a 2.0 grade<lb/>
point average in high school.<lb/>
Jordan still plans to attend<lb/>
North Carolina. But the NCAA's<lb/>
Proposition 48 stipulates that he<lb/>
may not practice with the squad,<lb/>
and he loses one of his four years<lb/>
of eligibility.<lb/>
Jordan will also miss the annual<lb/>
East-West all-star football game,<lb/>
which is scheduled for July 28 in<lb/>
Greensboro, The Chapel Hill<lb/>
Newspaper reported.<lb/>
"His attitude is such that he's<lb/>
decided to pass up a chance of a<lb/>
lifetime, an opporutnity to play in<lb/>
the state's high school all-star<lb/>
game, in order to be a part of the<lb/>
UNC summer bridge program<lb/>
Brown said.<lb/>
The bridge program is open to<lb/>
all students who wish to get a<lb/>
head start on making the transi-<lb/>
tion from high school to college,<lb/>
and Jordan has been enrolled this<lb/>
sumcr.<lb/>
"Randy feels very positive<lb/>
about the progress he has made<lb/>
through the program this sum-<lb/>
mer Brown said.<lb/>
The other 19 Tar Heel football<lb/>
recruits will be eligible. Jordan is<lb/>
the only incoming UNC athlete in<lb/>
all sports who did not meet the<lb/>
requirements of Proposition 48,<lb/>
officials said.<lb/>
Tar Heel basketball recruit<lb/>
Kenny Williams failed to gradu-<lb/>
ate with his high school class and<lb/>
did not meet the minimum v 7<lb/>
on the SAT. Coach Dean Smith,<lb/>
however, asked Williams not to<lb/>
apply at UNC.<lb/>
Jordan also was a state cham-<lb/>
pion in track, winning three<lb/>
events.<lb/>
P'epper-Morchrie in tie for US Open lead<lb/>
BALTIMORE (AP) ? Dottie han and Amy Benz were another fared well in the past.<lb/>
Pepper-Mochrie isn't dwelling on shot back at even-par 142.<lb/>
the leader board just yet. The field of 153 was trimmed to<lb/>
If she did, Pepper-Morehrie the top 60 plus tics after the sec-<lb/>
would find herself among three ond round over the 6,232-yard,<lb/>
golfers tied for the lead after the par-71 Five Farms course at the<lb/>
second round of the U.S. Baltimore Country Club.<lb/>
Women's Open chapionship. She Defending champion Laura<lb/>
finished two rounds at 3-under- Davics of Britain shot a second-<lb/>
par 139 along with Julie Inkster round, 2-over-par 73 to finish 36<lb/>
and first-round leader Liselotte holes at 145, tied for 20th.<lb/>
Neumannn of Sweden. Nancy Lopez, seeking her first<lb/>
"This golf tournament doesn't Open victory in 13 tries, shot a 74<lb/>
even get started until the second and was at 146.<lb/>
nine on Sunday Pepper- Pepper-Mochrie had the lead<lb/>
Morchrie said after shooting a 2- alone until her second shot on the<lb/>
under-par 69 Friday. "We aren't final hole, a 3-iron from the rough,<lb/>
even close yet and there's a heck hit a tree limb. Her third shot went<lb/>
of a golf course we have to play. to the front fringe, where she got<lb/>
"If I start worrying about Julie up and down for a bogey and a<lb/>
and Lottie, I'm history share of the lead.<lb/>
The leaders matched an Open "My shotmaking was real pre-<lb/>
record for lowest 36-hole score,<lb/>
set by Donna Caponi in 1970.<lb/>
Tied for fourth, two shots back,<lb/>
were Vicki Fcrgon and Tammi<lb/>
Green.<lb/>
Two-time Open winner Jo Anne<lb/>
Garner, Donna White, Pattv Shee-<lb/>
dictable said the LPGA rookie<lb/>
who has six top 10 finishes, in-<lb/>
cluding a second and a third, in 17<lb/>
tour events this year.<lb/>
Inkster fashioned a second-<lb/>
round 68 for a share of the lead in<lb/>
a tournament in which she hasn't<lb/>
Inkster has won eight LPGA<lb/>
events since turning pro in 1983<lb/>
and finished as high as third on<lb/>
the tour's money list, but has<lb/>
never cracked the Open's top 20 in<lb/>
nine tries.<lb/>
"I've tried too hard because I<lb/>
wanted it so bad said Inkster,<lb/>
who has her husband, Brian, cad-<lb/>
dying for her for the first time in<lb/>
four years.<lb/>
Inkster made three straight<lb/>
birdies beginning on the seventh<lb/>
hole. A birdie on 11 moved her to<lb/>
four under, but a bad chip on 15<lb/>
COSt her a stroke.<lb/>
Neumann, another LPGA<lb/>
rookie who took a two-shot lead<lb/>
into the second-round, had to<lb/>
shake off a case of nerves before<lb/>
shooting a 1-over-par 72.<lb/>
"I played too much sale at the<lb/>
beginning. It didn't work out too<lb/>
well said Neumann, a five-time<lb/>
winner in Europe who has vet to<lb/>
finish in the top 10 in an LPGA<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Neumann bogeyed the third<lb/>
and 10th holes before finally<lb/>
making a birdie on No. 17.<lb/>
Two shots behind the leaders<lb/>
were a pair of players with vastly<lb/>
different Open histories.<lb/>
