<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058102_0001"/>
Inside:<lb/>
EDITORIALS4<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS7<lb/>
FEATURES12<lb/>
SPORTS17<lb/>
Features:<lb/>
An ECU Senior, Jackie Padgette will carry the Miss<lb/>
North Carolina to Alabama and compete for the Miss<lb/>
U.S.A. title, see page 12.<lb/>
Sports:<lb/>
The Florida State Seminoles pummel the Pirates by<lb/>
24. No relief is in sight, this Saturday the Syracuse<lb/>
Orangemen bring their 5-1 record to Ficklen Stadium,<lb/>
see page 17.<lb/>
(Hire lEast Carolinian<lb/>
TK  j ' <lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 28<lb/>
Tuesday October 20, 1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
20 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
The state appropriated S26 million dollars for an addition to Joyner Library. Plans have<lb/>
not been drawn up yet, but the money is there for expansion (Photo By Thomas Walters,<lb/>
ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Image and personnel changes<lb/>
are in store for Catholic Center<lb/>
By SEAN HERRING<lb/>
Assistant News f'ditor<lb/>
An image change is the goal<lb/>
that board members of the New-<lb/>
man Catholic Center (NCC) have<lb/>
in store for the future of the or-<lb/>
ganization.<lb/>
A meeting was held this week<lb/>
in order to workout some difficul-<lb/>
ties within the center's structure.<lb/>
NCC Outreach and Publicity<lb/>
Minister Teresa Lee stated the<lb/>
meeting was productive for the<lb/>
center, since there were no docu-<lb/>
mented rules for its growth.<lb/>
"This meeting was a stepping<lb/>
stone to progress here in this'faith<lb/>
community Good ideas were<lb/>
shared, and enthusiasm finally<lb/>
was sparked with this meeting.<lb/>
We started slow, but 1 feel that this<lb/>
semester will be good she said.<lb/>
Lee added, "1 hope that the<lb/>
students on this campus will visit<lb/>
the center, and experience for<lb/>
themselves the warmth and fun of<lb/>
Newman<lb/>
Some board officials feel that<lb/>
the ambiguity in the organization<lb/>
should be cleared up in order to<lb/>
recruit new members.<lb/>
President Kevin Prevost said,<lb/>
"We had some nostalgic rules that<lb/>
we felt should be reassessed.<lb/>
Once these rules are organized, I<lb/>
foresee progress tor Newman<lb/>
"Another purpose of the<lb/>
meeting was to reaffirm the board<lb/>
members' commitment, and to<lb/>
motivate them to start recruiting<lb/>
more members, " he said.<lb/>
Prevost stated, "1 hope even-<lb/>
tually we can get active participa-<lb/>
tion from nearly all the Catholic<lb/>
students on ECU's campus<lb/>
The board evaluated its pres-<lb/>
ent officers, and asked them, If<lb/>
they are committed to the NCC?'<lb/>
As a result four members re-<lb/>
signed, and some new officers<lb/>
were elected.<lb/>
Karen Mustian resigned as<lb/>
vice president, and Tim Seyfried,<lb/>
who is also maintenance minister<lb/>
for the center, was elected as the<lb/>
new vice president.<lb/>
Paul Hagwood resigned as<lb/>
community service minister and<lb/>
Mark Dunlap was elected to fill<lb/>
the position.<lb/>
Other vacancies on the gov-<lb/>
erning committee at the NCC,<lb/>
which have not been filled are the<lb/>
fundraising ministry, and the<lb/>
social activities ministry.<lb/>
Seyfried stated that he sees a<lb/>
need for the board to change di-<lb/>
rection in the way the NCC is<lb/>
operated.<lb/>
"I want to see a lot more so-<lb/>
cial programs for the center, and<lb/>
make Newman more visible on<lb/>
campus. One of the projects that I<lb/>
would like to initiate is for New-<lb/>
man to have a happy hour at the<lb/>
Elbo<lb/>
Seyfried stated that the first<lb/>
impression ot the NCC ma v not be<lb/>
favorable to some students, be-<lb/>
cause they only see one side of the<lb/>
center and its people.<lb/>
"The way Newman is pro-<lb/>
jected is fine, but the fun side is net<lb/>
known. We are all college stu-<lb/>
dents, and just because we are<lb/>
involved in a faith community,<lb/>
does not mean that we do not<lb/>
know how to have a good time<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
'The first time that some<lb/>
people visit Newman they get the<lb/>
wrong impression of the center,<lb/>
because they just come to Mass or<lb/>
something of that nature. If they<lb/>
visited other functions and got to<lb/>
know the people, they would like<lb/>
the other side of center Seyfried<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The NCC board members'<lb/>
duties are to organize the NCC<lb/>
calendar and coordinate events<lb/>
for the center.<lb/>
Other than Mass that is held<lb/>
on Wednesday and Sunday, the<lb/>
NCC has other social events, ac-<lb/>
cording to Chaplain and Catholic<lb/>
Campus Minister Father Paul<lb/>
Vaeth.<lb/>
"We hope that the activities<lb/>
such as the Wednesday night din-<lb/>
ners, and the Halloween Party,<lb/>
and the all-nighters let students<lb/>
experience the many facets of<lb/>
Newman, " Vaeth said.<lb/>
Whales still trapped under<lb/>
ice, fate is questionable<lb/>
BARROW, Alaska (AP) - Es-<lb/>
kimo whalers wielding chain<lb/>
saws donated by an oil company<lb/>
cut new breathing holes for three<lb/>
beleaguered whales trapped two<lb/>
weeks in thick ice near the top of<lb/>
the world.<lb/>
The Eskimos on Tuesday cut<lb/>
three holes 75 yards apart in a line<lb/>
leading away from the larger of<lb/>
two small breathing pools the<lb/>
California gray whales have used<lb/>
since being stranded in the<lb/>
Beaufort Sea while migrating<lb/>
south.<lb/>
The rescuers, who received a<lb/>
telephone pep talk Tuesday from<lb/>
President Reagan, hope the new<lb/>
holes will influence the endan-<lb/>
gered marftmals to move in the<lb/>
direction they must travel if they<lb/>
are ever to escape their icy corral.<lb/>
"It'll be interesting to see if it<lb/>
works North Slope Borough<lb/>
biologist Craig George said as he<lb/>
dodged the slushy spray from<lb/>
chain sawschewing through foot-<lb/>
deep ice 18 miles northeast of this<lb/>
Inupiat Eskimo community.<lb/>
Standard Oil of Alaska do-<lb/>
nated three chain saws, and<lb/>
planned to send a digging ma-<lb/>
chine by helicopter to speed the<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Meanwhile, a long-shot at-<lb/>
tempt to free the whales with an<lb/>
icebreaking barge was de-<lb/>
layed until today.<lb/>
Two Alaska Army National<lb/>
Guard Skycrane helicopters have<lb/>
been rigged to tow the 185-ton<lb/>
hovercraft barge from Prudhoe<lb/>
Bay, an oil field about 200 miles<lb/>
southeast, in a tricky trip across<lb/>
Arctic Ocean ice.<lb/>
The trip, which is expected to<lb/>
take 25 to 40 hours, was to have<lb/>
started Monday, but was delayed<lb/>
when the barge got stuck in the ice<lb/>
and was slowed again by refuel-<lb/>
ing. The barge was moved a short<lb/>
distance from its dock Tuesday<lb/>
night, but one of the helicopters<lb/>
encountered some resistance.<lb/>
Crews planned to work<lb/>
through the night to lighten the<lb/>
barge by 70 tons, National Guard<lb/>
spokesman Mike Hallcr.<lb/>
Hallcr said that if the barge<lb/>
could not be moved bv noon to-<lb/>
J<lb/>
day (5 p.m. EDT), officials would<lb/>
consider alternatives.<lb/>
Officials hoped to use the<lb/>
barge to carve a 40-foot path to<lb/>
open water and freedom for the<lb/>
whales. The barge pulverizes ice<lb/>
with its bulk and the fans that<lb/>
provide lift.<lb/>
Leads in the ice that were as<lb/>
close as five miles last weekend<lb/>
have been plugged by shifting<lb/>
winds, record low temperatures<lb/>
and drifting ice.<lb/>
See RESCUE, page 2<lb/>
Ignorance keeps students from<lb/>
voting in last six elections<lb/>
BY JOE HARRIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The National Student Cam-<lb/>
paign for Voter Registration<lb/>
(NSCVR) released figures today<lb/>
that showed only 40 percent of<lb/>
voters 18-24 years old voted in the<lb/>
last presidential election.<lb/>
Of 23 democracies around the<lb/>
world, the United States ranks 22<lb/>
in voter turnout. Participation has<lb/>
been on the decline in all presi-<lb/>
dential elections since 1964 (Ken-<lb/>
nedy versus Nixon). In 1984, a<lb/>
little less than half of eligible vot-<lb/>
ers exercised their priviledgc to be encouraged,<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
developed from position papers<lb/>
provided by the Bush and<lb/>
Dukakis campaigns, conversa-<lb/>
tions with campaign staff and<lb/>
newspaper articles.<lb/>
'The guide is a useful tool for<lb/>
any citizen who wants to see be<lb/>
auy.cast a vote before Election<lb/>
Day � in person. Early voting can<lb/>
be completed in one step: the<lb/>
voter goes to their election<lb/>
official's office, applies and then<lb/>
votes on the same da v.<lb/>
The research portion of the<lb/>
yond the hoopla of the campaigns plan outlines the voting criteria. It<lb/>
to assess where the candidates<lb/>
stand on critical issues that affect<lb/>
our future Ms. Crane said.<lb/>
Ms. Crane said students<lb/>
must be made aware of the neces-<lb/>
sary steps in registration and vot-<lb/>
ing. "If away at school, use of the<lb/>
absentee ballot process needs to<lb/>
"Studies show that a signifi-<lb/>
cant barrier to student voting is<lb/>
the lack of information on candi-<lb/>
dates and the issues said Andre<lb/>
Dclattre chairperson of the Na-<lb/>
tional Student Campaign for<lb/>
Voter Registration. He also said<lb/>
students need to take advantage<lb/>
of the opportunity to vote, "They<lb/>
may not realize it, but students<lb/>
have the unprecedented opportu-<lb/>
nity to shape our nation's course<lb/>
on many issues of national and<lb/>
student concern<lb/>
A Voters Guide was devel-<lb/>
oped by Ca t heri ne C ra ne, d i rec to r<lb/>
of the NSCVR to provide students<lb/>
with a source of information on<lb/>
the candidates. The guide was<lb/>
involves facts like when and<lb/>
where, regulations, deadlines,<lb/>
polling hours and locations and<lb/>
how to use the absentee ballot.<lb/>
"Communication may be the<lb/>
most important portion of our<lb/>
plan, said Ms. Crane.<lb/>
"We have to educate and<lb/>
motivate through communica-<lb/>
tion to student voters. You have to<lb/>
educate the students as to the<lb/>
requirements of registering and<lb/>
voting, then motivate him or her<lb/>
to do so She said this is done<lb/>
through<lb/>
She outlined four specific<lb/>
elements for voter registration<lb/>
and participation: organization,<lb/>
research, communication and im-<lb/>
plementation.<lb/>
In the organization process a<lb/>
plan for registering both out-of-<lb/>
state and in-state students is set<lb/>
up, showing how to register by<lb/>
mail and to vote bv absentee bal-<lb/>
lot.<lb/>
An absentee ballot is a ballot<lb/>
marked and mailed in advance bv<lb/>
a voter who is away from the<lb/>
place of registration, or if the indi-<lb/>
vidual cannot vote in person on<lb/>
Election Day.<lb/>
Another form of voting that<lb/>
many individuals are unaware oi<lb/>
is "early voting It is the process registered and vote, so whv not do<lb/>
by which an individual can actu- jt?"<lb/>
publicity and making<lb/>
students aware of their voting<lb/>
priviledgc.<lb/>
"Implementing simplv<lb/>
means to apply everything I have<lb/>
talked about and getting the stu-<lb/>
dents to come out and vote<lb/>
Crane said<lb/>
"We want voter participation<lb/>
in this election and all upcoming<lb/>
ones � WPJEMJUy from students<lb/>
If you're registered there is no rea-<lb/>
son not to vote. The absentee bal-<lb/>
lot and earlv voting gives every-<lb/>
one the chance. It's easv to get<lb/>
Crash anniversary brings<lb/>
prevention plan, no parties<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - The world<lb/>
faced the first anniversary of the<lb/>
worst stock panic in history yes-<lb/>
terday with cynicism, sullenness<lb/>
and the long-awaited govern-<lb/>
ment approval of automatic trad-<lb/>
ing halts designed to foil another<lb/>
crash.<lb/>
"It's business, as unusual<lb/>
said Arthur D. Cashin Paine<lb/>
Webber Group Inc. broker and<lb/>
governor on the floor of the New<lb/>
York Stock Exchange, where<lb/>
prices eked to a post-crash high<lb/>
Tuesday despite less-than-bullish<lb/>
attitudes.<lb/>
Trading remained so slow<lb/>
that dozens of brokers in the<lb/>
nation's biggest stock market<lb/>
stood around with little to do.<lb/>
"If there's no fire, all you see is<lb/>
guys polishing the engines<lb/>
Cashin said. "There's a lot of<lb/>
people not participating, a lot of<lb/>
people on the sidelines. I would<lb/>
say the mood is sober, bordering<lb/>
on the sullen<lb/>
The atmosphere in the heart<lb/>
of this world financial center<lb/>
Dow average and other key indi-<lb/>
ces have recovered somewhat.<lb/>
Late Tuesday, a buying burst<lb/>
lifted the Dow average 19.38<lb/>
points to 2,159.85, its highest post-<lb/>
crash close.<lb/>
But many Wall Street profes-<lb/>
sionals say the stock market re-<lb/>
mains uninspired, even though<lb/>
some of the best-known firms<lb/>
have exhorted investors to buy.<lb/>
They blame continuing uncer-<lb/>
tainty about the direction of inter-<lb/>
est rates and the nation's general<lb/>
economic health.<lb/>
"I think people on Wall Street<lb/>
are more concerned about the<lb/>
economy said Earl Ellis, a mar-<lb/>
ket maker on the New York ex-<lb/>
change floor. "If you could assure<lb/>
people that the economy would<lb/>
be good, this market would take<lb/>
off<lb/>
The exchange, alarmed about<lb/>
post-crash investor apathy and<lb/>
underlying fear of another crash,<lb/>
joined with other U.S. financial<lb/>
markets in July in proposing "cir-<lb/>
cuit breakers" - coordinated trad-<lb/>
ing halts and price limits to avoid<lb/>
another panic. Late Tuesday, on<lb/>
the eve of the crash anniversary,<lb/>
the Securities and Exchange<lb/>
Commission approved these<lb/>
proposals, as expected.<lb/>
The measures, approved on a<lb/>
one-year experimental basis, pro-<lb/>
vide for a one-hour trading halt<lb/>
across markets when the Dow<lb/>
Jones average of 30 industrial<lb/>
stocks plunges by 250 points or<lb/>
more from the previous dav's<lb/>
closing.h calls for a two-hour halt<lb/>
when the Dow falls by 400 points.<lb/>
Coordination among mar-<lb/>
kets was a key recommendation<lb/>
by a White House panel ap-<lb/>
pointed to study the crash. But it<lb/>
took months for the New York<lb/>
exchange and other markets to fi-<lb/>
nally agree on how to do it.<lb/>
Members of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity participate in<lb/>
a step-show outside the Croatan (Photo By Mark Love, ECU<lb/>
Photolab).<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20, 1988<lb/>
Firm announces new anti-viral AIDS drugs<lb/>
RESEARCH TRIANGLE<lb/>
PARK,N.C (AD-Glaxo Inc. has<lb/>
announced plans to conduct re-<lb/>
search on a new anti-viral drug to<lb/>
combat the AIDS virus, and hopes<lb/>
to begin tests on humans within a<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
Glaxo officials announced<lb/>
Tuesday that thev have signed a<lb/>
letter of intent with the Universitv<lb/>
J<lb/>
oi Minnesota on the licensing and<lb/>
development of dideoxycarbocy-<lb/>
clie nudeoside, or Carbovir.<lb/>
Hie agreement would give<lb/>
Glaxo exclusive worldwide rights<lb/>
to develop and market the com-<lb/>
pound.<lb/>
Jennifer McMillan, spokes-<lb/>
woman for Glaxo, told The Dur-<lb/>
ham Sun that research on the drug<lb/>
is still in the very early stages and<lb/>
has not progressed beyond the<lb/>
test tube.<lb/>
In laboratory tests on live vi-<lb/>
rus, Carbovir has been found to<lb/>
inhibit the reproduction of hu-<lb/>
man immunodeficiency virus<lb/>
(HIV) which causes AIDS (Ac-<lb/>
quired Immune Deficiency Syn-<lb/>
drome).<lb/>
There is now no cure for<lb/>
AIDS. One drug, azidothymidine<lb/>
(AZT), has been found to inhibit<lb/>
the virus' reproduction and<lb/>
extend lives of patients.<lb/>
Another pharmaceutical<lb/>
company in the Research Triangle<lb/>
Park, Burroughs Wellcome Co<lb/>
produces and markets AZT under<lb/>
the name Rctrovir.<lb/>
Carbovir's effectiveness<lb/>
against the virus was discovered<lb/>
by Dr. Robert Vince, professor of<lb/>
medicinal chemistry at the Col-<lb/>
lege of Pharmacy of the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Minnesota.<lb/>
Vince, who began using the<lb/>
drug in AIDS research last No-<lb/>
vember, said Tuesday that the<lb/>
National Cancer Institute was the<lb/>
first to use the drug.<lb/>
Since he began testing its ef-<lb/>
fectiveness against HIV, the tests<lb/>
have been limited to those done<lb/>
on live vinis samples in test tubes.<lb/>
'There are no animal models<lb/>
for AIDS, so all you can do is test<lb/>
to see if it's toxic to animals he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Studies to see how the drug<lb/>
acts on humans may be less than a<lb/>
year away.<lb/>
"It will be six to eight months<lb/>
before we can begin studies in<lb/>
man. "If all the studies before that<lb/>
progress and go well and the<lb/>
compund does what, we think it<lb/>
will do Ms. McMillan said. "If<lb/>
all goes well, the earliest the drug<lb/>
will be available is two to three<lb/>
years out<lb/>
"This is a very important area<lb/>
of research so we're working as<lb/>
hard as we can to determine the<lb/>
drug's effectiveness said Ms.<lb/>
McMillan.<lb/>
"Initially, we'll do the devel-<lb/>
opment work and all further test-<lb/>
ing to develop the compound. I'm<lb/>
sure Vince will continue to work<lb/>
on the product at the university<lb/>
The testing will be performed<lb/>
by researchers worldwide for<lb/>
Glaxo Inc. and its parent com-<lb/>
pany, kaO Glaxo Holdings p.l.c,<lb/>
based in London.<lb/>
Ms. McMillan said Glaxo, the<lb/>
second-largest pharmaceutical<lb/>
firm in the world, chose to study<lb/>
Carbovir more closely because "it<lb/>
seems the furthest along" of sev-<lb/>
eral drugs being studied for use<lb/>
by AIDS patients.<lb/>
Carbovir is similar to AZT in<lb/>
that it is an antiviral and not a<lb/>
vaccine. Researchers believe its<lb/>
method of action will be similar to<lb/>
AZT in that it will interfere with<lb/>
the virus replication.<lb/>
Carbovir is designed to keep<lb/>
the HIV virus from multiplying<lb/>
into more individual AIDS vi-<lb/>
ruses.<lb/>
Tourists perish after falling<lb/>
L1WILLE FALLS,N.C. (AP)<lb/>
- Two women posing for a sunset<lb/>
photograph on a ledge at a Blue<lb/>
Ridge Parkway Overlook fell to<lb/>
their deaths, and the husband of<lb/>
one of the women was injured<lb/>
trying to help, authorities said.<lb/>
"Thev were going to take a<lb/>
photograph of the two women<lb/>
standing on the ledge said Sher-<lb/>
iff Bob Havnes. "One of them<lb/>
slipped and grabbed the other<lb/>
one<lb/>
Visitors to the Chestoa View<lb/>
overlook about three miles west<lb/>
of Linville heard screams coming<lb/>
from below the ledge about 8 p.m.<lb/>
Monday, and notified park rang-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
It was early Tuesday before<lb/>
rescuers scaling the rugged cliffs<lb/>
could reach the bodies of Susan<lb/>
White Hair, 32, of Summcrville,<lb/>
S.C, and Helen Burnette Gibbs,<lb/>
31. of Favetteville, said parkway<lb/>
chief ranger Howard Parr.<lb/>
"We think that one of the<lb/>
ladies lost her balance and the<lb/>
other lady attempted to grab her<lb/>
and they both went over the rail<lb/>
Parr said.<lb/>
lames Clifton Gibbs, 37, also<lb/>
of Favetteville, tried to climb<lb/>
down into the gorge north oi<lb/>
Marion to rescue his wife and<lb/>
friend, but slipped and fell 150 to<lb/>
250 feet, said McDowell County<lb/>
Sheriff Bob Havnes.<lb/>
"He turns around, leans<lb/>
down to pick up his tripod and his<lb/>
camera.<lb/>
He hears a commotion be<lb/>
hind him and by time he turns<lb/>
around his wife and the good<lb/>
friend of the family are already<lb/>
down over the overlook, falling<lb/>
said RussWhitlock, a park ranger.<lb/>
Gibbs sustained onlv minor<lb/>
injuries, however, and was<lb/>
treated and released from Memo-<lb/>
rial Mission Hospital in Asheville<lb/>
on Tuesday.<lb/>
Mrs. Gibbs was a registered<lb/>
nurse at the Veterans Administra-<lb/>
tion Medical Center at Favettev-<lb/>
ille, and Ms. Hair was a registered<lb/>
nurse in the Charleston area, a<lb/>
family friend said.<lb/>
"The women "were classmates<lb/>
v'vetfevilTeTechnical Commu-<lb/>
nity College, and Ms. Hair gradu-<lb/>
ated from Fast Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity in Greenville, the friend said.<lb/>
Major Don Ramsey said one<lb/>
woman fell about 150 feet into a<lb/>
gorge and the other fall about 700<lb/>
feet.<lb/>
Using lights, ropes, rappeling<lb/>
lines and lifts, the rangers with<lb/>
sheriff's deputies and rescue<lb/>
squad members from McDowell<lb/>
and Avery counties, searched the<lb/>
higher reaches oi the approxi-<lb/>
mately 2,000 Unit deep chasm<lb/>
Monday night and early Tuesday.<lb/>
"The terrain was so rough<lb/>
they had to use ropes from below<lb/>
and above Haynessaid. 'That's<lb/>
why it took so long to get the<lb/>
people out of there<lb/>
Haynes said Chestoa View,<lb/>
about 20 miles north of Marion on<lb/>
the Parkway, overlooks a valley<lb/>
2,000 feet below. He said a two-<lb/>
foot rock wall at the Chestoa View<lb/>
parking area borders a ledge<lb/>
above a gorge.<lb/>
The gorge ranges in depth<lb/>
from 150 to 500 feet.<lb/>
The effort involved nearly<lb/>
100 Park Service rangers and res-<lb/>
cue squad personnel from<lb/>
McDowell and Avery counties.<lb/>
Parr said that although seri-<lb/>
ous injuries and deaths are com-<lb/>
mon along the rugged trails of the<lb/>
national forests, they are ex-<lb/>
tremely rare along the parkway,<lb/>
with its short and relatively level<lb/>
trails and overlooks.<lb/>
"This is one of the few serious<lb/>
accidents I can remember in a<lb/>
long, long time, thank the good<lb/>
Lord he said.<lb/>
Serving (lie East Carolina campus community since 1025.<lb/>
James F. J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey Spencer Meymandi<lb/>
Richard-Alan Cook Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY RATES<lb/>
O 49 Column inches$4.25<lb/>
50-99415<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 Rate)<lb/>
One color and black S90.0Q<lb/>
Two colors and black  15.00<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
5.000 or less  H each<lb/>
5.001 - 10,0005 5c each<lb/>
10,001-12,000  c ca.h<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Resue attempts being made<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Bv Tuesday nint the nearest<lb/>
open water was believed to be<lb/>
idcrTffliK a'rttyrwffetdirsatEp'<lb/>
The rescue effort, compli-<lb/>
cated bv the harsh arctic condi-<lb/>
tions, has become a race against<lb/>
time.<lb/>
The voting whales are tired,<lb/>
and at least one has pneumonia.<lb/>
Their barnacle encrusted snouts<lb/>
have ben worn raw from grating<lb/>
on the jagged ice surrounding the<lb/>
breathing holeb the animals were<lb/>
in shallow water only a<lb/>
hundred feet from shore.<lb/>
Last week, ice around the<lb/>
holes was so thin biologists did<lb/>
not dare walk on it. By Tuesday,<lb/>
with a record low temperature of<lb/>
minus 13 degrees, the ice was 18 to<lb/>
24 inches thick.<lb/>
The whales are 24 to 30 feet<lb/>
long, but have shown no inclina-<lb/>
tion to smash their way to free-<lb/>
dom.<lb/>
See More<lb/>
For<lb/>
$50.00 Less.<lb/>
Right now at our Greenville office you can be<lb/>
fitted for a pair of daily wear or extended wear<lb/>
contact lenses and receive a $50.00 discount<lb/>
off our usual package price.<lb/>
Usual Fee<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
Your Price<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Wear<lb/>
$155.00<lb/>
50.00<lb/>
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Extended<lb/>
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50.00<lb/>
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So call us for an appointment and see how<lb/>
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Contact Us<lb/>
And Save.<lb/>
Dr. John C. Molnar<lb/>
OpfL c Eye Care Center, OD, PA<lb/>
.(te Raza in Greenville<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
(919) 756-9771<lb/>
OtTOMCTNC<lb/>
�Y�CAR�C�HT�R,<lb/>
' Package includes: Eye Exam. Contact Lens Evaluation<lb/>
Eye Grass Prescription, Fitting and FoUow-up. Contacts.<lb/>
Care Kit and Instructions. No other discounts apply.<lb/>
Coupon must be presented to recede discount at ttme of<lb/>
ofer. Otter expires Offer expires October 31,1988<lb/>
IIWIMMUWIilMlWW<lb/>
1.000 TITLES TO CHOOSE FROM<lb/>
Movie QQC<lb/>
RentalsJJ pon<lb/>
MULTIPLE COPIES OF NEW RELEASES<lb/>
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Available at our in<lb/>
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m�m itn <lb/>
1 1 1 1 II SI 11 s<lb/>
POST<lb/>
oi ihi;<lb/>
iu mi<lb/>
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At Kroger,<lb/>
your<lb/>
pharmacist<lb/>
fills your<lb/>
prescription<lb/>
while you<lb/>
fill your<lb/>
shopping list<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
t<lb/>
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i<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
Items and Prices Effective<lb/>
Sun. October 16, 1988 thru<lb/>
Sat. October 22, 1988<lb/>
Copyright l�al<lb/>
Krog.r Sav On<lb/>
Quantity Rights Rl.r�.d<lb/>
Nan Sold fa Oaalar<lb/>
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OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd Creenvil<lb/>
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Workin<lb/>
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in his I <lb/>
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and r<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058102_0003"/><lb/>
71 IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20, 1988 3<lb/>
ugs<lb/>
r igs being studied tor use<lb/>
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parbo ir is similar to AZT in<lb/>
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K?S EVERYDAY<lb/>
ivd Greenville<lb/>
)<lb/>
Working class wealthy are competitors<lb/>
