<?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="00058098_0001"/>
Coming Thursday:<lb/>
SGA committee heads lay down the platforms for the<lb/>
fall 88 semester.<lb/>
Features:<lb/>
Sneak preview at Mendenhall of the new Tom Hanks<lb/>
md Sally Field movie, "Punchline" see page 11.<lb/>
???? '? ? ?<lb/>
Sports:<lb/>
A 36-48 victory for the Ragin' Cajuns drop the Pirates<lb/>
averall record to 1-4, see page 16.<lb/>
L<lb/>
She lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 24<lb/>
Tuesday October 4,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
18 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
After 17 years and two colonies,Theta Chi<lb/>
is rechartered and back on campus<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
Newt Editor<lb/>
After 17 years of dormancy,<lb/>
the Theta Chi Fraternity has re-<lb/>
appeared on campus as the new-<lb/>
est chartered Greek organization.<lb/>
On Saturday, with the help of<lb/>
14 other Theta Chi chapters, some<lb/>
from as far away as Ohio State, the<lb/>
Epsilon Iota chapter went<lb/>
through the installation cere-<lb/>
mony and received its' charter.<lb/>
With its' new charter, the fra-<lb/>
ternity has dropped the "colony"<lb/>
status and is nationally recog-<lb/>
nized. "Because we're chartered,<lb/>
we'll be able to vote on things that<lb/>
effect Theta Chi on the national<lb/>
level, it really is important to us<lb/>
said Chris Ffautz, president.<lb/>
The fraternity, originally<lb/>
founded in 1958, was one of the<lb/>
first Greek organizations on the<lb/>
ECU campus. In 1971, because of<lb/>
disciplinary reasons, Theta Chi<lb/>
had its charter revoked and did<lb/>
not surface until 1984.<lb/>
The 1984 attempt to re-<lb/>
colonize failed because of low<lb/>
membership. Ffautz said, "There<lb/>
was only one brother, Bryan Las-<lb/>
siter, he tried to keep it going, but<lb/>
it was too much work for one<lb/>
person<lb/>
A third try to colonize in the<lb/>
"Theta Chi is<lb/>
back and here<lb/>
to stay'<lb/>
spring of 1986 was successful.<lb/>
This time a sizable group was<lb/>
taken to N.C. State and initiated.<lb/>
With the newfound interest, the<lb/>
workings of the fraternity began.<lb/>
A regional counselor was<lb/>
assigned to watch over the devel-<lb/>
M<lb/>
opments of the colony. "We had<lb/>
to start keeping books, watching<lb/>
over the grades of the members,<lb/>
getting letters of recommenda-<lb/>
tion from other fraternities and<lb/>
prove that we were financially<lb/>
stable. All these things were nec-<lb/>
essary for us to even think about<lb/>
signing a petition for our charter<lb/>
said Ffautz.<lb/>
Last spring, Steve Layman<lb/>
filed the petition at the Theta Chi<lb/>
national headquarters to obtain<lb/>
the charter and was successful.<lb/>
Now Theta Chi has 42 active<lb/>
brothers.<lb/>
"I feel like we're on our way<lb/>
up. We're stronger as a fraternity<lb/>
and getting more recognition on<lb/>
campus. Also, we're looking into<lb/>
buying a house on Pitt Street ?<lb/>
the same place we held this year's<lb/>
rush and where some of the broth-<lb/>
ers already live. I would have to<lb/>
sav Theta Chi is back and here to<lb/>
stav said Ffautz.<lb/>
Brody Scholars Program names five scholarship recipients<lb/>
FCU Vews Bureau<lb/>
Five students in the first-year<lb/>
class at the East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity School of Medicine are recipi-<lb/>
ents of annual scholarships and<lb/>
fellowships awarded through the<lb/>
Brody Scholars Frogram.<lb/>
Established five years ago by<lb/>
the Brody family of Kinston and<lb/>
Greenville, the program annually<lb/>
provides academic awards for<lb/>
students demonstrating exem-<lb/>
plary academic performance and<lb/>
leadership skills.<lb/>
The program's largest stipend,<lb/>
a $7,500 ? per-year-scholarship,<lb/>
is awarded to the student chosen<lb/>
as the Brody Scholar. The scholar-<lb/>
ship recipient is selected based on<lb/>
high academic performance,<lb/>
demonstrated leadership poten-<lb/>
tial, and personal interview<lb/>
evaluations.<lb/>
Charles David Finley of Char-<lb/>
lotte has been named this year's<lb/>
Brody Scholar. An honors gradu-<lb/>
ate of the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill, he is the<lb/>
son of Robert and Jane Finley,<lb/>
1601 E. Crest Drive, Charlotte.<lb/>
Four fellowships, each carrying<lb/>
a $2,000 annual award over the<lb/>
next four years, are also presented<lb/>
to students with exemplary aca-<lb/>
demic records.<lb/>
? uM?w&amp;?<lb/>
.? "5<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
'?.<lb/>
 <lb/>
A cup chain turned to a cup fig and then some fans resorted to bottle throwing. ECU Police re-<lb/>
ported a few fans had to be esct I out of the stadium (Photo By Thomas Walters, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Legislators disappointed in fan behavoir at game<lb/>
By MICHAEL BARTLETT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Speaker of the House Marty<lb/>
Helms appointed the committee<lb/>
chairs for the 1988-89 school year<lb/>
at the SGA's weekly meeting<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
This year's chairpersons are.<lb/>
Susan Cooperman, Appropria-<lb/>
tions; Bob Landry, Rules and<lb/>
Judiciary; Lee Toler, Student<lb/>
Welfare; and Terry Hindle,<lb/>
Screenings and Appointments.<lb/>
During the opening discus-<lb/>
sion, Legislator Bob Landry ex-<lb/>
pressed his disapproval of fan<lb/>
behavior at Saturday's ECU<lb/>
game. Legislator Karen Smith, a<lb/>
member of the Marching Pirates,<lb/>
voiced her distaste for the inci-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
"They work hard every week<lb/>
for the halftime show and stu-<lb/>
dents booing makes it seem any-<lb/>
thing but worthwhile said<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
Landry later presented a<lb/>
constitution for the Overseas De-<lb/>
velopment Network. He said the<lb/>
Tailgating activities prior to Saturday's ECU  Southwest Louisiana football game was enjoyed by<lb/>
many (Photo By Gretchen Journigan, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Enrollment in N.C. colleges up for<lb/>
men, women and minorities<lb/>
the comparable amount charged and private colleges increased 30<lb/>
by most other states. percent, from 240,936 to 312,503.<lb/>
RALEIGH (AF) - An increase<lb/>
of 5,000 students  most of them<lb/>
from the Tar Heel state  in the<lb/>
enrollment in the University of<lb/>
North Carolina system reflects<lb/>
UNC commitment to provide<lb/>
more state residents with the<lb/>
chance to go to college, a UNC<lb/>
official said.<lb/>
Last year, the UNC system<lb/>
enrolled 131,913 students. While<lb/>
Dawson told The News and<lb/>
Observer of Raleigh that the per-<lb/>
centage of North Carolina resi-<lb/>
dents who attend colleges also<lb/>
had increased dramatically in the<lb/>
past decade.<lb/>
N.C. State University en-<lb/>
rolled 1,216 new students. With a<lb/>
student body of 25,537, NCSU<lb/>
final figures will not be available remains the largest university in<lb/>
the state.<lb/>
Enrollment at the University<lb/>
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,<lb/>
the state's second largest univer-<lb/>
sity, is up 804 students, to 23,579.<lb/>
Of the 15,691 undergraduates<lb/>
enrolled at UNC-CH this fall,<lb/>
until late October, enrollment at<lb/>
UNC campuses this fall is ex-<lb/>
pected to surpass 137,000 - an<lb/>
increase of about 4 percent.<lb/>
Raymond H. Dawson, UNC<lb/>
senior vice president for aca-<lb/>
demic affairs, said enrollment<lb/>
growth probably can be traced to 9,236  or 59 percent - are female,<lb/>
the larger class of high school Each year since 1975, the flagship<lb/>
students that graduated from campus has admitted more<lb/>
North Carolina high schools last women than men, and has main-<lb/>
spring, tained an average female-to-male<lb/>
In 1987, the state's public ratio in recent years of about 60-<lb/>
schools graduated 66,045 stu- 40.<lb/>
dents. While the final count won't The most dramatic growth in<lb/>
be available from state officials for terms of percentage was at UNC-<lb/>
several weeks, the 1988 graduat- Charlotte, where enrollment in-<lb/>
ing class is expected to show an creased 7.8 percent from 12,031<lb/>
increase of more than 3,000 stu- to 12,970.<lb/>
dents. East Carolina University in<lb/>
Dawson attributed part of the Greenville remains the state's<lb/>
university enrollment growth to third largest public university,<lb/>
the state's policy of keeping tui- with a student body of 15,579 - a<lb/>
tion as low as possible for North 4.7 percent increase over last year.<lb/>
Carolina residents. State resi- From 1976 to 1986, enroll-<lb/>
dents pay $504 a year in tuition to ment at North Carolina's commu-<lb/>
attend UNC-CH  far less than nity colleges, public univesities<lb/>
pei<lb/>
According to the Chronicle of<lb/>
Higher Education that places<lb/>
North Carolina sixth in the nation<lb/>
in terms of college enrollment<lb/>
growth.<lb/>
Gary T. Barnes, UNC associ-<lb/>
ate vice president for planning,<lb/>
said that in the past, the number of<lb/>
North Carolinians who have gone<lb/>
to college has been less than in<lb/>
most other states.<lb/>
According to 1986 figures, 58<lb/>
percent of the nation's high school<lb/>
graduates enrolled in some form<lb/>
of higher education, Dawson<lb/>
said. That compares to a college-<lb/>
going rate in North Carolina of<lb/>
about 51 percent, he said.<lb/>
Dawson said certain seg-<lb/>
ments of the population, such as<lb/>
women and blacks, are going to<lb/>
college in much greater numbers<lb/>
todav than they were a decade<lb/>
ago<lb/>
"The black going-rate is up<lb/>
from 16 percent in 1980 to better<lb/>
than 21 percent last year he said.<lb/>
The number of women at-<lb/>
tending North Carolina colleges<lb/>
and universities increased by 54<lb/>
percent in the past decade, from<lb/>
111,465 in 1976 to 171,366 in 1986.<lb/>
During the same period, the<lb/>
number of men enrolled in North<lb/>
Carolina colleges increased only 9<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
"They work hard every<lb/>
week<lb/>
for the halftime show<lb/>
and students booing<lb/>
makes it seem anything<lb/>
but worthwhile"<lb/>
network strives to make students<lb/>
aware of the problems of global<lb/>
poverty. The constitution passed<lb/>
by consent.<lb/>
Legislator Allen Manning<lb/>
brought a yearly appropriation<lb/>
bill for the ECU Accounting Soci-<lb/>
ety of $510 to the floor.<lb/>
The East Carolina Honors<lb/>
Organization had its annual<lb/>
budget of $650 approved. Legis-<lb/>
lator Russel Lowe stated that the<lb/>
majority of the money will be<lb/>
spent for guest speakers.<lb/>
The final piece of old business<lb/>
was an annual appropriation of<lb/>
$500 to the ECU Biology Club.<lb/>
Notices and annoucements<lb/>
began with Chairman of the<lb/>
Screenings and Appointments<lb/>
Committee Terry Hindle express-<lb/>
ing some of his goals for the up-<lb/>
coming year.<lb/>
"Its' the goal of this year's<lb/>
committee to keep a full legisla-<lb/>
tive body said Hindle.<lb/>
The meeting ended with the<lb/>
legislators being sworn in by At-<lb/>
torney General Alice Hardin.<lb/>
The SGA meets every Mon-<lb/>
day at 5 p.m. and it is open to all<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The SGA in full swing. Though the legislature looks full, there are some vacancies need to be filled<lb/>
(Photo By Jeff Whigtmeyer, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0002"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 4, 1988<lb/>
Marquette University adopts preaching ban<lb/>
ICPS) ? Angered by what they<lb/>
call unethical Church of Christ re-<lb/>
cruiting methods, Marquette<lb/>
University officials have banned<lb/>
all religious groups from prosely-<lb/>
tizing on the Catholic campus.<lb/>
The new policy is apparently<lb/>
the first ban on preaching by any<lb/>
Catholic college in the U.S. Uni-<lb/>
versity officials say the Milwau-<lb/>
kee Church of Christ uses "ma-<lb/>
nipulation and "harassment" to<lb/>
convert students to the faith, de-<lb/>
scribed by one member as a self-<lb/>
governing "bible-believing<lb/>
church<lb/>
"Their tactics are manipulative<lb/>
by targeting vulnerable people<lb/>
and pressuring them so it is diffi-<lb/>
cult to make a free choice said<lb/>
the Rev. David Haschka, director<lb/>
of Marquette's Campus Ministry.<lb/>
Although Marquette is a Catho-<lb/>
lic school, it does not attempt to<lb/>
convert its students to Catholi-<lb/>
cism. Under the new policy,<lb/>
Haschka said, no one ? "not even<lb/>
the Catholic church" ? may<lb/>
proselytize.<lb/>
A handful of preachers regu-<lb/>
larly travels across the country to<lb/>
visit public campuses. While<lb/>
many students find the preachers,<lb/>
who seek attention by verbally<lb/>
assaulting passersby, obnoxious<lb/>
and disruptive, campus officials<lb/>
sometimes are reluctant to ban<lb/>
them for fear of lawsuits charging<lb/>
them with violating the evangel-<lb/>
ists' constitutional rights to free-<lb/>
dom of speech and religion.<lb/>
Still, some schools have taken<lb/>
action.<lb/>
Two University of Arizona stu-<lb/>
dents, for example, organized a<lb/>
drive to limit the preachers to a<lb/>
"speakers comer" on campus last<lb/>
fall. And in 1984, the University of<lb/>
Virginia ? after a volley of threat-<lb/>
ened lawsuits ? limited preach-<lb/>
ers to certain days, hours and<lb/>
areas of the campus.<lb/>
Private Catholic schools like<lb/>
Marquette aren't required to let<lb/>
such preachers on campus. Bar-<lb/>
bara Kcebler of the National<lb/>
Catholic Education Association,<lb/>
however, reports she's unaware<lb/>
of other Catholic schools adopt-<lb/>
ing similar policies.<lb/>
"We don't have that problem<lb/>
said Seton Hall University<lb/>
spokeswoman Jane Dcganan of<lb/>
campus preachers "I'm i ?<lb/>
aware of any groups that h i<lb/>
come on campus to proselytize "<lb/>
Seton r tall, she said, doesn I<lb/>
to convert its non-Catholic stu-<lb/>
dents, which make up 16 p<lb/>
of the student body.<lb/>
Milwaukee Church of Christ<lb/>
officials told the Marquette Trib-<lb/>
une, the campus newpaper, that<lb/>
thev won't back down because<lb/>
the ban<lb/>
Discovery returns home safely<lb/>
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.<lb/>
(AP) ? Discovery's five astro-<lb/>
nauts headed back to Earth today<lb/>
alter a remarkably smooth four-<lb/>
day flight that kept their pledge to<lb/>
the Challenger crew and "re-<lb/>
sumed the journey" of Americans<lb/>
into space.<lb/>
The shuttle travelers were on<lb/>
course to ignite re-en try rockets<lb/>
for a fiery hourlong dash through<lb/>
the atmosphere. Touchdown was<lb/>
scheduled for 12:37p.m. EDTona<lb/>
drv lakebed at Edwards Air Force<lb/>
Base in California's Mojave Des-<lb/>
ert.<lb/>
Thousands of people were<lb/>
already gathered in the desert<lb/>
Sunday to cheer their dramatic<lb/>
arrival, and Vice President<lb/>
George Bush was expected to<lb/>
greet them. The weather looked<lb/>
tine for a landing.<lb/>
Commander Frederick H.<lb/>
1 lauck and his crew were coming<lb/>
home from the first shuttle flight<lb/>
since the Challenger explosion of<lb/>
Ian. 28,198o, and on Sunday they<lb/>
poignantly remembered the five<lb/>
men and two women who died in<lb/>
that tragedy.<lb/>
In an emotional message<lb/>
which they took turns reading,<lb/>
1 lauck pilot Richard 0. Covey,<lb/>
n issi n -pe.ialist George D. Nel-<lb/>
son, lohn M. Lounge and DavidC.<lb/>
Hilmers eulogized their fallen<lb/>
comrades as "fellow sojourners"<lb/>
and friends and expressed "rever-<lb/>
ence for those whose sacrifice<lb/>
made our journey possible<lb/>
"At this moment, our place in<lb/>
the heavens makes us feel closer<lb/>
to them than ever before Nelson<lb/>
said as the television screen<lb/>
showed the tail of Discovery sil-<lb/>
houetted against a striking view<lb/>
of Earth 184 miles below.<lb/>
"Lest we ever forgetthat to<lb/>
ascend to this seeming tranquil<lb/>
sea will always be fraught with<lb/>
danger, let us remember the Chal-<lb/>
lenger crew whose voyage was so<lb/>
tragically short said Covey.<lb/>
'Today, up here where the<lb/>
blje sky turns to black said<lb/>
Hauck, "we can say at long last to<lb/>
Dick, Mike, Judy, to Ron and El,<lb/>
and to continue for you. Dear<lb/>
friends, your loss has meant that<lb/>
we could confidently begin anew.<lb/>
Dear friends, your spirit and your<lb/>
dreams are still alive in our<lb/>
heart<lb/>
The seven who died aboard<lb/>
Challenger were Richard Scobee,<lb/>
Michael Smith, Judith Resnik,<lb/>
Ronald McNair, Ellison Onizuka,<lb/>
Gregory Jarvis and schoolteacher<lb/>
Christa McAuliffe.<lb/>
Following the memorial,<lb/>
Discovery's astronauts held a 20-<lb/>
minute news conference from<lb/>
space while gathered in the mid-<lb/>
deck in front of a photograph of<lb/>
the Challenger crew.<lb/>
"It's good to be back to where<lb/>
they wanted to go so badly<lb/>
Lounge commented.<lb/>
Replying to questions from<lb/>
reporters at the Johnson Space<lb/>
Center in Houston, the crew ex-<lb/>
pressed pleasure over<lb/>
Discovery's performance and the<lb/>
results of the mission, during<lb/>
which they released a $100 mil-<lb/>
lion communications satellite<lb/>
from the cargo bay and conducted<lb/>
a dozen science and technology<lb/>
experiments.<lb/>
Hauck had said before the<lb/>
Oight that because more than 200<lb/>
modifications had been made,<lb/>
flying Discovery would be like<lb/>
testing a new spacecraft. He said<lb/>
then heexpected some equipment<lb/>
surprises, but reported Sunday<lb/>
"the machine worked superbly<lb/>
with only a few minor glitches.<lb/>
He said, however, there<lb/>
would be a discussion "with the<lb/>
folks on the ground" about the<lb/>
bulky, uncomfortable spacesuits<lb/>
the astronauts have to wear on<lb/>
liftoff and landing to take advan<lb/>
tage of a new escape system.<lb/>
The experiments were wide-<lb/>
ranging, from growing crystals in<lb/>
weightlessness to testing a laser<lb/>
beam communications system.<lb/>
Nelson said all "exceeded my<lb/>
expectations in the way they have<lb/>
run<lb/>
Lounge was asked what he<lb/>
would say to the two presidential<lb/>
candidates to convince them to<lb/>
support the space program. He<lb/>
answered this way:<lb/>
"This is a very important<lb/>
flight simply because it's the first<lb/>
step. I would hope that all of the<lb/>
enthusiasm that we've seen<lb/>
throughout the country for this<lb/>
Hight is sustained for the dozens<lb/>
and dozens of flights we have<lb/>
ahead of us if we're going to make<lb/>
this program grow to the point<lb/>
that it needs to grow to to get us on<lb/>
the path to the future<lb/>
The shuttle redesign follow-<lb/>
ing Challenger focused on the<lb/>
solid-fue booster rockets that<lb/>
caused theaccident. But extensive<lb/>
modifications also were made to<lb/>
the orbiting vehicle, the main<lb/>
engines and the external fuel tank<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey Spencer Meyman<lb/>
Richard-Alan Cook Adam Blankensh<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95 Local Open Rate S4 "<lb/>
Bulk Rate (Contracts) Frequency (Contracts)<lb/>
100-199 col. inches$4.50<lb/>
200-299 col. inches$4.40<lb/>
300-399 col. inches$4.30<lb/>
400-499 col. inches$4.20<lb/>
500-599 col. inches$4.10<lb/>
600 and above$4.00<lb/>
Classified Display<lb/>
Open Rate$5.00<lb/>
Color Advertising<lb/>
One Color and black$90.00<lb/>
Two Color and black$155.00<lb/>
di<lb/>
5 Insertions -11 I 54<lb/>
1225)  54<lb/>
10 Insertions r-i  $4<lb/>
(12251  $4<lb/>
15 Insertion- I S4<lb/>
(12-25")  $4<lb/>
20 Insertions (4 -11 i  $4<lb/>
(12 -25 I  $4<lb/>
25 Inserttions 4ii") . $4<lb/>
(12 25 $4<lb/>
45<lb/>
1<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
CROP walk coming to Greenville<lb/>
The CROP walk, an event<lb/>
aimed to raise money and interest<lb/>
on the issue of world hunger, will<lb/>
take place in Greenville on Nov. 6.<lb/>
This is a 10 kilometer walk (6<lb/>
milesi where paticipants are paid<lb/>
for every kilometer they walk by<lb/>
sponsors<lb/>
Marianne Exum, chairperson<lb/>
of this year's walk, said they want<lb/>
to raise interest about the event,<lb/>
not only in Greenville but on the<lb/>
campus of ECU.<lb/>
"We want to promote compe-<lb/>
tition between campus organiza-<lb/>
tions. By doing this we feel par-<lb/>
ticipation in the walk itself, and<lb/>
interest in the hunger problem<lb/>
will be up said Exum.<lb/>
She said prizes will be<lb/>
awarded to the organization<lb/>
which has the most participation<lb/>
and also to those who raise the<lb/>
most money.<lb/>
Individuals are also encour-<lb/>
aged to participate. "We are not<lb/>
necessarily looking for only<lb/>
group participation said Exum.<lb/>
Anyone or group interested<lb/>
in the CROP walk is encouraged<lb/>
to attend a meeting Thursday<lb/>
night, 7 p.m room 244 in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
in ?<lb/>
Kill '<lb/>
PECIAI<lb/>
?ei? G? ?<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
Big K<lb/>
Soft Drinks<lb/>
2$ 4 99<lb/>
ns n lg<lb/>
12-Oz<lb/>
WEDNESDAY I<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
All Campus Male<lb/>
Strip-Off<lb/>
1st $100.00<lb/>
2nd $50.00<lb/>
3rd $25.00<lb/>
Drink Specials All Night!<lb/>
Admission: $1.00 Members<lb/>
$2.00 Guests<lb/>
Ladies Only Til 10:30<lb/>
Doors Open at 8:30<lb/>
If interested - Sign-up on<lb/>
Wednesday at the Elbo<lb/>
8:30-9:00.You can also<lb/>
sign-up in front of the<lb/>
Student Store!<lb/>
PAPER<lb/>
Hi-Dri<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
Jumbo<lb/>
Rolls<lb/>
$1<lb/>
LIGHT N LIVELY<lb/>
Cottage<lb/>
Cheese.<lb/>
24<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
Cup<lb/>
$109<lb/>
AVONDALE<lb/>
French<lb/>
Fries<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
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LMMIT 1 WITH S10 ADD L PURCHASE<lb/>
miBiummmsiiimm<lb/>
1,000 TITLES TO CHOOSE FROM<lb/>
Movie QQO<lb/>
Rentals55J Peroay<lb/>
MULTIPLE COPIES OF NEW RELEASES<lb/>
New 1 99<lb/>
Releases . . ? ? <lb/>
per Day<lb/>
New Mail Boxes<lb/>
Available at our in<lb/>
Store Post Office.<lb/>
U Itl'l <lb/>
I Mil II SI II I s<lb/>
POST<lb/>
OFFICE?<lb/>
MHV lit I<lb/>
II III Oil<lb/>
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? jdflfet. Items and Pricei<lb/>
f m m m Sun. October 2,<lb/>
? I 1 ? 'at. October 8, 1<lb/>
KroaerXavon<lb/>
Items and Prices Effective<lb/>
1988 thru<lb/>
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unravel the mysti ? ?<lb/>
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crammed in <lb/>
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When ? lid :l<lb/>
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<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 4.1988 3<lb/>
ban<lb/>
preachers "I'm not<lb/>
any groups that have<lb/>
campus to proselytize<lb/>
all, she said doesn't try<lb/>
rt its non Catholic stu-<lb/>
make up 16 percent<lb/>
tudent bod<lb/>
I lurch ot Chnst<lb/>
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3<lb/>
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4$ "e<lb/>
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If 111 s your<lb/>
f escription<lb/>
hile you<lb/>
11.11 your<lb/>
topping 1 ist<lb/>
fURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
Blvd - Gree<lb/>
DAYJ<lb/>
nville J<lb/>
Authorities find 75 puppies<lb/>
Clip-N-Save<lb/>
SrARTA,N.C. (AP) ?It took<lb/>
authorities more than a month to<lb/>
unravel the mystery of the pup-<lb/>
pies at least 75 of them ?<lb/>
crammed in cages and left in the<lb/>
heavy pine woods high in the<lb/>
steep Alleghany County moun-<lb/>
tains.<lb/>
When they did, they found<lb/>
behind it two teen-agers ? one<lb/>
whose family sold dogs for re-<lb/>
search in New lersey, but moved<lb/>
to North Carolina after surrender-<lb/>
ing their license while being in-<lb/>
vestigated. The other was a friend<lb/>
who came from the same town in<lb/>
New Jersey.<lb/>
County, state and federal offi-<lb/>
cials are investigating how the<lb/>
teen-agers got the dogs and<lb/>
whether they have been illegally<lb/>
selling them. No charges have<lb/>
been filed.<lb/>
None of the dogs had records<lb/>
of shots, and the owner surren-<lb/>
dered them to the county last<lb/>
week rather than pay to vaccinate<lb/>
and house them according to legal<lb/>
standards, said Al Eatmon, direc-<lb/>
tor of animal welfare for the N.C.<lb/>
Department of Agriculture and<lb/>
the case's chief investigator.<lb/>
Under county ordinances, the<lb/>
dogs ? most onlv months old ?<lb/>
are scheduled to be put to death<lb/>
Monday if not adopted.<lb/>
"I'd like to get it cleared up<lb/>
and our dog problem back to<lb/>
what it was Alleghany County<lb/>
Manager Dan McMillan told the<lb/>
Greensboro News &amp; Record. "We<lb/>
want to do everything we can to<lb/>
see that they get good homes<lb/>
McMillan said he will ask<lb/>
county commissioners Monday<lb/>
for an extension on holding the<lb/>
animals, and officials also have<lb/>
asked Watauga and other nearby<lb/>
counties to help find homes for<lb/>
the puppies. Five have been<lb/>
adopted. Another five have pro-<lb/>
spective homes.<lb/>
It is an unusual problem for<lb/>
the county, which has no animal<lb/>
shelter and a part-time animal<lb/>
control officer who, before the<lb/>
ordeal, had picked up eight dogs<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
"We don't have a dog prob-<lb/>
lem McMillan said.<lb/>
But by the middle of August,<lb/>
a problem had started. Residents<lb/>
of the secluded neighborhood<lb/>
nine miles from Sparta said they<lb/>
heard constant barking from the<lb/>
woods. Residents of summer cab-<lb/>
ins complained they couldn't go<lb/>
outside because of the noxious<lb/>
smell.<lb/>
When residents found the<lb/>
dogs in a litter-strewn, boggy area<lb/>
of the woods, they began watch-<lb/>
ing the road that passes by their<lb/>
homes, said Geraldine Bennett.<lb/>
"First thing I knowed, they<lb/>
were going in with dogs, going in<lb/>
with dogs and going in with<lb/>
dogs she said. As the number<lb/>
grew, some dogs would break<lb/>
free and roam yards, eating the<lb/>
neighbors' pet food.<lb/>
Authorities watched the<lb/>
cages for a month before tracing<lb/>
them to Ronald Wayne McDow-<lb/>
ell, 18.<lb/>
McMillan said McDowell had<lb/>
come to his office weeks earlier,<lb/>
asking about requirements for<lb/>
raising hunting dogs. The<lb/>
county's only requirement is that<lb/>
an owner not raise more than six<lb/>
litters a year.<lb/>
"He said he was just going<lb/>
into the dog business Eatmon<lb/>
said. "He said he hadn't sold any,<lb/>
but had intentions of selling some<lb/>
dogs for hunting, as pets, and<lb/>
might even sell some to research<lb/>
When Eatmon and investiga-<lb/>
tors from the U.S. Department of<lb/>
Agriculture went to the area<lb/>
two weeks ago, they found 75<lb/>
dogs in 14 cages in a 50-yard area.<lb/>
The dogs were cramped, but<lb/>
"were in good flesh and all, fat<lb/>
and sassy and probably could<lb/>
not be considered abused, he said.<lb/>
"They were getting some-<lb/>
thing to eat and water, or it ap-<lb/>
peared they had Eatmon said.<lb/>
"A puppy can't miss many<lb/>
meals But at least oneof thedogs<lb/>
was sick and was killed.<lb/>
Officials say a down payment<lb/>
on the land where the dogs were<lb/>
kept was made earlier this year in<lb/>
the name of 15-year-old Ruddy<lb/>
Vrana, whose parents - Rudolf<lb/>
and Helena Vrana ? own and<lb/>
operate High Meadows Inn, a<lb/>
motel, lodge and restaurant about<lb/>
three miles away.<lb/>
McDowell, who like the<lb/>
Vranas is originally from<lb/>
Millville, N.J works at the inn.<lb/>
Efforts to reach both teen-agers<lb/>
last week were unsuccessful. Nei-<lb/>
ther has a telephone listing, and<lb/>
motel staff said they were not<lb/>
there.<lb/>
McDowell told authorities<lb/>
that the Vranas were not con-<lb/>
nected to the dogs.<lb/>
"He took the heat for the<lb/>
whole thing said McMillan. "Of<lb/>
course, you don't necessarily<lb/>
have to believe him<lb/>
For more than 10 years before<lb/>
coming to North Carolina, the<lb/>
Vrana family operated Vrana Re-<lb/>
search Animals in Millville, N.J<lb/>
licensed to sell animals to re-<lb/>
search laboratories, exhibitors<lb/>
