<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058090_0001"/>
Coming Thursday:<lb/>
Who killed Thomas Lee McGowan?<lb/>
'ea hires:<lb/>
he Marching Pirates celebrate their 50th anniversary.<lb/>
SPORTS:<lb/>
A look at the Pirate's 52-13 victory over Tennessee<lb/>
Tech.<lb/>
She<lb/>
(tfarnlttuart<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. lb<lb/>
Tuesday, September 6,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
26 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
ECU student assualted, sustains injuries<lb/>
By SHAN HERRING<lb/>
An ECL student was walking<lb/>
home from work, when tour men<lb/>
attacked him, beating him with an<lb/>
iron bar and taking his money, ac-<lb/>
cording to Greenville Police re-<lb/>
ports.<lb/>
Despite the attack injuries and I<lb/>
$6,000 in medical bills. 1 awrence<lb/>
Tolo. a native oi Kenya, has re-<lb/>
sisted drawing unfavorable con<lb/>
elusions about the United States.<lb/>
It was something that could<lb/>
have happened to anyone, he<lb/>
said.Tolo, 22. hasbeen in America<lb/>
tor three years studying pre-engi-<lb/>
neering. at ECU, and is employed<lb/>
at Fast fare.<lb/>
1 do not have a bad perception<lb/>
ot America, even though this has<lb/>
happened. I do not believe that it<lb/>
was racially motivated. " Tolo<lb/>
said.<lb/>
he attack occurred on<lb/>
rhrusday September 1, about<lb/>
10:50 p.m. near Elm and 10th<lb/>
streets, acording to police reports.<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial I lospital<lb/>
reports show that Tolo was in-<lb/>
jured around his right cheek and<lb/>
eye and suffered a fractured left<lb/>
arm. The total cost for his treat-<lb/>
ment will be approximately<lb/>
$6,000, according to hospital re-<lb/>
ports.<lb/>
"1 had a bad experience, that has<lb/>
taught me to be more cautious, "<lb/>
Tolo said.<lb/>
"But 1 have met some good<lb/>
people in America, like those that<lb/>
1 know at the university, down-<lb/>
town, and at work. "<lb/>
He added, "The people 1 work<lb/>
with are good people. Their sup-<lb/>
port has been a comfort to me. 1<lb/>
still have a long way to recovery,<lb/>
not only physically and mentally,<lb/>
but financially he said.<lb/>
According to ECU officials,<lb/>
because Tolo does not have 24-<lb/>
hour insurance coverage at the<lb/>
university, and he was not injured<lb/>
on the campus, insurance benefits<lb/>
from the school do not apply to his<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
"I do not know how I will be<lb/>
able to cover all of my medical<lb/>
bills. It is indefinite how long I will<lb/>
be under doctors' care, " Tolo<lb/>
Slid.<lb/>
He further stated, "Hopefully,<lb/>
the people that did this to me will<lb/>
beapprehended,and some justice<lb/>
will be served. "<lb/>
Alumni contribute $150,000,<lb/>
challenge others to do same<lb/>
KT ch� H<lb/>
Four alumni have committed<lb/>
11 50<lb/>
VI1<lb/>
ast V arc<lb/>
I i n a<lb/>
Pro-<lb/>
ther<lb/>
University's Annual Civ in<lb/>
gram and have challenged<lb/>
ECU alumni to do the same.<lb/>
John J. Beard III, of 1 i s Vngeles<lb/>
William H. "Bill Bodenhame<lb/>
oi Deerfield beach, Fla Robert S.<lb/>
Bob" Rippy oi Wrightsville<lb/>
Beach and j. Michael M.kc . <lb/>
Hams of Burlington have agreed<lb/>
to match all new and increased<lb/>
gifts to the university ud<lb/>
P<lb/>
to<lb/>
$150,000.<lb/>
"There are few things in fui<lb/>
raising that capture the imaj<lb/>
tions of potential donors as d i sa<lb/>
challenge gift said David B.<lb/>
McDonald, institutional Ad-<lb/>
vancement director. "There is<lb/>
something very appealing about<lb/>
the idea oi doubling the value ot<lb/>
your contribution at no extra<lb/>
expense to you. "<lb/>
Thechallengegift will provide a<lb/>
focus tor ECU's 1988-89 fund-<lb/>
raising year as the Young Alumni<lb/>
Challenge, McDonald said. "The<lb/>
young' in the name refers to the<lb/>
four who are issuing the chal-<lb/>
lenge; all attended ECU during<lb/>
the TO's, McDonald said.<lb/>
"We're directing the challenge to<lb/>
all alumni and friends oi the uni-<lb/>
versity regardless oi age. "<lb/>
The $150,000 contibuted by the<lb/>
four "young" alumni will be used<lb/>
to enhance ECU's scholarship<lb/>
program. McDonald said. They<lb/>
have agreed, however, to match<lb/>
all new and increased gifts re-<lb/>
gardlessol where that money will<lb/>
be used.<lb/>
Beard is the evening news an-<lb/>
chor and commentator with<lb/>
KNBC-TV in Los Angeles, a sta-<lb/>
tion that is owned and operated<lb/>
by NBC He has received two<lb/>
Emmy a .�. ards: one for a program<lb/>
he hosted on helpoing children<lb/>
cope with emergencies and one<lb/>
tor a series on the U.S. Marine<lb/>
Corps in Beirut that he conceived,<lb/>
wrote and produced.<lb/>
A native of St. Pauls, N.C,<lb/>
Beard enrolled at ECU after a tour<lb/>
in Vietnam with the Navy hospi-<lb/>
tal corps. He graduated in 1975<lb/>
with a Bachelor ot Fine Arts de-<lb/>
gree in drama and speech and a<lb/>
minor in broadcasting.<lb/>
While attending ECU, Beard<lb/>
worked full time at IV I V in<lb/>
Washington. N.C, as reporter<lb/>
mo news anchor. I le was hon-<lb/>
ored by the Alumni Association in<lb/>
1984 with the<lb/>
Alumni Award.<lb/>
tions. "<lb/>
Bodenhamer, a resident oi<lb/>
Deerfield Beach, Fla is president<lb/>
ot Grayline Transportation Serv-<lb/>
ice and executive vice president of<lb/>
B &amp;: L Services Inc which to-<lb/>
gether form the largest transpor-<lb/>
tation company in the southeast-<lb/>
ern United States.<lb/>
"Now that I'm established pro-<lb/>
fessionally, I want to give some-<lb/>
thing back to the university and<lb/>
encourage other alumni to do the<lb/>
same, " Bodenhamer said. "With<lb/>
this challenge, 1 hope we can<lb/>
motivate other ECU graduates to<lb/>
make their first commitments to<lb/>
the university or to increase their<lb/>
levels of giving. "<lb/>
A native of Jacksonville, N.C,<lb/>
Bodenhamer came to ECU in 1970<lb/>
Crews work hard on Sunday morning cleaning Ficklin Stadium after the Pirate's S2-11 victory over<lb/>
Tennessee Tech (ECU Photolab).<lb/>
dent-senior manager of the Sher-<lb/>
son Lehman Hutton Partnership<lb/>
Group. "We develop and ma-ket<lb/>
programs that are known as direct<lb/>
investments, " Rippy said. "We<lb/>
on a football scholarship. He left just finished up the financing oi<lb/>
the team after two vcars to be<lb/>
come more involved with other<lb/>
campus activities.<lb/>
He served as Student govern-<lb/>
ment Association (SGA) presi-<lb/>
dent in 1973-74, and is known for<lb/>
implementing the student shuttle<lb/>
Outstanding bus system and for insisting that<lb/>
campus security cars switch from<lb/>
" I had a great experience at East red to blue lights, thereby earning<lb/>
Carolina and treasure the memo-<lb/>
ries from those years, ' Beard<lb/>
said. "As time has passed, my<lb/>
appreciation for the university<lb/>
has deepened. I'm proud to do<lb/>
what I can to make an ECU expe-<lb/>
rience available to future genera-<lb/>
the nickname "Blue Light"<lb/>
Bodenhamer.<lb/>
Rippy, a resident of<lb/>
Wrightsville Beach, is vice presi-<lb/>
all of Walt Disney's movies. 'Who<lb/>
Framed Roger Rabbit' was one oi<lb/>
them. "<lb/>
A native ot Burlington, Rippy<lb/>
majored in biology at ECU and<lb/>
was active in fraternity life, serv-<lb/>
ing as president oi Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
fraternity and treasurer of the<lb/>
Inter-Fraternity Council. I le com-<lb/>
pleted all coursework tor a<lb/>
master's degree in science educa-<lb/>
tion and taught school for one<lb/>
year before entering the business<lb/>
world.<lb/>
"I decided I didn't want to be a<lb/>
biology teacher for the rest oi my<lb/>
life, " he said. "The degree does<lb/>
come in handy, though. I was the<lb/>
liaison for a $30 million partner-<lb/>
ship we just bought because I was<lb/>
the only one is the group that<lb/>
understood biochemistry. "<lb/>
Williams is president oi Ala-<lb/>
mance Machine Companv in<lb/>
Burlington, a manufacturer oi<lb/>
marine transmission couplings.<lb/>
He also owns several small busi-<lb/>
nesses, including car washes, a<lb/>
miniature golf course and a rec-<lb/>
reational water park.<lb/>
As an ECU undergraduate,<lb/>
Williams served as president ot<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau fraternitv, was a<lb/>
member of the Inter-Fraternitv<lb/>
Council, and a cheerleader. He<lb/>
majored in biology education.<lb/>
Williams is one oi ECU's major<lb/>
contributers, having recently<lb/>
committed $20,000 to establish a<lb/>
University Scholars Award and<lb/>
tour Alumni Honors Scholar-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
"The state does a good job pro-<lb/>
viding for education, " Williams<lb/>
said. "But in order to truly enrich<lb/>
the higher educational process,<lb/>
individual commitments are<lb/>
needed. Even if it isn't your kid<lb/>
that will benefit from that gift.<lb/>
somebody's will. "<lb/>
See ALUMNI, page 9<lb/>
12 perish on N.C. highways<lb/>
Many people, including Patrick Davenport, enjoyed a few<lb/>
pre-game beers (ECU Photolab).<lb/>
(AP)- A wet Labor Day week-<lb/>
end across much of North Caro-<lb/>
lina has kept roads perilous as va-<lb/>
cationers return from holiday<lb/>
revelry, the state Highway Patrol<lb/>
said today.<lb/>
At least 12 people, including a<lb/>
bicyclist, ha ve died so far in Labor<lb/>
Day weekend traffic wrecks on<lb/>
North Carolina roads, the patrol<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Labor Day weekend traffic has<lb/>
been heavy Trooper M.D.<lb/>
Walker said. "I've been working<lb/>
the interstates. It has been the<lb/>
heaviest I've seen it all year. They<lb/>
have kept us going<lb/>
"Our advice is to slow down<lb/>
and be patient he said.<lb/>
The National Weather Service<lb/>
said western North Carolina skies<lb/>
should begin clearing today, but<lb/>
those over eastern areas won't<lb/>
clear until tonight as a cold front<lb/>
moves out to sea.<lb/>
The patrol's official Labor Day<lb/>
fatality count began at 6 p.m. Fri-<lb/>
day and ends at midnight tonight.<lb/>
The Carolina Motor Club pre-<lb/>
dicted 22 people would die in<lb/>
North Carolina traffic accidents<lb/>
over the 54-hour holiday week-<lb/>
end.<lb/>
Last Labor Day weekend in<lb/>
North Carolina, 36 people died<lb/>
and 1,675 were injured, taking it<lb/>
the worst since 1971. Last year, the<lb/>
highway patrol arrested<lb/>
229people for driving while im-<lb/>
paired and issued 932 speeding<lb/>
tickets during the Labor Day<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Barry I loward Bell, 24, of Rose<lb/>
Hill, was killed when his bicycle<lb/>
was struck bv a car in his Duplin<lb/>
County hometown at 4 a.m. Sat-<lb/>
urday, troopxTS said.<lb/>
Darrell Lynn Baber, 20, oi Fort<lb/>
Bragg, was killed about 4:55 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday when he apparently fell<lb/>
asleep while driving on N.C. 410,<lb/>
about three miles south oi Duplin.<lb/>
His car struck a bridge railing.<lb/>
Zula Barnes Perry, 70, of Merry<lb/>
Hills, died about 12:30 p.m. Sun-<lb/>
day when she walked into the<lb/>
path of a car on a rural road in<lb/>
Bertie Countv.<lb/>
Donnell Catling, 29,of Ahoskie,<lb/>
was killed about 7 p.m. Sunday<lb/>
when the motorcycle he was rid-<lb/>
ing struck a ditch off a rural road<lb/>
about four miles north of<lb/>
Ahoskie.<lb/>
Donnell I loward Lewis, 31, and<lb/>
Nancy Lee Lewis, 12, both of Blad-<lb/>
enboro, were killed when the car<lb/>
in which they were passengers<lb/>
collided with another vehicle on<lb/>
N.C. 211, about three miles cast of<lb/>
Lumbcrton.<lb/>
Phillip Edison Wcstbrook, 44,<lb/>
of Eden, died when the car he was<lb/>
driving collided head-on with<lb/>
another vehicle on a rural road<lb/>
about three miles west of Eden<lb/>
about 6 p.m. Sunday.<lb/>
During an earlv Sunday rain-<lb/>
storm, two Catawba County<lb/>
sheriff's deputies were injured<lb/>
when their patrol car hit a pool oi<lb/>
water, hydroplaned and collided<lb/>
with another car at the Hickory-<lb/>
city limits, according to authori-<lb/>
ties. No one was killed.<lb/>
In Burke Countv, 1 mile west oi<lb/>
Glen Alpine, Ronald Cornelius<lb/>
Fortune, 35, oi Ashevillc, died<lb/>
about 9:30 p.m. Saturday when<lb/>
his car ran off U.S. 70, overturned<lb/>
and pinned him inside the ve-<lb/>
hicle.<lb/>
Johnnie Rudolph Monroe, 46, oi<lb/>
Wade, was killed at 3:10 a.m.<lb/>
Sunday when his car ran off a<lb/>
rural Robeson County road six<lb/>
miles southeast of St. Fauls, struck<lb/>
a ditch bank and overturned sev-<lb/>
eral times, throwing him from the<lb/>
vehicle.<lb/>
Karen E. Wargo. 21, oi Bethle-<lb/>
hem, Pa and Anthony M. Bid-<lb/>
well, 23, oi White Mills  uere<lb/>
passengers in a car that swerved<lb/>
and struck a tree Friday night<lb/>
when its driver tried to pass se<lb/>
eral vehicles at once on N.C. 58 in<lb/>
Nash Countv, troopers said.<lb/>
On Saturday, William E. Tripp,<lb/>
24, oi Shallotte, died when the car<lb/>
he was driving was struck head-<lb/>
on bv another on a rural road just<lb/>
west of Ocean Isle Beach in Brun-<lb/>
swick Dounty. Two other people<lb/>
were injured in the accident at<lb/>
1:15 a.m. Saturday, troopers said<lb/>
The accidents bring a total of<lb/>
981 people killed on North Caro<lb/>
lina roads so far this year, com-<lb/>
pared with 1,02" at this same time<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
Governor offers reward<lb/>
for info on murder<lb/>
RALEIGH� Governor James<lb/>
G. Martin today announced that<lb/>
the State is offering a reward of up<lb/>
to $5,000 for information leading<lb/>
to the arrest and conviction of the<lb/>
person or persons responsible for<lb/>
the murder of Thomas Lee<lb/>
McGowan of Greenville, North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The body of Thomas Lee<lb/>
McGowan, male, age 72, of 714<lb/>
Atlantic Avenue, Greenville,<lb/>
North Carolina, was found on<lb/>
July 11, 1988, at approximately<lb/>
10:30 a.m lying in a storage ware-<lb/>
house in Greenville, North Caro-<lb/>
lina. Mr. McGowan had received<lb/>
multiple contact wounds to the<lb/>
head that resulted in his death.<lb/>
Anyone having information<lb/>
concerning this murder should<lb/>
contact the Greenville Police<lb/>
Department or the State Bureau of<lb/>
Investigation.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0002"/><lb/>
THF EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1988<lb/>
ChJamydia may cause sterility and infertility<lb/>
1 recently found out that 1 have<lb/>
chlamydia. 1 low did 1 get it and is<lb/>
it contagious<lb/>
Chlamydia is a bacterial infec-<lb/>
tion that is sexually transmitted.<lb/>
Public Health authorities esti-<lb/>
mate that four to five people get<lb/>
chlamydia for every person who<lb/>
has gonorrhea.<lb/>
Genital infections caused by<lb/>
chlamydia occur in men and<lb/>
women and may cause different<lb/>
types of medical problems includ-<lb/>
ing:<lb/>
i I N ' MdfllfifDlfi)<lb/>
By<lb/>
Mary Elesha-Adams<lb/>
�sterility in males and infertil-<lb/>
ity in women<lb/>
Reiter's syndrome, an arthri-<lb/>
tis-like condition<lb/>
�increased chance of ectopic<lb/>
pregnancy (the embryo grows in<lb/>
the Fallopian tube instead of the<lb/>
uterus)<lb/>
�pelvic inflamatory disease in<lb/>
women<lb/>
�increased chance of sponta-<lb/>
neous abortion and stillbirth in<lb/>
women who have chlamydial in-<lb/>
fections during pregnancy<lb/>
�transmission of the bacteria<lb/>
to a child during birth causing eye<lb/>
infections and pneumonia.<lb/>
How do you know you have<lb/>
chlamydia?<lb/>
The chlamydia victim may not<lb/>
know that he or she has the dis-<lb/>
ease because 60-80 of women<lb/>
and 10 of men with the disease<lb/>
have no symptoms. If people<lb/>
don't know they have chlamydia<lb/>
they may infect others. Symptoms<lb/>
may include:<lb/>
�painful urination and a wa-<lb/>
tery discharge from the penis in<lb/>
men<lb/>
�women may have genital<lb/>
itching and burning, dull pelvic<lb/>
pain, vaginal discharge and<lb/>
bleeding between menstrual peri-<lb/>
ods.<lb/>
If you think you have ch-<lb/>
lamydia see your doctor, nurse<lb/>
practicioner, or physician assis-<lb/>
tant and ask for a test which in-<lb/>
volves taking a genital sample.<lb/>
The Student Health Center rou-<lb/>
tinely tests for chlamydia in<lb/>
women who have routine pelvic<lb/>
pap exams because of the lack of<lb/>
noticeable symptoms.<lb/>
The treatment for chlamydia is<lb/>
antibiotic therapy. You should tell<lb/>
your sexual partner if you have<lb/>
chlamydia so he or she can also seek<lb/>
medical attention.<lb/>
<lb/>
On a universitv or college cam-<lb/>
pus a bicycle is the fastest, most<lb/>
economical means of transporta-<lb/>
tion Tins isespecially true at ECU<lb/>
considering the present parking<lb/>
situation, it also holds true that a<lb/>
bicycle worth riding is worth<lb/>
keeping' You can protect you bike<lb/>
from theft and discourage theft bv<lb/>
taking proper precautions.<lb/>
During the 87-88 school year<lb/>
there were fifty-seven (57) bicvcle<lb/>
thefts reported to the ECU Cam-<lb/>
pus Police, having a property<lb/>
value of SIC 741.00. Thisincluded<lb/>
one moped valued at $600.00.<lb/>
Subtracting the value oi the<lb/>
moped, the average cost ol each<lb/>
ycle stolen was $181.09<lb/>
Thus far this 88-89 school year<lb/>
three (3) bicycles, having a value<lb/>
t $483.00, have been reported<lb/>
stolen. Two of these bikes were re-<lb/>
covered, one sustaining $45.00 in<lb/>
damages. Also, two mopeds w 're<lb/>
reported stolen, having a value of<lb/>
51 450.00. One was recovered<lb/>
valued at $800.00) but sustained<lb/>
�h era! hundred dollars worth ot<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
Most oi these thefts were made<lb/>
easj b the bike or moped owner<lb/>
who left the bike unlocked, used<lb/>
inadeqyate locking devices, or<lb/>
failed to take other precautions to<lb/>
avoid or discourage theft. Most all<lb/>
thefts are performed by amateurs.<lb/>
Some of the thefts are bv fellow<lb/>
students who may not have had<lb/>
any criminal intent, but when pre-<lb/>
sented the opportunity, just could<lb/>
not resist Most bikes are usually<lb/>
stol n t � il s or others pass<lb/>
ingthrucampuslookingforanew<lb/>
ride.<lb/>
You can protect your bicycle or<lb/>
moped from theft and discourage<lb/>
most thieves by taking these<lb/>
simple precaution<lb/>
1. ALWAYS LOCK YOUR BI-<lb/>
CYCLE OR MOLED<lb/>
Remember, it only takes a<lb/>
moment to steal an unlocked bi-<lb/>
cvcle or moped. .Always secure<lb/>
your bicvcle, even in areas you<lb/>
think are protected, such as ga-<lb/>
rages, porches and backyards.<lb/>
Pirate Crime Column<lb/>
By<lb/>
Keith Knox<lb/>
2. USE HIGH SECURITY<lb/>
TYLE LOCK<lb/>
The most common tools used<lb/>
bv the bike thief are boltcutters<lb/>
and cablewire cutters. These<lb/>
tools are powerful enough to cut<lb/>
through chains, cables or pad-<lb/>
locks up to S" thick.<lb/>
Fortunately, the new types of<lb/>
high security bike locks are<lb/>
shaped like huge padlocks de-<lb/>
signed to stop the tools used bv<lb/>
bike thieves. Many oi the new<lb/>
locks come with a warranty that<lb/>
guarantees the owner against<lb/>
theft if defeated up to a specific<lb/>
value. These are definitely the<lb/>
best locks when properly used.<lb/>
A hardened chain or cable at<lb/>
least 716" thick when used with<lb/>
the same size padlock provides a<lb/>
degree oi security for most inex-<lb/>
pensive bikes. However, an ex-<lb/>
pensive bicycle or any moped<lb/>
should bv protected bv a high se-<lb/>
curity lock, regardless oi where ;t<lb/>
is parked. Before purchasing a<lb/>
lock, you should consider the<lb/>
value of the bike as well as it's<lb/>
value to you. Also keep in mind<lb/>
the deductible in most insurance<lb/>
policies are high enough to be of<lb/>
little benefit in replacing most bi-<lb/>
cycles.<lb/>
3. LOCK YOUR BICYCLE OR<lb/>
MOLED TROrERLY<lb/>
A bike is light enough to be<lb/>
carried away if it is not locked to<lb/>
something immovable. Be sure to<lb/>
use your lock to secure at least the<lb/>
back wheel; and frame tube to a<lb/>
bike rack or similar immobile ob-<lb/>
ject. On campus they should only<lb/>
be secured to a bike rack or desig-<lb/>
nated bike shed. Never lock your<lb/>
bike by the front or back wheel<lb/>
alone. Lock your bike in a well-lit<lb/>
area where pedestrian traffic will<lb/>
discourage theft.<lb/>
4. REGISTER YOUR BICYCLE<lb/>
OR MOPED<lb/>
On the ECU campusbicycleand<lb/>
moped registration is mandatory,<lb/>
just as registering your vehicle.<lb/>
Each year the Department of<lb/>
Fublic Safety impounds 100 bi-<lb/>
cycles whicn go unclaimed.<lb/>
All unregistered bicycles can be<lb/>
impounded and held until proof<lb/>
of ownership is determined. Be-<lb/>
fore a bicycle is released, a $5.00<lb/>
impounding fee must be paid.<lb/>
This cost and inconvenience can<lb/>
be eliminated by simply register-<lb/>
ing vour bicycle for $1.00 which is<lb/>
permanent. The moped registra-<lb/>
tion is the same as a motorcycle<lb/>
and the cost is $10.00 per year<lb/>
By registering your bicycle or<lb/>
moped through the Public Safety<lb/>
Traffic Office, a permanent record<lb/>
of its description is on file. To<lb/>
further discourage theft, your<lb/>
bike can be engraved or stamped<lb/>
with a unique identification<lb/>
number (Operation ID) on the<lb/>
frame. If your bike is stolen, the<lb/>
registration decal, along with the<lb/>
engraved ID number and serial<lb/>
number, if one, will help police in<lb/>
identifying the bike as being sto-<lb/>
len and in returning the bike to<lb/>
you.<lb/>
If you have not already taken<lb/>
the above precautions, please do<lb/>
so immediately. Remember a bike<lb/>
or moped worth riding is worth<lb/>
keeping.<lb/>
)<lb/>
The East Carolinian:<lb/>
Long hours, low pay.<lb/>
Great Experience.<lb/>
Apply in person, Publications<lb/>
Building, Second Floor<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
lames 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/>
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BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
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PHONE:<lb/>
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Officials finding<lb/>
more than drugs<lb/>
���<lb/>
PHOENIX, (AD - Cociane and<lb/>
marijuana arc still the major tar-<lb/>
gets, but spiders and snakes are<lb/>
showing up in some contraband<lb/>
searches.<lb/>
So are iguanas, desert tortises<lb/>
and just about anything else that<lb/>
creeps or crawls, officials saw<lb/>
Federal and state officials who<lb/>
patrol Arizona's borders don't<lb/>
keep tabs on their living hauls the<lb/>
way they keep count of kilos and<lb/>
bads they siezc, but consider the<lb/>
numbers in two recent cases.<lb/>
On July 28,1987, the U.S. Border<lb/>
Patrol siezed 3,000 iguanas and<lb/>
several hundred tarantulas that<lb/>
were being smuggled in the<lb/>
United States through Nogales,<lb/>
Mexico.<lb/>
On March 23, the U.S. Customs<lb/>
Service confiscated 1,600 tarantu-<lb/>
las and 500 iguanas from a pick-<lb/>
up truck tried to cross the border.<lb/>
"We're not seeing a vast<lb/>
amount cross the border says<lb/>
Tom McDermott, agent in charge<lb/>
oi the customs office in Tuscon.<lb/>
"It's just not in the course of our<lb/>
normal customs-type of exams<lb/>
But Assistant U.S. Attomet<lb/>
Reese Bostwick, who is prosecut-<lb/>
ing Jorgr Manuel Martinez-Quin-<lb/>
tero in the March 23 incident, says<lb/>
there is a real market" out there<lb/>
for almost anything that is rare,<lb/>
even when it would make most<lb/>
people's flesh crawl.<lb/>
Bostwick, who handled wild-<lb/>
life cases for the Pi ma County<lb/>
attorney's office before switching<lb/>
to the federal prosecutor's office,<lb/>
recalls trailer home bedrooms<lb/>
where walls were lined with rep-<lb/>
tile cases and closets held "canvas<lb/>
bags full of poisonous snakes<lb/>
"To me it's not normal to sleep<lb/>
in vour bedroom with all kinds of<lb/>
reptiles he said.<lb/>
"There's big bucks involved<lb/>
Bostwick added, saying tarantu-<lb/>
las go for $1.25 and Gila monsters<lb/>
ran sell for $50 to $75 apiece and<lb/>
the endangered spotted rattle-<lb/>
snake fetches $100 to $150.<lb/>
Although traffic in endangered<lb/>
or protected species such as 18<lb/>
types of iguanas is a specific focus<lb/>
of such agencies as the U.S. Fish<lb/>
and Wildlife Service, even a com-<lb/>
mon species can draw attention of �<lb/>
the customs agents.<lb/>
That's because federal smug-<lb/>
gling laws require importers to<lb/>
declare theur goods and pay tax,<lb/>
whether or not the goods are 1c-<lb/>
gal.<lb/>
"Anytime vou conceal some-<lb/>
thing and bring it across the bor-<lb/>
der and don't declare it, you are<lb/>
violating a federal smuggling<lb/>
statute McDermott says. That's<lb/>
true even when the item is duty-<lb/>
free, he added, citing laws on<lb/>
declaring currency and jewels.<lb/>
Smuggling of endangered spe-<lb/>
cies and their pelts was a bigger<lb/>
concern in the 1970s, but drugs<lb/>
provide a bigger margin of profit<lb/>
and "and it's going to take you<lb/>
just as much room to smuggle in a<lb/>
tarantula" as a more profitable<lb/>
amount of cocaine, he added.<lb/>
Over the years customs agents<lb/>
"run across every type of com-<lb/>
modity conceivable from pre-<lb/>
Columbian artifacts to bull se-<lb/>
men, McDermott says.<lb/>
Still officers tend to jump back<lb/>
a few feet when they open a box<lb/>
that looks as though it could con-<lb/>
tain drugs but find a boa constric-<lb/>
tor, says Assistant Chief Ron<lb/>
Moser of the U.S. Border Patrol's<lb/>
Tuscon Sector.<lb/>
Hunting a protected species not<lb/>
only devastates the population<lb/>
but often ruins the only habitat in<lb/>
which the species can live, Bost-<lb/>
wick added.<lb/>
"What if they find out that the<lb/>
venom from the two-spotted rat-<lb/>
tler is the only known cure for<lb/>
AIDS?" he said.<lb/>
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HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
ie Blvd - Greenville<lb/>
J<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1988 3<lb/>
Faces immortalized in plaster<lb/>
EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP)-<lb/>
Inside an old, disused church on<lb/>
Edinburgh's Royal Mile, a<lb/>
strange, even macabre spectacle<lb/>
draws a steady line throughout<lb/>
the day.<lb/>
Upon a narrow wooden plat-<lb/>
form around three of the walls,<lb/>
the faces of 45 famous and infa-<lb/>
mous men are displayed in a<lb/>
dozen glass cases plaster casts<lb/>
made in their lifetime of after<lb/>
death, and not seen in public since<lb/>
since 1886.<lb/>
They start with a cheerful-look-<lb/>
ing Sir Isaac dNewton, greatest of<lb/>
scientists, who died in 1717, and<lb/>
end with expressionless George<lb/>
Rryce, who murdered a nurse-<lb/>
maid in 1864 and was the last man<lb/>
to be publicly hanged in Ed-<lb/>
inburgh, the Scottish capital.<lb/>
In between are such historic<lb/>
figures as Prime Minister William<lb/>
Pitt the Younger, composer Felix<lb/>
Mendelssohn and the poets Fried-<lb/>
rich Schiller and John Keats.<lb/>
Novelist Sir Walter Scott's mask<lb/>
has a line across the forehead<lb/>
showing it was made after the top<lb/>
oi the skull was removed at the<lb/>
autopsy into the stroke that killed<lb/>
him.<lb/>
There is baby-faced John Any<lb/>
Bird Bell, hanged in Kent in 1831<lb/>
before a crowd of 10,000 for cut-<lb/>
ting the throat of another youth.<lb/>
"Lord have mercy upon us, all<lb/>
people before me take warning<lb/>
from me he cried before the gal-<lb/>
lows trap was sprung beneath his<lb/>
feet.<lb/>
Visitors pay 50 pence (85 cents)<lb/>
to enter, and lapse into a strange<lb/>
silence as they gaze at the masks.<lb/>
"I think visitors find it so fasci-<lb/>
nating because we aren't exposed<lb/>
to this sort of material any more<lb/>
said Dr. Matthew Kaufman, pro-<lb/>
fessor of anatomy at Edinburgh<lb/>
University, who organized the ex-<lb/>
hibition.<lb/>
"To see the real features of the<lb/>
famous in three dimensions when<lb/>
they are long dead is fairly star-<lb/>
tling. If you are looking at a<lb/>
painted portrait you can never be<lb/>
absolutely sure that the image is<lb/>
lifelike, but about these there can<lb/>
be no doubt, " Kaufman, 45, said<lb/>
in an interview.<lb/>
Of the 45 masks on display, nine<lb/>
were made in life and 24 in death.<lb/>
The others could be either.<lb/>
Those of the poet Samuel Taylor<lb/>
Coleridge and playwright Rich-<lb/>
ard Brinsley Sheridan are far from<lb/>
peaceful and clearly show the<lb/>
final spasm of death.<lb/>
Kaufman said life masks were<lb/>
common before photography was<lb/>
invented. They were made of<lb/>
plaster with quills through which<lb/>
to breathe, and moulds were then<lb/>
made from the hollow plaster<lb/>
casts.<lb/>
"We found the masks covered<lb/>
in grime in the cellars and an attic<lb/>
of the university anatomy depart-<lb/>
ment said Kaufman. "It seems<lb/>
ludicrous that they were hidden<lb/>
away for so long<lb/>
The collection of 300 masks is<lb/>
one of the world's largest and was<lb/>
once double that number. Dam-<lb/>
aged masks and duplicates were<lb/>
disposed of years ago and many<lb/>
were smashed in the late 1950s<lb/>
when their shelves collapsed.<lb/>
The masks include that of John<lb/>
James Audubon, the American<lb/>
artist and naturalist who died in<lb/>
1851.<lb/>
French artist Jacques-Louis<lb/>
David is there, and so is Jean-Paul<lb/>
Marat, the French revolutionary<lb/>
agitator murdered in his bath by<lb/>
Charlotte Corday in 1793. David's<lb/>
painting of Marat dead in the bath<lb/>
was a high point of European<lb/>
painting of that time.<lb/>
Corsican assassin Joseph<lb/>
Fieschi's death mask shows the<lb/>
mutilations he suffered trying to<lb/>
kill king Louis Philippe of France<lb/>
in 1835 with a contraption of 25<lb/>
rifles bolted to a metal frame and<lb/>
fired simultaneously.<lb/>
The king escaped and Fieschi<lb/>
and two accomplices were guillo-<lb/>
tined.<lb/>
The rogues' gallery includes<lb/>
Edinburgh's notorious William<lb/>
Burke and William Hare, who<lb/>
murdered at least 16 adults and<lb/>
children in the early 19th century<lb/>
to sell the bodies to Dr. Robert<lb/>
Knox, an anatomist.<lb/>
"There are all sorts of strange<lb/>
things like this lying about, ne-<lb/>
glected or forgotten. Quite often<lb/>
they get thrown out, sold, broken<lb/>
or destroyed because the right<lb/>
person with the curiosity or the<lb/>
imagination is not there at the<lb/>
right time to rescue them<lb/>
Kaufman said.<lb/>
"I'm interested in the masks<lb/>
and I was sure others would be<lb/>
because I'm interested in out-of-<lb/>
the-way things the anatomist<lb/>
.said.<lb/>
r<lb/>
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Jurors admit mistake<lb/>
Philadelphia (AD - Halt the<lb/>
jurors in the first tobacco liability<lb/>
suit to result in a judgement<lb/>
against a cigarette company for a<lb/>
lung cancer death say they were<lb/>
wrong in awarding money, ac-<lb/>
cording to a report Saturday.<lb/>
They hope an appeals court<lb/>
overturns their verdict, according<lb/>
to early Sunday editions of The<lb/>
Philadelphia Inquirer.<lb/>
Three of the six federal jurors<lb/>
said in seperate interviews over<lb/>
the last two weeks that they<lb/>
shouldn't have ordered the Lig-<lb/>
gett Group Inc. to award $400,000<lb/>
Antonio Cipollone, whose wife<lb/>
Rose, died oi lung cancer after<lb/>
smoking for more than 40 years.<lb/>
The trial judge, H. Lee Sarokin,<lb/>
at firmed the werdict two weeks<lb/>
irr- inrnTfrrffjgift<lb/>
ThejuQjjiaid<lb/>
"RsepTTOrTb was Tesponsrore<lb/>
for her own actions, that the to-<lb/>
bacco companies never forced her<lb/>
to light up and that they never<lb/>
should have been held liable.<lb/>
But they said they compro-<lb/>
mised after two oi the jurorswho<lb/>
insisted on finding the tobacco<lb/>
companise liable wore down the<lb/>
others through five days of in-<lb/>
tense deliberation and heated<lb/>
arguments in a cramped jury<lb/>
room in Newark, N.J.<lb/>
"As I look back on it todav, I<lb/>
don't think I did the right thing<lb/>
said Marie Mickens, who was the<lb/>
jury foreman. "I hope they (Lig-<lb/>
gett) win on appeal. I really do<lb/>
Mrs. Mickens and the others<lb/>
who were interviewed by the<lb/>
newspaper said they wish they<lb/>
simply told the judge they could<lb/>
not reach a conclusion. She also<lb/>
said that they were a hung jury<lb/>
and that the case should be re-<lb/>
tried.<lb/>
When the verdict was read in<lb/>
court on June 13, juror Barbara<lb/>
Reilly wept.<lb/>
"1 was crying because I gave<lb/>
in she said. She said shebelieved<lb/>
the decision was wrong and that<lb/>
she should have stood her ground<lb/>
in the jury room.<lb/>
Another juror, Ralph Eliseo<lb/>
said he also thought he should not<lb/>
have compromised and that the<lb/>
iict should beqyertuxned.<lb/>
erc'are nights f ray awake<lb/>
11 lvl1rlrii1g,n!)id'Tobrnming<lb/>
wrong that is going to affect<lb/>
mankind for years? said Eliseo,<lb/>
the lone smoker on the jury.<lb/>
The other three jurors declined<lb/>
to discuss the case, the Inquirer<lb/>
Reported.<lb/>
Cipollone's attorneys had ar-<lb/>
gued that Liggett, which makes<lb/>
Chesterfields, the brand Mrs.<lb/>
Cipollone smoked most of her<lb/>
life, made false health claims in its<lb/>
1950s advertising. That advertis-<lb/>
ing was essentially a false war-<lb/>
ranty that smoking was safe, the<lb/>
lawyers claimed.<lb/>
But the heart of their case, the<lb/>
lawyers said, was their claim that<lb/>
Liggett conspired that Phillip<lb/>
Morris Inc. and Lorillard Inc<lb/>
which made other brands of ciga-<lb/>
rettes Ms. Cipollone smoked, to<lb/>
keep secret what the companies<lb/>
knew about the health hazards of<lb/>
smoking.<lb/>
The plaintiffs' attorneys intro-<lb/>
duced hundreds of secret indus-<lb/>
try documents from the 1950s. It<lb/>
was the first those documents had<lb/>
been used in a tobacco liability<lb/>
trial, and Cipollone's argued they<lb/>
illustrated a decision by cigarette<lb/>
makers to hide what they knew<lb/>
about the dangers of smoking.<lb/>
"It's just how you interpret it<lb/>
she said. "We don't see how<lb/>
theyrje so damaging<lb/>
Attorneys for both Cipollone<lb/>
awcH-iggett said-Fridaythey �rere<lb/>
not surprised that the jurors had<lb/>
compromised, but that their state-<lb/>
ments would have little or no part<lb/>
in the appeal that the cigarette<lb/>
company plans to file later this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
"What the jurors, with their<lb/>
comments, seem to indicate is that<lb/>
they accept the proposition that a<lb/>
person who smokes in the '40s,<lb/>
'50s or '60s understands what<lb/>
they're doing and voluntarily<lb/>
chooses to smoke said James<lb/>
Kearney, an attorney for Liggett.<lb/>
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THE PLAZA-OREINViLLE<lb/>
MONFRI. 9 A.M. 'TIL 5 P.M.<lb/>
355-5075<lb/>
Four Klansmen<lb/>
arrested at rally<lb/>
(AD� Four members of the<lb/>
Christian Knights of the Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan were arrested during a<lb/>
weekend march in Durham after<lb/>
officers found a substance be-<lb/>
lieved to be marijuana under the<lb/>
front seat of one car, officials said.<lb/>
Between 65 and 70 Klan mem-<lb/>
bers drove through Druham after<lb/>
a march in Raleigh on Saturday,<lb/>
Durham Police Major H.K.<lb/>
Fletcher said. The Klan members<lb/>
were on their way to a march in<lb/>
Hillsborough.<lb/>
The Klan had asked permission<lb/>
to march in Durham on Saturday,<lb/>
but a permit was denied by Dur-<lb/>
ham City Manager Orville Pow-<lb/>
ell.<lb/>
Fletcher said 23 vehicles con-<lb/>
taining Klan members came<lb/>
through Durham about 2 p.m.<lb/>
Confederate nags flew from car<lb/>
windows and Klan members ex-<lb/>
changed shouts with passersby.<lb/>
Officers stopped one car after<lb/>
they received information that<lb/>
there might be weapons in the<lb/>
vehicle.<lb/>
The owner of the car, Dwayne<lb/>
Mark Karr, 29, of Petersburg, W.<lb/>
Va consented to search of the<lb/>
Officers arrested Karr, Gary<lb/>
Ford Adkins, 23, of Reidsville,<lb/>
Thomas Arthur Reed, 41, and<lb/>
Timothy Ala Rexrode, 36, both of<lb/>
Belpre, Ohio.<lb/>
The four men were charged<lb/>
with possession of marijuana and<lb/>
possession of drug parapherna-<lb/>
lia. Each was placed under a<lb/>
$1,000 secured bond. Adkins<lb/>
posted bond, but the other men<lb/>
were held overnight in jail.<lb/>
Later, about 50 Klan members<lb/>
dressed in hooded robes marched<lb/>
in Hillsborough to the Orange<lb/>
County Courthouse, carrying<lb/>
Confederate flages. More than<lb/>
100 onlookers stood behind lines<lb/>
of deputies from Orange County<lb/>
and police from Chapel Hill and<lb/>
Carrboro. Agents from the State<lb/>
Bureau of Investigation were also<lb/>
on hand. A handful of protesters<lb/>
shouted back and waved anti-<lb/>
klan placards.<lb/>
The Christian Knights of the Ku<lb/>
Klux Klan also held a march<lb/>
around the Capitol building in<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
The 73 marchers in Raleigh�<lb/>
many dressed in hooded ropes of<lb/>
white, red, green or black� gath-<lb/>
Stop by UBE before<lb/>
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pirate football<lb/>
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And while you're at<lb/>
UBE see our full line<lb/>
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It's all at University<lb/>
Book Exchange, downtown<lb/>
Greenville  the one for<lb/>
the fans. Stop by today.<lb/>
vehicle, Fletcher said, and officers crcd for a brief rally and speeches<lb/>
found marijuana and rolling pa- Less than a dozen protesters were<lb/>
pcrs. present and there were no arrests.<lb/>
Flaming Carrot � says Watch out for the V <lb/>
Pirate Comix v�IV<lb/>
1988 PIRATE HOME SCHEDULE<lb/>
The cutting edg of humor'<lb/>
Most every Thursday in the<lb/>
East Carolinian. Solid<lb/>
MjrMlMlJpMfMlMIHMM<lb/>
Sept. 3 Tennessee Tech. 7:00 PM<lb/>
Sept. 24 Southern Mississippi (Parent's Day) 1:30 PM<lb/>
Oct. 1 Southwestern Louisiana 1:30 PM<lb/>
Oct. 8 West Virginia (Homecoming)<lb/>
Oct. 22 Syracuse<lb/>
Oct. 29 Miami<lb/>
2:00 PM<lb/>
1:30 PM<lb/>
130 PM<lb/>
7ieOhe TofTheThnsI<lb/>
Open Football Saturdays 9:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M.Weekdays 9:00 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.<lb/>
516 S. Cotanche Street Downtown Greenville<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0004"/><lb/>
(Ufa lEaat (ftarnlintan<lb/>
SrvtHM th lt i.j�Wtw t�<lb/>
 iwyi.n umr 1925<lb/>
Pete Fernald, cw�m��,�<lb/>
Chip Carter, MMf.�,u�or<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, ���� ofuwrtuwj<lb/>
Joe Harris, N��FjitOT<lb/>
DOUG JOl INSON, Sports UUor<lb/>
Tim Hampton, re��i.r�i��<lb/>
Mici ielle England, &amp;�� m�<lb/>
Derbie Stevens, s<lb/>
Jeff Parker.s &amp;<lb/>
TOM FURR,Crrt�i�Kn.M�uj�r<lb/>
Susan Howell, fvmMmpr<lb/>
John W. Medlin, ek�,<lb/>
Mac Clark, BusmesMMger<lb/>
September 6, 1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Abortion<lb/>
Funeral didn't help either side<lb/>
Choices are always hard to While the priest who performed<lb/>
make. From what to wear in the the service commented on the "in-<lb/>
morning to what college to go to, trinsic dignity" of the fetuses, that<lb/>
there's always the element of doubt dignity was compromised in every<lb/>
 "What would it have been like if I way  from the scavenger-like<lb/>
had chosen B instead of A?" method of collecting the fetuses, to<lb/>
Maybe that's why organizations their storing and eventual burial,<lb/>
and governments that focus on tak- While the pro-life contingent<lb/>
ing away individual choice always may feel steps like this are necessary<lb/>
pop up, despite the wars fought and to halt what they see as the murder<lb/>
laws passed to prevent them. If one of uncounted innocents, this fiasco<lb/>
has no choice, one cannot make the will only hurt their cause in the long<lb/>
wrong choice. run. Not that it will help the pro-<lb/>
Pro-life activists, such as the choice supporters more. While it<lb/>
ones who staged the mass fetus may seem to justify their cause tem-<lb/>
funeral, point out that unborn chil- porarily, the lasting memories of the<lb/>
dren have no choice in the matter of funeral will be ones of disgust and<lb/>
THE! MNDE:MHAU. G-FrAETRiCAUY &amp;AU�D7 SUBSTITUTE" MEAL PLAN -<lb/>
OK<lb/>
C D c<lb/>
Mow To EAT ON A Bock �6HTr FIVET<lb/>
their own lives and deaths. Pro-<lb/>
choice activists argue that the<lb/>
woman must have the right to<lb/>
choose what happens to their bod-<lb/>
ies, especially after traumatic situ-<lb/>
ations such as rape or sexual abuse.<lb/>
While the anti-abortionists'<lb/>
repulsiveness, and a desire to think<lb/>
less about the situation of abortion.<lb/>
something neither cause wants.<lb/>
Choices are always hard to<lb/>
make. Perhaps if the anti-abortion-<lb/>
ists realized that the pro-choice<lb/>
groups want to be responsible for<lb/>
cause is a worthy one, and guided by their choices, they should let them<lb/>
good intentions, their often extrem- be. They have to live with their deci-<lb/>
ist nature prevents their reasons and sions for the rest of their lives,<lb/>
rationale from being heard. The Just like the organizer of the<lb/>
mass funeral was not a legitimate funeral, the priest, the people who<lb/>
protest, it was a media spectacle. collected the fetuses <lb/>
Mass funeral draws disgust<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
After reading several articles<lb/>
concerning the recent mass funeral<lb/>
for 157 aborted fetuses, we felt it<lb/>
necessary to write and express our<lb/>
disgust. Besides the fact that this is<lb/>
conceivably the most morbid event<lb/>
in the ongoing disputes between pro-<lb/>
choice and anti-abortion factions,<lb/>
this is a blatant and vulgar invasion<lb/>
of the privacy of the women in-<lb/>
volved.<lb/>
We can understand the feelings<lb/>
of those who for various reasons<lb/>
wish to keep their unborn children;<lb/>
however, we feel that there should be<lb/>
more respect for those who do choose<lb/>
abortion. It is pointless and trite to<lb/>
speculate at what the world might<lb/>
have lost by not having had these<lb/>
children grow into maturity; what<lb/>
we do not know about, we cannot<lb/>
lose.<lb/>
This funeral and the publicity<lb/>
generated by it and its proponents<lb/>
seem to be a grandiose guilt trip, a<lb/>
most immature way to address an<lb/>
issue. Everyone is entitled to his or<lb/>
her beliefs � this is supposedly "the<lb/>
land of the free" � but the attitude<lb/>
these people are trying to generate is<lb/>
one of absolute right and wrong, a<lb/>
scenario which does not exist in the<lb/>
real world.<lb/>
Granted, for religious or per-<lb/>
sonal reaasons, some will elect to<lb/>
have their babies, but considering the<lb/>
consequences faced by some mothers<lb/>
and children, abortion could actually<lb/>
be the more humane choice.<lb/>
Many abortions are had by<lb/>
women who are financially or emo-<lb/>
tionally unable to deal with the<lb/>
enormous responsibility of raising<lb/>
and caring for a child. Furthermore,<lb/>
should a woman be raped and not<lb/>
report it, it is unrealistic to expect her<lb/>
to bear her assailant's child.<lb/>
While we are not advocating the<lb/>
use of abortion as a form of delayed<lb/>
in this country are sadly lacking.<lb/>
Many girlswomen who find<lb/>
themselves pregnant cannot<lb/>
adequately provide for the child.<lb/>
Medicaid, AFDC, food stamps and<lb/>
housing assistance have been drasti-<lb/>
cally reduced, not to mention student<lb/>
financial aid, which is at an all-time<lb/>
low.<lb/>
Please explain how a young col-<lb/>
lege woman, who is pregnant, is to<lb/>
birth and care for a child without<lb/>
money.<lb/>
If she drops out of school and<lb/>
works full-time, she is trapped in<lb/>
low-paying, non-advancing jobs,<lb/>
always struggling to make ends<lb/>
meet. If she marries then one spouse<lb/>
will have to work to support the<lb/>
family, again in low-paying, non-<lb/>
advancing jobs.<lb/>
Also, over 75 of young mar-<lb/>
riages fail. If she tries to stay in<lb/>
school, she'll need her own apart-<lb/>
ment plus tuition plus books plus<lb/>
food plus childcare � difficult for<lb/>
many parents with adequate in-<lb/>
comes.<lb/>
Finally, and probably most im-<lb/>
portantly, many young people are<lb/>
just not emotionally prepared to be<lb/>
parents�it's no one's fault, they just<lb/>
aren't ready.<lb/>
Instead of anti-choice activists<lb/>
burying fetuses, why don't they start<lb/>
providing low-interest loans or<lb/>
clothing or housing or childcare or<lb/>
deposits on apartments.<lb/>
There are very few of us who<lb/>
choose to terminate a pregnancy for<lb/>
convenience alone � many of us just<lb/>
don't see any other viable alternative.<lb/>
If you want to stop abortions, then<lb/>
help us where it really counts � the<lb/>
pocketbook. Hot air never pu t food in<lb/>
anyone's mouth.<lb/>
Lysa Hieber<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Nursing<lb/>
birth control, we still feel that the<lb/>
choice should be made by the woman Mail SipOlOgiZ6S<lb/>
herself not anyone else; it is, after all,<lb/>
her own body.<lb/>
Marshall Moore<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Psychology<lb/>
Robin Andrews<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Anthropology<lb/>
Pregnant reality<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
The article of activists holding a<lb/>
funeral (for aborted fetuses) made<lb/>
me again think of the whole abortion<lb/>
issue. Aside from emotions, the eco-<lb/>
nomic reality is that provisions for<lb/>
parenting and providing for children<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Well, it seems that the time has<lb/>
come that every man in the universe<lb/>
should stop pretending and own up<lb/>
to the truth. All the things feminists<lb/>
have said are, sadly enough, true,<lb/>
and we have been lying to society<lb/>
every day.<lb/>
We really do think women are<lb/>
the enemies, and feel comfortable<lb/>
when they are bound and gagged.<lb/>
And every time we open a door for a<lb/>
woman, or even smile at her, what we<lb/>
really want is to tie her up, beat her<lb/>
into a bloody pulp, and rape her until<lb/>
she can't walk straight.<lb/>
We're so incredibly narrow-<lb/>
minded that we hate everyc ne who<lb/>
isn't exactly like ourselves. But<lb/>
please forgive us, our brains are in<lb/>
our penises.<lb/>
We can't talk without using pro-<lb/>
fanity and can't cope with society<lb/>
when we're sober. We want to kill<lb/>
everything we can't rape and burn<lb/>
everything we can't kill. That's just<lb/>
the way we are.<lb/>
God is really a woman, and she<lb/>
hates men, one and all. Satan put us<lb/>
here to test women, the only "real"<lb/>
human beings. We were put here to<lb/>
insult, harass, humiliate and sexually<lb/>
abuse them.<lb/>
That's just our way of being po-<lb/>
lite.<lb/>
But honestly, I would like to say<lb/>
that I am deeply sorry � I am deeply<lb/>
sorry for the many people who have<lb/>
read this letter thus far and agreed<lb/>
with it, and haven't noticed that<lb/>
those incredible truths are blatant<lb/>
lies, a sarcastic trap for the narrow-<lb/>
minded, self-righteous people who<lb/>
are lost in a world of their own stere-<lb/>
otypical truths.<lb/>
I am sorry that many women<lb/>
think of men as sexual vampires. I am<lb/>
sorry that they sneer at me when I<lb/>
hold a door. I am sorry they think of<lb/>
me as a pervert whenever I speak to<lb/>
them. I am sorry that they see me as a<lb/>
sex-starved Neandrathal, whose<lb/>
only interest in his fellow human<lb/>
beings is in their use for pacification<lb/>
of his violent and sexual urges.<lb/>
I am sorry society has lost its<lb/>
virginity. I am sorry that some people<lb/>
are narrow-minded, prejudiced, self-<lb/>
righteous zealots who stereotype<lb/>
everyone they see. I am sorry for the<lb/>
minority of individuals whose ac-<lb/>
tions have caused the rest to be stere-<lb/>
otyped. I am sorry to be living in a<lb/>
society of people who love them-<lb/>
selves so much, but love each other so<lb/>
little.<lb/>
Last of all, I am sorry for people<lb/>
whom I have not touched, who will<lb/>
go on thinking of everyone they see<lb/>
as an enemy.<lb/>
With deepest regrets,<lb/>
Jim Shamlin<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
English<lb/>
Paper "boo-boos"<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
When I was eight years old, I fell<lb/>
off my bicycle while trying to pop a<lb/>
wheelie to impress Molly Reeber and<lb/>
skinned my elbow. It looked awful.<lb/>
Blood everywhere. But when we<lb/>
cleaned away the carnage, the<lb/>
wound was very small.<lb/>
Everything should have been<lb/>
okay after that. Of course, It wasn't.<lb/>
Children are lousy for picking scabs<lb/>
and mine eventually became so in-<lb/>
fected that I had to go to the doctor.<lb/>
Two weeks ago, The East Carolin-<lb/>
ian, in an attempt to impress us with<lb/>
a "fancy" illustration, missed the<lb/>
maneuver completely and got them-<lb/>
selves very bloody. Now, because the<lb/>
editorial staff cannot seem to quit<lb/>
picking at the scab, this "boo-boo"<lb/>
might become a far more mortal<lb/>
wound.<lb/>
While the illustration (8-23-88,<lb/>
p.l) that has offended so many<lb/>
people on this campus is undoubt-<lb/>
edly a very gross and sexist thing, it is<lb/>
not nearly so unsightful as the paper<lb/>
published September 1st. that the<lb/>
managing editor (editorial, p.4),<lb/>
much less the illustrator (cartoon and<lb/>
letter, p.4) and entertainment editor<lb/>
("East Carolinian under siege <lb/>
p.l7) can defend the illustration, and<lb/>
attack those already injured, in the<lb/>
patronizing, chauvanistic and<lb/>
'light" way they did is unforgivable.<lb/>
Instead of apologizing for the<lb/>
insult they inflicted on a great num-<lb/>
ber of people, they chose to drive<lb/>
their illustrated sword to the hilt.<lb/>
Every person on campus should take<lb/>
their actions as a personal affront.<lb/>
Although I am a very real sup-<lb/>
porter of our paper's First Amend-<lb/>
ment right to freedom of speech, I am<lb/>
11 it<lb/>
also a great believer in journalistic<lb/>
ethics and maturity. The public bait-<lb/>
ing and patronizing displayed in the<lb/>
9-1-88 paper is obviously the work of<lb/>
eight year olds.<lb/>
