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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058087_0001"/>
Coming Next Week:<lb/>
A feature story on the Usuals, a Local Greenville band.<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
An interview with Bill Shepperd of the Amatuers,<lb/>
Greenville's very own reggae band.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
A preview of the Pirate football season. The teams ,<lb/>
players, and coaches.<lb/>
She iiast Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 13<lb/>
Thursday, August 25,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
22 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Education issue tops Gardner's agenda<lb/>
By GRfcER BOWEN<lb/>
J iXJit Writer<lb/>
fim Gardner, the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Republican eanidate for Lieu-<lb/>
tenant Govcnerbelcives that edu-<lb/>
cation, economics and drugs are<lb/>
the major challenges he would<lb/>
face as Licutentant Govcner.<lb/>
Gardner, a native oi Rocky<lb/>
Mount North Carolina, first<lb/>
started his political carreer in-<lb/>
volved in politics in 1963 when he<lb/>
became involved in Senator<lb/>
Gold water's campaign. At age 29,<lb/>
he ran for Congress and received<lb/>
48 percent of the vote which wasa<lb/>
first for a republican eanidate at<lb/>
that time.<lb/>
Gardner was the 1965 state<lb/>
Republican Partv Chairman and<lb/>
in 1966, was elected to Congress.<lb/>
In 1968 Gardner ran for Govcnor<lb/>
and received 48 percent oi the<lb/>
vote. Gardner was only 35 at the<lb/>
time. Me thinks that North Caro-<lb/>
lina needs two strong parties for<lb/>
many reasons and is pleased that<lb/>
the Republican Party in North<lb/>
Carolina i growing.<lb/>
'Politics are like business, it is<lb/>
not competitive with one partv.<lb/>
Two strong parties help keep both<lb/>
honest and more in touch with the<lb/>
people's needs he said.<lb/>
Education will be Gardners'<lb/>
top priority. "We need better<lb/>
teachers in our classrooms and to<lb/>
get better teachers, we need better<lb/>
salaries said Gardner.<lb/>
Govener Martin has placed<lb/>
education at the top of priorities<lb/>
as well. During Martin's years in<lb/>
oiiko a percentage of the North<lb/>
Carolina state budget has been<lb/>
alotted towards education. Gard-<lb/>
ner intends to continue this pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Economics is another area<lb/>
Gardner wishes to improve. Even<lb/>
though Business Week magzine<lb/>
voted North Carolina as the<lb/>
number 1 place in the U.S. to set<lb/>
up a factory, Gardner said there is<lb/>
a great deal still to be done.<lb/>
Gardner would like to encour-<lb/>
age more businesses to move to<lb/>
North Carolina. In order to keep<lb/>
North Carolina attractive to new<lb/>
businesses, Gardner would like to<lb/>
improve the roads. "If we are<lb/>
going to develop as a state we<lb/>
need better roads, particularly in<lb/>
the east he said.<lb/>
"I'd like to be a working part-<lb/>
ner with the Govenor he said.<lb/>
He wants to see the Govcnor have<lb/>
veto power, and will encourage<lb/>
such legislation. "Our govern-<lb/>
ment was designed with a system<lb/>
of checks and balances, that is<lb/>
why the Govenor needs veto<lb/>
power added Gardner. Elimi-<lb/>
nation of the pork barrel legisla-<lb/>
tion is another goal of Gardners.<lb/>
Pork barrel legislation allows<lb/>
members of the North Carolina<lb/>
Legislature to appropriate thou-<lb/>
sands of dollars to special projects<lb/>
oi their choice.<lb/>
The biggest problem facing our<lb/>
state is drugs, according to Gard-<lb/>
ner. "Drugs are the biggest men-<lb/>
ace facing our state he said.<lb/>
Gardner has a three-fold plan to<lb/>
battle drugs in North Carolina.<lb/>
The first part oi this plan is to<lb/>
educate school children. Gardner<lb/>
would like to see mandatory drug<lb/>
education program in every<lb/>
shcool. Me hopes that education<lb/>
will help keep young people from<lb/>
becoming drug abuscrs.<lb/>
Gardner would like our state to<lb/>
begin a bureau of drug enforce-<lb/>
ment similar to the Drug Enforce-<lb/>
ment Agency ,(DEA). This de-<lb/>
partment would be set up to help<lb/>
local police in their efforts to<lb/>
combat the growing drug prob-<lb/>
lem. Me would like to see wire<lb/>
tapping and an investigative<lb/>
grand jury be implimented as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
The third part of Gardners drug<lb/>
plan would deal with punuish-<lb/>
ment of drug dealers. Gardner<lb/>
saiddrugs are so profitable that<lb/>
there needs to be stricter punish-<lb/>
ments so that drug'dealers will<lb/>
think twice<lb/>
Parole is the first area Gardner<lb/>
would deal with. 'Taroleissolax,<lb/>
that a criminal usually may only<lb/>
serve but 10 or 15 percent of their<lb/>
sentence said Gardner. Me<lb/>
would like to sec there be no pa-<lb/>
role for drug dealers.<lb/>
"I'd like North Carolina to have<lb/>
the toughest drug laws in the<lb/>
nation said Gardner. A School<lb/>
Yard bill twice as strict as the fed-<lb/>
eral law is also part of Gardners'<lb/>
plan to combat drugs. This bill<lb/>
would be set up to sentence any-<lb/>
one caught dealing drugs within<lb/>
1000 yards of school yard 28 years<lb/>
in jail with no parole.<lb/>
"Drug dealers arc peddling<lb/>
poison said Gardner. I le would<lb/>
like the drug dealers who sold<lb/>
drugs to a user who dies, because<lb/>
of the drugs, to be given the death<lb/>
penalty. Gardner hopes this will<lb/>
discourage drug dealers form<lb/>
coming to North Carolina.<lb/>
"Any young person who has<lb/>
the grades should be able to jiiorJ<lb/>
college Gardner said. Gardner<lb/>
said he would do everything he<lb/>
could to help students receive<lb/>
money for college. Me believes<lb/>
that the finacial aid program was<lb/>
abused by people who cither did<lb/>
not need the money, or did not<lb/>
pay it back.<lb/>
Gardner encourages all stu-<lb/>
dents to vote for the eanidate of<lb/>
their choice. "Young people have<lb/>
more to lose than anyone he<lb/>
said. Me thinks that many stu-<lb/>
dents do not realize that the deci-<lb/>
sions made today in government<lb/>
effect their future lives. "No one<lb/>
will be more effected than the<lb/>
people who are in college now<lb/>
stated Gardener.<lb/>
"I can make a meaningful con-<lb/>
tribution to North Carolina right<lb/>
now Gardner said and that is<lb/>
why he is running for Lieutenant<lb/>
Govenor.<lb/>
Enrollment all-time high<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
c I Jitor<lb/>
There are 15,500 students en-<lb/>
rolled for the fall 1988 semester at<lb/>
ECU, the most in the schools 81<lb/>
year history.<lb/>
As of August IS admissions had<lb/>
a 5.3 percent increase in freshman<lb/>
applications. This is after the<lb/>
March 15 deadline as opposed to<lb/>
last years deadline oi July 30.<lb/>
This year the oiiicc of admis-<lb/>
sion received 8,100 freshman ap-<lb/>
plications, 6,880 were accepted<lb/>
and 3,050 enrolled. Last vear 7,787<lb/>
applications were submitted,<lb/>
6,1 H (0 were accepted and 2,756 en-<lb/>
rolled.<lb/>
Transfer applications were cut-<lb/>
down by design. This was done to<lb/>
control growth. Only 1650 trans-<lb/>
fer applications were submitted,<lb/>
1,000 qualified, and 700 enrolled.<lb/>
This is compared to last years fig-<lb/>
ures of 1,800 submissions, 1,200<lb/>
acceptances, and 750 to 800 enroll-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
According to Eugene A.<lb/>
Owens, Acting Director of Ad-<lb/>
missions, this is an 11 percent<lb/>
increase in the actual number of<lb/>
applications accepted, or stu-<lb/>
dents who qualify for admission,<lb/>
and a 10 percent increase in stu-<lb/>
dents who decided to attend.<lb/>
Owens gave two theories for<lb/>
the growth. He said, "There are<lb/>
simply more, or a higher percent-<lb/>
age of high school graduates than<lb/>
in past years. Because so many<lb/>
morcaregraduating, they want to<lb/>
continue on with their education,<lb/>
namely a four year degree. In es-<lb/>
sence, they are qualified<lb/>
The other main reason Owens<lb/>
stated is, "the people enrolled<lb/>
now, and the ones coming in are<lb/>
the first generation of the baby-<lb/>
boomers. These are the best edu-<lb/>
cated people in the country and<lb/>
they are cnstilling the idea of a 16<lb/>
year education on their children.<lb/>
Many kids grow up taking for<lb/>
granted that after high school<lb/>
they will go to college. The em-<lb/>
phasis is clearly on education<lb/>
The sudden growth, according<lb/>
to Owens, goes against all trend<lb/>
data. "Wc had to take all the data<lb/>
and throw it out the door. The<lb/>
phenomenon that we're experi-<lb/>
encing is two-fold. One, whether<lb/>
they realize or not, is that the stu-<lb/>
dents are promoting the ECU<lb/>
image. The other is the quality of<lb/>
The registrar has been busy all<lb/>
(Photo by Tom Walters, ECU Ph<lb/>
students we have on campus<lb/>
keeps climbing<lb/>
"The school is also becoming<lb/>
more attractive to students. We<lb/>
have 120 to 150 majors, and nearly<lb/>
200 academic programs, so there<lb/>
is a good variety to choose from.<lb/>
By having so many choices, 1 feel<lb/>
we can cater to any prospective<lb/>
students desires. We have all the<lb/>
advantages of a large school and<lb/>
summer. Here, one of the record 15,500 students registers<lb/>
oto Lab)<lb/>
yet the personality of a smal1<lb/>
school said Owens.<lb/>
Owens went on to say that ECU<lb/>
is closing the image gap. He said,<lb/>
"I strongly believe that every-<lb/>
one from the greundskeepers to<lb/>
the trustees have the responsibil-<lb/>
itv to understand, demonstrate<lb/>
'there is a lag of a period of years and carry the ECU image with<lb/>
between what is happening, and<lb/>
what the publics' perception is.<lb/>
We have closed the party-school<lb/>
gap image considerably. A big<lb/>
contributor to this fact are the<lb/>
student to faculty relations. "<lb/>
them, either in a positive or nega-<lb/>
tive way, whether they like it or<lb/>
not. This is why ECU is changing<lb/>
and growing in a positive way<lb/>
said. Owens<lb/>
Department sponsors symposium<lb/>
Be sure to drop classes before it is too late. The last day to drop is<lb/>
MondayOctober 3. (Photo by Tom Walters, ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
BEAUFORT, N.C. - "Coastal<lb/>
Cultural Heritage: 19th Century<lb/>
Influences" is the theme of the<lb/>
first North Carolina Maritime<lb/>
Museum Sumposium to be held<lb/>
here Oct. 23-25. The event is co-<lb/>
sponsored by the N.C. Maritime<lb/>
Museum and the East Carolina<lb/>
University Division of Continu-<lb/>
ing Education.<lb/>
Sumposium sessions will focus<lb/>
on seaside personalities, changes<lb/>
in the coastline, the lifestyle of the<lb/>
Outer Banks, coastal boats,<lb/>
coastal architecture and events in<lb/>
the history of the coastal region.<lb/>
The symposium is designed for<lb/>
persons with a personal or profes-<lb/>
sional interest in the life and cul-<lb/>
ture of North Carolina's coast,<lb/>
said an ECU official.<lb/>
Topics and speakers arc:<lb/>
"Carteret County Characters<lb/>
Nelson W. Taylor III, Morchcad<lb/>
City attorney and native of<lb/>
Beaufort: "Evaluation of the Dy-<lb/>
namic North Carolina Coastal<lb/>
Zone: Its Effect upon Our Cultural<lb/>
Heritage Dr. Stanley Riggs, pro-<lb/>
fessor of geology at ECU; "Wind,<lb/>
Water and Song: Life on<lb/>
Portsmouth Island and Core<lb/>
Banks Constance Mason, N.C.<lb/>
Maritime Museum curator-re-<lb/>
searcher;<lb/>
"By Their Boats Shall Ye Know<lb/>
Them Michael Alford, curator<lb/>
of maritime research, N.C. Mari-<lb/>
time Museum; "By Ocean,<lb/>
sounds, and Rivers: A Glimpse<lb/>
into the Architectural Heritage of<lb/>
the North Carolina Coast Dru-<lb/>
cilla Haley York, head of the east-<lb/>
ern office of the N.C. bivision of<lb/>
Archives and History;<lb/>
"The Establishment of a<lb/>
Mormon Community at Harkers<lb/>
Island, N.C, "Joel Hancock,<lb/>
Harkers Island native and author<lb/>
of a forthcoming book, "Strength-<lb/>
ened by the Storm and "Not For<lb/>
at All from America: The 19th<lb/>
Century and Coastal Culture<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Parramorc, associate<lb/>
professor of history at Mcredity<lb/>
College.<lb/>
The symposium teatures sev-<lb/>
eral tours of Beaufort's historic<lb/>
area, social gatherings and meals,<lb/>
among them a dinner cruise<lb/>
aboard the "Carolina Princess<lb/>
A Maritime Museum program,<lb/>
"Traditional Trades and Pas-<lb/>
times featuring local artisans<lb/>
and musicians, will be offered<lb/>
twice during the sumposium.<lb/>
Heed warnings about the heat<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Low pressure systems from<lb/>
the Great Lakes region has low-<lb/>
ered temperatures in the area for<lb/>
the time being, from the balmy<lb/>
90's to the muggy 80's. Even so,<lb/>
there are some safety precau-<lb/>
tions that still should be taken<lb/>
into consideration for animal<lb/>
health care, during the heat and<lb/>
humidity.<lb/>
According to Dr. M.J. House<lb/>
of the Animal Hospital of Pitt<lb/>
County P.A "As the heat goes<lb/>
up, pet owners and farmers<lb/>
should protect their animals and<lb/>
livestock, especially house pets<lb/>
and poultry and swine<lb/>
House stated that, "It is<lb/>
normal for dairy cows' fertility<lb/>
rate to go down, as well as the<lb/>
daily weight gain of some farm<lb/>
animals. But, farmers should<lb/>
change feed schedules, and<lb/>
provide plenty of water for the<lb/>
animals, according to how the<lb/>
weather situation is that day.<lb/>
They should also get as much<lb/>
vcntelation as possible<lb/>
The effects of the heat on<lb/>
house pets is not much different<lb/>
than for farm animals. All<lb/>
species must remain cool in<lb/>
order to function at its potential.<lb/>
Most dogs are most comfort-<lb/>
able at a temperature of about 55<lb/>
to 60 degrees Fahrenheit,<lb/>
according to House.<lb/>
"Air conditioning is not<lb/>
always enough for most dogs,<lb/>
because their temperature<lb/>
comfort index is not the same as<lb/>
for a human. They (dogs) often<lb/>
need more air movement, such<lb/>
as from a fan he said.<lb/>
He added, "If your dog starts<lb/>
to show unusual signs of<lb/>
panting, just take a bucket of<lb/>
water and throw it on him<lb/>
Other house pets that are<lb/>
sometimes affected arc cats,<lb/>
mice, and fish.<lb/>
"Cats tend not to be as active<lb/>
as dogs so, they arc usually not<lb/>
very affected by the heat But,<lb/>
water should be kept available<lb/>
for them, so when they feel at<lb/>
liberty to drink it they can do<lb/>
 he said.<lb/>
House said I cannot stress<lb/>
enough the importance of not<lb/>
enclosing your pets in a hot and<lb/>
unvcnelatcd environment. Not<lb/>
on'y Ctln large animals suffer to<lb/>
death, but small pets such as<lb/>
mice, hamster and fish arc<lb/>
definitely at a disadvantage<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0002"/><lb/>
J<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1988<lb/>
Transplant gives life, second chance, hope<lb/>
By GREER BOWEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Mari Guthrie, the daughter of<lb/>
A. K. Guthrie who works with<lb/>
Eastern Area Health Education<lb/>
Center, an ECU Medical School<lb/>
affiliate, had a kidney transplant<lb/>
on Monday, August 15.<lb/>
Guthrie, who is in her 20's, has<lb/>
dealt with a disease called Glom-<lb/>
crulonephritis (kidney failure) for<lb/>
four years. A kidney transplant<lb/>
was the only way she could at-<lb/>
tempt to have a normal life.<lb/>
Guthrie had lived a normal,<lb/>
healthy life up until her kidney<lb/>
failed four years ago. She became<lb/>
ill almost at once. One night her<lb/>
mother found her in the bathroom<lb/>
with a violent nose bleed. They<lb/>
rushed her to the hospital and her<lb/>
blood pressure was 210 over 190.<lb/>
The doctors that she could have<lb/>
had a stroke if her nose had not<lb/>
bled. Guthrie discovered after<lb/>
cxploritory surgery that she was<lb/>
only born with one kidney.<lb/>
Guthrie remained in the hospital<lb/>
for one week.<lb/>
Guthrie's life changed drasti-<lb/>
cally after that. She and her doc-<lb/>
tors tried to treat her disease with<lb/>
diet and medication. Three years<lb/>
later, there was only choice,<lb/>
Guthrie had to begin dialysis<lb/>
while her doctors searched for a<lb/>
new kidney.<lb/>
Dialysis gavcGuthric, as it docs<lb/>
many people, time and a chance to<lb/>
live a fairly normal life until a<lb/>
kidney is located. Patients go to<lb/>
dialysis three times a week.<lb/>
The process removes natural<lb/>
polutants that functional kidney<lb/>
would remove from the body.<lb/>
Often paitents retain fluid in their<lb/>
body between treatments and can<lb/>
weigh as much as 10 pounds more<lb/>
than their normal weight.<lb/>
In October of 1988, Guthrie<lb/>
began dialysis. The first step was<lb/>
to implant a Gortex Graph in her<lb/>
arm just below her wrist. This<lb/>
graph is a small, thin, white plas-<lb/>
tic tube about the size of a ball-<lb/>
point-pen cap.<lb/>
Doctors surgically implant<lb/>
these tubes by sewing a vein and<lb/>
an artery together. The area be-<lb/>
comes elevated naturaly and al-<lb/>
lows an easy access to the blood<lb/>
stream for the dialysis needles.<lb/>
Guthrie's arm graph did not<lb/>
work and a Perm Cath had to be<lb/>
implanted in her right chest just<lb/>
below her shoulder. A Perm Cath<lb/>
remains partially exposed. This<lb/>
did not work either, and a graph<lb/>
was placed in her right thigh.<lb/>
Then the actual dailysis began.<lb/>
Every Monday, Wensday, and<lb/>
Friday Guthrie would go to dialy-<lb/>
sis for three hours. During these<lb/>
next few months the search began<lb/>
for a kidney. Guthrie's mother,<lb/>
Harriett Guthrie volunteered to<lb/>
give her daughter a kidney.<lb/>
"I did not ask Mama for a kid-<lb/>
ney, she just came into my room<lb/>
and volunteered. It was the most<lb/>
wonderful thing anyone had ever<lb/>
said to me Guthrie said.<lb/>
The match between Mari<lb/>
Guthrie and Harriett was perfect,<lb/>
the possible better match would<lb/>
have been identical twins. They<lb/>
began the procedures necessary<lb/>
to prepare mother and daughter<lb/>
for the transplant.<lb/>
Guthrie continued dialysis<lb/>
three times a week and became<lb/>
more at ease with it. "When I first<lb/>
went to dialysis I was terrified<lb/>
and lonely. But the nurses made it<lb/>
much easier because they are so<lb/>
supportive said Guthrie.<lb/>
Many dialysis patients, such as<lb/>
Guthrie's partner Lonnie Grahan<lb/>
Jr. aren't fortunate enough to find<lb/>
a kidney right away. Graham has<lb/>
been on dialysis for a year and 8<lb/>
months. Graham works for<lb/>
Greenville Utilitcs and is very<lb/>
hopefull that his time will come<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
All kidney pateints must stick<lb/>
to a strick diet. Ususally the diet<lb/>
consists on 60 grams of protein,<lb/>
low in sodium and potasiumwith<lb/>
only 6 glasses of liquid a day.<lb/>
Foods like soup and jcllo arc con-<lb/>
sidered as liquids, and, must be<lb/>
monitercd.<lb/>
Kim White, a nurse at the<lb/>
Greenville Dialysis Center said<lb/>
that most patients have very good<lb/>
attitudes. "The average age of<lb/>
dialysis patient is 50 so Mari is one<lb/>
of the baby's here said White.<lb/>
Some reasons for kidney failure<lb/>
are alcohol abuse, too much<lb/>
asprin, and drug abuse.<lb/>
White said that heroin and<lb/>
cocaine users arc the most com-<lb/>
mon drug abusers on dialysis<lb/>
treatment. Often these people<lb/>
have a hard time in dialysis be-<lb/>
cause thier veins have collasped<lb/>
due intraveinous drug use.<lb/>
The weekend before the actual<lb/>
transplant, Mari and her mother<lb/>
had to undergo numerous tests<lb/>
and doctors apointments. Each of<lb/>
them was tested to insure that<lb/>
they were in perfect health. If<lb/>
cither of them had contracted so<lb/>
much as a cold, the transplant<lb/>
would have been postponed.<lb/>
Mari was tested for a reaction to<lb/>
an anti-rejection drug that is still<lb/>
in the testing stages. This drug<lb/>
was invented by the doctors at the<lb/>
East Carolina Medical School.<lb/>
Mari and her mother entered<lb/>
Pitt Memorial Hospital an Sun-<lb/>
day August 14. The long and<lb/>
complicated process that began<lb/>
four years ago was soon to end.<lb/>
Monday morning the surgery<lb/>
was preformed.<lb/>
The doctors told them that the<lb/>
kidney should work almost in-<lb/>
stantly if Mart's body was not<lb/>
going to reject it.Guthric told her<lb/>
motheryou're going to give life<lb/>
to me a second time and that is<lb/>
what happened.<lb/>
The kidney worked, by Tues-<lb/>
day afternoon Guthrie was sitting<lb/>
up and talking on the phone, by<lb/>
Friday all tubes and moniters<lb/>
were removed from her body<lb/>
Tuesday of this week, mother and<lb/>
daughter were at home.<lb/>
The chance that she could die<lb/>
did not seem to cause any hesita<lb/>
tion. Guthrie received a second<lb/>
chance to live a normal life. She,<lb/>
like so many others found a way<lb/>
to start over, to physicaly be burn<lb/>
again through a gift of love.<lb/>
Guthrie will remain at home for<lb/>
three months and then plans to<lb/>
return to school. Her strength and<lb/>
couragehave helped her maintain<lb/>
a positive attitude. Guthrie said it<lb/>
was easier for her because slu-<lb/>
trustshcrdoctor, Dr. W. Newman<lb/>
South Carolina cleans coast<lb/>
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) - The<lb/>
South Carolina Sea Grant Consor-<lb/>
tium is looking for a few thousand<lb/>
good beachcombers.<lb/>
They'll be needed next month<lb/>
when South Carolina, for the first<lb/>
time, joins 17 other coastal states<lb/>
in sweeping its shoreline for trash.<lb/>
Trash left by beachgocrs and<lb/>
washed up on shore is unsightly.<lb/>
But it also can be fatal for birds<lb/>
and marine animals.<lb/>
Wildlife and fish can die from<lb/>
either eating trash or becoming<lb/>
entangled in plastic and other<lb/>
containers, Lin Dunbar of the Sea<lb/>
Grant Consortium said.<lb/>
The beach sweep will be held<lb/>
Sept. 24 along with similar pro-<lb/>
grams in other coastal states in-<lb/>
cluding neighboring North Caro-<lb/>
lina and Georgia. The event is<lb/>
sponsored by the consortium as<lb/>
well as the Center for Environ-<lb/>
mental Education in Washington.<lb/>
Both individuals and groups<lb/>
can participate, Ms. Dunbar said.<lb/>
Participants will be given bio-<lb/>
dcgradablc bags in which to col-<lb/>
lect the trash. In addition, they'll<lb/>
get a data card on which they can<lb/>
record each item of trash they<lb/>
collect.<lb/>
The cards will then be sent to<lb/>
Washington where they'll be<lb/>
tabulated and the states will bet-<lb/>
ter be able to identify the various<lb/>
sources of beach pollution, Ms.<lb/>
Dunbar said.<lb/>
The bags will also be weighed to<lb/>
determine just how much trash is<lb/>
recovered from the beaches.<lb/>
ANNOUNCING<lb/>
INTRODUCING A<lb/>
CHECKING ACCOUNT V<lb/>
THAT WILLOWY<lb/>
COST YOU THIS<lb/>
MUCH A MONTH.<lb/>
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AUGUST 28 - SEPTEMBER 2, 1988<lb/>
REGISTRATION: AUGUST 22-25, 1988<lb/>
AT 10:00 A.M3 P.M.<lb/>
STUDENT STORES.CROATAN<lb/>
AND ALL RESIDENCE HALLS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058087_0003"/><lb/>
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tubes and monitors<lb/>
hoved from her body.<lb/>
It this week, mother and<lb/>
Iv ere at home.<lb/>
nee that she could die<lb/>
lorn to cause any hesita-<lb/>
mric received a second<lb/>
I l.ve a normal life. She,<lb/>
ny others found a way<lb/>
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a girt of love.<lb/>
will remainat home for<lb/>
iths and then plans to<lb/>
Her strength and<lb/>
: .i her maintain<lb/>
tudc Guthrie said it<lb/>
her because she<lb/>
� Dr. . Newman<lb/>
W<lb/>
x&amp;<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
&amp;0Ncdl<lb/>
H<lb/>
988<lb/>
s<lb/>
fp Deadline<lb/>
ay 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1988<lb/>
Children with AIDS:mountingl<lb/>
number of innocent victims<lb/>
BOSTON (AP) - He is 3 years<lb/>
old, wearing a red T-shirt ar -<lb/>
boasting how his dad had taken<lb/>
him to see the fireworks. His little<lb/>
sidekick sucks on a Topside and<lb/>
shows off his purple tongue.<lb/>
"You can't get me. Daddy<lb/>
shouts one of the boys as he races<lb/>
playfully down the hallway of the<lb/>
hospital wing.<lb/>
The illness that put them there<lb/>
is masked by their innocence and<lb/>
perfectly normal ways.<lb/>
They are the children of AIDS.<lb/>
Not all are so tree to run and<lb/>
play. Some come into the world<lb/>
prematurely and drug-addicted.<lb/>
Many have swollen glands, some-<lb/>
times enlarged livers and spleens.<lb/>
Their bodies are wracked by diar-<lb/>
rhea and nausea, burning with<lb/>
fever and wet from night sweats.<lb/>
More than 500 of them across<lb/>
the United States have died of<lb/>
AIDS and 3,000 a�e infected, ac-<lb/>
cording to Dr. fames Oleske,<lb/>
medical director oi the children's<lb/>
AIDS program at Children's 1 los-<lb/>
pital in Newark, X.l.<lb/>
Their numbers are growing at<lb/>
an alarming rate in a nation ill-<lb/>
equipped to care for them: in<lb/>
many places, hospitals must sci vc<lb/>
a exjx?nsive baby sitters while<lb/>
foster homes are desperately<lb/>
sought for the infants.<lb/>
Dr. Martha Rogers, chief of<lb/>
pediatric and family studies for<lb/>
the AIDS program at the federal<lb/>
Centers for Disease Control in<lb/>
Atlanta, estimates about 10,000<lb/>
children under the age of 13 will<lb/>
be infected with the AIDS virus<lb/>
within a tew years.<lb/>
That's the low end ot Oleske's<lb/>
estimate; he foresees 10,000 to<lb/>
20,000 infected children by 1991.<lb/>
"I estimate that one in every 10 to<lb/>
13 hospital beds for children in the<lb/>
United States will be occupied by<lb/>
a child sick with I AIDS) infection.<lb/>
1 hat is a frightening statistic<lb/>
About 13 percent of the child<lb/>
victims got AIDS through tainted<lb/>
blood transfusions.<lb/>
Almost all the others, however,<lb/>
were doomed before birth, born<lb/>
to mothers infected with the AIDS<lb/>
virus throueh intravenous drug<lb/>
use or through sx mth a 4tM&amp;tJ��.pyr Jf<lb/>
user.SixoutoflOofthcsechildren<lb/>
die bv age 2 or 3, Oleske said.<lb/>
The tragedy is compounded<lb/>
when the mother is a single parent<lb/>
and unable to care for the infant<lb/>
because of her drug habit or be-<lb/>
cause she i incapacitated with<lb/>
AIDS herself. A grandmother<lb/>
may care for both daughter and<lb/>
grandchild, while she watches<lb/>
them deteriorate and die.<lb/>
With family members<lb/>
unavailable to hclpin many cases,<lb/>
"Where are the increasing num-<lb/>
bers of children born with AIDS<lb/>
going to be cared for?" Oleske<lb/>
asked. "Who's going to care for<lb/>
them?"<lb/>
One answer may lie in the estab-<lb/>
lishment oi state-supported tran-<lb/>
sitional group homes thatprovide<lb/>
temporary care for outpatient<lb/>
children until foster homes can be<lb/>
found. Several have been set up in<lb/>
the last 18 months, including<lb/>
homes in Boston, Albany, N.Y<lb/>
and Elizabeth, N.J. More are being<lb/>
planned.<lb/>
At Boston City 1 lospital, a reno-<lb/>
vated wing known as Dowling 5<lb/>
South can house four children.<lb/>
Among current rebidents are the<lb/>
two boys whose fathers cannot<lb/>
care for them full-time but who<lb/>
take them on outings like the<lb/>
Fourth of July fireworks.<lb/>
Since the Dowling wing opened<lb/>
in February 1987, the mothers of<lb/>
two children living there have<lb/>
died.<lb/>
"Give me two weeks pleaded<lb/>
one mother - and she held on long<lb/>
enough to make arrangements for<lb/>
the care oi her child.<lb/>
Anne Murphy, a 31-year-old<lb/>
social worker at Dowling 5 South,<lb/>
has seen dying mothers "just<lb/>
coming in and spending time<lb/>
with their kids, playing with<lb/>
them, putting them to bed, feed-<lb/>
ing them supper, some of the<lb/>
daily routine kind of things that I<lb/>
think take on so much more<lb/>
meaning when you feel that your<lb/>
time could be limited<lb/>
For many of the children, how-<lb/>
ever, the warmth of mothers and<lb/>
fathers is absent, and nurses try to<lb/>
comfort them when they cry out<lb/>
with withdrawal pains.<lb/>
Some of the older children,<lb/>
unable to understand what is<lb/>
happening to them, turn to their<lb/>
toy doctors' kits and play out their<lb/>
own tragic lives.<lb/>
"They give us fake shots and<lb/>
take our blood pressure said Ms.<lb/>
Murphy. "They play out a lot of<lb/>
the tilings that happened to them<lb/>
in the hospital and kind of deal<lb/>
with the experience removed<lb/>
from it in a way<lb/>
Many potential foster parents<lb/>
are reluctant to consider children<lb/>
with AIDS - fearful or ignorant of<lb/>
the disease or unwilling to<lb/>
commit the extraordinary<lb/>
amount oi time and energy re-<lb/>
quired.<lb/>
Even so, seven children from St.<lb/>
Clare's Home in Elizabeth, N.J<lb/>
have been placed in foster homes,<lb/>
said Terry and Faye Zealand who<lb/>
founded the place of transition<lb/>
between hospital and foster care<lb/>
in May 1987. They plan to open<lb/>
two more homes in New Jersey.<lb/>
"I can't find a cure for AIDS. I<lb/>
know that 1 have to leave that up<lb/>
to somebody else but I know that<lb/>
1 can provide a home for these<lb/>
children Mrs. Zealand said.<lb/>
In Elizabeth and Albany,<lb/>
townspeople have been sympa-<lb/>
thetic.<lb/>
Local construction workers<lb/>
helped renovate a two-story resi-<lb/>
dence that had been vacant for<lb/>
two years for St. Clare's Home. At<lb/>
a zoningboard hearing in Albany,<lb/>
three neighbors spoke in support<lb/>
of the Farano Center for Children,<lb/>
which opened in December. Civic<lb/>
organizations held fundraisers<lb/>
and donated furniture to the<lb/>
home operated by Albany Catho-<lb/>
lic Charities.<lb/>
At the Farano Center, as many<lb/>
as 40 volunteers take the children<lb/>
for walks and visits to the park.<lb/>
Three of these volunteers have<lb/>
become foster parents to AIDS<lb/>
children, and the applications of<lb/>
four others are being considered.<lb/>
The transitional homes can ac-<lb/>
commodate only a half-dozen or<lb/>