and dealers, according to Marlene<lb/>
Stinson, a U.S. Department of<lb/>
Agriculture spokeswoman.<lb/>
In 1985 Mr.Stinson said the<lb/>
Vranas were convicted in New<lb/>
Jersey of violating the Animal<lb/>
Welfare Act by selling animals<lb/>
during a required five-day hold-<lb/>
ing period, failing to provide vet-<lb/>
erinary care and not having clean<lb/>
and adequate shipping contain-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
The Vranas were fined $3,00C<lb/>
and had their license suspended<lb/>
30 days.<lb/>
In February 1988, the Vranas<lb/>
were found in violation of a<lb/>
Millville ordinance allowing<lb/>
them to keep no more than 26<lb/>
dogs. Investigators found 272<lb/>
dogs on their property. Rudoll<lb/>
and Helena Vrana were fined<lb/>
$5,000 each and sentenced to 1C<lb/>
days in jail.<lb/>
Cynthia Stahl, a USDA inves-<lb/>
tigator in Trenton, N.J said the<lb/>
Vranas also are under a federal in-<lb/>
vestigation and surrendered their<lb/>
license that month. She declined<lb/>
to reveal the focus of the investi-<lb/>
gation.<lb/>
But she said a daughter, Bar-<lb/>
bara Vrana, was issued an animal<lb/>
dealer license about the same<lb/>
time. Her business, Blue Star As-<lb/>
sociation, has the same address as<lb/>
Vrana Research Animals.<lb/>
FIcwses<lb/>
Order E.C.U.<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Corsages<lb/>
Early!<lb/>
Call Day Or Night!<lb/>
757-1892<lb/>
3010 A. East 10th St.<lb/>
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Clip-N-Save<lb/>
Chileans vote on Pinochet<lb/>
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)  Af-<lb/>
ter a flurry of rallies, arrests and<lb/>
speeches in the streets, campaign-<lb/>
ing was put on hold today while<lb/>
Chileans prepared for a vote on<lb/>
extending right-wing Gen. Au-<lb/>
gusto Pinochet's presidency to<lb/>
1997.<lb/>
Police and some army troops<lb/>
were out in force.<lb/>
By law political campaigning<lb/>
ended on midnight Sunday, after<lb/>
a massive pro-Pinochet caravan<lb/>
of cars, trucks and buses jammed<lb/>
the capital's main boulevards and<lb/>
groups of opposition sympathiz-<lb/>
ers skirmished with riot police.<lb/>
Dozens were arrested in the<lb/>
skirmishes, according to prelimi-<lb/>
nary police reports. Helmeted riot<lb/>
officers used tear gas, water can-<lb/>
nons and nightsticks to disperse<lb/>
groups of Pinochet opponents on<lb/>
the downtown streets.<lb/>
At least 10 people were hurt,<lb/>
two seriously, in isolated inci-<lb/>
dents throughout the day includ-<lb/>
ing brawls between government<lb/>
supporters and opponents.<lb/>
Hundreds of policemen pa-<lb/>
trolled the streets and were joined<lb/>
Sunday by small army units, most<lb/>
of them manning machine guns<lb/>
mounted on pickup trucks and<lb/>
other vehicles.<lb/>
The government has insisted<lb/>
that it will keep strict order before<lb/>
and during Wednesday's referen-<lb/>
dum, in which the government is<lb/>
asking Chileans to ratify a pro-<lb/>
posal by Pinochet and other mili-<lb/>
tary commanders that he remain<lb/>
in power until 1997. The armed<lb/>
forces has traditionally been<lb/>
charged with guarding elections<lb/>
in Chile, where the last presiden-<lb/>
tial ballot was in 1970.<lb/>
SHEAR<lb/>
HAIR<lb/>
DESIGN<lb/>
INC.<lb/>
STYLISTS<lb/>
Beth Long<lb/>
Pam Freedman<lb/>
Linda Jones<lb/>
Tina Getsmger<lb/>
Ricky Narron<lb/>
Lisa BisseSI Whitehurst<lb/>
Melody Furci<lb/>
Linda Murrell<lb/>
UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP AND NEWLY REMODELED<lb/>
Beth Perry Long and Keith Long. New Owners<lb/>
SPECIALIZING IN:<lb/>
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Highlighting ? Eyebrow and facial waxing<lb/>
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Between Kmg Sandwicn and Tre Was.i House:<lb/>
We carry 3 TaOf product hoes<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
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presents<lb/>
co<lb/>
oo<lb/>
"A Colorful, Family Show"<lb/>
TIME Magazine<lb/>
October 5, 6, 7, 8 and 10<lb/>
in<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
at<lb/>
8:15 pm<lb/>
General Public: $10.00<lb/>
ECU Students: 6.00<lb/>
CALL: 757-6390<lb/>
Y<lb/>
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ALL THE PLEASURE.<lb/>
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Except Kiddie Cups<lb/>
1 One discount person per order per visit J One discount per person per order per visit<lb/>
I Offer expires October 10, 1988 ! Good While Supply Last<lb/>
, r Offer expires October 10,1988<lb/>
I<lb/>
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C<lb/>
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REGISTER<lb/>
TO<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
IN FRONT OF THE STUDENT STORE<lb/>
(BRING YOUR DRIVER'S LICENSE)<lb/>
MON OCT. 3RD<lb/>
9-11 A.M.<lb/>
TUES OCT. 4TH<lb/>
9-2 P.M.<lb/>
WED OCT. 5TH<lb/>
9-2 P.M.<lb/>
THURS OCT. 6TH<lb/>
9-12 P.M.<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE<lb/>
INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL<lb/>
AND<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0004"/><lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
oUfe ?aat (Butalinxtm<lb/>
v?n?j in !?.?Mm ,??,? lanmiiit inn !?<lb/>
Pete Fernald, c<lb/>
Chip Carter, m? m<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, oir???rMmm<lb/>
Joe Harris, w?.Erf,o,<lb/>
Doug Johnson, sns ?.??<lb/>
Tim Hampton. rMm ?i?r<lb/>
Mici ielle England, &amp;? ?????<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, se<lb/>
JEFF PARKER,ST'u?mm<lb/>
TOMFURR,CMti,<lb/>
Susan Howell,<lb/>
John W. Medlin, mm<lb/>
Mac Clark, hmmmtvmmm,<lb/>
October 4,1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Olympics<lb/>
Politics play too big a part<lb/>
Many are familiar with the story<lb/>
of Socrates' end. To oversimplify it,<lb/>
he drank wine laced with the poison<lb/>
hemlock rather than perform an<lb/>
action that he felt was wrong. There<lb/>
are two common reactions to this<lb/>
story: one, from those who believe<lb/>
that principle takes priority over<lb/>
longevity, applauds Socrates; the<lb/>
other, from those who prefer life at<lb/>
any cost, denounces him.<lb/>
Either way, it cannot be denied<lb/>
that Socrates sacrificed his life to his<lb/>
honor. And, as the dust settles on<lb/>
Seoul's Olympic Stadium, it is clear<lb/>
that America faces a similar di-<lb/>
lemma.<lb/>
It seems that politics has pro-<lb/>
gressively tainted the Olympics<lb/>
over the years. Admittedly, the<lb/>
Olympic Games have been linked to<lb/>
politics since their inception in an-<lb/>
cient Greece. But (apologies to Si-<lb/>
mon and Garfunkel) politics like a<lb/>
cancer grows: it has wormed its in-<lb/>
sidious way into the spirit of the<lb/>
sport, and the 1988 Summer Games<lb/>
dealt out three blatant examples.<lb/>
 JirtLe AmecarL,Women's<lb/>
Gymnastic Team, a young and inex-<lb/>
perienced group, lost the Bronze to<lb/>
the East German team by less than<lb/>
one-half of one point. The American<lb/>
team had been leading the East<lb/>
Germans, but they lost due to the<lb/>
East Germans' invocation of a<lb/>
rarely-enforced rule whose intent<lb/>
was to prevent the competitors from<lb/>
being "coached" through their exer-<lb/>
cises.<lb/>
If the East Germans had been<lb/>
tenth and the Americans ninth,<lb/>
would the East Germans have asked<lb/>
that the rule be enforced? Of course<lb/>
not. But then, the East Germans'<lb/>
concern was not with principle but<lb/>
with winning. The Americans vio-<lb/>
lated the letter of the rule; but, much<lb/>
worse, the East Germans violated<lb/>
the spirit of the Games.<lb/>
The second example was the<lb/>
Korean boxing coaches' instigation<lb/>
of a brawl in one of the boxing rings.<lb/>
True, a boxing ring is as appropriate<lb/>
a place as any for a brawl, but the<lb/>
bout is not supposed to pit the refe-<lb/>
ree against the coaching staff and a<lb/>
security man. Following the<lb/>
struggle, the Korean boxer who had<lb/>
lost the fight sat in the ring for over<lb/>
an hour, thereby setting "a new<lb/>
Olympic record for petulance as<lb/>
one NBC announcer put it.<lb/>
The third example was the gold-<lb/>
medal fight between Roy Jones, an<lb/>
American, and Park Si-hun, a Ko-<lb/>
rean. It was quite clear to onlookers<lb/>
that Jones had won the match, but<lb/>
the judges' decision was 3-2 in his<lb/>
opponent's favor. This followed<lb/>
many Korean disappointments in<lb/>
Olympic boxing, and it was fol-<lb/>
lowed by allegations that at least one<lb/>
of the judges had been bribed.<lb/>
Sports in general, and the Olym-<lb/>
pics in particular, represent struggle<lb/>
in a microcosm; it is only natural that<lb/>
viewers should see the symbolism<lb/>
in the Olympics. If we are to extrapo-<lb/>
late from what happened at the<lb/>
Games, it would appear that Amer-<lb/>
ica is being badly used and abused.<lb/>
It would appear that America is<lb/>
blindly blundering along in the des-<lb/>
perate hope that everyone else will<lb/>
just play fair.<lb/>
Looking again at the real world,<lb/>
one can see immediately that Amer-<lb/>
ica is in fact used and abused. But<lb/>
then, we allow ourselves to be. Stu-<lb/>
pid moves such as the Iran-Contra<lb/>
affair, or merelv ur supporting the<lb/>
contras in the fi A place, show other<lb/>
countries a United States that is<lb/>
badly disorganized and ill-<lb/>
equipped to deal with the real<lb/>
world. America can't seem to play<lb/>
fair.<lb/>
So it shouldn't be terribly sur-<lb/>
prising that America can't cheat<lb/>
well, cither. America's clumsy at-<lb/>
tempts at covert operations - and<lb/>
again, Iran-Contra leaps to mind -<lb/>
perpetuate rather than alleviate its<lb/>
problems. America's innocence has<lb/>
been spoiled by two world wars and .<lb/>
several smaller ones. On the positive<lb/>
side, the world-war victories led to<lb/>
America's retreat from isolationism,<lb/>
thus making America an active par-<lb/>
ticipant in the high-stakes game of<lb/>
international politics. But to be a<lb/>
truly effective player on the world<lb/>
level, we must make a difficult deci-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
On the one hand, we can make<lb/>
some vaguely Orwellian moves in<lb/>
the hope that they will make us a<lb/>
harder target. We can tighten still<lb/>
further the restrictions on citizens'<lb/>
access to information about the ac-<lb/>
tions of the government. We can<lb/>
make the media a de facto propa-<lb/>
ganda tool of the government. We<lb/>
can even allow violations oi the Bill<lb/>
of Rights in cases which the govern-<lb/>
ment says are necessary to its own<lb/>
welfare.<lb/>
Without a doubt, these policies<lb/>
would make sensitive information<lb/>
about our country less accessible to<lb/>
foreign powers. It would practically<lb/>
end the intelligence leaks (now<lb/>
there's a phrase that describes the<lb/>
problem with Washington) and ille-<lb/>
gal sales of advanced technology<lb/>
that have become commonplace in<lb/>
our society. But at what price?<lb/>
Our alternative is to stick with<lb/>
our present game plan This path<lb/>
may very well result in America's<lb/>
reduction to a third- or fourth-place<lb/>
power. It could bring political disas-<lb/>
ter on the heads of millions of<lb/>
Americans. It would be drinking<lb/>
hemlock.<lb/>
Sad but true: our choice, as illus-<lb/>
trated painfully in the Olympics, is<lb/>
to risk an ignoble end on the one<lb/>
hand and a noble end on the other.<lb/>
We all strive to be first. Instead,<lb/>
we should strive to be best. Such was<lb/>
the lesson that Socrates taught. And<lb/>
that's what the Games are all about.<lb/>
Editorial Policy Change:<lb/>
Due to the volume of letters received each week by the<lb/>
Campus Forum, The East Carolinian is forced to request<lb/>
that ALL letters contain no more than 300 words each. This<lb/>
policy is effective immediately. Letters over the limit will<lb/>
be returned to the author(s) for rewriting.<lb/>
Yearbook criticized<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Being a student at an accredited<lb/>
four-year university such as ours, I<lb/>
was hoping for a yearbook that I<lb/>
could look at twenty years from now<lb/>
and be proud of. I have been anx-<lb/>
iously awaiting the 1987 Buccaneer<lb/>
for well over a year and now that it<lb/>
has arrived, and I have flipped disap-<lb/>
pointedly through each page, my<lb/>
reaction is sheer disgust.<lb/>
Our yearbook should center<lb/>
around the students, faculty and ac-<lb/>
tivities surrounding life at ECU, yet<lb/>
the first 24 pages are pictures from<lb/>
around Greenville without even a<lb/>
hint of a Pirate anywhere. There are<lb/>
enough activities going on around<lb/>
our campus all day long to provide<lb/>
more student oriented snapshots to<lb/>
fill the pages of our Buccaneer.<lb/>
I couldn't helpbut remember my<lb/>
junior high annual and the simple<lb/>
m - ?8n school quality of it when I exam-<lb/>
ined the '87 Buccaneer. And to top off<lb/>
the indignation I felt, my senior pic-<lb/>
ture doesn't even have the right<lb/>
name under it!<lb/>
Tcrri R. Or<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
Department of English<lb/>
Voting rights<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
The members of the organiza-<lb/>
tions listed below would like to en-<lb/>
courage not only members of our<lb/>
organizations, but students in gen-<lb/>
eral lo exercise their right to cast a<lb/>
vote in the upcoming campus Home-<lb/>
coming elections as well as the na-<lb/>
tional elections to be held in Novem-<lb/>
ber.<lb/>
One of the primary missions of<lb/>
higher education is to promote and<lb/>
develop good citizenship. One of the<lb/>
best ways to show one's acceptance<lb/>
of responsibility to hisher commu-<lb/>
nity and country is to cast one's ballot<lb/>
during times of election. Campus<lb/>
wide elections offer us the opportu-<lb/>
nity to practice becoming good citi-<lb/>
zens. So, please, use the individual<lb/>
power that you have and vote on<lb/>
October 12 and November 4.<lb/>
Remember, if you do not exercise<lb/>
your right to vote then you cannot<lb/>
exercise your right to complain.<lb/>
Dr. Larry Smith<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority<lb/>
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority<lb/>
Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity<lb/>
ECU Gospel Choir<lb/>
Expressions Magazine<lb/>
Christian Fellowship<lb/>
Republican stand<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
For the past two years, I have had<lb/>
the pri viledge of turning to the edito-<lb/>
rial pages of this fine publication and<lb/>
finding Justin Sturz immersed in a<lb/>
duel with a campusalumni liberal. I<lb/>
applauded his efforts on behalf of the<lb/>
Republican conservatives, upon<lb/>
which I place my beliefs as well as my<lb/>
vote. Indeed, it is an honor to have the<lb/>
eloquent (albeit verbose) Sturz de-<lb/>
fend our cause against the "bleeding-<lb/>
heart liberal Yet I am somewhat<lb/>
perplexed.<lb/>
Mr. Sturz, what exactly are your<lb/>
intentions? As stated in your letter in<lb/>
the Tuesday edition, your purpose in<lb/>
writing such fiery, anti-liberal letters<lb/>
was to, if I might paraphrase, antago-<lb/>
nize liberals into unrequested de-<lb/>
bate?at their disadvantage?debat-<lb/>
ing on topics that you choose appar-<lb/>
ently at random which vou attack<lb/>
ferociously without realizing that<lb/>
these arguments have no real pur-<lb/>
pose except 1) to stroke your ego, 2) to<lb/>
make others look bad and 3) to splash<lb/>
your name abundantly across the<lb/>
editorial page over letters that few<lb/>
students read and even fewer care<lb/>
about. Correct?<lb/>
O.K Mr. Sturz. Here is your<lb/>
chance to redeem yourself in the eyes<lb/>
of your fellow Republicans. Instead<lb/>
of shouting down the liberal plat-<lb/>
form, why don't you list yours. A<lb/>
fame-hungry personage such as<lb/>
yourself should jump a t his chance to<lb/>
shower us (your staunch followers<lb/>
and admirers) with your infinite<lb/>
wisdom concerning the Republican<lb/>
views on such important matters as<lb/>
foreign trade, deficit spending, sup-<lb/>
ply-side economics, and other thorns<lb/>
in the side of the Democratic party.<lb/>
List your views in your finest<lb/>
William F. Buckley style, type them<lb/>
up, and send 'em all to the editor. The<lb/>
world, not to mention Greenville and<lb/>
surrounding areas (Wintcrville,<lb/>
Bclvoir, Faukland, Ayden, Tickbite,<lb/>
etc.) await breathlessly for your ex-<lb/>
alted answer to Life, the Universe,<lb/>
and Michael Dukakis. In other words<lb/>
(written in one syllable, so that even<lb/>
our professors can understand),<lb/>
"Where do you stand, Jus??"<lb/>
K. Blake Johnson<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
HistoryPizza Delivery<lb/>
Sanskrit<lb/>
Curriculum hard?<lb/>
To the editor<lb/>
Joe Harris's article which domi-<lb/>
nated Tuesday's headlines should<lb/>
pose a few questions to our student<lb/>
body. Is the fact that our nursing<lb/>
students scored so poorly on their<lb/>
exam symbolic of all of our depart-<lb/>
ments and of all students at our<lb/>
school?<lb/>
Where does the blame rest? Are<lb/>
we not trying hard enough? It ap-<lb/>
pears so. Is the curriculum too tough?<lb/>
Or arc the requirements of an "A" too<lb/>
demanding and strenuous? This is<lb/>
unlikely.<lb/>
It appears that society is mass-<lb/>
producing high school graduates<lb/>
that have never had any significant<lb/>
level of responsibili ty. We are seeing<lb/>
too many people at this school that<lb/>
express little interest in academia<lb/>
and more in social self-service. And<lb/>
this is devastating to our standing as<lb/>
a university. Is there any hope in<lb/>
turning ECU from "party school" to<lb/>
an outstanding academic entity?<lb/>
It is only fair that my source of<lb/>
outrage be known. The base of my<lb/>
disappointment stems from several<lb/>
of my classes. I have listened as stu-<lb/>
dent after student has complained,<lb/>
disrespectfully usually, to professors<lb/>
that margins on a term paper are an<lb/>
unknown. These same students had<lb/>
no perception of proper term paper<lb/>
format or a deadline.<lb/>
This makes me wonder what our<lb/>
admissions board requires of an<lb/>
applicant. Several professors have<lb/>
expressed their mutual astonishment<lb/>
of our student's literacy, and lack<lb/>
thereof, and disappointment in<lb/>
student's basic language skills to<lb/>
friends and myself.<lb/>
With this happening at our fu-<lb/>
ture alma mater, how should we feel?<lb/>
Is ignorance Miss? I hope these prob-<lb/>
lems have not become a plague in our<lb/>
classrooms. It is a virus at the mo-<lb/>
ment and we are in desperate need of<lb/>
a vaccine.<lb/>
I hope these problems will not<lb/>
continue to spread. Because I never<lb/>
want one of my fondest memories of<lb/>
the great 'ol days at EC to be one of a<lb/>
guy bickering with a professor over<lb/>
the necessity of a paper being bound<lb/>
by a staple.<lb/>
lames E. Havcrtv II.<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
Paper praised<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
As long as I have been a student<lb/>
at ECU,I never really paid much at-<lb/>
tention to The East Carolinian. Sure,<lb/>
I've read almost every edition that<lb/>
has been published in the last few<lb/>
years. To me the student newspaper<lb/>
just magically appeared on campus<lb/>
forme to leisurely read at my conven-<lb/>
ience. Alas I have been enlightened.<lb/>
This summer 1 began working at<lb/>
the newspaper as an advertising<lb/>
representative, I was simplv amazed<lb/>
at the amount of effort and time put<lb/>
into producing each and everv issue.<lb/>
It is not unusual for some staff mem-<lb/>
bers to average less than fifty cents an<lb/>
hour.<lb/>
On production nights (Mondavs<lb/>
and Wednesdays) many students<lb/>
work well past 1 a.m Gotfforbid if<lb/>
the computers go down, we all know<lb/>
that it'll be a very late evening. These<lb/>
long hours do more than cut into<lb/>
your study-time but they also inhibit<lb/>
your social life. The students of ECU<lb/>
are probably not aware that The East<lb/>
Carolinian is completely run bv stu-<lb/>
dents. As a matter of fact, few school<lb/>
newspapers are solely run by stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
If it appears to you that I am<lb/>
patting the backs of the employees of<lb/>
The East Carolinian well that's cxacti)<lb/>
what I'm doing. I do not exactly agree<lb/>
with all the editorials at times but I<lb/>
still respect these individuals for<lb/>
their professionalism and dedication<lb/>
to doing the very best job tha t they arc<lb/>
capable of doing.<lb/>
In closing I would like for the<lb/>
student body and faculty to trv to<lb/>
look at The Big Picture before being<lb/>
so critical about the product that we<lb/>
so diligently provide for your read-<lb/>
ing entertainment twice weekly.<lb/>
Ruard Alan Cook<lb/>
Industry and Technology<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian xvelcomes<lb/>
letters expressing all points of mew.<lb/>
Mail or drop them by our office in the<lb/>
Pubications Building, across from<lb/>
the entrance of Joync Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all<lb/>
letters must include the name, major<lb/>
and classification, address, phone<lb/>
number, and signature of the<lb/>
authoris). Letters are limited to 300<lb/>
words or less, double spaced or neatly<lb/>
printed. AU letters are subject to ed-<lb/>
iting for Areyity. obscenity, and libel,<lb/>
and no personal attacks will be per-<lb/>
mitted. Students, faculty and staff<lb/>
writing letters for this page are re-<lb/>
minded that they are limited to one<lb/>
every two weeks. The deadline for<lb/>
editorial material is 5 p.m. Friday for<lb/>
Tuesday's edition and 5 p.m. Tues-<lb/>
day for Thursday's edition.<lb/>
Publi<lb/>
DURHAM I ?-<lb/>
ence has shown pu<lb/>
on the superconductimi<lb/>
collider art- mon thai<lb/>
chance tor local i .<lb/>
md off, a spoi<lb/>
! s Department t I ner<lb/>
 I he real situation u<lb/>
get testimony all i<lb/>
of interests<lb/>
uty executive dir ? -<lb/>
perconducting<lb/>
fas said<lb/>
r e h ar fr m I<lb/>
;1 and ? .<lb/>
offi ials, utility con i<lb/>
ronmental gi<lb/>
tage is toh<lb/>
of input that i!<lb/>
and id as a :<lb/>
beyor I<lb/>
D IE t, .<lb/>
comments from<lb/>
- ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
arrived in ' rth ai<lb/>
in pr<lb/>
pi.<lb/>
'<lb/>
imj<lb/>
comm ? -<lb/>
Quayle,<lb/>
Qn<lb/>
dential debal j<lb/>
COr con ten -<lb/>
rj<lb/>
his candid i - ral<lb/>
? - ?<lb/>
the format is<lb/>
debati s and<lb/>
? read for the c r<lb/>
!h, tickets' I <lb/>
Republican (<lb/>
Democrat Mi; <lb/>
a da oft from cai<lb/>
day while tl - -<lb/>
crammed I<lb/>
itchupin(<lb/>
Qu i<lb/>
 u w with 1 <lb/>
said that although the v<lb/>
dentu! exourv.<lb/>
ill JoiifiJliiijj )v<lb/>
can voters is thecar<lb/>
While House - .md<lb/>
senator vwll direct his all<lb/>
the Democratic nominee<lb/>
The opponent tor md<lb/>
chaeiDukakis He'sthc- J<lb/>
running for : nt<lb/>
said. "The senator from 1<lb/>
the ice presidential ra<lb/>
andim tandm<lb/>
and k is that e<lb/>
on th . J<lb/>
a Its<lb/>
? -<lb/>
in Boston, was trs<lb/>
mentary school in I <lb/>
Conn todaj K-<lb/>
rail) on the si - <lb/>
Demo I<lb/>
visiting Dearb rnH<lb/>
to watch the inciner j<lb/>
fis j<lb/>
plant<lb/>
Busfi was g<lb/>
J<lb/>
- five-man crev? 1<lb/>
Force Base inO I<lb/>
president was plan j<lb/>
paign stop later in I<lb/>
Red<lb/>
K' inwhtU a<lb/>
in hea <lb/>
found the two can<lb/>
tual dead heat with Bush le)<lb/>
Dukakis 48 44 percent <lb/>
vev ot B89 registered v<lb/>
ducted tor The Raltir- <lb/>
Monday through Thursday<lb/>
margin ot erre:<lb/>
33 percentage po<lb/>
The vice pre I<lb/>
dates, cleared their c <lb/>
schedules to concenti<lb/>
debate, while workers<lb/>
Auditorium in Omaha<lb/>
the hall after a perform J<lb/>
Christian rock hand aiv.<lb/>
bition by pro wrestlers<lb/>
The biggest task taan<lb/>
BRANDED!<lb/>
Greenville Buyers<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0005"/><lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER A. 1988 5<lb/>
. <lb/>
<lb/>
d<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
iper praised<lb/>
editor:<lb/>
i; as 1 have been a student<lb/>
r ver really paid much at-<lb/>
The East Carolinian. Sure,<lb/>
almost every edition that<lb/>
published in the last few<lb/>
Jme the student newspaper<lb/>
Icallv appeared on campus<lb/>
lei surely read at my conven-<lb/>
es 1 have been enlightened.<lb/>
Bummer I began working at<lb/>
Bpaper as an advertising<lb/>
itivc, 1 was simplv amazed<lb/>
unt oi effort and time put<lb/>
hieing each and every issue.<lb/>
Inusual for some staff mem-<lb/>
terage less than fifty cents an<lb/>
production nights (Mondays<lb/>
Incsdavs) many students<lb/>
li past 1 a.m Gotiforbid if<lb/>
tutors go down, we all know<lb/>
a very late evening. These<lb/>
irs do more than cut into<lb/>
v-time but they also inhibit<lb/>
il life. The students of ECU<lb/>
 not aware that The East<lb/>
is completely run by stu-<lb/>
a matter of fact, few school<lb/>
ers are solely run by stu-<lb/>
!appears to you that I am<lb/>
ie backs of the employees of<lb/>
'arolmian wcW that's exactly<lb/>
doing. 1 do not exactly agree<lb/>
Ithe editorials at times but I<lb/>
xt these individuals for<lb/>
Ifcssionahsm and dedication<lb/>
? very best pb that they arc<lb/>
hi doing.<lb/>
losing 1 would like for the<lb/>
bodv and faculty to try to<lb/>
ic Big Ticture before being<lb/>
il about the product that we<lb/>
ntly provide for your rcad-<lb/>
rtainment twice weekly.<lb/>
Ruard Alan Cook<lb/>
Industry and Technology<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
orum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
e East Carolinian welcomes<lb/>
expressing all points of view,<lb/>
?drop them by our office in the<lb/>
Itions Building, across from<lb/>
trance of Joync Library.<lb/>
r purposes of verification, all<lb/>
tmust include the name, major<lb/>
ssification, address, phone<lb/>
and signature of the<lb/>
(s). Letters are limited to 300<lb/>
r less, double spaced or neatly<lb/>
All letters are subject to ed-<lb/>
)r brevity, obscenity, and libel,<lb/>
personal attacks will be per-<lb/>
Students, faculty and staff<lb/>
letters for this page are re-<lb/>
that they are limited to one<lb/>
frvo weeks. The deadline for<lb/>
il material is 5 p.m. Friday for<lb/>
ly's edition and 5 p.m. Tues-<lb/>
Thursday's edition.<lb/>
Public concerned about collider<lb/>
DURHAM (AD - Experi-<lb/>
ence has shown public hearings<lb/>
on the superconducting super<lb/>
collider are more than just a<lb/>
chance for local residents to<lb/>
sound off, a spokesman for the<lb/>
U.S. Department of Energy said.<lb/>
"The real situation is that we<lb/>
get testimony all across the range<lb/>
of interests Richard Nolan, dep-<lb/>
uty executive director of the Su-<lb/>
perconducting Super Collider<lb/>
Site Task Force, said Sunday.<lb/>
"We hear from business groups,<lb/>
local and regional government<lb/>
officials, utility companies, envi-<lb/>
ronmental groups. The advan-<lb/>
tage is to benefit from a diversity<lb/>
of input that includes interests<lb/>
and ideas and comments that are<lb/>
beyond just the local citizenry<lb/>
Nolan wasa member of oncof<lb/>
two DOE teams that will hear<lb/>
comments from the seven states<lb/>
competing for the supercon-<lb/>
ducting super collider. The team<lb/>
arrived in North Carolina Sunday<lb/>
in preparation for this week's<lb/>
public hearings.<lb/>
Public hearings will be held<lb/>
today and Tuesday in Butner to<lb/>
address the draft environmental<lb/>
impact statement prepared on the<lb/>
$4.4 billion atom smasher, but all<lb/>
comments will be welcome, No-<lb/>
lan said.<lb/>
"Many of the comments that<lb/>
we have gotten and 1 suspect we<lb/>
will get have to do with clear ex-<lb/>
pressions of support or concerns<lb/>
about the project he said at a<lb/>
news conference. "We want to<lb/>
take those into account<lb/>
Nolan said 107 people have<lb/>
signed up to speak, forcing offi-<lb/>
cials to expand the length of the<lb/>
hearings today and to add a sec-<lb/>
ond day to the previously an-<lb/>
nounced schedule. Today's hear-<lb/>
