<?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="00058096_0001"/>
Coming Thursday:<lb/>
The story concerning the format change in the 88<lb/>
lomecoming contest.<lb/>
Features:<lb/>
A review of the two up coming Monty Python<lb/>
movies to be shown at Hendrix Theatre, see page 7.<lb/>
Sports:<lb/>
Despite 538 total yards in offense, the Pirates drop to<lb/>
1-3 against Southern Mississippi, see page 10.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
Saat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 22<lb/>
Tuesday September 27,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
12 Tages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Nursing graduates post low exam scores<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The ECU School of Nursing<lb/>
class which graduated in Mav of<lb/>
1988, posted the lowest test scores<lb/>
in the UNC System on the N.C.<lb/>
nursing exam.<lb/>
According to figures released<lb/>
by the North Carolina Board of<lb/>
Nursing, 73 ECU graduates took<lb/>
the exam and 43, or 59 percent<lb/>
passed.<lb/>
These figures do not include<lb/>
the 17 graduates who took the<lb/>
exam out-of-state. Fifteen oi the<lb/>
17 who took the exam in states<lb/>
other than N.C, had acceptable<lb/>
scores.<lb/>
Oi all 1,422 N.C nursing<lb/>
graduates who took the exam in<lb/>
1988, 85 percent oi first time ex-<lb/>
aminees passed.<lb/>
The examination, which is<lb/>
given each Feb. and July, is re-<lb/>
quired by the state to be a certified<lb/>
nurse.<lb/>
According to The Daily Reflec-<lb/>
tor, the state Board oi Nursing re-<lb/>
quires schools to post a 60 percent<lb/>
passing rate for anv single exam<lb/>
and a 70 percent passing rate over<lb/>
any three-year period. Schools<lb/>
that fail to meet that standard are<lb/>
automatically reviewed by a team<lb/>
of Board of Nursing officials.<lb/>
Emilie Hcnning, dean of the<lb/>
ECU School of Nursing, said, "We<lb/>
are not at all happy about these<lb/>
scores. Right now we are review-<lb/>
ing our curriculum and looking<lb/>
for some type of indicating fac-<lb/>
tors<lb/>
She said the exam taken by<lb/>
the last class of graduates was a<lb/>
new one and had an unofficial<lb/>
failure rate oi 16.4 percent, as<lb/>
compared to nine percent failure<lb/>
rate of the old exam.<lb/>
Henning also said the nurs-<lb/>
ing school has established a task<lb/>
force to look at all the aspects of<lb/>
the program; from the ability of<lb/>
the new student entering nursing<lb/>
to possible outside influences.<lb/>
"We offered a readiness diag-<lb/>
nostic test which we felt gave the<lb/>
students an indicator of what is to<lb/>
be expected on the exam and gave<lb/>
us a look at who might pass and<lb/>
fail. Also we (the nursing faculty)<lb/>
urged all students to attend re-<lb/>
view courses, study for the exam<lb/>
and not to take it lightly said<lb/>
Henning.<lb/>
The nursing department<lb/>
keeps up with its graduates by<lb/>
mailing surveys to check prog-<lb/>
ress with jobs, etc. This year, the<lb/>
surveys will be conducted by<lb/>
phone and the questions will con-<lb/>
centrate on the study habits of<lb/>
those who took the exam.<lb/>
"The survey will ask ques-<lb/>
tions like, 'how much did you<lb/>
study, what did you study and<lb/>
what outside influences were<lb/>
affecting during the exam or<lb/>
studying?' " said Henning. She<lb/>
also noted the exam is given in<lb/>
July and Feb.<lb/>
"Many students find it hard<lb/>
to study after they have come<lb/>
straight out of school. The period<lb/>
after graduation is a big time in<lb/>
life, there is so much going on, it's<lb/>
tough to start studying again<lb/>
Henning said.<lb/>
Henning said in her 13 years<lb/>
as the dean of nursing, she has<lb/>
never seen scores like the ones<lb/>
received on this year's exam. Ac-<lb/>
cording to her, the scores go<lb/>
against all trend data, which<lb/>
stated there should have only<lb/>
been a six percent rate of failure.<lb/>
She said ECU nursing gradu-<lb/>
ates have always been well re-<lb/>
ceived at the professional level<lb/>
and does not think this year's<lb/>
scores will influence the hiring<lb/>
process.<lb/>
"We are going to offer assis-<lb/>
tance to those who didn't pass, if<lb/>
they want it. You are allowed to<lb/>
take the exam as many times as<lb/>
you want during a specified pe-<lb/>
riod of time, after that, you have to<lb/>
go back and repeat some of the re-<lb/>
quired courses said Henning.<lb/>
Henning said, "This problem<lb/>
is alarming and we're doing eve-<lb/>
rything to find solutions. Right<lb/>
now we just don't understand the<lb/>
reason why. We are very con-<lb/>
cerned<lb/>
Progress continues oh the Mendenhall Student Center. Beware of -the ditch running parallel with<lb/>
the walk leading to the Student Bank (Photo by Thomas Walters, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Numbers and percentages of<lb/>
other nursing graduates in the<lb/>
UNC system were as follows:<lb/>
UNC Chapel Hill, 84 examinees,<lb/>
88 percent pass rate; UNC Greens-<lb/>
boro, 64 examinees, 89 percent<lb/>
pass rate; UNC Wilmington, 20<lb/>
examinees, 95 percent pass rate;<lb/>
UNC Charlotte, 73 examinees, 84<lb/>
percent pass rate; Winston Salem<lb/>
State university, 11 examinees, 64<lb/>
percent pass rate; Western Caro-<lb/>
lina University, 42 examinees, 67<lb/>
percent pass rate.<lb/>
N.C. Central and N.C. A.&amp;T.<lb/>
posted the highest examination<lb/>
grades in the state. Central had 14<lb/>
people take the exam with a 93<lb/>
percent pass rate while A.&amp;T. had<lb/>
eight students take the test and all<lb/>
pass.<lb/>
Co-op offers jobs, credit, experience and pay<lb/>
By LYNN JOYNER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Co-op program has<lb/>
been in operation since 1975 and<lb/>
last year placed about 1500 stu-<lb/>
dents in career-related, paying<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
Bill Barrett, co-op coordina-<lb/>
tor, explained the advantages of<lb/>
working in a co-op job, "There is<lb/>
the opportunity to get experience<lb/>
related to your major, and we do<lb/>
provide paid employment unlike<lb/>
internships that don't pay. There<lb/>
is also the possibility of getting<lb/>
academic credit for some majors.<lb/>
The experience always looks<lb/>
good on your resume, and there is<lb/>
a possibility of having that job<lb/>
when you graduate<lb/>
The three ways a student can<lb/>
co-op are through alternating<lb/>
positions, parallel positions, and<lb/>
summer positions.<lb/>
In the alternating positions, a<lb/>
student works full time for an<lb/>
employer and does not go to<lb/>
school. Typically, a student will<lb/>
work more than one sei ester in<lb/>
this situation. In the paro el posi-<lb/>
tion, a student works part time<lb/>
(10-20 hours per week) while at-<lb/>
tending school. In the summer<lb/>
position, a student works full<lb/>
time only during the summer.<lb/>
Some major corporations stu-<lb/>
dents have worked for include<lb/>
Northern Telecom, Burroughs<lb/>
Wellcome, Duke Power, Purdue,<lb/>
Inc and Wachovia Bank. Stu-<lb/>
dents have also worked for the<lb/>
state and federal government,<lb/>
national institutes of health, and<lb/>
Disney World. Students may be<lb/>
placed in jobs in Greenville as<lb/>
well as other parts of the state and<lb/>
country. Barrett said students<lb/>
have been placed from Maine, to<lb/>
Horida, to Colorado.<lb/>
Barrett said, "I think students<lb/>
come back really enthused about<lb/>
their curriculum. They find out<lb/>
what they are learning really does<lb/>
have a place in the real world<lb/>
Usually juniors and seniors<lb/>
are placed in jobs with large com-<lb/>
panies, but there are many jobs<lb/>
that do not require knowledge in<lb/>
a particular major that are open<lb/>
for freshmen and sophomores.<lb/>
"We encourage students to get<lb/>
involved as soon as possible. I<lb/>
even encourage freshmen Bar-<lb/>
rett said.<lb/>
Barrett said after being as-<lb/>
signed a coordinator, a student<lb/>
should check by the co-op office<lb/>
once or twice a month because of<lb/>
varying application deadlines for<lb/>
certain jobs. A resume, transcript,<lb/>
and co-op application are also<lb/>
required of the student, and the<lb/>
co-op office will provide assis-<lb/>
tance, if needed, to write a res-<lb/>
ume.<lb/>
Barrett said the bulletin board<lb/>
outside the co-op office has job<lb/>
positions posted on it that are<lb/>
available at any given time, but<lb/>
the coordinator has a list of those<lb/>
that are not posted and are com-<lb/>
ing up.<lb/>
Barrett suggested to get in-<lb/>
volved in the co-op program, a<lb/>
student should pick up an appli-<lb/>
cation at the co-op office, and then<lb/>
attend one of the seminars held on<lb/>
Mondays and Thursdays. The<lb/>
office is located in room 2300-232<lb/>
of the General Classroom Build-<lb/>
ing and is open from 8 a.m. until 5<lb/>
p.m. Monday through Fridav.<lb/>
Dates and times for the co-op<lb/>
seminars are listed on the Student<lb/>
Events calendar or in The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
Hargett, Thomas win elections<lb/>
despite low voter participation<lb/>
Students take advantage of the remaining warm afternoons. The shorts and short sleeves will soon<lb/>
be replaced by jeans and sweaters (Photo by Thomas Walters, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
By REID PARKER<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
Melissa Hargett and Allan<lb/>
Thomas were declared the win-<lb/>
ners Wednesday night, Sept 21, in<lb/>
theSG A run-off election for fresh-<lb/>
man and sophomore class presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
In the run-off for freshman<lb/>
class president, Melissa Hargett<lb/>
topped her opponent, Arielle<lb/>
Sturz, with 55 percent of the vote.<lb/>
A total of 73 freshmen voted in<lb/>
Wednesdays election.<lb/>
Allan Thomas received 67<lb/>
percent of the sophomore vote,<lb/>
enough to defeat Scott Jones for<lb/>
the presidential seat. Eighty-six<lb/>
sophomores voted in the contest.<lb/>
Student turn-out for the SG A<lb/>
election was poor.<lb/>
Paul Puckett, chairman of the<lb/>
elections committee, said, 'Turn-<lb/>
out was again horrible. But, I re-<lb/>
ally think, a lot of it had to do with<lb/>
the students not knowing who<lb/>
was on the ballot. I'm apalled that<lb/>
only 73 freshmen and 86 sopho-<lb/>
mores, out of all the thousands of<lb/>
students, chose who their presi-<lb/>
dent would be<lb/>
Voters were not the only ones<lb/>
who did not turn out for the elec-<lb/>
tion. The vote count was sched-<lb/>
uled for 7 p.m. Wednesday night,<lb/>
though the voting began early, no<lb/>
candidates, or anyone associated<lb/>
with the four campaigns, came by<lb/>
to learn the results of the initial<lb/>
vote count which ended at 7:20.<lb/>
A mandatory meeting was<lb/>
scheduled at 5 p.m. Monday night<lb/>
for all newly-elected representa-<lb/>
tives at room 221 in Mendenhall.<lb/>
The Elections Committee is<lb/>
made up each term of represcnta- committee was headed by Paul<lb/>
tives from various organizations Puckett who tallied the votes and<lb/>
around campus. This term's declared the winners.<lb/>
WZMB temporarily silenced<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
When students turn their radio<lb/>
dials to WZMB 91, they will be<lb/>
tuning into static, for the next few<lb/>
days.<lb/>
WZMB, ECU's campus radio<lb/>
station signed off of the air at 3:15<lb/>
a.m. Saturday, after having fre-<lb/>
quency trouble.<lb/>
WZMB General Manager Keith<lb/>
Powe said that, "It's a component<lb/>
in our transmitter that went bad,<lb/>
called an exciter. The exciter al-<lb/>
lows us (WZMB) to stay on fre-<lb/>
quency<lb/>
Powe said that the exciter is<lb/>
about the size of an f.m. receiver<lb/>
that can be purchased for a stereo<lb/>
system.<lb/>
"It is going to take a couple of<lb/>
days to get the exciter fixed. Our<lb/>
engineer is out of town, and he<lb/>
will be back on Sunday. So, we are<lb/>
sending the exciter out to another<lb/>
company<lb/>
Powe held a meeting yesterday<lb/>
for the staff, in which he informed<lb/>
them that even though the station<lb/>
is not on the airwaves, they will be<lb/>
helping to reorganize it and make<lb/>
improvements.<lb/>
"We plan to clean everything in<lb/>
the station, so that everything is<lb/>
neat Powe said.<lb/>
"Office hours will be kept be all<lb/>
staff members, and we still take<lb/>
phone calls from all businesses<lb/>
and WZMB listeners. We are still<lb/>
functioning as a radio station, we<lb/>
are just not on the air right now, he<lb/>
said<lb/>
According to Powe, a image<lb/>
change for WZMB should come<lb/>
about by the end of this week.<lb/>
"We do not plan to let this inci-<lb/>
dent effect the way that we feel<lb/>
about the station. It was some-<lb/>
thing that could not be helped, so<lb/>
we plan to do some productive<lb/>
things with the time, such as some<lb/>
minor repairs<lb/>
"By sign on time at 5:45 a.m.<lb/>
Saturday, we plan to come on<lb/>
with a new liner, changing the old<lb/>
one which is ' the unique differ-<lb/>
ence with Z 91 So our audience<lb/>
should listen for the new liner.<lb/>
Also, we plan to return with better<lb/>
sound qualitv<lb/>
Powe stated that funding<lb/>
which is donated to the station for<lb/>
grant announcements and pro-<lb/>
gram spots will not be lost, be-<lb/>
cause the station is out of commis-<lb/>
sion for a week.<lb/>
"The station being down is not<lb/>
something that WZMB has not ex-<lb/>
perienced. Over the summer<lb/>
there is a two week closing of the<lb/>
station between second summer<lb/>
session and the fall semester,<lb/>
Powe said.<lb/>
"The only way that it effects us<lb/>
is that, it throws us a week behind<lb/>
in our grant announcements and<lb/>
See PROBLEMS, page 3<lb/>
<pb facs="00058096_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 27.1988<lb/>
ECU Police have lost and found<lb/>
Lost and found articles;<lb/>
where do you go on campus to<lb/>
find them?<lb/>
Most do not know that there<lb/>
is a place where lost and found<lb/>
property can be recovered. The<lb/>
place is ECU Public Safetv office<lb/>
located at 609 E. 10th Street.<lb/>
Lost and found property<lb/>
usually finds its way to the cam-<lb/>
pus police and the list of items is<lb/>
usuallv long each semester.<lb/>
A lot of students, staff, faculty<lb/>
and visitors usually think that if<lb/>
they lost or misplaced something,<lb/>
it's gone forever. That may be the<lb/>
case sometimes, but its worth the<lb/>
time to check at lost and found.<lb/>
Don't give up, check it out.<lb/>
The following is a list of items<lb/>
presently stored at the Public<lb/>
Safety Police office: Glasses and<lb/>
glasses cases of all kinds, contact<lb/>
lens and cases, watches (mens &amp;<lb/>
womens), wallets, checkbooks,<lb/>
purses, pocketbooks, knapsacks<lb/>
with books, etc ladies rings, tote<lb/>
bags and luggage, jackets and<lb/>
vests, various text books, scarfs,<lb/>
keys and key rings and other<lb/>
miscellaneous articles of value.<lb/>
These items are kept for a<lb/>
period of 90 days and then are<lb/>
disposed of according to law.<lb/>
You never know if its your<lb/>
lost and found property if you<lb/>
don't check it out. If you've lost or<lb/>
misplaced an article of value,<lb/>
check by campus police. If it has<lb/>
not been turned in, they will be<lb/>
glad to log your missing item and<lb/>
notify you if it turns up.<lb/>
To claim your item, it will be<lb/>
necessary for you to be able to de-<lb/>
scribe it in some detail. However,<lb/>
there are items turned in with<lb/>
people's name etc. on them. But<lb/>
for some reason they can no t be lo-<lb/>
cated or contacted. So go on by,<lb/>
maybe you'll get lucky with your<lb/>
lost, misplaced, or possibly unre-<lb/>
portcd or stolen item.<lb/>
First female, Catholic bishop elected<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The<lb/>
Rev. Barbara C. Harris savs her<lb/>
election as the first woman<lb/>
bishop in the Anglican<lb/>
Communion's 450-year history<lb/>
offers new hope to those who've<lb/>
felt alienated and ignored bv thi<lb/>
Episcopal Church.<lb/>
"A fresh wind is blowing<lb/>
across this church of ours Ms.<lb/>
Harris said Sunday in her ser-<lb/>
mon at the Church of the Advo-<lb/>
cate, where she serves as interim<lb/>
rector.<lb/>
Tne Episcooal Church is at-<lb/>
tempting to include everyone in<lb/>
the mainstream "oi God's jus-<lb/>
tice, grace, brotherhood and sis-<lb/>
terhood the black cleric told a<lb/>
congregation of 50.<lb/>
Pointing to the Rev. Jesse<lb/>
Jackson's "Rainbow Coalition<lb/>
reaching across color and sexual<lb/>
lines, she said the church's ac-<lb/>
tion gives "new hopeand new<lb/>
vision to hundreds of thou-<lb/>
sands" who have felt left out of<lb/>
the denomination.<lb/>
Ms. Harris, a 58-year-old for-<lb/>
mer public relations executive,<lb/>
was elected Saturday to the po-<lb/>
sition oi suffragan, or assistant,<lb/>
bishop for the eastern Massa-<lb/>
chusetts diocese. The diocese,<lb/>
which includes Boston, is the<lb/>
nation's largest in both geogra-<lb/>
phy and population.<lb/>
However, the third-ranking<lb/>
prelate in the Church of Enoland<lb/>
said Sunday he will refuse to<lb/>
recognize Ms. Harris or any<lb/>
other woman bishop.<lb/>
"I have already stated pub-<lb/>
licly that I would not beable to<lb/>
be in communion with a woman<lb/>
so elected and consecrated<lb/>
said the Rt. Rev. Graham Le-<lb/>
onard, bishop of London.<lb/>
Bishops at a world Anglican<lb/>
conference this summer ap-<lb/>
proved a resolution saying they<lb/>
would respect and remain in fel-<lb/>
lowship with churches that<lb/>
have women priests and bish-<lb/>
ops, even if they disagree with<lb/>
their principles.<lb/>
Several appointments earlier<lb/>
this year show the church is<lb/>
changing, said Ms. Harris. Two<lb/>
black priests were elected coad-<lb/>
jutor bishops, who are first in<lb/>
line to succeed their presiding<lb/>
bishops, without first serving as<lb/>
assistants.<lb/>
One, the Rev. Herbert Tho-<lb/>
moson Jr was installed in Cin-<lb/>
cinnati on Saturday as the first<lb/>
black bishop of the Episcopal<lb/>
Diocese of Southern Ohio.<lb/>
Ms. Harris told the congrega-<lb/>
tion her election "is of signifi-<lb/>
cance to the Episcopal Church in<lb/>
the United States and to the<lb/>
worldwide Anglican Commun-<lb/>
ion<lb/>
The Rev. Paul Washington,<lb/>
retired pastor of the Church of<lb/>
the Advocate, said Sunday that<lb/>
Ms. Harris' election will allow<lb/>
other qualified women to move<lb/>
into bishop positions.<lb/>
The Episcopal Church is one<lb/>
of 27 self-governing church comprise the Anglican Com-<lb/>
bodies in 164 countries that munion.<lb/>
COLD CUT<lb/>
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We specialize in duplicating and binding<lb/>
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The Center Is Open<lb/>
Tues. Wed.<lb/>
10-2 9-2:30<lb/>
For an appointment or more infor-<lb/>
mation, call 24-Hour Helpline,<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
111 East Third Street - The Lee Bulldtng<lb/>
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Free Pregnancy Test-<lb/>
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MARATHON<lb/>
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Mon. - Fri. 4-11<lb/>
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the Ed<lb/>
States thin!<lb/>
vice pr<lb/>
wants t.<lb/>
dent he v-<lb/>
ild tak<lb/>
funding<lb/>
� .<lb/>
- � race thr<lb/>
lems<lb/>
will have to d( a<lb/>
Problem pl<lb/>
Continued fr<lb/>
 ur (ngagements I<lb/>
they won't be live wl<lb/>
aired said IVv.<lb/>
"It is a disappointmt i<lb/>
uowrrr msr getting sorr<lb/>
it a gnitii n by a lol ol:<lb/>
ItOI<lb/>
FREE MOVIE<lb/>
STUDENTS PRESENTING A CO<lb/>
ING PASS AT THE DOOR Of tmE <lb/>
CEIVE A FREE MOVIE POSTER<lb/>
iPo�!�' imWiM � tarn<lb/>
PRESENTEDl<lb/>
ECC1 FILM COM!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058096_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 27,1988 3<lb/>
UT<lb/>
69.<lb/>
<lb/>
(,i i �<lb/>
RCOl IK I 1 COMBO<lb/>
 i i i iilir<lb/>
f<lb/>
�s�4 Go<lb/>
7$3<lb/>
59c<lb/>
GO.<lb/>
�?N�<lb/>
� lye,<lb/>
Kroger Sfc<lb/>
r I p 11 o n<lb/>
i'I 11 e you<lb/>
I p o u r<lb/>
hopping list<lb/>
�.<lb/>
IRS EVERYDAY<lb/>
IBivcl Greenville<lb/>
Bush says opportunity is key<lb/>
r<lb/>
(CPS) � "1 have been going<lb/>
around the country saying that I<lb/>
want to be known as the 'educa-<lb/>
tion president George Bush<lb/>
said during a campaign stop in<lb/>
California this summer. "The rea-<lb/>
son is simple: Opportunity is<lb/>
what America is all about, and<lb/>
education is the key to opportu-<lb/>
nity<lb/>
An educated workforce, Bush<lb/>
believes, is the key to a prosper-<lb/>
