<?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="00058091_0001"/>
Coming Tuesday:<lb/>
The story behind parking permit "A'<lb/>
eatures:<lb/>
Ijack the Ripper is still alive.<lb/>
SPORTS:<lb/>
A profile of Jarrod Moody, the Pirate's flashy slot-<lb/>
back<lb/>
dihe ?nst (Earoltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 17<lb/>
Thursday, September 8,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
16 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Pirate Crew replaces Buccaneer Babes<lb/>
By i,in yco K<lb/>
ThePirah; Crew v i11 replace<lb/>
zcaneit Babes, iis the or-<lb/>
- the 1 I ; th the re-<lb/>
nd a<lb/>
ikethe tiassadors<lb/>
Pirate . r( wmembersserve ah<lb/>
?tesses  '?eir duties<lb/>
.a 11 ?t t S arid<lb/>
r ?"uentsng t?urs, pre<lb/>
n j'rout ECU<lb/>
'ith the visitors and<lb/>
 at thefootball<lb/>
Ann?explained<lb/>
that, e1vear the<lb/>
TC AAI- il.<lb/>
live 'tn-<lb/>
letes ii d one<lb/>
unol'al v isi- iution. The<lb/>
unoffic-1 ???n the fall<lb/>
when p?their<lb/>
parentsattend ECU home football<lb/>
games. Thcofficial visitsare taken<lb/>
in the spring.<lb/>
Previously, the Buccaneer<lb/>
Babes were hostesses for visiting<lb/>
athletes. They began under the<lb/>
U adershipof Nancy Emery, wife<lb/>
ol former ECU football coach Ed<lb/>
Emery.<lb/>
Once Nancy and Ed left, there<lb/>
was not a staff person available to<lb/>
give the amount of time to the<lb/>
organization that was necessary.<lb/>
rhey had some people in the foot-<lb/>
ball office who oversaw it. But<lb/>
they were so busy. It was a sccre-<lb/>
tarv or something like that,<lb/>
A man said.<lb/>
In additon to the lack of leader-<lb/>
ship, "They had a lot of com-<lb/>
plaints about the name, too. "<lb/>
Aman said.<lb/>
Not only was the name, Bucca-<lb/>
neer Babes, sexually suggestive,<lb/>
but it limited the organization to<lb/>
female membership. "A guv is not<lb/>
going to try out for an organiza-<lb/>
tion called Buccaneer Babes, '<lb/>
Aman said.<lb/>
The athletic department de-<lb/>
cided to re-organize the Bucca-<lb/>
neer Babes into Tirate Crew and<lb/>
employed Aman part-time to di-<lb/>
rect the new group.<lb/>
The rirateCrew consists of four<lb/>
male and 16 female students.<lb/>
Aman emphasized the fact that<lb/>
ECU is the only university who<lb/>
has male participants in this type<lb/>
of group.<lb/>
In response to rumors that the<lb/>
Buccaneer Babes sexually inter-<lb/>
acted with the visiting athletes,<lb/>
Aman said, "I think that's the type<lb/>
of reputation this kind oi group<lb/>
gets at all universities. They<lb/>
(rumors) are totallv untrue<lb/>
J<lb/>
One of the rules of the Bucca-<lb/>
neer Babes and a rule of this or-<lb/>
gaization (Pirate Crew) is that<lb/>
they are at no time alone with a<lb/>
recruit. 'That's for a number of<lb/>
reasons: so rumors can't be<lb/>
started and also because the<lb/>
NCAA is so strict about payoffs<lb/>
and things of that nature, "said<lb/>
Aman.<lb/>
In regard to NCAA rules, the<lb/>
Pirate Crew attended a two hour<lb/>
training session. "They know<lb/>
what they can or can't do. They<lb/>
can't give money to the recruits.<lb/>
You can't buy them (the athletes)<lb/>
anything. If the student wants a<lb/>
drink, he can't buy one for the<lb/>
recruit. There are a lot of grav<lb/>
areas too, " Aman said.<lb/>
In addition to athletic recruit-<lb/>
ment, the Pirate Crew helps the<lb/>
cheerleaders paint banners on<lb/>
Thursday nights proceeding the<lb/>
football games. "In the future,<lb/>
they hope to also work with the<lb/>
non-revenue sports in getting<lb/>
folks out to the swimming meets<lb/>
and volleyball games and things<lb/>
like that, they're a spirit group, "<lb/>
Aman said.<lb/>
!n order to participate in Pirate<lb/>
Crew, students had to undergo<lb/>
interviews by a selection commit-<lb/>
tee1. They must also have a 2.2<lb/>
grade point average.<lb/>
"The reason we chose a 2.2 is<lb/>
because that is the average G.P.A.<lb/>
of the ECU student. If they are<lb/>
having a problem with grades,<lb/>
they don't have any business giv-<lb/>
ing extra time. They need to be<lb/>
studying, "Aman said.<lb/>
"Pi Kapps" get first house at<lb/>
ECU built for a fraternity<lb/>
By Ot HARRIS<lb/>
Consti iction i . ler ? ?) for<lb/>
thefirstl us to be built sole) for<lb/>
a fraternity in the histon fECU.<lb/>
"All oi the other fraternity and<lb/>
sorority houses, for that matter,<lb/>
were purchased privately, ours is<lb/>
the first to be built with fvinds<lb/>
raised by the fraternity . nd<lb/>
alumni said Dillon Kalkhurst, a<lb/>
brother of Pi Kappa Phi.<lb/>
The foundation for phase one<lb/>
of the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity<lb/>
house was poured last Wednes-<lb/>
day, August 31.<lb/>
This newest structural edition<lb/>
to the Greek housing system is<lb/>
located on a 2.7 acre lot at 803<lb/>
Hooker Road. The original house<lb/>
that stood on this same ground<lb/>
from 1970 to 1985 has since been<lb/>
demolished to make room for the<lb/>
new one.<lb/>
A fire in 1973 ravaged the sec-<lb/>
ond floor of the original house,<lb/>
thus weakening the main struc-<lb/>
ture. Then, in 1985, the house had<lb/>
to be vacated because of the struc-<lb/>
tural damage, "it was just going to<lb/>
collapse on us one day, we had to<lb/>
pet out said Kalkhurst<lb/>
"We've beer, waiting five years<lb/>
to see this. Many of us started to<lb/>
doubt whether or not it was really<lb/>
going to happen said Kalkhurst,<lb/>
the only active member to live in<lb/>
the old structure.<lb/>
Phase one, when complete, will<lb/>
be a fully furnished, two story,<lb/>
5,500 square foot structure. "The<lb/>
bedrooms arc going to have dorm<lb/>
type furniture in them. Every-<lb/>
thing, beds, desks, shelves, and<lb/>
dressers arc going to be stationary<lb/>
? we think it'll be more durable<lb/>
said Kalkhurst.<lb/>
An look at the progress on the 85,000 square foot Sports Medicine Complex from the top<lb/>
of Ficklen Stadium. Evidence that ECU is definitely growing (Photo by Thomas Walters).<lb/>
Other features of the house are The alumni and undergradu- oi whom are alumni, were very<lb/>
central air conditioning, cable TV, ates raised over $75,000 for a<lb/>
complete kitchen facilities, a full down payment. Fund raising for<lb/>
size bar, a fireplace and party the new house has been going on<lb/>
room. Each of the eight bedrooms since 1983, but according to<lb/>
will have its own bathroom. Kalkhurst, over $11,000 was<lb/>
The house is being built with raised on the 25 Annual<lb/>
:b-<lb/>
cxpansion in mind. Phase two<lb/>
and three are already on paper.<lb/>
Kalkhurst said "it's been de-<lb/>
signed so we can add on to it with-<lb/>
out much difficulty<lb/>
In the second phase a 'Great<lb/>
Hall' for meetings, etc. will be<lb/>
added and more bed space is<lb/>
planned for the third phase.<lb/>
"Phases two and three are on<lb/>
down the road, right -now, we<lb/>
have to get phase one built and<lb/>
paid for Kalkhurst said.<lb/>
Founder's Day weekend last Fel<lb/>
ruarv. The total cost for the house<lb/>
is $225,000.<lb/>
To help pay, the Pi Kapps (as<lb/>
they are known on .ampus) sold<lb/>
stock in the house for $10 a piece.<lb/>
A plaque is to be placed on the<lb/>
outside of the house honoring all<lb/>
those who contributed $100 or<lb/>
more.<lb/>
"Ellis Banks, who has been<lb/>
chapter advisor for 10 years, and<lb/>
Carl Darden, a local realator, both<lb/>
instrumental in getting the fund<lb/>
raising campaign oii the ground<lb/>
said Kalkhurst.<lb/>
The house is being built by<lb/>
Freddy Morton Construction<lb/>
Company, out or New Bern, NC.<lb/>
Morton too, is an alumni.<lb/>
The proposed time of comple-<lb/>
tion is in mid December. "It has to<lb/>
be finished by the spring semester<lb/>
so 16guys can move in and begin<lb/>
making house payments with<lb/>
their rent money said<lb/>
Kalkhurst.<lb/>
Kalkhurst said the last three<lb/>
years have really been tough on us<lb/>
as a fraternity. It's hard when<lb/>
there is no house or central meet-<lb/>
ing place.<lb/>
Governor, GPD want murderer<lb/>
lie on!) remaining indicator that there was once a fraternity house<lb/>
at 803 Hooker Road, things are due to change (Photo by Thomas Walters)<lb/>
Hatcher on the lam, sought to<lb/>
stand trial in Roberson Co.<lb/>
federal authorities continue to<lb/>
search for accused hostage-taker<lb/>
Eddie Hatcher while an attorney<lb/>
for the fugitive savs he expects his<lb/>
client to appear for trial on fire-<lb/>
arms and hostage-taking charges.<lb/>
U.S. marshals reported no new<lb/>
developments Tuesday in the<lb/>
search for Hatcner, one of two<lb/>
Robeson County American Indi-<lb/>
ans charged in tne Feb. 1 takeover<lb/>
of a newspaper office in Lumber-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
Authorities have been searching<lb/>
for Hatcher since Aug. 31. when<lb/>
he failed to surrender after a fed-<lb/>
eral appeals court revoked the<lb/>
bail that allowed his release from<lb/>
jail on Julv 5.<lb/>
Hatcher's co-defendant, Timo-<lb/>
thy Jacobs, 20, who was released<lb/>
with Hatcher surrendered to au-<lb/>
thorities Aug. 31 in Asheville.<lb/>
One of Hatcher's attorneys,<lb/>
Barry Nakell of Chapel Hill, said<lb/>
Tuesday he expects Hatcher to<lb/>
appear for trial.<lb/>
"I think that all I'll say is that I<lb/>
expect him to appear for trial<lb/>
Nakell told The Favettcville<lb/>
Times. "He's been very eager for a<lb/>
trial<lb/>
Nakell has declined to comment<lb/>
about whether he has spoken<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
A??i?Unt Newt I ditnr<lb/>
Governor James G. Martin an-<lb/>
nounced that the State is offering<lb/>
a reward for information leading<lb/>
to the arrest and conviction of the<lb/>
person or persons responsible for<lb/>
the murder of a local man.<lb/>
The reward offered, in crimes of<lb/>
this nature, is known as the<lb/>
Governor's reward.<lb/>
Detective J.E. Nichols, of the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department<lb/>
said, "the Governor's reward is<lb/>
an additional tool to help us<lb/>
gather information, in any serious<lb/>
offense<lb/>
"The Governor can grant or not<lb/>
grant any amount that he feels is<lb/>
necessary, but the amount usu-<lb/>
ally awarded is $5,000 he said.<lb/>
Nichols stated the murder of<lb/>
Thomas Lee McGowan, 72, of 714<lb/>
Atlantic Avenue, who was a local<lb/>
'can man is still under investiga-<lb/>
tion, and that they are looking for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
The FBI and State Bureau of<lb/>
Investigation (SBI) are working<lb/>
jointly to gather information and<lb/>
solve the crime.<lb/>
According to police reports,<lb/>
McGowan was found on July 11,<lb/>
1988, at approximately 10:30 a.m<lb/>
lying dead in a Greenville storage<lb/>
warehouse, where he ran a make-<lb/>
shift flea market. McGowan had<lb/>
received multiple contact<lb/>
wounds to the head.<lb/>
"I do not want to give out any<lb/>
privileged information, because it<lb/>
might tip the case, or discourage<lb/>
people from calling with informa-<lb/>
tion Nichols said.<lb/>
He stated, "the Governor's<lb/>
reward is somewhat like Crime<lb/>
Stoppers, but they only offer<lb/>
$1,000 for information leading to<lb/>
the arrest or conviction of the<lb/>
perpetrator<lb/>
No one is awarded any money<lb/>
until after the court heanng, to<lb/>
decide whether his information is<lb/>
pertinent to the arrest or convic-<lb/>
tion of the accused, as stated by<lb/>
the NC. Governor's Statue.<lb/>
Furthermore, if more than one<lb/>
person comes forth with useful in-<lb/>
formation, the reward is divided<lb/>
among the number oi people,<lb/>
who gave the tip.<lb/>
Nichols said. "Law enforce-<lb/>
ment personnel are not eligible to<lb/>
receive the reward. because this is<lb/>
our job to investigate crimes. No<lb/>
crane is going to be solved bv one<lb/>
person, but we must utilize other<lb/>
agencies, tools, and equipment<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
with Hatcher since he was to sur-<lb/>
render to authorities in Raleigh.<lb/>
A trial has tentatively been set<lb/>
for later this month, authorities<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Hatcher, 30, was last reported<lb/>
seen at a Mexican restaurant in<lb/>
Chapel Hill on Aug. 31, according<lb/>
to William Berryhill Jr U.S. Mar-<lb/>
shal for eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
"Right now, there's just no major<lb/>
break in the case, but we're<lb/>
diligently pursuing Mr. Hatcher's<lb/>
whereabouts Berryhill said<lb/>
Tuesday. "It's almost has disap-<lb/>
peared off the face of the earth<lb/>
Berryhill said he did not think<lb/>
any harm has come to Hatcher.<lb/>
'To the very best of my knowl-<lb/>
edge Eddie Hatcher is alive,<lb/>
well and kicking somewhere<lb/>
Hatcher and Jacobs, who are<lb/>
accused of holding hostages for 10<lb/>
hours at The Robesonian in Lum-<lb/>
berton, have said thev took the<lb/>
action to call attention to allega-<lb/>
tions of corruoption in the<lb/>
county's criminal justice system.<lb/>
All of the hostages were freed<lb/>
uniniured by the two Tuscarora<lb/>
Indians, who surrendered with-<lb/>
out incident after Gov. Jim Martin<lb/>
agreed to appoint a task force to<lb/>
investigate the allegations.<lb/>
The two men face possible life<lb/>
imprisonment if they are con-<lb/>
victed of the charges, which in-<lb/>
clude taking hostages, using fire-<lb/>
arms to commit a hostage-taking<lb/>
offense and firearms.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0002"/><lb/>
Coming Tuesday:<lb/>
The story behind parking permit "A<lb/>
Features:<lb/>
Jack the Ripper is still alive.<lb/>
SPORTS: "<lb/>
A profile of Jarrod Moody, the Pirate's flashy slot-<lb/>
back<lb/>
Sthe ?aBt Ularultnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol.63 No. 17<lb/>
Thursday, September 8,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
16 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Pirate Crew replaces Buccaneer Babes<lb/>
By TAMMY AYCOCK<lb/>
Stiff Wnlcr<lb/>
The Pirate Crew will replace<lb/>
The Buccaneer Babes, as the or-<lb/>
ganization which helps the ECU<lb/>
Athletic Department with the re-<lb/>
cruitment of new athletes.<lb/>
This year, the new group con-<lb/>
sists of twenty students and a<lb/>
J<lb/>
non-student director, Page Aman<lb/>
Like the ECU Ambassadors,<lb/>
Pirate Crew members serve as<lb/>
hosts and hostesses. Their duties<lb/>
include: meeting athletes and<lb/>
their parents, giving tours, pro-<lb/>
viding information about ECU<lb/>
and sitting with the visitors and<lb/>
their parents at the football<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Aman, the director explained<lb/>
that, each academic year the<lb/>
NCAA allows prospective ath-<lb/>
letes one official visit and one<lb/>
unofficial visit per institution. The<lb/>
unofficial visits occur in the fall<lb/>
when potential recruits and their<lb/>
parents attend ECU home football<lb/>
games. The official visits are taken<lb/>
in the spring.<lb/>
Previously, the Buccaneer<lb/>
Babes were hostesses for visiting<lb/>
athletes. They began under the<lb/>
leadership'of Nancy Emery, wife<lb/>
of former ECU football coach Ed<lb/>
Emery.<lb/>
"Once Nancy and Ed left, there<lb/>
was not a staff person available to<lb/>
give the amount of time to the<lb/>
organization that was necessary.<lb/>
They had some people in the foot-<lb/>
ball office who oversaw it. But<lb/>
they were so busy. It was a secre-<lb/>
tary or something like that, "<lb/>
Aman said.<lb/>
In additon to the lack of leader-<lb/>
ship, "They had a lot of com-<lb/>
plaints about the name, too. "<lb/>
Aman said.<lb/>
Not only was the name, Bucca-<lb/>
neer Babes, sexually suggestive,<lb/>
but it limited the organization to<lb/>
female membership. "A guy is not<lb/>
going to try out for an organiza-<lb/>
tion called Buccaneer Babes, "<lb/>
Aman said.<lb/>
The athletic department de-<lb/>
cided to re-organize the Bucca-<lb/>
neer Babes into Pirate Crew and<lb/>
employed Aman part-time to di-<lb/>
rect the new group.<lb/>
The Pirate Crew consists of four<lb/>
male and 16 female students.<lb/>
Aman emphasized the fact that<lb/>
ECU is the only university who<lb/>
has male participants in this type<lb/>
of group.<lb/>
In response to rumors that the<lb/>
Buccaneer Babes sexually inter-<lb/>
acted with the visiting athletes,<lb/>
Aman said, "I think that's the type<lb/>
of reputation this kind of group<lb/>
gets at all universities. They<lb/>
(rumors) are totally untrue<lb/>
One of the rules of the Bucca-<lb/>
neer Babes and a rule of this or-<lb/>
gaization (Pirate Crew) is that<lb/>
they are at no time alone with a<lb/>
recruit. "That's for a number of<lb/>
reasons: so rumors can't be<lb/>
started and also because the<lb/>
NCAA is so strict about payoffs<lb/>
and things of that nature, " said<lb/>
Aman.<lb/>
In regard to NCAA rules, the<lb/>
Pirate Crew attended a two hour<lb/>
training session. "They know<lb/>
what they can or can't do. They<lb/>
can't give money to the recruits.<lb/>
You can't buy them (the athletes)<lb/>
anything. If the student wants a<lb/>
drink, he can't buy one for the<lb/>
recruit. There are a lot of gray<lb/>
areas too Aman said.<lb/>
In addition to athletic recruit-<lb/>
ment, the Pirate Crew helps the<lb/>
cheerleaders paint banners on<lb/>
Thursday nights preceeding the<lb/>
football games. "In the future,<lb/>
they hope to also work with the<lb/>
non-revenue sports in getting<lb/>
folks out to the swimming meets<lb/>
and volleyball games and things<lb/>
like that. They're a spirit group<lb/>
Aman said.<lb/>
In order to participate in Pirate<lb/>
Crew, students had to undergo<lb/>
interviews by a selection commit-<lb/>
tee. They must also have a 2.2<lb/>
grade point average.<lb/>
"The reason we chose a 2.2 is<lb/>
because that is the average G.P. A.<lb/>
of the ECU student. If they are<lb/>
having a problem with grades,<lb/>
they don't have any business giv-<lb/>
ing extra time. They need to be<lb/>
studying, "Aman said.<lb/>
"Pi Kapps" get first house at<lb/>
ECU built for a fraternity<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
News Fd iror<lb/>
sorority houses, for that matter,<lb/>
were purchased privately, ours is<lb/>
 the first to be built with funds<lb/>
Construction is underway for raised b the fratemity and<lb/>
the t.rst house to be built so ey for aiumni mon Kalkhurst, a<lb/>
a fraternity in the history of ECU. brother of Pi K phi<lb/>
ther fraternity and y foundatior; for phase one<lb/>
of the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity,<lb/>
house was poured last Wednes-<lb/>
day, August 31. j<lb/>
This newest structural edition<lb/>
to the Greek housing system is<lb/>
located on a 2.7 acre lot at 803<lb/>
Hooker Road. The original hou9e<lb/>
that stood on this same ground<lb/>
from 1970 to 1985 has since been<lb/>
demolished to make room for the<lb/>
new one.<lb/>
A fire in 1973 ravaged the sec-<lb/>
ond floor of the original house,<lb/>
thus weakening the main struc-<lb/>
ture. Then, in 1985, the house had<lb/>
to be vacated because of the struc-<lb/>
tural damage, "it was just going to<lb/>
collapse on us one day, we had to<lb/>
get out said Kalkhurst<lb/>
"We've been waiting five years<lb/>
to see this. Many of us started to<lb/>
doubt whether or not it was really<lb/>
going to happen said Kalkhurst,<lb/>
the only active member to live in<lb/>
the old structure.<lb/>
Phase one, when complete, will<lb/>
be a fully furnished, two story,<lb/>
5,500 square foot structure. "The<lb/>
bedrooms are going to have dorm<lb/>
type furniture in them. Every-<lb/>
thing, beds, desks, shelves, and<lb/>
dressers are going to be stationary<lb/>
?we think it'll be more durable<lb/>
said Kalkhurst.<lb/>
An look at the progress on the 85,000 square foot Sports Medicine Complex from the top<lb/>
of Ficklen Stadium. Evidence that ECU is definitely growing (Photo by Thomas Walters).<lb/>
Other features of the house are<lb/>
central air conditioning, cable TV,<lb/>
complete kitchen facilities, a full<lb/>
size bar, a fireplace and party<lb/>
room. Each of the eight bedrooms<lb/>
will have its own bathroom.<lb/>
The house is being built with<lb/>
expansion in mind. Phase two<lb/>
and three are already on paper.<lb/>
Kalkhurst said "it's been de-<lb/>
signed so we can add on to it with-<lb/>
out much difficulty<lb/>
In the second phase a 'Great<lb/>
Hall' for meetings, etc. will be<lb/>
added and more bed space is<lb/>
planned for the third phase.<lb/>
"Phases two and three are on<lb/>
down the road, right -now, we<lb/>
have to get phase one built and<lb/>
paid for Kalkhurst said.<lb/>
The alumni and undergradu-<lb/>
ates raised over $75,000 for a<lb/>
down payment. Fund raising for<lb/>
the new house has been going on<lb/>
since 1983, but according to<lb/>
Kalkhurst, over $11,000 was<lb/>
raised on the 25 Annual<lb/>
Founder's Day weekend last Feb-<lb/>
ruary. The total cost for the house<lb/>
is $225,000.<lb/>
To help pay, the Pi Kapps (as<lb/>
they are known on campus) sold<lb/>
stock in the house for $10 a piece.<lb/>
A plaque is to be placed on the<lb/>
outside of the house honoring all<lb/>
those who contributed $100 or<lb/>
more.<lb/>
"Ellis<lb/>
Banks, who has been<lb/>
chapter advisor for 10 years, and<lb/>
Carl Darden, a local realator, both<lb/>
of whom are alumni, were very<lb/>
instrumental in getting the fund<lb/>
raising campaign off the ground<lb/>
said Kalkhurst.<lb/>
The house is being built by<lb/>
Freddy Morton Construction<lb/>
Company, out of New Bern, N.C.<lb/>
Morton too, is an alumni.<lb/>
The proposed time of comple-<lb/>
tion is in mid December. "It has to<lb/>
be finished by the spring semester<lb/>
so 16 guys can move in and begin<lb/>
making house payments with<lb/>
their rent money said<lb/>
Kalkhurst.<lb/>
Kalkhurst said "the last three<lb/>
years have really been tough on us<lb/>
as a fratemity. It's hard when<lb/>
there is no house or central meet-<lb/>
ing place.<lb/>
Governor, GPD want murderer<lb/>
Theonly remaining indicator that there was once a fraternity house<lb/>
at 803 Hooker Road, things are due to change (Photo by Thomas Walters)<lb/>
Hatcher on the lam, sought to<lb/>
stand trial in Roberson Co.<lb/>
Federal authorities continue to<lb/>
search for accused hostage-taker<lb/>
Eddie Hatcher, while an attorney<lb/>
for the fugitive sa vs he expects his<lb/>
client to appear for trial on fire-<lb/>
arms and hostage-taking charges.<lb/>
U.S. marshals reported no new<lb/>
developments Tuesday in the<lb/>
search for Hatcner, one of two<lb/>
Robeson County American Indi-<lb/>
ans charged in tne Feb. 1 takeover<lb/>
of a newspaper office in Lumber-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
Authorities have been searching<lb/>
for Hatcher since Aug. 31. when<lb/>
he failed to surrender after a fed-<lb/>
eral appeals court revoked the<lb/>
bail that allowed his release from<lb/>
jail on Julv 5.<lb/>
Hatcher's co-defendant, Timo-<lb/>
thy Jacobs, 20, who was released<lb/>
with Hatcher surrendered to au-<lb/>
thorities Aug. 31 in Asheville.<lb/>
One of Hatcher's attorneys,<lb/>
Barry Nakell of Chapel Hill, said<lb/>
Tuesday he expects Hatcher to<lb/>
appear for trial.<lb/>
"I think that all I'll say is that I<lb/>
expect him to appear for trial<lb/>
Nakell told The Favetteville<lb/>
Times. "He's been very eager for a<lb/>
trial<lb/>
Nakell has declined to comment<lb/>
about whether he has spoken<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
Aaaktut New Editor<lb/>
Governor James G. Martin an-<lb/>
nounced that the State is offering<lb/>
a reward for information leading<lb/>
to the arrest and conviction of the<lb/>
person or persons responsible for<lb/>
the murder of a local man.<lb/>
1 The reward offered, in crimes of<lb/>
this nature, is known as the<lb/>
Governor's reward.<lb/>
Detective J.E. Nichols, of the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department<lb/>
said, "the Governor's reward is<lb/>
an additional tool to help us<lb/>
gather information, in any serious<lb/>
offense<lb/>
"The Governor can grant or not<lb/>
grant any amount that he feels is<lb/>
necessary, but the amount usu-<lb/>
ally awarded is $5,000 he said.<lb/>
Nichols stated the murder of<lb/>
Thomas Lee McGowan, 72, of 714<lb/>
Atlantic Avenue, who was a local<lb/>
'can man is still under investiga-<lb/>
tion, and that they are looking for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
The FBI and State Bureau of<lb/>
Investigation (SBI) are working<lb/>
jointly to gather information and<lb/>
solve the crime.<lb/>
According to police reports,<lb/>
McGowan was found on July 11,<lb/>
1988, at approximately 10:30 a.m<lb/>
lying dead in a Greenville storage<lb/>
warehouse, where he ran a make-<lb/>
shift flea market. McGowan had<lb/>
received multiple contact<lb/>
wounds to the head.<lb/>
"I do not want to give out any<lb/>
privileged information, because it<lb/>
might tip the case, or discourage<lb/>
people from calling with informa-<lb/>
tion Nichols said.<lb/>
He stated, "the Governor's<lb/>
reward is somewhat like Crime<lb/>
Stoppers, but they only offer<lb/>
$1,000 for information leading to<lb/>
the arrest or conviction of the<lb/>
perpetrator<lb/>
No one is awarded any money<lb/>
until after the court hearing, to<lb/>
decide whether his information is<lb/>
pertinent to the arrest or convic-<lb/>
tion of the accused, as stated by<lb/>
the N.C. Governor's Statue.<lb/>
Furthermore, if more than one<lb/>
person comes forth with useful in-<lb/>
formation, the reward is divided<lb/>
among the number of people,<lb/>
who gave the tip.<lb/>
Nichols said, "Law enforce-<lb/>
ment personnel are not eligible to<lb/>
receive the reward, because this is<lb/>
our job to investigate crimes. No<lb/>
crime is going to be solved by one<lb/>
person, but we must utilize other<lb/>
agencies, tools, and equipment<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
with Hatcher since he was to sur-<lb/>
render to authorities in Raleigh.<lb/>
A trial has tentatively been set<lb/>
for later this month, authorities<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Hatcher, 30, was last reported<lb/>
seen at a Mexican restaurant in<lb/>
Chapel Hill on Aug. 31, according<lb/>
to William Berryhill Jr US. Mar-<lb/>
shal for eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
"Right now, there's just no major<lb/>
break in the case, but we're<lb/>
diligently pursuing Mr. Hatcher's<lb/>
whereabouts Berryhill said<lb/>
Tuesday. "If s almost has disap-<lb/>
peared off the face of the earth.<lb/>
Berryhill said he did not think<lb/>
any harm has come to Hatcher.<lb/>
"To the very best of my knowl-<lb/>
edge Eddie Hatcher is ave,<lb/>
well and kicking somewhere<lb/>
Hatcher and Jacobs, who are<lb/>
accused of holding hostages for 10<lb/>
hours at The Robesonian in Lum-<lb/>
berton, have said thev took the<lb/>
action to call attention to allega-<lb/>
tions of comioption in the<lb/>
county's criminal justice system.<lb/>
All of the hostages were freed<lb/>
uniniured by the two Tuscarora<lb/>
Indians, who surrendered with-<lb/>
out incident after Gov. Jim Martin<lb/>
agreed to appoint a task force to<lb/>
investigate the allegations.<lb/>
The two men face possible life<lb/>
imprisonment if they are con-<lb/>
victed of the charges, which in-<lb/>
clude taking hostages, using fire-<lb/>
arms to commit a hostage-taking<lb/>
offense and firearms.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8, 1988<lb/>
Pap smears can detect cancer in women<lb/>
I'm 18 years old a;?d having<lb/>
my first Pap smear.<lb/>
What do I need to Know?<lb/>
The Pap smear is a simple and<lb/>
painless test used for the detec-<lb/>
tion of cervical cancer or the pres-<lb/>
ence of precancerous cells. The<lb/>
test is done by collecting a sample<lb/>
of cells from the cervix or mouth<lb/>
of the womb.<lb/>
The pap smear makes it pos-<lb/>
sible to discover very early cancer<lb/>
vhich is almost 100 percent cur-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
However, if the precancer-<lb/>
ous cells are left untreated they<lb/>
may advance to invasive cancer.<lb/>
Some women are more likely than<lb/>
others to develop abnormal cervi-<lb/>
cal cells.<lb/>
Although the exact cause is<lb/>
lot knovn, sexual intercourse is<lb/>
somehow involved, women at<lb/>
risk include, 1) those who began<lb/>
sexual intercourse before age 18,<lb/>
2) those who have had sexual in-<lb/>
tercourse vith multiple partners.<lb/>
You should start having Pap<lb/>
smears soon after you begin hav-<lb/>
ing sexual intercourse.<lb/>
If your first Pap test shovs no<lb/>
evidence of abnormal cells, it<lb/>
should be repeated in one year.<lb/>
If your second test is also nor-<lb/>
mal then the test should be re-<lb/>
peated at regular intervals of 1-3<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Check vith your health care<lb/>
provider since the need for this<lb/>
test varies from person to person.<lb/>
At the same time you receive your<lb/>
Pap smear, the health care pro-<lb/>
vider usually examines your<lb/>
breasts for any lumps.<lb/>
At this time heshe may teach<lb/>
you hov to do a breast self-exam.<lb/>
Don't be afraid to learn about<lb/>
breast cancer and hov to detect it.<lb/>
Ninety percent of breast cancers<lb/>
are discovered by the woman or<lb/>
her partner.<lb/>
Breast cancer is also one of the<lb/>
easiest types of cancer to identify.<lb/>
Early detection and treatment is<lb/>
what makes treatment of breast<lb/>
cancer so successful.<lb/>
Breast self-exams should be<lb/>
performed once a month, ltisbest<lb/>
to do the exam 3-5 days after your<lb/>
period. This is because it is very<lb/>
common for normal lumps in the<lb/>
breasts to svell and harden before<lb/>
your period. If you are just learn-<lb/>
ing how to perform breast self-<lb/>
exams, home helth care provid-<lb/>