ing will be from 2 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
and from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. in the<lb/>
Butner Sports Arena. Further<lb/>
comment will be heard from 9<lb/>
a.m. to noon on Tuesday.<lb/>
As of August, the department<lb/>
had received 387 letters about the<lb/>
collider from North Carolina. Of<lb/>
them, only eight favored the proj-<lb/>
ect, 364 were opposed, and 15 had<lb/>
no clear opinion.<lb/>
"It doesn't concern me in the<lb/>
sense that 1 believe that is the ratio<lb/>
of the people who favor the proj-<lb/>
ect Bill Dunn, North Carolina's<lb/>
project coordinator, told the<lb/>
Greensboro News &amp; Record.<lb/>
"1 wish no one was unhappy<lb/>
that the project would go here.<lb/>
But we didn't try to match num-<lb/>
bers  we didn't recruit people to<lb/>
send comments in to support the<lb/>
project<lb/>
Nolan said the amount of in-<lb/>
terest shown in North Carolina<lb/>
has been about on par with that in<lb/>
other states. Hearings have been<lb/>
held in Michigan, Tennessee,<lb/>
Texas and Colorado so far. The<lb/>
second team is currently in<lb/>
Arizona and both teams will con-<lb/>
verge on Illinois for the last series<lb/>
Nolan said the process is on<lb/>
schedule for an expected an-<lb/>
nouncement of the preferred site<lb/>
in late November and the formal<lb/>
designation of a host state in Janu-<lb/>
ary.<lb/>
Comments made at the hear-<lb/>
ing will become part of the final<lb/>
environmental impact statement,<lb/>
which will specify how the 53-<lb/>
mile diameter project will affect<lb/>
such things as wetlands, farm-<lb/>
land, water supplies and the<lb/>
economies of each site, Nolan<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Officials refused to ans ver<lb/>
questions about how North Caro-<lb/>
lina compares with the other<lb/>
states vying for the project. Nolan<lb/>
downplayed the competitive as-<lb/>
pect, saying, "The enormity of<lb/>
this project dictates that it cannot<lb/>
be viewed as a winncr-take-all<lb/>
proposal<lb/>
He said the super collider is a<lb/>
"commitment to the pursuit of<lb/>
fundamental science" that will<lb/>
ultimately benefit the entire na-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Nolan and Jay Hunze, direc-<lb/>
tor of the Chicago office of DOE's<lb/>
Technology Management Divi-<lb/>
sion, also downplayed public<lb/>
fears about the project.<lb/>
"We've had years and years<lb/>
operating experience at similar,<lb/>
less-powerful facilities Nolan<lb/>
said. "There has never been an<lb/>
incident where a citizen has been<lb/>
injured<lb/>
Hunze said there is virtually<lb/>
no risk of radiation from the ma-<lb/>
chine, in which subatomic par-<lb/>
ticles are magnetically whipped<lb/>
around an underground race-<lb/>
track, colliding and giving scien-<lb/>
tists a glimpse at the nature of<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
Riverbluff<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
We Welcome<lb/>
Parents<lb/>
And Students<lb/>
?Fully Carpeted<lb/>
?Large Pool<lb/>
?Free Cable<lb/>
?Bus Service1.5 miles from campus<lb/>
'Under New Management<lb/>
10th Street Ext. to Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
Quayle, Bentsen ready debate<lb/>
(AD-Republican Dan<lb/>
Quavle believes the vice presi-<lb/>
dential debate will enable the<lb/>
GOP contender to dispel doubts<lb/>
harbored by some voters about<lb/>
his candidacv. Democrat Llovd<lb/>
Rentson, still uncomfortable with<lb/>
the format, is relying on mock<lb/>
debates and intense preparation<lb/>
to ready for the encounter.<lb/>
Hie tickets' top candidates <lb/>
Republican George Bush and<lb/>
Democrat Michael Dukakis - took<lb/>
a dav off from campaigning Sun-<lb/>
day while their running mates<lb/>
crammed for Wednesday night's<lb/>
matchup in Omaha, Neb.<lb/>
Quavle, in a pre-debate inter-<lb/>
view with The Associated Press,<lb/>
said that although the vice presi-<lb/>
dential encounter is important,<lb/>
tWoUivJnyinm&amp; la?iS.i9r .rS??er .<lb/>
can voters is the candidate for the<lb/>
White House - and the Indiana<lb/>
senator will direct his attacks at<lb/>
the Democratic nominee.<lb/>
'The opponent for me is Mi-<lb/>
chael Dukakis. He's the one that's<lb/>
running for president Quavle<lb/>
said. "The senator from Texas is<lb/>
the vice presidential nominee,<lb/>
and my target and my discussion<lb/>
and my focus that evening will be<lb/>
on the governor from Massachu-<lb/>
setts<lb/>
Dukakis, who spent Sunday<lb/>
in Boston, was traveling to an ele-<lb/>
mentary school in Hartford,<lb/>
Conn, today before attending a<lb/>
rally on the statehouse steps. The<lb/>
Democratic nominee also was<lb/>
visiting Dearborn Heights, Mich<lb/>
to watch the incineration of con-<lb/>
fiscated drugs at a local sanitation<lb/>
plant.<lb/>
Bush was greeting the return<lb/>
of the space shuttle Discovery and<lb/>
its five-man crew at Edwards Air<lb/>
Force Base in California. The vice<lb/>
president was planning a cam-<lb/>
paign stop later in the day in<lb/>
Redding, a growing Northern<lb/>
California city.<lb/>
Meanwhile, a statewide poll<lb/>
in heavily-Democratic Maryland<lb/>
found the two candidates in a vir-<lb/>
tual dead heat with Bush leading<lb/>
Dukakis 48-44 percent. The sur-<lb/>
vey of 889 registered voters, con-<lb/>
ducted for The Baltimore Sun<lb/>
Monday through Thursday, had a<lb/>
margin of error of plus or minus<lb/>
3.3 percentage points.<lb/>
The vice presidential candi-<lb/>
dates cleared their campaign<lb/>
schedules to concentrate on the<lb/>
debate, while workers at the Civic<lb/>
Auditorium in Omaha readied<lb/>
the hall after a performance by a<lb/>
Christian rock band and an exhi-<lb/>
bition by pro wrestlers.<lb/>
The biggest task facing the<lb/>
crew, according to City Public<lb/>
Events Manager Terry Forsberg,<lb/>
is decorating the candidates'<lb/>
dressing rooms with carpeting<lb/>
and drapes.<lb/>
"Thev'll look like vour living<lb/>
room - or better yet, theirs<lb/>
Forsberg said.<lb/>
Quayle holed up with top<lb/>
advisers at an undisclosed loca-<lb/>
tion in the Washington, D.C<lb/>
area, and conducted mock de-<lb/>
bates with Bentsen's stand-in,<lb/>
Sen. Bob Pack wood, R-Ore.<lb/>
The Indiana senator said he<lb/>
was not concerned about possible<lb/>
gaffes during the debate, a prob-<lb/>
lem for the candidate during his<lb/>
campaign appearances.<lb/>
"The reason I'm not is be-<lb/>
cause ifs going to be questions<lb/>
a.nd answers. There's alwdys mar<lb/>
possibility, but I'm a "very confi<lb/>
dent person he said.<lb/>
Republican strategists be-<lb/>
lieve expectations remain low for<lb/>
Quayle's performance based on<lb/>
his miscues and reputation as a<lb/>
lightweight candidate. But the<lb/>
Indiana senator says he is not<lb/>
giving much consideration to<lb/>
expectations.<lb/>
Bentsen, meanwhile, held a<lb/>
mock debate with Quayle stand-<lb/>
in, Rep. Dennis Eckart, D-Ohio,<lb/>
and then flew to Austin, Texas, to<lb/>
devote his time to debate prepara-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
In the mock session, Eckart's<lb/>
attacks sent staffers scurrying for<lb/>
research material, and left<lb/>
Bentsen a bit uncomfortable with<lb/>
the debate format - 90 minutes of<lb/>
questions, two-minute responses<lb/>
and one-minute rebuttals.<lb/>
"He does not seem relaxed<lb/>
said Bentsen's spokesman Mike<lb/>
McCurry. "If it'wbre the Senate<lb/>
floor he'd be very comfortable<lb/>
and if it were the Senate rules he<lb/>
would be very comfortable.<lb/>
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2one is cleaned<lb/>
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(Lamest priced garment is cleaned free!<lb/>
Present this coupon when<lb/>
you bring in your clothes<lb/>
I<lb/>
$FREE Dry Cleaning $<lb/>
Bring In 3 and<lb/>
Get 1 FREE.<lb/>
(Lowest priced gasmen! is cleaned Jme)<lb/>
m<lb/>
$FREE Dry Cleaning $<lb/>
 Present this coupon when<lb/>
 you bring in your clothes<lb/>
$FREE Dry Cleaning $<lb/>
$FREE Dry Cleaning $<lb/>
Bring In 4 and<lb/>
Pay For 3<lb/>
1 is FREE.<lb/>
(Lowest priced gai ment is cleaned free<lb/>
Present this coupon when <lb/>
lyou bring in your clothes<lb/>
SFREE Dry Cleaning $<lb/>
I<lb/>
ALL THIS WEEK<lb/>
THE<lb/>
GREAT PITT<lb/>
COUNTY FAIR!<lb/>
WRIST-BAND<lb/>
NIGHTS ARE:<lb/>
TONIGHT AND THURSDAY<lb/>
$8.00<lb/>
GETS YOU IN THE GATE-<lb/>
UNLIMITED RIDES AND<lb/>
ALL FREE ATTRACTIONS!<lb/>
PITT COUNTY<lb/>
FAIR<lb/>
HWY 264 EAST<lb/>
BIGGEST FAIR EAST OF RALEIGH!<lb/>
Li J ??<lb/>
? w<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0006"/><lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 4, 1988<lb/>
;i<lb/>
Classifieds<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/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT: Duplex<lb/>
House. 12 block from campus. 2 small<lb/>
bedrooms. Large kitchen and living room.<lb/>
250.00. 12 month lease. 402 Biltmore<lb/>
Street. 752-7538.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
$167.50 per month, 1 2 utilities (bedroom<lb/>
furnished or unfurnished). 355-7269<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1982 Buick Century Limited,<lb/>
AC, Cruise, PS, PB. High mileage but<lb/>
sharp; in good running condibon. $2800.<lb/>
Call 758-7413 anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Beige &amp; white love seat. Good<lb/>
condition S50. Call today! 758-9264.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Waterbcd, Queen size with<lb/>
bookcase headboard, heater, free float.<lb/>
$150. Call John 757-1597.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 55 gallon fish aquarium with<lb/>
cast iron stand. Also includes 55 pds. of<lb/>
rock, under gravel filter, hood, light,<lb/>
pump. Call 758-0678.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from<lb/>
$100. Fords Mercedes Corvettes.<lb/>
Chews. Surplus. Buyers Guide (1) 805-<lb/>
687-6000 Ext. S-1166.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 londa CX500 Custom mint<lb/>
condition. 6000 mi must sell Desperate.<lb/>
Call David 758-5510. Leave message if not<lb/>
in.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Papers, SI 50 per<lb/>
page. Resume's written and typed, S20.00<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 S2.00 per<lb/>
page, and include paper and computer-<lb/>
ized spelling check. We also offer<lb/>
Re'sumc' production, and other business<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/>
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/>
PARTY: If you're having a party and need<lb/>
a D.J. for the best music available for par-<lb/>
ties dance, top 40 it. beach Call 355-2781,<lb/>
ask for Morgan<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Resumes Term<lb/>
Papers, Theses, etc. Great Rates Call<lb/>
Becky 758-1161 before 5, 752-1321 after 5.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Shenanigans Nite Club<lb/>
in Goldsboro is now hiring cocktail serv-<lb/>
ers. Apply in person at Comfort Inn,<lb/>
Spence Ave, Goldsboro, NC.<lb/>
TRAVEL SALES: Sell package spring<lb/>
break tours to Caribbean. Free travel and<lb/>
S! Great sales experience and flexible<lb/>
hours! Call 1 (800) 426-7710.<lb/>
ON CAMPUS TRAVEL REP. OR OR-<lb/>
GANIZATION NEEDED to promote<lb/>
Spring Break Trip to FloridaTexas. Earn<lb/>
money, free trips, and valuable work ex-<lb/>
perience. Call lntercampus Programs. 1-<lb/>
800-433-7747.<lb/>
BE ON T.V Many needed for commer-<lb/>
cials. Casting info (1) 805-687-6000 Ext.<lb/>
TV-1166.<lb/>
PART-TIME OFFICE POSITION avail<lb/>
able at Carolina Imprints, 715 Albemarle<lb/>
Ave Greenville. 1230-5:30 p.m , M-F.<lb/>
Pleasant phone voice a must. Light typing<lb/>
and filing. $3.50 per hour. Call 830-1929<lb/>
for appointment.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
CHRISTINE ANDERSON: Hope you<lb/>
had a Happy 21st Birthday! Love, Rae.<lb/>
TO MY BIG SIS DANA: Thank you so<lb/>
much for all the great gifts, especially the<lb/>
time and thought vou put into them. 1 had<lb/>
a blast that Thursday night! I laving you as<lb/>
my big sis means alot to me Love, Col-<lb/>
leen.<lb/>
JULES: Happy B-day. I know we will<lb/>
have as much fun celebrating this one as<lb/>
we will the next 21. Love, Bud.<lb/>
NEW DELI JAMS! Friday come welcome<lb/>
back the best blues band in 3 states, the<lb/>
BLUES DEFENDERS. Saturday boogie<lb/>
down to the sounds of the LEMON SIS-<lb/>
TERS and RUTABAGA BROTHERS. Be<lb/>
there!<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS AND GOOD<lb/>
LUCK to the following Sigma candidates<lb/>
for the Homecoming Court: Kris Kelly,<lb/>
Marta Joyner, Deborah Watkins, Susanna<lb/>
1 ludson, Noelle I logan and Kathryn<lb/>
Sepcnzis. Love the Sisters and Pledges of<lb/>
Tri Sigma<lb/>
LIZ WALMA: We love you and support<lb/>
you 100! On Wed vote Liz Walma<lb/>
HOMECOMING QUEEN!<lb/>
BONNIE ARMENTROUT for HOME-<lb/>
COMING QUEEN. Don't forget to vote<lb/>
for Bonnie on Wed. We love you!<lb/>
CASEY: Hello again Wish 1 could have<lb/>
spent this weekend with vou but I'm sure<lb/>
you didn't spend it alone. Listen to your<lb/>
mother, you know mother knows best By<lb/>
the way, you looked really good last<lb/>
Thursday I don't know if you have ex-<lb/>
plained yet but I hope it turns out good.<lb/>
Don't worry, be happy. There is no such<lb/>
thing as stress. I'll bet you know who feels<lb/>
better by now. Your Not So Secret Ad-<lb/>
mirer.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI: The Brothers and Pledges<lb/>
of Pi Kappa Phi would like to congratulate<lb/>
their new Little Sister Pledges. President<lb/>
Karen Costenbader, Secretary Lisa Kra-<lb/>
mer, Kendran Hudgins, Robin Bently,<lb/>
Brigette McKay, Cindy Jones, Carolyn<lb/>
Mason, Tina Jones, Dawn Edwards,<lb/>
Jeanne Sharpe, Andrea Cole and Angela<lb/>
Woodward. Good luck, we are looking<lb/>
forward to a killer semester.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI: Get ready PiKapps and<lb/>
Dates for the Daddy Weekend. Party Fri-<lb/>
day, Party Saturday at the Moose Lodge<lb/>
and Sunday. Who knows7<lb/>
TOJODI C1FERNI ON HER 20th: Cock<lb/>
tail is approaching soon. Should we go to<lb/>
low-impact or Tony? Don't Phillip on too<lb/>
many drinks that night. Kenny be theone?<lb/>
If not, don't get apPauled or go psycho on<lb/>
us. Just walk aRay and I'll referee vou to<lb/>
someone else. Alpha love, Debbie.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE NEW<lb/>
CHI OMEGA PLEDGE CLASS: Leigh<lb/>
Atkiss, Molly Anderson, Cate Bohanon,<lb/>
Robyn Cayton, I leather Cierpik, Angela<lb/>
Clay, Ashley Dagenhart, Madge Duffy,<lb/>
Anna Eubank, Tina Getgood, Beth<lb/>
Hay wood, Michelle Gibson, Danielle<lb/>
LaMonica, Megan Grecnwald, Ashley<lb/>
Hendrix, Kathy Hewitt, Jenni Higgins,<lb/>
Sommer I lunsucker, Jarilyn Jones, Paula<lb/>
Joseph, Jennifer Kinlaw, Jen Levine, Tracy<lb/>
Lewis, Stacie McCarver, Courtney<lb/>
Maultin, Christie O'Brian, Amy O'Neal,<lb/>
Marv Scott Parsley, Bridgette Pichot,<lb/>
Angela Proctor, Tracy Siska, Georgie<lb/>
Slaughter, Jennifer Sncll, Tracy Stallings,<lb/>
Regina Thompson and Colleen Wunner.<lb/>
We Love You Girls! The Sisters of Chi<lb/>
Omego.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA PLEDGES: Keep up the<lb/>
good work and enthusiasm! You are<lb/>
doing a great job and I'm proud of y'all<lb/>
Your Pledge Trainer, Melissa Tucker.<lb/>
KIRSTIN EAKES We all wanted to let<lb/>
you know how proud we are to have you<lb/>
representing us at Homecoming. Love,<lb/>
the sisters and pledges of Delta Zeta.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA wishes the football team<lb/>
best of luck at 1 lomecoming GO PI-<lb/>
RATES<lb/>
SWF seeking romantic, wealthy SWM<lb/>
who desires a loving companion for the<lb/>
Homecoming Weekend. No common<lb/>
men or petit bourgeois relationships<lb/>
wanted. 1 lope this helps you out Liz!<lb/>
TO THE SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE<lb/>
Congratulations Sorry I couldn't be<lb/>
there for the vote but work is keeping me<lb/>
away. Signed, A Camp Counselor.<lb/>
TINA BURNS: Happy Birthday, Hon! I<lb/>
hope it was the best because you deserved<lb/>
it! I love ya! Your big sis, Evelyn Brown.<lb/>
KA LITTLE SISTER PLEDGES: There<lb/>
will be a meeting at 9:30 tonight, Oct 4th<lb/>
Wednesday, Oct. 5th come to the house at<lb/>
5:00 for the raising of the flag and to help<lb/>
build the KA Homecoming float.<lb/>
LOST: Green velcro wallet. If found<lb/>
PLEASE call Mike at 752-7307. Show your<lb/>
honesty.<lb/>
DARYL: 1 couldn't have asked for a better<lb/>
big sis. We arc going to have a blast 2-<lb/>
gcther. Your the greatest! Sigma love and<lb/>
Mine. Lil sis Kim<lb/>
DEBBIE: thanx for being a great big sis. I<lb/>
can't believe you fooled me. Thanx for<lb/>
being there. Sigma love and mine, little sis<lb/>
Lois.<lb/>
SIGMA LITTLE SISTERS want to thank<lb/>
our big sisters for a great week. Thanks for<lb/>
all the fun and gifts but most of all thanks<lb/>
for being GREAT big sisters. Love Al-<lb/>
ways, Sigma little sisters<lb/>
TO THE BEST GUYS in the world, Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Phi! Thanks! Love Missy C.<lb/>
NEED CASH? 1 lave baseball cards? Call<lb/>
Earlvis, the mad baseball card buyer I pay<lb/>
damn good money for cards of any year,<lb/>
any shape, and any condition. If you need<lb/>
party money, Big E is the one to call. 757-<lb/>
6366, leave message if not there.<lb/>
PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCE-<lb/>
MENT: Greenvilles 1st Annual Baseball<lb/>
Card, Coin, and Comic Book Show Sun-<lb/>
day October 23, 1988, 1000 am? 5.00<lb/>
p.m Ramada Inn, Greenville, N C , Hwy<lb/>
2M Bv Pass, Admission $1 00per person<lb/>
door prizes For more information call<lb/>
752-7736<lb/>
LOST: 7 month male Dalmation, one blue<lb/>
eye and one brown, needs mcdicaiton If<lb/>
seen or found please call 830-3909, 758<lb/>
3084 or 738-5580 ask for John Note he's a<lb/>
deaf dog and will not respond to sound<lb/>
Please call ? I miss him a lot<lb/>
Your Best Look<lb/>
Specializing In: MANICURES.<lb/>
French Manicures ? Nail Tips ?<lb/>
Overlays ? Wrapping ? Acrylics ?<lb/>
PEDICURES ? SKIN CARE. Body<lb/>
Wrapping ? Tacc &amp;c Body Waxing ?<lb/>
Facials ? Deep Pore Cleansing ?<lb/>
Acne Treatments ? Muscle Tone<lb/>
Treatments ? Complete Line Of<lb/>
Therapeutic Skin Care Products For<lb/>
Men &amp; Women<lb/>
355-2969 - For Appointment<lb/>
STazaDrrcenvillc<lb/>
EL-TORO<lb/>
MENS HAIRSTYLING<lb/>
STYLE CUT 700<lb/>
WALK-INS WELCOME<lb/>
20 YEARS OF SERVING ECU<lb/>
2 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS<lb/>
Eastgatc Shopping Center<lb/>
IAitoss from Highway Patrol SlaUoil<lb/>
Brhlnri Car Qurst Auto Parts<lb/>
2800 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
?All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
?And Ready To Rent <lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
?Ixxntrd Stir ECU<lb/>
?Across From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
S32S a month<lb/>
Contact J T or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-781 5 or 830-1937<lb/>
Office open - Apt 8. 12 - 530 p m<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clean and quirt one hedroom fumuh?i<lb/>
apart mrnts, energy efficient, fre water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV<lb/>
Couples or singles onlv $2S a month. 6 month<lb/>
lease MOHILF. 1 iOMK RENTALS - couples or<lb/>
singles Apartment and mobile homes ir. Azalea<lb/>
Gardrns near Brook Valley Country Club<lb/>
Contact J T or Tommy Williams<lb/>
7-v78l5 "<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal and Confideritial Cars"<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 appomtmer.t Mon thru Sat Low<lb/>
Com Trrmin,arin o 20 wreka of rrrgriancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
UNIVERSITY UNIONS<lb/>
Season tickets arc 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 Marsahs, CABARET, The Acting<lb/>
Company in Love's Labour's Lost, Nadja<lb/>
Salerno-Sonnenbcrg, 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, cxt.<lb/>
266.<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 you graduate. We would like<lb/>
to extend an invitation to all students to<lb/>
attend a Co-op Information Seminar in the<lb/>
CCB (see schedule below for Oct. Semi-<lb/>
nars). 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 you "fun"<lb/>
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 sec us today!<lb/>
Mon Oct. 3, 4 p.m. rm. 2006; Thurs Oct.<lb/>
6, 1 p.m rm. 2010; Mon Oct. 10, 1 p.m.<lb/>
rm. 2010; Thurs Oct. 13, 4 p.m. rm. 2006;<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 20, 1 p.m rm. 2010; Mon<lb/>
Oct. 24,1 p.m rm. 2010; Thurs Oct. 27,4<lb/>
p.m rm. 2006; Mon Oct. 31, 4 p.m rm.<lb/>
2006.<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.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
study for Fall Semester andor Spring<lb/>
Semester, you arc 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/>
LOST?<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.<lb/>
night 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/>
KAYAKINGCANOE<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Kavak-<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/>
UNIVERSITY UNIONS<lb/>
The Ohio Ballet will innate 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: "Untitled" (first<lb/>
performed by PHIL080LUS in 1975),<lb/>
"Summer Night" (choreographed by<lb/>
I leinz Poll), "Gravity" (a new work by<lb/>
Laura Dean), "Triptych" (choreographed<lb/>
bv 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/>
Committee and the Department of Uni-<lb/>
versity Unions.<lb/>
WATER BASKETBALL<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural COREC<lb/>
water basketball registration meeting<lb/>
held Oct. 4 at 6 p.m. 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 Intramurral 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/>
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 S50. Call 757-6823<lb/>
for entry forms and additional informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
CRQPWALK 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/>
9450.<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 'or one or more of the scholarships<lb/>
listed below. Planters Bank Scholarship (3<lb/>
at SlOOOeach), University Book Exchange<lb/>
( 2 at S500 each), NCNB ($500), J. Fred<lb/>
1 lamblen ($200) Credit Women Interna-<lb/>
tional (S200), Cameron-BrownFirst<lb/>
Union Scholarship (3 at S500 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. Burnette (S600), Ward<lb/>
Real Estate Scholarship ($300).<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
The 1987 yearbooks have come in. Any-<lb/>
one who would like a copy of it may come<lb/>
by the office and pick one up. We are<lb/>
located in front of Joyner Library in the<lb/>
Publications Bldg.<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
All students who intend to go to law<lb/>
school after ECU are invited to join the<lb/>
ECU Law Society The next meeting will<lb/>
be at 6:00 in Mendenhall, rm. 221 on Oct.<lb/>
6th.<lb/>
NEW POETRY CONTEST<lb/>
Cameron Publishing Company an-<lb/>
nounces a new poetry contest open to all.<lb/>
$1,500 First Prize plus other prizes. For<lb/>
contest rules, send self-addressed<lb/>
stamped envelope to: Cameron Publish-<lb/>
ing Company, 1109 S. Plaza Way 422,<lb/>
Flagstaff, AZ 86001. The contest deadline<lb/>
is Nov. 10,1988.<lb/>
PURPLE &amp; GOLD<lb/>
PIG PICKIN' AND SOCIAL<lb/>
The ECU Black Alumni Chapter cordially<lb/>
invites alumni, students and their friends<lb/>
to our 2nd Annual Pig Pickin' and Social<lb/>
on Oct. 7 at the Pirate Club from 6p.m. to<lb/>
1 am The menu wili include BBQ and<lb/>
fried chicken with all the fixins! Cost: $10<lb/>
person for all that you can cat. Mail check<lb/>
to ECU Black Alumni Chapter, P.O. Box<lb/>
4021, Greenville, or contact Barbara Hines<lb/>
(Psychology Dept.) at 756-6491. Come<lb/>
enjoy an evening of good food, good com-<lb/>
pany and live jazz! Proceeds will go to-<lb/>
ward the Ledonia S. Wright Memorial<lb/>
Scholarship Fund for Minority Students.<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
Then will be a general meeting for all Am-<lb/>
bassadors Wed. at 5:15 p.m. in Menden-<lb/>
hall rm. 221. Remember that missing over<lb/>
2 meetings per semester may lead to pro-<lb/>
bation.<lb/>
KAPPA DELTA PI<lb/>
Organizational meeting Oct. 11 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m rm. 129 Speight. For member and<lb/>
any interested potential members<lb/>
HTM FL TAILGATE PARTY<lb/>
Jewisn students, see your eld friends ?nd<lb/>
meet new ones when we have a Tailgate<lb/>
Party on Oct. 8th from 11:30-130 pin.<lb/>
Meet by the playground in front of<lb/>
Elmhurst Elementary School (across from<lb/>
Ruse High and behind the Freshmen<lb/>
parking lot on 14th St.). Bring your own<lb/>
food and drink. For more info , please call<lb/>
Mike at 756-4930.<lb/>
WOMEN'S TENNIS<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will host UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington today at 3:00 next to Minges.<lb/>
The match is one of only two to be played<lb/>
here at the university. The other match<lb/>
will be Thurs. at 2:30 against Campbell.<lb/>
SPANISH CLUB<lb/>
Attention students: come join our Spanish<lb/>
Club. Meehr.gs are held every Wed. at<lb/>
3.00 in conference room of Foreign Lan-<lb/>
guage Dept. In the now GCB. Elections<lb/>
will be held Oct. 4th. Make your vote<lb/>
count!<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
ELECTIONS! for officers will be held<lb/>
lues, Oct. 4 at 4:00 p.m. in 1013 GCB.<lb/>
'Those interested in nmning for office<lb/>
please have dues paid and be present at<lb/>
the meeting. Anyone interested in BUSI-<lb/>
NESS or BUSINESS ED. is encouraged to<lb/>
attend. PBL is the collegiate equivalent to<lb/>
FBLA and ALL MAJORS ARE WEL-<lb/>
COME!<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR DEMOC-<lb/>
RACY<lb/>
Students for Economic Democracy will be<lb/>
meeting on Sun. evening at 7.00 in Men-<lb/>
denhall, room 248. Attendance is re-<lb/>
quired<lb/>
TRAVEL COMMITTEE<lb/>
Attention all ECU students, faculty,<lb/>
alumni and parents of ECU students!<lb/>
Why spend another dull Thanksgiving<lb/>
when you could be in the exciting city of<lb/>
lights, New York City. Come join the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union's Travel Committee excursion<lb/>
to New York City, Nov. 23-27. For more<lb/>
info call the Central Ticket Office at 757-<lb/>
6611.<lb/>
COLLEGE DEMOCRATS<lb/>
College Democrats will meet tonight -<lb/>
Tues Oct. 4 at 7.30 p.m in Brewstcr B304.<lb/>
We will have a speaker from the state<lb/>
office of College Democrats and will dis-<lb/>
cuss further businesscampaigning If<lb/>
you have questions, call 830-1382.<lb/>
PHI ALPHA THETA<lb/>
There will be a meeting Oct. 10 at 2:30 in<lb/>
the Todd Room. Graduate and under-<lb/>
graduate history majors are encouraged<lb/>
to attend Undergrads must have an over-<lb/>
all 3.0 average and a 3 5 average in history.<lb/>
MINORITY STUDENT ORG.<lb/>
ELECTION of officers for the MINORITY<lb/>
STUDENT ORGANIZATION will be<lb/>
held on Oct 11 at 5:00 p.m in Speight 129.<lb/>
S' jdonts interested in running for an of-<lb/>
fice or nominating another student<lb/>
should contact Dr. Smith (205 Whichard<lb/>
or extension 6495) NO LATER THAN Oct.<lb/>
7. Positions available are PRESIDENT,<lb/>
VICE-PRES SEC. AND TREASURER.<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
CCF would like to invite you to our Bible<lb/>
Studies every Tues. night at 7:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Rawl 130. Bring a friend. For more info<lb/>
call Jim at 752-7199.<lb/>
FINANCIAL MGMT. ASSOC.<lb/>
CASH, VACATION, &amp; PRIZES: HOW?<lb/>
By playing the hottest business game in<lb/>
town sponsored by Wall Street and<lb/>
AT&amp;T. There are over 400 chances to win.<lb/>
The top 10 performers will receive a cash<lb/>
prize, with first place performer receiving<lb/>
S25,000 cash; and the top 100 performers<lb/>
each month will receive athletic shoes<lb/>
from Reebok and a wrist watch, courtesy<lb/>
of Bcneton by Bulova. You can participate<lb/>
for only $49.95. Interested participants<lb/>
can register on the first floor of the GCB on<lb/>
Wed. and Thurs. between 10-2 p.m. or by<lb/>
