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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058101_0001"/>
Inside:<lb/>
EDITORIALS4<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS?6<lb/>
FEATURES8<lb/>
SPORTS12<lb/>
Features:<lb/>
The performance by the Ohio Ballet was dazzling,<lb/>
see page 8.<lb/>
Sports:<lb/>
The Florida State Seminoles host the Pirates in<lb/>
Tallahassee this Saturday, see page 10.<lb/>
?Jte lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 27<lb/>
Thursdav October 13,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Last year's Buccaneer questionable in many aspects<lb/>
ByKRISTINAMURDEN<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
The 1987 Buccaneer, which<lb/>
sparked a letter to the editor in<lb/>
Tuesday's East Carolinian w as the<lb/>
result of "poor management and<lb/>
conflict of interest, said the<lb/>
Buccaneer's 1989 editor Mike<lb/>
Daughtry.<lb/>
The yearbook, which was a<lb/>
year late, is currently being re-<lb/>
viewed by the ECU Media hoard<lb/>
under the stipulation that it the<lb/>
books do not go out taster, their<lb/>
budget will be lowered or the<lb/>
book will be deleted tor a year,<lb/>
said Daughtry.<lb/>
The main problems last year<lb/>
were due to the yearbook staff's<lb/>
inability to meet deadlines and<lb/>
failure to work together, lite ECU<lb/>
Photolab also contributed to the<lb/>
problems, in that there was a<lb/>
problem with the quality and<lb/>
quantity of photos submitted.<lb/>
Daughtery said there was a "con-<lb/>
flict of interest between the pho-<lb/>
tography manager and the<lb/>
Buccaneer's general managers <lb/>
They didn't see eye to eye it was<lb/>
too difficult tor them to work to-<lb/>
gether, which created problems<lb/>
"The media board is also at<lb/>
fault said ex-staft member Tat<lb/>
O Neil. He criticized them tor<lb/>
their "get it out now" attitude.<lb/>
Kim Kayos, the '88 editor,<lb/>
added that the Media Board<lb/>
threatened the '87 editor Beth<lb/>
Davis to get the lxok out on time<lb/>
or give back her salary.<lb/>
Kayes said, "The '87book was<lb/>
poorlv managed and thrown to-<lb/>
gether in two week avis lied to<lb/>
the staff about parts of the book<lb/>
being sent to the printer when it<lb/>
was really sitting in her apart-<lb/>
ment she cheated the students<lb/>
said Kayes.<lb/>
Daughterv added that Davis<lb/>
blatantly lied to her staff about<lb/>
mating deadlines which was a<lb/>
factor in the lxok's tardiness.<lb/>
When Davis left ECU she<lb/>
submitted materials unclear to<lb/>
the Bue's publishers which de-<lb/>
layed printing said Daughtry.<lb/>
"There should have been a clear<lb/>
understanding on production<lb/>
details like page numbers, etc,<lb/>
between the editor and the<lb/>
printer<lb/>
Daughtry said the '87 year-<lb/>
book was "so bad" because of the<lb/>
photos, and that the ECU Photo-<lb/>
lab submitted a limited amount of<lb/>
photos, many of which were un-<lb/>
acceptable.<lb/>
When Kayes became the '88<lb/>
editor "she did one hell of a job<lb/>
said Daughtry. "She proved that<lb/>
the Buccaneer can stand on its feet<lb/>
 the superiority of the '88 Fuc<lb/>
due to her efforts Kayes com<lb/>
mended graphic artist Mike Iver-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Daughtry said Kayes wan1<lb/>
to produce a yearbook that she<lb/>
could look back on in 20 years and<lb/>
be proud of.<lb/>
The new staff of the Buc said<lb/>
that the'89 Buc will be as good as<lb/>
'88's if not better. "Contributions<lb/>
are encouraged and we want to<lb/>
increase the group and individual<lb/>
picture sections<lb/>
Daughtry said, "The student<lb/>
bodv needs to get involved. Let us<lb/>
know what's out there we cai<lb/>
ver what we don't know<lb/>
- new slogan is, "It<lb/>
trb? k until vou're in<lb/>
it<lb/>
? - 7 and WHS yearbooks<lb/>
cam .in within a month of each<lb/>
?ther and 3,000 of the 5,000 88's<lb/>
ne in 2 days and only<lb/>
 5,00( 87s were picked<lb/>
pint ks rhe Buccaneer is<lb/>
free ?? ? harge<lb/>
lndi i lu il pictures will be<lb/>
taken in the back of the soda shop<lb/>
in th student store from Oct. 31-<lb/>
Nov. 4 from 9 am12 p.mand 1<lb/>
p m 4 30 p m.<lb/>
Wooten Award given<lb/>
for quality of student<lb/>
to SRA<lb/>
life<lb/>
By BEN SHELBY<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
The members of the Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity were "big brothers" to 22 young men from the<lb/>
Greenville Area Boys Club (Photo By Gretchen Journigan, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
ECU'S Student Resident As-<lb/>
sociation (SRA) is the first SRA in<lb/>
the state to receive the Dan<lb/>
Wooten Award. Approximately<lb/>
50 Universities and colleges<lb/>
across the state (both privately<lb/>
and publicly funded) were eli-<lb/>
gible for the award.<lb/>
The award is given to the<lb/>
school's SRA that contributes<lb/>
most to the quality of life for cam-<lb/>
pus residential students and for<lb/>
providing the best leadership de-<lb/>
velopment opportunity.<lb/>
The award, given in memory<lb/>
of Dan Wooten who served as<lb/>
Director of Housing Operations<lb/>
at ECU for 25 years, was received<lb/>
October 4th.<lb/>
"Winning the award will give<lb/>
us national recognition said<lb/>
SRA President Mark Carroll.<lb/>
The SRA serves as a collecrh e<lb/>
voice for student residents. Last<lb/>
year the SRA sponsored a campus<lb/>
blood drive, collecting 392 pints<lb/>
of blood. It assisted with the ECl<lb/>
Telefund and supported Pirate<lb/>
Walk. Also, it provided financial<lb/>
support to individual resid<lb/>
halls and monetary awards to<lb/>
residence halls with the high st<lb/>
percentage of residents voting<lb/>
during campus elections.<lb/>
The SRA had freshman o Kk-<lb/>
out, encouraging students to be-<lb/>
come involved in residential gov-<lb/>
ernment. It provided leadership<lb/>
workshops during spring and fall<lb/>
semesters and sent delegates to<lb/>
state, regional, and national con-<lb/>
ferences. It hosted an awards din-<lb/>
ner recognizing outstanding resi-<lb/>
dence hall and their leaders.<lb/>
As an administrative liason,<lb/>
the SRA supported a $40 incn asc<lb/>
in room rent which will provide<lb/>
air conditioning and ether reno-<lb/>
vations n the residence halls.<lb/>
Carroll said the SRA stands a<lb/>
good chanceof w inning next year.<lb/>
vould like to see greater par-<lb/>
ticipation among resident stu-<lb/>
dents<lb/>
udents don't real-<lb/>
ize the opportunities that are<lb/>
available tor them he said, "A<lb/>
ibersh<lb/>
? i rd cost only $8 a nci<lb/>
? i pay for itself dur-<lb/>
the year he added.<lb/>
n Fulgham, asst<lb/>
e chancellor and director ol<lb/>
re sidiand housing, is the<lb/>
tl ad isor t the SRA. "I'm<lb/>
extrcmel) proud arid pleased that<lb/>
the N.C. Housing Office Associa<lb/>
? "? , gnized the SRA by pre-<lb/>
sent them with the Dan<lb/>
Wooten rward The students<lb/>
 oi - I' crj hard for it They are<lb/>
tx - m  d foi the work<lb/>
aid<lb/>
WZMB to appeal for emergency funding<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
futures Kditor<lb/>
WZMB has had nothing to be<lb/>
excited about lately.<lb/>
A faulty component called an<lb/>
exciter has put the student radio<lb/>
station in a state of airwave limbo<lb/>
The silence may continue for a<lb/>
month unless emergencv funding<lb/>
can be allocated to WZMB.<lb/>
The exciter, which keeps the<lb/>
station on the correct frequency of<lb/>
91.3 FM, failed Sept. 24, forcing<lb/>
WZMB to sign-off indefinitely.<lb/>
According to the station's man-<lb/>
agement, the faulty component<lb/>
was sent to an Illinois company<lb/>
for repairs weeks ago.<lb/>
"We are getting the runa-<lb/>
round on the exciter Keith<lb/>
Powe, General Manager of<lb/>
WZMB said.<lb/>
Powe said the company con-<lb/>
tracted for the repair job, Versa<lb/>
Count, has promised to return the<lb/>
part on two different dates.<lb/>
"A spokesman for the com-<lb/>
pany assured me on Oct. 3 I'd<lb/>
receive the exciter. I called back<lb/>
and then he told me Oct. 10. We<lb/>
have yet to see anything Powe<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Frustrated, Powe has sought<lb/>
new avenues to solve the prob-<lb/>
lem. The purchase of a new or<lb/>
used exciter may be the best possi-<lb/>
bility, Powe said.<lb/>
Now Powe's mission is to<lb/>
find the necessary funding to<lb/>
purchase the part. Powe said he<lb/>
must petition the Media Board,an<lb/>
advisory committee consisting of<lb/>
both students and faculty, for an<lb/>
emergency appropriation.<lb/>
"We are trying to set an emer-<lb/>
gency meeting of the Media<lb/>
Board Powe said. As of Wednes-<lb/>
day, Powe said attempts to set the<lb/>
emergency meeting have reached<lb/>
some snags.<lb/>
"Many members of the board<lb/>
can't change their schedules.<lb/>
Powe said. "But as far as I can see,<lb/>
I will get a meeting even if 1 have<lb/>
to cry and plead he said.<lb/>
According to Powe, ECU pol-<lb/>
icy concerning purchase bidding<lb/>
may cause the station to remain<lb/>
off the air for a month. During the<lb/>
month, all respective companies<lb/>
are given an opportunity to bid on<lb/>
the price of the component, Powe<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In efforts to gauge the cost of<lb/>
a new or an u s. d exciter, Powe has<lb/>
received price quotes from sev-<lb/>
eral electronics companies which<lb/>
specialize in broadcast equip-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
According to Powe. Broad-<lb/>
cast Electronics, one oi the largest<lb/>
such companies, quoted S3.51X1<lb/>
tor an used exciter If purchas d.<lb/>
the component would have a k<lb/>
da warranty<lb/>
Education is goal of awareness week<lb/>
ByLYNNJOYNER<lb/>
Staff Writrr<lb/>
A host of events are sched-<lb/>
uled for ECU'S third annual Alco-<lb/>
hol Awareness Week which is<lb/>
slated for Oct. 19-27. The purpose<lb/>
of the week is to educate the<lb/>
campus on the effects of alcohol<lb/>
and alcohol abuse.<lb/>
Mary Elesha-Adams, Health<lb/>
Educator at ECU's Student<lb/>
Health Service, said: "The pur-<lb/>
pose of Alcohol Awareness Week<lb/>
is to provide information and ac-<lb/>
tivities that will help students,<lb/>
staff and faculty develop an<lb/>
awareness of alcohol issues and to<lb/>
develop responsible alcohol us-<lb/>
age<lb/>
On Oct. 19, at 4 p.m a banner<lb/>
judging will take place at Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium. The contest is a new<lb/>
event in which campus organiza-<lb/>
tions, fraternities and sororities<lb/>
will make banners that promote<lb/>
alcohol awareness. The winning<lb/>
group will recieve $50.<lb/>
Thursday from 1-5 p.m a<lb/>
demonstration featuring Vince<lb/>
and Larry ? the "Crash Guys" ?<lb/>
will be held on the central cam-<lb/>
pus mall, concerning the use of<lb/>
seatbelts and drinking and driv-<lb/>
ing. The event, sponsored by Scott<lb/>
Hall, will include volunteer stu-<lb/>
dents or faculty testing out the<lb/>
"condensor"? an automoblie<lb/>
impact simulator.<lb/>
Casino Night will be held on<lb/>
Friday from 8-10 p.m. at Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center in room 244.<lb/>
The event, sponsored by the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union, Special Events, and<lb/>
Pubicity and Public Relations<lb/>
Committees, will include games<lb/>
of chance such as blackjack and<lb/>
bingo. Players will bet with play<lb/>
money and at the end of the night<lb/>
may use the money to bid on<lb/>
prizes at an auction. Mocktails<lb/>
(alcohol-free "mixed drinks") will<lb/>
also be served.<lb/>
On Saturday, winning ban-<lb/>
ners will be on display at the<lb/>
ECU Syracuse football game at<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Exhibits and displays will be<lb/>
at Garrett Dormitory on Monday<lb/>
from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. The infor-<lb/>
mation will be part oi the program<lb/>
"Alcohol: The Fatal Attraction<lb/>
Mocktails will also be served at<lb/>
this event, which is sponsored by<lb/>
the Central Area Council.<lb/>
The program "Using Alcohol<lb/>
Wisely: Methyl and Ethyl Speak<lb/>
Out" will be held at Hetcher Hall<lb/>
from 4-6 p.m. on Tuesday. This<lb/>
event is sponsored by the West<lb/>
Area Council. Also on Tuesday at<lb/>
7 p.m the Inter-Fraternity Coun-<lb/>
cil, Panhellenic, BACCHUS, and<lb/>
244 Mcndenhall will sponsor a<lb/>
talk by Mark Usry, Assistant Pro-<lb/>
fessor of Business Law at James<lb/>
Madison University, on "Risk<lb/>
Management<lb/>
See ALCOHOL, page 2<lb/>
The Austin Building's duty has been taken by the new General Classroom Building; who<lb/>
knows what takes place in there now (Photo By Thomas Walters, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13, 1988<lb/>
Stress needs to be prevented<lb/>
Two senior nursing students<lb/>
asked the Health Coordinator<lb/>
about stress, and what some of its<lb/>
possible contributing factors are.<lb/>
ITU e? V u J, u  r - ,i. . <lb/>
By<lb/>
Mary Elesha-Adams<lb/>
Stress is your body's physical<lb/>
and emotional reaction to change<lb/>
or to a situation that may be dan-<lb/>
gerous, confusing, irritating, or<lb/>
boring. Stress is a part of everyday<lb/>
life and can be good or bad.<lb/>
Graduating from high<lb/>
school, starting college, and de-<lb/>
ciding on a major are examples of<lb/>
"good stress" (oreustress). "Good<lb/>
stressors" provide a positive,<lb/>
motivating force.<lb/>
"Bad stress" or distress, can<lb/>
lead to serious health problems if<lb/>
it continues. Examples of "bad<lb/>
stress" are wrecking your car, fail-<lb/>
ing a midterm, or breaking up<lb/>
with a girlfriend or boyfriend.<lb/>
We all would like to avoid<lb/>
bad stress, but sometimes it's just<lb/>
not possible. Since we can't avoid<lb/>
stress, we should think about<lb/>
stress positively; life would be<lb/>
dull and purposeless without it.<lb/>
Signs of Stress Can Include:<lb/>
Grouchiness<lb/>
Irritability<lb/>
Inability to concentrate<lb/>
Insomnia<lb/>
Fatigue<lb/>
Eating too much or too little<lb/>
Diarrhea, cramps<lb/>
Headaches<lb/>
Neck and backaches<lb/>
Butterflies in stomach<lb/>
Chest pain<lb/>
Ways to Reduce Stress<lb/>
1. Organize your life! Redo<lb/>
your room, apartment, or house<lb/>
so that you know where every-<lb/>
thing is.<lb/>
2. Organize your time by set-<lb/>
ting priorities. Decide each day<lb/>
what is most important to accom-<lb/>
plish and do it.<lb/>
3. Plan to spend 15 minutes<lb/>
alone each day. Clean your mind<lb/>
of all thoughts and relax.<lb/>
4. Find a quiet place to study,<lb/>
and study on a regular basis.<lb/>
Cramming and procrastination<lb/>
will only increase your stress.<lb/>
5. Take breaks from studying<lb/>
? 10 minutes every hour should<lb/>
re-encrgize you tor more. Don't<lb/>
give in to peer pressure and take a<lb/>
"let's go out for one drink break<lb/>
6. Eat a balanced diet every<lb/>
day; junk food, and too much<lb/>
sugar, caffeine, and alcohol may<lb/>
contribute to irritability or fa-<lb/>
tigue.<lb/>
7. Get enough sleep and rest.<lb/>
Everyone's needs are different.<lb/>
You've had enough sleep when<lb/>
you wake up feeling refreshed.<lb/>
Don't cut classes though!<lb/>
8. Establish a balance be-<lb/>
tween work, school and exercise.<lb/>
9. Learn how to say no. Don't<lb/>
over-extend yourself by trying to<lb/>
do too much.<lb/>
10. Talk about problems with<lb/>
friends or family.<lb/>
11. Stretching and progres-<lb/>
sive muscle relaxation can help<lb/>
you achieve a relaxation re-<lb/>
sponse.<lb/>
12. Keep your sense of humoi.<lb/>
13. Learn to accept what vow<lb/>
cannot change.<lb/>
COLLATION<lb/>
IS NOT A DIRTY WORD . . .<lb/>
(Ka la shan. ka-) 1. the act. process, or<lb/>
result of gathering (the sections of a book)<lb/>
together in proper order for binding<lb/>
IT'S OUR BUSINESS<lb/>
We specialize in duplicating and binding<lb/>
multiple page documents<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
FAST COPIES FOR FAST TIMES<lb/>
We are open early &amp; late (Next to Chico's in Georgetown Shops)<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
Waste treatment plant halted<lb/>
FAYETTEVILLE (AP) ?<lb/>
The U.S. government has put an<lb/>
indefinite hold on proceedings<lb/>
against the state over a new law<lb/>
that effectively blocks a pro-<lb/>
posed hazardous-waste treat-<lb/>
ment plant in Scotland County,<lb/>
but plant foes say they aren't<lb/>
celebrating yet.<lb/>
"An indefinite postpone-<lb/>
ment is the next best thing to<lb/>
saying, 'Let's turn out the lights,<lb/>
the party's over said Richard<lb/>
Regan, environmental coordina-<lb/>
tor for the Center for Commu-<lb/>
nity Action in Robeson County.<lb/>
Alcohol awareness<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
"If You Wanna Get High Go<lb/>
Fly a Kite the final event of the<lb/>
week, is sponsored by Kitty Hawk<lb/>
Kites and will take place on Col-<lb/>
lege Hill. Kitty Hawk Kites will<lb/>
decorate, and skits involving al-<lb/>
cohol-related situations will be<lb/>
performed.<lb/>
A question and answer ses-<lb/>
sion will follow each skit. Ms.<lb/>
Elesha-Adams said: "We are<lb/>
doing these alcohol-awareness<lb/>
activities for thisone week, but we<lb/>
want sufdehts" tobe aware"aTl the<lb/>
time. Programs and classes are<lb/>
given throughout the year, and<lb/>
there are many sources of alcohol<lb/>
information available on cam-<lb/>
pus<lb/>
Ms. Elesha-Adams said that<lb/>
pamphlets and a film concerning<lb/>
drinking and driving can be ob-<lb/>
tained at the Student Health Cen-<lb/>
ter. Other drug and alcohol infor-<lb/>
mation resources and clinical<lb/>
services are listed in "Alcohol<lb/>
Drug Abuse a publication spon-<lb/>
sored by The Division of Student<lb/>
Life.<lb/>
"It seems logical that the next<lb/>
step would be for EPA to drop<lb/>
the whole thing<lb/>
But environmental leaders<lb/>
fear that the federal government<lb/>
will use the threat of a cutoff of<lb/>
federal toxic-waste cleanup<lb/>
money to force the state to accept<lb/>
the facility.<lb/>
The Environmental Protec-<lb/>
tion Agency announced last year<lb/>
that it was initiating action that<lb/>
could strip the state of its ability to<lb/>
manage its own hazardous waste.<lb/>
The action came in the wake of the<lb/>
General Assembly's passage of a<lb/>
bill that greatly restricts the<lb/>
amount of treated waste water<lb/>
that hazardous-waste plants can<lb/>
discharee. <lb/>
Scning the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
James F. J. McKce. Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey Spencer Meymandi<lb/>
Richard-Alan Cook Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashlev E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY RATES<lb/>
0-49 Column InchesS4.25<lb/>
50-994.15<lb/>
100-149 4.05<lb/>
150-199 3.95<lb/>
200-249 3.85<lb/>
250 and above3.75<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in Addition to Regular Space Rale)<lb/>
One color and black?? SO.OO<lb/>
Two colors and black 155.00<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
5.000 or less ( each<lb/>
5.001 - 10,0005.5c each<lb/>
10,001 12,000 5c each<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
RocSports<lb/>
SuperSports<lb/>
DresSports<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
ProVValker<lb/>
Cbrnforts<lb/>
And - they're available in<lb/>
a wide variety of sizes,<lb/>
colors and shies<lb/>
for both men and<lb/>
women.<lb/>
Phones<lb/>
,757-6366757-6557<lb/>
757-6558757-6309<lb/>
Rockport<lb/>
Headquarters.<lb/>
Come in now and see .1 full range of styles for uien'mdlaetesfetfla iHi(,fcMi<lb/>
walking shoe Rockports For over 10 vrars Rockport's<lb/>
been making shoes that make walking a pleasure<lb/>
With ali the unique comfort support and flexibility features you need.<lb/>
j. Rockport The original walking shoe<lb/>
Rockport @<lb/>
The RACK ROOM<lb/>
has as large a<lb/>
selection of men's<lb/>
and ladies' Rockport<lb/>
as you will find in<lb/>
this area.<lb/>
? i<lb/>
1 u 'J4J ?<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
On Greenville's Largest<lb/>
Wide Screen TV<lb/>
This Week<lb/>
Buffalo Bills<lb/>
vs<lb/>
New York Jets<lb/>
8:00 until<lb/>
$2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
$1.00 Miller Long Necks<lb/>
$1.50 Highballs<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/>
Ramada Inn<lb/>
(Formerly Sheraton of Greenville)<lb/>
203 W. Greenville Blvd. ? 355-2666<lb/>
1988 PIRATE HOME SCHEDULE<lb/>
Sept 3 Tennessee Tech. 7:00 PM<lb/>
Sept. 24 Southern Mississippi (Parent's Day) 1:30PM<lb/>
Oct. 1 Southwestern Louisiana 1:30 PM<lb/>
Oct. 8 West Virginia (Homecoming)<lb/>
Oct 22 Syracuse<lb/>
Get 29 Miami<lb/>
2 00 PM<lb/>
1 30 PM<lb/>
1 30 PM<lb/>
7te OhB ?bfTh&amp; fhrtsl<lb/>
Open Football Saturdays 9:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M.Weekdays 9:00 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.<lb/>
516 S. Cotanche Street Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Crime<lb/>
George Bush and Mi<lb/>
Dukakis appealed -<lb/>
class Americans with pl<lb/>
crack down on criminals and<lb/>
first-time buyers purcha -<lb/>
as the two V hite House coi I<lb/>
its crammed for theii ?<lb/>
final presidential debate<lb/>
The Republican president!<lb/>
nominee, hammering a.<lb/>
preferred toj<lb/>
cused his rival<lb/>
concerned ab <lb/>
nalsthan their<lb/>
a different apj roach 11<lb/>
"1 m . - .<lb/>
rude to tb ?<lb/>
more symr. il<lb/>
enmr than I r<lb/>
Bush told ai<lb/>
a Knights<lb/>
Trenton, <lb/>
WhiW ?<lb/>
courted <lb/>
American<lb/>
Dukakis tr<lb/>
built on th. ; I<lb/>
able housing si<lb/>
post-World ?<lb/>
The 1 ?<lb/>
used a ? '<lb/>
Levittown, <lb/>
Marcos invesl<lb/>
<lb/>
proa<lb/>
in<lb/>
- and offer<lb/>
thatwoul 1 ?<lb/>
cost him mill<lb/>
reported I<lb/>
Citing a<lb/>
Department cal<lb/>
les Times s 1<lb/>
the dep -<lb/>
might "s ? t<lb/>
barrass<lb/>
rials by all<lb/>
condu<lb/>
Under I<lb/>
mod m<lb/>
would ha ? '<lb/>
millioi<lb/>
alleuedly I -<lb/>
treasury b I<lb/>
in<lb/>
prison sentei<lb/>
Soui<lb/>
DTS officials ir -? m I<lb/>
Marcos ma tl i<lb/>
political!)<lb/>
about his di.<lb/>
era! governn ent I<lb/>
White Houst<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The cal<lb/>
elabor that the -<lb/>
merit is ned tha<lb/>
.1<lb/>
Kollar to chair<lb/>
identity commiti<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
has been named<lb/>
sitv - mmittee v<lb/>
rktodc<lb/>
syst m ? ?<lb/>
sitv.<lb/>
As East v -<lb/>
has crown the irr<lb/>
versirj been p <lb/>
consistent<lb/>
cellor Richard Eak<lb/>
August ol this year<lb/>
pointed an In<lb/>
address a broad i<lb/>
related sues I<lb/>
University and to w ? <lb/>
with the vice chancellor<lb/>
tional advancemenf I<lb/>
the imace ECl I<lb/>
The first issue to b f<lb/>
under this charge from<lb/>
cellor i- consid? i j<lb/>
ECU is presented and<lb/>
through<lb/>
? mbt s<lb/>
The subcomm<lb/>
Ms. kollar is currently<lb/>
input from all members<lb/>
campus community<lb/>
the visual image of I<lb/>
trayed in internal and e<lb/>
publications, stationer)<lb/>
tisements and public<lb/>
announcements Written<lb/>
ments mav be address I<lb/>
subcommittee at the c<lb/>
University Publication<lb/>
Racdale.<lb/>
EdWheatky(Businesj<lb/>
of the University Imacl<lb/>
Force who appointed ti<lb/>
committee, has emphasij<lb/>
importance ot the croup<lb/>
"Because of the multiplj<lb/>
images representing the<lb/>
sitv, there is no one ce<lb/>
I imageofECL'portravedtv<lb/>
" nal and external audierj<lb/>
commented<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0003"/><lb/>
ION<lb/>
IWORD . . .<lb/>
act, process, or<lb/>
fctionsof a book)<lb/>
' )i binding<lb/>
SINESS<lb/>
ind bmdmg<lb/>
IPY<lb/>
0<lb/>
TIMES<lb/>
?rgctown Shops)<lb/>
: ?<lb/>
port<lb/>
luarters.<lb/>
for mn and Jaelks in f he original<lb/>
? ears Rockport's<lb/>
icing a pleasure<lb/>
id tlcxibiiitv- eaturcs vou nood<lb/>
? ing shoe.<lb/>
:kport ?<lb/>
you're at<lb/>
ir full line<lb/>
II Athletic<lb/>
Champion<lb/>
lortswear.<lb/>
ersity<lb/>
ntown<lb/>
one for<lb/>
y today.<lb/>
2:00 PM<lb/>
1 30 PM<lb/>
1 30 PM<lb/>
5:30 P.M.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13,1988 3<lb/>
Crime tops "promises"<lb/>
lists<lb/>
George Bush and Michael<lb/>
Dukakis appealed to working<lb/>
class Americans with pledges to<lb/>
crack down on criminals and help<lb/>
first-time buyers purchase homes<lb/>
as the two White House contend-<lb/>
ers crammed for their second and<lb/>
final presidential debate.<lb/>
The Republican presidential<lb/>
nominee, hammering away at his<lb/>
preferred topic ? crime ? ac-<lb/>
cused his rival of being more<lb/>
concerned about the fate of crimi-<lb/>
nals than their victims and vowed<lb/>
a different approach if elected.<lb/>
"I'm going to bring an atti-<lb/>
tude to the White House that has<lb/>
more sympathy for the victims of<lb/>
crime than for the criminals<lb/>
Bush told an audience Monday at<lb/>
a Knights of Columbus hall in<lb/>
Trenton, N.J.<lb/>
While the vice president<lb/>
courted votes in Trenton's Italian-<lb/>
American neighborhood,<lb/>
Dukakis traveled to a community<lb/>
built on the premise that afford-<lb/>
able housing should be available<lb/>
to post-World War II families.<lb/>
The Democratic nominee<lb/>
used a visit to a typical family in<lb/>
Levittown, N.Y and a speech at<lb/>
the local high school to introduce<lb/>
his plan that would allow first-<lb/>
time buyers to use up to $10,000 of<lb/>
their IRAs or pension plans for a<lb/>
down payment.<lb/>
Dukakis was meeting with<lb/>
Vietnam War veterans today in<lb/>
Cambridge, Mass and deliver-<lb/>
ing an economics speech at Tufts<lb/>
University in nearby Medford.<lb/>
Democratic vice presidential<lb/>
nominee Lloyd Bentsen was cam-<lb/>
paigning in New Jersey and Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, two key electoral states<lb/>
with 16 and 25 votes, respectively.<lb/>
Bush was heading to Seattle<lb/>
where he was giving another<lb/>
t' gh-on-crime speech ? white-<lb/>
Cv ! that is ? to business stu-<lb/>
dents at Seattle University,<lb/>
the Pauley Pavilion on the Uni-<lb/>
versity of California at Los Ange-<lb/>
les campus.<lb/>
With Election Day exactly<lb/>
four weeks away, the latest na-<lb/>
tionwide poll showed the presi-<lb/>
dential race too close to call.<lb/>
Bush leads Dukakis 50-47<lb/>
percent in the ABC News-Washi-<lb/>
noton Post poll conducted Wed-<lb/>
nesday through Sunday. The sur-<lb/>
vey of 600 likely voters had a<lb/>
margin of error of plus or minus<lb/>
five percentage points, statisti-<lb/>
cally negating the lead.<lb/>
A Los Angeles Times poll re-<lb/>
leased Monday found that Re-<lb/>
publican vice presidential candi-<lb/>
date Dan Quayle remains a drag<lb/>
on the GOP ticket.<lb/>
Bush-Quayle leads Dukakis-<lb/>
Bentsen 44-41 percent, but Bush<lb/>
alone leads his Democratic oppo-<lb/>
nent 48-39 percent.<lb/>
The weekend survey of 893<lb/>
registered voters had a margin of<lb/>
error of five percentage points.<lb/>
But the poll also found that<lb/>
Dukakis' negative rating was<lb/>
higher than Quayle ? 45 percent<lb/>
to 40 percent.<lb/>
Quayle, who campaigned in<lb/>
Michigan and Ohio, gave what he<lb/>
described as the "final word" on<lb/>
his answer to last week's debate<lb/>
question of what he would do if he<lb/>
was suddenly propelled into the<lb/>
presidency.<lb/>
Quayle said he would make a<lb/>
request to address the nation and<lb/>
would consult with allies, but<lb/>
other steps would depend on the<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
"Obviously you do different<lb/>
things under an assassination.<lb/>
The first thing you do in an assas-<lb/>
sination ? I would still say a<lb/>
prayer for myself and the nation<lb/>
?but the first thing you do is you<lb/>
get on the phone and call the head<lb/>
of the CIA and see what he thinks<lb/>
it was Quayle said during a<lb/>
question-and-answer session af-<lb/>
ter an economics speech in De-<lb/>
troit.<lb/>
Quayle said he would have<lb/>
"contingency plans under differ-<lb/>
ent situations<lb/>
The Democratic nominee on<lb/>
Monday also marched in the Co-<lb/>
lumbus Day parade in New York<lb/>
City where he was joined by New<lb/>
York Gov. Mario Cuomo, Mayor<lb/>
Ed Koch and John F. Kennedy Jr.<lb/>