I hope that the Media Board will<lb/>
take this latest outrage by "our"<lb/>
newspaper staff under serious con-<lb/>
sideration. 1 encourageall students, if<lb/>
you have not already, to evaluate the<lb/>
illustration and to read the editorials<lb/>
and satire mentioned above.<lb/>
If you too take personal offense, I<lb/>
hope you will exercise your First<lb/>
Amendment right and scud letters to<lb/>
the newspaper and Media Board of-<lb/>
fices until either a formal apology or<lb/>
resignation is offered by the manag-<lb/>
ing editor oi The Eat Carolinian. We<lb/>
do not deserve to be blatantly in-<lb/>
sulted like this by our own paper.<lb/>
Hale Svvanson<lb/>
Graduate Student,<lb/>
Technical and Professional<lb/>
Writing<lb/>
Former East Carolinian Staff<lb/>
Writer<lb/>
Cartoon still offends<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
When I picked up the first issue<lb/>
of your paper I was .rushed and<lb/>
didn't have time to read it, but 1 did<lb/>
glance at the front page before tuck-<lb/>
ing it into my backpack, and I<lb/>
laughed with amazement at the ill-<lb/>
fated pirate cartoon.<lb/>
As a male, I wasn't particularly<lb/>
offended by what I saw � Mr. Parker<lb/>
has a fine sense of the female figure,<lb/>
but I still can't believe it was allowed<lb/>
to be represented in such a manner.<lb/>
I have listened to my fellow<lb/>
males making fun of the letters of<lb/>
protest, and I have read with further<lb/>
shock Parker's letter of explanation<lb/>
and your editorial on the matter. You<lb/>
are right � it wasn't an apologv, but<lb/>
it should have been.<lb/>
You should not have apologized<lb/>
for being sexist or chauvanistic. You,<lb/>
Parker, my friends and probably half<lb/>
the people who complained seem to<lb/>
have missed the point. It never<lb/>
crossed my mind that you might be<lb/>
sexist until you started so vehe-<lb/>
mently protesting the issue.<lb/>
What you should apologize for is<lb/>
that you even considered printing<lb/>
the cartoon in this day and age any-<lb/>
where but in the Fun N Games sec-<lb/>
tion (where it seems anything goes) if<lb/>
at all.<lb/>
You should apologize for your<lb/>
insensitivity toward the feelings of<lb/>
women in general and for negli-<lb/>
gently chopping at the roots of credi-<lb/>
bility of the newspaper you are so<lb/>
proud of.<lb/>
Printing such a cartoon in such a<lb/>
way is simply not done � it is sub-<lb/>
standard, just as the use of the word<lb/>
"irregardless" in your editorial.<lb/>
Charles W.Wilkerson, III<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
Dukakis would fail<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
A Michael Dukakis presidency<lb/>
would undoubtably be even a more<lb/>
dismal failure than our last Demo-<lb/>
cratic presidency � the infamous<lb/>
Jimmy Carter era. This would be true<lb/>
not only economically and socially,<lb/>
but it would also be especially true in<lb/>
the area of foreign policy.<lb/>
"Mike Dukakis has not had a<lb/>
single day's experience in foreign<lb/>
policy� Senator Al Gore (D-<lb/>
Tenn.), quoted in Los Angeles Times,<lb/>
21888.<lb/>
"Dukakis' approach to foreign<lb/>
policy comes so close to renouncing<lb/>
the unilateral use of American power<lb/>
to protect national interests, while<lb/>
relying on international covenants<lb/>
and organizations that have looked<lb/>
futile for 40 years, that it sometimes<lb/>
sounds as if the ghost of Eleanor<lb/>
Roosevelt controls his entire body<lb/>
Washington Post columnist David<lb/>
Broder, 21088.<lb/>
"Dukakis's foreign policy is pure<lb/>
McGovern  on every issue from<lb/>
arms control to the Persian Gulf, his<lb/>
positions are foursquare with  the<lb/>
left end of the Democratic party<lb/>
New Republic editor Morton Kon-<lb/>
dracke, 81387.<lb/>
"Dukakis shows how contemp<lb/>
tuous the dominant liberal wing ol<lb/>
his party is toward the traditions that<lb/>
have kept this country strong and<lb/>
how determined to neutralize the use<lb/>
of American power in this hemi-<lb/>
sphere � Former New Left leaders<lb/>
Peter Collier and David Horowitz,<lb/>
quoted in The New York Post, 315<lb/>
88.<lb/>
"Governor Dukakis" belief in<lb/>
multilateral diplomacy and legal so-<lb/>
lutions makes him little more than a<lb/>
one-man United Nations, and a<lb/>
somewhat simple-minded one at<lb/>
that � The Economist, 423v<lb/>
"Unfortunately, his good sense<lb/>
as governor?) gives way to idiocy in<lb/>
foreign policy. He seems unable to<lb/>
grasp the expansionist dynamics of<lb/>
tyrannies, and assume: a rational or<lb/>
rather stable world where conflicts<lb/>
can be reduced to negotiations He<lb/>
always wants to deliver our vital<lb/>
security to international agencies<lb/>
said a Democratic strategist. It<lb/>
shows breathtaking naivete �<lb/>
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, The Spec-<lb/>
tator of London, 111487.<lb/>
Our national security will be<lb/>
severely and dangerously threat-<lb/>
ened if Michael Dukakis is elected<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Nicolas Skottergaard<lb/>
Treasurer<lb/>
ECU College Republicans<lb/>
Dukakis didn't help<lb/>
To the editior:<lb/>
During Michael Dukakis' second<lb/>
term as governor of Massachusetts,<lb/>
the state lost 13 of its manufactur-<lb/>
ing jobs, thus accounting for 40 of<lb/>
all manufacturing jobs lost nation-<lb/>
wide. Employment growth has<lb/>
been a sluggish 4.1 , far below the<lb/>
national average of 7.6.<lb/>
Yet despite this, Massachusetts<lb/>
has maintained a healthy unem-<lb/>
ployment figure of about 3.<lb/>
Why?<lb/>
1 � Massachusetts benefited<lb/>
greatly from the Reagan defense<lb/>
buildup. Ranking 12th in the na-<lb/>
tion in population, Massachusetts<lb/>
was fourth in total defense con-<lb/>
tracts for fiscal year 1986, receiving<lb/>
$9 billion in contracts.<lb/>
According to Bank of Boston<lb/>
Chief Economist James Howell, "If<lb/>
it weren't for the Reagan defense<lb/>
buildup, the Massachusetts indus-<lb/>
trial economy could really be in the<lb/>
worst shape in its history Ironi-<lb/>
cally, the Reagan defense buildup<lb/>
has been vociferously criticized<lb/>
by Dukakis and most of his fellow<lb/>
Democrats.<lb/>
2 � Proposition 2 12, which<lb/>
Dukakis opposed, spurred the<lb/>
growth in non-manufacturing<lb/>
jobs, such as real estate and con-<lb/>
struction.<lb/>
3 � Due to a low birth-rate and<lb/>
out-state migration because of the<lb/>
high cost of living, Massachusetts'<lb/>
workforce has been stagnant since<lb/>
1984, growing only 1.9 compared<lb/>
to a national average of 5.6.<lb/>
Thus, despite sluggish growth in<lb/>
the employment rate, unemploy-<lb/>
ment has remained low. "That low<lb/>
unemployment is more a reflection<lb/>
of a stagnant since labor force than<lb/>
economic strength according to<lb/>
Howell.<lb/>
Now, as a Boston Herald edito-<lb/>
rial pointed out, these three factors<lb/>
have something in common:<lb/>
"None of them bears Gov.<lb/>
Dukakis' fingerprints<lb/>
Russell Leon Dixon<lb/>
Accounting<lb/>
Snphnmnre<lb/>
Tea<lb/>
KEARNY, N.J. (AP) Ev<lb/>
of the pugnacious polil<lb/>
Teamsters Local 5f0 can<lb/>
in thegraffiti on theconcrej<lb/>
of the Pulaslu Skvw ay's hi<lb/>
black girders.<lb/>
"Remember Cask �<lb/>
horts a scrawl, referring<lb/>
thony Castelhto, a Local<lb/>
cial slain in 19H<lb/>
Reputed Genovest- enm<lb/>
lly figure Anthonv 'Ton'<lb/>
Provenzano and his bi<lb/>
Salvatore and Nunzio n<lb/>
Union City-based<lb/>
1979, when Anthonv P<lb/>
zano was convicted of rad<lb/>
ing and ordering Cash<lb/>
killing<lb/>
In 1984, a fed :<lb/>
moved 560 executive<lb/>
placed the local under a trj<lb/>
end a quarter-cei<lb/>
Scho<lb/>
WA<lb/>
many sch<lb/>
grade becau se<lb/>
content, a coi - m<lb/>
group has said rginj j<lb/>
to serve "heal! I<lb/>
mealss icha j<lb/>
tatoes instead - I i<lb/>
Ellen Ha<lb/>
of Public  for Fod<lb/>
Health ?o<lb/>
ted encourag ng ti<lb/>
fresh fruit ar i<lb/>
survey oi school n<lb/>
But she s i<lb/>
served in v<lb/>
often are fied food<lb/>
dishes high ir<lb/>
"Our young Ir on ar-<lb/>
rive audience We ha<lb/>
tunity here. ' Ha:i- <lb/>
got to establish' fest) I<lb/>
healthy eat<lb/>
The 37<lb/>
program, sen ing<lb/>
children, is rur I<lb/>
Department. Surp ts<lb/>
ties purchased b .<lb/>
for 20 percent of tr ; -<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
Therein lies the roc' "j<lb/>
lem, according v.<lb/>
because the corr.r- j<lb/>
often high in fat, sugar on<lb/>
"Congress has comp<lb/>
the problem by bowing<lb/>
milk producers'lol li<lb/>
ing that schools serve �<lb/>
with low-fat milk opl <lb/>
said.<lb/>
Public Voice recommi<lb/>
among other thiongs thatj<lb/>
set limits on the air<lb/>
sodium and sugar p I<lb/>
school lunches and d j<lb/>
healthier commodities I<lb/>
But Suzanne S. Han<lb/>
assistant secretary ei agriij<lb/>
for food and oensumer<lb/>
said in a statement that<lb/>
be irresponsible to k<lb/>
ties purchased by the<lb/>
ment, as required h U<lb/>
unused.<lb/>
Furthermore, she said,<lb/>
entific communin. 1 5 I<lb/>
port setting absolute lej<lb/>
sugar, fat or sodium at thij<lb/>
because current n<lb/>
tions regarding childre<lb/>
troversial.<lb/>
Trooper inju<lb/>
when bitten<lb/>
(AD - A state Highw<lb/>
trooper who was bitten<lb/>
tempting 10 arrest a suj<lb/>
drunken driving was in<lb/>
dition on Saturday aftei<lb/>
undergoing surgery to refl<lb/>
dozen wounds to his f<lb/>
tiessav.<lb/>
Trooper R.H. Fields<lb/>
Moore County Memorial<lb/>
Fridav for injuries he suft<lb/>
ing a struggle with the su;<lb/>
Al Warlick of the NC. CH<lb/>
of Crime Control and Pul<lb/>
Warlick said Fields was<lb/>
in the face<lb/>
The suspect had not beel<lb/>
on Sarurdav night. Warhf<lb/>
Fields stopped the<lb/>
N.C 73 near Ellerbe<lb/>
County at about midnij<lb/>
on suspicion of dnving<lb/>
paired. When fields wci<lb/>
his automobile the man<lb/>
soybean field, Warlick<lb/>
pursued him and, the<lb/>
fighting.<lb/>
Fields, who has been a<lb/>
about six months, event<lb/>
trolled the suspect, retui<lb/>
car and called for aj<lb/>
Warlick said.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0005"/><lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 61988 5<lb/>
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"It<lb/>
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� e Massachusetts<lb/>
� jnant since<lb/>
mpared<lb/>
i erag, of 5.6<lb/>
iggish growth in<lb/>
nl rate, unemploy-<lb/>
i ned low 'That lou<lb/>
ntis mere a reflection<lb/>
ince labor force than<lb/>
gth " iccording to<lb/>
is a Boston Herald edito-<lb/>
it, these1 three factors<lb/>
imething in common:<lb/>
� them bears Gov<lb/>
fingerprints<lb/>
Russell Leon Dixon<lb/>
Accounting<lb/>
Teamsters Local 560 hold first elections<lb/>
KEARN , N.J. (AD Evidence<lb/>
t the pugnacious politics of<lb/>
leamsters Local tO can be seen<lb/>
in the graffiti on the concrete base<lb/>
ol the Pulaski Skyway's hulking<lb/>
Mack girders.<lb/>
Remember Castellito ex-<lb/>
horts a scrawl, referring to An-<lb/>
thony Castellito, a Local 560 offi-<lb/>
cial slain in 11.<lb/>
Reputed Genovese crime fam-<lb/>
ily figure Anthonv "Tony Tro"<lb/>
Provenzano and his brothers<lb/>
Salvatore and Nunzio ran the<lb/>
Union City based local until<lb/>
1979, when Anthonv Proven-<lb/>
zano was convicted of racketeer-<lb/>
ing and ordering Castellito's<lb/>
killing<lb/>
In 1984, a federal judge re-<lb/>
moved 560 executive board and<lb/>
placed the local under a trustee to<lb/>
end a quarter-century of organ-<lb/>
VVASHINGTON (AP)<lb/>
Too<lb/>
ized crime domination.<lb/>
It was the first such action in<lb/>
U.S. history.<lb/>
This Labor Day finds Local 560<lb/>
in its 26th month nder the trustee,<lb/>
Edwin Stier. But the trusteeship<lb/>
is scheduled to end Dec. 6, the<lb/>
date Stier set for 560's first con-<lb/>
tested election since 1965, the last<lb/>
year anyone ran against the<lb/>
Provenzanos.<lb/>
"What's happening here is<lb/>
exactly what we wanted said<lb/>
Stier. '<lb/>
The candidates are going to<lb/>
each barn and campaigning in an<lb/>
open election<lb/>
But in the bams, as the sprawl-<lb/>
ing truck depots are known, the<lb/>
trusteeship has not pleased<lb/>
many members.<lb/>
Some at first welcomed the<lb/>
efforts to exercise corruption but<lb/>
gTew wary when U.S. Atorney<lb/>
Rudolph Giuliani of New York<lb/>
recently sued to place a trustee-<lb/>
ship over the International<lb/>
Brotherhood of Teamsters.<lb/>
"We are keeping a sharp eye of<lb/>
events over the river said a fed-<lb/>
eral prosecutor in New York who<lb/>
spoke on the condition of ano-<lb/>
nymity.<lb/>
"A smooth transition back to<lb/>
union control of the local could<lb/>
mean a lot to our case against the<lb/>
international<lb/>
Three men arc running for<lb/>
president of the 8.000-member<lb/>
loeak, the Teamsters' largest:<lb/>
Michael Sciarra of the Teamsters<lb/>
for Liberty, who served on the<lb/>
ousted board; Russ Viggiani, a<lb/>
Local 560 business agent and head<lb/>
of Teamsters for Solidarity; and<lb/>
Ray Carney, a trucker who ran<lb/>
against Anthony Provenzano in<lb/>
1965 and leader of The Committee<lb/>
for the United Ticket.<lb/>
The government had sought to<lb/>
bar Sciarra for running, saying the<lb/>
local would again be dominated<lb/>
by organized crime under his<lb/>
leadership.<lb/>
U.S. District Judge Dickinson R.<lb/>
Debevoise is expected to rule soon<lb/>
on the government motion.<lb/>
After U.S. District Judge Harold<lb/>
A. Ackerman ordered the ouster<lb/>
of the local's leadership, Sciarra<lb/>
served as interim president for<lb/>
two years until June 1986, when<lb/>
appeals were exhausted.<lb/>
The goverment's case against<lb/>
Sciarra rests partly on secretly re-<lb/>
corded tapes of conversations.<lb/>
The tapes, made public during<lb/>
the hearings, allegedly depict<lb/>
Genovese captain Matthew<lb/>
"Matty the Horse" laniello telling<lb/>
a former Local 560 official that<lb/>
Sciarra should "take over" the<lb/>
union after the trusteeship.<lb/>
Sciarra has denied any link<lb/>
toorganized crime or any inten-<lb/>
tion to take orders from anyone<lb/>
J<lb/>
once elected. Though he declined<lb/>
to be interviewed, he authorized<lb/>
union member and friend Al<lb/>
Laurie to speak for him.<lb/>
Laurie said the tape transcripts<lb/>
are unclear about the subject<lb/>
being discussed and who is<lb/>
speaking.<lb/>
Stier, who has taken no official<lb/>
position on Sciarra's participa-<lb/>
tion, agrees Sciarra is probably the<lb/>
front-runner, but that Carney has<lb/>
made inroads.<lb/>
Sciarra's two opponents, con-<lb/>
cerned about the possible back-<lb/>
lash that barring Sciarra could<lb/>
create, say they would like him to<lb/>
run.<lb/>
Viggiani, 48, said he believes<lb/>
the intimidation of the Proven-<lb/>
zano years still remains, though<lb/>
more subtle.<lb/>
"There are still members con-<lb/>
cerned with reprisals who arc not<lb/>
openly supportive of an opposing<lb/>
ticket he said.<lb/>
Stier said that intimidation has<lb/>
been "only minor at this point<lb/>
Carney, 58, admits that Sciarra<lb/>
has experience because of his 14<lb/>
years in union office.<lb/>
"But that's why we're where we<lb/>
arc today he said. "I'm a truck<lb/>
driverand I wanttogivcthisunion<lb/>
back to the members. Thcv should<lb/>
have a voice and know w here their<lb/>
money is going<lb/>
much<lb/>
many school lunches rate a C"<lb/>
grade because of their high fat<lb/>
ntent, a consumer nutrition<lb/>
group has said, urging caferterias<lb/>
to serve 'healthfully modified<lb/>
meals such aschili atop baked po-<lb/>
es instead of hot dogs.<lb/>
Ellen Haas executive director<lb/>
f Public 'Voice for Food and<lb/>
I lealth Policy, aid her group spot-<lb/>
ted encouraging trends toward<lb/>
fresh fruit and vegetables in a<lb/>
sun ey of school menus.<lb/>
But she said the main courses<lb/>
served in school cafeterias tar too<lb/>
�'en are tied foods" and other<lb/>
dishes high in saturated fat.<lb/>
'Our oung children are a cap-<lb/>
tive audience We have an oppor-<lb/>
�  it) here. ' Haas said. "We've<lb/>
I to establish lifestyles that have<lb/>
healthy eating habits<lb/>
The 3.7 billion school lunch<lb/>
I r igram, serving some 27 million<lb/>
ildren, is run by the Agriculture<lb/>
Department. Surplus commodi-<lb/>
� 5 purchased by USDA account<lb/>
for 20 percent of the foods used in<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
Therein lie s the root oftheprob-<lb/>
a rd ng to Public Voice,<lb/>
because the commodities are<lb/>
ten high in fat, sugar or sodium.<lb/>
"Congress has compounded<lb/>
the problem bv bowing to the<lb/>
milk producer' lobbvand requir-<lb/>
ing that schools serve whole milk,<lb/>
with low-fat milk optional, " it<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Public Voice recommended,<lb/>
among other thiongs, that USDA<lb/>
set limits on the amount oi fat,<lb/>
sodium and sugar permitted in<lb/>
school lunches and distribute<lb/>
healthier commodities to schools.<lb/>
But Suzanne S. Harris, depry<lb/>
assistant secretary of agriculture<lb/>
for food and oensumer services,<lb/>
said in a statement that "it would<lb/>
he irresponsible" to let commodi-<lb/>
ties purchased by the govern-<lb/>
ment, as required by law, go<lb/>
unused.<lb/>
Furthermore, she said, "the sci-<lb/>
entific community does not sup-<lb/>
port setting absolute levels for<lb/>
sugar, fat or sodium at this time"<lb/>
because current rccommenda-<lb/>
ns regarding children are con-<lb/>
troversial.<lb/>
Trooper injured<lb/>
when bitten<lb/>
(AP) - A state Highway Patrol<lb/>
trooper who was bitten while at-<lb/>
tempting to arrest a suspect for<lb/>
drunken driving was in good con-<lb/>
dition on Saturday afternoon after<lb/>
undergoing surgery to repair half a<lb/>
dozen wounds to his car, authori-<lb/>
ties say.<lb/>
Trooper R.H. Fields was taken to<lb/>
Moore County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
Friday for injuries he suffered dur-<lb/>
ing a struggle with the suspect, said<lb/>
Al Warlick of the N.C Department<lb/>
�f Crime Control and Public Safety<lb/>
Warlick said Fields was also bitten<lb/>
in the face.<lb/>
The suspect had not been charged<lb/>
on Saturdav night, Warlick said.<lb/>
Fields stopped the man along<lb/>
N C 73 near Ellerbe in Moore<lb/>
County at about midnight Friday<lb/>
n suspicion of driving while im-<lb/>
paired. When fields went back to<lb/>
his automobile the man ran into a<lb/>
soybean field, Warlick said. Fields<lb/>
pursued him and, the man began<lb/>
fighting.<lb/>
Fields, who has been a trooper for<lb/>
about six months, eventually con-<lb/>
trolled the suspect, returned to his<lb/>
car and called for assistance,<lb/>
Warlick said.<lb/>
"Nutrition strategies warranted<lb/>
tor the general adult population<lb/>
may actually be harmful to chil-<lb/>
dren, particaularly low-income<lb/>
children, during periods or<lb/>
growth and development Hams<lb/>
said.<lb/>
However, Haas said the Na-<lb/>
tional Science Foundationk the<lb/>
National Institutes of Health and<lb/>
the Merican Heart Association<lb/>
agree that fat should not constitute<lb/>
more than 30 percent of a child's<lb/>
daily caloric intake. And she said<lb/>
the average school lunch contains<lb/>
39 percent fat.<lb/>
Public Voice listed several ex-<lb/>
amples of traditional menus heavy<lb/>
on tried chicken and fish, mashed<lb/>
and fried potatoes and sweet, pre-<lb/>
pared deserts. The group com-<lb/>
pared those with "healthfully<lb/>
modified menus adopted by some<lb/>
school districts.<lb/>
For example, in Kennesaw, Ga<lb/>
students got baked chicken breasts<lb/>
with lemon and garlic, steamed<lb/>
broccoli and carrots, a homc-<lb/>
makde whoe wheat roll and fresh<lb/>
sruit. And in Denver, one meal<lb/>
was a baked potato topped with<lb/>
chili, accompanied by raw broccoli<lb/>
and carots and sweet potato pie.<lb/>
"We hear complaints that stu-<lb/>
dents won't eat this stuff, " Haas<lb/>
said. "We just don't buy that "<lb/>
Some school districts won praise<lb/>
for serving low-fat milk and home-<lb/>
make iow-fat salad fressings, buv-<lb/>
ing the ingredients themselves to<lb/>
substitute for higher-fat com-<lb/>
modities from USDA.<lb/>
Haas urged the department to<lb/>
help keep nutntious meals afford-<lb/>
able<lb/>
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� MEAL PLAN -<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6.1988 5<lb/>
&amp;hington Post columnist David<lb/>
tier, 21088.<lb/>
Du ka kiss foreign policy is pure<lb/>
overn  on every issue from<lb/>
ih control to the Persian Gulf, his<lb/>
itions are foursquare with  the<lb/>
nd of the Democratic party<lb/>
Republic editor Morton Kon-<lb/>
8 'S7.<lb/>
Dukakis shows how contemp-<lb/>
- the dominant liberal wing of<lb/>
v irty is toward the traditions that<lb/>
kept this country strong and<lb/>
determined to neutralize the use<lb/>
merican power in this hcmi-<lb/>
Icre � Former New Left leaders<lb/>
pr Collier and David Horowitz,<lb/>
ed in The New York Post, 315<lb/>
i<lb/>
Governor Dukakis" belief in<lb/>
(lateral diplomacy and legal so-<lb/>
ns makes him little more than a<lb/>
man United Nations, and a<lb/>
lewhat simple linded one at<lb/>
- The Economist, 42388.<lb/>
fortunately, his good sense<lb/>
overnoii ?) gives way to idiocy in<lb/>
pi en policy. He seems unable to<lb/>
jsp the expansionist dynamics of<lb/>
innies, and assume: a rational or<lb/>
t stable world where conflicts<lb/>
be reduced to negotiationsHe<lb/>
says wants to deliver our vital<lb/>
Rrity to international agencies<lb/>
a Democratic strategist. It<lb/>
vs breathtaking naivete. �<lb/>
wose Evans-Pritchard,TheSpec-<lb/>
rof London, 111487.<lb/>
Dur national security will be<lb/>
and dangerously threat-<lb/>
it Michael Dukakis is elected<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Nicolas Skottergaard<lb/>
Treasurer<lb/>
ECU College Republicans<lb/>
hikakis didn't help<lb/>
To the editior:<lb/>
During Michael Dukakis' second<lb/>
?rm as governor of Massachusetts,<lb/>
e state lost 13 of its manufactur-<lb/>
tg jobs, thus accounting for 40 of<lb/>
111 manufacturing jobs lost nation-<lb/>
Vide. Employment growth has<lb/>
eon a sluggish 4.1 , far below the<lb/>
lational average of 7.6.<lb/>
Yet despite this, Massachusetts<lb/>
las maintained a healthy unem-<lb/>
lovment figure of about 3.<lb/>
IVhy?<lb/>
Massachusetts benefited<lb/>
treatly from the Reagan defense<lb/>
jmildup. Ranking 12th in the na-<lb/>
ion in population, Massachusetts<lb/>
-as fourth in total defense con-<lb/>
racts for fiscal year 1986, receiving<lb/>
�9 billion in contracts.<lb/>
According to Bank of Boston<lb/>
Thief Economist James Howell, "If<lb/>
It weren't for the Reagan defense<lb/>
mildup, the Massachusetts indus-<lb/>
rial economy could really be in the<lb/>
.orst shape in its history Ironi-<lb/>
cally, the Reagan defense buildup<lb/>
las been vociferously criticized<lb/>
y Dukakis and most of his fellow<lb/>
emocrats.<lb/>
2 Proposition 2 12, which<lb/>
Hikakis opposed, spurred the<lb/>
jrowth in non-manufacturing<lb/>
bs, such as real estate and con-<lb/>
struction.<lb/>
3 � Due to a low birth-rate and<lb/>
ut-state migration because of the<lb/>
ugh cost of living, Massachusetts'<lb/>
orkforce has been stagnant since<lb/>
1984, growing only 1.9 compared<lb/>
to a national average of 5.6.<lb/>
Thus, despite sluggish growth in<lb/>
the employment rate, unemploy-<lb/>
rnent has remained low. "That low<lb/>
i nemployment is more a reflection<lb/>
4 a stagnant since labor force than<lb/>
ronomic strength according to<lb/>
4owell.<lb/>
Now, as a Boston Herald edito-<lb/>
lal pointed out, these three factors<lb/>
lave something in common:<lb/>
I'None of them bears Gov.<lb/>
Dukakis' fingerprints<lb/>
Russell Leon Dixon<lb/>
Accounting<lb/>
.rtpKfrryra1<lb/>
Teamsters Local 560 hold first elections<lb/>
KEARNY,N.J. (AP) Evidence<lb/>
of the pugnacious politics of<lb/>
Teamsters Local 560 can be seen<lb/>
in the graffiti on the concrete base<lb/>
of the Pulaski Skyway's hulking<lb/>
black girders.<lb/>
"Remember Castellito ex-<lb/>
horts a scrawl, referring to An-<lb/>
thony Castellito, a Local 560 offi-<lb/>
cial slain in 1961.<lb/>
Reputed Genovese crime fam-<lb/>
ily figure Anthony 'Tony Pro"<lb/>
Provenzano and his brothers<lb/>
Salvatore and Nunzio ran the<lb/>
Union City-based local until<lb/>
1979, when Anthony Proven-<lb/>
zano was convicted of racketeer-<lb/>
ing and ordering Castellito's<lb/>
killing.<lb/>
In 1984, a federal judge re-<lb/>
moved 560 executive board and<lb/>
placed the local under a trustee to<lb/>
end a quarter-century of organ-<lb/>
ized crime domination.<lb/>
It was the first such action in<lb/>
U.S. history.<lb/>
This Labor Day finds Local 560<lb/>
in its 26th month nder the trustee,<lb/>
Edwin Stier. But the trusteeship<lb/>
is scheduled to end Dec. 6, the<lb/>
date Stier set for Ss first con-<lb/>
tested election since 1965, the last<lb/>
year anyone ran against the<lb/>
Provenzanos.<lb/>
"What's happening here is<lb/>
exactly what we wanted said<lb/>
Stier.<lb/>
"The candidates are going to<lb/>
each barn and campaigning in an<lb/>
open election<lb/>
But in the barns, as the sprawl-<lb/>
ing truck depots are known, the<lb/>
trusteeship has not pleased<lb/>
many members.<lb/>
Some at first welcomed the<lb/>
efforts to exercise corruption but<lb/>
grew wary when U.S. Atorney<lb/>
Rudolph Giuliani of New York<lb/>
recently sued to place a trustee-<lb/>
ship over the International<lb/>
Brotherhood of Teamsters.<lb/>
"We are keeping a sharp eye of<lb/>
events over the river said a fed-<lb/>
eral prosecutor in New York who<lb/>
spoke on the condition of ano-<lb/>
nymity.<lb/>
"A smooth transition back to<lb/>
union control of the local could<lb/>
mean a lot to our case against the<lb/>
international<lb/>
Three men are running for<lb/>
president of the 8.000-member<lb/>
loeak, the Teamsters' largest:<lb/>
Michael Sciarra of the Teamsters<lb/>
for Liberty, who served on the<lb/>
ousted board; Russ Viggiani, a<lb/>
Local 560 business agent and head<lb/>
of Teamsters for Solidarity; and<lb/>
Ray Carney, a trucker who ran<lb/>
against Anthony Provenzano in<lb/>
1965 and leader of The Committee<lb/>
for the United Ticket.<lb/>
The government had sought to<lb/>
bar Sciarra for running, saying the<lb/>
local would again be dominated<lb/>
by organized crime under his<lb/>
leadership.<lb/>
U.S. District Judge Dickinson R.<lb/>
Debevoise is expected to rule soon<lb/>
on the government motion.<lb/>
After U.S. District Judge Harold<lb/>
A. Ackerman ordered the ouster<lb/>
of the local's leadership, Sciarra<lb/>
served as interim president for<lb/>
two years until June 1986, when<lb/>
appeals were exhausted.<lb/>
The government's case against<lb/>
Sciarra rests partly on secretly re-<lb/>
corded tapes of conversations.<lb/>
The tapes, made public during<lb/>
the hearings, allegedly depict<lb/>
Genovese captain Matthew<lb/>
"Matty the Horse" Ianiello telling<lb/>
a former Local 560 official that<lb/>
Sciarra should "take over" the<lb/>
union after the trusteeship.<lb/>
Sciarra has denied any link<lb/>
toorganized crime or any inten-<lb/>
tion to take orders from anyone<lb/>
once elected. Though he declined<lb/>
to be interviewed, he authorized<lb/>
union member and friend Al<lb/>
Laurie to speak for him.<lb/>
Laurie said the tape transcripts<lb/>
are unclear about the subject<lb/>
being discussed and who is<lb/>
speaking.<lb/>
Stier, who has taken no official<lb/>
position on Sciarra's participa-<lb/>
tion, agrees Sciarra is probably the<lb/>
front-runner, but that Carney has<lb/>
made inroads.<lb/>
Sciarra's two opponents, con-<lb/>
cerned about the possible back-<lb/>
lash that barring Sciarra could<lb/>
create, say they would like him to<lb/>
run.<lb/>
Viggiani, 48, said he believes<lb/>
the intimidation of the Proven-<lb/>
zano years still remains, though<lb/>
more subtle.<lb/>
There are still members con-<lb/>
cerned with reprisals who are not<lb/>
openly supportive of an opposing<lb/>
ticket he said.<lb/>
Stier said that intimidation has<lb/>
been "only minor at this point<lb/>
Carney, 58, admits that Sciarra<lb/>
has experience because of his 14<lb/>
years in union office.<lb/>
"But that's why we're where we<lb/>
are today he said. "I'm a truck<lb/>
driver and I want to give this union<lb/>
back to the members. They should<lb/>
have a voice and know where their<lb/>
money is going<lb/>
School lunches don ft hold much nutrition<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)� Too<lb/>
many school lunches rate a "C"<lb/>
grade because of their high fat<lb/>
content, a consumer nutrition<lb/>
group has said, urging caferterias<lb/>
to serve "healthfully modified"<lb/>
meals such as chili atop baked po-<lb/>
tatoes instead of hot dogs.<lb/>
Ellen Haas, executive director<lb/>
of Public "Voice for Food and<lb/>
Health Policy, aid her group spot-<lb/>
ted encouraging trends toward<lb/>
fresh fruit and vegetables in a<lb/>
survey of school menus.<lb/>
But she said the main courses<lb/>
served in school cafeterias "far too<lb/>
often are fied foods" and other<lb/>
dishes high in saturated fat.<lb/>
"Our young children are a cap-<lb/>
tive audience. We have an oppor-<lb/>
tunity here, " Haas said. "We've<lb/>
got to establish lifestyles that have<lb/>
healthy eating habits<lb/>
The 3.7 billion school lunch<lb/>
program, serving some 27 million<lb/>
children, is run by the Agriculture<lb/>
Department. Surplus commodi-<lb/>
ties purchased by USDA account<lb/>
for 20 percent of the foods used in<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
Therein lies the root of the prob-<lb/>
lem, according to Public Voice,<lb/>
because the commodities "are<lb/>
often highin fat, sugar or sodium.<lb/>
"Congress has compounded<lb/>
the problem by bowing to the<lb/>
milk producers' lobby and requir-<lb/>
ing that schools serve whole milk,<lb/>
with low-fat milk optional, " it<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Public Voice recommended,<lb/>
among other thiongs, that USDA<lb/>
set limits on the amount of fat,<lb/>
sodium and sugar permitted in<lb/>
school lunches and distribute<lb/>
healthier commodities to schools.<lb/>
But Suzanne S. Harris, depty<lb/>
assistant secretary of agriculture<lb/>
for food and oensumer services,<lb/>
said in a statement that "it would<lb/>
be irresponsible" to let commodi-<lb/>
ties purchased by the govern-<lb/>
ment, as required by law, go<lb/>
unused.<lb/>
Furthermore, she said, "the sci-<lb/>
entific community does not sup-<lb/>
port setting absolute levels for<lb/>
sugar, fat or sodium at this time"<lb/>
because current recommenda-<lb/>
tions regarding children are con-<lb/>
troversial.<lb/>
Trooper injured<lb/>
when bitten<lb/>
(AP) - A state Highway Patrol<lb/>
trooper who was bitten while at-<lb/>
tempting to airest a suspect for<lb/>
drunken driving was in good con-<lb/>
dition on Saturday afternoon after<lb/>
undergoing surgery to repair half a<lb/>
dozen wounds to his ear, authori-<lb/>
ties say.<lb/>
Trooper R.H. Fields was taken to<lb/>
Moore County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
Friday for injuries he suffered dur-<lb/>
ing a struggle with the suspect, said<lb/>
Al Warlick of the N.C. Department<lb/>
of Crime Control and Public Safety.<lb/>
Warlick said Fields was also bitten<lb/>
in the face.<lb/>
The suspect had not been charged<lb/>
on Saturday night, Warlick said.<lb/>
Fields stopped the man along<lb/>
N.C. 73 near Ellerbe in Moore<lb/>
County at about midnight Friday<lb/>
on suspicion of driving while im-<lb/>
paired. When fields went back to<lb/>
his automobile the man ran into a<lb/>
soybean field, Warlick said. Fields<lb/>
pursued him and, the man began<lb/>
fighting.<lb/>
Fields, who has been a trooper for<lb/>
about six months, eventually con-<lb/>
trolled the suspect, returned to his<lb/>
car and called for assistance,<lb/>
Warlick said.<lb/>
"Nutrition strategies warranted<lb/>
for the general adult population<lb/>
may actually be harmful to chil-<lb/>
dren, particaularly low-income<lb/>
children, during periods of<lb/>
growth and development Harris<lb/>
said.<lb/>
However, Haas said the Na-<lb/>
tional Science Foundationk the<lb/>
National Institutes of Health and<lb/>
the Merican Heart Association<lb/>
agree that fat should not constitute<lb/>
more than 30 percent of a child's<lb/>
daily caloric intake. And she said<lb/>
the average school lunch contains<lb/>
39 percent fat.<lb/>
Public Voice listed several ex-<lb/>
amples of traditional menus heavy<lb/>
on fried chicken and fish, mashed<lb/>
and fried potatoes and sweet, pre-<lb/>
pared deserts. The group com-<lb/>
pared those with "healthfully<lb/>
modified menus adopted by some<lb/>
school districts.<lb/>
For example, in Kennesaw, Ga<lb/>
students got baked chicken breasts<lb/>
with lemon and garlic, steamed<lb/>
broccoli and carrots, a home-<lb/>
makde whoe wheat roll and fresh<lb/>
sruit. And in Denver, one meal<lb/>
was a baked potato topped with<lb/>
chili, accompanied by raw broccoli<lb/>
and carots and sweet potato pie.<lb/>
"We hear complaints that stu-<lb/>
dents won't eat this stuff, " Haas<lb/>
said. "We just don't buy that. "<lb/>
Some school districts won praise<lb/>
for serving low-fat milk and home-<lb/>
make low-fat salad fressings, buy-<lb/>
ing the ingredients themselves to<lb/>
substitute for higher-fat com-<lb/>
modities from USDA.<lb/>
Haas urged the department to<lb/>
help keep nutritious meals afford-<lb/>
able-<lb/>
anrnt<lb/>
The Duke<lb/>
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and videotape your party. The Power<lb/>
Station DJ's. 752-0940.<lb/>
DWI? Don't Drink &amp; Drive. Come party<lb/>
in style. Call Class Act Limousine. 757-<lb/>
3240.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
EXPEDITIONS TO AFRICA: Spring<lb/>
semester openings to Kenya and<lb/>
Cameroon. Join a team of international<lb/>
young people to explore tropical rain-<lb/>
forests and discover African wildlife. AP-<lb/>
PLY NOW! Final chance for selection is<lb/>
Sept. 30 - Oct. 2, 1988 in North Carolina.<lb/>
Call OPERATION RALEIGH at 1-800-<lb/>
727-7787 for an application today.<lb/>
SHONEYS: On Memorial Drive, is hiring<lb/>
waitresses, hostesscashiers, and bar at-<lb/>
tendents. We have full and part-time<lb/>
positions available. Come by for an appli-<lb/>
cation.<lb/>
TUTOR NEEDED: For 7th grader to help<lb/>
with homework 1 hour a day, 4 days a<lb/>
week. 3-4 p.m. Must have own transpor-<lb/>
tation. 756-7966.<lb/>
STUDENT NEEDED: To care for a group<lb/>
of infants and toddlers on Thursday<lb/>
mornings from 9:00 - 12:00. Must have<lb/>
transportation. Call Mrs. Dunn at 355-<lb/>
6852.<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/>
NEEDED: Soccer coaches. Must be abail-<lb/>
able Tuesdays and Thursdays after 2.00<lb/>
p.m. Starting salary $5.00 per hour. For<lb/>
more information contact Rita Roy, Pitt<lb/>
County Community Schools at 830 4216.<lb/>
SUNNY SIDE EGGS INC: Is now ac<lb/>
cepting applications for responsible col-<lb/>
lege students who wish to earn while they<lb/>
learn. Apply in person at our main office<lb/>
on State Road 1708 or call 756-4187.<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED: Inter<lb/>
ested in making money part-time photo-<lb/>
graphing people? No experience neces-<lb/>
sary; we train. If you are highly sociable,<lb/>
have 35mm camera and transportation,<lb/>
give us a call between 12 noon and 5 p.m.<lb/>
M-F at 1-800-722-7033.<lb/>
PART-TIME WORKERS: Needed at<lb/>
Sunnyside Eggs to load and unload<lb/>
trucks. Hours 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/>
BRODY'S AND BRODY'S FOR MEN:<lb/>
Are now accepting applications for the<lb/>
Fall semester. Enthusiastic individuals<lb/>
who enjoy fashion and can work flexible<lb/>
hours should apply. Brodv's Carolina<lb/>
East Mall. Monday thru Wednesday, 2-4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS: To the new fall<lb/>
pledges of Sigma Sigma Sigma: Christine<lb/>
Allaback, Merry Aycock, Ginger Bcattv,<lb/>
Robin Black, Stephanie Bovkin, I lolly<lb/>
Bratton, Meadc Burke, Catherine Car-<lb/>
penter, Misha Caison, Luanne Collins,<lb/>
Suzanne Desrochers, Valerie Dixon,<lb/>
Paige Dusenberry, Emily Euro, Carla<lb/>
Fairbanks, Danielle Faulkner, Lois Gi-<lb/>
lbert, Abbie Gore, Julie 1 lamrick, Amv<lb/>
I larns, Chnsti 1 larris, Amber I lodge,<lb/>
Cynthia Holhauser, HannaM Hooks,<lb/>
Lisa Joyner, Martha Riser, Cassis Lane,<lb/>
Katerie Laughlin, Jill Mau, Colleen<lb/>
McDonald, Liz Moore, kati Mulligan,<lb/>
Amy Neal, Kin Schecter and Michelle<lb/>
Streib. We love you, the Sisters.<lb/>
THE SIGMAS: Would like to wish all the<lb/>
fraternities good luck on a successful<lb/>
rush.<lb/>
KELLY GREER: You did a great job with<lb/>
rush, we love you. The Sigmas.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS: To all the so-<lb/>
rorities on a terrific rush The Sigmas.<lb/>
TAKE PART IN GREEK LIFE: By rush-<lb/>
ing one of the strongest fraternities on<lb/>
campus � Sigma Phi Epsilon.<lb/>
"PHI KAPPA ALPHA"  Enough said<lb/>
LAND HO Rush Pika on "Pikes Peak"<lb/>
corner of 5th in Elizabeth tonight!<lb/>
SORORITIES: Congratulations girls<lb/>
Hope you all had a fabulous rush. The<lb/>
Pikes.<lb/>
TO THE LONDON TRAVELERS:<lb/>
Well, it's not exactly South Kensington,<lb/>
but the rain seems familiar. I lope your<lb/>
return to Greenville has been pleasant,<lb/>
and let's do that dinner thing sometime.<lb/>
� Leona.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA ALPHA  The most fun you<lb/>
can have with your clothes on <lb/>
DEAR PETE: We quit Love the staff of<lb/>
the East Carolinian.<lb/>
DEAR JIMMY: Where were you? We all<lb/>
quit! Signed: S.M S.M , A.B AD R.C<lb/>
Later now.<lb/>
DEAR TYPESETTERS: We missed you<lb/>
Monday at work. Hope you enjoyed<lb/>
your long weekend!<lb/>
TO ALL OF OUR "ENGLISH"<lb/>
SPEAKING FRIENDS: "Mark<lb/>
"Anne "Emma and "Mike" We hope<lb/>
you enjoyed your stay in Greenville. We<lb/>
hope you take some of this jolly good<lb/>
fun back to England From Trish, Susan,<lb/>
and Tammy<lb/>
DEAR CLAYBORN: It's me again Once<lb/>
again we had too much space left in the<lb/>
last column I thought I would take this<lb/>
opportunity to say thank you for a great<lb/>
weekend Love, Susan.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
a-TOfio<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
HAIRCUTS<lb/>
OR STYLING<lb/>
Eastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
(Across from Highway Patrol Station)<lb/>
Behind Car Quest Auto Parts<lb/>
2800 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Johnny Weathington<lb/>
752-3318<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/>
�Located Near ECU<lb/>
� Acroas From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
$325 a month<lb/>
Contact J. T or Tommy William<lb/>
756-7815 or 830-1937<lb/>
Office open - Apt 8, 12 - 530 p m<lb/>
�AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clean and quiet ont bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, energy efficient tree water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. $205 a month, 6 month<lb/>
lease MOBILE HOME RENTALS - couples or<lb/>
singles. Apartment and mobile homes in Aulea<lb/>
Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.<lb/>
Contact JT. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal aiul 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 fiat l,ow<lb/>
Cost Termination to 20 wrrlts of prrgnjnty<lb/>
1 1-800-433-2930<lb/>
CRUSTY'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
WE<lb/>
DELIVER<lb/>
NOW HIRING DRIVERS<lb/>
25-30 Delivery Drivers. Earn $4 - $8 per hour.<lb/>
Flexible hours. Bonus Plan Available.<lb/>
Must have own car and insLirance.<lb/>
Apply in person at 1414 Charles Streets.<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 held Aug. 30,<lb/>
31, Sept. 15at3p m and on Sept. 7at7p.m.<lb/>
in the Bloxton 1 louse.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
study for Fall Semester and or Spring<lb/>
Semester, you are encouraged to contact<lb/>
the Co-op office about off campus place-<lb/>
ments. Call 757-6979 or come by the Gen-<lb/>
eral Classroom Building, Room 2028.<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMFCIS<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/>
VVe are also looking for coaches for basket-<lb/>
ball, weightlifting, ans swimming. All<lb/>
interested persons should contact Greg<lb/>
Epperson or Connie Sappenfield at the<lb/>
Special Olympic office, 830-4551.<lb/>
NEW STUDENT REVIEWS<lb/>
Anyone who purchased new student<lb/>
reviews should come by the yearbook<lb/>
office to pick them up. Hours are M-F, 6-8<lb/>
p.m<lb/>
ECU GOSPEL CHOIR<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/>
HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
Student, faculty, staff, and the general<lb/>
public are invited to attend a lecture spon-<lb/>
sored by the Honors 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 7:30 p.m. Sept. 6 in Room<lb/>
1026 General Classroom Building and is<lb/>
free of charge.<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
ECU Christian fellowship will be held<lb/>
every Thursday at 6 p.m. in the Cultural<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
CAMPUS GIRL<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 7"W-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 08341.<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/>
SEA<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/>
OVERSEAS DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
Are you interested in dedicating 6 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/>
bed 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 Birds, presented by the cof-<lb/>
fee house committee of the student union,<lb/>
will be accepting appbeations 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/>
HANG GLIDING<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Hang<lb/>
Gliding registration meeting. From Aug.<lb/>
22 to Sept. 6 learn how to fly high in the<lb/>
skv!<lb/>
BACKPACKING<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Back-<lb/>
packing registration meeting held from<lb/>
Aug. 22 to Sept. 6. Have an excellent time<lb/>
exploring the woods and Uving in the<lb/>
wild!<lb/>
CO-OP 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 p.m<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/>
WOMEN'S STUDIES<lb/>
The Women's Studies Committee will<lb/>
hold it's 1988-89 organizational meeting<lb/>
Thursday from 3-5 p.m. in GCB 1028 All<lb/>
interested faculty, staff and students are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
FRIENDS<lb/>
The final interest meeting for East Caro-<lb/>
lina Friends will be held tonight at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in Brewster B 205. Anyone interested in<lb/>
joining ECF this year and who has not<lb/>
already done so must attend tonights<lb/>
meehng. For more info, call Dr. Mooney,<lb/>
Sociology, at 757-6137.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The National Gamma Beta Phi Society<lb/>
will meet Sept. 13 at 8 p.m. in Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
WOMEN'S FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
I lelp support a new tradition at ECU. Be a<lb/>
part of the Women's Frisbee dub. For all<lb/>
those interested there will be a meeting at<lb/>
Mendenhall, room 247 Wednesday at 5<lb/>
p.m. No experience necessary.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
On Friday there will be a meeting held in<lb/>
the lobby in front of the Student Union<lb/>
offices for the following students: Leigh<lb/>
Boggs, Anna Cancy, Amy Eckroth,<lb/>
Christy Mangum, Darlene Perdisatt,<lb/>
Davandra Reed, Diana Richardson, Dawn<lb/>
Schafer, Nancy Simons, Melissa Spain,<lb/>
Mitzi Stumps, Todd Teague. If you are<lb/>
unable to attend this 4 p.m. meeting<lb/>
please contact me at 752-8165.<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
The Student Council for Exceptional Chil-<lb/>
dren will hold their first meeting on Sept.<lb/>
12 at 5:15 p.m. in Sp 103. Speakers from<lb/>
Assn. of Retarded Citizens and Special<lb/>
Olympics: Everyone is welcome to attend.<lb/>
ECHQ<lb/>
There will be a meeting Thursday at 5 p.m.<lb/>
in the Honors Lounge (Room 1004 - Gen-<lb/>
eral Classroom Bldg.). All those interested<lb/>
in the Honors Program at ECU should<lb/>
plan to attend. Members are requested to<lb/>
bring ideas regarding our community<lb/>
outreach &amp; ideas for guest lectures and<lb/>
colloquia. New members always wel-<lb/>
come. Call Dr. Sanders (757-6373) for<lb/>
more info.<lb/>
OMEGA PSI PHI<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity Incorporated<lb/>
will be host at the Unlimited Touch Thurs-<lb/>
day at 100 p.m. until Ladies wear those<lb/>
biker shorts to participate in our first<lb/>
competition of the year<lb/>
OMEGA PSI PHI<lb/>
There will be a formal smoker Wednesday<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in the Ledonia B. Wright Cultural<lb/>
Center. All persons interested are wel-<lb/>
come. Shirt and tie are required.<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda is holding an OPEN<lb/>
1 lOUSE for anyone interested in Business,<lb/>
on Thursday at 4 p.m. in room 1013 Gen-<lb/>
eral Classroom Building. Anyone en-<lb/>
rolled in a Business or BV'IE course is<lb/>
encouraged to attend and all majors are<lb/>
welcome PPL is the collt t � equivilant<lb/>
to FBLA.<lb/>
PRE-PHYSICAL THERAPY<lb/>
All general college pre-physical therapy<lb/>
sophomores, or higher, anticipating ap-<lb/>
plying to the May 1989 Physical Therapy<lb/>
Class should go to the Physical Therapy<lb/>
Department Office, 1st floor, Belk Build-<lb/>
ing, before the end of Sept. to determine<lb/>
eligibility. Instructions for receiving the<lb/>
application packet will be given then. If<lb/>
you have any questions, contact that office<lb/>
by phone (757-6961, ext. 261) or in person.<lb/>
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION<lb/>
On Nov. 19 the Pit! County ECU Alumni<lb/>
Assoc. the ECU Office of Admissions are<lb/>
co-sponsoring an all day academic bowl<lb/>
competition. The format used by the bowl<lb/>
will closely adhave to the format used by<lb/>
the GE College Bowl. The ECU Bowl<lb/>
needs moderators, judges, time-keepers,<lb/>
and scorers. Sept. 15 at 7 p.m. in the confer-<lb/>
ence room of the TaylorSlaughter<lb/>
Alumni Center on E. 5th Street, there will<lb/>
be an orientationmini-training session<lb/>
for interested volunteers. Faculty, staff,<lb/>
and students are invited to attend. Call<lb/>
Susan C. Smith, Admissions, 757-6640 or<lb/>
John Anema at 752-7151 for further infor-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
RE-ELECTION FOR GOV.<lb/>
The ECU Students for the Re-election of<lb/>
Gov. Jim Martin invite all students, fac-<lb/>
ulty and staff to the opening of the Pitt<lb/>
County I leadquarters on Thursday start-<lb/>
ing at 5:30 p.m. The Governor's wife Dot-<lb/>
tie Martin will be attending at 6 p.m. The<lb/>
Pitt County Headquarters is located at 210<lb/>
E. 4th St. and the telephone number is 758-<lb/>
6339.<lb/>
RE-ELECTION FOR GOV.<lb/>
The ECU Students for the Re-election of<lb/>
Gov. Jim Martin invite all students, fac-<lb/>
ulty and staff to "An Evening with Gov.<lb/>
Jim Martin" a barbecue supper and eve-<lb/>
ning of entertainment on Sept. 13 starting<lb/>
at 6 p.m. Tickets are $5 and are available at<lb/>
210 E. 4th St. or by calling 758-6339 or 758-<lb/>
1403.<lb/>
IEWISH STUDENTS<lb/>
You are welcome to attend the following<lb/>
High Holiday Services at Temple Bayt<lb/>
Shalom (1420 E. 14th St. in Greenville):<lb/>
Sept. ll,8p.m.ErevRoshHashanah,Sept.<lb/>
12,10a.m. Rosh Hashanah Day -6:30p.m.<lb/>
Ma-ariv, Sept. 13, 10 a.m. 2nd Day Rosh<lb/>
Hasahanah, Sept. 20, 7 p.m. Erev Yom<lb/>
Kippur, Sept. 21, 9:30 a.m. Yom Kippur<lb/>
Morning - 4:30 p.m. Afternoon Service,<lb/>
Yizor it N'llah. For more info, or direc-<lb/>
tions call Mike at 756-4930 All students<lb/>
are invited to the home of Dr Bramv<lb/>
Resnik for a Home Hospitality Dinner on<lb/>
Sept. 20 at 5:15p.m. Please call to RSVP for<lb/>
dinner. Call Dr. Resnik at 355-5321 (home)<lb/>
or 757-6521 (work) or Mike at 756-4930.<lb/>
CHI ALPHA OMEGA<lb/>
Any young Christian men who are inter-<lb/>
ested in pledging the new Christian Social<lb/>
Fraternity, Chi Alpha Omega, rush will be<lb/>
Sept. 6,7 from 7-9 p.m. in the Biology<lb/>
Building N-102. If you have any questions<lb/>
contact: Steve Llvod 752-1765 or Dean<lb/>
Layes 752-8239.<lb/>
WES2FEL<lb/>
Wes2fel is a Christian fellowship which<lb/>
welcomes all students, and is sponsored<lb/>
jointly by the Presbyterian and Methodist<lb/>
Campus Ministries. Come to the Method-<lb/>
ist Student Center (501 E. 5th, across from<lb/>
Garrett dorm) every Wednesday night at<lb/>
5 p.m. for a home cooked meal with a short<lb/>
program afterwards. This week the meal<lb/>
wall be promptly at 5 p.m. and than a Rick<lb/>
Hill eonert. The meal is S2 at the door,<lb/>
$1.50 if you sign up in advance. Call 758-<lb/>
2030 for reservations.<lb/>
KERYGMA<lb/>
A Bible study only for those serious about<lb/>
studying the Bible. It is challenging and<lb/>
requires commitment, involving discus-<lb/>
sion and readings. Weekly meetings will<lb/>
be scheduled to accomodate those who<lb/>
are interested. Kcrygma is an interde-<lb/>
nominational program, and sponsored by<lb/>
Presbyterian Campus Ministry. For more<lb/>
info, call Mike at 752-7240.<lb/>
FREE CONCERT<lb/>
Rick Hill, a Christian Folksinger, will give<lb/>
a free concert on the mall Wednesday<lb/>
from 6-8 p.m. He will play music from<lb/>
James Taylor and Peter, Paul and Mary, as<lb/>
well as his own music. Sponsored by Pres-<lb/>
byterian Campus Ministry, 752-7240.<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will be a general meeting for all<lb/>
Ambassadors Wednesday at 5:15 p m in<lb/>
Mendenhall room 221. Remember that<lb/>
missing over 2 meetings per semester may<lb/>
lead to probation.<lb/>
ACCOUNTING SOCIETY<lb/>
Accounting majors: If you are enrolled in<lb/>
a 3000 or 4000 level accounting class, you<lb/>
are invited to attend the Accounting Soci-<lb/>
ety Wine and Cheese Social, Thursday.<lb/>
Stop by the Accounting Office for an in-<lb/>
vitation.<lb/>
EDUCATION MAIORS<lb/>
The Department of Speech-Language it<lb/>
Auditory Pathology (SLAP) will be pro-<lb/>
viding the speech and hearing screening<lb/>
for all students eligible for admission to<lb/>
the Upper Division of Teacher Education<lb/>
on Sept. 12, 13, and 14. The Department<lb/>