contacting Student Financial Mgmt. As-<lb/>
soc. members or call the FINA dept. 757-<lb/>
6670.<lb/>
OLD YEARBOOKS<lb/>
The yearbook staf t has a few copies of the<lb/>
1983-1986 Buccaneers left in the office. If<lb/>
you would like to receive a copy of any of<lb/>
these books, please come by the Bucca-<lb/>
neer office and pick one up They arc in<lb/>
front of the office door, and anyone is<lb/>
welcome to receive a copy. We arc located<lb/>
in front of Joyner Library on the second<lb/>
floor of the Publications Bldg.<lb/>
BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
There will be a meeting Oct. 10 in BN-109<lb/>
at 500. The Dean of Med. School will be<lb/>
speaking about Med. school and what it<lb/>
takes to get in. Please try to attend<lb/>
SURF CLUB<lb/>
There will be a Surf Club meeting Tues<lb/>
Oct 4 at 700 p.m. in room 221 at Menden<lb/>
hall Evervone is welcome.<lb/>
S?MQRS<lb/>
Applications are now being taken for<lb/>
scats on the Senior Class Council Fill out<lb/>
application in SGA office at Mendenhall<lb/>
by 3 p.m Oct. 7.<lb/>
ECU GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
!STAR SEARCH STAR SEARCH' ECU<lb/>
Gospel Choir will be holding ROUND I of<lb/>
STAR SEARCH '88 on Tues . Oct 4 at 7 30<lb/>
p.m in Jenkins Auditorium. Admission is<lb/>
S2.00 at the door.<lb/>
CHRISTMAS PARADE<lb/>
The 1988 Farmvillc Christmas Parade,<lb/>
sponsored by the Farmvillc Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce, will be held Dec 1 at 4 30 pm<lb/>
Any group, business or individual wish-<lb/>
ing to enter a float or unit in the parade this<lb/>
vcar should contact the Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce office at 104 E. Wilson St or<lb/>
call 753-4670. The Chamber is requesting<lb/>
that reservations be made before Oct. 31.<lb/>
SCHOLAR-IN-RESIDENCE<lb/>
Opportunities for American colleges and<lb/>
universities to host z. visiting scholar from<lb/>
abroad for all or part of the 198-90 aca-<lb/>
demic ; ear are available through the<lb/>
Fulbnght Scholar-in-Rcsidence Program<lb/>
A Fulbnght Scholar-in-Residence may Z<lb/>
teach regular courses from a foreign area <lb/>
perspcct: e, serve as a resource person in ?<lb/>
mterdisophrary courses, assist in devel- <lb/>
oping new courses, or participate in spe- E<lb/>
cial seminars The program prondos I<lb/>
roundtrip travel for the grantee and, for ?<lb/>
full-year awards, one accompanying :<lb/>
dependent; a monthly maintenance al- Z<lb/>
lowancc, and incidental allowances fori<lb/>
travel, books, and services essential to the I<lb/>
assignment The host institution is ex ;<lb/>
oocted to share some costs in the form of -<lb/>
supplementary funding or in kind sup-<lb/>
port such as housing The deadline for-<lb/>
receipt of proposals is Nov 1, 1988 De- I<lb/>
tailed program guidelines and proposal-<lb/>
forms are available now and can be re- i<lb/>
quested from the Office of International <lb/>
Studies. 1002 GCB, 757-6769.<lb/>
ECU FORENSIC SOCIETY j<lb/>
Interested in competing in Intercollegiate'<lb/>
Debate, Public Speaking, Oral Interpre<lb/>
tivc Reading, or Dramatic Interpretation7"<lb/>
Well, the ECU Forensics Society is for you.<lb/>
We meet everv Tues night at 8:00 in 211:<lb/>
I<lb/>
Mcssick Theatre Arts Building<lb/>
Read The East Carolinian Classified Page<lb/>
Bush<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AT)<lb/>
George Bush commands j! j<lb/>
autumn advantage over M<lb/>
Dukakis in the Electoral Colle<lb/>
but the campaign for the Wr<lb/>
House will be divided in a set<lb/>
of close, hard fought<lb/>
from California to Connecti<lb/>
according to an Associated Pr<lb/>
survey oi the 50 statt -<lb/>
Republicans sound o<lb/>
following a strong, lat<lb/>
surge by Bush Demo<lb/>
concern but sa Ihei<lb/>
time to overtake tht<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
"Dukakis wont nary<lb/>
his Massachusetts n<lb/>
but now people are renx<lb/>
what government, th<lb/>
was under immv Car-<lb/>
Tony Feather ex<lb/>
of the Republican !<lb/>
soun, where the <lb/>
are rated even<lb/>
Said Democrat<lb/>
Stenholm of I exa?<lb/>
Dukakis is the un<lb/>
over yet be an)<lb/>
imagination But he - .<lb/>
the offensive<lb/>
charges of liberal<lb/>
The nationwide :<lb/>
Stress ai<lb/>
avoided<lb/>
What is sti<lb/>
sion and what can be<lb/>
avoid theml'<lb/>
Stress is your b I<lb/>
sponse to any demand<lb/>
amount of stress may K<lb/>
for example, by h<lb/>
paper written on time or I<lb/>
well in a competition.<lb/>
Too much str ss an in.<lb/>
you uncomfortable an i<lb/>
shorten your life Signs<lb/>
include aches. esp<lb/>
aches, neckaches, and backacl<lb/>
"nervous stomach<lb/>
chest pams. grouchiness<lb/>
and drinking too much<lb/>
little, inability to sit sli<lb/>
trate, insomnia, and ha<lb/>
fears about known or unk-no<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Sleep at least 6-5<lb/>
night; sleep helps the h d I<lb/>
store itself. Exercise -<lb/>
swimming, running<lb/>
reduces tension and<lb/>
mental alertness. Diet influ<lb/>
your reaction to stress c i <lb/>
increases feelings of anxiety.<lb/>
down on sugar sail<lb/>
food, and caffeine.<lb/>
Spend time alone ea I<lb/>
to give yourself a chance I<lb/>
wind and focus on yours<lb/>
your friends as s unding<lb/>
sharing daily expei<lb/>
them can be rela<lb/>
at the same time Consider! -<lb/>
courses in time arrangem<lb/>
stress reduction All oi us<lb/>
benefit from these pr grams;tl<lb/>
can help us put our busv In<lb/>
back into perspective<lb/>
Depression is a mo <lb/>
turbance; feelings of sadn<lb/>
disappointment or loneliness<lb/>
present and may cause' the<lb/>
pressed person to withdraw fri<lb/>
people and activities, and<lb/>
velopphvsical discomfort - i<lb/>
aches, pains, fatigue, poor -j<lb/>
tion, weight less or gain an<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
FAMOU<lb/>
?GENEROUS T<lb/>
?REALC1<lb/>
?Fl<lb/>
DELIVERY HOURS<lb/>
SUNTHURS. 4 PI<lb/>
FRI.&amp;SAT. 4PMT<lb/>
DELIVERY CHARG75<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0007"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 4.1988 7<lb/>
SERVICE ANNOUNCE-<lb/>
- 1st Annual Baseball<lb/>
I Dink ivvk Show Sun<lb/>
tor 23 1988 1000 am - 5:00<lb/>
da Inn Greenville N C Hwy<lb/>
. : pi :on<lb/>
. mation call<lb/>
or one blue<lb/>
?on It<lb/>
I 19 758<lb/>
he'sa<lb/>
id to ound<lb/>
I TOftO<lb/>
S HAIRSTYLING<lb/>
1E CUT 700<lb/>
IK-INS WELCOME<lb/>
KS OF SI RVING ECU<lb/>
H KS FKi 1 CAMPUS<lb/>
??<lb/>
Street<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
JORTION<lb/>
IEE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
lat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
ngle Women's<lb/>
alth Center<lb/>
uirr or-<lb/>
00-433-2930<lb/>
d school and what it<lb/>
it in Tloaso trv to attend.<lb/>
RJ CLL'H<lb/>
SJbNJQRS<lb/>
taker t.r<lb/>
. f ill out<lb/>
Me-ndonhall<lb/>
:U GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
;<lb/>
lies H t 4 at 7 3fJ<lb/>
dn ission is<lb/>
LBiiTMAS PARADE<lb/>
. - stn i- Parade<lb/>
by t! Tiher of<lb/>
tec i at 4 30p.m<lb/>
iness or individual wish<lb/>
Iter a float or unit in the parade this<lb/>
tact the Chamber of<lb/>
A I Wilson St or<lb/>
he Chamber is requesting<lb/>
made before Oct. "U<lb/>
L AR-IX RESIDENCE<lb/>
Km Tican (.ollegt- and<lb/>
? - visiting scholar from<lb/>
1989 K) aca<lb/>
h the<lb/>
? ign area<lb/>
ires erson in<lb/>
l es, assist in devel<lb/>
' courses, or participate in spo<lb/>
The program provides<lb/>
I j. tra ? ? ? grantee and, r r<lb/>
award jii on ; .<lb/>
nt; a monthly mamt. i<lb/>
 allovvaii es f ;r<lb/>
? s essential t -1<lb/>
? institution is ex<lb/>
i sts in the form ol i<lb/>
I ling or in-kind sup- ;<lb/>
deadline for<lb/>
1, WHH De- ?<lb/>
)gram guidelines and proposal -<lb/>
ie available now and can be re<lb/>
I' fficeol Internationa:<lb/>
iUFUXSJCSQCiET<lb/>
d in competing in Intercollegiate<lb/>
iPublic Speaking, Oral Interpre .<lb/>
ping, or Dramatic Interpretation'<lb/>
CU Forensics Society is for vou<lb/>
everv Tucs night at 8 00 in 211<lb/>
I Theatre Arts Building<lb/>
age<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
e<lb/>
I<lb/>
r<lb/>
e<lb/>
e<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
e<lb/>
k<lb/>
y<lb/>
Bush has slim lead over Dukakis<lb/>
r<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) -<lb/>
George Bush commands an early<lb/>
autumn advantage over Michael<lb/>
Dukakis in the Electoral College,<lb/>
but the campaign for the White<lb/>
House will be decided in a series<lb/>
of close, hard fought contests<lb/>
trom California to Connecticut,<lb/>
according to an Associated Press<lb/>
survey of the 50 states.<lb/>
Republicans sound confident<lb/>
following a strong, late summer<lb/>
surge by Bush. Democrats project<lb/>
concern but say there's ample<lb/>
time to overtake the vice presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
"Dukakis won the primary on<lb/>
his Massachusetts miracle claim,<lb/>
but now people are remembering<lb/>
what government, the economy,<lb/>
was under Jimmy Carter said<lb/>
Tony Feather, executive director<lb/>
of the Republican Party in Mis-<lb/>
souri, where the two candidates<lb/>
are rated even.<lb/>
Said Democratic Rep. Charles<lb/>
stenholm of Texas, where<lb/>
' Dukakis is the underdog: "It's not<lb/>
over vet by anv stretch of the<lb/>
imagination. But he's got to go on<lb/>
the offensive" against Bush's<lb/>
charges of liberalism.<lb/>
The nationwide public opin-<lb/>
ion surveys indicate a narrow<lb/>
advantage for Bush, although the<lb/>
same surveys show enough unde-<lb/>
cided and loosely committed vot-<lb/>
ers to alter the outcome of the race<lb/>
at the last moment.<lb/>
Adding to the uncertainty isa<lb/>
campaign caelcndar that includes<lb/>
a debate Wednesday betweren<lb/>
vice presidential candidates Dan<lb/>
Quayle and Lloyd Bentscn, fol-<lb/>
lowed by a return engagement<lb/>
between Dukakis and Bush in<lb/>
mid-October. After that comes a<lb/>
three-week sprint to the finish line<lb/>
punctuated by a barrage of televi-<lb/>
sion commercials.<lb/>
Bush appears to be solidify-<lb/>
ing much of the traditional Re-<lb/>
publican base across the South<lb/>
and Rocky Mountain We.4e sur-<lb/>
vey showed. He is rated the solid<lb/>
leader in Florida with its 21 elec-<lb/>
toral votes and seems to be open-<lb/>
ing a little daylight between him-<lb/>
self and the Democrats in Texas,<lb/>
although Dukakis is waging an<lb/>
intensive campaign in running<lb/>
mate Lloyd Bentsen's home state.<lb/>
Dukakis is given the edge in<lb/>
several traditional Democratic<lb/>
party strongholds, including<lb/>
New York with its 36 electoral<lb/>
votes, but has not been as success-<lb/>
ful as Bush in cementing his own<lb/>
political base.<lb/>
The A survey of Political<lb/>
Leaders, Independent Analysts<lb/>
and Public Opinion Polls in all 50<lb/>
states turned up frequent expres-<lb/>
sions of concern among demo-<lb/>
crats over the shape of Dukakis'<lb/>
campaign, tempered with hope<lb/>
that the Massachusetts governor<lb/>
may be on the rebound after suf-<lb/>
fering a political free fall earlier in<lb/>
the campaign.<lb/>
Republicans who were wor-<lb/>
ried when Bush was down in the<lb/>
polls last summer are smiling at<lb/>
their fortunes now that he is<lb/>
showing surprising strength in<lb/>
states like New York, Pennsylva-<lb/>
nia and Iowa that figured to be<lb/>
among his weakest.<lb/>
The Electoral College lineup<lb/>
looks like this:<lb/>
- Bush's strongest region is<lb/>
probably the South, where he<lb/>
leads almost everywhere.<lb/>
Bentsen's presence on the ticket<lb/>
almost guarantees a close race in<lb/>
Texas, however, and Dukakis has<lb/>
strong support in North Carolina<lb/>
and border states such as Arkan-<lb/>
sas, Kentucky and Tennessee.<lb/>
- California and Washington<lb/>
on the West Coast are rated as<lb/>
tossups, with Dukakis given the<lb/>
edge in Oregon. Bush appears to<lb/>
have firmed up support in tradi-<lb/>
tional Republican states such as<lb/>
Utah, Idaho and Wyoming, but<lb/>
the Dukakis campaign says it has<lb/>
strength in New Mexico and<lb/>
Montana.<lb/>
- Farm states such as Kansas<lb/>
and Nebraska are leaning to Bush,<lb/>
while Dukakis harbors hope for<lb/>
the Dakotas. Dukakis is favored in<lb/>
Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota<lb/>
in the upper Midwest. Dukakis<lb/>
has no hopes<lb/>
for Quayle's home state of<lb/>
Indiana. The Democrat seems to<lb/>
have a slight edge in Illinois, but<lb/>
Democrats concede he is proba-<lb/>
bly slightly behind in Ohio and<lb/>
Missouri. Republicans see a nar-<lb/>
row advantage in Michigan.<lb/>
- The Northeast is Dukakis'<lb/>
strongest region, and despite<lb/>
closer-than-expected public polls,<lb/>
he is regarded as the likely winner<lb/>
at home in Massachusetts as well<lb/>
as New York, Rhode Island,<lb/>
-jnra-y.mB-rfy<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
NITE IS COLLEGE NITE 8-11<lb/>
ONLY $2.00<lb/>
ADMISSION WTTH COLLEGE ID<lb/>
.75 SKATE RENTAL<lb/>
104 E. RED BANKS RD. ? GREENVILLE. NC ? 756 6000<lb/>
Stress and depression can be<lb/>
avoided with a few measures<lb/>
What is stress and depres-<lb/>
sion and what can be done to<lb/>
avoid them?<lb/>
Stress is your body's re-<lb/>
sponse to anv demand. A certain<lb/>
amount of stress may be helpful,<lb/>
for example, bv helping you get a<lb/>
paper written on time or bv doing<lb/>
well in a competition.<lb/>
Too much stress can make<lb/>
vou uncomfortable and can<lb/>
shorten your life. Signs of stress<lb/>
include aches, especially head-<lb/>
aches, neckaches, and backaches<lb/>
"nervous stomach diarrhea,<lb/>
chest pains, grouchiness, eating<lb/>
and drinking too much or too<lb/>
little, inability to sit still or concen-<lb/>
trate, insomnia, and having vague<lb/>
fears about known or unk-nown<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Sleep at least 6-8 hours a<lb/>
night; sleep helps the body to re-<lb/>
store itself. Exercise such as<lb/>
swimming, running, and aerobics<lb/>
reduces tension and increases<lb/>
mental alertness. Diet influences<lb/>
your reaction to stress; caffeine<lb/>
increases feelings of anxiety. Cut<lb/>
down on sugar, salt, alcohol, junk<lb/>
food, and caffeine.<lb/>
Spend time alone each day<lb/>
to give yourself a chance to un-<lb/>
wind and focus on yourself. Use<lb/>
your friends as sounding boards;<lb/>
sharing daily experiences with<lb/>
them can be relaxing and helpful<lb/>
at the same time. Consider taking<lb/>
courses in time arrangement or<lb/>
stress reduction. All of us can<lb/>
benefit from these programs; they<lb/>
can help us put our busy lives<lb/>
back into perspective.<lb/>
Depression is a mood dis-<lb/>
turbance; feelings of sadness,<lb/>
disappointment or loneliness are<lb/>
present and may cause the de-<lb/>
pressed person to withdraw from<lb/>
people and activities, and de-<lb/>
velop physical discomfort such as<lb/>
aches, pains, fatigue, poor diges-<lb/>
tion, weight loss or gain, and sleep<lb/>
disturbances. The person also<lb/>
loses the ability to enjoy life.<lb/>
Depression can occur as the<lb/>
result of a loss - death of a loved<lb/>
one, the loss oi a relationship, or<lb/>
the loss oi an object or dream of a<lb/>
major emotional meaning. De-<lb/>
pression may also occur without a<lb/>
recognizable cause.<lb/>
Some feelings of depres-<lb/>
sion are "normal" or common ?<lb/>
there is no need to feel weak or<lb/>
ashamed. Most depressed people<lb/>
do not attempt suicide, however;<lb/>
all talk of suicide should be taken<lb/>
seriously. Help should be ob-<lb/>
tained immediately.<lb/>
- see a physician tor a complete<lb/>
checkup<lb/>
- take a break for a favorite activ-<lb/>
ity. Have some fun!<lb/>
- get some exercise<lb/>
- DO NOT ignore himher<lb/>
- DO NOT try to "cheer up" the<lb/>
person<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
M?0?T ARTIST<lb/>
Immediately<lb/>
Apply In Person At<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
(2nd Floor, Publications Building in front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
East Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
?DIAMONDS<lb/>
?STERLING SILVERY<lb/>
?TELEVISIONS<lb/>
?GUNS<lb/>
?JEWELRY<lb/>
?GUITARS<lb/>
?COINS<lb/>
?CAMERAS<lb/>
?STEREOS<lb/>
?VCR'S<lb/>
752-0322<lb/>
CORNER OF 10TH &amp; DICKINSON<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
SMALL<lb/>
Cheese Pizza $4.95<lb/>
Cheese and 1 Topping$5.60<lb/>
Each Additional Topping$ .65<lb/>
SPECIALTY PIZZAS<lb/>
Cheese Lovers$6.90<lb/>
Meat Lovers$6.90<lb/>
Supreme $6.90<lb/>
Super Supreme$7.55<lb/>
MEDIUM LARGE<lb/>
$6.85 $8.95<lb/>
$7.65 $9.90<lb/>
$ .80 .95<lb/>
$9.25<lb/>
$9.25<lb/>
$9.25<lb/>
$10.05<lb/>
$11.80<lb/>
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$12.75<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA HUTQUALITY<lb/>
?GENEROUS TOPPINGS<lb/>
?REAL CHEESE<lb/>
?FRESH VEGETABLES<lb/>
?DOUGH MADE FRESH DAILY - NEVER FROZEN<lb/>
DELIVERY HOURS<lb/>
SUNTHURS. 4 PM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
FRI.&amp;SAT. 4 PM TO 1:00 AM<lb/>
DELIVERY CHARG75<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmimmm COUPON GOOD FOR JUST 7 DAYS!<lb/>
DELIVERY AREA LIMITED TO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
PHONE 752-4445<lb/>
PIZZA HUT PAIRS!<lb/>
2 MEDIUM CHEESE PIZZAS<lb/>
FOR ONLY $9.99<lb/>
$1.29 PER TOPPING COVERS BOTH PIZZAS<lb/>
? Icoupon expires OcL 10, 1988)<lb/>
 East Carolina's<lb/>
Finest Tea<lb/>
Jfz<lb/>
 a<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
DIAL 7581976<lb/>
?<lb/>
?off<lb/>
in.4<lb/>
4111<lb/>
O<lb/>
 -<lb/>
? East Carolina<lb/>
Tea Party<lb/>
? Every Thursday<lb/>
at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
? Free Admission<lb/>
All Night<lb/>
? $3 First Iced Tea<lb/>
$2 For 2nd, 3rd, &amp; 4th<lb/>
plus you keep the Mason Jar<lb/>
? Free non-alcoholic drinks for<lb/>
designated drivers.<lb/>
? Must be 21 to enter and have valid I.D.<lb/>
? High Energy Music provided by Connie<lb/>
Rogers, Greenville's Hottest DJ.<lb/>
RAMADA INN<lb/>
?<lb/>
5 c (Formerly Sheraton of Greenville)<lb/>
203 W. Greenville Blvd. ? 355-2666<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
Gigantic Warehouse Sale<lb/>
Just For You<lb/>
NOTHING OVER $10<lb/>
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY<lb/>
HIJACK<lb/>
<lb/>
Tom Tog's<lb/>
Factory Outlet<lb/>
1900 Dickinson Ave<lb/>
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx<lb/>
Trocadero Tom Togs Fashions<lb/>
Come Visit A New Image Featuring<lb/>
1st 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 Mori. - Sat (Fri. &amp; Sat til 9)<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
Visit Our Other Locations<lb/>
Hwy. 64 East Between<lb/>
Bethel and Tarboro<lb/>
Conetoe, N.C.<lb/>
Wed. -Sat. 9-5<lb/>
Hwy. 70 West<lb/>
Morehead City, N.C.<lb/>
Wed. - Sat9-5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 4. 1988 7<lb/>
VNNOl Ni. 1<lb/>
. . a Sun<lb/>
 .) m 5 00<lb/>
one blue<lb/>
sound<lb/>
L-TOftO<lb/>
Ins hairstyling<lb/>
1E CUT 700<lb/>
K INS WTLCOME<lb/>
i RVING ECU<lb/>
M CAMP1 S<lb/>
JJjLS<lb/>
PORTION<lb/>
EE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
at. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
ngle Women's<lb/>
lealth Center<lb/>
00-433 2930<lb/>
.school and hat it<lb/>
(tend<lb/>
IB<lb/>
QRS<lb/>
GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
HRISTMAS PARADE<lb/>
R-IX-RESIDENCE<lb/>
- i ,i<lb/>
;h the<lb/>
?ram.<lb/>
? may ?<lb/>
n area<lb/>
X FORENSIC SOCIETY<lb/>
giate<lb/>
peaking, Oral Interpre<lb/>
:? . relation?<lb/>
ECU Forensks Society is for vou<lb/>
. a night al 8 00 in 211<lb/>
I i atrc Arts Building<lb/>
age<lb/>
r<lb/>
IS<lb/>
t<lb/>
t-<lb/>
it<lb/>
iV<lb/>
;r<lb/>
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Bush has slim lead over Dukakis!<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) -<lb/>
(ieorge Bush commands an earlv<lb/>
autumn advantage over Michael<lb/>
Dukakis in the Electoral College,<lb/>
but the campaign for the White<lb/>
House will be decided in a series<lb/>
o( close, hard fought contests<lb/>
irom California to Connecticut,<lb/>
according to an Associated Press<lb/>
survey of the 50 states.<lb/>
Republicans sound confident<lb/>
following a strong, late summer<lb/>
urge bv Bush. Democrats project<lb/>
concern but sav there's ample<lb/>
me to overtake the vice presi-<lb/>
lent.<lb/>
"Dukakis won the primary on<lb/>
is Massachusetts miracle claim,<lb/>
but now people are remembering<lb/>
what government, the economy,<lb/>
.as under Jimmy Carter said<lb/>
bny Feather, executive director<lb/>
. t the Republican Party in Mis-<lb/>
ouri, where the two candidates<lb/>
are rated even.<lb/>
Said Democratic Rep. Charles<lb/>
Menholm of Texas, where<lb/>
hakakis is the underdog: "It's not<lb/>
aver vet bv any stretch oi the<lb/>
,magination. But he's got to goon<lb/>
the offensive" against Bush's<lb/>
charges oi liberalism.<lb/>
The nationwide public opin-<lb/>
ion surveys indicate a narrow<lb/>
advantage for Bush, although the<lb/>
same surveys show enough unde-<lb/>
cided and loosely committed vot-<lb/>
ers to alter the outcome of the race<lb/>
at the last moment.<lb/>
Adding to the uncertainty is a<lb/>
campaign caelendar that includes<lb/>
a debate Wednesday betweren<lb/>
vice presidential candidates Dan<lb/>
Qua vie and Lloyd Bentsen, fol-<lb/>
lowed by a return engagement<lb/>
between Dukakis and Bush in<lb/>
mid-October. After that comes a<lb/>
three-week sprint to the finish line<lb/>
punctuated by a barrage of televi-<lb/>
sion commercials.<lb/>
Bush appears to be solidify-<lb/>
ing much of the traditional Re-<lb/>
publican base across the South<lb/>
and Rocky Mountain We.4e sur-<lb/>
vey showed 1 le is rated the solid<lb/>
leader in Florida with its 21 elec-<lb/>
toral votes and seems to be open-<lb/>
ing a little daylight between him-<lb/>
self and the Democrats in Texas,<lb/>
although Dukakis is waging an<lb/>
intensive campaign in running<lb/>
mate Lloyd Bentsen's home state.<lb/>
Dukakis is given the edge in<lb/>
several traditional Democratic<lb/>
rtv strongholds, including<lb/>
York with its 36 electoral<lb/>
votes, but has not been as success-<lb/>
ful as Bush in cementing his own<lb/>
political base.<lb/>
The A survey of Political<lb/>
Leaders, Independent Analysts<lb/>
and Public Opinion Polls in all 50<lb/>
states turned up frequent expres-<lb/>
sions of concern among demo-<lb/>
crats over the shape of Dukakis'<lb/>
campaign, tempered with hope<lb/>
that the Massachusetts governor<lb/>
may be on the rebound after suf-<lb/>
fering a political free fall earlier in<lb/>
the campaign.<lb/>
Republicans who were wor-<lb/>
ried when Bush was down in the<lb/>
polls last summer are smiling at<lb/>
their fortunes now that he is<lb/>
showing surprising strength in<lb/>
states like New York, Pennsylva-<lb/>
nia and Iowa that figured to be<lb/>
among his weakest.<lb/>
The Electoral College lineup<lb/>
looks like this:<lb/>
- Bush's strongest region is<lb/>
probably the South, where he<lb/>
leads almost everywhere.<lb/>
Bentsen's presence on the ticket<lb/>
almost guarantees a close race in<lb/>
Texas, however, and Dukakis has<lb/>
strong support in North Carolina<lb/>
and border states such as Arkan-<lb/>
sas, Kentucky and Tennessee.<lb/>
- California and Washington<lb/>
on the West Coast are rated as<lb/>
tossups, with Dukakis given the<lb/>
edge in Oregon. Bush appears to<lb/>
have firmed up support in tradi-<lb/>
tional Republican states such as<lb/>
Utah, Idaho and Wyoming, but<lb/>
the Dukakis campaign says it has<lb/>
strength in New Mexico and<lb/>
Montana.<lb/>
- Farm states such as Kansas<lb/>
and Nebraska are leaning to Bush,<lb/>
while Dukakis harbors hope for<lb/>
the Dakotas. Dukakis is favored in<lb/>
Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota<lb/>
in the upper Midwest. Dukakis<lb/>
has no hopes<lb/>
for Quayle's home state of<lb/>
Indiana. The Democrat seems to<lb/>
have a slight edge in Illinois, but<lb/>
Democrats concede he is proba-<lb/>
bly slightly behind in Ohio and<lb/>
Missouri. Republicans see a nar-<lb/>
row advantage in Michigan.<lb/>
- The Northeast is Dukakis'<lb/>
strongest region, and despite<lb/>
closer-than-expected public polls,<lb/>
he is regarded as the likely winner<lb/>
at home in Massachusetts as well<lb/>
as New York, Rhode Island,<lb/>
<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
NTTE IS COLLEGE NTTE 8-11<lb/>
ONLY $2.00<lb/>
ADMISSION WITH COLLEGE I.O.<lb/>
.75 SKATE RENTAL<lb/>
104 E. RED BANKS RD ? GREENVILLE. NC ? 756 6000<lb/>
Stress and depression can be<lb/>
avoided with a few measures<lb/>
What is stress and depres-<lb/>
sion and what can be done to<lb/>
avoid them?<lb/>
Stress is your body's re-<lb/>
sponse to any demand. A certain<lb/>
amount of stress may be helpful,<lb/>
for example, by helping vou get a<lb/>
paper written on time or bv doing<lb/>
well in a competition.<lb/>
Too much stress can make<lb/>
vou uncomfortable and can<lb/>
shorten your life. Signs oi stress<lb/>
include aches, especially head-<lb/>
aches, neckaches, and backaches<lb/>
nervous stomach diarrhea,<lb/>
chest pains, grouchiness, eating<lb/>
and drinking too much or too<lb/>
little, inability to sit still or concen-<lb/>
trate, insomnia, and having vague<lb/>
fears about known or unk-nown<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Sleep at least 6-8 hours a<lb/>
night; sleep helps the body to re-<lb/>
store itself. Exercise such as<lb/>
swimming, running, and aerobics<lb/>
reduces tension and increases<lb/>
mental alertness. Diet influences<lb/>
your reaction to stress; caffeine<lb/>
increases feelings of anxiety. Cut<lb/>
down on sugar, salt, alcohol, junk<lb/>
food, and caffeine.<lb/>
Spend time alone each day<lb/>
to give yourself a chance to un-<lb/>
wind and focus on yourself. Use<lb/>
v our friends as sounding boards;<lb/>
sharing daily experiences with<lb/>
them can be relaxing and helpful<lb/>
at the same time. Consider taking<lb/>
courses in time arrangement or<lb/>
stress reduction. All of us can<lb/>
benefit from these programs; they<lb/>
an help us put our busy lives<lb/>
back into perspective.<lb/>
Depression is a mood dis-<lb/>
turbance; feelings of sadness,<lb/>
disappointment or loneliness are<lb/>
present and may cause the de-<lb/>
pressed person to withdraw from<lb/>
;vople and activities, and de-<lb/>
velop physical discomfort such as<lb/>
aches, pains, fatigue, poor diges-<lb/>
'ion, weight loss or gain, and sleep<lb/>
disturbances. The person also<lb/>
loses the ability to enjoy life.<lb/>
Depression can occur as the<lb/>
result oi a loss death of a loved<lb/>
one. the loss oi a relationship, or<lb/>
the loss of dn object or dream of a<lb/>
major emotional meaning. De-<lb/>
pression may alsooccur without a<lb/>
recognizable cause.<lb/>
Some feelings of depres-<lb/>
sion are "normal" or common <lb/>
there is no need to feel weak or<lb/>
ashamed. Most depressed people<lb/>
do not attempt suicide, however;<lb/>
all talk of suicide should be taken<lb/>
seriously. Help should be ob-<lb/>
tained immediately.<lb/>
- see a physician tor a complete<lb/>
checkup<lb/>
- take a break for a favorite activ-<lb/>
ity. Have some fun!<lb/>
- get some exercise<lb/>
- DO NOT ignore himher<lb/>
- DO NOT trv to "cheer up" the<lb/>
person<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
LAYOUT ARTIST<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058098_0009"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
The ECU Homecoming committee<lb/>
Sonja Love<lb/>
Tyler Hall<lb/>
Katherine Kirk<lb/>
Cotton Hall<lb/>
i tt<lb/>
Teddy Burroughs<lb/>
Pirate Crew<lb/>
Tammy Tadlock<lb/>
Sigma Alpha Epsilon<lb/>
Deborah Watkins<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
Elizabeth Batson<lb/>
Zeta Tau Alpha<lb/>
Cheri Matthews<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta<lb/>
<lb/>
Kristina Muth<lb/>
Chi Omega<lb/>
?<lb/>
Tammie Daugherty<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Kirsten Eakes<lb/>
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Paige Barber<lb/>
Greene Hall<lb/>
Kathryn Sepenzis<lb/>
Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Emily Procter<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
? ??:  .<lb/>
Shawn Bowden<lb/>
ECU Gospel Choir<lb/>
Melissa Smith<lb/>
Clement Hall<lb/>
Barbara Lamb<lb/>
Alpha Zi Delta<lb/>
Mae Woodard Yelverton<lb/>