ers recommend that you<lb/>
perform the breast self-exams ev-<lb/>
ery day for one month.<lb/>
This helps to familiarize you<lb/>
vith the procedure and that is nor-<lb/>
mal for you. If you do find a suspi-<lb/>
cious lump, DO NOT PANIC.<lb/>
Most lumps are not cancerous.<lb/>
However, consult your health care<lb/>
provider since only heshe can<lb/>
distinguish between a benign or<lb/>
malignant lump.<lb/>
A mammogram is another<lb/>
method used for detection of<lb/>
breast cancer. The mammogram is<lb/>
an x-ray that develops a very clear<lb/>
picture of each breast.<lb/>
Mammograms have been able to<lb/>
identify tumors up to two years be-<lb/>
fore they can be felt.<lb/>
The American Cancer Soci-<lb/>
ety recommends a "baseline"<lb/>
mammogram for women between<lb/>
the age of 35-39 years for 1 ater com-<lb/>
parison; a mammogram every<lb/>
year or two for "omen 40-49, a<lb/>
mammogram every yeer for<lb/>
women over 50.<lb/>
Remember it is knowledge<lb/>
about these two types of cancer<lb/>
that leads to early detection and<lb/>
successful treatment. Ifyouvould<lb/>
like more information stop by the<lb/>
Student Healt Center or see yo<lb/>
health care provider.<lb/>
This Health Column was it-<lb/>
ten by Donna Bullock, a recent<lb/>
graduate of the ECU School of<lb/>
Nursing. Also, credit goes to<lb/>
Vicky Langrehr, also a recent<lb/>
graduate of the School of Nursing.<lb/>
Old Faithful threatened<lb/>
YELLOWSTONE NA-<lb/>
TIONAL PARK, (AP) - Visitors<lb/>
were ordered out of the Old Faith-<lb/>
ful complex today as a wind-<lb/>
blown wildfire roared less than a<lb/>
mile away, and firefighters at<lb/>
Yellowstone's northern border<lb/>
battled to save two towns.<lb/>
The 500 to 600 visitors and<lb/>
non-essential emoloyees at the<lb/>
hotel and campground complex<lb/>
near the park's most popular at-<lb/>
traction were told to leave for<lb/>
safety reasons and to allow fire-<lb/>
fighters the access they need to<lb/>
protect structures, says spokes-<lb/>
woman Joan AnzelmoThis is<lb/>
not a panic at all she said.<lb/>
Winds gusting to 30 mph<lb/>
pushed the 147,000-acre North<lb/>
Fork blaze to within three-quar-<lb/>
ters of a mile of the complex early<lb/>
today. Embers carried by the<lb/>
wind started spot fires even<lb/>
nearer to the famed geyser.<lb/>
Although officials had earlier<lb/>
said they did not believe an<lb/>
evacuation would be needed.<lb/>
Anzelmo said the fire did not calm<lb/>
down during the night as it usu-<lb/>
ally has.<lb/>
"We just feel that for the<lb/>
public's safety ,we will never take<lb/>
anvjotuiatiftsfche said, I<lb/>
Officials are confident they can<lb/>
protect structures from the ad-<lb/>
vancing flames. These include the<lb/>
historic, wooden Old Faithful Inn,<lb/>
two other lodges, hundreds of<lb/>
cabins, a general store, a service<lb/>
station and a clinic.<lb/>
On Tuesday, soldiers laid a<lb/>
4.000-foot irrigation line to wet<lb/>
down the area to divert the<lb/>
Hames.<lb/>
The blaze is among 13 major<lb/>
fires that have burned roughly 1<lb/>
million acres this summer in Yel-<lb/>
lowstone and the surrounding<lb/>
national forests in Wyoming,<lb/>
Montana and Idaho. Inside the<lb/>
2.2 million-acre park, 634,000<lb/>
acres are charred.<lb/>
At Yellowstone's northern<lb/>
border, firefighters wetted down<lb/>
buildings in the tiny towns of Sil-<lb/>
ver Gate and Cooke City as the<lb/>
63,000 acre Storm Creek fire<lb/>
surged out of the park. Both<lb/>
towns with a combined year<lb/>
round population of 150, were<lb/>
ordered<lb/>
evacuated earlier Tuesday as the<lb/>
fire threatened from 1 and a half<lb/>
miles away.<lb/>
Flames from a spot fire skirted<lb/>
Silver Gate from just 600 yards<lb/>
away Tuesday night and moved<lb/>
toward Cooke City, three miles to<lb/>
the east.<lb/>
Wind-blown embers landed<lb/>
on buildings but were quickly<lb/>
doused by firefighters, who<lb/>
worked a night-long effort to save<lb/>
the community.<lb/>
"Cool night air reduced the<lb/>
spot fire's intensity, said fire in-<lb/>
formation officer Pat Kaunert, but<lb/>
tne Storm Creek fire raged out of<lb/>
control<lb/>
Firefighters cut Silver Gate's<lb/>
power Tuesday night to prevent<lb/>
the downing of live power lines.<lb/>
The town was lit only by spot-<lb/>
lights, and the orange glow of the<lb/>
spot fire 200 yards away was<lb/>
bright enough to read by, The<lb/>
Associated Press' David Foster<lb/>
reported from the town.<lb/>
David Liebersbach, fire com-<lb/>
mander at Silver Gate, estimated<lb/>
firefighters had a 25 percent<lb/>
chance of saving the town.<lb/>
Other Montana fires also<lb/>
forced evacuations.<lb/>
The 66,000-plus-acre Canyon<lb/>
Creek fire in west-central Mon-<lb/>
tana grew so quickly that officials<lb/>
had no accurate idea of its size,<lb/>
said jane Weber of the Lewis and<lb/>
Clark National Forest. The<lb/>
growth promoted an evacuation<lb/>
of an undetermined number of<lb/>
cabins.<lb/>
More than 30 cabins southwest<lb/>
of Augusta were ordered evacu-<lb/>
ated, Weber said. To the south-<lb/>
west across the Scapegoat Wilder-<lb/>
ness, the Canyon Creek fire forced<lb/>
evacuations as it burned north of<lb/>
Ovando, about 75 northwest of<lb/>
Helena. Officials evacuated<lb/>
about 10 residences near a new<lb/>
fire eight miles west of Glacier<lb/>
National Park.<lb/>
Gov. Ted Schwinden on Tues-<lb/>
day banned all outdoor recreation<lb/>
outside Montana's cities and<lb/>
towns due to the fire danger.<lb/>
Elsewhere, a fire in parched<lb/>
grass and pine in central Wash-<lb/>
ington exploded from 160 acres<lb/>
Monday to more than 25,000 acres<lb/>
Tuesday, sending firefighters<lb/>
fleeing, destroying at least one<lb/>
house and forcing the evacuation<lb/>
of a dozen others. State officials<lb/>
closed 40 miles of nearby U.S. 97<lb/>
due to smoke.<lb/>
In Idaho, wind whipped a fire<lb/>
in the Nez Perce National forest<lb/>
from 25,900 acres Monday to<lb/>
36,780by Tuesday, night.<lb/>
Campgrounds were evacu-<lb/>
ated about 225 miles north of San<lb/>
Francisco in the King Mountain<lb/>
Range, wherea 1,150-acre fire was<lb/>
burning. Forests and grassland<lb/>
also burned in Oregon and Utah.<lb/>
The Boise Interagency Fire<lb/>
Center, the coordinating office for<lb/>
firefighting in the West, said fires<lb/>
this year have charred 3.65 mil-<lb/>
lion acres, an area larger than<lb/>
Connecticut. Slightly more than 2<lb/>
million of the acres are in Alaska.<lb/>
During the last big fire season,<lb/>
1985, 2.8 million acres burned.<lb/>
C A I IV BEAUTY<lb/>
OAALL T supply<lb/>
STUDENT DISCOUNTS HONORED YEAR AROUND<lb/>
WITH STUDENT I.D.<lb/>
X3<lb/>
20OFF-<lb/>
ALL NEUTROGENA PRODUCTS<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON THROUGH OCTOBER 31,1988<lb/>
OHECK TELEPHONE DIRECTORY FOR NEAREST LOCATION <lb/>
ARTIED TO MUCH<lb/>
STUDENTS? NEED CASH?<lb/>
Southern Gun<lb/>
&amp; Pawn, Inc.<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
ON<lb/>
TV'S. STEREOS, VCR'S, GUNS,<lb/>
DIAMONDS, BICYCLES, CLASS RINGS.<lb/>
ALL MOST ANYTHING OF VALUE<lb/>
WE BUY GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
3<lb/>
NEW 14K GOLD<lb/>
500 N. GREENE ST. ? JUST ACROSS RIVER BRIDGE<lb/>
 ? GREENVILLE<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/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James F.J. McKce, 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/>
Squirrel Man Hotline<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95<lb/>
Bulk Rate (Contracts)<lb/>
100-199 col. inches$4.50<lb/>
200-299 col. inches$4.40<lb/>
300-399 col. inches$4.30<lb/>
400-499 col. inches$4.20<lb/>
500-599 col. inches$4 10<lb/>
600 and above$4. 0<lb/>
Classified Display<lb/>
Open Rate$5.00<lb/>
Color Advertising<lb/>
One Color and black$90.00 (1<lb/>
Two Color and black$155.00<lb/>
Local Open Rate$4.75<lb/>
Frequency (Contracts)<lb/>
5 Insertions4ll")<lb/>
(12-251 <lb/>
10 Insertions n )<lb/>
0225") <lb/>
$4.55<lb/>
$4.50<lb/>
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l1 Insertions -11") $4.45<lb/>
<lb/>
rtsertions I<lb/>
(12 -25") <lb/>
25 Insertions (4<lb/>
-25") <lb/>
 ;<lb/>
ii)<lb/>
$4.40<lb/>
$4.40<lb/>
$4.35<lb/>
$4.35<lb/>
S4 20<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
$&amp;<lb/>
6S<lb/>
t and Faculty s<lb/>
j " I.pf IIq Sphp Ynn <lb/>
Let Us Serve You<lb/>
We will Gladly Cash Your Checks From Home!<lb/>
?M<lb/>
<lb/>
?r<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Sirloin Steaks<lb/>
$2<lb/>
19<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Fresh Ground<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
T-Bone Steaks<lb/>
$239 ?<lb/>
Fryer Leg<lb/>
Quarters<lb/>
49<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Beef<lb/>
99<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
5 lbs. or more<lb/>
Deli Specials<lb/>
Virginia Baked Ham $2.99 lb.<lb/>
Turkey Breast$3.99 lb.<lb/>
Boiled Ham$2.99 lb.<lb/>
Lo Salt Boiled Ham$2.99 lb.<lb/>
Swiss Cheese$2.99 lb.<lb/>
Overtoil's Has<lb/>
Bud Kegs For<lb/>
Your Party-<lb/>
Needs<lb/>
Coors<lb/>
i?eg. or Lite Beer<lb/>
$5"<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
12 pk12 oz. cans<lb/>
Paige<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
7$ loo<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
Regular Only<lb/>
$K99<lb/>
J lb.<lb/>
12 pk12 oz. cans<lb/>
Giant Roll<lb/>
Coca Cola 2 Liter<lb/>
Limit four of your choice with a<lb/>
$10.00 or more order not including<lb/>
ad specials <lb/>
Kingsford<lb/>
Charcoal<lb/>
49<lb/>
Golden Ripe<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
19 H,<lb/>
2<lb/>
10 lb. Bag<lb/>
Seedless White<lb/>
Grapes<lb/>
79 ??.<lb/>
Prices Effective: Wednesday, September 7 thru Sat. September 10.<lb/>
Open Monday Thru Saturday 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.<lb/>
Sundays 1 p.m. Thru 6 p.m.<lb/>
S SHOPPING CENTER IS<lb/>
I TLYLOCATED<lb/>
ALKING DISTANCE OF ECU<lb/>
ORNEROF<lb/>
? IARVIS STREETS! JUST<lb/>
 FROM ECU!<lb/>
:or<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
tf<lb/>
ifc.<lb/>
?!<lb/>
6<lb/>
H<lb/>
Come by and visit our newly remodeled<lb/>
laundromat!<lb/>
New equipment and a fresh new look!<lb/>
Watch for specials later!<lb/>
SHOP WHERE THE PIRATES SHOP FOR PRICE,<lb/>
QUALITY, AND CONVENIENCE!<lb/>
OVEETON'S<lb/>
m<lb/>
IOC<lb/>
fcJh)<lb/>
-J -<lb/>
U.S. lo<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - A studv<lb/>
released today challenoes the<lb/>
notion that America will be able to<lb/>
replace millions of jobs lost inj<lb/>
fading smokestack industries<lb/>
with new jobs in emerging high-<lb/>
technology fields.<lb/>
The Council on Competitive<lb/>
ness said the United States ha;<lb/>
lost its once-commanding lead 111<lb/>
many high-tech industries It said<lb/>
that onlv a concerted effort b<lb/>
government, industry and thq<lb/>
nation's schools can reverse tht<lb/>
trend.<lb/>
"In field after field, from com<lb/>
bustion engineering to consume:<lb/>
electronics, from machine tools t<lb/>
the integrated circuitg foreigi<lb/>
competitors have moved int<lb/>
markets pioneered and onc<lb/>
dominated by American firms<lb/>
the report said. "Often, their sue<lb/>
cess wasbuilt onexoloiting invenj<lb/>
tions made in American Laboratal<lb/>
Patriotism<lb/>
WASrflNGTON(AP)-M <lb/>
Dukakis spoke of his immigrant<lb/>
heritage before a backdrop I<lb/>
American Rags and the Statue 01<lb/>
Liberty. George Bush led the RJ<lb/>
publican convention in a n <lb/>
tion r( the Pledge o Allegiance.<lb/>
Typical scenes from what I<lb/>
ready the most star spai I<lb/>
presidential campaign in n j<lb/>
ory.<lb/>
The red, white and blue hue i<lb/>
the contest no doubt reflects<lb/>
judgment that Americans are .1<lb/>
the mood for another dose of pa<lb/>
triotism, the sort oi stuff Rona'u<lb/>
Reagan promoted in two lanv<lb/>
slide election victories.<lb/>
But flag-waving also is the ret<lb/>
uge of candidates who woul<lb/>
rather not spell out how they plaJ<lb/>
to balance the budget :r creatj<lb/>
millionsof new, well-paying<lb/>
Hag-waving isn't Limited<lb/>
creating a sea of color for the e<lb/>
ning television news shows.<lb/>
"Read my lips says Republ<lb/>
can Bush, no new taxes.<lb/>
"Good jobs at good wages<lb/>
Embassy worki<lb/>
ordered home<lb/>
RANGOON, Burma (AP)<lb/>
Army trucks loaded with trooj<lb/>
rolled toward the center of tb<lb/>
capital todav with orders to shoe<lb/>
looters, who were sacking go<lb/>
ernment buildings, factories anl<lb/>
farms.<lb/>
The U.S. Embassv in Ran goo)<lb/>
ordered an evacuation oi<lb/>
American dependents as a "prj<lb/>
cautionary measure said Re<lb/>
Petzino. the U.S. Embassy spoke<lb/>
man in Bangkok. He said tl<lb/>
evacuees would be sent to Banj<lb/>
kok.<lb/>
"The streets are deserto<lb/>
people are pretty much in fear<lb/>
their property.Things have pretj<lb/>
much closed down said a Wei<lb/>
ern diplomat in Rangoon. "The<lb/>
is a widespread perception tl<lb/>
things have deteriorated<lb/>
Today was the first time<lb/>
nearlv three weeks that the mi<lb/>
tary presence had been obvious<lb/>
Rangoon, where looting bro)<lb/>
out Tuesday.<lb/>
The diplomat said he saw abel<lb/>
10 trucks with at least 20 soldiej<lb/>
in each vehicle late Tuesdi<lb/>
around Rangoon University ai<lb/>
Shwedagon Tagoda, both gath<lb/>
ing spots for anti-governmel<lb/>
protesters. He said it was the lai<lb/>
est military force he had seen,<lb/>
Rangoon in two weeks.<lb/>
"The defense forces and<lb/>
people's police force shall o<lb/>
fire to impose control should tl<lb/>
find that these looters, bent<lb/>
violence, continue th<lb/>
actsstate-run Rangoon Rac<lb/>
announced as the troops roll<lb/>
in<lb/>
"At present, unscrupulol<lb/>
people are restoring to violent<lb/>
breaking into, looting and<lb/>
stroying factories, warehouj<lb/>
and other sites where puP<lb/>
property is being stored<lb/>
brief broadcast said.<lb/>
It was the first stem warnj<lb/>
about intervention to stop If<lb/>
ing, which began outside the<lb/>
several weeks ago.<lb/>
Radio Rangoon said its warnj<lb/>
"does not concern those<lb/>
who are demonstrating pe<lb/>
fully referring to pro-der<lb/>
demonstrations against the thrj<lb/>
week-old government of Pre<lb/>
dent Maung Maung.<lb/>
Looters broke into the Custol<lb/>
Department warehouse, a buil<lb/>
ing of the Education DepartmJ<lb/>
and soap and textile factonl<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0004"/><lb/>
men<lb/>
his<lb/>
member it is knowledge<lb/>
icse two types of cancer<lb/>
is to early detection and<lb/>
ul treatment. If you vould<lb/>
o information stop by the<lb/>
Heall Center or see yo<lb/>
.ire provider.<lb/>
t lealth Column was ,wit-<lb/>
Donna Bullock, a recent<lb/>
e of the ECU School of<lb/>
Use credit goes to<lb/>
angrehr, also a recent<lb/>
2 of the School oi Nursing.<lb/>
rolinian<lb/>
Using<lb/>
?ncer Meymandi<lb/>
am Blankenship<lb/>
Kate$4.75<lb/>
tracts)<lb/>
$4.55<lb/>
$4.50<lb/>
$4.50<lb/>
$4.45<lb/>
$4.45<lb/>
$4.40<lb/>
$4.40<lb/>
$4.35<lb/>
 $4.35<lb/>
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9<lb/>
eptember 10<lb/>
n. - 8 p.m.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8,1988 3<lb/>
U.S. lost lead in high-tech<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
PREGNANCY CENTER<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - A study<lb/>
released today challenoes the<lb/>
notion that America will be able to<lb/>
replace millions of jobs lost in<lb/>
fading smokestack industries<lb/>
with new jobs in emerging high-<lb/>
technology fields.<lb/>
The Council on Competitive-<lb/>
ness said the United States has<lb/>
lost its once-commanding lead in<lb/>
many high-tech industries. It said<lb/>
that onlv a concerted effort by<lb/>
government, industry and the<lb/>
nation's schools can reverse the<lb/>
trend.<lb/>
"In field after field, from com-<lb/>
bustion engineering to consumer<lb/>
electronics, from machine tools to<lb/>
the integrated circuitg foreign<lb/>
competitors have moved into<lb/>
markets pioneered and once<lb/>
dominated by American firms<lb/>
the report said. "Often, their suc-<lb/>
cess was built on exoloiting inven-<lb/>
tions made in American laborato-<lb/>
ries by American scientists<lb/>
The report said other countries<lb/>
such as Japan have done a much<lb/>
better job of bringing new tech-<lb/>
nology to the marketplace<lb/>
quickly.<lb/>
Unless this trend is reversed,<lb/>
the study warned, the United<lb/>
States will suffer further deterio-<lb/>
ration in its trade deficits and a<lb/>
declining standard of living.<lb/>
"Technology is essential to<lb/>
America's competitiveness, the<lb/>
driving force behind increased<lb/>
productivity, export growth and a<lb/>
rising standard of living said<lb/>
John Young, chairman of the<lb/>
council and president of Hewlett-<lb/>
Packard Co.<lb/>
In releasing the report, Young<lb/>
said he wanted to challenoe the<lb/>
comforting illusion tnat "the sun-<lb/>
rise industries of high technology<lb/>
are the wave of the future - the<lb/>
economic panacea we all need<lb/>
"In 1987, our trade deficit with<lb/>
Japan in electronics was almost as<lb/>
large as it was for automobiles. So<lb/>
Silicon Valley is not so far re-<lb/>
moved from Detroit he said.<lb/>
The report cited these develop-<lb/>
ments:<lb/>
-American companies' share of<lb/>
the U.S. domestic market has<lb/>
shrunk dramatically in many<lb/>
high-technology fields. Between<lb/>
1970 and 1987, U.S. manufactur-<lb/>
ing companies' share of the<lb/>
American market in phono-<lb/>
graphs fell from 90 percent to 1<lb/>
percent, in color televisions from<lb/>
90 percent to 10 percent, in ma-<lb/>
chine tools from 100 percent to 35<lb/>
percent and in teleohones from 99<lb/>
percent to 25 percent.<lb/>
-America's trade surplus in high-<lb/>
technology products has declined<lb/>
precipitously during the 1980s<lb/>
and was actually in deficit for the<lb/>
first time in 1986.<lb/>
-Foriegn inventors captured 47<lb/>
percent of U.S. patents in 1987, up<lb/>
from 35 percent in 1975 with Japa-<lb/>
nese inventors holding key pat-<lb/>
ents in an increasing number of<lb/>
fields.<lb/>
-By 1986, Japan had captured 65<lb/>
percent of the world market in<lb/>
computer chips. The United<lb/>
States had less than 30 percent.<lb/>
-America could face a shortfall of<lb/>
500,000 scientists and engineers<lb/>
by the year 2010, due to retire-<lb/>
ments and a declining number of<lb/>
students choosing careers in sci-<lb/>
ence and engineering.<lb/>
The council, founded in 1986, is<lb/>
composed of 151 chief executives<lb/>
from industry, organized labor<lb/>
and higher education. It has is-<lb/>
sued a series of reports aimed at<lb/>
improving the ability of Ameri-<lb/>
can companies to compete in<lb/>
world markets.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Thg Center la Orwm<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
9-2:30<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
10-2<lb/>
For an appointment or more infor-<lb/>
mation, call 24-Hour Helpline,<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
111 East Third Street ? The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville. N. C.<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Te?t-<lb/>
. Confidential Counselin<lb/>
Patriotism is Dukakis, Bush platform<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Michael<lb/>
Dukakis spoke of his immigrant<lb/>
heritage before a backdrop of 22<lb/>
American flags and the Statue of<lb/>
Liberty. George Bush led the Re-<lb/>
publican convention in a recita-<lb/>
tion r( the Pledge of Allegiance.<lb/>
Typical scenes from what is al-<lb/>
ready the most star spangled<lb/>
presidential campaign in mem-<lb/>
ory.<lb/>
The red, white and blue hue of<lb/>
the contest no doubt reflects a<lb/>
judgment that Americans are in<lb/>
the mood for another dose of pa-<lb/>
triotism, the sort of stuff Ronald<lb/>
Reagan promoted in two land-<lb/>
slide election victories.<lb/>
But flag-waving also is the ref-<lb/>
uge of candidates who would<lb/>
rather not spell out how they plan<lb/>
to balance the budget or create<lb/>
millions of new, well-paying )obs.<lb/>
Flag-waving isn't limited to<lb/>
creating a sea of color for the eve-<lb/>
ning television news shows.<lb/>
"Read my lips says Republi-<lb/>
can Bush, " no new taxes<lb/>
"Good jobs at good wages<lb/>
says Democrat Dukakis, waving<lb/>
his favorite rhetorical flag.<lb/>
Weighing in on Tuesday was<lb/>
the president, an old master at this<lb/>
kind of campaigning.<lb/>
"After eight hard years of re-<lb/>
building America's strength, do<lb/>
we really want to return to a<lb/>
Disneyland defense policy ?" the<lb/>
president asked the American<lb/>
Legion.<lb/>
He ticked off the defense system<lb/>
he claimed Dukakis opposes, in-<lb/>
cluding the Trident missle system<lb/>
and the Stealth bomber, both of<lb/>
which the Massachusetts gover-<lb/>
nor supports.<lb/>
On the question of a federal<lb/>
budget awash in record amounts<lb/>
of red ink, both candidates talk<lb/>
about the need to reduce the defi-<lb/>
cits, but they aren't saying how<lb/>
they'd do it.<lb/>
The flexible freeze proposed by<lb/>
Bush is derided by Dukakis as<lb/>
"son of voodoo economics the<lb/>
memorable phrase Bush once<lb/>
used - and now wishes he hadn't<lb/>
to describe Reagan's economic<lb/>
policies.<lb/>
But Dukakis' own plan for cut-<lb/>
ting the deficit is based on un-<lb/>
specified cuts and his determina-<lb/>
tion to collect up to $100 billion in<lb/>
unpaid income taxes.<lb/>
Helping the homeless, the eld-<lb/>
erly, providing better schools and<lb/>
health care, rebuilding the<lb/>
nation's roads and bridges, re-<lb/>
storing the competitive edge to<lb/>
American industry, cleaning up<lb/>
the environment, all these are<lb/>
widely accepted goals to be<lb/>
reached through the vaquest of<lb/>
proposals.<lb/>
Everybody is for cooperation,<lb/>
bringing together government,<lb/>
business and labor.<lb/>
With new taxes a forbidden<lb/>
topic and budget deficits remain-<lb/>
ing, at record levels, neither Bush<lb/>
nor Dukakis wants to commit<lb/>
himself to specific proposals with<lb/>
price tags the nation can't afford.<lb/>
So, instead they tout their lead-<lb/>
ership abilities, a pitch that as-<lb/>
sumes the main task is to convince<lb/>
voters that the candidate will<lb/>
make the right decisions, what-<lb/>
ever they may turn out to be.<lb/>
By now, the voters ought to be<lb/>
convinced that both presidential<lb/>
candidates are patriots who love<lb/>
their country and revere its flag,<lb/>
convinced and ready to hear now<lb/>
the contenders plan to deal with<lb/>
national problems.<lb/>
Read The East Carolinian for the latest in campus<lb/>
new, sports, and features, every Tuesday and Thurs-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Until we drop dead from exhaustion.<lb/>
"The best paper for the price.<lb/>
99VFF<lb/>
12" Sub or<lb/>
Regular<lb/>
Size Salad<lb/>
e<lb/>
5th St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
5&amp; Sfiidcwtmatux<lb/>
SUBUJfiV<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
756-2110<lb/>
Embassy workers<lb/>
ordered home<lb/>
RANGOON, Burma (AP) -<lb/>
Army trucks loaded with troops<lb/>
rolled toward the center of the<lb/>
capital today with orders to shoot<lb/>
looters, who were sacking gov-<lb/>
ernment buildings, factories and<lb/>
farms.<lb/>
The U.S. Embassv in Rangoon<lb/>
ordered an evacuation of 95<lb/>
American dependents as a "pre-<lb/>
cautionary measure said Ross<lb/>
Petzino. the U.S. Embassy spokes-<lb/>
man in Bangkok. He said the<lb/>
evacuees would be sent to Bang-<lb/>
kok.<lb/>
"The streets are deserted,<lb/>
people are pretty much in fear of<lb/>
their property. Things have prettv<lb/>
much closed down said a West-<lb/>
ern diplomat in Rangoon. "There<lb/>
is a widespread perception that<lb/>
things have deteriorated<lb/>
Today was the first time in<lb/>
nearly three weeks that the mili-<lb/>
tary presence had been obvious in<lb/>
Rangoon, where looting broke<lb/>
out Tuesday.<lb/>
The diplomat said he saw about<lb/>
10 trucks with at least 20 soldiers<lb/>
in each vehicle late Tuesday<lb/>
around Rangoon University and<lb/>
Shwedagon Pagoda, both gather-<lb/>
ing spots for anti-government<lb/>
protesters. He said it was the larg-<lb/>
est military force he had seen in<lb/>
Rangoon in two weeks.<lb/>
"The defense forces and the<lb/>
people's police force shall open<lb/>
fire to impose control should they<lb/>
find that these looters, bent on<lb/>
violence, continue their<lb/>
actsstate-run Rangoon Radio<lb/>
announced as the troops rolled<lb/>
in<lb/>
"At present, unscrupulous<lb/>
people are restoring to violence,<lb/>
breaking into, looting and de-<lb/>
stroying factories, warehouses<lb/>
and other sites where public<lb/>
property is being stored the<lb/>
brief broadcast said.<lb/>
It was the first stern warning<lb/>
about intervention to stop loot-<lb/>
ing, which began outside the city<lb/>
several weeks ago.<lb/>
Radio Rangoon said its warning<lb/>
"does not concern those people<lb/>
who are demonstrating peace-<lb/>
fully referring to pro-democ-<lb/>
demonstrations against the three-<lb/>
week-old government of Presi-<lb/>
dent Maung Maung.<lb/>
Looters broke into the Customs<lb/>
Department warehouse, a build-<lb/>
ing of the Education Department<lb/>
and soap and textile factories.<lb/>
The Wash House<lb/>
Laundramats - Dry Cleaning<lb/>
10th St.<lb/>
752-6117<lb/>
14th St.<lb/>
758-6001<lb/>
Attendants -<lb/>
Snacks - Cable TV<lb/>
One type of Coupon Per Visit<lb/>
f" COUPON "<lb/>
I 20 Off <lb/>
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Buy 1 Wash,<lb/>
Get 2nd<lb/>
One Free<lb/>
Expires 9-16-88 i Expires 9-16-88 Expires 9-16-88 j<lb/>
We Support The Pirates<lb/>
Wednesday, September 14<lb/>
9 a.m. until 6 p.m.<lb/>
Voting On The Following Positions:<lb/>
Dorm Representative<lb/>
Day Representative<lb/>
Class Officers<lb/>
Must have valid ECU ID with current activity sticker to vote<lb/>
POLLS LOCATED THROUGHOUT CAMPUS<lb/>
Poor College<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Special<lb/>
COUPONS GOOD THRU SEPTEMBER 88' ONLY<lb/>
2 Free<lb/>
Tanning visits<lb/>
with<lb/>
HaircutBlowdry<lb/>
Yearly Membership<lb/>
to tanning Booth<lb/>
$100.00<lb/>
unlimited visits<lb/>
$60.00 Membership<lb/>
to tanning Booth<lb/>
per semester<lb/>
lFree<lb/>
Tanning Visit<lb/>
with a 29.95 perm<lb/>
Special good with couupon only Appointment helpful but not necessary!<lb/>
103 EASTBROOK DRIVE 758-7570<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0005"/><lb/>
(Miz iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Pete Fernald, o?rM??<lb/>
Chip Carter, m? gm?<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, DtnctofAhtTi&amp;nt<lb/>
Joe Harris, m?m<lb/>
Doug joi nson,m g?<lb/>
TIM HAMPTON,f?h,r?F,fttor<lb/>
Mia ielle England, o-? m<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, smm<lb/>
Jeff Parker,s??t ??<lb/>
TOM FURR, Circyiaum Manager<lb/>
Susan Howell, pro m?<lb/>
John W. Medlin, msm<lb/>
Mac Clark, Fusm?sM?ugCT<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8,1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Parking<lb/>
Freshmen must lose out<lb/>
The parking situation on campus<lb/>
is getting worse. The stopgap meas-<lb/>
ures proposed last semester will not<lb/>
alleviate nearly enough of the pres-<lb/>
sure, pressure made worse by the<lb/>
fact this year's enrollment was at an<lb/>
J<lb/>
all time high. While an admittedly<lb/>
expensive parking deck would<lb/>
seem the best long term solution,<lb/>
there is another avenue that needs to<lb/>
be explored.<lb/>
It's an unpleasant alternative, but<lb/>
one that seems to be inevitable. ECU<lb/>
can no longer afford to let freshmen<lb/>
register their cars. We are the only<lb/>
one of the larger schools in the UNC<lb/>
system that still lets freshmen park<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
While it's a good thing ECU was<lb/>
able to help ease the transistion to<lb/>
college life for the freshman body<lb/>
this long, there are three other<lb/>
undergraduate classes, graduate<lb/>
students, faculty, staff and admini-<lb/>
stration to consider.<lb/>
The added space of the current<lb/>
freshmen lots, added to the 900<lb/>
under construction would still not<lb/>
solve the problem, but it would help<lb/>
considerably.<lb/>
Greenville, while not much else in<lb/>
a lot of respects, is a convenient town<lb/>
for students. Almost anything is<lb/>
within walking or bus distance.<lb/>
While a mandatory ban on freshmen<lb/>
cars is an major inconvenience, in<lb/>
most respects it is hardly a fatal one.<lb/>
The ban would also change<lb/>
Greenville weekends substantially.<lb/>
Many think of ECU as a suitcase<lb/>
college, but having the majority of<lb/>
the freshmen here on the weekends<lb/>
would encourage them to take ad-<lb/>
vantage of the opportunities<lb/>
Greenville does have to offer.<lb/>
While freshmen would under-<lb/>
standably rage at this restriction, it<lb/>
really is fast becoming one of the few<lb/>
Dptions ECU has left in this situ-<lb/>
ation. And, with the prejudice of up-<lb/>
perclassmenhood, they will no<lb/>
doubt appreciate it in the coming<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Apology<lb/>
As editor of The East Carolinian, I<lb/>
have had to think and rethink my<lb/>
position on the infamous "pirate<lb/>
cartoon" we ran in our first issue,<lb/>
and the editorial I wrote on Sept.l.<lb/>
After listening to many differing<lb/>
opinions on the subject, I feel I was<lb/>
out of line in writing the editorial.<lb/>
I wrote it as an explanation of why<lb/>
the cartoon got published, but it<lb/>
came out much more arrogant than<lb/>
I intended, and much more defen-<lb/>
sive. My personal feelings on the<lb/>
matter obviously surfaced much<lb/>
more than is warranted in an edito-<lb/>
rial.<lb/>
I would also like to apologize to<lb/>
