<?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="00058100_0001"/>
Coming Tuesday:<lb/>
The story behind the mailbox break-in in Jones Hal<lb/>
Features:<lb/>
Jim Shamlim takes an in depth look at the 69th<lb/>
annual Pitt County fair, see page 7.<lb/>
Sports:<lb/>
The Pirates meet defeat at the hands of West Virgina,<lb/>
overall they are l-5 and things aren't going to get<lb/>
easier, see page 9.<lb/>
?he fSaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol.63 No. 26<lb/>
Tuesday October 11,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Medical transport for ECU a possibility<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
Assistant News Fditor<lb/>
t?? III! I  IN!<lb/>
A resolution concerning<lb/>
emergency medical transporta-<lb/>
tion for students attending ECU,<lb/>
was brought up at Monday's<lb/>
weekly SGA meeting by Legisla-<lb/>
tor Allen Manning.<lb/>
Thv? student health service<lb/>
does not offer medical aid be-<lb/>
tween the hours oi 3 p.m. to 6 a.m.<lb/>
during the summer terms and 8<lb/>
p.m. to 8 a m. during the fall and<lb/>
spring semesters, so students are<lb/>
forced to turn to an emergency<lb/>
room at a Pitt Co. Hospital<lb/>
taxi service he said.<lb/>
At the present, insurance of-<lb/>
Manning said, "SGA decided fered by the Student Health Serv-<lb/>
in the fall of 1986 to terminate the ice, which covers emergency<lb/>
24-hour student health service, transportation costs, is only avail-<lb/>
because the insurance liability to able through a fee. In addition, a<lb/>
operate the service was extremely student must pay the regular<lb/>
costlv<lb/>
wise<lb/>
and was not financially semester health fees.<lb/>
"On campus, an average of<lb/>
two students a month require<lb/>
emergency transportation and,<lb/>
campus police should not be ex-<lb/>
pected to be a rescue unit nor a<lb/>
Manning resolved that the<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
of ECU supports the reimburse-<lb/>
ment of emergency transporta-<lb/>
tion costs to students who use the<lb/>
service during regular school<lb/>
terms after regular Student<lb/>
Health Service hours.<lb/>
"I would like to encourage<lb/>
the students to get involved in the<lb/>
SGA meetings, and vote for this<lb/>
resolution he said.<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association believes that the Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Service is responsible<lb/>
for overseeing procedures and<lb/>
providing funds concerning re-<lb/>
imbursement for after hours<lb/>
emergency transportation.<lb/>
"The SGA felt that since we<lb/>
are responsible for ending the 24-<lb/>
hour student health service, we<lb/>
should have another solution, for<lb/>
the students that might need<lb/>
medical attention, after the infir-<lb/>
mary is closed Manning said.<lb/>
According to Manning, he<lb/>
suggested the transportation plan<lb/>
to SHS Associate Director for<lb/>
Business Affairs Kay Van-<lb/>
Nortwick, and she supports the<lb/>
idea.<lb/>
VanNortwick said, "I think<lb/>
that this is a good idea. The uni-<lb/>
versity does not provide this serv-<lb/>
ice and some students are reluc-<lb/>
tant to call a city rescue unit, be-<lb/>
cause they charge for the service<lb/>
"This service would probably<lb/>
help during intramural games,<lb/>
when an athlete is injured, and the<lb/>
SHS is closed. Also, it would be<lb/>
helpful for students that have<lb/>
acute illnesses she said.<lb/>
According to Manning the<lb/>
idea has been introduced, and<lb/>
will be voted on next Monday, to<lb/>
determine if it meets the needs of<lb/>
the students.<lb/>
Smith becomes vice chancellor of student life and minority affairs<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
AuttUnt News Editor<lb/>
A new administrative posi-<lb/>
tion has been added to the student<lb/>
life program at ECU this semester.<lb/>
The university now has an assis-<lb/>
tant vice chancellor for student<lb/>
life and minority affairs.<lb/>
Dr. Larry T. Smith comes to<lb/>
ECU from a post as associate dean<lb/>
of students for programs and ac-<lb/>
tivities and director of minority<lb/>
affairs at Knox College in<lb/>
Galesburg, Illinois.<lb/>
Smith has a Ph.D. in higher<lb/>
education administration and<lb/>
supervision, which he received<lb/>
from Bowling Green State Uni-<lb/>
versity in Ohio.<lb/>
His appointment as ECU'S<lb/>
assistant vice chancellor for stu-<lb/>
dent life and minority affairs was<lb/>
announced by Dr. Elmer E. Meyer<lb/>
Jr who retired as vice chancellor<lb/>
of student life in August.<lb/>
Smith said ECU is a promis-<lb/>
ing environment for a minority<lb/>
affairs program.<lb/>
"I have a good feeling about<lb/>
acceptingthis position at ECU, be-<lb/>
cause of the university's attitude<lb/>
and care that it seems to have for<lb/>
its students. 1 can build on that<lb/>
type of excitement. The atmos-<lb/>
phere seems to be warm and open<lb/>
to the idea of establishing an office<lb/>
'ot minority affairs Smith said.<lb/>
During his two months in<lb/>
office, Smith stated that he is still<lb/>
forming opinions about ECU.<lb/>
He said, "I have made ef-<lb/>
forts to find out what the<lb/>
university's expectations are<lb/>
from a standpoint of minority<lb/>
affairs. ECU is just at a point now<lb/>
that the university offers minor-<lb/>
ity affairs, but it does not know<lb/>
what is needed<lb/>
According to Smith, there is<lb/>
a need for students to participate<lb/>
in minority affairs to show other<lb/>
schools that ECU is united.<lb/>
"I have gotten the impres-<lb/>
sion from some of the students<lb/>
that, white and black leaders on<lb/>
ECU's campus do not work to-<lb/>
gether. This should not be the case<lb/>
in an atmosphere that shares a<lb/>
common interest, such as being a<lb/>
part of the ECU community<lb/>
said Smith.<lb/>
Smith stated that he be-<lb/>
lieves that one of the most impor-<lb/>
tant issues that ECU can address<lb/>
is multiculturalism and plural-<lb/>
ism.<lb/>
He said, "Society is becom-<lb/>
ing more diverse. Some students<lb/>
need to learn that they will have to<lb/>
work with people of different<lb/>
backgrounds. They need to learn<lb/>
to appreciate different cultures,<lb/>
races, and ethnic backgrounds.<lb/>
Also, students should try to avoid<lb/>
sex discrimination. "<lb/>
Smith said, "We (ECU)<lb/>
would be doing the students an<lb/>
injustice if they did not learn this<lb/>
lesson. Because we would not be<lb/>
challenging them to broaden their<lb/>
horizon<lb/>
He said that he has ob-<lb/>
served an effort by the admini-<lb/>
stration to increase the awareness<lb/>
of minority student life at ECU<lb/>
and in the community.<lb/>
"It is evident to me that<lb/>
ECU sees that the area of minority<lb/>
students growth can be strength-<lb/>
ened. So, they (the administra-<lb/>
tion) took the mttiati ve by getting<lb/>
a vice chancellor for minority ait-<lb/>
fairs and student life to help<lb/>
improve racial awareness for stu-<lb/>
dents, faculty, towns-people, and<lb/>
the community Smith said.<lb/>
Smith stated that evidence<lb/>
of a change will take time.<lb/>
Student recreational center in the making<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
Newt Editor<lb/>
The vice chancellor of student life and minority affairs. Dr.<lb/>
Larry Smith (Photo Bv Thomas Walters, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
McDowell, Dillenger debate "Judges:<lb/>
Law makers or interpreters?" issue<lb/>
By TON! PAGE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
 The Jenkins Art Auditoruim<lb/>
was crowded with both students<lb/>
and faculty Thursday night as<lb/>
guest speakers debated the ques-<lb/>
tion: "Judges: Law makers or<lb/>
Interpreters?"<lb/>
On the right, Dr. Gary L.<lb/>
McDowell, a former assisfant to<lb/>
Attorney General Edwin Meese,<lb/>
defended the fundamentalist<lb/>
view that judges should leave leg-<lb/>
islatures alone. He criticized the<lb/>
modern courts' more liberal form<lb/>
of decision making which was<lb/>
successfully defended by Duke<lb/>
Law Ptotesor Walter Dillenger.<lb/>
fvL-Do well held his ground by<lb/>
using Jud?;e Robert Bork as an ex-<lb/>
ample of a traditionalist who held<lb/>
a strict interpretation of the<lb/>
constitution and the controversial<lb/>
role of the court in law- making.<lb/>
"Laws may be unjust at times, but<lb/>
that does not mean they are un-<lb/>
constitutional" McDowell said as<lb/>
he stated his belief that judges<lb/>
should have only those powers<lb/>
deligated to them in the<lb/>
constitution. McDowell said that<lb/>
today's "Anti-Traditionalist"<lb/>
thinkers make judgements based<lb/>
on moral standards and stretch<lb/>
the language of the constitution.<lb/>
McDowell spoke out against<lb/>
those who crucified Judge Robert<lb/>
Bork and said that "Substantive<lb/>
concern overrode credentials<lb/>
when Bork lost the appointment<lb/>
to the Supreme Court. He praised<lb/>
Bork's faithfulness to the<lb/>
constitution and defended past<lb/>
controversial decisions of the<lb/>
conservative court.<lb/>
On the left, liberal Professor<lb/>
Walter Dillenger who was once a<lb/>
student of Judge Bork stated that<lb/>
"conservatives such as Bork and<lb/>
McDowell often extoll the text of<lb/>
the constitution, yet they seldom<lb/>
quote it Dillenger pointed out<lb/>
the text of the constitution and ac-<lb/>
knowledged the framers intent as<lb/>
being a "general principal of law"<lb/>
that would inevitably change<lb/>
with the times.<lb/>
Dillenger gave examples of<lb/>
"bad laws" made us the past by<lb/>
the court which confo; med to the<lb/>
language of the constitution so<lb/>
strictly that fundamental rights<lb/>
were taken away in the process.<lb/>
"A strict literal interpretation can<lb/>
be dangerous" said Dillenger<lb/>
"We must maintain fidelity to the<lb/>
constitution and those who wrote<lb/>
it, but validity of decisions must<lb/>
be stressed. The framers gave us a<lb/>
general principal and judges<lb/>
must work with that to determine<lb/>
law based on the facts of a case<lb/>
A short question and answer<lb/>
period followed the debate which<lb/>
was moderated by political sci-<lb/>
ence professor Tinsley Yarbough.<lb/>
A new 165,000 square foot<lb/>
student recreational center will be<lb/>
the latest improvement on stu-<lb/>
dent life at ECU.<lb/>
The need for this type of rec-<lb/>
reational facility at ECU was<lb/>
noted in the university's long-<lb/>
range planning document pre-<lb/>
pared in 1982. The document indi-<lb/>
cates that the lack of suitable<lb/>
space will be resolved by the con-<lb/>
struction of  a new physical<lb/>
education and intramuralrec-<lb/>
reational facility<lb/>
Last year the SGA initiated a<lb/>
resolution in support of the con-<lb/>
struction of a new facility, and<lb/>
highly recommended to the ad-<lb/>
ministration that a new recrea-<lb/>
tional facility be placed on the<lb/>
priority list for new construction<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor of Student<lb/>
Life Dr. Alfred Matthews said,<lb/>
"This is going to be a state of the<lb/>
art facility. There are still a bunch<lb/>
of 'possibles and maybes' as far as<lb/>
what is going to be in this new rec-<lb/>
center, but there is certainly<lb/>
plenty of space to be filled up<lb/>
"We're looking at space<lb/>
enough for anywhere between 12<lb/>
to 18 racquetball courts, five to six<lb/>
volleyball courts, two swimming<lb/>
pools ? possibly one indoor and<lb/>
the other outside. We're still very<lb/>
much in the planning stages so<lb/>
there is lots of room for changes<lb/>
said Matthews.<lb/>
The center will house courts,<lb/>
which will provide facilities for<lb/>
the following sports: racquetball<lb/>
and squash; multipurpose area<lb/>
for basketball, volleyball, tennis,<lb/>
badminton and jogging; aerobics,<lb/>
strength and weight training; ar-<lb/>
eas for golf, archery and batting<lb/>
practice; and a swimming pool.<lb/>
There will also be equipment<lb/>
check-out, locker rooms, laundry<lb/>
facilities, seminar rooms, lounges<lb/>
and administrative offices.<lb/>
"Anywhere from six to eight<lb/>
students and three to four faculty<lb/>
members will make up the plan-<lb/>
ning board that says what goes<lb/>
inside. I would like to see two<lb/>
sophomores, two juniors, and two<lb/>
seniors on the board to give it<lb/>
some continuity. The students<lb/>
will know what they want and<lb/>
need in this facility said Mat-<lb/>
thews.<lb/>
Operation and governance of<lb/>
the facility will be primarily stu-<lb/>
dents. "Students run the show<lb/>
over at Memorial Gym, and this<lb/>
will be no different said Mat-<lb/>
thews.<lb/>
An increase in tuition, which<lb/>
may take effect as early as next<lb/>
fall, will begin paying for the $14<lb/>
million facility. "We estimate the<lb/>
increase at around $75 for full<lb/>
time students, but this is subject to<lb/>
change, it may even be lower<lb/>
said Matthews. Part time students<lb/>
and summer session students will<lb/>
pay a prorated fee, faculty and<lb/>
staff utilizing the facility would<lb/>
pay a similar fee.<lb/>
There are three proposed<lb/>
sites for the building: 1) adjacent<lb/>
tobehind Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, 2) the College Hill area,<lb/>
where the tennis courts are pres-<lb/>
ently located, and 3) the vicinity of<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Matthews said, "All these<lb/>
areas have the space for the build-<lb/>
ing, which will be multi-story, but<lb/>
the immediate problem facing<lb/>
each site is parking. The Menden-<lb/>
hall area would probably be the<lb/>
best, simply because it would be<lb/>
right there on the central campus.<lb/>
It would be accessible to more<lb/>
people, but parking is the main<lb/>
problem with this site<lb/>
The facility is geared toward<lb/>
informal recreation. Matthews<lb/>
said, "We plan to give priority to<lb/>
informal recreation, this facility is<lb/>
a place to go to exercise and have<lb/>
fun<lb/>
The priority then proceeds as<lb/>
follows: organized university re-<lb/>
lated, recreational programs, in-<lb/>
structional programs, intramu-<lb/>
ral s ? when space is available<lb/>
and the facility will be for rent to<lb/>
the community when space is<lb/>
available.<lb/>
Matthews said the facility<lb/>
will take about a year to design<lb/>
and an additional 18 to 24 months<lb/>
for construction.<lb/>
A smile from, and a crown for ECU'S newest Homecoming Queen, Sonja Love (Photo By Mark<lb/>
Love, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0002"/><lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 11. 1988<lb/>
Pinochet acknowledges defeat, extends rule<lb/>
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)<lb/>
President Augusto Pinochet ac-<lb/>
knowledged defeat in a referen-<lb/>
dum on extending his rule but<lb/>
again rejected opposition de-<lb/>
mands for his resignation and<lb/>
vowed to stay in power for an-<lb/>
other 18 months.<lb/>
A key opposition leader,<lb/>
meanwhile, was quoted Sunday<lb/>
as calling for talks with the mili-<lb/>
tary government on the nation's<lb/>
oolitical future.<lb/>
In a surprise television ap-<lb/>
pearance from his country home<lb/>
at Bucalemu, Gen. Pinochet said<lb/>
Sunday, "1 acknowledge the<lb/>
opposition's victory, but I am not<lb/>
going to change what the<lb/>
constitution savs.<lb/>
March 11,1990, is going to be<lb/>
the day that the government is<lb/>
handed over.<lb/>
"The situation is very<lb/>
simple he said. "We fulfilled<lb/>
the constitution that was set up <lb/>
so now that the opposition has<lb/>
triumphed, why should we<lb/>
change?"<lb/>
The comments of the 72-year-<lb/>
old commander-in-chief of<lb/>
Chile's armed forces came during<lb/>
a three-minute TV newscast. Pi-<lb/>
nochet was dressed in a short-<lb/>
sleeve blue shirt. He appeared<lb/>
relaxed and spoke clearly and<lb/>
firmly.<lb/>
Nearly 7 million Chileans<lb/>
went to the polls Wednesday to<lb/>
vote on the armed forces' pro-<lb/>
posal that Pinochet remain ore-<lb/>
sident until 1997. Pinochet, who<lb/>
ousted elected Marxist President<lb/>
Salvador Allende in a 1973 coup<lb/>
that left Allende dead, lost by<lb/>
about 800,000 votes or a margin of<lb/>
more than 11 percent.<lb/>
The vote was carried out<lb/>
under a 1980 constitution. That<lb/>
document also calls for elections<lb/>
for president and congress to be<lb/>
held in December 1989, with the<lb/>
winners taking office in March.<lb/>
Opposition leaders have<lb/>
pressed Pinochet's military gov-<lb/>
ernment to move up the date of<lb/>
elections and make other consti-<lb/>
tutional changes.<lb/>
Their proposals include<lb/>
eliminating a constitutional ban<lb/>
on Marxist gTOups, and allowing<lb/>
the entire Senate ? not just two-<lb/>
thirds ? to be elected rather than<lb/>
appointed.<lb/>
Jurisdictional dispute in hostage case<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ?A key<lb/>
phase of the trial to two American<lb/>
Indians accused of taking hos-<lb/>
tages at a Robeson County news-<lb/>
paper could come down to a juris-<lb/>
dictional dispute over whether<lb/>
the case should be in federal court<lb/>
officials say.<lb/>
U.S. District Court judge Ter-<lb/>
rertce Boyle spent the weekend<lb/>
considering whether to dismiss<lb/>
federal charges against Eddie<lb/>
Hatcher and Timothy Jacobs,<lb/>
despite objections from prosecu-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
The crowning irony in this<lb/>
case is that the defendants chose<lb/>
their jurisdiction on Feb. 1 and<lb/>
now they want to throw out the<lb/>
charge on a jurisdictional ques-<lb/>
tion Assistant U.S. Attorney<lb/>
lohn Bruce said Friday. "I think it<lb/>
would be tragic for this prosecu-<lb/>
tion to be terminated  on what<lb/>
we view to be an extremely strict<lb/>
view of this matter<lb/>
But while Bruce argued that<lb/>
the two asked to surrender to FBI<lb/>
agents and included in their writ-<lb/>
ten list of demands a requirement<lb/>
for a federal investigation of al-<lb/>
leged corruption in Robeson<lb/>
County, the defense urged Boyle<lb/>
to take a narrower view.<lb/>
'There is absolutely no proof<lb/>
as to Timmy Jacobs making a<lb/>
demand on the federal govern-<lb/>
ment said Lewis Pitts of the<lb/>
Christie Institute-South, defend-<lb/>
ing Jacobs. He told Boyle the fed-<lb/>
eral hostage-taking law was de-<lb/>
signed to deal with international<lb/>
seizures and that Congress had<lb/>
specifically wanted strict limits<lb/>
on its use in domestic cases.<lb/>
Boyle appeared to be leaning<lb/>
toward the defense's side on Fri-<lb/>
dav.<lb/>
"What may have been done<lb/>
may have been conspicuously a<lb/>
crime, but the question is whether<lb/>
it's a criminal matter against the<lb/>
United States Bovle said<lb/>
?m<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
United Way<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
Why not come by the REAL Crisis Intervention Center: 312 E.<lb/>
10th St: or call 758-HELP, For Free Confidential Counseling or As-<lb/>
sistant<lb/>
Our Volunteers and Staff are on duty 24 hrs. a day, year around,<lb/>
in order to assist you in virtually any problem area you might have<lb/>
Our longstanding goal has always been to preserve and enhance<lb/>
the quality of life for you and our community.<lb/>
Licensed And Accredited By The State ot North Carolina<lb/>
MARATHON<lb/>
RESTAURANTS<lb/>
Greek Owned &amp; Operated Since 1979<lb/>
Delivery Hours<lb/>
Mon. -Fri. 4-11<lb/>
Sat. - Sun. 11-11<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
GREEK DISHES<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
GPEK PASTRIES<lb/>
'Best Deal in Town"<lb/>
752-0326<lb/>
or<lb/>
752-3753<lb/>
560 Evans St.<lb/>
Opposition leaders also want<lb/>
to streamline the process by<lb/>
which future constitutional<lb/>
changes can be made.<lb/>
"We will formally call on<lb/>
those holding power now to talk<lb/>
to reach an agreement opposi-<lb/>
tion spokesman Patricio Aylwin<lb/>
said in an interview published<lb/>
Sunday in the newspaper La<lb/>
Epoca. "We will take the initiative<lb/>
by making a proposal and call to<lb/>
the armed torces<lb/>
Aylwin is spokesman for the<lb/>
16-party coalition that urged<lb/>
Chileans vote "no" in the referen-<lb/>
dum.<lb/>
A 4-man military junta acts as<lb/>
the legislatureof this South Amer-<lb/>
ica country, which has been ruled<lb/>
by freely elected, democratic gov-<lb/>
ernments for most of its 178-year<lb/>
history as an independent nation.<lb/>
The junta is empowered to<lb/>
change the constitution, but Pino-<lb/>
chet said in a speech broadcast<lb/>
nationwide the night after the ref-<lb/>
erendum that he had no intention<lb/>
of doing so.<lb/>
Ricardo Lagos, a prominent,<lb/>
moderate Socialist, acknowlegcd<lb/>
that negotiations, if they take<lb/>
place, would take time. "The<lb/>
people are mature enough to<lb/>
understand that 15 years of dicta-<lb/>
torship don't end in 15 hours<lb/>
But other Pinochet opponents<lb/>
already have served notice they<lb/>
don't intend to wait long or pea i<lb/>
fully. On Saturday, a coalition ol<lb/>
leftist parties publicly called for<lb/>
Pinochet's immediate resign.<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The situation sets up poten<lb/>
tial clashes between the govern<lb/>
ment and its opponents<lb/>
JOIN THE WINNING<lb/>
COMBINATION<lb/>
BE A RESIDENT<lb/>
ADVISOR<lb/>
APPLICATION DEADLINE FOR<lb/>
SPRING EMPLOYMENT 1989:<lb/>
OCTOBER 19, 1988<lb/>
All new application should attend an<lb/>
organizational meeting during the week of<lb/>
1010 12. Check bulletin boards for time<lb/>
and place. For information contact the<lb/>
departmental office in 214 Whichard,<lb/>
757-6771 or any residence hall office.<lb/>
Serving tin' East Carol ? j ?.<lb/>
James F. -J. McKee. Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey Spencer M ym m ll<lb/>
Richard-Alan Cook Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY RATES<lb/>
0-49 Column inches$4.5<lb/>
50 99 I.<lb/>
100-149  4<lb/>
150-199  1 95<lb/>
200 249  3.85<lb/>
250 and above   3 75<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in Addition to Regular Spjc Rj<lb/>
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ts and black<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
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5.001 10, ?<lb/>
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BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
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Govern<lb/>