Early Childhood Education<lb/>
T<lb/>
prese<lb/>
Susie Tolar<lb/>
Medical Records Association<lb/>
IWthanv Robinson<lb/>
Slav Mall<lb/>
Tracey Holderfield<lb/>
Beta Theta Pi<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
Michelle I ud<lb/>
International I i<lb/>
1 i N alma<lb/>
Upha Phi<lb/>
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Scott Hall<lb/>
 ii' Val<lb/>
Leisure Svstems Studies<lb/>
Delynda Carter<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi<lb/>
1 twanna Richardson<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
Cam Ward<lb/>
PanhclUnic Council<lb/>
Christine Cioto<lb/>
Umstead Hall<lb/>
Kris Kelley<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0010"/><lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
e<lb/>
presents the 1988 Court Candidates<lb/>
Bethany Robinson<lb/>
Slav Hall<lb/>
ai tvCvr<lb/>
ssiKUtlOn<lb/>
 <lb/>
,4<lb/>
?"<lb/>
Michelle Tudor<lb/>
International Language Organization<lb/>
field<lb/>
ta Pi<lb/>
y O Dell<lb/>
tt Hall<lb/>
 <lb/>
'<lb/>
Li. W alma<lb/>
Alpha Pn.<lb/>
m<lb/>
i Carter<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi<lb/>
Angie Neal<lb/>
Leisure Systems Studies<lb/>
Levanna Rtchardson<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
ggg&amp;yjh ?f<lb/>
(am Ward<lb/>
Panhellenic Council<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
'<lb/>
f W ?" -arl<lb/>
W <lb/>
Christine Cioto<lb/>
I mstead Hall<lb/>
Kris Kelley<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Valeria Lassiter<lb/>
Expressions Magazine<lb/>
Jan Schuller<lb/>
Sigma Alpha Iota<lb/>
Vira Robinson<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi<lb/>
Susanna Hudson<lb/>
Ambassadors<lb/>
Kim Ives<lb/>
White Hall<lb/>
Sonia Pickens<lb/>
Phi Beta Sigma<lb/>
"<lb/>
Missy Cleveland<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
Bonnie Armentrout<lb/>
Theta Chi<lb/>
Rana Harris<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
I H<lb/>
Laura Clark<lb/>
Fletcher Hall<lb/>
Cynthia McMurray<lb/>
Jones Hall<lb/>
Noelle Hogan<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
Pam Soucv<lb/>
American Marketing Associ ition<lb/>
Hannah Hooks<lb/>
Carret Hall<lb/>
Ramona Brady<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Lyn Harris<lb/>
Pure (lold Dancers<lb/>
Marta Joyner<lb/>
Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Kim Bowen<lb/>
Cheerleaders<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0011"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
10<lb/>
Till: EASTCAROI IN1AN<lb/>
IKTOI1CR 4, 1W8<lb/>
Gardner, Rand go after the issues in debate<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) - Re-<lb/>
publican fim Gardner accused his<lb/>
Democratic opponent of being<lb/>
part of the "arrogant" leadership<lb/>
in the Legislature, while Tonv<lb/>
Rand questioned Gardner's fit-<lb/>
ness for office in the only sched-<lb/>
uled televised debate between<lb/>
thecandidates for lieutenant gov-<lb/>
ernor.<lb/>
Gardner said that under the<lb/>
leadership of Rand, who isSenate<lb/>
majority leader and chairman fo<lb/>
the Senate Base Budget Commit-<lb/>
tee, the state had moved back-<lb/>
ward, not forward in addressing<lb/>
education and road con struct ion<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
"1 would have assumed that<lb/>
under this leadership he would<lb/>
have moved ahead in great<lb/>
stride tor North Carolina Gar-<lb/>
dener said<lb/>
"We've had a vacuum of it in<lb/>
the General Assembly Rand<lb/>
later noted Gardner's business<lb/>
failures in the 1970s and said,<lb/>
"His ability to manage his affairs<lb/>
is somewhat suspect And he<lb/>
touted the legislature's accom-<lb/>
plishments in improving public<lb/>
education in North Carolina.<lb/>
"At a time when business<lb/>
and government leaders across<lb/>
our state have been working to-<lb/>
gether hand in hand to make pub-<lb/>
lic schools better. Mr. Gardner<lb/>
has been absent with no excuse<lb/>
Rand said. "Myopponent simply<lb/>
isn't qualified to lead the fight to<lb/>
make our public schools better<lb/>
The debate was held at the<lb/>
Bryan School of Business at the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Greensboro. The UNC Center for<lb/>
Public Televisions broadcast the<lb/>
debate live, but 10 to 15 minutes<lb/>
were lost because of technical dif-<lb/>
ficulty caused by rain. The pro-<lb/>
gram will be rcbroadcast at 8 p.m.<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Each candidate was allowed<lb/>
a one-minute opening statement.<lb/>
Tlien, each was required to an-<lb/>
swer two questions from spon-<lb/>
sorsol the event. Thecandidates<lb/>
then fielded questions from a<lb/>
panel of three state political re-<lb/>
porters. Each then answered two<lb/>
questions prepared by hisoppo-<lb/>
nent Each was allowed a two-<lb/>
minute closing statement.<lb/>
Foreclosure on PTL?<lb/>
( OLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Another major creditor wants to<lb/>
be allowed to foreclose on TTI.<lb/>
property. This one  Fairfax Sav-<lb/>
ings and Loan of Baltimore ?<lb/>
helped finance construction oi<lb/>
Heritage USA's hotel, retail mall<lb/>
and water park.<lb/>
Lawyers for Fairfax said in<lb/>
papers filed last week in U.S.<lb/>
Bankruptcy Court that since PTL<lb/>
missed its Sept. 10 payment and<lb/>
did not ask for an extension, they<lb/>
should be allowed to "take imme-<lb/>
diate possession oi all rents, prof-<lb/>
its and revenues<lb/>
During PTL's years of rapid<lb/>
growth under founder Jim<lb/>
Bakker, Fairfax loaned money to<lb/>
help build its major attractions:<lb/>
the Heritage Grand Hotel, water<lb/>
park, conference center and retail<lb/>
mall called "Main Street USA as<lb/>
well as the unfinished Heritage<lb/>
Towers Hotel.<lb/>
The lending agency has a<lb/>
$12.2 million claim against PTL in<lb/>
bankruptcy court. PTL was or-<lb/>
dered bv the court last year to<lb/>
make monthlv payments of<lb/>
$ 120,000 to Fairfax. When the tele-<lb/>
vision ministry's revenues con-<lb/>
tinued to dwindle, the court re-<lb/>
duced the payments to $5 per<lb/>
occupied room or $60,000 plus ten<lb/>
percent of the gross retail and rent<lb/>
from the mall shops.<lb/>
Fairfax said PTLdid not make<lb/>
the Sept. 10 payment for the<lb/>
month of August and did not<lb/>
produce the monthly operating<lb/>
report that was to accompany the<lb/>
payment.<lb/>
No hearing date has been<lb/>
scheduled yet to hear the motion,<lb/>
but a hearing to hear several other<lb/>
motions in the case has been set<lb/>
for Oct. 17.<lb/>
Also on that day, Bankruptcy<lb/>
Judge Rufus Reynolds will con-<lb/>
sider a motion to foreclose filed by-<lb/>
First Mortgage Investment Co. of<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C which holds<lb/>
the note on about 10 acres of PTL<lb/>
property, including the television<lb/>
and radio editing facilities.<lb/>
Reynolds also will consider<lb/>
during that hearing motions by<lb/>
Fairfax and another major credi-<lb/>
tor ? accountants Arthur An-<lb/>
dersen and Co. of Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
? to convert the case to Chapter 7,<lb/>
which would close the television<lb/>
ministry and put its assets on the<lb/>
auction block, one bv one.<lb/>
Rand said that he would re-<lb/>
form the budget process by in-<lb/>
volving the governor in the for-<lb/>
mation of the base and expansion<lb/>
budgets enacted by the legislature<lb/>
each vear. This way, the governor<lb/>
would have to take some respon-<lb/>
sibility for the final spending bill<lb/>
before it is passed, Rand said.<lb/>
"1 propose that he come to the<lb/>
Legislature when they complete<lb/>
the base budget process and that<lb/>
he gives his ideas and give his<lb/>
opinion on what the Legislature<lb/>
has done Rand said. "I also pro-<lb/>
pose that e do the same thing in<lb/>
the expansion budget so the gov-<lb/>
ernor can be a meaningful part of<lb/>
the budget process<lb/>
Gardner said he wants to<lb/>
remove partisanship from the<lb/>
Legislature. "Everyone in the<lb/>
Legislature has a responsibility<lb/>
once the election is over to work<lb/>
for the best legislation for every<lb/>
citizen of this state Gardner<lb/>
said. "What we've had is a hostile<lb/>
Legislature working against the<lb/>
governor of North Carolina on al-<lb/>
most each and every single is-<lb/>
sue<lb/>
Gardner sought to attach<lb/>
himself to Gov. Jim Martin, the<lb/>
incumbent Republican running<lb/>
for re-election against Lt. Gov.<lb/>
Bob Jordan, a Democrat. Gardner<lb/>
invoked Martin's name during<lb/>
several responses to questions,<lb/>
touting proposals pushed by the<lb/>
Martin administration.<lb/>
Supporters of both candi-<lb/>
dates moved quickly to declare<lb/>
their man the winner.<lb/>
"Rand clearly had more com-<lb/>
mand of the facts and the issues<lb/>
said Stephanie Bass the press<lb/>
spokeswoman. Gardener was<lb/>
quite vague and he showed he<lb/>
knows little of the workings of<lb/>
state government or the budget<lb/>
State Republican Party Chair-<lb/>
man Jack Hawke said Gardner<lb/>
won. "He had the chance to talk<lb/>
about his issues Hawke said.<lb/>
The debate was sponsored by<lb/>
the League of Women Voters; the<lb/>
Junior League of Greensboro; the<lb/>
Greater Greensboro Merchants<lb/>
Association; the Greensboro Area<lb/>
chamber of Commerce, the<lb/>
Greensboro Pulpit Forum, the<lb/>
Greensboro Jaycees; and the<lb/>
Women's Professional Forum<lb/>
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&amp;32 Ounce<lb/>
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99<lb/>
15 Oz ABC-123 With Meatballs;<lb/>
Beef O-GettiBeef-A-RomDinosaurs With<lb/>
MeatballsBeef RavioliMini RavioliRoller<lb/>
CoastersSpaghetti WMeatballsTic Tac<lb/>
Toes WMeatballs<lb/>
16 Oz. - FrenchThousand<lb/>
IslandButtermilk-Herb<lb/>
PFEIFFER DRESSING<lb/>
99<lb/>
10 8 Oz Sausage10 1 Oz Cheese<lb/>
10 3 Oz Pepperoni10 8 Oz Hamburger<lb/>
&amp; Combination10.3 Oz Canadian<lb/>
JENO'S FROZEN PIZZA<lb/>
18.25 0z. - Assorted<lb/>
Betty Crocker<lb/>
CAKE MIXES<lb/>
5 0z. - 5 Ct Buttermilk<lb/>
Butter Tastin<lb/>
HUNGRY JACK BISCUITS<lb/>
20 Oz. - Frozen Shoestring<lb/>
INTERSTATE POTATOES<lb/>
27.5 0z. - Fish Sticks<lb/>
24 0z - Fish Fillets<lb/>
MRS. PAUL'S<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0012"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 4,1988<lb/>
Gardner, Rand go after the issues in debate<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) - Re- Rand said that he would re- he gives his ideas and give his for the best legislation for every several responses to questions,<lb/>
publican Jim Gardner accused his form the budget process by in- opinion on what the Legislature citizen of this state Gardner touting proposals pushed by the<lb/>
Democratic opponent of being volving the governor in the for- has done Rand said. "I also pro- said. "What we've had is a hostile<lb/>
part of the "arrogant" leadership rnation of the base and expansion pose that e do the same thing in Legislature working against the<lb/>
in the Legislature, while Tony budgets enacted by the legislature the expansion budget so the gov- governor of North Carolina on al-<lb/>
Rand questioned Gardner's fit- each year. This way, the governor emor can be a meaningful part of most each and every single is-<lb/>
ness for office in the only sched- would have to take some respon- the budget process<lb/>
uled televised debate between sibility for the final spending bill<lb/>
thecandidates for lieutenant gov- before it is passed, Rand said. Gardner said he wants to<lb/>
remove partisanship from the<lb/>
"I propose that he come to the Legislature. "Everyone in the<lb/>
Legislature when they complete Legislature has a responsibility<lb/>
the base budget process and that once the election is over to work<lb/>
sue.<lb/>
Gardner sought to attach<lb/>
himself to Gov. Jim Martin, the<lb/>
Martin administration.<lb/>
Supporters of both candi-<lb/>
dates moved quickly to declare<lb/>
their man the winner.<lb/>
"Rand clearly had more com-<lb/>
mand of the facts and the issues<lb/>
said Stephanie Bass the press<lb/>
ernor.<lb/>
Gardner said that under the<lb/>
leadership of Rand, who is Senate<lb/>
majority leader and chairman fo<lb/>
the Senate Base Budget Commit-<lb/>
tee, the state had moved back-<lb/>
ward, not forward in addressing<lb/>
education and road construction<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
"1 would have assumed that<lb/>
under this leadership he would<lb/>
have moved ahead in great<lb/>
strides for North Carolina Gar-<lb/>
dener said.<lb/>
"We've had a vacuum of it in<lb/>
the General Assembly Rand<lb/>
later noted Gardner's business<lb/>
failures" in the 1970s and said,<lb/>
"His ability to manage his affairs<lb/>
is somewhat suspect And he<lb/>
touted the Legislature's accom-<lb/>
plishments in improving public<lb/>
education in North Carolina.<lb/>
"At a time when business<lb/>
and government leaders across<lb/>
our state have been working to-<lb/>
gether hand in hand to make pub-<lb/>
lic schools better, Mr. Gardner<lb/>
has been absent with no excuse<lb/>
Rand said. "My opponent simply<lb/>
isn't qualified to lead the fight to<lb/>
make our public schools better<lb/>
The debate was held at the<lb/>
Bryan School of Business at the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Greensboro. The UNC Center for<lb/>
Public Televisions broadcast the<lb/>
debate live, but 10 to 15 minutes<lb/>
were lost because of technical dif-<lb/>
ficulty caused by rain. The pro-<lb/>
gram will be rebroadcast at 8 p.m.<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Each candidate was allowed<lb/>
a one-minute opening statement.<lb/>
Then, each was required to an-<lb/>
swer two questions from spon-<lb/>
sors of the event. The candidates<lb/>
then fielded questions from a<lb/>
panel of three state political re-<lb/>
porters. Each then answered two<lb/>
questions prepared by hisoppo-<lb/>
nent. Each was allowed a two-<lb/>
minute closing statement.<lb/>
incumbent Republican running spokeswoman. Gardener was<lb/>
for re-election against Lt. Gov. quite vague and he showed he<lb/>
Bob Jordan, a Democrat. Gardner knows little of the workings of<lb/>
invoked Martin's name during state government or the budget<lb/>
State Republican Party Chair-<lb/>
man Jack Hawke said Gardner<lb/>
won. "He had the chance to talk<lb/>
about his issues Hawke said.<lb/>
The debate was sponsored by<lb/>
the League of Women Voters; thf<lb/>
Junior League of Greensboro; trip<lb/>
Greater Greensboro Merchants<lb/>
Association; the Greensboro Area<lb/>
chamber of Commerce; the<lb/>
Greensboro Pulpit Forum; the<lb/>
Greensboro Jaycees; and the<lb/>
Women's Professional Forum. <lb/>
i USDA Choice Beef Top<lb/>
Round Roast. London Broil<lb/>
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Foreclosure on PTL? KjHolW FmS<lb/>
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COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Another major creditor wants to<lb/>
be allowed to foreclose on PTL<lb/>
property. This one ? Fairfax Sav-<lb/>
ings and Loan of Baltimore ?<lb/>
helped finance construction of<lb/>
Heritage USA's hotel, retail mall<lb/>
and water park.<lb/>
Lawyers for Fairfax said in<lb/>
papers filed last week in U.S.<lb/>
Bankruptcy Court that since PTL<lb/>
missed its Sept. 10 payment and<lb/>
did not ask for an extension, they<lb/>
should be allowed to "take imme-<lb/>
diate possession of all rents, prof-<lb/>
its and revenues<lb/>
During PTL's years of rapid<lb/>
growth under founder Jim<lb/>
Bakker, Fairfax loaned money to<lb/>
help build its major attractions:<lb/>
the Heritage Grand Hotel, water<lb/>
park, conference center and retail<lb/>
mall called "Main Street USA as<lb/>
well as the unfinished Heritage<lb/>
Towers Hotel.<lb/>
The lending agency has a<lb/>
$12.2 million claim against PTL in<lb/>
bankruptcy court. PTL was or-<lb/>
dered by the court last year to<lb/>
make monthly payments of<lb/>
$120,000 to Fairfax. When the tele-<lb/>
vision ministry's revenues con-<lb/>
tinued to dwindle, the court re-<lb/>
duced the payments to $5 per<lb/>
occupied room or $60,000 plus ten<lb/>
percent of the gross retail and rent<lb/>
from the mall shops.<lb/>
Fairfax said PTL did not make<lb/>
the Sept. 10 payment for the<lb/>
month of August and did not<lb/>
produce the monthly operating<lb/>
report that was to accompany the<lb/>
payment.<lb/>
No hearing date has been<lb/>
scheduled yet to hear the motion,<lb/>
but a hearing to hear several other<lb/>
motions in the case has been set<lb/>
for Oct. 17.<lb/>
Also on that day, Bankruptcy<lb/>
Judge Rufus Reynolds will con-<lb/>
sider a motion to foreclose filed by<lb/>
First Mortgage Investment Co. of<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C which holds<lb/>
the note on about 10 acres of PTL<lb/>
property, including the television<lb/>
and radio editing facilities.<lb/>
Reynolds also will consider<lb/>
during that hearing motions by<lb/>
Fairfax and another major credi-<lb/>
tor ? accountants Arthur An-<lb/>
dersen and Co. of Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
?to convert the case to Chapter 7,<lb/>
which would close the television<lb/>
ministry and put its assets on the<lb/>
auction block, one by one.<lb/>
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CoastersSpaghetti WMeatbattsTic Tac<lb/>
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16 Oz. - FrenchThousand<lb/>
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10.8 Oz. Sausage10.1 Oz. Cheese<lb/>
10.3 Oz. Pepperoni10.8 Oz. Hamburger<lb/>
&amp; Combination10.3 Oz. Canadian<lb/>
JENO'S FROZEN PIZZA<lb/>
5 0z. - 5 Ct. Buttermilk<lb/>
Butter Tastin'<lb/>
HUNGRY JACK BISCUITS<lb/>
18.25 Oz. - Assorted<lb/>
Betty Crocker<lb/>
CAKE MIXES<lb/>
20 Oz. - Frozen Shoestring<lb/>
INTERSTATE POTATOES<lb/>
27.5 Oz. - Fish Sticks<lb/>
24 Oz. - Fish Fillets<lb/>
MRS. PAUL'S<lb/>
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J . ?'?<lb/>
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30 Ct. - Food Lion Tall<lb/>
KITCHEN BAGS<lb/>
$-49<lb/>
22 Oz. - 40 Off Dawn<lb/>
DISH DETERGENT<lb/>
$109<lb/>
6 Oz. - Assorted Flavors<lb/>
9-UVES CAT FOOD<lb/>
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There is a Food Lion conveniently located near yon<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0013"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
THE EASTCAROl INI AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
OCTOBER 4,1988 Page 11<lb/>
'Punchline' preview tonigh<lb/>
By ALICIA FORD<lb/>
StaffWriter<lb/>
The Student Union will be<lb/>
presentinga free sneak preview of<lb/>
the new movie "Punchline" star-<lb/>
ring Tom Hanks and Sally Field<lb/>
tonight at 8 p.m. in Hendrix The-<lb/>
atre.<lb/>
Written and directed by<lb/>
David SeltzerTunchline" is a<lb/>
comedy about two aspiring,<lb/>
young stand-up comedians.<lb/>
Academv award-winning<lb/>
actress Sally Field is best known<lb/>
for her role as the determined<lb/>
union organizer in the film<lb/>
"Norma RaeIn "Punchline she<lb/>
stars as Lilah Krysick, a house-<lb/>
wifc-turned-comic who is trying<lb/>
to make a name for herself in a<lb/>
New York club called The Gas<lb/>
Sta tion. Krvsick is mother of three<lb/>
children, and throughout the<lb/>
movie she strives to overcome her<lb/>
insecurities and inhibitions in<lb/>
order to succeed as a stand-up<lb/>
comedian.<lb/>
Tom Hanks first achieved<lb/>
stardom in the Ron Howard film<lb/>
"Splash" and has more recently<lb/>
been praised for his comedic abili-<lb/>
ties in the summer box office<lb/>
smash, "Big In "Punchline"<lb/>
Hanks appears as Steven Gold, a<lb/>
medical student who wants to be<lb/>
a heart surgeon but can't stand the<lb/>
sight of blood. He moonlights at<lb/>
The Gas Station and everyone<lb/>
agrees that he is going to be the<lb/>
next one to become a famous<lb/>
comic.<lb/>
After Gold neglects his stud-<lb/>
ies and flunks out of medical<lb/>
school, he devotes all of his en-<lb/>
ergy into being a comedian. Al-<lb/>
though it is impossible to teach<lb/>
anyone how to be funny, he tries<lb/>
to show Krysick that the best rou-<lb/>
tines are based on your own per-<lb/>
sonal problems, and that every<lb/>
situation has a potential humor-<lb/>
ous content.<lb/>
Hanks found that being a<lb/>
stand-up comic is much more<lb/>
difficult than it looks. "I wanted<lb/>
my character to be authentic, so I<lb/>
decided to try out my material in<lb/>
real comedy clubs. At first I<lb/>
bombed terribly. In fact, one of<lb/>
the most important lessons I<lb/>
learned was how much it hurt to<lb/>
be really bad<lb/>
With the help of his comedy<lb/>
coach Randy Fechter, Hanks per-<lb/>
fects his routine and succeeds in<lb/>
portraying the character of Steven<lb/>
Gold as truly humorous.<lb/>
"Punchline" features over<lb/>
twenty real comedians and is cer-<lb/>
tain to be full of laughs. Passes are<lb/>
available at The Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center information desk and<lb/>
free movie posters will be given<lb/>
away to students presenting a<lb/>
completed screening pass at the<lb/>
door.<lb/>
Dance workshop set for weekend<lb/>
News Release<lb/>
On Saturday and Sunday, Oc-<lb/>
tober 8 and 9, the Theatre Arts<lb/>
Department of ECU will co-spon-<lb/>
sor a weekend workshop for<lb/>
dance teachers in the studios of<lb/>
the Messick Theatre Arts Center<lb/>
on the ECU campus in Greenville.<lb/>
This years guest artists will be<lb/>
Robert Atwood and Michelle Pi-<lb/>
ette.<lb/>
Robert Atwood's expertise as<lb/>
a ballet instructor has placed him<lb/>
as a teacher-in-demand on the<lb/>
faculties of the NYC Joffrey Ballet<lb/>
School, STEPS, Pineapple Studio,<lb/>
the Zena Rommctt Dance Asso-<lb/>
ciation and Connecticut College.<lb/>
Atwood served as Guest Ballet<lb/>
Master for the City Contempo-<lb/>
Robert Atwood, pictured here, will be one of the special quest<lb/>
instructors during the Fourth Annual Dance Workshop this<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
rary Dance Company of Hong<lb/>
Kong, was Associate Director of<lb/>
the Bicentennial Dance Theatre,<lb/>
and has guest taught for the<lb/>
Rockford Ballet, the Academy of<lb/>
the Hong Kong Ballet and the<lb/>
North Carolina Dance Alliance.<lb/>
The workshop will include<lb/>
movement classes, lecturedem-<lb/>
onstrations and questionanswer<lb/>
sessions conducted by an accred-<lb/>
ited faculty of dance movement<lb/>
specialists.<lb/>
Atwood performing credits<lb/>
range from work in musical the-<lb/>
atre summer stock and the Ameri-<lb/>
can Dance Machine, to the<lb/>
Bernhardt and Fokine Ballet<lb/>
Companies, to the Mimi Garrard<lb/>
Dance Theatre and the Rebecca<lb/>
Kelly Dance Company.<lb/>
He has also choreographed<lb/>
and directed for musical theatre<lb/>
and cabaret productions.<lb/>
Michelle Pictte holds an M.S.<lb/>
in Sports Medicine from the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Wisconsin at LaCrosse.<lb/>
She has a vast knowledge in dance<lb/>
medicine and is Head Athletic<lb/>
Trainer and a facultv member at<lb/>
Ravenscroft School in Raleigh.<lb/>
In addition to teaching at the<lb/>
American College Dance Festival<lb/>
in 1983 and 1986, she has been a<lb/>
consultant to Daniel Nagrin in<lb/>
writing of his current book, Sur-<lb/>
viving As A Dancer<lb/>
Registration for the two day<lb/>
workshop will begin Saturday,<lb/>
October 9, at 9 a.m. in Room 108 of<lb/>
the Messick Theatre Arts Center.<lb/>
The registrationfee of $45.00 will<lb/>
include a buffet lunch on Satur-<lb/>
day. Classes on Sunday will begin<lb/>
at 9:30 a.m. and conclude at 5:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Sally Field and Tom Hanks star as two aspiring stand-up comic in "Punchline In a sneak preview,<lb/>
Student Unions is presenting "Punchline" tonight at 8 p.m. in Hendrix theatre.<lb/>
Review of home videos<lb/>
By DAVID TREV1NO<lb/>
Special to Cast Carolinian<lb/>
SLEEPING BEAUTY<lb/>
Directed by Clyde Gcronimi<lb/>
Written bv Erdman Penner, et<lb/>
al.<lb/>
Released through Disney<lb/>
Home Video<lb/>
1959color75 minutes<lb/>
This animated version of the<lb/>
familiar storv, in which a beauti-<lb/>
ful princess is bewitched and<lb/>
sleeps alone waiting to be awak-<lb/>
ened by the kiss of true love, was<lb/>
first released to theatres in 1959,<lb/>
but Walt Disney's Sleeping<lb/>
Beauty endures as one of the most<lb/>
charming presentations of the<lb/>
fairy tale oi romantic love.<lb/>
The film begins with a bejew-<lb/>
eled volume opening to a world of<lb/>
animated dream imagery. Sleep-<lb/>
ing Beauty contains a cornucopia<lb/>
of astonishingly vivid surreal<lb/>
apparitions which range from the<lb/>
terrifying transformation of the<lb/>
wicked witch from human forms<lb/>
into a towering reptilian vision of<lb/>
enraged evil to the gentle meta-<lb/>
morphosis of flying arrows and<lb/>
hurtling boulders into harmless<lb/>
flowers and fragile bubbles.<lb/>
The animation is pared down<lb/>
compared to the cluttered lush-<lb/>
ness of Snow White and the Seven<lb/>
Dwarfs or Bambi, but it is cer-<lb/>
tainly not sparse or barren.<lb/>
The frames contain less of the<lb/>
realistic detail which fills the<lb/>
other works. The drawing in<lb/>
Sleeping Beauty is sharper, the<lb/>
edges harder. There is less of the<lb/>
idealized haze And with the lov-<lb/>
ers united at last in marriage, the<lb/>
storybook closes because the fairy-<lb/>
tale has come to an end.<lb/>
I'VE HEARD THE MER-<lb/>
MAIDS SINGING<lb/>
Written and Directed by Pa-<lb/>
tricia Rozema<lb/>
Released through Charter<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
1987color82 minutes<lb/>
Sheila McCarthy makes her<lb/>
feature film debut in this charm-<lb/>
ing feminist fairy tale from Can-<lb/>
ada as Polly, the sincere, straight-<lb/>
forward dreamer who effortlessly<lb/>
navigates her bicycle around<lb/>
Toronto snapping photographs of<lb/>
lovers, skyscrapers, mother<lb/>
babies, street hockey players and<lb/>
whatever else strikes her fancy<lb/>
when she is not fantasizing that<lb/>
she can fly.<lb/>
I've Heard the Mermaids<lb/>
Singing is staged as a stream-of-<lb/>
consciousness confessional in<lb/>
front of a video camera. Polly<lb/>
admits that she is thirty-one years<lb/>
old, has no family and no lover,<lb/>
and works as a barely competent<lb/>
"Girl Friday" with a temporaries<lb/>
agency. She describes herself as a<lb/>
"spinster" and an "unsuccessful<lb/>
career woman<lb/>
Wonderfully played by Ms.<lb/>
McCarthy, Polly gets a job work-<lb/>
ing in a trendy art gallery where<lb/>
she becomes infatuated with her<lb/>
confident, sophisticated boss,<lb/>
Gabrielle (Paule Ballargeon), to<lb/>
whom she refers as "the curator<lb/>
Awkward Polly is the an-<lb/>
tithesis OF the sleek, French-<lb/>
See WITCHES, page 12<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
In the article "Famous more<lb/>
reknowned for their sub sand-<lb/>
wiches" printed in Thursday's<lb/>
The East Carolinian, it was incor-<lb/>
rectly stated that Famous Pizza<lb/>
delivers 99-cents pitchers of beer<lb/>
on Wednesdays.<lb/>
In fact, no such deliveries are<lb/>
made. Pitchers of beer are avail-<lb/>
able at the restaurant for 99 cents<lb/>
on Wednesdays, but they will no<lb/>
be delivered. It is, in fact, illegal tc<lb/>
deliver alcoholic beverages ir<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
In addition. Famous Pizza<lb/>
first opened in 1978 at 300 E. 10th<lb/>
St. It moved to its present location<lb/>
100 E. 10th St in 1986.<lb/>
Famous Pizza serves a varierv<lb/>
of food in addition to pizzas anc<lb/>
subs.<lb/>
We apologize for any incon<lb/>
venience Thursday's mistakes<lb/>
might have caused.<lb/>
Solid Rock'tour draws praise<lb/>
By DAVID McCREARY<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
An enthusiastic crowd of<lb/>
approximately 600 gathered at<lb/>
Wright Auditorium on Sunday<lb/>
night to hear DeGarmo &amp; Key,<lb/>
The Altar Boys, and comedian<lb/>
Steve Geyer. These contemporary<lb/>
Christian performers rocked the<lb/>
building at several decibels for<lb/>
about three hours and seemed to<lb/>
please all onlookers.<lb/>
The Altar Boys, a three-man<lb/>
band from Los Angeles, opened<lb/>
the show with a head liner-level<lb/>
performance. Sporting black<lb/>
denim jeans and dangling ear-<lb/>
rings, these guys filled the stage<lb/>