Michael Dukakis promised to<lb/>
erase the nation's $150 billion<lb/>
trade deficit in four years as the<lb/>
Democratic nominee waged his<lb/>
uphill fight for the presidency.<lb/>
Republican front-runner George<lb/>
Bush claimed the underdog label<lb/>
in his battle with the notion that<lb/>
the race for the White House is<lb/>
over.<lb/>
Dukakis portrayed the elec-<lb/>
tion as a choice between a candi-<lb/>
date for the wealthy and a nomi-<lb/>
nee who is committed to working<lb/>
class Americans as he took his<lb/>
case to voters in Michigan.<lb/>
The Democratic nominee re-<lb/>
ceived an enthusiastic response<lb/>
Tuesday in kalamazoo when he<lb/>
told the crowd, George Bush<lb/>
cares about the people on Easy<lb/>
Street. I care about the people on<lb/>
Main Street. He's on their side.<lb/>
I'm on your side<lb/>
Dukakis also accused the<lb/>
Republican administration of fail-<lb/>
ing to halt the growing trade defi-<lb/>
cit and doing nothing to solve the<lb/>
problems that led to the 1987stock<lb/>
market crash, which occurred one<lb/>
year ago today.<lb/>
The vice president, who trav-<lb/>
eled to Fulton, Mo site of former<lb/>
British Prime Minister Winston<lb/>
Churchill's famed "Iron Curtain"<lb/>
speech, focused on ISSoviet<lb/>
relations in his address at West-<lb/>
minister College.<lb/>
But in opening comments<lb/>
and remarks to the students and<lb/>
reporter Bush sought to convince<lb/>
listeners he doesn't have the<lb/>
presi iential election in hand.<lb/>
The worst thing to do would<lb/>
be to show a complacency I don't<lb/>
feel or an overconfidence that I do<lb/>
not feel said the GOP nominee,<lb/>
who led by 17 points over in this<lb/>
week's NBC News-Wall Street<lb/>
journal poll.<lb/>
A Dukakis aide, however,<lb/>
said a new Harris poll put the gap<lb/>
at about nine percentage points.<lb/>
Barbara Winkour, a spokes-<lb/>
woman for Louis Harris &amp; Associ-<lb/>
ates in New York, said Harris<lb/>
would be releasing a poll today,<lb/>
but declined to comment Tuesday<lb/>
on its results.<lb/>
Two other surveys found<lb/>
J<lb/>
Bush leads of about that size. In<lb/>
the first poll of 1,002 registered<lb/>
voters surveyed Saturday<lb/>
through Monday, Bush led 49-39<lb/>
percent. The second poll of 1,201<lb/>
likely voters Friday through<lb/>
Monday gave the GOP ticket a 49-<lb/>
40 percent lead.<lb/>
Both were ongoing tracking<lb/>
polls - in which the newest day's<lb/>
result is added and the last day's<lb/>
is dropped - done by KRC Com-<lb/>
munications Research in Cambr-<lb/>
idge, Mass. They had margin of<lb/>
errors of three percentage points<lb/>
either way.<lb/>
Front-runner Bush was<lb/>
stressing his foreign policy<lb/>
themes today at a series of appear-<lb/>
ances in Dearborn, Royal Oak and<lb/>
Saginaw, Mich. The industrial<lb/>
state, with its 20 electoral votes, is<lb/>
a key battleground.<lb/>
Dukakis was traveling<lb/>
through rural areas of Illinois and<lb/>
Missouri, visiting a farm in Hull,<lb/>
111 and attending a livestock auc-<lb/>
tion in Mexico, Mo. The Demo-<lb/>
cratic nominee is hoping to break<lb/>
the Republican lock on the rural<lb/>
vote in a year in which the farm<lb/>
economy has suffered.<lb/>
Democratic vice presidential<lb/>
candidate Lloyd Bentsen was<lb/>
spending his second day in Cali-<lb/>
fornia, the biggest electoral prize<lb/>
with 47 votes. Republican Dan<lb/>
Quayle was campaigning in Mis-<lb/>
souri and West Virginia.<lb/>
Bensten, who has hinted at<lb/>
dissatisfaction with his running<lb/>
mate's limited response to GOP<lb/>
attacks, accused the Republican<lb/>
ticket of a "vicious campaign that<lb/>
violates the public trust<lb/>
"They've said things about<lb/>
Mike Dukakis that in Texas we<lb/>
wouldn't say about a rattlesnake<lb/>
on a lawn at a church picnic<lb/>
Bentsen told about 2,000 students<lb/>
at the University of California at<lb/>
Los Angeles.<lb/>
For his part, Dukakis lashed<lb/>
out at Bush, charging that his rival<lb/>
has "no convictions, no ideas, no<lb/>
plans<lb/>
The Massachusetts governor<lb/>
said his solution to the trade defi-<lb/>
cit would be to reduce the budget<lb/>
deficit, increase foreign trade,<lb/>
invest in education and training<lb/>
and place a greater emphasis on<lb/>
research and development.<lb/>
The vice president, expand-<lb/>
ing on his own campaign ad sug-<lb/>
gesting that only the Republican<lb/>
nominee is experienced enough<lb/>
to negotiate with the Soviets, told<lb/>
the Fulton audience he would<lb/>
remain wary of Soviet intentions<lb/>
despite the reforms instituted<lb/>
under the leadership of Mikhail S.<lb/>
Gorbachev.<lb/>
"Now is not the time to aban-<lb/>
don realism about what moves<lb/>
the Soviet Union Bush said.<lb/>
Quayle also was warning<lb/>
against overconfidence, but was<lb/>
upbeat after greeting cheering<lb/>
college students in Illinois.<lb/>
"I'm beginning to feel what<lb/>
it's going to be like on election<lb/>
night Quayle said.<lb/>
��<lb/>
Student Health Services<lb/>
GET TO THE GAME ON TIME<lb/>
The Saturday Clinic at the Student Health<lb/>
Service will be held from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00<lb/>
p.m. on Saturday, October 22. 1988.<lb/>
The Sunday Clinic will be held as usual from<lb/>
2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Call the Student Health Services at 757-6841 for<lb/>
more information or questions.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
The<lb/>
CoMedY<lb/>
ZONE<lb/>
WED<lb/>
" "Hie<lb/>
CoMedY<lb/>
ZONE<lb/>
WED<lb/>
5th St. Entrance<lb/>
Now Open<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Perfect<lb/>
Strangers<lb/>
Perfect<lb/>
Strangers<lb/>
Highball Special<lb/>
Costa Rican<lb/>
tour announced<lb/>
A two-weeks-long studv tour<lb/>
in Costa Rica next June will be<lb/>
ottered by the East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity School of Education and<lb/>
the Central American nation's<lb/>
Universidad Nacional.<lb/>
The program, open to gradu-<lb/>
ate and undergraduate students,<lb/>
will focuson the theme of interde-<lb/>
pendence between developing<lb/>
nations- and the industrialized<lb/>
world.<lb/>
1 rartWpanH will W-Todd-rrT<lb/>
the homes of Costa Rican families.<lb/>
They will visit and observe in the<lb/>
local schools, take field trips to<lb/>
commodity fields and factories,<lb/>
and engage in class sessions with<lb/>
Universidad Nacional faculty.<lb/>
Open to students at other cam-<lb/>
puses and to non-stdents as well<lb/>
as regular ECL students, the ECU<lb/>
- Costa Rica program offers three<lb/>
semester hours of college credit.<lb/>
No more than 15 participants will<lb/>
be admitted into the program<lb/>
which runs from June 13 to June<lb/>
27.<lb/>
Cost of the trip is $980 for in-<lb/>
state residents. This fee includes<lb/>
housing and food with the Costa<lb/>
Rican family, airfare from Miami,<lb/>
tuition and planned travel in<lb/>
Costa Rica. Application deadline<lb/>
is February 15, 1989.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
ECU - Costa Rica program is<lb/>
available from Dr. Vila Rosenfeld.<lb/>
ECU School of Education, Speight<lb/>
Building, East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity, 27858: telephone (919) 757-<lb/>
4125 - office or (919) 757-3238 -<lb/>
home.<lb/>
COPIES 5 ?<lb/>
(Self Service 8 12 x 11 white bond)<lb/>
:�. (, 758-2400<lb/>
Fast Copies For Fast Times<lb/>
(Next to Chico's in the Geogretown Shops)<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Kody Lee<lb/>
Kody Lee<lb/>
Kody Lee<lb/>
Kody Lee<lb/>
Michigan's 1<lb/>
Rock &amp; Roll Band<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
Billy Price<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
The Keystone<lb/>
Rhythym<lb/>
Band<lb/>
Hot Rhvthvm &amp; Blues<lb/>
U C C I<lb/>
'sm<lb/>
' � . . C � � !<lb/>
soHERNev<lb/>
OAKLEY SALE!<lb/>
Razor Blades Normally $75<lb/>
Now Only $60<lb/>
One Week Only!<lb/>
Located In The Plaza Mall Entrance<lb/>
Store Hours<lb/>
MonSat. 10-9<lb/>
Sun. 1-6<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
355-7695<lb/>
$<lb/>
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CASH IN A FLASH FOR<lb/>
THE BIG GAME BASH<lb/>
Southern Gun<lb/>
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INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
ON<lb/>
TVS, STEREOS, VCR'S. GUNS,<lb/>
DIAMONDS. BICYCLES, CLASS RINGS.<lb/>
ALL MOST ANYTHING OF VALUE<lb/>
WE BUY GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
752-2464<lb/>
$<lb/>
NEW 14K GOLD<lb/>
500 N. GREENE ST. � JUST ACROSS RIVER BRIDGE<lb/>
; GREENVILLE<lb/>
$<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Coming Attractions<lb/>
'e ,�<lb/>
. <lb/>
.M � �<lb/>
(0 I fjUJj (� I I O I LM li &amp;) I I QJ<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
SMALL<lb/>
Cheese Pia $4.95<lb/>
Cheese and 1 Topping$5.60<lb/>
Bach Additional Topping$ .65<lb/>
SPECIALTY PIZZAS<lb/>
Cheese Lovers$6.90<lb/>
Moat Lovers$6.90<lb/>
S11 p re me $6.90<lb/>
Super Supreme$7.55<lb/>
MEDIUM LARGE<lb/>
$6.85 $8.95<lb/>
$7.65 $9.90<lb/>
$ .80 .95<lb/>
$9.25 $11.80<lb/>
$9.25 $11.80<lb/>
$9.25 $11.80<lb/>
$10.05 $12.75<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA HUTQUALITY<lb/>
�GENEROUS TOPPINGS<lb/>
�REAL CHEESE<lb/>
�FRESH VEGETABLES<lb/>
�DOUGH MADE FRESH DAILY<lb/>
NEVER FROZEN<lb/>
DELIVERY HOURS<lb/>
SUNTHURS. 4 PM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
FRI.&amp;SAT. 4PM TO 1:00 AM<lb/>
DELIVERY CHARGE 75<lb/>
DELIVERY AREA LIMITED TO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
PHONE 752-4445<lb/>
COUPON GOOD FOR JUST 5 DAYS!<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
LARGE MEATLOVER'S PIZZA<lb/>
FOR $9.99<lb/>
CYOU SAVE $1.80)<lb/>
(coupon expires Oct. 24, 1988<lb/>
Sports Psychologist U.S. Olympic Team<lb/>
Asst. Professor, ECU Counseling Center<lb/>
Consultatnt Sports Medicine<lb/>
8 p.m. Thursday, October 20<lb/>
M tht Cenreal Classroom Bldg rm 1026<lb/>
Sponsored hy TV Student Union Fontm Committee in conjunction with tht F.CU Counseling Center and tht ECU Sports Medicine Pi<lb/>
A FORMER COMMUNIST COMES HOME<lb/>
JUN1US SCALES<lb/>
Former head of the North Carolina and South Carolina Communist Party<lb/>
He mall reflect on the Communist Party and it s faults<lb/>
Monday, October 24 - 11:30 am-1:30 Brown Bag Lunch<lb/>
In Mendenhall Rm 244<lb/>
Lecture at 8:00 p.m. Mendenhall rm 244<lb/>
Cponsored by The Student Union Forum Committee<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS<lb/>
SEAN HAYES<lb/>
Soloist Guitarist at the Underground Mendenhall<lb/>
Friday, October 21 at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Coffeehouse Committee and Student Union<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW<lb/>
Faces, structur s and architectures of<lb/>
North and Central American Earth As seen by<lb/>
ERNST HABR1CHS<lb/>
October 24- November 18<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery<lb/>
Opening Reception Wednesday, October 26 at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Arts Committee<lb/>
MOVIE OF THE WEEK<lb/>
THE GLASS MENAGERIE - PG<lb/>
Wednesday, October 19 at 8:00 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
All movies are FREE to ECU student with valid ECU I.D.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Films Committee<lb/>
- - �<lb/>
� <lb/>
� - i �<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0004"/><lb/>
Stye Saat (Earnltnian<lb/>
vmv ih. t  Cniim �<lb/>
mk tmr 1925<lb/>
Pete Fernald, cm�<lb/>
Chip Carter, mm e<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, wmmnf a�!<lb/>
Joe Harris, n�� �.��<lb/>
Doug Johnson, sp u<lb/>
Tim Hampton, F.�,u�<lb/>
Miqielle England, &amp;�M��,er<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, s�r�<lb/>
Jeff Parker ��<lb/>
TOM FURR,Circid�imM�nfl$�r<lb/>
SUSAN HOWELUfVadwrt.� Manager<lb/>
John W. Medlin, a w�rt0r<lb/>
Mac Clark, bu� ���M��jrr<lb/>
October 20. 1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Communism<lb/>
Paranoia destroys from within<lb/>
"The people themselves are the<lb/>
government's only safe depositories<lb/>
� Jefferson.<lb/>
"I heartily accept the motto, 'That<lb/>
government is best which governs<lb/>
least 1 also believe � 'Tliat govern-<lb/>
ment is best which governs not at all<lb/>
and when men are prepared for it, that<lb/>
will be the kind of government which<lb/>
they will have � Thoreau.<lb/>
Democracy is a grand experi-<lb/>
ment which will show whether the<lb/>
common citizens are yet ready for<lb/>
taking an active role in their own<lb/>
government. Democracy is not the<lb/>
last improvement that can be made<lb/>
on government, but if it should<lb/>
work it will pave the way for other<lb/>
forms oi government that allow<lb/>
even more freedom.<lb/>
But democracy is yet young, and<lb/>
its existence depends on a special<lb/>
and rare set of conditions. In coun-<lb/>
tries in which there is not a high level<lb/>
of literacy and popular interest in<lb/>
government � like, say, Nicaragua<lb/>
� democracy cannot and will not<lb/>
last. Though the very idea is anath-<lb/>
ema to many Americans, it happens<lb/>
to be true that more repressive forms<lb/>
of government such as communism<lb/>
are in fact best for many societies.<lb/>
Very often, communism or some<lb/>
other tyrannical system holds sway<lb/>
in countries for several decades,<lb/>
educating and training its people,<lb/>
and when the people are ready for a<lb/>
more open form of government,<lb/>
they will find a way to get it. Witness<lb/>
as examples Haiti, Chile, Korea, the<lb/>
Philippines, and even the Soviet<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
Democracy poses a threat to<lb/>
communism, but communism<lb/>
poses no threat to democracy. There<lb/>
is not one case�not one, not ever �<lb/>
of communism "taking over" a free<lb/>
and open society which guaranteed<lb/>
its citizens freedom of speech, reli-<lb/>
gion, the press, et alia � and whose<lb/>
citizens acted to protect those rights.<lb/>
It simply would not happen.<lb/>
Why? Because democracy can<lb/>
only be destroyed from within; it<lb/>
dies when its spirit is lost. Believe it<lb/>
or not, America faces a lesser threat<lb/>
from its own Communist Party than<lb/>
it does from its Republicans and<lb/>
Democrats; the latter groups usually<lb/>
equate political philosophy with<lb/>
moral right, so that any challenge to<lb/>
or question of the political status<lb/>
quo is ipso facto an attack on God<lb/>
and Man.<lb/>
Those who would silence any<lb/>
point of view � no matter how re-<lb/>
pulsive they may find it � are the<lb/>
true danger to democracy. They<lb/>
commit the worst crime with the<lb/>
best intentions. And so it seems that<lb/>
a certain banner apparently put up<lb/>
by the College Republicans on The<lb/>
Mall � a banner which read "Keep<lb/>
the commies out of our back yards<lb/>
 join the College Republicans" �<lb/>
is likely to do more harm than good.<lb/>
Freedom of speech exists in the<lb/>
hope that all ideas will be given fair<lb/>
and equal treatment, and that as a<lb/>
result the best will naturally emerge.<lb/>
One hopes that by advertising their<lb/>
ignorance in such a fashion, the<lb/>
College Republicans will alienate<lb/>
more people than they attract.<lb/>
Because if it works the other way<lb/>
� if, in fact, such tactics are success-<lb/>
ful � it will be one more indication<lb/>
that our liberty is not nearly as safe<lb/>
as it should be<lb/>
"7JJE Pr�t3rea UaS5<lb/>
Tm 7h�T-3&amp; ClA9<lb/>
Voters think Dukakis bad<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Let's set the record straight<lb/>
about Mike Dukakis's economic rec-<lb/>
ord in Massachusetts. Wyatt M.<lb/>
Jones IV, instead of quoting the na-<lb/>
tional chairman of the Democratic<lb/>
Party on Dukakis's record, should<lb/>
instead listen to the people who live<lb/>
in Massachusetts.<lb/>
Jack Flood is the chairman of<lb/>
the Massachusetts House Taxation<lb/>
Committee and a Democrat. He has<lb/>
this to say about the Democratic can-<lb/>
didate for president: "Dukakis has<lb/>
been on the wrong side of every<lb/>
major economic policy issue. We're<lb/>
right now driving business out of<lb/>
Massachusetts, because Dukakis has<lb/>
overspent so much. Business leaders<lb/>
know taxes arc going to have to rise<lb/>
again to cover the current mess<lb/>
"Three years ago, there was a<lb/>
$1 billion surplus. We spent it all, and<lb/>
now we're borrowing just to meet<lb/>
current payrolls. And not only has<lb/>
this been the worst spending spree in<lb/>
Massachusetts history, we have al-<lb/>
most nothing to show for it in better<lb/>
services<lb/>
Small wonder that the voters of<lb/>
"Taxachusetts" think Dukakis has<lb/>
been bad for the state's economy.<lb/>
Nicolas Skottergaard<lb/>
Treasurer<lb/>
ECU College Republicans<lb/>
Fees! Fees! Fees!<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Fees! Fees! Fees! Evertime 1 turn<lb/>
around it seems like I have to pay for<lb/>
something. If it is not a parking ticket,<lb/>
it is some other outrageous fee. What<lb/>
really got to me was not being able to<lb/>
cash a check so I could pay for my<lb/>
phone bill.<lb/>
I was not able to cash this check<lb/>
because the little sticker that had the<lb/>
words "fall 88" printed on it evi-<lb/>
dently had fallen off. Therefore, I am<lb/>
unable to cash checks, get football<lb/>
tickets, and do other activities which<lb/>
require an identification card until I<lb/>
get a duplicate. In order to get a<lb/>
duplicate I have to pay five dollars.<lb/>
This is ridiculous! How much<lb/>
trouble can one little sticker be? Five<lb/>
dollars is a rip off to me. Most fresh-<lb/>
men and other students for that fact<lb/>
need that money for other much<lb/>
needed things.<lb/>
Kelly Aycock<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Duke's policies bad<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Wyatt M. Jones IV's Oct. &amp; let-<lb/>
ter was full of error and misrepresen-<lb/>
tation. Jones seems to believe that<lb/>
Dukakis' economic policies have<lb/>
helped Massachusetts. Jones is<lb/>
wrong.<lb/>
The economic recovery that<lb/>
Massachusetts enjoyed from 1978-<lb/>
1983 (the "Miracle") occurred in spite<lb/>
of Dukakis, not because of him. The<lb/>
recovery was due to Proposition 2, a<lb/>
major 1980 tax cut and large defense<lb/>
contracts that resulted from Reagan's<lb/>
defense buildir . Dukakis opposed<lb/>
both.<lb/>
The recovery continued until<lb/>
Dukakis returned to the governor's<lb/>
chair in 1983. He had been thrown<lb/>
out of office in 1978 because he had<lb/>
promised not to raise taxesbu t raised<lb/>
them anyway � by $650 million, the<lb/>
largest tax increase in Massachusetts<lb/>
history (thus effectively negating bv<lb/>
$150 million the $500 million in tax<lb/>
cuts he had supposedly imple-<lb/>
mented since then).<lb/>
And Dukakis, because of his<lb/>
huge spendingand taxing sprees, has<lb/>
in five years ruined Massachusetts<lb/>
economy. In June 1986, Massachu-<lb/>
setts had a cash surplus of $912 mil-<lb/>
lion (a result of the recoverv). In two<lb/>
years, Dukakis has transformed this<lb/>
surplus into a deficit of over $500<lb/>
million! Massachusetts voters think<lb/>
Dukakis has been bad for the state's<lb/>
economy by a 2-to-l margin.<lb/>
Since lVe , Massachusetts has<lb/>
lost over 90,000 industrial jobs, down<lb/>
13, while the nation gained 2.<lb/>
Since 1983, Dukakis has raised<lb/>
spending 78, the highest of any<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Dukakis' economic failures<lb/>
are yet another example of the<lb/>
failure of tax-and-spend liberalism.<lb/>
Another example is the federal<lb/>
deficit, created and maintained by<lb/>
the liberal Democrats in congress!<lb/>
ArielleSturz<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Psychology<lb/>
THE SUPREME)<lb/>
COURT 5 RE- '<lb/>
eVAUJATTWe THE<lb/>
�MAMCffIKM <lb/>
PROCiAMATfOM,A<lb/>
Media coverage focusing on wit, quotes<lb/>
BY CLAY DEANHARDT<lb/>
Campui Spectrum<lb/>
Back in October of 1976, before I was old enough<lb/>
to vote or even to know what my vote meant, one of<lb/>
my elementary school teachers asked if anyone in<lb/>
the class wanted to campaign for their favorite presi-<lb/>
dential candidate. The choice, to me, was clear.<lb/>
"Vote for Ford I screamed passionately.<lb/>
"Carter's wishy-washy<lb/>
Little then did I know that my young ideas<lb/>
would represent a kind of rallying cry for campaign-<lb/>
ing in 1988.<lb/>
In today's world of sophisticated television<lb/>
coverage, instant communication and the omnipres-<lb/>
ent "sound bite campaigning has degenerated into<lb/>
an extended process of name calling, issue ducking,<lb/>
generalizing and quip manufacturing. More impor-<lb/>
tant than the issues, it seems, is the good quote.<lb/>
And because of that, the American public is<lb/>
going to be the real loser in November.<lb/>
The most frightening thing about this election is<lb/>
not that the candidates are using these tactics, but<lb/>
that the public is buying them. The candidates are<lb/>
having more success skimming the suface of the<lb/>
issues and centering their campaigns on personali-<lb/>
ties than they are by setting their agenda.<lb/>
This year, it appears, education, defense, eco-<lb/>
nomics, social programs and the deficit have taken a<lb/>
back seat to the Pledge of Allegiance, the ACLU, the<lb/>
National Guard and the wimp factor.<lb/>
The predominant practitioner of this kind of<lb/>
public pandering seems to be the Republican party.<lb/>
Indeed, after two elections of hawking the candidate<lb/>
most suited for television, the GOP machine has<lb/>
nearly perfected these modern campaigning tech-<lb/>
niques.<lb/>
In the past, candidates have had to talk directly<lb/>
about the issues. They spoke vehemently about their<lb/>
positions and their plans for America's future. They<lb/>
answered questions, and they held news confer-<lb/>
ences. At one point and time accessibility seems to<lb/>
have been important for the man-who-would-be-<lb/>
president.<lb/>
How times have changed.<lb/>
So far in this election George Bush's campaign<lb/>
machinery has run like a fine tuned car. Following<lb/>
the Republican national convention in New Orleans,<lb/>
Bush deftly used smear tactics to paint Mike<lb/>
Dukakis as a out-of-touch liberal somewhere left of<lb/>
Nikolai Lenin.<lb/>
Time and again we saw Bush draped in the red,<lb/>
white and blue on the evening news as he pummeled<lb/>
Dukakis with attacks on his patriotism, his beliefs<lb/>
and his sensibilities.<lb/>
Bush also took a card from his boss's deck and<lb/>
limited his accessibility to the press, thus forcing<lb/>
newsmen- to use the quotes his campaign team<lb/>
manufactured rather than taking a chance on ad-<lb/>
libbing. The public could see why when, almost<lb/>
every time he did ad-lib, Bush began sticking his foot<lb/>
in his mouth (remember Pearl Harbor Day).<lb/>
At i he same time, the Dukakis camp was reeling.<lb/>
They were doing everything that seemed right �<lb/>
talking about the issues, giving the press time to<lb/>
clarify the issues and avoiding direct attacks on a<lb/>
very popular incumbent � but somehow the Duke<lb/>
was still taking it on the chin. Dukakis was having to<lb/>
n a defensive campaign, countering Bush'sattacks<lb/>
of the day before, and it was killing him in the polls.<lb/>
Until the Democrats learned a few tricks from<lb/>
the Republicans. Word is now that it is becoming<lb/>
increasingly difficult for reporters to get close to<lb/>
Dukakis. Gone are the days when the governor of<lb/>
Massachussetts would often fraternize with the<lb/>
media during the campaign trips. Now Dukakis, like<lb/>
Bush, gets his message out through the sound bite,<lb/>
and, like Bush, he is more often than not attacking his<lb/>
opponent.<lb/>
And, like Bush, he has gained in the polls.<lb/>
If this trend toward generalization and distor-<lb/>
tion continues in the campaign, and if the media<lb/>
continues to focus more on the campaigns than the<lb/>
candidates, Americans will rapidly fall into a pat-<lb/>
tern of electing candidates with the wittiest speech<lb/>
writers. As complex as the world is today, that is a<lb/>
nightmarish possibility.<lb/>
Unless the American public wakes up and<lb/>
demands more from its candidates, we can expect<lb/>
this kind of whitewash campaigning to continue.<lb/>
Like Tom Sawyer, campaign strategists are leading<lb/>
us to the fence and getting us to perform for them<lb/>
while they sit back and reap the benefits.<lb/>
It's time we find out what Tom, George and<lb/>
Mike are really doing.<lb/>
Campus Spectrum Rules<lb/>
In addition to the "Campus<lb/>
Forum" section of the editorial<lb/>
page, the East Carolinian features<lb/>
the "Campus Spectrum This is<lb/>
an opinion column by guest writ-<lb/>
ers from the student body and<lb/>
faculty. The columns printed in<lb/>
the "Campus Spectrum" will<lb/>
contain current topics of concern<lb/>
to the campus, community or<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
The columns are restricted in<lb/>
content only with regard to rules<lb/>
of grammar and decency. Persons<lb/>
submitting columns must be will-<lb/>
ing to accept byline credit for their<lb/>
efforts, as no entries from ghost<lb/>
writers will be published.<lb/>
Gard<lb/>
RALEIGH AP) -<lb/>
Gardner, the Republican<lb/>
didate for lieutenar<lb/>
nor, says he will ask m<lb/>
television officials for pa<lb/>
sion to rebroadcast his del<lb/>
with Democratic nom<lb/>
Tony Rand<lb/>
Gardner said Tue;<lb/>
that WSOC-TY oi Chan<lb/>
had agreed to provide air<lb/>
for the debate, oi I<lb/>
broadcast Oct. 2, if GarJ<lb/>
would cover the cos j<lb/>
he said he was prepai<lb/>
Rand said Moi I<lb/>
would not give <lb/>
have the debate rerun.<lb/>
"I cannot ir g<lb/>
science be a part<lb/>
ulgationofthedi rl<lb/>
misrepresental<lb/>
forth in that del<lb/>
said in a letter tc Gai<lb/>
Gardner<lb/>
neys were looking<lb/>
legal ramitu.<lb/>
the debate<lb/>
consent and vs .<lb/>
Center officials I - -<lb/>
themselves or maV<lb/>
able to oth i<lb/>
Aging re;<lb/>
COLL MB.<lb/>