BELGRADE, Yugoslav<lb/>
(AP)  Workers put down ? j<lb/>
students went on a hunger Stril<lb/>
and Serbs rallied to condemn<lb/>
government crackdown on gro<lb/>
ing protests, but the natio<lb/>
president threatened tougher<lb/>
curity measures.<lb/>
In an unusual 30-minute<lb/>
dio and television addr<lb/>
day, President Raif Dizdare<lb/>
also promised a shake-up<lb/>
 ommunistPartyleadersb. <lb/>
called for economic reforn<lb/>
national economic crisis has en<lb/>
bined with tensions betw.<lb/>
Serbs and ethnic Albaniai<lb/>
three months of protests an I<lb/>
for an overhaul in the partv hi<lb/>
archv.<lb/>
In the southern republic<lb/>
Montenegro, hundreds I<lb/>
grad University stud rttsb<lb/>
hunger strike Sunday to pi<lb/>
the use of force bv police. ThJ<lb/>
also pressed their demai<lb/>
overhaul of regional ar. -<lb/>
Communist leaders?<lb/>
In an unusual .<lb/>
demand for democracy, tl ?<lb/>
rial Communist youth uni<lb/>
called for "direct ar. I<lb/>
Laotian authorities<lb/>
acknowledge captui<lb/>
BANGKOK, Thailand<lb/>
? Laos has acknow ledgi -d arre<lb/>
ing two Americans I -<lb/>
the communist coui<lb/>
cize a reward I<lb/>
war prisoners<lb/>
U.S. officials ir-i ? - <lb/>
the Laotian g -vemment h<lb/>
formed the U.S. En .in V<lb/>
tiane that it had arrested Do<lb/>
! ong of Jacksonville N C<lb/>
former Lin ton, Ind. -<lb/>
James Copp. now of I lai<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
It was the first<lb/>
knowiedgment by I<lb/>
forces had captured the p -<lb/>
LLS. Embas- sp ?<lb/>
Ross Pet2 I Saturday<lb/>
Laos informed the American F<lb/>
bassy but added that we have<lb/>
further word regarding t<lb/>
cae" -?-<lb/>
Ms Long and Copp<lb/>
Thai fishing boat, crossed<lb/>
Mekong River beundarv betw<lb/>
Thailand and Laos and were ca<lb/>
tured Oct. 3 in a Laotian <lb/>
according to Thai- who v<lb/>
to visit them.<lb/>
Before setting oit Ms<lb/>
told The Associated Pn ss t<lb/>
they intended to pass<lb/>
bills stamped with an of I -<lb/>
million to an an Vi<lb/>
ese or Cambodian who<lb/>
produce a live American bei<lb/>
held in Indochina.<lb/>
Four American colleagues<lb/>
Ms. Long and Copp dr<lb/>
about $1,000 worth I<lb/>
stamped bills on Fnda<lb/>
same area of the Meki rig M uch<lb/>
the money eventually ended <lb/>
the hands of Thai chi<lb/>
Meanwhile in the<lb/>
States, five members ot the<lb/>
family passed ou j<lb/>
Saturday I ha t u rged pa j<lb/>
the Laotian Embassy in Was<lb/>
ton, D.C, to inquire about G<lb/>
and Ms Long<lb/>
The family was in Indiana)<lb/>
lis to visit The Moving V.<lb/>
model oi the Vietnam VeteraJ<lb/>
Memorial that is on travelif<lb/>
exhibit<lb/>
The family said Copp and <lb/>
Long had the appropriate pap<lb/>
to visit Thailand but not Laos<lb/>
"This wasn't a Rambo<lb/>
sion Bill Copp said of<lb/>
brother's activities. These wi<lb/>
civilians and they were handi<lb/>
out the currency. The)<lb/>
tmng to make the govemmj<lb/>
get something done about<lb/>
soldiers who may be missingj<lb/>
held prisoner<lb/>
"He's not a renegade Sail<lb/>
Copp said oi her brother w<lb/>
served in the Army in Vietnai<lb/>
1985. "He rust thinks it's at<lb/>
time for those boys to I<lb/>
home<lb/>
The U S. government still ij<lb/>
2,393 Americans as missing<lb/>
action in the three lndochin<lb/>
countries after the Vietnam<lb/>
ended in 1975, but no solid<lb/>
dence has emerged that any<lb/>
still alive.<lb/>
The reward is being offe<lb/>
by 21 VS. congressmen and<lb/>
vate American citizens<lb/>
The six Amencans in Soi<lb/>
east Asia seeking informatioi<lb/>
MlAs are members of the<lb/>
tional Steering Committee<lb/>
American War Veterans, a pn <lb/>
lobbying group.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0003"/><lb/>
'I<lb/>
i<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
CXZTOBER 11,1988<lb/>
Pinochet acknowledges defeat, extends rule<lb/>
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) ?<lb/>
President Augusto Pinochet ac-<lb/>
knowledged defeat in a referen-<lb/>
dum on extending his rule but<lb/>
again rejected opposition de-<lb/>
mands for his resignation and<lb/>
vowed to stay in power for an-<lb/>
other 18 months.<lb/>
A key opposition leader,<lb/>
meanwhile, was quoted Sunday<lb/>
as calling for talks with the mili-<lb/>
tary government on the nation's<lb/>
oolitical future.<lb/>
In a surprise television ap-<lb/>
pearance from his country home<lb/>
at Bucalemu, Gen. Pinochet said<lb/>
Sunday, "I acknowledge the<lb/>
opposition's victory, but I am not<lb/>
going to change what the<lb/>
constitution says.<lb/>
March 11,1990, is going to be<lb/>
the day that the government is<lb/>
handed over.<lb/>
"The situation is very<lb/>
simple he said. "We fullfilled<lb/>
the constitution that was set up<lb/>
so now that the opposition has<lb/>
triumphed, why should we<lb/>
change?"<lb/>
The comments of the 72-year-<lb/>
old commander-in-chief of<lb/>
Chile's armed forces came during<lb/>
a three-minute TV newscast. Pi-<lb/>
nochet was dressed in a short-<lb/>
sleeve blue shirt. He appeared<lb/>
relaxed and spoke clearly and<lb/>
firmly.<lb/>
Nearly 7 million Chileans<lb/>
went to the polls Wednesday to<lb/>
vote on the armed forces' pro-<lb/>
posal that Pinochet remain ore-<lb/>
sident until 1997. Pinochet, who<lb/>
ousted elected Marxist President<lb/>
Salvador Allende in a 1973 coup<lb/>
that left Allende dead, lost by<lb/>
about 800,000 votes or a margin of<lb/>
more than 11 percent.<lb/>
The vote was carried out<lb/>
under a 1980 constitution. That<lb/>
document also calls for elections<lb/>
for president and congress to be<lb/>
held in December 1989, with the<lb/>
winners taking office in March.<lb/>
Opposition leaders have<lb/>
pressed Pinochet's military gov-<lb/>
ernment to move up the date of<lb/>
elections and make other consti-<lb/>
tutional changes.<lb/>
Their proposals include<lb/>
eliminating a constitutional ban<lb/>
on Marxist groups, and allowing<lb/>
the entire Senate ? not just two-<lb/>
thirds ? to be elected rather than<lb/>
appointed.<lb/>
Opposition leaders also want<lb/>
to streamline the process by<lb/>
which future constitutional<lb/>
changes can be made.<lb/>
"We will formally call on<lb/>
those holding power now to talk<lb/>
to reach an agreement opposi-<lb/>
tion spokesman Patricio Aylwin<lb/>
said in an interview published<lb/>
Sunday in the newspaper La<lb/>
Epoca. "We will take the initiative<lb/>
by making a proposal and call to<lb/>
the armed torces<lb/>
Aylwin is spokesman for the<lb/>
16-party coalition that urged<lb/>
Chileans vote "no" in the referen-<lb/>
dum.<lb/>
A 4-man military junta acts as<lb/>
the legislature of this South Amer-<lb/>
ica country, which has been ruled<lb/>
by freely elected, democratic gov-<lb/>
ernments for most of its 178-year<lb/>
history as an independent nation.<lb/>
The junta is empowered to<lb/>
chang. he constitution, but Pino-<lb/>
chet said in a speech broadcast<lb/>
nationwide the night after the ref-<lb/>
erendum that he had no intention<lb/>
of doing so.<lb/>
Ricardo Lagos, a prominent,<lb/>
moderate Socialist, acknowleged<lb/>
that negotiations, if they take<lb/>
place, would take time. "The<lb/>
people are mature enough to<lb/>
understand that 15 years of dicta-<lb/>
torship don't end in 15 hours<lb/>
But other Pinochet opponents<lb/>
already have served notice they<lb/>
don't intend to wait long or peace-<lb/>
fully. On Saturday, a coalition of<lb/>
leftist parties publicly called for<lb/>
Pinochet's immediate resigna-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The situation sets up poten-<lb/>
tial clashes between the govern-<lb/>
ment and its opponents.<lb/>
Jurisdictional dispute in hostage case<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ?A key<lb/>
phase of the trial to two American<lb/>
Indians accused of taking hos-<lb/>
tages at a Robeson County news-<lb/>
paper could come down to a juris-<lb/>
dictional dispute over whether<lb/>
the case should be in federal court,<lb/>
officials say.<lb/>
U.S. District Court Judge Ter-<lb/>
rence Boyle spent the weekend<lb/>
considering whether to dismiss<lb/>
federal charges against Eddie<lb/>
Hatcher and Timothy Jacobs,<lb/>
despite objections from prosecu-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
"The crowning irony in this<lb/>
case is that the defendants chose<lb/>
their jurisdiction on Feb. 1 and<lb/>
now they want to throw out the<lb/>
charge on a jurisdictional ques-<lb/>
tion Assistant U.S. Attorney<lb/>
John Bruce said Friday. "I think it<lb/>
would be tragic for this prosecu-<lb/>
tion to be terminated  on what<lb/>
we view to be an extremely strict<lb/>
view of this matter<lb/>
But while Bruce argued that<lb/>
the two asked to surrender to FBI<lb/>
agents and included in their writ-<lb/>
ten list of demands a requirement<lb/>
for a federal investigation of al-<lb/>
leged corruption in Robeson<lb/>
County, the defense urged Boyle<lb/>
to take a narrower view.<lb/>
"There is absolutely no proof<lb/>
as to Timmy Jacobs making a<lb/>
demand on the federal govern-<lb/>
ment said Lewis Pitts of the<lb/>
Christie Institute-South, defend-<lb/>
ing Jacobs. He told Boyle the fed-<lb/>
eral hostage-taking law was de-<lb/>
signed to deal with international<lb/>
seizures and that Congress had<lb/>
specifically wanted strict limits<lb/>
on its use in domestic cases.<lb/>
Boyle appeared to be leaning<lb/>
toward the defense's side on Fri-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"What may have been done<lb/>
may have been conspicuously a<lb/>
crime, but the question is whether<lb/>
if s a criminal matter against the<lb/>
United States Boyle said<lb/>
United Way<lb/>
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X) Greenville Blvd Greenville<lb/>
D<lb/>
Govern<lb/>
BELGRADE, Yugoslav<lb/>
(AP) ? Worjters put down tool<lb/>
students went on a hunger stri j<lb/>
and Serbs rallied to condemn)<lb/>
government crackdown on groi<lb/>
ing protests, but the natior<lb/>
president threatened tougher<lb/>
curity measures.<lb/>
In an unusual 30-minute<lb/>
dio and television address Sul<lb/>
day, President Raif DizdareJ<lb/>
also promised a shake-up<lb/>
Communist Party leadership ai<lb/>
called for economic reforms,<lb/>
national economic crisis has coi<lb/>
bined with tensions betw<lb/>
Serbs and ethnic Albanians to fi<lb/>
three months of protests and caj<lb/>
for an overhaul in the party hi<lb/>
archy.<lb/>
In the southern republic<lb/>
Montenegro, hundreds of Til<lb/>
grad University students begai<lb/>
hunger strike Sunday to prot<lb/>
the use of force by police,<lb/>
also pressed their demands for,<lb/>
overhaul of regional and nahoi<lb/>
Communist leadership.<lb/>
In an unusually outspokJ<lb/>
demand for democracy, the of<lb/>
rial Communist youth union al<lb/>
called for "direct and secret" el<lb/>
Laotian authorities<lb/>
acknowledge captui<lb/>
BANGKOK, Thailand (.<lb/>
? Laos has acknowledged am<lb/>
ing two Americans who entei<lb/>
the communist country to put<lb/>
cize a reward to free Amerid<lb/>
war prisoners.<lb/>
VS. officials in Bangkok sal<lb/>
the Laotian government has if<lb/>
formed the U.S. Embassy in VU<lb/>
tiane that it had arrested Doni<lb/>
Long of Jacksonville, N.C, ai<lb/>
former Linton, Ind. residei<lb/>
James Copp, now of Hampsteal<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
It was the first reported<lb/>
knowledgment by Laos that<lb/>
forces had captured the pair.<lb/>
U.S. Embassy spokesmaj<lb/>
Ross Petzig said Saturday tl<lb/>
Laos informed the American Ei<lb/>
bassy but added that we have;<lb/>
further word regarding tl<lb/>
Ms. Long and Copp hire<lb/>
Thai fishing boat, crossed t<lb/>
Mekong River boundary betw<lb/>
Thailand and Laos and were ca<lb/>
tured Oct. 3 in a Laotian villaj<lb/>
according to Thais who were al<lb/>
to visit them.<lb/>
Before setting off, Ms. L01<lb/>
told The Associated Press tl<lb/>
they intended to pass out do<lb/>
bills stamped with an offer of $<lb/>
million to any Laotian, Vietnai<lb/>
ese or Cambodian who coi<lb/>
produce a live American beii<lb/>
held in Indochina.<lb/>
Four American colleagues j<lb/>
Ms. Long and Copp dropj<lb/>
about $1,000 worth of rewai<lb/>
stamped bills on Friday into tj<lb/>
same area of the Mekong. Muchl<lb/>
the money eventually ended upj<lb/>
the hands of Thai children.<lb/>
Meanwhile in the Unitj<lb/>
States, five members of the Co<lb/>
family passed out strips of pa<lb/>
Saturday that urged people to 1<lb/>
the Laotian Embassy in VYashit<lb/>
ton, D.C, to inquire about Coj<lb/>
and Ms. Long.<lb/>
The family was in Indiana<lb/>
lis to visit The Moving Wallj<lb/>
model of the Vietnam Vetet<lb/>
Memorial that is on travelij<lb/>
exhibit.<lb/>
The family said Copp and N<lb/>
Long had the appropriate paj<lb/>
to visit Thailand but not Laos<lb/>
This wasn't a Rambo<lb/>
sion Bill Copp said of<lb/>
brother's activities. These<lb/>
civilians and they were hand<lb/>
out the currency. They<lb/>
trying to make the gove<lb/>
get something done about<lb/>
soldiers who may be missing<lb/>
held prisoner<lb/>
-He's not a renegade' Sa<lb/>
Copp said of her brother,<lb/>
served in the Army in Vietna<lb/>
1985. "He just thinks it's al<lb/>
time for those boys to<lb/>
home<lb/>
The US. government still<lb/>
2,393 Americans as missing<lb/>
action in the three Indochi<lb/>
countries after the Vietnam<lb/>
ended in 1975, but no solid<lb/>
denee has emerged mat any<lb/>
still alive.<lb/>
The reward is being<lb/>
by 21 US congressmen and<lb/>
vate American citizens.<lb/>
The six Americans in<lb/>
east Asia seeking informa<lb/>
Ml As are members o <lb/>
Steering Committee<lb/>
canWarV<lb/>
lobbying group.<lb/>
wd<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0004"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 11,1988 3<lb/>
rule<lb/>
i; mochet opponents<lb/>
ib -i! ved notice they<lb/>
wait long or peace<lb/>
?  .i voalitton ol<lb/>
parties publ s called foi<lb/>
diate resigna-<lb/>
?-iis up poten-<lb/>
h tween the govern-<lb/>
onents.<lb/>
ING<lb/>
liKS<lb/>
'? ,00<lb/>
.fr1<lb/>
 ? ?i mom<lb/>
t ? ; I in ??? ? il-<lb/>
Box<lb/>
79?<lb/>
'JN<lb/>
 rc<lb/>
af<lb/>
'?"?<lb/>
? 6 <lb/>
iOURS E<lb/>
Givd<lb/>
VERYDAYJ<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Government toughens despite strikes<lb/>
r<lb/>
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia<lb/>
t,AP)  Workers put down tools,<lb/>
students went on a hunger strike<lb/>
and Serbs rallied to condemn a<lb/>
government crackdown on grow-<lb/>
ing protests, but the nation's<lb/>
president threatened tougher se-<lb/>
curity measures.<lb/>
In an unusual 30-minute ra-<lb/>
dio and television address Sun-<lb/>
day, President Raif Dizdarevic<lb/>
also promised a shake-up in<lb/>
Communist Party leadership and<lb/>
called for economic reforms. A<lb/>
national economic crisis has com-<lb/>
bined with tensions between<lb/>
Serbs and ethnic Albanians to fuel<lb/>
three months of protests and calls<lb/>
for an overhaul in the party hier-<lb/>
archy.<lb/>
In the southern republic of<lb/>
Montenegro, hundreds of Tito-<lb/>
grad University students began a<lb/>
hunger strike Sunday to protest<lb/>
the use of force by police. They<lb/>
also pressed their demands for an<lb/>
overhaul of regional and national<lb/>
Communist leadership.<lb/>
In an unusually outspoken<lb/>
demand for democracy, the offi-<lb/>
cial Communist youth union also<lb/>
called for "direct and secret" elec-<lb/>
tions get leaders the people would<lb/>
support.<lb/>
Residents reported a heavy<lb/>
police presence and roadblocks<lb/>
around Titograd, the capital of<lb/>
Montenegro located 280 miles<lb/>
southwest of Belgrade. Riot police<lb/>
wielding clubs broke up an over-<lb/>
night rally there Saturday after<lb/>
demonstrators called for the<lb/>
ouster of regional Communist<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
In the northern Montenegrin<lb/>
town of Niksic, 15 miles to the<lb/>
northwest, thousands of local<lb/>
steel mill workers put down their<lb/>
tools Sunday and marched to<lb/>
protest what they view as police<lb/>
brutality the day before, the state<lb/>
news agency Tanjug said.<lb/>
Police fired tear gas there<lb/>
Saturday to break up another<lb/>
crowd, and three people were<lb/>
reported hospitalized Sunday.<lb/>
In his speech, Dizdarevic,<lb/>
who heads a nine-member collec-<lb/>
tive presidency that also com-<lb/>
mands the country's armed<lb/>
forces, said if the protest persist,<lb/>
they "could lead us to adopt<lb/>
emergency measures He urged<lb/>
all Yugoslavians to stay calm.<lb/>
He did not elaborate, but it is<lb/>
believed that if a state of emer-<lb/>
gency were declared, it would<lb/>
likely include a curfew, restriction<lb/>
of movement and deployment of<lb/>
troops in the streets.<lb/>
Recent Serbian nationalist<lb/>
rallies and worker protests "are<lb/>
seriously jeopardizing public or-<lb/>
der Dizdarevic said. "Thereisa<lb/>
real danger that the actions which<lb/>
are imperiling constitutional or-<lb/>
der could continue and spread.<lb/>
"The institutions and organs<lb/>
of this country will do all that the<lb/>
constitution laws permit to pro-<lb/>
tect public order and peace, per-<lb/>
sonal security and property, aned<lb/>
the constitutional system he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Dizdarevic promised un-<lb/>
specified economic measures to<lb/>
combat 217 percent inflation, a<lb/>
$21 billion dollar debt and 15<lb/>
percent unemployment.<lb/>
He also said the policy-mak-<lb/>
ing Central Committee, which is<lb/>
scheduled to meet Oct. 17, will<lb/>
make changes in the country's<lb/>
leadership. But he did not say<lb/>
who might be replaced.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Tanjug said the<lb/>
situation in Montenegro was<lb/>
"extremely serious<lb/>
In troubled southern Kosovo<lb/>
province, about 20,000 people<lb/>
rallied to press Serbian claims of<lb/>
harassment by the ethnic Al-<lb/>
banian majority.<lb/>
Police did not report any inci-<lb/>
dents, however, at the rally in<lb/>
Titovo Mitrovica, 145 miles south<lb/>
of Belgrade.<lb/>
At dozens of similar rallies in<lb/>
recent months, Serbs have railed<lb/>
against the ethnic Albanian Com-<lb/>
munist leaders in Kosovo, one of<lb/>
two autonomous provinces in the<lb/>
republic of Serbia. The mostly<lb/>
Christian Serbs have long been at<lb/>
odds with the Albanians, who are<lb/>
mainly Moslem.<lb/>
To head off ethnic violence in<lb/>
Kosovo, Albanian Halit Trnavci<lb/>
told the crowd Sunday that Serbs<lb/>
and Albanians should protect<lb/>
links forged through the centu-<lb/>
ries.<lb/>
About 10,000 other people<lb/>
rallied in Subotica, a town on the<lb/>
border with Hungary in Serbia's<lb/>
other autonomous province,<lb/>
Vojvodina, Tanjug said.<lb/>
EVERY TUESDAY<lb/>
NITE IS COLLEGE NITE 8-11<lb/>
ONLY $2.00<lb/>
ADMISSION WITH COLLEGE I.O.<lb/>
.75$ SKATE RENTAL<lb/>
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STEVE HARDY'S ORIGINAL BEACH PARTY<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT<lb/>
Fun After Business Hours <lb/>
Laotian authorities<lb/>
acknowledge capture<lb/>
BANGKOK, Thailand (AD<lb/>
Laos has acknowledged arrest-<lb/>
ing two Americans who entered<lb/>
the communist country to publi-<lb/>
cize a reward to free American<lb/>
war prisoners.<lb/>
U.S. officials in Bangkok said<lb/>
the Laotian government has in-<lb/>
formed the U.S. Embassy in Vien-<lb/>
tiane that it had arrested Donna<lb/>
Long of Jacksonville, N.C and<lb/>
termer Linton, Ind. resident<lb/>
James Copp, now of Hampstead,<lb/>
IM.C.<lb/>
It was the first reported ac-<lb/>
knowledgment by Laos that its<lb/>
forces had captured the pair.<lb/>
U.S. Embassy spokesman,<lb/>
Ross Petzig said Saturday that<lb/>
Laos informed the American Em-<lb/>
bassy butadded that, "we have no<lb/>
further word regarding this<lb/>
ca<lb/>
Ms. Long and Copp hired a<lb/>
Thai fishing boat, crossed the<lb/>
Mekong River boundary between<lb/>
Thailand and Laos and were cap-<lb/>
tured Oct. 3 in a Laotian village,<lb/>
according to Thais who were able<lb/>
to visit them.<lb/>
Before setting off, Ms. Long<lb/>
told The Associated Tress that<lb/>
they intended to pass out dollar<lb/>
bills stamped with an offer of $2.4<lb/>
million to any Laotian, Vietnam-<lb/>
ese or Cambodian who could<lb/>
produce a live American being<lb/>
held in Indochina.<lb/>
Four American colleagues of<lb/>
Ms. Long and Copp dropped<lb/>
about $1,000 worth of reward-<lb/>
stamped bills on Friday into the<lb/>
same area of the Mekong. Much of<lb/>
the money eventually ended up in<lb/>
the hands of Thai children.<lb/>
Meanwhile in the United<lb/>
States, five members of the Copp<lb/>
family passed out strips of paper<lb/>
Saturday that urged people to call<lb/>
the Laotian Embassy in Washing-<lb/>
ton, DC, to inquire about Copp<lb/>
and Ms. Long.<lb/>
The familv was in Indianapo-<lb/>
lis to visit The Moving Wall, a<lb/>
model of the Vietnam Veterans<lb/>
Memorial that is on traveling<lb/>
exhibit.<lb/>
The family said Copp and Ms.<lb/>
Long had the appropriate papers<lb/>
to visit Thailand but not Laos<lb/>
"This wasn't a Rambo mis-<lb/>
sion' Bill Copp said of his<lb/>
brother's activities. "These were<lb/>
civilians and they were handing<lb/>
out the currency. They were<lb/>
trying to make the government<lb/>
get something done about the<lb/>
soldiers who may be missing or<lb/>
held prisoner<lb/>
"He's not a renegade Sandy<lb/>
Copp said of her brother, who<lb/>
served in the Army in Vietnam in<lb/>
1985. "He just thinks it's about<lb/>
time for those boys to come<lb/>
home<lb/>
The U.S. government still lists<lb/>
2,393 Americans as missing in<lb/>
action in the three Indochinese<lb/>
countries after the Vietnam War<lb/>
ended in 1975, but no solid evi-<lb/>
dence has emerged that any are<lb/>
still alive.<lb/>
The reward is being offered<lb/>
by 21 U.S. congressmen and pri-<lb/>
vate American citizens.<lb/>
The six Americans in South-<lb/>
east Asia seeking information on<lb/>
MI As are members of the Na-<lb/>
tional Steering Committee for<lb/>
American War Veterans, a private<lb/>
lobbying group.<lb/>
tating &amp; Drinking<lb/>
Steve Hardy Begins at 7 00<lb/>
Drink Specials All Evening<lb/>
Hot Buffalo Wings til 7 30<lb/>
This coupon must be presented<lb/>
ith shm ufder<lb/>
SHIRT COUPON<lb/>
We're Serious About Our World Series Party-<lb/>
Catch All The Action At O'Cools T.Vs. Featuring<lb/>
Our Soon To Be Famous Double-Shot Margaritas<lb/>