Although he received a warm<lb/>
reception from the thousands<lb/>
who lined the streets in the tradi-<lb/>
tional Italian-American event,<lb/>
Dukakis received some disheart-<lb/>
ening news from II Progesso, the<lb/>
Italian-language newspaper.<lb/>
In its Columbus Day edition,<lb/>
the 85,000-circulation daily en-<lb/>
dorced the candidacy of George<lb/>
Bush.<lb/>
Marcos investigation to come to a halt<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The<lb/>
State Department wants U.S.<lb/>
prosecutors to end their fraud<lb/>
investigation of Ferdinand Mar-<lb/>
cos and offer him a plea bargain<lb/>
that would keep him out of jail but<lb/>
cost him millions of dollars, it was<lb/>
reported today.<lb/>
Citing a confidential State<lb/>
Department cable, the Los Ange-<lb/>
les Times said feoeral officials fear<lb/>
the deposed Philippine president<lb/>
might "seek to involve and em-<lb/>
barrass" U.S. and Philippine offi-<lb/>
cials by alleging improper or ille-<lb/>
gal conduct, if he is indicted.<lb/>
Under the plea agreement<lb/>
outlined in the cable, Marcos<lb/>
would have to return hundreds of<lb/>
millions of dollars in assets he<lb/>
allcuedlv took from his country's<lb/>
treasury before he fled to Hawaii<lb/>
in 1986, but he would avoid a<lb/>
frison sentence.<lb/>
Sources familiar with the in-<lb/>
tG?tj?JaR&amp;.J?ld tte? T?mos that<lb/>
U.S. officials are worried that<lb/>
Marcos may threaten to reveal<lb/>
politically damaging information<lb/>
about his dealings with the fed-<lb/>
eral government to pressure the<lb/>
White House to block prosecu-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The cable also states, without<lb/>
elaborating, that the State Depart-<lb/>
ment is concerned that Marcos<lb/>
Kollar to chair visual<lb/>
identity committee<lb/>
Voi Rel?.j?e<lb/>
Joanne Kollar, director of the<lb/>
Office of University Publications,<lb/>
has been named to chair a univer-<lb/>
sity subcommittee which will<lb/>
work to develop a visual identity<lb/>
system for East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
As East Carolina University<lb/>
has grown, the image of the Uni-<lb/>
versity has not been portrayed<lb/>
consistently, according to Chan-<lb/>
cellor Richard Eakin. Thus, in<lb/>
August of this year, Eakin ap-<lb/>
pointed an Image Task Force to<lb/>
address a broad range of image-<lb/>
related issues concerning the<lb/>
University and to work directly<lb/>
with the vice chancellor of institu-<lb/>
tional advancement to identify<lb/>
the image ECU wants to portray.<lb/>
The first issue to be addressed<lb/>
under this charge from the chan-<lb/>
cellor is consideration of the way<lb/>
ECU is presented and received<lb/>
through graphic designs and<lb/>
symbols.<lb/>
The subcommitte chaired by<lb/>
Ms. Kollar is currently seeking<lb/>
input from all members of the<lb/>
, campus community concerning<lb/>
the visual image of ECU as por-<lb/>
trayed in internal and external<lb/>
publications, stationary, adver-<lb/>
tisements, and public service<lb/>
announcements. Written com-<lb/>
ments may be addressed to the<lb/>
subcommittee at the Office of<lb/>
University Publications, 122<lb/>
Ragsdale.<lb/>
Ed Wheatley (Business), chair<lb/>
of the University Image Task<lb/>
Force who appointed the sub-<lb/>
committee, has emphasized the<lb/>
I importance of the group's work.<lb/>
"Because of the multiplicity of<lb/>
images representing the univer-<lb/>
sity, there is no one consistent<lb/>
t image of ECU portrayed to its inter<lb/>
nal and external audiences h?<lb/>
commented.<lb/>
may be attempting to destabilize<lb/>
the current government of the<lb/>
Philippines.<lb/>
The classified cable from<lb/>
Abraham D. Sofaer, the State<lb/>
Department's chief legal counsel,<lb/>
was relayed to other top depart-<lb/>
ment officials and U.S. Ambassa-<lb/>
dor Nicholas Platt in Manila.<lb/>
Prosecutors and diplomatic<lb/>
advisers disagree over when to<lb/>
initiate plea bargaining in the<lb/>
Marcos case, which is being<lb/>
handled by U.S. Attorney<lb/>
Rudolph Giuliani in New York<lb/>
City.<lb/>
The State Department wants<lb/>
to give Marcos "a last chance,<lb/>
prior to indictment to reach a<lb/>
settlement, the cable said. Federal<lb/>
prosecutors prefer to indict him<lb/>
first to gain added leverage ac-<lb/>
cording to the report.<lb/>
"(The Department of) Justice<lb/>
has presented no good reason<lb/>
why we should not continue to<lb/>
insist on offering Mr. Marcos a<lb/>
chance to reach a voluntary plea<lb/>
agreement prior to indictment<lb/>
the cable said.<lb/>
JOIN THE WINNING<lb/>
COMBINATION<lb/>
BE A RESIDENT<lb/>
ADVISOR<lb/>
APPLICATION DEADLINE FOR<lb/>
SPRING IMPLOYMENT 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/>
SHEAR<lb/>
HAIR<lb/>
DESIGN<lb/>
INC.<lb/>
I<lb/>
STYLISTS<lb/>
Beth Long<lb/>
Pam Freedman<lb/>
Linda Jones<lb/>
Tina Getsinger<lb/>
Ricky Narron<lb/>
Lisa Bissell Whitehurst<lb/>
Melody Furci<lb/>
Linda Murrell<lb/>
UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP AND NEWLY REMODELED<lb/>
Beth Perry Long and Keith Long. New Owners<lb/>
SPECIALIZING IN:<lb/>
Cuts for the entire family ? Color ? Perms<lb/>
Highlighting ? Eyebrow and facial waxing<lb/>
Monday - Friday 9:00 UNTIL<lb/>
Saturday by appointment<lb/>
752-79109706<lb/>
514 E. 14th Street<lb/>
(Between King Sandwich and The Wash House)<lb/>
We earn 3 major product lines<lb/>
? U C C I<lb/>
'<lb/>
i ? ? f ? e ? ? ?<lb/>
fey?<lb/>
Greenville's Lowest Priced<lb/>
Retail Distributor of<lb/>
Store Hours<lb/>
MonSat. 10-9<lb/>
Sun. 1-6<lb/>
vy-pt<lb/>
Sunglasses<lb/>
Guaranteed<lb/>
Located In The Plaza Mall Entrance<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
355-7695<lb/>
m I<lb/>
Student &amp; Faculty<lb/>
Savings<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Whole Rib Eyes<lb/>
$268lb.<lb/>
Sliced Free<lb/>
Ground Daily<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
88c lb<lb/>
5 lbs. or more<lb/>
Gwaltney Franks<lb/>
99<lb/>
Pkg-<lb/>
Chicken Leg Quarters<lb/>
38?<lb/>
Family Pack<lb/>
Spare Ribs<lb/>
99<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
5 lbs. or more<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
10 lb. bag<lb/>
Grade A<lb/>
Extra Large Eggs<lb/>
79<lb/>
dozen<lb/>
Carolina Brand<lb/>
1 lb. bag Hot Dogs $1.39<lb/>
8 oz. Bologna pkg 79c<lb/>
Richfood<lb/>
Homogenized Milk<lb/>
12 gallon paper carton<lb/>
99<lb/>
Jiffy Pop Popcorn<lb/>
MicrowaveReg. or Butter<lb/>
99<lb/>
4.2 oz. pkg.<lb/>
Deli<lb/>
Boiled Ham lb. $2.99<lb/>
Turkey Breast lb. $3.99<lb/>
Store Hours<lb/>
Open Sundays 1 p.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Monday-Saturday, 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.<lb/>
Prices Effective<lb/>
Wednesday, Oct. 12-<lb/>
Saturday, Oct. 15<lb/>
Mastercard &amp; Visa Accepted<lb/>
WIC - Food Stamps Welcome<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
211 Jarvis Street<lb/>
2 Blocks From E.CU.<lb/>
OVEPTON&amp;<lb/>
Supetmt<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0004"/><lb/>
?fj? iEafit QIaroltman<lb/>
PETE FERNAL.D, OmmttMmagm<lb/>
C UP CAR! ER, M?fmf EArlor<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, ihndofof.jtiMng<lb/>
Joe Harris, n? bm?<lb/>
Doug Jot inson, sm em?<lb/>
Tim Hampton r?.?Ma.<lb/>
MICHELLE ENGLAND, Cr?i(Man-jr<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, sk)<lb/>
Jeep Parker ?,??<lb/>
POM FU RR , Ore uUt urn Manager<lb/>
Susan HowELL,pr?i,rti0n.virr<lb/>
JOl IN W. MEDL1N, An Dimtm<lb/>
MAC CLARK, tusiruss Ma-uijCT<lb/>
October 13, 1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
P.ige 4<lb/>
Drugs<lb/>
Nothing but political fodder<lb/>
Drugs.<lb/>
The very word is enough to<lb/>
strike terror into the vestigial hearts<lb/>
of politicians, all oi whom seem<lb/>
aghast at the prospect that they<lb/>
might appear any less zealous about<lb/>
the situation than their comrades.<lb/>
Although it's been said, many<lb/>
times, many ways, it apparently<lb/>
hasn't vet been said loudly enough<lb/>
that the whole purpose of the drug<lb/>
"controversy" is to provide politi-<lb/>
cians with a complete non-issue<lb/>
about which thev can beat their<lb/>
breasts. The drug "controversy" is a<lb/>
beautiful example of empty politics:<lb/>
no matter what his views on other<lb/>
issues, any politician (or virtually<lb/>
any other public figure, for that<lb/>
matter) will look at drugs only one<lb/>
way. No thought required.<lb/>
The idea has gained widespread<lb/>
support at home and abroad ?<lb/>
many other countries, including the<lb/>
Soviet Union, have jumped on the<lb/>
anti-drug bandwagon. There seems<lb/>
to be almost universal agreement<lb/>
that drugs are responsible for<lb/>
America's problems ? from the<lb/>
federal deficit to the spread of secu-<lb/>
lar humanism to the heartbreak oi<lb/>
psoriasis.<lb/>
But what, exactly, is wrong with<lb/>
drugs?<lb/>
One: they're bad for you. But<lb/>
then, so are smoking, drinking alco-<lb/>
hol and voting for Republicans. One<lb/>
of the choices we face as adults is<lb/>
how we want to kill ourselves ?<lb/>
whether by slashing wrists, or, as<lb/>
Thoreau would put it, by "frittering<lb/>
our lives away by degrees<lb/>
Two: air traffic controllers and<lb/>
railroad workers use them, thereby<lb/>
endangering the lives of innocent<lb/>
people. This line of thinking gener-<lb/>
ally ignores the fact that people who<lb/>
are deprived of one form oi self-de-<lb/>
structive behavior will seek another<lb/>
If forced to give up drugs, users<lb/>
usually turn to alcohol or some other<lb/>
form of self-destruction, and the end<lb/>
result is substantially the same.<lb/>
Three: drugs are responsible for<lb/>
inner-city violence and gang wars.<lb/>
True, drugs are a contributing fac-<lb/>
tor, but poverty and frustration are<lb/>
the major causes. Gang violence<lb/>
existed long before drugs were such<lb/>
a problem; the important difference<lb/>
is that today the gangs can afford<lb/>
bigger and better weapons. How-<lb/>
ever, they wouldn't have access to<lb/>
these weapons were it not for laugh-<lb/>
able gun-control laws, and they<lb/>
wouldn't be making such a hefty<lb/>
profit in the first place if drugs were<lb/>
not illegal. Therefore, the problem<lb/>
exists more because of government<lb/>
than in spite of it.<lb/>
One good way to deal with the<lb/>
problem would be to find out why<lb/>
people take drugs ? to escape, of<lb/>
course, but to escape from exactly<lb/>
what? Simple humdrum existence?<lb/>
Reruns? The heartbreak of psoria-<lb/>
sis?<lb/>
If the government were to focus<lb/>
but one-tenth the energy it is exert-<lb/>
ing to "fight the war on drugs" on<lb/>
this aspect of the drug problem, they<lb/>
could conceivably win the battle<lb/>
without bloodshed. But that would<lb/>
be sensible and it would take time,<lb/>
so it's obviously an unfit solution.<lb/>
Besides, it's worth keeping in mind<lb/>
that the drug "controversy" has a<lb/>
symbiotic relationship with politi-<lb/>
cians. If they actually solve the prob-<lb/>
lem, that takes away the ultimate<lb/>
political "issue a subject about<lb/>
A'hich the candidates can posture<lb/>
and talk tough while remaining<lb/>
completely safe from the ravages of<lb/>
intelligent criticism.<lb/>
Politicians are currently being<lb/>
selected for office largely on the<lb/>
basis of their ability to impersonate<lb/>
Rambo, to "get tough" on "issues"<lb/>
like drugs. No politician who wants<lb/>
to be elected (which included, at last<lb/>
count, all politicians) would ex-<lb/>
change "I'm for putting drug push-<lb/>
ers behind bars and saving our help-<lb/>
less little kids" for "I'm for finding<lb/>
out why people use drugs, and I'm<lb/>
for offering them more constructive<lb/>
wavs to deal with the world<lb/>
J<lb/>
The 1980s, so much like the 1950s<lb/>
in other ways, has at last generated<lb/>
its own brand of McCarthyism. In<lb/>
the '50s, the commies were lurking<lb/>
around every corner, just waiting to<lb/>
pollute your child's precious bodily<lb/>
fluids; it was taken as self-evident<lb/>
that the commies were the root of all<lb/>
evil. In the the era of glasnost, the<lb/>
word "commie" has been ex-<lb/>
changed for "druggie" (or, in many<lb/>
versions, "drug pusher"), but the<lb/>
tone, style and content are virtually<lb/>
identical. And the argument is still<lb/>
as valid.<lb/>
?'M 5wKf?5er Vme FTHo$e 5ToDem rWe Gutto rlofcT A?- Au T"hk Csikcvcn!<lb/>
Dukakis a blatant liberal<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes<lb/>
letters expressing all points of view.<lb/>
Mail or drop them by our office in the<lb/>
Pubications Building, across from<lb/>
the entrance of Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all<lb/>
letters must include the name, major<lb/>
and classification, address, phone<lb/>
number, and signature of the<lb/>
author(s). Letters are limited to 3(X)<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
words or less, double spaced or neatly<lb/>
printed. All letters are subject to ed-<lb/>
iting for brevity, obscenity, and libel,<lb/>
and no personal attacks will be per-<lb/>
mitted. Students, faculty and staff<lb/>
writing letters for this page are re<lb/>
minded that they are limited to one<lb/>
every two weeks. The deadline for<lb/>
editorial material is 5 p.m. Friday for<lb/>
Tuesday's edition and 5 p.m. Tues<lb/>
day for Thursday's edition.<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Many, including many liberals,<lb/>
arc trying to portray Mike Dukakis as<lb/>
a "conservative" or "moderate<lb/>
Dukakis is neither, however. He's a<lb/>
liberal who shares many of the views<lb/>
of the ultra-liberal Jesse Jackson.<lb/>
Why are some people trying to<lb/>
present Dukakis as not liberal? Be-<lb/>
cause the word "liberal" is a dirty<lb/>
word in politics today. Liberal poli-<lb/>
cies have proven to be tremendous<lb/>
failures in every arena, from foreign<lb/>
policy to social spending, from moral<lb/>
issues to education.<lb/>
A solid majority of the American<lb/>
people identify themselves as con-<lb/>
servative. Mike Dukakis's views do<lb/>
not reflect the views, values, beliefs,<lb/>
or needs of the vast majority of the<lb/>
American people.<lb/>
I challenge anyone who claims<lb/>
that Dukakis is not a liberal to exam-<lb/>
ine the simple facts. How could<lb/>
Dukakis: want to kill our missile<lb/>
defenses  be against the Pledge of<lb/>
Allegiance  favor outlawing fire-<lb/>
arms  veto a bill that mandates<lb/>
sentences for drug pushers  favor<lb/>
abortion-on-demand  favor forced<lb/>
busing, the ERA, quotas, and compa-<lb/>
rable worth  spend, spend, spend<lb/>
and tax, tax, tax  say Lt. Col. Oliver<lb/>
North is not a hero.<lb/>
Commute the sentences of over<lb/>
50 murderers  give vacations to<lb/>
non-parolable rapists and killers <lb/>
fund pro-communist enemies of the<lb/>
U.S.  toast the communist revolu-<lb/>
tion in Red China  try to repeal the<lb/>
laws against blasphemy, fornication,<lb/>
unnatural acts, crimes against nature<lb/>
with "man or beast" and promote<lb/>
lethal behavior with gay rights laws<lb/>
? and be construed by any stretch of<lb/>
the imagination as anvthing but an<lb/>
ultra-lilvral?<lb/>
James Thompson<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Buccaneer racist?<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
To editor of 1988 Buccaneer,<lb/>
Kimberly E. Kayes:<lb/>
After viewing the 1988 Bucca-<lb/>
neer ! became very disgusted that<lb/>
there were no reviews of the activities<lb/>
the black students on this campus<lb/>
experienced and enjoyed the past<lb/>
academic year. In the section entitled<lb/>
"Performances" I couldn't believe<lb/>
that one of East Carolina's biggest<lb/>
concerts was not included.<lb/>
I am referring to the Anita Baker<lb/>
concert that was held last fall<lb/>
semester. Ms. Kayes, you nor your<lb/>
staff overlooked highlights from the<lb/>
Fizz or the Jimmy Buffet concert. I am<lb/>
aware that East Carolina if a pre-<lb/>
dominately white school but then<lb/>
are black students enrolled here.<lb/>
The Bvrcaneer also includes<lb/>
events such as Greek Week, Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi Toga Party, Phi Tau Chill Thrill<lb/>
and even the incident which occured<lb/>
on Biltmore Street. If fails to include<lb/>
such events as Greek Step shows and<lb/>
minority day. I am outraged that<lb/>
every group of students cannot be<lb/>
fairly represented.<lb/>
In essence, I feel that the Bucca-<lb/>
neer is a bad representation of the<lb/>
student as a whole at ECU.<lb/>
Adnarial Boot<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Dukakis spends<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
The statement "the Reagan<lb/>
Administration is responsible for the<lb/>
federal deficit" is a politically moti-<lb/>
vated lie. Let's look at the facts, not<lb/>
Democratic rhetoric.<lb/>
FACT: The percentage of the<lb/>
GNP going toward defense spending<lb/>
has declined since 1960?while wel-<lb/>
fare outlays increased from 4.87 to<lb/>
10.87c of the GNP.<lb/>
FACT: The President doesn't<lb/>
spend the money. Congress does,<lb/>
and it's the liberal Democrat majority<lb/>
in congress which is responsible for<lb/>
the deficit.<lb/>
FACT: Since 1980, federal reve-<lb/>
nues, despite Reagan's tax cuts, have<lb/>
risen 77, while spending has risen<lb/>
79. Thus, 977c of the current deficit<lb/>
is now the e' feet of pre-Rcagan liberal<lb/>
Democrat spending-and-taxing<lb/>
sprees.<lb/>
FACT: During the last year of<lb/>
Republican control of the Senate,<lb/>
congress endorsed Reagan's eco-<lb/>
nomic policies?policies responsible<lb/>
for reducing the federal deficit for<lb/>
1987 by $73 billion to 1.77c of the<lb/>
GNP, the lowest proportion of GNP<lb/>
since 1982.<lb/>
FACT: Since then, the Democrats<lb/>
have ignored the Republicans' ear-<lb/>
nest actions on deficit reduction and<lb/>
have ignored Reagan's budget plans.<lb/>
Instead, they've spent $89 billion<lb/>
more than Reagan requested, mostly<lb/>
with pork barrel spending sprees,<lb/>
and then blamed the Reagan admini-<lb/>
stration for the huge deficit they cre-<lb/>
ated!<lb/>
FACT: Michael Dukakis has ru-<lb/>
ined Massachusetts economy with<lb/>
his huge tax-and-spend policies. In<lb/>
1986, Massachusetts had a deficit<lb/>
surplus of $912 million. Today, the<lb/>
state faces a $600 million deficit.<lb/>
Massachusetts has lost 90,000 indus-<lb/>
trial jobs since 1984. The 1978-1983<lb/>
"Massachusetts Miracle" occurred<lb/>
because of Proposition 2 (a major tax<lb/>
cut)and huge defense contracts, both<lb/>
o( which Dukakis opposed.<lb/>
The deficit will reniain until<lb/>
Republicans control the presidency<lb/>
and Congress.<lb/>
Mary- Ford ham<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Political Sciena<lb/>
Jones rebutted<lb/>
lo the editor:<lb/>
ToWyattM. J?es IV:<lb/>
Wyalt thank vou for vou- latest<lb/>
I" tier. certainly confirmed mv a-<lb/>
.sumptions about your information<lb/>
coming from some bad dream. All of<lb/>
your information came from the<lb/>
Spectrum, one of the most liberal<lb/>
media productions ever.<lb/>
Vvatt you said that I was not<lb/>
intelligent enough to debate the is<lb/>
sues, that I could only cloud our dis-<lb/>
cussion with mudslinging. that re-<lb/>
ally hurt but I got over it partying<lb/>
downtown rhursday night. You may<lb/>
be right about my intelligence, but<lb/>
everybody can' ? be a freshman politi-<lb/>
cal science major. I'm sorry about the<lb/>
mudslinging, but ;s my ole Irish<lb/>
Grandmother Maggie used to say, "It<lb/>
vou can't handle the heat get out of<lb/>
? tire<lb/>
On the serious side VVyatt, n the<lb/>
last lew weeks we have had a spree oi<lb/>
people shooting our children at<lb/>
schools in South Carolina and Flor-<lb/>
ida. How can anvone vote for a man<lb/>
like Dukakis who doesn't support<lb/>
the death penalty for these people.<lb/>
The unemployment rte has fallen<lb/>
again to a new low. Major investment<lb/>
firms are predicting lower interest<lb/>
rates and low inflation coupled with<lb/>
strong growth in the G"P next year.<lb/>
We are the strongest country in the<lb/>
world, no other countrv's people are<lb/>
as free as ours.<lb/>
Why should we risk all this on a<lb/>
man whose idea or freedom is letting<lb/>
murderers out on weekend passes. A<lb/>
man who let a billion dollar surplus<lb/>
turn into a four-hundred-million<lb/>
dollar deficit in his state. A man<lb/>
whose own police department en-<lb/>
dorses his opponent. A man whose<lb/>
smile looks like Jimmy Carter, when<lb/>
we can have George Bush. A man<lb/>
with good ole common sense and<lb/>
Southern Christian ethics.<lb/>
Bobby R. Hall Jr.<lb/>
Senior Mgmt.<lb/>
ECU Chairman for Bush 88<lb/>
POWs existence still denied by Laotions<lb/>
By BRYAN HASKINS<lb/>
Campus Spcrtnim<lb/>
With the recent arrest of two activists in Laos, the<lb/>
POWMIA issue has once again been thrust into the<lb/>
spotlight. It has been well over a decade since the<lb/>
United States withdrew from the Indochina conflict,<lb/>
yet people are still striving to learn the fate of their<lb/>
brothers, fathers, husbands, and sons. Why? What is<lb/>
it that leads them to believe that American, dead or<lb/>
alive, are being witheld from returning?<lb/>
In the years since the U.S. pullout, there have<lb/>
been literally thousands of sightings by refugees<lb/>
who have fled Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. A<lb/>
good number of these have been proven to be fal-<lb/>
sified, perhaps in the hopes of gaining preferential<lb/>
treatment by U.S. immigration authorities. Many,<lb/>
however, have neither been proved nor disproved,<lb/>
thus casting a shadow of doubt on Vietnamese<lb/>
claims that uVro are no Americans left a'ive. Still,<lb/>
there has been a great deal of bureaucratic foot-<lb/>
dragging on this sensitive issue; and the American<lb/>
public has grown weary of looking backwards.<lb/>
This does not, however, change the fact that<lb/>
there are approximately 2,500 Americans listed as<lb/>
missing in action. For years the government listed<lb/>
almost all of the MI As "presumed dead until a<lb/>
breakthrough occured in 1980. In April of that year,<lb/>
a rebel patrol operating in Laos contacted the CIA,<lb/>
claiming that 30 Americans were being held in an<lb/>
open-air prison camp in Laos. In late 1980, a U.S.<lb/>
reconnaissance satellite was "bumped" into an orbit<lb/>
over the camp. The resulting photograph revealed<lb/>
"30 non-Asian by measurable length of shadow"<lb/>
means that the prisoners are Caucasians, which<lb/>
could make them anything from French to Austra-<lb/>
lian to American.<lb/>
The "figure 52" is significant, because it was the<lb/>
symbol that American POWs used during the war to<lb/>
signal their presence to reconnaissance pilots. The<lb/>
newly elected Reagan administration became con-<lb/>
vinced of a U.S. POW presence, and the Joint Special<lb/>
Operation Center was given the go-ahead to formu-<lb/>
late a rescue operation. Helicopter pilots capable of<lb/>
the mission were identified, and a model of the camp<lb/>
was constructed at Ft. Bragg for training use by the<lb/>
Delta Force. The operation, however, wasbegun too<lb/>
late to avoid the monsoon season. Furthermore, a<lb/>
private rescue mission failed to reach the camp, and<lb/>
the prisoners were removed to a hidden location.<lb/>
The offical mission was then dropped.<lb/>
In July of 1981, the Socialist Republic of Vietnam<lb/>
returned the remains of Commander Ronald Dodge.<lb/>
Up until the time he was returned, the Vietnamese<lb/>
claimed that they had never held him, even though<lb/>
a Japanese news agency had filmed Commander<lb/>
Dodge while he was being held alive as a POW<lb/>
during the war. The U.S. know that the Vietnamese<lb/>
were lying when they said that all the POWs and all<lb/>
remains that they were holding have been returned<lb/>
in "Operation Homecoming We knew that Com-<lb/>
mander Dodge was still being held; yet the powers<lb/>
thai be obliterated him with the stroke of a pen just<lb/>
as surely as if the mountains of the central highlands<lb/>
had fallen upon him and swallowed him up.<lb/>
In 1954, the Geneva Accords were signed, the<lb/>
French pulled out of Indochina, and North Vietnam<lb/>
returned what it said were all of the POWs it was<lb/>
holding. They were lying then, too. In 1980, a French<lb/>
naval pilot escaped from Vietnam, having been held<lb/>
for 26 years.<lb/>
In 1969, Laos claimed to be holding over 158<lb/>
American POWs. To this date, only one has been<lb/>
returned (Emmit Kay ? 1974), yet now Laos claims<lb/>
that they are not holding any American POWs<lb/>
Where are the rest of them, then? Have the moun-<lb/>
tains fallen upon them as well?<lb/>
Martfi<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP)<lb/>
Hatcher did not make anyl<lb/>
demand on the federal g<lb/>
ment during negotiations<lb/>
lease hostages at The Robe)<lb/>
newspaper Feb. 1, Go<lb/>
Martin's chief of staff tej<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Phil Kirk, who earlu<lb/>
testified for the prosecutio<lb/>
called this morning b<lb/>
"Did 1 ever make a d<lb/>
that the government of the<lb/>
States do anythii .<lb/>
asked.<lb/>
"Indirectly, vou did<lb/>
you said you would rv I<lb/>
to any local rst <lb/>
said. But Kirk said he did<lb/>
gest that Hatch. -<lb/>
highway patr<lb/>
law officers other th<lb/>
Hatcher is chai<lb/>
eral h ? I<lb/>
quires that son - <lb/>
mand on the I<lb/>
Timothy a - -J<lb/>
fendant, <lb/>
charge earlier I ? -<lb/>
The two si<lb/>
manufacture I<lb/>
conspiracv and<lb/>
threat.<lb/>
Under<lb/>
Kirk said he str<lb/>
federal in r 'tingj<lb/>
Hatcher tv 1<lb/>
ion the- ndef<lb/>
one else, i va? trying<lb/>
negotiations open a<lb/>
side would say 'th<lb/>
and break off :<lb/>
cause who knows<lb/>
have happened tl<lb/>
Hatch. -<lb/>
attorney Martha Get<lb/>
Wolenskv oi '<lb/>
Service in Lou -<lb/>
whom testified tl<lb/>
called them sa<lb/>
that indicated<lb/>
involvement in dr I<lb/>
"Did Mr. H tell vf<lb/>
11 of the pee:<lb/>
map had aln<lb/>
and charged with 1<lb/>
tions?"<lb/>
Assistant US - ' '<lb/>
Bruce asked Wolc nsl<lb/>
"No Wolensk<lb/>
Hatcher's final ?<lb/>
j.T. Freeman, said he<lb/>
maps Hatcher had and v a<lb/>
to have them in hjs hous<lb/>
"I said, 'Man ! d n I<lb/>
see this Freeman said;<lb/>
that he let Hatcher so, i<lb/>
night in his home al<lb/>
maps.<lb/>
"I was seared to I<lb/>
anywhere and scare !<lb/>
there Freeman sa 1<lb/>
earlv that morning anc<lb/>
relief 1 had when Eddie<lb/>
Attorneys f r qi<lb/>
catcd thev have a few wl<lb/>
left before they close then<lb/>
On Tuesday<lb/>
that he and hatcher agreed<lb/>
one would get hurt dui<lb/>
seigewould get hurt dui<lb/>
siege.<lb/>
"We didn t want ai<lb/>
frontation with anybod)<lb/>
testified. We ju<lb/>
get in and get i<lb/>
and Hatcher decided <lb/>
The Robesonian office hcj<lb/>
AIDS protesl<lb/>
shut down F<lb/>
ROCKVTLLE, Md.<lb/>
Hundreds of demonstrajj<lb/>
grv with the<lb/>
government's response<lb/>
AIDS crisis effectively shj<lb/>
the Food and<lb/>
Administration s heads<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Authorities had arrl<lb/>
least 50 protesters bj<lb/>
momino. Demonstrative<lb/>
said thgy were aiming tej<lb/>
rests bv earlv afternoon<lb/>
Scores of federal ei<lb/>
were stranded outsj<lb/>
sprawling 17-story<lb/>
when Montgomery Lot<lb/>
lice stopped letting woj<lb/>
side at 730 am.<lb/>
The FDA had plannj<lb/>
5,000 employees to an<lb/>
and use a rear enfranci<lb/>
For The Re<lb/>
The East Carolinian w<lb/>
acknowledge the for fel<lb/>
the Brody Scholarship:<lb/>
Lewis Cannon, Lauri<lb/>
Peeples, Thomas J. Ellis<lb/>
Mangum<lb/>
A story was run<lb/>
Tuesday's paper about<lb/>
Scholars which did noj<lb/>
fellows and we apologu<lb/>
inconvenience.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER H, 1988 5<lb/>
Martin's chief of staff testifies<lb/>
l c N '<lb/>
iberal<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
rebutted<lb/>
the<lb/>
i<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? tht<lb/>
px -rt<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
a re<lb/>
n is let!<lb/>
t s A<lb/>
tus<lb/>
 million<lb/>
A man<lb/>
