<?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="00058099_0001"/>
"<lb/>
Coming Tuesday:<lb/>
Larry Smith, director of the minority student Organ<lb/>
12ation speaks. Also a look at the "Judges, Lawmakers<lb/>
or Interpreters?" debate.<lb/>
<lb/>
Features:<lb/>
Scott Maxwell gives the Wednesday night perform-<lb/>
ance of "Carnival" two thumbs up, see page 11.<lb/>
Another undefeated foe, the West Virginia Moun-<lb/>
taineers, come to Fkklen Stadium and face the Pirates<lb/>
on Homecoming, see page 16.<lb/>
?be lEast Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol.63 No. 25<lb/>
Thursday October 6,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
20 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Strategic planning policy will determine<lb/>
factors for future growth of ECU<lb/>
Spectators at the 69th annual Pitt County Fair . The festivities<lb/>
will end on Saturday (Photo By J.D. Whitmire, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Two North Carolinians<lb/>
being held captive in Laos<lb/>
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -<lb/>
Police in Laos have captured two<lb/>
North Carolinians who said they<lb/>
planned to distribute dollar bills<lb/>
stamped with a reward offer for<lb/>
any U.S. military personnel still<lb/>
held captive in Indochina.<lb/>
Ross Petzing, a U.S. Embassy<lb/>
spokesman, said Donna Long of<lb/>
Jacksonville, N.C and another<lb/>
American were being held at Ban<lb/>
Sing Samphan in the southern<lb/>
Laotian province of Champasak.<lb/>
Jerry Kiley of the National<lb/>
Steering Committee for American<lb/>
War Veterans identified the sec-<lb/>
ond American as Jim Copp of<lb/>
Hampstead, N.C. Another<lb/>
committee member, John Nevin,<lb/>
said in Washington that neither<lb/>
American had a visa to enter Laos.<lb/>
State Department spokes-<lb/>
woman Phyllis Oakley told re-<lb/>
porters in Washington that the<lb/>
U.S. Consulate in Udorn, Thai-<lb/>
land, confirmed that Lao authori-<lb/>
ties detained two Americans<lb/>
Monday on the Thai-Lao border.<lb/>
'The Americans had rented a<lb/>
boat and were on the Mekong<lb/>
River. The Thai-Lao border does<lb/>
not run along the middle of the<lb/>
river but evidently follows a vary-<lb/>
ing line, and the Americans may<lb/>
have accidentally floated into Lao<lb/>
territory said Mrs. Oakley. "We<lb/>
are waiting for the Lao authorities<lb/>
to inform us whether the Ameri-<lb/>
cans will be held and charged or<lb/>
released. Our counsel has not yet<lb/>
met with them<lb/>
'They looked so sad said<lb/>
Pornthipa Vajarabukka, a Thai<lb/>
hotel manager who crossed the<lb/>
Mekong River into Laos to see<lb/>
them Tuesday. Ms. Pornthipa<lb/>
said she took the Americans cloth-<lb/>
ing, food and cigarettes but was<lb/>
not allowed to speak to them.<lb/>
Petzing said: "We have ad-<lb/>
vised our embassy in Vientiane of<lb/>
the arrest and our embassy is<lb/>
checking with Lao authorities to<lb/>
determine what has transpired<lb/>
On Sunday, Ms. Long told<lb/>
The Associated Press she and<lb/>
Copp planned to drop plastic<lb/>
bags containing stamped dollars<lb/>
and other currency into the river<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
Auittant Ntwi Editor<lb/>
A set of university-wide deci-<lb/>
sions will provide ECU with an<lb/>
overall direction, for the future.<lb/>
These decisions for the advance-<lb/>
ment of the university arc re-<lb/>
ferred to as strategic planning.<lb/>
Administration, faculty, staff<lb/>
and students attended a Tuesday<lb/>
meeting to review the strategy of<lb/>
the strategic planning model,<lb/>
which will be officially in effect<lb/>
the summer of 1991.<lb/>
The Director of Planning and<lb/>
Institutional Research, Sue<lb/>
Hodges said, "Strategic planning<lb/>
shows where ECU is going; and<lb/>
how it will get there<lb/>
"The desire of the program is<lb/>
to guide the university into a well-<lb/>
planned future, so that it will have<lb/>
some guidance in dealing with<lb/>
and pass out money in villages<lb/>
alorg Laotian bank of the<lb/>
Mekong. She revealed the plan on<lb/>
condition it not be revealed until<lb/>
the two left Laos or were cap-<lb/>
tured.<lb/>
Each bill bears a message of-<lb/>
fering a $2.4 million reward to<lb/>
anyone delivering an American<lb/>
prisoner of war to the Interna-<lb/>
tional Red Cross.<lb/>
Ms. Pornthipa said the<lb/>
Americans were held in a small<lb/>
house in Ban Sing Samphan. She<lb/>
said Laotian authorities told her<lb/>
Monday they would be freed<lb/>
within three days.<lb/>
She said the management of<lb/>
her hotel in Ubon felt some re-<lb/>
sponsibility because the Ameri-<lb/>
cans made contact with it before<lb/>
starting the trip to the Mekong,<lb/>
which forms a boundary with<lb/>
Thailand and flows to both Cam-<lb/>
bodia and Vietnam.<lb/>
The reward is being offered to<lb/>
Cambodians, Laotians and Viet-<lb/>
namese through the National<lb/>
Steering Committee for American<lb/>
War Veterans, a private group.<lb/>
The committee says the money<lb/>
was pledged by 21 congressmen<lb/>
and the American Defense Insti-<lb/>
tute, another group concerned<lb/>
with missing soldiers.<lb/>
The United States lists 2393<lb/>
Americans as still missing in ac-<lb/>
tion in the Indochina war which<lb/>
ended in 1975. The governments<lb/>
of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia<lb/>
say no Americans are held in tneir<lb/>
countries.<lb/>
Kiley, project director for<lb/>
American War Veterans, claimed<lb/>
600 Americans are missing in<lb/>
Laos.<lb/>
"The reason why these two<lb/>
peoples as private citizens are<lb/>
jeopardizing themselves is be-<lb/>
cause the United States govern-<lb/>
ment has never acknowledged<lb/>
the existence of those POWs in<lb/>
Laos he said in a telephone in-<lb/>
terview in New York.<lb/>
Several activists, including<lb/>
relatives of MIAs, floated bal-<lb/>
loons down the Mekong from the<lb/>
Thai shore last year with offers of<lb/>
the reward, with no known result.<lb/>
problems, like economic impact<lb/>
and opportunities such as techno-<lb/>
logical growth Hodges said.<lb/>
Hodges said the program is<lb/>
in the beginning stages.<lb/>
"The program work groups<lb/>
are being chosen and these<lb/>
groups should begin a coordinat-<lb/>
ing process by November 1 she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Chancellor Eakin will work<lb/>
with vice chancellors, deans, fac-<lb/>
ulty, staff, students, alumni, com-<lb/>
munity leaders and others to<lb/>
develop the strategic planning<lb/>
model that will guide our (ECU)<lb/>
program she said.<lb/>
Hodges said the planning<lb/>
will involve and affect everyone<lb/>
on campus, "We will seek the<lb/>
involvement of students in work<lb/>
groups and consultation, as we<lb/>
develop plans for the future<lb/>
The process for developing<lb/>
unit plans will be determined bv<lb/>
individual departments of ECU.<lb/>
Unit plans will be reviewed for<lb/>
consistency with the overall stra-<lb/>
tegic plan. A composite of the two<lb/>
plans will result in ECU's strate-<lb/>
gic decisions.<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin<lb/>
said, "One of the benefits from the<lb/>
strategic planning process will be<lb/>
the potential for ECU to broaden<lb/>
as a learning institution<lb/>
"ECU hasa great deal to offer.<lb/>
We would like to focus energy on<lb/>
improving our learning environ-<lb/>
ment at the universitv, so that we<lb/>
can be more effective and respon-<lb/>
sive to the needs of the state, its<lb/>
citizens, and its educational sys-<lb/>
tem Eakin said.<lb/>
The strategic planning proc-<lb/>
ess promises to be better than the<lb/>
"fiasco of 1969 said Vice Chan-<lb/>
cellor C.G. Moore in reference to<lb/>
the former long-range plan.<lb/>
Hodges stated, "The essence<lb/>
of the strategic planning program<lb/>
first and foremost is so that ECU<lb/>
has more control over its fate, and<lb/>
how it wants to move forward in<lb/>
the future, as a university<lb/>
She added, "We will set our<lb/>
(ECU's) goals and directions<lb/>
based on the needs of the<lb/>
university's environment, its ca-<lb/>
pabilities, the internal values and<lb/>
its aspirations.<lb/>
Because new developments<lb/>
will occur, and the strategic em-<lb/>
phasis will change constantly,<lb/>
strategic planning for ECU will<lb/>
never end.<lb/>
 lodges said Unit plans will<lb/>
be reviewed and updated every<lb/>
two years and the university-<lb/>
wide strategies reassessed every<lb/>
four years<lb/>
Library cards will be obsolete<lb/>
By TAMMY AYCOCK<lb/>
Staff NMM<lb/>
Students and faculty will<lb/>
soon be able to use their ECU<lb/>
identification cards to check out<lb/>
materials from all ECU libraries:<lb/>
Joyner, Music, and Health Sci-<lb/>
ences, beginning in January.<lb/>
This will be made possible<lb/>
through the usage of the LS2000<lb/>
system. 'The Health Sciences<lb/>
Library has been circulating ma-<lb/>
terials on this system for two<lb/>
years as of January said Dr.<lb/>
JoAnn Bell, Acting Director of<lb/>
Academic Library Services.<lb/>
LS2000 is "an automated<lb/>
integrated system. When we use<lb/>
the word integrated, we mean<lb/>
that it will be used for all the vari-<lb/>
ous functions that go on in a li-<lb/>
brary from the time a book gets<lb/>
ordered until it appears on the<lb/>
shelves said Marilyn Miller,<lb/>
assistant director of academic li-<lb/>
brary services.<lb/>
"What this will really means,<lb/>
most of all, is a lot more conven-<lb/>
ience Miller said. Library pa-<lb/>
trons will no longer have to manu-<lb/>
ally fill out charge cards for each<lb/>
item they wish to check out; and<lb/>
for ECU students, faculty, and<lb/>
staff, library cards will become<lb/>
obsolete.<lb/>
Library materials (except<lb/>
Dewey Decimal books) and all<lb/>
ECU identification cards will<lb/>
have bar codes affixed to them for<lb/>
circulation purposes.<lb/>
Also, patrons will be using<lb/>
the LS2000 online catalog as<lb/>
their primary source of informa-<lb/>
tion opposed to using the card<lb/>
catalog. "The major portion of our<lb/>
collection (all Library of Congress<lb/>
materials) will be online; Dewey<lb/>
books will not. We will still have<lb/>
some catalog cabinets out there<lb/>
for a while Miller said.<lb/>
For Dewey Decimal books,<lb/>
the check-out procedure will<lb/>
"take a little bit longer. We have<lb/>
an ongoing reclassification sys-<lb/>
tem. Anything going out in a<lb/>
Dewey will be coming back in and<lb/>
go immediately to reclass. The<lb/>
next time it comes back, it's going<lb/>
to be a Library of Congress book<lb/>
and have a bar code on it Miller<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The LS2000 system will give<lb/>
the status on all library books<lb/>
(except Dewey Decimal books) in<lb/>
regard to their availability and<lb/>
location. Presently, the system<lb/>
lists all materials (in Joyner and<lb/>
Music libraries) as available, even<lb/>
if they are checked out when the<lb/>
system is fully implemented, it<lb/>
will indicate whether or not the<lb/>
materials are available. If the<lb/>
materials are unavailable, it will<lb/>
give their due dates.<lb/>
"With this system, patrons<lb/>
will be able to give their names<lb/>
and find out if they have any<lb/>
overdue books. Under the man-<lb/>
ual system (in which checked out<lb/>
books are filed by call numbers), it<lb/>
is impossible to get this informa-<lb/>
tion until their books are two<lb/>
weeks overdue Miller said.<lb/>
Anyone who has a hardware<lb/>
terminal into the campus network<lb/>
(Net 1) or anyone who has a com-<lb/>
puter with a modem can gain<lb/>
access into the LS2000 system. It<lb/>
is not ready now for this type of<lb/>
access, but it will be by January.<lb/>
Information on how to dial in will<lb/>
be issued later this semester.<lb/>
"Anyone who isn't taking<lb/>
Library Science 1000 or who<lb/>
hasn't registered at the Health<lb/>
Sciences Library needs to fill out a<lb/>
registration form for LS2000 at<lb/>
any of the ECU libraries. We en-<lb/>
courage them to do this prior to<lb/>
the end of this semester Miller<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The LS2000 system is mar-<lb/>
keted by OCLC, a major library<lb/>
vendor.<lb/>
Although Bill and Miller had<lb/>
individual and yearly figures,<lb/>
they were unable to give an esti-<lb/>
mate for the total cost of automat-<lb/>
ing all three libraries.<lb/>
Bell explained, "The univer-<lb/>
sity very seldom buys things as a<lb/>
whole package. The costs have<lb/>
been sprea.ii.cn er a five year pe-<lb/>
riod. We paid for a license to use<lb/>
this software system; then we<lb/>
paid a fee to OCLC to customize it<lb/>
(LS2000); then we paid fees for<lb/>
our tapes which are the biblio-<lb/>
graphic records. So, there are<lb/>
many different costs associated<lb/>
with it and we haven't even men-<lb/>
tioned the equipment costs<lb/>
This summer, the 5280 system<lb/>
was upgraded to a larger CPU<lb/>
(the computer on which the auto-<lb/>
mated system will run). The cost<lb/>
for this was $449,000. The reason<lb/>
we had to purchase the CPU is<lb/>
that the computer we initially<lb/>
See LIBRARY, page 2<lb/>
Students are asked to vote for eight of the 44 Homecoming candidates. The finalists will be ann-<lb/>
ounced ?t Thursday night's pep rally (Photo By Gretchen Journigan, ECU Photolab). <lb/>
Outstanding alumni award to be given at Homecoming gc.s<lb/>
ECU Newt Bur<lb/>
The ECU Alumni Association<lb/>
recognized recipients of the 1988<lb/>
Outstanding Alumni Award Sat-<lb/>
urday during the University's<lb/>
annual Homecoming celebration.<lb/>
Honored were William Scott<lb/>
Sawyer of Morehead City, Robert<lb/>
Allen Ward of Burlington and<lb/>
Henry G. Williamson, Jr. of<lb/>
Wilson.<lb/>
The three received engraved<lb/>
pewter plates at an awards lunch-<lb/>
eon hosted by Chancellor Richard<lb/>
R. Eakin in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
They were also recognized on the<lb/>
football field during half-time of<lb/>
the ECU-West Virginia game.<lb/>
'The field of nominees for the<lb/>
1988 Outstanding Alumni Award<lb/>
was large and varied said<lb/>
Burney R. Rivenbark, president of<lb/>
the ECU Alumni Association. "It<lb/>
was a tough decision to choose<lb/>
three winners, but Scott Sawyer,<lb/>
Bob Ward and Henry Williamson<lb/>
best exemplify the ECU spirit of<lb/>
service and determination. I am<lb/>
proud to share the ECU identity<lb/>
with three such distinguished<lb/>
individuals<lb/>
Sawyer, a 1984 psychology<lb/>
and political science graduate, is<lb/>
afflicted with muscular dystro-<lb/>
phy. At 32, Sawyer is confined to<lb/>
his wheelchair, as he was during<lb/>
his years at ECU. He spends his<lb/>
days writing at his computer or<lb/>
reading books on a wide range of<lb/>
interests from science fiction to<lb/>
current politics. Sawyer's pri-<lb/>
mary goal is the completion of his<lb/>
autobiography, which relates his<lb/>
personal triumph over the tre-<lb/>
mendous physical tolls of his dis-<lb/>
See ALUMNI, page 2<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6, 1988<lb/>
Despite arrests, demonstrators plan more action<lb/>
ATLANTA (AP) - Abortion<lb/>
protesters prepared for more<lb/>
demonstrations after police ar-<lb/>
rested more than 350 of them us-<lb/>
ing get-tough tactics that organiz-<lb/>
ers blamed for an injury and<lb/>
caused civil libertarians to regis-<lb/>
ter a complaint.<lb/>
"1 could not believe the level<lb/>
of brutality that was going on<lb/>
here protest leader Randall<lb/>
Terry said Tuesday as police<lb/>
dragged or carried protesters<lb/>
who resisted arrest by crawling<lb/>
on hands and knees.<lb/>
Today was to be the second<lb/>
day of Operation Rescue's four-<lb/>
day "siege of Atlanta" aimed at<lb/>
temporarily shutting some of the<lb/>
seven clinics that perform abor-<lb/>
tions here. Last summer, the New<lb/>
York-based group led demonstra-<lb/>
tions at Atlanta clinics during the<lb/>
Democratic National Conven-<lb/>
tion, resulting in 700arrests, three<lb/>
of whom remain in jail.<lb/>
In demonstrations Tuesday<lb/>
at three midtown clinics, 360<lb/>
people were arrested, police and<lb/>
Operation Rescue officials said.<lb/>
Most clinics followed their<lb/>
usual schedule, said Lynne Ran-<lb/>
dall, executive director of one of<lb/>
the clinics.<lb/>
Most of those who arrested<lb/>
were charged with criminal tres-<lb/>
pass and identified themselves as<lb/>
3abv Jane Doe or Baby John Doe,<lb/>
said police spokeswoman Myrna<lb/>
May. That identification tactic<lb/>
was used in earlier protests.<lb/>
At a rally Tuesday night at St.<lb/>
Jude the Apostle Roman Catholic<lb/>
Church in suburbs north of At-<lb/>
lanta, Terry urged about 600<lb/>
people to join today's protests.<lb/>
But only about 75 people said<lb/>
they would participate, and re-<lb/>
mained for coaching on tactics.<lb/>
Protesters complained that<lb/>
police treated them with unneces-<lb/>
sary harshness, twisting arms and<lb/>
fingers and using pressure-point<lb/>
holds just under the ears to force<lb/>
them off the street and into buses.<lb/>
Some screamed or cried as they<lb/>
were taken away.<lb/>
Police asked the protesters if<lb/>
they would walk to the buses<lb/>
before hauling them off when<lb/>
they refused.<lb/>
Gene Guerrero, executive<lb/>
director of the Georgia chapter of<lb/>
the American Civil Liberties<lb/>
Union, said he asked the city to<lb/>
abandon pressure-point holds.<lb/>
However, he said, "I've been<lb/>
toalotofdcmonstrationsand I've<lb/>
seen a lot of police brutality. I<lb/>
haven't seen that today<lb/>
Guerrero, who joined abor-<lb/>
tion rights advocates in helping<lb/>
escort women through the dem-<lb/>
onstrators to the clinics Tuesday,<lb/>
said Operation Rescue was going<lb/>
beyond the limits of free speech.<lb/>
"There is a real interference<lb/>
now he said. Protest organizers<lb/>
complained that the police's tac-<lb/>
tics, which they<lb/>
had been warned about, led<lb/>
to the injury of the Rev. Doyle<lb/>
Clark, a demonstrator in his late<lb/>
50s who is pastor of a church in<lb/>
Hudson, Ind.<lb/>
Clark said he was dropped on<lb/>
his head as police carried him to a<lb/>
bus, according to Grady Memo-<lb/>
rial Hospital spokesman William<lb/>
Breyer. Breyer said Clark, who<lb/>
was being kept in the hospital's<lb/>
detention unit, would probablv<lb/>
be treated and returned to jail.<lb/>
In addition to trespass<lb/>
charges, participants in this<lb/>
week's protests face fines up to<lb/>
$500 for contempt of court if they<lb/>
violate a Superior Court judge's<lb/>
order limiting the demonstra<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Fiber is essential in diet<lb/>
A faculty member who at-<lb/>
tends the "Exercise Wisely"<lb/>
lunchtime aerobics class at Me-<lb/>
morial Gym asked me to write<lb/>
about the benefits of fiber.<lb/>
fluids you drink. If constipation should see vour health care pro-<lb/>
lasts more than two weeks, or you vider.<lb/>
develop abdominal pain you If you have any questions you<lb/>
would like answered in the<lb/>
Health Column, call Mary Elesha-<lb/>
Adams at 757-6794 .<lb/>
jw<lb/>
-<lb/>
By<lb/>
Mary Elesha-Adams<lb/>
Alumni name award recipients at Homecoming<lb/>
Are you eating enough fiber<lb/>
every day? The National Cancer<lb/>
Institute recommends 30-40<lb/>
grams per day, however, the<lb/>
average American only eats 10-15<lb/>
gramsof dietary fiber a day. If you<lb/>
eat mostly white breads, white<lb/>
rice, and fast foods you may not be<lb/>
getting enough fiber in your diet.<lb/>
Why is fiber important? High<lb/>
fiber foods, such as whole grains,<lb/>
raw fruits and vegetables, and<lb/>
beans, can help you lose weight,<lb/>
keep your heart and gastrointesti-<lb/>
nal tract healthy, reduce your<lb/>
chance of developing certain can-<lb/>
cers, and reduce constipation.<lb/>
Many high fiber foods have<lb/>
low caloric density, which means<lb/>
you can eat a large amount of<lb/>
these foods yet consume fewer<lb/>
calories than with low calorie<lb/>
foods. For example, you can eat<lb/>
two oranges instead of drinking a<lb/>
cup of orange juice and end up<lb/>
with the same number of calories.<lb/>
Eating the oranges takes longer<lb/>
and uses more calories to process.<lb/>
Try to eat fiber foods every<lb/>
day. You can have whole fruit,<lb/>
whole wheat English muffins,<lb/>
popcorn, peas, oatmeal, raw, or<lb/>
slightly steamed vegetables- and<lb/>
salads, bran cereals, and gar-<lb/>
banzo beans.<lb/>
Occasionally when people try<lb/>
to increase dietary fiber, they may<lb/>
complain of feeling bloated, and<lb/>
having gas or constipation. If you<lb/>
experience these symptoms, you<lb/>
should increase the amount of<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
ease.<lb/>
Robert Ward is the vice presi-<lb/>
dent of finance and administra-<lb/>
tion for Unifi, Inc a Greensboro-<lb/>
based textile concern with proc-<lb/>
essing facilities in North Carolina<lb/>
and Ireland. Among other profes-<lb/>
sional and civic involvements,<lb/>
Ward serves on ECU's Business<lb/>
Advisory Council for the School<lb/>
of Business, the board of directors<lb/>
of the ECU Foundation and the<lb/>
executive committee of the Pirate<lb/>
Club. He graduated from ECU<lb/>
with a bachelor's degree in busi-<lb/>
ness administration in 1962.<lb/>
Henry G. Williamson, Jr. is<lb/>
vice chairman of Branch Banking<lb/>
&amp; Trust, based in Wilson. N.C<lb/>
and president of BB&amp;T Financial<lb/>
Corporation. I le completed both<lb/>
bachelor's and master's degrees<lb/>
at ECU in business administra-<lb/>
tion in 1969 and 1972. Williamson<lb/>
was an integral figure in the estab-<lb/>
lishment of the BB&amp;T Center tor<lb/>
Leadership Development at ECU;<lb/>
he currently serves on the center's<lb/>
board of directors. He has served<lb/>
on the curriculum advisory group<lb/>
for East Carolina's Department of<lb/>
Finance, and, in 1986, he served<lb/>
on the Steering Committee for the<lb/>
$2 million Golden Anniversary<lb/>
Campaign for the School of Busi-<lb/>
ness. He wascited in Outstanding<lb/>
Young Men in America in 1983.<lb/>
Library coming to computer age<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
started with (the 5280) was<lb/>
smaller. The disk drive did not<lb/>
have the capacity we needed and<lb/>
the computer itself did not have<lb/>
the capacity for the number of ter-<lb/>
minals we need to have available<lb/>
for the faculty, staff, and stu-<lb/>
dents-more memory and more<lb/>
terminal ports are the reasons for<lb/>
having to upgrade Bell said.<lb/>
All LS2000 purchases were<lb/>
made from the libraries' regular<lb/>
operating budget. "We haven't<lb/>
received special funding to pur-<lb/>
chase equipment Bell said.<lb/>
Serving the East Curolina ccanpus community since 1925.<lb/>
James F. J. McKcc. Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey Spencer Meymandi<lb/>
Richard-Alan Cook Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY RATES<lb/>
0-40 Column inchesS4.25<lb/>
50-004 15<lb/>
100- 140 4.05<lb/>
150 100 3.05<lb/>
200 2403.85<lb/>
250 and above3.75<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in AiUition to Regular Space Rale)<lb/>
One color anJ blackS90.00<lb/>
Two colors ami black 155<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
5.000 or less (,c C-Kh<lb/>
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Oct. 22 Syracuse 130 PM<lb/>
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Bike<lb/>
Bicycle riders whq<lb/>
violators of state law<lb/>
pus regulations hatj<lb/>
problem on the 1 I<lb/>
As the automobj<lb/>
tion on campus has !n<lb/>
has the bicycle papula<lb/>
past month there hav<lb/>
eral bicyclists who ha<lb/>
with autos on campu<lb/>
clist was at fault inea<lb/>
I rtunatelv nor<lb/>
ously injured R?<lb/>
collisions were ri<lb/>
way on a one wa<lb/>
stop for a du .<lb/>
and illegal p<lb/>
several pedestriai<lb/>
have had near n<lb/>
sidewalks<lb/>
Crime Colui<lb/>
by<lb/>
Captain Kn<lb/>
ECU Police D<lb/>
Effective in i<lb/>
ECUPubli<lb/>
servo Oft<lb/>
monitoring b.<lb/>
will beenforb<lb/>
pus regulatior j<lb/>
for violations and<lb/>
bicycles w hi i<lb/>
Violenc<lb/>
SANTIAC<lb/>
Power out amci<lb/>
1st bombings plui<lb/>
into darkness<lb/>
yesterda) s nal -J<lb/>
on whether Gc n ? <lb/>
chef should rema<lb/>
Troops were pi -<lb/>
polling places throuj<lb/>
country and other<lb/>
army units patl<lb/>
late Tuesday<lb/>
bers increased<lb/>
struck Santiago ai<lb/>
a 1,300-mile-?-<lb/>
At least eig j<lb/>
heard in Santiagi<lb/>
the power outage<lb/>
Police blamed the<lb/>
a terrorist bomb<lb/>
three electrical U 1<lb/>
they had n reports ol<lb/>
in Junes from the -<lb/>
plosions, indicat<lb/>
have been noise fcx n bi<lb/>
to frighten but not ha<lb/>
The blackout into<lb/>
election eve marked<lb/>
calm, with manv resid<lb/>
theaters and restaui<lb/>
Tuesday in anticipatio<lb/>
off on election da<lb/>
national holiday.<lb/>
The nation's long-<lb/>
hon machinerv has beej<lb/>
in place for today s ra<lb/>
on Pinochet, who lit!<lb/>
gency rule and loosend<lb/>
gnp on the oppositu<lb/>
D<lb/>
New<lb/>
4 Drav<lb/>
Ar<lb/>
Sweet Wi<lb/>
207 E. 5th ?<lb/>
11-7 Mo<lb/>
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We Also<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
(KTOBER 6,1988 3<lb/>
ction<lb/>
Ispital spokesman William<lb/>
Breyer said Clark, who<lb/>
trig kept in the hospital's<lb/>
n unit, would probably<lb/>
d and returned to jail.<lb/>
addition to trespass<lb/>
participants in this<lb/>
rotests face tines up to<lb/>
r ntempt of court it they<lb/>
Supt rioi Court judge's<lb/>
i nitine the demonstra-<lb/>
crtising<lb/>
It aives<lb/>
.nun<lb/>
1 iiD<lb/>
SING<lb/>
i RATES<lb/>
Us:<lb/>
r-6557<lb/>
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rsity<lb/>
ntown<lb/>
one for<lb/>
y today.<lb/>
M<lb/>
2:00 I'M<lb/>
1 M) PM<lb/>
1:30 PM<lb/>
<lb/>
L- 5:10 P.M.<lb/>
Bikers need to heed rules<lb/>
Bicycle riders who are unsafe,<lb/>
violators of state laws and cam-<lb/>
pus regulations have become a<lb/>
problem on the ECU campus.<lb/>
As the automobile popula-<lb/>
tion on campus has increased, so<lb/>
has the bicycle population. In the<lb/>
past month there have been sev-<lb/>
eral bicyclists who have collided<lb/>
with autos on campus. The bicy-<lb/>
clist was at fault in each incident.<lb/>
Fortunately none were seri-<lb/>
ously injured. Reasons for these<lb/>
collisions were: riding the wrong<lb/>
way on a one way street, failure to<lb/>
stop for a duly erected stop sign<lb/>
and illegal passing. In addition,<lb/>
several pedestrians and bicyclists<lb/>
have had near misses on campus<lb/>
sidewalks.<lb/>
Crime Column<lb/>
by<lb/>
Captain Knox<lb/>
ECU Police Dept.<lb/>
Effective immediately, the<lb/>
ECU Public Safety-Police and Re-<lb/>
serve Officers will begin strictly<lb/>
monitoring bicycle traffic. They<lb/>
will be enforcing state laws, cam-<lb/>
pus regulations, issuing citations<lb/>
for violations and impounding<lb/>
bicycles when applicable.<lb/>
For those who may not know<lb/>
the laws and regulations govern-<lb/>
ing bicycles on campus, they are<lb/>
as follows:<lb/>
Sec. 1. North Carolina motor<lb/>
vehicle laws consider a bicycle to<lb/>
be a motor vehicle insofar as the<lb/>
nature of the vehicle permits.<lb/>
Traffic regulations must be<lb/>
obeyed as bicycle riders. Traffic<lb/>
citations will be issued to opera-<lb/>
tors of bicycles violating traffic<lb/>
regulations.<lb/>
Sec. 2 Bicycles parked or<lb/>
operated on the East Carolina<lb/>
University campus shall be regis-<lb/>
tered with the Traffic Office and<lb/>
bear a bicycle registration permit.<lb/>
All bicycles found on camp in<lb/>
violation of this section oe<lb/>
impounded until proof of o ner-<lb/>
ship is determined.<lb/>
Sec. 3 Bicycles will not be<lb/>
parked inside administrative or<lb/>
classroom buildings, in stairwells<lb/>
or hallwavs of residence halls, on<lb/>
sidewalks, ramps or outside stair-<lb/>
ways. University Police are au-<lb/>
thorized to use the force necessary<lb/>
to remove and impound all bi-<lb/>
cycles found in violation of the<lb/>
Article.<lb/>
Sec. 4 Unregistered bicycles<lb/>
left on campus will be considered<lb/>
to be illegally parked. Thev mav<lb/>
be impounded and disposed of in<lb/>
accordance with North Carolina<lb/>
State Statutes.<lb/>
Sec. 5 Bicycles will not be<lb/>
operated on the sidewalks of<lb/>
ECU. Bicycles will not be<lb/>
operated in excess of 15 mph and<lb/>
operators will observe and com-<lb/>
ply with traffic regulations.<lb/>
Sec. 6 Bicycles operated on<lb/>
campus at night shall have lights<lb/>
and reflectors in accordance with<lb/>
North Carolina State Statutes.<lb/>
Other facts to consider: bi-<lb/>
cycles are no match for cars or<lb/>
trucks in a collision. The car or<lb/>
truck is going to win every time.<lb/>
Yet, some bicyclists must thinl<lb/>
differently about the way they<lb/>
ride. Some bicyclists do not ride<lb/>
safely and are just an accident<lb/>
waiting to happen. Some even<lb/>
daringly and blatantly ride as if<lb/>
they own the road, expecting<lb/>
