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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058089_0001"/>
Coming Tuesday:<lb/>
rhe Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity; the newest house on<lb/>
campus and a starting over period for the brothers.<lb/>
Matures:<lb/>
IA profile and interviews with Greenville's very own<lb/>
rock-n-roll quartet; the Usuals<lb/>
?SPORTS<lb/>
The Fearless Football Forecast, also a look at the<lb/>
debut game for the Pirates against Tennessee Tech.<lb/>
?he<lb/>
(Earnlmiatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol.63 No. 15<lb/>
Thursday, September 1,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
24 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
The story goes much deeper than the statistics<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
Newa TJ nor<lb/>
According to a graphic that<lb/>
accompanied the article "UNCW<lb/>
is coming of age at 19" in the<lb/>
August 21, 1988 edition of the<lb/>
WilmingtonStar,71 percentof the<lb/>
ECL' faculty holds doctorate or<lb/>
professuial degrees.<lb/>
In the article ECU is compared<lb/>
with six other schools in the UNC<lb/>
system: Appalachian State, UNC-<lb/>
Asheville, UNC-Wilmington,<lb/>
L XC-Greensboro, UNC-Char-<lb/>
lotte and UNC-Chapel Hill. Of<lb/>
these six, ECU ranks at the bottom<lb/>
with 71 percent of its faculty hold-<lb/>
ing doctorate or professional de-<lb/>
grees and UNC-Chapel Hill tops<lb/>
the list with 87.7 percent.<lb/>
What the article does not show<lb/>
are the statistics for the other<lb/>
schools in the UNC system: Fay-<lb/>
etteville State, Elizabeth City,<lb/>
N.C School of Art, N.C. Central,<lb/>
N.C Agriculture and Technol-<lb/>
ogy. Pembroke State, Western<lb/>
Carolina and Winston Salem<lb/>
State.<lb/>
Hunter Kome, the author of the<lb/>
article, was asked how he came to<lb/>
pick 7 oi the fiften schools in the<lb/>
UNC system. Kome said, "I<lb/>
thought these 7 were the best or<lb/>
most widely known schools in the<lb/>
state. ECU was used because it is<lb/>
the only other school in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina, besides UNCW,<lb/>
that has any size<lb/>
What the story does not reflect<lb/>
are actual statistics concerning<lb/>
ECU, or any other of the men-<lb/>
tioned schools.<lb/>
Of ECU's 954 professors, not<lb/>
including associate professors,<lb/>
assistant professors, instructors<lb/>
or others, 89.6 percent hold a<lb/>
rh.D. Seventy nine percent of<lb/>
associates, 68 percent of assistants<lb/>
and 16 percent of instructors have<lb/>
earned a doctorate or first profes-<lb/>
sional degree.<lb/>
There are significant differ-<lb/>
ences in the titles. An instructor is<lb/>
usually hired on a short term ba-<lb/>
sis, some may be working toward<lb/>
a masters degree. An assistant is<lb/>
hired in hopes of staying on and<lb/>
trying to achieve tenure. The asso-<lb/>
ciate is one who has been pro-<lb/>
moted from assistant, and is<lb/>
working toward the professor<lb/>
title.<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin said,<lb/>
"the statistics are somewhat mis-<lb/>
leading. You have to look beyond<lb/>
the numbers and look at the qual-<lb/>
ity and contributions of our fac-<lb/>
ulty. Whether they have a Ph.D. or<lb/>
not, each member is making a<lb/>
strong contribution to ECU. Actu-<lb/>
ally, I think 71 percent of the fac-<lb/>
ulty holding doctorates is some-<lb/>
thing to boast about<lb/>
Eakin went on to say many<lb/>
faculty members in the theatre<lb/>
arts, music and art departments<lb/>
do not hold doctorates.<lb/>
"These departments are<lb/>
enormous and have many in-<lb/>
structors. Lotsof the faculty in the<lb/>
'fine arts' are renown dramatists,<lb/>
actors, artists and musicians.<lb/>
There isn't any need for these<lb/>
people to pursue a doctorate. In<lb/>
some cases there simply isn't any<lb/>
further to go, as far as their educa-<lb/>
tion is concerned.<lb/>
"When you look in the business<lb/>
school, English department and<lb/>
science area, where having a doc-<lb/>
torate is the standard, a high<lb/>
number of these people hold<lb/>
Th.D.s said Eakin.<lb/>
One reason for the lower num-<lb/>
ber of faculty with doctorates is<lb/>
ECU's rapid growth<lb/>
Eakin said, "we had to open up<lb/>
36 new positions this year to ac-<lb/>
commodate the students. It is<lb/>
simply impossible to hire 36<lb/>
people with doctorate degrees.<lb/>
Dr. William Bloodworth, Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Academic Affairs,<lb/>
said, "the hiring process is an<lb/>
extremely long one. You have to<lb/>
nationally advertise, interview<lb/>
and screen the applicants. Even if<lb/>
we want them, it doesn't mean<lb/>
they'll take the job<lb/>
"The percentage will increase<lb/>
over time. People have to under-<lb/>
stand this is a building process, it<lb/>
just doesn't happen over night. I<lb/>
feel once our enrollment becomes<lb/>
more stable, we'll be able to hire<lb/>
more people said Bloodworth.<lb/>
The university hires few<lb/>
people without doctorates or ap-<lb/>
Percentage of faculty holding doctorates or<lb/>
professional degrees in 1987.<lb/>
Source: Statistical Abstract of Higher<lb/>
propriate degrees. The exception<lb/>
comes in times of need, then, less<lb/>
qualified applicants are hired on a<lb/>
temporary basis. A common prac-<lb/>
tice is to hire someone who is close<lb/>
to receiving their doctorate de-<lb/>
gree in hopes that they will stay on<lb/>
after graduation.<lb/>
Bloodworth said"it's all in<lb/>
how you want look at the figures.<lb/>
I think we've done an awfully<lb/>
good job at hiring a qualified fac-<lb/>
ulty. Our two priorities are to<lb/>
always hire the best faculty pos-<lb/>
sible and to encourage our pres-<lb/>
ent faculty to keep doing a great<lb/>
job<lb/>
The statistics can be found in<lb/>
Statistical Abstract of Higher<lb/>
Education in North Carolina<lb/>
1987-88.<lb/>
Tenants, renters need to know their rights<lb/>
BvGREERBOWEN<lb/>
S?j Writer<lb/>
Each semester, many ECU stu-<lb/>
dents move into apartments<lb/>
oblivious to laws and rights that<lb/>
benefit them as tenants.<lb/>
A large number of these stu-<lb/>
dents are taken advantage of be-<lb/>
cause they are unaware of the<lb/>
laws designed to protect them.<lb/>
When first moving into an<lb/>
apartment, students should read<lb/>
the lease. Mac Hines, of Davison<lb/>
and Hines Reality in Rocky-<lb/>
Mount, N.C. said that if vou do<lb/>
not understand the lease, get<lb/>
Mmeone to interpret it for you.<lb/>
The lease will explain all rules of<lb/>
the landlord and should explain<lb/>
the rights of the tenant.<lb/>
Mr. Hines said to remember all<lb/>
landlords are not realitors. He<lb/>
also suggested talking to other<lb/>
tenants before moving in. "Stu-<lb/>
dents as well as all renters should<lb/>
have renters insurance, said<lb/>
Hines.<lb/>
Vicky Hardv of State Farm In-<lb/>
surance company said that renter<lb/>
insurance is not very expensive.<lb/>
The average renters insurance<lb/>
policy costs $120 a year, which<lb/>
comes to about $10a month. It will<lb/>
provide coverage in the event of<lb/>
theft, robbery, fire, water damage<lb/>
and any number of unexpected<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Hardy said most realitors don't<lb/>
have insurance to cover loses of<lb/>
the tenant.<lb/>
When deciding on the amount<lb/>
of insurance, students should es-<lb/>
timate the value of their belong-<lb/>
ings. "If you figure that you have<lb/>
X amount of jeans and X amount<lb/>
of dollars, a T.V a sofa, bed, and<lb/>
dresser, you'll soon find out your<lb/>
stuff is worth a great deal more<lb/>
than you ever would have imag-<lb/>
ined, " said Hardy. She said that if<lb/>
you purchased your furniture at a<lb/>
yard sale, you should still esti-<lb/>
mate their value, based on their<lb/>
replacement costs.<lb/>
Another area students know<lb/>
very little about, are the laws<lb/>
designed to protect them from<lb/>
poor landlords. Leslie S. Robin-<lb/>
son of James M. Roberts Law Firm<lb/>
in Greenville said "these laws are<lb/>
written so the average person can<lb/>
read and understand their<lb/>
rights<lb/>
First, there are many laws a<lb/>
landlord must comply with.<lb/>
North Carolina general statute 42-<lb/>
38 details these laws as well as the<lb/>
renters reponsibility.<lb/>
A landlord must make all re-<lb/>
pairs necessary to keep the pre-<lb/>
mesis in good living conditon.<lb/>
The landlord must "maintain in<lb/>
good, safe working order and<lb/>
promptly repair all electrical,<lb/>
plumbing, sanitary, heating, ven-<lb/>
tilating, air conditioning, other fa-<lb/>
cilities and appliances supplied<lb/>
required " According to<lb/>
N.C.G.S. 42-42, a landlord, once<lb/>
notified in writing must repair<lb/>
any broken appliances or facility<lb/>
in the apartment.<lb/>
Security deposits are to be<lb/>
placed in a North Carolina bank<lb/>
or a furnished bond. The landlord<lb/>
must notify the renter of where<lb/>
his security deposit is being held<lb/>
within 30 days.<lb/>
When moving out, a landlord<lb/>
may use the deposit to pay for<lb/>
damages, upaid bills or loss of<lb/>
rent due to a broken lease. 30 days<lb/>
after moving out, an itemized list<lb/>
of any damages and the balance of<lb/>
the security deposit is then mailed<lb/>
to the former tenant.<lb/>
The landlord may not withhold<lb/>
as damages any part of the de-<lb/>
posit for normal wear and tear on<lb/>
the apartment. He may not with-<lb/>
hold amounts that exceed actual<lb/>
repair costs.<lb/>
If a landlord fails to comply<lb/>
with these laws, a tenant may take<lb/>
them to court to receive the de-<lb/>
posit damages and court costs.<lb/>
Generally, students don't try to<lb/>
press charges against their land-<lb/>
lords. A good understanding of<lb/>
the laws makes it easier to negoti-<lb/>
ate with your landlords. Byknow-<lb/>
ing your rights, it becomes much<lb/>
harder for landlords to take ad-<lb/>
vantage of renters.<lb/>
Usually, a simple letter staring<lb/>
that you know your rights, and<lb/>
the laws, you can keep from being<lb/>
taken advantage of.<lb/>
If a tenant is to be evicted, the<lb/>
landlord must hand deliver the<lb/>
notice or mail it to the premesis. If<lb/>
a tenant leaves any belonging in<lb/>
an apartment such as furniture,<lb/>
the sheriff must be there and all<lb/>
belongings are to be placed in stor-<lb/>
age. In order to get those belongings<lb/>
back, the tenant must pay all back<lb/>
rent and storage costs.<lb/>
ECU adopts AIDS<lb/>
prevention policy<lb/>
By MICHAEL LEWIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"AIDS Prevention a dilemma<lb/>
that health care providers have<lb/>
been faced with for the past eight<lb/>
years.<lb/>
AIDS, is a disease that is trans-<lb/>
mitted by intimate sexual contact<lb/>
or exposure to infected blood.<lb/>
Because of this, the ECU AIDS<lb/>
Education Committee has put out<lb/>
pamplets to faculty, staff and stu-<lb/>
dents, about the prevention and<lb/>
spread of AIDS.<lb/>
The committee, has adopted<lb/>
specific guidelines to control the<lb/>
transmission of AIDS. The<lb/>
committee asserts that students<lb/>
who have AIDS should be al-<lb/>
lowed regular classroom atten-<lb/>
dance in an unrestrictive manner<lb/>
as long as they are physically able<lb/>
to attend classes. Also, university<lb/>
personel with AIDS, do not pose a<lb/>
known health risk to other stu-<lb/>
dents or employees thus, policy<lb/>
should reflect this data.<lb/>
The purpose of the pamplet is to<lb/>
educate students, staff and fac-<lb/>
ulty about the virus (and treat<lb/>
those who have or think they may<lb/>
have the virus). The better in-<lb/>
formed the public is about the<lb/>
virus, the higher the rate of effec-<lb/>
tiveness for the new policy.<lb/>
A guideline of the new policy is<lb/>
to conduct educational programs<lb/>
for university personel and stu-<lb/>
dents. These programs will pro-<lb/>
vide information to employees<lb/>
and staff who need to know pre-<lb/>
ventive methods to the virus if<lb/>
they should come in contact with<lb/>
someone who is HIV positive.<lb/>
See AIDS, page 2<lb/>
Student Bank offers new services<lb/>
Classes are in full swing, parties are meant for the weekend and the library is reserved for<lb/>
wee knights, (ECU Photoiab).<lb/>
By TAMMY AYCOCK<lb/>
Staff Writar<lb/>
In response to many requests,<lb/>
the Student Bank (MSC) is offer-<lb/>
ing a new service.<lb/>
"This will allow ECU students<lb/>
to pay their Greenville Utilities<lb/>
bill while they are on campus, "<lb/>
said Janice Craft, the bank man-<lb/>
ager.<lb/>
The only conditions of this<lb/>
time-saving service are: bills must<lb/>
be paid before their due dates and<lb/>
people must bring both parts of<lb/>
their statements.<lb/>
'If they want to pay it on the<lb/>
due date, they can't pay it here.<lb/>
They (Greenville Utilities) will<lb/>
not allow us to take them on or<lb/>
after the due date. We have to take<lb/>
them before the due date and they<lb/>
have to bring both parts of the bill,<lb/>
Craft said.<lb/>
The Student Bank also accepts<lb/>
payment for Carolina Telephone.<lb/>
"We can take them no matter<lb/>
when they are due. If they are late,<lb/>
that's between them and the<lb/>
phone company Craft said.<lb/>
In additon to handling bills,<lb/>
"We offer savings accounts to the<lb/>
students. These are not interest<lb/>
bearing accounts because we are<lb/>
not a commercial bank. If s just a<lb/>
safe place for students to keep<lb/>
their money until they need it.<lb/>
They don't have to maintain any<lb/>
certain balance to have an ac-<lb/>
count Craft said.<lb/>
"Another advantage for the<lb/>
students is that we don't charge<lb/>
for withdrawal. The only charge<lb/>
is if you lose your passbook, there<lb/>
is a fifty-cent fee to replace it, "<lb/>
Craft said.<lb/>
The bank also provides check<lb/>
cashing. They will cash checks up<lb/>
to a maximum of $125 every seven<lb/>
working days of the bank.<lb/>
In order to cash a check, stu-<lb/>
dents must present an ECU iden-<lb/>
tification card and a current activ-<lb/>
ity sticker. "We cash checks<lb/>
whether they are in-state or out-<lb/>
of-state. If there is a returned<lb/>
check, we do have a ten dollar<lb/>
fine, plus whatever their bank<lb/>
See BANK,page 2<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0002"/><lb/>
7<lb/>
4<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1,1988<lb/>
Toxic shock syndrome; a lethal disease<lb/>
WHAT IS TOXIC SHOCK AND<lb/>
WHO CAN GET IT?<lb/>
Toxic shock syndrome (TSS) is a<lb/>
rare disease believed to be caused<lb/>
bv a bacterium c lied staphylo-<lb/>
ooccus aureus. TS3 is a rare, but<lb/>
serious disease which can some-<lb/>
times be fatal. It is estimated that<lb/>
6-17 of every 100,000 girls and<lb/>
women who are menstruating<lb/>
will get TSS each year. However,<lb/>
TSS also occurs in non-menstruat-<lb/>
ing women, men and children<lb/>
Teenage girls and women under<lb/>
thirty years oi age are reported to<lb/>
be more likely to develop tam-<lb/>
pon-associated TSS Approxi-<lb/>
mately 78 of the cases reported<lb/>
to the Federal Center of Disease<lb/>
Control occurred in menstruating<lb/>
women who were using tampons,<lb/>
while the remaining 22 oc-<lb/>
curred in children, men, and<lb/>
women who were not menstruat-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
What Are the Symptoms of TSS<lb/>
Primary symptoms of TSS are<lb/>
sudden, high fever (usually 102<lb/>
degrees or more), vomiting, diar-<lb/>
rhea, fainting, or near fainting<lb/>
when standing, dizziness, or a<lb/>
rash that looks like sunburn<lb/>
Additional symptoms may in- remove your tampon at once and<lb/>
elude aching of muscles and see your health care professional<lb/>
joints, redness of eyes, sore throat immediately and tell himher<lb/>
and weakness.<lb/>
symptoms during your period, could use tamponsduring the da;<lb/>
and napkins at night. In addition<lb/>
it is advisable to use a tampor<lb/>
with the minumum absorbcncy<lb/>
that you need to control your<lb/>
menstrual flow. Regardless of<lb/>
which tampon you choose, you<lb/>
will probably want to change you<lb/>
tampon every 4 to 6 hours, or<lb/>
more often if needed, recognizing<lb/>
you are menstruating.<lb/>
What Can I do to Reduce My<lb/>
Risk of Getting TSS?<lb/>
You can entirely avoid the low<lb/>
What Should I Do if I Think I<lb/>
Have TSS?<lb/>
If you experience sudden fever<lb/>
and one or more of the other<lb/>
risk of getting a tampon-associ- too frequent changing may cause<lb/>
ated TSS by not using tampons.<lb/>
However, if you choose to use<lb/>
tampons, it may be possible to<lb/>
reduce your risk by alternating<lb/>
tampons with napkins during<lb/>
your period. For example, you<lb/>
some irritation.<lb/>
Can a Person<lb/>
Than Once?<lb/>
Get TSS More<lb/>
About one in every three girls or<lb/>
women who have had ISS has<lb/>
gotten it again. So, if a hea'th ca-e<lb/>
professional has told you that you<lb/>
have had TSS, or if you believe<lb/>
you have had the disease, do not<lb/>
use tampons until you check with<lb/>
your health care professional.<lb/>
What if I Want More Informa-<lb/>
tion About TSS<lb/>
If you would like more informa-<lb/>
tion about TSS, stop by or call the<lb/>
Student Health Center at 757-<lb/>
6841.<lb/>
The hurricane season is here<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
AssUUnt N'cwi Editor<lb/>
No high temperature records<lb/>
are expected to be set during the<lb/>
weekend, because 1988 is begin-<lb/>
ning to see its first signs of the<lb/>
rainy hurricane season.<lb/>
"This is not abnormal for this<lb/>
time of year said meteorologist<lb/>
Richard Jones of the National<lb/>
Weather Service at the Raleigh-<lb/>
Durham Airport.<lb/>
No high temperature records<lb/>
are expected to be set during the<lb/>
weekend, because 1988 is begin-<lb/>
ning to see its first signs of the<lb/>
rainy hurricane season.<lb/>
"This is not abnormal for this<lb/>
time of year said meteorologist<lb/>
Richard Jones of the National<lb/>
Weather Service at the Raleigh-<lb/>
Durham Airport.<lb/>
"The weather will fluctuate like<lb/>
this, from now through the rest of<lb/>
the summer and the fall he said.<lb/>
"Everyone might as well get<lb/>
used to the unpredictability of the<lb/>
weather. It might be hot and<lb/>
sunny one minute and scattered<lb/>
thunderstorms the next minute<lb/>
Jones added.<lb/>
hven though the temperature<lb/>
has dipped into the 60's and 70's<lb/>
for the past few days, these tem-<lb/>
peratures are nowhere near a rec-<lb/>
ord.<lb/>
According to Jones, the record<lb/>
low for this time of year has been<lb/>
recorded in the 40 degree range.<lb/>
"The lower temperatures have<lb/>
probably not seemed much<lb/>
cooler, because the humidity has<lb/>
been so high he said.<lb/>
There will be little change in the<lb/>
weather outlook for the next sev-<lb/>
eral days, but that more sections<lb/>
of the state will have a chance for<lb/>
the standard afternoon and eve-<lb/>
ning thunderstorms.<lb/>
Police searching for attackers want help<lb/>
Campus Police are seeking in-<lb/>
formation about an alleged as-<lb/>
sault on a female that occurred on<lb/>
Friday, August 26th at approxi-<lb/>
mately 1 a.m. in the main lobby of<lb/>
Clement Hall.<lb/>
Although rumors of this inci-<lb/>
dent have been spreading that a<lb/>
female was raped, facts of the case<lb/>
indicate that the victim experi-<lb/>
enced unsolicited and unwanted<lb/>
touching. There has not been a<lb/>
rape reported.<lb/>
The alleged assault did occur in<lb/>
the main lobby area of Clement<lb/>
Hall near the lobby phone. The<lb/>
incident was interrupted by an<lb/>
unidentified female who walked<lb/>
in on the incident, at which time<lb/>
the perpetrators stopped. The<lb/>
victim ran upstairs to a student's<lb/>
room and called Public Safety.<lb/>
Officers arrived immediately; the<lb/>
perpetrators had fled the area and<lb/>
have not been located.<lb/>
The perpetrators were de-<lb/>
scribed as undetermined number<lb/>
of black males with close cut hair<lb/>
and one of them was wearing<lb/>
white shorts.<lb/>
Campus police urge female and<lb/>
male students to use caution<lb/>
when confronted by any group of<lb/>
two or more male subjects who<lb/>
Six perish when jetliner<lb/>
???<lb/>
plunges into sea<lb/>
HONG KONG (AP) - A Chinese<lb/>
jetliner skidded down a slipper)<lb/>
runway, barreled into the sea and<lb/>
broke apart today while landing<lb/>
in heavy rain. Officials said six of<lb/>
the 89 people on board were<lb/>
killed.<lb/>
All of the fatalities were among<lb/>
the 11 Chinese crew members,<lb/>
said Chen Zhengyou, a spokes-<lb/>
man for Civil Aviation Admini-<lb/>
stration of China, that nation's<lb/>
flag-carrier.<lb/>
A massive rescue operation at<lb/>
Hong King's airport involving di-<lb/>
vers, a flotilla of boats and five<lb/>
helicopters began after Flight 301<lb/>
plunged into Victoria Harbor at<lb/>
9:19 a.m.<lb/>
Small rubber rafts with rescue<lb/>
personnel bobbed around the<lb/>
partially submerged wreckage of<lb/>
the British-made Trident jet,<lb/>
which had arrived from Canton,<lb/>
capital of China's Guangdong<lb/>
province about 90 miles to the<lb/>
northwest.<lb/>
Fire engines crowded onto Kai<lb/>
Tak Airport's solitary runway,<lb/>
which juts into the harbor. Seven<lb/>
hours after the crash, a 15-foot<lb/>
crane began hauling the fuselage<lb/>
from the water.<lb/>
"It fell into the sea at the end of<lb/>
the runway police spokesman<lb/>
Tony Leung said of the CAAC<lb/>
jetliner.<lb/>
Fifteen of the 83 people pulled<lb/>
from the wreckage required hos-<lb/>
pitalization and were reported in<lb/>
fair or satisfactory condition.<lb/>
Government-run Radio Televi-<lb/>
sion Hong Kong said at least three<lb/>
of the dead were recovered from<lb/>
the wreckage.<lb/>
The radio interviewed one un-<lb/>
identified passenger who said<lb/>
some of the plane's safety belts<lb/>
did not work.<lb/>
"That's why when the plane<lb/>
landed so hard, people simply<lb/>
were flying the woman told the<lb/>
station. "I was in the back. It<lb/>
didn't dawn on me that we were<lb/>
really out of control. I was think<lb/>
ing more of .how I was going to<lb/>
get out<lb/>
look suspicious or out of place.<lb/>
Aviod making contact with those<lb/>
subjects and report them immedi-<lb/>
ately to Public Safety to have them<lb/>
checked out.<lb/>
Anyone having any informa-<lb/>
tion concerning this incident or<lb/>
any other crimes on campus are<lb/>
urged to call Public Safety-Police<lb/>
757-6150 or Pirate Crime Busters<lb/>
AIDS policy<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Topics such as: the use of con-<lb/>
doms, transmission of the virus,<lb/>
possible implements that may be<lb/>
contaminated and cleansing of<lb/>
contaminated surfaces will be<lb/>
covered.<lb/>
The new policy should have<lb/>
"no adverse effect" on the enroll-<lb/>
ment , said Ms. Mary Elesha-<lb/>
Adams, member of the ECU AIDS<lb/>
Education Committee and ECU<lb/>
Health Educator at the Student<lb/>
Health Center.<lb/>
The brochure states, "no pro-<lb/>
gram of screening for newly<lb/>
admitted or current students or<lb/>
other university personnel for<lb/>
antibodv to HIV7 is recommended<lb/>
at this time. "<lb/>
Bank services<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
charges, " Craft said.<lb/>
Last year, the student bank<lb/>
began to sell American Express<lb/>
Money Orders. "We charge one<lb/>
dollar per money order, it can be<lb/>
any amount up to $1,000, " Craft<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Student Bank, located on<lb/>
the main floor of Mcndenhall<lb/>
Student Center and is University<lb/>
operated. It is open to students,<lb/>
faculty, and staff Monday<lb/>
through Thursday form 10 a.m.<lb/>
until 4:30 p.m. and on Friday from<lb/>
10 a.m. until 5 p.m.<lb/>
757-6266. All information will be<lb/>
treated strictly confidential and<lb/>
the caller does not have to give his<lb/>
name. Persons with information<lb/>
about crime on campus who call<lb/>
in information thru Pirate Crime<lb/>
Busters are eligible for a reward<lb/>
up to $1,000.00 depending on the<lb/>
type and value of the information<lb/>
given which leads to an arrest.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey Spencer Meymandi<lb/>
Richard-Alan Cook Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95 Local Open Rate$4.75<lb/>
Bulk Rate (Contracts) Frequency (Contracts)<lb/>
100-199 col. inches$4.50 5 Insertions4ii")$4.55<lb/>
200-299 col. inches$4.40 0225)$4.50<lb/>
300-399 col. inches$4.30<lb/>
400-499 col. inches$4.20<lb/>
500-599 col. inches$4.10<lb/>
600 and above$4.00<lb/>
Classified Display<lb/>
Open Rate$5.00<lb/>
10 Insertions(4in$4.50<lb/>
(1225)  $4.45<lb/>
15 Insertions(4in$4.45<lb/>
0225")$4.40<lb/>
20 Insertions (4li)$4.40<lb/>
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Color Advertising<lb/>
One Color and black$90.00 d225)$4.20<lb/>
Two Color and black$155.00<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Phone:<lb/>
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? York free weights<lb/>
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? Expanded free-weight area? Wolff system sunbed<lb/>
? 1500 square foot aerobic floor? Private dressing rooms<lb/>
? New aerobic program coordinated by? Private tile showers<lb/>
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Pitt<lb/>
(AP) - Pitt County Memc<lb/>
Hospital in Greenville hopd<lb/>
add 143 new beds to meet<lb/>
demands of a growing patl<lb/>
load and educational progri<lb/>
for doctors and other health<lb/>
professionals, officials say<lb/>
At a recent certificateof-n<lb/>
hearing, Dave McRae, vice pr<lb/>
dent and chief operating offij<lb/>
said that without the additic<lb/>
beds, the delivery c( health<lb/>
ices in eastern North Carol<lb/>
would suffer, and teaching<lb/>
research opportunities woul<lb/>
limited.<lb/>
The 560-bed hospital is uni<lb/>
among the four academic mec<lb/>
school at East Carolina Univer<lb/>
- drawing patients in need of t<lb/>
ary care from a 29-county reg<lb/>
in the east - it serves as the c(<lb/>
munity hospital for the more t<lb/>
97,000 residents of Pitt Counl<lb/>
Tertiary services available<lb/>
PCMH include cardiology<lb/>
cardiac surgery, cancer diagnl<lb/>
and treatment, high-risk obstj<lb/>
cal and neonatal and pedi<lb/>
intensive care, neurology<lb/>
neurosugery, rehabilitation,<lb/>
chiatry, trauma. All were d(<lb/>
oped using a partnership betv<lb/>
the countv-owned hospital<lb/>
the ECU School od Medicine<lb/>
Because of the lack of bed s<lb/>
McRae said last week, "there<lb/>
waiting lists for all thest tert<lb/>
services<lb/>
"More than 60 percent ofl<lb/>
patients admited to Pitt Mem(<lb/>
come from outside Pitt Coui<lb/>
McRae said. "Most of these<lb/>
tients are referred for sen<lb/>
unavailable at other hospital<lb/>
eastern North Carolina)<lb/>
Solidt<lb/>
WARSAW, Poland (AP)<lb/>
Walesa said he would attemJ<lb/>
make up for the years Solid<lb/>
was barred form dialogue in<lb/>
with Communist authontu<lb/>
day, eight years to the da<lb/>
government recognized sol<lb/>
iry.<lb/>
Authorities hoped the m<lb/>
would help end Poland's<lb/>
serious labor unrest since<lb/>
crushed the free trade u<lb/>
movement in a 1981 mil<lb/>
crackdown.<lb/>
Tne enterprises across the c<lb/>
rrv remained idled by sti<lb/>
demanding reinstatement ofl<lb/>
danty and higher wages to<lb/>
60 percent inflation.<lb/>
Walesa planned to confer<lb/>
Interior Minister Gen. Czi<lb/>
Kiszczak; a senior represent<lb/>
of the Roman Catholic Chi<lb/>
and a member of a pro-rel<lb/>
group backed by the governi<lb/>
Government spokesman<lb/>
Urban said Stanislaw Gosj<lb/>
secretarv of the official nat<lb/>
unity organization PRON,<lb/>
would take part.<lb/>
Walesa went to church<lb/>
quarters after arriving<lb/>
Gdansk.<lb/>
"I'm like a cook prepannj<lb/>
meal, but 1 can't tell yet i<lb/>
going to be a good pie or a<lb/>
one said Andrzej Stelma<lb/>
ski, a senior mediator affij<lb/>
with the church. Authentic-<lb/>
municate with the oppoj<lb/>
through the church, and Stj<lb/>
chowski has played a key rj<lb/>
The government deman<lb/>
exchange for the talks - W<lb/>
first with government o<lb/>
since 1982 - that Walesa<lb/>
strike at the Uenin shipy<lb/>
Gdansk.<lb/>
When asked bv reporter<lb/>
would do this. Walesa rep<lb/>
don't have the powers<lb/>
asked if that meant he woul<lb/>
call off the strike, the Soli<lb/>
chairman said, "1 did not<lb/>
Asked earlier what he<lb/>
discuss with Kiszczak,<lb/>
saidHow to make up for tl<lb/>
seven years<lb/>
Accords signed at the<lb/>
shipyard on Aug. 31,1980<lb/>
nationwide strike wave<lb/>
Solidarity the only mdej<lb/>
labor federation ever recc<lb/>
in the Sovied bloc.<lb/>
There was no govemi<lb/>
nouncement of today's<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0003"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1,1988 3<lb/>
sease<lb/>
y uncn who have had 1SS has<lb/>
L itten it again. So, if a hec;thcare<lb/>
professional has told you that you<lb/>
ave had TSS, or if you believe<lb/>
u have had the disease, do not<lb/>
se tampons until you check with<lb/>
our health care professional.<lb/>
What if I Want More lnforma-<lb/>
Vbout TSS<lb/>
w ould like more informa-<lb/>
nt TSS stop bv or call the<lb/>
Health Center at 757-<lb/>
arolinian<lb/>
tor or Advertising<lb/>
hre$entatives<lb/>
Spencer Meymandi<lb/>
Adam Blankenship<lb/>
? n<lb/>
 rRTlSING<lb/>
oca! Open Rate $4.75<lb/>
requency (Contracts)<lb/>
serti r?s(4 11 S4.55<lb/>
$4.50<lb/>
- 11  $4.50<lb/>
22S $4.45<lb/>
5 Ins ns(4Mi $4.45<lb/>
: ; $4.40<lb/>
ns(4 11 I $4.40<lb/>
22S  $4.35<lb/>
5 ns rtbons 4 in$4.35<lb/>
: ?5 $4.20<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
0 p.m.<lb/>
te:<lb/>
1366<lb/>
ftage of our many facilities:<lb/>
? rooms<lb/>
r 'in<lb/>
- i :na<lb/>
al whirlpool<lb/>
sunbed<lb/>
ssing rooms<lb/>
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our extra<lb/>
d services:<lb/>
&amp; A: IA Memberships<lb/>
at locations worldwide<lb/>
I rest Seminars<lb/>
ir calendar events<lb/>
 :ies<lb/>
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novations are complete,<lb/>
p prices will go up, so be sure<lb/>
W! or, bring in the coupon<lb/>
free month pass and see for<lb/>
iv The Spa is Greenville's best<lb/>
value!<lb/>
wibcrships Available!<lb/>
Qe<lb/>
a<lb/>
Pitt Memorial expands service<lb/>
$<lb/>
medical school in 1986, "particu-<lb/>
larly in the key educational de-<lb/>
partments such as medicine, ob-<lb/>
stetrics, pediatrics, psychiatry,<lb/>
and surgery<lb/>
That marginal student-patient<lb/>
(AP) - Pitt County Memorial McRae said that because the<lb/>
Hospital in Greenville hopes to hospital serves as a regional refer-<lb/>
add 143 new beds to meet the ral center and as a community<lb/>
demands of a growing patient hospital, patients have faced de-<lb/>
load and educational programs lays.<lb/>
for doctors and other health care "During the past year, we have<lb/>
professionals, officials say. exprienced many occasions when ratio, Laupus said, is "causing us<lb/>
At a recent certificate-of-need it has become necessary to post- to postpone an increase in class<lb/>
hearing, Dave McRae, vice presi- pone admissions, including delay size to 80, which has been the<lb/>
dent and chief operating officer, of scheduled surgery, because no expectation of the General As-<lb/>
said that without the additional rooms were available he said. sembly Marginal patient num-<lb/>
beds, the delivery of health serv- "Patients who are referred to bers have also influenced the<lb/>
tees in eastern North Carolina Pitt Memorial for urgent, special- number of residents accepted into<lb/>
would suffer, and teaching and ized care must take precedence the various programs,<lb/>
research opportunities would be over the less critical community "At present, we accept 50 first-<lb/>
limited, patients year residents when we should be<lb/>
The 560-bed hospital is unique The shortage of bed space also accepting about 80 per year<lb/>
among the four academic medical affects the educational mission of<lb/>
school at East Carolina University the hospital where, each year,<lb/>
-drawing patients in need of terti- 1,000 East Carolina University<lb/>
medical school students and<lb/>
other health care profcssionals-<lb/>
in-training receive clinical experi-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
'The lack of sufficient beds, the<lb/>
PCMH include cardiology and inadequacy of educational space irothofthesedepartmcntsoperate<lb/>
cardiac surgery, cancer diagnosis near the bedside and the over- largely in the outpaitent setting<lb/>
and treatment, high-risk obstetri- crowding of virtually all space for Similar scenarios can be devel-<lb/>
cal and neonatal and pediatric support services have combined oped for the availability of terti-<lb/>
mtensive care, neurology and to delay - and in some cases Hock ary training sites in nursing, Lau-<lb/>
neurosugery, rehabilitation, psy- - plans for the ECU School of bus said.<lb/>
chiatry, trauma. All were devel- Medicine to increase its entering Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
oped using a partnership bet ween medical student class size from 72 opened in April ly, wim<lb/>
the county-owned hospital and students to 80 and to expand its 400,000 square feet of space and<lb/>
the ECU School od Medicine. residency programs McRae 370bcds. Thc$15.5-millionbuild-<lb/>
Because of the lack of bed space, said.<lb/>
The first medical school class -<lb/>
28 medical students - began its<lb/>
studies in 1977.<lb/>
Dr. William Laupus, vice chan-<lb/>
cellor for health sciences and dean<lb/>
of the medical school at East Caro-<lb/>
lina University, said the student<lb/>
patient ratio at the hospital be<lb/>
ary care from a 29-county region<lb/>
in the east - it serves as the com-<lb/>
munity hospital for the more than<lb/>
97,000 residents of Pitt County.<lb/>
Tertiary services available at<lb/>
Laupus said. "Viewed in terms of<lb/>
total resident numbers, our pro-<lb/>
gram should provide education<lb/>
for about 200 to 240 residents per<lb/>
year, instead of the 155 we now<lb/>
have. Only the family medicine<lb/>
and emergency medicine pro-<lb/>
grams operate at full strength and<lb/>
McRae said last week, "there are<lb/>
waiting lists for all thest tertiary<lb/>
services<lb/>
"More than 60 percent of the<lb/>
patients admited to Pitt Memorial<lb/>
come from outside Pitt County<lb/>
McRae said. "Most of these pa-<lb/>
tients are referred for services<lb/>
unavailable at other hospitals (in came marginal when the first 72-<lb/>
eastern North Carolina) student class was admitted to the<lb/>
ing was designed as a community<lb/>
hospital.<lb/>
But an affiliation agreement<lb/>
between the state and county<lb/>
governments that same year<lb/>
transformed the hospital into a<lb/>
teaching and research facility,<lb/>
which has caused it to grow to<lb/>