will be testing from 5 to 6:30 p.m on each<lb/>
day listed above. NO APPOINTMENT IS<lb/>
NEEDED (first come, first serve basis).<lb/>
The SLAP Department is located in Belk<lb/>
Annex on Charles St.<lb/>
BIQLQGi STUDENTS<lb/>
Get acquainted with biology facult) ar .<lb/>
biologs club members at the oriental<lb/>
gathering Sept 12 jt 7 pm in ii I<lb/>
Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
FORENSIC SOCIETY<lb/>
Interested in competing in Intercollegiate<lb/>
Public Speaking, Interpretation, or De-<lb/>
bate?WeU the ECU ForensicsSociety is<lb/>
vou. The next meeting will be Sept 6 at 8<lb/>
p.m. in 211 Messtck Theatre Arts Building<lb/>
WINDSURFING<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural<lb/>
Windsurfing registration meeting held<lb/>
from Sept 6 to Sept 27.<lb/>
GROUP PHOTOGRAPHS<lb/>
Croup photographs will be taken Sept 1 5<lb/>
until Dec 2 No group pictures can be<lb/>
taken after Dec. 2 Please note that the a<lb/>
group listing with the name at every per<lb/>
son in the photograph MUST be pre-<lb/>
sented BEFORE the photographer films<lb/>
the group ORGANIZATIONS V<lb/>
OUT LISTINGS WILL NO! H PO<lb/>
GRAPl 1ED, and time does not permit I<lb/>
scheduling of another session<lb/>
UNIVERSITY UNIONS<lb/>
A special attraction of EVITA will be pre<lb/>
sented in Wright Auditorium on Sept 22<lb/>
at 8 pm Composed bv Andrew Lloyd<lb/>
Webber (CATS, PHANTOM OF THE<lb/>
OPERA, and 1ESUS CHRIST SUPER-<lb/>
STAR), EVITA won seven Tony Awards,<lb/>
including Best Musical. EVITA is based<lb/>
upon the life of Eva Peron, the second wife<lb/>
of Argentine dictator Juan Peron Tickets<lb/>
for the New York Touring Production of<lb/>
EVITA are now an sale For further details<lb/>
contact: The General Ticket Office, Men-<lb/>
denhall Students Center, 757-6611, ext<lb/>
266.<lb/>
FOOD FEST<lb/>
The American 1 ieart Association and<lb/>
Purdue will sponsor Food Fest, 1968 at<lb/>
Krogers and Harris (Bells Fork location)<lb/>
Sept. 13 and 14. "Heartsmart" tours will<lb/>
be given by qualified nutritionist at 10<lb/>
a.m. and 6 p.m daily for a S5 donation to<lb/>
the Al IA The tours teach consumers to<lb/>
shop for healthy foods found in local gro-<lb/>
cery stores. For more information call 752-<lb/>
7374.<lb/>
VOTERS<lb/>
The League of Women Voters of<lb/>
Greenville-Pitt Countv will sponsor voter<lb/>
registration on Sept 14 from 8.30 a m. to 1<lb/>
p.m. in the ECU Bookstore lobbv New<lb/>
registrations, permanent address changes<lb/>
andor party affiliation changes can be<lb/>
made at this time<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
Coping with stress: A free mini dass of-<lb/>
fered by the ECU Counseling Center for<lb/>
students: You can � identify sources of<lb/>
stress, make positive changes, manage<lb/>
your response to stressful situations, learn<lb/>
to relax, improve self confidence Sept<lb/>
12,14,16,19 in 329 Wright Building from 3-<lb/>
4 pm. No advance registration is re-<lb/>
quired. Call or stop by the Counseling<lb/>
Center for further information. (316<lb/>
Wright Building 757 6661) Plan on at<lb/>
tending all four sessions<lb/>
Advertise in The East Carolinian<lb/>
A spi<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)<lb/>
sales jumped 41 pen � I<lb/>
weeks earlier this vearf<lb/>
cause of a rash of h j<lb/>
A stud) of more th<lb/>
male doctors hud she,<lb/>
taking a single aspii<lb/>
other das could I he j<lb/>
risk in half<lb/>
The study wason<lb/>
recent reports<lb/>
first time that doctor <lb/>
ly to treat heart atta <lb/>
to prevent them<lb/>
In the most r-<lb/>
�found that one aspi<lb/>
and a<lb/>
�n v<lb/>
hours ran dramal<lb/>
ride of a second fatal he�<lb/>
Without the treatmt<lb/>
tientshad a 13 per<lb/>
within five w -<lb/>
the figure dropped I -j<lb/>
'The real - j<lb/>
treatment for pa'<lb/>
ret . �,<lb/>
stu.<lb/>
Heart .<lb/>
leading<lb/>
The <lb/>
rmer H<lb/>
in 1987<lb/>
� �<lb/>
-<lb/>
the recent . -J<lb/>
heart attacks are the<lb/>
dissoKers and that<lb/>
�<lb/>
- .<lb/>
I<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
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�<lb/>
I �<lb/>
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scheduled for Deceml<lb/>
next April in the i<lb/>
added to resident<lb/>
Their call is bei<lb/>
some members ot I<lb/>
the state u <lb/>
who at the very U<lb/>
to take a second I<lb/>
i before the<lb/>
month on Dec 1 a I<lb/>
I<lb/>
. mo<lb/>
chargt that tx .<lb/>
increase in fuh,<lb/>
thly 1"<lb/>
$7as a ua to<lb/>
duos distano<lb/>
courage large busii<lb/>
sta) on the public pi I<lb/>
t than buik: .<lb/>
networks<lb/>
But tlu V i<lb/>
State I : imer<lb/>
is asking the FCC to<lb/>
future increase s<lb/>
about $1 billion <lb/>
unco<lb/>
M<lb/>
FAMO<lb/>
�UENEROI<lb/>
-REj<lb/>
nFMVERY HOI<lb/>
SUNTHURS.<lb/>
FRI.&amp;SAT. 4 PI<lb/>
DELIVERY CHAR<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
4kn<lb/>
DELIVER<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0008"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6.1988 7<lb/>
I (X K �ENGLISH"<lb/>
I FRIENDS: -Mark<lb/>
mma and Mike" We hope<lb/>
id our M a in Greenville. We<lb/>
tke some ol thi jolly good<lb/>
England From Tnsh, Susan,<lb/>
BOKV It s mo aain. Once<lb/>
i to much space left in the<lb/>
. thought S would take this<lb/>
 -xiv thank ou for a great<lb/>
in<lb/>
ORTION<lb/>
It ntial Care"<lb/>
E Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
8:30 4 p.m.<lb/>
r. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
gle Women's<lb/>
lalth Center<lb/>
)0 433 2930<lb/>
Y'S<lb/>
WE<lb/>
DELIVER<lb/>
i-ERS<lb/>
$8 per hour,<lb/>
lilable. �<lb/>
surance.<lb/>
- Streets.<lb/>
OG STl<lb/>
DENTS<lb/>
ig facult) and<lb/>
R1 NSK MiClIT<lb/>
� i i-i)t'<lb/>
� i. 6 at 8<lb/>
NDSLRF1NG<lb/>
tramural<lb/>
 hold<lb/>
UP PI C.RAPHS<lb/>
. � n Sepl 15<lb/>
J. N . tures can be<lb/>
: ise note that the a<lb/>
� every per-<lb/>
MUST be pre-<lb/>
� graphef films<lb/>
� ; WITH-<lb/>
N rBEPl IOTO<lb/>
es not permit the<lb/>
- session<lb/>
r Rsm unions<lb/>
' AwtU be pro<lb/>
. � num on Sept 22<lb/>
Andrew Lloyd<lb/>
� NTOM OF THE<lb/>
S CHRIST SL'PER-<lb/>
�n so on Tony Awards,<lb/>
, EVITA is based<lb/>
ron, the second wife<lb/>
Juan Peron Tickets<lb/>
.ring Production of<lb/>
: further details<lb/>
ket Office, Men-<lb/>
Center, 757-6611. ext<lb/>
FQDDFISI<lb/>
i ioart Association and<lb/>
sor Food Fest, 1988 �<lb/>
and Harris fBeOs Tork location)<lb/>
13 and 14 "1 leartsmart" tours will<lb/>
len b qualified nutritionist at 10<lb/>
p m daily for a S5 donation to<lb/>
f A The tours teach consumers to<lb/>
jr healthy foods found in local gro-<lb/>
r more information call 752-<lb/>
VOTERS<lb/>
�  n n Voters of<lb/>
� County will sponsor voter<lb/>
- � 14from830am to 1<lb/>
the ECU Bookstore lobby. New<lb/>
Ia ns, permanent address changes<lb/>
r irty affiliation changes can be<lb/>
this time<lb/>
QLNS�LIN��EXIEB<lb/>
with stress A free mini class of-<lb/>
 the ECU Counseling Center for<lb/>
s You can � identify sources of<lb/>
make positive changes, manage<lb/>
nsc to stressful situations, learn<lb/>
(, improve self confidence Sept.<lb/>
19 in J29 Wright Building from 3-<lb/>
No advance registration is re-<lb/>
Call or stop by the Counseling<lb/>
for further information. (316<lb/>
It Building, 757 6661) Plan on at-<lb/>
lg all four sessions.<lb/>
tan<lb/>
Aspirin cuts the risk<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)-Aspirin<lb/>
sales jumped 41 percent for a few<lb/>
weeks earlier this year, not be-<lb/>
cause of a rash of headaches.<lb/>
A study of more than 22,000<lb/>
male doctors had shown that<lb/>
taking a single aspirin every<lb/>
other day could cut heart attack<lb/>
risk in half.<lb/>
The study was one of a series of<lb/>
recent reports showing for the<lb/>
first time that doctorsare able not<lb/>
only to treat heart attacksbut also<lb/>
to prevent them.<lb/>
In the most recent report, doc-<lb/>
tors found that one aspirin tablet<lb/>
and a single dose of a clot-dis-<lb/>
solving drug given within 24<lb/>
hours can dramatically cut the<lb/>
risk of a second fatal heart attack.<lb/>
Without the treatment, pa-<lb/>
tients had a 13 percent chance of<lb/>
dying from a second heart atack<lb/>
within five weeks, the research-<lb/>
ers found. With the treatment,<lb/>
the figure dropped to 8 percent.<lb/>
'The real discovery is that<lb/>
treatment for patients is going to<lb/>
reduce in-hospital mortality sub-<lb/>
stantially says Richard Peto of<lb/>
Oxford University, one of the<lb/>
study's authors.<lb/>
Heart disease is the nation's<lb/>
leading causes of death, by far.<lb/>
The National Center for Health<lb/>
Statistics reports that 762,820<lb/>
Americans died of heart disease<lb/>
in 1987. (This does not include<lb/>
those who died of blood-vessel<lb/>
diseases, such as strokes.)<lb/>
The drugs most responsible for<lb/>
the recent success in preventing<lb/>
heart attacks are the new clot-<lb/>
dissolvers and that old standby,<lb/>
aspirin.<lb/>
The usual cause of heart at-<lb/>
tacks is a blockage of the coro-<lb/>
nary arteries, which supply the<lb/>
heart muscle with oxygen-rich<lb/>
blood. The blockage arises from<lb/>
the buildup of fats, cholesterol<lb/>
and clotted blood.<lb/>
Clot-dissolvers break up clots,<lb/>
thus restoring blood flow. Aspi-<lb/>
rin interferes with aspects of the<lb/>
clotting process, helping to pre-<lb/>
vent clot formation in the first<lb/>
place.<lb/>
The limited sales of the clot-<lb/>
dissolving drugs in the United<lb/>
States show that many doctors<lb/>
are still not using them, despite<lb/>
their proven success. But that is<lb/>
beginning to change.<lb/>
Some doctors predict that in the<lb/>
not -too-distant future these<lb/>
drugs will be judged so safe that<lb/>
they will be administered rou-<lb/>
tinely by paramedics in ambu-<lb/>
lances before suspected heart at-<lb/>
tacck victims even reach the hos-<lb/>
pital.<lb/>
"We have to know how to re-<lb/>
spond quickly, and we have to<lb/>
have the courage to use these<lb/>
drugs in the absevce of a defini-<lb/>
tive diagnosis says Dr. Burton<lb/>
Sobel of Washington University<lb/>
in St. Lousis, a pioneering in the<lb/>
testing of the clot-dissolvers.<lb/>
"The most important thing we<lb/>
can do is teach patients in advance<lb/>
about the value of early treat-<lb/>
ment he says.<lb/>
While most public attention has<lb/>
focused on this new ability to pre-<lb/>
vent heart attacks, researchers<lb/>
have also made important prog-<lb/>
ress in speeding the recovery of<lb/>
patients who survive heart at-<lb/>
tac<lb/>
Researchers at the University of<lb/>
Michigan recently determined<lb/>
that some heart attack victims can<lb/>
be released from the hospital as<lb/>
soon as three daysafter their heart<lb/>
attacks. Most heart attacks vic-<lb/>
tims are kept in the hospital for at<lb/>
least seven to 10 days.<lb/>
The patients given early dis-<lb/>
charge were able to return to work<lb/>
two weeks sooner than others in<lb/>
the study group. After six<lb/>
months, not one death was re-<lb/>
corded in the early-discharge<lb/>
group. The researchers concluded<lb/>
that perhaps 15 percents of heart<lb/>
attacks victims could be safely<lb/>
discharged after three days.<lb/>
In July, Stanford University<lb/>
doctors found that workers who<lb/>
went back to their jobs about<lb/>
seven weeks after their heart at-<lb/>
tacks did at least as well as work-<lb/>
ers who went back after a more<lb/>
typical convalescence of about 10<lb/>
or 11 weeks.<lb/>
All of these advances come at a<lb/>
time when public health experts<lb/>
are increasingly emphasizing the<lb/>
role of good gealth and good nu-<lb/>
trition in lowering heart disease<lb/>
risk.<lb/>
Early next year, the American<lb/>
Heart Association seal of approval<lb/>
will begin appearing on foods that<lb/>
are low in fat and cholesterol and<lb/>
therefore can help reduce heart<lb/>
disease risk.<lb/>
U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett<lb/>
Koop in July issued his first report<lb/>
on nutrition, calling on Americans<lb/>
to lower their consuption of fats<lb/>
and to eat more vegetables, fruits,<lb/>
fish, poultry and whole grains.<lb/>
Progress in research on heart<lb/>
disease is making clear that the<lb/>
heart attack is no longer a mysteri-<lb/>
ous killer that strikes without<lb/>
warning and cannot be defended<lb/>
against.<lb/>
MUch can be done to prevent<lb/>
heart attacks, great improvements<lb/>
are being made in treatments, and<lb/>
recovery is faster than ever before.<lb/>
Phone rates slated to increase<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Local<lb/>
residential phone rates across<lb/>
America are due to go up twice<lb/>
during the coming months, but<lb/>
state utility consumer advocates<lb/>
are trying to head off the increases<lb/>
before they can take effect.<lb/>
Consumer advocates want the<lb/>
Federal Communications<lb/>
Commission to cancel increases<lb/>
scheduled for December and the<lb/>
next April in the "line charge"<lb/>
added to residential phone bills.<lb/>
Their call is being heard by<lb/>
some members of Congress and<lb/>
the state utilities commissioners,<lb/>
who at the very least want the FCC<lb/>
to take a second vote on the added<lb/>
charges before they take effect.<lb/>
The increases - 60 cents per<lb/>
month on Dec. 1 and 30 cents on<lb/>
April 1,1989 - were part of a three<lb/>
step) boost in the monthly line<lb/>
charge that began with a 60-cent<lb/>
increase in July 1, 1987. The<lb/>
monthly charge is already $2. 60.<lb/>
The FCC approved the increases<lb/>
in April 1987asa way to further re-<lb/>
duce long distance rates and en-<lb/>
courage large business users to<lb/>
stay on the public phone network<lb/>
rather than building their own<lb/>
networks.<lb/>
But the National Association of<lb/>
State Utility Consumer Advocates<lb/>
is asking the FCC to cancel the<lb/>
future increases - amounting to<lb/>
about $1 billion dollars a year -<lb/>
saying they are "unecessary, un-<lb/>
supported and unwarranted<lb/>
The association and three tele-<lb/>
communication analysts commis-<lb/>
sioned by the group to study a June<lb/>
report compiled by the FCC on the<lb/>
effects of the subscriber line charge<lb/>
concluded that the threat of large<lb/>
users bypassing the local phone<lb/>
network has not materialized. In-<lb/>
creasing the charge by 90 cents will<lb/>
have no effect on the bypass that is<lb/>
already occurring, they said.<lb/>
"We've really attacked the very<lb/>
basis for the subscriber line charge,<lb/>
" said Ron Binz, Colorado con-<lb/>
sumer counsel.<lb/>
The line charge helps pay the<lb/>
cost of wire that connects a<lb/>
consumer's telephone with a<lb/>
phone company's central office.<lb/>
Part of the cost of that line is also<lb/>
subsidized with long distance<lb/>
rates, so raising the proportion<lb/>
paid by suscribers reduces long<lb/>
distance rates. Long-distance<lb/>
rates have dropped more than 30<lb/>
percent since the charge was<lb/>
imposed in 1985.<lb/>
Raising the line charge also<lb/>
raises local connection fees paid<lb/>
by large business users. Some<lb/>
businesses find it ecomomical to<lb/>
build their own telecommunica-<lb/>
tions networks and bypass the<lb/>
public phone network.<lb/>
The FCC continues to support<lb/>
the subscriber lone charge and the<lb/>
underlying policy of shifting the<lb/>
costs of the local phone network<lb/>
to subscribers, said FCC spokes-<lb/>
man John Kamp.<lb/>
"The policy  has worked very<lb/>
well. Bypass has not grown and it<lb/>
has caused rates overall to come<lb/>
down considerably, and we have<lb/>
not seen evidence to cause us to<lb/>
change course, " he said.<lb/>
The agency, however, will<lb/>
"look very carefully" at the con-<lb/>
sumer advocates' requests to can-<lb/>
cel the scheduled increases, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But the consumer advocates'<lb/>
group has already taken its case to<lb/>
Congress, where it is talking to<lb/>
Democratic members of the com-<lb/>
munications committees, most of<lb/>
whom opposed the original im-<lb/>
position of the line charge at $1 in<lb/>
June 1985 and the later increases.<lb/>
The issue "has caught Con-<lb/>
gress' eye, " said Gerard Sa-<lb/>
lemme, an aide to Rep. Edward<lb/>
Markey, D-Mass chairman of the<lb/>
House of telecommunications<lb/>
subcommittee, particularly be-<lb/>
cause of concerns about an FCC<lb/>
proposal to give AT&amp;T and the<lb/>
local Bell phone companies more<lb/>
financial flexibility by capping<lb/>
rates but lifting the lid on profits.<lb/>
Salemme said that if price caps<lb/>
were adopted, regulators would<lb/>
have little or no assurance that the<lb/>
line-charge increases were being<lb/>
passed along in the form of re-<lb/>
duced long-distance rates.<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
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Cheese and 1 Topping$5.60 $7.65 $9.90<lb/>
Each Additional Topping$ .65 .80 .95<lb/>
SPECIALTY PKZA8<lb/>
CheeseLovers$6.90 $9.25 $11.80<lb/>
Meat Lovers$6.90 $9.25 $11.80<lb/>
Supreme$6.90 $9.25 $11.80<lb/>
Super Supreme$7.55 $10.05 $12.75<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA HUTQUAUTY<lb/>
�GENEROUS TOPPINGS<lb/>
�REAL CHEESE<lb/>
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FRI.&amp;SAT- 4 PM TO 1:00 AM<lb/>
DELIVERY CHARGE 75<lb/>
COUPON GOOD FOR JUST 7 DAYS!<lb/>
DELIVERY AREA LIMITED TO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
PHONE 752-4445<lb/>
A FREE PIZZA HUT<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
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FOR<lb/>
RUSH PHI KAPPA TAU<lb/>
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY<lb/>
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and Pizza from<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058090_0009"/><lb/>
8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6,1988<lb/>
Fires threatening two towns<lb/>
SILVER GATE, Mont. (AP) -<lb/>
Resident of two towns on the edge<lb/>
of a giant wildfire near Yellow-<lb/>
stone National Park fled their<lb/>
homes and firefighters today<lb/>
made a "last ditch" effort to stop<lb/>
the encroachiong flames-<lb/>
About a 150 residents of Silver<lb/>
Creek and Cooke City near<lb/>
Yellowstone's northeastern en-<lb/>
trance, were told Sunday to<lb/>
evacuate.<lb/>
Only a few residents opted to<lb/>
stay.<lb/>
"There's no real reason to<lb/>
leave Cooke City's Wayne<lb/>
Johnson as firefighters moved<lb/>
past him. "I don't think the town<lb/>
is going to burn<lb/>
But officials were not confi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
"If the fire jumps out of the line<lb/>
and explodes, it could burn up<lb/>
that canyon faster than they could<lb/>
drive out of there said fire infor-<lb/>
mation officer Dave McMorran.<lb/>
"So we're spreading the word<lb/>
around tonight, 'Don't sit around<lb/>
and wait, folks<lb/>
Crews lit a three mile line of<lb/>
flames through the forest Sunday<lb/>
night to burn up fuel in front of the<lb/>
60,000-acre Storm Creek fire and<lb/>
to buffer the towns.<lb/>
The blaze was among fires that<lb/>
have blackened 910,000 acres of<lb/>
the greater Yellowstone area, in-<lb/>
cluding 611,000 acres within the<lb/>
park itself, or more than one-<lb/>
fourth of Yellowstone's 2.2 mil-<lb/>
lion total acreage. One blaze, the<lb/>
North Fork fire, was within three<lb/>
miles of the Old Faithful geyser in<lb/>
Wyoming.<lb/>
Elsewhere, fires in Southern<lb/>
Calirornia blackened nearly 3,000<lb/>
acres of brush, timber and dam-<lb/>
aged at least 21 homes as searing<lb/>
dry weather and Santa Ana winds<lb/>
harried firefighters and ignited<lb/>
new flames. The fire forced 150<lb/>
people to evacuate from a mobile<lb/>
home park 15 miles northeast of<lb/>
San Diego.<lb/>
Washington state's most seri-<lb/>
ous forest fires balloned to more<lb/>
than 12,500 acres, sending smoke<lb/>
and ash over the town of Republic<lb/>
but posing no immediate threat.<lb/>
In Utah, calm winds helped<lb/>
firefighters keep a raging 5,400<lb/>
acre brush-fire from more than 70<lb/>
canyon homes east of Salt Lake<lb/>
City, authorities said.<lb/>
In Idaho, a fire that spread from<lb/>
Yellowstone into the Island Park<lb/>
area of eastern Idaho during the<lb/>
weekend burned more than<lb/>
1400 acres, but light winds gave<lb/>
firefighters a reprieve. The state's<lb/>
largest fire, the Ludder Creek fire<lb/>
in central Idaho, grew to more<lb/>
than 21,000 acres.<lb/>
More than 600 firefighters in<lb/>
Montana tended the backfire set<lb/>
near Yellowstone's northeast en-<lb/>
trance. The blaze was expected to<lb/>
burn more than 5,000 acres by la te<lb/>
today in a west, southwest direc-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Storm Creek fire, which<lb/>
started nearly three months ago in<lb/>
the Abroska-Beartooth Wilder-<lb/>
ness of Montana, continued burn-<lb/>
ing southerly down a pair of creek<lb/>
drainages in the park, away from<lb/>
the two towns.<lb/>
The next two days are critical as<lb/>
officials expect southwest winds<lb/>
to kick up Tuesday and blow the<lb/>
flames toward the towns, said Pat<lb/>
Kuanert, fire information officer.<lb/>
"We're creating a massive<lb/>
buffer in a last ditch effort to save<lb/>
this town Kuanert said. "We<lb/>
need two miles of buffer to hold it.<lb/>
Two miles of black<lb/>
Crews also manned a 65-foot-<lb/>
wide swath bulldozed through<lb/>
the forest, waiting with shovels<lb/>
and hoses to put out any burning<lb/>
embers.<lb/>
Tanker trucks sprayed flame<lb/>
retardent foam on the historic<lb/>
gatehouse at the park's northeast<lb/>
entrance.<lb/>
Smoke from the backfires filled<lb/>
both towns, and curious residents<lb/>
in Cooke City watched down the<lb/>
highway.<lb/>
The evacuation notice was<lb/>
given Sunday morning and<lb/>
sheriffs deputies drove a patrol<lb/>
vehicle slowly through the streets<lb/>
blaring out the evacuation signal.<lb/>
The fire started June 14 when a<lb/>
lightning strike sparked a small<lb/>
blaze in the wilderness. Under<lb/>
forest service policy, it was al-<lb/>
lowed to burn as long as it re-<lb/>
mained within the boundaries<lb/>
perscribed in a fire management<lb/>
plan.<lb/>
But in mid August, 70 mph<lb/>
gusts blew the fire across several<lb/>
miles in a few hours and firefighters<lb/>
moved in to stop the advance. At<lb/>
the same time, a man-caused fire<lb/>
burning to the west in the same area<lb/>
- the Hellroaring Creek blaze - also<lb/>
gained ground.<lb/>
The Hellroaring fire stands at<lb/>
nearly 54,000 acres, and officials<lb/>
expect the fires to merge Tuesday.<lb/>
To the southeast of Cooke City and<lb/>
Silver Gate is the 236,900-acre Clo-<lb/>
ver Mist fire, burning in Yellow-<lb/>
stone.<lb/>
"This group of fires is the largest<lb/>
complex of fires to ever burn in the<lb/>
written history of the continental<lb/>
U.S excluding Alaska Kaunert<lb/>
said. 'This is a one-in-400 year<lb/>
event<lb/>
Suspect killed by police fire<lb/>
FAYETTEVILLE (AP) - A sus-<lb/>
pect in an extortion attempt was<lb/>
shot to death by Fayetteville po-<lb/>
lice in a wooded area of Fort Bragg<lb/>
after he picked up $15,000 left by<lb/>
an extortion victim, authorities<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The suspect armed with a shot-<lb/>
gun "slung around his chest<lb/>
was shot after he pointed the<lb/>
weapon at lawmen, said Fay-<lb/>
etteville police Sgt. A.M.Marable.<lb/>
Detective Melton brown was<lb/>
injured when his left knee was<lb/>
struck by an officer's bullet that<lb/>
apparently richocheted. Ms.<lb/>
Marable said.<lb/>
Brown was treated and released<lb/>
from Cape Fear Valley Medical<lb/>
Center, a hospital spokeswoman<lb/>
said.<lb/>
An unidentified source told<lb/>
Fayetteville Observer-Times that<lb/>
the dead man had been identified<lb/>
as Staff Sgt. Erick William<lb/>
Johnson, 35, a Special Forces sol-<lb/>
dier.<lb/>
A backpack found by lawmen<lb/>
in a search of the area around the<lb/>
shooting Saturday afternoon con-<lb/>
tained identification that led them<lb/>
to Johnson's home, the newspa-<lb/>
per reported.<lb/>
Johnson had been reported<lb/>
missing Friday night by his wife.<lb/>
Fingerprints and other infor-<lb/>
mation about the dead man had<lb/>
been sent early Saturday to the<lb/>
FBI's computer center in Wash-<lb/>
ington by a team of federal inves-<lb/>
tigators in an effort to establish his<lb/>
identity, the newspaper said.<lb/>
The shooting ocurred shortly<lb/>
after 9 a.m. Saturday in an area<lb/>
where the suspect had picked up<lb/>
$15,000 that had been left by an<lb/>
extortion victim, Ms. Marable<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Several officers were waiting in<lb/>
the nearby woods "for whatever<lb/>
might occur or whoever might<lb/>
come out she said. The suspect<lb/>
had a "bandoleer belt " of ammu-<lb/>
nition strapped around his chest,<lb/>
Ms. Marable said.<lb/>
As the suspect came out of the<lb/>
woods, the officers approached<lb/>
and identified themselves, she<lb/>
said. They also told the suspect to<lb/>
drop his weapon, but he suspect<lb/>
advanced on the officers "with his<lb/>
weapon drawn she said.<lb/>
"He pointed at one of our officers<lb/>
and was shot by another"<lb/>
SUMMER CLOTHES<lb/>
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Women's Jeans &amp; Dress Pants -<lb/>
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Summer &amp; Jean Skirts -<lb/>
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Summer Dresses - $1.95<lb/>
Shorts (Men's &amp; Womens) 50V<lb/>
T-Shirts 50�<lb/>
We have an even larger selection of<lb/>
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Coming Soon! FallWinter Clothes<lb/>
Overcoats, Leather Jackets<lb/>
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At<lb/>
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DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP)<lb/>
Flying across the nation it is virt<lb/>
ally impossible to discern tl<lb/>
mighty rivers that normally n<lb/>
bon thhe landscapes There<lb/>
just vast seas of muddv brwi<lb/>
water - and millions of strand<lb/>
people<lb/>
Roods have inundated thrd<lb/>
quarters of Bangladesh and cl<lb/>
transportation links from it n<lb/>
jor port to the capital and otl<lb/>
maor cities, officials sav thoul<lb/>
today adding that flood waters<lb/>
three ma)or rivers were recedii<lb/>
In Dhaka, flood waters were<lb/>
their highest levels i n 4 years af<lb/>
covered three fourths of the cai<lb/>
tal.<lb/>
Dhaka newspapers reportedj<lb/>
more flood deathhs today, brid<lb/>
ing the toll to at (east " sir<lb/>
June, when rivers began ov<lb/>
flowing their banks in anni<lb/>
monsoon flooding in this impd<lb/>
erished nation or 110 milhi<lb/>
people.<lb/>
The government I <lb/>
widely considered 1<lb/>
Millions of the maroned<lb/>
eating raw food and dr j<lb/>
muddy, probabl) contaminat<lb/>
water, 83.(X)0 people nationvMl<lb/>
have contracted diarrheal d<lb/>
cases, said Health Minister At<lb/>
Loans<lb/>
RALEIGH With<lb/>
terms just tx ginning -<lb/>
dents and parents may i<lb/>
with meeting educati<lb/>
penses f so, they ma<lb/>
consider student or parent<lb/>
available through t ollegt l<lb/>
datum Inc. (Cl I reru Imei<lb/>
any eligible . univei<lb/>
technical or v nal sch<lb/>
College Foundation - - j<lb/>
the central lender in North (<lb/>
lina for Staff i - form<lb/>
Insured Stud( nt 1 ins<lb/>
mental Loans I - Stud<lb/>
FLL'S Loans to parents. Funds)<lb/>
loans from CF1 are provided<lb/>
North Carolina full-service bar.<lb/>
and special investors The Nd<lb/>
Carolina State Education As<lb/>
tancc Authority (N.C SEA A<lb/>
vides the guarantee for tK<lb/>
CFI's educational ear arc<lb/>
fered under the nationwide Ro<lb/>
T. Stafford Student Loan I<lb/>
(formerly called the Guarand<lb/>
Student Loan Program). The SJ<lb/>
ford Loans are need-based but I<lb/>
Supplemental and PLUS loan-<lb/>
not.<lb/>
North Carolina resident- H<lb/>
apply, even if they attend a<lb/>
out of state. Out-of-state reside!<lb/>
ma appl v it they a t tend c -J<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Stafford Loans are for depe<lb/>
ent or independent student!<lb/>
undergraduate or graduate pj<lb/>
fessional programs oi study<lb/>
are based on financial need<lb/>
gible undergraduate freshi<lb/>
and sophomores may borrow<lb/>
to $2,625 per year; undergradi<lb/>
juniors and seniors, up to 54.<lb/>
per year. The loan maximum<lb/>
graduateprofessional studeni<lb/>
$7,500 per year.<lb/>
The interest rate on Staff<lb/>
Loans is 8 per year for new<lb/>
rowers. Repayment oi loan pnj<lb/>
pal does not have to begin und<lb/>
months after the student gral<lb/>
ates or drops below half-time<lb/>
rollment. Most borrowers hi<lb/>
financial need and thereby qua<lb/>
for the federal government's rf<lb/>
ment oi interest prior to the ret.<lb/>
ment period.<lb/>
Supplemental Loans tor<lb/>
dents (SLS), the second t p<lb/>
Youth alumni<lb/>
challenge<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
The Young Alumni Challenl<lb/>
was formally announced dunj<lb/>
todav's Alumni Leadership G<lb/>
ference, a training and intomj<lb/>
tion session sponsored annu.<lb/>
by the Lumni Associaiton<lb/>
alumni and fiends who hod vi<lb/>
untary leadership positions w<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
"We're thrilled that these f<lb/>
young entrepreneurs have<lb/>
cided to invest in East Carolina<lb/>
said Chancellor Richard R. Eal<lb/>
"We're excited about their<lb/>
sonal success and about wl<lb/>
their challenge can mean for<lb/>
university Their generosity<lb/>
their enthusiasm are splenJ<lb/>
examples for all of us "<lb/>
For more information about<lb/>
Young Alumni Challenge, cj<lb/>
tact David B. McDonald at<lb/>
ECU Office of Institutional<lb/>
vancement, TaylorSlaughl<lb/>
Alumni Center, Greenville, Nf<lb/>
27858,(919)757-6685-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0010"/><lb/>
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OTHES<lb/>
UTS!<lb/>
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)ress Pants -i<lb/>
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Skirts -<lb/>
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Vinter Clothes<lb/>
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More!<lb/>
lb Buy<lb/>
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752-3866<lb/>
I- zz !<lb/>
Millions stranded by floods<lb/>
DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) -<lb/>
Hying across the nation it is virtu-<lb/>
ally impossible to discern the<lb/>
mighty rivers that normally rib-<lb/>
bon thhe landscapes. There are<lb/>
Hist vast seas of muddy brwon<lb/>
water - and millions of stranded<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Hoods have inundated three-<lb/>
quarters of Bangladesh and cut<lb/>
transportation links from its ma-<lb/>
jor port to the capital and other<lb/>
major cities, officials say, though<lb/>
today adding that flood waters on<lb/>
three major rivers were receding.<lb/>
In Dhaka, flood waters were at<lb/>
their highest levels in 54 years and<lb/>
covered three fourths of the capi-<lb/>
tal.<lb/>
Dhaka newspapers reported 60<lb/>
more flood deathhs today, bring-<lb/>
ing the toll to at least 1,007 since<lb/>
lune, when rivers began over-<lb/>
flowing their banks in annual<lb/>
nonsoon flooding in this impov-<lb/>
erished nation of 110 million<lb/>
people.<lb/>
The government of 333 dead id<lb/>
widely considered low.<lb/>
Millions of the marooned are<lb/>
mating raw food and drinking<lb/>
muddy, probably contaminated<lb/>
water, 83,000 people nationwide<lb/>
have contracted diarrheal dis-<lb/>
eases, said Health Minister Abdul<lb/>
Munim.<lb/>
He said 65 people have died of<lb/>
the diseases so far.<lb/>
"It is a calamity Information<lb/>
Minister Mahbubur Rahman told<lb/>
reporters Sunday night. "It is a<lb/>
havoc creating, menacing flood<lb/>
Flying in an airplane across<lb/>
Bangladesh Sunday from the In-<lb/>
dian border to Dhaka, even the<lb/>
civilian pilot couldn't differenti-<lb/>
ate between rivers and flood wa-<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
"I've never seen anything like it<lb/>
before said Ghias Ahmad, who<lb/>
has been flying over his country<lb/>
for 19 years.<lb/>
The waters swallowed up en-<lb/>
tire villages. Occasionally, tin<lb/>
roofs glinted in the sunlight, the<lb/>
houses beneath them completely<lb/>
submerged.<lb/>
On a few high spots of ground<lb/>
or short stretches of paved road<lb/>
still above water, people milled<lb/>
idly, small boats beside them.<lb/>
The Ganges and Brahmaputura<lb/>
rivers and their dozens of tribu-<lb/>
taries flow from India to and<lb/>
through Bangladesh to the Bay of<lb/>
Bengal.<lb/>
The rivers flood almost each<lb/>
year after the monsoon rains in<lb/>
Bangladesh annd India. Last year<lb/>
the flooding in Bangladesh killed<lb/>
about 1,500 people.<lb/>
This season, some refugees<lb/>
found shelter in relief centers or<lb/>
relatives' homes, said govern-<lb/>
ment officials who spoke on the<lb/>
condition of anonymity. But they<lb/>
estimate that at least 20 million<lb/>
people were either stranded in<lb/>
their homes or marooned on small<lb/>
outcroppings of high ground<lb/>
with few supplies.<lb/>
Wells and pumps are flooded,<lb/>
officials said, and flood water<lb/>
which is probably impure, is the<lb/>
only source of drinking water.<lb/>
The central government for<lb/>
foregin aid, includin boats, heli-<lb/>
copters and three million tons of<lb/>
grain.<lb/>
Officials today reported water<lb/>
levels falling on the Brahmaptura,<lb/>
Ganges and Megha rivers. But<lb/>
relief officials cannot reach many<lb/>
parts of the country because<lb/>
transportation has widely broken<lb/>
down.<lb/>
"Shorrtages of medicine,<lb/>
cooked food and drinking water<lb/>
is causing untold miseries to mil-<lb/>
lions of marooned people a re-<lb/>
lief ministry official said on con-<lb/>
ditin of anonymity.<lb/>
The information minister said<lb/>
flood waters destroyed crops and<lb/>
Loans available<lb/>
RALEIGH- With college fall<lb/>
ns just beginning, some stu-<lb/>
kts and parents may need help<lb/>
with meeting educational ex-<lb/>
penses. It so, they may want to<lb/>
consider student or parent loans<lb/>
lilable through College Foun-<lb/>
dation Inc. (CFI) for enrollment at<lb/>
any eligible college, university,<lb/>
technical or vocational school.<lb/>
College Foundation serves as<lb/>
central lender in North Caro-<lb/>
i for Stafford Loans (formerly<lb/>
ured Student loans), Supple-<lb/>
mental Loans for Students, and<lb/>
s i oans to parents. Funds for<lb/>
n - from CFI are provided by<lb/>
North l arolina full-service banks<lb/>
and special investors. The North<lb/>
Carolina State Education Assis-<lb/>
tance Authority (N.C. SEAA) pro-<lb/>
les the guarantee for the loans.<lb/>
CFI's educational loans are of-<lb/>
ercd uTtdes .hc nationwide Robert<lb/>
T. Stafford Student Loan Porgram<lb/>
(formerly called the Guaranteed<lb/>
Student Loan Program). The Staf-<lb/>
ford Loans are need-based but the<lb/>
Supplemental and PLUS loans are<lb/>
not.<lb/>
North Carolina residents may<lb/>
apply, e'en if they attend college<lb/>
out ol state. Out-of-state residents<lb/>
may apply if they attend college in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Stafford Loans are for depend-<lb/>
ent or independent students in<lb/>
dergraduate or graduatepro-<lb/>
nal programs of study and<lb/>
are based on financial need. Eli-<lb/>
'e undergraduate freshmen<lb/>
and sophomores may borrow up<lb/>
$2,625 per year; undergraduate<lb/>
ors and seniors, up to $4,000<lb/>
year. The loan maximum for<lb/>
iuateprofessional students is<lb/>
17,500 per year.<lb/>
The interest rate on Stafford<lb/>
ins is 8 per year for new bor-<lb/>
rowers. Repayment of loan princi-<lb/>
pal does not have to begin until 6<lb/>
months after the student gradu-<lb/>
ates or drops below half-time en-<lb/>
rollment. Most borrowers have<lb/>
nancial need and thereby qualify<lb/>
for the federal government's pay-<lb/>
ment of interest prior to the repay-<lb/>
ment period.<lb/>
Supplemental Loans for Stu-<lb/>
dents (SLS), the second type of<lb/>
Youth alumni<lb/>
challenge<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
The Young Alumni Challenge<lb/>
was formally announced during<lb/>
today's Alumni Leadership Con-<lb/>
ference, a training and informa-<lb/>
tion session sponsored annualy<lb/>
by the Lumni Associaiton for<lb/>
alumni and fiends who hod vol-<lb/>
untary leadership positions with<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
"We're thrilled that these four<lb/>
young entrepreneurs have de-<lb/>
cided to invest in East Carolina<lb/>
said Chancellor Richard R. Eakin.<lb/>
"We're excited about their per-<lb/>
sonal success and about what<lb/>
their challenge can mean for the<lb/>
university. Their generosity and<lb/>
their enthusiasm are splendid<lb/>
examples for all of us. "<lb/>
For more information about the<lb/>
Young Alumni Challenge, con-<lb/>
tact David B. McDonald at the<lb/>
ECU Office of Institutional Ad-<lb/>
vancement, TaylorSlaughter<lb/>
Alumni Center, Greenville, N.C,<lb/>
27858, (919) 757-6685.<lb/>
loan offered by the Foundation,<lb/>
are available to undergraduate<lb/>
independent students and in<lb/>
some cases, undergraduate stu-<lb/>
dents who are dependent, or<lb/>
graduateprofessional students.<lb/>
These loans are appropriate for<lb/>
students who do not qualify for<lb/>
the interest-subsidized student<lb/>
loans (Stafford Loans) or need as-<lb/>
sistance in addition to a Stafford<lb/>
Loan.<lb/>
Students do not have to demon-<lb/>
strate "need" in order to qualify<lb/>
for Suplemental Loans for Stu-<lb/>
dents. Under this program they<lb/>
may borrow up to $4,000 per year<lb/>
with an aggregate limit of $20,000.<lb/>
Interest is a variable rate set annu-<lb/>
ally for the 12-month period July<lb/>
1- June 30. The rate for the current<lb/>
12-month period is 10.45.<lb/>
Students with Supplemental<lb/>
Loans may postpone the required<lb/>
payments on loan principal as<lb/>
long as they are enrolled full-time.<lb/>
They are, however, responsible<lb/>
for paying the interest while en-<lb/>
rolled. The SLS borrower must<lb/>
either pay the interest monthly or<lb/>
sign an agreement authorizing<lb/>
CFI to add the interest to the loan<lb/>
principal.<lb/>
PLUS Loans are for parents of<lb/>
dependent students and are not<lb/>
based on financial need. The in-<lb/>
terst rate for the current 12-month<lb/>
period (July 1- June 30) is 10.45.<lb/>
Under the PLUS Loan Program,<lb/>
parents may borrow up to $4,000<lb/>
per year per dependent student,<lb/>
with an aggregate limit of $20,000<lb/>
per student. Although parents do<lb/>
not have to demonstrate "need<lb/>
they must be able to show the<lb/>
ability to make the required<lb/>
monthly payments.<lb/>
CFI cite the advantages of PLUS<lb/>
Loans as being low monthly pay-<lb/>
ments over a long repayemnt<lb/>
period, coverage with "cash<lb/>
flow" while the student is en-<lb/>
rolled in college, and the opportu-<lb/>
nity to accelerate payments at any<lb/>
time without penalty.<lb/>
Repayment on a PLUS Loan<lb/>
begins within 31-60 days of the<lb/>
date the loan is issued; but the<lb/>
WORK FOR YOURSELF<lb/>
As a campus representative<lb/>
you'll be responsible for placing<lb/>
advertising materials on botlettn<lb/>
boards and wording on<lb/>
marketing programs for clients<lb/>
such as American Express,<lb/>
Boston University. Eurall, and<lb/>
various movie companies,<lb/>
among others. Part-time work,<lb/>
choose your own hours. No<lb/>
sales. Many of our reps stay<lb/>
with us long after graduation If<lb/>
you are self-rnotlvated. hard-<lb/>
working, and a bit of an<lb/>
entrepreneur, call or write for<lb/>
more Information to:<lb/>
AMERICAN PASSAGE<lb/>
NETWORK<lb/>
6211 W. HOWARD STREET<lb/>
CHICAGO. IL. 60648<lb/>
1(800) 221-5942 or<lb/>
(312)647-6860<lb/>
CHICAGO DALLAS LOS ANGELES<lb/>
NEW YORK SEATTLE<lb/>
could prevent the planting of the<lb/>
winter rice crop. He said this<lb/>
might lead to the shortfall of two<lb/>
million tons of rice.<lb/>
The minister said Bangladesh<lb/>
needs 18 million tons of rice a year<lb/>
to feed its people. He said 16.5<lb/>
million tons are grown at home<lb/>
and 1.5 million tons imported.<lb/>
In Dhaka, a city of 6 million<lb/>
people, gasoline has become<lb/>
scarce for the few motor vehicles<lb/>
that are still navigating the streets.<lb/>
Many gas stations are closed.<lb/>
Boats have replaced cars and<lb/>
bicycle-powered rickshaws in<lb/>
manny parts of the city. River<lb/>
boats capable of carrying 100 to<lb/>
200 people sail between partly<lb/>
submerged houses in low lying<lb/>
nieghborhoods flooded by the<lb/>
Buriganga, Turag and Sitalakya<lb/>
rivers that surround Dhaka on<lb/>
three sides.<lb/>
Many of the capital's street are<lb/>
knee and waist deep in murky,<lb/>
black water that carries a strong<lb/>
stench of sewage, and adults and<lb/>
children alike wade through it.<lb/>
Over the last week, the price of<lb/>
rice nearly doubled, from 15 cents<lb/>
a pound to 28 cents, as those who<lb/>
could afford started hoarding.<lb/>
CFI<lb/>
monthly payment may be as low<lb/>
as $50 per month, depending on<lb/>
the amount and number of loans.<lb/>
The maximum repayment period<lb/>
for each loan is 10 years.<lb/>
CFI urges students and parents<lb/>
to seek overall advice from the fi-<lb/>
nancial aid office of the student's<lb/>
college about which of CFI's loan<lb/>
programs would be the appropri-<lb/>
ate choice for them in meeting their<lb/>
college's cost.<lb/>
Students and parents can get<lb/>
more information aobut CFI's loan<lb/>
programs from college financial aid<lb/>
officers or College Foundation Inc.<lb/>
P.O.Box 12100,Raleigh,NC 27605,<lb/>
919821-4771.<lb/>
SCIENCE AND<lb/>
ENGINEERING<lb/>
MAJORS!<lb/>
The Air Force has open-<lb/>
ings for men and women in<lb/>
selected science and engineering<lb/>
fields. To prepare you for one, you can<lb/>
apply for an Air Force ROTC scholarship<lb/>
See what it can do for you. Contact the cam-<lb/>
pus Air Force ROTC representative today<lb/>
CAPT RANDY HOUSTON<lb/>
WRIGHT ANNEX, RM 312<lb/>
919-757-6598<lb/>
.AlRrQR�EJ<lb/>
Leadership Excellence Starts Here<lb/>
MIIA1<lb/>
PIIIA!<lb/>
BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE<lb/>
ALWAYS!<lb/>
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I VALUAMOUIT<lb/>
rALL'ASUCOLTON<lb/>
I TWO MEDIUM I<lb/>
PIZZAS<lb/>
"5 Topping Special"<lb/>
$Q99<lb/>
toppings include<lb/>
 plus tax<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Ham, Ground Bi, or lulun Sausage. I<lb/>
SO LIMIT <lb/>
Il'epperom, Mushrooms. Green Pepper, Onions � <lb/>
 nd you r choice of: Mnm &amp;� �ri<lb/>
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Choice of 3 Vegetables &amp; 2 Meats<lb/>
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EXPIRES 103188 "NO LIMIT<lb/>
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LXl'lRI.S 10111<lb/>
757 U12<lb/>
little Caesars Pizza<lb/>
Open for Lunch at 11:00a.m.<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/>
Student Union<lb/>
Coming Attractions<lb/>
Wednesday. September 78:00 p.m.<lb/>
MATEWAN<lb/>
Thursday. September 8<lb/>
Sunday. September 118:00 p.m. Hendrix<lb/>
GOOD MORNING VIETNAM<lb/>
Friday. September 98:00 p.m. Underground<lb/>
Coffeehouse Auditions<lb/>
"BATTLE OF THE BANDS<lb/>
To sign-up or for more information Contact the<lb/>
Student Union at 757-6611, ext. 210 - Room 236<lb/>
Upcoming Events;<lb/>
Lecture - Slide Presentation - "American Pictures"<lb/>
By Jacob Holdt - Tuesday. September 20<lb/>
E. 10th St. at Greenville Blvd. 756-7256<lb/>
(noit to Food Uon) ' m<lb/>
757-1212<lb/>
323 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
(across trom Form Froth)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0011"/><lb/>
10THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6,1988<lb/>
Drug campaign not successful OOITION<lb/>
TINGO MARIA, Peru (AP) -<lb/>
The increase has come despite a 5-<lb/>
year-old American-financed<lb/>
manual eradication program.<lb/>
U.S. officials say manual eradica-<lb/>
tion of plants is too slow and too<lb/>
dangerous because workers are<lb/>
exposed to attacks by the hired<lb/>
gunmen of the drug barons and<lb/>
by Maoist Shining Path rebels<lb/>
who prowl the valley.<lb/>
Thirty-four members of eradi-<lb/>
cation teams have been killed in<lb/>
recent years, and in 1987 the 460<lb/>
workers in the program pulled up<lb/>
only 876 acres of plants.<lb/>
The 3-year-old Garcia admini-<lb/>
stration has tried to disrupt the<lb/>
marketing network of Peruvian<lb/>
and Colombian drug organiza-<lb/>
tions. But American drug offi-<lb/>
cials, while praising Peru's<lb/>
commitment, say the efforts have<lb/>
been frustrated by the far greater<lb/>
resources of the cocaine lords.<lb/>
Since 1985, a special anti-nar-<lb/>
cotics police force has confiscated<lb/>
nearly 100 tons of semi-refined<lb/>
cocaine paste, burned 770 crude<lb/>
jungle labs for producing paste,<lb/>
and dynamited more than 170<lb/>
clandestine airstrips, according to<lb/>
Gen. Juan Zarate, head of the nar-<lb/>
cotics unit.<lb/>
But the drug gangs have<lb/>
quickly repaired the dirt run-<lb/>
ways, often within 24 hours, us-<lb/>
ing well-paid work crews of local<lb/>
villagers and sometimes even<lb/>
earth-moving tractors, Zarate<lb/>
said in an interview.<lb/>
The campaign against cocaine<lb/>
ran into a new obstacle since the<lb/>
fanatical Shining Path guerrillas<lb/>
extended their presence in the<lb/>
Upper Huallaga Valley in early<lb/>
1987.<lb/>
the guerrillas now control large<lb/>
areas of the valley. They have<lb/>
exploited resentment of the man-<lb/>
ual eradication program to win<lb/>
support among peasants growing<lb/>
coca.<lb/>
U.S. officials now want to try<lb/>
aerial applicaiton of Spike in pel-<lb/>
let form to see how accurately<lb/>
planes can drop them on coca<lb/>
fields, most of them smaller than<lb/>
an acre and interspersed with<lb/>
jungle. Spraying has been ruled<lb/>
out because the liquid might be<lb/>
blown to surrounding areas.<lb/>
But the officials say the aerial<lb/>
testing is "on hold" until the U.S.<lb/>
government can resolve its dis-<lb/>
pute with Lilly. The company<lb/>
announced in late May that be-<lb/>
cause of "a number of practical<lb/>
and policy considerations" it<lb/>
would not sell Spike for use in<lb/>
Peru against coca.<lb/>
State department officails say<lb/>
that Lilly is worried about repri-<lb/>
sals from international drug traf-<lb/>
fickers and that the company also<lb/>
fears lawsuits for any ecological<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
The company stands by Spike's<lb/>
safety if used as directed against<lb/>
brush in grasslands in the U.S.<lb/>
West� the purpose for which it<lb/>
was designed� but not as an<lb/>
herbicide against coca in Peru's<lb/>
jungle.<lb/>
A pamphlet distributed with<lb/>
the herbicide warns that it will kill<lb/>
trees and shrubs if their roots<lb/>
come in contact with it.<lb/>
'The problem is that Spike is<lb/>
not designed specifically for coca,<lb/>
" says Edgar Machado, an agron-<lb/>
omy professor at the National<lb/>
Agrarian University in Lima and<lb/>
Peru's leading expert on coca.<lb/>
"Any broadleaf plant that<lb/>
comes in contact with Spike is<lb/>
going to die, and breadleaf plants<lb/>
make up 98 percent of the jungle,<lb/>
the exposed soil will be washed<lb/>
away by the valley's torrential<lb/>
rains. The erosion will be terrible,<lb/>
" Machado says.<lb/>
Although the debate on the use<lb/>
of a potent herbicide has centered<lb/>
on ecological damage, Peru's<lb/>
government must also consider<lb/>
the economic and social conse-<lb/>
quences of destroying illegal coca<lb/>
cultivation.<lb/>
U.S. drug experts estimate that<lb/>
cocaine trafficking generates at<lb/>
least $700 million annually for<lb/>
Peru, a sum equal to nearly 30 per-<lb/>
cent of the country's legal export<lb/>
earnings.<lb/>
With Peru mired in its worst<lb/>
economic troubles of the century,<lb/>
many Peruvians wonder whether<lb/>
the country can afford to wipe out<lb/>
coca cultivation.<lb/>
"If this bankrupt nation has<lb/>
dollars circulating on the streets,<lb/>
it is because of drug trafficking<lb/>
Machado says. "It is not in<lb/>
anyone's interest to kill the goose<lb/>
that lays the golden eggs. "<lb/>
Some 200,000 peasants have<lb/>
migrated to the Upper Huallaga<lb/>
Valley in the past two decades to<lb/>
grow coca because they can earn<lb/>
10 times as much from it as from<lb/>
other crops.<lb/>
Some government officials be-<lb/>
lieve that if coca is eradicated in<lb/>
the Upper Huallaga without a<lb/>
program to help the peasants,<lb/>
they will migrate elsewhere, cut<lb/>
down more trees and plant more<lb/>
coca. That would also create re-<lb/>
sentment that the Shining Path<lb/>
would be quick to exploit.<lb/>
(Ka la shan, ka-) 1. the act, process, or<lb/>
result of gathering (the sections of a book)<lb/>
together in proper order for binding<lb/>
IT'S OUR BUSINESS<lb/>
We specialize in duplicating and binding<lb/>
multiple page documents<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
rsn<lb/>
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FAST COPIES FOR FAST TIMES<lb/>
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Pinochet is the only candidate<lb/>
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)-Thou- Gen. Pinochet, the 72-year-old blocking trat; � Police broke up<lb/>
sands of protestors battled police army commander who has ruled<lb/>
following the largest anti-govern- Chile with a military junta since a<lb/>
ment rally si nee the military coup in September 1973, was se-<lb/>
nominated right -wing President lected last Tuesday by himself<lb/>
Augusto Pinochet as the only can- and the commanders of the navy,<lb/>
didate in a fall presidential refer- air force and national police as the<lb/>
endum.<lb/>
More than 100,000 people<lb/>
the processir �� and there were<lb/>
skirmishes throughout the area<lb/>
between rock-throwing demon-<lb/>
strators and police firing buckshot<lb/>
Pinochet led the 1973 military!<lb/>
coup that ousted the elected gov-<lb/>
ernment of Marxist President of I<lb/>
Salvadoe Allende.<lb/>
Ricardo Lagos, a socialist opposi-<lb/>
tion leader, called the rally "the first <lb/>
and teargas.<lb/>
Pinochet, in an "open letter to the step toward the final defeat of Pino-<lb/>
sole candidate in the presidential men and women of my country" chct<lb/>
referendum scheduled for Oct. 5. printed Sunday in most local news- Rallying participants including<lb/>