autos to yield to them instead of<lb/>
vice versa.<lb/>
Some motorists look out for<lb/>
the unyielding bicyclist (those<lb/>
who will not yield to let traffic<lb/>
J<lb/>
pass safely). While pulling out to<lb/>
go around the bicyclist, the mo-<lb/>
torist puts himself and others in<lb/>
danger of a head on collision.<lb/>
We must remember streets<lb/>
and highways were designed for<lb/>
15-55 mph traffic with car and<lb/>
truck traffic in mind. Although<lb/>
there are some areas with bicycle<lb/>
routes, the common sense thing<lb/>
to do is pull off and let traffic by.<lb/>
Most avid bicyclists will argue<lb/>
they have as much right on the<lb/>
road as cars and trucks. That may<lb/>
well be true; however, in reality, if<lb/>
there is a collision, who do you<lb/>
think will walk away un-<lb/>
scratched?<lb/>
People constantly threaten to<lb/>
sue the motorist. Maybe so, if it<lb/>
can be proved that it was not the<lb/>
bicyclists fault and that heshe<lb/>
did not contribute to the accident.<lb/>
Remember the same rules of the<lb/>
road apply to bicyclists as to<lb/>
motorists.<lb/>
Furthermore, is it worth the<lb/>
price of broken bones, scars, pa-<lb/>
ralysis or death that is sometimes<lb/>
associated with collisions be-<lb/>
tween bicycles and autos? What<lb/>
of the agony the driver of the auto<lb/>
feels when heshe hits a bicyclist,<lb/>
no matter who is at fault? Think<lb/>
about it! Is it worth the chance?<lb/>
Ride carefully and safely;<lb/>
obey all state and campus regula-<lb/>
tions concerning bicycles. With<lb/>
your help it can be safer for you<lb/>
and everyone concerned.<lb/>
Purple's The Color At<lb/>
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Last Minute Decorations<lb/>
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Violence, bombings plague Chilean elections<lb/>
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -<lb/>
Tower outages blamed on terror-<lb/>
ist bombings plunged the capital<lb/>
into darkness on the eve of<lb/>
yesterday's national referendum<lb/>
on whether Gen. Augusto Pino-<lb/>
chet should remain as president.<lb/>
Troops were posted at 1,000<lb/>
polling places throughout the<lb/>
country and other police and<lb/>
army units patrolled the streets<lb/>
late Tuesday night. Their num-<lb/>
bers increased after blackouts<lb/>
struck Santiago and other cities in<lb/>
a 1,300-milc stretch of the country.<lb/>
At least eight explosions were<lb/>
heard in Santiago moments after<lb/>
the power outage.<lb/>
Police blamed theblackout on<lb/>
a terrorist bombing of at least<lb/>
three electrical towers, but said<lb/>
they had n reports of damage or<lb/>
"injuries from the subsequent ex-<lb/>
plosions, indicating they may<lb/>
have been noise bombs intended<lb/>
to frighten but not harm.<lb/>
The blackout interrupted an<lb/>
election eve marked by relative<lb/>
calm, with many residents filling<lb/>
theaters and restaurants late<lb/>
Tuesday in anticipation of a day<lb/>
off on election day, declared a<lb/>
national holiday.<lb/>
The nation's long-idled elec-<lb/>
tion machinery has been put back<lb/>
in place for today's referendum<lb/>
on Pinochet, who lifted emer-<lb/>
gency rule and loosened his tight<lb/>
grip on the opposition in the<lb/>
months preceding the balloting.<lb/>
Voting was scheduled from 8<lb/>
a.m. to 5 p.m with the first<lb/>
unofficial returns to be released<lb/>
about an hour after polls closed.<lb/>
A coalition of 16 opposition<lb/>
parties, distrustful of the Interior<lb/>
Ministry's tabulations, planned a<lb/>
separate vote count. The group<lb/>
says it will accept as official the<lb/>
results of the National Electoral<lb/>
Service, which are to be disclosed<lb/>
on Friday.<lb/>
Patricio Aylwin, president of<lb/>
the centrist Christian Democratic<lb/>
Party and spokesman for a oppo-<lb/>
sition coalition, predicted<lb/>
Pinochet's downfall.<lb/>
"We are going to vote and we<lb/>
are going to win he told report-<lb/>
ers. Gen. Jorge Zincke. militarv<lb/>
commander of Santiago, said in-<lb/>
structions had been given to pro-<lb/>
vide access at polling places to the<lb/>
estimated 500 foreign observers.<lb/>
"We have nothing to hide he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
About 150,000 members of<lb/>
the armed forces and national<lb/>
police have been on barracks alert<lb/>
since Sunday. Paper ballots at<lb/>
voting booths were marked only<lb/>
with a "yes" and a "no<lb/>
If most vote "yes Pinochet<lb/>
will begin an eight-year term in<lb/>
March. The military junta he<lb/>
leads, which theoretically served<lb/>
as the legislative branch of<lb/>
Pinochet's government, will be<lb/>
disbanded. A new Congress<lb/>
would be seated in 1990, two-<lb/>
thirds elected and the remaining<lb/>
third appointed by Pinochet.<lb/>
1 f most cast "no" ballots, open<lb/>
elections arc to be held next year<lb/>
and Pinochet is to relinquish<lb/>
power in March 1990.<lb/>
No matter what the outcome<lb/>
of the referendum, congressional<lb/>
elections will be held in 1990, but<lb/>
the legislature will have limited<lb/>
authority. It will be virtually<lb/>
powerless to amend a 1980<lb/>
constitution, which gives the mili-<lb/>
tary autonomy and a supervisory<lb/>
role in national policy-making.<lb/>
Pinochet has pointed to an<lb/>
improved economy in recent<lb/>
years and the promise of growth<lb/>
and stability if he is retained as<lb/>
president. His critics say the rich<lb/>
have benefited the most, and say-<lb/>
human rights abuses continue<lb/>
under his rule.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058099_0004"/><lb/>
T<lb/>
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olfje iEaat darnlttuan<lb/>
Pete Fernald, Gnri Manage,<lb/>
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JOt IN W. MEDLIN, Art Director<lb/>
MAC CLARK, Business Manager<lb/>
October 6, 1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Abortion<lb/>
A thought experiment in alternatives<lb/>
Much has been said about abor-<lb/>
tion. The subject touches almost<lb/>
everyone's life in some way: a friend<lb/>
has an abortion, a group lauds or<lb/>
lambaste a political candidate for his<lb/>
views on the matter, and so on.<lb/>
Most of the argument seems to<lb/>
focus on the relative rights of a liv-<lb/>
ing, breathing woman and those of a<lb/>
fetus. Unfortunately, beliefs on both<lb/>
sides have been constructed to con-<lb/>
form with previously established<lb/>
dogma. As neither side is likely to<lb/>
change the other's fundamental be-<lb/>
liefs, the debate is clearly unproduc-<lb/>
tive; a better solution must be found.<lb/>
Like most discoveries, the solu-<lb/>
tion to the abortion controversy was<lb/>
here all along, just waiting to be<lb/>
found. And here it is:<lb/>
First oi all, America is at least<lb/>
nominally a democracy, so one<lb/>
would assume that for the abolition<lb/>
of abortion to be the law oi the land,<lb/>
more than 50 percent oi the voters<lb/>
would have to be against it.<lb/>
To find out who is for choice and<lb/>
who is against it, then, there must be<lb/>
some sort oi national referendum on<lb/>
the subject. For reasons that will be<lb/>
made clear in a moment, the best<lb/>
way to carrv out the referendum<lb/>
would be to allow anyone who<lb/>
wishes to declare himself or herself<lb/>
against abortion to sign his or her<lb/>
name to a list, including his or her<lb/>
address and phone number.<lb/>
If the number of names on the list<lb/>
did not exceed 50 percent of the<lb/>
number of legitimate American vot-<lb/>
ers, we could simply throw the list<lb/>
away, let abortion remain legal, and<lb/>
end the whole thing there.<lb/>
If, on the other hand, more than<lb/>
50 percent oi the populace proved to<lb/>
be against abortion, then abortion<lb/>
would be abolished.<lb/>
But there's a catch.<lb/>
If abortion is made illegal, the<lb/>
government keeps the list. And now<lb/>
every time a baby is born to a woman<lb/>
who would otherwise have had an<lb/>
abortion, we take a look at the list.<lb/>
And we pick a name. At random.<lb/>
Like a lotterv.<lb/>
And this person instantly be-<lb/>
comes legally and morally respon-<lb/>
sible for the care and keeping of that<lb/>
infant. No matter the person's finan-<lb/>
cial status, social status or marital<lb/>
status. No matter whether the baby<lb/>
is black or white; healthy or sick;<lb/>
normal or hideously malformed;<lb/>
KMS-v v<lb/>
wanted or unwanted.<lb/>
And this person would become<lb/>
legally and morally responsible not<lb/>
only for the baby, but also, to an<lb/>
extent, for the mother. If she re-<lb/>
quired physical or mental treatment<lb/>
at any time in her life as a direct or<lb/>
indirect result of having the baby,<lb/>
the baby's new parents would be<lb/>
required to provide it. They would<lb/>
have to compensate her for lost<lb/>
wages, if any. And, of course, if she<lb/>
had died during childbirth, they'd<lb/>
be guilty of murder.<lb/>
Come to think of it, it wouldn't<lb/>
be a bad idea to make this legal<lb/>
moral parent responsible for the<lb/>
mother's health from the moment of<lb/>
conception. Heshe would need to<lb/>
ensure that the mother had<lb/>
adequate natal care, that she didn't<lb/>
drink, smoke or do drugs, and - most<lb/>
important - that she didn't have an<lb/>
abortion.<lb/>
If the legal moral parent refused<lb/>
to accept the baby or went into hid-<lb/>
ing to avoid it, heshe would be<lb/>
sought by the police, or, if necessary,<lb/>
the FBI; when found, heshe would<lb/>
be charged with and prosecuted for<lb/>
child abuse, neglect and abandon-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
And it wouldn't be to the anti-<lb/>
abortionists' advantage to make up<lb/>
false names. If it were found that a<lb/>
person whose name was on the list<lb/>
had never in fact existed, the name<lb/>
would be struck from the list and<lb/>
some legitimate person would be<lb/>
chosen instead. If at any point the<lb/>
number of people "bn the list fell<lb/>
below7 50 percent of the total popula-<lb/>
tion, abortion would become legal<lb/>
but those persons who had acquired<lb/>
babies in the interim would still be<lb/>
responsible for them.<lb/>
Of course, to make this legally<lb/>
binding, all those who signed the list<lb/>
would have to be informed of pre-<lb/>
cisely what they were getting them-<lb/>
selves into, and they would have to<lb/>
be made aware that by signing their<lb/>
names to the list, they were accept-<lb/>
ing anything and everything that<lb/>
might befall them as a result of<lb/>
"adopting" a child through this<lb/>
process.<lb/>
Granted, most people would not<lb/>
declare themselves against abortion<lb/>
if they were the ones who had to<lb/>
suffer the consequences of having<lb/>
the baby  but then, that says it all,<lb/>
doesn't it?<lb/>
Response termed redundant<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
To the ECU Chairman for Bush<lb/>
'88:<lb/>
Thank you for your response<lb/>
which I found to be ethereal and<lb/>
redundant. While I did not take your<lb/>
attacks upon my character person-<lb/>
ally, those attacks only affirmed my<lb/>
suspicions that you cannot intelli-<lb/>
gently debate the issues. Your only<lb/>
recourse has been to cloud our dis-<lb/>
cussion with mudslinging. Appar-<lb/>
ently, Bush has a great deal of influ-<lb/>
ence on you. And you, like Bush, do<lb/>
not have the ability to deal with the<lb/>
real issues.<lb/>
For example; Bush says he wants<lb/>
to be the education candidate. But,<lb/>
where was George while the Re-<lb/>
aganBush administration turned its<lb/>
back on the federal government's<lb/>
commitment to education? The Re-<lb/>
aganBush administration has aban-<lb/>
doned young Americans who de-<lb/>
serve a chance to attend college. Over<lb/>
the last 7 years, more than 730,000<lb/>
students have seen their chance for a<lb/>
college loan disappear. (Kirk, Paul.<lb/>
Spectrum, September988).<lb/>
The Mike Dukakis record on<lb/>
education is solid. Over the past 7<lb/>
years, while he was governor, Mike<lb/>
Dukakis quintupled funding for col-<lb/>
lege scholarships in Massachusetts.<lb/>
(Kirk, Paul. Spectrum, Scptember-<lb/>
1988).<lb/>
Although he claims to be a fiscal<lb/>
conservative, George Bush sup-<lb/>
ported the 2 largest tax increases in<lb/>
the history of the nation: the 1982<lb/>
deficit reduction tax increase and the<lb/>
1983 Social Security tax increase.<lb/>
(Kirk, Paul. Spectrum, Septcmbcr-<lb/>
1988).<lb/>
Mike Dukakis has cut taxes five<lb/>
times in the last 5 years, providing<lb/>
more that $500 million dollars in tax<lb/>
relief. Only 15 states have a lower tax<lb/>
burden than Massachusetts. (Kirk,<lb/>
Paul. Spectrum, Septembcr-1988).<lb/>
Mr. Hall, 1 will address another<lb/>
issue concerning the jobs debate.<lb/>
George Bush boasts a $22,000 a year<lb/>
average pay rate for new jobs, not<lb/>
$30,000 a year as you reported. This<lb/>
figure comes from the Bureau of<lb/>
Labor Statistics AFTER the early 80's<lb/>
recession. In 1986, the Join t Economic<lb/>
Committee of Congress issued a re-<lb/>
port titled, "The Great American Job<lb/>
Machines; The Proliferation of Low<lb/>
Wage Employment in the U.S. Econ-<lb/>
omy<lb/>
The report said between 1979<lb/>
and 1984 nearly three fifths of net<lb/>
new jobs paid LOW wages, com-<lb/>
pared with one fifth during the 1963-<lb/>
79 period. George Bush says he is for<lb/>
working families. Where was George<lb/>
while annual job growth dropped<lb/>
25 lower than levels during the<lb/>
previous Democratic administra-<lb/>
tion? (Kirk, Paul. Spectrum, Septem-<lb/>
bcr-1988, p.20).<lb/>
Over the last 5 years, while Mike<lb/>
Dukakis has been governor, growth<lb/>
in per capita income in Massachu-<lb/>
setts has been the highest in the na-<lb/>
tion. (Kirk, Paul. Spectrum.<lb/>
Sepcmtber-1988).<lb/>
i ?w&amp;e<lb/>
MORE JOBS,<lb/>
5CH00CS,<lb/>
STKoweef?<lb/>
vmmw<lb/>
AA1ATI0MAL I<lb/>
MUTH<lb/>
, PtAM J<lb/>
Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation passing the buck, making deals to try and keep insolvent thrifts alive<lb/>
Again, 1 appreciate your re-<lb/>
sponse to my letter. It was very inter-<lb/>
esting to sec in print your obvious<lb/>
perceptual impairment regarding<lb/>
the real problems and issues facing<lb/>
our country and state. And, given all<lb/>
of the above facts, my position re-<lb/>
mains the same.<lb/>
Wyatt M. Jones, IV<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Military criticized<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
If vou have a lot of moncv, vou<lb/>
can just about do anything that you<lb/>
want to do. You can find some other<lb/>
people who want to foment a war<lb/>
and buy an election. Or even if you<lb/>
don't start a war, you can squander a<lb/>
lot of monev on national defense<lb/>
which both parties tell us that they<lb/>
plan to do.<lb/>
But I was in the National Guard<lb/>
and when we were called to active<lb/>
duty for two tornadoes, we were not<lb/>
really too effective. It took so long to<lb/>
get us activated that if the looters<lb/>
were going to steal anything, it<lb/>
would have been taken by the time<lb/>
we got there.<lb/>
The National Guard should have<lb/>
just one small part of each unit that<lb/>
works with the Sheriff's Department<lb/>
and then when a large emergency<lb/>
comes along they could go right to<lb/>
work. I would think that the police<lb/>
with the computer technology could<lb/>
predict when i crime wave was<lb/>
about to hit. T n a few of the Na-<lb/>
tional Guard I ys might just stake<lb/>
out businesses that might be robbed.<lb/>
But I would like to see a panel of<lb/>
military experts (not controlled by<lb/>
the U.S. military) who would evalu-<lb/>
ate each item that is procured by the<lb/>
military. A layman is practically<lb/>
powerless to keep from being robbed<lb/>
by the big business concerns.<lb/>
Years ago I lived near<lb/>
MacDonald Air Craft Corp and I was<lb/>
really taken in by thier propaganda.<lb/>
But then I met an instructor at Cha-<lb/>
nute who told me that he thought<lb/>
that MacDonald turned out nothing<lb/>
but garbage.<lb/>
I talked to European military<lb/>
experts about U.S. strategy in W.W.il<lb/>
and they thought that there was some<lb/>
insanity in the Pentagon since they<lb/>
said that you could not get an army<lb/>
through the Brenner Pass into Ger-<lb/>
many. They also thought that the old<lb/>
Army Air Force was more interested<lb/>
in dropping bombs in order to make<lb/>
U.S. bomb manufacturers rich than<lb/>
trying to end W.W. II because all of<lb/>
Germany runs on electricity and by<lb/>
just bombing German power plants<lb/>
we could have ended it. If General<lb/>
Patton had not been such a yes man,<lb/>
he would have landed in Southern<lb/>
France and quietly proceeded into<lb/>
Berlin.<lb/>
But if I had a son who wanted to<lb/>
become a professional soldier, 1<lb/>
would tell him no and that I didn't<lb/>
want him to beome a boot lickcr. The<lb/>
military used to breed boot lickers<lb/>
like flvs. The last time I stopped at<lb/>
Fort Bragg at the N .CO Club, I heard<lb/>
this guv say something about buying<lb/>
a drink for the First Sergeant. Well, let<lb/>
the First Sergeants buy their own<lb/>
booze. They alwavs had a lot more<lb/>
rank than I did and thus more moncv<lb/>
The U.S. Navy wants more air-<lb/>
craft carriers, but I dislike the U.S.<lb/>
Navy. They kept my brother and a lot<lb/>
of other guys imprisoned on war<lb/>
ships during the war with Japan a lot<lb/>
longer than was necessary? not to<lb/>
mention that they got a lot more<lb/>
Marines killed than was really neces-<lb/>
sary at places such as Tarawa.<lb/>
I also dislike the reports that I<lb/>
have heard about the U.S.M.C. train-<lb/>
ing men so hard that they practically<lb/>
destroy their souls. During the war in<lb/>
Vietnam, I had learned about some-<lb/>
thing that is called the craft of intelli-<lb/>
gence. I saw material printed that<lb/>
could get out Marines killed, as well<lb/>
as information printed that could get<lb/>
the Marines being held in P.O.W.<lb/>
camps killed.<lb/>
I once knew a woman who was<lb/>
married to a professional Navy man<lb/>
and she was faithful to him, but I<lb/>
think that she did this by becoming a<lb/>
drug addict. But why couldn't the<lb/>
Navy have a floating base that the<lb/>
dependents of military people could<lb/>
live on. Then their wives wouldn't<lb/>
have to be unfaithful since the fleet<lb/>
units could visit with their families<lb/>
on weekends.<lb/>
Some of these foreign countries<lb/>
want to hold the U.S. up because we<lb/>
want to have bases in the Philippines.<lb/>
Well, why not put some people to<lb/>
work here in the U S. designing ships<lb/>
large enough to be floating bases.<lb/>
There is a lot of good here in the U.S.<lb/>
that I would like to rest of the world<lb/>
to see Such as Disney World. I would<lb/>
also like to have a comprehensive<lb/>
study made of Eisenhower's cam-<lb/>
paign.<lb/>
Bill J. Bloomer<lb/>
More Parrots ?<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In response to my attack on the<lb/>
lowdown character of the pirate.<lb/>
Professor Daniel has suggested the<lb/>
parrot as a substitute symbol. He<lb/>
argues that phonetically and<lb/>
orthographically the change would<lb/>
be easy.<lb/>
Good suggestion! 1 would like to<lb/>
add that the parrot would make a<lb/>
colorful logo and has the added vir-<lb/>
tue of being a unique school totem.<lb/>
As acting chair of the Luke<lb/>
Plankwalker midcourse-correction<lb/>
task force, I welcome futher sugges-<lb/>
tions. Though it would be more ex-<lb/>
pensive to change to, the bright crim-<lb/>
son ladybug is getting votes. Appro-<lb/>
priate face paintes and balloons are<lb/>
readily available for this winning<lb/>
pest destroyer.<lb/>
Edith Webber<lb/>
English Department, Emeritus<lb/>
BY JAMES K. GLASSMAN<lb/>
TheNev Republic<lb/>
Here's the deal: You put up $10 million in cash.<lb/>
A federal agency will put upanother$200million. In<lb/>
return you get to own 70 percent of a billion-dollar<lb/>
savings and loan association. Like the deal so far? It<lb/>
been peddling this deal? and some even better. It's<lb/>
finding quite a few takers, including Robert M. Bass,<lb/>
the mild-mannered billionaire who ranks a mere<lb/>
27th among the richest Americans.<lb/>
But with 505 thrifts insolvent and another 435<lb/>
with a dangerously low net worth, FSLIC needs to<lb/>
gets better: If interest rates rise and it costs you more find a lot of buycrs. jn their haste to unload, FSLIC<lb/>
to pull in deposits, the feds will pick up the tab. If and the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, which<lb/>
rates fall, you get to keep the extra profits. Ditto for rcguiates S&amp;Ls, are making quick and dirty deals-<lb/>
assets: If loans go bad, the feds will handle it; if they that y go SOUTi leaving the taxpayer to clean<lb/>
turn out to be in better shape than you thought, you Up the mess.<lb/>
get the extra money.<lb/>
The Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp<lb/>
the insolvent federal agency whose job it is to bail out<lb/>
or shut down ' c hundreds of insolvent S&amp;Ls, has<lb/>
What everyone had thought FSLIC was sup-<lb/>
posed to do when S&amp;Ls (or "thrifts") got into trouble<lb/>
was shut them down and pay off depositors of<lb/>
$100,000 or less. The problem, however, is that<lb/>
FSLIC doesn't have the money. So it sells the sick<lb/>
thrift to a healthy thrift? or, more recently, it sells<lb/>
the sick thrift to anyone who'll buy it. Since smart<lb/>
buyers know that FSLIC is desperate, recent "sales"<lb/>
have been giveaways, with the buyer barely at risk.<lb/>
Its neatest deal was announced on Labor Day:<lb/>
Robert Bass would put up $550 million to buy 70<lb/>
percent of American Savings and Loan Association<lb/>
of Stockton, Calif the country's largest thrift, with<lb/>
$30 billion in assets. FSLIC would put up the equiva-<lb/>
lent of $2 billion for the remaining 30 percent.<lb/>
Bass got one especially nice arrangement: He<lb/>
can use $1.5 billion of the thrift's deposits for doing<lb/>
deals. What sort of deals will Bass do? This year, he's<lb/>
already bought the Westin hotel chain ($1.5 billion<lb/>
itself) and then sold off the Plaza to Donald Trump<lb/>
for $410 million. He's bought Bell &amp; Howell ($702<lb/>
million), and he's been trying to buy Macmillan ($2<lb/>
billion).<lb/>
Now, the Home Loan Bank Board and FSLIC<lb/>
have come up with a way of keeping insolvent thrifts<lb/>
alive, maybe even through the start of the 101st<lb/>
Congress in January. And (who knows?) by then<lb/>
Robert Bass may be up to 20th or even 15th on the<lb/>
billionaires' ladder.<lb/>
Late<lb/>
(CPS) ? Boston Uniw<lb/>
rejected student protests anl<lb/>
sued strict new rules Septet<lb/>
15 prohibiting students fl <lb/>
ing overnight guests of the I<lb/>
site sex in their dorm ra J<lb/>
"All oi life after 11 .<lb/>
been banned at BL sen<lb/>
Sanbonmatsu told a 1 <lb/>
2,000 students that had<lb/>
verged to protest the . j<lb/>
rules the day before tl<lb/>
approved.<lb/>
BU's strict new ruk -<lb/>
the closest a college has i <lb/>
to the "in loco parent<lb/>
ship schools maintain<lb/>
their students up until tl <lb/>
Under the doctrin<lb/>
meaning adminis)<lb/>
place oi the parei <lb/>
set curfews for students,<lb/>
ponded students for be! I<lb/>
ways they didn't like ar I<lb/>
students oi th<lb/>
visit with each other<lb/>
SAT scores<lb/>
for third st<lb/>
(CPS) ? In sj<lb/>
wave of school r<lb/>
mostly at helj<lb/>
better on st<lb/>
Scholastic A:<lb/>
scores have sta<lb/>
third straight year tl ?<lb/>
Board annour<lb/>
This year s fr I<lb/>
average verb  - -J<lb/>
down two p nts fi<lb/>
before?and av i<lb/>
of 4m. the same as in 1987<lb/>
"There's no medal r<lb/>
ica in this new -<lb/>
tan of Education '?"?<lb/>
nett. "I said in April 1<lb/>
absolute level in which I<lb/>
provements are tak i .<lb/>
unacceptablylowT J<lb/>
lower and still not a rl<lb/>
Come on team back ii<lb/>
ing<lb/>
College Boar<lb/>
Donal Stewart chose to stj<lb/>
positive: "It ib certainly r<lb/>
ng to sec that the decline ii<lb/>
on the SAT has leveled I<lb/>
ccti years, because thi pr<lb/>
means that some positive<lb/>
are happening in the ru<lb/>
schools<lb/>
Average scores pi<lb/>
1963, and various obs <lb/>
blamed everything from tei<lb/>
atmospheric nuclear restij<lb/>
the decline since.<lb/>
In the interim, verbal<lb/>
reached a high of 4r ir<lb/>
math scores a hij<lb/>
Yet from the verbal 1 a A<lb/>
the math low or 4rv - H<lb/>
corded in 1981 - average<lb/>
began to rebound modi j<lb/>
thev leveled of! again in V<lb/>
Although the O <lb/>
sternly warns people t,<lb/>
the test scores in the J<lb/>
which the particular <lb/>
were earned p<lb/>
trumpet them as prooi j<lb/>
thing<lb/>
When score- turn j<lb/>
in 1982, President Reag <lb/>
thev vindicated his edl<lb/>
policies<lb/>
Education Polic)<lb/>
feanne Alien of the <lb/>
Foundation, an influent<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
The<lb/>
COMedY<lb/>
ZONE<lb/>
WED<lb/>
The<lb/>
CoMedY<lb/>
ZONE<lb/>
WED<lb/>
5th St. Entrance<lb/>
Now Open<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
tt<lb/>
Plus<lb/>
126 Greenville 1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0005"/><lb/>
rt?<lb/>
??<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
aidant<lb/>
d boot tickers<lb/>
e I stopped at<lb/>
 OClub heard<lb/>
ng about buying<lb/>
Sergeant Well, lei<lb/>
nts buy their own<lb/>
iys had a lot more<lb/>
thus more money.<lb/>
? wants more air-<lb/>
? I dislike the U.S.<lb/>
 brother and a lot<lb/>
n prisoned on war<lb/>
ir with lapana lot<lb/>
necessary? not to<lb/>
ey got a lot more<lb/>
was really neces-<lb/>
h as Tarawa,<lb/>
ke the reports that I<lb/>
it the L.S.M.C. train-<lb/>
it they practically<lb/>
ils During the war in<lb/>
irned about somc-<lb/>
d the craft of intelli-<lb/>
aterial printed that<lb/>
Marines killed, as well<lb/>
?n printed that could get<lb/>
. held in P.O.W.<lb/>
a woman who was<lb/>
fessional Navy man<lb/>
? lithful to him, but I<lb/>
this by becoming a<lb/>
? why couldn't the<lb/>
a ting base that the<lb/>
ilitary people could<lb/>
;r wives wouldn't<lb/>
ful since the fleet<lb/>
I with their families<lb/>
- foreign countries<lb/>
L S. up because we<lb/>
is sin the Philippines.<lb/>
? put some people to<lb/>
S designing ships<lb/>
? be floating bases.<lb/>
 . d here in the U.S.<lb/>
- t i rest of the world<lb/>
v World. I would<lb/>
a comprehensive<lb/>
?h(user's cam-<lb/>
Bill f. Bloomer<lb/>
lore Parrots ?<lb/>
my attack on the<lb/>
icter of the pirate,<lb/>
)aniel has suggested the<lb/>
' 'lite symbol. He<lb/>
metically and<lb/>
hange would<lb/>
rv I would like to<lb/>
le parrot would make a<lb/>
d has the added vir-<lb/>
inique school totem.<lb/>
hair of the Luke<lb/>
r mid nurse-correction<lb/>
me futher sugges-<lb/>
gh it would be more ex-<lb/>
geto, the bright crim-<lb/>
g is getting votes. Appro-<lb/>
paintes and balloons are<lb/>
nlable tor this winning<lb/>
Edith Webber<lb/>
h Department, Emeritus<lb/>
nt thrifts alive<lb/>
the thrift's deposits for doing<lb/>
ils will Bassdo? This year, he's<lb/>
testin hotel chain ($f.5 billion<lb/>
fl the Tlaza to Donald Trump<lb/>
bought Bell &amp; Howell ($702<lb/>
?n trying to buy Macmillan ($2<lb/>
I oan Bank Board and FSLIC<lb/>
Iva v of keeping insolvent thrifts<lb/>
' rough the start of the 101st<lb/>
And iwho knows?) by then<lb/>
up to 20th or even 15th on the<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6,1988 5<lb/>
Late night life banned<lb/>
(CPS) ? Boston Universitv<lb/>
rejected student protests and is-<lb/>
sued strict new rules September<lb/>
15 prohibiting students from hav-<lb/>
ing overnight guests of the oppo-<lb/>
site sex in their dorm rooms.<lb/>
"All of life after 11 p.m. has<lb/>
been banned at BU senior Jamie<lb/>
Sanbonmatsu told a crowd of<lb/>
2,000 students that had con-<lb/>
verged to protest the visitation<lb/>
rules the day before thev were<lb/>
approved.<lb/>
BU's strict new rules may be<lb/>
the closest a college has returned<lb/>
to the "in loco parentis" relation-<lb/>
ship schools maintained with<lb/>
their students up until the l0s.<lb/>
Under the doctrine?literally<lb/>
meaning administrators acted "in<lb/>
place of the parents" ?campuses<lb/>
set curfews for students, sus-<lb/>
pended students for behaving in<lb/>
ways they didn't like and forbade<lb/>
students of the opposite sex to<lb/>
visit with each other behind<lb/>
closed doors.<lb/>
Though the rules collapsed<lb/>
under student protests for greater<lb/>
autonomy, new drinking laws<lb/>
and increasing numbers of stu-<lb/>
dent lawsuits blaming colleges<lb/>
for sexual assaults and other<lb/>
crimes have moved many cam-<lb/>
J<lb/>
puses to tighten their control over<lb/>
potentially litigious student be-<lb/>
havior during the past few years.<lb/>
St. Joseph's College in Maine,<lb/>
the State University of New York<lb/>
at Binghamton and North Caro-<lb/>
lina State University, among oth-<lb/>
ers, also have restricted or banned<lb/>
overnight visits to dorms by<lb/>