ous economy. To prepare that<lb/>
workforce, he promises more stu-<lb/>
dent aid, plans to help families<lb/>
save for thci r children's education<lb/>
and programs to bring more mi-<lb/>
nority students to campuses.<lb/>
He says his U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Education would avoid the con-<lb/>
frontational style of President<lb/>
Reagan's Education Dept. under<lb/>
William Bennett.<lb/>
And while all that might<lb/>
sound very attractive toa national<lb/>
college community buffeted by<lb/>
eight years of budget cuts and<lb/>
White House criticism, a lot of<lb/>
people in higher education think<lb/>
George Bush is full of bunk.<lb/>
Bush "will do whatever his<lb/>
advisors tell him to do to get<lb/>
elected. Hell, it's politics said<lb/>
Dr. Robert Clodius of the Na-<lb/>
tional Association of State Uni-<lb/>
versities and Land Grant Col-<lb/>
leges.<lb/>
While Dr. AimsMcGuincssof<lb/>
the Education Commission of the<lb/>
States thinks "you can take the<lb/>
vice president at h word: he<lb/>
wants to be the education presi-<lb/>
dent he wonders whether Bush<lb/>
would take the political heat of<lb/>
funding college programs at the<lb/>
expense of, say, defense.<lb/>
"Whoever is elected presi-<lb/>
dent has to face three major prob-<lb/>
lems McGuiness said. "They<lb/>
will have to deal with the budget<lb/>
and trade deficits, the high prior-<lb/>
ity placed on defense spending<lb/>
and the commitment to entitle-<lb/>
ments for older people, such as<lb/>
Social Security<lb/>
He can't do anything (about<lb/>
education) if he doesn't address<lb/>
those problems first<lb/>
McGuiness, Cu Jius and<lb/>
other education professionals<lb/>
note Bush offered public support<lb/>
for � and certainly no public re-<lb/>
sistance to � the Reagan<lb/>
administration's budgetary at-<lb/>
tacks on federal college funding.<lb/>
But now the vice president<lb/>
calls for maintaining work-study,<lb/>
the still-unproven income-contin-<lb/>
gent loans program and Pell<lb/>
Grants for low-income students.<lb/>
For middle-class students,<lb/>
the vice-president, like his Demo-<lb/>
cratic opponent, Gov. Michael<lb/>
Dukakis, proposes creating a Col-<lb/>
lege Savings Bond. The bond<lb/>
would be similar to U.S. Savings<lb/>
Bonds, except that interest earned<lb/>
would be tax-free if the bond is<lb/>
applied to college expenses.<lb/>
Helping students pay for col-<lb/>
lege should be "one of our highest<lb/>
priorities in the 1990s Bush says.<lb/>
'The only thing he's wedded<lb/>
to is the college savings bond<lb/>
plan said Becky Timmons of the<lb/>
American Council on Education<lb/>
(ACE). "It's something we're in-<lb/>
terested in. It could be an impor-<lb/>
tant vehicle for the middle class.<lb/>
But Bush has not laid out concrete<lb/>
plans for the poor<lb/>
"He's ignoring a whole sector<lb/>
of the population Janet Licber-<lb/>
man of the United States Student<lb/>
Association (USSA) said.<lb/>
The vice president, a Yale<lb/>
grad, does have a long record of<lb/>
supporting black colleges. Many<lb/>
black college presidents credit<lb/>
Bush with helping their institu-<lb/>
tions secure federal grants.<lb/>
Bush, too, has been a long-<lb/>
time supporter of the United<lb/>
Negro College Fund, donating<lb/>
half the royalties he receives from<lb/>
his autobiography "Looking For-<lb/>
ward" to the fund.<lb/>
While a Texas congressman<lb/>
from 1967 to 1970, Bush did vote<lb/>
for the major education funding<lb/>
bills that arose.<lb/>
Education, in fact, is one<lb/>
arena where Bush appears eager<lb/>
to distance himself from the Re-<lb/>
agan administration, but many<lb/>
campus denizens, unrepentedly<lb/>
resentful of Reagan, wonder<lb/>
where he was when they needed<lb/>
him.<lb/>
'The question is, where has<lb/>
he been for the last eight years?"<lb/>
asked Michael Edwards of the<lb/>
National Education Association.<lb/>
"For a lot of people, it is going to<lb/>
take some convincing, and<lb/>
they're going to doubt his credi-<lb/>
bility<lb/>
But Terrel Bell, President<lb/>
Reagan's first Education secre-<lb/>
tary, noting vice presidents are<lb/>
supposed to play subservient<lb/>
roles, didn't "think it's fair to say<lb/>
the vice president should be re-<lb/>
sponsible for the president's poli-<lb/>
cies<lb/>
Although Bush avoided criti-<lb/>
cizing the Reagan<lb/>
administration's education poli-<lb/>
cies in public, Bell said, he did so<lb/>
often during cabinet meetings.<lb/>
"1 believe he will continue to<lb/>
emphasize the value of education<lb/>
for all people said Bush advisor<lb/>
Shirley Gordon, president of<lb/>
Washington's Highline Commu-<lb/>
nity College.<lb/>
"just the phrase 'education<lb/>
president' indicates he wants to<lb/>
give education a higher priority, a<lb/>
different emphasis than we've<lb/>
seen under President Reagan<lb/>
said Dr. Richard Rosser of the Na-<lb/>
tional Association of Independ-<lb/>
ent Colleges and Universities.<lb/>
And even Bush skeptics are<lb/>
delighted the vice president is<lb/>
paying attention to them, meeting<lb/>
with them and including them in<lb/>
his speeches.<lb/>
"That he speaks to education<lb/>
is a healthy sign said Lieberman<lb/>
of the USSA, perhaps one of the<lb/>
Reagan administration's most<lb/>
outspoken education critics.<lb/>
"I'm delighted he's put so<lb/>
much attention on education<lb/>
added Prof. Gloria Horn of<lb/>
California's Mission College,<lb/>
another Bush advisor. "1 think<lb/>
Bush will work better with educa-<lb/>
tion than Bennett has<lb/>
Still, the ACE's Timmons<lb/>
cautioned all the good intentions<lb/>
in the world won't count without<lb/>
cash.<lb/>
The vice president's proposal<lb/>
to freeze federal spending for one<lb/>
year to reduce the budget deficit,<lb/>
she maintained, "would con-<lb/>
strain the prospects of doing any-<lb/>
thing for education that's current<lb/>
and vital<lb/>
"The real gutsy stuff is what<lb/>
his priorities will be when it<lb/>
comes to budget requests Clo-<lb/>
dius said. "It's well nigh impos-<lb/>
sible to determine what Bush will<lb/>
mean for higher education when<lb/>
you think about it in those terms<lb/>
'The next president must be<lb/>
ready to make education at least<lb/>
as important as national defense<lb/>
said Rosscr. "If he doesn't, we'll<lb/>
continue to have problems with<lb/>
education.<lb/>
"<lb/>
V<lb/>
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Problem plagues student radio station<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
program spots. We will still cover<lb/>
our engagements this week, but<lb/>
they won't be live when they are<lb/>
aired said Powe.<lb/>
"It is a disappointment, because<lb/>
w c� rerc -jtis � getting some more<lb/>
recognition by a lot of people who<lb/>
did not know who WZMB is, or<lb/>
what it stands for he said.<lb/>
" i he appearances the station has<lb/>
made in the last couple of weeks<lb/>
and the remote reportings, is fi-<lb/>
nally building up to were we, at<lb/>
WZMB, wantit,asfarasacampus<lb/>
medium and a Greenville<lb/>
mediumhe added.<lb/>
Even though<lb/>
quency is down,<lb/>
WZMB's fre-<lb/>
the staff has<lb/>
taken a good-natured look at the<lb/>
incident.<lb/>
Powe said that there is a joke<lb/>
out that there is a little gremlin<lb/>
going around,Jo everybody, jra?<lb/>
dio, so no one can pick up WZMB.<lb/>
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THURSDAY<lb/>
Ladies Only Door's Open at 8:00 Highball Special All Night<lb/>
ictory<lb/>
Michael Dukakis<lb/>
President of the United States<lb/>
Bob Jordan<lb/>
Governor of North Carolina<lb/>
Lloyd Bentsen<lb/>
Vice-President<lb/>
Walter B. Jones<lb/>
First District<lb/>
JOIN THE WINNERS<lb/>
VOLUNTEER<lb/>
355-0786<lb/>
355-0706<lb/>
College Democrats - Students For DUKAKIS<lb/>
Democratic Unity Campaign<lb/>
of North Carolina Jqq<lb/>
Thii l� a paid political idverttsrrr�M<lb/>
Th� view expicsaed in thto ad aic tHoac of the advertawr and are not neoeaaarfly tht view crfthii newspaper, �hL"mvr�y, or any ott�emp!oy�ei<lb/>
<pb facs="00058096_0004"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
otlft fEaat (Earnltman<lb/>
PETE FERNALD, CmntMam<lb/>
Chip Carter, M��rM �<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, p� a<lb/>
Joe Harris, N��Mtor<lb/>
Doug Johnson, span, un<lb/>
Tim Hampton, f u<lb/>
Michelle England, era m�i�<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, s�r�y<lb/>
JEFF PARKER��-�<lb/>
TOM FURR,Ci�HMMM.rr<lb/>
Susan Howell, mm. m�<lb/>
John W. Medlin, m m<lb/>
Mac Clark, ��.�m�<lb/>
September 27.1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Concerts<lb/>
Can we afford to keep up with UNC?<lb/>
The pitiful turnout at theEU<lb/>
concert, and the mishandling of the<lb/>
promotional aspects of the show last<lb/>
Sunday night, underscored the fact<lb/>
that ECU isn't ready to start compe-<lb/>
ting with Chapel Hill for cultural<lb/>
superiority just yet. It also brings to<lb/>
light some of the other problems<lb/>
ECU'S Student Union has to deal<lb/>
with when putting on a major con-<lb/>
cert for students. While some of this<lb/>
is due to factors such as space, band<lb/>
availability, publicity and funding,<lb/>
much of it can be attributed to stu-<lb/>
dent apathy.<lb/>
Many students are not even<lb/>
aware of the Student Union, the<lb/>
student organization that plans and<lb/>
organizes entertainment through-<lb/>
out the school year. Thus, they con-<lb/>
tribute no input towards the band,<lb/>
movie or other entertainment selec-<lb/>
tion process, and have no reason to<lb/>
complain if their favorite artist<lb/>
passes Greenville by to play Duke or<lb/>
UNC.<lb/>
However, the Student Union<lb/>
needs to take some more steps to-<lb/>
ward involving students, and find-<lb/>
ing out who they really want to see.<lb/>
For example, look at the past few<lb/>
semesters.<lb/>
Fair T987 brought the Fixx and<lb/>
Anita Baker to our campus. The Fixx<lb/>
has been on a downward slide in<lb/>
their career ever since their big hit of<lb/>
several years ago, "One Thing Leads<lb/>
to Another<lb/>
Baker is a rising star with several<lb/>
hit singles to her credit � but only<lb/>
one album. Of the two artists, Baker<lb/>
was by far the better choice eco-<lb/>
nomically and aesthetically, but the<lb/>
money used for the Fixx show<lb/>
should have been saved for a later<lb/>
date.<lb/>
Spring brought a no-risk, cult<lb/>
figure in Jimmy Buffett. Buffet has<lb/>
such a large following on college<lb/>
campuses that getting him here was<lb/>
not a move anyone had to think hard<lb/>
about. Next month will bring UB40,<lb/>
a pop-reggae band whose old single<lb/>
"Red Red Wine" is currently being<lb/>
revived on the pop charts.<lb/>
And of course, there was last<lb/>
week's EU. While scheduling<lb/>
groups like EU is a bold move to try<lb/>
and bring new kinds of music to the<lb/>
eastern part of the state, more pub-<lb/>
licity was needed to make it the<lb/>
success it could have been.<lb/>
However, none of these artists<lb/>
have a broad spectrum appeal.<lb/>
While no one is suggesting that only<lb/>
bands with the largest common<lb/>
denominator be signed, perhaps the<lb/>
idea of major concerts should be<lb/>
changed to many minor concerts to<lb/>
please punk, pop, metal, rap blues,<lb/>
country and jazz fans.<lb/>
Instead of spending big money<lb/>
to sign big groups that only fractions<lb/>
of the student population will see,<lb/>
why not plan on many concerts at<lb/>
lower prices that would enable stu-<lb/>
dents to experience a variety of<lb/>
genres.<lb/>
Chapel Hill's Dean Dome can<lb/>
afford the bigger names, and can<lb/>
absorb the losses when only half the<lb/>
arena is filled as was the case with<lb/>
their Bob Dylan show. Minges isn't<lb/>
the Dean Dome and there's no rea-<lb/>
son to try and convert it now.<lb/>
The ECU Parrots ?<lb/>
To the editor,<lb/>
I'm in agreement with Professor<lb/>
E. Webber's letter suggesting a<lb/>
change in the name of our school's<lb/>
mascot to something "less aggres-<lb/>
sive I have a suggestion that might<lb/>
please her and even be a realistic al-<lb/>
ternative. Let's change our name to<lb/>
the ECU Parrots!<lb/>
When we hear EOU students and<lb/>
supporters yell "Go Pirates" it al-<lb/>
ways sounds like "Go Parrots If we<lb/>
listen closely, we can hear that most<lb/>
eastern North Carolinians indeed<lb/>
yell "Parrots" when they attempt to<lb/>
yell "Pirates This change would<lb/>
necessitate only a minor orthrogra-<lb/>
phic ohange due to the similar man-<lb/>
ner in which both words are spelled.<lb/>
Finally, 1 feel the change to be a<lb/>
realistic option. If one consults a<lb/>
dictionary, one observes a meaning<lb/>
of "Parrot" to be: "One who mind-<lb/>
lessly imitates words or actions of<lb/>
another Lots of ECU supporters<lb/>
and students behave as if their cen-<lb/>
tral nervoussystems belong to Par-<lb/>
rots, not Pirates. Go Parrots!<lb/>
Hal J. Daniel III, Professor<lb/>
Speech, Language and Audi-<lb/>
tory Pathology<lb/>
Adjunct Professor, Anthropol-<lb/>
ogy<lb/>
Adjunct Professor, Biology<lb/>
Liberal hypocrisy<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Arnie Cullipher's letter in<lb/>
Tuesday's paper was just the kind of<lb/>
response I expected to my evaluation<lb/>
of liberal hypocrisy which appeared<lb/>
Letter labeled "uninformed diatribe<lb/>
a week earlier.<lb/>
Instead of logically and intelli-<lb/>
gently rebutting my letter, Mr. Cul-<lb/>
lipher engaged in puerile, hackneyed<lb/>
name-calling. He sarcastically re-<lb/>
ferred to me as "King He compared<lb/>
me to Ed Meese.<lb/>
He claimed that I "deserve to be<lb/>
exiled to a land where opinions are<lb/>
enforced He openly stated, "I am<lb/>
condeming Justin Sturz He<lb/>
branded me as a "pompus, self-pro-<lb/>
claimed authority on Democracy"<lb/>
that "makes my blood boil<lb/>
He accused me of writing "more-<lb/>
informed-than-thou drivel He ridi-<lb/>
culed my beliefs as "bitching" and<lb/>
only half-jokingly implied I want to<lb/>
put all of those who ideologically<lb/>
differ from me in "concentration<lb/>
camps in Arizona<lb/>
In short, Mr. Cullipher's letter<lb/>
was unadulterated, preposterous,<lb/>
McCarthyish paranoia. I can assure<lb/>
my fellow students at ECU that not<lb/>
only do more than a few of my friends<lb/>
subscribe to the liberal viewpoint,<lb/>
but that I have NO desire to censor<lb/>
their opinions, "condemn" them, or<lb/>
brand them as "pompus, bitching"<lb/>
persons who "deserve to be exiled"<lb/>
and who belong in "concentration<lb/>
camps<lb/>
The beliefs that I expressed in my<lb/>
letter are the result of large amounts<lb/>
of reading and listening to both sides<lb/>
on each issue I raised. I can assure<lb/>
everyone that my beliefs are based on<lb/>
logical, documented facts and obser-<lb/>
vationsof the world around me, NOT<lb/>
some self-righteous belief that I<lb/>
ucicvely possess some "divine inner<lb/>
light" which elevates me to the status<lb/>
of a "self-proclaimed authority on<lb/>
Democracy<lb/>
Recent polls indicate that a large<lb/>
majority of the American people<lb/>
subscribe to the conservative point-<lb/>
of-view (40 as opposed to 18 who<lb/>
are self-described liberals). Indeed,<lb/>
the word "liberal" is such a dirty<lb/>
word in politics today that Mike<lb/>
Dukakis is doing everything he can<lb/>
to avoid r�eing truthfully labeled one.<lb/>
Liberalism has been such a tre-<lb/>
mendous failure in so many areas of<lb/>
American life that most Americans<lb/>
have to be deceived into voting for a<lb/>
liberal � a basic assumption of those<lb/>
who wrote the bland, issueless,<lb/>
spineless Democratic Party Platform<lb/>
of 1988. In other words, those who<lb/>
drafted the Democratic platform<lb/>
tried to avoid doing just what I did:<lb/>
stating in clear, unambiguous lan-<lb/>
guage my sincerely-researched and<lb/>
heart-felt beliefs.<lb/>
One reason I wrote my "liberal<lb/>
dictionary" was to stir up some de-<lb/>
bate on this page. If Mr. Cullipher or<lb/>
anyone else can logically rebut any-<lb/>
thing I said in my letter, let them go<lb/>
ahead and do it! I will be more that<lb/>
happy to listen to their viewpoint,<lb/>
and if they convince me that my be-<lb/>
liefs are incorrect and unfounded,<lb/>
well then by golly I'll change my<lb/>
beliefs! This has always been my<lb/>
policy in formulating my political<lb/>
ideology.<lb/>
And, contrary to what Mr. Cul-<lb/>
lipher may believe, there are millions<lb/>
of Americans, including many on<lb/>
this campus, who agree with me on<lb/>
the issues. Indeed, the statistical evi-<lb/>
dence seems to indicate that a major-<lb/>
ity of Americans agree with me.<lb/>
I harbor no resentment against<lb/>
Mr. Cullipher or anyone else with<lb/>
whom I disagree, nor will I stoop to<lb/>
his level and engage in personal at-<lb/>
tacks.<lb/>
My quarrel is with the entire lib-<lb/>
eral ideology and its applications, not<lb/>
any particular person. 1 trust Mr.<lb/>
Cullipher will have the decency to<lb/>
respect my willingness to stand up<lb/>
for and unabashedly present my be-<lb/>
liefs for the scrutiny of others.<lb/>
Justin Sturz,<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
EnglishJournalism<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
To the ECU Chairman for Bush<lb/>
88:<lb/>
This letter is in response to Bobby<lb/>
Hall's slanderous acusations to-<lb/>
wards the Democratic party. It's<lb/>
obvious Mr. Hall's letter is an<lb/>
uninformed diatribe that is a laugh-<lb/>
ing stock to literate voters.<lb/>
Mr. Hall, when Jimmy Carter<lb/>
became president, unemployment,<lb/>
inflation, and interest rates did soar<lb/>
to an all time high. There were 52<lb/>
Americans being held hostage by<lb/>
Iranian madmen. Do you know why?<lb/>
During Carter's administration the<lb/>
country was suffering through a seri-<lb/>
ous oil crises. Neither the govern-<lb/>
ment nor the public could do any-<lb/>
thing about the crisis. This crisis and<lb/>
not Carter's failed policies led to in-<lb/>
flation, unemployment and high in-<lb/>
terest rates. Mr. Hall, what would<lb/>
you do with 52 American hostages?<lb/>
Would you sell weapons to these<lb/>
madmen like Reagan?<lb/>
Yes, communism has spread to<lb/>
Afghanistan and Nicaragua. Carter<lb/>
imposed grain embargoes on Af-<lb/>
ghanistan which Presidcn- Reagan<lb/>
quickly lifted. Are the Nicaraguans<lb/>
allowed to have a revolution if they<lb/>
want? Does Mr. Hall support So-<lb/>
moza and his National Guard?<lb/>
Reagan's common sense poli-<lb/>
cies? Supply side, which George<lb/>
Bush once called "voodoo econom-<lb/>
ics is just another word for deficit<lb/>
spending which is more than any<lb/>
Democrat ever!<lb/>
New jobs? These jobs are in the<lb/>
low-paid service sector. These<lb/>
people and their families are barely<lb/>
uving above the poverty level. The<lb/>
manufacturing sector, due to Reagan<lb/>
policy, is running from the necessity<lb/>
of modernizing.<lb/>
Sure, President Reagan "flexed<lb/>
his muscle" by invading the pea pod<lb/>
island of Grenada to stop commu-<lb/>
nism. President Reagan does support<lb/>
the right wing human rights viola-<lb/>
tors in South Africa and Chile. Flip-<lb/>
flop Reagan supports disarmament,<lb/>
however, he opposed this early in his<lb/>
administration.<lb/>
George Bush will use the death<lb/>
penalty, and he will release rapists<lb/>
�and murderers (through the-furkmgh<lb/>
program. Reagan was the first in the<lb/>
U.S to introduce furlough while he<lb/>
was governor of California. Most<lb/>
states now have furloughs.<lb/>
The ReaganBush administra-<lb/>
tion is a sleazy one. There have been<lb/>
indictments and convictions of high<lb/>
advisors like Mike Deaver, who is<lb/>
serving time, Nofziger, and Meese.<lb/>
NSC staffers made foreign policy in<lb/>
violation of U.S. law. Neither Bush<lb/>
nor Reagan has given a satisfactory-<lb/>
explanation.<lb/>
Yes, George Bush made it,<lb/>
though not very efficiently, in his<lb/>
own business with the help and back-<lb/>
ing of friends and family. Yes, Mi-<lb/>
chael Dukakis worked hard through<lb/>
night school and can call his accom-<lb/>
plishments his own. It's a fact that<lb/>
George Bush has never been elected<lb/>
but appointed to every office he has<lb/>
held. Bush did in fact run for office for<lb/>
the only time in 1970. Lloyd Bentsen<lb/>
soundly defeated George in this elec-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The DukakisBentsen ticket has<lb/>
an outstanding plan which will allow<lb/>
young people to access educational<lb/>
opportunities allowing them a realis-<lb/>
tic chance at achieving the American<lb/>
Dream. With George Bush and his<lb/>
huge deficit these opportunities will<lb/>
not exist.<lb/>
