<?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="00058092_0001"/>
Coming Thursday:<lb/>
fudge Robert Orr campaigns in Greenville. ECU'S<lb/>
nursing school is under fire for low test scores.<lb/>
'eatures:<lb/>
The Ayden Collard Festival has turned Earlvis into a<lb/>
lover of the leaves.<lb/>
Sports:<lb/>
The Pirates take it on the chin from the Hokies 27-16.<lb/>
Also, a regional college wrap up.<lb/>
i&amp;hz iEaat (ftaroltman<lb/>
Sewing the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. b3 No. 18<lb/>
Tuesday, September 13,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
18 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Student property owners should show respect<lb/>
By TOM PAGE<lb/>
MilT V nttr<lb/>
Each year many ECU students<lb/>
choose to live in various off-cam-<lb/>
pus housing.<lb/>
There are over 4(1 apartment<lb/>
complexes in the arc. and also<lb/>
various rooms and homes for<lb/>
rent.<lb/>
When students decide to mine<lb/>
oii campus and abandon dorm<lb/>
life, they must also be conscious of<lb/>
the fact that they are citizens of<lb/>
Greenville and are responsible for<lb/>
their actions that may affect their<lb/>
neighbors, according to detective<lb/>
Doug Jackson, of the Greenville<lb/>
police department.<lb/>
Jackson stated that one of the<lb/>
biggest problems off-hand is the<lb/>
iack ol respect given to neighbors<lb/>
bv many of the college students in<lb/>
their neighborhoods.<lb/>
"Not all, but many students<lb/>
fail torealize they are residents of<lb/>
Greenville and should act as such.<lb/>
Many students think they are just<lb/>
temporary residents and can do<lb/>
whatever they want, but that is<lb/>
not the case he said.<lb/>
lackson said much of the time<lb/>
parties are the disruptive factor in<lb/>
many of the complaints.<lb/>
Some other common com-<lb/>
plaints received bv the police<lb/>
department pertaining to the area<lb/>
around the university are:<lb/>
- More than 3 unrelated people<lb/>
living in a single familv dwelling.<lb/>
Violation of Greenville Zoning<lb/>
Ordinance Section 32-3.<lb/>
- "Dogs running at large Vio-<lb/>
lation Citv Code Section 12-2-39<lb/>
- Loud noises or music. Viola-<lb/>
tion City Code Section 12-5-1<lb/>
- Speeding on the streets ? Vio-<lb/>
lation City Code Section 10-2-141.<lb/>
Parking tickets andor towing<lb/>
will be issued for the following<lb/>
violations:<lb/>
1-on a sidewalk<lb/>
2-in front of a public or<lb/>
private driveway<lb/>
3-within 15 feet of a fire<lb/>
hydrant<lb/>
4-on a crosswalk<lb/>
5-within 10 feet of an in-<lb/>
tersection<lb/>
6-parked left to curb<lb/>
7-no parking zones<lb/>
marked with signs or yellow<lb/>
curbs<lb/>
8-a controlled residential<lb/>
parking area designated as "A"<lb/>
parking<lb/>
9-double parking<lb/>
10-bus stops<lb/>
These are all violations of city<lb/>
ordinance codes and carry penal-<lb/>
ties which many students are not<lb/>
aware of or may not take seri-<lb/>
ously. Some students do not real-<lb/>
ize that there is even a problem.<lb/>
"I never really thought of<lb/>
myself as a citizen of Greenville,<lb/>
but I guess when it comes down to<lb/>
it 1 am. 1 didn't know there was<lb/>
that much of a problem. It seems<lb/>
like it's all students in the area<lb/>
anyway said one student resi-<lb/>
dent of a nearby apartment com-<lb/>
plex.<lb/>
1 he neighbors in the sur-<lb/>
rounding area see things a little<lb/>
differently.<lb/>
One man on lewis St. ex-<lb/>
pressed, "It's not so much the<lb/>
parties as it is the parking prob-<lb/>
lem. On the weekdays they take<lb/>
my spaces and if thev ha e parties<lb/>
on the weekend they take my<lb/>
spaces, not to mention leave a<lb/>
mess sometimes. After communi-<lb/>
cation tails, you have to call the<lb/>
police. Which is something neigh-<lb/>
bors shouldn't have to do<lb/>
According to Detective<lb/>
lackson, the "Good Neighbor<lb/>
Policy" is the best way to get to<lb/>
enjoy off-campus experience for<lb/>
everyone involved. Jackson said<lb/>
students should be aware ot the<lb/>
ordinances listed above which<lb/>
may affect them. Many of the<lb/>
complaints could be cut down in<lb/>
regards to the parties if students<lb/>
would tell neighbors ahead of<lb/>
time when they plan to have a<lb/>
part v.<lb/>
"It comes down to the fact that<lb/>
student or non-student, v.<lb/>
citizens of the same city and<lb/>
should respect each other as<lb/>
as respect the city ordinance, "he<lb/>
s.iid.<lb/>
lackson works jn conjunction<lb/>
with many m . rhood im-<lb/>
provement programs such as<lb/>
Crime Stoppers and The Tar F<lb/>
Neighborhood Association<lb/>
SGA plans for improvement<lb/>
IU MICHAEL LEWIS<lb/>
The plan ot" action for this<lb/>
vear's Student Government Asso-<lb/>
ciation is to better the ECU cam-<lb/>
pus, while it motivates and helps<lb/>
the student body.<lb/>
"No problem too big or person<lb/>
too small, tell us what's happen-<lb/>
ing, and we'll get involved said<lb/>
SGA President Larry Murphy.<lb/>
This is the attitude the SGA has<lb/>
taken on for the Fall year of 1988.<lb/>
The SGA has taken affirmative<lb/>
action towards improving in-<lb/>
volvement, school spirit, campus<lb/>
interaction and student facilities.<lb/>
According to Murphy a major<lb/>
focus oi the SGA is to improve<lb/>
minority involvement.<lb/>
Murphv said, "one ot the mam<lb/>
goals oi the SGA this year is to<lb/>
promote more minoritv involve-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
The SGA plans to do this with<lb/>
the help of MSO (Minority Stu-<lb/>
dent Organization). MSO Presi-<lb/>
dent Greg Thompson and Direc-<lb/>
tor )oe Singleton will both play<lb/>
crucial roles in this plan.<lb/>
"We hope to improve race rela-<lb/>
tions and encourage more partici-<lb/>
pation among minority students,<lb/>
said Thompson<lb/>
"School spirit, is another con-<lb/>
cern of the SGA said Treasurer,<lb/>
Tripp Rouges.<lb/>
"We hope to promote ECU's<lb/>
name and be rccognzied for being<lb/>
more than just a party school he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
To boost morale, th SGA plans<lb/>
to stir up competing a between<lb/>
fraternities, dorms, and other stu-<lb/>
dent organizations. Prizes will be<lb/>
awarded to the dorm, fraternity<lb/>
or organization that has the larg-<lb/>
est attendance at the home games.<lb/>
"Leaders meetings tech-<lb/>
niques similar to the one North<lb/>
Carolina State University uses,<lb/>
will be conducted by the SGA<lb/>
with intent to promote more<lb/>
campus involvement.<lb/>
The bG A has started a newslet-<lb/>
ter campaign which will be sent to<lb/>
most campus organizations.<lb/>
These letters will inform the or-<lb/>
ganizations about what's going<lb/>
on on campus and activities pro-<lb/>
posed by the SGA. By doing this,<lb/>
the SGA hopes to encourage or-<lb/>
ganizations to work with them in<lb/>
making better programs for stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
Work petition polls were con-<lb/>
ducted this summer for handicap<lb/>
students. The questionaire was<lb/>
concerned with problems of<lb/>
handicap students such as regis-<lb/>
tration. The main question was<lb/>
whether or not students would<lb/>
mind handicap students having<lb/>
priority during class registration.<lb/>
Other concerns of the SGA this<lb/>
year are better student recrea-<lb/>
tional facilities, parking and Pi-<lb/>
rate Walk.<lb/>
Most of the programs have al-<lb/>
ready been put into effect, but<lb/>
some are scheduled for later in<lb/>
the semester.<lb/>
vandals struck campus Saturday night. Another job that FCU Maintenance should not have to<lb/>
waste time repairing (Photo by David Paris Ian, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Assault story is questionable<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
On Tuesday, September 6, The<lb/>
East Carolinian ran a story stating<lb/>
that a Lawrence 1 olo, a Kenyan<lb/>
and a pre-enginecring student<lb/>
was assaulted and sustained<lb/>
$6,(XY) in injuries.<lb/>
Foreign Student Advisor Dr.<lb/>
Lucv Wright brought it to the at-<lb/>
tention oi The East Carolinian that<lb/>
there is no one enrolled at ECU by<lb/>
that name. She, along with main<lb/>
others requested more informa-<lb/>
tion on Tolo, and the incident.<lb/>
When police reports, school rec-<lb/>
ords and work records concern-<lb/>
ing Tolo were examined more<lb/>
closely, it seems he does not exist.<lb/>
The story reported that Tolo<lb/>
was attacked on Thursday, Sep-<lb/>
tember l,bv four men withan iron<lb/>
bar after he finised his shift at the<lb/>
Fast Fare. The Greenville Police<lb/>
Department nor FCU Campus<lb/>
Security has any record oi an as-<lb/>
sault complaint being filed that<lb/>
night. Also, after contacting all ot<lb/>
the Fast Fare food stores, all of<lb/>
which have no record of Tolo's<lb/>
employment, his identity and<lb/>
whereabouts still remain a mvs<lb/>
Students opt for five years<lb/>
College Hill residents partake in an oversized game of Twister.<lb/>
Just one of the activities SKA has for the students (Photo by<lb/>
Thomas Walters<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
Assistant N?v?i Editor<lb/>
Statistics show that not all stu-<lb/>
dents are finishing college in four<lb/>
years, but are extending their<lb/>
undergraduate studies to at least<lb/>
five years.<lb/>
This one year extension is more<lb/>
popularly known as "the five year<lb/>
plan<lb/>
According to ECU Planning<lb/>
and Institutional Research, ECU<lb/>
had a total of 2,910 seniors, as of<lb/>
the spring semester of this year.<lb/>
Of this number, 1,952 received<lb/>
undergraduate degrees, by the<lb/>
end of the first summer session.<lb/>
The research shows that, the<lb/>
number of minorities that re-<lb/>
ceived degrees out of that 1,952<lb/>
total was 248.<lb/>
There were 199 black students,<lb/>
that graduated, which made up<lb/>
10.2 percent of the total under-<lb/>
graduate class.<lb/>
Other undergraduate students<lb/>
included nine American Indians;<lb/>
12 Asian Pacific Islanders; six<lb/>
Hispanic and 22 non-resident ali-<lb/>
ens (non citizens).<lb/>
William Helton, the director of<lb/>
ECU Planning and Institutional<lb/>
Research stated that the data for<lb/>
this study is gathered over a fiscal<lb/>
year, which is from July 1 to June<lb/>
30.<lb/>
"It is too early to know how<lb/>
many seniors will graduate this<lb/>
fall or how many oi the seniors<lb/>
have tentatively applied tor<lb/>
graduation Helton said.<lb/>
But according to their research<lb/>
there are 2,657 students that are<lb/>
classified as seniors, this<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
He said, "41 percent of students<lb/>
that enrolled at FCU in 1982<lb/>
graduated within five years. Also<lb/>
37.8 percent either transferred to<lb/>
other schools or dropped out of<lb/>
school<lb/>
Helton also found through the<lb/>
study that 12.5 percent of the stu-<lb/>
dents from the same class were<lb/>
academically suspended.<lb/>
Some students find it difficult to<lb/>
graduate in four years because<lb/>
they have done everything from<lb/>
partying too much their freshmen<lb/>
year to changing their major.<lb/>
Kim Day, a senior psychology<lb/>
major stated, "1 came to college<lb/>
my first year thinking that college<lb/>
was all fun, and I'd just get by<lb/>
with the work. Then, I started<lb/>
taking fewer semester hours,<lb/>
which has put me behind. But 1<lb/>
am not in any hurry to get out of<lb/>
school. Even after I get mv under-<lb/>
graduate degree, I want to stay<lb/>
and get a graduate degree<lb/>
Lester Faison, a senior business<lb/>
major said, "I decided to take a<lb/>
different route with my educa-<lb/>
tion. I graduated from high<lb/>
school, and then entered a trans-<lb/>
fer program at Wayne Commu-<lb/>
nity College, in Goldsboro. Even<lb/>
though I did not graduate last<lb/>
May, this was the best approach<lb/>
to college for me<lb/>
Some students believe that tak-<lb/>
ing too many hours might cause<lb/>
them to become overloaded, and<lb/>
result in their not being produc-<lb/>
tive. So, in order to put more<lb/>
emphasis on their studies, they<lb/>
plan their curriculum around five<lb/>
or more years.<lb/>
David Kornegay, a senior crimi-<lb/>
nal justice major stated, " When I<lb/>
first came to college, I did not<lb/>
know exactly what I wanted to<lb/>
major in, so I have changed mv<lb/>
major since being at ECU. Also, I<lb/>
did not want to overload myself<lb/>
with too much of a heavy course<lb/>
load. I decided to spread out my<lb/>
semester hours over a five year<lb/>
period, because I believe that it is<lb/>
the quality of the work, not the<lb/>
quantity of hours<lb/>
tery.<lb/>
Hie reporter who covered the<lb/>
story, Sean Herring, an employee<lb/>
of The Fast Carolinian and K<lb/>
n-Karry said Tolo is a period<lb/>
customer of the store and came in<lb/>
Friday night, September 2 :<lb/>
daged and severly bruised lie:<lb/>
ring said Tolo had hospital re-<lb/>
ports, which cannot be obtained<lb/>
because thev are priviledged in<lb/>
formation, and spoke of the inci-<lb/>
dent without problem.<lb/>
Herring said "Idid not have am<lb/>
reason to believe that he was mis-<lb/>
representing himself. So 1 did rt<lb/>
examine the documents lolo had<lb/>
in his folder. 1 ve seen and chatted<lb/>
with him oft and on tor the lasl<lb/>
two years<lb/>
"I don't doubt that this isn t a<lb/>
real person, but we have no vav<lb/>
of proving this, said Wrigl<lb/>
According to Wright it lolo is<lb/>
here illegally, he would be in vio<lb/>
lation of immigration law s.<lb/>
"We don't want to get him<lb/>
trouble, but we do want to h?<lb/>
him if indeed, he needs it I've<lb/>
people asking me w ho this pers<lb/>
is and to whom could thev con<lb/>
tribute money for the medi<lb/>
bills Wright said.<lb/>
She said "sometimes there are<lb/>
students who trv and take advan<lb/>
tageof the system because ot their<lb/>
status, but we (the university)<lb/>
have no tolerance tor actions like<lb/>
this She added that incidents<lb/>
where a student takes advantage<lb/>
oi the system are very rare<lb/>
"Wedefinitely know he is not a<lb/>
student nor has he ever been a stu<lb/>
dent, at least as long as I ve been<lb/>
here at the university. I would<lb/>
know immediately whether he<lb/>
was a student, faculty or even a<lb/>
resident.<lb/>
"When it comes to registering<lb/>
foreign students the school is verv<lb/>
thorough in checking student vi-<lb/>
sas and things of that nature. If we<lb/>
did register a student who does<lb/>
not have all the correct paper-<lb/>
See TOLO, pace 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0002"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8, 1988<lb/>
Syphilis cases up 38 percent in N. C. cities<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - An alarming<lb/>
increase in syphilis is occurring in<lb/>
North Carolina cities, hitting<lb/>
mostly young blacks and possibly<lb/>
leaving them vulnerable to expo-<lb/>
sure to AIDS, health officials say.<lb/>
The state wide increase began<lb/>
last year, when the number of<lb/>
syphilis cases soared 38 percent<lb/>
over the previous year, increasing<lb/>
to 770 from 558. During the first<lb/>
six months of 1988, the increase<lb/>
has been less steep, about 18 per-<lb/>
cent over 1987.<lb/>
"Most of it is heterosexual<lb/>
)ames W. Prugh of the state's<lb/>
Sexually Transmitted Disease<lb/>
branch told the News and Ob-<lb/>
server of Raleigh. "Certainly the<lb/>
vast majority of cases are in urban<lb/>
areas<lb/>
About 58 percent of the cases<lb/>
occur in males, with an average<lb/>
age of 28, and 42 percent in fe-<lb/>
males, with and average age of 25.<lb/>
About 87 percent of those affected<lb/>
are black, 10 percent white and<lb/>
the rest Hispanic, Asian or Ameri-<lb/>
can Indian.<lb/>
Last year, 41 percent of the<lb/>
state's reported cases occurred in<lb/>
three urban areas: Mecklenburg,<lb/>
Guilford and Wake counties.<lb/>
Prugh said no one was sure<lb/>
what was causing the increase,<lb/>
but some county clinic workers<lb/>
say they are seeing an increase in<lb/>
patients who are drug users.<lb/>
"We're running into more situ-<lb/>
ations where patients are talking<lb/>
about drugs he said. "Obvi-<lb/>
ously, these same people are<lb/>
going to be at risk for AIDS<lb/>
Statistics show AIDS is infect-<lb/>
inga disproportionate percentage<lb/>
of blacks. In North Carolina, 44<lb/>
percent of AIDS victims are black,<lb/>
while the general population is<lb/>
about 25 percent black.<lb/>
Some public health experts say<lb/>
there is evidence syphilis helps<lb/>
the spread of the AIDS virus.<lb/>
Syphilis sores, sometimes hidden<lb/>
internally, could be an easy en-<lb/>
trance for the AIDS virus.<lb/>
"It could very well compound<lb/>
the problem said Judy Owen-<lb/>
O'Dowd, regional supervisor for<lb/>
the state's AIDS control program<lb/>
in Raleigh.<lb/>
In many instances, syphilis<lb/>
appears to be decreasing in the<lb/>
homosexual population as many<lb/>
change their sexual habits for fear<lb/>
of AIDS, said Dr. Peter Morris,<lb/>
deputy director of the Wake<lb/>
health Department.<lb/>
"We would agree the shift has<lb/>
occurred from gay or bisexual<lb/>
males to heterosexual males he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The pattern in North Carolina<lb/>
has been reported nationwide.<lb/>
Last month, th Centers for Disease<lb/>
control reported a 25 percent in-<lb/>
crease in syphilis nationwide for<lb/>
1987 compared with 1986.<lb/>
North Carolina's experience<lb/>
varies with each city.<lb/>
In Charlotte, a public health<lb/>
expert said clients in the sexually<lb/>
transmitted disease clinic appear<lb/>
to be using more cocaine.<lb/>
"There's trading sex for drugs<lb/>
said Sakeena Smith, a regional<lb/>
supervisor for sexually transmit-<lb/>
ted disease control in Charlotte.<lb/>
"It appears to be associated<lb/>
with drug use. We're seeing a lot<lb/>
of cocaine; some crack, but not a<lb/>
whole lot.<lb/>
In Wake County, some of the<lb/>
increase may be due to a decrease<lb/>
in federal syphiliscontrol funds in<lb/>
the past five years. Whereas the<lb/>
county shared a field investigator<lb/>
with four other counties.<lb/>
Because field investigators<lb/>
track down those to whom syphi-<lb/>
lis is passed, investigators who<lb/>
are too busy will take longer to<lb/>
track down sex partners, giving<lb/>
the disease more time to spread.<lb/>
Statewide, the number of feder-<lb/>
ally funded investigators has<lb/>
dropped from 21 in 1985 to nine<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
"They are stretched thin Mor-<lb/>
ris said.<lb/>
In Durham County, mean-<lb/>
while, syphilis cases dropped<lb/>
from 55 to 37 over the two-year<lb/>
period ending in 1987.<lb/>
"Health care for sexually trans-<lb/>
mitted disease is much more ac-<lb/>
cessible in Durham than other<lb/>
places said Irving Hoffman,<lb/>
clinical coordinator of the Dur-<lb/>
ham County Health Department.<lb/>
"We see all comers. That's tradi-<lb/>
tionally the way it's been for a<lb/>
long time<lb/>
The decrease in Durham could<lb/>
also be due to a second factor. The<lb/>
county is one of the few in the state<lb/>
that still uses an injected form or<lb/>
penicillin to treat gonorrhea<lb/>
cases.<lb/>
The injected penicillin ala<lb/>
knocks out any syphilis infection<lb/>
Most other counties switched ir<lb/>
the last few years to using a less<lb/>
expensive oral form of pemcillir<lb/>
for gonorrhea that does not tre.i<lb/>
syphilis.<lb/>
Rameses the Great on display<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) - The four-<lb/>
month "Rame ses the Great"<lb/>
exhibit of ancient Egyptian arti-<lb/>
facts has arrived in Charlotte,<lb/>
expected to bring enough new<lb/>
visitors to the city's Mint Museum<lb/>
to compensate for a big price tag,<lb/>
officials say.<lb/>
Organizers anticipate that 85 to<lb/>
90 percent of the visitors drawn to<lb/>
the exhibit will be seeing the<lb/>
museum for the first time.<lb/>
"We hope to expose the mu-<lb/>
seum to at least 400,000 people<lb/>
who have never walked through<lb/>
these doors before said Robert<lb/>
Bush Jr project coordinator for<lb/>
the show that will feature some 70<lb/>
objects from the time of Ramesses<lb/>
11, who ruled Egypt 3,000 years<lb/>
ago. "This could help us become<lb/>
one of the leading visual arts faci-<lb/>
tities in the South<lb/>
The cost to put on the exhibit<lb/>
will be $4.2 million - more than the<lb/>
museum's combined budgets<lb/>
over the past half-century. The<lb/>
museum also is spending<lb/>
$800,000 to get the word out on<lb/>
jfftflflolletftpn which began its tour<lb/>
in June 1985 in Montreal. But out-<lb/>
of-town visitors are expected to<lb/>
pump millions of dollars into the<lb/>
area's economy during the<lb/>
exhibit's four-month run, officials<lb/>
said.<lb/>
At 7:14 p.m. Sunday, about 23<lb/>
hours after he left Boston by truck,<lb/>
Ramesses the Great arrived at the<lb/>
museum - feet first.<lb/>
Harvey Walden, 50, swung his<lb/>
65-foot rig into the museum's<lb/>
driveway as two other trucks fol-<lb/>
lowed with the head and middle<lb/>
portion of the 3,000-year-old<lb/>
statue of the great pharaoh.<lb/>
On Monday, the other 72 arti-<lb/>
facts in the exhibition, including<lb/>
items of gold and Ramesses' cof-<lb/>
fin lid, were expected to arrive by<lb/>
plane from Boston, where the<lb/>
exhibition recently concluded a<lb/>
four-month stay.<lb/>
On Tuesday, workers for Acuff<lb/>
Crane &amp; Rigging Co. of Memphis<lb/>
will begin reassembling the 47-<lb/>
ton, three-story statue in the tem-<lb/>
porary wing.<lb/>
The two-day 1,000-mile trip<lb/>
took weeks of planning and the<lb/>
cooperation of seven states to al-<lb/>
low the overweight load to pass.<lb/>
Keeping the route secret to<lb/>
maintain security the convoy.of<lb/>
three trucks and three cars swung<lb/>
west to avoid the New York met-<lb/>
ropolitan area. It included two<lb/>
Charlotte police officers, two<lb/>
Mint officials and a restorer from<lb/>
Ciaro's Egyptian Museum.<lb/>
The buildup has been going on<lb/>
for nearly a year for the show,<lb/>
which is expected to draw as<lb/>
many as 600,000 visitors when it<lb/>
makes its next-to-last U.S. stop in<lb/>
north Carolina beginning Oct. 1<lb/>
before heading to Dallas.<lb/>
"You usually get only one op-<lb/>
portunity like this in a lifetime<lb/>
said Mint Museum Director Mil-<lb/>
ton Bloch. "We're telling every-<lb/>
one to stop thinking about it and<lb/>
go out and buy your tickets<lb/>
Landing the show was a major<lb/>
coup for the museum and quickly<lb/>
became a logistical nightmare. In<lb/>
May, the museum closed its doors<lb/>
and gutted the entire inside of the<lb/>
building. Another 15,000-square-<lb/>
foot structure was built for the<lb/>
exhibit and parking was added.<lb/>
The new $600,000 wing will<lb/>
come when the show closes.<lb/>
So far, about 200,000 tickets<lb/>
have been sold and organizers<lb/>
hope to sell another 50,000 before<lb/>
the start of the show. To"bfeaT<lb/>
even, they have to sell about<lb/>
500,000 tickets priced at $7.50 a<lb/>
piece.<lb/>
In Memphis, the show drew<lb/>
about 760,000 people and about<lb/>
825,000 people went to see it in<lb/>
Denver.<lb/>
"The old adage that art follows<lb/>
commerce is true said museum<lb/>
spokesman Phil Busher. "Four of<lb/>
the seven cities that hosted the ex-<lb/>
hibit are in the South<lb/>
The contract calls for the Egyp-<lb/>
tian government to collect any<lb/>
profits from the show, Busher<lb/>
said. In the event it loses money,<lb/>
more than 40 area corporations<lb/>
have agreed to make up the defi-<lb/>
cit.<lb/>
But Bloch and his associates are<lb/>
cautiously optimistic.<lb/>
"The proof will be in the pud-<lb/>
ding when it actually happens<lb/>
he said. "We need a good show so<lb/>
in the future when exhibits are<lb/>
being organized they will think of<lb/>
us again as a Southern anchor<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM (AP) - While<lb/>
R.I. Revnolds Tobacco Co. isn't<lb/>
J J<lb/>
touting its reduced-smoke ciga-<lb/>
rette as a safer smoke, a panel of<lb/>
scientists says the new product is<lb/>
less toxic than conventional ciga-<lb/>
rettes.<lb/>
RJR's testing showed "clearly<lb/>
less toxicity produced by smoke<lb/>
from the new cigarette than by<lb/>
smoke" from regular cigarettes,<lb/>
said 12 scientists assembled by<lb/>
Emory University's School of<lb/>
Medicine in Atlanta at RJR's re-<lb/>
quest. The research is assembled<lb/>
in a 743-page book, "New Ciga-<lb/>
rette Prototypes That Heat In-<lb/>
stead of Burn Tobacco which<lb/>
will be sent to members of Con-<lb/>
gress, scientists and other inter-<lb/>
ested people.<lb/>
The panel agreed RJR's tests for<lb/>
urine mutagenicity, or potential<lb/>
formation of cancer, showed a<lb/>
significant difference" between<lb/>
people smoking the new cigarette<lb/>
or a conventional cigarette.<lb/>
The cigarette, which will sell at a<lb/>
premium to other brands, works<lb/>
by heating instead of burning<lb/>
tobacco. Smokers light a carbon<lb/>
heat source at the cigarette's tip.<lb/>
Duringinhalation, air is heated by<lb/>
the smoldering carbon and<lb/>
passed over an aluminum-en-<lb/>
cased flavor capsule.<lb/>
The result is no ash and little<lb/>
smoke.<lb/>
Reynolds is hoping the product<lb/>
will quell nonsmokers' com-<lb/>
plaints about second-hand smoke<lb/>
and help stem the 2 percent an-<lb/>
nual decline in the number of<lb/>
American smokers.<lb/>
Health groups are urging the<lb/>
Food and Drug Administration to<lb/>
regulate Premier, saying it bears<lb/>
little resemblance to a cigarette<lb/>
and the public might perceive the<lb/>
product as safer.<lb/>
However, RJR officials don't ad-<lb/>
vertise Premier as a safer ciga-<lb/>
rette, just one that reduces "many<lb/>
of the compounds often associ-<lb/>
ated with the smoking and health<lb/>
controversy<lb/>
Tolo story<lb/>
a mystery<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
work, we'd be in trouble with the<lb/>
Department Immigration<lb/>
Wright said.<lb/>
She also said there have been<lb/>
Kenyans here in the past, but none<lb/>
with the name Tolo. "Some<lb/>
people change their name for the<lb/>
sake of convenience, but the Tolo<lb/>
case is so sketchy, we have no way<lb/>
of knowing<lb/>
If you have any information on<lb/>
the identity or address of Law-<lb/>
rence Tolo, please call The East<lb/>
Carolinian at 757-6366 or Lucy<lb/>
Wright 757-6882.<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/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey Spencer Meymandi<lb/>
Richard-Alan Cook Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95 Local Open Rate$4.75<lb/>
Bulk Rate (Contracts) Frequency (Contracts)<lb/>
100-199 col. inches$4.50 5 Insertions(4 -in  . $4.3<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$4.00<lb/>
Classified Display<lb/>
Open Rate$5.00<lb/>
Color Advertising<lb/>
One Color and black$90.00 (12-25") . . $4.20<lb/>
Two Color and black$155.00<lb/>
(1225")  $4.50<lb/>
10 Insertions(4 -n ')$4.50<lb/>
(12251  $4.45<lb/>
15 Insertions -11 ) $4.4?<lb/>
(12-25")  $4.40<lb/>
20 Insertions (4 11 )$4.40<lb/>
(12-25  $4.3;<lb/>
25 Insertions (4-in$4.35<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
Smokeless cigs less toxic<lb/>
The Co-Ed National Service Fraternity<lb/>
September) 13, 14, and 15<lb/>
 formore information<lb/>
call 752-8736<lb/>
Everyone Welcome<lb/>
'Stop by our information booth today in<lb/>
front of the E.C.U. Student Store<lb/>
A FUN TRIP<lb/>
THE MOST UNIQUE SHOP IN PIRATE COUNTRY<lb/>
A "DIFFERENT" SHOPPING EXPERIENCE<lb/>
USED<lb/>
Over Coats Trench Coats<lb/>
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JEWELRY -<lb/>
FURNITURE - <lb/>
ELECTRONICS- C5u2L?<lb/>
SMALL APPLIANCES- au<lb/>
COLLECTIBLES- Coins. Etc.<lb/>
POTS &amp; PANS<lb/>
CHINA &amp; CRYSTAL<lb/>
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10:00-5:00 M-F<lb/>
10:00 - 3:00 Sat.<lb/>
On The Corner Below "Fizz<lb/>
400 S. Evans St.<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
Libya!<lb/>
(CPS) ? For at leas! the<lb/>
year in a row, the College f<lb/>
Hearts National Committt<lb/>
sent out a wildly alarmi;<lb/>
draising letter to potent J<lb/>
nors.<lb/>
For example, the letter<lb/>
Libyan leader Moammar(j<lb/>
has given U.S. campus<lb/>
$300,000 to "turn innocent<lb/>
students away tr m theii<lb/>
ents" and to "turn Am I<lb/>
into the seething cauldi<lb/>
respect and violence ol ti<lb/>
sixties<lb/>
Concerned citizens<lb/>
Libyan-sponsored campus<lb/>
by donating rr.<lb/>
Republicans<lb/>
The letter, aim<lb/>
word the same plea for do<lb/>
the group mailed to p<lb/>
donors lastyeai<lb/>
tions about th <lb/>
committee's fundra<lb/>
and political e<lb/>
campus critics j<lb/>
agan.<lb/>
"This said an<lb/>
Sanbrano of CISPES ?<lb/>
in Solidarity with the P 1<lb/>
Salvador), which the let! -1<lb/>
has ties to ten<lb/>
geous<lb/>
The College Rep <lb/>
charges were built on "r<lb/>
ports by a small net<lb/>
servative student mi<lb/>
them College Repubh I<lb/>
bers ? who, drawing the<lb/>
conclusions from newsj<lb/>
nes and conservative maj:<lb/>
write papers accusi:<lb/>
disloyalty<lb/>
They then send ti<lb/>
the Federal Bureau<lb/>
tion which, it was reve<lb/>
January 1988. used them<lb/>
reason tor investigating<lb/>
that were critical of Rea<lb/>
ministration policies.<lb/>
Federal legislators and nl<lb/>
pers around the country rj<lb/>
criticized the FBI's inv<lb/>
of Reagan critics as n<lb/>
when the scheme cairn I<lb/>
documents obtained b ? 1<lb/>
ter for Constitutional R<lb/>
New York "public ii<lb/>
group.<lb/>
. - , .to hearings, FBI otticu<lb/>
fied their four-year invesj<lb/>
Murderers<lb/>
GREENSBORO (Al<lb/>
ston-Salem teen-age. and<lb/>
friend surrendered to Ohi<lb/>
and were chargsi with rmi<lb/>
the stabbing death ol I<lb/>
steomother last week<lb/>
Greensboro apartment<lb/>
The two also were ch <lb/>
felonv larceny oi the worn;<lb/>
which was recovered Surj<lb/>
the Ohio State Patrol.<lb/>
Arthur Martin Marty<lb/>
Jr. of Winston Salem, an<lb/>
Michelle Lewis, also o W<lb/>
Salem, surrendered Sundi<lb/>
noon to police in MaumeJ<lb/>
just southwest of Toledo<lb/>
- stolen car reportedly raij<lb/>
gas, said Greensboro po<lb/>
Joe Deich.<lb/>
Maumee police disj<lb/>
Wavne Pitzen said ai<lb/>
Lewis called his depart<lb/>
12:21 p.m. Sunday fr<lb/>
tion just off the Ohio<lb/>
Pitzen said the two te.<lb/>
ELE<lb/>
T<lb/>
RE<lb/>
9a<lb/>
in your r<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13,1988 3<lb/>
cities<lb/>
comers. That's tradi-<lb/>
way it's been for a<lb/>
ase in Durham could<lb/>
?second factor. The<lb/>
the few in the state<lb/>
injected form of<lb/>
t gonorrhea<lb/>
penicillin also<lb/>
a phihs infection<lb/>
es switched ir<lb/>
years to using a less<lb/>
m vt perticiUir<lb/>
a( Joes not trea<lb/>
olinian<lb/>
mandi<lb/>
sonship<lb/>
4 75<lb/>
acts)<lb/>
54 35<lb/>
$4.50<lb/>
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S4 45<lb/>
54 45<lb/>
. $4.40<lb/>
54 40<lb/>
$4.35<lb/>
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OURS<lb/>
iday<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
<lb/>
6<lb/>
OUNTRY<lb/>
IIENCE<lb/>
IMCES- '<lb/>
AL<lb/>
ING!<lb/>
Man<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
Libya accused of funding unrest<lb/>
(CPS) ? For at least the second of the groups never did uncover publican allegations were false<lb/>
year in a row, the College Repub- any wrongdoing,<lb/>
licans National Committee has But College Republicans<lb/>
sent out a wildly alarmist fun- spokesman Greg Rothman disre-<lb/>
draising letter to potential do- gards the FBI's inability to verify<lb/>
nors. his group's allegations.<lb/>
For example, the letter claims "The information is still true<lb/>
Libyan leader MoammarQaddati he maintained. "It hasn't<lb/>
This year the department refused<lb/>
comment, as did the FBI.<lb/>
The Central American report<lb/>
was prepared by College Republi-<lb/>
added.<lb/>
College Republican spies, he<lb/>
said infiltrated the University of<lb/>
Massachusetts at Amherst Young<lb/>
Communist League. Rothman<lb/>
cans who, the letter says, recently charged the group receives fund-<lb/>
has given U.S. campus groups<lb/>
$300,000 to "turn innocent young<lb/>
students away from their par-<lb/>
ents" and to "turn America back<lb/>
into the seething cauldron of dis-<lb/>
respect and violence of the late<lb/>
sixties<lb/>
Concerned citizens, can count<lb/>
Libyan-sponsored campus unrest<lb/>
by donating money to the College<lb/>
Republicans.<lb/>
The letter, almost word-for-<lb/>
word the same plea for donations<lb/>
changed. In fact, the situation<lb/>
there (in Central America) has<lb/>
gotten worse<lb/>
The only difference between<lb/>
1987 and 1988 f undraising letters:<lb/>
Friends of the Democratic Center<lb/>
in Central America, better known<lb/>
as FRODEMCA, is not listed as a<lb/>
recipient of Libyan aid in the 1988<lb/>
version. TRODEMCA, like the<lb/>
College Republicans, supports<lb/>
travelled to Central America to in-<lb/>
vestigate the situation there.<lb/>
Rothman says College Republi-<lb/>
cans visited Central America last<lb/>
year and this year.<lb/>
When asked if it was ethical ?<lb/>
or wise ? to distribute the same<lb/>
report of a "recent" College<lb/>
Republican fact-finding trip,<lb/>
Rothman said "a free market<lb/>
would dictate that some donors<lb/>
would read the same letter<lb/>
He added that fundraising let-<lb/>
ing and direction from the KGB,<lb/>
the Soviet intelligence agency.<lb/>
"America is under siege Roth-<lb/>
man concluded.<lb/>
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"START THE WAVE<lb/>
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U .S. aid to the Nicaraguan rebels ters had to have a passionate tone<lb/>
attempting to overthrow that to be successful in attracting<lb/>
the group mailed to potential nation's leftist Sandinista govern- money.<lb/>
ment. Moreover, he said some of the<lb/>
Both letters cite a "classified letter's charges are coming true,<lb/>
report" of how the Nicaraguan noting the July arrests of eight<lb/>
rebels, known as contras, are Libyans accused of illegally fund-<lb/>
donors last year, raises new ques-<lb/>
tions about the national<lb/>
committee's fundraising ethics<lb/>
and political espionage against<lb/>
campus critics of President Re-<lb/>
agan.<lb/>
sickly, ill-equipped and demoral-<lb/>
ized. If the contras are not sup-<lb/>
"This said an angry Angela ported, the letters say, commu-<lb/>
Sanbrano of CISPES (Committee<lb/>
in Solidarity with the People of El<lb/>
Salvador), which the letter asserts<lb/>
has ties to terrorists, "is outra-<lb/>
geous.<lb/>
The<lb/>
nism will spread to the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
Both letters claim leftist groups<lb/>
such as Witness for Peace and<lb/>
CISPES wish to "turn innocent<lb/>
ing pro-Libyan demonstrations<lb/>
on U.S. campuses and paying for<lb/>
leftist students' trips to Libya.<lb/>
One of the Libyans allegedly also<lb/>
plotted to assassinate former<lb/>
Marine Col. Oliver North.<lb/>
"We were aware of it Roth-<lb/>
man said. "The recent arrests<lb/>
College Republicans'<lb/>