those people who found the cartoon<lb/>
offensive ? as stated before, it was<lb/>
not our intent to offend with that<lb/>
particular cartoon and I and my staff<lb/>
are sorry for any grief it might have<lb/>
caused.<lb/>
va9 ottvotAvveivs? wmsp camm- s ytv.<lb/>
Quayle overshadows during convention<lb/>
BY FRED BARNES<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
Dan Quayle did to George Bush what Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan was expected to do. Quayle over-<lb/>
shadowed the vice president, at least from day<lb/>
two of the Republican National Convention<lb/>
through the following week.<lb/>
Quayle also did what Bush often does to<lb/>
himself. Quayle made himself the butt of jokes,<lb/>
both for being a lightweight und for having spent<lb/>
the Vietnam War in the Indiana National Guard.<lb/>
Comedian Jay Lcno said National Guard duty<lb/>
served Quayle well: "You just kind of sit around<lb/>
and you wait for something to happen. Hey, if<lb/>
that isn't training for the vice presidency, I don't<lb/>
know what is)<lb/>
The Qualye vice-presedential controversy. It<lb/>
may not be the turning point in the campaign,<lb/>
but it's an awfully important episode. In the best-<lb/>
case scenario, Bush will suffer only slightly on<lb/>
Nov. 8 because of Quayle.<lb/>
But Bush has to make the best case happen,<lb/>
and that won't be easy. The guess is it's too late<lb/>
to dump Quayle from the ticke . "After you get<lb/>
Bush up defending him four or five times, you<lb/>
can't yank him says John Sparthe Republican<lb/>
consultant.<lb/>
So Bush somehow has to take the focus off<lb/>
Quayle. Qr he'll be peppered with questions<lb/>
about Quayle from now until Eection Day. And<lb/>
Democrats, without directly attrcking Quayle,<lb/>
will make Bush's judgment in picking him an<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
Why did Bush pick Quayle? The answer is not<lb/>
that Bush was looking for a "lapdog's lapdog<lb/>
as Democratic operative Jerry Seigel puts it.<lb/>
Bush took the course of least resistance. When<lb/>
the other candidates were ruled out, he went<lb/>
with the guy that two of his senior aides were<lb/>
touting.<lb/>
Edward Collins, who managed President<lb/>
Reagan's canpaign in 1984, has twe good rules<lb/>
for choosing a running mate. Bush violated both.<lb/>
One is never let the decision get tied ap with the<lb/>
convention, which invariably distorts reality.<lb/>
The other is to pick som,eone who's been nation-<lb/>
ally tested.<lb/>
One tested candidate was Richaid Thorn-<lb/>
burgh, the former Pennsylvania governor who'd<lb/>
just been unanimously confirmed as attorney<lb/>
general. But Thornburgh was persona non grata<lb/>
with conservatives, so he was out. Alan Simpson<lb/>
was unacceptable for the sane reason - a pro-<lb/>
choice position on abortion. Dole and Kemp<lb/>
were out because Bush can't abide either of<lb/>
them, especially Dole. And Gov. George<lb/>
Deukmiejian of California didn't want to be<lb/>
picked.<lb/>
By process of elimination, Quayle was left. Both<lb/>
pollster Robert Teeter and media consultant Roger<lb/>
Ailes had worked in Quayle's Senate campaigns,<lb/>
and they spoke favorably. But neither Teeter nor<lb/>
Ailes had enough clout to impose their man on<lb/>
Bush. The only fellow with that sort of influence is<lb/>
campaign chief James Baker, who favored Dole but<lb/>
didn' t lobby aggressively. The Quayle decision was<lb/>
Bush's.<lb/>
Naming Quayle on day two upset everyone's<lb/>
well-laid plans for the convention and the cam-<lb/>
paign. The first day, aimed at touting the Reagan<lb/>
record, went off as planned. Day Two was for<lb/>
basinng Michael Dukakis, but Quayle got all the<lb/>
attention. Day three was fo. building up Bush, but<lb/>
Quayle and questions about his background held<lb/>
sway. Bush's speech was the centerpiece on day<lb/>
four, but the burgeoning Quayle story rivaled it.<lb/>
After that, it was all Quayle.<lb/>
Bush was supposed to come out of New Orleans<lb/>
on a hot streak. He didn't. His speech was scintillat-<lb/>
ing, but his comments on everything but Quayle<lb/>
were ignored for the next week. He sought to make<lb/>
the case that as president he'd build on Reagan's<lb/>
foundation and that Dukakis was too great a risk for<lb/>
the nation to take. None of this got through. The<lb/>
media concentrated on Bush's vehement defense of<lb/>
Quayle ("He damm sure didn't burn the American<lb/>
flag").<lb/>
Baker and Stuart Spencer, the premier GOP<lb/>
strategist, had ambitious scheme for making the<lb/>
vice presidential nominee a big help to Bush. That<lb/>
went up in smoke. Spencer figured a well-run vice<lb/>
presidential effort could add two or three percent-<lb/>
age points to Bush's vote. Now he will be delirious<lb/>
with joy if Quayle doesn't lose points for the ticket.<lb/>
The pro-Quayle arguments trotted out by the<lb/>
Bush campaign haven't help ed. They're negative-<lb/>
Quayle isn't qualified to be president just because<lb/>
he didn't flee to Canada during Vietnam. And at-<lb/>
tacking the press may inflamie the public against<lb/>
Sam Donaldson, but not in favor of Quayle.<lb/>
The Bush campaign desperately needs, in Sears'<lb/>
wordsa device to get people to lay off Quayle<lb/>
The best device is Quayle himself. Should Quayle<lb/>
turn out to be a spectacularly appealing cam-<lb/>
paigner, the press might ease up.<lb/>
Don't hold your breath. If Quayle were that good<lb/>
on the stump, he wouldn't be regarded as such a<lb/>
lightweigh t by his peers in Congress. Quayle's<lb/>
strong suit supposed to be national defense, but<lb/>
given the National Guard flap, this is the subject on<lb/>
which he has the least credibility at the moment.<lb/>
An obvious step is a Ferraro-sryle press confer-<lb/>
ence that allows reporters to exhaust their ques-<lb/>
tions. Bushies aren't willing to risk thus. They don't<lb/>
trust all of Quayle's story and they aren't confident<lb/>
he can sell himself. They also recoil at the analogy to<lb/>
Geraldine Ferraro.<lb/>
Another idea, credited to Eric Breindel of the<lb/>
New York Post, Bush to name his Cabinet and and<lb/>
give the press a flock of new personalities to cover<lb/>
Breindel suggested Co'in Powell for defense secre-<lb/>
tary and Max Kempelmen for national security<lb/>
adviser. This might work in the short run.<lb/>
It's up to Bush to create a compeleing story.<lb/>
Otherwise, short of a windfall like a major Dukakis<lb/>
blunder, the Quayle story will lingerBy mid-Sep-<lb/>
tember, the press will be writing stories about<lb/>
places Quayle won'tgo" because GOP candidates<lb/>
don'twant him around, says Sears. Bush will be one<lb/>
of those candidates.<lb/>
Sun tans need not be cancer causing hobby<lb/>
By FRED BARNES<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
Almost 6,000 Americans will die of skin cancer<lb/>
this year. That's a lot. What makes it worse is that<lb/>
skin cancer is the most easily preventable form of<lb/>
cancerotherflvn lung cancer caused by smoking. As<lb/>
we all now r jw, most skin cancer is caused by<lb/>
overexposuie to the sun. Even when it doesn't kill,<lb/>
excessive sun causes premature aging of the skin<lb/>
and non-fatal cancers.<lb/>
Now that the link between sunlight and skin can-<lb/>
cer is well known, the official position of right-<lb/>
thinking people is that the purposeful exposure of<lb/>
pale flesh to raw sunlight for the purpose of acquir-<lb/>
ing a tan is almost criminally foolhardy ? like<lb/>
smoking. Millions disregard this interdict, of<lb/>
course, but their pleasure is.reduced (or enhanced,<lb/>
as the case may be) by guilt.<lb/>
"You cannot get a tan without damaging your<lb/>
skin says the president of the American Academy<lb/>
of Dermatology. The Skin Cancer Foundation says,<lb/>
"The term 'healthy tan' is a contradiction in terms<lb/>
An expert featured in the current issue of Conde<lb/>
Nast Traveller recommends using a sunscreen that is<lb/>
the equivalent of "standing in a dark basement at<lb/>
midnight<lb/>
Is it truly necessary for everyone who enjoys a tan<lb/>
to give up that small pleasure? This is the kind of<lb/>
decision our culture is ill-equipped to help us make<lb/>
sensibly. Although sunning and smoking both cause<lb/>
cancer, there are differences. One is that the risk of<lb/>
getting fatal cancer from heavy sunning is far<lb/>
smaller than the risk of getting fatal cancer from<lb/>
heavy smoking. More people tan than smoke, but<lb/>
hundreds of thousands die each year from smoking.<lb/>
Another difference is that in the case of sunning,<lb/>
moderation is a live option. If the vast majority of<lb/>
smokers would cut back to two or three cigarettes a<lb/>
day, smoking would no longer be a serious health<lb/>
problem. But smoking is addictive, and few smokers<lb/>
can hold themselves to two or three a day. There is no<lb/>
such dilemma regarding suntans, yet the new helio-<lb/>
phobia rarely allows for any middle ground.<lb/>
The risk of skin cancer from suntanning has three<lb/>
features that make it difficult to assess rationally.<lb/>
First, it is a small risk of a large negative outcome.<lb/>
We are shutting down our nuclear power industry<lb/>
because of the tiny chance of a catastrophic melt-<lb/>
down, while we complacently tolerate the certainty<lb/>
of lesser but still serious harms (pollution, mining<lb/>
accidents) from other power sources.<lb/>
Second, the degree of risk varies with the degree of<lb/>
exposure. No exposure to the sun, however small, is<lb/>
completely harmless; extra caution is never com-<lb/>
pletely wasted. You can always be a bit safer. Under<lb/>
such circumstances, it's hard to abandon the quest<lb/>
for perfect safety. Especially when ? point three ?<lb/>
the benefit side of the calculus is "merely" pleasure.<lb/>
A tan does nothing for the world except to make<lb/>
people happy. And, despite our nation's founding<lb/>
commitment to "the pursuit of happiness we often<lb/>
act as if it deserves no weight. Oh, we all give it<lb/>
weight in our personal decisions, but we abandon it<lb/>
when we're in our civic mode of thought.<lb/>
No one thinks a suntan is worth getting skin<lb/>
cancer. It's not worth a one-in-a-hundred chance.<lb/>
But at some point ? one in 10,000,100,000,1 million<lb/>
? trivial pleasure has its legitimate claims even<lb/>
against cancer.<lb/>
The two professions that guide us through that<lb/>
tradeoff, journalism and medicine, both have pro-<lb/>
fessional biases against this common-sense truth.<lb/>
Having drawn attention to some peril ? be it skin<lb/>
cancer or nuclear war or the melting of the polar caps<lb/>
?journalists are constitutionally indisposed to play<lb/>
down its enormity or to emphasize how unlikely it is<lb/>
to occur. Doctors are constitutionally disposed (and<lb/>
thank God for it) to be extremely risk averse, and to<lb/>
be absolutists about the tradeoff between health and<lb/>
other concerns.<lb/>
It's true that, at least for white people, any expo-<lb/>
sure at all to the sun ages the skin and increases the<lb/>
risk of getting cancer. If s also true, however, that the<lb/>
overwhelming greatest danger is from sunburns,<lb/>
not mere tanning. And it seems to be true that your<lb/>
risk of getting skin cancer, and even of premature<lb/>
aging skin, is based primarily on your experience of<lb/>
sunburn as a child, not on your tanning behavior as<lb/>
an adult. Although dermatologists are struggling to<lb/>
prove otherwise, there's no proof yet that long ultra-<lb/>
violet rays, the kind used in tanning parlors and the<lb/>
kind that predominate in sunshine at times other<lb/>
than around midday, are cancerous at all.<lb/>
In short, the rates of skin cancer we're seeing today<lb/>
are the fruits of ignorant misbehavior over the past<lb/>
few decades. If everyone had escaped repeated<lb/>
sunburn as a kid, avoided the sun around midday,<lb/>
used moderately protective lotion the nest of the<lb/>
time, and settled for a butterscotch custard look<lb/>
rather than chocolate pudding, skin cancer would be<lb/>
an insignificant problem.<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) A $1<lb/>
judgment against Duke Li<lb/>
sity that grew out of a dii<lb/>
over an experimental cancer<lb/>
ment has been overturned<lb/>
panel of the N.C Court n<lb/>
peals.<lb/>
A three-judge panel on<lb/>
day struck down a jurv's<lb/>
that Duke pay former f<lb/>
member Raymond U $1 m<lb/>
But the judges upheld a $1(<lb/>
judgment against a doctor<lb/>
Duke faculty affirming the<lb/>
finding that he had slander!<lb/>
The ruling arose from a<lb/>
over control of a machu<lb/>
deep-heating cancerous tuj<lb/>
LT, a Korean native who vJ<lb/>
assistant professor of radiolj<lb/>
Duke University Medical C<lb/>
had done extensive resean<lb/>
"hyperthermia anexpeni<lb/>
treatment for cancer inv<lb/>
heat radiation.<lb/>
During a visit to lapan.<lb/>
proached a manufacturer<lb/>
developing the machine<lb/>
manufacturer crafted the<lb/>
motron RF-8 in 1981 and<lb/>
to loan a unit to Duke for c<lb/>
mental treatments.<lb/>
U contended that the loa<lb/>
contingent on his supervisii<lb/>
controlling the machine<lb/>
the experiments. But att<lb/>
machine arrived in 1983,<lb/>
physicians on the medical<lb/>
staff argued that U could<lb/>
the "principal inveshgatol<lb/>
projects involving humai<lb/>
cause he was not a med ical i<lb/>
U contended he was ths<lb/>
person qualified to lead tl<lb/>
periments and was approi<lb/>
Pope<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - The<lb/>
boro News &amp; Record did n<lb/>
a former Guilford Countv<lb/>
when it said he "openly he<lb/>
public" by denying that I<lb/>
sex with the girlfriend of al<lb/>
jail inmate or did favors,<lb/>
inmate, a state appeal.<lb/>
panel has ruled.<lb/>
A three-judge panel<lb/>
North Carolina Court of <lb/>
upheld Thursday a judct<lb/>
missal of a libel suit filed<lb/>
mer sheriff James L. Proffi<lb/>
Proffitt was elected count<lb/>
iff in 1982. In 1985, the<lb/>
Record said that the State<lb/>
of Investigation was lookil<lb/>
allegations that Proffitt aj<lb/>
mer Assistant District Att<lb/>
Robert Johnston had agre<lb/>
certain favors for jail inma<lb/>
nie Douglas in exchange<lb/>
with Douglas' then-girj<lb/>
Carmen Jobe. She later<lb/>
Douglas.<lb/>
Three of the new spa j<lb/>
porters interviewed Pro ft<lb/>
reported that he "denied<lb/>
sex with the woman Th<lb/>
was repeated in several<lb/>
quent news stones.<lb/>
In November 1985. Prq1<lb/>
leased a lengthy stater<lb/>
which he denied doing faj<lb/>
Douglas in exchange for 4<lb/>
his girlfriend but did notj<lb/>
cally deny having had<lb/>
her.<lb/>
During his trial on<lb/>
charges, Troffitt admitted<lb/>
had sex with Mrs. Dougla<lb/>
sisted the sex was not in ei<lb/>
for favors. Profitt was acqi<lb/>
bribery March 26,1986.<lb/>
The next day, the New;<lb/>
ord ran its editorial caj<lb/>
Proffitt's removal from of<lb/>
contending they had liej<lb/>
having had sex witj<lb/>
Douglas.<lb/>
Proffitt later sued, arg<lb/>
he had never denied ha<lb/>
sex with the woman but<lb/>
rued doing so in exch<lb/>
favors.<lb/>
"We find (Proffitt's) a<lb/>
unpersuasive the appej<lb/>
said in its opinion. j<lb/>
The trial judge threwl<lb/>
libel suit, ruling there wa<lb/>
cient evidence that the nej<lb/>
had libeled Proffitt.<lb/>
In other cases, the ppeaj<lb/>
awarded a new trial tc<lb/>
Keith Benfield, who<lb/>
victed in Rockingham Cj<lb/>
first-degree sexual offej<lb/>
taking indecent liberties<lb/>
child. He was sentenced <lb/>
prison plus five years.<lb/>
The appeals court rule<lb/>
trial court erred by alloi<lb/>
alleged victim's hearsa<lb/>
ment improperly tobeinl<lb/>
asevidence. Benfield was<lb/>
with forcing his mfe to<lb/>
with his minor son, the<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0006"/><lb/>
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n w as<lb/>
 ones<lb/>
I the cam-<lb/>
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i. They re negative-<lb/>
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tely needs, in Scars<lb/>
ft Quayle "<lb/>
ild Quayle<lb/>
ppealing cam-<lb/>
re that good<lb/>
regarded as such a<lb/>
toss Quavle's<lb/>
il defense, but<lb/>
- the subject on<lb/>
the moment.<lb/>
- confer-<lb/>
4 'heir ques-<lb/>
r - They don't<lb/>
ireri t confident<lb/>
coil at the analogy to<lb/>
?<lb/>
n IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8,1988 5<lb/>
reindel of the<lb/>
me hi- t and and<lb/>
nalities to cover.<lb/>
- defense secre-<lb/>
n for national security<lb/>
rt rvm.<lb/>
i competeing story.<lb/>
? a maior Dukakis<lb/>
ger "By mid-Sep-<lb/>
iries about<lb/>
cause GOP candidates<lb/>
? ?rs Bush will beone<lb/>
Slobby<lb/>
mely risk averse, and to<lb/>
tradeoff between health and<lb/>
k r white people, any expo-<lb/>
. s the -kin and increases the<lb/>
t s also true, however, that the<lb/>
SI danger is from sunburns,<lb/>
d it seems to be true that your<lb/>
ancer, and even of premature<lb/>
nmarilv on your experience of<lb/>
I on your tanning behavior as<lb/>
matologists are struggling to<lb/>
e's no proof yet that long ultra-<lb/>
ised in tanning parlors and the<lb/>
tie in sunshine at times other<lb/>
are cancerous at all.<lb/>
skin cancer we're seeing today<lb/>
ant misbehavior over the past<lb/>
eryone had escaped repeated<lb/>
aided the sun around midday,<lb/>
rotective lotion the rest of the<lb/>
a butterscotch custard look<lb/>
pudding, skin cancer would be<lb/>
Duke loses $1 million SAVACENTER<lb/>
i<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) A $1 million<lb/>
judgment against Duke Univer-<lb/>
sity that grew out of a dispute<lb/>
over an experimental cancer treat-<lb/>
ment has been overturned by a<lb/>
panel of the N.C. Court of Ap-<lb/>
peals.<lb/>
A three-judge panel on Tues-<lb/>
day struck down a jury's order<lb/>
that Duke pay former faculty<lb/>
member Raymond U $1 million.<lb/>
But the judges upheld a $100,000<lb/>
judgment against a doctor on the<lb/>
Duke faculty affirming the jury's<lb/>
finding that he had slandered U.<lb/>
The ruling arose from a fight<lb/>
over control of a machine for<lb/>
deep-heating cancerous tumors.<lb/>
L, a Korean native who was an<lb/>
assistant professor of radioloev at<lb/>
Duke Universitv Medical Center,<lb/>
had done extensive research on<lb/>
"hyperthermia an experimental<lb/>
treatment for cancer involving<lb/>
heat radiation.<lb/>
During a visit to japan, U ap-<lb/>
proached a manufacturer about<lb/>
developing the machine. The<lb/>
manufacturer crafted the Ther-<lb/>
motron RF-8 in 1981 and offered<lb/>
to loan a unit to Duke for experi-<lb/>
mental treatments.<lb/>
U contended that the loan was<lb/>
contingent on his supervising and<lb/>
controlling the machine during<lb/>
the experiments. But after the<lb/>
machine arrived in 1983, some<lb/>
physicians on the medical center<lb/>
staff argued that U could not be<lb/>
the "principal investigator" on<lb/>
projects involving humans be-<lb/>
cause he was not a medical doctor.<lb/>
U contended he was the only<lb/>
person qualified to lead the ex-<lb/>
periments and was approved as<lb/>
sole principal investigator by the<lb/>
university's Institutional Review<lb/>
board and the Food and Drug Ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
But Dr. LeonaraProsnitz, direc-<lb/>
tor of radiationonocology,insisted<lb/>
that he should be the principal in-<lb/>
vestigator. As the argument per-<lb/>
sisted, Prosnitz allegedly began<lb/>
making statements about U's<lb/>
abilities, qualifications and char-<lb/>
acter, the appeals court's opinion<lb/>
said.<lb/>
On April 2, 1984 U obtained<lb/>
access to the Thci motron and re-<lb/>
moved parts making it inoper-<lb/>
able. The university obtained a<lb/>
court order for the return of the<lb/>
parts and a contempt motion<lb/>
when U failed to comply. The<lb/>
university later dismissed its ac-<lb/>
tion when a consent order was<lb/>
agreed to by all parties that said<lb/>
the machine would not be used<lb/>
unless both sides agreed.<lb/>
U filed his suit in October 1984,<lb/>
alledgingthat Duke,Prcsnitz and<lb/>
other university officials were<lb/>
guilty of malicious prosecution,<lb/>
abuse of process, intentional in-<lb/>
fliction of emotional distress, tak-<lb/>
ing U's personal property, tres-<lb/>
passing, civil conspiracy, slander<lb/>
and libel.<lb/>
The jury in the August 1986 trial<lb/>
in Durham County Superior<lb/>
Court ordered Duke to pay U $1<lb/>
million in punitive damages and<lb/>
$30,000 in compensatory dam-<lb/>
ages for malicious prosecution<lb/>
and $1 for coverting his personal<lb/>
property for the university's use.<lb/>
It also ordered Prosnitz to pay<lb/>
U. now a biophysicist at Rex<lb/>
Hospital in Raleigh, $50,000 in<lb/>
compensatory damages and<lb/>
$50,000 in punitive damages for<lb/>
libel and slander.<lb/>
The court upheld the $100,000<lb/>
judgment against Prosnitz and<lb/>
the $1 million judgment against<lb/>
Duke.<lb/>
In ruling that Duke did not<lb/>
have to pay the $1 million, the ap-<lb/>
peals court said the university did<lb/>
not act unreasonably in filing a<lb/>
civil action against U to recover<lb/>
the parts of the Thermotron he<lb/>
had taken.<lb/>
"Although it is not clear<lb/>
whether either partv had an ex-<lb/>
clusive right to use and control the<lb/>
property  it is clear that it was<lb/>
reasonable for defendant Duke to<lb/>
employ a procedure for a quick,<lb/>
definite resolution since patients<lb/>
depended on the operation of the<lb/>
machine "Chief Judge Robert A.<lb/>
Hedrick wrote in the court's opin-<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
The court also ruled that there<lb/>
was insufficient evidence for the<lb/>
Jury's finding that Prosnitz li-<lb/>
beled U. But, the court said.<lb/>
Prosnitz's statements were slan-<lb/>
derous.<lb/>
According to the appeals court,<lb/>
Prosnitz said that U was "a liar,<lb/>
deceitful, absolutely, useless, and<lb/>
does not have a Ph.D and was a<lb/>
fraud<lb/>
"We hold that such statements<lb/>
concerning plaintiffs academic<lb/>
credentials amount to allegations<lb/>
that impeach plaintiff in his pro-<lb/>
fession Hedrick wrote. "As a<lb/>
member of Duke University's<lb/>
faculty and as a research scientist,<lb/>
plaintiff depended on his aca-<lb/>
demic degree in his work<lb/>
Paper wins libel suit<lb/>
iem.<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - The Greens-<lb/>
boro News &amp; Record did not libel<lb/>
a former Guilford County sheriff<lb/>
when it said he "openly lied to the<lb/>
public" by denying that he had<lb/>
sex with thegirlfriendofacounty<lb/>
jail inmate or did favors for the<lb/>
inmate, a state appeals court<lb/>
panel has ruled.<lb/>
A three-judge panel of the<lb/>
North Carolina Court of Appeals<lb/>
upheld Thursday a judge's dis-<lb/>
missal of a libel suit filed bv for-<lb/>
mer sheriff James L. Proffitt.<lb/>
Proffitt was elected county sher-<lb/>
iff in 1982. In 1985, the News &amp;<lb/>
Record said that the State Bureau<lb/>
of Investigation was looking into<lb/>
allegations that Proffitt and for-<lb/>
mer Assistant District Attorney<lb/>
Robert Johnston had agreed to do<lb/>
certain favors for jail inmate Ron-<lb/>
nie Douglas in exchange for sex<lb/>
with Douglas' then-girlfriend.<lb/>
Carmen Jobe. She later married<lb/>
Douglas.<lb/>
Three of the newspaper's re-<lb/>
porters interviewed Proffitt and<lb/>
reported that he "denied having<lb/>
sex with the woman The denial<lb/>
was repeated in several subse-<lb/>
quent news stories.<lb/>
In November 1985. Proffitt re-<lb/>
leased a lengthy statement in<lb/>
which he denied doing favors for<lb/>
Douglas in exchange for sex with<lb/>
his girlfriend but did not specifi-<lb/>
cally deny having had sex with<lb/>
her.<lb/>
During his trial on bribery<lb/>
charges, Proffitt admitted having<lb/>
had sex with Mrs. Douglas but in-<lb/>
sisted the sex was not in exchange<lb/>
for favors. Profitt was acquitted of<lb/>
bribery March 26, 1986.<lb/>
The next day, the News &amp; Rec-<lb/>
ord ran its editorial calling for<lb/>
Proffitt's removal from office and<lb/>
contending they had lied about<lb/>
having had sex with Mrs.<lb/>
Douglas.<lb/>
Proffitt later sued, arguing that<lb/>
he had never denied having had<lb/>
sex with the woman but had de-<lb/>
nied doing so in exchange for<lb/>
favors.<lb/>
"We find (Proffitt's) argument<lb/>
unpersuasive the appeals panel<lb/>
said in its opinion.<lb/>
The trial judge threw out the<lb/>
libel suit, ruling there was insuffi-<lb/>
cient evidence that the newspaper<lb/>
had libeled Proffitt.<lb/>
In other cases, the appeals court:<lb/>
awarded a new trial to Darold<lb/>
Keith Benfield, who was con-<lb/>
victed in Rockingham County of<lb/>
first-degree sexual offense and<lb/>
taking indecent liberties with a<lb/>
child. He was sentenced to life in<lb/>
prison plus five years.<lb/>
The appeals court ruled that the<lb/>
trial court erred by allowing the<lb/>
alleged victim's hearsay state-<lb/>
ment improperly to be introduced<lb/>
asevidence. Benfield wascharged<lb/>
with forcing his wife to have sex<lb/>
with his minor son, the woman's<lb/>
stepson, in May 1985.<lb/>
Ordered new trials for Ellen<lb/>
Jones Robey and Richard Dale<lb/>
Barnes. Mrs. Robey wascharged<lb/>
with second-degree murder and<lb/>
Barnes with accessory after the<lb/>
fact, but the appeals panel ruled<lb/>
both convictions were based on a<lb/>
statement that was obtained in<lb/>
violation of Mrs. Robey's right to<lb/>
have counsel present during<lb/>
questioning.<lb/>
The Randolph County case<lb/>
stemmed from the Cnristmas Eve<lb/>
1984 slaving of Thomas Robey.<lb/>
Upheld the July 1987 conviction<lb/>
of James Howell Hensley on a<lb/>
charge of assault with a deadly<lb/>
weapon inflicting serious injury<lb/>
and second-degree sexual of-<lb/>
fense.<lb/>
Hensley was charged in Burke<lb/>
County with bearing his pregnant<lb/>
live-in girlfriend.<lb/>
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$Southern Gon Ac Pawn, Inc.<lb/>
752-2464$<lb/>
sary; we train. It 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/>
0.100 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. Brody's Carolina<lb/>
East Mall Monday thru Wednesday, 2-4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
BARMAIDS WANTED: Part-time, no<lb/>
experience needed, will train. Must be 21<lb/>
years old. Excellent tips call 758-0058, ask<lb/>
for Sue.<lb/>
PART-TIME HELP NEEDED: Young<lb/>
male for sales and stock. Some heavy<lb/>
lifting required. Must be neat and outgo-<lb/>
ing. Apply at the youth shop, Carolina<lb/>
East Centre. No phone calls<lb/>
BE ON T.V Many needed for commer-<lb/>
cials Casting info. (1) 805-687-6000 Ect.<lb/>
TV- 1166.<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS MAGAZINE: The<lb/>
American Scholastic Press Association<lb/>
Award Winning Publication at ECU is<lb/>
now accepting applications for staff writ-<lb/>
ers and a PromotionDistribution Man-<lb/>
ager. Apply at the Media Board<lb/>
Secretary's office in the Publications<lb/>
Bldg. (second floor) by Friday. Contribu-<lb/>
tors welcome.<lb/>
PERSONALS <lb/>
SHANNA?OK, here it is, the personal<lb/>
you've been anxiously awaiting. Have a<lb/>
great semester ? you're running out of<lb/>
time ? the countdown is 8 mos. You're<lb/>
the best "Roomie" ever! Stephanie.<lb/>
THE DAY THEY COULDN'T CALL<lb/>
PREF Sigmas and Lambda Chi's had a<lb/>
last. From before the game 'til after, the<lb/>
fun sure did last. With the flowers and the<lb/>
escorts, our pledges were surprised, let's<lb/>
do it again soon, thank you to the Lambda<lb/>
Chi's. And good fellowship was had by<lb/>
all. The Sigmas.<lb/>
GIRLS OF ECU: How would you like to<lb/>
spend one night of the week with 54 of the<lb/>
best looking guys on campus? Little Sis-<lb/>
ter Rush Phi Kappa Tau, Sept. 13,14! Little<lb/>
Sister President - Lori Moss.<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA presents The EMBERS<lb/>
Thurs Sept. 15 from 5-9 p.m. Tickets will<lb/>
be on sale in front of the Student Store or<lb/>
call 757-0128. Coolers are welcome!<lb/>
PHI TAU LIL SISTER Happy Hour at<lb/>
?bo! Thursday nights! Come party with<lb/>
ECU'S best Lil' Sisters!<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to all the new<lb/>
pledges. We are real excited. Love the<lb/>
sisters of Alpha Xi Delta.<lb/>
MICHELLE BOYD: We just want to<lb/>
thank you for such a great job and all the<lb/>
hard work you did. We Love You Sisters<lb/>
of Alpha Xi.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to everyone for<lb/>
a great Rush and a special thanks to Cam<lb/>
and Liz for all their hard work and a job<lb/>
well done. Love, Alpha Xi Delta.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU: Thanks for such a<lb/>
blast at the game and the pref party after-<lb/>
wards. Let's do it again soon Love,<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta.<lb/>
KATIE: Happy 21st birthday! We've all<lb/>
been through alot together, way too<lb/>
much to recount, but it's been fun. Have a<lb/>
great time Friday night, don't do any-<lb/>
thing stupid such as pass out at 10.30 with<lb/>
your skirt up around your head, pull<lb/>
slugs off the shed or "Let me see you<lb/>
smooch" and for god's sake if you get<lb/>
sick, ADMIT IT! None of this "from here<lb/>
down I'm sick, but from here up I think I<lb/>
have the flu Let's have a great party<lb/>
Friday. "Keith-Keith-get off me Keith<lb/>
Love Kris, Lynne, Leigh Anne, Banshee,<lb/>
Freddie, Zack, B.B. (wherever he is) and<lb/>
Elvis and his crew.<lb/>
JEFF: Thanks for making the last 2<lb/>
months wonderful! I'm glad you can fi-<lb/>
nally use that "L" word. I Love You, Rae.<lb/>
PETE: It was nice meeting you at the late<lb/>
night - Sat. night at the Phi Tau house<lb/>