Green, who shot a 70, finished<lb/>
tied for 15th in last year's Open a birdie on No. 7 and three in a row<lb/>
after being tied for 14th in 1986. on the ninth, 10th and 11th holes.<lb/>
She missed the cut in her first Fergon,a two-time winner who<lb/>
Open. has never finished better than<lb/>
After bogcying the second and 24th in seven Open tries, birdied<lb/>
third holes, Green came back with the final hole.<lb/>
NFL officials crack down on<lb/>
illegal steroid use by players<lb/>
Negotiations between Charlotte Hornets<lb/>
and Kurt Rambis snag on salary dispute<lb/>
CIIARLOTTE (AP) ? Negotia-<lb/>
tions between Kurt Rambis and<lb/>
the Charlotte Hornets are ex-<lb/>
pected to be completed in the next<lb/>
two days, sources have told The<lb/>
Charlotte Observer.<lb/>
The sources, who asked not to<lb/>
be identified, said the only re-<lb/>
maining hurdle is salary for the<lb/>
30-ycar-old player, who has been<lb/>
with the Los Angeles Lakers for<lb/>
the past seven seasons. The two<lb/>
sides have agreed on a four-year<lb/>
deal, all of which the Hornets<lb/>
have offered to guarantee.<lb/>
One source said the difference<lb/>
in dollars between the two sides is<lb/>
not large, but the same source .lid<lb/>
that wasn't a sure sign the deal<lb/>
could be made.<lb/>
The 6-foor-8 Rambis was the<lb/>
Lakers' starting power forward<lb/>
for 4 12 seasons before his play-<lb/>
ing time dwindled the past two<lb/>
seasons. Rambis said in Charlotte<lb/>
on Friday that he expects to be a<lb/>
Hornet next season.<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? For the<lb/>
first time, NFL players who test<lb/>
positive for steroids this season<lb/>
will face disciplinary action, in-<lb/>
cluding possible suspensions, the<lb/>
NFL confirmed today.<lb/>
In a 15-page directive sent to all<lb/>
26 teams, Commissioner Pete<lb/>
Rozelle said that any player who<lb/>
tests positive for steroids for the<lb/>
second time will be subject to dis-<lb/>
ciplineby the league. While warn-<lb/>
ings against steroids were in-<lb/>
cluded in last year's directive, this<lb/>
is the first time league discipline<lb/>
has been mentioned.<lb/>
Other drugs already on the list<lb/>
include cocaine, marijuana and<lb/>
amphetamines.<lb/>
'Each instance this year of a<lb/>
second positive test will be<lb/>
handled on a case by case basis.<lb/>
Involved players will be subject to<lb/>
appropriate discipline by the<lb/>
commissioner the memo says.<lb/>
Asked if suspensions might be<lb/>
included, NFL spokesman Joe<lb/>
Browne said:<lb/>
"I can't rule that out<lb/>
Earlier, the Atlanta Constituti-<lb/>
on, in a copyright story, said it<lb/>
obtained a copy of a 15-pagc di-<lb/>
rective.<lb/>
Steroids artificially enhance<lb/>
muscle growth and have been<lb/>
used by some athletes who want<lb/>
to be bigger and stronger.<lb/>
The memo said steroids de-<lb/>
serve "special mention" because<lb/>
there has been "widespread mis-<lb/>
use  throughout much of the<lb/>
sports world, including football<lb/>
Rozelle said studies have indi-<lb/>
cated that steroids are harmful to<lb/>
a person's physical and mental<lb/>
health and "there is a growing<lb/>
concern that players using ster-<lb/>
oids can cause serious on-field<lb/>
injuries<lb/>
"The NFL Physicians Socictv<lb/>
declares lh???? are no legitimate<lb/>
medical purposes to prescribe<lb/>
steroids for NFL players the<lb/>
newspaper quoted the memo as<lb/>
saying.<lb/>
Under the NFL's drug-testing<lb/>
program, players are tested when<lb/>
they report to training camp and<lb/>
again if there is "reasonable<lb/>
cause<lb/>
Last year, the NFL included<lb/>
steroids in the test for the first<lb/>
time, but the league did not con-<lb/>
sider disciplinary action against<lb/>
players who tested positive f( r<lb/>
them.<lb/>
This year, "the league no longer<lb/>
merely condemns the use of the<lb/>
substance. It is prohibited in any<lb/>
quanitity for any purposes the<lb/>
memo said.<lb/>
It said any player who tests<lb/>
positive for steroids and shows<lb/>
medical complications may be<lb/>
considered unfit to participate in<lb/>
football and may be placed on the<lb/>
non-football illness list until the<lb/>
complications are treated and<lb/>
resolved.<lb/>
Paul and Doug bring you the bossest sports coverage around. This fall. Only in The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Every Tuesday and Thursday. Word.<lb/>
MICHAEL KEATON<lb/>
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music by GABRIEL YARED executive producer RON HOWARD<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058085_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>