members of the opposite sex in re-<lb/>
cent vears.<lb/>
Virtually every campus in the<lb/>
United States, moreover, has stiff-<lb/>
ened its student drinking rules<lb/>
since 1CS6, when the federal gov-<lb/>
ernment threatened to cut off<lb/>
funding to any state that still al-<lb/>
lowed 18-year-olds to drink alco-<lb/>
hol.<lb/>
BU officials said they were<lb/>
just trying to help students study.<lb/>
The new rules, said BU<lb/>
spokesman Kevin Carleton, ad-<lb/>
dress "concerns stated by stu-<lb/>
dents, staff and parents that resi-<lb/>
dences too often have failed to<lb/>
provide the kind of environment<lb/>
where an individual can quietly<lb/>
study and have his or her right to<lb/>
privacy respected<lb/>
Sanbonmatsu, on the other<lb/>
hand, charged, "The administra-<lb/>
tion is stunting our growth and<lb/>
development by denying us the<lb/>
right to make decisions<lb/>
Under the new guidelines,<lb/>
some of which go into effect in late<lb/>
fall and others during the spring,<lb/>
guests must display identification<lb/>
cards and leave the dormitory by<lb/>
11 p.m. on weekdays and 1 a.m.<lb/>
on weekends.<lb/>
Overnight guests of the same<lb/>
sex are still allowed, but guests of<lb/>
the opposite sex will not be al-<lb/>
lowed to stay overnight.<lb/>
Students older than age 21<lb/>
can bring a six-pack of beer or a<lb/>
liter of other kinds of alcoholic<lb/>
beverages into the dorms, but no<lb/>
more than that.<lb/>
Carleton student protests of<lb/>
the rules did not faze BU officials.<lb/>
"1 don't think anv demonstration<lb/>
J<lb/>
would have an effect he said.<lb/>
"What can have an effect is a rea-<lb/>
sonable discussion <lb/>
Professor<lb/>
Lating tk Drinking<lb/>
Come Home To Professor O'Cools<lb/>
For The Idea Homecoming!<lb/>
All Weekend Long<lb/>
Drink Specials<lb/>
Double Shot Lime Margaritas $2.50<lb/>
All Imported Mexican Beer SI.50<lb/>
Prime Rib Dinner S9.95 After 5 p.m.<lb/>
LOCATED IN THE FARM FRESH<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
11 am-I am Monday- Saturday i 1 am 10 pm Sunday 355 2 ??<lb/>
SAT scores at standstill<lb/>
for third straight year<lb/>
(CTS) - In spite oi a huge<lb/>
wave oi school reforms aimed<lb/>
mostly at helping students to do<lb/>
better on standardized tests,<lb/>
Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT)<lb/>
scores have stayed flat tor the<lb/>
third straight year, the College<lb/>
Board announced Sept. 20.<lb/>
This year's freshman had<lb/>
average verbal scores of 428 ?<lb/>
down two points from the year<lb/>
before ?and average math scores<lb/>
of 47b, the same as in 1987.<lb/>
"There's no medal for Amer-<lb/>
ica in this news said U.S. Secre-<lb/>
tary oi Education William Ben-<lb/>
nett. "1 said in April that the<lb/>
absolute level in which our im-<lb/>
provements are taking place is<lb/>
urtacceptably low Today it's a bit<lb/>
lower and still not acceptable.<lb/>
Come on team back into train-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
College Board President<lb/>
Donal Stewart chose to stress the<lb/>
positive: "It is certainly reassur-<lb/>
ing to see that the decline in scores<lb/>
on the SAT has leveled oii in re-<lb/>
cent years, because this probablv<lb/>
means that some positive things<lb/>
are happening in the nation's<lb/>
schools<lb/>
Average scores peaked in<lb/>
1963, and various observers have<lb/>
blamed everything from tenure to<lb/>
atmospheric nuclear testing for<lb/>
the decline since.<lb/>
In the interim, verbal scores<lb/>
reached a high of 466 in 1968 and<lb/>
math scores a high of 493 in 1969.<lb/>
Yet from the verbal low of 424 and<lb/>
the math low of 466 ? both re-<lb/>
corded in 1981 ? average scores<lb/>
began to rebound modestly until<lb/>
they leveled off again in 1987.<lb/>
Although the College Board<lb/>
sternly warns people to weight<lb/>
the test scores in "the context in<lb/>
which the particular test scores<lb/>
were earned politicians always<lb/>
trumpet them as proof of some-<lb/>
thing.<lb/>
When scores turned upward<lb/>
in 1982, President Reagan claimed<lb/>
they vindicated his education<lb/>
policies.<lb/>
Education Policy Analyst<lb/>
leanne Allen of the Heritage<lb/>
foundation, an influential con-<lb/>
servative think tank, says the<lb/>
Reagan administration can still<lb/>
take credit tor improving SAT<lb/>
scores.<lb/>
A lot oi the dialogue by the<lb/>
Reagan administration sparked<lb/>
efforts to improve education she<lb/>
said. "The states responded to<lb/>
that dialogue, but improvements<lb/>
that time. We'll see some real in-<lb/>
novative successes<lb/>
Still others don't see much<lb/>
room for interpretation in the<lb/>
scores.<lb/>
lohn Katzman, president oi<lb/>
Princeton Review, a New York<lb/>
firm that coaches standardized<lb/>
test takers, has fervently criticized<lb/>
the SAT for what he says is a bias<lb/>
against women and minorities.<lb/>
Hie SAT, he savs, doesn't test<lb/>
actual knowledge, just students'<lb/>
ability to take standardized tests.<lb/>
"It's a lousy test that doesn't<lb/>
measure aptitude<lb/>
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' Extended war-<lb/>
ranty for $80.00<lb/>
covers up to 36<lb/>
months36.000<lb/>
miles. Labor not<lb/>
included.<lb/>
Drive An Engine Bargain<lb/>
HASTINGS FORD<lb/>
10th Street &amp; 264 Bypass ? Greenville, NC ? 919-758-0114<lb/>
Toll Free 1-800-654-3429<lb/>
Y0UP DEALEP P0R FORD AUTHORIZED REMANUFACTURED TARTS<lb/>
Join The<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Parade Whatever<lb/>
The Weather<lb/>
There's Something<lb/>
Special For You<lb/>
To Wear<lb/>
MonSat. 10-6<lb/>
Thurs. 10-8<lb/>
919 A. Redbanks Rd.<lb/>
Arlington Village<lb/>
756-1058<lb/>
?&amp;l(?- VALUABLE COUPONS<lb/>
tfv FILM DEVELOPING SPECIAL<lb/>
Disc-$2.49 24 Exp$3.99<lb/>
12 Exposure<lb/>
$1-99<lb/>
Good on 110. 126 &amp; Disc color<lb/>
print C 41 roll orders<lb/>
t<lb/>
35MM Users try our<lb/>
MARK 35 Custom Processing<lb/>
12 Exp. 24 Exp. 36 Exp.<lb/>
$2.99 $4.89 $7.39<lb/>
?<lb/>
coupon mull accompany order<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Offer Good October 6 thru October 24th<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
The<lb/>
CoMedY<lb/>
ZONE<lb/>
WED<lb/>
' The<lb/>
CoMedY<lb/>
ZONE<lb/>
WED<lb/>
5th St. Entrance<lb/>
Now Open<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Neauveau<lb/>
Campaign<lb/>
Neauveau<lb/>
Campaign<lb/>
New Music<lb/>
Highball Special<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Helix<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Hard<lb/>
Knocks<lb/>
Heavy Metal<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
ICE<lb/>
WATER<lb/>
MANSION<lb/>
Powerhouse Rock<lb/>
Gigantic Warehouse Sale<lb/>
Just For You<lb/>
NOTHING OVER $10<lb/>
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY<lb/>
MSi<lb/>
hmIACK<lb/>
&amp;?<lb/>
jiffy lube<lb/>
"AMERICAS FAVORITE OIL CHANGE"<lb/>
In 10 Minutes with no appointment<lb/>
Heres what the J-Team can do for you:<lb/>
?Change your oi' with i majoi brand!<lb/>
?Add n new oil tiltcr:<lb/>
? Lubricate the chassis!<lb/>
?( heck and till transmission,<lb/>
differential, brake, power steering,<lb/>
window washer and battery fluids!<lb/>
?C heck air filter!<lb/>
?inflate tires!<lb/>
?Check wiper tlades!<lb/>
?Vacuum the ii.terior!<lb/>
? Wash vour windows!<lb/>
Plus FREE Car Wash with full service!<lb/>
$2.00 Of 1 (with this ad)<lb/>
26 Greenville Blvd. Phone 75G-257' Horns: MonFri. 7M) a.inGO p.m. Sat, til 5:30<lb/>
Tom Tog's<lb/>
FactOrv Outlet<lb/>
1900 Dickinson Avc<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/>
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="00058099_0006"/><lb/>
6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBERS 1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED Christian male<lb/>
nximmate to share new mobile home. 10<lb/>
minutes from campus Non-smoker,<lb/>
please Weekends call Hugh 756-6851.<lb/>
ASSUME LEASE: 1 bdr. apartment at<lb/>
Riverbluff $230 per month. $100 deposit.<lb/>
Call 830-1185.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
ASAP to share a 3-bedroom townhouse.<lb/>
No deposit, private bedroom, private<lb/>
bathroom. $183 33mo. 13 utilities.<lb/>
Fireplace, tanning beds, sauna, weight-<lb/>
room and more Call 355-0700.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1982 Buick Century Limited,<lb/>
AC Cruise, PS, I'B High mileage but<lb/>
sharp; m good running condition. $2800.<lb/>
Call 758 7423 anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Beige St white love seat. Good<lb/>
condition S50. Call today! 758-9264.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from<lb/>
SI 00 Fords Mercedes. Corvettes.<lb/>
Chews Surplus. Buyers Guide (1) 805-<lb/>
687 (VkX) Ext. S-1166<lb/>
FOR SALE: Honda CX500 Custom mint<lb/>
condition 6000 mi must sell. Desperate.<lb/>
Call David 758-5510 Leave message if not<lb/>
in<lb/>
FOR SALE Men's Jamis Earth Cruiser.<lb/>
Excellent condition $10000 firm. 752-<lb/>
510.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Papers, $1 50 per<lb/>
page. Resume's written and typed, $20.00<lb/>
Close to campus. Call Joy at 758-7423 be-<lb/>
tween 6 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
STUDENT TYPING SERVICES: Pro-<lb/>
gressive Solutions, Inc , offers high-qual-<lb/>
itv, inexpensive word processing and<lb/>
other services for the student. Our high<lb/>
speed laser printing systems yield the<lb/>
highest possible quality in the shortest<lb/>
length of time. Rates start at $2.00 per<lb/>
pjge and include paper and computer-<lb/>
ized spelling check. We also offer<lb/>
Resume' production, and other business<lb/>
and professional services. Call 757-3111<lb/>
M-F for more details!<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 &amp; 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/>
AT YOUR SERVICE:<lb/>
Typing'Typing'Typing. Affordable and<lb/>
Professional. Call 355-6634 after 600 p m<lb/>
HELP WANTED<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 Intercampus 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. 12:30-5:30 p.m M-F.<lb/>
Tleasant phone voice a must. Light typing<lb/>
and filing. $3.50 per hour. Call 830-1929<lb/>
for appointment.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
LOST: Green velcro wallet. If found<lb/>
PLEASE call Mike at 752-7307. Show your<lb/>
honesty.<lb/>
GREF:Thebig21 is here! Thursday nights<lb/>
gonna be just a little wild. . . (Scrol me!)<lb/>
Downtown won't be the same when you<lb/>
get finished with it! Later, Steve P Bobbv<lb/>
F, Rick S<lb/>
PIRATE FOOTBALL TEAM: We believe<lb/>
in you and are behind you all the way!<lb/>
With Purple Pride, THE PIRATE CREW<lb/>
COLEMAN: Get ready for a great<lb/>
semester! You are the BEST! Love ya, your<lb/>
Big Bro!<lb/>
PHI TAU LITTLE SISTERS We warned<lb/>
you about the forbidden fruit! Isn't that<lb/>
my tie floating in the PJ7 We had a blast!<lb/>
Thanx, the BROTHERS.<lb/>
PHI TAUS: Get ready to ROCK the<lb/>
HouseHomecoming 1988?Starting<lb/>
early and ending late. Let's make this the<lb/>
BEST ever!<lb/>
PHI TAUS: Get ready for a STRANGE<lb/>
Thursday night!<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI Cocktail is a day<lb/>
away. Get ready to swing and swav We'll<lb/>
be cruzin' to the American Legion. AOPi's<lb/>
get ready, cause we're best in the region<lb/>
Dates make sure you're feeling all right,<lb/>
because we'll have vou giggin all night<lb/>
Get excited to have a great time<lb/>
THETA CHI: Congratulations on your<lb/>
charter! You guvs really worked hard<lb/>
Thanks for inviting us to a great celebra-<lb/>
tion love the sisters and pledges of<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi<lb/>
HAPPY 21ST B-DAY SANDY BFALE<lb/>
Since Joe already gave you such a BIG<lb/>
present, I don't know what to get that<lb/>
could beat it. I lave a great time at Va.<lb/>
Tech E.D.<lb/>
LOST: Men's I IS Class Ring Gold with<lb/>
topaz stone. Virginia State seal on one<lb/>
side Woodbridge I IS. written around<lb/>
stone Name inside. Please call 752 9694.<lb/>
ZTA'S: Get ready to roll up your sleeves,<lb/>
build a float, and tap some kegs' We'll see<lb/>
you at the party tonight! Love, Alpha Sigs.<lb/>
LOST: If anyone found 4 rings (dassring.<lb/>
shrimp ring, birthstone ring, sweetheart<lb/>
ring) in the bathroom at Mendenhali Stu-<lb/>
dent Center on Friday (930), PLEASE<lb/>
CALL MICHELLE at 752 8463. RE-<lb/>
WARD<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to the new Zeta<lb/>
Pledge Class officers of Zeta Tau Alpha?<lb/>
Tracy, June, Missy and April. You guys<lb/>
are the best pledge class. Love the sisters<lb/>
of Zeta.<lb/>
ALPHA SIGS: Get ready to party tonight<lb/>
as we finish the float! The Zctas.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to the Theta<lb/>
Chi's for receiving their charter and for<lb/>
letting us be a part of it. Thanks Love the<lb/>
Zetas.<lb/>
ZETA'S: Get ready for an exciting week-<lb/>
end, cause I lomecoming '88 is here. Let's<lb/>
make this a great weekend for our<lb/>
Alumni!<lb/>
ALPHA PHI ALPHA Homecoming Ac-<lb/>
tivities?Greek Step Show 5 pm. Friday at<lb/>
Bookstore; Dance at Cultural Center Fri-<lb/>
day, 10 p.m2 a.m Adm. $1.00; Super<lb/>
Homecoming Day Celebration at the<lb/>
Unlimited Touch Nightclub, Saturday<lb/>
night, 10 p.m. - until. Students $2.00.<lb/>
Inovation, dedication, and motivation for<lb/>
future generations.<lb/>
THANK YOU SIG EP AND AZD for<lb/>
making the first week of Pirate Walk a<lb/>
success.<lb/>
TO ALL ALPHA PHI COCKTAIL<lb/>
DATES: Get psyched! Friday is the night<lb/>
for another outstanding homecoming<lb/>
cocktail We can't wait because we know<lb/>
our dates can't be beat. As usual, the best<lb/>
for the best Love, your Alpha Phi dates.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI SISTERS AND PLEDGES:<lb/>
For the pledges, it's a first. But the sisters<lb/>
can guarantee that this night will defi-<lb/>
nitely be unforgettable so get ready for the<lb/>
weekend. An Alpha Phi tradition.<lb/>
ALL PIKA'S: Rest up for this weekend If<lb/>
you didn't know what full throttle meant,<lb/>
you will. Foosh, Foosh.<lb/>
GOOD LUCK TO WENDY KLICH Pi<lb/>
Kappa Alpha's 1988 Homecoming Queen<lb/>
Candidate.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA: 1 lappy 1 lour tonight<lb/>
MMHHMHB<lb/>
Why go anywhere else Drink specials<lb/>
PIKE'S AND THEIR DATES The time<lb/>
has finally come Time?Saturday 1000,<lb/>
place?Pikas Peak, event?-Ribbon Cut<lb/>
tins Ceremony 1988?the year of the Pike<lb/>
FREE CARWASH from Delta Zeta Fri<lb/>
day, Oct 7, 2 p.m6 p m.<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: Used Nintendo car<lb/>
fridges with instructions for re-sale East<lb/>
Coast Music St Video 758-4251,1109 Char<lb/>
les Blvd<lb/>
$ NEED CASH? $<lb/>
Loans On &amp;. Baying Guns<lb/>
TV's, Stereos, Gold Jewelry, coins,<lb/>
most anything of value<lb/>
, Southern Gun &amp; Pawn, Inc<lb/>
$ 752-2464<lb/>
?<lb/>
Your Best Look<lb/>
Specializing In: MANICURES:<lb/>
French Manicures ? Nail Tips ?<lb/>
Overlays ? Wrapping ? Acrylics ?<lb/>
PEDICURES ? SKIN CARE: Body<lb/>
Wrapping ? Face St Body Waxing ?<lb/>
Facials ? Deep Pore Cleansing ?<lb/>
Acne 7 atments ? Muscle Tone<lb/>
Treatments ? Complete Line Of<lb/>
Therapeutic Skin Care Products For<lb/>
Men St Women<lb/>
355-2969 - For Appointment<lb/>
314 Plaza Dr Greenville<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
'Personal and Conjvdential Care'<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call for appointment Mon thru SaL Lew<lb/>
Coat Termination to 20 wrrki of pre?nanry<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
CRUSTY'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
WE<lb/>
DELIVER<lb/>
Now Hiring Drivers<lb/>
Starting Wage $4.00 per hr.<lb/>
Earn Up To $9.00 per hr.<lb/>
Flexible hours, Bonuses. Must<lb/>
have own car and insurance.<lb/>
Apply in person at 1414 Charles St.<lb/>
wsrm<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Subscription Form<lb/>
Name:<lb/>
Address:<lb/>
Date to Begin:<lb/>
Complimentary.<lb/>
Amount Paid:<lb/>
Individual:<lb/>
Date to End:<lb/>
Business:<lb/>
Date Paid.<lb/>
Rates: Individual $25 p?r ycarBuiinrw $35 per year<lb/>
Return to: Th East Carolinian. Publication Uldg . - ECU. Cnrcnvillc. NC 27KS8-4353<lb/>
UNIVERSITY UNIONS<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Season tickets are now on sale for the Per-<lb/>
forming Arts Series at ECU. This year<lb/>
there are 14 outstanding performances<lb/>
starting in Oct and running through<lb/>
April Some of the attractions include:<lb/>
Wynton Marsalis, CABARET, The Acting<lb/>
Company in Love's Labour's Lost, Nadja<lb/>
Salerno-Sonnenberg, The Tokyo String<lb/>
Quartet. Oregon, The Atlanta Symphony,<lb/>
and the Ohio Ballet. For a free brochure,<lb/>
and further details contact: The Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, Mendenhali, 757-6611, ext.<lb/>
266<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
Cooperative Education, a free service of-<lb/>
fered bv the University, is designed to<lb/>
help you find career-related work experi-<lb/>
ence before vou graduate. We would like<lb/>
to extend an invitation to all students to<lb/>
attend a Coop Information Seminar in the<lb/>
CCB (see schedule below for Oct. Semi-<lb/>
nars) The onlv 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 see us today!<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 6,1 p.m rm. 2010; Mon Oct<lb/>
10,1 p.m. rm. 2010; Thurs Oct. 13,4 p.m.<lb/>
rm 2006, Thurs Oct. 20,1 p.m rm. 2010;<lb/>
Mon , Oct. 24, 1 p.m rm. 2010; Thurs<lb/>
Oct 27, 4 p.m rm. 2006; Mon Oct. 31,4<lb/>
p.m rm. 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.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
: study for Fall Semester andor Spring<lb/>
. Semester, you are encouraged to contact<lb/>
the Co-op office about off-campus place-<lb/>
ments Call 757-6979 or come by the CCB,<lb/>
room 2028<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/>
i<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/>
KAYAKINGCANQE<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Kayak-<lb/>
ingCanoe registration held from Sept. 15<lb/>
to Oct. 7. Learn to canoe and kayak in a<lb/>
fantastic trip. All you need to do is regis-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY UNIONS<lb/>
The Ohio Ballet will inbate 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 PHILOBOLUS in 1975),<lb/>
"Summer Night" (choreographed by<lb/>
Heinz Poll), "Gravity" (a new work by<lb/>
Laura Dean), 'Triptych" (choreographed<lb/>
by Heinz Poll to Mendelssohn's "Piano<lb/>
Concerto No. 2, D Minor), Tickets for this<lb/>
outstanding event are now on sale in the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, Mendenhali 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/>
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 1 st place winners will be<lb/>
displayed during the ECU vs Syracuse<lb/>
game and be awarded $50. Call 757-6823<lb/>
for entry forms and additional informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
CROPWALK88<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 Mendenhali. 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 for one or more of the scholarships<lb/>
listed below. Planters Bank Scholarship (3<lb/>
at $1000 each). University Book Exchange<lb/>
( 2 at $500 each), NCNB ($500), J. Fred<lb/>
Hamblen ($200) Credit Women Interna-<lb/>
tional ($200), Cameron-BrownFirst<lb/>
Union Scholarship (3 at $500 each), FOR<lb/>
ACCOUNTING MAJORS ONLY: Latney<lb/>
W. Pittard Memorial, Raleigh-Durham<lb/>
Chapter Institute of Internal Auditors<lb/>
($350), National Association of Account-<lb/>
ants - Eastern Carolina Chapter Scholar-<lb/>
ship ($500) DECISION SCIENCES MA-<lb/>
JOR ONLY: Grant for Decision Sciences<lb/>
Majors ($125), FINANCE MAJORS<lb/>
ONLY: Archie R. Burnette (S600), Ward<lb/>
Real Estate Scholarship ($100)<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
All students who intend to go to law<lb/>
school after ECU are invited to pin the<lb/>
ECU Law Society. The next meeting will<lb/>
be at 600 in Mendenhali, rm 221 on Oct.<lb/>
6th.<lb/>
NEW POETRY CONTEST<lb/>
Cameron Publishing Company an<lb/>
nounces a new poetrv contest open to all<lb/>
SI,500 First Prize plus other prizes For<lb/>
contest rules, send self-addressed<lb/>
stamped envelope to: Cameron Publish<lb/>
ing Company, llfW 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 a.m. The menu will include BBQ and<lb/>
fried chicken with all the fixins! Cost: $10<lb/>
person for all that you can eat Mail check<lb/>
to ECU Black Alumni Chapter, P O. Box<lb/>
4021, Greenville, or contact Barbara 1 lines<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/>
KAPPA DELTA PI<lb/>
Organizational meeting Oct. 11 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m rm. 129 Speight. For members and<lb/>
any interested potential members.<lb/>
HILLEL TAILGATE PARTY<lb/>
Jewish students, see your old friends and<lb/>
meet new ones when we have a Tailgate<lb/>
Party on Oct. 8th from 11:30-1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Meet by the playground in front of<lb/>
Elmhurst Elementary School (across from<lb/>
Rose 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/>
STUDENTS FOR DEMOC-<lb/>
RACY<lb/>
Students for Economic Democracy will be<lb/>
meeting on Sun. evening at 7 00 in<lb/>
Mendenhali. room 248. Attendance<lb/>
is required<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 Qty. 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/>
MINORITY STUDENT ORG.<lb/>
ELECTION of officers for the MINORITY<lb/>
STUDENT ORGANIZATION will be<lb/>
held on Oct. 11 at 5:00p.m. in Speight 129.<lb/>
Students 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, Si 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/>
$25,000 cash; and the top 100 performers<lb/>
each month will receive athletic shoes<lb/>
from Reebok and a wrist watch, courtesy<lb/>
of Beneton 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 FIN A dept. 757-<lb/>
6670.<lb/>
OLD YEARBOOKS<lb/>
The yearbook staff 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 are in<lb/>
front of the office door, and anyone is<lb/>
welcome to receive a copy. We are 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 5:00. 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/>
SENIORS<lb/>
Applications are now being taken for<lb/>
seats on the Senior Class Council. Fill out<lb/>
application in SGA office at Mendenhali<lb/>
by 3 p.m. Oct. 7.<lb/>
ECU FORENSIC SOCIETY<lb/>
Interested in competing in Intercollegiate<lb/>
Debate, Public Speaking, Oral Interpre-<lb/>
tive Reading, or Dramatic Interpretation?<lb/>
Well, the ECU Forensics Society is for you.<lb/>
We meet every Tues. night af 8:00 fn 211<lb/>
Messick Theatre Arts Bldg.<lb/>
CAMPFIRE<lb/>
Sing and roast marshmallows around a<lb/>
genuine campfire, Fri Oct. 7, 8 p.m. -<lb/>
until, in the amphitheatre behind Fletcher<lb/>
Dorm Sponsored by Methodist St Presby-<lb/>
terian Campus Ministries, 752-7240.<lb/>
INT'L. STUDENT ASSOC.<lb/>
Come and roller skate with International<lb/>
Student Assoc. on Fri Oct. 7 at Sports<lb/>
World from 800-10.00 p.m. If you need a<lb/>
ride, meet at Mendenhali at 7:30.<lb/>
KARATE CLUB<lb/>
Important meeting Thurs Oct. 6, 7:30<lb/>
Memorial Gym 208. If you were a mem-<lb/>
ber, be there.<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR MARTIN<lb/>
Students working for the reelection of<lb/>
Gov. Jim Martin will meet tonight and<lb/>
every Thurs. evening at 7:00 p.m. in 221<lb/>
Mendenhali. Martin HQ is now opened at<lb/>
the corner of 4th St Reade Streets. Please<lb/>
call 752-8359 for more information.<lb/>
SME<lb/>
The Society of Manufacturing Engi-<lb/>
neers is having a called meeting<lb/>
Oct. 11 in Rawl 106 at 400 Guest<lb/>
speaker?Micky RL McDowell.<lb/>
Dept head for AT&amp;cT. Subject: New<lb/>
Technology in Fiber Optics All<lb/>
members and interested persons<lb/>
are urged to attend!<lb/>
UNDERWATER HOCKEY<lb/>
Underwater Hockey games are scheduled<lb/>
from 7:00 p.m. thru 8:30 p.m. at Memorial<lb/>
Gym pool. An approved Club Sport, new<lb/>
members are welcome at any time ?<lb/>
equipment needs include: mask, fins,<lb/>
snorkel. Come out and trv the newest<lb/>
sport on campus.<lb/>
INJURY EVALUATION<lb/>
Injury assessment will be performed by a<lb/>
certified trainer each Wed. and Thurs.<lb/>
from 6:30-7:30 p.m. in the Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium Sports Care Room A. Recom-<lb/>
mendation for rehabilitative processes<lb/>
will be given for all interested. For addi-<lb/>
tional info, call 757-6387.<lb/>
CROP<lb/>
ODN is sponsoring a recruitment rally for<lb/>
CROP which is interested in helping to<lb/>
alleviate hunger in our world. All inter-<lb/>
ested are invited to the rally, Thurs Oct.<lb/>
6, 7 p.m room 244 Mendenhali.<lb/>
A FISH CALLED WANDA<lb/>
"A Fish Called Wanda" will show at<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre this Thurs. thru Sun<lb/>
(Oct. 6-9) This is free to all ECU students<lb/>
with valid ID &amp; faculty with films passes<lb/>
PINK FLOYD: THE WALL<lb/>
The Student Union Films Committee<lb/>
proudly presents "Pink Floyd: The Wall"<lb/>
this Fri. and Sat. at 11 00 pm T-shirts and<lb/>
an original soundtrack recording will be<lb/>
given away at each showing<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
It's Homecoming on Sat, Oct. 8. a tho<lb/>
Pirates host one of the nations best foot<lb/>
ball teams?the Mountaineers of West Va<lb/>
Game time is 200 p m and the gates open<lb/>
at 12:00 noon<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
The soccer team will end their home<lb/>
schedule this Sun Oct. 9 at 12 00 The<lb/>
will host the college of William &amp; Mary<lb/>
Let's end the season in stvle<lb/>
WOMEN'S TENNIS<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will take to the court<lb/>
today at 2:30. They will host Campbell on<lb/>
the courts at the south side of Minges<lb/>
SPIRIT CHALLENGE<lb/>
The Sports Spirit Challenge Contest has a<lb/>
revised schedule. This schedule change<lb/>
will be included in a memo to fraternity<lb/>
and sorority presidents as well as head<lb/>
residents of the halls. Your participation<lb/>
in this competition is greatly appreciated<lb/>
The next event will be Sun at 12:00 (soc<lb/>
cer).<lb/>
HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
East Carolina Honors Organization is the<lb/>
student honors group at ECU; it work<lb/>
closely with the Honors Program and i<lb/>
affiliated with the NC Honors Asoo<lb/>
Southern Regional Honors Council, and<lb/>
the National Collegiate Honors Council<lb/>
Meetings are held on alternate Thursday<lb/>
at 5:00 in room 1004 of the GCB Meeting<lb/>
for Oct. are on the 6th and 20th; contact Pr<lb/>
Sanders (757-6376) for more info<lb/>
CAMFUS CRUSADE<lb/>
PRIME TIME; Everyone welcome Join us<lb/>
for a time of fun, fellowship St teaching on<lb/>
how to live a more effective Christian life<lb/>
on a College Campus. 730 p.m on Thurs<lb/>
days, Brewster C-103<lb/>
Read The East Carolinian Classified Page<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
u<lb/>
M<lb/>
VTl<lb/>
c<lb/>
i<lb/>
Nucl<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
three decades, serious<lb/>
the Savannah Ri<lb/>
weapons planl w r<lb/>
for national security<lb/>
in some cases n I<lb/>
Washington, according<lb/>
officials ho art trvn<lb/>
that attitude<lb/>
( die senior I I<lb/>
mint official<lb/>
approach to -xit<lb/>
nah River Plai<lb/>
to that which I<lb/>
of the shutl<lb/>
28<lb/>
And or<lb/>
. the facil<lb/>
closed<lb/>
allowed to i ? n u<lb/>
ation imp<lb/>
An Enerj<lb/>
spokesman. Will (. .<lb/>
that since the fed<lb/>
began making al i<lb/>
I ?? ?<lb/>
been a mind -<lb/>
are doing<lb/>
for national ?<lb/>
that may<lb/>
? ivard pub a<lb/>
been sensith<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
forn ?<lb/>
Tobacco proa<lb/>
chain<lb/>
pip<lb/>
bac ?? ielve<lb/>
- ? ?<lb/>
cer 1<lb/>
ti<lb/>
5 Cos. I r<lb/>
ready carry a I<lb/>
 am I<lb/>
?<lb/>
labels ? i<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
aware oi that i j<lb/>
taken prod I<lb/>
re;<lb/>
Deputy Attorney '<lb/>
C. Thompson the<lb/>
menrooorainanw tj<lb/>
ated by the N I<lb/>
initiative.<lb/>
I<lb/>
identify produ Is<lb/>
that can c? -<lb/>
tenlit<lb/>
must warn thi<lb/>
cant' amounts<lb/>
Yon<lb/>
I si uthe<lb/>
fomia. It recentK<lb/>
Safev av supermai<lb/>
em California.<lb/>
products pi 1<lb/>
panies was d<lb/>
with Proposition<lb/>
sp ? ;nan Vic<lb/>
On Fridaj<lb/>
General John K<lb/>
filed a<lb/>
baeco manufa<lb/>
itorechaii - ?<lb/>
The su ? nod<lb/>
failed to warn corj<lb/>
cancer risk of . rti<lb/>
However Ms<lb/>
the Los <lb/>
de til th<lb/>
-Hi<lb/>
FAM'<lb/>
?GENE!<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
SUNTHUR!<lb/>
FRI.&amp;SAT.<lb/>
DELIVERY CJ<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
DELIVER!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0007"/><lb/>
THE HAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6, 19H8 7<lb/>
. where else I Hink specials<lb/>