Three environmer<lb/>
have called on Enerj<lb/>
John Herringtor I j<lb/>
environmental in j<lb/>
before resta rt i n g a r ft<lb/>
led Savannah River Pla<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
It the Depart me r I<lb/>
refuses, the groups I<lb/>
court injunction tost J<lb/>
aging reactors from o<lb/>
until the compreher<lb/>
completed. Dan Reicher<lb/>
nev for the Natural R<lb/>
Defense Cour i Tu<lb/>
The NRDC, Grce<lb/>
U.S.A. and South Carohj<lb/>
ergy Research Foui<lb/>
planned to deliver a lettej<lb/>
nngton today, req :<lb/>
environmental impact<lb/>
Meanwhile, a publi<lb/>
port said Tueda 1<lb/>
trained personnel and ini<lb/>
safety procedures blamed<lb/>
of 375,000 gallons oi wa<lb/>
taminated bv radiation<lb/>
year-old plant.<lb/>
Officials with the<lb/>
Co which operates thej<lb/>
weapons facility- for the<lb/>
ment of Energv, alsi J<lb/>
sight caused underrepef<lb/>
the amount of radioactl<lb/>
taminant in the water<lb/>
into a creek on I u! v 6 The<lb/>
Ca.) Chronicle and the<lb/>
Herald reported.<lb/>
LA<lb/>
x<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
m-<lb/>
on the ri<lb/>
earning aj<lb/>
Clifton, <lb/>
ARMY<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20,1988 5<lb/>
s bad<lb/>
I until<lb/>
rnor's<lb/>
n thrown<lb/>
xrause lie had<lb/>
ixcsbut raised<lb/>
ilium, the<lb/>
iachusetts<lb/>
gby<lb/>
tax<lb/>
- I imple-<lb/>
his<lb/>
� es, has<lb/>
- husetts s<lb/>
16 M issachu-<lb/>
- f S912 mil-<lb/>
two<lb/>
� ned this<lb/>
margin<lb/>
ssachusetts has<lb/>
 dllvtnal jobs, down<lb/>
i the nation gained 2<lb/>
- Dukakis has raised<lb/>
thehighest et any<lb/>
�<lb/>
erexan' 10<lb/>
<lb/>
federal<lb/>
J and maintained by<lb/>
s in congress!<lb/>
Arielle Sturz<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Psychology<lb/>
PREME<lb/>
:s R�-I<lb/>
?M THE<lb/>
C!fWT?CAJ<lb/>
AMATICAI1 <lb/>
;?-<lb/>
Si<lb/>
tes<lb/>
:an public wakes up and<lb/>
It- candidates, we can expect<lb/>
h campaigning to continue.<lb/>
gn strategists are loading<lb/>
us to perform for them<lb/>
reap the benefits.<lb/>
out what Tom, George and<lb/>
Mng-<lb/>
Spectrum Rules<lb/>
Ition to the "Campus<lb/>
ption of the editorial<lb/>
1st Carolinian features<lb/>
i Spectrum This is<lb/>
'lumn by guest writ<lb/>
: student body and<lb/>
rolumns printed in<lb/>
)us Spectrum" will<lb/>
rent topics of concern<lb/>
lpus, community or<lb/>
umns are restricted in<lb/>
with regard to rules<lb/>
and decency. Persons<lb/>
.olumns must be will-<lb/>
It byline credit for their<lb/>
10 entries from ghost<lb/>
be published.<lb/>
Gardner wants debate rebroadcast<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - Jim<lb/>
Gardner, the Republican can-<lb/>
didate for lieutenant gover-<lb/>
nor, says he will ask public<lb/>
television officials for permis-<lb/>
sion to rebroadcast his debate<lb/>
with Democratic nominee<lb/>
Tony Rand.<lb/>
Gardner said Tuesday<lb/>
that WSOC-TV of Charlotte<lb/>
had agreed to provide air time<lb/>
for the debate, originally<lb/>
broadcast Oct. 2, if Gardner<lb/>
would cover the costs, which<lb/>
he said he was prepared to do.<lb/>
Rand said Monday he<lb/>
would not give his consent to<lb/>
have the debate rerun.<lb/>
"1 cannot in good con-<lb/>
science be a party to the prom-<lb/>
ulgation of the distortions and<lb/>
misrepresentations you put<lb/>
forth in that debate Rand<lb/>
said in a letter to Gardner.<lb/>
Gardner said his attor-<lb/>
neys were looking into the<lb/>
legal ramifications of airing<lb/>
the debate without Rand's<lb/>
consent and would ask UNC<lb/>
Center officials to rerun it<lb/>
themselves or make it avail-<lb/>
able to other stations.<lb/>
Many observers have said<lb/>
Gardner out-performed Rand<lb/>
in the debate, but Gardner<lb/>
said he was "amazed" that<lb/>
Rand didn't want it rebroad-<lb/>
cast. "I think this would only<lb/>
help educate people to make a<lb/>
good choice on Nov. 8 he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Meanwhile Tuesday,<lb/>
Marion G. "Pat" Robertson<lb/>
called on his North Carolina<lb/>
supporters to put aside hard<lb/>
feelings from the presidential<lb/>
primary and give full backing<lb/>
to the Republican ticket.<lb/>
"I'm doing everything I<lb/>
can to see George Bush<lb/>
elected Robertson said at a<lb/>
news conference before a<lb/>
fund-raiser and rally for Gard-<lb/>
ner. "I would like to see our<lb/>
supporters work for Mr. Bush<lb/>
but  (also) for local candi-<lb/>
dates<lb/>
North Carolina support-<lb/>
ers of Robertson were at odds<lb/>
with Bush supporters and the<lb/>
state Republican establishment<lb/>
earlier this year over apportion-<lb/>
ment of delegate slots to the na-<lb/>
tional party convention.<lb/>
Many Robertson backers<lb/>
boycotted the state Republican<lb/>
convention, saying they had been<lb/>
cheated.<lb/>
Sue Wyatt, who was<lb/>
Robertson's statecampaign direc-<lb/>
tor, said in an interview she fully<lb/>
supported Gardner and that he<lb/>
"supports our viewpoint on is-<lb/>
sues<lb/>
She said she would vote for<lb/>
Bush over Dukakis, but that the<lb/>
vice president's North Carolina<lb/>
supporters had not contacted her<lb/>
to invite Robertson's supporters<lb/>
to join the campaign-<lb/>
Ms. Wyatt said she hoped<lb/>
most Robertson backers would<lb/>
support the ticket.<lb/>
There has to be some animos-<lb/>
ity still on the part of a lot of these<lb/>
people who were so abused dur-<lb/>
ing the delegate-selection proc-<lb/>
ess she said. "But 1 think that<lb/>
overall they realize, particularly<lb/>
in the case of Jim Gardner and<lb/>
George Bush, that they're more<lb/>
conservative than their Demo-<lb/>
cratic opponents<lb/>
Asked about Republican<lb/>
Gov. Jim Martin, she said, "I really<lb/>
would not speak to that right<lb/>
now. I just don't know. He also<lb/>
has not contacted us or asked for<lb/>
our help<lb/>
Gardner said Robertson's<lb/>
presence, "indicates the full sup-<lb/>
port that we have of all the<lb/>
Robertson people<lb/>
"1 think that's the gTeat thing<lb/>
about the Republican Party this<lb/>
year Gardner said. "It's the<lb/>
most unified that I've ever seen it<lb/>
since I've been a Republican in<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Robertson repeated familiar<lb/>
Republican criticisms of Michael<lb/>
Dukakis, saying voters "are very<lb/>
suspicious of someone who is<lb/>
probably the most liberal candi-<lb/>
date ever put forward for the<lb/>
presidency by any major party in<lb/>
the history of America<lb/>
The $50-per-pcrson fund-<lb/>
raiser was held at a private resi-<lb/>
dence. Tickets to the rally at a<lb/>
Raleigh hotel sold for $10 per per-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Campmeeting<lb/>
We Love Jesus Ministries<lb/>
Saturday, October 22nd -1 p.m.<lb/>
Town Commons Ampitheatre<lb/>
Good Gospel Music<lb/>
Come And See The Resurrection<lb/>
Power Of The Lord Jesus Christ<lb/>
Evangelists:<lb/>
Steve and Robin Ballanger<lb/>
Todd Pierce<lb/>
Joy Alford<lb/>
For more information contact<lb/>
Todd Pierce 758-4356<lb/>
Aging reactors cause of controversy<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP-<lb/>
Three environmental groups<lb/>
have called on Energy Secretary<lb/>
John Herrington to prepare an<lb/>
environmental impact statement<lb/>
before restarting any of the troub-<lb/>
led Savannah River Plant reac-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
If the Department of Energy<lb/>
ret uses, the groups will seek a<lb/>
court injunction to stop the three<lb/>
aging reactors from operating<lb/>
until the comprehensive study is<lb/>
completed, Dan Reicher, an attor-<lb/>
nev for the Natural Resources<lb/>
Defense Council, said Tuesday.<lb/>
The N'RDC, Greenpeace<lb/>
U.S.A. and South Carolina's En-<lb/>
ergv Research Foundation<lb/>
planned to deliver a letter to Her-<lb/>
ringtor today, requesting the<lb/>
environmental impact statement.<lb/>
Meanwhile, a published re-<lb/>
port said Tuesday that poorly<lb/>
trained personnel and inadequate<lb/>
safety procedures blamed for leak<lb/>
of 375,000 gallons of water con-<lb/>
taminated by radiation at the 38-<lb/>
vear-old plant.<lb/>
Officials with the Du Pont<lb/>
Co which operates the nuclear<lb/>
weapons facility for the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Energy, also said an over-<lb/>
sight caused underreporting of<lb/>
the amount of radioactive con-<lb/>
taminant in the water released<lb/>
mto a creek on July 8,The Augusta<lb/>
C,a.) Chronicle and the Augusta<lb/>
I lerald reported.<lb/>
The amount of radiation<lb/>
spilled into the water was too<lb/>
small to pose a health or safety<lb/>
threat, officials said. SRP's three<lb/>
reactors were reduced to half<lb/>
power last year when experts<lb/>
questioned whether the emer-<lb/>
gency cooling system could<lb/>
handle a problem at full power.<lb/>
Since April, all three reactors<lb/>
have been shut down entirely for<lb/>
maintenance and testing amid<lb/>
additional safety questions. One<lb/>
reactor was restarted for less than<lb/>
a week in August.<lb/>
When it was shut down, SRP<lb/>
was the government's sole pro-<lb/>
ducer of radioactive tritium and<lb/>
plutonium used in nuclear weap-<lb/>
ons.<lb/>
An environmental impact<lb/>
statement is required under fed-<lb/>
eral law whenever there is a<lb/>
major federal action signifi-<lb/>
cantly affecting the quality of the<lb/>
human environment<lb/>
Reicher said restart of the<lb/>
reactors qualifies as a "major fed-<lb/>
eral action" because "revelations<lb/>
about the SRP reactors" raise dis-<lb/>
turbing questions about the envi-<lb/>
ronmental and safety risks of their<lb/>
future operation<lb/>
Department of Energy Dep-<lb/>
uty Secretary Joseph Salgado said<lb/>
Oct. 10 that a "phased restart" of<lb/>
SRP's K Reactor is planned in<lb/>
December and restart the two<lb/>
other reactors will be restarted bv<lb/>
the middle of 1989.<lb/>
Herrington said last week<lb/>
that the department will operate<lb/>
reactors in a safe and "environ-<lb/>
mentally sensitive manner" while<lb/>
still meeting the nation's defense<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058102_0006"/><lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20,1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
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3 pieces Call 752-7313 after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE Nice sofa, king size mattress,<lb/>
twin sie mattress, kitchen chairs, round<lb/>
table Make offer<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 S2 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, NC<lb/>
752-36H<lb/>
PARTY: If you're having a party and need<lb/>
a D.J for the best music available for par-<lb/>
ties dance, top 40 &amp; beach. Call 355-2781,<lb/>
ask for Morgan<lb/>
AT YOUR SERVICE:<lb/>
TypingTypingTyping. Affordable and<lb/>
Professional. Call 355-6634 after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
PAPERS, RESUMES, ETC Done by<lb/>
Desktop Publishing or Word Processing.<lb/>
Rush jobs accepted. Call 752-1933.<lb/>
TYPING, TYPING, TYPING: Real<lb/>
Cheap Affordable Rates! Call 752-5084.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
NEED MALE AND FEMALE DANCERS<lb/>
FOR PRIVATE PARTIES: Also need<lb/>
ladies 18-36 years of age for a legs video.<lb/>
Earnings of $50 per hour and more. Apply<lb/>
in person Monday through Friday, 4 p.m.<lb/>
to 5:30 p.m. to Promotions Co 2708-A E.<lb/>
10th Street. No phone calls.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Need someone to do<lb/>
housedeaning with a local firm. About 15-<lb/>
20 hours a week. Average of $5 00-S6.00<lb/>
hr. Call 758-0897.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Are you a college stu-<lb/>
dent or faculty member in need of spend-<lb/>
ing money? Brady's is accepting applica-<lb/>
tions for part-time sales and customer<lb/>
service positions. Apply in person,<lb/>
Brods, Carolina East Mall, M-W, 2-4<lb/>
p m.<lb/>
WANTED: Campus representative to<lb/>
promote our low cost, high quality Spring<lb/>
Break trip to Daytona Beach. Free trips<lb/>
and money while gaining valuable busi-<lb/>
ness experience. Call Kurt with Travel As-<lb/>
sociates. 1-800-558-3002.<lb/>
OPPORTUNITY IN THE TRAVEL IN-<lb/>
DUSTRY: The 1 college tour operator is<lb/>
looking for an efficient, responsible, and<lb/>
organized campus representative to mar-<lb/>
ket a Spring Break trip on campus. Earn<lb/>
free trips, and good commissions while<lb/>
gaining great business experience. For<lb/>
more information call 1-800-999-4300.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: The New Ramada Inn<lb/>
needs some good people to help provide<lb/>
the best service in town. The positions that<lb/>
are currently available are Bartenders and<lb/>
Cocktail Waitresses. However, those with<lb/>
experience in other areas of food and<lb/>
beverage are welcome to apply. Applica-<lb/>
tions will be taken in person only at the<lb/>
Hostess Station in the restaurant. No<lb/>
phone calls please.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Production assistants<lb/>
needed for entry level full-time and part-<lb/>
time position at local TV station. Must be<lb/>
dependable and work well with others.<lb/>
TV production background helpful but<lb/>
not essential. Send inquiries to Production<lb/>
Manager, WNCT-TV, P.O. Box 898,<lb/>
Greenville, NC. 27834. EOE.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
NEED CASH? Have baseball cards? Call<lb/>
Earlvis, the mad baseball buyer. I pay<lb/>
damn good money for cards of any year,<lb/>
any shape, and any condition. If you need<lb/>
party money. Big E is the one to call 757-<lb/>
6366, leave a message.<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: Used Nintendo Car-<lb/>
tridges with instructions for re-sale. East<lb/>
Coast Music &amp; Video, 758-4251, 1109<lb/>
Charles Blvd.<lb/>
CHI O, CHI O: It's off to Mexico we go. It<lb/>
was a dare, to sit in the chair, with Tequila<lb/>
shots, we couldn't stop. Frozen drinks<lb/>
were next, but hitting the pinatas was<lb/>
best! We had a blast � The Phi Taus.<lb/>
HOPE EVERYONE HAD A GREAT<lb/>
FALL BREAK: And good luck for the rest<lb/>
of the semester. �The Sigmas.<lb/>
ECU: We hope everyone had a safe and<lb/>
happy Fall Break. �Delta Zeta.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: Good luck to our awe-<lb/>
some football team. We know you can do<lb/>
it!<lb/>
KIRSTIN EAKES: Your sisters are very<lb/>
proud of you baby! �Delta Zeta.<lb/>
TKE: Can't wait for tonite. It's been too<lb/>
long! �The Sigmas.<lb/>
THETA CHI: Congratulations on your in-<lb/>
stallation. We are all glad to have you back<lb/>
on campus. �The Sigmas.<lb/>
KA'S: Had a good time at the social Tues-<lb/>
day. Can't wait to do it again soon. �The<lb/>
Sigmas.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS: To James Ford<lb/>
Griffin - Sig Ep Brother of the Week PS.<lb/>
Nice camera appearance by the BRAIN. �<lb/>
Your Fraternal Brothers of Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon.<lb/>
CHI-OMEGAS: Be ready to GIG on<lb/>
Thursday when we hop, skip, and go<lb/>
naked - Birthday Suits Optional! �Love<lb/>
the Sig Eps.<lb/>
KA LrTTLE SISTERS: There is a Manda<lb/>
tory Meeting Oct. 24th at 9:30. Bring<lb/>
money for fund raiser. Plan to stay late for<lb/>
one of those late sister socials<lb/>
THE SIGMAS: We had a great timebuild-<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
ing the float! We couldn't have done it<lb/>
without you! Thanks a bunch! �Love,<lb/>
The Kappa Sigs.<lb/>
GREAT, AWESOME, DRUNKEN: We<lb/>
scam, exhuberant, loose date, find date,<lb/>
champagne, kegs, grain, find someone<lb/>
elses date, plantation. Pike's Peak, Rotary<lb/>
Club. What is this. Pi Kappa Alpha Home-<lb/>
coming of course. 1988 The Year of the<lb/>
Pike.<lb/>
NEW DELI: Has the best music around<lb/>
Friday come jam with MIKE EDWARDS<lb/>
and the BANNED, and tap your toes with<lb/>
MIKE 'LIGHTNIN' WELLS acoustic<lb/>
sounds on Saturday.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO THETA<lb/>
CHI: For winning football championship.<lb/>
�The Pike's.<lb/>
ZETA'S: Hope that you had a great Fall<lb/>
Break<lb/>
M ANDY PARISH: Thanx for everything!<lb/>
I'm so glad you're my big sis! You're<lb/>
awesome! Get ready for a great semester,<lb/>
let's support our "favorite pasttime" to<lb/>
the maximum! I love ya! �YLS, Kelli.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA PLEDGES: Our<lb/>
pledge party together was a blast! Let's<lb/>
keep the kegs flowing Your pledge class<lb/>
is awesome - Good Luck! �Love, Delta<lb/>
Zeta Pledges.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY JOYCE We love<lb/>
you! �The Sisters and Pledges of Zeta<lb/>
Tau Alpha<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY NECATHA 1 lope<lb/>
your 21st birthday is as good as mine was<lb/>
We shall party tonight �Bertha<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA: Don't miss the bus to<lb/>
Pikes Peak, and if you do, you better beat<lb/>
feet. If you don't make it to tonigh t's party,<lb/>
there will be many a Pike that will be<lb/>
sorry.<lb/>
CASINO NIGHT '88: Student Union Pro-<lb/>
ductions and Public Relations Committee<lb/>
presents Casino Night '88 - 8 p.m. Fri Oct.<lb/>
21st, Mendenhall Student Center, rm. 244<lb/>
Fr"e admission, prizes, mock tails and<lb/>
refreshments.<lb/>
Q: What do these have in common: Def<lb/>
Leppard, Raleigh, $70, TAXI? A. Maria<lb/>
ASW; From pumpkin snatching, to<lb/>
Your Best Look<lb/>
Specializing In: MANICURES:<lb/>
French Manicures � Nail Tips �<lb/>
Overlays � Wrapping � Acrylics �<lb/>
PEDICURES � SKIN CARE: Body<lb/>
Wrapping � Face &amp; Body Waxing �<lb/>
Facials � Deep Pore Cleansing �<lb/>
Acne Treatments � Muscle Tone<lb/>
Treatments � Complete Line Of<lb/>
Therapeutic Skin Care Products For<lb/>
Men &amp; Women<lb/>
355-2969 - For Appointment<lb/>
314 Plaza Dr Greenville<lb/>
EL-TOftO<lb/>
MENS HAIRSTYLING<lb/>
STYLE CUT 7��<lb/>
WALK-INS WELCOME<lb/>
20 YEARS OP SERVING ECU<lb/>
2 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS<lb/>
Eastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
(AcToaa from Highway Patrol Station)<lb/>
Behind Car Quest Auto Part<lb/>
2800 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
-<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal and Confidential Care"<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call for appointment Mon. thru Sat Low<lb/>
Coat Termination to 20 weeka of pregnancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
drunken death ndes in the little red<lb/>
wagon, to December 11th, to New Year's<lb/>
Eve in Pa, to Spring Break skiing, to Rose-<lb/>
ball, mixer, &amp; cocktail, to under the Stars<lb/>
in Sandestin, Honda, to the pig pickins<lb/>
and Fall Break in Pa , we have been to<lb/>
gether for 1 year Let's do it again' �With<lb/>
all of my LOVE, TBF<lb/>
SAE A AND B FLAG FOOTBALL<lb/>
TEAMS It's hard to believe that six points<lb/>
can be so many Both teams would like to<lb/>
thank all our fans Get ready, though,<lb/>
because basketball is right around the<lb/>
corner<lb/>
THURSDAY IS FIZZ DAY Come to Pi<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Happy Hour 930 - till<lb/>
Drink specials and tree Nacho's<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA BROTHERS AND<lb/>
LITTLE SISTERS Big Brother -Little Sis<lb/>
ter movie, Sunday, Oct 23 at Mendenhall<lb/>
Get in touch with your Little or Big.<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/>
� I.ocjted Near ECU<lb/>
�A ros� From Highway Ptrol Station<lb/>
J32.S a month<lb/>
Contact J T or Tommy Williams<lb/>
7S6-7815 or 830-1937<lb/>
Oilice open Apt 8. 12-530 pm<lb/>
�AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
I . jn and rjuiet on bedroom fumuri-d<lb/>
a: artmrn�. cnerfty eilKirnt. free watr. atd<lb/>
vcr optional washers, dryers cabif -<lb/>
' . uplfs or single, only $205 a month. 6 nopth<lb/>
,rasc Mt 1B!1 i. 1 iOMF. RF-VTAJ -S � couples or<lb/>
UAgln Apartrrrnt arc mobile liomes in AsA.e<lb/>
Carders near Brook V alley Country C I<lb/>
Contact J T or Tommy Williams<lb/>
"S6-7&amp;15 '<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Subscription Form<lb/>
Name:<lb/>
Address:<lb/>
Date to Begin:<lb/>
bmplimentary.<lb/>
Amount Paid: <lb/>
Date to End:<lb/>
Individual:<lb/>
Business:<lb/>
Date Paid:<lb/>
at�: Individual $25 pr yearBuainest $35 per vaar<lb/>
jr to Th Easi Carolinian. Publication Bldg. - ECU CiceavUle, NC 27SS8-4353<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/>
Announcements<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
Cooperative Education, a free service of-<lb/>
fered bv the University, is designed to<lb/>
help you find career-related work experi-<lb/>
ence before you graduate We would like<lb/>
to extend an invitation to all students to<lb/>
attend a Co op Information Seminar in the<lb/>
CCB (see schedule below for Oct. Semi-<lb/>
nars) The only bonuses we can offer you<lb/>
for taking time from your busy schedule<lb/>
are.<lb/>
�extra cash to help cover the cost of college<lb/>
expenses or perhaps to increase 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 bv to see us today!<lb/>
Thurs, Oct 20, 1 p.m rm 2010; Mon,<lb/>
Oct 24, 1 p m , rm 2010, Thurs Oct. 27,4<lb/>
p m , rm 2006, Mon , Oct. 31, 4 p.m , rm<lb/>
2006<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Christian Fellowship will be held every<lb/>
Thurs at 6 (X) in the Culture Center. You<lb/>
are invited to join us<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
study for Fall Semester andor Spring<lb/>
Semester, you are encouraged to contact<lb/>
the Co op office about off-campus place-<lb/>
ments. Call 757 6979 or come by the GCB,<lb/>
room 2028<lb/>
LQSU<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 un com promised word of God.<lb/>
Every Fri night at 7:00 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
frCHOI ARSHIPS AVAILABLE<lb/>
Business students interested in scholar-<lb/>
ships should secure forms from one of the<lb/>
following depl. 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 dty of<lb/>
lights, New York City. Come jr In the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union's Travel Commit cursion<lb/>
to New York City, Nov. 23- ror 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 pjn. or by<lb/>
contacting Student Financial Mgmt. As<lb/>
soc. members or call the FINA dept 757-<lb/>
6670.<lb/>
SUMMER IOB OPPORTUNE<lb/>
XXfiS<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/>
-esentation will be on Mon Nov. 21 at<lb/>
. 10 a.m. in 1029 GCB. The ten-week in-<lb/>
tei hip program, in the Raleigh area, is<lb/>
opt'�. sophomores, juniors, and seniors<lb/>
currei. c 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 y earbook now has that<lb/>
chance. Gass photographs will be taken<lb/>
Oct. 31 -Nov. 4 in the t lent Store from 9<lb/>
a.m. oil 12 p.m. and 1 n. to 4 30 p.m.<lb/>
each day. The yearbook i t vour year-<lb/>
book until you are in it.<lb/>
SKIING TRIP<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Skiing<lb/>
Trip registration meeting from Aug. 22 to<lb/>
Oct. 22. Now you can ski the slopes and<lb/>
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/>
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 500<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/>
Hall at 757-6387.<lb/>
WYNTQN MARSALIS CQN-<lb/>
CERI<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 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/>
INTERVIEWING WORK-<lb/>
SHOPS<lb/>
To help ECU people prepare for on and off<lb/>
campus interviews, the Career Planning<lb/>
&amp; Placement Service in Bloxton House 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; 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 730 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 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/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will be a general meeting 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 you are interested, please<lb/>
meet in conference room 105 Memorial<lb/>
Gym at 6:00.<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
An important meeting for FRESHMEN<lb/>
who intend to major 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/>
ECU STUDENTSSTAFF<lb/>
LSS SOCIETY<lb/>
Volunteers, old dothes &amp; sheets are<lb/>
needed DESPERATELY for the Pirate<lb/>
ClubLSS 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 Smyth<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/>
andVince.<lb/>
COLLEGE DEMOCRATS<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR DUKAKIS<lb/>
Come sec Senator Lloyd Bentsen today.<lb/>
Come to Mendenhall, rm. 244 at 130 p m<lb/>
and join the winners' For more into . call<lb/>
752-5611.<lb/>
AMNESTY INT'L.<lb/>
Amnestv International meets ever<lb/>
fourth Wed. at 8 p.m. at St Paul's Epi-<lb/>
copal Church 401 E. 4th St in the upper<lb/>
floor enter from the 4th street entrance<lb/>
Ni.t meeting Oct. 26.<lb/>
SPANISH CLUB<lb/>
Spanish Club will meet todav in Confer<lb/>
ence rm of Foreign Language Dept. in<lb/>
GCB Topics of discussion are fund rais-<lb/>
ers, dinners and entertainment Please<lb/>
join us! Bienvenidos Todos!<lb/>
A CONTEST<lb/>
The Biology Club is sponsoring a t shirt<lb/>
contest We are looking for "nifty" de-<lb/>
signs relating to Biology (not Biology<lb/>
Club) There will be a prize offered to the<lb/>
best design on Oct 31 The designs are to<lb/>
be turned in no la ter than 4 00 on Oct 26 in<lb/>
B-102 (under the stairs of Biology Bldg)<lb/>
Please leave your name and telephone<lb/>
number with the design For more info ,<lb/>
call Mamta Patel at 757-6286 or leave a<lb/>
message in the Biology Club office<lb/>
A CHALLENGE<lb/>
The East Carolina Biology Qub chal<lb/>
lenges EC1IO and physics club to raise at<lb/>
least $100 for crop walk which is to be held<lb/>
on Nov 6th and to challenge two other<lb/>
organizations to do the same.<lb/>
CORAL REEF DIVE CLUB<lb/>
Coral Reef Dive Qub meeting will be Oct<lb/>
24 in Mendenhall, rm. 248 at 8:00 p.m. For<lb/>
more info, call David at 758-5132<lb/>
INTENDED SLAP MAIORS<lb/>
All General College students who have in<lb/>