?<lb/>
n whose<lb/>
rtcr, v<lb/>
c Bush<lb/>
? ? tall ir<lb/>
Mmt.<lb/>
ns<lb/>
rn<lb/>
- rh<lb/>
ISl<lb/>
? ds<lb/>
. the<lb/>
. ictnam<lb/>
?iWs 1 ??? -x<lb/>
i In 1  a French<lb/>
having been held<lb/>
 holding over 1 S<lb/>
nlv one has been<lb/>
: . ? now 1 aos claims<lb/>
American POWs<lb/>
then" Have the moun-<lb/>
RALE1CH (AP) - Eddie<lb/>
1 latcher did not make any direct<lb/>
demand on the federal govern-<lb/>
ment during negotiations to re-<lb/>
lease hostages at The Robesonian<lb/>
newspaper Feb. 1, Gov. )im<lb/>
Martin's chief of staff testified<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Phil Kirk, who earlier had<lb/>
testified for the prosecution, was<lb/>
called this morning bv 1 latcher.<lb/>
"Did 1 ever make a demand<lb/>
that the government of the United<lb/>
States do anything?" Hatcher<lb/>
asked<lb/>
Indirectly, you did in that<lb/>
you said you would not surrender<lb/>
to any local or state officials Kirk<lb/>
said. But Kirk said he did not sug-<lb/>
gest that Hatcher surrender to<lb/>
highway patrol troopers or state<lb/>
law officers other than the SB1.<lb/>
Hatcher is charged with fed-<lb/>
eral hostage-taking, which re-<lb/>
quires that someone make a de-<lb/>
mand on the federal government.<lb/>
Timothy Jacobs, Hatcher's co-de-<lb/>
fendant, was acquitted on the<lb/>
charge earlier this week.<lb/>
The two still face charges of<lb/>
manufacture o illegal firearms.<lb/>
conspiracy and making a bomb<lb/>
threat.<lb/>
Under crossea mi nation,<lb/>
Kirk said he stressed the word<lb/>
federal in negotiating with<lb/>
Hatcher because "it was my opin-<lb/>
ion they would surrender to no<lb/>
one else. 1 was trving to keep the<lb/>
negotiations open so that neither<lb/>
side would sav 'the heck with it'<lb/>
and break off negotiations be-<lb/>
cause who knows what could<lb/>
have happened then<lb/>
Hatcher also called Raleigh<lb/>
attorney Martha Geer and John<lb/>
Wolenskv of th ' U.S. Customs<lb/>
Service in Louisiana, both of<lb/>
whom testified that Hatcher<lb/>
called them saving he had maps<lb/>
that indicated law enforcement<lb/>
involvement in drug trafficking.<lb/>
"Did Mr. Hatcher tell you that<lb/>
11 of the people named on that<lb/>
map had already been arrested<lb/>
and charged w ith narcotics viola-<lb/>
tions" '<lb/>
Assistant U.S. Attorney ohn<lb/>
Bruce asked Wolenskv.<lb/>
"No Wolenskv responded<lb/>
Hatcher's final witness, the Rev.<lb/>
IT. Freeman, said he saw the<lb/>
map-1 latcher had and was scared<lb/>
to have them in his house.<lb/>
1 said, 'Man, 1 don't want to<lb/>
see this Freeman said, adding<lb/>
that he let Hatcher spend the<lb/>
night in his home after seeing the<lb/>
maps.<lb/>
I was scared to carry him<lb/>
anywhere and scared to leave him<lb/>
there Freeman said. "He left<lb/>
early that morning and what a<lb/>
relief 1 had when Eddie left<lb/>
Attornevs for Jacobs indi-<lb/>
cated they have a few witnessc?<lb/>
left before they close their case.<lb/>
On Tuesday acobs testified<lb/>
that he and hatcher agreed that no<lb/>
one would get hurt during the<lb/>
seigewould get hurt during the<lb/>
siege.<lb/>
"We didn't want any con-<lb/>
frontation with anybody Jacobs<lb/>
testified. "We just figured we'd<lb/>
get in and get out Jacobs said he<lb/>
and Hatcher decided to take over<lb/>
The Robesonian office because it<lb/>
AIDS protestors<lb/>
shut down FDA<lb/>
RCXKVILLE, Md. (AP) -<lb/>
Hundreds of demonstrators an-<lb/>
grv with the federal<lb/>
government's response to the<lb/>
AIDS crisis effectively shut down<lb/>
the Food and Drug<lb/>
Administration's headquarters<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Authorities had arrested at<lb/>
least 50 protesters by mid-<lb/>
mornino. Demonstration leaders<lb/>
said thgv were aiming for 300 ar-<lb/>
rests bv earlv afternoon.<lb/>
Scores of federal employees<lb/>
were stranded outside the<lb/>
sprawling 17-story building<lb/>
when Montgomery County po-<lb/>
lice stopped letting workers in-<lb/>
side at 7:30 a.m.<lb/>
The FDA had planned for its<lb/>
5,000 employees to arrive earlv<lb/>
and use a rear entrance.<lb/>
For The Record<lb/>
The East Carolinian wishes to<lb/>
acknowledge the for fellows of<lb/>
the Brody Scholarship: Michael<lb/>
Lewis Cannon, Laura Harris<lb/>
Peeples, Thomas J Ellis and Kim<lb/>
Mangum.<lb/>
A story was run in last<lb/>
Tuesday s paper about the Brody<lb/>
Scholars which did not list the<lb/>
fellows and we apologize for the<lb/>
inconvenience.<lb/>
would be a good way to draw at-<lb/>
tention to their concern about<lb/>
problems in Robeson County.<lb/>
"We agreed that nobody<lb/>
would be hurt at Hie Robe-<lb/>
sonian Jacobs said. And we<lb/>
agreed that we would be in and<lb/>
out of there in two hours because<lb/>
we thought Governor Martin<lb/>
would call when Eddie wanted to<lb/>
talk to him<lb/>
Also Tuesday, U.S. District<lb/>
fudge Terrence Boyle said he had<lb/>
made a "written notation" during<lb/>
a bench conference to cite one ot<lb/>
Jacobs' attorneys, Lewis Pitts, for<lb/>
contempt of court. Boyle did not<lb/>
disclose what prompted the con<lb/>
tempt citation, saving he would<lb/>
decide punishment at the conclu-<lb/>
sion oi the trial.<lb/>
Pitts, asked what brought the<lb/>
citation, said, "1 have no comment<lb/>
on that. 1 am just very troubled<lb/>
that the judge has ruled as irrele<lb/>
vant every major defense we have<lb/>
brought up to bring out the injus-<lb/>
tice in Robeson County<lb/>
Bovle has ruled that 1 latcher<lb/>
and Jacobs cannot use the "neces<lb/>
sitv defense which is an attempt<lb/>
to justify their actions on the<lb/>
premise that their lives were in<lb/>
danger. Based on that ruling, the<lb/>
judge has not allowed evidence<lb/>
attempting to show that drug traf-<lb/>
ficking was widespread in the<lb/>
county prior to the Feb. 1 takeover<lb/>
of the newspaper and that there<lb/>
was discrimination against Indi-<lb/>
ans and blacks.<lb/>
acobs testified that Hatcher<lb/>
told him two days before the Feb.<lb/>
1 takeover that Robeson County<lb/>
Sheriff Hubert Stone wanted to<lb/>
kill him because of evidence he<lb/>
had linking law enforcement offi-<lb/>
cers to drug trafficking.<lb/>
"I asked him why the sheriff<lb/>
would want to do that Jacobs<lb/>
testified. "He showed me some<lb/>
maps with names on them and 1<lb/>
said 'Oh mv God, with what<lb/>
you've eot, thev will kill you<lb/>
"There was no doubt in my<lb/>
mind, just from my own knowl-<lb/>
edge of drug kingpins in Robeson<lb/>
County, th.it what he had was<lb/>
hot Jacobs said.<lb/>
Jacobs said he and Hatcher<lb/>
considered takingover thecounty<lb/>
courthouse, but decided it was<lb/>
too large. 1 le said the two agreed<lb/>
on I he Robesonian as their target<lb/>
on Jan 30, and took over the<lb/>
newspaper two days later.<lb/>
YOUR SPORTS STATION<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
luting &amp; Drinking<lb/>
MONDAY NITE<lb/>
Month of fundays<lb/>
OKTOBERFEST 88<lb/>
Come celel rate the sea ? <lb/>
good food and go d I<lb/>
moi tl ?1 ?'?? ibelh -???<lb/>
For a ;??:? I!<lb/>
he evei ng meal,<lb/>
- f ? .?? ?:? i jl ?<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
AND ALL MAJ( )R SPORTING EVEN<lb/>
Casual Dining at its Finest<lb/>
! ! famous Il . I Margaritas!<lb/>
.OCATED BEHIND QUIN SAND Ac E CLEANERS<lb/>
l. THE FARM FRESH SI IOPPING CENTER<lb/>
ll am-1 am Monday S . , 11 am 10 : rtday 355-2946<lb/>
(??!don't Want<lb/>
a lot of hype.<lb/>
I just want<lb/>
something I<lb/>
can count onW<lb/>
Some long distance o<lb/>
parties promise y u the m x u<lb/>
but what you realK want is de<lb/>
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Thai's just what you II gel when<lb/>
you ch x se AIXT Long I Hstanct<lb/>
Service, at a cost that's a - i less<lb/>
than you think Vu can expect<lb/>
low long distance rates, 24-hour<lb/>
operator assistance, clear con<lb/>
nections and immediate credit<lb/>
tor wrong numbers And the<lb/>
assurance that virtually all i<lb/>
vour calls will go through the<lb/>
first time That's tht genius I<lb/>
the ASM Worldwide Intel! -<lb/>
Netw rk<lb/>
When it's nine tocho st<lb/>
forget the gimmicks and mak<lb/>
the intelligent choice. i!<lb/>
fyoud like to know m<lb/>
about our products! ?r services,<lb/>
like International Calling and<lb/>
the AI&amp;T Card, call us at<lb/>
1 Si h222 W N i<lb/>
AT&amp;T<lb/>
The right choice.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0006"/><lb/>
WL-<lb/>
fMl CfH$iKClcN!<lb/>
iberal<lb/>
i ge defense contracts, both<lb/>
hikakis opposed.<lb/>
deficit will remain until<lb/>
:ans control the presidency<lb/>
teress.<lb/>
Mary Fordham<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
es rebutted<lb/>
he editor:<lb/>
'vattM.J???s IV:<lb/>
 tlunk you for your latest<lb/>
I certainly confirmed my as-<lb/>
ms about youfinformation<lb/>
(from some bad dream. All of<lb/>
formation came from the<lb/>
one of the most liberal<lb/>
'actions ever.<lb/>
Ltt you said that 1 was not<lb/>
nt enough to debate the is<lb/>
it 1 could only cloud our dis-<lb/>
with mudslingingr that re-<lb/>
 but I got over it partying<lb/>
Ivvn Thursday night. You may<lb/>
about my intelligence, but<lb/>
iy can' ? be a freshman politi-<lb/>
nce major. I'm sorry about the<lb/>
lging, but s my ole Irish<lb/>
?ther Maggie used to say, "If<lb/>
l"i handle the heat get out of<lb/>
he serious side Wyatt, in the<lb/>
p weeks we have had a spree of<lb/>
shooting our children at<lb/>
in South Carolina and Flor-<lb/>
fw can anyone vote for a man<lb/>
lkakis who doesn't support<lb/>
ith penalty for these people,<lb/>
employment rte has fallen<lb/>
i a new low. Major investment<lb/>
ire predicting lower interest<lb/>
fid low inflation coupled with<lb/>
growth in the GNP next year.<lb/>
the strongest country in the<lb/>
I no other country's people are<lb/>
as ours.<lb/>
iy should we risk all this on a<lb/>
lose idea of freedom is letting<lb/>
rs out on weekend passes. A<lb/>
ho let a billion dollar surplus<lb/>
tto a four-hundred-million<lb/>
I deficit in his state. A man<lb/>
own police department en-<lb/>
I his opponent. A man whose<lb/>
oks like Jimmy Carter, when<lb/>
have George Bush. A man<lb/>
ood ole common sense and<lb/>
Irn Christian ethics.<lb/>
Bobby R. Hall Jr.<lb/>
Senior Mgmt.<lb/>
ECU Chairman for Bush 88<lb/>
ns<lb/>
oming We knew that Com-<lb/>
still being held; yet 'he powers<lb/>
with the stroke of a pen just<lb/>
kntains of the central highlands<lb/>
md swallowed him up.<lb/>
tieva Accords were signed, the<lb/>
J Indochina, and North Vietnam<lb/>
Id were all of the POWs it was<lb/>
lying then, too. In 1980, a French<lb/>
from Vietnam, having been held<lb/>
Jaimed to be holding over 158<lb/>
this date, only one has been<lb/>
IV 1974), yet now Laos claims<lb/>
riding any American POWs.<lb/>
f them, then? Have the moun-<lb/>
em as well?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13,1968 5<lb/>
Martin's chief of staff testifies<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - Eddie<lb/>
Hatcher did not make any direct<lb/>
demand on the federal govern-<lb/>
ment during negotiations to re-<lb/>
lease hostages at The Robesonian<lb/>
newspaper Feb. 1, Gov. Jim<lb/>
Martin's chief of staff testified<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Phil Kirk, who earlier had<lb/>
testified for the prosecution, was<lb/>
called this morning by Hatcher.<lb/>
"Did I ever make a demand<lb/>
would be a good way to draw at-<lb/>
tention to their concern about<lb/>
problems in Robeson County.<lb/>
"We agreed that nobody<lb/>
would be hurt at The Robe-<lb/>
sonian Jacobs said. "And we<lb/>
agreed that we would be in and<lb/>
out of there in two hours because<lb/>
we thought Governor Martin<lb/>
would call when Eddie wanted to<lb/>
talk to him<lb/>
told him two days before the Feb. "There was no doubt in my<lb/>
1 takeover that Robeson County mmd' M from my own knowl-<lb/>
Sheriff Hubert Stone wanted to<lb/>
kill him because of evidence he<lb/>
had linking law enforcement offi-<lb/>
cers to drug trafficking.<lb/>
"I asked him why the sheriff<lb/>
would want to do that Jacobs<lb/>
testified. "He showed me some<lb/>
maps with names on them and I<lb/>
said 'Oh my God, with what<lb/>
that the government of the United Judge Terrence Boyle said he had<lb/>
States do anything?" Hatcher made a "written notation" during<lb/>
asked. a bench conference to cite one of<lb/>
"Indirectly, you did in that Jacobs' attorneys, Lewis Pitts, for<lb/>
you said you would not surrender contempt of court. Boyle did not<lb/>
to any local or state officials Kirk disclose what prompted the con-<lb/>
said. But Kirk said he did not sug- tempt citation, saying he would<lb/>
gest that Hatcher surrender to decide punishment at the conclu-<lb/>
highway patrol troopers or state sion of the trial,<lb/>
law officers other than the SBI. Pitts, asked what brought the<lb/>
Hatcher is charged with fed- citation, said, "I have no comment<lb/>
eral hostage-taking, which re- on that. I am just very troubled<lb/>
quires that someone make a de- that the judge has ruled as irrele-<lb/>
mand on the federal government, vant every major defense we have<lb/>
Timothy Jacobs, Hatcher's co-de- brought up to bring out the injus-<lb/>
fendant, was acquitted on the tice in Robeson County<lb/>
charge earlier this week. Boyle has ruled that Hatcher<lb/>
The two still face charges of and Jacobs cannot use the "neces-<lb/>
manufacture of illegal firearms, sity defense which is an attempt<lb/>
conspiracy and making a bomb to justify their actions on the<lb/>
threat. premise that their lives were in<lb/>
Under cross-examination, danger. Based on that ruling, the<lb/>
Kirk said he stressed the word judge has not allowed evidence<lb/>
federal in negotiating with attempting to show that drug traf-<lb/>
Hatcherbecause"itwasmyopin- ficking was widespread in the<lb/>
ion they would surrender to no county prior to the Feb. 1 takeover<lb/>
one else. I was trying to keep the of the newspaper and that there<lb/>
Also Tuesday, U.S. District you've got, they will kill you<lb/>
edge of drug kingpins in Robeson<lb/>
County, that what he had was<lb/>
hot Jacobs said.<lb/>
Jacobs said he and Hatcher<lb/>
considered taking over the county<lb/>
courthouse, but decided it was<lb/>
too large. He said the two agreed<lb/>
on The Robesonian as their target<lb/>
on Jan. 30, and took over the<lb/>
newspaper two days later.<lb/>
negotiations open so that neither<lb/>
side would say 'the heck with it'<lb/>
and break off negotiations be-<lb/>
cause who knows what could<lb/>
have happened then<lb/>
Hatcher also called Raleigh<lb/>
attorney Martha Geer and John<lb/>
Wolensky of the U.S. Customs<lb/>
Service in Louisiana, both of<lb/>
whom testified that Hatcher<lb/>
called them saying he had maps<lb/>
that indicated law enforcement<lb/>
involvement in drug trafficking.<lb/>
"Did Mr. Hatcher tell you that<lb/>
11 of the people named on that<lb/>
map had already been arrested<lb/>
and charged with narcotics viola-<lb/>
tions?"<lb/>
Assistant U.S. Attorney John<lb/>
Bruce asked Wolensky.<lb/>
"No Wolensky responded.<lb/>
Hatcher's final witness, the Rev.<lb/>
J.T. Freeman, said he saw the<lb/>
maps Hatcher had and was scared<lb/>
; ;toih?veihem in his house.<lb/>
I said, 'Man, I don't want to<lb/>
see this Freeman said, adding<lb/>
that he let Hatcher spend the<lb/>
night in his home after seeing the<lb/>
maps.<lb/>
"I was scared to carry him<lb/>
anywhere and scared to leave him<lb/>
there Freeman said. "He left<lb/>
early that morning and what a<lb/>
relief I had when Eddie left<lb/>
Attorneys for Jacobs indi-<lb/>
cated they have a few witnesses<lb/>
left before they close their case.<lb/>
On Tuesday Jacobs testified<lb/>
that he and hatcher agreed that no<lb/>
one would get hurt during the<lb/>
seigewould get hurt during the<lb/>
siege.<lb/>
"We didn't want any con-<lb/>
frontation with anybody Jacobs<lb/>
testified. "We just figured we'd<lb/>
get in and get out Jacobs said he<lb/>
and Hatcher decided to take over<lb/>
The Robesonian office because it<lb/>
AIDS protestors<lb/>
shut down FDA<lb/>
ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) -<lb/>
Hundreds of demonstrators an-<lb/>
gry with the federal<lb/>
government's response to the<lb/>
AIDS crisis effectively shut down<lb/>
the Food and Drug<lb/>
Administration's headquarters<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Authorities had arrested at<lb/>
least 50 protesters by mid-<lb/>
mornino. Demonstration leaders<lb/>
said thgy were aiming for 300 ar-<lb/>
rests by early afternoon.<lb/>
Scores of federal employees<lb/>
were stranded outside the<lb/>
sprawling 17-story building<lb/>
when Montgomery County po-<lb/>
lice stopped letting workers in-<lb/>
side at 730 a.m.<lb/>
The FDA had planned for its<lb/>
5,000 employees 10 arrive early<lb/>
and use a rear entrance.<lb/>
For The Record<lb/>
The East Carolinian wishes to<lb/>
acknowledge the for fellows of<lb/>
the Brody Scholarship: Michael<lb/>
Lewis Cannon, Laura Harris<lb/>
Peeples, Thomas J. Ellis and Kim<lb/>
Mangum.<lb/>
A story was run in last<lb/>
Tuesday's paper about the Brody<lb/>
Scholars which did not list the<lb/>
fellows and we apologize for the<lb/>
inconvenience.<lb/>
was discrimination against Indi-<lb/>
ans and blacks.<lb/>
Jacobs testified that Hatcher<lb/>
YOUR SPORTS STATION<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
Eating 6i Drinking<lb/>
MONDAY NITE J FOOTBALL<lb/>
AND ALL MAJOR SPORTING EVENTS<lb/>
Casual Dining at its Finest<lb/>
Featuring our soon-to-be-famous Double-Shot Margaritas!<lb/>
LOCATED BEHIND QUINCY'S AND ACE CLEANERS<lb/>
IN THE FARM FRESH SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
11 am-1 am Monday-Saturday 11 am-10 pm Sunday 355-2946<lb/>
Month of fundays.<lb/>
OKTOBERFEST '88.<lb/>
Come celebrate the season with<lb/>
good food and good times this<lb/>
month at Annabelle's Restaurant.<lb/>
For a light breezy lunch,<lb/>
k hearty evening meal,<lb/>
or festive latenight<lb/>
excitement, October at<lb/>
Annabelle's is simply<lb/>
wunderbar! Come join<lb/>
the fun and get into<lb/>
the spirit of<lb/>
Oktoberfest '88.<lb/>
Annabelle's<lb/>
V RESTAURANT &amp; PUB m<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
Greenville Blvd<lb/>
756-0315<lb/>
RESTAURANT &amp; PUB<lb/>
Mon-Thun 11 30 am 11 00 pm<lb/>
Fn Sat 11 30 AM Midnight<lb/>
Sunday 12 Noon 11 00 PM<lb/>
(M don't want<lb/>
hype,<lb/>
want<lb/>
thing I<lb/>
unt on.W<lb/>
Some long distance com-<lb/>
panies promise you the moon,<lb/>
but what you really want is de-<lb/>
pendable, high-quality service.<lb/>
That's just what you'll get when<lb/>
you choose AT&amp;T Long Distance<lb/>
Service, at a cost thats a lot less<lb/>
than you think. You can expect<lb/>
low long distance rates, 24-hour<lb/>
operator assistance, clear con-<lb/>
nections and immediate credit<lb/>
for wrrong numbers. And the<lb/>
assurance that virtually all of<lb/>
your calls will go through the<lb/>
first time. That's the genius of<lb/>
the AI&amp;T WDridwide Intelligent<lb/>
Network.<lb/>
When it's time to choose,<lb/>
forget the gimmicks and make<lb/>
the intelligent choice, AT&amp;T.<lb/>
If youd like to know more<lb/>
about our products or services,<lb/>
like International Calling and<lb/>
the AI&amp;T Card, call us at<lb/>
1800 222-0300.<lb/>
The right choice.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0007"/><lb/>
Tl It EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13,1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
ASAP: To share a 3-bedroom townhouse.<lb/>
No deposit, private bedroom, private<lb/>
bathnxm S183 33mo.13 utilities.<lb/>
Fireplace tanning beds, sauna, weight-<lb/>
room and more Call 355-0700.<lb/>
FEMAI E ROOMMATE NEEDED: For 3<lb/>
bedroom apartment. 13 rent, 13 utili-<lb/>
ties 1 3 deposit Call Wendy at 752-1321.<lb/>
ROOM MA 1 b WAN 1 ED Christian male<lb/>
roommate to share now mobile home. 10<lb/>
minutes trom campus Non-smoker,<lb/>
please Call Hugh at 756-6851 after 5:00<lb/>
p m<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
EOR SA1 E: 1982 Buick Century Limited,<lb/>
 Cruise PS PB High mileage but<lb/>
sharp in good running condition. $2800<lb/>
Call 758 7423 anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1984 Kawasaki GPZ-1100. Ex-<lb/>
cellent condition. Must see. $150000. 758-<lb/>
5513<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1984 Mada B-2000 Pick-up<lb/>
I ligh road miles. Topper. New tires. Ex-<lb/>
cellent condition $3400 Call 757-6281.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1982 Yokswagon jetta 5<lb/>
speed Diesal 87K Excellent condition.<lb/>
$2700 Call 757-6281.<lb/>
STEREO FOR SALE Dual cassette, turn<lb/>
table, digital receiver, 2 speakers Excel-<lb/>
lent condition SI25 Call 756-9420 after 7<lb/>
p m<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
STUDENT TYPING SERVICES: Pro-<lb/>
gressive Solutions, Inc. otters highqual-<lb/>
t inexpensive word processing and<lb/>
other services tor the student. Our high<lb/>
speed laser printing systems vield the<lb/>
highest possible quality in the shortest<lb/>
length ot time Rates start at $2.00 per<lb/>
page and include paper and computer-<lb/>
ized polling check We also offer<lb/>
Resume' production, and other business<lb/>
and professional services Call 757-3111<lb/>
Ml 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/>
sth Street (beside Cubbies) Greenville,<lb/>
PARTTt It vou re having a partv and need<lb/>
a D 1 for trie best music available for par-<lb/>
ties dance, top 40 &amp; beach Call 355-2781,<lb/>
ask tor Morgan<lb/>
AT YOUR SERVICE<lb/>
TvpingTvpingTvping Affordable and<lb/>
Protessional 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 Intercampus Programs 1-<lb/>
800-433-7747.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS Also Cruiseships.<lb/>
$10,000-$105,000vr! Now hiring! 320<lb/>
Listings' (1) 805-687-6000 Ext Oj-1166<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 $K) 00-5150 00dav Call 1-800-932-<lb/>
0528, Ext. 25.<lb/>
NEED OYSTER SHUCKERS AND CA-<lb/>
TERERS: Applv in person at Riverside<lb/>
Oyster Bar, 17N. Green St.<lb/>
NEED MALE AND FEMALE DANC-<lb/>
ERS FOR PRIVATE PARTIES Also<lb/>
need ladies 18-36 vears of age for a legs<lb/>
video. Earnings of $50 per hour and more.<lb/>
Apply in person Monday through Friday,<lb/>
4 p.m. to 530 p.m. to Promotions Co<lb/>
2708-A E. 10th Street No phone calls.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
NEED CASH? Have baseball cards7 Call<lb/>
Earlvis, the mad baseball buver. I pay<lb/>
damn good money for cards of any year,<lb/>
any shape, and any condition If you need<lb/>
party money, Big E is the one to call 757-<lb/>
6366, leave a message.<lb/>
TO BUCK LAWSON AND BUCK<lb/>
BOSCH: Thanks for the spedding week<lb/>
end! You guys are so funny vou kept us in<lb/>
tears' We'll never forget: an O.D. on cream<lb/>
of broccolh; lockjaw margantas; late-<lb/>
night alumni at Crumpeys; a toxic vodka<lb/>
collins; beer spillage in the lap; tomato<lb/>
soup bloody marys, hidden liquor bottles<lb/>
without having to wear speedos, un<lb/>
shelled peanuts and a harmonica at the<lb/>
game; the national anthem serenade; sped<lb/>
dancin with Willy T ; the desertion at<lb/>
American Legion; and overall a rip- roar-<lb/>
ing speddin time (PS - We hope you get<lb/>
heckled for this, vou phone campers!)<lb/>
Love, Betty Sumrell and Betty Peters.<lb/>
TO THE LAMBDA CHI RADIO<lb/>
SHACK PACK Oh God! Is there any<lb/>
thing in that cup7 The trash can doesn't<lb/>
have a liner Oh God' - BS and BP<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: Used Nintendo Car<lb/>
tndges with instructions for re-sale. East<lb/>
Coast Music &amp; Video, 758-4251, 1109<lb/>
Charles Blvd<lb/>
C. EDWARDS Hey. Guess who7 Re<lb/>
member Oct 13, 19877 Kinda blows vour<lb/>
mind, eh7 I just wanted to let vou know-<lb/>
that vou are more special to me than ever.<lb/>
and 1 wanted to thank vou for everything<lb/>
A year ot love, friendship, and incredibly<lb/>
fun times You're the best. See you at<lb/>
lunch Love, CTinssy.<lb/>
THE WAY CAMPUS FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
TWIG FELLOWSHIPS: Are available<lb/>
every Tuesday and Thursday at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
at 2007 Tiffany Dr in 1 lentage Village<lb/>
Call 355-5164 for details 1 lot Bible! Great<lb/>
fellowship!<lb/>
PIKA: Get psyched for our social next<lb/>
Thursday night Love, the AZD's.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO SON) A<lb/>
LOVE: Chi becoming the new 1 lomecom-<lb/>
ing Queen, also to Emily Proctor and<lb/>
Chris Kelly on being 1st and 2nd runners<lb/>
up<lb/>
TO ALL FRATERNITIES AND SO-<lb/>
RORITIES: 1 lave a great Fall Break Love<lb/>
the AZD's<lb/>
PAULA JONES: Congratulations on be<lb/>
coming a new sister of Alpha Xi Delta.<lb/>
Love the AZD's<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON: Congratulations<lb/>
on winning "The 188 East Carolina<lb/>
I lomecoming Spirit Award Let's con<lb/>
tinue our quest for a Cup Rucannun this<lb/>
summer in St. I ouis!<lb/>
SIC EPS &amp; DATES: It started Friday<lb/>
when the float was constructed- at 1:11<lb/>
"Boo-Ga-Ga" was conducted. "Column"<lb/>
was crowned for the upcoming year - take<lb/>
care of that queen oh she's so dear Satur-<lb/>
day a m bv one "new" house we were<lb/>
sane until, until the game we screamed<lb/>
"The Plane The Plane We then rocked<lb/>
the cabin all through the night with<lb/>
hundreds of balloons and twinkly lights.<lb/>
We awoke the next morning to the pop-<lb/>
ping of Cores and that champagne smell -<lb/>
no one was left standing - not even "The<lb/>
Date from I lell ?Thanks, lames'<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: Congrats to our flag foot-<lb/>
ball team on an awesome season. Way to<lb/>
go girls'<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DINNER: The infamous<lb/>
Delta Zeta event is just around the corner.<lb/>
Tickets are S3 and available from anv<lb/>
Delta Zeta sister or pledge. Be there Octo-<lb/>
ber 23 from 5 8 p m.<lb/>
THETA CHI: Congratulations on your<lb/>
chapter trom Delta Zeta<lb/>
DELTA ZETA What a weekend' The<lb/>
food was scrumptious, the house looked<lb/>
great, and Ticia Pilati had a wiggjy date<lb/>
Mane looked beautiful sitting in her chair,<lb/>
mi glad we could all make it there. Slippin<lb/>
and slidin on the kitchen floor, June Smith<lb/>
must be sore. Shelley and Fred were on the<lb/>
go, dancing to the DJ's bad disco We all<lb/>
showed up with cool dates to make a<lb/>
success of I lomecoming '88!<lb/>
LOST: One parMlhTaTTKFChairi-<lb/>
pagne BriincrTTrmtinrl pirate return to<lb/>
shoeless, shadeless, shaky date.<lb/>
HEY KRISTI The weekend started off<lb/>
with a bang, too bad date 1 couldn't<lb/>
hang Well, you found a new date but I<lb/>
kept my Irate. Hope next year is just as<lb/>
much fun, maybe by then you'll learn how<lb/>
to fold your tongue. ?TICIA.<lb/>
W1GGLY AND DATE 2: We love you ?<lb/>
you know who<lb/>
JAMES FORD GRIFFIN?A SIG-EP<lb/>
LEGEND! Thank you so much for one<lb/>
incredible 1 lomecoming weekend! Every<lb/>
aspect was 100 first class! The best<lb/>
Homecoming ever! Fraternally?your<lb/>
Sig Ep Brothers.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI PLEDGES Y'all are doing<lb/>
an excellent job! Keep up the good work.<lb/>
Miss Prez-Ann you should be proud! We<lb/>
love you?The Alpha Phi Sisters. PS.?<lb/>
When is the surprise social? 1 lint I lint<lb/>
SOUND MIXTURES FALL NEWSLET-<lb/>
TER: Oct. 1, Theta Chi and guests set new<lb/>
maximum capacity record at Rotary Club<lb/>
Once again the Rotary neighbors call cops<lb/>
and cops pump down the volume Oct. 7,<lb/>
another Alpha Omicron Pi bash MVP<lb/>
award (most vicious partiers) goes to Sam,<lb/>
Melinda, Teresa and Macon. Slip and<lb/>
slide, snowballs, beer fights, what a mess.<lb/>
Oct. 8, Sigma Phi Epsilon homecoming in<lb/>
the woods Awesome party y'all,<lb/>
Boogaga! Just please don't bump the<lb/>
table! Special thanx to Bassetti, Peterson,<lb/>
1 leim, Boone, Shell, Unchurch, and James<lb/>
Keep the parties coming, Bob-Sound Mix-<lb/>
tures DJ Service, 752-4916<lb/>
THE BROTHERS OF SAE would like to<lb/>
thank all of our guests and dates, we all<lb/>