ID LHF1R PATfS The time<lb/>
come nme Saturday IftOO<lb/>
ik event Ribbon Cut<lb/>
m 188 the vear of the Pike<lb/>
v sH<lb/>
 i Zeta En<lb/>
0 Bl I -ii Nintendo cat<lb/>
ctions tvT re sale Tast<lb/>
  "Char<lb/>
JBORTION<lb/>
dential Core<lb/>
EE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
at. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
ngle Women's<lb/>
.ealth Center<lb/>
n s.1 iw<lb/>
liI f pi fgnanrv<lb/>
A4'<lb/>
00-433-2930<lb/>
1MAN<lb/>
ISH CALLED WANDA<lb/>
d Wanda will show at<lb/>
? 5 Tl rs thru Sun<lb/>
students<lb/>
 ? - films passes<lb/>
i FLOYD: THE WALL<lb/>
m? Commitl i<lb/>
? ? id Tho Wall<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
S0CCI.R<lb/>
team<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
rhe<lb/>
dan<lb/>
WOMEN'S TENNIS<lb/>
the courts<lb/>
rr i ?<lb/>
jSPIRIT CHALLENGE<lb/>
rts Spirit Challcng ? test has a<lb/>
lule This schedule change<lb/>
fraternity<lb/>
y. v presidents as well as h id<lb/>
?? ??<lb/>
 petition is greatly appreriat<lb/>
nt will be "sun a 2:00 si n<lb/>
IQNORS PROGRAM<lb/>
 it it works<lb/>
h the Honors Program and is<lb/>
led with the N.C Honors Assr<lb/>
nal Honors Council ? I<lb/>
il Collegiate Honorsouncil<lb/>
isr- ?re held on alternate Thursd i) -<lb/>
roon 04 rftheGCB Meetii<lb/>
?n the 6th and 20th ontactDi<lb/>
I ' ? - re inl<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSADE<lb/>
'T Everone welcome Join us<lb/>
! of fun fellowship &amp; teaching on<lb/>
?. e a more effective Christian life<lb/>
ampus 7 V) p m on Thurs<lb/>
r 10<lb/>
cu<lb/>
J<lb/>
age<lb/>
Nuclear mishaps kept secret<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AD - For<lb/>
three decades, serious mishaps at<lb/>
the Savannah River nuclear<lb/>
weapons plant were kept secret<lb/>
foe national security reasons and<lb/>
in some cases not reported to<lb/>
Washington, according to federal<lb/>
officials who are trying to change<lb/>
that attitude.<lb/>
One senior Energy Depart-<lb/>
ment official has compared the<lb/>
approach to safety at the Savan-<lb/>
nah River Plant, near Aiken, S.C<lb/>
to that which led to the explosion<lb/>
ol the shuttle Challenger on Jan.<lb/>
28 1986.<lb/>
And one member of Congress<lb/>
says the facility, which has boon<lb/>
closed since August should not be<lb/>
allowed to reopen until tho situ-<lb/>
ation improves.<lb/>
An Energy Department<lb/>
spokesman, Will Callicott, said<lb/>
that since the federal government<lb/>
began making atomic weapons in<lb/>
World War II, "there has always<lb/>
been a mind set, a culture, that wo<lb/>
are doing work that is important<lb/>
for national security and perhaps<lb/>
that may override any obligation<lb/>
toward public accountability.<lb/>
"People have historically not<lb/>
been sensitive to the importance<lb/>
of disclosing things Callicott<lb/>
sud. Clearly, there is a lot of in-<lb/>
formation that did not make it up<lb/>
th?" chain to top management hero<lb/>
"?adquarters<lb/>
'thout a detailed review of<lb/>
the re jo. d, ho said, it would bo im-<lb/>
possible to determine exactly<lb/>
what information had reached<lb/>
Washington and what had boon<lb/>
released to the public.<lb/>
Energy Secretary John Hcr-<lb/>
nngton, since taking office in<lb/>
1985, "has given heightened at-<lb/>
tention to the area of environ-<lb/>
mental safety and health and for<lb/>
the first time placed these issues<lb/>
in the hands of an assistant secre-<lb/>
tary, Callicott said.<lb/>
The Savannah River facility<lb/>
produces plutonium and tritium,<lb/>
which are used in making nuclear<lb/>
weapons. It is run by E.I. du Pont<lb/>
Nemours &amp; Co. under contract<lb/>
from the Energy Department.<lb/>
A Du Pont inspector, G.C.<lb/>
Ridgcly, wrote in a recently re-<lb/>
leased August 1985 memoran-<lb/>
dum that 30 "reactor incidents of<lb/>
the greatest significance" oc-<lb/>
curred there.<lb/>
One of the most serious mis-<lb/>
haps at Savannah River was the<lb/>
melting in November 1970 of a<lb/>
rod used to start an atomic chain<lb/>
reaction, causing radioactive con-<lb/>
tamination of an adjacent room. It<lb/>
took 900 people throe months to<lb/>
clean up the contamination, ac-<lb/>
cording to tho memo.<lb/>
"Serious radiation exposure<lb/>
could have occurred because no<lb/>
outside alarm existed" and an<lb/>
"alarm was ignored for two<lb/>
hours tho memo said.<lb/>
Last Friday, Energy Depart-<lb/>
ment officials said the depart-<lb/>
ment had not been informed oi<lb/>
the incidents, but on Monday sen-<lb/>
ior department spokesman C.<lb/>
Anson Franklin said those state-<lb/>
ments were incorrect and that tho<lb/>
incidents had been reported to the<lb/>
department's regional office in<lb/>
Aikcn.<lb/>
He said the information ap-<lb/>
parently had not boon relayed to<lb/>
headquarters in Washington<lb/>
from the regional office.<lb/>
The reactors at Savannah<lb/>
River were closed down after the<lb/>
most recent incident, in August,<lb/>
and had been scheduled to reopen<lb/>
Tuesday. But Energy Department<lb/>
officials assured fnembers of Con-<lb/>
gress last week that production<lb/>
would not resume until safety<lb/>
was assured, possibly after 30<lb/>
davs to 45 davs.<lb/>
"If they restart those things<lb/>
without having briefed us and<lb/>
without having convinced us they<lb/>
have solved the saety and health<lb/>
issues, they will be in serious<lb/>
trouble in the Congress said<lb/>
Rep. Mike Synar, D-Okla.<lb/>
Synar, chairman of the En-<lb/>
ergy, Environment and Natural<lb/>
Resources subcommittee of the<lb/>
Government Affairs Committee,<lb/>
held hearings on the Savannah<lb/>
River facility last Friday.<lb/>
The most blistering charge<lb/>
last week came from Richard<lb/>
Starostecki, deputy assistant sec-<lb/>
retary for safety, health and qual-<lb/>
ity assurance, in a memorandum<lb/>
discussing the most recent inci-<lb/>
dent, a small power pulse in Au-<lb/>
gust.<lb/>
"The issue was not whether<lb/>
the reactor was out of control; this<lb/>
time it was not Starostecki said<lb/>
in the memo, which was released<lb/>
at a congressional hearing.<lb/>
"The more serious issue deals<lb/>
with an institutional problem and<lb/>
attitudes toward safety' Staros-<lb/>
tecki said.<lb/>
MALPASS<lb/>
MUFFLER<lb/>
BRAKE SERVICE<lb/>
METRIC HARDWARE<lb/>
SPEEDOMETER SERVICE<lb/>
AUTO PARrS<lb/>
758-7676<lb/>
2616 E. 10th St. Greenville. NC<lb/>
?<lb/>
Tobacco products removed from shelves<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) -<lb/>
California's largest supermarket<lb/>
chain began removing cigars,<lb/>
pipe tobacco and chewing to-<lb/>
bacco from shelves because the<lb/>
products are not labeled as can-<lb/>
cer-causing in compliance with a<lb/>
tate la <lb/>
, igarettes are not involved in<lb/>
the action announced Tuesday by<lb/>
Vons Cos. Inc. because they al-<lb/>
roady carry a federally mandated<lb/>
warning label. Several brands of<lb/>
chewing tobacco that carry such<lb/>
labels also are exempt.<lb/>
"It's the first time we are<lb/>
aware of that a supermarket has<lb/>
taken product oii the shelves in<lb/>
response to Proposition 65 said<lb/>
Deputy Attorney General Craig<lb/>
C. Thompson, the state enforce-<lb/>
ment cixrchnator tor the law cre-<lb/>
ated by the November 1986 ballot<lb/>
initiative.<lb/>
The law requires the state to<lb/>
identify products and substances<lb/>
that can cause1 cancer, birth de-<lb/>
fects and sterility. Businesses<lb/>
must warn the public of "signifi-<lb/>
cant" amounts oi the substances.<lb/>
Vons has 336 stores in the<lb/>
central and southern parts of Cali-<lb/>
fornia. It recently acquired 172<lb/>
Safeway supermarkets in South-<lb/>
ern California.<lb/>
The removal of 17 tobacco<lb/>
products produced by five com-<lb/>
panies was designed to comply<lb/>
with Proposition 65, said Vons<lb/>
spokeswoman Vickie Sanders.<lb/>
On Friday, state Attorney<lb/>
General John K. Van do Kamp<lb/>
filed a civil lawsuit against 25 to-<lb/>
bacco manufacturers and eight<lb/>
food store chains, including Vons.<lb/>
The suit claimed the companies<lb/>
failed to warn consumers of the<lb/>
cancer risk of certain products.<lb/>
However, Ms. Sanders told<lb/>
the Los Angeles Times that the<lb/>
decision to pull the products had<lb/>
nothing to do with the lawsuit.<lb/>
"We did not do it without<lb/>
warning or notice to manufactur-<lb/>
ers. This is not a sudden move on<lb/>
Vons' part she said.<lb/>
Tobacco manufacturers and<lb/>
distributors were told in August<lb/>
that Vons would require warning<lb/>
labels on products by Sept. 17, Ms.<lb/>
Sanders said. That deadline later<lb/>
was extended until Monday, she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The tobacco industry hoped it<lb/>
could comply with the law by<lb/>
posting signs in stores and other<lb/>
measures short of attaching warn-<lb/>
ing labels to their products.<lb/>
This Friday<lb/>
Afternoon<lb/>
Live Entertainment<lb/>
At Pantana Bob's<lb/>
A<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Special<lb/>
with<lb/>
THE BOND<lb/>
The First Band To Ever Perform At P.Bs<lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 4 P.M.<lb/>
A Late Nite Place To Be Is Now<lb/>
The Firday Afternoon Place To Be<lb/>
Private Club For Members &amp; Invited Guests<lb/>
Reg.<lb/>
$28995<lb/>
0 ONLY<lb/>
$17995<lb/>
Row your! ' <lb/>
wri the Set ??? ' '<lb/>
RM TOOO tl ? ???<lb/>
Oi S. 'v.i i . i ? I .<lb/>
Th. AM 1000feature ?? ?<lb/>
exclusive "H ' meek<lb/>
for extra stability Am<lb/>
construct3 of ' ?<lb/>
tl ? Otner qual I .<lb/>
features include an<lb/>
electronic timerstop<lb/>
 ??. and amecnar-<lb/>
stroke '?? Ba ? " .<lb/>
tne Scnwint- Nq Time<lb/>
Limit' warranty Assem<lb/>
tiled and i-eady to row<lb/>
Bicycle Post<lb/>
530 Cotanche St. ? Downtown Greenville (Next S&amp;R Computer)<lb/>
757-3616 757-1816<lb/>
John's Flowers and Gifts<lb/>
503 E. 3rd St.<lb/>
752-3311<lb/>
Order Early for<lb/>
Homecoming Corsages<lb/>
$5.00 plain<lb/>
$10.00 fancy<lb/>
$7.50 with Greek Letters<lb/>
i1<lb/>
I Discounts For Fraternities I<lb/>
l and Other Groups <lb/>
J of 20 or more J<lb/>
Lh ?? mh mb MB ??? mtm am m ??? wmm hb m ??? m ??? mmm wmm ?? wmm wtm<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
SMALL MEDIUM LARGE<lb/>
Cheese Pizza $4.95 $6.85<lb/>
Cheese and 1 Topping$5.60 $7.65<lb/>
Each Additional Topping $ .65 .80<lb/>
$8.95<lb/>
$9.90<lb/>
$ .95<lb/>
SPECIALTY PIZZAS<lb/>
Cheese Lovers$6.90<lb/>
Meat Lovers$6.90<lb/>
Supreme $6.90<lb/>
$9.25 $11.80<lb/>
$9.25 $11.80<lb/>
$9.25 $11.80<lb/>
Super Supreme $7.55 $10.05 $12.75<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA HUTQUALITY<lb/>
NEVER FROZEN<lb/>
?GENEROUS TOPPINGS<lb/>
?REAL CHEESE<lb/>
?FRESH VEGETABLES<lb/>
?DOUGH MADE FRESH DAILY<lb/>
DELIVERY HQVR$ DELIVERY AREA LIMITED TO<lb/>
FW&amp;SATR 4 PMTO1!oHS EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
DELIVERY CHARGE 75' PHONE 752"4445<lb/>
 COUPON GOOD FOR JUST 5 DAYS! ??????i<lb/>
PIZZA HUT PAIRS!<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
2 MEDIUM CHEESE PIZZAS<lb/>
FOR ONLY $9.99<lb/>
$1.29 PER TOPPING COVERS BOTH PIZZAS<lb/>
(coupon expires OcL 10, 1988)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
8<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6, 1988<lb/>
Air pollution is toi<lb/>
congressional problem<lb/>
SAV-A-CENTER<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - A trie utilities and the auto industry,<lb/>
Congress split by economic and domestic and foreign,<lb/>
regional differences has proven Sen. Robert Stafford, R-Vt a<lb/>
again that cleaning up air pollu- veteran of clean air wars, pointed<lb/>
tion from vehicle tailpipes and his finger at Senate Majority<lb/>
industrial smokestacks remains Leader Robert Byrd, D-W.Va<lb/>
the nation's toughest environ- who held the Environment<lb/>
mental problem Committee's bill off the floor for<lb/>
ronmental lobby's Clean Air Coa-<lb/>
lition also criticized the plan say-<lb/>
ing thay no bill was better than a<lb/>
weak one.<lb/>
Southern lawmakers were<lb/>
unhappy because the proposal<lb/>
would have forced some of their<lb/>
power plants to install scrubbers<lb/>
uai LMiiL'ii'iii. ?  ri<lb/>
Onlv once since the Clean Air 11 months while he pushed for to solve what is generally seen in<lb/>
. -? ;?- f AJrl t?M?MMA ll- "Il.1 ?? mUam n( AA-<lb/>
Act was enacted in 1970 has Con<lb/>
gress been able to agree on major<lb/>
amendments to strengthen the<lb/>
basic law, and that occurred 11<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
Two years ago, environmen-<lb/>
talists in the House and Senate<lb/>
concessions for West Virginia's<lb/>
coal.<lb/>
The bill's death left the nation<lb/>
with no new tools to combat the<lb/>
ozone and carbon monoxide -<lb/>
chiefly from vehicle emissions -<lb/>
that has grown to the point that<lb/>
the Capitol as a problem of Mid-<lb/>
west utilities polluting the North-<lb/>
east.<lb/>
For its part, the utilities'<lb/>
lobby, the Edison Electric Insti-<lb/>
tute, consistently said "no" to acid<lb/>
rain controls. It cited scientific<lb/>
Id I IMA III IIIC 1 Hiuac 0"U -Aiai o ?  ?<lb/>
renewed the campaign to escalate upwards of 100 urban areas are disagreements over the problem<lb/>
the battle against urban smog, violating air quality standards<lb/>
acid rain caused by coal-burning designed to protect human<lb/>
factories and power plants and health.<lb/>
toxic fumes from chemicals. Also left in the dust was any<lb/>
On Tuesday, they tossed in new plan to deal with toxic fumes<lb/>
the towel, vowing to try again from chemical plants and the<lb/>
next year. 'There has not been acid-rain chemicals produced by<lb/>
sufficient willingness to compro- coal-burning power plants and<lb/>
mise said Sen. George Mitchell, factories.<lb/>
D-Maine,whospentmuchofl988 month' M,tchc11<lb/>
and said controls should await<lb/>
development of clean-coal tech-<lb/>
nology, which is expected to be<lb/>
cheaper than scrubbers.<lb/>
Byrd issued a statement say-<lb/>
ing he was "disappointed" that a<lb/>
compromise on acid rain could<lb/>
not be reached this year that<lb/>
would both enhance the environ-<lb/>
ment and protect the economies<lb/>
u-Maine, wnospentmucnoi ioo  ' .j  ?.u mem ?iu pw. ??. vw?<lb/>
trying to put together a consensus Rhard Trumka president of the of coai-producing states like West<lb/>
n. ?  1 T.ifrw-1 Mino Workers union.  "i n ??;? i  rr<lb/>
on a clean air bill. "As a result, we<lb/>
will do nothing<lb/>
Mitchell, citing this summer's<lb/>
smog alerts around the country,<lb/>
said the technology exists to con-<lb/>
trol air pollution. "All we lack is<lb/>
the political will to do so<lb/>
Among those he cited as re-<lb/>
sisting compromise were the<lb/>
environmental lobby and the two<lb/>
behemoths that would be most<lb/>
affected by such legislation: elec-<lb/>
United Mine Workers union,<lb/>
worked out an acid rain plan that<lb/>
favored West Virginia's high sul-<lb/>
fur coal industry and mandated<lb/>
the use of expensive stack gas<lb/>
scrubbers by about two dozen<lb/>
large utilities.<lb/>
The proposal infuriated sena-<lb/>
tors from Western states with<lb/>
cleaner burning, low sulphur<lb/>
coal. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo<lb/>
threatened to filibuster. The envi-<lb/>
Virginia. "I will continue to work<lb/>
to resolve this issue<lb/>
The fight over acid rain was<lb/>
just part of the complicated<lb/>
closed-door negotiations over the<lb/>
clean air bill.<lb/>
Another major factor in its<lb/>
demise was a proposal to help<lb/>
combat urban pollution by forc-<lb/>
ing reluctant automakers to pro-<lb/>
duce vehicles with cleaner ex-<lb/>
haust emissions.<lb/>
Supporters of trade restrictions vow to keep trying<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sup-<lb/>
porters of a bill to impose tougher<lb/>
restrictions on textile imports, af-<lb/>
ter failing to override President<lb/>
Reagan's veto, promise to renew<lb/>
their efforts when Congress re-<lb/>
turns next year.<lb/>
"Well be back Sen. Emest<lb/>
F. Hollings, D-S.C, said Tuesday<lb/>
after the House voted 272-152 to<lb/>
override Reagan's veto but fell 11<lb/>
votes short of the two-thirds<lb/>
needed to enact the measure over<lb/>
his objections.<lb/>
The action appeared to close<lb/>
the book on the battle for textile<lb/>
legislation this year, with two<lb/>
weeks at most remaining before<lb/>
lawmakers adjourn to campaign<lb/>
full time.<lb/>
The bill, designed to protect<lb/>
American industry from foreign<lb/>
competition, would freeze cur-<lb/>
rent textile and apparel imports at<lb/>
1987 levels and limit future in-<lb/>
creases to 1 percent annually. The<lb/>
same would apply to non-rubber<lb/>
footwear except that no future<lb/>
growth would be allowed.<lb/>
Countries that increase their<lb/>
purchases of U.S. farm goods<lb/>
would get larger shares of the U.S.<lb/>
textiles market. A pilot program<lb/>
would be established, allowing<lb/>
the government to auction off<lb/>
import licenses. A special quota<lb/>
would be created for imported<lb/>
silk neckties.<lb/>
Reagan vetoed the measure<lb/>
Sept. 28, saying it represented<lb/>
"protectionism at its worst" and<lb/>
would not only narrow consumer<lb/>
choices but inhibit trade and cost<lb/>
America overseas sales. Sponsors<lb/>
said it would save American jobs<lb/>
now in jeopardy because of a<lb/>
wave of Asian textiles and ap-<lb/>
parel crowding U.S. merchandise<lb/>
out of stores.<lb/>
House Speaker Jim Wright,<lb/>
D-Texas, lobbied furiously for the<lb/>
override and sponsors said they<lb/>
were close to two-thirds at one<lb/>
point, "But we had some guys we<lb/>
just couldn't pull across" said<lb/>
Rep. W. G. Hefner, D-N.C.<lb/>
"Obviously, I'm disap-<lb/>
pointed Hollings said in a state-<lb/>
ment. He claimed the bill was<lb/>
similar to provisions endorsed by<lb/>
Reagan several years ago before<lb/>
the president became critical of<lb/>
"this protectionism nonsense<lb/>
"The failure to override the<lb/>
veto means that the next Congress<lb/>
or the next administration must<lb/>
act to restructure our current inef-<lb/>
ficient textile policy Sen. Strom<lb/>
Thurmond, R-S.C, said after the<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
Textile and apparel workers<lb/>
bused in for the occasion from<lb/>
various East Coast cities held a<lb/>
flag-waving rally on the steps of<lb/>
the Capitol at noon, chanting,<lb/>
"Save our jobs, save our jobs<lb/>
Some then watched glumly from<lb/>
the House galleries as the legisla-<lb/>
tion met its doom.<lb/>
Critics portrayed the meas-<lb/>
ure as guaranteed to spur price<lb/>
increases that would amount to a<lb/>
fresh tax on consumers.<lb/>
"Stand up for consumers,<lb/>
stand up for America, support<lb/>
your president's veto urged<lb/>
Rep. William Frenzel, R-Minn.<lb/>
Rep. Sam Gibbons, D-Fla<lb/>
another of the bill's fiercest critics,<lb/>
said "it imposes a tax on consum-<lb/>
ers of about $20 billion a year<lb/>
Rep. Ed Jenkins, D-Ga some-<lb/>
times said to occupy .the textile<lb/>
seat" on the House Ways and<lb/>
Means Committee, scoffed at the<lb/>
notion of new price hikes under<lb/>
the bill and added that import<lb/>
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CINCINNATI (APM<lb/>
Rev. Clarence Riven <lb/>
pump life and music intd<lb/>
Catholic services, which<lb/>
have become boring nti<lb/>
parishioners endure rat!<lb/>
enjoy.<lb/>
"What's wr J<lb/>
It's a perfectly good w<lb/>
said<lb/>
I T .<lb/>
about 250 priests in<lb/>
cese of Cincinnati, I-<lb/>
seeks toinji I<lb/>
feeling and mu<lb/>
church s '<lb/>
Mass<lb/>
A litui.<lb/>
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OCTOBZR 6 1988 9<lb/>
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I or Typographical Errors<lb/>
1 im-i: Midnight<lb/>
Reverend wants to spice-up church<lb/>
CINCINNATI (AP) - The<lb/>
Rev. Clarence Rivers wants to<lb/>
pump life and music into Roman<lb/>
Catholic services, which he says<lb/>
have become boring rituals that<lb/>
parishioners endure rather than<lb/>
enjoy.<lb/>
"What's wrong with enjoy?<lb/>
It's a perfectly good word he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
One ot two blacks among<lb/>
about 250 priests in the Archdio-<lb/>
cese of Cincinnati. Rivers said he<lb/>
seeks to inject some oi the livelier<lb/>
feeling and music of black<lb/>
churches into the celebration of<lb/>
Mass<lb/>
A liturgist. musician, drama-<lb/>
tist, lecturer and teacher of Eng-<lb/>
lish literature, he emphasized that<lb/>
he is not advocating doing away<lb/>
with traditional Catholic rituals.<lb/>
"I'm not an anti-traditional-<lb/>
ist Rivers said in an interview.<lb/>
"I'd keep everything A demon<lb/>
strative man with an easy laugh,<lb/>
he added<lb/>
"1 trv to ep'tin to people, it<lb/>
you're not entertained, you're<lb/>
Wired. To entertain them doesn't<lb/>
mean you're standing on your<lb/>
head, spitting, nickels<lb/>
"Where 1 was first ordained, I<lb/>
noticed that ushers were the<lb/>
greatest watch-watchers in the<lb/>
world. If the service was longer<lb/>
than it was supposed to be, the<lb/>
ushers were the first in the congre-<lb/>
gation to go (look at their wrist-<lb/>
watches)<lb/>
"They don't do that at a ball-<lb/>
game. If it goes 14 innings, they<lb/>
don't get up and say, 'It was only<lb/>
supposed to go nine innings<lb/>
The bearded priest, clad on a<lb/>
hot day in shorts, unbuttoned<lb/>
shirt and high-top sneakers, has<lb/>
founded a non-profit organiza-<lb/>
tion called Stimuli, based in his<lb/>
home, to push his efforts to enli-<lb/>
ven church services.<lb/>
A veteran of 10 years as a<lb/>
parish priest after his ordination<lb/>
in 1956, he no longer is assigned to<lb/>
a parish, but is financially sup-<lb/>
ported by the archdiocese - al-<lb/>
though not totheextenthewould<lb/>
like.<lb/>
Rivers, 56, who also has pur-<lb/>
sued studies in Europe, said the<lb/>
black communit) has something<lb/>
to co ntribute to worship services<lb/>
in what he refers to as "the Euro-<lb/>
pean church In a 1987interview,<lb/>
he told The Community News, an<lb/>
inner-city neighborhood news-<lb/>
paper in Washington, D.C<lb/>
"I am interested in transport-<lb/>
ing to the Catholic Church some<lb/>
small part of the black spirit. The<lb/>
Catholic Church has good rituals<lb/>
and ceremonies, but they are done<lb/>
without style, without beauty and<lb/>
without grace<lb/>
"In the Western world the<lb/>
word 'churchv'meansdcad,butif<lb/>
blacks say 'we had church' it<lb/>
means they could have parried all<lb/>
night long<lb/>
Rivers, a native of Selma,<lb/>
Ala moved to Cincinnati as a<lb/>
child and stayed. He was or-<lb/>
dained there in 1956 and has since<lb/>
traveled widely to study, lecture,<lb/>
and produce and oversee plays<lb/>
and musical presentations.<lb/>
His credits include founding<lb/>
and directing a theater companv<lb/>
that specialized in Shakespeare.<lb/>
He said the clergy needs to<lb/>
learn techniques of acting to con-<lb/>
vey messages to the congregation<lb/>
while entertaining them and<lb/>
holding their attention. He said<lb/>
that message wasn't lost on the<lb/>
ancient Greeks, whose dramas<lb/>
that formed a foundation for<lb/>
today's theater took on the fervor<lb/>
o( religion.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the clergv is<lb/>
not often trained in the perform-<lb/>
ing arts, Rivers said.<lb/>
"You'd probably do much<lb/>
better if you got a Hollywood<lb/>
producer who knew about wor-<lb/>
ship he said. "People don't real-<lb/>
ize that worship drama. It's verv<lb/>
difficult for people to accept<lb/>
that<lb/>
Rivers proposes to instruct<lb/>
the clergy in acting and drama as<lb/>
well as enlivening worship music.<lb/>
He said he is disappointed<lb/>
that the archdiocese has not f man<lb/>
daily supported his ideas to liven<lb/>
up the Mass. Rivers said a 1 lolly-<lb/>
wood agent once asked him to<lb/>
come to I.os Angeles and market<lb/>
his ideas in search of support 1 le<lb/>
said he turned dov n the proposal<lb/>
out of loyalty to the archdiocese<lb/>
The Rev. Ted Kosse, a spokes-<lb/>
man for the Archdiocese oi Cin-<lb/>
cinnati, said the archdiocese sup<lb/>
ports and appreciates the work of<lb/>
Rivers.<lb/>
"I le basically wants to go full<lb/>
steam ahead in his enterprise ef-<lb/>
forts, and we're not in a position<lb/>
to fund him as fully as he would<lb/>
like Kosse slid.<lb/>
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Britain, Iran restore relations<lb/>
UNITED NATION'S (AD -<lb/>
Britain's foreign secretary says he<lb/>
will meet Iran's foreign inminstcr<lb/>
this week to discuss restoring<lb/>
diplomatic ties between the two<lb/>
nations after a year of chilly rela-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"Certainly we are seeking<lb/>
normal relations Sir Geoffrey<lb/>
Howe told reporters Tuesday.<lb/>
' That is one oi the purposes of the<lb/>
meeting" with Iranian Foreign<lb/>
Minister AH Akbar Velayati, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
When asked if he might an-<lb/>
nounce restoration of relations<lb/>
after the meeting, Howe smiled<lb/>
arid replied: "Watch this space<lb/>
Officials at the British Foreign<lb/>
Office in London said the meeting<lb/>
would be held Friday at U.N.<lb/>
headquarters in New York.<lb/>
In New York, U.S. Secretary<lb/>
oi State George Shultz said Tues-<lb/>
day that U.S. diplomats have no<lb/>
plans to meet with Iranian envoys<lb/>
in the city for the 43rd U.N. Gen-<lb/>
eral Assembly.<lb/>
Last week, Britain's Foreign<lb/>
Office said other likely topics of<lb/>
discussion between Howe and<lb/>
Velayati include the fate oi Brit-<lb/>
ons missing in Lebanon and U.N.<lb/>
efforts to end the 8-year-old Iran-<lb/>
Iraq war.<lb/>
A Foreign Office spokesman,<lb/>
speaking on condition of ano-<lb/>
nymity, said Britain would main-<lb/>
tain its policy of not negotiating<lb/>
for the release of hostages.<lb/>
The missing Britons include<lb/>
Anglican Church envoy Terry<lb/>
VVaite, journalist John McCarthy,<lb/>
and teacher Brian Kccnan who is<lb/>
also an Irish national. All arc be-<lb/>
lieved held by pro-Iranian Shiite<lb/>
Moslem extremists, although no<lb/>
claim of responsibility has been<lb/>
made for Waite's disappearance.<lb/>
Britain withdrew its embassy<lb/>
staff from Tehran last year after an<lb/>
Iranian diplomat was arrested on<lb/>
shoplifting charges in Britain and<lb/>
after Iranian militants beat a Brit-<lb/>
ish diplomat in Tehran, the Ira-<lb/>
nian capital<lb/>
But British-Iranian relations<lb/>
have thawed with Iran making<lb/>
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Western nations alter agreeing to<lb/>
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sian Gulf War. London sent a Brit-<lb/>
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for three weeks in August.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058099_0010"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6. 1088 9<lb/>
OUBLE<lb/>
OUPON<lb/>
AVINGS<lb/>
On Manufacturer s<lb/>
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Store For Details!<lb/>
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ge<lb/>
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fponsible For Typographical Errors.<lb/>
Blvd.<lb/>
100 a.m12 Midnight<lb/>
Reverend wants to spice-up church<lb/>
i<lb/>
CINCINNATI (AP) - The<lb/>
Rev. Clarence Rivers wants to<lb/>
pump life and music into Roman<lb/>
Catholic services, which he says<lb/>
have become boring rituals that<lb/>
parishioners endure rather than<lb/>
enjoy.<lb/>
"What's wrong with enjoy?<lb/>
It's a perfectly good word he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
One of two blacks among<lb/>
about 250 priests in the Archdio-<lb/>
cese of Cincinnati, Rivers said he<lb/>
seeks to inject some of the livelier<lb/>
feeling and music of black<lb/>
churches into the celebration of<lb/>
Mass.<lb/>
A liturgist, musician, drama-<lb/>
tist, lecturer and teacher of Eng-<lb/>
lish literature, he emphasized that<lb/>
he is not advocating doing away<lb/>
with traditional Catholic rituals.<lb/>
"I'm not an anti-traditional-<lb/>
ist Rivers said in an interview.<lb/>
"I'd keep everything A demon-<lb/>
strative man with an easy laugh,<lb/>
he added:<lb/>
"1 try to explain to people, if<lb/>
you're not entertained, you're<lb/>
bored. To entertain them doesn't<lb/>
mean you're standing on your<lb/>
head, spitting nickels<lb/>
"Where I was first ordained, I<lb/>
noticed that ushers were the<lb/>
greatest watch-watchers in the<lb/>
world. If the service was longer<lb/>
than it was supposed to be, the<lb/>
ushers were the first in the congre-<lb/>
gation to go (look at their wrist-<lb/>
watches)<lb/>
"They don't do that at a ball-<lb/>
game. If it goes 14 innings, they<lb/>
don't get up and say, 'It was only<lb/>
supposed to go nine innings<lb/>
The bearded priest, clad on a<lb/>
hot day in shorts, unbuttoned<lb/>
shirt and high-top sneakers, has<lb/>
founded a non-profit organiza-<lb/>
tion called Stimuli, based in his<lb/>
home, to push his efforts to enli-<lb/>
ven church services.<lb/>
A veteran of 10 years as a<lb/>