LOCATED IN THE FARM FRESH<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
1 1 a.m. 1 a.m. Monday-Saturday1 1 a.m. 10 p.m. Sunday355-2946<lb/>
FEATURING<lb/>
STEVE<lb/>
IHARDY'S<lb/>
BEACH PARTY<lb/>
MTTF<lb/>
RAMADA<lb/>
EDO? - ' ?.???"??<lb/>
Riverbluff<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
Welcomes<lb/>
New and Returning<lb/>
Students<lb/>
?Fully Carpeted<lb/>
?Large Pool<lb/>
?Free Cable<lb/>
?Bus Service1.5 miles from campus<lb/>
?Under New Management<lb/>
10th Street Ext. to Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
POSITION<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is now accepting<lb/>
applications for an<lb/>
advertising sales<lb/>
representative.<lb/>
Reauirements:<lb/>
Previous Sales Experience<lb/>
Good Personality &amp; Professional Appearance<lb/>
Excellent Communication Skills<lb/>
Good Organizational Skills<lb/>
Must Be Dependable &amp; Show Initiative &amp; Enthusiasm<lb/>
Must Have Own Transportation<lb/>
Must Have The Desire To Excel<lb/>
Apply in Person at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Please Include Resume<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
(In Front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
No Phone Calls Please!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0005"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 11,1988 3<lb/>
rule<lb/>
Eut other Pinochet opponents<lb/>
dy have served notice they<lb/>
't intend to wait iong or peace-<lb/>
On Saturday, a coalition of<lb/>
t parties publicly called for<lb/>
Khet's immediate resigna-<lb/>
The situation sets up poten-<lb/>
ashes between the govern-<lb/>
kt and its opponents.<lb/>
?r of Advertising<lb/>
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le Blvd Greenville<lb/>
Government toughens despite strikes<lb/>
r<lb/>
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia<lb/>
(AP) ? Wooers put down tools,<lb/>
students went on a hunger strike<lb/>
and Serbs rallied to condemn a<lb/>
government crackdown on grow-<lb/>
ing protests, but the nation's<lb/>
president threatened tougher se-<lb/>
curity measures.<lb/>
In an unusual 30-minute ra-<lb/>
dio and television address Sun-<lb/>
day, President Raif Dizdarevic<lb/>
also promised a shake-up in<lb/>
Communist Party leadership and<lb/>
called for economic reforms. A<lb/>
national economic crisis has com-<lb/>
bined with tensions between<lb/>
Serbs and ethnic Albanians to fuel<lb/>
three months of protests and calls<lb/>
for an overhaul in the party hier-<lb/>
archy.<lb/>
In the southern republic of<lb/>
Montenegro, hundreds of Tito-<lb/>
grad University students began a<lb/>
hunger strike Sunday to protest<lb/>
the use of force by police. They<lb/>
also pressed their demands for an<lb/>
overhaul of regional and national<lb/>
Communist leadership.<lb/>
In an unusually outspoken<lb/>
demand for democracy, the offi-<lb/>
cial Communist youth union also<lb/>
called for "direct and secret" elec-<lb/>
tions get leaders the people would<lb/>
support.<lb/>
Residents reported a heavy<lb/>
police presence and roadblocks<lb/>
around Titograd, the capital of<lb/>
Montenegro located 280 miles<lb/>
southwest of Belgrade. Riot police<lb/>
wielding clubs broke up an over-<lb/>
night rally there Saturday after<lb/>
demonstrators called for the<lb/>
ouster of regional Communist<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
In the northern Montenegrin<lb/>
town of Niksic, 15 miles to the<lb/>
northwest, thousands of local<lb/>
steel mill workers put down their<lb/>
tools Sunday and marched to<lb/>
protest what they view as police<lb/>
brutality the day before, the state<lb/>
news agency Tanjug said.<lb/>
Police fired tear gas there<lb/>
Saturday to break up another<lb/>
crowd, and three people were<lb/>
reported hospitalized Sunday.<lb/>
In his speech, Dizdarevic,<lb/>
who heads a nine-member collec-<lb/>
tive presidency that also com-<lb/>
mands the country's armed<lb/>
forces, said if the protest persist,<lb/>
they "could lead us to adopt<lb/>
emergency measures He urged<lb/>
all Yugoslavians to stay calm.<lb/>
He did not elaborate, but it is<lb/>
believed that if a state of emer-<lb/>
gency were declared, it would<lb/>
nkely include a curfew, restriction<lb/>
of movement and deployment of<lb/>
troops in the streets.<lb/>
Recent Serbian nationalist<lb/>
rallies and worker protests "are<lb/>
seriously jeopardizing public or-<lb/>
der Dizdarevic said. 'There is a<lb/>
real danger that the actions which<lb/>
are imperiling constitutional or-<lb/>
der could continue and spread.<lb/>
"The institutions and organs<lb/>
of this country will do all that the<lb/>
constitution laws permit to pro-<lb/>
tect public order and peace, per-<lb/>
sonal security and property, aned<lb/>
the constitutional system he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Dizdarevic promised un-<lb/>
specified economic measures to<lb/>
combat 217 percent inflation, a<lb/>
$21 billion dollar debt and 15<lb/>
percent unemployment.<lb/>
He also said the policy-mak-<lb/>
ing Central Committee, which is<lb/>
scheduled to meet Oct. 17, will<lb/>
make changes in the country's<lb/>
leadership. But he did not say<lb/>
who might be replaced.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Tanjug said the<lb/>
situation in Montenegro was<lb/>
"extremely serious<lb/>
In troubled southern Kosovo<lb/>
province, about 20,000 people<lb/>
rallied to press Serbian claims of<lb/>
harassment by the ethnic Al-<lb/>
banian majority.<lb/>
Police did not report any inci-<lb/>
dents, however, at the rally in<lb/>
Titovo Mitrovica, 145 miles south<lb/>
of Belgrade.<lb/>
At dozens of similar rallies in<lb/>
recent months, Serbs have railed<lb/>
against the ethnic Albanian Com-<lb/>
munist leaders in Kosovo, one of<lb/>
two autonomous provinces in the<lb/>
republic of Serbia. The mostly<lb/>
Christian Serbs have long been at<lb/>
odds with the Albanians, who are<lb/>
mainly Moslem.<lb/>
To head off ethnic violence in<lb/>
Kosovo, Albanian Halit Trnavci<lb/>
told the crowd Sunday that Serbs<lb/>
and Albanians should protect<lb/>
links forged through the centu-<lb/>
ries.<lb/>
About 10,000 other people<lb/>
rallied in Subotica, a town on the<lb/>
border with Hungary in Serbia's<lb/>
other autonomous province,<lb/>
Vojvodina, Tanjug said.<lb/>
I<lb/>
EVERT TUESDAY<lb/>
NTTE IS COLLEGE NITE 8-11<lb/>
ONLY $2.00<lb/>
ADMIMION WTTH COUUI U.<lb/>
.75$ SKATE RENTAL<lb/>
104 E. RED BANKS RD. ? GREENVILLE. NC ? 756-6000<lb/>
J<lb/>
Laotian authorities<lb/>
acknowledge capture<lb/>
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)<lb/>
? Laos has acknowledged arrest-<lb/>
ing two Americans who entered<lb/>
the communist country to publi-<lb/>
cize a reward to free American<lb/>
war prisoners.<lb/>
U.S. officials in Bangkok said<lb/>
the Laotian government has in-<lb/>
formed the U.S. Embassy in Vien-<lb/>
tiane that it had arrested Donna<lb/>
Long of Jacksonville, N.C and<lb/>
former Linton, Ind. resident<lb/>
James Copp, now of Hampstead,<lb/>
NC.<lb/>
It was the first reported ac-<lb/>
knowledgment by Laos that its<lb/>
forces had captured the pair.<lb/>
U.S. Embassy spokesman,<lb/>
Ross Petzig said Saturday that<lb/>
Laos informed the American Em-<lb/>
bassy bu t added that we have no<lb/>
further word regarding this<lb/>
catse?iiii.1 ?- -? ? ?" - ?w<lb/>
Ms. Long and Copp hired a<lb/>
Thai fishing boat, crossed the<lb/>
Mekong River boundary between<lb/>
Thailand and Laos and were cap-<lb/>
tured Oct. 3 in a Laotian village,<lb/>
according to Thais who were able<lb/>
to visit them.<lb/>
Before setting off, Ms. Long<lb/>
told The Associated Press that<lb/>
they intended to pass out dollar<lb/>
bills stamped with an offer of $2.4<lb/>
million to any Laotian, Vietnam-<lb/>
ese or Cambodian who could<lb/>
produce a live American being<lb/>
held in Indochina.<lb/>
Four American colleagues of<lb/>
Ms. Long and Copp dropped<lb/>
about $1,000 worth of reward-<lb/>
stamped bills on Friday into the<lb/>
same area of the Mekong. Much of<lb/>
the money eventually ended up in<lb/>
the hands of Thai children.<lb/>
Meanwhile in the United<lb/>
States, five members of the Copp<lb/>
family passed out strips of paper<lb/>
Saturday that urged people to call<lb/>
the Laotian Embassy in Washing-<lb/>
ton, D.C to inquire about Copp<lb/>
and Ms. Long.<lb/>
The family was in Indianapo-<lb/>
lis to visit The Moving Wall, a<lb/>
model of the Vietnam Veterans<lb/>
Memorial that is on traveling<lb/>
exhibit.<lb/>
The family said Copp and Ms.<lb/>
Long had the appropriate papers<lb/>
to visit Thailand but not Laos'<lb/>
"This wasn't a Rambo mis-<lb/>
sion Bill Copp said of his<lb/>
brother's activities. "These were<lb/>
civilians and they were handing<lb/>
out the currency. They were<lb/>
trying to make the government<lb/>
get something done about the<lb/>
soldiers who may be missing or<lb/>
held prisoner<lb/>
"He's not a renegade Sandy<lb/>
Copp said of her brother, who<lb/>
served in the Army in Vietnam in<lb/>
1985. "He just thinks it's about<lb/>
time for those boys to come<lb/>
home<lb/>
The U.S. government still lists<lb/>
2,393 Americans as missing in<lb/>
action in the three Indochinese<lb/>
countries after the Vietnam War<lb/>
ended in 1975, but no solid evi-<lb/>
dence has emerged that any are<lb/>
still alive.<lb/>
The reward is being offered<lb/>
by 21 US. congressmen and pri-<lb/>
vate American citizens.<lb/>
The six Americans in South-<lb/>
east Asia seeking information on<lb/>
MIAs are members of the Na-<lb/>
tional Steering Committee for<lb/>
American War Veterans, a private<lb/>
lobbying group.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT<lb/>
Fun After Business Hours <lb/>
Playing the Very Best in Beach.<lb/>
Top 40. Oldies and Dance Music<lb/>
Steve Hardy Begins at 7:00<lb/>
Drink Specials All Evening<lb/>
Hot Buffalo Wings 'til 7:30<lb/>
Utiivg&amp;DriuWinfe<lb/>
Were Seriqi<lb/>
Catch All The<lb/>
Our Soon To I<lb/>
LOCA<lb/>
11 a.ml a.m.<lb/>
.<lb/>
Riverbluff<lb/>
?<lb/>
Apartment<lb/>
v<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
New and Returning<lb/>
Students<lb/>
?Fully Carpeted<lb/>
?Large Pool<lb/>
?Free Cable<lb/>
?Bus Service1.5 miles from campus<lb/>
?Under New Management<lb/>
10th Street Ext. to Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
?<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is now accepting<lb/>
applications for an<lb/>
advertising sales<lb/>
representative.<lb/>
Reauirements:<lb/>
Previous Sales Experience<lb/>
Good Personality &amp; Professional Appearance<lb/>
Excellent Communication Skills<lb/>
Good Organizational Skills<lb/>
Must Be Dependable &amp; Show Initiative &amp; Enthusiasm<lb/>
Must Have Own Transportation<lb/>
Must Have The Desire To Excel<lb/>
Apply in Person at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Please Include Resume<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
(In Front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
.No Phone Calls Please'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0006"/><lb/>
yffiiFHi'fHf<lb/>
?- ?v<lb/>
SJje iEast (Earoltnian<lb/>
Pete Fernald, Gm?Mmia<lb/>
Chip Carter, m smm<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, ???? .??,<lb/>
JOEHARR Nn?Etor<lb/>
DOUG JOt DMSON, sort. ?<lb/>
Tim Hampton, fm m<lb/>
Michelle England, cr?M?.?r<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, s?T??y<lb/>
October 11.1988<lb/>
JEW PARKERMaff Illustrator<lb/>
T()M FURR,e.rfyLHimM??jff<lb/>
Susan Hovvell, product? m?<lb/>
jOI IN W. MEDLIN, Art director<lb/>
Mac Clark, ???M?Mer<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Pago 4<lb/>
Culture<lb/>
America lacking in cultural changes<lb/>
Like all things, morality must saw the introduction of even more<lb/>
:hange with the times. Often, a tech- efficient methods of mass murder.<lb/>
nological innovation challenges tra<lb/>
ditional patterns of thought and<lb/>
forces a reevaluation of societal<lb/>
morality. For example, mass availa-<lb/>
bility of contraceptives, especially<lb/>
In America, such technological ad-<lb/>
vances as clean abortions and ge-<lb/>
netic engineering have had massive<lb/>
social impact.<lb/>
And the changes are coming<lb/>
the Pill, has helped lead to the weak- dangerously fast. Society can no<lb/>
ening of earlier generations' taboos longer keep up with the demands<lb/>
on sexual activity. placed upon it by its own technol-<lb/>
But culture changes more slowly ogy. The cultural gap has widened<lb/>
than science. For an idea to gain from a mere fissure to a giant chasm,<lb/>
widespread acceptance may take Unfortunately, the society which<lb/>
decades or even centuries, creating a has been most commonly in the lead<lb/>
so-called cultural gap. Fortunately, in technological advancement is the<lb/>
throughout most of human history, same one which takes the longest to<lb/>
science did not progress so fast that update its outdated attitudes:<lb/>
culture could not keep up, and so the America. Reactionary thinking, all<lb/>
grew unman- too prevalent in this country, delays<lb/>
society's acceptance of reality and is<lb/>
itself a denial of reality ? a wish to<lb/>
live in a world that no longer is and<lb/>
away; they will get worse. The last<lb/>
best hope of America is intelligence<lb/>
Congress doesn't pass<lb/>
ban<lb/>
By FRED BARNES<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
cultural gap never<lb/>
ageably large.<lb/>
By contrast, in the twentieth<lb/>
century, science began to accelerate<lb/>
at an alarming rate. World War I<lb/>
brought with it chemical-bacterio- and free thought, both of which we<lb/>
logical warfare, and World War II are sadly lacking<lb/>
<lb/>
4np now<lb/>
FORM<lb/>
EXCITING,<lb/>
SWNWIEOUS,<lb/>
OFF 7H? CUFF,<lb/>
KM0CRA77C<lb/>
R6B0TWL,<lb/>
ow7teuaU(Aam?<lb/>
Biker angry at stickers<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In response to the article pub-<lb/>
lished on Oct. 6 entitled, "Bikers need<lb/>
to heed rules who are you trying to<lb/>
kid? Just look at the stupidity of the<lb/>
second paragraph. How can both the<lb/>
population of cars and bicycles in-<lb/>
crease respectively when each one is<lb/>
inversely proportional of the other.<lb/>
Besides, lef s get to the meat of<lb/>
the situation. How can there be an<lb/>
increase of a car population on cam-<lb/>
pus, when it cost an outlandish fifty<lb/>
dollars to park your car? An excellent<lb/>
example of this can be represented by<lb/>
the numerous student parking<lb/>
spaces that are left vacant. Maybe the<lb/>
ECU traffic department has lost<lb/>
thousands of dollars in parking dues<lb/>
and needs some way to create reve-<lb/>
nue, there fore using bikers as scape-<lb/>
goats.<lb/>
Maybe it's beyond the minds of<lb/>
the ECU police and traffic depart-<lb/>
ment to think that a single sticker will<lb/>
automatically stop bicyclist from<lb/>
driving into traffic, on the sidewalk<lb/>
and committing other traffic viola-<lb/>
tions. Also, has the ECU traffic office<lb/>
lowered themselves to pull out their<lb/>
trusty radar guns to clock bikers to<lb/>
make sure they are traveling the<lb/>
specified fifteen miles per hour?<lb/>
It should be considered that not<lb/>
all students fall into the rules men-<lb/>
tioned, but all students must suffer.<lb/>
Although it is reasonable to enforce<lb/>
the laws, a mandatory bicycle sticker<lb/>
is ridiculous. If ECU needs extra<lb/>
revenue, try finding it somewhere<lb/>
else instead of using a cover up.<lb/>
Brent Hoggard<lb/>
Industrial Technology<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Gary Bauer, President Reagan's domestic policy<lb/>
adviser, is the New Right remnant at the White<lb/>
House. Bauer is responsible for blocking White<lb/>
House support for a federal law banning discrimina-<lb/>
tion against AIDS victims. He's convinced such<lb/>
legislation is both unnecessary and dangerous.<lb/>
The White House role in enacting a federal ban<lb/>
on AIDS discrimination is pivotal. Congress has<lb/>
refused to pass such a ban, but Republican opposi-<lb/>
ton might dissolve if Reagan called for one. Chiefly<lb/>
because of Bauer, he didn't<lb/>
Here's how it happened. Bauer got bad news<lb/>
one morning in late July as he was leaving the White<lb/>
House on a family vacation. James Watkins, the<lb/>
chairman of the president's commission on AIDS,<lb/>
had already gone on record in favor of protecting<lb/>
AIDS victims under federal anti-discrimination<lb/>
laws. Now, Dr. D. Ian MacDonald, the White House<lb/>
official who'd been asked to study the commission's<lb/>
report, was going to do the same.<lb/>
The afternoon before, at a meeting of White<lb/>
I louse aides including MacDonald, the consensus<lb/>
had been the other way, Bauer's way. Bauer had<lb/>
argued his side strenuously. But MacDonald had<lb/>
changed his mind, Bauer was told. A call to<lb/>
MacDonald confirmed it.<lb/>
Bauer was furious. His views that MacDonald's<lb/>
recommendation was critical. If MacDonald<lb/>
changed his mind, Bauer was told. A call to<lb/>
MacDonald confirmed it.<lb/>
Bauer was furious. His view was that<lb/>
MacDonald's recommendation was critical. If<lb/>
MacDonald joined Watkins in urging an anti-bias<lb/>
law, the president would be put in a box, Bauer<lb/>
figured. It would be awkward for him to buck both<lb/>
Watkins and his own adviser.<lb/>
Bauer called a White House aide. He said he'd<lb/>
resign if the president was forced into backing a<lb/>
federal anti-bias law. And he'd go public and ex-<lb/>
plain exactly why he was resigning. Then he pro-<lb/>
ceeded to the airport, and to his vacation in the<lb/>
Kentucky woods.<lb/>
Bauer didn't hear a word from the White House.<lb/>
But a few days later he watched MacDonald's press<lb/>
conference at the White House on CNN. He was<lb/>
delighted. A new law may never be needed,<lb/>
MacDonald said. "States and communities are<lb/>
coming up with laws or already have taken care of<lb/>
this problem he said. "And that should cover<lb/>
people in the workplace<lb/>
Bauer's forte is making the most out of what<lb/>
appear to be insignificant assignments. In January<lb/>
1987, for instance, the president's "legislative and<lb/>
administrative message to Congress which is<lb/>
mostly boilerplate, said the administration would<lb/>
pursue "pro-family guidelines" in its "family re-<lb/>
port Nine months later Reagan issued a "family<lb/>
executive order" that called on Bauer to come up<lb/>
with specific policies to implement the guidelines.<lb/>
Bauer was more than happy to comply.<lb/>
By early last summer Bauer had his recommen-<lb/>
dations. He circulated his ideas to others on the<lb/>
White House staff. He accepted dozens of suggest<lb/>
changes. But when the suggestions kept coming anc<lb/>
stylisitic changes in his draft were proposed<lb/>
stiffened. He told Rhett Dawson, the White Hoi<lb/>
staff secretary, that the proposals had to be dis<lb/>
patched to Reagan. They were.<lb/>
Reagan bought all of them. "Once you get soi<lb/>
thing like this on his desk, he inevitably does th<lb/>
right thing? in both meanings of the word, said<lb/>
Bauer.<lb/>
What Reagan signed was a series of memos I<lb/>
members of his Cabinet. The secretary of agricultun<lb/>
was ordered to test the use of housing vouchers I<lb/>
the poor in rural areas. The attorney general .<lb/>
instructed to draft legislation "requiring that no bill<lb/>
be reported to the Senate or House oi Repres<lb/>
lives by any committee of either house unless sucl<lb/>
bill is accompanied by a Family Impact Statement<lb/>
The secretary ofo education was told to "develop a<lb/>
model policy that agencies could use to make the<lb/>
receipt of federal funds contingent upon institul<lb/>
taking appropriate steps to create a drug-free en i<lb/>
ronment<lb/>
Those memos drew little reaction. But the one U<lb/>
Otis Bowen, the secretary of health and human<lb/>
scrvcies, gut a lot. He was told to make sure that<lb/>
government educational programs promote Sexual<lb/>
abstinence among teens, and to bar the Use ot federal<lb/>
funds for distributing contraceptives in schools<lb/>
"without parental permission The touchiest or<lb/>
dealt with fetal research, a new area of concern for<lb/>
the anti-abortion movement. Bauer believes that iv<lb/>
of fetal tissue or organs from aborted babies is mor<lb/>
ally wrong.<lb/>
The memo said Bowen must "develop options<lb/>
such as an executive order to protect unborn or<lb/>
newborn children from experimentation, researcl<lb/>
and organ transplantation, except in cases where thi<lb/>
unborn or newborn child would itself directly bene<lb/>
fit by any such procedures to which it was sub<lb/>
jected That doesn't require a total ban on the us,<lb/>
fetal tissue, but it comes close. Bowen s agency is<lb/>
none too keen on a bin.<lb/>
To make matters worse, Bauer jumped the gun<lb/>
Six days before the presidential memo went to<lb/>
Bowen, Bauer sent a draft executive order to him It<lb/>
was marked "eyes only" and "confidential but it<lb/>
quickly got around HHSand was leaked to thepress<lb/>
Bowen never answered Bauer's letter, but he com-<lb/>
plained to a reporter that he didn't know if White<lb/>
House instructions on the issue were coming from<lb/>
Reagan or Bauer. This prompted Nancy Risque, the<lb/>
Cabinet secretary, to call Bowen and assure him<lb/>
Reagan wants to limit the use of fetal tissue.<lb/>
An aide says Bowen will give the White House<lb/>
a progress report in December when a advisory<lb/>
committee of scientists gives him its findings on the<lb/>
issue. Before that, he shouldn't act.<lb/>
Housing prices need to take slow downturn<lb/>
By MICHAEL KINSLEY<lb/>
Th? New Kgpublk<lb/>
The good burghers of Yonkers, N.Y say they<lb/>
are not racists for opposing the construction of<lb/>
public housing in their middle-class neighborhoods.<lb/>
They say their real concern is real estate values.<lb/>
Actually, I believe them. Or at least, I find it plau-<lb/>
sible.<lb/>
According to one Yonkers real estate agent, a<lb/>
three-bedroom house purchased for $18,000 to<lb/>
$30,000 in the mid-1950s would sell for 10 times as<lb/>
much today. For these homeowners, this unex-<lb/>
pected bonanza is their nest egg. (Nationally, real<lb/>
estate is 60 percent to 70 percent of the average<lb/>
person net worth)<lb/>
If the realtor is right that public housing might<lb/>
knock 10 percent ? $25,000 or so ? off of nearby<lb/>
house prices, that seems reason enough for Yonkers'<lb/>
panic. Thus the real significance of the Yonkers<lb/>