Wyatt M. Jones, IV.<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Quayle's role in Army examined<lb/>
By DAVID W. TREVINO<lb/>
Special to Tha Eaat Carolinian<lb/>
Immediately after the Honorable James<lb/>
Danforth Quayle III received the Republican party's<lb/>
nomination for the vice-presidency of the United<lb/>
States, hours of television time and miles of column<lb/>
inches were devoted to scrutinizing certain aspects<lb/>
of his service with the Indiana Army National Guard<lb/>
during the final years of the war in Vietnam. A great<lb/>
many people, both in and out of the Fourth Estate,<lb/>
feel Senator Quayle was treated unfairly by the<lb/>
press.<lb/>
There is no question that no one else's military<lb/>
record from that period has been subjected to such<lb/>
minute inspection and such wide exposure nineteen<lb/>
years later. Memories of that time in our nation's<lb/>
history have grown hazy for many of us who lived<lb/>
through it, and many who will vote this year were<lb/>
not yet born in 1969 when Senator Quayle enlisted.<lb/>
Consideration of what others of his generation chose<lb/>
to do, or not do, would help to give some perspective<lb/>
to the Republican nominee for the vice-presidency's<lb/>
decision to join the Indiana Army National Guard<lb/>
six days before his student deferment expired.<lb/>
Take, for example, the case of Jose Francisco<lb/>
Jimenez. On the twenty-eighth of August in 1969,<lb/>
101 days after the Honorable Mr. Quayle proudly<lb/>
raised his right hand to take the oath of enlistment,<lb/>
Jimenez was a lance corporal in the Marine Corps<lb/>
serving as a fire team leader with Company "K<lb/>
Third Battalion, Seventh Marines in Quang Nam<lb/>
Province, Republic of Vietnam.<lb/>
On that day, 95 days after Senator Quayle was<lb/>
graduated from Depauw University where he had<lb/>
been a vocal supporter of our involvement in Viet-<lb/>
nam, Company "K" was engaged in fierce comt M<lb/>
with elements of the North Vietnamese Army.<lb/>
When the lead platoon became pinned down by<lb/>
concentrated fire from small arms, automatic weap-<lb/>
ons and an anti-aircraft gun, Lance Corporal<lb/>
Jimenez acted without hesitation. He charged into<lb/>
the elephant grass before him and killed an enemy<lb/>
soldier obstructing his path to the anti-aircraft<lb/>
weapon firing with deadly effectiveness into his<lb/>
fellow Marines.<lb/>
He rushed across twenty meters of open ground<lb/>
swept by hostile fire to the anti-aircraft gun position.<lb/>
Using his rifle and grenades, he destroyed the<lb/>
weapon and killed its gunner.<lb/>
Jimenez continued to advance through wither-<lb/>
ing fire. He killed another North Vietnamese soldier<lb/>
with a grenade. He killed two more with his rifle<lb/>
from a distance of less than ten feet.<lb/>
N.V.A. automatic weapons began concentrating<lb/>
their fire on Jimenez. Shouting to his comrades, he<lb/>
charged forward in pursuit of a sixth enemy soldier<lb/>
he had spotted in a tree line. It was then a sniper's<lb/>
bullet mortally wounded Lance Corporal Jimenez.<lb/>
He was one of 9,856 members of our armed<lb/>
forces to lose their lives that year in Vietnam. No<lb/>
members of the Indiana Army National Guard were<lb/>
killed defending the Hoosier State in 1969.<lb/>
For his gallant action, Lance Corporal Jimenez<lb/>
was posthumously awarded the highest decoration<lb/>
conferred by the United States, the Congressional<lb/>
Medal of Honor. It was presented to his mother by<lb/>
then-President Richard Nixon at a White House<lb/>
ceremony in 1970,the year the Honorable James<lb/>
Danforth Quayle III began his studies at the Indiana<lb/>
University School of Law.<lb/>
Aside from the difference in the branches of the<lb/>
armed forces in which Lance Corporal Jimenez and<lb/>
Senator Quayle cnose to serve,there is another im-<lb/>
portant difference between these two men who wore<lb/>
uniforms during the war in Vietnam. The Republi-<lb/>
can nominee for our nation's second highest elective<lb/>
office was born in Indiana, a member of the family<lb/>
which controls the richest and most powerful pub-<lb/>
lishing empire in that state; the late Lance Corporal<lb/>
Jimenez was the son of a farm worker and born in<lb/>
Morelia, Mexico.<lb/>
At the age of ten, Jimenez and his four-year-old<lb/>
sister traveled with their mother from Morelia, a city<lb/>
between Guadalajara and Mexico City, to Eloy,<lb/>
Arizona in search of a better life.<lb/>
After graduation from Santa Cruz Valley Union<lb/>
High School where he was president of the Future<lb/>
Farmers of America, Jimenez went to work on a<lb/>
nearby ranch where he and his family lived.<lb/>
The war in Vietnam dragged on and Jimenez<lb/>
saw many of his classmates drafted, but he was not<lb/>
called into service. Jimenez was a citizen of the<lb/>
Republic of Mexico and could not be conscripted. He<lb/>
had no need for a student deferment such as Senator<lb/>
Quayle used between 1965 and 1969.<lb/>
But on June 7,1968, Jimenez left the little farming<lb/>
community in central Arizona where he lived and<lb/>
drove sixty miles to Phoenix to join the United States<lb/>
Marine Corps. He told his mother, "This country has<lb/>
given us so much, and I must give something back<lb/>
He gave his life.<lb/>
The Honorable James Danforth Quayle III says<lb/>
he is proud to have served his country as a public<lb/>
information specialist in the Indiana Army National<lb/>
Guard. It is unfortunate that the humble Jose Fran-<lb/>
cisco Jimenez cannot thank Senator Quayle for those<lb/>
weekends of sacrifice so many years ago.<lb/>
Duka<lb/>
(CPS) � Democratic<lb/>
dential nominee Michael Di<lb/>
unveiled a plan Sept. 7 to k<lb/>
dents repay their college loaj<lb/>
rate that depends on how<lb/>
they earn after they gradual<lb/>
The idea � which in tal<lb/>
been tried at a number <lb/>
puses � immediately<lb/>
mixed reviews.<lb/>
Bruce Carnes, deputy<lb/>
secretary at the L' S t<lb/>
Education, said it would<lb/>
students who got we! <lb/>
;obs after graduation<lb/>
He predicted studenh<lb/>
ing to take higher salaricj<lb/>
would refuse to pin the pre<lb/>
forcing the federal govern!<lb/>
kick in dollars to cover t'rj<lb/>
costs ot lower-paid<lb/>
would never repay all U<lb/>
owed.<lb/>
Dukakis aide Thorn<lb/>
man, of course, was more ej<lb/>
astic.<lb/>
"This is not only I I<lb/>
.iesirable he said 'It wi<lb/>
everyone who is qualm<lb/>
wants to go to oolU j<lb/>
college<lb/>
"It is a substant. i<lb/>
one that should be (<lb/>
opened Bob A i the N<lb/>
Association of State L'no<lb/>
and Land-Grant College;<lb/>
"We're extrem<lb/>
that one of the president ii<lb/>
dates has come forth wit<lb/>
and imaginative prograi<lb/>
lege loans for people<lb/>
walks of life said Rich<lb/>
ser, president of the<lb/>
Association of Indcpencj<lb/>
leges and Universities.<lb/>
Janet Lieberman of<lb/>
Student Association, w'<lb/>
resents campus studentj<lb/>
ments in Washington, "<lb/>
"It's a very creative pre<lb/>
help middle-class f ami til<lb/>
doesn't really addres- t<lb/>
of low-income people.<lb/>
"What low-in,<lb/>
need is grant money<lb/>
Merkowitz oi the<lb/>
Council on Education<lb/>
the least likely to take<lb/>
Both presidential c<lb/>
nevd to develop plans<lb/>
the needs of rhe needn<lb/>
The Dukakis plan<lb/>
low anv student, regi<lb/>
family income, to gel a<lb/>
guaranteed student toai<lb/>
through mandatorv pi<lb/>
auctions dunng the<lb/>
working years for as loi<lb/>
work, or "buy out" oi th(<lb/>
at anv time by paying a lj<lb/>
As a result, gradu<lb/>
find jobs with high salal<lb/>
pay back more than tl<lb/>
and principal on their U<lb/>
low-income students<lb/>
pay back all thev born<lb/>
' "The probler<lb/>
(Dukakis s) plan, is<lb/>
Carter dies<lb/>
of cancer<lb/>
PLAINS. C. (A<lb/>
Carter, whose eso<lb/>
President Carter's<lb/>
zling good ol boy br<lb/>
natch- amused and<lb/>
Americans, "struggj<lb/>
geously" with the<lb/>
killed him, his familj<lb/>
Carter died at hoi<lb/>
creatic cancer, the saj<lb/>
that killed his fat!<lb/>
older sister, on Sunf<lb/>
ing at age 51.<lb/>
A few blocks av(<lb/>
southwestern Georg<lb/>
flag flew at half-stafl<lb/>
street from the<lb/>
where Carter oftej<lb/>
beers while entertan;<lb/>
ers with his irrevcrc<lb/>
Billy Carter,<lb/>
claimed beer-dnnkj<lb/>
bov, was forced<lb/>
himself when bJ<lb/>
Jimmy rocketed int<lb/>
House in 1977.<lb/>
Within a few<lb/>
Carter put his namj<lb/>
of beer that floppej<lb/>
water with remark<lb/>
as racist or anti-<lb/>
cepted money froi<lb/>
was forced to sell -<lb/>
ties to pay a debt t(<lb/>
Revenue Service,<lb/>
neath the mask o<lb/>
was a perceptive<lb/>
reader, a fighter wj<lb/>
go down quietly ur<lb/>
sures of alcoholifJ<lb/>
He ran the U<lb/>
business until Jii<lb/>
officer 13 years rj<lb/>
turned home to �<lb/>
chafing under<lb/>
reign, quickly<lb/>
school sweetheaj<lb/>
joined the Marine<lb/>
<pb facs="00058096_0005"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 27,1988 5<lb/>
IBM<lb/>
Red<lb/>
tribe<lb/>
<lb/>
which Presideni Reagan<lb/>
�re the Nicaraguans<lb/>
e a revolution if they<lb/>
es Mr. Hall support So-<lb/>
National Guard?<lb/>
n - common sense poli-<lb/>
?pl) side, which George<lb/>
; called "voodoo econom-<lb/>
t another word for deficit<lb/>
which is more than any<lb/>
ever!<lb/>
jobs are in the<lb/>
ic sector. These<lb/>
d their families are barely<lb/>
ve the poverty level. The<lb/>
jring sector, due to Reagan<lb/>
running from the necessity<lb/>
�rni;<lb/>
President Reagan "flexed<lb/>
nvading the pea pod<lb/>
Grenada to stop commu-<lb/>
nt Reagan does support<lb/>
wmg human rights viola-<lb/>
uth Africa and Chile. Flip-<lb/>
supports disarmament,<lb/>
It r he opposed this early in his<lb/>
listration.<lb/>
porge Bush will use the death<lb/>
and he will release rapists<lb/>
11 rdevem through the-Airlough<lb/>
im. Reagan was the first in the<lb/>
introduce furlough while he<lb/>
vernor of California. Most<lb/>
have furloughs.<lb/>
2 ReaganBush administra-<lb/>
izy one. There have been<lb/>
lents and convictions of high<lb/>
rs like Mike Deaver, who is<lb/>
: time, Nofziger, and Meese.<lb/>
rs made foreign policy in<lb/>
lion of U.S. law Neither Bush<lb/>
leagan has given a satisfactory<lb/>
lation.<lb/>
es, George Bush made it,<lb/>
;h not very efficiently, in his<lb/>
usiness with the help and back-<lb/>
f friends and family. Yes, Mi-<lb/>
Dukakis worked hard through<lb/>
school and can call his accom-<lb/>
ments his own. It's a fact that<lb/>
;e Bush has never been elected<lb/>
Ippointed to every office he has<lb/>
Bushdid in fact run for office for<lb/>
ily time in 1970. Lloyd Bentsen<lb/>
ly defeated George in this elec-<lb/>
he DukakisBentsen ticket has<lb/>
� mdingplan which will allow<lb/>
Ig people to access educational<lb/>
jrtunities allowing them a realis-<lb/>
lance at achieving the American<lb/>
i. With George Bush and his<lb/>
deficit these opportunities will<lb/>
Wyatt M.Jones, IV.<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
ned<lb/>
Jimenez and his four-year-old<lb/>
heir mother from Morc!ia,acity<lb/>
Ira and Mexico Citv, to Elov,<lb/>
a better life.<lb/>
trom Santa Cruz Valley Union<lb/>
 was president of the Future<lb/>
Jimenez went to work on a<lb/>
he and his family lived,<lb/>
tnam dragged on and Jimenez<lb/>
smates drafted, but he was not<lb/>
Jimenez was a citizen of the<lb/>
ltd could not be conscripted. He<lb/>
jdent deferment such as Senator<lb/>
?n 1965 and 1969.<lb/>
, Jimenez left the little farming<lb/>
al Arizona where he lived and<lb/>
'hoenix to join the United States<lb/>
d his mother, "This country has<lb/>
id I must give something back<lb/>
fames Danforth Quayle III says<lb/>
served his country as a public<lb/>
st in the Indiana Army National<lb/>
late that the humble Jose Fran-<lb/>
thank Senator Quayle for those<lb/>
te so many years ago.<lb/>
Dukakis unveils loan plan<lb/>
(CPS) � Democratic presi-<lb/>
dential nominee Michael Dukakis<lb/>
unveiled a plan Sept. 7 to let stu-<lb/>
dents repay their college loans at a<lb/>
rate that depends on how much<lb/>
they earn after they graduate.<lb/>
The idea � which in fact has<lb/>
been tried at a number of cam-<lb/>
puses � immediately drew<lb/>
mixed reviews.<lb/>
Bruce Carnes, deputy under-<lb/>
secretary at the U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Education, said it would "soak"<lb/>
students who got well-paying<lb/>
jobs after graduation.<lb/>
He predicted students train-<lb/>
ing to take higher-salaried jobs<lb/>
would refuse to join the program,<lb/>
forcing the federal government to<lb/>
kick in dollars to cover the loan<lb/>
costs of lower-paid students who<lb/>
would never repay all that they<lb/>
owed.<lb/>
Dukakis aide Thomas Her-<lb/>
man,of course, was moreenthusi-<lb/>
astic.<lb/>
"This is not only feasible, it is<lb/>
desirable he said. "It will allow<lb/>
everyone who is qualified and<lb/>
wants to go to college to go to<lb/>
college<lb/>
"It is a substantive proposal,<lb/>
tme that should be discussed<lb/>
opened Bob Aaron of the National<lb/>
Association of State Universities<lb/>
and Land-Grant Colleges.<lb/>
"We're extremely pleased<lb/>
that one of the presidential candi-<lb/>
dates has come forth with a new<lb/>
and imaginative program for col-<lb/>
lege loans for people from all<lb/>
walks of life said Richard Ros-<lb/>
ser, president of the National<lb/>
Association of Independent Col-<lb/>
leges and Universities.<lb/>
Janet Lieberman of the U.S.<lb/>
Student Association, which rep-<lb/>
resents campus student govern-<lb/>
ments in Washington, D.C said,<lb/>
"It's a very creative program to<lb/>
help middle-class families, but it<lb/>
doesn't really address the needs<lb/>
of low-income people<lb/>
"What low-income people<lb/>
need is grant money said Dave<lb/>
Merkowitz of the American<lb/>
Council on Education. "They're<lb/>
the least likely to take out loans.<lb/>
Both presidential candidates<lb/>
need to develop plans to address<lb/>
the needs of the neediest<lb/>
The Dukakis plan would al-<lb/>
low any student, regardless of<lb/>
family income, to get a federally<lb/>
guaranteed student loan, repay it<lb/>
through' mandatory payroll de-<lb/>
ductions during the student's<lb/>
working years for as long as they<lb/>
work, oriiy out" of the program<lb/>
at any time by paying a lump sum.<lb/>
As a result, graduates who<lb/>
find jobs with high salaries could<lb/>
pay back more than the interest<lb/>
and principal on their loans, while<lb/>
low-income students may never<lb/>
pay back all they borrowed.<lb/>
"The problem with<lb/>
(Dukakis's) plan . is it depends<lb/>
Carter dies<lb/>
of cancer<lb/>
PLAINS. Ga. (AP) - Billy<lb/>
Carter, whose escapades as<lb/>
President Carter's beer-guz-<lb/>
zling good ol' boy brother alter-<lb/>
nately amused and dismayed<lb/>
Americans, "struggled coura-<lb/>
geously" with the cancer that<lb/>
killed him, his family says.<lb/>
Carter died at home of pan-<lb/>
creatic cancer, the same disease<lb/>
that killed his father and an<lb/>
older sister, on Sunday morn-<lb/>
ing at age 51.<lb/>
A few blocks away in this<lb/>
southwestern Georgia hamlet, a<lb/>
flag flew at half-staff across the<lb/>
street from the gas station<lb/>
where Carter often downed<lb/>
beers while entertaining report-<lb/>
ers with his irreverent wit.<lb/>
Billy Carter, a self-pro-<lb/>
claimed beer-drinking good ol'<lb/>
boy, was forced to redefine<lb/>
himself when big brother<lb/>
Jimmy rocketed into the White<lb/>
House in 1977.<lb/>
Within a few years, Billy<lb/>
Carter put his name on a brand<lb/>
of beer that flopped, got in hot<lb/>
water with remarks denounced<lb/>
as racist or anti-Semitic, ac-<lb/>
cepted money from Libya and<lb/>
was forced to sell some proper-<lb/>
ties to pay a debt to the Internal<lb/>
Revenue Service. But under-<lb/>
neath the mask of court jester<lb/>
was a perceptive man, an avid<lb/>
reader, a fighter who refused to<lb/>
go down quietly under the pres-<lb/>
sures of alcoholism or cancer.<lb/>
He ran the family peanut<lb/>
business until Jimmy, a Navy<lb/>
officer 13 years his senior, re-<lb/>
turned home to take over. Billy,<lb/>
chafing under his brother's<lb/>
reign, quickly married his high<lb/>
school sweetheart, Sybil, and<lb/>
joined the Marines.<lb/>
upon people who are likely to<lb/>
make reasonable incomes being<lb/>
willing to get soaked Carnes<lb/>
contended.<lb/>
Rosser believed the federal<lb/>
government will have to subsi-<lb/>
dize the program to keep it viable<lb/>
� something Dukakis says won't<lb/>
be necessary � but in the long run<lb/>
would deal "with the student loan<lb/>
default question in a very effec-<lb/>
tive way thus saving taxpayers<lb/>
millions of dollars.<lb/>
Because the government<lb/>
would take its payment directly<lb/>
out of grads' paychecks, the de-<lb/>
fault rate � at least theoretically<lb/>
� would be minimal.<lb/>
"It's nice that under this plan<lb/>
you can graduate and go into a<lb/>
low-paying job like teaching and<lb/>
nursing and not worry about<lb/>
paying off your loans said<lb/>
Lieberman. "We appreciate the<lb/>
creativity<lb/>
Yale University had a similar<lb/>
loan program for 3,600 students<lb/>
from 1972 to 1978, in which stu-<lb/>
dents could borrow a portion of<lb/>
their tuition from the school and<lb/>
begin repaying it after graduation<lb/>
at a rate of four-tenths of one per-<lb/>
cent � or $4 per year �- for each<lb/>
$1,000 borrowed.<lb/>
Dukakis's plan, by contrast,<lb/>
would have students repay their<lb/>
loans at a rate of $8 per year for<lb/>
every $1,000 borrowed.<lb/>
"We still think it's a plausible<lb/>
idea said Yale's Donald Routh,<lb/>
director of financial aid.<lb/>
Routh said Yale dropped the<lb/>
idea because it required massive<lb/>
amounts of capital to maintain it.<lb/>
Administrators figured it would<lb/>
take 17 years before payments<lb/>
would reduce the outstanding<lb/>
balance owed the university.<lb/>
Yet fears that students antici-<lb/>
pating a high income would not<lb/>
participate in such a program<lb/>
proved not to be true, Routh<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Carncs's own U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Education also has promoted an<lb/>
"income contingent loan" pro-<lb/>
gram, now being tested at 10<lb/>
campuses.<lb/>
In his last two federal college<lb/>
budget proposals, in fact, Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan asked Congress to<lb/>
replace virtually all Guaranteed<lb/>
Student Loans with income-con-<lb/>
tingent loans, but Congress, heed-<lb/>
ing educators' testimony that it<lb/>
was too early to tell if the idea is<lb/>
workable, opted for a pilot pro-<lb/>
gram instead.<lb/>
Under the Reagan plan, all<lb/>
borrowers would have to repay<lb/>
all the principal and interest they<lb/>
owed in a prescribed time.<lb/>
Under Dukakis's plan, loan<lb/>
repayments would come directly<lb/>
out of graduates' paychecks,<lb/>
much like their Social Security<lb/>
payments.<lb/>
Graduates would not have<lb/>
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repayments deducted from earn-<lb/>
ings over a certain cap, probably<lb/>
to be set somewhere between<lb/>
$50,000 and $100,000 a year.<lb/>
Graduates who borrowed<lb/>
$20,000 to get through college and<lb/>
earned, say, $20,000 would repay<lb/>
the government $500 in a year, or<lb/>
2.5 percent of their income.<lb/>
Students would take out the<lb/>
loans, which would be guaran-<lb/>
teed by the government, through<lb/>
banks.<lb/>
Aaron thought it intersting<lb/>
that Dukakis, who has trailed Re-<lb/>
publican presidential nominee<lb/>
George Bush in the polls since<lb/>
mid-August, unveiled the "sub-<lb/>
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�<lb/>
USA<lb/>
A LIC. OF POWER IOUSE GYM LICENSING ENT INC.<lb/>
DBA. POWERI IOUSE GYM, GREENVILLE, N.C<lb/>
FEATURING:<lb/>
FLEX 7000 LBS. FREE WTS.<lb/>
POLARIS CO-ED<lb/>
NAUTILUS OLYMPIC PLATFORM<lb/>
WORKOUT PROGRAMS<lb/>
DIET &amp; NUTRITION SUPPLEMENTS<lb/>
�<lb/>
4000 sq. ft Newly Remodeled Workout Area<lb/>
Use This Ad For 1 Free Workout<lb/>
$50<lb/>
Membership<lb/>
For Remainder Of Semester<lb/>
Hrs: M-F 10-9: Sat10-6; Sunl-6<lb/>
oOl�HOi,S<lb/>
m m<lb/>
1002 Evans St<lb/>
758-9584<lb/>
FOR EVfcfcYiWty<lb/>
For. adV sftDCiffis <lb/>
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flA&amp;F� CourM<lb/>
�<lb/>
sponsored ey<lb/>
potfT JUST WATCH<lb/>
IT HAPPCM.<lb/>
MrVC6 1T<lb/>
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C. o NNAl TTrl EL.<lb/>
STUDENT (JNION<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058096_0006"/><lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 27, 1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
mi<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Christian male<lb/>
roommate to share new mobile home. 10<lb/>