parish priest after his ordination<lb/>
in 1956, he no longer is assigned to<lb/>
a parish, but is financially sup-<lb/>
ported by the archdiocese - al-<lb/>
though not to the extent he would<lb/>
like.<lb/>
Rivers, 56, who also has pur-<lb/>
sued studies in Europe, said the<lb/>
black community has something<lb/>
to co ntribute to worship services<lb/>
in what he refers to as "the Euro-<lb/>
pean church In a 1987 interview,<lb/>
he told The Community News, an<lb/>
inner-city neighborhood news-<lb/>
paper in Washington, D.C<lb/>
"I am interested in transport-<lb/>
ing to the Catholic Church some<lb/>
small part of the black spirit. The<lb/>
Catholic Church has good rituals<lb/>
and ceremonies, but they are done<lb/>
without style, without beauty and<lb/>
without grace<lb/>
"In the Western world the<lb/>
word 'churchy' means dead, but if<lb/>
blacks say 'we had church' it<lb/>
means they could have partied all<lb/>
night long<lb/>
Rivers, a native of Selma,<lb/>
Ala moved to Cincinnati as a<lb/>
child and stayed. He was or-<lb/>
dained there in 1956 and has since<lb/>
traveled widely to study, lecture,<lb/>
and produce and oversee plays<lb/>
and musical presentations.<lb/>
His credits include founding<lb/>
and directing a theater company<lb/>
that specialized in Shakespeare.<lb/>
He said the clergy needs to<lb/>
learn techniques of acting to con-<lb/>
vey messages to the congregation<lb/>
while entertaining them and<lb/>
holding their attention. He said<lb/>
that message wasn't lost on the<lb/>
ancient Greeks, whose dramas<lb/>
that formed a foundation for<lb/>
today's theater took on the fervor<lb/>
of religion.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the clergy is<lb/>
not often trained in the perform-<lb/>
ing arts, Rivers said.<lb/>
"You'd probably do much<lb/>
better if you got a Hollywood<lb/>
producer who knew about wor-<lb/>
ship he said. "People don't real-<lb/>
ize that worship drama. It's very<lb/>
difficult for people to accept<lb/>
that<lb/>
Rivers proposes to instruct<lb/>
the clergy in acting and drama as<lb/>
well as enlivening worship music.<lb/>
He said he is disappointed<lb/>
that the archdiocese has not finan-<lb/>
cially supported his ideas to liven<lb/>
up the Mass. Rivers said a Holly-<lb/>
wood agent once asked him to<lb/>
come to Los Angeles and market<lb/>
his ideas in search of support. He<lb/>
said he turned down the proposal<lb/>
out of loyalty to the archdiocese.<lb/>
The Rev. Ted Kosse, a spokes-<lb/>
man for the Archdiocese of Cin-<lb/>
cinnati, said the archdiocese sup-<lb/>
ports and appreciates the work of<lb/>
Rivers.<lb/>
"He basically wants to go full<lb/>
steam ahead in his enterprise ef-<lb/>
forts, and we're not in a position<lb/>
to fund him as fully as he would<lb/>
like Kosse said.<lb/>
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Britain, Iran restore relations<lb/>
Scott's<lb/>
tOTDOtrT<lb/>
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -<lb/>
Britain's foreign secretary says he<lb/>
will meet Iran's foreign mminstcr<lb/>
this week to discuss restoring<lb/>
diplomatic ties between the two<lb/>
nations after a year of chilly rela-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"Certainly we are seeking<lb/>
normal relations Sir Geoffrey<lb/>
Howe told reporters Tuesday.<lb/>
"That is one of the purposes of the<lb/>
meeting" with Iranian Foreign<lb/>
Minister Ali Akbar Velayati, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
When asked if he might an-<lb/>
nounce restoration of relations<lb/>
after the meeting, Howe smiled<lb/>
and replied: "Watch this space<lb/>
Officials at the British Foreign<lb/>
Office in London said the meeting<lb/>
would be held Friday at U.N.<lb/>
headquarters in New York.<lb/>
In New York, U.S. Secretary<lb/>
of State George Shultz said Tues-<lb/>
day that U.S. diplomats have no<lb/>
plans to meet with Iranian envoys<lb/>
in the city for the 43rd U.N. Gen-<lb/>
eral Assembly.<lb/>
Last week, Britain's Foreign<lb/>
Office said other likely topics of<lb/>
discussion between Howe and<lb/>
Velayati include the fate of Brit-<lb/>
ons missing in Lebanon and U.N.<lb/>
efforts to end the 8-year-old Iran-<lb/>
Iraq war.<lb/>
A Foreign Office spokesman,<lb/>
speaking on condition of ano-<lb/>
nymity, said Britain would main-<lb/>
tain its policy of not negotiating<lb/>
for the release of hostages.<lb/>
The missing Britons include<lb/>
Anglican Church envoy Terry<lb/>
Waite, journalist John McCarthy,<lb/>
and teacher Brian Kecnan who is<lb/>
also an Irish national. All are be-<lb/>
lieved held by pro-Iranian Shiite<lb/>
Moslem extremists, although no<lb/>
claim of responsibility has been<lb/>
made for Waite's disappearance.<lb/>
Britain withdrew its embassy<lb/>
staff from Tehran last year after an<lb/>
Iranian diplomat was arrested on<lb/>
shoplifting charges in Britain and<lb/>
after Iranian militants beat a Brit-<lb/>
ish diplomat in Tehran, the Ira-<lb/>
nian capital.<lb/>
But British-Iranian relations<lb/>
have thawed with Iran making<lb/>
overtures to Britain and other<lb/>
Western nations after agreeing to<lb/>
an August cease-fire in the Per-<lb/>
sian Gulf War. London sent a Brit-<lb/>
ish trade officer to Tehran's trade<lb/>
fair this month, and British diplo-<lb/>
mat David Redda way visited Iran<lb/>
for three weeks in August.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
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Buy Clothes,<lb/>
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With A Clothing<lb/>
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includes:<lb/>
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Special Available At Both Greenville Locations<lb/>
(East &amp; West Greenville Blvd.)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0011"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6. 1988<lb/>
PTL sells for $115 million<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, N.C (AD -<lb/>
PTL's trustee has accepted a $115<lb/>
million bid from a Canadian busi-<lb/>
nessman for the Christian<lb/>
ministry's assets, but the buyer,<lb/>
who is Jewish, hasn't said what he<lb/>
will do with the remnants of Jim<lb/>
Bakker's empire.<lb/>
The decision Tuesday came<lb/>
down to who ottered "the most<lb/>
money and the best terms said<lb/>
bankruptcy trustee M.C. "Red<lb/>
Ben ton.<lb/>
"I'd hoped we could get a bit<lb/>
more for it. But this is not a bad<lb/>
price s.ud Benton, who spent<lb/>
nearlv six months talking with<lb/>
bidders.<lb/>
One of them was Bakker, who<lb/>
nearly a month ago failed to se-<lb/>
cure the financing for his$172 mil-<lb/>
lion offer.<lb/>
Bakker gave a conditional<lb/>
blessing to the winning bid bv<lb/>
Stephen R. Mernick of Toronto,<lb/>
fammv and I remain<lb/>
committed to the restoration ot<lb/>
the ministry oi TTL, Bakker said<lb/>
in a statement. If the present offer<lb/>
is agreeable to the creditors, the<lb/>
partners I PR's major donors)<lb/>
and the court, and Cod's will is<lb/>
satisfied with respect to the minis-<lb/>
trv of PTL, we will be happy with<lb/>
that outcome<lb/>
Mernick, 34, will pay $50 mil-<lb/>
lion at closing, which the contract<lb/>
set at no later than Dec. 31, and the<lb/>
balance over five wars, said his<lb/>
attorney, Joseph Kluttz.<lb/>
If approved by a US Bank-<lb/>
ruptcy Court judge in Columbia.<lb/>
S.C, Mernick will own the 500-<lb/>
acre Heritage USA, a Christian<lb/>
retreat and theme park south oi<lb/>
Charlotte in York County, S.C;<lb/>
the PTL satellite TV network; and<lb/>
1,700 undeveloped acres in York<lb/>
County.<lb/>
PTL's religious functions<lb/>
have been separated from its<lb/>
other operations, and the 1 Ion<lb/>
tage USA Church is leasing back<lb/>
its facilities from PTL to continue<lb/>
on-site worship and Christian<lb/>
broadcasting.<lb/>
Mernick, an Orthodox Jew<lb/>
who was celebrating the holiday<lb/>
Simchat Torah, did not travel to<lb/>
Charlotte to attend Tuesday's<lb/>
new conference announcing the<lb/>
winning bid.<lb/>
Kluttz said Mernick has inter-<lb/>
ests in real estate, clothing, gar-<lb/>
bage collection and landfills.<lb/>
"His primary interest as a<lb/>
businessman is to get a maximum<lb/>
return on his investment Kluttz<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In a Sept. 15 letter to Benton,<lb/>
Mernick said he would welcome<lb/>
the opportunity to meet with rep-<lb/>
resentatives of any group or<lb/>
groups that are seriously inter-<lb/>
ested in exploring ways of pre-<lb/>
serving or enhancing the Chris-<lb/>
tian orientation of parts or all of<lb/>
the existing developed assets<lb/>
Gun control advocate, Carl Rowan is being<lb/>
tried on weapons violations, after shooting<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Syn-<lb/>
dicated columnist Carl T. Rowan.<lb/>
a longtime gun control advocate<lb/>
now being tried on weapons<lb/>
charges, says he thought the pistol<lb/>
he used to shoot a baekvard in-<lb/>
truder was exempt from local<lb/>
registration laws.<lb/>
Closing arguments were set<lb/>
to begin today in Rowan's trial on<lb/>
charges of using an unregistered<lb/>
handgun in the June 14 shooting<lb/>
oi a teen-ager who had taken an<lb/>
uninvited dip in the columnist's<lb/>
backyard swimming pool.<lb/>
It convicted of the misde-<lb/>
meanor charges, the 63-vear-old<lb/>
Rowan could ico up to two years<lb/>
in prison and a $2,000 fine.<lb/>
District of Columbia Superior<lb/>
Court Judge Arthur L. Burnett<lb/>
said Tuesday that jurv delibera-<lb/>
tions would begin immediatelv<lb/>
after prosecutors and defense<lb/>
lawyers finished summarizing<lb/>
their cases.<lb/>
Rowan told the jury on Tues-<lb/>
day that in 1982 his son, then an<lb/>
FBI agent, left the .22-caliber pis-<lb/>
tol in his father's bedroom after<lb/>
the columnist received death<lb/>
threats trom persons purporting<lb/>
to be members of the Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan.<lb/>
"I was getting a lot oi threats<lb/>
ifter Vernon Jordan (former head<lb/>
oi the National Urban League)<lb/>
was shot. They said, Tou're next,<lb/>
nigger Rowan testified.<lb/>
Rowan said his son was told<lb/>
by District police officials that he<lb/>
had a "blanket exemption" from<lb/>
the city's tough handgun registra-<lb/>
tion laws because he was a federal<lb/>
agent.<lb/>
He said police also told his<lb/>
son there would be no problem"<lb/>
if Rowan Sr. handled the weapon.<lb/>
Earlier, Rowan's son, Carl Jr<lb/>
testified that twice in 1982 and<lb/>
once when he was preparing to<lb/>
leave the FBI in 1983 he was told<lb/>
by police that he did not have to<lb/>
register weapons he had pur-<lb/>
chased tor personal use.<lb/>
After telling police that other<lb/>
members of his family might<lb/>
handle the weapon, "they told me<lb/>
that as long as it was where it<lb/>
lawfully should be, if others have<lb/>
Reynolds has said a firm bid<lb/>
must be submitted by Oct. 14 or<lb/>
he would order PTL's assets sold<lb/>
to pay creditors, who are esti-<lb/>
mated to be owed more than $130<lb/>
million. He is expected to hold a<lb/>
hearing on the bid in about a<lb/>
month.<lb/>
An assistant to Reynolds,<lb/>
Susanne Robiscek said the judge<lb/>
doesn't a have any comment" on<lb/>
J<lb/>
the offer.<lb/>
PTL has been in bankruptcy<lb/>
reorganization since June 1987.<lb/>
Three months earlier, Bakker re-<lb/>
signed after he admitted having a<lb/>
sexual encounter with Jessica<lb/>
Hahn in 1980 and disclosed that<lb/>
money was paid to silence the<lb/>
access to it, it isn't a problem<lb/>
Rowan Jr. testified.<lb/>
Rowan's attorney's have<lb/>
maintained that the columnist<lb/>
and his son were given inaccurate<lb/>
advice by members of the police<lb/>
department' s gun control unit<lb/>
about the city's gun registration<lb/>
policy, which stipulates that a<lb/>
weapon can be used only by its<lb/>
registered owner.<lb/>
Police Inspector James R. Lev,<lb/>
introduced by Rowan's attorney<lb/>
as an expert witness on gun regis-<lb/>
tration matters, said Tuesday that<lb/>
while Rowan broke the law by<lb/>
using the unregistered weapon,<lb/>
he should no! have been prose-<lb/>
cuted because he thought he was<lb/>
acting in self-defense.<lb/>
Detective Charles . Jones,<lb/>
who arrived at Rowan's house<lb/>
immediatelv after the June 14<lb/>
shooting, told thecourt that a slid-<lb/>
ing glass door at the rear of the<lb/>
house showed signs that someone<lb/>
had tried to force it open.<lb/>
However, Jones could not say<lb/>
when the door was damaeed<lb/>
Rowan has said he shot Ben-<lb/>
jamin Smith, 18, of Chevy Chase,<lb/>
Md because he was afraid Smith<lb/>
was trying to enter his house.<lb/>
Smith, who was shot in the wrist,<lb/>
has said he was trying to leave the<lb/>
property when Rowan shot him.<lb/>
Dining Comments from Bob<lb/>
"Go with the<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
and dinner at the Beef Barn. Opening at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. Sat Oct. 8 &amp; we'll be here late after the<lb/>
game. ECU &amp;: the Beef Bama winning<lb/>
tradition<lb/>
BEEF<lb/>
BARN<lb/>
Bob Simon<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
400 St. Andrews Dr. ? 756-1 Ibl<lb/>
Mrs.<lb/>
Mon. -Tlirus. 6-10 p.m.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sal. 6-10:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sun. 530-9 p.m.<lb/>
jffrr<lb/>
in:<lb/>
??1i<lb/>
4111<lb/>
???<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
On Greenville's Largest<lb/>
Wide Screen TV<lb/>
This Week<lb/>
New York Giants<lb/>
vs<lb/>
Philadelphia Eagles<lb/>
8:00 until<lb/>
Hot Dog Buffet 5-8<lb/>
Buffalo Wings 8-until<lb/>
$2.00 Pitchers<lb/>
Ramada Inn<lb/>
(Formerly Sheraton of Greenville)<lb/>
203 W. Greenville Blvd. ? 355-2666<lb/>
Aaron Grubncr, Mernick's<lb/>
attorney in Toronto, told The<lb/>
Charlotte Observer last month<lb/>
that Mernick wanted PTL because<lb/>
"it's a large tract of land, and I'm<lb/>
not sure those types of parcels are<lb/>
readily available<lb/>
Mernick, who entered the<lb/>
negotiations a month ago, outbid<lb/>
fellow Canadian Peter Thomas of<lb/>
Vancouver. Thomas offered $113<lb/>
million, $46 million of it in cash,<lb/>
but not all would have been pay-<lb/>
able until September 1989.<lb/>
By signing Mernick's con-<lb/>
tract, Benton agreed to stop nego-<lb/>
tiating with any other bidders and<lb/>
to file a motion with Bankruptcy<lb/>
Judge Rufus Reynolds recom-<lb/>
mending Mernick's offer by Fri-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Other bidders may still pres-<lb/>
ent offers directly to the court, but<lb/>
Benton said his recommendation<lb/>
gives Mernick the upper hand.<lb/>
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Micah do<lb/>
in psychi 1<lb/>
Bv NIK Vn ??<lb/>
A<lb/>
with <lb/>
her 2 Tht<lb/>
Through .1 smoke) Minges<lb/>
from! ngland played<lb/>
Fields, H<lb/>
B UUIMORP<lb/>
<lb/>
 c ai<lb/>
mated carl<lb/>
Kiysick wh is<lb/>
ield in th<lb/>
Punchline<lb/>
COMING<lb/>
IN<lb/>
I NTERTAINMEM<lb/>
Novoar<lb/>
Black Jack Susie -<lb/>
FrKin<lb/>
Helix, AM<lb/>
Blue Defender, New IV<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Ice Water Mansion<lb/>
Lennon Sisters and<lb/>
IheRutabeger Brother-<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0012"/><lb/>
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AT.<lb/>
3 PM<lb/>
5 11 oz. Sirloin<lb/>
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I HI I ASI I Rel INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
IH'IUMLK 1988 Pa?a<lb/>
?l SSERT BAR<lb/>
k Dinners<lb/>
S OK Y<lb/>
;dae<lb/>
Two thumbs up for 'Carnival<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
Auutant Folura Idnor<lb/>
TC8V<lb/>
i.tiis is a scene t<lb/>
 p laving a<lb/>
B lanton is seek<lb/>
! ove Photol<lb/>
torn "Carnival ECU<lb/>
t Mc( iinnis Theatre,<lb/>
ing Grobert, played b<lb/>
ab)<lb/>
Playhouse's curren<lb/>
Here, Lili, protra<lb/>
v Chris Brown. (Ph<lb/>
t production<lb/>
ed by Nina<lb/>
oto bv Mark<lb/>
Something about going to the<lb/>
theater is magical. Ot "Carnival"<lb/>
this is doubly so.<lb/>
Set in (what else?) a "Carni-<lb/>
val the musical follows the ex-<lb/>
periences and growth of a stun<lb/>
ningly beautiful small town girl,<lb/>
I ili (Nina Blanton), who comes to<lb/>
the C irque de Paris looking tor a<lb/>
friend of her recently deceased<lb/>
lather.<lb/>
Unfortunately tor the naive<lb/>
1 ill. her lather's friend turns out<lb/>
to be less help than she had hoped.<lb/>
lo make matters worse, the poor<lb/>
girl is spotted by the slick and<lb/>
opportunistic magi ian Man n<lb/>
the Magnificent (Jeffrey 1 largett),<lb/>
who dazzles her with tricks and<lb/>
invites her back to his trailer for a<lb/>
spot ot lunch.<lb/>
Fortunately for I ili (although<lb/>
she doesn't see it ,h particularly<lb/>
fortunate), she has also been spot<lb/>
ted by Paul Berthalet (Stuart<lb/>
Maxwell), a bitter ex-dancer<lb/>
turned puppeteer, who tries des<lb/>
peratelv to rescue her from<lb/>
Marco's clutches without reveal<lb/>
ing too mu h ol himself in the<lb/>
process.<lb/>
1 he greater portion ot the<lb/>
show hu usses on Paul's inner<lb/>
struggle as he tries to save Lili<lb/>
from Marco. Marco is more expe-<lb/>
rienced in wooing women, and he<lb/>
finds iteasy toattract Lili with his<lb/>
magic.<lb/>
Paul, on the other hand, finds<lb/>
that he cannot be as direct as the<lb/>
magician. He can use his own<lb/>
magic his delicate charm  in<lb/>
Lili only w hen deludes behind his<lb/>
puppets. When he confronts her<lb/>
face-to-face, he can show Lili<lb/>
nothing but lus rage and frustra-<lb/>
tion at his own inability to open<lb/>
up to her. She interprets his feel<lb/>
?ngs as anger towards her, and she<lb/>
sees him as a monster. In tact,<lb/>
without meaning to do so. Paul<lb/>
almost drives Lili out of Marco's<lb/>
arms and into those oi Paul's as-<lb/>
sistant facquoi (Billy Sharpe).<lb/>
Marco's assistant and oft be-<lb/>
trayed lover, Rosalie (Janice<lb/>
Schreiber), unwittingly helps<lb/>
Paul. She, too, has a stake in de<lb/>
fleeting Mano's attention away<lb/>
from the lovely Lili. (Incidentally,<lb/>
the hilarious scene between<lb/>
Rosalie and the quintessential<lb/>
ringleader Mr. Schlegel (Vandy<lb/>
Behr), in which the pair drink and<lb/>
sing to Marco's many mistresses,<lb/>
is worth the price of admission in<lb/>
itsell I<lb/>
I he major problem with a<lb/>
premise such as this is that it is too<lb/>
easy to take the "sitcom ap-<lb/>
proach to it to skim thesurface<lb/>
not to probe too deeply Happily,<lb/>
"( arnival ' avoids this trap It<lb/>
walks a treacherous tightrope<lb/>
without ever falling into the abyss<lb/>
ol predictable shallowness on on<lb/>
side or overblow n tearjerking on<lb/>
theother It retains the semi mys-<lb/>
tical atmosphere ol a v arnival<lb/>
and combines it with deeply<lb/>
moving human drama<lb/>
Some of the best moments in<lb/>
the play are those in w hich Mavis<lb/>
Ray's skillful choreography<lb/>
See NOT, page 12<lb/>
Micah does alien rental flicks review<lb/>
in psyching - up for Halloween<lb/>
IUI PI I Sl"F<lb/>
I I HI (iULT.<lb/>
TC8V"<lb/>
Bv MIC All HARRIS<lb/>
we? n arounci the<lb/>
nsumers ma<lb/>
? ie mam spa e<lb/>
 available.<lb/>
g v 1 se en ounters<lb/>
I iti ? ? ?n Octo<lb/>
ioimih to Hallow-<lb/>
een seems appropriate when you War of the' Worlds'<lb/>
consider the tradition of alien C .eorge Pals beautifully crafted<lb/>
invasion via mass media begun film seems dated today, but that's<lb/>
by Orson Welles' "War ol the hardly a fair criticism. However,<lb/>
Worlds" broadcast. it's hardh excuse fo the hokey,<lb/>
1 lalloween became as mut h a single1 glimpse ol the aliens we're<lb/>
night when aliens slither over the given. I hey are lcsseffe ti e than<lb/>
earth as the ghouls. You can celc- their battleships that float<lb/>
brate the event by checking out through the skies with the malign<lb/>
the video versions tor the misad- mem ot aerial sharks.<lb/>
aliens less benign The ships design crackle<lb/>
than<lb/>
swee<lb/>
tol' E.T<lb/>
l i STADIUM CUP<lb/>
dse or am sundae <lb/>
HOBS<lb/>
et<lb/>
IDMONDA<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
h<lb/>
J)<lb/>
WESTIES<lb/>
Id c ofi<lb/>
 i<lb/>
PL MI'S<lb/>
PI ZIO<lb/>
Ol i<lb/>
IORDS '<lb/>
See INVADERS, page 12 More scenes from theECU's Playhouse latest production, "Carnival (Photo by Mark 1 eve -Photolab)<lb/>
UB40 reggaesMinges<lb/>
ByJEl I GIBSON<lb/>
Stiff Writci<lb/>
1 hrough a smokey Minges stage, LB40 shines. Feeding the crowd's appetite for Reggae, this 12-some<lb/>
froml ngland played in Greenville Monday. (Photo By Mark Love? Photolab)<lb/>
Fields, Hanks line up the punches<lb/>
Bv AI 1C IA I OR1)<lb/>
Sufi Vntp<lb/>
ill (iod sown ani-<lb/>
i i arto? ins insists l.ilah<lb/>
a '??? is portrayed by<lb/>
i ield in the new mo ie<lb/>
i hline<lb/>
VSUAI S ? , <lb/>
J IP<lb/>
COMING 1 ll ERTAINMENT<lb/>
1 hursday<lb/>
1 ampaign, Attic Black a k, Susie's<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
f h lix, Attic Blu - 1 H'tendeT, New 1 oll<lb/>
? rday.<lb/>
1. i W ate-r Mansion 1 ennon Sisters and the Rutabeger Brothers. New I eh<lb/>
"Punchline" was presented<lb/>
by TheStudcnt Union on Tuesday<lb/>
night. Even after sitting on the<lb/>
floor tor two hours, watching this<lb/>
movie from an extreme angle and<lb/>
straining to hear it over the<lb/>
packed house in 1 lendrixTheatre,<lb/>
1 was still able to thoroughly enjoy<lb/>
it.<lb/>
"Punchline" is a film about<lb/>
two wanta - be comedians who<lb/>
pel form nightly at a New York<lb/>
(lub called The (ias Station.<lb/>
I om 1 lanks, Sally Field and<lb/>
flu- other twenty or so comics in<lb/>
the movie- had everyone in the<lb/>
audience laughing out loud.<lb/>
Lilah Krysick is the mother<lb/>
ot three-children who, against her<lb/>
family's wishes, performs nightly<lb/>
at comedy house. She wants so<lb/>
desperately to be funny that she<lb/>
secretly spends $500of the house-<lb/>
hold cookie jar money on some<lb/>
really bad jokes. After she realizes<lb/>
she has wasted the money and the<lb/>
jokes bomb on stage, she tries to<lb/>
enlist Tom I kinks' character into<lb/>
giving her a few pointers on how<lb/>
to be- a better comedian.<lb/>
Everyone agrees that<lb/>
1 kinks' character, Steven Cold, is<lb/>
the best comic at the club. After<lb/>
flunking out of medical school<lb/>
without the knowledge oi his fa-<lb/>
ther (a heart surgeon), he spends<lb/>
all ol his time performing and<lb/>
perfecting his routine. The reason<lb/>
that Cold is such a successful<lb/>
comedian is that he is able to<lb/>
apply his jokes to the audience<lb/>
and the situation.<lb/>
After he teaches Krysick<lb/>
that everyone has the potential to<lb/>
be funny, she is able to overcome<lb/>
her insecurities and use- her own<lb/>
life as a housewife and a mother.<lb/>
She starts making up her own<lb/>
material and becomes a sue cess at<lb/>
The Gas Station.<lb/>
In fact, she gets a little too<lb/>
good, maybe even better than<lb/>
Gold himself.<lb/>
Tom 1 lanks deserves the<lb/>
real credit for the best portrayal of<lb/>
the life oi a lonely comedian 1 Ie<lb/>
makes Cold more realistic by<lb/>
showing how he uses humor to<lb/>
hide his real feelings. He falls in<lb/>
love with Lilah and after she fi-<lb/>
nally convinces him that she re-<lb/>
ally loves her husband , he makes<lb/>
up jokes to try and hide the pain.<lb/>
In one scene Cold's father<lb/>
and brother show up at the club<lb/>
unexpectedly, just before Gold is<lb/>
getting ready to perform. He is<lb/>
overcome with fear and the audi-<lb/>
ence senses this. 1 le tries too hard<lb/>
See PUNCHLINE, page 12<lb/>
It there ever was a night to<lb/>
forget about the drudgery of<lb/>
homework and studying and ust<lb/>
enjoy life, it was Monday night.<lb/>
Why? Answer: UB40wasintown.<lb/>
Playing their unique sound ol<lb/>
reggae in Minges Coliseum,<lb/>
I 'B40. in their firsl Greenville gig,<lb/>
more than satisfied the swaying-<lb/>
to-the-beat crowd.<lb/>
By 9:30 p.m the white lights<lb/>
shone on the smoke-filled stage.<lb/>
And the stage came alive with the<lb/>
sounds oi UB40.<lb/>
Along with a good show of<lb/>
reggae, IB40 brought with them a<lb/>
great production which consisted<lb/>
oi a three level stage, an adequate<lb/>
light show and ot coursea reeling-<lb/>
12-member band.<lb/>
As expected, UB40 played all<lb/>
oi their popular hits such as "Red<lb/>
Red Wine" and "Rat in the<lb/>
Kitchen" and "Maybe Tomor-<lb/>
row" which is a single they re-<lb/>
corded in ihc United Kingdom.<lb/>
In "Sing Our Own Song off<lb/>
their 1986 album "Rat in the<lb/>
Kitchen UB40 demonstrated<lb/>
they seek to end apartheid in<lb/>
South Africa. "Sing Our Own<lb/>
Song" is dedicated to the black<lb/>
South Africans population who<lb/>
have seen their leaders jailed and<lb/>
their human rights disregarded.<lb/>
Singer Norman Lamont Has-<lb/>
san stopped during the song to<lb/>
explain two key words in the lv r-<lb/>
ics, "Amandla Awethu the Afri-<lb/>
can words which mean the<lb/>
"people are the power<lb/>
The three-level stage was one<lb/>
of the largest stages Minges has<lb/>
ever set up for a band. C n the top<lb/>
level, a fantastic three-member<lb/>
hom section consisting of trum-<lb/>
peter, saxaphone player and<lb/>
trombone player, played in con-<lb/>
stant choreographed motion<lb/>
throughout the show.<lb/>
Although the lighting equip-<lb/>
ment was not elaborate, the tim-<lb/>
ing oi lights added to the show's<lb/>
effect. The light show especially<lb/>
shined during "Red Red Wine<lb/>
Everytime the chorus of "Red Red<lb/>
Wine" came up, Minges was lit up<lb/>
with bright red lights enabling<lb/>
everyone to be seen.<lb/>
A crowd of about 2,000<lb/>
people attended the concert spon-<lb/>
sored by Major Concerts Commit-<lb/>
tee. 1 lowever, ECU student turn-<lb/>
out could n't be compared to the<lb/>
estatic high school fans. Although<lb/>
the crowd was young in age. ev-<lb/>
eryone seemed to enjoy the show<lb/>
which was ev ident from the con-<lb/>
stant dancing that occurred<lb/>
throughout the show.<lb/>
One possible reason for ECU<lb/>
attendance being so lax could<lb/>
have been because W ZMB wasoff<lb/>
the air tor a week before the con-<lb/>
cert and wasn't able to promote<lb/>
the show as much a the station<lb/>
wanted.<lb/>
I B40 played for about 1 hour<lb/>
and V minutes including a juic-<lb/>
ing three song encore.<lb/>
In opening tor UB40, Velvet<lb/>
Elvis made their Greenville de-<lb/>
bute. Velvet FK is. a four-member<lb/>
band from Lexington Kentucky<lb/>
has a definite progressive sound.<lb/>
After experiencing problems<lb/>
with the public announce system,<lb/>
Velvet Elvis tore through some<lb/>
meat) originals. Most of the songs<lb/>
Velvet Elvis played can be found<lb/>
on their album 100Proof, which is<lb/>
produced by Mitch Faster.<lb/>
Easter has produced bands<lb/>
Let's Active. RFM, and Pon<lb/>
Dixon. If you like Velvet Elvis or<lb/>
would like to know more about<lb/>
them, tune in to ECl 's radio sta-<lb/>
tion WZMB. Velvet Elvis songs to<lb/>
be request are Something Hap-<lb/>
pened Todav "Privilege and<lb/>
Ambition, all ot which can be<lb/>
found on their new release-<lb/>
Elvis is undisputedly dead<lb/>
HENDERSONVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
(AP) - Evangelist Rick Stanley,<lb/>
Elvis Presley's step-brother, savs<lb/>
Elvis is unequivocally and unde-<lb/>
niably dead.<lb/>
"I know Elvis isdead. There is<lb/>
no belief about it the34-year-old<lb/>
Southern Baptist evangelist said<lb/>
Sunday in 1 lendersonville.<lb/>
"I was there when they rolled<lb/>
him over on the carpet and he had<lb/>
been dead tor six hours; rigor<lb/>
mortis (had) set in he said.<lb/>
But Stanley said recent car-<lb/>
toons and television shows de-<lb/>
picting Elvis as alive don't bother<lb/>
him.<lb/>
'I'm used to it   Stanley<lb/>
told the Hendersonville Times-<lb/>
News.<lb/>
"People don't want to let go of<lb/>
the memory oi Elvis Stanley<lb/>
grew up at the Craceland Man-<lb/>
sion in Memphis, Tenn after his<lb/>
mother married Elvis' father,<lb/>
Vernon Presley.<lb/>
1 le said the recently released<lb/>
book, Is Elvis Alive? by Gail<lb/>
Brewer-Giorgio has embarrassed<lb/>
and hurt him.<lb/>
1 thought of getting in touch<lb/>
with the host lawv ers in the coun-<lb/>
trv and suing her tor mental an-<lb/>
guish Stanley said, adding that<lb/>
he decided it would just help her<lb/>
sell more books. "1 don't think<lb/>
much ot her 1 wish she'd stop and<lb/>
think. It's a drag for me<lb/>
Perry Coino is still alive<lb/>
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)-<lb/>
Perrv Corrto savs the awful<lb/>
novelty songs" that his concert<lb/>
audiences still demand have been<lb/>
haunting him since the 1930s,<lb/>
w hen he sang with led Weem's<lb/>
big band.<lb/>
"Me and Sinatra and all the<lb/>
rest oi the singers used to talk<lb/>
about all the crap we had to sing<lb/>
Como said.<lb/>
Corrto, 76, said he still winces<lb/>
when performing such million-<lb/>
selling hits as "Papa 1 ove<lb/>
Mambo" and "Don't I et the Stars<lb/>
Get in t our Eyes<lb/>
A Hubba-Hubba-Hubba'<lb/>
was another sick one and another<lb/>