700,000 square feet, with a value<lb/>
not including the estimated $20<lb/>
million in equipment, of $70 mil-<lb/>
lion.<lb/>
Theexpansion plans would add<lb/>
230,000 square feet of new space<lb/>
and renovate 80,000 square feet in<lb/>
the present building, at a cost of<lb/>
about $50 million.<lb/>
Another 600 employees will be<lb/>
needed after the expansion and<lb/>
renovation is complete.<lb/>
The hospital is presently Pitt<lb/>
County's largest employer, with<lb/>
3,016 workers and a payroll of<lb/>
$57.8 million a year.<lb/>
Dukakis<lb/>
gaining groundl<lb/>
on Bush camp<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Some<lb/>
state and local Democratic leaders<lb/>
say that while Michael Dukakis'<lb/>
Republican rivals have made<lb/>
their grab for the national spot-<lb/>
light, his campaign has been<lb/>
making important organizational<lb/>
gain in the field.<lb/>
Around the country, Dukakis<lb/>
field leaders and Democratic<lb/>
Party state and local leaders con-<lb/>
tend the appearance of flagging<lb/>
momentum on the part of the<lb/>
Dukakis campaign is at worst a<lb/>
temporary problem - a part of the<lb/>
upsand downs of a campaign that<lb/>
will balance in the end.<lb/>
Dukakis campaign officials<lb/>
have said they were devoting<lb/>
much of their summer efforts to<lb/>
building organization in the<lb/>
states, and party officials in some<lb/>
key states point to organizational<lb/>
gains.<lb/>
CASH IN A FLASH FOR<lb/>
THE BIG GAME BASH<lb/>
Southern Gun<lb/>
&amp; Pawn, Inc.<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
ON<lb/>
TV'S, STEREOS. VCR'S. GUNS.<lb/>
DIAMONDS. BICYCLES. CLASS RINGS.<lb/>
ALL MOST ANYTHING OF VALUE<lb/>
WE BUY GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
$<lb/>
$<lb/>
3$ 752-2464 gg<lb/>
NEW 14K GOLD<lb/>
500 N. GREENE ST. ? JUST ACROSS RIVER BRIDGE<lb/>
? GREENVILLE<lb/>
$<lb/>
Mexican Restaurant<lb/>
Solidarity now 8 years<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Mark Johnson<lb/>
with Luke Whisnant<lb/>
Thursday September 1<lb/>
? Start? at lO p.m.<lb/>
61.00 Admis.ion<lb/>
WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Lech<lb/>
Walesa said he would attempt to<lb/>
make up for the years Solidarity<lb/>
was barred form dialogue in talks<lb/>
with Communist authorities to-<lb/>
day, eight years to the day the<lb/>
government recognized solidar-<lb/>
ity.<lb/>
Authorities hoped the meeting<lb/>
would help end Poland's most<lb/>
serious labor unrest since they<lb/>
crushed the free trade union<lb/>
movement in a 1981 military<lb/>
crackdown.<lb/>
Tne enterprises across the coun-<lb/>
try remained idled by strikers<lb/>
demanding reinstatement of Soli-<lb/>
darity and higher wages to offset<lb/>
60 percent inflation.<lb/>
Walesa planned to confer with<lb/>
Interior Minister Gen. Czeslaw<lb/>
Kiszczak; a senior representative<lb/>
of the Roman Catholic Church;<lb/>
and a member of a pro-reform<lb/>
group backed by the government.<lb/>
Government spokesman Jerzy<lb/>
Urban said Stanislaw Ciosek, a<lb/>
secretary of the official national<lb/>
unity organization PRON, also<lb/>
would take part.<lb/>
Walesa went to church head-<lb/>
quarters after arriving form<lb/>
Gdansk.<lb/>
"I'm like a cook preparing this<lb/>
meal, but I can't tell yet if it is<lb/>
going to be a good pie or a rotten<lb/>
one said Andrzej Stelmachow-<lb/>
ski, a senior mediator affiliated<lb/>
with thechurch. Authorities com-<lb/>
municate with the opposition<lb/>
through the church, and Stelma-<lb/>
chowski has played a key role.<lb/>
The government demanded in<lb/>
exchange for the talks - Walesa's<lb/>
first with government officials<lb/>
since 1982 - that Walesa end a<lb/>
strike at the Lenin shipyard in<lb/>
Gdansk.<lb/>
When asked by reporters if he<lb/>
would do this, Walesa replied'I<lb/>
don't have the powers When<lb/>
asked if that meant he would not<lb/>
call off the strike, the Solidarity<lb/>
chairman said, "I did not say so<lb/>
Asked earlier wha he would<lb/>
discuss with Kiszczak, Walesa<lb/>
saidHow to make up for the past<lb/>
seven years"<lb/>
Accords signed at the Gdansk<lb/>
shipyard on Aug. 31,1980 after a<lb/>
nationwide strike wave made<lb/>
Solidarity the only independent<lb/>
labor federation ever recognized<lb/>
in the Sovied bloc.<lb/>
There was no government an-<lb/>
nouncement of today's meeting,<lb/>
but the communist party's ruling<lb/>
Politburo issued a statement late<lb/>
Tuesday saying it endorsed a<lb/>
proposal by Kiszczak for "round-<lb/>
table" discussions on strikers'<lb/>
grievances.<lb/>
The strikes began Aug. 16 in the<lb/>
coal fields of Silesia, in southern<lb/>
Poland, and spread to Solidarity's<lb/>
traditional stronghold in the ports<lb/>
and shipyards of the Baltic coast.<lb/>
At their peak, they affected 20<lb/>
businesses employing about<lb/>
100,000 people.<lb/>
A strike at the huge steel and<lb/>
heavy machinery plant in Stalowa<lb/>
Wola, in southeastern Poland,<lb/>
intensified this week.<lb/>
Solidarity activists there said<lb/>
four army helicopters circled over<lb/>
the plant Tuesday and 500 troops<lb/>
took up positions around it. The<lb/>
mill makes heavy machinery and<lb/>
military hardware, and officials<lb/>
have said they cannot allow the<lb/>
strike there to go on indefinitely.<lb/>
Senior Solidarity advisers<lb/>
called today's Warsaw meeting a<lb/>
historic event.<lb/>
Walesa last met with a senior<lb/>
government official in early 1982,<lb/>
when he was still interned.<lb/>
In recent (years, he has been<lb/>
spoken of by the government as a<lb/>
private citizen, a tool of foreign<lb/>
powers and "the former head of a<lb/>
former union<lb/>
But in the last few months, au-<lb/>
thorities have been seeking part-<lb/>
ners in an attempt to open a dia-<lb/>
logue with society that might help<lb/>
lead the country out of economic<lb/>
despondency.<lb/>
"The results of this meeting. .<lb/>
.will be very important for the fate<lb/>
of the whole country and world<lb/>
said Adam Michnik, a senior Soli-<lb/>
darity adviser.<lb/>
"The talks begin exactly on the<lb/>
anniversary of the 1980 accords<lb/>
and we want to believe that now a<lb/>
new chance begins, and it will be<lb/>
at a time when Poles can make use<lb/>
of this chance Michnik said.<lb/>
At a news conference in War-<lb/>
saw, government spokesman<lb/>
jerzy Urban said "the starting of<lb/>
talks would be common victory<lb/>
In the fiesta Room.<lb/>
Join us for<lb/>
Drinks A Appetizers.<lb/>
Musi be 21 or older.<lb/>
INTER-<lb/>
FRATERNITY<lb/>
COUNCIL<lb/>
PARKER'S<lb/>
DINNERS INCLUDE Brunswick Stew, Cole Slaw<lb/>
Boiled Potatoes or French Fries and Corn Sucks<lb/>
PLATES INCLUDE Cole Slaw and Corn Sticks<lb/>
ANNOUNCES<lb/>
BARBECUE<lb/>
LARGE BARBECUE DINNER 4.00<lb/>
SMALL BARBECUE DINNER3 50<lb/>
LARGE BARBECUE PLATE4.00<lb/>
SMALL BARBECUE 1LATE3.50<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
FRIED OR BARBECUED<lb/>
LARGE Cl IICK1.N DINNER4.25<lb/>
SMALL CHICKEN DINNER3.50<lb/>
"RIED LIVER PLATE 3.75<lb/>
COMBINATIONS<lb/>
LARGE COMBINATION 4.25<lb/>
Barbecue and Chicken (While Mrii)<lb/>
SMALL COMBINATION 3.90<lb/>
Btrbecue and Chjcken (Dark Meal)<lb/>
FAMILY STYLE DINNERS(Each) 5.00<lb/>
INCLUDES Harbcue, Fried Chicken,<lb/>
Co!c Slaw, Brunswick Stew, Ituiled Potatoes<lb/>
and Corn Sticks<lb/>
CHILDREN Through 10 Years Old2.75<lb/>
Entire Table Must Order Family Style<lb/>
No Doggie Dag From Family Style<lb/>
FRATERNITY<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6,7,8<lb/>
8-11 P.M.<lb/>
TUES WED THURS<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
FISH DINNER5.00<lb/>
OYSTER PRY5.00<lb/>
OYSTER STEW?5.00<lb/>
SIKLMPDINNER ?5.00<lb/>
ANY TWO COMBINATIONS SEAFOOD 5.75<lb/>
SEA1OOD PLATTER (Euh. Shump. Opiera)6.75<lb/>
PARKER'S WILL CATER ALL YOUR NEEDS<lb/>
OPEN TO ALL<lb/>
MALE STUDENTS<lb/>
Two Locations To Serve You<lb/>
No. 1 S. Memorial Drive No. 2. 2020 E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-2388 758-9215<lb/>
FOR INFORMATION CALL<lb/>
DEAN AT 830-4739<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0004"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
?lie iEaBt daralinian<lb/>
U1 Csrt .wr?i mmmIv 'r !??<lb/>
PETE FERNALD, C???IM?t?<lb/>
Chip Carter, m?Vnt u<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, rwtoroa!<lb/>
Joe Harris, N???d.tor<lb/>
Douc Johnson, spom &amp;.<lb/>
Tim Hampton, r?f?r?, &amp;?<lb/>
Miqielle England, cf M?rr<lb/>
DEDniE Stevens, w<lb/>
September 1,1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Jeff Parker.?wn<lb/>
TOM FURR, Circi?l?wn M?Mj?r<lb/>
Susan Howell, pro m?<lb/>
John W. Medlin, &amp;<lb/>
MAC CLARK, Bksipios Manager<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Cartoon<lb/>
Overreciction not expected<lb/>
The complaints are still flooding in<lb/>
about the cartoon we ran on the front<lb/>
page of the August 23 issue of The<lb/>
East Carolinian. I'm still don't be-<lb/>
lieve it.<lb/>
When I instructed the staff illustra-<lb/>
tor to draw a banner for the front<lb/>
page of the "Welcome Back" issue, I<lb/>
never dreamed we would get the<lb/>
overwheling negative response we<lb/>
got. I didn't think we'd get any re-<lb/>
sponse at all.<lb/>
Call me sexist. Call me an uncaring<lb/>
pawn of a patriarchal society. I've<lb/>
heard it all in the past week. Doesn't<lb/>
bother me at all. But it does bother<lb/>
me that The East Carolinian is ac-<lb/>
cused oi these things. And since I am<lb/>
the editor, I am responsible for its<lb/>
editorial content.<lb/>
One of the plaintiffs encouraged<lb/>
me to think about the effect the car-<lb/>
toon would have on a rape victim,<lb/>
especially one who had been tied up<lb/>
and threatened. An extreme case (no<lb/>
doubt &amp;n tirtforfunately common<lb/>
oje, but an extreme C?$g for our<lb/>
purposes) and yet it gave me pause<lb/>
As editor, my responsibility is to<lb/>
provide news, features and sports<lb/>
coverage that concern ECU and the<lb/>
surrounding area. My editorial re-<lb/>
sponsibilities are to provide<lb/>
thoughtful editorials and illustra-<lb/>
tions that reflect the views of the<lb/>
editorial staff of this paper. During<lb/>
this semester, that means my views<lb/>
and my staff's.<lb/>
So are we just sexist pigs? Well,<lb/>
that is irregardless in this case. The<lb/>
cartoon was NOT an editorial car-<lb/>
toon, only the welcome back car-<lb/>
toon. It was not intended to present<lb/>
ANY views whatsoever  not even<lb/>
the illustrator's.<lb/>
But, as with anything printed or<lb/>
drawn, it conciously or uncon-<lb/>
ciously presents a point of view.<lb/>
And it influences people. That is the<lb/>
power of the media  any media.<lb/>
At no time during the publishing<lb/>
process did I see anything wrong<lb/>
with the illustration. After all the<lb/>
negative response we recieved, I<lb/>
understood how it might be offen-<lb/>
sive, but to me personally, there is<lb/>
nothing wrong with it. It is simply a<lb/>
historical and literary allusion, and<lb/>
therefore has nothing to do with<lb/>
ECU except for the pirate motif.<lb/>
This summer we published the<lb/>
SGA Documents for the Student<lb/>
Government Association. The same<lb/>
illustrator was asked to do their<lb/>
cover, and he provided a picture of a<lb/>
pirate captain writing in his log book<lb/>
late at night. Behind him a male<lb/>
crewman is sneaking up with a<lb/>
knife.<lb/>
Neither the SGA nor us are advo-<lb/>
cating murder. It was plain and<lb/>
simply another illustration with the<lb/>
pirate motif. Our front page cartoon<lb/>
may not be historically precise (as I<lb/>
have been informed women did not<lb/>
wear strapless dresses in those<lb/>
days), art has always sacrificed pre-<lb/>
cision for beauty.<lb/>
So why write an editorial about the<lb/>
controversy? An editorial that will<lb/>
probabaly only stir things up again?<lb/>
Well, I wanted to explain. I could<lb/>
write about the fact that it was 2 a.m.<lb/>
when the cartoon finally got here<lb/>
and that everyone should try to put<lb/>
out a 54 page newspaper in two<lb/>
days, but that would be whining. I'd<lb/>
rather write about the after effects of<lb/>
the fact that so many people wrote in<lb/>
protesting the cartoon.<lb/>
A Fa Qrjy??very leOrriUtn vas<lb/>
'printecflt is our policy to print any<lb/>
letter recieved as long as it's not<lb/>
libelous, the letter is signed and it's<lb/>
legible. The policy was made so that<lb/>
we could hear the reader's feedback<lb/>
and so that the readers would not<lb/>
feel compelled to let us have the last<lb/>
word.<lb/>
All the letters were printed, all<lb/>
phone messages that reached me<lb/>
were returned and people that came<lb/>
to see me were listened to. The latter<lb/>
did not have to happen, but I feel<lb/>
obliged to listen to people with<lb/>
complaints, whether I feel they are<lb/>
serious complaints or not.<lb/>
Fact Two: Another cartoon about<lb/>
the conflict, similar to the first illus-<lb/>
tration, has been printed in this is-<lb/>
sue. We did this because all the<lb/>
controversy amused us, but we also<lb/>
wanted to show we were not being<lb/>
intentionally sexist.<lb/>
Fact Three: The most rational<lb/>
plaintiff I talked to made me realize<lb/>
that we may have made a mistake in<lb/>
printing the cartoon. I don't think<lb/>
we did, but I was pleased to know I<lb/>
was open-minded enough to doubt<lb/>
it.<lb/>
This is not an apology. This is an<lb/>
explanation. I am proud of the both<lb/>
the skill and the illustration that the<lb/>
artist produced. I'm also proud we<lb/>
shook things up. Most of all, I'm<lb/>
proud of the newspaper.<lb/>
?-<lb/>
Cartoon offends, cartoonist responds<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
The cartoon on the front page of the<lb/>
August 23rd edition of your newspa-<lb/>
per, depicting a pirate with sword in<lb/>
hand, approaching a bound and<lb/>
gagged, scantillly-clad female, needs<lb/>
some explaination. The only caption<lb/>
is "Welcome Back Should the<lb/>
reader assume that females returning<lb/>
to ECU are subject to male aggres-<lb/>
sion, or that sadistic treatment of<lb/>
women is prevalent male behavior<lb/>
on this campus? Is the cartoon a joke?<lb/>
What was the intent of your newspa-<lb/>
per in publishing such a cartoon?<lb/>
Particularly ironic was the fact that<lb/>
this cartoon appeared on the same<lb/>
page as the lead article about Pirate<lb/>
Walk. Indeed, females at ECU will<lb/>
need escorts, night and day, if this<lb/>
cartoon represents the attitudes and<lb/>
behaviors of ECU males. I imagine<lb/>
many men on this campus were as<lb/>
offended as I was by such a cartoon. If<lb/>
the cartoon was used merely as a<lb/>
filler, its choice, at best, was a serious<lb/>
error in judgment. If the cartoon was<lb/>
deliberately chosen to illustrate a<lb/>
macho attitude of males towards<lb/>
females on our campus, its choice<lb/>
indicates a total irresponsibility in<lb/>
journalism on the part of your news-<lb/>
paper. An explanation, please?<lb/>
Judy Rollins, PhD<lb/>
Professor Department of Child<lb/>
Development and Family Relations<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Since I seemed to have stirred some<lb/>
ires with my "Welcome Back" illus-<lb/>
tration in the August 23rd East Caro-<lb/>
linian, I would like to offer my views<lb/>
on the matter.<lb/>
I am sorry that so many people<lb/>
were upset and offended by the car-<lb/>
toon. That was not my intent, nor was<lb/>
it to demean women, which I don't<lb/>
believe I did.<lb/>
That said, I have to object to what I<lb/>
think was an overreaction by the crit-<lb/>
ics of the picture. First off, I resent the<lb/>
implication that the picture is invit-<lb/>
ing violence against women and rein-<lb/>
forcing rape. I am very strongly in<lb/>
opposition to those kinds of behavior<lb/>
and would not have drawn the pic-<lb/>
ture had I believed it did either.<lb/>
To draw such conclusions from the<lb/>
cartoon is simply to read too much<lb/>
into it. What it actually is is a por-<lb/>
trayal of the stereotypical pirate<lb/>
scene so often depicted in literature<lb/>
and movies. It is not representational<lb/>
of any situation in relation to the<lb/>
campus and the student body. It is<lb/>
also not going to motivate anyone<lb/>
into going out and tying up women.<lb/>
men is okay, just don't direct it to-<lb/>
wards women. Well, violence is not<lb/>
okay directed towardsanyoneof any<lb/>
sex. But it is true that had 1 shown the<lb/>
man bound to the mast no one would<lb/>
have written in or complained that<lb/>
the picture demeaned men or subju-<lb/>
gated them. If anyone is going to<lb/>
object to what they think is violence,<lb/>
I bcleve they should measure all<lb/>
material by the same yardstick<lb/>
What I would like to stress is that<lb/>
the picture is a cartoon. The charac-<lb/>
ters involved are in a fantasy setting,<lb/>
and are not representativesof all men<lb/>
and women. The picture is a poke at<lb/>
a stereotype of the same kind as the<lb/>
top-hatted villain tying a girl to the<lb/>
railroad tracks; we're not supposed<lb/>
to look at this as reality and give it<lb/>
such intense consideration. It is a<lb/>
cartoon. And I am not sexist or chau-<lb/>
vanistic, nor am I trying to encourage<lb/>
others to be that way.<lb/>
I hope I have helped the people<lb/>
offended see that there was nothing<lb/>
malicious about the illustration, and<lb/>
that no more will be read into this<lb/>
letter than there is, as was the case<lb/>
with the picture. Thank you for lis-<lb/>
I haveneaiel Urn tormnenwui? -toting.<lb/>
many who suggested such alterna-<lb/>
tives as, "He should have tied up a<lb/>
man instead or "have the girl tie up<lb/>
the Pirate What I don't understand<lb/>
about this line of reasoning is that it<lb/>
seems to say that violence against<lb/>
Jeff Parker<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Staff Illustrator<lb/>
i.<lb/>
Dukakis's policies distance women<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Have you heard of the so-called<lb/>
"gender gap of 1988?" It translates as<lb/>
"the majority of women won't vote<lb/>
for George Bush That is debatable.<lb/>
Correct cr not, however, the fact<lb/>
remains that it women find out about<lb/>
Michael Dukakis' views on criminals<lb/>
vs. victims, particularly on rapists vs.<lb/>
female victims, the "gender gap"<lb/>
would likely disappear.<lb/>
Dukakis is an enthusiastic sup-<lb/>
porter of the unique Massachusetts<lb/>
prison furlough program. Until the<lb/>
law was changed this year over<lb/>
Dukakis' objection, Massachusettes<lb/>
was the only state to grant unsuper-<lb/>
vised "vacations" (furloughs) to<lb/>
first-degree murderers sentenced to<lb/>
life imprisonment without parole.<lb/>
In 1976, the Massachusetts Legisla-<lb/>
ture passes a bill to deny furloughs to<lb/>
first degree murderers. but Governor<lb/>
Dukakis vetoed it.<lb/>
William Hortcn, jr was serving a<lb/>
sentence of life imprisonment with-<lb/>
out parole in a Mass. prison after<lb/>
being convicted of robbing a 17-year-<lb/>
old gas station attendent in 1974,<lb/>
brutally stabbing him 19 times, and<lb/>
stuffing his body into a trash can.<lb/>
Horton was given a Massachusetts<lb/>
furlough in June 1986, and he took<lb/>
advantage of the opportunity to es-<lb/>
cape and leave the state. On April 3,<lb/>
1987, Horton broke into a Maryland<lb/>
home and terrorized a man and<lb/>
woman for 12 hours. Horton tied up<lb/>
the man, robbed, pistol-whipped and<lb/>
kicked him, and cut him 22 times<lb/>
across the middle of his body. Horton<lb/>
tied the woman up for four hoursand<lb/>
raped her twice.<lb/>
Maryland found Horton guilty of<lb/>
13 crimes and sentenced him to two<lb/>
life teVras.plus 85 years. The judge<lb/>
states "I'm not prepared to take the<lb/>
chance that Mr. Horton might be<lb/>
furloughcd  he now belongs to the<lb/>
state of Maryland<lb/>
A Lawrence, Mass. newspaper<lb/>
became interested in the story, but<lb/>
the Dukakis administration refused<lb/>
to release information about the<lb/>
Horton case because prison officials<lb/>
wanted to "protect prisoners' pri-<lb/>
vacy rights<lb/>
The newspaper stories, however,<lb/>
activated the Massachusetts Legisla-<lb/>
ture. At a public hearing, victims told<lb/>
how other murderers had committed<lb/>
heinous crimes, including rape,<lb/>
while on Massachusetts furlough.<lb/>
A prison official admitted that<lb/>
under Dukakis a sentence of "life<lb/>
without parole" is meaningless. Af-<lb/>
ter ten years, a lifer in Mass. is rou-<lb/>
tinely transferred to minimum secu-<lb/>
rity and made eligible for furloughs.<lb/>
The sister of the murdered gas sta-<lb/>
tion attendant started a petition<lb/>
campaign under the name Citizens<lb/>
Against Unsafe Society (CAUS).<lb/>
When she and other female victims of<lb/>
murderers-on-furlough encoun-<lb/>
tered Gov. Dukakis, he warned them<lb/>
that they were "not going to change<lb/>
my mind<lb/>
The CAUS women set out to gather<lb/>
the issue on the ballot in a Nov. 1988<lb/>
referendum, and they succeeded in<lb/>
getting them by the December 1987<lb/>
deadline. In April 1988, the Massa-<lb/>
chusetts Legislature overwhelm-<lb/>
ingly passed a bill to prohibit fur-<lb/>
loughs for murders.<lb/>
The issue isn't dead, however,<lb/>
because Dukakis didn't want to sign<lb/>
the law and did so very reluctantly.<lb/>
He has never apologized to or ex-<lb/>
pressed compassion for the victims<lb/>
of Massachusetts-murdcrcrs-on-fur-<lb/>
lough.<lb/>
At present time, there are 76 con-<lb/>
victed criminals (including 10 mur-<lb/>
derers and 9 rapists) who are missing<lb/>
as a result of being released on fut-<lb/>
loughs during Dukakis' administra-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
And Dukakis is the Presidential<lb/>
nominee selected by the so-called<lb/>
"party of compassion!?" How could<lb/>
any woman vote for a man who puts<lb/>
the "rights" of rapists and murderers<lb/>
over the rights of women to be pro-<lb/>
tected from these same rapists and<lb/>
murderers.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Kimbcrly Babb<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
tow<lb/>
WITH PgSnClPKrUR ARS ANP1WWIV PBmmJH<lb/>
C<lb/>
totte<lb/>
boan<lb/>
-witj<lb/>
At<lb/>
Corf<lb/>
side<lb/>
10, if<lb/>
nets'<lb/>
NBA<lb/>
Mavi<lb/>
Th<lb/>
sibill<lb/>
ton s<lb/>
colia<lb/>
comi<lb/>
woul<lb/>
Oi<lb/>
authi<lb/>
pany<lb/>
Ell-<lb/>
W1I<lb/>
sonJ<lb/>
Wid<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM<lb/>
though she says i j<lb/>
accountable for the<lb/>
the Challenger, in<lb/>
people died, the wife)<lb/>
says she still support)<lb/>
program<lb/>
"The space<lb/>
continue safely )an(<lb/>
widow oi pilot MirJ<lb/>
told The Winston-Sal<lb/>
in an article publish<lb/>
"I'd love to fk in th? s<lb/>
when it's safe<lb/>
Mrs. Smith said she<lb/>
for the crew of the<lb/>
shuttle, Dis over)<lb/>
vorsof theChal!<lb/>
"I support the<lb/>
said. "They are v . I<lb/>
and women Th-<lb/>
roes, living tr<lb/>
countr. -<lb/>
She said her hi <lb/>
that the space pre<lb/>
"mankind's most n. 1<lb/>
pursuingourcoir<lb/>
was a gn at ; fetr A ai<lb/>
before the world I<lb/>
pilot of the space ?<lb/>
longer Mrs. Smil<lb/>
Lawyers fot Mrs. Si<lb/>
ated an undisclo-<lb/>
Aug. 22 m a $1.5 bill<lb/>
against Morton Thiol<lb/>
manufacturer of<lb/>
Highw<lb/>
Widening U S<lb/>
North Car. lina shoi<lb/>
priority of the statc<lb/>
plan, Lt. gov. Bob<lb/>
during a stop on hi<lb/>
orial campaign.<lb/>
"This road is impel<lb/>
state's future and wt<lb/>
to improve it, fordaj<lb/>
day in Washington,<lb/>
rruliar with the over<lb/>
Highway 1" that<lb/>
Xorth Carolina. I<lb/>
Highway 1" in al<lb/>
Una, and I know whe<lb/>
can develop up an.<lb/>
highway<lb/>
Jordan said the sti<lb/>
tation Improve;<lb/>
adopted by the D<lb/>
aeon<lb/>
ists, i<lb/>
ooacl<lb/>
news<lb/>
Tuesi<lb/>
York<lb/>
Sat<lb/>
rehal<lb/>
andp<lb/>
Blaze<lb/>
Sovie<lb/>
injun<lb/>
for IS<lb/>
c<lb/>
Tol<lb/>
St<lb/>
i<lb/>
Ixxxxxx<lb/>
Tr<lb/>
Corr<lb/>
pa<lb/>
Pananl<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
'<lb/>
L<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0005"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
esponds<lb/>
oka v. just don't direct it to-<lb/>
L women. Well, violence is not<lb/>
I c. irected towards anyoneo any<lb/>
ut it is true that had 1 shown the<lb/>
Itound to the mast no one would<lb/>
ati tten in or complained that<lb/>
:ture demeaned men or subju-<lb/>
them. If anyone ? going to<lb/>
:t to what they think is violence,<lb/>
;eve they should measure all<lb/>
tnal by the same yardstick.<lb/>
h ?t I would like to stress is that<lb/>
jicrure is a cartoon. The charac-<lb/>
ir volved are in a fantasy setting,<lb/>
e not representativesof al! men<lb/>
omen. The picture isa poke at<lb/>
trtxtvpe of the same kind as the<lb/>
med villain tying a girl to the<lb/>
ad tracks; we're not supposed<lb/>
k at this as reality and give it<lb/>
intense consideration. It is a<lb/>
yon. And I am not sexist or chau-<lb/>
Istic, nor am I trying to encourage<lb/>
Irs to be that way.<lb/>
Ihope 1 have helped the people<lb/>
dcd see that there was nothing<lb/>
Icious about the illustration, and<lb/>
no more will be read into this<lb/>
ir than there is, as was the case<lb/>
the picture. Thank you for Hs-<lb/>
eff Parker<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Staff Illustrator<lb/>
women<lb/>
-dcrers-on-furlough encoun-<lb/>
cd Gov. Dukakis, he warned them<lb/>
tt they were "not going to change<lb/>
mmd<lb/>
he C AUS women set out to gather<lb/>
issue on the ballot in a Nov. 1988<lb/>
Jfcrendum, and thev succeeded in<lb/>
Itting them by the December 1987<lb/>
ladline. In April 1988, the Massa-<lb/>
lusetts Legislature overwhelnv<lb/>
: ly passed a bill to prohibit to-<lb/>
ughs tor murders.<lb/>
?The issue isn't dead, however,<lb/>
Icause Dukakis didn't want to sign<lb/>
law and did so very reluctantly. !<lb/>
has never apologized to or ex-<lb/>
fcessed compassion for the victims<lb/>
Massachusetts-murderers-on-fur-<lb/>
fcgh.<lb/>
present time, there are 76 con-<lb/>
Ictcd criminals (including 10 mur-<lb/>
ders and 9 rapists) who are missing<lb/>
a result of being released on fui-<lb/>
Highs during Dukakis' administra-<lb/>
n.<lb/>
And Dukakis is the Presidential<lb/>
?minee selected by the so-called<lb/>
of compassion!?" How could<lb/>
ly woman vote for a man who puts<lb/>
ie "rights" of rapistsandmurderers<lb/>
l cr the rights of women to be pro-<lb/>
Beted from these same rapists and<lb/>
lurdercrs.<lb/>
i nee rely,<lb/>
fcimberly Babb<lb/>
cnior<lb/>
SHALL<lb/>
5ARTH.<lb/>
k IV<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1,1981 5<lb/>
Widow favors program<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM (AP) - Al<lb/>
though she says no one was held<lb/>
accountable for the explosion of<lb/>
the Challenger, in which seven<lb/>
people died, the wife of the pilot<lb/>
says she still supports the shuttle<lb/>
program.<lb/>
"The space program should<lb/>
continue safely Jane Smith, the<lb/>
widow of pilot Michael Smith,<lb/>
told The Winston-Salem Journal<lb/>
in an article published Tuesday,<lb/>
"I'd love to fly in the space shuttle<lb/>
when it's safe<lb/>
Mrs. Smith said she prays often<lb/>
tor the crew of the next space<lb/>
shuttle, Discovery, and the survi-<lb/>
vors of the Challenger crew.<lb/>
"I support the astronauts she<lb/>
said. "They are very brave men<lb/>
and women. They are great he-<lb/>
roes, living tributes to this<lb/>
country's efforts<lb/>
She said her husband believed<lb/>
that the space program was<lb/>
mankind's most noble effort in<lb/>
pursuing our country's future. He<lb/>
was a great patriot and hero long<lb/>
before the world knew him as the<lb/>
pilot of the space shuttle Chal-<lb/>
lenger Mrs. Smith said.<lb/>
Lawyers for Mrs. Smith negoti-<lb/>
ated an undisclosed settlement<lb/>
Aug. 22 in a $1.5 billion lawsuit<lb/>
against Morton Thiokil Inc the<lb/>
manufacturer of the shuttle's<lb/>
rocket booster. way to handle this terrible loss<lb/>
Mrs. Smith said her husband she said,<lb/>
would have wanted those who Smith, a native of Beaufort, had<lb/>
caused the shuttle explosion to be logged more than 5,000 hours of<lb/>
held responsible for their actions, flight time as a jet pilot and had<lb/>
"I'm certain he would have flown about 28 kinds of aircraft. A<lb/>
wanted them to be held account-<lb/>
able for a product that did not<lb/>
meet government specificaitons<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Smith was one of the seven<lb/>
astronauts killed when the Chal-<lb/>
lenger blew up Jan. 28,1986.<lb/>
Mrs. Smith, a native of Char-<lb/>
lotte, was in Winston-Salem to<lb/>
meet with her chief legal counsel,<lb/>
graduate of the U.S. Naval Acad-<lb/>
emy and the U.S. Naval Post-<lb/>
graduate School, he flew 198 mis-<lb/>
sions as a fighter pilot in Vietnam.<lb/>
He was chosen from among<lb/>
3,500 candidates for the shuttle<lb/>
mission. He was already sched-<lb/>
uled to pilot the next shuttle<lb/>
launch in September 1986 that<lb/>
would have carried the first jour-<lb/>
William Maready, and to thank nalist into space, his wife said<lb/>
the staff of the law firm of Petree,<lb/>
Stockton &amp; Robinson for their<lb/>
work on the lawsuit.<lb/>
The Smith family was the last of<lb/>
the seven families of victims of the<lb/>
He was proud to be part of the<lb/>
space shuttle Mrs. Smith said.<lb/>
"He felt these people in charge<lb/>
would take care of him<lb/>
Mrs. Smith, who wore a replica<lb/>
Challenger disaster to settle with of the Challenger patch around<lb/>
the company. The lawsuit con-<lb/>
tended that Morton Thiokol failed<lb/>
to make a solid rocket booster that<lb/>
would operate properly.<lb/>
"There are people who would<lb/>
differ with what I did she said.<lb/>
"That's not the issue.<lb/>
"The issue here is accountabil-<lb/>
ity she said. "After the special<lb/>
tragedy, no one was held account-<lb/>
able. No one was ever punished. It<lb/>
was wrong.<lb/>
"I feel this is the only dignified<lb/>
her neck and aviator wings with a<lb/>
diamond on her dress, said that<lb/>
she and her three children - Scott,<lb/>
19, Alison, 17, and Erin, 11 - are<lb/>
trying to move beyond the trag-<lb/>
edy.<lb/>
The entire family watched the<lb/>
launch and explosion of the Chal-<lb/>
lenger from the roof the the<lb/>
launch control center.<lb/>
"It was devastating she said.<lb/>
"We talk about their father.<lb/>
Widening U.S. 17 in eastern Transportation in 1987 desig-<lb/>
North Carolina should be a top nated$81 million for U.S. 17 over<lb/>
priority of the state's highway the next nine years. But he said<lb/>
plan, Lt. gov. Bob Jordan said that would complete only 13 per-<lb/>
during a stop on his gubernati- cent of the work that needs to be<lb/>
orial campaign.<lb/>
"This road is important to our<lb/>
state's future and we must work<lb/>
to improve it Jordan said Tues-<lb/>
day in Washington, N.C. "I am fa-<lb/>
miliar with the over 260 miles of<lb/>
done.<lb/>
"The real question that faces us<lb/>
is not if Highway 17 will be four<lb/>
lanes from Virginia to South<lb/>
Carolina he said. "The real ques-<lb/>
tion is how quickly we can make<lb/>
Highway 17 that run through this happen.<lb/>
North Carolina. I have driven Jordan said completion of Inter-<lb/>
Highway 17 in all of North Caro- state 40 to Wilmington in 1990 provements, saying they would<lb/>
Una, and I know what congestion plus expansion of US. 70, U.S. 64 cost "$1.35 in interest for every<lb/>
can develop up and down this and US. 264 will give North Caro-<lb/>
highway lina good east-west highways.<lb/>
Jordan said the state Transpor- "It is now time to move toward<lb/>
tation Improvement Plan completion of the important<lb/>
adopted by the Department of Highway 17, north-south corri-<lb/>
dor he said.<lb/>
Jordan said U.S. 17 is important<lb/>
because it connects major cities<lb/>
and towns in eastern North Caro-<lb/>
lina and will play an important<lb/>
role in economic growth of the<lb/>
region. He also cited the road as a<lb/>
crucial link for tourists and mili-<lb/>
tary traffic among bases in Vir-<lb/>
ginia, North Carolina and South<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Jordan rejected the use of high-<lb/>
way bonds to pay for the im-<lb/>
dollar in new money.<lb/>
Subscribe 757-6366<lb/>
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$1.00 with ECU<lb/>
I.D. All Nite<lb/>
D&amp;D New And Used<lb/>
1504 N. Greene St. Greenville<lb/>
830-9262<lb/>
Store Hours: M,T,Th, F -10-6 p.mVSat 8-6 p.m.<lb/>
New 5-piece wooden Dinette Sets - $149.95<lb/>
4 Drawer Chests - $46.00 each or 2 for $79.00<lb/>
5 Drawer Chests - $69.95<lb/>
AndVarious Other Unique Items!<lb/>
Highway 17 on Jordan platform<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Student Union Board of Directors<lb/>
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 Cornmitte 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 9f 1988<lb/>
yAjB<lb/>
rf Cs<lb/>
uU<lb/>
1900 Dickinson Ave<lb/>
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx<lb/>
Trocadero Tom Togs Fashions<lb/>
Come Visit A New Image Featuring<lb/>
1 Quality At Off Prices Originals From<lb/>
Panama Jack &amp; Other Exclusive Name Brands.<lb/>
? T A (fc<lb/>
<lb/>
1 v<lb/>
4<lb/>
?<lb/>
Located Next to Tons of Toys - S. Memorial Drive<lb/>
Hours: 10-6 Mon. - Sat (Fri. &amp; Sat til 9)<lb/>
Visit Our Other Locations<lb/>
Hwy. 64 East Between Hwy 70 west<lb/>
Morehead City, N.C.<lb/>
Bethel and Tarboro<lb/>
Conetoe, N.C.<lb/>
Wed. -Sat. 9-5<lb/>
Wed. - Sat. 9-5<lb/>
$<lb/>
$$<lb/>
?ttc<lb/>
e&amp;t<lb/>
JUST DON'T BE ANOTHER<lb/>
FACE IN THE CROWD<lb/>
EXPERIENCE PIKE!<lb/>
September 6,7,8 From 8-11 p.m.<lb/>
For information and rides call 752-4773<lb/>
PIKES PEAK LOCATED ON THE CORNER OF 5TH AND ELIZABETH<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0006"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1.1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: To share 3<lb/>
bedroom house 5 blocks from campus.<lb/>
Completely furnished except for bed-<lb/>
room. $175 deposit with 6 months lease.<lb/>
$180month13 ublibes &amp; phone. Free<lb/>
cable. Jacuzzihot tub. Non-smoker pre-<lb/>
ferred. Call Wiley 752-4614.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
Non-smoker preferred 2 bdrm, 2 bath<lb/>
apt. Call 355-5127.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: $80 for<lb/>
new house one block from campus, fully<lb/>
furnished with AC Call Mike or leave<lb/>
message 830-4728.<lb/>
ATTENTION STUDENTS NEW 2 it 3<lb/>
bdrm mobile homes, fully furnished, A<lb/>
C, within 5 mins of ECU campus, ONLY<lb/>
$215 a month! Call 756-9874.<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/>
FOR RENT: Stall space and pasture for a<lb/>
horse or a donkev. 8 miles from campus,<lb/>
dirt roads available Call 746-4793 after 6<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
OWN YOUR OWN HOME FOR HALF<lb/>
THE PRICE OF RENT 1989 mobile<lb/>