dkrated a desire to major in Speech Lan<lb/>
guage and Auditory Pathology and have<lb/>
R. Muzzarelli as their advisor are to meet<lb/>
on Nov. 2 at 5.00 p.m in Brewster B-306<lb/>
Advising for early registration will take<lb/>
place at that time. Others interested in<lb/>
SLAP should contact the dept. - 757-6961<lb/>
meeting on Sun e �<lb/>
Mendenhall, rm 24 j<lb/>
in seeing what S F D<lb/>
attend<lb/>
BLACK PSYCHOLOf<lb/>
MAJORS<lb/>
Attentkx ' . �<lb/>
Are you<lb/>
nitv and what you an<lb/>
leaving ECU? V<lb/>
today u � . �<lb/>
be glad that vou d I<lb/>
LQ QKTOB1 HI! 5<lb/>
The IK<lb/>
� 2 �<lb/>
244 The I<lb/>
play from 7-9 pi<lb/>
rolls f �<lb/>
potal<lb/>
be beer (for a<lb/>
refn<lb/>
ava<lb/>
tuxes n � �<lb/>
N sales at I<lb/>
CJQLLEGJ<lb/>
Neutrinol<lb/>
STOCK r<lb/>
- Three Ameri u<lb/>
Prize in p I<lb/>
work with part<lb/>
tiny they car<lb/>
surface<lb/>
The B<lb/>
ences cit<lb/>
Melvin S hv n<lb/>
berger for their<lb/>
tnno bear<lb/>
The an: �.<lb/>
work wascan<lb/>
and opened entii<lb/>
tumties for research into<lb/>
nermost structure and d<lb/>
i 'natter "<lb/>
The academj<lb/>
diiscovery of the mu <lb/>
Neutrinos, the n<lb/>
ti les in narui<lb/>
i rtts of mattt<lb/>
have "gh<lb/>
enable them I thro<lb/>
surface.<lb/>
"The v onti<lb/>
warded consisted amo<lb/>
things of trar<lb/>
ghostly neutrino in! <lb/>
tool oi research<lb/>
ment said<lb/>
I ederman 66<lb/>
the Fermi Nationa <lb/>
i bora tor in B<lb/>
Schwartz,  -<lb/>
sor at Stan? - !<lb/>
M president I<lb/>
ways, Inc in Mo i i<lb/>
i alif.<lb/>
Bad Kissingen, <lb/>
and is an American j<lb/>
ever, the acaden -<lb/>
his n.e<lb/>
hevn a physic st at C<lb/>
Geneva sine<lb/>
On Iuesda) v'<lb/>
whose idea- j<lb/>
and demand he<lb/>
iSa.<lb/>
5e1<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR EC. PEMQC-<lb/>
RACY<lb/>
Students for Economic Democracy will be<lb/>
r<lb/>
Whtn uruifiu I not owi<lb/>
Otenv. HC I<lb/>
�II M<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0007"/><lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20. 1988 7<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
little red<lb/>
New ear's<lb/>
ng Break skiing, to Rose-<lb/>
indef the Stan<lb/>
to the pig piokins<lb/>
v t' have been to-<lb/>
la it again! With<lb/>
H FLA VOOTBALL<lb/>
thai -i points<lb/>
i teams would like to<lb/>
Get readv though,<lb/>
.mnind the<lb/>
Come to Pi<lb/>
��30 - nil<lb/>
HERS AND<lb/>
tile Sis<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
oi By<lb/>
a t to i ive<lb/>
i - m �<lb/>
Rent<lb/>
Rl Ml TS<lb/>
�1 NS"<lb/>
iVAILABLE<lb/>
 �<lb/>
anian<lb/>
is for an<lb/>
sentative.<lb/>
<lb/>
nthusiasrn<lb/>
mian<lb/>
t�sume<lb/>
plding<lb/>
lbrary)<lb/>
please!<lb/>
i<lb/>
;n in r l.<lb/>
-� in the upper<lb/>
si .�( entrance<lb/>
lit! CLUB<lb/>
� ; i. 4 fer<lb/>
pt in<lb/>
an fund rais<lb/>
unenl Please<lb/>
A CON lib I<lb/>
ring a t shirt<lb/>
.<lb/>
lesigns ar I<lb/>
I Con Oct 26irt<lb/>
I Btolog) Bldg )<lb/>
ame and telephone<lb/>
: sign Tor more info<lb/>
H 757-6286 or leave a<lb/>
g (lub office<lb/>
A CHALLENGE<lb/>
ib chal<lb/>
�K3 tub to raise at<lb/>
ilk which is to be held<lb/>
� and to challenge two other<lb/>
do the same<lb/>
ORAL RkEFDJVE CLUB<lb/>
1 "lub meeting will be Oct<lb/>
D .  - pm For<lb/>
� :)awi �t7SI 5132<lb/>
IhNDI Q SLAP MAJORS<lb/>
ge students who have in<lb/>
led a desire to maor in Speech Lan-<lb/>
uditorv Pathology and have<lb/>
irdli as their advisor are to m�t<lb/>
1. . 2 a! "N 00 p m in Brewster B 306<lb/>
psing for earl) registration will take<lb/>
at that time Carters interested in<lb/>
should ontact the dept 757 61<lb/>
12HNT5 FQILEC QEMQCr<lb/>
RAO<lb/>
Kits tor Economic Democracy will be<lb/>
meeting on Sun evening at 7:00 pan in<lb/>
Mendenhall. rm 2-iS Anyone interested<lb/>
in seeing what S ED. is about is invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
BLACK PSYCHOLOGY<lb/>
MAJORS<lb/>
Attention" All Black Psychology Majors:<lb/>
Are you concerned about your commu<lb/>
nitv and what you are going to do after<lb/>
leaving ECU? Well, come out and join us<lb/>
today in room 2tO Kawl at 4 lit' You will<lb/>
be glad that you did<lb/>
ILO QKTOBERFF.ST<lb/>
The ILO Oktoberfest will take place on<lb/>
Oct 26 from 6-930 pm in Mendenhall,<lb/>
244 The ECU "Schmutzigs" band will<lb/>
play from 7-9 p.m The menu consists ot<lb/>
rolls Knockwurst, Sauerkraut, German<lb/>
potato salad and dessert There will also<lb/>
be Nvr (tor an wine 21 or over) and other<lb/>
refreshments Tickets are S2 50 and are<lb/>
a ailable from 11 O representatives or the<lb/>
Dept of Foreign Languages and Litera<lb/>
rures Thev will be on sale through Oct. 1�<lb/>
No salt a the door.<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
Urgent meeting for all members and other<lb/>
interested Republicans. Tonight at 700<lb/>
p.m. in 221 Mendenhall.<lb/>
DANCE<lb/>
Oct 21, wes2fel Christian Fellowship will<lb/>
host a dance at the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center, from 9 p.m. until midnight Bring<lb/>
your own music (cassettes) if you desire,<lb/>
refreshments provided Please, no alco-<lb/>
hol. Sponsored bv Presbyterian and Meth-<lb/>
odist Campus Ministries, 758-2030.<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Will beholding meeting today at 400 p.m.<lb/>
in room 1013 CCB. New officers will be<lb/>
installed and yearbook pictures will be<lb/>
taken, so dress appropriately All people<lb/>
going to the Fall Membership Training<lb/>
Conf please attend this meeting to make<lb/>
final plans $25, si5, and $10 will be<lb/>
awarded to the top 3 sellers of Tom Watt<lb/>
Check the Bulletin Board on the 2nd floor<lb/>
outside of room 2014 CCB for other an-<lb/>
nouncements.<lb/>
LIFE PLANNING WORK-<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
This workshop is intended to provide as-<lb/>
sistance to students unsure of the direc-<lb/>
tion they wish their lives to take. The focus<lb/>
will be on lifestyles for the future. Many<lb/>
people do not think of themselves as<lb/>
having influence on their futures, but<lb/>
rather, just let the future happen. Partici-<lb/>
pants in Life Planning will engage in a<lb/>
process of self examination of present<lb/>
behaviors, goal setting and decision mak-<lb/>
ing. The Life Planning Workshop will<lb/>
meet: Oct. 24, 26, 28 and 31 in 313 Wright<lb/>
Bldg. from 3-4 p.m. (attend all 4 meetings).<lb/>
Although advanced registration is not<lb/>
required, we would appreciate advance<lb/>
notification of interest to insure that we<lb/>
have adequate materials on hand. Please<lb/>
contact the Counseling Center in 316<lb/>
Wright Bldg. (757-6661) for further info, or<lb/>
to let us know you plan to attend.<lb/>
E. C. HONORS ORG.<lb/>
East Carolina I lonors Organization is the<lb/>
student honors group at ECU; it works<lb/>
closely with the Honors Program and is<lb/>
affiliated with the N.C Honors Assoc,<lb/>
Southern Regional Honors Council and<lb/>
the National Collegiate Honors Council.<lb/>
Meetings are held on alternate Thursdays<lb/>
at 5:00 in room 1004 of the CCB. Meetings<lb/>
for Oct. are on the 6th and 20th; contact Dr.<lb/>
Sanders (757-6373) for more info<lb/>
HEALTH SERVICE CLINIC<lb/>
Don't miss the game on Sat The Sat<lb/>
Clinic will be held from 10.00 am. to 12:00<lb/>
noon. The Sun. Clinic will be held as usual<lb/>
from 2:00 p.m. to 400 pm Call the Stu-<lb/>
dent I lealth Services at 757 6841 for more<lb/>
info, or questions.<lb/>
"Greenville's Finest Bakery for over 63 ytmn. "<lb/>
Happy Birthday<lb/>
(buy your friends personalized<lb/>
B-Day cakes at Dieners)<lb/>
Phone: 752-5251<lb/>
815 Dickinson Avenne<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
ow to runyour<lb/>
own snow<lb/>
Neutrino studies bag Nobel prize<lb/>
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)<lb/>
Three Americans won the Nobel<lb/>
Prize in physics today for their<lb/>
work with particles that are so<lb/>
tiny thev can pass through any<lb/>
surface.<lb/>
The Royal Academy oi Sci-<lb/>
� rices cited Leon Lederman,<lb/>
Melvin Schwartz and )ack Stein-<lb/>
berger for their work with neu-<lb/>
trino beams.<lb/>
The announcement said their<lb/>
work was carried out in the 1960s<lb/>
and opened entirely new oppor-<lb/>
tunities for research into the in-<lb/>
nermost structure and dynamics<lb/>
s matter<lb/>
The academy also cited their<lb/>
scovery of the muon neutrino.<lb/>
Neutrinos, the most common<lb/>
irticles in nature, are constitu-<lb/>
tes of matter so tiny that they<lb/>
have "ghostlike" qualities that<lb/>
enable them to pass through any<lb/>
surface.<lb/>
"The contribution now<lb/>
awarded consisted among other<lb/>
tilings of transforming the<lb/>
ghostly neutrino into an active<lb/>
hl of research the announce-<lb/>
ment said.<lb/>
Lederman, 66, is director at<lb/>
the Fermi National Accelerator<lb/>
I aboratory in Batavia, 111.<lb/>
Schwartz, 55, is a former profes-<lb/>
sor at Stanford University and<lb/>
now president of Digital Path-<lb/>
ways, Inc in Mountain View,<lb/>
Calif.<lb/>
Steinberger, 67, was born in<lb/>
Bad kissingen, West Germany,<lb/>
and is an American citizen. 1 low-<lb/>
ever, the academy officially lists<lb/>
his nationality as Swiss. He has<lb/>
been a physicist at CERN, in<lb/>
Geneva, since 1968.<lb/>
On Tuesday, Maurice Allais,<lb/>
whose ideas on balancing supply<lb/>
and demand helped rebuild the<lb/>
French economy alter World War<lb/>
II, won the Nobel Prize for eco-<lb/>
nomics.<lb/>
Allais said the poverty and<lb/>
unemployment he saw in the<lb/>
United States, on a visit during the<lb/>
Great Depression of the 1930s,<lb/>
turned him to economics from the<lb/>
engineering career tor which he<lb/>
had trained.<lb/>
On Monday, American re-<lb/>
searchers Gertrude B. Elion and<lb/>
George H. Flitchings shared the<lb/>
medicine award with Sir James<lb/>
W. Black of Britain for helping<lb/>
develop drugs to treat leukemia,<lb/>
high blood pressure, AIDS and<lb/>
other diseases.<lb/>
U.N. peacekeeping forces<lb/>
won the Nobel Peace Prize, an-<lb/>
nounced Sept. 29 in Oslo, Nor-<lb/>
way, and the award in literature<lb/>
went last week to Egyptian novel-<lb/>
ist Naguib Mahfouz, the first<lb/>
Arabic-language writer to win it.<lb/>
Economics is the only one of<lb/>
the six Nobel prizes not stipulated<lb/>
in the will of Swedish industrialist<lb/>
Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dy-<lb/>
namite, who died in 1896. This<lb/>
vear's prizes are worth about<lb/>
$390,000.<lb/>
Riverbluff<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
Welcomes<lb/>
New and Returning<lb/>
Students<lb/>
� Fully Carpeted<lb/>
�Large Pool<lb/>
�Free Cable<lb/>
�Bus Service1.5 miles from campus<lb/>
�Under New Management<lb/>
10th Street Ext. to Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
4 suit siitouii<lb/>
' met i : �<lb/>
urtua '��' ' i ��' '�<lb/>
� - �  ���<lb/>
II �anl<lb/>
How to uvt iheCaid now<lb/>
�� iis?�er<lb/>
I - ft-THI �� ���:����<lb/>
Tht � Express Card<lb/>
I �<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 Day 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/>
<pb facs="00058102_0008"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
n<lb/>
8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20,1988<lb/>
(T<lb/>
Jordan wants stiffer drug laws<lb/>
Lt. Gov. Bob Jordan, flanked<lb/>
by sheriffs from across the state,<lb/>
blasted Gov. Jim Martin's record<lb/>
on crime and called for stiffer<lb/>
penalties against convicted drug<lb/>
dealers.<lb/>
For his part, Martin called<lb/>
Tuesday for education reforms,<lb/>
saying the state needs to put more<lb/>
effort into education, with higher<lb/>
salaries and a career ladder that<lb/>
will give teachers a chance for ad-<lb/>
vancement.<lb/>
In the presidential race,<lb/>
Democratic nominee Michael<lb/>
Dukakis planned to discuss agri-<lb/>
cultural issues with farmers and<lb/>
other supoorters via a satellite<lb/>
television linkup. The event was<lb/>
scheduled for today at the state<lb/>
fair.<lb/>
Meanwhile former Gov.<lb/>
Lester maddox called on North<lb/>
Carolina Democratic leaders to<lb/>
abandon Dukakis, saying he had<lb/>
nothing to offer the party's con-<lb/>
servatives.<lb/>
"A lot of Democratic leaders<lb/>
are refusing to go out and cam-<lb/>
paign for Dukakis because they<lb/>
know what the people feel<lb/>
Maddox said at a news conference<lb/>
outside the state Capitol. "The<lb/>
people are frightened about<lb/>
Dukakis and they're disap-<lb/>
pointed in their Democratic lead-<lb/>
ers<lb/>
The Democratic Party "is<lb/>
under the absolute control of the<lb/>
revolutionary leftists in this coun-<lb/>
try Maddox said. "They sup-<lb/>
port (Nicaraguan leader Daniel)<lb/>
Ortega, they support Jane Fonda,<lb/>
they support (House Speaker) Jim<lb/>
Wright<lb/>
Maddox, who was Georgia<lb/>
governor from 1967-71, said he<lb/>
was traveling 1,000 miles per<lb/>
week at his own expense, urging<lb/>
Democratic officials to insist that<lb/>
the partv move toward the right.<lb/>
Jordan, the Democratic gu-<lb/>
bernatorial nominee, charged<lb/>
Tuesday that Martin has funncled<lb/>
money into political payoffs in-<lb/>
stead of fighting drugs in the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
"Jim Martin has not given the<lb/>
war on drugs this kind of leader-<lb/>
ship. As usual, he has been bring-<lb/>
ing up the rear Jordan said in a<lb/>
new conference at the Pitt County<lb/>
Courthouse in Greenville. "Yes,<lb/>
he made a television commercial<lb/>
against drugs. Yes, he had some<lb/>
press conferences about druos.<lb/>
But we need action, not talk.<lb/>
"Jim Martin chose to spend<lb/>
over a quarter of a million dollars<lb/>
in taxpayers money for a political<lb/>
payoff he said. "I say we should<lb/>
stop wasting money on political<lb/>
debts and start spending it on a<lb/>
Governor's Office on Drug<lb/>
Abuse. Political payoffs and po-<lb/>
litical rhetoric will not win the<lb/>
war against drugs<lb/>
Jordan said the "payoff" was<lb/>
the job Martin awarded to former<lb/>
Democratic Lt. Gov. Jimmy<lb/>
Green. Jordan also said Reoubli-<lb/>
cans who were defeated in local<lb/>
elections in the state were given<lb/>
prime jobs in the Martin admini-<lb/>
stration.<lb/>
"North Carolina is not going<lb/>
to make any more excuses for why<lb/>
we can't support our schools<lb/>
Martin told about 250 people.<lb/>
'This is the area where the most<lb/>
effort and the strongest commit-<lb/>
ment are needed<lb/>
Martin said the career ladder<lb/>
plan, which rates teacher per-<lb/>
formance and offers teacher more<lb/>
pay for higher ratings, was "of the<lb/>
greatest importance to educa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
'Teachers would be able to<lb/>
receive promotions without leav-<lb/>
ing the classroom he said.<lb/>
Martin said he expected the<lb/>
state's averages wages to con-<lb/>
tinue increasing, reaching the<lb/>
national average by the mid-<lb/>
1990s.<lb/>
"If we can continue to have a<lb/>
strong market economy, a strong<lb/>
job market and a strong business<lb/>
climate, we can bid up the wages<lb/>
of people across the board he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Jordan also made a call for<lb/>
stricter penalties against people<lb/>
convicted on drug charges during<lb/>
his news conference. About 20<lb/>
sheriffs and law enforcement offi-<lb/>
cers, including Pitt Sheriff Raloh<lb/>
Tyson, lined the courthouse steps<lb/>
behind Jordan during his news<lb/>
;onference.<lb/>
Possession of any amount of<lb/>
cocaine or crack - even one vial -<lb/>
should be a felony, Jordan said,<lb/>
and any adult offender should<lb/>
serve prison time for the offense.<lb/>
Jordan said he supported<lb/>
death sentences for "drug king-<lb/>
pins" involved in murders, and<lb/>
he said he would consider<lb/>
extending the punishment to<lb/>
other drug dealers, depending on<lb/>
the size of their drug operation.<lb/>
The state must build more<lb/>
prisons to reduce overcrowding,<lb/>
he said, and some misdemeanor<lb/>
offenders should be kept out of<lb/>
jail to alleviate the problem. More<lb/>
money should also be made avail-<lb/>
able for local governments to in-<lb/>
crease community service pro-<lb/>
grams so that some people do not<lb/>
go to jail.<lb/>
Vance County Sheriff Tony<lb/>
McGee and Martin County Sheriff<lb/>
Wille Rogers also spoke briefly in<lb/>
support of Jordan.<lb/>
"I can't imagine any law en-<lb/>
forcement officer not supporting<lb/>
Bob Jordan Rogers said. McGee<lb/>
also said Jordan is the best candi-<lb/>
date, but he declined to cite spe-<lb/>
cific reasons Jordan could do a<lb/>
better job than Martin.<lb/>
CLIFF'<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Washington Highway (N.C. 33 ext.) Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
r<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/>
752-3172 <lb/>
READ THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
A103<lb/>
Art and reason<lb/>
When Mark and I deckled to spend<lb/>
the weekend at his mother's house.<lb/>
I never imagined I won Mix walking<lb/>
into a mouses nightmare. Ihciv were<lb/>
eats everywhere.<lb/>
( at plaques, cat statues, cat . locks,<lb/>
even a eat mat. I couldn't begin to Juph<lb/>
cate her collection of kittv litter iI I spent<lb/>
a ear at a garage sale. Conspicuously<lb/>
absent, however, w as a real cat. Strange,<lb/>
I thought, and began to tear that a<lb/>
weekend with cat woman coukl be a<lb/>
lot less than purr-feet.<lb/>
But then she came home. au<lb/>
Mark intnxiuced her. She was<lb/>
dressed surprisingly well no<lb/>
leopard pants In fact, von<lb/>
coukl sav she was the cats meow.<lb/>
but 111 rather not.<lb/>
She ottered me a cup of DutchIn k<lb/>
olate Mint. Now that was something<lb/>
I could relate to.Then she brought it<lb/>
out in the most beautiful, distinctly<lb/>
untelmcchma 111 ever seen. As wc<lb/>
sipped. I found out that Mrsamplx<lb/>
has my same weakness tor choc 'late.<lb/>
lo es the theater as much as I do. but,<lb/>
iXTcdibh; never saw "( ats So Mark<lb/>
ak 1 are taking her next month<lb/>
General Foods International Coffees<lb/>
Share the feeling.<lb/>
RAMADA INN PRESENTS<lb/>
Costa<lb/>
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica I AI<lb/>
The government declared a I<lb/>
I it emergency and began eva j<lb/>
ing coastal resid i<lb/>
loan spun toward enti I<lb/>
tea alter leaving a tra j<lb/>
tion in Colombia<lb/>
At least 50 peopl<lb/>
injured or missing in (<lb/>
and tens of thousand<lb/>
were destl<lb/>
aals said.<lb/>
puzzling f �<lb/>
ratic course ' ar<lb/>
the Colombian .<lb/>
San Andre<lb/>
Colombian coast<lb/>
Manuel Obai<lb/>
Costa Rica's<lb/>
Committee ;<lb/>
a the killer sti rm vs<lb/>
Rica early toda<lb/>
Th<lb/>
homeless<lb/>
Jren and s'<lb/>
from Puerto I u<lb/>
coast port cit<lb/>
ab � 5 �;<lb/>
Court o<lb/>
� �<lb/>
marijuai<lb/>
V5<lb/>
ils sa<lb/>
Supreme Court is<lb/>
tor law enter<lb/>
nev General Lac) Th "<lb/>
isked the I v<lb/>
review the de<lb/>
Fhe state Supren<lb/>
ing said an -V. �.<lb/>
was wrong - -<lb/>
doned store torif tl<lb/>
of a marijuana manul<lb/>
plant.<lb/>
The state Suprem<lb/>
that because th<lb/>
peek into the<lb/>
lie interior<lb/>
Newland w as not in plain <lb/>
anyone pa<lb/>
tino slights were j<lb/>
According to a bru<lb/>
forThornburgb) ss -<lb/>
nev General lohn Wa<lb/>
state Supreme Court - d<lb/>
"hvporteehnical. ' unwoj<lb/>
for law enforcement<lb/>
void of an) practica<lb/>
The decision coi j<lb/>
principle that l.v.s enl i qj<lb/>
officers should K i<lb/>
verify informant<lb/>
tore seek ng search<lb/>
Watters writes<lb/>
eluded that, even th<lb/>
cers crossed se oral t i<lb/>
defendant's p<lb/>
barn, they were vv<lb/>
to peer into it.<lb/>
That was all th d<lb/>
the Avery County case<lb/>
claims in his brief he!<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
On Greenville's Largest<lb/>
Wide Screen TV<lb/>
This Week<lb/>
San Francisco 49'ers<lb/>
vs<lb/>
Chicago Bears<lb/>
8:00 until<lb/>
$2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
$1.00 Miller Long Necks<lb/>
$1.50<lb/>
Ramada Inn<lb/>
(Formerly Shearton of Greenville)<lb/>
203 W. Greenville Blvd. � 355-2666<lb/>
STEVE HARDYS ORIGINAL BEACH PARTY<lb/>
BIAS<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT<lb/>
Fun After Business Hours <lb/>
Playing the Very Best in Beach.<lb/>
Top 40, Oldies and Dance Music<lb/>
Steve Hardy Begins at 7:00<lb/>
Drink Specials All Evening<lb/>
Hot Buffalo Wings "til 7:30<lb/>
STEVE<lb/>
'HARDY'S<lb/>
BEACH PARTY<lb/>
LADIES<lb/>
GENTLEMEN<lb/>
jftl<lb/>
PRIZES<lb/>
T-SHIRTS<lb/>
RAMADA<lb/>
EDGERTON MANAGEMENT CORP<lb/>
R<lb/>
b<lb/>
R<lb/>
V.v��<lb/>
'�4 �J<lb/>
S &amp; &amp; tf f&amp;v?!<lb/>
R<lb/>
iCi<lb/>
a ?<lb/>
East Carolina's<lb/>
Finest Tea<lb/>
� East Carolina<lb/>
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TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20, 1988 9<lb/>
Costa Rica braces forhurricanei<lb/>
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) -<lb/>
The government declared a state<lb/>
of emergency and began evacuat-<lb/>
ing coastal residents as Hurricane<lb/>
loan spun toward Central Amer-<lb/>
ica after leaving a trail of devasta-<lb/>
tion in Colombia.<lb/>
At least 50 people were dead,<lb/>
injured or missing in Colombia<lb/>
and tens of thousands oi homes<lb/>
were destroyed or flooded, offi-<lb/>
cials said.<lb/>
Packing 95-mph winds and<lb/>
puzzling forecasters with its er-<lb/>
ratic course, loan churned toward<lb/>
the Colombian island resort oi<lb/>
San Andres, 500 miles north of the<lb/>
C olombian coast.<lb/>
Manuel Obando, president of<lb/>
Costa Rica's National Emergencv<lb/>
Committee, predicted the brunt<lb/>
of the killer storm would hit Costa<lb/>
Rica early today.<lb/>
The government evacuated<lb/>
homeless elderly people and chil-<lb/>
dren and 8f hospital patients<lb/>
from Puerto Limon, an Atlantic<lb/>
coast port city of 8,000 people<lb/>
about 105 miles southeast oi the<lb/>
capital, San Jose, Obando said.<lb/>
He said 167 inmates also were<lb/>
evacuated from a prison and that<lb/>
authorities were prepared to<lb/>
move another 30,000 coastal resi-<lb/>
dents inland sheets of rain lashed<lb/>
the coast.<lb/>
If bv Mondav we observe that<lb/>
there is a imminent danger, we'll<lb/>
begin to evacuate Obando said.<lb/>
Heavy rains pushed the Re-<lb/>
ventazon and Parritas rivers over<lb/>
their banks near the Pacific coast<lb/>
port of Puntarenas, 80 miles<lb/>
northeast of San Jose, radio re-<lb/>
ports said.<lb/>
In Panama, a hurricane watch<lb/>
was in effect for the north coast<lb/>
from Punta San Bias to Boca del<lb/>
Toro and for San Andres.<lb/>
Long lines formed at super-<lb/>
markets and pharmacies in Pan-<lb/>
ama Citv, the capital, as people<lb/>
heeded warnings to stock up on<lb/>
supplies. The government de-<lb/>
clared a state of alert.<lb/>
"Stay calm, don't become<lb/>
alarmed and don't panic Colon<lb/>
Mayor Juan Fidel Macias told<lb/>
residents of that Atlantic port in a<lb/>
radio broadcast.<lb/>
Traffic in the Panama Canal<lb/>
was not expected to be disrupted,<lb/>
said Panama Canal Commission<lb/>
spokesman Franklin Castrellon.<lb/>
In Nicaragua, officials were<lb/>
uncertain what impact Joan<lb/>
would have. "We can't say if the<lb/>
storm will directly affect Nicara-<lb/>
gua at this moment said Pilar<lb/>
Cruz, director of Nicaragua's<lb/>
National Meteorological Service.<lb/>
At midnight EDT Tuesday,<lb/>
Joan was centered near latitude<lb/>
11.3 north, longitude 77.5 west,<lb/>
the National Hurricane Center in<lb/>
Coral Gables, Ha said in a state-<lb/>
ment. It said the hurricane's cen-<lb/>
ter was about 290 miles southeast<lb/>
of San Andres and 210 miles<lb/>
northeast of Colon.<lb/>
Joan's unusual southern path<lb/>
had forecasters puzzling over its<lb/>
possible landfall.<lb/>
"Joan is one of a kind said<lb/>
Jim Gross, a meteorologist at the<lb/>
National Hurricane Center. "You<lb/>
just don't see many hurricanes<lb/>
that take this course and hug the<lb/>
coast<lb/>
Joan raked the northern Co-<lb/>
lombian coast with heavy rains<lb/>
and winds Monday, triggering<lb/>
floods that inundated and de-<lb/>
stroyed homes.<lb/>
In the northern town of<lb/>
Carmen de Bolivar, 360 miles<lb/>
north of Bogota, the capital, at<lb/>
least three people were killed<lb/>
Monday and about 38 were miss-<lb/>
ing, Victor Leon Mendoza of the<lb/>
Bolivar state government said.<lb/>
A child was killed and seven<lb/>
people injured Monday in the<lb/>
town of Uribia on Colombia's<lb/>
Guajira Peninsula, police said in a<lb/>
communique. About 75 percent<lb/>
of the homes in Uribia, a town of<lb/>
45,000, were destroyed or<lb/>
flooded, police said.<lb/>
Camilo Cardenas, president<lb/>
of Colombia's National Emer-<lb/>
gency Committee, said in a news<lb/>
release that about 200 homes in<lb/>
Carmen deBolivar were de-<lb/>
stroyed or flooded.<lb/>
Court overturns ruling in<lb/>
marijuana production case<lb/>
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ASIflEVILLE (AP) - State offi-<lb/>
cials say a ruling by the state<lb/>
Supreme Court is "unworkable<lb/>
tor law enforcement and Attor-<lb/>
nes- General Lacy Thornburg has<lb/>
asked the U.S. Supreme Court to<lb/>
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The state Supreme Court rul-<lb/>
ing said an Avery County deputy<lb/>
was wrong to peek into an aban-<lb/>
doned store to verify the existence<lb/>
of a marijuana manufacturing<lb/>
plant.<lb/>
The state Supreme Court said<lb/>
that because the deputy stooped<lb/>
to peek into the cracks - because<lb/>
the interior of the store near<lb/>
Mewland was not in plain view to<lb/>
anyone passing by - Joseph Mario<lb/>
Tarantino's rights were wronged.<lb/>
According to a brief written<lb/>
for Thornburg by Assistant Attor-<lb/>
ney General John Watters, the<lb/>
state Supreme Court's decision is<lb/>
"hvpertechnical "unworkable<lb/>
for law enforcement" and "de-<lb/>
void of any practical wisdom<lb/>
The decision contradicts the<lb/>
principle that law enforcement<lb/>
officers should be encouraged to<lb/>
verify informant information be-<lb/>
fore seeking search warrants,<lb/>