charges were built on "recent" re- parents and grandparents" and<lb/>
ports by a small network of con- disrupt American campuses to<lb/>
servative students ? many of promote communism,<lb/>
them College Republican mem- CISPES's Sanbrano called the<lb/>
bers ? who, drawing their own letter "a way of trying to dclegit-<lb/>
conclusions from newspaper sto- imize the work that comes from<lb/>
nes and conservative magazines, real concern about U.S. policy in<lb/>
write papers accusing others of Central America. These are false<lb/>
young students away from their have to lead you to question to<lb/>
credibility of CISPES<lb/>
Sharon Dibbley, a spokes-<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
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accusations. There's no proof. The<lb/>
FBI used an incredible amount of<lb/>
resources to prove these same<lb/>
changes, but they found no evi-<lb/>
dence<lb/>
"Our financial records are<lb/>
available upon request said<lb/>
Witness for Peace spokesman Joe<lb/>
disloyalty<lb/>
They then send the papers to<lb/>
the Federal Bureau of Investiga-<lb/>
tion which, it was revealed in<lb/>
January 1988, used them as the<lb/>
reason for investigating groups<lb/>
that were critical of Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration policies.<lb/>
Federal legislators and newspa-<lb/>
pers around the country roundly<lb/>
cnticized the FBI's investigations<lb/>
of Reagan critics as improper<lb/>
when the scheme came to light in<lb/>
documents obtained bv the Cen-<lb/>
ter for Constitutional Rights, a<lb/>
New York "public interest"<lb/>
group.<lb/>
? In hearings. FBI officials testi-<lb/>
fied their four-year investigation department said the College Re-<lb/>
Murderers surrender in Ohio<lb/>
woman for the U.S. Attorney in<lb/>
Alexandria, Va a connection be-<lb/>
tween Libya and CISPES. "We<lb/>
still have an ongoing investiga-<lb/>
tion. We can't release that infor-<lb/>
mation<lb/>
The College Republicans, Roth-<lb/>
man said, are still investigating,<lb/>
too.<lb/>
"Any time you have an organi-<lb/>
zation whose idea is to subvert the<lb/>
U.S. government, it's worth<lb/>
watching he said. It's campus<lb/>
conservatives' duty to look into<lb/>
?GENEROUS TOPPINGS<lb/>
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lie<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) - A Win-<lb/>
ston-Salem teen-age. and his girl-<lb/>
friend surrendered to Ohio police<lb/>
and were chargsi with murder in<lb/>
the stabbing death of the man's<lb/>
steomother last week in her<lb/>
Greensboro apartment.<lb/>
The two also were charged with<lb/>
felonv larceny of the woman's car,<lb/>
which was recovered Sunday by<lb/>
the Ohio State Patrol.<lb/>
Arthur Martin "Marty" Vause<lb/>
Jr. of Winston Salem, and Lorrie<lb/>
Michelle Lewis, also of Winston-<lb/>
Salem, surrendered Sunday after-<lb/>
noon to police in Maumee, Ohio,<lb/>
just southwest of Toledo, after the<lb/>
stolen car reportedly ran out of<lb/>
gas, said Greensboro police Sgt.<lb/>
Joe Deich.<lb/>
Maumee police dispatcher<lb/>
Wayne Pitzen said Vause and<lb/>
Lewis called his department at<lb/>
12:21 p.m. Sunday from a gas sta-<lb/>
tion just off the Ohio Turnpike.<lb/>
Pitzen said the two told police<lb/>
they were wanted in connection<lb/>
with a murder in North Carolina<lb/>
and asked to turn themselves in.<lb/>
Vause was being held without<lb/>
bond in the Lucas County Jail in<lb/>
Toledo, Ohio, while Lewis, at 17 a<lb/>
juvenile under Ohio law, was<lb/>
being held at the Lucas County<lb/>
Child Study Institute, also in<lb/>
Toledo, pending extradition to<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
They are charged in the death of<lb/>
Nancy Fogleman Cook, 40, who<lb/>
was found dead Thursday in her<lb/>
locked apartment. She had been<lb/>
stabbed repeatedly in the chest.<lb/>
The arrest warrants allege she<lb/>
was killed Sect. 5. Police believe<lb/>
she was last seen alive about mid-<lb/>
night Sept. 3, when a pizza was<lb/>
delivered to the apartment, and a<lb/>
witness has told police she saw<lb/>
Vause and Lewis leave the apart-<lb/>
ment in Cook's car Sept. 5, just<lb/>
after a loud argument inside the<lb/>
apartment.<lb/>
Rcgotri, noting the internal Reve- such groups to assist the FBI, he I yym (coupon expires Sept. 19, 1988)<lb/>
nue Service would have found ? ???? -??i?- ? ? ????? ?? ? ?-? - ??.?? ?-???. ?<lb/>
improper foreign payments to it<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
"The IRS is a lot more experi-<lb/>
enced in these matters than the<lb/>
College Republicans<lb/>
Last year the State Department<lb/>
said the College Repbulican alle-<lb/>
gations were false. This vear the<lb/>
t? "Gccd IdUwH?<lb/>
&amp; 6. <lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
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while you<lb/>
fill your<lb/>
shopping list<lb/>
ft<lb/>
? k Item and Prices<lb/>
M m m m Sun. September 1<lb/>
J Wk " 8at September 1<lb/>
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11, 1988 thru<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058092_0004"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
aJlje lEaat (Earnlinian<lb/>
Sm? ?? U? C?fc?mpiii?ii?iin ') ? 1 ?KS<lb/>
Pete Fernald, i<lb/>
Chip Carter<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, m?i?r a-??,<lb/>
Joe Harris, n?. &amp;?<lb/>
Doug Johnson, sp. ??<lb/>
Tim Hampton, f?r?r? u?<lb/>
Michelle England, obm<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, .w?ry<lb/>
Jeff Parker, hm.<lb/>
Tom Ftjrr,c?j<lb/>
Susan Howell,<lb/>
John W. Medun, <lb/>
Mac Clark, ?.<lb/>
September 13.1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Drop add<lb/>
Reduction of deadline suggested<lb/>
decrease the drop time but increase<lb/>
the add period. Student A, faced<lb/>
with unwanted classes, might drop<lb/>
them and have to become a part-<lb/>
time student, while Student B may<lb/>
be dropping the classes Student A<lb/>
might want to take ? and has no<lb/>
way to add them to his schedule.<lb/>
The question of whether or not to<lb/>
reduce the free drop period was<lb/>
raised last year during a meeting of<lb/>
the faculty senate, debated on but<lb/>
never acted upon. It was left for the<lb/>
Credits Committee to gather infor-<lb/>
mation on the subject.<lb/>
Which they will do during open<lb/>
meetings on September 19 and 22 in<lb/>
Brewster - C -103 at 2:30 p.m. Stu-<lb/>
dents are urged to attend either<lb/>
meeting to present feelings and<lb/>
ideas on the subject.<lb/>
One question that will un-<lb/>
doubtably surface during the meet-<lb/>
ings will be whether graduate stu-<lb/>
dents, who may drop courses up to<lb/>
two weeks before the final exam,<lb/>
should be allowed to take 5000 level<lb/>
courses while seniors are enrolled.<lb/>
It is no doubt unfair that the grad<lb/>
student is able to quit the class with-<lb/>
out penalty while the senior is re-<lb/>
stricted to the first six or less weeks<lb/>
of the semester. Because in the final<lb/>
analysis, it is the students paying for<lb/>
the classes and he or she should be<lb/>
the one to determine how long he or<lb/>
she wishes to stay in the class.<lb/>
The Credits Committee is having<lb/>
two meetings to consider reducing<lb/>
the free drop period undergraduate<lb/>
students now enjoy. This means, in<lb/>
many cases the drop period would<lb/>
end before students have taken the<lb/>
first test in the class and decided<lb/>
whether or not it is worth their while<lb/>
to continue in the course at the pres-<lb/>
ent time.<lb/>
While most students will see this<lb/>
as a bad move, the reasons behind<lb/>
the faculty's wish to reduce the cur-<lb/>
rent six week drop period are sound.<lb/>
In the first place, it is a long time<lb/>
for students to decide whether or<lb/>
not they wish to stay in the class.<lb/>
Although it's nice to see what the<lb/>
first test grade will be, that really<lb/>
isn't a good indicator of perform-<lb/>
ance, especially in a literature or art<lb/>
class, where tests are infrequent and<lb/>
usually not standardized.<lb/>
It is also a matter of the student<lb/>
and teacher's time. It is a waste of<lb/>
time for a student to stay in a class<lb/>
that long and then leave, as well as<lb/>
the teacher.<lb/>
Plus, when the teaching sched-<lb/>
ules are made out at the beginning of<lb/>
the semester, extra sections are<lb/>
opened and closed depending on<lb/>
the students enrolled. This wouldn't<lb/>
be necessary if the class size dra-<lb/>
matically decreases after six weeks<lb/>
of class, and sectic s close again,<lb/>
leaving extra faculty.<lb/>
A helpful alternative would be to<lb/>
?w - ? - ?w-?? m mm ii ? ?? -?? i nrr i mmm j ml.<lb/>
ISAJ'f (T N0MP6RRJL, HERB IJW AMP TAMM0 M C0MIN6 WCK.?7Hc"<lb/>
watcr sim is come back mtmomscmiwmKm<lb/>
Liberal dictionary sent in<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Anyone baffled by liberal dou-<lb/>
blethink and the inconsistent, hypo-<lb/>
critical double-standards of liberals?<lb/>
This dictionary should help if you<lb/>
are:<lb/>
Crisis: Any situation liberals want<lb/>
changed.<lb/>
Bilingual: Unable to speak English.<lb/>
Equal Opportunity: Preferential<lb/>
treatment<lb/>
Compassion: Using tax money to<lb/>
support those unwilling to work.<lb/>
Insensitivity: Objection to the use of<lb/>
tax money for that purpose.<lb/>
Simplistic: Any argument with<lb/>
which liberals disagree but can't<lb/>
answer.<lb/>
Demonstration: A liberal riot.<lb/>
Mob Violence: A conservative riot.<lb/>
A Matter of Principle: A liberal con-<lb/>
viction.<lb/>
An Emotional Issue: A conservative<lb/>
conviction.<lb/>
Funding: Taxpayer's money.<lb/>
Commitment: More taxpayer's<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Federal Budget: A work of fiction<lb/>
about government spending.<lb/>
Stereotypes: Liberal behavior pat-<lb/>
terns they don't wish to think about.<lb/>
Constitutional Interpretation:<lb/>
Judges reading liberal political views<lb/>
into the Constitution.<lb/>
Politicizing the Courts: Judges<lb/>
reading conservative political views<lb/>
into the Constitution.<lb/>
Public Interest Group: Politically<lb/>
organized liberals.<lb/>
Special Interest Lobby: Politically<lb/>
organized conservatives.<lb/>
Racism: Any criticism of minorities,<lb/>
no matter how slight or justified.<lb/>
National liberation movements:<lb/>
Organizations trying to create<lb/>
people's rebublics.<lb/>
People's Republics: Places where<lb/>
you do what you are told or get shot<lb/>
Consciousness Raising: Embracing<lb/>
liberal tenets.<lb/>
Abortion-on-Demand: Mass murder<lb/>
for fun and profit.<lb/>
Fascism: Nazism: Any movement,<lb/>
ideology, political opinion, or con-<lb/>
viction not meeting liberal approval.<lb/>
McCarthyism: Joe McCarthy<lb/>
making outrageous, slanderous ac-<lb/>
cusations of liberals under the shield<lb/>
of Congressional immunity.<lb/>
Protecting the Social Gains of the<lb/>
Past: Teddy Kennedy making outra-<lb/>
geous, slanderous accusations of<lb/>
Judge Bork under the shield of Con-<lb/>
gressional immunity.<lb/>
Pragmatist: A politician with no<lb/>
fixed principles in mind. Idealogue:<lb/>
A conservative with a set of fixed,<lb/>
right-wing principles.<lb/>
Progressive: A liberal with a set of<lb/>
fixed, left-wing principles.<lb/>
United Nations: An international<lb/>
competition more popular than the<lb/>
Olympics because all the players win<lb/>
except Americans Israelis, and South<lb/>
Africans.<lb/>
Civil Liberties: A legal and social<lb/>
program for creating a privilege caste<lb/>
of robbers, rapists, subversives and<lb/>
pornographers.<lb/>
Gun Control: A method of strip-<lb/>
ping law-abiding citizens of their<lb/>
firearms while assuring that crimi-<lb/>
nals retain theirs undisturbed.<lb/>
Arms Control: Campaigns by the<lb/>
last eight American presidents to<lb/>
demonstrate that liars and killers can<lb/>
be trusted with our lives.<lb/>
Welfare: A method of subsidizing<lb/>
promiscuity and bastardy.<lb/>
Education: In the U.S a device for<lb/>
persuading citizens to contribute<lb/>
upwards of $100 billion a year to-<lb/>
ward the corruption of their children.<lb/>
Right To Privacy: The right to engage<lb/>
in perversion, and the right to pass on<lb/>
any diseases that devolve from it.<lb/>
(Important: Not to be construed as<lb/>
the right to join a club in which the<lb/>
members set their own standards for<lb/>
admission<lb/>
Liberal hypocrisy is rank and unend-<lb/>
ing!<lb/>
Justin Sturz<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
EnglishJournalism<lb/>
Graph wrong<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Irrespective of the reasons for<lb/>
the differences in the percentages of<lb/>
faculty with PhDs at the various insti-<lb/>
tutions described in the article of 1<lb/>
September 1988The Story Goes<lb/>
Much Deeper than the Statistics it is<lb/>
important to note that the accompa-<lb/>
nying graphic distorts the numbers.<lb/>
The graphic employs a scale which is<lb/>
unequal across the ordinate (vertical<lb/>
axis) of the figure and which exagger-<lb/>
ates the differences between the<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
As examples, the height of<lb/>
the bar representing ECU (with 71<lb/>
of ECU faculty holding PhDs) is<lb/>
71mm, but the bars representing Ap-<lb/>
palachian (with 84.8 of faculty with<lb/>
PhDs) and UNC-CH (87.8 of fac-<lb/>
ulty with PhDs) are 102mm and<lb/>
109mm respectively. The effect of<lb/>
this scale is to make the difference be-<lb/>
tween ECU and Appalachian appear<lb/>
more than twice its actual size (as<lb/>
43.7 instead of the true 19.4), and<lb/>
the difference between ECU and<lb/>
UNC-CH appears as 535 rather<lb/>
than the true 23.7.<lb/>
That is, 84.8 of the faculty at<lb/>
Appalachian have PhDs compared<lb/>
to 71 of ECU faculty, and the differ-<lb/>
ence (13.8) is 19.4 of 71. But the<lb/>
bar representing Appalachian is<lb/>
31mm longer (43.7 of 71mm) than<lb/>
the bar representing ECU. The dis-<lb/>
tortion is repeated with the bar repre-<lb/>
senting UNC-CH.<lb/>
The use of such deceptive<lb/>
graphics has long been recognized by<lb/>
both the lay person (Huff, 1954, How<lb/>
to Lie with Statistics), and the profes-<lb/>
sional (Tufte, 1983, The Visual Dis-<lb/>
play of Quantitative Information).<lb/>
Tufte presents a Tie Factor" index<lb/>
which is obtained from the ratio of<lb/>
the size of the effect shown in the<lb/>
graphic to the size of the effect shown<lb/>
in the data. The "Lie Factor" for the<lb/>
printed graphic is approximately<lb/>
2.25. Unfortunately, the deliberate or<lb/>
inadvertent use of misleading graph-<lb/>
ics is a common occurrence in the<lb/>
popular press, but the misrepresen-<lb/>
tation of numerical data should be<lb/>
avoided.<lb/>
The correct rule is simple: in-<lb/>
creases in the length, width, or area of<lb/>
the representational figure should be<lb/>
tional to changes m tho data As your<lb/>
article demonstrated, the interpreta-<lb/>
tion of numbers is difficult enough<lb/>
without further confusing the reader<lb/>
through visual embellishments<lb/>
which misrepresent the data.<lb/>
G. Michael Poteat, PhD<lb/>
Assistant Professor<lb/>
Department of Psychology<lb/>
Cartoon bad<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
The cartoon depecting your<lb/>
staff illustrator being hanged, while<lb/>
"girls" wearing ERA shirts cheer,<lb/>
suggests that only women were<lb/>
offended by the illustration of the<lb/>
pirate with the bound and gagged<lb/>
female. This is not so. As the father<lb/>
of a 7-year-old girl, who I hope will<lb/>
grow up in a world that respects<lb/>
her, I also found your illustrations<lb/>
objectionable, including this latest<lb/>
infraction.<lb/>
There is an assumption that<lb/>
most female students, like most male<lb/>
students, are at the University to<lb/>
study, and most do. But too many of<lb/>
your photos, cartoons and ads por-<lb/>
tray females as less than serious, and<lb/>
the cumulative effect of such edito-<lb/>
rial choices erodes the status that<lb/>
women have fought so hard to<lb/>
achieve in recent years. In particular,<lb/>
the reference to the women who criti-<lb/>
cized you as "girls" is inappropriate;<lb/>
most of the letters you published<lb/>
were from female professors and<lb/>
graduate students older than your-<lb/>
selves.<lb/>
Tomis Kapitan<lb/>
Assistant Professor<lb/>
Phiosophy department<lb/>
Penis envy?<lb/>
To the editor.<lb/>
As a former student of ECU I<lb/>
would like to comment on the car-<lb/>
toon flap of recent weeks.<lb/>
First of all, vour editorial defense<lb/>
was adequate and accurate but you<lb/>
should realize that it will never sat-<lb/>
isfy your feminist critics; they lack a<lb/>
sense of humor. Feminists are ideo-<lb/>
logues whose basic interest is politi-<lb/>
cal power. Humor, unless it is explic-<lb/>
itly directed against men, is for them<lb/>
intolerable.<lb/>
Moreover, you need hardly be<lb/>
defensive about an ordinary piece of<lb/>
comic relief. Page through any femi-<lb/>
nist newspaper or magazine and you<lb/>
will see what I mean. The cartoons<lb/>
and commentary are often so ob-<lb/>
scene and so desperately hostile to<lb/>
men that it is almost unbelievable.<lb/>
There is no humor in them? only a<lb/>
very twisted kind of anxious hate.<lb/>
Some psychologists believe<lb/>
that the typically feminist problems<lb/>
with men can be traced back to early<lb/>
childhood. Little Jane looks bet ween<lb/>
her legs and discovers that she lacks<lb/>
something that Little johnny has. For<lb/>
most little girls this shock is quickly<lb/>
over and they go on to other things.<lb/>
For feminists, however, it leaves a<lb/>
lasting sense of inferiority and the<lb/>
result is an abiding resentment of<lb/>
anything masculine.<lb/>
That is why reasoning with<lb/>
them about humor doesnt work; it is<lb/>
an emotional problem, not a logical<lb/>
one and Freud described it in two<lb/>
words?"penis envy If they can't<lb/>
blame biology they will blame you<lb/>
instead. The fact is that feminists hate<lb/>
being women.<lb/>
You may need a word of ad-<lb/>
vice. Now that you have ruffled the<lb/>
feathers of that vindictive academic<lb/>
bird, best known as the whining<lb/>
femette, you can expect a number of<lb/>
nasty political measures to be taken<lb/>
against you.<lb/>
At least two of the critical let-<lb/>
ters printed against the inoffensive<lb/>
cartoon came from women who rep-<lb/>
resent organizations (as you do not)<lb/>
and so they obviously know each<lb/>
other. The first tactic of such cliques<lb/>
is to start a whispering campaign<lb/>
against you.<lb/>
They will also raise the issue with<lb/>
faculty friends so as to get statements<lb/>
in support.<lb/>
A suitably pliable administrator<lb/>
will then be found to remonstrate<lb/>
with you and perhaps to hint darkly<lb/>
at a "possible need for discipline, i.e.<lb/>
punishment for contrary thinking, as<lb/>
a means of muzzling dissent. Should<lb/>
this effort at "re-education" fail, you<lb/>
may then hear a whisper that per-<lb/>
haps there should be a co-editor<lb/>
appointed to "help you" with your<lb/>
copy or, perhaps, that more "sensi-<lb/>
tive reporters should be hired to pres-<lb/>
ent their viewpoint? i.e. to criticize<lb/>
men and to proclaim that every<lb/>
manhole is a personhole.<lb/>
How do I know: all this? Well,<lb/>
t! sorry truth is that I once dated a<lb/>
feminist and even let her persuade<lb/>
me to attend some meetings. What<lb/>
an eye-opener! These women, a lot of<lb/>
whom were lesbians, were only very<lb/>
superficially interested in issues like<lb/>
equal pay tor equal work.<lb/>
Their real goal, as one over-<lb/>
weight speaker boldly put it, is<lb/>
"power, so that we can build a matri-<lb/>
archy in which the aggressfve' in-<lb/>
stincts of men will be subdued to the<lb/>
service of women If you think I<lb/>
exaggerate just read the articles in<lb/>
any feminist newspaper. By the way,<lb/>
there were five or six other men sit-<lb/>
ting together at this same meeting.<lb/>
All of them applauded the speaker<lb/>
and I couldn't understand whv until<lb/>
I saw that they were homosexuals.<lb/>
When I asked the woman<lb/>
sitting next to me about this, her reply<lb/>
was that the only man a convinced<lb/>
feminist could trust was a homosex-<lb/>
ual because "they like to penetrate<lb/>
each other instead of us<lb/>
I left my date at that meeting<lb/>
and never looked back. Who needs<lb/>
the sleaze and the aggravation! That<lb/>
may be your attitude too, but you will<lb/>
still need to watch out and protect<lb/>
your newspaper. You have aroused<lb/>
the feeding frenzy of the shrews and,<lb/>
unlike other people, they are not<lb/>
quick to forgive and forget. Be pre-<lb/>
pared for a flank attack. It may take<lb/>
the form of a demand for more<lb/>
"women's studies" courses (i.e. po-<lb/>
litical action committees) in which<lb/>
the topic discussed will be the news-<lb/>
paper at ECU.<lb/>
The tone may even sound ob-<lb/>
jective, but the emotions will be raw<lb/>
and you will be the target. They will<lb/>
work to construct a situation in<lb/>
which their interpretation of humor<lb/>
and fact becomes the only allowable<lb/>
one. If you let that happen then you<lb/>
deserve the consequences. How do<lb/>
you like the idea of being "sub-<lb/>
dued"?<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
William May<lb/>
Alumnus<lb/>
Anti-abortion<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
As a woman and as a mother<lb/>
of three, I feel I must respond to the<lb/>
two pro-abortion letters in the Sept.<lb/>
6 East Carolinian. The letters<lb/>
blasted pro-life activists for holding<lb/>
a mass funeral for aborted unborn<lb/>
children, saying that the funeral<lb/>
"disgusted" them and was a<lb/>
"blatant and vulgar invasion of the<lb/>
privacy of the women involved<lb/>
I ask: whaf s wrong with prop-<lb/>
erly and respectfully burying our<lb/>
dead? Have we become so barbaric<lb/>
and callous in this country that we<lb/>
don't care if our unborn children are<lb/>
disposed of as so much garbage?<lb/>
And as far as the phrase "inva-<lb/>
sion of privacy" is concerned, yes,<lb/>
there WAS an invasion of privacy:<lb/>
the ultimate invasion, which led to<lb/>
the deaths of 157 innocent unborn<lb/>
children.<lb/>
See LETTER, page 3<lb/>
1<lb/>
S<lb/>
is<lb/>
Letter to &amp;<lb/>
Continued from pa<lb/>
Lei me be clear<lb/>
choice. As far as I'm coi<lb/>
woman has the right tl<lb/>
whether or not to have sex<lb/>
marriage; a woman has th<lb/>
choose whether or not to<lb/>
control; and a woman has tl<lb/>
choose whether or not to p<lb/>
up for adoption. But a wt<lb/>
not have the "right tol<lb/>
whether or not to murder hi<lb/>
child Even though a womj<lb/>
legal right to murder that<lb/>
does not for any reason<lb/>
moral nght to do'so.<lb/>
We who are ag<lb/>
do provide alternativ<lb/>
Greenville, we have the<lb/>
Crisis Pregnancv Center l<lb/>
111 East 3rd Street Thep<lb/>
ber is 757-0003. Let<lb/>
young women who think<lb/>
nowhere to turn that there<lb/>
canng help available for tl<lb/>
for their unborn child<lb/>
Raj<lb/>
ECL<lb/>
Vote Thomal<lb/>
Totheed -<lb/>
Sophornc- -<lb/>
to voice your opir 1<lb/>
bestowed upon you. On VI<lb/>
vou will have the chai<lb/>
vour class leaders Tl<lb/>
valuable to you, fi r the<lb/>
voice in Student Gov? n<lb/>
backbone of all studc j<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
You need a stror j<lb/>
leader to represent youi<lb/>
campus. You need a 4<lb/>
who is willing to work for;<lb/>
and desires and who will<lb/>
defeat as an alternative<lb/>
views are in mind.<lb/>
You need for your leai<lb/>
President ? one whu<lb/>
in student government ai<lb/>
other campus actr.<lb/>
tions. You need a Pres<lb/>
shows concern for your cl<lb/>
the school. You need<lb/>
for vour Sophomore (<lb/>
Show your concern tor y<lb/>
exercising your right I<lb/>
II YOUR S<lb/>
Profess<lb/>
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Fating A liml<lb/>
MONDAY XI<lb/>
Casual<lb/>
Ftv<lb/>
Don't Miss our I<lb/>
LOCAT1<lb/>
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11 am-1 am M day-f<lb/>
BACK T<lb/>
SCHOOI<lb/>
SPECIA;<lb/>
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it)<lb/>
Dt<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0005"/><lb/>
II It EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13,1988 5<lb/>
Letter to editor protests pro-choice letter about funeral<lb/>
tactic of such cliques<lb/>
hispering campaign<lb/>
o the issue with<lb/>
get statements<lb/>
le administrator<lb/>
remonstrate<lb/>
to hint darklv<lb/>
vd tor discipline, i.e.<lb/>
:rarv thinking, as<lb/>
ssent. Should<lb/>
rail, you<lb/>
a whisper that per-<lb/>
be a co-editor<lb/>
 on with vour<lb/>
that more "sensi-<lb/>
d hehiredtopres-<lb/>
? - i c to criticize<lb/>
:laim that everv<lb/>
nhole.<lb/>
. all this? Well,<lb/>
at 1 once dated a<lb/>
? her persuade<lb/>
meetings. What<lb/>
? women, a lot of<lb/>
?bian were onlv very<lb/>
sted in issues like<lb/>
. irk.<lb/>
al, as one over-<lb/>
er boldly put it, is<lb/>
I we can build a matn-<lb/>
:h the aggressive m-<lb/>
be -ubdued to the<lb/>
If you think I<lb/>
t read the articles in<lb/>
iper. By the way,<lb/>
e or six other men sit-<lb/>
at this same meeting.<lb/>
pplauded the speaker<lb/>
understand whv until<lb/>
re homosexuals.<lb/>
! asked the woman<lb/>
i me about this, her reply<lb/>
. man a convinced<lb/>
j trubt was a homosex-<lb/>
ke to penetrate<lb/>
istead oi us<lb/>
date at that meeting<lb/>
- i back. Who needs<lb/>
i the aggravation! That<lb/>
ide too, but you will<lb/>
watch out and protect<lb/>
per. You have aroused<lb/>
Irenzy of the shrews and,<lb/>
h people, they are not<lb/>
and forget. Be pre-<lb/>
lank attack. It may take<lb/>
It a demand for more<lb/>
tudies' courses (i.e. po-<lb/>
committces) in which<lb/>
: us sod will be the news-<lb/>
IL<lb/>
me mav even sound ob-<lb/>
he emotions will be raw<lb/>
be the target. They will<lb/>
instruct a situation in<lb/>
linterpretation of humor<lb/>
mes the onlv allowable<lb/>
t that happen then you<lb/>
ronsequences. How do<lb/>
B idea of being "sub-<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
William May<lb/>
Alumnus<lb/>
ti-abortion<lb/>
iitor<lb/>
I woman and as a mother<lb/>
lei'l I must respond to the<lb/>
ortion letters in the Sept.<lb/>
)iinian. The letters<lb/>
iife activists for holding<lb/>
cral for aborted unborn<lb/>
iving that the funeral<lb/>
I" them and was a<lb/>
d vulgar invasion of the<lb/>
he women involved<lb/>
what S wrong with prop-<lb/>
spectfully burying our<lb/>
pc we become so barbaric<lb/>
in this country that we<lb/>
If ur unborn children are<lb/>
v is so much garbage?<lb/>
las far as the phrase "inva-<lb/>
lacv" is concerned, yes,<lb/>
an invasion of privacy:<lb/>
invasion, which led to<lb/>
of 157 innocent unborn<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
Let me be clear: I am pro-<lb/>
choice. As far as I'm concerned, a<lb/>
woman has the right to choose<lb/>
whether or not to have sex outside of<lb/>
marriage; a woman has the right to<lb/>
choose whether or not to use birth<lb/>
control; and a woman has the right to<lb/>
choose whether or not to put her baby<lb/>
up for adoption. But a woman does<lb/>
not have the "right to choose"<lb/>
whether or not to murder her unborn<lb/>
child. Even though a woman has the<lb/>
legal right to murder that child, she<lb/>
does not for any reason have the<lb/>
moral right to do so.<lb/>
We who are against abortion<lb/>
do provide alternatives. In<lb/>
Greenville, we have the Carolina<lb/>
Crisis Pregnancy Center located at<lb/>
111 East 3rd Street. The phone num-<lb/>
ber is 757-0003. Let me assure the<lb/>
young women who think they have<lb/>
nowhere to turn that there is loving,<lb/>
canng help available for them AND<lb/>
for their unborn children.<lb/>
Rachel Sturz<lb/>
ECU Alumnus<lb/>
Vote Thomas<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Sophomores: Your opportunity<lb/>
to voice your opinion is about to be<lb/>
bestowed upon you. On Wednesday<lb/>
you will have the chance to vote for<lb/>
vour class leaders. These leaders are<lb/>
valuable to you, for they are your<lb/>
voice in Student Government ? the<lb/>
backbone of all student involvement<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
You need a strong and capable<lb/>
leader to represent your class on<lb/>
campus. You need a class President<lb/>
who is willing to work for your wants<lb/>
and desires and who will not accept<lb/>
defeat as an alternative when your<lb/>
views are in mind.<lb/>
You need for your leader ? your<lb/>
President ? one who is experienced<lb/>
in student government as well as in<lb/>
other campus activitiesorganiza-<lb/>
tions. You need a President who<lb/>
shows concern for your class and for<lb/>
the school. You need Allen Thomas<lb/>
for vour Sophomore Class President.<lb/>
Show your concern for your class by<lb/>
exercising your right to vote. Vote on<lb/>
Wednesday. Allen Thomas, Sopho-<lb/>
more Class President, "A Proven<lb/>
Leader<lb/>
Kelly Jones<lb/>
Student Government Vice<lb/>
President<lb/>
Vote Thomas<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I would like to take this opportu-<lb/>
nity to strongly encourage the sopho-<lb/>
mores of East Carolina to vote for the<lb/>
most qualified candidate for Sopho-<lb/>
more Class president ? Allen Tho-<lb/>
mas. Last year Allen served as a SG A<lb/>
Day Representative and on the Ap-<lb/>
propriations Committee. Later, he<lb/>
was also appointed to the Student<lb/>
Store Advisory Committee.<lb/>
While working with Allen on the<lb/>
Legislature last year, I learned that he<lb/>
is very concerned with campus ac-<lb/>
tivities and the interests of his peers.<lb/>
Allen also stands up for what he be-<lb/>
lieves and is not afraid to voice his<lb/>
opinion. He has the experience and<lb/>
maturity necessary to uphold this<lb/>
position. I urge you to take an active<lb/>
part in your Student Government on<lb/>
Wednesday by voting for Allen Tho-<lb/>
mas as your Sophomore Class Presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Colleen M. McDonald<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
S.G.A. Secretary<lb/>
Vote Sturz<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Dear Freshman:<lb/>
Tom orrow you will be electing<lb/>
the two people who will be repre-<lb/>
senting you throughout the 1988-89<lb/>
school year, your freshman class<lb/>
President and Vice President. These<lb/>
offices need to be filled by two people<lb/>
who will stand up and speak out for<lb/>
their fellow classmates.<lb/>
We, Ariclle Sturz and Kim<lb/>
Faulkner, believe that we can fill<lb/>
these two positions to the upmost of<lb/>
their capacities. We have both held<lb/>
many leadership positions through-<lb/>
out our high school year and wish to<lb/>
continue doing so here at ECU. Make<lb/>
your vote count.<lb/>
Arielle Sturz ? President<lb/>
Kim Faulkner ? Vice President<lb/>
Kim Faulkner<lb/>
Spanish<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Arielle Sturz<lb/>
Psychology<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Vote Kalkhurst<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Dear Seniors:<lb/>
Tomorrow we will be electing<lb/>
our class president. The senior calss<lb/>
president plays an important role in<lb/>
our plans to graduate. He plans both<lb/>
graduations and any other activities<lb/>
concerning Seniors. The position of<lb/>
senior president entails a strong<lb/>
devotion to the job.<lb/>
Dillion Kalkhurst possesses this<lb/>
devotion and committement. Dillion<lb/>
has committed himself to serving the<lb/>
students his entire college career. He<lb/>
has served on Canvassing and Solic-<lb/>
iting, Chancellors Bcautification,<lb/>
Recreation, and Screening, and Ap-<lb/>
pointments committees. Dillion also<lb/>
served on the legislature for three<lb/>
vears and Scott Thomas's cabinet.<lb/>
Being a senior myself, 1 believe Dil-<lb/>
lion is the best person for us.<lb/>
Vote Dillion Kalkhurst.<lb/>
Senior President<lb/>
Larry Murphy<lb/>
Student Body President<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
English<lb/>
Vote Kalkhurst<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Seniors,<lb/>
Tommorow you will be choosing<lb/>
the person to be the head of your<lb/>
class, the Senior Class President.<lb/>
There is one candidate that stands<lb/>
out above the rest, Dillion Kalkurst.<lb/>
Dillion has served East Carolina in<lb/>
many different ways. He has been an<lb/>
active member of the Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment for 3 years.<lb/>
Dillion has held the position of<lb/>
legislator for 2 years and last year<lb/>
served on the Presidents Cabinet.<lb/>
Dillion has worked very closely with<lb/>
school administraiton and would<lb/>
continue to do this  a very<lb/>
proffesional manner.<lb/>
Fellow seniors 1 urge you to get<lb/>
out and vote Dillion Kalkurst for<lb/>
Senior Class President on Wednes-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Tripp Roakcs<lb/>
SGA Treasurei<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
SRA ELECTIONS<lb/>
TODAY<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
James Gardner<lb/>
for<lb/>
Vice President<lb/>
"The Right Choice"<lb/>
Helping Fellow Students Towards A<lb/>
Better Dormitory Life<lb/>
ih<lb/>
"HELP" WANTED<lb/>
Ex ellentpp rtur it :<lb/>
Earn Extra Cash<lb/>
Flexible I lours!<lb/>
IV lo IVi ple ' I S : I over<lb/>
needed at the<lb/>
STOP SHOP<lb/>
21 3 East 5th Streel<lb/>
2-6366<lb/>
YOUR SPORTS STATION<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
Fating &amp; linking<lb/>
MONDAY NITE VI FOOTBALL<lb/>
Casual Dining at its Finest!<lb/>
Featuring our soon-to-bc-famous Double-Shot Margaritas!<lb/>
Don't Miss our Reggae Celebration Every Wednesday Night<lb/>
LOCATED LT THE FARM FRESH<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
11 am-1 am Monday-Saturday 11 am-10 pm Sunday 355-2946<lb/>
"All right, classLet's test yqur New Music Knowledge<lb/>
BACK TO<lb/>
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2nd SET OF<lb/>
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AT TIME OF PROCESSING UMrT 7 ROLLS-<lb/>
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This special commemorative<lb/>
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A. Special perlor mane e by Whitney H<lb/>
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C. No commentary Dy Jim McKay<lb/>
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ONE HOUR PHOTOS AND PORTRAITS<lb/>
"Quality, Convenience and Personal Service'<lb/>
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TANGERINE DREAM<lb/>
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This legendary European trio:<lb/>
A. Pioneered synthesizer<lb/>
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B. Began as Wayne Newton s<lb/>
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C. Took their name from a tropical-<lb/>
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JJ 1 LPTape I CO<lb/>
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THE PRIMITIVES<lb/>
Lovely<lb/>
Right now. The Primitives<lb/>
are favorites on:<lb/>
A Rye ??? rsl v i<lb/>