home models are here so 1988 models<lb/>
have been specially reduced to move fast.<lb/>
Low down payments and monthly pay-<lb/>
ments. We handle the financing! CALL<lb/>
DEE, 756-9874, STUDENTS &amp; SINGLE-<lb/>
PARENT FAMILIES WELCOME<lb/>
FEMALE NON-SMOKING<lb/>
ROOMMATE: Wanted to share mobile<lb/>
home. Upperclassman preferred. $150<lb/>
mo &amp; 1 2 util. Call 830-6908.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Christian<lb/>
Male Roommate to share new mobile<lb/>
home. 10 minutes from campus. Non-<lb/>
smoker, p'ease. Weekends call Hugh 756-<lb/>
0851.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED: Pri-<lb/>
vate bedroom it private bath in a trailer<lb/>
about 2 miles from campus. S125 a month<lb/>
plus 12 utilities. Call Michele at 752-<lb/>
1218<lb/>
GIVE YOUR LANDLORD THE AX<lb/>
Purchase your own 3 bedroom mobile<lb/>
home for as little as $145 a month! Call<lb/>
Gail at 756-9874.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
UNIVERSITY AREA: Walk to school<lb/>
from ycur 2500 sq. ft. heated space 3<lb/>
bedroom, 2 batn home. Freshly painted<lb/>
interior. $95,000. Call Alice Moore Realty.<lb/>
355-6712 or Bradley Gray 752-3699.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Double bed mattress and<lb/>
boxspring $100. Supersingle waterbed,<lb/>
everything included $100. Call 830-0598.<lb/>
SLEEPER SOFA: Call 756-9225.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1988 Dodge Raider, red,<lb/>
four-wheel drive, automatic, AC, AM<lb/>
FM stereo cassette, loaded, 15,000 miles.<lb/>
Paid $15,500 new ? will sell for 513,000<lb/>
or best offer. Great for beach, hunting,<lb/>
fishing, camping, etc Call Angela at 830-<lb/>
8802.<lb/>
FOR SALE: INXS tickets, call 24 hours,<lb/>
753-2263.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 pair 250 watt EP1 speakers<lb/>
2 year warranty Price negotiable. Call<lb/>
758-7699 or stop by Wilson Acres Apts,<lb/>
ask for Matt.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
PARTY: If you are having a party and<lb/>
need a D.J for the best music available for<lb/>
parties Dance, Top 40 it Beach, Call 355-<lb/>
2781 and ask for Morgan.<lb/>
DWI? Don't Drink it Drive. Come<lb/>
Partv in Style. Call Class Act Limousine.<lb/>
757-3240.<lb/>
SCHOOLS IN: Time to party! Call us for<lb/>
your music needs. We'll beat all prices<lb/>
and videotape vour partv. The Power<lb/>
Station DJ s. 752-0946.<lb/>
ECU PARTY PEOPLE: Let the parties<lb/>
begin! But don't start until you call sound<lb/>
mixtures D.J. Service. Party music ca-<lb/>
tered by Greeks, for Greeks; we know<lb/>
what ya'll like! Call now for more info.<lb/>
752-4916, Bob. You won't be disap-<lb/>
pointed!<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
PART-TIME HELP NEEDED: Young<lb/>
male for sales and stock. Some heavy<lb/>
lifting required. Must be neat and outgo-<lb/>
ing. Applv at the Youth Shop, Carolina<lb/>
East Centre. No phone calls<lb/>
BRODY'S FOR MEN: Is looking for con<lb/>
scientious, part-time associates who are<lb/>
personable, responsible, and fashion for-<lb/>
ward. Must enjov people and be able to<lb/>
work flexible hours. Applv ir. person:<lb/>
Brody's, Carolina East Mall, M-W, 2-4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED: Inter-<lb/>
ested in making money part-time photo-<lb/>
graphing people? No experience neces-<lb/>
sary, we train. If vou are highly socialbe,<lb/>
have 35mm camera and transportation,<lb/>
give us a call between 12 noon and 5 p.m.<lb/>
M-Fat 1-800.722-7033.<lb/>
ARE YOU A COLLEGE STUDENT: Or<lb/>
faculty member looking for part-time<lb/>
employment? Are vou enthusiastic, de-<lb/>
pendable, and excited about working in a<lb/>
fashion environment? If you are sincere<lb/>
about working it have a flexible sched-<lb/>
ule, apply in person, Brody's, Carolina<lb/>
East Mall, M-W, 2 4pm<lb/>
NEEDED: Part-time, outside sales &amp;<lb/>
counter rep Three afternoons per week.<lb/>
Apply in person: Budget Rent a Car, 10th<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
SUNNY SIDE EGGS INC: Is now ac<lb/>
cepting applications for responsible col-<lb/>
lege students who wish to earn Kflilc they<lb/>
learn Apply in person at our main office<lb/>
on State Road 1708 or call 756-4187.<lb/>
NEEDED: Soccer Coaches Must be avail-<lb/>
able Tuesday's and Thursday's after 2:00<lb/>
p.m. Starring salary S3 00 per hour. For<lb/>
more information contact Rita Roy, Pitt<lb/>
County Community Schools at 830-4216.<lb/>
DELIVERY PERSONEL NEEDED: Part<lb/>
time, 10-20 hrs. per week Must have own<lb/>
car. Apply in person at 114 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
PART-TIME WORKERS. Needed at<lb/>
Sunnyside Eggs to load and unload<lb/>
trucks. I lours are from 5 p.m. to mid-<lb/>
night. Call Tracy at 756-4235 or apply in<lb/>
person.<lb/>
WANTED ? FILE CLERK: For local law<lb/>
firm. Filing, light typing, and some tele-<lb/>
phone work. Experience helpful. 355-<lb/>
0300 ask for Carla.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
LOOK OUT ECU: Elvis is on his was<lb/>
TCB.<lb/>
SHEL I wasn't expecting such a drastic<lb/>
change! But do what you want to do.<lb/>
Good luck this semester. PS. I'll miss ya<lb/>
this F-ball season. Kev.<lb/>
HEY PI KAPPS: The IIOUSE has started<lb/>
Let's get ready for a great Rush. P.S.<lb/>
thanks Sigma's for all the Toga shirt sales<lb/>
? We love you. The Brothers of Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi.<lb/>
CALLING ALL GWECKMANS: There<lb/>
is a mandatory bikers pants meeting at<lb/>
Bart As House. Be there or hate.<lb/>
TO: TAMMY ELLIS: I thought I'd put<lb/>
this not in the paper to publisize our love<lb/>
and let the whole world know what you<lb/>
mean to me. I never thought that I could<lb/>
love the way I have this past year. I can't<lb/>
wait till the day you carry on the Smith<lb/>
name and tradition. You're everthing I<lb/>
always wanted in a female. Love, Kent<lb/>
TAKE PART IN GREEK LIFE: By rush<lb/>
ing one of the strongest Fraternities on<lb/>
campus Sigma Phi Epsilon.<lb/>
ECU LADIES: Get ready for Pi Kappa<lb/>
Alpha's fall til' sis rush Coming soon to<lb/>
Grog's.<lb/>
PIKAS &amp; PIKA I.II. SISTERS: Welcome<lb/>
back! Don't forget about the tailgate party<lb/>
Saturday aft. Call Bowles for more info<lb/>
WOULD YOU LIKE TO ATTEND A:<lb/>
Champagne breakfast ? I low about<lb/>
socials, formals&amp; road trips? Rush Sigma<lb/>
Phi Epsilon.<lb/>
CHI O'S: Be prepared to pref full throttle<lb/>
with Pepe and the Pikas Good luck with<lb/>
rush The brothers.<lb/>
DO YOU WANT TO GET MORE OUT<lb/>
OF YOUR COLLEGE YEARS? Make<lb/>
life-long friends Rush Sigma Phi Epsilon.<lb/>
FRESHMEN GUYS: Get psyced to be-<lb/>
come a Pike. Rush Pi Kappa Alpha next<lb/>
week and find out what it means to be a<lb/>
part of the best.<lb/>
TO ALL SORORITIES: Good luck with<lb/>
rush. We look forward to partying with<lb/>
you and your pledges The Pikes.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU: All campus party at<lb/>
the Phi Kappa Tau house, Friday Septem-<lb/>
ber 2 SEE YOU will be playing from 10 -<lb/>
until. Come party with the Phi Taus No<lb/>
bottles please.<lb/>
IT'S ALMOST TIME: KA Little Sister<lb/>
Rush.<lb/>
KA LITTLE SISTERS: Don't forget our<lb/>
first meeting at 9:30. We've got a great<lb/>
semester in head of us ? so lets get<lb/>
started now!<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: Used Nintendo car-<lb/>
tridges with instructions for re-sale. East<lb/>
Coast Music it Video 758-4251, 1109<lb/>
Charles Blvd.<lb/>
FRESHMEN MALES: Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
wants you! We have a brand new frater-<lb/>
nity house under construction. You!<lb/>
could be the first to live there this spring.<lb/>
Be a Pi Kappa. Call 758-1700 for more<lb/>
info.<lb/>
LADIES: Free all night tonight at the<lb/>
FJbo Dance all night at Greenvilles most<lb/>
happening dub. The Qbo"<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR: Friday afternoon $2 teas<lb/>
all day and night Be there! The Qbo<lb/>
Free admission. 5- 2 a.m.<lb/>
CREEKS: Big time tea bash, get your "I<lb/>
Survived The Elbo Tea Bash" shirts $2 tea<lb/>
party Friday 5 - 2 a.m. Free admission<lb/>
CARPOOL NEEDED: Want a nde to<lb/>
campus by 8:00 a.m. weekdays. Can pay<lb/>
for gas. Live on 4th Street on way to ECU<lb/>
Call 752-0156 after 9 p.m.<lb/>
K-MAY: Thanx for a wonderful 11<lb/>
months! May our future be as bright a.<lb/>
the past has been' I love you' JSE<lb/>
BASEBALL CARDS WANTED: Any<lb/>
year, shape of cards. I'll pay damn good<lb/>
money for any cards of any year of any<lb/>
shape or condition Need party monev7<lb/>
Sell your cards to Earlvis Call 757-6366<lb/>
Leave a message if not here.<lb/>
HEY MON!<lb/>
WEDNESDAY NIGHTS<lb/>
ARE<lb/>
HAPPENING AT<lb/>
PROFESSOR O'COOLS<lb/>
JAMAICAN<lb/>
CELEBRATION.<lb/>
GREAT SPECIALS AND<lb/>
REGGAE MUSIC ALL<lb/>
NITE LONG MON! DON'T<lb/>
MISS IT! LOCATED<lb/>
BEHIND ACE CLEANERS<lb/>
IN FARM FRESH<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
f All New, XM <lb/>
GYM<lb/>
USA<lb/>
A I ' ft! ?IK?"(? IKTNW. EKf.MC<lb/>
pi nwtrttr cvu CHDMUtNC<lb/>
Offers both<lb/>
Monthly &amp; Semester<lb/>
Rates For Students<lb/>
758-9584<lb/>
? i i ri o rm mi v<lb/>
i, rtii arsT<lb/>
W<lb/>
"THE<lb/>
( AH PET CLEANER'<lb/>
ilai !)?, .<lb/>
Loanf On Ptrffng OwW<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
? All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
?And Ready To Rent'<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
? Ixxratcd Near BCU<lb/>
? Across From Highway I'atrol Slat ion<lb/>
limited Offer - $275 a month<lb/>
Contact I. T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 or 830-1 037<lb/>
Office open - Apt. 8,17 - 5:30 p m.<lb/>
? -AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clean and quiet one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartnvnts. energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable IV.<lb/>
Couples or singles onv $W5 a month. 6 month<lb/>
lease MOHLE 1 DME RENTALS - couples or<lb/>
singles. Apartment and mobile homes in Azalea<lb/>
Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club<lb/>
Contact J.T or Tommy Williams<lb/>
7S6-7815 '<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
'Personal nnd Confidential Care"<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call for appointment Mon. thru Sat. Ixw<lb/>
Copt TrrtM'Mtion to 20 week of prrgnancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
CRUSTY'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
WE<lb/>
DELIVER<lb/>
NOW HIRING J&amp;l'C As<lb/>
FOR ALL POSITIONS<lb/>
25-30 Delivery Drivers. Earn $4 - $8 per hour.<lb/>
Flexible hcuirs. 8 10 inside pcrGonnek<lb/>
Must have own car and insurance.<lb/>
Apply in person at 1414 Charles Streets.<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/>
Announcements<lb/>
SENIORGRAP STUDENTS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement Serv-<lb/>
ice, located in the Bloxton House between<lb/>
Mendenhall and Greene Residence Hall,<lb/>
is where graduating students may put<lb/>
resumes and establish a credentials file.<lb/>
Interview signups begin soon, and you<lb/>
must be registered to sign up. General in-<lb/>
formation meeting will be helc Aug. 30,<lb/>
31, Sept. 15 at 3 p.m. and on Sept. 7at7p.m.<lb/>
in the Bloxton House.<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/>
men  Call 757-6979 or come by the Gen-<lb/>
era! Classroom Building, Room 2028.<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/>
SPECIAL QLYMPCIS<lb/>
The Greenville-Pitt County Special Olym-<lb/>
pics will be conducting a training school<lb/>
Sept. 17 at Elm St. Gym for anyone inter-<lb/>
ested in volunteering to coach soccer for<lb/>
special athletes. No experience is needed.<lb/>
We are also looking for coaches for basket-<lb/>
ball, weightlifting, ans swimming. All<lb/>
interested persons should contact Greg<lb/>
Epperson or Connie Sappenfield M the<lb/>
Special Olympic office, 8304551.<lb/>
PHYSICAL ED. AND FITNESS<lb/>
IESI<lb/>
The physical eduction motor and physical<lb/>
fitness competency test is Friday at 1 p.m.<lb/>
at Minges Coliseum. A passing score on<lb/>
this test is required of all students prior to<lb/>
declaring physical ed. as a major. 1. Main-<lb/>
taining an average T-score of 45 on the si x-<lb/>
item test battery. 2. Having a T-score on<lb/>
the aerobic run. Any student with a medi-<lb/>
cal condition that would contraindict par<lb/>
tidparion in the testing should contact<lb/>
Mike McCannon or Dr. Gay Israel at 757-<lb/>
6497. To be exempted you must have a<lb/>
physicians' excuse. A detailed summary<lb/>
of the test is available in the Human Per-<lb/>
formance Lab (Room 113, Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum).<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
The first organizational meeting of the<lb/>
school year will be Sept. 8 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Room 221.<lb/>
All old members &amp; irit.restea students are<lb/>
encouraged to attend.<lb/>
NEW STUDENT REVIEWS<lb/>
Anyone who purchased new student<lb/>
reviews should cum by the yearbook<lb/>
office to pick them up. Hours are M-F, 6-8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
ECU Gospel Choir is open for member-<lb/>
ship to all interested students. Last day to<lb/>
join in Sept. 21. Rehearsals are held<lb/>
Wednesdays at 5 p.m. in Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Cultural Center.<lb/>
ADVANCEMENT OF MGMT<lb/>
Society for the Advancement of Manage-<lb/>
ment, informal membership meeting,<lb/>
Sept. 7, 3 p.m room 3014, General Class-<lb/>
room Building. Enhance your business<lb/>
interest with tours of the area industry<lb/>
and great speakers throughout the year.<lb/>
Not limited to business majors!<lb/>
HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
ftudent, faculty, staff, and the general<lb/>
public are invited to attend a lecture spon-<lb/>
sored by the 1 lonors Program. The topic is<lb/>
"Polish Public Opinion and the Crisis of<lb/>
Socialism the lecturer is Dr. Renata<lb/>
Siemienska-Zochowska a sociologist<lb/>
from Warsaw University The lecture<lb/>
takes place at 730 p.m. Sept. 6 in Room<lb/>
1026 General Classroom Building and is<lb/>
free of charge.<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
ECU Christian fellowshio will be held<lb/>
every Thursday at 6 p.m. in the Cultural<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
CAMPUS SERVICE<lb/>
Campus service will be held in Jenkins<lb/>
Aud. 10:30 a.m. Sept. 11 come enjoy the<lb/>
word of God at the first 88 campus service.<lb/>
HONORS ORGANIZATION<lb/>
The ECU Honors Organization will meet<lb/>
Thursday at 5 p.m. in Room 1004 of the<lb/>
General Classroom Bldg. All former<lb/>
ECHO members and new students inter-<lb/>
ested in the program are invited. For more<lb/>
info, call Mary at 752-8022 or Dr. Sanders<lb/>
at 757-6373.<lb/>
CAMPUS GIRL SCOUTS<lb/>
College aged adults meet for the 1st meet-<lb/>
ing of the semester, Thursday at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Room available from information desk<lb/>
in Mendenhall. New memberships avail-<lb/>
able. For information call Nanci, 758-6701<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
NATIONAL TEACHER EXAM<lb/>
The National Teacher Examinations ?<lb/>
Core Battery Exams ? (Communication<lb/>
Skills, General Knowledge, and Profes-<lb/>
sional Knowledge) will be offered at ECU<lb/>
October 22. Applications are to be com-<lb/>
pleted and mailed to Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, Box 911-R, Princeton, NJ 08541.<lb/>
Applications must be postmarked no later<lb/>
than Sept. 19. Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Room-105, Speight Building.<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
The Graduate Management Admission<lb/>
Test will be offered at ECU on October 15.<lb/>
Applications are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to GMAT Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, Box 966-R, Princeton, NJ 08540.<lb/>
Applications must be postmarked no later<lb/>
than Sept. 12. Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Room-105 Speight Building.<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Record Examination will be<lb/>
offered .it EC1' n October8. Applications<lb/>
aro t ? I and m tiled . (IRE,<lb/>
Eductional Testing Service, Iiox955, Prin-<lb/>
ceton, NJ 08340. Applications must be<lb/>
postmarked no later than Sept. 2 Applica-<lb/>
tions may be obtained from the FCU Test-<lb/>
ing Center, Room-105 Speight Building<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
The Law School Admission Test will be<lb/>
offered at ECU on October 1. Applications<lb/>
are to be completed and mailed to Educa-<lb/>
tional Testing Service, Box 966-R, Prince-<lb/>
ton, NJ 08540. Applications must be post-<lb/>
marked no later than Sept. 1.<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
All pre law students, freshmen to seniors,<lb/>
are invited to attend our first meeting on<lb/>
Thursday, at 7 p.m. in Room 221 Menden-<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS MAGAZINE<lb/>
The American Scholastic Press Associa-<lb/>
tion Award Winning Pulbication at ECU<lb/>
is now accepting applications for staff<lb/>
writers and a Promotion Distribution<lb/>
Manager. Apply at the Media Board<lb/>
Secretary's office in the Publications Bldg.<lb/>
(second floor) by Friday. Contributors are<lb/>
also welcome.<lb/>
PIRATE HOME OPENER<lb/>
The 1988 Pirate Football season opens<lb/>
Saturday at 7 p.m. in Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
against Tenn. Tech. The Breeze Band<lb/>
0ehind Scales) and Brice St. (beside<lb/>
Minges) will perform liveat 4:30p.m. 1100<lb/>
beach blankets will be given away at the<lb/>
gate. A Pirate fan will win a 3 day3 night<lb/>
Bahama vaction by putting together a<lb/>
winning puzzle. Puzzles will be sold prior<lb/>
to the game.<lb/>
PEP RALLY TONICHT<lb/>
The 8th annual ECU football pep rally<lb/>
sponsored by fludweiser will be tonight at<lb/>
7 p.m. in Ficklen Stadium Gates open at<lb/>
6:30 p.m. The rally will feature the ECU<lb/>
football players anc coaches, atnietic di-<lb/>
rector, The Marching Pirates, the ECU<lb/>
haerleaders, and Pirate mascot. Admis-<lb/>
sion is free and several prizes will be given<lb/>
away. In case of rain the rally will be held<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
SRA<lb/>
Interested in your residence hall? Become<lb/>
involved by joining Student Residence<lb/>
Association See your residence hall direc-<lb/>
tor for information Elections for officer's<lb/>
are Sept. 13.<lb/>
OVERSEES DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
Are you interested in dedicating6 months<lb/>
of your life to an internship in Zimbabwe,<lb/>
Southern Africa, living and learning with<lb/>
the people? Call Marianne Exum (h) 830-<lb/>
9450 or (w) 751-6271 for application and<lb/>
more details. Application deadline Octo-<lb/>
ber 1.<lb/>
FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
Practices are in full swing. Come to the<lb/>
bottom of College Hill every Tues<lb/>
Thurs and Sunday at 5 p.m. New players<lb/>
are more than welcome. Join the team that<lb/>
tied for 5th place last year at Collegiate<lb/>
Nationals in Santa Barbara, Ca.<lb/>
RUGBY<lb/>
All athletes are encouraged to try this<lb/>
hard nosed sport and join in the fellow-<lb/>
ship of Rugby. Practice is Tuesday thru<lb/>
Thursday 3:30 p.m. until. For more infor-<lb/>
mation call the ECU Intramural Club<lb/>
Sports Dept. or Bob Eason at 757-0209.<lb/>
BATTLE OF THE BANDS<lb/>
Battle of the Bands, presented by the cof-<lb/>
fee house committee of the student ur.ion,<lb/>
will be accepting applications for this<lb/>
event until Sept 8 at 5 p.m. Pick up appli-<lb/>
cations at the information desk at Men-<lb/>
denhall. Amateur bands only please! So-<lb/>
loists and Guitarists welcome.<lb/>
TEENS<lb/>
DI ALA-TEEN is interested in your valu-<lb/>
able time. We are looking for special teens,<lb/>
between the ages of 15 &amp; 18, who would<lb/>
like to volunteer their listening skills to<lb/>
help other teens in crisis. We are offering<lb/>
training classes for our teen hotline begin-<lb/>
ning Sept. 6. for more information call<lb/>
Marlene 758-1976 or 758-HELP.<lb/>
REAL CRISIS CENTER<lb/>
We need your experience! Your achieve-<lb/>
ments in everyday situations can be<lb/>
useful to others. Real crisis center recruit-<lb/>
ing volunteer counselors. We will be of-<lb/>
fering training dasses on Sept. Call 758-<lb/>
HELP or come by 312 East 10th Street<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSAPE<lb/>
Everyone welcome ? Fun, Fellowship,<lb/>
teaching, and training on how to live a<lb/>
more effective Christian life on a college<lb/>
campus Thursday at 730 p.m. in Brew-<lb/>
ester C-103.<lb/>
HANG GLIDING<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Har.g<lb/>
Gliding registration meeting. From Aug.<lb/>
22 to Sept. 6 learn how to fly high in the<lb/>
sky!<lb/>
CQ-QP EDUCATION<lb/>
Co-op education, a free service offered by<lb/>
the University, is designed to help you<lb/>
find career-related work experience be-<lb/>
fore you graduate. All students are en-<lb/>
couraged to attend a Co-op Information<lb/>
Seminar in the General Classroom Build<lb/>
ing. The Seminar schedule is: Thursday<lb/>
Aug. 25 4 p.m. Room 2006, Monday, Aug<lb/>
29 1 p.m. Room 2010, Thursday, Sept. 1 4<lb/>
p.m. Room 2026, Thursday, Sept. 8 1 p.m<lb/>
Room 2010, Monday, Sept. 12 1 p.m<lb/>
Room 2010, Thursday, Sept. 15 4 p.m<lb/>
Room 2006, Monday, Sept. 19 4 pm<lb/>
Room 2006, Thursday Sept. 22 1 p.m<lb/>
Room 2010, Monday, Sept. 26 1 p.m<lb/>
Room 2010, Thursday, Sept. 29 4 p m<lb/>
Room 2006.<lb/>
Advertise in The East Carolinian<lb/>
Classifeids Page<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
(<lb/>
1<lb/>
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:<lb/>
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vs<lb/>
P<lb/>
SC<lb/>
5<lb/>
Acti<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP). I<lb/>
activists sa<lb/>
for 157 i<lb/>
rtiry,butj -<lb/>
it w<lb/>
dcmonstral<lb/>
moven ? i<lb/>
change fed<lb/>
"It's an a<lb/>
whoch<lb/>
sionofthc ?<lb/>
compk ?<lb/>
cumst<lb/>
their n<lb/>
Zicglci<lb/>
Ab ?<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
"Ba ? ?<lb/>
find<lb/>
?<lb/>
Hill, .<lb/>
Tia<lb/>
ansv ? ?<lb/>
un!<lb/>
"Wh tl<lb/>
thing<lb/>
praj for the d<lb/>
O' Kcc ?<lb/>
Our Lad<lb/>
Church in Rale<lb/>
"It's ? ?<lb/>
or abortion or-<lb/>
ers, in North C I<lb/>
O'K<lb/>
human I<lb/>
( -<lb/>
lro-Lifc <lb/>
?<lb/>
in Chi.<lb/>
fctuses<lb/>
search I<lb/>
researcl 1<lb/>
i:ts lool rl<lb/>
The let uses wen<lb/>
packaged and labeled!<lb/>
with th<lb/>
doctors, dates ar I<lb/>
tions were pc i i<lb/>
The fctuses v. . ro s<lb/>
O'Keete, who had a si<lb/>
made tor them<lb/>
cese of Raleigh :<lb/>
Gangs in<lb/>
RALEIGl ?<lb/>
federal law enforccn<lb/>
irmst vrk'trcvV. fXe<lb/>
jhe passr effort<lb/>
gangs to take over dru<lb/>
mg operations in x<lb/>
Attorney General 1 a<lb/>
burg says.<lb/>
"What makes<lb/>
gangs so d<lb/>
fence associated v<lb/>
Simmons, Tl<lb/>
man, said<lb/>
of a two ? '<lb/>
forcement<lb/>
Carolina South<lb/>
gia and Florid<lb/>
"When th ?<lb/>
move in with I<lb/>
dominating the di<lb/>
that means<lb/>
competition, tlu<lb/>
Simmon said<lb/>
ders and rand<lb/>
cal. That's one way<lb/>
date the comm<lb/>
drug deali rs hey<lb/>
who's in the way<lb/>
The confer nee at I<lb/>
lina State Univei<lb/>
reporters bee<lb/>
ment agencies ?? I<lb/>
telligence infoi !<lb/>
gangs, which have m.<lb/>
into drug trafficl<lb/>
as Atlanta, Miam j<lb/>
"The Jamaican g j<lb/>
a peculiar threat beca<lb/>
vuriousness of tl<lb/>
Thornburg told I<lb/>
Tuesday: We have<lb/>
pared to head then ot'tj<lb/>
making it veryui .<lb/>
the gangs to org j<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
"The Jamaican ; i<lb/>
controlled and can b<lb/>
but only it aU kiu ej<lb/>
agencies work togethi<lb/>
The conference, hoj<lb/>
SBI's Criminal Intel<lb/>
tion and the Raleighl<lb/>
partment, is the first o<lb/>
the state<lb/>
Raleigh Police Chk<lb/>
Heineman said thei<lb/>
gangs, called posses<lb/>
ous because of their <lb/>
because thev move qi<lb/>
"Jamaican gangs aj<lb/>
space program Hen<lb/>
"It doesn't take vearsl<lb/>
A group of Jamaican<lb/>
up and operating witlj<lb/>
The conference ha<lb/>
workshops on the n<lb/>
law officers, as well<lb/>
of federal agencies, u<lb/>
maican gangs<lb/>
According to StatcJ<lb/>
Investigation figures,<lb/>
claiming to be nativ<lb/>
have been arrested in<lb/>
lina in the past 10 ye<lb/>
iorityinthelasttwotcj<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1,1988 7<lb/>
f"i Tree all nighJ tonight at the<lb/>
?nce all night at C.reenvilles most<lb/>
bung dub The Obo"<lb/>
f HOUR Friday afternoon $2 teas<lb/>
and night" Be there' The Qbo <lb/>
?omission n 2am<lb/>
Ik Big time tea hash, get vour "I<lb/>
bo Tea Bash" shirts $2 tea<lb/>
day 5 2am Free admission<lb/>
 SUPEP: Want a nde to<lb/>
? ? 8 V a m weekdays Can pav<lb/>
- 4th Street on wav to ECU.<lb/>
.ltter Jpm<lb/>
m tor a wonderful 11<lb/>
M.iv mr tvirure be as bright as<lb/>
been! i love vou' 1SE<lb/>
lFA.11 CARPS WANTED: Any<lb/>
Isk I'll pav damn good<lb/>
- i anv ear of anv<lb/>
Need partv monev?<lb/>
irdsl larvis- Call 757-6366.<lb/>
lot here<lb/>
l-unt On toyfnj fcm<lb/>
Stereoc Gold rmtef<lb/>
mMt anything ?f i<lb/>
Jouthem Con .fjltg$j(<lb/>
'52-1464<lb/>
TVS<lb/>
WE<lb/>
DEIJVEM<lb/>
TIONS<lb/>
$4 - $8 per hour.<lb/>
ifle rr-onneW<lb/>
d insurance.<lb/>
irles Streets.<lb/>
AT I ON AND<lb/>
mENT<lb/>
eeded<lb/>
partment is recruiting lor<lb/>
-nestcr program.<lb/>
? - cccr skills and<lb/>
ts must be able to<lb/>
n 11-rentals. Hours<lb/>
S me night and<lb/>
m September to mid<lb/>
- tour. Applicants will<lb/>
Ben lames at 830-4543.<lb/>
TEEN ? interested in vour valu-<lb/>
? We are looking for special teens,<lb/>
the ages (if 15 it 18, who would<lb/>
olunteer their listening skills to<lb/>
?eens in crisis. We are offering<lb/>
It :ss for our teen hotline begin-<lb/>
- ? r more information call<lb/>
- 76 or 758- HELP<lb/>
iREAL CRISIS CENTER<lb/>
leed vour expenence! Your achieve-<lb/>
eryday situations can be<lb/>
- Real crisis center recruit-<lb/>
teeT counselors. We will be of-<lb/>
lmng classes on Sept Call 758-<lb/>
-ome bv 312 East 10th Street.<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSAPE<lb/>
one welcome ? Fun, Fellowship,<lb/>
nz, and training on how to live a<lb/>
effective Chnstian life on a college<lb/>
 "hursday at 730 pm. in Brew-<lb/>
-103<lb/>
HANG GLIDING<lb/>
Lre to attend the Intramural Har.g<lb/>
ng registration meeting. From Aug<lb/>
I ? am how to fly high in the<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
i education, a free service offered by<lb/>
ersity, is designed to help you<lb/>
?ex related work expenence be-<lb/>
graduate All students are en-<lb/>
Iged to attend a Co-op Information<lb/>
lar It the General Classroom Build-<lb/>
fne Seminar schedule is: Thursday,<lb/>
2'4 pm Room 2006, Monday, Aug<lb/>
 m. Room 2010, Thursday, Sept. 1 4<lb/>
oom 2026, Thursday, Sept 8 1 p m<lb/>
2010, Monday, Sept 1? 1 pm,<lb/>
2n!0 Thursday, Sept 15 4 pm.<lb/>
2006, Monday, Sept 19 4 pm<lb/>
06 Thursday Sept 22 1 pm<lb/>
2010, Monday. Sept 26 1 p.m.<lb/>
2010, Thursday, Sept 294pm<lb/>
2006<lb/>
Activists hold ceremonies for 157 fetuses<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - Anti-abortion<lb/>
activists say they held a funeral<lb/>
tor 157 fetuses to show their dig-<lb/>
nity , but pro-choice advocates say<lb/>
it was a "gruesome exercise" that<lb/>
demonstrated the frustration of a<lb/>
movement that has been unable to<lb/>
change federal abortion laws.<lb/>
"It's an affront to the women<lb/>
who chose the procedure, an inva-<lb/>
sion oi their personal privacy and<lb/>
completely insensitive to the cir-<lb/>
cumstances oi their lives and to<lb/>
their religious beliefs said Ruth<lb/>
Ziegler, director oi the National<lb/>
Abortion Rights Action League of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
"Basically, I think most people<lb/>
find it repugnant Ziegler said.<lb/>
But Lucy O'Kcefe of Chapel<lb/>
Hill, who organized the service<lb/>
Tuesday, said the funeral was an<lb/>
answer to those who think "the<lb/>
unborn are trash<lb/>
"What we are doing is some-<lb/>
thing very straight-forward -<lb/>
praying for the dead Ms.<lb/>
O'Kcefe said after the service at<lb/>
Our Lady oi Lordes Catholic<lb/>
Church in Raleigh.<lb/>
"It's not about labs in Chicago<lb/>
or abortion clinics, or even moth-<lb/>
ers, in North Carolina Ms.<lb/>
O'Keefesaid. "It'sabout 157dcad<lb/>
human beings<lb/>
Joseph Scheidler, director of the<lb/>
Pro-Life Action League, a na-<lb/>
tional anti-abortion group based<lb/>
in Chicago, said Sunday that the<lb/>
fetuses had been found during a<lb/>
search through the garbage at a<lb/>
research lab in Chicago bv activ-<lb/>
ists looking for abortion remains.<lb/>
The fetuses were individually<lb/>
packaged and labeled, he said,<lb/>
with the names oi the mothers,<lb/>
doctors, dates and places abor-<lb/>
tions were performed.<lb/>
The fetuses were sent to Ms.<lb/>
O'Kcefe, who had a single coffin<lb/>
made for them and asked the Dio-<lb/>
cese of Raleich to conduct the<lb/>
Gongs in N.C.<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) State, local and<lb/>
federal law enforcement agencies<lb/>
Ihusf work together tohead of fat<lb/>
fc pass' 'efforts bv Jamaican<lb/>
gangs to take over drug traffick-<lb/>
ing operations in North Carolina,<lb/>
Attorney General Lacy Thorn-<lb/>
burg savs.<lb/>
"What makes the Jamaican<lb/>
gangs so dangerous is the vio-<lb/>
lence associated with them John<lb/>
Simmons, Thornburg's spokes-<lb/>
man, said Tuesdav before the start<lb/>
of a two-day conference of law en-<lb/>
forcement officials trom North<lb/>
Carolina, South Carolina, Geor-<lb/>
gia and Florida.<lb/>
"When they move in, they<lb/>
move in with the intention oi<lb/>
dominating the drug trade, and if<lb/>
that means blowing away the<lb/>
competition, they'll do that,<lb/>
Simmons said. "Drive-by mur-<lb/>
ders and random killings are typi-<lb/>
cal. That's one way they intimi-<lb/>
date the community and other<lb/>
drug dealers. They don't care<lb/>
who's in the way. "<lb/>
The conference at North Caro-<lb/>
lina State Lniverstiy is closed to<lb/>
reporters because law enforce-<lb/>
ment agencies will be trading in-<lb/>
telligence information on the<lb/>
gangs, which have made inroads<lb/>
into drug trafficking in such cities<lb/>
as Atlanta, Miami and New York.<lb/>
"The Jamaican gangs represent<lb/>
a peculiar threat because of the<lb/>
viciousness of their operation,<lb/>
Thornburg told 150 lawmen<lb/>
Tuesday: "We have to be pre-<lb/>
pared to head then off at the pass,<lb/>
making it very uncomfortable for<lb/>
the gangs to organize in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
"The Jamaican gangs can be<lb/>
controlled and can be defeated,<lb/>
but only if all law enforcement<lb/>
agencies work together, " he said.<lb/>
The conference, hosted by the<lb/>
SBI's Criminal Intelligence Sec-<lb/>
tion and the Raleigh Police De-<lb/>
partment, is the first of its kind in<lb/>
the state.<lb/>
Raleigh Police Chief Frederick<lb/>
Heineman said the Jamaican<lb/>
gangs, called posses, arc danger-<lb/>
ous because of their violence and<lb/>
recause they move quickly.<lb/>
"Jamaican gangs aren't like a<lb/>
space program Heineman said.<lb/>
"It doesn't take years to develop.<lb/>
A group of Jamaicans can be set<lb/>
up and operating within a week<lb/>
The conference has scheduled<lb/>
workshops on the roles of local<lb/>
law officers, as well as a number<lb/>
of federal agencies, in fighting Ja-<lb/>
maican gangs.<lb/>
According to State Bureau of<lb/>
Investigation figures, 278 persons<lb/>
claiming to be native Jamaicans<lb/>
have been arrested in North Caro-<lb/>
lina in the past 10 years, the ma-<lb/>
jority in the last two to three years.<lb/>
service. The coffin, which was not<lb/>
present at the funeral service, was<lb/>
taken to Guadalupc Catholic<lb/>
Church in Newton Grove for<lb/>
burial Tuesday afternoon.<lb/>
Monsignor James McSwceney<lb/>
said even though the fetuses were<lb/>
not present at the service, an enve-<lb/>
lope with 157 names "chosen by<lb/>
concerned people" was placed on<lb/>
the church altar and would be<lb/>
buried with the casket.<lb/>
"We are here to give reverence<lb/>
to our belief that God is the crea tor<lb/>
and sustainer of life and that ev-<lb/>
ery stage of human development<lb/>
from conception to natural death<lb/>
is sacred to God McSweeney<lb/>
told about 200 people, including<lb/>
many mothers with young chil-<lb/>
dren. "We arc here because of the<lb/>
intrinsic dignity oi these human<lb/>
beings whose lives will never<lb/>
"flourish<lb/>
McSwceney said the world had<lb/>
been "repulsed and horrified" by<lb/>
the slaughter of 6 million Jews<lb/>
during World War II, but he said<lb/>
abortions "are a new holocaust in<lb/>
which millions of lives are<lb/>
snuffed out for no other reason<lb/>
than that their existence is an<lb/>
embarrassment<lb/>
"With the enormity of this<lb/>
tragic waste of precious human<lb/>
life . . . our faith requires us to<lb/>
make our own fervent prayer,<lb/>
'Father forgive them, for they<lb/>
know not what they do<lb/>
McSwceney said.<lb/>
He said the world would never<lb/>
know what music, art, love or<lb/>
compassion the fetuses could<lb/>
have brought.<lb/>
"We were never given an op-<lb/>
portunity to know these unborn<lb/>
children McSweeney said. "Our<lb/>
lives will not be enriched by them.<lb/>
The lives of us all have been di-<lb/>
minished by their being deprived<lb/>
of life<lb/>
Ms. O'Kcefe, who had kept the<lb/>
fetuses in her kitchen, said she ini-<lb/>
tially feared she would have<lb/>
nightmares with the bags of re-<lb/>
mains in her house.<lb/>
"But there was none of that<lb/>
shesaid. "Instead, I felt a descend-<lb/>
ing sense of peace that the right<lb/>
thing was happening<lb/>
She would not divulge the<lb/>
name of the Chicago laboratory or<lb/>
the North Carolina clinics noted<lb/>
on the tagged remains<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
RUSH PHI KAPPA TAU<lb/>
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY<lb/>
409 Elizabeth St.<lb/>
Leaders in:<lb/>
A ca dem ics A th letics<lb/>
Campus Organizations<lb/>
Social Enjoyment<lb/>
"Come See What Makes Us Best"<lb/>
Call 757-1319<lb/>
for a ride<lb/>
jfyfa ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0008"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1, 1?H8<lb/>
m<lb/>
t<lb/>
Two million needed to save Bishop College<lb/>
(CPS) Bishop College, a 108-<lb/>
vear-old traditionally black<lb/>
school, was ordered closed by a<lb/>
i deral judge after it tailed to raise<lb/>
almost $2 million needed tocover<lb/>
its prospective 1988-89 deficit<lb/>