so children at a time, cared for by<lb/>
an around-the-clock staff.<lb/>
That leaves hospitals as the only<lb/>
home for many children of AIDS.<lb/>
That is costly not only to them, in<lb/>
terms of childhood joys missed,<lb/>
but also for the state.<lb/>
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VlAVge Wf 3fet;H All gglN OVR fJfeATg T2 sataPl ?<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Temptation<lb/>
Movie raises old questions<lb/>
This editorial almost started out<lb/>
with a Biblical quote. It could have<lb/>
begun, "Let those among you with-<lb/>
out sin, cast the first stone But the<lb/>
controversy over the film, "The Last<lb/>
Temptation of Christ" is one about<lb/>
doctrine and judgement. A religious<lb/>
quote would not have lent perspec-<lb/>
tive to this editorial.<lb/>
Why? Because though the use of<lb/>
the quote would be ironical, the<lb/>
appearance of it here, in an editorial<lb/>
concerned with the issue of thinking<lb/>
for one's self, would merely rein-<lb/>
force the lack of choice prevalent in<lb/>
modern day America.<lb/>
This severe lack of choice stems<lb/>
from the fact that the middle class<lb/>
Judeo-Christian morals and ethics<lb/>
(and these religious fanatics are a<lb/>
minority � contrary to whatever<lb/>
they shout about 150 million follow-<lb/>
ers) it's both an embodiment and<lb/>
desecration of the American dream.<lb/>
It's great that the common people<lb/>
have the power to change things. It's<lb/>
a shame it's over something so igno-<lb/>
rant and irrelevant.<lb/>
So, reluctantly, I decided to write<lb/>
this editorial. I haven't seen the<lb/>
movie yet. I really have no business<lb/>
writing about a motion picture I<lb/>
haven't except for the fact that the<lb/>
reason I haven't seen it is because I<lb/>
was denied the chance to see it.<lb/>
Unless I were to travel to Raleigh,<lb/>
Richmond, Charlotte or any other<lb/>
large city, I don't stand a chance of<lb/>
Nixon no Nostradamus<lb/>
are the ones most children are indoc- seeing it. Unless it comes out on<lb/>
trir ated in at school and home. No home video in a few months,<lb/>
other options are ever explored �"if In which case the video store will<lb/>
it was good enough for me, its good probably be pressured into not<lb/>
enough for the voung'uns selling the film. The whole contro-<lb/>
No efforts are made to expose versy will start right back up again,<lb/>
children to other ways of believing Don't these people have anything<lb/>
or thinking. Thus they grow up and better to do with their time?<lb/>
perpetuate the cycle. So, at the end of my editorial, I<lb/>
What relation is this editorial to found myself wanting a quote that<lb/>
the controversial film? The movie is<lb/>
just the latest in a long line of secu-<lb/>
lar-religious battles. And they all<lb/>
center on the same basic things �<lb/>
summed up this madness. Some-<lb/>
thing that might even open up these<lb/>
zealotseyes and make them think a<lb/>
liftle. Something to help them see<lb/>
people trying to tell other people how life really is, something to save<lb/>
what to think and believe. them from their petty, ignorant<lb/>
Conservative groups have tried lives,<lb/>
everything possible to halt the re- Then I remembered that's what<lb/>
lease of the movie. In many places Jesus had been trying to do. Perhaps<lb/>
they have succeeded � especially the real "last temptation" is decid-<lb/>
here in the Bible Belt. ing to live  and die  for yourself<lb/>
If a paranoid minoritv can do this and not everyone else.<lb/>
By ANDREW SULLIVAN<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
"You won't have Nixon to kick around anymore<lb/>
Richard Nixon, November 1962.<lb/>
The Machiavclli of the White House has become<lb/>
the Nostradamus of New Jersey. Richard Nixon is<lb/>
not merelu back, he's turned clairvoyant. Since 1982<lb/>
Nixon has been seer to presidents, campaign manag-<lb/>
ers and TV pundits, not to mention the reading<lb/>
public.<lb/>
To the dedicated Nixonologist, the ex-president's<lb/>
statesmanlike ones, a.k.a. meditations on the pain-<lb/>
fully obvious. And then there arc thcquasi-mystie.il,<lb/>
inspirational ones, which, for the sake of precision,<lb/>
we'll characterize as factually wrong.<lb/>
The "painfully obvious" category is quintessen-<lb/>
tially Nixonian. Take the July 14 Nixon memo to the<lb/>
Bush camp. It contained the razor-sharp observa-<lb/>
tions that the Dukakis-Bentscn ticket made Texas a<lb/>
key electoral battleground; that three possibk- eon-<lb/>
tenders for the Bush vice presidential slot were jack<lb/>
Kemp, Bob Dole and George Deukmejian; and that<lb/>
of the two men on the Democratic ticket, "one is tall,<lb/>
the other is short<lb/>
In 1984 Nixon wrote a similar memo to the Reagan<lb/>
camp. That time he really went out on a limb: "As<lb/>
of today, one week before the election, it can safely be<lb/>
predicted that Reagan will win with a landslide<lb/>
Nixon's examination of Edward Kennedy's for-<lb/>
tunes exemplifies the "factually wrong" prediction.<lb/>
Ineffective teachers spark anger in student<lb/>
��. .  �.j � n: iI 7 ,<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
What can we do about ineffective<lb/>
teachers? It appears from my experi-<lb/>
ence that the administrators of this<lb/>
school don't care about students'<lb/>
educational needs. 1 have talked to<lb/>
everyone in the "chain of command"<lb/>
except the chancellor. Dr. Eakin.<lb/>
Last semester I took a class, with a<lb/>
certain instructor. The man is totally<lb/>
ineffective as a teacher. I had an A<lb/>
average, in my third semester of the<lb/>
class and cannot speak, read or write<lb/>
the language, 1 think there is a funda-<lb/>
mental problem with a course where<lb/>
a student can make an A and not have<lb/>
learned anything.<lb/>
I talked with other students in the<lb/>
class to see if they had similar com-<lb/>
plaints about his instructional meth-<lb/>
ods � preparation of material, pres-<lb/>
entation to the class, means of assess-<lb/>
ing student comprehension (grad-<lb/>
ing), and suitability of textbooks. We<lb/>
ALL agreed that Hie teacher has a<lb/>
good knowledge of the language, but<lb/>
that he is entirely incapable of trans-<lb/>
mitting his knowledge to students in<lb/>
a manner that they can understand.<lb/>
We had to buy four books for the<lb/>
class. We used only ONE of them; I<lb/>
spent quite a lot of money for books<lb/>
that were never used in the course. I<lb/>
spoke with the teacher last semester<lb/>
about his intimidating manner when<lb/>
a student had a question to ask. His<lb/>
response was that students now are<lb/>
weak and timid because they have no<lb/>
military experience. He rejected my<lb/>
suggestion that changing times re-<lb/>
quire different teaching methods.<lb/>
He also made comments during<lb/>
class that many of the women in the<lb/>
class regarded as sexist. Duringoneof<lb/>
his 'lectures" on the verb tense sys-<lb/>
tem, he spent 50 minutcsconfusing us<lb/>
on tenses. I went into class under-<lb/>
standing the tense system and came<lb/>
out bewildered. Later that day, I ex-<lb/>
plained in 10 minutes to one of my<lb/>
fellow students what it had taken him<lb/>
50 minutes to try to explain (unsuc-<lb/>
cessfully).<lb/>
After two semesters of this type of<lb/>
instruction, I talked with the teacher<lb/>
hn,ifr tho rial's problems with his<lb/>
teaching methods. He refused to con-<lb/>
sider my discussion seriously. I next<lb/>
went to the head of the department.<lb/>
He listened politely and sympatheti-<lb/>
cally, and made it quite clear that he<lb/>
intended to do nothing. I next went to<lb/>
the Dean of the college oi Arts and<lb/>
Sciences, Dr. Eugene Ryan.<lb/>
In Company with other students,<lb/>
we discussed our greivances with Dr.<lb/>
Ryan. He also listened sympatheti-<lb/>
cally. He also did nothing. When I<lb/>
went into the next class this semester,<lb/>
who did I see standing in front of the<lb/>
class? The same teacher!<lb/>
I am now dropping the course,<lb/>
rather than wasting my money and<lb/>
time sitting in a classroom with an<lb/>
incompetent teacher. There are three<lb/>
other teachers in the department who<lb/>
are qualified to teach the course. After<lb/>
an entire class complains about a<lb/>
teacher, one would think the school<lb/>
might consider assigning one of them<lb/>
to teach the class. Apparently, ECU<lb/>
docs not give a damn about whether<lb/>
or not students have an able instruc-<lb/>
tor in the class � it just isn't really<lb/>
important if we receive quality in-<lb/>
struction or not,aslongas they can list<lb/>
in the catalog that they offer the class<lb/>
as a course.<lb/>
This teacher has tenure. With no tie-<lb/>
in to a review board, tenure allows<lb/>
incompetent teachers to continue in<lb/>
the same capacity. With tenure, the<lb/>
evaluations we do each semester<lb/>
have absolutely no impact on the<lb/>
teacher's job status, pay scale, or mail<lb/>
raises. This should be changed.<lb/>
There is no greivance committee<lb/>
that I know of that can judge in the<lb/>
instances. Going through the proper<lb/>
channels does no good. If we expect<lb/>
decent instruction, where are we to go<lb/>
when that is not given?<lb/>
Larry Bellis<lb/>
Grad. Student,<lb/>
History<lb/>
No to Dukakis<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
If you're planning to vote for Mike<lb/>
Dukakis in November, please read on.<lb/>
Firm of all if�hPrPPyprwasa'Mas-<lb/>
sachusctts Miracle it occurred in<lb/>
spite of Dukakis, not because of him.<lb/>
The economic recovery that came to<lb/>
Massachusetts in the late seventies and<lb/>
early eighties was due to Proposition 2<lb/>
12, a major 1980 tax cut, and large<lb/>
defense contracts that resulted from<lb/>
Reagan's defense buildup. Dukakis<lb/>
opposed both.<lb/>
This economic recovery continued<lb/>
until Dukakis returned to the<lb/>
governor's chair in 1983. He had been<lb/>
thrown out of office in 1978 because he<lb/>
had promised not to raise taxes but<lb/>
raised them anyway � by $650 mil-<lb/>
lion, the largest tax increase in Mass.<lb/>
history.<lb/>
And Dukakis, because of his huge<lb/>
spending and taxing sprees, has in five<lb/>
years ruined Massachusetts' economy.<lb/>
In June 1986, Massachusetts still had,<lb/>
as a result of the 1978-1983 recovery, a<lb/>
cash surplus of $912 million. By June<lb/>
1988, Dukakis had helped create a cash<lb/>
deficit of over $500 million! Small<lb/>
wonder that Massachusetts' voters, by<lb/>
more than a 2-to-l margin, think<lb/>
Dukakis has been bad for the state's<lb/>
economy.<lb/>
Since 1984, Massachusetts has lost<lb/>
over 90,000 industrial jobs, down 13,<lb/>
while the nation gained 27c! Job<lb/>
growth in Massachusetts ranks 33rd in<lb/>
the nation. Since 1983, Dukakis has<lb/>
raised state spending 62, the highest<lb/>
of any state.<lb/>
Jack Flood, democratic chairman of<lb/>
the Massachusetts House Taxation<lb/>
Committee says: "Dukakishas been on<lb/>
the wrong side of every major eco-<lb/>
nomic policy issue. We're right now<lb/>
driving business out of Massachusetts,<lb/>
because Dukakis has overspent so<lb/>
much. Business leaders know taxes are<lb/>
going to have to rise again to cover the<lb/>
current mess.<lb/>
"Three years ago, there was a $1 bil-<lb/>
lion surplus. We spent it all, and now<lb/>
we're borrowing just to meet current<lb/>
payrolls. And not only has this been<lb/>
the worst spending spree in Massachu-<lb/>
setts history, we have almost nothing<lb/>
to show for it in better services<lb/>
The Associated Industries of Massa-<lb/>
chusetts, May 20,1988: "Dukakis has<lb/>
abandoned pro-growth policies<lb/>
Richaid Voke, Democrat and Choir-<lb/>
man of the Mass. House Ways and<lb/>
Means Committee: "There hasn't<lb/>
been any will to control spending in<lb/>
Dukakis' administration for at least<lb/>
five years<lb/>
The colossal failure of "Dutaxus"<lb/>
economic policies is yet another<lb/>
example of the failure of tax-and-<lb/>
spend liberalism. The ultimate ex-<lb/>
ample of such liberal failure is the<lb/>
huge federal deficit, created and<lb/>
maintained by liberal Democrats in<lb/>
Congress, not President Reagan!<lb/>
Dukakis claims that, if he's<lb/>
elected, his administration will be<lb/>
free of corruption and sleaze. "In<lb/>
contrast to Reagan's administra-<lb/>
tion he boasted recently, "I have<lb/>
maintained a high standard of ethi-<lb/>
cal conduct in my (Mass.) admini-<lb/>
stration That, my friends, is a bold-<lb/>
face lie.<lb/>
A partial list of unethical conduct<lb/>
in Dukakis' administration:<lb/>
Dukakis awarded a consulting con-<lb/>
tract for $275,000 for Dukakis' cam-<lb/>
paign; a member of Dukakis' cabinet<lb/>
voted to give a $3.7 million Lew-<lb/>
interest loan to a housing project in<lb/>
his own wife's name; Dukakis' edu-<lb/>
cation advisor is in prison for giving<lb/>
away $80,000 in bogus consulting<lb/>
contracts; Dukakis' choice to head<lb/>
the Metropolitan District Police<lb/>
Commission is in prison for stealing<lb/>
and selling police exams and answer<lb/>
sheets; Dukakis' number-two man<lb/>
in public safety was forced to resign<lb/>
after FBI documents revealed his ties<lb/>
to a convicted loan shark; Dukakis<lb/>
appointed a man to a $54,000-a-ycar<lb/>
college professorship who had paid<lb/>
$10,000 in hush money to the family<lb/>
of one student and settled out of<lb/>
court a suit brought by the family of<lb/>
another suit, etc etc.<lb/>
And where was George Bush<lb/>
during all this? Well, Mr. Teddy<lb/>
"Chappaquiddick" Kennedy, he<lb/>
was dry, sober, and home with his<lb/>
wife!<lb/>
Justin Sturz<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
English Journalism<lb/>
In October 1982, a Nixon premonition had it that<lb/>
"Edward Kennedy will be the 1QS4 Democral<lb/>
nominee, with Glenn possible<lb/>
Two years later, in a Reagan memo, he changed his<lb/>
mind: "Most people will disagree with my conclu-<lb/>
sion that as tar as Teddy Kennedy is concerned the<lb/>
train has left the station <lb/>
still, you never know. By early 19SS Kennedy h<lb/>
become "the least discussed and most logical candi-<lb/>
date for a draft suggested Nixon in The Lone!<lb/>
Sunday Times.<lb/>
Nixon's London column, engineered by his friend<lb/>
Rupert Murdoch, is a gold mine for Nixonologi -<lb/>
In seven months as special commentator on the U -<lb/>
campaign, Nixon has gotten virtually everything<lb/>
wrong.<lb/>
In February he predicted a serious Kemp surge in<lb/>
New 1 lampshire. In March he foresaw that after<lb/>
Super Tuesday, "Bob Dole can make it a race by<lb/>
winning California's winner-take-all primary on<lb/>
June 6 land that Pat Robertson will have enough<lb/>
d( legates in influence the platform<lb/>
I le also ventured that "Michael Dukakis and Rich-<lb/>
ard Gephardt will be the only serious Democratic<lb/>
hopefuls Nixon believed a deadlocked Democratic<lb/>
convention was a "very likely event He argued<lb/>
two weeks later that "Republicans can relish spend-<lb/>
ing the next four months watching Michael Dukakis,<lb/>
Al Gore, Richard Gephardt and Paul Simon cut each<lb/>
other to ribbons<lb/>
For Nixon, staving on the cutting analytic edge<lb/>
sometimes calls for rapid repositioning. On Feb.14<lb/>
he predicted that "Jesse Jackson will be strong by the<lb/>
convention that he is not going to be fobbed off by<lb/>
being put in charge of the anti-drug program O:<lb/>
March 20, though, he wrote that "there was never a<lb/>
chance that the Democrats would have put Jackson<lb/>
on the ticket But once Jackson won the Michigan<lb/>
primary, he became "the most effective candidate<lb/>
since Teddy Roosevelt<lb/>
In March, Nixon predicted that "Dukakis would<lb/>
be guaranteed a loss in November In April he<lb/>
ventured that "the only ticket that has a chance in<lb/>
November is Dukakis-Nunn After the Atlanta<lb/>
convention, with the Democrats enjoying a double-<lb/>
digit lead in the polls, Nixon seems to have changed<lb/>
his mind. At a recent dinner party he is reported to<lb/>
have said that Bush will be decisively defeated.<lb/>
Nixon's record is no better on global than on<lb/>
national matters. Three years before Gorbachev<lb/>
pulled the troops out of Afghanistan, Nixon pre-<lb/>
dicted, "He will be tough in keeping what he has; he<lb/>
can't risk sing any part of the Soviet empire he has<lb/>
inherited As late'as 19S8, in his much-hyped book<lb/>
"1999, Victory Without War Nixon still held that<lb/>
the Afghan invasion was "bold but well-studied<lb/>
gambit" and that Moscow "took the decision to<lb/>
intervene as coolly as a master chess player<lb/>
In Novemb 1982 Nixon asserted thai there<lb/>
u uukJ be a Middle East war if Israeli prime minister<lb/>
Mcnachcm Begin did not agree to a self-governing<lb/>
Palestinian state. Begin didn't and there wasn't.<lb/>
Nixon noted in April 1986 that "Korea is being<lb/>
l.orain �!ed as a likely candidate for American inter-<lb/>
vention to bring about a change of leadership And.<lb/>
he warned, "comparisons to the Philippines are<lb/>
superficial and inaccurate There is not yet a viable<lb/>
alternative to the Chun government Within a year<lb/>
Chun had stepped down in favor of a viable, demo<lb/>
cratically elected alternative.<lb/>
Even on the little things, Nixon gets it wrong. He<lb/>
predicted that because of the recession, 1982 would<lb/>
be bad, but 1984 would be "a great year for our<lb/>
Republican candidates In fact, Republicans did<lb/>
worse in the Senate in 19S4 than in 1982.<lb/>
In December 1986 Nixon predicted that "a summit<lb/>
will take place in Washington in spring 1987 It took<lb/>
place in December.<lb/>
In 1984 Nixon predicted that "the Reagan margin<lb/>
couldbeaslow as 11 percent or as high as 19 percent,<lb/>
but I sense 15 percent is closer to the mark Actu-<lb/>
ally, it was 18. The same year Nixon told Reagan,<lb/>
"You will win a decisive victory in the electoral vote<lb/>
approaching the one you achieved in 1980 Sure<lb/>
enough, Reagan beat it.<lb/>
Fifteen days before he submitted his resignation a<lb/>
president, Nixon mused o.i tape that Watergate<lb/>
was "the thinnest scandal in American history He<lb/>
went on to predict, with all the certainty Nixonolo-<lb/>
gists have come to treasure: "I will survive it<lb/>
Sting op<lb/>
for poacj<lb/>
KNOXVIl<lb/>
Wildlife ofl , nu<lb/>
undercover<lb/>
in indictn<lb/>
inspired wl<lb/>
black bear .<lb/>
poaching b<lb/>
oral years,<lb/>
"We've !<lb/>
the well?<lb/>
sud Car ' '<lb/>
tor of the !<lb/>
soun sAj<lb/>
ence Tuc -d<lb/>
vi the undei<lb/>
The di<lb/>
poachii<lb/>
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bear ; irl<lb/>
ders, t � �<lb/>
dicinal<lb/>
Ofl<lb/>
Carolin i<lb/>
Fish and '<lb/>
ranged I<lb/>
�<lb/>
atton<lb/>
N.C ai I<lb/>
began n il<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Tim I i �<lb/>
said t! ,<lb/>
with n<lb/>
state ; ' H<lb/>
IK r.<lb/>
Ten:<lb/>
arrested I<lb/>
additioi<lb/>
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tew w eks '<lb/>
are against<lb/>
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lachians s- .<lb/>
Orphanage<lb/>
charges, 1<lb/>
OXFORD "<lb/>
Attorney Da<lb/>
the Mate C<lb/>
low record<lb/>
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David Ra .<lb/>
charges ot i<lb/>
ties w ill<lb/>
You<lb/>
We Oil<lb/>
Camera<lb/>
Photofinis<lb/>
48 Hour<lb/>
24 Hour<lb/>
Nikon an<lb/>
A Complel<lb/>
Film Eqj<lb/>
Kodak, A1<lb/>
ortfl<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0005"/><lb/>
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virtually everything<lb/>
i serious Kemp surge in<lb/>
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chad Dukakis and Rich-<lb/>
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event He argued<lb/>
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tnd Paul Simon cut each<lb/>
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pid repositioning. On Feb.14<lb/>
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� thai th.re was never a<lb/>
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I be decisively defeated.<lb/>
better on global than on<lb/>
hrce years before Gorbachev<lb/>
f Afghanistan, Nixon pre-<lb/>
in keeping what he has; he<lb/>
part of the Soviet empire he has<lb/>
 in his much-hyped book<lb/>
out War Nixon still held that<lb/>
n was "bold but well-studied<lb/>
Moscow "took the decision to<lb/>
master chess player<lb/>
32 Nixon asserted that there<lb/>
ast war if Israeli prime minister<lb/>
d not agree to a self-governing<lb/>
didn't and there wasn't.<lb/>
,pnl 1986 that "Korea is being<lb/>
: .late for American inter-<lb/>
hange of leadership And,<lb/>
arisons to ihe Philippines are<lb/>
urate  There is not yet a viable<lb/>
un government Within a year<lb/>
n in favor of a viable, demo-<lb/>
I ings, Nixon gets it wrong. He<lb/>
1 e of the recession, 1982 would<lb/>
ild be "a great year for our<lb/>
' In fact, Republicans did<lb/>
in 1 �� than in 1962.<lb/>
mi Nixon predicted that "a summit<lb/>
ngton in spring 1987 It took<lb/>
ted that "the Reagan margin<lb/>
11 percent or as high as 19 percent,<lb/>
Jccntis closer to the mark Actu-<lb/>
� same year Nixon told Reagan,<lb/>
e victory in the electoral vote<lb/>
ne you achieved in 1980 Sure<lb/>
at it.<lb/>
.re he submitted his resignation a<lb/>
mused o.i tape) that Watergate<lb/>
scandal in American history He<lb/>
:t. with all the certainty Nixonolo-<lb/>
o treasure. "I will survive it<lb/>
TI IF FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1988 5<lb/>
Sting operation indicts 43<lb/>
for poaching black bear<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -<lb/>
Wildlife officials say a massive<lb/>
undercover operation, resulting<lb/>
in indictments of 43 people, was<lb/>
inspired when the danger to the<lb/>
black bear population from<lb/>
poaching became apparent sev-<lb/>
eral years ago.<lb/>
"We've been concerned about<lb/>
the welfare of the bears forycars<lb/>
said Gary Myers, executive direc-<lb/>
tor of the Tennessee Wildlife Re-<lb/>
sources Agency, at a news confer-<lb/>
ence Tuesday announcing results<lb/>
of the undercover operation.<lb/>
The driving force behind the<lb/>
poaching apparently was the de-<lb/>
mand among Orientals for certain<lb/>
bear parts, especially gall blad-<lb/>
ders, for the organs' alleged me-<lb/>
dicinal and aphrodisiac qualities.<lb/>
Officials from Tennessee, North<lb/>
Carolina, Georgia and the U.S.<lb/>
Fish and Wildlife Service ar<lb/>
ranged the operation.<lb/>
Warrants were issued by U.S.<lb/>
attorneys in Knoxville, Asheville,<lb/>
N.C and Atlanta, and agents<lb/>
began making arrests early Tues-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Tim 1 lergenrader of the I WRA<lb/>
said the 43 people are charged<lb/>
with more than 130 federal and<lb/>
.tate violations.<lb/>
Hcrgenrader said eight of nine<lb/>
Tcnnesseans charged had been<lb/>
arrested by midday, and that An<lb/>
additional 20 or so arrests are<lb/>
expected in Tennessee in the next<lb/>
few weeks. Most of the warrants<lb/>
are against North Carolinians.<lb/>
One suspect is a Georgian.<lb/>
Officials estimate the black bear<lb/>
�population in the southern Appa-<lb/>
lachians is about 2,000 animals,<lb/>
which are threatened already by a<lb/>
loss of habitat. Areas in public<lb/>
lands, both state and federal, are<lb/>
set aside as bear habitat where<lb/>
hunting is prohibited.<lb/>
Hefgenrader said some of the<lb/>
bears were legitimately killed.<lb/>
But he said it is illegal to sell any<lb/>
part of a bear no matter how or<lb/>
where it is killed.<lb/>
During the three-year under-<lb/>
cover operation agents bought<lb/>
266 gall bladders, which Hcrgen-<lb/>
rader said are dried and used as a<lb/>
powder believed by some Orien-<lb/>
tals to enhance health, virility,<lb/>
sexual drive and potency.<lb/>
Agents also bought 85 claws, 77<lb/>
feet, four heads, nine hides and<lb/>
one live cub. Hcrgenrader said<lb/>
there is a domestic as well as inter-<lb/>
national market for some of the<lb/>
bear parts, especially claws,<lb/>
which are used to make jewelry,<lb/>
and heads, which are used as tro-<lb/>
phies.<lb/>
Officials brought a display of<lb/>
the contraband to the news con-<lb/>
ference, including several plastic<lb/>
food bags each containing one<lb/>
ea!l bladder.<lb/>
I lergenrader said many bear<lb/>
poachers would use the whole<lb/>
animal, but that undercover<lb/>
agents occasionally found bear<lb/>
carcasses from which only the gall<lb/>
bladder and claws had been re-<lb/>
moved.<lb/>
Tennessee lias a two-week<lb/>
hunting season for bears in mid-<lb/>
winter, which was timed to mini-<lb/>
mize the impact of hunting on the<lb/>
bear population. Pregnant fe-<lb/>
males usually have begun long<lb/>
periods of sleep by then and so are<lb/>
less likely to become prey, Myers<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Myers said studies of the black<lb/>
bears were made years ago be-<lb/>
cause the population appeared to<lb/>
be dwindling. "We decided we<lb/>
were driving our black bear popu-<lb/>
lation to extinction he said.<lb/>
Further studies indicated that<lb/>
poaching accounted for half or<lb/>
more of the annual deaths of the<lb/>
bears, he said, and led to the<lb/>
undercover operation.<lb/>
Myers said the state considered<lb/>
more restrictive laws but decided<lb/>
that would punish legitimate<lb/>
hunters without curtailing poach-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
I Ic described the poachers as "a<lb/>
loose, informal network of people<lb/>
who knew who you needed to see<lb/>
if you want bear gall bladders<lb/>
Officials said the bears were<lb/>
killed by various means, from<lb/>
rifles to snares. Some of the bears<lb/>
were killed in the Great Smoky<lb/>
Mountains National Park, where<lb/>
hunting of any kind is prohibited,<lb/>
as well as on other public lands on<lb/>
which bear hunting is banned.<lb/>
Myers said the operation was<lb/>
the largest of its kind in Tennessee<lb/>
in at least 14 years.<lb/>
Those arrested were cited un-<lb/>
der the Lacey Act, which prohib-<lb/>
its the interstate transportation of<lb/>
illegally taken game, and the<lb/>
Migratory Bird Treaty Act.<lb/>
A Lacev Act violation carries a<lb/>
J<lb/>
maximum penalty of five years in<lb/>
prison and fines up to $20,000. A<lb/>
conviction for conspiracy carries a<lb/>
five year prison term and up to<lb/>
$10,000 in fines.<lb/>
Annual I7K<lb/>
Tog<lb/>
with<lb/>
Band<lb/>
of Oz<lb/>
and<lb/>
180 Pro�<lb/>
Orphanage superintendent faces indicent liberties<lb/>
charges, D.A. wants to use previous record<lb/>
OXFORD, N.C (AP) - District<lb/>
Attorney I )avid R. Waters will ak<lb/>
the state Court of Appeals to al-<lb/>
low records of a previous convic-<lb/>
tion to be admitted as evidence in<lb/>
the trial oi a former superinten-<lb/>
dent of the Oxford Orphanage.<lb/>
David Ralph Moul faces seven<lb/>
charges of taking indecent liber-<lb/>
ties with children while lie was<lb/>
superintendent at the orphanage, lowed a motion Friday by defense<lb/>
His trial, scheduled for Monday attorney to suppress the introduc-<lb/>
in (ran illc Superiorourt, was<lb/>
delayed until the appeals court<lb/>
makes a ruling on admission of<lb/>
cvid( nee froma May 1973com ic-<lb/>
tion in Lancaster, Neb on a<lb/>
charge of contributing to the need<lb/>
for supervision of a minor.<lb/>
udce<lb/>
EMBLEM<lb/>
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TICKETS ON SALE IN FRONT OF THE STUDENT<lb/>
STORE MON. - THURS. <lb/>
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microwave, tanning beds, pool, hot tub<lb/>
and much more  Call Stacy at 355-5610<lb/>
before 2 p.m. ASAP.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: to share 2 bed<lb/>
room trailer 6 12 miles from campus.<lb/>
S95mo. 12 utilities. Only responsible<lb/>
people apply, please. Call 752-6433.<lb/>
GIVE OUR LANDLORD THE AX<lb/>
Purchase your own 3 bedroom home for<lb/>
as little as S145 a month! Call Gail at 756-<lb/>
9S74!<lb/>
APT FOR RENT: Located 3 blocks from<lb/>
campus, low rent, great location. Call<lb/>
Luke or Steve for more details. 830-0339.<lb/>
ROOM &amp; BOARD AVAILABLE: near<lb/>
cmapus, for female non-smokeTwork<lb/>
exchange. Call 757-1798.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: S165 per month.<lb/>
Utilities included. Near ECU campus.<lb/>
Call 758-1274 after 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dorm room size couch �<lb/>
folds out into a bed and a bookcase. Call<lb/>
758-9600.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Double bed mattress and<lb/>
boxspring S100. Supersingle waterbed,<lb/>
everthing included $100. Call 830-0898.<lb/>
SNAKE FOR SALE: 4 12 foot Boll Py-<lb/>
thon. Very tame, cage, water bowl &amp; heat<lb/>
rock incl.SlOO Jim at 752-1815.<lb/>
LOFT AND SMALL REFRIGERATOR:<lb/>
for sale. Call 758-5581.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Single bed-mattress, box<lb/>
springs, and fram. In great condition! Call<lb/>
Rich at 752-0661 for details.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Oceanfront, beautiful Myrtle<lb/>
Beach condo, RCI timeshare property. Buy<lb/>
this low season week at a very reasonable<lb/>
price and enjoy excellent worldwide ex-<lb/>
changes through RCI any time of the year.<lb/>
You may decide to use it for rentals or for<lb/>
a quiet week at the beach yourself! Call<lb/>
756-7846 for details after 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Queen size sofa bed; refin-<lb/>
ished oak table, easy chair; long table; 2 end<lb/>
talbles; twin bed frame. 355-4717.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Televidco 64K Computer<lb/>
Model TS-803, CPM Operating System<lb/>
(With GSX), 14-inch Monochrome Moni-<lb/>
tor, Two Built-in Double Sided 5 14 Inch<lb/>
Floppy Disk Drives (Each disk holds 368.6<lb/>
K), Okidata Microline 82A Dot-Matrix<lb/>
Printer With Tractor Feed and Extra Rib-<lb/>
bons Includes Tele-Solutions-80 Soft-<lb/>
ware Package (Word Processing, Business<lb/>
Planning, and business Graphics), Also<lb/>
Included is a Property Management Pro-<lb/>
gram as Well as a Demo Utility, CPU I las<lb/>
a Keypad on its Right Side and Function<lb/>
Keys at the Top as Well as Ports For a<lb/>
Printer, Modem, and Mouse. This com-<lb/>
puter system is around eight years old and<lb/>
originally cost over $3000! The system is in<lb/>