B '? ? ? :? &amp; i '? '  -<lb/>
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C The Mori ???<lb/>
S-C 0 LPTape<lb/>
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This exciting new singer-<lb/>
songwriter was inspired by:<lb/>
A. Te Mormon Tdt ? .noir<lb/>
B. Trie Chipmunks<lb/>
C. The classic soui greats<lb/>
of the 50 s &amp; 60 s<lb/>
A"<lb/>
3 W LP Tape<lb/>
0-2 Correct<lb/>
3-4 Correct<lb/>
?<lb/>
All 5 Correct<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
(next to Annabcllc's)<lb/>
355-5050<lb/>
r TAYLOR DAYME<lb/>
J. Tell It To My Heart<lb/>
This sizzling songstress's<lb/>
first top-10 hit was:<lb/>
A. Tell it to my Great Dane<lb/>
B. Tell it to my Heart<lb/>
C. Tell it to the Marines<lb/>
A<lb/>
THE PLAZA, CAROLINA EAST MAIL<lb/>
12?<lb/>
LETTER, p.ige 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0006"/><lb/>
k<lb/>
.<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13,1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FOR RENT: Large, 1 bedroom duplex<lb/>
near university. 213 S. Eastern Street,<lb/>
$230, 758-5299.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Large 3 bedroom house near<lb/>
uniwewtty. 111 East 9th St. $360.758-5299.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
$lr7 0 per month (bedroom furnished or<lb/>
unfurnished) 12 utilities Available Oct.<lb/>
1 355-T&amp;9.<lb/>
ROOM &amp; BOARD available near cam-<lb/>
pus for female non-smoker work ex-<lb/>
change. Call 757-1798.<lb/>
HOUSEMATE: Quiet mf, wanted by<lb/>
faculty member. 3B house, newly remod-<lb/>
eled, walking distance from campus. Rent<lb/>
and lease negotiable. 757-6265 or leave<lb/>
message 757-6665. Cabrielle Yablonsky.<lb/>
APT. FOR RENT: Located 3 blocks from<lb/>
campus. Low rent, great location. Call<lb/>
Luke or Steve for more details. 830-0339.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: Canon T80 auto-focus cam-<lb/>
era, 30 mm lens, 60-300 mm zoom lens and<lb/>
electronic flash $450. Call Bryan 752-0270.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Crate GS150 watt amp. Brand<lb/>
new. 15" electra voice speaker. 20 ft. patch<lb/>
chord included. $275. 758-74, Jay.<lb/>
SOFA, CHAIR: Floral print. Great condi-<lb/>
tion ? no tears, need to sell. 756-8913 after<lb/>
5:30 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AKC Labrador Retreiver<lb/>
puppies, yellow, black, chocolate. Super<lb/>
litter! 9 vrs. breeding experience. Ready 9-<lb/>
19 HS. 793-9206.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from<lb/>
$100. Fords. Mercedes. Corvettes.<lb/>
Chews. Surplus. Buyers Guide (1) 805-<lb/>
687-bOOOExt. S-1166.<lb/>
1980, 850 SUZUKI: Black, 4 cyd drive<lb/>
shaft, 2 fiber glass luggage type saddle-<lb/>
bags, windshield, space helmet, new<lb/>
battery and break shoes. $750. Call 756-<lb/>
8692<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
FLORAL DESIGNER NEEDED: Prefer<lb/>
experienced full time help. Will consider<lb/>
part-time and training. Apply in person.<lb/>
1703 W 6th St. Greenville.<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL GIRLS! Rush Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Phi Lil'Sisters! Join the fun meet<lb/>
the brothers and sisters, Sept. 13 and 14<lb/>
from 9-11 at the Alpha Sig house?422<lb/>
West Fifth Street. For a ride or any infor-<lb/>
mation, call 757-3516.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: The Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association announces an opening<lb/>
in the Student Services Board. The posi-<lb/>
tion is Assistant Refrigerator Rental Man-<lb/>
ager Salary is $150 a month. No experi-<lb/>
ence required. Applications are available<lb/>
in room 222 Mendenhall. Deadline 5:00<lb/>
Friday, Sept. 16 For more info, contact<lb/>
Tripp Roakes at 757-6611, ext. 218.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: National marketing<lb/>
firm seeks ambitious Junior, Senior, or<lb/>
Graduate Student to manage on-campus<lb/>
promotions for top national companies<lb/>
this semester. Flexible hours with earning<lb/>
potential at $2,500. Call Judy C or Myra at<lb/>
1-800-592-2121.<lb/>
NEED WAITRESSES AND HOST-<lb/>
ESSES: Will work around class schedule.<lb/>
Apply in person. Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Rest, 105 Air Port Rd.<lb/>
BE ON T.V Many needed for commer-<lb/>
cials. Casting info. (1) 800-687-6000 Ext.<lb/>
TV-1166.<lb/>
EXPEDITIONS TO AFRICA: Spring<lb/>
semester openings to Kenya and<lb/>
Cameroon. Join a team of international<lb/>
young people to explore tropical rain-<lb/>
forests and discover African wildlife.<lb/>
APPLY NOW! Final chance for selection<lb/>
is Sept. 30-Oct. 2,1988 in North Carolina.<lb/>
Call OPERATION RALEIGH at 1-S00-<lb/>
727-7787 for an application today.<lb/>
BRODrS AND BRODVS FOR MEN<lb/>
are now accepting applications for the Fall<lb/>
Semester. Enthusiastic individuals who<lb/>
enjoy fashion and can work flexible hours<lb/>
should apply. Brady's Carolina East Mall.<lb/>
Monday thru Wednesday, 2-4 p.m.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24<lb/>
hours in and out. Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages. SDF<lb/>
Professional Computer Services, 106 East<lb/>
5th Street (beside Cubbies) Greenville,<lb/>
NC 752-3694.<lb/>
DWI? Don't Drink &amp; Drive. Come Party<lb/>
In Style. Call Class Act Limousine 757-<lb/>
3240.<lb/>
PARTY: If you're having a party and need<lb/>
a D.J. for the best music available for par-<lb/>
ties. Dance, Top 40 &amp; Beach. Call 355-2781<lb/>
ask for Morgan.<lb/>
SCHOOLS IN: Time to party! Call us for<lb/>
your music needs. We'll beat all prices and<lb/>
videotape your party. The Power Station<lb/>
DJ's. 752-0946, 752-0940.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
ECU LADIES: Come out tonight to<lb/>
Grog's and meet the brothers of Pi Kappa<lb/>
Alpha and become involved in the hottest<lb/>
frat. on campus. Become a little sister and<lb/>
find out why PIKE IS IT<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA: We had a blast at the<lb/>
party. Can't wait till the next one. Good<lb/>
luck to all the pledges. The Brothers it<lb/>
Pledges of Pi Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON: We would<lb/>
like to welcome all of the members of our<lb/>
Alpha pledge class. Good luck fellows!<lb/>
KA?Thanks for a great time at your<lb/>
house Friday evening. The rain sure<lb/>
didn't stop us! Let's do it again. Love, The<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi's.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
New York Hair Designer to<lb/>
provide FREE make-overs to<lb/>
Dorm Students.<lb/>
RA's contact Joanne Dunn at<lb/>
Professional Image.<lb/>
Set up an appointment for<lb/>
your hall today!<lb/>
Designer Haicuts abo available<lb/>
for all students $10. For more<lb/>
information 756-2945<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/>
Coat Termtnii i 11 ! i 30 v ? npregnancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
RA'S AND HEAD RESIDENTS: Be sure<lb/>
to vote for your fellow staff member from<lb/>
Jarvis. Vote Mary Fordham - Senior Class<lb/>
President.<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS are proud to<lb/>
support their vice-chairman in her cam-<lb/>
paign for senior class president. Good<lb/>
luck Mary Fordham!<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI: The brothers of<lb/>
Sigma Alpha Epsilon would like to thank<lb/>
you for your participation with our Rush.<lb/>
Wecould not have done it without you all.<lb/>
Thanks again! Sigma Alpha Epsilon.<lb/>
THE BROTHERS OF PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
would like to thank the ladies of Chi<lb/>
Omega and Alpha Omicron Pi for their<lb/>
help with rush.<lb/>
TKE'S: On Sunday night we crossed the<lb/>
street to what became an incredible feat.<lb/>
Your house rocked on with party and<lb/>
song and before we knew it the night was<lb/>
half gone. Rush was awesome, and now<lb/>
we can say, the parried that followed is an<lb/>
unforgettable day. Looking forward to<lb/>
the next time we meet because parties<lb/>
with you sure can't be beat. Love, the<lb/>
sisters &amp; pledges of Alpha Phi.<lb/>
RHONDA KNIGHT: Rush was awe-<lb/>
some! Thanks for all the hard work - It sure<lb/>
has paid off. We love you! Sisters of Alpha<lb/>
Phi.<lb/>
THE SISTERS OF ALPHA PHI are proud<lb/>
to announce the new Beta Sigma pledges:<lb/>
Star Almasie, Katerine Baker, Leigh<lb/>
Boggs, Lori Caviness, Keshia Colon, Lisa<lb/>
Crawford, Rhonda Dale, Jill Dervero,<lb/>
Melanie Hamilton, Elizabeth Hane,<lb/>
Gretchen Helms, Malinda Highsmith,<lb/>
Gretche Ives, Kathv Jablonski, Ann<lb/>
Johnson, Dlen Joyner, Sarah Kennedy,<lb/>
Colleen Kirkparrick, Kelli Kuchelmeister,<lb/>
Cheryl Culin, Heather Lyle, LaDonna<lb/>
McKee, Anne Pankratz, Stephanie Pipkin,<lb/>
Veronica Potter, Julianne Ridolphi, Amy<lb/>
Spencer, Tracy Stawarz, Becky Suarez,<lb/>
Carolyn Suggs, Elizabeth Temple, Mich-<lb/>
elle Vassil, Jeannette Varhies, Andrea<lb/>
Worthington, Jennifer Ziegler. We're<lb/>
proud of you all! Love, The Sisters.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE NEW<lb/>
BETA RHO PLEDGES OF DELTA<lb/>
ZETA: Tammy Preisler, Mary Ellen Lan-<lb/>
ham, Michele Tate, Kathy Hornby,<lb/>
Shelley Sotir, Melinda Gay, Kelly Wells,<lb/>
Darla Brown, Susan Weast, Heather<lb/>
Laird, Kelly Gibson, Kelly Kane, Nicolle<lb/>
Smith, 1 racy Ford, Susan Carroll, Melissa<lb/>
Pruden, Wendy Neal, Claudia Chalmers,<lb/>
Katherine Klutz, Nancy Pew, Stacey Wal-<lb/>
drop, ReneeCundiff, Kelli Green, Tammy<lb/>
Thigpen, Pam McKinney, Suzanne Keen,<lb/>
Rondalyn Mount and Kelly Spiegland.<lb/>
SIGMA SIGMA SIGMA: The brothers of<lb/>
Sigma Alpha Epsilon would like to thank<lb/>
you for helping us with Rush on such<lb/>
short notice. We hope in the future we can<lb/>
return the favor! Thanks Again! Sigma<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon.<lb/>
3RD SEMESTER FRESHMEN: Your<lb/>
vote still counts for Freshmen Class Presi-<lb/>
dent. Elect one of your own, Dean Wilk-<lb/>
ins.<lb/>
FRESHMEN: Don't let someone else<lb/>
choose your class president! GO VOTE.<lb/>
Paid for by the Dean Wilkins for class<lb/>
president committee.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU: The buses picked us<lb/>
up, and songs we did sing, To get us all<lb/>
psyched up for the famous tailgating.<lb/>
When we finally got to the game, we were<lb/>
all very impressed, with the seats on the 50<lb/>
yd. line, which turned out to be the very<lb/>
best. The victory of the game, got us ex-<lb/>
cited about continuing the fun. Back to<lb/>
your house we went, for the night was not<lb/>
done. Thanks for showing us a great pref<lb/>
day, we would not have done it any other<lb/>
way. Let's do it again soon! Love the<lb/>
AZD's.<lb/>
TO DONNA BONNESERA AND KIM-<lb/>
BERLY FLEMING: Congratulations on<lb/>
becoming sisters! We are very excited to<lb/>
have you part of our sisterhood! Love the<lb/>
AZD's.<lb/>
TO ALL THE FRATERNITIES: We hope<lb/>
you all had a great rush! We all look for-<lb/>
ward to meeting your new pledges! Love<lb/>
the AZDs.<lb/>
CHI ALPHA OMEGA: Congrats to the<lb/>
Beta pledge class of Chi Alpha Omega:<lb/>
Reggie, Jon, Devin, Mike, Chris, Jeff,<lb/>
David, John, Kennith, Jonathan, Jesse.<lb/>
From the Brothers of Chi Alpha Omega.<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA THETA SORORITY<lb/>
INC. will be having their formal rush on<lb/>
Wed Sept. 14th 1988. It will be held at the<lb/>
Ledonia S. Wright Afro American Cul-<lb/>
tural Center at 8:00. All interested ladies<lb/>
are asked to attend.<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA invites all inter<lb/>
ested girls to become Crescent Girls. Rush<lb/>
is Wednesday and Thursday night, start-<lb/>
ing at 9:00. For info, call 757-1367 500<lb/>
Elizabeth St.<lb/>
SENIORS! Be sure to bring your student<lb/>
i.d. on Wednesday, Sept. 15, and vote for<lb/>
Mary Fordham as your class president!<lb/>
Don't forget.<lb/>
ELLEN, I LOVE YOU We have spent<lb/>
some great times together and I hope for<lb/>
many more. TIL<lb/>
TO ROCK AND (DO)2: The hotel was<lb/>
kickin the game was stiff. We sat in Do's<lb/>
car and whew, caught a whiff! At Capt.<lb/>
Bill's we did meal, only to find we had to<lb/>
pick up the bill. Then for a stroll onto the<lb/>
swaying pier, M.K. asked why! Dot said,<lb/>
"Let's get the hell out of here Thanks for<lb/>
a great weekend! Dot and MKB.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE NEW<lb/>
JAMMIN' PLEDGE CLASS OF ALPHA<lb/>
DELTA PI! Robbyn Adams, Carey As-<lb/>
penburg, Kristine Baker, Gina Beard,<lb/>
Elizabeth Black, Barbara Bond, Amy Brat-<lb/>
ton, Tina Burns, Lisa Creech, Kim Cum-<lb/>
mings, Lisa Cummings, Maria Denoia,<lb/>
Sarah Fallon, Jocelyn Casque, Lisa<lb/>
Gonzalez, Kelly Hawthorne, Donna Hill-<lb/>
beck, Julia Hodge, Ashley Hutchinson,<lb/>
Dlen Jeffreys, Jennifer Kirchoff, Kelly<lb/>
Lassiter, Bo McDonald, Mary Meadows,<lb/>
Player Miller, Leslie Millikan, Rebecca<lb/>
Serling, Jcana Shallcross, Michelle Shuler,<lb/>
Melanie Simpson, Shannon Sitlinger,<lb/>
Laura Stephens, Mary Staton Stocks,<lb/>
Cynthia Sykes, Manea Thornell, Ahsa<lb/>
Turner and Kristen Walsh Love your si.v<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
TO KA PLEDGES Congratulations KA<lb/>
Little Sisters look forward to a great year<lb/>
NEED A RIDE TO ALABAMA on<lb/>
Thanksgiving Break Please call now to<lb/>
confirm! 758-8727 ? Tom<lb/>
READY TO ROCK on a Wednesday<lb/>
night? Check out hard rock hooligans<lb/>
Roulette, who are out to entertain you<lb/>
with style. Susie's Trechouse, Wedne.<lb/>
day, Sept 21 at 1000<lb/>
COME SEE THE EMBERS live at the K A<lb/>
House for the 1st Annual Boardwalk<lb/>
Benefit for MDA. Thur Sept 15 5-9 p m<lb/>
Get your tickets now Coolers are wvl<lb/>
come.<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 Stu<lb/>
dent Store or call 757 0128 Coolers are<lb/>
welcome!<lb/>
CHRISTIE: I lope you have a happy 21st,<lb/>
looking forward to spending part of it<lb/>
with you! RAC<lb/>
BASEBALL CARDS Sell old card fat<lb/>
cash, call Thomas. 756-0685 afte- ipm<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
HAIRCUTS<lb/>
OR STYLING<lb/>
Eastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
lAcroaa from Highway Patrol Station!<lb/>
Dchtnd Car Quest Auto Part<lb/>
2800 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Johnny Weathington<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
?All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
?And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
?Located Near BCU<lb/>
? Arrow From hghway Pit rot Stit ion<lb/>
S32S a month<lb/>
Contact J. T. or Tommy William<lb/>
756-7815 or 830-1937<lb/>
Office open - Apt. 8,12 - 5 JO 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 MOBILE HOME RENTALS - couple or<lb/>
singles. Apartment and mobile homes in Azalea<lb/>
Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.<lb/>
ConUrt T or Tommy William<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
CRUSTY<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
WE<lb/>
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/>
ECU STUPENT BANK<lb/>
Faculty, staff, and students may now pay<lb/>
Iheir Greenville Utility bills at the ECU<lb/>
STUDENT BANK, presenting both parts<lb/>
of the bill. Other services include cashing<lb/>
checks, savings accounts, paying tele-<lb/>
phone bills, and the purchase of money<lb/>
orders.<lb/>
ECU GOSPEL CHQIR<lb/>
ECU Gospel Choir is open for member-<lb/>
ship to all interested students. Last day to<lb/>
join is Sept. 21. Rehearsals are held<lb/>
Wednesdays at 5 p.m. in Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Cultural Center.<lb/>
CO-REC ALMOST ANY-<lb/>
THING GOES<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Co-Rec<lb/>
Almost Anything Goes registration meet-<lb/>
ing held September 20 at 530 p.m. in GCB<lb/>
1026. It's fun and exciting and you'U have<lb/>
a blast so register September 20.<lb/>
CHANGES IN OFFICE<lb/>
The League of Women Voters of<lb/>
Greenville-Pitt County will sponsor an<lb/>
informational evening for Greenville citi-<lb/>
zens regarding the proposed changes in<lb/>
the terms of office for the Mayor and<lb/>
members of the City Council and the<lb/>
Mayor's vote. Speakers will include: Dr.<lb/>
Dorothy Clayton, Professor of Political<lb/>
Science at ECU; Mr. DeWitt McCarley,<lb/>
Greenville City Attorney; and Mayor Ed<lb/>
Carter. The League encourages the public<lb/>
to attend and participate in asking ques-<lb/>
tions concerning these issues. The event<lb/>
will be held in the Council Chambers on<lb/>
the third floor of the Qty Office F 'ding<lb/>
on Fifth Street on Sept 13,1968, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
HEARTSMART FOOD<lb/>
On Sept. 13th and 14th, the American<lb/>
Heart Association and Purdue are spon-<lb/>
soring Food Fest, 1988. At Krogers and<lb/>
Harris (Bells Fork location) there will be<lb/>
two "Heartsmart Food Tours" daily - at 10<lb/>
a.m. and 6 p.m. Each tour costs $5 (which<lb/>
is donated to the American Heart Assoc.)<lb/>
and are given by qualified nutritionists.<lb/>
These tours are to help consumers make<lb/>
healthy, smart choices at the grocery<lb/>
store. Handouts and samples are avail-<lb/>
able - bring your shopping list! Please<lb/>
come and help us raise money for a wor-<lb/>
thy cause. Call 752-7374 evenings after 6<lb/>
p.m. for more information, or just come on<lb/>
down on the 13th and 14th for an informa-<lb/>
tive and fun tour.<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR BUSH 88<lb/>
Students for Bush 88 call Bobby Hall for<lb/>
info. Buttons, stickers etc. 758-5775.<lb/>
GROUP PHOTOGRAPHS<lb/>
Group photographs will be taken Sept. 15<lb/>
until Dec. 2. No group pictures can be<lb/>
taken after Dec. 2. Please note that the<lb/>
group listing with the name of every per-<lb/>
son in the photograph MUST be pre-<lb/>
sented BEFORE the photographer films<lb/>
the group. ORGANIZATIONS WITH-<lb/>
OUT LISTINGS WILL NOT BE PHOTO-<lb/>
GRAPHED, and time does not permit the<lb/>
scheduling of another session. Call 757-<lb/>
6501 and leave date it time for the photo to<lb/>
be taken. Please give 2 days notice for the<lb/>
photographer.<lb/>
MCfl.<lb/>
Do not forget the Monday night meeting<lb/>
at 7 p.m. at MSC Everyone is invited to<lb/>
attend. Our first I.C. is at UNC-CH. One<lb/>
major issue to be presented is "Condoms<lb/>
in the Residences Hall This should bring<lb/>
a lot of debate. For membership info<lb/>
contact Don at 355-3152 or Janet at 355-<lb/>
6420. All majors are welcome.<lb/>
ECU FORENSIC SOriFTY<lb/>
Interested in competing in intercollegiate,<lb/>
public speaking interpreted reading or<lb/>
debate? Well the ECU Forensic Society is<lb/>
for you. The next meeting will be Sept. 20,<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in 211 Messick Theatre Arts Bldg.<lb/>
COUNSELING CENTER<lb/>
STRATEGIES FOR TAKING STAN-<lb/>
DARDIZED TESTSHOW TO DO WELL<lb/>
ON THE GRE. Are you planning on tak-<lb/>
ing the GRE, LSAT, MAT, MEDCAT, or<lb/>
other standardized tests? This workshop<lb/>
will cover basic information about these<lb/>
tests, test taking strategy and sample<lb/>
items. 4-5 p.m. in 312 Wright Bldg Sept.<lb/>
19. If you are planning on taking the<lb/>
Graduate Record Examination for admis-<lb/>
sion to graduate school, this workshop<lb/>
will help you prepare - types of items, test<lb/>
taking strategy, scores and sample items<lb/>
will be discussed. Sept 20 from 4-5 p.m. in<lb/>
312 Wright Bldg GRE Workshop.<lb/>
EARLY CHILDHOOD CM IB<lb/>
All early childhood education majors are<lb/>
invited to the first meeting of the Early<lb/>
Childhood Education Club. The meeting<lb/>
will be on Sept. 14 at 4 p.m. in Speight 308.<lb/>
Please join us!<lb/>
ECU GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
ECU Gospel Choir is now accepting new<lb/>
members for Fall and Spring. Last day to<lb/>
pin is Monday, Sept. 19. Rehearsals are<lb/>
Wednesdays at 5 p.m. at Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Cultural Center.<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
CCF - Campus Christian Fellowship, a<lb/>
non-denominational Christian group for<lb/>
ECU students will meet every Tuesday<lb/>
night n Ra wl 130 at 7 p.m. You are invited<lb/>
to join us for rood-fun-fellowship and<lb/>
praise! B.Y.O.B. (Bring Your Own Bible).<lb/>
MIDDLE GRADES ED. CI.IJB<lb/>
ECU Middle Grades Club will be having a<lb/>
membership drive in Speight on Sept.<lb/>
13th, 14th, 19th, and 20th. The Club will<lb/>
have its first meeting Sept. 20th in Speight<lb/>
203. All Middle Grades Majors are en-<lb/>
couraged to become a part of this special<lb/>
organization. For info call club president<lb/>
Tad Williams 830-1761.<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR MARTIN<lb/>
Students for Martin invite everyone to<lb/>
come see Governor Martin on , Sept. 14 at<lb/>
2 p.m. here on campus at Mendenhall.<lb/>
There will also be a rally Tuesday evening,<lb/>
6 p.m at the Moose Lodge. Call Mary<lb/>
Fordham, 752-8359 for more info.<lb/>
COMMUNION<lb/>
Worship God and celebrate Communion<lb/>
this Wed. night at 5 p.m. at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center then enjoy a delicious, all-<lb/>
you-can-eat home cooked meal and good<lb/>
fellowship (wes2fel). The meal is $2 at the<lb/>
door, $1.50 if you sign up in advance. Call<lb/>
758-2030 for reservations. Sponsored by<lb/>
Presbyterian and Methodist Campus<lb/>
Ministries.<lb/>
PHYSICAL THERAPY CLUB<lb/>
Blood Drive Challenge - The P.T. Club is<lb/>
challenging all clubs, fraternities, sorori-<lb/>
ties, etc. to donate. You may need the "gift<lb/>
of life" some day. Blood drive - Menden-<lb/>
hall rm. 244 Sept. 14, Sept. 15,12-6 p.m.<lb/>
LQSI<lb/>
Something missing in your life? We've<lb/>
found it and we want to share it with you.<lb/>
Jenkins Art Auditorium. EVERY Friday<lb/>
night at 7 p.m.<lb/>
AGC<lb/>
Attention Industry and Technology En-<lb/>
thusiasts: There will be an (ACG) Associ-<lb/>
ated General Contractors Meeting Sept.<lb/>
14 at 5:45 p.m in the Rawl Bldg. Beer it<lb/>
nuts will be served. Check it out.<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
If you are challenged everyday with prob-<lb/>
lems that you find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
us for the uncompromised word of God.<lb/>
Every Friday night at 7 p.m. in the Jenkins<lb/>
Art Auditorium.<lb/>
ECU WOMEN'S SOCCER<lb/>
cum<lb/>
There is a mandatory meeting Sept. 15th<lb/>
at 530 p.m. in Memorial Gym room 102.<lb/>
All new it interested members are wel-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
WINDSURFING<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural<lb/>
Windsurfing registration meeting held<lb/>
from Sept. 6 to Sept. 27.<lb/>
GROUP PHOTOGRAPHS<lb/>
Group photographs will be taken Sept.15<lb/>
until Dec. 2. No group pictures can be<lb/>
taken after Dec. 2. Please note that the a<lb/>
group listing with the r. me of every per-<lb/>
son in the photograph MUST be pre-<lb/>
sented BEFORE the photographer films<lb/>
the group. ORGANIZATIONS WITH<lb/>
OUT LISTINGS WILL NOT BE PHOTO-<lb/>
GRAPHED, and time does not porn I<lb/>
scheduling of another session<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 Salerruv<lb/>
Sonnenberg; Sinead O'Connor?The Lion<lb/>
and the Cobra; REO Specdwagon?Life<lb/>
as We Know It. The Music Listening<lb/>
Lounge is open seven days a week from 2<lb/>
1030 p.m. and is located on the second<lb/>
floor gallery of Mendenhall Check out<lb/>
the new tunes before vou<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 wiU sponsor voter<lb/>
registration on Sept 14 from 830 am 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/>
NATIONAI TEACHER EXAM<lb/>
The National Teacher Examinations ?<lb/>
Core Battery Exams ? (Communication<lb/>
Skills, General Knowledge, and Profes-<lb/>
sional Knowledge) will be offered at BCU<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/>
man Sept. 19. Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Room-105, Speight Building<lb/>
CREDJXCQMMITttE<lb/>
The Credits Committee is considering<lb/>
question of whether the free drop pe<lb/>
for undergraduate students shouic,<lb/>
shortened In order to learn thefeeuni<lb/>
the faculty, staff, and students regard<lb/>
this question, the Credits Commute<lb/>
scheduled two Open Meetings du<lb/>
which individuals are invited to pr<lb/>
their feelings and ideas ALL faculty<lb/>
and students are invited to attend u,<lb/>
meetings on either of the following d<lb/>
Sept 1Q. 2.10- 4:30 pj? room C<lb/>
Drewstei and Sept 22. 2 30 ? 4 30<lb/>
room G 101 Brewster It is requested)<lb/>
any proposal or recommendation<lb/>
seated during the meeting be accor<lb/>
nied by a written summary, given to,<lb/>
committee at the time of the meej<lb/>
Failure to prepare a summary<lb/>
prevent you from being allowed to i<lb/>
ent your iews and .<lb/>
limit the abilm of the commit!<lb/>
thorn complete consideration<lb/>
IEYVISH bTU) MS<lb/>
You are wel on e to after<lb/>
High 1: s at 1<lb/>
Shalom (1420 E. 14(<lb/>
Sept 11 8pm El<lb/>
12, 10 am. Rosh Hashanaii<lb/>
Ma am<lb/>
Masahanah Sept.<lb/>
Kippur Sept .<lb/>
Morning 130 . <lb/>
Yior &amp; N'ilah r moi <lb/>
ttons call Mil<lb/>
are invited to the hon <lb/>
Resmk for j<lb/>
Sept 2<lb/>
dinner Call Dl I<lb/>
or 757-6521 m  r Mil<lb/>
ECU WOMEN'S SQCCI r<lb/>
Anyone interested I<lb/>
Club Soccer in the Fa<lb/>
year, an orga<lb/>
set up It you an sted and<lb/>
more information please get ? <lb/>
with one or an) r the folk<lb/>
Kris Slacum 758-4255 Bern Harvey<lb/>
9450 or Ann Totaro B3 -<lb/>
leave messa<lb/>
Outpatien<lb/>
A treatment program I<lb/>
people with aching backs .<lb/>
pain in their sholders, elbov, - <lb/>
knees is underway at East Caf<lb/>
lina University in the D<lb/>
of Physical Therapy.<lb/>
The department a j<lb/>
ECU School of Allied Health<lb/>
ences, has established an<lb/>
tient clinic specializing in<lb/>
pedic physical therapy a; j<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"We considered calling ii j<lb/>
clinic so that pcopU?jCOu!c (<lb/>
understand what we do<lb/>
George Hamilton, chairn<lb/>
the Physical Therapv pr<lb/>
But he said calling it a back<lb/>
tended to limit the wide ra<lb/>
services and treatment I <lb/>
will provide<lb/>
"The clinic can help poor j<lb/>
back problems, and probk<lb/>
sociated with pain in the mus<lb/>
and in the pints of the h-<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Anybody who has km :<lb/>
pain, whiplash injuries, bursi<lb/>
tennis elbow, post fracture<lb/>
some typeof injury that causes<lb/>
joint to be week, painful or <lb/>
can be helped bv<lb/>
therapy he said 'We wi I<lb/>
work to establish fund<lb/>
joint after injury or surgen<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The clinic will take referral<lb/>
physicians or individuals w!<lb/>
call the Department of Physw<lb/>
Therapy at 757-4133 or 7S7-?(.<lb/>
to set up an appointment<lb/>
Hamilton said the clinic is Km)<lb/>
opened to provide a place<lb/>
physical therapy faculty to mail<lb/>
tain their clinical skills w hue pt<lb/>
viding a service to the citizens<lb/>
Greenville and eastern Mori<lb/>
Carolina He said the clinic w<lb/>
also be a teaching resource tj<lb/>
students and will assist in ti<lb/>
collection of research informant<lb/>
for studies on the effectiveness<lb/>
various treatments.<lb/>
The physical therapy depai<lb/>
ment at ECU began in 19(9 as oi<lb/>
of the programs ottered in tl<lb/>
CO<lb/>
(Self Serviced I<lb/>
FAST<lb/>
aHMaaHt"JBaaMBi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0007"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
H<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13, 1988 7<lb/>
tings, Lisa Cummings, Maria Denoia,<lb/>
rah Fallon, Jocelyn Casque, Lisa<lb/>
nzalez, Kellv Hawthorne, Donna Hill-<lb/>
;k, Julia Hodge. Ashley Hutchinson.<lb/>
Hen Jeffreys, Jennifer Kirchoff, Kelly<lb/>
ivsiter Bo McDonald, Mary Meadows,<lb/>
ber Miller, Leslie Millikan, Rebecca<lb/>
sriing, jeana Shallaoss, Michelle Shuler,<lb/>
lielanie Simpson, Shannon Sitlinger,<lb/>
iura Stephens. Marv Staton Stocks,<lb/>
tvnthia Sykes, Mariea ThornelL Alisa<lb/>
furrter and knsten Walsh Love your sis-<lb/>
fO KA PLEDGES Congratulations. KA<lb/>
tie Sisters look forward to a great year.<lb/>
itED A RIDE TO ALABAMA on<lb/>
mksgiving Break Please call now to<lb/>
Uirm' 758 8727 ? Tom<lb/>
D TO ROCK on a Wednesday<lb/>
ight? Ch.vk out hard rock hooligans<lb/>
ulette. who are out to entertain you<lb/>
Style. Susie's Trechouse, Wednes-<lb/>
 Sept 21 at IftOO<lb/>
: iME SEE THE EMBERS live at the KA<lb/>
ri use for the 1st Annual Boardwalk<lb/>
tor MDA Thur , Sept 13 5 9pm.<lb/>
: youf tickets now Coolers are wel-<lb/>
PPA ALPHA presents the 1st Annual<lb/>
?jrdwalk Benefit tor MDA Featuring<lb/>
?e Embers Thurs Sept 15 from 3-9 p.m.<lb/>
;kets will be on sale in front of the Stu<lb/>
i. -tore or call 757 0128 Coolers are<lb/>
ne!<lb/>
HRIST1E: i lope you have a happy 21st,<lb/>
k oking forward to spending part of it<lb/>
h you! RAC<lb/>
VSFBALL CARDS Sell old cards for<lb/>
"homas 756-0685 aft" 5pm<lb/>
ASSIF1ED<lb/>
TION<lb/>
BOARD<lb/>
ERS<lb/>
g Judicial<lb/>
ers need to<lb/>
Harden at<lb/>
23 or<lb/>
ext. 218<lb/>
ately:<lb/>
outh<lb/>
wford<lb/>
ates<lb/>
You!<lb/>
GRAPHED, and time does not permit tlv<lb/>
scheduling of another session.<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/>
MarsaJis? Standard Time, FNXS?Kick;<lb/>
Ahmad Jamal?Crystal; Jad)a Salerno-<lb/>
Sonnenberg, Sinead O'Connor?The Lion<lb/>
land the Cobra, REO Speedwagon?Life<lb/>
las We Know It The Music Listening<lb/>
ILounge is open seven days a week from 2-<lb/>
110-30 pm and is located on the second<lb/>
floor gallery of Mendenhall Check out<lb/>
Ithe new tunes before vou<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-Pi ft County will sponsor voter<lb/>
registration on Sept 14 from 830 a.m. to 1<lb/>
pm in the ECU Bookstore lobby. New<lb/>
registrations, permanent address changes<lb/>
andor party affiliation changes can be<lb/>
made at this time.<lb/>
NATIONAL TEACHER EXAM<lb/>
The National Teacher Examinations ?<lb/>
Core Battery Exams ? (Communication<lb/>
Skills, General Knowledge, and Profes-<lb/>
sional Knowledge) will be offered at ECU<lb/>
October 22 Applications are to be com-<lb/>
pleted and mailed to Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, Box 911 R, Princeton, NJ 08541.<lb/>
Applications must be postmarked no later<lb/>
than Sept 19 Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Room 105, Speight Building<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CREDIT COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Credits Committee is considering the<lb/>
question of whether the free drop period<lb/>
for undergraduate students should be<lb/>
shortened. In order to learn the feelings of<lb/>
the faculty, staff, and students regarding<lb/>
this question, the Credits Committee has<lb/>
scheduled two Open Meetings during<lb/>
which individuals are invited to present<lb/>
their feelings and ideas. ALL faculty, staff,<lb/>
and students are invited to attend these<lb/>
meetings on either of the following dates:<lb/>
Tt 19, 2.30 ? 4:30 p.m. room C-103<lb/>
Hrewster and Sept. 22, 2:30 ? 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
room C-103 Brewster. It is requested that<lb/>
any proposal or recommendation pre-<lb/>
sented during the meeting be accompa-<lb/>
nied bv a written summary, given to the<lb/>
committee at the time of the meeting.<lb/>
Failure to prepare a summary will not<lb/>
prevent you from being allowed to pres-<lb/>
ent your views and proposals, but may<lb/>
limit the ability of the committee to give<lb/>
them complete consideration.<lb/>
IEWISH STUDENTS<lb/>
 ou are welcome to attend the following<lb/>
I ligh 1 lolidav Services at Temple Bayt<lb/>
sh.ilom (1420 E. 14th St. in Greenville):<lb/>
Sept 11,8 p.m. Erev Rosh I lashanah, Sept.<lb/>
12,10 am Rosh I lashanah Day - 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Ma-ariv, Sept. 13, 10 a.m. 2nd Day Rosh<lb/>
liasahanah, Sept. 20, 7 p.m. Erev Yom<lb/>
kippur, Sept. 21, 9:30 am. Yom Kippur<lb/>
Morning - 4:30 p.m. Atternoon bcrvice,<lb/>
Wor &amp; Nilah. For more info, or direc-<lb/>
tions call Mike at 756-4930. All students<lb/>
are invited to the home of Dr. Brainy<lb/>
Resnik for a I lome 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/>
FCU WOMEN'S SOCCER<lb/>
Anvone 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 vou 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 Harvey 756-<lb/>
M50 or Ann Totaro 830-9315. Call and<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
PRE-PHYSICAL THERAPY<lb/>
All general college pre-physical therapy<lb/>
sophomores, or higher, anticipating ap-<lb/>
plying to the May 1989 Physical Therapy<lb/>
Class should go to the Physical Therapy<lb/>
Department Office, 1st floor, Belk Build-<lb/>
ing, before the end of Sept. to determine<lb/>
eligibility. Instructions for receiving the<lb/>
application packet will be given then. If<lb/>
you have any questions, contact that office<lb/>
by phone (757-6961, ext. 261) or in person.<lb/>
ALUMNT 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/>
competition. The format used by the bowl<lb/>
will closely adhave to the format used by<lb/>
the GE College Bowl. The ECU Bowl<lb/>
needs moderators, judges, time-keepers,<lb/>
and scorers. Sept. 15 at7p.m. in theconfer-<lb/>
ence room of the TaylorSlaughter<lb/>
Alumni Center on E 5th Street, there will<lb/>
be an orientationmini-training session<lb/>
for interested volunteers. Faculty, staff,<lb/>
and students are invited to attend. Call<lb/>
Susan C. Smith, Admissions, 757-6640 or<lb/>
John Anema at 752-7151 for further infor-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
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 CLJJB<lb/>
Practices are in full swing. Come to the<lb/>
bottom of College Hill every Tues.?<lb/>
Thurs and Sunday at 5 p.m. New players<lb/>
are more than welcome. Join the team that<lb/>
tied for 5th place last year at Collegiate<lb/>
Nationals in Santa Barbara, Ca.<lb/>
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/>
ALPHA PHI OMEGA<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega is a co-ed National<lb/>
Service Fraternity. We want you to know<lb/>
what we are all about. Please look for<lb/>
announcements in upcoming meetings<lb/>
and events. Everyone is welcome!<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
Co-op education, a free service offered by<lb/>
the University, is designed to help you<lb/>
find career-related work experience be-<lb/>
fore you graduate. All students are en-<lb/>
couraged to attend a Co-op Information<lb/>
Seminar in the General Classroom Build-<lb/>
ing. The Seminar schedule is: Thursday,<lb/>
Aug. 25 4 p.m. Room 2006, Monday, Aug.<lb/>
29 1 p.m. Room 2010, Thursday, Sept. 1 4<lb/>
p.m. Room 2026, Thursday, Sept. 8 1 p.m.<lb/>
Room 2010, Monday, Sept. 12 1 p.m.<lb/>
Room 2010, Thursday, Sept. 15 4 p.m.<lb/>
Room 2006, Monday, Sept. 19 4 p.m.<lb/>
Room 2006, Thursday Sept. 22 1 p.m.<lb/>