episode may be to illustrate again how our society is<lb/>
being twisted and torn by the enormous run-up in<lb/>
real estate prices.<lb/>
There are signs the run-up may be over, and<lb/>
growing nervousness that real estate may be head-<lb/>
ing for a crash. Nationally, house prices are just<lb/>
barely rising. The median price of an existing home<lb/>
rose 3.7 percent during the year ending in July.<lb/>
That's less than inflation, and much less than the<lb/>
average owner's mortgage rate.<lb/>
The main reason to think a real estate crash<lb/>
might be coming is the huge gap between the cost of<lb/>
owning a house and the cost of renting one. For two<lb/>
decades, house prices have gone up twice as fast as<lb/>
rents. A four-bedroom house in a fancy Washington<lb/>
suburb might cost $500,000 (up from $400,000 last<lb/>
year). That house can be rented for $2,400 a month.<lb/>
Figuring everything, the cost of buying a house in<lb/>
Washington is more than double the cost of renting<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Why would someone pay twice as much to live<lb/>
in the same house? Yes, there are tax benefits, but not<lb/>
nearly enough to explain the differential. The ro-<lb/>
mance of home ownership may be part of it. How-<lb/>
ever, the main reason is clearly the belief that prices<lb/>
will keep going up. When today's price is simply a<lb/>
bet that tomorrow's price will be even higher, you<lb/>
have a classic speculative bubble. As investors in<lb/>
pyramid schemes throughout the ages have learned<lb/>
?and as stock market investors were reminded last<lb/>
year ? the "greater fool" theory can't be right for-<lb/>
ever.<lb/>
Of course people have been saying this about<lb/>
real estate for years, and have always been wrong, so<lb/>
far. What's the evidence this time is different?<lb/>
First, there's today's price slowdown, which<lb/>
comes when times are generally good and interest<lb/>
rates ae relatively low. A market that's counting on<lb/>
future increases to support today's prices can turn a<lb/>
slowdown into a rout pretty quickly. Second, there's<lb/>
tax reform. Slicing marginal tax rates makes tax<lb/>
deductions less valuable, thereby increasing the<lb/>
after-tax cost of home ownership. This is still just<lb/>
beginning to sink in.<lb/>
Third, there are 28 percent more houses on the<lb/>
market than a year ago. That's ominous. Comstock<lb/>
Partners, a New York financial firm that is spreading<lb/>
the real-estate crash scare, advises homeowners to<lb/>
sell out and rent. I certainly lack the courage to take<lb/>
this advice. But if even a few homeowners become<lb/>
persuaded that prices are about to topple, then<lb/>
they'll be right: Prices will topple.<lb/>
A real estate crash would be far more traumatic<lb/>
than the stock market crash. Not only do people have<lb/>
more invested in their houses than in stocks, but that<lb/>
investment is heavily leveraged through mortgages.<lb/>
A 25 percent drop in prices (which Houston has<lb/>
already suffered) would wipe out many homeown-<lb/>
ers' entire investment. No one knows to what extent<lb/>
the consumer boom of recent years has been fed by<lb/>
people's belief that their houses were making them<lb/>
rich. A real estate nosedive might easily lead to the<lb/>
recession the stock market crash did not.<lb/>
On the other hand a decline in house prices, if<lb/>
not a crash, would be a healthy development. Who<lb/>
would really be harmed? Not voung people who<lb/>
haven't yet bought a home. In 1950, it cost 14 percent<lb/>
of the average 30-year-olds's income to buy the<lb/>
median home. Today it costs 44 percent. At those<lb/>
levels, many can't even qualifv for a mortgage. The<lb/>
fraction of young Americans owning homes has<lb/>
dropped dramatically. Most people who ahead)<lb/>
own homes are either going to live in them for main<lb/>
more years or trade up. Regional variations ma<lb/>
affect them, but in general the houses they sell and<lb/>
the houses they buy will go up or down together<lb/>
The group hurt by a downturn in house prices<lb/>
would be older people selling their last house. But<lb/>
these folks are likely to have bought for a small<lb/>
fraction of today's prices. It's rough justice if thev<lb/>
make a smaller profit and home ownership becomes<lb/>
more affordable for young people.<lb/>
The bloated prices of exisiting houses may make<lb/>
the owners feel rich, but they add nothing to the<lb/>
nation's wealth. A house is exactly the same house<lb/>
after it doubles in "value In fact, as my favorite<lb/>
economist, Henry George, pointed out a century<lb/>
ago, inflated land values make the economy less<lb/>
efficient. They operate like a tax on the truly produc-<lb/>
tive factors, labor and capital. Housing inflation has<lb/>
depressed our ecomony, frenzied our psyches, di-<lb/>
vided our society. A turnaround would be ner-<lb/>
vewracking, but no bad thing.<lb/>
Riotin<lb/>
ALGIERS. Algeria<lb/>
Soldiers shet protesters am<lb/>
helicopters buzzed riot at<lb/>
quell unrest that killed<lb/>
in coastal desert and rno<lb/>
areas hit hard by high unefl<lb/>
ment and spirahng prices<lb/>
President Chadli Bern<lb/>
prepared to address th<lb/>
night while the countrv r?<lb/>
under a stat. t emergenr<lb/>
nighttime curtow<lb/>
the capital Algiers Obj<lb/>
said he would Hkeh app<lb/>
calm in his s p.m<lb/>
message<lb/>
They suggested I ?<lb/>
tress this aj<lb/>
the economic crisis<lb/>
gered the violent i<lb/>
worst in this, rtl<lb/>
since its m I<lb/>
France in<lb/>
I nrest hit th<lb/>
city oi I trai '<lb/>
Riotir<lb/>
doen provir<lb/>
tng in tho soutl<lb/>
Interior Mir,<lb/>
the we? <lb/>
Wt-h "<lb/>
Bush and<lb/>
second d<lb/>
Ge .<lb/>
Dukakis t -<lb/>
studied for tlu<lb/>
rial debate as stat ?<lb/>
nation indicated I<lb/>
can nominee<lb/>
lead Over the I ?<lb/>
lenger<lb/>
The vice presi 1<lb/>
eralhoursatl<lb/>
home Sunday momir :<lb/>
for the debate befoi <lb/>
Illinois when<lb/>
Slavic par<lb/>
forgettheS<lb/>
err<lb/>
Dukaki - was<lb/>
ah-<lb/>
advisersatthi<lb/>
Boston when I<lb/>
strategy I<lb/>
schedu<lb/>
Angeles<lb/>
The Democratic<lb/>
speaking .it<lb/>
today before march<lb/>
iork Go '<lb/>
Columbus<lb/>
i ork v<lb/>
Bush a<lb/>
Knight<lb/>
Trenton <lb/>
would disc iss<lb/>
rights oJ k tims<lb/>
The GOPl<lb/>
mate Pan Qua:<lb/>
paigning in  "<lb/>
ton Hills V ? - a<lb/>
Akron and Tbled<lb/>
Democratic v<lb/>
nominee<lb/>
inc to Senate duties<lb/>
ton<lb/>
Statewide polls<lb/>
Ohio New Mexico and<lb/>
showed Bush<lb/>
while a survey<lb/>
Southern and N<lb/>
the Repuh<lb/>
a I2-point n<lb/>
over his Dem<lb/>
The pv<lb/>
voters cted<lb/>
The<lb/>
Constitution showed<lb/>
ing Dukakis 49-37 pert<lb/>
percent ot those surve<lb/>
cided<lb/>
The poll had a mar,<lb/>
ot plus or minus h J<lb/>
points<lb/>
Bush led in e<lb/>
eluding Honda vs; I<lb/>
26-point advantage il<lb/>
where despite th<lb/>
I one Star state Sef<lb/>
Bentsen on the Democ<lb/>
the OOP nominee enj<lb/>
point lead<lb/>
Both are high sd<lb/>
toral College states H<lb/>
21 electoral votes; lu<lb/>
third biggest prize wU<lb/>
The survey als<lb/>
Alabama. Delaware<lb/>
Maryland Mississii<lb/>
homa. South Carolina<lb/>
West Virginia Geoi<lb/>
tacky. Arkansas and<lb/>
hna<lb/>
With his supped<lb/>
the South Push turnoj<lb/>
non Sunday to the M<lb/>
the crucial state of llh<lb/>
has 24 electoral votes<lb/>
The vice preside)<lb/>
wife, Barbara, rode<lb/>
fashioned fire truck a<lb/>
mile parade rout,<lb/>
Cicero and Per win. u<lb/>
Houbv Day parade. a<lb/>
vakian celebration<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0007"/><lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 11,1988 5<lb/>
Ke.d<lb/>
vRveK$<lb/>
?<lb/>
s ban<lb/>
- ideas to others on the<lb/>
i repted dozensol suggested<lb/>
ions kept coming and<lb/>
i wore proposed, he<lb/>
awson the White House<lb/>
proposals had to be dis-<lb/>
re<lb/>
I hem Once ou get some-<lb/>
jsk, he inevitabl) does the<lb/>
L inings of the word said<lb/>
n as a series of niomos to<lb/>
tarj of agriculture<lb/>
 housing vouchers for<lb/>
ittomey general was<lb/>
ion "requiring that no bill<lb/>
or House of Kepresenta-<lb/>
f either house unless such<lb/>
amily Impact Statement<lb/>
n was told to "develop a<lb/>
mid use to make the<lb/>
ntingent upon institution<lb/>
to create a drug-free envi-<lb/>
httle reaction. But the one to<lb/>
Itarv of health and human<lb/>
as told to make sure that<lb/>
1 programs promote Sexual<lb/>
and to baftHe' iise" M federal<lb/>
contraceptives in schools<lb/>
ssion The touchiest order<lb/>
th, a new area of concern for<lb/>
fment. Bauer believes that use<lb/>
trom aborted babies is mor-<lb/>
must "develop options<lb/>
rder to protect unborn or<lb/>
n experimentation, research<lb/>
ion, except in cases where the<lb/>
liid would itself directly bene-<lb/>
piures to which it was sub-<lb/>
quirea total ban on the use of<lb/>
ks close. Bowen's agency is<lb/>
In<lb/>
rse, Bauer jumped the gun<lb/>
presidential memo went to<lb/>
(raft executive order to him. It<lb/>
(ly" and "confidential but it<lb/>
IS and was leaked to the press.<lb/>
?d Bauer's letter, but he com-<lb/>
that he didn't know if White<lb/>
the issue were coming from<lb/>
prompted Nancy Risque, the<lb/>
call Bowen and assure him<lb/>
It the use of fetal tissue.<lb/>
pen will give the White House<lb/>
December when a advisory<lb/>
Its gives him its findings on the<lb/>
lshouldn't act.<lb/>
nturn<lb/>
a healthy development. Who<lb/>
ned? Not young people who<lb/>
lome. In 1950, it cost 14 percent<lb/>
?ar-olds's income to buy the<lb/>
it costs 44 percent. At those<lb/>
en qualify for a mortgage. The<lb/>
jmcricans owning homes has<lb/>
fy. Most people who already<lb/>
going to live in them for many<lb/>
up. Regional variations may<lb/>
?neral the houses they sell and<lb/>
ill go up or down together.<lb/>
y a downturn in house prices<lb/>
le selling their last house. But<lb/>
to have bought for a small<lb/>
Inces. It's rough justice if they<lb/>
I and home ownership becomes<lb/>
wung people.<lb/>
fs of exisiting houses may make<lb/>
but they add nothing to the<lb/>
)use is exactly the same house<lb/>
?alue In fact, as my favorite<lb/>
eorge, pointed out a century<lb/>
lues make the economy less<lb/>
like a tax on the truly produc-<lb/>
eapital. Housing inflation has<lb/>
ny, frenzied our psyches, di-<lb/>
tumaround would be ner-<lb/>
id thing.<lb/>
ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) ?<lb/>
Soldiers shot protesters and army<lb/>
helicopters buzzed riot areas to<lb/>
quell unrest that killed at least 200<lb/>
in coastal, desert and mountain<lb/>
areas hit hard by high unemploy-<lb/>
ment and spiraling prices.<lb/>
President Chadli Bendjedid<lb/>
prepared to address the nation to-<lb/>
night while the country remained<lb/>
under a state of emergency and a<lb/>
nighttime curfew was in effect in<lb/>
the capital, Algiers. Observers<lb/>
said he would likely appeal for<lb/>
calm in his 8 p.m. (3 p.m. EDT)<lb/>
message.<lb/>
They suggested he could but-<lb/>
tress this appeal by addressing<lb/>
the economic crisis which trig-<lb/>
gered the violence Tuesday - the<lb/>
worst in this North African nation<lb/>
since its independence from<lb/>
France in 1962.<lb/>
Unrest hit the western port<lb/>
city of Oran to Annaba in the east.<lb/>
Rioting also was reported in a<lb/>
dozen provincial centers, includ-<lb/>
ing in the southern desert, said<lb/>
Interior Minister El Hadi Khediri,<lb/>
appearing on state television over<lb/>
the weekend.<lb/>
"We have tried in vain to stop<lb/>
the troubles Khediri said.<lb/>
In Algiers, where the violence<lb/>
started, clashesbetween the army<lb/>
and rioters spread late Saturday<lb/>
and early Sunday as protesters<lb/>
defied a 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew<lb/>
and a ban on demonstrations.<lb/>
Only brief volleys of gunfire<lb/>
were heard early today. Kouba,<lb/>
on the southern fringes of Algiers,<lb/>
apparently suffered the largest<lb/>
number of dead and injured.<lb/>
Hospital sources reported more<lb/>
than 60 people killed when the<lb/>
army, according to witnesses,<lb/>
fired into a crowd after it repeat-<lb/>
edly ignored calls to disperse.<lb/>
Information compiled from<lb/>
hospital and police sources in<lb/>
various parts of the country indi-<lb/>
cated about 200 people killed and<lb/>
several hundred injured. It<lb/>
seemed likely the actual death toll<lb/>
was higher.<lb/>
No official death toll has been<lb/>
issued.<lb/>
The unrest began about 10<lb/>
days ago with non-violent strikes<lb/>
demanding higher wages to keep<lb/>
up with inflation.<lb/>
Algeria's annual unemploy-<lb/>
ment rate is estimated at 40 per-<lb/>
cent and food prices have risen by<lb/>
at least 40 percent since January.<lb/>
But the government so far has<lb/>
vowed to stick to an austerity plan<lb/>
prompted in part by the falling<lb/>
price of oil, the nation's main<lb/>
export.<lb/>
Bendjedid proclaimed a state<lb/>
of emergency Thursday. On Fri-<lb/>
day, the Military Command or-<lb/>
dered soldiers to shoot if demon-<lb/>
strators failed to disperse.<lb/>
At Mustapha Hospital in<lb/>
Algiers, physicians moved pa-<lb/>
tients out of the hospital to make<lb/>
room for the hundreds of injured<lb/>
demonstrators.<lb/>
"It's terrible. Beirut. Like<lb/>
Beirut. The same thing said a<lb/>
Frenchman arriving Sunday in<lb/>
Paris on Air Algeria's only sched-<lb/>
uled flight of the day. He was<lb/>
interviewed on French television.<lb/>
He was not identified.<lb/>
Algiers was mostly calm<lb/>
Sunday as army helicopters<lb/>
armed with rockets flew at low<lb/>
altitudes, apparently to discour-<lb/>
age the formation of crowds.<lb/>
Algerian radio reported out-<lb/>
breaks of violence had occurred in<lb/>
the Kabyle mountain region east<lb/>
of Algiers, as well as in Ouargla,<lb/>
Djelfa and other centers of the<lb/>
southern desert.<lb/>
An Islamic fundamentalist<lb/>
group calling itself the Movement<lb/>
for Algerian Renewal on Sunday<lb/>
demanded removal of the presi-<lb/>
dent, Interior Minister Khediri<lb/>
and the head of the ruling Na-<lb/>
tional Liberation Front Party,<lb/>
Mohamed Cherif Messaadia.<lb/>
Gordon's<lb/>
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Bush and Dukakis setting strategy for<lb/>
second debate set onThursday<lb/>
l<lb/>
George Bush and Michael<lb/>
Dukakis focused on strategy and<lb/>
studied for their second presiden-<lb/>
tial debate as state polls across the<lb/>
nation indicated that the Republi-<lb/>
can nominee is solidifying his<lb/>
lea4 over the Democratic chal-<lb/>
lenger.<lb/>
The vice president spent sev-<lb/>
eral hoursat his Washington, D.C.<lb/>
home Sunday morning preparing<lb/>
for the debate before traveling to<lb/>
Illinois where he marched in a<lb/>
Slavic parade and vowed never to<lb/>
forget the Soviet presence in East-<lb/>
ern Europe.<lb/>
Dukakis was closeted for<lb/>
about six hours with a dozen<lb/>
advisers at the Park Plaza Hotel in<lb/>
Boston where they discussed<lb/>
strategy for the confrontation<lb/>
scheduled for Thursday in Los<lb/>
Angeles.<lb/>
The Democratic nominee was<lb/>
speaking at a Long Island school<lb/>
today before marching with New<lb/>
York Gov. Mario Cuomo in the<lb/>
Columbus Day parade in New<lb/>
York City.<lb/>
Bush was addressing a<lb/>
Knights of Columbus meeting in<lb/>
Trenton, N.J where aides said he<lb/>
would discuss crime and the<lb/>
rights of victims.<lb/>
The GOP nominee's running<lb/>
mate, Dan Quayle, was cam-<lb/>
paigning in Detroit and Farming-<lb/>
ton Hills, Mich in addition to<lb/>
Akron and Toledo, Ohio.<lb/>
Democratic vice presidential<lb/>
nominee Lloyd Bentsen was tend-<lb/>
ing to Senate duties in Washing-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
Statewide polls in Kansas,<lb/>
Ohio, New Mexico and Missouri<lb/>
showed Bush leading Dukakis<lb/>
while a survey of voters in 15<lb/>
Southern and border states found<lb/>
the Republican nominee holding<lb/>
a 12-point regional advantage<lb/>
over his Democratic rival.<lb/>
The poll of 2,102 registered<lb/>
voters, conducted last week by<lb/>
The Atlanta Journal-<lb/>
Constitution, showed Bush lead-<lb/>
ing Dukakis 49-37 percent with 12<lb/>
percent of those surveyed unde-<lb/>
cided.<lb/>
The poll had a margin of error<lb/>
of plus or minus two percentage<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Bush led in every state, in-<lb/>
cluding Florida, where he held a<lb/>
26-point advantage, and Texas,<lb/>
where despite the presence of<lb/>
Lone Star state Sen. Lloyd<lb/>
Bentsen on the Democratic ticket,<lb/>
the GOP nominee enjoys a 14-<lb/>
point lead.<lb/>
Both are high-stakes Elec-<lb/>
toral College states. Florida has<lb/>
21 electoral votes; Texas is the<lb/>
third biggest prize with 29.<lb/>
The survey also included<lb/>
Alabama, Delaware, Louisiana,<lb/>
Maryland, Mississippi, Okla-<lb/>
homa, South Carolina, Virginia,<lb/>
West Virginia, Georgia, Ken-<lb/>
tucky, Arkansas and North Caro-<lb/>
lina.<lb/>
With his support strong in<lb/>
the South, Bush turned his atten-<lb/>
tion Sunday to the Midwest and<lb/>
the crucial state of Illinois, which<lb/>
has 24 electoral votes.<lb/>
The vice president and his<lb/>
wife, Barbara, rode in an old-<lb/>
fashioned fire truck along a two-<lb/>
mile parade route between<lb/>
Cicero and Berwin, in the annual<lb/>
Houby Day parade, a Chechoslo-<lb/>
vakian celebration of bountiful<lb/>
mushroom crops.<lb/>
"This is the day we celebrate<lb/>
family, we celebrate faith and we<lb/>
celebrate freedom Bush said in<lb/>
brief remarks before the parade<lb/>
began. "And none of us will ever<lb/>
forget there is not freedom in<lb/>
Eastern Europe, and I have<lb/>
pledged, as president, to never<lb/>
forget that<lb/>
Earlier, Bush prepared for<lb/>
the nationally broadcast, 90-min-<lb/>
ute debate scheduled for Thurs-<lb/>
day in the Pauley Pavilion on the<lb/>
University of California at Los<lb/>
Angeles campus.<lb/>
The date had depended on<lb/>
the length of the American<lb/>
League baseball playoffs, but that<lb/>
series ended Sunday when the<lb/>
Oakland A's completed a sweep<lb/>
of the Boston Red Sox.<lb/>
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$12 75<lb/>
THE RESUME PEOPLE<lb/>
Next to Chicos in the Georgetown Shops<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA HUTQUALITY<lb/>
?GENEROUS TOPPINGS<lb/>
?REAL CHEESE<lb/>
?FRESH VEGETABLES<lb/>
?DOUGH MADE FRESH DAILY - NEVER FROZEN<lb/>
DELIVERY AREA LIMITED TO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
PHONE 752-4445<lb/>
nftixinpRY HOURS<lb/>
SUNTHURS, 4 PM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
FRI.&amp;SAT. 4PM TO 1:00 AM<lb/>
DELIVERY CHARGE 75 '<lb/>
COUPON GOOD FOR JUST 7 DATS! ????<lb/>
pi BUY 3 SPAGHETTI OR CAVATINI?<lb/>
DINNERS AND GET 1 FREE<lb/>
(YOU SAVE $3.05)<lb/>
(coupon expire Oct. 17, 19881<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 11,1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<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/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for 3<lb/>
bedroom apartment. 13 rent, 13 utili-<lb/>
ties, 1 3 deposit Call Wendy at 752-1321.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED ChrisHan male<lb/>
roommate to share new mobile home 10<lb/>
minutes from campus Non smoker,<lb/>
please Call 1 lugh at 75h-6851 after 5:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
HOUSEMATE: Quiet MF, wanted by<lb/>
faculty member 3 bedroom house, newly<lb/>
remodeled, walking distance campus.<lb/>
Rent and lease negotiable Call 752 3677<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: 182 Buick Century Limited,<lb/>
AC, Cruise, PS, PB High mileage but<lb/>
sharp; in good running condition $2800.<lb/>
Call 758-7413 anytime<lb/>
FOR SALE: 184 Mada B-2000 Pick up.<lb/>
High road miles. Topper. New tires. Ex-<lb/>
cellent condition $3400 Call 757-6281.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 182 Vokswagon Jetta. 5<lb/>
speed Diesal 87K. Excellent condition.<lb/>
$2700. Call 757-6281.<lb/>
STEREO FOR SALE: Dual cassette, rum<lb/>
table, digital receiver, 2 speakers. Excel-<lb/>
lent condition $125. Call 756-9420 after 7<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Papers, SI 50 per<lb/>
page Resume's written and typed, $20.00<lb/>
Close to campus. Call Joy at 758-7423 be-<lb/>
tween 6 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
STUDENT TYPING SERVICES: Pro-<lb/>
gressive Solutions, Inc offers high-qual-<lb/>
ity, inexpensive word processing and<lb/>
other services for the student. Our high<lb/>
speed laser printing systems yield the<lb/>
highest possible quality in the shortest<lb/>
length of time. Rates start at $2 00 per<lb/>
page, and include paper and computer-<lb/>
ized spelling check We also offer<lb/>
Resume' production, and other business<lb/>
and professional services. Call 757-3111<lb/>
MF 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/>
TypingTypingTvping. Affordable and<lb/>
Professional. Call 355-6634 after 6:00 p.m<lb/>
PAPERS, RESUMES, ETC. done by<lb/>
Desktop Publishing or Word Processing.<lb/>
Rush jobs accepted Call 752-1933<lb/>
TYPING, TYPING, TYPING Real<lb/>
Cheap. Affordable Rates! Call 752-5084.<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 lntercampus Programs. 1-<lb/>
800-433-7747.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS:<lb/>
$10,000-$! 05,000 yr!<lb/>
Also Cruiseships<lb/>
Now hiring! 320<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal arid Confidential Care"<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call for appointment Mon thru Sat- Low<lb/>
CmI Termination to 20 werka of pregnancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
Ustings! (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. OJ-llt6.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK TOUR PROMOTER-<lb/>
ESCORT: Energetic person, (MF), to<lb/>
take signups for our FLORIDA tours. We<lb/>
furnish all materials for a successful pro-<lb/>
motion. Good PAY and FUN. Call CAM-<lb/>
PUS MARKETING at 1-800-777-2270.<lb/>
PART-TIME BABYSITTER NEEDED<lb/>
on Tues. &amp; Thurs. (call if can work either<lb/>
day). 8:30 a.m4 p.m. Must have own<lb/>
transportation. Call 756-6319.<lb/>
MKTG. FIRM seeks individual to work<lb/>
ft or pt marketing credit cards to stu-<lb/>
dents on campus. Flexible hours. Earn b<lb/>
w $90.00-$150.00day. Call 1-800-932-<lb/>
0528, Ext. 25!<lb/>
OPPORTUNITY IN THE TRAVEL IN-<lb/>