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cers crossed several fences on the<lb/>
defendant's property to get to the<lb/>
bam, they were within their rights<lb/>
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That was all the deputy did in<lb/>
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But 24th Judicial District At-<lb/>
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he doubts the higher court will<lb/>
hear the case. Of the 1,000 cases<lb/>
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If it refuses to hear argu-<lb/>
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attorney has argued the mari-<lb/>
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because the deputy violated<lb/>
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Without the marijuana, there<lb/>
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by the U.S Supreme Court - U.S.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058102_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20, 1988<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
Bakker says he can prove innocence<lb/>
COLUMBIA,S.C. (AD-PTL<lb/>
founder Jim Bakker says docu-<lb/>
ments he's just received should<lb/>
vindicate him against charges he<lb/>
failed to repay the television<lb/>
ministry money used for his own<lb/>
benefit.<lb/>
Appearing Tuesday to de-<lb/>
fend allegations in a $52 million<lb/>
lawsuit PTL filed against him,<lb/>
Bakker told reporters he was "a<lb/>
touch angry he was only now<lb/>
receiving canceled checks and re-<lb/>
imbursement receipts and<lb/>
hinted they may have been pur-<lb/>
posely withheld.<lb/>
"I think somebody calcu-<lb/>
lated they would hold all the ma-<lb/>
terials until the middle of the<lb/>
trial he said, though he did not<lb/>
say who.<lb/>
Bakker predicted his re-<lb/>
search would satisfy at least 90<lb/>
percent of the Internal Revenue<lb/>
Service's concerns.<lb/>
In its suit against Bakker, his<lb/>
wife Tammy and former aide<lb/>
David Taggart, PTL accuses<lb/>
Bakker of mismanaging the min<lb/>
first week of the trial in Septem- Court. A federal grand jury in unanimously in favor of bonuses<lb/>
ber that the Bakkers received Charlotte, N.C has been investi- for Bakker.<lb/>
about $9.5 million in bonuses, gating for more than a year the "If a bonus came up, I voted for<lb/>
salaries and other compensation ministry raised money for one it said Ms. Spencer, pastor of The<lb/>
from 1983 to 1987. purpose and it used it for one thing House ofTruth church in Oakland,<lb/>
An IRS agent also testified he or another. Calif,<lb/>
found cash advances to Bakker Bakker's other attorney, Ryan Under cross-examination by<lb/>
and Taggart that apparently Hovis, said they asked for the in- PTL attorney Tom White, Ms.<lb/>
served no legitimate business formation last week, once they dis- Spencer could not recall the pre-<lb/>
purpose. Bakker called the case covered who the appropriate en- cise salary of Bakker during her<lb/>
'literally a trial for my life.<lb/>
"It may be business as usual<lb/>
for everyone else, but this is my<lb/>
life I'm talking about Bakker<lb/>
during a lunch break in the hear-<lb/>
ing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court.<lb/>
The ministry entered bank-<lb/>
ruptcy protection three months<lb/>
after Bakker left in March 1987<lb/>
after he admitted to a sexual<lb/>
encounter with former church<lb/>
secretary Jessica Hahn.<lb/>
The trial resumed Monday,<lb/>
and Bakker is expected to testify<lb/>
today for the first time this week.<lb/>
Bakker attorney Jim Toms<lb/>
said Bakker's comments about<lb/>
possible sabotage "really reflect a<lb/>
frustration" in trying to prove his<lb/>
case based on records scattered<lb/>
tity would be to ask. He would not<lb/>
say who was asked.<lb/>
In Tuesday's testimony, inde-<lb/>
pendent financial analyst James<lb/>
Wilson said PTL's finances from<lb/>
1978 to 1986 showed it to be a<lb/>
time on the board from November<lb/>
1985 to March 1987, when the<lb/>
board resigned.<lb/>
As he began Bakker's defense<lb/>
Monday, attorney Ryan Hovis<lb/>
said he will try to show that<lb/>
healthy, growing ministry without Bakker's salaries and benefits were<lb/>
financial problems<lb/>
According to Wilson, the<lb/>
ministry's fixed assets grew at an<lb/>
annual compound rate of 28 per-<lb/>
cent during that time while reve-<lb/>
nues increased 19 percent.<lb/>
Also Tuesday, a former PTL<lb/>
board member said Bakker de-<lb/>
served every bonus he received<lb/>
while at the helm of the Fort Mill-<lb/>
based television ministry and reli-<lb/>
gious theme park.<lb/>
Evelyn Spencer told Judge<lb/>
not only approved, but that he also<lb/>
earned them.<lb/>
And despite what he said was<lb/>
a lack of records, Hovis said he<lb/>
would present a pattern of ap-<lb/>
proval for salaries and bonuses<lb/>
and reimbursement for Bakker's<lb/>
personal expenses.<lb/>
During the first hal f of the trial,<lb/>
PTL attorneys White and Brad<lb/>
Lcggett presented financial rec-<lb/>
ords and testimony from PTL offi-<lb/>
cials and an IRS agent that PTL<lb/>
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nakker or mismanaging uie iiwm- case udscu un rtvurus scattercu cveiyn opc-nc-i ii�u j"�-5� -tr�<lb/>
istry. The ministry presented among PTL offices, a federal gTand Rufus Reynolds she and other claimed showed Bakker had mis<lb/>
testimony and evidence in the jury probe, and U.S. Bankruptcy board members consistently voted managed the ministry.<lb/>
Elderly man kidnapped by two women<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM (AP) - A<lb/>
77 year-old man who was cov-<lb/>
ered with blood was picked up by<lb/>
a truck driver after he was kid-<lb/>
napped by two women who<lb/>
locked him in the trunk of his<lb/>
Cadillac and later stabbed him in<lb/>
the chest, authorities say.<lb/>
James Howard Cardwell of<lb/>
VVinston-Salem was abandoned<lb/>
on the sideof a Surrv County road<lb/>
Countv, Va Sheriff's Depart- phoned Cardwell and asked him<lb/>
mcnt to drive her to Stanleyville to pick<lb/>
'I don't know why it hap- up her car.<lb/>
pened Cardwell said Tuesday in<lb/>
an interview from Baptist Hospi-<lb/>
tal, where he was listed in stable<lb/>
condition.<lb/>
Ms. Gibson and Ms. Ferguson<lb/>
face extradition to Forsyth<lb/>
County for trial on charges of<lb/>
assault with a deadlv weapon<lb/>
Monday, according to Forsyth with intent to kill, inflicting seri<lb/>
County Sheriff's Major E.D.<lb/>
Alston. Cardwell was robbed of<lb/>
"I didn't really have time to<lb/>
do it, but she asked me to do her a<lb/>
favor, and I did said Cardwell,<lb/>
who was acquainted with one of<lb/>
the suspects.<lb/>
They arranged to meet at a<lb/>
church parking lot, Alston said.<lb/>
When Cardwell arrived, he was<lb/>
met by the two women and a tcen-<lb/>
$100 and stabbed with a knife that<lb/>
punctured and deflated a lung,<lb/>
according to an arrest warrant.<lb/>
Two women, Tammy Gibson,<lb/>
ous injury; first-degree kidnap- age boy that Cardwell did not<lb/>
ping; and larceny of an automo- know.<lb/>
bile. Ms. Gibson also faces a<lb/>
charge of armed robbery. Ms.<lb/>
Ferguson also faces one count of<lb/>
robbery with a dangerous<lb/>
28, and Freda Diana Ferguson, 28, weapon. They were being held in<lb/>
both of Winston-Salem, were ar- the Carroll County jail,<lb/>
rested early Tuesday about two The incident began about 5:30<lb/>
miles outside Hillsville, Va said p.m. in Winston-Salem, Alston<lb/>
Det. Steve Williams of the Carroll said, when one of the women tele-<lb/>
He said he drove to<lb/>
Stanleyville, but they wanted to<lb/>
keep going.<lb/>
"So I pulled over and told<lb/>
them I wasn't going to go any far-<lb/>
ther Cardwell said. He said he<lb/>
was then threatened with a knife.<lb/>
He was later locked in the trunk of<lb/>
his car.<lb/>
"I reckon they kept me in that<lb/>
trunk, just riding anywhere, but I<lb/>
didn't know where they were<lb/>
going Cardwell said. They<lb/>
stopped about one-and-half<lb/>
hours later on U.S. 52, somewhere<lb/>
outside of Pilot Mountain, and<lb/>
unlocked the trunk, Alston said.<lb/>
"They unlocked the trunk<lb/>
and stabbed me Cardwell said.<lb/>
"I didn't even know that I was<lb/>
stabbed. I just looked down, and I<lb/>
was bleeding all over the place<lb/>
The women drove away in<lb/>
the Cadillac, Alston said, leaving<lb/>
Cardwell injured by the side of<lb/>
the road. He was picked up by a<lb/>
truck driver late Monday night<lb/>
and driven to a gas station in Pilot<lb/>
Mountain. An ambulance took<lb/>
him to Baptist Hospital.<lb/>
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SEOUL, South Korea I<lb/>
South Korea will call on<lb/>
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cials said.<lb/>
South Korean President<lb/>
Tae-woo, to meet Thursday<lb/>
White House with rresidenl<lb/>
agan, "will formally urgj<lb/>
United States to take broad<lb/>
ures as soon as possible t<lb/>
prove ues with North Korea.<lb/>
government official said<lb/>
The official, speaking<lb/>
dihon of anonymity, said RoJ<lb/>
brief Reagan on nib new peat<lb/>
tiatives on the Korean penil<lb/>
and thank him for Washing<lb/>
support for a successful host<lb/>
the Seoul Olympics.<lb/>
The United State- b I<lb/>
its military presence in!<lb/>
around the Korean pen<lb/>
during the Seoul Olympic<lb/>
warned North Kon j<lb/>
Shrou<lb/>
Science brought the<lb/>
of Tunn into prominend<lb/>
now science has shoved lj<lb/>
toward obscurity<lb/>
Despite the turn-abo<lb/>
puzzling cloth doubt. j<lb/>
remain to manv an obn J<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
However results<lb/>
last week from radiocarbc<lb/>
show the shroud is only al<lb/>
vears old and could not<lb/>
burial cloth of Jesus in <lb/>
century.<lb/>
Manv had believed thl<lb/>
was the one used to wi j<lb/>
body after his crucifixion<lb/>
the time of his resurrect!<lb/>
belief that had been stn i :<lb/>
by previous scientific findl<lb/>
But the latest tests<lb/>
separate laboratories in<lb/>
the U.S and Switzerland!<lb/>
highly sensitive datin<lb/>
niques, find the s'r<lb/>
from between 12rn to P:<lb/>
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Enter: 0<lb/>
EC<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20, 1988 11<lb/>
US!<lb/>
v Will<lb/>
irate Balloons<lb/>
PAPER"<lb/>
Get<lb/>
U - Cutlery<lb/>
vers, Plates &amp;<lb/>
Briers<lb/>
?on Bouquet!<lb/>
h Our Exclusive<lb/>
r k onvience<lb/>
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l&amp;s Uti<lb/>
South Korea appeals for U.S. help<lb/>
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -<lb/>
South Korea will call on the<lb/>
United States to improve rela-<lb/>
tions with communist North Ko-<lb/>
rea in conjunction with similar<lb/>
moves by the Soviet Union and its<lb/>
allies to thaw ties with Seoul, offi-<lb/>
cials said.<lb/>
South Korean President Roh<lb/>
Tae-woo, to meet Thursday at the<lb/>
White House with President Re-<lb/>
agan, "will formally urge the<lb/>
United States to take broad meas-<lb/>
ures as soon as possible to im-<lb/>
prove ties with North Korea one<lb/>
government official said.<lb/>
The official, speaking on con-<lb/>
dition of anonymity, said Roh will<lb/>
brief Reagan on his new peace ini-<lb/>
tiatives on the Korean peninsula<lb/>
and thank him for Washington's<lb/>
support for a successful hosting of<lb/>
the Seoul Olympics.<lb/>
The United States beefed up<lb/>
its military presence in and<lb/>
around the Korean peninsula<lb/>
during the Seoul Olympics and<lb/>
warned North Korea against dis-<lb/>
rupting the Games, which Pyon-<lb/>
gyang unsuccessfully sought to<lb/>
co-host. The Games ended with-<lb/>
out incident on Oct. 2.<lb/>
In a related development,<lb/>
Roh, speaking at the United Na-<lb/>
tions, called Tuesday for a sum-<lb/>
mit meeting with North Korea's<lb/>
president to sign a non-aggres-<lb/>
sion pact. North Korea and South<lb/>
Korea have been bitter enemies<lb/>
since the division of the Korean<lb/>
peninsula in 1945.<lb/>
Relations between the United<lb/>
States and North Korea have<lb/>
never developed beyond the<lb/>
symbolic stage. The United States<lb/>
fought for South Korea in a three-<lb/>
year war against the North Kore-<lb/>
ans in the early 1950s.<lb/>
As a conciliatory gesture, the<lb/>
United States allowed limited<lb/>
contact with North Korea in early<lb/>
1987 but revoked the decision last<lb/>
year after the communist Asian<lb/>
state was implicated in the No-<lb/>
vember bombing of a South Ko-<lb/>
rean commercial jet with 115<lb/>
people on board near Burma.<lb/>
South Korea, the official said,<lb/>
now hopes the United States will<lb/>
change its policy again, easing<lb/>
visa restrictions and allowing<lb/>
limited personnel find trade con-<lb/>
tacts with North Korea.<lb/>
Such conciliatory U.S. ges-<lb/>
tures are necessary to bolster<lb/>
Koh's initiatives to improve rela-<lb/>
tions with North Korea, the offi-<lb/>
cial said.<lb/>
Roh on Tuesday told the U.N.<lb/>
General Assembly that South<lb/>
Korea is ready to end its rivalry<lb/>
and confrontation with North<lb/>
Korea and would not oppose its<lb/>
allies improving ties with North<lb/>
Korea.<lb/>
"It is our wish that our allies<lb/>
and friends will contribute to the<lb/>
progress and opening of North<lb/>
Korea by engaging Pyongyang<lb/>
(the North Korean capital) in<lb/>
expanding relations he said.<lb/>
"It is also our position that<lb/>
those socialist countries with<lb/>
close ties to North Korea continue<lb/>
to maintain positive relations and<lb/>
cooperate with North Korea even<lb/>
as they improve relations with<lb/>
us Roh added.<lb/>
It is unclear how far South<lb/>
Korea wants the United States to<lb/>
go to improve ties with North<lb/>
Korea, but the official said, "We<lb/>
want the policies of our allies<lb/>
commensurate with moves by<lb/>
countries allied with the north<lb/>
South Korea, bolstered by a<lb/>
remarkable economic revival in<lb/>
the last two decades, is actively<lb/>
pushing to improve ties with<lb/>
communist nations. Hungary and<lb/>
Yugoslavia have already set up<lb/>
trade offices in Seoul and the<lb/>
Soviet Union and other major<lb/>
communist nations are expected<lb/>
to follow suit.<lb/>
A few days before the Sum-<lb/>
mer Olympics opened in Seoul<lb/>
last month, Hungary made the<lb/>
surprise announcement that it<lb/>
would become the first commu-<lb/>
nist nation to establish ambassa-<lb/>
dorial-level relations with South<lb/>
Korea.<lb/>
Shroud of Turin age under question<lb/>
Science brought the Shroud<lb/>
of Turin into prominence and<lb/>
now science has shoved it back<lb/>
toward obscurity.<lb/>
Despite the turn-about, the<lb/>
puzzling cloth doubtlessly will<lb/>
remain to many an object of fasci-<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
However, results disclosed<lb/>
last week from radiocarbon tests<lb/>
show the shroud is only about 700<lb/>
years old and could not be the<lb/>
burial cloth of Jesus in the first<lb/>
century.<lb/>
Many had believed the cloth<lb/>
was the one used to wrap Jesus'<lb/>
bodv after his crucifixion and at<lb/>
the time of his resurrection - a<lb/>
belief that had been strengthened<lb/>
by previous scientific findings.<lb/>
But the latest tests at three<lb/>
separate laboratories in Britain,<lb/>
the U.S. and Switzerland, using<lb/>
highly sensitive datino tech-<lb/>
niques, find the shroud dated<lb/>
from between 1260 to 1390.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the mystery of<lb/>
the image on the cloth remains. It<lb/>
shows, as in a photographic nega-<lb/>
tive, the front and back of a<lb/>
scourged, crucified man. Scien-<lb/>
tists have been unable to deter-<lb/>
mine how it got there.<lb/>
A 32-mcmber U.S. research<lb/>
team concluded in 1981, after<lb/>
spending five days subjecting the<lb/>
shroud to a wide range of tests,<lb/>
that the image is not the product<lb/>
of an artist and that it bears blood<lb/>
stains.<lb/>
But what caused "the image is<lb/>
an ongoing mystery the report<lb/>
said.<lb/>
That question also remained<lb/>
unanswered by the latest radio-<lb/>
carbon tests.<lb/>
The Rev. Adam Otterbein,<lb/>
head of the Holy Shroud Guild,<lb/>
says there are many other unre-<lb/>
solved questions, such as previ-<lb/>
ous research claims that the image<lb/>
snowed first-century coins over<lb/>
the victim's eyes.<lb/>
Some scientists previously<lb/>
had suggested that the image was<lb/>
made by a sudden, intense blaze<lb/>
of light, such as that mentioned by<lb/>
Scripture at the time of the resur-<lb/>
rection.<lb/>
Others have theorized the<lb/>
image was caused by radiation, or<lb/>
by some sort of still unexplained<lb/>
chemical reaction between body<lb/>
secretions and the cloth, but that<lb/>
they have not been able to dupli-<lb/>
cate the effect by such processes.<lb/>
The history of the 14-by-4-<lb/>
foot-long linen shroud can be<lb/>
traced to 1354, when it was depos-<lb/>
ited in Lirey, France, by a French<lb/>
nobleman who participated in<lb/>
Crusades to the Holy Land.<lb/>
The cloth has been kept since<lb/>
1578 in Turin, Italy, where the<lb/>
Catholic archbishop of Turin is its<lb/>
official guardian.<lb/>
It drew little attention until<lb/>
scientific investigations of it be-<lb/>
gan about the turn of the century,<lb/>
starting with 1898 photographs<lb/>
revealing the image on the shroud<lb/>
had characteristics of a photo-<lb/>
graphic negative.<lb/>
Since that time, various stud-<lb/>
ies accumulated so extensively<lb/>
that they took on a technical<lb/>
name, "siconology" (shroud<lb/>
study). But testing of the cloth<lb/>
itself was not allowed since its<lb/>
keepers feared damage to it.<lb/>
But that changed dramati-<lb/>
cally in 1978 when scientists of the<lb/>
U Q Shroud of Turin Research<lb/>
Project were allowed to conduct<lb/>
various chemical, photographic<lb/>
and comouterized tests.<lb/>
Taking three years to corre-<lb/>
late their results, they concluded<lb/>
in 1981 that the image of the cruci-<lb/>
fied figure had not been forged by<lb/>
an artist, but they were uncertain<lb/>
how it got there.<lb/>
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Enter: October 3rd-0ctober 21st<lb/>
ECU Student Stores<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0012"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLirJ<lb/>
THE EAST CAROI INI AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
OCTOBER 20, 1988 Page 12<lb/>
Padgette looks forward to Miss USA Pageant,<lb/>
ECU senior carries N.C. crown to Alabama<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
Assistant Feature Editor<lb/>
address younger people and she<lb/>
hopes that winning the Miss USA<lb/>
and Miss Universe titles would<lb/>
"the friendliest people in the<lb/>
world Padgette enjoyed grow-<lb/>
ing up in Hobgood and thinks<lb/>
attend ECU in the upcoming<lb/>
spring semester. As a result, she<lb/>
will graduate a semester later<lb/>
Jackie Padgette is a senior at allow her to speak to even more that everyone should be proud of than anncjpatecj but she has no<lb/>
In the formal wear competition, Jackie Padgette fared well en-<lb/>
route to winning Miss North Carolina.<lb/>
'Blushing Brides'<lb/>
Stone the Attic<lb/>
By EARL V. HAMPTON<lb/>
Features Kditor<lb/>
Jagger kindsot things Thisguy is<lb/>
a great impersonator. 1 le does the<lb/>
 hands on the hips Jagger strut.<lb/>
Stumbling out of a shiny The hands on the head agger<lb/>
black van, two men emerge into a comatose. The machine gun jump<lb/>
ECU, majoring in Clothing and such groups.<lb/>
Textiles and minoring in Child Padgette stopped short of<lb/>
Development. She gets good saying that she thinksshe will win<lb/>
grades, and education is impor- the Miss USA title. She did say<lb/>
tant to her. She is five feet eight that she would go to the competi-<lb/>
tnches tall, with blond hair and tion with a positive attitude and<lb/>
blue-green eyes. that, with the invaluable assis-<lb/>
Nothing is particularly tance of her mother, she has been<lb/>
unusual about that, except that preparing for the Miss USA com-<lb/>
Padgette is also Miss North Caro- petition since she became Miss<lb/>
lina. In February she will be repre- NC-USA. She lists as her main<lb/>
senting this state in the Miss USA strengths honesty and her ability<lb/>
Pageant in Mobile, Alabama, the to be herself.<lb/>
next step up in the Miss Universe Padgette says that, in addi-<lb/>
Pageant. Should she win the Miss non to the formal aspects of the<lb/>
USA Pageant, she'll go on to competition, there is much per-<lb/>
compete for the title of Miss Uni- ai competition among the<lb/>
verse as well. contestants � mostly friendly.<lb/>
Unlike a certain other well- although she reports that some<lb/>
known pageant, the Miss Uni- get too caught up in it. Wardrobe<lb/>
verse Pageant does not include a js a large part of this competition,<lb/>
talent competition. It does, how- but Padgette wishes it weren't,<lb/>
ever, include a question-and-an- She hopes the judges look past the<lb/>
swer session, and Padgette says outer trappings and see the inner<lb/>
that the questions make or break person.<lb/>
the contestants. Questions are Of pageants Padgette said, "If<lb/>
directed at getting to know the a girl goes into it with the right<lb/>
contestants; at the national level attitude it's a good experience<lb/>
the judges also ask about the con- she went on to say that, as a result<lb/>
testants' home states and about Df participating in pageants, she<lb/>
politics. Says Padgette, "You have has gTown and matured as a per-<lb/>
to be prepared for anything met people, and established<lb/>
Winning in the various levels j0b contacts.<lb/>
of the Miss Universe Pageant pays Pageants have opened many<lb/>
off. Being selected as Miss NC- doors and opportunities for her.<lb/>
USA garnered Padgette $2000, a For example, Padgette has al-<lb/>
diamond ring and a fur coat, and ready had two job offers in the<lb/>
' all;xAPonPaid triP lo thc Clothing and Textiles field from<lb/>
people she's met in the two<lb/>
where she's from and who she is.<lb/>
Padgette was introduced to<lb/>
East Carolina by her brother, a<lb/>
former ECU student. This is her<lb/>
fifth year here and she loves it.<lb/>
However, since the Miss USA<lb/>
competition requires four weeks<lb/>
of preparation, practicing and<lb/>
rehearsals, she will not be able to<lb/>
regrets.<lb/>
When it's all over, Padgette<lb/>
plans to take a well-earned vaca-<lb/>
tion in New Orleans. When that's<lb/>
over, she'll go back to carrying out<lb/>
the duties of her crown or<lb/>
maybe crowns<lb/>
young Thursday night as they<lb/>
cross a can-littered downtown<lb/>
Greenville parking lot.<lb/>
The taller of the two carries a<lb/>
beat up suit case held together by<lb/>
an arrav of bumper sticker while<lb/>
the shorter nun luggs a brown<lb/>
guitar case. Stepping on the center<lb/>
line of Reid St the one says to the<lb/>
other in an English accent,<lb/>
"Greenville looking pretty crazy-<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
Suddenly, a convertible Rab-<lb/>
bit slams its brakes on the down-<lb/>
town motorway. Astounded, the<lb/>
two men stop in their tracks.<lb/>
The driver of the car, an ECU<lb/>
co-ed, gawks at the two strangers<lb/>
as her jaw bone drops. And she<lb/>
screams, "Stav right there, 1 want<lb/>
vour autograph. Oh, I am going to<lb/>
kill my roommate. She didn't tell<lb/>
me the Rolling Stones were com-<lb/>
ing to town<lb/>
No, the Stones didn't play the<lb/>
Emerald City and there wasn't<lb/>
any girl in a Rabbit either. One<lb/>
thing is for certain although, "The<lb/>
Blushing Brides" Stoned several<lb/>
hundred Attic patrons Thursday.<lb/>
A Rolling Stones tribute<lb/>
band, "The Brides" play nothing<lb/>
but RS tunes and they do a good<lb/>
job of doing just that, a damn good<lb/>
job. Let's not be repetitive, but<lb/>
they play like them, they sound<lb/>
like them and they look like them.<lb/>
The lead singer (the reviewer<lb/>
must apolize at this point for his<lb/>
ineptness and incompetence in<lb/>
not finding out the band mem-<lb/>
bers' names; he was very drunk at<lb/>
the time) really looks like Mick<lb/>
Jagger. Maybe a few inches, well<lb/>
maybe four inches taller than<lb/>
Mick but hey you can't always get<lb/>
what you want.<lb/>
And on stage, he does Mick<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
in<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Valence<lb/>
Susie's<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Colan Lee<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Mike Edwards Band<lb/>
"�eli<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Billy Price<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Mike Lightening' Wells<lb/>
Deli<lb/>
Jagger ushi. Not to mention (no-<lb/>
tice it is being mentioned anyway)<lb/>
the one - hundred million agger<lb/>
mouth-lip contortions.<lb/>
This guv, we'll call him<lb/>
Mickey, must have practiced<lb/>
endless hours in front of a mirror<lb/>
to reach this level of "lumping<lb/>
Jack Flash-dom" and it's enter-<lb/>
taining, flat-out damn entertain<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
And the other guv, we'll call<lb/>
him Jack, had a strong resem<lb/>
blance to Keith Richards and Ins<lb/>
patented tired look. aA is a<lb/>
couple inches shorter than Keith,<lb/>
well maybe six inches, but hey<lb/>
what do you want wicker.<lb/>
Jack Richards burst into the<lb/>
Attic scene with a white shirt,<lb/>
black leather vest, permanent five<lb/>
o'clock shadow, and a burning<lb/>
Marlboro Unlike the real Keith,<lb/>
Jack relinquished most of his lead<lb/>
guitar roles to the real lead guitar-<lb/>
ist of "The Brides<lb/>
With mirror shades and a<lb/>
receding hair line, the lead guitar-<lb/>
ist was the true musical treat of the<lb/>
evening as he matched the RS<lb/>
sound lick for lick. But Jack had to<lb/>
be given credit for good play on<lb/>
the ascoutic guitar during the m-<lb/>
tro and mid-part of "Angie<lb/>
If this reviewer recollects<lb/>
properly (no law suits please),<lb/>
'The Brides" started out the show<lb/>
with "Let's Spend the Night To-<lb/>
gether They sent the crowd<lb/>