perfect operating condition. We have ex-<lb/>
panded our system so this one must go! We<lb/>
are asking S450 or best offer. To inquire,<lb/>
call Remco East at 758-6061.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1978 Nova, Automatic, Power<lb/>
Steering, AC &amp; New Tires $800. Call 756-<lb/>
8692 or 523-8354 (Kinston).<lb/>
RUSTIC HARD-WOOD FRAME<lb/>
FURNITURE: for sale � In good shape!<lb/>
Price negotiable Call 757-1635.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
PARTY: If you're having a party and need<lb/>
a D.J. for the best music available for par-<lb/>
ties � Dance, Top 40, &amp; Beach. Call 355-<lb/>
2781 and ask for Morgan.<lb/>
HAVE A COMPLIMENTARY GLAM-<lb/>
OUR MAKEOVER: to help you look your<lb/>
best. For information and appointment<lb/>
with Mary Kay consultant call 752-9129.<lb/>
SCHOOLS IN: Time to party! Call us for<lb/>
your music needs. We'll beat all prices and<lb/>
videotape your party. The Power Station<lb/>
DJ's. 752-0946.<lb/>
ECU PARTY PEOPLE: let the parties be-<lb/>
gin! But don't start until you call sound<lb/>
mixtures D.J. Service. Party music catered<lb/>
by Greeks, for Creoles; we know what<lb/>
ya'll like! Call now for more info. 752-<lb/>
4916, Bob. You won't be disappointed!<lb/>
SCHOOLS IN: Time to party! Call us for<lb/>
your music needs. We'll beat all prices and<lb/>
videotape your party. The Power Station<lb/>
DJ's 752-0940.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
NEEDED: Soccer coaches. Must be<lb/>
available Tuesday's and Thursday's<lb/>
after 2:00 p.m. Starting salary $5 per<lb/>
hour. For more information contact Rita<lb/>
Roy, Pitt County Community Schools at<lb/>
830-4216.<lb/>
SUNNY SIDE EGGS INC is now ac<lb/>
ccpting applications for responsible col-<lb/>
lege students who wish to earn while<lb/>
they learn. Apply in person at our main<lb/>
office on State Road 1708 or call 756-<lb/>
4187.<lb/>
NEEDED: Students interested in ba-<lb/>
bysitting on week-ends. Must have<lb/>
transportation. Call Mrs. Dunn at 355-<lb/>
6852.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Part-time college stu-<lb/>
dent. Apply in person, Larry's Carpet-<lb/>
land, 3010 E. 10th Street.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Experienced with<lb/>
riding mowers, string weed trimmer. 30<lb/>
hours month doing grass work. Hours<lb/>
flexible $4 hr. start, $5 when trained.<lb/>
Driver's license 830-1882.<lb/>
NEEDED: Part-time, outside sales &amp;<lb/>
counter rep, Three afternoons per week.<lb/>
apply in Person: Budget Rent-a-Car,<lb/>
10th Street.<lb/>
ARE YOU A COLLEGE STUDENT: or<lb/>
faculty member looking for part-time<lb/>
employment? Are you enthusiastic, de-<lb/>
pendable, and excited about working in<lb/>
a fashion environment? If you are sin-<lb/>
cere about working &amp; have a flexible<lb/>
schedule, apply in person, Brody's,<lb/>
Carolina East Mall, M-W, 2-4 p.m.<lb/>
HTLP WANTED: Laundromat atten-<lb/>
dant mornings and evenings. For more<lb/>
info call 752-5222.<lb/>
BRODY'S FOR MEN: is looking for<lb/>
conscientious, part-time associates who<lb/>
arc personable, responsible, and fashion<lb/>
forward. Must enjoy people and be able<lb/>
to work flexible hours. Apply in person.<lb/>
Brody's, Carolina East Mall, M-W, 2-4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN: now accepting<lb/>
applications for all positions. Apply<lb/>
alter 2 p.m.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: AEROBIC IN-<lb/>
STRUCTORS NEEDED. Apply in per-<lb/>
son this this week at The Spa.<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED: Inter-<lb/>
ested in making money part-time pho-<lb/>
tographing people? No experience nec-<lb/>
essary; we train. If you arc highly so-<lb/>
ciable, have 35 mm camera and trans-<lb/>
portation, give us a call between 12 noon<lb/>
and 5 p.m. M-F at 1-800-722-7033.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS: Also Cruiseshops.<lb/>
$10,000 - $105,000vr! Now 1 tiring! 320<lb/>
Listings! (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. OJ-1166.<lb/>
"HIRING! Federal government jobs in<lb/>
your area and overseas. Many immediatf<lb/>
openings without waiting list or test. $1 -<lb/>
68,000. Phone call refundable. (602) 838-<lb/>
8885. Ext. 5285<lb/>
COLLEGE REP WANTED: to work 5-15<lb/>
hours per week on campus starting Fall<lb/>
term. Good income. For information and<lb/>
application write to: Collegiate Market-<lb/>
ing Services, 251 Glenwood Drive,<lb/>
Mooresvillc, NC 28115.<lb/>
WANTED: College student for occ.i<lb/>
sional work, must have own pick up<lb/>
truck. If interested, please call 756-9874<lb/>
M-F, 9-5.<lb/>
FREE HAWAIIAN TRIP: could be<lb/>
yours! World's largest party plan com-<lb/>
pany hiring demonstrators. Excellent<lb/>
pay, bonuses! Free $300 kit; supplies. No<lb/>
investment, collecting or delivering. Call<lb/>
Chellc 758-6141.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU: Welcome back you<lb/>
guys. 1 lope ya'll had a great summer Get<lb/>
psyched for a jamm'in semester with<lb/>
your hi' sisters.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU LIL' SISTERS: MAN<lb/>
DATORY meeting for those planning to<lb/>
active this semester; at J-5 Wilson Acres<lb/>
Thursday Aug 25 at 9.00. For more info<lb/>
call Lori at 355-7158 or Amanda 3t 53<lb/>
9006.<lb/>
WELCOME BACK OX: Meet at the 1 lub<lb/>
tonight at 8 p.m Let's get ready for an<lb/>
awesome year and plan for our charter in<lb/>
October! the Rev.<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Mark O Brier Y U<lb/>
are finally 19 (you infant) I lope you enjoy<lb/>
your cake! Grecr.<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA: wants to welcome ba.k<lb/>
all stew and stew runners. Come over to<lb/>
the weekly Thursday late night, right<lb/>
after the Pi Kappa Phi Toga Party.<lb/>
WANTED: used filing cabinet, 4 or 5<lb/>
drawer metal or wood, decent condition,<lb/>
75S-6998.<lb/>
THE BROTHERS OF PHI KAPPA TAL:<lb/>
. u!d like to welcome everyone back<lb/>
1 tope you had a great summer.<lb/>
-i'MWJIVi<lb/>
Sandwiches ft Salads<lb/>
Helpwanted!<lb/>
In Store and<lb/>
Delivery-<lb/>
Drivers. Good<lb/>
Pay, Flexible<lb/>
Hours,<lb/>
Part-time and<lb/>
Full Time. <lb/>
BUDGET TIRE<lb/>
&amp; SERVICE<lb/>
7620 N. Creene Street<lb/>
Save S when you need &amp; tire - go<lb/>
used instead of new.<lb/>
We have GOOD used tires - all<lb/>
sizes - Low profile, high perform-<lb/>
ance, regular street tread, a few<lb/>
raised letters, and the popular<lb/>
Goodyear Eagle GT.<lb/>
BEWARE of used tires without a<lb/>
wTitten warranty. We warrantee<lb/>
our tires in writing for 3060 days,<lb/>
depending on price. On the corner<lb/>
of 1 Iwy 33 and N. Greene St. Infor-<lb/>
mation calls velcome - 830-3772<lb/>
"35; -�-�<lb/>
WELCOME BACK SPECIAL<lb/>
UP TO $300 OFF!<lb/>
Fairiane<lb/>
Farms<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
Most<lb/>
desirable<lb/>
address<lb/>
GREENVILLE RECREATION AND<lb/>
PARKS DEPARTMENT<lb/>
SOCCER COACHES NEEDED<lb/>
The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department is recruiting for<lb/>
10-14 part-time soccer coaches for the fall semester program.<lb/>
Applicants must possess some knowledge in soccer skills and<lb/>
have patience to work with youth. Applicants must be able to<lb/>
coach young people, ages 5-15 in soccer fundamentals. Hours<lb/>
approximately 3-7 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Some night and<lb/>
weekend coaching. Program will extend from September to mid<lb/>
November. Salary rate is $3.55 to $4.35 per hour. Applicants will<lb/>
be accepted starting August 20. Contact Ben James at 830-4543.<lb/>
A P A R I M k N I S<lb/>
� Two full baths in all two and three bedroom apartments<lb/>
� Patio with all first floor apartments. Private deck with<lb/>
second floor apartments. Each with sliding glass doors<lb/>
and enclosed storage room.<lb/>
� Cable T.V. available J<lb/>
� A real wood-burning fireplace in each apartment<lb/>
� Waii-to-wail carpeting; drapes for all windows, tile foyer<lb/>
� Lighted tennis court<lb/>
� Swimming pool<lb/>
� Club room<lb/>
� All energy efficient appliances<lb/>
Office Phone (919) 355-2198<lb/>
Office Hours M-F 10 a.m 6 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday 12 p.m. - 4 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday 1p.m. - 4 p.m.<lb/>
SGA Judicial<lb/>
Appointments<lb/>
Congratulations on your<lb/>
appointment to the<lb/>
Fall 1988 Judicial Board to:<lb/>
MB<lb/>
 WELCOME BACK j<lb/>
ROOMMATE SPECIAL<lb/>
Up To $30001<lb/>
! Towards tier ill �. Months Rent On A �<lb/>
12 Month Lease For A 2 BR Apartment<lb/>
Crina Kern<lb/>
Angie South<lb/>
Pat O'Neal<lb/>
Barry Nobles<lb/>
Laura Sherill<lb/>
Melissa Moore<lb/>
Blake Hfbgg<lb/>
Keith Crawford<lb/>
Liz Woolen<lb/>
Erma Dellinger<lb/>
Joy Lorrimore<lb/>
Tammy Ellis<lb/>
Kris Kellv<lb/>
J<lb/>
Alicia Thomas<lb/>
Tom Furr<lb/>
Brad Cates<lb/>
Robert Lorrison<lb/>
Bryon Stevens a<lb/>
Mandy Marlowe<lb/>
Jennifer Souther<lb/>
Mike Carlson<lb/>
There will be a mandatory training<lb/>
session Wednesday, August 31st at<lb/>
4:00 in Room 221 Mendenhall.<lb/>
If u lable to attend please contact<lb/>
Alice Harden at 758-9923.<lb/>
Please leave name and number.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SFVIORCRAD STUDENTS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement Serv-<lb/>
icc, located in the Bloxton I louse between<lb/>
Mendenhall and Creene Residence 1 lall,<lb/>
is where graduating students may put<lb/>
resumes and establish a credentials file.<lb/>
Interview sign-ups begin soon, and you<lb/>
must be registered to sign up. General In-<lb/>
formation meetings will be held Aug.<lb/>
30,31, Sept. 7 and 15 at 3p.m. and on Sept.<lb/>
7 at 7 p.m. in the Blcxton I louse.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
study for Fall Semester andor Spring<lb/>
Semester, you are encouraged to contact<lb/>
the Co-op office about off campus place-<lb/>
ments. Call 757-6979 or come by the<lb/>
General Classroom Building, Room 2028.<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
The first annual King of the I lill competi-<lb/>
tion will be held August 31 at 3.30 p.m. on<lb/>
the College Hill Recreational facilities.<lb/>
An information meeting will be held<lb/>
August 30 at 5 p.m. in Bio 103. College<lb/>
I lill Residents brign SRA cards for par-<lb/>
ticipation. Sponsored by Intramural-Rec-<lb/>
reational Services. For additional info call<lb/>
Mary Malone at 757-6387.<lb/>
FREE TICKETS<lb/>
FREE tickets to Judas Priest and Cinder-<lb/>
alla. The show is Sept. 9th at the Greens-<lb/>
boro Coliseum. Listen to the Mctalshop<lb/>
this weekend on VVZMB 91.3<lb/>
UNIVERSITY COMMITTEES<lb/>
Applications are now being accepted for<lb/>
students wishing to serve on University<lb/>
Committees for the 1988-89 school year.<lb/>
Thirty student positions are open.<lb/>
Committees with vacancies are: Alco-<lb/>
holDrug Education Committee (1),<lb/>
Residence Life and Housing Committee<lb/>
(2), Status of Minorities Committee (4),<lb/>
St3tus of Women Committee (5), Student<lb/>
Health Services Committee (3), Admis-<lb/>
sions Committee (1), Calendar Commit-<lb/>
tee (1), Career Education Committee (1),<lb/>
Continuing Education Committee (1),<lb/>
Credits Committee (1), Curriculum<lb/>
Committee (1), General College Commit-<lb/>
tee (1), Libraries Committee (1), Student<lb/>
Recruitment and Retention Committee<lb/>
(1), Teaching Effectiveness Committee<lb/>
(3), and Faculty Computer Committee<lb/>
(1). Applications are available at the fol-<lb/>
lowing locations: Office of the Vice<lb/>
Chancelor for Student Life, 204<lb/>
Whichard; Mendenhall Students Center<lb/>
Information Desk; SGA Office, Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center; and Residence 1 lall<lb/>
Director's Offices. Questions about Uni-<lb/>
versity Committees and memberships<lb/>
may be directed to the Office of the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life (757-6541).<lb/>
Applications must be turned in to 204<lb/>
Whichard Building by Sept. 1.<lb/>
CHORAL SOCIETY<lb/>
The Greenville Choral Society will begin<lb/>
rehearsals for its 19th season at 7:30 p.m<lb/>
Sept. 6. Singers interested in joining<lb/>
should audition on Sunday at St. James<lb/>
United Methodist Church, 2000 E. 6th St.<lb/>
between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. contact the<lb/>
musical director. Dr. Rhonda Fleming, at<lb/>
756-3618.<lb/>
YEARBOOK STAFF<lb/>
Staff positions are available for the fol-<lb/>
lowing positions: layout artist, business<lb/>
managers, writers and sports editors. To<lb/>
apply go by the Buccaneer office or the<lb/>
Media Board Secretary's office for appli-<lb/>
cation. We are located on the second floor<lb/>
of the Publications Building. Application<lb/>
deadline is September 2.<lb/>
FREE PIZZA<lb/>
Tuesday, 6-8 p.m. AFROTC Det �600.<lb/>
Wright Annex 3rd floor. Talk with Air<lb/>
Force officers. Find out about U.S. Air<lb/>
Force.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Student Union Forum committee. We<lb/>
make the decisions on which popular<lb/>
speakers will come and speak at ECU.<lb/>
Join us on the Forum Committee! Contact<lb/>
Student Union at 757-6611 and leave a<lb/>
message for Allen Manning to get your<lb/>
application!<lb/>
EPISCOPAL FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
ESF will meet Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. St.<lb/>
Paul's Episcopal Church on 4th Street<lb/>
(one block towards river from Garrett<lb/>
Dorm) for Holy Communion and dinner.<lb/>
Call Allen Manning for more info at 758-<lb/>
1440.<lb/>
FORENSICS SOCIETY<lb/>
Interested in competing intercollegiate<lb/>
public speaking, intern, or debate? The<lb/>
first meeting will be Wednesday in Mes-<lb/>
sick 214 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
HONORS SEMINARS<lb/>
All faculty members and I Ionors stu-<lb/>
dents are reminded of their opportunity<lb/>
to design or request an I Ionors Seminar<lb/>
of their choice. The Honors Committee<lb/>
makes the final selection. Please submit<lb/>
proposals to David Sanders (757-6373) at<lb/>
the Honors Office, Room 1002, General<lb/>
Classroom Building, by Wednesday. See<lb/>
Dr. David Sanders in the I Ionors Office<lb/>
for more info.<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSADE<lb/>
PRIME TIME � Everyone welcome. Fun,<lb/>
fellowship, teaching and training on how-<lb/>
to live a more effective Christian life on<lb/>
the college cam pus. Thursday at 7:30 pm.<lb/>
Brewster C-103.<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
The first organizational meeting of the<lb/>
school year will be September 8 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center, Room<lb/>
221. All old members and interested stu-<lb/>
dents are encounraged to attend. Come<lb/>
on out and help us defeat the 'crats in No-<lb/>
vember!<lb/>
Quayle embarks on his first campaign trip, denies allegations that he flirted with and propositioned a lobbyist<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Repub-<lb/>
lican vice presidential nominee<lb/>
Dan Quaylc is embarking on his<lb/>
first solo campaign trip, indig-<lb/>
nant about a former lobbyist's<lb/>
claim that he propositioned her<lb/>
but declaring he can put the furor<lb/>
behind him by stressing "jobs,<lb/>
peace, freedom<lb/>
The Indiana senator travels to<lb/>
Cincinnati and to Lexington, Ky<lb/>
then makes an address tonight<lb/>
before a national conference of<lb/>
enlisted National Guardsmen in<lb/>
St. Louis.<lb/>
Quayle spent Tuesday at his<lb/>
Virginia home working on his<lb/>
stump speech as new revelations<lb/>
surfaced about his entry into the<lb/>
National Guard and relationship<lb/>
with a woman lobbyist.<lb/>
As for new reports about his<lb/>
entry into the Guard and relation-<lb/>
ship with former lobbyist Paula<lb/>
Parkinson, Quayle said: 'This is<lb/>
just getting a little bit outrageous<lb/>
and I'm getting a little bit indig-<lb/>
nant about just one bum rap after<lb/>
another<lb/>
Quaylc has denied using his<lb/>
family's influence to get into the<lb/>
Indiana National Guard during<lb/>
the Vietnam War, saying that the<lb/>
Guard had openings at the time.<lb/>
Bu t a retired Indiana guard offi-<lb/>
cial acknowledged Tuesday that<lb/>
he asked the Guard personnel<lb/>
office to "hold" a space for Quayle<lb/>
after receiving a call from a<lb/>
Quaylc family friend in 1969.<lb/>
Retired Major Gen. Alfred<lb/>
Ahner, former military support<lb/>
officer for Indiana and later head<lb/>
of the state's National Guard, said<lb/>
he was contacted by an old friend,<lb/>
Wendell Phillippi, a retired<lb/>
Guard commander who then<lb/>
worked for a newspaper owned<lb/>
by Quaylc's family.<lb/>
"Wendell Phillippi had called<lb/>
and said he had a good man, and<lb/>
said he thought he'd make a good<lb/>
Guardsman Ahner said in a tele-<lb/>
phone interview from Indiana.<lb/>
After learning thre were a<lb/>
couple vacancies, "I said hold one<lb/>
of them, there's a good guy com-<lb/>
ing over he said.<lb/>
"We couldn't take him if there<lb/>
wasn't any opening Ahner said.<lb/>
He said Quayle was accepted into<lb/>
the state's headquarters unit,<lb/>
which was "pretty selective" and<lb/>
looked for recruits with intelli-<lb/>
gence and leadership potential.<lb/>
He said he "paid attention" to<lb/>
Phillippi because "he was a for-<lb/>
mer commanding general" who<lb/>
would have an eye for who might<lb/>
make a good Guardsman. Ahner<lb/>
said Quayle received no preferen-<lb/>
tial treatment during his service.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Playboy magazine<lb/>
said Tuesday and article in its No-<lb/>
vember edition includes a stste-<lb/>
ment from Ms. Parkinson that<lb/>
Quayle propositioned her during<lb/>
a trip to Florida eight years ago<lb/>
but that she rebuffed him because<lb/>
she was with another man.<lb/>
We flirted a lot and danced<lb/>
extremely close and sugges-<lb/>
tively Ms. Parkinson said in the<lb/>
Playboy interview. "He said he<lb/>
wanted to make love<lb/>
The release by Playboy fol-<lb/>
lowed a report in the Daily news<lb/>
of Los Angeles in which two for-<lb/>
mer attorneys for Ms. Parkinson<lb/>
say she told the FBI in 1981 about<lb/>
the alleged proposition.<lb/>
One of the attorneys, Washing-<lb/>
ton lawyer Glenn Lewis, told The<lb/>
Associated Press that Playboy's<lb/>
account was consistent with what<lb/>
Ms. Parkinson had told the FBI.<lb/>
"Quaylc made a pass at her,<lb/>
said he would like to sleep with<lb/>
her. She said, 'No, I'm with<lb/>
Tom Lewis said, referring to<lb/>
former U.S. Rep. Tom Evans, R-<lb/>
Dcl who went on the golfing trip<lb/>
to Florida in 1980.<lb/>
Ms. Parkinson, Evans, Quayle,<lb/>
then a representative, and a third<lb/>
congressman shared a cottage,<lb/>
and the FBI looked into the outing<lb/>
in an investigation into whether<lb/>
sexual favors were traded for<lb/>
votes against legislation. Officials<lb/>
dropped the case seven years ago<lb/>
withutiiling charges.<lb/>
"I had nothing to do with her<lb/>
down there Quayle said Tues-<lb/>
day. "I've got a wife and three<lb/>
small children, and I hope there's<lb/>
some respect and dignity for<lb/>
things I did not do before we go<lb/>
rushing off with all these so-called<lb/>
rumors<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1988 7<lb/>
d. picas<lb/>
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CAMPUS CRUSADE<lb/>
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rhurs laj al 7 3 p.m.<lb/>
:OLLEGl REPUBLICANS<lb/>
il meeting of the<lb/>
September 8 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
ident Center, Room<lb/>
rs and interested stu-<lb/>
igcd to attend. Come<lb/>
help us defeat the 'crats in No-<lb/>
hvist<lb/>
fmer U.S. Rep. Tom Evans, R-<lb/>
, who wont on the golfing trip<lb/>
1 irida in 1.980.<lb/>
fs. Parkinson, Evans, Quayle,<lb/>
fm a representative, and a third<lb/>
ressman shared a cottage,<lb/>
d the FBI looked into the outing<lb/>
tn investigation into whether<lb/>
cual favors were traded for<lb/>
kesagainst legislation. Officials<lb/>
ppcd the case seven years ago<lb/>
Ithut tiling charges.<lb/>
I'i had nothing to do with her<lb/>
jwn there Quayle said Tucs-<lb/>
jv. "I've got a wife and three<lb/>
tall children, and I hope there's<lb/>
ne respect and dignity for<lb/>
ngs I did not do before we go<lb/>
jhingoffwithall these so-called<lb/>
inors<lb/>
r<lb/>
s<lb/>
t<lb/>
 - sBudweiser beer We know ofZZ 5fl<lb/>
Tthe famhrewcr which costs so much to b�e!lQn�P<lb/>
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rEN0WNEP<lb/>
iUDWEISEFl'<lb/>
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Tickets: $4.00 Advance, $5.00 At The Gate<lb/>
7 PM-Until 209 East 5th Street Downtown<lb/>
Purchase tickets in front of Student Store, Monday-Thursday<lb/>
 �m. acili<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0008"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1988<lb/>
Peace is subject at meeting<lb/>
All New!<lb/>
GENEVA (AP) - The Iran-Iraq International negotiations have<lb/>
peace talks starting Thursday are marked Geneva's history for 116<lb/>
only one set of negotiations that<lb/>
bolster Geneva's century-old tra-<lb/>
dition as a city of peace.<lb/>
A day earlier, Greek and Turk-<lb/>
ish factions from Cyprus open<lb/>
two days of meetings in a new<lb/>
attempt to resolve the political<lb/>
years, since the settlement of a<lb/>
controversy arising from the U.S,<lb/>
Civil War.<lb/>
At dispute in 1872 were heavy<lb/>
losses inflicted on 22 Union ships<lb/>
by a British-equipped Confeder-<lb/>
ate frigate, the Alabama. The<lb/>
have extolled the Geneva spirit<lb/>
after the first summit between<lb/>
President Reagan and Soviet<lb/>
leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev in<lb/>
1985 signaled a new phase in<lb/>
superpower relations.<lb/>
In April, the superpowers<lb/>
ence for South-West Africa. But a<lb/>
complete peace package still<lb/>
seems a way off.<lb/>
Geneva was the launching pad<lb/>
for international arbitration be-<lb/>
tween Chile and Argentina on the<lb/>
century-old Beagle Channel dis-<lb/>
to international arbitration and a<lb/>
Geneva tribunal ruled Britain<lb/>
should pay the United States<lb/>
$15.5 million in damages.<lb/>
Nine years earlier, Henry Dun-<lb/>
ant, a Geneva native, launched<lb/>
the idea for the Red Cross. The<lb/>
future of the island divided by United States and Britain agreed<lb/>
war.<lb/>
Both sets of talks arc brokered<lb/>
by the United Nations, which has<lb/>
its European base at the former<lb/>
League of Nations building.<lb/>
The Palace of Nations hosts<lb/>
about 8,000 meetings a year, help-<lb/>
ing make Geneva the world's<lb/>
conference capital.<lb/>
The heavy U.N. focus is likely to<lb/>
overshadow a third major meet-<lb/>
ing on the city's neutral ground: a<lb/>
U.SSoviet review of the Anti-<lb/>
Ballistic Missile Treaty, whose<lb/>
outcome could affect superpower<lb/>
arms reduction talks.<lb/>
The "Geneva spirit" saw a ren-<lb/>
aissance this year with the com-<lb/>
pletion of a U.SSoviet treaty<lb/>
scrapping intermediate-range<lb/>
missiles and the signing of a U.N.<lb/>
-backed accord setting a Soviet<lb/>
troop pullout from Afghanistan.<lb/>
Those agreements took years to<lb/>
signed the U.N. agreement on Af- putc and between Egypt and Is-<lb/>
ghanistan after six years of nego- rael over compting claims to the<lb/>
Taba strip.<lb/>
Pope John Paul II's mediaiton<lb/>
was needed before a Chile-Argen-<lb/>
tina settlement was signed in<lb/>
1982. The Taba judges, inaugu-<lb/>
rated in 1986, are still deliberat-<lb/>
tiations.<lb/>
Secretary of State George P.<lb/>
Shultz and Foreign Minister<lb/>
Eduard Shevardnadze returned<lb/>
to Geneva a month later to settle<lb/>
final details of the intermediate-<lb/>
range nuclear forces treaty, which<lb/>
was signed in Washington in last<lb/>
�$�<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Through the ups and downs of<lb/>
International Red Cross today is year. U.SSoviet talks'on cutting diplomacy, negotiators from all<lb/>
based in Geneva. long-range nuclear arsenals are over the world keep flocking to<lb/>
Hopes were high in 1919 when continuing.<lb/>
Geneva was chosen to be the host Earlier this month, reprcsenta-<lb/>
of the League of Nations. But in tives of South Africa, Angola and<lb/>
the 1930s, the League could dc<lb/>
little to prevent Adolf Hitler's rise<lb/>
to power in Germany or Italy's<lb/>
war in Ethiopia.<lb/>
It collapsed in World War II.<lb/>
The United Nations made Ge-<lb/>
neva its European center in 1946.<lb/>
Most U.Naffiliated agencies<lb/>
have headquarters in the city,<lb/>
including the World Health Or-<lb/>
ganization and the International<lb/>
Telecommunication Union.<lb/>
met in Geneva under U.S. media-<lb/>
tion and agreed on first concrete<lb/>
moves to end the civil war in<lb/>
Angola and declare independ-<lb/>
this city.<lb/>
"No other world city is charac-<lb/>
terized by as total a calm, as total<lb/>
an absence of political passion in<lb/>
matters of international politics<lb/>
former U.S. diplomat George<lb/>
Wynne wrote during his 1970s<lb/>
posting in Geneva.<lb/>
GYM<lb/>
�<lb/>
USA<lb/>
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GUC rate hikes to begin<lb/>
complete, a fate that may befall Superpower efforts to ban all<lb/>
the Iran-Iraq talks, called to settle chemical weapons and nuclear<lb/>
points of conflict after both sides tests have gone on for years in<lb/>
accepted a cease-fire in the 8-year- Geneva,<lb/>
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Escape foiled by inmate at<lb/>
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Conner was arrested in Greens-<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) - Six men,<lb/>
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Municipal Power Agency; the<lb/>
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This rate hike, the first of three<lb/>
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Bush<lb/>
(AP) - George Bush saysl<lb/>
standing firm behind run<lb/>
mate Dan Quayic despite "u<lb/>
ousrumormengers" raising<lb/>
tions about the Indiana<lb/>
character Democrat Mid<lb/>
Dukakis aimed some of the h<lb/>
est criticism yet at his<lb/>
opponent<lb/>
Vice President Bush<lb/>
plained during a V.<lb/>
paign swing that the I <lb/>
questions about his ch<lb/>
vice pre; t runn i<lb/>
wasdrownir<lb/>
The Republican pr<lb/>
candidate declared I<lb/>
paign would g t bad<lb/>
"whenever you j<lb/>
these questions<lb/>
But Bush . told a a<lb/>
supporters gat<lb/>
the Californi<lb/>
Sacramcr- mi .j<lb/>
seme insid<lb/>
drive me to cl<lb/>
standing V<lb/>
Quay!<lb/>
I<lb/>
Victim rs<lb/>
COLUMBUS, 01<lb/>
suspect in dor rts I<lb/>
tnbuted to I<lb/>
was arrested after a <lb/>
cnts lured him i traj<lb/>
amateur staki<lb/>
than a year, a new<lb/>
today.<lb/>
The parent- spent<lb/>
nights a week search<lb/>
daughter's attack - 1 j<lb/>
warnings they were p<lb/>
lives in danger and p<lb/>
washngthcirtime,TheCoj<lb/>
Dispatch said in a .<lb/>
The father, armed<lb/>
would wait in a car while<lb/>
acted as a decoy on tl I<lb/>
ner where hi I 1 (<lb/>
raped in June lu"<lb/>
per said.<lb/>
Police announced V j<lb/>
Robert Biddings, 34,v. a;<lb/>
i, ECU facul<lb/>
of Associa<lb/>
ICV Ncw�l<lb/>
GREENVILLE - Dr.<lb/>
Chestnut oi the psyche<lb/>
partment faculty at ECl<lb/>
stalled last week as 2<lb/>
of the Association c I<lb/>
chologists at its ann j<lb/>
bon in Washington<lb/>
Chestnut, a member o I<lb/>
faculty since 1974, said Ij<lb/>
spearhead a national<lb/>
focusing on: ia) identitj<lb/>
documenting mental ht<lb/>
grams that have proven'<lb/>
in dealing with iss <lb/>
mental h( b)<lb/>
ment, retention and pr<lb/>
of black college stud -<lb/>
education an I ebh<lb/>
andtheteachingof.<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Chestnut said one j<lb/>
official duties as i<lb/>
dent of the Black V-<lb/>
Association was I j<lb/>
ccutive meeting oi <lb/>
and Policy Board oft �c<lb/>
Psychological Ass 1<lb/>
lanta.<lb/>
The meeting was thj<lb/>
that leaders oi all r- <lb/>
Psychological Assocu<lb/>
Day-<lb/>
Re;<lb/>
9U<lb/>
Deadline<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0009"/><lb/>
xM<lb/>
kout Area<lb/>
 orkout<lb/>
il pi rs<lb/>
1-6<lb/>
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tber 2nd<lb/>
idates<lb/>
�eptember 13th<lb/>
9 A.M. - 6 P.M.<lb/>
RuMll<lb/>
r.� ' ,�<lb/>
M5:30 P.M.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1988 9<lb/>
Bush still stands tough<lb/>
(AP) - George Bush says he's<lb/>
standing firm behind running<lb/>
mate Dan Quayle despite "insidi-<lb/>
ous rumormongcrs" raising ques-<lb/>
tions about the Indiana senator's<lb/>
character Democrat Michael<lb/>
Dukakis aimed some of the harsh-<lb/>
est criticism yet at his Republican<lb/>
opponent.<lb/>
Vice President Bush com-<lb/>
plained during a Western cam-<lb/>
paign swing that the flood of<lb/>
questions about his choice of a<lb/>
vice presidential running mate<lb/>
was drowning out the issues.<lb/>
The Republican presidential<lb/>
candidate declared that his cam-<lb/>
paign would get back on track<lb/>
whenever you stop asking me<lb/>
those questions<lb/>
But Bush also told a crowd of<lb/>
supporters gathered in front of<lb/>
the California State Capitol in<lb/>
Sacramento: "I'm not going to let<lb/>
some insidious rumormongers<lb/>
drive me to change mv mind. I'm<lb/>
standing behind Dan Quavle<lb/>
Quayle also lamented Tuesday<lb/>
that "the voters don't know Dan<lb/>
Quayle because you haven't<lb/>
given me a chance to present my-<lb/>
self to America<lb/>
Making his first solo flight as<lb/>
the GOP vice presidential nomi-<lb/>
nee, Quayle travels today to Cin-<lb/>
cinnati and to Lexington, Ky<lb/>
before making an address tonight<lb/>
before a national conference of<lb/>
enlisted National Guardsmen in<lb/>
St. Louis.<lb/>
Quayle is facing questions<lb/>
about his National Guard duty at<lb/>
the height of the Vietnam War,<lb/>
admission into law school and<lb/>
claims by former lobbyist Paula<lb/>
Parkinson that he propositioned<lb/>
her eight years ago during a golf<lb/>
vacation in Florida with two other<lb/>
congressmen.<lb/>
Ms. Parkinson told Playboy<lb/>
magazine she rebuffed Quaylc's<lb/>
advances during the vacation<lb/>
because she was there with then-<lb/>