DUSTRY: The 1 college tour operator is<lb/>
looking for an efficient, responsible, and<lb/>
organized campus representative to mar-<lb/>
ket a Spring Break trip on campus Earn<lb/>
free trips, and good commissions while<lb/>
gaining great business experience. For<lb/>
more information, call 1-800-999-4300.<lb/>
NEED OYSTER SHUCKERS AND CA-<lb/>
TERERS: Apply in person at Riverside<lb/>
Ovster Bar, 17N. Green St.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
NEED CASH? Have baseball cards? Call<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
? All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
? And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMEN" j<lb/>
2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
?Located Near ECU<lb/>
? Acroaa From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
$325 a month<lb/>
Contact J.T or Tommy WUliama<lb/>
756-7815 or 830-1937<lb/>
Office open - Apt. 8,12 - 530 p.m.<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clfan and quiet one bedroom furnlar-id<lb/>
apartmenta, energy eificient, free watei and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryera, cable XV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. $206 a month, 6 month<lb/>
lease MOBILF. HOME RENTAIS - couples or<lb/>
singles Apartrrent and mobile home in Azale.<lb/>
C.ardeiis near Brook Valley Country CJuV<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
Earlvis, the mad baseball buyer. I pay<lb/>
damn good money for cards of any year,<lb/>
any shape, and any ondihon. If you need<lb/>
party money, Big E is the one to call. 757-<lb/>
6366, leave a message.<lb/>
LOST: If anyone found 4 rings (dassring,<lb/>
shrimp ring, birthstone ring, sweetheart<lb/>
ring) in the bathroom at Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center on Friday (930), PLEASE<lb/>
CALL MICHELLE at 752-8463. RE-<lb/>
WARD!<lb/>
CHRISTOPHER: You're doing a terrific<lb/>
job! I'm so proud of you. I love you with all<lb/>
my heart! Your Sweetheart, Joan.<lb/>
THET A CHI. The Brothers and Pledges of<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi would like to congratulate<lb/>
Theta Chi for regaining their charter. Glad<lb/>
to have you back.<lb/>
KA'S: Can't wait to see where you were<lb/>
when the ship went down, tonite! Get<lb/>
ready for an awesome time. The Sigmas<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA: We had a great time<lb/>
building the float with you guys Thanks<lb/>
for having us over! The Sigmas.<lb/>
MARTA JOYNER AND KRIS KELLY<lb/>
Congratulations on making the 1 lome<lb/>
coming Court. We love you. The pledges<lb/>
and sisters of Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
THE PLEDGES OF PI KAPPA ALPHA:<lb/>
Would like to thank the pledges of Delta<lb/>
Zeta for the great time we had with you<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA PLEDGE AUCTION<lb/>
SUNDAY: Oct. 23 at the Attic Stay tuned<lb/>
for details.<lb/>
NEW DELI KEEPS J AMMIN! On Thurs<lb/>
day come hear the SWAMP GYPSIES,<lb/>
featuring Mike 1 lamer, Sue Ludeke &amp; Bob<lb/>
Gravelin. They play between 9-11, after 11<lb/>
p.m. is DEAD HEAD JAM Fridav, don't<lb/>
miss WIDESPREAD PANIC, or you'll be<lb/>
sorry.<lb/>
WAY TO GO MB Sure helps the Alpha<lb/>
Xi Delta rep!<lb/>
KA Thanks for all the tun' You gu) - -<lb/>
know how tii do it right Love the <lb/>
Omega's<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS On your new<lb/>
charter Theta Chi l tin hi Omega's.<lb/>
THANKS FOR ALL YOUR HH P JOHN<lb/>
CARTER! Love the ("hi Omega's<lb/>
CHI OMEGA PI UK.IS .t psyched.<lb/>
Wecanhardlv wait Love the sisters of 'i<lb/>
Omega<lb/>
KAREN, STEVL. DA ID hanks i<lb/>
guys for a most enlightening sctt.<lb/>
Student Union forever! 1 ove, Karen i.<lb/>
MASSAGE C1INR Physical therap?<lb/>
students ar having .i m tssage lini<lb/>
Tuesday, October II from 5 - ?<lb/>
at the Physical Therap) 1 al ?<lb/>
I lealth Bldg Advanced ti kets ai - <lb/>
for 10 nun and SI 2 at the d<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
$ NEED CASH? $<lb/>
Loans On tc Buying Guns<lb/>
TV Stereo, Gold Jewelry, coins,<lb/>
most anything of value<lb/>
. Southern Gon &amp; Pawn, Inc.<lb/>
$ 752-2464 6<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
EL-TOftO<lb/>
???<lb/>
MENS HAIRSTYLING<lb/>
STYLE CUT 700<lb/>
IWALK-INS WELCOME<lb/>
20 TEARS OP SERVING ECU<lb/>
2 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS<lb/>
Eastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
(Acroaat from Highway Patrol Station)<lb/>
Behind Car Quest Auto Part<lb/>
2800 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
SALES POSITION AVAILABLE<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is now accepting applications lor an<lb/>
advertising sales representative.<lb/>
Requirements:<lb/>
Previous Sales Experience<lb/>
Good Personality &amp; Professional Appearam e<lb/>
Excellent Communication Skills<lb/>
Good Organizational Skills<lb/>
Must Be Dependable &amp; Show Initiative &amp; Enthusiasm<lb/>
Must Have Own Transportation<lb/>
Must Have The Desire To Excel<lb/>
Apply in Person at<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Please Include Resume<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
(In Front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
No Phone Calls Please!<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
Cooperative Education, a free service of-<lb/>
fered by the University, is designed to<lb/>
help vou find career-related work experi-<lb/>
ence before you graduate We would like<lb/>
to extend an invitation to all students to<lb/>
attend a Co-op Information Seminar in the<lb/>
GCB (see schedule below for Oct. Semi-<lb/>
nars). The only bonuses we can offer you<lb/>
for taking time from your busy schedule<lb/>
are:<lb/>
?extra cash to help cover the cost of college<lb/>
expenses or perhaps to increase your<lb/>
"fun" budget,<lb/>
?opportunities to test a career choice if you<lb/>
have made one or to explore career op-<lb/>
tions if undecided about a future career,<lb/>
and<lb/>
a highly "marketable" degree, which<lb/>
includes a valuable career-related experi-<lb/>
ence, when you graduate.<lb/>
Come by to see us today!<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 13, 4 p.m. rm. 2006; Thurs<lb/>
Oct. 20, 1 p.m rm. 2010; Mon Oct. 24,1<lb/>
p.m rm. 2010; Thurs, Oct. 27,4 p.m rm.<lb/>
2006; Mon Oct. 31, 4 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 GCB,<lb/>
room 2028<lb/>
LOST?<lb/>
Something missing in your life? We've<lb/>
found it and we want to share it with you.<lb/>
Jenkins Art Auditorium EVERY Fri.<lb/>
night at 700.<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
If you are challenged everyday with prob-<lb/>
lems that you find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
us for the uncompromised word of God.<lb/>
Every Fri. night at 700in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY UNIONS<lb/>
The Ohio Ballet will initiate 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: "Unhtled" (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 tne<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center, 757-6611, ext. 266. This event<lb/>
is sponsored by the Performing Arts<lb/>
Committee and the Department of Uni-<lb/>
versity Unions.<lb/>
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 SI000 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/>
(S350), National Association of Account-<lb/>
ants - Eastern Carolina Chapter Scholar-<lb/>
ship ($500) DECISION SCIENCES MA-<lb/>
JOR ONLY: Grant for Decision Sciences<lb/>
Majors ($125), FINANCE MAJORS<lb/>
ONLY: Archie R. Bumette ($600), Ward<lb/>
Real Estate Scholarship ($300).<lb/>
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/>
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/>
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 at 8:00 in 211<lb/>
Messick Theatre Arts Bldg.<lb/>
TRAVEL COMMITTEE<lb/>
Attention all ECU students, faculty,<lb/>
alumni and parents of ECU students!<lb/>
Why spend another dull Thanksgiving<lb/>
when you could be in the exciting city of<lb/>
lights. New York City. Come join the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union's Travel Committee excursion<lb/>
to New York City, Nov. 23-27. For more<lb/>
info, call the Central Ticket Office at 757-<lb/>
6611.<lb/>
MINORITY STUDENT ORG.<lb/>
ELECTION of officers for the MINORITY<lb/>
STUDENT ORGANIZATION will be<lb/>
held on Oct. 11 at 500 p.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, &amp; PRIZES: HOW?<lb/>
By playing the hottest business t,ame 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. Ypu 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 FTNA dept. 757-<lb/>
6670.<lb/>
m n YEARBOOKS<lb/>
SMI<lb/>
The Society of Manufacturing Engineers<lb/>
is having a called meeting Oct. 11 in Rawl<lb/>
106 at 4:00. Guest speaker?Micky R.L.<lb/>
McDowell, Dept. head for AT&amp;T. Subject.<lb/>
New Technology in Fiber Optics. All<lb/>
members and interested persons are<lb/>
urged to attend!<lb/>
UNDERWATER HOCKEY<lb/>
Underwater Hockey games are scheduled<lb/>
from 7:00 p.m. thru 830 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 try 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/>
SNCAE<lb/>
There will be a meeting on Tues Oct 11 at<lb/>
5 p.m. Joan Shappley will speak to us on<lb/>
how to arrange our classrooms. ALL<lb/>
EDUCATION MAJORS ARE WELCOME<lb/>
TO ATTEND!<lb/>
PRFPROFESSIONAL HEALTH<lb/>
ALLIANCE<lb/>
The PreProfessional Health Alliance will<lb/>
hold its first meeting of the 88-89 school<lb/>
year, on Thurs Oct. 13 at 530 p.m. in<lb/>
room 247 Mendenhall. Any student inter-<lb/>
ested in a health-related career is invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
FINANCIAL MGMT. ASSOC.<lb/>
The Student Financial Management As-<lb/>
soc. will meet Wed Oct. 12 at 430 p.m. in<lb/>
room 3009 of the GCB. The guest speaker<lb/>
will be Dorson White, V.P. for Business<lb/>
Services at BB&amp;T. All interested students<lb/>
are invited to attend the meeting.<lb/>
Program, is coming to ECU to speak on<lb/>
summer jobs in state government. The<lb/>
presentation will be on Mon Nov. 21 at<lb/>
10:00 a.m. in 1029 GCB. The ten-week in-<lb/>
ternship program, in the Raleigh area, is<lb/>
open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors<lb/>
currently enrolled in college. (Those en-<lb/>
tering Graduate School as of May 1989 are<lb/>
not eligible).<lb/>
CLASS PICTURES<lb/>
Any student wishing to have a dass pic-<lb/>
ture taken for the yearbook now has that<lb/>
chance. Qass photographs will be taken<lb/>
Oct. 31-Nov. 4 in the Student Store from 9<lb/>
a.m. till 12 p.m. and 1 p.m. to 430 p.m.<lb/>
each day. The yearbook is not your year-<lb/>
book until you are in it.<lb/>
ECU SURF CLUB<lb/>
The Surfing Club will have a meeting<lb/>
Tues Oct. 11 at 7:00 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
rm. 221. The meeting is very important.<lb/>
Everyone is welcome.<lb/>
NTF (SPECIALTY AREA)<lb/>
The National Teacher Exam?Specialty<lb/>
Area?will be offered at ECU on SAT.<lb/>
NOV. 12,1988. Application blanks are to<lb/>
be completed and mailed to the Educa-<lb/>
tional Testing Service, Box 911-R, Prince-<lb/>
ton, NJ 08541. Applications must be post-<lb/>
marked no later than OCT. 14, 1988.<lb/>
Applications may be obtained from the<lb/>
ECU Testing Center, Room 105, Speight<lb/>
Bldg ECU.<lb/>
AHPAT<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions Admission<lb/>
Test will be offered at ECU on SAT NOV.<lb/>
12, 1988. Application blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to The Psychologi-<lb/>
cal Corp 555 Academic Court, San Anto-<lb/>
nio, TX 78204-0952 to arrive by OCT. 11,<lb/>
1988.<lb/>
EARLY CHILDHOOD CLUB<lb/>
Have you started working on your PRO-<lb/>
FESSIONAL FILE yet? Come see com-<lb/>
pleted files and get some great ideas at the<lb/>
next (EQ2 meeting! Everyone is welcome<lb/>
to come on Wed Oct. 12 at 4:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Speight 129. Please join us!<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma will hold a business meet-<lb/>
ing Oct. 13th from 7-730 p.m. in room 205<lb/>
Austin. All those interested please attend.<lb/>
We will discuss purchasing tee-shirts.<lb/>
MINORITY CAREER<lb/>
EXPLORATION PAY<lb/>
Wed Oct. 19, from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall. Representatives from<lb/>
various career fields will be available to<lb/>
talk about career opportunities. Spon-<lb/>
sored by the Office of Minority Student<lb/>
Affairs and Career Planning and Place-<lb/>
ment Services.<lb/>
Thurs, Oct. 13 at 8:00 pm. for registration<lb/>
and a free demonstration<lb/>
ADVANCEMENT<lb/>
OF MANAGEMENT<lb/>
Society for the Advancement of Mgmt is<lb/>
sponsoring a tour of the DuPont plant in<lb/>
Kinston on Wed Oct. 12. We will meet in<lb/>
GCB room 1026 at 3:00 and depart shortly<lb/>
after. Anyone interested in going should<lb/>
see Dr. Koulamis in GCB 3111 or contact<lb/>
Angela Dixon.<lb/>
JUNIORS. SENIORS. &amp;<lb/>
GRAD. STUDENTS<lb/>
Sign up this week for your own Visa or<lb/>
Master Card with Sovran Bank The Soci-<lb/>
ety for the Advancement of Mgmt. will<lb/>
have a table set up in front of the student<lb/>
store thrcugh Thurs. from 9:00-400<lb/>
Sovran Bank is offering great terms to full-<lb/>
time students, so come by and apply this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
GAMMA PET A PHI<lb/>
The National Gamma Beta Phi Honor<lb/>
Society will hold a meeting Tues Oct. 11<lb/>
at 8:00 in Jenkins Auditorium. New<lb/>
members are welcomed.<lb/>
SNCAE<lb/>
Do you know all you need to know about<lb/>
taking the NATIONAL TEACHER<lb/>
EXAM? There will be a workshop for the<lb/>
NTE Professional Knowledge area Wed<lb/>
Oct. 12,4:30-8:00 p.m. Cost is $5.00 Regis-<lb/>
ter in Speight, room 154. First 25 people to<lb/>
register will be taken, so hurry! See Sherry<lb/>
Tripp. It's worth your time to know!<lb/>
SKIING TRIP<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Skiing<lb/>
Trip registration meeting from Aug 22 to<lb/>
Oct. 22. Now you can ski the slopes and<lb/>
leam the,ropes in this fun filled trip!<lb/>
VON-3 BASKETBALL<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Free<lb/>
Throw Contest registration meeting held<lb/>
Nov. 1 at 5:00 p.m. in B1O103. Play begins<lb/>
shortly afterwards! Interested in officiat-<lb/>
ing? Attend the first officials clinic on Oct.<lb/>
25 at 8:00 p.m. at MG102. For additional<lb/>
info call Dave Hall at 757-6387.<lb/>
CO-KEf FLAG FOOTBALL<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Co-Rec<lb/>
Flag Football meeting held Oct 25 at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. in BIO 109. Play begins shortly after-<lb/>
ward! Interested in officiating? Attend the<lb/>
first officials clinic Oct. 25 at 800 pm in<lb/>
MG102. For additional info call Dave<lb/>
Hall at 757-6387.<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramui il<lb/>
registration mooting hold Oct 19 at 6 ?<lb/>
p.m in GCB 1026 Play begins shorl<lb/>
afterward! Interested in officiating? V'<lb/>
tend the first officials clinic Oct - ?<lb/>
p.m. in MG 102 For additional int.<lb/>
Dave Hall at 757-6387<lb/>
RHO EPS I ION<lb/>
Members or anyone interested in Rho Ep<lb/>
silon National Real Estate Fratemit) aro<lb/>
reminded of a mandatory meeting<lb/>
Wed , Oct. 12 at 3:30 p m. in GCB 3009 I<lb/>
vou cannot make the meeting or have ar y<lb/>
questions, please call Todd Kirkpatrick a:<lb/>
752-3642<lb/>
WYNTON MARSALIS CON-<lb/>
CERT<lb/>
The Dept. of University Unions is proud<lb/>
to present Wynton Marsalis in concert<lb/>
Tues Nov. 1 at 8:00 p m in W right Audi<lb/>
tonum. Tickets go on sale tor this Per<lb/>
forming Arts Series event on Mon , CX I<lb/>
10. Winner of a Grammy Award tor both<lb/>
classical ami jazz performances Mr Mar<lb/>
salis is sure to bring an energetic and en<lb/>
tertaining show to Wright Auditorium<lb/>
For further details, contact The Contra<lb/>
Ticket Office, Mendenhall. or call I<lb/>
757-6611.<lb/>
SUMMER IOBS<lb/>
Dr. Jack Vogt, a representative from the<lb/>
Institute of Government Summer Intern<lb/>
KARATECLUB<lb/>
If you are interested in joining the ECU<lb/>
Karate Club, come to Memorial Gym<lb/>
BANNER CONTEST<lb/>
Last chance to register your<lb/>
organization's banner for the National<lb/>
Alcohol Awareness Week Contest is 5<lb/>
p.m. Frf Oct. 14 in 209 Whichard. Re-<lb/>
member all banners will be judged at 4<lb/>
p.m. Wed Oct. 19 at Ftcklen Stadium,<lb/>
East service entrance. Call 757-6823 for<lb/>
more info.<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS<lb/>
Expressions is now accepting poetry and<lb/>
short stories for the Dec issue Themaga<lb/>
zine is published twice a semester with<lb/>
the first issue coming out in Oct This<lb/>
special issue will ho a small magazine<lb/>
with mainly general information<lb/>
whereas the Doc issue will ho a larger -<lb/>
containing news stones short stories<lb/>
editorials, poetry, etc Articles ma be left<lb/>
at the office or at the Media Board<lb/>
Secretary's Office in the Publications<lb/>
Bldg<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Voile)<lb/>
ball registration meeting held (.Vt 19 at<lb/>
5:00 p.m in GCB 1026 Play begins shortly<lb/>
afterward! Interested in officiating? Tor<lb/>
additional into, call DAve 1 lall at 7<lb/>
6387.<lb/>
WERE YOU A.BQ.Y-SCQLI?<lb/>
East Carolina Council's Oder of the Ar<lb/>
row Lodge, Croatan Lodge 117, is cole<lb/>
bratingits50th Anniversary on Now 4 6 at<lb/>
Bonner Scout Reservation All past mem<lb/>
bers of Croatan Lodge are invited "Green<lb/>
Bar Bill William 1 larcourt (Author of the<lb/>
Boy Scout Handbook), will be our hon<lb/>
ored guest In order to attend, vou must<lb/>
preregister by Oct. 14 The cost will he<lb/>
$12.00 for Sat and S15 for Fn Sun Regis-<lb/>
tration includes all meals, acnvibes, and a<lb/>
beautiful special edition patch Send<lb/>
check with name and address to East<lb/>
Carolina Council, O A 50th Annivcrsarv,<lb/>
P.O. Box 1698, Kinston, N C 285(13 or call<lb/>
(919) 522-1521.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
0<lb/>
m<lb/>
'Hi<lb/>
'fy<lb/>
The headloss women is only<lb/>
Shamlin had a good tirr?<lb/>
Origin o<lb/>
the irivet<lb/>
By JIM SHAMI IN<lb/>
??? w, -<lb/>
Did ou t ?<lb/>
floated abo' c lh<lb/>
Ferris wh ?<lb/>
fairs N .<lb/>
Ono <lb/>
can remember I<lb/>
county fair in each count) i -<lb/>
fair in each state and The V <lb/>
Fair whi<lb/>
planet I I it all b<lb/>
Th<lb/>
from Old French term I -<lb/>
combination<lb/>
"forum m n - nd<lb/>
tae' h lida fhus a I<lb/>
spe ial sort of mars j<lb/>
on holidays rhis d<lb/>
hardly befits the modem J<lb/>
which is better de$cr?reti .<lb/>
carnival a festivity il<lb/>
purely for amusemc<lb/>
Like that<lb/>
the origin of the I<lb/>
nebulous It is likely tl i I<lb/>
aproductofapre-li stij<lb/>
Before the exister<lb/>
mative tribes would gather al<lb/>
good hunt or much later a d<lb/>
harvest. There would he a q<lb/>
feast and a trad<lb/>
skills<lb/>
lne itablc a few of the w ar<lb/>
would g: I istedandei .<lb/>
spear-chuckling contest muej<lb/>
the amusement of their I<lb/>
non wives and offspring Or<lb/>
haps the tarn - uld sa)<lb/>
yeah, well m pig s bigj<lb/>
you pig and they would bj<lb/>
the animals out for a more<lb/>
tne comparison.<lb/>
A more reasonable expl<lb/>
might derive from the overj<lb/>
trade routes of Eastern<lb/>
chants who drove their w<lb/>
across Europe to ped<lb/>
wares lor satet s sake<lb/>
went in caravans, later c<lb/>
Gypsy trams through the cl<lb/>
nent. To attract customer<lb/>
would bring musicians jugs<lb/>
belly-dancers sv? ord-s all<lb/>
ers and so forth<lb/>
A documented theon <lb/>
origin of fairs is provided In<lb/>
nelious Walford. In hi;<lb/>
Railroa<lb/>
,<lb/>
<lb/>
SPENCER, N C.<lb/>
Dressed in traditional rail<lb/>
clothes retired machinist J<lb/>
Ruble and a handful oi othel<lb/>
unteers are trying to resto<lb/>
glorv what once was the 1<lb/>
repair facility for steam lo"<lb/>
lives in the South.<lb/>
"What we're doing is fj<lb/>
next generation Ruble<lb/>
the restoration of Spencer<lb/>
"We want them to be able td<lb/>
something about their pastj<lb/>
The railroad buffs he<lb/>
turn the 57-acre site and its <lb/>
ing buildings into a tran?<lb/>
tion museum surpassed b<lb/>
The Southern Ral<lb/>
opened the Spencer Shops lj<lb/>
because of its strategic lo1<lb/>
halfwav between Washi<lb/>
DC. and Atlanta. By 19:<lb/>
facility employed nearly!<lb/>
men and was capable of ser<lb/>
100 steam locomotives a dJ<lb/>
"In its heyday, one<lb/>
pletely rebuilt locomotive<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0009"/><lb/>
tefun<lb/>
ruiht Love thehi<lb/>
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XI I VIKHH I' OH<lb/>
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CERT<lb/>
??? 3rd for txjth<lb/>
Mr Mar<lb/>
 an enerj ri indei<lb/>
aim<lb/>
? ntral<lb/>
I XPRESSIONS<lb/>
ie coming oul<lb/>
short si<lb/>
VOLLEYBAL1<lb/>
d the Intramural<lb/>
? meeting held Oct 19 at<lb/>
B1 2 i'lav b<lb/>
 ? dating<lb/>
ii! DAve i Lall al 757<lb/>
IEJCQ1 A liO) SCQUJJ<lb/>
lina I i Ol ler of ttv<lb/>
itai K' 1'<lb/>
I. Oth Anniversary on N<lb/>
1 ut Reservation All paM mem<lb/>
It afan Lodge are invited "Green<lb/>
l William riarcourt (Author of the<lb/>
nut Handbook), wall ho our him<lb/>
Mil In order to attend, you must<lb/>
lMer bv Oct 14 The mst wifi he<lb/>
iorSat andSltorTn Sin Kgi<lb/>
indudea all meals, activities and a<lb/>
ful special edition patch Send<lb/>
?ith name and address to East<lb/>
a Council, O A 5(h AnnnT-jr<lb/>
n 1698, Kinston, N C 28503?<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
OCTOBER 11,1988 Page 7<lb/>
Doing the county fair hop<lb/>
ByJIMSHAMLIN<lb/>
Sufi Writer<lb/>
It's another ten minutes before<lb/>
you reach the booth by the gate,<lb/>
and another fifteen in queue for<lb/>
tickets. "Two, please feeling the<lb/>
It's Friday afternoon, classes are tingle of excitement returning,<lb/>
over, and it's time to relax. Down-<lb/>
town is the same old scene; some-<lb/>
thing different is wanted, a<lb/>
change of pace.<lb/>
Thumbing through the pages of<lb/>
The East Carolinian the answer is<lb/>
minute ride.<lb/>
After the ride is over, you de-<lb/>
cide to eat some food from the<lb/>
concession stand. Paying$7.50 for<lb/>
two comdogs, an order of fries.<lb/>
Six says an old woman in a and two cokes, you stand there<lb/>
stained pink sweatshirt. She looks eating, you look at the crowd.<lb/>