minutes from campus. Non-smoker,<lb/>
please. Weekends call Hugh 756-6851.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
Room semi-private. $130 a month. 12<lb/>
utilities. Call after 3:00 p.m. 830-9138.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1982 Buick Century Limited,<lb/>
AC, Cruise, PS, PB. High mileage but<lb/>
sharp; in good running condition. $2800.<lb/>
Call 758-7423 anytime.<lb/>
2 WATER BEDS: King &amp; Queen size, with<lb/>
heaters and side rails. $200.00 each. Call<lb/>
355-2764 anvtime.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 9 ft. cubic refrigerator � ice<lb/>
box. New, used 1 month (90.00! Sleeper-<lb/>
sofa, great condition (50.00). Call 758-<lb/>
9437.<lb/>
DODGE OMNI: 1979, 4 cylinder. FM<lb/>
AM stereo. Very good condition. 86,000<lb/>
miles. $1300 756-4329.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Papers, $1 50 per<lb/>
page. Resume's written and typed, $20.00<lb/>
Close to campus. Call Joy at 758-7423 be-<lb/>
tween 6 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
STUDENT TYPING SERVICES: Pro-<lb/>
gressive Solutions, Inc offers high-qual-<lb/>
ity, inexpensive word processing and<lb/>
other services for the student Our high<lb/>
speed laser printing systems yield the<lb/>
highest possible quality in the shortest<lb/>
length of time. Rates start at $2.00 per<lb/>
page, and include paper and computer-<lb/>
ized spelling check. We also offer<lb/>
Resume' production, and other business<lb/>
TYTINC, TYPING, TYPING: Real cheap<lb/>
ffordable Rates! Call 752-5084.<lb/>
and professional services. Call 757-3111<lb/>
M-F 11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. for more de-<lb/>
tails!<lb/>
QUALIFIED TUTORING: in Latin &amp;<lb/>
French. Call 758-7592.<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/>
DWI7 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 trie best music available for par-<lb/>
ties dance, top 40 &amp; beach. Call 355-2781,<lb/>
ask for Morgan.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND DESKTOP<lb/>
PUBLISHING: Reports, Resumes, etc.<lb/>
Rush jobs accepted. Call 752-1933.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
galleria<lb/>
FULL TIME<lb/>
Positions<lb/>
Now Open!<lb/>
We are looking for responsible<lb/>
individuals who enjoy RE-<lb/>
TAIL SALES. You must be<lb/>
willing to work hard! Desire a<lb/>
career, not just a job? Galleria<lb/>
offer the chance for advance-<lb/>
ment!<lb/>
Call for Appt.<lb/>
756-0700<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
PLEDGES OF TRI SIGMA: Now the sus-<lb/>
pense is over, big sis week is through, we<lb/>
all had so much fun and we hope that you<lb/>
did too. Giving you gifts and surprises,<lb/>
without giving our names away, it was<lb/>
hard, but you all are great girls, and we're<lb/>
glad that your Sigmas to stay! Love the<lb/>
sisters.<lb/>
KAPPA SIG'S: Can't wait to get started<lb/>
on the Homecoming float. The Sigmas.<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI BETA<lb/>
LAMBDA'S: I just wanted to tell all of you<lb/>
that I think you're great. We're going to<lb/>
have a fantastic semester! Keep up the<lb/>
enthusiasm! Feelin' Kinda Mellow. Your.<lb/>
"PT" � Heidi.<lb/>
IF ANYONE HAS FOUND: A gold signet<lb/>
ring with the initials TAM (in that order),<lb/>
in Mcndenhall Student Center contact<lb/>
Thorn Atkinson at 758-9155.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
WE THANK EVERYONE: For his and<lb/>
her kindness and sympathy last week.<lb/>
Your thoughtfulness is greatly appreci-<lb/>
ated. Love Alpha Delta Pi.<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA PI: Hope you all have a<lb/>
good week. The Sigmas.<lb/>
AZD: We had a great time with you all at<lb/>
the picnic. Looking forward to doing<lb/>
something again soon. The Sigmas.<lb/>
YO BABIES: Here's a little encourage-<lb/>
ment to keep up the good work out on the<lb/>
field. Let's continue, to show them that the<lb/>
Delta Zeta's can't be beat!<lb/>
STEPHEN AND LEE: Hope you boys had<lb/>
fun hitting the big 21. Downtown �<lb/>
beware! Love ya, Judy and Kristi.<lb/>
SUSAN AND LESLIE: Hey, you sexy<lb/>
girls � I've been watching you! LHW.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
BUS DRIVER:<lb/>
Needed to deliver<lb/>
children to and from a<lb/>
private school, Monday<lb/>
thru Friday, from 7:00<lb/>
a.m. to 9:00 a.m<lb/>
and from 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
to 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
If you desire part-time<lb/>
earnings of $6.00 to $6.50<lb/>
per hour, then contact<lb/>
Lynn Branch at 752-7444.<lb/>
Experience Preferred.<lb/>
EL-TOftO<lb/>
MENS HAIRSTYLING<lb/>
STYLE CUT 700<lb/>
WALK-INS WELCOME<lb/>
20 YEARS OF SERVING ECU<lb/>
2 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS<lb/>
Eastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
;Across from Highway Patrol Station)<lb/>
IJrhlnd Car Quest Auto Parts<lb/>
2800 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
NEW DELI: Wants you to jam with the<lb/>
best. Come welcome UNCLE GREEN on<lb/>
Thursday, you will love the original tunes<lb/>
from their albums. Don't miss THE<lb/>
BOND Friday, and jam hard with BAD<lb/>
BOB &amp; THE ROCKING HORSES Satur-<lb/>
day. Don't forget Open Mike Wednes-<lb/>
days.<lb/>
WOULD YOU LIKE TO HA VE A: Daddy<lb/>
Earth Cruiser, you can, just buy a raffle<lb/>
ticket from a Pika.<lb/>
SISTERS OF ALPHA DELTA PI: We feel<lb/>
great sorrow for your loss and express our<lb/>
condolences. With Love, The Brothers of<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE OFFI-<lb/>
CERS OF AOPI'S BETA LAMBDA'S:<lb/>
Pres. � Chris Saleeby; V-Pres. � Caroline<lb/>
Haire; Treas.� Heather Hatch; Sec �<lb/>
Amy Pfrommer; Social Chrmn. � Shan-<lb/>
non Fowler; Phil. � Kathy Bowen; PR.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
� All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
�And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
�Located Near ECU<lb/>
� Across From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
$325 a month<lb/>
Contact J T or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 or 430-1937<lb/>
Office open - Apt 8,12 - 530 p m.<lb/>
�AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clean and quiet 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 RENTAIS - couples or<lb/>
singles. Apartment and mobile homes in Ayalea<lb/>
Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.<lb/>
Contact J.T or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 '<lb/>
� Kelli MacWelch, Fundraising � Missy<lb/>
Ellis; Historian � Torry Davidson; Chap-<lb/>
lain � Meredith Grogan; Jr Panhellenic �<lb/>
Jo Brooks, Sarah Metcalf, Kim Wood and<lb/>
Amy Huber. Have a great semester! Love,<lb/>
the sisters of AOPi.<lb/>
DON'T MISS THE TREBLE MAN1AX:<lb/>
Appeanng at Susie's Treehouse Wednes-<lb/>
day, Sept, 28 Party Rock &amp; Roll by REM,<lb/>
U2, Hoodo Gurus, etc.<lb/>
BARB BOND: I am so excited to have you<lb/>
as my little sister We will have tons of fun<lb/>
together. Good luck with pledging and<lb/>
remember you're my special pledge<lb/>
Love, Your Big Sister Lisa Reucher<lb/>
ANYONE GOING TO PITTSBURGH? I<lb/>
need a ride anytime � but especially for<lb/>
Fall Break. Will pay 12 gas. Call after<lb/>
noons 355-0711.<lb/>
SUSAN: Happy B-day sweetheart � I<lb/>
love you Tommy.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<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 SaL Low<lb/>
Cost Termination to 20 wee.ka of preuirvcy<lb/>
 1-800-433-2930<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
jINTVFRSITY UNIONS<lb/>
Season tickets are now on sale for the Per-<lb/>
forming Arts Series at ECU. This year<lb/>
there are 14 outstanding performances<lb/>
starting in Oct and running through<lb/>
April. Some of the attractions include:<lb/>
Wynton Marsalis, CABARET, The Acting<lb/>
Company in Love's Labour's Lost, Nadja<lb/>
Salerno-Sonnenberg, The Tokyo String<lb/>
Quartet, Oregon, The Atlanta Symphony,<lb/>
and the Ohio Ballet. For a free brochure,<lb/>
and further details contact: The Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, Mendenhall 757-6611, ext.<lb/>
266. .<lb/>
NEW ARRIVALS<lb/>
The MSC Music Listening Lounge has<lb/>
received the following selections on com-<lb/>
pact disc: Aerosmith�Permanent Vaca-<lb/>
tion; Wynton Marsalis�Standard Time;<lb/>
INXS� Kick; Ahmad Jamal�Crystal;<lb/>
Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg; Sinead<lb/>
O'Connor�The Lion and the Cobra; REO<lb/>
Speedwagon�Life as We Know It. The<lb/>
Music Listening Lounge is open seven<lb/>
days a week from 2-10:30 p.m. and is<lb/>
located on the second floor gallery of<lb/>
Mendenhall. Check out the new runes<lb/>
before you buy<lb/>
PRE-P.T. STUDENTS<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/>
Dept. Office, 1st floor, Belk Bldg before<lb/>
the end of Sept. to determine eligibility.<lb/>
Instructions for receiving the application<lb/>
packet will be given then. If you have any<lb/>
question, contact that office by phone<lb/>
(757-6961, ext. 261) or in person.<lb/>
WINDSURFING<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural<lb/>
Windsurfing registration meeting held<lb/>
from Sept. 6-27. Now you can surf the<lb/>
waters and learn the technique in this fun<lb/>
filled trip.<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 a group<lb/>
listing with the name of every person in<lb/>
the photograph MUST be presented BE-<lb/>
FORE the photographer films the group.<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS WITHOUT LIST-<lb/>
INGS WILL NOT BE PHOTOGRAPHED,<lb/>
and time does not permit the scheduling<lb/>
of another session. Call 757-6501 and<lb/>
leave date it time for the photo to be taken.<lb/>
Please give two days notice for the pho-<lb/>
tographer.<lb/>
OVERSEAS DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
NETWORK<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? Overseas Development has<lb/>
the perfect opportunity. Call Marianne<lb/>
Exum (h) 830-9450 or (w) 757-6271 for<lb/>
application and more details. Application<lb/>
deadline Oct. 1.<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
Cooperative Education, a free service of<lb/>
fered by the University, is designed to<lb/>
help you find career-related work experi-<lb/>
ence before vou graduate. We would like<lb/>
to extend an invitation to all students to<lb/>
attend a Co-op Information Seminar in the<lb/>
GCB . The only bonuses we can offer you<lb/>
for taking time from your busy schedule<lb/>
are:<lb/>
�extra cash to help cover the cost of college<lb/>
expenses or perhaps to increase your<lb/>
"fun" budget,<lb/>
�opportunities to test a career choice if you<lb/>
have made one or to explore career op-<lb/>
tions if undecided about a future career,<lb/>
and<lb/>
a highly "marketable" degree, which<lb/>
includes a valuable career-related experi-<lb/>
ence, when you graduate.<lb/>
Come by to see us today!<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Christian Fellowship will be held every<lb/>
Thurs. at 6:00 in the Culture Center. You<lb/>
are invited to join us in lifting up the name<lb/>
of Jesus in songs and Bible study. God<lb/>
Bless You.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
study for Fall Semester andor Spring<lb/>
Semester, you are encouraged to contact<lb/>
the Co-op office about off-campus place-<lb/>
ments. Call 757-6979 or come by the GCB,<lb/>
room 2028.<lb/>
ECU STUDENT BANK<lb/>
Faculty, staff, and students may now pay<lb/>
their 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/>
Something missing in your life? We've<lb/>
found it and we want to share it with you.<lb/>
Jenkins Art Auditorium. EVERY Fri. night<lb/>
at 7:00.<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 Fri. night at 7:00 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
Practices are in full swing. Come to the<lb/>
bottom of College Hill every Tues<lb/>
Thurs and Sun. at 5:00. New players are<lb/>
more than welcome. Join the team that<lb/>
tied for 5th place last year at Collegiate<lb/>
Nationals in Santa Barbara, Ca.<lb/>
NEW STUDENT REVIEWS<lb/>
Anyone who purchased New Student<lb/>
Review this summer, should come by the<lb/>
Buccaneer, yearbook, office and pick<lb/>
them up. The office is located in front of<lb/>
Joyner Library, on the second floor of the<lb/>
Publications Bldg. You may pick the book<lb/>
up between 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. and from 2<lb/>
p.m. to 5 p.m. this week and next week.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The new executive officers of the National<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi Honor Society are Sherry<lb/>
Campbell, Kathy McHate, ludy Wilson,<lb/>
Suzanne Black, Kevin Sullivan, Stacy<lb/>
Truett and Stacie Scales The next meeting<lb/>
will be the 27th of Sept in Jenkins Audito-<lb/>
rium.<lb/>
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
Amnesty International will meet Wed<lb/>
Sept. 28 at 8 p.m at St. Paul's Episcopal<lb/>
Church, 401 E. 4th St in the upper floor<lb/>
Students welcome.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The National Gamma Beta Phi Society<lb/>
will meet Sept. 27 at 8 p.m. in Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium. Attendance is required.<lb/>
Don't forget to bring your nickels.<lb/>
AMA<lb/>
The AMA will be holding its second<lb/>
meeting Thurs Sept. 29 at 3:30. This<lb/>
meeting will be held in room 1031 of the<lb/>
GCB. Our guest speaker will be Craig<lb/>
Quick from Pitt Memorial. He will be<lb/>
speaking about marketing health care. All<lb/>
interested are welcome and old members<lb/>
are encouraged to attend.<lb/>
KAYAKINGCANOE<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Kayak-<lb/>
ingCanoe registration held from Sept. 15<lb/>
to Oct. 7. Learn to canoe and kayak in a<lb/>
fantastic trip. All you need to do is regis-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Bowling<lb/>
registration meeting held Oct. 4 at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. in GCB 1026. Play begins shortly<lb/>
afterwards! Be sure to register as soon as<lb/>
possible for some in the alleys!<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
To all students with a 3.0 gpa or better:<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi is having an orientation<lb/>
meetingOct.4&amp;5at7p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
room 244. If you're interested, please<lb/>
come by.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY UNIONS<lb/>
The Ohio Ballet will intiate the 1988-89<lb/>
Performing Art Series on Oct. 12 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium. The program for<lb/>
the evening includes: "Un titled" (first<lb/>
performed by PHILOBOLUS in 1975),<lb/>
"Summer Night" (choreographed by<lb/>
Heinz Poll), "Gravity" (a new work by<lb/>
Laura Dean), "Triptych" (choreographed<lb/>
by Heinz Poll to Mendelssohn's "Piano<lb/>
Concerto No. 2, D Minor). Tickets for this<lb/>
outstanding event are now on sale in the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center, 757-6611, ext. 266. This event<lb/>
is sponsored by the Performing Arts<lb/>
The Buswell Parnas-Luvisi Trio will open<lb/>
the 1988-89 Chamber Music Series on Oct.<lb/>
3, at 8 p.m. in I lendrix Theatre. Composed<lb/>
of James Buswell (violinist), Leslie Parnas<lb/>
(cellist), and Lee I uvisipianist). Their<lb/>
program includes: 1 laydn's � "Trio in G<lb/>
Major Zaninelli's � "Arioso Brahm's<lb/>
� Trio in C Minor. Op. 101 and<lb/>
Beethoven's � 'Trio in B-flat Major, Op.<lb/>
97" (The Archduke). Tickets are now on<lb/>
sale for this event in the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhall Student Center, 757-<lb/>
6611, ext 266. This event is co-sponsored<lb/>
bv the School of Music and the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Univeristy Unions.<lb/>
SPANISH CLUB<lb/>
Will have a meeting on Sept. 28 in confer-<lb/>
ence room of Foreign Language Dept. in<lb/>
GCB at 3 p.m.<lb/>
STAR SEARCH<lb/>
Star Search '88. ECU Gospel Choir will be<lb/>
holding auditions for interested students<lb/>
on Sept. 28 in Ledonia Wright Cultural<lb/>
Center at 5 p.m. There will be a $5 entry fee<lb/>
due at time of audition. Everyone wel-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
RESUME WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement Serv-<lb/>
ice in the Bloxton House is offering these<lb/>
one hour programs on beginning a res-<lb/>
ume for your job search. Handouts and<lb/>
samples will be given out to the first 20<lb/>
people to come to each session. No sign up<lb/>
required. These sessions are held in the<lb/>
Career Planning Room on Sept. 28 at 3<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
INTERVIEWING WORKSHOP<lb/>
To help ECU people prepare for on and off<lb/>
campus interviews, the Career Planning<lb/>
and Placement Service in te Bloxton<lb/>
House is offering these one hour pro-<lb/>
grams to aid you in developing better<lb/>
interviewing skills for use in your job<lb/>
search. The program is open to the first 20<lb/>
people to come for each session. No sign<lb/>
up is required. These sessions are held in<lb/>
the Career Planning Placement Room on<lb/>
Sept. 29 at 3 p.m.<lb/>
S.A.M.<lb/>
S.A.M. meeting Sept. 28, 3:30 p.m GCB<lb/>
1026 Speaker will be Lisa Daniel, Person-<lb/>
nel Director for the Northeast Region,<lb/>
Wachovia Bank. Her topic will be Man-<lb/>
agement Development Programs. Mem-<lb/>
bers are encouraged to attend and guests<lb/>
are welcome.<lb/>
Committee and the Department of Uni-<lb/>
versity Unions.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY UNIONS<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS<lb/>
Expressions is now accepting poetry and<lb/>
short stories for the December issue. The<lb/>
magazine is published twice a semester<lb/>
with the first issue coming out in October.<lb/>
This special issue will be a small magazine<lb/>
with mainly general information,<lb/>
whereas the December issue will be a<lb/>
larger size containing news stories, short<lb/>
stories, editorials, poetry, etc Articles<lb/>
may be left at the office or at the Media<lb/>
Board Secretary's Office in the Publica-<lb/>
tions Building.<lb/>
FILMS COMMITTFF<lb/>
The Student Union Films Committee<lb/>
presents "Monty Pythons Flying Circus<lb/>
on Sept 28. "Life of Brian will show at 8<lb/>
p.m in Hendnx theater followed by "The<lb/>
Meaning of Life" at 10 p.m These show-<lb/>
ings are free to all ECU students with valid<lb/>
ID and faculty with film passes.<lb/>
FATAL ATTRACTION<lb/>
Fatal Attraction will be playing Thur. thru<lb/>
Sunday at 8 p.m. in I lendrix Theater. This<lb/>
is free to all ECU students with valid ID<lb/>
and faculty with film passes. Sponsored<lb/>
by Student Union Films Committee.<lb/>
WATER BASKETBALL<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural CO-REC<lb/>
water basketball registration meeting<lb/>
held Oct 4 at 6pm in MG 102 Play begins<lb/>
shortly afterward. Interested in officiat-<lb/>
ing? Attend the first official clinic Oct. 4 at<lb/>
6:30 p.m. in MG 102 For additional info<lb/>
call Dave Hall at 757-6387.<lb/>
1-ON-l BASKETBALL<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural 1-on-l<lb/>
basketball registration meeting held Oct.<lb/>
5 at 5 p.m. in MG 102. Play begins shortly<lb/>
afterwards. Be sure to register as soon as<lb/>
possible to see who is the next Michael<lb/>
Jordan.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI OMEGA<lb/>
The co-ed National Service Fraternity,<lb/>
proudly announces and congratulates the<lb/>
Fall 1988 Pledge Class: Yolanda Arroy,<lb/>
Tammy Blake, Rodney Dancy, Mark<lb/>
Dyer, Tracey Eason, Dennis Gardner,<lb/>
Rana Harris, Sean Herring, David Konne-<lb/>
gay, Bill Mitchell, Tom Mitchell, Lisa<lb/>
Moffat, David Overton, Stephen Parker,<lb/>
Beth Sedberry, Todd Stewart, Jennifer<lb/>
Terrell, Marti Wilson, and Don Witham.<lb/>
WES2FEL<lb/>
Wes2fel is a Christian fellowship which<lb/>
welcomes all students, and is sponsored<lb/>
jointly by the Presbyterian and Methodist<lb/>
Campus Ministries. Come to the Method-<lb/>
ist Student Center (501 E 5th, across from<lb/>
Garrett dorm) this Wed. at 5 p.m. and<lb/>
every Wed. night for a home cooked meal.<lb/>
This week we will worship before we eat<lb/>
The meal is $2 at the door, $1.50 if you sign<lb/>
up in advance. Call 758-2030 for reserva-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
BANNER CONTEST<lb/>
To participate in the banner contest, dur-<lb/>
ing NATIONAL ALCOHOL AWARE-<lb/>
NESS WEEK, register your organizations<lb/>
entry, in 209 Whichard Building by Oct.<lb/>
14. Six divisional 1st place winners will be<lb/>
displayed during the ECU vs Syracuse<lb/>