Bishop, whose financial woes<lb/>
and enrollment problems began a<lb/>
decade ago. is the latest small<lb/>
private college to close as college<lb/>
costs skv rocket and the pool of<lb/>
available high school graduates<lb/>
diminishes.<lb/>
A 1982 University of Michigan<lb/>
stud) predicted that as many as<lb/>
1 small, private colleges like<lb/>
Bishop would close by 1990.<lb/>
That dire prediction didn't<lb/>
materialize, said David Ray of the<lb/>
National Association of Inde-<lb/>
pendent Colleges and Universi-<lb/>
ties, but many small, religious and<lb/>
black institutions have been<lb/>
forced to close or merge with<lb/>
healthier schools.<lb/>
Earlier this year, for example,<lb/>
I oretto 1 eights College in Den-<lb/>
ver, a small Catholic school, was<lb/>
forced to merge with Regis Col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
In 1986, financial problems<lb/>
pushed Titt College in Atlanta to<lb/>
merge with Mercer University<lb/>
and forced Berkshire Christian<lb/>
College in Massachusetts to close<lb/>
its doors. In 1984, enrollment and<lb/>
financial problems forced Rhode<lb/>
Island's Barrington College to<lb/>
merge with Cordon College.<lb/>
Generally, however, "enroll-<lb/>
ments are steady" at the smaller<lb/>
private campuses, Ray reported.<lb/>
'The seats are still full. "<lb/>
lames Miller, who conducted<lb/>
the Michigan study, said he over-<lb/>
estimated the number of small<lb/>
colleges that would close because<lb/>
he underestimated "the institu-<lb/>
tional tenacity" of schools like<lb/>
Bishop.<lb/>
"There have been remarkably<lb/>
few that haveclosed Miller said.<lb/>
"Bishop provides an example of<lb/>
how hard it is to kill a college, or<lb/>
rather how fiercely colleges cling<lb/>
to life<lb/>
Bishop, the only predominantly<lb/>
black campus in the Dallas area,<lb/>
had struggled for 16 months to<lb/>
raise the $1.85 million bankruptcy<lb/>
Judge Robert C. McGuire said<lb/>
was necessary to open the school<lb/>
this fall.<lb/>
Campus supporters, who esti-<lb/>
mate th school owes about $18<lb/>
million to creditors, attempted to<lb/>
keep the school open with an in-<lb/>
tensive fundraising drive that in-<lb/>
cluded selling T-shirts outside the<lb/>
federal courthouse.<lb/>
George McElreath, the federal<lb/>
bankruptcy trustee overseeing<lb/>
the case, said attorneys told him<lb/>
that donations had increased to<lb/>
about $7,000 per day in early<lb/>
kind of job in preparing for par- primary source of funding a;<lb/>
ticipation in the culture that has to keep prices down for their tra-<lb/>
been lost, " said Rev. William ditional constituencies of I<lb/>
Shaw,chairmanofBishop'sboard low-income families The)<lb/>
of trustees. a fine line, " said Rav<lb/>
Small, black and religious Bishop's slide began in 11?<lb/>
August. "But, that's not enough schools such as Bishop, whose 1970s when three top admini<lb/>
"It's a sad day, " Bishop senior 1967 peak enrollment of 1,500 had tors were indicted on char.<lb/>
Wayne Croomes said. "I was dropped to about 300, can find embezzling student aid funds<lb/>
hoping something positive would economic pressures simply too though two were acquitted<lb/>
come out of it. It's time for me to great, Ray said. the other was convicted en'<lb/>
Such schools have small en- misdemeanor charge, Bis:<lb/>
dowments, rely on tuition as a image never recovered<lb/>
move on" from the school, which<lb/>
specialized in religion and educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"I think there is a real need for<lb/>
Bishop College in the Dallas area,<lb/>
" said Dallas Mayor Annette<lb/>
Strauss. "I hope it can be reorgan-<lb/>
ized at a later time. It serves a<lb/>
good purpose<lb/>
"You have an institution that<lb/>
has a particular kind of heritage<lb/>
and that has done a particular<lb/>
r<lb/>
No room in N.C. landfills<lb/>
WILMINGTON (AD - A third<lb/>
of the state's 119 local landfills<lb/>
will run out of space in the next<lb/>
tw o years and new federal regula-<lb/>
tions could shrink the- lifespan of<lb/>
the rest, but local officials say the<lb/>
state is gi ing the problem too low<lb/>
a priority.<lb/>
rheGeneral Assembly has just<lb/>
n t come to grips with the prob-<lb/>
lem and the money that is going to<lb/>
have to be spent on it says Steve<lb/>
Levitas, director of the N.C. Envi-<lb/>
imcntal Defense Fund. The<lb/>
Raleigh based think tank is writ-<lb/>
ing a solid-waste management<lb/>
in that it hopes the state will<lb/>
adopt.<lb/>
North Carolina's old one ex-<lb/>
pired on 1985. Levitas thinks such<lb/>
a plan is crucial it local govern-<lb/>
ments are to deal wiselj with the<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
it's the obvious place to start<lb/>
ic aid. It doesn't make sense to<lb/>
different policies<lb/>
it seems the strategy is to wait<lb/>
ui til there's a critical situation<lb/>
ai d then take action after the<lb/>
Bets) Dorn, recycling coor-<lb/>
v r Mecklenburg County<lb/>
1 ? t Wilmington Morning<lb/>
rv<lb/>
iblished Tuesday<lb/>
N , i tl C arolina no! only lacks a<lb/>
unifeirn policy, but also the man<lb/>
powei needed to write one. Terry<lb/>
Dover o( the N.C Solid Waste<lb/>
Branch, the lead agency, says his<lb/>
e has 17 people working in it.<lb/>
1 le saj s there ought to be 65, with<lb/>
time staff in regional offices.<lb/>
' Basicall)  he says, "we've got<lb/>
enough people to react to emer-<lb/>
gency situations. We're not able to roads, it's a matter of balancing tricity. The rest will have to come<lb/>
spend the time necessary on re- those Jordan says. "And the from taxes or tipping fees.<lb/>
search and development that we loan fund was a new program. I "It's an expensive problem<lb/>
need And that's our dilema sense the legislature will find the Thaxton says. "All solutions are<lb/>
It is up to us he said, "to money in 1989 to at least start the expensive But without a strong<lb/>
provide a central thrust of infor- program state presence, a host of other<lb/>
mation, of technical assistance, to The cost of disposing of the 6.5 public and private agencies are<lb/>
these people with needs. And million tons of garbage tossed out stepping in to fill the void. There<lb/>
hopefully there will be funding annually in North Carolina alone are countless private consultants<lb/>
and personnel forthcoming in the has gone up steeply. What used to selling their thoughts to local<lb/>
near future that will enable us to cost $5 a ton to bury now costs $20 governments. Ms. Dover of Meek-<lb/>
exercise our role a ton to put in lined landfills. The lenburg County says she will quit<lb/>
A $1 million proposal to beef up expense is largely the result of injanuarytobecomeaconsultant.<lb/>
the branch staff failed in the Gen- 1985 state rules that prohibit bur- And while their various per-<lb/>
iod garbage from leaching septic spectives are welcomed, some<lb/>
or toxic residue into groundwa- worry that the state should help<lb/>
ter. counties select their options.<lb/>
Most North Carolinians de- "There are so many consultants<lb/>
pend on groundwater for drink- out there says Gary Hunt of the<lb/>
ing and bathing. state pollution prevention pro-<lb/>
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1 t. Gov Bob ordan said the<lb/>
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Altogether on state lai<lb/>
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Terrill.<lb/>
US Forest Service spokJ<lb/>
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caused fires in Southern<lb/>
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e e<lb/>
Crisis<lb/>
WASHINGTON (API<lb/>
Soviet relations were in a<lb/>
wind of confusion even<lb/>
Polish workers staged thci<lb/>
occupation strikes.<lb/>
The United States is end<lb/>
thealwavsdisonentir<lb/>
choosing a new president<lb/>
And the Soviet Union is<lb/>
ing from a tumultuous Cj<lb/>
nist Partv conference fillt<lb/>
boisterous calls for econo<lb/>
form and greater derru<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"Not only is it a period<lb/>
flux, but as far as the Sovu<lb/>
is concerned, it ism the m<lb/>
state since the U917<lb/>
revolution said Madeli<lb/>
bright, the chief foreigi<lb/>
adviser to Democratic pr<lb/>
tial nominee Michael<lb/>
Ms. Albright, born in C;<lb/>
vakia, is an expert on EaJ<lb/>
relations and a professor<lb/>
getown University<lb/>
The latest Polish u<lb/>
poses, loud and clear ml<lb/>
unanswered questions aq<lb/>
reform program oi kremiii<lb/>
Mikhail S. Gorbachev: Ho<lb/>
political power are OOl<lb/>
authorities willing to han<lb/>
their people in returr for!<lb/>
Warning:<lb/>
don't he<lb/>
tCPS It doesn't pa) I <lb/>
ients about how baa d t<lb/>
oe for them.<lb/>
Renelle Masse) <lb/>
sirv oi South Florida foj<lb/>
challenging students<lb/>
tions that alcohol n ?<lb/>
funnv, brave, more socij<lb/>
ler or better in some othj<lb/>
the most effective wav<lb/>
students to cut down th.<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"We're lookking at<lb/>
approach to prevention 1<lb/>
hoi abuse Massev said<lb/>
Some studies indicatj<lb/>
manv as 82 percent of thj<lb/>
collegians dnnk rcgul<lb/>
excessive drinking haj<lb/>
into a problem at manv<lb/>
Intoxicated studenl<lb/>
blamed for turning a 11<lb/>
rado State University blj<lb/>
into a not, while hundi<lb/>
been arrested dunng<lb/>
spring break riots in Pal<lb/>
Cal and Talm Spring<lb/>
recent vears. Drunken<lb/>
Iowa State and the Um<lb/>
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spring also led to arrestl<lb/>
and vandalism.<lb/>
Excessive drinking<lb/>
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Hoping to curb suchj<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058089_0009"/><lb/>
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THURSDAY,<lb/>
SEPTEMBER<lb/>
1<lb/>
8 P.M.<lb/>
Wildfires threatening town<lb/>
California firefighters battled<lb/>
more than 170 fires, while gusts in<lb/>
Yellowstone threatened to fan a<lb/>
90,000-acre blaze toward 600 cab-<lb/>
ins and the park superintendent<lb/>
said there was no end in sight to<lb/>
this summer's wildfires.<lb/>
Montana ranchers prepared for<lb/>
possible evacuation today, and<lb/>
crews fought woodland blazes in<lb/>
Idaho, Oregon, Washington,<lb/>
Nevada and Utah.<lb/>
In California, nearly 9,500 light-<lb/>
ning strikes Tuesday sparked<lb/>
scores of blazes a year after a<lb/>
similar barrage spawned devas-<lb/>
tating fires. Firefighters said more<lb/>
than 4,600 acres had burned, but<lb/>
they held most of the blazes to an<lb/>
acre or less in the drought-<lb/>
parched wildlands.<lb/>
Crews were hampered by 100-<lb/>
plus-dcgree temperatures, winds<lb/>
and lightning in some areas. The<lb/>
unfavorable conditions were ex-<lb/>
pected to continue today.<lb/>
Altogether on state land, 73<lb/>
lightning-sparked fires burned<lb/>
2,700 acres, said state Department<lb/>
of Forestry spokeswoman Karen<lb/>
Terrill.<lb/>
U.S. Forest Service spokesman<lb/>
Matt Mathes said 43 lightning-<lb/>
caused fires in Southern Califor-<lb/>
nia national forests burned just 30<lb/>
acres, while 60 blazes in northern<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
California national forests black-<lb/>
ened 1,900 acres.<lb/>
"We are flying over the areas to<lb/>
determine if there are any (other)<lb/>
hot spots Terrill said.<lb/>
Near San Francisco, fire swept<lb/>
through dry brush and trees Tues-<lb/>
day in Orinda, destroying five<lb/>
houses and badly damaging two<lb/>
others.<lb/>
Police believe an electronically<lb/>
ignited toy rocket may have<lb/>
sparked the blaze, which was<lb/>
controlled in about two hours<lb/>
without reports of injuries.<lb/>
"This has been the worst time of<lb/>
my life said Beverly Hopp,<lb/>
whose 33-year-old home was<lb/>
destroyed. "What do you do after<lb/>
all these years?"<lb/>
The only thing she and her<lb/>
husband, Al, could save was a<lb/>
desk containing money and in-<lb/>
surance papers.<lb/>
In Wyoming, flames from the<lb/>
90,000-acre North Fork fire at yel-<lb/>
lowstone National park moved to<lb/>
within a quarter-mile Tuesday of<lb/>
the Canyon hotel and camp-<lb/>
ground comples.<lb/>
Firefighters hoped for an early<lb/>
winter to quell blazes burning<lb/>
about a fifth of the 2.2 million-acre<lb/>
park, but Yellowstone's superin-<lb/>
tendent offered little encourage-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"When will this end? Frankly,<lb/>
ladies and gentlemen, that's<lb/>
anybody's guess Robert Barbee<lb/>
told about 100 people Tue:day<lb/>
night at a meeting in nearby Gar-<lb/>
diner, Montana.<lb/>
Gusty winds forecast for this<lb/>
afternoon threatened to again<lb/>
close some park roads that were<lb/>
put off limits Tuesday afternoon<lb/>
but later reopened.<lb/>
Yellowstone spokeswoman<lb/>
Linda young said activity on the<lb/>
34,000-acre wolf Lake fire forced<lb/>
closure of one road, and a flareup<lb/>
in North Fork blaze closed<lb/>
yellowstone's west entrance for<lb/>
several hours.<lb/>
To the north in Montana, wi nds<lb/>
played havoc with efforts to con-<lb/>
trol the 190,000-acre Clover-Mist<lb/>
fire, burning in Yellowstone and<lb/>
in neighboring Shoshone Na-<lb/>
tional Forest.<lb/>
Officials closed U.C. 212 rear<lb/>
Cooke City for a time Tuesday as<lb/>
soldiers chased spot fires.<lb/>
Ranchers were planning for<lb/>
possible evacuation today along<lb/>
western Montana's Rocky Moun-<lb/>
tain Front where a previously<lb/>
"lct-it-burn" wilderness fire<lb/>
jumped onto national forest and<lb/>
private land Tuesday. Hundreds<lb/>
of firefighters rushed to keep it<lb/>
from spreading further.<lb/>
The 39,000-acre blaze in the<lb/>
Scapegoat Wilderness roared into<lb/>
Lewis and Clark National Forest,<lb/>
burning 7,000 additional acres.<lb/>
Livestock and horses were<lb/>
removed from cabins threatened<lb/>
by the 9-week-old blaze, which<lb/>
was sparked by lightning, and<lb/>
some ranchers left as a precau-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
In Idaho, crews near the Wyo-<lb/>
ming line worked to protect<lb/>
ranches in the Caribou National<lb/>
Forest, after a 6,000-acre fire<lb/>
burned to within a mile of the<lb/>
properties Tuesday. One family<lb/>
was evacuated because they lack a<lb/>
telephone and couldn't be noti-<lb/>
fied in case the blaze blew up. Sev-<lb/>
enteen major fires are burning<lb/>
70,000 acres in Idaho.<lb/>
The number of firefighters<lb/>
more than doubled Tuesday to<lb/>
679 at Oregon's biggest forest fire,<lb/>
which has burned 36,000 acres in<lb/>
the Wallowa-Whitman National<lb/>
Forest and the Hell's Canyon<lb/>
National Recreation Area.<lb/>
Favorable weather in eastern<lb/>
Washington helped thousands of<lb/>
firefighters gain a handle on fires<lb/>
burning on more than 23,000<lb/>
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as crews cut trails around nearly<lb/>
70 percent of major fires on the<lb/>
Colville Indian Reservation.<lb/>
The American Scholastic Press Association Award<lb/>
Winning Publicaton at ECU<lb/>
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR<lb/>
STAFF WRITERS AND A PROMOTION-<lb/>
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Crisis complicating relations<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. -<lb/>
Soviet relations were in a whirl-<lb/>
wind of confusion even before<lb/>
Polish workers staged their latest<lb/>
occupation strikes.<lb/>
The United States is engaged in<lb/>
the always disorienting process of<lb/>
choosing a new president.<lb/>
And the Soviet Union is emerg-<lb/>
ing from a tumultuous Commu-<lb/>
nist Party conference filled with<lb/>
boisterous calls for economic re-<lb/>
form and greater democratiza-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"Not only is it a period of great<lb/>
flux, but as far as the Soviet Union<lb/>
is concerned, it is in the most fluid<lb/>
state since the U917 Russian)<lb/>
revolution said Madeleine Al-<lb/>
bright, the chief foreign policy<lb/>
adviser to Democratic presiden-<lb/>
tial nominee Michael Dukakis.<lb/>
Ms. Albright, born in Czechoslo-<lb/>
vakia, is an expert on East-West<lb/>
relations and a professor at Geor-<lb/>
getown University.<lb/>
The latest Polish upheaval<lb/>
poses, loud and clear, one of the<lb/>
unanswered questions about the<lb/>
reform program of kremlin leader<lb/>
Mikhail S. Gorbachev: How much<lb/>
political power are communist<lb/>
authorities willing to hand over to<lb/>
theirpeople in return for a popu-<lb/>
Warnings<lb/>
don't help<lb/>
(CPS) It doesn't pay to nag stu-<lb/>
dents about how bad drinking can<lb/>
oe for them.<lb/>
Renelle Massey of the Univer-<lb/>
sity of South Florida found that<lb/>
challenging students' assump-<lb/>
tions that alcohol makes them<lb/>
funny, brave, more sociable, sex-<lb/>
ier or better in some other way is<lb/>
the most effective way of getting<lb/>
students to cut down their drink-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"We're lookking at this as an<lb/>
approach to prevention" of alco-<lb/>
hol abuse, Massey said.<lb/>
Some studies indicate that as<lb/>
many as 82 percent of the nation's<lb/>
collegians drink regularly, and<lb/>
excessive drinking has turned<lb/>
into a problem at many schools.<lb/>
Intoxicated students were<lb/>
blamed for turning a 1986 Colo-<lb/>
rado State University block party<lb/>
into a riot, while hundreds have<lb/>
been arrested during drunken<lb/>
spring break riots in Palm Beach,<lb/>
Cal and Palm Springs, Fla. in<lb/>
recent years. Drunken parties at<lb/>
Iowa State and the University of<lb/>
California-Santa Barbara last<lb/>
spring also led toarrests, injuries<lb/>
and vandalism.<lb/>
Excessive drinking has killed<lb/>
several students in recent years: a<lb/>
Rutgers University fraternity<lb/>
pledge died in February after a<lb/>
"drink til you're sick" hazing<lb/>
session, for example. In 1985, a<lb/>
University of Colorado sorority<lb/>
pledge was killed after falling<lb/>
from a bridge during a drunken<lb/>
party.<lb/>
Hoping to curb such incidents<lb/>
and comply with lower drinking<lb/>
age laws, most campuses have<lb/>
developed "alcohol awareness<lb/>
programs" that generally focus<lb/>
on the ill effects of drinking.<lb/>
lar commitment to invigorate the<lb/>
economy?<lb/>
The wrong answer from<lb/>
Moscow or Warsaw to that ques-<lb/>
tion will present the next Ameri-<lb/>
can president with a dilemma.<lb/>
"The problem that the next<lb/>
president is going to have to de-<lb/>
cide is whether to continue to<lb/>
demand perfection from the So-<lb/>
viet bloc, or whether to just de-<lb/>
clare victory and accept any<lb/>
change for the better. And there is<lb/>
no question that things are getting<lb/>
better said jerry Hough, a Soviet<lb/>
expert at Duke University.<lb/>
"It seems that everybody is<lb/>
holding his breath said Charles<lb/>
Fairbanks of the Johns Hopkins<lb/>
center for advanced international<lb/>
studies. "There is a marked move-<lb/>
ment toward detente, but no one<lb/>
is sure how much momentum it<lb/>
has<lb/>
A new explosion of violence in<lb/>
Poland could delay or derail the<lb/>
train.<lb/>
Two weeks ago Polish workers,<lb/>
with their backs to the economic<lb/>
wall, began a second wave of occu-<lb/>
pation strikes this year, demanding<lb/>
that the government recognize and<lb/>
negotiate with the banned Solidar-<lb/>
ity trade union.<lb/>
The strikes foued Polish leaders<lb/>
to meet today with Solidarity's<lb/>
leader, Lech Walesa, with whom<lb/>
they had vowed not to negotiate<lb/>
since releasing him from martial<lb/>
law internment in 1982.<lb/>
Polish leader Gen. Wojciech<lb/>
Jaruzelski has introduced reforms<lb/>
which, like Gorbachev's program,<lb/>
loosen central controls and allow a<lb/>
greater role for market forces. But<lb/>
the Polish reforms have not stimu-<lb/>
lated the economy<lb/>
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nag SF<lb/>
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Pork<lb/>
Spare Ribs<lb/>
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4Q<lb/>
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SWEET?18 LB A jQ<lb/>
Red Ripe<lb/>
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WASHINGTON STATE?RGE 90 SIZE<lb/>
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REG ?COUNTRY STYLE OR CALCIUM<lb/>
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boes<lb/>
Stay up with Jerry and Wfe<lb/>
watch the stars come out<lb/>
LABOR DAY WEEKEND<lb/>
Muscular Dystrophy Association<lb/>
Live from Caesars Palace, Las Vegas<lb/>
Prices Good In Greenville, N.C. ? At 703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open Sunday 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. ? Monday thru Saturday 7:00 a.m. - 12 Midnight<lb/>
I<lb/>
or<lb/>
e<lb/>
w<lb/>
to<lb/>
sa<lb/>
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tl<lb/>
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g<lb/>
V<lb/>
k<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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t<lb/>
<lb/>
Cra<lb/>
RAMSTEIN, V<lb/>
(AP) - Family meml<lb/>
ately searched for<lb/>
missing after a fierjj<lb/>
crash that killed 49<lb/>
jured c! ildren lay ui<lb/>
hospitalsasofficialbtr<lb/>
mine if their parents w<lb/>
the dead.<lb/>
BylateTuesdd.<lb/>
tors who died in Sum<lb/>
ter had been ldentifu<lb/>
cials said that of<lb/>
still hospitalized <lb/>
not survive.<lb/>
Scores of pe<lb/>
bumed when thr<lb/>
Italian air force stur.l<lb/>
lided and one ca- <lb/>
crowd at the annual<lb/>
the U.S. Air Force ba<lb/>
stein.<lb/>
The pilots of tht<lb/>
killed, and the Italian<lb/>
final who coordinate<lb/>
stunts said one cause!<lb/>
by flying into an<lb/>
maneuver at the w:<lb/>
Bi-anr<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP)<lb/>
Carolina's failure I<lb/>
the competency test<lb/>
twice a year makes it hi<lb/>
students from drop;<lb/>
their adult high s<lb/>
programs, representatl<lb/>
eral communitv a <lb/>
"Retention of stude<lb/>
problem for commi<lb/>
leges said Cavared<lb/>
supervisor of the aj<lb/>
school diploma progrc<lb/>
Community College<lb/>
cannot always wast tj<lb/>
test, especially those<lb/>
the service. We need<lb/>
Cou<lb/>
SANFRANCISC<lb/>
appeals court stn. k<lb/>
guidelines establis i<lb/>
sentences for 1 I<lb/>
mg the standard- are<lb/>
tionai bggausu u.cy v-<lb/>
bv judgcra$ a political<lb/>
'The 9th U.S. Gra<lb/>
Appeals, the h: <lb/>
on the issue, said Tu<lb/>
placing three fed<lb/>
the sevcn-m<lb/>
commissior violated<lb/>
tional separations<lb/>
in a 2-1 vote, the :<lb/>
the use of judges t I<lb/>
sion interfered with t!i<lb/>
judicial impartial<lb/>
the president I I<lb/>
move member- j<lb/>
by judge Alex Ko <lb/>
"Congress ma) .<lb/>
system of se i <lb/>
quire judges to s<lb/>
that make p<lb/>
Kozinski said.<lb/>
Tine decision<lb/>
region covered b)<lb/>
comprising r i<lb/>
Guam and the N rtr<lb/>
anas. However<lb/>
nation's first en the!<lb/>
level to rule on the all<lb/>
guidelines.<lb/>
Other fedcra<lb/>
wide have issued<lb/>
flicting rulings o :h<lb/>
tnc guidelines, m j<lb/>
the scparation-of-<lb/>
The guidelines ?<lb/>
bv public defend i<lb/>
dispk as : w ith p .<lb/>
lengthened sent,<lb/>
crimes and rcstru t( d j<lb/>
thorit<lb/>
-<lb/>
The chairman of I<lb/>
cotrunissienJudgeW !<lb/>
ins oi the ' hU.S<lb/>
Appeals in Richmond<lb/>
hcwasdiyaojpoii I<lb/>
but added. "We'll<lb/>
definitive and final an<lb/>
the U.5. S I'Tomo <lb/>
soon '<lb/>
ki-is, interviei<lb/>
Wasr??r ;tor. on Larry<lb/>
dicated radio talk <lb/>
courts have decided<lb/>
cases b1 nn validity!<lb/>
tencing guidelines, wij<lb/>
ingsabout evenly dhk<lb/>
The Snprome Court<lb/>
uled arguments on tbtj<lb/>
Oct. 5 in a Missouri cas<lb/>
Tuesday's ruling on<lb/>
solidatcd' challenges<lb/>
Diego said the comnv.<lb/>
la ted the constitution;<lb/>
the role of the judicial<lb/>
"its function is politic<lb/>
judicial in nature<lb/>
Kozinski said the a<lb/>
had to make rules ar<lb/>
having the force cf<lb/>
that only the legislative<lb/>
rive branches, and not<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0011"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1, 1988 11<lb/>
:s Sunday,<lb/>
gust 28th.<lb/>
"IVE THRU SATURDAY.<lb/>
IPER 3. 1988 QUANTITY<lb/>
D NOT RESPONSIBLE<lb/>
GRAPHICAL ERRORS.<lb/>
ERY ITEMS AVAILABLE<lb/>
'NLY IN STORES WITH<lb/>
I SE DEPARTMENTS.<lb/>
neless<lb/>
in Steak<lb/>
'?18 LB AVG<lb/>
Red Ripe<lb/>
Watermelon<lb/>
48<lb/>
IGE 9C SIZE<lb/>
Bartlett<lb/>
Pears<lb/>
69<lb/>
RED<lb/>
California<lb/>
Raspberries<lb/>
OR<lb/>
Gold Rush<lb/>
Bars<lb/>
949<lb/>
 N 10 PURCH<lb/>
Breyers<lb/>
ce Cream<lb/>
ORE IDA<lb/>
Cob<lb/>
Corn<lb/>
J29<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
Mixed<lb/>
Vegetables<lb/>
2100<lb/>
bciation<lb/>
e, Las Vegas<lb/>
Crash death toll reaches 49<lb/>
RAMSTEIN, West Germany and speed.<lb/>
It was that pilot's jet, having<lb/>
crossed solo through two passing<lb/>
formations, that tumbled into the<lb/>
crowd.<lb/>
Opposition to military air<lb/>
shows as they tried to figure out<lb/>
(AP) - Family members desper-<lb/>
ately searched for loved ones<lb/>
missing after a fiery air show<lb/>
crash that killed 49 people. In-<lb/>
jured children lay unclaimed in<lb/>
hospitals as officials tried to deter-<lb/>
mine if their parents were among<lb/>
the dead.<lb/>
By late Tuesday, only 11 specta-<lb/>
tors who died in Sunday's disas-<lb/>
ter had been identified and offi-<lb/>
cials said that of the 282 people dangers of air shows seriously. I<lb/>
still hospitalized, 20 to 30 might<lb/>
emment spokesman tor Khine-<lb/>
land Palatinate state, said none of<lb/>
the 14 were children.<lb/>
Dietzen said police received<lb/>
scores of reports of missing<lb/>
people following the crash.<lb/>
There are even cases of people<lb/>
how to make them safer, many from as far away as America who<lb/>
sheim.<lb/>
"There is the possibility that the<lb/>
parents of both girls arc dead,<lb/>
since no one has inquired about<lb/>
them Bild quoted the head sur-<lb/>
geon, Dr. Rudolf Zellner, as say-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
One boy thought to be about 13<lb/>
DAN'S<lb/>
See Us At Our New Location<lb/>
VINTAGE CUM IIINC, 212 East Fifth St<lb/>
JEWELRY, COLLLCTAItt IS Greenville, NC<lb/>
AND FURNITURE 919-752-1730<lb/>
West Germans - including some have said'my relative has been on also had not been identified, the<lb/>
not survive.<lb/>
Scores of people were badly<lb/>
burned when three of 10 jets in an<lb/>
Italian air force stunt team col-<lb/>
lided and one careened into the<lb/>
crowd at the annual air show at<lb/>
the U.S. Air Force base in Ram-<lb/>
stein.<lb/>
The pilots of the three jets were<lb/>
killed, and the Italian air force of-<lb/>
ficial who coordinated the team's<lb/>
stunts said one caused the crash<lb/>
by flying into an intersecting<lb/>
maneuver at the wrong altitude<lb/>
of those injured Sunday - de- vacation there for three weeks,<lb/>
manded the shows be banned. and we haven't heard a word. Is is<lb/>
"Now I take warnings about the possible they were at Ram-<lb/>
stein? he said,<lb/>
didn't before said Karl West Germany's ARD televi-<lb/>
Eggcnweiler of Rothenberg-am- sjon showed pictures of a special<lb/>
Neckar, whose back and arms<lb/>
were severly burned and who will<lb/>
likely be scarred for life.<lb/>
"Now I think these shows<lb/>
should be forbidden he said<lb/>
from his bed at Kaiserslautern<lb/>
hospital near Ramstein.<lb/>
The nationalities of the identi-<lb/>
fied victims was unclear.<lb/>
Chief Pentagon spokesman<lb/>
Dan Howard sid six Americans<lb/>
were known to be among those<lb/>
killed. But Jucrgen Deitzen, gov-<lb/>
missmg persons<lb/>
bureau set<lb/>
up<lb/>
Frankfurt Abendpost newspaper<lb/>
said. Doctors at a hospital in Of-<lb/>
fenback near Frankfurt said he<lb/>
was burned over 95 percent of his<lb/>
body.<lb/>
The boy has not regained con-<lb/>
sciousness since he was brought<lb/>
after the disaster in the nearby to the hospital "and no one has<lb/>
town of Kaiserslautern.<lb/>
"I'm looking for my sister said<lb/>
one unidentified German man.<lb/>
"The whole family didn't come<lb/>
home<lb/>
The West German newspaper<lb/>
Bild said authorities searched in<lb/>
vain for the parents of two badly<lb/>
burned girls - 6-year-old Nadine<lb/>
and 10-year-old Melanic - who<lb/>
were taken to a hospital in Oggcr-<lb/>
asked about him Dr. Roberto<lb/>
Avalos was quoted by the news-<lb/>
paper as saying.<lb/>
"The doctors have a horrible<lb/>
suspicion: they are afraid his par-<lb/>
ents are among the dead the<lb/>
newspaper said.<lb/>
In a poll by the respected Wick-<lb/>
ert Institute, 82 percent of the<lb/>
2,710 West Germans surveyed<lb/>
said they want all military air<lb/>
shows stopped.<lb/>
Bi-annual testing causing drop-outs<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - North<lb/>
Carolina's failure to administer<lb/>
the competency test more than<lb/>
twice a year makes it hard to keep<lb/>
students from dropping out of<lb/>
their adult high school diploma<lb/>
programs, representatives of sev-<lb/>
eral community colleges say.<lb/>
"Retention of students is a big<lb/>
problem for community col-<lb/>
leges said Cavaretta Martin,<lb/>
supervisor of the adult high<lb/>
school diploma program at Nash<lb/>
Community College. "Students<lb/>
cannot always wait to take the<lb/>
test, especially those going into<lb/>
the service. We need another ad-<lb/>
ministration of the test<lb/>
Martin made his feelings<lb/>
known to the N.C. Testing<lb/>
Commission. The commission<lb/>
heard his and several other com-<lb/>
plaints about the various tests it<lb/>
requires of students in North<lb/>
Carolina, The Greensboro News<lb/>
&amp; Record reported.<lb/>
Besides the competency test,<lb/>
the state requires schools to ad-<lb/>
minister the California Achieve-<lb/>
ment Test in grades 3,6 and 8;<lb/>
social studies and science tests in<lb/>
the same grades; and end-of-<lb/>
course tests in Algebra I and sev-<lb/>
eral other courses in high school.<lb/>
About 50 school officials at-<lb/>
tended Tuesday's hearing, but<lb/>
only eight spoke. The hearing is<lb/>
one of three the commission is<lb/>
holding as part of its annual effort<lb/>
to hear public opinion about its<lb/>
testing programs The others will<lb/>
be in Wrightsville Beach Sept. 15<lb/>
and in Hendersonville Oct. 27.<lb/>
The commission will use the<lb/>
comments to consider what<lb/>
changes, if any, are needed in the<lb/>
testing program. It will give a<lb/>
report on the hearings to the State<lb/>
Board of Education on December<lb/>
7.<lb/>
The competency test, which all<lb/>
high school students must pass to<lb/>
graduate, is administered twice a<lb/>
year - in February and May. Stu-<lb/>
dents who drop out of high school<lb/>
often go to community colleges<lb/>
and enroll in the adult high school<lb/>
diploma program which lets<lb/>
them take courses required for<lb/>
graduation.<lb/>
However, once they pass those<lb/>
courses, they frequently have to<lb/>
wait months to take the required<lb/>
competency tests. That delay, the<lb/>
community college officials said<lb/>
causes many students to drop ou'<lb/>
without getting their diploma<lb/>
Court of appeals says no<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A U.S.<lb/>
appeals court struck down new<lb/>
guidelines establishing a range of<lb/>
sentences for federal crimes, rul-<lb/>
ing the standards are unconstitu-<lb/>
tional bQQause thqy. l re grafted<lb/>
bv judges as a political act.<lb/>
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of<lb/>
Appeals, the highest court to rule<lb/>
on the issue, said Tuesday that<lb/>
placing three federal judges on<lb/>
the seven-member sentencing<lb/>
commissior violated constitu-<lb/>
tional separations of powers.<lb/>
in a 2-1 vote, the court decided<lb/>
the use of judges on the commis-<lb/>
sion interfered with the "aura of<lb/>
judicial impartiality" by allowing<lb/>
the president to appoint . d re-<lb/>
move members, said the opinion<lb/>
by Judge Alex Kozinski.<lb/>
"Congress may not, under our<lb/>
system of separated powers, re-<lb/>
quire judges to serve on bodies<lb/>
that make political decisions<lb/>
Kozinski said.<lb/>
The decision affects only the<lb/>
region covered by the 9th Circuit,<lb/>
comprising nine Western states,<lb/>
Guam and the Northern Mari-<lb/>
anas. However, the court is the<lb/>
nation's first on the appellate<lb/>
level to rule on the validity of the<lb/>
guidelines.<lb/>
Other federal judges nation-<lb/>
wide have issued numerous con-<lb/>
flicting rulings or. challenges to<lb/>
the guidelines, mostly based on<lb/>
the separation-of-powers issue.<lb/>
The guidelines wei-c challenged<lb/>
by public defender who were<lb/>
displeased with provisions that<lb/>
lengthened sentences for many<lb/>
crimes and restricted judges' au-<lb/>
thority<lb/>
The chairman of the sentencing<lb/>
commission, Judge William Wilk-<lb/>
ins of the ?' h U.S. Circuit Court of<lb/>
Appeals in Richmond, Va said<lb/>
he was dit appointed by the ruling<lb/>
but added, 'We'll be having a<lb/>
definitive and final answer from<lb/>
the "JS. Supreme Court real<lb/>
soon '<lb/>
Wi'kins, interviewed from<lb/>
Was-T ;tor. on Larry King's syn-<lb/>
dicated radio talk show, said<lb/>
courts have decided about 200<lb/>
cases based on validity of the sen-<lb/>
tencing guidelines, with the rul-<lb/>
ings about evenly divided.<lb/>
The Supreme Court has sched-<lb/>
uled arguments on the issue for<lb/>
Oct. 5 in a Missouri case, he said.<lb/>
Tuesday's ruling on two con-<lb/>
solidated challenges from San<lb/>
Diego said the commission vio-<lb/>
lated the constitutional limit on<lb/>
the role of the judiciary because<lb/>
"its function is political and not<lb/>
judicial in nature<lb/>
Kozinski said the commission<lb/>
had to make rules and policies<lb/>
having the force of law, "tasks<lb/>
that only the legislative or execu-<lb/>
tive branches, and not the judici-<lb/>
ary, may constitutionally per-<lb/>
form<lb/>
The guidelines, which took ef-<lb/>
fect in November, recommend<lb/>
minimum and maximum sen-<lb/>
tences for each crime, requiring<lb/>
the judge to state unusual circum-<lb/>
stances for imposing a sentence<lb/>
outside the range.<lb/>
The appeals court also found<lb/>
invalid the 1984 sentencing law<lb/>
that created the Sentencing<lb/>
Commission and abclishcl pa-<lb/>
role in post-November 1987 cases.<lb/>
Such a ruling would restrc the<lb/>
entire previous law, v hich gener-<lb/>
ally gave judges wide-ranging<lb/>
sentencing discretion and pro-<lb/>
vided for parole eligibility after<lb/>
one-third of a sentence.<lb/>
"We're very happy with the<lb/>
guidelines being thrown out<lb/>
said Geoff Hansen, an assistant<lb/>
federal public defender in San<lb/>
Francisco. "We're just ecstatic<lb/>
that we don't have to deal with<lb/>
this nightmare any more<lb/>
But he said lawyers will be "in<lb/>
some state of uncertainty" in deal-<lb/>