packed blocks of a broad avenue Sunday's rally was the largest papers promised full democracy if Chileans who have returned from<lb/>
in central Santiago on Sunday show of force by the opposition he is returned to office in the refer- exile, sang and danced to poitical<lb/>
chanting "Pinochet's going to since Pinchet, seeking popular endum. songs,<lb/>
fall support lifted on Aug. 27 the state "If Chileans call me to govern, Among former exiles was Isa-<lb/>
Police arrested 262 demonstra- of emergency that restricted pub- each of them will govern too the belle Allende, 44, a daughter of the<lb/>
tors, a police officer and eight ci- lie gatherings. letter said. late president, who died during the<lb/>
vilians were wounded, said Gen. There had been scattered street In an interview printed Sunday, coup. She received a huge ovation<lb/>
Sergio Badiola, the govenor of demonstrations after Pinochet's in the conservative newspaper El when her name was announced<lb/>
Santiago. He said six of the in- nomination was announced Mercutio, Pinochet also promised annd joined in the dancing with<lb/>
jured, including the police oficer Tuesday when three people were to resign "3(5 amity commander and Lagos,<lb/>
were seriously hurt. shot to death and hundreds were govern as a civilian. Pinochet on Thursday decreed an<lb/>
Police fired tear gas, buchshot arrested. Chile's 7.2 million voters are to enj j0 political exile,<lb/>
and water cannons when tens of Hector Moya, the main speaker vote either for or against Pinochet<lb/>
thousands of people began a at Sunday's rally, told the cheer- in the referendum,<lb/>
march on the government palace ing crowd: "We can clearly now If approved Pinochet will begin a<lb/>
after the generally peaceful rally see that the Pinochet regime al- new eight year term in March. If<lb/>
had ended. ready has been defeated Moya is rejected on open presidential elec-<lb/>
Organizers said 300,000 people the head of the truckers' union. tion is to be held in December 1989<lb/>
attended the rally and journalists When the rally ended a column with Pinochet remaining until an<lb/>
estimated the crowd at more than of tens of thousands of people elected president takes office in<lb/>
100,000. marched to the city's center, March.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Fugitive apprehended in Franklin, Va.<lb/>
ASHEVILLE (AP)�People who fraud in 1983, and the new charges been published in another North<lb/>
aided the six month-flight of a fed- violated the terms of his release Carolina newspaper, Tucker said,<lb/>
eral fugitive form Burke county from federal prison,<lb/>
apprehended last week may also be Some individuals may have har-<lb/>
charged as the result of an ongoing bored Roberts or otherwise assisted<lb/>
investigation, a federal agent says, him in violation of federal law,<lb/>
Ronnie Floyd Roberts, 45, who Tucker said,<lb/>
allegedly faked his own obituary in Most residents cooperated, he<lb/>
an effort to throw authorities off his said, and federal agents eventually<lb/>
trail, was arrested Friday by federal traced Roberts to a mobile home in<lb/>
marshalls in Franklin county, Va the Penhook Community, about 30<lb/>
on charges of violating his parole, miles south of Roanoke, Va.<lb/>
The bogus obituary "wasn't the Roberts is lodged in the Franklin<lb/>
only elaborate attempt to deceive county Jail on a felony charge of<lb/>
us, " Inspector J. Glenn Tucker, of possession with intent to distribute<lb/>
the U.S. Marshall Service's cocaine as the result of evidence<lb/>
Asheville office, said Saturday, agents in Virginia say they found at<lb/>
"The other (scheme) is part of a the home,<lb/>
continuing investigation. " Marshall Wayne Beaman, based<lb/>
Federal authorities conducted an in Virgnia, said in a statement Fri-<lb/>
"intensive investigation" in and day that Roberts had managed to<lb/>
around Roberts' home community get his obituary printed in an<lb/>
of Icard after he failed to appear in Asheville newpaper on or about<lb/>
court to answer charges of posses- March 21 in an attempt to avoid ar-<lb/>
sion of cocaine and driving while rest.<lb/>
impaired earlier this year, Tucker But a check of the Asheville Citi-<lb/>
said. zeneditionsof March 20,21, and 22<lb/>
Roberts had been on parole since showed no published obituary for<lb/>
1985 after being convicted of wire Roberts. The obituary may have<lb/>
Join Joe Harris and The<lb/>
East Carolinian News<lb/>
Team every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday for the<lb/>
latest in campus news.<lb/>
Wednesday September 7<lb/>
Phi Tau Uil Sisters Presents<lb/>
Ladies Best Tan Contest<lb/>
$100 1st<lb/>
$50 2nd<lb/>
$25 3rd<lb/>
Admission $1.00 Members ($2.00 Guests)<lb/>
Sign Up at Elbo or Call<lb/>
Phi Tau House 757-1319<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi invites everyone to<lb/>
Party 50tf Members ($1.00 guest)<lb/>
Best in Dance and Rock-N-Roll<lb/>
Drinks Specials Every<lb/>
And All Night<lb/>
2L Southern tradition<lb/>
Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Order<lb/>
43! " Tar Landin6 Seafood<lb/>
WPfr' Restaurant<lb/>
AofAMUL �Wclcomc Back special'1<lb/>
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Served with French Trie or Baked Potato Cole Slaw. Hush Puppies S O . 3 J<lb/>
SERVED THIS TUES WED. &amp; THURS. 11 A.M. - 9 P.M.<lb/>
758-0327105 Airport Rd.<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
8-11 p.m.<lb/>
Meet the Alpha<lb/>
Xi Delta's<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
8-11 p.m.<lb/>
Pizza Nite<lb/>
LOW COST<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO Uth WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to 1 weeks at additional cost. Pregnancy Test, Birth<lb/>
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call 832-0635 (toll free number 1-6GO-532- S384) between 9 �.m and 5<lb/>
p.m. weekdays. General anesthesia available.<lb/>
! RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
8-11 p.m.<lb/>
Invitation Only<lb/>
For Rides and Information Please Call 757-0128<lb/>
We are located at 500 E 11th St<lb/>
Card<lb/>
FOREST CITY, N.C Ai<lb/>
Forest City does not hawanai<lb/>
mobile auction and is not parti<lb/>
larly close to the state's lar$<lb/>
retail centers, but the south!<lb/>
mountain town has more thai<lb/>
share of people trying ti i mcrej<lb/>
the value of a car by knockini<lb/>
few miles off the odometer.<lb/>
Last spring 10 Rutherfc<lb/>
County wholesale car deaj<lb/>
were arrested on federal fa<lb/>
charges and pleaded guilty<lb/>
summer, authorities said<lb/>
One of the 10 dealers, r<lb/>
die � not his real name gd<lb/>
suspended jail term, a fine an<lb/>
order to pay restitution<lb/>
Dealers like Freddi<lb/>
tered the business as a teen<lb/>
high-mileage cars from ante <lb/>
Recorl<lb/>
LONGWOOD,<lb/>
winner of the rec rd5 1IV1<lb/>
plus Lotto game remain- <lb/>
tcry, but the ma - his<lb/>
where the winning ticket a asj<lb/>
has already claimed some en<lb/>
"It might put Longwood<lb/>
map now Mayor David Gu<lb/>
s3id Sunday "Whether thev<lb/>
bought the ticket hen or wh'cl<lb/>
they live here, it means a ltf<lb/>
community like tl<lb/>
"We're going to talu I<lb/>
Engin<lb/>
GRAPEVINE, Texas<lb/>
vestigatiors concluded work<lb/>
site of the Delta Air lines 1<lb/>
crash that killed 13 of the' -<lb/>
aboard, refusing to comment!<lb/>
reports that two engines mJ<lb/>
tailed.<lb/>
Some pilots specul<lb/>
cf the Boeing 72Ts threi<lb/>
may have failed K ause thej<lb/>
flaps apparentIv wen r<lb/>
the time oi the crash, rathe<lb/>
extended for tak<lb/>
 � Virrfi<lb/>
. 'V<lb/>
<lb/>
irk.<lb/>
SV<lb/>
x<lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
-<lb/>
�i<lb/>
MI<lb/>
All<lb/>
ME<lb/>
u<lb/>
ji<lb/>
S<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0012"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1988 11<lb/>
ION<lb/>
ORD . <lb/>
ct. process, or<lb/>
'onsof a book)<lb/>
if btndmg<lb/>
INESS<lb/>
and binding<lb/>
TIMES<lb/>
rgetown Shops)<lb/>
ember 7<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
i<lb/>
($2.00 Guests)<lb/>
.rCall<lb/>
7-1319<lb/>
everyone to<lb/>
SI.00 guest)<lb/>
ock-N-Roll<lb/>
s Every<lb/>
ight<lb/>
ton<lb/>
a<lb/>
Car dealers arrested for odometer tamper<lb/>
tOREST CITY, N.C. (AP) -<lb/>
I rest City does not have an auto-<lb/>
mobile auction and is not particu-<lb/>
dose to the state's largest<lb/>
retail centers, but the southern<lb/>
mountain town has more than its<lb/>
are of people trying to increase<lb/>
the value of a car by knocking a<lb/>
tew miles off the odometer.<lb/>
Last spring 10 Rutherford<lb/>
County wholesale car dealers<lb/>
 ere arrested on federal fraud<lb/>
, barges and pleaded guiltv this<lb/>
summer, authorities said.<lb/>
One ot the 10 dealers, Fred-<lb/>
die � not his real name � got a<lb/>
suspended jail term, a fine and an<lb/>
rder to pav restitution.<lb/>
Valers like Freddie, who en-<lb/>
d the business as a teen, buy<lb/>
gh mileage cars from auto auc-<lb/>
tions or large dealerships, make<lb/>
cosmetic and minor internal re-<lb/>
pairs to the vehicles and lower<lb/>
their mileage � by changing the<lb/>
odometer and accompanying<lb/>
documents.<lb/>
"There wouln't be any way<lb/>
these cars would be sold other-<lb/>
wise he told The Charlotte<lb/>
Observer. "No one would buy a<lb/>
car with 120,000 miles, no matter<lb/>
what kind of condition it's in<lb/>
"Rutherford County has been<lb/>
dubbed Little Detroit' for all the<lb/>
buying, selling and trading of<lb/>
used cars that goes on there said<lb/>
A.A. "Butch" Justice, a Marion<lb/>
resident who heads the Odome-<lb/>
ter Task Force at the N.C. Divi-<lb/>
sion of Motor Vehicles.<lb/>
Dozens of concrete-block ga-<lb/>
rage line U.S. 74. Signs say things<lb/>
like "wholesale used car dealer"<lb/>
and "auto restoration special-<lb/>
ists<lb/>
Rutherford County has many<lb/>
honest wholesalers, Justice said,<lb/>
but others specialize in flipping<lb/>
miles off odometers, falsifying<lb/>
titles and forging mileage state-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Freddie, who talked about his<lb/>
business only on condition of<lb/>
anonymity, said rollbacks don't<lb/>
really hurt consumers. Mileage<lb/>
isn't a fair indicator of a car's<lb/>
condition anyway, he said.<lb/>
"A person who commutes<lb/>
from Monroe to Charlotte and a<lb/>
traveling salesman could put<lb/>
75,000 miles a year on their cars,<lb/>
but it's not the same kind of wear-<lb/>
and-tear he said.<lb/>
"Nobody's getting hurt<lb/>
Justice disagreed.<lb/>
"If nobody gets hurt, for what<lb/>
reason are they rolling the cars<lb/>
back?" he said. "They do it for one<lb/>
reason � to increase the amount<lb/>
of money they can make<lb/>
The National Highway Traffic<lb/>
Safety Administration estimates<lb/>
that a mid-sized car two years or<lb/>
older loses $50 in value for every<lb/>
1,000 miles driven.<lb/>
Freddie figures rollbacks<lb/>
added an average of $200 per car<lb/>
to his profits. At retail, the roll-<lb/>
backs cost consumers much<lb/>
more. Trimming a late-model<lb/>
Cadillac to 40,000 from 75,000<lb/>
miles could increase the retail<lb/>
value more than $1,000.<lb/>
When he rolled back an odome-<lb/>
ter, he often didn't tell the retailer<lb/>
he sold the car to. Dealers aren't<lb/>
liable unless they know about the<lb/>
alteration.<lb/>
"Why should I get anyone else<lb/>
in trouble?" Freddie said. "I'm<lb/>
the one who changed the miles<lb/>
Still, he said, many dealers<lb/>
know about rollbacks even if they<lb/>
don't talk about it.<lb/>
'They'll call me and say they<lb/>
want a blue '85 Ford with 25,000<lb/>
miles on Monday, and I'll have<lb/>
one with 55,000 miles, which they<lb/>
won't take he said. "The next<lb/>
day I'll call and offer the same<lb/>
kind of car with under 25,000<lb/>
miles. They know<lb/>
If s the false mileage statement<lb/>
that usually leads to wholesalers'<lb/>
arrests. Eventually the paper trail<lb/>
leads to a canceled title or odome-<lb/>
ter statement with many thou-<lb/>
sands more miles than the cur-<lb/>
rent odometer reading.<lb/>
Finding the title is easy for a car<lb/>
traded in North Carolina. It's<lb/>
more difficult for one that came<lb/>
from another state.<lb/>
"You have some North Caro-<lb/>
lina dealers who will buy a car<lb/>
from Florida, sell it in Virginia<lb/>
and never touch North Caro-<lb/>
lina Justice says. 'That's why<lb/>
cooperation with other states is so<lb/>
important<lb/>
If s also why federal courts and<lb/>
the FBI have gotten involved, the<lb/>
says. "Our state laws are not<lb/>
strong enough to keep these<lb/>
people out of business<lb/>
Record lottery winner is still a mystery<lb/>
I ONGWOOD, Ha. (AD The<lb/>
nner oi the record $54 Million-<lb/>
- I otto game remains a mvs-<lb/>
v but the mayor oi this town<lb/>
ere the winning ticket was sold<lb/>
- already claimed some credit.<lb/>
It niight put Longwood on the<lb/>
p now' Mayor David Guntcr<lb/>
.1 Sundav. "Whether thev just<lb/>
ight the ticket here or whether<lb/>
v live here, it means a lot to a<lb/>
nmunity like this<lb/>
We're going to take the credit.<lb/>
It feels good<lb/>
The winning ticket for Saturday<lb/>
night's game, whose jackpot was<lb/>
a North American record, was<lb/>
purchased in this bedroom com-<lb/>
munity 18 miles northeast of<lb/>
Orlando, said Lottery Secretary<lb/>
Rebecca Paul at a news comfer-<lb/>
ence in Miami Beach. She did not<lb/>
identifv the vendor who sold the<lb/>
J<lb/>
ticket with the winning numbers<lb/>
3-5-19-20-27-35.<lb/>
The frenzy of lottery-ticket<lb/>
buying here poured over to other<lb/>
states, including New York,<lb/>
where one winning ticket was<lb/>
purchased for Saturday night's<lb/>
$23 million jackpot, and Illinois,<lb/>
where holders of four winning<lb/>
tickets will split $21 million.<lb/>
The previous North American<lb/>
record jackpot, $54.4 million, was<lb/>
shared by two California lottery<lb/>
players in June. A Pennsylvania<lb/>
couple had the largest single-<lb/>
ticket lottery prize until now<lb/>
when they won $46 million in<lb/>
1987.<lb/>
The new Florida millionaires, if<lb/>
several persons shared the ticket -<lb/>
get 180 days to claim the prize.<lb/>
The earliest it can be claimed is<lb/>
Tuesday, after Labor Day.<lb/>
actual federal taxes owed could depending on final sales figures,<lb/>
be higher. Florida has no state Saturday sales totaled 14.6 mil-<lb/>
income tax. lion tickets, and total weekly pur-<lb/>
Splitting a $54 million payout chases were 44.78 million,<lb/>
into 20 installments, and deduct- Players had turned to psychics,<lb/>
ing 20 percent, would bring the gimmicks and other formulas to<lb/>
annual check to $2.16 million. beat the 14 million-to-1 odds of<lb/>
Officials had estimated picking the six winning digits out<lb/>
Saturday's jackpot at $52 million, of 49.<lb/>
The prize will be doled out over but the last-minute frenzy of sales Until Saturday, there hadn't<lb/>
20 years. The state lottery with- that sometimes topped 850 tickets been a winner since Aug. 6. That<lb/>
holds 20 percent of large payouts a second raised the total to $54 boosted the jackpot with each<lb/>
for federal income taxes, although million. It could be even larger, passing week.<lb/>
Engine failure may have caused 727 crash<lb/>
IRAPEVINE, Texas (AP)� In-<lb/>
tigatiors concluded work at the<lb/>
c of the Delta Air Lines jetliner<lb/>
ish that killed 13 of the 108 people<lb/>
ard, refusing to comment about<lb/>
oorts that two engines mav have<lb/>
led.<lb/>
Some pilots speculated that two<lb/>
I the Boeing 727's three engines<lb/>
v have failed because the wing<lb/>
ipS apparently were retracted at<lb/>
time of the crash, rather than<lb/>
tended for takeoff, The Dallas<lb/>
Morning News reported Sunday.<lb/>
"When someone says 'engine<lb/>
failure' there are a whole host of<lb/>
things that might mean, " Lee Dick-<lb/>
inson of the Naitonal Transpor-<lb/>
taion Safety Board said Sunday.<lb/>
A recording of cockpit crew<lb/>
members showed they mentioned<lb/>
engine failure. Two loud pops were<lb/>
then heard, which could have indi-<lb/>
cated a "compressor stall. " But<lb/>
Dickinson said a compressor stall,<lb/>
which occurs when an engine is<lb/>
starving for air, is not critical: "Keep<lb/>
in mind, compressor stall is not<lb/>
serious, it's a hiccup. "<lb/>
Flight 1141 crashed and burned<lb/>
on takeoff Wednesday at Dallas-<lb/>
Fort Worth International Airport<lb/>
on a flight for Salt Lake City.<lb/>
On Sunday, workers at the crash<lb/>
site sealed the cockpit in a plastic<lb/>
blue tarpaulin. The wreckage was<lb/>
to be hauled to Delta headquarters<lb/>
in Atlanta, where it would be dis-<lb/>
mantled and studied, Dickinson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Two flight attendants were taken<lb/>
to the wreckage and questioned,<lb/>
but Dickinson said he had no infor-<lb/>
mation on what they told investiga-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
The role of the wing flaps, which<lb/>
are extended during takeoff to pro-<lb/>
vide added lift, continued to be dis-<lb/>
cussed.<lb/>
Flight Engineer Stephen Judd has<lb/>
toid investigators the flaps were<lb/>
extended in the proper postion<lb/>
upon takeoff. But evidence from the<lb/>
wreckage indicated the flaps wre<lb/>
completely or almost completely<lb/>
retracted.<lb/>
"We have further verification<lb/>
that the flaps were retracted Dick-<lb/>
inson said Sunday.<lb/>
Bill Melvin, a Delta pilot partici-<lb/>
pating in the investigation on<lb/>
behalf of the Air Line Pilots As-<lb/>
sociation, said he believes Flight<lb/>
1141's pilot could have been<lb/>
facing engine failure and de-<lb/>
cided to retract the flaps in a last-<lb/>
ditch effort to save the plane.<lb/>
"A 727 will still fly if it loses<lb/>
one engine, but all 727 pilots<lb/>
know if you lose two engines,<lb/>
the onlv wav you can fly the<lb/>
plane off is to get rid of the flaps,<lb/>
" Melvin said, noting the man-<lb/>
uever is not an approved emer-<lb/>
gency procedure. "With two<lb/>
engines out, there's onlv one<lb/>
way that plane could flv� with<lb/>
the flaps up. "<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0013"/><lb/>
 <lb/>
<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6,1988<lb/>
Eastern Airlines to lay off 4,000 workers<lb/>
MIAMI (AP) � Eastern Air-<lb/>
lines will lay off 4,000 workers<lb/>
Saturday now that the financially<lb/>
troubled carrier has posted a $4.7<lb/>
million bond with a federal court<lb/>
in case unions battling the cuts<lb/>
win their case.<lb/>
The bond was posted late Sat-<lb/>
urday, airline spokeswoman Vir-<lb/>
ginia Sanchez said Sunday.<lb/>
'The layoffs will be effective<lb/>
September 10 at the end of the<lb/>
employees' normal shift Ms.<lb/>
Sanchez said. "We really don't<lb/>
know what the exact number of<lb/>
employees will be. Some may<lb/>
take early retirement, there are<lb/>
different options<lb/>
No union spokesman could be<lb/>
reached for comment late Sun-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
But spokesmen earlier had said<lb/>
they eventually would win their<lb/>
case.<lb/>
"We strongly believe that the<lb/>
earlier ruling will be upheld<lb/>
said Charles Bryan, president of<lb/>
the Miami local of the machinists'<lb/>
union.<lb/>
The airline in July announced<lb/>
plans for the layoffs and service<lb/>
cutbacks in 14 cities.<lb/>
The unions, however, contend<lb/>
that Texas Air Corp Eastern's<lb/>
parent company, is stripping the<lb/>
Miami-based carrier's assets in<lb/>
favor of sister carrier Continental<lb/>
Airlines. Eastern has lost about $1<lb/>
billion during the past decade.<lb/>
The three main unions sued<lb/>
when the layoff plans, the largest<lb/>
in Eastern's 60-year history, were<lb/>
announced. Those affected in-<lb/>
clude management, about 1,000<lb/>
flight attendants, 1,000 machin-<lb/>
ists and 500 pilots.<lb/>
On Friday, the U.S. Court of<lb/>
Appeals dissolved an order by<lb/>
U.S. District Judge Barrington<lb/>
Parker in Washington, D.C, who<lb/>
ruled that Eastern could proceed<lb/>
with the service cuts but could<lb/>
not lay off union members.<lb/>
The appeals court said the car-<lb/>
rier would have to post the bond<lb/>
to cover a month of paychecks<lb/>
should the unions win.<lb/>
After the machinists' union<lb/>
balked at pay and benefit cuts,<lb/>
Eastern asked federal mediators<lb/>
Greeks will close U.S. airbase<lb/>
in Athens, renewal talks stall<lb/>
ATHENS, Greece (AP) - Talks<lb/>
on a new U.S. bases agreement<lb/>
broke off today after Greek nego-<lb/>
tiators announced the U.S. Air<lb/>
Force base next to Athens Airport<lb/>
will be closed, the government<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Government spokesman Sotiris<lb/>
Kostopoulos said the American<lb/>
sideasked that the talks be tempo-<lb/>
rarily postponed following the<lb/>
Greek announcement.<lb/>
"The American delegation re-<lb/>
quested a temporary postpone-<lb/>
ment in order to return to Wash-<lb/>
ington and fake relevant instruc-<lb/>
tions from the American authori-<lb/>
ties Kostopoulos said in a state-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The statement did not say when<lb/>
the talks would resume.<lb/>
No U.S. Embassy spokesman<lb/>
could immediately be reached be-<lb/>
cause of the Labor Day holiday.<lb/>
The postponement came on the<lb/>
opening day of a ninth round of<lb/>
negotiations for a new Greek-<lb/>
American defense cooperation<lb/>
agreement to replace a 1983 ac-<lb/>
cord expiring in December.<lb/>
Premier Andreas Papandreou's<lb/>
socialist government said last<lb/>
month that Hellenikon Air Basp<lb/>
would be shut do wn. At that time,<lb/>
the United States said its future<lb/>
was still under discussion.<lb/>
Hellenikon is one of four<lb/>
American bases that have<lb/>
operated in Greece since the<lb/>
1950s. It provides support for<lb/>
planes monitoring Soviet naval<lb/>
operations in the Mediterranean<lb/>
and for another three U.S. bases<lb/>
here.<lb/>
About 1,400 American service-<lb/>
men, 200 civilian employees and<lb/>
700 Greeks work at the base, lo-<lb/>
cated next to Athens International<lb/>
Airport.<lb/>
The Greek government has so<lb/>
far made no threat to close any<lb/>
other base, but says Hellenikon's<lb/>
operations cannot be transferred<lb/>
to another U. s. installation.<lb/>
There had been speculation<lb/>
here that a U.S. Navv communi-<lb/>
catons base at Souda Bay on the<lb/>
southern island of Crete could be<lb/>
expanded to replace Hellenikon.<lb/>
The other American bases in<lb/>
Greece are a Navy communica-<lb/>
tions at Nea Makri near Athene<lb/>
which tracks Soviet naval and<lb/>
submarine activity and an elec-<lb/>
tronic surveillance base at<lb/>
Gournes, also on Crete.<lb/>
As a form of rent for the bases,<lb/>
Greece receives $340 million an-<lb/>
nuallv in U.S. militarv credits.<lb/>
Talks for the new defense coop-<lb/>
eration agreement started in<lb/>
November but the regular<lb/>
monthyl meetings have made<lb/>
little progress.<lb/>
The main obstacle appears to be<lb/>
Greek insistence that in return for<lb/>
a new bases agreement the United<lb/>
States should help toward solving<lb/>
Greek-Turkish disputes over<lb/>
military control of the Aegean<lb/>
and the divided island of Cyprus.<lb/>
If the Greek and American ne-<lb/>
gotiating teams fail to reach<lb/>
agreement, the current accord<lb/>
gives the United States 17 months<lb/>
to dismantle the bases after the<lb/>
date the accord expires.<lb/>
to declare contract talks at an<lb/>
impasse. If mediators, who have<lb/>
been involved off and on since<lb/>
January, make the declaration<lb/>
and no agreement is reached after<lb/>
a 30-day cooling off period, the<lb/>
union could strike and Eastern<lb/>
could impose its terms on work-<lb/>
er-<lb/>
Machinists union members arc<lb/>
to vote Sept. 15 on a company<lb/>
proposal under which some<lb/>
workers would take leaves with<lb/>
workers keeping seniority if<lb/>
called back.<lb/>
Young Americans suffering,<lb/>
experiencing economic woes<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) � High<lb/>
poverty rates for young families<lb/>
are getting America's youth off to<lb/>
"the worst possible start warns<lb/>
the head of a group promoting<lb/>
the interests of children.<lb/>
"Our children and our young<lb/>
families are this nation's growing<lb/>
edge. We neglect them at our<lb/>
peril said Marian Wright Edel-<lb/>
man, president of the Children's<lb/>
Defense Fund.<lb/>
The comments came with the<lb/>
release of a study commissioned<lb/>
by the group, which found that<lb/>
the economic growth of the last<lb/>
reported.<lb/>
As a result the poverty rate for<lb/>
such families nearly doubled<lb/>
from 12 percent in 1973 to 22<lb/>
percent in 1986, the fund said.<lb/>
Census Bureau figures for 1987<lb/>
were released last week and,<lb/>
while not identical to the<lb/>
children's fund figures, tend to<lb/>
support the group's assertions.<lb/>
The Census Bureau found that<lb/>
the 1987 poverty rate for children<lb/>
aged 18 and under was 20 per-<lb/>
cent, up from 14.2 percent in 1973.<lb/>
Younger families tended to have<lb/>
higher poverty rates than older<lb/>
few years hasn't benefited young ones, the census figures showed.<lb/>
American families.<lb/>
"America's young families are<lb/>
afflicted by an economic depres-<lb/>
sion in the middle of our society's<lb/>
more general prosperity Edel-<lb/>
man said in a statement.<lb/>
In terms of constant dollars, the<lb/>
income of families with children<lb/>
headed by an adult under the age<lb/>
30 fell by about one-fourth be-<lb/>
tween 1973 and 1986, the fund<lb/>
Poverty rates for children,<lb/>
whether black, white, or His-<lb/>
panic, rose between 1973 and<lb/>
1987, the figures showed, and<lb/>
were higher than for other fami-<lb/>
lies or individuals.<lb/>
'These are the children on<lb/>
whom we must rely to be the<lb/>
workers, leaders, parents, tax-<lb/>
payers, soldiers and hope of the<lb/>
21 st century Edelman said. "We<lb/>
are getting them off to the worst<lb/>
possible start<lb/>
In the short term, the<lb/>
Children's Defense Fund called<lb/>
for a higher minimum wage and<lb/>
passage of the Act for Better<lb/>
Child Care, legislation pending<lb/>
in Congress to improve services<lb/>
for working parents.<lb/>
Long-term recommendations<lb/>
included extending Medicaid<lb/>
coverage to pregnant women and<lb/>
children in families with less than<lb/>
twice the poverty income; ex-<lb/>
panded tax credits for low-in-<lb/>
come families; expanded Head<lb/>
Start programs; setting up com-<lb/>
munity learning centers for chil-<lb/>
dren, and a series of educational<lb/>
and home-buyer assistance pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
The fund describes itself as a<lb/>
non-profit group working to<lb/>
draw attention to the needs of<lb/>
children, particularly the poor,<lb/>
minorities and handicapped.<lb/>
w m There's more to an education than just the classroom. When you've<lb/>
JOD finished with the books, you still have a ways to go. You need<lb/>
experience � practical, skill-building experience. And you can get both at ECU.<lb/>
Working for The East Carolinian can help students of all majors gain abilities<lb/>
that can make the difference in the job market. Practical writing, editing,<lb/>
interviewing and reporting experience will give most job seekers an extra edg-<lb/>
over the competition. If you are looking for a part-time job that will do more for<lb/>
your future than flipping hamburgers will, come by The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
on the second floor of the Publications building,<lb/>
across from the entrance or Joyner iibrar.<lb/>
tVlil IllUilV. U.UI1 1 ilj.jll i�t, li<lb/>
Experience<lb/>
y<lb/>
The brick benches outside tn<lb/>
Photolab).<lb/>
 -air<lb/>
���<lb/>
I<lb/>
The days of sun are becumir<lb/>
Kappa Sigma<lb/>
m<lb/>
KAPPA<lb/>
SIGMA<lb/>
THE MOST<lb/>
MMi<lb/>
MAN IN THE<lb/>
COUNTRY<lb/>
4'ssroBi<lb/>
Hyeta-ffi ffippter<lb/>
Qtyartereb 1966<lb/>
700 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Phone 752-5543757-1005<lb/>
September 6 - Chicken &amp; Shrimp with the girls of Delta Zeta<lb/>
September 7 - Meet the girls of Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
September 8 - Meet the Brothers and Alumni<lb/>
The Brothers Of Kappa<lb/>
Sigma Invite You To Stop<lb/>
By During Fall Rush.<lb/>
Tutu urges e<lb/>
JOHANNESBURG, 5<lb/>
rica (AP) - Archbis<lb/>
Tutu, saying he .<lb/>
God" in defying the g<lb/>
urged Macks and ��<lb/>
next month's nat<lb/>
regated municipal <lb/>
Elsewhere on Sunday<lb/>
tivist Winnie Mandela<lb/>
lated state of emerg<lb/>
palling for increased i<lb/>
economic sanctions 5tS<lb/>
Africa.<lb/>
Tutu, in a service at St. Gei<lb/>
Cathedral in Cape 1 �� n<lb/>
scribed the elections as i<lb/>
crous" and "unjust" and - <lb/>
government was attemp<lb/>
"force participation<lb/>
"I urge black people in this<lb/>
cese both to vote in the Octi<lb/>
elections and I hope that <lb/>
Angilicans would join their bj<lb/>
fellow Angilicans in that actiT<lb/>
Said Tutu, winner oi the<lb/>
Nobel Peace Prize.<lb/>
"I am aware oi the penaltid<lb/>
tached to this call. 1 am not dc<lb/>
the government, 1 am obej<lb/>
God the black churchman <lb/>
Whites, blacks, Asians<lb/>
people of mixed-race will<lb/>
separate elections Oct. 2Moch<lb/>
local officials. The black majq<lb/>
has no vote in national affairs<lb/>
though the nation's 2b miM<lb/>
blacks make up about 75 percej<lb/>
South Africa's population.<lb/>
Under the36-month-old staj<lb/>
bnergency if is illegal to call<lb/>
flection boycott in South AtncJ<lb/>
convicted, violators may bo ti<lb/>
Or imprisoned<lb/>
In the 1984 municipal electii<lb/>
anti-apartheid groups promo<lb/>
election boycotts and only at<lb/>
Join the dedicate<lb/>
East Carolinian!<lb/>
troopers as the<lb/>
bring you the<lb/>
freshest news,<lb/>
features and<lb/>
sports every Tuel<lb/>
day and Thursday!<lb/>
Available free a<lb/>
convenient loca<lb/>
tions all over<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The best paper for the<lb/>
money<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0014"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBERS 1988 13<lb/>
rs<lb/>
5 on a compam<lb/>
which some<lb/>
ke loaves with<lb/>
�  seniority it<lb/>
ring,<lb/>
woes<lb/>
aid. "We<lb/>
: ff to the worst<lb/>
h rl term, the<lb/>
�e Fund called<lb/>
um wage and<lb/>
Xv't for Better<lb/>
pending<lb/>
i sei v ices<lb/>
dations<lb/>
 Medicaid<lb/>
�. men and<lb/>
resthan<lb/>
ex-<lb/>
: s for li v-in-<lb/>
ad<lb/>
i om-<lb/>
rsfor chil-<lb/>
onal<lb/>
.b a<lb/>
c to<lb/>
�u e<lb/>
<lb/>
2<lb/>
l Delta Zeta<lb/>
�elta<lb/>
ni<lb/>
8<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
pa<lb/>
top<lb/>
The brick benches outside the General Classroom Building are the newest spots to hang-out (ECU<lb/>
Fhotolab). b<lb/>
The days of sun are becoming limited and the cold weather will soon be here (ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Tutu urges elections boycott<lb/>
HANNESBURG, South At- 10 percent of elgible black voters<lb/>
" a P) - Archbishop Desmond went to the polls.<lb/>
saying he was "obeying<lb/>
m<lb/>
re-<lb/>
in defying the government.<lb/>
d blacks and whites to boycott<lb/>
th s nationwide but seg-<lb/>
I municipal elections,<lb/>
ere on Sunday, black ac-<lb/>
� �'� lie Mandela also vio-<lb/>
lat d oi emergency rules by<lb/>
calling for increased international<lb/>
ecor i sanctions against South<lb/>
Africa<lb/>
Tutu, in a service at St. George's<lb/>
Cathedral in Cape Town, de-<lb/>
- -bed the elections as ludi-<lb/>
crous" and "unjust" and said the<lb/>
� ernment was attempting to<lb/>
"force participation<lb/>
"1 urge black people in this dio-<lb/>
cese both to vote in the October<lb/>
elections and 1 hope that white<lb/>
Angilicans would join their black<lb/>
fellow Angilicans in that action<lb/>
aid Tutu, winner of the 1984<lb/>
Nobel Peace Trize.<lb/>
"I am aware of the penalties at-<lb/>
tached to this call. I am not defying<lb/>
the government, I am obeying<lb/>
God the black churchman said.<lb/>
Whites, blacks, Asians and<lb/>
people of mixed-race will hold<lb/>
separate elections Oct. 26 to choose<lb/>
local officials. The black majority<lb/>
has no vote in national affairs, al-<lb/>
though the nation's 26 million<lb/>
blacks make up about 75 percent of<lb/>
South Africa's population.<lb/>
Under the 36-month-old state of<lb/>
-nergency if is illegal to call for an<lb/>
election boycott in South Africa. If<lb/>
convicted, violators may be fined<lb/>
or imprisoned.<lb/>
In the 1984 municipal elections,<lb/>
anti-apartheid groups promoted<lb/>
election boycotts and only about<lb/>
Many black activists view black<lb/>
elected officials as collaborators<lb/>
with the white-dominated gov-<lb/>
ernment and its apartheid policies<lb/>
oi racial separation.<lb/>
Tutu said calling for an election<lb/>
boycott was a legitimate "non-vio-<lb/>
lent way of expressing our opposi-<lb/>
tion to the evil and injustice of<lb/>
apartheid<lb/>
"You cannot get security<lb/>
through the barrel of a gun, nor<lb/>
through the draconian and op-<lb/>
pressive state of emergencyhe<lb/>
Now Showing<lb/>
At Hendrix<lb/>
Wed. September 7<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
"����<lb/>
ONE OF THE BEST<lb/>
FILMS OF 1987"<lb/>
Jack Sam GANNfcTT NEWS SESviCE<lb/>
MATEWAN<lb/>
W'iimHkiiuwDimi ran JmrSqies<lb/>
Join the dedicated<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
troopers as they<lb/>
bring you the<lb/>
freshest news,<lb/>
features and<lb/>
sports every Tues-<lb/>
day and Thursday.<lb/>
Available free at<lb/>
convenient loca-<lb/>
tions all over<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
"The best paper for the<lb/>
money<lb/>
Boat collides with another,<lb/>
operator intoxicated<lb/>
SWANSBORO, N.C. (AP) - A<lb/>
Hubert man was charged with<lb/>
operating a motorboat while im-<lb/>
paired after his 20-foot outboard<lb/>
struck an anchored " hing boat in<lb/>
the Intracoastal Waterway, send-<lb/>
ing four people to the hospital, of-<lb/>
ficials said.<lb/>
Robert Sutton Ramsey Jr 32,<lb/>
was held in the Onslow County<lb/>
Jail briefly Saturday before post-<lb/>
ing $500 bond, said Church Boahn<lb/>
with the N.C. Wildlife<lb/>
Commission's Richlands ofice.<lb/>
Ramsey's boat, which had a 200-<lb/>
horsepower engime, was carrying<lb/>
eight people at about 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday when it struck an an-<lb/>
chored 16-foot Regal open motor-<lb/>
boat with two people fishing in<lb/>
Brown's Inlet off Camp Lejune,<lb/>
Boahn said.<lb/>
The Glastron sank and is sitting<lb/>
of the bottom of the waterway in<lb/>
shallow water, but is not a hazard<lb/>
to navigation, Boahn said. The<lb/>
smaller boat did not sink, and<lb/>
there was no fire or explosion.<lb/>
A passenger on the Glastron,<lb/>
Jeremy Trott, 7, of Hubert, was<lb/>
taken to Onslow Memorial Hospi-<lb/>
tal. He suffered multiple broken<lb/>
bones of both legs, cuts and bruises<lb/>
and fluid in his lungs and chest<lb/>
cavity, said law enforcement per-<lb/>
sonnel.<lb/>
Jeremy Trott was flown to Pitt<lb/>
Memorial Hospital in Greenville,<lb/>
where he was listed in critical but<lb/>
stable condition on Sunday night.<lb/>
His father, Kenny Trott, 34, was<lb/>
in stable condition Sunday night in<lb/>
Onslow Memorial.<lb/>
Mercy Trott, 12, was treated for<lb/>
infuries to her right knee Onslow<lb/>
Memorial on Saturday and re-<lb/>
leased.<lb/>
Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt.<lb/>
Ronnie Joe Lowe, 36, was treated<lb/>
at Lejeune Naval Hospital and<lb/>
released. Lowe was fishing aboard<lb/>
the Regal.<lb/>
Victims were taken by a private<lb/>
boat to Willis Landing on Bear<lb/>
Creek and rushed to Onslow<lb/>
Memorial by the Swansboro Res-<lb/>
cue Squad.<lb/>
Ramsey also is charged with<lb/>
reckless and negligent operation,<lb/>
driving with an expired registra-<lb/>
tion and failing to transfer ower-<lb/>
ship of a motorboat, Boahn said<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
He said an investigation was<lb/>
continuing into a controlled sub-<lb/>
stance found aboard the Glastron.<lb/>
Help wanted<lb/>
Typesetters needed to<lb/>
work Sunday nights,<lb/>
Monday, Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday mornings and<lb/>
afternoons.<lb/>
Experience with Apple<lb/>
Macintosh computers<lb/>
preferred, but not neces-<lb/>
sary.<lb/>
Must be able to type<lb/>
upwards of 60 words a<lb/>
minute.<lb/>
Apply in person at The<lb/>
East Carolinian office,<lb/>
Publications Building,<lb/>
second floor.<lb/>
Serious, dedicated appli-<lb/>
cats only<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Ice I<lb/>
Cream, Frozen Yogurt <lb/>
HOMEMADE<lb/>
ICE CREAM<lb/>
Gneenville.NC<lb/>
and Sorbet<lb/>
312 E. 10th St. (Next to Wendy's)<lb/>
758-0000<lb/>
Buy 1 Mini<lb/>
Sundae<lb/>
Get 1 Free<lb/>
value $2.19<lb/>
Expires 9-13-88<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Ice I<lb/>
Cream, Frozen Yogurt <lb/>
1<lb/>
HOMEMADE<lb/>
ICE CREAM<lb/>
Greenville.NC<lb/>
and Sorbet<lb/>
312 E. 10th St. (Next to Wendy's)<lb/>
758-0000<lb/>
$1.00 Off<lb/>
"Start the<lb/>
Wave<lb/>
Bandanna"<lb/>
Expires 9-13-88<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Get up to 40 off<lb/>
an IBM PS2<lb/>
just by showing<lb/>
PC FAIR - SEPTEMBER 7TH 9:00-3:00<lb/>
ECU BOOKSTORE<lb/>
Congratulations! Just by having your name on one of<lb/>
these, you may be eligible to get a great discount on a new<lb/>
IBM Personal System2 computer. And that's the hard<lb/>
part.<lb/>
The easy part's the IBM PS2. It's easy to learn and<lb/>
easy to use. It can help you organize notes, write and revise<lb/>
papers, produce high-quality graphics, and more.<lb/>
So bring your school I.D. to us, and use your good<lb/>
looks to make your schoolwork look better.<lb/>
Register to win a "GIANT" BICYCLE at the Fair<lb/>
(All-terrain, aluminum, $300 value)<lb/>
FACULTY, STAFF, AND STUDENTS<lb/>
DISCOUNT AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 6-9,1988.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0015"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
14 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEITEMBFR 6.1988<lb/>
t<lb/>
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Aw <lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Sorority<lb/>
Thursday Sept. 8<lb/>
Meet the Brothers &amp; Little Sisters of<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI at the Rotary Club.<lb/>
For Ride or More<lb/>
Information Call<lb/>
752 - 6927<lb/>
. V<lb/>
LOCATION:<lb/>
803 Hooker Rd.<lb/>
MBy the Lake"<lb/>
Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Evans St.<lb/>
Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi<lb/>
looker Rd.<lb/>
College<lb/>
Hill<lb/>
Brewster<lb/>
14th St.<lb/>
10th St.<lb/>
NEW HOUSE<lb/>
UNDER CONSTRUCTION<lb/>
Ready by January<lb/>
(only house built for a Fraternity)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0016"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6,1988 Page 15<lb/>
Marching in 50th year, the Pirates jam on<lb/>
The beat in the stands. The beat on the field. The beat in your living room? The Marching Pirates are turning<lb/>
50 and yes they are cutting an LP. Twirling, rifle-bearing horn-pumping, this large group of instrument waving,<lb/>
drum pounders belabors long hours to entertain the Ficklen Crowd. (Photolab).<lb/>
Clean your face after Four<lb/>
Star, sauce a little heavy<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
Auistant Feature Fditor<lb/>
And now, the second install-<lb/>
ment in the ECU Student Survival<lb/>
Guide - a review of pizza places in<lb/>
the Greenville area. This week the<lb/>
spotlight is on Four Star Pizza.<lb/>
Four Star's delivery is - what<lb/>
else - free and within 30 minutes.<lb/>
On those occasions when Four<lb/>
Star fails to deliver within 30<lb/>
minutes, they compensate with a<lb/>
doNar-off coupon. Deliveries are<lb/>
alwavs free - no iminimurrr order<lb/>
is necessary.<lb/>
Hobie Kern, owner and<lb/>
operator of Four Star, admitted<lb/>
that some deliveries to dorms<lb/>
were "a little late" in his store's<lb/>
early days (way back in Febru-<lb/>
ary). On the other hand, Kern<lb/>
maintained that he and his team<lb/>
have improved, and that deliver-<lb/>
ies are now almost alwavs on<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Four Star Fizza offers a<lb/>
number of specialty items, includ-<lb/>
ing diet pizza. The diet pizza,<lb/>
available in a 10-inch size only,<lb/>
has about half the calories of regu-<lb/>
lar pizza (78 calories per slice) and<lb/>
757c less fat. The pizza sports<lb/>
mushrooms, onions, green pep-<lb/>
pers, black olives, Parmesan<lb/>
cheese, and sliced tomatoes. Stan-<lb/>
dard add-ons are hot peppers and<lb/>
pineapple. One diet pizza costs<lb/>
$6.10, two cost $9.20.<lb/>
Another specialty item from<lb/>
Four Star is the aptly-named<lb/>
Four-Star Flamer. This pizza is<lb/>
HOT! The Flamer includes pep-<lb/>
peroni, onions, hot peppers, jal-<lb/>
apeno peppers, and a dash of<lb/>
Texas Pete. This delectable deli-<lb/>
cacy isavailable in large and small<lb/>
sizesand costs the same as a three-<lb/>
item pizza for that size ($6.60 for<lb/>
one 10-inch, $10.20 for two 10-<lb/>
inch, $10.25 for one 14-inch, or<lb/>
$14.75 for two 14-inch). Order at<lb/>
your own risk.<lb/>
Four Star offers four types of<lb/>
subs (all 12-inch): meatball, ham<lb/>
and cheese, roast beef and cheese,<lb/>
and Italian. All subs cost $4.50.<lb/>
Four Star isn't limited to these<lb/>
four subs, however; pizza subs<lb/>
and other types of subs will be<lb/>
made upon request (and my con-<lb/>
versation with Kern seemed to<lb/>
indicate that he enjoys a chal-<lb/>
lenge).<lb/>
Four Star recognizes that<lb/>
some people, for whatever rea-<lb/>
son, sometimes want to order<lb/>
only one pizza. Therefore, in<lb/>
addition to their "doublezz" piz-<lb/>
zas (much the same two-for-onc<lb/>
deal as Little Caesars, and at<lb/>
competitive prices), Four Star<lb/>
sells single pizzas.<lb/>
Four Star make: its own<lb/>
dough and sauce daih 'rom fresh<lb/>
ingredients purchas i locally.<lb/>
They use 100 real cheese (actu-<lb/>
ally a blend of three cheeses) and,<lb/>
according to Kern, they have the<lb/>
best ovens in the business.<lb/>
I ordered two 14-inch pepper-<lb/>
oni pizzas and eight 12-ounce<lb/>
Cokes from Four Star on a Satur-<lb/>
day afternoon. The total was<lb/>
$13.78 plus tip (I used a coupon,<lb/>
however; standard prices would<lb/>
be slightly higher). My order was<lb/>
delivered hot and fresh within 3C<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
The pizza would have been<lb/>
worth a much longer wait. The<lb/>
cheese was tasty and still melted;<lb/>
the crust was good though not<lb/>
great; and the tomato sauce was<lb/>
well abundant.<lb/>
There was, to be honest,<lb/>
rather more tomato sauce than I<lb/>
like. Kern informed me that this is<lb/>
a common complaint from cus-<lb/>
tomers. However, he stated that<lb/>
he'd rather have customers com-<lb/>
plain about getting too much<lb/>
sauce than too little.<lb/>
On the same note, Kern men-<lb/>
tioned that Four Star is always<lb/>
perfectly happy to fulfill a request<lb/>
- whether for less sauce or for<lb/>
none at all. Four Star will also<lb/>
make other types of "custom-<lb/>
ized" pizzas. Kern seems to live<lb/>
by the well-worn phrase, 'The<lb/>
customer is always right<lb/>
Kern is a veteran of the pizza<lb/>
business (you might call him a<lb/>
Four Star general). Before open-<lb/>
ing a Four Star in Greenville, Kern<lb/>
operated two Four Star restau-<lb/>
rants in other college towns. Four<lb/>
Star is a 120-store chain, but the<lb/>
Greenville Four Star is the chain's<lb/>
first store in North Carolina. If all<lb/>
goes well, Kern hopes to open<lb/>
another Four Star elsewhere in<lb/>
North Carolina in the spring.<lb/>
Four Star is a worthy oppo-<lb/>
nent of the "big boys" - Little<lb/>
Caesar's, Dominoes, and Pizza<lb/>
Hut. I strongly recommend giv-<lb/>
ing Four Star a try next time you<lb/>
want a pizza (although you may<lb/>
want to ask for light sauce). And<lb/>
when you want a custom sub or<lb/>
pizza, Four Star really shines.<lb/>
Four Star Pizza is located at<lb/>
114 East 10th street. They can be<lb/>
reached at 758-3300 from 11 a.m.<lb/>
until 1 a.m. Sunday through<lb/>
Thursday and from 11 am-until 2<lb/>
a.m. Friday and Saturday.<lb/>
Bob Bad and Horses plays Deli<lb/>
By GREER BOVVEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Bad Bob and the Rocking<lb/>
Horses, a three member band<lb/>
who will rock the whale room<lb/>
from the get-go.<lb/>
Bad Bob, Bob Tunncll, who is<lb/>
originally from Greenville, plays<lb/>
the Emerald City scene is often as<lb/>
he can.<lb/>
"I started playing when I was<lb/>
really young, I think I got started<lb/>
because mv sister had a ukelele, "<lb/>
said Tunncll (alias Bad Bob).<lb/>
"J.W Raburn, also of<lb/>
Greenville plays base, and Bob<lb/>
"shakin" Aiken of Snow Hill<lb/>
(Pugsleyland) plays the drums.<lb/>
Raburn works the New Deli dur-<lb/>
ing the day, and Bob "Shakin"<lb/>
Aiken teaches at a prison.<lb/>
These three musicians have<lb/>
played in many other bands be-<lb/>
fore forming Bad Bob and the<lb/>
Rocking Horses one year ago. But<lb/>
these three men plan to stick to-<lb/>
gether at least for a while. "We<lb/>
like each other" said Raburn. Both<lb/>
Raburn and Bad Bob think Aikens<lb/>
style is perfect for the band, "he's<lb/>
got a solid drive, " said Raburn.<lb/>
The band's main influences are<lb/>
Albert King, Chicago blues, Lou-<lb/>
isiana blues and oven country<lb/>
music. "I like a lot of music but<lb/>
blues is what I play best, " said<lb/>
Bad Bob.<lb/>
Bad Bob, who now lives in<lb/>
Wilmington, say the band rarely<lb/>
practices, "Blues lands don't ref-<lb/>
use! " said Raburn. That's proba-<lb/>
bly why they never do the same<lb/>
show twice. "These guys have<lb/>
enough experience that they can<lb/>
follow me said Bad Bob.<lb/>
Bad Bob said his favorite song is<lb/>
Elvis's "Hound Dog" a solid hard<lb/>
core blues version of an old rock<lb/>
song, because the style feels more<lb/>
comfortable to him. On the other<lb/>
hand, Raburn said his favorite is<lb/>
Chuck Berry's "Mabeline" only<lb/>
ByTOBIFERRELL<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina Marching<lb/>
Pirates entered their 50th per-<lb/>
forming season with a spectacular<lb/>
pre-game and half-time show at<lb/>
the football game home opener<lb/>
this Saturday in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
With those dazzling Golden<lb/>
Girls, flags, refiles twirlcrs, and<lb/>
East Carolina's most talented<lb/>
instrumentalists, the Marching<lb/>
Pirates made an evening of enter-<lb/>
tainment to remember.<lb/>
Under the direction of Drum<lb/>
Major Todd Brewer and the Asso-<lb/>
ciate Drum Major Scott Lane, the<lb/>
band performed a pre-game<lb/>
show of the ECU fight song, "The<lb/>
Star Spangled Banner the alma<lb/>
mater, and a special piece, "Har-<lb/>
lem Nocturne Pirate fans will<lb/>
recognize Harlem Nocturne,<lb/>
composed by Earl Hagen, as the<lb/>
old theme song from The Un-<lb/>
touchables.<lb/>
The Overture to Ruslan<lb/>
Ludmilla piece by Glinka opened<lb/>
the half-time musical program.<lb/>
The percussion section will dis-<lb/>
play their express in a solo en-<lb/>
titled "The Magician" by Chick<lb/>
Corea. The third selection was<lb/>
Benny Goodman's Sing, Sing,<lb/>
Sing. The half-time program<lb/>
lasted eight minutes.<lb/>
As the season progresses, other<lb/>
musical arrangements will be<lb/>
added to the program.<lb/>
Approximately 225 students<lb/>
are participating in the marching<lb/>
band this season. Aside from the<lb/>
instrumentalists, there arc about<lb/>
17 Golden Girls, 15 color guard<lb/>
members, 10 rifles, and 2 feature<lb/>
twirlcrs. Dr. Tom Goolsby, direc-<lb/>
tor of the program, said, "Fresh-<lb/>
men make up a little over one-<lb/>
third of the band<lb/>
Although instrumental majors<lb/>
must march in the band at least<lb/>
two years, many other music<lb/>
majors and non-music majors re-<lb/>
turn with the instrumental majors<lb/>
year after year to be a part of this<lb/>
enthusiastic group. Students in-<lb/>
cluding Susan Cooperman, Tim<lb/>
Tiegs, Steve Turner, Kelly Jones,<lb/>
and Steve Purifoy are just a few of<lb/>
the many students who have<lb/>
faithfully entertained Pirate fans<lb/>
for three years or more.<lb/>
For Marching Pirates, school<lb/>
started a week early with daily 9<lb/>
am to 9 pm field and sectional<lb/>
practices. While other students<lb/>
were still lounging by the pool,<lb/>
the Marching Pirates were sweat-<lb/>
ing it out to the "perfection" fans<lb/>
will hear and see Saturday eve-<lb/>
ning.<lb/>
Senior, Susan Cooperman, in-<lb/>
strumental major, spoke on the<lb/>
success of this year's band camp.<lb/>
She said that by Tuesday the band<lb/>
had memorized the music and<lb/>
field drill for the half-time opener.<lb/>
This was an unusual occurence.<lb/>
Many bands perform their first<lb/>
show with flipchart music or by<lb/>
remaining basically motionless<lb/>
while playing memorized music.<lb/>
The pre-game show has also<lb/>
been learned. Often it is learned<lb/>
the day before the game. With<lb/>
these achievements under their<lb/>
belts, there's no stopping the<lb/>
Marching Pirates.<lb/>
Low esteem over Connells, Raleigh<lb/>
band could have played longer<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Feature Rditor<lb/>
Call me a rock and roll conser-<lb/>
vative, call me a Led Zeppelin<lb/>
freak, call me a user of scatological<lb/>
language, call me a recent evictee<lb/>
of the house from hell, call me a<lb/>
yellow journalist, but the Con-<lb/>
nells did not satisfv mv music<lb/>
J J<lb/>
bone.<lb/>
The Connells, supposed to be<lb/>
one of America's premier college<lb/>
bands, came to Greenville's Attic<lb/>
Friday night with their noses<lb/>
pointed towards the purple sky.<lb/>
But wait a minute, they have a<lb/>
reason for being so arrogant, you<lb/>
see they are from the shopping-<lb/>
center capital of Raleigh.<lb/>
First of all, the Connells didn't<lb/>
play long enough. The opening<lb/>
band, Mary on the Dash, played<lb/>
until 11:30 p.m leaving a void of<lb/>
a half of hour to be filled with bad<lb/>
videos on Attic's magna bad<lb/>
video screen.<lb/>
By mid-night, the Connells<lb/>
had left the back stage mirrors<lb/>
and came on stage. Not a second<lb/>
after 1:30 a.m they returned to<lb/>