tired, as if she hasn't left the ticket<lb/>
window for three days.<lb/>
After buying the tickets, we<lb/>
wade into another line which<lb/>
found: the Pitt County Fair. So moves only a little faster. An old<lb/>
you call a friend and say "Hey, man in a satin baseball jacket and<lb/>
In the crowd, there are red-<lb/>
necks, crying toddlers in K-Mart<lb/>
jumpsuits, dazed-looking pre -<lb/>
teens in plaid polyester pants,<lb/>
obnoxious teenagers in baseball<lb/>
caps and black tee-shirts, young<lb/>
want to cruise the fair?" a John Deere cap takes the tickets punks in leather jackets, and<lb/>
At 7:30 p.m you pick up the and lets you pass. Shuffling middle-aged people dressed in<lb/>
date and cruise east towards through a throng of bewildered cellulose and baseball caps. It's<lb/>
highway 256. A few miles down onlookers and uninformed depu- like double-coupons day at Farm<lb/>
256, you see an array of neon and ties, the fair-goers veer to the left, Fresh. Bored, and perhaps dis-<lb/>
flourescent lights in the distance away from the motor show and gusted, by the penny public, you<lb/>
The headless women is only one of the big attractions at the annual Pitt County Fair. Reviewer Jim<lb/>
Shamlin had a good time, but spent too much money. (Photo by Mark Love?Photolab)<lb/>
Origin of fairs goes beyond<lb/>
the invention of Ferris Wheel<lb/>
before stopping in a queue of traf<lb/>
fie in the left lane.<lb/>
"Ooh the friend says, in child-<lb/>
like anticipation, "The Ferris<lb/>
Wheel<lb/>
There are many attractions<lb/>
which rise above the labyrinth of<lb/>
booths below. The steam from<lb/>
towards more civilized amuse-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
"Let's ride the ferris wheel<lb/>
suggests your date as you weave<lb/>
through an arcade, ignoring the<lb/>
calls of the red-faced carnies. You<lb/>
nod and look around for a ticket<lb/>
look around for a trash can. You<lb/>
realize that you're standing on it.<lb/>
After a gourmet junk food din-<lb/>
ner, the 'Tilt-A-Whirl" ride looks<lb/>
appealing. Then comes Sea<lb/>
Dragon, "The Round-Up, The Oc-<lb/>
topuss, and a few other rides<lb/>
whose names soon blend in<lb/>
among the rest.<lb/>
Being the average male fair-<lb/>
By JIM SHAMLIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Pai you ever wonder, as you<lb/>
floated above the crowds inthe<lb/>
Ferris wheel, how the tradition of<lb/>
lairs began?<lb/>
Once a year, for as long as you general area<lb/>
can remember, there has been a<lb/>
county fair in each county, a state<lb/>
fair in each state, and The Worlds<lb/>
Fair which encompasses the<lb/>
planet. Where did it all begin?<lb/>
The word "fair" itself comes<lb/>
from Old French term "foire a<lb/>
combination of Latin<lb/>
nn "(marketplace) and "fer-<lb/>
(holiday). Thus, a fair is a<lb/>
special sort of marketplace held<lb/>
on holidays. This definition<lb/>
hardly befits the modem fair,<lb/>
which is better described?1?-<lb/>
"carnival"? a festivity held<lb/>
purely for amusement.<lb/>
Like that of many traditions,<lb/>
Fairs, Past and Present (written<lb/>
in 1863), he suggested that fairs<lb/>
originated from the masses of pil-<lb/>
grims who traveled to holy places<lb/>
on holy days. Since the site itself<lb/>
could not accomodate all pil-<lb/>
grims, tents were pitched in its<lb/>
And since money is easier to<lb/>
carry than food, especially on a<lb/>
long trek, they bought provisions<lb/>
from the local peasantry. In order<lb/>
to maximize their profits, these timc' disbanded when the plague<lb/>
Lord Mayor of London, invested<lb/>
over 500 marks (about 245 lbs. of<lb/>
silver) to improve the roads in<lb/>
specific consideration of fair-<lb/>
goers. Of course, riots, crime, dis-<lb/>
ease, and fires were always a risk<lb/>
when people amassed, but the<lb/>
benefit of commerce and taxes far<lb/>
outweighed these dangers.<lb/>
There was much legislature<lb/>
over fairs. They were limited in<lb/>
booth. When you find one, you<lb/>
concession booths rises slowly have to wait in another queue to<lb/>
towards the starless sky, visible purchase ten tickets for $3.50.<lb/>
only in the faint light. The traffic Thereisalongerlineattheferris<lb/>
begins to move; a Pitt County wheel. You're lucky that you<lb/>
Deputy is directing the line of cars bought ten tickets; that's exactly 80cr' vou feel compelled to ask-<lb/>
across the highway, into the park- what you need for the two of you vour date if she would like a<lb/>
ing lot. to ride. As the wheel spins suffed animal. She tugs at your<lb/>
Twenty minutes later, you're around, she looks at the array of sleeve, pointing to a four-foot<lb/>
led to an available space which is amusements below. You smile at stuffed Gumby. It hangs in an<lb/>
a 15-minute hike from the gates, her fervor, even though you're attractive display, along with six<lb/>
So you begin the trek, navigating thinking about the twenty-min- others just alike,<lb/>
puddles and squidgy spots. ute wait vou endured for the five- See EATING, page 8<lb/>
Seventh daughter of seventh<lb/>
daughter looks back on years<lb/>
peasants began to set up booths in<lb/>
the pilgrims' campsites.<lb/>
One such early fair held on the<lb/>
feast of Saint Bartolomew in<lb/>
Smithfield, English Historians<lb/>
struck, and moved out of the cit-<lb/>
ies. Laws of the polity were ex-<lb/>
tended to fairs, so that such things<lb/>
as prostitution and gambling,<lb/>
once popular events, were illegal-<lb/>
wrestle. Eventually, the two<lb/>
in of the fair is highly events grew together into a huge<lb/>
nebulous. It is likelv that fairs are celebration.<lb/>
a product ofapre-historic festival. Regardless of the precise on-<lb/>
Before the existence of gods, pri- gins, the primary element of early<lb/>
mative tribes would gather after a fairs was commerce. While a<lb/>
good hunt or, much later, a good single person would not be will-<lb/>
harvest. There would be a great ing to travel fifty miles to buy a<lb/>
recognize Smithfield as the site ized at fairs as well. The English<lb/>
where many tournaments were Courts of Piepowder arose with<lb/>
held: The nobiliJty .would oust faU and disbanded with their<lb/>
white tha pmnnrry, m anyana dissolution ThPSP courts fifiEMfld<lb/>
else who couldn't afford shiny to settle disputes among the mer-<lb/>
armor and gallant steeds, would chants and customers. They also<lb/>
WHITEV1LLE, N.C. (AP) -<lb/>
Hope Bennett was born 90 years<lb/>
ago, the seventh daughter of a<lb/>
seventh daughter and the middle<lb/>
child among 13 in a family named<lb/>
Formyduval.<lb/>
She was 14 years old before<lb/>
she visited a town, traveling by<lb/>
least and a trade of crafts and<lb/>
skills.<lb/>
Inevitable, a few of the warriors<lb/>
would get toasted and engage in a<lb/>
pear-chuckling contest, much to<lb/>
the amusement of their Cromag-<lb/>
non wives and offspring. Or per-<lb/>
haps the farmers would say, "Oh,<lb/>
yeah, well my pig's bigger than<lb/>
set standards of measure, quality,<lb/>
and price. In fact, many of the<lb/>
statutes of common law concern-<lb/>
ing commerce originated in these<lb/>
fair courts.<lb/>
Since Walford's book was writ-<lb/>
ten some time before the inven-<lb/>
tion of the Ferris Wheel, the evolu-<lb/>
tion of fairs since the mid-nine-<lb/>
teenth century is left to specula-<lb/>
tion. But the decline of mercentile<lb/>
in fairs is apparent.<lb/>
vou pig and they would bring as a standard forbidding<lb/>
the animals out for a more objec-<lb/>
tive comparison.<lb/>
A more reasonable explanation<lb/>
might derive from the overland<lb/>
trade routes of Eastern mer-<lb/>
single ounce of spice, a merchant<lb/>
would gladly travel that distance<lb/>
to sell a large quantity to throngs<lb/>
of customers. Livestock sales,<lb/>
once an individual event, soon :ourse<lb/>
came to the fairs. There, judges such as candy.appies and<lb/>
would rank livestock (including carmc, which are sti1<lb/>
slaves captured in combat) to specifically sold at fairs. These<lb/>
rank quality, whic would serve goods by and large arerV t ncces.<lb/>
sities. Thus fairs, by and large, arc<lb/>
no longer an event which is cru-<lb/>
cial to world commerce.<lb/>
Amusements, however, did not<lb/>
fall by the wayside. There were<lb/>
theatrical booths, competitions,<lb/>
performances by artisans, and<lb/>
even public executions. Fairs pro-<lb/>
chants, who drove their wagons vided the opportunity for a single not sold, but the prizes they win<lb/>
increase their value. Still, this<lb/>
Live stock judging is still held at<lb/>
fairs. The animals themselves are<lb/>
across Europe to peddle their performance to attract a large<lb/>
wares. For safety's sake, they audience, and hence a large sum<lb/>
went in caravans, later called of admissions. Even though these<lb/>
Gypsy trains, through the conn- amusements were many, they still<lb/>
nent. To attract customers, they did not replace trade as the focus<lb/>
would bring musicians, jugglers, ?f the fairs,<lb/>
bellv-danccrs, sword-swallow- Politicians, of course, could not<lb/>
crs and so forth. ignore the fairs. An event of such<lb/>
A documented theory of the proportions, properly taxed,<lb/>
origin of fairs is provided by Cor- could generate much revenue for cantilism as the primary function<lb/>
nelious Walford. In his book, a policy. Sir William Littlebury, of fairs.<lb/>
event is of relatively minor impor-<lb/>
tance to the general public.<lb/>
There are still special events<lb/>
such as motor shows and con-<lb/>
certs. And there are a plethora of<lb/>
mechanical contraptions which<lb/>
whirl fairgoers about. Thus, en-<lb/>
tertainment has surpassed mer-<lb/>
?wagwraluug a iinnhiy luad-riom<lb/>
her home in the Nakina commu-<lb/>
nity to Vineland, now part of<lb/>
Whiteville. It was enough to let<lb/>
her know she was not going to<lb/>
stay down on the farm.<lb/>
At 16, she impetuously mar-<lb/>
ried a railroad man three times<lb/>
her age. Her family told her it<lb/>
wouldn't work. It was 14 years<lb/>
later, while living in Savannah,<lb/>
Ga that she realized they were<lb/>
right.<lb/>
Freeing herself from a stifling<lb/>
marriage, she enrolled in a cosme-<lb/>
tology school in New York City,<lb/>
arriving during Prohibition to<lb/>
find herself sharing an apartment<lb/>
building with some other enter-<lb/>
prising North Carolinians who<lb/>
had brought some home-grown<lb/>
skills north with them. They were<lb/>
operating stills in the apartment<lb/>
building.<lb/>
"I never knew what hospital-<lb/>
ity was until I went to New York<lb/>
she said in an interview with the<lb/>
Wilmington Morning Star. She<lb/>
befriended a manager at the Met-<lb/>
ropolitan Opera House and got<lb/>
season tickets for two years. She<lb/>
also caught a stage show intro-<lb/>
ducing a new act: a kid named<lb/>
Bing Crosby.<lb/>
In 1934, she returned to<lb/>
Savannah to start a beauty shop<lb/>
business. Between cutting hair<lb/>
and giving permanents, she be-<lb/>
gan dabbling in real estate, buy-<lb/>
ing old houses and renovating<lb/>
them, doing a lot of the work her-<lb/>
self.<lb/>
She can still recall the amaze-<lb/>
ment olajjuildjngcojoiracior wJaa<lb/>
arrived at a job site to discover<lb/>
that she had already put down the<lb/>
foundation herself.<lb/>
"I can't believe I'm 90 years<lb/>
old she said. "I can't do the<lb/>
things 1 used to, but my mind and<lb/>
my attitude toward life are the<lb/>
same as they always were<lb/>
Her second marriage was<lb/>
happy and lasted 14 years before<lb/>
her husband died of heart disease<lb/>
She was alone for seven years<lb/>
until one day she was sitting in a<lb/>
supper club in Savannah when a<lb/>
man playing the piano asked her<lb/>
if she had any requests. He played<lb/>
every tune she named.<lb/>
James H. Bennett was his<lb/>
name.<lb/>
"They called me 'Red' for<lb/>
years and years, but I lost most of<lb/>
my hair so now they call me<lb/>
Jimmy he said.<lb/>
Bennett grew up in South<lb/>
Carolina, enrolling at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of South Carolina at the age of<lb/>
15, the youngest freshman the<lb/>
school had ever had.<lb/>
Bennett played in the bands<lb/>
of Tommy Dorsey and at the<lb/>
Grand Ole Opry. During World<lb/>
War II, while serving in the 3rd<lb/>
Army, he once performed for the<lb/>
troops, including Gen. George S.<lb/>
Patton. An old shoulder injury<lb/>
hampers his musical pursuits, but<lb/>
he can still belt out old tunes on an<lb/>
accordian.<lb/>
He says he once knew 1,000<lb/>
songs and played in a place where<lb/>
the owner promised a $10 bill to<lb/>
anyone who could name a rune<lb/>
Bennett didn't know.<lb/>
"Hhink he only lost one $10<lb/>
bill he said. "My memory's not<lb/>
as good. I can't remember but<lb/>
about 800 of them<lb/>
Bennett was on the way from<lb/>
New York to play at the Fontaine-<lb/>
bleau Hotel in Miami when he<lb/>
stopped in Savannah for a two-<lb/>
week gig at the supper club.<lb/>
He walked Hope to her car<lb/>
one night. He never did make it to<lb/>
Miami.<lb/>
They were married 21 years<lb/>
ago. This time, she married a<lb/>
younger man. He's 66.<lb/>
Back in 1957, Mrs. Bennett<lb/>
was diagnosed with anemia and a<lb/>
nerve disorder that temporarily<lb/>
confined her to a wheelchair. She<lb/>
overcame the problems, however,<lb/>
and she's still going strong, devot-<lb/>
ing a lot of time to making quilts<lb/>
for nieces and nephews.<lb/>
The Bennetts have no chil-<lb/>
dren of their own, but they have<lb/>
other relatives in Columbus<lb/>
County. About six and a half<lb/>
years ago, they returned to<lb/>
Whiteville, where they live in a<lb/>
mobile home they moved into<lb/>
after Mrs. Bennett was told she<lb/>
could not live in an apartment<lb/>
with her two dogs, both dead now<lb/>
and still missed, remembered in<lb/>
pictures produced by Bennett's<lb/>
hobby of photography.<lb/>
Railroad clothing are in vogue<lb/>
SPENCER, N.C. (AP) -<lb/>
Dressed in traditional railroad<lb/>
clothes, retired machinist Milton<lb/>
Ruble and a handful of other vol-<lb/>
unteers are trying to restore to<lb/>
glory what once was the largest<lb/>
repair facility for steam locomo-<lb/>
tives in the South.<lb/>
"What we're doing is for the<lb/>
next generation Ruble said of<lb/>
the restoration of Spencer Shops.<lb/>
"We want them to be able to learn<lb/>
something about their past"<lb/>
The railroad buffs hope to<lb/>
turn the 57-acre site and its decay-<lb/>
ing buildings into a transporta-<lb/>
tion museum surpassed by none.<lb/>
The Southern Railway<lb/>
opened the Spencer Shops in 18<lb/>
because of its strategic location<lb/>
halfway between Washington<lb/>
DC. and Atlanta. By 1938, the<lb/>
facility employed nearly 3,000<lb/>
men and was capable of servicing<lb/>
100 steam locomotives a day.<lb/>
"In its heyday, one com-<lb/>
pletely rebuilt locomotive would<lb/>
come out that door every day<lb/>
said Charlie Peacock, a former<lb/>
brakeman and conductor who is<lb/>
president of the non-profit N.C.<lb/>
Transportation History Corp<lb/>
which leases the facility from the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
With the introduction of die-<lb/>
sel locomotives in the 1940s, activ-<lb/>
ity waned. The shops were closed<lb/>
in I960, leaving only a skeleton<lb/>
crew.<lb/>
In 1977, Southern donated the<lb/>
Spencer Shops to the state as the<lb/>
eventual site of the N.C. Trans-<lb/>
portation Museum. But little state<lb/>
funding has materialized and<lb/>
most of the progress at the site is<lb/>
credited to the small band of eld-<lb/>
erly volunteers.<lb/>
Ruble and his crew has<lb/>
logged thousands of hours restor-<lb/>
ing old trains, repairing tracks<lb/>
and performing countless other<lb/>
grimy duties.<lb/>
"My wife likes to tell every-<lb/>
one that she saw me more often<lb/>
when I was working said Jim<lb/>
Mesimore, who also put in 47<lb/>
years at the shops.<lb/>
The 37-stall roundhouse is<lb/>
serviced by a 100-foot turntable<lb/>
which rotates to permit locomo-<lb/>
tives to move into and out of the<lb/>
roundhouse for repairs. The vol-<lb/>
unteers got the turntable working<lb/>
again, much to the amazement of<lb/>
a state official who considered it a<lb/>
total loss.<lb/>
Ruble and the other volun-<lb/>
teers wonder aloud if the Spencer<lb/>
Shops can survive the elements<lb/>
long enough for the state to fund i t<lb/>
as a full-fledged museum.<lb/>
Five years ago, the state De-<lb/>
partment of Cultural Resources<lb/>
opened an exhibit on the history<lb/>
of transportation in the old Mas-<lb/>
ter Mechanic's Office storehouse.<lb/>
Thousands of students visit the<lb/>
Spencer Shops each year, where<lb/>
they get a chance to take a ride on<lb/>
an old steam locomotive.<lb/>
This is one of Frank Diener's works of art which will be on exhibit Thursday at Gray Art Gallery,<lb/>
elephant will join other big top sculptures in "Diener's Circus<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0010"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
8 THE EAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
OCTOBER 11,1988<lb/>
Eating at the Pitt fair<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
"Two dollars for three darts<lb/>
the man shouts as you approach,<lb/>
knowing only too well that you're<lb/>
already interested. You hand him<lb/>
the money, take your darts, and<lb/>
miss miserably. The date looks<lb/>
unimpressed, so you reach into<lb/>
vour pocket. This time, you man-<lb/>
age to burst one balloon, a score<lb/>
which merits a blue snake made<lb/>
out of fake fur. "You can trade him<lb/>
in for bigger prizes the crony<lb/>
reminds you, so you buy another<lb/>
chance, and another, and another.<lb/>
Several minutes later, you walk<lb/>
awav from the booth. Your date<lb/>
clutches a stuffed white Hon. It's<lb/>
no Gumby but it cost you over<lb/>
twenty bucks. She seems satis-<lb/>
fied, but vou feel lousy. As a con-<lb/>
solation, you take her to another<lb/>
concessions stand. There, you buy-<lb/>
two caramel apples and a bag of<lb/>
cotton candy to take home.<lb/>
"Seven-fifty says the middle-<lb/>
aged woman at the window. You<lb/>
reach into your pocket, finding<lb/>
only two fives and three<lb/>
crumpled ones. You hand her<lb/>
eight dollars and pocket the<lb/>
change, wondering where the rest<lb/>
of your eighty-dollar bankroll<lb/>
went.<lb/>
On your way out, you decide to<lb/>
investigate the two large alumi-<lb/>
num buildings near the gate.<lb/>
There aren't any lines there, and<lb/>
no-one appears to be collecting<lb/>
money from the people who<lb/>
wander into them.<lb/>
The first building has four rows<lb/>
of booths. Some of them are com-<lb/>
mercial displays for not - profit<lb/>
organizations and local busi-<lb/>
nesses, others are businesses in<lb/>
themselves - selling everything<lb/>
from baked goods to porcelain<lb/>
figurines to automotive stereo<lb/>
speakers, and others are propa-<lb/>
gands centers for political fac-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
As vou enter the next building.<lb/>
Painter adds<lb/>
dreams to art<lb/>
? N EW YORK (AD - To under-<lb/>
standhe paintings of Vicky<lb/>
Montesinos is to know her<lb/>
dreams.<lb/>
"We all have our own uni-<lb/>
verse said Montesinos, a Mexi-<lb/>
can artist whose work has been<lb/>
shown throughout the world. "It<lb/>
belongs to you only. Sometimes<lb/>
you allow others to be in your<lb/>
universe and sometimes you<lb/>
don't<lb/>
The 44-year-old Montesinos<lb/>
is on show this fall at the Circle<lb/>
Gallery in Soho.<lb/>
"1 feel like my own universe is<lb/>
full of dreams. A fantasy, nothing<lb/>
that is quite visible she says.<lb/>
That world of fantasy seems<lb/>
to be in Montesinos' blood. Her<lb/>
father, Fernando Rivero, was a<lb/>
film director in Mexico City and<lb/>
worked with such actresses as<lb/>
Susan Havward and Hedv<lb/>
Lamarr.<lb/>
And Montesinosrecallsbcing<lb/>
in awe o those women.<lb/>
"1 was surrounded by this<lb/>
kind of fantasy. They were so<lb/>
beautiful. I was thinking, '1 wish 1<lb/>
could be like that Montesinos<lb/>
said, adding that she doesn't tind<lb/>
women as beautiful today.<lb/>
"1 don't know why. Maybe<lb/>
it's me. I'm sure there are beauti-<lb/>
ful women around but I don't find<lb/>
what I used to find in those<lb/>
people<lb/>
The women in Montesinos'<lb/>
paintings are often colorfully<lb/>
dressed with their hair hidden<lb/>
under elaborate hats.<lb/>
"Basically, in all my paint-<lb/>
ings, the women have a nostalgic<lb/>
look<lb/>
she said. "If I could choose to<lb/>
be in another life, I would choose<lb/>
the 1900s in Europe. I have a lot of<lb/>
feelings for those places. I have a<lb/>
read a lot history books about<lb/>
what happened there<lb/>
One of her paintings is called<lb/>
"The Venetian<lb/>
"I get a lot of inspiration every<lb/>
time I go to Venice. I try to go<lb/>
every year. It's a very serious<lb/>
place. I get inspired and try to<lb/>
bring what Venice was in the<lb/>
1900s to my paintings. I imagine<lb/>
people dressed in a lot of gold<lb/>
Montesinos is concerned that<lb/>
people are more interested in<lb/>
material gains than in developing<lb/>
their imagination.<lb/>
'The values ha ve been chang-<lb/>
ing little by little. I find people<lb/>
have really all their attention on<lb/>
making a lot of money; that takes<lb/>
a lot of time and energy. Maybe<lb/>
that's one of the reasons they re-<lb/>
ally don't have time to dream<lb/>
you want to turn around right<lb/>
away - the smell of the pigs and<lb/>
goats overwhelms you from<lb/>
acress the room. But your date<lb/>
cries, "look - bunnies and strolls<lb/>
across the hay-matted floor. You<lb/>
follow her as she looks at rabbits,<lb/>
ducks, pigeons, and other inno-<lb/>
cent-looking animals in chicken-<lb/>
wire cages.<lb/>
As for yourself, you are inter-<lb/>
ested in a particular fellow who is<lb/>
looking at chickens from several<lb/>
feet awav. Though he is dressed in<lb/>
a denim jacket and a baseball cap<lb/>
bearing the infamous "CAT"<lb/>
logo, there is something different<lb/>
about him.<lb/>
Tcrhaps it's his distinguished<lb/>
posture, or his designer spec-<lb/>
tacles, or the gTey sideburns,<lb/>
which identifies him as a bastion<lb/>
of intelligence in this asylum for<lb/>
the mentally insufficient. He<lb/>
cocks his head, walks up to the<lb/>
cages, and barks loudly.<lb/>
An hour later, you walk your<lb/>
date to her door. She is smiling a<lb/>
tired but satisfied smile. You feel<lb/>
exhausted and depressed, think-<lb/>