dancing with "Under My<lb/>
Thumb "Heartbreaker" and<lb/>
"(Censored word for the name of<lb/>
a female dog)<lb/>
Mickey jumped around su-<lb/>
perbly during "Bitch jumping<lb/>
with the big fast car beat and<lb/>
jumping to the flashing white<lb/>
lights. After a short intermission,<lb/>
the fellows came out with "One<lb/>
hit to the body to your body to<lb/>
your body to your body is one<lb/>
straight shot to the heart<lb/>
Providing the back beat for<lb/>
'The Brides" was a bass player<lb/>
who stood unexcited (kind of like<lb/>
ZMB) in his portion of the stage<lb/>
like a lot bass players do. With his<lb/>
black attire, the bassist wore one<lb/>
of those American Indian, two-<lb/>
string ties with the turquoise<lb/>
thing in the middle. (Tel! me the<lb/>
name of that thing, piease)<lb/>
There was something differ<lb/>
ent about this guy, though. He<lb/>
was missing a pinky finger, or<lb/>
morepreciselyahalfofone,onhis<lb/>
plucking hand. The pinky had a<lb/>
lot of tape on it, so he may have<lb/>
intentionally taped it back. Ac-<lb/>
cording to an local expert on the<lb/>
matter, bassist ManuteCain from<lb/>
the Usuals, the pinky finger is<lb/>
used little in the thump of the<lb/>
thick bass chords.<lb/>
A "The Blushing Brides<lb/>
show wouldn't be complete with-<lb/>
out playing "Satisfaction The<lb/>
best song ever written and played<lb/>
by the Stones, "Satisfaction" hits<lb/>
all the nerves .<lb/>
Miss USA competition; on the na-<lb/>
tional and international levels, the<lb/>
prizes are even better.<lb/>
Padgette is using her title for<lb/>
more than personal benefit, how-<lb/>
ever. Most important to her is<lb/>
actively using her title to help<lb/>
adolescents and children.<lb/>
She has spoken to high school<lb/>
groups and 4-H clubs, telling<lb/>
them to make the most of life; she<lb/>
also endorses the "just say no to<lb/>
drugs campaign. She is giad that<lb/>
her title puts her in a position to<lb/>
months she has held the Miss NC-<lb/>
USA title.<lb/>
She plans to take advantage<lb/>
of and to make the most of all the<lb/>
opportunities she gets. But she<lb/>
cautioned that it is also important<lb/>
to keep her experiences in per-<lb/>
spective and learn from them.<lb/>
Padgette hails from Hob-<lb/>
good, North Carolina, a farming<lb/>
community 40 miles north of<lb/>
Greenville. According to Padg-<lb/>
ette, lobgood has five hundred of<lb/>
Wake Forest students<lb/>
slosh in experiment<lb/>
With flowers and trophy, Jackie Padgette, an ECU senior from<lb/>
Hobgood is crowned Miss North Carolina<lb/>
Group trek to NYC<lb/>
during fall break<lb/>
WiNSTON-SALEM (AP) �<lb/>
Traci Piccolo, tennis racket in<lb/>
hand, popped the fluorescent<lb/>
green ball up four times before it<lb/>
bounded away. She giggled.<lb/>
Over on Super Hang-on, a<lb/>
video game, Dennis Gregory,<lb/>
steering wheel in hand, watched<lb/>
as the motorcyclist on the screen<lb/>
J<lb/>
overshot and crashed. He shook<lb/>
his head, his eyes red and bleary.<lb/>
It was b p.m. Tuesday at Wake<lb/>
Forest University, and Piccolo<lb/>
sumption does to your coordina-<lb/>
tion skills said Gregory, director<lb/>
of residence life and housing, be-<lb/>
fore starting a regimen of down-<lb/>
ing a beer in 15-minute intervals<lb/>
for more than two hours.<lb/>
Gregory said he is mindful<lb/>
of the ironies of a faculty member<lb/>
at a school with a Baptist tradition<lb/>
getting sloshed with a small<lb/>
group of students while dozens of<lb/>
others looked on. But he stressed<lb/>
that one must be realishc in gaug-<lb/>
and Gregory - one a student; the ing the extent of drinking among<lb/>
other, a faculty member - were<lb/>
well on their way to getting<lb/>
drunk.<lb/>
"1 can definitely feel it<lb/>
Piccolo, 21, said after downing<lb/>
five 12-ounce Coors Lights.<lb/>
This was no afternoon party<lb/>
on the Magnolia Patio of Rey-<lb/>
nolda Hall, but rather a controlled<lb/>
experiment to show how drink-<lb/>
ing impairs motor skillscoordina-<lb/>
tion, The Greensboro News &amp;<lb/>
Record reported<lb/>
students, whether of legal drink-<lb/>
ing age or not.<lb/>
"It's real difficult when the<lb/>
drinking age is 21 for us to say to<lb/>
our students who are not 21 to<lb/>
drink responsibly Gregory said.<lb/>
"But we know students are<lb/>
going to drink, regardless of age,<lb/>
so we're trying to be an educa-<lb/>
tional model<lb/>
The program, held on the<lb/>
back patio of Rey nolda Hall, had a<lb/>
party atmosphere to it as a disc<lb/>
The experiment was spon- jockey played loud rock music<lb/>
sored by the Alcohol Task Force, a ancj onlookers milled around<lb/>
student group that helps devise talking and laughing while sip-<lb/>
campus alcohol policies and pro- ping non-alcoholic beverages<lb/>
mote what Gregory described as provided by the Alcohol Task<lb/>
Force.<lb/>
'responsible drinking.<lb/>
During the course of the<lb/>
demonstration, Gregory and<lb/>
three 21-year-old students -<lb/>
Piccolo, Pat Easterly and Linny<lb/>
Little - were served 12-ounce cans<lb/>
every 15 minutes.<lb/>
After several rounds, the four<lb/>
were asked to bounce a ball on a<lb/>
tennis racket, walk a straight line, around You-<lb/>
hopscotch through a taped-off<lb/>
pattern and play the video game,<lb/>
which simulates driving a motor-<lb/>
cycle.<lb/>
Although some perform-<lb/>
ances were affected, none of the<lb/>
participants had a blood-alcohol<lb/>
content of 0.10 percent, the state's<lb/>
legal limit for intoxication, ac-<lb/>
cording to a Breathalyzer test<lb/>
Winston-Salem police admini-<lb/>
stered after about an hour. East-<lb/>
erly blew a 0.09; Piccolo, a 0.07;<lb/>
Gregory and Little, each a 0.04.<lb/>
"What we're trying to do is<lb/>
havea controlled drinking experi-<lb/>
ment to show what alcoholic con-<lb/>
By STEPHANIE FOLSOM<lb/>
Suit Writer<lb/>
Going to New York is like going<lb/>
to another country. The city, with<lb/>
all of its diversities, played host to<lb/>
nine members of ECU's Wefel<lb/>
organization over Fall Break.<lb/>
This city, otherwise known as<lb/>
the melting pot, has many ethnic<lb/>
groups and problems that the<lb/>
YVefel group was interested in<lb/>
learning more about. Their goals,<lb/>
which there were at least nine of,<lb/>
included finding out how mission<lb/>
projects are working in New York<lb/>
and how missions could work in<lb/>
their lives.<lb/>
The group was composed of:<lb/>
Dan Earnhardt, Judy McLaw-<lb/>
horn, Zhi Liu, Cindy Solomon,<lb/>
Chuck Martin, Michael Cary,<lb/>
Oscar Montiel, Stephanie Folsom,<lb/>
and Bill Stanley.<lb/>
They saw, some of them for the<lb/>
first time, how each part of New<lb/>
York City is a major contrast to the<lb/>
next. In the midst of a rich skyline<lb/>
of apartment buildings and cor-<lb/>
porations, restaurants and thea-<lb/>
ters, there are drugs and the<lb/>
homeless, empty buildings and<lb/>
corrupt politics.<lb/>
In one neighborhood live the<lb/>
Hispanics, in another the blacks,<lb/>
and in yet another live the whites;<lb/>
still segregated from those are the<lb/>
subcultures of Little Italy, China-<lb/>
town, and Harlem. It would seem<lb/>
that the melting pot has not yet<lb/>
been put on the stove.<lb/>
Tolerance of the different ethnic<lb/>
groups is varied. On some streets<lb/>
no-one gives attention to what<lb/>
race you are, while there is fear to<lb/>
walk down another. On some<lb/>
"Our job on the task force is to<lb/>
promote awareness and educa-<lb/>
tion said Scott DuBois, a senior<lb/>
who heads the task force, "an<lb/>
awareness of what overdrinking<lb/>
is, what alcoholism looks like and<lb/>
how to deal with drunk people streets you are left alone, while on<lb/>
others you are harassed to buy<lb/>
drugs. But on all streets, there are<lb/>
the homeless.<lb/>
One of the ECU group's first<lb/>
stops was a visit to Harlem Resto-<lb/>
ration Project's (HRP) founder<lb/>
and executive director, Marie<lb/>
York City. She said it was wicked<lb/>
of Columbia to tear down good<lb/>
buildings and force people to<lb/>
move out.<lb/>
She said she blames this prac-<lb/>
tice as one reason wh the cost of<lb/>
living is so outrageous in New<lb/>
York City. She also said the prob-<lb/>
lem is complicated because'there<lb/>
has not been any leadership from<lb/>
the top for the last fifteen years or<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Her explanation of the problem<lb/>
was followed by a tour oi Harlem.<lb/>
It was a Saturdav and there was a<lb/>
kind of festival of street market-<lb/>
ing on the sidewalk<lb/>
Runyon said the HRP is dedi-<lb/>
cated to helping restore and re-<lb/>
vitalize buildings that are run-<lb/>
down and already within the<lb/>
Harlem community. In man-<lb/>
power, ex-offenders are preferred<lb/>
in order to help tram them with a<lb/>
job skill and make it easier for<lb/>
them to rejoin the community.<lb/>
Runyon, who served a term in<lb/>
the Albany legislature, said that<lb/>
the city was not a good manager<lb/>
of its buildings. She says of the<lb/>
single-room occupancies, which<lb/>
the HRP has made available. It<lb/>
ain't good livin but it's better<lb/>
than the streets She said she<lb/>
feels that Harlem probably suffers<lb/>
more than any other part oi the<lb/>
city.<lb/>
After seeing some of the worst<lb/>
sections in the city, it was hopeful<lb/>
for many in the group to see that at<lb/>
least one woman's dream of help-<lb/>
ing out had become a reality.<lb/>
Sunday morning was spent at<lb/>
Riverside Church, a huge church<lb/>
built by grants from Rockefeller.<lb/>
This church was important for the<lb/>
group to visit, since it takes a very<lb/>
active stance in missions.<lb/>
Upon entering the church,<lb/>
immediately there were signs an-<lb/>
nouncing opportunities to help<lb/>
out and learn more about such<lb/>
problems as racism and educa tion<lb/>
in the community.<lb/>
In a skit by the children, every-<lb/>
day problems, such as being of-<lb/>
Responsible drinking is<lb/>
knowing your limits and know-<lb/>
ing when to say no DuBois said.<lb/>
"Knowing when not to get behind<lb/>
a wheel of a car<lb/>
Before starting her drinking,<lb/>
Piccolo said, "Most people just Runyon. Runyon lives on the<lb/>
thinkOh, I just had four beers, j��yE fered drugs and bemg mugged,<lb/>
apartments. She became inter- were given a child's perspective<lb/>
"But this is really showing ested in housing and the homeless<lb/>
them exactly what happens even after her landlord, Columbia Uni-<lb/>
versity, tried to throw her out of<lb/>
her home.<lb/>
Runyon gave an interesting<lb/>
perspective as to why there is<lb/>
such a housing problem in New<lb/>
with two or three beers she said.<lb/>
"I just hopes it leaves some kind of<lb/>
lasting impressions so people are<lb/>
a lot less willing to drive after<lb/>
they've been drinking<lb/>
The last full day in the city in-<lb/>
cluded a visit to the Interchurch<lb/>
Center on Riverside Drive. This<lb/>
visit provided members of the<lb/>
group who were serious about<lb/>
pursuing missions the chance to<lb/>
See BUMS, page 13<lb/>
State<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) -<lb/>
among the funnel cakes,<lb/>
vegetables and giant snake I<lb/>
a tiny church waits silenj<lb/>
those who want to get rein<lb/>
just a little peace and qu 1<lb/>
State Fair<lb/>
"It just might do the ,<lb/>
some good over here said<lb/>
Jordan, 22, tugging on tht<lb/>
wooden back ot a �<lb/>
boy, hallelujah bend<lb/>
had some good times in hej<lb/>
A shrill voice interrupt<lb/>
dan as a small bov gra <lb/>
lectern, raised a beckoning<lb/>
and belted out a gigg<lb/>
gospel tune.<lb/>
'The spirit s goir .<lb/>
down and zap him said ij<lb/>
grinning<lb/>
The 91-year-old bu<lb/>
served two Wake C<lb/>
churches before it was mo<lb/>
the fairgn tunds several I<lb/>
Located in Heritage V ;<lb/>
behind the Village of Yesu<lb/>
the white frame structure<lb/>
daily services during �<lb/>
"Come Worship With'<lb/>
the Spirit'of Yesteryi<lb/>
ute worship experieno tl<lb/>
outside beckons. Inside, al<lb/>
local cor � ons ta<lb/>
offering services that<lb/>
elude costumes and m<lb/>
Johnny<lb/>
celebrah<lb/>
LOSANGELES(AP)-<lb/>
Carson and Fd McM <lb/>
centlv celebrated the 2:<lb/>
versary of "The Tonight<lb/>
but their associate j<lb/>
four more vears.<lb/>
It was 30 vears ao wh�<lb/>
started working together.<lb/>
Carson was h st I a garni<lb/>
called "Who Do You Trustl<lb/>
McMahon was hired to<lb/>
announcer.<lb/>
"Our relationship wa-<lb/>
ll shed the very first dav<lb/>
hon recalled. "I mtrodud<lb/>
show then 1 brought himi<lb/>
of questions. He jumped,<lb/>
'Lothar, you startled me<lb/>
Lothar was the faithfi<lb/>
kick to Mandrake the Maj<lb/>
in the newspaper<lb/>
When Mandrake's<lb/>
enough. Lothar<lb/>
muscle.<lb/>
"That set oui<lb/>
Lots oi humor and kidd s<lb/>
of playing on mv s<lb/>
hPPy-gO-lucky Irishman<lb/>
things we ve done on<lb/>
night Show were sot u<lb/>
tested on Who Do ou Ti<lb/>
"lohnnv s the boss<lb/>
McMahon. " ou have to n<lb/>
ber that, but 1 get mv tw<lb/>
worth in there. His mam<lb/>
nages - it s alv a s good tori<lb/>
His wealth and his passij<lb/>
privacy.<lb/>
Actually, lohnnv k da<lb/>
self He'll sa Somehodv c<lb/>
see me. but thev got we1<lb/>
they fell into the moat<lb/>
Their association has<lb/>
longer than am of Carson<lb/>
riages<lb/>
We e never had a du<lb/>
ment. ne er had a problem<lb/>
McMahon 1 think we<lb/>
mutual respect tor each oj<lb/>
respect his being the bos<lb/>
spect his privacy. We hk<lb/>
other<lb/>
It was Pick Clarkl<lb/>
brought them together, anoi<lb/>
years later, McMahon and<lb/>
teamed up for NBC's "Bl<lb/>
and Practical lokes whid<lb/>
Bums sight<lb/>
Continued from pagej<lb/>
find out about the opporti<lb/>
open and have their qu<lb/>
answered<lb/>
Afterwards, the group t<lb/>
active role by providing tl<lb/>
needed for two shuts at Broi<lb/>
Presbvtenan Church's<lb/>
kitchen Members of the<lb/>
commented that thev enjojl<lb/>
chance to serve and help of<lb/>
The trip, like the city. wa<lb/>
contradictions. There wei<lb/>
ments of experiencing thej<lb/>
tourist scene, but there wi<lb/>
moments of being humbj<lb/>
not turning a deaf ear to th<lb/>
people and their problei<lb/>
instead recognizing th<lb/>
people and being willing<lb/>
them. Some street people<lb/>
suiting, some just wanted<lb/>
one to listen to them,<lb/>
seemed to disappear ii<lb/>
woodwork, and still other<lb/>
entertaining.<lb/>
Their echoes were haunt<lb/>
the subway, a black maj<lb/>
could not control his moi<lb/>
hollered, "1 am not a thief<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0013"/><lb/>
Pageant,<lb/>
bama<lb/>
seme<lb/>
coming<lb/>
s a she<lb/>
��. ; Liter<lb/>
is no<lb/>
m Orleans V hen that<lb/>
�?v �<lb/>
'Hifr A<lb/>
s ��-�<lb/>
g .jmff&amp;t<lb/>
te, an ECU senior from<lb/>
to NYC<lb/>
reak<lb/>
I was wi Ked<lb/>
nbia tear od<lb/>
I gs n d force people to<lb/>
out.<lb/>
aid she blames this prac-<lb/>
� one reason v In the cost of<lb/>
- s . rageous in New<lb/>
I tls viid the prob-<lb/>
ated because' there<lb/>
t been any leadership from<lb/>
p for the last fifteen yearsor<lb/>
ition of the problem<lb/>
i tour of Harlem,<lb/>
a Saturday and there was a<lb/>
� festival of street market-<lb/>
n the sidewalk<lb/>
b n said the HRP is dedi-<lb/>
to helping restore and re-<lb/>
lize buildings that are run-<lb/>
in and already within the<lb/>
�m community. In mau-<lb/>
ler, ex-offenders are preferred<lb/>
rder to help tram thorn with a<lb/>
and make it easier for<lb/>
i reji c rrtmunit)<lb/>
mvon, who served a term in<lb/>
my legislature, bdid that<lb/>
:ity was not d manager<lb/>
s buildings. She savs of the<lb/>
lie-room occupancies which<lb/>
1RP has made available, "It<lb/>
good iivin but it's better<lb/>
the streets She said she<lb/>
.that Harlem probably suffers<lb/>
le than anv other part of the<lb/>
Jfti r seeing some of the worst<lb/>
ports in thecity, it was hopeful<lb/>
any in the group to see that at<lb/>
one woman s dream of help-<lb/>
Dut had become a reality.<lb/>
nda morning was spent at<lb/>
jrside Church, a huge church<lb/>
I by grants from Rockefeller.<lb/>
urch was important for the<lb/>
ip to visit since it takes a very<lb/>
stance in missions.<lb/>
n entering the church,<lb/>
jediately there were signs an-<lb/>
icing opportunities to help<lb/>
. nd learn more about such<lb/>
lemsas racismand education<lb/>
�e communitv.<lb/>
a skit by the children, every -<lb/>
 problems, such as being of-<lb/>
drugs and being mugged,<lb/>
given a child's perspective,<lb/>
he last full day in the city in-<lb/>
led a visit to the Interchurch<lb/>
ter on Riverside Drive This<lb/>
provided members of the<lb/>
m who were serious about<lb/>
fumg missions the chance to<lb/>
See BUMS, page 13<lb/>
r<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20, 1988 13<lb/>
SAV-A-CENTER<lb/>
State Fair gets religion<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - Nestled the turn of the century.<lb/>
among the funnel cakes, mutant Pearl Wood, 75, of Samaria<lb/>
 egetabies and giant snake house, Baptist Church in Raleigh, sewed<lb/>
a tiny church waits silently for her long skirt and bonnet to wear<lb/>
those who want to get religion or when her choir sang to an audi-<lb/>
just a little peace and quiet at the ence of about 85 on Friday.<lb/>
State Fair. She sang "Amazing Grace"<lb/>
It just might do the people and it brought back memories of<lb/>
no me good over here said Terry attending Hephzibah Baptist<lb/>
Jordan, 22, tugging on the loose Church near Lizard Lick, vhere<lb/>
Road Baptist Church are taking a<lb/>
break from the hot sun and the<lb/>
crying lost children, whom<lb/>
they're supposed to help as offi-<lb/>
cial fair chaplains.<lb/>
"Walking your legs off, that's<lb/>
about what it amounts to said<lb/>
Reynolds, wearing sneakers of<lb/>
clerical black.<lb/>
'Farm animals don't turn my<lb/>
wooden back of a pew. "Yeah<lb/>
boy, hallelujah benches. They've<lb/>
had some good times in here<lb/>
A shrill voice interrupted Jor-<lb/>
dan as a small boy grabbed the<lb/>
lectern, raised a beckoning arm,<lb/>
and belted out a giggling falsetto<lb/>
ispel tune.<lb/>
"The spirit's going to come<lb/>
down and zap him said Jordan,<lb/>
grinning.<lb/>
91-year-old<lb/>
two Wake<lb/>
she grew up. crank grumbled Wickham, who<lb/>
It won't hurt the fair goers to said he and the other roaming<lb/>
see a little old-time religion, Mrs. pastors were there to help with<lb/>
Wood said. practical problems, like lost kids,<lb/>
"So many children today and to help spread the Word,<lb/>
don't even know what the inside Axut 65 pastors have taken<lb/>
of a church looks like she said in four-hour shifts at the fair, accord-<lb/>
ing to the Rev. Charles L. McMil<lb/>
The<lb/>
served<lb/>
churches before it was moved to<lb/>
the fairgrounds several years ago.<lb/>
Located in Heritage Village just<lb/>
behind the Village of Yesteryear,<lb/>
the white frame structure offers<lb/>
daily services during the fair.<lb/>
"Come Worship With Us in<lb/>
the Spirit'of Yesteryear15-min-<lb/>
ute worship experience the sign<lb/>
outside beckons. Inside, about 10<lb/>
local congregations take turns<lb/>
offering services that often in-<lb/>
clude costumes and music from<lb/>
an interview with The News and<lb/>
Observer of Raleigh.<lb/>
The church is a popular spot<lb/>
for older fair goers to stop in, sip<lb/>
building cold water from Coca-Cola cups,<lb/>
County and reminisce about the way it<lb/>
Ian of the Raleigh Baptist Associa-<lb/>
tion, which helps coordinate the<lb/>
chaplain program at the fair.<lb/>
The Rev. Bill Furr of Trinity<lb/>
Baptist Church in Raleigh put in<lb/>
used to be. When things are quiet, fur hours Monday<lb/>
they sit alone with their memo-<lb/>
ries.<lb/>
But before the building gets<lb/>
too quiet, two young Baptist pas-<lb/>
tors bound in, wearing red-and-<lb/>
white baseball hats with a black<lb/>
cross and the word "CHAP-<lb/>
LAIN" emblazoned across the<lb/>
front.<lb/>
The Rev. Ray Wickham of<lb/>
Ephesus Baptist Church and the<lb/>
Rev. Jim Reynolds of Ayersboro<lb/>
It was real nice he said.<lb/>
"We didn't really get too many<lb/>
people to talk seriously about reli-<lb/>
gion or anything, but we had a lot<lb/>
of people come up and talk to us<lb/>
about church, people coming up<lb/>
to ask directions, which we didn't<lb/>
know<lb/>
"The church needs to go<lb/>
where the people are McMillan<lb/>
said, "and obviously this week in<lb/>
Raleigh, North Carolina, people<lb/>
are at the fair.<lb/>
Johnny Carson, Ed McMahon<lb/>
celebrate 30th anniversary<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Johnny still do occasionally as a special<lb/>
Larson and Ed McMahon re-<lb/>
cently celebrated the 26th anni-<lb/>
versary of "The Tonight Show<lb/>
but their association goes back<lb/>
four more years.<lb/>
It was 30 years ago when they<lb/>
was my next-door<lb/>
in Philadelphia<lb/>
recalled. "One day<lb/>
Murrow interviewed<lb/>
Dick<lb/>
neighbor<lb/>
McMahon<lb/>
Edward R<lb/>
Dick on the CBS show 'Person to<lb/>
Person He had a party, and I<lb/>
started working together, when entertained. Dick's producer told<lb/>
me I was pretty good. The<lb/>
producer's office was in New<lb/>
York in the next office to Johnny's<lb/>
at the Little Theater. When he<lb/>
heard they were looking for an<lb/>
announcer he suggested me<lb/>
McMahon took the train to<lb/>
NeOojlndinetwithCarson,<lb/>
Carson was host of a game show<lb/>
called "Who Do You Trust?" and<lb/>
McMahon was hired to be the<lb/>
announcer.<lb/>
"Our relationship was estab-<lb/>
lished the very first day McMa-<lb/>
hon recalled. "I introduced the<lb/>
show, then I brought him the list<lb/>
of questions. He jumped.andsaidv �<lb/>
'Lothar, vou startled me<lb/>
Lothar was the faithful side-<lb/>
kick to "Mandrake the Magician"<lb/>
in the newspaper comic strip.<lb/>
When Mandrake's magic wasn't<lb/>
enough, Lothar supplied the<lb/>
muscle.<lb/>
"That set our relationship.<lb/>
Lots of humor and kidding. A lot<lb/>
of playing on my size, being a<lb/>
happy-go-lucky Irishman. All the<lb/>
things we've done on The To-<lb/>
night Show' were set up and<lb/>
tested on 'Who Do You Trust?'<lb/>
"Johnny's the boss said<lb/>
McMahon. "You have to remem-<lb/>
ber that, but I get my two cents'<lb/>
worth in there. His many mar-<lb/>
riages - it's always good for a joke.<lb/>
His wealth and his passion for<lb/>
privacy.<lb/>
Actually, Johnny kids him-<lb/>
self. He'll say, 'Somebody came to<lb/>
see me, but they got wet when<lb/>
they fell into the moat<lb/>
Their association has lasted<lb/>
longer than any of Carson's mar-<lb/>
riages.<lb/>
"We've never had a disagree-<lb/>
ment, never had a problem said<lb/>
McMahon. "I think we have a<lb/>
mutual respect for each other. I<lb/>
respect his being the boss. I re-<lb/>
spect his privacy. We like each<lb/>
other<lb/>
It was Dick Clark who<lb/>
brought them together, and many<lb/>
vears later, McMahon and Clark<lb/>
teamed up for NBC's "Bloopers<lb/>
and Practical lokes which they<lb/>
Bums sighted<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
find out about the opportunities<lb/>
open and have their questions<lb/>
answered.<lb/>
Afterwards, the group took an<lb/>
active role by providing the help<lb/>
needed for two shifts a t Broadway<lb/>
Presbyterian Church's soup<lb/>
kitchen. Members of the group<lb/>
commented that they enjoyed the<lb/>
chance to serve and help others.<lb/>
The trip, like the city, was one of<lb/>
contradictions. There were mo-<lb/>
ments of experiencing the usual<lb/>
tourist scene, but there were also<lb/>
moments of being humbled by<lb/>
not turning a deaf ear to the street<lb/>
people and their problems but<lb/>
instead recognizing them as<lb/>
people and being willing to help<lb/>
them. Some street people were in-<lb/>
sulting, some just wanted some-<lb/>
one to listen to them, others<lb/>
seemed to disappear into the<lb/>
woodwork, and still others were<lb/>
entertaining.<lb/>
Thei r echoes were haunting. On<lb/>
the subway, a black man who<lb/>
could not control his movements,<lb/>
hollered, "I am not a thief.<lb/>
"He asked me a few questions and<lb/>
we stood by the window and<lb/>
watched them put up a sign at the<lb/>
Shibert Theater across the street<lb/>
he said. "It was for Judy Holliday<lb/>
in 'Bells Are Ringing<lb/>
"Johnny said thank you, and I<lb/>
left figuring I didn't get the job.<lb/>
Two weeks later the producer<lb/>
called me and said, 'Look, when<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058102_0014"/><lb/>
<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20,1988<lb/>
Preacher boxes for the Lord<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) - Charlie<lb/>
Hopkins, pastor of Solid Rock<lb/>
Ministries, will take on Mike<lb/>
Tyson's chief sparring partner in a<lb/>
four-round bout Sunday night,<lb/>
but he says it wasn't his idea.<lb/>
Hopkins, 42, has never had a<lb/>
sanctioned fight, amateur or pro-<lb/>
fessional. But 14 months ago, he<lb/>
heard a voice. The voice, says<lb/>
Hopkins, came straight from the<lb/>
Lord. And it told him he would be<lb/>
heavyweight champion of the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
"I heard it says Hopkins,<lb/>
"but it didn't make sense<lb/>
So Hopkins will fight heavy-<lb/>
weight Fred Whitaker of Win-<lb/>
ston-Salem in the bout Sunday at<lb/>
the VVinston-Salem Convention<lb/>
Center. Whitaker has an 8-3 rec-<lb/>
semi-pro teams, Hopkins has terian Church. The church is<lb/>
punched people before. When he owned by a group of London-<lb/>
was in the Army, he and his bud- based investors.<lb/>
Hopkins thought he could<lb/>
raise $60,000 through a fight with<lb/>
former heavyweight champion<lb/>
George Foreman. But Foreman,<lb/>
also a minister, told Hopkins to<lb/>
prove himself first.<lb/>
"A victory against Whitaker<lb/>
will keep me going says<lb/>
dies used to bring their argu-<lb/>
ments into the ring. There were no<lb/>
judges or referees.<lb/>
"I never lost Hopkins says.<lb/>
But as he grew older, the<lb/>
sweet science became the sweet.<lb/>
Ties, desserts - "my metabolism<lb/>
went crazy he says. Hopkins is<lb/>
about 6-0in January, he weighed Hopkins<lb/>