game and be awarded $50 Call 757-6823<lb/>
for entry forms and additional informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
COLLEGE DEMOCRATS<lb/>
Students for Dukakis and College Demo-<lb/>
crats will hold an organizational meeting<lb/>
on Sept. 29 at 8:lb p m in Mendenhall<lb/>
Room 221.<lb/>
CROPWALK 88<lb/>
Any individuals or groups interested in<lb/>
participating in the 7th annual Cropwalk<lb/>
for hunger should attend the ECU Re-<lb/>
cruitment Rally Oct. 6 at 7 p.m. in room<lb/>
244 Mendenhall. The walk will be held on<lb/>
Nov. 6th. For more information contact<lb/>
Marianne Exum (ODN) 757-6271 or 830-<lb/>
9430.<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
Intramural independent representative<lb/>
meeting Sept. 29 at 5:30 p.m. in Memorial<lb/>
Gym 105-C. Help the intramural inde-<lb/>
pendent division grow! Your ideas are<lb/>
needed For additional info call 757-6387<lb/>
NURSING STUDENTS<lb/>
In order to receive your nursing pin by De-<lb/>
cember, 1988, orders must be placed in the<lb/>
Student Stores, Wright Building, no later<lb/>
than Oct. 3. Orders should be placed at the<lb/>
Jewelry Counter Orders must be paid in<lb/>
full when the order is placed<lb/>
EARLY CHILDHOOD CLUB<lb/>
All early childhood club members are<lb/>
reminded of the fashion show on how to<lb/>
dress professionally at the next meeting<lb/>
on Sept. 28 at 4 p.m. in Speight 129.<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
The Student Council for Exceptional Chil-<lb/>
dren will hold ameeting on Oct. 3at 5pm<lb/>
in Sp 103. Everyone is welcome to attend<lb/>
PRODUCTIONS COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student Union Productions Commit-<lb/>
tee is accepting applications for members<lb/>
to serve on the Committee. If interested, or<lb/>
for more info call 757-6611 ext. 210 Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Office, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE<lb/>
Business students interested in scholar-<lb/>
ships should secure forms from one of the<lb/>
following dept offices: Accounting �<lb/>
GCB 3208, Decision Sciences � 3418, Fi-<lb/>
nance � 3420, Management � 3106,<lb/>
Marketing � 3414. All applications must<lb/>
be submitted to Ruth Jones (GCB 3210),<lb/>
Chairman of School of Business Scholar-<lb/>
ship Committee, by Oct. 14. Students may<lb/>
apply for one or more of the scholarships<lb/>
listed below. Ranters Bank Scholarship (3<lb/>
' at $1000 each), University Book Exchange<lb/>
( 2 at $500 each), NCNB ($500), J. Fred<lb/>
Hamblen ($200) Credit Women Interna-<lb/>
tional ($200), Cameron-BrownFirst<lb/>
Union Scholarship (3 at $500 each), FOR<lb/>
ACCOUNTING MAJORS ONLY: Latney<lb/>
W. Pittard Memorial, Raleigh-Durham<lb/>
Chapter Institute of Internal Auditors<lb/>
($350), National Association of Account-<lb/>
ants - Eastern Carolina Chapter Scholar-<lb/>
ship ($500) DECISION SCIENCES MA-<lb/>
JOR ONLY: Grant for Decision Sciences<lb/>
Majors ($125), FINANCE MAJORS<lb/>
ONLY: Archie R. Bumette ($600), Ward<lb/>
Real Estate Scholarship ($300).<lb/>
Single vote keeps minimum wage from increasing to $3.55<lb/>
a achimctom (AP) hr.aW thplnonAm Dpmorratir narine down bv about half the below the current $335 floor. 100th Congress is to end bv Oct. specified number of<lb/>
S<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) �<lb/>
Only one vote - and possibly a<lb/>
few federal judgeships - are<lb/>
stopping Senate Democrats<lb/>
from shutting off a Republican<lb/>
filibuster and passing the first<lb/>
increase in the $3.35 hourly<lb/>
minimum wage since 1981.<lb/>
But having lost two cloture<lb/>
votes last week in trying to<lb/>
break the logjam, Democratic<lb/>
leaders were unwilling to<lb/>
schedule a third attempt until<lb/>
after Sunday night's debate be-<lb/>
tween presidential candidates<lb/>
George Bush and Michael<lb/>
Dukakis.<lb/>
Republican leaders following<lb/>
a White House-directed legisla-<lb/>
tive strategy are insisting on<lb/>
paring down by about half the<lb/>
$1.20 increase in the minimum<lb/>
wage that Democrats would like<lb/>
to implement over a three-year<lb/>
period.<lb/>
The Republicans also want to<lb/>
couple the increase to a new 90-<lb/>
day, 85 percent subminimum<lb/>
wage for newly hired workers,<lb/>
as long as no one would fall<lb/>
below the current $335 floor.<lb/>
The minimum wage bill is<lb/>
one of several facing an impa-<lb/>
tient Congressmen eager to ad-<lb/>
journ to hit the fall campaign<lb/>
trail.<lb/>
Senate Majority Leader<lb/>
Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va has<lb/>
warned senators to be prepared<lb/>
for Saturday sessions if the<lb/>
100th Congress is to end by Oct.<lb/>
16 � a date two weeks beyond<lb/>
the original target date for fin-<lb/>
ishing business.<lb/>
Behind the scenes, GOP lead-<lb/>
ers are holding the minimum<lb/>
wage bill hostage while trying<lb/>
to win a commitment from<lb/>
Democratic leaders to act before<lb/>
Congress adjourns on an un-<lb/>
specified number of the 29 fed-<lb/>
eral judicial nominations that<lb/>
President Reagan has sent to<lb/>
Capitol Hill.<lb/>
GOP leaders, however, were<lb/>
confident that no more mem-<lb/>
bers in their party would break<lb/>
ranks and suggested that a few<lb/>
might even switch back.<lb/>
Mend<lb/>
By JIM SHAMLIN<lb/>
�ull Writer<lb/>
Tomorrow night, Mendi<lb/>
hall Student Center <lb/>
double-shot of Engli<lb/>
Showing in Hendrix 'it it r wi<lb/>
bo 'The Life of Brian" �<lb/>
by "The Meaning ol Life<lb/>
films are products<lb/>
(Monty) Pictures, Inc<lb/>
TheMontyP) tl<lb/>
already attracted a<lb/>
in the United StaU s<lb/>
panded when MTV I<lb/>
ing their halt-hour sh<lb/>
Python FlvingOr<lb/>
weekly. John Cici<lb/>
Pal in, two of its fon<lb/>
bers, recently<lb/>
office hit "A Fish<lb/>
Those unfamiliar<lb/>
group should pr<lb/>
Over-ex<lb/>
prematu<lb/>
NEW YORK ,P<lb/>
who exercise enouj I <lb/>
their menstrual pi i<lb/>
fer an irreversibl<lb/>
in their bones that could<lb/>
serious fractures or a �<lb/>
mature aging, ru<lb/>
gest.<lb/>
A 24-year h<lb/>
periods are irregular car<lb/>
bones of a 50-year- I<lb/>
Charles H.Chesnu I<lb/>
sity of Washington<lb/>
loss has occurred <lb/>
there's very little u<lb/>
it<lb/>
The bone loss<lb/>
tentially serious spina<lb/>
and to less serious fracrt<lb/>
that will keep worn<lb/>
cising.<lb/>
Women can n gaii<lb/>
periods bv rediK<lb/>
exercise, but the I<lb/>
to fullv recover, said Chestnut.<lb/>
Recreational athk<lb/>
women who are just tryii i<lb/>
fit don't suffer disruj <lb/>
ods.<lb/>
The loss r<lb/>
menstrual periods know n<lb/>
callv as amenorrhea. o, 1<lb/>
J �<lb/>
in runners c i lists s<lb/>
and ballet dancers, sa<lb/>
Loucks, a research i I<lb/>
istat the Univ. j<lb/>
San Diego, and<lb/>
the effect of exercise oi<lb/>
Researchers don't kr . <lb/>
intense exercise a I<lb/>
periods. "Most people think I<lb/>
probablv a combinal<lb/>
tors said Barbara . -<lb/>
an exercise a<lb/>
physiologist at the Pa j<lb/>
cal Center in Seattle v<lb/>
Biden<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) J<lb/>
seph Biden says he<lb/>
strength and confidence from<lb/>
knowledge that he survived a"<lb/>
threatening brain aneun, sm<lb/>
"Instead ot making me<lb/>
that now there's a great urge<lb/>
about what I must do wi th my <lb/>
it had the opposite effect 1<lb/>
serene the Delaware DertxW<lb/>
said in the Oct. 3 issue of Peo<lb/>
4<lb/>
UB40, pictured here, will be <lb/>
album. The eight Englishm<lb/>
great hits are such songs as'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058096_0007"/><lb/>
fr<lb/>
n<lb/>
IC ih Mac Welch, Fundraising � Missy<lb/>
I listorian � Torrv Davidson, Chap-<lb/>
Meredith Grogan; Ir Panhellenic �<lb/>
 oks arah Metcalf, kirn Wood and<lb/>
n hiber la e a great semester! Love,<lb/>
asters or AOPi.<lb/>
.1 MISS THE TREBLE MANIAX:<lb/>
� j at susu- S Treehouse Wednes-<lb/>
28 Part) Rock A Roll bv REM,<lb/>
eurus, etc.<lb/>
RB BOND amso excited to have you<lb/>
tittle asta Wo will have tons of fun<lb/>
I etna Good luck with pledging and<lb/>
nbex you're im special pledge.<lb/>
iv our Big Sister Lisa Reucher.<lb/>
ONl c.OINC TO PITTSBURGH? I<lb/>
� anytime � but especially for<lb/>
ik WU1 pa I 2 gas Call aftcr-<lb/>
'11.<lb/>
swivt heart<lb/>
ISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
I i Mfuiential 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/>
men) Mon thru Sat- Low<lb/>
��rki of pregnancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
r Mendenhall<lb/>
CROP WALK 88<lb/>
r groups interested in<lb/>
g  the 7A annual Gropwalk<lb/>
unger should attend the ECU Re-<lb/>
rtt Ra � Ocl t at 7 p.m. in room<lb/>
ill The walk will be held on<lb/>
I 6th For more information contact<lb/>
Exum (ODN) 757-6271 or 830-<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
imural independent representative<lb/>
ingS pt 29 at 5 30 p m in Memorial<lb/>
Help the intramural tnde-<lb/>
� vision grow' Your ideas are<lb/>
r additional info call 757-6387.<lb/>
NLRSING STUDENTS<lb/>
receive v our nursing pin by De-<lb/>
ber 1988, orders must be placed in the<lb/>
lent Stores, Wright Building, no later<lb/>
� I 1 Orders should be placed at the<lb/>
untei Orders must be paid in<lb/>
: the order is placed.<lb/>
RL CHILDHOOD CLUB<lb/>
.v childhood club members are<lb/>
femindod of the fashion show on how to<lb/>
ss professionally at the next meeting<lb/>
sept 2 at 4 p m in Speight 129.<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
I Council for Exceptional Chil-<lb/>
d will hold a meeting on Oct. 3 at 5 pm.<lb/>
3 E ervone is welcome to attend.<lb/>
I PRODUCTIONS COMMITTEE<lb/>
E Student Union Productions Commit-<lb/>
is accepting applications for members<lb/>
ten eon the Committee. If interested, or<lb/>
more info call 757-6611 ext. 210 Stu-<lb/>
nt Union Office, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE<lb/>
ss students interested in scholar-<lb/>
should M-cure forms from one of the<lb/>
pi offices Accounting �<lb/>
CiCB 32 - Decision Sciences � 3418, Fi-<lb/>
3420, Management � 3106,<lb/>
Marketing � 3414. All applications must<lb/>
be submitted to Ruth Jones (CCB 3210),<lb/>
ran of School of Business Scholar-<lb/>
ommirtee, bv Oct. 14. Students may<lb/>
r r one a more of the scholarships<lb/>
listed below Planters Bank Scholarship (3<lb/>
� (Oeach), University Book Exchange<lb/>
I 2 at S500 each), NCNB (S500), J. Fred<lb/>
I famblen CS200) Credit Women Interna-<lb/>
(S200), Cameron-BrownFirst<lb/>
I mon Scholarship (3 at $500 each), FOR<lb/>
T1NG MAJORS ONLY: Latney<lb/>
W Pittard Memorial, Raleigh-Durham<lb/>
ipter Institute of Internal Auditors<lb/>
National Association of Account-<lb/>
ants - Eastern Carolina Chapter Scholar-<lb/>
ship (S500) DECISION SCIENCES MA-<lb/>
JOR ONLY: Grant for Decision Sciences<lb/>
Majors ($125), FINANCE MAJORS<lb/>
NLY Archie R. Bumette (5600), Ward<lb/>
cal Estate Scholarship (5300)<lb/>
$3.55<lb/>
specified number of the 29 fed-<lb/>
ral judicial nominations that<lb/>
resident Reagan has sent to<lb/>
apitol Hi<lb/>
GOP leaders, however, were<lb/>
�confident that no more mem-<lb/>
bers in their party would break<lb/>
ranks and suggested that a few<lb/>
�might even switch back.<lb/>
<lb/>
� 4<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
THE EASTt AROI INJAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 27, 1988 Page 7<lb/>
Mendenhall to show two Python movies<lb/>
ByJIMSHAMLIN<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
Tomorrow night, Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center hosts a<lb/>
double-shot of English satire:<lb/>
Showing in Hcndrix Theater will<lb/>
be 'The Life of Brian" followed<lb/>
bv"The Meaning of Life Both plans to see<lb/>
tion. MTV's introduction to their<lb/>
scries includes a warning: to be random silliness, when there<lb/>
"Monty Python's Flying Circus" is actually a deeper, more intcllec-<lb/>
has been proven to be an effective tual meaning,<lb/>
tool in the offending of the easily<lb/>
offended. So, if you're one of The first film, "The Life of<lb/>
them, do us both a favor, and Brian" precedes "The Last Temp-<lb/>
don't watch tation of Christ" in poking fun of<lb/>
Two things anyone who Christian mythology. It follows<lb/>
the show should Brian, a poor young man who had<lb/>
tools, much of the plot will seem allels with modern society.<lb/>
After that, "The Meaning of<lb/>
Life" will be screened. This film<lb/>
takes the audience on a whimsical<lb/>
stroll through history, laughing<lb/>
all the way. Monty Python makes<lb/>
fun of the stupidity of the stone-<lb/>
age man, feudal lords, and the<lb/>
modem consumer, covering the<lb/>
entire history of the search for the<lb/>
meaning of this awkward thing<lb/>
called 'life' in less than two hours.<lb/>
The double-feature begins at<lb/>
8pm and should last between<lb/>
three and four hours. Although it<lb/>
is worth admission at any price,<lb/>
the show is free to all students<lb/>
with ID card and activity sticker.<lb/>
films are products of Python<lb/>
Alontv) Pictures, Inc.<lb/>
The Monty Python troupe has is always sniping at some political<lb/>
already attracted a cult following faction, and usually with amazing<lb/>
bring: First, a brain, preferrably the misfortune of being born in<lb/>
one which is sharp. Monty Python Jerusalem on Christmas day, 0<lb/>
in the United States, which ex-<lb/>
panded when MTV began show-<lb/>
ing their half-hour show, Monty<lb/>
Python Flying Circus, eight times<lb/>
weekly. John Cleese and Michael<lb/>
Palin, two o its foremost mem-<lb/>
bers, recently starred in the box-<lb/>
office hit "A Fish Called Wanda<lb/>
Those unfamiliar with the<lb/>
group should proceed with cau-<lb/>
subtlety. No country is safe and<lb/>
no religion sacred when the cam-<lb/>
era is rolling.<lb/>
Second, a general knowledge<lb/>
of English humor and society.<lb/>
Since they are an English group, a<lb/>
great portion of their material<lb/>
deals with British culture and in-<lb/>
tellect. Without these two vital<lb/>
AD. From the moment of hisbirth<lb/>
to his unfortunate crucifixion, he<lb/>
is mistaken for the messiah with<lb/>
hilarious results. Most of the<lb/>
Mother not bitter because of son's<lb/>
accidental contraction of AIDS<lb/>
DURHAM (AP) - Matthew's<lb/>
mother says she is not bitter that<lb/>
her 8-year-old son acquired AIDS<lb/>
Over-exercising can cause<lb/>
premature aging in women<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Women<lb/>
who exercise enough to disrupt<lb/>
their menstrual periods may suf-<lb/>
fer an irreversible loss of strength<lb/>
in their bones that could lead to<lb/>
serious fractures or a kind of pre-<lb/>
mature aging, new studies sug-<lb/>
gest.<lb/>
A 24-year-old woman whose<lb/>
periods are irregular can have the<lb/>
bones of a 50-year-old, said Dr.<lb/>
Charles H. Chesnut of the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Washington. "Once that<lb/>
loss has occurred, it appears<lb/>
there's very little we can do about<lb/>
it<lb/>
The bone loss can lead to po-<lb/>
iaborated with Chesnut.<lb/>
"I low much of the problem is<lb/>
due to exercise, how much is due<lb/>
to nutrition, how much is due to<lb/>
psycholooical stress 1 don't think<lb/>
anyone can say with certainty<lb/>
Estimates of the frequency<lb/>
vary widely, said Loucks, with<lb/>
some researchers reporting the<lb/>
problem in only a few percent of<lb/>
athletes and others reporting<lb/>
some disruption of periods in as<lb/>
many as 40 percent of women<lb/>
atnletes.<lb/>
Chestnut said the women he<lb/>
and Drinkwater studied did not<lb/>
pothesis.<lb/>
Women who have lost their<lb/>
periods do not produce as much<lb/>
of the female sex hormone estro-<lb/>
gen, which leads to calcium loss.<lb/>
So the researchers assume that<lb/>
exercise-related bone loss is due<lb/>
to the low estrogen levels in the<lb/>
amenorrheic athletes Loucks<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The same thing haopens after<lb/>
menopause, leading to the disor-<lb/>
der called osteoporosis, charac-<lb/>
terized by loss of calcium and<lb/>
fragile bones.<lb/>
Loucks said the underlying<lb/>
per week or more. (That thrcsh-<lb/>
hold varies from one individual to<lb/>
the next, he said.)<lb/>
"We want to be very sure that<lb/>
people don't get the idea that<lb/>
exercise causes low bone mass<lb/>
Drinkwater said. "Exercise is<lb/>
beneficial to bone. It's the amen-<lb/>
tentially serious spinal fractures were running 30 miles to 35 miles<lb/>
and to less serious stress fractures<lb/>
that will keep women from exer-<lb/>
cising.<lb/>
Women can regain regular<lb/>
periods by reducing their level of<lb/>
exercise, but the bones don't seem<lb/>
to fully recover, said Chestnut.<lb/>
Recreational athletes, or<lb/>
women who are just trying to stay<lb/>
fit, don't suffer disruption of peri-<lb/>
ods.<lb/>
The loss or disruption of<lb/>
menstrual periods, known techni-<lb/>
cally as amenorrhea, occurs most<lb/>
in runners, cyclists, swimmers<lb/>
and ballet dancers, said Anne<lb/>
Loucks, a research endocrinoloo-<lb/>
ist at the University of California,<lb/>
San Diego, and an authority on<lb/>
the effect of exercise on women.<lb/>
Researchers don't know why<lb/>
intense exercise affects menstrual<lb/>
begin to have problems until they disorder that triggers thcamenor-<lb/>
the doctor isn't always easy,<lb/>
however.<lb/>
They view themselves as<lb/>
very healthy she said. "It's very<lb/>
periods. "Most people think it's hard to convince them they have a<lb/>
probably a combination of fac- problem<lb/>
tors said Barbara Drinkwater, The mechanism of bone loss<lb/>
an exercise and eu�ironmenta!  un.c. . woiCi�ii is not<lb/>
physiologist at the Pacific Medi- completely clear, but researchers<lb/>
cal Center in Seattle who has col- say they do have a plausible hy-<lb/>
Biden survives aneurysm<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Sen. Jo-<lb/>
seph Biden says he gained<lb/>
strength and confidence from the<lb/>
knowledge that he survived a life-<lb/>
threatening brain aneurysm.<lb/>
"Instead of making me feel<lb/>
that now there's a great urgency<lb/>
about what I must do with my life,<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
Biden, 45, who was wel-<lb/>
comed back to the Senate earlier<lb/>
this month, said that before the<lb/>
first of his two operations in Feb-<lb/>
ruary, he spoke with his sons,<lb/>
Beau, 19, and Hunter, 18.<lb/>
film's satire is a wholly imaginary through an accidental blood<lb/>
conception of the way in which transfusion. She is more upset<lb/>
Monty Python would have made about the way society has treated<lb/>
sport of the government of society her family,<lb/>
of Biblical times had television "Isolation is a big issue with<lb/>
been invented two thousand these folks. They're all alone<lb/>
years earlier. Some of this satire, said Chris Weedy, a social worker<lb/>
however, has unmistakable par- at Duke's Pediatric AIDS Clinic,<lb/>
where Matthew Lane, not his real<lb/>
name, is being treated.<lb/>
Many families of children<lb/>
with AIDS are rejected by society<lb/>
and do not have any support sys-<lb/>
tems to help them with common<lb/>
feelings of fear, guilt, anger and<lb/>
denial, Ms. Weedy said. Counsel-<lb/>
ing, financial assistance and other<lb/>
support services available to<lb/>
families whose relatives are fight-<lb/>
ing cancer, Alzheimer's disease<lb/>
and other illnesses are scarce for<lb/>
families whose members have<lb/>
AIDS.<lb/>
The Lane family is finding<lb/>
that out first-hand. When Mat-<lb/>
thew developed leukemia,<lb/>
friends and family were there to<lb/>
comfort him and his family. But<lb/>
when a contaminated blood<lb/>
transfusion gave him the AIDS<lb/>
virus, they suddenly found them-<lb/>
selves coping alone.<lb/>
Nurses at their local hospital<lb/>
quit hugging and holding him.<lb/>
The tutor who taught Matthew at<lb/>
home - and who had brought him<lb/>
cookies and held him in her lap<lb/>
refused to enter the house.<lb/>
Some of the other mothers in<lb/>
the leukemia support group that<lb/>
helped Mrs. Lane cope with<lb/>
Matthew's cancer expressed con-<lb/>
cern that an unnamed child in-<lb/>
fected with the AIDS virus might<lb/>
be coming to the same clinic as<lb/>
their children.<lb/>
Mrs. Lane became more iso-<lb/>
lated, afraid to tell them that the<lb/>
child they feared was her son.<lb/>
The Lanes fear harrassment.<lb/>
Even family members shunned<lb/>
them.<lb/>
"Matthew used to play with<lb/>
my sister's children, but not<lb/>
now said Mrs. Lane.<lb/>
Her sister will not visit and<lb/>
ignores the Lanes when they<lb/>
chance to meet in public.<lb/>
"They're just real frightened,<lb/>
I guess Mrs. Lane told The Dur-<lb/>
ham Morning Herald.<lb/>
But AIDS can not be acquired<lb/>
through casual contact with an<lb/>