with nonstop motion as they<lb/>
ripped through a short set of<lb/>
tunes from their latest album<lb/>
"Against the Grain<lb/>
Although their music re-<lb/>
sembles punk-rock style, the Al-<lb/>
tar Boys were quick to label their<lb/>
music otherwise. Guitarist-singer<lb/>
Mark Strand stated, "I classify our<lb/>
music as rock-and-roll. I have<lb/>
something to communicate and<lb/>
this (style) is how I do that And<lb/>
communicate he did, as Strand<lb/>
strummed his gu iiar with furious<lb/>
passion in the last song of the set,<lb/>
"You Are Loved<lb/>
As the crowd continued to<lb/>
edge its way closer to the stage,<lb/>
bearded comedian Steve Geyer<lb/>
entertained the crowd with a half-<lb/>
hour performance of good, clean<lb/>
humor. Geyer, a Nashville, Ten-<lb/>
nessee native and former night-<lb/>
club performer, talked about dat-<lb/>
ing relationships, struggles with<lb/>
parents, and his personal relation-<lb/>
ship with Jesus Christ. "I think<lb/>
God has a great sense of humor.<lb/>
Whenever we do something com-<lb/>
pletely bonehcaded 1 know He<lb/>
must get a kick out of watching<lb/>
us said Geyer.<lb/>
After a brief intermission, the<lb/>
veteran five-man band DeGarmo<lb/>
&amp; Key took the stage, filled it with<lb/>
a multi-colored lightshow, and<lb/>
opened with several of their clas-<lb/>
sic hits. The crowd, which had<lb/>
been standing almost all evening,<lb/>
began to increase a few notches in<lb/>
volume and clapped along with<lb/>
the band's melodic sounds.<lb/>
Eddie DeGarmo, who carried<lb/>
a hand-held keyboardsynthe-<lb/>
sizer, was dressed in a long, black<lb/>
trenchcoat and gray-and-white<lb/>
striped pants. Dana Key, with his<lb/>
brown hair in a pony-tail, was also<lb/>
wearing a black outfit and<lb/>
handled an electric guitar.<lb/>
DeGarmo quickly excited the<lb/>
crowd by saying, "The Bible says<lb/>
praise the Lord with a loud noise;<lb/>
we promise to do our best Dana<lb/>
Key constantly proved he had the<lb/>
vocal ability and mastery of his<lb/>
guitar to handle front and center<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
Near the end of the tune<lb/>
"666 Key showed command of<lb/>
his instrument by blazing a few<lb/>
chords under the spotlight.<lb/>
Drummer Chuck Reynolds kept a<lb/>
solid back-beat on his raised<lb/>
Yamaha drum set and Eddie<lb/>
DeGarmo frequently maneu-<lb/>
vered to a stationary keyboard<lb/>
where he flashed bits of synthe-<lb/>
sized brilliance.<lb/>
Following a fifteen-minute<lb/>
break, bassist Tommy Cathey<lb/>
took center stage wearing a white<lb/>
hat, black jacket and pants, ivory-<lb/>
snow tie, and tennis shoes.<lb/>
Cathey began strumming the<lb/>
tune to "The Pink Panther" and<lb/>
some vintage James Bond themes<lb/>
as the heart-thumping bass vi-<lb/>
brated the floor of the auditorium.<lb/>
This partial repertoire in-<lb/>
spired the fans to gear up for the<lb/>
second half of the show, which<lb/>
was nearly perfect. The crowd<lb/>
sang along with the song "Addy"<lb/>
and danced in the aisles to "Des-<lb/>
tined to Win" The tune "Rock<lb/>
Solid" was the final song as the<lb/>
band began building toward a<lb/>
dynamic finish. The crowd then<lb/>
chanted for an encore and was<lb/>
treated to "Don't Stop the Music<lb/>
Aside from the rock-and-roll<lb/>
aspect of the show, there were<lb/>
moments of straightforward con-<lb/>
versation. Dana Key was the pre-<lb/>
miere spokesman as he chal-<lb/>
lenged the audience to forget<lb/>
about the priorities of the world<lb/>
and to focus on giving glory to<lb/>
Jesus Christ.<lb/>
"We love rock-and-roll, but<lb/>
that's not the reason we came here<lb/>
tonight. We came to challenge ev-<lb/>
eryone to make Jesus Christ their<lb/>
King and Savior said Key.<lb/>
The concert ended with an<lb/>
invitation for people to come for-<lb/>
ward and profess Jesus Christ as<lb/>
their Lord and Savior. As several<lb/>
responded to this altar call, the<lb/>
band closed with "Stand Up and<lb/>
Be Counted Dana Key then chal-<lb/>
lenged everyone to stand up for<lb/>
their beliefs wherever they go.<lb/>
DeGarmo and Key rocked Wright Auditorium Sunday with the contemporary Christian sounds of<lb/>
"Solid Rock<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0014"/><lb/>
<lb/>
!<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 4.198?<lb/>
Ohio Ballet coming to ECU<lb/>
K I New Bureau<lb/>
The Ohio Ballet, one of the<lb/>
nation's leading ballet compa-<lb/>
nies, will perform at ECU Wed-<lb/>
nesday, Oct. 12, at 8 p.m. Their<lb/>
program, consisting of four re-<lb/>
cently-choreographed dance<lb/>
pieces, is scheduled for Wright<lb/>
Auditorium as the first event of<lb/>
ECU's 1988-89 Performing Arts<lb/>
Series.<lb/>
The performance will consist<lb/>
oi two romantic dance pieces cho-<lb/>
reographed by the company's<lb/>
founder-director, Heinz Poll ?<lb/>
"Summer Night based on the<lb/>
"Romanze" from Chopin's Con-<lb/>
certo No. 1 in E Minor and "Trip-<lb/>
tych danced to Mendelssohn's<lb/>
Piano Concerto No. 2 in D Minor<lb/>
along with "experimentalist"<lb/>
dance pieces by Laura Dean and<lb/>
Robert Barnett based on contem-<lb/>
porary music.<lb/>
Founded in Akron, Ohio, in<lb/>
1968, the 22-member company<lb/>
became a professional touring<lb/>
group 10 years ago and has since<lb/>
performed in 162 cities and 36<lb/>
states, as well as in Europe and<lb/>
South America.<lb/>
This year, the Ohio Ballet tour<lb/>
schedule includes a week-long<lb/>
return engagement at the Joyce<lb/>
Theater in Manhattan, an<lb/>
extensive California coastal tour<lb/>
and a fall series of performances<lb/>
in the southeastern states.<lb/>
Dance critics have praised the<lb/>
company's blend of modern<lb/>
dance techniques with classical<lb/>
ballet forms.<lb/>
'Their appealingly open,<lb/>
unaffected manner and the emo-<lb/>
Thc Ohio Ballet, one of the nation<lb/>
ECU Performing Arts Series,<lb/>
"experimentalist" dance pieces.<lb/>
tional honesty of Poll's dances are<lb/>
rarer virtues than properly<lb/>
pointed feet said Christine<lb/>
Temin of the Boston Globe. "One<lb/>
of the most pleasant surprises of<lb/>
the dance season has turned out to<lb/>
be the Ohio Ballet which turns out<lb/>
to be uniquely itself said Anna<lb/>
Kisselgof f of the New York Times.<lb/>
In the Ohio Ballet, each<lb/>
dancer is treated as an important<lb/>
component in the whole, with no<lb/>
favored few "stars In selecting<lb/>
dancers, Poll says he looks for<lb/>
strong classical technique and<lb/>
such contemporary dance values<lb/>
as vitality, athleticism and ncr-<lb/>
's leading ballet companies, is comi<lb/>
The Ohio Ballet will perform<lb/>
sonality.<lb/>
As a European whose career<lb/>
asa solo dancer developed in Ger-<lb/>
many and France, Poll has ob-<lb/>
served a certain "energy and per-<lb/>
sonality" in American dancers.<lb/>
"When I came to America, I<lb/>
noticed people walked differently<lb/>
here he commented. "Here<lb/>
there was a casualness and uncon-<lb/>
cern. I try to capture that in the<lb/>
company<lb/>
The Ohio Ballet's ECU per-<lb/>
formance is funded in part by a<lb/>
grant from the North Carolina<lb/>
Arts Council and the National<lb/>
ng to ECU Oct. 12. Kicking off The<lb/>
"Summer Night" along with<lb/>
Endowment for the Arts.<lb/>
Tickets are $14 each for the<lb/>
general public and $7 for students<lb/>
and youth and are available at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, telephone<lb/>
(919) 757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
'Witches of Eastwick' on video<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
speaking, slightly older Gabrielle.<lb/>
Polly aches to learn everything<lb/>
her self-assured role model seems<lb/>
to have so easily mastered.<lb/>
Before working at the art gal-<lb/>
lery Polly was content to cover the<lb/>
walls of her tiny apartment with<lb/>
the photographs she took, but it is<lb/>
not too long before, like everyone<lb/>
else in Gabrielle's circle, she be-<lb/>
comes a real artist. And, not sur-<lb/>
prisingly, it turns out that the rcd-<lb/>
1 aired Polly has something im-<lb/>
portant to teach the worldly Gab-<lb/>
rielle.<lb/>
Despite Ms. Rozema's rather<lb/>
predictable script and less than<lb/>
extraordinary direction, I've<lb/>
Heard the MermaidsSingingisan<lb/>
unusually entertaining experi-<lb/>
ence. This is primarily a result of<lb/>
the endeari ng performance of Ms.<lb/>
McCarthy. Fellow Canadian Ron<lb/>
Graham has described her as<lb/>
looking and sounding "as if<lb/>
C.oldie Hawn had a daughter by<lb/>
Woody Woodpecker You have<lb/>
to see her.<lb/>
THE WITCHES OF EAST-<lb/>
WICK<lb/>
Directed by George Miller<lb/>
Written by Michael Cristofer<lb/>
Released through Warner<lb/>
Home Video<lb/>
1987color118 minutes<lb/>
"Women. A mistake? Or did<lb/>
He do this to us on purpose?"<lb/>
The Witches of Eastwick is a<lb/>
post-feminist fairy tale which<lb/>
begins on a dark and stormy night<lb/>
when three beautiful New Ent<lb/>
land matrons (Susan Sarandon,<lb/>
Michelle Pfeiffer and Cher) seem-<lb/>
ingly conjure up the answer to<lb/>
their boredom with the local crop<lb/>
of tedious, uptight men. The ful-<lb/>
fillment o( their longing is Darvl<lb/>
Van Home, the devil incarnate,<lb/>
brilliantly protrayed in a torrent<lb/>
of smirks and raised eyebrows by<lb/>
Jack Nicholson.<lb/>
Paunchy and eccentrically<lb/>
dressed. Van Home seduces all<lb/>
three repressed women, most<lb/>
memorably Cher, after lunch, and<lb/>
they share a relationship which<lb/>
both infuriates and titillates the<lb/>
entire town. There is a falling-out,<lb/>
though, and the women wind up<lb/>
with Van Home's palatial estate,<lb/>
his money and his children.<lb/>
The film presents a sleek and<lb/>
polished surface. With the bodies<lb/>
of Susan Sarandon, Michelle<lb/>
Pfeiffer and Cher frequently and<lb/>
lovingly caressed by the camera,<lb/>
it is an eminently watchablc film.<lb/>
Mr. Nicholson is certainly enter-<lb/>
taining if not so visually pleasing.<lb/>
The problems with The<lb/>
Witches oi Eastwick are, surpris-<lb/>
ingly, with director George Miller<lb/>
and writer Michael Cristofer.<lb/>
The Australian Miller, well-<lb/>
known for his Mad Max films,<lb/>
never captured the look and feel<lb/>
of Nathaniel Hawthorne country<lb/>
essential to the film. Periodic in-<lb/>
sertions of postcard vistas failed<lb/>
to create a believable New Eng-<lb/>
land coastal town.<lb/>
Mr. Cristofer's screenplay is<lb/>
full of unanswered questions and<lb/>
unexplained motivations. It was<lb/>
especially disappointing when<lb/>
one considers that it came from<lb/>
the author of The Shadow Box.<lb/>
The Witches of Eastwick may<lb/>
mark the return of "real" men to<lb/>
the American cinema, but it<lb/>
ended with women in control and<lb/>
me relieved the film was over.<lb/>
Videos courtesy of East Coast<lb/>
Music and Video.<lb/>
DOUBLE FEATURE<lb/>
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At Hendrix<lb/>
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RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
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?3. WML<lb/>
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Your Utility Bill<lb/>
And<lb/>
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Pay It At A Local Bank<lb/>
GUC is remodeling its main office, so the entire first<lb/>
floor and the drive-thru window are closed. While<lb/>
renovations continue, it will be more convenient for<lb/>
you to just drop it in the mail, use our automatic Bank<lb/>
Draft program, or pay it right on campus at the ECU<lb/>
Student Bank. Other banks which accept GUC pay-<lb/>
ments are as follows: Barclays of N.C Branch Banking<lb/>
&amp; Trust Co First Citizens Bank &amp; Trust Co First<lb/>
Federal Savings and Loan, Peoples Bank &amp; Trust Co<lb/>
Planters National Bank &amp; Trust Co Wachovia Bank &amp;<lb/>
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MONFRI. 9 A.M. 'TIL 5 PJ.<lb/>
355-5075<lb/>
ECU SPIRIT-<lb/>
GREAT IN '88!<lb/>
Homecoming 1988 Events<lb/>
Thursday, October 6 - Pep Rally<lb/>
7 p.m. Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
Featuring: Tlie Marching Pirates,<lb/>
Tlie Pure Gold Dancers, and More<lb/>
Court Candidates will be introduced<lb/>
and the 8 finalists will be announced!<lb/>
Free tee Shirts to the first 200 fans<lb/>
Saturday, October 8 - Parade<lb/>
10 a.m. - Starts at 10th &amp; Elm<lb/>
and travels down 5th Street<lb/>
Bands, Floats, Homecoming Court, and Lots More<lb/>
Amn<lb/>
(( I,S)-TimCarr<lb/>
sity of Massachusetts <lb/>
a big tan of U2, made it a<lb/>
catch the band on a<lb/>
telecast.<lb/>
It turned out thegroul<lb/>
formance was part j<lb/>
International's "Cor. 1<lb/>
Hope" tour, designed k<lb/>
duce the human r j<lb/>
students ust like Carrier<lb/>
And it worked In whai<lb/>
be one of the most sue<lb/>
political recruiting 1<lb/>
cent campus hi arrj<lb/>
ther peopli<lb/>
ganization<lb/>
UMass chapter<lb/>
Nationwide, the<lb/>
I high s<lb/>
l( rs grew to "more th<lb/>
ted Peter 1 ai<lb/>
membership fl<lb/>
"Idon'l<lb/>
with music<lb/>
whoistakii<lb/>
m intern with <lb/>
national (A<lb/>
equate it w<lb/>
coursel<lb/>
the group, wh<lb/>
?<lb/>
to resp ?<lb/>
cizc s th<lb/>
? cience i -<lb/>
ers - and v<lb/>
penalty<lb/>
d  <lb/>
ot U.S. student i<lb/>
involved with I .1<lb/>
"nonpartisa I<lb/>
been able to build<lb/>
port in as si rl I<lb/>
Intei<lb/>
- udd terrible I<lb/>
all those new men j<lb/>
ing si<lb/>
- time it's<lb/>
"1 luman Rights!<lb/>
<lb/>
Chapman, Sting<lb/>
and issou Ml<lb/>
"It's important to se?<lb/>
certs - and our rtst<lb/>
Environme<lb/>
mad over ?.<lb/>
WILMINGTON<lb/>
door balloon launch<lb/>
ten some folks ? Stin<lb/>
want them d<lb/>
"Releas<lb/>
traditional - j<lb/>
burn, a W <lb/>
lawyer who r<lb/>
himsell as an emit<lb/>
until he saw a p i I<lb/>
turtle lool<lb/>
n.<lb/>
?ctv. I<lb/>
balloons g<lb/>
come down ar I J<lb/>
in the ocean.<lb/>
those and the) die. Evi<lb/>
loves sea turl - ? '? i<lb/>
TheWilmii tonMorninj<lb/>
Wa<lb/>
examining litt i<lb/>
begun talking to l J<lb/>
and city Ol - <lb/>
the practice ot outd r<lb/>
launches.<lb/>
"It's not a m<lb/>
- e. but it<lb/>
said - m the<lb/>
coming a ma<lb/>
A few weeks<lb/>
launch marked theofl<lb/>
rung ot re5 1 !<lb/>
Thalian W in Wilm j<lb/>
On Frida) Nal I<lb/>
MIA Da) f<lb/>
launched in New<lb/>
County to honor ? v -j<lb/>
linians listed I<lb/>
action The launch u as -a<lb/>
by the local Veterans <lb/>
Wars.<lb/>
Washburn said I<lb/>
commander ot the VF<lb/>
whether the could d<lb/>
else to honor the veteraf<lb/>
60-gun salute.<lb/>
'There s not<lb/>
about it im Williams<lb/>
manding officer tor tl<lb/>
chapter, said hours Kj<lb/>
ceremony Friday.<lb/>
Ot Washburn scall.<lb/>
son said, "1 think he's jus<lb/>
on the telephone I ve ne<lb/>
a fish with any rubber irj<lb/>
Andv Wood, a natj<lb/>
the NC Aquarium at Fcj<lb/>
said he has been warnirj<lb/>
about the danger of out!<lb/>
loon launches for 10 yf<lb/>
with little success.<lb/>
-Virtually every to<lb/>
the beach I find balloonl<lb/>
READ<lb/>
CA<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0015"/><lb/>
iVTOBLFU. 1988<lb/>
3<lb/>
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Presents<lb/>
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istination<lb/>
ONSNOW! <lb/>
55-5075<lb/>
IIRIT-<lb/>
Nf88!<lb/>
988 Events<lb/>
ep Rally<lb/>
m<lb/>
irates,<lb/>
d Wore<lb/>
duced<lb/>
kneed!<lb/>
tans<lb/>
arade<lb/>
Elm<lb/>
reet<lb/>
i Lots More<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 4,1988 13<lb/>
Amnesty<lb/>
(CPS)- Tim Carrier, a Univcr- students-as one of the ways we're Kotkin's in the majority. already helped triple attendance-<lb/>
sity of Massachusetts student and building a base of support for Unlike some other activist to 35 people-at the OU chapter's<lb/>
a big fan of U2, made it a point to human rights said Ellen Cull of groups, Amnesty seems to believe fall meeting,<lb/>
catch the band on a 1986 MTV Amnesty's Northeast office. that "the more the merrier ob- About 40 students were in-<lb/>
telecast. Building it that fast, however, served Roger Williams, a reporter spired enough by news of the<lb/>
It turned out the group's per- can cause pioblems for a group. for Foundation News, which cov- concerts to attend an Amnesty<lb/>
jormanoe was part of Amnesty Integrating such vast num- crs charitable and volunteer or- organization meeting at Indiana<lb/>
International's "Conspiracy of bers of new members "strain our ganizations. University in September.<lb/>
Hope" tour, designed to intro- resources confessed jack "The more people involved Reporter Williams thinks<lb/>
duce the human rights group to Rendler, who helps coordinate Williams explained, "the greater another key to AI's success is that,<lb/>
students just like Carrier. AI's campus chapters, and, inev- t,ie pressure they can bring to once the students get to their local'<lb/>
And it worked. In what had to itably, brought in a lot of people governments to respect human campus meeting, they get to<lb/>
who were fans of music, not rights<lb/>
human rights. Recruiting all those warm<lb/>
"I know Sting sings about it or bodies, moreover, has been "good<lb/>
something one Indiana Univer- for Amnesty he said.<lb/>
be one of the most successful mass<lb/>
political recruiting efforts in re-<lb/>
cent campus history, Carrier, like<lb/>
30,00 other people, joined the or-<lb/>
ganization, eventually founding a sity student said when asked why<lb/>
UMass chapter. she was attending a campus AI<lb/>
Nationwide, the 250 campus meeting,<lb/>
and high school Amnesty chap- That attitude, Amnesty offi-<lb/>
ters grew to "more than 1,000 re- cials say, was the source of their<lb/>
ported Peter Larson of the group's problems after the 1986 tour,<lb/>
membership office. "The 'Conspiracy' tour re-<lb/>
"1 don't even equate Amnesty called Allen Hailey, a University<lb/>
with music anymore Carrier, of Oklahoma junior, "got more<lb/>
who is taking this term off to work people involved, but some<lb/>
as an intern with Amnesty Inter- weren't getting the message,<lb/>
UMass student Carrier<lb/>
thought it's been especially good<lb/>
for the human rights issue.<lb/>
"Most who follow the cause<lb/>
he contended, "don't do it be-<lb/>
cause it's a rock star thing. Those<lb/>
people get washed out after the<lb/>
concerts are over<lb/>
Amnesty International USA<lb/>
choose from a cafeteria assort-<lb/>
ment of ways to end torture<lb/>
around the world.<lb/>
"Some people can fly to<lb/>
Southeast Asia to inspect prisons<lb/>
if they like he said. "Others only<lb/>
need to commit themselves to<lb/>
writing a letter once a month<lb/>
Even if students don't stick<lb/>
with Amnesty, Hironaka points<lb/>
out, they become "more con-<lb/>
scious of serious things<lb/>
"Young people need to real-<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Executive Director Jack Hcaley ize the power they can have over<lb/>
national (AI), said. "Now all I<lb/>
equate it with is human rights<lb/>
Of course the main purpose of<lb/>
the group, whose efforts won the<lb/>
1978 Nobel Trize, is to lobbv gov<lb/>
noting some saw it as this week's<lb/>
cause.<lb/>
Added Loala Hironaka,<lb/>
whose University of California at<lb/>
Berkeley chapter grew from 200 to<lb/>
ernments worldwide to get them 500 members after the "Conspir<lb/>
to respect human rights. It pubii- acy" concerts: "What happened in<lb/>
cizes the cases of "prisoners of<lb/>
conscience" - or political prison-<lb/>
ers - and works to end the death<lb/>
penalty.<lb/>
And while a healthy handful<lb/>
of U.S. students always has been<lb/>
involved with the issue, few<lb/>
"nonpartisan" groups have ever<lb/>
been able to build campus sup-<lb/>
port in as short a time as Amnesty<lb/>
International did in 1986.<lb/>
1986 is that you have a lot of<lb/>
people join up, but you don't have<lb/>
time to form them<lb/>
It was hard, Hironaka said, to<lb/>
educate the new members about<lb/>
Amnesty's strictly nonpartisan,<lb/>
independent stance.<lb/>
"Amnesty is supposed to be<lb/>
nonpartisan, but students are<lb/>
sometimes using it in partisan<lb/>
ways she said. "You'd like to<lb/>
have  the students understand<lb/>
And this month, despite hav<lb/>
ing had a terrible time integrating Amnesty's mandate<lb/>
all those new members two years Steve Kotkin, also of the<lb/>
ago, the group is actively recruit- Berkeley chapter, called it "a<lb/>
ing students again. question of philosophy<lb/>
This time it's called the "Some are for a smaller, tight-<lb/>
"Human Rights Now tour, and knit group where all the members<lb/>
features Bruce Springsteen, Tracy are informed and involved. Oth-<lb/>
Chapman, Sting, Peter Gabriel crs want a broader organization,<lb/>
and Senegal's Youssou N'Dour. I'm partial to greater numbers<lb/>
"It'simportant to see thecon- myself. We can always educate<lb/>
certs - and our efforts to organize people after thev join up<lb/>
Environmentalist lawyer hopping<lb/>
mad over balloon launches<lb/>
concedes AI has always had a<lb/>
modest attrition rate among its<lb/>
members, but that the huge vol-<lb/>
ume of new members after the<lb/>
1986 tour gave Amnesty a new<lb/>
edge: "Now there's depth<lb/>
So the group is out recruiting<lb/>
again. This time (it also mounted<lb/>
lower-key concerts in the late sev-<lb/>
enties and early eighties) there are<lb/>
only U.S. three stops - Philadel-<lb/>
phia, Los Angeles and Oakland -<lb/>
for the "Human Rights Now<lb/>
tour that will touch down in India,<lb/>
Europe, Japan, Africa, Latin<lb/>
America and perhaps even the<lb/>
Soviet Union before ending.<lb/>
But at the same time, AI has<lb/>
designated the second week in<lb/>
October a U.S. campus activities<lb/>
week, complete with lectures and<lb/>
concerts to raise awareness of the<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
"We'll have an Oklahoma<lb/>
Human Rights Now! concert with<lb/>
local bands OU's Hailey prom-<lb/>
ised.<lb/>
While Rendler doesn't expect<lb/>
the new tour to generate as many<lb/>
new American members as the<lb/>
1986 effort, Hailey reported it has<lb/>
the future and over their own<lb/>
destiny Peter Gabriel told the<lb/>
Washington Post. "If you follow<lb/>
the line of the cynics on compas-<lb/>
sion fatigue, you end up with a<lb/>
world that doesn't care, that feels<lb/>
impotent, that is unable to voice<lb/>
its feelings or to have any influ-<lb/>
ence over its own life, and that's<lb/>
very self-destructive<lb/>
COPIES 5 $<lb/>
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ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
th?<lb/>
WILMINGTON (AP) - Out-<lb/>
door balloon launches have got-<lb/>
ten some folks so stirred up they<lb/>
want them stopped.<lb/>
"Releasing balloons is pretty<lb/>
traditional said Jonathan Wash-<lb/>
burn, a Wilmington real estate<lb/>
lawyer who never thought of<lb/>
himself as an environmentalist<lb/>
until he saw a pictureof what a sea<lb/>
turtle looked like after it ate a<lb/>
ballon.<lb/>
"Actually, it's littering. The<lb/>
balloons go up. They've got to<lb/>
come down and they come down<lb/>
in the ocean. The sea turtles eat<lb/>
those and they die. Everybody<lb/>
loves sea turtles Washburn told<lb/>
The Wilmington Morning Star.<lb/>
Washburn said he has been<lb/>
examining littering laws and has<lb/>
begun talking to local lawmakers<lb/>
and city officials about curbing<lb/>
the practice of outdoor balloon<lb/>
launches.<lb/>
"It's not a major political is-<lb/>
sue, but it could be Washburn<lb/>
said. "Plastics in the ocean is be-<lb/>
coming a major topic<lb/>
A few weeks ago, a balloon<lb/>
launch marked the official begin-<lb/>
ning of restorations to City Hall-<lb/>
Thalian Hall in Wilmington.<lb/>
On Friday, National POW-<lb/>
MIA Dav, 60 balloons were<lb/>
J <lb/>
launched in New Hanover<lb/>
County to honor 60 North Caro-<lb/>
linians listed as still missing in<lb/>
action. The launch was sponsored<lb/>
bv the local Veterans of Foreign<lb/>
Wars.<lb/>
Washburn said he called the<lb/>
commander of the VFW to ask<lb/>
whether they could do something<lb/>
else to honor the veterans, say a<lb/>
60-gun salute.<lb/>
'There's nothing I can do<lb/>
about it Jim Williamson, com-<lb/>
manding officer for the VFW<lb/>
chapter, said hours before the<lb/>
ceremony Friday.<lb/>
Of Washburn's call, William-<lb/>
son said, "I think he's just a wacko<lb/>
on the telephone. I' ve never found<lb/>
a fish with any rubber in them<lb/>
Andy Wood, a naturalist at<lb/>
the N.C. Aquarium at Fort Fisher,<lb/>
said he has been warning people<lb/>
about the danger of outdoor bal-<lb/>
loon launches for 10 years, but<lb/>
with little success.<lb/>
"Virtually every time I walk<lb/>
the beach I find balloons Wood<lb/>
said. He records and catalogues<lb/>
the trash and debris he finds<lb/>
washed ashore and balloons ac-<lb/>
count for "no small percentage<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
And, like all plastics, they do<lb/>
not go away.<lb/>
During last year's Beach<lb/>
Sweep, in which volunteers col-<lb/>
lected and catalogued trash along<lb/>
the beach, balloons had their own<lb/>
category,Wood said.<lb/>
"It's a problem. It's a real<lb/>
problem. We do know that some<lb/>
animals have died eating this<lb/>
stuff he said.<lb/>
Particularly vulnerable are<lb/>
land and sea turtles and some<lb/>
duck species. "There's something<lb/>
about the texture of a balloon that<lb/>
wood ducks like Wood said.<lb/>
When released to the wind,<lb/>
balloons can travel for days,<lb/>
across hundreds of miles. Wood<lb/>
said he once found three balloons<lb/>
on North Carolina beaches that<lb/>
had been launched three days<lb/>
earlier from Terre Haute, Ind.<lb/>
"Wherever they come down,<lb/>
they are a problem he said.<lb/>
Today, the Naval Fleet Re-<lb/>
serve plans to launch 201 balloons<lb/>
from the Battleship North Caro-<lb/>
lina to celebrate the 201st anniver-<lb/>
sary of the Constitution - one bal-<lb/>
loon every minute at the sound of<lb/>
the ship's bell.<lb/>
Wood said he will try to have<lb/>
today's 4 p.m. balloon launch<lb/>
canceled.<lb/>
Del Herrmann, secretary of<lb/>
the Wilmington Fleet Reserve<lb/>
Association, said he doesn't buy<lb/>
the balloon scare. An animal may<lb/>
die if it swallowed a balloon by<lb/>
freak accident, he said, "but that<lb/>
wouldn't stop me from launching<lb/>
a balloon<lb/>
The national bicentennial<lb/>
committee recommended that<lb/>
every town and city across Ameri-<lb/>
ca launch balloons every year to<lb/>
celebrate the nation's<lb/>
Constitution.<lb/>
"It flies in the face of common<lb/>
sense Wood said, who acknowl-<lb/>
edged that since the balloon in-<lb/>
dustry has its own Washington<lb/>
lobby, opponents of outdoor<lb/>
launches are probably outspent in<lb/>
getting lawmakers to see things<lb/>
their way.<lb/>
Specializing In:<lb/>
"Custom Screen Printing<lb/>
As Well As Tuxedos For All Formal Occasions<lb/>
Retail Store Carries:<lb/>
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Arriving Soon, Halloween attire &amp; accessories, Mask, Makeup, Soft Bizarre Pumpkin Heads<lb/>
This Add Acts As A 10 Off Coupon To All<lb/>
 Retail Sales Over $20.00<lb/>
Good Til December 1,1988<lb/>
READ THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
A102<lb/>
Intro, to The Short Story<lb/>
When Carla told me that my date<lb/>
was a little short, I thought she was<lb/>
talking dollars and cents, not feet and<lb/>
inches. So there I was at the door, in<lb/>
my spiked heels, staring at the top of<lb/>
my date's head.<lb/>
All I could think was, how do I<lb/>
get myself out of this? I could imagine<lb/>
how my legs would ache if I had to walk<lb/>
around with my knees bent all evening.<lb/>
So to stall for time, while figuring<lb/>
out how to take malaria, I made us<lb/>
some Double Dutch Chocolate.<lb/>
When I brought it into the living<lb/>
X room, I discovered that Gary was<lb/>
a chocolate lover too. Ahh, a man<lb/>
after my own heart. Okay, I de-<lb/>
cided Id give him a chance. So we<lb/>
sat down and saw each other face<lb/>
to-face for the first time. He had a<lb/>
nice smile.<lb/>
After some small talk?I mean<lb/>
conversation?I discovered that we<lb/>
both love Updike, hate the winter<lb/>
weather, and both have minia-<lb/>
ture schnauzers. So, we made<lb/>
a date to introduce Shadow<lb/>
and Schatzi next week.<lb/>
General Foods International Coffees<lb/>