the self-indulence glory of the<lb/>
back stage mirrors, leaving the<lb/>
packed crowd in grimaced "Oh,<lb/>
man" looks.<lb/>
But when I fork over six bucks,<lb/>
which I didn't have to do (thanks<lb/>
Attic), I expect to hear at least two<lb/>
hours of music. Are these guys so<lb/>
big that they can't play for more<lb/>
than a hour and a half?<lb/>
Maybe this reviewer is over<lb/>
reacting, some of the show was<lb/>
actually pretty good. Although<lb/>
the Connells can be called a REM-<lb/>
sound-like-to-band, some of their<lb/>
originals ripped the crowd with<lb/>
quality guitar and bam-bam style<lb/>
drums. The Connells' strength<lb/>
lies in the guitar and drums.<lb/>
Despite the frat-boy looks of<lb/>
lead singer Doug MacMilan, he<lb/>
managed to ramble through origi-<lb/>
nals "Choosing Side" off their<lb/>
critical acclaimed second LP �<lb/>
Boylan Heights with tolerable<lb/>
utterances. MacMilan, a Bryan<lb/>
Adams clone, also sang lead on<lb/>
the title cut from the five member<lb/>
band's first release "Darker<lb/>
Days<lb/>
Long haired George Huntley<lb/>
is the jammer of the band. Playing<lb/>
lead guitar, Huntley also contrib-<lb/>
utes with good key board play<lb/>
and split vocals. Huntlev's vocals<lb/>
in "1934" shook the audience to<lb/>
the point where the wooden<lb/>
floors where springing from the<lb/>
slamming packed crowd.<lb/>
Huntley also shined with a<lb/>
six-string exhibition in "Scottv's<lb/>
Lament" which surprisingly<lb/>
sounded faintlv like bagpipes.<lb/>
Although the ConnelJ s origi-<lb/>
nals were good, their cover songs<lb/>
sucked, except for one. Bon Jovi's<lb/>
"I'm Cowboy" or whatever the<lb/>
name of that song only received<lb/>
cat calls from the true Pamilco<lb/>
county fans in the audience. Rod<lb/>
Stewart's "Maggie" was yawn<lb/>
inducing.<lb/>
Their ended the show with a<lb/>
worthwhile rendition of Alice<lb/>
Cooper's "I'm Eighteen<lb/>
Whaling in the 50's, Bob Tunnell, J.W. Raburn and Bob Aiken, Bob and the Rockers, played and will play<lb/>
the New Deli. So if you haven't seen them yet this month, don't worry, you can see them later. Kind of<lb/>
like Now or Laters.<lb/>
because "I get to sing it Bob took off into the dance floor, one upstages Bad Bob. Even quest<lb/>
The band has a loyal following, sweat pouring from his brow as performances like Charles Ca-<lb/>
Many of thes "groupies" are he made that electric guitar wail hoon, who played the harmonica<lb/>
middle age and older but there are out the rocking, electric blues that with them at the Deli can't draw<lb/>
many younger people who love has made the band so popular. eyes away from Bad Bob.<lb/>
the band as well. They travel all Off stage, Bad Bob is quiet, and Bad Bob and the Rocking<lb/>
across the state and rock all finds shy as he lets the more talkative Horses are a great blues band<lb/>
of fans, no matter how young or band member, Raburn, steal the with a powerful sound. All three<lb/>
old.<lb/>
In a recent show at Greenville's<lb/>
New Deli, Bad Bob laid down<lb/>
guitar solos that Eddie Van Halen<lb/>
would admire. At one point, Bad<lb/>
Old woman joins Odd Shoe Exchange at<lb/>
(AP)� fane Baldwin ot Sun one away. Now I have a place to someone who wears uiu&amp;c&amp;iz<lb/>
(AP)� jane Baldwin of Sun<lb/>
City joined the Odd Shoe Ex-<lb/>
change this summer. The 62-ycar-<lb/>
old woman, who had her left leg<lb/>
amputated two years ago, wears a<lb/>
10-B on her right foot.<lb/>
She's still paying off the money<lb/>
one away. Now I have a place to<lb/>
take the extra shoe she says.<lb/>
After trying on about a dozen<lb/>
shoes, Ms. Baldwin decided on a<lb/>
white leather tennis shoe and<lb/>
white sandal.<lb/>
On a nearby rack stood a dozen<lb/>
she owes on her operation, she or so pairs of boots. Ms. Sallman<lb/>
says. "I haven't had any extra pulled out a mismatched pair:<lb/>
money to buy shoes. When you size 10 left and size 8 right.<lb/>
have to buy good shoes, they run Through her system of handwrit-<lb/>
about $50 a pair. It's awful to pay ten 3-by-5 index cards, she was<lb/>
that much and throw the other able to match the boots with<lb/>
izes.<lb/>
Her extensive files include out-<lb/>
lines of members' feet and shoe<lb/>
ads that illustrate their prefer-<lb/>
ences.<lb/>
Many of the mismates that Ms.<lb/>
Sallman helps pair never meet.<lb/>
They correspond and send each<lb/>
other shoes. Others live close<lb/>
enough to shop together and<lb/>
trade mismated pairs.<lb/>
Ms. Sallman shared shoes with<lb/>
one mismate for 11 years before<lb/>
show. But when the lights came<lb/>
on, Bad Bob transforms.<lb/>
His energy and raw talent<lb/>
shine. Raburn and Bob Aiken are<lb/>
extremely talented as well, but no<lb/>
62 in the longest headline ever read<lb/>
members are talented and love<lb/>
their music. Anyone who enjoys<lb/>
driving drums, solid base, and a<lb/>
blues lead guitar that makes your<lb/>
feet move, should see Bad Bob.<lb/>
meeting the woman, a Los Ane- up in California, and unbe-<lb/>
les bookkeeper. They were mis- knownst to me, they lived an<lb/>
mates from 1972 through about hour's drive apart Ms. Sallman<lb/>
1984, when Ms. Sallman devel- recalls. "They would meet each<lb/>
oped a bunion that made her foot other and go shoe shopping<lb/>
part-time private-duty nurse be<lb/>
cause she is working to make<lb/>
some of her dreams come true for<lb/>
the shoe exchange.<lb/>
Those dreams include a store-<lb/>
wider.<lb/>
Ms. Sallman recalls one mis-<lb/>
mate, a New York career woman<lb/>
who bought expensive shoes. Ms.<lb/>
Sallman could not keep up.<lb/>
But many mismates share<lb/>
happy endings.<lb/>
"I matched these two women<lb/>
Another member, 1 gave her a front shop where she can ware-<lb/>
mate in another state who, unbe-<lb/>
knownst to me, lived down the<lb/>
street from a relative. The best<lb/>
part about this service is the<lb/>
friends you make<lb/>
Ms. Sallman, a volunteer, has<lb/>
little time to make a living as a tional funding.<lb/>
house donated shoes, as well as<lb/>
offer a place for members to try on<lb/>
shoes, and an office for the<lb/>
organization's headquarters.<lb/>
Her wish list also includes vol-<lb/>
unteers, a computer and addi-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0017"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1988 Page 15<lb/>
Marching in 50th year, the Pirates jam on<lb/>
The beat in the stands. The beat on the field. The beat in your living room? The Marching Pirates are turnin<lb/>
50 and yes they are cutting an LP. Twirling, rifle-bearing horn-pumping, this large group of instrument waving,<lb/>
drum pounders belabors long hours to entertain the Ficklen Crowd. (Photolab).<lb/>
Clean your face after Four<lb/>
Star, sauce a little heavy<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
Assistant Feature Fditor<lb/>
And now, the second install-<lb/>
ment in the ECU Student Survival<lb/>
Guide - a review of pizza places in<lb/>
the Greenville area. This week the<lb/>
spotlight is on Four Star Pizza.<lb/>
Four Star's delivery is - what<lb/>
else - free and within 30 minutes.<lb/>
On those occasions when Four<lb/>
Star fails to deliver within 30<lb/>
minutes, they compensate with a<lb/>
dollar-off coupon. Deliveries are<lb/>
always free - no iminimurrr order<lb/>
is necessary.<lb/>
Hobie Kern, owner and<lb/>
operator of Four Star, admitted<lb/>
that some deliveries to dorms<lb/>
were "a little late" in his store's<lb/>
early days (way back in Febru-<lb/>
ary). On the other hand, Kern<lb/>
maintained that he and his team<lb/>
have improved, and that deliver-<lb/>
ies are now almost always on<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Four Star Pizza offers a<lb/>
number of special ty items, includ-<lb/>
ing diet pizza. The diet pizza,<lb/>
available in a 10-inch size only,<lb/>
has about half the calories of regu-<lb/>
lar pizza (78 calories per slice) and<lb/>
75 less fat. The pizza sports<lb/>
mushrooms, onions, green pep-<lb/>
pers, black olives, Parmesan<lb/>
cheese, and sliced tomatoes. Stan-<lb/>
dard add-ons are hot peppers and<lb/>
pineapple. One diet pizza costs<lb/>
$6.10, two cost $9.20.<lb/>
Another specialty item from<lb/>
Four Star is the aptly-named<lb/>
Four-Star Flamer. This pizza is<lb/>
HOT! The Flamer includes pep-<lb/>
peroni, onions, hot peppers, jal-<lb/>
apeno peppers, and a dash of<lb/>
Texas Pete. This delectable deli-<lb/>
cacy is available in large and small<lb/>
sizes and costs the same as a three-<lb/>
item pizza for that size ($6.60 for<lb/>
one 10-inch, $10.20 for two 10-<lb/>
inch, $10.25 for one 14-inch, or<lb/>
$14.75 for two 14-inch). Order at<lb/>
your own risk.<lb/>
Four Star offers four types of<lb/>
subs (all 12-inch): meatball, ham<lb/>
and cheese, roast beef and cheese,<lb/>
and Italian. All subs cost $4.50.<lb/>
Four Star isn't limited to these<lb/>
four subs, however; pizza subs<lb/>
and other tvpes of subs will be<lb/>
made upon request (and my con-<lb/>
versation with Kern seemed to<lb/>
indicate that he enjoys a chal-<lb/>
lenge).<lb/>
Four Star recognizes that<lb/>
some people, for whatever rea-<lb/>
son, sometimes want to order<lb/>
only one pizza. Therefore, in<lb/>
addition to their "doublezz" piz-<lb/>
zas (much the same two-for-one<lb/>
deal as Little Caesars, and at<lb/>
competitive prices), Four Star<lb/>
sells single pizzas.<lb/>
Four Star make: its own<lb/>
dough and sauce daih Torn fresh<lb/>
ingredients purchas 1 locally.<lb/>
They use 100 real cheese (actu-<lb/>
ally a blend of three cheeses) and,<lb/>
according to Kern, they have the<lb/>
best ovens in the business.<lb/>
I ordered two 14-inch pepper-<lb/>
oni pizzas and eight 12-ounce<lb/>
Cokes from Four Star on a Satur-<lb/>
day afternoon. The total was<lb/>
$13.78 plus tip (I used a coupon,<lb/>
however; standard prices would<lb/>
be slightly higher). My order was<lb/>
delivered hot and fresh within 3C<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
The pizza would have been<lb/>
worth a much longer wait. The<lb/>
cheese was tasty and still melted;<lb/>
the crust was good though not<lb/>
great; and the tomato sauce was<lb/>
well abundant.<lb/>
There was, to be honest,<lb/>
rather more tomato sauce than I<lb/>
like. Kern informed me that this is<lb/>
a common complaint from cus-<lb/>
tomers. However, he stated that<lb/>
he'd rather have customers com-<lb/>
plain about getting too much<lb/>
sauce than too little.<lb/>
On the same note, Kern men-<lb/>
tioned that Four Star is always<lb/>
perfectly happy to fulfill a request<lb/>
- whether for less sauce or for<lb/>
none at all. Four Star will also<lb/>
make other types of "custom-<lb/>
ized" pizzas. Kern seems to live<lb/>
by the well-worn phrase, 'The<lb/>
customer is always right<lb/>
Kern is a veteran of the pizza<lb/>
business (you might call him a<lb/>
Four Star general). Before open-<lb/>
ing a Four Star in Greenville, Kern<lb/>
operated two Four Star restau-<lb/>
rants in other college towns. Four<lb/>
Star is a 120-store chain, but the<lb/>
Greenville Four Star is the chain's<lb/>
first store in North Carolina. If all<lb/>
goes well, Kern hopes to open<lb/>
another Four Star elsewhere in<lb/>
North Carolina in the spring.<lb/>
Four Star is a worthy oppo-<lb/>
nent of the "big boys - Little<lb/>
Caesar's, Dominoes, and Pizza<lb/>
Hut. I strongly recommend giv-<lb/>
ing Four Star a try next time you<lb/>
want a pizza (although you may<lb/>
want to ask for light sauce). And<lb/>
when you want a custom sub or<lb/>
pizza, Four Star really shines.<lb/>
Four Star Pizza is located at<lb/>
114 East 10th street. They can be<lb/>
reached at 758-3300 from 11 a.m.<lb/>
until 1 a.m. Sunday through<lb/>
Thursday and from 11 a.m. until 2<lb/>
a.m. Friday and Saturday.<lb/>
Bob Bad and Horses plays Deli<lb/>
By GREER BOWEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Bad Bob and the Rocking<lb/>
Horses, a three member band<lb/>
who will rock the whale room<lb/>
from the get-go.<lb/>
Bad Bob, Bob Tunnell, who is<lb/>
originally from Greenville, plays<lb/>
the Emerald City scene is often as<lb/>
he can.<lb/>
"I started playing when I was<lb/>
really young, I think I got started<lb/>
because my sister had a ukclele, "<lb/>
said Tunnell (alias Bad Bob).<lb/>
"J.W Raburn, also of<lb/>
Greenville plays base, and Bob<lb/>
"shakin" Aikcn of Snow Hill<lb/>
(Pugsleyland) plays the drums.<lb/>
Raburn works the New Deli dur-<lb/>
ing the day, and Bob "Shakin"<lb/>
Aiken teaches at a prison.<lb/>
These three musicians have<lb/>
played in many other bands be-<lb/>
fore forming Bad Bob and the<lb/>
Rocking Horses one year ago. But<lb/>
these three men plan to stick to-<lb/>
gether at least for a while. "We<lb/>
likeeachother" said Raburn. Both<lb/>
Raburn and Bad Bob think Aikens<lb/>
style is perfect for the band, "he's<lb/>
got a solid drive, " said Raburn.<lb/>
The band's main influences are<lb/>
Albert King, Chicago blues, Lou-<lb/>
isiana blues and even country<lb/>
Old woman joins Odd Shoe<lb/>
(AP)� Jane Baldwin of Sun one away. Now 1 have a place to<lb/>
music. "I like a lot of music but<lb/>
blues is what I play best, " said<lb/>
Bad Bob.<lb/>
Bad Bob, who now lives in<lb/>
Wilmington, say the band rarely<lb/>
practices, "Blues lands don't ref-<lb/>
use! " said Raburn. That's proba-<lb/>
bly why they never do the same<lb/>
show twice. "These guys have<lb/>
enough experience that they can<lb/>
follow me said Bad Bob.<lb/>
Bad Bob said his favorite song is<lb/>
Elvis's "Hound Dog" a solid hard<lb/>
core blues version of an old rock<lb/>
song, because the style feels more<lb/>
comfortable to him. On the other<lb/>
hand, Raburn said his favorite is<lb/>
Chuck Berry's "Mabeline" only<lb/>
ByTOBIFERRELL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina Marching<lb/>
Pirates entered their 50th per-<lb/>
forming season with a spectacular<lb/>
pre-game and half-time show at<lb/>
the football game home opener<lb/>
this Saturday in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
With those dazzling Golden<lb/>
Girls, flags, refiles twirlers, and<lb/>
East Carolina's most talented<lb/>
instrumentalists, the Marching<lb/>
Pirates made an evening of enter-<lb/>
tainment to remember.<lb/>
Under the direction of Drum<lb/>
Major Todd Brewer and the Asso-<lb/>
ciate Drum Major Scott Lane, the<lb/>
band performed a pre-game<lb/>
show of the ECU fight song, "The<lb/>
Star Spangled Banner the alma<lb/>
mater, and a special piece, "Har-<lb/>
lem Nocturne Pirate fans will<lb/>
recognize Harlem Nocturne,<lb/>
composed by Earl Hagen, as the<lb/>
old theme song from The Un-<lb/>
touchables.<lb/>
The Overture to Ruslan<lb/>
Ludmilla piece by Glinka opened<lb/>
the half-time musical program.<lb/>
The percussion section will dis-<lb/>
play their express in a solo en-<lb/>
titled 'The Magician" by Chick<lb/>
Corea. The third selection was<lb/>
Benny Goodman's Sing, Sing,<lb/>
Sing. The half-time program<lb/>
lasted eight minutes.<lb/>
As the season progresses, other<lb/>
musical arrangements will be<lb/>
added to the program.<lb/>
Approximately 225 students<lb/>
are participating in the marching<lb/>
band this season. Aside from the<lb/>
instrumentalists, there are about<lb/>
17 Golden Girls, 15 color guard<lb/>
members, 10 rifles, and 2 teature<lb/>
twirlers. Dr. Tom Goolsby, direc-<lb/>
tor of the program, said, "Fresh-<lb/>
men make up a little over one-<lb/>
third of the band<lb/>
Although instrumental majors<lb/>
must march in the band at least<lb/>
two years, many other music<lb/>
majors and non-music majors re-<lb/>
turn with the instrumental majors<lb/>
year after year to be a part of this<lb/>
enthusiastic group. Students in-<lb/>
cluding Susan Cooperman, Tim<lb/>
Tiegs, Steve Turner, Kelly Jones,<lb/>
and Steve Purifoy are just a few of<lb/>
the many students who have<lb/>
faithfully entertained Pirate fans<lb/>
for three years or more.<lb/>
For Marching Pirates, school<lb/>
started a week early with daily 9<lb/>
am to 9 pm field and sectional<lb/>
practices. While other students<lb/>
were still lounging by the pool,<lb/>
the Marching Pirates were sweat-<lb/>
ing it out to the "perfection" fans<lb/>
will hear and see Saturday eve-<lb/>
ning.<lb/>
Senior, Susan Cooperman, in-<lb/>
strumental major, spoke on the<lb/>
success of this year's band camp.<lb/>
She said that by Tuesday the band<lb/>
had memorized the music and<lb/>
field drill for the half-timeopener.<lb/>
This was an unusual occurence.<lb/>
Many bands perform their first<lb/>
show with flipchart music or by<lb/>
remaining basically motionless<lb/>
while playing memorized music.<lb/>
The pre-game show has also<lb/>
been learned. Often it is learned<lb/>
the day before the game. With<lb/>
these achievements under their<lb/>
belts, there's no stopping the<lb/>
Marching Pirates.<lb/>
Low esteem over Connells, Raleigh<lb/>
band could have played longer<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Call me a rock and roll conser-<lb/>
vative, call me a Led Zeppelin<lb/>
freak, call me a user of scatological<lb/>
language, call me a recent evictee<lb/>
of the house from hell, call me a<lb/>
yellow journalist, but the Cou-<lb/>
ncils did not satisfy my music<lb/>
bone.<lb/>
The Connells, supposed to be<lb/>
one of America's premier college<lb/>
bands, came to Greenville's Attic<lb/>
Friday night with their noses<lb/>
pointed towards the purple sky.<lb/>
But wait a minute, they have a<lb/>
reason for being so arrogant, you<lb/>
see they are from the shopping-<lb/>
center capital oi Raleigh.<lb/>
First of all, the Connells didn't<lb/>
play long enough. The opening<lb/>
band, Mary on the Dash, played<lb/>
until 11:30 p.m leaving a void of<lb/>
a half of hour to be filled with bad<lb/>
videos on Attic's magna bad<lb/>
video screen.<lb/>
By mid-night, the Connells<lb/>
had left the back stage mirrors<lb/>
and came on stage. Not a second<lb/>
after 1:30 a.m they returned to<lb/>
the self-indulcnce glory oi the<lb/>
back stage mirrors, leaving the<lb/>
packed crowd in grimaced "Oh,<lb/>
man" looks.<lb/>
But when I fork over six bucks,<lb/>
which I didn't have lo do (thanks<lb/>
Attic), I expect to hear at least two<lb/>
hours of music. Are these guys so<lb/>
big that they can't play for more<lb/>
than a hour and a half?<lb/>
Maybe this reviewer is over<lb/>
reacting, some of the show was<lb/>
actually pretty good. Although<lb/>
the Connells can be called a REM-<lb/>
sound-like-to-band, some of their<lb/>
originals ripped the crowd with<lb/>
the title cut from the five member<lb/>
band's first release "Darker<lb/>
Days<lb/>
Long haired George Huntley<lb/>
is the jammer of the band. Playing<lb/>
lead guitar, Huntley also contrib-<lb/>
utes with good key board play<lb/>
and split vocals. Huntley7s vocals<lb/>
in "1934" shook the audience to<lb/>
the point where the wooden<lb/>
floors where springing from the<lb/>
slamming packed crowd.<lb/>
Huntley also shined with a<lb/>
six-string exhibition in "Scottv's<lb/>
Lament" which surprisingly<lb/>
sounded faintlv like bagpipes.<lb/>
Although the Conneli s origi-<lb/>
quality guitar and bam-bam style nals were good, their cover songs<lb/>
drums. The Connells' strength sucked, except for one. Bon Jo vis<lb/>
lies in the guitar and drums. "I'm Cowboy" or whatever the<lb/>
Despite the frat-boy looks of name of that song only received<lb/>
lead singer Doug MacMilan, he cat calls from the true Pamilco<lb/>
managed to ramble through origi-<lb/>
nals "Choosing Side" off their<lb/>
critical acclaimed second LP �<lb/>
Boylan Heights with tolerable<lb/>
utterances. MacMilan, a Bryan<lb/>
county fans in the audience. Rod<lb/>
Stewart's "Maggie" was yawn<lb/>
inducing.<lb/>
Their ended the show with a<lb/>
worthwhile rendition of Alice<lb/>
Adams clone, also sang lead on Cooper's "I'm Eighteen<lb/>
Whaling in the 50's, Bob Tunnell, J.W. Raburn and Bob Aiken, Bob and the Rockers, played and will play<lb/>
the New Deli. So if you haven't seen them yet this month, don't worry, you can see them later. Kind of<lb/>
like Now or Laters.<lb/>
because "I get to sing it. " Bob took off into the dance floor,<lb/>
The band has a loyal following, sweat pouring from his brow as<lb/>
Many of thes "groupies" are he made that electric guitar wail<lb/>
middle age and older but there are out the rocking, electric blues that<lb/>
many younger people who love has made the band so popular,<lb/>
the band as well. They travel all Off stage, Bad Bob is quiet, and<lb/>
across the state and rock all finds shy as he lets the more talkative<lb/>
of fans, no matter how young or<lb/>
old.<lb/>
In a recent show at Greenville's<lb/>
New Deli, Bad Bob laid down<lb/>
guitar solos that Eddie Van Halen<lb/>
would admire. At one point, Bad<lb/>
band member, Raburn, steal the<lb/>
show. But when the lights came<lb/>
on. Bad Bob transforms.<lb/>
His energy and raw talent<lb/>
shine. Raburn and Bob Aiken are<lb/>
extremely talented as well, but no<lb/>
would admire. At one point, bad extremely taientea as wen, out no reet move, sne<lb/>
Exchange at 62 in the longest headline ever read<lb/>
someone who wears ulose sizes.<lb/>
one upstages Bad Bob. Even quest<lb/>
performances like Charles Ca-<lb/>
hoon, who played the harmonica<lb/>
with them at the Deli can't draw<lb/>
eves awav from Bad Bob.<lb/>
Bad Bob and the Rocking<lb/>
Horses are a great blues band<lb/>
with a powerful sound. All three<lb/>
members are talented and love<lb/>
their music. Anyone who enjoys<lb/>
driving drums, solid base, and a<lb/>
blues lead guitar that makes your<lb/>
feet move, should see Bad Bob.<lb/>
City joined the Odd Shoe Ex-<lb/>
change this summer. The 62-year-<lb/>
old woman, who had her left leg<lb/>
amputated two years ago, wears a<lb/>
10-B on her right foot.<lb/>
She's still paying off the money<lb/>
take the extra shoe she says.<lb/>
After trying on about a dozen<lb/>
shoes, Ms. Baldwin decided on a<lb/>
white leather tennis shoe and<lb/>
white sandal.<lb/>
On a nearby rack stood a dozen<lb/>
she owes on her operation, she or so pairs of boots. Ms. Sallman<lb/>
says. "I haven't had any extra pulled out a mismatched pair:<lb/>
money to buy shoes. When you size 10 left and size 8 right,<lb/>
have to buy good shoes, they run Through her system of handwrit-<lb/>
about $50 a pair. It's awful to pay ten 3-by-5 index cards, she was<lb/>
that much and throw the other able to match the boots with<lb/>
Her extensive files include out-<lb/>
lines of members' feet and shoe<lb/>
ads that illustrate their prefer-<lb/>
ences.<lb/>
Many of the mismates that Ms.<lb/>
Sallman helps pair never meet.<lb/>
They correspond and send each<lb/>
other shoes. Others live close<lb/>
enough to shop together and<lb/>
trade mismated pairs.<lb/>
Ms. Sallman snared shoes with<lb/>
one mismate for 11 years before<lb/>
meeting the woman, a Los Au6e- up in California, and unbe-<lb/>
les bookkeeper. They were mis- knownst to me, they lived an<lb/>
mates from 1972 through about hour's drive apart Ms. Sallman<lb/>
1984, when Ms. Sallman devel- recalls. "They would meet each<lb/>
oped a bunion that made her foot other and go shoe shopping,<lb/>
wider. "Another member, I gave her a<lb/>
Ms. Sallman recalls one mis- mate in another state who, unbe-<lb/>
mate, a New York career woman knownst to me, lived down the<lb/>
who bought expensive shoes. Ms.<lb/>
Sallman could not keep up.<lb/>
But many mismates share<lb/>
happy endings.<lb/>
"I matched these two women<lb/>
street from a relative. The best<lb/>
part about this service is the<lb/>
friends you make<lb/>
Ms. Sallman, a volunteer, has<lb/>
little time to make a living as a tional funding.<lb/>
part-time private-duty nurse be<lb/>
cause she is working to make<lb/>
some of her dreams come true for<lb/>
the shoe exchange.<lb/>
Those dreams include a store-<lb/>
front shop where she can ware-<lb/>
house donated shoes, as well as<lb/>
offer a place for members to try on<lb/>
shoes, and an office for the<lb/>
organization's headquarters.<lb/>
Her wish list also includes vol-<lb/>
unteers, a computer and addi-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0018"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
THEEAS1 CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6. 1988<lb/>
Kinks still sing 'Lola, Lola'<lb/>
(AT) - Earlier this vear, the<lb/>
kinks brought out "The Road a<lb/>
collection of songs, mostly from<lb/>
the 1980s, recorded live during a<lb/>
1987 IS. tour.<lb/>
Now, kinks songwriter Ra<lb/>
Davies is in California, where a<lb/>
musical comedy he composed,<lb/>
'80 Days is playing at the la<lb/>
olla Playhouse.<lb/>
The album, the British group's<lb/>
second for MCA records, was<lb/>
taped in Columbia. Md and<lb/>
Philadelphia. The title" song was<lb/>
recorded in a studio "he song "It"<lb/>
is new, composed by Davies as a<lb/>
dance for his wife Pat Crosbie,<lb/>
formerly with the Irish National<lb/>
ballet 1 le'd like to expand it so it<lb/>
becomes one side of Mi album.<lb/>
Recentl) . the kinks did some<lb/>
recording for the next album, but<lb/>
� it has paused while Davies<lb/>
w i irks on 80 Daj s.<lb/>
"I had seen the movie Around<lb/>
the World in SO Days when 1 was<lb/>
a kid Daviessays. '1 wasn't that<lb/>
interested in it. But the show is<lb/>
really more about ules Verne<lb/>
himself. He was the Steven<lb/>
Spielberg of the Victorian era.<lb/>
"he Director, Des McAnuff,<lb/>
who did Big River' (based on<lb/>
Huckleberry Finn') sent me a<lb/>
teli gramsaj ��. a) need<lb/>
you, which It ht �� asa rather<lb/>
nice introduction to the project<lb/>
lie sent me a draft script<lb/>
somebodv had done. We got talk-<lb/>
ing about it. 1 wrote what 1<lb/>
sought a few good tunes would<lb/>
be. He liked them. 1 le got a book<lb/>
writer. ! wasn't interested in<lb/>
doing David Niven (star of the<lb/>
movie) with music. This project<lb/>
has been going on for tour years.<lb/>
N. ou can't rush these things<lb/>
Review<lb/>
Davies wrote one previous<lb/>
musical, which was rushed, for a<lb/>
small English company in 1982. "I<lb/>
had to write it in two weeks. It was<lb/>
a bizarre plot oi out-of-work<lb/>
women in Fast London kidnap-<lb/>
ping Prince Charles. It was<lb/>
commisioned by the National<lb/>
Fheatre, by Sir Peter Hall. He<lb/>
wanted a modern version of "The<lb/>
Poet and the Women where the<lb/>
women kidnap Aristophanes.<lb/>
"It was good writing the song<lb/>
for Prince Charles, a patriotic<lb/>
song about England. It was of-<lb/>
Broadway style, fun and campy.<lb/>
It w asa daunting task to write it in<lb/>
two weeks<lb/>
I le wrote musk for the films<lb/>
"The Virgin Soldier" and "Percy<lb/>
1 le says, "We tired our manager<lb/>
just after that. We had a top-10 hit<lb/>
in America, l.ola at the same to<lb/>
me Instead of putting us on tour<lb/>
here, he said we should do the<lb/>
"Percy" soundtrack. 1 wrote a<lb/>
fantastic piece oi music. The pro-<lb/>
ducer got a knife and cut every-<lb/>
thing. My work was completely<lb/>
butchered.<lb/>
"The best way 1 did it was a TV<lb/>
film I wrote, directed and did the<lb/>
music, "Return to Waterloo A<lb/>
few art-type cinemas showed it.<lb/>
"1 was approached to write an<lb/>
v. ri nental play with music. So<lb/>
i wrote a play where the lead<lb/>
character didn't speak. 1 ended up<lb/>
directing Keith Colley, a Shake-<lb/>
spearean actor, using sign lan-<lb/>
guage, exploiting every facet oi<lb/>
his face. 1 felt it was like doing a<lb/>
silent movie.<lb/>
"They wanted me to direct<lb/>
something else after 'Return to<lb/>
Waterloo'but I had other things to<lb/>
do, like finding a record com-<lb/>
pany. I always admired the<lb/>
Beatles because they stayed with<lb/>
the same company. The Kinks<lb/>
have been with four labels. With<lb/>
no disrespect to the companies<lb/>
I've been with or am with, I'd<lb/>
rather my career had been cata-<lb/>
loged with one record company<lb/>
In the 1960s, when the Kinks<lb/>
had strings of hit singles, they'd<lb/>
put all their equipment into a<lb/>
truck and tour in Britain on week-<lb/>
ends.<lb/>
Now, Davies says, "Bands like<lb/>
Def Leppard tour 18 months and<lb/>
never make a record for four<lb/>
years. They're completely ex-<lb/>
hausted.<lb/>
"And I can't decide to go play in<lb/>
Truro and get equipment to-<lb/>
gether. 1 have to hire about 30<lb/>
people and it's all a big deal.<lb/>
"We still play requests, which<lb/>
sends the light and sound crew-<lb/>
mad. They like to have the show<lb/>
rehearsed<lb/>
The Kinks were formed in 1964<lb/>
with Davies as lead vocalist and<lb/>
guitarist, Dave Davies on lead<lb/>
guitar and vocals, Peter Quaife on<lb/>
bass and Mick Avory on drums.<lb/>
The current lineup is the Davies<lb/>
brothers, Ian Gibbons, keyboards,<lb/>
Jim Rodford, bass, and Rob<lb/>
1 lenrit, drums.<lb/>
Davies says, "It would be nice<lb/>
for the Kinks to be on Broadway<lb/>
for a week and do a week in Bos-<lb/>
ton rather than doing one-<lb/>
nighters. Next year will be our<lb/>
25th year.<lb/>
"The concert we did in London<lb/>
Dec. 22 was one of the best ever.<lb/>
We played about three hours<lb/>
solid, with no intermission and no<lb/>
popcorn. We used some of that<lb/>
footage in the 'Road' video. The<lb/>
video also has stuff from the 1960s<lb/>
and 70s.<lb/>
"I've got enough footage to<lb/>
make an 8-hour film about the<lb/>
Kinks. I'll settle for an hour and a<lb/>
half<lb/>
Davies believes that the best<lb/>
ballad he ever wrote was "Water-<lb/>
loo Sunset" and the two best rock-<lb/>
ers were "You Really Got Me<lb/>
which Van 1 lalen covered, and<lb/>
"All Day and All of the Night<lb/>
which the Stranglers covered.<lb/>
"Now when we play You Really<lb/>
Got Me new audiences think<lb/>
we're covering the Van Halen<lb/>
song<lb/>
Asked whether he has mel-<lb/>
lowed with age, Davies recountsa<lb/>
letter from a nephew stating he<lb/>
wasangry, discontent, ambitious,<lb/>
jealous, wants to achieve every-<lb/>
thing and feels there's no time. It<lb/>
ended. "Uncle Raymond, what<lb/>
are you like?"<lb/>
He says, "I wrote a note back<lb/>
sayingDitto I'm still as hungry<lb/>
for success. I take failure hard.<lb/>
That's the one aspect of my per-<lb/>
sonality 1 try to fight against.<lb/>
"I've tried to mellowout severa 1<lb/>
times in my life. I finish one proj-<lb/>
ect. The phone rings and I start<lb/>
another. If the phone didn't nng<lb/>
I'd start one myself.<lb/>
"1 get passionate about what I<lb/>
do. I think the older you get the<lb/>
less mellow you get, really. You<lb/>
get angrier<lb/>
Pupp<lb/>
PH<lb/>
�<lb/>
99VFF<lb/>
5th St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
C77<lb/>
gnjHSP<lb/>
12" Sub or<lb/>
Regular<lb/>
Size Salad<lb/>
The Pla<lb/>
75<lb/>
-I<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
Summer Savings<lb/>
Trust Baxt<lb/>
� BAXTl R<lb/>
Johnny D. conies back with Fatal Flowers<lb/>
By MATT JAMES<lb/>
M.l" K H<lb/>
1 he rode over on a tidal<lb/>
wa c ol gritty rock -n- roll quitars<lb/>
in overdrive with last years<lb/>
A ounger Days to stun many a<lb/>
first time listener and critics alike.<lb/>
For a band inspired by the<lb/>
late 7 V ova. it's refreshing<lb/>
to realize the) stuck to a basic<lb/>
- �� I with a modern edge. For all<lb/>
ol the unbridled energy found on<lb/>
their last album, the new one<lb/>
tsquietmonru nts thathigh-<lb/>
light thoughtful - : gsandblues)<lb/>
intramentation.<lb/>
ohnny D. is the imaginary<lb/>
character who realizes nothing<lb/>
last forever (especially stardom)<lb/>
and in rune carefully crafted<lb/>
songs, I he (lowers perform<lb/>
Lady runs body<lb/>
business for sear<lb/>
LITTLE HAMPTON, Eng-<lb/>
land (AP) - Anita Roddick was the<lb/>
quintessential flower child oi the<lb/>
s. She cared seriously about<lb/>
pollution, whales acid rain, all oi<lb/>
it. Now she runs a $68 milion<lb/>
cosmetics business - -n is still a<lb/>
flower child at heart, and in fact.<lb/>
To her competitors in this<lb/>
highly competetive business,<lb/>
"We may seem to be slightly<lb/>
flaky she says. "But in 20 years<lb/>
time what we are going to be<lb/>
doing is the norm<lb/>
And what is this 45-year-old<lb/>
entrepreneur doing at her corn-<lb/>
pans Body Shop International<lb/>
PL( ?<lb/>
Among other innovations,<lb/>
she uses natural ingredients in her<lb/>
products, vegetable - not animal -<lb/>
materials. She refuses to test her<lb/>
cosmetics on animals or buy from<lb/>
suppliers that do. She provides<lb/>
refills to cut down on waste. She<lb/>
uses receded paper and recedes<lb/>
her waste. She also plows a por-<lb/>
tion of the profits into environ-<lb/>
mental causes and education<lb/>
"The Body Shop approach<lb/>
Mrs. Roddick says, "is non-ex-<lb/>
ploitative<lb/>
And, apparently, successful.<lb/>
What started out in 1976 as a little<lb/>
shop in the seaside town of<lb/>
Brighton in southeast England<lb/>
today numbers 14 stores and 317<lb/>
franchises all over the world. Its<lb/>
first shop in the United States<lb/>
opened this summer in New York<lb/>
in - where else - Greenwich Vil-<lb/>
lage.<lb/>
"It s that constant looking for<lb/>
a better way that gives our com-<lb/>
pany its morals and sense of pur-<lb/>
pose Mrs. Roddick says.<lb/>
Mrs. Roddick is passionate,<lb/>
with a hard edge. When she talks,<lb/>
her face is alternately wide open<lb/>
and closed. She is a short woman,<lb/>
highly energetic, with a shock of<lb/>
shoulder-length hair. She usually<lb/>
wears jeans and sneakers to work.<lb/>
songs related to his life and times, preme production, this Fatal<lb/>
There is still a healthy portion Rowers LP could be played all<lb/>
of crunch rock that actually help day long. There may be a lot oi<lb/>
highlight the more evolved songs Johnny D's and a lot of Flowers,<lb/>
on the album. Songs like "The but the Fatal Flowers arc an one of<lb/>
DM<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Monday-Saturday 10-9<lb/>
Sunday 1-6<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(Except Algner. Nike and Reebok)<lb/>
Dance the title track and the<lb/>
souped-up mid tempo sound of<lb/>
"Rock and Roll Star challenge<lb/>
 to stared still or stay in your<lb/>
seat.<lb/>
From "Moving Target" to<lb/>
"Dear friends" and the violin,<lb/>
piano, harmonica and trombone<lb/>
work inbetween, The Fatal Flow-<lb/>
ers can give any band this union a<lb/>
run for its money.<lb/>
 oupled with record sculp-<lb/>
tor Mick Ronson's , who has also<lb/>
produced Lou Reed, David<lb/>
Bowie, and Mott the Hople, su-<lb/>
shop, $68 million<lb/>
ch for new face<lb/>
She is breaking the rules not<lb/>
just in business but in the cosmet-<lb/>
ics industry in particular.<lb/>
Body Shop seeks to buy its<lb/>
ingredients and create jobs in Brit-<lb/>
ain and the Third World. It has<lb/>
pledged to devote 25 percent of<lb/>
the profits oi a new soap factory<lb/>
into the Glasgow community in<lb/>
which it is located.<lb/>
Besides launching a myriad<lb/>
of community projects, it uses its<lb/>
stores as forums for educating<lb/>
people about issues ranging from<lb/>
saving whales to saving the ozone<lb/>
layer.<lb/>
Mrs. Roddick travels around<lb/>
the world three months a year<lb/>
observing women perform their<lb/>
ablutions to get ideas for products<lb/>
which simply cleanse, polish and<lb/>
protect the hair and skin.<lb/>
"It's constantly looking, us-<lb/>
ing the past as a prologue, seeing<lb/>
what can be dime she says.<lb/>
Not all her travels are fruit-<lb/>
ful, however.<lb/>
She discovered that some<lb/>
Japanese women rub crushed<lb/>
nightingale droppings onto their<lb/>
skin to whiten it.<lb/>
"I haven't been able to do<lb/>
anything with that she says,<lb/>
laughing. BodyShopsarea farcry<lb/>
from run-of-the-mill natural<lb/>
foods and -cosmetics stores<lb/>
which sell Vitamin F pills and<lb/>
Castile soap.<lb/>
Bod Shops are a hybrid of<lb/>
the 1960s health ideal and 1980s<lb/>
sophistication. They are cool,<lb/>
dark-green and fragrant. The 300<lb/>
or so products include white<lb/>
grape skin tonic, Viennese chalk<lb/>
facial wash, and a Moroccan mud<lb/>
shampoo.<lb/>
Mrs. Roddick was born and<lb/>
brought up in I.ittlehampton, a<lb/>
small blue-collar resort town west<lb/>
ot Brighton. As a youth she<lb/>
worked in the family cafe.<lb/>
1 ler first passion was drama<lb/>
but she was trained as a teacher.<lb/>
a kind bunch.<lb/>
"All right, classLet's test your New Music Knowledge!<lb/>
I. Heavy Nova<lb/>
Robert Palmer's latest<lb/>
hit single is:<lb/>
A. Irresistibly Simple'<lb/>
B. Simply Irresistible<lb/>
C. Simple Yet Irresistible<lb/>
 oro<lb/>
O. Hot Water<lb/>
This singer-songwriter's<lb/>
fans are known as:<lb/>
A. Parrotheads<lb/>
B. Potheads<lb/>
C. Mr Potato Heads<lb/>
MCA<lb/>
699 1199<lb/>
LPTape I I<lb/>
CD<lb/>
O CROWDEDHOUSE<lb/>
C Temple Of Low Men<lb/>
This supergroup s last<lb/>
album went:<lb/>
A. Platinum<lb/>
B. Aluminum<lb/>
C. Round and round<lb/>
fkt<lb/>
Tape<lb/>
12<lb/>
H. Soul Searchin<lb/>
Glenn Frey made his acting<lb/>
debut in an episode of:<lb/>
A. Miami Vice<lb/>
B. Punky Brewster<lb/>
C. The Smurfs<lb/>
MCA<lb/>
1 Tape<lb/>
12"<lb/>
lUTvTTMHHI<lb/>
0-2 Correct - �<lb/>
3-4 Correct<lb/>
All 5 Correct1<lb/>
5<lb/>
o:a<lb/>
. Day By Day<lb/>
This popular instrumental<lb/>
star plays the:<lb/>
A. Stock Market<lb/>
B. Saxophone<lb/>
C. Electric Kazoo<lb/>
S&amp;33MD3?<lb/>
THE PLAZA, CAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0019"/><lb/>
Jfc<lb/>
16<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1988<lb/>
Kinks still sing 'Lola, Lola'<lb/>
(AP) - Earlier this year, the<lb/>
Kinks brought out "The Road a<lb/>
collection of songs, mostly from<lb/>
the 1980s, recorded live during a<lb/>
1987 U.S. tour.<lb/>
Now, Kinks songwriter Ray<lb/>
Davies is in California, where a<lb/>
musical comedy he composed,<lb/>
"80 Days is playing at the La<lb/>
Jolla Playhouse.<lb/>
The album, the British group's<lb/>
second for MCA records, was<lb/>
taped in Columbia. Md and<lb/>
Philadelphia. The title song was<lb/>
recorded in a studio. The song "It"<lb/>
is new, composed by Davies as a<lb/>
dance for his wife, Pat Crosbie,<lb/>
formerly with the Irish National<lb/>
Ballet. He'd like to expand it so it<lb/>
becomes one side of an album.<lb/>
Recentlv, the Kinks did some<lb/>
recording for the next album, but<lb/>
that has paused while Davies<lb/>
works on "80 Days<lb/>
"I had seen the movie' Around<lb/>
the World in 80 Davs' when I was<lb/>
J<lb/>
a kid Davies says. "I wasn't that<lb/>
interested in it. But the show is<lb/>
really more about Jules Verne<lb/>
himself. He was the Steven<lb/>
Spielberg of the Victorian era.<lb/>
"The Director, Des McAnuff,<lb/>
who did 'Big River' teased on<lb/>
'Huckleberrv Finn') sent me a<lb/>
telegram saying, Broadway need<lb/>
you which I thought was a rather<lb/>
nice introduction to the project.<lb/>
"He sent me a draft script<lb/>
somebody had done. We got talk-<lb/>
ing about it. I wrote what I<lb/>
thought a few good runes would<lb/>
be. He liked them. He got a book<lb/>
writer. I wasn't interested in<lb/>
doing David Niven (star of the<lb/>
movie) with music. This project<lb/>
has been going on for four years.<lb/>
You can't rush these things<lb/>
Review<lb/>
Davies wrote one previous<lb/>
musical, which was rushed, for a<lb/>
small English company in 1982. "I<lb/>
had to write it in two weeks. It was<lb/>
a bizarre plot of out-of-work<lb/>
women in East London kidnap-<lb/>
ping Prince Charles. It was<lb/>
commisioned by the National<lb/>
Theatre, by Sir Peter Hall. He<lb/>
wanted a modern version of "The<lb/>
Poet and the Women where the<lb/>
women kidnap Aristophanes.<lb/>
"It was good writing the song<lb/>
for Prince Charles, a patriotic<lb/>
song about England. It was of-<lb/>
Broadway style, fun and campy.<lb/>
It wasa daunting task to write it in<lb/>
two weeks<lb/>
He wrote music for the films<lb/>
"The Virgin Soldier" and "Percy<lb/>
He says, "We fired our manager<lb/>
just after that. We had a top-10 hit<lb/>
in America, 'Lola at the same to<lb/>
me. Instead of putting us on tour<lb/>
here, he said we should do the<lb/>
"Percy" soundtrack. I wrote a<lb/>
fantastic piece of music. The pro-<lb/>
ducer got a knife and cut every-<lb/>
thing. My work was completely<lb/>
butchered.<lb/>
'The best way I did it was a TV<lb/>
film I wrote, directed and did the<lb/>
music, 'Return to Waterloo A<lb/>
few art-type cinemas showed it.<lb/>
"I was approached to write an<lb/>
experimental play with music. So<lb/>
I wrote a play where the lead<lb/>
character didn't speak. I ended up<lb/>
directing Keith Colley, a Shake-<lb/>
spearean actor, using sign lan-<lb/>
guage, exploiting every facet of<lb/>
his face. I felt it was like doing a<lb/>
silent movie.<lb/>
"They wanted me to direct<lb/>
something else after 'Return to<lb/>
Waterloo' but I had other things to<lb/>
do, like finding a record com-<lb/>
pany. I always admired the<lb/>
Beatles because they stayed with<lb/>
the same company. The Kinks<lb/>
have been with four labels. With<lb/>
no disrespect to the companies<lb/>
I've been with or am with, I'd<lb/>
rather my career had been cata-<lb/>
loged with one record company<lb/>
In the 1960s, when the Kinks<lb/>
had strings of hit singles, they'd<lb/>
put all their equipment into a<lb/>
truck and tour in Britain on week-<lb/>
ends.<lb/>
Now, Davies says, "Bands like<lb/>
Def Leppard tour 18 months and<lb/>
never make a record for four<lb/>
years. They're completely ex-<lb/>
hausted.<lb/>
"And I can't decide to go play in<lb/>
Truro and get equipment to-<lb/>
gether. I have to hire about 30<lb/>
people and it's all a big deal.<lb/>
"We still play requests, which<lb/>
sends the light and sound crew<lb/>
mad. They like to have the show<lb/>
rehearsed<lb/>
The Kinks were formed in 1964<lb/>
with Davies as lead vocalist and<lb/>
guitarist, Dave Davies on lead<lb/>
guitar and vocals, Peter Quaife on<lb/>
bass and Mick Avory on drums.<lb/>
The current lineup is the Davies<lb/>
brothers, Ian Gibbons, keyboards,<lb/>
Jim Rodford, bass, and Bob<lb/>
Henrit, drums.<lb/>
Davies says, "It would be nice<lb/>
for the Kinks to be on Broadway<lb/>
for a week and do a week in Bos-<lb/>
ton rather than doing one-<lb/>
nighters. Next year will be our<lb/>
25th year.<lb/>
"The concert we did in London<lb/>
Dec. 22 was one of the best ever.<lb/>
We played about three hours<lb/>
solid, with no intermission and no<lb/>
popcorn. We used some of that<lb/>
footage in the 'Road' video. The<lb/>
video also has stuff from the 1960s<lb/>
and 70s.<lb/>
"I've got enough footage to<lb/>
make an 8-hour film about the<lb/>
Kinks. I'll settle for an hour and a<lb/>
half<lb/>
Davies believes that the best<lb/>
ballad he ever wrote was "Water-<lb/>
loo Sunset" and the two best rock-<lb/>
ers were "You Really Got Me<lb/>
which Van Halen covered, and<lb/>
"All Day and All of the Night<lb/>
which the Stranglers covered.<lb/>
"Now when we play Tou Really<lb/>
Got Me new audiences think<lb/>
we're covering the Van Halen<lb/>
song<lb/>
Asked whether he has mel-<lb/>
lowed with age, Davies recounts a<lb/>
letter from a nephew stating he<lb/>
was angry, discontent, ambitious,<lb/>
jealous, wants to achieve every-<lb/>
thing and feels there's no time. It<lb/>
ended: "Uncle Raymond, what<lb/>
are you like?"<lb/>
He says, "I wrote a note back<lb/>
saying,TJitto I'm still as hungry<lb/>
for success. I take failure hard.<lb/>
That's the one aspect of my per-<lb/>
sonality I try to fight against.<lb/>
"I've tried to mellow out several<lb/>
times in my life. I finish one proj-<lb/>
ect. The phone rings and I start<lb/>
another. If the phone didn't ring<lb/>
I'd start one myself.<lb/>
"I get passionate about what I<lb/>
do. I think the older you get the<lb/>
less mellow you get, really. You<lb/>
get angrier<lb/>
98WF<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
 5th St.<lb/>
� Downtown<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
12" Sub or<lb/>
Regular<lb/>
Size Salad<lb/>
e<lb/>
ke&amp;tfllc<lb/>
�SUBWRY<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
756-2110<lb/>
Johnny D. comes back with Fatal Flowers<lb/>
By MATT JAMES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
They rode over on a tidal<lb/>
wave of gritty rock -n- roll quitars<lb/>
in overdrive with last years<lb/>
"Younger Days to stun many a<lb/>
first time listener and critics alike.<lb/>
For a band inspired by the<lb/>
late '70's punk era, it's refreshing<lb/>
to realize they stuck to a basic<lb/>
sound with a modern edge. For all<lb/>
of the unbridled energy found on<lb/>
their last album, the new one<lb/>
exhibits quiet moments that high-<lb/>
light thoughtful songs and bluesy<lb/>
intramentation.<lb/>
Johnny D. is the imaginary<lb/>
character who realizes nothing<lb/>
last forever (especially stardom)<lb/>
and in nine carefully crafted<lb/>
songs, The Flowers perform<lb/>
songs related to his life and times.<lb/>
There is still a heal thy portion<lb/>
of crunch rock that actually help<lb/>
highlight the more evolved songs<lb/>
on the album. Songs like "The<lb/>
Dance the title track and the<lb/>
souped-up mid tempo sound of<lb/>
"Rock and Roll Star challenge<lb/>
you to stared still or stay in your<lb/>
seat.<lb/>
From "Moving Target" to<lb/>
"Dear friends" and the violin,<lb/>
piano, harmonica and trombone<lb/>
work inbetween, The Fatal Flow-<lb/>
ers can give any band this union a<lb/>
run for its money.<lb/>
Coupled with record sculp-<lb/>
tor Mick Ronson's , who has also<lb/>
produced Lou Reed, David<lb/>
Bowie, and Mott the Hople, su-<lb/>
preme production, this Fatal<lb/>
Rowers LP could be played all<lb/>
day long. There may be a lot of<lb/>
Johnny D's and a lot of Flowers,<lb/>
but the Fatal Flowers are an one of<lb/>
a kind bunch.<lb/>
LOW PRICE<lb/>
and Reebok)<lb/>
Lady runs body shop, $68 million<lb/>
business for search for new face<lb/>
LITTLEHAMPTON, Eng-<lb/>
land (AP) - Anita Roddick was the<lb/>
quintessential flower child of the<lb/>
'60s. She cared seriously about<lb/>
pollution, whales, acid rain, all of<lb/>
it. Now she runs a $68 milion<lb/>
cosmetics business - and is still a<lb/>
flower child at heart, and in fact.<lb/>
To her competitors in this<lb/>
highly competetive business,<lb/>
"We may seem to be slightly<lb/>
flaky she says. "But in 20 years<lb/>
time what we are going to be<lb/>
doing is the norm<lb/>
And what is this 45-year-old<lb/>
entrepreneur doing at her com-<lb/>
pany, Bodv Shop International<lb/>
PLC?<lb/>
Among other innovations,<lb/>
she uses natural ingredients in her<lb/>
products, vegetable - not animal -<lb/>
materials. She refuses to test her<lb/>
cosmetics on animals or buy from<lb/>
suppliers that do. She provides<lb/>
refills to cut down on waste. She<lb/>
uses recycled paper and recycles<lb/>
her waste. She also plows a por-<lb/>
tion of the profits into environ-<lb/>
mental causes and education.<lb/>
"The Body Shop approach<lb/>
Mrs. Roddick says, "is non-ex-<lb/>
ploitative<lb/>
And, apparently, successful.<lb/>
What started out in 1976 as a little<lb/>
shop in the seaside town of<lb/>
Brighton in southeast England<lb/>
today numbers 14 stores and 317<lb/>
franchises all over the world. Its<lb/>
first shop in the United States<lb/>
opened this summer in New York<lb/>
in - where else? - Greenwich Vil-<lb/>
lage.<lb/>
"It's that constant looking for<lb/>
a better way that gives our com-<lb/>
pany its morals and sense of pur-<lb/>
pose Mrs. Roddick says.<lb/>
Mrs. Roddick is passionate,<lb/>
with a hard edge. When she talks,<lb/>
her face is alternately wide open<lb/>
and closed. She is a short woman,<lb/>
highly energetic, with a shock of<lb/>
shoulder-length hair. She usually<lb/>
wears jeans and sneakers to work.<lb/>
She is breaking the rules not<lb/>
just in business but in the cosmet-<lb/>
ics industry in particular.<lb/>
Body Shop seeks to buy its<lb/>
ingredients and create jobs in Brit-<lb/>
ain and the Third World. It has<lb/>
pledged to devote 25 percent of<lb/>
the profits of a new soap factory<lb/>
into the Glasgow community in<lb/>
which it is located.<lb/>
Besides launching a myriad<lb/>
of community projects, it uses its<lb/>
stores as forums for educating<lb/>
people about issues ranging from<lb/>
saving whales to saving the ozone<lb/>
layer.<lb/>
Mrs. Roddick travels around<lb/>
the world three months a year<lb/>
observing women perform their<lb/>
ablutions to get ideas for products<lb/>
which simply cleanse, polish and<lb/>
protect the hair and skin.<lb/>
"It's constantly looking, us-<lb/>
ing the past as a prologue, seeing<lb/>
what can be done she says.<lb/>
Not all her travels are fruit-<lb/>
ful, however.<lb/>
She discovered that some<lb/>
Japanese women rub crushed<lb/>
nightingale droppings onto their<lb/>
skin to whiten it.<lb/>
"I haven't been able to do<lb/>
anything with that she says,<lb/>
laughing. Body Shops are a far cry<lb/>
from run-of-the-mill natural<lb/>
foods-and-cosmetics stores<lb/>
which sell Vitamin E pills and<lb/>
Castile soap.<lb/>
Body Shops are a hybrid of<lb/>
the 1960s health ideal and 1980s<lb/>
sophistication. They are cool,<lb/>
dark-green and fragrant. The 300<lb/>
or so products include white<lb/>
grape skin tonic, Viennese chalk<lb/>
facial wash, and a Moroccan mud<lb/>
shampoo.<lb/>
Mrs. Roddick was born and<lb/>
brought up in Littlehampton, a<lb/>
small blue-collar resort town west<lb/>
of Brighton. As a youth she<lb/>
worked in the family cafe.<lb/>
Her first passion was drama<lb/>
but she was trained as a teacher.<lb/>
"All right, c<lb/>
wledge!<lb/>
jj<lb/>
4<lb/>
1.<lb/>
Heavy Nova<lb/>
Robert Palmer's latest<lb/>
hit single is:<lb/>
A. "Irresistibly Simple"<lb/>
B. "Simply Irresistible"<lb/>
C. "Simple Yet Irresistible"<lb/>
ODD 'W99 MM<lb/>
� " LPT � �� CD<lb/>
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This singer-songwriter's<lb/>
fans are known as:<lb/>
A. Parrotheads<lb/>
B. Potheads<lb/>
C. Mr. Potato Heads<lb/>
699 1199<lb/>
LPTape I<lb/>
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Temple Of Low Men<lb/>
This supergroup's last<lb/>
album went:<lb/>
A. Platinum<lb/>
B. Aluminum<lb/>
C. Round and round<lb/>
Soul Searchiri<lb/>
Glenn Frey made his acting<lb/>
debut in an episode of:<lb/>
A. Miami Vice<lb/>
B. Punky Brewster<lb/>
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MCA<lb/>
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HOW TO SCORE<lb/>
0-2 Correct looks like you could use some remedial c� m New<lb/>
Music Better come see us soon<lb/>
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needed We suggest you come see us soon<lb/>
All S Correct Nice work' You re obviously one ot Our regular<lb/>
customers See you soon<lb/>
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Day By Day<lb/>
This popular instrumental<lb/>
star plays the:<lb/>
A. Stock Market<lb/>
B. Saxophone<lb/>