Let's get together soon.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to the Beta<lb/>
Lambda pledges of Alpha Omicron Pi<lb/>
Michelle Allen, Kathryn Bowen, Jo<lb/>
Brooks, Natalie Brown, Donna Davidson,<lb/>
Barbara Dean, Holly Eckman, Missy Dhs,<lb/>
Shannon Fowler, Jodi Gear, Meredith<lb/>
Grogan, Caroline Haire, Bonnie Haswell,<lb/>
Heather Hatch, Amy Huber, Robin Jen-<lb/>
kins, Fay Jones, Gretchen Joumigan, Jen-<lb/>
nifer Jounigan, Kellie MacWelsh, Sarah<lb/>
Metcalf, Amy Pfrommer, Gina Pacifico,<lb/>
Sara Rowe, Rebecca Saleeby, Lora Sadler,<lb/>
Leanne Shaw, Lisa Selby, Sue Sullivan,<lb/>
Christi Smith, Stephanie Slyvester, Robin<lb/>
Wiggins and Kim Wood We had a great<lb/>
time this weekend and we're looking<lb/>
forward to some fun! Get psyched for<lb/>
Friday - Ifs your night!<lb/>
SIGMAS: Partying Saturday before and<lb/>
after the game was Supreme. Congrats to<lb/>
your new pledges (beautiful in the Sigma<lb/>
tradition). Let's do it again soon as good<lb/>
fellowship was had by all. Love, The<lb/>
Lambda Chi's.<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA presents the 1st Annual<lb/>
Boardwalk Benefit for MDA. Featuring<lb/>
the Embers Thurs, Sept. 15 from 5-9 p m.<lb/>
Tickets will be on sale in front of the<lb/>
Student Store or call 757-0128. Coolers are<lb/>
Welcome!<lb/>
COME SEE THE EMBERS live at the tCA<lb/>
House for the 1st Annual Boardwalk<lb/>
Benefit for MDA. Thurs Sept. 15, 5-9<lb/>
p.m. Get your tickets now. Coolers are<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
DO YOU ENJOY WORKING WITH<lb/>
PEOPLE? Undecided on a major? If so,<lb/>
come find out what SCEC is all about<lb/>
First meeting ? Mon Sept 12 at 5:15 in<lb/>
SP103.<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: Used Nintendo Car<lb/>
fridges with instructions for re sale i ast<lb/>
Coast Music and Video 754251, 1109<lb/>
Charles Blvd<lb/>
180 PROOF, band of Pi Kappa Phi pet<lb/>
forms with three other bands at the Bud<lb/>
Band Wars, Sat. Sept 10, noon b<lb/>
Opening with skvdivers and ?<lb/>
broadcasting live IT A pia ana<lb/>
sold and c(?olers wel.ome Tickets<lb/>
Coast Music and Video Fottowth<lb/>
or catch the bus at the bottom ol<lb/>
Hill"<lb/>
1980, 850 SUZUKI: Blaik 4 cyd<lb/>
shaft, 2 fiber glass luggage tvi' -???.<lb/>
bags, windshield, space helmet, n.<lb/>
tery and break shoos $750Call75<lb/>
BASEBALL CARDS: SeH old<lb/>
cash, call Thomas at 7V 068 - afti I<lb/>
BASEBALL CARDS WANTED: Ar .<lb/>
year, shape of car.K I 11 pav damn grx.i<lb/>
money for anv ards of am yeai<lb/>
shape or condition Net i; irtyn<lb/>
Sell your cards to EarivisM! fall 757<lb/>
1 eave niivjr it not there<lb/>
r<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
V.<lb/>
The East Carolinian:<lb/>
Long hours, low pay.<lb/>
Great Experience.<lb/>
Apply in person, Publications<lb/>
Building, Second Floor<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
FRIDAY SEPT. 9<lb/>
Mike Lightnin' Wells<lb/>
SAT. SEPT. 10<lb/>
The Boomers<lb/>
513 Cotanche St.<lb/>
(Across from U.BI.)<lb/>
BUDGET TIRE<lb/>
&amp; SERVICE<lb/>
  ?:? Sireel<lb/>
.ou need &amp; tire ? go<lb/>
I . : :i ol new.<lb/>
ha eCO( D used tires - all<lb/>
? ?? profile, high pcrform-<lb/>
ur street tread, a few<lb/>
I letters, and the popular<lb/>
' ? ir Eagle GT.<lb/>
VAI of u ed tires without a<lb/>
irrant) We warrantee<lb/>
.  tires in writing for 3060 days,<lb/>
nding on price. On the corner<lb/>
? t 1 h v 33 and NL ('reene St. In for<lb/>
i calls velcomo H30-3772<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal and Confidential Care"<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call for appointment Mon. thru Sat- Low<lb/>
Cost Termination to 20 weeks of pregnancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
Mandarin &amp;<lb/>
Ming Dynasty<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
for<lb/>
New Restaurant to<lb/>
Open in Middle Sept.<lb/>
Need Hostess,<lb/>
Waitress &amp; Deliver<lb/>
Call Mary<lb/>
756-9687<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/>
? Across From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
$325 a month<lb/>
Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 or 830-1937<lb/>
Odwxopen- Apt 8, 12-530 p.m.<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clean and quirt one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. $205 a month. 6 month<lb/>
lease MOBI1.E HOME RENTALS - couples or<lb/>
singles. Apartment and mobile homes in Azalea<lb/>
Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
CRUSTY'S<lb/>
1 lli?ri DELIVER<lb/>
Now Hiring Drivers<lb/>
Starting Wage $4.00 per hr.<lb/>
Earn Up To $9.00 per hr.<lb/>
Flexible hours, Bonuses. Must<lb/>
have own car and insurance.<lb/>
Apply in person at 1414 Charles St.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
JUDICIAL BOARD<lb/>
MEMBERS<lb/>
The following Judicial<lb/>
Board Members need to<lb/>
contact Alice Harden at<lb/>
758-9923 or<lb/>
757-6611 ext. 218<lb/>
immediately:<lb/>
Angie South<lb/>
Keith Crawford<lb/>
Brad Cates<lb/>
Thank You!<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
? QLLEGE WORK STIJDY<lb/>
f you 1 i been awarded college work<lb/>
. foi I ill Semester andor Spring<lb/>
Semester you .ire encouraged to contact<lb/>
? ?. about off campus place-<lb/>
ments Call 57-6979 or come by the Gen-<lb/>
r.il v . ?! room Building, Room 2028.<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPqS<lb/>
. i Pitt Count) Special Olym-<lb/>
pics will lx conducting .1 training school<lb/>
iept 17 at Elm Si Cym for anyone inter-<lb/>
ested iii volunteering to coach soccer for<lb/>
sped il athletes. No experience is needed.<lb/>
We are also 1 tokingfor nudies for basket-<lb/>
kill, iveightlifting, ans swimming. All<lb/>
interested persons should contact Creg<lb/>
j person rmime Sappen field at the<lb/>
ial Xympk office, 830 4551<lb/>
NEW STUDENT REVIEWS<lb/>
Anyone who purchased new student<lb/>
reviews sin Mild come bv the yearbook<lb/>
office to pick them up. Hours are M-F, 6-8<lb/>
p m<lb/>
WINDSURFING<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural<lb/>
Windsurfing registration meeting held<lb/>
front Sept f to Sept 27<lb/>
GROUP PHOTOGRAPHS<lb/>
i iroup photographs will be taken Sept 15<lb/>
until Dec 2. No group pictures can be<lb/>
taken atter Dec 2 Please note that the a<lb/>
group listing with the name of every per-<lb/>
son in the photograph MUST be pre-<lb/>
sented BtrOKE the photographer films<lb/>
the group. ORGANIZATIONS WITH-<lb/>
OUT LISTINGS WILL NOT BE PI lOTO-<lb/>
GRAPHED, and time does not permit uV<lb/>
scheduling of another session.<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 SCOUTS<lb/>
College aged adults meet for the 1st meet-<lb/>
ing of the semester, Thursday at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Room available from information desk<lb/>
in Mendenhall. New memberships avail-<lb/>
able. For information call Nanci 7SH-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 Profos-<lb/>
sional Knowledge) will be offered at ECU<lb/>
October 22. Applications are to be com-<lb/>
pleted and mailed to Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, Box 911-R, Princeton, NJ 08541.<lb/>
Applications must be postmarked no later<lb/>
than Sept. 19. Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Room-105, Speight Building.<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
The Graduate Management Admission<lb/>
Test will be offered at ECU on October 15.<lb/>
Applications are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to GMAT Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, Box 96f-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, bee your residence nan 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/>
AH athletes are encouraged to try this<lb/>
hard nosed sport and join in the fellow-<lb/>
ship of Rugby. Practice is Tuesday thru<lb/>
Thursday 3:30 p.m. until. For more infor-<lb/>
mation call the ECU Intramural Club<lb/>
Sports Dept. or Bob Eason at 757-0209.<lb/>
BATTLE OF THE BANDS<lb/>
Battle of the Bands, presented by the cof-<lb/>
fee house committee of the student union,<lb/>
will be accepting applications for this<lb/>
event until Sept 8 at 5 p.tr. Pick up appli-<lb/>
cations at the information desk at Men-<lb/>
denhall. Amateur bands only please! So-<lb/>
loists and Guitarists welcome.<lb/>
BIOLOGY SIUPENTS<lb/>
Get acquainted with biology faculty and<lb/>
biology club members at the orientation<lb/>
gathering Sept. 12 at 7 p.m. in BN 109.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served.<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 Sor -<lb/>
ety Wine and Cheese Social, Thursday.<lb/>
Stop by the Accounting Office for an in-<lb/>
vitation.<lb/>
EDUCATION MAJORS<lb/>
The Department of Speech-Language &amp;<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/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The National Gamma Beta Phi Society<lb/>
will meet Sept. 13 at 8 p.m. in Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
VOTERS<lb/>
The League of Women Voters of<lb/>
Greenville-Pitt County will sponsor voter<lb/>
registration on Sept. 14 from 8:30 a.m. to 1<lb/>
p.m. in the ECU Bookstore lobby. New<lb/>
registrations, permanent address changes<lb/>
andor party affiliation changes can be<lb/>
made at this time.<lb/>
roiiNSFTTNr: 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/>
12,14,1619 in 329 Wright Building from 3-<lb/>
4 p.m. 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/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
Co-op education, a free service offered bv<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 pm.<lb/>
Room 2010, Monday, Sept. 26 1 pm<lb/>
Room 2010, Thursday, Sept. 29 4 pm.<lb/>
Room 2006.<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/>
Da van dr a 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/>
ECHO<lb/>
There will hi a meeting Thursday .1! 5p<lb/>
in the 1 ionots Lounge (Room 1 ?<lb/>
eral Classroom Bldg 1 Allt - stcd<lb/>
in the Honors Program at ECU should<lb/>
plan to attend Members are requesti d<lb/>
bring ideas regarding our comn<lb/>
outreach &amp; ideas for guest lectures and<lb/>
colloquia New members always m<lb/>
come Call Dr Sanders (757-6373) for<lb/>
more info<lb/>
KERVGMA<lb/>
A Bible study onh forthosi serious atx<lb/>
studying the Bible it is challenging at d<lb/>
requires commitment, involving discus<lb/>
sion and readings Weekl) meetings will<lb/>
be scheduled to accoi xtate those who<lb/>
are interested Kervg.ua is an interde-<lb/>
nominational program, and sponsored by<lb/>
Presbyterian Campus Ministry i or more<lb/>
info, call Mike at 752-7240<lb/>
ACCOUNTING SOCIETY<lb/>
ACCOUNTING MAJORS It vou me en<lb/>
rolled in a 3000 or 400Q level account c<lb/>
class, you are invited to attend the Ac<lb/>
counting Society Wine and Cheese Sodal<lb/>
Thursday, September 8 Stop by the Ac-<lb/>
counting Office for an invitation<lb/>
ECU WOMEN'S SOCCER<lb/>
Anyone interested in playing Women's<lb/>
Club Soccer in the Fall and Spring of this<lb/>
year, an organizational meeting is being<lb/>
set up. If you are interested and want<lb/>
more information, please get in touch<lb/>
with one or any of the following people<lb/>
Kris Slacum 758-4255, Beth Harvev 736-<lb/>
9450 or Ann Totaro 830-9315 Cail and<lb/>
leave message<lb/>
I'Hl BET A LAMBDAI<lb/>
Phi hV?a Lai ung an<lb/>
i K USE for ai .iinBi<lb/>
on Thursday at 4 p m in room 1(<lb/>
eral Classroom :? ding Anvi<lb/>
: in a Businc? ? E<lb/>
j<lb/>
1<lb/>
!<lb/>
PRE-PHYSICALTHFR,<lb/>
All g<lb/>
' anticipal<lb/>
r, BeL<lb/>
? <lb/>
1<lb/>
haveam<lb/>
ALUMNI ASSOCIATq<lb/>
Ass<lb/>
con .<lb/>
v<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Court r<lb/>
KA :<lb/>
peals<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
ar-<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
nstiti<lb/>
A  ' ' : ?<lb/>
r ? 1<lb/>
on Thurs lay : a Fj<lb/>
ntySupci ? " A<lb/>
? ? Lai :<lb/>
University - j<lb/>
tired for rel 'I<lb/>
detector test. 1<lb/>
turned to the lower c iri<lb/>
'The fundamental - <lb/>
titled to protection<lb/>
r privacy includii I<lb/>
tionsr ps marriage or p<lb/>
tion, tvar no res 1<lb/>
righl  in the<lb/>
question, "the court<lb/>
?<lb/>
th.<lb/>
5,1<lb/>
ncluding tl  I po<lb/>
examaination vi<lb/>
woman s) con-utut.<lb/>
"  ' rt Tt<lb/>
- ted '?'? rtsl - m S<lb/>
Univers Norl<lb/>
tern and two WS<lb/>
reinstatement and back<lb/>
Superior Court ju - U<lb/>
her, but the appc -<lb/>
out the judgment.<lb/>
Ms Truesdalc was ei<lb/>
SIC I<lb/>
Gordo<lb/>
Golf &amp; S<lb/>
In Front of Greenville<lb/>
7-10 a.m. S,<lb/>
 . i Sodtx Ne<lb/>
T<lb/>
Luncheon Sp<lb/>
Daily Lunche<lb/>
&amp; Sunday Bui<lb/>
Shrimp Dinne)<lb/>
 . -  ? s ?; ;?<lb/>
6 00-900<lb/>
fI<lb/>
mLunch 11.30i<lb/>
<lb/>
? ?AI! AB( 0p?" 7<lb/>
1 VSP'ffl<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0008"/><lb/>
THE! ASTCAROLir '<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
EHJ BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
' '?"? a i- holding .ui OI'LN<lb/>
? ?ne interested in Business<lb/>
 at 4 p m in room 1013 Gen<lb/>
? i Building Anyone en<lb/>
i isiness ?! H IE course is<lb/>
 ' nd and all majors are<lb/>
i ollegiate equi ilanl<lb/>
PR! PHYS1CAI THERAP<lb/>
ego pre physical thorapv<lb/>
 highei anticipating ap-<lb/>
Ma J89 Physical Thorapv<lb/>
I e Physical Therapy<lb/>
? ho 1st floor Belk Build<lb/>
I ol Sept to determine<lb/>
tions for receiving Iho<lb/>
 ill be given then It<lb/>
-  ? ontacl that office<lb/>
exl 2rl) or in person<lb/>
l I'MNl ASSOCIATION<lb/>
' v , unt) ECU Alumni<lb/>
of Admissions are<lb/>
?- . dav academic bowl<lb/>
? .i! used by the bowl<lb/>
the formal used by<lb/>
?? Bowl ITie ECU Bowl<lb/>
ges time keepers,<lb/>
? i: p in m theconfer-<lb/>
once room of the TaylorSlaughter<lb/>
Alumni Center on E Sth Street, there will<lb/>
lv an orientation mini- training session<lb/>
tor interested volunteers Faculty, staff,<lb/>
and students are invited to attend Call<lb/>
Susan C Smith, Admissions. 737 SMfl or<lb/>
lohn Anema at 7:2 71 Si for further mior<lb/>
mation<lb/>
RE-ELECTION FOR GOV.<lb/>
The ECU Students tor the Re election of<lb/>
Gov Jim Martin invite all students, fac<lb/>
ulty and staff to the opening of the Pitt<lb/>
County 1 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 Countv 1 leadquarters is located at 210<lb/>
E. 4th St and the telephone number is 758<lb/>
6339.<lb/>
RE-ELECTION FOR GQV,<lb/>
The ECU Student tor the Re election of<lb/>
Gov Iim Martin invite all students, fac<lb/>
ulty and staff ?o "An Evening with Gov<lb/>
hm Martin' a barbecue supper and eve<lb/>
ning of entertainment on Sept 13 starting<lb/>
at b p m Tickets are S and are available at<lb/>
210E 4thS? orhycalhng758-6339or758<lb/>
1403<lb/>
JEWISH STUDENTS<lb/>
You are welcome to attend the following<lb/>
High Holiday Services at Temple Bay!<lb/>
Shalom (1420 E 14th St in Greenville)<lb/>
Spt 11,8pm ErevRoshHashanah,Sept<lb/>
12,10am Rosh Hashanah Day 6:30p.m<lb/>
Ma anv. Sept 13, 10 a m 2nd Day Rosh<lb/>
Hasahanah, Sept 20, 7 pm Erev Yom<lb/>
Kippur, Sept. 21, 9.30 a.m. om Kippur<lb/>
Morning 4 30 p m Alternenin Service,<lb/>
"iior &amp; N'ilah. Tor more info, or direc<lb/>
tions call Mike at 756 4430 All students<lb/>
are invited to the home of Dr Bramy<lb/>
Resnik for a 1 lome Hospitality Dinner on<lb/>
Sept. 20 at SIS p.m. Please call to RSVP tor<lb/>
dinner Call Dr. Resnik at 355-5321 (home)<lb/>
or 757 6521 (work) or Mike at 756 4930<lb/>
UNIVERSITY UNIONS<lb/>
Season tickets are now on sale for the<lb/>
Performing Arts Series at ECU This year<lb/>
there are fourteen outstanding perform<lb/>
ances starting in October and running<lb/>
through April Some of the attractions<lb/>
include VVvnton Marsahs, CABARET.<lb/>
Die Acting Company in Love's labour's<lb/>
lost, Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg, The<lb/>
Tokyo String Quartet, Oregon, The At<lb/>
lanta Symphony, and the Ohio Ballet Eor<lb/>
a free brochure, and further details con<lb/>
tact: The Central Ticket Office, Menden<lb/>
hall Student Center, 757 fvill, exl 2m-<lb/>
uirt rules on lie detector<lb/>
THIi REBEL<lb/>
Till RIBI'l will be accepting submis<lb/>
sions for the annual poetry and prose<lb/>
contests continuously until Nov 7 Sub<lb/>
mil typed entries to Media Board or Rebel<lb/>
i fti e (pen to ? urrently enrolled 1 ' I<lb/>
students only<lb/>
PHI ALPHA THETA<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta will hold it- first meeting<lb/>
Sept 14 at 2.30 in the Todd Room All<lb/>
members and those people who are inter<lb/>
ested in joining ART 1 N OURA ED R )<lb/>
ATTEND<lb/>
A MA<lb/>
The American Marketing .V? iation will<lb/>
hold its first meeting this M ursda Sep<lb/>
tember 8th at 3 30 VVe will be meeting in<lb/>
room 1031 of the Newlassroom Build<lb/>
mg lom Atkins, a representative of th<lb/>
Miller Brewing Company is our guest<lb/>
speaker All interested are welcome and<lb/>
old members are encouraged to attend<lb/>
NEW ARRIVALS<lb/>
I In- Mendenhall "student Center Music<lb/>
1 is t en in g 1 ounge has received the follow<lb/>
ing selections on oompad disc Aeros<lb/>
mith Permanent Vacation Wynton<lb/>
Marsahs standard I une, INXS Kirk<lb/>
Ahmad amal rystal; adja Salerno<lb/>
Sonnenberg;Sinead Cy onnor fheLion<lb/>
All<lb/>
New! I<lb/>
?<lb/>
GYM<lb/>
USA<lb/>
m ?<lb/>
i ??<lb/>
i (' a r n<lb/>
1 Tt '??<lb/>
P) A state ap-<lb/>
tel has ruled that a<lb/>
t? st ask ing questions<lb/>
s including<lb/>
is not unconstitu-<lb/>
: h acts are not<lb/>
constitution.<lb/>
;e panel of the<lb/>
art of Appeals<lb/>
irsday reversed a Forsyth<lb/>
rc ourt order that<lb/>
i a Winston-Salem State<lb/>
. oe who was<lb/>
?  to take a lie-<lb/>
he case was re-<lb/>
1 the lower court.<lb/>
mental rights en-<lb/>
n under the right<lb/>
iding family rela-<lb/>
? acr or procrea-<lb/>
. i resemblance to the<lb/>
 in the activities in<lb/>
irt said in an<lb/>
idg. Donald<lb/>
irt (.Trod in<lb/>
the polygraph<lb/>
violated (the<lb/>
n -t ??nal right to<lb/>
I<lb/>
n Truesdale hao<lb/>
m State, the<lb/>
 ? ? t arolina sys-<lb/>
officiais tor<lb/>
1 back pay. A<lb/>
: Ige sided with<lb/>
; . als court threw<lb/>
nt.<lb/>
idale w as employed<lb/>
as a security officer at the univer-<lb/>
sity on a probationary basis in<lb/>
November 1984. She was told that<lb/>
before becoming a permanent<lb/>
emplovee, she would have to un-<lb/>
dergo a polygraph exam, but she<lb/>
refused to do so after learning that<lb/>
some of the questions would in-<lb/>
volve her sexual activity.<lb/>
She was dismissed in August<lb/>
1985 for insubordination. In the<lb/>
order giving Ms. Truesdale her<lb/>
lob and back pay, the Superior<lb/>
Court Judge found that the<lb/>
university's action violated her<lb/>
constitutional rights, including<lb/>
the right to privacy and tne right<lb/>
against self-incrimination.<lb/>
The appeals court ruled that<lb/>
the questions on the polvgraph<lb/>
examination were designed to<lb/>
determine whetner an applicant<lb/>
was truthful on his or her employ-<lb/>
ment application.<lb/>
The questions dealing with<lb/>
sexual activity involved homo-<lb/>
sexuals, sexual arousal bv view-<lb/>
ing children, sexual contact witn<lb/>
minors and unusual or unnatural<lb/>
sex acts - none of which is pro-<lb/>
tected by the Constitution as a<lb/>
fundamental right, the appeals<lb/>
court said.<lb/>
The appeals panel was unable<lb/>
to determine whether the lie-de-<lb/>
tector test violated Ms.<lb/>
Truesdale's right against self-in-<lb/>
crimination because it was un-<lb/>
clear whether she would have<lb/>
SIDEWALK SALE!<lb/>
Gordon's<lb/>
Golf &amp; Ski<lb/>
J7<lb/>
:<lb/>
? In vnville TV &amp; Appliance &amp; Gordon's Golf &amp; Ski<lb/>
756-1003<lb/>
10 a.m. Saturday, September 10th<lb/>
iwi rters ' Irei - lotho Idn &amp; Mrns Ski Jackrts, Housrwarrs, Izod<lb/>
its. Socks n &amp; I sed Apparel, Bab) I krthes, Men s Pin's 5ue 32 &amp; 34. etc .), Jr. 4<lb/>
? j. s i loll a- f n and Indies Coif Shoes, etc.<lb/>
M W- i I EMS FROM 25 TO $5.00<lb/>
Will be postponed it it r.nns<lb/>
I R<lb/>
Mandarin<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
Spttta&amp;zutg in Teina<lb/>
unan Srethuan ('uisinr<lb/>
Luncheon Special<lb/>
$<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
Daily Luncheon Buffet<lb/>
&amp; Sunday Buffet<lb/>
All You<lb/>
Can Eft Only<lb/>
$<lb/>
? ??? ,? 6 to 10 S? TS)<lb/>
3.89<lb/>
11 30-3 00 pm<lb/>
Shrimp Dinner Buffet$5.99<lb/>
? ? i ' ??? BBO CiMckan sr,arer,5 Snnmii ? CNcMn Dei.gM<lb/>
Men . e Beet ? K a ? ? ik ami rwekax .fn<lb/>
6 00-9 00 pm Thursday, Friday &amp; Saturday<lb/>
on<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
Lunch 1130-200 pm ? Dinner 5:00-9:00 pm<lb/>
756-9687<lb/>
All ABC Permits Take Outs Welcome<lb/>
Open 7 Days A Week 11 30 am-10 00 pm<lb/>
been fired if she had refused to<lb/>
answer some questions, Smith<lb/>
wrote.<lb/>
For that reason, the appeals<lb/>
panel rule, the case must he re-<lb/>
turned to the Superior Court so it<lb/>
can be determined what would<lb/>
happen if Ms. Truesdale took the<lb/>
Fifth Amendment on some ques-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
and the Gobra; K! () Sp edwagon<lb/>
as Wi Know It 11 e Music 1 isti<lb/>
I ounge is p n - en davs a weel ?<lb/>
; nd is S.k ? ? n the m<lb/>
?r gallery f M I - -<lb/>
tlu- new I ir es ' ? i ro vu"<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ' <lb/>
n :<lb/>
? I<lb/>
USED FURNITURE<lb/>
LIQUIDATION<lb/>
Several Hundred Pieces<lb/>
LIVING ROOM:<lb/>
Couches $50.00 Up<lb/>
Sleeper Solas $75.00 Up<lb/>
Chairs $10.00 Up<lb/>
End Tables $7.00 Up<lb/>
Coffee Tables $8.00 Up<lb/>
BEDROOMS:<lb/>
INDIVIDUAL PIECES<lb/>
OR COMPLETE SETS<lb/>
Chests $20.00 Up<lb/>
Dressers $20 00 Up<lb/>
Nite Tables $10 00 Up<lb/>
Beds $10 00 Up<lb/>
DESKS. ROCKERS<lb/>
TABLES<lb/>
DINETTE SETS:<lb/>
Table. 4 Chairs<lb/>
$65 00 Up<lb/>
COMPARE OUR<lb/>
PRICES ANYWHERE<lb/>
LOWEST PRICES FOR<lb/>
CASH &amp; CARRY<lb/>
THF "URNITURE<lb/>
MAN<lb/>
iCOIN &amp; RING MAN<lb/>
Corner of Evan &amp; Fourth Streets<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
FEATURING:<lb/>
FLEX<lb/>
POLARIS<lb/>
NAUTILI ?<lb/>
WORKOl II'Io<lb/>
DIE1 &amp; NUTRITION Ul<lb/>
LBS<lb/>
'<lb/>
LFM <lb/>
-1000 sq. it. Newly Remodeled IVorkoul A<lb/>
L'se This d lur 1 Free Work<lb/>
? s,)<lb/>
SPECIAL RAT I S IOK 1 Cl STUDENTS<lb/>
!lrs: M-F 10-9; Sat 10-6; Sunl-6<lb/>
10(32 Evans St<lb/>
756-9584<lb/>
LiV Sister Rush<lb/>
'Come Party With The<lb/>
Best"<lb/>
Tuesday. Sept. 13<lb/>
Wednesday. Sept. 14<lb/>
Parties Start 9:00 P.M.<lb/>
For A Ride or More Info Call:<lb/>
757-1319<lb/>
Thursday Ladies Night<lb/>
Ladies Free All Night<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
Drink Specials All Night<lb/>
Friday The Famous<lb/>
"Late Dav Tea Bash"<lb/>
5 p.m. - 2 a.m. $2.00 Ice Teas And<lb/>
Free Admission For All Until 9:00<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBERS, 1988 7<lb/>
ED TO BU Used Nintendo Car<lb/>
with instructions for re -jle East<lb/>
Music and Video 758 4251, 1109<lb/>
Blvd<lb/>
OOF, band of li Kappa Phi per<lb/>
with three other bands at the Bud<lb/>
ars Sat Sept 10 runni til six.<lb/>
g with skvdivers and WRDU<lb/>
i-ting live PTA pizza and pepsj<lb/>
i colliers u ekxxne Tickets at East<lb/>
rusk and Video Follow the signs<lb/>
:h the bus at the bottom ot "the<lb/>
<lb/>
60 SUZUKI: Black 4 cyd drive<lb/>
nber glass luggage type saddle<lb/>
ndshield, space helmet, new bat<lb/>
d bre.ik shot's $750 Call 756 8692<lb/>
VI 1 c AKPS Sell old cards tor<lb/>
??- at v ii arter 5 p.m.<lb/>
I L i A.RPS U AMU): Anv<lb/>
ards ! li pa) damn good<lb/>
any cards I an) u of anv<lb/>
nditn F I i:t mone) ?<lb/>
irdst Eai is all 757 tvc?6<lb/>
?<lb/>
CUJ<lb/>
e .ist Carolinian:<lb/>
turs, low pay.<lb/>
ireat 1 xperience.<lb/>
n person, Publications<lb/>
ding Second Floor<lb/>
-<lb/>
ED <lb/>
ON<lb/>
BOARD<lb/>
RS<lb/>
Judicial<lb/>
3 need to<lb/>
irden at<lb/>
or<lb/>
. 218<lb/>
bly:<lb/>
ith<lb/>
ford<lb/>
but<lb/>
E?HQ<lb/>
ting Thursday at 5 pjm.<lb/>
ounge (Room 1004 - Gen<lb/>
oom BldgAll those interested<lb/>
tors Program at ECU should<lb/>
nd Members are requested to<lb/>
I r gardii g ur community<lb/>
ldfjs t r guest lectures and<lb/>
m members always tad<lb/>
11 Dr Sanders (757-6373) tor<lb/>
idv only for those serious about<lb/>
the Bible It is challenging and<lb/>
commitment, involving discus<lb/>
leadings Weekly meetings will<lb/>
lied to a. idase those wno<lb/>
?sled Kerg,ua is an mterde-<lb/>
mal program, and sponsored by<lb/>
an Campus Ministry For more<lb/>
like at 752-7240<lb/>
DINTING SOCIETY<lb/>
INC MAJORS: If you are o?-<lb/>
MXX) or 4000 level accounting<lb/>
: are invited to attend the Ac-<lb/>
xriety Wine and Cheese Social,<lb/>
, September 8. Stop by the Ac-<lb/>
Dthce for an invitation.<lb/>
;N'S SOCCER<lb/>
He-rested in playing Women's<lb/>
2r in the Fall and Spring of this<lb/>
rganizartonal meeting is being<lb/>
you are interested and want<lb/>
rotation, please get in touch<lb/>
w anv of the following people.<lb/>
an 758-4255, Beth I larvey 756-<lb/>
nn Totaro 830-9315 Call and<lb/>
?sage<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
EHLEETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda is holding an OPEN<lb/>
1IOUSE 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 BVIE course is<lb/>
encouraged to attend and all majors are<lb/>
welcome. PBL is the collegiate equivilant<lb/>
to FBLA.<lb/>
PRE-PHYSICAI.THAFY<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 Pitt County ECU Alumni<lb/>
Assoc. the ECU Office of Admissions are<lb/>
co-sponsoring an all day academic bowl<lb/>
aim petition. 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 orientahonmini-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 Headquarters on Thursday start-<lb/>
ing at 530 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-elecbcn 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/>
JEWISH STUDENTS<lb/>
You are welcome to attend the following<lb/>
High Holiday Services at Temple Bayt<lb/>
Shalom (1420 E. 14th St. in GreenviUe):<lb/>
Sept. 11,8 p.m. Erev Rosh Hashanah, Sept.<lb/>
12,10 a.m. Rosh Hashanah Day - 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Ma-ariv, Sept. 13, 10 am 2nd Day Rosh<lb/>
Hasahanah, Sept. 20, 7 p.m. Erev Yom<lb/>
Kippur, Sept. 21, 9:30 a.m. Yom Kippur<lb/>
Morning - 430 p.m. Afternoon Service,<lb/>
Yizor &amp; N'ilah. For more info, or direc-<lb/>
tions call Mike at 756-4930. All students<lb/>
are invited to the home of Dr. Bramy<lb/>
Resnik for a Home Hospitality Dinner on<lb/>
Sept. 20 at 5:15 p.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/>
UNIVERSITY UNIONS<lb/>
Season tickets are now on sale for the<lb/>
Performing Arts Series at ECU. This year<lb/>
there are fourteen outstanding perform-<lb/>
ances starting in October and running<lb/>
through April. Some of the attractions<lb/>
include: Wynton Marsalis, CABARET,<lb/>
The Acting Company in Love's Labour's<lb/>
Lost, Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg, The<lb/>
Tokyo String Quartet, Oregon, The At-<lb/>
lanta Symphony, and the Ohio Ballet. For<lb/>
a free brochure, and further details con-<lb/>
tact: The Central Ticket Office, Menden<lb/>
hall Student Center, 757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
Court rules on lie detector<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - A state ap-<lb/>
peals court panel has ruled that a<lb/>
lie-detector test asking questions<lb/>
about sexual activities including<lb/>
homosexuality is not unconstitu-<lb/>
tional because such acts are not<lb/>
protected by the Constitution.<lb/>
A three-judge panel of the<lb/>
North Carolina Court of Appeals<lb/>
on Thursday reversed a Forsyth<lb/>
County Superior Court order that<lb/>
reinstated a Winston-Salem State<lb/>
University employee who was<lb/>
fired for refusing to take a lie-<lb/>
detector test. The case was re-<lb/>
turned to the lower court.<lb/>
'The fundamental rights en-<lb/>
ti tied to protection under the right<lb/>
of privacy, including family rela-<lb/>
tionships, marriage or procrea-<lb/>
tion, bear no resemblance to the<lb/>
right to enlarge in the activities in<lb/>
questionthe court said in an<lb/>
opinion written bv Judge Donald<lb/>
L. Smith.<lb/>
'Thus, the trial court erred in<lb/>
concluding that the polygraph<lb/>
examaination violated (the<lb/>
woman's) constitutional right to<lb/>
privacy Smith wrote.<lb/>
Tommle Jean Truesdale hao<lb/>
sued Winston-Salem State, the<lb/>
University of North Carolina sys-<lb/>
tem and two WSSU officiais for<lb/>
reinstatement and back pay. A<lb/>
Superior Court judge sided with<lb/>
her, but the appeals court threw<lb/>
out the judgment.<lb/>
Ms. Truesdale was employed<lb/>
as a security officer at the univer-<lb/>
sity on a probationary basis in<lb/>
November 1984. She was told that<lb/>
before becoming a permanent<lb/>
employee, she would have to un-<lb/>
dergo a polygraph exam, but she<lb/>
refused to do so after learning that<lb/>
some of the questions would in-<lb/>
volve her sexual activity.<lb/>
She was dismissed in August<lb/>
1985 for insubordination. In the<lb/>
order giving Ms. Truesdale her<lb/>
job and back pay, the Superior<lb/>
Court Judge found that the<lb/>
universitv's action violated her<lb/>
constitutional rights, including<lb/>
the right to privacy and tne right<lb/>
against self-incrimination.<lb/>
The appeals court ruled that<lb/>
the questions on the polygraph<lb/>
examination were designed to<lb/>
determine whetner an applicant<lb/>
was truthful on his or her employ-<lb/>
ment application.<lb/>
The questions dealing with<lb/>
sexual activity involved homo-<lb/>
sexualit, sexual arousal bv view-<lb/>
ing children, sexual contact witn<lb/>
minors and unusual or unnatural<lb/>
sex acts - none of which is pro-<lb/>
tected by the' Constitution as a<lb/>
fundamental right, the appeals<lb/>
court said.<lb/>