U.S. Rep. Tom Evans, a Delaware<lb/>
Republican.<lb/>
"We flirted a lot and danced<lb/>
extremely close and sugges-<lb/>
tively Ms. Parkinson told the<lb/>
magazine about Quayle, accord-<lb/>
ing to excerpts of the forthcoming<lb/>
article released Tuesday. "He said<lb/>
he wanted to make love<lb/>
Washington attorney Glenn<lb/>
Lewis, who represented Ms. Park-<lb/>
inson when she was questioned<lb/>
by the FBI in 1981, said Playboy's<lb/>
account agreed with what she<lb/>
told the FBI.<lb/>
But Quayle said he had "noth-<lb/>
ing to do with her adding, "This<lb/>
is just getting a little bit outra-<lb/>
geous and I'm getting a little bit<lb/>
indignant about just one bum rap<lb/>
after another<lb/>
Dukakis was traveling today to<lb/>
Washington to pick up an en-<lb/>
dorsement from the 13-million-<lb/>
member AFL-CIO. On Tuesday,<lb/>
the Massachusetts governor bor-<lb/>
rowed Bush's line about "voodoo<lb/>
economics" to criticize the vice<lb/>
president's budget plan.<lb/>
"There is no Republican plan<lb/>
Dukakis said. "The vice president<lb/>
is talking about a flexible freeze.<lb/>
That's like a melting ice cube<lb/>
That's the son of voodoo econom-<lb/>
ics Bush criticized Ronald<lb/>
Reagan's economic proposals as<lb/>
"voodoo economics" in 1980<lb/>
when the two were competing for<lb/>
the GOP presidential nomination.<lb/>
Dukakis also questioned Bush's<lb/>
support for mandatory recitation<lb/>
of the Pledge of Allegiance in<lb/>
schools, saying the vice president<lb/>
was unfit to run for president if he<lb/>
would sign such legislation after<lb/>
being told by a court that it was<lb/>
unconstitutional.<lb/>
Bush continued to enjoy post-<lb/>
convention gains in the polls.<lb/>
A new Gallup poll said Bush<lb/>
was leading Dukakis, 48 percent<lb/>
to 44 percent, among registered<lb/>
voters. However, the survey had a<lb/>
margin of error of 3 percentage<lb/>
points, meaning that cither figure<lb/>
could be off by that much. Gallup<lb/>
contacted 1,000 likely voters last<lb/>
weekend immediately following<lb/>
the Republican National Conven-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
wrrnrtiiort w iters<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN is now accepting applica-<lb/>
tions for staff writers. Only students seriously inter-<lb/>
ested in writing need to apply. Great opportunities.<lb/>
Great company. Invaluable experience. Apply in per-<lb/>
son at the East Carolinian Office.<lb/>
Victim rs parents trap suspected rapist<lb/>
Local and Out of<lb/>
Town Newspapers<lb/>
Full selection of 1989 Calendars<lb/>
Greeting Cards For All Occasions1<lb/>
P Ballo on for all occasions<lb/>
CENTRAL BOOK<lb/>
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Bw�Bi Squf<lb/>
C�m � 7S4-7177<lb/>
Opwi 'TM t 30 PM �w D�Tf A WM<lb/>
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A<lb/>
suspect in dozens of attacks at-<lb/>
tributed to the "handcuff rapist"<lb/>
was arrested after a victim's par-<lb/>
ents lured him into a trap in an<lb/>
amateur stakeout lasting more<lb/>
than a year, a newspaper reported<lb/>
today.<lb/>
The parents spent several<lb/>
nights a week searching for their<lb/>
daughter's attacker despite police<lb/>
warnings they were putting their<lb/>
lives in danger and probably<lb/>
wasting their time, The Columbus<lb/>
Dispatch said in a copyright story.<lb/>
The father, armed with a gun,<lb/>
would wait in a car while his wife<lb/>
acted as a decoy on the same cor-<lb/>
ner where her daughter was<lb/>
raped in June 1987, the newspa-<lb/>
per said.<lb/>
Tolicc announced Monday that<lb/>
Robert Biddings, 34, was arrested<lb/>
Thursday and was being held in<lb/>
the Franklin County jail on one<lb/>
count of rape and two counts of<lb/>
kidnapping in lieu of $750,000<lb/>
bond. They said they would seek<lb/>
to have him charged with up to 60<lb/>
rapes.<lb/>
Biddings is a suspect in a scries<lb/>
of attacks dating back to 1984 that<lb/>
had been attributed to the "hand-<lb/>
cuff rapist so called because he<lb/>
used handcuffs in early attacks,<lb/>
said police spokeswoman Denise<lb/>
Tangborn.<lb/>
The Dispatch, quoting police<lb/>
reports, court records and un-<lb/>
identified sources, said the rape<lb/>
victim's parents decided to track<lb/>
down their 23-ycar-old<lb/>
daughter's attacker themselves<lb/>
and find the evidence needed to<lb/>
break the case.<lb/>
The father said he knew police<lb/>
were understaffed and could not<lb/>
spend as much time on the case as<lb/>
he and his wife wanted. The Dis-<lb/>
patch interviewed the father<lb/>
Monday but did not identify him.<lb/>
The newspaper gave this ac-<lb/>
count of how the trap was sprung:<lb/>
On the night of Friday, Aug. 5 -<lb/>
the same day of the week and the<lb/>
same time of day their daughter<lb/>
was attacked - the mother was<lb/>
standing on the corner just cast of<lb/>
downtown, when a man parked<lb/>
his car and walked toward her.<lb/>
The attacker grabbed her,<lb/>
dragged her toward nearby Fran-<lb/>
klin Park and drew a gun. The<lb/>
woman's husband ran from his<lb/>
car, also drew a gun and said:<lb/>
"Freeze! Police<lb/>
The attacker ran to his car and<lb/>
fled.<lb/>
The husband wrote down the<lb/>
car's license plate and called po-<lb/>
lice.<lb/>
The license number was traced<lb/>
to a car owned by Biddings, who<lb/>
was arrested after police searched<lb/>
his apartment.<lb/>
The charges against Biddings<lb/>
relate to the case involving the<lb/>
couple's daughter.<lb/>
So far, Biddings has been linked<lb/>
to 19 additional attacks, said po-<lb/>
lice Capt. Antonc Lanata.<lb/>
'The victims have picked him<lb/>
out of a photo display, or by<lb/>
physical evidence - fingerprints<lb/>
Lanata said. Interviews with<lb/>
other victims were continuing, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Evidence against Biddings will<lb/>
be presented to a Franklin County<lb/>
grand jury, accompanied by re-<lb/>
quests for indictments on 60<lb/>
counts of rape and felony<lb/>
YOUR SPORTS STATION<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
Filing ft l iiiiKinj;<lb/>
MONDAY NITE (J FOOTBALL<lb/>
AND ALL MAJOR SPORTLNG EVENTS<lb/>
Casual Dining at its Finest<lb/>
Featuring our soon-to-be-famous Double-Shot Margaritas!<lb/>
Don't Miss our Reggae Celebration Every Wednesday Night<lb/>
LOCATED BEHLND QUINCY'S AND ACE CLEANERS;<lb/>
IN THE FARM FRESH SHOPPLNG CENTER<lb/>
11 am-l am Monday-Saturday 11 am-10 pm Sunday 355-2946<lb/>
ECU faculty member elected 20th president<lb/>
of Association of Black Psychologists<lb/>
ICL' Ni'ns Burcju<lb/>
GREENVILLE - Dr. Dennis E.<lb/>
Chestnut of the psychology de-<lb/>
partment faculty at ECU was in-<lb/>
stalled last week as 20th president<lb/>
of the Association of Black Psy-<lb/>
chologists at its annual conven-<lb/>
tion in Washington.<lb/>
Chestnut, a member of the ECU<lb/>
faculty since 1974, said he would<lb/>
spearhead a national program<lb/>
focusing on: (a) identifying and<lb/>
documenting mental health pro-<lb/>
grams that have proven effective<lb/>
in dealing with issues of black<lb/>
mental health; (b) the recruit-<lb/>
ment, retention and progression<lb/>
of black college students in higher<lb/>
education and (c) the black family<lb/>
and the teaching of values to black<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Chestnut said one of his first<lb/>
official duties as national presi-<lb/>
dent of the Black Psychologists<lb/>
Association was to attend an ex-<lb/>
ecutive meeting of the Planning<lb/>
and Policy Board of the American<lb/>
Psychological Association in At-<lb/>
lanta.<lb/>
The meeting was the first time<lb/>
that leaders of all major American<lb/>
Psychological Associations have<lb/>
convened together to discuss Hispanic Psychological Associa-<lb/>
common goals and plans, Chest- tion also attended the Atlanta<lb/>
nut said. Representatives of the meeting, Chestnut said.<lb/>
Society of Indian Psychologists, Chestnut, a native of Tabor<lb/>
the Asian American Psychology- City, N.C also serves as Director<lb/>
cal Association and the National of Minority Affairs.<lb/>
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Open 7 Days A Week<lb/>
Mon. - Fri. 6 am -10 pm<lb/>
Sat. &amp; Sun. 8 am -7 pm<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
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is taking application for<lb/>
Day-Student Representative<lb/>
for the 1988-89 Term<lb/>
Responsibilities:<lb/>
Qualifications:<lb/>
Selecting the Student Union President<lb/>
Approving Committe Chairpersons<lb/>
Approving the Student Union Budget<lb/>
Setting Policy for the Student Union<lb/>
Full-Time Student<lb/>
Reside Off Campus<lb/>
Independent<lb/>
Deadline To Apply: Friday, September 9, 1988<lb/>
SPECIAL STUDENT RATES<lb/>
$100 per semester<lb/>
(Student Hours Are Limited)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0010"/><lb/>
SAVACENTER<lb/>
Sale Starts Sunday,<lb/>
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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 3, 1988. QUANTITY<lb/>
RIGHTS RESERVED. NOT RESPONSIBLE<lb/>
FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS<lb/>
DELIBAKERY ITEMS AVAILABLE<lb/>
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Open Sunday 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. � Monday thru Saturday 7:00 a.m. - 12 Midnight<lb/>
I � I i t AS I A p <lb/>
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i Coke on the way to Sear!<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058087_0011"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
s<lb/>
I<lb/>
Sunday,<lb/>
ust 28th.<lb/>
'E THRU SATURDAY,<lb/>
:R 3, 1988. QUANTITY<lb/>
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IRAPHICAL ERRORS.<lb/>
IY ITEMS AVAILABLE<lb/>
ILY IN STORES WITH<lb/>
lOSE DEPARTMENTS.<lb/>
CHOICE GRAIN FED<lb/>
n Steak<lb/>
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Bartlett<lb/>
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69<lb/>
RED<lb/>
California<lb/>
� Raspberries<lb/>
P PRECZC<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1988 I'jgc 11<lb/>
Amateurs: reggae-rock energy<lb/>
By GREER BOW EN<lb/>
M.itt liter<lb/>
i like all music Bill Shep-<lb/>
I i A said. Host known in<lb/>
irecnville as "Shop" the musi-<lb/>
un brings an energized version<lb/>
i reggae-rock to Eastern North<lb/>
( arolina. Shep, who is the<lb/>
founder ol The Amateurs, has<lb/>
-1 lusic in his blood.<lb/>
1 lis mother cut about 78-rpm<lb/>
.pel records and his four sisters<lb/>
- i mod a gospel group known as<lb/>
he Shepherd Sisters. Shop said<lb/>
that he grow up with musk all<lb/>
ound him. 1 had neighbors in<lb/>
tuex rts that were originally from<lb/>
Iiinivi.nl that were in a group<lb/>
tailed Calypso Mania' and that<lb/>
was my introduction to reggae<lb/>
aid Shop.<lb/>
Shep le med back in his big,<lb/>
,n chair and gave a gentle<lb/>
he spoke of his fans. "We<lb/>
get a lot of mail from people we've<lb/>
met along the way and people we<lb/>
haven't met at all, but they all are<lb/>
really supportive he said. Much<lb/>
of these people write to say that<lb/>
thev know of clubs that the Ama-<lb/>
tours might like to play in, others<lb/>
write just to saykecp it up And<lb/>
that is just what they do.<lb/>
This September, the band will<lb/>
record a new tape in Chapel Hill<lb/>
at TGS Studio. Steve Gronbeck,<lb/>
the producer, has worked with<lb/>
many artists some of which arc on<lb/>
the Island Record label. "I'm a<lb/>
slob in my daily life but I'm a<lb/>
perfectionist when it comes to my<lb/>
music Shop said.<lb/>
The bands roster includes;<lb/>
Yince Stout (base), Larry Price<lb/>
(saxophone), Buddy Alcorn<lb/>
(rvthum guitar), Kerry<lb/>
Richardson (drums), Mike Davis<lb/>
(lead guitar) and of course Shep<lb/>
on lead vocals and congos. Each<lb/>
member brings his own personal-<lb/>
ity to the group which was voted<lb/>
the best local band in a local poll<lb/>
for two years in a row.<lb/>
Shep is involved in many other<lb/>
things besides the band. He was<lb/>
the founder of doggers day here<lb/>
in Greenville and the organizer of<lb/>
the Reggae Festival in Nags Head.<lb/>
His interests range from folk<lb/>
music to classic rock and he even<lb/>
enjoys blue grass. This diversity<lb/>
adds flavor to the Amateurs style<lb/>
of reggae-rock.<lb/>
The band works out of a house<lb/>
on 5th street where they reads all<lb/>
their fan mail. Many of the letters<lb/>
arc saved and a great number are<lb/>
answered pcrsonaly by the band.<lb/>
"We have a grass roots organi-<lb/>
zation here Shep said. Theband<lb/>
members are all great friends and<lb/>
spend a great deal of time to-<lb/>
gether. Even though Shep formed<lb/>
the band, there seems to be no real<lb/>
leader as such.<lb/>
The Amateurs travel all across<lb/>
North Carolina and have done<lb/>
some shows in South Carolina<lb/>
and other places. But Shep said he<lb/>
really loves the mountains and<lb/>
would one day like to settle there.<lb/>
The Amateurs music is just like<lb/>
the band, it is a combination of<lb/>
many different elements, but<lb/>
when the lights come on and the<lb/>
music starts, these different<lb/>
elements come together to form a<lb/>
solid sound.<lb/>
This reggae-rock is sure to get<lb/>
the audience going this Friday<lb/>
night when the Amatures start the<lb/>
new school year off right at the<lb/>
New Deli.<lb/>
The band friendliness and<lb/>
honest live of music makes them a<lb/>
favorite where ever they play.<lb/>
"We arc leaving at 3 in the morn-<lb/>
ing to go to Hilton Head, why<lb/>
don't you come along for the ride?<lb/>
There is a nightmare on my street, Elm<lb/>
St. five not worth one Freddy Krueger<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
v ightmareon 11m Street: The<lb/>
ream Master" epitomizes the<lb/>
. dream of all movie goers: a<lb/>
tc of time and monev that<lb/>
A manages to be entertaining<lb/>
all.<lb/>
The original concept of<lb/>
'Nightmare On Elmstreet" was a<lb/>
freshing ariatfon on the typical<lb/>
me ot splatter movies. A group<lb/>
ii. nts, irate at the neighbor-<lb/>
d child molester getting out of<lb/>
: . ing his sentence, but the unto-<lb/>
ird fc How alive in his home.<lb/>
I'ut thechilci molestcr'sspirit<lb/>
irrts years later to slaughter<lb/>
. parent's children through<lb/>
dreams. Thesedream<lb/>
uJn. alU A'ed for gore to be<lb/>
' sr�ensd �4th the addecW<lb/>
ment of surrealism.<lb/>
1hus was born Freddy<lb/>
legcr. ith his pizza complex-<lb/>
ion and razor blades flashing<lb/>
from his fingertips, he is a much a<lb/>
symbol of cinematic shock in the<lb/>
'80's as the Karloff Frankenstein<lb/>
was in the '30's and '40's.<lb/>
But familiarity breeds con-<lb/>
tempt. Universal wore their ver-<lb/>
sion of Frankenstein out in a series<lb/>
of films, and now Freddy Krueger<lb/>
has suffered the same fate.<lb/>
"Nightmare On Elm Street:<lb/>
The Dream Master" has no clear<lb/>
beginning or end. It picks up<lb/>
where Part III, the Dream Warri-<lb/>
ors, led off and woe to you if you<lb/>
didn't see the previous film and<lb/>
are left to tie the loose ends that<lb/>
flap aboi�' like so much film<lb/>
leader on a take-up red At least,<lb/>
there could have been a montage<lb/>
flashback sequence or a "Star<lb/>
Wars: scroll e(leqt"us the movie<lb/>
spewed (the ItdSWaft? almost<lb/>
stream of consciousness in their<lb/>
aciton, at least gave you that<lb/>
muchV<lb/>
1 suppose it doesn't matter<lb/>
because all of the "dream warri-<lb/>
ors" from the third movie are of-<lb/>
fered by Freddy within thirty<lb/>
minutes. And they're only the<lb/>
first to go as seemingly the whole<lb/>
student body of the local high<lb/>
school begins to drop dead.<lb/>
These characters tend to be so<lb/>
obnoxious that you're rooting for<lb/>
Freddy to off them. Once again,<lb/>
we are presented with teens who<lb/>
are not only wittier but the moral<lb/>
superiors of their parents. This<lb/>
attempt at "audience identifica-<lb/>
tion" is nothing but a cheap,<lb/>
short-cut to the heart of the "rebel-<lb/>
lious teen" expected to flock to<lb/>
this movie.<lb/>
The only semi-appealing ex-<lb/>
ceptions arc a ncrdcttc named<lb/>
Sheila and .our� heroine, Alice,<lb/>
played by a young actress with<lb/>
"Cissy Spacck as Carrie" stamped<lb/>
all over her.<lb/>
You see, Alice evidently has<lb/>
some psychic ability that is only<lb/>
explained with some cursory<lb/>
comment like "I daydream a lot<lb/>
So do a lot of people, Alice, but<lb/>
you don't sec them becoming a<lb/>
gestalt entity of their dead friends<lb/>
like you do. This aspect of the<lb/>
movie is interesting but ulti-<lb/>
mately a convenient plot cop-out<lb/>
since all her dead friends' talents<lb/>
she's absorbed just happen to be<lb/>
the right ones she needs to fight<lb/>
off Freddy.<lb/>
We've established plot and<lb/>
character as basically unredeem-<lb/>
able at this point.<lb/>
Docs this movie haveanything<lb/>
going for it? What about those<lb/>
crazy, surreal, and often times<lb/>
gorcy dream sequences?<lb/>
But these sequencjgre sadly,<lb/>
Peking. How majyjMBPly-faced<lb/>
twnior higrroyychcrai take to<lb/>
conceive of such scenes as a dog<lb/>
jacking off his leg to urinate flame<lb/>
and a jock on the toilet suddenly<lb/>
Bill Shepperd, affectionately known throughout the Emerald<lb/>
City as Shep, brings his high energy reggae-rock sound of the<lb/>
Amateurs to the New Deli Friday.<lb/>
finding nls stall tilled with adimr- fused with our secretary) suffers<lb/>
ing cheerleaders? This sopho- the most innovative of the dream<lb/>
mork self-indulgence adds new deaths: a fate Kafka's Gregor<lb/>
facets to the definition of "low- Samsa would appreciate. Wilcox<lb/>
brow " now stars on the TV show, "Just<lb/>
The gore here is pretty ho-hum the Ten Of Us with the original<lb/>
stuff. Ironically, the dream sc- Elm Street girl, Heather Lang-<lb/>
quences were more effective ekamp.<lb/>
when restrained. Examples: a Heather's character, Nancy's<lb/>
young man finds himself in an tombstone is glimpsed in the cur-<lb/>
infinate maze of old cars in a rent movie. Is this the ultimate<lb/>
junkyard (the terror of which can fate of Freddy's victims: to end up<lb/>
be felt by anyone who's forgotten on lackluster situation comedies?<lb/>
their parking place at the mall:<lb/>
Sheila the nerdeUc discovers her<lb/>
i ink, pen frijHung fctafct?!<lb/>
Ummcolattskl 11 ' inii<lb/>
One of Freddy's victims is<lb/>
played by Lisa Wilcox, whose<lb/>
character. Debbie (not to be con-<lb/>
If so, Krueger is more benign<lb/>
than The Dream Master's" pro-<lb/>
ducers. Two hours workth of<lb/>
'�Gilligan's Island" rerun "are<lb/>
more tolerable than what they've<lb/>
turned out. On our cat head scale<lb/>
of five, this turkev rates a one.<lb/>
CAM NUGGETS 18 CT PKG OR<lb/>
Gold Rush<lb/>
Bars<lb/>
VORS�LIWIT i W MlN 10 PURCH<lb/>
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ORE IDA<lb/>
Cob<lb/>
Corn<lb/>
429<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
Mixed<lb/>
Vegetables<lb/>
2100<lb/>
'0 OZ ��<lb/>
so�es<lb/>
ociation<lb/>
:e, Las Vegas<lb/>
Mac and Me one real long commercial<lb/>
By GREER BOWEN<lb/>
MII Writci<lb/>
was less than inventive and the<lb/>
characters were shallow andof ten<lb/>
unrealistic.<lb/>
rion Pictures' "Mac and Me" The movie begins with a family<lb/>
irccl lake-offon the extremely of aliens an their natural planet<lb/>
ilu movie EX. The plot is drinking something out of the<lb/>
htly different, but the changes earth through straws. An US<lb/>
i improve the alcin-come-to space probe lands and acciden-<lb/>
h story at all. taly sucks the family up in a vac-<lb/>
is movie was one big en- uum cleaner attachment.<lb/>
ment after another. The plot When the probe returns to<lb/>
iis is � picture from the new commericial sensation "Mac and<lb/>
vip " The title of the movie should be "Big Mac and Me drinking<lb/>
.Coke on the way to Sears The kid is (do you care) and the other<lb/>
uy looks vaintly like a girl Mr. Gil used to date.<lb/>
earth, the aliens escape and in the<lb/>
confusion, the smallest is sepa-<lb/>
rated from the rest of the family.<lb/>
The smallest, Mac as he is later<lb/>
named, causes a wreck on the<lb/>
interstate when he jumps on the<lb/>
hood of a car. Mac then climbs<lb/>
into the car of a family that is<lb/>
stalled by the traffic jam.<lb/>
This family consists of a mother,<lb/>
teenage boy named Michael, and<lb/>
the star, Eric. Eric is in a wheel-<lb/>
chair but the audience is never<lb/>
told why. Just as the audience is<lb/>
never told what happened to the<lb/>
father.<lb/>
Mac secerns to be clcctricaly<lb/>
charged and starts up electronic<lb/>
toys and the t.v. with just a touch,<lb/>
of course no one believes Ere<lb/>
when he says that he has seen a<lb/>
creature from outcrspacc -xcept<lb/>
for the girl next door named Deb-<lb/>
bie.<lb/>
After a few scenes of Mac ap-<lb/>
pearing and disappearing to go<lb/>
out side and telepathically com-<lb/>
municates with his family that is<lb/>
now in the desert, Eric catches<lb/>
Mac. Mac will only drink Coke<lb/>
and this seems to be what keeps<lb/>
him healthy as his family starves<lb/>
from coke cola withdrawl in the<lb/>
desert.<lb/>
Eric and Debbie take Mac to a<lb/>
birthday party at McDonalds<lb/>
dressed as a teddy bear and Mac<lb/>
sees the kids dancing around and<lb/>
dances on the counter. The gov-<lb/>
ernment scientists see him try to<lb/>
catch him but of course Eric,<lb/>
Debbie, Michael, and Debbie's<lb/>
older sister who works at<lb/>
McDonalds save Mac and help<lb/>
him reach his parents.<lb/>
They find Mac's family and<lb/>
bring them to health by giving<lb/>
them coke. The alcin family is<lb/>
attacked by the police when they<lb/>
try to take a case of coke from a lo-<lb/>
cal grocery store. Eric is injured<lb/>
and the aliens save him. but in-<lb/>
stead of going home, the aliens are<lb/>
made U.S. citizens and the movie<lb/>
ends with them driving away in<lb/>
their very own car.<lb/>
The aliens looked like people<lb/>
dressed in fair to good Halloween<lb/>
costumes. The idea of having a<lb/>
handicapped boy staring in a film<lb/>
was a good one but not in an<lb/>
unoriginal plot. It would had<lb/>
Jade Category, the actor who<lb/>
played Eric could have acted.<lb/>
It is doubtful that even the<lb/>
youngest moviegoer will find this<lb/>
movie very enjoyable. E.T. was a<lb/>
been at least slightly enjoyable if hit because of universal appeal<lb/>
nd the depiction of boy and his<lb/>
friend. Mac and Eric are never<lb/>
really friends and has no univer-<lb/>
sal appeal. Mac and Me is a sad<lb/>
excuse for summertime entertain-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Piekin' the Bones<lb/>
The BoneheacTs back  and his front, his side, his left ear<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Vulture<lb/>
Well, I'm back. I didn't really<lb/>
die last spring. No thanks to the<lb/>
dreaded ECU Association of Fat<lb/>
Girls that Write Bad Poetry, or the<lb/>
Legion of Toolbox Carrying Art<lb/>
Pansies. The Bonchcad is back,<lb/>
but people are saying I'm  dif-<lb/>
ferent.<lb/>
I admit, some of my behavior<lb/>
has been pretty bizarre lately. I<lb/>
have become Greenville's biggest<lb/>
Dcf Lcppard fan. The Bonchcad,<lb/>
fan of such boss bands as drivin'<lb/>
rt' cryin Wild Seeds and Patsy<lb/>
Cline, now listening to pop rock<lb/>
with slit jeans?<lb/>
Believe mc, it scares me too. I<lb/>
tried to find out what had hap-<lb/>
pened. I retraced the steps of my<lb/>
summer, seeking, searching for<lb/>
clues. Was I amnesiac?<lb/>
Had I two years ago passed out<lb/>
downtown, woken up and just<lb/>
ASSUMED I was the Bonchcad? If<lb/>
so, what was my life really like? If<lb/>
my memory came back, what<lb/>
would be there for me to return<lb/>
to?<lb/>
I Would I one day wake up and<lb/>
fc-cmember my life in Wilson,<lb/>
working at the Kash and Karry�,<lb/>
married to a domineering rcd-<lb/>
icck who worked nights at the<lb/>
ivcrrcady� plant? Would I have<lb/>
to take care of the kids?<lb/>
I reasoned that this could not be<lb/>
the case. It might explain the Dcf<lb/>
Lcppard tendencies, but there are<lb/>
statutes in the N.C. law books that<lb/>
revent Kash and Karry� em-<lb/>
ployees from knowing how to<lb/>
�ead. When I woke up, 1 read that<lb/>
"Prisoners are allowed one phone<lb/>
call" sign right off the bat.<lb/>
No, amnesia was out. Perhaps 1<lb/>
had been kidnapped by aliens. I<lb/>
shudder to think what kind of<lb/>
aliens they could have been<lb/>
though. Picture a three- headed,<lb/>
purple monstrosity, with tencyc-<lb/>
stalks and oozing orange sores<lb/>
wearing a Mctallica tank top.<lb/>
Perhaps one drunken night I<lb/>
stumbled into an extraterrestrial<lb/>
spaceship, thinking it was the piss<lb/>
closet. I befriended the creatures<lb/>
and lived among them for a time.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the only thing<lb/>
they could hear were heavy drum<lb/>
The Bonehead's back<lb/>
beats and insipid lyrics, so that's<lb/>
how we communicated.<lb/>
No, I thought. It can't be that.<lb/>
Most alien races are as Mojo<lb/>
Nixon postulated � moving<lb/>
toward perfect Elvisness. Any<lb/>
races intelligent enough for inter-<lb/>
stellar travel would find a way to<lb/>
get around the cultural difficul-<lb/>
ties of Bon Jovi contamination.<lb/>
The most likely explanation is<lb/>
all the time I spent on the Island of<lb/>
Scars� Models. The long days<lb/>
under the spotlights, the endless<lb/>
drugs and the mindless women I<lb/>
was forced to have mind-numb-<lb/>
ing amounts of sex with.<lb/>
It surely softened my brain to<lb/>
the point where I would no longer<lb/>
fight my way to the stereo and<lb/>
change the tape. Instead, I said,<lb/>
"What the hell and relaxed my<lb/>
strict musical and moral stan-<lb/>
dards.<lb/>
So. FIcrc I am. Am I still THE<lb/>
Bonchcad, the one so feared and<lb/>
hated by the entire faculty of the<lb/>
Women's Studies department? I<lb/>
guess so.<lb/>
What bones shall I pick this<lb/>
year? What subculture can 1 mer-<lb/>
cilessly attack, humiliating them<lb/>
and stripping them bare like a<lb/>
hungry vulture? What ideals and<lb/>
social cripples can I rip apart to<lb/>
make mvsclf look better?<lb/>
Well, basically anybody I can<lb/>
outrun. Old people, handicapped<lb/>
people and people that say,<lb/>
"Wanna drink some beers?" But<lb/>
before I start any controversy, a<lb/>
little story. What happened yes-<lb/>
terday convinced mc it's gonna be<lb/>
a great year.<lb/>
On the first day of my science<lb/>
lab, in those highly slanted rooms<lb/>
in the foul recesses of the Biology<lb/>
building, I went to my class, ft<lb/>
seemed like a cool class.<lb/>
As I sat in the back row, an<lb/>
enormously fat girl wheeled in.<lb/>
Strapped on the back was her art<lb/>
toolbox. She stopped right in the I<lb/>
middle of the door, impecding the<lb/>
progress of those freshmen strag-<lb/>
glers trying to make it to class.<lb/>
Halfway through the lecture,<lb/>
right about the time the professor<lb/>
started discussing meteors, her<lb/>
brake slipped. She careened<lb/>
See BONEHEAD, page 14<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0012"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROl IN1AN<lb/>
AUGUST 25. 1988<lb/>
Movie, "The Last Temptation of Christ receives national<lb/>
protest from fundmentalists, including 8,000 area petitioners<lb/>
BvEARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
lecture I Jitor<lb/>
With mass protest over the re-<lb/>
cent release of "The Last Tempta-<lb/>
tion of Christ" around the coun-<lb/>
try, a local radio station has com-<lb/>
piled approximately 8,000 signa-<lb/>
tures from people who seek to<lb/>
have the film ban from area thea-<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
Tom Lamprecht, general man-<lb/>
ager of WG1 IB in Farmville, pre-<lb/>
sented the signed petitions of<lb/>
approximately 8,000 people to<lb/>
theaters in Greenville last week.<lb/>
Lamprecht said all ot the area<lb/>
theaters, except tor the Plitt thea-<lb/>
ter, told the general manager that<lb/>
they would not show the contro-<lb/>
versial movie.<lb/>
1 amprccht said Plitt has iu.t<lb/>
made a decision whether to show<lb/>
the film or not. According to<lb/>
lamprecht, Plitt is owned by<lb/>
Universal Studios, which re-<lb/>
leased the film last Friday.<lb/>
According to the Associated<lb/>
Tress, about 23,000 people, some<lb/>
carrying crosses, protested the<lb/>
film's release outside of Univcr-<lb/>
sial Studios in Universial City,<lb/>
California. Fundmcntalist Chris-<lb/>
tians say the movie is blasphc<lb/>
mous in its portrayal ot Jc u<lb/>
Christ templed to abandon his<lb/>
divinity.<lb/>
"It 1 a distortation ot what the<lb/>
Sibli1 sa s. I lollywood in general<lb/>
has been inaccurate in depicting<lb/>
history. I get tired of the historical<lb/>
inaccuratencss said Lamprecht.<lb/>
1 c said VVG1 IB started to dis-<lb/>
tributing petitions about 30 days<lb/>
ago. Of the number of signatures,<lb/>
hesaid " I 'm surprised. 1 expected<lb/>
to receive maybe a 1,000 signa-<lb/>
ture<lb/>
The nation's fourth-largest<lb/>
theater chains-General Cinema<lb/>
1 heaters-has decided against<lb/>
show the film in their 1.338<lb/>
st ret i'<lb/>
Around the country, churches<lb/>
have band together in efforts to<lb/>
have the movie not shown in<lb/>
community theaters. Lamprecht<lb/>
said many oi the signatures on the<lb/>
petitions came from members of<lb/>
churches through out Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Opponents of the film are en-<lb/>
raged by the protrayal of Jesus as<lb/>
an ambivalent savior. In a halluci-<lb/>
nation while dying on the cross.<lb/>
Christ imagines abandoning his<lb/>
divinity to live asan ordinary man<lb/>
and fantasizes about sex with<lb/>
Mary Magdalene.<lb/>
"It has gone to far. Personal<lb/>
beliefs are being infringed on<lb/>
said Lamprcchet<lb/>
Disney recent releases succeed, flop<lb/>
ByMICAH HARRIS<lb/>
Within two months, Walt<lb/>
Disney Studios released two fea-<lb/>
tures which are state of the art<lb/>
animation.<lb/>
both films exhibit a high degree<lb/>
of technical innovation and art-<lb/>
istry. One is a glorious success, the<lb/>
other has received a compara-<lb/>
tively lukewarm reception by<lb/>
audiences.<lb/>
The former, of course1, is the<lb/>
now ubiquitous, "Roger Rabbit<lb/>
The latter is "Bambi<lb/>
"Roger Rabbit's" success is well<lb/>
deserved. To my mind, it is only<lb/>