ing with many recent cases, in-<lb/>
cluding some where the guide-<lb/>
lines helped individual defen-<lb/>
dants and others involving plea-<lb/>
bargains based on the guidelines.<lb/>
The status of parole is also un-<lb/>
clear, he said.<lb/>
Kozinski said the commission's<lb/>
detailed rules on sentences for<lb/>
each crime inv?de the executive<lb/>
and legislative policy-making<lb/>
roies in many ways. For example,<lb/>
it said sentences for white-collar<lb/>
crimes were too short, that all<lb/>
defendants except the poorest<lb/>
must pay fines. The commission<lb/>
also refrained from issuing any<lb/>
guidelines on the death penalty,<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
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COME AS YOU ARE<lb/>
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from different backgrounds which come togehter to form a<lb/>
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Ladies Summer<lb/>
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TUES. SEPT. 6 - Pig Pickin'<lb/>
WED. SEPT. 7 - Pizza and Pool Tourney<lb/>
THURS. SEPT. 8 - Meet the Chi Omegas<lb/>
All Freshmen Welcome<lb/>
1297-1997<lb/>
LADIES' CANVAS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058089_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MTU 1HH I l"<lb/>
Lake Gaston pipeline clogged by red tape<lb/>
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP)<lb/>
Not one section of pipe has been<lb/>
laid in the 85-mile lake Gaston<lb/>
pipeline, which remains mired in<lb/>
litigation five years after the city<lb/>
sought permission to build the<lb/>
$200 million project.<lb/>
Thecity nevertheless, isbuying<lb/>
land in the pipeline's path and is<lb/>
polishing the final engineering<lb/>
plan, and city officials express<lb/>
optimism they can start construc-<lb/>
tion next oar.<lb/>
'Hopefully, we will be in a<lb/>
position to begin sometime in<lb/>
1989 said Clarence O. Warn-<lb/>
stafl Virginia beach director ot<lb/>
public utilities. Ot course, that <lb/>
not guaranteed It is not under our<lb/>
direct influence and control<lb/>
We will not be read) to bid the<lb/>
pi. (: until the first part ol I -<lb/>
said 0 mas M 1 cah 111, chiel<lb/>
cngin? : on the project. "Check<lb/>
w ithussix to 12 months from now<lb/>
and it certainly will be a dilferent<lb/>
stor)<lb/>
Construction isexpeett d to take<lb/>
three to five ears.<lb/>
The city originally had hoped to<lb/>
start construction this summer so<lb/>
the pipeline would be finished in<lb/>
time to avoid a critical imbalance<lb/>
ot water supply and demand in<lb/>
1991.<lb/>
o the target date has been<lb/>
delayed by a lawsuit tiled b<lb/>
North Carolina in 1984. The suit<lb/>
. oh c - a permit granted in 1981<lb/>
b the Army Corps of Engineers<lb/>
:  allows Virginia Beach to<lb/>
I uild the pipeline to 1 akc Gaston,<lb/>
which straddles the North Caro-<lb/>
na-Virginia line.<lb/>
V rth Carolina is chalk i cii :<lb/>
look at the pivts citects on " jn 990 ve are not suffi<lb/>
striped bass and to reassess Vir , . free of litigation, we will<lb/>
ginia Beach's lone, term watei I . t develop interim, emcr-<lb/>
needs. The corps reported back in supplies U bridge the gap<lb/>
lune, once again endoi  I itl slid<lb/>
pipeline.<lb/>
Responses by int<lb/>
hat v ould in. lud? drilling<lb/>
1 l irti deeper wells or building a desalt<lb/>
to the new report ' ted ing plant at about twice the co I<lb/>
to the corps this month and are to . i the Gaston projeel Other op<lb/>
be sent to Britt b the I I n are a moratorium on build<lb/>
A citv studv savs that in b M ing and freiuent water conserva-<lb/>
tln re will not be enough qualit lion and rationing,<lb/>
water during! i tfdroueht. I'ive of the seven localities be-<lb/>
tween 1 ake Gaston and Suffolk,<lb/>
where the water would be land ne ledtobu<lb/>
pumped through Norfolk's treat- and the cit is el<lb/>
ment plant to Virginia beach, deal with<lb/>
have given thecity permission to poration 1 i i<lb/>
build the pipeline. An application route. It thai<lb/>
is ponding with Brunswick mated, the city wil<lb/>
County. third- ot t! ie n<lb/>
The last remaining locality is Progrc<lb/>
Suffolk rhc design of the project the financin<lb/>
is not far along enough in Suffolk A Virgini i I<lb/>
icquired about t of I . , r the pip line, is I<lb/>
i ? . I il will dot idc<lb/>
:<lb/>
to apply Leahy said.<lb/>
iudec ruled<lb/>
ahv said Virginia Beach has city's water in : i<lb/>
r to ask I i tl<lb/>
iion tor b<lb/>
: M ; i t.Thercl<lb/>
Get Hiprrfbtized!<lb/>
Read Features<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
t<lb/>
iditv ot tl<lb/>
permit in i s<lb/>
) strict Court in Raleigh<lb/>
udgc W. Earl Britt told I<lb/>
C rps f Engii ?rs I take a?. i<lb/>
Preachers<lb/>
taught at home<lb/>
MARK V N.C (AP) - Aster<lb/>
repeatev suspensions from<lb/>
scf it aj pears that three<lb/>
McD tvell County children who<lb/>
preached at the school gates will<lb/>
be taught at home.<lb/>
A;ter d.n -1 ne nec? tiation -<lb/>
-<lb/>
v I a c<lb/>
cag based advocacy orgar<lb/>
I n said Davidand RobinStrode,<lb/>
 . children's parents had signed<lb/>
a piece i I p ipe r asking that their<lb/>
children be removed from<lb/>
Eastficld Elementary School and<lb/>
b ; taught at home.<lb/>
"We pictty much got what eve-<lb/>
rybody wanted said Dan Rod-<lb/>
den, president of Caleb Cam-<lb/>
paign, a nonprofit Christian civil<lb/>
: ghts rganization.<lb/>
But David Ricketts, superinten-<lb/>
dent of the McDowell County<lb/>
schcx Is, sa.d he was no sure an<lb/>
agree mc nt had been reached.<lb/>
' o. e don t know that that's<lb/>
. de ision he said.<lb/>
o w ould teach the cl<lb/>
drcn and what arrangements<lb/>
  i be trade were not part i :<lb/>
the agreement disclosed to re-<lb/>
Strode said he and his family<lb/>
aid r afford to hire a teacher<lb/>
? . v for the at-home curricu-<lb/>
? I 1 .w . VV. v4 ?<lb/>
I d n t want to run a school<lb/>
he said. "But I am for the<lb/>
Idren<lb/>
Rodden said his nonprofit or-<lb/>
zal n would help with the<lb/>
 . ati :  rogram and even help<lb/>
? . uncn pi yed Strode, 40, find a<lb/>
:<lb/>
K<lb/>
ard<lb/>
ple v<lb/>
' v e know he<lb/>
UitiC and we V i<lb/>
would be willing to h Ip " lie said<lb/>
The Strodes did not mec t with<lb/>
 officials Tuesday, but in-<lb/>
: : ived Rodden and Ralph<lb/>
Davis, another representative ol<lb/>
the Caleb Campaign, to shuttle<lb/>
back and forth bet w een the school<lb/>
and the Strode home, about 1 12<lb/>
I cks.<lb/>
"I know how Henry Kissinger<lb/>
feels Rodden said, referring to<lb/>
hisi ' :tions<lb/>
Until noon Tuesday, Rodden<lb/>
and Davis were "working to save<lb/>
the marriage" between the chil-<lb/>
dren - Duffcy, 11, Pepper, 7 and<lb/>
Matthew, h - and the school. Rod-<lb/>
den said. "At noon today, I real-<lb/>
ized the marriage was unsavable<lb/>
a -1 we went for a divorce<lb/>
Although Rodden said the<lb/>
agreement satisfied everyone,<lb/>
David Slradc did not appear<lb/>
happv when he came out of the<lb/>
bouse late Tuesday afternoon. His<lb/>
cv? s were red and he appeared to<lb/>
have been crying.<lb/>
"As the world builds bigger and<lb/>
better schools and bigger and<lb/>
better churches, the children arc<lb/>
going to hell by the thousands<lb/>
he said before turning away.<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef<lb/>
BONELESS<lb/>
SIRLOIN<lb/>
STEAK<lb/>
Prices in this ad good thru<lb/>
Sunday, September 4, 1988<lb/>
House 01 Raefcrd Frozen<lb/>
Turkey BreastsLb. I.IB<lb/>
i: W i :V<lb/>
Golden Ripe<lb/>
Lbs.<lb/>
Thompson Seedless<lb/>
GRAPES<lb/>
3 Lb. - Jumbo<lb/>
BAKING POTATOES<lb/>
3 Lb. Bag - Tasty<lb/>
YELLOW ONIONS<lb/>
Carlo Rossi<lb/>
1.5 Liter<lb/>
(Chablis. Rhine. Fink<lb/>
Chablis. Yin Rose.<lb/>
Hurgundy. Paisano, Lt. Chablis i<lb/>
100 Pure<lb/>
GROUND BEEF<lb/>
PATTIES<lb/>
$2<lb/>
s<lb/>
i;<lb/>
Coke, Diet Coke, CF<lb/>
Coke, CF Diet Coke,<lb/>
Cherry Coke, QQC<lb/>
Coke Classic 2 itr 33<lb/>
Sprite &amp; Diet Sprite<lb/>
$1.09<lb/>
Coke &amp; related items<lb/>
I 2 1 pk 12 oz. can'<lb/>
ans<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
Coors<lb/>
2 pk. - 12 oz. can<lb/>
RegularLight<lb/>
CANTALOUPES<lb/>
$9<lb/>
Gourmet Meat &amp; Seafood Specials<lb/>
??<lb/>
v<lb/>
Fresh Domestic ? Whole Or rial'<lb/>
LEG OF LAMB<lb/>
Plume de Veau<lb/>
VEAL ROUND<lb/>
STEAK<lb/>
$229 $$9<lb/>
Large<lb/>
California<lb/>
Peaches Lb. .49<lb/>
California Plums Or<lb/>
Nectarines Lb.<lb/>
Tender<lb/>
YELLOW CORN<lb/>
Ears V V<lb/>
Imitation<lb/>
CRAB MEAT<lb/>
$199<lb/>
o? I Lb<lb/>
Your Choice - Fresh<lb/>
PERCH FILET,<lb/>
CATFISH FILET,<lb/>
Or Shell On 60-80 Ct.<lb/>
SMALL SHRIMP<lb/>
$29?<lb/>
Large - Melons<lb/>
H0NEYDEWS<lb/>
$199<lb/>
Farh ? i JL<lb/>
10 Ct - Reg Southern<lb/>
Style - Big Country<lb/>
BISCUITS<lb/>
<lb/>
35?<lb/>
V<lb/>
e5<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Fully Cooked<lb/>
60-70 Ct.<lb/>
 Shell On<lb/>
$399<lb/>
'&amp; BIB COUNTRY<lb/>
AJ<lb/>
MCWTS<lb/>
64 Oz. - Old South<lb/>
ORANGE JUICE<lb/>
$119<lb/>
13 Oz Vac Bag ADEP<lb/>
Flaked Coffee<lb/>
MASTER BLEND<lb/>
$159<lb/>
'Hf f ? ? -? ? 0<lb/>
These<lb/>
B I <lb/>
iVV.if<lb/>
lenin l<lb/>
- '<lb/>
it tal<lb/>
?<lb/>
m. n ?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
tells!<lb/>
a d<lb/>
?<lb/>
time I s<lb/>
???<lb/>
fait! ? .<lb/>
At: r<lb/>
. 5 ?<lb/>
Drummer<lb/>
his round .<lb/>
This is a purr<lb/>
.They mako w<lb/>
that vou rag<lb/>
The Cn<lb/>
laid to r<lb/>
B G UO SAN<lb/>
Where<lb/>
twoi<lb/>
i !ou <lb/>
victorious<lb/>
now ?<lb/>
sed<lb/>
Lum s<lb/>
the cornei<lb/>
has cl -<lb/>
The v -<lb/>
hot :n d<lb/>
or ic<lb/>
phema<lb/>
discern<lb/>
24 hours a da<lb/>
;et sometl<lb/>
The -<lb/>
Jazz mi<lb/>
Bv STEPHAM1 FOl<lb/>
MASTEH BL? NO<lb/>
This summer<lb/>
tious orw<lb/>
lames, a jazz<lb/>
time srudenJ ai I<lb/>
reaching his<lb/>
a musician and as<lb/>
lames, a 21-y<lb/>
majonnp in music ed<lb/>
a minor in piano w<lb/>
last April bv the G<lb/>
Hightower Publish i<lb/>
to work on musk arrange<lb/>
In July he was gjvei<lb/>
project ot the summ r<lb/>
asked to do the arrangemeri<lb/>
the theme sng to K ;<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0013"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1,188<lb/>
Lake Gaston pipeline clogged by red tape<lb/>
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) -<lb/>
Not one section of pipe has been<lb/>
laid in the 85-mile Lake Gaston<lb/>
pipeline, which remains mired in<lb/>
litigation five years after the city<lb/>
sought permission to build the<lb/>
$200 million project.<lb/>
The city, nevertheless, is buying<lb/>
land in the pipeline's path and is<lb/>
polishing the final engineering<lb/>
plan, and city officials express<lb/>
optimism they can start construc-<lb/>
tion next year.<lb/>
"Hopefully, we will be in a<lb/>
position to begin sometime in<lb/>
1989 said Clarence O. Warn-<lb/>
staff, Virginia Beach director of<lb/>
public utilities. "Of course, that's<lb/>
not guaranteed. It is not under our<lb/>
direct influence and control<lb/>
"We will not be ready to bid the<lb/>
project until the first part of 1989<lb/>
said Thomas M. Leahy III, chief<lb/>
engineer on the project. "Check<lb/>
with us six to 12 months from now<lb/>
and it certainly will be a different<lb/>
story<lb/>
Construction is expected to take<lb/>
three to five vears.<lb/>
The city originally had hoped to<lb/>
start construction this summer so<lb/>
the pipeline would be finished in<lb/>
time to avoid a critical imbalance<lb/>
of water supply and demand in<lb/>
1991.<lb/>
But the target date has been<lb/>
delayed by a lawsuit filed by<lb/>
North Carolina in 1984. The suit<lb/>
involves a permit granted in 1984<lb/>
by the Army Corps of Engineers<lb/>
that allows Virginia Beach to<lb/>
build the pipeline to Lake Gaston,<lb/>
which straddles the North Caro-<lb/>
lina-Virginia line.<lb/>
North Carolina is challenging<lb/>
the validity of the permit in U.S.<lb/>
District Court in Raleigh.<lb/>
Judge W. Earl Britt told the<lb/>
Corps of Engineers to take a closer<lb/>
Preachers<lb/>
taught at home<lb/>
MARION, N.C. (AP) - After<lb/>
repeated suspensions from<lb/>
school, it appears that three<lb/>
McDowell County children who<lb/>
preached at the school gates will<lb/>
be taught at home.<lb/>
After day-long negotiations<lb/>
Tuesday, the president of a Chi-<lb/>
cago-based advocacy organiza-<lb/>
tion said David and Robin Strode,<lb/>
the children's parents, had signed<lb/>
a piece of paper asking that their<lb/>
children be removed from<lb/>
Eastficld Elementary School and<lb/>
be taught at home.<lb/>
"We pictty much got what eve-<lb/>
rybody wanted said Dan Rod-<lb/>
den, president of Caleb Cam-<lb/>
paign, a nonprofit Christian civil<lb/>
rights organization.<lb/>
But David Rickctts, superinten-<lb/>
dent of the McDowell County<lb/>
schools, said he was no sure an<lb/>
agreement had been reached.<lb/>
"We don't know that that's<lb/>
their decision he said.<lb/>
ust who would teach the chil-<lb/>
dren and what arrangements<lb/>
would be made were not part of<lb/>
the agreement disclosed to re-<lb/>
porters.<lb/>
Strode said he and his family<lb/>
could not afford to hire a teacher<lb/>
o to oay for the at-home curricu-<lb/>
lum needed.<lb/>
'I don't want to run a school<lb/>
here he said. "But I am for the<lb/>
children<lb/>
Rodden said his nonprofit or-<lb/>
ganization would help with the<lb/>
education program and even help<lb/>
the unemployed Strode, 40, find a<lb/>
zo.<lb/>
"We know he has had hard<lb/>
time and we know people who<lb/>
wouldbc willing to help he said.<lb/>
The Strodcs did not meet with<lb/>
?hool officials Tuesday, but in-<lb/>
stead allowed Rodden and Ralph<lb/>
Davis, another representative of<lb/>
the Caleb Campaign, to shuttle<lb/>
back and forth between the school<lb/>
and the Strode home, about 1 1 2<lb/>
blocks.<lb/>
"I know how Henry Kissinger<lb/>
feels Rodden said, referring to<lb/>
his negotiations.<lb/>
Until noon Tuesday, Rodden<lb/>
and Davis were "working to save<lb/>
the marriage" between the chil-<lb/>
dren - Duffcy, 11, Pepper, 7 and<lb/>
Matthew, 6 - and the school. Rod-<lb/>
den said. "At noon today, I real-<lb/>
ized the marriage was unsavable<lb/>
?d we went for a divorce<lb/>
Although Rodden said the<lb/>
agreement satisfied everyone,<lb/>
David Strode did not appear<lb/>
happy when he came out of the<lb/>
house late Tuesday afternoon. His<lb/>
eves were red and he appeared to<lb/>
have been crying.<lb/>
"As the world builds bigger and<lb/>
better schools and bigger and<lb/>
better churches, the children are<lb/>
gping to hell by the thousands<lb/>
he said before turning away.<lb/>
look at the project's effects on<lb/>
striped bass and to reassess Vir-<lb/>
ginia Beach's long-term water<lb/>
needs. The corps reported back in<lb/>
June, once again endorsing the<lb/>
pipeline.<lb/>
Responses by interested parties<lb/>
to the new report were submitted<lb/>
to the corps this month and are to<lb/>
be sent to Britt by the fall.<lb/>
A city study says that in 1991<lb/>
there will not be enough quality<lb/>
water during times of drought.<lb/>
"If by 1990 we are not suffi-<lb/>
ciently free of litigation, we will<lb/>
have to develop interim, emer-<lb/>
gency supplies to bridge the gap<lb/>
Warnstaff said.<lb/>
That could include drilling<lb/>
deeper wells or building a desalt-<lb/>
ing plant - at about twice the cost<lb/>
oi the Gaston project. Other op-<lb/>
tions are a moratorium on build-<lb/>
ing and frequent water conserva-<lb/>
tion and rationing.<lb/>
Five of the seven localities be-<lb/>
tween Lake Gaston and Suffolk,<lb/>
where the water would be<lb/>
pumped through Norfolk's treat-<lb/>
ment plant to Virginia Beach,<lb/>
have given the city permission to<lb/>
build the pipeline. An application<lb/>
is pending with Brunswick<lb/>
County.<lb/>
The last remaining locality is<lb/>
Suffolk. "The design of the project<lb/>
is not far along enough in Suffolk<lb/>
to apply Leahy said.<lb/>
Leahy said Virginia Beach has<lb/>
acquired about 25 percent of the<lb/>
land needed to build the pipeline,<lb/>
and the city is close to sealing a<lb/>
deal with Norfolk Southern Cor-<lb/>
poration for 50 miles of pipeline<lb/>
route. If that deal is consum-<lb/>
mated, the city will have two-<lb/>
thirds of the necessary property.<lb/>
Progress also has been made on<lb/>
the financing front.<lb/>
A Virginia Beach Circuit Court<lb/>
judge ruled last week that the<lb/>
city's water impact fee, created to<lb/>
help pay for the pipeline, is legal.<lb/>
City Council will decide on<lb/>
Sept. 6 whether to ask for the vot-<lb/>
ers' permission for bonds to fi-<lb/>
nance part of the project. The ref-<lb/>
erendum would be held in No-<lb/>
vember.<lb/>
Get Hip?ffiotized!<lb/>
Read Features<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef<lb/>
BONELESS<lb/>
SIRLOIN<lb/>
STEAK<lb/>
Prices in this ad good thru<lb/>
Sunday, September 4, 1988.<lb/>
House Of Raeford Frozen 40<lb/>
Turkey BreastsLb. l-lo<lb/>
UntCho<lb/>
ans??w<lb/>
Golden Ripe<lb/>
Thompson Seedless<lb/>
GRAPES<lb/>
3 Lb. - Jumbo<lb/>
BAKIN6 POTATOES<lb/>
3 Lb. Bag -Tasty<lb/>
YELLOW ONIONS<lb/>
Carlo Rossi<lb/>
1.5 Liter<lb/>
(Chablis. Rhine. Pink<lb/>
Chablis, Vin Rose.<lb/>
Burgundy, Paisano, Lt. Chablis.)<lb/>
100 Pure<lb/>
GR0UM0 BEEF<lb/>
PATTIES<lb/>
$2<lb/>
.<lb/>
Coke, Diet Coke, CF<lb/>
Coke, CF Diet Coke,<lb/>
Cherry Coke, QQ<lb/>
Coke Classic star 33<lb/>
Sprite &amp; Diet Sprite<lb/>
$1.09<lb/>
Coke &amp; related items<lb/>
24 pk. - 12 oz. cans<lb/>
1 (<lb/>
Coors<lb/>
24 pk. - 12 oz. cans<lb/>
Regular Light<lb/>
12 Size<lb/>
? 1<lb/>
CANTALOUPES<lb/>
ana<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
$9<lb/>
Gourmet Meat &amp; Seafood Specials<lb/>
Each<lb/>
Fresh Domestic - Whole Or Half<lb/>
LEG OF LAMB<lb/>
Plume de Veau<lb/>
VEAL ROUND<lb/>
$22?. $449<lb/>
 Tr Lb.<lb/>
Large<lb/>
California<lb/>
Peaches Lb. .49<lb/>
California Plums Or Qq<lb/>
Nectarines Lb. .99<lb/>
Tender<lb/>
YELLOW CORN<lb/>
?99<lb/>
?-v<lb/>
w<lb/>
Imitation<lb/>
CRAB MEAT<lb/>
$199<lb/>
o? I Lb<lb/>
Your Choice - Fresh<lb/>
PERCH FILET,<lb/>
CATFISH FILET,<lb/>
Or Shell On 60-80 Ct.<lb/>
SMALL SHRIMP<lb/>
$29??<lb/>
Large - Melons<lb/>
H0NEYDEWS<lb/>
$199<lb/>
Canh B iJT<lb/>
10 Ct. - Reg.Southern<lb/>
Style - Big Country<lb/>
BISCUITS<lb/>
ha<lb/>
PIB MliWW (Mi<lb/>
JL.<lb/>
Fully Cooked<lb/>
60-70 Ct.<lb/>
Shell On<lb/>
64 0z. - Old South<lb/>
ORANGE JUICE<lb/>
13 Oz. - Vac. Bag ADEP<lb/>
Flaked Coffee<lb/>
MASTER BLEND<lb/>
$1194E$159<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL<lb/>
These<lb/>
By EARLY IS HAMPTON<lb/>
Feature Editof a Staff Ituai<lb/>
Sammy Madison, a man bare)<lb/>
iwake, answers the door after<lb/>
tening to five minutes of fist bar,<lb/>
tng. Sliding the glass deer<lb/>
he scrapes crusts of sleep from r<lb/>
?yesand says, "What's uj<lb/>
Asleep Madison was not<lb/>
?Saturday night as he and hiK<lb/>
The Usuals, blistered a pa<lb/>
:rowd at Greenville's Attii i<lb/>
their brand of psycho-R a: I<lb/>
But now, at 10 Mondav morni<lb/>
it takes the lead singer<lb/>
guitarist of The Usuals a H<lb/>
moments of couch slou.<lb/>
collect his thoughts<lb/>
"Yeah, it was a prett.<lb/>
crowd Madison said<lb/>
playing in front of the he-<lb/>
Green vilhans.<lb/>
Flashing back to Saturc<lb/>
night<lb/>
It's the middle of the sec<lb/>
and Sammy looks down I<lb/>
scribbled song line-up she<lb/>
tells the audience, "We'r J<lb/>
slow down a little bit and : J<lb/>
Simon and Garfunkel tune<lb/>
crowd stirs in antic .<lb/>
time Usuals goers say J<lb/>
slow song ? while ardent L<lb/>
faithful scream<lb/>
After a line or tw i<lb/>
vocals to the classic "Cecc<lb/>
Drummer Scott Srutts thur,<lb/>
his round demons, exaltinc<lb/>
This is a purple rag. buy thei<lb/>
.They make wonderful pres<lb/>
that you rag on the Pirates. 1<lb/>
The C ro<lb/>
laid to r<lb/>
By GARY SANDERSON<lb/>
Staff HUM<lb/>
Where will ECU students $j<lb/>
two in the morning after quail<lb/>
a few too many beers or a:<lb/>
victorious evening oi foot<lb/>
now that The Crow's Not<lb/>
closed? Originally known<lb/>
Lum's, the restaurant, locate<lb/>
the comer of tenth and Ch<lb/>
has closed it's door after 20 v<lb/>
TheCrow'sNestalwaysofrt<lb/>
hot food, ice cold beer, plea<lb/>
service and suitable Pirate<lb/>
phemalia to make even the<lb/>
discerning fan feel at ease Q<lb/>
24 hours a day, one could alJ<lb/>
get something good to eat.<lb/>
The sign out front reads sn<lb/>
Jazz mi<lb/>
By STEPHANIE FOLS(<lb/>
Staff Ml<lb/>
MAsTt ? I" '<lb/>
This summer proved an at<lb/>
tious one for Wayne, Jai<lb/>
James, a jazz musician and<lb/>
time student at ECU, st?<lb/>
reaching his goals this summj<lb/>
a musician and as a person.<lb/>
James, a 21-year-old s<lb/>
majoring in music education<lb/>
a minor in piano, was conta<lb/>
last April by the Chnstoj<lb/>
Hightower Publishing Com<lb/>
to work on music arrangem<lb/>
In jury he was given his bi<lb/>
project of the summer. He,<lb/>
asked to do the arrangemei<lb/>
the theme song to be playe<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0014"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
tape<lb/>
nc, i- legal.<lb/>
vie on<lb/>
for the vot-<lb/>
? - to fi-<lb/>
he ref-<lb/>
? n No-<lb/>
Ik-<lb/>
w?<lb/>
Hip-motized!<lb/>
ad Features<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
? ?run<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
1.18<lb/>
n Seedless<lb/>
APES<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
bize mv<lb/>
LOUPES<lb/>
jer<lb/>
now CORN<lb/>
99?<lb/>
eg Southern<lb/>
Big Country<lb/>
ISCUITS<lb/>
Vac Bag ADEP<lb/>
feked Coffee<lb/>
TER BLEND<lb/>
59<lb/>
Masteh OLf no<lb/>
THE EASTCAROI INI AN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1,1988 Page 13<lb/>
These guys play scary music the fast way<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
tenure Iditor ? Stall I suai<lb/>
Sammy Madison, a man barely<lb/>
? wake, answers the door after list-<lb/>
ening to five minutes of fist bang-<lb/>
Sliding the glass door open,<lb/>
scrapes crusts oi sleep from his<lb/>
w's and says, "What's up?"<lb/>
Asleep Madison was not on<lb/>
Saturday night as he and his boys,<lb/>
"he Usuals, blistered a packed<lb/>
?wd at Greenville's Attic with<lb/>
r brand of psycho-R and R.<lb/>
B I now. at 10 Monday morning,<lb/>
I takes the lead singer lead<lb/>
. tarist oi The Usuals a few<lb/>
m ?ments of couch slouching to<lb/>
collect his thoughts.<lb/>
Yeah, it was a pretty good<lb/>
crowd Madison said about<lb/>
pta) ing in front of the hometown<lb/>
envillians<lb/>
Flashing back to Saturday<lb/>
?<lb/>
tfit.<lb/>
s the middle of the second set<lb/>
? Sammy looks down to the<lb/>
bled song line-up sheet and<lb/>
tells theaudience, "We're going to<lb/>
5 down a little bit and play a<lb/>
Simon and Garfunkel tune The<lb/>
crowd stirs in anticipation, first<lb/>
e Usuals goers say "What, a<lb/>
- w song ? while ardent Usuals<lb/>
faithful scream.<lb/>
After a line or two of slow<lb/>
vocals to the classic "Cecelia<lb/>
Drummer Scott Stutts thunders<lb/>
his round demons, exaltinc the<lb/>
other band members to up the<lb/>
tempo four fold. Quick sing,<lb/>
Madison blurts "Cecelia, you're<lb/>
breaking my heart<lb/>
"We are speeding up every-<lb/>
thing. Even the songs on our<lb/>
album, we now play a lot faster<lb/>
Madison sas about the band's<lb/>
trenzy-stvle play.<lb/>
The Usuals are so involved in<lb/>
the catyclysmic pace some of the<lb/>
band members actually bleed.<lb/>
Atter Saturday night's show, bas-<lb/>
sist Tracy "Manute" Cam hugged<lb/>
his much deserved Budweiser<lb/>
with the bleeding fingers oi his<lb/>
right hand.<lb/>
In between cigarette drags,<lb/>
Manute savs "Man. I thump the<lb/>
chords so hard, I didn't even real-<lb/>
ize the blood A week before,<lb/>
while playing a gig in Greens-<lb/>
boro, the demonic-looking Cain<lb/>
with his goatee and shoeless feet<lb/>
actually beat the thick strings on<lb/>
his psychdelic-painted LOVE<lb/>
bass until the chords broke.<lb/>
"Yeah, it is pretty unusual to<lb/>
break a has string Madison<lb/>
commented later. "Munate<lb/>
thought it was time to crawl outol<lb/>
his shell and jam around on<lb/>
stage<lb/>
The bassist throws the theory<lb/>
ot - rock and rollers can't even<lb/>
read music out ot the proverbial<lb/>
window. am la k<lb/>
or.lv en<lb/>
lit<lb/>
semester hours, all elective<lb/>
classes, trom receiving a degree in<lb/>
music from F. 1<lb/>
Cain's new thrashing style is<lb/>
only o ne indication of The Usuals'<lb/>
transformation. Loyal Usual lis-<lb/>
teners say the band sounds better<lb/>
than ever.<lb/>
"I've seen these boys many a<lb/>
times-maybe in the hundreds-but<lb/>
they jammed tonight a sweat<lb/>
dripping David Sanderson said.<lb/>
Drummer Stutts, who along<lb/>
with Madison formed the band<lb/>
five years ago, is the true work<lb/>
horse of The Usuals. Despite<lb/>
showing up to gigs in shorts and<lb/>
cut-ofl tee-shirts, Stutts always<lb/>
manages to become drenched in<lb/>
his ow n sweat.<lb/>
Said to be the only rational one<lb/>
in band, Stutts becomes philo-<lb/>
sophical as he watches his partner<lb/>
take the next pool shot at a local<lb/>
billiards hall. "Our songs aren't<lb/>
shallow, they have solid mean-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
During the Attic show, Stutts<lb/>
drums fire into the audience with<lb/>
a bamming intro to the original<lb/>
"Abusing You Inbctween<lb/>
songs, Stutts smiles and shakes<lb/>
his head as cat calls ring 'Bonzo,<lb/>
Bonzo<lb/>
The latest addition to The Usu-<lb/>
als is rythm guitarist Pat Dickcn-<lb/>
son, who brings a new spectrum<lb/>
of fast pick-licks to the band's<lb/>
sound. Dickenson's multi-tal-<lb/>
ented fingers are evident as he<lb/>
plays the acoustic introduction to<lb/>
See USUALS, page 15<lb/>
hot 10.<lb/>
4<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
4<lb/>
i<lb/>
Introductions left to right. Sammy Madison, Tat Dickenson, Scott (Bonzo) Stutts and Tracey (Manute)<lb/>
Cain, the Usuals. While this isn't the best quality picture of this offensive-looking bunch, trust me they<lb/>
look scarier in person. Check them out September 19 at the TKE house.<lb/>
'Pirate rags' revitalized by<lb/>
easy - going entreprenuer<lb/>
<lb/>
 <lb/>
f<lb/>
This is a purple rag. Buy them. Wave them at home football games and away games if you are so inclined<lb/>
. They make wonderful presents. Buy ten and send them to your favorite Wolf pack fans. Tell everyone<lb/>
that you rag on the Pirates. (Photo by Thomas Walters?Photolab)<lb/>
The Crow's Nest, born in '68,<lb/>
laid to rest July 27,1988<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
"Thanks a lot for your time Mrs.<lb/>
Bell I said at the end of the inter-<lb/>
view.<lb/>
"Thank you, and please, call me<lb/>
Nancy This informality seems<lb/>
typical of Nancy Bell's easy-going<lb/>
and warm personality. This kind<lb/>
of personality seems natural for a<lb/>
retired social worker, but a busi-<lb/>
ness woman?<lb/>
Bell is a business woman<lb/>
though, as well as a semi-retired<lb/>
medical social worker. And her<lb/>
first business venture seems<lb/>
poised to breakthrough in a big<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Some graduate students and<lb/>
seniors may remember the purple<lb/>
"Pirate rags" that used to wave<lb/>
back and forth in the stands dur-<lb/>
ing football season. For some<lb/>
reason, the unknown companv<lb/>
that manufactured these screen<lb/>
printed handkerchiefs decided to<lb/>
stop making them.<lb/>
But Bell and her husband, re-<lb/>
cent ECU alumni, remembered<lb/>
them, lor a couple oi years they<lb/>
kicked the idea around, wonder-<lb/>
ing if they could start producing<lb/>
them. They had a couple ot the old<lb/>
ones, but nothing gelled until they<lb/>
watched the World Series.<lb/>
The abundance of the Minne-<lb/>
sota Twin "Homerun Hankies"<lb/>
prompted them to make an idea<lb/>
into reality. With a small inheir-<lb/>
itence and money from their per-<lb/>
sonal savings, they ordered the 15<lb/>
inch by 15 inch purple handker-<lb/>
chiefs.<lb/>
The companv, Collegiate Con-<lb/>
cepts of Atlanta, had no handker-<lb/>
chiefs that size, so they had to be<lb/>
special ordered.<lb/>
Bell brought them to BLT's, a<lb/>
local screenpnnter and had them<lb/>
stylized with the Pirate logo and<lb/>
the school seal, a substantially<lb/>
different design trom the swash-<lb/>
buckling pirate who used to<lb/>
adorn the rags.<lb/>
They are now cm sale at the<lb/>
Student Store and at University<lb/>
Book Exchange. 5 oi the cost<lb/>
goes to the university, and 105! ot<lb/>
Bell's profits goes to the Pediatric<lb/>
Department of the School oi<lb/>
Medicine in order to "share our<lb/>
good fortune, and help children<lb/>
get medical help Bell said.<lb/>
mother ot two preschool<lb/>
girls, this is a subject Bell is pas-<lb/>
sionate about. She worked at<lb/>
Greenville Dialysis, and now<lb/>
devotes her time between the chil-<lb/>
dren, volunteer social work and<lb/>
her new business<lb/>
The name of her new company<lb/>
is Rags and Stuff Inc and she feels<lb/>
that the new Pirate Rags will go<lb/>
over well since ECU fans are "so<lb/>
spirit filled anyway<lb/>
As tor the future, she would like<lb/>
to go into some high schools with<lb/>
her product as well as the frater-<lb/>
nities and sororities here on cam-<lb/>
pus. She thinks the rags would be<lb/>
a good project for fundraisers.<lb/>
Tart oi the money used to fi-<lb/>
nance the project came trom a<lb/>
small inheiritenee she reeieved<lb/>
alter her father died a short while<lb/>
ago. She explained that her father,<lb/>
a businessman, "paid her way<lb/>
through college<lb/>
"1 think he'd be proud oi me<lb/>
By GARY SANDERSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
'Born Sept 8 1968; Laid to rest<lb/>
July 27, 1988 However, his wife<lb/>
? lane, and literally tens of thou-<lb/>
vVhere will ECU students go at sands oi students can not be so<lb/>
two in the morning after quaffling easily summed up. The Brown-<lb/>
a few too many beers, or atter a ings, who owned the restaurant<lb/>
victorious evening of football, for nearly 20 years, developed a<lb/>
now that The Crow's Nest has<lb/>
closed? Originally known as<lb/>
Lum's, the restaurant, located at<lb/>
the corner of tenth and Charles<lb/>
has closed it's door after 20 years.<lb/>
TheCrow'sNestalwavsoffered<lb/>
special affection for ECU and it's<lb/>
students. "We were there even<lb/>
before the building was com-<lb/>
pletely built said Mrs. Brown-<lb/>
still, things change. Time goes by<lb/>
so fast one day then a month<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Though the building is to be<lb/>
leveled in October, traditions die<lb/>
hard, and those who visited the<lb/>
Crow's Nest will cherish the<lb/>
memories for the rest of their<lb/>
lives. Virtually every student who<lb/>
has attended ECU in the last<lb/>
twenty years has seen the Crow's<lb/>
Nest at least onece. For many, it<lb/>
was their first meal in Greenville,<lb/>
n times past famous people like<lb/>
Pickin' the record charts<lb/>
Rolling Stone Top 100 bogus, thus Bonehead's 9<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Back-Up Singer<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"A lotot former employees and<lb/>
hotfood ice cold beer; pleasant regular customers were dis-<lb/>
service and suitable Pirate para- traught at our closing She added Tony Orlando, FrankieValle and<lb/>
phemalia to make even the most that she and Mr. Browning where Jessica Savage dined there, good<lb/>
discerning fan feel at ease. Open deeply grieved for the first week, time abounded and sorrows were<lb/>
24 hours a day, one could always but that she has become accus- drowned.<lb/>
eet something good to eat. tomed to the change now. "You're See cROW'S, page 15<lb/>
The sign out front reads simplv talking about 20 years of our lives,<lb/>
Jazz musician reaches goal<lb/>
By STEPHANIE FOLSOM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This summer proved an ambi-<lb/>
tious one for Wayne, James,<lb/>
James, a jazz musician and part-<lb/>
time student at ECU, started<lb/>
reaching his goals this summer as<lb/>
a musician and as a person.<lb/>
James, a 21-year-old senior<lb/>
majoring in music education with<lb/>
a minor in piano, was contacted<lb/>
last April by the Christopher<lb/>
Hightower Publishing Company<lb/>
to work on music arrangements.<lb/>
In July he was given his biggest<lb/>
project of the summer. He was<lb/>
asked to do the arrangement for<lb/>
the theme song to be played at<lb/>
Somerset Place on Saturday, Sep-<lb/>
tember 3.<lb/>
Dorothy Redford wrote a book<lb/>
about Somerset Place, tracing her<lb/>
roots back to the former slave<lb/>
plantation in Creswell, NC. Her<lb/>
family reunites there every year<lb/>
around Labor Day. This year such<lb/>
prominent persons as Alex Haley<lb/>
and Jesse Jackson will be present.<lb/>
Another chance to use" his musi-<lb/>
cal talents occurred at the Demo-<lb/>
cratic banquet in Atlanta.<lb/>
Last October, while James and<lb/>
other members of the Brazz Band<lb/>
were playing at a homecoming<lb/>
reunion, James' first opportunity<lb/>
to play at he convention arose.<lb/>
"There was a man there (at the<lb/>
reunion) from Atlanta who was<lb/>
impressed with the band. He<lb/>
talked about us playing with<lb/>
some sort of thing relating to the<lb/>
Democratic Convention said<lb/>
James. The chance fell through for<lb/>
the Brazz Band. Since some mem-<lb/>
bers of the band had prior obliga-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"They had other obligations,<lb/>
but I did have the chance to go<lb/>
down there said James. "I knew<lb/>
some people down in Atlanta<lb/>
who knew 1 was a musician<lb/>
James played at a small banquet,<lb/>
which he said was mostly for<lb/>
delegates. "Everything went<lb/>
See JAMES, page 16<lb/>
Now I'm really steamed.<lb/>
Rolling Stone just put out an<lb/>
issue with theblurbThe 100 Best<lb/>
Singles of the last 25 years 1<lb/>
know it's just blurb and I know RS<lb/>
is using their 25th anniversary for<lb/>
all sorts of market ploys, trying to<lb/>
win back their readership from<lb/>
SPIN.<lb/>
The article was 98 pages long<lb/>
including ads, and the singles<lb/>
were picked by polling 25 of RS's<lb/>
record critics. In other words, 100<lb/>
pages full of maudlin reminen-<lb/>
scences about album-oriented-<lb/>
radio singles by critics who have<lb/>
believe Bruce Springsteen created<lb/>
rock the day after he rested.<lb/>
I'd rather read poetry.<lb/>
I mean, "Stayin' Alive" by the<lb/>
BeeGees was Number 50, while<lb/>
Led Zepplin's "Whole Lotta<lb/>
Love" zoomed up to Number 96<lb/>
It was ridiculous. Even cheese-<lb/>
meistcrs Foreigner made it with "I<lb/>
Want to Know What Love is in<lb/>
at Number 54.<lb/>
Disgusting. And not one Stevie<lb/>
Nicks or Def Leppard song. So, to<lb/>
rectify this, I have come up with<lb/>
The Bonehead's Top Nine of the<lb/>
Last 22 Years, Which Only 15 Of<lb/>
He Can Vouch For As Having<lb/>
Really Existed.<lb/>