The appeals panel was unable<lb/>
to determine whether the lie-de-<lb/>
tector test violated Ms.<lb/>
Truesdale's right against self-in-<lb/>
crimination because it was un-<lb/>
clear whether she would have<lb/>
been fired if she had refused to<lb/>
answer some questions, Smith<lb/>
wrote.<lb/>
For that reason, the appeals<lb/>
panel rule, the case must be re-<lb/>
turned to the Superior Court so it<lb/>
can be determined what would<lb/>
happen if Ms. Truesdale took the<lb/>
Fifth Amendment on some ques-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
THE REBEL<lb/>
THE REBEL will be accepting submis-<lb/>
sions for the annual poetry and prose<lb/>
contests continuously until Nov. 7. Sub-<lb/>
mit typed entries to Media Board or Rebel<lb/>
Office. Open to currently enrolled ECU<lb/>
students only.<lb/>
PHI ALPHA THETA<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta will hold its first meeting<lb/>
Sept. 14 at 230 in the Todd Room. All<lb/>
members and those people who are inter-<lb/>
ested in joining ARE ENCOURAGED TO<lb/>
ATTEND.<lb/>
AMA<lb/>
The American Marketing Association will<lb/>
hold its first meeting this Thursday, Sep-<lb/>
tember 8th at 330. We will be meeting in<lb/>
room 1031 of the New Classroom Build-<lb/>
ing. Tom Atkins, a representative of the<lb/>
Miller Brewing Company is our guest<lb/>
speaker. All interested are welcome and<lb/>
old members are encouraged to attend.<lb/>
NEW ARRIVALS<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student Center Music<lb/>
Listening Lounge has received the follow-<lb/>
ing selections on compact disc: Aeros-<lb/>
mith?Permanent Vacation; Wynton<lb/>
Marsalis?Standard Time; INXS? Kick;<lb/>
Ahmad Jamal?Crystal; Jadja Salerno-<lb/>
Sonnenberg; Sinead O'Connor?The Lion<lb/>
and the Cobra; REO Speedwagon?Life<lb/>
as We Know It. The Music Listening<lb/>
Lounge is open seven days a week from 2-<lb/>
10:30 p.m. and is located on the second<lb/>
floor gallery of Mendenhall. Check out<lb/>
the new tunes before you<lb/>
All New!<lb/>
4flc?&amp;<lb/>
i<lb/>
GYM<lb/>
USA<lb/>
A LIC. OF POWERHOUSE GYM.LICENSING ENT INC.<lb/>
DBA. POWERHOUSE GYM, GREENVILLE, N.C<lb/>
FEATURING:<lb/>
FLEX 7000 LBS. FREE WTS.<lb/>
POLARIS CO-ED<lb/>
NAUTILUS OLYMPIC PLATFORM<lb/>
WORKOUT PROGRAMS<lb/>
DIET &amp; NUTRITION SUPPLEMENTS<lb/>
4000 sq. ft. Newly Remodeled Workout Area<lb/>
Use This Ad For 1 Free Workout<lb/>
?SPECIAL RATES FOR ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
Hrs: M-F 10-9; Sat10-6; Sunl-6<lb/>
SIDEWALK SALE!<lb/>
Gordon's<lb/>
Golf &amp; Ski<lb/>
M<lb/>
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 Sweaters, Children's Clothes, Ladies &amp; Mens Ski Jackets, Housrwaies, Izod<lb/>
hirts. Boys Shorts, Ski Hats, Socks, New &amp; Used Apparel, Baby Clothes, Men's Pants (Size 32 it 34. etc), Jr. h<lb/>
Child ren s Sneakers, Coif Clubs, Coif Balls, Golf Bags, Mens and Ladies Golf Shoes, etc<lb/>
MANY ITEMS FROM 25 TO $5.00<lb/>
Will be postponed if it rains<lb/>
Mandarin<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
Specializing in Ttkjng<lb/>
"Hunan Szxchuan Cuisine<lb/>
Luncheon Special.<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Daily Luncheon Buffet<lb/>
&amp; Sunday Buffet<lb/>
(Children under 5 eat FREE. Ages 6 to 10 $2 75)<lb/>
Luncheon Special Menu Available<lb/>
All Vow<lb/>
Can Eai Only<lb/>
$3.89<lb/>
11:30-3:00 pm<lb/>
Shrimp Dinner Buffet$5.99<lb/>
Stumwl Snnmp Fn?l Shrimp. Sesame Seed Otcfcan. 8BO Chicken. Spareries. Shnmp 4 Chicken Oeiioht<lb/>
Snnmp Fned Rice Shnmp Lo Mem Orange Beef Egg Roll. Sweet t Sour Pork and ClMCkan. Soup, lea Cream<lb/>
Pmeapole Fortune Cookies<lb/>
6:00-9:00 pm Thursday, Friday Saturday<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
Lunch 11:30-2:00 pm ? Dinner 5:00-9:00 pm<lb/>
756-568?<lb/>
All ABC Permits ? Take Out Welcome<lb/>
Opan 7 Days A Weak 11:30 am-10:00 pm<lb/>
.2217 yipggUgfj Gaftr"S .S&amp;W&amp;FWNtrlWVt<lb/>
1002 Evans St.<lb/>
758 9584<lb/>
USED FURNITURE<lb/>
LIQUIDATION<lb/>
Savarai Hundred Placet<lb/>
LIVING ROOM:<lb/>
Couches$50.00 Up<lb/>
Sleeper Sofas$75.00 Up<lb/>
Chairs$10.00 Up<lb/>
End Tables$7.00 Up<lb/>
Coffee Tables$8.00 Up<lb/>
BEDROOMS:<lb/>
INDIVIDUAL PIECES<lb/>
OR COMPLETE SETS<lb/>
Chests$20.00 Up<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058091_0010"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
0<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8,1988<lb/>
Elizabeth City attracting students<lb/>
ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. (AP)- lie university with about 1,500<lb/>
An ambitious plan launched a students enrolled, Elizabeth City<lb/>
year ago to upgrade Elizabeth State was founded in 1891 to<lb/>
City State University, viewed by educate young black men and<lb/>
some as the weakest link in the women in rural northeastern<lb/>
UNC system, is attracting better North Carolina,<lb/>
students to the small, remote cam- Over the years, almost every<lb/>
pus. student who has applied has been<lb/>
But the university may have admitted, and as a result, ECSU man class' average SAT score by<lb/>
trouble keeping that crop of has developed a reputation as the 70 points from 597 in fall 1986 to<lb/>
campus of last resort for college- 667.<lb/>
The top SAT score is 1,600, and<lb/>
In less than two years, there are<lb/>
indications more capable stu-<lb/>
dents are being admitted.<lb/>
In 1987-88, ECSU enrolled 249<lb/>
incentive scholars who posted<lb/>
an avcraoe Scholastic Aptitude<lb/>
Test score of 678. That, in turn,<lb/>
helped boost the entering fresh-<lb/>
brighter students unless its cur-<lb/>
riculum - which has been de-<lb/>
scribed as lacking- sufficient<lb/>
breadth and riogr" in places - is<lb/>
strengthened,according to re-<lb/>
ports prepared as part of the plan.<lb/>
Studies of the school's curricu-<lb/>
lum, conducted orimarily by offi-<lb/>
cials from the four other predomi-<lb/>
nantly black schools in the Uni-<lb/>
versity of North Carolina system,<lb/>
show some strengths, but reveal<lb/>
overworked professors, diluted<lb/>
academic programs and haphaz-<lb/>
ard academic counseling, The<lb/>
City McCants said. But a lot of<lb/>
people are finding out that you<lb/>
can't go to Elizabeth City any<lb/>
more. As a matter of fact, if you<lb/>
don't aoPly early, you may not get<lb/>
into Elizabeth City at all<lb/>
Jenkins, the university's chan-<lb/>
cellor, agrees that the presence of<lb/>
the scholarship students has<lb/>
made a difference.<lb/>
"Image is so important Jen-<lb/>
kins said. Because we were able<lb/>
to offer the scholarships, we have<lb/>
attracted a much laroer number of<lb/>
going blacks.<lb/>
But in January 1987, CD. Span- everybody is given 400 points<lb/>
gler Jr president of the Univer- when they take the test. By com-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina system, parision the average SAT score for academically talented students<lb/>
unveiled an "academic de- freshman at the University of than we have been able to attract<lb/>
veloomcnt plan" to bolster North Carolina at Chapel Hill was in the past<lb/>
ECSU's curriculum and lure as 1.099; at Western Carolina Uni- Spangler is similarly pleased,<lb/>
many as 250 better-preoared stu- vcrsity, 828; and at North Caro- "Every measure we've had - not<lb/>
dents each year through annual lina Central University, 716. just class rank, but all the other<lb/>
scholarships of up to $3,000. Gerald McCants, who as UNC ranks such as the SAT - has gone<lb/>
Spangler's plan to upgrade system director of special pro-<lb/>
ECSU, developed in conjunction grams oversees implementation<lb/>
Huyal ? drey<lb/>
? Red ? Black<lb/>
? Navy ? Velio<lb/>
galleria<lb/>
MAI f IGH<lb/>
I united Quantities<lb/>
i imeron Village '?' mur 8 Sal<lb/>
? Northfidge Mon Fr 10 9-Sdt I ?<lb/>
Durham ? Northgate Mali (Moo Sat '09 ?<lb/>
GFM f NVH 1 t ? The Plaza tMo'i Sal '0-9 ? Sun<lb/>
??IBM ? <lb/>
up by an increase that no other<lb/>
university in the (UNC) system<lb/>
with Chancellor Jimmy Jenkins, of the plan at ECSU, likens the has ever had Spangler said.<lb/>
also called for a review of all aca-<lb/>
News and Observer of Raleigh demic degree programs and the<lb/>
general education program for<lb/>
treshmen and sophomores.<lb/>
In addition, the plan called for a<lb/>
review of all teacher-education<lb/>
prooramsand a review of admin-<lb/>
istrative systems and student<lb/>
services.<lb/>
reoorted.<lb/>
Some classes were criticized for<lb/>
being too easy, including one sci-<lb/>
ence course that was described as<lb/>
more like an 8th or 9th orade<lb/>
course.<lb/>
North Carolina's smallest pub-<lb/>
scholarshiop program to a ouiet Raymond Dawson, UNC's sen-<lb/>
educational revolution ior vice president for academic<lb/>
"The image that peoole have affairs, said ECSU officials al-<lb/>
had of Elizabeth City - that image, ready have begun responding to<lb/>
believe it or not, doesn't exist any the recommendations in the<lb/>
more McCants said recently.<lb/>
"It has always been known if<lb/>
you didn't have any other school<lb/>
to go to, you could ko to Elizabeth<lb/>
reoorts comoleted so far.<lb/>
But Dawson said that it still is<lb/>
early to gauge the progress.<lb/>
Chief DEA administrator pushes legalization<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - The<lb/>
Drug Enforcement<lb/>
Administration's chief adminis-<lb/>
trative law judge says marijuana<lb/>
should be legalized as a perscrip-<lb/>
tion drug because smoking it<lb/>
helps cancer patients control nau-<lb/>
sea after chemotherapy.<lb/>
Francis L. Youno recom-<lb/>
mended reclassifying marijuana<lb/>
the legitimate need, amplv dem-<lb/>
onstrated in this record, of count-<lb/>
less sufferers for the relief mari-<lb/>
juana can provide when pre-<lb/>
scribed bv a physician in a legiti-<lb/>
mate case<lb/>
Young cited testimony by doc-<lb/>
tors and patients during 11 davs<lb/>
Laws(NQRML).<lb/>
The group's attorney, Kevin B.<lb/>
Zeese. vowed to take the case back<lb/>
to the court if Lawn or his succes-<lb/>
sor rejects Young's recommenda-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
DEA has historically opposed<lb/>
moving marijuana from the list of<lb/>
of hearings that marijuana wasan Schedule I drugs, which includes<lb/>
accepted and effective treatment<lb/>
as a Schedule II drug so that it for nausea among cancer patients<lb/>
could be prescribed by phvsicians and for multiple sclerosis, a de-<lb/>
to treat the often severe nausea ac- bilitating and crippling neuro-<lb/>
companying chemotherapy as logical disease,<lb/>
well as muscle spasms caused bv The hearings were ordered in<lb/>
multiole sclerosis. 1980 bv the U.S. Circuit Court of<lb/>
Young, whose findings are not Appeals here, which chastised<lb/>
binding on DEA's head, John DEA for ignoring its statutory<lb/>
heroin, TCP and LSD, to Schedule<lb/>
11.<lb/>
DEA spokesman Cornelius<lb/>
Dougherty said lawn "won't<lb/>
have any comment until he has<lb/>
had a chance to look at" Young's<lb/>
68-page opinion.<lb/>
Dougherty said Lawn could opt<lb/>
process Zeese said.<lb/>
Even if DEA upholds Young's<lb/>
findings, the Food and Drug Ad-<lb/>
ministration and state regulatory<lb/>
agencies would have to pass<lb/>
judgement before marijuana were<lb/>
made available as a drug.<lb/>
Young determined that smoking<lb/>
marijuana was more effective at<lb/>
controlling nausea from<lb/>
chemotherapy than capsules that<lb/>
contain the synthetic THC, the<lb/>
chemically active ingredient of<lb/>
cannabis.<lb/>
When smoked, "natural mari-<lb/>
juana is inhaled and generally<lb/>
takes effect more quickly than the<lb/>
i&amp;l.<lb/>
For Voting<lb/>
Us 'The Best<lb/>
All-Around Bar" &amp;<lb/>
'The Best Bartending<lb/>
Staff In<lb/>
 Greenville<lb/>
Pl<lb/>
GieenwiKe Times aejoe-<lb/>
JJ CUSTOMER<lb/>
APPRECIATION<lb/>
f ;J NIGHT 4<lb/>
'THURS. SEPT 8TH<lb/>
to hold further hearings before synthetic capsule which is in<lb/>
Lawn, acknowledoed that obligation to consider evidence making a final decision.<lb/>
"strong emotions are aroused on that marijuana might have some<lb/>
both sides of any discussion con- medical benefit.<lb/>
cerning the use of marijuana.<lb/>
"Nonetheless it is essential for<lb/>
this agency, and its<lb/>
administrator, calml v and dispas-<lb/>
sionately to review tne evidence<lb/>
of record, correctly to apply the<lb/>
law, and act accordingly he<lb/>
wrote in an opinion released<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Young rejected as "specious"<lb/>
the argument that prescribing<lb/>
marijuana cigarettes as a medi-<lb/>
cine "will send a signal' that mari-<lb/>
juana is OK generally for recrea-<lb/>
tional use<lb/>
"The fear of sending such a sig-<lb/>
nal cannot be permitted to over-<lb/>
ride<lb/>
Governor<lb/>
offers<lb/>
reward<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/>
The appellate court had twice<lb/>
previously overruled DEA's re-<lb/>
jection of getitions, first filed in<lb/>
1972, by the National Organiza-<lb/>
tion for the Reform of Marjuana<lb/>
Zeese hailed Young's decision,<lb/>
saying it marks the first time<lb/>
there has ever been an unbiased<lb/>
hcarinc on whether or not marj-<lb/>
juana is safe for use under medical<lb/>
supervision<lb/>
"It's a verv important step in the<lb/>
gested and must be processed<lb/>
through the digestive system be-<lb/>
fore it takes effect Young said.<lb/>
In the case of multiple sclerosis,<lb/>
there are few drugs to treat<lb/>
muscle spasms, and they often<lb/>
cause serious side effects<lb/>
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Tickli<lb/>
ByJIMSHAMLIN<lb/>
SuM Wntrt<lb/>
A notice to intellectual mint<lb/>
hungry for sociopolitical satire<lb/>
just a cheap laugh from whate'<lb/>
source: Berke Breathed,en<lb/>
the much revered<lb/>
County" comic str<lb/>
nubtished his latest ba -<lb/>
 Mental<lb/>
now in h<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWl LI<lb/>
Amkum It <lb/>
Cliff Notes hav<lb/>
to by none other thai<lb/>
ous Stephen King<lb/>
babyfoodof<lb/>
rywhere While 1 agi ?<lb/>
assessment, I'd rail ? -<lb/>
cliff than read I'<lb/>
But now tht n<lb/>
Jack th<lb/>
ByMuVAHHARRT-<lb/>
su" H rtaa<lb/>
One hundred y<lb/>
the Ripper stepped into tl<lb/>
ing fog outside Whit<lb/>
through the ethereal vei<lb/>
ory.<lb/>
There can be little d <lb/>
is as much lack's continual<lb/>
nvmitv and his m si n, j<lb/>
pearance as his brief and hij<lb/>
selective killing spree<lb/>
killed prostitute- that<lb/>
him such an appealir .<lb/>
the various media.<lb/>
Movies have found th.<lb/>
ripe for treatment aim. ? -<lb/>
their beginning.A silent Hi<lb/>
cock film. The I I<lb/>
the ordeal ot a landlady v<lb/>
afraid she has taken in the Ri<lb/>
as a tenant.<lb/>
Sherlock Holmes I r o.<lb/>
met lack fn a Ws film A Stuj<lb/>
Terror. And Nicl is ' U<lb/>
(who combined 1 lolmes witl<lb/>
likes oi Sigmund Freud and B<lb/>
Stoker in hi run<lb/>
Per Cent Sol<lb/>
End Horror) created a v<lb/>
mix from the Ripper H.G.<lb/>
The Time Machine and<lb/>
himself in 1971 -<lb/>
Time.<lb/>
Television, too, has <lb/>
London murderer ass<lb/>
ter sometimes putting hu<lb/>
the strangest oi places A: <lb/>
sode of the western "Omi<lb/>
Jack the Ripper, who recent<lb/>
White Chapel in London, il<lb/>
his prostitute?killing leg;<lb/>
Brown Re<lb/>
ROCHESTER, NY. (API<lb/>
foot infection possibly cl<lb/>
by a spider bite has put evf<lb/>
ist Billy Grahan in the hosj<lb/>
ministry spokesman says.<lb/>
Graham, 69, in western<lb/>
York for a week long ci<lb/>
was told he would have to<lb/>
least two days after being<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0011"/><lb/>
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THE EAST CARCH INI AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8, 1988 l?ge 9<lb/>
Tickling tale encompasses Bloom County'<lb/>
ByJIMSHAMLIN<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
A notice to intellectual minds<lb/>
hungry for sociopolitical satire, or<lb/>
just a cheap laugh from whatever<lb/>
source: Berke Breathed, creator of<lb/>
the much revered "Bloom<lb/>
County" comic strip, has just<lb/>
nubhshed his latest book. Tales<lb/>
too Ticklish to Tell. Both Opus and Binkley's poor process. left untouched in Bloom County, by Kalevji Levonof). Gorbachev<lb/>
Bill and the meadow gang are father go through mid-life crises; Beneath the silliness is, as usual, Perhaps Tales too Ticklish to comments briefly on the paralel-<lb/>
back, with the exception of yaz Steve files suit against Santa Claus a satire upon modern society. TeJl is not quite as funny as his lism between Tales too Ticklish<lb/>
Pistacto, and are up to their old for selling war toys; and Hodge- Breathed slides adeptly into and past books (Loose Tales, Toons for to Tell and Mark Twain's Huck-<lb/>
tricks in hillarious new ways: Bill podge discovers that Portnoy has out of social and political issues Qur Times, Penguin Dreams and elberry Finn, especially in the<lb/>
becomes a born again televangcl- been a groundhog all these years, with the skill of a master humor- Stranger Things, Bloom County distinct similarities of Bill the Cat<lb/>
ist "Oral Bill with a promise to As if that weren't enough, Steve is ist. He pokes fun at the elections, Babylon,and Billy and the Boin- and Jim. He even attempts a char-<lb/>
send all the rest of the televangcl- kidnapped by aliens who subject the Wall Street crises, AIDS, pit gers Bootleg), but it is just as so- aciture of Ronald Reagan, but<lb/>
ists to eternal rest if everyone him to "Gephardtization a bulls, anti-smoking propaganda, cially relevant, which makes it states "I will not be leaving my<lb/>
sends in fiftv clams. mind-boggling, mind-reversing and much, much more. Nothing is just as worthwhile to the crowd of governmental duties for a new<lb/>
' Mental Baby food for college students'<lb/>
now in hilarious parody version<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
AuisUnt Feature Editor<lb/>
of us facing this quandary: Jump reads, in toto, "They're dead").<lb/>
Off the Cliff Notes by Gina and In addition, most of the synop-<lb/>
 Annette Cascone, from Bart ses are accompanied by informa-<lb/>
Cliff Notes have been referred Books. tion "About the Author a see-<lb/>
to by none other than the illustri- Jump Off the Cliff Notes is a hi- tion telling you "Who's Who<lb/>
ous Stephen King as "the mental larious parody of the actual Cliff sing-along songs, review ques-<lb/>
babyfood o college students eve- Notes. In it are informally-told tions, and pop quizzes. Now how<lb/>
r where While I agree with his synopses of no fewer than sixteen much would you pay? But wait,<lb/>
assessment, I'd rather jump off a oft-assigned classics, ranging there's more!<lb/>
cliff than read Moby Dick again. from Moby Dick to Romeo and After all of the synopses have<lb/>
But now there's hope for those Juliet (the synopsis of which been concluded, there is "A Word<lb/>
Jack the Ripper is still alive<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
One hundred years ago. Jack<lb/>
the Ripper stepped into the morn-<lb/>
Strip scripted by Harlan Ellison, future city. The citizens' corrupt<lb/>
explainedJack'sdisappearanceas moral nature was a direct<lb/>
a relocation of hunting grounds counterpoint to the antiseptic set-<lb/>
ting.<lb/>
link. Ellison's extrapolation is a<lb/>
chilling comment on our society's<lb/>
insatiable, vicarious enjoyment of<lb/>
from 1880 London to the Ameri<lb/>
can West of the ime. Fed up with<lb/>
ing fog outside White Chapel and taking the blame for his murders,<lb/>
through the ethereal veil of mem- the local Indians sent Jack to yet<lb/>
orv. another hunting ground of the<lb/>
There can be little doubt that it "happy" variety.<lb/>
is as much Jack's continual ano- Jack found himself out west<lb/>
nvmitv and his mysterious disap- again in the recent"Bridce Across violence through sports and van<lb/>
pearance as his brief and highly Time" TV movie with Hunter's s<lb/>
selective killing spree (he only Stephanie Kramer. William<lb/>
killed prostitutes) that has made Nolan's script had Jack's spirit<lb/>
him such an appealing enigma to part and parcel of the relocated<lb/>
the various media. London Bridge. Star Trek's Wolf<lb/>
Movies have found the Ripper in the Fold episode by Robert<lb/>
ripe for treatment almost since Bloch (like Ellison, a writer fasci-<lb/>
their beginning.A silent Hitch- nated by Jack) proposed that the<lb/>
cock film, The Lodger, concerns Ripper was an evil entity which<lb/>
the ordeal of a landlady who is manifested itself on different<lb/>
afraid she has taken in the Ripper worlds by possessing unwitting<lb/>
as a tenant. individuals.<lb/>
Sherlock Holmes, for example, Fiction writers have found Jack<lb/>
"met lack n a '60s film A Study in to be a mother lode of material.<lb/>
Terror. And Nicholas Meyer Robert Bloch in Yours Truly, Jack<lb/>
(who combined Holmes with the the Ripper proposed that Jack was<lb/>
of Advice which includes a seri-<lb/>
ous, well-researched, thought-<lb/>
provoking, insightful essay on Dr.<lb/>
Seuss's One Fish, Two Fish, Red<lb/>
Fish, Blue Fish. Following this is,<lb/>
appropriately, a tribute to Dr.<lb/>
Seuss.<lb/>
Rounding out the parody are<lb/>
several humorous illustrations. In<lb/>
one, Stallone-as-Rambo appears<lb/>
deeply engrossed in a copy of<lb/>
English Made Simple - but he's<lb/>
holding it upside-down.<lb/>
The text is slim, but its laughter<lb/>
density is high. (Laughter density<lb/>
is a quantity determined here at<lb/>
the East Carolinian offices by a<lb/>
rigorously scientific process in-<lb/>
volving state-of-the-art Amiga<lb/>
technology which measures<lb/>
Peanuts" readers who have out-<lb/>
grown Charlie Brown.<lb/>
Sadly enough, there is no free<lb/>
record inside, but there is a copy<lb/>
of The bloom Picayune. Further-<lb/>
more, the introduction in written<lb/>
by Mikhail Gorbachev (translated<lb/>
Gina Cascone<lb/>
&amp; Annette Cascone<lb/>
career in the are profession any-<lb/>
time soon<lb/>
Tales too Ticklish to Tell is<lb/>
published by Little, Brown, and<lb/>
Company; it is available at local<lb/>
bookstores for $7.95, plus tax.<lb/>
JUMP OFF<lb/>
THE CLIFF NOTES<lb/>
A Parody<lb/>
Jack becomes their toy as they laughs per unit page.) Occasion-<lb/>
send him on a murder spree and ally, the authors ran a joke into the<lb/>
enjoy his orgies through a psychic ground - after all, you can only<lb/>
likes of Sigmund Freud and Bram an immortal who kept his youth<lb/>
Stoker in his novels, The Seven by making ritual sacrifices.<lb/>
Per Cent Solution and The West<lb/>
End Horror) created a wonderful<lb/>
mix from the Ripper, H.G. Wells<lb/>
The Time Machine, and Wells<lb/>
himself in 1970's Time After<lb/>
Time.<lb/>
Television, too, has used the<lb/>
London murderer as subject mat-<lb/>
ter sometimes putting him in<lb/>
the strangest of places. An epi-<lb/>
sode of the western "Cimmaron<lb/>
Bloch and Ellison extrapolated<lb/>
from the idea for two stories in the<lb/>
Dangerous Visions anthology.<lb/>
Bloch's "A Toy for Juliette" was a<lb/>
routine time travel one-liner.<lb/>
However, Ellison's sequel, "The<lb/>
Prowler in the City at the Edge of<lb/>
the World was an incredibly<lb/>
provocative piece.<lb/>
In this story, Jack has been lifted<lb/>
from the past by a dysutopian<lb/>
In "Is There A Demon Lover in<lb/>
the House? Roger Zelazny cre-<lb/>
ates an effective mood sketch that<lb/>
allows Jack to enter the peep-<lb/>
shows of the 20th century. The<lb/>
story, like Ellison's, points out<lb/>
how easily the line blurs between<lb/>
voyeur and participant sex and<lb/>
violence.<lb/>
In his novel A Feast Unknown,<lb/>
Philip Jose Farmer uses Jack as a<lb/>
peripheral but important charac-<lb/>
ter. According to Farmer, Jack<lb/>
was a member of a society of<lb/>
immortals, the son of a cromag-<lb/>
non man, whose substitution of<lb/>
cruelty for the sex act was a side<lb/>
effect of the life serum.<lb/>
Farmer's book, more than any<lb/>
other, points out how Jack the<lb/>
Ripper has become as much a fic-<lb/>
tional as a historical being A Feast<lb/>
Unknown opens with the state-<lb/>
ment:<lb/>
"I was conceived and born in<lb/>
1888. Jack the Ripper was my fa-<lb/>
ther<lb/>
The speaker is Tarzan!<lb/>
make so many phallic references<lb/>
to Moby Dick - but mostly it's<lb/>
good, relatively clean fun. And, if<lb/>
you're clever enough to come up<lb/>
with a great pop quiz of your own<lb/>
(see the book for details), you can<lb/>
win a lifetime subscription to<lb/>
National Lampoon.<lb/>
Jump Off the Cliff Notes<lb/>
adroitly manages to simultane-<lb/>
ously poke fun at "the classics"<lb/>
and at the actual Cliff Notes. It<lb/>
will be published September 30th<lb/>
for $4.95. Though that may seem a<lb/>
bit steep for something that re-<lb/>
sembles a pamphlet more than it<lb/>
does a book, the five bucks is<lb/>
worth it: Jump Off the Cliff Notes The new outrageous Jump Off the Cliff Notes parody of the often<lb/>
is a good thing in a small package, exam used booklets that even Albert Einstein used. This book<lb/>
provides hours of cramped-filledentertainment.<lb/>
Hot sucrose band, Sugarcubes, hits Raleigh<lb/>
Cracking the Classics<lb/>
Including Favorite Books of<lb/>
the Rich and Famous<lb/>
By STEVE SOMMERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Those of us who remember<lb/>
buying REM records before the<lb/>
Rolling Stone ever heard of them,<lb/>
truly remember a different time.<lb/>
This was a time when bands<lb/>
which were abstract and a little<lb/>
weird didn't get all the attention.<lb/>
Then one day, people started<lb/>
getting bored or sophisticated or<lb/>
something. It's hard to put a fin-<lb/>
ger on it, but the next thing you<lb/>
by anatomically correct stick fig-<lb/>
ures, this band has generated<lb/>
more upward mobility in a single<lb/>
week on the Billboard charts than<lb/>
any other noncommercial band<lb/>
today. It may be pop music but<lb/>
you can't call it perky or cut or<lb/>
shallow, and they do not fit into<lb/>
my definition of commercial.<lb/>
In fact, their album "Life's Too<lb/>
Good" has the same abstract style<lb/>
founded by the underground<lb/>
know David Byrne is on the cover band Siouxie Sioux combined<lb/>
of Time magazine and The Sug- with the down to earth yet still<lb/>
arcubes, a band from Iceland of all flighty poetry of REM. The Sug-<lb/>
places, takes America by storm. arcubes are just one big paradox,<lb/>
With a single album decorated but so is today's music scene.<lb/>
Even closer to home, a compari<lb/>
son to these Icelandic hopsters<lb/>
can be drawn with Fetehin' Bones<lb/>
from Charlotte. Like the Tarheel<lb/>
band, The Cubes are fronted by a<lb/>
charismatic female lead who has<lb/>
energetic, sultry, and reverbic<lb/>
voice. In fact, the Cubes have<lb/>
much in common with bands<lb/>
with big cult followings.<lb/>
When XTC first started receiv-<lb/>
ing critical acclaim, they were<lb/>
considered to be innovative with<lb/>
See'CUBES, P. GE10<lb/>
Pickin' the Bones<lb/>
Evictee can't decide on new national anthem<lb/>
Tack the Ripper, who recently celebrated his hundredth anniversary of his fog stepping death outside the<lb/>
White Chapel in London, is the reoccuring subject of literature, cinema and television. While he is dead,<lb/>
his prostitute?killing legacy follows him through the 1980's. (Illustration by Jeff Parker-Parkerlab)<lb/>
Brown Recluse spider bites Billy Graham<lb/>
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP? A ted to Highland Hospital here on<lb/>
foot infection possibly caused Labor Day, spokesman A. Larry<lb/>
by a spider bite has put evangel- Ross said Tuesday,<lb/>
ist Billy Grahan in the hospital, a A doctor who examined Gra-<lb/>
ministry spokesman says. ham in North Carolina theorized<lb/>
Graham, 69, in western New the evangeist had been bitten by<lb/>
York for a weeklong crusade, Brown Recluse spider, Ross<lb/>
was told he would have to stay at said. Graham lives in a wooden<lb/>
least two days after being admit- area of the southern Appalachi-<lb/>
ans mountains near Boone,<lb/>
North Carolina where he has<lb/>
been known to walk in the wil-<lb/>
derness.<lb/>
Brown Recluse, a rare breed of<lb/>
spider, is one of the most poi-<lb/>
sonious insects on North Ameri-<lb/>
can.<lb/>
BY CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Anthem Writer<lb/>
In a moment, we will present<lb/>
our column on "National An-<lb/>
thems ? Should We Change<lb/>
Ours, and Why Do Russian Tag<lb/>
Teams Consistently Feel the Need<lb/>
to Sing Theirs Before Every Wres-<lb/>
tling Match?" But first, a humor<lb/>
update.<lb/>
Those of you who read this<lb/>
space during the waning summer<lb/>
months were privileged to see the<lb/>
article In Which the Bonehead<lb/>
and his trusty sidekick Complain<lb/>
A Lot Lass were bogusly pulled<lb/>
for a DWI after a drivin' n' cryin'<lb/>
show.<lb/>
Well, yesterday we had the le-<lb/>
gal adventure, In Which Bone-<lb/>
head and Complain A Lot go to<lb/>
Court Drunk, See Space Aliens<lb/>
Who Look Like Agnes Morehead<lb/>
Abduct the Judge and Mate Him<lb/>
With Clones Formed From Ann<lb/>
Jillian's Massected Breasts and<lb/>
Eventually Lose their Parking<lb/>
Space to the Teenage Mutant<lb/>
Vampire Lawyer Who Gets Their<lb/>
Sentence Reduced To Weaving<lb/>
Without A Loom.<lb/>
I guess that about says it all.<lb/>
On to this National Anthem<lb/>
business. Seems Ray Charles is<lb/>
spearheading efforts to change<lb/>
the anthem from "The Star-<lb/>
Spangled Banner" to "America<lb/>
the Beautiful His reasons are<lb/>
that it's more reflective of the<lb/>
country at peace and easier for<lb/>
people to sing.<lb/>
Even respected (at least by my<lb/>
dad) Raleigh columnist Dennis<lb/>
Rogers is getting invoved in this<lb/>
hot issue. His column Tuesday<lb/>
contained an interview with a guy<lb/>
who has been trying to get the<lb/>