had a great time this weekend Waldo ?<lb/>
better keep an eye on your brother next<lb/>
time. PS. Is Bolo in the house!<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA PLEDGES We<lb/>
would like to thank vou for helping us on<lb/>
the I lomecoming float. ?Pledges of Pi<lb/>
Kappa Alpha<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA PLEDGE AUCTION:<lb/>
To be held at the Attic Sunday, October 23.<lb/>
All interested parties call 752 9168<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
CHI ALPHA OMEGA Congratulations<lb/>
to our new little sisters Stephanie Folsom,<lb/>
Missy Hargett, Betsy Hicks, Shannon<lb/>
Kenley, Miti Mauldin, Cindi Move,<lb/>
Kathy Orr, Rachael Seavey, Dana Shrum,<lb/>
Susan Wallace, and Sherri Williams<lb/>
Many thanks to Pam Martin for all your<lb/>
hard work We love you all! ?Your broth<lb/>
ers and sisters in Chi Alpha Omicron and<lb/>
in Christ.<lb/>
PIRATE WALK: Would like to thank the<lb/>
Pika's and Alpha Phi for their help with<lb/>
Pirate Walk this week<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
THE SISTERS AND PLEDGES ot<lb/>
ETA TAU ALPHA; Would like to than)<lb/>
Caroline McClelland for a memorabk u I<lb/>
festive Founder's lay Weekend tor all<lb/>
We love you!<lb/>
ZETA'S: ongratulations on turning<lb/>
"s0 " This year's Founder's !a celebra<lb/>
tion in Chapd 1 lill will be the best one yet!<lb/>
1 lave a great Fall Break'<lb/>
Happv 20th B-dav. Jennifer Slotl<lb/>
! ove, Kris BD I leath and Md<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
f<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to live<lb/>
?All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
?And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 ? 5th Street<lb/>
? I-ocated r FCU<lb/>
? Across Trom I hghwjy Pat rol St at lor<lb/>
S3ZS a month<lb/>
Contact J T or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 or aW 1937<lb/>
Office open Apt 8, 12 - 5.V) p m<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS'<lb/>
Clean and quiet one bedroom fumiv-i d<lb/>
apartments, energy eidrieni. (ree wati. and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable .V<lb/>
Couples or single . only $2flS a month, 6 month<lb/>
lease MOBILE HOME RENTALS - coup.es <lb/>
singles Apartn rnt and mobile liomes in Aj<lb/>
Gardens near Brook V alley Country (<lb/>
Contact T iir Tommy Williams<lb/>
T56-781s '<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
'Personal md Confidential I<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M F 8:30 4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
? ? ? M<lb/>
? Pern - ? - - ? i -?- . ? ? -<lb/>
V14" ?????? -<lb/>
1-800 433 2930<lb/>
Your Best Look<lb/>
Specializing In. MANICURES.<lb/>
French Manicures ? Nail Tips ?<lb/>
Overlays ? Wrapping ? Acrylics ?<lb/>
PEDICURES ? SKIN CAREBody<lb/>
Wrapping ? Face &amp; Body Waxing ?<lb/>
' Tacials Deep Pore Gcarising ?<lb/>
Acjm Treatment ? Muscle To no t<lb/>
Treatments ? Complete Line Of<lb/>
Therapeutic Skin Care Products For<lb/>
Men &amp; Women<lb/>
355-29 - For Appointment<lb/>
314 Plaa Dr Greenville<lb/>
SALES POSITION AVAILABLE<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is now accepting applications for an<lb/>
advertising sales representative.<lb/>
Requirements:<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<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Please Include Resume<lb/>
Publications Building"<lb/>
(In Front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
No Phone Calls Please!<lb/>
?SBiHl<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
v ooperative Education, a free service of-<lb/>
vrt.i b, the University, is designed to<lb/>
help vou find career related work experi-<lb/>
before vou graduate. We would like<lb/>
extend an invitation to all students to<lb/>
attend a Co op Information Seminar in the<lb/>
CCB (see schedule below for Oct. Semi-<lb/>
narO The onlv bonuses we can offer you<lb/>
tor taking time from your busv schedule<lb/>
are<lb/>
'extra ash to help cover the cost of college<lb/>
enses or perhaps to increase your<lb/>
fun" budget<lb/>
'opportunities to test a career choice if vou<lb/>
have made one or to explore career op-<lb/>
tion1- it undecided about a future career,<lb/>
and<lb/>
a hifthlv marketable" degree, which<lb/>
include- a valuable career-related experi-<lb/>
ence, when you graduate.<lb/>
Come by to see us todav!<lb/>
Thurs Oct 13, 4 p.m. rm. 2006, Thurs<lb/>
(A-t 20. 1 p m , rm. 2010; Mon Oct. 24,1<lb/>
p.m rm 2010, Thurs Oct. 27, 4 p.m rm.<lb/>
200b; 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 oin us.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
study for Fall Semester andor Spring<lb/>
1 emester, you are encouraged to contact<lb/>
the Co-op office about off-campus place-<lb/>
ments Call 77 6979 or come by the GCB,<lb/>
room 2028<lb/>
LQST2<lb/>
Something missing in your life? We've<lb/>
found it and we want to share it with you.<lb/>
lenkans Art Auditorium EVERY Fri<lb/>
night at 700.<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
If vou are challenged everyday with prob-<lb/>
lems that vou find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
us for the uncompromised word of God.<lb/>
Everv Fn night at 7 00 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE<lb/>
Business students interested in scholar-<lb/>
ships should secure forms from one of the<lb/>
following dept offices: Accounting ?<lb/>
CCB 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/>
applv for one or more of the scholarships<lb/>
listed below Planters Bank Scholarship (3<lb/>
at SI000 eacrO, University Book Exchange<lb/>
( 2 at $500 each), NCNB ($500), J. Fred<lb/>
Hamblen ($200) Credit Women Interna-<lb/>
tional ($200), Cameron-BrownFirst<lb/>
Union Scholarship (3 at $500 each), FOR<lb/>
ACCOUNTING MAJORS ONLY: Latney<lb/>
W. Pittard Memorial, Raleigh-Durham<lb/>
Chapter Institute of Internal Auditors<lb/>
($350), National Association of Account-<lb/>
ants - Eastern Carolina Chapter Scholar-<lb/>
ship ($500) DECISION SCIENCES MA-<lb/>
JOR ONLY: Grant for Decision Sciences<lb/>
Majors ($125), FINANCE MAJORS<lb/>
ONLY: Archie R. Burnette ($600), Ward<lb/>
Real Estate Scholarship ($300).<lb/>
TRAVEL COMMITTEE<lb/>
Attention till 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/>
FINANCIAL MGMT. ASSOC.<lb/>
CASH, VACATION, &amp; PRIZES: HOW?<lb/>
By playing the hottest business game in<lb/>
town sponsored by Wall Street and<lb/>
AT&amp;T. There are over 400 chances to win<lb/>
The top 10 performers will receive a cash<lb/>
prize, with first place performer receiving<lb/>
$25,000 cash; and the top 100 performers<lb/>
each month will receive athletic shoes<lb/>
from Reebok and a wrist watch, courtesy<lb/>
of Beneton by Bulova. You can participate<lb/>
for only $49.95. Interested participants<lb/>
can register on the first floor of the GCB on<lb/>
Wed. and Thurs. between 10-2 p.m. or by<lb/>
contacting Student Financial Mgmt. As-<lb/>
soc. members or call the F1NA dept. 757-<lb/>
6670.<lb/>
UNDERWATER HOCKEY<lb/>
Underwater Hockey games are scheduled<lb/>
from 700 p m. thru 8:30 p.m. at Memorial<lb/>
Gym pool. An approved Club Sport, new<lb/>
members are welcome at any time ?<lb/>
equipment needs include: mask, fins,<lb/>
snorkel. Come out and 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 630-7:30 pjn. 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/>
PRE.PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
HEALTH ALLIANCE<lb/>
The Pre-Professional I lealth Alliance will<lb/>
hold its first meeting of the 88-89 school<lb/>
year, on Thurs. Oct 13, at 5:30 p.m. in<lb/>
room 247 Mendenhall Anv student inter-<lb/>
ested in a health related career is invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
KARATE CLUB<lb/>
If vou are interested in joining the ECU<lb/>
Karate Club, come to Memorial Gym<lb/>
Thurs Oct 13 at 8 00 p.m. for registration<lb/>
and a free demonstration<lb/>
MINORITY CAREER<lb/>
EXPLORATION DAY<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 bv the Office of Minority Student<lb/>
Affairs and Career Planning and Place-<lb/>
ment Services.<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Skiing<lb/>
Tnp registration meeting from Aug. 22 to<lb/>
Oct. 22. Now vou can ski the slopes and<lb/>
learn the ropes in this fun filled trip!<lb/>
3-ON-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 BIO103. Play begins<lb/>
shortlv afterwards! Interested in officiat-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Attend the first officials clinic on Oct<lb/>
SUMMER JOB<lb/>
Dr. Jack Vogt, a representative from the<lb/>
Institute of Government Summer Intern<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 class pic-<lb/>
ture taken for the yearbook now has that<lb/>
chance. Class photographs will be taken<lb/>
Oct. 31-Nov. 4 in the Student Store from 9<lb/>
am. till 12 p m. and 1 p.m to 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
each day The yearbook is not your year-<lb/>
book until you are in it.<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma will hold a business meet-<lb/>
ing Oct. 13th from 7-7:30 p.m. in room 205<lb/>
Austin. All those interested please attend.<lb/>
We will discuss purchasing tee-shirts.<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 through Thurs. from 9:00-4:00.<lb/>
Sovran Bank is offering great terms to full-<lb/>
time students, so come by and apply this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
SKIING TRIP<lb/>
25 at 8:00 p.m. at MG102. For additional<lb/>
info call Dave Hall at 757-6387.<lb/>
CO-REC FLAG FOOTBALL<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Co-Rec<lb/>
Rag Football meeting held Oct. 25 at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. in BIO103. Play begins shortly after-<lb/>
ward! Interested in officiating? Attend the<lb/>
first officials clinic Oct. 25 at 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
MG102. For additional info call Dave<lb/>
I lall at 757-6387.<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Soccer<lb/>
registration meeting held Oct. 19 at 6:00<lb/>
p.m. in GCB 1026. Play begins shortly<lb/>
afterward! For additional info call Dave<lb/>
Hall at 757-6387.<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Volley-<lb/>
ball registration meeting held Oct. 19 at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. in GCB 1026. Play begins shortly<lb/>
afterward! For additional info call Dave<lb/>
Hall at 757-6387.<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. Fri Oct. 14 in 209 Whichard. Re-<lb/>
member all banners will be judged at 4<lb/>
p.m. Wed Oct. 19 at Ficklen Stadium,<lb/>
East service entrance. Call 757-6823 for<lb/>
more info.<lb/>
WYNTON MARSALIS CON-<lb/>
CERT<lb/>
The Dept. of University Unions is proud<lb/>
to present Wynton Marsalis in concert<lb/>
Nov. 1 at 8:00 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Tickets go on sale for this Performing Arts<lb/>
Series event on Mon Oct. 10. Winner of a<lb/>
Grammy Award for both classical and<lb/>
jazz performances, Mr. Marsalis is sure to<lb/>
bring an energetic and entertaining show<lb/>
to Wright Auditorium. For further details,<lb/>
contact: The Central Ticket Office, Men-<lb/>
denhall, or call (919) 757-6611.<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS<lb/>
Expressions is now accepting ptxtrv and<lb/>
short stories for the Dec issue The maga<lb/>
ine is published twice a semester with<lb/>
the first issue coming out in Oct. This<lb/>
special issue will be a small magazine<lb/>
with mainlv general info, whereas the<lb/>
Dec. issue will be a larger size containing<lb/>
news stones, short stones, editorials,<lb/>
poetry, etc. Articles mav be left at the<lb/>
office or at the Media Board Secretary's<lb/>
Office in the Publications Bldg.<lb/>
INTERVIEWING WORK-<lb/>
SHOPS<lb/>
To help ECU people prepare for on and ot t<lb/>
campus interviews, the Career Planning<lb/>
&amp; Placement Service in Bloxton ! louse is<lb/>
offering these one hour programs to aid<lb/>
you in developing better interviewing<lb/>
skills for use in your job search The pro<lb/>
gram is open to the first 20 people to come<lb/>
for each session. No sign up is required<lb/>
These sessions are held in the Career Plan<lb/>
ning Room on Oct. 12 &amp; 20<lb/>
RESUME WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning &amp; Placement Service<lb/>
in Bloxton House is offering these one<lb/>
hour programs on beginning a resume for<lb/>
your job search. Handouts and samples<lb/>
will be given out to the first 20 people to<lb/>
come to each session. No sign up is re-<lb/>
quired. These sessions are held in the<lb/>
Career Planning Room on Oct 11,21 &amp; 2b<lb/>
at 3 p.m.<lb/>
WOMEN VOTERS<lb/>
The League of Women Voters ot<lb/>
Greenville-Pitt County will sponsor a<lb/>
public forum for state legislative candi<lb/>
dates on Oct. 25, at 7:30 p m in the Willis<lb/>
Bldg. at First and Reade Circle in<lb/>
Greenville. On Nov. 1, a second forum<lb/>
will be held, again at 7:30 p.m. in the Willis<lb/>
Bldg for candidates for the Pitt Countv<lb/>
Board of Commissioners.<lb/>
Group photographs will be taken Sept 15<lb/>
until Dec. 2. No group pictures can be<lb/>
taken after Dec. 2. Please note that the<lb/>
group listing with the name of everv per<lb/>
son in the photograph MUST be pre<lb/>
sented BEFORE the photographer films<lb/>
the group. ORGANIZATIONS WITH-<lb/>
OUT LISTINGS WILL NOT BE PHOTO<lb/>
GRAPHED, and time does not permit the<lb/>
scheduling of another session Call 757<lb/>
6501 and leave date &amp; time for the photo to<lb/>
be taken. Please give two days notice for<lb/>
the photographer.<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
The 1987 yearbooks have come in Any<lb/>
one who would like a copy of it may come<lb/>
by the orhce ana pick one up A ai<lb/>
located in front ot ovner 1 ibrar in the<lb/>
Publication- Bldg<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
rhere will be a general meet gl lUAm<lb/>
bassadors ed at 5 15 pm in Menden<lb/>
hall room 221 Remember that missing<lb/>
over 2 meetings p i at mestei ma lead to<lb/>
probation<lb/>
WINDSURFING CLl B<lb/>
There will be a meeting Ot t 2" toorganiz<lb/>
a group trip d1 Whichard s Beach o er the<lb/>
weekend It you are interest) I ts<lb/>
meet in conference room ' '<lb/>
Gym at 6 I<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
An important n MEN<lb/>
who intend to major in the following<lb/>
Business and Distributive Fd Driver s<lb/>
Ed Early Childhood Ed Health Ed In<lb/>
termediate Ed Marketing Ed Mid<lb/>
Grades Ed, Physical Ed Special Ed<lb/>
Technical Fd and Vocational Ed rhc<lb/>
Second Academic Major Required b) I<lb/>
University of N C Board of Governors<lb/>
Oct. 2 from 3:00-5:00 p.m in Wrig<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
LIBRARY SCIENCE 1000<lb/>
LIBS 1000 (2nd block) began CVt 11th &amp;<lb/>
12th (Vt 11th Tues &amp; Thurs, vt 12th<lb/>
Mon At Wed<lb/>
EPISCOPAL STUD1 NT<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
The Episcopal Student Fellowship will be<lb/>
meeting on Wednesdays at 5 30 at St<lb/>
Paul's Episcopal Church on 4th St AH art<lb/>
welcome for Holv Communion dinner<lb/>
and program For more into call Allen<lb/>
Manning at 758 1440<lb/>
ECU STUDENTSSTAFF<lb/>
LSSSJQOETY<lb/>
Volunteers, old clothes &amp; sheets are<lb/>
needed DESPERATELY for the Pirate<lb/>
ClubLSS Society "Ir Spooky Pirate<lb/>
Night Halloween Carnival" to be held<lb/>
Oct 28 from 6-8 p m at the Pirate Club<lb/>
For more info , please contact Beth Smvth<lb/>
or Ann Totaro at 830-931 5, anvtime'<lb/>
SEATJELLEQR SAFETY<lb/>
If you drive a car, then this is for you' Seat<lb/>
Belts For Safety: Don't Dnnk and Pnve A<lb/>
presentation on the campus mall 1 -5 p m<lb/>
Oct. 20 Ride the seat belt convincer (car<lb/>
crash simulator) and be eligible to win<lb/>
$100 See displays convincing vou to wear<lb/>
seat belts Meet TV personalities Larrs<lb/>
and Vince<lb/>
Security<lb/>
strikes, nc<lb/>
Bl LGRADE i I<lb/>
AP) Thousands t t<lb/>
rndcxj strikes today in the<lb/>
ghtened set urit) mo<lb/>
but other pr t<lb/>
mands tor ei onomic and<lb/>
tnges and I<lb/>
leader<lb/>
The government strui<lb/>
fuse the mushro -mini:<lb/>
fueled by e om ???<lb/>
ethnic Serbian nat<lb/>
? six national republic<lb/>
tenegro and Serl<lb/>
mmunist<lb/>
two ol<lb/>
Serbian<lb/>
nse of l<lb/>
Authority<lb/>
specified emergi<lb/>
' ' nda) in Monl<lb/>
; to the offi ia I<lb/>
Tanjug ?<lb/>
oi ndittoi<lb/>
report! I ' '<lb/>
-<lb/>
sign ? ?<lb/>
.ipttal<lb/>
About<lb/>
Nil<lb/>
<lb/>
Til<lb/>
ricet<lb/>
lanjug sai . j<lb/>
ers ended theii i<lb/>
n<lb/>
? -<lb/>
tiona!<lb/>
eluding 21" pi<lb/>
- tvent unerr .<lb/>
billion foreion d<lb/>
Protesters in Ni<lb/>
manded Mon<lb/>
Montenegn - ? <lb/>
tor allowing authority<lb/>
tear gas ane.<lb/>
weekend pi<lb/>
tized their point by h <lb/>
weanng a gas ma k<lb/>
ders of the <lb/>
ported.<lb/>
"We are not d<lb/>
gallov - ? ?' '<lb/>
beating up I<lb/>
are only demar 1<lb/>
ing the ageno<lb/>
Miloslav Michui<lb/>
Tr j?<lb/>
may<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0008"/><lb/>
i w<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
i<lb/>
-<lb/>
OCTOBER 13,1986<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. $l83.33mo. 13 utilities.<lb/>
Fireplace, tanning beds, sauna, weight-<lb/>
room and more. Call 355-0700.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: For 3<lb/>
bedroom apartment. 1 3 rent, 1 3 utili-<lb/>
ties, 1 3 deposit. Call Wendy at 752-1321.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Christian male<lb/>
roommate to share new mobile home. 10<lb/>
minutes from campus. Non-smoker,<lb/>
please. Call Hugh at 756-6851 after 5:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1982 Buick Century Limited,<lb/>
AC, Cruise, PS, PB. High mileage but<lb/>
sharp: in good running condition. $2800.<lb/>
Call 758-7423 anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1984 Kawasaki GPZ-1100. Ex-<lb/>
cellent condition. Must see. $1500.00.758-<lb/>
5513.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1984 Mazda B-2000 Pick-up.<lb/>
I Ugh road miles. Topper. New tires. Ex-<lb/>
cellent condition $3400. Call 757-6281.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1982 Vokswagon Jetta. 5<lb/>
speed. Diesal. 87K. Excellent condition.<lb/>
S2700. 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/>
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/>
M-F for more details!<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24<lb/>
hours in and out. Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages. SDF<lb/>
Professional Computer Services, 106 East<lb/>
5th Street (beside Cubbies) Greenville,<lb/>
NC 752-3694.<lb/>
PARTY: If you're having a party and need<lb/>
a D.J. for the best music available for par-<lb/>
ties dance, top 40 it beach. Call 355-2781,<lb/>
ask for Morgan.<lb/>
AT YOUR SERVICE:<lb/>
TypingTypingTyping. Affordable and<lb/>
Professional Call355-6634 after 600p.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 Intercampus Programs. 1-<lb/>
800433-7747.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS: Also Cruiseships.<lb/>
$10,000-$105,000yr! Now hiring! 320<lb/>
Listings! (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. OJ-1166.<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/>
NEED OYSTER SHUCKERS AND CA-<lb/>
TERERS: Apply in person at Riverside<lb/>
Oyster Bar, 17N. Green St.<lb/>
NEED MALE AND FEMALE DANC-<lb/>
ERS FOR PRIVATE PARTIES: Also<lb/>
need ladies 18-36 years of age for a legs<lb/>
video. Earnings of $50 per hour and more.<lb/>
Apply in person Monday through Friday,<lb/>
4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. to Promotions Co<lb/>
2708-A E 10th Street. No phone calls.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
NEED CASH? Have baseball cards? Call<lb/>
Earlvis, the mad baseball buyer. 1 pay<lb/>
damn good money for cards of any year,<lb/>
any shape, and any condition. If you need<lb/>
party money. Big E is the one to call. 757-<lb/>
6366, leave a message.<lb/>
TO BUCK LAWSON AND BUCK<lb/>
BOSCH: Thanks for the spedding week-<lb/>
end! You guys are so funny you kept us in<lb/>
tears! We'll never forget: an O.D. on cream<lb/>
of broccolli; lockjaw margaritas; late-<lb/>
night alumni at Crumpeys; a toxic vodka<lb/>
collins; beer spillage in the lap; tomato<lb/>
soup bloody marys, hidden liquor bottles<lb/>
without having to wear speedos; un-<lb/>
shelled peanuts and a harmonica at the<lb/>
game; the national anthem serenade; sped<lb/>
dancin with Willy T; the desertion at<lb/>
American Legion; and overall a rip-roar-<lb/>
ing speddin time (P.S. - We hope you get<lb/>
heckled for this, you phone campers!)<lb/>
Love, Betty Sumrell and Betty Peters.<lb/>
TO THE LAMBDA CHI RADIO<lb/>
SHACK PACK: Oh God! Is there any-<lb/>
thing in that cup? The trash can doesn't<lb/>
have a liner. Oh God! - BS and BP<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: Used Nintendo Car-<lb/>
tridges with instructions for re-sale. East<lb/>
Coast Music it Video, 758-4251, 1109<lb/>
Charles Blvd. - - ? <lb/>
C. EDWARDS: Hey. Guess who? Re-<lb/>
member Oct 13,1987? Kind a blows your<lb/>
mind, eh? I just wanted to let you know<lb/>
that you are more special to me than ever,<lb/>
and I wanted to thank you for everything.<lb/>
A year of love, friendship, and incredibly<lb/>
fun times. You're the best. See you at<lb/>
lunch. Love, Chrissy.<lb/>
THE WAY CAMPUS FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
TWIG FELLOWSHIPS: Are available<lb/>
every Tuesday and Thursday at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
at 2007 Tiffany Dr. in Heritage Village.<lb/>
Call 355-5164 for details. Hot Bible! Great<lb/>
fellowship!<lb/>
PIKA: Get psyched for our social next<lb/>
Thursday night. Love, the AZD's.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO SONJA<lb/>
LOVE: On becoming the new Homecom-<lb/>
ing Queen, also to Emily Proctor and<lb/>
Chris Kelly on being 1st and 2nd runners<lb/>
up.<lb/>
TO ALL FRATERNITIES AND SO-<lb/>
RORITIES: Have a great Fall Break. Love<lb/>
the AZD's.<lb/>
PAULA JONES: Congratulations on be-<lb/>
coming a new sister of Alpha Xi Delta.<lb/>
Love the AZD's.<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON: Congratulations<lb/>
on winning "The 1988 East Carolina<lb/>
Homecoming Spirit Award Let's con-<lb/>
tinue our quest for a Cup Bucannun this<lb/>
summer in St. Louis!<lb/>
SIG EPS &amp; DATES: It started Friday<lb/>
when the float was constructed- at 1:11<lb/>
"Boo-Ga-Ga" was conducted. "Column"<lb/>
was crowned for the upcoming year - take<lb/>
care of that queen - oh she's so dear. Satur-<lb/>
day am by one "new" house we were<lb/>
sane until, until the game we screamed<lb/>
"The Plane-The Plane We then rocked<lb/>
the cabin all through the night - with<lb/>
hundreds of balloons and twinkly lights.<lb/>
We awoke the next morning to the pop-<lb/>
ping of Cores and that champagne smell -<lb/>
no one was left standing - not even "The<lb/>
Date from I lell ?Thanks, lames!<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: Congrats to our flag foot-<lb/>
ball team on an awesome season. Way to<lb/>
go girls!<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DINNER: The infamous<lb/>
Delta Zeta event is just around the corner.<lb/>
Tickets are $3 and available from any<lb/>
Delta Zeta sister or pledge. Be there Octo-<lb/>
ber 23 from 5-8 p.m.<lb/>
THETA CHI: Congratulations on your<lb/>
chapter from Delta Zeta.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: What a weekend! The<lb/>
food was scrumptious, the house looked<lb/>
great, and Ticia Pilati had a wiggly date.<lb/>
Marie looked beautiful sitting in her chair,<lb/>
so glad we could all make it there. Slippin<lb/>
and slidin on the kitchen floor, Julie Smith<lb/>
must be sore. Shelley and Fred were on the<lb/>
go, dancing to the DJ's bad disco. We all<lb/>
showed up with cool dates to make a<lb/>
success of Homecoming '88!<lb/>
hang. Well, you found a new date but I<lb/>
kept my Irate. Hope next year is just as<lb/>
much fun, maybe by then you'll learn how<lb/>
to fold your tongue. ?TICIA.<lb/>
WIGGLY AND DATE 2: We love you?<lb/>
you know who.<lb/>
JAMES FORD GRIFFIN?A SIG-EP<lb/>
LEGEND! Thank you so much for one<lb/>
incredible Homecoming weekend! Every<lb/>
aspect was 100 first class! The best<lb/>
Homecoming ever! Fraternally?your<lb/>
Sig-Ep Brothers.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI PLEDGES: Y'all are doing<lb/>
an excellent job! Keep up the good work.<lb/>
Miss Prez-Ann you should be proud! We<lb/>
love you?The Alpha Phi Sisters. P.S.?<lb/>
When is the surprise social? Hint Hint.<lb/>
SOUND MIXTURES FALL NEWSLET-<lb/>
TER: Oct. 1, Theta Chi and guests set new<lb/>
maximum capacity record at Rotary Club<lb/>
Once again the Rotary neighbors call cops<lb/>
and cops pump down the volume. Oct. 7,<lb/>
another Alpha Omicron Pi bash. MVP<lb/>
award (most vicious partiers) goes to Sam,<lb/>
Melinda, Teresa and Macon. Slip and<lb/>
slide, snowballs, beer fights, what a mess.<lb/>
Oct. 8, Sigma Phi Epsilon homecoming in<lb/>
the woods. Awesome party y'all,<lb/>
Boogaga! Just please don't bump the<lb/>
table! Special thanx to Bassetti, Peterson,<lb/>
Heim, Boone, Shell, Upchurch, and James.<lb/>
Keep the parties coming, Bob-Sound Mix-<lb/>
tures DJ Service, 752-4916.<lb/>
THE BROTHERS OF SAE would like to<lb/>
thank all of our guests and dates, we all<lb/>
had a great time this weekend. Waldo ?<lb/>
better keep an eye on your brother next<lb/>
time. P.S. Is Bolo in the house!<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA PLEDGES: We<lb/>
would like to thank you for helping us on<lb/>
the Homecoming float. ?Pledges of Pi<lb/>
Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA PLEDGE AUCTION:<lb/>
To be held at the Attic Sunday, October 23.<lb/>
All interested parties call 752-9168.<lb/>
CHI ALPHA OMEGA: Congratulations<lb/>
to our new little sisters: Stephanie Folsom,<lb/>
Missy Hargett, Betsy Hicks, Shannon<lb/>
Kenley, Mitzi Mauldin, Cindi Moye,<lb/>
Kathy Orr, Rachael Seavey, Dana Shrum,<lb/>
Susan Wallace, and Sherri Williams<lb/>
Many thanks to Pam Martin for all your<lb/>
hard work. We love you all! ?Your broth-<lb/>
ers and sisters in Chi Alpha Omicron and<lb/>
in Christ.<lb/>
PIRATE WALK: Would like to thank the<lb/>
Pika's and Alpha Phi for their help with<lb/>
Pirate Walk this week.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
THE SISTERS AND PLEDGES OF<lb/>
ZETA TAU ALPHA: Would like to thank<lb/>
Caroline McClelland for a memorable and<lb/>
festive Founder's Day Weekend for all<lb/>
We love you!<lb/>
ZETA'S: Congratulations on turning<lb/>
"90 This year's Founder's Day celebra-<lb/>
tion in Chapel Hill will be the best one yet!<lb/>
Have a great Fall Break!<lb/>
Happy 20th B-day: Jennifer Slothower<lb/>
Love, Kris. B P I leath, and Mel<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
? All New 2 Bedroom ?<lb/>
?And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
?Located Near ECU<lb/>
? Across From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
S32S a month<lb/>
Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 or 830-1937<lb/>
Office open - Apt. 8,12 - 5 JO p.m.<lb/>
? AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clean and quiet one bedroom fu mis has<lb/>
apartments, energy eilscwm. free watt; and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable W.<lb/>
Couples or single, only. $205 a month, f month<lb/>
lease. MOBILE HOME RENTAIS - couples or<lb/>
singles. Apartrrrnt and mobile homes in Azale<lb/>
Gardens near Brook Valley Country CJj'<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
. i<lb/>
I<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal and Confidential Car<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
vall for appointment Mon thru Sat 1-ow<lb/>
font Termination to 70 wr?-k? of pregnancy<lb/>
.<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
shoeless, shadeless, shaky date.<lb/>
try<lb/>
HEY KRISTI: The weekend started off<lb/>
with a bang, too bad date 1 couldn't<lb/>
SALES POSITION AVAILABLE<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is now accepting applications for an<lb/>