1Stand Back"?Stevie Nicks.<lb/>
Despite her ditziness, her obses-<lb/>
sion with black, witchy costumes<lb/>
and her general California air-<lb/>
headed nessshecanj?omejj?<lb/>
with some whopper hooks. This<lb/>
tune is on about three oi my party<lb/>
tapes, and hasn't failed to get me<lb/>
laid yet. Even the back-up singers<lb/>
jam.<lb/>
The plot of the song is basically<lb/>
the same as everything else she's<lb/>
written ?"No one on this planet<lb/>
knows what love is exepet me,<lb/>
and I'm gonna whine about it tor<lb/>
four minutes Everybody has<lb/>
bad days, but I can see where hers<lb/>
could be slightly worse than your<lb/>
average housewife.<lb/>
Back-up vocalist Bonehea'd<lb/>
2. "Buddah, Buddah, Buddah"<lb/>
? Rick Rock. An almost impos-<lb/>
sible to find gem these days, but<lb/>
when the Raleigh scene was still<lb/>
worth something, Rick and his<lb/>
song were the absolute most<lb/>
smokin Even Don Dixon cov-<lb/>
ered it in concert.<lb/>
A bouncy, self-parody about<lb/>
enlightenment, the folk guitar<lb/>
and rock drumbeat got even the<lb/>
bitter, cynical drunks in clubs<lb/>
dancing. My favorite line is still<lb/>
"Enemy planes in the comic books<lb/>
go Buddah, buddah, buddah<lb/>
3 Rock Box ? Run D.M.C If<lb/>
not the first synthesis of metal and<lb/>
rap, the very best. The homeboys<lb/>
are still trving to live up to the<lb/>
genius oi their first crossover hit.<lb/>
Still a valid song after so many<lb/>
years (one of the most frequent<lb/>
criticisms oi rap), the songs mes-<lb/>
sage is simple and the groove just<lb/>
plain wicked. Also it's the one rap<lb/>
1 know all the words to, and have<lb/>
proven it at several parties.<lb/>
3 12. "Rock me Amadeus" ?<lb/>
Falco. 90 of this song sucks, but<lb/>
the chorus on the 12-inch mix has<lb/>
those girls singing some German<lb/>
words 1 can't understand and<lb/>
then going "ayyyeeeyiiiieeee" in<lb/>
a really fixin' way.<lb/>
4. "If You Love Me Let Me<lb/>
Know" ? Olivia Newton-John.<lb/>
Yeah laugh, but 1 heard it again<lb/>
the other day and was blown<lb/>
away. If you can get your voice as<lb/>
deep as the back-up singer's then<lb/>
you can smirk all you want.<lb/>
If not, the just chill out and lis-<lb/>
ten to that country-pop hook.<lb/>
Olivia's voice won't put Whitney<lb/>
out of a job, but it was okay foi the<lb/>
70s.<lb/>
5. "Think" ? Aretha Franklin.<lb/>
The ultimate in "Boy, you better<lb/>
shape up soul songs. The scene<lb/>
in 'The Blues Brothers" where she<lb/>
has it out with her husband in her<lb/>
diner, complete with soda-sip-<lb/>
ping, back-up singers will live<lb/>
forever in celluloid history. (This<lb/>
is Earlvis personal favorite)<lb/>
See BONEHEAD, page 14<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0015"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
f<lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1,1988<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
TV show, a vigilante dream<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Fahrenheit 451 is Ray<lb/>
Bradbury's classic tale of a future<lb/>
America in which mere posses-<lb/>
sion books is highly illegal. Its<lb/>
hero, Guy Montag, at first sup- toward Gne who killed for per-<lb/>
ports the Establishment but later sona profit,<lb/>
rebels against it. In the end Mon- On the omer hand, shades<lb/>
tag kills a man who represents all of Montag's run through the city<lb/>
that Montag had come to hate run through my mind. While I<lb/>
about his society, and he is forced have no doubt that our iegai sys.<lb/>
with this evidence . infringement on Fifth Amend-<lb/>
The viewer knows further ment rights. It is, simply, that this<lb/>
that the suspect is avoiding the show is popular-and its popular-<lb/>
police (which suggests, though it ity is growing. America's Most<lb/>
is not evidence of, guilt). Cer- Wanted is a reflection of - and, I<lb/>
tainly we feel more kindly dis- suspect, a contribution to - the<lb/>
posed toward a man who killed vigilante-style mentality that has<lb/>
for literary freedom than we do been growing in popularity in this<lb/>
to flee.<lb/>
Montag is considered such<lb/>
a dangerous criminal that the<lb/>
entire city is awakened in the<lb/>
middle of the night to watch the<lb/>
chase. Eventually, the populace is<lb/>
encouraged to throw open its<lb/>
doors and watch for Montag in<lb/>
the hope that one of them isbound traCking a man?down like a dog<lb/>
to spot him. Surely the more people who are<lb/>
And this, in a way, is how I<lb/>
country.<lb/>
America's Most Wanted is<lb/>
popular because it makes the<lb/>
American citizen a police infor-<lb/>
mant. It gives him a sense of strik-<lb/>
ing a blow against a crime situ-<lb/>
tem does a good job, it is not and ation that he feels is hopelessly<lb/>
cannot be perfect. Is it not possible out of control. And perhaps it<lb/>
that this show could be partly gives him a sense of added secu-<lb/>
responsible for sending an inno- rity.<lb/>
cent man to prison? Or, worse yet, But America's Most<lb/>
to the electric chair? Wanted won't make crime go<lb/>
I also have serious qualms away. Nor, I suspect, will it make<lb/>
about involving the populace in crime any less prevalent. And<lb/>
see the television show America's<lb/>
Most Wanted. I've spent a lot of<lb/>
time pondering my feelings about<lb/>
this show, and I still can't quite<lb/>
decide what to think.<lb/>
On the one hand, the men<lb/>
and women "featured" on the<lb/>
shown the face of the suspect, the<lb/>
more likely it would be that one of<lb/>
them would happen to know<lb/>
someone who looked an awful lot<lb/>
like the suspect.<lb/>
After all, everybody looks<lb/>
like somebody - I, for example,<lb/>
bear a strong resemblance to the<lb/>
show are accused of reprehen- Phantom of the Opera - and I fear<lb/>
sible crimes, usually murder or a that citizens could be detained for<lb/>
combination of murder and rape, the heinous crime of happening to<lb/>
And, though the presumption of look like this week's featured kil-<lb/>
innocence presumably prevails, ler.<lb/>
the viewer knows that there exists What worries me most,<lb/>
at least enough evidence to create though, is neither possibilities of<lb/>
suspicion of guilt and is presented mistaken identity nor possible<lb/>
The Bonehead top 9<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
6. "Hey, Hey What Can I Do?"<lb/>
? Led Zcppplin. I never even<lb/>
liked Led Zepplin till I heard the<lb/>
flip side of "The Immigrant<lb/>
Song The little ditty about a<lb/>
"woman who won't be true" is<lb/>
quintessential Zepplin.<lb/>
It has guitars, screams and<lb/>
some killer back-up singers. Hey,<lb/>
hey, what can 1 say?<lb/>
7. "Kiss Me Deadly" ? Lita<lb/>
Ford. Lita IS pretty much dain<lb/>
bread, but soaring guitars, growl-<lb/>
ing vocals and lyrics that are just<lb/>
the damn story of my life make it<lb/>
for me.<lb/>
The acapella opening lines, "I<lb/>
went to a party last Saturday<lb/>
night I didn't get laid, I got in a<lb/>
fight L'hn-uh  It ain't no big<lb/>
thang just send chills up and<lb/>
down my spine. Strangely<lb/>
enough, no back-up singers. 45s<lb/>
are dead.<lb/>
8. "You Better, You Bet" ? The<lb/>
Who. A great song about getting<lb/>
laid, and a song who's meaning<lb/>
made it past my mom when I<lb/>
asked her to buy it for me. I don't<lb/>
think she realized what "welcom-<lb/>
ing me with open arms  and<lb/>
open legs" meant. It's really the<lb/>
last good thing the Who did, and<lb/>
if they'd stopped after this song, I<lb/>
might be more excited about their<lb/>
upcoming reunion.<lb/>
9. "You Can't Always Get What<lb/>
You Want" ?The Rolling Stones.<lb/>
Maybe the most gothic of their<lb/>
songs and almost overproduced,<lb/>
but it skirts that fine line neatly.<lb/>
From the choir singing at the<lb/>
beginning to the guitar solo at the<lb/>
end, there's not a moment on this<lb/>
song that's wasted.<lb/>
So there you have it. As you can<lb/>
see, I'm a big fan of back-up sing-<lb/>
ers. I almost made it a top ten so I<lb/>
could include Kim Wilde's re-<lb/>
make of "Keep Me Hanging On"<lb/>
for the "wooo-wooo" back-ups.<lb/>
No doubt I will end up being a<lb/>
studio back-up singer when I<lb/>
grow up.<lb/>
It's kind of ironic that "Rolling<lb/>
Stone" did a top 100 list of 45s, a<lb/>
product that will be dead in an-<lb/>
other year, replaced by the CD<lb/>
three-inch. This will kill scratch<lb/>
rapping and probably the three<lb/>
minute single.<lb/>
But to all of us who grew up,<lb/>
singing the chours of our favorite<lb/>
seven-inch pieces of vinyl  this<lb/>
column's for you. Next week:<lb/>
More of my regularly scheduled<lb/>
abuse.<lb/>
while the show has aided in the<lb/>
catching, and therefore in the<lb/>
convicting, of some criminals<lb/>
who might never have been<lb/>
caught or convicted without it,<lb/>
I'm still not convinced that it does<lb/>
more good than harm.<lb/>
If nothing else, a criminal<lb/>
who was featured on the show<lb/>
might go free by claiming that, as<lb/>
a result of the show, no jury could<lb/>
be unprejudiced. And before you<lb/>
treat this thought too lightly, note<lb/>
that this is one objection that has<lb/>
been raised to the upcomirg trial<lb/>
of one particularly photogenic<lb/>
suspect - Lt. Col. Oliver North.<lb/>
And one more thing: Guy<lb/>
Montag escaped. But his pursu-<lb/>
ers, realizing that Montag had<lb/>
eluded them, saved face by killing<lb/>
another man in his stead. Think<lb/>
about it.<lb/>
HE PIRATES<lb/>
BLAZE OF<lb/>
PURPLE AND GOLD<lb/>
? V"<lb/>
Pirate Raggs Available<lb/>
At UBE, ECU Student<lb/>
Store, Pirates Chest and<lb/>
Concession Stands At<lb/>
The Game.<lb/>
ew St<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
500 W Greenville Bivcl<lb/>
Pictured here are the Connells, Michael Connell, George Huntley,<lb/>
Doug MacMilan, David Connell, and Peele Wimberley. Compared to<lb/>
the Smithsand Simon and Garfunkcl, the Connells bring their melodic<lb/>
collection of folk-rock to the Attic Friday night.<lb/>
Originating from the rock and roll town of Raleigh (more satire), the<lb/>
Connells were voted the best new local band in the Spectator's 'Best in<lb/>
the Triangle in 1988.<lb/>
Their second album, Boylan Heights (named after a Raleigh Mrect)<lb/>
has earned critical acclaim both in the U.S. and over seas in England. At<lb/>
one time the record ranked second on many college radio station c harts.<lb/>
Expect some guitar lickings in originals, "OT Squared" and bagpipe<lb/>
sounding six-string in "Scotty's Lament Cover songs include, a blast-<lb/>
ing Alice Cooper tune "I'm Eighteen" and a Doors tune here and there.<lb/>
Besides being compared to every band ever, save Led Zeppeb n, the<lb/>
Connells are said to sound like early REM. You remember early REM<lb/>
and the music they played before they SOLD OUT. If this comparsion<lb/>
is true,this features editor looks forward to seeing the proof Friday<lb/>
nishL<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
"We're doing our<lb/>
part to meet the<lb/>
student's budget"<lb/>
ECU Students Get 10 Off With I.D.<lb/>
LUNCH DINNER<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
Help Yourself Home Cooking<lb/>
?? All You Care To Eat! v?<lb/>
vr One Low Price Does It All!<lb/>
$4<lb/>
fit<lb/>
49)<lb/>
Entrees ? Dessert ? Salad Bar ? Vegetables ? Drinks<lb/>
Great Food Within Your College Budget<lb/>
Entertainment This Month<lb/>
September<lb/>
Thurs1Deadhead Jam<lb/>
Fri2Stingrays<lb/>
Sat3Pattersons (Tennessee SoulR&amp;B)<lb/>
Wed7Open Mic Nite<lb/>
Thurs8Deadhead Jam<lb/>
Fri9Mike Lightnin' Wells<lb/>
Sat10Boomers<lb/>
Wed14Open Mic Nite<lb/>
Thurs15Deadhead Jam<lb/>
Fri16Blues Defenders<lb/>
Sat17Liquid Sound<lb/>
Wed21Open Mic Nite<lb/>
Thurs22Deadhead Jam<lb/>
Fri23Knockedout Loaded<lb/>
Sat24Slurpeeeee (Formerly Soul Train)<lb/>
Wed28Open Mic Nile<lb/>
Thurs29Deadhead Jam<lb/>
Fri30TBA<lb/>
SatOctlBad Bob &amp; The Rockin Horses<lb/>
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September 6, 7, 8<lb/>
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Across From Wendy's<lb/>
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?<lb/>
year ago, I reviewed the just-<lb/>
mien ng "Star Trek: The Next<lb/>
cration" with misgivings.<lb/>
w, will a full season behind<lb/>
a new one ahead, I hate to sav<lb/>
se doubts remain. "Star Trek<lb/>
Next Generation" has vet to<lb/>
the federation bX)ts of the<lb/>
inal series.<lb/>
Ironically, this failure seems<lb/>
in part to Gene Roddenberry<lb/>
tuation with his first bom<lb/>
s gone to extremes to make<lb/>
e the "Next Generation" 1 -<lb/>
?the original series in his<lb/>
e of col r, set, and format.<lb/>
fhat Roddenberry has for.<lb/>
is that 20-plus years have<lb/>
sed not only for "Star Trek<lb/>
all television as well The<lb/>
ry-hook i ilors and obviously<lb/>
stic indoor "outdoors" - I<lb/>
rked well and were the norm<lb/>
row's Ne<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
clrs. Browning recalls crowded<lb/>
it ;hts especially around Hallow-<lb/>
and after football games.<lb/>
re always busy the night of<lb/>
fc )tball games, win or lose she<lb/>
sa d. It was on one such crow<lb/>
 ening that those gatr<lb/>
te rned of the tragic plane rr i<lb/>
w uch killed the Marshall I<lb/>
te im the very night ECU had<lb/>
p ived them.<lb/>
'The television program .<lb/>
ir errupted and everyone ins<lb/>
lc irned of the accident said 1<lb/>
B owning. She added that<lb/>
ti les were not commonp<lb/>
r) wevcr, and said that the g<lb/>
ti e outweighed the bad I<lb/>
"he Brownings have not all<lb/>
tc ;ethcr laid down their spatulas,<lb/>
Jteuals spee<lb/>
p sound,<lb/>
hit the road<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
Pifik Floyd's "Wish You Were<lb/>
Hfcre" before turning around and<lb/>
5t: apping on a green six-string I -<lb/>
H sndrix's "All Along the Watch<lb/>
lower<lb/>
Dickenson "made it easier for<lb/>
to play, he picks songs up r<lb/>
a ray Madison said about the<lb/>
itanst who joined the ba<lb/>
ei ;ht months ago.<lb/>
Their album "Nothing to Feai<lb/>
But Life Itself which<lb/>
ined what Madison once<lb/>
xibed as 'scary music <lb/>
lessage is only beginn<lb/>
le Usuals' originals cuts K '<lb/>
?n says he has six new or<lb/>
1st waiting to be perfectc if rgi<lb/>
av.<lb/>
Off their first recording<lb/>
ibva a track co-w:<lb/>
ichael Fletcher and Mad I<lb/>
iich adventures into the land q<lb/>
?onsm, flving there via e<lb/>
litars and bombing with a bac<lb/>
Kuncing beat "Fletch<lb/>
?ote that song two montl s I<lb/>
re Reagan sent the planes,<lb/>
fcdison said oi the song I -<lb/>
fc of those weird thir<lb/>
It's now 10:30 and Samr<lb/>
,nching on a mid-m -j<lb/>
cakfast oi nachos and pica <lb/>
uce left over from the nig!<lb/>
fore. His eves, still tinad -<lb/>
the light of the day, stare<lb/>
sliding glass door as he CO<lb/>
iplates a week of travel on th<lb/>
?en road.<lb/>
'We are booked five n<lb/>
ek for the next couple<lb/>
nths. This week we travel t<lb/>
apel Hill and then to Naj<lb/>
fad and then back to Chapj<lb/>
111 Madison says<lb/>
On the road, the band trie-<lb/>
the seemingly endless ga<lb/>
:ween the horizon of paintJ<lb/>
I tted lines. As Madison rea.<lb/>
'Jen and the Art of Motorcvc<lb/>
tintenance Stutts beats tl<lb/>
(t ?ering wheel oi the van like<lb/>
?re a bongo.<lb/>
Bored in the passenger's se.<lb/>
mute Cain bends a dnnku<lb/>
aw and mounts the just create<lb/>
N sketball rim on the van's coj<lb/>
e. Taking a roll of duct taj<lb/>
iich no band is without, ti<lb/>
?ist balls a gob of the silvj<lb/>
e to form a basketball.<lb/>
rhrowing the ball to Dickens<lb/>
1 le back seat, he says "Hey ma<lb/>
ike a three-pointer<lb/>
Inbetween criss-crossing 0<lb/>
tate and the southeast, Madi;<lb/>
lid the band has made a teni<lb/>
lively date to play at the TKE a<lb/>
arty on September 16.<lb/>
Maybe by then Dickenson wl<lb/>
able to convert a three-pointe1<lb/>
It<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0016"/><lb/>
PIRATES<lb/>
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Tllli FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEFTHMBCR 1, 1988 15<lb/>
New Star Trek show has misgivings<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
SUH Writer<lb/>
A ear ago, 1 reviewed the just-<lb/>
remiering "Star Trek: The Next<lb/>
eneration" with misgivings.<lb/>
,nv will a full season behind<lb/>
and a new one ahead, 1 hate to say<lb/>
se doubts remain. "Star Trek:<lb/>
ic Next Generation" has vet to<lb/>
the federation boots or the<lb/>
riginal series.<lb/>
Ironically, this failure seems<lb/>
n part to Gene Roddenberry<lb/>
infatuation with his first born.<lb/>
! s gone to extremes to make<lb/>
re the Next Generation" looks<lb/>
ke the original series in his<lb/>
ko of color, set, and format.<lb/>
a hat Roddenberry has forgot-<lb/>
i n is that 20-plus years have<lb/>
ssed not onlv for "Star Trek"<lb/>
I all television as well. The<lb/>
book colors and obviously<lb/>
i-nc indoor "outdoors" sets<lb/>
?ked well and were the norm<lb/>
in the 's simply because color<lb/>
was new and audiences had no<lb/>
other frame of reference. Today,<lb/>
they're as obsolete as the NBC<lb/>
peacock.<lb/>
ambiguity and hence any poten-<lb/>
tial for moral dilemma. This may<lb/>
make for easy audience accessi-<lb/>
bility (we know wh6 the good<lb/>
guys are; the only thing missing is<lb/>
a white hat) but the end result is<lb/>
The episodic format is also<lb/>
annoving today. Again, following something akin to having Charlie<lb/>
the typical '60's TV format, the GaddV and the Action ;<lb/>
original Trek was guilty of having<lb/>
Kirk fall deeply in love with Edith<lb/>
keeler, see her die, then never<lb/>
mention her once over the next<lb/>
episode (or the next two years); in<lb/>
"The Next Generation Lt. Yar<lb/>
New<lb/>
Team man the Enterprise.<lb/>
For contrast, consider the char-<lb/>
acters of "Blake's 7 a British sci-<lb/>
ence-fiction series airing Satur-<lb/>
day nights on PBS. Although the<lb/>
special effects arc pitiful corn-<lb/>
dies and is conveniently forgotten pared to the new (or old, for that<lb/>
next week. matter) "Star Trek's the charac-<lb/>
Charactcr development is ham- tcrization is light years ahead of<lb/>
pered without continuity, and "The Next Generation<lb/>
this brings us to "The Next Gen- The shifty Avon, cowardly<lb/>
orations" mostgrieviousflaw: the Villa, egotistical Tarrant, and<lb/>
characters are bland to the point impudent Dayna are all flawed<lb/>
of being generic. Everybody is individuals as apt to act selfishin-<lb/>
just so stinking nice! They all get shly as hcriocally. They are also<lb/>
along too well. more interesting and likable due<lb/>
This valium-injected character- to these flaws than the flawless<lb/>
iztion cancels out any moral philanthropists aboard the Enter-<lb/>
prise.<lb/>
Avon alone is a more wonder-<lb/>
fully complex creation than any to<lb/>
walk across Roddenberrys refur-<lb/>
bished starship bridge. Of course,<lb/>
the original "Star Trek" had char-<lb/>
acters of depth, but in his rush to<lb/>
imitate form and not substance,<lb/>
Roddenberry seems to have for-<lb/>
gotten this. The new characters<lb/>
(except Will Wheaton's Wesley.<lb/>
The sooner he's shoved in a black<lb/>
hole, the better) have potential.<lb/>
But sadly, we were made a ware<lb/>
of how little it has been realized in<lb/>
"Skin of Evil" when Lt. Yar dies.<lb/>
Although the episode itself was<lb/>
one of a thimblcfull that managed<lb/>
to capture the essence of the origi-<lb/>
nal series (the other two being<lb/>
"Haven" and the new Trek's<lb/>
Shining Moment: "Conspiracy"),<lb/>
Yar's eulogy had no resonance<lb/>
because the characters' interac-<lb/>
tion and development have been<lb/>
superficial at best.<lb/>
Now I'm not suggesting that<lb/>
"Star Trek: The Next Generation"<lb/>
turns into a futuristic "thirtysom-<lb/>
ething" of wimps in space, lt is,<lb/>
after all, adventure show (al-<lb/>
though "the Next Generation"<lb/>
has been severely weak in the<lb/>
action dept. as well). But conflicts<lb/>
should mean something, and they<lb/>
mean less that nothing when no<lb/>
one cares about the people in-<lb/>
volved.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
Plaza Shopping Or 756 0084<lb/>
Now Shotting<lb/>
STEALING HOME<lb/>
NIGHTMARE ON<lb/>
ELM ST. PART IV<lb/>
COCKTAIL<lb/>
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Now Showing<lb/>
WILLOW<lb/>
Crow's Nest owner recalls special nights<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
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RATED R YOUNG GUNS<lb/>
1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20<lb/>
Continued from page 13 for Mr. Browning, who hasappar- EvcnthoughThcCrow'sNestis<lb/>
Mrs. Browning recalls crowded 0ntly turned his efforts towards closed and the building is to be<lb/>
'specially around Hallow- hot dogs, is affiliated with a new leveled, many patrons have ac-<lb/>
restaurant on highway 17 in quired memorabilia in order to<lb/>
Jacksonville appropriately jog their memories. At least two<lb/>
named The Hot Diggidy Dog. He people have bought the tables<lb/>
takes with him the warmth and<lb/>
smiles of many years well spent at<lb/>
The Crow's Nest.<lb/>
i n and after football games. "We<lb/>
a ;re always busy the night of<lb/>
ill games, win or lose she<lb/>
f ij. It was on one such crowded<lb/>
evening that those gathered<lb/>
3 le imed of the tragic plane crash<lb/>
 - h killed the Marshall football<lb/>
j ? im the very night ECU had<lb/>
ived them.<lb/>
he television program was<lb/>
in errupted and everyone inside<lb/>
k le irned of the accident said Mrs.<lb/>
jf B owning. She added that bad<lb/>
I ri fies were not commonplace,<lb/>
f .sever, and said that the good<lb/>
ti no outweighed the bad tenfold.<lb/>
Brownings have not all<lb/>
L 'her laid down their spatulas,<lb/>
t Isuals speed<lb/>
up sound,<lb/>
hit the road<lb/>
they always dines at and many<lb/>
others have bought Crow's Nest<lb/>
aprons, menus, serving trays<lb/>
along with beer signs, I'irate pic-<lb/>
tures, lanterns, mapkin holders<lb/>
and salt and pepper shakers.<lb/>
Even though many ot the inte-<lb/>
rior furnishings have been sold,<lb/>
many tables and chairs still re-<lb/>
main. Perspective buvcrs should<lb/>
call 756-4194 or 752-6311.<lb/>
RA'i ED PC.<lb/>
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RATED PG 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00<lb/>
<lb/>
OoenTheBook<lb/>
That Solves Problems<lb/>
w<lb/>
m<lb/>
Wk<lb/>
. Continued from page 13<lb/>
file Floyd's "Wish You Were<lb/>
rtere" before turning around and<lb/>
r pping on a green six-string for<lb/>
ndrix's "All Along the Watch-<lb/>
r<lb/>
kenson "made it easier for<lb/>
- play, he picks songs up right<lb/>
 . Madison said about the<lb/>
rist who joined the band<lb/>
I ? months ago.<lb/>
ir album "Nothing to Fear<lb/>
ut Life Itself' which con-<lb/>
1 j what Madison once de-<lb/>
; tcd as "scary music with a<lb/>
i sage is only beginning of<lb/>
i suals' originals cuts. Madi-<lb/>
ays he has six new originals<lb/>
?. siting to be perfected tor gig<lb/>
I<lb/>
()ff their first recording comes<lb/>
a track co-written by<lb/>
lei Fletcher and Madison-<lb/>
h adventures into the land of<lb/>
fan rism, flying there via evil<lb/>
rs and bombing with a back-<lb/>
 incing beat. "Retch and 1<lb/>
Jr v that song two months be-<lb/>
)? Reagan sent the planes<lb/>
, n said of the song, "it's just<lb/>
ol those weird things<lb/>
It's now 10:30 and Sammy is<lb/>
inching on a mid-morning<lb/>
? fast oi nachos and picante<lb/>
uce left over from the night<lb/>
re His eves, still unadjusted<lb/>
light of the day, stare out of<lb/>
E sliding glass door as he con-<lb/>
lates a week oi travel on the<lb/>
rn road.<lb/>
e are booked five nights a<lb/>
;vk for the next couple of<lb/>
nths. This week we travel to<lb/>
ipel Hill and then to Nags<lb/>
ad and then back to Chapel<lb/>
11 Madison says.<lb/>
On the road, the band tries to<lb/>
the seemingly endless gap<lb/>
N tween the horizon of painted<lb/>
lotted lines. As Madison reads<lb/>
en and the Art of Motorcycle<lb/>
Vaintcnance Stutts beats the<lb/>
l ienng wheel of the van like it<lb/>
re a bongo.<lb/>
Bored in the passenger's seat,<lb/>
' anute Cain bends a drinking<lb/>
? aw and mounts the just created<lb/>
i skctball rim on the van's con-<lb/>
ic Taking a roll of duct tape,<lb/>
? iich no band is without, the<lb/>
be ssist balls a gob of the silver<lb/>
tato form a basketball.<lb/>
ITirowing the ball to Dickcnson<lb/>
irJthe back seat, he says "Hey man<lb/>
take a three-pointer<lb/>
Inbetween criss-crossing the<lb/>
?tate and the southeast, Madison<lb/>
viid the band has made a tenta-<lb/>
tively date to play at theTKE lawn<lb/>
party on September 16.<lb/>
Maybe by then Dickcnson will<lb/>
be able to convert a three-pointer.<lb/>
m<lb/>
5?<lb/>
Oo<lb/>
V<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058089_0017"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
V<lb/>
16<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1,1988<lb/>
The incredible animal half page<lb/>
Alligators look like dead meat<lb/>
CORKSCREW, Ha. (AP) ?<lb/>
Drawn by adventure and hopes of<lb/>
big profits. Florida's 238 newly<lb/>
licensed alligator hunters are get-<lb/>
ting ready to begin the state's first<lb/>
legal gator hunt in 26 years.<lb/>
More than 5,000 novice and<lb/>
skilled hunters alike scrambled to<lb/>
apply for the permits after game<lb/>
officials announced the hunt,<lb/>
designed to trim an alligator<lb/>
population that was once threat-<lb/>
ened by poachers but is now an<lb/>
estimated at 1 million.<lb/>
Wide-eyed amateurs will be<lb/>
stalking freshwater swamps,<lb/>
lakes and streams with hopes of<lb/>
cashing in on their catch, which<lb/>
can bring as much as $1,000 for a<lb/>
10-foot gator's skin and meat.<lb/>
But some experts are wonder-<lb/>
ing if the permit holders really<lb/>
know what they're in for.<lb/>
"You got to laugh when you<lb/>
hear these people say they're<lb/>
going to make money off this<lb/>
hunt said 37-year-old Dale<lb/>
Dunaway, who operates one of<lb/>
florida's few alligator processing<lb/>
plants.<lb/>
"They don't figure in the time,<lb/>
expenses ? and don't forget the<lb/>
danger Dunaway said Tuesday.<lb/>
TdTike to see some people's faces<lb/>
the first time a gator takes a bite at<lb/>
their airboat<lb/>
For 30 days beginning at sunset<lb/>
Thursday, the randomly selected<lb/>
permit holders will be allowed to<lb/>
hunt in designated areas where<lb/>
the gator population is<lb/>
extraordinarily high.<lb/>
Waterfront resident all over<lb/>
Florida called for a hunt against<lb/>
the carnivorous reptiles after a 10<lb/>
12?foot bull gator killed 4-year<lb/>
-old Erin Glover in the Gulf Coast<lb/>
community of Englewood in<lb/>
June.<lb/>
But game officials have placed<lb/>
tight restrictions on the hunt.<lb/>
PErmit holders will be working at<lb/>
night, when flashlights make the<lb/>
reptiles' eye glow eerily red. And<lb/>
they are not allowed to use guns,<lb/>
relying on clubs, traps and hooks<lb/>
attached to poles.<lb/>
The harvest is limited to up to<lb/>
3,435 gators, with each hunter<lb/>
limited to 15 gators each.<lb/>
"We expect to be ud non-stOD<lb/>
from Thursday until about Mon-<lb/>
day, either skinning or hunting<lb/>
Dunaway said at his 2-year-old<lb/>
processing operation in this re-<lb/>
mote southwest Florida town.<lb/>
"We're gonna be looking at a lot of<lb/>
dead gators<lb/>
Skinning an average alligator is<lb/>
a full day's work, Dunaway reck-<lb/>
ons.<lb/>
First he plunges his hunting<lb/>
knife through the gator's thick<lb/>
hide at the tip of it tail. Then, it's a<lb/>
slow and difficult cut to the snout.<lb/>
"You got to look at it as an hour<lb/>
a foot to properly skin and gut a<lb/>
gator said Dunaway. "There's<lb/>
no way around it. It's hard work,<lb/>
you bet<lb/>
Some of the experienced hunt-<lb/>
ers will be permitted to use the<lb/>
equipment at the gator house, a<lb/>
cement frame enclosed by screen<lb/>
wire and decorated by deer ant-<lb/>
lers.<lb/>
But the novice trappers will<lb/>
have to sit and watch their catch<lb/>
be pried apart.<lb/>
Alligators are cut up the back to<lb/>
preserve the valuable hide cover-<lb/>
ing the belly and underarms, said<lb/>
Dunaway. The hide, which sells<lb/>
for about $42 a foot to foreign<lb/>
manufacturers, is submerged in a<lb/>
brine solution for about a week.<lb/>
The excess flesh is then scraped<lb/>
off and the skin is sun dried.<lb/>
"And we bury the innards as far<lb/>
away as possible said Dunaway.<lb/>
"They got a powerful smell and if<lb/>
you ever cut open the stomach<lb/>
you better start running<lb/>
The meat, which Dunaway says<lb/>
makes a nice addition to spaghetti<lb/>
sauce, must be frozen within<lb/>
hours after the alligator is killed.<lb/>
Turbo pig wins the 10th annual race at Pork Chop Downs<lb/>
COLUMBUS, OHIO (AP)?<lb/>
The Swine Arena on the Ohio<lb/>
State Fairgrounds became Pork<lb/>
Chop Downs as 15 pigs saun-<lb/>
tered, sprinted and stumbled<lb/>
toward the finish line a slop<lb/>
trough in the 10th annual pig race.<lb/>
The winner was Turbo Pig,<lb/>
whose time of 3.9 seconds shaved<lb/>
more than a second off the 2.7-<lb/>
second mark set last year by<lb/>
Squealing Demon.<lb/>
Three hogs painted with or-<lb/>
ange, green and blue racing<lb/>
stripes competed in the first of<lb/>
nine heats Thursday. It was a<lb/>
close race until Joan Jett and Slop<lb/>
Buster collided halfway down the<lb/>
50-foot track.<lb/>
Seizing the opportunity, Al-<lb/>
berto Clipper won it by a snout,<lb/>
clocking in at 4.4 seconds.<lb/>
Other first-round winners were<lb/>
eventual champ Turbo Pig, Boar-<lb/>
ing Down, Fried Bacon, New Deal<lb/>
Charlie, Burning Buns, Crisp<lb/>
Cutlet, Calvin Swine and Bugsy.<lb/>
Second-round eliminations<lb/>
narrowed the field to Boaring<lb/>
Down, New Deal Charlie, Burn-<lb/>
ing Buns and Turbo Pig.<lb/>
As anticipation grew and ver-<lb/>
bal bets were placed, Turbo Pig<lb/>
broke loose from the starting gate<lb/>
and headed for the feed trough.<lb/>
Race action was stalled until five<lb/>
officials cornered the pig and cor-<lb/>
ralled him into the starting gate.<lb/>
With all four pigs in place, the<lb/>
starting bell sounded.<lb/>
Burning Buns took the early<lb/>
lead but squealed and slowed<lb/>
down as Boaring Down darted in<lb/>
front of him. New Deal Charlie<lb/>
ran to the outside and stopped for<lb/>
a fraction of a second to check out<lb/>
the crowd. Turbo Pig took advan-<lb/>
tage of Charlie's curiosity, cross-<lb/>
ing the finish line to claim first<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Amy Herbkersman of Collins,<lb/>
who won $234 for Turbo Pig's<lb/>
performance, said she doesn't do<lb/>
anything special to prepare her<lb/>
hog for race day.<lb/>
"He's just a really fast pig she<lb/>
said. "I give him really good feed,<lb/>
but I don't train him much<lb/>
Under New Management<lb/>
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Stop cutting up cats, professor<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP)?An ani-<lb/>
mal rights group picketed on the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Greensboro campus tuesday<lb/>
night in an effort to get a professor<lb/>
to stop using cats and kittens in<lb/>
his work.<lb/>
About 30 protesters of the<lb/>
North CartMna NeKttfc<lb/>
mals contend the research con-<lb/>
ducted by psychology Professor<lb/>
James at 21<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
pretty good. It was very interest-<lb/>
ing said James.<lb/>
James' big personal project<lb/>
began with paperwork this sum-<lb/>
mer. He hopes to have everything<lb/>
completed by next year to lift an<lb/>
organization, HYPO , oft the<lb/>
ground. "HYPO" stands for<lb/>
"Help Young People Overcome<lb/>
"What I mean by HYPO is to<lb/>
overcome drugs and alcohol<lb/>
"This idea all comes from a guy<lb/>
who has gone through quite a few<lb/>
problems in his life with alcohol<lb/>
said James. "I want to try to get<lb/>
through to as many young people<lb/>
as I can who want to overcome<lb/>
drugs and alcohol. These young<lb/>
people have to grow up some-<lb/>
time<lb/>
When asked what he wants to<lb/>
do in the future, James said, "I<lb/>
want to repay God for all his bless-<lb/>
ings by helping other people is<lb/>
I'm able to be of service. I guess<lb/>
that's what I'm all about<lb/>
Walter Salinger is painful and<lb/>
stressful to the animals including<lb/>
altering their vision and that it has<lb/>
no known human application.<lb/>
UNCG officials said that<lb/>
Salinger's research benefits the<lb/>
understanding of a disease that<lb/>
affects about two percent of the<lb/>
million people<lb/>
"The benefits to humans make<lb/>
this research worthwhile. Other-<lb/>
wise, we wouldn't do it, " said<lb/>
Stephen Mosier, UNCG's director<lb/>
of research services, who said he<lb/>
spoke for Salinger and the univer-<lb/>
sity. "We don't torture animals,<lb/>
and we don't subject animals to<lb/>
pain. Just as human surgery is<lb/>
done under anesthesia, so is ani-<lb/>
mal, surgery, "<lb/>
;<lb/>
Mosier said he spoke for Salin-<lb/>
ger so that the professor could<lb/>
spend time on his teaching and<lb/>
research.<lb/>
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PHONE ORDERS: MasterCartWISA are accepted Call 1-800-3344095<lb/>
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SURVEYORS SUPPLY CQ, Q<lb/>
Hwy. 64 at Salem St ? Apex, N.C. 27502 ? 1-800-334-0095 ? (919) 362-7000<lb/>
ANNOUNCING<lb/>
Elections for Executive Officer's<lb/>
for the<lb/>
Student Residence Association<lb/>
Area Residence Councils<lb/>
Residence Hall House Councils<lb/>
September 13,1988<lb/>
Filing Dates Are September 6-8<lb/>
For more information and applications<lb/>
See Your Residence Hall Director<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
Video Concepts is<lb/>
offering Microwaves,<lb/>
Typewriters, Stereos,<lb/>
Vacuum Cleaners, TV's,<lb/>
VCR's, Calculators,<lb/>
Phones &amp; Camcorders at<lb/>
Factory Prices.<lb/>
Call Today, 24 Hours<lb/>
830-1787<lb/>
SIGMA PHI<lb/>
EPSILON<lb/>
a lifetime experience<lb/>
?ECU'S Largest Fraternity<lb/>
?Chancellor Cup Champs<lb/>
4 Years Running<lb/>
?2 Houses and a Party Room<lb/>
?Winner of Inter-Fraternity Council's<lb/>
"Most Outstanding Chapter Award"<lb/>
Located at the corner of 5th and Summit<lb/>
(across from Garrett Hall)<lb/>
Sept. 6 - Meet the Sorority Girls<lb/>
of Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
Sept. 7 - Meet the Sorority Girls<lb/>
of Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sept. 8 - Brothers and Rushees Only<lb/>
"The House With The Heart"<lb/>
Need A Ride or Have Any Questions? Call 757-0487<lb/>
Wide Selection of Calendars<lb/>
&amp;Local and Out of Town Newspapers<lb/>
Balloons For All Occasions<lb/>
CENTRAL BOOK<lb/>
GrMnvill Square Shopping Cnt?r ? 7S7177<lb/>
Opan TM 9 30 P.M. tmn Days A WMk<lb/>