gold record said Como, who<lb/>
performs this week at Rally's<lb/>
Grand 1 lotel md Casino.<lb/>
'1 still do them onstage once<lb/>
in a while because the audience<lb/>
wants it. but I say Vech' after-<lb/>
wards<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0013"/><lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
PECIAL<lb/>
SAT.<lb/>
3 PM<lb/>
5 11 oz. Sirloin<lb/>
otato Bar<lb/>
undae Bar<lb/>
3.49<lb/>
REE DESSERT BAR<lb/>
1th AH Steak Dinners<lb/>
TAKE-OUTS OKAY<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
OCTOBER 6, 1988 Page 11<lb/>
VDAE<lb/>
EK.<lb/>
Two thumbs up for 'Carnival<lb/>
TCBV<lb/>
? he taste I<lb/>
? n hall<lb/>
,nd; - fat-free. Add<lb/>
 nuts, sprinkles<lb/>
rithi gai Ided, or<lb/>
r nvtnine . I - ise.<lb/>
All Off PLEASURE.<lb/>
None of the am<lb/>
TC8V,f<lb/>
This is a scene from "Carnival ECU Playhouse's current production<lb/>
now playing at McGinnis Theatre. Here, Lili, protrayed by Nina<lb/>
Blanton is seeking Crobert, played by Chris Brown. (Photo by Mark<lb/>
Love ? Photolab)<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
Asi-t.int features KJilur<lb/>
Something about going to the<lb/>
theater is magical. Of "Carnival"<lb/>
this is doubly so.<lb/>
Set in (what else?) a "Carni-<lb/>
val the musical follows the ex-<lb/>
periences and growth of a stun-<lb/>
ningly beautiful small-town girl,<lb/>
Lili (Nina Blanton), who comes to<lb/>
the Cirque dc Paris looking for a<lb/>
friend oi her recently-deceased<lb/>
father.<lb/>
Unfortunately for the naive<lb/>
Lili, her father's friend turns out<lb/>
to be less help than she had hoped.<lb/>
To make matters worse, the poor<lb/>
girl is spotted by the slick and<lb/>
opportunistic magician Marco<lb/>
the Magnificent (Jeffrey 1 largett),<lb/>
who dazzles her with tricks and<lb/>
invites her back to his trailer for a<lb/>
spot oi lunch.<lb/>
Fortunately for Lili (although<lb/>
she doesn't see it as particularly<lb/>
fortunate), she has also been spot-<lb/>
ted by Paul Berthalet (Stuart<lb/>
Maxwell), a bitter ex-dancer<lb/>
turned puppeteer, who tries des-<lb/>
perately to rescue her from<lb/>
Marco's dutches without reveal-<lb/>
ing too much of himself in the<lb/>
process.<lb/>
The greater portion of the<lb/>
show focusses on Paul's inner<lb/>
struggle as he tries to save Lili<lb/>
from Marco. Marco is more expe-<lb/>
rienced in wooing women, and he<lb/>
finds it easy to attract Lili with his<lb/>
magic.<lb/>
Paul, on the other hand, finds<lb/>
that he cannot be as direct as the<lb/>
magician. He can use his own<lb/>
magic - his delicate charm  on<lb/>
Lili only when he hides behind his<lb/>
puppets. When he confronts her<lb/>
face-to-face, he can show Lili<lb/>
nothing but his rage and frustra-<lb/>
tion at his own inability to open<lb/>
up to her. She interprets his feel-<lb/>
ings asanger towards her,and she<lb/>
sees him as a monster. In fact,<lb/>
without meaning to do so, Paul<lb/>
almost drives Lili out of Marco's<lb/>
arms and into those of Paul's as-<lb/>
sistant jacquot (Billy Sharpe).<lb/>
Marco's assistant and oft-be-<lb/>
trayed lover, Rosalie (Janice<lb/>
Schreibcr), unwittingly helps<lb/>
Paul. She, too, has a stake in de-<lb/>
flecting Marco's attention away<lb/>
from the lovely Lili. (Incidentally,<lb/>
the hilarious scene between<lb/>
Rosalie and the quintessential<lb/>
ringleader Mr. Schlegel (Vandy<lb/>
Behr), in which the pair drink and<lb/>
sing to Marco's many mistresses,<lb/>
is worth the price of admission in<lb/>
itself.)<lb/>
The major problem with a<lb/>
premise such as this is that it is too<lb/>
easy to take the "sitcom" ap-<lb/>
proach to it ? to skim the surface;<lb/>
not to probe too deeply. Happily,<lb/>
"Carnival" avoids this trap. It<lb/>
walks a treacherous tightrope<lb/>
without ever falling into the abyss<lb/>
of predictable shallowncss on on<lb/>
side or overblown tearjerking on<lb/>
the other. It retains the semi-mys-<lb/>
tical atmosphere of a "Carnival"<lb/>
and combines it with deeply<lb/>
moving human drama.<lb/>
Some of the best moments in<lb/>
the play are those in which Mavis<lb/>
Ray's skillful choreographv<lb/>
See NOT, page 12<lb/>
? ?'<lb/>
Iht i, unity Hii )<lb/>
? . ? v.<lb/>
Micah does alien rental flicks review<lb/>
in psyching - up for Halloween<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
With 1 lalloween around the<lb/>
er, video consumers may<lb/>
want to look into the many space<lb/>
creature flicks now available.<lb/>
Let's look at a few.<lb/>
IT. - the Extra-Terrestrial"<lb/>
will be making close encounters<lb/>
with ideo store patrons on Octo-<lb/>
ber 27. The proximity to 1 lallow-<lb/>
een seems appropriate when you "War of the Worlds" ?<lb/>
consider the tradition of alien George Pal's beautifully crafted<lb/>
invasion via mass media begun film seems dated today, but that's<lb/>
by Orson Welles' "War of the hardly a fair criticism. However,<lb/>
Worlds broadcast. it's hardly excuse fo the hokey,<lb/>
I lalloween became as much a single glimpse oi the aliens we're<lb/>
night when aliens slither over the given. They are less effective than<lb/>
earth as the ghouls. You can cele- their battleships that float<lb/>
brate the event by checking out through the skies with the malign<lb/>
the video versions for the misad- mein of aerial sharks,<lb/>
ventures of aliens less benign The ship's design crackles<lb/>
than sweet ol' E.T. See INVADERS, page 12<lb/>
i STADIUM CLP<lb/>
tase of any sundae<lb/>
ersort per visit per order<lb/>
ffer expires ? ? ber 14 191<lb/>
H0?$<lb/>
:et<lb/>
D MONDAY<lb/>
er the great 1<lb/>
DOM W<lb/>
? TIRE STOCK I I<lb/>
WESTIES W<lb/>
25<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
MFC SUGG.<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 x<lb/>
? <lb/>
IA ROUP<lb/>
S PUMPS<lb/>
IAPEZIO<lb/>
7f OFF<lb/>
M<lb/>
3<lb/>
More scenes from the ECU'S Playhouse latest production, "Carnival (Photo by Mark Love ? Photolab)<lb/>
UB40 reggaes Minges<lb/>
By JEFF GIBSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Through a smokey Minges stage, UB40 shines. Feeding the crowd's appetite for Reggae, this 12-some<lb/>
fromEngland played in Greenville Monday. (Photo By Mark Love ? Photolab)<lb/>
Fields, Hanks line up the punches<lb/>
By ALICIA FORD<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
"We are all God's own ani-<lb/>
mated cartoons insists Lilah<lb/>
Krvsick, who is portrayed by<lb/>
Sally Field in the new movie<lb/>
"Punchline<lb/>
COMING<lb/>
IN<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Movo Campaign, Attic<lb/>
Black jack, Susie's<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Helix, Attic<lb/>
HIues Defender, New Deli<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Ice Water Mansion<lb/>
Lennon Sisters and<lb/>
the Rutabeger Brothers,<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
"Punchline" was presented<lb/>
by The Student Union on Tuesday<lb/>
night. Even after sitting on the<lb/>
floor for two hours, watching this<lb/>
movie from an extreme angle and<lb/>
straining to hear it over the<lb/>
packed house in Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
I was still able to thoroughly enjoy<lb/>
it.<lb/>
"Punchline" is a film about<lb/>
two wanta - be comedians who<lb/>
perform nightly at a New York<lb/>
club called The Gas Station.<lb/>
Tom Hanks, Sally Field and<lb/>
the other twenty or so comics in<lb/>
the movie had everyone in the<lb/>
'dience laughing out loud.<lb/>
Lilah Krysick is the mother<lb/>
ot thr e children who, against her<lb/>
family's wishes, performs nightly<lb/>
at comedy house. She wants so<lb/>
desperately to be funny that she<lb/>
secretly spends $500 of the house-<lb/>
hold cookie jar money on some<lb/>
really bad jokes. After she realizes<lb/>
she has wasted the money and the<lb/>
jokes bomb on stage, she tries to<lb/>
enlist Tom Hanks' character into<lb/>
giving her a few pointers on how<lb/>
to be a better comedian.<lb/>
Everyone agrees that<lb/>
Hanks' character, Steven Gold, is<lb/>
the best comic at the club. After<lb/>
flunking out of medical school<lb/>
without the knowledge of his fa-<lb/>
ther (a heart surgeon), he spends<lb/>
all of his time performing and<lb/>
perfecting his routine. The reason<lb/>
that Gold is such a successful<lb/>
comedian is that he is able to<lb/>
apply his jokes to the audience<lb/>
and the situation.<lb/>
After he teaches Krysick<lb/>
that everyone has the potential to<lb/>
be funny, she is able to overcome<lb/>
her insecurities and use her own<lb/>
life as a housewife and a mother.<lb/>
She starts making up her own<lb/>
material and becomes a success at<lb/>
The Gas Station.<lb/>
In fact, she gets a little too<lb/>
good, maybe even better than<lb/>
Gold himself.<lb/>
Tom Hanks deserves the<lb/>
real credit for the best portrayal of<lb/>
the life of a lonely comedian. He<lb/>
makes Gold more realistic by<lb/>
showing how he uses humor to<lb/>
hide his real feelings. He falls in<lb/>
love with Lilah and after she fi-<lb/>
nally convinces him that she re-<lb/>
ally loves her husband, he makes<lb/>
up jokes to try and hide the pain.<lb/>
In one scene Gold's father<lb/>
and brother show up at the club<lb/>
unexpectedly, just before Gold is<lb/>
getting ready to perform. He is<lb/>
overcome with fear and the audi-<lb/>
ence senses this. He tries too hard<lb/>
See PUNCHLINE, page 12<lb/>
If there ever was a night to<lb/>
forget about the drudgerv of<lb/>
homework and studying and just<lb/>
enjoy life, it was Monday night.<lb/>
Why? Answer: UB40 was in town.<lb/>
Playing their unique sound of<lb/>
reggae in Minges Coliseum,<lb/>
UB40, in their first Greenville gig,<lb/>
more than satisfied the swaying-<lb/>
to-the-beat crowd.<lb/>
By 9:30 p.m the white lights<lb/>
shone on the smoke-filled stage.<lb/>
And the stage came alive with the<lb/>
sounds of UB40.<lb/>
Along with a good show of<lb/>
reggae, UB40 brought with them a<lb/>
great production which consisted<lb/>
of a three level stage, an adequate<lb/>
light show and of course a reeling-<lb/>
s-member band.<lb/>
As expected, UB40 played all<lb/>
of their popular hits such as "Red<lb/>
Red Wine" and "Rat in the<lb/>
Kitchen" and "Maybe Tomor-<lb/>
row" which is a single they re-<lb/>
corded in the United Kingdom.<lb/>
In "Sing Our Own Song off<lb/>
their 1986 album "Rat in the<lb/>
Kitchen UB40 demonstrated<lb/>
they seek to end apartheid in<lb/>
South Africa. "Sing Our Own<lb/>
Song" is dedicated to the black<lb/>
South Africanr population who<lb/>
have seen their leaders jailed and<lb/>
their human rights disregarded.<lb/>
Singer Norman Lamont Has-<lb/>
san stopped during the song to<lb/>
explain two key words in the lyr-<lb/>
ics, "Amandla Awethu the Afri-<lb/>
can words which mean the<lb/>
"people are the power<lb/>
The three-level stage was one<lb/>
of the largest stages Minges has<lb/>
ever set up for a band. On the top<lb/>
level, a fantastic three-member<lb/>
horn section consisting of trum-<lb/>
peter, saxaphone player and<lb/>
trombone player, played in con-<lb/>
stant choreographed motion<lb/>
throughout the show.<lb/>
Although the lighting equip-<lb/>
ment was not elaborate, the tim-<lb/>
ing of lights added to the show's<lb/>
effect. The light show especiallv<lb/>
shined during "Red Red Wine<lb/>
Every time the chorus of "Red Red<lb/>
Wine" came up, Minges was lit up<lb/>
with bright red lights enabling<lb/>
everyone to be seen.<lb/>
A crowd of about 2,000<lb/>
people attended the concert spon-<lb/>
sored by Major Concerts Commi t-<lb/>
tee. However, ECU student turn-<lb/>
out could n't be compared to the<lb/>
estatic high school fans. Although<lb/>
the crowd was young in age, ev-<lb/>
eryone seemed to enjoy the show<lb/>
which was evident from the con-<lb/>
stant dancing that occurred<lb/>
throughout the show.<lb/>
One possible reason for ECU<lb/>
attendance being so lax could<lb/>
have been because WZM B was off<lb/>
the air for a week before the con-<lb/>
cert and wasn't able to promote<lb/>
the show as much as the station<lb/>
wanted.<lb/>
UB40 played for about 1 hour<lb/>
and 30 minutes including a juic-<lb/>
ing three song encore.<lb/>
In opening for UB40, Velvet<lb/>
Elvis made their Greenville de-<lb/>
bute. Velvet Elvis, a four-member<lb/>
band from Lexington, Kentucky<lb/>
has a definite progressive sound.<lb/>
After experiencing problems<lb/>
with the public announce system,<lb/>
Velvet Elvis tore through some<lb/>
meaty originals. Most of the songs<lb/>
Velvet Elvis played can be found<lb/>
on their album 100 Proof, which is<lb/>
produced by Mitch Easter.<lb/>
Easter has produced bands<lb/>
Let's Active, REM, and Don<lb/>
Dixon. If you like Velvet Elvis or<lb/>
would like to know more about<lb/>
them, tune in to ECU's radio sta-<lb/>
tion WZMB. Velvet Elvis songs to<lb/>
be request are "Something Hap-<lb/>
pened Today "Privilege and<lb/>
AmbitionaIl of which can be<lb/>
found on their new release.<lb/>
Elvis is undisputedly dead<lb/>
HENDERSONVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
(AP) - Evangelist Rick Stanley,<lb/>
Elvis Presley's step-brother, says<lb/>
Elvis is unequivocally and unde-<lb/>
niably dead.<lb/>
"I know Elvis isdead. There is<lb/>
no belief about it the34-year-old<lb/>
Southern Baptist evangelist said<lb/>
Sunday in Hendersonville.<lb/>
"I was there when they rolled<lb/>
him over on the carpet and he had<lb/>
been dead for six hours; rigor<lb/>
mortis (had) set in he said.<lb/>
But Stanley said recent car-<lb/>
toons and television shows de-<lb/>
picting Elvis as alive don't bother<lb/>
him.<lb/>
"I'm used to it   Stanley<lb/>
told the Hendersonville Times-<lb/>
News.<lb/>
"People don't want to let go of<lb/>
the memory of Elvis Stanley<lb/>
grew up at the Graceland Man-<lb/>
sion in Memphis, Tenn after his<lb/>
mother married Elvis' father,<lb/>
Vernon Presley.<lb/>
He said the recently released<lb/>
book, Is Elvis Alive? by Gail<lb/>
Brewer-Giorgio has embarrassed<lb/>
and hurt him.<lb/>
"I thought of getting in touch<lb/>
with the best lawyers in the coun-<lb/>
try and suing her for mental an-<lb/>
guish Stanley said, adding that<lb/>
he decided it would just help her<lb/>
sell more books. "1 don't think<lb/>
much of her. I wish she'd stop and<lb/>
think  It's a drag for me<lb/>
Perry Como is still alive<lb/>
ATLANTIC CITY, N (AP)-<lb/>
Perry Como says the "awful<lb/>
novelty songs" that his concert<lb/>
audiences still demand have been<lb/>
haunting him since the 1930s,<lb/>
when he sang with Ted Weem's<lb/>
big band.<lb/>
"Me and Sinatra and all the<lb/>
rest of the singers used to talk<lb/>
about all the crap we had to sing<lb/>
Como said.<lb/>
Como, 76, said he still winces<lb/>
when performing such million-<lb/>
selling hits as "Papa Love<lb/>
Mambo" and "Don't Let the Stars<lb/>
Get in Your Eyes<lb/>
"A Hubba-Hubba-Hubba'<lb/>
was another sick one and another<lb/>
gold record said Como, who<lb/>
performs this week at Bally's<lb/>
Grand Hotel rnd Casino.<lb/>
"I still do thetn onstage once<lb/>
in a while because the audience<lb/>
wants it, but I say Vech' after-<lb/>
wards<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0014"/><lb/>
<lb/>
1 T<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6, 1988<lb/>
'Invaders From Mars' remade<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
with an eerie grace and holds up<lb/>
against anything Industrial Light<lb/>
and Magic has produced. Deserv-<lb/>
edly, the movie took an Oscar for<lb/>
special effects. Watch it on tape or<lb/>
TV if you get a chance, because the<lb/>
"War of the Worlds" TV scries<lb/>
premiering this month is a direct<lb/>
sequel to this 1953 movie.<lb/>
"Invaders From Mars"?<lb/>
This remake of Menzies film suf-<lb/>
fers in comparison to the original.<lb/>
The producers have seemingly<lb/>
tried to make a bad movie and<lb/>
they've succeeded. It works nei-<lb/>
ther as a piece of camp or affec-<lb/>
tionate tribute. They also seem to<lb/>
unfairly assume familiarity with<lb/>
the original so you're in on the<lb/>
joke (nudge, nudge; wink, wink)<lb/>
that it'sall a dream. Well, now you<lb/>
know. I'd prefer "Santa Claus<lb/>
Conquers the Martians<lb/>
"Santa Claus Conquers the<lb/>
Martians"? I think the plot sums<lb/>
this one all up: armed with dan-<lb/>
gerous pop guns, the martians<lb/>
arrive on earth at the height of the<lb/>
holiday season to kidnap Santa to<lb/>
placate their young who've<lb/>
learned of the jolly old elf via TV<lb/>
signals from earth. The earth<lb/>
stands still when the govern-<lb/>
ments learn of the outrage.<lb/>
Not to worry: we knowbv the<lb/>
title who comes out on top of this<lb/>
one. Considered one of the worst<lb/>
movies ever made, it is perhaps<lb/>
ont up to Ed Wood, jrs high stan-<lb/>
dards, but it has to be preferrable<lb/>
to, say, Tobe Hooper's "Invaders<lb/>
From Mars<lb/>
"Superman" and "Superman<lb/>
II" -Bet you don't normally go<lb/>
around thinking of Superman as<lb/>
an alien, hah? Well, he is and<lb/>
there's plenty of invasion stuff<lb/>
going on when the Phantom Zano<lb/>
Williams arrive in part two. The<lb/>
Saly kinds successfully translated<lb/>
the scale and good natured naiv-<lb/>
ety of the American comic book to<lb/>
the screen in these efforts. A tricky-<lb/>
task even they haven't gotten it<lb/>
right since. 1 fere's wishing them<lb/>
better luck on their "Superboy"<lb/>
series premiering this month.<lb/>
"Buckaroo Banzai"? stands<lb/>
as a definition of cult film.<lb/>
Buckaroo" doesn't quite succeed<lb/>
in making the pulpserial hero<lb/>
hip but it offers an 'official'<lb/>
explanation to the story behind<lb/>
Orson Welles' infamous broad-<lb/>
cast. Art students should like it.<lb/>
"Plan 9 From Outer Space<lb/>
you couldn't make a funnier<lb/>
movie if you tried, and, indeed,<lb/>
Ed Wood, Jr was in dead earnest<lb/>
over his tale of aliens, who having<lb/>
Mayberiys "Aunt Bea" in a bit<lb/>
part.<lb/>
"Invasion of the Body Snatch-<lb/>
ers"? Both versions of jack<lb/>
Finney's novel are pretty good<lb/>
although you'd refer the remake<lb/>
if you lean toward the gross-out.<lb/>
However, the 1956 original is<lb/>
unrivaled in sheer claustrophobia<lb/>
inducement. The greenhouse<lb/>
scene alone is particularly unset-<lb/>
tling.<lb/>
"The Thing"? No contest be-<lb/>
tween remake and original here.<lb/>
failedtoconquereartheighttimes A though Tohn r .<lb/>
befonv unlJ.h ih.ir ?JL n( n Allnou&amp;h J?h" Carpenter's ver<lb/>
before, unleash their army of the<lb/>
undead.<lb/>
Actually, the army consists of<lb/>
three zombies (a fat guy, a<lb/>
woman, and an old man) and one<lb/>
saucer that resembles a utility<lb/>
building in close-up. Hmmmm<lb/>
maybe they should just skip<lb/>
ahead to Flan 10.<lb/>
"The Day the Earth Stood<lb/>
Still"? An incredibly mature film<lb/>
at the dawn (1951 )of the bug-eyed<lb/>
monster-kiddie matinee era. Still<lb/>
a genre triumph. Look for<lb/>
Not too bitter, not too sweet:<lb/>
"Carnival" is just right<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
transforms the stage into a surreal<lb/>
min-or of the play's action. Bodies,<lb/>
at first frozen, slowly start to<lb/>
whirl; then the pace increases, the<lb/>
music builds, and suddenly the<lb/>
stage is alive with activity.<lb/>
The production as a whole is<lb/>
an ambitious one (referring tp the<lb/>
work it took to put the show to-<lb/>
gether, director Edgar Loessin<lb/>
called it "a monster"), and it<lb/>
seemed to suffer from what<lb/>
jitters At times, the actors<lb/>
seemed to be fighting to be heard<lb/>
over the orchestra, and there were<lb/>
a couple of minor technical diffi-<lb/>
culties. Rest assured, however;<lb/>
neither of these was a problem in<lb/>
dress rehearsal and neither<lb/>
should be a problem again, so the<lb/>
remaining productions should be<lb/>
flawless.<lb/>
Opening night jitters aside,<lb/>
the theater department has done a<lb/>
marvelous job. Everyone in-<lb/>
volved in "Carnival from the set<lb/>
Maxwell termed "opening night designers to the lead characters,<lb/>
deserves a standing ovation.<lb/>
Though the show is not psy-<lb/>
chological drama in the nature of,<lb/>
say, Equus, "Carnivar's charac-<lb/>
ters are realistic, and, better yet,<lb/>
they are compellinglv and be-<lb/>
lievably portrayed by the stu-<lb/>
dents. "Carnival" is tender and<lb/>
unashamed!v romantic.<lb/>
See it. And, if possible see it<lb/>
with someone you love.<lb/>
Dime for thought<lb/>
(AP) - When Kennv Walters<lb/>
used 3,000 $1 bills to pay the<lb/>
county taxes on his tool-rental<lb/>
business, he thought his feelings<lb/>
were clear and the matter was<lb/>
closed.<lb/>
But Clear Creek County<lb/>
Treasurer Geraldine Thompson<lb/>
may have upstaged Walters. She<lb/>
returned his change of $110<lb/>
mostly in nickels, dimes and<lb/>
pennies.<lb/>
"I guess he was just trying to<lb/>
make a statement said<lb/>
Thompson "I just gave him all<lb/>
the change I could dish out. I<lb/>
mean, turnabout is fair play<lb/>
Walters said he enjoyed<lb/>
Thompson's response to his<lb/>
"silent protest He said he was<lb/>
trying to make a point when he<lb/>
paid his $2,890 in taxes in person<lb/>
withan old gunpowder crate full<lb/>
of$l bills.<lb/>
LastAlcatraz<lb/>
inmate dies<lb/>
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) -<lb/>
Clarence Carnes, the only inmate<lb/>
survivor of a 1946 escape attempt<lb/>
from Alcatraz that left seven<lb/>
dead, died Monday in prison a<lb/>
month before he was to be re-<lb/>
leased. He was 61.<lb/>
On July 6, 1945, Carnes was<lb/>
sent to Alcatraz, the federal prison<lb/>
island in San Francisco Bay. He<lb/>
was 18, the youngest inmate ever<lb/>
incarcerated there.<lb/>
Early the next year, Carnes<lb/>
was drawn into a daring escape<lb/>
plot that quickly went awry. Two<lb/>
guards were killed and several<lb/>
were wounded.<lb/>
The six inmates who partici-<lb/>
pated got control of little more<lb/>
than one cell house.<lb/>
Poetry Forum<lb/>
The ECU Poetry Forum will<lb/>
meet Thursday night at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Menedenhall 248. Those wishing<lb/>
to have their work read and cri-<lb/>
tiqued should bring 8-10 copies of<lb/>
their poem(s) to the meeting.<lb/>
All students, faculty and local<lb/>
citizens are invited to attend.<lb/>
Punchline<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
to be funny and bombs terribly.<lb/>
He starts crying on the stage and<lb/>
you can feel his frustration and<lb/>
pain in trying so hard just to make<lb/>
these people laugh.<lb/>
"Punchline" is a very funny<lb/>
and realistic movie about stand-<lb/>
up comedy. So if you're in the<lb/>
mood for a few tears and a lot of<lb/>
laughs, go see it when it hits the<lb/>
theatres nationwide this week-<lb/>
end.<lb/>
sion is no great movie, it's more,<lb/>
uh, engrossing than the 1951 ver-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
"Howard the Duck"? Al-<lb/>
though slammed by critics in their<lb/>
ongoing fits of George Lucas'<lb/>
bashing (induced, no doubt, as a<lb/>
reaction to thier overrating of<lb/>
"Return of the jedi"), "Howard"<lb/>
was a well-crafted in-joketribute<lb/>
to the genre. The Dark OverLord<lb/>
special effect is great. The Lea<lb/>
Thompson special effect is even<lb/>
better.<lb/>
Student Health Services<lb/>
GET TO THE GAME ON TIME<lb/>
The Saturday Clinic at the Student Health<lb/>
Service will be held from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00<lb/>
p.m. on Saturday, October 8,1988.<lb/>
The Sunday Clinic will be held as usual from<lb/>
2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Call the Student Health Services at 757-6841 for<lb/>
more information or questions.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Services<lb/>
2nd Session Fitness Classes<lb/>
Registration Dates Session Dates<lb/>
October 11-14<lb/>
Cost Per Session (12 classes)<lb/>
$10.00.Students<lb/>
$20.00Faculry-Staff<lb/>
October 19-December 2<lb/>
Cost Per Drop-in Class<lb/>
$1.00Students<lb/>
$200 Faculty-Staff<lb/>
All classes available on a drop-in basis with purchase of a ticket<lb/>
Tickets are available in 204 Memorial Gymnasium, Monday-<lb/>
Thursday, 8 a.m 6pm and Friday, 8 a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Days<lb/>
Mon &amp; Wed<lb/>
Mon &amp; Wod<lb/>
Man. &amp; Wed<lb/>
Tues. &amp; Th.<lb/>
Tues. &amp; Tlv<lb/>
Tues. &amp; Th<lb/>
Tues &amp; Th<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
Mon &amp; Wed.<lb/>
Tues. &amp; Th.<lb/>
Tues ii Th.<lb/>
Fn<lb/>
Sat<lb/>
Ti in e$<lb/>
.100 4 (X) p m<lb/>
405 5 05 p ni<lb/>
5:15 6:1 5 p ni<lb/>
300 4 00 pm.<lb/>
4 05 5:05 pm.<lb/>
5:15-6.15 p m<lb/>
6 30-7:30 p.m.<lb/>
5:15 6:15 p m<lb/>
1:00-2.00 p.m.<lb/>
3.00-4:00 pm<lb/>
(1 -??. mpa t<lb/>
 ow lmpa ti<lb/>
(1 ow Impact)<lb/>
(Drop in Only)<lb/>
(Drop in Only)<lb/>
TONING<lb/>
4 05 5 05 p m<lb/>
4.05-5:05 p.m.<lb/>
5:30-6:30 p m<lb/>
4:00-5:00 p m<lb/>
12.00 nixmlffl<lb/>
(Drop in ChiK I<lb/>
Location<lb/>
MC 108<lb/>
ment<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
MC 108<lb/>
Greene<lb/>
mc; 108<lb/>
MC 108<lb/>
MG108<lb/>
MC 108<lb/>
MC 108<lb/>
MC 108<lb/>
MG ??<lb/>
MG 108<lb/>
MG !<lb/>
M, 108<lb/>
Tues. &amp; Th<lb/>
MC, 108<lb/>
AOLAKOBICS<lb/>
5 30 6 30 pm<lb/>
SUPRCLASS<lb/>
An innovative 90 minute workout incorporating weights js light ?<lb/>
muscular strength and endurance, in addition to a 30 minute aerobic compo-<lb/>
nent Registration is required and sessions are the same as all other fitness<lb/>
classes. Cost per session (12 classes) is SI 5 00students and S25 OOfaculh ar :<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
Mon &amp; Wed. 6:30 8 00 p.m<lb/>
Sat. 10.30-12:00 p.m.<lb/>
'Drop in SI 25Student &amp; $2 50Staff<lb/>
MC 108<lb/>
MC 108<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
Plaza Shopping Ctr 756 008H<lb/>
TarkjThiatre<lb/>
Ends Thursday<lb/>
MIDNIGHT RUN<lb/>
Starts Friday<lb/>
LICENSE TO DRIVE<lb/>
J<lb/>
A FISH CALLED WANDA<lb/>
NIGHTMARE ON ELM ST.<lb/>
PART IV<lb/>
Ends Thursday<lb/>
TUCKER<lb/>
Starts Frirfqy<lb/>
GORILLAS IN THE MIST<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
lults $250til<lb/>
5:30<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
ANYTIME<lb/>
BUCCANNER MOVIES<lb/>
,756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
RATED R<lb/>
<lb/>
YOUNG GUNS<lb/>
1: 00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20<lb/>
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RATED R<lb/>
MARRIED TO THE MOB<lb/>
1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:15<lb/>
RATED PG<lb/>
HEARTBREAK HOTEL<lb/>
1:00-3:00 5:00-7:00-9:00<lb/>
,?YS POOL<lb/>
517CotancheSt.<lb/>
Under New Management<lb/>
Pool Prices: $1.50 per hour per person<lb/>
12 Price for Ladies<lb/>
WED: Ladies Day - Ladies Play Free All Day<lb/>
ILLES: College Day. 1.00HourPerson F or College Students<lb/>
Now Completely Remodeled<lb/>
?Including Ladies Bathroom<lb/>
Fraternity Tournaments Welcomed<lb/>
?Coin Operated Challenge Tables - .50games<lb/>
?New Pool equipment and accessories<lb/>
?Coldest Beer in Town<lb/>
?New Expanded Business Hours<lb/>
Mon. - Wed. 8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Thurs. - Sat. 8:00 a.m. -1:00 a.m. Sun. 1:00 p.m. -10:00 p.m.<lb/>
Look For Upcoming Tournaments and Specials<lb/>
cSPLdShi<lb/>
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JT1 The Unique Shoes<lb/>
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ARLINGTON VILLAGE SHOPS<lb/>
GREENVILLE 355-3069<lb/>
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MOREHEAD CITY 726-7882<lb/>
HOURS: 10-6 MONSAT.<lb/>
UULM<lb/>
rTrail<lb/>
CHEROKEE, N C. 1<lb/>
The leaves on the Qualla Bou(<lb/>
ary reservation have chanjf<lb/>
color 150 times since me<lb/>
Cherokee nation was forced<lb/>
leave here in a wintrv march<lb/>
became known as "the "rail<lb/>
Tears" because 4,000 Indil<lb/>
died during it<lb/>
This week, represent<lb/>
of Cherokee1 Nation ?<lb/>
homa came here to pin thr E<lb/>
ern Band ot Cherokee Indu<lb/>
those who staved behind<lb/>
marking the 150th ann<lb/>
ot the forced march At ti <lb/>
enng, it was evident ti<lb/>
leaves are not the onh<lb/>
that have changed<lb/>
Instead of skins and fei<lb/>
ers, the Indians wore dark b<lb/>
ness suits Rather than<lb/>
ing the threat of the whir<lb/>
they talked about e<lb/>
development And the ?<lb/>
Cherokees have a woman <lb/>
'The Cherokee pe pk<lb/>
grown since the removal<lb/>
Jonathan Taylor, chiet<lb/>
Eastern Band, which inh<lb/>
the 56,000-acre Qua<lb/>
ary.<lb/>
Throughout history<lb/>
Cherokees have always tru<lb/>
do something better he<lb/>
The News &amp; Record oi Gr<lb/>
boro reported "And r<lb/>
people have the abilit)<lb/>
themselves and gel<lb/>
done"<lb/>
Eastwo<lb/>
(CPS) Clint Hast <lb/>
made their day at Wesl<lb/>
versify in Connecticut<lb/>
Eastwood last week<lb/>
nounced he will donate all<lb/>
ments and film relatir<lb/>
career as an actor, prod<lb/>
director to Wesleyan an.<lb/>
Museum of Modem Art<lb/>
York.<lb/>
Persuading E<lb/>
make the donation appart<lb/>
wasn't too difficult althou<lb/>
took three years to clinch the<lb/>
"We saw him, told him<lb/>
the archiy?and who was irt ij<lb/>
kept inHoflch with him "j<lb/>