Room 2010, Monday, Sept. 26 1 p.m.<lb/>
Room 2010, Thursday, Sept. 29 4 p.m.<lb/>
Room 2006.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
study for Fall Semester and or Spring<lb/>
Semester, you are encouraged to contact<lb/>
the Co-op office about off campus place-<lb/>
ments. Call 757-6979 or come by the Gen-<lb/>
eral Classroom Building, Room 2028.<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPCIS<lb/>
The Greenville-Pitt County Special Olym-<lb/>
pics will be conducting a training school<lb/>
Sept. 17 at Elm St. Gym for anyone inter-<lb/>
ested in volunteering to coach soccer for<lb/>
special athletes. No experience is needed.<lb/>
We are also looking for coaches for basket-<lb/>
ball, weight-lifting, ans swimming. All<lb/>
interested persons should contact Greg<lb/>
Epperson or Connie Sappenfield at the<lb/>
Special Olympic office, 830-4551.<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 tv Gentries to Media Board or Rebel<lb/>
Otfi pen to currently enrolled ECU<lb/>
stud its only.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY UNION<lb/>
A special added attraction of EVITA will<lb/>
be presented in Wright Auditorium on<lb/>
Sept. 22,1988, at 8 p.m. Composed by An-<lb/>
drew Lloyd Webber (CATS. PHANTOM<lb/>
OF THE QPERA and 1ESUS CHRIST<lb/>
SUPERSTAR), EVITA won seven Tony<lb/>
Awards, including Best Musical. EVITA<lb/>
is based upon the life of Eva Peron, the<lb/>
second wife of Argentine dictator Juan<lb/>
Peron. Tickets for the New York Touring<lb/>
Production of EVITA are now on sale. For<lb/>
further details, contact: The Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhall Student Center, 757-<lb/>
6611, Ext. 266.<lb/>
SRA<lb/>
Interested in your resident hall? Become<lb/>
involved by joining Student Residence<lb/>
Association. See your residence hall direc-<lb/>
tor for information. Elections for officers<lb/>
are today!<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/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
Students who wish to obtain financial aid<lb/>
for overseas education may apply for a<lb/>
Rivers Scholarship. The next application<lb/>
deadline is Oct 1, 1988. For further info<lb/>
contact the Office of International Studies<lb/>
in the GCB, room 1002, 757-6769.<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
The Lady Pirates Volleyball Team will<lb/>
play Campbell University Wed. night at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Minges Coliseum. The team only<lb/>
has a limited amount of home games so<lb/>
get out there and show your support.<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
JIM LAYTON<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Sophomore Class President<lb/>
"OUTSPOKEN LEADERSHIP"<lb/>
Outpatient clinic set up by physical therapy dept<lb/>
A treatment program to help<lb/>
people with aching backs and<lb/>
pain in their sholders, elbows and<lb/>
knees is underway at East Caro-<lb/>
lina University in the Department<lb/>
of Physical Therapy.<lb/>
The department, a part of the<lb/>
ECU School of Allied Health Sci-<lb/>
ences, has established an outpa-<lb/>
tient clinic specializing in ortho-<lb/>
pedic physical therapy applica-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
We ct nsiaered calling it a back<lb/>
cinc so vYvai people .coulcTbettqf<lb/>
understand what we do said<lb/>
George Hamilton, chairman of<lb/>
the Physical Therapy program.<lb/>
But he said calling it a back clinic<lb/>
tended to limit the wide range of<lb/>
services and treatment the clinic<lb/>
will provide.<lb/>
"The clinic can help people with<lb/>
back problems, and problems as-<lb/>
sociated with pain in the muscles<lb/>
and in the joints of the body he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Anybody who has low back<lb/>
pain, whiplash injuries, bursitis,<lb/>
tennis elbow, post fracture or<lb/>
some type of injury that causes the<lb/>
joint to be week, painful or stiff<lb/>
can be helped by physical<lb/>
therapy he said. "We will also<lb/>
work to establish function in a<lb/>
joint after injury or surgery he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The clinic will take referrals by<lb/>
physicians or individuals who<lb/>
call the Department of Physical<lb/>
Therapy at 757-4135 or 757-6961<lb/>
to set up an appointment.<lb/>
Hamilton said the clinic is being<lb/>
opened to provide a place for<lb/>
physical therapy faculty to main-<lb/>
tain their clinical skills while pro-<lb/>
viding a service to the citizens of<lb/>
Greenville and eastern North<lb/>
Carolina. He said the clinic will<lb/>
also be a teaching resource for<lb/>
students and will assist in the<lb/>
collection of research information<lb/>
for studies on the effectiveness of<lb/>
various treatments.<lb/>
The physical therapy depart-<lb/>
ment at ECU began in 1969 as one<lb/>
of the programs offered in the<lb/>
then new School of Allied health.<lb/>
Although the program currently<lb/>
graduates about 24 students a<lb/>
year, the demand by students to<lb/>
major in Physical Therapy is high.<lb/>
Hamilton said the department<lb/>
gets more than 300 applications<lb/>
for the spaces available each year<lb/>
in the curriculum. He said the<lb/>
department gets a constant<lb/>
stream of calls and letters from<lb/>
potential employers outlining the<lb/>
opportunities for graduates of the<lb/>
4??gfajBv: 7" ?<lb/>
In past years the physical ther-<lb/>
apy program has provided a lim-<lb/>
ited amount of clinical service,<lb/>
primarily to ECU students and<lb/>
faculty. This is the first time that it<lb/>
has offered a full time, full service<lb/>
clinic to the public.<lb/>
The Physical Therapy Depart-<lb/>
ment and its clinic is located in the<lb/>
Belk Allied Health Building.<lb/>
Therapy rooms on the first floor of<lb/>
the building contain an array of<lb/>
sophisticated equipment. There<lb/>
are tables for therapeutic exercise<lb/>
and massage and special exercise<lb/>
machines designed for manipu-<lb/>
lating certain muscles and joints.<lb/>
One of the machines is actually<lb/>
a type of robot, called a Biodex,<lb/>
that can be programmed to en-<lb/>
hance muscle and tendon devel-<lb/>
opment in the knee and other ex-<lb/>
tremity joints. The machine can<lb/>
also help therapists analyze the<lb/>
extent of functional loss following<lb/>
injury or disease of a joint.<lb/>
Hamilton said that when an<lb/>
individual comes to the clinic a<lb/>
physical therapist will evaluate<lb/>
the problem and make an assess-<lb/>
ment to determine what should<lb/>
be done. If the problem is some-<lb/>
thing that cannot be helped by<lb/>
physical therapy then the thera-<lb/>
pist will suggest seeing a physi-<lb/>
cian.<lb/>
"Our intent is to work closely<lb/>
with the medical community in<lb/>
helping people with musclo-<lb/>
skeletal problems he said.<lb/>
He said that one of the goals for<lb/>
the program is to combine the<lb/>
patient care services offered by<lb/>
the faculty of the Department of<lb/>
Physical Therapy with the patient<lb/>
care services offered by medical<lb/>
school and faculty.<lb/>
"We see physical therapy as an<lb/>
extension of the physician Ha-<lb/>
milton said.<lb/>
He said medical doctors can<lb/>
treat patients by administering<lb/>
drugs, performing surgery or by<lb/>
physical intervention. But he said<lb/>
physicians sometimes forget the<lb/>
physical intervention and rely<lb/>
solely on drugs and surgery.<lb/>
An example might be a patient<lb/>
who sees a physician for back<lb/>
pain. After examining the patient<lb/>
and taking x-rays, if the doctor<lb/>
can find no disease or major struc-<lb/>
tural deficiency causing the prob-<lb/>
lem the patient is sometimes told<lb/>
that the condition is fleeting and<lb/>
that it will get better with pain<lb/>
medication and rest.<lb/>
"Sometimes they do get better<lb/>
and sometimes they don't said<lb/>
Hamilton. These minor problems<lb/>
sometimes grow into greater<lb/>
problems because the patient will<lb/>
usually cut down on physical ac-<lb/>
tivity.<lb/>
"As you cut down on activities<lb/>
you weaken your muscle and<lb/>
joint structure and allow bi-<lb/>
omechanical alteration to occur<lb/>
Hamilton said. "You then may be<lb/>
placed in a sudden demanding<lb/>
situation and your body can't<lb/>
respond. When you can't respond<lb/>
you injure yourself he said.<lb/>
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<lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMRER 13. 1988<lb/>
Gubernatorial candidates looking for edge<lb/>
RALEIGH (AD - With the gu-<lb/>
bernatirial race in the home<lb/>
stretch and Gov. Jim Martin and<lb/>
Lt. Gox. Bob Jordan running neck<lb/>
and neck, the campaigns are<lb/>
maneuvering for every opportu-<lb/>
nity to gain advantage - however<lb/>
slight.<lb/>
Take, for example, their ap-<lb/>
proach to "free media" - an<lb/>
insider's term for campaign cov-<lb/>
erage by newspapers, television<lb/>
and radio. Strategists view a fa-<lb/>
vorable news story, especially on<lb/>
television, as a sort of frecbie, in<lb/>
contrast to advertising that must<lb/>
be purchased at steep rates.<lb/>
In pursuit of such freebics, they<lb/>
work to make their candidate look<lb/>
good in the news and get the<lb/>
media to report on the issues they<lb/>
want to discuss.<lb/>
"You want all the media atten-<lb/>
tion that you can get focused on<lb/>
what you feel is important said<lb/>
Sam Poole. a Southern Fines attor-<lb/>
ney who engineered Democratic<lb/>
Sen. Terr Sanford's come-from-<lb/>
behind defeat oi Republican Jim<lb/>
Brovhill in 1986.<lb/>
It's a political axiom that an<lb/>
incombent has a natural advan-<lb/>
tage where free media is con-<lb/>
cerned. A governor has the "bully<lb/>
pulpit" - virtually unlimited ac-<lb/>
cess to the media simply by call-<lb/>
ing a news conference. He also, as<lb/>
Jordan frequently notes, has a<lb/>
communications staff and pre-<lb/>
sides over an administration dot-<lb/>
ted with press offices.<lb/>
Martin and his strategists skill-<lb/>
fully exploit the bully pulpit.<lb/>
Throughout his term, he has used<lb/>
his regular Raleigh news confer-<lb/>
ence to go over the heads of<lb/>
Democratic legislators, portray-<lb/>
ing himself to their constituents as<lb/>
the victim of pettv partisanship.<lb/>
Since the campaign has begun,<lb/>
Martin has opened nearly every<lb/>
news conference with announce-<lb/>
ments of new initiatives or policy<lb/>
statements, often talking for 20<lb/>
minutes or longer before the floor<lb/>
is opened for questions.<lb/>
The tactic usually ensures that<lb/>
at least some stations and news-<lb/>
papers will carry stories Martin<lb/>
wants covered.<lb/>
Tim Pittman, Martin's cam-<lb/>
paign press secretary, denies the<lb/>
news conference format was de-<lb/>
signed solely for political benefit,<lb/>
But he acknowledged the<lb/>
campaign's goal is for the gover-<lb/>
nor to emerge from every encoun-<lb/>
ter with the media "looking like a<lb/>
leader, an activist governor<lb/>
whose policies have moved the<lb/>
state forward<lb/>
Another goal is for newsconfer-<lb/>
ences to establish differences be-<lb/>
tween martin and Jordan with a<lb/>
favorable slant for the governor,<lb/>
Pittman said.<lb/>
The lieutenant governor has a<lb/>
much lower profile. Although<lb/>
Jordan meets with reporters daily<lb/>
when the General Assembly is in<lb/>
session, television coverage of the<lb/>
Legislature has fallen off in recent<lb/>
years. His visibility has picked up,<lb/>
but equalling Martin's is nearly<lb/>
impossible.<lb/>
To partially offset Martin's<lb/>
advantage, Jordan and the state<lb/>
Democratic Party have begun<lb/>
holding news conferences Thurs-<lb/>
day mornings in Raleigh - usually<lb/>
an hour or so before Martin's get<lb/>
under way at 10 a.m.<lb/>
The Democrats generally focus<lb/>
on an issue such as education or<lb/>
the environment, touting<lb/>
Jordan's record and proposals<lb/>
and criticizing Martin's perform-<lb/>
ance. This assures that Martin will<lb/>
be put on the defensive at some<lb/>
point during his own news con-<lb/>
ference as reporters seek a re-<lb/>
sponse. And it enables Jordan to<lb/>
exert some control over the ongo-<lb/>
ing campaign debate.<lb/>
Jordan's campaign press secre-<lb/>
tary, Phil Wells, usually attends<lb/>
Martin's news conferences and<lb/>
often buttonholes reporters after-<lb/>
ward to rebut some of the<lb/>
governor's remarks.<lb/>
Pittman calls the Jordan camp's<lb/>
tactics "annoying" but acknowl-<lb/>
edges a Martin staffer occasion-<lb/>
ally attends Jordan news confer-<lb/>
ences. In 1984, the Martin cam-<lb/>
paign recorded news conferences<lb/>
of Democratic nominee Rufus<lb/>
Edmisten.<lb/>
"The bothersome thing is that<lb/>
reporters walk into our press con-<lb/>
ferences with questions about<lb/>
whatever Jordan said Pittman<lb/>
said. "The governor is very good<lb/>
at handling questions on his feet.<lb/>
But there's no doubt they have<lb/>
negated the one-man show on<lb/>
Thursdays<lb/>
Poole said neither side has<lb/>
clearly outdone the other in the<lb/>
free-media battle. The important<lb/>
thing, he said, is to stay on the<lb/>
offensive and control the agenda -<lb/>
stratagems Sanford worked to<lb/>
near perfection.<lb/>
By mixing paid commercials<lb/>
with news conferences focusing<lb/>
on specific topics, Sanford effec-<lb/>
tively conveyed his message in<lb/>
the crucial final weeks of the 1986<lb/>
campaign when support surged<lb/>
his way.<lb/>
Dukakis takes policy on the road<lb/>
TWO<lb/>
AMHERST, MASS (CPS) ? If<lb/>
he's elected president in Novem-<lb/>
ber, Gov. Michael Dukakis will<lb/>
take with him education policies<lb/>
that have left students in Massa-<lb/>
chusetts with more financial aid<lb/>
and campuses with more build-<lb/>
ings, but that have also gotten the<lb/>
state's public colleges in deep<lb/>
budget troubles.<lb/>
This fall, for example, some<lb/>
schools are turning away stu-<lb/>
dents, replacing teachers with<lb/>
computers and raising tuition S3<lb/>
percent ? a higher price hike than<lb/>
the national average oi 4 percent<lb/>
? to cope with deep budget cuts.<lb/>
In general, the Dukakis ad-<lb/>
ministration has been both a boon<lb/>
and a bust for colleges and univer-<lb/>
sities.<lb/>
Hie boons have been consider-<lb/>
able: since beginning his second<lb/>
term in 1982, after a four-year<lb/>
absence from the governor's of-<lb/>
fice and a stint teaching at Har-<lb/>
vard, Dukakis has raised student<lb/>
aid, faculty salaries and the budg-<lb/>
ets oi other programs on public<lb/>
campuses to promote his high<lb/>
tech agenda for the state's econ-<lb/>
omy.<lb/>
As the federal government re-<lb/>
duced aid to students, the<lb/>
Dukakis administration picked<lb/>
up the slack: since 1983 the state's<lb/>
scholarship fund, for example,<lb/>
jumped from $19 million to $84<lb/>
million.<lb/>
Earlier in 1988, moreover,<lb/>
Dukakis signed legislation to inti-<lb/>
tate more than $400 million in<lb/>
massive construction, mainte-<lb/>
nance and repair projects on sev-<lb/>
eral campuses, a bill that was a top<lb/>
priority for education officials. "I<lb/>
think we were treated reasonably<lb/>
fairly said Franklyn Jenifer,<lb/>
chanceilor of the Board of Regents<lb/>
of Higher Education.<lb/>
Yet Massachusetts students<lb/>
and administrators maintain<lb/>
they're frustrated by what they<lb/>
see as a bias toward private insti-<lb/>
tutions, by scandals that pushed<lb/>
several campus presidents out of<lb/>
jobs and by Dukakis's failure to<lb/>
maintain adequate operations<lb/>
budgets for state colleges.<lb/>
Jenifer, for one, said operating<lb/>
budget cuts have almost para-<lb/>
lvzcd the state higher education<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Public campuses will receive<lb/>
$638 million this year, $21.3 mil-<lb/>
lion less than last year, current<lb/>
operating budgets are "not con-<lb/>
ducive to maintaining pro-<lb/>
grams Jenifer said.<lb/>
Fitchberg State President Yin-<lb/>
cent Mara called the reductions<lb/>
the most severe blow to public<lb/>
institutions since the state's fiscal<lb/>
crises during Dukakis's first term<lb/>
in 1975.<lb/>
Several schools say they'll ac-<lb/>
cept fewer students this year be-<lb/>
cause of financial woes. To save<lb/>
money, they'll cut back on teach-<lb/>
ing assistants, freeze faculty hir-<lb/>
ing and tap maintenance funds to<lb/>
try to provide the same level of<lb/>
services as last year.<lb/>
The University of Massachu-<lb/>
setts at Amherst, the state's flag-<lb/>
ship public university with more<lb/>
than 20,000 undergraduates, is<lb/>
charging students a special one-<lb/>
time $230 fee to raise emergency<lb/>
cash.<lb/>
Students throughout the state<lb/>
public system face an 8.5 percent<lb/>
tuition hike in the coming year<lb/>
and a substantial increase in dor-<lb/>
mitory fees.<lb/>
Many University of Lowell stu-<lb/>
dents will receive instruction<lb/>
from computers, instead of fac-<lb/>
ulty members, in order to cut<lb/>
costs. Those students will have to<lb/>
pav a $100 fee to use computer<lb/>
labs.<lb/>
"Without the faculty we have to<lb/>
do something said President<lb/>
William T. Hogan.<lb/>
It could get worse. State campus<lb/>
budgets, Dukakis said during a<lb/>
March hearing on college savings<lb/>
bonds, "cannot be expected to<lb/>
continue to grow at anything like<lb/>
the rate they have over the past<lb/>
few years<lb/>
Some students, however, are<lb/>
upset most by Dukakis's support<lb/>
of a measure that would allow<lb/>
schools to keep excess revenues<lb/>
generated by tuition hikes. The<lb/>
"tuition retention" plan, student<lb/>
leaders say, encourages colleges<lb/>
to raise their prices.<lb/>
"We all think he's not sensitive<lb/>
enough said Michael Ferrigno,<lb/>
director oi the State Student Asso-<lb/>
ciation of Massachusetts. "It pains<lb/>
us. This policy, we believe, is re-<lb/>
allv a Republican policy<lb/>
And Vincent McGrath, presi-<lb/>
dent of the State College Faculty<lb/>
Association and a Salam State<lb/>
College professor, sud tuition in-<lb/>
creases are often determined by<lb/>
what private colleges charge,<lb/>
even though private schools<lb/>
"can't keep their own costs<lb/>
down<lb/>
McGrath also thinks Dukakis<lb/>
tends to bow to the traditional<lb/>
dominance of private collages in<lb/>
Massachusetts.<lb/>
"We aren't California we're not<lb/>
Texas and we're not Michigan<lb/>
Dukakis said during a 1986 Bos-<lb/>
ton Globe interview. "We do hap-<lb/>
pen to have some of the finest<lb/>
(private) institu tions in the world.<lb/>
And I don't think it makes sense<lb/>
for us to duplicate that (by build-<lb/>
ing up public colleges)<lb/>
The remark infuriated many<lb/>
educators and students. Stanley<lb/>
Rosenberg, a Democratic state<lb/>
representative from Arnherst,<lb/>
said the UMass community still<lb/>
feels betrayed.<lb/>
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"The governor has clearly done<lb/>
and said things over time which<lb/>
have given rise to concern and<lb/>
annoyance among people in west-<lb/>
ern Massachusetts Rosenberg<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Yet, he quickly added, the<lb/>
Dukakis terms have been "a good<lb/>
time" for UMass, noting that $141<lb/>
million of the recently signed<lb/>
capital improvements bill will go<lb/>
to the Amherst campus alone.<lb/>
Rosenberg credits Dukakis<lb/>
with saving the multi-million<lb/>
dollar capital outlay proposal<lb/>
from legislature that had doomed<lb/>
it.<lb/>
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September 16-18, 1988<lb/>
Fly roundtrip Raleigh Durham<lb/>
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Feature Fdrtor<lb/>
AYDEN.N.C(EP)-<lb/>
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wasa blast in more wavs thai<lb/>
Saturday afternoon the<lb/>
between East Avenue and<lb/>
Third of downtown Avdt<lb/>
came filled with excitemenl<lb/>
Children screamed on the!<lb/>
carnival rides ranging rroml<lb/>
ris wheel to flying dragon;<lb/>
ents stood paticntlv by .<lb/>
the nde would end<lb/>
Like a minature coun I<lb/>
there were manv booths<lb/>
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players received six ring I<lb/>
what else - a bottle of P j<lb/>
At another booth, a praj<lb/>
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asked the Yankee<lb/>
The smell of food perm<lb/>
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plates of collards EP ta J<lb/>
collards at two seperate<lb/>
to determine what good<lb/>
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EP first stopped at Hoi<lb/>
Home Cooked Collard Dirj<lb/>
in a quest for quality coif<lb/>
Hennie's collards were<lb/>
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toes, boiled oora and a d<lb/>
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"Been cooking collards <lb/>
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This is a picture of last veal<lb/>
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Expression<lb/>
By TIN) HAMPTOl<lb/>
Features Fd.tor<lb/>
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nald Dillahunt looks out c<lb/>
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tances and over the blur oi<lb/>
before pausing<lb/>
"We are out to broadei<lb/>
scope of ECU's minority mi<lb/>
zine Dillahunt said of E<lb/>
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the new general manager otj<lb/>
pressions, Dillahunt along<lb/>
managing editor Valeria LasJ<lb/>
feel thev can accomplish sot<lb/>
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duction vear.<lb/>
In the first pages<lb/>
Expression's summer edition<lb/>
editorial staff defines the puri<lb/>
of the magazine as to provide<lb/>
alternate voice?a voice to I<lb/>
dress the special concerns<lb/>
problems of minority groups!<lb/>
Expressions defines mincj<lb/>
as "any student or group of <lb/>
Miss Am<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWEl<lb/>
I4itm<lb/>
In spnng, a young man's<lb/>
fancy turns to thoughts of love<lb/>
contrast, in fall, it rums to "<lb/>
nel 9 and the Miss America<lb/>
eant.<lb/>
Every year around this til<lb/>
this symbol of overbearing 05<lb/>
tatiousness and stunning stud<lb/>
ity graces the public airwaf<lb/>
Doesn't it ever occur to anyj<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0009"/><lb/>
dge<lb/>
:ontrol the agenda<lb/>
anford worked to<lb/>
i commercials<lb/>
?S Kvusing<lb/>
Sanford effec<lb/>
i the I<lb/>
?rt surged<lb/>
les<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
S I)XH<lb/>
 Durham<lb/>
&amp;39.00!<lb/>
r n nindtnp<lb/>
iiimbia Npt K<lb/>
turning to<lb/>
irham Sepl 17<lb/>
kits arc- non-<lb/>
lable and must<lb/>
ir hased within<lb/>
lours of<lb/>
nation Seats<lb/>
 limited<lb/>
v;S8So<lb/>
THE EAST CAROI INJAN<lb/>
stxk<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13, 1988 Page 9<lb/>
Welcome to the Ayden Collard Festival<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Fcatuna Fditor<lb/>
AYDEN, N.C. (EP) ? The 14th<lb/>
annual Ayden Collard Festival<lb/>
was a blast in more ways than one.<lb/>
Saturday afternoon the area<lb/>
between East Avenue and North<lb/>
TTiird of downtown Ayden be-<lb/>
came filled with excitement.<lb/>
Children screamed on the manv<lb/>
carnival rides ranging from a Fer-<lb/>
ns wheel to flying dragons. Par-<lb/>
ents stood pahentlv bv, wishing<lb/>
the nde would end.<lb/>
Like a minature county fair,<lb/>
there were many booths where<lb/>
dolls could be won. In one booth<lb/>
players received six rings to win<lb/>
what else - a bottle of Pepsi.<lb/>
At another booth, a practiced<lb/>
vendor with a northern accent<lb/>
would periodically say "Yes sir,<lb/>
pick one out, yes sir just pick one<lb/>
out "Oh boy, do you mean 1 can<lb/>
win a Spuds doll too Bonehead<lb/>
asked the Yankee.<lb/>
The smell of food permeated<lb/>
the air as vendors sold hot dogs,<lb/>
pizza, sausage and of course<lb/>
plates of collards. EP taste tested<lb/>
collards at two seperate locations<lb/>
to determine what good collards<lb/>
are.<lb/>
EP first stopped at "Hennie's<lb/>
Home Cooked Collard Dinners"<lb/>
in a quest for quality collards.<lb/>
Hennie's collards were served<lb/>
with a large ham hoc, white pota-<lb/>
toes, boiled ocra and a cut of<lb/>
cornbread.<lb/>
"Been cooking collards for 14<lb/>
years or theres 'bout, I forget<lb/>
Hennie said as she loaded the<lb/>
plate with the steaming green<lb/>
vegetable.<lb/>
Under the blue canvas tent of<lb/>
Hennie's make-shift kitchen, EP<lb/>
tasted the loaded dinner. One of<lb/>
your exclusive crew, a blatant<lb/>
bad-mouthed Yankee tratitor,<lb/>
had never tried the succulent leaf<lb/>
and vowed after a fork-full never<lb/>
to again.<lb/>
Others in the crew found<lb/>
Hennie's collards mighty tasty<lb/>
stating that the ham hoc was the<lb/>
key to the zesty tongue kick.<lb/>
From Hennie's, EP ventured to<lb/>
Bum's Restaurant where the crew<lb/>
merged into a long line of hungry<lb/>
people. Bum's is a down home<lb/>
kind of place. Waiting in line on<lb/>
wood planked floors with the<lb/>
varnish worn off, the crew looked<lb/>
around to get a feel for the place.<lb/>
On the far wall of stimulated-<lb/>
wood grain was a row of pictures<lb/>
placed for bored line-waiters to<lb/>
pass the time. There were pictures<lb/>
of dogs, pigs, and horses.<lb/>
There was also a cool portrait of<lb/>
John "The Duke" Wayne in a<lb/>
cowboy hat in front of a rustic<lb/>
setting. Beside "The Duke" was a<lb/>
picture of another modern day<lb/>
hero of sorts, Ollie North. But<lb/>
OUie didn't quite fit in with the<lb/>
dogs, pigs, horses and the rustic<lb/>
back-dropping John Wayne,<lb/>
that's why they put it near the tea<lb/>
line where no one looks up.<lb/>
Finally we reached the famed<lb/>
Bum's food line. From our van-<lb/>
tage point, one could see Bill<lb/>
Dennis chopping his reknown<lb/>
barbecue pig in the back and his<lb/>
wife Shirley asking customers if<lb/>
they cared for one meat or two.<lb/>
Besides serving quality col-<lb/>
lards, Bum had some damn good<lb/>
barbecue.<lb/>
After picking up the iced tea<lb/>
without paying homage to Ollie,<lb/>
the EP crew neaded for a white<lb/>
cloth-covered picnic table. It was<lb/>
there after saying grace to the God<lb/>
of Bum's that Pete, EP's exclusive<lb/>
Interlude driver, ran into some<lb/>
misfortune.<lb/>
Pete reached for Bum's bar-<lb/>
bacue sauce (not barbeque as us<lb/>
city boys say) which was nothing<lb/>
more than red colored vingear in<lb/>
an old Heinz bottle with a 'Bum's<lb/>
sauce' written on a masking tape<lb/>
label.<lb/>
Pete, like a city boy can be when<lb/>
thrown into a new rural environ-<lb/>
ment, thought that Bum's sauce<lb/>
was like all other barbeque sauces<lb/>
and gave the swift shake. Little<lb/>
did he know that Bum puts some-<lb/>
thing exact in his sauce to give it a<lb/>
kick and to loosen the bottle's cap.<lb/>
Other members of our exclusive<lb/>
staff had to endure the strong<lb/>
odor of Bum's sauce for the rest of<lb/>
the day. Well there was one ad-<lb/>
vantage to Pete's Bum deal (corny<lb/>
but not scatological), people got<lb/>
out of our way as we passed<lb/>
through the crowd.<lb/>
Back at the collard cooking<lb/>
contest, Ayden mayor Marvin<lb/>
"Bear" Baldree named Mamie<lb/>
Anderson of 2nd street the first<lb/>
place winner. She won a trophy<lb/>
and a $25 prize. By the wav,<lb/>
Anderson was the first Collard<lb/>
Queen in 1974.<lb/>
For the five days of the festival,<lb/>
gambling was legal in North<lb/>
Carolina. Bets were placed on the<lb/>
money wheel and quarter bearers<lb/>
tryed to win in a game called<lb/>
Splashdown.<lb/>
It's now Mondav afternoon and<lb/>
the collard festival is still with the<lb/>
HP crew. Collards are still with us<lb/>
bodv and soul. More body than<lb/>
soul.<lb/>
This is a picture of last year's Expressions staff. Returning staff members include Reggie Dillahunt,<lb/>
general manager andValeria Lassiter, managing editor. Expressions is soon to release a special edition<lb/>
issue in October. (Photo?Photofile)<lb/>
Expressions broadens ECU minority voice<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Features Fditor<lb/>
With unblinking eyes, Regi-<lb/>
nald Dillahunt looks out of his<lb/>
office window, off into the dis-<lb/>
tances and over the blur of brick,<lb/>
before pausing.<lb/>
"We are out to broaden the<lb/>
scope of ECU's minority maga-<lb/>
zine Dillahunt said of Expres-<lb/>
sions, a student publication. As<lb/>
the new general manager of Ex-<lb/>
pressions, Dillahunt along with<lb/>
managing editor Valeria Lassiter<lb/>
feel they can accomplish some of<lb/>
the goals set for the '8889 pro-<lb/>
duction year.<lb/>
In the first pages of a<lb/>
Expression's summer edition, the<lb/>
editorial staff defines the purpose<lb/>
of the magazine as to provide "an<lb/>
alternate voice?a voice to ad-<lb/>
dress the special concerns and<lb/>
problems of minority groups<lb/>
Expressions defines minority<lb/>
as "any student or group of stu-<lb/>
dents that feels outside the 'main-<lb/>
stream Purposive, Expressions<lb/>
addresses the special concerns of<lb/>
students belonging to specific<lb/>
minority groups, the handi-<lb/>
capped, International students,<lb/>
according to the statement<lb/>
But Dillahunt stresses that<lb/>
Expressions is not only for mi-<lb/>
norities. He said he welcomes all<lb/>
students who wish to contribute<lb/>
art work, opinion or stories to the<lb/>
publication.<lb/>
For this year, the general man-<lb/>
ager is concerned with covering<lb/>
campus events. Dillahunt said<lb/>
Expressions now than ever will be<lb/>
reporting activities related to<lb/>
ECU students.<lb/>
Expression's next edition<lb/>
(which will be a special issue), to<lb/>
be available sometime in October,<lb/>
will feature Lee McNeil, an ECU<lb/>
trackester now competing in the<lb/>
Summer Olympics in Seoul, Ko-<lb/>
rea.<lb/>
Also in the October issue, the<lb/>
magazine will have an article on<lb/>
Dr. Larry Smith, ECU's first direc-<lb/>
tor of minority affairs. For opin-<lb/>
ion, Dillahunt said the publica-<lb/>
tion will center its editorials on<lb/>
the government, federal, state<lb/>
and local, while taking a focus on<lb/>
the minority angle of news events.<lb/>
The October issue will be dedi-<lb/>
cated to former Expressions gen-<lb/>
eral manager, Gloria Chance. Dil-<lb/>
lahunt credits Chance with the<lb/>
transformation of the magazine<lb/>
with "strong leadership and dedi-<lb/>
cation which has set new stan-<lb/>
dards for Expressions<lb/>
The accomplishments Expres-<lb/>
sions has made in the last two<lb/>
years speak for themselves. It<lb/>
won "Best of Show" honors from<lb/>
American College Press in 1986.<lb/>
Expression's spring edition of<lb/>
1987 won the Scholastic Press<lb/>
Association "First Place" overall<lb/>
and "Best Cover" for an illustra-<lb/>
tion by the great Shelton Bryant.<lb/>
The 14th annual Ayden Collard Festival turned out to be a big success as approximately 15,000 celebrated<lb/>
the leafy green vegetable. Besides an eating contest, a cooking contest and the crowning of a new Collard<lb/>
Queen, the collard monsters came out of the wood works. (Illustration by Parker?Parkerlab)<lb/>
Spunk and Bones search for<lb/>
fuzzy green Collard Monster<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Cotlaid Rrprtcr<lb/>
The search for the Seatbelt-<lb/>
Wearing Collard Monster began<lb/>
after we ate. The Spunskter and I<lb/>
saw a girl with at least six of the<lb/>
fuzzy green creatures attatched to<lb/>
her banana clip.<lb/>
Ever the questioning tvpe of<lb/>
guv, Spunky asked her where she<lb/>
got it from. Bored with us already,<lb/>
she waved backwards and said,<lb/>
"That green tent over there<lb/>
Our quest had begun. It was<lb/>
to be a quest frought with peril,<lb/>
danger and the foul aroma of col-<lb/>
lards. But we would persevere.<lb/>
We had not spent the balance<lb/>
of the day in Ayden, enjoying the<lb/>
sights, sounds and nauseating<lb/>
smells of the 14th Annual Ayden<lb/>
Collard Festival, to have our day<lb/>
ruined by simple lack of direction.<lb/>
The ride to the festival had<lb/>
not been without its own perils.<lb/>
The four of us: the collard-loving<lb/>
Earlvis, the collard-hating Bone-<lb/>
head, the collard-ingesting<lb/>
Spunky and Pete, the Original<lb/>
Collard Animal?, piled into<lb/>
something we call The Prelude<lb/>
With a Bra and set out for Avden.<lb/>
Our progress was impeded<lb/>
by two huge, slavering Cujo<lb/>
clones. These two dogs were ap-<lb/>
proximately five feet tall at the<lb/>
shoulder and had onlv one<lb/>
thought burning in their feeble<lb/>
minds ? scratch through the<lb/>
windows of the car and bite the<lb/>
people inside on the ankle repeat-<lb/>
edly.<lb/>
Luckily, Preludes are quite a<lb/>
bit faster than your average rabid<lb/>
canine<lb/>
Parking was not a problem.<lb/>
The railroad tracks provided<lb/>
plenty of space, but evcrv time we<lb/>
heard a whistle, Pete began to<lb/>
squirm nervously.<lb/>
The Festival itself was quite<lb/>
well, festive. Sort of a really, re-<lb/>
ally, really, really scaled-down<lb/>
version of the State fair, the main<lb/>
difference being the pervasive<lb/>
smell of collards.<lb/>
Cooked collards. Boiled col-<lb/>
lards. Stuffed collards. Collard<lb/>
with seatbclts on. Collard juice.<lb/>
Collards and ham. Barbeque col-<lb/>
lards.<lb/>
Collard cakes. Collard cook-<lb/>
ies. Spam? and collards. Collards<lb/>
and eggs. Collards in just about<lb/>
any imaginable size, shape and<lb/>
form.<lb/>
We ate lunch at not one, but<lb/>
two places. Then Spunkv and i<lb/>
saw the aforementioned Collard<lb/>
Monsters. We took oii in the gen-<lb/>
eral direction the girl had pointed<lb/>
in.<lb/>
We saw not one but three<lb/>
green tents. Upon entering the<lb/>
last one, an exhibit of grenades,<lb/>
guns, bumper stickers and other<lb/>
deadly weapons, we found  an<lb/>
emptv box.<lb/>
Just ahead of us, a little girl in<lb/>
pigtails and collard uice running<lb/>
from her mouth walked away<lb/>
with the last two Seatbelt-Wear-<lb/>
mg Collard monsters. I fell into<lb/>
despair.<lb/>
The girl watched my face<lb/>
screw up with tears. She walked<lb/>
back and handed a Collard Mon-<lb/>
ster to Spunky and saidHere.<lb/>
i "all can have this<lb/>
So, with a vinegar-saturated<lb/>
Pete, an interviewlcss Earlvis, a<lb/>
happy Bonehead and full<lb/>
Spunky, we headed back to the<lb/>
car, where the radio would tell us<lb/>
that ECU was getting beat bv Vir-<lb/>
ginia Tech in a pretty bad way.<lb/>
My monster sits on top of my<lb/>
computer now. I named him "Bla-<lb/>
tant<lb/>
New Collard Eating champion<lb/>
unbuttons shirt for victory<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Feature Editor<lb/>
AYDEN, N.C. (EP) ? Johnny<lb/>
Barrow did not have time to bask<lb/>
in the limelight.<lb/>
Instead, the newlv crowned<lb/>
1988 Collard Eating King, who<lb/>
had just consumed four poundsof<lb/>
the leafy-green vegetable, fleed<lb/>
the 14th annual Ayden Col-<lb/>
lard Festival for a more favorable<lb/>
spot behind some bushes.<lb/>
Midway through the 30 min-<lb/>
ute eating contest on Saturday,<lb/>
Barrow, a native of Grifton, found<lb/>
the key to his success. He unbut-<lb/>