advertising sales representative.<lb/>
Requirements:<lb/>
Previous Sales Experience<lb/>
tonality &amp; Professional Appearance<lb/>
client Communication Skills<lb/>
iood Organizational Skills<lb/>
triable &amp; Show Initiative &amp; Enthusiasm<lb/>
.t Have Own Transportation<lb/>
;t Have The Desire To Excel<lb/>
Apply in Person at<lb/>
e East Carolinian<lb/>
ase Include Resume<lb/>
ATicattmsliTalSg<lb/>
Front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
 Phone Calls Please!<lb/>
i<lb/>
Security<lb/>
strikes, n<lb/>
BELGRADE, Yt<lb/>
(AP) ? Thousands of<lb/>
ended strikes today in tht<lb/>
heightened security mc<lb/>
but other protesters presJ<lb/>
mands for economic and<lb/>
changes and forced out a rj<lb/>
leader.<lb/>
The government struj<lb/>
defuse the mushrooming <lb/>
fueled by economic turn<lb/>
ethnic Serbian nationalisr<lb/>
of six national republic;<lb/>
tcnegTO and Serbia.<lb/>
Communist Partv vs<lb/>
two other republics ske<lb/>
the Serbian cause camel<lb/>
defense of the governmci<lb/>
Authorities impos<lb/>
specified emergency ni<lb/>
Monday in Montenegro,<lb/>
ing to the official newsl<lb/>
Tanjug. Several Yugoslav<lb/>
ing on condition of an4<lb/>
reported Monday that<lb/>
fense units in Belgrade<lb/>
on a higher level of alert. <lb/>
no sign of trouble surfa<lb/>
capital.<lb/>
About 15,000 pej<lb/>
iksic, a town about<lb/>
from the Montenegrin<lb/>
Titograd, joined about 3<lb/>
workers in a protest<lb/>
Tanjug said. However, tl<lb/>
ers ended their three-d<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Workers are angry<lb/>
tional economic probll<lb/>
eluding 217 percent inff<lb/>
oercent unemplovment<lb/>
billion foreion debt.<lb/>
Protesters in Nil<lb/>
manded Mondav<lb/>
Montenegro's oolicechi<lb/>
for allowing authority<lb/>
tear gas and clubs to<lb/>
weekend protests. Thel<lb/>
tized their point by hoistj<lb/>
wearing a gas mask on<lb/>
ders of the crowd,<lb/>
ported.<lb/>
"We are not demaj<lb/>
gallows for those whooi<lb/>
beating up of our coi<lb/>
are only demanding tl<lb/>
ing the agency quote<lb/>
Miloslav Michuncmch<lb/>
AnnouiK<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
Cooperative Education, a free service of-<lb/>
fered by the University, is designed to<lb/>
help you find career-related work experi-<lb/>
ence before you graduate. We would like<lb/>
to extend an invitation to all students to<lb/>
attend a Co-op Information Seminar in the<lb/>
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 nn.<lb/>
2006; Mon Oct. 31, 4 p.m nn. 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 WQRK 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 7:00.<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
If you are challenged everyday with prob-<lb/>
lems that you find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
us for the uncompromised word of God.<lb/>
Every Fri. night at 7:00 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE<lb/>
Business students interested in scholar-<lb/>
ships should secure forms from one of the<lb/>
following dept. offices: Accounting ?<lb/>
GCB 3208, Decision Sciences ? 3418, Fi-<lb/>
nance ? 3420, Management ? 3106,<lb/>
Marketing ? 3414. All applications must<lb/>
be submitted to Ruth Jones (GCB 3210),<lb/>
Chairman of School of Business Scholar-<lb/>
ship Committee, by Oct. 14. Students may<lb/>
apply for one or more of the scholarships<lb/>
listed below. Planters Bank Scholarship (3<lb/>
at $1000 each). University Book Exchange<lb/>
( 2 at $500 each), NCNB ($500), J. Fred<lb/>
Hamblen ($200) Credit Women Interna-<lb/>
tional ($200), Cameron-BrownFirst<lb/>
Union Scholarship (3 at $500 each), FOR<lb/>
ACCOUNTING MAJORS ONLY: Latney<lb/>
W. Pittard Memorial, Raleigh-Durham<lb/>
Chapter Institute of Internal Auditors<lb/>
($350), National Association of Account-<lb/>
ants - Eastern Carolina Chapter Scholar-<lb/>
ship ($500) DECISION SCIENCES MA-<lb/>
JOR ONLY: Grant for Decision Sciences<lb/>
Majors ($125), FINANCE MAJORS<lb/>
ONLY: Archie R. Bumette ($600), Ward<lb/>
Real Estate Scholarship ($300).<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/>
FINANCIAL MGMT. ASSOC.<lb/>
CASH, VACATION, it PRIZES: HOW?<lb/>
By playing the hottest business game in<lb/>
town sponsored by Wall Street and<lb/>
AT&amp;T. There are over 400 chances to win.<lb/>
The top 10 performers will receive a cash<lb/>
prize, with first place performer receiving<lb/>
$25,000 cash; and the top 100 performers<lb/>
each month will receive athletic shoes<lb/>
from Reebok and a wrist watch, courtesy<lb/>
of Beneton by Bulova. You can participate<lb/>
for only $49.95. Interested participants<lb/>
can register on the first floor of the GCB on<lb/>
Wed. and Thurs. between 10-2 p.m. or by<lb/>
contacting Student Financial Mgmt. As-<lb/>
soc. members or call the FINA dept. 757-<lb/>
6670.<lb/>
UNDERWATER HOCKEY<lb/>
Underwater Hockey games are scheduled<lb/>
from 700 p m. thru 8:30 p.m. at Memorial<lb/>
Gym pool. An approved Club Sport, new<lb/>
members are welcome at any time ?<lb/>
equipment needs include: mask, fins,<lb/>
snorkel. Come out and try the newest<lb/>
sport on campus.<lb/>
INJURY EVALUATION<lb/>
The Pre-Professional Health Alliance will<lb/>
hold its first meeting of the 88-89 school<lb/>
year, on Thurs. Oct. 13, at 5:30 p.m. in<lb/>
room 247 Mendenhall. Any student inter-<lb/>
ested in a health-related career is invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
KARATE CLUB<lb/>
If you are interested in joining the ECU<lb/>
Karate Club, come to Memorial Gym<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 13 at 8:00 p.m. for registration<lb/>
and a free demonstration.<lb/>
MINORITY CAREER<lb/>
EXPLORATION DAY<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/>
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/>
learn 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 BIO103. 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-REC 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 B1O103. Play begins shortly after-<lb/>
ward! Interested in officiating? Attend the<lb/>
first officials clinic Oct. 25 at 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
MG102. For additional info call Dave<lb/>
Hall at 757-6387.<lb/>
Expressions is now accepting poetry and<lb/>
short stories for the Dec. issue. The maga-<lb/>
zine is published twice a semester with<lb/>
the first issue coming out in Oct. This<lb/>
special issue will be a small magazine<lb/>
with mainly general info whereas the<lb/>
Dec. issue will be a larger size containing<lb/>
news stories, short stories, editorials,<lb/>
poetry, etc. Articles may be left at the<lb/>
office or at the Media Board Secretary's<lb/>
Office in the Publications Bldg.<lb/>
Injury assessment will be performed by a<lb/>
certified trainer each Wed. and Thurs.<lb/>
from 6-30-7:30 pjn. 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/>
PRE-PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
HEALTH ALLIANCE<lb/>
SUMMER JOB<lb/>
Dr. Jack Vogt, a representative from the<lb/>
Institute of Government Summer Intern<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 class pic-<lb/>
ture taken for the yearbook now has that<lb/>
chance. Class 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 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
each day. The yearbook is not your year-<lb/>
book until you are in it<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma will hold a business meet-<lb/>
ing Oct. 13th from 7-7:30 p.m. in room 205<lb/>
Austin. All those interested please attend.<lb/>
We will discuss purchasing tee-shirts.<lb/>
JUNIORS. SENIORS. &amp;<lb/>
GRAP. 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 ly in front of the student<lb/>
store through Thurs. from 9:00-4:00.<lb/>
Sovran Bank is offering great terms to full-<lb/>
time students, so come by and apply this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
SKIING TRIP<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Soccer<lb/>
registration meeting held Oct. 19 at 6:00<lb/>
p.m. in GCB 1026. Play begins shortly<lb/>
afterward! For additional info call Dave<lb/>
Hall at 757-6387.<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Volley-<lb/>
ball registration meeting held Oct. 19 at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. in GCB 1026. Play begins shortly<lb/>
afterward! For additional info call Dave<lb/>
Hall at 757-6387.<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. Fri Oct. 14 in 209 Whichard. Re-<lb/>
member all banners will be judged at 4<lb/>
p.m. Wed Oct. 19 at Ficklen Stadium,<lb/>
East service entrance. Call 757-6823 for<lb/>
more info.<lb/>
tYYNTQN marsalis con-<lb/>
CERI<lb/>
The Dept of University Unions is proud<lb/>
to present Wynton Marsalis in concert<lb/>
Nov. 1 at 8:00pm. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Tickets go on sale for this Performing Arts<lb/>
Series event on Mon Oct 10. Winner of a<lb/>
Grammy Award for bom classical and<lb/>
jazz performances, Mr. Marsalis is sure to<lb/>
bring an energetic and entertaining show<lb/>
to Wright Auditorium. For further details,<lb/>
contact: The Central Ticket Office, Men-<lb/>
denhall, or cafl (919) 757-6611.<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS<lb/>
INTERVIEWING WORK-<lb/>
SHOPS<lb/>
To help ECU people prepare for on and off<lb/>
campus interviews, the Career Planning<lb/>
it Placement Service in Bloxton I louse is<lb/>
offering these one hour programs to aid<lb/>
you in developing better interviewing<lb/>
skills for use in your job search. The pro-<lb/>
gram is open to the first 20 people to come<lb/>
for each session. No sign up is required.<lb/>
These sessions are held in the Career Plan-<lb/>
ning Room on Oct. 12 it 20.<lb/>
RESUME WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning &amp; Placement Service<lb/>
in Bloxton House is offering these one<lb/>
hour programs on beginning a resume for<lb/>
your job search. Handouts and samples<lb/>
will be given out to the first 20 people to<lb/>
come to each session. No sign up is re-<lb/>
quired. These sessions are held in the<lb/>
Career Planning Room on Oct. 11,21 &amp;26<lb/>
at 3 p.m.<lb/>
WOMEN VOTERS<lb/>
The League of Women Voters of<lb/>
Greenville-Pitt County will sponsor a<lb/>
public forum for state legislative candi-<lb/>
dates on Oct 25, at 7:30 p.m. in the Willis<lb/>
Bldg. at First and Reade Circle in<lb/>
Greenville. On Nov. 1, a second forum<lb/>
will be held, again at 730 p.m. in the Willis<lb/>
Bldg for candidates for the Pitt County<lb/>
Board of Commissioners.<lb/>
GROUP PHOTOGRAPHS<lb/>
Group photographs will be taken Sept. 15<lb/>
until Dec. 2. No group pictures can be<lb/>
taken after Dec 2. Please note that the<lb/>
group listing with the name of every per-<lb/>
son in the photograph MUST be pre-<lb/>
sented BEFORE the photographer films<lb/>
the group. ORGANIZATIONS WITH-<lb/>
OUT USTINGS WILL NOT BE PHOTO-<lb/>
GRAPHED, and time does not permit the<lb/>
scheduling of another session. Call 757-<lb/>
6501 and leave dateJr time for the photo to<lb/>
be taken. Please give two days notice for<lb/>
the photographer.<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
The 1987 yearbooks have come in. Any-<lb/>
one who would like a copy of it may come<lb/>
by the ottice and pick one up SN'e arc<lb/>
located in front ot Jovner Library in the<lb/>
Publications Bldg<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will be a general meeb n g for all Am<lb/>
bassadors Wed. at 5:15 p m in Menden<lb/>
hall room 221. Remember that missing<lb/>
over 2 meetings per semester may lead to<lb/>
probation.<lb/>
WINDSURFING CLUB<lb/>
There will be a meeting Oct 25 to organize<lb/>
a group trip to Whichard's Beach over the<lb/>
weekend. If vou are interested, please<lb/>
meet in conference room 105 Memorial<lb/>
Gvm at 6:00<lb/>
I<lb/>
r<lb/>
1<lb/>
r<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
An important meeting for FRESHMEN<lb/>
who intend to mapr in the following:<lb/>
Business and Distributive Ed, Driver's<lb/>
Ed Early Childhood Ed Health Ed , In<lb/>
termediate Ed Marketing Ed Middle<lb/>
Grades Ed Physical Ed Special Ed ,<lb/>
Technical Ed. and Vocational Ed "The<lb/>
Second Academic Major Required by the<lb/>
University of N. C Board of Governors<lb/>
Oct. 25 from 3:00-500 p m in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
LIBRARY SCIENCE 1000<lb/>
LIBS 1000 (2nd block) began Oct Uth &amp;<lb/>
12th. Oct. 11th: Tues. &amp; Thurs , Oct. 12th:<lb/>
Mon. it Wed<lb/>
EPISCOPAL STUDENT<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
The Episcopal Student Fellowship will be<lb/>
meeting on Wednesdays at 5 30 at St.<lb/>
Paul's Episcopal Church on 4th St All are<lb/>
welcome for Holy Communion dinner<lb/>
and program. For more info, call Allen<lb/>
Manning at 758-1440<lb/>
ECU STUPENTSSTAFfl<lb/>
LSS SOCIETY<lb/>
Volunteers, old dothes it sheers are<lb/>
needed DESPERATELY for the Pirate<lb/>
aubLSS Society "Jr. Spooky Pirate<lb/>
Night Halloween Carnival" to be held<lb/>
Oct. 28 from 6-8 p m at the Pirate Club.<lb/>
For more info please contact Beth Smvth<lb/>
or Ann Totaro at 830-9315, anytime!<lb/>
SEAT BELT fOR SAFETY<lb/>
If you drive a car, then this is for you! Seat<lb/>
Belts For Safety: Don't Drink and Drive. A<lb/>
presentation on the campus mall 1 -5 p.m.<lb/>
Oct 20. Ride the seat belt convincer (car<lb/>
crash simulator) and be eligible to win<lb/>
$100. See displays convincing you to wear<lb/>
seat belts. Meet TV personalities Larry<lb/>
and Vine.<lb/>
Tryd<lb/>
may<lb/>
Noi<lb/>
undo<lb/>
make1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13.1988 7<lb/>
I IKs SO PLEDGES OF<lb/>
H VLPH A: Would like to thank<lb/>
? elland for a memorable and<lb/>
w eokend lor all<lb/>
- Oil turning<lb/>
Foundei - Da) celebra<lb/>
e best one vet!<lb/>
h B-Jjv ennifer Slothower<lb/>
IMd<lb/>
A Ci ASS1FIED<lb/>
BORTION<lb/>
' E Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
I - 30 1 p.m.<lb/>
L .t. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
an pie Women's<lb/>
fi 1th Center<lb/>
U00 433 2930<lb/>
L vVAILABLE<lb/>
plinian<lb/>
k a! u ?ns U r an<lb/>
i sentative<lb/>
Is:<lb/>
?n at<lb/>
iinian<lb/>
Lesume<lb/>
'Icffnjf<lb/>
Jbrary)<lb/>
lease!<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
WINDSURFING CLl B<lb/>
1 Rl SI1M1.N<lb/>
-<lb/>
i<lb/>
UK m SCIENCE 1000<lb/>
tt 11th &amp;<lb/>
&amp; Thur- I k ?<lb/>
If PIS( OPAI Sll DJ VI<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
? ? -ill be<lb/>
? rinesdays jt 5 30 at St<lb/>
I il Church on 4th St Allare<lb/>
?or Holy Communion dinner<lb/>
Tor more info -ill Allen<lb/>
?<lb/>
LL STUDENTS SIAEft<lb/>
LSS SOCIETY<lb/>
 Id dothea S sheets are<lb/>
ESP1 RATELY for the Pirate<lb/>
SL- - ? ? !r Spooky Pirate<lb/>
t Halloween Carnival" to he held<lb/>
I from K.8 p m at the Pirate CTvib<lb/>
?re info please contact Beth Smvth<lb/>
nTotaro at 830-9315 anytimel<lb/>
MM BHLTFQRSAFHJY<lb/>
L drive ? ? ar then this is tor von' Sat<lb/>
ForSafer) Pon't Drink and Drive A<lb/>
en ration on the campus mall 1 -5 p m<lb/>
Ride the seat belt oanvinccf (car<lb/>
simulator) and be eligible to ?in<lb/>
See display s com Dicing von to wear<lb/>
Kits Med fV personalities 1 arr<lb/>
Security measures quell<lb/>
strikes, not opposition<lb/>
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia A member of Montenegro's<lb/>
(AP) ? Thousands of workers ruling Presidium, RadivojeBrajo-<lb/>
pnded strikes today in the face of vie, told a rally in Titograd in an<lb/>
heightened security measures, emotional address that he was<lb/>
but other protesters pressed de- resigning, and the regional party<lb/>
mands for economic and political leadership held an emergency<lb/>
changes and forced out a regional meeting.<lb/>
leader.<lb/>
The government struggled to<lb/>
defuse the mushrooming protests<lb/>
hieled by economic turmoil and<lb/>
ethnic Serbian nationalism, in two<lb/>
Later Monday, 1,000 con-<lb/>
struction workers in Titograd<lb/>
ended their strike there.<lb/>
Meanwhile, two of<lb/>
Yugoslavia's six republics<lb/>
of six national republics, Mon- Slovenia and Bosnia Herzegovina<lb/>
tenegro and Serbia. ? issued statements supporting<lb/>
Communist Party leaders in the national government's de-<lb/>
two other republics skeptical of nunciation of nationalist protests.<lb/>
the Serbian cause came to the "We reject  models of a<lb/>
defense of the government. strong state  and imposition of<lb/>
Authorities imposed un- socialism and democracy as tai-<lb/>
specified emergency measures lored by the Serbian leadership<lb/>
Monday in Montenegro, accord- Communists from liberal Slov-<lb/>
ing to the official news agency enia said Monday.<lb/>
Tanjug. Several Yugoslavs speak- But the leadership of Serbia<lb/>
ing on condition of anonymity defended its drive for more con-<lb/>
reported Monday that civil dc- trol of its two provinces, which<lb/>
fense units in Belgrade were put are nominally autonomous. The<lb/>
on a higher level of alert, although Presidium of the Party and the<lb/>
no sign of trouble surfaced in the Presidency of Serbia denounced<lb/>
capital. Monday unidentified politicians<lb/>
About 15,000 people at and journalists in Slovenia who it<lb/>
Niksic, a town about 30 miles said "are spreading fear of Ser-<lb/>
from the Montenegrin capital of bia<lb/>
Titograd, joined about 3,000 steel<lb/>
workers in a protest Monday,<lb/>
Tanjug said. However, the work<lb/>
Ethnic tensions, never far<lb/>
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Workers are angry about na- protests this year,<lb/>
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Protesters in Niksic de- Moslems, outnumber mainly<lb/>
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"We are not demanding the nist Central Committee of Serbia<lb/>
gallows for those who ordered the were to meet today to discuss a<lb/>
beating up of our comrades, we drive of the republic's leader, Slo-<lb/>
are only demanding their sack- bodan Milosevic, for more control<lb/>
ing the agency quoted worker of Serbia's two provinces.<lb/>
Miloslav Michunovich as saying.<lb/>
Attention All<lb/>
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The Association<lb/>
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Duke, Duke<lb/>
( What if the Sergeant sees us)<lb/>
Between Rock and a Hard Place<lb/>
Citizen's Arrest<lb/>
,<lb/>
REWARD: For anyone who can satisfactorily explain why the cartoonist of<lb/>
Hey Big Head calls himself The Boo-man.<lb/>
WANTED: More readers like: Chuck Harrell, Krissy Muth, "Rats Joe Harris,<lb/>
Luke Whisnant<lb/>
Pee<lb/>
Continued from payr v<lb/>
The first caller was i<lb/>
named Ra from Greenville<lb/>
said that he was a compi<lb/>
gambler and that he needed.<lb/>
(gamblers termini ford<lb/>
urn) or Cuidi a m I<lb/>
lor a book -maker ivoul i<lb/>
ger his life<lb/>
In trying to aid the - I<lb/>
vidual named Rav Earl saj<lb/>
knew nothing of sp i<lb/>
the Mountaineers n( <lb/>
rhis is Mkk ag?er and Keitl<lb/>
do the look tike the Rolling<lb/>
Micah Uk<lb/>
( ontinued from p.ij'<lb/>
nly aliens that .<lb/>
ones<lb/>
Of course tor the I<lb/>
? ?r fictional<lb/>
work that is <lb/>
shou dnotl<lb/>
film ring much mor<lb/>
f disb<lb/>
ivorld of the r<lb/>
and<lb/>
tilm s<lb/>
in tl emits<lb/>
?<lb/>
it<lb/>
'?<lb/>
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not sugges<lb/>
s ?? ? - - tealk<lb/>
iivi m?-re than 5<lb/>
READ<lb/>
CARC<lb/>
Take<lb/>
Schol<lb/>
 Buy One<lb/>
I andG<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
of Equ.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Not Good<lb/>
Entertainj<lb/>
Thurs . Oct<lb/>
Dead)<lb/>
Fn . Oct<lb/>
Sat Oct<lb/>
Call Ahea<lb/>
Hoi<lb/>
Moo Tu?<lb/>
,lm lOprr<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13, 1988 9<lb/>
<lb/>
LTJ<lb/>
Pee Wee calls Big E on Z-103<lb/>
( untinued from page )<lb/>
I he first caller was a cat<lb/>
ed Ray from Greenville. Rav<lb/>
that he was a compulsive<lb/>
nbler and that he needed a lock<lb/>
tlers terminology for a sure<lb/>
01 Guido (a ficticious name<lb/>
i N?ok maker) would endan-<lb/>
lis hte<lb/>
In trying to aid the poor mdi-<lb/>
rtamed Rav. Earl said he<lb/>
in nothing of Sports. But take<lb/>
Mountaineers ot West Vir-<lb/>
ginia giving up 20 and a halt<lb/>
points against ECU' came the<lb/>
game wisdom of E.<lb/>
That proved to be the worst<lb/>
adv ice The Big E has ever gi ven as<lb/>
West Virginia won the game 30-10<lb/>
and Rav lost his life over a half of<lb/>
a point.<lb/>
After a few more songs, the<lb/>
phone lines lit up again. This time<lb/>
it was an ECU student named Gil<lb/>
who knew that E is a world trav-<lb/>
eler. Gil asked where he should<lb/>
spend lushpring Break.<lb/>
"When 1 hear the name Gil, I<lb/>
think of gills and when I think of<lb/>
gills, 1 think of fish, when 1 think of<lb/>
fish 1 think of fishy smelling<lb/>
things at the beach. Hey Gil, go to<lb/>
the Bahamas and have a good<lb/>
time E said.<lb/>
Calling next was another<lb/>
ECU student. Bradford's predica-<lb/>
ment was one of stepping in dog<lb/>
loaves left by the neighbor's<lb/>
pooch. Bradford said the dog<lb/>
t -wx o<lb/>
??-1 <lb/>
' a4<lb/>
I his is Mick larger and Keith Richards right? Wrong. These gins are members of the Blushing Brides. Not onh<lb/>
In the) look like the Rolling Stones, the play and sound like them, the Brides rot ks the Vttic tonight.<lb/>
Micah likes new movie 'Alien Nation<lb/>
looked like a horse.<lb/>
Hearing that the dog re-<lb/>
sembled a horse lead Big E to ask<lb/>
"Where do you live in Greenville,<lb/>
Bradford?" With the answer<lb/>
"hallucinogenic highway' Earl<lb/>
knew instantly the disturbed lad<lb/>
was speaking of the dog of<lb/>
BUtmore St.<lb/>
"Hey man, you are talking<lb/>
about that horse-dog on Biltmore<lb/>
St. I kind of like that dog, why<lb/>
don't you leave him alone? E<lb/>
said as his temper started to flare.<lb/>
Dee-jay Doug added "Yeah<lb/>
Bradford, maybe you arc the one<lb/>
we need to get rid of<lb/>
The next caller came at 2:30.<lb/>
Hager, also from Greenville,<lb/>
asked The Big E how he could stop<lb/>
his friends from calling him Pee<lb/>
Wee.<lb/>
"Are you small, are you<lb/>
small? E asked. Haggar said no.<lb/>
"Have you been taking stcriods<lb/>
like Ben Johnson?" Haggar said<lb/>
no. "Have you thought about<lb/>
buving a pit bull and sic-ing the<lb/>
dog on vour friend's legs every<lb/>
time they call you Pee Wee?"<lb/>
"You could also improve vour<lb/>
image by wearing a lot of gold<lb/>
jewelery like the Fat Boys was<lb/>
E's advice.<lb/>
Before the guy with the stick-<lb/>
ligure complex hung up, Doug<lb/>
came on with, "Hey Hay wood,<lb/>
Haywood, what is vour name<lb/>
Haggar? Well, see you later Pee<lb/>
Wee'<lb/>
A fisherman from Beaufort<lb/>
proved to be the next caller. He<lb/>
said his wife had been cruel to<lb/>
him He said he had wandered<lb/>
into the neighbor's sheep flock to<lb/>
satisfv his lust.<lb/>
"You are sick, 1 am truly dis-<lb/>
gusted was the only thing E<lb/>
could say. Even Big E has some<lb/>
standards of bad taste. Doug and<lb/>
E, with no help from a drunk<lb/>
Parker, decided not to air the<lb/>
demented call from the fisher-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
As F and Tark walked out of<lb/>
the station at 4:30 a.m Doug<lb/>
threw them a tec-shirt and invited<lb/>
them back. And back to the "dead<lb/>
medium" E must go.<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Washington Highway (N.C. 33 cxtGreenville, North Carolina<lb/>
r<lb/>
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Shrimp Plate $3.65<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
Weekend Specials<lb/>
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RATED R EVIL LAUGH<lb/>
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RATED R<lb/>
NIGHTMARE OF ELM ST. PART 4<lb/>
1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15 9:15<lb/>
RATED R<lb/>
Y<lb/>
yf<lb/>
( untinued from pae l)<lb/>
 aliens that exit are the<lb/>
vou see on camera.<lb/>
Of course, tor the film's sec-<lb/>
fictional "world" to<lb/>
that is exactly how vou<lb/>
nld not feel Roger Rabbit a<lb/>
, liring much more sus-<lb/>
n of disbelief, presented a<lb/>
is world of the human<lb/>
he other " It seems this<lb/>
nity ti real life (il ssel<lb/>
. uldbe in itsfavor<lb/>
rhaps that worked against<lb/>
ithei robk m is thai there<lb/>
II) a sense of scope here I'm<lb/>
. sting the movie should<lb/>
focuss that theahensare<lb/>
m re than stock figures but<lb/>
that we get a better peripheral<lb/>
picture of how the aliens' arrival<lb/>
has effected the national scene.<lb/>
In their "Watchman" graphic<lb/>
novel, Alan Moore and Dave<lb/>
Gibbons effected a subplot that<lb/>
turned a New York street corner<lb/>
into a microcosm of the world. It<lb/>
was an economic move of story-<lb/>
telling that allowed a sense of<lb/>
resonance to the main plot line.<lb/>
"Alien Nation weighing in at<lb/>
just over 90 minutes running time<lb/>
could've stood an extra thirty<lb/>
minutes to grant a similar sense ot<lb/>
scale.<lb/>
Although entertaining, the<lb/>
movie's Haws don't allow it to<lb/>
come across a any more than a<lb/>
glorified TV show. My ad cl is to<lb/>
wait until it comes on iV and<lb/>
make the popcorn yourself. Two<lb/>
cat heads.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
HaiU Shopping Cir. 756 OOHH<lb/>
nqiv shouting<lb/>
A FISH CALLED WANDA<lb/>
GORILLAS IN THE MIST<lb/>
Starts Fiiilaj<lb/>
BULL DURHAM<lb/>
Ends Thursdau<lb/>
LICENSE TO DRIVE<lb/>
Starts Fridau<lb/>
CADDYS HACK II<lb/>
YOUNG GUNS<lb/>
1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
xrmc<lb/>
The I "e-<lb/>
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2PHE 7WE<lb/>
WED vj VVFl)<lb/>
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FRIDAYSATURDAY<lb/>
JimThe Point<lb/>
ThackeryThe Point<lb/>
&amp;The Point<lb/>
TheThe Point<lb/>
Assassins<lb/>
Rhihm &amp; Blues<lb/>
Formerly of the Nighihauk?;<lb/>
$1.00 ECl<lb/>
READ THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
?v<lb/>
r<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Take a Break From<lb/>
School and Work<lb/>
n<lb/>
Buy One Specialty Sandwich J<lb/>
andGet 2nd Sandwich<lb/>
of Equal or Lesser Value<lb/>
12 Price<lb/>
Expiration 10-22-88<lb/>
Not (kxxi With Any Other Special Otters<lb/>
Entertainment For The Weekend<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 13. Swamp Gypsies (9-11)<lb/>
Deadhead Jam (11-close)<lb/>
Fri . Oct. 14, Widespread Panic<lb/>
Sat . Oct. 15. Closed For Fall Break<lb/>
Call Ahead For Takeouts 758-0080<lb/>
Hours of Operations<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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J<lb/>
I ues<lb/>
lam 10pm<lb/>
WwJ Thur<lb/>
llarrvlam<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
I1anv2am<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
12 noon 2am<lb/>
Thursday Pi Kappa Phi L'il Sisters<lb/>
and Phi Kappa Tau L'il Sisters<lb/>
Presents Ladies Night<lb/>
All Ladies Free All Night<lb/>
Come Early Drink Specials All Night<lb/>
Friday The Famous<lb/>
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5 p.m. - 2 a.m. $2.00 Ice Teas And<lb/>
Free Admission For All Until 9:00<lb/>
$2.00 Frozen<lb/>
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Specials<lb/>
ThursSun.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0012"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13.1968 9<lb/>
Li id (guest artist) Parker<lb/>
i.J Mi<lb/>
<lb/>
Harris ,md laselriu<lb/>
50O8Y Twmo:<lb/>
IAT If iTS FULL Or uiVB AMD Wl<lb/>
i-ASSEO iT JK THEN wE'O B?<lb/>
TwL SOCSiES<lb/>
V<lb/>
?Ht OTMCR WAV J<lb/>
)uieautc' s<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
In Reid<lb/>
V<lb/>
10M<lb/>
of the<lb/>
labors<lb/>
Boxcar<lb/>
fee lost<lb/>
i'<lb/>
r f<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
Pee Wee calls Big E on Z-103<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
The first caller was a cat<lb/>
named Ray from Greenville. Ray<lb/>
said that he was a compulsive<lb/>
gambler and that he needed a lock<lb/>
(gamblers terminology for a sure<lb/>
win) or Guido (a ficticious name<lb/>
tor a book-maker) would endan-<lb/>
ger his life.<lb/>
In trying to aid the poor indi-<lb/>