one of a handful of recent movies<lb/>
to capture perfectly the cssenceof<lb/>
the classic, peculiarly American<lb/>
film (the only other to come<lb/>
quickly to mind is Rob Reiner's<lb/>
" The Princess bride").<lb/>
But 1 wonder, how much ot<lb/>
"Roger's" success is due to this<lb/>
quality as opposed to the mar-<lb/>
ketability of the bucktoothed<lb/>
hero? 1 lore, at last, since the glory<lb/>
days of "FT and "Gremlins is<lb/>
a fantasy figure whose fascimile<lb/>
could grace sweat shirts, lunch<lb/>
boxes, and plastic cups.<lb/>
Children suckled on such lame<lb/>
TV tare as "He-Man "G.I. joe<lb/>
and "Smurfs" still retain in their<lb/>
kid-nd diet the classic Warner<lb/>
Bros, shorts and naturally find<lb/>
"Roger ' easily accessible.<lb/>
"Roger Rabbit , representing<lb/>
the tradition of "big-foot" humor<lb/>
of the animated short, literally<lb/>
screams at the viewer from the<lb/>
screen. As with most special ef-<lb/>
fects laden films, the pyrotechnic<lb/>
display calls attention to itself. In<lb/>
"Roger Rabit the fireworks are<lb/>
part of the film's fabric, not<lb/>
merely sewn on, and thus they<lb/>
work in the context.<lb/>
"Bambi by contrast, is a quiet<lb/>
film. For the time period, it was<lb/>
just as "technical" as "Roger Rab-<lb/>
bit But just as the story con text (if<lb/>
"Roger Rabbit" allows the techni-<lb/>
cal innovation to run roughshod<lb/>
as a hurricane over the screen, the<lb/>
storv context oi "Bambi" requires<lb/>
that it come across as a whisper.<lb/>
"Bambi" has been criticized tor<lb/>
lacking the power to hold the at-<lb/>
tention of today's children.<lb/>
Yesterday's kids wailed at the<lb/>
death of Bambi's mother; today's<lb/>
indifferently ask for more pop-<lb/>
corn. This is not a reflection on the<lb/>
film, but rather the children<lb/>
whose minds have been ravaged<lb/>
by those demented blue trolls<lb/>
(Smurfs to you) and similar<lb/>
drivel.<lb/>
With the possible exception of<lb/>
Thumper, none of "Bambi's" cast,<lb/>
including the lead himself, have<lb/>
personality enough to warrant<lb/>
cen so much as a 7-11 Slurpee<lb/>
Cup. This "flaw however,<lb/>
works as much in the context of<lb/>
the film as "Roger's" self-indul-<lb/>
gent twisting of physics. As John<lb/>
Grant points out in "The Encyclo-<lb/>
pedia of Walt Disney's Animated<lb/>
I<lb/>
Character (depth in characten<lb/>
zation) would, have been a mis-<lb/>
take, for the point of the movie is<lb/>
that these are real animals aiu<lb/>
animal -li ing in a real forest<lb/>
As mentioned, "Roger Rabit<lb/>
i : all Us technical innovation,<lb/>
barely strays from the cartoon's<lb/>
spawning ground: the short<lb/>
"c ig"cartoon. "Bambi" remainsa<lb/>
much more experimental film:<lb/>
much more a work ot art.<lb/>
Critic Leonard Maltin called it<lb/>
"a visual poem "Bambi" is that<lb/>
and more: a symbiosis ot light and<lb/>
sound.<lb/>
"Bambi" can be viewed as a<lb/>
compliment to the Nutcracker<lb/>
Suite segment oi "Fantasia" as<lb/>
orchestration weds with anima-<lb/>
tion to form a pagan to nature.The<lb/>
,u companiment to the ballet leaps<lb/>
i the young stags through the<lb/>
meadow, the scattering oi autum<lb/>
leaves, v Bambi's learning to<lb/>
skate are just a few examples.<lb/>
the upshot oi Bambi's luke-<lb/>
u arm acceptance is that "Bambi"<lb/>
will 1 rob ibly never have another<lb/>
extensive theatrical release. As<lb/>
they've done with other classic<lb/>
cart n featuie, Disney will<lb/>
probably opt to re-release it on<lb/>
video cassette. There is little lost<lb/>
in the transition with those<lb/>
Disney cartoons that stress char-<lb/>
acter instead oi spectacle, such as<lb/>
"Lady and the Tramp and<lb/>
"Cinderella<lb/>
But, in "Bambi's" case, the<lb/>
transfer to video wijl be like re-<lb/>
producing the detailed art oi Pe-<lb/>
ter Bruegel the Elder or Gustave<lb/>
Here to a postage stamp.<lb/>
We never see just who shot<lb/>
Bambi's mother, but we know<lb/>
who buried her.<lb/>
OpenTheBook<lb/>
That SolvesProblems.<lb/>
r<lb/>
�?- C- v s rtZ . S-C-i<lb/>
Batgirl sayeth:<lb/>
Reading the<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Features page is totally rad.<lb/>
I mean, boss<lb/>
Sorry.<lb/>
Pleas don't<lb/>
make me<lb/>
go back to<lb/>
the car show.<lb/>
P'ease.<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
V u're in school -with a pile of books to<lb/>
plow through even week. So the last thing<lb/>
you need is another book, right<lb/>
Wrung The Student Banking cheek<lb/>
book act itails makes your life easier.<lb/>
Much easier Student Banking is a no<lb/>
hassle checking account created expressly<lb/>
lor you at a time when you don't have<lb/>
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Hen's how it works:<lb/>
No Surprises: You'll know exactly how<lb/>
much monej will be deducted from your<lb/>
account in service charges each month,<lb/>
.lust $3.00<lb/>
For just $3.(X) a month, you can make<lb/>
up to l withdrawals from your account<lb/>
each month You can make these with-<lb/>
drawals b check, at a First Citizens Bank<lb/>
"24" ATM or a combination of both.<lb/>
V.u won't te hit by any extra charges<lb/>
as long as you make no more than 2<lb/>
transactions per month.<lb/>
Free Checks: To get you start eel. we'll<lb/>
give you �() free checks, personalized with<lb/>
your name and address. (Hometown and<lb/>
major not included.)<lb/>
Free ATM Card: With this card, you<lb/>
can withdraw cash anytime you need it<lb/>
24 hours a day I'so it for last-minute lab<lb/>
fees or late night pizza runs.<lb/>
You'll find a First Citizens Bank "2 i"<lb/>
ATM on�or very near�your campus. Ybu<lb/>
can also use your ATM card at l,SOOKela '<lb/>
ATMs in five Southeastern<lb/>
states. Great for road trips!<lb/>
Keep in mind that you<lb/>
will te charged normal ser-<lb/>
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MKVUKH n<lb/>
c IH88HRS1 I rnZENSHANKA. lid SI<lb/>
'VU'WI<lb/>
Xeno<lb/>
By STEVE SOMMER!<lb/>
St��l Wnttr<lb/>
If you were around Si<lb/>
night while Xenon wassctti<lb/>
f r the welcome back concei<lb/>
would have seen a good<lb/>
1 he ECU Marching Pirates<lb/>
would have hung aroun.<lb/>
enough to watch Xenon, th<lb/>
would have sevn a real<lb/>
band.<lb/>
You know those 5 <lb/>
come on the radio and you<lb/>
diatcly sv- � h  � station,<lb/>
were cxa tly the gutless<lb/>
s. ngs that rr I<lb/>
list<lb/>
One of Qw<lb/>
to pose, tel<lb/>
CHICAGO (AP) -<lb/>
�.tor Jonathan Blacl I<lb/>
rr iga.ur.c says<lb/>
ingl<lb/>
 make �<lb/>
publican vi<lb/>
didate Dar Q 11<lb/>
nude irs the r<lb/>
ber issue<lb/>
Black would not saj<lb/>
whether Parkinson's CO<lb/>
will contradic I<lb/>
prcviousl) �<lb/>
shared a Florid<lb/>
other congressme and<lb/>
son in fanuarj Q4<lb/>
never ace. I intimaj<lb/>
her, and a justice Deri<lb/>
investigation of Parkinsoj<lb/>
tionships with members<lb/>
grcss found no impropru<lb/>
Playboy s mar .<lb/>
graph will appear in a sd<lb/>
the magazine featuring wj<lb/>
Washington in tl<lb/>
uled to be on the new <lb/>
1.<lb/>
Quaylc and I<lb/>
members shared a<lb/>
Parkinson during a g I<lb/>
tion in 1980. The two cj<lb/>
men besides Quaylc whl<lb/>
We N<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0013"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1988<lb/>
Movie, "The Last Temptation of Christ receives national<lb/>
protest from fundmentalists, including 8,000 area petitioners<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Feature Fviitor <lb/>
With mass protest over the re-<lb/>
cent release of "The Last Tempta-<lb/>
tion of Christ" around the coun-<lb/>
try, a local radio station has com-<lb/>
piled approximately 8,000 signa-<lb/>
tures from people who seek to<lb/>
have the film ban from area thea-<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
Tom Lamprecht, general man-<lb/>
ager of WGHB in Farmville, pre-<lb/>
sented the signed petitions of<lb/>
approximately 8,000 people to<lb/>
theaters in Greenville last week.<lb/>
Lamprecht said all of the area<lb/>
theaters, except for the Plitt thea-<lb/>
�<lb/>
5<lb/>
-<lb/>
:<lb/>
ter, told the general manager that<lb/>
they would not show the contro-<lb/>
versial movie.<lb/>
Lamprecht said Plitt has not<lb/>
made a decision whether to show<lb/>
the film or not. According to<lb/>
Lamprecht, Plitt is owned by<lb/>
Universal Studios, which re-<lb/>
leased the film last Friday.<lb/>
According to the Associates<lb/>
Press, about 25,000 people, some<lb/>
carrying crosses, protested the<lb/>
film's release outside of Univer-<lb/>
sial Studios in Universial City,<lb/>
California. Fundmentalist Chris-<lb/>
tians say the movie is blasphe-<lb/>
mous in its portrayal of Jesus<lb/>
Christ tempted to abandon his<lb/>
divinity.<lb/>
"It is a distortation of what the<lb/>
Bible says. 1 lollywood in general<lb/>
has been inaccurate in depicting<lb/>
history. 1 get tired of the historical<lb/>
inaceurateness said Lamprecht.<lb/>
1 Ic said WGHB started to dis-<lb/>
tributing petitions about 30 days<lb/>
ago. G the number of signatures,<lb/>
hesaid " 1 'm surpribed. 1 expected<lb/>
to receive maybe a 1,000 signa-<lb/>
ture<lb/>
The nation's fourth-largest<lb/>
theater chains-General Cinema<lb/>
Theaters-has decided against<lb/>
show the film on their 1,338<lb/>
sv i ecus<lb/>
Around the country, churches<lb/>
have band together in efforts to<lb/>
have the movie not shown in<lb/>
community theaters. Lamprecht<lb/>
said many of the signatures on the<lb/>
petitions came from members of<lb/>
churches through out Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Opponents of the film are en-<lb/>
raged by the protrayal of Jesus as<lb/>
an ambivalent savior. In a halluci-<lb/>
nation while dying on the cross,<lb/>
Christ imagines abandoning his<lb/>
divinity to liveasan ordinary man<lb/>
and fantasizes about sex with<lb/>
Mary Magdalene.<lb/>
"It has gone to far. Personal<lb/>
beliefs are being infringed on<lb/>
said Lamprechet.<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
AMIGOS<lb/>
?<lb/>
� Authentic Mexican Fmtd<lb/>
� Open 7 Day i Week For<lb/>
Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
Mnn-lhurs - am-W "�<lb/>
Fri-S.it - II am II pin<lb/>
� (itntinu Serving Late<lb/>
itiht Snacks and<lb/>
I o-lituils till I am<lb/>
Disney recent releases succeed, flop<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Within two months, Walt<lb/>
Disney Studios released two fea-<lb/>
tures which are state of the art<lb/>
animation.<lb/>
Both films exhibit a high degree<lb/>
of technical innovation and art-<lb/>
istry. One is a glorious success, the<lb/>
other has received a compara-<lb/>
tively lukewarm reception by<lb/>
audiences.<lb/>
The former, o course, is the<lb/>
now ubiquitous, "Roger Rabbit<lb/>
The latter is "Bambi<lb/>
"Roger Rabbit's" success is well<lb/>
deserved. To my mind, it is only<lb/>
one of a handful oi recent movies<lb/>
to capture perfectly the essence of<lb/>
the classic, peculiarly American<lb/>
film (the only other to come<lb/>
quickly to mind is Rob Reiner's<lb/>
"The Princess Bride").<lb/>
But I wonder, how much of<lb/>
"Roger's" success is due to this<lb/>
quality as opposed to the mar-<lb/>
ketability of the bucktoothed<lb/>
hero? Here, at last, since the glory<lb/>
days of "ET and "Gremlins is<lb/>
a fantasy figure whose fascimile<lb/>
could grace sweat shirts, lunch<lb/>
boxes, and plastic cups.<lb/>
Children suckled on such lame<lb/>
TV fare as "He-Man "G.l. Joe<lb/>
and "Smurfs" still retain in their<lb/>
kid-rid diet the classic Warner<lb/>
Bros, shorts and naturally find<lb/>
"Roger" easily accessible.<lb/>
"Roger Rabbit representing<lb/>
the tradition of "big-foot" humor<lb/>
of the animated short, literally<lb/>
screams at the viewer from the<lb/>
screen. As with most special ef-<lb/>
fects laden films, the pyrotechnic<lb/>
display calls attention to itself. In<lb/>
"Roger Rabit the fireworks are<lb/>
part of the film's fabric, not<lb/>
merely sewn on, and thus they<lb/>
work in the context.<lb/>
"Bambi by contrast, is a quiet<lb/>
film. For the time period, it was<lb/>
just as "technical" as "Roger Rab-<lb/>
bit But just as the story context of<lb/>
"Roger Rabbit" allows the techni-<lb/>
cal innovation to run roughshod<lb/>
as a hurricane over the screen, the<lb/>
story context of "Bambi" requires<lb/>
that it come across as a whisper.<lb/>
"Bambi" has been criticized for<lb/>
lacking the power to hold the at-<lb/>
tention of today's children.<lb/>
Yesterday's kids wailed at the<lb/>
death of Bambi's mother; today's<lb/>
indifferently ask for more pop-<lb/>
corn. This is not a reflection on the<lb/>
film, but rather the children<lb/>
whose minds have been ravaged<lb/>
by those demented blue trolls<lb/>
(Smurfs to you) and similar<lb/>
drivel.<lb/>
With the possible exception of<lb/>
Thumper, none of "Bambi's" cast,<lb/>
including the lead himself, have<lb/>
personality enough to warrant<lb/>
even so much as a 7-11 Slurpee<lb/>
Cup. This "flaw however,<lb/>
works as much in the context of<lb/>
the film as "Roger's" self-indul-<lb/>
gent twisting of physics. As John<lb/>
Grant points out in 'The Encyclo-<lb/>
pedia of Walt Disney's Animated<lb/>
Character (depth in characteri-<lb/>
zation) wouldhave been a mis-<lb/>
take, for the point of the movie is<lb/>
that these are real animals � ajiy<lb/>
animals-living in a real forest<lb/>
As mentioned, "Roger Rabit<lb/>
for all its technical innovation,<lb/>
barely strays from the cartoon's<lb/>
spawning ground: the short<lb/>
"gag" cartoon. "Bambi" remains a<lb/>
much more experimental film:<lb/>
much more a work of art.<lb/>
Critic Leonard Maltin called it<lb/>
"a visual poem "Bambi" is that<lb/>
and more: a symbiosis of light and<lb/>
sound.<lb/>
"Bambi" can be viewed as a<lb/>
compliment to the Nutcracker<lb/>
Suite segment of "Fantasia" as<lb/>
orchestration weds with anima-<lb/>
tion to form a pagan to nature. The<lb/>
accompaniment to the ballet leaps<lb/>
ol the young stags through the<lb/>
meadow, the scattering of autum<lb/>
leaves, and Bambi's learning to<lb/>
hkate are just a few examples.<lb/>
1 he upshot of Bambi's luke-<lb/>
warm acceptance is that "Bambi"<lb/>
will probable never have another<lb/>
extensive theatrical release. As<lb/>
they've done with other classic<lb/>
cartoon feature, Disnev will<lb/>
probably opt to re-release it on<lb/>
video cassette. There is little lost<lb/>
in the transition with those<lb/>
Disney cartoons that stress char-<lb/>
acter instead of spectacle, such as<lb/>
"Lady and the Tramp and<lb/>
"Cinderella<lb/>
But, in "Bambi's" case, the<lb/>
transfer to video will be like re-<lb/>
producing the detailed art of Pe-<lb/>
ter Bruegel the Elder or Gustavo<lb/>
Do re to a postage stamp.<lb/>
We never see just who shot<lb/>
Bambi's mother, but we know<lb/>
who buried her.<lb/>
Come For The Food<lb/>
Stay For The Fun<lb/>
MexiccjiiReskiui- tnt<lb/>
521 CotancheSt<lb/>
U<lb/>
757-1')bb<lb/>
OpenTheBook<lb/>
That SolvesProblems.<lb/>
Batgirl sayeth:<lb/>
Reading the<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Features page is totally rad.<lb/>
I mean, boss<lb/>
Sorry.<lb/>
Please don't<lb/>
make me<lb/>
go back to<lb/>
the car show<lb/>
P'ease.<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
You're in school�with a pile of books to<lb/>
plow through oven week. So the last thing<lb/>
you need is another book, right?<lb/>
Wrong. The Stu nt Banking check<lb/>
lxM)k actually makes y ur life easier.<lb/>
Much easier. Student Banking is a no-<lb/>
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Meres how it works:<lb/>
No Surprises: You'll know exactly how<lb/>
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account in service charges each month.<lb/>
Just $3.00.<lb/>
For just $3.00 a month, you can make<lb/>
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each month. You can make these with-<lb/>
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You won't be hit by any extra charge's<lb/>
as long as you make no more than 12<lb/>
transactions per month.<lb/>
Free Checks: To get you started, well<lb/>
give you 50 free checks, personalized with<lb/>
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major not included.)<lb/>
Free ATM Card: With this card, you<lb/>
can withdraw cash anytime you need it<lb/>
24 hours a day. lTse it for last minute lah<lb/>
fees or late night pizza runs.<lb/>
You'll find a First Citizens Bank '24"<lb/>
ATM on-or very near-your campus. You<lb/>
can also use your ATM card at 1,800 Relay"<lb/>
ATMs in five Southeastern<lb/>
states. Great for road trips!<lb/>
Keep in mind that you<lb/>
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MS BANK A iw sit.MIA<lb/>
Xeno<lb/>
By STEVE SOMMERJ<lb/>
Staff WnMf<lb/>
If you were around Si<lb/>
night while Xenon was settii<lb/>
for the welcome back concci<lb/>
would have seen a good<lb/>
The ECU Marching Pirates<lb/>
would have hung aroundj<lb/>
enough to watch Xenon, the<lb/>
would have seen a real!<lb/>
band.<lb/>
You know those songj<lb/>
come on the radio and you<lb/>
diately switch the station<lb/>
were exactly the gutless<lb/>
songs that made-up Xenon<lb/>
list.<lb/>
Now, there's somethinj<lb/>
One ofQw<lb/>
to pose, tell<lb/>
CHICAGO (AP) � Mai<lb/>
editor Jonathan Black of ?<lb/>
magazine says one-time<lb/>
ington lobbyist Paula Pai<lb/>
will make new commerts<lb/>
Republican vice-president<lb/>
didatc Dan Quayle and<lb/>
r.udc :r. the magazine's<lb/>
bcr issue.<lb/>
Black would not say, hq<lb/>
whether Parkinson's coi<lb/>
will contradict what she<lb/>
previously about when.<lb/>
shared a Florida conagc i<lb/>
other congrcssmc and<lb/>
son in January 19S0. Qua<lb/>
never accused of intima<lb/>
her, and a Justice Dep<lb/>
investigation of Parkinsoi<lb/>
tionships with members<lb/>
grcss found no impropru<lb/>
" Playboy s managing<lb/>
graph will appear in a<lb/>
the magazine featuring w<lb/>
Washington in the issu<lb/>
ulcd to be on the ncwsstai<lb/>
1.<lb/>
Quayle and two othci<lb/>
members shared a cottaj<lb/>
Parkinson during a golfn<lb/>
tion in 1980. The two c<lb/>
men besides Quavle whe<lb/>
We N<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0014"/><lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
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IS.<lb/>
-t<lb/>
i<lb/>
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�<lb/>
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� "lith so<lb/>
ti ens<lb/>
� Fiedcopj<lb/>
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when<lb/>
mints on rental<lb/>
ttionaica rental<lb/>
at ibr spring<lb/>
" the Firstiti<lb/>
� near your cam<lb/>
pen a Student<lb/>
account today<lb/>
be the most im<lb/>
K�ik �u oH'n<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1988 13<lb/>
Xenon plays gutless Top 40<lb/>
By STEVE SOMMERS<lb/>
ftaff Writof<lb/>
If you were around Sunday<lb/>
night while Xenon was setting-up<lb/>
for the welcome back concert, you<lb/>
would have seen a good band,<lb/>
The ECU Marching Pirates. If you<lb/>
would have hung around long<lb/>
enough to watch Xenon, then you<lb/>
would have seen a really bad<lb/>
band.<lb/>
You know those songs that<lb/>
come on the radio and you imme-<lb/>
diately switch the station, those<lb/>
were exactly the gutless top 40<lb/>
songs that made-up Xenon's play<lb/>
list.<lb/>
Now, there's something about<lb/>
cover bands (let alone top40cover<lb/>
bands) that really makes ones face<lb/>
drag. Somewhere between a<lb/>
complete loss of personal integ-<lb/>
rity there is a loss of artistic integ-<lb/>
rity, not to mention the shut and<lb/>
closed case of musicians that have<lb/>
completely sold-out.<lb/>
However, Xenon was worse<lb/>
than your typical top 40 cover<lb/>
band in that you would never<lb/>
know if they were musicians. On<lb/>
stage there were five guys, one<lb/>
was singing, one standing, play-<lb/>
ing plastic Casio drums and three<lb/>
� I'll say that number again �<lb/>
three guys were playing key-<lb/>
boards.<lb/>
It's like they all met at Pitt<lb/>
County Tech and decided to get a<lb/>
band together which could play at<lb/>
Ramada Inns all across tourist<lb/>
infected coastal plains. Landing<lb/>
this gig at ECU must have been a<lb/>
real career buster.<lb/>
There is this word that keeps<lb/>
coming in my head when I think<lb/>
about this Xenon band. This word<lb/>
transcends beyond words which<lb/>
also apply, like "gutless "insin-<lb/>
cere and "bland and that word<lb/>
is "cheesy In fact, I would not be<lb/>
at all surprised if this was just one<lb/>
stop on a tour which of course<lb/>
would be sponsored by the Dairy<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
I can see it now, "Xenon and<lb/>
Velvetta rock America. Coming<lb/>
soon to a Holiday Inn near you<lb/>
Please forgive the Student<lb/>
Union for the terrible error of<lb/>
choosing Xenon. Hopefully eve-<lb/>
rybody can find some under-<lb/>
standing in their hearts and<lb/>
minds to realize that the commit-<lb/>
tee was working under a lot of<lb/>
tension this summer considering<lb/>
the intense heat and long dry<lb/>
spills.<lb/>
Read the new satire page<lb/>
One of Quayle's croonies<lb/>
to pose, tell all in Playboy<lb/>
CHICAGO (AP) � Managing<lb/>
editor Jonathan Black of Playboy<lb/>
magazine says one-time Wash-<lb/>
ington lobbyist Paula Parkinson<lb/>
will make new comments about<lb/>
Republican vice-presidential can-<lb/>
didate Dan Quayle and appear<lb/>
nude in the magazine's Novem-<lb/>
ber issue.<lb/>
Black would not say, however,<lb/>
whether Parkinson's comments<lb/>
will contradict what she has said<lb/>
previously about when Quayle<lb/>
shared a Florida cottage with two<lb/>
other congressme . and Parkin-<lb/>
son in January 1980. Quayle was<lb/>
never accused of intimacy with<lb/>
her, and a Justice Department<lb/>
investigation of Parkinson's rela-<lb/>
tionships with members of Con-<lb/>
gress found no impropriety.<lb/>
Playboys managing photo-<lb/>
graph will appear in a section of<lb/>
the magazine featuring women in<lb/>
Washington in the issue sched-<lb/>
uled to be on the newsstands Oct.<lb/>
1.<lb/>
Quayle and two other House<lb/>
members shared a cottage with<lb/>
Parkinson during a golfing vaca-<lb/>
tion in 1980. The two congress-<lb/>
men besides Quayle who shared<lb/>
the cottage were Rep. Tom<lb/>
Railsback, R-Ill and Rep. Tho-<lb/>
mas B. Evans, R-Del.<lb/>
Parkinson said she had an affair<lb/>
with Evans, who later left the<lb/>
House. Quayle, now the junior<lb/>
senator from Indiana, has denied<lb/>
having an affair with Parkinson.<lb/>
Questions about the incident<lb/>
were revived last week when<lb/>
George Bush named Quayle as his<lb/>
GOP running mate.<lb/>
"That's been looked into and<lb/>
there's absolutely nothing to it<lb/>
said Bush campaign chairman<lb/>
James A. Baker 111 when the issue<lb/>
resurfaced.<lb/>
At the time of the incident,<lb/>
Parkinson was 30 years old and a<lb/>
lobbyist for an insurance industry<lb/>
group that opposed legislation to<lb/>
set up a national crop insurance<lb/>
program. The bill passed in the<lb/>
House by a 235-150 vote in Sep-<lb/>
tember 1980, but Quayle voted<lb/>
against it.<lb/>
The Justice Department investi-<lb/>
gated Parkinson's activities in<lb/>
connection with allegations of a<lb/>
sex-and-influence scandal but<lb/>
dropped its case in August 1981<lb/>
without filing criminal charges.<lb/>
IMAGINE YOURSELF<lb/>
�Involved in an active, prcsitigous student<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
�Having a major leadership role on campus.<lb/>
�Gaining valuable experience in public rela-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
�Projecting a positive image of ECU.<lb/>
�Meeting University and community VIP's,<lb/>
government officials, and alumni leaders.<lb/>
�Influencing the future of your University.<lb/>
WELCOME BACK ECU TO<lb/>
stem bo's<lb/>
gTHE ORIGINAL HARDEE<lb/>
Corner 5th and Rcade St. (next to Stop Shop)<lb/>
Phone 830-5476<lb/>
Fresh Ground Hamburger<lb/>
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Open 10 a.m. til 1 a.m. - Closed Sunday<lb/>
New Students<lb/>
Welcome to Fast Carolina and to the Catholic Student Center<lb/>
an<lb/>
ECU AMBASSADOR!<lb/>
See the Membership Booth in front of the<lb/>
Student Store - August 22-31<lb/>
Newman<lb/>
Catholic Student Center<lb/>
931 E 10:h Mrot<lb/>
Crwnvillo, NC 27"U<lb/>
iN) 737 37tn)<lb/>
 37-11<lb/>
Sunday Mass Schedule<lb/>
11:30 a.m. - Biology Bldg. Room 103; 8.30 p.m. - Newman Center<lb/>
Wednesday Mass<lb/>
5:30 p.m followed by a fellowship dinner<lb/>
For more information call Teresa Lee,<lb/>
Outreach and Publicity Chairman - 830-3835<lb/>
The Newman Center is open to all students, faculty and staff at ECU<lb/>
father Paul Vacth Chaplain &amp; Campus Minister<lb/>
We Now Deliver<lb/>
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Enjoy TCiT frozen yogurt <lb/>
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<pb facs="00058087_0015"/><lb/>
<lb/>
14<lb/>
Tl tC EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1988<lb/>
Advice Column<lb/>
Jr. has bed wetting problem<lb/>
Dear Big E,<lb/>
First let me say that is about<lb/>
time you incompetent journalists<lb/>
started an advice column. Your<lb/>
paper is horrid. I mean look at all<lb/>
the typos and words usscd in-<lb/>
corectly. But I'll say it is about<lb/>
time you had this column.<lb/>
O.K. I am a fairly attractive male<lb/>
now in my third year of school<lb/>
(but 1 am not a junior) hercat ECU.<lb/>
I've dated four girls since I have<lb/>
been here, but unfortunately I<lb/>
haven't had a satisfying relation-<lb/>
ship until recently.<lb/>
During an English class in the<lb/>
first session of summer school, I<lb/>
met a hot babe who will go name-<lb/>
less. She sat beside me in class and<lb/>
we passed notes back and forth.<lb/>
One day, she invited me over to<lb/>
her pool where we laved out and<lb/>
discussed life.<lb/>
We found we had a lot in com-<lb/>
mon and 1 asked her out. From the<lb/>
fi rst date, I could tell that we could<lb/>
have something together. Maybe<lb/>
it was a little twinkle in her eye or<lb/>
something corny like that, but we<lb/>
started going out pretty seriously<lb/>
and still are.<lb/>
Alright, so obviously I have a<lb/>
problem or I wouldn't be writing<lb/>
you. It started on our fourth date<lb/>
or so. We were caught in a real ro-<lb/>
mantic embrace in her apartment<lb/>
and she lead mc up stairs. Need-<lb/>
less to say, we didn't get much<lb/>
sleep that summer night as we<lb/>
carrcssed and tasted each others<lb/>
bodies until the sun came up.<lb/>
Just Ask<lb/>
BigE<lb/>
Earlvis<lb/>
the left side to sleep, leaving me In the past, I have been accused<lb/>
on the other side in puddles of se- of being a sexist, homophobic,<lb/>
crctions. Cadillac driver. But when women<lb/>
While she sleeps, I just lay there over step their limits, just as in<lb/>
uncomfortable and damp. Some your case, it's time to put your<lb/>
nights I try to move to the left side Nike down and smell the stale<lb/>
of the bed before we do it, but beer.<lb/>
when I do she won't touch me. But in this case there are altcr-<lb/>
1 don't know it's pretty stupid natives. Next time you sleep with<lb/>
but it's really getting on my her, pull out the vaccum cleaner<lb/>
nerves. I mean, I have to work and place it by the bed. After<lb/>
early in the morning and I am moaning "Oh God" and crinkling<lb/>
always tired because 1 can't get your toes, turn the vaccum on full<lb/>
any sleep. Big E, I really like this blast and proceed to apply the<lb/>
girl, but how do I tell her that lam suction to the dampen area. It may<lb/>
getting tired of sleeping in the wet take some time to dry, but the<lb/>
spot? Hoover will remove all of your<lb/>
Signed P.D. gross and unslightly left overs.<lb/>
If this doesn't work, try sheet-<lb/>
Dear wet spot, ing the bed in a roll of industry<lb/>
My, my you really got yourself sized Downey (the quicker<lb/>
in a spot didn't you? I had a simi picker-up) and sleep moisturc-<lb/>
iar situation to yours when I lived free-<lb/>
in Aycock Dorm, but we shared Wr�at's the deal. Got a problem?<lb/>
the misery because the bed was so Don't just carry it around in your<lb/>
small. turgid head, just ask Earlvis, the<lb/>
Alright man, you have to level Bi8 E- Got a gambling problem ?<lb/>
Girl friend have the crabs?Think<lb/>
The really boss<lb/>
Satire Page<lb/>
Hi kids! Welcome to The East<lb/>
Carolinian Features Section's All<lb/>
New Satire Page. This is a new<lb/>
feature, designed specifically so<lb/>
that we, the writers, can write all<lb/>
sorts of slanderous and Iibelous<lb/>
things AND GET AWAY WITH<lb/>
IT!<lb/>
Well, all we really want to do is<lb/>
ENTERTAIN you, the reader. In<lb/>
order to provide this service, we<lb/>
have enlisted the writing ablitics<lb/>
of the most famous, the most boss<lb/>
writers to walk the face of the<lb/>
planet.<lb/>
Of course, we arc referring to The<lb/>
Venerable Earlvis, and the often<lb/>
perverse Bonchcad.<lb/>
They have gallantly volunteered<lb/>
their time, effort and their meager<lb/>
paychecks in order to bring you,<lb/>
the reader the highest quality<lb/>
humor available. Not like we're<lb/>
trying to compete with our very<lb/>
own Fun 'N Games � section<lb/>
though. No, sir. Not us.<lb/>
So enjoy our stuff, write to the<lb/>
advice column, but whatever you<lb/>
do don't sue us. By the way, our<lb/>
boss photos were taken by<lb/>
Photolab's own, Jon Jordan.<lb/>
Thanks, guy.<lb/>
Bonehead back<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
downwards, straight tor the shelf<lb/>
of jars containing fetal pigs.<lb/>
The rest of the class stared in<lb/>
utter horror as she tried to stop.<lb/>
She fishtailed into the shelf, caus-<lb/>
ing the bottles to come crashing<lb/>
down on her head. The stink of<lb/>
formaldehyde and rotted pig<lb/>
wafted up from the bottom of the<lb/>
room.<lb/>
I fell over I was laughing so<lb/>
hard. I guess I am still the Bone-<lb/>
head. Have a good one kids, and<lb/>
don't let a fat girl get ya.<lb/>
Fetal pigs  I love it.<lb/>
with her. Tell her to sleep on the<lb/>
right side or take the sheets to the y�u see Elvis? Dr0P me a line at:<lb/>
Since then I have noticed that laundry mat and dry the damn Earlvis<lb/>
she always edges me to the right thing. If she refuses, threaten her East Carolinian<lb/>
side of the bed before we have sex. with "No more earth-shattering Publications Building<lb/>