ing of your $25-an-hour evening.<lb/>
"I really enjoyed tonight she<lb/>
says.<lb/>
"Yeah you say, "We should<lb/>
do it again sometime<lb/>
"Next year she says.<lb/>
"Next year you think, and so<lb/>
the first time that night, you smile.<lb/>
-???"? <lb/>
ATTENTION BSN<lb/>
CLASS OF 1989.<lb/>
The Air Force has a special pro-<lb/>
gram for 1989 BSNs If selected,<lb/>
you can enter active duty soon<lb/>
after graduation without waiting<lb/>
tor the results of your State Boards<lb/>
To qualify you must have an overall<lb/>
2 75GPA After commissioning,<lb/>
you'll attend a five-month intern-<lb/>
ship at a major Air Force medical<lb/>
facility Its an excellent way to pre-<lb/>
pare for the wide range of experi-<lb/>
ences you'll have serving your<lb/>
country as an Air Force nurse of-<lb/>
ficer. For more information, call<lb/>
MSgt Nick Nero (919)850-9549<lb/>
Station to Station Collect<lb/>
L<lb/>
VINTAGE CLOTHING<lb/>
JUST IN FROM D.C.<lb/>
Dresses, Hats, Gloves, etc. from<lb/>
the 30's, 40's, and 50's<lb/>
Most Items Priced BELOW $10<lb/>
Winter Jackets $7.95 &amp; Up<lb/>
(Leather. Military, Members Only. Denim, etc.)<lb/>
$5 OFF Our Already Low Priced<lb/>
JEAN JACKETS<lb/>
CLOTHES<lb/>
10:00-5:00 M-F<lb/>
10:00-3:00 Sat.<lb/>
400 S. Evans St.<lb/>
On the corner below "Fizz"<lb/>
'Recycled Clothing (New &amp; Used)<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
'<lb/>
- o<lb/>
? East Carolina's<lb/>
Finest Tea<lb/>
- ? East Carolina<lb/>
Tea Party<lb/>
? Every Thursday &amp;<lb/>
at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
? Free Admission<lb/>
All Night<lb/>
? $3 First Iced Tea<lb/>
$2 For 2nd, 3rd, &amp; 4th A<lb/>
plus you keep the Mason Jar<lb/>
? Free non-alcoholic drinks for <lb/>
designated drivers.<lb/>
? Must be 21 to enter and have valid I.D.<lb/>
? High Energy Music provided by Connie<lb/>
Rogers, Greenville's Hottest D.J. I<lb/>
RAMADA INN ;<lb/>
(Formerly Sheraton of Greenville) <lb/>
203 W. Greenville Blvd. ? 355-2666 0 ,<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Monday-Saturday 10 9<lb/>
Sundav 1 -6<lb/>
Fall Savings<lb/>
U<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(Except Algner. Nike and Reebok)<lb/>
i i i I L l<lb/>
FANTASTIC<lb/>
FALL AIR FARES<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
NEW YORK$178<lb/>
BUFFALO$168<lb/>
ATLANTA$188<lb/>
ORLANDO$210<lb/>
CHICAGO$203<lb/>
EL PASO$378<lb/>
WASHINGTON$168<lb/>
BALTIMORE$168<lb/>
DALLAS$288<lb/>
OMAHA$238<lb/>
MIAMI$220<lb/>
DES MOINES$298<lb/>
LOS ANGELES$358<lb/>
HOUSTON$248<lb/>
SEATTLE$368<lb/>
CLEVELAND$168<lb/>
DETROIT$178<lb/>
PHOENIX$348<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA  $194<lb/>
DENVER$268<lb/>
COLUMBUS OH $158<lb/>
ST. LOUIS$218<lb/>
Call Us For The Lowest Fare To Your Destination<lb/>
Read the Fine Prtat: These fares are subject to change Sears a'e limited 7 Day  ? ? ?<lb/>
based on oft pea trave Ti ivel on other days slightly Signer Fares are nor ???? indatoM <lb/>
chased within 24 hours o' 'eservanons Fares over Tha-rsgiving and Crsj m : ???<lb/>
CALL ITG FOR HOLIDAY RESERVATIONS NOW!<lb/>
(T.<lb/>
vt-y)<lb/>
TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
THE PLAZA-GREENVILLE<lb/>
MOffFRI. 9 A.M. 'TIL 5 P.M.<lb/>
355-5075<lb/>
?m?<lb/>
'TllvV<lb/>
<lb/>
tt !??"?<lb/>
??<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Coming Attractions<lb/>
??<lb/>
jU??j<lb/>
(O 1 O S I (? I ? Q I I (O I 4) I I g<lb/>
k<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW<lb/>
Faces, Structures, and Architectures<lb/>
of North and Central American Earth<lb/>
as seen by<lb/>
ERNST HABR1CHS<lb/>
Mcndenhall Gallery, October 24-November 8<lb/>
Opening Reception - October 26 - 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Visual Arts Committee and Student Union<lb/>
Movie of the Week<lb/>
REPULSION - R<lb/>
Wednesday, October 12 8:00 p.m. Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
All films are FREE to ECU students with valid ECU I.D.<lb/>
HORROR MOVIE LOCK-lJ<lb/>
CARRIE THE OMEN<lb/>
TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE<lb/>
Costume contest, prizes, shrieks and howls<lb/>
Sunday, October 30 -1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Films Committee and Student Union<lb/>
'z<lb/>
) .<lb/>
5<lb/>
TAKE A BITE OF THE BIG APPLE<lb/>
Thanksgiving in New York<lb/>
November 23-27<lb/>
Sponsored by the Travel Committee and Student Union<lb/>
For more information contact the Central Ticket office at 757-661<lb/>
ircxMG out to 5?v? au<lb/>
Hl<lb/>
Willie I ewis looks for a hand<lb/>
but were unable to put it toee<lb/>
The year<lb/>
the ECU<lb/>
Bv KRISTIN HALBERG<lb/>
v ? mj ni " rti<lb/>
The Pentathlon h-<lb/>
Thurda ma) indi I<lb/>
ing season for the Ft I<lb/>
team as eve r) time in I<lb/>
squad meet was improved<lb/>
from last <lb/>
We are ver)<lb/>
though it is still earh xud H<lb/>
Coach Kick Kobe<lb/>
The overall - <lb/>
Pentathlon c i -1<lb/>
women put fr<lb/>
Maunch in th<lb/>
captured first pla i<lb/>
3525 points<lb/>
For tl M<lb/>
nedy den<lb/>
year's Pentathlon, kept h -<lb/>
uV second year in a row a <lb/>
with V?: point<lb/>
 . ?nd place in th.<lb/>
Standings tor the women<lb/>
claimed by last year - I<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers with her<lb/>
point total Tom H<lb/>
had 2839 t. tal p nts<lb/>
fortable second p i<lb/>
men<lb/>
FTurd, fourth and fifl<lb/>
ocrall stand gs for the<lb/>
w ere claimed b Marc v ? <lb/>
points) nd hns 227<lb/>
and Mark O Brien 226<lb/>
For the women, it wasShell) M<lb/>
(3299 points) Robin Wicks 3<lb/>
and Page H 2812 securing<lb/>
third, fourth and fiftl <lb/>
specti eh<lb/>
Clems<lb/>
? No 11 Qems<lb/>
Virginia tor the 28th straigri j<lb/>
and North Carolina matched<lb/>
worst start in 21 years with a 1<lb/>
to Wake Forest to highlight V,<lb/>
tic Coast Conference act:<lb/>
weekend<lb/>
mson cot a scare fl<lb/>
Virginia before a Rodney<lb/>
hams touchdown pass to C<lb/>
Davis with 152 left gave the<lb/>
gets a 10-7 icton<lb/>
We played well enoughj<lb/>
wm but we didn't saidVirgi<lb/>
coach George Welsh We plaj<lb/>
K minutes of football tor the 1 j<lb/>
time all season<lb/>
They're getting better - al<lb/>
Mountai<lb/>
Special to ???? iMtt iTMrehntmm<lb/>
The ECU Rugby Club<lb/>
eied to Boone last Sarurda<lb/>
meet the Mountaineers of<lb/>
The Mountaineers, last ve,<lb/>
State Champs, showed how hcj<lb/>
held can have its advantages<lb/>
The Tirate Ruggers staj<lb/>
slow and couldn't seem to<lb/>
their game plan Both teJ<lb/>
moved the ball effectively,<lb/>
neither team was able to<lb/>
earlv. The Mountaineers set<lb/>
first on missed plays by ECU<lb/>
could never open the game ul<lb/>
Fhillip Ritchie scored fii<lb/>
ECU with an assist from<lb/>
Tobin and Greg Roche. The<lb/>
version kick for two was<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0011"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
'(<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 11.1988<lb/>
Eating at the Pitt fair<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Two dollars for three darts<lb/>
the man shouts as you approach,<lb/>
knowing only too well that you're<lb/>
already interested. You hand him<lb/>
the money, take your darts, and<lb/>
miss miserably. The date looks<lb/>
unimpressed, so you reach into<lb/>
your pocket. This time, you man-<lb/>
age to burst one balloon, a score<lb/>
which merits a blue snake made<lb/>
out of fake fur. "You can trade him<lb/>
in for bigger prizes the crony<lb/>
reminds you, so you buy another<lb/>
chance, and another, and another.<lb/>
Several minutes later, you walk<lb/>
away from the booth. Your date<lb/>
clutches a stuffed white lion. It's<lb/>
no Gumby but it cost you over<lb/>
twenty bucks. She seems satis-<lb/>
fied, but you feel lousy. As a con-<lb/>
solation, you take her to another<lb/>
concessions stand. There, you buy<lb/>
two caramel apples and a bag of<lb/>
cotton candy to take home.<lb/>
"Seven-fifty says the middle-<lb/>
aged woman at the window. You<lb/>
reach into your pocket, finding<lb/>
only two fives and three<lb/>
crumpled ones. You hand her<lb/>
eight dollars and pocket the<lb/>
change, wondering where the rest<lb/>
of your eighty-dollar bankroll<lb/>
went.<lb/>
On your way out, you decide to<lb/>
investigate the two large alumi-<lb/>
num buildings near the gate.<lb/>
There aren't any lines there, and<lb/>
no-one appears to be collecting<lb/>
money from the people who<lb/>
wander into them.<lb/>
The first building has four rows<lb/>
of booths. Some of them are com-<lb/>
mercial displays for not - profit<lb/>
organizations and local buisi-<lb/>
nesses, others are businesses in<lb/>
themselves - selling everything<lb/>
from baked goods to porcelain<lb/>
figurines to automotive stereo<lb/>
speakers, and others are propa-<lb/>
gands centers for political fac-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
As you enter the next building.<lb/>
Painter adds<lb/>
dreams to art<lb/>
you want to turn around right<lb/>
away - the smell of the pigs and<lb/>
goats overwhelms you from<lb/>
across the room. But your date<lb/>
cries, look - bunnies and strolls<lb/>
across the hay-matted floor. You<lb/>
follow her as she looks at rabbits,<lb/>
ducks, pigeons, and other inno-<lb/>
cent-looking animals in chicken-<lb/>
wire cages.<lb/>
As for yourself, you are inter-<lb/>
ested in a particular fellow who is<lb/>
looking at chickens from several<lb/>
feet away. Though he is dressed in<lb/>
a denim jacket and a baseball cap<lb/>
bearing the infamous "CAT'<lb/>
logo, there is something different<lb/>
about him.<lb/>
Perhaps it's his distinguished<lb/>
posture, or his designer spec-<lb/>
tacles, or the grey sideburns,<lb/>
which identifies him as a bastion<lb/>
of intelligence in this asylum for<lb/>
the mentally insufficient. He<lb/>
cocks his head, walks up to the<lb/>
cages, and barks loudly.<lb/>
An hour later, you walk your<lb/>
date to her door. She is smiling a<lb/>
tired but satisfied smile. You feel<lb/>
exhausted and depressed, think-<lb/>
ing of your $25an-hour evening.<lb/>
"I really enjoyed tonight she<lb/>
says.<lb/>
"Yeah you say, "We should<lb/>
do it again sometime<lb/>
"Next year she says.<lb/>
"Next year you think, and so<lb/>
the first time mat night, you smile.<lb/>
fNEVV YORK (AP) - To under-<lb/>
5tom the -paintings -xA - Vicky<lb/>
Montesinos is to know her<lb/>
dreams.<lb/>
"We all have our own uni-<lb/>
verse said Montesinos, a Mexi-<lb/>
can artist whose work has been<lb/>
shown throughout the world. "It<lb/>
belongs to you only. Sometimes<lb/>
you allow others to be in your<lb/>
universe and sometimes you<lb/>
don't<lb/>
The 44-year-old Montesinos<lb/>
is on show this fall at the Circle<lb/>
Gallery in Soho.<lb/>
"I feel like my own universe is<lb/>
full of dreams. A fantasy, nothing<lb/>
that is quite visible she says.<lb/>
That world of fantasy seems<lb/>
to be in Montesinos' blood. Her<lb/>
father, Fernando Rivero, was a<lb/>
film director in Mexico City and<lb/>
worked with such actresses as<lb/>
Susan Hayward and Hedy<lb/>
Lamarr.<lb/>
And Montesinos recalls being<lb/>
in awe of those women.<lb/>
"I was surrounded by this<lb/>
kind of fantasy. They were so<lb/>
beautiful. I was thinking, T wish I<lb/>
could be like that Montesinos<lb/>
said, adding that she doesn't find<lb/>
women as beautiful today.<lb/>
"1 don't know why. Maybe<lb/>
it's me. I'm sure there are beauti-<lb/>
ful women around but I don't find<lb/>
what I used to find in those<lb/>
people<lb/>
The women in Montesinos'<lb/>
paintings are often colorfully<lb/>
dressed with their hair hidden<lb/>
under elaborate hats.<lb/>
"Basically, in all my paint-<lb/>
ings, the women have a nostalgic<lb/>
look<lb/>
she said. "If I could choose to<lb/>
be in another life, I would choose<lb/>
the 1900s in Europe. I have a lot of<lb/>
feelings for those places. I have a<lb/>
read a lot history books about<lb/>
what happened there<lb/>
One of her paintings is called<lb/>
"The Venetian<lb/>
"I get a lot of inspiration every<lb/>
time I go to Venice. I try to gp<lb/>
every year. If s a very serious<lb/>
place. I get inspired and try to<lb/>
bring what Venice was in the<lb/>
1900s to my paintings. I imagine<lb/>
people dressed in a lot of gold<lb/>
Montesinos is concerned that<lb/>
people are more interested in<lb/>
material gains man in developing<lb/>
their imagination.<lb/>
"The values have been chang-<lb/>
ing little by little. I find people<lb/>
have really all their attention on<lb/>
making a lot of money; that takes<lb/>
a tot of time and energy. Maybe<lb/>
that's one of the reasons they re-<lb/>
ally don't have time to dream<lb/>
ATTENTION BSN<lb/>
CLASS OF 1989.<lb/>
The Air Force has a special pro-<lb/>
gram for 1989 BSNs. If selected,<lb/>
you can enter active duty soon<lb/>
alter graduation?without waiting<lb/>
for the results of your State Boards<lb/>
lb qualify you must have an overall<lb/>
2.75 GRA After commissioning,<lb/>
you'll attend a five-month intern-<lb/>
ship at a major Air Force medical<lb/>
facility Ifs an excellent way to pre-<lb/>
pare for the wide range of experi-<lb/>
ences you'll have serving your<lb/>
country as an Air Force nurse of-<lb/>
ficer For more information, call<lb/>
MSgt Nick Nero (919)850-9549<lb/>
Station to Station Collect<lb/>
VINTAGE CLOTH!<lb/>
I JUST IN FROM D.<lb/>
I Dresses, Hats, Gloves, etc. fr<lb/>
I the 30's, 40's, and 50's<lb/>
I Most Items Priced BELOW<lb/>
Winter Jackets $7.95 i<lb/>
(Leather, Military, Members Only, Detttn<lb/>
$5 OFF Our Already Low<lb/>
JEAN JACKETS<lb/>
dimes<lb/>
10:00-5:00 M-F<lb/>
10:00-3:00 Sat.<lb/>
400 S. Evans St<lb/>
Ok the corner below "Yva"<lb/>
?Recycled Clothing (New &amp; Used)<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
R<lb/>
it<lb/>
UJ<lb/>
b<lb/>
8<lb/>
 ? -<lb/>
R<lb/>
sr<lb/>
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ia.ge Seats are limited 7 Day advance reservations are required Prices<lb/>
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thanksgiving and Christmas are higher<lb/>
UDAY RESERVATIONS MOW!<lb/>
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355-5075<lb/>
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inn'<lb/>
ig Attractions<lb/>
? ? . ?v ?t:<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW<lb/>
Faces, Structures, and Architectures<lb/>
of North and Central American Earth<lb/>
as seen by<lb/>
ERNST HABRICHS<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery, October 24-November 8<lb/>
Opening Reception - October 26 - 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Visual Arts Committee and Student Union<lb/>
Movie of the Week<lb/>
REPULSION - R<lb/>
Wednesday October 12 8:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
All films are FREE to ECU students with valid ECU LD.<lb/>
HORROR MOVIE LOCK-IN<lb/>
CARRIE THE OMEN<lb/>
TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE<lb/>
Costume contest, prizes, shrieks and howls<lb/>
Sunday, October 30 -130 p.m.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Rims Committee and Student Union<lb/>
TAKE A BITE OF THE BIG APPLE<lb/>
Thanksgiving in New York<lb/>
November 23-27<lb/>
Sponsored by the Travel Committee and Student Union<lb/>
For more information contact the Central Ticket office at 757-661'<lb/>
THE I<lb/>
Willie Lewis looks for a hand<lb/>
but were unable to put it toge<lb/>
The year<lb/>
the ECU<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
AMlataat Sport. Editor<lb/>
The Pentathlon held lal<lb/>
Thursday may indicate a proi<lb/>
ing season for the ECU s<lb/>
team, as every time in this int<lb/>
squad meet was improved uj<lb/>
from last year.<lb/>
"We are very pleased, evi<lb/>
though it is still early said He<lb/>
Coach Rick Kobe.<lb/>
The overall standings in<lb/>
Pentathlon competition for<lb/>
women put freshman Jem<lb/>
Maunch in the spotlight as<lb/>
captured first place with a total<lb/>
3525 points.<lb/>
For the men, Raymond K?<lb/>
nedy, defending champion of i<lb/>
year's Pentathlon, kept his title <lb/>
WITH JWZ JJLMMlS.<lb/>
Second place in the over<lb/>
standings for the women<lb/>
claimed by last year's title hole<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers with her<lb/>
point total. Tom Holsten,<lb/>
had 2839 total points, had a coj<lb/>
fortable second place lead for<lb/>
men.<lb/>
Third, fourth and fifth pl?<lb/>
overall standings for the<lb/>
were claimed by Marc Cook (2:<lb/>
points), Andy Johns (2279 poii<lb/>
and Mark O'Brien (2265 poinj<lb/>
For the women, it was Shelly Ml<lb/>
(3299 points), Robin Wicks (28<lb/>
and Page Holt (2812) securing I<lb/>
third, fourth and fifth spots,<lb/>
spectively.<lb/>
Clems<lb/>
(AP) ?Nc. llOemson<lb/>
Virginia for the 28th straight til<lb/>
and North Carolina matched<lb/>
worst start in 21 years with a 1<lb/>
to Wake Forest to highlight AtlJ<lb/>
tic Coast Conference action t<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Clemson got a scare<lb/>
Virginia before a Rodney<lb/>
Hams touchdown pass to Cl<lb/>
Davis with ' 't gave the<lb/>
gers a 10<lb/>
"We playea well enough!<lb/>
win, but we didn't said VirgiJ<lb/>
coach George Welsh. "We plai<lb/>
60 minutes of football for the '<lb/>
time all season<lb/>
"They're getting better - al<lb/>
Mountai<lb/>
The ECU Rugby Club<lb/>
eled to Boone last Saturda)<lb/>
meet the Mountaineers of<lb/>
The Mountaineers, last<lb/>
State Champs, showed how 1<lb/>
field can have its advantages.<lb/>
The Pirate Ruggers<lb/>
slow and couldn't seem to<lb/>
their game plan. Both<lb/>
moved the ball effectively,<lb/>
neither team was able to<lb/>
early. The Mountaineers<lb/>
first on missed plays by<lb/>
could never open the game<lb/>
Phillip Ritchie scored!<lb/>
JECU with an assist from<lb/>
j Tobin and Greg Roche. The<lb/>
version kick for two<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0012"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
t<lb/>
OCTOBER 11, 1988 Page 9<lb/>
?I<lb/>
DW PRICE<lb/>
d Reebok)<lb/>
I I<lb/>
C<lb/>
IES$298<lb/>
II ES$358<lb/>
$248<lb/>
$368<lb/>
$168<lb/>
$178<lb/>
$348<lb/>
HIA $194<lb/>
$268<lb/>
OH . $158<lb/>
$218<lb/>
stination<lb/>
iONSNOW! <lb/>
55-5075<lb/>
? ? a<lb/>
,<lb/>
? 0-<lb/>
TXT<lb/>
ns<lb/>
??. Zi.<lb/>
I &amp; i r n<lb/>
lures<lb/>
iarth<lb/>
t8<lb/>
m.<lb/>
Ident Union<lb/>
leatre<lb/>
?CLID<lb/>
CRE<lb/>
?? Union<lb/>
I<lb/>
Pirates drop to 1-5<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sport Editor<lb/>
Willie Lewis looks for a hand up after being tackled. The Pirates were looking for something all day,<lb/>
but were unable to put it together. (Photo by Thomas Walters - ECU Photo Lab.)<lb/>
The year looks promising for<lb/>
the ECU men'swomen's team<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
Asi?Unt Sports Editor<lb/>
The Pentathlon held last<lb/>
Thursday may indicate a promis-<lb/>
ing season for the ECU swim<lb/>
team, as every time in this intra-<lb/>
squad meet was improved upon<lb/>
from last year.<lb/>
"We are very pleased, even<lb/>
though it is still early said Head<lb/>
Coach Rick Kobe.<lb/>
The overall standings in the<lb/>
Pentathlon competition for the<lb/>
women put freshman Jenny<lb/>
Maunch in the spotlight as she<lb/>
captured first place with a total of<lb/>
3525 points.<lb/>
For the men, Raymond Ken-<lb/>
nedy, defending champion of last<lb/>
year's Pentathlon, kept his title for<lb/>
the second year in a row as he won<lb/>
wtrh 3092 points.<lb/>
Second place in the overall<lb/>
standings for the women was<lb/>
claimed by last year's title holder<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers with her 3406<lb/>
point total. Tom Holsten, who<lb/>
had 2839 total points, had a com-<lb/>
fortable second place lead for the<lb/>
men<lb/>
Third, fourth and fifth place<lb/>
overall standings for the men<lb/>
were claimed by Marc Cook (2326<lb/>
points), Andy Johns (2279 points)<lb/>
and Mark O'Brien (2265 points).<lb/>
For the women, it was Shelly Mica<lb/>
(3299 points), Robin Wicks (2838)<lb/>
and Page Holt (2812) securing the<lb/>
third, fourth and fifth spots, re-<lb/>
spectively.<lb/>
The women exploded as<lb/>
three new pentathlon records<lb/>
were set. Veteran sophomore<lb/>
swimmer Meredith Bridgers<lb/>
broke her own record in the 100-<lb/>
yard breaststroke when she swam<lb/>
it in 1:07.0. Freshman Jenny<lb/>
Maunch took second in 1:13.4<lb/>
while Shelly Mica, who is also a<lb/>
freshman, secured third in 1:16.4.<lb/>
Bridgers again claimed a title<lb/>
when she broke the record in the<lb/>
200-yard individual medley (IM),<lb/>
turning in a time of 2:16.0.<lb/>
Maunch was again in second<lb/>
place, swimming the 200 IM in<lb/>
2:18.3, and Mica repeated her<lb/>
third place performance again in<lb/>
this event, touching the wall in<lb/>
2:19.0.<lb/>
The 100-yard freestyle was<lb/>
the next record breaking event for<lb/>
the lady swimmers, and this time<lb/>
it was freshman Page Holt who<lb/>
put her name in the Pentathlon<lb/>
record books as she posted a win-<lb/>
ning time of 55.3. Coming in sec-<lb/>
ond was Maunch in 58.7, while<lb/>
sophomore Carolyn Green took<lb/>
third in 59.10.<lb/>
Freshman Shelly Mica was<lb/>
next to shine for the Pirates as she<lb/>
swam to a first place finish in the<lb/>
100-yard butterfly in a time of<lb/>
1:02.7. Junior Robin Wicks fol-<lb/>
lowed to take the second place<lb/>
slot in 1:03.2 and Maunch held on<lb/>
for third in 1:03.3<lb/>
Finally for the ladies, it was<lb/>
freshman Wendy Smith taking<lb/>
first in the 100-yard backstroke in<lb/>
1:05.8. Soon to follow was Mica in<lb/>
at 1:07.5 and bringing up the rear<lb/>
was Maunch in 1:09.2.<lb/>
The men were impressive in<lb/>
their performances as well, as a<lb/>
new Pentathlon record was estab-<lb/>
lished in the 100-yard<lb/>
breaststroke. Raymond Kennedy,<lb/>
a junior and veteran to the ECU<lb/>
swimming program, swam a rec-<lb/>
ord breaking time of 1:01.23. John<lb/>
Springer claimed second with his<lb/>
time of 1:05.08, while Hoppy<lb/>
Hopkinson managed third in<lb/>
1:06.54.<lb/>
Next up for the Pirates was<lb/>
Tom Holsten, just barely captur-<lb/>
ing first from Kennedy in the 200-<lb/>
yard individual medly in his time<lb/>
of 2:02.93. Kennedy swam in at<lb/>
2:02.93 while third place went to<lb/>
Ted Christensen.<lb/>
Eight-hundredths of a second<lb/>
separated John Farrell and Mark<lb/>
O'Brien as Farrell came out on top<lb/>
with his time of 56.70. George<lb/>
Walters claimed third inthisclose<lb/>
race with a time of 56.84.<lb/>
The 100-yard butterfly<lb/>
proved to be another close race,<lb/>