vidual named Ray, Earl said he<lb/>
knew nothing of sports. "But take<lb/>
the Mountaineers of West Vir-<lb/>
ginia giving up 20 and a half<lb/>
points against ECU came the<lb/>
game wisdom of E.<lb/>
That proved to be the worst<lb/>
advice The Big E has ever given as<lb/>
West Virginia won the game 30-10<lb/>
and Ray lost his life over a half of<lb/>
a point.<lb/>
After a few more songs, the<lb/>
phone lines lit up again. This time<lb/>
it was an ECU student named Gil<lb/>
who knew that E is a world trav-<lb/>
eler. Gil asked where he should<lb/>
spend hisbpringBreak.<lb/>
"When I hear the name Gil, I<lb/>
think of gills and when I think of<lb/>
gills, I think of fish, when 1 think of<lb/>
fish I think of fishy smelling<lb/>
things at the beach. Hey Gil, go to<lb/>
the Bahamas and have a good<lb/>
time E said.<lb/>
Calling next was another<lb/>
ECU student. Bradford's predica-<lb/>
ment was one of stepping in dog<lb/>
loaves left by the neighbor's<lb/>
pooch. Bradford said the dog<lb/>
This is M ick Jagger and Keith Richards right? Wrong. These guys are members of the Blushing Brides. Not only<lb/>
do the look like the Rolling Stones, they play and sound like them. The Brides rocks the Attic tonight.<lb/>
Micah likes new movie 'Alien Nation<lb/>
looked like a horse.<lb/>
Hearing that the dog re-<lb/>
sembled a horse lead Big E to ask<lb/>
"Where do you live in Greenville,<lb/>
Bradford?" With the answer<lb/>
"hallucinogenic highway Earl<lb/>
knew instantly the disturbed lad<lb/>
was speaking of the dog of<lb/>
Biltmore St.<lb/>
"Hey man, you are talking<lb/>
about that horselog on Biltmore<lb/>
St. I kind of like that dog, why<lb/>
don't you leave him alone? E<lb/>
said as his temper started to flare.<lb/>
Dee-jay Doug added "Yeah<lb/>
Bradford, maybe you are the one<lb/>
we need to get rid of<lb/>
The next caller came at 2:30.<lb/>
Hager, also from Greenville,<lb/>
asked The Big E how he could stop<lb/>
his friends from calling him Pee<lb/>
Wee.<lb/>
"Are you small, are you<lb/>
small? E asked. Haggar said no.<lb/>
"Have you been taking steriods<lb/>
like Ben Johnson?" Haggar said<lb/>
no. "Have you thought about<lb/>
buying a pit bull and sic-ing the<lb/>
dog on your friend's legs every<lb/>
time they call you Pee Wee?"<lb/>
"You could also improve your<lb/>
image by wearing a lot of gold<lb/>
jewelery like the Fat Boys was<lb/>
E's advice.<lb/>
Before the guy with the stick-<lb/>
figure complex hung up, Doug<lb/>
came on with, "Hey Haywood,<lb/>
Hay wood, what is your name<lb/>
Haggar? Well, see you later Pee<lb/>
Wee<lb/>
A fisherman from Beaufort<lb/>
proved to be the next caller. He<lb/>
said his wife had been cruel to<lb/>
him. He said he had wandered<lb/>
into the neighbor's sheep flock to<lb/>
satisfy his lust.<lb/>
"You are sick, I am truly dis-<lb/>
gusted was the only thing E<lb/>
could say. Even Big E has some<lb/>
standards of bad taste. Doug and<lb/>
E, with no help from a drunk<lb/>
Parker, decided not to air the<lb/>
demented call from the fisher-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
As E and Park walked out of<lb/>
the station at 4:30 a.m Doug<lb/>
threw them a tee-shirt and invited<lb/>
them back. And back to the "dead<lb/>
medium" E must go.<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Washington Highway (N.C. 33 ext.) Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
i<lb/>
r1<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
L<lb/>
MonThurs.<lb/>
Shrimp Plate 3.65<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
Weekend Specials<lb/>
Beer, Wine Brown Baggin O.K.<lb/>
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Adults $2?'W<lb/>
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756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
RATED R EVIL LAUGH<lb/>
1:00-3:00-5:00-7:05-9:00<lb/>
'FarkJThtatrc<lb/>
? ? ? ? wm<lb/>
( ontinued from page 9<lb/>
the only aliens that exist are the<lb/>
ones vou see on camera.<lb/>
Of course, for the film's sec-<lb/>
ondary, fictional "world" to<lb/>
work, that is exactly how you<lb/>
should not feel. "Roger Rabbit a<lb/>
him requiring much more sus-<lb/>
pension of disbelief, presented a<lb/>
credulous world of the human<lb/>
and "the other It seems this<lb/>
tilm's proximity to real life (it's set<lb/>
in the 1990s) would be in its favor.<lb/>
But perhaps that worked against<lb/>
it<lb/>
Another problem is that there<lb/>
is I udlv a sense of scope here I'm<lb/>
not suggesting the movie should<lb/>
se its focus so that the aliens are<lb/>
no more than stock figures but<lb/>
that we get a better peripheral<lb/>
picture of how the aliens' arrival<lb/>
has effected the national scene.<lb/>
In their "Watchman" graphic<lb/>
novel, Alan Moore and Dave<lb/>
Gibbons effected a subp1 that<lb/>
turned a New York strt omer<lb/>
into a microcosm of the .orld. It<lb/>
was an economic move of story-<lb/>
telling that allowed a sense of<lb/>
resonance to the main plot line.<lb/>
"Alien Nation weighing in at<lb/>
just over 90 minutes running time,<lb/>
could've stood an extra thirty<lb/>
minutes to grant a similar sense of<lb/>
scale.<lb/>
Although entertaining, the<lb/>
movie's flaws don't allow it to<lb/>
come across as any more than a<lb/>
glorified TV show. My advice is to<lb/>
wait until it comes on TV and<lb/>
make the popcorn yourself. Two<lb/>
cat heads.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
llazj Shopping Or. 756-008H<lb/>
Now Showing<lb/>
A FISH CALLED WANDA<lb/>
GORILLAS IN THE MIST<lb/>
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1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20<lb/>
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Formerly of the Nighihawk<lb/>
READ THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
The Point<lb/>
The Point<lb/>
The Point<lb/>
The Point<lb/>
$1.00 ECU<lb/>
Take a Break From<lb/>
School and Work<lb/>
r<lb/>
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Buy One Specialty Sandwich j<lb/>
andGet 2nd Sandwich<lb/>
of Equal or Lesser Value<lb/>
12 Price<lb/>
Expiration 10-22-88<lb/>
Not Good With Any Other Special Offers<lb/>
"Entertainment For The Weekend<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 13. Swamp Gypsies (9-11)<lb/>
Deadhead Jam (11-close)<lb/>
Fri Oct. 14. Widespread Panic<lb/>
Sat Oct. 15. Closed For Fall Break<lb/>
Call Ahead For Takeouts 758-0080<lb/>
Hours of Operations<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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J<lb/>
Mum lues<lb/>
11 am 10pm<lb/>
Wed-Thur<lb/>
Ham-lam<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Ham- 2am<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
12-noon-2am<lb/>
Thursday Pi Kappa Phi L'il Sisters<lb/>
and Phi Kappa Tau L'il Sisters<lb/>
Presents Ladies Night<lb/>
All Ladies Free All Night<lb/>
Come Early Drink Specials All Night<lb/>
Friday The Famous<lb/>
"Late Dav Tea Bash"<lb/>
5 p.m. - 2 a.m. $2.00 Ice Teas And<lb/>
Free Admission For All Until 9:00<lb/>
$2.00 Frozen<lb/>
16 oz.<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
ThursSun.<lb/>
;<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0013"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
CXTTOBER 13, 19S8<lb/>
SAVACENTER<lb/>
Trip to the 'BigApple'<lb/>
By ALICIA FORD<lb/>
Sulf Writer<lb/>
Do you have a strong desire<lb/>
for the fast-paced, bright lights<lb/>
and active nightlife oi a big city?<lb/>
How would you like to spend<lb/>
Thanksgiving in The Big Apple'?<lb/>
The Student Union is sponsoring<lb/>
a trip to New York City from<lb/>
November 23 until November 27.<lb/>
Accomodations for the trip<lb/>
are at the Hotel Edison and trans-<lb/>
portation will be provided by the<lb/>
La Grange bus. Trices per person<lb/>
arc $115 quad, $135 triple, $165<lb/>
double, and $249 for a single. The<lb/>
deadlone for sign-up is Novem-<lb/>
ber 1 at theCentral Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Thc former head oi the<lb/>
North and South Carolina com-<lb/>
munist Party, lunius Scales, will<lb/>
be lecturing on the pros of com-<lb/>
munism October 24 at 8:00 pm. If<lb/>
you're interested in eating with a<lb/>
communist, you can brown bag<lb/>
lunch with Mr. Scales from 11:30-<lb/>
1:30, room 244 Mendenhall.<lb/>
A photography show pre-<lb/>
sented bv Ernest Habrich will<lb/>
begin on Occtober 24 and run<lb/>
through November 8 at the Men-<lb/>
denhall Art Callers The central<lb/>
theme of the photography pre-<lb/>
sented bv Habrich is the faces and<lb/>
structures of North and Central<lb/>
American Earth.<lb/>
ln addition, the Student<lb/>
Union is presenting a number of<lb/>
free movies for the rest of October.<lb/>
One of Tennesse William's most<lb/>
famous work "The Glass Menag-<lb/>
erie is being shown on Wednes-<lb/>
day October 19. Directed by Taul<lb/>
Newman, the film stars Joannne<lb/>
Wotxiward as a mother who tries<lb/>
to impose her own dreams into<lb/>
her daughter's life. The daughter<lb/>
is portraved by Karen Allen.<lb/>
A remake of the 1930's sus-<lb/>
pense thriller "D.O.A starring<lb/>
Dennis Quaid and Meg Ryan is<lb/>
being presented on October 20-23.<lb/>
Dexter Cornell (Quaid), is an<lb/>
English professor who discovers<lb/>
he has been poisoned and only<lb/>
has 24 hours to find his killer. One<lb/>
oi his students and prime sus-<lb/>
pects, Ryan, is forced into helping<lb/>
him, and she soon falls in love<lb/>
with her sexy professor. "D.O.A<lb/>
is a good mystery but you can<lb/>
pretty much guess the ending.<lb/>
On October 26 "Cry Free-<lb/>
dom a movie about the life oi<lb/>
African journalist Donald Woods,<lb/>
will be presented. The film is<lb/>
based on two oi Wood's biogra-<lb/>
phies about South Africa: "Biko"<lb/>
and "Asking tor Trouble Kevin<lb/>
Kilme portrays the author in a<lb/>
"true story of a friendship that<lb/>
shook South Africa and awak-<lb/>
ened the world<lb/>
Just in t ne for Halloween,<lb/>
"Serpent and he Rainbow" will<lb/>
be shown from October 28-30. A<lb/>
Wes Craven film, "Serpent" is<lb/>
based on the true story of Harvard<lb/>
anthropologist Wade Davis.<lb/>
Davis travels to Haiti where he<lb/>
discovers an ancient voodoo<lb/>
powder that puts the people who<lb/>
inhale it into a deep coma. They<lb/>
have no pulse or blood pressure,<lb/>
and these "corpses" can only be<lb/>
awakened late at night. "Serpent<lb/>
and the Rainbow" is a good hor-<lb/>
ror flick filled with walking zom-<lb/>
bies, cursed, evil and black magic.<lb/>
If that's not enough blood and<lb/>
guts for you, check out the pre-<lb/>
Halloween horror movie lock-in<lb/>
on Sunday October 30 at 1:30 pm.<lb/>
Three horror-buff favorites are<lb/>
being presented: "Carrie "The<lb/>
Omen and "Texas Chainsaw<lb/>
Massacre Be sure to wear your<lb/>
Halloween garb for the costume<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
"Coming in November: Tom<lb/>
Hanks box office smash "Big" is<lb/>
being shown on Novemeber 3-6.<lb/>
On November 2, "The Unbear-<lb/>
able Lightness of Being" and the<lb/>
award-winning "The Last Em-<lb/>
peror" will be presented from<lb/>
November 10-13.<lb/>
The movies are free for stu-<lb/>
dents with ID and valid activity<lb/>
stickers. All shows start at 8:00 pm<lb/>
are screened in Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Female faculty fight hiring practices<lb/>
(CPS)? Female faculty mem-<lb/>
bers on two separate campuses<lb/>
have opened the new year with<lb/>
critical salvos at the men who run<lb/>
their schools.<lb/>
A group of Univeristv of Iowa<lb/>
faculty members announced in<lb/>
August it would trv to pressure UI<lb/>
to hire more women, a move<lb/>
which prompted UI to release a<lb/>
report defending its efforts to re-<lb/>
cruit female teachers and deans.<lb/>
On Sept. 7, moreover, a simi-<lb/>
larlv new group at the University<lb/>
of New Mexico held a press con-<lb/>
ference to publicize the condi-<lb/>
tion of women working on this<lb/>
campus<lb/>
UNM History Prof. Jan Foe-<lb/>
buck said she helped form the<lb/>
group after President Gerald<lb/>
Mav's April, 1988, explanation<lb/>
that he has not appointed any<lb/>
women to high-level administra-<lb/>
tive posts on the campus because<lb/>
there were no women qualified<lb/>
for them.<lb/>
"We need to get together on<lb/>
this issue and get our voices<lb/>
heard Roebuck told the Daily<lb/>
Lobo, UNM's campus paper. "It's<lb/>
been going on long enough<lb/>
She said the new group<lb/>
would pressure May to hire more<lb/>
women and form a task force to<lb/>
recruit them.<lb/>
A similar press conference<lb/>
inspired the University of Iowa,<lb/>
which formed an "affirmative<lb/>
'Norwegian Saga'<lb/>
tonight on campus<lb/>
?' EjCU News Bureau<lb/>
"Norwegian Saga the first<lb/>
film in East Carolina University's<lb/>
1988-89 Travel-Adventure Film<lb/>
Series, will offer a glimpse of the<lb/>
historical and legendary scenes of<lb/>
Norway tonight in ECU'S Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre beginning at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Through the eyes of<lb/>
filmmaker John Roberts, the audi-<lb/>
ence experiences a cruise to the<lb/>
"top of the world" at Molde and<lb/>
visits the jagged chain of moun-<lb/>
tains of the Lofoton Islands, trav-<lb/>
eling back down by narrow,<lb/>
winding mountain roads to see a<lb/>
Norwegian wedding in tradi-<lb/>
tional costume.<lb/>
Other highlights of the film<lb/>
include a salmon fishing excur-<lb/>
sion, a pony trip to Glacier and a<lb/>
number of museums - the Monk,<lb/>
Oslo Folk and the Viking.<lb/>
Also featured are spectacular<lb/>
views of the famed Norwegian<lb/>
fjords and newly renovated his-<lb/>
toric fjord homes.<lb/>
The Travel-Ad venture Film<lb/>
Series is one of ECU's most popu-<lb/>
larevents,and frequently sellsout<lb/>
early. Single tickets to "Norwe-<lb/>
gian Saga" are now available at<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office in Men-<lb/>
denhall Student Center, tele-<lb/>
phone 757-6611.<lb/>
Also on sale are season tick-<lb/>
ets, priced at $18, guaranteeing a<lb/>
seat at all six of the 1988-89 Travel-<lb/>
Adventure Films.<lb/>
The remaining films are<lb/>
"Americans in Paris Oct. 25;<lb/>
"Italy - Places in Between Nov.<lb/>
21; "Safari Jan. 19; "Bermuda Is<lb/>
Another World Feb. 6 and<lb/>
"Nova Scotia, Newfoundland,<lb/>
Labrador March 23.<lb/>
Discounts are offered to per-<lb/>
sons in groups of 20 or more.<lb/>
action task force" in 1984 to re- more" male tenured professors<lb/>
cruit women, to release an inter- on campus than female ? gender<lb/>
nal report purporting to show no longer seems to be a factor in<lb/>
that - although there are<lb/>
BACK TO<lb/>
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AT TIME OF PROCESSING LIMIT 2 ROLLS -<lb/>
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ONE FREE REPRINT WITH EACH<lb/>
TWO PURCHASED<lb/>
ONE COUPON PER VISIT<lb/>
.JE555EIL3f?ii? ?? ?- -J<lb/>
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WTTH PURCHASE OF ANY COLOR<lb/>
ENLARGEMENT UP TO 11-XU- <lb/>
Reccivf 2nd Enlargement<lb/>
ran EXPIRES<lb/>
LIMIT 2<lb/>
set1W1KUJ<lb/>
INSTANT REPLAY<lb/>
ONE HOUR PHOTOS AND PORTRAITS<lb/>
'Quality, Convenience and Personal Service'<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
(next to Annabcllc's)<lb/>
355-5050<lb/>
DOUBLE<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
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On Manufacturer's<lb/>
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U.S. NO. 1?UMIT ONE WITH J10 MIN PURCHASE<lb/>
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5 lb<lb/>
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SLICE?MTN. DEW?PEPSI FREE<lb/>
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CUSTOM GROUND?LIMIT ONE WITH 10 MIN PURCHASE<lb/>
Eight<lb/>
O'Clock<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
LIMIT TWO WITH s10 MIN PURCHASE<lb/>
Parkay<lb/>
Margarine<lb/>
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U.S.DA. CHOICE GRAIN FED<lb/>
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AT U S POST OFFICE PRICES<lb/>
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Prices Effective Thru Sat . Oct 15. 1988 Quantity Rights Reserved Not Responsible For Typographical Errors<lb/>
Prices Good In Greenville, N.C. ? At 703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open Sunday 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. ? Monday thru Saturday 7:00 a.m12 Midnight<lb/>
i<lb/>
Members (it 7<lb/>
American<lb/>
night (Photola<lb/>
'Gorillas<lb/>
doc inner<lb/>
By JEFF FARKl R<lb/>
now I<lb/>
lure has come l taV<lb/>
It's the si r<lb/>
Dun Foss<lb/>
M<lb/>
. I<lb/>
 k the<lb/>
?<lb/>
cape,<lb/>
shot wore K<lb/>
give tl<lb/>
-<lb/>
dear us to then<lb/>
creatun<lb/>
little was g<lb/>
paint ai<lb/>
part tmd a<lb/>
What '<lb/>
istic and -<lb/>
intothecai<lb/>
her dedical<lb/>
. ed in to the j<lb/>
p film beg -<lb/>
se p<lb/>
Wc<lb/>
her si<lb/>
author<lb/>
Leake tvork<lb/>
Ge - .<lb/>
thai<lb/>
this stud<lb/>
?<lb/>
her track r<lb/>
Omira '<lb/>
aboul ?<lb/>
to the<lb/>
Fosse) N gins<lb/>
even<lb/>
the K ??<lb/>
and thcgoi<lb/>
?<lb/>
gorill ?s<lb/>
andb<lb/>
mimit -<lb/>
beha rs<lb/>
Sic<lb/>
.<lb/>
Biz E goe<lb/>
B 1 Rlls HW1<lb/>
?<lb/>
other i<lb/>
for Big<lb/>
a -v rt am<lb/>
of the news ro<lb/>
Yeah n<lb/>
col ami<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
in<lb/>
Entertainmei<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
The Blushing Bri<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Swamp Gypsiej<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
Triple Maniac<lb/>
Susie's<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
JimThackery and the<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Wide Spread Va<lb/>
Deli<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
The Point<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0014"/><lb/>
UBLE<lb/>
UPON<lb/>
VINGS<lb/>
I Ml I S I K( 'I INI-XN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Ballet dazzles crowd<lb/>
IK IM SHAMI IN<lb/>
SUM Vnltr<lb/>
The Ohio Ballet practice their movements during a dress rehearsal Wednesday. One of<lb/>
s premier ballet companies, 1 he Ohio Ballet performed at Wright Auditorium Wedne<lb/>
itolab)<lb/>
'Gorillas in the Mist' entertains,<lb/>
documents Dian Fossey's life<lb/>
Slowly, a warm, blue<lb/>
light filled the stage. In die center<lb/>
of the itage, two voung women in<lb/>
Victorian dresses nonchalantly<lb/>
.n i.m ,t their hats. 1 heir hats<lb/>
arranged,the) stood. Much to the<lb/>
audience's amazement, they were<lb/>
ovei ? ight f el tall.<lb/>
No, tins was neither The-<lb/>
ft the Absurd or 1 )adaist<lb/>
i it wa- the opening dance<lb/>
the( hio Ballet at Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium last night. I lutr program<lb/>
? I of four seperatc pieces<lb/>
hit h w ere modern and<lb/>
tin i ther two lassical.<lb/>
rhe opening scene was<lb/>
from Untitled a dance origi-<lb/>
nally composed for the bizarre<lb/>
and artful Pilobolus company<lb/>
Although the first appearance<lb/>
nt foot tall women and man in<lb/>
little more than g strings startled<lb/>
e of peple w ho came<lb/>
prepared to see ball t the st i <lb/>
11 fold itself.<lb/>
? t i a me a dance; en-<lb/>
titlt i Summer Night, which<lb/>
? 1 iduced in the program<lb/>
. ith .i uui te from Shellev. 1 he<lb/>
theme ol the dance was roman 1<lb/>
evident by the stt. slow motions<lb/>
of the dancers (choreographed by<lb/>
1 teinz Poll, their own artistic di-<lb/>
re tor) as well as that oi the music<lb/>
(Chopin's "Romanze)<lb/>
I nlike its predecessor, the<lb/>
second piece followed classical<lb/>
ballet style: rwocouples danced<lb/>
on stage, alternately and simulta-<lb/>
neously, using the entire area ter<lb/>
their graceful flourishes. The<lb/>
stage itself was lit by a pa? hwrk<lb/>
oi white and a subdued blue<lb/>
glow, winch enhanced the grave<lb/>
and beauty of the dance itseit<lb/>
" iravirv  another fine<lb/>
example of modern dance, fol<lb/>
lowed. It filled the stage with ten<lb/>
dan( ers w hose mo ements capti-<lb/>
vated the audience. Although<lb/>
their movements were, at times,<lb/>
identical and monotonous, there<lb/>
were times of what seemed to be<lb/>
wild abandi n.<lb/>
The interplay and the juxta-<lb/>
position of the two completeh<lb/>
filled the stagi with moti<lb/>
"Gravity" was danced to the<lb/>
heavy rhythm : primitive<lb/>
drums, w hich only served to fur-<lb/>
ther entrance the audience.<lb/>
The last dance was en-<lb/>
titli d <lb/>
?r .1 thr<lb/>
unfolde Iuiral 1 rue<lb/>
to tins definiti was<lb/>
done in thn ? sep rate<lb/>
buteachasma<lb/>
integrated w I<lb/>
tych, this ;<lb/>
The musi<lb/>
in the 19th entun, 1<lb/>
delssohn 1 Piano <lb/>
ber 2 in D1<lb/>
?<lb/>
? 11<lb/>
brown and tl<lb/>
first time n I<lb/>
? ?? ? .<lb/>
iway froi 1<lb/>
into th? lancu<lb/>
merited th<lb/>
atti ? ?<lb/>
istance fi<lb/>
1 a prol<lb/>
?<lb/>
. 1<lb/>
nati nsact<lb/>
? their<lb/>
the ??<lb/>
il in<lb/>
Men<lb/>
? I<lb/>
.<lb/>
 PARK I R<lb/>
job in studving the film footage of<lb/>
Fosse inaction Most of the earl<lb/>
footaee VVea er saw was shot bv<lb/>
forn<lb/>
unelt<lb/>
uir<lb/>
P<lb/>
a? e<lb/>
the<lb/>
try to<lb/>
11 wi th 1<lb/>
? the jungles-<lb/>
big location<lb/>
?<lb/>
V<lb/>
en-<lb/>
d us the<lb/>
? . )ian<lb/>
us a<lb/>
ion<lb/>
a National Geographic photogra<lb/>
adven pherBobCai played in the<lb/>
nit le b Australian a ti r Bryan<lb/>
a n.<lb/>
As in real life ampbell<lb/>
became ! )ian 11 sse s 1 t t<lb/>
beir I to ??? rk with her<lb/>
- films show ed the rest<lb/>
of the world of 1 osse s wi ?rkdur-<lb/>
ing the late Sixties, prompt:<lb/>
tifu! It did not much of the public to label her<lb/>
hundreds the Gorilla Woman<lb/>
What real-lite concept)<lb/>
?d as being a strange relatii n<lb/>
ship the movie gives a more ob<lb/>
jectivc view I Fossev spent<lb/>
much of her vi.no life with<lb/>
uj ; gorillas, and did<lb/>
come to respect them as familv. In<lb/>
the almost twenl vears sh<lb/>
in the Congo, the determined<lb/>
nan and anthropologisl fought poachers<lb/>
? she be- and trappers to insure the safer)<lb/>
of the animals.<lb/>
'Fight' is meant literal!)<lb/>
here. Fossc carried out a small<lb/>
level of warfare against the<lb/>
Batwa, natives who regarded her<lb/>
las under the as a wit h because of her reddish<lb/>
ius Dr Louis tire hair. She takes to 'fighting<lb/>
y with National fire with fire" by creating a taboo<lb/>
? finds ouf svmbol of herself to use against<lb/>
. in charge of the superstitious hunters.<lb/>
ik departs Her Struggle to protect the<lb/>
ery is that is makes her other enemies<lb/>
mb 1. in hn along the wa making her mur-<lb/>
? knows nothing der in 1985 a mystery. (And that<lb/>
las Unfamiliar shouldn't ruin the film for you<lb/>
?and it's inhabitants, becauseit'scommonknowledg<lb/>
irnev that will The film gives us unbiased depic-<lb/>
her the ruler of tions of characters that would be<lb/>
lin where she suspect; trapper Van Vecten, th<lb/>
Batwa, and the research assis<lb/>
group of tants, and leaves the actual mur-<lb/>
1 rves them dervague, to be taken as you want<lb/>
. them by to<lb/>
? gestures and ;il notice tins review<lb/>
lent here that does not say much about the tech-<lb/>
did a careful nical side of the mo ie. Well, the<lb/>
sets were all on I v in. ?n in the<lb/>
Kenvan mountains, so the were<lb/>
realistic. I 11. hi iel animated<lb/>
gorillas were done bv spe ial ef-<lb/>
fet tsw izard Rick Baker, and most<lb/>
people will probabh not be able<lb/>
itch them. Nothing lex hi<lb/>
will stand out to draw vour atten-<lb/>
tion, win h is as it sh iuld I<lb/>
Direct iel A<lb/>
w iselv let most 1 l the weight I<lb/>
the film be arried on th l<lb/>
dersof the lead at tress,Sigournt <lb/>
V ea er, I he f us ?n her hara<lb/>
' ? 11 id . '<lb/>
apesai<lb/>
to he<lb/>
of mterac tion v ith<lb/>
itesl<lb/>
lint some calle-d<lb/>
"?  tian<lb/>
irney<lb/>
1 to beein<lb/>
me<lb/>
rkn<lb/>
A'atch ? ? , ? tion<lb/>
from the ? id w ho nei<lb/>
herblowdrver to the no nons 1 e<lb/>
keeper of the mountain, it seems<lb/>
her role as th ' 1 h "Ripli ? " ?<lb/>
;ht have hi<lb/>
pn I<lb/>
her.<lb/>
The su i ess of tins mo ie<lb/>
ms to beattributi I to)<lb/>
cast's and crew's belief in wl<lb/>
thev were doing.<lb/>
cheap attempts t. get sympatl<lb/>
1 Man Fi ?sse 's pa 11 I I :<lb/>
cation are I ?. 1 1 ? alisticalh I<lb/>
Weavi r<lb/>
M -st e ervone invol<lb/>
with Fossev during her 1 1<lb/>
Africa were consultants to :<lb/>
film, and approved of everything<lb/>
shown, a rarity in biograj<lb/>
films, rhe gorillas Sigourne<lb/>
worked with w ere even the acl<lb/>
ones Fossev studied.<lb/>
 hat is so spectacular about<lb/>
the film is the realism captured<lb/>
without sacritu ing any entertain<lb/>
ment value. Instead of laps<lb/>
into documentary straightness,<lb/>
the mo ie re read s the fer or<lb/>
Fossev herself had, and no mo<lb/>
ments drag. At least once a yi ar<lb/>
you should go set a film that<lb/>
matters, so go see this one be<lb/>
cause it dt<lb/>
Hie K goes radio, gives advice to derelicts<lb/>
IK I ARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
urei niter<lb/>
: ? jockey on the<lb/>
ne line asked<lb/>
e for yi u Earl<lb/>
from the den- ail<lb/>
? h. real1 ? like the<lb/>
: ? ? phone.<lb/>
s<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
ht<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
in<lb/>
1 nterlainment<lb/>
I hursday<lb/>
I he Blushing Brides<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Swamp (iypsies<lb/>
New I )eli<lb/>
I riple Maniacs<lb/>
Susie's<lb/>
I rid ay<lb/>
im rhackery and the Assassins<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Wide Spread Panic<lb/>
Deli<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
The Point<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
rhe excited voi e of the Dee-<lb/>
jay blistered the phone wires with<lb/>
praise. And then came the ques-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
"so 1 , the infamous advii e<lb/>
umnist that you are, how<lb/>
would you like to come on a radio<lb/>
talk show? I )oug Warner from Z<lb/>
? I d<lb/>
E paused and tried to ontrol<lb/>
his slobber as he contemplated<lb/>
tame Well let me think about it<lb/>
 e.ih what the hay E said.<lb/>
It was set for Thursday. Iran<lb/>
scending the so called 'dead<lb/>
medium of print journalism,<lb/>
Earl's voice would soon be<lb/>
blasted into thehomesof millions.<lb/>
( into b autiful Beaufort N (<lb/>
we went. Earl and Parker tanked<lb/>
up theaddy, bought two quarts<lb/>
1.( 1 il and a twelve pa k ot <lb/>
drinks m( we were off down a<lb/>
misty high way 43 Alter nine false<lb/>
accusations, Parker finally posi<lb/>
lively identified The Mistv Blue<lb/>
I ounge At that point, Parker<lb/>
agreed to write a feature on The<lb/>
Misty Blue I ounge.<lb/>
By 12 45 a m , comedian and<lb/>
super Dee lav Doug Warner in-<lb/>
troduced The Big I "Welcome to<lb/>
the , E. 1 have read some of your<lb/>
advice columns in the East<lb/>
( arolmian  " Warner started<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Warner, a transplant vankee<lb/>
fn im Washington D. came to<lb/>
103 two vears ago. His first assign<lb/>
ment was to spin inyl on the<lb/>
dreaded graveyard shitt, during<lb/>
the hours of midnight to 6 a.m.<lb/>
Rather than be peeved about the<lb/>
shift, Warner brought the grave<lb/>
yard shift alive.<lb/>
I told my boss 1 wanted to get<lb/>
at least one lawsuit slapped on the<lb/>
station because of the show<lb/>
Warner said. In other words,<lb/>
Warner's style can be compared<lb/>
to the now defum t C learly I .1<lb/>
beled lastarolmian Satire Page<lb/>
As the I hursday's show pro<lb/>
grossed, the rambling disc jo ke)<lb/>
had Earl and Park in hysterics<lb/>
Warner slammed the E 1 tat<lb/>
ulty, Ann Landers and<lb/>
Greenville's own, jim Whitting-<lb/>
rON.<lb/>
During a Robert Plant song,<lb/>
Warner, a coffee baron and a nico<lb/>
tine craver, confided that he still<lb/>
hasn't become accustomed to<lb/>
Eastern North ('arolina. "I have to<lb/>
drive a whole hour to go to an in<lb/>
door mail he said.<lb/>
Back on tin-air, Warner asked<lb/>
Big E if he would mind advising<lb/>
some of the troubled listeners<lb/>