song changed for years.<lb/>
Well, boss for him. I'm pretty<lb/>
sick of the "Star Spangled Ban-<lb/>
ner" too. I could hardly sing it<lb/>
when I was a wee bonehead and<lb/>
my vocal chords were pitched<lb/>
slightly higher. When I hit pu-<lb/>
berty, I quit going to ball games<lb/>
until the first half was over.<lb/>
But the problem remains of<lb/>
what to change the anthem to. I<lb/>
dislike the "Banner but "Amer-<lb/>
ica the Beautiful" ??? Advanced<lb/>
sources say thaf s one of the songs<lb/>
Tiffany is considering recording<lb/>
on her next Lp.<lb/>
As rockin' and a rollin' as I am,<lb/>
I can't think of a very hip tune to<lb/>
replace the current anthem. I ref-<lb/>
use to be required to stand up for<lb/>
anything Bruce Springsteen has<lb/>
done.<lb/>
As much as I used to like Prince,<lb/>
his song "America" off that gut-<lb/>
less "Around the World in a Da'<lb/>
album is too damn aggravating,<lb/>
and it's 26 minutes long on the<lb/>
disco version. That could push the<lb/>
length of televised sports games<lb/>
up a good 45 minutes, allowing<lb/>
for commercials.<lb/>
Punkongsmenerarent<lb/>
very complimentary towards the<lb/>
country. I may be wrong on this<lb/>
but nothing comes to mind<lb/>
Maybe X's "Los Angeles but<lb/>
guess that is a little too regional.<lb/>
My choices lean toward the<lb/>
more obscure and novel. Perhaps<lb/>
thebest one would be "Movin'Ori<lb/>
Up the theme song from The<lb/>
Jeffersons It's a great little ditty<lb/>
about success and being up-<lb/>
wardly mobile, a very appropri-<lb/>
ate mood in the country today.<lb/>
Just run those lyrics through<lb/>
your mind and tap out the beat!<lb/>
across the dashboard of your car.<lb/>
"Now we're up in the big<lb/>
leagucsGettin' our turn at bat<lb/>
Long as we live It's you and me<lb/>
baby Ain't nothing wrong with<lb/>
that  It's enough to make you<lb/>
believe in God.<lb/>
"I'm Just a Bill "Elbow<lb/>
Room or almost any of the other<lb/>
songs from the "History Rock"<lb/>
segments of ABC's old "School-<lb/>
house Rock" series would be<lb/>
great . They're bright, fun and<lb/>
definitely patriotism at its best.<lb/>
Imagine Whitney Houston<lb/>
singing, "Oh, I'm just a bill Yes<lb/>
I'm only a billAnd I'm sitting<lb/>
here on Capitol HillWell, it's a<lb/>
long, long wait while I'm sitting in<lb/>
committee  before the start of<lb/>
the 89 Super Bowl, the year the<lb/>
'Skins beat the Raiders by a g<lb/>
21 point margin.<lb/>
See 'CHAINS page 10<lb/>
r the<lb/>
;ood<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0012"/><lb/>
mi i v<lb/>
ROI INIAN<lb/>
si I'll MB!<lb/>
t)8S<lb/>
Yo, to new western<lb/>
Guns<lb/>
<lb/>
Bv MM SHAMLIN<lb/>
Start Wtiler<lb/>
"Young Guns' Ihe latest re<lb/>
K ist' hv Morgan Creek pictures<lb/>
stands in tlii' shadows ol some<lb/>
rather A.n k predi n<lb/>
lust est? ml ised in<lb/>
1980 ? w as Sil ei ido w hu h<lb/>
dosed before it reached most the<lb/>
at res.<lb/>
Next can ic i 'ale K idei vhich<lb/>
survived onh because ol i<lb/>
l irtN 1 lai i' I jsI ? i m d k- repu<lb/>
tarion tor massive devastation<lb/>
untortunateh it didn t take long<lb/>
tv r the film I ich discount the<lb/>
atres Hut don't count on seeine,<lb/>
r ' ? ??<lb/>
The plol : .<lb/>
id of 1 ? Kid and<lb/>
gang of ed 1 he<lb/>
Regul  but 1 rrows much<lb/>
' . .is v 11<lb/>
Billy is res a ? a an I eiffoi<lb/>
named ohn runstel, v ho is<lb/>
played b rerence Stn 'orin<lb/>
from A Vi lo a Kill<lb/>
Funstel owns a cattU ranch in<lb/>
New M ? ? hiv h isguarded b)<lb/>
a pad st boys orphans and<lb/>
tla ? eat h ol w huh is spe-<lb/>
cialized in some form ol combat<lb/>
such as pugilism, sharpshooting,<lb/>
or knife throwing. These "Regu-<lb/>
lators' guard the ranch from a<lb/>
corrupt politician named Murphy<lb/>
I Jack Palance ol Ripleys Believe<lb/>
it or Not ). When Murphy sends<lb/>
his men to kill Tunstel, the Regu-<lb/>
lators become assasins bent on<lb/>
revenge.<lb/>
But th?: plol ls much thicker<lb/>
than thatIt i:ides such con<lb/>
ceptsasRe and man's<lb/>
'Cubes intriangle<lb/>
Conlnued t:om page 9<lb/>
tl eir songs' actuastructure<lb/>
I he Cubes are certainly innova<lb/>
rvith their song structure. But,<lb/>
CTC and5i uxieand the Ban-<lb/>
she sfrom England, where<lb/>
thissi i.sound was<lb/>
mad lar<lb/>
1 itts I I<lb/>
on the small ind'pt ndenl label.<lb/>
One LittleIndianRi. ords when<lb/>
they cameto the statt s the) w ere<lb/>
immevii.itted-up b I<lb/>
r lali. 1 his sumn<lb/>
i serendip I v.i<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
? kjc 1t ba?<lb/>
i 11i to do<lb/>
well in thi .<lb/>
as I he Sir?ver, .it this<lb/>
; in time all 1lis ex pet tations<lb/>
navevi rshot ?. thi<lb/>
and s suc ess<lb/>
Life's Ud ' has<lb/>
higher on the Billboard i I<lb/>
chart- than pi pected<lb/>
ITiese ? tt- fr m Iceland are<lb/>
making a big big initial impai t<lb/>
 Toi .<lb/>
Raleigh .it the ill eatre It<lb/>
 (.hi have tii kets i m ?. en en i<lb/>
I i i ausi ? en sold-ont<lb/>
for sc?' t ral da and me nA<lb/>
most of nv friends don't have<lb/>
any. However, copies ol Life's<lb/>
loo Good" arc available every-<lb/>
where. It' you have not ye( ob<lb/>
tained a copy, go ahead and A so.<lb/>
Lite's too good not to.<lb/>
inhumanity to man It deals with<lb/>
corruption, society, honor, and<lb/>
humanity. It muses over empiri-<lb/>
cal truths and the struggle be-<lb/>
tween legality And justice. The<lb/>
itor) is much deeper than venge-<lb/>
ince and big guns in the old west.<lb/>
Mute are topics which relate to<lb/>
?ociet) in the twentieth century.<lb/>
In short, there is something in it<lb/>
for anyone who wants to see more<lb/>
than blood and nudity.<lb/>
Furthermore instead ol the<lb/>
;? pica) two dimensional cowboy,<lb/>
the characters of "Young Guns"<lb/>
are real life people, with whom<lb/>
the viewer can identify. Much ol<lb/>
this can be attributed to the qual<lb/>
it ol the actors<lb/>
Emiiio Estevez ("Stakeout")<lb/>
plays the lead role Although he<lb/>
, rtravs Bill) the kid as a ho<lb/>
tcidal psychopath with a sick<lb/>
-v use ol humor, he is a likable<lb/>
charactei I nderneath all the vio-<lb/>
lence and anger is a little boy, who<lb/>
loves pLo ing cowboys and Indi-<lb/>
ans w ith the other neighborhood<lb/>
children. Death is a completely<lb/>
surreal concept to him, like King<lb/>
down and counting to ten.<lb/>
Charlie Sheen I Wall Street") is<lb/>
Dick a father figure who keeps<lb/>
the boys in check. I le was the only<lb/>
one who can tell truth from illu-<lb/>
sion, and who remains cooly in<lb/>
control even when his life is in<lb/>
danger.<lb/>
1 ou Diamond Phillips 11 a<lb/>
Bamba) plays Chaves, the last<lb/>
Na vajo. Cha ves is, bv far, the most<lb/>
disappointing character. He is<lb/>
melodramatic and insecure, a<lb/>
sign that both writer and actor<lb/>
have many things to learn before<lb/>
they can be considered masters of<lb/>
their craft.<lb/>
Dermont Melroney, a new<lb/>
comer to the screen, plays the part<lb/>
of Steven. Although he is billed as<lb/>
a main character, he does little<lb/>
more than shoot and spit tobacco,<lb/>
a dark reminder o the cowboy of<lb/>
classical western films<lb/>
Casey Semaszko, another debu-<lb/>
tant, is Charlie. He is the epitome<lb/>
of the boy inside of every man,<lb/>
who moans, whines, and screams<lb/>
in tear, he is scared and alone,<lb/>
following his peers before him-<lb/>
self, even when it comes to leav-<lb/>
ing his wife for a battle against<lb/>
overwhelming odds.<lb/>
By far, the most well developed<lb/>
character is Poc, played by Keifer<lb/>
Sutherland ('The Lost Boys").<lb/>
Doe is a distinctly nontraditional<lb/>
twist to the old characters. I le is a<lb/>
romantic cowboy, who philoso-<lb/>
phises and writes poetry. I le puts<lb/>
his honor before his life and wins.<lb/>
Doc not only shows a new side<lb/>
ot the western man, it shows a<lb/>
side of Sutherland which audi-<lb/>
ences have never seen before: a<lb/>
good actor who can portray a<lb/>
multifaceted character, and who<lb/>
portraysit well. Wecanonly hope<lb/>
to see more work of this quality<lb/>
from him in the future.<lb/>
Aside from the depth ol the plot<lb/>
and the quality ot the acting, there<lb/>
are many things in "Young Cams"<lb/>
tor the illiterate cinemaphile.<lb/>
There is copious amounts of ac-<lb/>
tion and bloodshed, some ol<lb/>
which is completely unbe<lb/>
lieveable. There is suk humor,<lb/>
even though it's not in the form of<lb/>
Schwarzeneggerian one liners.<lb/>
There's even nudity, only one<lb/>
breast, but it is thereon n t ?<lb/>
those who demand it<lb/>
All in all, "Younglun is -t<lb/>
terrific film.It may even sparl the<lb/>
revival of the western genn in a<lb/>
form representative ol today<lb/>
new talent in screenwriting and<lb/>
a ting It rates two thumbs up,<lb/>
five stars, a massive ere ti in, oi a<lb/>
ten on anybody's vale In an)<lb/>
case, it well worth the five dol<lb/>
lar admission, pl rhaps i ' ei<lb/>
twice.<lb/>
Nom thawing<lb/>
STEALING HOME<lb/>
NIGHTMARE ON<lb/>
ELM ST. PART IV<lb/>
COCKTAIL<lb/>
TarkJIhtatrt<lb/>
Have<lb/>
' ? ?Jk<lb/>
ARTHUR Ii<lb/>
J<lb/>
Squirrel Man Hotline<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
NOW SHOWING<lb/>
ATHENDRIX<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8 THRI II<lb/>
ROBIN WlLl A.Ms<lb/>
STARING IN<lb/>
JST1&amp;<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
Adults $2  i M5i<lb/>
5:30 I u <lb/>
UCCANNER MOVIES<lb/>
756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
RATED R YOUNG GUNS<lb/>
1:00 3:05 5:10-7:1! I<lb/>
<lb/>
COMING TO AMERICA<lb/>
! :00 3:05 5:10 7:1<lb/>
<lb/>
THE GREAT OUTDOOR<lb/>
RATED pg 1:00 3:00 5 MI .<lb/>
-<lb/>
J<lb/>
'Chains' to become new anthem<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
1 rue, Ihe song does reveal a lot<lb/>
i our bureaucratic methodology<lb/>
and we might not want the Rus-<lb/>
sians earning how we managed<lb/>
to cot to the efficiency level we're<lb/>
currently at, but this is the era of<lb/>
i Ilasnost 1 guess <lb/>
What worries me the most is<lb/>
that 1 couldn't find a suitable<lb/>
Stevie Nicks soi  to suggest<lb/>
(i ran ted, there sno reason to proj-<lb/>
ect my unhealthy obsessions on<lb/>
the rest of ihe nation but hell,<lb/>
Reagan did it foi years.<lb/>
1 did find a Fleetwood Mac<lb/>
song, and the more 1 thought<lb/>
about it, it seriously is a pretty a it<lb/>
dt scription ol thi1- land ol ours.<lb/>
ii i i: multi -vo als<lb/>
glorious 70s.<lb/>
"I can still hoar you singing ' Ye-<lb/>
w-ill never break the chainNever<lb/>
break the chain( hams kecpus<lb/>
together Songs like this you an<lb/>
interpret anyway you want. And<lb/>
that is what a national anthem<lb/>
should be  something different<lb/>
tor all the citizens.<lb/>
1 Intil next week, don't drink<lb/>
and drive, be sure and catch the<lb/>
Collard Festival Beauty Pageant<lb/>
in Ayden tonight (in fact, don't<lb/>
miss any of The c ollard 1 estival)<lb/>
and most of all, keep our feet on<lb/>
the ground and don't take any<lb/>
bad poetry.<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
'Squirrel<lb/>
of flying<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Monday-Saturday 10-9<lb/>
Sunday 1-6<lb/>
Fall Savings<lb/>
RE<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(Except Aigner. Ntke and Reebok)<lb/>
1 1 I<lb/>
TEEN f<lb/>
Ulflb 7581976<lb/>
vforicate<lb/>
TO<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
starts Saturday,<lb/>
September 3rd<lb/>
50 Off<lb/>
Starting Mon. Sept 12th<lb/>
All Summer<lb/>
Merchandise,<lb/>
Sele ted ev elry and<lb/>
Accessories. Some tall<lb/>
and<lb/>
winter merchandise.<lb/>
419 Kcd Hanks Rd<lb/>
Arlington Village<lb/>
756-1058<lb/>
"All right classLets test your New Music Knowledge<lb/>
PRE<lb/>
.<lb/>
Bla<lb/>
1.<lb/>
STEVE W1NWOOO<lb/>
Roll With It<lb/>
As a teenager. Steve<lb/>
Winwood sang in:<lb/>
A. T ? ? wei<lb/>
B. The Spen ei Dav is Group<lb/>
C. His brother's weddn<lb/>
0 BRIAN WILSON<lb/>
 Love and Mercy<lb/>
Brian was the songwriting<lb/>
genius behind:<lb/>
A. The Beastie Boys<lb/>
B. The Beach Boys<lb/>
C. The California Raisins<lb/>
?a TS. ITS,<lb/>
o urn<lb/>
L. Lot it<lb/>
LITTLE FEAT<lb/>
Roll<lb/>
s<lb/>
This is the group s<lb/>
first all nt album<lb/>
A :<lb/>
B<lb/>
C. 1979<lb/>
BAD COMPANY<lb/>
Dangerous Age<lb/>
This British supergroup s<lb/>
legendary vocalist is:<lb/>
A. Paul Rod ;? "<lb/>
B. Hoy R<lb/>
C. Mi R<lb/>
otfiv;<lb/>
Xte<lb/>
T 12"<lb/>
0-2 Correct<lb/>
3 4 Correct<lb/>
All S Correct<lb/>
s 7:00 S<lb/>
Menc<lb/>
A Co)<lb/>
5.<lb/>
ESCAPE CLUB<lb/>
Wild Wild West<lb/>
The Escape Club s smash<lb/>
new single is:<lb/>
A. Wild. Wild W?M<lb/>
B. Escape Clause"<lb/>
C. E s ape Hatch<lb/>
Q33ffi(30a?<lb/>
THE PLAZA, CAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
O<lb/>
'K<lb/>
m<lb/>
699 99<lb/>
CD<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0013"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8, 188<lb/>
Yoto new western'Young Guns'<lb/>
By JIM SH AMLIN<lb/>
S(i Writer<lb/>
"Young Guns the latest re-<lb/>
lease by Morgan Creek pictures,<lb/>
stands in the shadows of some<lb/>
rather dark predecessors: The<lb/>
first western film released in<lb/>
1980's was "Silverado which<lb/>
closed before it reached most the-<lb/>
atres.<lb/>
Next came "Pale Rider which<lb/>
survived only because of Clint<lb/>
"Dirty Harry" Eastwood's repu-<lb/>
tation for massive devastation;<lb/>
unfortunately, it didn't take long<lb/>
for the film to reach discount the-<lb/>
atres. But don't count on seeing<lb/>
"Young Guns" on cable this<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
The plot itself is based upon the<lb/>
legend of Billy the Kid and his<lb/>
gang of outlaws called "The<lb/>
Regulators but borrows much<lb/>
from Oliver Twist. It begins when<lb/>
Billv is rescued bv a Gran Feiffor<lb/>
named John Tunstel, who is<lb/>
played by Terence Stump (Zorin<lb/>
from "A View to a Kill").<lb/>
Tunstel owns a cattle ranch in<lb/>
New Mexico which is guarded by<lb/>
a pack of lost boys?orphans and<lb/>
outlaws -each of which is spe-<lb/>
cialized in some form of combat<lb/>
such as pugilism, sharpshooting,<lb/>
or knife-throwing. These "Regu-<lb/>
lators" guard the ranch from a<lb/>
corrupt politician named Murphy<lb/>
(Jack Palance of "Ripleys Believe<lb/>
it or Not"). When Murphy sends<lb/>
his men to kill Tunstel, the Regu-<lb/>
lators become assasins bent on<lb/>
revenge.<lb/>
But the plot is much thicker<lb/>
than that. It includes such con-<lb/>
cepts as Romantic love and man's<lb/>
'Cubes in triangle<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
their songs' actual structure, and<lb/>
The Cubes are certainly innova-<lb/>
tive with their song structure. But,<lb/>
XTC and Siouxie and the Ban-<lb/>
shees are from England, where<lb/>
this "progressive" sound was<lb/>
made popular.<lb/>
In Europe, "Life's Too Good' is<lb/>
on the small independent label.<lb/>
One Little Indian Records, when<lb/>
they came to the states they were<lb/>
immediatelv picked-up bv the<lb/>
major label Electra. This summer,<lb/>
I serendipitouslv met the owner<lb/>
of One Little Indian Records who<lb/>
said that he hasn't seen such en-<lb/>
ergy by the American mess for<lb/>
this type of band, let alone one of<lb/>
his bands.<lb/>
He expected the Cubes to do<lb/>
well in the U.S "maybe as good<lb/>
as The Smiths However, at this<lb/>
point in time all his expectations<lb/>
have been way overshot bv the<lb/>
realitv of the band's success.<lb/>
life's Too Good" has<lb/>
higher on the Billboard album<lb/>
charts than most people expected.<lb/>
These poets from Iceland are<lb/>
making a big big initial impact.<lb/>
Tonight, they will be playing in<lb/>
Raleigh at the Rialto Theatre. If<lb/>
you have tickets, I'm very envious<lb/>
because they have been sold-out<lb/>
for several days now, and me and<lb/>
most of my friends don't have<lb/>
any. However, copies of "Life's<lb/>
Too Good" are available every-<lb/>
where. If you have not yet ob-<lb/>
tained a copy, go ahead and do so.<lb/>
Life's too good not to.<lb/>
inhumanity to man. It deals with Bamba) plays Chaves, the last<lb/>
corruption, society, honor, and Navajo. Chaves is, by far, the most<lb/>
humanity. It muses over empiri- disappointing character. He is<lb/>
cal truths and the struggle be- melodramatic and insecure,<lb/>
tween legality and justice. The sign that both writer and actor are many things in "Young Guns<lb/>
story is much deeper than venge- have many things to learn before ftr the illiterate cinemaphile.<lb/>
ance and big guns in the old west, they can be considered masters of There is copious amounts of ac-<lb/>
There are topics which relate to their craft. tion and bloodshed, some of<lb/>
society in the twentieth century. Dermont Melroney, a new- which is completely unbe-<lb/>
In short, there is something in it comer to the screen, plays the part Heveable. There is sick humor,<lb/>
for anyone who wants to see more of Steven. Although he is billed as even though if s not ??. the form of<lb/>
than blood and nudity. a main character, he does little Schwarzeneggerian one-liners<lb/>
Furthermore, instead of the more than shoot and spit tobacco,<lb/>
typical two-di mensional cowboy, a dark reminder of the cowboy of<lb/>
the characters of "Young Guns" classical western films,<lb/>
are real-life people, with whom CaseySemaszko,anotherdebu-<lb/>
the viewer can identify. Much of tant, is Charlie. He is the epitome<lb/>
of the boy inside of every man,<lb/>
who moans, whines, and screams<lb/>
in fear, he is scared and alone,<lb/>
to see more work of this quality breast, but it is there on screen for<lb/>
from him in the future. those who demand it.<lb/>
Aside from the depth of the plot All in all, "Young Guns" is a<lb/>
and the quality of the acting, there terrific film. It may even spark the<lb/>
There's even nudity, only one<lb/>
revival of the western genre, in a<lb/>
form representative of today's<lb/>
new talent in screenwriting and<lb/>
acting. It rates two thumbs up,<lb/>
five stars, a massive erection, or a<lb/>
ten on anybody's scale. In any<lb/>
case, it's well worth the five-dol-<lb/>
lar admission, perhaps even<lb/>
twice.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
I'l.ia Shopping Clr. 756 OOH8<lb/>
Now Showing<lb/>
STEALING HOME<lb/>
NIGHTMARE ON<lb/>
ELM ST. PART IV<lb/>
COCKTAIL<lb/>
TartCIheatre<lb/>
3 ife<lb/>
<lb/>
San Showing<lb/>
ARTHUR II<lb/>
this can be attributed to the qual<lb/>
ity of the actors:<lb/>
Emilio Estevez ("Stakeout")<lb/>
Squirrel Man Hotline<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
plays the lead role. Although he following his peers before him-<lb/>
portrays Billy the kid as a ho-<lb/>
mocidal psychopath with a sick<lb/>
sense of humor, he is a likable<lb/>
character. Underneath all the vio-<lb/>
lence and anger is a little boy, who<lb/>
loves playing cowboys and indi-<lb/>
self, even when it comes to leav-<lb/>
ing his wife for a battle against<lb/>
overwhelming odds.<lb/>
By far, the most well developed<lb/>
character is Doc, played by Keifer<lb/>
Sutherland ("The Lost Boys").<lb/>
ans with the other neighborhood Doc is a distinctly nontraditional<lb/>
children. Death is a completely twist to the old characters. He is a<lb/>
surreal concept to him, like lying romantic cowboy, who philoso-<lb/>
down and counting to ten.<lb/>
Charlie Sheen ("Wall Street") is<lb/>
Dick, a father figure who keeps<lb/>
the boys in check. He was the only<lb/>
one who can tell truth from illu-<lb/>
sion, and who remains cooly in<lb/>
control even when his life is in<lb/>
danger.<lb/>
Lou Diamond Phillips (La<lb/>
phises and writes poetry. He puts<lb/>
his honor before his life and wins.<lb/>
Doc not only shows a new side<lb/>
of the western man, it shows a<lb/>
side of Sutherland which audi-<lb/>
ences have never seen before: a<lb/>
good actor who can portray a<lb/>
multifaceted character, and who<lb/>
portrays it well. We can only hope<lb/>
NOW SHOWING<lb/>
AT HENDRIX<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8 THRU 11<lb/>
ROBIN WILLIAMS<lb/>
STARING IN<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
Adults $25?,tn<lb/>
5:30<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
ANYTIME<lb/>
BUCCANNER MOVIES<lb/>
. 756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
RATED R YOUNG GUNS<lb/>
1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15 9:20<lb/>
RATED R<lb/>
COMING TO AMERICA<lb/>
1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20<lb/>
THE GREAT OUTDOORS<lb/>
RATED PG 1 00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'Chains' to become new anthem<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
True, the song does reveal a lot<lb/>
of our bureaucratic methodology<lb/>
and we might not want the Rus-<lb/>
sians learning how we managed<lb/>
to get to the efficiency level we're<lb/>
currently at, but this is the era of<lb/>
Glasnost I guess <lb/>
What worries me the most is<lb/>
that I couldn't find a suitable<lb/>
Stevie Nicks song to suggest.<lb/>
Granted, there's no reason to proj-<lb/>
ect my unhealthy obsessions on<lb/>
the rest of the nation but hell,<lb/>
Reagan did it for years.<lb/>
I did find a Fleet wood Mac<lb/>
song, and the more I thought<lb/>
about it, it seriously is a pretty apt<lb/>
description of this land of ours.<lb/>
And it's one of those multi-vocals<lb/>
glorious 70s.<lb/>
"I can still hear you singing We<lb/>
will never break the chainNever<lb/>
break the chainChainskeep us<lb/>
together Songs like this you can<lb/>
interpret anyway you want. And<lb/>
that is what a national anthem<lb/>
should be  something different<lb/>
for all the citizens.<lb/>
Until next week, don't drink<lb/>
and drive, be sure and catch the<lb/>
Collard Festival Beauty Pageant<lb/>
in Ayden tonight (in fact, don't<lb/>
miss any of The Collard Festival)<lb/>
and most of all, keep your feet on<lb/>
the ground and don't take any<lb/>
bad poetry.<lb/>
vings<lb/>
O OFF<lb/>
iY LOW PRICE<lb/>
ike and Reebok)<lb/>
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SIEVE WMWOOD<lb/>
Roll With It<lb/>
As a teenager, Steve<lb/>
Win wood sang in:<lb/>
A. The shower<lb/>
B. The Spencer Davis Group<lb/>
C. His brother's wedding<lb/>
M LPTape 'I CO<lb/>
<lb/>
3 BRIAN WILSON<lb/>
 Love and Mercy<lb/>
Brian was the songwriting<lb/>
genius behind:<lb/>
A. The Beastie Boys<lb/>
B. The Beach Boys<lb/>
C. The California Raisins<lb/>
2.<lb/>
UTTIEFEAT<lb/>
Let It Roll<lb/>
This is the group's<lb/>
first all-new album since:<lb/>
A 416 BC<lb/>
B. Their last one<lb/>
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fff LPTape lib CO<lb/>
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This British supergroup's<lb/>
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A. Paul Rodgers<lb/>
B. Roy Rogers<lb/>
C. Mr. Rogers<lb/>
m LP-<lb/>
Tape<lb/>
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0-2 Correct LoofcsNkeyou<lb/>
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new single is:<lb/>
A. "Wild. Wild West"<lb/>
B. "Escape Clause"<lb/>
C. "Escape Hatch"<lb/>
O LPTape 11<lb/>
THE PLAZA, CAROUNA EAST MAU<lb/>
Have<lb/>
Dear Big E,<lb/>
I have just lived the worst wee'<lb/>
nd of my life, it started out out tl<lb/>
k? a blast when<lb/>
Meandering in a maze<lb/>
streets, 1 could onlv think of a<lb/>
ing my turgid head on Silky (ml<lb/>
pillow) and sleep. Leaninf<lb/>
against a sturdy tree, I set ml<lb/>
bearings and wondered wh<lb/>
Beam-ed me.<lb/>
Coming upon the house when<lb/>
rent a room, I stopped to pa<lb/>
homcage to the homestead<lb/>
was glad to be there. Gazinl<lb/>
towards the shipped paint an<lb/>
the crooked shutters, "Gee, wh?<lb/>
a beautiful house slurred froi<lb/>
my mouth.<lb/>
Crossing the waist high wccl<lb/>
oi the front yard, I sudden!<lb/>
stopped. Maybe it was mv intu<lb/>
tion, but more like<lb/>
twirling blue lights<lb/>
Greenville FD patrol cars whi<lb/>
deterred my forward<lb/>
and caused me to hit the d -<lb/>
LikeG.l. foe, 1 crawled tl j<lb/>
the jungle of rag u thj<lb/>
heard a hysterical woma.<lb/>
screaming at the two policemen<lb/>
'Squirrel<lb/>
of flying<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. BD<lb/>
Greenville's infamous "squirm<lb/>
man" has struck again, demo<lb/>
strating a strange new swoopii<lb/>
ability before blatantly killing ?<lb/>
ECU professor Monday night<lb/>
Dr. Ripped Wallpaper, an EC<lb/>
alumnus w ho majored in Stkkii<lb/>
IV Needles in Peoples' Arms vs <lb/>
killed as the squirrel creatui<lb/>
swooped down from the top<lb/>
Ringgold Towers aparmc<lb/>
building and bit his shoulder.<lb/>
Wallpaper was taken to V<lb/>
Memorial following the atta<lb/>
but was pronounced dead on at<lb/>
val from loss oi shoulder.<lb/>
Experts are unsure it the<lb/>
den appearance of glider pane<lb/>
on the previously land boui<lb/>
creature means that there is a sei<lb/>
PRE<lb/>
S<lb/>
YU<lb/>
Gat<lb/>
a<lb/>
Bla<lb/>
Si<lb/>
Delta SVSwa<lb/>
The<lb/>
At 7:00 Si<lb/>
Men<lb/>
A Cor<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0014"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
nqw Showing<lb/>
TEALING HOME<lb/>
JGHTMARE ON<lb/>
:LM ST. PART IV<lb/>
COCKTAIL<lb/>
?arfcrheatre<lb/>
AT?U' Shoeing<lb/>
ARTHUR II<lb/>
30<lb/>
CHILDREN N<lb/>
ANYTIME $2<lb/>
MOVIES<lb/>
ire Shopping Center<lb/>
?UNS<lb/>
MERICA<lb/>
OUTDOORS<lb/>
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i OFF<lb/>
OW PRICE<lb/>
nd Reebok)<lb/>
I I<lb/>
'ledge<lb/>
-7<lb/>
<lb/>
rUi<lb/>
It Roll<lb/>
ie group s<lb/>
libum<lb/>
YV<lb/>
12?<lb/>
r;Gi<lb/>
MAIL<lb/>
@ks iSaib igaMaaiLiiia ifafeils? Iii?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8,1988 11<lb/>
Have mercy for the homeless<lb/>
Low tar, true Hast temptation9<lb/>
Deai Big E,<lb/>
have just lived the worst week-<lb/>
d of my life, it started out out to<lb/>
.1 blast when<lb/>
Meandering in a maze of<lb/>
streets, I could only think of lay-<lb/>
ing my turgid head on Silky (my<lb/>
How) and sleep. Leaning<lb/>
igainst a sturdy tree, 1 set my<lb/>
mrings and wondered who<lb/>
am-ed me.<lb/>
( oming upon the house where I<lb/>
. nt a room, 1 stopped to pay<lb/>
lomeage to the homestead as I<lb/>
is glad to be there. Gazing,<lb/>
wards the chipped paint and<lb/>
crooked shutters, "Gee, what<lb/>
tutiful house slurred from<lb/>
v mouth.<lb/>
( rossing the waist high weeds<lb/>
the front yard, 1 suddenly<lb/>
d Maybe it was mv intui-<lb/>
?n but more likely it was the<lb/>
tirling blue lights of the two<lb/>
reenville PD patrol cars which<lb/>
terred my forward progress<lb/>
id caused me to hit the deck.<lb/>
keG.I. oe, I crawled through<lb/>
e jungle of rag weeds. 1 then<lb/>
eard a hysterical woman<lb/>
1 aming at the two policemen. I<lb/>
lay still to listen. "Drug dealers,<lb/>
can't you control these pushers of<lb/>
death, these peddlers of Satin. Get<lb/>
him, put out an UPI or whatever<lb/>
it's called, get him she said. 1<lb/>
finally recognized her voice, she<lb/>
was my landlord.<lb/>
Just Ask<lb/>
BigE<lb/>
Signed, Homeless Rufugee<lb/>
Dear Fugitive Rufugee,<lb/>
And if you need a job, hey<lb/>
man we can set you up. Positions<lb/>
will soon be open for General<lb/>
Manager and Managing Editor.<lb/>
The pay is pretty good for those<lb/>
Ifeelforyouguy.It'sunfortu- two jobs, about $100 a month after<lb/>
nate that some land-owning-Re- taxes, state and local, psychology<lb/>
publican paranoids suddenly care, drug addictions and every-<lb/>
throw good, emest-livingcitizens day injury from being an eight-<lb/>
out of their rented dwellings for year-old.<lb/>
unsignificant things. Jobs are also open for News,<lb/>
Let me, along with the entire Features and Sports Editors. Yeah<lb/>
staff of the East Carolinian, wel- it's sad but you see they are kind<lb/>
come you to stay with us. We have of like Three-Mile-lsland, they are<lb/>
several couches from which you experience a major melt down. If<lb/>
can choose from to crash on. Re- y?u nave a big ego and hate for<lb/>
Stiffling her with "Mam, Mam<lb/>
now just settle down one of the<lb/>
cops continued in a practiced,<lb/>
professional tone, "We have just any man, come on up to the Pub- people to spit in your face, I don'?<lb/>
borough search of lications Building, across from advise you to take on one of these<lb/>
Joyner Library, and we will put jobs.<lb/>
you up until you can get back on Really man, if life is getting<lb/>
your feet again. you down then come up and live<lb/>
People say that maybe the the life on the edge. And the best<lb/>
opinion of this column isblatantly part about it, you can eat, sleep,<lb/>
sexist (our opponents like the study and work inside the same<lb/>
word blatant) and full of scato- four walls, just don't hit the ceil-<lb/>
logical language but in your case, ing because it is made out of as-<lb/>
I can't kick you when you down, bestos and you might die if you<lb/>
Seriously, Pete has a big green breathe it.<lb/>
What am I going do? I have no couch, Chip has a brown one and East Carolinian<lb/>
place to turn. I am broke and am of course there is the famous Bat Publications Building<lb/>
currently living out of the trunk of Cave which houses the Bat East Carolina Universitv<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
conducted a<lb/>
these premises and have seizeebne<lb/>
half of a marijuana cigarette<lb/>
weighing approximately one<lb/>
quarter of one gram<lb/>
On Sunday, I found out that<lb/>
the landlady had evicted me and<lb/>
my roommate without notice. All<lb/>
of my stuff was thrown out in the<lb/>
stocks of rag weed in the front<lb/>
vard.<lb/>
mv car.<lb/>
NEW YORK (BP) ? Biblical<lb/>
scholars today stunned the reli-<lb/>
gious and entertainment worlds<lb/>
with their startling revelation that<lb/>
the real last temptation of Christ<lb/>
was a Marlboro Light cigarette.<lb/>
Rev. N. Tolerence, a Methodist<lb/>
preacher who was made a life's<lb/>
work of studying an ancient set of<lb/>
forbidden religious papers<lb/>