C. Electric Kazoo<lb/>
THE PLAZA, CAROLMA EAST MALL<lb/>
7 UVTap iZcO<lb/>
Pupp<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA, (Al<lb/>
Felix Smyth once had the<lb/>
on a string. Fancy cars, oj<lb/>
nights at the theater, a bin<lb/>
coal, a cupboard full of foe<lb/>
"In general, we were<lb/>
off than anyone else said S<lb/>
"We lived pretty well<lb/>
Sometimes, too well.<lb/>
Smyth's lifestyle oftcj<lb/>
him in trouble with the law<lb/>
'The police would takij<lb/>
and gnll me about robberies<lb/>
neighborhood he said. I<lb/>
couldn't understand how if<lb/>
live so well. They thought I<lb/>
have a job<lb/>
They thought wrong,<lb/>
have a job  giving life to<lb/>
of wood, a hank of cloth, a sj<lb/>
thread.<lb/>
Felix Smyth was a pupi<lb/>
a man who pulled the stnnj<lb/>
brought laughter and ma<lb/>
millions of "children from<lb/>
96<lb/>
He pulled down<lb/>
dough, too.<lb/>
Like the summer 0?<lb/>
Smyth, while still atte<lb/>
North Catholic High Schoc<lb/>
in S3, 000 a week working<lb/>
down the East Coast.<lb/>
In the evenings, he die<lb/>
shows for vaudeville audi(<lb/>
Then, starting at midni<lb/>
put on two after-hours she<lb/>
gins with a wad in their<lb/>
and a bulge in their coats<lb/>
"1 didn't know it at thj<lb/>
but I was working in spc<lb/>
ies laughed Smyth. "Thj<lb/>
who hired me were mobs<lb/>
wasn't until years later II<lb/>
Trust Baxtl<lb/>
THE BAXTER TRUSf<lb/>
ByJ.P. Hailey<lb/>
At 35, Steve Winslow is 1<lb/>
He tried his hand at acting<lb/>
He tried being a lawyer,<lb/>
it. Now, he drives a cab i<lb/>
York City.<lb/>
A real loser, right? Wro<lb/>
miracle oi miracles, a dai<lb/>
deep distress and badlv in j<lb/>
a mouthpiece opens th<lb/>
phone book and finds Wij<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0020"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBERS 1988 17<lb/>
12" Sub or<lb/>
Regular<lb/>
Size Salad<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
756-2110<lb/>
�m<lb/>
Puppeteer pulls strings to top<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA, (AP) �<lb/>
Felix Smyth once had the world<lb/>
on a string. Fancy cars, opening<lb/>
nights at the theater, a bin full of<lb/>
coal, a cupboard full of food.<lb/>
"In general, we were better<lb/>
off than anyone else said Smyth.<lb/>
We lived pretty well<lb/>
Sometimes, too well.<lb/>
Smyth's lifestyle often got<lb/>
him in trouble with the law.<lb/>
The police would take me in<lb/>
and grill me about robberies in the<lb/>
neighborhood he said. " They<lb/>
couldn't understand how I could<lb/>
live so well. They thought I didn't<lb/>
have a job<lb/>
They thought wrong. He did<lb/>
have a job  giving life to a hunk<lb/>
of wood, a hank of cloth, a spool of<lb/>
thread.<lb/>
Felix Smyth was a puppeteer,<lb/>
a man who pulled the strings that<lb/>
brought laughter and magic to<lb/>
millions of "children from nine to<lb/>
96<lb/>
He pulled down decent<lb/>
dough, too.<lb/>
Like the summer of 28 when<lb/>
Smyth, while still attending<lb/>
North Catholic High School, took<lb/>
in 55. 000 a week working up and<lb/>
down the East Coast.<lb/>
In the evenings, he did three<lb/>
shows for vaudeville audiences.<lb/>
Then, starting at midnight, he<lb/>
put on two after-hours shows for<lb/>
guys with a wad in their pockets<lb/>
and a bulge in their coats.<lb/>
"I didn't know it at the time,<lb/>
but I was working in speakeas-<lb/>
ies laughed Smyth. "The guys<lb/>
who hired me were mobsters. It<lb/>
wasn't until vears later I found<lb/>
out the bulges in their coats were 6-year-old boy reccieved a set of<lb/>
shoulder holsters hand puppets from his mother �<lb/>
Though the darkness of the not Santa Claus.<lb/>
Great Depression hovered on the "I came from a very realistic<lb/>
horizon, it was the beginning of family he said. "I was not al-<lb/>
Smyth's sunnier days. lowed to believe in the fantasy of<lb/>
Today, after an estimated Santa. I had the joy of Christmas,<lb/>
half-million performances in al- but not the fantasy of it. My fan-<lb/>
most 70 years, Felix Smyth's tasy would come later<lb/>
sunny days are few. A wood back alley was<lb/>
The veteran puppeteer, who Smyth's stage,<lb/>
will be 76 in October, gets around After a while, Smyth took his<lb/>
his rowhouse with a shillelagh, puppets � and his fantasies � to<lb/>
He has no control over his lower<lb/>
legs. He's practically blind. He<lb/>
hasn't pulled a string in earnest in<lb/>
more than two vears.<lb/>
"I'm really bad off he said.<lb/>
"He's on the shady side of his<lb/>
career, but at one time he was at<lb/>
the top of his profession said<lb/>
Gerald VVhartenby, a retired city<lb/>
detective and puppeteer who has<lb/>
performed with Smyth.<lb/>
"He's one of the last vaude-<lb/>
ville-era puppeteers still around<lb/>
added Whatenby. "He's a Phila-<lb/>
delphia treasure and no one<lb/>
knows it. He's a tremendous<lb/>
puppeteer<lb/>
Smyth started fooling around<lb/>
with puppets as a youngster<lb/>
growing up in north Philadelpia.<lb/>
He was a "sickly kid who was in<lb/>
the hospital more than out<lb/>
During one of those hospital<lb/>
stays, Smyth happened to hear a<lb/>
puppet show on the radio. He<lb/>
started imitating the various<lb/>
voices and sounds heard ont the<lb/>
show.<lb/>
It was puppet love at first<lb/>
sound.<lb/>
The following Christmas, the<lb/>
birthday parties, school plays and<lb/>
sidewalk shows. Eventually, his<lb/>
"childish hands" got too big for<lb/>
his little toy puppets.<lb/>
So he started making his own.<lb/>
In addition to hand puppets,<lb/>
young Smyth also carved mari-<lb/>
onettes (stringed puppets).<lb/>
Smyth turned professional<lb/>
when he was 10. He remembers it<lb/>
was on a Sunday because he was<lb/>
supposed to go on a picnic, but<lb/>
was asked to perform at a church<lb/>
fair. It was an offer he couldn't<lb/>
refuse.<lb/>
"They paid me a man's<lb/>
weekly salary, which back then<lb/>
was $10, $12 he recalledHere I<lb/>
was, a kid 10 years old, making in<lb/>
one day what a man made in a<lb/>
week. From then on, I averaged<lb/>
$10 a show<lb/>
Though the coal bin, pantry,<lb/>
and his pockets were full, Smyth<lb/>
� wanting to "keep the cops off<lb/>
my back" � got a plant job in<lb/>
1932. It was supposed to be only<lb/>
temporary. He retired 42 years<lb/>
later.<lb/>
After retirement, Smyth con-<lb/>
tinued his puppetry, putting on<lb/>
more shows than ever. Despite<lb/>
getting up in years, he seemed as<lb/>
ageless as his hand-crafted mari-<lb/>
onettes.<lb/>
But in the winter of 1982, time<lb/>
started to close in.<lb/>
Smyth, who has two children<lb/>
and two grandchildren, was into<lb/>
the third week of a seven-month<lb/>
tour of the midwest when his auto<lb/>
skidded off the ice-covered high-<lb/>
way near Grand Rapids, Mich. At<lb/>
first, it appeared he wasn't seri-<lb/>
ously injured, but it was later<lb/>
determined he had suffered two<lb/>
broken vertabrae.<lb/>
Four years and two<lb/>
operations later, Smyth was left<lb/>
with no control of his lower legs<lb/>
and withrut feeling below his<lb/>
ankles. About the same time,<lb/>
glaucoma left himblind in onecye<lb/>
and almost blind in the other.<lb/>
Very seldom does Smyth<lb/>
open the small, drab, well-trav-<lb/>
eled suitcase containing his pup-<lb/>
pets.<lb/>
"Why bother?" he asked<lb/>
softly. "I can't see them<lb/>
"I don't want to torture my-<lb/>
self reminiscing, either he said.<lb/>
"Over the years, I put on thou-<lb/>
sands of shows for millions of<lb/>
people. I wish I could do it again,<lb/>
but I know I can't. I miss it, the<lb/>
closeness of the kids. I miss all of<lb/>
it<lb/>
Smyth slowly got up from hi<lb/>
easy chair. Leaning heavily on his<lb/>
shillelagh, he carefully walked to<lb/>
a nearby book shelf, lifting his legs<lb/>
high in the air, much like a mari-<lb/>
onette.<lb/>
Trust Baxter, he's an one time lawyer now big city cabbie<lb/>
THE BAXTER TRUST,<lb/>
ByJ.P. Hailey<lb/>
At 35, Steve Winslow is in a rut.<lb/>
He tried his hand at acting. No go.<lb/>
He tried being a lawyer. He blew<lb/>
it. Now, he drives a cab in New<lb/>
York City.<lb/>
A real loser, right? Wrong. For,<lb/>
miracle of miracles, a damsel in<lb/>
deep distress and badly in need of<lb/>
a mouthpiece opens the tele-<lb/>
phone book and finds Winslow's<lb/>
name in the lawver section. She<lb/>
J<lb/>
calls him. And, over he comes,<lb/>
with shoulder-length hair, and<lb/>
wearing blue jeans, a tan cordu-<lb/>
roy jacket and a green tie.<lb/>
When she answers the door, the<lb/>
girl, Sheila Benton, blinks and<lb/>
blinks again. But she hires<lb/>
Winslow anyway and it's a good<lb/>
thing she does. A corpse has been<lb/>
found in Sheila's apartment,<lb/>
stabbed in the back. Sheila says<lb/>
she didn't do it and doesn't even<lb/>
know the dead man. But the cops<lb/>
think she did and arrest her, even<lb/>
though they treat her very nicely<lb/>
because she is one of the heirs to a<lb/>
multimillion-dollar trust and<lb/>
niece of one of the most powerful<lb/>
men in the city.<lb/>
Winslow's efforts to vindicate<lb/>
Sheila are largely what "The<lb/>
Baxter Trust" is all about, and<lb/>
writer J.P. Hailev has done a fine<lb/>
job of detailing a murder mystery<lb/>
that contains some of the best<lb/>
courtroom dialogue put down in<lb/>
a very long time. His scenes out of<lb/>
court are good, but those taking<lb/>
place in court are superb. Truly,<lb/>
a virtuoso performance, and one<lb/>
that allows Winslow, who has<lb/>
never been in court before, to<lb/>
demonstrate he is not the push-<lb/>
over the prosecution thinks he is.<lb/>
As to who did the dirty deed �<lb/>
well, Winslow pursues a lot of<lb/>
false leads and comes up with a<lb/>
number of interesting theories<lb/>
For<lb/>
insurance<lb/>
call<lb/>
Bill McDonald<lb/>
P.O. 2429<lb/>
East 10th Street Ext.<lb/>
752-6680<lb/>
Like a good neighbor,<lb/>
State Farm is there.<lb/>
STATI FARM<lb/>
INSURANCE<lb/>
State Farm Insurance Companies<lb/>
Home Offices: Bloomington, Illinois<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIAL<lb/>
MONSAT.<lb/>
11AM-3PM<lb/>
17- 4oz. Sirloin<lb/>
Potato Bar<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
Hot Bar<lb/>
Sundae Bar<lb/>
$4.49<lb/>
I1<lb/>
Daily Specials<lb/>
10 Discount on<lb/>
Regular Priced<lb/>
Items<lb/>
With Student I.D.<lb/>
FREE DESSERT BAR<lb/>
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TAKE-OUTS OKAY<lb/>
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Meet the Delta Sigs<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Bar-B-Q<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Bid Nite<lb/>
510 E. 10th St.<lb/>
(Across from Wendy's)<lb/>
Call for Rides 757-0313<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0021"/><lb/>
18 THE EAST CAROLINlAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1988<lb/>
The animal halfpa2e<lb/>
Bears killed for eating trees<lb/>
EUGENfc, Ore. (AD - The rust-<lb/>
red trail left by a black bear last<lb/>
vear stands out in the green of the<lb/>
Coast Range, even from a ridge a<lb/>
mile away.<lb/>
Sometime in the spring or early<lb/>
summer before the berries rip-<lb/>
ened, the animal followed a game<lb/>
trail down a hillside draw. Under<lb/>
a canopy of 20-year-old Douglas<lb/>
fir, the bear nibbles and tasted its<lb/>
way from tree to tree until it found<lb/>
one it liked.<lb/>
The it stood up, grabbed the<lb/>
trunk with both paws, opened its<lb/>
mouth wide and used its front<lb/>
teeth to rake off bark to get to the<lb/>
soft white cambium layer.<lb/>
Doing what hungry bears have<lb/>
done for thousands of years, the<lb/>
bear ate the cambium off 2 or 3 feet<lb/>
of trunk, gouging a band of verti-<lb/>
cal tooth marks all the way<lb/>
around. Then it headed down the<lb/>
trail to find another tree.<lb/>
The wounded fir stayed green<lb/>
for months in this place where it<lb/>
rains 80 inches a vear. Then it ran<lb/>
out of nutrients, died and<lb/>
changed color.<lb/>
Seen from a distance on a hot<lb/>
summer day, the jagged line of 40<lb/>
or 50 red trees on the hillside<lb/>
makes perfect sense once you<lb/>
know it was made by a bear.<lb/>
But the hillside is owned by a<lb/>
timber company, and a visit to the<lb/>
damaged timber reveals that<lb/>
more trees have been stripped this<lb/>
year. Tree-eating bears are about<lb/>
as welcome in this forest as rats in<lb/>
a cheese factory, and standard<lb/>
procedure calls for them to be<lb/>
snared and "removed One of<lb/>
the steps in this process is a bullet<lb/>
in the head.<lb/>
Timber companies, environ-<lb/>
mentalists and wildlife research-<lb/>
ers want to know if there's a better<lb/>
way to deal with the inherent<lb/>
conflict between the state's largest<lb/>
industry and the estimated 25,000<lb/>
black bears that range Oregon<lb/>
forests. Bill Noble is supposed to<lb/>
find out.<lb/>
Noble, a 30-year-old graduate<lb/>
student at Oregon State Univer-<lb/>
sity, is the main researcher in a<lb/>
project in which bears are snared<lb/>
and collared with radio transmit-<lb/>
ters. Working in the forests near<lb/>
Alsea, he's supposed to learn as<lb/>
much as he can about bears in the<lb/>
areas where rees are being killed<lb/>
and in nearby "control" area<lb/>
where little or no bear damage is<lb/>
seen.<lb/>
Noble's faculty adviser on the<lb/>
project, Charles Meslow, is a vet-<lb/>
eran researcher with Oregon State<lb/>
and the federal Fish and Wildlife<lb/>
Service. A lot of people have done<lb/>
a lot of research on black bears, he<lb/>
says, but no one seems to have any<lb/>
hard answers about tree damage<lb/>
and how to control it.<lb/>
A major goal of Noble's<lb/>
$130,000 project is to get some<lb/>
clues as to whether all bears or<lb/>
only certain bears eat trees. Forest<lb/>
and wildlife managers also want<lb/>
to know if there'a anything short<lb/>
of death that will discourage<lb/>
bears from eating trees. One the-<lb/>
ory is that maybe some bears have<lb/>
a nutritional deficiency that the<lb/>
cambium satisfies.<lb/>
And even if there's not much<lb/>
short of killing bears that will<lb/>
protect the trees, the timber own-<lb/>
ers want to know if there's at least<lb/>
a way to be more sure that the<lb/>
bears they kill are the ones that<lb/>
have been eating their trees.<lb/>
When Noble finds a bear in a<lb/>
snare, he tranquilizes it and ra-<lb/>
dios for someone to help him<lb/>
gather the basic physical informa-<lb/>
tion on the animal. Then he places<lb/>
a radio collar on the bear and<lb/>
watches until he's sure that the<lb/>
animal is recovering from the<lb/>
tranquilizer. Over the year Noble<lb/>
and others will monitor the bear's<lb/>
travels using the radio collar.<lb/>
Bear damage has always been a<lb/>
problem in the Northwest woods,<lb/>
but it's flared up over the past few<lb/>
years in the central Coast range,<lb/>
and no one is sure why. Timber<lb/>
companies responded, as they<lb/>
have for decades, by having their<lb/>
employees or contract hunters<lb/>
and trappers kill bears in the areas<lb/>
where trees were being damaged.<lb/>
Although bears are protected as<lb/>
game animals, if s legal to kill a<lb/>
bear that damages private prop-<lb/>
erty, as long as the authorities are<lb/>
notified and the carcass is turned<lb/>
over for charitable or research<lb/>
use.<lb/>
It's an imprecise process that<lb/>
draws fire from environmental-<lb/>
ists who think the bears have a<lb/>
right to do what they naturally do,<lb/>
and from some recreational hunt-<lb/>
ers who believe every bear killed<lb/>
for eating trees is a bear that can't<lb/>
be hunted for sport.<lb/>
SIDEWALK SALE!<lb/>
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In Front of Greenville TV &amp; Appliance &amp; Gordon's Golf &amp; Ski<lb/>
756-1003<lb/>
7-10 a.m. Saturday, September 10th<lb/>
Skis Boots Baby items. Wool Swelters, Children's Clothes, Udles 4 Mens Ski Jackets, Housewsres. Uod<lb/>
Shirts, Boy's Shorts, Ski Hats, Socks, New k Used Apparel. Baby Clothes, Men's Pants (Size 32 34. etc ), Jr It<lb/>
Children's Sneakers, Coll Clubs, Coif Balls, Coif Bags, Mens and Ladies Coif Shoe, etc<lb/>
MANY ITEMS FROM 25c TO $5.00<lb/>
Will be postponed if it rains<lb/>
Tire &amp; Parts Inc.<lb/>
752-6838<lb/>
Kangaroos used for shoe leather<lb/>
ritu Release<lb/>
Your school's athletic pro-<lb/>
gram mav be perpetuating the<lb/>
slaughter of nearly three million<lb/>
kangaroos in Australia this year.<lb/>
What do jocks have to do with<lb/>
roos?<lb/>
Kangaroos are hunted<lb/>
mainly for their pelts, which are<lb/>
turned into a high-quality leather<lb/>
and made into, among other<lb/>
things, sport shoes. Faced with a<lb/>
Greenpeace-organized boycott in<lb/>
Europe, many sport shoe manu-<lb/>
facturers, including Nike, Puma<lb/>
and New Balance have dropped<lb/>
kangaroo leather from their<lb/>
sneakers. However, Adidas con-<lb/>
tinues to use kangaroo leather in<lb/>
its promotional shoes, which it<lb/>
gives to professional athletes and<lb/>
school athletic programs.<lb/>
After the success in Europe,<lb/>
Greenpeace is turning its atten-<lb/>
tion to the American market, the<lb/>
U.S. is the world's largest im-<lb/>
porter of raw kangaroo products.<lb/>
Targeting both running shoe<lb/>
manufacturers and the U.S. legis-<lb/>
lature, Greenpeace hopes to pres-<lb/>
sure the Australians to curtail the<lb/>
kill by drying up the American<lb/>
market for kangaroo goods.<lb/>
The Australian kangaroo<lb/>
hunt is the largest slaughter of<lb/>
wild mammals in the world. In<lb/>
addition to the commercial hunt<lb/>
of more than 2,900,000 roos for<lb/>
1988, an estimated one million<lb/>
roos will be gunned down outside<lb/>
Book review<lb/>
MONEY TROUBLE. By Wil-<lb/>
liam J. Reynolds.<lb/>
"Mystery fans hate coinci-<lb/>
dences says private investigator<lb/>
Nebraska (first name not given),<lb/>
"but they make the game<lb/>
And they do, they surely do in<lb/>
William J. Reynolds' "Money<lb/>
Trouble a title that tells it all.<lb/>
A chap named Gregg Longo<lb/>
has been gunned down by the<lb/>
Omaha police. The cops claim<lb/>
Longo wasa bandit who'd carried<lb/>
out a string of blank robberies and<lb/>
they've got the circumstantial<lb/>
evidence to prove it.<lb/>
Now the coincidences begin.<lb/>
Nebraska remembers that he<lb/>
knew Longo slightly some 20<lb/>
years back during high school<lb/>
days. Then he is contacted by<lb/>
Longo's widow, who turn out to<lb/>
be Nebraska's long-lost high<lb/>
school love, Carolyn. Carolyn<lb/>
claims she is being persecuted by<lb/>
the cops, who are trying to find<lb/>
the $78,000 or so they claim Longo<lb/>
got in hie scries of bank robberies.<lb/>
Carolyn wants Nebraska to either<lb/>
prove her dead husband innocent<lb/>
or find the stolen money.<lb/>
Eventually, Nebraska docs<lb/>
both, but the trial is a long and<lb/>
tricky one and it's full of coinci-<lb/>
dences. Like the fact that Longo<lb/>
had one of the stolen bills on him<lb/>
when he was killed and that he<lb/>
used another stolen bill to pay a<lb/>
debt. Add to that the fact that<lb/>
widow Carolyn worked in the<lb/>
same office with a man who has<lb/>
some part of another case he is<lb/>
working on. A bit confusing, but<lb/>
Reynolds is a good guide and the<lb/>
reader need have no fear, since all<lb/>
the seemingly loose ends � and<lb/>
coincidences � are neatly re-<lb/>
solved at the close.<lb/>
the government quota. Seven<lb/>
speciesof kangaroos havealready<lb/>
become extinct and twelve others<lb/>
are considered endangered under<lb/>
the Convention on International<lb/>
Trade in Endangered Spelive<lb/>
kangaroos have their legs and<lb/>
tails hacked off by shooters whose<lb/>
first shot wasn't enough to kill.<lb/>
Shooters make good money<lb/>
selling the pelts and meat, which<lb/>
is ground into pet food.<lb/>
"Calling the Australian kan-<lb/>
garoo hunt wildlife management<lb/>
is a blatant misnomer, said<lb/>
Leilani Anderson, Kangaroo<lb/>
Campaign Coordinator for<lb/>
Greenpeace USA. "The Austra-<lb/>
lian government threatens to<lb/>
manage the kangaroos to death<lb/>
The Australian govern-<lb/>
ment continues to escalate the<lb/>
kangaroo genocide by sanction-<lb/>
ing larger and larger quotas. In<lb/>
1981 an inflated population esti-<lb/>
mate of 32 million kangaroos<lb/>
prompted the U.S. Fish and Wild-<lb/>
life Service to lift a ban on kanga-<lb/>
roo imports into the U.S. Two<lb/>
years later the Australian govern-<lb/>
ment revised its estimates show-<lb/>
ing that a paltry 19 million kanga-<lb/>
roos remained. Despite the pre-<lb/>
cipitous decline, elements in the<lb/>
Australian government are en-<lb/>
couraging both human consump-<lb/>
tion of kangaroo meat and farm-<lb/>
ing roos to satiate the growing<lb/>
market for kangaroo products.<lb/>
Many of these products may<lb/>
be on your campus. The kangaroo<lb/>
issue could make a great story for<lb/>
your news organization as it di-<lb/>
rectly involves school athletics.<lb/>
Student activism could be an-<lb/>
other angle, because the Green-<lb/>
peace campaign for a Congres-<lb/>
sional ban on kangaroo imports<lb/>
should interest many young<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Greenpeace will be officially<lb/>
kicking off the kangaroo cam-<lb/>
paign in September. If you should<lb/>
want any interviews, photos or<lb/>
more information aobut the kan-<lb/>
garoo slaughter and what can be<lb/>
done to end it contact Green-<lb/>
peace.<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
SAVE! SAVE!<lb/>
ON HIGH QUALITY<lb/>
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With Student I.D.<lb/>
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At 7:00 Sunday, September 11,1988<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
A Convocation For The Black<lb/>
College Woman!<lb/>
! STRESS &amp;<lb/>
Freshmen are welcome<lb/>
Pirat<lb/>
Bv DOUG <lb/>
<lb/>
"I thought it v.<lb/>
overall : -<lb/>
This is 1<lb/>
Art Bal i<lb/>
52-13<lb/>
h<lb/>
And '<lb/>
to des<lb/>
the enorn<lb/>
from .i �<lb/>
ers. Th<lb/>
the T<lb/>
again in a -<lb/>
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wh<lb/>
hm I-<lb/>
str<lb/>
son<lb/>
1 r �<lb/>
went<lb/>
and tv<lb/>
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Re.<lb/>
yar : i<lb/>
retun<lb/>
yards<lb/>
57 m re<lb/>
And as<lb/>
Charlie<lb/>
ncl ind<lb/>
passii  ' � �<lb/>
55 v<lb/>
off for -<lb/>
record 1 i<lb/>
dium. n<lb/>
Pr<lb/>
Mr1<lb/>
c<lb/>
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I<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
Art Baker listens<lb/>
calMPhoti bj I<lb/>
Marylc<lb/>
strong<lb/>
unior N<lb/>
touchdov'<lb/>
anoth( � -<lb/>
terbui <lb/>
seas '<lb/>
Saturd<lb/>
Tra<lb/>
the -<lb/>
yard driv<lb/>
J-yard �<lb/>
O I<lb/>
even. :<lb/>
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Verr<lb/>
ing pass with<lb/>
ter . ; Mai<lb/>
vantage n<lb/>
one pla) a<lb/>
On the first <lb/>
next possess n<lb/>
nerback I B. Bn w n I<lb/>
Jay Gruden ; <lb/>
38-yard line<lb/>
Four pla -<lb/>
drove into the end<lb/>
yard sneak givinj<lb/>
10 lead on the final �<lb/>
period<lb/>
' O'Donncii complete<lb/>
passes for 128<lb/>
touchdowns m the deJ<lb/>
ter In all, he complete<lb/>
passes tot 239 )<lb/>
touchdowns and on<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0022"/><lb/>
ALE!<lb/>
k Gordon's Golf &amp; Ski<lb/>
�ptember 10th<lb/>
.�� &amp; Mem Si Jickm, Houstwam Izod<lb/>
k e Men � Pants (Sla 32 4 H etc.). Jr. k<lb/>
L. Men and Lad�Colf Shoe, etc.<lb/>
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It rains<lb/>
r<lb/>
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JALITY<lb/>
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NG<lb/>
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A:<lb/>
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4<lb/>
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Y.<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
P6<lb/>
ness<lb/>
11,1988<lb/>
nter<lb/>
lack<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1988 Page 21<lb/>
Pirates cruise past Golden Eagles 52-13<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sport Editor<lb/>
"1 thought it was just a great<lb/>
overall performance<lb/>
This is how Pirate Head Coach<lb/>
Art Baker summed up Saturday's<lb/>
52-13 victory over Tennessee<lb/>
Tech.<lb/>
And this is about the only way<lb/>
to describe the game, because of<lb/>
the enormity of contributions<lb/>
from a number of the Pirate play-<lb/>
ers. The Pirate offense exploited<lb/>
the Tech defense time and time<lb/>
again in a seemingly effortless,<lb/>
workman-like fashion, a defense<lb/>
which according to Eagles Coach<lb/>
hm Ragland was "one oi the<lb/>
strong points going into the sea-<lb/>
son<lb/>
For example, Travis Hunter<lb/>
went six for eight for 114 yards<lb/>
and two touchdowns passing,<lb/>
adding 29 more on the ground.<lb/>
Reggie McKinnev ran for 7<lb/>
yards, adding b7 more on kick<lb/>
returns. Tim James rushed for 5b<lb/>
yards, and caught two passes for<lb/>
7 more.<lb/>
And as if that wasn't enough,<lb/>
Charlie Libretto came oii the<lb/>
bench and went three for three<lb/>
passing for 28 yards, and ran for<lb/>
5 yards and two touchdowns,<lb/>
junior Robinson returned a kick-<lb/>
off for98 yards for a touchdown, a<lb/>
record for a game in Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium. The offensive line opened<lb/>
gaping holes. The defense held<lb/>
Tech to only 277 total yards and 13<lb/>
points.<lb/>
What else could Baker say?<lb/>
The Firates set the tempo for the<lb/>
game in front of the 29,700 plus<lb/>
crowd from the outset, when jun-<lb/>
ior Robinson returned the open-<lb/>
ing kick-off from his own goal-<lb/>
line out to the Firate 26 yard line.<lb/>
On the first play from scrim-<lb/>
mage, fullback Tim James got the<lb/>
call, and carried the ball up the gut<lb/>
of the defense for a 12 yard gain.<lb/>
After another carry by James and<lb/>
an incomplete pass, Travis<lb/>
Hunter found tailback Reggie<lb/>
McKinney coming across the<lb/>
middle for an eleven yard com-<lb/>
pletion down to the Tech 47 yard<lb/>
line. Two plays later, on an option<lb/>
left, Hunter pitched the ball to<lb/>
running back Jarrod Moody, who<lb/>
cut off a block on the corner and<lb/>
ran down the sideline for a 44 yard<lb/>
touchdown. "It was just a simple<lb/>
option play Moody said after<lb/>
the game, "what we've been run-<lb/>
ning for a long time, and when<lb/>
Travis pitched me the ball, I got a<lb/>
great block from Reggie McKin-<lb/>
ney, and the line sealed of the<lb/>
backside. They did a good job<lb/>
Rob Imperato added the extra<lb/>
point, giving the Firates a 7-0 lead<lb/>
with only 3:12 clasped.<lb/>
Firate fans didn't have to wait<lb/>
long for another Firate score. Af-<lb/>
ter three unsuccessful offensive<lb/>
plays by Golden Eagles they were<lb/>
forced to punt, turning the ball<lb/>
over to ECU on their own 29 yard<lb/>
line. On a penalty plagued drive,<lb/>
the Firate's Darren Bynum found<lb/>
the end zone on a 30 yard reverse,<lb/>
only to have the touchdown nulli-<lb/>
fied by an illegal motion penalty.<lb/>
James pounded the middle, gain-<lb/>
ing 25 yards in the course of the<lb/>
series to keep the Firate drive<lb/>
alive, before Hunter threw a 30<lb/>
yard touchdown strike to Bojack<lb/>
Davenport with 7:40 remaining in<lb/>
the first quarter. Imperato added<lb/>
the extra point, improving the<lb/>
Firate lead to 14-0.<lb/>
But the first quarter was not<lb/>
through, and neither were the<lb/>
Firates. A stingy ECU defense<lb/>
held the Eagles to only 17 yards on<lb/>
their next possession, and Tech<lb/>
was forced to punt, rolling the ball<lb/>
dead on the Firate nine yard line.<lb/>
Reggie McKinney took the ball<lb/>
out to the 23 yard line before<lb/>
another illegal procedure penalty<lb/>
took the Firates back to the 18. On<lb/>
the next play, Hunter faded back,<lb/>
and flipped a short screen pass to<lb/>
James on the left side. James made<lb/>
a leaping, one-handed grab, then,<lb/>
behind his blockers, ran through<lb/>
and over the Eagle defense, finally<lb/>
being pulled down 40 yards later<lb/>
at theTech 42 yard line. Two plays<lb/>
later, Bynum cut loose on another<lb/>
end around, the same play that he<lb/>
had scored on earlier, picking up<lb/>
25 vardsdown to theTech 13. Two<lb/>
plays later Hunter found Moody<lb/>
in the end zone for a 12 yard<lb/>
touchdown, Hunter's second of<lb/>
the quarter. "Travis was really<lb/>
sharp tonight throwing the ball<lb/>
Baker commented after the con-<lb/>
test. Imperato added the extra<lb/>
point, and the Firates led 21-0<lb/>
with 1:57 remaining in the quar-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
The Golden Eagles were finally<lb/>
able to engineer a successful drive<lb/>
at the end of the first quarter and<lb/>
the beginning of the second,<lb/>
going 53 yards down to the Firate<lb/>
21 before stalling. They were<lb/>
forced to settle for a 38 yard field<lb/>
goal by Eagle place kicker Ryan<lb/>
Weeks.<lb/>
Charlie Libretto cruises into the en<lb/>
Walters).<lb/>
Lightening struck again on the<lb/>
Eagle's subsequent kick-off in the<lb/>
form of Junior Robinson. Robin-<lb/>
son took Weeks' kick on his own 2<lb/>
yard line, and streaked 98 yards<lb/>
for a touchdown, with the help of<lb/>
some spectacular blocking, espe-<lb/>
cially two thrown downfield bv<lb/>
Willie Lewis and Glenn Willis. "I<lb/>
had a big hole to run through,<lb/>
because everybody had the right<lb/>
block Robinson said. "I got a<lb/>
really good block fromGIenn,and<lb/>
I just cut of it and went in Imper-<lb/>
ato added the extra point, taking<lb/>
the ECU lead to 28-3.<lb/>
On Tech's next series, quarter-<lb/>
back Thomas DeBow was picked<lb/>
off by the Firate's Glenn Willis.<lb/>
The Firates couldn't move the<lb/>
ball, but Imperato stepped in and<lb/>
kicked a 44 yard field goal, clear-<lb/>
ing up some oi the doubts about<lb/>
the kickirtg-gamein the process,<lb/>
and boosting the Firate lead to 31 -<lb/>
3 with 8:09 remaining in the half.<lb/>
d zone for one of his two toucdown scrambles. (Photo by Thomas<lb/>
"Our kicking game was surpris-<lb/>
ingly good tonight Baker com-<lb/>
mented after the game, "I was<lb/>
very pleased with our effort<lb/>
The two squads then traded the<lb/>
ball for the remainder of the half,<lb/>
neither able to get close to the<lb/>
opposing end zone. As the last<lb/>
seconds ticked of the clock the<lb/>
Firates started for the locker room<lb/>
with a commanding 28 point lead.<lb/>
ECU started the second half<lb/>
much as they had ended the first.<lb/>
After a kick-off to the Eagles to<lb/>
open the half, the Firate defense<lb/>
took the field, and forced the<lb/>
Eagles to give up the ball after<lb/>
only a few plays. The offense<lb/>
came on and, behind runs by<lb/>
Hunter of 26 yards and McKinney<lb/>
of nine, nine, and 17 yards respec-<lb/>
tively, the Firates drove down to<lb/>
the Tech five yard line. On the<lb/>
next play, McKinney took the<lb/>
pitch from Hunter and cruised<lb/>
across the goal line for the score.<lb/>
Imperato added the extra point,<lb/>
making the score 38-3.<lb/>
On the next series, the Golden<lb/>
Eagles scored their only touch-<lb/>
down of the game, on a 71 vard<lb/>
pass from DeBow to Kenneth Gil-<lb/>
strap. Weeks added the extra<lb/>
point, boosting the score to 38-10<lb/>
At this point, the Firates began<lb/>
to shuffle in their second team<lb/>
players Led by Charlie Libretto<lb/>
and running backs Willie Lewis,<lb/>
Dcnell Harper, and David<lb/>
Daniels, the Firates engineered a<lb/>
time consuming 7:34 drive, end<lb/>
ing with a Libretto keeper for a<lb/>
four yard touchdown.<lb/>
Tech drove the length of the<lb/>
field on their next possession but,<lb/>
once again the defense stopped<lb/>
them in close, and the Eagles' had<lb/>
to settle for a 38 yard field goal bv<lb/>
Weeks, cutting the Firate lead to<lb/>
45-10 with 11:38 remaining in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
See PIRATES, page 25<lb/>
Virginia wins season opener<lb/>
Art Baker listens to his coaches upstairs, and makes a touchdown<lb/>
call. (Photo by Thomas Walters).<lb/>
Maryland wins in<lb/>
strong comeback<lb/>
COLLEGE FARK, Md. (AF) �<lb/>
Junior Neil O'Donnell threw two<lb/>
touchdown passes and ran for<lb/>
another score in a 21 -0 third-quar-<lb/>
ter burst that carried Maryland to<lb/>
a 27-16 victory over Louisville in a<lb/>
season-opener for both schools<lb/>
Saturday night.<lb/>
Trailing 10-3, Maryland opened<lb/>
the second half with a 13-play, 78-<lb/>
vard drive that culminated with a<lb/>
3-yard touchdown pass from<lb/>
O'Donnell to Mike Beasley to<lb/>
even the score at 10-10.<lb/>
O'Donnell then connected with<lb/>
Vernon Joines for a 66-yard scor-<lb/>
ing pass with 1:47 left in the quar-<lb/>
ter, giving Maryland a 17-10 ad-<lb/>
vantage. The touchdown came<lb/>
one play after a Louisville punt.<lb/>
On the first play of Louisville's<lb/>
next possession, Maryland cor-<lb/>
ncrback J.B. Brown intercepted a<lb/>
fay Gruden pass at the Louisville<lb/>
38-yard line.<lb/>
Four plays later, O'Donnell<lb/>
drove into the end zone on a 1-<lb/>
yard sneak, giving Maryland a 24-<lb/>
10 lead on the final play of the<lb/>
period.<lb/>
O'Donnell completed nine of 11<lb/>
passes for 128 yards and two<lb/>
touchdowns in the decisive quar-<lb/>
ter. In all, he completed 22 of 33<lb/>
passes for 239 yards with two<lb/>
touchdowns and one intercep-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Louisville pulled within 24-16<lb/>
when Gruden threw his second<lb/>
touchdown pass to Chad Fortune,<lb/>
a 3-yarder, with 7:44 remaining.<lb/>
The extra-point attempt went<lb/>
wide to the left.<lb/>
Dan Flocki completed the scor-<lb/>
ing with a 47-yard field goal with<lb/>
2:09 remaining for the Terps.<lb/>
Louisville controlled the game<lb/>
in the opening quarter. The Cardi-<lb/>
nals opened a 10-0 lead when<lb/>
Gruden connected with Fortune<lb/>
on a 40-yard touchdown pass<lb/>
with 1:07 remaining in the period.<lb/>
That completion moved<lb/>
Gruden into second place in ca-<lb/>
reer passing yards at Louisville.<lb/>
Gruden completed 28 of 45 passes<lb/>
for 319 yards in the game. That<lb/>
yardage total gives the senior<lb/>
4,823 for his career. Ed Rubbert<lb/>
holds the Louisville record with<lb/>
5,496 yards.<lb/>
The Terps pulled within 10-3<lb/>
with 10:49 left in the first half on a<lb/>
35-yard field goal by Flocki.<lb/>
Louisville opened the scoring<lb/>
when Ron Bell made a 29-yard<lb/>
field goal with 5:10 left in the first<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Maryland, which averaged 88<lb/>
yards rushing per game last year,<lb/>
gained 176 yards on the ground.<lb/>
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AF)<lb/>
� It wasn't what Virginia had in<lb/>
mind as the Cavaliers prepare for<lb/>
a date next week with No. 20 Fenn<lb/>
State.<lb/>
"They nickle and dimed us to<lb/>
death in the first half Virginia<lb/>
defensive back Kevin Cook said<lb/>
after the Cavaliers came back<lb/>
from a 17-10 half time deficit for a<lb/>
31-23 victory over William &amp;<lb/>
Mary Saturday night.<lb/>
"We turned it on in the second<lb/>
half Cook said, "but we're not<lb/>
going to be able to do it all year<lb/>
against teams that are maybe a<lb/>
little better<lb/>
Tailback Marcus Wilson scored<lb/>
touchdowns on Virginia's first<lb/>
two possessions of the second half<lb/>
as the Cavaliers kicked off their<lb/>
100th year of football with the<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
The game also was the season<lb/>
opener for William &amp; Mary, a<lb/>
Division I-AA school which had<lb/>
won the last two meetings be-<lb/>
tween the two teams.<lb/>
Virginia Coach George Welsh<lb/>
said the Cavaliers need to get<lb/>
more aggressive when they play<lb/>
Penn State.<lb/>
"I d n't think this team has<lb/>
foun elf yet Welsh said. "We<lb/>
have .een dull. We haven't been<lb/>
enthusiastic. And that's going to<lb/>
hurt us<lb/>
"Overall, they wore us<lb/>
down William &amp; Mary coach<lb/>
Jimye Laycock said. "It took its<lb/>
toll. Their quickness and ability to<lb/>
come from the back side hurt us<lb/>
The Indians built their halftime<lb/>
advantage behind the passing of<lb/>
John Brosnahan and the running<lb/>
of Allan Williams.<lb/>
Virginia put together a 75-yard,<lb/>
seven play drive on its first pos-<lb/>
session of the second half, with<lb/>
Wilson running 20 yards up the<lb/>
middle to tie the game at 10:55 of<lb/>
the third quarter.<lb/>
On William &amp; Mary's first play<lb/>
from scrimmage after the ensuing<lb/>
kickoff, Viginia linebacker Ray<lb/>
Savage stripped the ball from Ray<lb/>
Kingsfield and the Cavaliers' Phil<lb/>
Thomas recovered at the Indians'<lb/>
18-yard line.<lb/>
Quarterback Shawn Moore ran<lb/>
18 yards for a score on the next<lb/>
play, but the touchdown was<lb/>
called back by a holding penalty.<lb/>
Five plays later, Moore hit Wilson<lb/>
on a 4-yard scoring pass for a 24-<lb/>
17 Virginia lead midway through<lb/>
the quarter.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary responded<lb/>
with a 44-yard drive that ended<lb/>
when Steve Christie tied his own<lb/>
school record with a 53-yard field<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
Early in the fourth quarter, the<lb/>
Indian's Aurelius Henderson in-<lb/>
tercepted a deflected Moore pass<lb/>
and returned it 23 vards to the<lb/>
J<lb/>
Virginia 12. But the William &amp;<lb/>
Mary drive stalled, and Christie<lb/>
hit a 22-yard field goal at the 12:27<lb/>
mark to cut the gap to 24-23.<lb/>
After each team swapped pos-<lb/>
sessions, Virginia moved 82 yards<lb/>
in six plays with Moore going in<lb/>
on 1-yard keeper for the final<lb/>
score with 3:58 to play. The key<lb/>
play in the drive was a short pass<lb/>
from Moore to Kevin Morgan,<lb/>
who turned it into a 51-yard gain<lb/>
to the William &amp; Mary 10.<lb/>
Virginia went up 3-0 in the first<lb/>
quarter on Mark Inderlied's 21-<lb/>
yard field goal before William &amp;<lb/>
Mary came back with a 71-yard<lb/>
march that Williams finished off<lb/>
with a 1-yard scoring run.<lb/>
Virginia took the kickorf and<lb/>
See VIRGINIA, page23<lb/>
Pirate's Booty<lb/>
Credit to those deserving it<lb/>
that don't. It takes these guys a<lb/>
long time and a lot of effort to<lb/>
transform a plot of gTass into a<lb/>
football field that can serve as a<lb/>
proper representative of the Ath-<lb/>
letic Department and the Univer-<lb/>
sity. Anyway, the field looked<lb/>
great, and I think the guys in<lb/>
operations deserve our gratitude.<lb/>
Now to the thing that I don't<lb/>
think anyone noticed, and to a de-<lb/>
partment on campus that doesn't<lb/>
receive nearly the credit that they<lb/>
deserve. I'm referring, of course,<lb/>
to the Sports Information Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
By DOUGJOHNSON<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
First off, let me say that I hope<lb/>
that everyone enjoyed the game. I<lb/>
sureashell did. I really had a great<lb/>
time watching the game. But 1 no-<lb/>
ticed a few other things, a few<lb/>
things that maybe some other<lb/>
people noticed, and some things<lb/>
that I'm sure no one in the stands<lb/>
saw. So I decided that I would<lb/>
devote today's column to giving<lb/>
credit where credit is due.<lb/>
First, the thing that some of you<lb/>
probably noticed. The field.<lb/>
Didn't it look great? Many people<lb/>
probably take for granted the way<lb/>
the field looks at the games. But I<lb/>
know a few guys in Operations<lb/>
Now, I'm sure you didn't real-<lb/>
ize this, and I'm equally sure that<lb/>
Sports Information were greatly<lb/>
responsible for the story that you<lb/>
just read about the game. But<lb/>
don't hold that against them. I<lb/>
mean, as soon as the first quarter<lb/>
was over, a very attractive<lb/>
woman came up to me and gave<lb/>
me, and me alone, a complete list<lb/>
of the first quarter stats. (Okay, so<lb/>
she may ha ve gi ven a copy to all of<lb/>
the other writers in the press box,<lb/>
too. But let me have my fantasies.)<lb/>
This same thing happened at the<lb/>
half, at the end of the third quar-<lb/>
ter, and at the end of the game.<lb/>
Any stat, any fact, or any an-<lb/>
swer that I may have needed<lb/>
about the game, either team, the<lb/>
coaches, etc. were immediately<lb/>
supplied by a hurrying, scum ing<lb/>
SI person. As a matter of fact, I<lb/>
really didn't have to be in the<lb/>
press box at all. I could have been<lb/>
drunk and raising hell in the<lb/>
stands with the rest of you. All I<lb/>
would have had to do was go up<lb/>
at the end of the game, and get the<lb/>
little package that they gave me. It<lb/>
had everything. Team stats, indi-<lb/>
vidual stats, scoring drives, blah,<lb/>
blah, blah. Hell, they even had<lb/>
quotes from the coaches in there.<lb/>
So what I guess I'm trying to<lb/>
say, in a round about, is thanks a<lb/>
lot, all of you, Dean and George<lb/>
and Tina and Carolyn and Tom,<lb/>
and anyone else that I may have<lb/>
forgotten, for making my job, and<lb/>
the job of all the other writers, so<lb/>
much easier and more enjoyable. I<lb/>
hope that the SI people at all of the<lb/>
schools that the Pirates play on thi<lb/>
road will be as competent ana<lb/>
cooperative as you all are, al<lb/>
though I really can't see this bein<lb/>
the case.<lb/>
And finally, thanks to the an-<lb/>
nouncer in the press box, who<lb/>
busted on the Tennessee Tech<lb/>
Dean and his entourage when<lb/>
they got too rowdy. Way to go,<lb/>
guy. Later.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0023"/><lb/>
22 THE EAST CAROLIN1 AN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6.1988<lb/>
Blue Devils get first victory<lb/>
EVANSTON, ILL. (AD- Duke<lb/>
Coach Steve Spurrier summed up<lb/>
Saturday night's 31-21 victory<lb/>
over Northwestern perfectly.<lb/>
"We came out of the box real<lb/>
quick, and we played extremely<lb/>
except for a few times Spurrier<lb/>
said. "We wanted to run more but<lb/>
we went to what we do best and<lb/>
that is pass<lb/>
Anthony Dilwig provided the<lb/>
passing as he completed 29 of 40<lb/>
passes for 353 yards and a pair of<lb/>
touchdowns while Randy Jones<lb/>
made a pair of 1-yard touchdown<lb/>
runs set up by Dilweg's passes.<lb/>
"1 just stood there and saw most<lb/>
of my passes completed said<lb/>
Dilweg. "My receivers were wide<lb/>
open. I was amazed surprised.<lb/>
The middle was wide open be-<lb/>
cause they respected our deep<lb/>
threat<lb/>
Dilweg's touchdown passes<lb/>
went to Clarkston Hines for 18<lb/>
yards and Dave Colonna for 8<lb/>
yards. Hines caught 8 passes for<lb/>
131 yards.<lb/>
"He was the hole in the win-<lb/>
dow said Dilweg.<lb/>
Spurrier said that the middle<lb/>
was open for the medium passes<lb/>
because "Their linebackers were<lb/>
snug on our line of scrimmage<lb/>
Northwestern Coach Francis<lb/>
Peay, was aware of that because<lb/>
"We wanted to take away their<lb/>
screen passes but we helped them<lb/>
find something they didn't have<lb/>
Northwestern also found some-<lb/>
thing it didn't have, the passing<lb/>
combination of Greg Bradshaw to<lb/>
Richard Buchanan.<lb/>
The two hooked up for three<lb/>
touchdowns on passes of 19, 26<lb/>
and 18 yards, the last coming with<lb/>
five seconds left in the game to cut<lb/>
Duke's margin of victory.<lb/>
"We didn' t come of f the football<lb/>
and we got smacked in the<lb/>
mouth said Peay.<lb/>
Duke's Blue Devils took com-<lb/>
mand of the game in the first half<lb/>
and raced to a 28-0 lead before<lb/>
North western's passing combi-<lb/>
nation of Bradshaw to Buchanan<lb/>
began to click.<lb/>
The two hooked up for a 19-<lb/>
yard touchdown with 1.03 left in<lb/>
the first half and Bradshaw com-<lb/>
pleted a 26-yard touchdown pass<lb/>
to Buchanan midway in the third<lb/>
quarter to cut the lead to 28-13.<lb/>
With five seconds left in the<lb/>
game, Bradshaw threw an 18-<lb/>
yard TD pass to Buchanan.<lb/>
Northwestern's Wildcats put<lb/>
on another threat in the third<lb/>
quarter but Bradshaw was sacked<lb/>
on successive plays by John<lb/>
Howell and Anthony Allen, forc-<lb/>
ing Northwestern into a punting<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Early in the fourth quarter,<lb/>
Duke threatened with Dilweg<lb/>
hitting Hines with passes of 16<lb/>
and 10 years but the Blue Devils<lb/>
settled for a 20-yard field goal by<lb/>
Doug Peterson and a safe 31-13<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
It marked the first time North-<lb/>
western had played a home night<lb/>
game in 45 years, but the portable<lb/>
lights did little to help the Wild-<lb/>
cats who have not won a season<lb/>
opener since 1975.<lb/>
Dilweg was sacked by Kurt<lb/>
Kundergreen on the third play<lb/>
from scrimmage for a seven yard<lb/>
loss. But from then on through the<lb/>
first quarter, Dilweg was perfect<lb/>
as he completed his first nine<lb/>
passes for 143 yards before miss-<lb/>
ing his first attempt in the second<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Dilweg drove Duke to the<lb/>
Northwestern 27-yard line and<lb/>
then completed a 21-yard pass to<lb/>
Colonna. But Colonna fumbled<lb/>
after the catch and Northwestern<lb/>
recovered.<lb/>
The Wildcats were forced to<lb/>
punt and Wyatt Smith returned<lb/>
42 yards to the Northwestern 13.<lb/>
Randy Jones needed only three<lb/>
plays to score from the 1 -yard line<lb/>
for a 7-0 lead.<lb/>
On Duke's next posession,<lb/>
Dilweg hit Hines with an 18-yard<lb/>
touchdown pass and a 14-0 lead.<lb/>
The Blue Devils then put to-<lb/>
gether two devastating drives for<lb/>
touchdowns, They went 82 yards<lb/>
in 17 plays with Randy Jones scor-<lb/>
ing from the 1-yard line and then<lb/>
marched 90 yards, capped by an<lb/>
8-yard TD pass from Dilweg to<lb/>
Colonna for a 28-0 lead �<lb/>
At that point all Northwestern<lb/>
backers had to cheer were kick<lb/>
returns By Pat New. New re-<lb/>
turned a punt for 43 yards and<lb/>
also had a 43-yard kickoff return.<lb/>
After Colonna's touchdown.<lb/>
New returned a kick 31 yards to<lb/>
the Northwestern 40. Bradshaw<lb/>
then completed a 41 yard pass to<lb/>
Randy McClellan and followed<lb/>
with his 19-yard touchdown pass<lb/>
to Buchanan to cut the Duke lead<lb/>
to 28-7 at the half.<lb/>
Thompson gets new start<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) The ex-<lb/>
pansion Charlotte Hornets said<lb/>
they don't plan to test David<lb/>
Thompson for drugs, but under<lb/>
the NBAs drug plan, front-office<lb/>
employees are subject to dis-<lb/>
missal if they test positive for ille-<lb/>
gal substances.<lb/>
The two-time national player of<lb/>
the year left N.C. State for a seem-<lb/>
inglv bright future in the pros in<lb/>
1975. But by the early 1980s, his<lb/>
star had dimmed as he lost a battle<lb/>
with cocaine.<lb/>
Thompson, hired as the team's<lb/>
director of community relations,<lb/>
admitted last week that his drug<lb/>
abuse began while a star player<lb/>
with the Denver Nuggets.<lb/>
"The first experience I had with<lb/>
drugs was just using small<lb/>
amounts he told The News and<lb/>
Observer of Raleigh. "It was just a<lb/>
social thing. I tell you when it<lb/>
really got bad was when free-bas-<lb/>
ing (smoking cocaine) became a<lb/>
fad. You can go through a lot of<lb/>
drugs quickly. It's a lot more<lb/>
addicting than just snorting<lb/>
Thompson said he has been<lb/>
clean of drugs since he left jail in<lb/>
1987. He has been in his home-<lb/>
town of Shelby for nine months,<lb/>
getting his life squared away.<lb/>
Several weeks ago, he ap-<lb/>
proached the Hornete about a job.<lb/>
"I have nothing to hide Th-<lb/>
ompson said. "It's been well-<lb/>
documented. It's time for me to<lb/>
tell my side of it. I don't think I'm<lb/>
a bad guy. I have an illness. It's a<lb/>
problem that's prevalent in soci-<lb/>
ety now. I'm a guy that's over-<lb/>
come it and is on the road back<lb/>
Carl Scheer, the Hornet's vice<lb/>
president, acknowledged there's<lb/>
no guarantee Thompson had<lb/>
solved his problem.<lb/>
"I know the percentage of re-<lb/>
covery is not very high. I hope he<lb/>
doesn't fail. 1 want him to<lb/>
succeed he said.<lb/>
"1 was overwhelmed by the<lb/>
response David received from the<lb/>
community here, the children and<lb/>
adults who came to David, asking<lb/>
for his autograph said majority<lb/>
owner George Shinn. "It re-<lb/>
minded me of what a great athlete<lb/>
he was and what a great athlete he<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
R<lb/>
U<lb/>
S<lb/>
H<lb/>
COME AS YOU ARE<lb/>
Wear a coat and tie or jeans and t-shirt. The main thing is to be<lb/>
yourself. At Alpha Sig we all are individuals; a group of men<lb/>
from different backgrounds which come together to form a<lb/>
stronger brotherhood. Please come visit the brothers and little<lb/>
sisters during rush to see what we are all about. And be sure to<lb/>
come as you are.<lb/>
TUES. SEPT. 6 - Pig Pickin'<lb/>
WED. SEPT. 7 - Pizza and Pool Tourney<lb/>
THURS. SEPT. 8 - Meet the Chi Omega's<lb/>
All Freshmen Welcome<lb/>
was and what he meant to our<lb/>
state<lb/>
"Right now, I'm looking for-<lb/>
ward to having a glimmer of<lb/>
hope Thompson said at a Char-<lb/>
lotte news conference last week<lb/>
after he was hired.<lb/>
MARATHON<lb/>
RESTAURANTS<lb/>
Greek Owned &amp; Operated Since 1979<lb/>
Delivery Hours<lb/>
Mon. - Fri. 4-11<lb/>
Sat. - Sun. 11-11<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
GREEK DISHES<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
GREEK PASTRIES<lb/>
'Best Deal in Town"<lb/>
752-0326<lb/>
or<lb/>
752-3753<lb/>
560 Evans St.<lb/>
�Pftnans<lb/>
MENS WEAR<lb/>
Khaki<lb/>
and<lb/>
Bucks<lb/>
Khakis and Dirty Bucks<lb/>
have been a by-word in<lb/>
every young man's ward-<lb/>
robe since World War II.<lb/>
We're not sure who can take<lb/>
credit for first putting the<lb/>
two together, but the love<lb/>
affair for these two timeless<lb/>
pieces of clothing continues<lb/>
both on and off campus.<lb/>
This fall Coffman's con-<lb/>
tinues to offer you some<lb/>
great values to help you<lb/>
build your fall wardrobe.<lb/>
Khakis and Bucksbasics for a<lb/>
young man's campus or<lb/>
weekend wardrobe. At all<lb/>
three of our Coffman's<lb/>
stores you'll find these spe-<lb/>
cial values during August.<lb/>
Pre-washed cotton<lb/>
 Duckheadspleated<lb/>
vHk<lb/>
� pair for T"D.30<lb/>
Our Own Coffman's<lb/>
 Fine Quality Khakis front 2 pair for s62.95<lb/>
pleated<lb/>
pair tor<lb/>
69.95<lb/>
Our Own Coffman's<lb/>
� Dirty Buckss59.50<lb/>
oPPmans<lb/>
MENS WEAR<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
CAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