After the act, she always moves to climaxes for you Emerald City, N.C 27858-4353<lb/>
Squirrel man sighted in woods<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C (BP) �<lb/>
Local authorities are investigat-<lb/>
ing reports of a large "squirrel<lb/>
man" that allegedly attacked two<lb/>
freshmen on the ECU campus<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Wandjtna Maguire, an 18-year-<lb/>
old Pamlico county native and<lb/>
Missy Bainbridgc, a 19-year-old<lb/>
from Wake county native re-<lb/>
ported the incident to Campus<lb/>
Security Monday night.<lb/>
Maguire is in stable condition at<lb/>
Pitt Memorial Hospital. She is<lb/>
and was released Tuesday morn- ofthe "squirrel man Police Chief Both girls took a brcathalizcr<lb/>
inS- Gordon O'Hara noted in his re- test and registered well below the<lb/>
The two girls were returning to port, but didn't rule out the possi- legal 1.0 intoxication level.<lb/>
their dorms around midnight<lb/>
when a "big furry guy with a big<lb/>
bushy tail jumped down from the<lb/>
trees" between them. Bainbridgc<lb/>
said in her statement, "He had big<lb/>
teeth  like this demonstrating<lb/>
with her index and middle fin-<lb/>
gers.<lb/>
"It was horrible she said. "He<lb/>
landed right in between us and<lb/>
started gnawing on Jina's leg. All<lb/>
bility of a "rodent-like man.<lb/>
During a press conference<lb/>
Tuesday, he said, "I never seen<lb/>
squirrels, say, man-sized, but<lb/>
back home in Conctoc I've seen<lb/>
'cm get mighty big. Say, the size of<lb/>
Officials have cordoned off the<lb/>
area, but large crowds of curious<lb/>
students and townspeople have<lb/>
congregated there in the last two<lb/>
days. No other sightings have<lb/>
been reported, but O'Hara is<lb/>
them little peoplethose midgets keeping the case open,<lb/>
in the circus "You never know. It might be<lb/>
He went on to say that the squir- one of them missing link kind of<lb/>
rels in Greenville had never been things he said.<lb/>
being treated for extensive blood I could do was just scream<lb/>
loss stemming from two large Greenville police and ECU<lb/>
gashes on her left leg. Bainbridgc Campus security combed the<lb/>
escaped with minor abrasions wooded area, but found no traces<lb/>
known to attack humans, "but it's<lb/>
been a long nut-less summer.<lb/>
With all these new students in<lb/>
town all ot a sudden, 1 can see<lb/>
where thev (the squirrels) might<lb/>
be tempted to try a new diet<lb/>
For Bainbridgc and Maguire,<lb/>
one sighting is enough. "I ain't<lb/>
going home that way anymore.<lb/>
I'm still having nightmares about<lb/>
that horrible tail Bainbridgc<lb/>
said.<lb/>
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We Support The Pirates<lb/>
Buy 1 Wash,<lb/>
Get 2nd<lb/>
One Free<lb/>
Did you know<lb/>
that tourism is<lb/>
one of North<lb/>
Carolina's<lb/>
largest<lb/>
industries?<lb/>
Last year 60<lb/>
million visitors<lb/>
rfSH<lb/>
3fij, 8$<lb/>
spent nearly<lb/>
SIX BILLION DOLLARS in North<lb/>
Carolina. So don't just say "Howdy to<lb/>
our guests from other states  Shake<lb/>
their hands, invite 'em to stay longer, and<lb/>
urge 'em to come back soon!<lb/>
North Carolina tourism - it's everybody's<lb/>
business!<lb/>
Travel &amp; Tourism<lb/>
227,900 Jobs Strong!<lb/>
CALL 1-800-VISIT NC.<lb/>
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�1988 N.C. Travel &amp; Tourism<lb/>
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IU MI AH HARRIS<lb/>
, you i essionable readers and<lb/>
to rhe Pirate Comics Page, a<lb/>
of Fast arolina foi several years<lb/>
s ; in see, things are in a bit of<lb/>
� we were trying to re-<lb/>
modi ' befor - liool started back and ran<lb/>
out<lb/>
still<lb/>
But<lb/>
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run it th top u the page. 1 xcelsior!<lb/>
t think th( if isn't anything new<lb/>
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you i jm. this excuse<lb/>
foi Inn and (hihs. I he New and 1m-<lb/>
proved I mi and Games will be back next<lb/>
is� nth all kind- ot pi i.�.l treats like<lb/>
tin t ond innual' Kill I anny Partridge"<lb/>
contest and a special tribute to Clint<lb/>
Howard, Ron's underrated brother and<lb/>
star ot "Gentle Ben as well as co-star of<lb/>
memoi ial episodes of The Andy Griffith<lb/>
Show "(as Leon, the jelly sandwich cow-<lb/>
boy) Mi "Star Trek"(as Balok, the badly<lb/>
dubbed alien with buck teeth). Why Ron<lb/>
has soared to fame as a respected actor and<lb/>
director while Clint is still ignored by his<lb/>
peers and public is one of those oft tragic<lb/>
Hollywood ironies. Perhaps his genius<lb/>
will only be recognied after his death as<lb/>
other artists of his caliber such as James<lb/>
Joyce. Excuse meI seem to have some-<lb/>
thing in mv eye <lb/>
by Jeffl got Miraclewoman's hair" Parker<lb/>
I'm sorry. I was supposed to be telling you<lb/>
about this comix page, wasn't 1? first off,<lb/>
we have the triumphant return of Steve<lb/>
Reid, Comicus laurelette, who is reprint-<lb/>
ing rarely scene episodes of his award<lb/>
winning series, "The Law Steve origi-<lb/>
nally ran these strips over the summmer to<lb/>
a miniscule summer session audience<lb/>
who couldn't appreciate his genius. Now,<lb/>
the whole student body can join the Law<lb/>
in his battle against Bubblehead. Wow<lb/>
Steve promises a new look for "The Law"<lb/>
when it returns with new episodes later<lb/>
this semester. In between drawing those<lb/>
new episodes, Steve will be busy on the<lb/>
editorial page as the new editorial cartoon<lb/>
ist. You're a better man than I am, Gunga<lb/>
Din. Can't read, though.<lb/>
New to this page is "The Avatar" by<lb/>
"Orpheus" writer Micah Harris and bril-<lb/>
liant young buck artist Richard Haselrig.<lb/>
This is a science-fiction comic, placed in<lb/>
the far future but based on Hindu mythol-<lb/>
ogy of the remote past. But don't think this<lb/>
is pretentious clap-trap. The emphasis is<lb/>
on action and adventure in this strip. Fol-<lb/>
low the exploits of Tate, assassian with no<lb/>
past or future, and his colorful allies,<lb/>
Queequeg and Loreli the Robot. Look for<lb/>
plenty of sensuous babes : - this strip<lb/>
because that's what Richaru es drawing<lb/>
more than anything in the world. In fact,<lb/>
m&amp;<lb/>
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he's otten heard to shout at Harris, "Can't<lb/>
we get the chicks more scantily clad than<lb/>
the way you've scripted them?" Harris,<lb/>
true to his puritan instincts resists the lad<lb/>
at every turn, but the artist has the last<lb/>
word in this medium (even if he has to<lb/>
make them up, right Rich? Just what does<lb/>
"precomous" mean?)<lb/>
For all you fans of the "gag cartoon Rik is<lb/>
returning with "Inside Joke" and boy, will<lb/>
it make you gag. That was a joke Rik.<lb/>
These one-liners come natural to Rik since<lb/>
he sometimes doubles as a stand-up come-<lb/>
dian. The other times he's lying down.<lb/>
That was another joke Rik. Feel free to use<lb/>
this in your repertoire. Rik, by the way, is<lb/>
a master of "Brady Bunch" trivia and an<lb/>
extensive collector of Brady memorabilia.<lb/>
He has the beard that Greg wore in the<lb/>
hippy episode, a Kitty Carry-All of his<lb/>
very own (remind me to return it to you,<lb/>
Rik�Parker), and Christopher Knight<lb/>
(Peter) chained in his basement where he<lb/>
feeds him only Pez, sunflower seeds, and<lb/>
lime Kool-Aid.<lb/>
For all you thinking persons (feminists<lb/>
take note), "Orpheus" is back courtesy of<lb/>
artist Tom Gurganus and Micah Harris.<lb/>
After a noble but failed attempt to write<lb/>
serious psycho-sexual dramas, the duo de-<lb/>
cided to give existentialistic ang I a break<lb/>
and try their hand at wacky stuffwithout<lb/>
sacrificing continuity! Some trick, eh?<lb/>
You'll remember Orpheus seemed to save<lb/>
his lady love from burning up with a<lb/>
werewolf in a car wreck at the series con-<lb/>
clusion last year. That's rightseemed to.<lb/>
Next week you'll learn the truth in a se-<lb/>
quence as riveting as that of Tarn Ewing<lb/>
opening the shower door to find Bobby in-<lb/>
side! From that point, anything can<lb/>
happenAND IT WILL, BROTHER, IT<lb/>
WILL!<lb/>
"The Undercover Cats the strip that set<lb/>
the high standard by which all subsequent<lb/>
Pirate Comix are measured puts all that<lb/>
behind it with this issue. "It looks tacky<lb/>
Parker admits. "Tacky but honest: for this<lb/>
reason I am proud to call him 'friend says<lb/>
frequent collaborator Tom Gurganus.<lb/>
"But then again, I'd be proud to call Clint<lb/>
Howard 'friend Note the realism with<lb/>
which Parker renders a cat visiting his<lb/>
sandbox. And this from a guy who used to<lb/>
scoop poop in a pet store for a living! He<lb/>
must've shut his eyes is all I can figure.<lb/>
Jeff is moving away from superhero par-<lb/>
ody with this strip, and if s a good thing<lb/>
since he nevered bothered to finish his<lb/>
stories anyway.<lb/>
Finally, we have Paul Friedrich and<lb/>
"Overkill I must say that I admire<lb/>
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tHev Kids! Turn paper on the side to finish this bumpin' article!T<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0017"/><lb/>
THE EASTC AROl INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1988 Pago 16<lb/>
Virgina Tech Hokies to face tough season<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
C'u-Sports I ditor<lb/>
The Hokies of Virginia Tech<lb/>
liave high expectations for the<lb/>
1988 season, but the schedule that<lb/>
Ihey face may be one oi the tough-<lb/>
est in the nation.<lb/>
Tech has a schedule compa-<lb/>
rable to that of the Pirates this<lb/>
war playing many of the teams<lb/>
tt ECU has to face. Florida State,<lb/>
West Virginia, South Carolina<lb/>
,vAd Syracuse are some oi the<lb/>
opponents that the two have in<lb/>
i mmon while the Hokies add<lb/>
the highly ranked Clcmson Ti-<lb/>
gers, who they will have to play in<lb/>
booth Valley.<lb/>
In spite of a disappointing 2-9<lb/>
ish last year, Hokie hd<lb/>
Coach Frank Beamer is optimistic<lb/>
about the upcoming year. "We'll<lb/>
definitely have a better football<lb/>
team next season he commented<lb/>
at the end oi last season, "and the<lb/>
big reason is that our players are<lb/>
now more familiar with our style<lb/>
ei' play, both offensively and de-<lb/>
� : sivcly<lb/>
1 lowcver, Reamer's optimism<lb/>
may be a bit premature. The<lb/>
kies return only 11 starters<lb/>
fi m last season, the most con-<lb/>
5C cuous : :heirlossesbeini;two-<lb/>
year starter Erik Chapman at<lb/>
quarterback. Redshirt freshman<lb/>
Will Furrer and Cam Young, a<lb/>
transfer student from N.C. State,<lb/>
moved to the head of the battle for<lb/>
the quarterback position during<lb/>
spring drills, but both arc young<lb/>
and neither has any experience.<lb/>
"Quarterback is a big question<lb/>
mark Beamer said. "Last year at<lb/>
this time, we had a proven per-<lb/>
former there. It makes it really<lb/>
tough when you go into a season<lb/>
without anv experience at all at<lb/>
the quarterback position Other<lb/>
key losses that the Hokies suf-<lb/>
fered are tight end Steve Johnson,<lb/>
the team's leading receiver with<lb/>
38 catches; fullbacks Earnie Jones<lb/>
Sean Donnelly; center John<lb/>
FitzHugh; offensive guard Kevin<lb/>
Keeffe; outside linebacker Eddie<lb/>
Noel; defensive tackle Greg Drew;<lb/>
inside linebacker Victor Jones;<lb/>
and safety Carter Wiley. Also<lb/>
goneareChuck Watson,a starting<lb/>
defensive end last season, and Joe<lb/>
Ledbetter, a part-time starter at<lb/>
the same position. Both cited per-<lb/>
sonal reasons for their failure to<lb/>
return to the team for the '88 sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
The backfield for the Flokies<lb/>
this season should be one of their<lb/>
strong suits. At fullback will be<lb/>
Richard Fox, who split starting<lb/>
time the last two seasons. Fie<lb/>
rushed for 135 yards last year and<lb/>
caught four passes. At tailback<lb/>
will be a trio of talented players in<lb/>
Jon Jeffries, Ralph Brown, and<lb/>
Lamar Smith. Jeffries led the<lb/>
Hokies last year in rushing with<lb/>
599 yards, and ranked among the<lb/>
nation's leaders in kickoff returns<lb/>
with 25.5 yard average. Brown<lb/>
accounted for 195 yards, and<lb/>
Smith finished the season with<lb/>
149 yards. Running at Hanker will<lb/>
be cither Jeff Roberts or veteran<lb/>
Karl Bordcn, both of whom are<lb/>
battling for the starting nod.<lb/>
The receiving department for<lb/>
Tech will be strong in one area,<lb/>
and relatively weak in another.<lb/>
Starting at the tight end position<lb/>
will be junior Brian McCall, who<lb/>
only caught one pass last year in<lb/>
his backup role. However, the<lb/>
Hokies return Myron Richardson,<lb/>
a converted flanker, at split end.<lb/>
Richardson caught 28 passes for<lb/>
396 yards and four touchdowns<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
The Hokie offensive line should<lb/>
be a plus this season for the team,<lb/>
returning some good and experi-<lb/>
enced players. At center will be<lb/>
Chris Henderson, who will move<lb/>
to this position from the backup<lb/>
role that he played last year be-<lb/>
hind FitzHugh. At theguard posi-<lb/>
tions will be Glenn Watts, a re-<lb/>
turning starter, and Tom Hall, a<lb/>
chief backup last year. Running at<lb/>
the tackles will be returner Todd<lb/>
Granlham, who the coaches look<lb/>
to to be the leader of the line, and<lb/>
Larry Peerv. Both Grant ham and<lb/>
Pccry are coming oii knee sur-<lb/>
gerv, but should be at 100 percent<lb/>
in the fall.<lb/>
On defense tor Tech will be<lb/>
many talented returning players.<lb/>
At the ends will be returning<lb/>
starter Jimmy Whittcn, who was<lb/>
ranked fifth on the team in tackles<lb/>
last season with 90. Al Chamblec<lb/>
apparently will fill in at the other<lb/>
end.<lb/>
At tackle will be returning<lb/>
starter Scott Hill, who was last<lb/>
year's leading tackier with 117,<lb/>
while redshirt freshmen Bryan<lb/>
Campbell and Todd Mcade will<lb/>
compete for the other tackle posi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Linebackers, both inside and<lb/>
outside, will be tough for the<lb/>
Hokies. At the inside will be<lb/>
Randy Cockrell, the team's sec-<lb/>
ond leading tackier last season<lb/>
with 133, and veteran Don Stokes<lb/>
will be at the other inside gap. On<lb/>
the outside will be two veteran<lb/>
players in Jock Jones and Darwin<lb/>
Herdman. Herdman had 23 tack-<lb/>
les and one interception, while<lb/>
Jones racked up 23 tackles.<lb/>
Returning at the corners u ill be<lb/>
veterans John Granby and Roger<lb/>
Brown. Granby racked up26 tack-<lb/>
les and one interception, and<lb/>
Brown accounted for 62 tackles<lb/>
and an interception. Scott Rice, a<lb/>
two-year veteran at comerback,<lb/>
will shift to the free safety this<lb/>
season. Rice had 43 stops last sea-<lb/>
son, and the coaches expect big r<lb/>
numbers from him this year.<lb/>
On special teams will be return-<lb/>
ing kicker Chris Kinzer, who led<lb/>
the nation in 19S6, going 23 of 27<lb/>
in field goals, and lie was lech's<lb/>
leading scorer last year with 47<lb/>
points. Chris Baucia, a reserve<lb/>
quarterback, will fill in at punter.<lb/>
'Cocks high on Ellis<lb/>
By PAUL DUNN<lb/>
(   rti I or<lb/>
I Diversity oi South Caro-<lb/>
. : v'c d - me national spot-<lb/>
t y ar by posting an 8-4<lb/>
rd md the n lor making an<lb/>
I p  nee at the Mazda Gator<lb/>
I h eGamecocks also earned<lb/>
nor ol being ranked 15th in<lb/>
the nation.<lb/>
The Pirates traveled to Colum-<lb/>
bia. South Carolina last year<lb/>
erienccd a 34-12<lb/>
:U ex<lb/>
n � tt game, the Gamecock's<lb/>
American quarterback candi-<lb/>
: ; ddElliscomplcted21of33<lb/>
5ses : r a school-record 425<lb/>
rds thi first time ever in South<lb/>
I r lina history that a quarter-<lb/>
ick had topped the 400 yard<lb/>
.rk<lb/>
Wi.ii his game winning per-<lb/>
formance Ellis also set new school<lb/>
records in passing yardage and in<lb/>
mplctions. Ellis, being only a<lb/>
tftior, still lias two more years of<lb/>
college ball.<lb/>
The almost super-human QB is<lb/>
actual!v thought to be slightly<lb/>
.vrrated by some, and his last<lb/>
five games proved that everyone<lb/>
can not be perfect. In those tinat<lb/>
games Ellis only threw one touch-<lb/>
down pass but had interceptions<lb/>
on a constant basis, totalling 24 in<lb/>
those five games. Even with the<lb/>
not so great passes towards the<lb/>
end of the season Ellis did still<lb/>
throw for over 3,000 yards and<lb/>
nobody can intercept that accom-<lb/>
plishment.<lb/>
Also in that game, when the<lb/>
Gamecock's QB wasn't setting<lb/>
records, wingback Sterling<lb/>
Sharpe was. Sharpe's game, ver-<lb/>
sus the Firates, caught four passes<lb/>
for 107 ya rd s. Hi s performa nee sct<lb/>
the new record for career catches<lb/>
with 14S receptions for 2,228<lb/>
yards. It also marked the 29th<lb/>
consecutive contest in which<lb/>
Sharpe had caught at least one<lb/>
pass, tving him with the school<lb/>
record. Sharpe has graduated and<lb/>
will be badly missed.<lb/>
Senior Flardin Brown will<lb/>
likely replace Sharpe at the wing-<lb/>
back slot but will be under con-<lb/>
stant pressure by many talented<lb/>
players. Topping the list of back-<lb/>
ups will be sophomore Carl Platt<lb/>
Platt has good hands and speed<lb/>
and is not afraid to catch theball in<lb/>
a crowd.<lb/>
i ne oaitKxuLio nave an im-<lb/>
pressive list oi plavcrs that should<lb/>
stand out in the 1988 season.<lb/>
unior I larold Green will show<lb/>
oii some excellent talent at the<lb/>
running back position. Green<lb/>
rushed'for 1,022 yards on 229 car-<lb/>
ries with 15 touchdowns in 1988.<lb/>
I le set a school single season rec-<lb/>
ord with 16 touchdowns and fin-<lb/>
ished eighth nationally in scoring.<lb/>
In his 22 college games Green has<lb/>
had 23 touchdowns, while scor-<lb/>
ing 96 points in 1987 alone.<lb/>
Making good impressions for<lb/>
the offensive line is right guard<lb/>
Calvin Stephens. The sophomore<lb/>
lineman has excellent strength<lb/>
and possesses good techniques<lb/>
and work habits. Stephens gained<lb/>
valuable experience last season as<lb/>
a freshmen when he started the<lb/>
last nine games.<lb/>
Along side of Stephens will be<lb/>
two year starter Mark Fryer. The<lb/>
right tackle is considered to be the<lb/>
Gamecocks most consistent line-<lb/>
man and has been tagged their<lb/>
best pass protector. Fryer does not<lb/>
only possess intelligence on the<lb/>
field but is also an intelligent-stu-<lb/>
dent. He received the Ed Guerard<lb/>
Academic Award last year.<lb/>
The South Carolina Gamecocks try to pull down an ECU ball carrier in last year's action. This year's<lb/>
contest promises to be one of the most exciting in recent history. - (File photo)<lb/>
nan. The full time starter from last<lb/>
reason had a total of 91 tackles.<lb/>
McKernan is not a flashy player<lb/>
but is a consistent one that has<lb/>
become known as a hard-hitter.<lb/>
Being the anchor of the defen-<lb/>
sive line, junior Kurt Wilson is<lb/>
looking to stay away from shoul-<lb/>
der injuries like the one he suf-<lb/>
fered before last season's Gator<lb/>
Bowl. Wilson finished the 1987<lb/>
Senior Kevin Hendrix will be at season with 45 tackles, two of<lb/>
the other end spot. Hendrix was a them for loss and four being quar-<lb/>
part-time starter last season and terback sacks,<lb/>
racked up 39 tackles including Coach Joe Morrison has imple-<lb/>
three behind the line of scrimage. mentcd some new multiple offen-<lb/>
year and produced 83 tackles He is an aggressive player that sives and replaced some keyposi-<lb/>
making him the fourth leading can run and make the big plays. tions in the defensive secondary,<lb/>
tackier on the 1987 team. Robin- One of South Carolina's better The changes should produce<lb/>
son, being a two year starter, will linebackers is senior Matt McKcr- a good season.<lb/>
Resuming tor the second yee.r to<lb/>
tike on the duties of the<lb/>
placexickcr is sophomore Collin<lb/>
Mackic. Mackie is hoping to re-<lb/>
peat his record breaking sea-en<lb/>
he had last year when he lead the<lb/>
NCAA in field goals with a total of<lb/>
23. 1 lis kicking performance also<lb/>
allowed him to become South<lb/>
Carolina's single-season highest<lb/>
be die mainstay of the 1988 defen-<lb/>
sive secondary.<lb/>
The Gamecocks are fortunate to<lb/>
have two excellent defensive ends<lb/>
returning.<lb/>
Junior' Scott Windsor played<lb/>
more downs than any Gamecock<lb/>
defensive plavcr in 1987. Windsor<lb/>
tallied 71 tackles with three of<lb/>
them being behind the line of scri-<lb/>
rer with 113 points. For the mage and four being QB sacks.<lb/>
SCO<lb/>
year, he connected on 25 of 32<lb/>
field goals and was perfect on all<lb/>
39 extra point attempts.<lb/>
Senior cornerback Robert<lb/>
Robinson had a good season last<lb/>
Pirate's Booty Pirate's Booty Pirate's Booty<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
and<lb/>
PALL DUNN<lb/>
Co-Sports Yditora<lb/>
� Hello, sports fans, welcome to<lb/>
mother year of exciting ?irate<lb/>
ports. This cloumn, when run,<lb/>
ill be devoted to sports editori-<lb/>
ls, current sporting events,<lb/>
p rts tidbits, etc etc. and so on.<lb/>
u I keep in mind, sports fans, this<lb/>
is your paper, and subsequently,<lb/>
'hat makes this your column, al-<lb/>
though we'll be writing it, and we<lb/>
don't formally recognize ANY of<lb/>
.our rights. If you have any sug-<lb/>
gestions, comments, (Not ones<lb/>
about our writing styles, IQ's, or<lb/>
eyr mothers, God bless their<lb/>
souls), or questions, feel free to<lb/>
drop them by the East Carolinian,<lb/>
located on the second floor of the<lb/>
Fublications Building.<lb/>
The following letter is from<lb/>
Pave Hart, Dircctorof Athleticsat<lb/>
ECU. Read it carefully, and have a<lb/>
5�od year. We'll be talking to you.<lb/>
pear Students:<lb/>
�1 first want to welcome you back<lb/>
tocampus for the beginningof the<lb/>
'88-69 school year. I hope that<lb/>
you are in store for a successful,<lb/>
memorable year which provides<lb/>
you opportunities for educational<lb/>
and social growth.<lb/>
As I have stated on many occas-<lb/>
sions since being named Director<lb/>
of Athletics last winter, our stu-<lb/>
dents have been, and are, our<lb/>
department's biggest asset. The<lb/>
support and participation dem-<lb/>
onstrated by our student body for<lb/>
ECU athletics has been extremely<lb/>
admirable. On behalf of everyone<lb/>
connected with the Department<lb/>
of Athletics, I express my appre-<lb/>
ciation for what you have meant<lb/>
to the growth of our program.<lb/>
In order for our athletic teams to<lb/>
n ;<lb/>
tt is mv nope that you will not<lb/>
leave campus for the beach that<lb/>
day but, instead, will allow us to<lb/>
bring the beach to you.<lb/>
It is very important that we do<lb/>
all that we can to create excite-<lb/>
ment and enthusiasm in Ficklcn<lb/>
Stadium on September 3rd. Our<lb/>
goal is to have the largest opening<lb/>
day crowd in the state. Our open-<lb/>
ing game promotion will be de-<lb/>
tailed in an upcoming issue of the<lb/>
East Carolinian. It is my hope that<lb/>
our students will rally around our<lb/>
collective effort to begin the sea-<lb/>
son on a very positive note the<lb/>
night of September 3rd.<lb/>
I encourage vou to be in Ficklcn<lb/>
Stadium to Kick-Off the 1988 Pi-<lb/>
rate Football Season.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
t h 4 v<lb/>
Daw Hart, Jr.<lb/>
Dave Hart<lb/>
best represent you and our out-<lb/>
standing University, we have lo<lb/>
have your continued participa-<lb/>
tion in the stands.<lb/>
We open our 1988 football sea-<lb/>
son AT FIOME on Saturday night,<lb/>
September 3rd. We have not had a<lb/>
home opener since 1981, which<lb/>
means that very few in our cur-<lb/>
rent student body have ever made<lb/>
Labor Day Weekend Plans<lb/>
around a football game in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Pirate Tickets<lb/>
Okay, all of you wild and crazy<lb/>
ECU football fans, it's time to pick<lb/>
up those home football tickets.<lb/>
You can go and pick them up next<lb/>
week on Tuesday, Wednesday, or<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
The times that you can pick up<lb/>
the tickets for the 7:00 p.m. kick-<lb/>
off against Tennessee Tech are<lb/>
8:00 a.m5:00 p.m. in the lobby at<lb/>
Mingcs Colisium, or 11:00 a.m<lb/>
8:00 p.m. at Mendcnhall Student<lb/>
Center, for you lazier purple and<lb/>
gold fans.<lb/>
That's right, the athletic office is<lb/>
helping out all of you impatient<lb/>
students who are tired of waiting<lb/>
in those 1 - o - n - g but always<lb/>
exciting lines by giving you two<lb/>
ticket locations to chose from.<lb/>
When picking up the tickets,<lb/>
vou must.you must, (deja-vu, this<lb/>
is really important) not only ha e<lb/>
a valid IP, but you must also pres-<lb/>
ent a current activity card.<lb/>
Tickets for groups of 25 or more<lb/>
can be picked up next Monday<lb/>
from 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m only at<lb/>
Mingcs.<lb/>
This will be ECU'S first home-<lb/>
opener since 1981. (That's seven<lb/>
years ago for those of us who can't<lb/>
pass college math).<lb/>
So get those coolers ready, (be<lb/>
sure to tell mom that it is only for<lb/>
sodas), and prepare to spend<lb/>
' Labor Pay VeekenVi 'nackin at<lb/>
Ficklcn Stadium.<lb/>
Football pep-rally<lb/>
The 8th Annual East Carolina<lb/>
University Football Pep Rally<lb/>
sponsored by Budweiscr will be<lb/>
held on Thursday, September 1 ai<lb/>
7:00 p.m. in Ficklen Stadium. The<lb/>
Marching Pirates begin marching<lb/>
up College Hill to the stadium at<lb/>
6:30 p.rm The Pep Rally will fea-<lb/>
ture the ECU football players and<lb/>
coaches, Athletic Pirector Pave<lb/>
Hart, the Marching Pirates, the<lb/>
ECU cheerleaders and Pirate<lb/>
mascot.<lb/>
Everyone is encouraged lo at-<lb/>
tend. Admission to the Pep Rally<lb/>
is free of charge. Several prizes<lb/>
will be given away including<lb/>
$1000 worth of grand prizes.<lb/>
In the event of rain, the Pep<lb/>
Rally is scheduled to be held in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Southern Miss has<lb/>
new head coach<lb/>
By PAUL DUNN<lb/>
Co-Sports Lditor<lb/>
The University of Southern<lb/>
Mississippi plays its 72nd season<lb/>
of intercollegiate football in 19S8,<lb/>
and during that almost three<lb/>
quarters of a century period the<lb/>
Golden Eagles have put together<lb/>
one of the winningest Division 1-<lb/>
A records in the country along<lb/>
with a matching reputation for<lb/>
excellence in all facets of the pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
A new head coach and a re-<lb/>
vamped coaching staff along with<lb/>
mostly new faces in the offensive<lb/>
line and defensive backfield will<lb/>
be t lie most rtotic?ablQ change'<lb/>
A former assistant coach at<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M, Curlcy Hallman,<lb/>
will take over at the head position<lb/>
for the Golden Eagles making him<lb/>
the 15th coach at the university.<lb/>
Hallman's staff will include a<lb/>
mixture of returners and new-<lb/>
comers. Thamas Coleman, ad-<lb/>
ministrative assistant, will be the<lb/>
top returning assistant coach.<lb/>
The only returning offensive<lb/>
coach from the '87 season will be<lb/>
Mark McHale. McHalc will once<lb/>
again be controlling the offensive<lb/>
line.<lb/>
Returning for the defensive side<lb/>
will be linebacker coach Freeman<lb/>
Horton and and the defensive<lb/>
backfield coach Steve Davis.<lb/>
Topping the list of impressive<lb/>
assistant coaches that will be new<lb/>
faces is Jeff Bower. Bower, a foi-<lb/>
mer SMU standout who also pre<lb/>
viously served as an assistant<lb/>
coach at SMU will have manv<lb/>
tasks to handle. Bower will take<lb/>
control again as the assistant head<lb/>
coach along with being the quar-<lb/>
terback coach and offensive coor-<lb/>
dinator.<lb/>
Finishing up the long list of new<lb/>
coaches are: defensive coordina-<lb/>
tor Ellis Johnson, running back<lb/>
coach Rodney Allison, wide re-<lb/>
ceiver coach Larry Edmondson,<lb/>
assistant offensive line coach<lb/>
Pave Voth, and defensive line<lb/>
coach Mike Burgar.<lb/>
Major concerns facing 1 lallman<lb/>
and his staff include the usually<lb/>
strong schedule. Making the<lb/>
schcduleevenmoredifficultisthe<lb/>
fact that SMU has lost the majority<lb/>
of the ot tensive line and also expe-<lb/>
rienced major losses in the defen-<lb/>
sive WclfeHd . <lb/>
Hallman and his staff experi-<lb/>
enced a hectic spring recruiting<lb/>
period. Hallman said that putting<lb/>
the Golden Eagles through one of<lb/>
their hardest spring sessions ever,<lb/>
along with a strong off-season of<lb/>
weight lifting and running pro-<lb/>
gram, helped bring his players<lb/>
back to campus to where they<lb/>
might normally be.<lb/>
The offensive line being the<lb/>
weak point of the offense, Hall-<lb/>
man and his staff used the spring<lb/>
to evaluate available talent and to<lb/>
move defensive lineman over to<lb/>
the offensive line. Buddy King<lb/>
and Ben Crimm arc now listed to<lb/>
start at left tackle and left guard<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
Brett Favrc returns at quarter-<lb/>
back and coach Hallman is ex-<lb/>
pecting alot out of the player.<lb/>
Favre earned his first letter last<lb/>
season as USM's starting quarter-<lb/>
back. He finished the season<lb/>
See EAGLES, page 17<lb/>
Mour<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSO<lb/>
West Virginia i h ad i<lb/>
Jehlen ln't I<lb/>
success oi<lb/>
(taint t rs  I<lb/>
1 Ic's basil<lb/>
� <lb/>
'W<lb/>
oodch '<lb/>
team NTehlcn<lb/>
jt it, it's i �<lb/>
-iow  I are I<lb/>
setter than I<lb/>
I'm � � :�<lb/>
ill gai<lb/>
" � �<lb/>
this r to I<lb/>
It seen I<lb/>
share"<lb/>
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is not th<lb/>
Eagles look<lb/>
towards goo<lb/>
football yea.<lb/>
i �<lb/>
is<lb/>
 :<lb/>
Rcgi'<lb/>
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serve at I<lb/>
caugl<lb/>
Sh<lb/>
the:<lb/>
a career<lb/>
2 5<lb/>
sc red six l<lb/>
�<lb/>
car. �<lb/>
for 548<lb/>
dott<lb/>
Prestoi<lb/>
end<lb/>
start<lb/>
Cai losl<lb/>
last year witli<lb/>
ved an N( '�.<lb/>
offens<lb/>
dame nl ill)<lb/>
would also show <lb/>
looksand<lb/>
up more at tii<lb/>
more and make ai<lb/>