After agreeing to the request, the<lb/>
phone lines instantly lit up<lb/>
Sec PEE WEE, page 10<lb/>
Sigourney Weaver stars as Dian Fossev , a controversial anthropologist who devoted nearly 20 years<lb/>
hei life to saving the mountain gorillas of Rwanda, in 'Gorilas in the Mist.<lb/>
Face the 'Alien Nation'<lb/>
By MiCAH HARRIS<lb/>
Suit Writer<lb/>
"Alien Nation" offers an in-<lb/>
teresting variation on the "crea-<lb/>
tures from beyond" theme. The<lb/>
extraterrestials here (dubbed<lb/>
New timers") are neither hell<lb/>
bent invaders or angelic visitors,<lb/>
but pitiful refugees. Thus, the<lb/>
inspire neither fear or wonder but<lb/>
contempt on the part ot the hu-<lb/>
man race.<lb/>
But the aliens (humanoid<lb/>
beings with complexions not un<lb/>
like the pallor of a marshmallow<lb/>
peanut) are quick learners They<lb/>
have been genetically engineered<lb/>
and are in fact our superiors<lb/>
mentall) and physically. They<lb/>
begin to carve out a place tor<lb/>
themselves in human society<lb/>
And some ot the "Newcomers"<lb/>
don't mind carving that niche out<lb/>
of their fellow aliens' bodies <lb/>
Alien Nation" was scripted<lb/>
by Rockne S. O Bannon. ot the<lb/>
revived Twilight Zone In such<lb/>
Twilight Zone stories as<lb/>
Shadow Man ' and a moon-<lb/>
lighted episode ol the then-con-<lb/>
current "Amazing Stones" (in<lb/>
which Patrick "happy feet"<lb/>
Swayze played a death's row<lb/>
inmate suddenly granted the<lb/>
power to heal), O Bannon dis-<lb/>
played a knack tor setting up an<lb/>
intriguing premise He does the<lb/>
same tor Alien Nation yet he<lb/>
tails to follow it through satisfac<lb/>
torily<lb/>
jamesCaan plays S) kes,acop<lb/>
whose personal life is on the<lb/>
downhill side He suffers another<lb/>
emotional blow when his partner<lb/>
and best friend, higgle, is killed<lb/>
during an exchange ot tire be-<lb/>
tween the cops and some aliens<lb/>
trying to knock o er a convenient<lb/>
store.<lb/>
The general hostility of<lb/>
Americans to the E.T. refugees is<lb/>
mirrored bv Svkes reaction to his<lb/>
new pa si the first<lb/>
alien to become a d tective S k. s<lb/>
and t rancis s wan 1 each<lb/>
other is the film s hi d the<lb/>
characters are likable but some<lb/>
how the relationship com. -<lb/>
across as superficial<lb/>
rhe relationship's develop<lb/>
ment seems too forced Grant<lb/>
Svkes has Kvn established as a<lb/>
man capable ol rising over pn<lb/>
dice Sykes is white arid his K st<lb/>
friend is black<lb/>
But when that best tru nd is<lb/>
killed by an alien Sykes proj?<lb/>
his anger to all of the New comers.<lb/>
so his acceptance of an alien part<lb/>
ner should be extremely diffk<lb/>
That it occurs apparently within a<lb/>
week is unlikely 1 nata single all-<lb/>
night drunk male bonding expe-<lb/>
rience establishes it is unbeliev-<lb/>
able given the circumstance.<lb/>
What is most irksome, how<lb/>
ever, is that the humanalien soci-<lb/>
ety is not convincing You feel that<lb/>
Sec MICAH, paiie 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0015"/><lb/>
UBLE<lb/>
UPON<lb/>
iVINGS<lb/>
Manufacturer s<lb/>
Coupons Up to 504<lb/>
t For Details!<lb/>
 H<lb/>
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illeBlvd.<lb/>
i 7 (XI a m12 Midnight<lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
OCTOBER 13. 1988 Page 11<lb/>
Ballet dazzles crowd<lb/>
ByJIMSHAMLIN<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
Menbers of The Ohio Ballet practice their movements during a dress rehearsal Wednesday. One of<lb/>
American's premier ballet companies, The Ohio Ballet performed at Wright Auditorium Wednesday-<lb/>
night (Photolab)<lb/>
'Gorillas in the Mist9 entertains,<lb/>
documents Dian Fossey9s life<lb/>
Slowly, a warm, blue<lb/>
light filled the stage. In the center<lb/>
of the stage, two young women in<lb/>
Victorian dresses nonchalantly<lb/>
arranged their hats. Their hats<lb/>
arranged, they stood. Much to the<lb/>
audience's amazement, they were<lb/>
over eight feet tall.<lb/>
No, this was neither The-<lb/>
atre of the Absurd or Dadaist<lb/>
drama, it was the opening dance<lb/>
of the Ohio Ballet at Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium last night. Their program<lb/>
consisted of four scperate pieces,<lb/>
two of which were modern and<lb/>
the other two classical.<lb/>
The opening scene was<lb/>
from "Untitled a dance origi-<lb/>
nally composed for the bizarre<lb/>
and artful Pilobolus company.<lb/>
Although the first appearance of<lb/>
eight-foot tall women and man in<lb/>
little more than g-strings startled<lb/>
the audience of peple who came<lb/>
prepared to see "ballet the story<lb/>
began to unfold itself.<lb/>
Next came a dance en-<lb/>
titled "Summer Night which<lb/>
was introduced in the program<lb/>
with a quote from Shelley. The<lb/>
theme of the dance was romance,<lb/>
evident by the soft, slow motions<lb/>
of the dancers (choreographed by<lb/>
Heinz Poll, their own artistic di-<lb/>
rector) as well as that of the music<lb/>
(Chopin's "Romanze)<lb/>
Unlike its predecessor, the<lb/>
second piece followed classical<lb/>
ballet style: Two couples danced<lb/>
on stage, alternately and simulta-<lb/>
neously, using the entire area for<lb/>
their graceful flourishes. The<lb/>
stage itself was lit by a patchwork<lb/>
of white and a subdued blue<lb/>
glow, which enhanced the grace<lb/>
and beauty of the dance itself.<lb/>
"Gravity another fine<lb/>
example of modern dance, fol-<lb/>
lowed. It filled the stage with ten<lb/>
dancers whose movements capti-<lb/>
vated the audience. Although<lb/>
their movements were, at times,<lb/>
identical and monotonous, there<lb/>
were times of what seemed to be<lb/>
wild abandon.<lb/>
The interplay and the juxta-<lb/>
position of the two completely<lb/>
filled the stage with motion.<lb/>
"Gravity" was danced to the<lb/>
heavy rhythm of primitive<lb/>
drums, which onlv served to fur-<lb/>
ther entrance the audience.<lb/>
The last dance was en-<lb/>
titled "Triptych an artistic term<lb/>
for a three-paneled cabinet which<lb/>
unfolded to create a mural. True<lb/>
to this definition, the dance was<lb/>
done in three parts, each scperate,<lb/>
but each a smaller portion of their<lb/>
integrated whole. Like the trip-<lb/>
tych, this piece was classical in<lb/>
stvle: Th.? music itself was written<lb/>
J<lb/>
in the 19th century bv Felix Men-<lb/>
delssohn (Piano Concerto Num-<lb/>
ber 2 in D minor.)<lb/>
The dancers wore traditional<lb/>
costumes of neutral white and<lb/>
brown and the lights were, for the<lb/>
first time, not used to create mood<lb/>
or setting. This called attention<lb/>
away from the accoutrements and<lb/>
into the dancing itself, which fully<lb/>
merited the audience's undivided<lb/>
attention.<lb/>
The company itself has<lb/>
grown over the 20 years oi its ex-<lb/>
istance from a small group of<lb/>
dancers to a a professional tour-<lb/>
ing group which has played in 162<lb/>
cities in 36 states, not to mention<lb/>
tours of Europe and South Amer-<lb/>
ica. Newspapers from Seattle to<lb/>
New York have called the Ohio<lb/>
Ballet "a credit to the entire dance<lb/>
community which "bedazzles<lb/>
nations across the countrv<lb/>
By JEFF PARKER<lb/>
Stiff Illustrator<lb/>
Move over "Born Free a<lb/>
new biographyjungle adven-<lb/>
ture has come to take your place.<lb/>
It's the Story oi anthropologist<lb/>
Dian Fossev, "Gorillas in the<lb/>
Mist<lb/>
"Gorillas" did not try to<lb/>
knock the viewer out with mag-<lb/>
nificent panoramasof the jungles-<lb/>
cape, though the big location<lb/>
shots were beautiful. It did not<lb/>
give the audience hundreds of<lb/>
shots of cute, lovable apes to en-<lb/>
dear us to them, it showed us the<lb/>
creatures as they really are, very<lb/>
little was glorified. And it did not<lb/>
paint an idealist's picture of Dian<lb/>
Fossey, the film showed her, bad<lb/>
parts and all.<lb/>
What it did do was give us a<lb/>
realistic and very insightful look<lb/>
into the career of this woman, and<lb/>
her dedication to a cause she be-<lb/>
lieved in to the point some called<lb/>
obsession.<lb/>
The film begins with Dian<lb/>
Fossev (portrayed by Sigourney<lb/>
Weaver) going to Africa to begin<lb/>
her study of the gorillas under the<lb/>
authoritv of the famous Dr. Louis<lb/>
Leakey, working with National<lb/>
Geographic. She soon finds out<lb/>
that she is left solely in charge of<lb/>
this study, as Dr. Leaky departs.<lb/>
Her next discovery is that<lb/>
her tracker, Sembagare, (John<lb/>
Omirah Miluwi) knows nothing<lb/>
about finding gorillas. Unfamiliar<lb/>
to the jungle and it's inhabitants,<lb/>
Fossey begins a journey that will<lb/>
eventually make her the ruler of<lb/>
the Rwanda mountain where she<lb/>
and the gorillas lived.<lb/>
After finding a group of<lb/>
gorillas, Fossey observes them<lb/>
and becomes accepted by them by<lb/>
mimicking their gestures and<lb/>
behaviors. It is evident here that<lb/>
Sicourney Weaver did a careful<lb/>
job in studying the film footage of<lb/>
Fossey in action. Most of the early<lb/>
footage Weaver saw was shot by<lb/>
National Geographic photogra-<lb/>
pher Bob Campbell, played in the<lb/>
movie by Australian actor Bryan<lb/>
Brown.<lb/>
As in real life, Campbell<lb/>
became Dian Fossey's lover after<lb/>
being sent to work with her.<lb/>
Campbell's films showed the rest<lb/>
of the world of Fossey's work dur-<lb/>
ing the late Sixties, prompting<lb/>
much of the public to label her<lb/>
"the Gorilla Woman<lb/>
What real-life conceptions<lb/>
tagged as being a strange relation-<lb/>
ship, the movie gives a more ob-<lb/>
jective view of. Fossey spent<lb/>
much of her daily life with<lb/>
"Group 4 the gorillas, and did<lb/>
come to respect them as family. In<lb/>
the almost twenty years she spent<lb/>
in the Congo, the determined<lb/>
anthropologist fought poachers<lb/>
and trappers to insure the safety<lb/>
of the animals.<lb/>
'Fight' is meant literally<lb/>
here. Fossey carried out a small<lb/>
level of warfare against the<lb/>
Batwa, natives who regarded her<lb/>
as a witch because of her reddish<lb/>
'fire' hair. She takes to "fighting<lb/>
fire with fire" by creating a taboo<lb/>
symbol of herself to use against<lb/>
the superstitious hunters.<lb/>
Her struggle to protect the<lb/>
gorillas makes her other enemies<lb/>
along the way, making her mur-<lb/>
der in 1985 a mystery. (And that<lb/>
shouldn't ruin the film for you<lb/>
because it'scommon knowledge).<lb/>
The film gives us unbiased depic-<lb/>
tions of characters that would be<lb/>
suspect; trapper Van Vecten, the<lb/>
Batwa, and the research assis-<lb/>
tants, and leaves the actual mur-<lb/>
der vague, to be taken as you want<lb/>
to.<lb/>
You'll notice this review<lb/>
does not say much about the tech-<lb/>
nical side of the movie. Well, the<lb/>
sets were all on location in the<lb/>
Kenyan mountains, so they were<lb/>
realistic. The very brief animated<lb/>
gorillas were done by special ef-<lb/>
fects wizard Rick Baker, and most<lb/>
people will probably not be able<lb/>
to catch them. Nothing technical<lb/>
will stand out to draw your atten-<lb/>
tion, which is as it should be.<lb/>
Director Michael Apted<lb/>
wisely let most of the weight of<lb/>
the film be carried on the shoul-<lb/>
ders of the lead actress, Sigourney<lb/>
Weaver. The focus on her charac-<lb/>
ter and growth of interaction with<lb/>
the apes are what relates the audi-<lb/>
ence to her.<lb/>
Watching her transition<lb/>
from the young lady who needs<lb/>
her bio wdryer to the no-nonsense<lb/>
keeper of the mountain, it seems<lb/>
her role as the tough "Ripley" in<lb/>
"Aliens" might have helped the<lb/>
producers in their decision to cast<lb/>
her.<lb/>
The success of this movie<lb/>
seems to be attributed to the entire<lb/>
cast's and crew's belief in what<lb/>
they were doing. There are no<lb/>
cheap attempts to get sympathy.<lb/>
Dian Fossey's passion and dedi-<lb/>
cation are shown realistically by<lb/>
Weaver.<lb/>
Most everyone involved<lb/>
with Fossey during her years in<lb/>
Africa were consultants to the<lb/>
film, and approved of everything<lb/>
shown, a rarity in biographical<lb/>
films. The gorillas Sigourney<lb/>
worked with were even the actual<lb/>
ones Fossey studied.<lb/>
What is so spectacular about<lb/>
the film is the realism captured<lb/>
without sacrificing any entertain-<lb/>
ment value. Instead of lapsing<lb/>
into documentary straightness,<lb/>
the movie recreates the fervor<lb/>
Fossey herself had, and no mo-<lb/>
ments drag. At least once a year<lb/>
you should go see a film that<lb/>
matters, so go see this one - be-<lb/>
cause it does.<lb/>
Big E goes radio, gives advice to derelicts<lb/>
By EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
The radio disc jockey on the<lb/>
 ithcr end of the phone line asked<lb/>
for Big E. "Line one for you Earl<lb/>
a scream came from the dense air<lb/>
oi the news room.<lb/>
"Yeah, really, so you like the<lb/>
column E said into the phone.<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
in<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
The Blushing Brides<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Swamp Gypsies<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
Triple Maniacs<lb/>
Susie's<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Jim Thackery and the Assassins<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Wide Spread Panic<lb/>
Deli<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
The Point<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
The excited voice of the Dee-<lb/>
Jav blistered the phone wires with<lb/>
praise. And then came the ques-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"So E, the infamous advice<lb/>
columnist that you are, how<lb/>
would you like to come on a radio<lb/>
talk show? Doug Warner from Z<lb/>
- 103 asked.<lb/>
E paused and tried to control<lb/>
his slobber as he contemplated<lb/>
fame. "Well let me think about it.<lb/>
Yeah, what the hay E said.<lb/>
It was set for Thursday. Tran-<lb/>
scending the so-called 'dead<lb/>
medium' of print journalism,<lb/>
Earl's voice would soon be<lb/>
blasted into thehomesof millions.<lb/>
Onto beautiful Beaufort N.C.<lb/>
we went. Earl and Parker tanked<lb/>
up the Caddy, bought two quarts<lb/>
of oil and a twelve pack of <lb/>
drinks and we were off down a<lb/>
misty highway 43. After nine false<lb/>
accusations, Parker finally posi-<lb/>
tively identified The Misty Blue<lb/>
Lounge. At that point, Parker<lb/>
agreed to write a feature on The<lb/>
Misty Blue Lounge.<lb/>
By 12:45 a.m comedian and<lb/>
super Dee-Jay Doug Warner in-<lb/>
troduced The Big E. "Welcome to<lb/>
the Z, E. I have read some of your<lb/>
advice columns in the East<lb/>
Carolinian  Warner started<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Warner, a transplant yankee<lb/>
from Washington D.C,cametoZ-<lb/>
103 two years ago. His first assign-<lb/>
ment was to spin vinyl on the<lb/>
dreaded graveyard shift, during<lb/>
the hours of midnight to 6 a.m.<lb/>
Rather than be peeved about the<lb/>
shift, Warner brought the grave-<lb/>
yard shift alive.<lb/>
"I told my boss I wanted to get<lb/>
at least one lawsuit slapped on the<lb/>
station because of the show<lb/>
Warner said. In other words,<lb/>
Warner's style can be compared<lb/>
to the now defunct Clearly La-<lb/>
beled East Carolinian Satire Page.<lb/>
As the Thursday's show pro-<lb/>
gressed, the rambling disc jockey<lb/>
had Earl and Park in hysterics.<lb/>
Warner slammed the ECU fac-<lb/>
ulty, Ann Landers and<lb/>
Greenville's own, Jim Whitting-<lb/>
TON.<lb/>
During a Robert Plant song,<lb/>
Warner, a coffee baron and a nico-<lb/>
tine craver, confided that he still<lb/>
hasn't become accustomed to<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina. "I have to<lb/>
drive a whole hour to go to an in-<lb/>
door mall he said.<lb/>
Back on the air, Warner asked<lb/>
Big E if he would mind advising<lb/>
some of the troubled listeners.<lb/>
After agreeing to the request, the<lb/>
phone lines instantly lit up.<lb/>
See PER WEE, page 10<lb/>
Sigourney Weaver stars as Dian Fossey, a controversial anthropologist who devoted nearly 20 years of<lb/>
her life to saving the mountain gorillas of Rwanda, in 'Gorilas in the Mist<lb/>
Face the 'Alien Nation'<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
su f Writer<lb/>
"Alien Nation" offers an in-<lb/>
teresting variation on the "crea-<lb/>
tures from beyond" theme. The<lb/>
extraterrestials here (dubbed<lb/>
"Newcomers") are neither hell-<lb/>
bent invaders or angelic visitors,<lb/>
but pitiful refugees. Thus, they<lb/>
inspire neither fear or wonder but<lb/>
contempt on the part of the hu-<lb/>
man race.<lb/>
But the aliens (humanoid<lb/>
beings with complexions not un-<lb/>
like the pallor of a marshmallow<lb/>
peanut) are quick learners. They<lb/>
have been genetically engineered<lb/>
and are in fact our superiors<lb/>
mentally and physically. They<lb/>
begin to carve out a place for<lb/>
themselves in human society.<lb/>
And some of the "Newcomers"<lb/>
don't mind carving that niche out<lb/>
of their fellow aliens' bodies<lb/>
"Alien Nation" was scripted<lb/>
by Rockne S. O'Bannon, of the<lb/>
revived "Twilight Zone In such<lb/>
"Twilight Zone" stories as<lb/>
"Shadow Man" and a moon-<lb/>
lighted episode of the then-con-<lb/>
current "Amazing Stories" (in<lb/>
which Patrick "happy feet"<lb/>
Swayze played a death's row<lb/>
inmate suddenly granted the<lb/>
power to heal), O'Bannon dis-<lb/>
played a knack for setting up an<lb/>
intriguing premise. He does the<lb/>
same for "Alien Nation yet he<lb/>
fails to follow it through satisfac-<lb/>
torily.<lb/>
James Caan plays Sykes, a cop<lb/>
whose p?rsonal life is on the<lb/>
downhill side. He suffers another<lb/>
emotional blow when his partner<lb/>
and best friend, Tuggle, is killed<lb/>
during an exchange of fire be-<lb/>
tween the cops and some aliens<lb/>
trying to knock over a convenient<lb/>
store.<lb/>
The general hostility of<lb/>
Americans to the E.T. refugees is<lb/>
mirrored by Sykes reaction to his<lb/>
new partner, Francisco, the first<lb/>
alien to become a detective. Sykes<lb/>
and Francisco's warming to each<lb/>
other is the film's heart, and the<lb/>
characters are likable, but some-<lb/>
how the relationship comes<lb/>
across as superficial.<lb/>
The relationship's develop-<lb/>
ment seems too forced. Granted,<lb/>
Sykes has been established as a<lb/>
man capable of rising over preju-<lb/>
dice. Sykes is white and his best<lb/>
friend is black.<lb/>
But when that best friend is<lb/>
killed by an alien, Sykes projects<lb/>
his anger to all of the Newcomers,<lb/>
so his acceptance of an alien part-<lb/>
ner should be extremely difficult.<lb/>
That it occurs apparently within a<lb/>
week is unlikely. That a single, all-<lb/>
night drunk male-bondi ng expe-<lb/>
rience establishes it is unbeliev-<lb/>
able given the circumstance.<lb/>
What is most irksome, how-<lb/>
ever, is that the humanalien soci-<lb/>
ety is not convincing. You feel that<lb/>
See MICAH. page 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0016"/><lb/>
I HI t-ASl CAROI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBHK Page H<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
Odds against the Pirates<lb/>
<lb/>
(AD - The momentum<lb/>
seems to be going against East<lb/>
Carolina as the Pirates have<lb/>
amassed a 1-5 record, while Flor-<lb/>
the Mountaineers.<lb/>
Ernie Logan moved to line-<lb/>
backer from defensive end and<lb/>
joined Robert Jones and Anthony<lb/>
ida State has mirrored that per- Thompson, who was coming off<lb/>
formance, winning five and los-<lb/>
ing just one.<lb/>
And Tirates Coach Art Baker<lb/>
says there's little reason to think<lb/>
the Pirates can turn the tide on<lb/>
Saturday when they take on the<lb/>
Seminoles in Tallahassee.<lb/>
"Florida State has one of the<lb/>
arthroscopic knee surgery the<lb/>
week before. Chris Hall started at<lb/>
cornerback. Junior Robinson<lb/>
moved from cornerback to safety<lb/>
Shannon Boling moved from de-<lb/>
fensive tackle to defensive end.<lb/>
James Singletary moved from<lb/>
linebacker to defensive end and<lb/>
ahead and start him<lb/>
While an assistant at Florida<lb/>
State, Baker helped recruit cur-<lb/>
rent Seminole quarterback Chip<lb/>
Ferguson, who is from Charlotte<lb/>
and played his high school ball in<lb/>
Spartanburg, SC.<lb/>
Ferguson has thrown for<lb/>
1,204 yards,compared to tht I 3<lb/>
yards Libretto and Hunter have<lb/>
combined for in six games<lb/>
Last year, Florida State took a<lb/>
44-3 win over the Pirates in<lb/>
Greenville as tailback Sammie<lb/>
Smith ran for 244 yards and one<lb/>
touchdown<lb/>
Look At Us Now wins<lb/>
best combinations of physically Greg Gardill started at defensive<lb/>
strong players and talented skill tackle for the first time this season,<lb/>
position players in the country "The way our defense had<lb/>
he said. I don't think there is a been playing, to hold them to 30<lb/>
(IRS) - Intramural flag foot-<lb/>
ball season is winding down as<lb/>
playoffs conclude this week. In<lb/>
semifinal action, Look At Us Now<lb/>
team with a better group of skill points was an accomplishment took on Our Perogativeina tough<lb/>
plavers than Florida State. Baker said.<lb/>
"The last three weeks they East Carolina used both<lb/>
haven't plaved all that well, yet Charlie Libretto and Travis<lb/>
still managed to win Baker said Hunter at quarterback with var-<lb/>
at his weekly news conference ied success against West Virginia.<lb/>
Monday. "That tells you some- Baker said he had not vet decided<lb/>
thing about how strong they are who would get the start Saturdav.<lb/>
East Carolina dropped a 30- i'm not sure he said. "I<lb/>
10 decision to seventh-ranked don't know whether Travis<lb/>
West Virginia last wcvkend. FSU, piaved that much better that he'll<lb/>
meanwhile, came from behind to start or whether Charlie will con-<lb/>
It will take a good deal of coaching from Art Baker to propel<lb/>
the Pirates of ECU past the Seminoles of Florida State.<lb/>
(Photo by Thomas Walters  ECU Photo Lab.)<lb/>
take a 28-10 win over Division I-<lb/>
AA Georgia Southern last Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The Pirates have had their<lb/>
problems on defense in recent<lb/>
weeks, prompting a number of<lb/>
changes prior to the game against<lb/>
rinue to start. We're going to have<lb/>
to continue to use both quarter-<lb/>
backs as we did the other da v. I<lb/>
think they understand that. It's<lb/>
not a problem wi th either of them.<lb/>
If one was head and shoul-<lb/>
ders better than the other, we'd go<lb/>
Frisbee golf appeals to variety of players<lb/>
Special to tht fast Clllim'?<lb/>
As you step up to the tee. a tail<lb/>
wind makes the long par 3 look a little<lb/>
shorter. Your dnve takes oft'at a good<lb/>
pace, levels off, and sails. The shot<lb/>
breaks slightly to the left as it loses<lb/>
power and falls to earth. The hole is<lb/>
tantalyzingly near, but just outsid<lb/>
your comfort zone. You're in den<lb/>
range, but if you oi'ershLXt, your<lb/>
birdie hopes can easily turn to bogie.<lb/>
Doyou play it safe and lay uporgo for<lb/>
it<lb/>
Frisbee golf is a relative new-<lb/>
comer to ECU. The Intramural<lb/>
Frisbee golf course is located off<lb/>
Charles Boulevard between the<lb/>
ECU track and the women's soft-<lb/>
ball field. Builtby the ECU Frisbee<lb/>
club, the nine hole course was<lb/>
opened in the summer of 1986. A than others. Most "golf discs" are<lb/>
joy the game, which combines the<lb/>
(light characteristics of Frisbee<lb/>
with the style o play of ball golf.<lb/>
The object ot the game is to<lb/>
land the disc in the hole with the<lb/>
least amount oi strokes. Plavers<lb/>
"tee off" at the designated tee<lb/>
marker. Each player then shoots<lb/>
from the place where his previous<lb/>
throw landed, starting with the<lb/>
nor farthest from the hole.<lb/>
 rK n everyone has completed<lb/>
the hole, the player with the low-<lb/>
est total on the hole has "the hon-<lb/>
ors and throws first on the next<lb/>
hole Each hole has a par, but bird-<lb/>
ies, bogies, and the occasional<lb/>
"cc also come into play.<lb/>
Any fiving disc will work for<lb/>
Frisbee golf, but some are better<lb/>
suited to the rigors oi the game<lb/>
discs which can be borrowed<lb/>
from the equipment checkout<lb/>
room in Memorial Gvm.<lb/>
second nine was added last sum-<lb/>
mer, and improvements continue<lb/>
this year with a nineteenth hole<lb/>
for "Around Nine a putting<lb/>
practice game.<lb/>
Frisbee golf, or "folf as it is<lb/>
occasionally called, appeals to a<lb/>
wide range of players. Young and<lb/>
old, novice and pro alike can en-<lb/>
aerodynamically shaped, about 8<lb/>
inches in diameter, and made of<lb/>
heavy plastic. Bright colors make<lb/>
it easier to find stray shots and<lb/>
riccochets in the woods. There is a<lb/>
wide variety of golf discs avail-<lb/>
able through mailorder houses<lb/>
and fanatic disc golfers. Intramu-<lb/>
ral Recreational Services has golf<lb/>
"Brooklyn" side of the chains, so a<lb/>
certain amount of finesse (or luck)<lb/>
is required. A successful putt will<lb/>
hit the chains and fall with a char-<lb/>
In Frisbee golf, the disc serves acteristic "ching which is music<lb/>
as both your ball and your club, to the golfer's ear.<lb/>
Many players carry more than<lb/>
one disc in order to take advan-<lb/>
tage oi the different flight charac-<lb/>
teristics inherent in different<lb/>
discs. There are some less esoteric<lb/>
reasons to carry more than one<lb/>
disc with you on the course,<lb/>
however. Frisbees get stuck in<lb/>
trees; they get lost; they break.<lb/>
The target in Frisbee golf is<lb/>
the "pole hole Invented by an<lb/>
imaginative Califomian named<lb/>
Ed Headrick, the pole hole looks<lb/>
somewhat like a cross between a<lb/>
crab trap and a bird bath. A series<lb/>
oi spokes radiate from the top of<lb/>
the pole, about chest-high, at-<lb/>
tached to the spokes are chains<lb/>
which are tethered in the center of<lb/>
a basket about six inches deep and<lb/>
three feet across. The chains de-<lb/>
flect the disc down into the basket<lb/>
where it comes to rest, completing<lb/>
the hole. The pole hole can be<lb/>
fickle, though. A putt can rim out<lb/>
of the basket or spin off the<lb/>
battle in the men's independent<lb/>
division. Look At Us Now used<lb/>
the short passing game and a<lb/>
stone wall defense to take a 13 to 2<lb/>
lead at the half.<lb/>
Dannv Allen took over the<lb/>
quarterbacking duties in the sec-<lb/>
ond half for Our Perogative and<lb/>
marched to a quick touchdown,<lb/>
tightening the contest up to 13-8.<lb/>
However, Look At Us Now was<lb/>
not finished. They pulled the de-<lb/>
fense together and used the quick-<lb/>
ness of Derek (Cap) Smith on of-<lb/>
fense to get another score which<lb/>
brought the final to 19-8 for Look<lb/>
At Us Now.<lb/>
In women's sorority action,<lb/>
the Turtles of Delta Zeta took on<lb/>
the Sailboats of Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma. Melissa Lord and Beth<lb/>
Hopkins of Delta Zeta shared<lb/>
quarterbacking roles and helped<lb/>
take the wind out oi the Sigma<lb/>
Sails. They rolled to a 12-0 halt-<lb/>
time score.<lb/>
In the second half of play<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma was still<lb/>
unable to stop the passing attack<lb/>
oi Delta Zeta. Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
did manage a score late in the<lb/>
game bringing the final tall) to26-<lb/>
6.<lb/>
In other action, one-on-one<lb/>
basketball moves into the quarter<lb/>
finals. In the 5'11" and under divi-<lb/>
sion, Jim Bolognosi and Blair<lb/>
Wiggins advanced along with<lb/>
Mark Games and Mike Graves<lb/>
Tina Ferrara and Garry Williams<lb/>
will battle head-to-head m the<lb/>
hopes of meeting the Bill Rice<lb/>
Rob Sheldon game winnerUher<lb/>
quarter finalists include C harles<lb/>
Dawson, Mike Kotarba, Frankie<lb/>
Calhoon and Larry Murphy all in<lb/>
the 5'11" and ver bra -<lb/>
Volleyball and si i regis-<lb/>
tration will he held on Wedrw s-<lb/>
dav, October 19 at 5 md 6 p.m<lb/>
respectively, in (a B I Inter-<lb/>
ested officials should eont<lb/>
Dave Hall in 204 Memorial C iym<lb/>