idyice ColurA<lb/>
Fros<lb/>
Dear Big r<lb/>
lama freshmen girl livii<lb/>
dorms. I enjoy ECU,<lb/>
have to share myd rm ro<lb/>
: razed ? , <lb/>
hell<lb/>
( ?mii .? from a si<lb/>
c arolina town, I never<lb/>
enced what you pe ipleat<lb/>
Carolinian call "The pa;<lb/>
and n i 1<lb/>
such devilish acti it) 1<lb/>
the bad reputation that I-l<lb/>
receivi ;rs<lb/>
wholesome ! iod I<lb/>
ran also attend tl<lb/>
out staying out all <lb/>
drunken stupor<lb/>
It ,? rted<lb/>
 irsl lei i<lb/>
mate. She I<lb/>
hair w<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
'Squin<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SOTEMBCR 1, lV8fe 17<lb/>
<lb/>
Advice Column<lb/>
Frosh roommate problems<lb/>
Dear Big E,<lb/>
1 am a freshmen girl living in the<lb/>
dorms. I enjoy ECU, except that 1<lb/>
have to share mv dorm room with<lb/>
a crazed sinner who 1 am oon-<lb/>
 inced i going to hell.<lb/>
Coming from a small N rth<lb/>
Carolina town, 1 never experi-<lb/>
enced what you people at the East<lb/>
Carolinian call "The party life"<lb/>
and nor do 1 care to partake in<lb/>
such devilish activity. 1 know of<lb/>
the bad reputation that ECU has<lb/>
received over the years, but 1 feel<lb/>
wholesome God-fearing people<lb/>
can also attend this school with-<lb/>
out staving out all night in a<lb/>
drunken stupor.<lb/>
It all started on the first day of<lb/>
school when we were moving in.<lb/>
1 ;irst let me describe my room-<lb/>
mate. She has bleached-blond<lb/>
hair which is spiked at the top.<lb/>
She wears nothing but tight<lb/>
loans and navel showing tops. She<lb/>
applies her make-up with a paint<lb/>
brush. On top of that she can<lb/>
quote every Poison song ever<lb/>
written.<lb/>
But it gets worse. She chews<lb/>
with her mouth open and often<lb/>
speaks with a full mouth of food.<lb/>
I can't stand people who chew<lb/>
with their mouth open. Ven ot sin-The Elbo. 1 just put in you think.<lb/>
Anyway, she was carrying a my ear plugs and try not to imag- 1 don't propose you forget<lb/>
suit case full of her slutty looking inc what they are doing. your self identity and become a<lb/>
clothes through the doorway and The following day, which is hell raiser, 1 just think it's time for<lb/>
muttering obscenities whcn'l first every day, she sleeps through all you to see the perspective of oth-<lb/>
laid eyes on her. Before even in- her classes and wakes up about crs. In my eight years ot college, 1<lb/>
two in the afternoon to smoke have learned much from other -<lb/>
marijuana. once thought to be weird and dif-<lb/>
Scriously, I have tried every- fcrcnt-people,<lb/>
thing. I have read scripture to her. On the other side of the porta-<lb/>
1 have read Revelations to her and John, I think you need to heed the<lb/>
East Carolinian under siege<lb/>
over buxom cartoon<lb/>
troducing herself, she said "It<lb/>
never gets this (obscenity) hot up<lb/>
Just Ask<lb/>
BigE<lb/>
in Jersey<lb/>
At that point 1 knew that God<lb/>
had placed this dirty, vile<lb/>
mouthed Yankee in my sight for a<lb/>
reason. HE was testing my claim.<lb/>
She comes in every morning<lb/>
about 4 a.m loud as can be and<lb/>
sometimes with something she<lb/>
has dragged home from that ha-<lb/>
told her that she needs to repent<lb/>
from eternal damnation, but she<lb/>
just laughs and turns up Toison.<lb/>
I have talked to my RA and to<lb/>
the people in the housing depart-<lb/>
ment. They say that there are no<lb/>
rooms open and that I will have to<lb/>
put up with the way it is. What can<lb/>
Ido?<lb/>
Signed, Tired of the Vile Yan-<lb/>
kee.<lb/>
Dear Yankee fan,<lb/>
Lighten up. Kids that have been<lb/>
held captive in their parent's<lb/>
home for 18 years ha vea tendency<lb/>
to explore unsought depths of<lb/>
banality once they come to col-<lb/>
lege Maybe you need to enter one<lb/>
of those what vou call "havens of<lb/>
sin" and see if it's as demonic as<lb/>
words of the great Pat Stevens<lb/>
who says "Take a look at yourself,<lb/>
have you looked at yourself, look<lb/>
at yourself Should you really<lb/>
inflict your beliefs on everyone<lb/>
who comes in contact with you.<lb/>
Although I do think you are<lb/>
taking this situation a little too far,<lb/>
I do agree with you on one issue. I<lb/>
hate when girls chew with their<lb/>
mouths open too.<lb/>
Gotta beef with your room-<lb/>
mate?, wish the wholeEast Caro-<lb/>
linian staff would go to hell?<lb/>
Tlink people use too much scato-<lb/>
logical language (consult dic-<lb/>
tionary)Drop me a line at:<lb/>
Earlvis<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
Emerald City, 27858-4353<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (BP) ?<lb/>
The East Carolinian, East Caro-<lb/>
lina University's student-run<lb/>
newspaper, has come under fire<lb/>
by women's rights groups for<lb/>
what they term "a blatantly sexist<lb/>
cartoon<lb/>
The cartoon, depicting a<lb/>
buxom female tied up by a pirate,<lb/>
was run on the front page of their<lb/>
Back to School" issue on August<lb/>
23. Dolores Ccllulite, head of<lb/>
Women Against Practically Evc-<lb/>
ything (WAPE) screamed Mon-<lb/>
day at a press conference, 'That<lb/>
paper is run by unwitting pawns<lb/>
of the patriarchal system<lb/>
The editorial staff of the news-<lb/>
paper could not be reached for<lb/>
omment. A terse statement is-<lb/>
sued Tuesday said only'Stop the<lb/>
madness<lb/>
Ccllulite and her group have<lb/>
tried to bring suit against the<lb/>
ety! Of course they threw it out!<lb/>
Any kind of social reform in this<lb/>
country is laughed right out o<lb/>
court Ccllulite cried out when<lb/>
questioned during the press con<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
When it was pointed out that<lb/>
one of the judges was a woman,<lb/>
Cellulite became incoherent and<lb/>
had to be sedated with 30 ocs o<lb/>
Valium.<lb/>
A BP opinion poll taken Sunday<lb/>
night, consisting exclusively of<lb/>
women, brought forth these star-<lb/>
tling results:<lb/>
25 of those responding<lb/>
thought the pirate was cute.<lb/>
5 thought the girl was cute.<lb/>
30 said they had always<lb/>
dreamed about being tied up.<lb/>
17 indicated they wished they<lb/>
were as buxom as the girl<lb/>
The remaining 23 replied tha<lb/>
?apcr and force it to shut down, they had no opinion about<lb/>
lie case has come before three bunch of purple lines arranged<lb/>
judges. Each one has thrown it out the bottom of hr,ironrMage of<lb/>
f court. some college rag in eastern NortI<lb/>
'Mon! Maldnminated soci- Carolina.<lb/>
'Squirrel many strikes once again<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (BP) ?<lb/>
(Irccnville's mysterious "squirrel<lb/>
man" has struck again!<lb/>
Three self-proclaimed "skate<lb/>
rats" were attacked in the parking<lb/>
lot of Eastbrook Apartments<lb/>
Wednesday night. Thirteen-year-<lb/>
old Bryan "Slash" Wheeler was<lb/>
killed in the first reported death<lb/>
caused by a six-foot tall human-<lb/>
oid squirrel that allegedly at-<lb/>
tacked two freshmen girls last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
The two surviving skate-<lb/>
boarders were released from Pitt<lb/>
County 1 lospital this morning.<lb/>
Police Chief Gordon O'Hara<lb/>
told reporters todavThe boy<lb/>
was cut up had. Looked like he'd<lb/>
been pushed through a blender<lb/>
on the puree setting<lb/>
Alex Cuervos, 12, told<lb/>
policeWe were doing some rad<lb/>
jumps off the curbs. Throwin' a<lb/>
few rocks at cars. Then, all oi a<lb/>
sudden this big hairy guy with a<lb/>
tail ran across the road on all<lb/>
fours<lb/>
"He bit Slash on the leg. Me and<lb/>
Tony tried to pull him off. The<lb/>
squirrel guy's teeth just pulled<lb/>
out a chunk of his leg when we<lb/>
finally got him off he said.<lb/>
O'Hara said Cuervos and the<lb/>
remaining survivor, Tony<lb/>
Bacardi, 13, pelted the creature<lb/>
with rocks. The squirrel man then<lb/>
ran back across Greenville Boule-<lb/>
vard, nearly missing being hit by a<lb/>
red Cadillac convertible.<lb/>
"Those kids did the smart thing.<lb/>
No squirrel, no matter how big, is<lb/>
gonna stick around to get hit by<lb/>
rocks he said.<lb/>
The two boys then attempted to<lb/>
pull their friend to the hospital on<lb/>
their skateboards. Wheeler was<lb/>
pronounced dead on arrival, due<lb/>
to excessive blood loss.<lb/>
O' Hara is filming public safety<lb/>
announcements that begin airing<lb/>
tonight. In them he gives advice<lb/>
for Greenville citizens that may<lb/>
run into the creature Don't walk<lb/>
alone. Carry rocks with you at all<lb/>
times<lb/>
During an interview, Dr. Thy-<lb/>
roid Glans stated his main con-<lb/>
cern. "This  thing may be in-<lb/>
fected with rabies. We have found<lb/>
no trace of it in the victims, but it<lb/>
is a possibility<lb/>
Glans had no specific theories<lb/>
concerning the origins of the<lb/>
squirrel man. "It may be some<lb/>
kind of mutation, or a missing<lb/>
link. Whatever it is, it's danger-<lb/>
ous<lb/>
O' Hara urges anyone with<lb/>
sightings of the creature, or infor-<lb/>
mation to call the Squirrel Man<lb/>
Hotline at 757-6366.<lb/>
Man harassed by the pizza men<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (EP)? if I didn't stop stuffing my face<lb/>
Once was funny, but after a week Whittley explains.<lb/>
Porter John Whittley was getting Following his doctor's advice,<lb/>
a little fed up with the practical he went on a strict diet of 500<lb/>
joke. calorics a dav which included<lb/>
Maybe fed up isn't the right "SaladandtofiiToday,Whittley<lb/>
words to describe Whittley's is at the normal weight of 155<lb/>
emotions You see, a practical pounds.<lb/>
joker has been sending food deli v- Pizza, submanne and sand<lb/>
ery men to Whittley's 5th street wich delivery men have been<lb/>
address for the last week. approaching the Whittley house<lb/>
"I just can't understand it, in herds. "At one time there were<lb/>
somebody has a sick sense of four of them at the door at one<lb/>
humor around here Whittley<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Whittley, a worker at a local<lb/>
tampon factory, says he is a vegi-<lb/>
tarian who gave up eating meat<lb/>
five years ago after a close call<lb/>
with death.<lb/>
'1 used to be a junk food junky<lb/>
time he said.<lb/>
Whittley said he is suffering<lb/>
from mental harassment becasue<lb/>
of the constant ringing of the door<lb/>
bell. "1 can't work, I can't sleep, ail<lb/>
I think about is food<lb/>
'I don't know if 1 can handle it<lb/>
 until I weighed almost 300<lb/>
Warning: Do not bug Campus poands and suffered from a con- smelling all this food brings back<lb/>
Security about this matter! Only dition of extreme cholesterol memories  Whittley said<lb/>
the Squirrel Hotline can help! jevcl My doctor said I would die hefore crying.<lb/>
BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE<lb/>
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Price Buster 2 J<lb/>
Large With <lb/>
Everything i<lb/>
Plus Tax<lb/>
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Expires 9-15-88<lb/>
Plus Ta c<lb/>
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CRUSTY'<lb/>
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CRUSTYSN !<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058089_0019"/><lb/>
K<lb/>
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I<lb/>
18 Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1, 1988<lb/>
"Womens be thinkin' too muchIke Turner, from his biography<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
<lb/>
By Friedrich Orpheus<lb/>
'itu A WSJ"1 ' Hi DCS GUI i' ; KAKt<lb/>
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1 DEATH ? I 'AIO<lb/>
AMSUtR<lb/>
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'NOT DEATH.<lb/>
But Loje "<lb/>
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-ELIZABETH 6At8(j8t0ijKl?6<lb/>
rfrtLDS WfeT' ITiH ? Agjf ' 57- . . ?T '<lb/>
$?. m. TC -R<lb/>
rf5lAMA?!WHAr<lb/>
7 i<lb/>
JnW-i.nJiL!<lb/>
By Gurganus and Harris<lb/>
prTD E A"D. N0NnACi<lb/>
"?-?KHOW THAT<lb/>
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L'ndercov er C ats<lb/>
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By Parker<lb/>
Bv ki in<lb/>
XX<lb/>
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'android<lb/>
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Inside lokt<lb/>
By Rik<lb/>
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T Harris .ind I Li<lb/>
krJE1;<lb/>
A 0. rViter's Talkie Skit <lb/>
?THE NEW-<lb/>
Avast, readers, and welcome to the NEW Pirate<lb/>
Comics and NEW Fun and Games. To celebrate<lb/>
our new look we're going do something unpre<lb/>
cedented on the comics page-let you actually<lb/>
SEE the Cartoonists! Crazy, eh?Now meet our<lb/>
very own version of The Cosby Kids so when<lb/>
you see them around campus you can form a<lb/>
mob and mob them. And for fun, help Elvis<lb/>
find his favorite snack, or the Memphis Mafia<lb/>
will be lookin' for ya. .droW<lb/>
Meet the Cartoon Gang!<lb/>
Overkill Orpheus<lb/>
Orpheus,<lb/>
The Avatar<lb/>
iw<lb/>
'6<lb/>
,Wf <lb/>
"?<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
BY DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sp ! -<lb/>
There are a v-<lb/>
between the E<lb/>
Golden Eaglesol<lb/>
! Thev both wear pun<lb/>
W<lb/>
Help Elvis Find the Peanut Butter and 'Nana Sandwich<lb/>
Faul "Dumb Donald" Friedrich<lb/>
The Law<lb/>
Tom "Russell" Gurganus<lb/>
The Avatar<lb/>
lohclx s raeer<lb/>
THIS AAiT<lb/>
GRACELAMD<lb/>
BUB! <lb/>
EQ<lb/>
'P<lb/>
ATi'cah "Weird Harold" Harris<lb/>
Inside Joke<lb/>
Elvis<lb/>
Fat Albert"<lb/>
Presley<lb/>
Undercover Cats<lb/>
Bondage Monthly<lb/>
jUJTBBj<lb/>
neT8Bew<lb/>
Y0 aBY.<lb/>
choice<lb/>
Steve "Bucky Reid<lb/>
A meal fit for a King!<lb/>
"Rudy" Haselrig<lb/>
Rik "Mushmouth" Elliot<lb/>
pr ? m<lb/>
Teff "Old Mudfoor" Parker<lb/>
Next Week:<lb/>
Because you demanded it-<lb/>
The Clint Howard Tribute<lb/>
<lb/>
East Carolina Fans hope t<lb/>
end when the Pirate's h?<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
Tennessee Tech at v I<lb/>
VirginaTech at Clec<lb/>
Tennessee at Georgia<lb/>
Louisville at Mai<lb/>
Duke at Northwestc<lb/>
North Carolina at S<lb/>
Temple at Syracuse<lb/>
Texas .UM at LSI<lb/>
San Piece State at I C<lb/>
Florida State at Miai<lb/>
Vikin<lb/>
(AH - Minnesota<lb/>
lerback ade ilson sa -<lb/>
ask to be traded it Tomm K<lb/>
isnanuxi to start Sunda - -<lb/>
opener in Buffalo.<lb/>
Wilson has been k -<lb/>
battle tor the si<lb/>
with Kramer since lead .<lb/>
Vikings to the Nati<lb/>
ence championship<lb/>
year with stunning p!a<lb/>
over New Orleans and<lb/>
Cisco<lb/>
Pirate's<lb/>
"1 -80<lb/>
B DOUGJOHNSO<lb/>
Sport iditor<lb/>
How many ot you ot<lb/>
have heard or seeij<lb/>
advcrtisments tor ECl w j<lb/>
the end proclaims that al<lb/>
who mav be inclined to J<lb/>
pursuaded bv the comnurj<lb/>
send moncv to the L'nivert<lb/>
purchase season tickets ma I<lb/>
by calling 1-800-HEL.r E(j<lb/>
show of hands, please.<lb/>
Well, regardless of w<lb/>
ou've heard it or not, rm<lb/>
try an make a point. Th<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0020"/><lb/>
??'?<lb/>
B Gureanusand Harris<lb/>
 Ki.in<lb/>
;t. - r.Quf f r v<lb/>
?tT ? ??? SLAPPf , i<lb/>
WOUND nRN '<lb/>
- : v )n<lb/>
nded it-<lb/>
Tribute<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1,1988 Page 19<lb/>
Pirates are ready to start football season<lb/>
BY DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
There are a lit ot similarities<lb/>
between the ECU Pirates and the<lb/>
Golden Eagles of Tennessee Tech.<lb/>
They both wear purple and gold<lb/>
uniforms. Thev bom utilize the<lb/>
run-and-shoot offense. And they<lb/>
both were 5-6 last season.<lb/>
This Saturday, these<lb/>
similarities won't mean anything.<lb/>
Both teams will be out to<lb/>
establish themselves, and to start<lb/>
the 1988 season with a win. No<lb/>
one is more ready for this than<lb/>
Pirate Head Coach Art Baker.<lb/>
"We're as anxious as any team in<lb/>
the country right now to get<lb/>
started he said during a press<lb/>
conference held at the Pirate's<lb/>
Club. "Our pre-season drills have<lb/>
been very productive, and I can<lb/>
say that we're ready to hit<lb/>
someone besides our<lb/>
teammates<lb/>
However, Baker is under no<lb/>
illusion that the task ahead will be<lb/>
an easy one. "Tennessee Tech is<lb/>
always a tough, hard-nosed<lb/>
football team he said. "They will<lb/>
be very ready to play us, I can<lb/>
promise you that. They always<lb/>
have good size and play with<lb/>
agressiveness<lb/>
"Coach (Jim) Ragland is a top-<lb/>
notch coach Baker added. "We<lb/>
have been friends a long time and<lb/>
I know that he'll have his troops<lb/>
prepared<lb/>
Other developments that may<lb/>
affect the Pirate's performance<lb/>
Saturday:<lb/>
Junior tailback Willie Lewisand<lb/>
senior rover Bryan Haywood,<lb/>
both starters last season, are listed<lb/>
as questionable for the contest<lb/>
with the Golden Eagles. Lewis has<lb/>
a strained groin, and Haywood is<lb/>
reported to have a slightly<lb/>
separated shoulder. Also, the<lb/>
question of who will perform the<lb/>
kicking and punting du ties for the<lb/>
School Officials would like to see a crowd of this magnitude at all ECU sporting events, but<lb/>
especially at this season's home opener. Come out and cheer for the Pirate's (File photo).<lb/>
Pirate's has been settled. Saturday's game. "We're looking numbered 35,047, on October 26,<lb/>
Sophomore Robb Imperato will for a big turnout from our fans this 1985, when the Pirate's hosted the<lb/>
be the place-kicker for Saturday's Saturday he said, "I think this Gamecocks of South Carolina,<lb/>
game, while redshirt freshman team is the type of team that will There are hopes that this home<lb/>
John Jett will do the punting. respond well to a big crowd opening game will shatter this<lb/>
Baker also expressed hopes that The largest crowd to ever see a record<lb/>
there would be a large turnout for football in Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
NFL, Rozelle crack down on drug abuse<lb/>
East Carolina Fans hope to see this sight often this week-<lb/>
end when the Pirate's host Tennessee Tech (File photo).<lb/>
(AP) - The question arose on<lb/>
July 26, when Pete Rozelle sus-<lb/>
pended Dexter Manley for 30<lb/>
preseason days for violating the<lb/>
NFL's susbatnee abuse policy for<lb/>
a second time.<lb/>
What's the penalty when all it<lb/>
docs is free Manley from two-a-<lb/>
day workouts in 90-dcgree heat<lb/>
and humidity?<lb/>
We now know the answer.<lb/>
For just as Manley returns for<lb/>
the Washington Redskins' opener<lb/>
against the New York Giants - to<lb/>
the applause of his teammates<lb/>
and Washingtonians who<lb/>
cheered his early suspension - the<lb/>
Giants' Lawrence Taylor leaves<lb/>
for the first of four regular-season<lb/>
games for essentially the same<lb/>
intraction. from that uneven justice?<lb/>
Which leads to a very basic Taylor who flaunted his late-<lb/>
question, night lifestyle even after his first,<lb/>
What good is the NFL's drug voluntary commitment to treat-<lb/>
policy if there's uneven justice for ment, richly deserves to miss four<lb/>
Lawrence Taylor and Dexter games and the $250,000 that goes<lb/>
Manley, two talented young men with the suspension. He also<lb/>
both in need of help? What good is seems in desperate need of treat-<lb/>
the policy if a large part of the ment that will cure his illness.<lb/>
nation's capital gets pleasureSee DRUGS, page 20<lb/>
Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
BR IAN BAILEY<lb/>
WNCT-TV Sports Director<lb/>
DEAN BUCHAN<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
CHIP CARTER<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Dr. RICHARD EAKIN<lb/>
ECU Chancellor<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
Tennessee Tech at ECU<lb/>
Virgina Tech at Clemson<lb/>
Tennessee at Georgia<lb/>
Louisville at Maryland<lb/>
Duke at Northwestern<lb/>
North Carolina at South Carolina<lb/>
Temple at Syracuse<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M at LSU<lb/>
San Diego State at UCLA<lb/>
Florida State at Miami<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
Syracuse<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
ECUECUECUECU<lb/>
ClemsonClemsonClemsonClemson<lb/>
Georgia Maryland DukeTennessee Maryland DukeGeorgia Maryland DukeTennessee Maryland Duke<lb/>
North CarolinaSouth CarolinaSouth CarolinaSouth Carolina<lb/>
Syracuse Texas A&amp;MSyracuse Texas A&amp;MTemple LSUSyracuse Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
UCLAUCLAUCLAUCLA<lb/>
Florida StateFlorida StateMiamiFlorida State<lb/>
Vikings have to pick their quarterback<lb/>
(AP) -Minnesota Vikings quar-<lb/>
terback Wade Wilson says he will<lb/>
ask tobe traded if Tommy Kramer<lb/>
is named to start Sunday's season<lb/>
opener in Buffalo.<lb/>
Wilson has been locked in a<lb/>
battle for the starting position<lb/>
with Kramer since leading the<lb/>
Vikings to the National Confer-<lb/>
ence championship game last<lb/>
year with stunning playoff upsets<lb/>
over New Orleans and San Fran-<lb/>
cisco.<lb/>
"I'm not conceding anything<lb/>
Wilson told the St. Paul Pioneer<lb/>
Press Dispatch in an interview<lb/>
Tuesday. "But I figure Tommy<lb/>
will get the nod because that's the<lb/>
way it's always been around<lb/>
here<lb/>
Wilson said he feels insulted,<lb/>
unappreciated, and most of all,<lb/>
grossly underpaid by the Vikings.<lb/>
"1 certainly don't want this to<lb/>
sound like a case of sour grapes<lb/>
Wilson told the newspaper.<lb/>
"Outwardly, I'll remain a nice<lb/>
company man, but I'm definitely<lb/>
very disappointed and unhappy<lb/>
here if I'm just looked at as insur-<lb/>
ance<lb/>
Wilson, who has played in 20 of<lb/>
the last 21 games, will earn<lb/>
$250,000 this year, roughly 25<lb/>
percent of the money being paid<lb/>
to Kramer and backups Steve<lb/>
Young in San Francisco and Jay<lb/>
Schroeder in Washington.<lb/>
At New Orleans, nose tackle<lb/>
Ted Gregory, in his first newscon-<lb/>
ference as a member of the Saints,<lb/>
said the Denver Broncos expected<lb/>
too much of him too soon and<lb/>
gave up on him too quickly.<lb/>
Gregory, the Broncos' No. 1<lb/>
draft choice this year out of<lb/>
Syracuse University, was traded<lb/>
by Denver on Monday for nose<lb/>
tackle Shawn Knight, the Saints'<lb/>
No. 1 draft choice a year ago.<lb/>
"I don't think you can term<lb/>
someone a bust in just five<lb/>
weeks Gregory said. "I'm just a<lb/>
rookie. I've only been in the<lb/>
league for five weeks and I felt<lb/>
that these last two weeks I played<lb/>
pretty well in preseason games,<lb/>
and I've been coming along with<lb/>
my professional techniques as far<lb/>
as playing defensive line Gre-<lb/>
gory said.<lb/>
Gregory said the Saints showed<lb/>
good judgment in acquiring him.<lb/>
"They know the kind of player I<lb/>
have the potential of being and<lb/>
the kind of player I was in col-<lb/>
lege he said.<lb/>
Denver officials said they<lb/>
traded Gregory because he didn't<lb/>
fit into the Broncos' system.<lb/>
Many teams began reshuffling<lb/>
their rosters following Monday's<lb/>
mandatory reduction to 47. Some<lb/>
of the players 1st to go almost im-<lb/>
mediately found themselves with<lb/>
new addresses, in most of those<lb/>
cases, with a lesser team.<lb/>
Pirate's Booty<lb/>
"1-800-HELP<lb/>
needs to be reconsidered<lb/>
BY DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sport Editor<lb/>
How many of you out there<lb/>
have heard or seen the<lb/>
advertisments for ECU, which at<lb/>
the end proclaims that anyone<lb/>
who may be inclined to, or was<lb/>
pursuaded by the commercial to,<lb/>
send money to the University or<lb/>
purchase season tickets may do so<lb/>
by calling 1-800-HELP ECU. A<lb/>
show of hands, please.<lb/>
Well, regardless of whether<lb/>
you've heard it or not, I'm going<lb/>
to try an make a point. The point<lb/>
being, 1 find that ad highly<lb/>
past couple of years, has I contend, however, that this<lb/>
undergone a vast transformation, marketing strategy, this 1-800-<lb/>
degrading, demeaning, and<lb/>
inappropriate. Please allow me to<lb/>
elaborate.<lb/>
East Carolina University, in the<lb/>
and is still in the process of great<lb/>
change and improvement. This is<lb/>
all well and good. As a result of<lb/>
these changes, there has been a<lb/>
concentrated effort on the part of<lb/>
University officials tc up-grade<lb/>
the image of the University, not<lb/>
only in how we are viewed by<lb/>
outside persons and our in-state<lb/>
constituents, but also in the way<lb/>
that the staff, faculty, and above<lb/>
all, the students, view the<lb/>
University, whose image is a<lb/>
direct reflection upon themselves.<lb/>
HELP ECU, is in no way<lb/>
consistent with the efforts to<lb/>
better the University's image.<lb/>
Rather, it would seem that it is the<lb/>
very antithesis of our collective<lb/>
efforts. I ask you, do you think<lb/>
you will ever see an ad that ends<lb/>
with Call 1-800-HELP UNC?"<lb/>
Don't be ridiculous, you laugh.<lb/>
How about one saying Call 1-<lb/>
800-HELP NCSU?" Give me a<lb/>
break, you scoff. (Besides, it<lb/>
would be too many numbers.)<lb/>
But you get my drift. At a time<lb/>
when we are struggling for<lb/>
recognition as one of the top<lb/>
schools in the East, against<lb/>
schools much older, more<lb/>
established, and wrongly, more<lb/>
respected, this ad deals us a<lb/>
damaging blow. I mean, begging<lb/>
for money. Come on folks. Whose<lb/>
idea was this? If we were an Easter<lb/>
Seals group, fine. If we were<lb/>
collecting for the American<lb/>
Cancer Society, all the better. But<lb/>
we're not.<lb/>
Don't get me wrong. I'm not<lb/>
saying that we don't need<lb/>
contributions. That would be<lb/>
ludicrous. But I do believe that we<lb/>
could effectively pursue the same<lb/>
end through different means.<lb/>
Well, Mister I don't-like-it-so-<lb/>
we-should-change-it, you may be<lb/>
saying, what do you suggest? I<lb/>
don't know. I admit it. I'm a<lb/>
journalist (supposedly), not<lb/>
marketing director. But give me<lb/>
time. If I come up with something,<lb/>
you will be the first to know<lb/>
Until next time, later.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0021"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
20<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1, 1S8<lb/>
Drugs a problem in the NFL<lb/>
Continued from page 19<lb/>
Taylor and the others must un-<lb/>
dergo treatment and check in<lb/>
regularly with the league's doc-<lb/>
tors. And Taylor, who wrote in his<lb/>
autobiography "the golf course<lb/>
was my detox tank will, in fact,<lb/>
undergo drug rehabilitation, ac-<lb/>
cording to his agent, Gary<lb/>
Kovach.<lb/>
Giants coach Bill Parcells, who<lb/>
in 1982 took over a drug-ridden<lb/>
team and not only solved most of<lb/>
the problem but built a Super<lb/>
Bowl winner in the process, took<lb/>
the league policy philosophically.<lb/>
"They can't do it at every time<lb/>
for everybody he said. "Teams<lb/>
report to training camps at differ-<lb/>
ent times. They have their veter-<lb/>
ans in at different times. The<lb/>
league has a problem structuring<lb/>
all those things<lb/>
Perhaps.<lb/>
But the NFL could make sure<lb/>
that all penalties are created<lb/>
equal.<lb/>
It could test everyone over a<lb/>
two-week period in July - either<lb/>
just before camp or during it - or<lb/>
announce nothing until just be-<lb/>
fore the start of the season, then<lb/>
mete out the suspension so that<lb/>
Manley, Taylor, Riddick,<lb/>
Townsend, et. al. get four games<lb/>
apiece.<lb/>
The league argues that it<lb/>
doesn't have the resources to do<lb/>
the first and that it would be abdi-<lb/>
cating its responsibilities if it did<lb/>
the second.<lb/>
"Suppose someone turned up<lb/>
dead from an overdose while we<lb/>
were waiting for all the tests and<lb/>
we knew he had a problem?" asks<lb/>
league spokesman Joe Browne.<lb/>
"Where would we be then?"<lb/>
Still, it's self-defeating to the<lb/>
program when LaVern Torgeson,<lb/>
Washington's defensive line<lb/>
coach, rationalizes Manley's sus-<lb/>
pension with the fact that he'll be<lb/>
back for the regular season. And<lb/>
linebacker Monte Coleman ex-<lb/>
ults:<lb/>
"I'm very happy. I think 30 days<lb/>
is a blessing for him. You know, I<lb/>
don't think we're really hurting<lb/>
We'll get Dexter back soon<lb/>
And where was the league in<lb/>
January 1987, when the Dcnvei<lb/>
Broncos removed tight end Clar-<lb/>
ence Kay from a drug rehabilita<lb/>
tion program for the playoffs,<lb/>
then let him go back to rehab after<lb/>
the Super Bowl? The answer: it<lb/>
was a first offense, so no suspen-<lb/>
sion is involved.<lb/>
Perhaps, as John F. Kennedy<lb/>
said when he called up the mili-<lb/>
tary reserves in the 1961 Berlin<lb/>
crisis "life is unfair<lb/>
But when a suspension for drug<lb/>
use elicits cheers, somebody<lb/>
could try to make life just a little<lb/>
fairer.<lb/>
Taylor had acknowledged that<lb/>
he underwent treatment for a<lb/>
cocaine problem in 1986 and he<lb/>
outlined his problems with the<lb/>
drug in his book "LT: Living on<lb/>
the Edge<lb/>
"He is a person who has clearly<lb/>
stated that he has not found the<lb/>
answers in life that he has found<lb/>
on a football field David<lb/>
Falkner, the co-author of Taylor's<lb/>
book, said in a television inter-<lb/>
view.<lb/>
Most of Taylor's teammates<lb/>
declined to talk about the suspen-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
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Next to Chicos in the Georgetown Shops<lb/>
ast Carolina<lb/>
II , r; - ?? : 1' 11<lb/>
j,<lb/>
A?) - Marc Wilson and Rusty<lb/>
Hilger, who competed with each<lb/>
other for the same job last season,<lb/>
arc now without one. So are some<lb/>
former high draft choices who<lb/>
never quite became the NFL play-<lb/>
ers the scouts thought.thev would<lb/>
be.<lb/>
"There willtie mistakes in draft<lb/>
choices San Diego Coach Al<lb/>
Saunders said Monday after cut-<lb/>
ting cornerback Lou Brock Jr son<lb/>
of the baseballHall of Famer and<lb/>
a second-roundlrhoice a year ago.<lb/>
"YoQ never know for sure how<lb/>
people will develop, and we're<lb/>
disappointed this high pick did<lb/>
not pan out<lb/>
Monday was the NFL's annual<lb/>
Heartbreak Day, the deadline for<lb/>
teams to get down to the47-plaver<lb/>
limit for the start of the season.<lb/>
Not only did the usual comple-<lb/>
ment of rookies and free agents<lb/>
go, but so did dozens oi veterans<lb/>
and some former high draft picks.<lb/>
Not only did the Green Bay<lb/>
Packers cut Wilson, whom they<lb/>
would have had to pay $550,00<lb/>
this year, but the Los Angeles<lb/>
Raiders waived Hilger, with<lb/>
whom he alternated at quarter-<lb/>
back last season.<lb/>
"From day one, it was one of<lb/>
those deals that was not meant to<lb/>
be said Wilson, who signed with<lb/>
the Packers at the start of training<lb/>
camp after being released by Los<lb/>
Angeles. "I wanted it to be. A lotof<lb/>
people wanted it to be. For what-<lb/>
ever reason, it just didn't happen.<lb/>
Now 1 can get on with something<lb/>
else<lb/>
Like the Chargers, the Raiders<lb/>
were another team that admitted<lb/>
making a mistake with a high<lb/>
pick. They cut Bob Buczkowski,<lb/>
their first-round pick in 1986.<lb/>
Buczkowski. a defensive end, had<lb/>
spent almost all of his first two<lb/>
vears on injured reserve with a<lb/>
bad back.<lb/>
And the New Orleans Saints<lb/>
and Denver Broncos swapped<lb/>
disappointing first-rounders, the<lb/>
Saints sending last year's top pick,<lb/>
defensive tackle Shawn Knight to<lb/>
the Broncos tor Denver's 1988<lb/>
first-rounder, nose tackle Ted<lb/>
Grecorv.<lb/>
Gregory was third on the Bron-<lb/>
cos' depth chart while Saints<lb/>
Coach Jim Mora said of the 6-foot-<lb/>
6, 288-pound Knight, who has<lb/>
never come close to starting:<lb/>
"Denver likes Shawn's size and<lb/>
strength<lb/>
Among the other oddities were<lb/>
the Los Angeles Rams, who left<lb/>
themselves with just one quarter-<lb/>
back, Jim Everett, after cutting<lb/>
backups Hugh Millen and Steve<lb/>
Dils. Atlanta immediately<lb/>
claimed Millen and Coach John<lb/>
Robinson said he hoped to re-sign<lb/>
Dils once he cleared waivers.<lb/>
Some of those cut were more<lb/>
bitter than others.<lb/>
"I know what the business is<lb/>
like, how ruthless it can be 32-<lb/>
ycar-old Doug Betters, an 11-year<lb/>
defensive end and one of the last<lb/>
of Miami's "Killer B's" said after<lb/>
being waived by the Dolphins. "I<lb/>
was just an insurance policy the<lb/>
last two years. I don't think I was<lb/>
ever given a chance to compete for<lb/>
a starting job<lb/>
Among the other veterans to go<lb/>
were a group with recent Super<lb/>
Bowl rings: tight end Clint Didier<lb/>
and running back Keith Griffin of<lb/>
the defending champion Wash-<lb/>
ington Redskins; wide receiver<lb/>
Stacy Robinson, guard Chris<lb/>
Godfrey and safety Greg Lasker<lb/>
of the New York Giants' 1986<lb/>
champions; and wide receiver<lb/>
Keith Ortego and defensive back<lb/>
Reggie Phillips, who returned an<lb/>
interception 26 yards for a touch-<lb/>
down in Chicago's 46-10 Super<lb/>
Bowl victory over New England<lb/>
after the 1985 season.<lb/>
"It was probably the toughest<lb/>
cut we had to make Redskins<lb/>
general manager Bobby Beathard<lb/>
said of Didier, who lost his job to<lb/>
second-year man Craig McEwen.<lb/>
Among the other cuts were Paul<lb/>
McFadden, whose 91 field goals<lb/>
were more than any Philadelphia<lb/>
Eagle in history; strong safety<lb/>
Lester Lyles, a two-year starter for<lb/>
the New York Jets; wide receiver<lb/>
Frankie Neal, Green Bay's sec-<lb/>
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MON. THRU. SAT.<lb/>
SUNDAYS 1-6 PM<lb/>
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OVEBTONS<lb/>
Iports Briefs<lb/>
harlot<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) - The Char-<lb/>
He Coliseum will get a score-<lb/>
ard just like the old one that fell<lb/>
irith some added safety features<lb/>
American Sign &amp; Indicator<lb/>
ynp. will install a new eight-<lb/>
ied scoreboard beginning Oct<lb/>
I, in time for the Charlotte Hor-<lb/>
:ts' first home game, an Oct 29<lb/>
BA exhibition against the Dallas<lb/>
avericks<lb/>
The sign company took respon-<lb/>
bility after the $1.2 million, 20-<lb/>
?n scoreboard fell 55 feet to the<lb/>
rfiseum floor on Aug. 12. The<lb/>
?rnpany said new safety features<lb/>
ould prevent a similar accident<lb/>
On Monday, the city's coliseum<lb/>
ithonty said it wants the com-<lb/>
my to install a new scoreboard.<lb/>
'Jliot takes over<lb/>
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -<lb/>
ill Elliot's second-place finish in<lb/>
eBusch 500 at Bristol, Tenn<lb/>
oved the Dawsonville, Ga j<lb/>
?ivcr into the lead in the NAS-<lb/>
AR Winston-Cup point stand-<lb/>
gs<lb/>
With nine races left on th?<lb/>
ice Winston Cup schedule. Elliot<lb/>