but it was Andy Johns who led the<lb/>
pack with a time of 54.61. Holsten<lb/>
closely followed with 54.75 and<lb/>
Erick Hoyos came in third in<lb/>
56.71.<lb/>
Finally for the men, John Far-<lb/>
rel won the 100-yard freestyle<lb/>
with his time of 49.38 and Billy<lb/>
Haughton swam for second in<lb/>
50.10. Hoyos secured third with a<lb/>
time of 50.18.<lb/>
The Pirates of ECU really<lb/>
weren't beaten Saturday by a<lb/>
team from West Virginia. Rather,<lb/>
they were beaten by two things.<lb/>
Themselves and Undra<lb/>
Johnson.<lb/>
Perhaps we should begin<lb/>
with Johnson, a back-up tailback<lb/>
who came in when the Mountain-<lb/>
eers' leading rusher Anthony<lb/>
Brown went out with a hamstring<lb/>
injury. Johnson ran over, under,<lb/>
around and through the Pirate<lb/>
defense for 167 yards and two<lb/>
touchdowns on 25 carries. The<lb/>
defense seemed to be able to limit,<lb/>
if not contain, everyone but<lb/>
Johnson, who time and again<lb/>
came up with good yardage<lb/>
whenever the Mountaineers<lb/>
needed it.<lb/>
Then we have the Pirates<lb/>
themselves. A team that can't<lb/>
seem to be able to get both the<lb/>
offense and the defense clicking at<lb/>
the same time. A team that had a<lb/>
touchdown called back on a pen-<lb/>
alty, and had two more touch-<lb/>
down passes dropped. Add to<lb/>
this two missed field goals, and<lb/>
you may very well have the differ-<lb/>
ence between beating a top-ten<lb/>
team and losing another game<lb/>
that they had the ability to win in<lb/>
front of 33,876 fans, the fourth-<lb/>
largest crowd in Ficklen history.<lb/>
The Pirates had possession of<lb/>
the ball to open the game. Junior<lb/>
Robinson took the kick-off on his<lb/>
own goal line, and returned it 65<lb/>
yards to the West Virginia 35 yard<lb/>
line. After a three-yard run, Reg-<lb/>
gie McKinney got open over the<lb/>
middle and caught a Charlie Li-<lb/>
bretto pass for a 20-yard gain<lb/>
down to the twelve-yard line. But<lb/>
the offense was unable to pick up<lb/>
the first down, and were forced to<lb/>
try a 30-yard field goal. Robb<lb/>
Imperato came on for the attempt,<lb/>
but it drifted wide left of the up-<lb/>
rights, and the Pirates came up<lb/>
empty.<lb/>
The Pirate defense played<lb/>
well on its first series out, holding<lb/>
the Mountaineers to three plays<lb/>
and forcing them to punt, but<lb/>
West Virginia got the ball back<lb/>
two plays later when Darrell<lb/>
Whitmore picked off a Libretto<lb/>
pass at the ECU 37-yard line.<lb/>
However, the Mountaineers were<lb/>
unable to move the ball, and were<lb/>
forced to bring Charlie Bauman in<lb/>
to kick a 49-yard field goal, giving<lb/>
West Virginia the early 3-0 lead<lb/>
with 9:31 left in the first period.<lb/>
The Pirates were unable to<lb/>
score on the ensuing drive, and<lb/>
the Mountaineers took posses-<lb/>
sion on their own 33-yard line.<lb/>
Johnson took over at this<lb/>
point, coming in for the injured<lb/>
Brown. Johnson accounted for 54<lb/>
of the 60 yards that it took for the<lb/>
Mountaineers to find the end<lb/>
zone. Johnson capped the drive<lb/>
when he went over from five<lb/>
yards out. Bauman hit the extra<lb/>
point, and West Virginia went up<lb/>
10-0 with 2:38 remaining in the<lb/>
first quarter.<lb/>
The Mountaineers scored<lb/>
again in the opening minutes of<lb/>
the second period,after driving 58<lb/>
yards in seven plays. The touch-<lb/>
down came when the Mountain-<lb/>
eers' much heralded quarterback<lb/>
Major Harris hit tight end Adrian<lb/>
Moss for an 18-yard touchdown<lb/>
strike. Bauman added the extra<lb/>
point, giving the Mountaineers a<lb/>
17-0 edge.<lb/>
The Pirates finally got a break<lb/>
mid-way through the second<lb/>
when Mike Applewhite fell on a<lb/>
Major Harris fumble on the ECU<lb/>
36-yard line. Travis Hunter en-<lb/>
tered the game for the Pirates, and<lb/>
took them down to the six-yard<lb/>
line before the drive stalled. Im-<lb/>
perato came on and hit a 22-yard<lb/>
field goal with seven minutes left<lb/>
in the half to make the score 17-3.<lb/>
The Pirate defense held the<lb/>
Mountaineers on their next two<lb/>
possessions, and with time run-<lb/>
ning down the Pirates got the ball<lb/>
on their own 22-yard line. After<lb/>
gaining but three yards on the<lb/>
ground in two plays. Hunter went<lb/>
to the air for Al Whiting. His pass<lb/>
bounced off Whiting's chest, and<lb/>
Walter Wilson snagged it out of<lb/>
the air for a 24-yard gain out to the<lb/>
49-yard line.<lb/>
Volleyball team slides<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's women's vol-<lb/>
leyball team was unable to come<lb/>
up with their first conference win<lb/>
this weekend as it lost to Ameri-<lb/>
can University and George Ma-<lb/>
son University in a double match<lb/>
in Wilmington.<lb/>
In a close first match, ECU<lb/>
went four games with the Lady<lb/>
Eagles of American. American<lb/>
won the first two games 15-9,15-<lb/>
10 but the Lady Pirates were able<lb/>
to take the third game from them,<lb/>
15-13. To cap off the win, Ameri-<lb/>
can won the fourth game 15-9.<lb/>
"We had four good games<lb/>
with American said Coach Judy<lb/>
Kirkpatrick. "The match was not a<lb/>
runaway match. We played well,<lb/>
but had a few errors that knocked<lb/>
us out of each game. American<lb/>
was a surprise over last year's<lb/>
team<lb/>
With only a fifteen minute<lb/>
break, ECU then took on George<lb/>
Mason University, who had lost<lb/>
earlier in the day to Wilmington.<lb/>
In the words of Coach Kirkpa-<lb/>
trick, it was a "flat match<lb/>
" The Lady Pirates were unable<lb/>
to generate offense in a match that<lb/>
George Mason walked away<lb/>
with, 2-15,8-15,7-15.<lb/>
In an effort to boost the of-<lb/>
fense, setter Kerry Weisbrod sat<lb/>
out one game against the Lady<lb/>
Patriots as Debbie Tate stepped<lb/>
in, but the win was out of the Lady<lb/>
Pirate's reach.<lb/>
"With George Mason, we<lb/>
never really had anything going. I<lb/>
believe we could have beat them<lb/>
had we played as well as we did<lb/>
against American<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are now 6-9<lb/>
overall and 0-3 in CAA play.<lb/>
Kirkpatrick says the conference<lb/>
record is not a problem at this<lb/>
point in the season because there<lb/>
is a lot of time for improving be-<lb/>
fore the conference tournament in<lb/>
November.<lb/>
"Although we are 0-3 in the<lb/>
CAA now, finishing in a decent<lb/>
place in the conference is not be-<lb/>
low our reach. There is a Kne that<lb/>
can be drawn between UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington and William &amp; Mary,<lb/>
then the other four teams are<lb/>
pretty even said Kirkpatrick.<lb/>
"We are still progressing and will<lb/>
have everything put together by<lb/>
conference tournament time<lb/>
ECU, who has lost four con-<lb/>
secutive games, will look for a win<lb/>
tonight night as it travels to<lb/>
Campbell University to take on<lb/>
the Ladv Camels, who they de-<lb/>
feated earlier this season, 156,15-<lb/>
7,15-4 in a match at Minges.<lb/>
Clemson plays just well enough to get win<lb/>
(AP) ? No. 11 Clemson beat<lb/>
Virginia for the 28th straight time<lb/>
and North Carolina matched its<lb/>
worst start in 21 years with a loss<lb/>
to Wake Forest to highlight Atlan-<lb/>
tic Coast Conference action this<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Clemson got a scare from<lb/>
Virginia before a Rodney Wil-<lb/>
liams touchdown pass to Chip<lb/>
Davis with 1:52 left gave the Ti-<lb/>
gers a 10-7 victory.<lb/>
"We played well enough to<lb/>
win, but we didn't said Virginia<lb/>
coach George Welsh. "We played<lb/>
60 minutes of football for the first<lb/>
time all season<lb/>
They're getting better - a lot<lb/>
better said Clemson coach<lb/>
Danny Ford. "Virginia kept us<lb/>
from making the big play and<lb/>
made us earn it<lb/>
Virginia went ahead, 7-3,<lb/>
with 5:27 to play when quarter-<lb/>
back Shawn Moore found Her-<lb/>
man Moore in the right corner of<lb/>
the end zone for a 14-yard scoring<lb/>
pass to top an 11-play, 76-yard<lb/>
Cavalier drive.<lb/>
Clemson took the ensuing<lb/>
kickof f and drove the length of the<lb/>
field in eight plays. Included in<lb/>
the series was tailback Terry<lb/>
Allen's 39-yard run on a third<lb/>
down that put the ball at the Vir-<lb/>
ginia 22-yard line. Two plays<lb/>
later, Williams found Davis alone<lb/>
down the left sideline for the<lb/>
game-winning score.<lb/>
Virginia ran eight plays in the<lb/>
closing seconds, but lost the ball<lb/>
on downs at the Clemson 45 with<lb/>
16 seconds left. The Cavaliers<lb/>
dropped to 2-3 and 1-2.<lb/>
North Carolina, in dropping a<lb/>
42-24 game to Wake Forest, fell to<lb/>
victories over North Carolina in<lb/>
back-to-back seasons, and in the<lb/>
1967 triumph, Tar Heel first-year or four times now this season. We<lb/>
coach Bill Dooley was struggling seem to bring out the best in the<lb/>
with an 0-5 start that led to a 2-8 ?PP?sin? team's quarterback<lb/>
finish. Never has North Carolina<lb/>
started a year 0-6.<lb/>
This time, Dooley is the Wake<lb/>
Forest coach in his second year,<lb/>
and he watched Mike Elkins<lb/>
ioach Mack Brown said of Elkins. with Danny Peebles on an 85-yard<lb/>
"We've seen guys like him three touchdown play.<lb/>
"Everybody was going out<lb/>
there to pay them back N.C.<lb/>
State strong safety Jesse Campbell<lb/>
said. "We really paid them back<lb/>
Georgia Tech dropped to 1-4,<lb/>
all of its losses coming in league<lb/>
0-5 in its ACC opener with North complete 18 of 22 passes for 233<lb/>
Carolina State lying in wait after yards and three touchdowns.<lb/>
its 49-0 shutout of East Tennessee<lb/>
State.<lb/>
Maryland defeated Georgia<lb/>
Tech 13-8 in the other ACC game.<lb/>
It had been 21 years since<lb/>
Wake Forest has been able to take<lb/>
Ricky Johnson scored on a 1-<lb/>
yard run in the second quarter<lb/>
and Dan Plocki kicked two field<lb/>
goals to give Maryland its second play.<lb/>
ACC victory and a 3-2 record Next weekend, all ACC<lb/>
overall. teams go back to work. Unbeaten<lb/>
The Wolfpack held East Ten- Duke goes for its sixth straight<lb/>
nessee State to 80 yards total of- victoryatClemson,N.C.Stateisat<lb/>
fense. Piling up a 35-0 lead at North Carolina and Wake Forest<lb/>
halftime, Chris Williams and Ty- is at Maryland in league games,<lb/>
rone Jackson scored two touch- Outside the conference, South<lb/>
was probably the top quarterback downs aptece for the Wolfpack, 4- Carolina is at Georgia Tech and<lb/>
the ACC North Carolina 1 and Preston Poag connected Virginia is at Louisville.<lb/>
Ricky Proehl caught one of those<lb/>
scoring passes, and had eight<lb/>
catches in all for 114 yards.<lb/>
"We knew in preseason he<lb/>
in<lb/>
Mountain men in green jersey's defeat the ECU Rugby team<lb/>
Special to the Eat CmroHmimm<lb/>
The ECU Rugby Club trav-<lb/>
eled to Boone last Saturday to<lb/>
meet the Mountaineers of ASU.<lb/>
The Mountaineers, last year's<lb/>
State Champs, showed how home<lb/>
field can have its advantages.<lb/>
The Pirate Ruggers started<lb/>
slow and couldn't seem to find<lb/>
their game plan. Both teams<lb/>
moved the ball effectively, but<lb/>
neither team was able to score<lb/>
early. The Mountaineers scored<lb/>
first on missed plays by ECU but<lb/>
could never open the game up.<lb/>
Phillip Ritchie scored first for<lb/>
ECU with an assist from Bob<lb/>
Tobin and Greg Roche. The con-<lb/>
version kick for two was good.<lb/>
Eric Mussler took one in to score<lb/>
and with the conversion the game<lb/>
was tied at 12.<lb/>
Missed tackles and penalties<lb/>
were the downfall of ECU. ASU<lb/>
scored late in the second half and<lb/>
the game ended 18-12. weak areas in time for the hardest<lb/>
The Pirate Ruggers took the part of their schedule,<lb/>
loss well, and have found their In "B" side action, the Pirates<lb/>
were too much for ASU. The Kil-<lb/>
ler "B's" ran all over the Moun-<lb/>
taineers and posted a 41-7 victory.<lb/>
Tennis team continues their winning streak<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's women's ten-<lb/>
nis team continued its winning<lb/>
streak Thursday as it won its fifth<lb/>
match of the season, defeating<lb/>
Campbell University 7-2.<lb/>
ECU swept the singles, win-<lb/>
ning all six matches over the Lady<lb/>
Camels. In number one singles,<lb/>
ECU's Holly Murray defeated<lb/>
Campbell's Karen Poole in three<lb/>
sets, 7-5, 1-6, 6-4 for ECU's first<lb/>
win of the day.<lb/>
Jill Hobson recorded a win in<lb/>
the number two singles as she de-<lb/>
feated Laura Ross easily, 6-3,6-3.<lb/>
ECU's Susan Mattocks also<lb/>
took an easy win over Dina<lb/>
Gaskins, 6-4, 6-0, while Wendy<lb/>
Simpson went three games with<lb/>
Minako Ishida, 2-6, 6-2, 6-2, for<lb/>
her win.<lb/>
Melyanee Morgan and Kathi<lb/>
Messer finished out ECU's singles<lb/>
sweep, each winning their<lb/>
matches in two games over their<lb/>
Campbell opponent.<lb/>
ECU was only able to come<lb/>
up with one win in doubles action<lb/>
with Campbell. Hobson and<lb/>
Simpson recorded the win for<lb/>
ECU as they defeated Gaskins<lb/>
and Antionette Burkman, 7-5,7-5.<lb/>
Messer and Mattocks lost a<lb/>
close match to Poole and Ross of<lb/>
Campbell, losing 7-5, 6-4, while<lb/>
Ellen Harrell and Morgan were tor the season with their win over<lb/>
also unable to take a win for ECU Campbell, and will look to con-<lb/>
as Campbell's Ishida and Laura tinue their winning as they travel<lb/>
Cannata won 7-5,6-3. to Eton College on Tuesday for a<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are now 5-1 3:00 p.m. match.<lb/>
Special te the Eaat C?mimt<lb/>
Women take first, men third in cross country<lb/>
in Lynchburg, again finished in<lb/>
third place with 98 points with<lb/>
Matt Schweitzer ECU's best fin-<lb/>
isher in ninth position,<lb/>
and Pembroke had 93. Methodist John Storms of Methodist set<lb/>
was unable to score in the meet. a new course record for the 8-<lb/>
Methodist "A" team won the kilometer run, finishing in 23:18.<lb/>
men's division with 17 points. The Pirates will be traveling<lb/>
while their "B" team finished with to Wilmington on Thursday to<lb/>
79. ECU, who took third last week compete in the state meet.<lb/>
18:44, which betters the old course<lb/>
mark.<lb/>
? East Carolina finished with 27<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, coming off points while St. Augustine had 41<lb/>
a win last week in Lynchburg, Va<lb/>
took first place at a cross country<lb/>
meet held at Methodist College<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
ECU's Ann Marie Welch took<lb/>
first place with an official time of<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0013"/><lb/>
<lb/>
)<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 11,1988<lb/>
ECU loses to the Mounties<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
Hunter then connected with<lb/>
Bojack Davenport for a gain of<lb/>
eight, and two plays later with<lb/>
Jarrod Moody for a gain of 10<lb/>
down to the 33. On the next play,<lb/>
Hunter found a streaking Wilson<lb/>
in the end zone on a 33-yard<lb/>
touchdown strike with :14 re-<lb/>
maining. Imperato added tru-<lb/>
extra point, cutting the Mountain<lb/>
eer lead to only a touchdown, 17-<lb/>
10.<lb/>
The Mountaineers had the<lb/>
ball to begin the second half, but<lb/>
after driving 56 yards down to the<lb/>
Pirate 13, West Virginia came up<lb/>
empty when Bauman missed on a<lb/>
30-yard field goal attempt. It was<lb/>
only his second miss of the year.<lb/>
The Pirates moved the ball<lb/>
well on the next possession, with<lb/>
James and McKinney bearing<lb/>
most of the load on the 51-yard<lb/>
drive. They stumbled at the 29,<lb/>
though, and Imperato came on to<lb/>
attempt a 45-yard field goal. He<lb/>
missed, and West Virginia took<lb/>
over at the 30.<lb/>
The Mountaineers took ad-<lb/>
vantage of the good field position,<lb/>
scoring when Johnson capped a<lb/>
70-yard drive with a 26-yard<lb/>
touchdown run. Bauman missed<lb/>
the extra point, and the Moun-<lb/>
taineers led 23-10 with 1:46 left in<lb/>
the third quarter.<lb/>
The Pirates were unable to<lb/>
put together a successful drive,<lb/>
and after three palys were forced<lb/>
to punt. John Jett, under a heavy<lb/>
rush, shanked the ball, and it<lb/>
drifted out of bounds at the ECU<lb/>
46-yard line.<lb/>
Again taking advantage of<lb/>
the good field position, West Vir-<lb/>
ginia drove the remaining 46<lb/>
yards down to the one-yard line<lb/>
before Harris went over on a<lb/>
keeper off left tackle. The extra<lb/>
point was good, and the Moun-<lb/>
taineers led by the final 30-10<lb/>
margin with 13:25 left in the game.<lb/>
As you may have guessed,<lb/>
neither team scored for the re-<lb/>
mainder of the game, although<lb/>
the Pirates threatened twice, both<lb/>
times moving down within the<lb/>
West Virginia 30-yard line. But<lb/>
they turned the ball over both<lb/>
times, once on downs and once on<lb/>
a Libretto interception. Pirate re-<lb/>
serve quarterback Jeff Blake got<lb/>
into the game in the wanning<lb/>
moments and made a good show-<lb/>
ing with his mobility.<lb/>
"1 thought it was a rough day<lb/>
for our kids Coach Art Baker<lb/>
said after the game. "We were<lb/>
closer today to being what I<lb/>
thought we'd be than any other<lb/>
time this year. I thought we<lb/>
played well against the seventh-<lb/>
ranked team in the nation.<lb/>
"It was a close game where<lb/>
we couldn't make mistakes and<lb/>
we dropped passes, dropped<lb/>
touchdown passes and missed<lb/>
field goals. The two missed field<lb/>
goals played a big part. We could<lb/>
have played a much different type<lb/>
of game at 17-16 than 17-10.<lb/>
"We continue to move the<lb/>
ball well, we just have to take<lb/>
advantage of scoring opportuni-<lb/>
ties<lb/>
LOW COST ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12TH WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to 18 weeks at additional cost.<lb/>
Pregnancy Test, Birth Control, and Problem Pregnancy<lb/>
Counseling. For further information, call 832-0535 (toll<lb/>
free number. 1-800-532-5384) between 9 am and 5 p.m.<lb/>
weekdays. General anesthesia available<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
Volleyball team names the Players- of-the-Week<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Donna Davis and Michelle<lb/>
Macintosh have been named the<lb/>
East Carolina Volleyball Players<lb/>
of the Week by ECU coach Judy<lb/>
Kirkpatrick for the week ending<lb/>
October 16.<lb/>
Davis, a senior outside hitter<lb/>
from Rockville Centre, N.Y was<lb/>
named the offensive Player of the<lb/>
Week after the Lady Pirate's<lb/>
weekend of conference play.<lb/>
Davis led ECU offensively<lb/>
with 14 kills, 11 in ECU'S match<lb/>
against American University. She<lb/>
added to her effort five service<lb/>
aces against the Lady Eagles.<lb/>
"Donna came off the bench<lb/>
and led us offensively with kills<lb/>
Coach Judy Kirkpatrick said.<lb/>
"She had a good all-around<lb/>
match, offensively and defen-<lb/>
sively, blocking and hitting well<lb/>
Davis was the Lady Pirate's<lb/>
block assist leader with five block<lb/>
assists for the weekend.<lb/>
Macintosh earned the title of<lb/>
defensive Player of the Week for<lb/>
the second week in a row as she<lb/>
continues to lead the Lady Pirates<lb/>
in digs. Macintosh, a junior out-<lb/>
side hitter from Morehead City,<lb/>
NC, leads ECU with 233 digs on<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
This past weekend, Macin-<lb/>
tosh added 48 digs in two matches<lb/>
to boost ECU defensively. She<lb/>
also added one block solo and two<lb/>
CrispeCCs<lb/>
Cover to Cover<lb/>
'Paptrback. 'Boot Txfhangt<lb/>
All Paperbacks 50 Off<lb/>
75 Off With Trade<lb/>
block assists. "This weekend she got into block-<lb/>
"Michelle has been great. She ing for usand that makes hereven<lb/>
has been consistent on defense more valuable for us<lb/>
and offense Kirkpatrick said.<lb/>
PEPSI PLAYER OF THE WEEK<lb/>
412 Evans St<lb/>
(Next to Bissette s)<lb/>
830-8944<lb/>
Mon -Fri 10-6<lb/>
Sat 10-3<lb/>
Gordon!s<lb/>
For ((Sporfa<lb/>
Jackets<lb/>
and Parkas<lb/>
S-XXL<lb/>
20 OFF<lb/>
UNTIL 10-15-88<lb/>
200 Greenville Blvd. ? 756-1003<lb/>
Subway<lb/>
Supports<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
and the<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
SOMETHI<lb/>
Mike Applewhite, THIS WEEK'S PLAYER OF THE WEEK<lb/>
HOMETOWN-Henderson, NC<lb/>
East Carolina vs West Virginia - Applewhite had 7 tackles against<lb/>
the Mountaineers, two of these for a two yard losses. He also de-<lb/>
flected two passes and recovered a fumble that led to ECU's first<lb/>
score.<lb/>
PERSONAL INFORMATION- Mike is an Industrial Tech major<lb/>
whose most admired is Howie Long of the L.A. Raiders. He is the<lb/>
son of Jeff and Daisy Allen.<lb/>
CONGRATULTIONS TO Mike Applewhite, FROM PEPSI-COLA.<lb/>
MUCH CONTINUED SUCCESS.<lb/>
FROM SUBWAY<lb/>
afw"<lb/>
? X at Ktotj. ??? '<lb/>
'frifk<lb/>
Buy One Sub Get<lb/>
Another For 99 $<lb/>
(With purchase of Medium Drinks)<lb/>
Offer Expires Oct 31 1988<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
Triple Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
with Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
$2.00 Frozen Drinks<lb/>
$2.00 Teas<lb/>
$1.00 Cans of Beer<lb/>
Greeks: Bring 3 or<lb/>
more people and all of<lb/>
you will get in free!<lb/>
Stop by UBE before<lb/>
or after any home<lb/>
pirate football<lb/>
game. Choose<lb/>
from the world's<lb/>
largest selection<lb/>
of pirate souvenirs from<lb/>
t-shirts, sweaters and hats to<lb/>
megaphones, pom poms and<lb/>
even E.C.U. tote bags.<lb/>
And while you're at<lb/>
UBE see our full line<lb/>
of Russell Athletic<lb/>
and Champion<lb/>
Sportswear.<lb/>
It's all at University<lb/>
Book Exchange, downtown<lb/>
Greenville . . . the one for<lb/>
the fans. Stop by today.<lb/>
1988 PIRATE HOME SCHEDULE<lb/>
Sept. 3 Tennessee Tech. 7:00 PM Oct. 8 West Virginia (Homecoming)<lb/>
Sept. 24 Southern Mississippi (Parent's Day) 1:30 PM Oct. 22 Syracuse<lb/>
Oct. 1 Southwestern Louisiana 1:30 PM Oct. 29 Miami<lb/>
2:00 PM<lb/>
1:30 PM<lb/>
1:30 PM<lb/>
i<lb/>
TheOnBfotThBFansI<lb/>
Open Football Saturdays 9:00 A.M. - 6:00 RMVWfeekdays 9:00 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.<lb/>
516 S. Cotanche Street Downtown Greenville<lb/>
<pb facs="00058100_0014"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>