278 pounds. "And a knockout over Fore-<lb/>
He realized he needed more man will get me a fight with Mike<lb/>
than faith. So he began running 5 Tyson. I can talk enough trash to<lb/>
miles in the morning and again at get him to fight me<lb/>
night. He lifted weights, hit the Bill Reynolds, manager of<lb/>
big bag, sparred. Now he weighs former Charlotte champion Kel-<lb/>
a lean, mean 215. vin Seabrooks, talks trash with the<lb/>
"I'm going to fight Whitaker best of them. Reynolds, who will<lb/>
like he's trying to steal my be in Hopkins's corner Sunday,<lb/>
ord and a reputation as the only familyHoPkins says. was asked if he believed.<lb/>
Tvson sparring partner who does Solid Rock is housed at Cos- "l beh� rhc � a ?'<lb/>
not back away. mopolitan Community Church in ding, tough fighter with a lot of<lb/>
"My fnenajp say that 1 can t do Charlotte.On Saturdays, Hopkins<lb/>
it says Hopkins. "They say I'm and teacher Loil Covington leave<lb/>
biting off mor? tjjpn I can chew, it to go into tough neighborhoods<lb/>
and knock on doors.<lb/>
'The Lord called me to get the<lb/>
lost souls from the city says<lb/>
Hopkins.<lb/>
Because the lost souls are<lb/>
many and the square feet few,<lb/>
Hopkins believes the Lord told<lb/>
him to find a bigger church. He is<lb/>
Desire enough to beat Tyson?<lb/>
"He'll beat Tyson easier than<lb/>
he will Whitaker says Reynolds.<lb/>
"On this basis: Tyson is ready<lb/>
to be taken<lb/>
A man reminds Reynolds that<lb/>
these words are being written<lb/>
down.<lb/>
"What are the first two letters<lb/>
in Charlie Hopkins?" Reynolds<lb/>
"Ch he is told.<lb/>
"What are the first two letters<lb/>
in champ?" asks Reynolds.<lb/>
"Ch he is told.<lb/>
Silence follows.<lb/>
A point has been made.<lb/>
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Hopkins, sweating after a<lb/>
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Athletic Leaguegym,iscalmas he<lb/>
says this. He is articulate and<lb/>
engaging. He i$ not crazy. He<lb/>
heart, determination and good<lb/>
says Reynolds. "You know, 1 tried<lb/>
to talk him out of it. But the more<lb/>
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Sincere enough to beat<lb/>
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"Yes says Reynolds. "He<lb/>
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GREENSB0RO (AP) - Ha-<lb/>
vden Fields wasn't even queen for<lb/>
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the 17-year-old senior was<lb/>
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The committee felt bad about<lb/>
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nouncer John Madden ha<lb/>
his private bus, the Mi<lb/>
cruiser<lb/>
Singer Willie Nelson<lb/>
collapsible one atop his<lb/>
Honeysuckle Rose<lb/>
The firefighters at the<lb/>
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der of the Shoshone <lb/>
Forest in Wyoming got<lb/>
while away the hours durn<lb/>
time off.<lb/>
Mickey Mantle has<lb/>
them.<lb/>
An estimated 2 millionl<lb/>
in America have satellite<lb/>
terns, with access to so<lb/>
channels of programminj<lb/>
Chuck Hewitt, president<lb/>
Satellite Broadcasting am<lb/>
munications Associati<lb/>
America (SBCA), who est!<lb/>
Couple n<lb/>
to pay ga<lb/>
WILMINGTON (AP)<lb/>
and Suzan Thacher sai<lb/>
shouldn't be billed I r z<lb/>
collection, because th<lb/>
have any garbage to colle<lb/>
The Thachers recycle<lb/>
post most oi their garbagj<lb/>
they take the rest to a land!<lb/>
the bi-monthlv trash bill<lb/>
the city have continued to<lb/>
and the city took the Thacj<lb/>
court.<lb/>
"Ecology is somethii<lb/>
we've been concerned abol<lb/>
number of years said i<lb/>
acher, who said she and hi<lb/>
band have practiced rej<lb/>
since the late 19H3s.<lb/>
"We've never used<lb/>
removal service. All we a<lb/>
the city to take this into con<lb/>
hon. We would like id<lb/>
people on how they can<lb/>
and compost<lb/>
The citv filed a cor<lb/>
against the Thachers Scp<lb/>
collect $321 in unpaid tra<lb/>
Magistrate Nancy Du'al<lb/>
in the city's favor Tue-<lb/>
listening to Assistant Cm<lb/>
TV fine tu<lb/>
for the futu<lb/>
(AP) � The tdeviskH<lb/>
future will be a high del<lb/>
svstem with the clarm 1<lb/>
film and the sound of c<lb/>
discs, sav representative!<lb/>
broadcast and electronic-i<lb/>
tries.<lb/>
ITie Federal Comr<lb/>
rions Commission recenl<lb/>
dorsed the advanced telj<lb/>
systems, declaring them<lb/>
public interest, and ap<lb/>
some preliminary rules foi<lb/>
mg them into American h<lb/>
But the commissioi<lb/>
manv technical and pro<lb/>
problems still must be in<lb/>
and the systems probablv<lb/>
be available from the IS<lb/>
cast industrv before W0'<lb/>
U.S. broadcaster-<lb/>
cemed that L S. research ej<lb/>
develop an industrv tram<lb/>
standard tor high detimd<lb/>
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Michael Rau, Nahor<lb/>
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said the FCC made a<lb/>
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TV to the public They se<lb/>
reaffirm support for fr<lb/>
the-air broadcasting,<lb/>
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�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0015"/><lb/>
II If I.AS IAKOUNIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20. 1�8 15<lb/>
)(Ml<lb/>
JmL<lb/>
i i E<lb/>
P<lb/>
11 v L&amp;YJ<lb/>
:ken<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
ad<lb/>
die<lb/>
ated to<lb/>
i Fund.<lb/>
Mobile satellite units are in<lb/>
P Television sports an<lb/>
ei lohn Madden has one in<lb/>
private bus the Madden<lb/>
�ei<lb/>
Singei Willie Nelson has a<lb/>
ipsible one atop Ins bus, the<lb/>
 suckle Rose<lb/>
firefighters at the remote<lb/>
amp along the western n<lb/>
der ol the Shoshone National<lb/>
Forest in Wyoming got one to<lb/>
le e-N a the hours during their<lb/>
Mantle has two of<lb/>
stimated 2 million honu's<lb/>
i have satellite TV sys<lb/>
s with access to some 150<lb/>
� programming, says<lb/>
vitt, president of the<lb/>
adt asting and Com-<lb/>
ssociation of<lb/>
B ho estimates<lb/>
there could be 10 million by the<lb/>
mid 1990s<lb/>
By then, he says, today's 10<lb/>
fool will have given way to<lb/>
smaller IS to 24-inch dishes<lb/>
Ihe cost tor an average sys-<lb/>
tem, says Hewitt, is about $2,500<lb/>
1 iewitl says satellite TV own<lb/>
ers can receive 5,300 sporting<lb/>
events a year, as well as movies,<lb/>
children's and family programs<lb/>
news weather, concerts, stock<lb/>
market information and college<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
Private homes (or buses)<lb/>
aren't the only receivers. Many<lb/>
private television networks have<lb/>
Ixvn established to provide out-<lb/>
lets for business and non profit<lb/>
corporations.<lb/>
"I've been amazed at how<lb/>
many churches have used memo<lb/>
rial funds to purchase a satellite<lb/>
Couple recycles, refuses<lb/>
to pay garbage bill<lb/>
dish said Pal orrt II ol ll<lb/>
I nited Methodist � hurt h's nel<lb/>
work in Nashville fenn Shesaid<lb/>
25 (XXI Sundav sv hool l .tders re<lb/>
centl viewed a three-session<lb/>
workshop aired at 50 sites na<lb/>
tionw ide (Tie IPenney mer<lb/>
chandising chain is equipping 650<lb/>
of its largest stores with satelliu<lb/>
dishes<lb/>
IT re are l: , ,n.<lb/>
sites w ith satellite dishes around<lb/>
the country, up from several<lb/>
hundred a few years ago, said<lb/>
Elliott Gold, publisher ot Business<lb/>
r magazine in Altadenaalii<lb/>
I le pr di( ts 12,1 H10 lo iti n is b<lb/>
Rec ei ing sites i tst about<lb/>
1 0 apie e to build, sendinj<lb/>
sites to beam the signal to a satel<lb/>
lite run $200,000 to S � said<lb/>
Louis Bransford ol the I'uhlu<lb/>
Sen i e satellite v imis,irtium<lb/>
i,<lb/>
�omp<lb/>
risrd ol<lb/>
nun iirs t; ad<lb/>
i.nips edm ators and health or<lb/>
ganizations using t lev ision<lb/>
l iu' obstac le to the gn th of<lb/>
the home satellite industry has<lb/>
� n the issue ol pira j<lb/>
Federal i ommunications<lb/>
c ommission official Richard<lb/>
smith recently estimated that<lb/>
nearly half of the satellite lishes<lb/>
used to receive pay TV pn grams<lb/>
have illegal dc i(S that un<lb/>
scramble the picture, and let the<lb/>
vlower watch tr free<lb/>
"If un hecked 1( Cl<lb/>
nnis R Patn k has s I<lb/>
� e growth of the illegal chips<lb/>
� re iten "th� v i ibility of thi satel<lb/>
lite to home program market<lb/>
Patru k has iid the de i i<lb/>
i t only steal from those who<lb/>
cated the programming, but<lb/>
from viewers who pa foi the<lb/>
srv ice and may lose it it the prob<lb/>
lem is not broucht under control<lb/>
GTON (AP) - I .am<lb/>
an rhacher say they<lb/>
be billed for garbage<lb/>
tion because they don t<lb/>
bagi to collect<lb/>
 hers rec cle or cm<lb/>
ol their garbage and<lb/>
rest to a landfill but<lb/>
thlv trash bills from<lb/>
ontinued to pile up,<lb/>
took the Thachers to<lb/>
gy is something that<lb/>
rned about for a<lb/>
said Mrs Hv<lb/>
aid she and her hus<lb/>
practiced recycling<lb/>
, er used a trash<lb/>
All we ask is for<lb/>
� i take this into considera-<lb/>
� ould like to tutor<lb/>
� they can recycle<lb/>
I compost<lb/>
ITie citv filed a complaint<lb/>
rs Sept 26 to<lb/>
� - trash bills<lb/>
. . will ruled<lb/>
u sday after<lb/>
� i it Attor-<lb/>
ney Robert Oast, city sanitation<lb/>
inspector Jen Lewis and the l"h<lb/>
achers, who operate a chiroprac<lb/>
tic center from their residence.<lb/>
1 thmk it's wonderful thai<lb/>
you're doing this but 1 m bound<lb/>
by the ordinance ou might want<lb/>
to follow up on this with the (ity<lb/>
manager. Ms. DuVall said<lb/>
The Thachers said they trans<lb/>
port their trash that cannot be<lb/>
recycled or composted to the ew<lb/>
Hanover County landtill every<lb/>
tour to six months. Ihe annual<lb/>
cost is about ss to $6, they said<lb/>
Mitzi York, special assistant<lb/>
to the city manager, said the city<lb/>
code does not include any provi<lb/>
sions for exemption from trash<lb/>
collection and disposal fees<lb/>
The ordinance, howevei<lb/>
says the v. itv Council can make<lb/>
adjustments to charges based on a<lb/>
recommendation by the citv<lb/>
manager. The Thachers re-<lb/>
quested an "adjustment" after<lb/>
luesdav s hearing in<lb/>
Magistrate s C ourt, Ms fork<lb/>
said<lb/>
rmani<lb/>
 Shoes<lb/>
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Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
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Open MonThurs<lb/>
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Fri. ft Sat. 10:00-9:00<lb/>
Attention All<lb/>
Students<lb/>
The Association<lb/>
of<lb/>
Student Organizations<lb/>
requests the honour of<lb/>
your presence<lb/>
at a<lb/>
reception honouring<lb/>
Dr. Alfred Matthews<lb/>
Vice Chancellor of Student<lb/>
Life<lb/>
to be held in the<lb/>
Gray Gallery<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Jenkins Building<lb/>
on<lb/>
October 27,1988<lb/>
5:00-7:00 p.m.<lb/>
R.S.V.P<lb/>
Ihe Student Union<lb/>
757-6611, Fxt.210<lb/>
bv I riday, October 21, 1988<lb/>
TV fine tuned<lb/>
for the future<lb/>
n of the<lb/>
h definition<lb/>
�. ith the clarit) of movie<lb/>
nd of compact<lb/>
itives of the<lb/>
Ironies indus-<lb/>
li ral i ommunica<lb/>
n recently en-<lb/>
I ihe advanced tele ision<lb/>
le laring them in the<lb/>
interest, and approving<lb/>
i liminary rules tor bring-<lb/>
m inti American homes<lb/>
Bui I mmission said<lb/>
meal and procedural<lb/>
till must be ironed out,<lb/>
he S) stems probably will not<lb/>
ailable from the I V broad<lb/>
 industry before 1993<lb/>
i ; , are eon<lb/>
n � ltl el S research efforts to<lb/>
. p an tndustn transmission<lb/>
presents<lb/>
S'lT.P INTO 1 Nil N I I II I<lb/>
LVi)lVsT�i<lb/>
lr <lb/>
YOUR SPORTS STATION<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
high definition TV<lb/>
t be mov ing fast enough to<lb/>
� . robable Japaneseinva<lb/>
� the new te hnology.<lb/>
lapanese have been<lb/>
rkini on an advanced system<lb/>
r tv 1 ide; and expect to<lb/>
: . high definition TV to<lb/>
in their 11 untry in 1990.<lb/>
rhe pi ture on a standard<lb/>
i ion set in the United States<lb/>
luced by a signal that scans<lb/>
� � k 00 dots on 525<lb/>
� s rhe lapanese system has<lb/>
1 1 25 scanning lines<lb/>
Mil hael Ran, National Asso<lb/>
ition of Broadcasters vice presi<lb/>
nt for scien e and technology<lb/>
,ud the R made a "strong<lb/>
mnitment to bring advanced<lb/>
rv to tin public 1 hey seemed to<lb/>
.(firm support tor free, over<lb/>
the air broadi .isting But the<lb/>
mmission must solve the difh<lb/>
culties of delivering the system<lb/>
er broadcast outlets "<lb/>
In a serii l preliminary rul-<lb/>
ings, the 1 said<lb/>
f risting broadi asters and<lb/>
itions are best equipped to<lb/>
ing the nev system to viewers<lb/>
Advanced television pro<lb/>
ims must be received on exist<lb/>
g television sets so viewers<lb/>
n't have to replace their equip-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
It additional frequency<lb/>
span is needed, it should be<lb/>
(�Mind within existing VHF and<lb/>
IMF television bands<lb/>
Tom Togs<lb/>
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RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS<lb/>
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ICKEN<lb/>
PECIAL<lb/>
?<lb/>
ken<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
d<lb/>
ilgate<lb/>
ated to<lb/>
Fund.<lb/>
Locations<lb/>
fd.)<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOWXKUttt 15-<lb/>
Mobile satellite units are in<lb/>
(AP) � Television sports an-<lb/>
nouncer John Madden has one in<lb/>
his private bus, the Madden-<lb/>
cruiser.<lb/>
Singer Willie Nelson has a<lb/>
collapsible one atop his bus, the<lb/>
Honeysuckle Rose.<lb/>
The firefighters at the remote<lb/>
fire camp along the western bor-<lb/>
der of the Shoshone National<lb/>
Forest in Wyoming got one to<lb/>
while away the hours during their<lb/>
time off.<lb/>
Mickey Mantle has two of<lb/>
them.<lb/>
An estimated 2 million homes<lb/>
in America have satellite TV sys-<lb/>
tems, with access to some 150<lb/>
channels of programming, says<lb/>
Chuck Hewitt, president of the<lb/>
Satellite Broadcasting and Com-<lb/>
munications Association of<lb/>
America (SBCA), who estimates<lb/>
there could be 10 million by the<lb/>
mid-1990s.<lb/>
By then, he says, today's 10-<lb/>
foot will have given way to<lb/>
smaller 18-to-24-inch dishes.<lb/>
The cost for an average sys-<lb/>
tem, says Hewitt, is about $2,500.<lb/>
Hewitt says satellite TV own-<lb/>
ers can receive 5300 sporting<lb/>
events a year, as well as movies,<lb/>
children's and family programs,<lb/>
news, weather, concerts, stock<lb/>
market information and college<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
Private homes (or buses)<lb/>
aren't the only receivers. Many<lb/>
private television networks have<lb/>
been established to provide out-<lb/>
lets for business and non-profit<lb/>
corporations.<lb/>
"I've been amazed at how<lb/>
many churches have used memo-<lb/>
rial funds to purchase a satellite<lb/>
Couple recycles, refuses<lb/>
to pay garbage bill<lb/>
dish said Pat Correll of the<lb/>
United Methodist Church's net-<lb/>
work in Nashville, Tenn. She said<lb/>
25,000 Sunday school leaders re-<lb/>
cently viewed a three-session<lb/>
workshop aired at 350 sites na-<lb/>
tionwide. The J.C. Penney mer-<lb/>
chandising chain is equipping 650<lb/>
of its largest stores with satellite<lb/>
dishes.<lb/>
There are 12,000 receiving .<lb/>
sites with satellite dishes around<lb/>
the country, up from several<lb/>
hundred a few years ago, said<lb/>
Elliott Gold, publisher of Business<lb/>
TV magazine in Altadena, Calif.<lb/>
He predicts 42,000 locations by<lb/>
1992.<lb/>
Receiving sites cost about<lb/>
$5,000 apiece to build; sending<lb/>
sites to beam the signal to a satel-<lb/>
lite run $200,000 to $300,000, said<lb/>
Louis Bransford of the Public<lb/>
Service Satellite Consortium,<lb/>
comprised of churches, trade<lb/>
groups, educators and health or-<lb/>
ganizations using television.<lb/>
One obstacle to the growth of<lb/>
the home satellite industry has<lb/>
been the issue of piracy.<lb/>
Federal Communications<lb/>
Commission official Richard<lb/>
Smith recently estimated that<lb/>
nearly half of the satellite dishes<lb/>
used to receive pay TV programs<lb/>
have illegal devices that un-<lb/>
scramble the picture, and let the<lb/>
viewer watch for free.<lb/>
"If unchecked FCC Chair-<lb/>
man Dennis R. Patrick has said,<lb/>
the growth of the illegal chips<lb/>
threaten "the viability of the satel-<lb/>
lite-to-home program market<lb/>
Patrick has said the devices<lb/>
not only steal from those who<lb/>
created the programming, but<lb/>
from viewers who pay for the<lb/>
service and may lose it if the prob-<lb/>
lem is not brought under control.<lb/>
WILMINGTON (AP) - Larry<lb/>
and Suzan Thacher say they<lb/>
shouldn't be billed for garbage<lb/>
collection, because they don't<lb/>
have any garbage to collect.<lb/>
The Thachers recycle or com-<lb/>
post most of their garbage, and<lb/>
they take the rest to a landfill. But<lb/>
the bi-monthly trash bills from<lb/>
the city have continued to pile up,<lb/>
and the city took the Thachers to<lb/>
court.<lb/>
"Ecology is something that<lb/>
we've been concerned about for a<lb/>
number of years said Mrs. Th-<lb/>
acher, who said she and her hus-<lb/>
band have practiced recycling<lb/>
since the late 1960s.<lb/>
"We've never used a trash<lb/>
removal service. All we ask is for<lb/>
the city to take this into considera-<lb/>
tion. We would like to tutor<lb/>
people on how they can recycle<lb/>
and compost"<lb/>
The city filed a complaint<lb/>
against the Thachers Sept. 26 to<lb/>
collect $321 in unpaid trash bills.<lb/>
Magistrate Nancy DuVall ruled<lb/>
in the city's favor Tuesday after<lb/>
listening to Assistant City Attor-<lb/>
ney Robert Oast, city sanitation<lb/>
inspector Jere Lewis and the Th-<lb/>
achers, who operate a chiroprac-<lb/>
tic center from their residence.<lb/>
" I think it's wonderful that<lb/>
you're doing this, but I'm bound<lb/>
by the ordinance. You might want<lb/>
to follow up on this with the city<lb/>
manager Ms. DuVall said.<lb/>
The Thachers said they trans-<lb/>
port their trash that cannot be<lb/>
recycled or composted to the New<lb/>
Hanover County Landfill every<lb/>
four to six months. The annual<lb/>
cost is about $5 to $6, they said.<lb/>
Mitzi York, special assistant<lb/>
to the city manager, said the city<lb/>
code does not include any provi-<lb/>
sions for exemption from trash<lb/>
collection and disposal fees.<lb/>
The ordinance, however,<lb/>
says the City Council can make<lb/>
adjustments to charges based on a<lb/>
recommendation by the city<lb/>
manager. The Thachers re-<lb/>
quested an "adjustment" after<lb/>
Tuesday's hearing in<lb/>
Magistrate's Court, Ms. York<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Attention All<lb/>
Students<lb/>
The Association<lb/>
of<lb/>
Student Organizations<lb/>
requests the honour of<lb/>
your presence<lb/>
at a<lb/>
reception honouring<lb/>
Dr. Alfred Matthews<lb/>
Vice Chancellor of Student<lb/>
Life<lb/>
to be held in the<lb/>
Gray Gallery<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Jenkins Building<lb/>
on<lb/>
October 27,1988<lb/>
5:00-7:00 p.m.<lb/>
R.S.V.P<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
757-6611, ExUlO<lb/>
by Friday, October 21,1988<lb/>
TV fine tuned<lb/>
for the future<lb/>
(AP) � The television of the<lb/>
future will be a high definition<lb/>
system with the clarity of movie<lb/>
film and the sound of compact<lb/>
discs, say representatives of the<lb/>
broadcast and electronics indus-<lb/>
tries.<lb/>
The Federal Communica-<lb/>
tions Commission recently en-<lb/>
dorsed the advanced television<lb/>
systems, declaring them in the<lb/>
public interest, and approving<lb/>
some preliminary rules for bring-<lb/>
ing them into American homes.<lb/>
But the commission said<lb/>
many technical and procedural<lb/>
problems still must be ironed out,<lb/>
and the systems probably will not<lb/>
be available from the U.S. broad-<lb/>
cast industry before 1993.<lb/>
U.S. broadcasters are con-<lb/>
cerned that U.S. research efforts to<lb/>
develop an industry transmission<lb/>
standard for high definition TV<lb/>
may not be moving fast enough to<lb/>
head of f a probable Japanese inva-<lb/>
sion of the new technology.<lb/>
The Japanese have been<lb/>
working on an advanced system<lb/>
for two decades and expect to<lb/>
introduce high definition TV to<lb/>
homes in their country in 1990.<lb/>
The picture on a standard<lb/>
television set in the United States<lb/>
is produced by a signal that scans<lb/>
more than 200,000 dots on 525<lb/>
lines. The Japanese system has<lb/>
1,125 scanning lines.<lb/>
Michael Rau, National Asso-<lb/>
ciation of Broadcasters vice presi-<lb/>
dent for science and technology,<lb/>
said the FCC made a "strong<lb/>
commitment to bring advanced<lb/>
TV to the public. They seemed to<lb/>
reaffirm support for free, over-<lb/>
the-air broadcasting. But the<lb/>
commission must solve the diffi-<lb/>
culties of delivering the system<lb/>
over broadcast outlets<lb/>
In a series of preliminary rul-<lb/>
ings, the FCC said:<lb/>
- Existing broadcasters and<lb/>
stations are best equipped to<lb/>
bring the new system to viewers.<lb/>
- Advanced television pro-<lb/>
grams must be received on exist-<lb/>
ing television sets so viewers<lb/>
won't have to replace their equip-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
- If additional frequency<lb/>
space is needed, it should be<lb/>
found within existing VHF and<lb/>
UHF television bands.<lb/>
presents<lb/>
-� Thf Umiouf Shc<lb/>
The Unique Shoes<lb/>
O 1989<lb/>
<lb/>
STEP INTO FALL WITH US!<lb/>
ARIINGION .IllAGt SHOPS tI ' in "tE' t MiOPS<lb/>
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t Jl <lb/>
Eating &amp; DHnkkigSjrYI Saloon<lb/>
MONDAY NITE (I FOOTBALL<lb/>
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Casual Dining at its Finest<lb/>
Featuring our soon-to-be-famous Double-Shot Margaritas!<lb/>
LOCATED BEHIND QULNCYS AND ACE CLEANERS<lb/>
LN THE FARM FRESH SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
11 am-l am Monday-Saturday 11 am-10 pm Sunday 355-2946<lb/>
Tom Togs<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
All Floor Space in Warehouse Open<lb/>
Nothing Over $10.00<lb/>
Tom Tog's<lb/>
Factory Outlet<lb/>
RESERVE OFFICERS'TRAINING CORPS<lb/>
THE MORE T0U USE YOUR HEAD,<lb/>
THE MORE MONEY<lb/>
YOU CAN GET FOR COLLEGE.<lb/>
Up to $4000 a year Just enroll in Army<lb/>
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ARMY ROTC<lb/>
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COOTBI YOU CAN TAKE<lb/>
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Visit Our Other Locations<lb/>
Hwy. 64 East Between j jq We$t<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058102_0017"/><lb/>
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Overkill<lb/>
"Your Love is like Sam Kinnison original Bonjovi lyrics<lb/>
l Friedrich<lb/>
Orpheus<lb/>
Bv Harris and Curganus<lb/>
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V- '� � fa9 � �� - �<lb/>
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5STu�K � � I�4i - �<lb/>
IE� HIRf 6C1 -�� -�� -J-<lb/>
�tw� , t -i" ift<lb/>
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Undercover Cats<lb/>
By Parker<lb/>
B arris aiul 1 laselrie<lb/>
Inside oke<lb/>
&amp;fevitf� WT &amp;0M ZTL�X <lb/>
Bv Rik<lb/>
I ho I aw<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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Hey Big Head!<lb/>
Bv Boo-Man<lb/>
Hosted by<lb/>
Chauncey<lb/>
The Funmeister<lb/>
Chauncey's Octoberfest Party Tips<lb/>
While celebrating Octoberfest, be sure to observe these helpful points that<lb/>
the ultimate party gentleman, CHAUNCEY THE FUNMEISTER has outlined<lb/>
for you. His wisdom and experience can save us all a lot of grief and boring<lb/>
times. Here are the five major rules to follow when going to ritzy social .<lb/>
gatherings. P<lb/>
5. Guys: Find yourself a<lb/>
Queen!<lb/>
Fellows, nothing will improve<lb/>
YOUR social stature more than<lb/>
being seen with a fabulous babe!<lb/>
ECU has a fine selection of these.<lb/>
Stay away from this one, though,<lb/>
she's all mine!<lb/>
Tally-Ho! The Funmeister here again to<lb/>
continue the festivities! Read my rules to<lb/>
party by and your Rocktober will be<lb/>
heightened immeasurably. And remember<lb/>
kids, overindulgence is for chumps.<lb/>
1. Don't take this!<lb/>
Never EVER take your<lb/>
wallet when socializing.<lb/>
You may wake up with<lb/>
the whole town thanking<lb/>
you for all the free drinks!<lb/>
2. Carry your own mug<lb/>
A must. There's nothing more<lb/>
disgusting than picking a cup<lb/>
of ale you THOUGHT was<lb/>
yours, only to ingest cigarette<lb/>
butts and strangers' saliva!<lb/>
3. Goes without saying<lb/>
4. Girls: Stay away<lb/>
from Rednecks<lb/>
Just in case, because during<lb/>
Rocktober, you never know.<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: Chauncey<lb/>
does not advocate casual sex;<lb/>
but he knows how kids can be<lb/>
and cares about them.<lb/>
Nothing will damage your<lb/>
social stature more than being<lb/>
seen with one of these cretins,<lb/>
ladies. Hang out with well-<lb/>
groomed and mannered fellows<lb/>
like Chauncey for instance!<lb/>
ALSO: NO JARHEADS.<lb/>
Come-<lb/>
To T�r<lb/>
Comic Fans! The Ramada Inn of Greenville will be hosting<lb/>
a Baseball Card, Coin ancf COMICS show Sunday Rocktober<lb/>
23, from 10:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Admission will be $1.00 and<lb/>
there will be door prizes! Come one, come all, come on y'all.<lb/>
j<lb/>
o<lb/>
v<lb/>
<lb/>
Red<lb/>
�scorr�ft(Xf"&amp;f j<lb/>
A<lb/>
I Hi<lb/>
Pirates cl<lb/>
look for<lb/>
By DOLC JOHNSON<lb/>
Spurt i d<lb/>
Tim lame- r<lb/>
touchdow ns and<lb/>
added an -<lb/>
enough to N<lb/>
State team, v.<lb/>
place r . -<lb/>
21 vict( �<lb/>
James �<lb/>
in the d<lb/>
times I �<lb/>
touchdov n<lb/>
on one pla)<lb/>
reaching trw<lb/>
(<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
tailbai <lb/>
Chris Park r<lb/>