plained leanine Basil<lb/>
Wesleyan s Corwin-Fuller<lb/>
fessor of Film Studies and cui<lb/>
of the school's cinema archivl<lb/>
Eastwood, currently<lb/>
the countrv could not K<lb/>
for comment about why he c<lb/>
Wesleyan Basinger specular<lb/>
might have been attracted h<lb/>
other film folks in the camj<lb/>
collection: Ingrid Bergman<lb/>
directorsRaoul Walsh, Eha kJ<lb/>
and Frank Capra. Eastwoo<lb/>
known as a Capra fan.<lb/>
Basinger was more empll<lb/>
about why, on the other<lb/>
Wesleyan chose Eastwood.<lb/>
"No one would ask wl<lb/>
$1 OFF<lb/>
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r<lb/>
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Choice of soup, sen<lb/>
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Mon Thurs 1130am -1000 p mj<lb/>
Fri 11.30am -11:00pm<lb/>
Sat. 3:00 p.m -11:00 pm<lb/>
Sun 12:00 noon - 10KX) p.m<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6,1988 13<lb/>
olina<lb/>
Irsitv<lb/>
?nt of<lb/>
creational<lb/>
ices<lb/>
tess Classes<lb/>
ecember2<lb/>
Prop in lass<lb/>
ndpnts<lb/>
,2 iX1 Facultv-Staff<lb/>
with purchase of a ticket<lb/>
w<lb/>
M( . ?-<lb/>
tOBICS<lb/>
ASS<lb/>
rsoit<lb/>
All Day<lb/>
ollege Students<lb/>
deled<lb/>
Icomed<lb/>
i- .50games<lb/>
:essories<lb/>
ours<lb/>
Sun. 1:00 p.m. - 10.00 p.m.<lb/>
Spec in Is<lb/>
I<lb/>
ts<lb/>
Unique Shoes<lb/>
989 11<lb/>
II I AGE SHOPS<lb/>
I I -3069<lb/>
ARBOR SHOPS<lb/>
CITY 726-7882<lb/>
tt MONSAT.<lb/>
'Trail of Tears' for 150 years<lb/>
CHEROKEE, N.C. (AP) -<lb/>
The leaves on the Qualla Bound-<lb/>
ary reservation have changed<lb/>
color 150 times since most of the<lb/>
Cherokee nation was forced to<lb/>
leave here in a wintry march that<lb/>
became known as "the Trail of<lb/>
Tears" because 4,000 Indians<lb/>
died during it.<lb/>
This week, representatives<lb/>
of Cherokee Nation of Okla-<lb/>
homa came here to join the East-<lb/>
ern Band of Cherokee Indians,<lb/>
those who stayed behind, in<lb/>
marking the 150th anniversary<lb/>
of the forced march. At the gath-<lb/>
ering, it was evident that the<lb/>
leaves are not the only things<lb/>
that have changed.<lb/>
Instead of skins and feath-<lb/>
ers, the Indians wore dark busi-<lb/>
ness suits. Rather than discuss-<lb/>
ing the threat of the white settler,<lb/>
they talked, about economic<lb/>
development. And the western<lb/>
Cherokees have a woman chief.<lb/>
The Cherokee people have<lb/>
grown since the removal said<lb/>
Jonathan Taylor, chief of the<lb/>
Eastern Band, which inhabits<lb/>
the 56,000-acre Qualla Bound-<lb/>
ary.<lb/>
'Throughout history, the<lb/>
Cherokees have always tried to<lb/>
do something better he said,<lb/>
The News k Record of Greens-<lb/>
boro reported. "And now our<lb/>
people have the ability to go<lb/>
themselves and get things<lb/>
done<lb/>
The 9,000-member Eastern<lb/>
Band evolved from about 1,400<lb/>
Cherokees who refused the<lb/>
government's order to relocate<lb/>
in 1838. Instead, they hid in<lb/>
North Carolina's mountains.<lb/>
The Western band of Cher-<lb/>
okees has 92,000 members, sec-<lb/>
ond only to the Na vahos. It is led<lb/>
by Wilma Mankiller, the tribe's<lb/>
first woman chief.<lb/>
Gov. Jim Martin told about<lb/>
750 Indians at Cherokee High<lb/>
School that the gathering should<lb/>
be a reminder "so that none of us<lb/>
should ever forget what hap-<lb/>
pened here<lb/>
rhe tribes used the gathering<lb/>
Monday and Tuesday to "inspire<lb/>
both remembrance and reflec-<lb/>
tion on determination and<lb/>
achievements said Ross Swim-<lb/>
mer, once the Western Band's<lb/>
chief and now assistant secretary<lb/>
for Indian affairs in the U.S. De-<lb/>
partment of the Interior.<lb/>
"It shows we can overcome<lb/>
difficulties to come back together<lb/>
Swimmer said.<lb/>
In two days of joint councils of<lb/>
the Eastern and Western bands,<lb/>
the Cherokees passed resolutions<lb/>
to support an alternate to the wil-<lb/>
derness bill introduced by Sen.<lb/>
Terry Sanford; to support legisla-<lb/>
tion that would encourage eco-<lb/>
nomic development by Indians; to<lb/>
ask for a new formula for road-<lb/>
funding apportionment; to sup-<lb/>
port amendments to the federal<lb/>
defense appropriations bill; and to Boundary's 2,400 homes are gov-<lb/>
ask for funding of more teachers<lb/>
aides positions.<lb/>
"But I know when I look at<lb/>
these hills, we all originated here<lb/>
The gathering gave 70-year-<lb/>
old Walker Calhoun of Cherokee a<lb/>
chance to revive the Green Corn<lb/>
Dance on the reservation for the<lb/>
ernment subsidized, and about 50<lb/>
percent of its students drop out of<lb/>
school after the sixth grade.<lb/>
Even the annual fall festival<lb/>
that opened during the celebration<lb/>
is a telling sign - a last grasp at<lb/>
summer's tourists, who fuel 90<lb/>
first time in 50 years. Calhoun said percent of the reservation's econ-<lb/>
he learned the celebration of har- omy. During winter months,<lb/>
vest from an uncle. He has taught it unemployment climbs to nearly<lb/>
to his four grandsons, who per- 50 percent,<lb/>
formed it to his chant Tuesday. Mankiller said she is optimis-<lb/>
"I enjoyed seeing them do this tic about the tribes' future,<lb/>
when I was young Calhoun said. "No matter what's happened<lb/>
"I just feel like it's something we to us in history, no matter how<lb/>
adverse the situation, we've been<lb/>
able to rise again she said. "I<lb/>
think every generation has more -<lb/>
better education, industry, more<lb/>
people living in adequate hous-<lb/>
ing. Generation by generation,<lb/>
there is overall improvement.<lb/>
should keep.<lb/>
One of the grandsons, 15-year-<lb/>
old Bob Raines, said he believes a<lb/>
sense of heritage is returning<lb/>
among young Indians on the reser-<lb/>
vation.<lb/>
"It makes you proud to be able<lb/>
to share in something so old<lb/>
Raines said.<lb/>
While the focus of the gather-<lb/>
ing was hope, there remains a dark<lb/>
side. In addition to the historical<lb/>
"We can dedicate monu-<lb/>
ments and build plaques she<lb/>
said. "But the best monument that<lb/>
we could give to the ancestors<lb/>
who died on the Trail of Tears and<lb/>
tragedy, the groups - though sepa- who fought that battle is to retain<lb/>
rated by 1,200 miles and several our identities as Indians<lb/>
states - also share modern prob-<lb/>
lems.<lb/>
As on most reservations, un-<lb/>
employment, education and in-<lb/>
adequate housing continue to be<lb/>
problems for both the Western<lb/>
Cherokees and the Eastern Band.<lb/>
About 75 percent of the Qualla<lb/>
:ma&amp;<lb/>
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Eastwood donates documents<lb/>
(CPS) ? Clint Eastwood<lb/>
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versity in Connecticut.<lb/>
Eastwood last week an-<lb/>
nounced he will donate all docu-<lb/>
ments and film relating to his<lb/>
career as an actor, producer and<lb/>
director to Wesleyan and the<lb/>
Museum of Modern Art in New<lb/>
York.<lb/>
Persuading Eastwood to<lb/>
wanted the working papers of<lb/>
James Joyce or Beethoven, but<lb/>
everyone's asked about this she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Eastwood collection and<lb/>
others in the archive have their<lb/>
greatest value in "connecting<lb/>
alumni in the filmmaking world<lb/>
to scholars and critics" as well as<lb/>
to current students, Basinger said.<lb/>
Moreover, "because<lb/>
make the donation apparently filmmaking is viewed as a com-<lb/>
wasn't too difficult although it mercial enterprise, availability to<lb/>
took three years to clinch the deal, film doesn't always exist. Many<lb/>
"We saw him, told him about<lb/>
the archjygand who was in it and<lb/>
kept inwach with him ex-<lb/>
plained Jeanine Basinger,<lb/>
Weslevan's Corwin-Fuller Pro-<lb/>
J<lb/>
fessor of Film Studies and curator<lb/>
of the school's cinema archive.<lb/>
Eastwood, currently out of<lb/>
the country could not be reached<lb/>
documents are not kept. The ar-<lb/>
chives is a place o rectify that<lb/>
problem and mate available the<lb/>
documents that surround creat-<lb/>
ing major motion pictures<lb/>
Eastwood is a proper subject<lb/>
for scholarly study, Basinger<lb/>
added, because "he's unique<lb/>
American artist. He has made<lb/>
leader Martin Luther King's<lb/>
widow, can sue Boston Univer-<lb/>
sity to retrieve papers her late<lb/>
husband apparently had donated<lb/>
to the school.<lb/>
She wants to transfer the<lb/>
documents to the Martin Luther<lb/>
King Center for Non-Violent So-<lb/>
cial Change in Atlanta.<lb/>
King went to graduate school<lb/>
at BU, which has held the collec-<lb/>
tion of his papers for 23 years.<lb/>
Mrs. King asserted BU hasn't<lb/>
cared for them or displayed them<lb/>
well.<lb/>
BU, in reply, producedktters<lb/>
from King seeming to bequeafli<lb/>
the papers to the school, and chal-<lb/>
lenged Mrs. King's standing to<lb/>
claim the papers.<lb/>
Murphy's ruling said she did<lb/>
have a claim.<lb/>
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Wesleyan. Basinger speculated he nal<lb/>
might have been attracted by the<lb/>
other film folks in the campus's<lb/>
collection: Ingrid Bergman, and<lb/>
directors Raoul Walsh, Elia Kazan<lb/>
and Frank Capra. Eastwood is<lb/>
known as a Capra fan.<lb/>
Basinger was more emphatic<lb/>
about why, on the other hand,<lb/>
Wesleyan chose Eastwood.<lb/>
"No one would ask why we<lb/>
The donation has attracted a<lb/>
lot of attention and publicity, but<lb/>
East wood himself has been "just<lb/>
terrific about this Basinger said.<lb/>
Other institutions have less<lb/>
happy experiences with dona-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Massachusetts Judge John L.<lb/>
Murphy Jr. last week ruled the<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058099_0016"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER M 988<lb/>
i<lb/>
ortimer Adler doesn t care<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, NC. (AD -<lb/>
In 1492, Columbus set sail for the<lb/>
new world. In 1789, French citi-<lb/>
zens stormed the Bastille, setting<lb/>
off the revolution. In 1863, Gen.<lb/>
Robert E. Lee's Confederate army<lb/>
was defeated at Gettysburg.<lb/>
Who cares? Many students<lb/>
don't. And neither does veteran<lb/>
educator Mortimer Adler.<lb/>
Facts are not important,<lb/>
Adler said Tuesday.<lb/>
"If I'm interested in the battle<lb/>
of Shiloh, 1 can go to the encyclo-<lb/>
pedia and look it up' he said.<lb/>
But Adler is not about to let<lb/>
students off the hook.<lb/>
Thinking and understanding<lb/>
are what get you along in the<lb/>
world, he said.<lb/>
And that is what Adler, chair-<lb/>
man of the board of editors of<lb/>
Encyclopedia Britannica, hopes to<lb/>
accomplish with his Taideia con-<lb/>
cept. Adler was on the UNC cam-<lb/>
pus for several educational semi-<lb/>
nars this week.<lb/>
Earlier this summer, UNC<lb/>
was selected as the headquarters<lb/>
tcMbbtoteateMMi Center for the<lb/>
Faideia Program. The center will<lb/>
provide training for teachers and<lb/>
coordinate efforts to spread the<lb/>
Paideia concept to the nation's<lb/>
schools. Previously, the center<lb/>
was based in Chicago, Adler's<lb/>
home.<lb/>
The Paideia Program has<lb/>
been in use for about four years,<lb/>
he said.Paideia is Greek for the<lb/>
upbringing of a child.<lb/>
Adler's program focuses on<lb/>
what children will learn. Instead<lb/>
of the traditional lecture format,<lb/>
Socratic questioning in seminar<lb/>
discussions is emphasized. Stu-<lb/>
dents also are coached in the skills<lb/>
of learning.<lb/>
All children are educable,<lb/>
Adler said, and thev all deserve<lb/>
the same quality of education.<lb/>
Patricia Weiss, director o( the<lb/>
UNC center, said the type of infor-<lb/>
mation a student receives in the<lb/>
traditional classroom format are<lb/>
facts that are forgotten as soon as<lb/>
the next test is over.<lb/>
Over the course of a lifetime,<lb/>
most people remember only one-<lb/>
tenth of the facts that they once<lb/>
knew well enough to pass an<lb/>
exam, Adler said.<lb/>
The quality of education in<lb/>
America has declined since edu-<lb/>
cators decided early in this cen-<lb/>
tury to educate all Americans,<lb/>
Alder said. But he doesn't suggest<lb/>
that the decision was wrong.<lb/>
No country has tried to do<lb/>
what the U.S. has attempted to do,<lb/>
he said. The educators just don't<lb/>
know how to do it"<lb/>
Adler's views have not en-<lb/>
deared him to the educational<lb/>
establishment, he said. The<lb/>
Paideia concept is a slap in the<lb/>
face to the schools of education, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Teachers from these schools<lb/>
often resist these new methods,<lb/>
Ms. Weiss said. The teachers,<lb/>
however, often eventually be-<lb/>
come the program's biggest sup-<lb/>
porters, she said. This is especially<lb/>
true when the teachers realize that<lb/>
they no longer must have all the<lb/>
right answers.<lb/>
Sheria Reid, an English<lb/>
teacher at Chapel Hill High<lb/>
School, agrees. Ms. Reid has in-<lb/>
corportated as much of Paideia<lb/>
method into her class room as<lb/>
possible, she said.<lb/>
"It's very relaxing to say 'I<lb/>
don't know, let's find out to-<lb/>
gether Ms. Reid said.<lb/>
Fifty-minute class periods<lb/>
make it impossible to impose the<lb/>
concept in full, she said. Adler<lb/>
says seminars must be two hours<lb/>
or longer to be completely effec-<lb/>
tive.<lb/>
Initial resistance often comes<lb/>
from teachers and students, Ms.<lb/>
Reid said. Teachers have been<lb/>
taught to group students by abil-<lb/>
ity, she said. But the Paideia pro-<lb/>
gram stresses the need for all stu-<lb/>
dents to be given the same chance<lb/>
with the same material.<lb/>
Leading a seminare discus-<lb/>
sion is also difficult because a<lb/>
teacher has to develop open-<lb/>
ended questions, Ms. Reid said.<lb/>
Students often oppose the<lb/>
program at first because they are<lb/>
not accustomed to dealing with<lb/>
questions that have no concrete<lb/>
answers, she said.<lb/>
"As students continue with it<lb/>
and begin to trust the teacher,<lb/>
they enjoy it she said. "It's a<lb/>
chance for them to talk and feel<lb/>
like experts<lb/>
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Welcome to Fun and Games take-off to Science Fiction!<lb/>
Enjoy our tribute and please welcome our new cartoon,<lb/>
"Hey Big Head' which we will spotlight later. In the<lb/>
meantime, feel free to write us care of the newspaper<lb/>
and tell us what you would like to see in Fun and Gamp<lb/>
Narrated<lb/>
By Pat<lb/>
Prescott<lb/>
of "Night Flight"<lb/>
Warning! Warning!<lb/>
Which "Lost in Space"<lb/>
character<lb/>
is this?<lb/>
. Mr. Robinson<lb/>
2. Mrs. Robinson<lb/>
3. Will<lb/>
4. Penny<lb/>
5. Judy<lb/>
6. Don<lb/>
7. Dr. Smith<lb/>
8. Robot<lb/>
8 SJI<lb/>
Where Are They Now<lb/>
Formerly Doug on the cool 'btYs shuvu<lb/>
"The Time Tunnel Robert Colbert is<lb/>
now Eric Forrester on "The Bold and<lb/>
the Beautiful Note the psychedelic<lb/>
time tunnel.<lb/>
What is Kirk Saying?<lb/>
1. "Hey really, there's nothing going on<lb/>
2. "No way. Not without my Starfleet-issue condoms<lb/>
3. "Now, you've been a bad little girl, so the Captain's<lb/>
going to have to spank<lb/>
What's the name of this Outer Limits episode?<lb/>
(Hint-it's the name of the hippest, most-read<lb/>
feature in The Fast Carolinian.)<lb/>
Is this the original Ming,<lb/>
or the one from "Flesh<lb/>
Gordon?'<lb/>
Ifs Geoffrey Hunter, the original captain of<lb/>
"the Enterprise! Luckily, Capt. Pike was booted out<lb/>
the docking bay, and Shatner was brought in to be Kirk!<lb/>
It doesn't matter. They<lb/>
both look the same and<lb/>
are kinky villains.<lb/>
;uii Xzpj3 iniM<lb/>
3uild) ou s,diain 'pH<lb/>
What is Kirk shooting at?<lb/>
A. Some damn no-good enemy of the<lb/>
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B. A former crewman turned-god.<lb/>
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That's right-it's "Funjmdjames!<lb/>
Fun and Games by Cap'n Parker<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0018"/><lb/>
T<lb/>
1<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBER 6 19M PaKe 16<lb/>
Pirates face a tough foe<lb/>
Reggie McKinney turns the corner under hot pursuit from<lb/>
the Mountaineer defense during last season's match-up.<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sports Kditor<lb/>
The West Virginia Mountain-<lb/>
eers will bring a 5-0 record and a<lb/>
number eight ranking with them<lb/>
when they come into Ficklen Sta-<lb/>
dium Saturday to play the Firatcs.<lb/>
The Mountaineers have<lb/>
rolled up impressive point totals<lb/>
in beating Bowling Green 62-14,<lb/>
Cal State Fullerton 45-10, Mary-<lb/>
land 55-24, Pitt 31-10, and Vir-<lb/>
ginia Tech, who defeated ECU<lb/>
earlier this season, 22-10. They<lb/>
average 43 points per game, while<lb/>
allowing an average of only 13<lb/>
points.<lb/>
"This is not a good team for us<lb/>
to have to bounce back against<lb/>
said Pirate Coach Art Baker at a<lb/>
press conference earlier this<lb/>
week. 'They are a very talented<lb/>
football team. If you look at West<lb/>
Virginia physically, 1 don't know<lb/>
if there's another team in the<lb/>
United States that would com-<lb/>
pare<lb/>
On the offensive side of the<lb/>
ball for the Mountaineers, the<lb/>
Pirates will have to be very con-<lb/>
cerned about the abilities of quar-<lb/>
terback Major Harris. "Major<lb/>
Harris is only one of the people on<lb/>
that team who is outstanding<lb/>
Baker said of the Mountaineer. "1<lb/>
think his performance against us<lb/>
last year helped him on his way to<lb/>
being a great quarterback. Since<lb/>
then, his career has really taken<lb/>
off<lb/>
Five games into the<lb/>
Mountaineer's season, Harris has<lb/>
completed 36 of 64 passes for 672<lb/>
yards and three touchdowns,<lb/>
being intercepted five times. He is<lb/>
also the teams second-leading<lb/>
rusher with 259 yards on 45 car-<lb/>
ries for two touchdowns.<lb/>
"They are intimidating on<lb/>
defense, and on offense they are<lb/>
power-oriented, throwing and<lb/>
running the option, keeping you<lb/>
off-balance Baker said.<lb/>
Another player to watch out<lb/>
for on offense will be Anthonv<lb/>
Brown, the Mountaineers lead-<lb/>
ing rusher. Brown has carried the<lb/>
ball 91 times on the season for 524<lb/>
yards and six touchdowns. The<lb/>
Mountaineers average 302.8<lb/>
yards per game rushing, and have<lb/>
a total offensive average of 487<lb/>
yards per game, while only allow-<lb/>
ing a 287 yard per game average.<lb/>
On defense, the Mountain-<lb/>
eers can strike from a number of<lb/>
positions. Linebacker Renaldo<lb/>
Turnbull is the leading tackier for<lb/>
West Virginia. After five games<lb/>
Turnbull has forty tackles, includ-<lb/>
ing 32 solos. He also has five sacks<lb/>
for -44 yards and three pass de-<lb/>
flections. Alvoid Mavs, a defen-<lb/>
sive back, has amassed three in-<lb/>
terceptions so far, and strong<lb/>
safety Bo Orlando has picked off<lb/>
two balls, returning one for a 56-<lb/>
yard touchdown.<lb/>
Another important part of the<lb/>
Mountaineer squad is kicker<lb/>
Charlie Bauman, who kicked<lb/>
three fiel goals last week against<lb/>
Virginia Tech. Bauman is nine for<lb/>
10 on field goals on the year, with<lb/>
a perfect three-for-three from 40-<lb/>
49 yards.<lb/>
Commenting on the Pirates<lb/>
Baker said, "Our offense has per-<lb/>
formed well. We had ust a couple<lb/>
of breakdowns against South-<lb/>
western Louisiana, but other than<lb/>
that, I'm pleased with their per-<lb/>
formance.<lb/>
"On defense, we arc trying to<lb/>
make whatever changes are nec-<lb/>
essary. Part of it is physical We<lb/>
are just being outmanncd. An-<lb/>
other part is mental We don't<lb/>
have great senior leadership on<lb/>
the defensive side of the ball<lb/>
Kobe honored<lb/>
Swim team looks to win<lb/>
By KRISTEN HA LB ERG<lb/>
?Vssistant Sports tditor<lb/>
The East Carolina Swim and<lb/>
Dive team gets its first taste oi<lb/>
action today at 4 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum as they compete in in-<lb/>
tra squad action in the Pentath-<lb/>
lon.<lb/>
In the Pentathlon, each swim-<lb/>
mer has the opportunity to swim<lb/>
five events; the 200-yard individ-<lb/>
ual medley, 100-yard butterfly,<lb/>
100-yard breaststroke, 100-yard<lb/>
freestyle and 100-yard back-<lb/>
stroke, even though they might<lb/>
not specialize in that particular<lb/>
event.<lb/>
"It'sanopportunitv to see the<lb/>
kids swim everything Coach<lb/>
Rick Kobe said.<lb/>
Coach Kobe uses the Pentath-<lb/>
lon to watch the swimmers com-<lb/>
pete in something other than the<lb/>
event they usually compete in.<lb/>
"This enables us to observe<lb/>
talent in the swimmer that we<lb/>
might not have known about be-<lb/>
fore Kobe said. "It is also a step-<lb/>
ping stone for picking the travel-<lb/>
ing team. The Pentathlon will give<lb/>
us a good indication oi where we<lb/>
are in our training<lb/>
Awards will be given out to<lb/>
anyone who sets Pentathlon rec-<lb/>
ords. Last year George Walters<lb/>
broke the record in the 100-vard<lb/>
backstroke with a time of 55.97.<lb/>
Ravmond Kennedv set a record at<lb/>
101.37 in the 100-yard<lb/>
breaststroke and Meredith Bridg-<lb/>
ers also pulled through with a<lb/>
record in the 100-yard<lb/>
breaststroke with a time of 101.16.<lb/>
Kennedy will be the one to<lb/>
beat this year, as he captured last<lb/>
year's Pentathlon crown with a<lb/>
total of 2795 points.<lb/>
For the ladies, Ryan Philyaw<lb/>
should be watched, as she won<lb/>
the Pentathlon last year with 3188<lb/>
points.<lb/>
When asked about the season<lb/>
ahead. Kobe remained optimistic.<lb/>
"We've been spoiled Kobe<lb/>
said. "We really haven't had a bad<lb/>
season. Tins should be an excel-<lb/>
lent year for us<lb/>
The men have 12 returning<lb/>
swimmers to the ECU program<lb/>
and, of those 12, all were confer-<lb/>
ence finalists last year. The ladies<lb/>
are just as strong with all seven of<lb/>
their returning swimmers confer-<lb/>
ence finalists as well.<lb/>
"I'm anticipating our finest<lb/>
year yet, but it is a long season<lb/>
said Kobe.<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
Assistant Sports Kditor<lb/>
Rick Kobe, coach of the ECU<lb/>
Swim Team, has been awarded<lb/>
the title of Master Coach by the<lb/>
College Swimming Coach Asso-<lb/>
ciation of America.<lb/>
This award, presented at the<lb/>
1988 World Swim Clinic in San<lb/>
Francisco, is one of the highest<lb/>
honors in coaching collegiate<lb/>
level swimming as a mere 10-1?<lb/>
percent of college coaches actu-<lb/>
ally receive an award of Master<lb/>
Coach.<lb/>
"I was verv honored Kobe<lb/>
said proudly.<lb/>
In order to be eligible for the<lb/>
award of Master Coach, certain<lb/>
criteria had to be met. First, any-<lb/>
one considered had to have<lb/>
coached at least 10 years in col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
Next, a coach must be a<lb/>
member of the College Swim-<lb/>
ming Coach Association oi Amer-<lb/>
ica and be in good standing.<lb/>
Third, a coach must win at<lb/>
least 50 percent of all dual meets<lb/>
(Kobe has an impressive 97-46<lb/>
record since coming to ECU).<lb/>
Fourth, a coach had to win a<lb/>
conference championship (the<lb/>
men's team won the conference in<lb/>
1986).<lb/>
Then, a coach had to produce<lb/>
an Olympic team member (Kobe<lb/>
had a former ECU swimmer swim<lb/>
Rick Kobe<lb/>
for the Peruvian team in the I 84<lb/>
Olympics at Los Angeles).<lb/>
And finally, a coach must<lb/>
have conducted and attended<lb/>
various swim clinics<lb/>
When all this criteria is met,<lb/>
the prospective coach then is<lb/>
aamininmimi<lb/>
"Now T can renre Tangncd<lb/>
Kobe.<lb/>
ECU welcomes "old timers<lb/>
yy<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
East Carolina, a baseball pro-<lb/>
gram that has suffered just one<lb/>
losing season since 1950, will<lb/>
welcome former players from<lb/>
years past on ,Oct. 22 for<lb/>
the first annual Old Timer's Base-<lb/>
ball Classic.<lb/>
The Classic will highlight a<lb/>
weekend of activities scheduled<lb/>
for the former Pirate players,<lb/>
coaches and managers. The game,<lb/>
scheduled for 10 a.m. at ECU'S<lb/>
Harrington Field, will coincide<lb/>
with the ECU-Syracusc football<lb/>
game scheduled for later in the<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"There have been a great deal<lb/>
of players to come through the<lb/>
Pictured here is the 1963 ECU baseball team, which finished the year third in the nation. ECU<lb/>
will host a game for older players to return and have a good time. (Photo courtesy SID.)<lb/>
ECU looks for winning years<lb/>
By DAVID MONROE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Througout the past five years<lb/>
since the incredible 8-3 team that<lb/>
brought pride, enthusiasm, and<lb/>
respect to East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity, ECU has been tortured by the<lb/>
"almosts" and "What-ifs Many<lb/>
blame the hell-bent scheduling by<lb/>
the Athletic Office, while others<lb/>
contend that the coaching staff,<lb/>
through mindless decisions, have<lb/>
brought this unbearable doom.<lb/>
Some individuals even place<lb/>
blame on the departure of Pat<lb/>
Dye, the legendary ECU football<lb/>
coach of the 70's and early 80's.<lb/>
To be honest, I guess they all<lb/>
are responsible in one way or<lb/>
another. Sure, had Pat Dye not<lb/>
decided to go to Auburn to build<lb/>
his powerhouse of the South, East<lb/>
Carolina University might have<lb/>
continued their winning ways (by<lb/>
1983, East Carolina had recorded<lb/>
their tenth winning season in<lb/>
twelve years; a feat that at that<lb/>
time was unsurpassed by any<lb/>
other school in the state of North<lb/>
Carolina). Also, I guess if ECU<lb/>
had decided to stay a Division I-<lb/>
AA school and play ball with the<lb/>
little guys they would have con-<lb/>
tinued to prove to be a power-<lb/>
house themselves.<lb/>
The realism though, is that<lb/>
See RETURN, page 17<lb/>
ECU baseball program that<lb/>
helped put it where it is today<lb/>
said Charlie Carr, ECU's Associ-<lb/>
ate Athletic Director and secre-<lb/>
tary of the Pirate Club. "And now<lb/>
we'd like to do something for<lb/>
them to show our appreciation.<lb/>
"We think this will be a great<lb/>
opportunity for players from dif-<lb/>
ferent ECU teams from years past<lb/>
to get together and reminisce<lb/>
Among those that have<lb/>
committed early to play in the<lb/>
game are Butch Davis (1978-80),<lb/>
who played the final portion of<lb/>
the 1988 season with the Balti-<lb/>
more Orioles. Richard "Rooster"<lb/>
Narron (1966-67) is a former ma-<lb/>
jor league standout who has also<lb/>
indicated that he will play.<lb/>
Several members of the 1986<lb/>
team that finished with a school<lb/>
record 40 victories have commit-<lb/>
ted, including Winfrcd Johnson,<lb/>
who set an NCAA record by hit-<lb/>
ting 70 career home runs and<lb/>
pitching 35 career victories.<lb/>
Since 1961, ECU has ap-<lb/>
peared in the NCAA playoffs 10<lb/>
times, won six Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence championships, three<lb/>
ECAC-South championships and<lb/>
one Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
title. Prior to joining the NCAA<lb/>
ranks, the Pirates won an NAIA<lb/>
national title in 1961 and finished<lb/>
third in the national NAIA tour-<lb/>
nament in 1963.<lb/>
More than 50 former ECU<lb/>
players have gone on to sign pro-<lb/>
fessional baseball contracts.<lb/>
"We are very excited about<lb/>
hosting the Classic and want to<lb/>
make it an annual event ECU<lb/>
head baseball coach Gary Over-<lb/>
ton said. "I think you'll see a lot of<lb/>
talent out there, but you'll also see<lb/>
a great deal of laughs. And that's<lb/>
what it's all about<lb/>
The Ramada Inn of<lb/>
Greenville announced last week<lb/>
that it is a proud sponsor of the<lb/>
Old Timers Classic and will also<lb/>
be the official headquarters of all<lb/>
"Old Timers" in town for the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The Classic is the brainchild<lb/>
of Pirate Club field representative<lb/>
Phil Hatch.<lb/>
Pirate's Booty Pirate's Booty<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sportt Kditor<lb/>
If I may, I would like to tell '<lb/>
vou all a storv. I was at the ECU-<lb/>
J J<lb/>
USL football game, covering it for<lb/>
the ever popular East Carolinian<lb/>
Things were going pretty good,<lb/>
and the Pirates were holding their<lb/>
own, when Art Baker decided to<lb/>
give Charlie Libretto, who had<lb/>
done quite a bit of running, a<lb/>
break. In came Travis Hunter.<lb/>
And up started the boos. To say I<lb/>
was mad would be an understate-<lb/>
ment. To say I was disappointed<lb/>
could be placed in the same con-<lb/>
text.<lb/>
I couldn't understand how a<lb/>
group of die-hard Pirate fans<lb/>
could be booing a decision to rest<lb/>
a quarterback who had been run-<lb/>
ning a lot in 85 degree weather, by<lb/>
putting in a quarterback who had<lb/>
been a two-year starter up until<lb/>