toned his black shirt to allow for<lb/>
more collard room.<lb/>
But it took more than just an<lb/>
unbuttoned shirt to guarantee his<lb/>
victory. Fans cheered during the<lb/>
last ten minutes of the contest as<lb/>
Barrow moaned in between bites.<lb/>
"Oh Lordy, I don't know if I<lb/>
can take one more bite Barrow<lb/>
said as he dug a plastic folk into<lb/>
the last styofoam container.<lb/>
After the contest, Ayden<lb/>
mayor Marvin "Bear" Baldree<lb/>
awarded Barrow with a trophy<lb/>
and a $50 first prize as the new<lb/>
king strutted around the wooden<lb/>
stage with a protruding stomach<lb/>
and a gaping smile.<lb/>
But not long afterwards, Bar-<lb/>
row jumped from the festival's<lb/>
center stage and high tailed down<lb/>
the railroad tracks in search of<lb/>
relief.<lb/>
Some of the more curious<lb/>
members of the crowd of approxi-<lb/>
mately 400 followed Barrow as he<lb/>
detoured into a parking lot, while<lb/>
others wondered if Barrow would<lb/>
be disqualified for running off.<lb/>
According to the official<lb/>
Ayden Collard Festival Eating<lb/>
Contest Rules, the winning con-<lb/>
testant may leave after being<lb/>
crowned.<lb/>
More succintly put, rule num-<lb/>
ber four states: "Must eat the most<lb/>
in the 30-minute time limit, then<lb/>
keep them down long enough to<lb/>
receive the trophy and prize<lb/>
money <lb/>
Initially with ten contestants.<lb/>
including two women and an<lb/>
uniformed soldier, the eating race<lb/>
started as one pound containers<lb/>
of collards where placed on two<lb/>
tables. Slabs of combread and<lb/>
cups of teas were provided, but<lb/>
according to rule number two<lb/>
"the weight of neither will count<lb/>
in the contest<lb/>
One by one, seven stomach-<lb/>
holding contestants dropped<lb/>
from the race leaving three collard<lb/>
fcasters. At one table, the soldier<lb/>
and a man sporting a white hat<lb/>
folked their way through three<lb/>
and a half pounds a piece as Bar-<lb/>
row slumped over the other table.<lb/>
In attendance for the contest<lb/>
was Mort Hurst who holds the<lb/>
world's record for eating collards<lb/>
at seven and a half pounds. Hurst,<lb/>
from Robersonville, wore a green<lb/>
tee-shirt on stage which pro-<lb/>
claimed "Collard Eating King<lb/>
EP wondered if Barrow<lb/>
would attempt to break Hurst's<lb/>
record next year, but the 1988<lb/>
collard chawing champ was<lb/>
unavailable for comment.<lb/>
Miss America Pageant reinforces outdated sexual stereotypes<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
A?i??fit Featura Editor<lb/>
In spring, a young man's idle<lb/>
fancy turns to thoughts of love. By<lb/>
contrast, in fall, it turns to Chan-<lb/>
nel 9 and the Miss America Pag-<lb/>
eant.<lb/>
Every year around this time,<lb/>
this symbol of overbearing osten-<lb/>
tahousness and stunning stupid-<lb/>
ity graces the public airwaves.<lb/>
Doesn't it ever occur to anyone<lb/>
that all the money that was spent<lb/>
on the glitz and glamor could<lb/>
have been better spent on the<lb/>
hungry and homeless?<lb/>
Of course, the Miss America<lb/>
pageant is not completely worth-<lb/>
less. It does pay of f in scholarships<lb/>
to the young ladies who win. On<lb/>
the other hand, it can hardly be<lb/>
said (though it sometimes is) that<lb/>
the Miss America Pageant pro-<lb/>
motes education.<lb/>
The Miss America Pageant<lb/>
does, however, provide an oppor-<lb/>
tunity for millions of American<lb/>
males to look at lots of lovely la-<lb/>
dies, and to do it in a completely<lb/>
unthreatening environment. It's<lb/>
even more socially accepted than<lb/>
Playboy and its like (albeit more<lb/>
demure).<lb/>
One sure-fire formula for<lb/>
success is to tell people what they<lb/>
want to hear, and the Miss Amer-<lb/>
ica Pageant tells one of the best<lb/>
lies of all time. It reinforces the<lb/>
prevalent typical-American-male<lb/>
beliefs that (a) there is little of<lb/>
value about any woman, except<lb/>
for her body, and (b) good looks<lb/>
make a good person.<lb/>
Admittedly, many of the at-<lb/>
tacks levelled at men by women<lb/>
are accurate. Many men are slav-<lb/>
ering, sex-starved microenceph-<lb/>
alic semi-simians. Not all, and<lb/>
fewer every year - yet many still<lb/>
remain among The Unenlight-<lb/>
ened. But given the picture that<lb/>
the Miss America Pageant pres-<lb/>
ents of women, who could expect<lb/>
otherwise?<lb/>
A common defense of the<lb/>
Miss America Pageant is that Miss<lb/>
America Does Great Things And<lb/>
Promotes The General Welfare.<lb/>
But be honest: this is the Miss<lb/>
America Pageant, not the Ambas-<lb/>
sador to France Pageant.<lb/>
Of course, not all the contest-<lb/>
ants are bubbleheads, either - in<lb/>
fact, most of them aren't. But the<lb/>
side of them most strongly em-<lb/>
phasized (and virtually the only<lb/>
side shown to the home viewer) is<lb/>
the physical. And so they seem<lb/>
like bubbleheads.<lb/>
Miss Minnesota (now also<lb/>
Miss America) actually seems to<lb/>
be a good person, but how many<lb/>
people noticed? She may very<lb/>
well be a worthy recipient of a<lb/>
$30,000 scholarship, but why<lb/>
should she get it primarily be-<lb/>
See PAGEANT, page 11<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0010"/><lb/>
7<lb/>
T<lb/>
dge<lb/>
ive and control the agenda -<lb/>
gems Sanford worked to<lb/>
?rfection.<lb/>
nixing paid commercials<lb/>
ews conferences focusing<lb/>
rific topics, Sanford effec-<lb/>
i conveyed his message in<lb/>
rial final weeks of the 1986<lb/>
lign when support surged<lb/>
?INNERS<lb/>
Price<lb/>
jroroiled<lb/>
kttered Grecian<lb/>
ootato or steak<lb/>
le only on Sun-<lb/>
ie'ss<lb/>
?T &amp; PUB<lb/>
jreenville Blvd.<lb/>
:30am-Midmght, Fn -Sat<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
16-18, 1988<lb/>
lcigh Durham<lb/>
r only $3900!<lb/>
for roundtrip<lb/>
lumbia Sept. 16<lb/>
returning to<lb/>
urham Sept 17<lb/>
Ickets are non-<lb/>
le and must<lb/>
rchased within<lb/>
lours of<lb/>
rvation. Seats<lb/>
re limited.<lb/>
Pairs subject to charge<lb/>
without notice.<lb/>
. S95856<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13, 1988 Page 9<lb/>
Welcome to the Ay den Collar d Festival<lb/>
By EARL VIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Fcatura Editar<lb/>
AYDEN, N.C (EP) ? The 14th<lb/>
annual Ayden Collard Festival<lb/>
was a blast in more ways than one.<lb/>
Saturday afternoon the area<lb/>
between East Avenue and North<lb/>
Third of downtown Ayden be-<lb/>
came filled with excitement.<lb/>
Children screamed on the many<lb/>
carnival rides ranging from a Fer-<lb/>
ris wheel to flying dragons. Par-<lb/>
ents stood patiently by, wishing<lb/>
the ride would end.<lb/>
Like a minature county fair,<lb/>
there were many booths where<lb/>
dolls could be won. In one booth<lb/>
players received six rings to win<lb/>
what else - a bottle of Pepsi.<lb/>
At another booth, a practiced<lb/>
vendor with a northern accent<lb/>
would periodically say "Yes sir,<lb/>
pick one out, yes sir just pick one<lb/>
out "Oh boy, do you mean I can<lb/>
win a Spuds doll too Bonehead<lb/>
asked the Yankee.<lb/>
The smell of food permeated<lb/>
the air as vendors sold hot dogs,<lb/>
pizza, sausage and of course<lb/>
plates of collards. EP taste tested<lb/>
collards at two seperate locations<lb/>
to determine what good collards<lb/>
are.<lb/>
EP first stopped at "Hennie's<lb/>
Home Cooked Collard Dinners"<lb/>
in a quest for quality collards.<lb/>
Hennie's collards were served<lb/>
with a large ham hoc, white pota-<lb/>
toes, boiled ocra and a cut of<lb/>
combread.<lb/>
"Been cooking collards for 14<lb/>
years or theres 1xut, I forget<lb/>
Hennie said as she loaded the<lb/>
plate with the steaming green<lb/>
vegetable.<lb/>
Under the blue canvas tent of<lb/>
Hennie's make-shift kitchen, EP<lb/>
tasted the loaded dinner. One of<lb/>
your exclusive crew, a blatant<lb/>
bad-mouthed Yankee tratitor,<lb/>
had never tried the succulent leaf<lb/>
and vowed after a fork-full never<lb/>
to again.<lb/>
Others in the crew found<lb/>
Hennie's collards mighty tasty<lb/>
stating that the ham hoc was the<lb/>
key to the zesty tongue kick.<lb/>
From Hennie's, EP ventured to<lb/>
Bum's Restaurant where the crew<lb/>
merged into a long line of hungry<lb/>
people. Bum's is a down home<lb/>
kind of place. Waiting in line on<lb/>
wood planked floors with the<lb/>
varnish worn off, the crew looked<lb/>
around to get a feel for the place.<lb/>
On the far wall of stimulated-<lb/>
wood grain was a row of pictures<lb/>
placed for bored line-waiters to<lb/>
pass the time. There were pictures<lb/>
of dogs, pigs, and horses.<lb/>
There was also a cool portrait of<lb/>
John "The Duke" Wayne in a<lb/>
cowboy hat in front of a rustic<lb/>
setting. Beside "The Duke" was a<lb/>
picture of another modern day<lb/>
hero of sorts, Ollie North. But<lb/>
Ollie didn't quite fit in with the<lb/>
dogs, pigs, horses and the rustic<lb/>
back-dropping John Wayne,<lb/>
that's why they put it near the tea<lb/>
line where no one looks up.<lb/>
Finally we reached the famed<lb/>
Bum's food line. From our van-<lb/>
tage point, one could see Bill<lb/>
Dennis chopping his reknown<lb/>
barbecue pig in the back and his<lb/>
wife Shirley asking customers if<lb/>
they cared for one meat or two.<lb/>
Besides serving quality col-<lb/>
lards, Bum had some damn good<lb/>
barbecue.<lb/>
After picking up the iced tea<lb/>
without paying homage to Ollie,<lb/>
the EP crew headed for a white<lb/>
cloth-covered picnic table. It was<lb/>
there after saying grace to the God<lb/>
of Bum's that Pete, EPs exclusive<lb/>
Interlude driver, ran into some<lb/>
misfortune.<lb/>
Pete reached for Bum's bar-<lb/>
bacue sauce (not barbeque as us<lb/>
city boys say) which was nothing<lb/>
more than red colored vingear in<lb/>
an old Heinz bottle with a 'Bum's<lb/>
sauce' written on a masking tape<lb/>
label.<lb/>
Pete, like a city boy can be when<lb/>
thrown into a new rural environ-<lb/>
ment, thought that Bum's sauce<lb/>
was like all other barbeque sauces<lb/>
and gave the swift shake. Little<lb/>
did he know that Bum puts some-<lb/>
thing exact in his sauce to give it a<lb/>
kick and to loosen the bottle's cap.<lb/>
Other members of our exclusive<lb/>
staff had to endure the strong<lb/>
odor of Bum's sauce for the rest of<lb/>
the day. Well there was one ad-<lb/>
vantage to Pete's Bum deal (corny<lb/>
but not scatological), people got<lb/>
out of our way as we passed<lb/>
through the crowd.<lb/>
Back at the collard cooking<lb/>
contest, Ayden mayor Marvin<lb/>
"Bear" Baldree named Mamie<lb/>
Anderson of 2nd street the first<lb/>
place winner. She won a trophy<lb/>
and a $25 prize. By the way,<lb/>
Anderson was the first Collard<lb/>
Queen in 1974.<lb/>
For the five days of the festival,<lb/>
gambling was legal in North<lb/>
Carolina. Bets were placed on the<lb/>
money wheel and quarter bearers<lb/>
tryed to win in a game called<lb/>
Splashdown.<lb/>
It's now Monday afternoon and<lb/>
the collard festival is still with the<lb/>
EP crew. Collards are still with us<lb/>
body and soul. More body than<lb/>
soul.<lb/>
The 14th annual Ayden Collard Festival turned out to be a big success as approximately 15,000 celebrated<lb/>
the leafy green vegetable. Besides an eating contest, a cooking contest and the crowning of a new Collard<lb/>
Queen, the collard monsters came out of the wood works. (Illustration by Parker?Parkerlab)<lb/>
Spunk and Bones search for<lb/>
fuzzy green Collard Monster<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Col laid Kcprtcr<lb/>
The search for the Seatbelt-<lb/>
Wearing Collard Monster began<lb/>
after we ate. The Spunskter and I<lb/>
saw a girl with at least six of the<lb/>
fuzzy green creatures attatched to<lb/>
her banana clip.<lb/>
Ever the questioning type of<lb/>
guy, Spunky asked her where she<lb/>
Sit it from. Bored with us already,<lb/>
e waved backwards and said,<lb/>
That green tent over there<lb/>
Our quest had begun. It was<lb/>
to be a quest frought with peril,<lb/>
danger and the foul aroma of col-<lb/>
lards. But we would persevere.<lb/>
We had not spent the balance<lb/>
?of the day in Ayden, enjoying the<lb/>
sights, sounds and nauseating<lb/>
smells of the Nth Annual Ayden<lb/>
iCollard Festival, to have our day<lb/>
Iruined by simple lack of direction.<lb/>
The ride to the festival had<lb/>
not been without its own perils.<lb/>
The four of us: the collard-loving<lb/>
Earlvis, the collard-hating Bone-<lb/>
head, the collard-ingesting<lb/>
Spunky and Pete, the Original<lb/>
.Collard Animal?, piled into<lb/>
Jsomething we call The Prelude<lb/>
Vith a Bra and set out for Ayden.<lb/>
Our progress was impeded<lb/>
by two huge, slavering Cujo<lb/>
clones. These two dogs were ap-<lb/>
proximately five feet tall at the<lb/>
shoulder and had only one<lb/>
thought burning in their feeble<lb/>
minds ? scratch through the<lb/>
windows of the car and bite the<lb/>
people inside on the ankle repeat-<lb/>
edly.<lb/>
Luckily, Preludes are quite a<lb/>
bit faster than your average rabid<lb/>
canine.<lb/>
Parking was not a problem.<lb/>
The railroad tracks provided<lb/>
plenty of space, but every time we<lb/>
heard a whistle, Pete began to<lb/>
squirm nervously.<lb/>
The Festival itself was quite<lb/>
well, festive. Sort of a really, re-<lb/>
ally, really, really scaled-down<lb/>
version of the State fair, the main<lb/>
difference being the pervasive<lb/>
smell of collards.<lb/>
Cooked collards. Boiled col-<lb/>
lards. Stuffed collards. Collard<lb/>
with seatbelts on. Collard juice.<lb/>
Collards and ham. Barbeque col-<lb/>
lards.<lb/>
Collard cakes. Collard cook-<lb/>
ies. Spam? and collards. Collards<lb/>
and eggs. Collards in just about<lb/>
any imaginable size, shape and<lb/>
form.<lb/>
We ate lunch at not one, but<lb/>
two places. Then Spunky and i<lb/>
saw the aforementioned Collard<lb/>
Monsters. We took off in the gen-<lb/>
eral direction the girl had pointed<lb/>
in.<lb/>
We saw not one but three<lb/>
green tents. Upon entering the<lb/>
last one, an exhibit of grenades,<lb/>
guns, bumper stickers and other<lb/>
deadly weapons, we found  an<lb/>
empty box.<lb/>
Just ahead of us, a little girl in<lb/>
pigtails and collard juice running<lb/>
from her mouth walked away<lb/>
with the last two Seatbelt-Wear-<lb/>
ing Collard monsters. I fell into<lb/>
despair.<lb/>
The girl watched my face<lb/>
screw up with tears. She walked<lb/>
back and handed a Collard Mon-<lb/>
ster to Spunky and saidHere.<lb/>
Y'all can have this<lb/>
So, with a vinegar-saturated<lb/>
Pete, an interviewless Earlvis, a<lb/>
happy Bonehead and full<lb/>
Spunky, we headed back to the<lb/>
car, where the radio would tell us<lb/>
that ECU was getting beat by Vir-<lb/>
ginia Tech in a pretty bad way.<lb/>
My monster sits on top of my<lb/>
computer now. I named him "Bla-<lb/>
tant<lb/>
This is a picture of last year's Expressions staff. Returning staff members include Reggie Dillahunt<lb/>
general manager andValeria Lassiter, managing editor. Expressions is soon to release a special edition<lb/>
issue in October. (Photo?Photofile)<lb/>
Expressions broadens ECU minority voice<lb/>
New Collard Eating champion<lb/>
unbuttons shirt for victory<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
i Editor<lb/>
With unblinking eyes, Regi-<lb/>
nald Dillahunt looks out of his<lb/>
office window, off into the dis-<lb/>
tances and over the blur of brick,<lb/>
before pausing.<lb/>
"We are out to broaden the<lb/>
scope of ECU'S minority maga-<lb/>
zine Dillahunt said of Expres-<lb/>
sions, a student publication. As<lb/>
the new general manager of Ex-<lb/>
pressions, Dillahunt along with<lb/>
managing editor Valeria Lassiter<lb/>
feel they can accomplish some of<lb/>
the goals set for the '8889 pro-<lb/>
duction year.<lb/>
In the first pages of a<lb/>
Expression's summer edition, the<lb/>
editorial staff defines the purpose<lb/>
of the magazine as to provide "an<lb/>
alternate voice?a voice to ad-<lb/>
dress the special concerns and<lb/>
problems of minority groups<lb/>
Expressions defines minority<lb/>
as "any student or group of stu-<lb/>
dents that feels outside the 'main-<lb/>
stream Purposive, Expressions<lb/>
addresses the special concerns of<lb/>
students belonging to specific<lb/>
minority groups, the handi-<lb/>
capped, International students,<lb/>
according to the statement<lb/>
But Dillahunt stresses that<lb/>
Expressions is not only for mi-<lb/>
norities. He said he welcomes all<lb/>
students who wish to contribute<lb/>
art work, opinion or stories to the<lb/>
publication.<lb/>
For this year, the general man-<lb/>
ager is concerned with covering<lb/>
campus events. Dillahunt said<lb/>
Expressions now than ever will be<lb/>
reporting activities related to<lb/>
ECU students.<lb/>
Expression's next edition<lb/>
(which will be a special issue), to<lb/>
be available sometime in October,<lb/>
will feature Lee McNeil, an ECU<lb/>
trackester now competing in the<lb/>
Summer Olympics in Seoul, Ko-<lb/>
rea.<lb/>
Also in the October issue, the<lb/>
magazine will have an article on<lb/>
Dr. Larry Smith, ECU's first direc-<lb/>
tor of minority affairs. For opin-<lb/>
ion, Dillahunt said the publica-<lb/>
tion will center its editorials on<lb/>
the government, federal, state<lb/>
and local, while taking a focus on<lb/>
the minority angle of news events.<lb/>
The October issue will be dedi-<lb/>
cated to former Expressions gen-<lb/>
eral manager, Gloria Chance. Dil-<lb/>
lahunt credits Chance with the<lb/>
transformation of the magazine<lb/>
with "strong leadership and dedi-<lb/>
cation which has set new stan-<lb/>
dards for Expressions<lb/>
The accomplishments Expres-<lb/>
sions has made in the last two<lb/>
years speak for themselves. It<lb/>
won "Best of Show" honors from<lb/>
American College Press in 1986.<lb/>
Expression's spring edition of<lb/>
1987 won the Scholastic Press<lb/>
Association "First Place" overall<lb/>
and "Best Cover" for an illustra-<lb/>
tion by the great Shel ton Bryant.<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
AYDEN, N.C. (EP) ? Johnny<lb/>
Barrow did not have time to bask<lb/>
in the limelight.<lb/>
Instead, the newly crowned<lb/>
1988 Collard Eating King, who<lb/>
had just consumed four pounds of<lb/>
the leafy-green vegetable, fleed<lb/>
the 14th annual Ayden Col-<lb/>
lard Festival for a more favorable<lb/>
spot behind some bushes.<lb/>
Midway through the 30 min-<lb/>
ute eating contest on Saturday,<lb/>
Barrow, a native of Grifton, found<lb/>
the key to his success. He unbut-<lb/>
toned his black shirt to allow for<lb/>
more collard room.<lb/>
But it took more than just an<lb/>
unbuttoned shirt to guarantee his<lb/>
victory. Fans cheered during the<lb/>
last ten minutes of the contest as<lb/>
Barrow moaned in between bites.<lb/>
"Oh Lordy, I don't know if I<lb/>
can take one more bite Barrow<lb/>
said as he dug a plastic folk into<lb/>
the last styofoam container.<lb/>
After the contest, Ayden<lb/>
mayor Marvin "Bear" Baldree<lb/>
awarded Barrow with a trophy<lb/>
and a $50 first prize as the new<lb/>
king strutted around the wooden<lb/>
stage with a protruding stomach<lb/>
and a gaping smile.<lb/>
But not long afterwards, Bar-<lb/>
row jumped from the festival's<lb/>
center stage and high tailed down<lb/>
the railroad tracks in search of<lb/>
relief.<lb/>
Some of the more curious<lb/>
members of the crowd of approxi-<lb/>
mately 400 followed Barrow as he<lb/>
detoured into a parking lot, while<lb/>
others wondered if Barrow would<lb/>
be disqualified for running off.<lb/>
According to the official<lb/>
Ayden Collard Festival Eating<lb/>
Contest Rules, the winning con-<lb/>
testant may leave after being<lb/>
crowned.<lb/>
More succintly put, rule num-<lb/>
ber four states: "Must eat the most<lb/>
in the 30-minute time limit, then<lb/>
keep them down long enough to<lb/>
receive the trophy and prize<lb/>
money<lb/>
Initially with ten contestants.<lb/>
including two women and an<lb/>
uniformed soldier, the eating race<lb/>
started as one pound containers<lb/>
of collards where placed on two<lb/>
tables. Slabs of combread and<lb/>
cups of teas were provided, but<lb/>
according to rule number two<lb/>
"the weight of neither will count<lb/>
in the contest"<lb/>
One by one, seven stomach-<lb/>
holding contestants dropped<lb/>
from the race leaving three collard<lb/>
feasters. At one table, the soldier<lb/>
and a man sporting a white hat<lb/>
folked their way through three<lb/>
and a half pounds a piece as Bar-<lb/>
row slumped over the other table.<lb/>
In attendance for the contest<lb/>
was Mort Hurst who holds the<lb/>
world's record for eating collards<lb/>
at seven and a half pounds. Hurst,<lb/>
from Roberson ville, wore a green<lb/>
tee-shirt on stage which pro-<lb/>
claimed "Collard Eating King<lb/>
EP wondered if Barrow<lb/>
would attempt to break Hurst's<lb/>
record next year, but the 1968<lb/>
collard chawing champ was<lb/>
unavailable for comment<lb/>
Miss America Pageant reinforces outdated sexual stereotypes<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
In spring, a young man's idle<lb/>
fancy turns to thoughts of love. By<lb/>
contrast in fall, it turns to Chan-<lb/>
nel 9 and the Miss America Pag-<lb/>
eant<lb/>
Every year around this time,<lb/>
this symbol of overbearing osten-<lb/>
tatiousness and stunning stupid-<lb/>
ity graces the public airwaves.<lb/>
Doesn't it ever occur to anyone<lb/>
that all the money that was spent<lb/>
on the glitz and glamor could<lb/>
have been better spent on the<lb/>
hungry and homeless?<lb/>
Of course, the Miss America<lb/>
pageant is not completely worth-<lb/>
less. It does pay off in scholarship<lb/>
to the young ladies who win. On<lb/>
the other hand, it can hardly be<lb/>
said (though it sometimes is) that<lb/>
the Miss America Pageant pro-<lb/>
motes education.<lb/>
The Miss America Pageant<lb/>
does, however, provide an oppor-<lb/>
tunity for millions of American<lb/>
males to look at lots of lovely la-<lb/>
dies, and to do it in a completely<lb/>
unthreatening environment. If s<lb/>
even more socially accepted than<lb/>
Playboy and its like (albeit more<lb/>
demure).<lb/>
One sure-fire formula for<lb/>
success is to tell people what they<lb/>
want to hear, and the Miss Amer-<lb/>
ica Pageant tells one of the best<lb/>
lies of all time. It reinforces the<lb/>
prevalent typical-American-male<lb/>
beliefs that (a) there is little of<lb/>
value about any woman, except<lb/>
for her body, and (b) good looks<lb/>
make a good person.<lb/>
Admittedly, many of the at-<lb/>
tacks levelled at men by women<lb/>
are accurate. Many men are slav-<lb/>
ering, sex-starved microenceph-<lb/>
alic semi-simians. Not all, and<lb/>
fewer every year - yet many still<lb/>
remain among The Unenlight-<lb/>
ened. But given the picture that<lb/>
the Miss America Pageant pres-<lb/>
ents of women, who could expect<lb/>
otherwise?<lb/>
A common defense of the<lb/>
Miss America Pageant is that Miss<lb/>
America Does Great Things And<lb/>
Promotes The General Welfare.<lb/>
But be honest this is the Miss<lb/>
America Pageant, not the Ambas-<lb/>
sador to France Pageant<lb/>
Of course, not all the contest-<lb/>
ants are bubbleheads, either - in<lb/>
fact, most of them aren't But the<lb/>
side of mem most strongly em-<lb/>
phasized (and virtually the only<lb/>
side shown to the home viewer) is<lb/>
the physical. And so they seem<lb/>
like bubbleheads.<lb/>
Miss Minnesota (now also<lb/>
Miss America) actually seems to<lb/>
be a good person, but how many<lb/>
people noticed? She may very<lb/>
well be a worthy recipient of a<lb/>
$30,000 scholarship, but wiry<lb/>
should she get it primarily be-<lb/>
See PAGEANT, page 11<lb/>
??t.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0011"/><lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13,1988<lb/>
Excessive INXS, the top 40 inside,top 40 inside<lb/>
By JEFF PARKER<lb/>
Staff! lluatrat or<lb/>
mixed in the studio twelve billowing clouds of artificial fog.<lb/>
times But that couldn't be far- Among some of the most<lb/>
ther from the truth. memorable performances of the<lb/>
Michael Hutchence has night was the groups old hit,<lb/>
one of the best singing voices in "Original Sin Early on they did a<lb/>
Last Friday night the Dean<lb/>
E. Smith Center held a capacity<lb/>
crowd that flocked to Chapel Hill rock today, and it sounds even lively and soulful rendition of<lb/>
for the INXS Calling All Nations better live. The bands' musical "Mystify In fact, there wasn't a<lb/>
Tour. ability is nothing to be ignored substandard performance to bo<lb/>
The show opened with either. One of the greater assets of found in any of their numbers. But<lb/>
Ziggy Marley and the Melody the band is Kirk Tengilly and his there was a problem with these<lb/>
Makers performing their unique saxophone playing. Unfortu- high-quality renditions, they<lb/>
brand of reggae before INXS nately, he didn't play the sax very were just like the released ver-<lb/>
"kick"ed off their performance. It much at all during the show, but sions. Very rarely did the group<lb/>
was clear that the Australian band did a nice job on the "Mediate" do any of their songs differently<lb/>
wanted to live up to the implica- solo and was at his best during the from the albums, which made<lb/>
tions generated by the title of their solo in "Never Tear Us Apart<lb/>
latest album, "Kick The bass The lighting of the con-<lb/>
was cranked up to full force, caus- cert was very subtle and<lb/>
ing teeth to chatter all throughout downplayed except for certain<lb/>
the Deandome. moody numbers like "Devil In-<lb/>
I have to admit I was side That seems to be the hip night occasionally playing to the<lb/>
pleasantly surprised at the qual- thing now, not using a lot of light crowd by dropping to his knees<lb/>
lty of the live sound. Two nights effects. The' didn't have any every so often. Eventually he<lb/>
qualms arx using the smoke came out of his baggy white shirt<lb/>
machine, ho er. I don't think to the delight of the girls near the<lb/>
the people sittirgHehind the stage stage, in a way living up to his<lb/>
got to see all of the show for the reputation as a psuedo-JimMorri-<lb/>
sing-along easy, but hindered<lb/>
some variety and expression on<lb/>
the part of the group.<lb/>
Hutchence swayed and<lb/>
paraded around the stage all<lb/>
earlier I had heard one of their<lb/>
concerts broadcast on radio and<lb/>
was in fear ofOh no, they're one<lb/>
of those groups that have to be re-<lb/>
son for the eighties, as he has been<lb/>
likened to in the media. He did a<lb/>
few kicks that would have made<lb/>
David Lee Roth proud.<lb/>
The group did a few tips<lb/>
of the hat to their popular videos<lb/>
throughout the concert. During<lb/>
"Mediate they pulled out signs<lb/>
with all the ate" words like they<lb/>
drop in sync in the video, but for<lb/>
this show INXS made souveniers<lb/>
out of them and threw them to the<lb/>
crowd. For the instrumental part<lb/>
of "Devil Inside Tim Farriss<lb/>
went offstage to reappear riding a<lb/>
skateboard. It was pretty enter-<lb/>
taining, since he almost crashed<lb/>
into Hutchence, but it pleased two<lb/>
young skatepunks in front of me<lb/>
to no end, which irked me.<lb/>
As I mentioned before,<lb/>
the bass was putting out to capac-<lb/>
ity for the whole show, which was<lb/>
fairly effective. It did get over-<lb/>
powering, though, during "Devil<lb/>
Inside and obscured the lyrics<lb/>
too much. Another problem was<lb/>
the monotonous heavy drum<lb/>
lead-injon Farris did to most of<lb/>
the songs. That kind of thing is<lb/>
only good for one or two times,<lb/>
and they did it a little too much.<lb/>
And they could have played<lb/>
longer. My personal gripe was<lb/>
that they never did one of their<lb/>
first big (and in my opinion their<lb/>
best) hits, "The One Thing I<lb/>
think that was an expected encore<lb/>
song that they should have done.<lb/>
After the concert, WRDU played a<lb/>
"concert flashback" of about six<lb/>
INXS songs, one of which was<lb/>
"The One Thing so evidently I<lb/>
wasn't the only person expecting<lb/>
it. As a matter of fact, they didn't<lb/>
really plav much at all from SH-<lb/>
ABOO-SHOOBAH.<lb/>
Aside from those bits,<lb/>
there was really little to complain<lb/>
about "Listen Like Thieves" was<lb/>
full of energy, and Hutchence and<lb/>
Pengilly (on guitar this time)<lb/>
came out to do the token ballad<lb/>
like all bands donow, but they did<lb/>
it well. INXS puts on a show on<lb/>
par with almost any recording<lb/>
artists thesodays, but they need to<lb/>
watch out for straying away from<lb/>
their underground roots to the<lb/>
lures of the typical Top 40 pop<lb/>
music scene. Their success is well-<lb/>
deserved and I hope they never<lb/>
compromise their music. They<lb/>
didn't for "Calling All Nations a<lb/>
concert worth the admission,<lb/>
which is true praise considering<lb/>
Ticketron prices.<lb/>
Thought-provoking folk singer strums mall<lb/>
By STEPHANIE FOLSOM<lb/>
Suft Writer<lb/>
Last week on the mall Rick<lb/>
Hall, a Christian folk singer,<lb/>
strummed the mellow sounds ot<lb/>
Peter, Paul, and Mary mixed with<lb/>
his own style of folk music during<lb/>
the evening hours.<lb/>
His thought-provoking music<lb/>
was about everyday life, prob-<lb/>
lems overlooked, greed eventu-<lb/>
allv leading to nothing, the home-<lb/>
less, and the Bible. One of his<lb/>
songs, which caused a lot of reac-<lb/>
tion was about "man and his shal-<lb/>
low image of woman<lb/>
Hall also reminded his listeners<lb/>
of the image being projected by<lb/>
the political campaigners. "Oh<lb/>
we're doing great Hall sarcasti-<lb/>
cally quotes the politicians. "But<lb/>
two and a half million people are<lb/>
homeless. Growth is great, but not<lb/>
for the poor said Hall. His next<lb/>
song reflected his thoughts, with<lb/>
the reminder: "We better care<lb/>
about each other if our town is<lb/>
gonna grow.<lb/>
As dusk set in. Hall's figure<lb/>
was but a shadow amidst the illu-<lb/>
mination of the stage. One man,<lb/>
almost hippy-looking with his<lb/>
pony-tail, old jeans and t-shirt,<lb/>
and his guitar provided all the<lb/>
sound necessary to create an at-<lb/>
mosphere on the mall.<lb/>
The guitar softly backed up his<lb/>
strong voice as he sang of wars<lb/>
and what they do to people per-<lb/>
sonally; not just what people do<lb/>
for their country. The verse, "Who<lb/>
cares about the end of the world?"<lb/>
was enough to create a chill and<lb/>
keep playing over and over in<lb/>
one's mind.<lb/>
Hall said he was born and<lb/>
raised in a rich suburb outside of<lb/>
Philadelphia, and that that had a<lb/>
great impact on what he now<lb/>
does.<lb/>
"My music reflects on relation-<lb/>
ships with other people. I've<lb/>
spent a lot of time talking about<lb/>
the poor. I know, having seen the<lb/>
other side of that (poverty), the<lb/>
resources that are there. My music<lb/>
just tries to play down the'let'sget<lb/>
wealthy' attitude said Hall.<lb/>
He noted a misinterpretation<lb/>
about his Christian music. "When<lb/>
people think of Christian music<lb/>
he said, "they think of 'smile, God<lb/>
loves ya My music reflects on<lb/>
relationships with other people<lb/>
He said he reaches out to<lb/>
people in his ministry through<lb/>
games and sing-a-longs. "I don't<lb/>
want communities to be large<lb/>
bodies of people who don't know<lb/>
each other. My music tends to be<lb/>
community oriented he said.<lb/>
Hall attended the Union Theo-<lb/>
logical Seminary in Richmond,<lb/>
Va where he began to blend his<lb/>
music with his ministry. He at-<lb/>
tended the chapel services and<lb/>
said to himself: "This is silly. I can<lb/>
do one of these things and can do<lb/>
it much better<lb/>
He then began to write songs,<lb/>
instead of sermons. He prepared<lb/>
two singing chapel services every<lb/>
year for five years. "Each time I<lb/>
took the congregation a little bit<lb/>
further. I had them dancing,<lb/>
which was unheard of. It's been a<lb/>
wild, wild trip<lb/>
LOW COST<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO Uth WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
AS ri ? ? ? Iweeksartaddil ru - .<lb/>
Contr ? . mseling rfun jon,<lb/>
: free number'1, -8  between 9 a.m. and 5<lb/>
p rri weel !j i et ? the?Uavailable<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
T.l?H<lb/>
Stcutiustt<lb/>
Manic impressive on Indecision<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
4 SHIRTS $036<lb/>
CLEANED K y WW<lb/>
for mm<lb/>
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SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
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CLIFF'S<lb/>
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Shrimp Plate $3.65<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
Flounder, Shrimp,<lb/>
Oyster Plate<lb/>
$5.75<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Feature F.diror<lb/>
Having until a quarter to two<lb/>
a.m the music of In Decision<lb/>
decisively pleased the near<lb/>
packed crowd at the Attic Satur-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
Mostly rye-died, the audience<lb/>
grooved to the fluid, breeze-back<lb/>
play of the four member band. A<lb/>
set of Grateful Dead songs proved<lb/>
to be the highlight of the evening.<lb/>
Jamming with the Dead's "Eyes<lb/>
of the World In Decision's lead<lb/>
singer bled vocals between the<lb/>
high pitched twangs of the two<lb/>
battling six strings and a jumping<lb/>
bass. The band more than<lb/>
adequately matched the patented<lb/>
high string play of the Dead's<lb/>
quitars.<lb/>
Other Dead Head songs in-<lb/>
cluded'n Franklin's Tower"<lb/>
which In Decision played to the<lb/>
satisfaction of Greenville's Dead<lb/>
faithful.<lb/>
"I was so glad they played 'Eyes<lb/>
of the World it's one of my favor-<lb/>
ite songs said a sweat drenched<lb/>
Ashley Dal ton.<lb/>
One of the biggest crowd pleas-<lb/>
ers of the night proved to be a<lb/>
rendition of The Guess Who's<lb/>
"No Sugar Tonight Swaying to<lb/>
the words of the song, the audi-<lb/>
ence helped out with<lb/>
'aasiakJraJJafaNdMaJfaNa<lb/>
Another jammer was the<lb/>
band's greenlighting of Traffic's<lb/>
"Dear Mister Fantasy They also<lb/>
played "Givemethebigboys who<lb/>
freed my souls, I wanna get losted<lb/>
in your rock and roll and slipped<lb/>
away<lb/>
During an instrumental, both<lb/>
battling quitar players simply got<lb/>
off. The twin quitarists split the<lb/>
lead during the beginning of the<lb/>
piece before forging together in<lb/>
timed sincopation as they fin-<lb/>
gered mirrored riffs. Bravo.<lb/>
In Decision also played Led<lb/>
Zep's "Hey, hey what can I say" as<lb/>
the drummer thumped the ram-<lb/>
ming intro.<lb/>
Besides one short break, the<lb/>
band entertained for about two<lb/>
hours. After fanatical fans beat<lb/>
their fists on the stage floor. In<lb/>
Decision returned for one encore.<lb/>
"1 have seen In Decision six<lb/>
timesand withouta doubt tonight<lb/>
was their best show Dalton said<lb/>
as the jubilant crowd filed out oi<lb/>
the Attic.<lb/>
 ?v<lb/>
a<lb/>
Sf?STlAN<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
IIAIRCUTTERS<lb/>
?Quality Cuts &amp; Perms at Affordable Prices<lb/>
Located on corner of AC CH<lb/>