infected person. The immune-<lb/>
weakening disease can only be<lb/>
transmitted perinatally, through<lb/>
sexual contact, tainted blood<lb/>
and contaminated<lb/>
trials at Duke as part of a multi- upbringing and has taken on the<lb/>
center study to test the drug's enormous responsibility of caring<lb/>
toxicity and effectiveness in chil- for a child with AIDS,<lb/>
dren. The drug is the only medi- "I had a home and I have love<lb/>
cine approved by the U.S. Food and that's what he needed said<lb/>
and Drug Administration for Carol, not her real name, during a<lb/>
treating adults with AIDS. recent interview. The social serv-<lb/>
Since entering the AZT study ices department in Carol's corn-<lb/>
June 13, Matthew has been taking munity asked that the real names<lb/>
the drug in liquid form every six of the child and foster parent not<lb/>
hours, around the clock. Matthew be revealed,<lb/>
is more active, has gained weight Social workers say it is diffi-<lb/>
and feels better, Mrs. Lane said. cult to find foster parents for chil-<lb/>
The highly-toxic drug is ap- dren with AIDS because of the<lb/>
rhea in exercising women ap-<lb/>
pears to be in the brain, perhaps in<lb/>
the hypothalamus, which con-<lb/>
trols the body's hormonal system.<lb/>
The hypothalamus sends signals<lb/>
to the pituitary gland, which in<lb/>
turn regulates hormone produc-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Chesnut and Drinkwater<lb/>
orrhea that's responsible for the found that women who stop exer-<lb/>
decrease of bone density cising and regain menstrual peri-<lb/>
Loucks also notes that many ods can recover some, but proba-<lb/>
thmgs can cause a woman to lose bly not all, of the lost bone,<lb/>
regular menstrual periods. "A Because bone loss is difficult<lb/>
woman who stops menstruating or impossible to remedy, doctors<lb/>
definitely should consult with her must focus on prevention, Ch-<lb/>
gynecologist to rule out other csnut said. "We want to get to<lb/>
possibilities these women athletes as soon as<lb/>
Getting women athletes to possible after amenorrhea occurs,<lb/>
within five to six months cer-<lb/>
tainly, and presumably get them<lb/>
on estrogen replacement, so we<lb/>
can prevent that loss before it's<lb/>
occurred.<lb/>
Because once that loss has<lb/>
occurred, it appears there's very<lb/>
little we can do about it<lb/>
Estrogen may not be suitable<lb/>
for all women, however.<lb/>
"Degarmo &amp; Key a higu-energy Christian rock and roll band, will<lb/>
be playing at Wright Auditorium Sunday at 7 p.m. This band features<lb/>
three Grammy &amp; Dove nominees for contemporary Christian music.<lb/>
Tickets will be available at local Christian bookstores as well as Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center.<lb/>
proved for adult AIDS patients<lb/>
but still experimental in children<lb/>
who have the fatal disease. The<lb/>
Lanes know there are unknown<lb/>
risks for Matthew in taking AZT,<lb/>
but they believe the AIDS-fight-<lb/>
ing medicine is his only chance at<lb/>
a better and longer life.<lb/>
"You really don't have a<lb/>
fear of the disease. Carol said<lb/>
Gregory deserves a full life no<lb/>
matter how short it might be.<lb/>
"I take one day at a time with<lb/>
it said Carol, who has had cus-<lb/>
tody of Gregory since December.<lb/>
"I'm thankful for each day he is<lb/>
here. He's a human being. He<lb/>
needs to be held and touched. No<lb/>
choice. That's the only treatment child or you and me has a guaran-<lb/>
thry've got and who knows, he tee of tomorrow she said.<lb/>
even<lb/>
said.<lb/>
get to experience Biden<lb/>
He said many people men- products<lb/>
tion the 1972 car accident that needles,<lb/>
killed his first wife and their in-<lb/>
fant daughter, telling him, "My<lb/>
God, you've had it tough and<lb/>
it had the opposite effect. I feel how lucky we were - even if it<lb/>
serene the Delaware Democrat ended there. We've had a love<lb/>
said in the Oct. 3 issue of People that 1 believe most people don't<lb/>
"I tried to point out to them been unlucky<lb/>
"But I think God balances it<lb/>
out Biden said.<lb/>
Matthew is one of about 50<lb/>
children from North Carolina and<lb/>
surrounding states who receive<lb/>
treatment at Duke's Pediatric<lb/>
AIDS Clinic.<lb/>
He was 4 when a blood trans-<lb/>
fusion necessary to fight the leu-<lb/>
kemia out the AIDS virus into his<lb/>
body. After years of<lb/>
chemotherapy, the cancer is in<lb/>
remission.<lb/>
Now the young AIDS victim<lb/>
is in another medical battle where<lb/>
the weapons are experimental.<lb/>
might outlive us. You never<lb/>
know Mrs. Lane said. "It keeps<lb/>
him with us longer. And he seems<lb/>
to be doing good, so we just got to<lb/>
keep it up she said.<lb/>
Blood banks have developed<lb/>
screening techniques to prevent<lb/>
Gregory has been hospital-<lb/>
ized several times for his illness<lb/>
and is being treated with AZT at<lb/>
Duke. Carol said she does not<lb/>
mind the frequent trips to the<lb/>
doctor's office, the worries and<lb/>
contaminated blood from getting the vigilance,<lb/>
into the pool, but Matthew re- She works part time at night,<lb/>
ceived his transfusion before the but said Gregory is "her biggest<lb/>
blood banks began testing for job<lb/>
AIDS.<lb/>
Gregory, 8, is one of a grow- "He's just been a real blessing<lb/>
ing number of children exposed to me. I wouldn't trade what I<lb/>
to AIDS who was abandoned at a have to do with the child for any-<lb/>
hospital after birth. His mother, thing she said,<lb/>
an intravenous drug abuser, was As of Sept. 1, there have been<lb/>
infected with the virus. 13 reported cases of AIDS in chil-<lb/>
A woman who heard about dren under the age of 13 in North<lb/>
He is being treated with AZT, Gregory's plight in the media,<lb/>
an AIDS-fighting drug, in clinical rescued him from an institutional<lb/>
Carolina, according to the state's<lb/>
AIDS Control Program.<lb/>
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Soul<lb/>
singer James Brown is again in<lb/>
trouble with the law.<lb/>
Brown faces numerous<lb/>
charges, including assault and<lb/>
battery with intent to kill, after<lb/>
leading police on a chase that<lb/>
began near Augusta, ran into<lb/>
South Carolina and back into<lb/>
Georgia.<lb/>
"The Godfather of Soul" was<lb/>
free Sunday after posting a total of<lb/>
$25,298 in bonds in both states.<lb/>
The half-hour chase ended<lb/>
 after police shot out the tires on<lb/>
JrUfi mcruredhere willbeperformingatMingesColiseumonMondaOctobertopromotetheirnew Brown's pickup truck. He drove<lb/>
alburn The ei�ht Englishmen comprise one of the best-known reggae bands around; among their many six miles on wheel rims before<lb/>
reat hiareten songs as"Red Red Wine" and "Rat in the Kitchen winding up m a ditch, police said.<lb/>
Singer James Brown in trouble<lb/>
again, runs from police<lb/>
The incident began when tenced to two and a half years of<lb/>
Brown, 55, walked into an insur- suspended jail time, fined $1,200<lb/>
ance seminar Saturday armed and placed on probation until he<lb/>
with a shotgun and a pistol, or- performs a benefit concert after<lb/>
dcred everyone to leave the room pleading no contest to possession<lb/>
and "escorted" some women out- of the drug PCP and guilty to a<lb/>
side to lock the restrooms, police charge of resisting arrest and a<lb/>
said. weapons charge.He was arrested<lb/>
During the chase, Brown again on Sunday, less than 10<lb/>
tried to ram police cars with his hourslater,thistimeonadrunken<lb/>
pickup truck, said Sgt. Frank driving charge, police said<lb/>
Tiller of the Richmond County<lb/>
Sheriff's Department.<lb/>
Brown's wife, Adrienne, said<lb/>
the singer is on medication for jaw<lb/>
Brown was released on$l,219<lb/>
bond after being charged with<lb/>
driving under the influence, driv-<lb/>
ing while his license was sus-<lb/>
surgery. "He's in pain He's not pended and improper movement<lb/>
in his right mind she said. on the roadway, said Augusta<lb/>
On July 21, Brown was sen- police Sot. C V. Huffman.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058096_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 27,1988<lb/>
Belated prom for Townsend<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Come-<lb/>
dian Robert Townsend, with a<lb/>
little help from an orchestra,<lb/>
singer and troupe of dancers, was<lb/>
on stage re-creating the high<lb/>
school prom he missed 13 years<lb/>
ago in Chicago.<lb/>
The orchestra played, the<lb/>
singer sang, the dancers danced,<lb/>
and Townsend, clad in his trade-<lb/>
mark black overcoat and brown<lb/>
hat, tried to generate the<lb/>
adolescent magic he missed in<lb/>
1975.<lb/>
Townsend and his cast took<lb/>
over the Wadsworth Theater, on<lb/>
the Veterans Administration<lb/>
complex in West Los Angeles, to<lb/>
rehearse his comedy special for<lb/>
Home Box Office.<lb/>
"We're doing a prom skit but<lb/>
we're using modern music he<lb/>
said as he took a seat to see how<lb/>
the show looked from out front.<lb/>
"Howard Hewitt is going to sing<lb/>
Once, Twice, Three Times 1<lb/>
graduated from Austin High<lb/>
School in Chicago, but 1 never got<lb/>
to the prom. So I'll just pretend<lb/>
this is it<lb/>
The one-hour special, pre-<lb/>
miering Saturday, is one of a se-<lb/>
ries of shows Townsend is doing<lb/>
for HBO. It's called "HBO Com-<lb/>
edy Hour: Take No Prisoners-<lb/>
Robert Townsend &amp; 1 lis Partners<lb/>
in Crime II<lb/>
"We have a theme in the<lb/>
shows of taking characters and<lb/>
breaking the rules he said. "We<lb/>
want to make people laugh as<lb/>
hard as they can. I think with<lb/>
comedy there's a way to be funny<lb/>
that's totallv clean. There's a wax-<lb/>
to be funny that's risque. Some oi<lb/>
the stuff I do is very clean. But<lb/>
some is borderline blue"<lb/>
The special also features a<lb/>
soap opera spoof called "The<lb/>
Bold, the Black, the Beautiful" and<lb/>
a very tough game show called<lb/>
"Street Wise Townsend bor-<lb/>
rows the cowboy drifter from a<lb/>
few Clint Eastwood Westerns for<lb/>
a skit called "How the West Was<lb/>
Won - Maybe<lb/>
After his prom-less gradu-<lb/>
ation in Chicago, Townsend<lb/>
joined the Second City comedy<lb/>
troupe. He later worked in the<lb/>
clubs in New York, where he met<lb/>
another rising young comedian<lb/>
named Eddie Murphy. Both audi-<lb/>
tioned for NBC's "Saturday Night<lb/>
Live Murphy got it.<lb/>
"I kept working in the clubs<lb/>
he said. "I did some movies, like<lb/>
'A Soldier's Story 'American<lb/>
Flyers 'Cooley High' and 'Streets<lb/>
of Fire Eddie and I stayed friends<lb/>
and supported each other. There<lb/>
wasn't any rivalry. I directed his<lb/>
concert (movie) 'Raw<lb/>
"1 don't think I was ready at<lb/>
the time. In retrospect, I think if I<lb/>
had gotten it ('Saturday Night<lb/>
Live') I wouldn't have become a<lb/>
writer and director<lb/>
Townsend is probably best<lb/>
known for his movie "Hollywood<lb/>
Shuffle Not so much for the fact<lb/>
that he co-wrote, directed and<lb/>
starred in it as for how he paid for<lb/>
the production.<lb/>
"I financed nearly half of it<lb/>
with credit cards he said, nam-<lb/>
ing the various cards he used.<lb/>
"The picture cost $100,000, and 1<lb/>
put $40,000 on credit cards. It<lb/>
earned $8 million at the box of-<lb/>
fice<lb/>
"Hollywood Shuffle" is a sat-<lb/>
ire on the way the movie industry<lb/>
treats blacks and the compro-<lb/>
mises they face if they want to be<lb/>
a part of it.<lb/>
"Hollywood Shuffle" got<lb/>
Townsend some serious attention<lb/>
from the studios - which suggests<lb/>
the most important color in Holly-<lb/>
wood is green.<lb/>
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Boys in the Bond<lb/>
f kMM kv I � .<lb/>
Mtll(H 15. It<lb/>
r a it. i<lb/>
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U'KII U I- IT a I" l-wx<lb/>
FILL Ol T ORDER FORM<lb/>
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CALL (�!�� 757-4.W0<lb/>
BOX OFFICE INFORMATION<lb/>
The East Carolina Plavhouve Box Office in<lb/>
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A p.<lb/>
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11 I<lb/>
Pee W<lb/>
CHICAGO (AP) Aim<lb/>
every morning at 6, Pee Wi<lb/>
eyes blink open. He stavs in<lb/>
while his legs limber up It takj<lb/>
while - sometimes a coupU<lb/>
hours because of a bullet<lb/>
lodged in his left call<lb/>
Around 10 am. he head<lb/>
the liquor store, where he can<lb/>
two 40-ounce bottles of 1 I<lb/>
$1.75 and can begin a longandl<lb/>
eventful day by "cooling out<lb/>
It he can round up<lb/>
change or if he's get n<lb/>
from his aid che� .<lb/>
and buy more<lb/>
This way, Pee Wee<lb/>
dreamily isolated from the<lb/>
world around him - the<lb/>
that comes hurtling out windc<lb/>
the used diapers dropped indj<lb/>
ways, the urine-soaked<lb/>
and the muscled teen-a<lb/>
who rule the pur<lb/>
buildings where I �<lb/>
Pee Wee tr<lb/>
realization that 1<lb/>
the housing ; i<lb/>
Homer Horn,<lb/>
still here.<lb/>
"I'm doing<lb/>
life said<lb/>
name is B I<lb/>
nobody's fault bul ni<lb/>
do regret sorre I<lb/>
out of thi-<lb/>
dreaming : gi<lb/>
doing what i I<lb/>
am<lb/>
"i et oru<lb/>
for several minutes und i<lb/>
enemy fire in Vk tr<lb/>
wounded himself wl<lb/>
ing back to safety<lb/>
something kids dream a<lb/>
was a hero.<lb/>
Tee Wee p<lb/>
kid whose body had 1<lb/>
blown away, a kid �.<lb/>
help, dying in the bush<lb/>
a sergeant and<lb/>
threw him over his s<lb/>
carried him t<lb/>
knew the white kid -<lb/>
had never seen him N<lb/>
would never see him<lb/>
"I wasn't no h i<lb/>
savs. "Over there w �.<lb/>
each other. We all did<lb/>
matter where you came  J<lb/>
Plus F<lb/>
.mi<lb/>
Bong a V(anm ,<lb/>
willi B<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058096_0009"/><lb/>
ECIAL<lb/>
It.<lb/>
PM<lb/>
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UALITY<lb/>
 NEVER FROZEN<lb/>
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OLINA UNIrERSITY<lb/>
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YS! i<lb/>
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I 9mrrp.<lb/>
1r A - 1<lb/>
fit-V . The<lb/>
Beys in tie  14Bond<lb/>
OFCOD<lb/>
lMt .M v<lb/>
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Si H<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 27,1968 9<lb/>
Pee Wee: an American hero<lb/>
CHICAGO (AP)�Almost<lb/>
every morning at 6, Pee Wee's<lb/>
eyes blink open. He stays in bed<lb/>
while his legs limber up. It takes a<lb/>
while - sometimes a couple of<lb/>
hours because of a bullet still<lb/>
lodged in his left calf.<lb/>
Around 10 a.m he heads to<lb/>
the liquor store, where he can get<lb/>
two 40-ounce bottles of beer for<lb/>
$1.75 and can begin a long and un-<lb/>
eventful day by "cooling out<lb/>
If he can round up more<lb/>
change or if he's got money left<lb/>
from his aid check, he'll go back<lb/>
and buy more.<lb/>
This way, Pee Wee can stay<lb/>
dreamily isolated from the grim<lb/>
world around him - the garbage<lb/>
that comes hurtling out windows,<lb/>
the used diapers dropped in door-<lb/>
ways, the urine-soaked stairways<lb/>
and the muscled teen-age boys<lb/>
who rule the public housing<lb/>
buildings where he lives.<lb/>
Pee Wee tries to ignore the<lb/>
realization that he was raised in<lb/>
the housing project called Henry<lb/>
Horner Homes and, at age 38, is<lb/>
still here.<lb/>
"I'm doing nothing with my<lb/>
life said Pee Wee, whose real<lb/>
name is Bob JeffersonIsn't<lb/>
nobody's fault but mine, but  I<lb/>
do regret somehow not getting<lb/>
out of this place. Aren't no kids<lb/>
dreaming of growing up and<lb/>
doing what I do or being what I<lb/>
am<lb/>
Yet once, when he was 18,<lb/>
for several minutes under heavy<lb/>
enemy fire in Vietnam, already<lb/>
wounded himself while stagger-<lb/>
ing back to safety, Pee Wee did<lb/>
something kids dream about. He<lb/>
was a hero.<lb/>
Pee Wee picked up a white<lb/>
kid whose body had been half<lb/>
blown away, a kid pleading for<lb/>
help, dying in the bush. Pee Wee,<lb/>
a sergeant and squad leader,<lb/>
threw him over his shoulder and<lb/>
carried him to safety. He never<lb/>
knew the white kid's name. He<lb/>
had never seen him before and<lb/>
would never see him again.<lb/>
"I wasn't no hero Pee Wee<lb/>
says. "Over there we did that for<lb/>
each other. We all did that. Didn't<lb/>
matter where you came from or<lb/>
who you were, rich or poor. You<lb/>
did for a man what you hoped<lb/>
they'd do for you<lb/>
But Pee Wee Jefferson won<lb/>
the Bronze Star for gallantry. He<lb/>
also won a Purple Heart and spent<lb/>
three months in the hospital. The<lb/>
Army returned him to the front,<lb/>
where he was shot in the same leg<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Two weeks in a hospital in<lb/>
Da Nang and another Purple<lb/>
Heart and hewas back in the line<lb/>
of fire.<lb/>
It took a third wound, this,<lb/>
lime shrapnel under his ribs - and<lb/>
a third Purple Heart - before he<lb/>
was sent home with a chest cov-<lb/>
ered with medals, a bad leg, a new<lb/>
drug habit and little chance of<lb/>
getting a job or having a future.<lb/>
"I guess you'd call me a dope<lb/>
fiend Pee Wee said. Thafs<lb/>
what I would still be if I could<lb/>
afford it. Now I drink beer<lb/>
As Pee Wee grew older, he<lb/>
was arrested many times and<lb/>
served 18 months in prison for<lb/>
burglary.<lb/>
He's been married twice,<lb/>
lived with several women, and<lb/>
fathered five children. He's been<lb/>
made old not by the war he fought<lb/>
abroad but by wars he's fought at<lb/>
home - in the housing projects.<lb/>
"I don't quite know what I'm<lb/>
going to do if I don't get myself<lb/>
out of here Pee Wee said, refer-<lb/>
ring to the Henry Horner homes,<lb/>
where he has been shot, stabbed<lb/>
and beaten. 'This place is con-<lb/>
trolled by young boys, and for this<lb/>
place, I am old. I am tired. I need<lb/>
to set out<lb/>
Being called a hero could<lb/>
have changed it all for Pee Wee<lb/>
Jefferson, but it didn't.<lb/>
"I ain't ashamed to say it. I'm<lb/>
so lost I'm waiting to be foundhe<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Pee Wee has spumed veter-<lb/>
ans groups and activities, though<lb/>
he recently began wearing a cap<lb/>
that says, "Vietnam Remem-<lb/>
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advantage of getting:<lb/>
� $100 a month while in school<lb/>
� Freshmen and Sophomores train<lb/>
during two six-week summer ses<lb/>
sions each paying more than1200<lb/>
We want you<lb/>
to go as far<lb/>
as you can,<lb/>
�Juniors train in one ten-week summer session and earn<lb/>
more than $2100<lb/>
� Free civilian flying lessons<lb/>
� A starting salary of more than18,000<lb/>
Immediately upon graduation you could become a Marine<lb/>
Officer It's your choice<lb/>
Maybe you're the kind of<lb/>
man we're looking for.<lb/>
 Gigantic Warehouse Sale<lb/>
FOR BACK TO SCHOOL<lb/>
Parents invited to preview warehouse Sept. 24th<lb/>
$10 or less<lb/>
Merchandise valued up to $48<lb/>
September 26 - October 1<lb/>
Tom Togs<lb/>
Factory Outlet<lb/>
1900 Dickinson Ave<lb/>
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXj<lb/>
Trocadero Tom Togs Fashions<lb/>
Come Visit A New Image Featuring<lb/>
1 Quality At Off Prices Originals From<lb/>
Panama Jack &amp; Other Exclusive Name Brands.<lb/>
Located Next to Tons of Toys - S. Memorial Drive<lb/>
Hours: 10-6 Mon. - Sat (FrL &amp; Sat til 9)<lb/>
Visit Capt Williams at the Student Supply Store<lb/>
Sept 28-30, 1988 or call 1-800-722-6715<lb/>
Visit Our Other Locations<lb/>
Hwy. 64 East Between Hwy. 70 West<lb/>
Morehead City, N.C<lb/>
Wed. - Sat 9-5<lb/>
Bethel and Tarboro<lb/>
Conetoe, N.C.<lb/>
Wed. -Sat. 9-5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058096_0010"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 27, 1988 Page 10<lb/>
Pirates fall to 1-3 at hands of USM 45-42<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
HMuna I ditor<lb/>
The Golden Eagles of the<lb/>
University of Southern Missis-<lb/>
sippi must have affixed a jinx on<lb/>
the ECU Pirates.<lb/>
In the latest contest between<lb/>
the two teams Saturday at Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium, ECU lead by four points<lb/>
with 1:38 left in the game only to<lb/>
become victims of a demoralizing<lb/>
45-42 loss.<lb/>
With twelve seconds remain-<lb/>
ing in the fourth period, Southern<lb/>
Miss quarterback Ailrick Young<lb/>
connected with right end Preston<lb/>
Hansford for the game winning<lb/>
touchdown, capping a 64-yard<lb/>
drive.<lb/>
"I hate to use an old cliche, but<lb/>
I don't know what to say Pirate<lb/>
Head Coach Art Baker said after<lb/>
the game. "They came back from a<lb/>
difficult situation. I thought it<lb/>
would be di f f icul t. We made some<lb/>