Share the feeling.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0016"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
14 THE EAST CARPI 1NIIAM<lb/>
OCTOBER 4i Qua<lb/>
Football fans create cup snake<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Featura Editor<lb/>
Neil Chang couldn't believe<lb/>
his eyes. Chang saw a 129-foot<lb/>
white snake wind by his bleacher<lb/>
seat Saturday at Ficklen stadium.<lb/>
During the third quarter of a<lb/>
football game between ECU and<lb/>
South Western Louisiana, the<lb/>
long ribbed serpent slowly made<lb/>
its way down section 28 of the<lb/>
stadium's student side towards<lb/>
the field.<lb/>
Created by an estimated 1,548<lb/>
plastic cups, the snake of cups (or<lb/>
cup chain) stretched over 43<lb/>
bleacher aisle before it mysteri-<lb/>
ously exploded.<lb/>
Starting during the third<lb/>
quarter, bored fans from section<lb/>
28 (the middle area of the student<lb/>
side) made a strange request to<lb/>
the surrounding crowd. "Throw<lb/>
us your cups was one of the<lb/>
request.<lb/>
And the cups flew from eve-<lb/>
rywhere. From across the field it<lb/>
looked as if a huge flock of doves<lb/>
had descended on the Pirate faith-<lb/>
ful.<lb/>
Originating six aisles from<lb/>
the stadium's top, the cup chain<lb/>
slivered down ten rows of bleach-<lb/>
ers in 15 minutes. Patient fans<lb/>
from the middle section sup-<lb/>
ported the cup chain with their<lb/>
hands as it weaved downward.<lb/>
Some of the self-amusing fans<lb/>
said building the cup chain was<lb/>
more exciting than watching the<lb/>
game. By the beginning of the<lb/>
fourth quarter, the chain was<lb/>
growing in strength as ECU's<lb/>
football team was losing at the<lb/>
hands of South Western<lb/>
Lousiana's Ragin' Cajun.<lb/>
After 45 minutes of cups<lb/>
being thrown, cups being col-<lb/>
lected and cups being added to<lb/>
the chain, the ribbed white snake<lb/>
had reached a milestone; it<lb/>
stretched to the first row.<lb/>
struction of the snake. Lasting ten<lb/>
minutes, the cup war pitted the<lb/>
top of the section against the bot-<lb/>
tom. As women and children<lb/>
cleared aside, bleacher bums<lb/>
showed their new sport of cup<lb/>
chucking.<lb/>
The cup snake is unofficially<lb/>
the largest of its type to ever be<lb/>
sighted in Ficklen Stadium. Esti-<lb/>
mated to be made of 1548 plastic<lb/>
cups, it reached 43 rows.<lb/>
While there are many other<lb/>
estimates of the number of cups,<lb/>
<lb/>
Ficklen fans do the Snake Cup during the third quarter of Saturday's football game. Before erupting, the<lb/>
snake sprawled from the top to the bottom of the stadium. (Photo by Thomas "Snakecatcher" Walters -<lb/>
-Photolab).<lb/>
And then it exploded. Er-<lb/>
rupting in the middle, the cups<lb/>
went flying up in the air. At one<lb/>
point someone said it looked like<lb/>
corn in a popper.<lb/>
The ensuing cup war was as<lb/>
entertaining as watching the con-<lb/>
Untortunately, Campus Se-<lb/>
curity had to break up the cup war<lb/>
and carry away some of the most<lb/>
ardent cup warriors. It seems that<lb/>
some of the warriors took this<lb/>
thing a little too far and started<lb/>
throwing glass liquor bottles.<lb/>
ranging trom 5,000 to 20,000, the<lb/>
1548 estimate is derived from the<lb/>
following theorem. Estimates are<lb/>
based on three feet from bleacher<lb/>
to bleacher and the length of a<lb/>
second cup in a stack is estimated<lb/>
to be one inch.<lb/>
John's Flowers and Gifts<lb/>
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Order Early for<lb/>
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$5.00 plain<lb/>
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r1<lb/>
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I and Other Groups <lb/>
I<lb/>
of 20 or more<lb/>
I<lb/>
'The Thin Blue Line a documentary on a Texas murder, to air on PBS<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) - "The<lb/>
Thin Blue Line the documentary<lb/>
movie about a Texas murder that<lb/>
has audiences buzzing, owes its<lb/>
origin to an unusual source -<lb/>
public television.<lb/>
The film, playing in selected<lb/>
theaters across the country, is<lb/>
among the latest fruits of an inno-<lb/>
vative financing deal created by<lb/>
the Public Broadcasting Service's<lb/>
"American Playhouse" series.<lb/>
The arrangement, by which<lb/>
PBS helps pay production costs in<lb/>
exchange for first television<lb/>
rights, has yielded some of the<lb/>
most critically acclaimed inde-<lb/>
pendent films in recent vcars,<lb/>
including 1983's "Testament<lb/>
1984's "El Norte 1985's "Smooth<lb/>
Talk last year's "Stand and De-<lb/>
liver and now, "The Thin Blue<lb/>
Line<lb/>
"I don't think any of those<lb/>
movies could have been made<lb/>
without "American Playhouse<lb/>
said Lindsay Law, the series' ex-<lb/>
ecutive producer.<lb/>
In an age of soaring produc-<lb/>
tion costs and diminishing under-<lb/>
writing, the "American Play-<lb/>
house" formula stands as a cost-<lb/>
efficient programming break-<lb/>
through.<lb/>
The documentary will not<lb/>
appear on PBS for at least a year.<lb/>
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Fair<lb/>
The Titt County Ame I<lb/>
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open its 69th edition on Mont<lb/>
October 3rd at 6 p m , and, fj<lb/>
the powerful lineup of ex hi<lb/>
and entertainment tl<lb/>
can only be describ<lb/>
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Fair manager . .<lb/>
stated that ever thii<lb/>
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"Last year we I i ?<lb/>
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that made a si -<lb/>
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O'Connor's 'COlk ??<lb/>
(library of Arm -<lb/>
The ant<lb/>
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Blood" and<lb/>
and "A CK'd M<lb/>
Find Also includ<lb/>
and a large si<lb/>
Mary Fl u<lb/>
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She began v. ?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058098_0017"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 4,1988 15<lb/>
and Gifts<lb/>
St.<lb/>
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Fair will be better than ever<lb/>
N.w.Rek?. involved, was expanding the pre- Also, the Magical World of<lb/>
The Pitt County American miums on livestock, and is host- Mike Basile will be featured each<lb/>
Legion Agricultural Fair will ing a lamb show this year. In night on the giant outdoor stage at<lb/>
open its 69th edition on Monday, addition, a new grandstand has 7:45 and 9:30 p.m. This is a great<lb/>
October 3rd at 6 p.m and, from been erected and extensive paint- illusion show that many describe<lb/>
the powerful lineup of exhibits ing and modiwcations on the as "beyond belief<lb/>
and entertainment, this year's fair twenty-building W. Conner In between these two events<lb/>
can only be described as the big- Eagles Farm Homestead Museum will be the hit of the 1987 fair, the<lb/>
gest and most colossal fair in Fitt have been completed. Buck Swamp Kickin Cloggcrs, on<lb/>
County's history. Amusements of America will the outdoor stage for 45 minutes<lb/>
Fair manager Elvy Forrest again bring their giant midway to Monday through Friday<lb/>
stated that everything is falling Greenville with new thrill rides Probably the most hilarious ???? num suum, ana eas<lb/>
into place and that he and fair and provide the Pitt County Fair show will be the Banana Derby we intend to keep growing and<lb/>
officials have been working since with the largest midway cast of with ponies racing around an 80- placing our emphasis on agricul-<lb/>
Januarv to make this the biggest Raleigh, just as it was in 1984, foot oval track where the "jock- ture, education and a wholesome<lb/>
and greatest fair of all. 1985,1986 and 1987. The midway eys" are monkeys. This show will family atmosphere. We invite all<lb/>
Last year, we broke all rec- promises lots of motion, music, perform 4 times nightly. of Eastern Carolina to be here<lb/>
mirth, and memories before head- On Wednesday and Thurs- with us on October 3-8,1988<lb/>
ing south to theGeorgia State Fair, day nights at 7 Jack Kotchman's Children's days are Tuesday<lb/>
As for free attractions, never great auto thrill show "Holly- through Friday, College night is<lb/>
entrance. This all adds up to an<lb/>
almost continuousstrcam of qual-<lb/>
ity free entertainment from 6:15<lb/>
p.m. on.<lb/>
"All of this is in keeping with<lb/>
our goal towards making the Pitt<lb/>
County Fair a regional fair for all<lb/>
of Eastern Carolina said Forrest.<lb/>
"We have already accomplished<lb/>
this to a large degree, as we now<lb/>
have people from as far as 75-100<lb/>
miles north, south, and east, and<lb/>
ords in attendance by a rather<lb/>
wide margin said Forrest. "Ev-<lb/>
eryone seemed pleased with the<lb/>
1987 fair and we got hundreds of<lb/>
fine complements with hardly<lb/>
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taken the basic contents of the by Domino's Pizza and the Coca-<lb/>
1987 fair and added and ex- Cola Bottling Company of<lb/>
panded, so this year's fair should Greenville. Two free pcrform-<lb/>
be even better "<lb/>
Forrest said that the fair was<lb/>
wood Stunt World" will be in the<lb/>
new grandstand along with the<lb/>
gigantic monster Car Crusher.<lb/>
New thrills have been added to<lb/>
Thursday night, and Senior Citi-<lb/>
zens Day is Wednesday, October<lb/>
5 with free admission and attrac-<lb/>
tions 1 p.m. - 3 p.m. Handicapped<lb/>
children will be treated to rides<lb/>
and refreshments all free of<lb/>
getting the youth of the area more except Monday<lb/>
this year's show.<lb/>
In addition to all of this, the<lb/>
ances will be given for children of old midway Band Organ (1910 charge on Thursday morning,<lb/>
all ages at 6:15 and 8:30 each night vintage) will be belting out its with the same for pre-schoolers<lb/>
midway each night at the midway on Friday morning.<lb/>
?  ? r Jmiuway tjainugiiituuiunuuwdY un rnuay morning.<lb/>
Christian author remembered<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - The sto<lb/>
riesof the late Flannery O'Connor<lb/>
are best understood by what's left<lb/>
unsaid.<lb/>
"She said that it was the mys-<lb/>
tery, what can not be explained,<lb/>
that made a story endlessly fasci-<lb/>
nating. She didn't feel that God's<lb/>
ways were cut and dry. There<lb/>
were always some surprises in<lb/>
store for everybody said Sally<lb/>
Fitzgerald, a longtime friend of<lb/>
the late writer who has edited<lb/>
O'Connor's "Collected Works"<lb/>
(Library of America, $30).<lb/>
The anthology contains<lb/>
O'Connor's short novels, "Wise<lb/>
Blood" and "Artificial Nigger"<lb/>
and "A Good Man Is Hard to<lb/>
Find Also included are essays<lb/>
and a large selection of letters.<lb/>
Marv Flannery O'Connor<lb/>
was born in Savannah in 1925, the<lb/>
only child of Rcgina Cline and<lb/>
Edward Francis O'Connor, Jr.<lb/>
She began writing at an early-<lb/>
age and set up an attic studio in<lb/>
her home as a work place. One of<lb/>
her favorite books growing up<lb/>
was "The Humorous Tales of<lb/>
Edgar Allan Poe<lb/>
She attended Georgia State<lb/>
College for Women, where she<lb/>
began signing her academic work<lb/>
"Flannery O'Connor<lb/>
In 1945. she received a schol-<lb/>
arship in journalism from the<lb/>
University of Iowa. She gained<lb/>
admission to the Writers' Work-<lb/>
shop, where she began reading<lb/>
the works of James Joyce, Franz<lb/>
Kafka and William Faulkner.<lb/>
"She was influenced by the<lb/>
Workshop Fitzgerald said. "She<lb/>
learned to spend a certain number<lb/>
of hours writing every day at the<lb/>
same time. She let nothing inter-<lb/>
fere with it<lb/>
O'Connor received a master<lb/>
of fine arts degree in 1947. That<lb/>
same year she began working on<lb/>
"Wise Blood her first novel. It<lb/>
took five years and endless revi-<lb/>
sions before the book was pub-<lb/>
lished.<lb/>
"She certainly suffered writ-<lb/>
ing Fitzgerald said. "Writing<lb/>
was very hard for her. She was a<lb/>
real perfectionist. She discarded<lb/>
more than 2,000 sheets from 'Wise<lb/>
Blood<lb/>
Fitzgerald met O'Connor in<lb/>
1949. "She was quite silent. She<lb/>
didn't talk a lot. She listened very<lb/>
carefully. If you were aware, you<lb/>
realized you were in the presence<lb/>
of someone listening and watch-<lb/>
ing very carefully<lb/>
In 1950, O'Connor began to<lb/>
suffer pains and heaviness in her<lb/>
arms and shoulder joints. Al-<lb/>
though at first she laughed off the<lb/>
symptoms as psychosomatic, an<lb/>
excuse not to write, O'Connor<lb/>
was eventually diagnosed as<lb/>
having lupus, an incurable dis-<lb/>
ease that killed her in 1964.<lb/>
"She bore it very well. We<lb/>
heard no complaints. She was<lb/>
quite funny about it Fitzgerald<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Despite her weakened condi-<lb/>
tion, O'Connor continued to work<lb/>
until her death. She completed a<lb/>
second novel, published two col-<lb/>
lections of short stories and was a<lb/>
prolific letter writer.<lb/>
Man and God, the struggle<lb/>
against grace and redemption<lb/>
were the major themes of<lb/>
O'Connor's stories and her life. In<lb/>
a 1957essay, "TheChurchand the<lb/>
Fiction Writer O'Connor<lb/>
summed up how religion shaped<lb/>
her writing:<lb/>
"When people have told me<lb/>
that because I am a Catholic, I<lb/>
cannot be an artist, I have to reply,<lb/>
ruefully, that because I am a<lb/>
Catholic, I cannot afford to be less<lb/>
than an artist<lb/>
Fitzgerald said O'Connor<lb/>
was concerned with "durable<lb/>
matters<lb/>
"These are the great ques-<lb/>
tions that have concerned serious<lb/>
artists throughout history she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
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Enter: October 3rd-0ctober 21st<lb/>
ECU Student Stores<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0018"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBER 4.1988 Page 16<lb/>
Pirates drop to 1-4<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sport Editor<lb/>
on<lb/>
drove the ball down to the ECU<lb/>
seven on a varied running attack<lb/>
before, on a third-and-goal situ-<lb/>
ation from the seven, Cajun quar-<lb/>
terback Brian Mitchell fumbled<lb/>
the ball on a draw. The Pirate's<lb/>
moments of the fourth quarter, Brian McPhatter, who has turned<lb/>
once again meeting defeat, this in solid play all year, recovered<lb/>
time at the hands of the Ragin' the ball at the five.<lb/>
A game that started very<lb/>
quickly for the Pirates turned into<lb/>
a nightmare as they watched the<lb/>
game slip away in the waning<lb/>
Felton Parquet of the Southwestern Louisiana Cajuns runs for a gain against a Pirate defense that<lb/>
had trouble containing him and his running mates. (Photo by Angela Pridgen.)<lb/>
Tennis team has good outing<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
S?aJi Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's women's ten-<lb/>
nis team recorded its first tourna-<lb/>
ment win of the season this past<lb/>
weekend as it earned the team<lb/>
champion honors at the Meredith<lb/>
Invitational Tennis Tournament<lb/>
in Raleigh.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates won three of<lb/>
the final single's rounds and two<lb/>
of the final double's rounds to win<lb/>
the team championship over<lb/>
seven other North Carolina<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
Wendy Simpson, Melyanee<lb/>
Morgan and Kathi Messer, ECU's<lb/>
fourth, fifth and sixth seeded<lb/>
singles respectively, were all<lb/>
winners in their final rounds.<lb/>
Simpson defeated Salem<lb/>
College's Jennifer King, 6-4,6-3 in<lb/>
Saturday's final, while Morgan<lb/>
was a winner over Theresa Burger<lb/>
of Meredith College, 6-3, 6-1.<lb/>
Messer, who is seeded in sixth<lb/>
place for the Lady Pirates, de-<lb/>
feated Mt. Olive's Kelly Quinn, 6-<lb/>
1,6-3.<lb/>
ECU's two doubles finals vic-<lb/>
tories came in the second and<lb/>
third doubles final round.<lb/>
In number two doubles, Jill<lb/>
Hobson and Wendy Simpson de-<lb/>
feated a Mt. Olive duo in three<lb/>
sets, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4.<lb/>
Ellen Harrell and Melyanee<lb/>
Morgan made up ECU's number<lb/>
three team as they defeated Pfeif-<lb/>
fer College's number three team<lb/>
for ECU's fifth win of the day<lb/>
ECU's Holly Murray made it Lady Seahawks of<lb/>
to the final round in number one Willmington at 3 p.m<lb/>
singles. Murray was defeated by<lb/>
Atlantic Christian's Sheila Milne<lb/>
in the final round, 1-6,1-6.<lb/>
Susan Mattocks of East Caro-<lb/>
lina also advanced to the final<lb/>
rounds in number three singles.<lb/>
Wingate College's Jill Deardoff<lb/>
defeated Mattocks in the final, 6-3,<lb/>
6-4.<lb/>
ECU recorded two losses in<lb/>
the first round. The first came in<lb/>
number two singles as Meredith<lb/>
College's Libby A very defeated<lb/>
Jill Hobson in three sets, 6-4,5-7,6-<lb/>
3. ECU's second loss in the first<lb/>
round came when Atlantic<lb/>
Christian's number one doubles<lb/>
team defeated ECU's Mattocks<lb/>
and Murrav in the first round of<lb/>
J<lb/>
play.<lb/>
East Carolina will resume<lb/>
play on Tucsdav as it hosts the<lb/>
UNC-<lb/>
on the<lb/>
courts next to Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
The men's team will be on the<lb/>
road Tucsdav at Pfciffer.<lb/>
Cajuns of Southwestern Louisi-<lb/>
ana.<lb/>
The Pirates were in the game<lb/>
the entire going, and it was theirs<lb/>
to win or lose right up to the last<lb/>
two minutes of the fourth quarter.<lb/>
It was the fourth loss in a row for<lb/>
the Pirates, dropping their record<lb/>
to 1-4.<lb/>
ECU took possession to start<lb/>
the game, beginning at their own<lb/>
20 yard line. Charlie Libretto took<lb/>
the snap, and pitched the ball back<lb/>
on an apparent running play that<lb/>
turned out to be anything but. Jeff<lb/>
Blake, the recipient of the pitch,<lb/>
who also happens to be a quarter-<lb/>
back, pulled up and fired up-field<lb/>
to Walter Wilson for a 38-yard<lb/>
gain out to the USL 42. Libretto<lb/>
took over the quarterback respon-<lb/>
sibilities at this point, guiding the<lb/>
Pirate offense down to the Cajun<lb/>
17before taking the ball in himself<lb/>
on a keeper around the right side.<lb/>
Imperato came on and added the<lb/>
extra point, and with only 2:35<lb/>
clasped, the Pirates held an early<lb/>
7-0 lead.<lb/>
The Pirates dodged a bullet<lb/>
on the ensuing kick-off when<lb/>
Willie Culpepper took the kick at<lb/>
the USL 12 yard line and returned<lb/>
it 51 yards out to the Pirate 37<lb/>
before being shoved out of<lb/>
bounds by Imperato, the last man of Pirate backs. On a second and<lb/>
back on defense. The Cajuns ten situation, Jarrod Moody took<lb/>
the pitch and ran around the left<lb/>
side down to the 10. ECU moved<lb/>
the ball eight yards down to the<lb/>
two, but were unable to pu ,h it<lb/>
into the endzone. Facing a fourth<lb/>
and goal situation. Pirate Coach<lb/>
Art Baker decided to go for it The<lb/>
call went to Libretto, who took the<lb/>
ball in for his second touchdown<lb/>
of the day- Imperato added the<lb/>
extra point, giving the Pirates a<lb/>
The Pirates moved the ball<lb/>
out to the USL45 yard line, helped<lb/>
along by 25 yards of penalties 14-10 edge<lb/>
against the Cajuns, before stall-<lb/>
ing. John Jett's punt rolled dead in<lb/>
the end zone, and the Cajuns took<lb/>
over on their own 20.<lb/>
Mitchell then proceeded to<lb/>
guide the Cajuns the length of the<lb/>
field down to the Pirate 17 before<lb/>
The Cajuns began their next<lb/>
series at their own 15-yard line<lb/>
Behind the running of USL's<lb/>
Steve McKinney, the Cajuns<lb/>
drove the ball out to midfield.<lb/>
Mitchell took over here, on a run<lb/>
of 15 yards and a pass accounting<lb/>
finding Corey Williams in the end for 12 more to Culpepper. Then,<lb/>
on a first and ten from the 17 yard<lb/>
line, fullback Felton Parquet took<lb/>
the ball up the middle and into the<lb/>
end zone. The Lemoine kick was<lb/>
good, and the Cajuns took a three<lb/>
point 17-14 lead.<lb/>
Reggie McKinney gave the<lb/>
Pirates excellent field position on<lb/>
their next series, returning the<lb/>
USL kick-off 28 yards from his<lb/>
own 12 out to the 40 yard line.<lb/>
The Pirate offense took ad-<lb/>
vantage of the good field position,<lb/>
and behind the leadership of Li-<lb/>
bretto, thev took the ball down to<lb/>
the USL nine yard line before<lb/>
Libretto punch.id it in on a keeper<lb/>
around the right side for his third<lb/>
rushing touchdown of the day.<lb/>
"I thought he (Libretto) did<lb/>
an excellent job Baker said of his<lb/>
starting quarterback. "I think the<lb/>
See HRATES, page 17<lb/>
zone for a touchdown strike. The<lb/>
extra point was good, and at the<lb/>
1:55 mark in the first period, the<lb/>
score was tied 7-7.<lb/>
The Pirates dodged their sec-<lb/>
ond bullet of the dav on the next<lb/>
J<lb/>
kick-off, when Junior Robinson<lb/>
fumbled the ball at the 10. USL<lb/>
recovered the ball, but after three<lb/>
attempts were unable to punch it<lb/>
into the endzone. The Cajuns<lb/>
were forced to settle for a 26-vard<lb/>
Mike Lemoine field goal, giving<lb/>
the Cajuns their first lead of the<lb/>
day at 10-7 with :54 remaining in<lb/>
the quarter.<lb/>
Not to be outdone, the Pirates<lb/>
retaliated with a scoring drive of<lb/>
their own to begin a 35 point sec-<lb/>
ond quarter between the two<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
The Pirates took the ball on<lb/>
their own 22, and ground it down<lb/>
to the USL 37 on runs bv a number<lb/>
Volleyball team 6-7<lb/>
Olympics disturbing<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's women's vol-<lb/>
leyball team dropped to a losing<lb/>
record (6-7) for the first time this<lb/>
season after taking two losses this<lb/>
Liberty match, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
were in every match, with the<lb/>
ability to win.<lb/>
"We had excellent play from<lb/>
Debbie Tate and Michelle Macin-<lb/>
tosh this weekend, but we had a<lb/>
breakdown in our serve receive<lb/>
and, of course, this hurts us offen-<lb/>
past weekend at the Winthrop sively said Kirkpatrick, whose<lb/>
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - A<lb/>
Korean boxer who knew he didn't<lb/>
deserve his gold raised the hand<lb/>
of an American who felt cheated,<lb/>
and with that noble gesture of<lb/>
sportsmanship ended an Olym-<lb/>
pics that will be remembered,<lb/>
sadlv, for its scandals.<lb/>
So many athletes came and<lb/>
did so well - the Soviet gymnastic<lb/>
whizzes and men's basketball<lb/>
team, East German swimming<lb/>
star Kristin Otto, Americans Greg<lb/>
Louganis, Janet Evans, Jim Ab-<lb/>
bott, Carl Lewis, Florence Griffith<lb/>
Joyner and Jackie Joyner-Kersee.<lb/>
These Games overcame the<lb/>
fear of terrorism and civil unrest<lb/>
and brought together nearly<lb/>
10,000 athletes from 160 countries<lb/>
in stadiums, arenas and pools as<lb/>
fine as ever seen.<lb/>
The Soviets reigned again<lb/>
with 55 golds, followed by East<lb/>
Germany's 37 and the United<lb/>
States' 36. Host South Korea rose<lb/>
to No. 1 in Asia, and fourth in the<lb/>
world with 12 golds.<lb/>
There were glorious mo-<lb/>
ments, from an opening cere-<lb/>
mony with exotic dancers and<lb/>
parachutists to a closing with<lb/>
hugs and tears, fireworks and<lb/>
dances, and the mascots of Seoul<lb/>
and Barcelona, the site of the 1992<lb/>
Games, floating together into the<lb/>
starry night.<lb/>
Yet, the highest moment of<lb/>
the Games - Ben Johnson rocket-<lb/>
ing to victory over Lewis in a 100-<lb/>
meter dash world record - led to have ended the fight in the ring,<lb/>
the deepest pain when the Cana- Instead, the decision went to the<lb/>
dian was caught cheating with judges and the result was aston-<lb/>
muscle-building anabolic ster<lb/>
oids.<lb/>
"There have been high points<lb/>
and some low points arcs the most<lb/>
important low point was Ben<lb/>
Johnson Juan Antonio<lb/>
Samaranch, president of the Inter-<lb/>
national Olympic Committee<lb/>
said Monday. "That was indeed a<lb/>
blow<lb/>
Catching Johnson, however,<lb/>
and expelling him along with nine<lb/>
other athletes with positive drug<lb/>
tests was an indication,<lb/>
Samaranch said, that "we have<lb/>
won the ? ttle against doping<lb/>
Lessons for the future also<lb/>
could be learned from the strange<lb/>
and appalling things that went on<lb/>
at the boxing ring, from an Ameri-<lb/>
can fighter missing hisbusand his<lb/>
bout, to Korean coaches pummel-<lb/>
ing a referee, and judges losing<lb/>
sight of honesty.<lb/>
Three golds, three silvers and<lb/>
two bronzes were quite a haul for<lb/>
the U.S. boxers, but they weren't<lb/>
ishing - to the fighters, the coaches<lb/>
and even to many Koreans.<lb/>
The Soviet and Hungarian<lb/>
judges scored it 60-56, a huge<lb/>
spread, in favor of Jones. The<lb/>
judges from Uruguay and Mo-<lb/>
rocco scored it 59-58 for Park, and<lb/>
the judge from Uganda had it 59-<lb/>
r9. with a plus mark for the Ko-<lb/>
jt<lb/>
rean ihat gave him the gold.<lb/>
On the victory platform, the<lb/>
gold iround Park's neck and the<lb/>
silver on Jones the Korean raised<lb/>
the American's hand for the<lb/>
crowd. Here, the gesture said, is<lb/>
the real winner.<lb/>
"I thought I lost the fight<lb/>
Park said. "1 might have won the<lb/>
gold medal thanks to the advan-<lb/>
tage of a home ring<lb/>
Jones, little soothed by his<lb/>
award afterward from the Inter-<lb/>
national Amateur Boxing Asso-<lb/>
ciation as the outstanding fighter<lb/>
of the tournament, charged the<lb/>
judges with robbing him of his<lb/>
gold and his dream and said he<lb/>
enough to wipe out the bitterness was giving up plans for a profes<lb/>
of a decision Sunday against 19- sional career.<lb/>
year-old Roy Jones in the 156-<lb/>
pound final against Korea's Park<lb/>
Si-hun.<lb/>
Jones peppered Park's face<lb/>
with rights and left hooks for<lb/>
three rounds, forced him to one<lb/>
standing 8-count and could have<lb/>
gotten three others that would<lb/>
UNC drops to 0-4<lb/>
AUBURN, Ala. (AP)-North said<lb/>
Carolina Coach Mack Brown, fast<lb/>
becoming an expert on Top 10<lb/>
teams since he's already seen<lb/>
three this season, says fourth-<lb/>
ranked Auburn is the best one to<lb/>
meet his eyes.<lb/>
"At this point in our program,<lb/>
we're not ready to play Auburn<lb/>
Brown said after watching the<lb/>
Tigers manhandle North Caro-<lb/>
lina 47-21 Saturday.<lb/>
Two of Carolina's earlier<lb/>
losses were to Top 10 teams, 31-10<lb/>
to eighth-ranked South Carolina<lb/>
and 28-0 to No. 10 Oklahoma. But<lb/>
Auburn, Brown said, "is the best<lb/>
football team we've played<lb/>
"They're so physical they<lb/>
won't let you run the ball he<lb/>
It'sone of the better football<lb/>
Samaranch said Monday the<lb/>
IOC will study whether boxing<lb/>
should be continued in the Olym-<lb/>
pics because of the hazards in the<lb/>
sport and the problems of officiat-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"We are really not happy<lb/>
with the way judges and officials<lb/>
are acting he said. "We lake the<lb/>
problem very seriously<lb/>
In a whirl of races and scan-<lb/>
dals and a blur of tears, happy and<lb/>
Invitational Volleyball Tourna<lb/>
ment in Rock Hill, SC.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates went into<lb/>
the tournament with an even 5-5<lb/>
record, after a loss on Wednesday<lb/>
to CAA opponent UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
At the tournament, ECU was<lb/>
victorious in its first match<lb/>
against Baptist College. The Lady<lb/>
Pirates went five games with<lb/>
Baptist before coming up with the<lb/>
win.<lb/>
ECU won the first game, 15-9,<lb/>
but BC's Lady Buc's rebounded<lb/>
back with two straight wins, 15-6,<lb/>
15-6.<lb/>
East Carolina made the next<lb/>
two games count as they went on<lb/>
to defeat Baptist, 15-10,15-13.<lb/>
"This was a dog-fight type of<lb/>
match said ECU coach Judy<lb/>
Kirkpatrick. "We fought hard and<lb/>
saw some very good offense from<lb/>
Jemma Holly, Debbie Tate and<lb/>
Michelle Macintosh<lb/>
ECU's second game of the<lb/>
tournament did not go as well as<lb/>
the first. Liberty University<lb/>