is a 16-point lead over Rusty<lb/>
Wallace of St. Louis 3,027-3,011 in<lb/>
ie sencs standings, NASCAR<lb/>
lid Mondav. Wallace finished<lb/>
inth in the Bristol race Satur<lb/>
Defending Winston Cup cham-<lb/>
ion Dale Earnhardt of Kannapo-<lb/>
s, N.C, was third in the seri<lb/>
landings with 2,901 points after<lb/>
inningat Bristol, NASCAR -<lb/>
Earnhardt was followed by Ken<lb/>
chrader of Fcnton, Mo with<lb/>
,702 and Terry Labonte of Cor<lb/>
us Chnsti, Texas, with 2 -r4<lb/>
funding out tfae top 10 arc C<lb/>
odine, 2,640 Sterling Marlin.<lb/>
,544; Phil Parsons, 2,511p; Dar-<lb/>
rfl Waltrip, 2,504; and Hobby<lb/>
lillin, 2,369.<lb/>
Earnhardt continues to lead all<lb/>
Srivers in the money won cate-<lb/>
pry with $730,085, while Wallace<lb/>
i second with $718,935. Elliot is<lb/>
hird with $677345, followed b<lb/>
.atonte with $620780 and<lb/>
)avey Allison of Huevtown. Ala<lb/>
rith $579,015.<lb/>
Completing the top 10 money<lb/>
dinners were Waltrip, $473,715<lb/>
chrader, $443,690; Hobby Alli-<lb/>
on, $408,795; Bodine, $384 345<lb/>
nd Parsons, $369,245.<lb/>
The next race will be the S<lb/>
n 500 at the Darlington Interna<lb/>
tional Raceway in South Car<lb/>
Sept. 4.<lb/>
Soviet healthy<lb/>
NEVV YORK (AP) - Arvidaj 1<lb/>
Sabonis, the Soviet Union's stai<lb/>
basketball center, has been pro<lb/>
nounced fit to play for the Sovk<lb/>
team in the upcoming Oa mpio<lb/>
according to a published report<lb/>
The announcement abou<lb/>
Sabonis' torn Achilles tendon was<lb/>
madebv Soviet officials foliowmj<lb/>
a consultation with Soviet special<lb/>
ists, Aleksandr Gomelsky, 9 I<lb/>
coach of the team, told the officiaj<lb/>
news agency Tass. according<lb/>
Tuesday's editions of the Net<lb/>
York Times.<lb/>
Sabonis had been undergo<lb/>
rehabilitation program design?<lb/>
and paid for by the Portland Trai<lb/>
Blazers - the team that dratted thj<lb/>
Soviet citizen - to overcome th<lb/>
injurv vrtuch has sidelined bin<lb/>
for 18 months.<lb/>
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SEPTEMBER 1,1988 21<lb/>
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September 3,1988<lb/>
y<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Charlotte Coliseum<lb/>
gets board<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) - The Char-<lb/>
lotte Coliseum will get a score-<lb/>
board just like the old one that fell<lb/>
- with some added safety features.<lb/>
American Sign &amp; Indicator<lb/>
Corp. will install a new eight-<lb/>
sided scoreboard beginning Oct.<lb/>
10, in time for the Charlotte Hor-<lb/>
nets' first home game, an Oct. 29<lb/>
Virgina football Olajuwon cuts<lb/>
UNC football<lb/>
HOUSTON (AP) - A television<lb/>
cameraman suffered a cut to his<lb/>
head when Houston Rockets star<lb/>
Akeem Olajuwon grabbed his<lb/>
video equipment after a reporter<lb/>
CH ARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP)<lb/>
- Virginia enters its 100th football<lb/>
season with much of its hope for<lb/>
success riding on inexperienced<lb/>
quarterback Shawn Moore,<lb/>
Coach George Welsh said Mon- questioned him about a lawsuit<lb/>
NBA exhibition against the Dallas day. filed against him by his former<lb/>
Mavericks. "Our offense will depend a lot girlfriend.<lb/>
on him Welsh said of his sopho- KHOU-TV cameraman Jim<lb/>
more quarterback from Shipley was treated and released<lb/>
at a local hospital for the small cut<lb/>
The sign company took respon-<lb/>
sibility after the $1.2 million, 20-<lb/>
ton scoreboard fell 55 feet to the<lb/>
coliseum floor on Aug. 12. The<lb/>
company said new safety features<lb/>
would prevent a similar accident.<lb/>
On Monday, the city's coliseum<lb/>
authority said it wants the com-<lb/>
pany to install a new scoreboard.<lb/>
Elliot takes over<lb/>
DAYTON A BEACH, Ha. (AP) -<lb/>
Bill Elliot's second-place finish in<lb/>
the Busch 500 at Bristol, Tenn has<lb/>
moved the Dawsonville, Ga<lb/>
driver into the lead in the NAS-<lb/>
CAR Winston-Cup point stand-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
With nine races left on the 29-<lb/>
race Winston Cup schedule, Elliot<lb/>
has a 16-point lead over Rusty<lb/>
Wallace of St. Louis 3,027-3,011 in<lb/>
the series standings, NASCAR<lb/>
said Monday. Wallace finished<lb/>
ninth in the Bristol race Saturday.<lb/>
, Defending Winston Cup cham-<lb/>
f)ion Dale Earnhardt of Kannapo-<lb/>
is, N.C was third in the series<lb/>
standings with 2,901 points after<lb/>
winning at Bristol, NASCAR said.<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP)<lb/>
North Carolina football coach<lb/>
Mack Brown announced Deems<lb/>
May will be the starting quarter-<lb/>
back as the Tar Heels face a diffi-<lb/>
cult South Carolina team.<lb/>
"I can't imagine opening with a<lb/>
tougher opponent than South<lb/>
Carolina Brown said Tuesday at<lb/>
a news conference. "I talked to<lb/>
(athletic director) John Swofford<lb/>
Martinsville, who will start Satur-<lb/>
day when the Cavaliers open their to ms forehead and was doing about putting it off a year, but he<lb/>
season at home against William &amp; nne' said Marc Watts, a sports didn't think that was a good<lb/>
Mary. reporter at the television station, idea<lb/>
The 6-foot-2, 210 pounder re- He did not need anY stitches, May, a redshirt freshman, and<lb/>
places the graduated Scott Watts said. junior Jonathan Hall had been<lb/>
Secules, who earned all-ACC The incident began when Watts competing for the starting nod<lb/>
honors in 1987, when Virginia and Shipley went to Olajuwon's throughout preseason workouts,<lb/>
went 8-4 and defeated Brigham House at about 11 a.m. to get a Hall, who sat out last season with<lb/>
Young in the All America Bowl.<lb/>
Moore was known as a running<lb/>
quarterback when he was named<lb/>
state Group AA player of the year<lb/>
in 1985, but Welsh said he does<lb/>
not plan to change Virginia's of-<lb/>
fense to take advantage of those<lb/>
abilities.<lb/>
"We haven't changed much<lb/>
Welsh said. "Everybody knows<lb/>
that we run the option<lb/>
William &amp; Mary, 5-6 last year,<lb/>
defeated Virginia 41-37 in 1986,<lb/>
the last time the two teams<lb/>
played.<lb/>
Clemson football<lb/>
CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) - The<lb/>
Clemson Tigers went through a<lb/>
Earnhardt was followed by Ken light workout Monday as they<lb/>
Schrader of Fenton, Mo with<lb/>
2,702 and Terry Labonte of Cor-<lb/>
pus Christi, Texas, with 2,654.<lb/>
Rounding out tbe top 10 are Geoff<lb/>
Bodine, 2,640 Sterling Marlin,<lb/>
2,544; Phil Parsons, 2,51 Ip; Dar<lb/>
rell Waltrip, 2,504; and<lb/>
Hillin, 2,369.<lb/>
prepare for the season opener<lb/>
against Virginia Tech on Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"We had a light workout in<lb/>
terms of hitting. That is normally<lb/>
the case on Mondays Ford said.<lb/>
Hobby "We will do some hitting later in<lb/>
the week<lb/>
Earnhardt continues to lead all "Hopefully, we won't get any<lb/>
drivers in the money won cate- more players hurt Ford said,<lb/>
gory with $730,085, while Wallace "We want to get as many people<lb/>
is second with $718,935. Elliot is ready to play as possible. This<lb/>
third with $677345, followed by time of year it is important to be<lb/>
Labonte with $620780 and two-deepatall positions. With the<lb/>
Davey AMisonof Hueytown, Ala heat factor this time of year, you<lb/>
with $579,015.<lb/>
Completing the top 10 money<lb/>
winners were Waltrip, $473,715;<lb/>
Schrader, $443,690; Hobby Alli-<lb/>
son, $408,795; Bodine, $384,345;<lb/>
and Parsons, $369,245.<lb/>
The next race will be the South-<lb/>
ern 500 at the Darlington Interna-<lb/>
tional Raceway.in South Carolina<lb/>
Sept. 4.<lb/>
Soviet healthy<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Arvidas<lb/>
Sabonis, the Soviet Union's star<lb/>
basketball center, has been pro-<lb/>
nounced fit to play for the Soviet<lb/>
team in the upcoming Olympics,<lb/>
according to a published report.<lb/>
The announcement about<lb/>
Sabonis' torn Achilles tendon was<lb/>
made by Soviet officials following<lb/>
a consultation with Soviet special-<lb/>
ists, Aleksandr Gomelsky, senior<lb/>
coach of the team, told the official<lb/>
news agency Tass, according to<lb/>
Tuesday's editions of the New<lb/>
York Times.<lb/>
Sabonis had been undergoing a<lb/>
rehabilitation program designed<lb/>
and paid for by the Portland Trail<lb/>
Blazers - the team that drafted the<lb/>
Soviet citizen - to overcome the<lb/>
injury wtirch has sidelined him<lb/>
for 18 months.<lb/>
need a deep team.<lb/>
Ford singled out some players<lb/>
for their performances and lead-<lb/>
ership roles during the preseason,<lb/>
including defensive lineman<lb/>
Mark Drag and linebacker Vince<lb/>
Taylor.<lb/>
comment from him about a law-<lb/>
suit filed late Friday by Lita<lb/>
Spencer, who claims the 6-foot-l 1<lb/>
inch center deserted her because<lb/>
he wanted a taller woman to bear<lb/>
his sons.<lb/>
College steroids<lb/>
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - An<lb/>
off-season program begun last<lb/>
spring by the National Collegiate<lb/>
Athletic Association at 25 schools<lb/>
found nearly one-third of football<lb/>
players at some colleges tested<lb/>
positive for steroids.<lb/>
Frank Uryasz, director of sports<lb/>
sciences for the NCAA, told The<lb/>
Kansas City Star, that positive<lb/>
rate ranged from 0 to 30 percent.<lb/>
He told The Associated Press that<lb/>
the overall average of players<lb/>
who tested positive was between<lb/>
3 and 4 percent.<lb/>
NCAA officials said the find-<lb/>
ings, to be released in greater de-<lb/>
tail this fall, suggest the current<lb/>
policy of testing players only<lb/>
prior to NCAA championship<lb/>
events and bowl games may deter<lb/>
abuse, but has not ended it.<lb/>
Steroids, synthetic versions of<lb/>
the male sex hormone testoster-<lb/>
one, have been linked to increased<lb/>
sports injuries and serious health<lb/>
risks<lb/>
I in i<lb/>
a shoulder injury, "has had a lot of<lb/>
soreness after the scrimmages<lb/>
said Brown.<lb/>
May, who has never taken a<lb/>
snap in a college game, "has a<lb/>
great mentality for football<lb/>
Brown said.<lb/>
"He's a very aggressive guy,<lb/>
and he has not been intimidated<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
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22 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1,1988<lb/>
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"THE HOUSE AT THE BOTTOM OF THE HILL"<lb/>
Clem<lb/>
CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) - <lb/>
Clemson senior fullback Ti<lb/>
Johnson isn't on the football f)<lb/>
running the football or bloclj<lb/>
linebackers, he might be pee<lb/>
down at a chessboard.<lb/>
Or he might be in the kite<lb/>
cooking. Or he might be in<lb/>
apartment watering plants,<lb/>
eluding a huge philodendroni<lb/>
he's seen grow from just a sprl<lb/>
"Chess, it started out wh'<lb/>
was in the fourth grad. Mvbr<lb/>
ers were interested, so I wasd<lb/>
petitive with them and I leai,<lb/>
it. Cooking, my mom alJ<lb/>
wanted us to be able to ta ke cai<lb/>
ourselves he said "So I<lb/>
cooking for myself in tlv<lb/>
second grade<lb/>
"I really don't know how<lb/>
plant interest came aboi<lb/>
Johnson said "1 just like to so<lb/>
can get the plants growing<lb/>
Obviously Johnson in't<lb/>
typical 6-foot, 23 ;<lb/>
player. He enjoys the phyj<lb/>
nature of football, but he's<lb/>
drawn to the mental a j<lb/>
chess. He said both arc <lb/>
that have one goal - "conque<lb/>
your opponent<lb/>
"Both are one-on-ow<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"Chess is like war You ti<lb/>
outmaneu ver your op <lb/>
David T<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, N (<lb/>
mer North Carolina Si<lb/>
American and NBA star D<lb/>
Thompson has been hired i<lb/>
Charlotte Hornets to .<lb/>
communitv relations, a - .<lb/>
told a Charlotte now -paper <lb/>
day.<lb/>
The Hornets have schedule<lb/>
p.m. news conference Tuesda<lb/>
announce Thompson's hii<lb/>
Thompson is expected t I<lb/>
much of his time worl<lb/>
youth programs for the Hor?<lb/>
Hornets majority ow<lb/>
George Shinn and vice presid<lb/>
Carl Scheer have been discus<lb/>
a job with Thompson for sevi<lb/>
weeks, according to The Chary<lb/>
4-<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Some assembly requ!rec,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058089_0024"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1, 1988 23<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
Clemson prepares for Hokies<lb/>
CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) - When a mental challenge. I haven't got- too much<lb/>
Clemson senior fullback Tracy ten to the point where I know the Johnson<lb/>
Johnson isn't on the football field<lb/>
running the football or blocking<lb/>
linebackers, he might be peering<lb/>
down at a chessboard.<lb/>
Or he might be in the kitchen<lb/>
cooking. Or he might be in his<lb/>
apartment watering plants, in-<lb/>
cluding a huge philodendron that<lb/>
he's seen grow from just a sprout.<lb/>
"Chess, it started out when 1<lb/>
was in the fourth grade. My broth-<lb/>
ers were interested, so I was com-<lb/>
petitive with them and I learned<lb/>
it. Cooking, my mom always<lb/>
wanted us to be able to take care of<lb/>
ourselves he said. "So I was<lb/>
cooking for myself in the first or<lb/>
second grade<lb/>
"1 really don't know how the<lb/>
plant interest came about<lb/>
Johnson said. "I just like to see if I<lb/>
can get the plants growing<lb/>
Obviously Johnson isn't your<lb/>
typical 6-foot, 230-pound football<lb/>
player. He enjoys the physical<lb/>
nature of football, but he's also<lb/>
drawn to the mental aspect of<lb/>
chess. He said both are contests<lb/>
that have one goal - "conquering<lb/>
your opponent<lb/>
"Both are one-on-one competi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"Chess is like war. You try to<lb/>
outmaneuver your opponent. It's<lb/>
did not come to<lb/>
great moves the Kannapolis, Clemson expecting to play full-<lb/>
back. He was a linebacker and<lb/>
tailback at A.L. Brown High<lb/>
School, which also produced for-<lb/>
mer Clemson star fullback Kevin<lb/>
Mack, who is now with the Cleve-<lb/>
land Browns.<lb/>
After arriving on campus,<lb/>
Johnson saw Clemson had several<lb/>
talented tailbacks. So, he decided<lb/>
N.C. native said. "But it's fun to<lb/>
corner your opponent and to put<lb/>
him in a position where he's vul-<lb/>
nerable<lb/>
Johnson also likes to make op-<lb/>
ponents of fourth-ranked<lb/>
Clemson vulnerable, which he<lb/>
does with his tough running style<lb/>
and bullish blocking. Last season,<lb/>
Johnson was stopped behind the to try linebacker. But he didn't<lb/>
line of scrimmage just once while like that, either.<lb/>
gaining 557 yards and scoring<lb/>
nine touchdowns.<lb/>
Johnson set a school record for<lb/>
rushing touchdowns in a bowl<lb/>
game when he scored three times<lb/>
in Clemson's 35-10 victory over<lb/>
Pettn State in the Citrus Bowl last<lb/>
just be without sense and run into<lb/>
someone who may outweigh you<lb/>
20 pounds, that was sort of hard to<lb/>
get used to<lb/>
Johnson learned well, however.<lb/>
He may be Clemson's best all-<lb/>
around blocker and runner. But<lb/>
that doesn't mean he enjoys<lb/>
blocking more than running.<lb/>
"I like to run the ball he said.<lb/>
"No doubt about it<lb/>
But he also knows his job often<lb/>
means to be an offensive lineman<lb/>
who wears a running back's<lb/>
number. That's OK with Johnson.<lb/>
The offensive line made Johnson<lb/>
"I don't know why I changed<lb/>
my mind. For some reason I didn't<lb/>
feel that comfortable with the<lb/>
linebacker position Johnson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
So, after talking with running and Lancaster honorary members<lb/>
back Coach Chuck Reedy, and had the two fullbacks pose<lb/>
year. His best rushing effort last Johnson decided to go where he with the line during picture day<lb/>
year came against North Carolina hoped to get the most playing last year<lb/>
when he gained 124 yards. time - fullback. The transition was<lb/>
Johnson shared duties with not overly difficult, but Johnson<lb/>
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Johnson figures he will play 20 to<lb/>
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"It won't put too much more of<lb/>
a burden on me Johnson said. "I<lb/>
think if I get in condition during<lb/>
the preseason it won't affect me<lb/>
had to get used to blocking, some-<lb/>
thing that was not often required<lb/>
of a tailback.<lb/>
"Blocking was the hardest<lb/>
part Johnson said. "A tailback,<lb/>
you block every once in a while,<lb/>
maybe on a pass. But you never<lb/>
had to lead for anybody. That was<lb/>
a very hard skill to obtain.<lb/>
"The technique was a little diffi-<lb/>
cult. But the fact that you have to<lb/>
While the Tigers are known for<lb/>
their option attack featuring the<lb/>
tailback, Johnson said the fullback<lb/>
is an integral ingredient in the<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
"I like playing fullback because<lb/>
it puts a lot of pressure on you. It's<lb/>
so important to this offense' he<lb/>
said. "The tailback is a very im-<lb/>
portant position, but they can't<lb/>
run without the fullback. I like the<lb/>
responsibility and knowing that 1<lb/>
am contributing to the game<lb/>
David Thompson returns to basketball<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - For-<lb/>
mer North Carolina State All-<lb/>
American and NBA star David<lb/>
Thompson has been hired by the<lb/>
Charlotte Hornets to work in<lb/>
community relations, a source<lb/>
told a Charlotte newspaper Mon-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The Hornets have scheduled a 2<lb/>
p.m. news conference Tuesday to<lb/>
announce Thompson's hiring.<lb/>
Thompson is expected to spend<lb/>
much of his time working in<lb/>
youth programs for the Hornets.<lb/>
Hornets majority owner<lb/>
George Shinn and vice president<lb/>
Carl Scheer have been discussing<lb/>
a job with Thompson for several<lb/>
weeks, according to The Charlotte<lb/>
Observer. Scheer signed Th-<lb/>
ompson to his first pro contract in<lb/>
1975 when Scheer was general<lb/>
manager of the Denver Nuggets,<lb/>
then of the American Basketball<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Thompson could not be<lb/>
reached for comment by the<lb/>
newspaper Monday.<lb/>
When Thompson first signed<lb/>
with the Nuggets, rejecting an<lb/>
offer from the Atlanta Hawks, he<lb/>
had already won two awards as<lb/>
Associated Press college basket-<lb/>
ball player of the year. Thompson<lb/>
played in four NBAall-stargames<lb/>
during a pro career that spanned<lb/>
eight seasons - six with Denver<lb/>
and two more with the Seattle<lb/>
SuperSonics.<lb/>
Then Thompson suffered a ca-<lb/>
reer-ending left knee injury in<lb/>
1984.<lb/>
Starting with a 1983 stay at a<lb/>
drug rehabilitation center in Boul-<lb/>
der, Colo Thompson experi-<lb/>
enced a long string of problems,<lb/>
including several brushes with<lb/>
the law. He entered a second drug<lb/>
rehabilitation center in Seattle in<lb/>
1986 and declared bankruptcy<lb/>
shortly after that, despite having<lb/>
made more than $2 million from<lb/>
his original six-year contract with<lb/>
the Nuggets.<lb/>
He has also been arrested twice,<lb/>
once serving four months in a<lb/>
Washington prison camp for as-<lb/>
saulting his wife, Cathy, in subur-<lb/>
ban Seattle. Thompson was or-<lb/>
dered to receive counseling as<lb/>
part of an in tervention progra m to<lb/>
have the simple assault charge<lb/>
dropped. However, he failed to<lb/>
attend the counseling sessions<lb/>
and was sent to a prison camp<lb/>
from April to August 1987.<lb/>
Thompson was also charged<lb/>
with public intoxication at a top-<lb/>
less bar in Indianapolis and was<lb/>
involved in a fight at Studio 54, a<lb/>
New York nightclub.<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
starts Saturday,<lb/>
September 3rd.<lb/>
25 Off<lb/>
All Summer<lb/>
Merchandise,<lb/>
Selected Jewelry<lb/>
and Accessories.<lb/>
Some fall and<lb/>
winter merchandise.<lb/>
919 Red Banks Rd.<lb/>
Arlington Village<lb/>
756-1058<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA RUSH<lb/>
fW<lb/>
Some assembly required<lb/>
Two Scoop Sundae in a<lb/>
B??<lb/>
4 s<lb/>
Mini Helmet<lb/>
The Baskin-Robbins Football Helmet<lb/>
Sundae! Start with a resular two-scoop<lb/>
sundae in your favorite Baskin-Robbins<lb/>
flavor. Add the topping of your choice,<lb/>
real cream, nuts and top it all off with<lb/>
a cherry.<lb/>
BASKIN<lb/>
All Served in a mini NFL helmet, com-<lb/>
plete with a face guard and official NFL<lb/>
team logo sticker.<lb/>
Collect all 28 mini helmets. Save 'em,<lb/>
trade them with your friends or re-use<lb/>
them at home.<lb/>
ROBBINS<lb/>
3Qfetaf?i (Hfyapte<lb/>
fflljartereb 1966<lb/>
700 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Phone 752-5543757-1005<lb/>
International Creams additional<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
(Next to K-Mart)<lb/>
756-4477<lb/>
? 1988 Baskm-aobbmj incorporated<lb/>
The Brothers Of Kappa<lb/>
Sigma Invite You To Stop<lb/>
By During Fall Rush.<lb/>
September 6th, 7th, 8th<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0025"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
24 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1, 188<lb/>
STUDENTS - FACULTYSTAFF<lb/>
FANS - FRIENDS<lb/>
s TBSNESSfc<lb/>
V<lb/>
"II<lb/>
 1<lb/>
P<lb/>
THE PIRATE BAHAMA<lb/>
BEACH TAILGATE<lb/>
SPONSORED BY PEPSI-COLA<lb/>
 C<lb/>
c-<lb/>
C<lb/>
<lb/>
tttitVVL<lb/>
?<lb/>
?L'VV<lb/>
;v<lb/>
IVV<lb/>
EP6'<lb/>
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3<lb/>
KICKOFF 7:00<lb/>
IT'S YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO DISPLAY YOUR PRIDE IN EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA!<lb/>
Make the ECU vs Tennessee Tech Football Game the Best Spectator<lb/>
Crowd in the State on September 3!<lb/>
IT ALL BEGINS WITH THE PIRATE BAHAMA BEACH TAILGATE<lb/>
SPONSORED BY PEPSI COLA<lb/>
LIVE BANDS IN THE TAILGATE LOTS 4:30 - 6:00<lb/>
The Breeze Band - Brice Street<lb/>
,<lb/>
4<lb/>
 ? "VV <lb/>
<lb/>
-1100 Pirate Beach Blankets given away at the Stadium Gates jv<lb/>
Sponsored by Pepsi Cola<lb/>
and<lb/>
-Win a 3 day - 3 Night Bahama Vacation for 4 people<lb/>
(Courtesy of Mike's Travel and Adventures), by putting together the winning puzzle. Souvenir puzzles (sponsored by<lb/>
Pepsi Cola) will be sold for a $1.00 Donation prior to the ECU vs Tenn. Tech football game only.<lb/>
All proceeds go to support the Athletic Scholarship Fund. The winning puz le will be<lb/>
announced at Half-time - So bring your puzzles to the game.<lb/>
(All Athletic Staff, their families, current scholarship Athletes and Athletic Recruits are not eligible to win.)<lb/>
ft.<lb/>
<lb/>
Be a Part of the Fun &amp; Excitement<lb/>
Student Ticket Pickup with I.D. and Activity Card at Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Athletic Ticket Office Hours 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. - call 757-6500<lb/>
jr<lb/>
L<lb/>
<lb/>
PIRATE FOOTBALL - STEPPING UP THE PACE<lb/>
?Winner responsible for Bahamian Taxes and Departure Taxes. Trip must be taken by Dec. 15, 1988.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0026"/><lb/>
El? r<lb/>
a<lb/>
Mfl OFF 7W? GOLD SPOT BELOW<lb/>
YOU COULD<lb/>
WIN INSTANTLY<lb/>
$100,000<lb/>
IN OLYMPIC GOLD<lb/>
HO 1989 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS<lb/>
SUPREME INTERNATIONAL SERIES<lb/>
i W<lb/>
VJf<lb/>
t?f'r<lb/>
rfc?<lb/>
r TTi<lb/>
5fZ<lb/>
A<lb/>
VV<lb/>
RCA 40 BIG SCREEN<lb/>
COLOR TELEVISION<lb/>
food Ptw" , ? ? c w<lb/>
NW<lb/>
' WHEN THE U.S. WINS YOU WIN AT MCDONALD'S, NOW THRU OCTOBER 3, 1988?DETAILS INSIDE<lb/>
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO PLAY OR RECEIVE PRIZE. 12 YEARS OR OLDER TO PLAY.<lb/>
0 REEBOK.<lb/>
SPORTS GEAR<lb/>
OR FREE<lb/>
MCDONALDS<lb/>
FOOD<lb/>
SAVE 200<lb/>
On a 2-Liter Bottle of<lb/>
diet Coke, caffeine<lb/>
free diet Coke: Or<lb/>
diet Sprite.<lb/>
NutraSweet<lb/>
C0SL<lb/>
'? ?<lb/>
FREE BIG MAC<lb/>
when you buy a<lb/>
Big Mac Sandwich<lb/>
 100 i Qeef patties : Hen<lb/>
ceese ettu I : kles r ?.<lb/>
McDonald - spe i sauce serve I<lb/>
" 3 rjhi, isted "  " decker<lb/>
. in  ? - Brine a '? en I an I<lb/>
PREE'Gocc<lb/>
?.<lb/>
OFFER VALID<lb/>
Thru Sept i8 1988<lb/>
WHEN THE U.S. WINS YOU WIN<lb/>
HOW TO PLAY: R?r oft the gtw<lb/>
soot to revea! a 1988 Sum i ?<lb/>
Olympics event lf the U S<lb/>
wins a meda in that event,<lb/>
you m McDonald s fooo-<lb/>
start redeeming date after<lb/>
the event medal is av.arded<lb/>
Save your game pieces<lb/>
Greco-Romai ? <lb/>
Sep- .<lb/>
IF THE U.S. WINS<lb/>
GOLD?VOU WIN<lb/>
aBiG VAC- Sandw eti<lb/>
SILVER?YOU V <lb/>
a Regi.ar Sze<lb/>
Orcer 0' F'es<lb/>
BRONZE-C. A N<lb/>
a VeC'u Sze<lb/>
Coca-Cc a<lb/>
YOU MAY WIN INSTANTLY S100.000 in Gold.<lb/>
Oidsmobi'e Cutass Sp'ee i"te'naiica Se- es<lb/>
RCA- 40 "ich Coior TV Reenok - Saos Gea- tx McDo-a d s Fooo<lb/>
No purchase necessary 12 years or older to play<lb/>
? <lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0027"/><lb/>
S AVI ON A 2-LITER BOTTLE OF DIET COKE.<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE OR DIET SPRITE , see other side.<lb/>
'4900CT00020<lb/>
Coktu<lb/>
Not good m conjunction with any other offer<lb/>
Limit one coupon redeemable per food item<lb/>
per customer per visit Cash value 120 of 1C<lb/>
Void where prohibited by law A P<lb/>
G S<lb/>
WHEN THE U.S. WINS YOU WIN<lb/>
Thts is not a complete listing of the rules Promotion subject to Official Rules posted at<lb/>
participating McDonald's. Restaurants and participating Coca-Cola retailers<lb/>
1 No purchase necessary to play or to receive prize 12 years or older to play<lb/>
2 Game Pieces available in the L) S at participating McDonald's Restaurants and on<lb/>
specialty marked 2-Nter bottles of Coca Cola products<lb/>
3 Prizes available are listed in the Odds Chart posted at partiapating McDonald's Restau<lb/>
rants and partiapating Coca-Cola retailers rood prizes redeemable on future visit<lb/>
4 The scheduled end date for the When The IIS Wins You Win" game at McDonald s rs<lb/>
October! 1988 Redemption is scheduled to end October 31.1988 See Official Rules for<lb/>
complete conditions affecting end date and redemption ALL POTENTIAL WINNING<lb/>
GAME MATERIALS ARE SUBJECT TO VERIFICATION<lb/>
c 1988 McDondd's Cocporation Al Rights Reserved Printed m the United Stales of America<lb/>
HOW TO WIN<lb/>
MCDONALD'S FOOD (<lb/>
RuC ofl :e gold soot on the Game Piece on the<lb/>
cover :e v S . r,s a 'eda in the event<lb/>
revea ed ou  n VcDc-a c s 'cog?start<lb/>
redeem ng the date after the ever,t medal is<lb/>
awarded Save your Game peces<lb/>
WHEN THE U.S.WINS<lb/>
?<lb/>
A GOLD MEDAL<lb/>
YOU WIN A<lb/>
BIG MAC<lb/>
SANDWICH<lb/>
A SILVER MEDAL<lb/>
YOU WIN A REG.<lb/>
SIZE ORDER OF<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
'i i. i<lb/>
A BRONZE MEDAL<lb/>
YOU WIN A<lb/>
MED. SIZE<lb/>
COCA-COLA<lb/>
'JXFA-<lb/>
INSTANT WINNERS<lb/>
WIN A 1989 OLDSMOBILE<lb/>
Cutlass Supreme International Series<lb/>
The Cutlass Supreme International Series challenges the best<lb/>
the world has to offer with front-wheel drrve. four wheel power<lb/>
disc Drakes, a fully independent suspension system and a.multi-<lb/>
port fuel injected V6 engine. The ride and handling are incredibly<lb/>
responsive. And the aerodynamic styling is truly a step ahead<lb/>
Cutlass Supreme International Series.<lb/>
It's a new generation of Oldsmobtle<lb/>
f.rt?<lb/>
A deluxe 40 big screen<lb/>
monitor television with<lb/>
dynamic stereo sound<lb/>
through four speakers,<lb/>
cable ready and with<lb/>
state of the art picture<lb/>
processing circuitry<lb/>
The full function TVVCR<lb/>
unified remote control<lb/>
delivers full access to<lb/>
this TV's outstanding<lb/>
capabilities<lb/>
An exciting prize package<lb/>
that includes the "New-<lb/>
port Classic a com-<lb/>
fortable all-leather<lb/>
tennis shoe, a Reebok<lb/>
special edition" tee-<lb/>
shirt, baseball cap.<lb/>
sports socks and a<lb/>
sports gear bag that<lb/>
carries it all. It's a win-<lb/>
ning combination1<lb/>
YOU CAN ALSO WIN MCDONALD'S FOOD &amp; (fCa'a INSTANTLY<lb/>
SAVE ALL YOUR MCDONALD'S &amp; COCA-COLA<lb/>
EVENT GAME PIECES AND WATCH FOR<lb/>
YOUR EVENTS ON NBC-TV.<lb/>
Broadcast schedule courtesy NBC Sports. &amp;-<lb/>
OPENING CEREMONY<lb/>
DAY 3<lb/>
Sun Sept 18<lb/>
730 pm-12 mid<lb/>
DAY a<lb/>
Mod SepJ '9<lb/>
730 pm-12 mid<lb/>
SWIMMING<lb/>
Men's &amp; Womens<lb/>
DIVING<lb/>
Mens<lb/>
Springboard<lb/>
Final<lb/>
GYMNASTICS<lb/>
?Ifin s<lb/>
Team<lb/>
Competition<lb/>
GYMNASTICS<lb/>
Women's<lb/>
Team<lb/>
Competition<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
DAY 5<lb/>
Tues Sept 20<lb/>
730 pm-12 mid<lb/>
DAY 6<lb/>
Wed Sept 21<lb/>
? 12 m :<lb/>
DAY 7<lb/>
Thus Sept 22<lb/>
730 pm-12 mid<lb/>
DAY 8<lb/>
Fi Sept 23<lb/>
1"ifi om-12 n I<lb/>
SWIMMING<lb/>
? Women:<lb/>
Fina -<lb/>
GYMNASTICS<lb/>
Mens<lb/>
Ail-Around<lb/>
Final<lb/>
GYMNASTICS<lb/>
TRACK<lb/>
Mens<lb/>
100 meter<lb/>
Final<lb/>
EQUESTRIAN<lb/>
Cross-<lb/>
country<lb/>
Competition<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
Men's<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
BOXING<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
TENNIS<lb/>
Mens<lb/>
Singles<lb/>
BOXING<lb/>
Prenminaries<lb/>
DIVING<lb/>
Men's<lb/>
Springboard<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
BOXING<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Men's<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Mens<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
Mens<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
BOXING<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
BOXING<lb/>
re m nanes<lb/>
TRACK<lb/>
Womens<lb/>
Marathon<lb/>
GYMNASTICS<lb/>
lividua<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Men's<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
SWIMMING<lb/>
Men s &amp; Women's<lb/>
Heats<lb/>
ROWING<lb/>
Finals<lb/>
ROWING<lb/>
Semi-<lb/>
Fmals<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Women's<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
WATER<lb/>
POLO<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
CYCUNG<lb/>
Track<lb/>
Events<lb/>
BOXING<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
DIVING<lb/>
Womens<lb/>
Springboard<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
Mens<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Men's<lb/>
Preliminaries<lb/>
DAY 9 Sat See 24 7:30 pm-12 midGYMNASTICS Women's Individual Finals (4)DIVING Womens Springboard FinalTRACK Women's 100 meter FinalROWING FinaisBOXING Preliminaries<lb/>
DAY lO Sun Sept 25 7 30 pm-12 midTRACK Mens &amp; Womens 800 meter FinalDIVING Men's Platform PreliminariesBASKETBALL Mens Quarter-FinalsCYCUNG Women's Road RaceBOXING Pre rn -1 ?<lb/>
DAY 11 Mon Sept 26 730 pm-12 midDIVING Mens Platform FinalCYCLING ' Mens Road RaceBOXING Quarter-FmalsBASKETBALL Womens Semi-FmaisVOLLEYBALL Womens Semi-Final<lb/>
DAY 12 Tues. Sept 27 730 pm-12 midBASKETBALL Mens Semi-FmalTRACK Decathlon Day1BOXING Quarter-FinalsEQUESTRIAN Team Jumping FinalWRESTLING Compel: on<lb/>
DAY 13 Wed Sept 28 730 pm-12 midWEIGHTUFTING Super-heavyweight FinalBOXING Semi-Fmals (12)BASKETBALL Women's FinalTRACK Decathlon Day 2CANOEING Semi-Finals<lb/>
DAY 14 Thurs. Sept 29 7 30 pm-12 midBASKETBALL Mens FinalTRACK Women's 100 meter Hurdles FinalVOLLEYBALL Mens Semi-FmalSYNCHRO SWIMMING Solo FinalTENNIS Smg.es ? ?<lb/>
DAY 15 Fn . Sept 30 730 pm-12 midTRACK Men's &amp; Womens 1500 meter FinalsBOXING Fmals (6)SYNCHRO SWIMMING Duet FinalTENNIS Women's SinglesCANOEING Finals<lb/>
DAY 16 Sat. Oct 1 730 pm-12 midBOXING Finals (6)VOLLEYBALL Men's FinalsEQUESTRIAN ?rc Pr k Jumping Final<lb/>
DAY 17 Sun Oct 2 7 00 pm 1100 pmC L () S I NG C ER E M0 N Y<lb/>
ALL TIMES IN THIS VIEWERS GUIDE ARE US TIME EASTERN DAYLIGHT TIME<lb/>
- -<lb/>
???!&amp; i<lb/>
I TOf US NS<lb/>
rtO<lb/>
H)PUW ?<lb/>
-?-s firs ? ?<lb/>
HOW TO PLAY ALONG WITH THE US. OLYMPIC TEAM<lb/>
AND WIN MCDONALD'S FOOD AND COCA-COLA?<lb/>
Rub off the gold spot on the Game Piece on the cover or on<lb/>
game pieces available at participating McDonald's You'll<lb/>
reveal a 1988 Summer Olympic Event If the U.S. wins a<lb/>
medal in that event, you win McDonald's food (see<lb/>
above) Start redeeming the date after the event<lb/>
medal is awarded You may also win GREAT<lb/>
PRIZES and McDonald's food instantly Only one<lb/>
prize redeemable per game piece per person<lb/>
per visit No purchase necessary<lb/>
Save your Game Pieces<lb/>
YOU CAN ALSO WIN WITH COCA-COLA<lb/>
2-LITER BOTTLE CAPS<lb/>
Look under the cap of specially marked<lb/>
2-liter bottles of Coca-Cola products, to<lb/>
reveal a 1988 Summer Olympic Event<lb/>
If the U.S. wins any medal in that<lb/>
event, you win a McDonald's food<lb/>
prize (see above). You may also<lb/>
win GREAT PRIZES and<lb/>
McDonald's food instantly<lb/>
No purchase necessary<lb/>
See official rules to obtain<lb/>
a free Game Piece<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0028"/><lb/>
GM<lb/>
. ? '<lb/>
The New Generation of Oldsmobile.<lb/>
Cutlass Supreme International Series<lb/>
The Cutlass Supreme International Series<lb/>
is a new generation ( i jmobile. It chal<lb/>
lenges Lhe best the world has to offer, with<lb/>
built-in acvar.taes like fron: wheel drive,<lb/>
: r wheel power<lb/>
aDSMOBILL li : brakes, fully<lb/>
independentsus<lb/>
pension and a multi<lb/>
port fuel-injected V6 engine. A sophisticated<lb/>
ride and handling system, power rack-and<lb/>
pinion steering and available anti-lock<lb/>
braking system add incredible responsive<lb/>
ness and control. State-of-the-art aero-<lb/>
dvnamic design is combined with low-profile<lb/>
performance radials on aluminum-styled<lb/>
16-inch wheels, fascia-mounted foglamps<lb/>
and wraparound glass to create style that's<lb/>
truly a step ahead.<lb/>
What's more, on the inside. Cutlass<lb/>
Supreme International Series is just as<lb/>
striking as it is on the outside. An electronic<lb/>
digital instrument cluster translates every<lb/>
driving function. Climate and sound sys<lb/>
terns can be controlled with available<lb/>
steering wheel touch controls. And contour<lb/>
front bucket seats with power-operated<lb/>
lumbar and side bolster supports tune the<lb/>
seating for extraordinary driving comfort.<lb/>
Cutlass Supreme International Series.<lb/>
The new world class competitor. Visit y ir<lb/>
nearby Olds dealer for a test drive : day.<lb/>
You'll agree that this generation of<lb/>
i ldsmobile will be hard to beat.<lb/>
II The New Generation of<lb/>
8 OLDSMOBILE<lb/>
TV<lb/>
WIN A NEW CUTLASS SUPREME INTERNATIONAL SERIES!<lb/>
VALASSIS INSERTS<lb/>
<pb facs="00058089_0029"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>