TARRYTOWN MALL - Rocky Mount<lb/>
Wher<lb/>
i A. . is <lb/>
.H'l tin i <lb/>
the su.<lb/>
It � hild is m<lb/>
m hool he will no doubt<lb/>
. rite a rep rt<lb/>
�<lb/>
in sch ol ma<lb/>
With U :<lb/>
to use<lb/>
mak thai<lb/>
There<lb/>
k.r th<lb/>
m �<lb/>
(rating it<lb/>
encoui<lb/>
tos<lb/>
�<lb/>
the j<lb/>
ol <lb/>
u<lb/>
<lb/>
blui<lb/>
i ,<lb/>
�<lb/>
;k ai<lb/>
Antarctic reei<lb/>
at Post Office<lb/>
hut<lb/>
As<lb/>
w!<lb/>
block<lb/>
rtiel<lb/>
-n individu<lb/>
nber i I<lb/>
�<lb/>
horiztwu.ii fcnn.ii design,<lb/>
scene depicting each m,<lb/>
means of travel is shown afjj<lb/>
right with a map of the :<lb/>
gion .is a backd black<lb/>
ted line follows the route of tral<lb/>
The four stamps are arrai j<lb/>
chronological order, left I I<lb/>
md top to bottom, start; i<lb/>
Palmer, who on Nov<lb/>
became the first Americai I<lb/>
continent. His sailir j<lb/>
i kw is based on a lir<lb/>
ided b) the Old I<lb/>
Museum ot Stonington Cof<lb/>
the explorer's hometown.<lb/>
V a v v lieutenant (<lb/>
Wilkes, who proved dui<lb/>
expedition ol 1839 43 that Ana<lb/>
tu.i isacontiru rtt,isont <lb/>
adhesive in the block. The<lb/>
of Wilkes is based on an ll<lb/>
painting by Samuel Ml Wat<lb/>
provided by the National I<lb/>
Gallery. Wilkes'ship con - a<lb/>
National Geographic Society<lb/>
erence materials<lb/>
Admiral Richard E. Byrd i<lb/>
st known American explord<lb/>
the Antarctic, fie condi<lb/>
expeditions to the region,<lb/>
oversaw extensive scienfl<lb/>
study and photographic mapn<lb/>
i the continent by air It is ml<lb/>
esting tor collectors to note<lb/>
stamps were issued in 19 I<lb/>
and 1935 to honor Rv rd S seci<lb/>
Antarctic expedition, chart I<lb/>
course he took in establish<lb/>
Little America<lb/>
The likeness of Bvrd is a 0<lb/>
posite based on National Tort<lb/>
Gallery photos and his plan!<lb/>
based on National Geograr<lb/>
Society photos.<lb/>
Lincoln Ellsworth, feature)<lb/>
the fourth stamp, was the firi<lb/>
fly over both the Arctic and<lb/>
Antarctic He was the leadej<lb/>
four expeditions during<lb/>
1930s in 1935, Ellsworth mac<lb/>
daring four-stop, 22-day fligl<lb/>
a single-engine plane His pot<lb/>
also is a composite taken ft<lb/>
se eral photographs from<lb/>
Library of Congress. The plat<lb/>
based on National Geograi<lb/>
photos.<lb/>
Ninety percent ot Antarctic<lb/>
covered with ice, glaciated<lb/>
about 170,000 years. Antarc<lb/>
has the world's coldest temj<lb/>
tures - 20 degrees colder than<lb/>
Arctic - and at 6,000 feet, has<lb/>
highest average altitude of<lb/>
continent.<lb/>
No wonder this fore!<lb/>
continent has been a challenj<lb/>
mankind!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0024"/><lb/>
Ill 1 As IA KOI INIAN<lb/>
si I'M MBI k ��-�<lb/>
RANTS<lb/>
Where did the summer go ?<lb/>
5 IES<lb/>
1 IKS<lb/>
nun'<lb/>
0326<lb/>
3753<lb/>
is it back to<lb/>
adi ' Whore did<lb/>
I id is in elementary<lb/>
loubl be asked<lb/>
I on w hat he did<lb/>
i i ation At<lb/>
I va .is w hen 1 w as<lb/>
- ears ago<lb/>
vpensiv c eas<lb/>
ficalh dc<lb/>
. ti rs w In not<lb/>
: t niih h more in<lb/>
i. ad antages<lb/>
in era Not<lb/>
� il report<lb/>
'his<lb/>
: also be<lb/>
re about<lb/>
itei aca<lb/>
ntribute<lb/>
; as the<lb/>
Id to<lb/>
ework<lb/>
sj :� ITie<lb/>
! some<lb/>
ire tak<lb/>
i : hings<lb/>
Lshutl �<lb/>
h it, to<lb/>
�<lb/>
i i the<lb/>
: forms<lb/>
� c An<lb/>
. I like a<lb/>
Some elementary schools do<lb/>
have some sort of photographic<lb/>
activities tor students. At the jun<lb/>
lor and senior high school levels<lb/>
Photographic help is much more<lb/>
prevalent. Some even have photo<lb/>
clubs or regular classes where<lb/>
students can take advantage ot<lb/>
advanced instruction in process<lb/>
ing and printing, as well as shoot-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The major problem I've en-<lb/>
countered with the very young<lb/>
student photographers is teach-<lb/>
ing them to be more selective<lb/>
about the pictures they take.<lb/>
Hand a younster a new camera<lb/>
and. in his enthusiasm to get out<lb/>
and shoot pictures, he'll burn upa<lb/>
rollot 10,12, 24, and even 3b expo<lb/>
sures in no time flat indis<lb/>
erectly shooting anything that<lb/>
appears in front ot the camera.<lb/>
When Mom and Dad are paying<lb/>
the film and processing costs, that<lb/>
i an sometimes be rather prohibi-<lb/>
tive. It can also be disappointing<lb/>
when you see all the not-so-hot<lb/>
vasted pictures.<lb/>
For the tirst tew rolls, parents<lb/>
should help guide the younster,<lb/>
not only in the economics ot<lb/>
trying to make every shot count<lb/>
toward An end result, but in ways<lb/>
to improve the basic shooting<lb/>
technique, such as making a<lb/>
o erall shot to tell the whole story<lb/>
and then movine in closer to show<lb/>
Antarctic region<lb/>
Post Office<lb/>
d<lb/>
ks<lb/>
3J<lb/>
V<lb/>
r<lb/>
45.95<lb/>
62.95<lb/>
69.95<lb/>
59.50<lb/>
'iul<lb/>
ex i<lb/>
1 I lien<lb/>
tica the<lb/>
. i a new<lb/>
11 h a -<lb/>
s ilkes<lb/>
i ineoln<lb/>
lil ot one<lb/>
irtet<lb/>
. it designs An icy<lb/>
� ich man s<lb/>
. w n at the<lb/>
I i lar re-<lb/>
ack dot-<lb/>
: tra el<lb/>
� in<lb/>
fl to right<lb/>
tarting with<lb/>
- 1820,<lb/>
.)� ' sight<lb/>
:  sh;p is<lb/>
h i ing<lb/>
i Lighthouse<lb/>
n, Conn<lb/>
. I Charles<lb/>
ed during his<lb/>
131 11 Antarc-<lb/>
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fhe portrait<lb/>
on an 1870<lb/>
� II IVaugh<lb/>
. Portrait<lb/>
n ics from<lb/>
i i� ref-<lb/>
rd is the<lb/>
u i �; l rerof<lb/>
ted five<lb/>
m, and<lb/>
 it ntific<lb/>
� mapping<lb/>
air. It is intcr-<lb/>
rs to l � �te that<lb/>
I I , 1934<lb/>
l's st v i nd<lb/>
I arting the<lb/>
tablishing<lb/>
t B id is a com-<lb/>
ttional Portrait<lb/>
ind his plane is<lb/>
il Q ographic<lb/>
!i. featured on<lb/>
is the first to<lb/>
. n ti and the<lb/>
tii H the leader of<lb/>
during the<lb/>
i irth made a<lb/>
la) flight in<lb/>
mc 1 lis portrait<lb/>
I posite taken from<lb/>
! . raphs from the<lb/>
� i he plane is<lb/>
t i (<lb/>
graphic<lb/>
I Ant.m ti( a is<lb/>
ice, gla i.ited tor<lb/>
ifl years. Antarctica<lb/>
( l's t oltlest tempera-<lb/>
�. ej �lder than the<lb/>
: at 6 00(I fe t. has the<lb/>
rage altitude of any<lb/>
i ,q, i this foreboding<lb/>
is been a challenge to<lb/>
details.<lb/>
For example: a long shot of the<lb/>
family gathered around a picnic<lb/>
talbe, followed by closer shots ot<lb/>
someone cooking hot dogs, And<lb/>
even closer shots ot someone eat-<lb/>
ing one.<lb/>
When the prints come back,<lb/>
take time with tin' youngster to<lb/>
evaluate the shots. I lore, the<lb/>
emphasis should be on praise for<lb/>
the "great" shots, with guidance<lb/>
on how some of the others might<lb/>
have Peen improved. For in-<lb/>
stance, could one of the pictures<lb/>
have been better had it been shot<lb/>
from another angle or a little<lb/>
closer, or was some point of the<lb/>
storv missed altogether?<lb/>
After having shot three of tour<lb/>
rools with such guidance (in<lb/>
which you've remembered to<lb/>
praise and assist rather than dis<lb/>
courage and i riticize), the young-<lb/>
ster should be ready to solo.<lb/>
It you've done your job well and<lb/>
really turned the youngster on to<lb/>
picture-taking, you will have set<lb/>
him up with a talent that can be<lb/>
further developed and used to his<lb/>
advantage tor the rest ot the<lb/>
school year and beyond. I he i ost<lb/>
of those few rolls ot film will pay<lb/>
high dividends<lb/>
In school, youngsters should<lb/>
seek permission from their teat h<lb/>
ers to use a camera as an addi<lb/>
tional school work tool. The mam<lb/>
letters 1 receive from teachers<lb/>
around the country make me feel<lb/>
that students w ill be encouraged<lb/>
and given further guidance in<lb/>
improving their skills<lb/>
From An illustrated report oi<lb/>
summer activities, the youngster<lb/>
can graduate to shooting school<lb/>
activities, earn extra credit and<lb/>
praise with photo reports and<lb/>
work on the school newspai �<lb/>
yearbook or other publicaitons.<lb/>
It's not unusual tor some hi<lb/>
school photographers to become<lb/>
so proficient that they are used by<lb/>
the local newspaper as strii<lb/>
photograpcrs tor overing schi<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Who knows? The younj<lb/>
you tin n on to pi( hire taking<lb/>
today may be the great photogra-<lb/>
pher ot ti imorrov<lb/>
RICK HILL<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FOLKSINGER<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
wins. SFPT 7<lb/>
6-8 I'M<lb/>
� <lb/>
SPONSORED BY . <lb/>
Bored with the class scene?<lb/>
Tired of having sand kicked in your face?<lb/>
Sick of seeing Doublemint S commercials on TV?<lb/>
Well, we don't care. Hut join Earlvis and the Bonehead evei j<lb/>
Thursday for the Boss last Carolinian Satire Pace am way.<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
in F R1ONCERT<lb/>
5 I'M<lb/>
Kl C I PI ION<lb/>
l I I K t ONCERT<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
METHODIST<lb/>
si l i) n I CENT1 R<lb/>
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i m)<lb/>
RAIN SITE:<lb/>
Ml NDENHALL 244<lb/>
FOR MORI INFO:<lb/>
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rt <lb/>
.f<lb/>
M don't want<lb/>
a lot of hype.<lb/>
I just want<lb/>
something I<lb/>
can count on .99<lb/>
5S�;�S<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
v,<lb/>
Greg Riley I Iniversity of North Carolina-Class of 1989<lb/>
&amp;.�<lb/>
A<lb/>
Some long <lb/>
panics promise youi t<lb/>
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first time. That's the t isol<lb/>
theAI&amp;TWorkivvidt li u y<lb/>
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When its i<lb/>
forget the gimmicks and makt<lb/>
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like International Calling and<lb/>
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The right choice.<lb/>
-1 nd<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0025"/><lb/>
J IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6,1988 19<lb/>
hon Where did the summer go ?<lb/>
RANTS<lb/>
rated Since 1979<lb/>
l lours<lb/>
i. 4 11<lb/>
11-11<lb/>
s<lb/>
ISHES<lb/>
CHES<lb/>
DS<lb/>
7 A<lb/>
STRIES<lb/>
in Town"<lb/>
752-0326<lb/>
or<lb/>
752-3753<lb/>
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cks<lb/>
r fr<lb/>
s45.95<lb/>
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EAR<lb/>
i AD Wow � is it back-to-<lb/>
, tool time already? Where did<lb/>
the summer go?<lb/>
U your child is in elementary<lb/>
-v hoot, he will no doubt be asked<lb/>
to write a report on what he did<lb/>
er the summer vacation. At<lb/>
(as! that's how it was when I was<lb/>
in school, many years ago.<lb/>
With today's inexpensive, easy-<lb/>
use cameras specifically de-<lb/>
signed for youngsters, why not<lb/>
make that report much more in-<lb/>
resting by adding photos?<lb/>
There are several advantages<lb/>
i r the child with a camera. Not<lb/>
mly will he make that report<lb/>
nore interesting by visually illus-<lb/>
rating it, but he might also be<lb/>
ncouraged to learn more about<lb/>
photography so that in later aca-<lb/>
demic years he might contribute<lb/>
school publicaitons such as the<lb/>
earbook or newspaper.<lb/>
Introducing a voting child to<lb/>
photography will take some work<lb/>
n the part of his parents. The<lb/>
luld will have to be taught some<lb/>
! the basics oi good picture-tak-<lb/>
ing, including such simple things<lb/>
is learning to squeeze the shutter<lb/>
utton, rather than punch it, to<lb/>
prevent camera movement and<lb/>
blurred pictures, as well as the<lb/>
slightly more complicated forms<lb/>
f a picture storv that have an<lb/>
opening and ending, just like a<lb/>
v ritten storv.<lb/>
Antarctic regioi<lb/>
at Post Office<lb/>
(AP) The ice-capped, sub-<lb/>
freezing continent of Antarctica<lb/>
has posed a challenge to explor-<lb/>
�r scientists and adventurers for<lb/>
hundreds oi years.<lb/>
As a tribute to four brave men<lb/>
w ho first explored Antarctica, the<lb/>
United States will issue a new<lb/>
block of four commemoratives.<lb/>
Featured on the block are Natha-<lb/>
niel B. Palmer, Charles Wilkes,<lb/>
Richard F. Byrd and Lincoln<lb/>
Ellsworth.<lb/>
�n individual portrait of one<lb/>
member of the heroic quartet<lb/>
appears to the left in each of the<lb/>
horizontal format designs An icy<lb/>
scene depicting each man's<lb/>
means of travel is shown at the<lb/>
right with a map of the polar re-<lb/>
gion as a backdrop. A black dot-<lb/>
ted line follows the rovite of travel.<lb/>
The four stamps are arranged in<lb/>
chronological order, left to right<lb/>
�nd top to bottom, starting with<lb/>
Palmer, who, on Nov. 18, lb20,<lb/>
became the first American to sight<lb/>
the continent. His sailing ship is<lb/>
I lero is based on a line drawing<lb/>
provided by the Old Lighthouse<lb/>
' luseum of Stonington, Conn<lb/>
the explorer's hometown.<lb/>
Navy lieutenant Charles<lb/>
 likes, who proved during his<lb/>
pedition of 1839-43 that Antarc-<lb/>
i a is a continent, is on the second<lb/>
id hesi vein the block. The portrait<lb/>
t Wilkes is based on an 1870<lb/>
painting by Samuel Bell Waugh<lb/>
provided bv the National Portrait<lb/>
.allery. Wilkes' ship comes from<lb/>
Manorial Geographic Society ref-<lb/>
rence materials.<lb/>
Admiral Richard E. Byrd is the<lb/>
i st-known American explorer of<lb/>
� he Antarctic. He conducted five<lb/>
expeditions to the region, and<lb/>
ersaw extensive scientific<lb/>
-tudy and photographic mapping<lb/>
4 the continent by air. It is inter-<lb/>
esting for collectors to note that<lb/>
tamps were issued in 1933,1934<lb/>
and 1935 to honor Byrd's second<lb/>
Nntarctic expedition, charting the<lb/>
course he took in establishing<lb/>
Little America.<lb/>
The likeness of Byrd is a corn-<lb/>
el te based on National Portrait<lb/>
tilery photos, and his plane is<lb/>
i-ed on National Geographic<lb/>
xiciety photos.<lb/>
Lincoln Ellsworth, featured on<lb/>
the fourth stamp, was the first to<lb/>
fly over both the Arctic and the<lb/>
ntarctic. Fie was the leader of<lb/>
tour expeditions during the<lb/>
1930s. In 1935, Ellsworth made a<lb/>
bring four-stop, 22-day flight in<lb/>
a single-engine plane. His portrait<lb/>
ilso is a composite taken from<lb/>
several photographs from the<lb/>
! ibrary of Congress. The plane is<lb/>
based on National Geographic<lb/>
photos.<lb/>
Ninety percent of Antarctica is<lb/>
coveted with ice, glaciated for<lb/>
about 170,000 years. Antarctica<lb/>
lias the world's coldest tempera-<lb/>
tures - 20 degrees colder than the<lb/>
Arctic - and at 6,000 feet, has the<lb/>
highest average altitude of any<lb/>
continent.<lb/>
No wonder this foreboding<lb/>
continent has been a challenge to<lb/>
mankind!<lb/>
Some elementary schools do<lb/>
have some sort of photographic<lb/>
activities for students. At the jun-<lb/>
ior and senior high school levels.<lb/>
Photographic help is much more<lb/>
prevalent. Some even have photo<lb/>
clubs or regular classes where<lb/>
students can take advantage of<lb/>
advanced instruction in process-<lb/>
ing and printing, as well as shoot-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The major problem I've en-<lb/>
countered with the very young<lb/>
student photographers is teach-<lb/>
ing them to be more selective<lb/>
about the pictures they take.<lb/>
Hand a younster a new camera<lb/>
and, in his enthusiasm to get out<lb/>
and shoot pictures, he'll burn up a<lb/>
roll of 10,12,24, and even 36 expo-<lb/>
sures in no time flat � indis-<lb/>
creetly shooting anything that<lb/>
appears in front of the camera.<lb/>
When Mom and Dad are paying<lb/>
the film and processing costs, that<lb/>
can sometimes be rather prohibi-<lb/>
tive. It can also be disappointing<lb/>
when you see all the not-so-hot<lb/>
wasted pictures.<lb/>
For the first few rolls, parents<lb/>
should help guide the younster,<lb/>
not only in the economics of<lb/>
trying to make every shot count<lb/>
toward an end result, but in ways<lb/>
to improve the basic shooting<lb/>
technique, such as making an<lb/>
overall shot to tell the whole story,<lb/>
and then moving in closer to show<lb/>
details.<lb/>
For example: a long shot of the<lb/>
family gathered around a picnic<lb/>
talbe, followed by closer shots of<lb/>
someone cooking hot dogs, and<lb/>
even closer shots of someone eat-<lb/>
ing one.<lb/>
When the prints come back,<lb/>
take time with the youngster to<lb/>
evaluate the shots. Here, the<lb/>
emphasis should be on praise for<lb/>
the "great" shots, with guidance<lb/>
on how some of the others might<lb/>
have been improved. For in-<lb/>
stance, could one of the pictures<lb/>
have been better had it been shot<lb/>
from another angle or a little<lb/>
closer, or was some point of the<lb/>
story missed altogether?<lb/>
After having shot three of four<lb/>
rools with such guidance (in<lb/>
which you've remembered to<lb/>
praise and assist rather than dis-<lb/>
courage and criticize), the young-<lb/>
ster should be ready to solo.<lb/>
If you've done your job well and<lb/>
really turned the youngster on to<lb/>
picture-taking, you will have set<lb/>
him up with a talent that can be<lb/>
further developed and used to his<lb/>
advantage for the rest of the<lb/>
school year and beyond. The cost<lb/>
of those few rolls of film will pay<lb/>
high dividends.<lb/>
In school, youngsters should<lb/>
seek permission from their teach-<lb/>
ers to use a camera as an addi-<lb/>
tional schoolwork tool. The many<lb/>
letters I receive from teachers<lb/>
around the country make me feel<lb/>
that students will be encouraged<lb/>
and given further guidance in<lb/>
improving their skills.<lb/>
From an illustrated report of<lb/>
summer activities, the youngster<lb/>
can graduate to shooting school<lb/>
activities, earn extra credit and<lb/>
praise with photo reports, and<lb/>
work on the school newspaper,<lb/>
yearbook or other publicaitons.<lb/>
It's not unusual for some high<lb/>
school photographers to become<lb/>
so proficient that they are used by<lb/>
the local newspaper as string<lb/>
photograpers for covering school<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Who knows? The youngster<lb/>
you turn on to picture-taking<lb/>
today may be the great photogra-<lb/>
pher of tomorrow!<lb/>
Bored with the class scene?<lb/>
Tired of having sand kicked in your face?<lb/>
Sick of seeing Doublemint � commercials on TV?<lb/>
Well, we don't care. But join Earlvis and the Bonehead every<lb/>
Thursday for the Boss East Carolinian Satire Page anyway.<lb/>
sft (<lb/>
M<lb/>
RICK HILL<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FOLKSINGER<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
ON THE MALL<lb/>
WEDS. SEPT 7<lb/>
6-8 PM<lb/>
SPONSORED BY<lb/>
W H d��&amp;<lb/>
A CARING CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
BEFORE CONCERT<lb/>
5 PM<lb/>
RECEPTION<lb/>
AFTER CONCERT<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
METHODIST<lb/>
STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
(501 H. 5th st across from<lb/>
Garrett Dorm)<lb/>
RAIN SITE:<lb/>
MENDENHALL 244<lb/>
FOR MORE INFO:<lb/>
752-7240<lb/>
?r: iP"<lb/>
$&amp;<lb/>
Some long distance com-<lb/>
panies promise you the moon,<lb/>
but what you really want is de-<lb/>
pendable, high-quality service.<lb/>
That's just what you'll get when<lb/>
you choose AT&amp;T Long Distance<lb/>
Service, at a cost that's a lot less<lb/>
than you think. bu can expect<lb/>
low long distance rates, 24-hour<lb/>
operator assistance, clear con-<lb/>
nections and immediate credit<lb/>
for wrong numbers. And the<lb/>
assurance that virtually all of<lb/>
your calls will go through the<lb/>
first time. That's the genius of<lb/>
the AI&amp;T Worldwide Intelligent<lb/>
Network.<lb/>
When it's time to choose,<lb/>
forget the gimmicks and make<lb/>
the intelligent choice, AT&amp;T.<lb/>
If voud like to know more<lb/>
4<lb/>
about our products or services,<lb/>
like International Calling and<lb/>
the AT&amp;T Card, call us at<lb/>
1 800 222-0300.<lb/>
Greg Mey University of North Carolina- Class of 1989<lb/>
ATM<lb/>
The right choice.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0026"/><lb/>
20 THE EAST O<lb/>
ROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER t 1988<lb/>
Yank up the chain saw music<lb/>
EUGENE, Ore. (AD - Scream-<lb/>
ing saws, crashing troos and roar-<lb/>
ing trucks they can handle. Hut<lb/>
that's nothing compared with<lb/>
what they can do with acoustic<lb/>
guitars and mellow voices.<lb/>
For years, Craig lenkins and<lb/>
Terry McKinnis ot Head wood.<lb/>
Ore have been self-taught, "aw-<lb/>
shucks' musicians. The kind of<lb/>
guys who'd duck their heads, grin<lb/>
sheepish grins and strum another<lb/>
tune every time someone sug-<lb/>
gested they should do something<lb/>
with the original material that<lb/>
was flowing out oi their heads<lb/>
and oft their fingertips.<lb/>
So now they've gone and done<lb/>
it Cut an album that's a polished<lb/>
mix of deft picking, smooth sing-<lb/>
ing and graceful lyrics that cap-<lb/>
ture the loggers' life. And - no<lb/>
surprise to those who've been lis-<lb/>
tening to the two guitar-playing,<lb/>
songwriting buddies tor years -<lb/>
the thing is selling.<lb/>
Bui fenkins and McKinnis<lb/>
aren t certain they want the world<lb/>
to beat a path to their door. This<lb/>
turor is enough to make a man<lb/>
want to pick up his s.nv and re-<lb/>
treat to the safety of the woods<lb/>
We ve never thought ot our-<lb/>
selvesas professional musicians<lb/>
says Jenkins, 35. "We don't read<lb/>
music. Wo have to memorize<lb/>
everything wo write. We just<lb/>
work on something until it sound<lb/>
good. We do it tor our enjoyment<lb/>
and tor the people around us<lb/>
Their cassette-tape album,<lb/>
"The Snag Fallers Ball is a<lb/>
mostly lighthearted collection of<lb/>
songs about logging in Oregon<lb/>
and Alaska.<lb/>
lenkins wrote nine of the 11<lb/>
songs on the album and co-au-<lb/>
thored two others with Don Heck,<lb/>
a triend who is also a musician.<lb/>
fenkins and McKinnis do the sing-<lb/>
ing on the album, with lenkins'<lb/>
animated, Hurl Ives-like voice<lb/>
dominant.<lb/>
The two partners are assisted in<lb/>
the guitar work by Doug Daniels,<lb/>
who owns the Eugene recording<lb/>
studio where the album was cut.<lb/>
The material on the album deals<lb/>
with such woods scenarios as the<lb/>
foibles of family-owned logging<lb/>
operations and the logger's pro-<lb/>
pensity to quit any job that<lb/>
doesn't sun mm.<lb/>
The songs are laced with the<lb/>
jargon ot the woods. Loggers<lb/>
who've heard the album give it<lb/>
high marks for authenticity.<lb/>
McKinnis, 34, mot Jenkins' sis-<lb/>
tor, Kim, and married her in 1977.<lb/>
The two men have boon playing<lb/>
guitar together over since.<lb/>
Over the past 10 years, the two<lb/>
have dabbled in creating lyrics<lb/>
and melodies of their own. Jen-<lb/>
kins characterizes much of that<lb/>
work as a diversion and describes<lb/>
most of the songs as pieces that<lb/>
were done for one-time special<lb/>
occasions.<lb/>
"1 was writing a few tunes, and<lb/>
we wree playing at some places<lb/>
and packing them in he says.<lb/>
"We started getting a few offers<lb/>
from outfits like the Rodeway<lb/>
Inns. 1 figured it was time to make<lb/>
a decision. So I did. I went with a<lb/>
logging company up in Alaska<lb/>
Hut friends kept making it<lb/>
tough for them to edge a way f rom<lb/>
the idea that songs about legging<lb/>
was intriguing. Last fall, they<lb/>
committed themselves to doing it.<lb/>
ITie recording business was a<lb/>
strange new world for them, as<lb/>
foreign a Coast Range logging<lb/>
operation might be for a studio<lb/>
musician.<lb/>
After a false start or two, they<lb/>
found Doug Daniels Productions<lb/>
in Eugene. Daniels, a folk musi-<lb/>
cian who established his own<lb/>
studioa yoarago, made more than<lb/>
one contribution to the album.<lb/>
"It was like two cultures meet-<lb/>
ing when wo found him Jenkins<lb/>
says. "Wo wore just a couple of<lb/>
loggers with some music, and we<lb/>
didn't know if he was going to<lb/>
laugh at us or what. He took us<lb/>
seriously<lb/>
"He convinced us it would bo<lb/>
ethical to do the songs live. He<lb/>
really deserves the credit for<lb/>
making the songs work<lb/>
Jenkins and McKinnis ordered<lb/>
up 1,000 tapes, thinking that they<lb/>
might sell out in a matter of<lb/>
months or years. But even with<lb/>
highly limited distribution, the<lb/>
album is going fast, and a second<lb/>
production run seems a certainty.<lb/>
Jenkins and McKinnis have<lb/>
neither the delusion nor the desire<lb/>
that the music will take them out<lb/>
of the woods. Rut they are talking<lb/>
about another album.<lb/>
"If we do it, I want to write<lb/>
about some things the logger's up<lb/>
against and what his future is. I'm<lb/>
going to call it 'Endangered Spe-<lb/>
cies "<lb/>
0<lb/>
�; �<lb/>
f<lb/>
NYC man plays super janitor<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) He's "the<lb/>
si:p.r sometimes more like a<lb/>
mayor ot a small town, an obser-<lb/>
vant shrink, a cat rescuer, mouse<lb/>
undertaker, burglar chaser. He's<lb/>
an arbiter, detective, middleman<lb/>
and ultimately the guy whose<lb/>
fault it is when anything goes<lb/>
Wrong. The buck stops there.<lb/>
Sometimes literally.<lb/>
The species is most annoyed<lb/>
to be called a janitor.<lb/>
Its natural habitat is New<lb/>
"i ork City, where complaining<lb/>
about one's super is just about<lb/>
second to complaints about the<lb/>
weather, but migrations have<lb/>
been noted as highnses prolifer-<lb/>
ate across the country. Their repu-<lb/>
tations vary as widely as stock-<lb/>
brokers' and sink as low as used-<lb/>
car salesmen's huckstering a mis-<lb/>
aligned bionic wonder.<lb/>
There's the drunken lout sce-<lb/>
nario, true enough in some cases.<lb/>
There's the crowd who speak<lb/>
Yugoslav, Creek, Moroccan and<lb/>
perchance Esperanto, but "no<lb/>
English, please. " There's the guy<lb/>
whose hand assumes the palm-up<lb/>
position before lips purse into the<lb/>
hello position.<lb/>
There are those who. while<lb/>
required to live in the building by<lb/>
saw, moonlight elsewhere during<lb/>
working ours. Sightings of such<lb/>
supers are as rare as those of fla-<lb/>
mingos on the Bering Strait.<lb/>
Hut there are supers who are<lb/>
ordinary folks, guys just doing a<lb/>
rather complex job. Joe Thomas is<lb/>
one such super, a family man with<lb/>
three daughters, New Yorker<lb/>
whose first job was pedaling 400<lb/>
pounds of potatoes across teh isle<lb/>
ot Manhattan from a West Side<lb/>
Italian vegetable stand to a fancy<lb/>
East Side restaurant.<lb/>
He's a man who believes<lb/>
strongly in doing things the old-<lb/>
fashioned way.<lb/>
He also really goes beyond<lb/>
the call of duty to help the citizens<lb/>
ot his domain.<lb/>
In some ways, he's a boy<lb/>
wonder. Now 31, he's already<lb/>
overseeing his second building,<lb/>
the current one a 22-story highrise<lb/>
near Lincoln Center which houses<lb/>
about 1,000 persons in 375 apart-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
1 le has boon there five years,<lb/>
knows all residents at least by<lb/>
sight, and admits there are a few<lb/>
who won't speak to him. He just<lb/>
continues to say hello to them.<lb/>
About 60 percent of the apart-<lb/>
ments are cooperatives, the re-<lb/>
mainder rentals.<lb/>
He supervises a staff of 10<lb/>
doormen, portersand handymen.<lb/>
In 1987, he was named "Super of<lb/>
the Year" by the large real estate<lb/>
firm that employs about 150 su-<lb/>
pers for its buildings. He received<lb/>
a savings Kind and a plaque.<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
BEING ACCEPTED<lb/>
FOR THE<lb/>
FOLLOWING POSITIONS<lb/>
� SPORTS WRITERS<lb/>
� NEWS WRITERS<lb/>
APPLY IN PERSON<lb/>
MONDAY - FRIDAY<lb/>
10 -A.M. -4P.M.<lb/>
AT<lb/>
THE EAST<lb/>
CAROUNIAN<lb/>
2ND FLOOR<lb/>
PUBLICATIONS BUILDING<lb/>
IN FRONT OF JOYNER LIBRARY<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity<lb/>
THERE MAY BE A BETTER WAY TO GO<lb/>
THROUGH COLLEGE . . . BUT NO ONE<lb/>
HAS FOUND IT YET!<lb/>
t 'Emphasis on Scholastics<lb/>
"Scholarships Awarded<lb/>
'Excellence in Athletics<lb/>
?Varsity Soccer Players<lb/>
?Varsity Tennis Players<lb/>
?Varsity Swimmers<lb/>
?Lacrosse Members<lb/>
?Varsity Cheerleaders<lb/>
?Outstanding Intramurals<lb/>
?Leadership in All Aspects of Campus Life<lb/>
?Best Social Life On Campus<lb/>
?Large Dynamic Brotherhood<lb/>
?Finest Little Sisters<lb/>
FALL RUSH 1988<lb/>
LOOK FOR THE PARTY TENTS<lb/>
"AT PKES PEAK Located on corner of W. 5th and Elizabeth St.<lb/>
Tuesday Sept 6 - Meet The Pikes wLittle Sisters 8-11<lb/>
Wednesday Sept 7 - Meet the Women of Chi Omega 8-11<lb/>
Thursday Sept 8 - Beginning of "Pikefettie"<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR RIDES CALL 752-4773<lb/>
Some<lb/>
KAI 1 In tin-<lb/>
ning, there were no heln<lb/>
shoulder pads. The ball j<lb/>
round than oblong. 1 ,<lb/>
counted five points, Ui<lb/>
four<lb/>
What it was .�. j<lb/>
The sport surfaced in<lb/>
Carolina in 1888 making<lb/>
day the beginning ot the i<lb/>
nial year of college football<lb/>
state Theharlot, i<lb/>
ported ir Saturd ty's<lb/>
Threes h olsthat -<lb/>
first season Dul<lb/>
linaandV - res! � fi<lb/>
their season Satui<lb/>
The football I<lb/>
stands surround i<lb/>
ways been a pia:<lb/>
turn into I i - and at<lb/>
sprc<lb/>
the most triv ial matt<lb/>
Even after<lb/>
rionof v<lb/>
official game is im-<lb/>
pending up n which sc<lb/>
football g :<lb/>
ence, itwa s<lb/>
vs Wal<lb/>
Shoo<lb/>
CHA R<lb/>
old i named<lb/>
serious condil ind a<lb/>
school coa h .�<lb/>
day. on la iftei . infire<lb/>
out at a Charlotte U n tball<lb/>
The tw a <lb/>
peoph<lb/>
p.m. Friday, inth<lb/>
the game between Wesl -<lb/>
and Garinger at Can;<lb/>
Meanwhile in '<lb/>
Friday night an<lb/>
was wounded as he left I<lb/>
box at a football .<lb/>
Adkins an assistant I<lb/>
coach at Glen Mills Hig<lb/>
was hit in the s<lb/>
and underwent surgi i<lb/>
urday, authorities said.<lb/>
Charlotte polic<lb/>
trged Donnell Prino<lb/>
18 and Albert Ang<lb/>
son, 17, both of Charlotte<lb/>
erson attends West I �<lb/>
High, said his father,<lb/>
Hankcrson.<lb/>
Logan was charged<lb/>
counts of assault with I<lb/>
weapon, inflicting seri<lb/>
while Hankerson was 1<lb/>
with carrying a<lb/>
weapon a 38-caliberhan<lb/>
police said<lb/>
A third num. Dwa<lb/>
of Charlotte, was chai<lb/>
carrying a concealed w <lb/>
possession of a stole n fit I<lb/>
ter police spotted him 1<lb/>
stands with a gun in his<lb/>
pocket. Charlotte Police<lb/>
mander Bruce Treadv<lb/>
Mints wa not ii<lb/>
shooting 1 le w as i<lb/>
jail Saturday.<lb/>
Police said two Wesl<lb/>
students apparently wei i<lb/>
ing the game wh<lb/>
youths approached ar<lb/>
fighting. One of the VN<lb/>
lotte students pulled a j<lb/>
from his w listband a-<lb/>
shooting police said<lb/>
Tread way said tr� s<lb/>
stemmed trom an oi<lb/>
among the tour apparer<lb/>
Continued from page 2<lb/>
Virginia n<lb/>
their ope tie,<lb/>
m ent 80 yards on 10 p<lb/>
Moore hitting tight end<lb/>
McGonnigal with a 30<lb/>
touchdown pass tor a 10-7<lb/>
Her lead<lb/>
Christie s43 yard fie <lb/>
the game w ith 5 4 to r<lb/>
first halt and the India s I<lb/>
their intermission lead<lb/>
Brosnan hit Harrv Mehre wj<lb/>
8-vard scoring strike i<lb/>
left<lb/>
Wilson, a sophomore, It<lb/>
runners with 102 vards on<lb/>
rics.<lb/>
Moore, a sophomore m<lb/>
his first start, completed 1 <lb/>
passes for lb7yards and ran!<lb/>
yards on 13 carries.<lb/>
"I think he did very well,<lb/>
also think he'll get better<lb/>
said. "I think he played wit!<lb/>
of poise<lb/>
Brosnahan was 15-22 fo<lb/>
yardsbefore lea ving the gai<lb/>
in the third quarter with a iJ<lb/>
tion between the third and fj<lb/>
finger on his throwing hai<lb/>
"The doctor's advised aj<lb/>
playing him Laycock sai<lb/>
played with it for a while.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0027"/><lb/>
<lb/>
20 THE EAST CARPI INI AN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6. 1988<lb/>
Yank up the chain saw music<lb/>
EUGENE, Ore. (AP) - Scream-<lb/>
ing saws, crashing trees and roar-<lb/>
ing trucks they can handle. But<lb/>
that's nothing compared with<lb/>
what they can do with acoustic<lb/>
guitars and mellow voices.<lb/>
For years, Craig Jenkins and<lb/>
Terry McKinnis of Dead wood.<lb/>
Ore have been self-taught, "aw-<lb/>
shucks" musicians. The kind of<lb/>
guys who'd duck their heads, grin<lb/>
sheepish grins and strum another<lb/>
tune every time someone sug-<lb/>
gested they should do something<lb/>
with the original material that<lb/>
was flowing out of their heads<lb/>
and off their fingertips.<lb/>
So now they've gone and done<lb/>
it. Cut an album that's a polished<lb/>
mix of deft picking, smooth sing-<lb/>
ing and graceful lyrics that cap-<lb/>
ture the loggers' life. And - no<lb/>
surprise to those who've been lis-<lb/>
tening to the two guitar-playing,<lb/>
song writing buddies for years -<lb/>
the thing is selling.<lb/>
But Jenkins and McKinnis<lb/>
aren't certain they want the world<lb/>
to beat a path to their door. This<lb/>
furor is enough to make a man<lb/>
want to pick up his saw and re-<lb/>
treat to the safety of the woods.<lb/>
"We've never thought of our-<lb/>
selves as professional musicians<lb/>
says Jenkins, 35. "We don't read<lb/>
music. We have to memorize<lb/>
everything we write. We just<lb/>
work on something until it sound<lb/>
good. We do it for our enjoyment<lb/>
and for the people around us<lb/>
Their cassette-tape album,<lb/>
"The Snag Fallers Ball is a<lb/>
mostly lighthearted collection of<lb/>
songs about logging in Oregon<lb/>
and Alaska.<lb/>
Jenkins wrote nine of the 11<lb/>
songs on the album and co-au-<lb/>
thored two others with Don Beck,<lb/>
a friend who is also a musician.<lb/>
JenkinsandMcKinnisdo the sing-<lb/>
ing on the album, with Jenkins'<lb/>
animated. Burl Ives-like voice<lb/>
dominant.<lb/>
The two partners are assisted in<lb/>
the guitar work by Doug Daniels,<lb/>
who owns the Eugene recording<lb/>
studio where the album was cut.<lb/>
The material on the album deals<lb/>
with such woods scenarios as the<lb/>
foibles of family-owned logging<lb/>
operations and the logger's pro-<lb/>
pensity to quit any job that<lb/>
doesn't suit him.<lb/>
The songs are laced with the<lb/>
jargon of the woods. Loggers<lb/>
who've heard the album give it<lb/>
high marks for authenticity.<lb/>
McKinnis, 34, met Jenkins' sis-<lb/>
ter, Kim, and married her in 1977.<lb/>
The two men have been playing<lb/>
guitar together ever since.<lb/>
Over the past 10 years, the two<lb/>
have dabbled in creating lyrics<lb/>
and melodies of their own. Jen-<lb/>
kins characterizes much of that<lb/>
work as a diversion and describes<lb/>
most of the songs as pieces that<lb/>
were done for one-time special<lb/>
occasions.<lb/>
"I was writing a few tunes, and<lb/>
we wree playing at some places<lb/>
and packing them in he says.<lb/>
"We started getting a few offers<lb/>
from outfits like the Rodeway<lb/>
Inns. I figured it was time to make<lb/>
a decision. So I did. I went with a<lb/>
logging company up in Alaska<lb/>
But friends kept making it<lb/>
tough for them to edge a way from<lb/>
the idea that songs about logging<lb/>
was intriguing. Last fall, they<lb/>
committed themselves to doing it.<lb/>
The recording business was a<lb/>
strange new world for them, as<lb/>
foreign a Coast Range logging<lb/>
operation might be for a studio<lb/>
musician.<lb/>
After a false start or two, they<lb/>
found Doug Daniels Productions<lb/>
in Eugene. Daniels, a folk musi-<lb/>
cian who established his own<lb/>
studio a year ago, made more than<lb/>
one contribution to the album.<lb/>
"It was like two cultures meet-<lb/>
ing when we found him Jenkins<lb/>
says. "We were just a couple of<lb/>
loggers with some music, and we<lb/>
didn't know if he was going to<lb/>
laugh at us or what. He took us<lb/>
seriously<lb/>
"He convinced us it would be<lb/>
ethical to do the songs live. He<lb/>
really deserves the credit for<lb/>
making the songs work<lb/>
Jenkins and McKinnis ordered<lb/>
up 1,000 tapes, thinking that they<lb/>
might sell out in a matter of<lb/>
months or years. But even with<lb/>
highly limited distribution, the<lb/>
album is going fast, and a second<lb/>
production run seems a certainty.<lb/>
Jenkins and McKinnis have<lb/>
neither the delusion nor thedesire<lb/>
that the music will take them out<lb/>
of the woods. But they are talking<lb/>
about another album.<lb/>
"If we do it, I want to write<lb/>
about some things the logger's up<lb/>
against and what his future is. I'm<lb/>
going to call it 'Endangered Spe-<lb/>
cies "<lb/>
NYC man plays super janitor<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)� He's "the<lb/>
super, " sometimes more like a<lb/>
mayor of a small town, an obser-<lb/>
vant shrink, a cat rescuer, mouse<lb/>
undertaker, burglar chaser. He's<lb/>
an arbiter, detective, middleman<lb/>
and ultimately the guy whose<lb/>
fault it is when anything goes<lb/>
wrong. The buck stops there.<lb/>
Sometimes literally.<lb/>
The species is most annoyed<lb/>
to be called a janitor.<lb/>
Its natural habitat is New<lb/>
York City, where complaining<lb/>
about one's super is just about<lb/>
second to complaints about the<lb/>
weather, but migrations have<lb/>
been noted as highrises prolifer-<lb/>
ate across the country. Their repu-<lb/>
tations vary as widely as stock-<lb/>
brokers' and sink as low as used-<lb/>
car salesmen's huckstering a mis-<lb/>
aligned bionic wonder.<lb/>
There's the drunken lout sce-<lb/>
nario, true enough in some cases.<lb/>
There's the crowd who speak<lb/>
Yugoslav, Greek, Moroccan and<lb/>
perchance Esperanto, but "no<lb/>
English, please. " There's the guy<lb/>
whose hand assumes the palm-up<lb/>
position before lips purse into the<lb/>
"hello" position.<lb/>
There are those who, while<lb/>
required to live in the building by<lb/>
saw, moonlight elsewhere during<lb/>
working ours. Sightings of such<lb/>
supers are as rare as those of fla-<lb/>
mingos on the Bering Strait.<lb/>
But there are supers who are<lb/>
ordinary folks, guys just doing a<lb/>
rather complex job. Joe Thomas is<lb/>
one such super, a family man with<lb/>
three daughters, New Yorker<lb/>
whose first job was pedaling 400<lb/>
pounds of potatoes across teh isle<lb/>
of Manhattan from a West Side<lb/>
Italian vegetable stand to a fancy<lb/>
East Side restaurant.<lb/>
He's a man who believes<lb/>
strongly in doing things the old-<lb/>
fashioned way.<lb/>
He also really goes beyond<lb/>
the call of duty to help the citizens<lb/>
of his domain.<lb/>
In some ways, he's a boy<lb/>
wonder. Now 31, he's already<lb/>
overseeing his second building,<lb/>
the current one a 22-story highrise<lb/>
near Lincoln Center which houses<lb/>
about 1,000 persons in 375 apart-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
He has been there five years,<lb/>
knows all residents at least by<lb/>
sight, and admits there are a few<lb/>
who won't speak to him. He just<lb/>
continues to say hello to them.<lb/>
About 60 percent of the apart-<lb/>
ments are cooperatives, the re-<lb/>
mainder rentals.<lb/>
He supervises a staff of 10<lb/>
doormen, porters and handymen.<lb/>
In 1987, he was named "Super of<lb/>
the Year" by the large real estate<lb/>
firm that employs about 150 su-<lb/>
pers for its buildings. He received<lb/>
a savings bond and a plaque.<lb/>
N<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
BEING ACCEPTED<lb/>
FOR THE<lb/>
FOLLOWING POSITIONS<lb/>
� SPORTS WRITERS<lb/>
� NEWS WRITERS<lb/>
APPLY IN PERSON<lb/>
MONDAY - FRIDAY<lb/>
10-A.M4P.M.<lb/>
AT<lb/>
THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
2ND FLOOR<lb/>
PUBLICATIONS BUILDING<lb/>
IN FRONT OF JOYNER LIBRARY<lb/>
A<lb/>
THERE M<lb/>
THROUG<lb/>
AY TO GO<lb/>
NO ONE<lb/>
HAS FOUND IT YET<lb/>
Emphasis on Scholastics<lb/>
Scholarships Awarded<lb/>
"Excellence in Athletics<lb/>
Varsity Soccer Players<lb/>
Varsity Tennis Players<lb/>
Varsity Swimmers<lb/>
Lacrosse Members<lb/>
Varsity Cheerleaders<lb/>
Outstanding Intramurals<lb/>
"Leadership in All Aspects of Campus Life<lb/>
Best Social Life On Campus<lb/>
"Large Dynamic Brotherhood<lb/>
?Finest Little Sisters<lb/>
FALL RUSH 1988<lb/>
LOOK FOR THE PARTY TENTS<lb/>
"AT PIKES PEAK" Located on corner of W. 5th and Elizabeth St.<lb/>
Tuesday Sept 6 - Meet The Pikes wLittle Sisters 8-11<lb/>
Wednesday Sept 7 - Meet the Women of Chi Omega 8-11<lb/>
Thursday Sept 8 - Beginning of "Pikefettie"<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR RIDES CALL 752-4773<lb/>
Some<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) �In the<lb/>
ning, there were no heli<lb/>
shoulder pads. The ball wai<lb/>
round than oblong. Field<lb/>
counted five points, touch<lb/>
four.<lb/>
What it was was "foot-b<lb/>
The sport surfaced in<lb/>
Carolina in 1888, making<lb/>
day the beginning of the cj<lb/>
nial year of college football<lb/>
state The Charlotte Obsen<lb/>
ported in Saturday's<lb/>
Three schools that were pari<lb/>
first season � Duke, North<lb/>
lina and Wake Forest � kid<lb/>
their season Saturday.<lb/>
The football fields � ,<lb/>
stands surrounding it<lb/>
ways been a place where i<lb/>
turn into foes and argul<lb/>
sprout over what some woul<lb/>
the most trivial matters.<lb/>
Even after 100 years, thel<lb/>
rion of who played the state<lb/>
official game is unsettlec<lb/>
pending upon which scl<lb/>
football guide is used as al<lb/>
ence, it was either North Ca<lb/>
vs. Wake Forest on Oct. 1<lb/>
Shoo<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) A 2(<lb/>
old man remained hospitalil<lb/>
serious condition, and a<lb/>
school coach was released<lb/>
day, one day after gunfire j<lb/>
out at a Charlotte football<lb/>
The two were among<lb/>
people wounded at abouj<lb/>
p.m. Friday, in the third qua<lb/>
the game between West Che<lb/>
and Garinger at Garinger.<lb/>
Meanwhile, in Augusta<lb/>
Friday night, an assistant<lb/>
was wounded as he left thel<lb/>
box at a football game.<lb/>
Adkins, an assistant fo<lb/>
coach at G! n Mills High S<lb/>
was hit in the shoulder anc<lb/>
and underwent surgery earll<lb/>
urday, authorities said.<lb/>
Charlotte police on Sati<lb/>
charged Donnell Prince L<lb/>
18, and Albert "Angelo" H<lb/>
son, 17, both of Charlotte.<lb/>
erson attends West Chi<lb/>
High, said his father,<lb/>
HanJcerson<lb/>
Logan was charged with<lb/>
counts of assault with a d<lb/>
weapon, inflicting serious n<lb/>
while Hankerson was chl<lb/>
with carrying a concj<lb/>
weapon � a 38-caliber hanj<lb/>
police said.<lb/>
A third man, Dwavne Mir<lb/>
of Charlotte, was charged!<lb/>
carrying a concealed wcapoT<lb/>
possession of a stolen fireaJ<lb/>
ter police spotted him lj<lb/>
stands with a gun in his<lb/>
pocket. Charlotte Police<lb/>
mander Bruce Treadwav<lb/>
Mims was not involved<lb/>
shooting. He was released<lb/>
jail Saturday.<lb/>
Police said two West Che<lb/>
students apparently were<lb/>
ing the game when two<lb/>
youths approached and s<lb/>
fighting. One of the West<lb/>
lotte students pulled a har<lb/>
from his waistband and<lb/>
shooting, police said<lb/>
Treadway said the sh<lb/>
stemmed from an on-gpinj<lb/>
among the four, apparentl v<lb/>
Continued from page 21<lb/>
Virginia win<lb/>
their openei<lb/>
went 80 yards on 10 playsj<lb/>
Moore hitting tight end<lb/>
McGonnigal with a 3(<lb/>
touchdown pass for a 10-71<lb/>
Her lead.<lb/>
Christie's43-yard field gc<lb/>
the game with 5:49 to play<lb/>
first half, and the Indian's<lb/>
their intermission lead<lb/>
Brosnan hit Harry Mehre<lb/>
8-yard scoring strike wit!<lb/>
left.<lb/>
Wilson, a sophomore, lj<lb/>
runners with 102 yards on<lb/>
ries.<lb/>
Moore, a sophomore<lb/>
his first start, completed 131<lb/>
passes for 167 yards and ran<lb/>
yards on 13 carries.<lb/>
"I think he did very well,<lb/>
also think he'll get better<lb/>
said. "I think he played wit<lb/>
of poise<lb/>
Brosnahan was 15-22 fc<lb/>
yardsbefore lea ving the gai<lb/>
in the third quarter with a Id<lb/>
tion between the third and i<lb/>
finger on his throwing hai<lb/>
The doctor's advised aj<lb/>
playing him Laycock saic<lb/>
played with it for a while.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0028"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1988 23<lb/>
H<lb/>
)<lb/>
i i<lb/>
K�<lb/>
i<lb/>
J<lb/>
Some discrepency in football's origins<lb/>
RA1 EIGH (AD � In the begin- or Trinity vs. North Carolina on<lb/>
ning, there were no helmets or<lb/>
shoulder pads. The ball was more<lb/>
round than oblong. Field goals<lb/>
counted five points, touchdowns<lb/>
tour.<lb/>
What it was was "foot-ball<lb/>
lhe sport surfaced in North<lb/>
Carolina in 1888, making Satur-<lb/>
day the beginning of the centen-<lb/>
nial year of college football in the<lb/>
state The Charlotte Observer re-<lb/>
ported in Saturday's edition.<lb/>
Three scruvls that were part ot the<lb/>
first season Duke, North Caro-<lb/>
lina and Wake Forest � kicked off<lb/>
their season Saturday.<lb/>
The football fields � and the<lb/>
stands surrounding it � has al<lb/>
Nov. 29.<lb/>
For the three schools involved,<lb/>
the issue is serious business. None<lb/>
are willing to forfeit their place in<lb/>
history to their oldest rivals.<lb/>
North Carolina and Wake For-<lb/>
est insists there should be no<lb/>
question that their meeting, won<lb/>
That statement draws a heated<lb/>
rebuttal from Wake Forest sports<lb/>
information director John Justus.<lb/>
Wake has a singular stake in the<lb/>
argument: It claims to have been<lb/>
the winner not only in the first<lb/>
college football game played in<lb/>
the state, but also the first college<lb/>
basketball and college basketball<lb/>
by Wake Forest 6-4, was the state's games piayed in North Carolina.<lb/>
information director Rick Brewer. Neither side is willing to budge. There have been attempts to<lb/>
"My contention is that Wake "The game was supposed to be settle the dispute or drop it alto-<lb/>
Forest had always been carried in played here in Chapel Hill; every- gether, but to no avail<lb/>
our records as first, and you can't body knows that Brewer said,<lb/>
change history said Brewer. "I "Trinity didn't come, so they had<lb/>
didn't realize there was any qucs- 0 forfeit<lb/>
tion about it until this year Tom Mickle, Duke's director of<lb/>
H m it doesn't end there - i uke sports services, counters: "AH you<lb/>
have to do is go back and look at<lb/>
first football game. Duke argues<lb/>
that because the Wake-North<lb/>
Carolina game was played using<lb/>
a combination of soccer and<lb/>
rugby rules, it cannot be consid-<lb/>
ered true football.<lb/>
The Nov. 29 game, which Trin-<lb/>
ity won 16-0, featured the "scien-<lb/>
tific" rules of the day, which were<lb/>
and North Carolina can't agree on<lb/>
what happened the next year ei-<lb/>
The NCAA recognizes Prince- ther-Part of the lore oi the ri valrV<lb/>
We were told by the ACC of-<lb/>
fice about 10 years ago to<lb/>
straighten it out, that it looked<lb/>
kind of silly said Johnny Moore,<lb/>
promotions director at Duke.<lb/>
"That was before (former Duke<lb/>
 a s been a place where friends approved by the American Inter<lb/>
urn into foes and arguments Collegiate Association.<lb/>
t<lb/>
rout over what some would call<lb/>
"The problem is what rules do<lb/>
most trivial matters. you go by said Duke archivist<lb/>
Even after 100 years, the qucs- Bill King. "Every authontative<lb/>
n of who played the state's first article I've seen on the matter says<lb/>
official game is unsettled. De-<lb/>
pending upon which school's<lb/>
otball guide is used as a refer-<lb/>
ee it was either North Carolina<lb/>
Wake Forest on Oct. 11, 1988,<lb/>
. s<lb/>
the North Carolina-Wake Forest<lb/>
game was more like soccer or<lb/>
rugby than football. As a histo-<lb/>
rian, I would accept that as a con-<lb/>
clusion<lb/>
ton and Rutgers as having played<lb/>
the first game in 1869 Justus<lb/>
said. "According to the 1969<lb/>
NCAA Guide, when the 100th<lb/>
anniversary was recognized, that<lb/>
game was played with even<lb/>
looser rules than were used in the<lb/>
Wake Forest-North Carolina<lb/>
game 19 years later. If the NCAA<lb/>
recognizes that as football, we<lb/>
should, too.<lb/>
"Besides, the whole thing boils<lb/>
down to the game North Carolina<lb/>
recognizes as first, since they<lb/>
played in both. They say our game<lb/>
was first, so I think that ends the<lb/>
argument right there<lb/>
So does North Carolina sports<lb/>
is that both claim a 1-0 forfeit vic-<lb/>
tory in 1889.<lb/>
Trinity and North Carolina<lb/>
were unsuccessful in their at-<lb/>
tempts to schedule a game for the<lb/>
autumn of 1889 because they<lb/>
could not agree on a site or date,<lb/>
historian Jim L. Sumner wrote in<lb/>
the July 1988 issue of The North<lb/>
Carolina Historical Review.<lb/>
The failure irritated both sides<lb/>
and each recorded a victory for a<lb/>
game never played.<lb/>
As a result, North Carolina's<lb/>
current media guide lists its series<lb/>
record with Duke as 38-32-4. The<lb/>
Blue Devils' guide says their rec-<lb/>
ord against the Tar Heels is 33-37-<lb/>
4.<lb/>
the records. Trinity was whipping sports information director) Ted<lb/>
everybody and Carolina just Mann died, and he wouldn't hear<lb/>
didn't want to get their butts of it.<lb/>
kicked<lb/>
BACK TO<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
Shootings interupt<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) A 20-year-<lb/>
Id man remained hospitalized in<lb/>
 rious condition, and a high<lb/>
school coach was released Satur-<lb/>
lay, one day after gunfire broke<lb/>
out at a Charlotte football game.<lb/>
The two were among four<lb/>
people wounded at about 9:30<lb/>
p.m. Friday, in the third quarter oi<lb/>
I he game between West Charlotte<lb/>
and Garinger at Garinger.<lb/>
Meanwhile, in Augusta, Ga<lb/>
Friday night, an assistant coach<lb/>
ivas wounded as he left the press<lb/>
box at a football game. Sam<lb/>
Adkins an assistant football<lb/>
roach at Glen Mills High School,<lb/>
was hit in the shoulder and side<lb/>
and underwent surgerv earlv Sat-<lb/>
urday, authorities said.<lb/>
Charlotte police on Saturdav<lb/>
charged Donnell Prince Logan,<lb/>
Is and Albert "Angelo" Hanker-<lb/>
son 17, both of Charlotte. Hank-<lb/>
erson attends West Charlotte<lb/>
I figh, said his father, Albert<lb/>
i iankerson.<lb/>
Logan was charged with three<lb/>
counts of assault with a deadly<lb/>
weapon, inflicting serious injury,<lb/>
16-year-old girl.<lb/>