Aerobic fitness class registration<lb/>
for second fall session continues<lb/>
through October 14 in 204 Memo-<lb/>
rial Gymnasium A cor .<lb/>
class schedule isa his<lb/>
location.<lb/>
Outdoor Re real Ski Trip<lb/>
adventure to Salt Lake City, Utah<lb/>
from Dec. 31-Jan 4 will be h<lb/>
registration through October 22 in<lb/>
204 Memorial Gymnasium <lb/>
involved in Outdoor Recreat<lb/>
? Intramural style, lor ad<lb/>
tional information, call  ;<lb/>
Oakland prepares for series<lb/>
5!r . .<lb/>
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -<lb/>
Storm Davis waved a bat menac-<lb/>
ingly and yelled "Everybody out<lb/>
of the way out there to his team-<lb/>
mates deep in the outfield as he<lb/>
stepped into the Oakland Coli-<lb/>
seum batting cage.<lb/>
Then he hit a ground ball.<lb/>
If the Athletics' pitchers are<lb/>
taking batting practice, it must bo<lb/>
World Series time.<lb/>
At Oakland's first pre-Series<lb/>
workout Tuesday, A's manager<lb/>
Tonv La Russa announced that<lb/>
Dave Stewart, Storm Davis and<lb/>
Bob Welch will start the first three<lb/>
games. Coincidentally, all three<lb/>
are ex-National Leaguers with<lb/>
hitting experience that could<lb/>
come in handy in Games 1, 2, 6<lb/>
and 7 when designated hitters<lb/>
will not be used in the National<lb/>
League park.<lb/>
"They won't be able to do<lb/>
enough (batting practice) in the<lb/>
next couple of weeks to overcome<lb/>
the disadvantage we have La<lb/>
Russa said. "But our starters are<lb/>
all good athletes, so I think they'll<lb/>
be all right<lb/>
La Russa is more focused on a<lb/>
couple of decisions he will have to<lb/>
make this week.<lb/>
Regular second baseman<lb/>
Glenn Hubbard, who was left off<lb/>
the playoff roster due to a ham-<lb/>
string pull, will be back for the<lb/>
scries if his leg is healthy by<lb/>
Friday's world series roster dead-<lb/>
line, according to La Russa. Oth-<lb/>
erwise, Mike Gallego and Tony<lb/>
Phillips will again share the sec-<lb/>
ond-base duties.<lb/>
The manager also hasn't<lb/>
made up his mind whether to play<lb/>
Dave Parker or LuisTolonia in left<lb/>
field against right-handed start-<lb/>
ers in the first two games. Because<lb/>
there is no DH in those games,<lb/>
whoever doesn't start will have to<lb/>
sit on the bench.<lb/>
"If it's Luis we don't have our<lb/>
leadoff guy, and if it's Dave we<lb/>
don't have our number four hit-<lb/>
ter l.a Russa said. "So it will<lb/>
affect our plans either way<lb/>
La Russa said he won't<lb/>
commit to a fourth-game starter<lb/>
until he sees how the first three<lb/>
games go. He said left-hander<lb/>
Curt Young, who spent the play-<lb/>
offs in the bullpen, could get a<lb/>
start.<lb/>
Stewart, who started twice in<lb/>
the playoffs and won Sunday's<lb/>
finale 4-1, hit some line drives and<lb/>
longflyballsduringhisturninthe<lb/>
batting cage, but said he's not<lb/>
looking forward to hitting in the<lb/>
World Series.<lb/>
"I'm looking forward to<lb/>
pitching, because that's what I do<lb/>
besthe said.<lb/>
In 1983, his last season in the<lb/>
National League, Stewart had one<lb/>
hit in seven at-bats for the Los<lb/>
Angeles Dodgers before being<lb/>
traded to Texas. But like most<lb/>
pitchers, he clearly remembers<lb/>
the few hits he has had.<lb/>
"In 1981, 1 hit a three-run<lb/>
triple against Cincinnati he said.<lb/>
As for his lifetime average, he<lb/>
only knows that it's "two-some-<lb/>
thing Sorry, Dave, it's actually<lb/>
.196. Stewart said he's also a "real<lb/>
good hunter<lb/>
Davis is a worse hitter, going<lb/>
only 1-for-l 6, .063, last year for San<lb/>
Diego in his only NL season. But<lb/>
he enjoyed taking his whacks on<lb/>
Tuesday, lining one shot to Jose<lb/>
Canseco that brought whoops<lb/>
from his teammates.<lb/>
"Hit it a little harder, man<lb/>
teased Canseco, standing in at<lb/>
third base.<lb/>
Welch, a career .151 hitter<lb/>
with the Dodgers, doesn't figure<lb/>
to get an at-bat early in the scries<lb/>
because he's scheduled to start<lb/>
Game 3 at Oakland.<lb/>
The IRS flag football season came to an end this week, and the champions were crowned.<lb/>
Tyson refractures right hand<lb/>
Block tickets for ECU  Syracuse contest<lb/>
Attention students! Ticket pick-up for blocking seating for the ECU - Syracuse game will be on<lb/>
Thursday (13th) and Friday (14th), instead of Monday and Tuesday, because, as you may have<lb/>
heard, we are on Fall Break thosedaysconsumertipfr<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Heavy-<lb/>
weight champion Mike Tyson has<lb/>
reportedly refracturcd his right<lb/>
hand, possibly putting a crimp in<lb/>
his scheduled title defense on<lb/>
Dec. 17 against Frank Bruno.<lb/>
Bill Cayton, Tyson's man-<lb/>
ager, confirmed Tuesday that he<lb/>
had been called by promoter Don<lb/>
King from Cleveland with the<lb/>
news that may affect the<lb/>
champion's fight schedule.<lb/>
The latest revelations were<lb/>
contained in a story in<lb/>
Wednesday's edition of the New-<lb/>
York Daily News.<lb/>
According to reports, Tyson<lb/>
was hitting the heavy bag in a<lb/>
gym on King's farm in Orwell,<lb/>
Ohio, when the injury occurred.<lb/>
Tyson originally had been<lb/>
scheduled to start training Mon-<lb/>
day in Catskill, N.Y.<lb/>
Cayton said he could not be<lb/>
positive whether the apparent<lb/>
hairline fracture on the third<lb/>
metacarpal of the right hand,<lb/>
which Tyson injured in a street<lb/>
fight with Mitch Green in August<lb/>
in New York, was new or old.<lb/>
That original injury forced<lb/>
postponement of the fight with<lb/>
Bruno until October. Further<lb/>
problems moved the fight back<lb/>
two more times, to December.<lb/>
According to the. News, Cay-<lb/>
ton said he spoke to the doctor<lb/>
who treated Tyson in Cleveland<lb/>
and was told the injury was<lb/>
"minor<lb/>
Cayton said it is still possible<lb/>
for Tyson to keep his four-times<lb/>
postponed date with Bruno.<lb/>
"There are nine weeks to the<lb/>
fight and a hairline fracture usu-<lb/>
ally takes only three weeks to<lb/>
heal Cayton said.<lb/>
Cayton said Tyson was ex-<lb/>
pected to arrive in New York<lb/>
today or tomorrow to be e<lb/>
ined bv Dr. David Chiu. Chiu<lb/>
treated Tyson after the fight w<lb/>
Green.<lb/>
"1 think they want to keep<lb/>
him (Tyson) in Cleveland because<lb/>
they're afraid oi papers being<lb/>
served on him Cayton was<lb/>
quoted a saying.<lb/>
East Carolina seventh<lb/>
(SID) - C A. SPIYEY-<lb/>
WACHESAW PLANTATION<lb/>
TOURNAMENT<lb/>
Murrels Inlet, SCWachesaw<lb/>
PJantationOct. 8-9<lb/>
TEAM SCORES<lb/>
Clemson 588<lb/>
South Carolina 601<lb/>
North Carolina 603<lb/>
Maryland 605<lb/>
Duke 608<lb/>
Augusta 611<lb/>
East Carolina hi5<lb/>
Virginia Tech 625<lb/>
Furman 626<lb/>
Coastal Carolina 635<lb/>
Appal. State 653<lb/>
The Citadel 660<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
Tee Davies 74-77?151<lb/>
Doug Hoey 77-79?156<lb/>
John Maginnes 78-76?154<lb/>
Francis Vaughn 82-76?158<lb/>
JimManos 84-75?159<lb/>
INDIVIDUALS<lb/>
?Chris Patton (Clem 75 f-0<lb/>
144<lb/>
ohn Reynolds (Duke) 70-<lb/>
74?144<lb/>
Siim Olson (Clem.) 76-71<lb/>
147<lb/>
Oswald Drawdy (Clem.)<lb/>
70 147<lb/>
Neil Sullivan (UNC)71 76<lb/>
147<lb/>
Jeff Hull (SO 77-71 US<lb/>
ECU HEAD COACH HAl<lb/>
MORRISON<lb/>
"1 think we are playing better<lb/>
than we did earlier in the fall.<lb/>
much steadier. This tournament<lb/>
was held on a beautiful, but very<lb/>
difficult golf course - I think the<lb/>
high scores reflect that "<lb/>
NEXT TOURNAMENT: Fri-<lb/>
day-Saturday at John Ryan Me-<lb/>
morial in Durham, hosted bv<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
ECU at Honda St<lb/>
N.C. State at I (<lb/>
Duke at Clems<lb/>
Alabama at feni<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Miami at N ti ime<lb/>
Michigan at<lb/>
Washing'<lb/>
Honda at Vai<lb/>
Fulch<lb/>
I A'<lb/>
draft, a coupl<lb/>
personnel <lb/>
about David <lb/>
230-pound<lb/>
State who<lb/>
thing from i<lb/>
fifth<lb/>
"What -<lb/>
defensive 1<lb/>
pro pir - n<lb/>
"I d<lb/>
we'd play hire I<lb/>
the set ?<lb/>
slow fort I<lb/>
strong en.<lb/>
r the ?<lb/>
playing stroi<lb/>
cinnati rk i<lb/>
the third<lb/>
one of the best at r<lb/>
the NFL - stn i<lb/>
the run. fleet<lb/>
receivers like th<lb/>
Al Toon. ??.<lb/>
fly pattern in Cine<lb/>
victory on Sund<lb/>
If blond<lb/>
Esiason.theNFI<lb/>
is gettir tiie ink and I<lb/>
Chapman<lb/>
CHARLOTTE N.C<lb/>
Rex Chap mar tl<lb/>
nets' top draft pi - I<lb/>
practioi with the -1<lb/>
nets lOday, after sieni-<lb/>
year contract worth m -<lb/>
million ds s<lb/>
Chapman s sigi<lb/>
culminated a maratl<lb/>
tion session which bej<lb/>
Monday between<lb/>
eral manager Carl E<lb/>
owner<lb/>
Chapmar<lb/>
"I'm read) I<lb/>
ball said Chapmar<lb/>
uptw<lb/>
at Kentucky I<lb/>
is behind us<lb/>
Open a mu<lb/>
for Watson<lb/>
SAN ANTON<lb/>
purse is down b - -<lb/>
the Texas Op n<lb/>
make a claim<lb/>
TGA Tour - dua<lb/>
champions<lb/>
Tom Wats<lb/>
hafrey oo<lb/>
position- M<lb/>
was the last man I<lb/>
nament under its<lb/>
Texas Open.<lb/>
The last two )<lb/>
nament. on the Oak 1<lb/>
Club course, was<lb/>
multi-milhon-dollar N<lb/>
Championships I<lb/>
Watson won<lb/>
ing all the way as he b k<lb/>
vear victor) droi<lb/>
Nabisco, howevi l<lb/>
taken its $2-million eJ<lb/>
Pebble Beach <lb/>
next month' and the San<lb/>
tournament reclaime <lb/>
first used in 1922 tl<lb/>
Open<lb/>
While Mahaffe) is<lb/>
winner of that title Watso<lb/>
back in a role he se ?<lb/>
defender.<lb/>
1 won there It s or<lb/>
that 1 go back and detent<lb/>
the six-time Haver oi the'<lb/>
five-time Pntish Open<lb/>
said earlier this season<lb/>
He 11 face a course<lb/>
undergone some slight<lb/>
unplanned - alterations<lb/>
holes, trees have been lo<lb/>
nadoes spawned bv F<lb/>
Gilbert on Sept. 17<lb/>
"It doesn t chai<lb/>
course's plavabilitv thai<lb/>
Mahaffey said Other tj<lb/>
the course is n greaj<lb/>
mavbe the best I've seed<lb/>
<pb facs="00058101_0017"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
1988 PR 1-<lb/>
tes<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
?omparedtothel,0! 1<lb/>
h- Libretto and Hunter have<lb/>
kbined tor m six games.<lb/>
a-t year Florida State took a-<lb/>
over the Pirates in<lb/>
it He as tailback Sammie<lb/>
t in tor 244 yards and one<lb/>
dow n<lb/>
ov wins<lb/>
? bringing the final talk to 26-<lb/>
thei action one-on-one<lb/>
etball moves into the quarter<lb/>
? In the 5 11" and under divi-<lb/>
hm Bolognosi and Blair<lb/>
? - advanced along with<lb/>
?.Hie- and Mike Graves<lb/>
any Williams<lb/>
battle head-to-head in the<lb/>
?s of meeting the Bill Rice ?<lb/>
Sheldon game winner Other<lb/>
- include: Charles<lb/>
M k Kotarba Frankie<lb/>
in Mun hv all in<lb/>
j soccer rcgis-<lb/>
t be held on ednes-<lb/>
 ttober 19 at 5 and 6 p.m<lb/>
elv in GCB 1026. lnter-<lb/>
s si ?u d contact<lb/>
II in 2 A M n rial Gym.<lb/>
? gist rat ion<lb/>
a - continues<lb/>
in 204 Memo-<lb/>
 complete<lb/>
ble at this<lb/>
uch Octotx<lb/>
- ki i np<lb/>
- City, Utah<lb/>
-Jan 4 will beholding<lb/>
Oration through October 22 in<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium. Get<lb/>
I in Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
I imural style. For addi-<lb/>
i! information, call 757-6387.<lb/>
ins were crowned.<lb/>
ht hand<lb/>
r ? morrow I be ?,mv<lb/>
Dr. David Chiu. Chiu<lb/>
? ' . ht with<lb/>
"I think the) want to keep<lb/>
in Cleveland because<lb/>
re afraid of papers being<lb/>
him Cayton was<lb/>
seventh<lb/>
)i<lb/>
S'att<lb/>
5-69-<lb/>
ohn Reynolds (Duke) 70-<lb/>
144<lb/>
im Ol - lem.) 76-71 ?<lb/>
Oswald Drawdy iClem.) 77-<lb/>
:4<lb/>
Meil Sullivan (UN071-76?<lb/>
l ft Hull (SC) 77-71 -148<lb/>
HEAD COACH HAL<lb/>
RRISON:<lb/>
I think we are plaving better<lb/>
r we did earlier in the fall,<lb/>
ju h steadier. This tournament<lb/>
s held on a beautiful, but very<lb/>
ult golf course  1 think the<lb/>
h scores reflect that"<lb/>
NEXT TOURNAMENT: Fri-<lb/>
t-Saturday at John Ryan Vic-<lb/>
inal in Durham, hosted by<lb/>
Ike<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
I<lb/>
OCTOBER 13,1988 13<lb/>
Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
ECU at Florida State<lb/>
N.C. State at UNC<lb/>
Duke at Clemson<lb/>
Alabama at Tennessee<lb/>
Wake Forest at Maryland<lb/>
Oklahoma State at Nebraska<lb/>
Miami at Notre Dame<lb/>
Michigan at Iowa<lb/>
Washington at USC<lb/>
Florida at Vanderbilt<lb/>
BRIAN BAILEY<lb/>
WNCT-TV Sports Director<lb/>
Last Week (8-2)<lb/>
Overall - (38-20)<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Oklahoma State<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
DEAN BUCHAN<lb/>
ECU Sports Information<lb/>
Last Week(9-1)<lb/>
Overall  (41-18)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Horida<lb/>
DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Last Week - (10-0)<lb/>
Overall - (42-17)<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Miami<lb/>
I' .igan<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Dr. RICHARD EAKIN<lb/>
ECU Chancellor<lb/>
Last Week  (7-3)<lb/>
Overall - (38-23)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
N.C. State<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Miami<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Last Week-(9-1)<lb/>
Overall - (43-16)<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
EARLV1S HAMPTON<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Last Week ?(9-1)<lb/>
Overall ? (42-17)<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
USC<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Fulcher a find for 6-0 Bengals<lb/>
(AP) ? Just before the 1986 sion spcis, there is far more to<lb/>
draft, a couple of the NFL's best Cincinm ti'sresurgencefrom4-ll<lb/>
personnel cvaluators were asked last seas m to 6-0 this season as the<lb/>
about David Fulcher, a 6-foot-3, league's mly unbeaten team.<lb/>
230-pound safety from Arizona In fa. t, winning is turning the<lb/>
State who was projected as any- Bengals from one of the league's<lb/>
thing from a first-rounder to a most ma igned organizations to<lb/>
fifth.<lb/>
sive offense. called "unheralded" that he's<lb/>
Another is right tackle Joe become heralded just for that.<lb/>
Walter, a 6-6, 290-pounder taken Krumrie's backup and eventual<lb/>
on the seventh round in 1985.<lb/>
"What is he, a linebacker or<lb/>
defensive back?" asked the first, a<lb/>
pro personnel director.<lb/>
'I don't know what position<lb/>
He keeps Brian Blados, a 1984<lb/>
first-rounder on the bench. Walter<lb/>
has shut down two of the league's<lb/>
premier pass rushers, Reggie<lb/>
White of the Eagles and Mark<lb/>
Gastineau of the Jets, and is being<lb/>
compared favorably to Anthony<lb/>
Munoz, his All-Pro counterpart<lb/>
on the left side.<lb/>
replacement  is David Grant,<lb/>
taken this year oa the fourth<lb/>
round.<lb/>
one of tie most respected. Like<lb/>
teams such as the Bears, Redskins,<lb/>
49crs and Giants, the Bengals<lb/>
have pa;laved chcic.s in ?e<lb/>
lower rounds of the draft into<lb/>
we'd play him at  if any said functional players<lb/>
the second, a coach. "He's a step And this with an organiza-<lb/>
slo w for the secondary, maybe not tion, headed by Paul Brown, that<lb/>
strong enough for linebacker often is ri.liculed for i penury.<lb/>
For the record, Fulcher is It has just one ft il-time scout<lb/>
playing strong safety for the Cin- compared to up to a dozen for<lb/>
cinnati Bengals, who took him on some teams; if s frequently the a good player<lb/>
the third round. He's becoming last team to sign its first-draft<lb/>
one of the best at his position in pick, and it's paying ju?t eight<lb/>
the NFL ? strong enough to jam players on injured reserve com-<lb/>
thc run, fleet enough to stay with pared to 26 for Washington, one<lb/>
receivers like the New York Jets' of many team that "stashes" de-<lb/>
Al Tcon, whom he thwarted on a velopmental players such as<lb/>
fly pattern in Cincinnati's 36-19 quarterback Mark Rypien with<lb/>
victory on Sunday. suspect injuries.<lb/>
If blond, articulate Boomer Fulcher is one ingredient, the pick in 1983 whose developed<lb/>
Esiason, theNFL'sleadingpasser, glue to a maturing defense that's into one of the best at his position<lb/>
is getting the ink and the televi- supplementing the already explo- in the league-in fact, he's so often<lb/>
Chapman signs with the Hornets<lb/>
"He's as good as Anthony,<lb/>
just ask Anthony Esiason says.<lb/>
Munoz, when asked, replies:<lb/>
"He's improved every year. He's<lb/>
There are a lot of Walters on<lb/>
the Bengals, particularly on de-<lb/>
fense, the kind of guys you look at<lb/>
and ask: "Where did he come<lb/>
from?"<lb/>
The most notable is nose<lb/>
tackle Tim Krumrie, a lOth-round<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - No financial details were dis-<lb/>
Rex Chapman, the Charlotte Hor- closed by team officials at a hastily<lb/>
nets' top draft pick, is expected to called news conference to an-<lb/>
practice with, the .Charlotte Hor- nounce the deal. But one source<lb/>
nets today, after signing a four- told The Charlotte Observer that<lb/>
Chapman joins the first-year<lb/>
expansion team just two days<lb/>
before it takes on the New Jersey<lb/>
Nets in its first pre-season game at<lb/>
Madison Square Garden in New<lb/>
year contract worth more than $2 the contract was for four years, York. The Hornets open the regu-<lb/>
million, officials say. and another placed Chapman's lar season Nov. 4 against Cleve-<lb/>
Chapman's signing Tuesday annual salary in the vicinity of land,<lb/>
culminated a marathon negotia- $650,000 a year.<lb/>
tion session which began on<lb/>
Monday between Hornets gen-<lb/>
eral manager Carl Scheer, team<lb/>
owner George Shinn, and<lb/>
Chapman's attorney David Falk.<lb/>
"I'm ready to play basket-<lb/>
ball said Chapman, who gave<lb/>
up two years of college eligibility<lb/>
at Kentucky to turn pro. "All this<lb/>
is behind us<lb/>
Open a must<lb/>
for Watson<lb/>
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - The<lb/>
purse is down by $1.4 million, but<lb/>
the Texas Open this week can<lb/>
make a claim rarely seen on the<lb/>
PGA Tour - dual defending<lb/>
champions.<lb/>
Tom Watson and John Ma-<lb/>
haffey occupy that (or those)<lb/>
position(s). Mahaffey, in 1985,<lb/>
was the last man to win this tour-<lb/>
nament under its current title, the<lb/>
Texas Open.<lb/>
The last two years, the tour-<lb/>
nament, on the Oak Hills Country<lb/>
Club course, was host to the<lb/>
multi-million-dollar Nabisco<lb/>
Championships of Golf.<lb/>
Watson won it last year, lead-<lb/>
ing all the way as he broke a three-<lb/>
year victory drought.<lb/>
Nabisco, however, now has<lb/>
taken its $2-million event to<lb/>
Pebble Beach, Calif, (to be played<lb/>
next month) and the San Antonio<lb/>
tournament reclaimed the name it<lb/>
first used in 1922 - the Texas<lb/>
Open.<lb/>
While Mahaffey is the last<lb/>
winner of that title, Watson will be<lb/>
back in a role he sees as that of a<lb/>
defender.<lb/>
"I won there. If s only right<lb/>
that I go back and defend there<lb/>
the six-time Player of the Year and<lb/>
five-time British Open winner<lb/>
said earlier this season.<lb/>
He'll face a course that has<lb/>
undergone some slight - and<lb/>
unplanned - alterations. On three<lb/>
holes, trees have been lost to tor-<lb/>
nadoes spawned by Hurricane<lb/>
Gilbert on Sept. 17.<lb/>
"It doesn't change the<lb/>
course's payability that much<lb/>
Mahaffey said. "Other than that,<lb/>
the course is in great shape,<lb/>
maybe the best I've seen it<lb/>
"I'm just happy to have all<lb/>
this behind us so I can concentrate<lb/>
on basketball said Chapman, a<lb/>
6-foot-4 guard.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058101_0018"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 13,1988<lb/>
America's Cup yacht seized<lb/>
STEVE HARDY'S ORIGINAL BEACH PART<lb/>
MIAMI (AP) - A Cuban gun-<lb/>
ship seized a U.S. merchant ship<lb/>
with eight people and New<lb/>
Zealand's America's Cup race<lb/>
yacht aboard, saying the vessel<lb/>
was in its waters, a claim the cap-<lb/>
tain flatly denied, the Coast<lb/>
Guard said.<lb/>
The eight, at least seven<lb/>
Americans, were detained Tues-<lb/>
day in Punto Cayo Malo, Cuba,<lb/>
said Coast Guard spokesman Dan<lb/>
Vogelcy.<lb/>
The disassembled sloop New<lb/>
Zealand was aboard the 160-foot<lb/>
U.Sregistered merchant ship<lb/>
Tampa Sea Horse, officials said.<lb/>
The 133-foot yacht was en<lb/>
route from Long Beach, Calif to<lb/>
New York City for a tour of East<lb/>
Coast cities.<lb/>
The Cubans seized the vessel<lb/>
off the southeastern tip of Cuba<lb/>
without firing shots or using<lb/>
force, saying it had violated the<lb/>
communist country's 12-mile ter-<lb/>
ritorial limit, the Coast Guard<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Capt. Jeff Jappe radioed an<lb/>
urgent appeal Tuesday at 3 p.m.<lb/>
EDT to the Coast Guard, insisting<lb/>
he was in international waters,<lb/>
but Coast Guard officers advised<lb/>
him to comply with the Cubans,<lb/>
Vogeley said.<lb/>
Lowell Oswald, a spokesman<lb/>
for the Tampa Sea Horse's agent,<lb/>
Zapata Marine of New Orleans,<lb/>
said he didn't know why the ship<lb/>
was seized<lb/>
"Hopefully, they'll let us go <lb/>
and they'll keep going to New<lb/>
York he said. "There's no way<lb/>
to really tell<lb/>
The merchant ship was es-<lb/>
corted to the Cuban port for in-<lb/>
spection, said Maggie Kerrigan, a<lb/>
spokeswoman at the New Zeal-<lb/>
and consulate in Los Angeles.<lb/>
She said one New Zealander<lb/>
was aboard, but a list supplied to<lb/>
the Coast Guard by Zapata listed<lb/>
all eight on board as Americans.<lb/>
Cuba detains foreign ships as<lb/>
often as once a month for trespass-<lb/>
ing in its waters, but the vessels<lb/>
and crewmen usually are quickly<lb/>
released, said Coast Guard Lt.<lb/>
Wayne Ball in Miami.<lb/>
"We feel that after a brief in-<lb/>
spection they will probably be<lb/>
'released said State Department<lb/>
press officer Ben Justesen in<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
If the crew is detained for an<lb/>
extended period, the State De-<lb/>
partment would seek to contact<lb/>
the crew through the U.S. diplo-<lb/>
matic mission in Havana, he said.<lb/>
San Diego-based Sail Amer-<lb/>
ica managed the successful U.S.<lb/>
defense of the America's Cup race<lb/>
by sailing the catamaran Stars &amp;<lb/>
Stripes against the single-hulled<lb/>
New Zealand last month off San<lb/>
Diego.<lb/>
Michael Fay, chairman of the<lb/>
New Zealand Challenge, forced<lb/>
the San Diego Yacht Club into an<lb/>
early defense of the cup this year<lb/>
after winning a court order that<lb/>
validated his challenge of race<lb/>
rules.<lb/>
The New Zealand was twice<lb/>
as long as the traditional 12-meter<lb/>
yachts used in cup competitions.<lb/>
The San Diego club responded by<lb/>
building a dual-hulled catamaran<lb/>
to defend the Cup, and Dennis<lb/>
Conner skippered the Stars &amp;<lb/>
Stripes to two easy victories to<lb/>
sweep a best-of-three series.<lb/>
Oswald estimated the Tampa<lb/>
Sea Horse's value at $3 million,<lb/>
but said he didn't know what the<lb/>
sailing vessel was worth.<lb/>
fcVl<lb/>
BIAS<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT<lb/>
Fun After Business Hours <lb/>
Playmi- ?; ? . ? ? ? Best m Beact"<lb/>
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Steve Hardy Begins at 7 00<lb/>
Drink Specials All Evening<lb/>
Hot Buffalo Wings til 7:30<lb/>
Bluebonnet Bowl cancelled<lb/>
HOUSTON (AP) - The finan-<lb/>
cially struggling Bluebonnet<lb/>
Bowl has elected to punt this sea-<lb/>
son, canceling the 1988 New<lb/>
Year's Eve game and trying to<lb/>
resume play in 1989 with a corpo-<lb/>
rate sponsor.<lb/>
"Suppose we take some time,<lb/>
really do our homework, put to-<lb/>
gether a series of events sur-<lb/>
rounding the ball game, and come<lb/>
up with a first class bowl game<lb/>
Bowl President Al Warrington<lb/>
said Tuesday night.<lb/>
The bowl's board of directors<lb/>
voted to skip the 1988 game un-<lb/>
less they quickly find a sponsor<lb/>
who insists on playing in Decem-<lb/>
ber.<lb/>
"The feeling of the board is<lb/>
that it would not be practical to<lb/>
play the game this year War-<lb/>
rington said. "If a title sponsor<lb/>
appeared and insisted we go on<lb/>
this year, we'd try to do it<lb/>
Warrington said, however, it<lb/>
AP top four<lb/>
Miami, UCLA, Southern Cal<lb/>
and Notre Dame are the top four<lb/>
teams in this week's Associated<lb/>
Press college football poll and<lb/>
several of them have to play each<lb/>
other.<lb/>
The first test comes this week<lb/>
when Miami visits Notre Dame.<lb/>
Southern Cal visits UCLA on<lb/>
Nov. 19 and the following week<lb/>
Notre Dame visits Southern Cal.<lb/>
Miami was idle over the<lb/>
weekend and held onto first place<lb/>
for the sixth week in a row. The<lb/>
Hurricanes received 52 of 56 first-<lb/>
place votes and 1,115 of a possible<lb/>
1,020 points from a nationwide<lb/>
panel of sports writers and<lb/>
sport scasters.<lb/>
UCLA remained No. 2 for the<lb/>
fifth consecutive week by defeat-<lb/>
ing Oregon State 38-21. The<lb/>
Bruins received one first-place<lb/>
vote and 1,051 points.<lb/>
Southern Cal is third for the<lb/>
third straight week following a<lb/>
42-14 victory over No. 18 Oregon<lb/>
which knocked the Ducks out of<lb/>
the Top Twenty. The Trojans re-<lb/>
ceived the remaining three first-<lb/>
place votes and 1,012 points.<lb/>
West Virginia rose from sev-<lb/>
enth to sixth with 811 points<lb/>
thanks to a 30-10 triumph over<lb/>
East Carolina:<lb/>
Nebraska's 63-10 rout of<lb/>
Kansas pushed the Comhuskers<lb/>
from ninth place to seventh with<lb/>
747 points. They passed South<lb/>
Carolina, which remained No. 8<lb/>
with 704 points after edging Vir-<lb/>
ginia Tech 26-24.<lb/>
Oklahoma went from 10th to<lb/>
ninth with 663 points by downing<lb/>
Texas 28-13 and Oklahoma State<lb/>
cracked the Top Ten for the first<lb/>
time since 1985 by defeating Colo-<lb/>
rado 41-21. The Cowboys, 13th a<lb/>
week ago, rounded out thr Top<lb/>
Ten with 599 points.<lb/>
The Second Ten consists of<lb/>
Clemson, Auburn, Georgia, Wyo-<lb/>
ming, Michigan, Washington,<lb/>
Arkansas, Indiana, LSU and Flor-<lb/>
ida.<lb/>
Last week, it was Clemson,<lb/>
Alabama, Oklahoma State, Flor-<lb/>
ida, Georgia, Wyoming, Michi-<lb/>
gan, Oregon, Washington and<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Alabama, a 22-12 loser to<lb/>
Mississippi, joined Oregon in fall-<lb/>
ing out of the Top Twenty.<lb/>
Indiana moved in for the first<lb/>
time this season after trouncing<lb/>
Ohio State 41-7 and LSU reap-<lb/>
peared after a one-week absence<lb/>
thanks to its victory over Auburn-<lb/>
would be difficult to get a bowl<lb/>
game organized by December.<lb/>
He said the bowl still had not<lb/>
heard from the NCAA, which is<lb/>
considering decertifying the<lb/>
game because it still owes<lb/>
$400,000 to participating teams<lb/>
from the last two years.<lb/>
Warrington said there was no<lb/>
negative feedback from the board<lb/>
of directors.<lb/>
"There was not one negative<lb/>
vote to hang it up he said. "I<lb/>
think the people went away with<lb/>
the determination to make this<lb/>
thing work. The NCAA is work-<lb/>
ing with us to try to help<lb/>
Warrington said the bowl is<lb/>
seeking $500,000 from prospec-<lb/>
tive sponsors to pay off its debts<lb/>
and to revive the game, which<lb/>
was played in the Astrodome last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The bowl actually had landed<lb/>
a sponsor last year, but the deal<lb/>
fell through at the last minute,<lb/>
Warrington said.<lb/>
"I think it came as a shock to<lb/>
everybody because it had been<lb/>
approved by all the committees<lb/>
Warrington said.<lb/>
The bowl also has considered<lb/>
combining several corporate<lb/>
sponsors and currently has a firm<lb/>
commitment for a $100,000 spon-<lb/>
sorship, Warrington said.<lb/>
The NCAA's Post Season<lb/>
Bowl Committee was meeting<lb/>
through today in Kansas City.<lb/>
"EATURING<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058101_0019"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>