that game. Travis Hunter, in only<lb/>
his junior season, is highly ranked<lb/>
in all of the Pirate passing statis-<lb/>
tics, and is expected to move into<lb/>
the number one slot in most of<lb/>
these before he graduates. He<lb/>
helped lead the Pirates to a re-<lb/>
spectable 5-6 finish last year, and<lb/>
was intrumental in the Pirate's<lb/>
season opening win over Tennes-<lb/>
see Tech. Sure Travis has made<lb/>
some mistakes, but who hasn't?<lb/>
And to those who added their<lb/>
voices to the mindless display of<lb/>
idiodicy, did you think that your<lb/>
actions would help improve<lb/>
Travis' level of play?<lb/>
Another thing that bothered<lb/>
me was the fact that, when Travis<lb/>
has needed a break in past games<lb/>
and Libretto came in to spell him,<lb/>
was his entrance met by boos? Not<lb/>
that 1 can remember. So why<lb/>
should it be the other way<lb/>
around?<lb/>
In a post-game press confer-<lb/>
ence, Coach Baker was asked his<lb/>
reaction to the booing. "I'm just<lb/>
terribly disappointed he said. "I<lb/>
don't mind anybody disagreeing<lb/>
with me and my decisions, but<lb/>
Travis Hunter has given as much<lb/>
as anybody on this team, and it<lb/>
really hurts me deep down to hear<lb/>
all the comments that are being<lb/>
made about him.<lb/>
"We feel as if we have a class<lb/>
program here, with class people<lb/>
in it, and I know every one of these<lb/>
young men, and they're great<lb/>
young men<lb/>
"I think it was pathetic said<lb/>
Charlie Libretto of the incident,<lb/>
"coming from East Carolina fans.<lb/>
I was really hurt, 1 felt bad. be-<lb/>
cause I think that brought me<lb/>
down, and 1 want everyone to<lb/>
know that it hurt me as much as it<lb/>
had to have hurt Travis. 1 think<lb/>
that if you're going to be East<lb/>
Carolina fans,then you have to go<lb/>
with the whole team, and not just<lb/>
one person<lb/>
"Travis has done nothing but<lb/>
great things for this team farrod<lb/>
Moody added, 'and the reaction<lb/>
was a surprise to me. The coach-<lb/>
ing staff and the players were<lb/>
shocked. We expect a lot more<lb/>
<lb/>
trom our fans, and you have to<lb/>
stick behind a guv. We stick be-<lb/>
hind our players 100  no matter<lb/>
who it is, and it really hurt us all<lb/>
I was listening to the Art<lb/>
Baker show Sunday night, and I<lb/>
heard a so-called 'fan call in and<lb/>
tell Baker that the fans were boo-<lb/>
ing his decision to put Travis in,<lb/>
not booing Travis himself. This is<lb/>
a lame excuse. What's the differ-<lb/>
ence? Either way. Hunter still had<lb/>
to feel the sting of the boos from<lb/>
the people who were supposed to<lb/>
be supporting him.<lb/>
Don't get me wrong. I don't<lb/>
agree with all of the calls that<lb/>
Baker makes. And I'm just as tired<lb/>
of seeing the Pirates lose as any-<lb/>
one here. 1 came to ECU in 1984,<lb/>
right after the 8-3 season. I saw<lb/>
two 2-9 seasons drag by, in addi-<lb/>
tion to last year's losing season,<lb/>
and this year's poor start. So I've<lb/>
seen as many losses as anybodv<lb/>
But I don't think that I could use<lb/>
that as an excuse for hurting a<lb/>
player's pride and confidence.<lb/>
You may not agree with my<lb/>
reasoning, and that's your right<lb/>
But 1 hope that the next time you<lb/>
feel a need to express vour high-<lb/>
handed indifference and insensi-<lb/>
tivity, you will first consider the<lb/>
feelings of the one you are about<lb/>
to hurt. Remember, "Walk a mile<lb/>
in my hightops or whatever that<lb/>
saying is.<lb/>
Retu<lb/>
Continued from pagt<lb/>
this is 1988 and not I9tfl<lb/>
Carolina had a decision tcj<lb/>
long before Pat Dye ever It<lb/>
develop a football pr<lb/>
the caliber of players that<lb/>
be able to compete on a nl<lb/>
level against established D<lb/>
I-A schools. When you cj<lb/>
that East Carolina ha- ?<lb/>
"established" Univi ?<lb/>
1967 and an NCAA I<lb/>
athletic program sir<lb/>
hardly think vou <lb/>
Carolina Universit)<lb/>
lished football program.<lb/>
In order tor  J<lb/>
gram to develop into a natj<lb/>
recognized or.<lb/>
be treated delicately du<lb/>
growing years I i j<lb/>
East Carolina Univen<lb/>
endure the a .<lb/>
play with the 1<lb/>
still only a child S j<lb/>
likes of LSU, Auburn I<lb/>
Florida, Miami, Fli ri I j<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
havoc with anyone - - J<lb/>
fact, since I -<lb/>
17 against thu 9 -<lb/>
Some mav ask<lb/>
long does it take : i<lb/>
develop" Twelve w<lb/>
answer that qw I<lb/>
that ECU will have j<lb/>
hard times and th I<lb/>
must be ma<lb/>
grams do not pop I<lb/>
Thev take time hard<lb/>
determination . ad <lb/>
to improve.<lb/>
As evident by tl<lb/>
ECU Lcicn<lb/>
Special to Ihr t j-<lb/>
The East Cai<lb/>
Club traveled to V 'mir.j<lb/>
weekend for the i<lb/>
Oceanfest Lacrosse<lb/>
Four teams ? Fort Bra<lb/>
State, Piedmont and EC<lb/>
scheduled to competi<lb/>
nament. which took pi i<lb/>
ber 1 and 2.<lb/>
Saturday, the Pil<lb/>
NCSU club in the pla<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Spare<lb/>
ib. 9<lb/>
Jesse Jo'<lb/>
Fran<lb/>
$<lb/>
Pkg-<lb/>
l1!<lb/>
Smithfi<lb/>
Baco<lb/>
lb. pk:<lb/>
$101<lb/>
1<lb/>
MAU<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0019"/><lb/>
oe<lb/>
the Pirates,<lb/>
is per-<lb/>
i couple<lb/>
South-<lb/>
than<lb/>
their pcr-<lb/>
tryingto<lb/>
I - are nec-<lb/>
. il We<lb/>
?. An-<lb/>
lon t<lb/>
? hip on<lb/>
ill<lb/>
wred<lb/>
luce<lb/>
- Kobe<lb/>
r swi m<lb/>
i . h must<lb/>
. ? nded<lb/>
i criteria is met,<lb/>
cctive coa h then is<lb/>
K ? fra rtf?i ?ebod<lb/>
Pirate's Booty<lb/>
said<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
J be-<lb/>
k that 1 " me<lb/>
rte to<lb/>
itithurti<lb/>
rt Tra - 1 think<lb/>
it il g to be East<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? .<lb/>
arr i<lb/>
md the r action<lb/>
e coach-<lb/>
r were<lb/>
re<lb/>
ive to<lb/>
k be-<lb/>
no matter<lb/>
rtusall"<lb/>
the Art<lb/>
' and I<lb/>
I in and<lb/>
? boo-<lb/>
? put Travis in,<lb/>
himself. This is<lb/>
the differ-<lb/>
? -till had<lb/>
x the sting ?s from<lb/>
; p sd to<lb/>
me rung. ! don't<lb/>
i of the calls that<lb/>
nd I'm just as tired<lb/>
 g  : I irat( - ?.? as any-<lb/>
e here. I came to E in 1984,<lb/>
ght after the  season 1 saw<lb/>
5 by, in addi-<lb/>
' last ? ng si iison,<lb/>
id thi r start. So I've<lb/>
n as mai . ises as anybody.<lb/>
it i don't think that I could use<lb/>
at as an excuse for hurting a<lb/>
:nde and confidence.<lb/>
You may not agree with my<lb/>
pasoning, and that's your right.<lb/>
lit 1 hope that the next time you<lb/>
1 a need to express your high-<lb/>
d indifference and insensi-<lb/>
ity, you will first consider the<lb/>
?lings of the one you are about<lb/>
hurt Remember, "Walk a mile<lb/>
my hightops or whatever that<lb/>
vine is.<lb/>
Return to greatness<lb/>
Continued from page 16<lb/>
this is 1988 and not 1983. East<lb/>
Carolina had a decision to make<lb/>
long before Pat Dye ever left? to<lb/>
develop a football program with<lb/>
the caliber of players that would<lb/>
be able to compete on a national<lb/>
level against established Division<lb/>
l-A schools. When you consider<lb/>
that East Carolina has been an<lb/>
"established" University since<lb/>
1967 and an NCAA Division I-A<lb/>
athletic program since 1976, I<lb/>
hardly think you can call East<lb/>
Carolina University an estab-<lb/>
lished football program.<lb/>
In order for a football pro-<lb/>
gram to develop into a nationally<lb/>
recognized organization it must<lb/>
be treated delicately during its<lb/>
growing years. Unfortunately for<lb/>
East Carolina University, it must<lb/>
endure the agony of having to<lb/>
play with the "big-boys" while<lb/>
still only a child. Sure, playing the<lb/>
likes of LSU, Auburn, Penn State,<lb/>
Florida, Miami, Florida State, and<lb/>
South Carolina would wreck<lb/>
havoc with anyone's schedule. In<lb/>
fact, since 1983 East Carolina is 0-<lb/>
17 against these seven schools.<lb/>
Some may ask, Just how<lb/>
long does it take for a program to<lb/>
develop? Twelve years?" I cannot<lb/>
answer that question, but I can say<lb/>
that ECU will have its share of<lb/>
hard times, and that sacrifices<lb/>
must be made. Winning pro-<lb/>
grams do not pop up over night.<lb/>
They take time, hard-work, and<lb/>
determination a determination<lb/>
to improve.<lb/>
As evident by the past two<lb/>
seasons, ECU has continued to<lb/>
improve. Although posting a 2-9<lb/>
record in 1986, a 5-6 record in<lb/>
1987, and currently riding a 1-4<lb/>
record in 1988, ECU has im-<lb/>
proved. In 1986, ECU's chances<lb/>
against the top schools were slim;<lb/>
to survive was enough to hope<lb/>
for. By 1987, ECU started to show<lb/>
glimpses of good things to come,<lb/>
but still a few mistakes here and<lb/>
there prevented a true showing.<lb/>
In 1988, ECU has met the opposi-<lb/>
tion head on.<lb/>
Although the East Carolina<lb/>
football team is 1-4, they have<lb/>
been in a position to win in each of<lb/>
the four games in which they lost;<lb/>
more than can be said for the pre-<lb/>
vious three years. In any of those<lb/>
games, had a series of plays went<lb/>
in ECU's favor, East Carolina<lb/>
University would be 5-0 (that in-<lb/>
eludes an impressive, hard-<lb/>
fought battle against then 14th<lb/>
ranked South Carolina; a team<lb/>
ECU has never beaten).<lb/>
Against South Carolina<lb/>
(USC), the defense was fine tuned<lb/>
as they held USC to 49 yards rush-<lb/>
J -<lb/>
ing and Todd Ellis, a Heisman<lb/>
candidate, to a less than 50 per-<lb/>
cent pass completion rate, but the<lb/>
offense was unable to get on<lb/>
track?scoring wise that is. Actu-<lb/>
ally, ECU had its way with USC as<lb/>
they pushed them up and down<lb/>
the field throughout the game.<lb/>
In ECU's last two games they<lb/>
have averaged over 500 yards<lb/>
total offense while putting an as-<lb/>
tonishing 74 points on the score-<lb/>
board against two teams consid-<lb/>
ered by many to be Top-20 caliber.<lb/>
Unfortunately, a defense that al-<lb/>
lows the opposition to average<lb/>
over 500 yards total offense and 46<lb/>
points a game tarnishes the<lb/>
achievements of being garnered<lb/>
by the offense. In order for ECU to<lb/>
win, it must click on both cylin-<lb/>
ders.<lb/>
With West Virginia, Florida<lb/>
State, Syracuse, and Miami still to<lb/>
be played, ECU must continue to<lb/>
show improvement. During any<lb/>
of these games if both the offense<lb/>
and defense play to their poten-<lb/>
tial, ECU will land the biggest<lb/>
victory in this schools history.<lb/>
What is needed now more than<lb/>
ever before is the support of the<lb/>
Pirate faithful the diehard who<lb/>
battles to the end of every game,<lb/>
cheering on the Pirates, regard-<lb/>
less of the score and not the way-<lb/>
side weekend fan who looks for<lb/>
the gates as soon as the Pirates fall<lb/>
behind and who seeks to criticize<lb/>
the efforts of the Athletic Office,<lb/>
the coaching staff, and the team<lb/>
itself. A new attitude needs to<lb/>
grow at East Carolina . . . one of<lb/>
pride, determination, and enthu-<lb/>
siasm. Given a chance, ECU will<lb/>
prevail. But short-term losses<lb/>
must be endured in order to en-<lb/>
sure long-term success.<lb/>
Let us start the tradition now,<lb/>
not next year. Turn out in force for<lb/>
the pep-rally tonight (Thursday)<lb/>
at Ficklen Stadium and for the<lb/>
game on Saturday against West<lb/>
Virginia. Show your pride, deter-<lb/>
mination, and enthusiasm for<lb/>
East Carolina Universitv. Let it be<lb/>
known that this school will not<lb/>
roll over and die.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse<lb/>
0<lb/>
presents<lb/>
cro<lb/>
Os!<lb/>
t <lb/>
A Colorful, Family Show"<lb/>
TIME Magainc<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/>
ECU Lacrosse team competes in Oceanfest<lb/>
Special to the Fast Carolinian<lb/>
The East Carolina Lacrosse<lb/>
Club traveled to Wilmington last<lb/>
weekend for the First Annual<lb/>
Oceanfest Lacrosse Tournament.<lb/>
Four teams ? Fort Bragg, N.C.<lb/>
State, Piedmont and ECU ? were<lb/>
scheduled to compete in the tour-<lb/>
nament, which took place Octo-<lb/>
ber 1 and 2.<lb/>
Saturday, the Pirates beat the<lb/>
NCSU club in the playoffs 11-6.<lb/>
First half scorers were Jeff<lb/>
Cartlcdge with two goals, as-<lb/>
sisted bv Ken McKenna and lay<lb/>
Black, Kelly Hoyt, Pete Gibbs,<lb/>
Drew Bourque, assisted by Jeff<lb/>
Cartlcdge, and Ken McKenna,<lb/>
and Jay Black with an assist by<lb/>
Pete Gibbs. In the second half<lb/>
N.C. State's defense improved,<lb/>
and the Tirates only had four<lb/>
goals. Pete Gibbs scored twice,<lb/>
Jeff Cartledge was assisted by Jay<lb/>
Black, and Jay Black was assisted<lb/>
by Derrick McWilliams.<lb/>
Sunday morning the club was<lb/>
defeated in the championship by<lb/>
the Piedmont Club, 12-1. The<lb/>
single goal was scored in the first<lb/>
quarter by Ken McKenna, who<lb/>
was assisted by Drew Bourque.<lb/>
Although defeated, the team<lb/>
as a whole played extremely well<lb/>
in the tournament. Pirate defense<lb/>
was strong, and ECU goalie Jamie<lb/>
Young received the Most Valu-<lb/>
able Defensive Player Award-<lb/>
INC.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058099_0020"/><lb/>
<lb/>
18<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6, 1988<lb/>
Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
West Virginia at ECU<lb/>
Michigan State at Michigan<lb/>
Clemson at Virginia<lb/>
Texas at Oklahoma<lb/>
Oregon at USC<lb/>
Notre Dame at Pitt<lb/>
UNC at Wake Forest<lb/>
Auburn at LSU<lb/>
Ga. Tech at Maryland<lb/>
Navy at Air Force<lb/>
BRIAN BAILEY<lb/>
WNCT-TV Sports Director<lb/>
Last Week - (8-2)<lb/>
Overall - (30-18)<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
DEAN BUCHAN<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
Last Week - (8-2)<lb/>
Overall  (32-17)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Last Week - (7-3)<lb/>
Overall - (32-17)<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
Dr. RICHARD EAKIN<lb/>
ECU Chancellor<lb/>
Last Week - (6-4)<lb/>
Overall - (31-20)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Last Week - (9-1)<lb/>
Overall - (34-15)<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Last Week - (9-1)<lb/>
Overall - (33-16)<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
Michigan State<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
ECU Irates win in Wilmington tourney<lb/>
By GARY HURLEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's Irates re-<lb/>
turned from Wilmington, N.C.<lb/>
champions of the Ultimate Fall<lb/>
Fling held on October 1 and 2.<lb/>
Hard running and a strong show-<lb/>
ing from East Carolina's rookies<lb/>
enabled them to come from be-<lb/>
hind and defeat Wilmington's<lb/>
crunch, 15-12, in front of their<lb/>
home team crowd.<lb/>
Eight men's teams and two<lb/>
women's teams from around the<lb/>
mid-atlantic region entered the<lb/>
tournament. The women's teams,<lb/>
East Carolina's Helios and<lb/>
Wilmington's No Conflicks,<lb/>
played three games over the<lb/>
weekend. No Conflicks won the<lb/>
contest. Helios was at a disadvan-<lb/>
tage lacking a coach, but have<lb/>
since found one in Randy Allen.<lb/>
On the opening day, the Irates<lb/>
handilv defeated Duke and the<lb/>
both teams advanced through<lb/>
their quarterfinal and semifinal<lb/>
matches on Sunday. The two rival<lb/>
teams would meet in the finals.<lb/>
Wilmington scored first and<lb/>
led through most of the game. The<lb/>
Irates only managed to even the<lb/>
score at times. Wilmington was<lb/>
leading 11-9 until a late game rally<lb/>
Univcrsitv of Virginia. Pit Bulls by EastCarolina finished them 15-<lb/>
on Crack, a Washington D.C. 12.<lb/>
based team, also lost to the Irates<lb/>
bv a score of 15-9.<lb/>
After the first day, the only<lb/>
two undefeated teams were<lb/>
Wilmington's Crunch and East<lb/>
C olina's Irates. As expected,<lb/>
The win was an important<lb/>
one. The Irates had lost in the fi-<lb/>
nals of their first tournament in<lb/>
the fall season. Chain Lightning, a<lb/>
veteran team out of Atlanta, de-<lb/>
feated the Irates 17-9 at the Char-<lb/>
lotte Ultimatum. Chain Lightning<lb/>
led the Irates at the half 9-7. They<lb/>
dominated the second half, scor-<lb/>
ing 8 points to East Carolina's 2.<lb/>
East Carolina now looks<lb/>
ahead to Open Sectionals in<lb/>
Richmond and Open Regionals in<lb/>
Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. The<lb/>
team's goal is to improve upon<lb/>
their 1988 showing in Collegiate<lb/>
Nationals, Ultimate's equivalent<lb/>
to the NCAA tournament in bas-<lb/>
ketball. The team tied for fifth<lb/>
place in a field of 12 teams from<lb/>
around the country.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
West Coast dominates field<lb/>
(AP) ? No, that's not a mis-<lb/>
print in the Pac-10 standings.<lb/>
Yes, UCLA is 4-0 overall and<lb/>
ranked No. 2 in the nation.<lb/>
Yes, Southern Cal is 4 0 and<lb/>
ranked No. 3 in the nation.<lb/>
Yes, the West Coast is drool-<lb/>
ing over the prospect of their Nov.<lb/>
19 showdown.<lb/>
But wait. Oregon is 4-it. too,<lb/>
and ranked No. 18.<lb/>
This is not uncharted terri-<lb/>
tory for the Ducks. They are in the<lb/>
Top Twenty for the second week<lb/>
in a row and they also made it<lb/>
once last year (No. 16) when a 34-<lb/>
27 victory over eventual Pac-10<lb/>
champion Southern Cal gave<lb/>
them a 4-1 record before a four-<lb/>
game losing streak did them in en<lb/>
route to a 6-5 finish.<lb/>
But before that, you have to<lb/>
go back all the way to 1970 to find<lb/>
Oregon in The Associated Press<lb/>
rankings. And the last time the<lb/>
Ducks appeared in a final AP poll<lb/>
was 1965.<lb/>
"Our followers and fans and<lb/>
students have kind of accepted<lb/>
that last year was not a fluke<lb/>
thing says Coach Rick Brooks,<lb/>
who inherited a string of six<lb/>
straight losing seasons when he<lb/>
took over in 1977. "We estab-<lb/>
lished that we were a good foot-<lb/>
ball team a year ago. This team is<lb/>
for real and won't fade away<lb/>
Oregon's six-game winning<lb/>
streak is the longest in the Pac-10<lb/>
and the school's longest since the<lb/>
1964 team won its first six games<lb/>
after the 1963 club finished with<lb/>
four straight victories.<lb/>
Not many people think the<lb/>
Ducks can make it 5-0. Saturdav<lb/>
finds them a 15-point underdog at<lb/>
Southern Cal. Oregon isn't a<lb/>
household word when it comes to<lb/>
the Top Twenty and the Ducks<lb/>
probably will be without quarter-<lb/>
back Bill Musgrave.<lb/>
Brooks pretty much summed<lb/>
it up last winter at the NCAA's<lb/>
annual College Football Preview<lb/>
in Kansas City when he spoke<lb/>
right after Coach of the Year Dick<lb/>
MacPherson of Syracuse got<lb/>
through entertaining the troops<lb/>
and quipped, "This is kind of like<lb/>
Twiggy following Dolly Parton<lb/>
Oregon hasn't exactly played<lb/>
creampuffs to get to 4-0. The<lb/>
Ducks handed Washington State<lb/>
? a team that has trounced Illi-<lb/>
nois, Minnesota and Tennessee<lb/>
on the road - - its only setback, 43-<lb/>
28, and beat Stanford by four<lb/>
points, just like Southern Cal did.<lb/>
Brooks says Oregon's pro-<lb/>
gram has come "light years" from<lb/>
when he arrived.<lb/>
"There quality in our pro-<lb/>
gram as far as taleni, depth and<lb/>
credibility he says. "We're a<lb/>
very good football team. What<lb/>
we're trying to do now is take the<lb/>
step from a good team, which<lb/>
we've been the last four-five-six<lb/>
years. We've been a respectable<lb/>
team, and if we're able to win on<lb/>
the road against USC, it would<lb/>
put us in the upper echelon.<lb/>
"It's pretty hard not to be<lb/>
happy being4-0 at this stageof the<lb/>
season. USC has the psychologi-<lb/>
cal advantage with their 100-year be ready to play, and I believe<lb/>
centennial celebration. We beat we'll be ready to play them<lb/>
thorn last vcar, so they're going to<lb/>
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IRSu<lb/>
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tramural-Recroational Sports<lb/>
introduced another unusual - <lb/>
activity to the1<lb/>
gram. The sport, under<lb/>
hockey wa? original!) h<lb/>
tfucedasafun wa<lb/>
pit year round. Hov<lb/>
has caught on qui ?<lb/>
oped into an inten it<lb/>
tional and competiti<lb/>
The game is pla<lb/>
the width ofapo Normal! I<lb/>
game 1- play i ii<lb/>
match Mui deep u<lb/>
fins, snorkt I and i I<lb/>
shaped stick as th i<lb/>
pushing a plastic<lb/>
puck along th I ??<lb/>
A team consist i f si<lb/>
for recreationa<lb/>
theplayersan .<lb/>
female mixed i I<lb/>
mal positions<lb/>
worked out a.<lb/>
ponents method i<lb/>
players remain und -<lb/>
long as the)<lb/>
passing the j<lb/>
an eft ort I<lb/>
ing the pu k I<lb/>
team -<lb/>
From the surl .<lb/>
hockey is not much i<lb/>
sport ? unles<lb/>
seen a spi rf<lb/>
feeding fi<lb/>
view this sport is 1<lb/>
and viev the a<lb/>
it is tali<lb/>
involved in it<lb/>
Game - u<lb/>
Friday i n<lb/>
through v<lb/>
of the club ar<lb/>
and your<lb/>
Be sure to hi<lb/>
and snorkel<lb/>
lungs even th<lb/>
be better<lb/>
For .<lb/>
free to c<lb/>
Tuesdays n<lb/>
6905 or Pati<lb/>
Knowles al<lb/>
The rail inti<lb/>
bash was held recent<lb/>
Got'Iscum u ith I<lb/>
suits BadminU n<lb/>
huge success featui<lb/>
star lung 5 mi-final<lb/>
very competiti e fir<lb/>
Volleyball pick<lb/>
most valuable<lb/>
By CAROLYN Ii<lb/>
S<lb/>
East Car<lb/>
coach ud Kirk<lb/>
named Debl<lb/>
Maclntosl as<lb/>
week for I k<lb/>
througl<lb/>
Tate a<lb/>
from Arcadia I<lb/>
the offensive .<lb/>
Tate earned<lb/>
performance<lb/>
along with ha ing s<lb/>
aces. 56 digs, 1 ? -<lb/>
and tour ble. -<lb/>
"Debbie has beer<lb/>
our games V i k<lb/>
.count on her it<lb/>
to her. She is all<lb/>
cred from hei pre-s<lb/>
and it we can keep her h<lb/>
she will definite!) K a -<lb/>
succeeding this yeai<lb/>
Kirk pa trick<lb/>
Macintosh, als a<lb/>
side hitter fi<lb/>
Was selected as the d<lb/>
blayer-of-the veek. Ma<lb/>
finished the -<lb/>
kills one service<lb/>
one Mock ass<lb/>
Michelle was sup i oi<lb/>
sides ol the ball this vend<lb/>
said Kirkpahrick On defens<lb/>
she seemed to be t er where th<lb/>
ball was She was coming out<lb/>
nowhere and making things haj<lb/>
pen for us<lb/>
<pb facs="00058099_0021"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6, 1988 19<lb/>
. . I HAMPTON<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
last Week(-l)<lb/>
Overall(33-16)<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
Michigan State<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Notre Pame<lb/>
 ake Forot<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Air 1 orce<lb/>
rolinian<lb/>
STYLISTS<lb/>
da Jones<lb/>
.<lb/>
tehurst<lb/>
NEWLY REMODELED<lb/>
? Perms<lb/>
I .axmg<lb/>
en;<lb/>
1706<lb/>
a hit<lb/>
3112<lb/>
lesnii iorfj<lb/>
0978<lb/>
a hit virtually<lb/>
?- ?? sAi gelesto<lb/>
. ?ks baseball<lb/>
lum ? g at :u after.<lb/>
pa : r just about<lb/>
ill want<lb/>
Mow to get<lb/>
the (.ard now<lb/>
efl u the firs<lb/>
. cess nii<lb/>
k t e believe in your<lb/>
ntia ???? ideii easier for<lb/>
? get the<lb/>
? .mi riftht<lb/>
' i nib or a<lb/>
ther you're n<lb/>
:?r i ?? senior or<lb/>
? ? look into<lb/>
approval<lb/>
ifc ids up an<lb/>
imp is or call<lb/>
??? and ask for a<lb/>
n plication<lb/>
? Express (lard<lb/>
?l Without It<lb/>
" hmrn ftJtl Ke irei yv,cf i'omp?m t?<lb/>
IRS unmasks new activities<lb/>
A<lb/>
(IRS) -The Department of In-<lb/>
tramural-Recreational Sports has<lb/>
introduced another unusual sport<lb/>
activity to the Club Sports Pro<lb/>
gram. The sport, underwater<lb/>
hockey, was originally intro-<lb/>
duced as a tun way to keep divers<lb/>
fit year round. However, the sport<lb/>
has caught on quickly and devel-<lb/>
oped into an international recrea-<lb/>
tional and competitive activity.<lb/>
The game is played utilizing<lb/>
the width of a pool Normally, the<lb/>
game is played in water approxi-<lb/>
mately 8 feet deep using a mask,<lb/>
fins snorkel and a foot long "Y"<lb/>
shaped stick as the medium for<lb/>
pushing a plastic coated lead<lb/>
puck along the bottom ot the pool.<lb/>
? team consist ot six players.<lb/>
For recreational purposes,<lb/>
the players are generally male and<lb/>
female mixed. Fhere are no for-<lb/>
mal positions, and strategy is<lb/>
rked out according to the op-<lb/>
ponents method of play. The<lb/>
ilayers remain under water as<lb/>
ong as they can pushing and<lb/>
issing the puck to each other in<lb/>
in effort to sc re a goal bv advanc-<lb/>
ing the puck to the opposite<lb/>
team's goal h1 wall).<lb/>
From the surface, underw ater<lb/>
hockey is not much of a spectator<lb/>
-port unless you have never<lb/>
seen a sport similar to sharks in a<lb/>
feeding frenzy! The best way to<lb/>
view this sport is to put on a mask<lb/>
and view the activity from where<lb/>
it is taking place, or better yet, get<lb/>
involved in it.<lb/>
Games are generally held on<lb/>
Friday evenings trom 7p.m.<lb/>
through 8:30 p.m. New members<lb/>
of the club are always welcome<lb/>
and your stick will be provided.<lb/>
Be sure to brine your mask, fins<lb/>
and snorkel and a pair oi good<lb/>
lungs ? even though gills would<lb/>
be better.<lb/>
For more information feel<lb/>
tree to contact Lynn Hams on<lb/>
Tuesdays and ITiursday at 77-<lb/>
905 or Patrick HarrisDave<lb/>
knowles at 757-6515.<lb/>
The tall intramural birdy<lb/>
basn was held recently in Mingcs<lb/>
Coiseum with the following re-<lb/>
sults. Badminton singles was a<lb/>
huge success, featuring six out-<lb/>
star ling semi-final matches and<lb/>
very ompetitive final games.<lb/>
In the men's open division,<lb/>
Gary Tilgham from Garrett Hall<lb/>
smashed his way into the record<lb/>
books by defeating Tote Clemens<lb/>
oi LX'lta Sigma in a three game<lb/>
match. Tho match featured nu-<lb/>
merous long rallies, and power<lb/>
slams finishing up with a five<lb/>
point tie breaker.<lb/>
In the men's intermediate<lb/>
competition, Leslie White of Pi<lb/>
Kappa Alpha triumphed over<lb/>
Tripp Roakes from fraternity<lb/>
fame Sig Fp in another 'dovvn-to-<lb/>
the-wire' affair.<lb/>
On the women's side of the<lb/>
net, prognosticate: lma Reek's<lb/>
favorite, lma Reek fell to the slams<lb/>
and passing shots of ECU shot<lb/>
putter Sarah Hickingbotham.<lb/>
Sarah captured the gold rather<lb/>
handily however, insiders claim<lb/>
that Reeks Ribs weren't well.<lb/>
EXCUSES EXCUSES<lb/>
Intramural flag football<lb/>
heads into its final week of com-<lb/>
petition as playoffs begin this<lb/>
week. Regular season top pricks<lb/>
include:<lb/>
Men's Independent A<lb/>
1. Funk Brothers<lb/>
2. Highste'bpers<lb/>
3. Fried City Gang<lb/>
4. Scott Sides wipers<lb/>
5. Scott SOB-C 1 furricanes<lb/>
Fraternity Division<lb/>
1. Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
2. Pi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
3. Sig Fp B<lb/>
4. Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
5. The la Chi<lb/>
Co-Rec Softball Standings<lb/>
1. Oakmont<lb/>
2. Silent Attack<lb/>
3. The Litewaits<lb/>
4. The Educators<lb/>
5. Damn Yankees<lb/>
Men's Independent B<lb/>
LBelkDPI<lb/>
2. Aycock 4th<lb/>
3. Longshots<lb/>
Women's Division<lb/>
1. The Scrags<lb/>
2. The Enforcers<lb/>
3. Zeta Tau Alpha<lb/>
4. Silent Attack<lb/>
5. Silver Bullet<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
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Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
(Next to Kmart)<lb/>
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Open MonThurs.<lb/>
10:00-8:00<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 10:00-9:00<lb/>
Open Sunday 1-6 p.m.<lb/>
Volleyball picks<lb/>
most valuable<lb/>
By CAROLYN J l SLICE<lb/>
Mjff Writer<lb/>
last Carolina volleyball<lb/>
coach udy Kirkpatrick has<lb/>
n uned Debbie Tate and Michelle<lb/>
Macintosh as the players-of-the-<lb/>
week for the week oi October 3<lb/>
through October 8.<lb/>
late, a junior outside hitter<lb/>
from Arcadia. IF, was selected as<lb/>
the offensive player-of the-week.<lb/>
Tate earned a 22 percent hitting<lb/>
performance in last week's play,<lb/>
along with having seven service<lb/>
aces, 56 digs, three block solos,<lb/>
and four block assists.<lb/>
"Debbie has been a big key in<lb/>
our games. We know that we can<lb/>
(ount on her it we can got the ball<lb/>
to her. She is almost fully recov-<lb/>
ered from her preseason injury<lb/>
and if we can keep her healthy,<lb/>
she will definitely be a key to us<lb/>
succeeding this year said<lb/>
Kirkpatrick.<lb/>
Macintosh, also a junior out-<lb/>
side hitter from Morehead City,<lb/>
was selected as the defensive<lb/>
plaver-of-the week. Macintosh<lb/>
finished the week's play with 19<lb/>
kills, one service ace, 52 digs, and<lb/>
one block assists.<lb/>
"Michelle was super on both<lb/>
sides of the ball this weekend<lb/>
said Kirkpatrick. "On defense,<lb/>
she seemed to be everywhere the<lb/>
ball was. She was coming out oi<lb/>
nowhere and making things hap-<lb/>
pen for us<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>