their o<lb/>
a nee.<lb/>
The d<lb/>
due to th(<lb/>
ersretui<lb/>
trio of outst ind ng d<lb/>
backs<lb/>
The rel<lb/>
tackles Steve Radkin ai<lb/>
Wattsandd - <lb/>
Rollins have . n tt<lb/>
light.<lb/>
Hallman said thai I<lb/>
not count on the new n i I<lb/>
says there is a p.<lb/>
some of this yeai "esf<lb/>
able to come foil<lb/>
Chris Seroka will be retj<lb/>
to continue his outstan I<lb/>
the placekicker Seroka ha J<lb/>
season last year when I<lb/>
32 extra point-and nine of<lb/>
goal attempts<lb/>
It is going to be a tryil<lb/>
exciting time for USM anj<lb/>
fans as they look forward<lb/>
new faces of many playcj<lb/>
coaches. What is ahead<lb/>
Golden Fagles very mil<lb/>
mains to be seen.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0018"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1988 17<lb/>
on<lb/>
mcrs will be<lb/>
d Roger<lb/>
p26tackv<lb/>
- �" �n, and<lb/>
2 tackles<lb/>
n s. tt Kicc, a:o<lb/>
at comcrback,s.<lb/>
s ifety thisb<lb/>
) st( pslastsca<lb/>
- pect bigger<lb/>
5 3 ear.j,<lb/>
be return-1<lb/>
- w ho ledt<lb/>
g 23 of 27<lb/>
1 he was Tech's<lb/>
it year with 4"f<lb/>
a reserve�<lb/>
 at punter.<lb/>
<lb/>
Vv<lb/>
1<lb/>
)<lb/>
:r:<lb/>
ear's action. This year's<lb/>
time starter from last<lb/>
i total of 91 tackles.<lb/>
- not a flashy player<lb/>
nl rte that has<lb/>
a hard-hitter.<lb/>
 r of the defen-<lb/>
junior Kurt Wilson is<lb/>
ly from shoul-<lb/>
�. - . - the one he suf-<lb/>
- r. last season's Gator<lb/>
n finished the 1987<lb/>
�4" I ickles, two of<lb/>
rlossand: urbeingquar-<lb/>
I ; M rri n has imple-<lb/>
soi multiple offen-<lb/>
idrepla iomekcyposi-<lb/>
vc secondary.<lb/>
 aid produce<lb/>
ss has<lb/>
Vich<lb/>
being the quar-<lb/>
 I  nsivecoor-<lb/>
the long list of new<lb/>
nsive coordina-<lb/>
is J � running back<lb/>
. Ulison, wide re-<lb/>
ich Larry Edmondson,<lb/>
� offensive line coach<lb/>
ind defensive line<lb/>
' � I irgar.<lb/>
r rns facing Hallman<lb/>
: include the usually<lb/>
dule Making the<lb/>
ileeven more difficult is the<lb/>
V1U has lost the majority<lb/>
nsive line and also expe-<lb/>
r i major losses in the defen-<lb/>
jacllfield. '<lb/>
Iman and his staff expen-<lb/>
a hectic spring recruiting<lb/>
Id. Hallman said that putting<lb/>
j n Eagles through one of<lb/>
hardest spring sessions ever,<lb/>
fe with a strong off-season of<lb/>
fit lifting and running pro-<lb/>
, helped bring his players<lb/>
to campus to where they<lb/>
t normally be.<lb/>
offensive line being the<lb/>
point of the offense, Hall-<lb/>
and his staff used the spring<lb/>
aluate available talent and to<lb/>
c defensive lineman over to<lb/>
offensive line. Buddy King<lb/>
Pen Cnmm arc now listed to<lb/>
it left tackle and left guard<lb/>
lectivcly.<lb/>
ctt Favre returns at quartcr-<lb/>
l and coach Hallman is cx-<lb/>
ing alot out of the player.<lb/>
te earned his first letter last<lb/>
Ion as USM's starting quarter-<lb/>
He finished the season<lb/>
See EAGLES, page 17<lb/>
Mountaineers under Major<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Co-Sportt L'ditor<lb/>
West Virginia Head Coach Don<lb/>
Nohlen isn't basing his team's<lb/>
success on how good the Moun-<lb/>
taineers will be.<lb/>
1 le's basing it on how good the<lb/>
opposition will be.<lb/>
'We have a good chance -a very<lb/>
good chance-to be a solid football<lb/>
team Nehlen said, "but as I look<lb/>
at it. it's not how good we arc but<lb/>
how good are the guys we play.<lb/>
Fight of our 11 opponents will be<lb/>
hotter than they were last year;<lb/>
I'm sure of that And if we lost six<lb/>
ball games last year, how much<lb/>
hotter are we going to have to play<lb/>
this year to turn the tide?"<lb/>
!t seems that everyone doesn't<lb/>
share Nehlen's concern about the<lb/>
ability of his team to win, and win<lb/>
big. The Mountaineers are highly<lb/>
ranked in many pre-season polls,<lb/>
with Sport magazine putting<lb/>
them at number 10. Much of the<lb/>
ado about the Mountaineers cen-<lb/>
ters around their second year<lb/>
quarterback Major Harris. A re-<lb/>
dshirt freshman last year, Harris<lb/>
was named freshman quarter-<lb/>
hack in America by The Sporting<lb/>
News. Comfortable in the wish-<lb/>
bone, option, power I or straight<lb/>
drop-back passing offenses, Har-<lb/>
ris will pose a challenge to oppos-<lb/>
ing defenses both in preparation<lb/>
and game situations because of<lb/>
his ability to scramble and make<lb/>
the most out of broken plays. His<lb/>
passing accuracy has improved in<lb/>
the off-season, making him a very<lb/>
good all-around offensive threat.<lb/>
Last year against ECU he ac-<lb/>
counted for a total of 106 yards in<lb/>
leading the Mountaineers to a 49-<lb/>
0 shutout, and eventually he led<lb/>
them to the Sun Bowl, where they<lb/>
lost by two points to Oklahoma<lb/>
State. "There's no question that<lb/>
Major Harris is a very fine quar-<lb/>
terback, but he is still only a so-<lb/>
phomore and still has some im-<lb/>
proving to do Nehlcn said, "but<lb/>
he's the guy who will do it. Hav-<lb/>
ing the quarterback position<lb/>
settled already is one of the things<lb/>
that like best about this team<lb/>
But the strength at quarterback<lb/>
is not the only reason for the<lb/>
Eagles look<lb/>
towards good<lb/>
football year<lb/>
Continued from page 16<lb/>
completing 79 of 194 passes for<lb/>
1,264 yards and a school record 15<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
At the fullback position will be<lb/>
Reginald Warnsley. Warnsley, in<lb/>
1987, proved to be a dazzling re-<lb/>
serve at the position and also<lb/>
caught four passes for 42 yards.<lb/>
Shelton Grady will hold down<lb/>
the tailback slot. Grady rushed for<lb/>
a career high in '87 with a total of<lb/>
1,023 yards on 225 carries and<lb/>
SO red six touchdowns.<lb/>
Positioned at the wide receiver<lb/>
is Darryl Tillman. He also had a<lb/>
career high season with 25 catches<lb/>
for 548 yards with four touch-<lb/>
downs.<lb/>
Preston Hansford is at the tight<lb/>
end spot although he had lost his<lb/>
starting position in spring work to<lb/>
Carlos Powell who sat out most of<lb/>
last year with an injury and re-<lb/>
ceived an NCAA hardship year.<lb/>
Hallman said, concerning the<lb/>
offense, that they would be a fun-<lb/>
damentally sound team but<lb/>
would also'show alot of different<lb/>
looks and that would open things<lb/>
up more at times, throw the ball<lb/>
more and make an effort to keep<lb/>
their opponents defense off bal-<lb/>
ance.<lb/>
The defense could be hurting<lb/>
due to the fact that only four start-<lb/>
ers return and the losses include a<lb/>
trio of outstanding defensive<lb/>
backs. However, all is not lost.<lb/>
The return of end Steve Brown,<lb/>
tackles Steve Radkin and Toby<lb/>
Watts and defensive back Vincent<lb/>
Rollins have given them new<lb/>
light.<lb/>
Hallman said that the staff does<lb/>
not count on the new recruits but<lb/>
says there is a possibility that<lb/>
some of this year's signccs will be<lb/>
able to come forth and help early.<lb/>
Chris Scroka will be returning<lb/>
to continue his outstanding job as<lb/>
the placckickcr. Scroka had a fine<lb/>
season last year when he hit 31 of<lb/>
32 extra points and nine of 15 field<lb/>
goal attempts.<lb/>
It is going to be a trying but<lb/>
exciting time for USM and their<lb/>
fans as they look forward to the<lb/>
new faces of many players and<lb/>
coaches. What is ahead for the<lb/>
Golden Eagles very much re-<lb/>
mains to be seen.<lb/>
Mountaineers' high prc-scason<lb/>
ranking. Nehlen will field a squad<lb/>
that boasts nine returning starters<lb/>
on offense and seven starters on<lb/>
defense, including last year's<lb/>
kicker and punter.<lb/>
"Our stcngth is in our offensive<lb/>
line with our running backs and of<lb/>
course wc have our quarterback<lb/>
returning Nehlcn said. The<lb/>
Mountaineers are returning all<lb/>
five starters from last year on the<lb/>
offensive line. Kevin Koken, a 6-2,<lb/>
263-pound senior, returns at the<lb/>
center position to acchor the line.<lb/>
Koken has been a starter for the<lb/>
past two seasons, and according<lb/>
to the coaches, he had a very good<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
At the guard positions, the<lb/>
Mountaineers return a good deal<lb/>
of talent and experience. John<lb/>
Stroia, a 6-3, 238-pound senior,<lb/>
will return at right guard. Stroia<lb/>
has been a starter for the last three<lb/>
seasons, and was named honor-<lb/>
able mention all-East last year.<lb/>
Starting at left guard will be Bob<lb/>
Kovak, a 6-2, 260-pound senior,<lb/>
who will starting at that position<lb/>
for his third consecutive season.<lb/>
The tackle position for the<lb/>
Mountaineers will be just as<lb/>
strong as the rest of the line in<lb/>
returning starters Rick Phillips, a<lb/>
6-4,262-pound senior who earned<lb/>
first team all-East honors last sea-<lb/>
son, and Brian Smidcr, a 6-4, 297-<lb/>
pound senior, who the Mountain-<lb/>
eers will look to for leadership<lb/>
and solid, consistent play. An-<lb/>
other plus on the offensive line is<lb/>
the great amount of depth that<lb/>
they have at all five positions.<lb/>
possesses the ability to break tack-<lb/>
les with his slashing running<lb/>
style, and is the 10th leading<lb/>
rusher in Mountaineer history.<lb/>
The wide receiver position is a<lb/>
question mark for West Virginia<lb/>
this season, with the loss of last<lb/>
season's starters Harvey Smith<lb/>
and John Talley, who combined<lb/>
for 572 yards and five touch-<lb/>
downs. At this point, the starting<lb/>
receivers will be returning letter-<lb/>
men Grantis Bell and Calvin Phil-<lb/>
lips. Phillips caught nine passes<lb/>
for 153 yards and two touch-<lb/>
downs last year, while Bell ac-<lb/>
counted for seven passes for 135<lb/>
yards and one touchdown. Both<lb/>
men have good hands, and speed<lb/>
to boot. The tight end position will<lb/>
be filled by returning starter Keith<lb/>
Winn, who pulled down 13 passes<lb/>
for 184 yards and one touchdown.<lb/>
As for defense, Nehlcn is not as<lb/>
confident in it as he is in the of-<lb/>
fense. "In our offense, we've got<lb/>
an arsenal to put points on the<lb/>
board, but I'm concerned about<lb/>
the defense he said. "For us to<lb/>
win the close ones, that's where<lb/>
we must show improvement<lb/>
The front line for the Mountain-<lb/>
eers will be it's primary weak-<lb/>
ness, due to the loss of some key<lb/>
personnel. The departure of Brad<lb/>
Hunt, a four year stand-out and<lb/>
an all-East selection, will weaken<lb/>
the team at this position, even<lb/>
though the coaches feel that they<lb/>
have solid players in Mike Fox<lb/>
and Chris Parker at the contain<lb/>
and rushing tackles, respectively.<lb/>
Also a strength for the offense<lb/>
will be the backfield. "Wc will go<lb/>
with three tailbacks again because<lb/>
all three- Anthony Brown Eugene<lb/>
Napoleon and Undra Johnson-<lb/>
arc solid and each adds a different<lb/>
dimension to our team said<lb/>
Nehlen. Brown, a 5-10, 211-<lb/>
pound senior, is probably the best<lb/>
among the bunch. He had four 100<lb/>
yard plus games last year, and<lb/>
was named AP honorable men-<lb/>
tion all-East. Napoleon, a 5-10,<lb/>
7frpowrd senior, has good<lb/>
speed for getting around the cor-<lb/>
ner and on kickoff returns.<lb/>
Johnson, a 5-9, 200-pound senior,<lb/>
The nose guard position will be<lb/>
one of question, also, with the loss<lb/>
of David Grant, a four year starter<lb/>
who was drafted by the Cincin-<lb/>
nati Bengals. Scott Summits will<lb/>
fill this position, but the coaches<lb/>
feel as though it will take him a<lb/>
while to play up to the standards<lb/>
set by Grant. "Along the defen-<lb/>
sive line, I am anxious to sec how<lb/>
we do Nehlen said. "In Brad<lb/>
Hunt and David Grant we lost an<lb/>
awful lot of our football team.<lb/>
When you have guys who have<lb/>
played four years and given as<lb/>
much as they did to a program, it's<lb/>
nearly impossible to replace them<lb/>
in one year<lb/>
The Mountaineers will be<lb/>
strong at the linebacker positions,<lb/>
which will be a must to back the<lb/>
untested defensive line. At the<lb/>
outside positions will be return-<lb/>
ing starters Robert Pickett and<lb/>
Dale Jackson. Pickett led the team<lb/>
in tackles last season with 91, in-<lb/>
cluding 55 solos. Jackson, one of<lb/>
the hardest hitters on the team,<lb/>
was third in tackles last year with<lb/>
84, including 57 solos. They also<lb/>
have good depth at this position.<lb/>
On the inside, returning starter<lb/>
Chris Haering, who was second<lb/>
on the team in tackles with 90, 53<lb/>
of them solo, will fill the middle.<lb/>
Haering will head a group of four<lb/>
talented players that can fill in at<lb/>
the middle position.<lb/>
The West Virginia secondary<lb/>
will contain three starters from<lb/>
last season- Bo Orlando, Preston<lb/>
Waters and Willie Edwards.<lb/>
Orlando, the strong safety, was<lb/>
fourth on the team in tackles last<lb/>
season with 83. Waters, at short<lb/>
corner, had 45 tackles last year,<lb/>
and the coaches hope for larger<lb/>
numbers from him this season.<lb/>
Edwards had 57 tackles last year,<lb/>
and has steadily improved in the<lb/>
off season. Along with Alvoid<lb/>
Mays at wide corner and Darrell<lb/>
Whitmorc at strong safety, they<lb/>
will round out an experienced<lb/>
secondary.<lb/>
The kicking game is a definite<lb/>
plus for the Mountaineers this<lb/>
season, with the return of veter-<lb/>
ans Charlie Baumannat the kicker<lb/>
position, and punter Lance Car-<lb/>
ion. Baumann went 13 of 16 field<lb/>
goals and 39 of 40 in extra points.<lb/>
Carion averaged 40.2 yards a<lb/>
punt, but was inconsistent. The<lb/>
coaches look for him to correct<lb/>
that this season.<lb/>
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"If Major continues to improve,<lb/>
and if our offensive line stays<lb/>
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said. "And if our linebackers<lb/>
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people. That's an awful lot of ifs,<lb/>
but I'd sure like to see it happen<lb/>
WELCOME BACK<lb/>
NEW AND<lb/>
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Summit toilet tissue 99 C (4 roll pack)<lb/>
2 liter Coke 89 c<lb/>
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8 1b. Bag of Ice 59C<lb/>
CHECK OUR DAILY SPECIALS ON OUR<lb/>
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<lb/>
f<lb/>
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11<lb/>
TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1988<lb/>
Seminoles could win it all<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Tae Kwon Do<lb/>
By PAUL DUNN<lb/>
Co-Sports tditor<lb/>
Tie Seminoles remain un-<lb/>
beaten in the five game Pirate<lb/>
seties, downing the Purple and<lb/>
Gold 44-3 last year at Ficklen sta-<lb/>
dium.<lb/>
Florida State comes off an im-<lb/>
prfcssive 1987 11-1 season and a<lb/>
Fiesta Bowl victory over Ne-<lb/>
braska and things are looking<lb/>
gopd for them in '88.<lb/>
The 1987 group didn't leave a<lb/>
lot of room for improvement'<lb/>
sajd Florida State head coach,<lb/>
Bobby Bowdcn. "If these boys can<lb/>
come back with the same atti-<lb/>
tudes they had last year, maybe<lb/>
we will be celebrating a national<lb/>
championship this year<lb/>
One of the reasons for their<lb/>
spjendid outlook for the upcom-<lb/>
ing season is that they have 43<lb/>
returning lettermen and 13 re-<lb/>
turning starters. Of those 13 start-<lb/>
ers, seven arc on offense and six<lb/>
arc on defense. Florida State also<lb/>
has a foursome of talented players<lb/>
who arc considered by ma rty to be<lb/>
the best at their positions in the<lb/>
nftion. On defense rtoseguard<lb/>
Cfclcll Haggins is a terror up front<lb/>
viile Jim Thorpe Award finalist<lb/>
dbion Sanders leads the defense<lb/>
idltheopcn field; on offense, Heis-<lb/>
rqpn Trophy canidate Sammie<lb/>
Smith's running will depend on a<lb/>
liiie led by All-American tackle<lb/>
PJt Tomberline.<lb/>
�The biggest question tor the<lb/>
Sfminolc offense will be to see if<lb/>
(Aartcrback Chip Ferguson can<lb/>
b a solid replacement for the<lb/>
graduated Danny McManus.<lb/>
Hprguson won the job in spring<lb/>
practice after losing it briefly to<lb/>
junior Peter Tom Willis, and his<lb/>
oiening performance against<lb/>
Miami will surely be a key one.<lb/>
BJ)th players have plenty oi game<lb/>
ejcpcriencc-but neither has<lb/>
jumped very far ahead of another.<lb/>
"Bis, in itself, could be a positive<lb/>
sftuation.<lb/>
Heading the group of tailbacks<lb/>
vtill be Sammie Smith. At 6-2, 220<lb/>
junds and with speed to boot,<lb/>
jprc aren't many tailbacks who<lb/>
fcvc his talents. Smith accounted<lb/>
l 1,230 yards in ten games in '87.<lb/>
SfMulti-talented junior Dexter<lb/>
3irter would be the star at most<lb/>
tivcrsitics but he has to take a<lb/>
ck scat to Smith, yet because of<lb/>
fispasscatching abilities, he is too<lb/>
luable to sit. Smith and Carter<lb/>
�all rotate series. If two outstand-<lb/>
r tailbacks aren't enough then<lb/>
I Seminoles will turn to the ever<lb/>
impressive Victor Floyd. The<lb/>
ird tcamer is the tenth leading<lb/>
S"sher in FSU history. Smith<lb/>
rtks only two notches above as<lb/>
e steps in at the number eight<lb/>
pot. The Seminoles will be able to<lb/>
ffeal with those undesirable inju-<lb/>
res.<lb/>
JrTaking a look at the fullback<lb/>
Bpsition, FSU once again will<lb/>
i&amp;ve plenty of backups. Actually,<lb/>
�&amp; this positions, they could put all<lb/>
Sirec names into a bag, toss it up<lb/>
tthd choose one. The starting full-<lb/>
Jpck will come from a group that<lb/>
Includes sophomore Edgar Ben-<lb/>
nett, who is listed at first team<lb/>
going into fall drills, senior Dayne<lb/>
Williams and junior Marion<lb/>
Butts. Williams is the incumbent<lb/>
starter and scored 15 touchdowns<lb/>
last year. Bennett is the flashiest<lb/>
and has some tailback in him.<lb/>
Both players have the ability to<lb/>
passes out of the back field. Butts<lb/>
is the masher of the group, and<lb/>
also has good catching abilities.<lb/>
With only two wide receivers<lb/>
gone do to graduation, junior<lb/>
Ronald Lewis will be the star of<lb/>
the group. Lewis was third on the<lb/>
team last year with 23 catches.<lb/>
Two year letterman Terry An-<lb/>
thony, a junior, will step in at the<lb/>
split-end position.<lb/>
Both offensive tackles will be<lb/>
returning, but the coaching staff<lb/>
will once again be concentrating<lb/>
on the backup situation. Pat<lb/>
Tomberline and Joe Ionata are<lb/>
excellent linemen but depth is<lb/>
always necessary.<lb/>
The top three guards from a<lb/>
year ago will be returning but a<lb/>
little scrambling will be neces-<lb/>
sary. Jason Kuipers, a two year<lb/>
starter, has vacated his guard<lb/>
position to move to center. Also<lb/>
returning are juniors Tony Yeo-<lb/>
mans and John Brown.<lb/>
The defense of the Seminoles<lb/>
will be a great asset that promises<lb/>
to one oi the best in the nation.<lb/>
There's as much talent at outside<lb/>
linebacker in 1988 as there has<lb/>
been at FSU in along time. Part-<lb/>
time '87 starters Shelton Th-<lb/>
ompson and Kevin Grant appear<lb/>
to be the front runners again in '88<lb/>
but the emergence oi former de-<lb/>
fensive back John 1 ladley is a<lb/>
definite plus.<lb/>
The starters are set for the tackle<lb/>
position. At the left side oi the line<lb/>
will be all-star candidate Eric<lb/>
1 laves. 1 layes is a big-player and<lb/>
is expected to produce metre of the<lb/>
same statistics in '88 that he did in<lb/>
Cocktail<lb/>
Nightmare on Elm St.<lb/>
Part IV<lb/>
Ending Thurs.<lb/>
Coming To America<lb/>
Starts Friday<lb/>
Stealing Home<lb/>
'87; six tackles for loss, four sacks,<lb/>
six passes broken up, three<lb/>
fumbles caused and three recov-<lb/>
eries. At the right side senior<lb/>
Steve Gabbard will hold down the<lb/>
position. Gabbard was sidelined<lb/>
for most of the '87 season.<lb/>
Junior Odell Haggins will re-<lb/>
main at the noseguard position<lb/>
after impressing many fans in the<lb/>
'87 season. Haggins had 73 tack-<lb/>
les, eight sacks, four tackles for<lb/>
loss, and the list goes on. The<lb/>
backup spot has heavy competi-<lb/>
tion. The battle is between Magdi<lb/>
Ei Shahawy and redshirt fresh-<lb/>
man Frank Romeo.<lb/>
Inside linebacker slots have<lb/>
linebacker coach Wally Burnham<lb/>
worried. Losing his two starters<lb/>
from last year and also losing<lb/>
young players he had been<lb/>
grooming -Haggins to noseguard<lb/>
and John Eaford to an automobile<lb/>
accident a year ago. Burnham had<lb/>
no choice but to start over. Junior<lb/>
Keith Carter and sophomore Kel-<lb/>
vin Smith have the inside track on<lb/>
the two starting positions after<lb/>
spring workouts. Carter has po-<lb/>
tential, now he must prove him-<lb/>
self. Smith has contributed but is<lb/>
coming off knee surgery.<lb/>
The two safety positions are as<lb/>
stable as any on the defense. At<lb/>
strong safety, coaches have thrce-<lb/>
year starter Stan Shiver back. At<lb/>
tree safety, Dedrick Dodge has<lb/>
been groomed to take over that<lb/>
spot.<lb/>
Everyone's AU-Amcrican, and<lb/>
sure to be FSU's highest draft pick<lb/>
ever at the end of the '88 season<lb/>
will be back at one of the corner-<lb/>
back spots. Deion Sanders is con-<lb/>
sidered by many to be the best<lb/>
athlete who has ever graced the<lb/>
FSU campus. On the right side,<lb/>
there is not much game experi-<lb/>
ence to speak of. Senior Tracy<lb/>
Sanders has been at the spot for a<lb/>
little over a year, but he doesn't<lb/>
have a lot of repetitions under his<lb/>
belt.<lb/>
Gone from Scminole land is<lb/>
Derek Schmidt, the NCAA's all-<lb/>
time leading scorer in Division<lb/>
college football history and one of<lb/>
the top field goal kickers in thel<lb/>
nation in 1987. Also departed isl<lb/>
punter Rick Tutcn, who had al<lb/>
poor senior year after a prc-sca-l<lb/>
son sickness that took away hisj<lb/>
strength. Schmidt's understudy<lb/>
sophomore Richie Andrew will<lb/>
be tested. Incoming freshman<lb/>
John Wimbcrly was to take over<lb/>
the punting responsibilities but;<lb/>
suffered a knee injury in the off-<lb/>
season. Doctors think his rehab isl<lb/>
on schedule. Should Wimbcrly<lb/>
not be able to punt, FSU will look J<lb/>
to walk-ons to fulfill this lead.<lb/>
FSU is definitely one of the most<lb/>
difficult challenges for the Pirates<lb/>
in the near future season.<lb/>
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FRIDAY - AUG. 26 AT NEW DELI<lb/>
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�Filing Date - August 26th - September 2nd<lb/>
SGA Office Room 222<lb/>
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�Mandatory Meeting For All Candidates<lb/>
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in Room 221, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
�Campaigning to begin September 7th - September 13th<lb/>
ELECTION DATE - SEPTEMBER 14, 1988<lb/>
9 A.M. - 6 P.M.<lb/>
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2 Free Tanning visits<lb/>
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103 EASTBROOK DRIVE 758-7570<lb/>
Syrac<lb/>
ByDOUGJOHNSO?<lb/>
C-Sp ��<lb/>
I987s I . h i<lb/>
Year Dick MacPtu<lb/>
beat the heln<lb/>
that ftnish( d tl<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"1987 was just .<lb/>
reflected Ma<lb/>
fun team to watch ai<lb/>
to be around. We<lb/>
ment before I<lb/>
going U be tl<lb/>
tenure and it .<lb/>
free, we'd be<lb/>
idea we'd be thai<lb/>
But that was 1<lb/>
Orangemen �<lb/>
new faces on the I<lb/>
many old<lb/>
instrumental in<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
On the i<lb/>
the Or<lb/>
returning start<lb/>
season's<lb/>
eighth<lb/>
in scor<lb/>
Orangemen i i<lb/>
depart<lb/>
quartcrba ' I<lb/>
I leisman Tr :<lb/>
seas n<lb/>
irreplaccal<lb/>
son saidI<lb/>
Orange men<lb/>
Billy Scharr ai .<lb/>
vying for the<lb/>
back p <lb/>
pound sopti<lb/>
by some to<lb/>
passsf r e i I<lb/>
Philcox, a 6-4 2<lb/>
is a good d(<lb/>
situat : i<lb/>
the SI<lb/>
ing to coach �<lb/>
Scharr cm rges i<lb/>
Philcox, I feel<lb/>
both of them, f '<lb/>
The Oranj<lb/>
thebackfield tl s<lb/>
starters return<lb/>
son. Senior<lb/>
Johnston will I<lb/>
position, ur<lb/>
Drumrnond and<lb/>
Owens will -<lb/>
tailback posil<lb/>
think that Johnston I<lb/>
tial to reach<lb/>
because of his all-purp<lb/>
to block, run ar I<lb/>
coming out of th<lb/>
three backs became I<lb/>
gain over 500 yai Is<lb/>
season since the r il<lb/>
onship team<lb/>
Johnston is the K si I<lb/>
country said Ia Phei<lb/>
runs with powc r -<lb/>
speed. He is the<lb/>
blocking back ai i<lb/>
hands. Put hin<lb/>
great<lb/>
Drumrnond<lb/>
and we've got ��<lb/>
On the offer<lb/>
lucky to have mai<lb/>
ers from last -<lb/>
will be All .<lb/>
Stoeppcl,a6 -<lb/>
Blake Bednarz i<lb/>
junior, and -<lb/>
Sim (6-3 272 .<lb/>
Flanncr) 6 3 21<lb/>
ncry will move I<lb/>
center p<lb/>
guard pe-<lb/>
lt appears as though :<lb/>
will get the nod<lb/>
there.<lb/>
The receh ing t<lb/>
angemen lost a lol of tak<lb/>
graduation, but v<lb/>
� i i  w�mmtmm<lb/>
Come on h<lb/>
the<lb/>
water's fit<lb/>
at<lb/>
Memorial G<lb/>
Rea<lb/>
The East Caroliniaj<lb/>
Every Tuesday and Thij<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0020"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25,1988 19<lb/>
Arts)<lb/>
.ing, Day<lb/>
And Evening<lb/>
Classes<lb/>
Available<lb/>
� mm ftifin- "r1<lb/>
ISaturvi.y 4 m. � p m<lb/>
Sundy 2 p m p m.<lb/>
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P<lb/>
n<lb/>
;r<lb/>
t<lb/>
l-<lb/>
C<lb/>
C<lb/>
d<lb/>
1-<lb/>
s,<lb/>
h<lb/>
14<lb/>
ic<lb/>
y<lb/>
)r<lb/>
ra<lb/>
n<lb/>
an<lb/>
tte<lb/>
Id<lb/>
he<lb/>
in<lb/>
ta<lb/>
le-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
to<lb/>
on<lb/>
cv<lb/>
re-<lb/>
he<lb/>
las<lb/>
ok<lb/>
lat<lb/>
ed<lb/>
to<lb/>
Syracuse looks to do it again<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Ci-Sports I ditor<lb/>
1987s National Coach oi the<lb/>
ear Pick MacPherson will again<lb/>
be at the helm of a S racuse team<lb/>
that finished theseason 110 1 last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"1987 was just unbelieveable<lb/>
reflected MacPherson. "It was a<lb/>
tun team to watch and a fun team<lb/>
to be around. We made the state<lb/>
ment before last year that it was<lb/>
ing to be the best team in our<lb/>
tenure and if we stayed injury-<lb/>
free, we'd be good. But ! had n<lb/>
idea we'd be that good<lb/>
But that was last war. The 1988<lb/>
Orangemen will have a cast oi<lb/>
new faces on the team, replacing<lb/>
many old ones that were highly<lb/>
instrumental in last year's suc-<lb/>
. CSS.<lb/>
On theoffensivc side of the ball.<lb/>
the Orangemen will have seven<lb/>
returning starters from last<lb/>
season's unit that was ranked<lb/>
eighth in total offense, and ninth<lb/>
in scoring. The biggest l ss for the<lb/>
Orangemen on offense i ill be the<lb/>
departure ol highly acclaimed<lb/>
larterback Pen McPhcrson a<lb/>
1 leisman rrophy runner-up last<lb/>
season. ' xi on do net r<lb/>
irreplaceable (<lb/>
son said oi Don Mi<lb/>
Orangemen have two players,<lb/>
lly Scharr and 'odd Phiicox,<lb/>
vying for the vaccated quarter-<lb/>
back position. Scharr a 6 1. 197-<lb/>
pound sophomore, is considered<lb/>
bv some to be the best p<lb/>
:� �� , -r t.i .ittf.d S :<lb/>
confident that he has the players junior Dan Bucey, can replace<lb/>
to take up the slack. Bat Kelly and Ward . David Bavaro, last seasons<lb/>
Tommy Kane, both honorable leading tackier, will return at the<lb/>
mention All-America, will be other inside position. Bavaro mis-<lb/>
rcplaced by senior Tat Davis at scd spring drills after shoulder<lb/>
tight end, and Deval Glover and surgery, but is expected to return<lb/>
Rob Moore at the vide-out posi- at 100 percent. The outside linc-<lb/>
tions. According to the coaches, backers, seniors Keith Fribergand<lb/>
Glover has good concentration Terry Wooden, return to shore up<lb/>
and a great deal of determination, the corners. Friberg improved his<lb/>
while comparisions have been<lb/>
drawn between Moore and for-<lb/>
mer SU standout Art Monk, now a<lb/>
star with the NFL's Washington<lb/>
Redskins.<lb/>
On defense1, the Orangemen<lb/>
return eight starters from last<lb/>
year, but once again they will be<lb/>
hit hard by losses. The defensive<lb/>
pass defense over the off-season,<lb/>
and Wooden may be the most<lb/>
talented outside linebacker of the<lb/>
MacPherson era. "Keith Friberg<lb/>
has never played as consistently<lb/>
well as he has this spring<lb/>
MacPherson said. "So, we are<lb/>
excellent at outside linebacker.<lb/>
With David Bavaro not being able<lb/>
line was virtually devastated by toplay this spring, it was kind of a<lb/>
graduation. All-America Lorn- blessing in disguise. We were able<lb/>
bardi finalist Ted Gregory, honor- to solidify that thing with four<lb/>
able mention All-America Paul other people<lb/>
is a <lb/>
situatioi<lb/>
the SU (<lb/>
ing to<lb/>
Seharr<lb/>
I d. ision maker in tough<lb/>
is and is c Ic in<lb/>
(ffensivc scheme, ac �<lb/>
:oaches. "Whether Billy<lb/>
emerges or it's 1 odd<lb/>
Frase, and jack-of-all-trades John<lb/>
Dominic are gone, leaving Rob<lb/>
Burnett as the sole returning<lb/>
starter. Burnett led the team in<lb/>
sacks last year, and the coaches<lb/>
will look to him to exert the lead-<lb/>
ership and experience that the<lb/>
young and inexperienced line<lb/>
will need. This season will see<lb/>
juniors bred PeRiggi and Frank<lb/>
Conover fighting for the<lb/>
scguard position, while Mark<lb/>
� inson, a sophomore, will start<lb/>
.it the left tackle position. "The<lb/>
one ingredient we have on the<lb/>
defensive line is that we have the<lb/>
activator or the flusher, or what-<lb/>
e er term you use for the guv who<lb/>
i; the catalyst, who makes things<lb/>
happen. That's Robert Burnett<lb/>
MacPhcrson.<lb/>
At linebackers, last year's unit<lb/>
In addition to a strong lineback<lb/>
ing corp, SU returns its starting<lb/>
The special teams for SU are<lb/>
expected to perform well this<lb/>
season, but there may be some<lb/>
question as to the abilities of the<lb/>
specialists. Neither Cooper Gar-<lb/>
diner nor Ken Hawkins per-<lb/>
formed at punter to the standard<lb/>
that MacPhcrson set last year. But<lb/>
Gardiner increased his leg<lb/>
strength over the off-season, and<lb/>