known popularly as the "Cacti<lb/>
Scrolls revealed during a press<lb/>
conference that Jesus was a pack<lb/>
a day smoker by the time he was<lb/>
16.<lb/>
"He had been trying to quit for<lb/>
years. Finally, Paul sent got him<lb/>
enrolled in a sort of early version<lb/>
of the Smoker's Anonymous<lb/>
group, and he was able to quit be-<lb/>
fore he was crucified Tolerence<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
The Cacti Scrolls, found in 1912<lb/>
inthefamousShrineofSt. Mary of<lb/>
the Cacti in Greenville, N.C, are<lb/>
in poor condition and hard to<lb/>
translate, Tolerence said. "That's<lb/>
why it took me so long to be sure<lb/>
of this find. I was pretty sure be-<lb/>
fore Scorsese started filming<lb/>
"I went to him with my discov-<lb/>
ery. He said he wanted more<lb/>
proof before he included it in his<lb/>
movie, so I went back to translat-<lb/>
ing, and he finished his film a<lb/>
somewhat haughty Tolerence<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"But I was right he exclaimed<lb/>
during the conference. "The<lb/>
scrolls clearly say And the Dark<lb/>
Angel came unto The Lord Jesus<lb/>
of Nazarath and saycth unto<lb/>
himHey  want a drag?<lb/>
"And the Lord jesus sayeth<lb/>
unto the Wicked One, 'No, I quit a<lb/>
couple of years ago. Thanks any-<lb/>
way<lb/>
"And the Prince of Darkness<lb/>
said unto the lord one more<lb/>
timeHey, man they're low tar<lb/>
Here the fragment breaks off<lb/>
said Tolerence.<lb/>
Tolerence did not speculate on<lb/>
whether Chnst took Satan up on<lb/>
his offer. "Seems to me that's<lb/>
another movie right there he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Religious leaders are denounc-<lb/>
ing the scrolls, saying that the fol-<lb/>
lowersofSt. Maryarecultistsand<lb/>
that the scrolls have nothing to do<lb/>
with history, religious or secular.<lb/>
Ticksuckers threaten Collard Festival<lb/>
Couch.<lb/>
Squirrel man' kills again after reports<lb/>
?f flying offRinggold Towers high rise<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (BP)<lb/>
reenville's infamous "squirrel<lb/>
in has struck again, demon-<lb/>
rating a strange new swooping<lb/>
bility before blatantly killing an<lb/>
professor Monday night.<lb/>
Dr. Kipped Wallpaper, an ECU<lb/>
mnus who majored in Sticking<lb/>
ond creature or the first is matur-<lb/>
ing rapidly.<lb/>
Dr. Fetchin Bones, a noted zo-<lb/>
ologist, speculates on the situ-<lb/>
ation saying, "It could be two<lb/>
seperate animals. Imagine if you<lb/>
will, a whole hidden race of dor-<lb/>
known creature has caused two<lb/>
reported deaths. Sightings have<lb/>
occurred all over the Greenville<lb/>
area, but most are concentrated<lb/>
around the ECU campus.<lb/>
One documented sighting hap-<lb/>
room, they found two long rows<lb/>
of scratches down the screen of<lb/>
the student's window. The rows,<lb/>
according to police scientist Barry<lb/>
Allen, looked "just like the<lb/>
scratches found on tree bark in<lb/>
Needles in Peoples' Arms, was reappearing for some reason,<lb/>
lied as the squirrel creature "This could well be the scien-<lb/>
vooped down from the top of tific find of the century he<lb/>
o 1 ci Towers aparment added.<lb/>
lilding and bit his shoulder. Police Chief Gordon O' Hara is<lb/>
Wallpaper was taken to Pitt more skepticalI don't know<lb/>
emorial following the attack, what's goin' on really, but it<lb/>
mant squirrel people, suddenly the middle of campus. A female<lb/>
student, who asked not to be iden-<lb/>
tified, called police when she<lb/>
heard a scraping sound on her<lb/>
dorm window.<lb/>
She turned around to see the<lb/>
pened Sunday at the fountain in trees inhabited by squirrels, only<lb/>
caused by something weighing<lb/>
roughly 250 pounds<lb/>
Greenville Police and The East<lb/>
Carolinian have set up "The<lb/>
Squirrel Man Hotline" at 757-<lb/>
6366, in order to collect informa-<lb/>
grey, bushy tail of the creature tion about the creature and try<lb/>
sliding downward. She says she and target dangerous areas.<lb/>
s pronounced dead on arri- seems to me like somebody done watched the squirrel man glide to Already sections of the campus<lb/>
il from loss of shoulder. been into the bad chemicals up to the ground and scamper past the such as the ROTC building and<lb/>
unsure if the sud- the Everready? plant. I don't fountain, disappearing behind the Mcndenhall reflecting pool<lb/>
n appearance of glider panels<lb/>
n the previously land bound<lb/>
feature moans that there is a sec-<lb/>
know what's next  giant tick<lb/>
people, I suppose<lb/>
Whatever the cause, the un-<lb/>
the Geology Building.<lb/>
When police arrived at her<lb/>
have been cordoned off due to the<lb/>
number of sightings reported.<lb/>
AYDEN, N.C. (BP) ? While its<lb/>
sister city Greenville struggles<lb/>
with the rampages of the killer<lb/>
"squirrel men Ayden, best<lb/>
known forits yearly Collard Festi-<lb/>
val, now has to contend with big<lb/>
problems of its own ? the "giant,<lb/>
bloodsucking tick people<lb/>
Three inhabitants of the<lb/>
"Morttown Acres" trailer park<lb/>
have reported the death of their<lb/>
neighbor, Verdant Dungarees, 82,<lb/>
Tuesday. Owner of the park,<lb/>
Griselda Flatts, told reporters<lb/>
Dungarees was a "good quiet<lb/>
tenant, and a good Christian, even<lb/>
if he did pick his nose a lot<lb/>
"I know that's why they got him<lb/>
instead of anyone else Flatts<lb/>
addedAnyone'll tell you that<lb/>
them bugs were after all them<lb/>
dried boogers he flicked onto his<lb/>
stoop. There's something in snot<lb/>
they can smell she whispered<lb/>
confidentially.<lb/>
Dungarees had apparently<lb/>
been sitting on thosesteps, talking<lb/>
to passing neighbors when, Flatts<lb/>
recounts, they heard "sounds<lb/>
like hundreds of tiny little forks<lb/>
scraping across the top of the<lb/>
trailer<lb/>
Dungarees had little time to<lb/>
investigate. By the time he had<lb/>
raised his head up, "13, maybe 15<lb/>
of them little bug men were all<lb/>
over him next door neighbor<lb/>
Jethro Tweed, 36, an unemployed<lb/>
florist said.<lb/>
"They looked like those cartoon<lb/>
critters  the Care Bears on TV,<lb/>
only they were dull grey with six<lb/>
spidery legs and blue, veiny eyes<lb/>
that kinda seemed to swim back<lb/>
and forth he added.<lb/>
Hatts interjects, "I swanee, 1<lb/>
could almost hear the blood<lb/>
they'd sucked gurgling around in<lb/>
their stomachs as they moved.<lb/>
And as Verdant died, you could<lb/>
almost see them getting bigger<lb/>
Dungarees was rushed to Pitt<lb/>
Memorial, but the multiple tiny<lb/>
wounds were fatal. His corpse<lb/>
was almost completely drained of<lb/>
blood.<lb/>
PRESENTING<lb/>
S$<lb/>
Tva<lb/>
G Sisters<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
kr<lb/>
'Pp.<lb/>
of the<lb/>
4<lb/>
We're getting a<lb/>
FACE<lb/>
LIFT!<lb/>
Black Greek Order<lb/>
Sisterhood<lb/>
Friendship<lb/>
e.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
6<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
DcUa SiSma<lb/>
Theta<lb/>
Togetherness<lb/>
At 7:00 Sunday, September 11,1988<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
A Convocation For The Black<lb/>
College Woman!<lb/>
d<lb/>
<lb/>
Q<lb/>
T)eS stress 9<lb/>
Freshmen are welcome<lb/>
Come by The Spa and see for yourself<lb/>
the changes we're making!<lb/>
? New owner<lb/>
? New management<lb/>
? September addition of 50 more space<lb/>
? September nursery<lb/>
? Expanded free-weight area<lb/>
? 1500 square foot aerobic floor<lb/>
? New aerobic program coordinated by<lb/>
Mark Brunetz, which features high<lb/>
and low impact classes, toning classes,<lb/>
seniors and resistance classes.<lb/>
? 50 aerobic classes per week<lb/>
And find out<lb/>
what we ALREADY offer:<lb/>
? Co-ed aerobics program<lb/>
? Complete dynacam weight machines<lb/>
? Stationary bikes<lb/>
? York free weights<lb/>
? Organized activities<lb/>
? Certified experienced aerobics<lb/>
instructors<lb/>
? Certified dynacam instructors<lb/>
? CPR certified instructors<lb/>
Take advantage of our many facilities:<lb/>
? Two exercise rooms<lb/>
? Aerobics classroom<lb/>
? Wet steam room<lb/>
? Desert dry sauna<lb/>
? Hot mineral whirlpool<lb/>
? Wolff system sunbed<lb/>
? Private dressing rooms<lb/>
? Private tile showers<lb/>
PLUS, note our extra<lb/>
benefits and services:<lb/>
? IPFA and AHA Memberships<lb/>
honored at locations worldwide<lb/>
? Special Interest Seminars<lb/>
? Monthly calendar events<lb/>
? Social activities<lb/>
Beat the Price Increase!<lb/>
After our renovations are complete,<lb/>
membership prices will go up, so be sure<lb/>
to JOIN NOW! or, bring in the coupon<lb/>
below for a free month pass and see for<lb/>
yourself why The Spa is Greenville's best<lb/>
health club value!<lb/>
Student Memberships Available!<lb/>
This coupon entitles you to a<lb/>
FREE MONTH PASS<lb/>
at The Spa in Southpark Shopping Center<lb/>
OlUr tipirOt Spt?mt?f IS. 1?M<lb/>
Limit on coupon pot customer<lb/>
I<lb/>
i7m?p<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0015"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8, 1968<lb/>
Where it seems anything goes<lb/>
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YE5. YOU SHOULD<lb/>
HAVE ASKEO<lb/>
WHO WAS<lb/>
AT THE DOOR-<lb/>
YOU OOH'T 5EEM<lb/>
TO REAU2E HOW-<lb/>
?-? VULNERABLi<lb/>
ZQVA.RF<lb/>
THE AUTHORTIE<lb/>
have: no<lb/>
Its here at last!<lb/>
THE<lb/>
CLINT<lb/>
HOWARD<lb/>
TRIBUTE<lb/>
The critics rave about the Fun and Games tribute to Clint Howard!<lb/>
"A veritable Clint-festThe New York Times<lb/>
"Two thumbs up for Ron's more talented brotherSiskel and Ebert<lb/>
"Clint, Clint, CLINTRex Reed<lb/>
BUT PRESIDENT<lb/>
CRUISE'S OPPOSITION<lb/>
TO CATMUlOATE<lb/>
RAVANA'S ORTHO-<lb/>
DOX FOLLOWING-<lb/>
OF SHIEVEA<lb/>
Micah Harris (unofficial biographer of Clint Howard) shares a poignant reminescience:<lb/>
I first encountered Clint Howard in his role as "Leon the little boy in the cowboy suit<lb/>
who always offered Barney a bite of his jelly sandwich on the "Andy Griffith Show" . Even in<lb/>
.i walk-on part with no lines, it was evident to me that Clint had, well, "presence It wasn't<lb/>
h.ird to imagine the jelly sandwich as the skull of Yorick and Clint as a young man assuming<lb/>
the role of Hamlet in a Joseph Fapp festival. But mostly I just thought about how sick I was<lb/>
looking at that jelly smeared all over that kid's face.<lb/>
Overpowered by his brother Ron as Opie, Clint's "Leon" soon disappeared. However,<lb/>
C inemax's release of "Andy Griffith: the Lost Episodes" gives us a chance to see what Clint<lb/>
could've really done. In the filmed but previously unreleased "Opie's Snipe Hunt written by<lb/>
a young Stephen King, we learn that Leon disappeared in the woods during the traditional<lb/>
Boy Scout initiationpractical joke of sending new recruits into the night in search of the<lb/>
mythical snipe creature.<lb/>
Driven by guilt, fellow scouts Opie and Johnny Paul go looking for the young recruit. They<lb/>
find Leon dead from exposure, a Jane Parker Jelly Roll wrapper clinging to his lips from a vain<lb/>
attempt to derive sustenance.<lb/>
But the episode never aired, and King used some of the story's elements in his novella 'The<lb/>
Body" (now a film by Rob Reiner). Look for "Opie's Snipe Hunt" along with "Howard Sprague<lb/>
Comes Out of the Closet" as part of Cinemax's "Andy Griffith: the Lost Episdoes" this month.<lb/>
MMt<lb/>
V<lb/>
CLINT HOWARD IN HIS GREATEST ROLE<lb/>
Facts about Clint:<lb/>
Favorite food: Jelly sandwiches<lb/>
Favorite drink: Tranya<lb/>
Turn-ons: finding work<lb/>
Turn-offs: pollution, bear-dung<lb/>
Roles through the years:<lb/>
Leon, on the Andy Griffith Show<lb/>
Mark, on Gentle Ben<lb/>
Balok, on Star Trek<lb/>
Possesed Man-Boy, in EvilSpeak<lb/>
Favorite appearance of his<lb/>
brother Ron:<lb/>
in Grand Theft Auto<lb/>
A scene from STAR TREK'sThe Corbomite Manuever where young Clint was picked to play<lb/>
the alien Balok because of his unique looks. The young Howard's voice was dubbed as he spoke<lb/>
with Kirk, but thanks to his professionalism, no one ever even noticed! <lb/>
Help Clint ride his brother Ronny's coattails to success!<lb/>
Years later, Clint decided to expand his horizons<lb/>
and took this challenging role as the demon-<lb/>
possesed Man-Boy in "EvilSpeak<lb/>
1<lb/>
You probably noticed now that the maze can't be finished.<lb/>
Thafs because Clint never became successful!<lb/>
s<lb/>
r<lb/>
I Ml<lb/>
Mood<lb/>
Bv GRI K IV<lb/>
S.j.) ,A <lb/>
Jarrod Moody begai<lb/>
football s. as ? -<lb/>
Sarurda. f'<lb/>
for 5 yards and<lb/>
touchdowns<lb/>
Mood) is a -<lb/>
Industrial i<lb/>
played hih s<lb/>
Northern Nash I<lb/>
Nashville<lb/>
"Iwasredshirti<lb/>
year hesai i.M<lb/>
isglad now that h<lb/>
freshman <lb/>
"Beinv: red<lb/>
chana I<lb/>
life and it .<lb/>
better at<lb/>
"The lean<lb/>
Sarurda)<lb/>
could impi<lb/>
her of pi ?<lb/>
Mood) sa<lb/>
have a winnii<lb/>
"Tr? '<lb/>
this year ? i<lb/>
ing pla) i ?<lb/>
Lame<lb/>
By NEEDH v <lb/>
RAU<lb/>
all thereat<lb/>
Sarurda)<lb/>
when ? ?<lb/>
purple and<lb/>
where I w a -<lb/>
o Boiang es fi<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
E<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
'4.v<lb/>
E No more crowds like th;<lb/>
i<lb/>
85<lb/>
Ganit<lb/>
COLUMBIA -<lb/>
South Care<lb/>
son saysheisn tcert<lb/>
two k.o players injured o<lb/>
weekend back in shar<lb/>
Sarurda) sgameag<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
TheGamei<lb/>
running backs tailba i<lb/>
(Green and fullback K<lb/>
suffered injuries in S<lb/>
llO South Carolina<lb/>
hhe North Carolina<lb/>
Morrison suffered w j<lb/>
,n described as a <lb/>
fklebone and Bing susU<lb/>
straimvi knee ligaments<lb/>
Morns-n sui Greer<lb/>
il?t was questionable<lb/>
Western Carolina while Pin<lb/>
Corn<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
: coimumv.?umm I ee<lb/>
i36, former assistant men sba<lb/>
?ball rx?ch at ECU has<lb/>
mamed to the same posihi<lb/>
Cornell University.<lb/>
Talbot, along with d<lb/>
Dorfman. fills the assistant<lb/>
tions vacated bv Al Wall<lb/>
rentlv head coach at CoK<lb/>
College, and Sieve Robu<lb/>
currently serving as an<lb/>
at the Universirv of Kansas<lb/>
"I'm extremely delighkj<lb/>
have Lee join us said Cc<lb/>
head coach Mike Dement<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0016"/><lb/>
to i iiirgtiniis<lb/>
t i<lb/>
3<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
f EADf<lb/>
( iu<lb/>
out Clint:<lb/>
?d: Jelly sandwiches<lb/>
ink: Tranya<lb/>
inding work<lb/>
ollution, bear-dung<lb/>
gh the years:<lb/>
Andy Griffith Show<lb/>
lentle Ben<lb/>
tar Trek<lb/>
Ian-Boy, in EvilSpeak<lb/>
Jpearance of his<lb/>
left Auto<lb/>
it was picked to play<lb/>
dubbed as he spoke<lb/>
to success!<lb/>
.hed.<lb/>
;<lb/>
IMF FASTI AROI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEPTEMBERS, 18H Page 11<lb/>
Moody a key figure in Pirate's success<lb/>
By GREKR BOWEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
larrod Moody began his senior<lb/>
football season right this past<lb/>
Saturday. Moody had two carries<lb/>
tor 55 yards, and scored two<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
Moody is a senior majoring in<lb/>
Industrial Technology, lie<lb/>
played high school football tor<lb/>
orthern Nash High School in<lb/>
Nashville, N.C.<lb/>
"1 was red shifted my freshman<lb/>
year he said. Moody said that he<lb/>
is glad now that he didn't play his<lb/>
freshman year for many reasons.<lb/>
Being red shirtcd gave me a<lb/>
chance to get adjusted to college<lb/>
life and it gave me a chance to get<lb/>
better at football he said.<lb/>
"The team had a good game<lb/>
Saturday, but there are things we<lb/>
could improve on, like the num-<lb/>
ber of penalties' said Moody.<lb/>
Moodvsaid the Pirates are sure to<lb/>
have a winning season.<lb/>
'The team is more experienced<lb/>
this year. We have a lot oi return-<lb/>
ing players on both sides of the<lb/>
ball, he said different cities, and the friend-<lb/>
Moody thinks he had con- snjpS i've developed, " he said,<lb/>
stantlv improved each season. " "The guys on the team are very<lb/>
try to improve each Saturday and tight and we have a good rapport<lb/>
do better than the week before. I with the assistant coaches, "<lb/>
never want to go backwards Moody said. He said that it is<lb/>
Moody said. 1 le said he likes to easier to relax with the assistant<lb/>
Jarrod Moody turns up field towards the goal line. (File Photo),<lb/>
play hard anil do what he has to coaches.<lb/>
in order to help the Pirates be<lb/>
successful.<lb/>
Moody has played football<lb/>
since the th grade and will miss<lb/>
the sport next year. "1 like Satur-<lb/>
day afternoons most of all. Rut I<lb/>
enjoy the travel and uetting to see<lb/>
1 lis favorite game of the season<lb/>
used to be the ECU-NCSU game.<lb/>
"It was the Rocky Mount Senior<lb/>
High, Northern Nash High<lb/>
School game all over again, but<lb/>
better he said He is not pleased<lb/>
that the NCSU and ECU won't<lb/>
play each other again. "It wasn't<lb/>
our fault. We can't control the<lb/>
crowd and the situation was<lb/>
handled poorly, but the decision<lb/>
has been made and we've got to<lb/>
live with it, " he said.<lb/>
The ECU-NCSU game in 1987<lb/>
was Moody's favorite game ever.<lb/>
He said that the excitement that<lb/>
surrounded that game was in-<lb/>
credible knew a lot of the play-<lb/>
ers on the NCSU team, and my<lb/>
high school coach is the NCSU's<lb/>
secondary coach, and I was able<lb/>
to score twice. It was too much<lb/>
fun" he said.<lb/>
Although Moody was injured<lb/>
in last Saturday's contest, he<lb/>
hopes to be able to practice and to<lb/>
play on Saturday.<lb/>
The next home game is on Sep-<lb/>
tember 24th against Southern<lb/>
Mississippi "We play them well<lb/>
each year, he said. Moody<lb/>
wants to do well in that game. "1<lb/>
want to do everything I can to<lb/>
help the team. I don't want it to be<lb/>
a last second game. "<lb/>
Although Moody will miss the<lb/>
Lamenting over lost rivalry<lb/>
By NEEDHAM PARK<lb/>
Staff Writrr<lb/>
RALEIGH -The dements were<lb/>
 there at Carter-Finlev stadium<lb/>
Saturday night. It was 6 p.m.<lb/>
when three cheerleaders in<lb/>
purple and gold strolled past<lb/>
where I was biting into mv piece<lb/>
of Bojangles fried chicken. Sud-<lb/>
denly to my left I hear "Would<lb/>
you like program?" I spent mv<lb/>
last $2.50 on a program onl be<lb/>
cause the girl selling them was<lb/>
awfully cute 1 must tell you.<lb/>
Anyway, I looked down at the<lb/>
program and was in utter shock<lb/>
to see that there v as a mistake on<lb/>
the cover, it read "NC STATE VS<lb/>
WESTERN CAROl IN A I re-<lb/>
membered thinking "boy some<lb/>
bumblehead must have printed<lb/>
this baby, it's the first game of the<lb/>
season and State always plays<lb/>
Fast Carolina  "<lb/>
"Wait a second, there's no ten-<lb/>
sion  there's no 'hev EC you<lb/>
look like shit to meor'straight to<lb/>
hell with State no fights before<lb/>
the game. This isn't the classic<lb/>
No more crowds like this one on opening day for the ECU- NCSU football game. (File Photo).<lb/>
Gamecocks hurting<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP)<lb/>
Ninth Carolina Coach oe Morri-<lb/>
son says he isn't certain he'll have<lb/>
two key players injured over the<lb/>
veekend back in shape in time for<lb/>
Saturday's game against Western<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The Gamecocks' two starting<lb/>
running backs, tailback Harold<lb/>
 .reen and fullback Keith Bing,<lb/>
suffered injuriesinSaturday's31-<lb/>
10 South Carolina victory over<lb/>
the North Carolina Tarheels.<lb/>
Morrison suffered what Morri-<lb/>
son described as "a bruised an<lb/>
klebone" and Bing sustained<lb/>
strained knee ligaments.<lb/>
Morrison said Green's av aila-<lb/>
bility was "questionable" for<lb/>
Western Carolina while Bino was<lb/>
doubtful. Green rushed an even<lb/>
100 yards, scored two touch-<lb/>
dow ns and aught five pases for<lb/>
68 yards against North Carolina.<lb/>
Bing rushed three times for 31<lb/>
yards, including a 25-yard run,<lb/>
and caught one pass for nine<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
Morrison said Gerald Wil-<lb/>
liamsand Mike Dingle, backup to<lb/>
Green and Bing, respectively.<lb/>
"kx)k like they'll get all the work<lb/>
they want" this weekend.<lb/>
Morrison said the pass block-<lb/>
ing was good against North<lb/>
( arolma and the relatively inex-<lb/>
perienced receiver corps per-<lb/>
formed well Quarterback Todd<lb/>
Ellis completed passes to 10 dif-<lb/>
ferent receivers in connecting on<lb/>
23 of 38 for 290 yards.<lb/>
Still, Morrison said Monday<lb/>
he still sees "a lot of correcting to<lb/>
do<lb/>
"I was pleased with the win<lb/>
he said. "Usually the most im-<lb/>
provement comes between the<lb/>
State-ECU game<lb/>
No, I'm not that stupid, all that<lb/>
was made up, of course. But I was<lb/>
silly enough to go all the wav to<lb/>
Raleigh to witness a 39 point<lb/>
blow-out when I could have<lb/>
stayed here in Greenville and<lb/>
seen the same thing.<lb/>
The game itself was an outright<lb/>
joke and hardly worth reporting<lb/>
anything else about. It was well<lb/>
over before the third quarter was<lb/>
even finished. State had run up<lb/>
the score to 38-3 by that point and<lb/>
most people began exiting to<lb/>
avoid the oncoming rain.<lb/>
Out of all this some questions<lb/>
from the past arose once more.<lb/>
Do we really want them to go to<lb/>
hell? And if we really look like<lb/>
shit to them should we even at-<lb/>
tempt to not try and pick on a<lb/>
State student next time the op-<lb/>
portunity arises? Should the se-<lb/>
ries have been cancelled?<lb/>
The biggest question is whv<lb/>
was there so much hate from both<lb/>
sides? I have attended every<lb/>
game since 1978 and can only<lb/>
recall the 1983 game as one to get<lb/>
uptight about. All theothcrs were<lb/>
over for the most part before the<lb/>
end of the third quarter, regard-<lb/>
less of which team won.<lb/>
In fact, the games themselves<lb/>
are a big blur; what stands out are<lb/>
the scenes that surround the<lb/>
games. In the early years it was<lb/>
mostly just people partying and<lb/>
getting sick from having too<lb/>
much of a good time. Gradually<lb/>
over the years more and more<lb/>
fights were breaking out, and the<lb/>
rivalry was getting deeper in in-<lb/>
tensity.<lb/>
The only exception to all this<lb/>
was the game in 1980 which was<lb/>
plaved in the afternoon in No-<lb/>
vember. It came down to what<lb/>
football was intended to be. Fun<lb/>
competition with very little un-<lb/>
necessary occurrences, and the<lb/>
game being in control of the play-<lb/>
ers and coaches didn't care what<lb/>
the fans did.<lb/>
So both sides point the fingers<lb/>
at each other while teams like<lb/>
Tennessee Tech and Western<lb/>
first and second games. We've<lb/>
got a lot of correcting to do, but Carolina have the grand oppor-<lb/>
not serious corrections.<lb/>
He said the Gamecocks still<lb/>
need to improve their running<lb/>
game. South Carolina netted 166<lb/>
yards on the ground against<lb/>
North Carolina, but Morrison<lb/>
said Green made much of his 100<lb/>
yards on his own.<lb/>
"We need to improve our run<lb/>
blocking the coach said.<lb/>
tunity to play first class 1 -A oppo-<lb/>
nents. Why doesn't one side quit<lb/>
whining because that is all any-<lb/>
one has done since last year and<lb/>
admit to being at least partially at<lb/>
fault. Only then will something<lb/>
be done about the game being<lb/>
reinstated. Incidently, since both<lb/>
teams won by a margin of 39 Sat-<lb/>
urday, this year could be de-<lb/>
clared a tie.<lb/>
Cornell selects new coach<lb/>
? COKNFILNFWSRHF.ASE- LoeTalbot,<lb/>
, V,formerassistantmen'sbasket-<lb/>
ball coach at ECU, has been<lb/>
? named to the same position at<lb/>
Cornell University.<lb/>
Talbot, along with George<lb/>
Dorfman, fills the assistant posi-<lb/>
y tions vacated by Al Walker, cur-<lb/>
it rently head coach at Colorado<lb/>
1 College, and Steve Robinson,<lb/>
 currently serving as an assistant<lb/>
e at the University of Kansas.<lb/>
k "I'm extremely delighted to<lb/>
? have Lee join us said Cornell<lb/>
head coach Mike Dement. "I've<lb/>
worked with him before, which<lb/>
will ease the transition, and his<lb/>
record as a head coach speaks for<lb/>
itself. His teaching ability will<lb/>
also be beneficial to our young<lb/>
squad<lb/>
Talbot is a 1973 graduate of St.<lb/>
Lawrence University, with a<lb/>
bachelor's degree in physical<lb/>
education. He served asagradu<lb/>
ate assistant at SLU from 1973-76<lb/>
and earned his masters of educa-<lb/>
tion degree in 1974.<lb/>
He went overseas in 1976 to<lb/>
work with the Saudi Arabian<lb/>
national basketball team tor two<lb/>
years, before returning to his<lb/>
alma mater in 1978 as head base-<lb/>
ball and assistant basketball<lb/>
coach, where he worked with for-<lb/>
mer Navy and current Pitt coach<lb/>
Paul Evans.<lb/>
Talbot was elevated to the<lb/>
head post in basketball at St.<lb/>
Iwrence in 1980, and his teams<lb/>
posted an overall record of 82-49,<lb/>
including three league champi-<lb/>
onships and two invitations to<lb/>
the NCAA Division III tourna-<lb/>
ment. His clubs consistently<lb/>
ranked in the top 10 nationally in<lb/>
field goal percentage offense and<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
He joined the staff at East<lb/>
Carolina University in 1985 as an<lb/>
assistant, coordinating all re-<lb/>
cruiting, scouting, scheduling,<lb/>
travel and many of the day-to-<lb/>
day operations of the Pirate<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
Talbot left ECU in 1987 to take<lb/>
a position as an investment ex-<lb/>
ecutive with Paine Webber in<lb/>
Baltimore before returning to<lb/>
coaching.<lb/>
actual games, he won't miss all<lb/>
the time football consume. He<lb/>
goes to class from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00<lb/>
p.m. He has lunch from 1:00 p.m.<lb/>
to 1:30 p.m gets dressed from<lb/>
130 to 2:30 and has meetings<lb/>
from 2:30 to 3.00. From 3:15 to<lb/>
6:15 they practice and then watch<lb/>
films from 6:30 to 7:00. Moody<lb/>
said he will not miss the bumps,<lb/>
the bruises, or the summer prac-<lb/>
tices, but he will miss those Satur-<lb/>
day afternoon games with all the<lb/>
fans.<lb/>
Women's Volleyball<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Staff H'nVr<lb/>
Season openers can bring many<lb/>
surprises. For first-year ECU<lb/>
Volleyball coach, Judy Kirkpa-<lb/>
tnck, Tuesday night's opening<lb/>
match was a pleasant surprise as<lb/>
ECU defeated Atlantic Christian<lb/>
3-2.<lb/>
"We did things so well tonight.<lb/>
Our offense was in full swing<lb/>
from the start and we were able to<lb/>
trv out a lot of things we've<lb/>
learned during'pre-season said<lb/>
Kirkpatrick, who took her first<lb/>
win at ECU in the victory at<lb/>
Minges.<lb/>
Things didn't look so good for<lb/>
t' e Lady Pirates at the beginning<lb/>
as Atlantic Christian defeated<lb/>
them 11-15 in the first game.<lb/>
Atlantic Christian was a much<lb/>
stronger team than we expected,<lb/>
so the first game took us by sur-<lb/>
prise. But I think the loss took<lb/>
some pressure off the team so<lb/>
they could settle down and play<lb/>
said Kirkpatnck.<lb/>
ECU rebounded from its first<lb/>
lose bv taking the second game<lb/>
15-13. The match tested both<lb/>
teams as control ot the game<lb/>
bounced from team to team.<lb/>
The 1 ady Pirates gained mo-<lb/>
mentum of the second game from<lb/>
plays like a spike from junior<lb/>
outside hitter lemma Hollev.<lb/>
Hollev's sp'ke "division-one<lb/>
vollevball at its finest" according<lb/>
to her coach, was just one of many<lb/>
offensive boosts for ECU.<lb/>
Kirkpatrick credits the team for<lb/>
its tremendous offensive effort<lb/>
One such effort came from jun-<lb/>
ior setter Kerry Weisbrod, whose<lb/>
experience showed as she took<lb/>
control in running the offense<lb/>
The third game did not o as<lb/>
well for the Idv Pirates as ACC<lb/>
won 8-15.<lb/>
Determined not to let the effort<lb/>
go to waste, ECU went on to a 15-<lb/>
12 win in the fourth game and a<lb/>
15-3 wm in the fifth game to cap-<lb/>
ture the match<lb/>
"Our team was m complete<lb/>
control by the final game Every-<lb/>
one was  the offense said<lb/>
kirkpatrick<lb/>
ECl plivinc without sen r<lb/>
i Vbbie Late be ius -t an in<lb/>
also saw exceptional pi iv in b -<lb/>
up setter Kc lle M il  i<lb/>
I i Iped pace the Pirates in<lb/>
and passing<lb/>
Kirkpatrick was<lb/>
with th ? play of Mid<lb/>
'?? ir I : ra  Si I<lb/>
U continue ? -? i<lb/>
this weekend as u travels to the<lb/>
Ml Carolina Classic in Chapel<lb/>
Hill. The Lady Pirates will face<lb/>
Davidson on Friday, and the<lb/>
Tarheels and Appalachian<lb/>
or Saturday<lb/>
ECU returns to action at home,<lb/>
Wednesday, September 14 as<lb/>
they host Campbell Univi<lb/>
7:00 at Minges Coliseum<lb/>
The ECU women's volleyball team captured a win this weekend<lb/>
to start the season on the right foot. (File Photo).<lb/>
Cross Country runs<lb/>
By MIKE McGEHEE<lb/>
Com pondent<lb/>
Methodist College held the first<lb/>
Cross-Country relay invitational<lb/>
over Labor Day weekend and<lb/>
East Carolina came back from it<lb/>
smiling. The women took second<lb/>
place, finishing just behind<lb/>
Winthrop. The women's race had<lb/>
each relay team consisting of two<lb/>
runners who ran three miles each.<lb/>
The relay team of Kim Griffiths<lb/>
and Ann Marie Welch won the<lb/>
overall meet at 37.56. Freshman<lb/>
Ann Marie Welch's cumulative<lb/>
time made her ECU's top finisher<lb/>
and overall invitational winner.<lb/>
Other fine performances came<lb/>
from Wilson and Sweeney (7th,<lb/>
41.13), Tillson and Hough (10,<lb/>