handed the lady Pirates a loss in<lb/>
three straight games, 15-10, 15-8,<lb/>
15-1.<lb/>
Liberty, who finished 22-8<lb/>
last season, took complete control<lb/>
of their game, taking ECU out of<lb/>
their own game.<lb/>
"This was a very tough Lib-<lb/>
erty team. They took us out of our<lb/>
game with good offense and good<lb/>
serving said Kirkpatrick. She<lb/>
also predicted that Liberty would<lb/>
win the tournament, and that they<lb/>
did on Saturday, defeating ECU's<lb/>
CAA rival UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
team looks to rebound next week-<lb/>
end as it faces two CAA oppo-<lb/>
nents.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will take the<lb/>
week off and then travel to<lb/>
Wilmington on Saturday to take<lb/>
on George Mason and American.<lb/>
"American is a very much<lb/>
improved team over last year<lb/>
said Kirkpatrick about the Ameri-<lb/>
can team who finished 9-21 last<lb/>
season. ECU and American met<lb/>
once last season, with American<lb/>
winning in three straight games.<lb/>
Kirkpatrick says that she expects a<lb/>
close match between the teams<lb/>
this vear. In the American<lb/>
matchup, Kirkpatrick says, the<lb/>
Lady Pirates have the skills to beat<lb/>
George Mason, but the match<lb/>
could be a tough one for ECU.<lb/>
Ticket pick-up times<lb/>
In ECU's last match of the<lb/>
teams I've ever coached against sad, the Olympics slipped from weekend, the team faced East<lb/>
All in all, Auburn turned in summer to fall. They were the Tennessee State University. The<lb/>
about an average effort. The Ti- m0st expensive and biggest ever. Lady Pirates were up against a<lb/>
gcrs had 255 yards passing and The Seoul Olympic Organiz- squad who finished 22-5 last sea- ECU's Traci Smith goes for a slam while her teammates look<lb/>
256 yards running for 511 total ingCommitteesaysitmadea$349 son and in first place of their con- on during weekend action. (Photo by Mar StartarU<lb/>
yards. million profit on the Games. Four ference.<lb/>
In four games, the Tigers have years ago, the Los Angeles Games ETSU won the first two<lb/>
averaged 257, 251 and 508 yards, earned a $225 million profit. games, 15-8,15-6 and looked to be<lb/>
respectively. It's that kind of of- Some athletes left Monday on its way to victory, but the Lady<lb/>
fensivc balance that has opposing with medals, others with only Pirates delayed the win coming<lb/>
coaches shaking their heads. souvenirs. back in the third game to win, 15- For all of you students who 1106:00 at Mendenhall.<lb/>
"We tell our guys you've got Some will get rich off these 7. ECU could not hold on though didn't know, or may have ,ust And remember any tickets<lb/>
tostoptherun,andthey'rethrow- Games, others will struggle. as ETSU won the fourth game, 15- forgotten, here, once again are notpfcted up on the abovemen-<lb/>
9, eliminating ECU from the tour- the times that you can pick up tioncd days will be made ava.l-<lb/>
nament your tickets or tne remaining able for purchase by the general<lb/>
ECU coach Judy Kirkpatrick home football games. public on Friday and Saturday. In<lb/>
Olympics received a gold crown said the level of play at the tourna- Y?&amp;&amp;Tady. other words, if you wait around<lb/>
y S 1 nnt was a good level for her Wednesday or Thursday from too long, you may not get a ticket<lb/>
team. With the exception of the<lb/>
ing the ball as well as I've seen in<lb/>
a long time said Brown, still<lb/>
winless after four games in his<lb/>
first season at North Carolina.<lb/>
See TARHEFXS, page 1H<lb/>
East German swimmer<lb/>
Kristin Otto, the first woman ever<lb/>
to win six gold medals in one<lb/>
See OLYMPICS, page 17<lb/>
You can get them on Tuesday, other words, if you wait around<lb/>
rtesday or Thursday from too long, you may not get a t<lb/>
8:0.) to 5:00 at Minges, or from for one of the bigger games.<lb/>
Pirates at<lb/>
1-4 now<lb/>
( outinued from page 16<lb/>
things he didn't do well, Sout<lb/>
western Louisiana had a lot to<lb/>
with that<lb/>
"I'm always surprised whei<lb/>
run the ball commented<lb/>
bretto on his 59-yard rushii<lb/>
performance. 1 always think<lb/>
myself as slow When I run hi<lb/>
that, somebody has to be blocj<lb/>
ing. So the credit would have to j<lb/>
to the offensive line and the slo<lb/>
and the good downfield bkx<lb/>
ing Libretto also accounted t<lb/>
163 yards passing, going 11 for!<lb/>
The Tirates got yet anotl<lb/>
break on the ensuing series v h<lb/>
ECU's Chris Hall intercepts<lb/>
Mitchell pass on the L'SL 26 i<lb/>
line It was the first interceptij<lb/>
on the year that he had throvs<lb/>
Travis Hunter came into<lb/>
game for his tirst appearance<lb/>
the day to begin the series Tj<lb/>
plavs later, Tim James bui<lb/>
the middle for an ECU sec j<lb/>
22 vards out. on only his ?-<lb/>
carrvofthe da) Itwasjami I<lb/>
rushing touchdown of the ?<lb/>
Imperato s kick was wide,andl<lb/>
Pirates led by 1 27-17, with<lb/>
left in the halt<lb/>
The Ca)uns sti I :k K<lb/>
quickly, however, dri i<lb/>
81 yards in seven <lb/>
Broussard capped the dr<lb/>
an 11 yard run t i<lb/>
extra point was<lb/>
Cajuns went into th - ?<lb/>
trailing by only thr? rT- j<lb/>
halt<lb/>
Neither team was<lb/>
capitalize on their n<lb/>
sessions to start the second he<lb/>
The Cajuns got the ha<lb/>
second time in the half on<lb/>
jett punt to the USL l,and<lb/>
returned out to the 2s yard 11<lb/>
From here the I<lb/>
time consum ng ! .<lb/>
covering 2 ai Is<lb/>
5 24 off the clock M<lb/>
the Cajuns dov n I<lb/>
yard line before taking<lb/>
himself. Lemoine ad I<lb/>
point, giving lb<lb/>
lead, a lead thai <lb/>
relinquish for I<lb/>
the contest<lb/>
The Pirates MtSWI I<lb/>
five minute, 13 play dr:<lb/>
own. but with a slightK d<lb/>
ending. The offen 9f s I<lb/>
USL 20 yard line, and tl<lb/>
were forced to settle for a 37<lb/>
Imperato field goal tl l<lb/>
the Pirates to within one 31<lb/>
the beginning of the fo<lb/>
ter<lb/>
Lemoine returned I<lb/>
on the next series with a : I<lb/>
of hisow n this one a 4r <lb/>
cap a 40 yard drive h US1<lb/>
field goal was the to)<lb/>
Lemoine's career. The s<lb/>
lengthened the Cajun lead b<lb/>
30.<lb/>
The Cajuns scored againj<lb/>
series later, on a six plav 55<lb/>
effort when Mitchell took the<lb/>
in from 35 yards out to givej<lb/>
Cajuns an 11-point 41-30<lb/>
with 3:5" left to go in the gai<lb/>
But the Pirates were tar tj<lb/>
reads to roll over and plav dj<lb/>
On their next series, the Pn<lb/>
drove down the held on the<lb/>
ot Libretto and the receiving aj<lb/>
ties of Al Whiting and jaj<lb/>
Moody, moving down to the<lb/>
nine yard line From here LibT<lb/>
found Walter Wilson in the-<lb/>
zone for an ECU touchdej<lb/>
Baker decided to go tor two pej<lb/>
to pull the Pirates within<lb/>
Olympic<lb/>
memories!<lb/>
Continued from page lb<lb/>
from local newspapers Mo<lb/>
as most valuable player c<lb/>
Seoul Games.<lb/>
The Pack Sang crown,<lb/>
of 20-karat gold and deal<lb/>
at ter the headgear of ancienj<lb/>
rean warriors cost Sll.OOf<lb/>
donors said.<lb/>
Although it was not at<lb/>
cial IOC award, the winne<lb/>
chosen by a panel of four!<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Greg Louganis' diving<lb/>
ended with his second pair oj<lb/>
medals in the springboard<lb/>
platform events, and he savj<lb/>
off to begin an acting careei<lb/>
Perhaps his first film sf<lb/>
be his own life story, begij<lb/>
with a troubled youth anO<lb/>
age bout with alcoholisr<lb/>
ending with his dives in<lb/>
after hitting his head ol<lb/>
springboard.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0019"/><lb/>
Ci<lb/>
lb<lb/>
1-4<lb/>
backs On a second and<lb/>
situation arrod Moody took<lb/>
?itch and ran around the left<lb/>
i to the 10. ECU moved<lb/>
eight yards down to the<lb/>
b but were unable to push it<lb/>
the endone Facing a fourth<lb/>
goal situation. Pirate Coach<lb/>
Wer decided to go tor it. The<lb/>
ll ??nt to Libretto, who took the<lb/>
" in tor his second touchdown<lb/>
t e da Imperato added the<lb/>
rtt ging the Pirates a<lb/>
in their next<lb/>
r own 15-yard line.<lb/>
) id the running of USL's<lb/>
e McKinne) the Cajuns<lb/>
.e the ball out to midfield.<lb/>
hell ? I on a run<lb/>
yar iss accounting<lb/>
ppcr Then,<lb/>
d ten from the 1" yard<lb/>
n Parquet took<lb/>
! id into the<lb/>
kick was<lb/>
, k a three<lb/>
?<lb/>
McKinn gave the<lb/>
. ? it held position on<lb/>
i r next series, returning the<lb/>
?? 8 i irds from his<lb/>
 i r I<lb/>
took ad<lb/>
 ' ? ; sition<lb/>
id rship of Li-<lb/>
i wn to<lb/>
: fore<lb/>
tin on a keeper<lb/>
? is third<lb/>
?. n of the day.<lb/>
br tto) did<lb/>
- ? I of his<lb/>
rtei - I think the<lb/>
PIRA IKS. page 11<lb/>
h<lb/>
6-7<lb/>
?sea so<lb/>
m George Mason and American.<lb/>
"American is a very much<lb/>
m over last year<lb/>
- ? k about the Amori-<lb/>
nished 9-21 last<lb/>
ECU and American met<lb/>
n, with American<lb/>
straight games.<lb/>
ksays that she expects a<lb/>
match between the teams<lb/>
is year. In the American<lb/>
li tatchup, Kirkpatrick says, the<lb/>
Lady Pirates have the skills to beat<lb/>
George Mason, but the match<lb/>
could be a tough one for ECU.<lb/>
t<lb/>
k<lb/>
I<lb/>
while her teammates look<lb/>
by Mar Startari.)<lb/>
-up times<lb/>
11:00-6:00 at Mcndenhall.<lb/>
And remember, any tickets<lb/>
not picked up on the abovemen-<lb/>
tioned days will be made avail-<lb/>
able for purchase by the general<lb/>
public on Friday and Saturday. In<lb/>
other words, if you wait around<lb/>
too long, you may not get a ticket<lb/>
for one oi the bigger games.<lb/>
T! IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 4, 1988 17<lb/>
Pirates at<lb/>
1-4 now<lb/>
Continued from page 16<lb/>
things he didn't do well, South-<lb/>
western Louisiana had a lot to do<lb/>
with that<lb/>
"I'm always surprised when I<lb/>
run the ball commented Li-<lb/>
bretto on his 59-yard rushing<lb/>
performance. "1 always think of<lb/>
myself as slow. When 1 run like<lb/>
that, somebody has to be block-<lb/>
ing. So the credit would have to go<lb/>
to the offensive line and the slots,<lb/>
and the good downfield block-<lb/>
ing Libretto also accounted for<lb/>
163 yards passing, going 11 for 20.<lb/>
The Tirates got yet another<lb/>
break on the ensuing series when<lb/>
ECU'S Chris Hall intercepted a<lb/>
Mitchell pass on the USL 26 yard<lb/>
line. It was the first interception<lb/>
on the year that he had thrown.<lb/>
Travis Hunter came into the<lb/>
game for his first appearance of<lb/>
the day to begin the series. Two<lb/>
plays later, Tim James bulled up<lb/>
the middle for an ECU score from<lb/>
22 yards out, on only his second<lb/>
carrv of the day. It was James'first<lb/>
rushing touchdown of the year,<lb/>
lmperato's kick was wide, and the<lb/>
Pirates led by 10, 27-17, with 4:22<lb/>
left in the half.<lb/>
The Cajuns struck back<lb/>
quickly, howcver, driving the ball<lb/>
81 yards in seven plays. P.D.<lb/>
Broussard capped the drive with<lb/>
an 11 yard run for the score. The<lb/>
extra point was good, and the<lb/>
Cajuns went into the locker room<lb/>
trailing by only three, 27-24, at the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
Neither team was able to<lb/>
capitalize on their respective pos-<lb/>
sessions to start the second half.<lb/>
The Cajuns got the ball for the<lb/>
second time in the half on a John<lb/>
jett punt to the USL 11, and it was<lb/>
returned out to the 28 yard line.<lb/>
From here the Cajuns began a<lb/>
time consuming 13 play drive,<lb/>
covering 72 yards and burning<lb/>
3 24 off the clock. Mitchell guided<lb/>
the Cajuns down to the ECU one<lb/>
yard line before taking it over<lb/>
himself. Lemoine added the extra<lb/>
point, giving the Cajuns a 31-27<lb/>
lead, a lead that they were not to<lb/>
relinquish for the remainder of<lb/>
the contest.<lb/>
The Pirates answered with a<lb/>
five minute, 13 play drive of their<lb/>
own, but with a slightly different<lb/>
ending. The offense stalled on the<lb/>
I SI. 20 yard line, and the Pirates<lb/>
were forced to settle for a 37-yard<lb/>
Imperato field goal that moved<lb/>
the Pirates to within one, 31-30, at<lb/>
the beginning of the fourth quar-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Lemoine returned the favor<lb/>
on the next series with a field goal<lb/>
of his own, this one a 46 yarder to<lb/>
cap a 40 yard drive by USL. The<lb/>
field goal was the longest of<lb/>
Lemoine's career. The score<lb/>
lengthened the Cajun lead to 34-<lb/>
30.<lb/>
The Cajuns scored again two<lb/>
series later, on a six play, 59 yard<lb/>
effort when Mitchell took the ball<lb/>
in from 35 yards out to give the<lb/>
Cajuns an 11-point 41-30 lead<lb/>
with 3:57 left to go in the game.<lb/>
But the Pirates were far from<lb/>
ready to roll over and play dead.<lb/>
On their next series, the Pirates<lb/>
drove down the field on the arm<lb/>
of Libretto and the receiving abili-<lb/>
ties of Al Whiting and Jarrod<lb/>
Moody, moving down to the USL<lb/>
nine vard line. From here Libretto<lb/>
found Walter Wilson in the end<lb/>
zone for an ECU touchdown.<lb/>
Baker decided to go for two points<lb/>
to pull the Pirates within field<lb/>
Olympic<lb/>
memories<lb/>
Continued from page 16<lb/>
from local newspapers Monday<lb/>
as most valuable player of the<lb/>
Seoul Games.<lb/>
The Pack Sang crown, made<lb/>
of 20-karat gold and designed<lb/>
after the headgear of ancient Ko-<lb/>
rean warriors, cost $11,000, its<lb/>
donors said.<lb/>
Although it was not an offi-<lb/>
cial IOC award, the winner was<lb/>
chosen by a panel of four IOC<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Greg Louganis' diving career<lb/>
ended with his second pair of gold<lb/>
medals in the springboard and<lb/>
platform events, and he says he's<lb/>
off to begin an acting career.<lb/>
Perhaps his first film should<lb/>
be his own life story, beginning<lb/>
with a troubled youth and teen-<lb/>
age bout with alcoholism and<lb/>
ending with his dives in Seoul<lb/>
after hitting his head on the<lb/>
springboard.<lb/>
The Smith Corona Correcting Cassette.<lb/>
We've reformed thel<lb/>
correction system.<lb/>
tl<lb/>
Charlie Libretto, who rushed for three touchdowns Saturday,<lb/>
looks for the end zone here. (Photo by Mark Love.)<lb/>
goal range of the lead, but the<lb/>
conversion failed, and the Pirates<lb/>
were down 41-36 with 2:55 re-<lb/>
maining in the game.<lb/>
On the ensuing kick-off,<lb/>
Baker opted to try an onsides kick.<lb/>
Instead of lmperato's kick bounc-<lb/>
ing the required ten yards, it took<lb/>
a bad hop back towards the<lb/>
swarm of Pirate defenders. Willie<lb/>
Culpepper picked up the ball for<lb/>
USL at the 43 yard line, and ran<lb/>
through the pack as they rushed<lb/>
right by htm. He was finally<lb/>
dragged down at the ECU three<lb/>
yard line. Three plays later,<lb/>
Broussard punched it in from one<lb/>
yard out to give the Cajuns their<lb/>
final 48-36 edge.<lb/>
'The ball just took a crazy<lb/>
bounce and bounced backwards<lb/>
instead oi towards. It doesn't<lb/>
work that way in practice, it usu-<lb/>
ally bounces 10 yards up the<lb/>
field Baker said of the muffed<lb/>
onsides attempt.<lb/>
Libretto was intercepted on<lb/>
the next series, but it was really<lb/>
incidental as there was only 1:10<lb/>
left to play. The Cajuns simply ran<lb/>
the clock out, and went back to<lb/>
Louisiana touting a perfect 4-0<lb/>
record.<lb/>
T am very disappointed with<lb/>
the way we played in the second<lb/>
half Baker said after the game.<lb/>
'They (USL) did a good job stop-<lb/>
ping our option in the second half<lb/>
and we didn't.<lb/>
"We are not playing good<lb/>
defensively. We have to play bet-<lb/>
ter pass defense, tackle better, and<lb/>
do better on the line of scrimmage.<lb/>
"USL did a good job doing<lb/>
what they had to do to win<lb/>
Baker concluded.<lb/>
r<lb/>
GORDONS<lb/>
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-?- 'II III" ?w<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Coming Attractions<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
W I o 11 (? t i u I La 11 p I I n j<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW<lb/>
Faces, Structures, Architecture of North<lb/>
and Central America as seen by<lb/>
ERNST HABRICH<lb/>
Reception Wednesday, October 26 at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery<lb/>
DOUBLE FEATURE<lb/>
Life &amp; Love in the 80s<lb/>
Sammy &amp; Rosie Get Laid - R<lb/>
Patti Rocks - R<lb/>
October 5<lb/>
Pink Floyd The Wall - R<lb/>
October 7-8<lb/>
REPULSION- R<lb/>
October 12<lb/>
films are FREE to ECU Students with valid ECU I.D.<lb/>
All Films are Shown in Hendrix Theatre at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
iOUT TOSCHVf VOU<lb/>
<pb facs="00058098_0020"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
18<lb/>
TI IE EAST C A ROLINIA N<lb/>
OCTOBER 4, 1988<lb/>
Tarheels can't find a win<lb/>
Continued from page 16<lb/>
But it must be noted that<lb/>
Auburn, 4-0, has yet to play a<lb/>
winning team (the last three<lb/>
twice, Stacy Danley and Alex<lb/>
haven t even won a game) and its St each X0Tcd Qnce and<lb/>
tour games were at Jordan- wide rcccivers Freddy Weygand<lb/>
he left the scoring to the Tigers'<lb/>
running game, which produced<lb/>
six touchdowns.<lb/>
Freshman Henry Love scored yards on a reverse for another<lb/>
Hare Stadium<lb/>
The Tigers finally get a taste<lb/>
of the road this Saturday when<lb/>
they meet Southeastern Confer-<lb/>
ence rival Louisiana State in Baton<lb/>
Rouge, where they haven't won<lb/>
since 1939.<lb/>
"I think this football team is<lb/>
mature enough Auburn Coach<lb/>
Pat Dye said. "They're smart<lb/>
enough to know that they haven't<lb/>
played an LSU or a Florida<lb/>
Auburn quarterback Reggie<lb/>
both<lb/>
and Alexander Wright<lb/>
scored on reverses.<lb/>
Love, filling in for starter<lb/>
James Joseph, who pulled a ham-<lb/>
string in pre-game warmups, had Jonathan Hall hit Reggie Clark at<lb/>
64 yards on 14 carries. Danley the goal line for a 24-yard touch-<lb/>
added 88 yards on eight carries. down pass to put the Tarheels on<lb/>
Dye, however, predicted the board in the third quarter.<lb/>
Auburn's running attack would Auburn starting tailback<lb/>
face a stiffer test against LSU. Stacy Danley made it 40-7 with a<lb/>
"I'm not sure we're physical 33-yard scoring run in the third<lb/>
enough to run the ball consis- quarter. Carolina's Kennard Mar-<lb/>
tently well Dye said. "We'll tin capped an 87-yard drive with a<lb/>
Slack completed 22 of 30 passes probably use the pass t0 xt the two-yard run for a touchdown in<lb/>
the fourth quarter and closed the<lb/>
Wideout Alexander Wright Carolina scoring with a two-yard<lb/>
ran 13 yards on a reverse for run in the final minute.<lb/>
Auburn's first touchdown and But Auburn's Alex Strong<lb/>
split end Freddy Weygand ran 34 had an 11-yard touchdown run set<lb/>
up by Shayne Wasden's 59-yard<lb/>
kickoff return in the fourth quar-<lb/>
ter and the Tigers were never<lb/>
threatened.<lb/>
Auburn's Win Lyle kicked<lb/>
field goals of 21 and 23 yards but<lb/>
he missed an extra point, the first<lb/>
in his Auburn career after 44<lb/>
straight.<lb/>
An interception by the Tigers'<lb/>
Greg Staples and his 16-yard re-<lb/>
turn to the Carolina 13 sparked<lb/>
Auburn to its first touchdown,<lb/>
and the Auburn defense kept the<lb/>
Tar Heels from getting any closer<lb/>
than the Auburn 48 until halfway<lb/>
through the third quarter.<lb/>
touchdown as Auburn built a 23-<lb/>
0 halftime lead.<lb/>
Love ran 11 yards for<lb/>
Auburn's second touchdown and<lb/>
three yards for the Tigers' fourth<lb/>
score that put the lead at 33-0.<lb/>
North Carolina quarterback<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
Lating&amp;DTiH<lb/>
Come Home To Professor O'Cools<lb/>
For The Idea Homecoming!<lb/>
All Weekend Long<lb/>
Drink Specials<lb/>
Double Shot Line Margaritas $2.50<lb/>
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LOCATED IN THE FARM FRESH<lb/>
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11 am-1 am Monday- Saturday 11 am-10 pm Sunday 355 2946<lb/>
intercep-<lb/>
tions against North Carolina, but<lb/>
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Bengals back on winning track<lb/>
(AD ? Cincinnati coach Sam<lb/>
Wyche understood the ultima-<lb/>
tum he received from the team's<lb/>
owners before starting the 1988<lb/>
NFL campaign.<lb/>
Wyche is in the fifth-and-last<lb/>
year of his contract and the Ben-<lb/>
gals haven't made the playoffs<lb/>
since he arrived in 1984. The<lb/>
message was either show im-<lb/>
provement in 198S or start pack-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Owners Paul and Mike<lb/>
Brown never told Wyche how<lb/>
much improvement the team<lb/>
needed to show. But, the team is<lb/>
doing its share to keep Wyche<lb/>
around.<lb/>
The Bengals, who finished 4-<lb/>
11 last year, are 5-0 and the only<lb/>
NFL'sonlv undefeated team after<lb/>
overpowering the Los Angeles<lb/>
Raiders 45-21 Sunday. Cincinnati<lb/>
holds a two-game advantage over<lb/>
defending AFC Central cham-<lb/>
pion Cleveland and Houston.<lb/>
The Buffalo Bills and Los<lb/>
Angeles Rams, who also went<lb/>
into Sunday's action undefeated,<lb/>
were losers. The Chicago Bears<lb/>
beat Buffalo 24-3, while the Phoe-<lb/>
nix Cardinals defeated the Rams<lb/>
41-27.<lb/>
Boomer Esiason picked apart<lb/>
the Raiders' secondary for 332<lb/>
yards and three touchdowns.<lb/>
"Our defense played beauti-<lb/>
fully, and our offense came up one<lb/>
yard short of 500 yards said<lb/>
Wyche, who isn't overplaying the<lb/>
importance of the club's best start<lb/>
since it opened 6-0 in 1975 en<lb/>
route to an 11-3 record.<lb/>
"Being the only undefeated<lb/>
team means about three days of<lb/>
bragging. It doesn't mean a<lb/>
thing said Wyche, who evened<lb/>
his NFL coaching mark at 34-34<lb/>
with Sunday's victory.<lb/>
In other games Sunday, it was<lb/>
Cleveland 23, Pittsburgh 9;<lb/>
Tampa Bay 27, Green Bay 24;<lb/>
Philadelphia 32, Houston 23;<lb/>
New England 21, Indianapolis 17;<lb/>
the New York Giants 24, Wash-<lb/>
ington 23; Seattle 31, Atlanta 20;<lb/>
Denver 12, San Diego 0; San Fran-<lb/>
cisco 20, Detroit 13, and Miami 24,<lb/>
Minnesota 7. Kansas City and the<lb/>
New York Jets played a 17-17 tie.<lb/>
Esiason completed 10<lb/>
straight passes at one stage, fin-<lb/>
ishing with 21 completions in 28<lb/>
attempts without being inter-<lb/>
cepted or sacked.<lb/>
Bears 24, Bills 3<lb/>
Chicago's Jim McMahon also<lb/>
had a strong performance, com-<lb/>
pleting 20 of 27 passes for 260<lb/>
vards and two touchdowns.<lb/>
Buffalo quarterback Jim Kelly<lb/>
completed 20 of 37 passes for 274<lb/>
yards but was sacked six times for<lb/>
losses of 56 yards. The Bills, who<lb/>
lost 24 yards on an attempted<lb/>
sweep, were held to a net of zero<lb/>
yards rushing.<lb/>
Giants 24, Redskins 23<lb/>
Odessa Turner caught eight<lb/>
passes for 103 yards and a touch-<lb/>
down and the New York Giants<lb/>
held off a late rally by Washing-<lb/>
ton. The Redskins, 2-3, missed a<lb/>
chance to take the lead when<lb/>
rookie kicker Chip Lohmiller<lb/>
missed a 36-yard field goal at-<lb/>
tempt with 2:54 left.<lb/>
The Giants, 3-2 and tied with<lb/>
Phoenix for the NFC East lead,<lb/>
saw a 24-9 lead in the third quarter<lb/>
shrink on two touchdown passes<lb/>
from Mark Rypien to Ricky Sand-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
Buccaneers 27, Packers 24<lb/>
Donald Igwebuike's 44-yard<lb/>
field goal with 12 seconds left<lb/>
gave Tampa Bay a victory over<lb/>
Green Bay for the second time this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Vinny Testaverde overcame<lb/>
four interceptions to complete his<lb/>
last five aerials, capping an eight-<lb/>
play, 72-ycar drive with a 19-yard<lb/>
scoring toss to Bruce Hill with 1:52<lb/>
left that tied the game at 24.<lb/>
Eagles 32, Oilers 23<lb/>
Randall Cunningham passed<lb/>
for two touchdowns and ran 33<lb/>
yards for another score to rally<lb/>
Philadelphia from a 16-point defi-<lb/>
cit.<lb/>
Cunningham completed 24 of<lb/>
38 passes for 289 yards, while the<lb/>
Eagles' defense held Houston to<lb/>
206 yards - 55 running and 156<lb/>
passing.<lb/>
The Oilers led 16-0 in the first<lb/>
period after blocking two punts,<lb/>
one for a touchdown and another<lb/>
resulting in a safety, and scoring<lb/>
on a one-yard rollout by Cody<lb/>
Carlson.<lb/>
Cleveland turned three of<lb/>
Pittsburgh's five second-half<lb/>
turnover into two Matt Bahr field<lb/>
goals, while rookie Brian Wash-<lb/>
ington intercepted a Pittsburgh<lb/>
pass and returned it 75 yards for a<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
Cleveland quarterback Mike<lb/>
Pa gel, subbing for the injured<lb/>
Bernie Kosar, threw for only 131<lb/>
yards while completing 15 of 26<lb/>
passes.<lb/>
Patriots 21, Colts 17<lb/>
Doug Flutie came off the<lb/>
bench to spark a 14-point fourth<lb/>
quarter, scoring the winning<lb/>
touchdown on a 13-vard run with<lb/>
23 seconds to play as New Eng-<lb/>
land beat Indianapolis.<lb/>
Flutie capped a nine-play, 80-<lb/>
yard drive for the winning score<lb/>
when he faked a handoff, rolled<lb/>
left and outraced the Colt defend-<lb/>
ers into the end zone. Rookie<lb/>
Chris Chandler had given the<lb/>
Colts a 17-14 lead with 2:23 re-<lb/>
maining when he hit Bill Brooks<lb/>
with a 48-yard pass.<lb/>
Seahawks 31, Falcons 20<lb/>
Rookie Kelly Stouffer engi-<lb/>
neered four touchdown drives in<lb/>
his first NFL start and John L.<lb/>
Williams scored three touch-<lb/>
downs on short runs as Seattle<lb/>
downed Atlanta.<lb/>
Stouffer completed a 53-yard<lb/>
pass to Brian Blades to set up Curt<lb/>
Warner's 12-yard scoring run that<lb/>
gave Seattle a 7-3 first-quarter<lb/>
lead it never relinquished.<lb/>
Stouffer completed 11 of 21<lb/>
parses for 164 yards and Warner<lb/>
gained 110 yards on 22 carries.<lb/>
Broncos 12, Chargers 0<lb/>
Rich Karlis kicked four field<lb/>
goals in Denver's victory over San<lb/>
Diego.<lb/>
The game turned on the play<lb/>
of the Broncos' special teams,<lb/>
which snuffed a first-half field<lb/>
goal try, blocked a Ralf<lb/>
Mojsicjenko punt late in the third<lb/>
quarter and forced a fumble by<lb/>
San Diego punt returner Lionel<lb/>
James with 10:23 remaining.<lb/>
Karlishad field goalsof 30,43,<lb/>
30 and 28 yards.<lb/>
49ers20, Lions 13<lb/>
Jerry Rice scored the 48th<lb/>
touchdown of his 49-game NFL<lb/>
career with an 11-yard touch-<lb/>
down on a reverse and John Tay-<lb/>
lor got San Francisco's other<lb/>
touchdown on a 77-yard punt re-<lb/>
turn.<lb/>
Detroit's Eric Hippie joined<lb/>
the overcrowded list of injured<lb/>
NFL quarterbacks when he suf-<lb/>
fered a broken left ankle in the<lb/>
third quarter.<lb/>
San Francisco quarterback<lb/>
Joe Montana passed for 182 yards.<lb/>
Cardinals 41, Rams 27<lb/>
Neil Lomax threw for 342<lb/>
yards and two touchdowns as<lb/>
Phoenix defeated the Rams for the<lb/>
first time since 1976.<lb/>
PEPSI PLAYER OF THE WEEK<lb/>
Charlie Libretto, THIS WEEK'S PLAYER OF THE WEEK<lb/>
HOMETOWN-Middleburg, Ha.<lb/>
East Carolina vs USC- Charlie rushed for 59 yards and 3 touch-<lb/>
downs on 17 attempts, and went 11 for 20 for 163 yards in the air.<lb/>
PERSONAL INFORMATION- Libretto is a junior majoring in<lb/>
Business Administration. He enjoys hunting and fishing.<lb/>
He is the son of Charlie and Paula Libretto.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO Charlie Libretto, FROM PEPSI-COLA<lb/>
MUCH CONTINUED SUCCESS.<lb/>
The tradition continues<lb/>
Mojo Sportswear presents:<lb/>
The original Greenville Halloween party shirt!<lb/>
14 color screenprint now available at:<lb/>
U.B.E Belks, At Barre Ltd Marsh's Surf Shop,<lb/>
Sweet Willie's, The Attic, The Wash Pub &amp; Grogs.<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/>
SS<lb/>
p<lb/>
?Fiesta All Night<lb/>
Tacos-n-nachos 5-7<lb/>
?Off The Cuff Lounge<lb/>
at the Ramada Inn<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
presents The<lb/>
Return of<lb/>
Mexican Fiesta<lb/>
Siesta All Day;<lb/>
Fiesta All Night<lb/>
Mexican Beer $1.50<lb/>
Marguritas $1.75<lb/>
Free Non-Alcoholic<lb/>
Beverages For<lb/>
Designated Drivers<lb/>
?NO COVER CHARGE<lb/>
m<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/>
<pb facs="00058098_0021"/>
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