14th &amp; Charles Blvd. iOZt-JOO3<lb/>
<lb/>
Mlvv<lb/>
<lb/>
kJ<lb/>
! 3 i J<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Coming Attractions<lb/>
r<lb/>
?' ' " ' "<lb/>
1 1Q I i (tt I 1 Q I ? ft) I L? I LJQJ<lb/>
c o<lb/>
R T<lb/>
H<lb/>
T<lb/>
in<lb/>
Wednesday. September 148:00 p.m. Hendrix<lb/>
FRANTIC<lb/>
Thursday. September 15 -<lb/>
Sunday. September 188:00 p.m. Hendrix<lb/>
MOONSTRUCK<lb/>
Friday. September 168:00 p.m. Underground<lb/>
CAMPUS COMEDIANS<lb/>
v.<lb/>
To sign-up or for more information Contact the<lb/>
Student Union at 757-6611, ext. 210 - Room 236<lb/>
Upcoming Events:<lb/>
Lecture - Slide Presentation - "American Pictures"<lb/>
By Jacob Holdt - Tuesday. September 20<lb/>
SEPT. 16<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Squirrel Man Hotline<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
JENKINS ART AUDITORIUM<lb/>
SPONSORED BY<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
Special Event - RANDEE OF THE REDWOODS<lb/>
Tuesday. September 27<lb/>
RCACHMG OUT TO SCRVf OU<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Continued from page<lb/>
cause of her body? N<lb/>
gave Mother Theresa a S<lb/>
scholarship.<lb/>
And on that sub<lb/>
there no similar paj<lb/>
rewards people u<lb/>
good people7 Admittedly,<lb/>
more difficult to n<lb/>
harder to see) than is p <lb/>
tractiveness - there is (belie<lb/>
not) debate on whether bo<lb/>
abortion clinics is really<lb/>
thing to do-but even ?<lb/>
can be overcome<lb/>
The biggest r<lb/>
there's no such <lb/>
nobody would ?<lb/>
90 of the average m<lb/>
attention is focus<lb/>
program, the  imsu I<lb/>
tion. (You don't thir -<lb/>
Miss America<lb/>
ered on radio?)<lb/>
I have even -<lb/>
America Pageant h<lb/>
piece ot Good Cli<lb/>
Without laur,<lb/>
on that insipid<lb/>
onecountere<lb/>
I worked<lb/>
stage stuff) for a loc i<lb/>
Pageant 'the V<lb/>
eant in Serr.ir, -la<lb/>
years runnir<lb/>
tion with it alon<lb/>
Opry veter<lb/>
NASHVILLE<lb/>
Grand Ole<lb/>
Reeves is a sing -<lb/>
musician, impressn<lb/>
ist, television star ai<lb/>
recently thought about a:<lb/>
priate epitaph<lb/>
"I want to be re j<lb/>
great showman and a nic<lb/>
he said m a rare surj<lb/>
ness. "That's all I<lb/>
The angular<lb/>
year-old performer e r<lb/>
about 1 million p<lb/>
one of the m st <lb/>
the Grand Ole Oprv<lb/>
live countrv mus<lb/>
He's been appear ng<lb/>
show for 22 yeai<lb/>
childhood vision as <lb/>
the youngest oi 11 s<lb/>
Sparta, N.C.<lb/>
jea ? c Oj<lb/>
? . - ? jn-$aturdav nif<lb/>
he<lb/>
it was the ultimate<lb/>
interview. "As a chi<lb/>
daddy I was goin I -<lb/>
Opry one da v. He -<lb/>
sure you are. 1 k<lb/>
mind and in '66 we<lb/>
He's cum rtl inv<lb/>
several projects in I<lb/>
album entitled "Oprv Lej<lb/>
He and fellow Oprv su<lb/>
Little Jimmy Dickens<lb/>
an album whose proceed:<lb/>
toward an Oprv retiremei<lb/>
"Id like to see this b<lb/>
cess for mv fellow mar<lb/>
said. "I'll do everything<lb/>
make it a success. I'd like<lb/>
that accomplished more<lb/>
No. 1 record.<lb/>
PEPSI PLA1<lb/>
lOE BRIGHT THI<lb/>
H( I<lb/>
East Carolina vs Virg<lb/>
tackles, one for a 3 and<lb/>
PERSONAL INFORM A<lb/>
undecided on his major<lb/>
he c<lb/>
CONGRATULATION:<lb/>
MUCH<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0012"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13,1988 11<lb/>
nside<lb/>
side trom those bits,<lb/>
really little to complain<lb/>
l isten I ike Thieves" was<lb/>
iergy,and Hutchenceand<lb/>
(on guitar this time)<lb/>
v to do the token ballad<lb/>
ands donow, but they did<lb/>
s puts on a show on<lb/>
h almost any recording<lb/>
wse days, but they need to<lb/>
kit tor straying away from<lb/>
derground roots to the<lb/>
It he typical Top 40 pop<lb/>
L r?e Vheir success is well-<lb/>
v. and I hope they never<lb/>
se their music. They<lb/>
Calling AH Nations a<lb/>
rth the admission,<lb/>
I - true praise considering<lb/>
KOF<lb/>
. nancy Tost Birth<lb/>
rjon,<lb/>
 - twee m and 5<lb/>
OMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
MMIZATIONS<lb/>
Oyster Bax<lb/>
 a<lb/>
Night<lb/>
S3.65<lb/>
rimp<lb/>
late<lb/>
?j7 TO;<lb/>
 ov<lb/>
u.<lb/>
w ? ? ' ' '<lb/>
&amp;Q LQJ<lb/>
endrix<lb/>
idrix<lb/>
Underground<lb/>
.NS<lb/>
mtact the<lb/>
Room 236<lb/>
in Pictures"<lb/>
ber 20<lb/>
Pageant agent of inequality<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
cause of her body? Nobody ever<lb/>
gave Mother Theresa a $30,000<lb/>
scholarship.<lb/>
And on that subject, why is<lb/>
there no similar pageant that<lb/>
rewards people who are simply<lb/>
good people? Admittedly, this is<lb/>
more difficult to measure (and<lb/>
harder to see) than is physical at-<lb/>
tractiveness - there is (believe it or<lb/>
not) debate on whether bombing<lb/>
abortion clinics is really a bad<lb/>
thing to do - but even that obstacle<lb/>
can be overcome.<lb/>
The biggest reason why<lb/>
there's no such pageant is that<lb/>
nobody would watch. Let's face it,<lb/>
90 of the average male viewer's<lb/>
attention is focused on 10 of the<lb/>
program: the swimsuit competi-<lb/>
tion. (You don't think so? Is the<lb/>
Miss America Pageant ever cov-<lb/>
ered on radio?)<lb/>
1 have even heard the Miss<lb/>
America Pageant held up as a<lb/>
piece of Good Clean Americana.<lb/>
Without launching a major attack<lb/>
on that insipid idea, here is just<lb/>
one counterexample.<lb/>
I worked (lighting and back-<lb/>
stage stuff) for a local qualifying<lb/>
Pageant (the Miss Seminole Pag-<lb/>
eant in Seminole, Florida) for two<lb/>
years running. (Heck, my associa-<lb/>
tion with it alone would disqual<lb/>
ify it as Good and Clean.) During inequality,<lb/>
that time, I gathered much evi- (It is worth noting, parcn-<lb/>
dence (circumstantial, but very thetically, that many women<lb/>
very strong) that the contest was seem to think that sexual equality<lb/>
disappearance would be a symbol<lb/>
of the triumph of sexual equality<lb/>
only if it disappeared due to disin-<lb/>
terest in it and not due to censor-<lb/>
rigged - or, more accurately, po- means women's being able to ogle ship. Otherwise, its disappear-<lb/>
?  i a itu i-? ?,  : tlr fickinn that mon anm wnnW Ivrnmp A Svmbol of<lb/>
ance would become a symbol of<lb/>
the triumph of repressive and<lb/>
fascistic tactics.<lb/>
Second, its focus might be<lb/>
radically different. The personal-<lb/>
ity and inner beauty of the con-<lb/>
testants would be given more<lb/>
actual consideration than would<lb/>
litical. And I would be very sur- men in the same fashion that men<lb/>
prised if this were true only at the ogle women. While that does in-<lb/>
local level. deed indicate equality, it isn't the<lb/>
For good or for ill (mostly for best type of equality. It reduces<lb/>
ill) the media strongly influence women to the men's level rather<lb/>
the way we think. Watching the than bringing the men up.<lb/>
Miss America Pageant leaves men (But then, we're all human;<lb/>
feeling safe from women and un- weallenjoyogling.It'snot wrong,<lb/>
threatened by them. Women are exactly, but it does tend to reduce their looks, as opposed to the cur<lb/>
shown just as most men want the ogled to the status of mere rent policy of tolerating, just for<lb/>
them to be - pretty playthings, things in the eyes of the oglcrs. show, everything other than the<lb/>
"dolls" in the Ibsenian sense. And I don't think that's quite swimsuit competition.<lb/>
Of course, much the same what the women's lib movement In fact, this may be beginning,<lb/>
might be said of all the spinoff was aiming for.) The Pageant officials have elimi-<lb/>
competitions - Mr. America, Mrs. There are those (primarily, nated the "derierre turn" as being<lb/>
America, and Mr. Gay America, though not exclusively, feminists) degrading to women. It's not<lb/>
just to name a few. There are all who think that a part of the solu- much but then, the longest jour-<lb/>
kinds of such divisions and tion to the problem of sexual ine- ney begins with a single step,<lb/>
pageants - from infant to elderly, quality is to get rid of pageants. And, I have been informed, TV<lb/>
of all sexes and denominations On the contrary: the Miss Amer- Guide reports that Pageant offi-<lb/>
and all the other artificial pigeon- ica Pageant, a symbol of outdated cialsare "bringing the Miss Amer-<lb/>
holes into which we stuff each sexual attitudes, wfll one day be ica Pageant into the 21st century<lb/>
other. the agent of its own destruction. Third, and most intriguing, it<lb/>
These others notwithstand- You see, the best function of might no longer be separate from<lb/>
ing, the Miss America Pageant is the Miss America Pageant is as a the other pageants. There might<lb/>
the biggest, the best-known and barometer (or perhaps a ther- be an integrated pageant mvolv-<lb/>
mometer) of social attitudes to- ing contestants of both sexes and<lb/>
wards women. When at long last of all ages and races. This would<lb/>
sexual equality has been estab- be the true mark of sexual and<lb/>
lished, the Miss America Pageant racial equality: it wouldbehuman<lb/>
will reflect it in one of three ways: equality.<lb/>
First, it might be gone. But its Someday<lb/>
NURSING STUDENTS:<lb/>
Secure bur Future<lb/>
Look into Air Force ROTC Com-<lb/>
bined with your bachelor's<lb/>
degree in nursing. Air Force<lb/>
ROTC prepares you fa a chalteng-<lb/>
and rewarding future as an<lb/>
n the Air Force Nurse Corps<lb/>
You also may be eligible for a 2- or 3-year<lb/>
scholarship that can pay your full college tuition<lb/>
and most textbook, lab and other fees, plus a<lb/>
monthly allowance during the school term<lb/>
Accept a commitment to caring Air Force nursing oppor-<lb/>
tunities are unlimited ? it all depends on you "folk to<lb/>
your Air Force ROTC campus representative today<lb/>
CAPT RANDY HOUSTON<lb/>
WRIGHT ANNEX, RM 312<lb/>
919-757-6598<lb/>
Leadership Excellence Starts Here<lb/>
the most widely watched of all.<lb/>
And it deserves the most attention<lb/>
here - it is, after all, at the center of<lb/>
what debate there is about the<lb/>
merits of pageants and it is most<lb/>
often cited as a symbol of sexual<lb/>
Opry veteran sings, writes, acts , does it all<lb/>
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)<lb/>
Grand Ole Opry veteran Del<lb/>
Reeves is a singer, songwriter,<lb/>
musician, impressionist, humor-<lb/>
ist, television star and actor. He<lb/>
recently thought about an appro-<lb/>
priate epitaph.<lb/>
"I want to be remembered as a<lb/>
great showman and a nice guy,<lb/>
He's formed a production and light material early in his<lb/>
company within the past year to career when he found those more<lb/>
help aspiring singers record their to his liking than ballads,<lb/>
songs and get professional advice "I couldn't really sell a ballad,<lb/>
without being ripped off. He It had to be material on the lighter<lb/>
wears a ring commemorating the side. Under this clown's face,<lb/>
Opry's 50th birthday and hopes there's a serious guy. But I never<lb/>
someone he takes under his expe- got to show it because I got tagged<lb/>
rienced wing will eventually get as that clown. I've been clowning<lb/>
NOW SHOWING<lb/>
AT HENDRIX<lb/>
Wednesday September 14<lb/>
fe?n?su o rS- ?? Oprs ,&amp;,h birthday ri as .ong as .can re?<lb/>
iicaaiuiiioiu b ,??? fknm tn crPf that nno Onpof thebreeziersone:<lb/>
ness. "That's all I could hope for.<lb/>
The angular, amiable 54-<lb/>
year-old performer entertains<lb/>
about 1 million people a year as<lb/>
one of the most popular acts on<lb/>
the Grand Ole Opry, a 62-year-old<lb/>
live country music show.<lb/>
I want them to get that ring One of the breezier songs was<lb/>
and say, T)el Reeves helped me his recent recording, 'Dear Dr.<lb/>
 . J . ? 1-X .1 St 1 a <lb/>
get this" he said<lb/>
Reeves is especially known to<lb/>
Opry fans for his impressions of<lb/>
actors like jimmy Stewart and<lb/>
Walter Brennan and fellow coun<lb/>
He's been appearing on the try stars Johnny Cash, Roy Acuff,<lb/>
show for 22 years, fulfilling a Hank Snow and Dickens,<lb/>
childhood vision as he grew up "I'd try these out on the band<lb/>
on the road he recalled. "If they<lb/>
the<lb/>
Ruth about sex counselor Ruth<lb/>
Westheimer.<lb/>
He appeared on her televi-<lb/>
sion show to talk about country<lb/>
music and recalled the effect his<lb/>
humor had on her: "She fell<lb/>
plumb off that little box she sits<lb/>
on.<lb/>
Reeves, named after Franklin<lb/>
"A heart-stopping<lb/>
thriller In the<lb/>
Hitchcock style<lb/>
- rat Collins WWOR-TV<lb/>
HARRISON<lb/>
FORD<lb/>
FRANTIC<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
DILLON<lb/>
KALKHURST<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
SENIORS CLASS PRESIDENT<lb/>
Student Government Legislature (3 years)<lb/>
Student Government Presidential Cabinet<lb/>
Student Government Screens and Appointments Committee<lb/>
- Intramural Recreational Center Committee<lb/>
? Past President, Treasurer, Chaplain of Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
ECU. Canvassing and Solicitation Committee<lb/>
? Chancellor Eakin's Campus Beautification Committee<lb/>
? Intra-Fraternity Council Vice-President, Secretary<lb/>
Broadcast - Communications Major<lb/>
E.C.U. Facilities Committee<lb/>
EXPERIENCE THAT COUNTS!<lb/>
BRING VALID ECU. STUDENT ID. TO VOTE WED. SEPT 14<lb/>
vrmmrest of 11 siblines in on the road, nerecanea. urney iwf.?uu????.<lb/>
? NC laughed1 knew I had it. it's been Delano Roosevelt, began singing<lb/>
Sparta, N.C<lb/>
?IKtthed (to the Dory) on a lot of hard work. I spent a lot of . and playingcuitar as a small bo<lb/>
iffituv niSS and doing (perfecting) them. By the time he was 12, he wa?<lb/>
SSSS "I starteTputting these to- playing with a band on a regula.<lb/>
was<lb/>
putting these to- playing with a band on a regular<lb/>
nr-urtoldmy gether in RenoF and Las Vegas. Saturday radio show<lb/>
interview. As a en id, 1 toia my &amp; preareDeoDie there who have He had four brothers in<lb/>
daddy I was going to sing on the J! roulette World War II and they left their<lb/>
wheel or whatever. They give guitars at home to serve their<lb/>
them two free drinks, and you'd country. He began playing them<lb/>
better entertain them and gradually became proficient.<lb/>
He admires the impressions He's recorded nine No. 1 rec-<lb/>
of Rich Little and envies the time ords and two dozen made the top<lb/>
Little apparently has to concen- 10 of the country music charts. He<lb/>
Opry one day. He said, 'Yeah,<lb/>
sure you are I kept my goal in<lb/>
mind and in '66 we achieved it<lb/>
He's currently involved in<lb/>
several projects, including an<lb/>
album entitled "Opry Legends<lb/>
He and fellow Opry stars like<lb/>
Little Jimmy Dickens will record<lb/>
an album whose proceeds will go<lb/>
toward an Opry retirement fund.<lb/>
"I'd like to see this be a suc-<lb/>
cess for my fellow man Reeves<lb/>
said. "I'll do everything I can to<lb/>
make it a success. I'd like to see<lb/>
that accomplished more than a<lb/>
No. 1 record<lb/>
trate on them. and Bobby Goldsboro were duet<lb/>
"He's darned good. He's had partners at one time<lb/>
more time to rehearse and prac-<lb/>
tice them than me. I had to learn<lb/>
2,000 songs plus do impersona-<lb/>
tions. He doesn't do (Johnny)<lb/>
Cash too good, but the rest are<lb/>
fantastic<lb/>
Reeves turned to impressions<lb/>
In the late 1960s, Reeves had<lb/>
his own syndicated TV show.<lb/>
VOTE DEAN WILKINS<lb/>
for Freshman Class<lb/>
PRESIDENT<lb/>
Wednesday, September 14<lb/>
PEPSI PLAYER OF THE WEEK<lb/>
JOE BRIGHT, THIS WEEKS PLAYER OF THE WEEK<lb/>
HOMETOWN-Chesapeake, Va.<lb/>
I East Carolina vs Virginia Tech- Against the Hokies, Joe was in on 51<lb/>
tackles, one for a 3 yard loss, and had 2 fumble recoveries from his<lb/>
end position.<lb/>
PERSONAL INFORMATION- Joe is a Red Shirt Freshman who is<lb/>
undecided on his major. He is the son of Joe and Etta Bright, and<lb/>
he enjoys lifting weights.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO JOE BRIGHT, FROM PEPSICOLA.<lb/>
MUCH CONTINUED SUCCESS.<lb/>
GO!<lb/>
PEPSI<lb/>
Stop by UBE before or afteT any Homo pirate foot-<lb/>
bail game Choose from the world's largest selection<lb/>
ot pirate souvenirs from t-shtrts, sweaters and hats to<lb/>
megaphones, pom poms and even ECU tote bags<lb/>
-rfceC<lb/>
And while you're at UBEseeour full HneofRussell<lb/>
Athletic and Champion Sportswear<lb/>
Its all at University Book Exchange, downtown<lb/>
Greenville the one for the tans Stop by tod.n<lb/>
Open Football Saturdays 9:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M.Ateekdays 9:00 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.<lb/>
516 S. Cotanche Street Downtown Greenville<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0013"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EASTCAROI INl.W<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1 ll)s.s<lb/>
Fans worship Elvis to death<lb/>
IOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (AP) pictures ot the thousands wno history has gotten people to put excitement. And there c<lb/>
Manv Elvis Preslev fans feel re- descend on the mansion every tattoos of them on their bodies?" middle-class women who gr<lb/>
IOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (AP)<lb/>
Main Eh is Preslev fans feel re<lb/>
sponsible tor his death and con<lb/>
tinue to worship him because<lb/>
they relate to his painful lite, savs<lb/>
a North Carolina photojournalist<lb/>
bitten in his own way by the<lb/>
Treslev bug.<lb/>
Ralph Burns treks to Mem<lb/>
phis most years from his home in<lb/>
Asheville, C to photograph<lb/>
and interview Presle admirersas<lb/>
they mourn their hero at<lb/>
Craceland each Aug. 16.<lb/>
' To his fans, the common<lb/>
theme is that Elvis Presley lived<lb/>
tor a reason and indeed did give<lb/>
his lite tor a purpose he said<lb/>
Burns said he tirst headed to<lb/>
Craceland in 1978 for the first<lb/>
anniversary ot Presley's death.<lb/>
He's been going back ever since to<lb/>
of the thousands wno<lb/>
on the mansion every<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"In some strange sense ot<lb/>
emotion manv ot the fans believe<lb/>
they are partially responsible tor<lb/>
Elvis having lost his life, that is by<lb/>
giving him the adulation and by<lb/>
forcing him into a very narrow<lb/>
world with no exits' Bums slid.<lb/>
1 hev teel they took their love<lb/>
and forced him back into him-<lb/>
self<lb/>
Burns said the fans he has<lb/>
interviewed don't consider their<lb/>
devotion to Preslev a religion. But<lb/>
he believes the Preslev myth in-<lb/>
cludes a "religious wrapping" of<lb/>
the fans through their unyielding<lb/>
love and such rituals as the can-<lb/>
dlelight procession to his grave on<lb/>
the death anniversary.<lb/>
stand bv Presley's erave and snap "1 low manv other people in<lb/>
history  has gotten people to put<lb/>
tattoos of them on their bodies?"<lb/>
Burns said. "1 mean, I can't think<lb/>
of anybody personally<lb/>
Much of the media have not<lb/>
been fair to Presley fans, said<lb/>
Burns, 44, who owns a photogra-<lb/>
phy store in Asheville.<lb/>
"The emphasis is on the per-<lb/>
verse aspects. Not many in the<lb/>
press take the time to really talk to<lb/>
them or try to understand this,<lb/>
and think, 'What does this say<lb/>
about all of us? Burns said.<lb/>
One woman Burns inter-<lb/>
viewed asked whv he was inter-<lb/>
ested. "I'm not obese and I don't<lb/>
have a tattoo the woman told<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Not all Preslev fans are the<lb/>
same, he said. There are<lb/>
"weirdos" who flock to<lb/>
Craceland for the attention and<lb/>
excitement. And there are<lb/>
middle-class women who grew<lb/>
up in the sanitized, conservative<lb/>
1950s with an emotional attach-<lb/>
ment that stems from an untamed<lb/>
sensuality they had little opportu-<lb/>
nity to express as young people,<lb/>
Burns said.<lb/>
'This guy expressed proba-<lb/>
bly every emotion that one would<lb/>
encounter in a romantic, sexual<lb/>
relationship he said.<lb/>
The true Preslev fans, mean-<lb/>
ing the ones who would "crawl<lb/>
over the coals for this man relate<lb/>
to his meager bovhood in Tupelo,<lb/>
Miss , and the "pressure of exis-<lb/>
tence" that led to hisdnig-taking,<lb/>
marital problems and eventual<lb/>
death, Burns said.<lb/>
"One of the things Elvis fans<lb/>
really understand is human<lb/>
frailty he said.<lb/>
SPORTSWORLD<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
NTTE IS COLLEGE NITE 8-11<lb/>
ONLY $2.00<lb/>
ADMISSION WITH COU.ECE ID<lb/>
.75 SKATE RENTAL<lb/>
04E REDBANKSRD ? GREENVILLE N ? ' 6001<lb/>
it.iiii' "v i iinv i uni anu ?iuu ? ,x ? ? v ?. . . K?,V.? ?   v     ? ? - ?  ,  <lb/>
Fats Domino still on Blueberry Hill<lb/>
TAYLORVIl 1.1 111. (AP)<lb/>
Music fans parked their cars near<lb/>
a soybean field, then walked past<lb/>
a 1958 Chevy and through the<lb/>
front doors to hear rock n roll<lb/>
legend Fats Domino.<lb/>
lust another weekend at<lb/>
Nashville North.<lb/>
This down home theater is<lb/>
400 miles from its namesake, but<lb/>
Nashville North attracts some of<lb/>
the nation's top musical enter-<lb/>
tainers, from Loretta Lynn nd<lb/>
Tennessee Ernie lord to Bon ovi<lb/>
and Fabian.<lb/>
And it packs in the people.<lb/>
"1 love it because it's close bv<lb/>
and they have great entertainers<lb/>
said Sue Norman of Urbana, who<lb/>
often makes the 75-mile drive. "1<lb/>
was surprised. 1 thought it would<lb/>
be old and dump)<lb/>
Still, Nashville North - lo-<lb/>
cated in south-central Illinois,<lb/>
southeast ot Springfield - is a tar<lb/>
cry from the Los Angeles Forum.<lb/>
The brick-and-metal building<lb/>
opened in 1976. From the outside,<lb/>
it could pass as a carpet store or<lb/>
union hall.<lb/>
But inside, ov ners Leroy and<lb/>
Terry Harris give customers what<lb/>
they want, music.<lb/>
"1 just love to play and I'm<lb/>
glad the people love us said<lb/>
urtino relaxing in a small room<lb/>
between two Sunday night<lb/>
shows<lb/>
Nashville North has 1,168<lb/>
seats on a sloping concrete floor<lb/>
facing the small stage.<lb/>
The walls are covered with<lb/>
framed ads tor area businesses<lb/>
like Skyway Motors and<lb/>
Richard's Towing. A huge sign<lb/>
with glittering letters hangs on<lb/>
the back of the stage proclaiming:<lb/>
"Nashville North<lb/>
Ushers patrol the aisles<lb/>
hawking cartons oi popcorn and<lb/>
cupsofsoda pop. No alcohol is al-<lb/>
lowed.<lb/>
"My customers just want to<lb/>
Ciime here and enjoy the music<lb/>
without worrying about some-<lb/>
body getting rowdy or dumping a<lb/>
beer down their back said Har-<lb/>
ris, who took over the theater in<lb/>
1985<lb/>
A blues band from nearby<lb/>
Decatur warms up the crowd,<lb/>
then Domino and his 12-piece<lb/>
band arrive bv bus from Milwau-<lb/>
kee<lb/>
Fans crowd around the front<lb/>
oi the stage taking pictures as<lb/>
Domino performs his chart-pop-<lb/>
ping hits from the 1 3(.s: "Blue-<lb/>
berry Hill "I'm In Love Again"<lb/>
and "Ain't That A Shame<lb/>
The band marches through<lb/>
the theater, and Domino gets a<lb/>
standing ovation as he bumps the<lb/>
Join Doug Johnson every Tuesday And Thursday for the<lb/>
best in Pirate Sports coverage. Only in The Past Carolinian.<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIAL<lb/>
MONSAT.<lb/>
11AM-3PM<lb/>
pl7<lb/>
- 4 oz. Sirloin<lb/>
Potato Bar<lb/>
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$4.49<lb/>
I<lb/>
Daily Specials<lb/>
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Regular Priced<lb/>
Items<lb/>
I With Student I.D.<lb/>
I<lb/>
FREE DESSERT BAR<lb/>
with All Steak Dinners<lb/>
TAKE-OUTS OKAY<lb/>
piano across the stage with his<lb/>
stomach while doing his closing<lb/>
song.<lb/>
"1 play mv music the same<lb/>
way because people expect it to<lb/>
sound exactly the way it does on<lb/>
the radio said Domino, whose<lb/>
road schedule would take him to<lb/>
Indianapolis the following day.<lb/>
"I'vebeen traveling40years. I )ust<lb/>
feel better when I'm performing<lb/>
1 larris said Domino is one ot<lb/>
170 acts he has brought to Nash-<lb/>
ville North. Manv stop in Taylor-<lb/>
ville on the way from one big city<lb/>
to another.<lb/>
"We pay a very good price<lb/>
said Harris. "Instead of a band<lb/>
sitting in a motel, they get $25,000<lb/>
and perform at Nashville North<lb/>
1 larris, who bought the thea-<lb/>
ter alter two previous operators<lb/>
failed, kept his job as a truck<lb/>
Iriver with United Parcel Service<lb/>
until he was sure his venture<lb/>
would succeed.<lb/>
One key, he said, is wearing<lb/>
many hats to save money. 1 larris,<lb/>
J5, picks groups, handles the fi-<lb/>
nances, unloads the equipment,<lb/>
runs the sound system, intro-<lb/>
duces performers, and thanks<lb/>
customers as they leave.<lb/>
His wife, Terry, handles<lb/>
ticket sales and often cooks a<lb/>
snack for the stars to eat between<lb/>
shows.<lb/>
Thev soon hope to develop a<lb/>
20,000-seat outdoor theater to at-<lb/>
tract even bigger entertainers, but<lb/>
it will not replace Nashville<lb/>
North.<lb/>
This theater is like one of<lb/>
our four children - we love it and<lb/>
we'd do anything for it Harris<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Riverbluff<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
Welcomes<lb/>
Students To Come By And See<lb/>
Our 2 Bedroom and 1 Bedroom<lb/>
Garden Apartments.<lb/>
?Fully Carpeted<lb/>
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?Bus Service1.5 miles from campus<lb/>
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10th Street Ext. to Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
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Publications Building - 2nd floor<lb/>
(In front ofJoyner Library)<lb/>
L<lb/>
J 2903 E. 10th St. - 758-2712<lb/>
fJlT, Structural Engineering. University ? Virginia, Fi- Uc Santa Cruz. Marine Biol- Universitv ? Michigan. MBA<lb/>
Analyzin j m I lesigning nance. Studies fluctuating ogy. Itudu candidate isted<lb/>
bridges Developed working stock and money markei whal tnd eff I f enviroi tng pi ts foi rM n -<lb/>
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analyze structural stress and Exchange The HP-12C with I . ? HI 22S h i i I   fl ws in I   :? ? . . nt<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058092_0014"/><lb/>
 mpi m<lb/>
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?<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13,1988<lb/>
Fans worship Elvis to death<lb/>
JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (AP)<lb/>
- Many Elvis Presley fans feel re-<lb/>
sponsible for his death and con-<lb/>
tinue to worship him because<lb/>
they relate to his painful life, says<lb/>
a North Carolina photojournalist<lb/>
bitten in his own way by the<lb/>
Presley bug.<lb/>
Ralph Burns treks to Mem-<lb/>
phis most years from his home in<lb/>
Asheville, N.C to photograph<lb/>
and interview Presley admirers as<lb/>
they mourn their hero at<lb/>
Graceland each Aug. 16.<lb/>
"To his fans, the common<lb/>
theme is that Elvis Presley lived<lb/>
for a reason and indeed did give<lb/>
his life for a purpose he said.<lb/>
Burns said he first headed to<lb/>
Graceland in 1978 for the first<lb/>
anniversary of Presley's death.<lb/>
pictures of the thousands who history has gotten people to put<lb/>
descend on<lb/>
year.<lb/>
the mansion every<lb/>
'In some strange sense of<lb/>
emotion many of the fans believe<lb/>
they an? partially responsible for<lb/>
tattoos of them on their bodies?'<lb/>
Burns said. "I mean, I can't think<lb/>
of anybody personally<lb/>
Much of the media have not<lb/>
been fair to Presley fans, said<lb/>
Elvis having lost his life, that is by Bums, 44, who owns a photogra-<lb/>
giving him the adulation and by phy store in Asheville.<lb/>
forcing him into a very narrow "The emphasis is on the per-<lb/>
world with no exits Burns said, verse aspects. Not many in the<lb/>
"They feel they took their love press take the time to really talk to<lb/>
and forced him back into him- them or try to understand this,<lb/>
self and think, 'What does this say<lb/>
Bums said the fans he has about all of us? Burns said,<lb/>
interviewed don't consider their One woman Burns inter-<lb/>
devotion to Presley a religion. But viewed asked why he was inter-<lb/>
he believes the Presley myth in-<lb/>
cludes a "religious wrapping" of<lb/>
the fans through their unyielding<lb/>
love and such rituals as the can-<lb/>
dlelight procession to his grave on<lb/>
He's been going back ever since to the death anniversary<lb/>
stand bv Preslev's erave and snap "How manv other people in<lb/>
ested. "I'm not obese and I don't<lb/>
have a tattoo the woman told<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Not all Presley fans are the<lb/>
same, he said. There are<lb/>
"weirdos" who flock to<lb/>
Graceland for the attention and<lb/>
excitement. And there are<lb/>
middle-class women who grew<lb/>
up in the sanitized, conservative<lb/>
1950s with an emotional attach-<lb/>
ment that stems from an untamed<lb/>
sensuality they had little opportu-<lb/>
nity to express as young people,<lb/>
Burns said.<lb/>
'This guy expressed proba-<lb/>
bly every emotion that one would<lb/>
encounter in a romantic, sexual<lb/>
relationship he said.<lb/>
The true Presley fans, mean-<lb/>
ing the ones who would "crawl<lb/>
over the coals for this man relate<lb/>
to his meager boyhood in Tupelo,<lb/>
Miss and the "pressure of exis-<lb/>
tence" that led to his drug-taking,<lb/>
marital problems and eventual<lb/>
death, Burns said.<lb/>
"One of the things Elvis fans<lb/>
really understand is human<lb/>
frailty he said.<lb/>
Fats Domino still on Blueberry Hill<lb/>
TAYLORVILLE, 111. (AP) - shows.<lb/>
Music fans parked their cars near Nashville North has 1,168<lb/>
a soybean field, then walked past seats on a sloping concrete floor<lb/>
a 1958 Chevy and through the facing the small stage.<lb/>
front doors to hear rock 'n' roll<lb/>
legend Fats Domino.<lb/>
Just another weekend at<lb/>
Nashville North.<lb/>
This down-home theater is<lb/>
400 miles from its namesake, but<lb/>
Nashville North attracts some of<lb/>
the nation's top musical enter-<lb/>
tainers, from Loretta Lynn and<lb/>
Tennessee Ernie Ford to Bon Jovi<lb/>
and Fabian.<lb/>
And it packs in the people.<lb/>
"I love it because it's close by<lb/>
and they have great entertainers<lb/>
said Sue Norman of Urbana, who<lb/>
often makes the 75-mile drive. "I<lb/>
was surprised. I thought it would<lb/>
be old and dumpy<lb/>
Still, Nashville North - lo-<lb/>
cated in south-central Illinois,<lb/>
southeast of Springfield - is a far<lb/>
The walls are covered with<lb/>
framed ads for area businesses<lb/>
like Skyway Motors and<lb/>
Richard's Towing. A huge sign<lb/>
piano across the stage with his<lb/>
stomach while doing his closing<lb/>
song.<lb/>
"I play my music the same<lb/>
way because people expect it to<lb/>
sound exactly the way it does on<lb/>
the radio said Domino, whose<lb/>
road schedule would take him to<lb/>
with glittering letters hangs on Indianapolis the following day.<lb/>
the back of the stage proclaiming: "I've been traveling 40 years. I just<lb/>
"Nashville North feel better when I'm performing<lb/>
Ushers patrol the aisles Harris said Domino is one of<lb/>
hawking cartons of popcorn and 170 acts he has brought to Nash-<lb/>
cups of soda pop. No alcohol is al- ville North. Many stop in Taylor-<lb/>
lowed, ville on the way from one big city<lb/>
"My customers just want to to another,<lb/>
come here and enjoy the music "We pay a very good price<lb/>
without worrying about some- said Harris. "Instead of a band<lb/>
body getting rowdy or dumping a si tting in a motel, they get $25,000<lb/>
beer down their back said Har-<lb/>
ris, who took over the theater in<lb/>
1985.<lb/>
A blues band from nearby<lb/>
Decatur warms up the crowd,<lb/>
then Domino and his 12-piece<lb/>
cry from the Los Angeles Forum, band arrive by bus from Milwau-<lb/>
The brick-and-metal building kee.<lb/>
opened in 1976. From the outside,<lb/>
it could pass as a carpet store or<lb/>
union hall.<lb/>
But inside, owners Leroy and<lb/>
Terry Harris give customers what<lb/>
they want: music.<lb/>
"I just love to play, and I'm<lb/>
glad the people love us said<lb/>
Domino, relaxing in a small room<lb/>
Fans crowd around the front<lb/>
of the stage taking pictures as<lb/>
Domino performs his chart-pop-<lb/>
ping hits from the 1950s: "Blue-<lb/>
berry Hill "I'm In Love Again"<lb/>
and "Ain't That A Shame<lb/>
The band marches through<lb/>
the theater, and Domino gets a<lb/>
and perform at Nashville North<lb/>
Harris, who bought the thea-<lb/>
ter after two previous operators<lb/>
failed, kept his job as a truck<lb/>
iriver with United Parcel Service<lb/>
until he was sure his venture<lb/>
would succeed.<lb/>
One key, he said, is wearing<lb/>
many hats to save money. Harris,<lb/>
35, picks groups, handles the fi-<lb/>
nances, unloads the equipment,<lb/>
runs the sound system, intro-<lb/>
duces performers, and thanks<lb/>
customers as they leave.<lb/>
between two Sunday night standing ovation as he bumps the<lb/>
Join Doug Johnson every Tuesday and Thursday for the<lb/>
best in Pirate Sports coverage. Only in The East Carolinian.<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
BEING<lb/>
ACCEPTED FOR<lb/>
Advertising Layout<lb/>
Technicians<lb/>
and<lb/>
Darkroom Technicians<lb/>
Experience A Plus!<lb/>
Apply at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Publications Building - 2nd floor<lb/>
(In front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
r<lb/>
I<lb/>
SPMISMMU<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
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ADKIMION WITH COLLSOS IJ?.<lb/>
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His wife, Terry, handles<lb/>
ticket sales and often cooks a<lb/>
snack for the stars to eat between<lb/>
shows.<lb/>
They soon hope to develop a<lb/>
20,000-seat outdoor theater to at-<lb/>
tract even bigger entertainers, but<lb/>
it will not replace Nashville<lb/>
North.<lb/>
This theater is like one of<lb/>
our four children - we love it and<lb/>
we'd do anything for it Harris<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Riverbluff<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
Welcomes<lb/>
Students To Come By And See<lb/>
Our 2 Bedroom and 1 Bedroom<lb/>
Garden Apartments.<lb/>
?Fully Carpeted<lb/>
?Large Pool<lb/>
?Free Cable<lb/>
?Bus Service1.5 miles from campus<lb/>
?Under New Management<lb/>
10th Street Ext. to Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
0M SHOES<lb/>
Fall Savings<lb/>
urn<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
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SUSAN KRUSE<lb/>
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HJlX Structural Engineering. University of Virginia, Fi<lb/>
Analyzing and designing nance. Studies fluctuating<lb/>
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bridge.The HP-28S helps him in Yen at Chicago Mercantile<lb/>
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geometry. It's the only calcu- RPN lets him analyze prices<lb/>
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jc Santa Cruz, Marine Biol- University of Michigan, MBA<lb/>