mistakes on defense and they<lb/>
(USM) made some great plays on<lb/>
offense<lb/>
With the Pirates down 38-27<lb/>
in the fourth quarter, Charlie Li-<lb/>
bretto, ECU's back up quarter-<lb/>
back, came off the pine to deliver<lb/>
a clutch performance. Libretto<lb/>
threw for two last period touch-<lb/>
downs as the Pirates pulled to a<lb/>
42-38 lead with a little more than<lb/>
a minute and a half left in the<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
"I'm prepared for the script<lb/>
Libretto said in a post game inter-<lb/>
view about coming off the bench .<lb/>
"I'm just glad the coaching staff<lb/>
has confidence in me to do the<lb/>
role he added.<lb/>
Libretto's 84 yard touchdown<lb/>
pass to tailback Reggie McKinney<lb/>
in the second quarter stands as the<lb/>
longest pass play in ECU history.<lb/>
Drifting back on the ECU 16, Li-<lb/>
bretto delivered a strike to strid-<lb/>
ing McKinney at mid-field. In the<lb/>
play, McKinney turned com-<lb/>
pletely around in full stride to<lb/>
catch the ball before outrunning<lb/>
one defender for the score.<lb/>
"I picked up the blitz on the<lb/>
play and saw a excellent pocket<lb/>
downfield and Reggie used his<lb/>
athletic ability to catch the ball<lb/>
Libretto said.<lb/>
The play surpasses the exist-<lb/>
ing record of 83 yards set in a 1972<lb/>
contest against Virginia Military<lb/>
Institute.<lb/>
Libretto completed eight of 15<lb/>
passes for 197 yards while rush-<lb/>
ing for 40 yards on seven carries.<lb/>
Coach Baker said there is a possi-<lb/>
bility that Libretto will start next<lb/>
week against Southwestern Lou-<lb/>
isiana, a game that will be played<lb/>
at Ficklen.<lb/>
In the first half, ECU drew<lb/>
first blood after taking the open-<lb/>
ing kickoff within the USM 20,<lb/>
where place kicker Robb Imper-<lb/>
ato nailed a 27-yard field goal.<lb/>
Although the initial drive of 66<lb/>
yards was marked by a methodic<lb/>
running game of fullbacks Tim<lb/>
James and David Daniels, junior<lb/>
quarterback Travis Hunter's third<lb/>
down completion to wideout<lb/>
Bojack Davenport of 13 yards at<lb/>
midfield was the key to the se-<lb/>
quence. ECU took the early lead,<lb/>
3-0.<lb/>
James left the game after a<lb/>
draw play during the first ECU<lb/>
possession as he hobbled to the<lb/>
sidelines while favoring his right<lb/>
leg. His leg was later diagnosed<lb/>
as being bruised.<lb/>
Southern Miss also imple-<lb/>
mented the ground game in their<lb/>
first possession as tailback Shcl-<lb/>
ton Gandy ran for six of the first<lb/>
seven USM plays. Starting at their<lb/>
own 16, Gandy picked up 23<lb/>
yards in USM's first four plays.<lb/>
On a third down and four<lb/>
situation, Ailrick Young called his<lb/>
own number as he scampered 42<lb/>
yards to the ECU 19. After barrel-<lb/>
ing seven yards on the next play,<lb/>
Gandy waltzed 12 yards, un-<lb/>
scathed by the ECU defense, for<lb/>
the touchdown. USM went up 7-3.<lb/>
Following an ECU punt,<lb/>
Linebacker Anthony Thompson<lb/>
had two consecutive tackles as the<lb/>
Pirate defense shut down the<lb/>
Golden Eagles on four plays.<lb/>
Deep in their own territory, USM<lb/>
punted to midfield, where return<lb/>
man Junior Robinson carried the<lb/>
ball to the USM 46.<lb/>
A reverse call to running back<lb/>
Darren Bynum ruffled the Eagles<lb/>
for a 21 yard pick up. The reverse,<lb/>
the first of three similar plays used<lb/>
by the Pirates during the game, set<lb/>
by a 10-7 margin.<lb/>
In the Golden Eagles' next<lb/>
possession, wide receiver Darryl<lb/>
Tillman caught an eleven yard<lb/>
pass, only to be popped by defen-<lb/>
sive back Ricky Torain. Torain's<lb/>
hit forced a fumble, which de-<lb/>
fense back Flint McCallum recov-<lb/>
ered.<lb/>
Two plays later, quarterback<lb/>
Libretto, calling his first plays of<lb/>
the game, threw the midfield pass<lb/>
to McKinney which netted 84<lb/>
yards in the longest pass play in<lb/>
ECU history. Following<lb/>
McKinney's score ECU lead 17-7.<lb/>
Following more good run-<lb/>
ning by Gandy and a 12 yard Brett<lb/>
Favre completion to Alfred Wil-<lb/>
liams, the Golden Eagles kicked a<lb/>
38 yard field goal off the foot of<lb/>
Chris Seroka. ECU, 17-10.<lb/>
After an ECU punt, USM<lb/>
geared in the two minute offense<lb/>
as Favre scrambled for a good<lb/>
gain and completed a 30 yard pass<lb/>
to wide out Robbie Weeks for a<lb/>
touchdown in the closing seconds<lb/>
of the half. At the half, the two<lb/>
teams were deadlocked at 17-17.<lb/>
On USM's second posses-<lb/>
sion of the second half, tailback<lb/>
Eddie Ray Jackson finished off a<lb/>
90-yard drive by scoring on an<lb/>
option left play. ECU blocked the<lb/>
kick for the point after and South-<lb/>
ern Miss led 23-17.<lb/>
But the Pirates battled back<lb/>
with a 72-yard drive behind the<lb/>
leadership of junior quarterback<lb/>
Travis Hunter. Hunter's short<lb/>
touchdown pass to tailback Willie<lb/>
Lewis before a Robb Imperato<lb/>
point after kick put ECU ahead<lb/>
24-23.<lb/>
On USM's next possession,<lb/>
Tillman returned the Imperato<lb/>
kick off to the 37 yard line from the<lb/>
end zone. Tillman also sparked<lb/>
the ensuing drive with a 34 recep-<lb/>
tion from Favre to the ECU one<lb/>
yard line. Tailback Ricky Bradley<lb/>
finished off the 63 yard, 8 play<lb/>
series with a bulldog run over<lb/>
center Jim Fcrrell's lead block.<lb/>
USM, 31-24.<lb/>
With two minutes elapsed in<lb/>
the fourth quarter, a Hunter pass<lb/>
was intercepted by free safety<lb/>
�� �� �<lb/>
tn9<lb/>
<lb/>
Reggie McKinney turns upfield in search of the end zone. Although the Pirates amassed 538<lb/>
yards in total offense, they were unable to top a tough USM squad. (Photo by Thomas Walters.)<lb/>
up a 16-yard option left touch- Kerry Valerie. Hunter, who corn-<lb/>
down run by running back Jarrod .cd five of 15 passes for 66<lb/>
Moody. ECU took the lead back urds, departed the game with<lb/>
12:57 left in the game.<lb/>
Coach Baker called on Li-<lb/>
bretto to fill the script. Big ground<lb/>
gains by tailbacks Denell Harper<lb/>
and Bynum of 12 and 16 yards set<lb/>
up a 33 yard gain on a Libretto<lb/>
keeper to the opponent's 10.<lb/>
Harper rambled another 8 yards<lb/>
to the USM 2 before Imperato<lb/>
kicked his second field goal<lb/>
through the uprights to make it<lb/>
31-27.<lb/>
And then it was Gandv's turn<lb/>
to have a running exhibition. On a<lb/>
first down play from his own<lb/>
35, Gandy sliced up the middle,<lb/>
shaking off the linebackers en-<lb/>
route to a 52 yard gain before<lb/>
Junior Robinson dragged him<lb/>
down. Two plays later it was<lb/>
Gandy up the middle for the<lb/>
Eagle touchdown, giving USM a<lb/>
38-27 edge.<lb/>
With 5:50 left, ECU got the<lb/>
ball back at their own 20. After<lb/>
two incompletions, Libretto<lb/>
found Harper for a first down.<lb/>
Two plays later, Libretto<lb/>
scrambled from the pocket, pick-<lb/>
ing up another first down.<lb/>
Libretto then looked for<lb/>
Bynum coming out of the back<lb/>
field. Finding a split in the zone<lb/>
defense of the Eagles, Bynum<lb/>
caught a Libretto pass for a 19<lb/>
yard advancement.<lb/>
A fifteen yard roughing the<lb/>
passer penalty put the Pirates into<lb/>
scoring position at the 16 yard<lb/>
line. Following the penalty, Li-<lb/>
bretto stepped back in the pocket<lb/>
and drilled a touchdown pass to<lb/>
wide receiver Walter Wilson. A<lb/>
successful two point conversion<lb/>
by Lewis pulled the Pirates within<lb/>
a field goal as Southern Miss led<lb/>
38-35.<lb/>
In playing their best scries of<lb/>
the game, the Pirate defense<lb/>
stopped the Golden Eagles on<lb/>
their next possession as junior<lb/>
linebacker Compton McCurry<lb/>
tackled Gandy twice in the play<lb/>
sequence.<lb/>
A 36 yard punt by USM's<lb/>
Bradley gave ECU the ball at their<lb/>
own 32. The ECU offensive unit<lb/>
exploded across midfield follow-<lb/>
ing a pass reception and a option<lb/>
run by Moody. On the next plav.<lb/>
Libretto found McKinney in the<lb/>
flats once more, this time good for<lb/>
30 yards. The Pirates had a tirt<lb/>
and ten at the USM 17.<lb/>
After two unsuccessful run-<lb/>
ning plays, Libretto whipped a<lb/>
pass to wide receiver Al Whiting<lb/>
in the left cornei o( the endone<lb/>
for the go ahead touchdown. With<lb/>
1:38 left, the Ficklen "Parent's<lb/>
day" crowd became jubilant as<lb/>
the Pirates lead 42-38.<lb/>
Coming off their best series of<lb/>
defensive play, it looked as if the<lb/>
Pirate defenders were flashing<lb/>
back to a superb performance<lb/>
against 12th ranked South Caro-<lb/>
lina last week.<lb/>
After an illegal proceedure<lb/>
flag on USM, Favre was sacked<lb/>
for a nine yard loss. Favre then<lb/>
threw incomplete on second<lb/>
down. And then the jinx came<lb/>
back to haunt the Pirates.<lb/>
Favre threw over the middle<lb/>
to Tillman tor a 22 yard gain, then<lb/>
to Jackson for a gain of nine. And<lb/>
then came the defensive play of<lb/>
the game as ECU linebacker<lb/>
See PIRATES, page 11<lb/>
Condrey "a good man to have at back<lb/>
�<lb/>
By DAVID MONROE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
On the football field, Kyle<lb/>
Condrey is a man with a mission:<lb/>
To be the hardest working player<lb/>
on one of the hardest working<lb/>
football teams in the country.<lb/>
On the football field, Kyle<lb/>
models himself after his role<lb/>
models Dwight Stevenson, center<lb/>
for the Miami Dolphins, and Mike<lb/>
Webster, center for the Pittsburgh<lb/>
Stcelers. When asked why, Kyle<lb/>
responded, "They best portray<lb/>
what being a professional is on a<lb/>
year-inyear-outbasis. The deter-<lb/>
mination and dedication that they<lb/>
put into their careers to be the best<lb/>
they can be both on and off the<lb/>
field<lb/>
Off the football field, Kyle is<lb/>
respected by his teammates as a<lb/>
loyal friend and a true gentleman.<lb/>
He exemplifies the qualities and<lb/>
character that he so admires<lb/>
within his father. "My father has<lb/>
always told me that everyone is a<lb/>
friend and that as long as you treat<lb/>
them as such they in return will<lb/>
treat and respect you as a friend<lb/>
Matt McLaughlin, a team-<lb/>
mate of Kyle's, describes him as<lb/>
the type of individual who will<lb/>
keep an eye out for you and pro-<lb/>
tect your backside. Kyle projects<lb/>
an image that one would not ex-<lb/>
pect from an individual who is 6<lb/>
feet 2 inches tall and weighs in at<lb/>
an impressive 265 pounds. His<lb/>
soft spoken manner and pleasant<lb/>
personality come across in such a<lb/>
way as to portray an individual<lb/>
who is confident and sure of his<lb/>
future and his friends. With this in<lb/>
mind, it is easy to understand<lb/>
why he is respected and well-<lb/>
liked among his teammates and<lb/>
fellow students.<lb/>
Early in Kyle's collegiate ca-<lb/>
reer he was offered a scholarship<lb/>
to attend Appalachain State Uni-<lb/>
versity in Boonc, N.C but the lure<lb/>
of possibly playing against some<lb/>
��" '<lb/>
Kyle Condrey<lb/>
of the best teams in the country<lb/>
drew him to East Carolina. At East<lb/>
Carolina, Kyle was faced with<lb/>
being a walk-on and having to<lb/>
compete against scholarship ath-<lb/>
letes for a position on the team.<lb/>
Through hard work, determi-<lb/>
nation, and love for the challenge<lb/>
of competition, Condrey rose to<lb/>
the occassion and within 2 years<lb/>
had not only secured a position on<lb/>
the football team but had also won<lb/>
a scholarship. By his Junior year,<lb/>
Kyle had achieved the starting<lb/>
role at center and was playing<lb/>
against the powerhouse football<lb/>
teams of college football that not<lb/>
more than four years earlier he<lb/>
had only fantasized playing<lb/>
against.<lb/>
The senior year for Kyle Con-<lb/>
drey will present the greatest<lb/>
challenge to him as he continues<lb/>
to lead EastCarolina University at<lb/>
center, tries to cope with the pres-<lb/>
sure of being an All-South Inde-<lb/>
pendent candidate, and prepares<lb/>
for graduation.<lb/>
The most memorable mo-<lb/>
ment in Kyle's career came in<lb/>
1987's victory over North Caro-<lb/>
lina State University in Raleigh<lb/>
before one of the largest crowds in<lb/>
North Carolina history. This<lb/>
game marked perhaps his finest<lb/>
hour as an athelete as he played<lb/>
the game of his life, but maybe<lb/>
more than that, this game marked<lb/>
the first time in which he was<lb/>
given the nod to start at center.<lb/>
Although he has lived his<lb/>
childhood fantasy of playing<lb/>
against teams such as Florida<lb/>
State, Auburn, Miami, and South<lb/>
Carolina, the game against N.C.<lb/>
State on that rainy September<lb/>
night will always carry special<lb/>
pride with Condrey.<lb/>
An Industrial Tech major,<lb/>
Kyle hopes to pursue a career in<lb/>
the construction field after gradu-<lb/>
ation, but he is quick to point out<lb/>
that should an offer to play in the<lb/>
National Football League come<lb/>
his way he would gladly accept.<lb/>
Although Kyle has a prefer-<lb/>
ence for the Miami Dolphins, he<lb/>
said just having the opportunity<lb/>
to play with any team, irre-<lb/>
gardless of their record, would be<lb/>
a dream come true. As long as ball field he is spending time with food. Kyle is not the exception as<lb/>
Kyle has the courage to dream, his his girlfriend Kim Quick or listen- he particularly enjoys eatting crab<lb/>
ing to Van Halen or ACDC<lb/>
albums. One thing noticeable<lb/>
about football players in general<lb/>
is their appetite and choice of<lb/>
hopes of someday playing profes-<lb/>
sional football will always be<lb/>
within his grasps.<lb/>
When Kyle is not on the foot-<lb/>
legs; not exactly what one might<lb/>
expect. Oh well, to each their own.<lb/>
Boston Red Sox team of hour<lb/>
IRS has fun weekend<lb/>
(IRS) - The 1988 Almost Any-<lb/>
thing Goes competition was held<lb/>
Thursday September 22 on Col-<lb/>
lege Hill Field with close to 200<lb/>
ECU students enjoying free t-<lb/>
shirts provided by Budweiser and<lb/>
hilarity provided by the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Services.<lb/>
Six crazy events including a<lb/>
keg rolling contest, dressing re-<lb/>
lay, caterpillar walk and three<lb/>
undescribable events allowed the<lb/>
co-rec squads to compete for 1st<lb/>
through 4th place individual tro-<lb/>
phies.<lb/>
Clueless found the answer to<lb/>
four event championships, giving<lb/>
them a 20 point lead over second<lb/>
place finishers Adapted 6.<lb/>
Clueless team members included<lb/>
Kristen Halberg, Jen Slothower,<lb/>
Heather Barfield, Clayton Wil-<lb/>
liams, Mark Barber and B.D.<lb/>
Wodd. Third place finisher and a<lb/>
returnee from the 1987 competi-<lb/>
tion, Gumby's, captured first<lb/>
place event wins in Fill-er-up.<lb/>
The fourth spot was up for<lb/>
grabs and had to be determined<lb/>
by a tug-o-war competition.<lb/>
Mackies Perogative and the Un-<lb/>
touchables pulled out the fourth<lb/>
place position receiving individ-<lb/>
ual trophies.<lb/>
Almost Anything Goes is<lb/>
held each year by the Department<lb/>
See IRS, page 11<lb/>
(AP)� Once again, Boston<lb/>
was the winner in baseball's great<lb/>
debate.<lb/>
For the second weekend in a<lb/>
row, the Red Sox outplayed their<lb/>
archrivals, the New York Yan-<lb/>
kees, and moved closer to a sec-<lb/>
ond American League East title in<lb/>
three years.<lb/>
Roger Clemens gave the Red<lb/>
Sox seven strong innings Sunday<lb/>
and Mike Grcenwell and Dwight<lb/>
Evans backed him with homers as<lb/>
Boston won 6-0 to take the rubber<lb/>
match of a three-game series at<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
"We just did what we had to<lb/>
do to win. So did I Clemens said.<lb/>
The Red Sox lead the second-<lb/>
place Detroit Tigers by 4 12<lb/>
games entering the final week of<lb/>
the season. Any combination of<lb/>
three Boston victories and Detroit<lb/>
losses will clinch the division for<lb/>
the Red Sox.<lb/>
"We're in the driver's seat<lb/>
said Grcenwell, who hit a three-<lb/>
run homer in the first inning. "We<lb/>
wanted to jump out today. We<lb/>
knew Roger was going to be out<lb/>
there<lb/>
Elsewhere, it was Detroit 7-4<lb/>
and 2-1 over Baltimore in a<lb/>
doubleheader; Cleveland 4,<lb/>
Toronto 3; Chicago 6, Kansas City<lb/>
5; Milwaukee 4, Oakland 2; Se-<lb/>
attle 8, Texas 5, and Minnesota 6,<lb/>
California 2.<lb/>
Clemens, 18-11, has struggled<lb/>
over the past two months since<lb/>
injuring his back while doing<lb/>
housework. He won for just the<lb/>
the third time in nine decisions,<lb/>
striking out seven to increase his<lb/>
major-league leading total to 287.<lb/>
The Yankees, 5 12 games<lb/>
back, have only themselves to<lb/>
blame for falling out of conten-<lb/>
tion. They dropped five out of<lb/>
seven in their weekend series<lb/>
against the Red Sox and contin-<lb/>
ued to be hurt by poor pitching<lb/>
and inconsistent hitting.<lb/>
Tigers 7, Orioles 4<lb/>
Detroit, on the brink of elimi-<lb/>
nation, got a one-hitter from Jack<lb/>
Morris in the opener of a double-<lb/>
header and a grand slam from<lb/>
Fred Lynn in the ninth of the sec-<lb/>
ond game.<lb/>
Morris, 14-13, struck out<lb/>
eight, walked two and allowed<lb/>
just a seventh-inning single to<lb/>
Mickey Tettleton. Luis Salazar's<lb/>
RBI single against Mark William-<lb/>
son, 5-7, broke a tie in the top of<lb/>
the ninth inning.<lb/>
In the second, Lynn's 24th<lb/>
homer of the season and seventh<lb/>
career grand slam rallied the Ti-<lb/>
gers from a 4-3 deficit. Baltimore<lb/>
relievers Mark Thurmond and<lb/>
Tom Niedenfuer, 3-4, had held<lb/>
Detroit hitless over 3 1-3 innings<lb/>
until Lynn's hit.<lb/>
Doyle Alexander, 14-11, won<lb/>
his third straight decision, allow-<lb/>
ing six hits in eight innings, walk-<lb/>
ing one and striking out one.<lb/>
Guillermo Hernandez closed,<lb/>
earning his 10th save.<lb/>
Indians 4, Blue Jays 3<lb/>
Dave Clark's RBI single with<lb/>
two outs in the bottom of the ninth<lb/>
gave Cleveland reliever Scott<lb/>
Bailes his first victory since Aug.<lb/>
16 and snapped the Indians' four-<lb/>
game losing streak.<lb/>
Toronto's Duane Ward, 9-3,<lb/>
walked Andy Allanson with one<lb/>
out in the bottom of the ninth.<lb/>
After Jay Bell struck out, Julio<lb/>
Franco singled to put runners on<lb/>
first and third. Clark then lined a<lb/>
hit between shortstop and third,<lb/>
his third single of the game, scor-<lb/>
ing Allanson.<lb/>
Bailes, 9-14, struck out three<lb/>
of the six batters he faced and<lb/>
ended a personal three-game los-<lb/>
ing streak, covering his last eight<lb/>
appearances.<lb/>
Brewers 4, Athletics 2<lb/>
Robin Yount homered,<lb/>
doubled and singled and Ted<lb/>
Higuera combined with two re-<lb/>
lievers on a seven-hitter as Mil-<lb/>
waukee salvaged the finale of a<lb/>
three-game series with Oakland<lb/>
Higuera, 15-9, scattered five<lb/>
hits over 6 2-3 innings, striking<lb/>
out nine and walking four. Chuck<lb/>
Bosio retired the last two batters<lb/>
in the bottom of the ninth to cam<lb/>
his fourth save.<lb/>
Storm Davis, 16-6, lost for just<lb/>
the second time in his last 13 deci-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
Mariners 8, Rangers 5<lb/>
Jay Buhner drove in four<lb/>
runs, Darnell Coles had four hits<lb/>
and reliever Gene Walter pitched<lb/>
four hitless innings as Seattle beat<lb/>
Texas despite trailing 5-0 after the<lb/>
first inning.<lb/>
Walter came on to start the<lb/>
fifth and retired 12 of the 13 bat-<lb/>
ters he faced, allowing just a walk<lb/>
to Oddibe McDowell with two<lb/>
outs in the sixth. Walter struck out<lb/>
seven in winning his first career<lb/>
decision in the American League.<lb/>
Reliever Craig McMurtry, 2-<lb/>
3, gave up Cole's two-run double<lb/>
and an RBI single to Steve Balbont<lb/>
in the Mariners' three-run sixth<lb/>
Twins 6, Angels 2<lb/>
Frank Viola won his 23rd<lb/>
game, tying him for the major-<lb/>
league high, and Dan Gladden<lb/>
stole home in the top of the sev-<lb/>
enth to put Minnesota ahead to<lb/>
stay.<lb/>
Viola, who has lost seven,<lb/>
scattered nine hits in seven in-<lb/>
nings.<lb/>
Danny Jackson of the Cincin-<lb/>
nati Reds and Orel Hershiser of<lb/>
the Los Angeles Dodgers also<lb/>
have 23 victories.<lb/>
White Sox 6, Royals 5<lb/>
Chicago rallied in the bottom<lb/>
of the ninth, shelling four Kansas<lb/>
City relievers for four runs to<lb/>
come back from a 5-2 deficit.<lb/>
SrsT<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
of Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
ices and Bud weiser. Over<lb/>
teams took part in this years si<lb/>
rial event. The next big spef<lb/>
event will be held spnl<lb/>
semester. Co-Rec Super Spf<lb/>
Day, also sponsored<lb/>
Budweiser provided participc<lb/>