is expected to do the honors for<lb/>
SU. Kevin Greene should do a<lb/>
good job at the placckicking posi-<lb/>
tion, but may suffer from inexpe-<lb/>
rience, and may not hold up well<lb/>
under pressure. "We were very,<lb/>
very satisfied with our kicking<lb/>
last year and we'd be pleased if<lb/>
Kevin Greene comes to that<lb/>
level MacPhcrson commented.<lb/>
1 think that we arc a very, very<lb/>
secondary intact. The top five for gOOCj, solid, competitive team<lb/>
Phiicox, 1 feel ver 1 about<lb/>
both of them MacPherson said.<lb/>
The Orangemen arc strong in<lb/>
the backficld this year, v thl rce<lb/>
starters returning from last s <lb/>
sen. Senior co-captain Daryl<lb/>
Johnston will fill the fullback<lb/>
position, while senior Robert<lb/>
Drummond and juni �' Micl I<lb/>
Owens will flank him at the<lb/>
tailback positions. IP' hes<lb/>
think that Johnston has tl n<lb/>
Hal to reach All-America status<lb/>
because of his all-purpose ability<lb/>
to block, run and catch the ball<lb/>
coming out of the back field.<lb/>
three backs became the first trio to<lb/>
gain over 500 yards in a sin<lb/>
season since the national ch in .pi<lb/>
onship team of 1959. I aryl<lb/>
Johnston is the host fullbac k in I<lb/>
country said f Ia Phci n. "1 le<lb/>
runs with power, strength and<lb/>
speed. He is the epitomy oi the<lb/>
eking back and he has great<lb/>
hands. Put him aloi I<lb/>
great combination oi .<lb/>
Drummond and Michael -<lb/>
and we've got it D nami<lb/>
On the offensive line<lb/>
luck- to have many oft!<lb/>
ers from last year ba k.Rel <lb/>
will be All-Fast tackle Craig<lb/>
Stoeppcl,a6-4,2 " Isenioi<lb/>
;ke Bednarz, a 6<lb/>
nior, and sophon<lb/>
Sims (6-3, Z2<lb/>
Flanncry (6-3,276-px lan-<lb/>
nery will move to the va<lb/>
center position, opening up the<lb/>
guard position for a new member.<lb/>
It appears as though Bobby Fuller<lb/>
will get the nod from the c ich s<lb/>
there.<lb/>
The receiving corp for the Or-<lb/>
angemen lost a lot of talented to<lb/>
graduation, but MacPherson is<lb/>
the Orangemen have been to<lb/>
gether for four years now, and<lb/>
they are very comfortable playing<lb/>
together. Senior co-captain<lb/>
Markus Paul returns at free<lb/>
safety, and is considered to be one<lb/>
of the finest defensive backs in the<lb/>
country. Jeff Mangrum, who<lb/>
plays the run and pass well, re-<lb/>
turns at strong safety. At the cor-<lb/>
ners will be David Holmes, who<lb/>
has the stength to play the bump-<lb/>
and-run well, and Chris Ingram,<lb/>
who is strong in both zone and<lb/>
man-to-man coverages. At the<lb/>
nickel back will be Jeff Buskirk.<lb/>
"Our secondary is a real strength<lb/>
on our football' team MacPher-<lb/>
son said. "These guys have been<lb/>
returns intact with the exception playing together for four years<lb/>
Vrek Ward. MacPherson feels now ancj they know what to do<lb/>
that last year's backup to Ward, m,t there<lb/>
MacPherson said, "but we're<lb/>
going to have to raise ourselves to<lb/>
another level to even come near to<lb/>
duplicating last year's record<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058087_0021"/><lb/>
s<lb/>
20<lb/>
THE CAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1088<lb/>
Hurricanes expect to excel<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Co-Sports I Jitor<lb/>
The Miami Hurncancscnter the<lb/>
1988 season riding the crest of a 32<lb/>
game regular season winning<lb/>
streak, including a perfect 12-0<lb/>
mark and a National Champion-<lb/>
ship victory last year.<lb/>
Despite the loss of 13 starters<lb/>
from last year's squad, including<lb/>
stars Michael Irving, Mclvin Brat-<lb/>
ton, Brian Blades and Daniel<lb/>
Stubbs, the Hurricanes remain<lb/>
one of the top teams in the nation,<lb/>
although Head Coach Jimmy<lb/>
Johnson warned in a Sport maga-<lb/>
zine interview, "It would be crazy<lb/>
to expect us to be perfect<lb/>
On offense, the Hurricanes will<lb/>
have only four starters from last<lb/>
season, the most important of<lb/>
these being Steve Walsh, who<lb/>
started all 12 games at quarter-<lb/>
back last year. Walsh, a 6-3,195-<lb/>
pound junior, had 176 comple-<lb/>
tions in 298 attempts for 2249<lb/>
yards and 19 touchdowns last<lb/>
season, while throwing only<lb/>
seven interceptions. According to<lb/>
coaches, Walsh's greatest attrib-<lb/>
ute ishisabililtv to change playsat<lb/>
the line of sen mm age in order to<lb/>
set the best offense for the existing<lb/>
defensive set-up.<lb/>
In the backfield for Miami will<lb/>
be two new faces due to the depar-<lb/>
ture of Mclvin Bratton and War-<lb/>
ren Williams At the fullback posi-<lb/>
tion will be Cleveland Gary, a 6-2,<lb/>
226-pound senior. Gary carried<lb/>
the ball 39 times for 157 yards and<lb/>
five touchdowns in his back-up<lb/>
role to Bratton last season, and he<lb/>
is expected to be more of a receiv-<lb/>
ing threat coming out of the back-<lb/>
field this year. Filling in at half-<lb/>
back will be Leonard Conlcy, a 5-<lb/>
9, 170-pound sophomore, who<lb/>
became Miami's all-time loading<lb/>
freshman rusher last season, to-<lb/>
talling 423 yards on 66 carries.<lb/>
The offensive lino will return<lb/>
three starters front last season,<lb/>
one at each oi the throe lino posi-<lb/>
tions. Rod Holder, a 6-3, 270-<lb/>
pound junior, returns at center to<lb/>
anchor the line. Holder missed<lb/>
spring practice while rehabilitat-<lb/>
ing from a knee injury, but is<lb/>
expected to be at 100 percent for<lb/>
the fall. He will be counted on to<lb/>
provide the leadership and expe-<lb/>
rience that the line will need. At<lb/>
loft guard will be another re-<lb/>
turner, Mike Sullivan, a 6-4, 274-<lb/>
pound sophomore, who is, ac-<lb/>
cording to coaches, capable of<lb/>
playing all three positions on the<lb/>
line. Filling the right guard posi-<lb/>
tion will be Bobby Garcia, a 6-3,<lb/>
253-pound junior, who was nick-<lb/>
named "The Cat by his team-<lb/>
mates because oi his quickness<lb/>
and agility, according to the Mi-<lb/>
ami media guide. Returning<lb/>
starter John O'Neill, a 6-3, 267-<lb/>
pound senior, will line up at right<lb/>
tackle for Miami. O'Neill missed<lb/>
spring drills because of a knee<lb/>
injury, but will be back as the<lb/>
Hurricane's leading pass protec-<lb/>
tor. On the left side at tackle will<lb/>
be Darrin Bruce, a 6-3,260-pound<lb/>
senior, a 1987 transfer from Cerri-<lb/>
tos Community College in Cali-<lb/>
fornia.<lb/>
The Hurricane receiving corp<lb/>
was the hardest hi t by graduation.<lb/>
A trio of new faces will step in to<lb/>
giveQB Walsh targets to throw to.<lb/>
Rob Chudzinski will start at tight<lb/>
end, Randal Hill at split end, and<lb/>
Dale Dawkins at flanker. Of the<lb/>
three, only Dawkins caught a pass<lb/>
last season, pulling down two for<lb/>
a total of 20 yards.<lb/>
The Hurricane defense is in a<lb/>
little better position than the of-<lb/>
fense, returning five starters from<lb/>
last year's squad. At the ends will<lb/>
be Willis Pcguese, a 6-4, 245-<lb/>
pound junior, and returner Bill<lb/>
Ha wkins, a 6-6,260-pound senior.<lb/>
Hawkins was the fifth leading<lb/>
tackier for the Hurricanes last<lb/>
year with 84 and third in sacks<lb/>
with b.5. At the tackles will be<lb/>
Jimmic Jones, a 6-4, 261-pound<lb/>
junior, and returning starter Greg<lb/>
Mark, a 6-4, 238-pound junior.<lb/>
Mark was the fourth leading tack-<lb/>
ier with 88, and the team's leading<lb/>
assist tackier with 53.<lb/>
Middle linebacker will sec a<lb/>
new starter in Bernard Clark,<lb/>
while the outside will be occupied<lb/>
by returning starters. Randy<lb/>
Shannon and Rod Carter. Clark, a<lb/>
6-2, 238-pound junior, was voted<lb/>
Miami's most valuable player in<lb/>
last year's championship game<lb/>
when he filled in for starter<lb/>
George Mira. Shannon, a 6-0,224-<lb/>
pound senior, finished as the fifth<lb/>
leading tackier with 87 stops,<lb/>
while Carter earned All-South<lb/>
honors, and finished second on<lb/>
the team in tackles with 138.<lb/>
Only one starter, Bubba<lb/>
McDowell, will return in the sec-<lb/>
ondary for the Hurricanes.<lb/>
McDowell, a 6-1, 195-pound sen-<lb/>
ior, averaged nearly six tackles<lb/>
per game after becoming the<lb/>
starter at free safety in the third<lb/>
game of the season. At strong<lb/>
safety will be Bobby 1 larden, a 6-<lb/>
2,195-pound junior, while Donald<lb/>
Ellis, a 5-11, 195-pound senior,<lb/>
and Kenny Berry, a 6-2, 185-<lb/>
pound junior, will start at the<lb/>
corners.<lb/>
On special teams will be Edgar<lb/>
Bonos at kicker and Tim Kalal at<lb/>
punter. Bones kicked all but one of<lb/>
Miami's kick-offs last season, and<lb/>
Kalal had an average of 40.1 yards<lb/>
per punt.<lb/>
GREENVILLE RECREATION AND<lb/>
PARKS DEPARTMENT<lb/>
SOCCER COACHES NEEDED<lb/>
The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department is<lb/>
recruiting for 10-14 part-time soccer coaches for the fall<lb/>
semester program. Applicants must possess some<lb/>
knowledge in soccer skills and have patience to work<lb/>
with youth. Applicants must be able to coach young<lb/>
people, ages 5-15 in soccer fundamentals. I lours ap-<lb/>
proximately 3-7 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Some night<lb/>
and weekend coaching. Program will extend from Sep-<lb/>
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per hour. Applicants will be accepted starting August<lb/>
20. Contact Ben James at 830-4543.<lb/>
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Temple Owls to rely on strong kicking<lb/>
By DOUGJOHNSON<lb/>
Co-Sports Lditur<lb/>
Offense promises to be the<lb/>
strong suit of the 19SS Owls from<lb/>
Temple, but the squad from the<lb/>
City of Brotherly Love will be<lb/>
hard-pressed to surpass last<lb/>
year's 4-7 mark.<lb/>
"Our schedule is very demand-<lb/>
ing, especially in the first halt of<lb/>
the season temple ! lead Coach<lb/>
Bruce Arians said. "We play foui<lb/>
bowl teams in the first five games,<lb/>
including two-Penn State and<lb/>
Alabama-who will be picked to be<lb/>
the top team in their conference or<lb/>
region<lb/>
The Owls will line up on offense<lb/>
with a great deal oi depth and<lb/>
experience. At the quarterback<lb/>
position, the Owls feel confident<lb/>
that thev have the depth and ex-<lb/>
oerience in Matt Baker and Tonv<lb/>
Lerro to get the job done. Baker, a<lb/>
sophomore, completed 39 Oi 77<lb/>
p sses for 499 yards and two<lb/>
touchdowns in just five games.<lb/>
Lerro, a junior, was 14 of 37 for 219<lb/>
yards. "If 1 had to name a starting<lb/>
quarterback coming out of spi ing<lb/>
practice it would be Matt Bal i<lb/>
said Arians.<lb/>
Fullback is a very questionable<lb/>
position for the Owls, because of<lb/>
the inexperience oi the players<lb/>
there. Nelson Herrera, who<lb/>
started only three games last sea-<lb/>
son, will be the starter this season.<lb/>
Herrera netted 129 yards on 37<lb/>
carries last year. "Nelson has all<lb/>
he tools necei�!ary to boewme a<lb/>
great player Arians com-<lb/>
mented, "but he needs to become<lb/>
more committed to being great<lb/>
According to Arians, halfback<lb/>
"would have to be the strongest<lb/>
position on the team with three<lb/>
quality running backs (Todd<lb/>
McNair, Ventres Stevenson and<lb/>
Tom Quinn), all of whom have<lb/>
started MacNair, a senior who<lb/>
earned first team All-ECAC, sec-<lb/>
ond team All Fast and honorable<lb/>
mention All-America honors,<lb/>
was the Owl's leading rusher List<lb/>
season, gaining 1,058 yards on 249<lb/>
carries. "1 would rank Todd as one<lb/>
oi the besi backs in the count; <lb/>
slid Arian .<lb/>
Thcoffensivc line is also strong,<lb/>
according to Arians. "1 think our<lb/>
offensive line will be as good as<lb/>
any we've ever had he said.<lb/>
"Tackle Chris Possenti received<lb/>
the John Rienstra Award for most<lb/>
outstanding improvement in the<lb/>
off-season conditioning. Center<lb/>
Dick Beck was extremely consis-<lb/>
tent, as was guard Tete Bernard.<lb/>
Guard Rich Gould had a very-<lb/>
good spring. Tackle Ray Haynes<lb/>
was probably the best player we<lb/>
had this season Arians is, how-<lb/>
ever, concerned witht the depth oi<lb/>
his line. "The key to our season is<lb/>
the dcvelopcment oi Marcus<lb/>
Gibbs, Brian Krulikowski, and<lb/>
Gary Thompson he said.<lb/>
Another area lacking depth is<lb/>
the receiver positions. "Wide re-<lb/>
ceiver is a question mark after you<lb/>
go past Rich Drayton and Mike<lb/>
Payls Arians said. As for tight<lb/>
end, the Owls have one player,<lb/>
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Co-Spcrts 1 rf.tjr<lb/>
Approaching the 1988 i <lb/>
reason, the Univer .<lb/>
nati looks to improve on ii<lb/>
mark from last year<lb/>
Head coach Dave Currc)<lb/>
in order to be a su.<lb/>
?hey must tighten up �<lb/>
bat a quick glance at tl J<lb/>
makes him realize that r<lb/>
challenges await the Bear Gt<lb/>
The return of 23 s <lb/>
ers creates a veteran i<lb/>
can but only he<lb/>
nati to the desir I<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Even the 1 I<lb/>
experience, tl<lb/>
will not see any �<lb/>
position.<lb/>
The leader<lb/>
that g od pi<lb/>
scnier<lb/>
pointed out 1<lb/>
die experi r matur<lb/>
ent to ha ,<lb/>
that he I<lb/>
those a<lb/>
� The prcs<lb/>
fend his �<lb/>
flayers at I<lb/>
Donasrx -<lb/>
plav at 1<lb/>
j Thedi � �<lb/>
much needed strcnj<lb/>
run the F ir ' '<lb/>
defense S i<lb/>
ind Andre ��� ,<lb/>
cpmmand I I<lb/>
Asbc - � �<lb/>
has had a stai<lb/>
former years. I k<lb/>
�xitt :<lb/>
hem I to I<lb/>
ras : �<lb/>
for loss. Lasl eai<lb/>
into the insidear <lb/>
fjfth-leadir I<lb/>
6-4, 2 0-p  1 5l<lb/>
much a relative r<lb/>
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Temple kiek<lb/>
to be their s<lb/>
Continued from ;<lb/>
Maurice Johnson, that can I<lb/>
slot. They hope that Frank V<lb/>
or George Dcvaney will coi<lb/>
a? the season progresses.<lb/>
On defense. Arians was<lb/>
antly surprised with the<lb/>
opement of his linebackinj<lb/>
and his secondary. But<lb/>
pectedthclinctobc ti ng.1<lb/>
have eight quality <lb/>
experience in the d 1<lb/>
tront ho said. "It v I be thf<lb/>
diefensh efi nt we vet<lb/>
up Seniors Andy Tapp<lb/>
and Camell .<lb/>
up at the ends, while at ret<lb/>
starters Kenyatta Rush.<lb/>
Gonstantatos and Eric <lb/>
will fill the tackle spots<lb/>
At inside lir - rs i<lb/>
WilliaiT<lb/>
�charlotte (Ar - J<lb/>
hnms, a prep all-star vn h pi<lb/>
to plav basketball at j<lb/>
tipa before he failed<lb/>
�om high school la j<lb/>
carolled at a junior<lb/>
Kansas.<lb/>
- Williams, an0 plaj a<lb/>
Northeastern High ir I<lb/>
Citv. started classes M 1<lb/>
Barton County Commun<lb/>
tcge in Great Bend Kai<lb/>
Barton coach Dan McGov<lb/>
$ "1 think he'll do fine a<lb/>
callv, McGovcrn told trd<lb/>
Totte Observer. "He sa I<lb/>
here to h i t the book - <lb/>
basketball is secondary<lb/>
. McGovcrn said Barto<lb/>
grong academic progra<lb/>
basketball program and<lb/>
rcrcncc the 15-s IKarj<lb/>
lawk Junior College <lb/>
has also been sua i -<lb/>
Barton players going o<lb/>
ditionally strong NCAA Iff<lb/>
rprograms include Todd,<lb/>
and Andre Harris at lndil<lb/>
Marvin Branch at Kansaf<lb/>
Smart oi Indiana, HaVvcxJ<lb/>
Oklahoma and Armon G<lb/>
Nevada-Las Vegas, all<lb/>
K'BA rosters, played atcoj<lb/>
Schools.<lb/>
 Before Williams will bd<lb/>
.� plav basketball, Bart<lb/>
Save proof he has obtal<lb/>
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ince he did not g<lb/>
&amp;lcGovcrn said<lb/>
$<lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0022"/><lb/>
THE CAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 25, 1988 2 1<lb/>
ATION AND<lb/>
TMENT<lb/>
ES NEEDED<lb/>
or the fall<lb/>
 L l <lb/>
to w o: k<lb/>
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Cincinnati will need help<lb/>
By TALL DUNN<lb/>
Co-Sports Idiiot<lb/>
Approaching the 1988 football<lb/>
season, the University of Cincin-<lb/>
nati looks to improve on its 4-7<lb/>
k from last year.<lb/>
Head coach Dave Currey said<lb/>
n i rdcr to be a success in 1988<lb/>
must tighten up the defense,<lb/>
but i quick glance at the schedule<lb/>
�r ikes him realize that many big<lb/>
tenges await the Bear Cats,<lb/>
return of 23 senior perform-<lb/>
ers creates a veteran presence that<lb/>
can but only help guide Cincin-<lb/>
� iti to the desired improved sea-<lb/>
Evcn with all the returning<lb/>
LTvperience, the quarterback slot<lb/>
not sec any experience at that<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
leader of the Bear Cats said<lb/>
. ,ood programs have good<lb/>
: leadership. He also<lb/>
p nted out that his seniors had<lb/>
vperience, maturity and tal-<lb/>
: � have their best vears, and<lb/>
that he hopes they will ultilize<lb/>
�  assets.<lb/>
jresent objective oi Currev<lb/>
 staff is to place the right<lb/>
rs at the right position as<lb/>
. - possible and to get them to<lb/>
at their fullest potential.<lb/>
c defensive line will have the<lb/>
needed strength it takes to<lb/>
the Bear Cat's Multiple 40<lb/>
tense Seniors Chris Asbcck<lb/>
Andrew Stewart will take<lb/>
nand oi the line.<lb/>
Asbeck,a 6-3,2t-4-pound tackle,<lb/>
I a starting role all three<lb/>
r years. He showed his vcr-<lb/>
� ty his sophomore year when<lb/>
m cd to the end position and<lb/>
ond on the team in tackles<lb/>
ss. Last year he moved back<lb/>
,e inside and was the team's<lb/>
ading tackier.<lb/>
4, 2(-0-pound Stewart is very<lb/>
ich a relative newcomer to the<lb/>
nehes. Stewart gave up football<lb/>
� i i-<lb/>
after his sophomore season in<lb/>
high school but was coaxed to<lb/>
return to the game his sophomore<lb/>
year in junior college. His diligent<lb/>
weight-training has paid off, for<lb/>
he led the Bear Cats last season in<lb/>
tackles for loss and sacks and was<lb/>
the teams fourth-leading tackier.<lb/>
Tom Szabados, a 6-1, 260-<lb/>
pound senior, complements the<lb/>
line with his steady, hard-nose<lb/>
play. Szabados was a starter and<lb/>
backup last season and was an all-<lb/>
star performer during spring<lb/>
practice.<lb/>
Chris Carmon, a 6-3,255-pound<lb/>
redshirt freshman is the top can-<lb/>
didate for the other end spot but<lb/>
the position is still up for grab.<lb/>
Scott Britt, 6-2,230-pounds, a jun-<lb/>
ior college transfer could see ac-<lb/>
tion there.<lb/>
The return of Ron Traut to the<lb/>
outside linebacker post should<lb/>
considerably strengthen the line-<lb/>
backing contingent. Traut had the<lb/>
starting position last year but<lb/>
broke his wrist before the season,<lb/>
which kept him out for the year.<lb/>
He is considered to have the best<lb/>
overall ability of the linebackers<lb/>
for the this season.<lb/>
Traut's return allowed the<lb/>
coaching staff to move Art Shef-<lb/>
field, who took over the starting<lb/>
position at outside linebacker last<lb/>
season, to strong safety. Vincent<lb/>
Munlin, who was backup at<lb/>
strong safety last season, has be-<lb/>
come the chief backup at outside<lb/>
linebacker.<lb/>
Donnie Robinson, a 6-foot, 218-<lb/>
pound senior is the lone veteran<lb/>
with experience as a starter<lb/>
among the returnees at inside<lb/>
linebacker.<lb/>
Jeff Schipani, a b-3, 215-pound<lb/>
senior, and Kyle Stroh, a 6-3, 226-<lb/>
pound sophomore, will be chal-<lb/>
lenging Robinson for the starting<lb/>
job this year.<lb/>
Top linebacker newcomers "bat<lb/>
will also contribute are jack Brus-<lb/>
cianclli , a junior college transfer<lb/>
and freshman Mark Rankin.<lb/>
All four starting all-senior sec-<lb/>
ondary players have departed<lb/>
and those created a major rebuild-<lb/>
ing effort. The Bear Cats have set<lb/>
there starters at that position<lb/>
coming out of spring practice.<lb/>
Marvin Bowan a 6-3, 191-<lb/>
pound junior who saw action last<lb/>
year as a backup has won the spot<lb/>
at free safety.<lb/>
The cornerback jobs are still up<lb/>
in the air. Sophomore Corey Wil-<lb/>
liams and junior college transfer<lb/>
Lionell Dozicr were the starters at<lb/>
the end of spring drills, but re-<lb/>
dshirt freshman John Cockrcll is<lb/>
in the picture.<lb/>
A key to the success of the Bear<lb/>
Cat's offense will be the rebuild-<lb/>
ing of the offensive line, where<lb/>
experience is also thin.<lb/>
Junior Troy Dixon and redshirt<lb/>
freshman Greg Zawie arc the<lb/>
prime candidates at right tackle.<lb/>
Senior Mike Bennett lost his<lb/>
starting job at left guard when<lb/>
sophomore Mark Eilerman out<lb/>
performed him during spring<lb/>
drills.<lb/>
Rob Hausfeld has been moved<lb/>
from left guard to left tackle to<lb/>
take advantage of his fine range<lb/>
while senior Greg Hcitkamp has<lb/>
taken over the starting assign-<lb/>
ment at right guard.<lb/>
Currey will welcome back the<lb/>
two top performers at the two<lb/>
running back and two receiver<lb/>
posts, and all but one of these<lb/>
veterans arc seniors.<lb/>
Cincinnati's key to their run-<lb/>
ning game will be balance.Scott<lb/>
Tackct and Leonard Cry arc back<lb/>
at fullback where the two com-<lb/>
bined for 642 yards and five<lb/>
touchdowns last season.<lb/>
But Al McKinney should again<lb/>
be the feature of the running<lb/>
game. McKinney who had his<lb/>
first start last year, rushed for 950<lb/>
yards. McKinney had a good<lb/>
spring practice and his future is<lb/>
looking even better.<lb/>
The receiving corps could be<lb/>
one of the best in the school's his-<lb/>
tory. Bill Davis, who shared the<lb/>
flanker position with Roosevelt<lb/>
Mukes combined with him for 81<lb/>
receptions and 1,161 yards last<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
Making an effort to get them<lb/>
both on the field more this year,<lb/>
Davis has moved to split end<lb/>
where he will compete with the<lb/>
sure-handed Joe Hicc who saw<lb/>
limited action last season due to<lb/>
injuries.<lb/>
Steve Sanders, who replaced<lb/>
the wounded Hice at split end<lb/>
most of last season, has been<lb/>
switched to flanker.<lb/>
Roundingout the pass-catching<lb/>
crew is tight end Daryl 1 luber, a<lb/>
three year starter.<lb/>
For the first time since 1980, the<lb/>
Bearcats will not have the luxury<lb/>
of beginning the season with an<lb/>
experienced quarterback.<lb/>
Sophomore Glenn Farkas, who<lb/>
served as backup for most of last<lb/>
season, emerged on top of the<lb/>
three-way battle for the QB slot.<lb/>
Redshirt freshman Don Hoogand<lb/>
junior college transfer Carl<lb/>
Johnson will continue to battle for<lb/>
the all-important role of backup<lb/>
quarterback.<lb/>
The kicking game for Cincin-<lb/>
nati should show a lot of strength.<lb/>
Gary Overgaauw, senior, had<lb/>
stiff competetion when he slightly<lb/>
beat out sophomore Jeff Jones for<lb/>
the right to do the punting. Over-<lb/>
gaauw will be under constcnt<lb/>
pressure from Jones.<lb/>
Thil Insalaco is back to handle<lb/>
the placekicking duties. The sen-<lb/>
ior led the team in scoring last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Coach Currey said his team<lb/>
needs to gain confidence in their<lb/>
selves and that winning breeds<lb/>
confidence<lb/>
P<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
I<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
BEING ACCEPTED<lb/>
FOR THE<lb/>
FOLLOWING POSITIONS<lb/>
� SPORTS WRITERS<lb/>
� NEWS WRITERS<lb/>
APPLY IN PERSON<lb/>
MONDAY - FRIDAY<lb/>
10-A.M4P.M.<lb/>
AT<lb/>
Temple kicking game promises<lb/>
to be their strongest attack<lb/>
read the east<lb/>
carolinian<lb/>
THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
2ND FLOOR<lb/>
PUBLICATIONS BUILDING<lb/>
IN FRONT OF JOYNER LIBRARY<lb/>
Continued from page 20<lb/>
Maurice Johnson, that can fill the<lb/>
slot. They hope that Frank Pollock<lb/>
or George Dcvaney will come on<lb/>
as the season progresses.<lb/>
On defense, Arians was pleas-<lb/>
antly surprised with the devcl-<lb/>
pement of his lincbacking corp<lb/>
and his secondary. But he ex-<lb/>
pected the line to be strong. "We'll<lb/>
have eight quality players with<lb/>
experience in the defensive<lb/>
front' he said. "It will be the best<lb/>
defensive front we've every lined<lb/>
ip Seniors Andy Pappalardo<lb/>
and Carncll Washington will line<lb/>
up at the ends, while at returning<lb/>
starters Kcnvatta Rush, Mike<lb/>
Jenstantatos and Eric Warren<lb/>
: till the tackle spots.<lb/>
At inside linebackers will be<lb/>
Anthonv Tezsla and Loranzo<lb/>
Square, both of whom were very<lb/>
impressive in spring drills. On the<lb/>
outside, a position that Arians<lb/>
was concerned about, will be Jeff<lb/>
Thomas on one side and cither Pat<lb/>
Dudley or Greg Taylor, who are<lb/>
battling for the starting job.<lb/>
The secondary was "a very<lb/>
good surprise this spring" said<lb/>
Arians. Expect to sec John Arm-<lb/>
strong, a converted linebacker, at<lb/>
free safety, while Joe Greenwood<lb/>
and Willard Cooper will occupy<lb/>
the corners.<lb/>
The kicking game should be<lb/>
strong this season, with third year<lb/>
man Ed Libcrati returning at<lb/>
punter, and Bill Wright, who the<lb/>
coaches think has the potential to<lb/>
reach All-America status, return-<lb/>
ing at kicker.<lb/>
Williams in college<lb/>
CARLOS SOSA<lb/>
GRANT JONES<lb/>
SUSAN KRUSE<lb/>
Cl 1ARLOTTE (AP) Kenny Wil-<lb/>
liams, a prep all-star who planned<lb/>
to play basketball at North Caro-<lb/>
. before he failed to graduate<lb/>
 m high school last spring, has<lb/>
� rolled at a junior college in<lb/>
Kansas.<lb/>
Williams, a 6-9 player from<lb/>
Northeastern High in Elizabeth<lb/>
ity, started classes Monday at<lb/>
irton County Community Col-<lb/>
;e in Great Bend, Kan said<lb/>
Barton coach Dan McGovcrn<lb/>
1 think he'll do fine academi-<lb/>
tlly, "McGovcrn told the Char-<lb/>
' tte Observer. "He said he's out<lb/>
' re to hit the books and that's it,<lb/>
basketball is secondary. "<lb/>
McGovcrn said Barton has a<lb/>
strong academic program. The<lb/>
basketball program and its con-<lb/>
n nee the 15-school Kansas Jay-<lb/>
hawk Junior College Conference<lb/>
has also been successful.<lb/>
Barton players going on to tra-<lb/>
ditionally strong NCAA Divid ion<lb/>
T programs include Todd Jadlow<lb/>
and Andre Harris at Indiana and<lb/>
Marvin Branch at Kansas. Keith<lb/>
smart of Indiana, Harvey Grant of<lb/>
Oklahoma and Armon Gilliam of<lb/>
Nevada-Las Vegas, all now on<lb/>
 R A rosters, played at conference<lb/>
si hools.<lb/>
Before Williams will be eligible<lb/>
to play basketball, Barton must<lb/>
have proof he has obtained his<lb/>
General Equivalency Diploma<lb/>
since he did not graduate,<lb/>
McGovcrn said.<lb/>
"He's been taking that near his<lb/>
home, I'm not sure exactly where,<lb/>
and we are in the process of hav-<lb/>
ing his results forwarded to us, "<lb/>
McGovcrn said. "If he has com-<lb/>
pleted them, he's fine. If not, we'll<lb/>
enroll him in that program out<lb/>
here<lb/>
The first games on Barton<lb/>
County's 31-game schedule is<lb/>
Nov. 1. In the meantime, Williams<lb/>
will go to class and workout with<lb/>
the team, McGovcrn said.<lb/>
Two former North Carolina<lb/>
assistant coaches arc head<lb/>
coaches at NCAA schools in Kan-<lb/>
sas. Eddie Fogler is at Wichita<lb/>
State and Roy Williams is at Kan-<lb/>
sas.<lb/>
McGovcrn said no one at North<lb/>
Carolina guided Williams to Bar-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
"I became aware that he would<lb/>
not be going to Carolina, just like<lb/>
coaches at a lot of junior colleges,<lb/>
" McGovcrn said. "I made three<lb/>
visits to Elizabeth City and got to<lb/>
know Kenny and his parents, and<lb/>
he came out here for a visit.<lb/>
"I think Kenny is committed to<lb/>
making things work academi-<lb/>
cally, and he knows we demand a<lb/>
lot of discipline. I told him in the<lb/>
recruiting process, (players) are<lb/>
not allowed to suit up for games<lb/>
and are barred from practice if<lb/>
they miss class.<lb/>
"He felt he would do well in<lb/>
that environment. "<lb/>
ftfllT, Structural Engineering. UniversitY � Virginia. Fi<lb/>
Analyzing and designing nance. Studies fluctuating<lb/>
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PICK-UP SPECIAL!<lb/>
Buy any size pizza, get one of equal value FREE!<lb/>
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Not valid with any other coupon or special<lb/>
Authority<lb/>
Corner of 14th &amp; Charles Streets, Greenville<lb/>
Call Us Now! 757-1955<lb/>
� � � WE ALSO DELIVER! <lb/>
<pb facs="00058087_0025"/><lb/>
?izza Transit Authority.<lb/>
Menu<lb/>
PTA pizzas (Small 10 Medium 12" Large 16") Our zesty sauce is made with<lb/>
romano cheese and topped with 100 mozzarella Double sauce is free<lb/>
Toppings<lb/>
Pepperoni Green Pepper Rings Green Olives Double Crust<lb/>
Ground Beet Fresh Mushrooms Onion Circles Italian Sauce<lb/>
Sausage Black Olives Double Cheese lalepeno Peppers<lb/>
Canadian Bacon Anchovies Pineapple<lb/>
Deluxe � pepperoni. sausage green peppers onions and mushrooms<lb/>
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Pizza Lite - mushrooms, onions, ground beef, green peppers, ripe olives<lb/>
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2 for 1<lb/>
Pick-up Special<lb/>
No Coupon Necessary<lb/>
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This store independently owned bv<lb/>
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P O Boi 421b, Greenville. N C 278Jb-421b<lb/>
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FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
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� HOURS �<lb/>
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Good only with this coupon One discount per pizza.<lb/>
Good Until December 31, 1988<lb/>
Transit<lb/>
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Save $3.00 on<lb/>
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Order any size pizza, large-16<lb/>
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Good Until December 31, 1988<lb/>
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Order any<lb/>
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Good only with this coupon One discount per pizza<lb/>
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Save $4.00 on<lb/>
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Order any<lb/>
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Buy any small-10" 2-item pizza, 4 Pepsis<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058087_0026"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>