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entific calculator<lb/>
New Achievers in<lb/>
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WR3W<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0015"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13, 1988 Page 13<lb/>
Pirates meet defeat at hands of Hokies<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Saturday's game with the<lb/>
Hokies of Virginia Tech was one<lb/>
of missed opportunities for the<lb/>
Pirates, on offense as well as de-<lb/>
fense, as they dropped their first<lb/>
game of the season 27-16.<lb/>
The Pirates drove the ball<lb/>
down inside the Tech 30 yard line<lb/>
seven times, but they were able to<lb/>
convert on three of these occa-<lb/>
sions, twice for touchdowns and<lb/>
once on a field goal.<lb/>
Tech won the toss, and took<lb/>
the ball at their own 20. In a varied<lb/>
offensiveattack, the Hokies drove<lb/>
the length of the field in a sus-<lb/>
tained drive to draw first blood<lb/>
when running back Jon Jeffries<lb/>
crossed the goal line on a three<lb/>
vard sprint. Tech added the extra<lb/>
point, and the Hokies took an<lb/>
early 7-0 lead.<lb/>
ECU opened their first drive<lb/>
with a 30 yard pass completion<lb/>
from Travis hunter to Al Whiting,<lb/>
who was voted as the offensive<lb/>
player of the game. The Pirates<lb/>
were unable to move the ball on<lb/>
the ground, but Hunter kept the<lb/>
drive alive on an 18 yard scramble<lb/>
on a broken pass play. After more<lb/>
failed running attempts, Hunter<lb/>
dropped back to pass, and, under<lb/>
pressure, threw an interception to<lb/>
a Hokie player, turning the ball<lb/>
over.<lb/>
On their next series, both<lb/>
squads stalled, unable to get the<lb/>
necessary yardage. The Pirates<lb/>
were forced to punt, but got the<lb/>
ball back three plays later when<lb/>
Robert Jones forced a fumble, and<lb/>
Junior Robinson recovered on the<lb/>
Tech 21 yard line. Three plays<lb/>
later, Hunter connected on a<lb/>
scrambling pass to Walter<lb/>
Wilson, who made a finger tip<lb/>
catch in the corner of the end zone.<lb/>
Imperato added the extra point,<lb/>
tying the score 7-7 with 8:55 re-<lb/>
maining in the first half.<lb/>
The Hokies responded in suit,<lb/>
taking Imperato's kick-off and<lb/>
returning it 28 yards to their own<lb/>
33. Led by their young quarter-<lb/>
back Will Furrer, the Hokies<lb/>
drove the field in another long,<lb/>
time consuming drive, ending<lb/>
with Jeffries second score of the<lb/>
half, a five yard sprint off the right<lb/>
side. The extra point was good,<lb/>
boosting the Hokies to a 14-7 lead<lb/>
with 4:27 remaining in the half.<lb/>
Furrer went 13 Of 18 on the day for<lb/>
158 yards.<lb/>
Again, the Pirates were<lb/>
unable to move the ball on a<lb/>
tough, scrappy Tech defense, and<lb/>
they were forced to punt to the<lb/>
Hokies. Engineering another long<lb/>
drive, consisting of 11 plays,<lb/>
down to the ECU 11 yard line<lb/>
before stalling under the pressure<lb/>
of the Pirate defense. Chris Kinzer<lb/>
came on the field for the Hokies<lb/>
<lb/>
?V ? -<lb/>
i - V , ,?<lb/>
? V '<lb/>
: jte<lb/>
and kicked a 28 yard field goal<lb/>
with :09 remaining, giving Tech a<lb/>
17-7 half time lead.<lb/>
The halftime statistics told a<lb/>
tale of their own. Virginia Tech<lb/>
amassed 17 first downs, com-<lb/>
pared to only seven for ECU. Tech<lb/>
gained 159 yards on the ground,<lb/>
while ECU managed only 42<lb/>
yards. Passing yardage was about<lb/>
equal, 76 yards for Tech and 66 for<lb/>
ECU. Total yardage for Tech and<lb/>
ECU was 235 and 108 yards, re-<lb/>
pectively. Time of possession was<lb/>
decidely in Tech's favor, with a<lb/>
5:18 difference.<lb/>
The Pirates had the ball to<lb/>
begin the second half, and they<lb/>
looked like they had come out of<lb/>
the lockeroom ready to play foot-<lb/>
ball. Tim James took the ball up<lb/>
the gut for a 10 yard gain on the<lb/>
first play from scrimmage, and<lb/>
Reggie McKinney followed with a<lb/>
16 yard burst. Helped along by a<lb/>
15 yard personal foul penalty on<lb/>
the Hokies, the Pirates drove the<lb/>
ball to the Tech 22 before stalling.<lb/>
Imperato came in to try a 44 yard<lb/>
field goal, but it drifted wide, and<lb/>
ECU came away empty.<lb/>
The Hokies answered the<lb/>
ECU drive with one of their own,<lb/>
with one distinct difference. They<lb/>
drove the ball from their own 22<lb/>
down to the the ECU five in 12<lb/>
plays before the defense tough-<lb/>
ened and stopped them. Kinzer<lb/>
came on and connected on his<lb/>
second field goal of the afternoon,<lb/>
22 yarder with 6:42 remaining in<lb/>
the third quarter, giving the Hok-<lb/>
ies a 20-7 edge.<lb/>
ECU answered in turn on<lb/>
their next possession, when McK-<lb/>
inney took the Kinzer kick-off and<lb/>
returned it 55 yards to the Tech 33.<lb/>
The Pirates kept the ball on the<lb/>
ground, grinding out 20 yards on<lb/>
carries by James, Hunter, and<lb/>
Denell Harper. The drive stalled<lb/>
at the thirteen, and the Pirates<lb/>
were forced to settle for a 29 yard<lb/>
Imperato field goal with 4:01 left<lb/>
in the third, cutting the Hokie lead<lb/>
to 20-10.<lb/>
On Tech's next series, they<lb/>
gave the Pirates the opportunity<lb/>
that they were looking for when<lb/>
Joe Bright recovered a Hokie<lb/>
fumble on the ECU 44 yard line<lb/>
with approximately four minutes<lb/>
remaining in the quarter. How-<lb/>
ever, they were unable to capital-<lb/>
ize when, two plays later, Hunter,<lb/>
under pressure from a storming<lb/>
Tech defense, threw an intercep-<lb/>
tion at the Hokie 44, his second on<lb/>
the day.<lb/>
Neither team was able to<lb/>
capitalize on the other's mistakes,<lb/>
and the two traded the ball for the<lb/>
remainder of the third period.<lb/>
The Pirates had the ball to<lb/>
begin the final period, but were<lb/>
again unable to move it, with the<lb/>
Hokies stopping many of the Pi-<lb/>
rate option plays in the backfield.<lb/>
The Pirates were forced to punt,<lb/>
and John Jett, who had been doing<lb/>
See PIRATES, page 14<lb/>
Junior Robinson confers with Coach Bell after the defense came off the field in Saturday's<lb/>
contest with the Hokies. The defense gave up 434 yards to the Hokies. (Photo SID).<lb/>
IRS crowns kings<lb/>
IRS- Over 400 participants<lb/>
took part in the first annual King<lb/>
of the Hill Competition held on<lb/>
College Hill last week. The com-<lb/>
petition pitted residence hall<lb/>
against residence hall in 8 com-<lb/>
petitive and crazy events de-<lb/>
signed strictly for participation<lb/>
purposes. Sponsored by Intramu-<lb/>
ral-Recreational Services.<lb/>
Participants enjoyed refresh-<lb/>
ments from Pepsi-Cola and pop-<lb/>
corn donated by Dining Services<lb/>
as well as a mix of popular tunes<lb/>
blending in with fun and excite-<lb/>
ment of the day. The event offered<lb/>
basketball, sand volleyball, tennis<lb/>
doubles, mini basketball, quarter-<lb/>
back pass, hoop the human, giant<lb/>
twister and the finale tug-o-war.<lb/>
Aycock residence hall lead<lb/>
the men's residence hall division<lb/>
in winning tickets up to the last<lb/>
half hour of play when Bclk sud-<lb/>
denly took the lead. Within min-<lb/>
utes, the men of Aycock once<lb/>
again pulled away in the ticket<lb/>
court as well as total participation<lb/>
numbers.<lb/>
Tyler residence hall over-<lb/>
powered the ladies from Jones<lb/>
and Belk with a 645 ticket total<lb/>
that kept them way above both<lb/>
male and female residence halls.<lb/>
Winning ticket resident halls<lb/>
battled it out for the finale tug-o-<lb/>
war event. Aycock pulled against<lb/>
a strong Belk squad while Tyler<lb/>
pulled against a mix of Jones and<lb/>
Belk females. The Tyler ladies<lb/>
took only a minute to dust off the<lb/>
other combination as they walked<lb/>
away with t-shirt honors. Aycock<lb/>
struggled momentarily, but<lb/>
gained a substantial lead with the<lb/>
cheerful aid of spectators stand-<lb/>
ing by. Aycock hall, a large per-<lb/>
centage of whom are freshmen,<lb/>
pulled Belk into the ground and<lb/>
captured the finale event.<lb/>
Winners of the overall King of<lb/>
the Hill competition received a<lb/>
crown for display in the winning<lb/>
residence hall while Queen of the<lb/>
Hill recipients took home a jew-<lb/>
eled Septor. For the overall<lb/>
crowning, Aycock narrowly de-<lb/>
feated Belk residence hall by a 15<lb/>
percent to 12 percent margin of<lb/>
overall participants. Jones resi-<lb/>
dence hall and Scott followed suit.<lb/>
In the ladies race, Tyler<lb/>
walked away with the Queen of<lb/>
the Hill championship with a 24<lb/>
percent residence hall participa-<lb/>
tion mark. Belk followed with 13<lb/>
percent. The event was a huge<lb/>
success. Plans for the future in-<lb/>
clude a "Best of the West" compe-<lb/>
tition for West Campus residents<lb/>
and a "Hall of Them All" for all<lb/>
campus recreational fun.<lb/>
DMA RECKS INTRAMU-<lb/>
RAL TOP PICKS<lb/>
FLAG FOOTBALL<lb/>
MEN: 1. Funk Brothers, 2. Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi 'A 3. Scott Sob-C<lb/>
Hurricanes, 4. The Heart Founda-<lb/>
tion, 5. The Alcoholics, 6. Belk<lb/>
Bums, 7. Kappa Sigma 'A and 8.<lb/>
Fried City Gang.<lb/>
WOMEN: 1. Silver Bullet, 2.<lb/>
Zeta Tau Alpha, and 3. Enforcers.<lb/>
CO-REC SOFTBALL<lb/>
1. The Syndicate, 2. D&amp;P<lb/>
Stoners, 3. Our Prerogative, 4.<lb/>
Mayberry All-Stars, and 5.<lb/>
Mudhens.<lb/>
Denell Harper turns the ball upfield as he tries to make a first<lb/>
down against the stingy Hokies. Harper and the rest of the Pirate<lb/>
offense accounted for only 297 yards in the game. (Photo SID).<lb/>
Agents violate rules<lb/>
Loss of quarterbacks dooms<lb/>
many of the NFL squads<lb/>
(AP)- Just how important is one- to have confidence that anybody The Montana-Rice score came<lb/>
eleventh of a football team? The who goes in can do the job just 39 seconds after Phil Simms<lb/>
Cincinnati Bengals, with Boomer In other games Sunday, it wasSan hit Lionel Manuel with a 15-yard<lb/>
Esiason at the controls, demon- Francisco 20, the New York touchdown pass that gave New<lb/>
strated that a healthy quarterback Giants 17; Chicago 17 Indianapo- York a 17-13 lead. What appeared<lb/>
can make all the difference. Hsl3; Buffalo 9, Miami 6; New Or- to be a game-winning score for<lb/>
The Cleveland Browns proved leans 29, Atlanta 21; Washington New York, 1-1, wasset upby a 32-<lb/>
the point when their second 30, Pittsburgh 29Tampa Bay 13, yard punt return by Phil McCon-<lb/>
(CPS)- Three sports agents and a<lb/>
pro foottall player were indicted<lb/>
Aug. 24 for allegedly using lucra-<lb/>
tive but illegal payments and<lb/>
threats to coerce college athletes<lb/>
into signing representation con-<lb/>
tracts.<lb/>
New York agents Norby Wal ters<lb/>
and Lloyd Bloom are accused of<lb/>
offering student-athletes cash,<lb/>
cars, trips and clothing if they<lb/>
signed - in some cases post-dated<lb/>
- agreements allowing Walters<lb/>
and Bloom to represent them in<lb/>
professional contract negotia-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
If the offer of cash or cars didn't<lb/>
work, U.S. Attorney Anton<lb/>
Valukas said, Walters and Bloom<lb/>
threatened to break their legs and<lb/>
harm their families.<lb/>
"This is my life on the<lb/>
line Now it's your life on the<lb/>
line your reputation, your busi-<lb/>
ness, your family, your brother,<lb/>
your school, everything is going<lb/>
to be tainted and tainted bad. It's<lb/>
gonna be terrible for you Wal-<lb/>
ters allegedly told former Univer-<lb/>
sity of Pittsburgh linebacker Tony<lb/>
Woods, now with the Seattle<lb/>
Seahawks.<lb/>
Bloom and Walters are<lb/>
charged with racketeering, mail<lb/>
fraud, wire fraud and extortion.<lb/>
The payments and contracts vio-<lb/>
lated National Collegiate Athletic<lb/>
Association (NCAA) rules.<lb/>
Also indicted was Cali-<lb/>
fornia agent Dave Lueddeke and<lb/>
Cris Carter of the National Foot-<lb/>
ball League's (NFL) Philadelphia<lb/>
Eagles.<lb/>
The indictment named<lb/>
reputed mobster Michael<lb/>
Franzese as an unindicted co-<lb/>
conspirator. Franzese financed<lb/>
the agents' efforts, and Walters<lb/>
and Bloom used Franzese's repu-<lb/>
tation to coerce athletes into sign-<lb/>
ing oontracts, Valukas said.<lb/>
Franzese is serving a 10-year<lb/>
prison term in California for rack-<lb/>
eteering and tax violations.<lb/>
Walters also allegedly<lb/>
used threats to sign acts in the<lb/>
music business, including the<lb/>
Jackson Five, according to the<lb/>
indictment.<lb/>
Prosecutors say Carter accepted<lb/>
$5,000 from Lueddeke that both<lb/>
ooncealed from a federal grand<lb/>
jury investigating Walters and<lb/>
Bloom. Carter, a former Ohio<lb/>
State player, was charged with<lb/>
obstruction of justice and mail<lb/>
fraud. Lueddeke was charged<lb/>
with perjury and obstruction of<lb/>
justice.<lb/>
"I am cooperating fully<lb/>
and could only say that I regret<lb/>
my past mistakes Carter said in<lb/>
a statement released by the<lb/>
Eagles.<lb/>
Prosecutors say Walters<lb/>
and Bloom induced athletes to<lb/>
defraud their schools by accept-<lb/>
ing cash and signing contracts in<lb/>
violation of NCAA rules, and<lb/>
then signing affidavits saying<lb/>
they had not broken any rules.<lb/>
Among the 35 schools<lb/>
defrauded were Michigan State,<lb/>
Notre Dame, Purdue and the uni-<lb/>
versities of Michigan and Illinois.<lb/>
Valukas said 43 college<lb/>
athletes who signed with Walters<lb/>
and Bloom avoided prosecution<lb/>
with pretrial agreements to per-<lb/>
form community service and to<lb/>
reimburse portions of their schol-<lb/>
arships to their universities.<lb/>
That group includes NFL<lb/>
players such as Ron Morris of<lb/>
Chicago, Ronnie Harmon of Buf-<lb/>
falo and Paul Palmer of Kansas<lb/>
City and Brad Sellers of the Na-<lb/>
tional Basketball Association Chi-<lb/>
cago Bulls. All have agreed to<lb/>
testify against Walters and<lb/>
Bloom, authorities said.<lb/>
Walters and Bloom each<lb/>
face a maximum of 70 years in<lb/>
prison and $2 million in fines if<lb/>
convicted. Carter faces 10 years<lb/>
and a $500,000 fine, and Lued-<lb/>
deke faces 15 years in jail and<lb/>
$750,000.<lb/>
starter in as many weeks went to<lb/>
the hospital.<lb/>
The end result in the National<lb/>
Football League is measured on<lb/>
the scoreboard, and the relative<lb/>
health of quarterbacks played a<lb/>
major role. With Esiason throw-<lb/>
ing four touchdown passes, the<lb/>
Bengals remained unbeaten by<lb/>
beating the Philadelphia Eagles<lb/>
28-24.<lb/>
The Browns, with Bernie Kosar<lb/>
out with an elbow sprain, lost<lb/>
backup Gary Danielson to a bro-<lb/>
ken ankle on Sunday. That left the<lb/>
Browns with former Indianapolis<lb/>
Colt Mike Pagel running a strange<lb/>
offense, and it showed. The<lb/>
Browns lost 23-3 to the New York<lb/>
Jets and after eight quarters of<lb/>
football are still looking for their<lb/>
first touchdown of the season.<lb/>
Green Bay 10; Denver 34, San<lb/>
Diego 3; Minnesota 36, New Eng-<lb/>
land 6; Houston 38, the Los Ange-<lb/>
les Raiders 35; the Los Angeles<lb/>
Rams 17, Detroit 10, and Seattle<lb/>
31, Kansas City 10.<lb/>
Dallas visits Phoenix tonight.<lb/>
Jets 23, Browns 3<lb/>
The Jets, 28-3 losers in a miser-<lb/>
key.<lb/>
Bears 17, Colts 13<lb/>
Indianapolis, 0-2, had two<lb/>
chances to come back after Chi-<lb/>
cago took a four-point lead on<lb/>
Matt Suhey's 2-yard run. But Eric<lb/>
Dickerson, whose 12-yard run<lb/>
had given the Colts a 13-10 lead,<lb/>
fumbled at the Chicago 37 and<lb/>
able performance at New Eng- Steve McMichael recovered. One<lb/>
land last week, preferred to think pjay after forcing a punt, Jack<lb/>
they had earned Sunday's victory Trudeau's pass was intercepted<lb/>
on performance and not because<lb/>
of Cleveland injuries.<lb/>
Roger Vick had two short scor-<lb/>
ing runs in the fourth period and<lb/>
Pat Leahy kicked three field goals.<lb/>
by Vestee Jackson.<lb/>
Bills 9, Dolphins 6<lb/>
Bengals 28, Eagles 24<lb/>
Esiason completed 20 of 32<lb/>
passes for 363 yards, throwing<lb/>
two scoring passes apiece to Tim<lb/>
McGee and James Brooks. Cun-<lb/>
"A lot of people didn't think we'd<lb/>
come in here and play well Esi-<lb/>
ason said after winning an offen- ?Sha? h?25 oiior? Xa<lb/>
sive duel with the Eagles'Randall and aJded another B on the<lb/>
Cunningham. "That was motiva- 8J??-<lb/>
tion for us. We have a lot of weap- Es'ason the fmal ?nJt 3'<lb/>
? yard touchdown pass to McGee<lb/>
As for the Browns, who also lost<lb/>
two defensive starters to injury<lb/>
during the game, "We didn't<lb/>
handle adversity today tight fers 20 Giants 17<lb/>
end Ozzie Newsome said. Joe Montana on the sidelines m <lb/>
"Football's a team game, and you favor of Steve Young at the start of 8:52 remaining. NewOrleans, 1-1,<lb/>
have to execute regardless of he 8ame- ?? "J Wlth exTV completed the comeback from a<lb/>
with 5:02 left to overcome a 24-21<lb/>
Eagles lead.<lb/>
Scott Norwood kicked three<lb/>
field goals, two in the fourth quar-<lb/>
ter, to give the mistake-prone Bills<lb/>
a narrow margin over the Dol-<lb/>
phins.<lb/>
Norwood gave Buffalo its sec-<lb/>
ond win of the year with a 28-yard<lb/>
field goal with 3:12 left. Miami<lb/>
drove 37 yards to the Buffalo 35<lb/>
before Dan Marino's fourth-<lb/>
down pass to Jim Jensen fell in-<lb/>
complete with 37 seconds left.<lb/>
Saints 29, Falcons 21<lb/>
Dal ton Hilliard made up for two<lb/>
lost fumbles by running for 97<lb/>
yards and scoring the clinching<lb/>
touchdown on a 4-yard run with<lb/>
who's playing next to you or at ?? on a 78-yard scoring pass<lb/>
any particular position. You have PlaV "? 42 seconds to PlaX-<lb/>
See NFL, page 15<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0016"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13,1988<lb/>
Wilander wins Open, moves into first spot<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Now when<lb/>
they compare Mats Wilander to<lb/>
Bjorn Borg they can talk about the<lb/>
things Borg never did.<lb/>
Up until now, the focus has been<lb/>
on the failings of Wilander. But<lb/>
his stirring five-set victory Sun-<lb/>
day over Ivan Lendl in the men's<lb/>
final of the U.S. Open changed all<lb/>
that.<lb/>
He won the tournament Borg<lb/>
never won.<lb/>
And today the computer rank-<lb/>
ings released by the Association<lb/>
of Tennis Professionals will have<lb/>
No. 2 Wilander replacing Lendl as<lb/>
the No. 1 plaver in the world.<lb/>
That number combined with his<lb/>
6-4, 4-6, 6-3, 5-7, 61 victory over<lb/>
Lendl should put to rest some of<lb/>
the talk about him not winning<lb/>
the big one.<lb/>
Ever since Wilander, 24, burst on<lb/>
the scene as a 17-year-old cham-<lb/>
pion at the 1982 French Open he<lb/>
has been seen as the next Super<lb/>
Swede. But mostly the perform-<lb/>
ance has fallen short of the prom-<lb/>
ise.<lb/>
And no one is more aware of that<lb/>
than Wilander. "It felt better than<lb/>
the first Paris time he said after<lb/>
he stopped Lendl from winning<lb/>
his fourth consecutive U.S. Open<lb/>
and took the No.l men's ranking<lb/>
away from him.<lb/>
"It meant so much. I never won<lb/>
here. A Swede never won here.<lb/>
And I'm going to be number one<lb/>
now in the computer rankings.<lb/>
"It was the biggest match I have<lb/>
ever played<lb/>
By winning at the Open, Wilan-<lb/>
der did something Borg never<lb/>
did. And by winning three Grand<lb/>
Slam events in the same year, he<lb/>
did something else his country-<lb/>
man never accomplished.<lb/>
In fact, no one among the men<lb/>
have won three Grand Slam<lb/>
events in the same year since<lb/>
Jimmy Connors did that in 1974.<lb/>
He now joins John Newcombe,<lb/>
Hie Nastase, Connors, Borg, John<lb/>
McEnroe and Lendl as the only<lb/>
men to be ranked No. 1 since the<lb/>
computer rankings started in<lb/>
1973.<lb/>
No one respected Wilander's ac-<lb/>
complishments this year more<lb/>
than Lendl, who was trying to<lb/>
become the first man to win four<lb/>
straight U.S. Opens since Bill<lb/>
Tilden won six straight in the<lb/>
early 1920s.<lb/>
"Three grand Slams is unbeliev-<lb/>
able said Lendl, who also saw<lb/>
his 156-week skein atop the com-<lb/>
puter rankings end just three<lb/>
weeks shy of the record set by<lb/>
Connors. "I hope i t happens to me<lb/>
next year<lb/>
Lendl, 28, did not go down with-<lb/>
out a fight in his seventh straignt<lb/>
trip to the Open finals.<lb/>
Trailing 3-5 in the fifth set with<lb/>
Wilander serving, he won the first<lb/>
point of the game. But Wilander<lb/>
won a big point when he survived<lb/>
a 52-volley effort to even the game<lb/>
at 15.<lb/>
Twice Lendl fought to gain the<lb/>
advantage in the game, but both<lb/>
times Wilander evened it at deuce<lb/>
and finally won match point<lb/>
when Lendl netted a backhand<lb/>
service return.<lb/>
Wilander won the first set when<lb/>
he broke Lendl in the 10th game<lb/>
and took the third set with a break<lb/>
in the second game. Lendl cap-<lb/>
tured the second set when he won<lb/>
the last five games after being<lb/>
down 1 -4 and evened the match at<lb/>
two sets each when he won the<lb/>
fourth set 7-5 by breaking Wilan-<lb/>
der in the final game.<lb/>
But in the end Wilander had<lb/>
enough left to finally be on the<lb/>
right side of compasisons with<lb/>
Borg.<lb/>
West Craven high on running back Becton<lb/>
NC<lb/>
(AP)- Athletes and coaches like<lb/>
Kay Yow, J.R. Reid, Sylvia Hatch-<lb/>
ell, Al Buehler, Hank Johnson,<lb/>
Sam Jones, Tab Ramos, Jim<lb/>
Copcland and Anthony Hem-<lb/>
brick are among those from North<lb/>
Carolina who will be part of the<lb/>
Olympics in Seoul, Korea.<lb/>
About 20 people in all with North<lb/>
Carolina ties wili be in the sea of<lb/>
25,000 at the Summer Games. But<lb/>
when it comes to the awarding of<lb/>
the gold, they figure to be on vic-<lb/>
tory stands in great disproportion<lb/>
to their number.<lb/>
In basketball, both men's and<lb/>
women's, they expect to help the<lb/>
United States put on a golden<lb/>
show. And in boxing and swim-<lb/>
ming, there are strong possibili-<lb/>
ties the favorites may fall to ath-<lb/>
letes who practice in North Caro-<lb/>
lina rings or pools.<lb/>
With UNC star Reid and Greens-<lb/>
boro-raised Danny Manning op-<lb/>
erating in the front court, the<lb/>
United States again will be the<lb/>
choice in men's basketball.<lb/>
The U.S. women also figure to be<lb/>
the strongest, and while none of<lb/>
the team members has North<lb/>
Carolina collegiate ties, Yow also<lb/>
heads the women's program at<lb/>
North Carolina State. And her as-<lb/>
sistants are Hatchell, the head<lb/>
women's coach at North Carolina<lb/>
and sister Susan Yow, a former<lb/>
Wolfpack All-America and assis-<lb/>
tant coach who now coaches at<lb/>
Drake.<lb/>
Golden also are the dreams of the<lb/>
U.S. boxing team, where Johnson,<lb/>
a soldier at Fort Bragg, will serve<lb/>
as an assistant coach. And while<lb/>
the veteran coach will have a full<lb/>
card of athletes to watch out for,<lb/>
he'll no doubt keep a close eye on<lb/>
Fort Bragg's Hembrick, the three-<lb/>
time U.S. Armv middleweight<lb/>
champion many say has the best<lb/>
chance of stopping favored Henry<lb/>
Maske of East Germany.<lb/>
Another major medal contender<lb/>
with Tar Heel connections actu-<lb/>
ally calls Fort M ill, S.C, home. But<lb/>
when Melvin Stewart is ready to<lb/>
practice, he zips across the state<lb/>
line to Charlotte's Mecklenburg<lb/>
Aquatic Club where long hours of<lb/>
work have made him the top U.S.<lb/>
hope in the 200-meter butterfly<lb/>
and a possible challenger to world<lb/>
record-holder Michael Gross of<lb/>
West Germany.<lb/>
Baseball will be a demonstration<lb/>
sport at the Olympics, but<lb/>
officials will decide winners and<lb/>
losers there, too, and<lb/>
Wake Foresfs Billy Masse, an out-<lb/>
fielder, should be a standout for<lb/>
the U.S. team.<lb/>
A gold also could come Lee Ver-<lb/>
non McNeill's way if tne East<lb/>
Carolina sprinter runs in one of<lb/>
the rounds of the men's 400-meter<lb/>
relay, since relay team partici-<lb/>
pants share any medal won in the<lb/>
final.<lb/>
Former Pirate Leora "Sam" Jones<lb/>
may also sparkle in the Seoul<lb/>
Games, just as she did in Los An-<lb/>
geles, but the United States needs<lb/>
several more players as talented<lb/>
as Jones before it becomes a medal<lb/>
contender in women's team<lb/>
handball.<lb/>
NEW BERN, N.C. (AP) - West<lb/>
Craven High School's Lee Becton<lb/>
may be only a 15-year-old sopho-<lb/>
more, but, the 5-foot-ll, 175-<lb/>
pound athlete has experienced<lb/>
overnight success on the Eagle<lb/>
football squad.<lb/>
He became the school's first-<lb/>
ever basketball starter as a fresh-<lb/>
man last year, and took a silver<lb/>
medal with a 46-foot, one-inch<lb/>
triple jump in the Junior Olym-<lb/>
pics in Gainesville, Fla this past<lb/>
July.<lb/>
In West Craven's first two foot-<lb/>
ball games this season, Becton has<lb/>
amassed 475 yards rushing, while<lb/>
his 231 yards rushing and four<lb/>
touchdowns scored last Friday<lb/>
against Greene Central resulted<lb/>
in him being named the state 3-A<lb/>
player-of-the-week.<lb/>
"The best thing about Lee Becton<lb/>
is that he's very gifted<lb/>
academically said Eagle foot-<lb/>
ball coach Clay Jordan. "You<lb/>
couldn't ask for a better student-<lb/>
athlete<lb/>
Jordan says intelligence serves<lb/>
Becton well on the playing field in<lb/>
determining where the best spot<lb/>
is to run through.<lb/>
"He uses his agility and intelli-<lb/>
gence rather than speed so<lb/>
much Jordan said. "He reads<lb/>
his blocks well and makes good<lb/>
decisions on his cuts. Having<lb/>
speed is great, but if you don't<lb/>
know how to run the football that<lb/>
speed's not going to carry you<lb/>
very far<lb/>
Becton's performance so far this<lb/>
season is not a fluke, based on the<lb/>
fact that he rambled for 21 touch<lb/>
downs last year on the junior var-<lb/>
sity, then added another touch<lb/>
down and a two-point conversion<lb/>
after being brought up to the var<lb/>
sity in West Craven's final gam.<lb/>
of 1987.<lb/>
Pirates handed first loss of season<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
a good job all day for ECU,<lb/>
dropped his punt on the 14 yard<lb/>
line of Tech, hemming them in<lb/>
deep in their own territory when<lb/>
the Hokies could manage only an<lb/>
eight yard return as a result of<lb/>
good special teams play.<lb/>
The Hokies stalled after only<lb/>
three unsucessful plays, and a<lb/>
shanked punt gave the Pirates the<lb/>
ball and another oppurtunity on<lb/>
their own 40 yard line. But they<lb/>
were once again thwarted on the<lb/>
first play from scrimmage when<lb/>
Hunter, under a heavy Tech pass<lb/>
rush, turned the ball over on an<lb/>
interception on the 43 yard line.<lb/>
With the advantage of excel-<lb/>
lent field position, Furrer guided<lb/>
the Hokies down to the Pirate two<lb/>
yard line before, on a second and<lb/>
goal situation, Rich Fox carried<lb/>
the ball over the right side for a<lb/>
Tech score. The extra point was<lb/>
good, giving them a 27-10 leads<lb/>
with 8:06 left to plav.<lb/>
At this point, Pirate Coach<lb/>
Art Baker decided to make an<lb/>
adjustment at quarterback, put-<lb/>
ting Charlie Libretto into the<lb/>
game. Libretto opened with a 24<lb/>
yard completion to Wilson down<lb/>
to the Tech 42. However, the Pi-<lb/>
rates faltered, and Libretto was<lb/>
forced into an interception trying<lb/>
to get a Pirate first down, after-<lb/>
which he saved a certain Hokie<lb/>
score when he tackled the re-<lb/>
turner on the ECU 17. Two plays<lb/>
later, the Hokies fumbled on the<lb/>
ECU 33, with Bright recovering<lb/>
for his second of the afternoon.<lb/>
The Pirate offense took over,<lb/>
and behind Libetto's arm, took<lb/>
the ball down to the Tech 12 yard<lb/>
line on receptions by Harper and<lb/>
Bojack Davenport , before li-<lb/>
bretto fired into the end zone<lb/>
complete to Davenport on a 12<lb/>
yard touchdown strike. They<lb/>
went for two points after the<lb/>
score, but were unable to convert<lb/>
when a Libretto pass to Harper<lb/>
fell incomplete. The Hokies ledby<lb/>
a scoreof 27-16 with 3:11 left in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
At this point, the Hokies were<lb/>
content to keep the ball on the<lb/>
ground and run time off the clock.<lb/>
The Pirate offense got the ball<lb/>
back with :18 remaining, but were<lb/>
unable to move it, thus giving the<lb/>
Hokies their final 27-16 victory.<lb/>
"When we came out of our<lb/>
dressing room and they came out<lb/>
of their dressing room, I think it<lb/>
was obvious that they were better<lb/>
prepared to get out there and play<lb/>
than we were Baker said after<lb/>
the game. "We had the opportuni-<lb/>
ties on offense. We know we can<lb/>
move the football. But moving the<lb/>
football doesn't score points.<lb/>
"They did not run anything<lb/>
that we didn't expect them to run.<lb/>
We lost the fight in the trenches,<lb/>
we just got knocked out of there.<lb/>
FANTASTIC<lb/>
FALL AIR FARES<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
NEW YORK$158<lb/>
BUFFALO$148<lb/>
ATLANTA$168<lb/>
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CHICAGO$183<lb/>
CHARLOTTE$58<lb/>
WASHINGTON$148<lb/>
BALTIMORE$148<lb/>
DALLAS$268<lb/>
OMAHA$218<lb/>
MIAMI$200<lb/>
DES MOINES. . .<lb/>
LOS ANGELES. .<lb/>
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ST.LOUIS<lb/>
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NFL<lb/>
Continued from page<lb/>
14-3 deficit when Hilhai<lb/>
rnaxed a 70-vard dnve.<lb/>
The Saints, 1-1, toke the lei<lb/>
good before the end of thtf<lb/>
period when Reuben<lb/>
scored from the 17 on a sw<lb/>
the right side<lb/>
Redskins 30. Steelers 29<lb/>
Washington had to rally<lb/>
keep from starting defend<lb/>
Super Bowl title with cons<lb/>
losses. Chip Lohmiller ki<lb/>
19-yard field goal with 12<lb/>
left to overcome the Steelei<lb/>
got two long touchd<lb/>
from Bubbv Bnster on the<lb/>
a 29-20 lead with 9 12 min<lb/>
play.<lb/>
Bucs 13, Packers 10<lb/>
Tampa Bay, 1-1. br ?<lb/>
game losing streak when<lb/>
Igwebuike kicked a 26 i<lb/>
goal on the final play<lb/>
Igwebuike kicked<lb/>
field goal of the game afte<lb/>
I esta ? rdi dr<lb/>
 ards in the final four mil<lb/>
Broncos 34,hai<lb/>
Perm S<lb/>
CHARLOTTESVILLE,M<lb/>
- In the process of surpri;<lb/>
ginia, No. 18 Penn State<lb/>
pnsed itself.<lb/>
"We wanted to start stroi<lb/>
don't think we re "I<lb/>
it Tenn State quarterbal<lb/>
Bill said after the Nittanl<lb/>
took a 21-0 lead just ovj<lb/>
minutes into Saturday<lb/>
came and beat the Cava<lb/>
14.<lb/>
Bill, a redshirt junior ma<lb/>
first start, completed I!<lb/>
passes for 179 yards aj<lb/>
touchdowns in tl i<lb/>
for Penn State<lb/>
Bill was not the or<lb/>
untested Nittanv Lion w<lb/>
The<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0017"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13,19W 15<lb/>
spot<lb/>
10k the third set with a break<lb/>
second game. Lendl cap-<lb/>
the second set when he won<lb/>
ist five games after being<lb/>
1 -4 and evened the match at<lb/>
?ts each when he won the<lb/>
set 7-5 by breaking Wilan-<lb/>
the final game.<lb/>
in the end Wilander had<lb/>
Ich left to finally be on the<lb/>
side of compasisons with<lb/>
k Becton<lb/>
Jordan said. "He reads<lb/>
locks well and makes good<lb/>
ions on his cuts. Having<lb/>
is great, but if you don't<lb/>
how to run the football that<lb/>
S not going to carry you<lb/>
Ifar<lb/>
U's performance so far this<lb/>
in is not a fluke, based on the<lb/>
lat he rambled for 21 touch-<lb/>
last vear on the junior var-<lb/>
Ithen added another touch-<lb/>
i and a two-point conversion<lb/>
being brought up to the var-<lb/>
lr West Craven's final game<lb/>
IL CHANGE"<lb/>
intment<lb/>
lo for you:<lb/>
service!<lb/>
ad)<lb/>
?6.30 D.m. Sal. ul 5:3(<lb/>
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shions<lb/>
Maturing<lb/>
lals From<lb/>
.me Brands.<lb/>
orial Drive<lb/>
til 9)<lb/>
Iwy. 70 West<lb/>
head City, N.C.<lb/>
fed- - Sat. 9-5<lb/>
NFL game highlights<lb/>
Continued from page 13<lb/>
14-3 deficit when Hilliard cli-<lb/>
maxed a 70-yard drive.<lb/>
The Saints, 1-1, toke the lead for<lb/>
good before the end of the third<lb/>
period when Reuben Mayes<lb/>
scored from the 17 on a sweep of<lb/>
the right side.<lb/>
Redskins 30, Steelers 29<lb/>
Washington had to rally late to<lb/>
keep from starting defense of its<lb/>
Super Bowl title with consecutive<lb/>
losses. Chip Lohmiller kicked a<lb/>
19-yard field goal with 12 seconds<lb/>
left to overcome the Steelers, who<lb/>
got two long touchdown passes<lb/>
from Bubby Brister on the way to<lb/>
a 29-20 lead with 91 2 minutes to<lb/>
play.<lb/>
Bucs 13, Packers 10<lb/>
Tampa Bay, 1-1, broke a nine-<lb/>
game losing streak when Donald<lb/>
Igwebuike kicked a 28-yard field<lb/>
goal on the final play of the game.<lb/>
Igwebuike kicked his second<lb/>
field goal of the game after Vinny<lb/>
Testaverde drove the Bucs 56<lb/>
yards in the final four minutes.<lb/>
Broncos 34, Chargers 3<lb/>
Tony Dorset t ran for 113 yards<lb/>
and a touchdown. Dorsett passed<lb/>
Franco Harris for third place on<lb/>
the NFL career rushing list with<lb/>
12,181 yards, 61 more than the<lb/>
former Steelers great. Jim Brown<lb/>
of the Cleveland Browns is the<lb/>
next Dorsett target, 131 yards<lb/>
away.<lb/>
John El way completed 17 of 28<lb/>
passes for 259 yards and two<lb/>
touchdowns - 44 yards to Mark<lb/>
Jackson in the first period and 24<lb/>
to Vance Johnson in the third.<lb/>
Vikings 36, Patriots 6<lb/>
Tommy Kramer, returned to the<lb/>
starting lineup after Wade Wilson<lb/>
presided over a season-opening<lb/>
13-10 loss to Buffalo, completed<lb/>
12 of 27 passes. His first two<lb/>
passes, a 24-yarder to Anthony<lb/>
Carter on the opening play and a<lb/>
38-yarder to Hassan Jones, set up<lb/>
Darrin Nelson's 8-yard touch-<lb/>
down run for a 7-0 Minnesota<lb/>
lead. Kramer left with six minutes<lb/>
remaining in the third quarter<lb/>
with a leg- cramp, and Wilson<lb/>
went the rest of the way.<lb/>
Oilers 38, Raiders 35<lb/>
Allen Pinkett, starting for in-<lb/>
jured Mike Rozier, scored three<lb/>
touchdowns for Houston, 2-0.<lb/>
The last of the three was a 6-yard<lb/>
run with 31 seconds to play.<lb/>
Rams 17, Lions 10<lb/>
Greg Bell, elevated to the start-<lb/>
ing lineup when Charles White<lb/>
was suspended for substance-<lb/>
abuse violations, ran for 139yards<lb/>
and a touchdown to pace Los<lb/>
Angeles, 2-0.<lb/>
A 4-yard touchdown pass from<lb/>
Jim Everett to Damone Johnson<lb/>
midway through the third quar-<lb/>
ter, following a Lions' turnover,<lb/>
provided the winning margin for<lb/>
the Rams.<lb/>
Seahawks 31, Chiefs 10<lb/>
Curt Warner had two short scor-<lb/>
ing runs and Jacob Green recov-<lb/>
ered a fumble in the end zone for<lb/>
another score as Seattle put the<lb/>
game away with a 28-point sec-<lb/>
ond quarter.<lb/>
Warner scored on runs of 1 and 3<lb/>
yards for a 17-3 lead. After Dave<lb/>
Krieg's 17-yard pass to rookie<lb/>
Brian Blades pushed the lead to<lb/>