42.11). The last two relay teams<lb/>
TalmadgeDaniels and McCall<lb/>
West looked good and gave the<lb/>
team depth. Both the women nd<lb/>
men lacked depth last ve ir that is<lb/>
not a problem this year Both<lb/>
Griffiths and Welch said " V e . re<lb/>
happy the first meet is over and<lb/>
we're looking forward to a chal-<lb/>
lenging and rewarding season<lb/>
The Pirate men placed fifth and<lb/>
leading the way for the Pirates<lb/>
was the relay team o( Matt<lb/>
Schweitzer and Vince Wilson(25,<lb/>
107), and MeadorGarriss (28,<lb/>
1 10). The men ran in pairs, each<lb/>
running six miles. Mike Curtus<lb/>
and Alan Burne didn't officially<lb/>
run, but will bring much needed<lb/>
depth to the program.<lb/>
Coaches Welburn and Craib<lb/>
were pleased with the times and<lb/>
excited about a season that is<lb/>
looking brighter every mile. The<lb/>
next meet will take ECU to the<lb/>
Pembroke Invitational.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0017"/><lb/>
14 THE FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8,1988<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Chapman expected to sign soon<lb/>
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP)-<lb/>
Winston Cup points leader Bill<lb/>
Elliot held off Rusty Wallace over<lb/>
the final 32 laps on Sunday to win<lb/>
the Southern 500 NASCAR race<lb/>
at Darlington International Race-<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Elliott passed Mike Alexander<lb/>
on lap 331 after the event's final<lb/>
caution period and then stayed<lb/>
just ahead of Wallace to win his<lb/>
fifth race of the year - the most of<lb/>
any driver on the circuit.<lb/>
LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP) -<lb/>
Emerson Fittipaldi moved past<lb/>
Mario Andretti 24 laps from the<lb/>
end Sunday to win the Escort 200<lb/>
Indy-car race at Mid-Ohio Sports<lb/>
Car Course.<lb/>
Fittipaldi lost the lead to An-<lb/>
dretti when the latter took advan-<lb/>
tage of the only full-course cau-<lb/>
tion flag in the 84-lap, 200.5-mile<lb/>
race, but easily won the battle of<lb/>
former Formula One champions.<lb/>
The 41-year-old Brazilian<lb/>
picked up the fifth victory of his<lb/>
five-year Indy-car career and his<lb/>
first of the season, beating An-<lb/>
dretti to the finish line by 7.7 sec-<lb/>
onds.<lb/>
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) -<lb/>
Harry Gant won his second<lb/>
straight Grand National Gator-<lb/>
ade 200 race Saturday at Darling-<lb/>
ton International Raceway and<lb/>
became the 17th different winner<lb/>
on the circuit in 24 races this sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Gant, of Taylorsville, N.C<lb/>
dominated the race from start to<lb/>
finish. He started second on the<lb/>
starting grid and passed pole-sit-<lb/>
ter Geoff Bodine on the sixth lap<lb/>
entering turn three.<lb/>
Bodine finished second. Mi-<lb/>
chael Waltrip, subbing for<lb/>
brother Darrell, finished third,<lb/>
followed by Davey Allison and<lb/>
Moroan Shepherd.<lb/>
MOSCOW (AP) - Soviets who<lb/>
win medals at the Seoul Olym-<lb/>
pics not only will come home<lb/>
with their awards, but also will be<lb/>
paid the equivalent of up to<lb/>
$19,000 for their winning per-<lb/>
formance, the head of the Soviet<lb/>
Olympic Committee said Mon-<lb/>
day. Marat Gramov, speaking at<lb/>
a news conference, denied such<lb/>
payments conflict with the<lb/>
purely amateur status that Soviet<lb/>
athletes purportedly possess.<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) Former<lb/>
Kentucky star Rex Chapman<lb/>
probably will sign a contract with<lb/>
the Charlotte Hornets in the next<lb/>
month or so, General Manager<lb/>
Carl Scheer says.<lb/>
The new NBA team chose<lb/>
Chapman in the eighth pick in the<lb/>
NBA's college draft on June 28.<lb/>
Last Wednesday, Scheer held his<lb/>
first serious contract discussions<lb/>
with Chapman's Washington,<lb/>
D.C. attorney, David Falk.<lb/>
In the interim, Chapman<lb/>
could have been getting valuable<lb/>
tutoring from his future coaches.<lb/>
Instead he has remained in Ken-<lb/>
tucky.<lb/>
Scheer concedes that the final<lb/>
haggling over Chapman's salary<lb/>
will likely take no more than an<lb/>
hour, and that the parameters for<lb/>
his pay - between $600,000 and<lb/>
$800,000 a year - were set almost<lb/>
from the day he signed.<lb/>
"It's just a style, a sense of<lb/>
timing, a way of doing business<lb/>
Scheer said. "After so many<lb/>
years, you learn it. It may not<lb/>
always be the best way, but that's<lb/>
the way it is<lb/>
On the surface, the system and<lb/>
its generally protracted nature<lb/>
don't seem so odd.<lb/>
But the reality of the situation<lb/>
is that the compensatorv worth of<lb/>
the players is fixed by unofficial<lb/>
salary scales. Most players are<lb/>
paid roughly the same amount as<lb/>
any other comparable player.<lb/>
And the months of debate that<lb/>
sometimes precede a signing<lb/>
consist largely of rhetoric.<lb/>
Scheer said it's a matter of<lb/>
knowing who you're dealing<lb/>
with more than dealing with a<lb/>
friend or an enemy.<lb/>
"It's almost like scouting a<lb/>
team he said. "You need to<lb/>
know their strengths and weak-<lb/>
nesses and how they like to do<lb/>
things. The situations are all dif-<lb/>
ferent. Sometimes you need to sit<lb/>
back. Other times it pays to be<lb/>
aggressive<lb/>
Scheer carefully plots his ne-<lb/>
gotiating strategies, choosing his<lb/>
ammunition and the manner in<lb/>
which it will be fired.<lb/>
"I never go into any negotia-<lb/>
tions without at least half a day<lb/>
spent planning what I'm going to<lb/>
say, how I'm going to say it he<lb/>
said. "There's no one way, so you<lb/>
have to prepare<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Astros break Red's win streak<lb/>
(AP)- Nerves proved more of<lb/>
an obstacle for Bob Forsch in his<lb/>
first appearance as a Houston<lb/>
Astro than the Cincinnati Reds.<lb/>
Forsch allowed five hits in<lb/>
eight innings and hit a three-run<lb/>
double as the Astros defeated<lb/>
Cincinnati 3-0 Monday night,<lb/>
snapping the Reds' five-game<lb/>
winning streak.<lb/>
Forsch, 38, broke into the ma-<lb/>
jor leagues with St. Louis in 1974<lb/>
and remained a Cardinal until<lb/>
last Wednesday when he was<lb/>
traded to the Astros for utili-<lb/>
tyman Denny Walling.<lb/>
"I remember my first start<lb/>
(ever), it was against Cincinnati<lb/>
when they were the Big Red Ma-<lb/>
chine. 1 was just as nervous start-<lb/>
ing this game. It was deja vu<lb/>
Forsch said.<lb/>
Reds rookie starter Norm<lb/>
Charlton, 1-3, hit Glenn Davis<lb/>
with a pitch leading off the fifth<lb/>
and Buddy Bell singled. After a<lb/>
sacrifice by Billy Hatcher ad-<lb/>
vanced the runners, Rafael<lb/>
Ramirez was intentionally<lb/>
walked to load the bases.<lb/>
Alex Trevino flied to shallow<lb/>
center for the second out, but<lb/>
Forsch followed with a double to<lb/>
center field that cleared the bases.<lb/>
Forsch is 8-for-27 (.296) this<lb/>
season with five runs batted in.<lb/>
Green wins<lb/>
in golf final<lb/>
OAKVILLE, Ontario (AP) -<lb/>
Ken Green was standing in the<lb/>
18th fairway, his hand resting on<lb/>
a 1-iron in his bag, watching and<lb/>
waiting.<lb/>
He was watching Scott Ver-<lb/>
plank, on the green ahead, lining<lb/>
up a 20-foot birdie putt that could<lb/>
tie the Canadian Open.<lb/>
Green was waiting to make a<lb/>
decision on whether to go for the<lb/>
water-guarded green on the par-<lb/>
5 finishing hole at the Glen Abbey<lb/>
Golf Club.<lb/>
When Verplank's putt mis-<lb/>
sed, Green dropped the 1-iron like<lb/>
a wriggling reptile and grabbed<lb/>
the 8-iron.<lb/>
"If he'd made the putt, I'd<lb/>
have gone for the green. I'm glad<lb/>
he missed it Green said. "If s a<lb/>
lot easier to hit a lay-up8-iron and<lb/>
a wedge than a pure i-iron<lb/>
Green's par at the 72nd hole<lb/>
on Monday gave him a final<lb/>
round of par 72 and a 275 total, 13<lb/>
under par. The one-stroke victory<lb/>
in the rain-delayed tournament<lb/>
was worm $135,000 from the total<lb/>
purse of $750,000 and pushed his<lb/>
year's earnings to a career-high<lb/>
$413,097.<lb/>
Verplank, who tied for second<lb/>
at 276 with Bill Glasson. had a<lb/>
closing 70 and was two under for<lb/>
the seven holes he played Mon-<lb/>
day. Glasson finished off a 67<lb/>
with birdies on the three holes he<lb/>
played.<lb/>
"There are guys that say they<lb/>
want to have to birdie the 18th to<lb/>
win. I'm not one of them. I<lb/>
wanted to have to make par<lb/>
Green said.<lb/>
He did. He laid it up safely,<lb/>
pitched on and two-putted for<lb/>
the title, the third of his career<lb/>
and, he said, the best.<lb/>
He's !86-for-864 (.215) in his ca-<lb/>
reer with 80 RBI.<lb/>
Pitching-wise and hitting-<lb/>
wise, his first game as an Astro<lb/>
was a great game. He pitched an<lb/>
outstanding ball game Houston<lb/>
manager Hal Lanier said. "He's<lb/>
always been a good hitter. If I<lb/>
hadn't had him I would have<lb/>
played the whole inning differ-<lb/>
ently. He started out as a third<lb/>
baseman, and he's a good athlete<lb/>
all the way around<lb/>
Elsewhere in the National<lb/>
League it was Los Angeles 3, At-<lb/>
lanta 0: San Diego 7, San Fran-<lb/>
cisco 4; New York 7, Pittsburgh 5;<lb/>
St. Louis 6, Montreal 2; and in a<lb/>
doubleheader, Chicago beat<lb/>
Philadelphia 14-3 in the first<lb/>
game and the Phillies came back<lb/>
to win the nightcap, 4-3.<lb/>
Dodgers 3, Braves 0<lb/>
Orel Hershiser pitched a four-<lb/>
hitter and won his 19th game as<lb/>
visiting Los Angeles beat Atlanta<lb/>
to snap a three-game losing<lb/>
streak.<lb/>
Hershiser, 19-8, struck out<lb/>
eight and walked one en route to<lb/>
his fourth shutout and fourth<lb/>
straight complete game.<lb/>
Alfredo Griffin singled with<lb/>
one out in the first inning and<lb/>
Rick Mahler, 9-13, hit Kirk Gi-<lb/>
bson with a pitch. Mickey<lb/>
Hatcher then singled to score<lb/>
Griffin and send Gibson to third.<lb/>
When the ball got by James in left<lb/>
field, Gibson scored.<lb/>
Mets 7, Pirates 5<lb/>
New York moved 10 games<lb/>
ahead of second-place Pittsburgh<lb/>
in the East as Mookie Wilson hit a<lb/>
three-run homer in the eighth<lb/>
inning following Lee Mazzilli's<lb/>
tie-breaking sacrifice fly.<lb/>
David Cone, 15-3, pitched<lb/>
seven inninos for his sixth victorv<lb/>
in seven decisions and Darryl<lb/>
Strawberry hit a solo homer run<lb/>
as Mets won for the ninth time in<lb/>
11 games.<lb/>
Padres 7, Giants 4<lb/>
San Diego beat San Francisco<lb/>
at Candlestick Park to improve to<lb/>
67-68 and move above the .500<lb/>
mark for the first time since July<lb/>
19,1986.<lb/>
Eric Show pitched a six-hitter<lb/>
and sparked a five-run fifth in-<lb/>
ning with a single.<lb/>
Cardinals 6, Expos 2<lb/>
Pedro Guerrero hit his first<lb/>
homer as a Cardinal at Busch<lb/>
Stadium and Scott Terry won his<lb/>
fifth straight game as St. Louis de-<lb/>
feated Montreal, snapping the<lb/>
Expos' four-game winning<lb/>
streak. Terry, 7-3, benefited from<lb/>
a four-run fifth inning keyed by<lb/>
three consecutive infield errors.<lb/>
includino two by shortstop Rex<lb/>
Hudler.<lb/>
Guerrero hit a two-run single<lb/>
for the only hit of the Cardinals'<lb/>
four-run fifth and hit his seventh<lb/>
homer in the seventh.<lb/>
Cubs 14, Phillies 3<lb/>
Ricky Jordan's sixth hit of the<lb/>
day, a two-run homer in the sev-<lb/>
enth inning, gave Philadelphia a<lb/>
4-3 victory over Chicago at<lb/>
Wrigley Field and a double-<lb/>
header split.<lb/>
In the first game, rookie center<lb/>
fielder Doug Dascenzo hit a<lb/>
double and RBI single during an<lb/>
eight-run, third inning as the<lb/>
Cubs beat the Phillies 14-3.<lb/>
The Labor Day doubleheader<lb/>
was the result of the rainout of the<lb/>
Cub's first home night game ever<lb/>
on Aug. 8.<lb/>
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ECU at Virginia Tech<lb/>
Southern Miss at Fla si<lb/>
Oklahoma at UNC<lb/>
Air Force at San Diegt<lb/>
Duke at Tennessee<lb/>
Nebraska at UCLA<lb/>
Kentucky at Auburn<lb/>
Alabama at Temple<lb/>
Penn State at Virginia<lb/>
TCU at Georgia<lb/>
Mia<lb/>
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1987 national champ? nsl<lb/>
"We set our .<lb/>
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back Steve Walsh said<lb/>
after the Hurricanes leaj<lb/>
sixth place to the top of<lb/>
following Saturdav nigl<lb/>
pasting o( Florida State<lb/>
had been No. 1.<lb/>
"We got off to a good s<lb/>
we didn't play anywhere<lb/>
good as we can offensive!<lb/>
ida State "held Miamil<lb/>
yards). We want to conl<lb/>
improve each week and<lb/>
ter Walsh said. 'If tl<lb/>
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care of itself<lb/>
Nebraska remained<lb/>
while Florida State ski<lb/>
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Twenty.<lb/>
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Stiff Wn?r<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBERS, 1988 1!<lb/>
GAME<lb/>
BRIAN BAILEY<lb/>
WNCT-TV Sports Director<lb/>
Last Week- (8-2)<lb/>
Overall- (8-2)<lb/>
DEAN BUCHAN<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
Last Week- (7-3)<lb/>
Overall-(7-3)<lb/>
DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Last Week-(7-3)<lb/>
Overall- (7-3)<lb/>
Dr. RICHARD EAKIN<lb/>
ECU Chancellor<lb/>
Last Week- (7-3)<lb/>
Overall- (7-3)<lb/>
CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Last Week-(9-1)<lb/>
Overall-(9-1)<lb/>
EARLVISHAMpftSN<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Last Week- (7-3)<lb/>
Overall- (7-3)<lb/>
ECU at Virginia Tech<lb/>
Southern Miss at Fla. St.<lb/>
Oklahoma at UNC<lb/>
Air Force at San Diego St.<lb/>
Duke at Tennessee<lb/>
Nebraska at UCLA<lb/>
Kentucky at Auburn<lb/>
Alabama at Temple<lb/>
Penn State at Virginia<lb/>
T'CU at Georgia<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
FSU<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
FSU<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
FSU<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
FSU<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
San Diego St.<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
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ECU<lb/>
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Alabama<lb/>
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Georgia<lb/>
Miami taking it one at time<lb/>
Join Doug Johnson every Tuesday and Thursday for the<lb/>
best in Pirate Sports coverage. Only in The East Carolinian.<lb/>
(AP)- The Miami Hurricanes<lb/>
iren't nearly as excited about<lb/>
being No. 1 in this week's Associ-<lb/>
ated Press college football poll as<lb/>
they were when thev won the<lb/>
987 national championship.<lb/>
We set our goals toward<lb/>
team success and working at get-<lb/>
?inj; better each week quarter-<lb/>
pack Steve Walsh said Monday<lb/>
after the Hurricanes leaped from<lb/>
Mth place to the top of the Poll<lb/>
following Saturday night's 31-0<lb/>
pasting oi Florida State, which<lb/>
tad been No. 1.<lb/>
"We got off to a good start, but<lb/>
we didn't play anywhere near as<lb/>
ood as we can offensively (Flor-<lb/>
ida State "held" Miami to 450<lb/>
ards). We want to continue to<lb/>
improve each week and get bet-<lb/>
ter' Walsh said. "If that hap-<lb/>
pens, then all the rankings and all<lb/>
that other recognition will take<lb/>
care of itself<lb/>
Nebraska remained No. 2<lb/>
while Florida State skidded to<lb/>
10th and Texas A&amp;M and Ten-<lb/>
nessee dropped out of the Top<lb/>
Twenty.<lb/>
Miami received 38 of 60 first-<lb/>
place votes and 1,149 of a possible<lb/>
1,200 points from a nationwide<lb/>
panel of sports writers and<lb/>
sportscasters. Nebraska, No. 2 in<lb/>
each of this season's three polls,<lb/>
received 14 first-place votes and<lb/>
1,113 points following a 63-13<lb/>
rout of Utah State.<lb/>
Miami's players apparently<lb/>
have taken their low-key cue<lb/>
from coach jimmy Johnson.<lb/>
"It's really too early in the<lb/>
season for a coach to be con-<lb/>
cerned about the rankings<lb/>
Johnson said. "I wouldn't even<lb/>
address it one way or another. We<lb/>
have a very young team and a lot<lb/>
of difficult games to play- Our<lb/>
only concern right now is going<lb/>
up and playing Michigan (on<lb/>
Sept. 17) in a place that's very<lb/>
difficult to play in. All we've<lb/>
done is win one game<lb/>
Defensive end Bill Hawkins<lb/>
said the Hurricanes "really don't<lb/>
get all that excited about the polls<lb/>
that take place during the season.<lb/>
The only poll that counts is the<lb/>
one on Januarv 2nd and that's a<lb/>
long way off. We're 1-0 and we<lb/>
have a tough road ahead. The<lb/>
game at Michigan is the number<lb/>
one concern for the team right<lb/>
now.<lb/>
Clemson, a 40-7 winner over<lb/>
Virginia Tech, climbed from<lb/>
fourth to third with three first-<lb/>
place votes and 1,003 points.<lb/>
Oklahoma, which opened its sea-<lb/>
son this week at North Carolina,<lb/>
slipped from third to fourth with<lb/>
two first-place votes and 969<lb/>
points.<lb/>
UCLA held onto fifth place by<lb/>
crushing San Diego State 59-6.<lb/>
The Bruins received two first-<lb/>
place votes and 941 points. The<lb/>
other first-place vote went to<lb/>
Southern Cal, which defeated<lb/>
Boston College 34-7 and rose<lb/>
from eighth to sixth with 878<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Auburn, which gets under<lb/>
way this week against Kentucky,<lb/>
remained seventh with 768<lb/>
points while Georgia jumped<lb/>
from 12th to eighth with 703<lb/>
points after beating Tennessee<lb/>
Club for Scuba divers<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If you are a scuba diver or just<lb/>
love to skin dive and be social,<lb/>
here is a club on campus that<lb/>
caters to your needs. The ECU<lb/>
Coral Reef Dive Club, under the<lb/>
direction of president David<lb/>
Angel, is a campus organization<lb/>
that centers around one interest,<lb/>
CUBA diveng.<lb/>
"Our main purpose here at East<lb/>
Carolina is to promote safe and<lb/>
enjoyable diving Angel said.<lb/>
Founded in i986 by former<lb/>
HCU students Wade Bunting,<lb/>
Butch Varker, and Clint Charles,<lb/>
the club stresses safety and<lb/>
makes sure the newer, less expe-<lb/>
nenced divers are "buddied up"<lb/>
with the more advanced divers.<lb/>
"We have a wide range of expe-<lb/>
rience in the club Angel said.<lb/>
There are dive instructors, assis-<lb/>
tant dive instructors and dive<lb/>
masters as well as beginning<lb/>
Open Water I divers.<lb/>
While diving may be the key<lb/>
interest, Angel stressed that the<lb/>
dive club is as much a social club<lb/>
as a dive club.<lb/>
"For every dive we do, we have<lb/>
a party afterwards<lb/>
The membership of the dive<lb/>
club extends to twenty active<lb/>
members but Angel hopes to get<lb/>
more people involved.<lb/>
"The more people we gave, the<lb/>
more we can do. So many stu-<lb/>
dents go through the SCUBA<lb/>
class at ECU and never keep up<lb/>
with the sport. But if there are<lb/>
enough people to participate in<lb/>
fundraisers, enough money can<lb/>
be raised to pay for things like<lb/>
charters and transportation<lb/>
Fundraisers include having car<lb/>
washes, selling t-shirts and<lb/>
selling hot dogs on Barefoot on<lb/>
the Mall.<lb/>
Assisting Angel in club respon-<lb/>
sibilities are vice president Rob<lb/>
Moore, treasurer Sue Cochran<lb/>
and secretary Heather Barfield.<lb/>
The club dives in many areas<lb/>
including many parts of Florida,<lb/>
and at sites off the North Carolina<lb/>
coast.<lb/>
"We've chartered many boats<lb/>
off the coast of North Carolina<lb/>
and we've been diving in many<lb/>
parts of Florida such as Blue<lb/>
Springs, Fort Lauderdale, Key<lb/>
Largo and Key West Angel<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"North Carolina is a great state<lb/>
to dive in because there are many<lb/>
tropicals, wrecks and history<lb/>
here. And besides Florida, the<lb/>
Gulf Stream comes closest here so<lb/>
the water is basically clear and<lb/>
warm<lb/>
The club would also like to<lb/>
stress that one does not need to be<lb/>
a diver to join the club. Skin di-<lb/>
vers and basically anyone that<lb/>
enjoys water and the fun that<lb/>
goes along with it is welcome to<lb/>
join.<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/>
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/>
28-17.<lb/>
Michigan moved up from 10th<lb/>
place to ninth with 639 points.<lb/>
The Wolverines open this week at<lb/>
Notre Dame. Florida State<lb/>
rounds out the Top Ten with 600<lb/>
points.<lb/>
The Second Ten consists of<lb/>
LSU, West Virginia, Notre Dame,<lb/>
Alabama, Michigan State, South<lb/>
Carolina, Iowa, Penn State, Texas<lb/>
and Washington. Texas and<lb/>
Washington made the Top<lb/>
Twenty for the first time this sea-<lb/>
son although neither has played a<lb/>
game yet.<lb/>
Last week's Second Ten was<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M, Georgia, Notre<lb/>
Dame, Alabama, Michigan State,<lb/>
West Virginia, LSU, Tennessee,<lb/>
South Carolina and Penn State.<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M fell to 0-2 by los-<lb/>
ing to LSU 27-0 while Tennessee<lb/>
dropped out as a result of its loss<lb/>
to Georgia.<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
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one name in temporary help. Kelly<lb/>
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many of which do not require special<lb/>
skills or experience.<lb/>
?Secretaries<lb/>
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Oil or stop in and let us tell you about our<lb/>
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This Week<lb/>
Dallas Cowboys<lb/>
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12 Price for Ladies<lb/>
WED: Ladies Day - Ladies Play Free All Day<lb/>
TUES: College Day. 1.00HourPerson For College Students<lb/>
Now Completely Remodeled<lb/>
?Including Ladies Bathroom<lb/>
?Fraternity Tournaments Welcomed<lb/>
?Coin Operated Challenge Tables - .50games<lb/>
? New Pool equipment and accessories<lb/>
? Coldest Beer in Town<lb/>
?New Expanded Business Hours<lb/>
Mon. - Wed. 8:00 ajn. -12:00 p.m. Thurs. - Sat 8:00 ajn. -1:00 ajn. Sun. 1:00 p.m. -10:00 p.m.<lb/>
Look For Upcoming Tournaments and Specials<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0019"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
16<lb/>
THE EA'ST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8,1988<lb/>
Red Sox take two in a row on the road<lb/>
(AD- It was a night of firsts for<lb/>
the Boston Red Sox first time in a<lb/>
long time they had won two<lb/>
straight on the road and, more<lb/>
importantly, first time they had<lb/>
undisputed possession of first<lb/>
place in two years.<lb/>
The Red Sox finally got over<lb/>
the hump Monday night with a 4-<lb/>
1 victory at Baltimore while De-<lb/>
troit was losing 5-4 in 10 innings<lb/>
to Toronto. That gave Boston a<lb/>
one-game lead over the Tigers in<lb/>
the sizzling American League<lb/>
East race which also saw the Mil-<lb/>
waukee Brewers and New York<lb/>
Yankees keep pace with victories<lb/>
on Monday.<lb/>
"Now we don't have to score-<lb/>
board watch as much Marty<lb/>
Barrett said after the Red Sox took<lb/>
over first place alone for the first<lb/>
time since 1986, when they won<lb/>
the AL pennant.<lb/>
Hanging tough just behind<lb/>
the 1-2 teams in the AL East were<lb/>
the Yankees and Brewers, who<lb/>
remained virtually tied for third,<lb/>
four games out. The Yankees<lb/>
were one percentage point ahead<lb/>
of the Brewers after their 7-2 vic-<lb/>
tory over Cleveland on Monday.<lb/>
The surprising Brewers, mean-<lb/>
while, beat Chicago 5-2 for their<lb/>
seventh straight victory.<lb/>
Elsewhere, it was Oakland 11,<lb/>
Texas 4: California 4, Kansas City<lb/>
2, and Minnesota 2, Seattle 0.<lb/>
Dwight Evans knocked in<lb/>
three runs, two with a homer, and<lb/>
Larry Parrish homered for the<lb/>
fourth time in five games to lead<lb/>
the Red Sox. The slugging of the<lb/>
pair helped Mike Smithson win<lb/>
his first game since July 23.<lb/>
The victory marked the first<lb/>
time since June 21 that the Red<lb/>
Sox won back-to-back games on<lb/>
the road. Boston, now 31 -38 away<lb/>
from Fenwav Park this year, de-<lb/>
feated California 6-5 Sunday in<lb/>
Anaheim. Blue Jays 5, Tigers 4<lb/>
Ernie Whitt homered leading<lb/>
off the 10th inning to power<lb/>
Toronto over Detroit at Tiger<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
Yankees 7, Indians 2<lb/>
Don Mattingly singled home<lb/>
theo-ahead run and Ken Phelps<lb/>
King wins by<lb/>
two strokes<lb/>
SPRINGFIELD, 111. (AP) - A<lb/>
two-stroke lead didn't look like<lb/>
much to Betsy King, who had it,<lb/>
or to Margaret Ward, who was<lb/>
trying to overcome it.<lb/>
But that turned out to be<lb/>
enough Monday to give King her<lb/>
third career victory and a $37,500<lb/>
winner's check in the $250,000<lb/>
LPGA Rail Classic at the Rail Golf<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
She endured a late surge by<lb/>
Ward to win the tournament with<lb/>
a final round of 1-under-par 71,<lb/>
giving her a 9-under-par total of<lb/>
207 for 54 holes on the wind-<lb/>
blown 6,403-yard course.<lb/>
King started Monday's final<lb/>
round with that two-stroke edge<lb/>
and led by as many as five shots in<lb/>
the early going. But her own<lb/>
miscues and birdies by Ward on<lb/>
the 14th and 16th made it close<lb/>
before Ward bogeyed the 17th<lb/>
and sealed King's victory.<lb/>
"I felt like I had a lot of chances<lb/>
to put it away, but I never really<lb/>
did King said.<lb/>
King's round wasn't up to the<lb/>
standard of the final-round 63<lb/>
that helped her win the 1986 Rail<lb/>
title. Her front nine was erratic,<lb/>
with three birdies and two bo-<lb/>
geys, but she said that this year as<lb/>
the leader she was playing a de-<lb/>
fensive game.<lb/>
Monday's victory was King's<lb/>
second of the season along with<lb/>
the Kemper Open in March, and<lb/>
it lifted her into the No. 9 spot on<lb/>
the LPGA earnings list, with<lb/>
$201,994.<lb/>
Ward said she had been play-<lb/>
ing for second place much of the<lb/>
day because of King's command-<lb/>
ing leads.<lb/>
"I really didn't start playing<lb/>
for first until I made thatbirdieon<lb/>
16 Ward said. "I thought I had a<lb/>
shot at it. I knew Betsy didn't like<lb/>
17 where she took a bogey 6 on<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
This time, though, it was<lb/>
Ward who took the bogey after<lb/>
missing a 4-foot putt. She<lb/>
matched King's 71 for the final<lb/>
round but was two shots behind<lb/>
for the tournament earnings sec-<lb/>
ond-place money of $23,125.<lb/>
Both leaders said they spent<lb/>
much o the day trying to out-<lb/>
guess a shifting wind that gusted<lb/>
to as much as 25 mph over the<lb/>
relatively flat, wide-open Rail<lb/>
course. Only one player in<lb/>
Monday's field of 83 broke 70.<lb/>
hit a three-run homer as New<lb/>
York scored six times in the<lb/>
eighth inning to beat Cleveland.<lb/>
Tom Candiotti held the Yan-<lb/>
kees to one run on five hits for<lb/>
seven innings before Don Gor-<lb/>
don, 2-3, relieved to start the<lb/>
eighth. Mattingly and Dave<lb/>
Winfield hit RBI singles off Scott<lb/>
Bailes and Phelps hit his 21st<lb/>
homer against Jeff Dedmon.<lb/>
Brewers 5, White Sox 2<lb/>
Paul Molitor hit a leadoff<lb/>
home run in the bottom of the<lb/>
first inning, sending Milwaukee<lb/>
over Chicago.<lb/>
Rookie Don August, 9-6, al-<lb/>
lowed six hits and left the game<lb/>
after Carl ton Fisk's leadoff homer<lb/>
in the ninth. Juan Nieves relieved<lb/>
for his first career save.<lb/>
A's 11, Rangers 4<lb/>
Storm Davis won his 10th<lb/>
straight game and Mark<lb/>
McGwire, Jose Canseco and Dave<lb/>
Henderson homered to lead a 15-<lb/>
hit attack for Oakland.<lb/>
Oakland won for the eighth<lb/>
time in its last 10 games and low-<lb/>
ered its magic number to 16. Any<lb/>
combination of A's victories and<lb/>
Minnesota Twins' defeats<lb/>
equalling 16 will give the A's the<lb/>
AL West title.<lb/>
With their sixth consecutive<lb/>
defeat, the Rangers were mathe-<lb/>
matically eliminated from the AL<lb/>
West race.<lb/>
Angels 4, Royals 2<lb/>
Wally Joyner doubled home<lb/>
the tying run in the eighth inning,<lb/>
then scored the game-winner on<lb/>
an error by right fielder Bo<lb/>
Jackson as California beat Kansas<lb/>
City.<lb/>
Charlie Leibrandt, 10-12,<lb/>
walked Brian Downing with two<lb/>
outs in the eighth before Joyner<lb/>
doubled home pinch-runner<lb/>
Mark McLemore to tie the game<lb/>
at 2-2.<lb/>
The winner was Willie Fraser,<lb/>
11-10.<lb/>
Twins 2, Mariners 0<lb/>
Frank Viola won his major<lb/>
league-leading 21st game and<lb/>
John Moses' run-scoring single<lb/>
broke a scoreless tie in the eighth<lb/>
inning as Minnesota defeated<lb/>
visiting Seattle.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
? , , ? ?<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
14<lb/>
MM<lb/>
5JOR<lb/>
 I?ulV jl<lb/>
LOOKING<lb/>
For an exciting and<lb/>
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WANT.<lb/>
CONSIDER<lb/>
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health departments, reha-<lb/>
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MATORING IN:<lb/>
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MINORING IN: "SLAP"<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THE<lb/>
PRE-PROFESSIONAL B.S.<lb/>
DEGREE CONTACT:<lb/>
Robert A. Muzzarelli, Chairman<lb/>
Department of Speech-Language &amp; Audi-<lb/>
tory Pathology 757-6961<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences<lb/>
<pb facs="00058091_0020"/><lb/>
rCTT?<lb/>
CLASSC<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058091_0021"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>