with more competitive activij<lb/>
to enjoy.<lb/>
Duke win<lb/>
not pretty<lb/>
(AP) � Steve Spurrier J<lb/>
reporters some ideas on I<lb/>
write their stones on Di <lb/>
that the Blue Devilsare 4 A<lb/>
first time in 17 seasons<lb/>
"I don't want you gi<lb/>
writing that we're a g<lb/>
team Spurrier said<lb/>
a lot of stupid thii<lb/>
here<lb/>
A 31-7 half time lead<lb/>
Blue Devils disintegrated in<lb/>
last 30 minutes and left the<lb/>
Devils clinging to a 38-34 . <lb/>
in their first Atlantic Coast<lb/>
ference outing. It was the t j<lb/>
time in four games that I<lb/>
run up a big lead, then j<lb/>
on to win.<lb/>
At Northwestern, a 28 I<lb/>
melted into a 2S-13 edge DJ<lb/>
had led Tennessee 24" be:<lb/>
settling for a 31-2b triumph<lb/>
Citadel had closed to within 2(<lb/>
before Duke moved ahead f<lb/>
41-17 victory.<lb/>
Two Shawn Moore to<lb/>
downs in the fourth quartei<lb/>
lowed two Moore to Tim<lb/>
kleston scoring passes in the tl<lb/>
period and that made<lb/>
come closer than Spur<lb/>
thought it should have been<lb/>
"Obviously, we're happ<lb/>
win the football game, but wj<lb/>
not very happv (with) the w,<lb/>
happened he said. "We <lb/>
sitting around here jumping<lb/>
celebrating and acting like w i<lb/>
a great football team. We are<lb/>
Virginia Coach George vj<lb/>
also was not pleased wit-<lb/>
team's performance and blarf<lb/>
defensive lapses for the<lb/>
which dropped the Caviliers<lb/>
2 and 1-1.<lb/>
"They beat us mar i<lb/>
and I think that their quarter!<lb/>
had a little too much tirn<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Duke quarterback f<lb/>
Dilweg completed 24 oi 4" pa<lb/>
for 391 yards.<lb/>
Clemson and Mary 11<lb/>
joined the Blue Devils at 1-0ii<lb/>
ACC this weekend. Clemson<lb/>
feated Georgia Tech 30-13<lb/>
Maryland scored with 1:12 to<lb/>
to defeat orth Carolina Slat<lb/>
26. Outside the conference V.i<lb/>
gan held off Wake Forest HMj<lb/>
Louisville knocked oii N<lb/>
Carolina 38-34.<lb/>
Georgia Tech still hasn't<lb/>
an ACC football game but<lb/>
have been close in their two p<lb/>
Pirates lo<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
Glenn Willis leveled Tillmai<lb/>
midfield, causing the wide<lb/>
ceivcr to have the breath knoc<lb/>
out of him.<lb/>
With USM at midfield, �d<lb/>
connected with Williams for<lb/>
key play of the game, a 42 j<lb/>
completion.<lb/>
"We've been hurting with<lb/>
man coverage. They hurt us n<lb/>
man coverage. Certainly USM<lb/>
to be given credit Coach "<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Richard Wright (Freshi<lb/>
defensive back) fell on the<lb/>
that set up the last score<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Tight end Hansford cai<lb/>
the final touchdown with tw<lb/>
seconds on clock to seal the<lb/>
tory for the Golden Eagles.<lb/>
The team has to be emotl<lb/>
ally drained Libretto c<lb/>
mented.<lb/>
Saturday's loss to Soutl<lb/>
Miss extends the ECU's stre<lb/>
misfortune with the Goll<lb/>
Eagles to five years. Last yearl<lb/>
Pirates lost in another he<lb/>
breaker 38-34. Two years aj<lb/>
yet another string of bad fate<lb/>
fell short by a field goal as<lb/>
won 23-21.<lb/>
The game in 1985 wai<lb/>
contest as USM rolled 27-<lb/>
1984, USM pulled out all the i<lb/>
in a 31-27 win. Regardless of I<lb/>
games, ECU did win in 1983, <lb/>
"I should of got a hor<lb/>
or a rabbit foot for this one<lb/>
said, still in disbelief<lb/>
Saturday's game.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058096_0011"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 27,1988 11<lb/>
'aeo<lb/>
I<lb/>
,1 538<lb/>
Vs.)<lb/>
t play,<lb/>
I a tirt<lb/>
tui run-<lb/>
.1 a<lb/>
nt s<lb/>
11 ii<lb/>
i aro-<lb/>
� . <lb/>
sacked<lb/>
<lb/>
nd<lb/>
 came<lb/>
rvt the Prates<lb/>
or themiddle<lb/>
-tin, then rul -<lb/>
RATES�, P3ge ll<lb/>
kption as rah<lb/>
hat oiu n<lb/>
jachtlMnrown.<lb/>
i of hour<lb/>
: I red<lb/>
i re-<lb/>
� -as Mil-<lb/>
ib of a<lb/>
. � � id<lb/>
five<lb/>
striking<lb/>
�nick<lb/>
I itters<lb/>
 .<lb/>
: r ust<lb/>
�<lb/>
� r-<lb/>
in tour<lb/>
ad four hits<lb/>
r Gene Walter pitched<lb/>
r n ir gs a - s. attle beat<lb/>
te trailing 5-0 after the<lb/>
me on to start the<lb/>
and retired 12 of the P bat<lb/>
. lowing just a walk<lb/>
' ' Do we!l with two<lb/>
. Kth Walter struck out<lb/>
winning his tirst career<lb/>
n in the American League<lb/>
. er Craig McMurtry, 2-<lb/>
ip Cole's two run double<lb/>
in RBI single to Steve Balboni<lb/>
in the Manners' three-run sixth.<lb/>
Twins 6, Angels 2<lb/>
Frank Viola won his 23rd<lb/>
, tying him for the major-<lb/>
ie high, and Dan Gladden<lb/>
home in the top ol the sev-<lb/>
nth to put Minnesota ahead to<lb/>
lay.<lb/>
Viola, who has lost seven,<lb/>
scattered nine hits in seven m-<lb/>
ungs<lb/>
Danny Jackson ot the Cincin-<lb/>
nati Reds and Orel Hershiser of<lb/>
the Los Angeles Dodgers also<lb/>
have 23 victories.<lb/>
White Sox 6, Royals 5<lb/>
Chicago rallied in the bottom<lb/>
t the ninth, shelling tour Kansas<lb/>
itv relievers for four runs to<lb/>
ome back from a 5-2 deficit.<lb/>
IRS loaded with fun<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
of Intramural-Recreational Serv-<lb/>
ices and Budweiser. Over 30<lb/>
teams took part in this years spe-<lb/>
cial event. The next big special<lb/>
event will be held spring<lb/>
semester. Co-Rec Super Sport<lb/>
Dav, also sponsored by<lb/>
Budweiser provided participants<lb/>
with more competitive activities<lb/>
to enjoy.<lb/>
IMA RECKS TOP<lb/>
FLAG FOOTBALL<lb/>
MEN<lb/>
PICKS WOMEN<lb/>
1. Enforcers<lb/>
2. Silver Bullet<lb/>
3. Delta Zeta<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
1. Funk Brothers<lb/>
2. Pi Kappa Alpha 'A'<lb/>
3. Sigma Alpha Epsilon<lb/>
4. High Steppers<lb/>
5. Sigma Phi Epsilon 'D'<lb/>
6. Belk D P I<lb/>
7. Aycock4th<lb/>
8. Fubar<lb/>
CO-REC SOFTBALL TOP<lb/>
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1. Oakmont<lb/>
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4. Damn Yankees<lb/>
5. Our Perogative<lb/>
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Sundav 1 6<lb/>
Fall Savings<lb/>
U<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(Except Alfiner. Nike and Reebok)<lb/>
I I<lb/>
Duke win<lb/>
not pretty<lb/>
(AP) � Steve Spurrier gave<lb/>
reporters some ideas on how to<lb/>
write their stories on Duke, now<lb/>
that the Blue Devils are 4 -0 for the<lb/>
first time in 17 seasons.<lb/>
"I don't want you guys to go<lb/>
writing that we're a great football<lb/>
team Spurrier said. "We still do<lb/>
a lot of stupid things around<lb/>
here<lb/>
A 31-7 halftime lead for the<lb/>
Blue Devils disintegrated in the<lb/>
last 30 minutes and left the Blue<lb/>
Devils clinging to a 38-34 victory<lb/>
in their first Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference outing. It was the third<lb/>
time in four games that Duke had<lb/>
run up a big lead, then had to hang<lb/>
on to win.<lb/>
At Northwestern, a 28-0 lead<lb/>
melted into a 28-13 edge. Duke<lb/>
had led Tennessee 24-7 before<lb/>
settling for a 31-26 triumph. The<lb/>
Citadel had closed to within 20-17<lb/>
before Duke moved ahead for a<lb/>
41-17 victory.<lb/>
Two Shawn Moore touch-<lb/>
downs in the fourth quarter fol-<lb/>
lowed two Moore to Tim Fin-<lb/>
kleston scoring passes in the third<lb/>
period and that made the out-<lb/>
come closer than Spurrier<lb/>
thought it should have been.<lb/>
"Obviously, we're happy to<lb/>
win the football game, but we're<lb/>
not very happy (with) the way it<lb/>
happened he said. "We are not<lb/>
sitting around here jumping and<lb/>
celebrating and acting like we are<lb/>
a great football team. We are not<lb/>
Virginia Coach George Welsh<lb/>
also was not pleased with his<lb/>
team's performance and blamed<lb/>
defensive lapses for the loss,<lb/>
which dropped the Cavillers to 2-<lb/>
2 and 1-1.<lb/>
"They beat us man-to-man,<lb/>
and I think that their quarterback<lb/>
had a little too much time he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Duke quarterback Anthony<lb/>
Dilweg completed 24 of 47 passes<lb/>
for 391 yards.<lb/>
Clemson and Maryland<lb/>
joined the Blue Devils at 1-0 in the<lb/>
ACC this weekend. Clemson de-<lb/>
feated Georgia Tech 30-13 and<lb/>
Maryland scored with 1:12 to play<lb/>
to defeat North Carolina State 30-<lb/>
26. Outside the conference, Michi-<lb/>
gan held off Wake Forest 19-9 and<lb/>
Louisville knocked off North<lb/>
Carolina 38-34.<lb/>
Georgia Tech still hasn't won<lb/>
an ACC football game, but they<lb/>
have been close in their two losses.<lb/>
Pirates lose<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
Glenn Willis leveled Tillman at<lb/>
midfield, causing the wide re-<lb/>
ceiver to have the breath knocked<lb/>
out of him.<lb/>
With USM at midfield, Favre<lb/>
connected with Williams for the<lb/>
key play of the game, a 42 yard<lb/>
completion.<lb/>
"We've been hurting with the<lb/>
man coverage. They hurt us in the<lb/>
man coverage. Certainly USM has<lb/>
to be given credit Coach Baker<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Richard Wright (Freshmen<lb/>
defensive back) fell on the play<lb/>
that set up the last score Baker<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Tight end Hansford caught<lb/>
the final touchdown with twelve<lb/>
seconds on clock to seal the vic-<lb/>
tory for the Golden Eagles.<lb/>
'The team has to be emotion-<lb/>
ally drained Libretto com-<lb/>
mented.<lb/>
Saturday's loss to Southern<lb/>
Miss extends the ECU's streak of<lb/>
misfortune with the Golden<lb/>
Eagles to five years. Last year, the<lb/>
Pirates lost in another heart-<lb/>
breaker 38-34. Two years ago, in<lb/>
yet another string of bad fate ECU<lb/>
fell short by a field goal as USM<lb/>
won 23-21.<lb/>
The game in 1985 was no<lb/>
contest as USM rolled 27-0. In<lb/>
1984, USM pulled out all the stops<lb/>
in a 31-27 win. Regardless of these<lb/>
games, ECU did win in 1983,10-6.<lb/>
"I should of got a horseshoe<lb/>
or a rabbit foot for this one Baker<lb/>
said, still in disbelief after<lb/>
Saturday's game.<lb/>
�1<lb/>
United Way<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
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Why not come by the REAL Crisis Intervention Center: 312 E.<lb/>
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OurVolunteers and Staff are on duty 24 hrs. a day, year around,<lb/>
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East Carolina vs USM- Against Southern Miss Libretto was 8 for<lb/>
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PERSONAL INFORMATION- Libretto is a junior majoring in<lb/>
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Coming Attractions<lb/>
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Coca-Cola Owl Cofca 55<lb/>
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Tuna Mett2.76<lb/>
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F'oshly EVked Crazy Bread<lb/>
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Crazy Sauce<lb/>
Randee of the Redwoods is coming<lb/>
to ECU, Tues. Sept. 27,<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Presented by the Special Events Committee<lb/>
Montv Python's Flving Circus<lb/>
DOUBLE FEATURE<lb/>
LIFE OF BRIAN - R<lb/>
MEANING OF LIFE - R<lb/>
Wednesday, September 28,<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Presented by the Films Committee<lb/>
Take a Bite of the Big Apple<lb/>
Sign Up Now for the New York Trip<lb/>
scheduled during Thanksgiving Break<lb/>
Presented by the Travel Committee<lb/>
For more information contact the<lb/>
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GET INVOLVED WITH STUDENT UNION<lb/>
�naaKiaB .��<lb/>
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Tuesday, September 27<lb/>
WHwnyoumok�piiMlrMi90oioo�iwti�i'�i<lb/>
Hours: 11:00 a.m. - 12:00 midnight SUN. - THU.<lb/>
11:00 a.m. - 1:00 a.m. FR1. - SAT.<lb/>
SLACKING OUT TOSCRVf VOU<lb/>
<pb facs="00058096_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 27, 188<lb/>
Lewis prevails in long jump<lb/>
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -<lb/>
Leaping lizards! Carl Lewis was<lb/>
furious, bickering with officials<lb/>
between jumps, but it didn't stop<lb/>
him from soaring into Olympic<lb/>
history with American teammate<lb/>
Roger Kingdom, a hooded blur in<lb/>
the high hurdles.<lb/>
Lewis dropped his John<lb/>
McEnroe imitation just long<lb/>
enough to fly 28-feet, 7 12-<lb/>
inches, lead a U.S. sweep with sil-<lb/>
ver medalist Mike Powell and<lb/>
bronze medalist Larry Myricks<lb/>
and become the first long jumper<lb/>
to win back-to-back golds.<lb/>
Kingdom, too, won his sec-<lb/>
ond straight gold in the 110-meter<lb/>
hurdles with an Olympic record<lb/>
time oi 12.98 seconds - five one-<lb/>
hundredths of a second off the<lb/>
world record bv Rcnaldo Ne-<lb/>
hemiah and third-fastest ever af-<lb/>
ter Kingdom's own 12.97 last<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Kingdom resembled the<lb/>
comic book character Flash in his<lb/>
red and white hooded racing suit,<lb/>
skimming over the hurdles to<lb/>
become the first two-time Olym-<lb/>
pic winner in the event since Lee<lb/>
Calhoun in 1956 and 1960.<lb/>
The prospect of an American<lb/>
gold rush in the final week of the<lb/>
Games seemed more real a day<lb/>
after Matt Biondi donned his fifth<lb/>
gold and record-tying seventh<lb/>
medal and Florence Griffith<lb/>
lovner lit up the stadium with her<lb/>
blazing speed and brilliant smile.<lb/>
Seven U.S. fighters reached<lb/>
the quarterfinals, the men's bas-<lb/>
ketball team made the semifinals<lb/>
with a ridiculously easy 94-57<lb/>
romp over a good Puerto Rican<lb/>
team and diver Greg Louganis<lb/>
was poised to defend his platform<lb/>
title in the finals Tuesday.<lb/>
Lewis, who hopes to grab two<lb/>
more golds in the 200 sprint and<lb/>
400 relav after gaining a silver in<lb/>
the 100 against Canada's Ben<lb/>
Johnson, got into an unusual<lb/>
quarrel against the officials.<lb/>
"It's not fair Lewis claimed<lb/>
repeatedly, complaining he<lb/>
wasn't being given enough time<lb/>
between jumps.<lb/>
He had first argued the sched-<lb/>
uling was too tight between his<lb/>
200-meter qualifying heats and<lb/>
the long jumps, lie ran in the last<lb/>
first-round heat and the first sec-<lb/>
ond-round heat of the 200 and<lb/>
was scheduled to go first in the<lb/>
long jump.<lb/>
"They couldn't have found a<lb/>
worse way to set me up he said.<lb/>
Was it a challenge?<lb/>
"More than that he said. "I<lb/>
think it was a planned challenge<lb/>
After three qualifying jumps,<lb/>
though, he was moved back to<lb/>
first in the order, and he com-<lb/>
plained he should have 10 min-<lb/>
utes between jumps.<lb/>
Instead, he said, an official<lb/>
told him to get on the runway<lb/>
right away.<lb/>
"I said the rules state inbe-<lb/>
tween jumps you have to get at<lb/>
least 10 minutes' rest Lewis<lb/>
said. "It wasn't really a confronta-<lb/>
tion. It was more of a discussion.<lb/>
And then it became a stall tactic.<lb/>
And then the funny thing is the<lb/>
clock  went dead, so there is a<lb/>
Lord.<lb/>
"1 seized the moment, took<lb/>
the adrenalin and came up with a<lb/>
great<lb/>
In other track events, unher-<lb/>
alded Paul Ereng of Kenya foiled<lb/>
Said Aouita's bid for a distance<lb/>
triple, kicking to victory in the<lb/>
800; Ibrahim Boutaib of Morocco<lb/>
won the gold in the 10,000; and<lb/>
East Germans Sigrun Wodars and<lb/>
Christine VVachtel finished 1-2 in<lb/>
the women's 800 with American<lb/>
Kim Gallagher taking third.<lb/>
Olga Bryzgina of the Soviet<lb/>
Union won the womcn's400gold,<lb/>
with defending Olympic cham-<lb/>
pion Valerie Brisco of the United<lb/>
States fading to fourth.<lb/>
Florence Griffith Joyner<lb/>
couldn't stop smiling Sunday,<lb/>
beaming broadly from start to<lb/>
finish as she proved herself the<lb/>
fastest woman in the world.<lb/>
She ran in the red U.S. track<lb/>
suit instead of the sexy one-<lb/>
legged outfit that brought so<lb/>
much attention at the Olympic<lb/>
trials. No one, though, ever came<lb/>
across the finish line in the Olym-<lb/>
pics the way Griffith Joyner did:<lb/>
bright red lips unsmudged, mas-<lb/>
cara on her eyes and long finger-<lb/>
nails painted red, white, blue and<lb/>
A favorable wind slightly<lb/>
over the limit during her 10.54-<lb/>
second run ruined her bid to<lb/>
break the Olympic record of 10.62<lb/>
she set in the second qualifying<lb/>
heat on Saturday, but the gold<lb/>
was much more important to her.<lb/>
It may, in fact, be worth millions<lb/>
in endorsements.<lb/>
Swimming ended Sunday<lb/>
with Biondi draping a fifth gold<lb/>
and a record-tying seventh medal<lb/>
around his neck after anchoring<lb/>
the 400 medley relay, and East<lb/>
German Kristin Otto winning the<lb/>
50 freestyle for a sixth gold to cap<lb/>
the most glittering Olympics evei<lb/>
by a woman.<lb/>
"As a child said the 22-year-<lb/>
old Biondi, "you awaysdreamol<lb/>
the Olympic Games and you sort<lb/>
of see athletes on television as<lb/>
superherocs - like Superman and<lb/>
Mighty Mouse and all those tre-<lb/>
mendously strong and undefeat-<lb/>
able people.<lb/>
"And now, I put that in per-<lb/>
spective with what I've done. Not<lb/>
only did I make it to the Olympic<lb/>
Games, not only have I won an<lb/>
Olympic medal, not only an<lb/>
Olympic gold medal, but I won<lb/>
seven Olympic metals in one<lb/>
Olympics  It's a hard thing to<lb/>
grasp<lb/>
YOUR SPORTS STATION<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
Eating &amp; Drinking<lb/>
DON'T MISS (1 EVERY<lb/>
OUR REGGAE WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CELEBRATION NIGHT<lb/>
Casual Dining at its Finest!<lb/>
Featuring our soon-to-bc-famous Double-Shot Margaritas!<lb/>
LOCATED IN THE FARM FRESH<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
11 am-l am Monday-Saturday 11 am-10 pmSunday 355-2946<lb/>
Everything to<lb/>
Get You Back On<lb/>
the Slopes.<lb/>
Come in and see the largest<lb/>
selection in the area of<lb/>
alpine ski equipment,<lb/>
along with a superb<lb/>
selection of the<lb/>
latest in designer<lb/>
fashion wear.<lb/>
<lb/>
GORDON'S<lb/>
StOLOtUUtL<lb/>
GOLF AND SKI SHOP<lb/>
264 By-Pass 756-1003<lb/>
N�! to Gra�nvllla TV and Appliance)<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
SHIRTS<lb/>
CLEANED<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
This coupon must be presented<lb/>
ith shirt order<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
SPECIALIZING<lb/>
IN ROCK N<lb/>
ROLL<lb/>
MEMORABILIA<lb/>
SINCE 1980<lb/>
LICENSED CONCERT<lb/>
T-SHIRTS NOW ON SALE<lb/>
YNGW1E MALMSTEEM Burning GuitarOdyssey Tour Black Tee $13.75<lb/>
JOE SATR1AM Cosmic Photo Black Tee S13 75<lb/>
LED ZEPPLIN "Swan Song' Blue Tye Dye S17.50<lb/>
INXS "INXS" Denim Tye Dye Tee S17.50<lb/>
J1MI HENDR1X "Smear Face PurplePink Tye Dye $17.50<lb/>
R.E.M. "Allied" Purple Tee S13.75<lb/>
GRATEFUL DEAD "Dead Set White Tee $13.75<lb/>
U2 "Joshua Tree Black Tee S 13.75<lb/>
PINK FLOYD "Bomer" Black Tee $13.75<lb/>
LYNYRD SKYNYRD Tribute Tour White Tee SI3.75<lb/>
"JUST IN "CrewSweat Shirts S 18.75 &amp; Sweat Pants $19.75"<lb/>
AEROSMITH. BON JOVI. IRON MAIDEN. MOTLEY CRUE. &amp; POISON<lb/>
INXS Denim Tve Dye Sweatshirt $26.50<lb/>
ORDERING INFO:<lb/>
M. L, XL Available<lb/>
Personal Checks &amp; Money Orders Accepted<lb/>
Add 5 N.C. Sales Tax<lb/>
SHIPPING CHARGES:<lb/>
Add $1.65 for first tee and 45� for each additional tee<lb/>
All Items sent Insured UPS<lb/>
ITS NOT TOO EARLY TO SHOP FOR CHRISTMAS<lb/>
P.O. Box 1803<lb/>
Dept. E<lb/>
Greenville. N.C. 27835 1803<lb/>
(919) 355-2747<lb/>
Call or Write about your Favorite Artist<lb/>
' CUSTOMIH M�VCI<lb/>
The ECU Special Events<lb/>
Committee and<lb/>
k i<lb/>
rtvts<lb/>
X<lb/>
MUSIC TELEVISION<lb/>
RANDEE'S<lb/>
CAMPAIGN<lb/>
CARAVAN<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/>
FLEMI.NG<lb/>
RANDEE of the REDWOODS<lb/>
Tuesday, September 27,1988<lb/>
akw HuMwaw � (31 V 99 am<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
ECU Students $4.00 Public $6.00<lb/>
Tickets Available at Central Ticket Office<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
M-F 11 a.m.Sp.m.<lb/>
�Fiesta All Night<lb/>
Tacos-n-nachos 5-7<lb/>
�Off The Cuff Lounge<lb/>
at the Sheraton<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
presents The<lb/>
Return of<lb/>
Mexican Fiesta<lb/>
Siesta All Day;<lb/>
Fiesta All Night<lb/>
Chihuahua's $1.00<lb/>
� Marguritas $1.75<lb/>
� Free Non- Alcoholic<lb/>
Beverages For<lb/>
Designated Drivers<lb/>
NO COVER CHARGE<lb/>
�. ���<lb/>
Must Have Valid Drivers<lb/>
License And Be 21 To Enter<lb/>
RAMADA INN<lb/>
(Formerly Sheraton of Greenville)<lb/>
203 W. Greenville Blvd. � 355-2666<lb/>
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