24-3, Green sacked Kansas City<lb/>
quarterback Bill Kenney on the<lb/>
next play and caused a fumble.<lb/>
Penn State learns about selves<lb/>
CHARLOTTESVILLE,Va. (AP)<lb/>
- In the process of surprising Vir-<lb/>
ginia, No. 18 Penn State also sur-<lb/>
prised itself.<lb/>
"We wanted to start strong, but I<lb/>
don't think we really planned on<lb/>
it Penn State quarterback Tom<lb/>
Bill said after the Nittany Lions<lb/>
took a 21-0 lead just over nine<lb/>
minutes into Saturday nighfs<lb/>
game and beat the Cavaliers 42-<lb/>
14.<lb/>
Bill, a redshirt junior making his<lb/>
first start, completed 15 of 22<lb/>
passes for 179 yards and two<lb/>
touchdowns in the season opener<lb/>
for Penn State.<lb/>
Bill was not the only relatively<lb/>
untested Nittanv Lion who made<lb/>
a big contribution. Gary Brown, a<lb/>
sophomore starting at tailback in<lb/>
place of the injured Blair Thomas,<lb/>
ran for two scores and caught a 19-<lb/>
yard pass for a third.<lb/>
"We needed a win Coach Joe<lb/>
Paterno said. "We got to play a lot<lb/>
of young kids we will need down<lb/>
the stretch. Our defense played<lb/>
hard and with a lot of intensity.<lb/>
We played ball like we wanted<lb/>
to<lb/>
Eleven different players carried<lb/>
the ball for the Nittany Lions, who<lb/>
finished with 444 yards in total<lb/>
offense compared to 250 for Vir-<lb/>
ginia. The Penn State defense<lb/>
forced a pair of turnovers, both of<lb/>
which led to touchdowns during<lb/>
the 21-0 run.<lb/>
"It all came together tonight<lb/>
said Brown, who ran seven times<lb/>
for 38 yards and caught three<lb/>
passes for 45 yards.<lb/>
Brown admitted he felt pressure<lb/>
trying to fill in for Thomas, who<lb/>
ran for 1,414 yards last year, the<lb/>
third-highest total in Penn State<lb/>
history. Thomas may miss the<lb/>
entire season as he recovers from<lb/>
knee surgery performed in Janu-<lb/>
ary.<lb/>
"I think this makes people real-<lb/>
ize that I can still play<lb/>
football Brown said.<lb/>
Fullback Sam Gash scored the<lb/>
first of his two touchdowns on a 1-<lb/>
yard run that capped Penn State's<lb/>
opening drive of 61 yards.<lb/>
Suffering<lb/>
From Total<lb/>
Mental Melt<lb/>
Down? Need<lb/>
A Mid-Week<lb/>
Break<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S HOTTEST<lb/>
HUMP-DAY CELEbRATION<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS<lb/>
Fiesta<lb/>
Grande<lb/>
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at the Sheraton<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
presents The<lb/>
Return of<lb/>
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Chihuahua's $1.00<lb/>
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(?) Sheraton Greenville<lb/>
The Sheraton Greenville ? 203 W. Greenville Wvd. ? 355-2666<lb/>
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-Out<lb/>
Thursday, September 15, 1988<lb/>
Tyler Beach - College Hill<lb/>
4:15 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Dining Services and<lb/>
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Everyone To Attend For A<lb/>
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Baked Potatoes<lb/>
Marinated Vegetables<lb/>
Corn Cobbetts<lb/>
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Novelty Ice Cream<lb/>
Assorted Cookies<lb/>
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Volleyball<lb/>
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?Please be sure to check in with Cashier at College Hill Dining<lb/>
Hall before going over to the grill-out.<lb/>
CANTEEN<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0018"/><lb/>
16 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13, 18<lb/>
Clemson prepared to consider Seminoles<lb/>
CIEMSON, S.C. (AP) - Now,<lb/>
Clemson can now focus all of its<lb/>
attention on Florida State.<lb/>
Since preseason practice last<lb/>
month, the third-ranked Tigers<lb/>
have had to endure questions<lb/>
daily about the Seminoles. While<lb/>
acknowledging it was hard not to<lb/>
think about playing Florida State,<lb/>
which was ranked No. 1 going<lb/>
into the season, the Tigers re-<lb/>
minded everyone they had two<lb/>
other games to play first.<lb/>
Last week, Clemson took care of<lb/>
the first game, beating Virginia<lb/>
Tech 40-7. On Saturday, the Tigers<lb/>
took care of second, downing I-<lb/>
AA Furman 23-3 at Death Valley<lb/>
"Who wants to talk about Florida<lb/>
State now?" Clemson coach<lb/>
Danny Ford said after the Tigers gers didn't look as sharp against said the Clemson defense was the<lb/>
beat Furman for the 23rd straight Furman as they had in their sea- key. The Paladins managed 201<lb/>
time. son opener when they did not yards in total offense, but most of<lb/>
Much of the talk late Saturday af-<lb/>
ternoon focused on Furman,<lb/>
which gave the Tigers a tough<lb/>
time, and whether Clemson had<lb/>
been conservative on offense so as<lb/>
to keep the No. 10 Seminoles<lb/>
guessing about what to expect<lb/>
Saturday at Death Valley<lb/>
turn the ball over once and did not<lb/>
have an offensive penalty.<lb/>
Against the Paladins, a member<lb/>
of the Southern Conference,<lb/>
Clemson lost one fumble and was<lb/>
called for eight penalties for 85<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
"We weren't crisp, we weren't<lb/>
A Florida State scout sitting in sharp Ford said. "It was a hard<lb/>
the press box to watch the Tigers win. But we made it hard on our-<lb/>
offered a reason for the Tigers selves.<lb/>
doing just that. But Ford said that "We were not as perfect as far as<lb/>
just wasn't so. execution and penalties. We had a<lb/>
"Yeah, well, we really tried to do couple of bad, bad penalties. We Baynes threw a bad pitch that was<lb/>
that' Ford said with a smile. "1 weren't as sharp, but I'm sure recovered by bandit end Jesse<lb/>
hope he thinks that Furman had a lot to do with that Hatcher. Two plays later, tailback<lb/>
Whatever was the case, the Ti- Furman coach Jimmy Satterfield Terry Allen scored the first of two<lb/>
it came early and late on an over-<lb/>
cast afternoon. The Tigers al-<lb/>
lowed Furman three first downs<lb/>
in the second period - two on<lb/>
penalties - and none in the third<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
"They are big and quick, and that<lb/>
caused us a lot of problems Sat-<lb/>
terfield said.<lb/>
"I don't believe that at halftime<lb/>
they were too impressed with<lb/>
Clemson's ranking Ford said.<lb/>
Furman quarterback Patrick<lb/>
TDs, leaping over from a yard out<lb/>
with 9:27 left in the opening pe-<lb/>
riod.<lb/>
Furman cut the lead to 7-3 when<lb/>
Glen Connally kicked a 48-yard<lb/>
field goal with 13.21 left in the<lb/>
second period.<lb/>
But freshman Chris Gardocki<lb/>
answered with two field goals to<lb/>
give Clemson a 13-3 halftime lead.<lb/>
Gardocki booted a 38-yarder with<lb/>
11:05 left and then added a 46-<lb/>
yarder with 2:47 remaining.<lb/>
The first field goal came after a<lb/>
52-yard drive, Clemson's longest<lb/>
scoring march of the day.<lb/>
Allen gave Clemson a 20-3 lead<lb/>
when he scored on a 7-yard run<lb/>
with 4:33 left in the third period.<lb/>
Gardocki added a 31-yard field<lb/>
goal with 9:19 to go in the game to<lb/>
close out the scoring.<lb/>
Clemson ended up with 316<lb/>
yards on offense, led by tailback<lb/>
Joe Henderson's 72 yards rush-<lb/>
ing. Furman had 201 yards, 140on<lb/>
the ground. Fullback Kennet<lb/>
Goldsmith had 70 yards, while<lb/>
tailback Bobby Daugherty had 66<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
"We're obviously disappointed<lb/>
in not winning Satterfield said.<lb/>
"We didn't execute well in the<lb/>
third-and-three,third-and-two<lb/>
situations. But a lot of that had to<lb/>
do with Clemson. They're a very<lb/>
experienced club.<lb/>
Tigers poor in outing against Furman,<lb/>
said holding back during contest<lb/>
CLEMSON, S.C.(AP) -<lb/>
Tailback Terry Allen scored two<lb/>
touchdowns and freshman Chris<lb/>
Gardocki lucked three field goals<lb/>
as No. 3 Clemson defeated Fur-<lb/>
man 23 3 Saturday<lb/>
Clemson, 2-0, struggled on an<lb/>
overcast afternoon to defeat the I-<lb/>
AA Paladins, 1-1, who were 3-1-1<lb/>
against Atlantic Coast Confer-<lb/>
ence teams since 12 going into<lb/>
the game<lb/>
The Tigers, who have won the<lb/>
past two ACC titles, scored their<lb/>
first TD after recovering a fumble<lb/>
at the Furman 3-yard line and<lb/>
didn't have a single scoring drive<lb/>
of more than 52 yards.<lb/>
Furman didn't look like a team<lb/>
playing against its highest-<lb/>
ranked foe ever before its largest<lb/>
crowd ever.<lb/>
The Tigers were one notch<lb/>
higher ranked than Florida State<lb/>
was when Furman lost to the<lb/>
Seminoles a year ago. And the<lb/>
80,300 at Death Valley easily<lb/>
eclipsed the 56,244 that saw the<lb/>
Paladins beat South Carolina at<lb/>
Williams-Brice Stadium in 1982.<lb/>
The Paladins, whose offensive<lb/>
line weighed an average of 35<lb/>
pounds less per man than the<lb/>
Tigers' defensive front, kept<lb/>
Clemson off guard with a tough<lb/>
running attack and scrappy de-<lb/>
fense that refused to surrender a<lb/>
big play.<lb/>
Clemson, which may have been<lb/>
looking ahead to No. 10 Florida<lb/>
State next week, led 13-3 at the<lb/>
half. The Tigers upped their lead<lb/>
to 20-3 when Allen scored on a 7-<lb/>
yard run to cap a five-play, 43-<lb/>
yard drive set up by James Lott's<lb/>
23-yard punt return.<lb/>
The Tigers then recovered a<lb/>
fumble at the Furman 38 and<lb/>
looked to be headed for the clinch-<lb/>
ing score. But Wesley McFadden<lb/>
fumbled four plays later to give<lb/>
the ball back to Furman.<lb/>
Blue Devils upset Volunteers<lb/>
( AP)- Duke expected to get a<lb/>
strong test trom Tennessee's pass-<lb/>
ing game, but it was the Blue<lb/>
Devils who took charge of the air<lb/>
to pull off a big upset.<lb/>
Fifth-year senior Anthonv<lb/>
Dilweg riddled the Tennessee<lb/>
defense with 21 completions in 32<lb/>
attempts for 311 yards and the<lb/>
three touchdowns. All of those<lb/>
touchdown passes went to Clark-<lb/>
ston Hines, who caught eight<lb/>
passes for 145 yards in the 31-26<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
"4t amaeehmp'earlynrHhe game<lb/>
that Tennessee acted like thev<lb/>
?fere afraid to throw the ball<lb/>
Duke Coach Steve Spurrier said.<lb/>
"I know thev want to run the ball<lb/>
and we heard coach (Johnny)<lb/>
Majors emphasized it in Practice<lb/>
this week, but 1 thought they<lb/>
would throw the ball a lot more<lb/>
Tennessee actually outgained<lb/>
the Blue Devils 488yards to 438<lb/>
yards, but much of it came in the<lb/>
Volunteers' desperate fourth-<lb/>
quarter rush which cut a 31-7<lb/>
deficit to within the final margin.<lb/>
If Tennessee's players were sur-<lb/>
prised by how well Duke's pass-<lb/>
ing game worked, Majors wasn't.<lb/>
Nor was he caught off guard by<lb/>
the Blue Devil defense, which<lb/>
kept Tennessee out of the game<lb/>
long enough to keep the last-gasp<lb/>
rally from ruining the upset.<lb/>
"I wasn't surprised by how well<lb/>
Duke did, especially on offense<lb/>
Majors said. "And I want to pay<lb/>
tribute to the fine work turned in<lb/>
by the Duke defense. They kept us<lb/>
off balance through much of the<lb/>
game<lb/>
The ACC's non-conference vic-<lb/>
tories this weekend came against<lb/>
Division I-AA teams. Wake For-<lb/>
est stopped Illinois State 35-0,<lb/>
Georgia Tech beat Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga 24-10 and No. 3<lb/>
Clemson defeated Furman 23-3.<lb/>
North Carolina lost a 28-0 deci-<lb/>
sion to fourth-ranked Oklahoma<lb/>
and No. 17 Penn State whipped<lb/>
Virginia 42-14.<lb/>
Tony Rogers rushed for 108<lb/>
yards and two touchdowns while<lb/>
reserve tailback Darrell France<lb/>
ran 14 yards for another touch-<lb/>
down for the Demon Deacons,<lb/>
1?lWg-g Mnkc Ywvrwg ?rtsr hgdsi<lb/>
touchdown run and quarterbaek<lb/>
Mike Flkins threw a 69-yard<lb/>
ouchdown pass to Ricky Proehl.<lb/>
Overall, the offense did a good<lb/>
ob' Wake Forest Coach Bill<lb/>
Ztooley said "A lot of good things<lb/>
:ame from the offensive line<lb/>
opening holes and providing ex-<lb/>
ceptional protection for the quar-<lb/>
terback<lb/>
Tailback Terry Allen scored two<lb/>
touchdowns and freshman Chris<lb/>
Gardocki kicked three field goals<lb/>
in Clemson's 23rd straight victorv<lb/>
over Furman. But Coach Danny<lb/>
Ford wasn't very excited about<lb/>
climbing to 2-0.<lb/>
As we look at the films Sunday,<lb/>
we'll see Furman was responsible<lb/>
for the way we looked at times<lb/>
Ford said. 'They gave us a hard<lb/>
contest<lb/>
Georgia Tech was tied by divi-<lb/>
sion 1-AA Furman when they<lb/>
played the Paladins in 1983. A<lb/>
repeat of those troubles loomed<lb/>
when Tennessee-Chattanooga<lb/>
took a 10-0 lead after three quar-<lb/>
ters, but it was just where Coach<lb/>
Bobby Ross wanted the Mocca-<lb/>
sins.<lb/>
"More than anything else, I<lb/>
wanted to see us come back from<lb/>
a little adversity Ross said. "In<lb/>
all honesty, I really wanted that<lb/>
kind of game for us as a football<lb/>
team<lb/>
Georgia Tech erased a field goal<lb/>
on the way to its first touchdown,<lb/>
and Cedric Stallworth's 16-yard<lb/>
interception return to the Mocca-<lb/>
sins' 6-yard-line set up Stefen<lb/>
Scotton's 1-yard scoring run that<lb/>
put Georgia Tech ahead to stay<lb/>
with 9:59 left.<lb/>
WinlegftJMojbe Carolina was<lb/>
beaten by three long Oklahoma<lb/>
drives, not long Sooner runs. A<lb/>
fourth drive led to a field goal, but<lb/>
when the Tar Heels were called<lb/>
for offside, Oklahoma traded the<lb/>
field goal for a touchdown 40 sec-<lb/>
onds later.<lb/>
"Our team took what they<lb/>
thought were proper angles be-<lb/>
cause they were just beating us<lb/>
outside for the first two plays in<lb/>
the option game Tar Heel Coach<lb/>
Mack Brown said. "That's some-<lb/>
thing you can't let them do<lb/>
Eleven different Nittany Lions<lb/>
carried the ball as Coach Joe<lb/>
Paterno substituted freely, trying<lb/>
to find a replacement for injured<lb/>
Blair Thomas, a tailback who ran<lb/>
for 1,414 yards last season. Gary<lb/>
Brown started in Thomas' place,<lb/>
and responded by running for<lb/>
two touchdowns and catching a<lb/>
19-yard pass for a third.<lb/>
Penn State forced a pair of turn-<lb/>
overs in the first quarter, and went<lb/>
to a 21-0 lead in the period.<lb/>
"Penn State is a team that you<lb/>
don't want to make two crucial<lb/>
early mistakes against Virginia<lb/>
Coach George Welsh said. "I<lb/>
don't know if it changes the out-<lb/>
come of the ballgame, but it<lb/>
makes it that much tougher to<lb/>
play<lb/>
Next week shows another abbre-<lb/>
viated schedule. Wake Forest is at<lb/>
North Carolina State and Georgia<lb/>
Tech goes to Virginia to open the<lb/>
ACC schedule. Clemson and Flor-<lb/>
ida State meet in Death Valley,<lb/>
The Citadel is at Duke and Mary-<lb/>
land goes to West Virginia. North<lb/>
Carolina has Saturday off.<lb/>
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A Dane's Personal Journey Through The American Underclass<lb/>
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FOR MORE INFO CALL 757-3042<lb/>
Allis<lb/>
RICHMOND (AP) - M<lb/>
before he drove to victoi<lb/>
Miller 400, Davey Alhsoi<lb/>
familiar voice talking to<lb/>
"I don't think anyone<lb/>
how much V ve missed hn<lb/>
son said of his father, Bol<lb/>
son, who was senouslv u<lb/>
a June 19 crash at a race<lb/>
Pond, Pa.<lb/>
For nearly 1 12 vears,<lb/>
Allisons drove together<lb/>
Winston Cup circuit,<lb/>
proud father saw his<lb/>
rookie-of-the-vear honors<lb/>
But now, Bobby Alhsonl<lb/>
perating from his vanou;<lb/>
at a rehabilitation cents<lb/>
mingham, Ala, and Dave<lb/>
on each week without<lb/>
litely answering the<lb/>
stream of questions about<lb/>
father is progressing.<lb/>
On Sunday, as the Miller<lb/>
about to begin, the public<lb/>
Tarh<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL. C <lb/>
homa quarterback<lb/>
Holieway savs not playii<lb/>
game saves wear and te,<lb/>
knee, but sharing time wil<lb/>
les Thompson did plenty<lb/>
age to North Carolina.<lb/>
Holieway, who missed<lb/>
three games oi the 198"<lb/>
with a knee injurv,<lb/>
ompson, the player wru<lb/>
him, each scored a touch<lb/>
the fourth-ranked Soon<lb/>
victorv- over the Tar<lb/>
wasn't the high-sconnj<lb/>
which many had expect<lb/>
did achieve the desired rl<lb/>
"The offense plavcd<lb/>
Holieway said. "I'm prol<lb/>
everybody on our team<lb/>
Success came early as Oj<lb/>
scored on its first two po<lb/>
and led 21-0 at halftii<lb/>
ompson wasn't expect!<lb/>
aspect.<lb/>
Dodgj<lb/>
AP)- The Cincinnaj<lb/>
mav have thrown away<lb/>
chances of catching the L<lb/>
les Dodgers in the<lb/>
League West.<lb/>
A pair oi throwinj<lb/>
with two outs in the bottc<lb/>
ninth inning enabled Los)<lb/>
to score the tying run<lb/>
Hamilton followed with<lb/>
run as the Dodgers rallies<lb/>
visiting Reds 5-3 Sundav<lb/>
The Dodgers, in dl<lb/>
seeing their two closest <lb/>
ers each gain ground,<lb/>
maintained a five-game 11<lb/>
PI<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058092_0019"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 13,1968 17<lb/>
les<lb/>
added a 31 -yard field<lb/>
19 19 to go in the game to<lb/>
?the scoring.<lb/>
Ison ended up with 316<lb/>
lot tense, led by tailback<lb/>
person's 72 vards rush-<lb/>
ianhad201vards,140on<lb/>
jnd Fullback Kennet<lb/>
b had 70 yards, while<lb/>
bby Daugherty had 66<lb/>
ibviousry disappointed<lb/>
inning Sattertield said.<lb/>
n t execute well in the<lb/>
la-three,third-and-two<lb/>
But a lot ot that had to<lb/>
lemson. They're a very<lb/>
:cd club.<lb/>
BS<lb/>
1<lb/>
T<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
hce<lb/>
ensive<lb/>
add up to<lb/>
ance<lb/>
??<lb/>
ire tarrn is there<lb/>
.a Company<lb/>
iqton Illinois<lb/>
K<lb/>
H<lb/>
CE<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
R<lb/>
OME<lb/>
7-3042<lb/>
Allison wins, hears father's voice in head<lb/>
RICHMOND (AP) - Moments<lb/>
before he drove to victory in the<lb/>
Miller 400, Davey Allison heard a<lb/>
familiar voice talking to him.<lb/>
"I don't think anyone realizes<lb/>
how much I've missed him Alli-<lb/>
son said of his father, Bobby Alli-<lb/>
son, who was seriously injured in<lb/>
a June 19 crash at a race in Long<lb/>
Tond, Pa.<lb/>
For nearly 112 years, the two<lb/>
Allisons drove together on the<lb/>
Winston Cup circuit, and the<lb/>
proud father saw his son take<lb/>
rookie-of-the-year honors in 1987.<lb/>
But now, Bobby Allison is recu-<lb/>
perating from his various injuries<lb/>
at a rehabilitation center in Bir-<lb/>
mingham, Ala and Davey drives<lb/>
on each week without him, po-<lb/>
litely answering the endless<lb/>
stream of questions about how his<lb/>
father is progressing.<lb/>
On Sunday, as the Miller 400 was<lb/>
about to begin, the public address<lb/>
system at the new Richmond<lb/>
International Raceway relayed<lb/>
the message that a special guest<lb/>
would be giving the ceremonial<lb/>
command to the drivers to start<lb/>
"I was kind of prepared for it the<lb/>
younger Allisonsaid, "so it didn't<lb/>
catch me off guard as bad as it<lb/>
might have, but it still sent cold<lb/>
chills up and down my spine. I<lb/>
know it probably set a lot of<lb/>
people on fire around this place,<lb/>
too<lb/>
Allison, who started on the pole,<lb/>
responded to his father's com-<lb/>
mand by leading 262 of the race's<lb/>
400 laps and pulling away late for<lb/>
a 3.25-second victory over Dale<lb/>
Earnhardt.<lb/>
"Man, I'm tickled to death Alli-<lb/>
son said when asked what his<lb/>
victory would do for his father's<lb/>
outlook. "When I talked to him<lb/>
yesterday, he was all pumped<lb/>
up<lb/>
Allison said his father told him<lb/>
he plans to be in Richmond for the<lb/>
February 1989 race.<lb/>
Allison not only earned the dis-<lb/>
tinction of winning the first Win-<lb/>
ston Cup event at the new track -<lb/>
the only three-quarter-mile lay-<lb/>
out on the circuit - but he also<lb/>
shattered the record for the fewest<lb/>
races needed to surpass the $1<lb/>
million mark in career winnings.<lb/>
Allison won $57,800 for Sunday's<lb/>
triumph, pushing his career win-<lb/>
nings to $1,052,785 in 52 races. The<lb/>
previous standard had been set by<lb/>
Earnhardt, who in 1981 went over<lb/>
the $1 million mark 76 races into<lb/>
his career.<lb/>
"I don't even think about that<lb/>
stuff said Allison, 27, of<lb/>
Hueytown, Ala. "I just want to go<lb/>
racing. I'm having a blast<lb/>
Allison trailed Ricky Rudd<lb/>
when the race went back to green<lb/>
on lap 332 following the fifth and<lb/>
final caution. Rudd held his posi-<lb/>
tion for 15 laps before a blown<lb/>
engine finished his day and put<lb/>
Allison's Ford Thunderbtrd<lb/>
ahead to stay.<lb/>
"I wasn't even driving it hard'<lb/>
said Rudd, who wound up 26th.<lb/>
Allison gradually pulled away<lb/>
from Earnhardt over the last 52<lb/>
laps, finishing with an average<lb/>
speed of 95.770 mph.<lb/>
Earnhardt, the two-time defend-<lb/>
ing Winston Cup champion, said<lb/>
his tires weren't handling prop-<lb/>
erly, "and we couldn't run with<lb/>
Davey. He just kept trucking on<lb/>
Terry Labonte was third, fol-<lb/>
lowed by Mark Martin and Alan<lb/>
Kulwicki. The outcome<lb/>
prompted a further slide by Rusty<lb/>
Wallace in the Winston Cup sea-<lb/>
son points standings. Wallace,<lb/>
who dropped from first to second<lb/>
two weeks ago at Bristol, Tenn<lb/>
slipped to third Sunday after fin-<lb/>
ishing 35th in the 36-car field.<lb/>
"If we lose this championship, if s<lb/>
because of Geoff Bodine an<lb/>
angry Wallace said, referring to a<lb/>
collision he and Bodine had on the<lb/>
second lap under caution. The<lb/>
wreck crippled Wallace's Pontiac,<lb/>
and NASCAR officials penalized<lb/>
Bodine for trying to pass cars<lb/>
during a caution period.<lb/>
Bodine, who wound up 22nd, said<lb/>
Wallace "pulled in front of me.<lb/>
They say his team is mad at me,<lb/>
but I had a head of steam up and<lb/>
ran over him. I can understand<lb/>
why they would be upset, but if<lb/>
they see the films, I think they will<lb/>
owe me an apology<lb/>
Bill Elliott, who finished sev-<lb/>
enth, held onto his points lead<lb/>
over Earnhardt, who went into<lb/>
the race in third position. Elliott<lb/>
has 3363 points, 117 ahead of<lb/>
Earnhardt and 119 ahead of Wal-<lb/>
lace.<lb/>
The 60-foot-wide, D-shaped<lb/>
track, which was built in less than<lb/>
seven months to replace an aging<lb/>
half-mile oval, has seating for<lb/>
53,103 people, but the race drew<lb/>
an estimated 60,000, making it the<lb/>
largest crowd ever for a sports<lb/>
event in Virginia.<lb/>
NASCAR officials took what<lb/>
they acknowledged was an<lb/>
unusual move by black-flagging<lb/>
Jimmy Means after 259 laps be-<lb/>
cause of his apparent fatigue.<lb/>
Tarheels lose second game<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP)-Okla-<lb/>
homa quarterback Jamelle<lb/>
"1 was figuring it would take the<lb/>
offense the second quarter,<lb/>
years Switzer added. "But we touchdown run around left end<lb/>
shut them out by making some with 7:54 left in the third period<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
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i<lb/>
knee, but sharing time with Char-<lb/>
les Thompson did plenty of dam-<lb/>
age to North Carolina.<lb/>
Holieway, who missed the last<lb/>
three games of the 1987 season<lb/>
with a knee injury, and Th-<lb/>
ompson, the plaver who replaced to 8et its ponts<lb/>
him, each scored a touchdown in<lb/>
the fourth-ranked Sooners' 28-0<lb/>
victory over the Tar Heels. It<lb/>
wasn't the high-scoring affair<lb/>
which many had expected, but it<lb/>
did achieve the desired result.<lb/>
That score ended a 12-play, 88-<lb/>
yard drive.<lb/>
North Carolina, which pene-<lb/>
trated Oklahoma territory four<lb/>
times in the first half, crossed the<lb/>
50 three times in the second half<lb/>
noma quant-mac janteiie ???????.   i - ' ; , ??r??i<lb/>
Holieway saVs not playing a full maybe the third, to get going big plays defensively, ntercept<lb/>
game saves wear and tear on his Thompson said. "I was surprised mg some? passes at key timesu<lb/>
by our team's performance One of those interceptions led to<lb/>
The Sooner offense did not break Oklahoma's first touchdown, one<lb/>
off the long plays as expected with of the four long drives. Leon<lb/>
their huge edge in speed over the Perry's 1-yard dive late in the first<lb/>
Tar Heel defense. Instead, Okla- quarter capped a 71 -yard, 10-play but its only scoring opportunity<lb/>
homa used three sustained drives drive for the Sooners. missed when Hamp Greene s 51-<lb/>
and the fourth Thompson came in for yard field goal attempt was wide<lb/>
touchdown resulted when a Oklahoma's third offensive series left near the end of the first half. A<lb/>
North Carolina penalty on a and finished an eight-play, 80- Jonathan Hall pass was inter-<lb/>
Sooner field goal attempt kept a yard drive with an 8-yard scoring cepted in the end zone with 40<lb/>
drive alive. In all, Oklahoma run with 1:17 left in the first quar- seconds left to play,<lb/>
rushed 71 times for 391 yards, tcr. Anthony Stafford closed out a First-year Coach Mack Brown, a<lb/>
Holieway and Thompson com- 79-yard, 13-play march with a 1- Switzer assistant in m ?C-<lb/>
se Dlaved great" pleted 3 of 6 passes for 72 yards, yard dive on fourth down with k"?led8 it was speed<lb/>
HoHewaviid "I'm proud of The Sooners fumbled seven times 8:30 left before halftime to give the that doomed the Tar Heels.<lb/>
3?J2I? and lost two. "Offensively, I Sooners a 21-0 lead after R.D. "We were concerned coming into<lb/>
SKt0W? thought we had a pretty good Lashar kickec1 the 30-yardfield the ball game that you cannot<lb/>
scored on its first two possessions<lb/>
and led 21-0 at halftime. Th-<lb/>
ompson wasn't expecting that<lb/>
aspect.<lb/>
game Oklahoma Coach Barry goal with 8:32 left. But North<lb/>
Switzer said. "Defensively, we Carolina was penalized for off-<lb/>
don't have the speed and quick- side, and the Sooners traded the<lb/>
ness we've had the past couple of field goal for a Holieway 4-yard<lb/>
nearly put on the picture of their<lb/>
speed during the week Brown<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Dodgers keep<lb/>
ame<lb/>
AD- The Cincinnati Reds<lb/>
may have thrown away anyone's<lb/>
chances of catching the Los Ange-<lb/>
les Dodgers in the National<lb/>
League West.<lb/>
A pair of throwing errors<lb/>
with two outs in the bottom of the<lb/>
ninth inning enabled Los Angeles<lb/>
to score the tying run and Jeff<lb/>
Hamilton followed with a home<lb/>
run as the Dodgers rallied past the<lb/>
visiting Reds 5-3 Sunday.<lb/>
The Dodgers, in danger of<lb/>
seeing their two closest challeng- Pittsburgh 7-4 and<lb/>
crs each gain ground, instead defeated Atlanta 8-2.<lb/>
Hous.onanapu.eaan.nna "jR-MrJEA S<lb/>
12 behind. eigm h hd ounder that third<lb/>
-These are the type of games lead baseman Chris Sabo stopped for<lb/>
vou'veeottowinifyouwanttogo John franco, leaumg u.c v n? c?hn threw<lb/>
ntobworldchamV'saidKSk league in saves, took over to start an mfidd Wt But ?oew<lb/>
Gibson, who scored the tying run the ninth. He had n0.KMmrf ?? 5ng when first<lb/>
when he dashed home from first run average in his last 31 outings Jejnnmg,scong<lb/>
base on the Reds'double error. over 35 2-3 innings. rrWtoVhePbte<lb/>
The Astros kept their distance Gibson, who homered earlier, poorly to tl<lb/>
by beating San Francisco 4-1.<lb/>
Elsewhere, New York beat Mon-<lb/>
treal 3-0, St. Louis got past Chi-<lb/>
cago 3-2, Philadelphia downed<lb/>
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Nothing could have prepared me<lb/>
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just "Anique"?was her name. Change<lb/>
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L<lb/>
<pb facs="00058092_0020"/><lb/>
18 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 8, 1988<lb/>
SC cruises past WC, prepares for future<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C.(AP) - West-<lb/>
ern Carolina coach Bob Waters,<lb/>
whose Catamounts fell 38-0 to<lb/>
No. 16 South Carolina, might be a<lb/>
little down after losing by lop-<lb/>
sided margins two weeks in a<lb/>
row.<lb/>
Not so.<lb/>
There is, according to Waters,<lb/>
still light at the end of the prover-<lb/>
bial tunnel.<lb/>
'The East Tennessee State game<lb/>
Thursday night (Sept. 15) is a big<lb/>
game for us and we have very<lb/>
little time to get ready he said<lb/>
following Saturday's loss.<lb/>
"Our goal is still to win the<lb/>
Southern Conference champion-<lb/>
ship and we're still undefeated<lb/>
East Tennessee State is Western<lb/>
Carolina's first Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence opponent.<lb/>
South Carolina coach Joe Morri-<lb/>
son, whose Gamecocks went to 2-<lb/>
0 with the win against Western,<lb/>
sees the going about to get<lb/>
tougher for his team.<lb/>
"Any time you win it's a good<lb/>
feeling said Morrison. "But 1<lb/>
told our ball club after the game<lb/>
that we will need to be a lot<lb/>
sharper physicially and mentally<lb/>
from this part on<lb/>
South Carolina, which beat<lb/>
North Carolina 31-10 a week ear-<lb/>
lier, next faces East Carolina, fol-<lb/>
lowed by Georgia. Later come<lb/>
Florida State and Clemson.<lb/>
"We were able to play a lot of<lb/>
folks, especially in the second<lb/>
half Morrison said, sizing up<lb/>
Saturday's win. "I thought our<lb/>
running backs did a good job.<lb/>
"Mike Dingle ran hard. He's<lb/>
going to be a good back<lb/>
Dingle, The Associated Press<lb/>
high school Player of the Year in<lb/>
1986, started his first game Satur-<lb/>
day for South Carolina and got his<lb/>
first two collegiate touchdowns.<lb/>
However, he suffered a brusied<lb/>
right shin and had to be carried off<lb/>
the field in the third quarter with<lb/>
85 yards rushing and another 57<lb/>
receiving.<lb/>
The status of the 6-3, 230-pound<lb/>
sophomore, who was filling in at<lb/>
fullback for the injured Keith<lb/>
Bing, was expected to be known<lb/>
earlv this week.<lb/>
South Carolina scored enough<lb/>
points to win on its first series<lb/>
with a 47-yard field goal by Collin<lb/>
Mackie, led 17-0 at half time and<lb/>
used reserves the entire fourth pe-<lb/>
riod.<lb/>
The initial touchdown came late<lb/>
in the first quarter on a 9-yard<lb/>
sprint around left end by tailback<lb/>
Gerald Williams, who was start-<lb/>
ing in place of Harold Green. Wil-<lb/>
liams had 108 yards rushing.<lb/>
Both Green and Bing were hurt<lb/>
the previous Saturday in the<lb/>
Gamecocks' 31-10 win against<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Dingle completed the first half<lb/>
scoring with a four-yard touch-<lb/>
down run about seven minutes<lb/>
before the half and got his other<lb/>
TD at the start of the second half.<lb/>
Gamecock quarterback Todd<lb/>
Ellis threw for 187 yards, his low-<lb/>
est passing output since he was<lb/>
Yankees beat Tigers<lb/>
(AP)- The better it gets for the<lb/>
New Yorx Yankees, the worse it<lb/>
becomes for the Detroit Tigers.<lb/>
Claudell Washington's two-<lb/>
run homer in the bottom of the<lb/>
18th inning Sunday rallied the<lb/>
Yankees over Detroit 5-4 as both<lb/>
teams tried to stay close in the<lb/>
American League East race.<lb/>
Both clubs are 3 12 games<lb/>
behind division-leading Boston.<lb/>
Although they share the same<lb/>
space, the Yankees and Tigers are<lb/>
heading in opposite directions.<lb/>
New York completed a four-<lb/>
game sweep at Yankee Stadium.<lb/>
Detroit, which led the AL East by<lb/>
tour games on Aug. 21, lost for the<lb/>
17th time in 20 games.<lb/>
The Yankees begin a four-game<lb/>
series in Boston on Thursday<lb/>
night. "We had a sense of having<lb/>
only a few games left to do some-<lb/>
thing" Yankees manager Lou<lb/>
Piniella said. "We knew it was<lb/>
now or never. I think that's what<lb/>
brought out the best in us<lb/>
The game lasted 6 hours, 1 min-<lb/>
utes. It was the longest game by<lb/>
time and innings in the AL this<lb/>
season. Atlanta and St. Louis<lb/>
played 19 innings on May 14.<lb/>
In other games in the American<lb/>
League, it was Cleveland 4, Bos-<lb/>
ton 2; Baltimore 4, Toronto 2; Chi-<lb/>
cago 3, Minnesota 2; Oakland 8,<lb/>
Kansas City 7, in 11 innings; Mil-<lb/>
waukee 5, Seattle 3, and Texas 8.<lb/>
California 3.<lb/>
Detroit's Alan Trammell hit a<lb/>
solo home run in the seventh in-<lb/>
ning that made it 3-3 and the game<lb/>
stayed tied until the 18th when the<lb/>
Tigers took the lead.<lb/>
An error by first baseman Don<lb/>
Mattingly set up an RBI single by<lb/>
rookie Tory Lovullo against Steve<lb/>
Shields, 4-4, the eventual winner.<lb/>
Mike Henneman had pitched<lb/>
seven scoreless innings before<lb/>
Guillermo Hernandez, 5-5, took<lb/>
over the start the bottom of the<lb/>
held to a 141-yard day in South<lb/>
Carolina's 20-16 loss last season to<lb/>
then-No. 2 Miami.<lb/>
Last weekend against North<lb/>
Carolina, he passed for 290 yards<lb/>
- more typical for the record-set-<lb/>
ting junior.<lb/>
The closest Western Carolina<lb/>
ever got to scoring was when the<lb/>
Catamounts reached South<lb/>
Carolina's 36-yard line before<lb/>
time ran out in the second quarter.<lb/>
After Dingle's second touch-<lb/>
down, South Carolina fumbled<lb/>
the ball away on two successive<lb/>
possessions.<lb/>
Then Ellis got South Carolina<lb/>
going again, ending their next<lb/>
drive by hitting tight end Carl<lb/>
Platt on a 12-yard shot that made<lb/>
the score 31-0.<lb/>
Backup quarterback Dickie De-<lb/>
Masi, who replaced Ellis for the<lb/>
final quarter, moved the Game-<lb/>
cocks to their fifth ai id final touch-<lb/>
down - a seven-yard run by fresh-<lb/>
man tailback Albert Haynes.<lb/>
Western Carolina, a Division I-<lb/>
AA school, posted all of its six first<lb/>
downs in the first half, the fewest<lb/>
first downs in school history. The<lb/>
Catamounts were held to seven<lb/>
first downs by Carson-Newman<lb/>
in 1967.<lb/>
The Catamounts had just 19<lb/>
yards total offense in the second<lb/>
half, finishing the game with 123<lb/>
yards. Ten second-half running<lb/>
plays netted just nine yards.<lb/>
Williams was the game's leading<lb/>
rusher, followed by Dingle and<lb/>
Haynes. The biggest rushing<lb/>
gainer for Western was tailback<lb/>
Carlton Terry, who had 44 yards<lb/>
on 12 attempts.<lb/>
18th.<lb/>
Rickey Henderson drew a lead-<lb/>
off walk and Washington fol-<lb/>
lowed with his ninth home run.<lb/>
Indians 4, Red Sox 2<lb/>
Willie Upshaw's RBI single<lb/>
broke a tie in the eighth inning<lb/>
and Tom Candiotti allowed five<lb/>
hits in seven innings as Cleveland<lb/>
salvaged the finale of a three-<lb/>
game scries at Boston.<lb/>
Upshaw's hit came off reliever<lb/>
Bob Stanley, 6-4. The Indians<lb/>
added an insurance run in the<lb/>
ninth when Carter tripled and<lb/>
Mel Hall singled.<lb/>
Brewers 5, Mariners 3<lb/>
Don August allowed seven hits<lb/>
in eight-plus innings and Robin<lb/>
Yount's two-run double keyed a<lb/>
four-run fifth.<lb/>
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