The elder Hankerson said he<lb/>
knew of a running dispute be-<lb/>
tween his son and a group of<lb/>
young men who had attended<lb/>
Garinger and were from a north<lb/>
Charlotte neighborhood.<lb/>
Hankerson said the dispute<lb/>
started in May. He said his son<lb/>
filed an assault charge against one<lb/>
of the young men in Mav.<lb/>
Four people were taken to<lb/>
Charlotte Memorial Hospital,<lb/>
including West Charlotte Assis-<lb/>
tant Coach John Overcash, who<lb/>
was wounded in the left leg, hos-<lb/>
pital spokeswoman Amy Farugia<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Overcash, 43, oi Harrisburg,<lb/>
was released Saturdav.<lb/>
Keith Allen Jones, 20, of Char-<lb/>
lotte, who underwent surgery<lb/>
early Saturdav for wounds in his<lb/>
abdomen remained in serious<lb/>
condition, a hospital spokes-<lb/>
woman said.<lb/>
Michael Lineberger, 18, of<lb/>
Charlotte, suffered a bullet<lb/>
wound to his right shoulder. Ms.<lb/>
Farugia said the bullet went<lb/>
while I Iankerson was charged through the shoulder. Lineberger<lb/>
with carrying a concealed also was released from the hospi-<lb/>
weapon a .38-caliber handgun, tal Saturday, she said.<lb/>
police said Lineberger, a Garinger drop-<lb/>
A third man, Dwayne Mims, 20, out, said he was shot in the back as<lb/>
A Charlotte, was charged with he tried to run from a gunman. "1<lb/>
v arrying a concealed weapon and was walking on the track, when 1<lb/>
possession of a stolen firearm af- came upon a crowd of people that<lb/>
ter police spotted him in the was gathered around the fight<lb/>
stands with a gun in his pants<lb/>
pocket. Charlotte Police Com-<lb/>
mander Bruce Tread way said<lb/>
Mims was not involved in the<lb/>
-hooting. He was released from<lb/>
til Saturday.<lb/>
Police said two West Charlotte<lb/>
students apparently were watch-<lb/>
ing the game when two other<lb/>
ouths approached and started<lb/>
fighting. One of the West Char-<lb/>
lotte students pulled a handgun<lb/>
from his waistband and began<lb/>
shooting, police said.<lb/>
Treadway said the shooting<lb/>
stemmed from an on-going feud<lb/>
umong the four, apparently overa<lb/>
Continued from page 21<lb/>
Virginia wins<lb/>
their opener<lb/>
went 80 yards on 10 plays, with<lb/>
Moore hitting tight end Bruce<lb/>
McGonnigal with a 30-yard<lb/>
touchdown pass for a 10-7 Cava-<lb/>
lier lead.<lb/>
Christie's43-yard field goal tied<lb/>
the game with 5:49 to play in the<lb/>
first half, and the Indian's earned<lb/>
their intermission lead when<lb/>
Brosnan hit Harry Mehre with an<lb/>
8-vard scoring strike with 1:47<lb/>
left.<lb/>
Wilson, a sophomore, led all<lb/>
runners with 102 yards on 20 car-<lb/>
ries.<lb/>
Moore, a sophomore making<lb/>
his first start, completed 13 of 21<lb/>
passes for 167yardsand ran for 75<lb/>
yards on 13 carries.<lb/>
"I think he did very w and I<lb/>
also think he'll get better Welsh<lb/>
said. "I think he played with a lot<lb/>
of poise<lb/>
Brosnahan was 15-22 for 165<lb/>
yardsbefore leaving the game late<lb/>
in the third quarter with a lacera-<lb/>
tion between the third and fourth<lb/>
finger on his throwing hand.<lb/>
"The doctor's advised against<lb/>
plaving him Laycock said. "He<lb/>
played with it for a while.<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Afterward, Lineberger said he<lb/>
ran from the stadium through a<lb/>
gate to the first police officer he<lb/>
saw across from the school. Police<lb/>
captured the two suspects there.<lb/>
Tatricia Ann Pope, who was<lb/>
injured when a bullet grazed her<lb/>
right foot, was treated and re-<lb/>
leased, Ms. Farugia said.<lb/>
"When I got up my foot started<lb/>
burning,and I saw my foot wasall<lb/>
swelled up she said.<lb/>
Within minutes, Charlotte po-<lb/>
lice had two suspects in custody.<lb/>
Officers also seized four weap-<lb/>
ons, three handguns and a rifle.<lb/>
"People were jumping over the<lb/>
fences and screaming all over the<lb/>
place said Elizabeth Henderson,<lb/>
a senior at West Charlotte High<lb/>
who attended the game.<lb/>
"It was chaos said MEDIC<lb/>
supervisor David Brown. "When<lb/>
the policemen started leading me<lb/>
in there, I didn't know how in the<lb/>
world we were going to find the<lb/>
patients. There were hundreds of<lb/>
people jjst mshing to get ouc of<lb/>
the area<lb/>
Witnesses said the shooting<lb/>
came out of a fight on the West<lb/>
Charlotte side of the field.<lb/>
Kirstcn Smith, a West Charlotte<lb/>
student, said she was sitting near<lb/>
where the trouble started. She<lb/>
said two young men were on the<lb/>
track that surrounded the field<lb/>
and that they were fighting.<lb/>
Miss Smith said a third man<lb/>
walked up with a gun.<lb/>
"I le started shooting five or six<lb/>
times into a whole bunch of<lb/>
people she said. "Everybody<lb/>
just dropped to the ground <lb/>
everywhere and on the field.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058090_0029"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6,1988 23<lb/>
2D<lb/>
k u<lb/>
) r<lb/>
2<lb/>
rED<lb/>
' TIONS<lb/>
TERS<lb/>
TF.RS<lb/>
RSON<lb/>
LID AY<lb/>
l ,<lb/>
I.<lb/>
�<lb/>
1st<lb/>
IAN<lb/>
5<lb/>
�K<lb/>
JILDING<lb/>
lR LIBRARY<lb/>
Some discrepency in football's origins<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) � In the begin-<lb/>
ning, there were no helmets or<lb/>
shoulder pads. The ball was more<lb/>
round than oblong. Field goals<lb/>
counted five points, touchdowns<lb/>
four.<lb/>
What it was was "football<lb/>
The sport surfaced in North<lb/>
Carolina in 1888, making Satur-<lb/>
day the beginning of the centen-<lb/>
nial year of college football in the<lb/>
state The Charlotte Observer re-<lb/>
ported in Saturday's edition.<lb/>
Three schools that were part of the<lb/>
first season � Duke, North Caro-<lb/>
lina and Wake Forest � kicked off<lb/>
their season Saturday.<lb/>
The football fields � and the<lb/>
stands surrounding it � has al-<lb/>
ways been a place where friends<lb/>
turn into foes and arguments<lb/>
sprout over what some would call<lb/>
the most trivial matters.<lb/>
Even after 100 years, the ques-<lb/>
tion of who played the state's first<lb/>
official game is unsettled. De-<lb/>
pending upon which school's<lb/>
football guide is used as a refer-<lb/>
once, it was either North Carolina<lb/>
vs. Wake Forest on Oct. 11,1988,<lb/>
or Trinity vs. North Carolina on<lb/>
Nov. 29.<lb/>
For the three schools involved,<lb/>
the issue is serious business. None<lb/>
are willing to forfeit their place in<lb/>
history to their oldest rivals.<lb/>
North Carolina and Wake For-<lb/>
est insists there should be no<lb/>
question that their meeting, won<lb/>
by Wake Forest 6-4, was the state's<lb/>
first football game. Duke argues<lb/>
that because the Wake-North<lb/>
Carolina game was played using<lb/>
a combination of soccer and<lb/>
rugby rules, it cannot be consid-<lb/>
ered true football.<lb/>
The Nov. 29 game, which Trin-<lb/>
ity won 16-0, featured the "scien-<lb/>
tific" rules of the day, which were<lb/>
approved by the American Inter-<lb/>
Collegiate Association.<lb/>
"The problem is what rules do<lb/>
you go by said Duke archivist<lb/>
Bill King. "Every authoritative<lb/>
article I've seen on the matter says<lb/>
the North Carolina-Wake Forest<lb/>
game was more like soccer or<lb/>
rugby than football. As a histo-<lb/>
rian, I would accept that as a con-<lb/>
clusion<lb/>
That statement draws a heated<lb/>
rebuttal from Wake Forest sports<lb/>
information director John Justus.<lb/>
Wake has a singular stake in the<lb/>
argument: It claims to have been<lb/>
the winner not only in the first<lb/>
college football game played in<lb/>
the state, but also the first college<lb/>
basketball and college basketball<lb/>
games played in North Carolina.<lb/>
"The NCAA recognizes Prince-<lb/>
ton and Rutgers as having played<lb/>
the first game in 1869 Justus<lb/>
said. "According to the 1969<lb/>
NCAA Guide, when the 100th<lb/>
anniversary was recognized, that<lb/>
game was played with even<lb/>
looser rules than were used in the<lb/>
Wake Forest-North Carolina<lb/>
game 19 years later. If the NCAA<lb/>
recognizes that as football, we<lb/>
should, too.<lb/>
"Besides, the whole thing boils<lb/>
down to the game North Carolina<lb/>
recognizes as first, since they<lb/>
played in both. They say our game<lb/>
was first, so I think that ends the<lb/>
argument right there<lb/>
So does North Carolina sports<lb/>
information director Rick Brewer.<lb/>
"My contention is that Wake<lb/>
Forest had always been carried in<lb/>
our records as first, and you can't<lb/>
change history said Brewer. "I<lb/>
didn't realize there was any ques-<lb/>
tion about it until this year<lb/>
But it doesn't end there � Duke<lb/>
and North Carolina can't agree on<lb/>
what happened the next year ei-<lb/>
ther. Part of the lore of the rivalry<lb/>
is that both claim a 1-0 forfeit vic-<lb/>
tory in 1889.<lb/>
Trinity and North Carolina<lb/>
were unsuccessful in their at-<lb/>
tempts to schedule a game for the<lb/>
autumn of 1889 because they<lb/>
could not agree on a site or date,<lb/>
historian Jim L. Sumner wrote in<lb/>
the July 1988 issue of The North<lb/>
Carolina Historical Review.<lb/>
The failure irritated both sides<lb/>
and each recorded a victory for a<lb/>
game never played.<lb/>
As a result, North Carolina's<lb/>
current media guide lists its series<lb/>
record with Duke as 38-32-4. The<lb/>
Blue Devils' guide says their rec-<lb/>
ord against the Tar Heels is 33-37-<lb/>
4.<lb/>
Neither side is willing to budge.<lb/>
"The game was supposed to be<lb/>
played here in Chapel Hill; every-<lb/>
body knows that Brewer said.<lb/>
'Trinity didn't come, so they had<lb/>
to forfeit<lb/>
Tom Mickle, Duke's director of<lb/>
sports services, counters: "All you<lb/>
have to do is go back and look at<lb/>
the records. Trini ty was whipping<lb/>
everybody and Carolina just<lb/>
didn't want to get their butts<lb/>
kick<lb/>
There have been attempts to<lb/>
settle the dispute or drop it alto-<lb/>
gether, but to no avail.<lb/>
"We were told by the ACC of-<lb/>
fice about 10 years ago to<lb/>
straighten it out, that it looked<lb/>
kind of silly said Johnny Moore,<lb/>
promotions director at Duke.<lb/>
'That was before (former Duke<lb/>
sports information director) Ted<lb/>
Mann died, and he wouldn't hear<lb/>
of it.<lb/>
Shootings interupt<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) A 20-year-<lb/>
old man remained hospitalized in<lb/>
serious condition, and a high<lb/>
school coach was released Satur-<lb/>
day, one day after gunfire broke<lb/>
out at a Charlotte football game.<lb/>
The two were among four<lb/>
people wounded at about 9:30<lb/>
p.m. Friday, in the third quarter of<lb/>
the game between West Charlotte<lb/>
and Garinger at Garinger.<lb/>
Meanwhile, in Augusta, Ga<lb/>
Friday night, an assistant coach<lb/>
was wounded as he left the press<lb/>
box at a football game. Sam<lb/>
Adkins, an assistant football<lb/>
coach at Glen Mills High School,<lb/>
was hit in the shoulder and side<lb/>
and underwent surgery early Sat-<lb/>
urday, authorities said.<lb/>
Charlotte police on Saturday<lb/>
charged Donnell Prince Logan,<lb/>
18, and Albert "Angclo" Hanker-<lb/>
son, 17, both of Charlotte. Hank-<lb/>
erson attends West Charlotte<lb/>
High, said his father, Albert<lb/>
Hanker son.<lb/>
Logan was charged with three<lb/>
counts of assault with a deadly<lb/>
weapon, inflicting serious injury,<lb/>
while Hankerson was charged<lb/>
with carrying a concealed<lb/>
weapon � a 38-caliber handgun,<lb/>
police said.<lb/>
A third man, DwayneMims,20,<lb/>
of Charlotte, was charged with<lb/>
carrying a concealed weapon and<lb/>
possession of a stolen firearm af-<lb/>
ter police spotted him in the<lb/>
stands with a gun in his pants<lb/>
pocket. Charlotte Police Com-<lb/>
mander Bruce Treadway said<lb/>
Mims was not involved in the<lb/>
shooting. He was released from<lb/>
jail Saturday.<lb/>
Police said two West Charlotte<lb/>
students apparently were watch-<lb/>
ing the game when two other<lb/>
youths approached and started<lb/>
fighting. One of the West Char-<lb/>
lotte students pulled a handgun<lb/>
from his waistband and began<lb/>
shooting, police said.<lb/>
Treadway said the shooting<lb/>
stemmed from an on-going feud<lb/>
among the four, apparently over a<lb/>
Continued from page 21<lb/>
Virginia wins<lb/>
their opener<lb/>
went 80 yards on 10 plays, with<lb/>
Moore hitting tight end Bruce<lb/>
McGonnigal with a 30-yard<lb/>
touchdown pass for a 10-7 Cava-<lb/>
lier lead.<lb/>
Christie's43-yard field goal tied<lb/>
the game with 5:49 to play in the<lb/>
first half, and the Indian's earned<lb/>
their intermission lead when<lb/>
Brosnan hit Harry Mchre with an<lb/>
8-yard scoring strike with 1:47<lb/>
left.<lb/>
Wilson, a sophomore, led all<lb/>
runners with 102 yards on 20 car-<lb/>
ries.<lb/>
Moore, a sophomore making<lb/>
his first start, completed 13 of 21<lb/>
passes for 167 yards and ran for 75<lb/>
yards on 13 carries.<lb/>
"I think he did very well, and I<lb/>
also think he'll get better Welsh<lb/>
said. "I think he played with a lot<lb/>
of poise<lb/>
Brosnahan was 15-22 for 165<lb/>
yards before leaving the game late<lb/>
in the third quarter with a lacera-<lb/>
tion between the third and fourth<lb/>
finger on his throwing hand.<lb/>
"The doctor's advised against<lb/>
playing him Laycock said. "He<lb/>
played with it for a while.<lb/>
16-year-old girl.<lb/>
The elder Hankerson said he<lb/>
knew of a running dispute be-<lb/>
tween his son and a group of<lb/>
young men who had attended<lb/>
Garinger and were from a north<lb/>
Charlotte neighborhood.<lb/>
Hankerson said the dispute<lb/>
started in May. He said his son<lb/>
filed an assault charge against one<lb/>
of the young men in May.<lb/>
Four people were taken to<lb/>
Charlotte Memorial Hospital,<lb/>
including West Charlotte Assis-<lb/>
tant Coach John Ovcrcash, who<lb/>
was wounded in the left leg, hos-<lb/>
pital spokeswoman Amy Farugia<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Overcash, 43, of Harrisburg,<lb/>
was released Saturday.<lb/>
Keith Allen Jones, 20, of Char-<lb/>
lotte, who underwent surgery<lb/>
early Saturday for wounds in his<lb/>
abdomen remained in serious<lb/>
condition, a hospital spokes-<lb/>
woman said.<lb/>
Michael Lineberger, 18, of<lb/>
Charlotte, suffered a bullet<lb/>
wound to his right shoulder. Ms.<lb/>
Farugia said the bullet went<lb/>
through the shoulder. Lineberger<lb/>
also was released from the hospi-<lb/>
tal Saturday, she said.<lb/>
Lineberger, a Garinger drop-<lb/>
out, said he was shot in the back as<lb/>
he tried to run from a gunman. "I<lb/>
was walking on the track, when I<lb/>
came upon a crowd of people that<lb/>
was gathered around the fight<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Afterward, Lineberger said he<lb/>
ran from the stadium through a<lb/>
gate t the first police officer he<lb/>
saw across from the school. Police<lb/>
captured the two suspects there.<lb/>
Patricia Ann Pope, who was<lb/>
injured when a bullet grazed her<lb/>
right foot, was treated and re-<lb/>
leased, Ms. Farugia said.<lb/>
"When I got up my foot started<lb/>
burning,and I saw my foot wasall<lb/>
swelled up she said.<lb/>
Within minutes, Charlotte po-<lb/>
lice had two suspects in custody.<lb/>
Officers also seized four weap-<lb/>
ons, three handguns and a rifle.<lb/>
"People were jumping over the<lb/>
fences and screaming all over the<lb/>
place said Elizabeth Henderson,<lb/>
a senior at West Charlotte High<lb/>
who attended the game.<lb/>
"It was chaos said MEDIC<lb/>
supervisor David Brown. "When<lb/>
the policemen started leading me<lb/>
in there, I didn't know how in the<lb/>
world we were going to find the<lb/>
patients. Theie were hundreds of<lb/>
people jjst tnshing to get ouc of<lb/>
the area<lb/>
Witnesses said the shooting<lb/>
came out of a fight on the West<lb/>
Charlotte side of the field.<lb/>
Kirsten Smith, a West Charlotte<lb/>
student, said she was sitting near<lb/>
where the trouble started. She<lb/>
said two young men were on the<lb/>
track that surrounded the field<lb/>
and that they were fighting.<lb/>
Miss Smith said a third man<lb/>
walked up with a gun.<lb/>
"He started shooting five or six<lb/>
times into a whole bunch of<lb/>
people she said. "Everybody<lb/>
just dropped to the ground <lb/>
everywhere and on the field.<lb/>
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WEDNESDAYS<lb/>
Fiesta<lb/>
Grande<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0030"/><lb/>
24 TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6,1988<lb/>
Appalachian keeps up their winning ways I pirat<lb/>
(AP) - Just when everyone<lb/>
thought they had the Ap-<lb/>
palachain State offense figured<lb/>
out, Mountaineer Coach Sparky<lb/>
Woods comes up with a surprise -<lb/>
the forward pass.<lb/>
Once a team that relied heavily<lb/>
on its rushing attack, Ap-<lb/>
palachain State went to the pass<lb/>
against The Citadel in its South-<lb/>
ern Conference opener and came<lb/>
away with a 38-14 victory. Quar-<lb/>
terback Bobby Fuller passed for<lb/>
228 yards and three touchdowns,<lb/>
and in all, Appalachain gained<lb/>
273 yards passing to go with 213<lb/>
yards rushing.<lb/>
"We've always wanted to be<lb/>
more balanced than we've turned<lb/>
out to be Woods said. 'There are<lb/>
several reasons we haven't been,<lb/>
including having a great running<lb/>
back in John Settle and not having<lb/>
the capacity to get the ball to our<lb/>
receivers consistently. I think<lb/>
now, we have that capability<lb/>
The result was a shock to the<lb/>
Citadel secondary.<lb/>
"They surprised us, throwing<lb/>
when they did free safety J.D.<lb/>
Cauthensaid. "We expected them<lb/>
to be like they've been in the past,<lb/>
running on first and second<lb/>
down<lb/>
The victory raised Appalachain<lb/>
State's unbeaten streak in regular<lb/>
season conference play to 19.<lb/>
East Tennessee State took a 26-<lb/>
10 victory over VMI in the other<lb/>
league game to open the season.<lb/>
Elsewhere, Marshall took a 30-17<lb/>
victory over the Morehead State<lb/>
and Furman whipped South<lb/>
Carolina State 38-0. Tulane de-<lb/>
feated Tennessee-Chattanooga<lb/>
33-19 and North Carolina State<lb/>
whipped Western Carolina 45-6.<lb/>
Albert Burt rushed for 125<lb/>
yards and two touchdowns to<lb/>
lead the Buccaneers to victory.<lb/>
Burt scored on a 6-yard run in the<lb/>
second quarter to put the Bucca-<lb/>
neers up 7-3 and then on a 1-yard<lb/>
run in the third quarter to give<lb/>
East Tennessee State to a 13-3<lb/>
edge.<lb/>
Leading in the fourth quarter,<lb/>
East Tennesee State extended<lb/>
their 19-10 lead when cornerback<lb/>
Rick Harris intercepted an at-<lb/>
tempted halfback pass to set up its<lb/>
final touchdown.<lb/>
Marshall, still looking for a<lb/>
Southern Quarter title despite<lb/>
reaching the finals of the NCAA<lb/>
Division I-AA playoffs, got a<lb/>
jump on its goals thanks to Ron<lb/>
Darby, who rushed for 154 yards<lb/>
and one touchdown.<lb/>
The Thundering Herd was trail-<lb/>
ing 10-3 and on the verge of falling<lb/>
further behind when Morehead<lb/>
State reached the Marshall 4. But<lb/>
Stanley Hall intercepted a Chris<lb/>
Swartz pass to halt the threat and<lb/>
turn the momentum in Marshall's<lb/>
direction.<lb/>
Tailback Marshall Daugherty<lb/>
rushed for 103 yards and two<lb/>
touchdowns, and Julius Dixon<lb/>
blocked two punts to lead to two<lb/>
more scores for Furman. Daugh-<lb/>
erty scored on a 22-yard run in the<lb/>
first quarter that was set up after<lb/>
Dixon blocked a punt that was<lb/>
recovered at the S.C. State 22.<lb/>
Dixon's next blocked punt<lb/>
came in the third quarter, and it<lb/>
led to a Patrick Baynes touch-<lb/>
down pass to Greg Key.<lb/>
"We still have a lot to do, but the<lb/>
effort is there Furman Coach<lb/>
Jimmy Satterfield said.<lb/>
A 93-yard kickoff return by<lb/>
Michael Pierce and a 59-yard punt<lb/>
return by Mitchell Price helped<lb/>
Tulane get away from the Mocca-<lb/>
sins in the third quarter. Brad<lb/>
Patterson threw a touchdown<lb/>
pass, Andre Lockhart ran for<lb/>
another score and Dennis Waters<lb/>
kicked field goals of 37 and 43<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
Western Carolina could get just<lb/>
two field goals from Clay Cox and<lb/>
only penetrated North Carolina<lb/>
State territory twice, and one of<lb/>
those was with the help of a 50-<lb/>
yard kickoff return.<lb/>
"1 was not prepared for this<lb/>
kind of disappointing perform-<lb/>
ance Western Carolina Coach<lb/>
Bob Waters said. "Ican'tthinkofa<lb/>
bright spot tonight. We had sev-<lb/>
eral players who played hard, but<lb/>
no bright area<lb/>
Wolfpack gets easy victory over 'Cats<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) � The quarter-<lb/>
back issue isn't settled at North<lb/>
Carolina State, but Coach Dick<lb/>
Sheridan found out how loaded<lb/>
his arsenal is after a 45-6 victory<lb/>
over Western Carolina on Satur-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
Sheridan wouldn't name a<lb/>
starting quarterback before the<lb/>
game, but Preston Poag got the<lb/>
nod and responded with three<lb/>
touchdown dives. Poag was one<lb/>
of three quarterbacks Sheridan<lb/>
used in the season-opener.<lb/>
When the Wolfpack went to<lb/>
freshman Anthony Barbour to<lb/>
run at tailback, he responded with<lb/>
the first two touchdown runs of<lb/>
his young collegiate career.<lb/>
"In vour first game, you never<lb/>
know what's going to happen<lb/>
Sheridan said. "I thought our kids<lb/>
played with a lot of enthusiasm<lb/>
Sheridan said nothing to indi-<lb/>
cate he would settle on one of his<lb/>
three quarterbacks who all played<lb/>
against the Catamounts.<lb/>
"1 thought (Poag) did an excel-<lb/>
lent job of running and throwing<lb/>
the ball Sheridan said. "Charles<lb/>
Davenport is our best running<lb/>
quarterback, and I think he<lb/>
showed why tonight. Shane<lb/>
Montgomery is our best passer<lb/>
and he did a great job in our two-<lb/>
minute drill<lb/>
Poag capped drives of 21, 26<lb/>
and 78 yards with his 1-yard scor-<lb/>
ing dives. Barbour, who had 47<lb/>
touchdowns his senior year at<lb/>
nearby Garner High School, fore halftime. crn Carolina 31 in the second<lb/>
scored on his thrid play from Western Carolina's offense quarter, but Fowble missed a 47-<lb/>
scrimmage, running 15 yards only reached N.C. State territory yard field goal attempt after the<lb/>
around right end with 7:32 left in twice, once with the aid of a 50- drive stalled,<lb/>
the second quarter. yard kickoff return which led to a Montgomery led the Wolfpack<lb/>
Barbour also scored on a 5-yard 35-yard field goal by Clay Cox on a 65-yard drive that ended on<lb/>
run with 9:56 left in the third early in the second quarter. Fowble's 31-yard field goal with<lb/>
quarter, raising N.C. State's edge Cox also had a 42-yard field 1:05 left before the half,<lb/>
to 31-3. Following a Chris Hartsell goal with 59 seconds left in the Western Carolina's only ven-<lb/>
interccption return to the Western third quarter for the Catamounts, turc into Wolfpack territory in the<lb/>
also playing their season opener, first half came after Otis<lb/>
"I was not prepared for this Washington's 50-yard kickoff re-<lb/>
kind of disappointing perform- turn early in the second quarter to<lb/>
ance Western Carolina Coach the N.C. State 40. Quarterback<lb/>
Bob Waters said. "Ican'tthinkofa Todd Cottrcll passed 15 yards to<lb/>
bright spot tonight. We had sev- tight end Jon Reed on a third-and-<lb/>
eral players who played hard, but 5 to keep the drive alive, but N.C.<lb/>
no bright areas State's defense tightened and Cox<lb/>
Davenport moved the kicked his 35-yard field goal with<lb/>
Wolfpack from its 17 to the West- H:31 left in the half.<lb/>
Carolina 38, Barbour rushed three<lb/>
times for 35 yards to set up Steve<lb/>
Salley's 2-yard scoring run with<lb/>
4:26 left to play.<lb/>
Barbour finished with 81 yards<lb/>
on nine carries.<lb/>
"Anthony Barbour had a tre-<lb/>
Mark Fowble, who hit all five of<lb/>
his conversions, also kicked a 31-<lb/>
yard field goal with 1:05 left be-<lb/>
Thc Catamounts hindered their<lb/>
own offense, committing 16<lb/>
penalties for 115 yards, compared<lb/>
to four N.C. State penalties for 34<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
"We just made too many mis-<lb/>
takes to be competitive in this<lb/>
game Waters said. "The team<lb/>
we put on the field tonight didn't<lb/>
resemble the team 1 saw in prac-<lb/>
tice this week. We kept shooting<lb/>
ourselves in the foot<lb/>
The loss was the worst open-<lb/>
ing-day defeat suffered by West-<lb/>
ern Carolina since a 51-0 loss to<lb/>
Carson-Newman in 1937.<lb/>
UCLA gains victory, but not good warm-up for Nebraska<lb/>
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) �<lb/>
Darryl Henley returned a punt 89<lb/>
vardsfora touchdown after just<lb/>
3:25 of play and Troy Aikman<lb/>
threw three first-half scoring<lb/>
passes Saturday night as fifth-<lb/>
ranked UCLA overpowered San<lb/>
Diego State 59-6 in the season<lb/>
opener for both teams.<lb/>
ilev, who returned a punt74<lb/>
yards for a touchdown in UCLA s<lb/>
47-14 seeason-opening victory<lb/>
over San Diego State last season,<lb/>
broke two tackles and side-<lb/>
stepped several other Aztecs in<lb/>
getting the Bruins off to a fast<lb/>
start.<lb/>
Aikman, who ranked second in<lb/>
the country in passing efficiency<lb/>
last season, threw a 43-yard<lb/>
touchdown pass to Laurence series of the third quarter. UCLA field goal with 58 seconds left<lb/>
Burkley and a 15-yard scoring led 38-0 at the time. before halftime made it 31-0.<lb/>
pass to Reggie Moore to give the Eric Ball, another UCLA senior, Estwick also scored on a 3-yard<lb/>
Bruins a 21-0 lead before the was the game's leading rusher run, capping a 78-yard, 10-play<lb/>
second quarter was two minutes with 122 yards on 17 carries. He drive with the second-half kickoff<lb/>
old. also left early in the third quarter, which gave the Bruins their 38-0<lb/>
Aikman completed 13 out of 17 Aikman's 2-yard touchdown lead,<lb/>
passes for 155 yards without pass to Mark Estwick with 3:47 UCLA's other points came on a ego State's touchdown on a 13-<lb/>
being intercepted before coming remaining in the second quarter 2-yard touchdown pass from yard run with 10 minutes left in<lb/>
out of the game after the first and Alfredo Velasco's 32-yard backup quarterback Ron Car- the contest.<lb/>
agher to Corwin Anthony late in<lb/>
the third quarter, a 30-yard touch-<lb/>
down run by freshman Shawn<lb/>
Wills with 8:05 left in the game,<lb/>
and 2-yard run by Wills with 2:48<lb/>
left.<lb/>
Tommv Booker scored San Di-<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
ECU's Largest Fraternity<lb/>
Chancellor Cup Champs 4 Years Running<lb/>
2 Houses and a Party Room<lb/>
Winner of Inter-Fraternity Council's<lb/>
"Most Outstanding Chapter Award"<lb/>
� �<lb/>
NEED A RIDE!<lb/>
Located at the Corner of 5th and Summit<lb/>
(Across from Garrett Hall)<lb/>
757-0487<lb/>
757-0305<lb/>
830-9646 September 6 - Meet Sorority Girls of Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
830-9647 .<lb/>
September 7 -Meet Sorority Girls of Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
September 8 -Brothers and Rushees Only<lb/>
"The House With A Heart"<lb/>
Continued from page 21<lb/>
On the Pirates next possess<lb/>
Libretto proved once again'<lb/>
he could run the Pirate's run<lb/>
shootoption offense, and m<lb/>
ing the offense down to the<lb/>
six yard line before taking tlu<lb/>
into the endzone himself<lb/>
keeper around the right<lb/>
Imperato added the extra<lb/>
giving the Pirates their final<lb/>
score. After this touchdown,<lb/>
was content to hold the Ea<lb/>
offense, and simply run the<lb/>
out. Mike Applewhite and<lb/>
Willis led the stingy Pirateofi<lb/>
with seven tackles each.<lb/>
"We look at this as the fint<lb/>
on our ladder of success. This<lb/>
a must game Baker said aftt<lb/>
game. "Our defense did anj<lb/>
standing job tonight. An<lb/>
you can hold an opponent tj<lb/>
13 points you have got<lb/>
happy. Individually, we h<lb/>
many people that stood<lb/>
Travis Hunter began tonigl<lb/>
where he left off at the end<lb/>
season. Jarrod Moody had a<lb/>
first half runningas well as nj<lb/>
ing. junior Robinson and Ri<lb/>
McKinney also come to mtf<lb/>
great performances he adJ<lb/>
Baker also had something<lb/>
ahou the attendance at<lb/>
Tennis<lb/>
SORGHO, Ky. (AP) -<lb/>
Jessica Navarre sat down a cl<lb/>
of vears ago to write letter tl<lb/>
colleges, the Bolivian<lb/>
didn't have any idea wh<lb/>
responses would be.<lb/>
It turned out to be plenum<lb/>
morning, she received six oi<lb/>
full athletic scholarships iJ<lb/>
mail.<lb/>
But considering what NaJ<lb/>
had to offer, that shouldn't<lb/>
as a surprise.<lb/>
Navarro, 20, won her fiH<lb/>
tional junior tennis tournam<lb/>
Bolivia when she was 12<lb/>
old. Over the next six yeai<lb/>
won three more national<lb/>
titles.<lb/>
Navarro eventually<lb/>
Union University in lacl<lb/>
Tenn spuming offers froml<lb/>
larger schools.<lb/>
More N<lb/>
BUFFALO, NY. (AP)<lb/>
Bowl MVP Bruce Smith.<lb/>
pended by the NFL two daj<lb/>
fore the Buffalo Bills'<lb/>
opener against Minnesota id<lb/>
ing a drug test, savs he will!<lb/>
to "put the pieces back toga<lb/>
"I'm just going to get o<lb/>
knees and pra v and handle M<lb/>
there the defensive end tol<lb/>
Buffalo News on Friday mi<lb/>
"I've got a lot on my mim<lb/>
added. "I just want to get el<lb/>
thing back together. 1 just wj<lb/>
put the pieces back togethei<lb/>
Smith, the NFL's first o<lb/>
draft choice in 1985 after a<lb/>
collegiate career at Virginia<lb/>
became the second Buffalo d<lb/>
to be suspended for drug abi<lb/>
four weeks. Running back<lb/>
Riddick just returned to the<lb/>
Wednesday following a nj<lb/>
long suspension.<lb/>
Asked if he felt Bills fans <lb/>
be upset at the news. Smith<lb/>
"I'm really not worried<lb/>
(public reaction) right nowj<lb/>
more concerned about m vsej<lb/>
my family. 1 think that's <lb/>
most important<lb/>
Smith said he thought<lb/>
players would understand.<lb/>
know me and I'm sure there<lb/>
be an v problems from that<lb/>
In announcing the suspei<lb/>
Bills General Manager Bill"<lb/>
said Smith would undergo,<lb/>
bilitation program under tl<lb/>
pervision of Dr. Forrest Tei<lb/>
who heads up the NFL's<lb/>
rehabilitation program.<lb/>
Smith had no comment<lb/>
rehabilitation program.<lb/>
Both Polian and Bills<lb/>
Mark Levy didn't dwell<lb/>
enormous cost the suspens<lb/>
Smith, the NFL's defensive<lb/>
man of the year last season,<lb/>
i�ave on the team. Insteadl<lb/>
focused on Smith the perso<lb/>
"We're talking about a<lb/>
health here said Poliai<lb/>
knowledging the suspensiol<lb/>
a "black mark" on the or<lb/>
tion. There are youngstei<lb/>
look up to the players. I h<lb/>
rible about that<lb/>
Levy called Smith "a lil<lb/>
<pb facs="00058090_0031"/><lb/>
ways<lb/>
ineget away from the Mooca-<lb/>
s in the third quarter Brad<lb/>
terson threw a touchdown<lb/>
Andre Lockhart ran for<lb/>
rther score and Dennis Waters<lb/>
ked field goals or 37 and 43<lb/>
Ste n Carolina could j;ct just<lb/>
icld goals from Clay Cox and<lb/>
ted North Carolina<lb/>
territory twice .1 d 01 e ol<lb/>
u as with the help of a 50-<lb/>
ofl return<lb/>
- not prepared tor this<lb/>
� disappointing perform-<lb/>
n Carolina Coach<lb/>
i can't think of a<lb/>
gl : We had sev-<lb/>
Ma. lyed hard, but<lb/>
irea<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
ats<lb/>
It � d<lb/>
nit ting 16<lb/>
many n<lb/>
ivc in tb, 1 <lb/>
hoot<lb/>
West-<lb/>
raska<lb/>
.<lb/>
minute left in<lb/>
N<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6,1988 25<lb/>
Pirates win big over Tech<lb/>
r<lb/>
���-?vj '�,���-<lb/>
 -i ?<lb/>
Continued from page 21<lb/>
On the Tirates next possession,<lb/>
Libretto proved once again that<lb/>
he could run the Pirate's run and<lb/>
shootoption offense, and march-<lb/>
ing the offense down to the Tech<lb/>
six yard line before taking the ball<lb/>
into the endzone himself on a<lb/>
keeper around the right side,<lb/>
lmperato added the extra point,<lb/>
giving the Tirates their final 52-13<lb/>
score. After this touchdown, ECU<lb/>
was content to hold the Eagles'<lb/>
offense, and simply run the clock<lb/>
out. Mike Applewhite and Glenn<lb/>
Willis led the stingy Pirate offense<lb/>
with seven tackles each.<lb/>
"We look at this as the first step<lb/>
on our ladder of success. This was<lb/>
a must game Baker said after the<lb/>
game. "Our defense did an out-<lb/>
standing job tonight. Anytime<lb/>
you can hold an opponent to just<lb/>
13 points you have got to be<lb/>
happy. Individually, we had so<lb/>
many people that stood out.<lb/>
Travis Hunter began tonight just<lb/>
where he left off at the end of last<lb/>
season. Jarrod Moody had a great<lb/>
first half running as well as receiv-<lb/>
ing. Junior Robinson and Reggie<lb/>
McKinnev also come to mind as<lb/>
great performances he added.<lb/>
Baker also had something to say<lb/>
abou the attendance at the game.<lb/>
<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
NITE IS COLLEGE NITE 8-11<lb/>
ONLY $2.00<lb/>
ADMISSION WITH COLLXGE I.O.<lb/>
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IA11 New! . <lb/>
Junior Robinson turns up field and heads for the goal line on one of his kick returns. (Photo from SID).<lb/>
ft<lb/>
GYM<lb/>
�<lb/>
"I was tremendously pleased<lb/>
with the turn-out for the game<lb/>
he said. "1 think that this team is<lb/>
really receptive to a good crowd,<lb/>
and 1 thought that the students<lb/>
really got into the game. We have<lb/>
some really great fans here<lb/>
The Tirates will be on the road<lb/>
next week-end, traveling to<lb/>
Blacksburg, 'a. to take on the<lb/>
1 lokies of Virgina Tech.One of the<lb/>
areas that the Pirates will have to<lb/>
improve on when they face the<lb/>
I lokies will be their penalties. The<lb/>
Pirates were penalized nine times<lb/>
for 69 vardsagainst Tech.<lb/>
USA<lb/>
Tennis player happy at small college<lb/>
SORGHO, Ky. (AP) � When<lb/>
Jessica Navarro sat down a couple<lb/>
o years ago to write letters to U.S.<lb/>
colleges, the Bolivian native<lb/>
didn't have any idea what the<lb/>
responses would be.<lb/>
It turned out to be plentiful. One<lb/>
morning, she received six offersof<lb/>
full athletic scholarships in the<lb/>
mail.<lb/>
But considering what Navarro<lb/>
had to offer, that shouldn't come<lb/>
as a surprise.<lb/>
Navarro, 20, won her first na-<lb/>
tional junior tennis tournament in<lb/>
Bolivia when she was 12 years<lb/>
old. Over the next six years she<lb/>
won three more national junior<lb/>
titles.<lb/>
Navarro eventually chose<lb/>
Union University in Jackson,<lb/>
Tenn spurning offers from many-<lb/>
larger schools.<lb/>
"I wanted to go to a small<lb/>
school, a religious school, not a<lb/>
state school or a big school<lb/>
Navarro said. "1 come from a<lb/>
small country so I didn't think 1<lb/>
would like that (a larger school).<lb/>
When 1 came to visit<lb/>
Unioneveryone was friendly<lb/>
and I loved it<lb/>
Navarro spent the summer as<lb/>
an instructor at Our Tennis House<lb/>
in Sorgho. She returns to Union in<lb/>
the fall and to her position as the<lb/>
No. 1 player on the women's ten-<lb/>
nis team, a spot she has held since<lb/>
arriving at the small Baptist<lb/>
school two years ago.<lb/>
Cochabamba, the largest city in<lb/>
Bolivia, is Navarro's home. She is<lb/>
one of seven children, all tennis<lb/>
players. Navarro's younger sis-<lb/>
ter, Karen, also attends Union and<lb/>
is the No. 3 player on the tennis<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"1 think he made a good invest-<lb/>
ment Navarro said of her father.<lb/>
"He trained us all when we were<lb/>
young, and now he doesn't have<lb/>
to pay for our education or any-<lb/>
thing<lb/>
Navarro, who didn't speak<lb/>
English when she came to the<lb/>
United States but speaks it almost<lb/>
flawlessly now, quickly saw what<lb/>
tennis could mean to her life.<lb/>
"When I won my first national<lb/>
tournament, I saw all the oppor-<lb/>
tunities it gave me she said.<lb/>
But while her style may not be<lb/>
perfect for hard surfaces, Navarro<lb/>
has proven herself at Union. Her<lb/>
singles record her first year was<lb/>
23-3. Last year she won 24<lb/>
matches in a row before losing in<lb/>
the National Association of Inter-<lb/>
collegiate Athletics district finals.<lb/>
"Because 1 lost that match, they<lb/>
seeded me 20th in the nation she<lb/>
said. "I don't think that was fair<lb/>
Navarro is studying business<lb/>
management and marketing at<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
"What I really want to do is<lb/>
manage the business of profes-<lb/>
sional players she said.<lb/>
As for her future as a tennis<lb/>
player, Navarro isn't sure where<lb/>
she is going. She would like to<lb/>
have a professional playing career<lb/>
but thinks the odds are against<lb/>
her.<lb/>
A LIC. OF POWERHOUSE GYM LICENSING ENT , INC.<lb/>
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More NFL players suspended<lb/>
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) � Pro<lb/>
Bowl MVP Bruce Smith, sus-<lb/>
pended by the NFL two days be-<lb/>
fore the Buffalo Bills' season<lb/>
opener against Minnesota for fail-<lb/>
ing a drug test, says he will work<lb/>
to "put the pieces back together<lb/>
"I'm just going to get on my<lb/>
knees and pray and handle it from<lb/>
there the defensive end told The<lb/>
Buffalo News on Friday night.<lb/>
"I've got a lot on my mind he<lb/>
added. "I just want to get every-<lb/>
thing back together. I just want to<lb/>
put the pieces back together<lb/>
Smith, the NFL's first overall<lb/>
draft choice in 1985 after a stellar<lb/>
collegiate career at Virginia Tech,<lb/>
became the second Buffalo player<lb/>
to be suspended for drug abuse in<lb/>
four weeks. Running back Robb<lb/>
Riddick just returned to the team<lb/>
Wednesday following a month<lb/>
long suspension.<lb/>
Asked if he felt Bills fans would<lb/>
be upset at the news, Smith said,<lb/>
"I'm really not worried about<lb/>
(public reaction) right now. I'm<lb/>
more concerned about myself and<lb/>
my family. I think that's what's<lb/>
most important<lb/>
Smith said he thought Bills<lb/>
players would understand. 'They<lb/>
know me and I'm sure there won't<lb/>
be any problems from that point<lb/>
In announcing the suspension,<lb/>
Bills General Manager Bill Polian<lb/>
said Smith would undergo a reha-<lb/>
bilitation program under the su-<lb/>
pervision of Dr. Forrest Tennant,<lb/>
who heads up the NFL's drug<lb/>
rehabilitation program.<lb/>
Smith had no comment on his<lb/>
rehabilitation program.<lb/>
Both Polian and Bills Coach<lb/>
Mark Levy didn't dwell on the<lb/>
enormous cost the suspension of<lb/>
Smith, the NFL's defensive line-<lb/>
man of the year last season, would<lb/>
have on the team. Instead, they<lb/>
focused on Smith the person.<lb/>
"We're talking about a guy's<lb/>
health here said Polian, ac-<lb/>
knowledging the suspension was<lb/>
a "black mark" on the organiza-<lb/>
tion. "There are youngsters who<lb/>
look up to the players. I feel ter-<lb/>
rible about that<lb/>
Levy called Smith "a likeable<lb/>
person, one-on-onc. I think he's a<lb/>
good-hearted person. I think he's<lb/>
a great athlete.<lb/>
"But, it will all go for naught if<lb/>
he doesn't lick this problem and<lb/>
he doesn't carry his side of the<lb/>
weight<lb/>
Polian said the 25-year-old<lb/>
Smith is "a young man who has a<lb/>
problem who needs to correct that<lb/>
problem and that takes prece-<lb/>
dence<lb/>
Bills nose tackle Fred Smerlas<lb/>
said that when Levy notified the<lb/>
team of Smith's suspension dur-<lb/>
ing practice, "Everybody's mouth<lb/>
just dropped. Everyone was kind<lb/>
of stunned<lb/>
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t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6,1988<lb/>
THE E.C.U<lb/>
INTERFRATERNITY<lb/>
COUNCIL INVITES<lb/>
YOU TO RUSH ' 88!<lb/>
Pi "Kappa Thi<lb/>
803 Hooker Read<lb/>
752-6927<lb/>
nKi<lb/>
Number of chapters Nationally. Over 120<lb/>
Date and Place of Pounding: December 10,1904<lb/>
College of Charleston, SC<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Charlotte, North Carolina<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Cold, White, Blue<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: PUSH<lb/>
(Play Unites for the Severely Handicapped)<lb/>
New House Ready For Spring Semester<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Strongest Alumni Association<lb/>
Thi "Kappa Tau<lb/>
DKT<lb/>
409 Elizabeth St.<lb/>
757-1319<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 100<lb/>
Date and Place of founding: March 17,1906<lb/>
Miami University<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Oxford, Ohio<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Havard Red and Old Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Children's Heart Foundation<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Encourage Brothers to be involved in campus functions.<lb/>
Ti Kappa Alpha n K A<lb/>
Corner Sth it Elizabeth 752-4773<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally. Over 150<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: March 1,1868<lb/>
University of Virginia<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Memphis, Tennessee<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Garnet and Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization:<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Group effort In reaching goals.<lb/>
Sigma Tan Qamma 7. T T<lb/>
508 W. 5th St. 757-0127<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally Over 100<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: June 28, 1920<lb/>
Central Missouri State Teachers College<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Warrensburg, Missouri<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Blue and White<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization:<lb/>
Greenville Boys Club<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Academics, Individuality<lb/>
Kappa Sigma KI<lb/>
700 E 10th St. 7525543<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 200<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: December 10,1869<lb/>
University of Virginia<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Charlottesville, Virginia<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Scarlet, White, Green<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Muscular Dystrophy<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Lambda Chi Mpha A X A<lb/>
Tues Sept. 6th<lb/>
8:00-11:00 p.m.<lb/>
Wed Sept. 7th<lb/>
8:00-11:00 p.m.<lb/>
Thurs Sept. 8th<lb/>
8:00-11:00 p.m.<lb/>
raternftrj "JCife . .<lb/>
Social ICife .<lb/>
To be In a fraternity Is not merely to be in a social<lb/>
club Fraternities are a way of life We share ex<lb/>
penses as well as experiences, and we are responsi<lb/>
ble to each other tor our own actions We live off<lb/>
campus, for the most part, yet we are very active on<lb/>
campus We enjoy a good relationship with our<lb/>
university's administration and, in the past tew<lb/>
decades, have become a major part of the univer-<lb/>
sity's student lite.<lb/>
Jfltll fraternities rfirrt my grabea?<lb/>
� No, there's every evidence that joining a fraternity<lb/>
Improves your chances ol graduating<lb/>
� 33. of men on campus without traternities will<lb/>
graduate, and<lb/>
� 47 of non-members on campuses with frater-<lb/>
nities graduate, but<lb/>
� 65 of all fraternity members graduate.<lb/>
� Scholarship programs of fraternities produce<lb/>
greater academic success, and better achievement<lb/>
for you.<lb/>
!t never can be said that fraternity people don't en-<lb/>
joy a good social life Getting to know many different<lb/>
people is only natural among such a close-knit<lb/>
group One seems to fall into a wealth of oppor-<lb/>
tunities for things to do with his spare time Events<lb/>
such as Greek Week is ust an example of some of<lb/>
the activities that fraternities plan during the year.<lb/>
Atltletics .<lb/>
Fraternity men enjoy an active athletic existence<lb/>
Whether it be track meets, field events or in-<lb/>
tramurals, we enjoy competing against one another<lb/>
in one sport or another<lb/>
500 E Elizabeth St.<lb/>
757-1367<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 200<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: November 2, 1909<lb/>
Boston University<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Indianapolis, Indiana<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Purple, Green, Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: March of Dimes<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Diversity<lb/>
Tau K&amp;ppa 'EpsiCon<lb/>
951 E 10th St. 757-3042<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 350<lb/>
Dote and Place of Founding: January 10,1899<lb/>
Illinois Wesleyan University<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Indianapolis, Indiana<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Cherry, G ray<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization<lb/>
St Judes Children's Hospital<lb/>
What meakes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Individualism, Campus Involvement<lb/>
"Beta Tfieta Pi<lb/>
P.O. Box 7192<lb/>
RUSH' 1110-B Contanche St. 757-1840<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally Over 100<lb/>
DM and Place of Founding: August 8,1839<lb/>
Miami, Ohio<lb/>
National Head quarters Location<lb/>
Miami, Ohio<lb/>
Fratenuty Colors: Pink and Slue<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization:<lb/>
What makes thi Fraternity Unique<lb/>
Brothers helping Brothers<lb/>
General Fraternity Facts<lb/>
� All but two U.S Presidents since 1825 have been fraternity men. Sixteen Vice-Presidenis have been fraternity men.<lb/>
 63 of the U.S. President's Cabinet members since 1900 have been fraternity men.<lb/>
 71 of the Who's Who in America listees are fraternity members.<lb/>
 76 of the US. Senators &amp; Representatives are fraternity members.<lb/>
 85 (40 of 47) of the U.S. Supreme Court Justices since 1910 have been fraternity men.<lb/>
 85 of the Fortune 500 executives are fraternity members.<lb/>
� Of the nation's 50 largest corporations, 43 are headed by fraternity members.<lb/>
TKE<lb/>
Ben<lb/>
Rush is open to all<lb/>
Male College Students<lb/>
Regardless of<lb/>
Classification or G.P.A.<lb/>
T)eita Sijjma Thi<lb/>
aio<lb/>
510 E. 10th St.<lb/>
7S7-0313<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: Over 135<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding December 10,1899<lb/>
College oi the City of New York<lb/>
National Headquarter Location:<lb/>
Indiana poll. Indiana<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Nik Green, White<lb/>
PhilanthropicOrganiation March of Dimes<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
The Fraternity of Engineered leadership<lb/>
Sigma Thi Epsilon<lb/>
505 E 3th St. 757-0487<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: Almost 300<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: November 1, 1901<lb/>
University of Richmond, Virginia<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Richmond, Virginia<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Purple, Red<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization Heart Fund<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Diversity<lb/>
Sigma Alpha "Epsilon Z A E<lb/>
402 E. 4th St.<lb/>
"58-5793<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 200<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: March 9, 1856<lb/>
Univensty of Alabama<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Evanston. Illinois<lb/>
Histonal: First Greek letter Fraternity founded in south.<lb/>
Only southern Fraternity founded before<lb/>
Civil War that still eists.<lb/>
National policy against Hazing<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Purple, Gold, White<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Those given and accepting bids will be charter<lb/>
members and part of the Alpha Pledge Class.<lb/>
Kappa Alpha<lb/>
800 E 11th St.<lb/>
757-0128<lb/>
KA<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: Over 150<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: December 21, 1865<lb/>
Washington and lee<lb/>
National Headquarters location:<lb/>
Lexington, VA<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Cnmson and Old Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Muscular Dystrophy<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
1st Fraternity on Campus<lb/>
Theta Chi<lb/>
210Whichard<lb/>
ex<lb/>
830-0912<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: 155<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: 1856<lb/>
Norwich University, Norwich, Vermont<lb/>
National Headquarters location:<lb/>
Trenton, New Jersey<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Red and White<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Ronald McDonald House<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Personal development and service to Alma-Mater.<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Thi<lb/>
AZP<lb/>
422 W Sth St.<lb/>
757-3516<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: Over 50<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: December 6, 1845<lb/>
Yale University<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Delaware, Ohio<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Cardinal and Stone<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: American Lung Association<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Individuality that comes together to form a close brotherhood<lb/>
Sigma 9u<lb/>
221 Mendenhall<lb/>
IN<lb/>
757824<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: Over 200<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: January 1. 1864<lb/>
Virginia Military Institute, Lexlnton. Virginia<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Lexington, Virginia<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Black, Gold and White<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Kidney Foundation<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Founded against hazing and First Social Fratenuty on<lb/>
campus to receive National Affiliation (source for the claim<lb/>
is the February 13, 19S8, The East Carolinian)<lb/>
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