for ' I<lb/>
Seimr<lb/>
who v<lb/>
shoul 1<lb/>
25 urr<lb/>
touchd<lb/>
Chris Parkei<lb/>
Bobb)<lb/>
back<lb/>
and I<lb/>
did a<lb/>
never d<lb/>
la. - riei<lb/>
After last<lb/>
ing tr<lb/>
tor Part r u<lb/>
The �<lb/>
an early ' :<lb/>
ter on<lb/>
run b<lb/>
Drug<lb/>
(SID<lb/>
Universirj '�<lb/>
along with Pi;<lb/>
of Eastern N r�l<lb/>
sponsoring �'<lb/>
cludii .<lb/>
ECU athletes.<lb/>
ECU football pla) - n<lb/>
Moody, Shannon :<lb/>
MichelandF<lb/>
ECU basketb<lb/>
Kenn r<lb/>
Lose Th<lb/>
and v<lb/>
<lb/>
our dru$<lb/>
campaign K<lb/>
invoh -<lb/>
Smith,<lb/>
to the M<lb/>
so pumped uj<lb/>
prime I<lb/>
three houi<lb/>
went or ar :<lb/>
times before the or<lb/>
ve never doru<lb/>
that's not like m<lb/>
being credited 2 xi<lb/>
the Bui<lb/>
tir-t M � da<lb/>
1984 :� a<lb/>
14<lb/>
�<lb/>
garru<lb/>
- -<lb/>
Pro A m<lb/>
for Nov.<lb/>
- i i '��<lb/>
Pirate Pro-Am<lb/>
will he hel .<lb/>
Brook Valley Countn<lb/>
Greenville Theevenl <lb/>
fund-raiser for tru<lb/>
Inner- mi.<lb/>
'The inaugural Pro-Al<lb/>
highl successful due to ti<lb/>
tieipants involved and wi<lb/>
that this event will gr<lb/>
Kts and exposure as the y<lb/>
bv said ECl -thletie I<lb/>
Dave Hart. Ir "It'salways<lb/>
hackers to nib elbows wi<lb/>
tossionals. It creates a ti:<lb/>
atmosphere<lb/>
Already secured for th<lb/>
�reprofessionalsJ.C Sneaj<lb/>
Hulbert and Bobby Watfca<lb/>
more professional is to Kj<lb/>
before the event The foj<lb/>
best-ball with tee time sl<lb/>
noon<lb/>
The fee tor playing<lb/>
with a social following th�<lb/>
of golf, involving parhci pa<lb/>
invited guests Rain date!<lb/>
event is Nov. 8, also at th<lb/>
Valley Country Club.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0018"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
anus<lb/>
V<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
($'<lb/>
r1<lb/>
d vnursclf a<lb/>
improve<lb/>
tature more than<lb/>
h a fabulous b.ibe!<lb/>
e selection of these,<lb/>
n this one, though,<lb/>
THE HAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBER 20, 1988 Page 17<lb/>
Pirates drop to 1-6 at Florida State,<lb/>
look forward to Syracuse at home<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sports tditor<lb/>
Tim lames rushed for two<lb/>
touchdowns and Travis Hunter<lb/>
added another, but it wasn't<lb/>
enough to beat a tough Florida<lb/>
state team, v ho kept their fifth-<lb/>
place ranking intact with the 45-<lb/>
21 victory.<lb/>
lames was the one bright spot<lb/>
in the defeat, carrying the ball 21<lb/>
times for 7 yards and the two<lb/>
touchdowns. A loss of three yards<lb/>
on one plav denied James of<lb/>
reaching the 100-yard mark.<lb/>
Once again the thorn in the<lb/>
Pirates' side was a back-up<lb/>
tailback this time by the name of<lb/>
Chris Parker, who was filling in<lb/>
tor the injured Sammv Smith, the<lb/>
Seminoles' number one tailback,<lb/>
who was out with a separated<lb/>
shoulder. Parker earned the ball<lb/>
25 times tor 158 yards and two<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
'We were depending on<lb/>
Chris Parker Seminole Coach<lb/>
Bobby Bowden said of his young<lb/>
back. "He had to come through<lb/>
and he did. Our offensive front<lb/>
did a lot to help him. But we've<lb/>
never doubted his ability. He just<lb/>
lacks experience and confidence<lb/>
After last weekend's show-<lb/>
ing, this should not be a problem<lb/>
tor Parker any longer.<lb/>
The Seminoles rolled out to<lb/>
an early 14-0 lead in the first quar-<lb/>
ter on a seven-yard touchdown<lb/>
run bv Parker on the opening se-<lb/>
ries of the game, and later on a<lb/>
two-yard run by fullback Marion<lb/>
Butts.<lb/>
The Pirates struck back<lb/>
quickly, however, with James<lb/>
scoring twice in the first seven<lb/>
minutes of the second quarter,<lb/>
first capping a 77-yard drive with<lb/>
a one-yard punch, and again<lb/>
crossing the goal line minutes<lb/>
later on the Pirates' next posses-<lb/>
sion when he rumbled 23 yards<lb/>
for his second touchdown to tie<lb/>
the score 14-14 on a series set up<lb/>
by an interception by Brian<lb/>
Hay wood.<lb/>
The tic was short-lived, how-<lb/>
ever, as the Seminole offense<lb/>
struck again on the ensuing series,<lb/>
this time when quarterback Chip<lb/>
Ferguson found receiver Ronald<lb/>
Lewis in the corner of the end<lb/>
zone for a 17-yard touchdown.<lb/>
Ferguson was not finished,<lb/>
though, and on the Seminoles'<lb/>
next series, he hooked up with<lb/>
Terrv Anthonv for a 23-yard<lb/>
touchdown strike, giving Florida<lb/>
State a 28-14 halftime lead. "Chip<lb/>
had some timely passes Bow-<lb/>
den said after the game. "His<lb/>
touchdown passes were very<lb/>
important<lb/>
The Pirates avoided two more<lb/>
possible first half scores on the<lb/>
play of Junior Robinson, who re-<lb/>
covered a Seminole fumble at the<lb/>
ECU 33, and minutes later inter-<lb/>
cepted a half-back pass by Butts at<lb/>
the ECU 4-yard line.<lb/>
The Pirates had the ball to<lb/>
begin the second half, but after<lb/>
taking the ball from their own 20<lb/>
down to the Seminole 17, they<lb/>
were denied a score when a bad<lb/>
snap on a Robb Imperato field<lb/>
goal attempt ended the drive.<lb/>
The only scoring in the third<lb/>
period came on a 20-yard field<lb/>
goal by Seminole kicker Bill Ma-<lb/>
son after a stalled drive down to<lb/>
the ECU four-yard line, to boost<lb/>
the the Seminole lead to 31-14.<lb/>
The Seminoles pulled away<lb/>
in the final period, scoring at the<lb/>
ten minute mark when Parker<lb/>
went over from 10 yards out, and<lb/>
again with three seconds to play<lb/>
when Peter Tom Willis hit tight<lb/>
end David Roberts on a six-yard<lb/>
touchdown pass to give Florida<lb/>
State the final 45-21 victory.<lb/>
Travis Hunter closed out the<lb/>
scoring for the Pirates when he<lb/>
scored from two yards out with<lb/>
2:07 remaining in the game.<lb/>
Hunter rushed 16 times for 20<lb/>
yards, and was three for 11 for 88<lb/>
yards passing.<lb/>
"Florida State has a good<lb/>
football team Pirate Coach Art<lb/>
Baker commented after the game.<lb/>
"I thought we gave a good ac-<lb/>
count of ourselves, however<lb/>
When asked about the<lb/>
Syracuse Orangemen, who will<lb/>
be coming to Ficklcn Stadium this<lb/>
weekend, Baker said "They are<lb/>
always a good football team. We<lb/>
will have to improve on today's<lb/>
performance quite a bit to have a<lb/>
chance to beat them<lb/>
The Orangemen, 5-1 on the<lb/>
season, have defeated ECU foes<lb/>
Temple and Virginia Tech, and<lb/>
will come to ECU having upset<lb/>
Penn State 24-10 last week.<lb/>
In the last two games,<lb/>
Syracuse quarterback Todd<lb/>
Philcox completed 38 of 59 passes<lb/>
for 554 yards and six touchdowns<lb/>
and just one interception. Philcox<lb/>
will be looking for wideout Deval<lb/>
Glover, who last week caught<lb/>
eight passes for 101 yards and the<lb/>
touchdown that gave Syracuse<lb/>
the final lead. Add to this offense<lb/>
Daryl Johnston, an All-America<lb/>
fullback and Heisman candidate,<lb/>
and you have a full package of<lb/>
explosive talent.<lb/>
But just as serious for the Pi-<lb/>
rates is the talented Orangemen<lb/>
defense. Three of Syracuse's top<lb/>
six all-time sack leaders arc on this<lb/>
year's squad in Terry Wooten,<lb/>
Rob Burnett and Keith Friberg. In<lb/>
the secondary, Marcus Paul, a<lb/>
two-time Jim Thorpe Award<lb/>
nominee, is the NCAA active ca-<lb/>
reer leader in interceptions, and<lb/>
he already has three on the year.<lb/>
Along with Thorpe will be<lb/>
All-America Candidate Chris In-<lb/>
gram, who has two interceptions<lb/>
on the season. The Orangemen<lb/>
are also strong at linebacker, with<lb/>
Butkus Award Candidate Terry<lb/>
Wooten shoring up the outside.<lb/>
Travis Hunter rushed for one touchdown against the Seminoles,<lb/>
but he and his teammates hope to improve on their performances<lb/>
when they face Syracuse on Saturday. (Photo courtesy of SID).<lb/>
Drug awareness program started at ECU<lb/>
(SID) � The East Carolina<lb/>
University Athletic Department<lb/>
along with Pizza Hut Restaurants<lb/>
of Eastern North Carolina, arc<lb/>
sponsoring an Anti-Drug and<lb/>
Alcohol Awareness Program, in-<lb/>
cluding trading cards featuring<lb/>
ECU athletes.<lb/>
The trading cards feature<lb/>
ECU football players Jarrod<lb/>
Moody, Shannon Boling, Billy<lb/>
Michel and Reggie McKinney and<lb/>
ECU basketball players Gus Hill,<lb/>
Kenny Murphy, Jeff Kelly, Reed<lb/>
Lose, Theodore "Blue" Edwards<lb/>
and coach Mike Steele.<lb/>
"We're truly excited about<lb/>
our drug and alcohol awareness<lb/>
campaign because it enables us to<lb/>
involve our community and<lb/>
school systems in a collective ef-<lb/>
fort to combat drug and alcohol<lb/>
abuse said ECU Athletic Direc-<lb/>
tor Dave Hart, lr. "Having our<lb/>
student-athletes serve as such<lb/>
positive role models certainly<lb/>
enhances the image our program<lb/>
would like to project<lb/>
The trading cards will be<lb/>
available beginning Oct. 23 at<lb/>
Pizza Hut Restuarants in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina. Each week, a dif-<lb/>
ferent ECU player's card will be<lb/>
available with each card having<lb/>
an anti-drug and alcohol aware-<lb/>
ness message on the back, with<lb/>
join the East Carolina University<lb/>
Athletic Department with the<lb/>
fight against drugs said Theron<lb/>
Riley of Pizza Hut.<lb/>
Special promotions arc<lb/>
planned with the use of the<lb/>
cards. The Oct. 29 Miami, Ha.<lb/>
football game will serve as a kick-<lb/>
off for the campaign with 20,000<lb/>
Jarrod Moody and Blue Edwards<lb/>
cards being given away.<lb/>
receive a half-price ticket for that<lb/>
game.<lb/>
If you show a fill set of foot-<lb/>
ball cards at a participating Pizza<lb/>
Hut between Nov. 20-26, you will<lb/>
receive a free mug. A full set of<lb/>
basketball cards at a Pizza Hut<lb/>
between Feb. 19-25 will get you a<lb/>
free mug also.<lb/>
At halftime of the Feb. 25 ECU<lb/>
basketball game against UNC-<lb/>
name of East Carolina's basket-<lb/>
ball MVP to the Pirate Club.<lb/>
All of this is in an effort to<lb/>
educate the people of Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina about the prob-<lb/>
lems of the use and abuse of drugs<lb/>
and alcohol. It is a battle that has<lb/>
ettorts to educate young people<lb/>
regarding the adverse effects of<lb/>
drugs on vouth and citizens in our<lb/>
community said Ed Carter,<lb/>
Mavor of Greenville. "I look for-<lb/>
ward to working with ECU to<lb/>
develop a successful strategy to<lb/>
Individuals showing a full set Wilmington, Pizza Hut will give<lb/>
of football cards at the Nov. 28<lb/>
ECU basketball game against<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro, will receive a<lb/>
half-price ticket for the game<lb/>
away a full scholarship in the<lb/>
been fought for a long time by deal with the drug abuse problem<lb/>
in this area"<lb/>
The campaign starts Monday,<lb/>
Oct. 17 with ECU athletes present-<lb/>
ing cards to the children at the<lb/>
Elmhurst Elementary School.<lb/>
city, regional, state and national<lb/>
campaigns.<lb/>
"I'm extremely pleased that<lb/>
the East Carolina University Ath-<lb/>
letic Department is joining in our<lb/>
information about the player also And, individuals showing a full<lb/>
included. set of basketball cards at the Feb.<lb/>
"Pizza Huts of Eastern North 20 ECU basketball contest against<lb/>
Carolina are pleased to be able to the U.S. Naval Academy, wil<lb/>
Hornets have fifteen days to<lb/>
cut from fifteen to twelve<lb/>
Smith, Bills look to make it<lb/>
to the biggest game in football<lb/>
(AP)<lb/>
SO pumped<lb/>
prime time<lb/>
Bruce Smith was<lb/>
up about playing in<lb/>
that he was dressed<lb/>
three hours before the game and<lb/>
went on and off the field seven<lb/>
times before the opening kickoff.<lb/>
"I've never done that before,<lb/>
that's not like me he said after<lb/>
being credited with 2 1 2 sacks as<lb/>
the Buffalo Bills, playing in their<lb/>
first Monday night game since<lb/>
1984, beat the New York Jets 37-<lb/>
14.<lb/>
"To me, it was the biggest<lb/>
game of my career<lb/>
Smith needed to look just 90<lb/>
Pro-Am set<lb/>
for Nov. 2<lb/>
(SID) The Second Annual<lb/>
Pirate Pro-Am Golf Tournament<lb/>
will be held on Nov 2 at the<lb/>
Brook Valley Country Club in<lb/>
Greenville. The event is held as a<lb/>
fund-raiser for the East Carolina<lb/>
University golf program.<lb/>
'The inaugural Pro-Am was<lb/>
highly successful due to the par-<lb/>
ticipants involved and we hope<lb/>
that this event will grow in num-<lb/>
bers and exposure as the years go<lb/>
by said ECU Athletic Director<lb/>
Dave Hart, jr. "It's always nice for<lb/>
hackers to rub elbows with pro-<lb/>
fessionals. It creates a fun-filled<lb/>
atmosphere<lb/>
Already secured for the event<lb/>
are professionals J.CSnead, Mike<lb/>
Hulbert and Bobby Watkins. One<lb/>
more professional is to be added<lb/>
before the event. The format is<lb/>
best-ball with tee-time slated for<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
The fee for playing is $500<lb/>
"It would be an understate-<lb/>
ment to say we were pumped up<lb/>
said Smith, ebullient and talkative<lb/>
for the first time since returning<lb/>
three games ago from a four-<lb/>
game substance abuse suspen-<lb/>
sion. 'This was a chance to show<lb/>
what the Buffalo Bills can do and<lb/>
we did<lb/>
'The sky's the limit he re-<lb/>
miles down the New Jersey Turn-<lb/>
pike to see the danger that pres-<lb/>
ents.<lb/>
just six days after the Phila-<lb/>
delphia Eagles, in their first na-<lb/>
tional showcase since 1981, beat<lb/>
the New York Giants 24-13, they<lb/>
bottomed out against Cleveland.<lb/>
They scored just three points, al-<lb/>
lowed Don Strock to throw two<lb/>
touchdown passes in his first start<lb/>
in five years while Monday night plied when asked if the Super<lb/>
hero Randall Cunningham was Bowl is what the Bills can ulti-<lb/>
sacked nine times. matcly do. Then he smiled.<lb/>
But Levy is more practical<lb/>
I've coached high school, (coachly).<lb/>
college and in the pros, and it He pointed out that the eu-<lb/>
happens at all levels Eagles phoria was over the instant the<lb/>
Coach Buddy Ryan says. 'That's game ended and the Bills have to<lb/>
one of the reasons I don't like the prove what they can do against<lb/>
Monday night game. It gives us New England this week. As the<lb/>
the short week Eagles learned Sunday, it won't<lb/>
But it's not just the short week be easy to get up again, particu-<lb/>
for teams like the Eagles and the larly for the young, budding All-<lb/>
Bills.<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) - The<lb/>
Charlotte Hornets have 15 days to<lb/>
cut their roster from 15 to 12 play-<lb/>
ers, but coach Dick Harter says he<lb/>
probably will wait another week<lb/>
before deciding who stays and<lb/>
who goes.<lb/>
"We'll go two more games<lb/>
and then make some adjust-<lb/>
ments Harter said Monday.<lb/>
That will take the team<lb/>
through two more exhibitions,<lb/>
Saturday against the Chicago<lb/>
Bulls in Chapel Hill's Dean Smith<lb/>
Center and Sunday against the<lb/>
Bulls in Richmond. The Hornets<lb/>
go into those games with a 1-1<lb/>
exhibition record after losing<lb/>
Friday's opener to the New Jersey<lb/>
Nets 118-97 and defeating the<lb/>
New York Knicks 126-113 Sun-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"I've changed my mind some<lb/>
on my original assessments<lb/>
Harter said. "Maybe I'll change it<lb/>
again<lb/>
Four of the 15 players swing- down. It brings out the best mail<lb/>
man Robert Reid, center-forward of us, because you can't sit down<lb/>
Jerome Henderson and forwards now and say what's going to<lb/>
Larry Spriggs and Brian Rowsom happen<lb/>
-are in camp without guaranteed Hornets vice president Carl<lb/>
contracts. Scheer said the team could wind<lb/>
But the team is still looking up with a roster of three centers,<lb/>
for help for centers Dave Hoppen four forwards and five guards,<lb/>
and Tim Kempton, either through "Some teams carry five<lb/>
trades or picking up players put guards he said. "The beauty of it<lb/>
on waivers. is we have a guv like Robert Reid<lb/>
Counting Dell Curry, out wno can plav several different<lb/>
until late December with a broken<lb/>
wrist, Charlotte has six guards,<lb/>
seven if you put Reid in the<lb/>
backcourt. The others are Rex<lb/>
Chapman, Tyrone "Muggsy"<lb/>
Bogues, Rickey Green, Michael<lb/>
Holton and Ralph Lewis.<lb/>
"All the camps I've been in<lb/>
have had a lot of guards Holton<lb/>
said. 'There's nothing unusual<lb/>
about this camp<lb/>
"What makes this an unusual<lb/>
situation is that, unlike a veteran<lb/>
team, the spots aren't locked<lb/>
positions.<lb/>
"I've been talking to general<lb/>
managers, trying to keep abreast<lb/>
of what's going on, having meet-<lb/>
ings with scouts who have seen<lb/>
NBA games and really just stand-<lb/>
ing bv, waiting for some move-<lb/>
ment he said.<lb/>
'The kev is timing, to be there<lb/>
when a team makes a decision on<lb/>
someone you might want.<lb/>
"Certainly, guards have to<lb/>
figure in our conversations. But at<lb/>
this point, we're just waiting<lb/>
The Eagles treated the New<lb/>
York game as a Super Bowl - a<lb/>
chance for national exposure. To<lb/>
the Giants, who had been on<lb/>
prime time 11 times since<lb/>
Philadelphia's previous appear-<lb/>
ance, it was ho hum.<lb/>
After the Bills beat the Jets on<lb/>
Monday night, their locker room the 31-year-old nose tackle who<lb/>
had that same kind of Super Bowl knows what it'slike to go through<lb/>
Pros like Smith and Cornelius<lb/>
Bennett, who are suddenly full of<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
Other Bills know differently.<lb/>
"Winning like we did on<lb/>
Monday night makes you a tar-<lb/>
get tight end Pete Metzelaars<lb/>
said after the game.<lb/>
Then there's Fred Smerlas,<lb/>
Kings start Gretzky<lb/>
atmosphere.<lb/>
It wasn't that they are now 6-<lb/>
1 and two games ahead in the AFC<lb/>
East; it was that they had won in<lb/>
front of the nation. In fact, they<lb/>
interrupted their shower to<lb/>
award owner Ralph Wilson the<lb/>
game ball and serenade him with<lb/>
a bit of off-color verse.<lb/>
Coach Marv Levy played<lb/>
down the importance of the na-<lb/>
tional television showcase. But he<lb/>
with a social following the round also said, "You'll have to ask the<lb/>
of golf, involving participantsand team about that<lb/>
invited guests. Rain date for the<lb/>
event is Nov. 8, also at the Brook But the team, almost to a man,<lb/>
Valley Country Club. contradicted him.<lb/>
two seasons (1984-85) in which<lb/>
the team had fewer victories<lb/>
(four) in 32 games than it has in<lb/>
seven this year.<lb/>
"We have a great mix he<lb/>
says. "The front office went out<lb/>
and got us veterans like Art Still<lb/>
and Leonard Smith. The players<lb/>
and the coaches get along fine and<lb/>
we've got great young guys like<lb/>
Bruce Smith and Shane Conlan most dominant player over the<lb/>
and Cornelius Bennett last decade.<lb/>
"But I think this team knows "There are a lot of emotions<lb/>
itself. I think it can keep an even here Gretzky said. "The things<lb/>
keel. We're never too high and you think about now that the<lb/>
never too low game is here are all the memories<lb/>
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) -<lb/>
- Wayne Gretzky will be getting<lb/>
together with a few of his friends<lb/>
tonight. Only this time, they'll be<lb/>
on the other side of the ice.<lb/>
"This one is going to be pretty<lb/>
hard on me, pretty hard on the<lb/>
Oilers and pretty hard on the<lb/>
fans Gretzky said of his first<lb/>
game in Edmonton since the<lb/>
Great Trade that sent him from<lb/>
the Oilers to the Los Angeles<lb/>
Kings over the summer.<lb/>
While the Kings will play 80<lb/>
games this NHL season, it's ap-<lb/>
parent that none will have the<lb/>
significance to Gretzky that this<lb/>
one has. Nor to the Oilers and the<lb/>
Oilers' fans who have watched<lb/>
Gretzky develop into the NHL's<lb/>
and all the fun. volved five players, three drafts<lb/>
"We had something that very picks and millions of dollars,<lb/>
few teams had (in Edmonton). We Gretzky, everyone's All-<lb/>
were the Green Bay Packers of our Star center for the last decade,<lb/>
time. We were in a small city and was dealt to the Kings along with<lb/>
we grew up together and we had Marty McSorely and Mike<lb/>
a great relationship with each Krushelnyski for Carson, Martin<lb/>
other and the city. Those are the Gelinas, the Kings' No. 1 draft<lb/>
things I'm thinking now pjck this vear, three future first-<lb/>
Gretzky also will be thinking roUnd picks and cash estimated<lb/>
about playing against some old<lb/>
friends, not with them.<lb/>
"I think about going one-on-<lb/>
one with Kevin Lowe and being<lb/>
knocked down in front of the<lb/>
net he said. "This game is not<lb/>
going to be easy on any of us. Not<lb/>
the three of us who went to Los<lb/>
Angeles, not Jimmy Carson<lb/>
(who came to Edmonton in the<lb/>
trade), not to any of the Oilers or<lb/>
the Kings, too<lb/>
Things just haven't been the<lb/>
same in Edmonton since<lb/>
Gretzky was traded in the block-<lb/>
buster deal on Aug. 9 that in-<lb/>
in the neightborhood of $15 mil-<lb/>
lion.<lb/>
Gretzky has been a factor in<lb/>
the early success of the Kings,<lb/>
who have a 4-2 record. Gretzky<lb/>
is in his accustomed spot among<lb/>
the scoring leaders with seven<lb/>
goals and eight assists.<lb/>
His totals this year give him<lb/>
career figures of 727 goals and<lb/>
1,339 assists in regular-season<lb/>
and playoff games.<lb/>
All but 10 of his goals and 11<lb/>
of his assists have come with the<lb/>
See GRET2XY, page 18<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0019"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
18<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20,1988<lb/>
<lb/>
Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
Syracuse at ECU<lb/>
Virginia at Wake Forest<lb/>
Clemson at N.C. State<lb/>
Maryland at Duke<lb/>
Georgia Tech-a UNC<lb/>
Mississippi at Vanderbilt<lb/>
Michigan St. at Illinois<lb/>
Penn State at Alabama<lb/>
Oklahoma at Colorado<lb/>
UCLA at Arizona<lb/>
BRIAN BAILEY<lb/>
WNCT-TV Sports Director<lb/>
Last Week - (7-2-1)<lb/>
Overall  (46-22-1)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Vanderbilt<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
DEAN BUCHANDOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
ECU Sports InformationSports Editor<lb/>
Last Week - (6-3-1)Last Week - (7-2-1)<lb/>
Overall - (47-21-1)Overall - (49-19-1)<lb/>
ECUECU<lb/>
Wake ForestWake Forest<lb/>
ClemsonClemson<lb/>
DukeDuke<lb/>
Georgia TechGeorgia Tech<lb/>
MississippiVanderbilt<lb/>
IllinoisMichigan St.<lb/>
AlabamaAlabama<lb/>
OklahomaOklahoma<lb/>
UCLAUCLA<lb/>
Dr. RICHARD EAKIN<lb/>
ECU Chancellor<lb/>
Last Week - (6-3-1)<lb/>
Overall  (44-24-1)<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Mississippi<lb/>
Michigan St.<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Last Week - (6-3-1)<lb/>
Overall - (49-19-1)<lb/>
Syracuse<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Mississippi<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Last Week-(7-2-1)<lb/>
Overall (49-19-1)<lb/>
Syracuse<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Vanderbilt<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
Penguins beat Flyers<lb/>
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The<lb/>
Pittsburgh Penguins figured out<lb/>
how to beat the Philadelphia<lb/>
Flyers: play just like the Flyers.<lb/>
The Pengiijns adopted a<lb/>
tight-checking defense-oriented<lb/>
style and ended the Flyers' sea-<lb/>
son-opening four-game winning<lb/>
streak with a 4-2 victory Tuesday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Of course, it helped that<lb/>
Mario Lcmieux was around to<lb/>
score three goals and set up the<lb/>
other.<lb/>
"Our ace came through<lb/>
again Penguins coach Gene<lb/>
Ubriaco said.<lb/>
Lemeiux's 14th career hat<lb/>
trick was the obvious difference,<lb/>
but Pittsburgh also showed more<lb/>
discipline than it had in its first<lb/>
four games. The Penguins al-<lb/>
lowed 21 goals in four games and<lb/>
owed their 3-1 record largely to<lb/>
their abilitv U in shootouts. It<lb/>
was different against the Flyers.<lb/>
"It was a well-disciplined<lb/>
game and it was nice to see we can<lb/>
play that way Penguins de-<lb/>
fenseman Paul Coffey said.<lb/>
"You alwavs want the 1-0 or<lb/>
2-0 game defenseman Rod<lb/>
Buskas said.<lb/>
'You play a tight-checking<lb/>
game and it gives everyone confi-<lb/>
dence<lb/>
Did the Flyers expect a defen-<lb/>
sive game from Pittsburgh?<lb/>
"I don't know if they ex-<lb/>
pected that kind of defensive<lb/>
game, to be honest Philadelphia<lb/>
center Dave Poulin said. "I,ve<lb/>
been reading the box scores and it<lb/>
seems like they've been in a lot of<lb/>
high-scoring games<lb/>
The Penguins didn't deviate<lb/>
from the plan until the third pe-<lb/>
riod, when Lemieux already had<lb/>
helped them to a 3-0 lead.<lb/>
Gretzky faces<lb/>
his old friends<lb/>
Continued from page 17<lb/>
Oilers, a team he led to four<lb/>
Stanley Cups this decade. He<lb/>
scored three goals in eight games<lb/>
with the Indianapolis Racers of<lb/>
the old World Hockey Associa-<lb/>
tion before Peter Pocklington<lb/>
bought Gretzky for the Oilers,<lb/>
also in the WHA at that time.<lb/>
Ironically, it is almost 10<lb/>
years to the day that Gretzky<lb/>
scored his first two professional<lb/>
goals against the Oilers. That<lb/>
happened with the Racers on<lb/>
Oct. 20,1978.<lb/>
As he was on opening night<lb/>
in Los Angeles with the Kings,<lb/>
Gretzky is just as nervous facing<lb/>
hisold teammates in the familiar<lb/>
Northlands Coliseum.<lb/>
"In every other game I've<lb/>
disliked the guys on ttye other<lb/>
team because I wanted to win so<lb/>
badly Gretzky said Tuesday at<lb/>
a press conference. "It will be<lb/>
different (tonight). That will be<lb/>
on my mind throughout the<lb/>
game<lb/>
It will be admittedly differ-<lb/>
ent for many of Gretzky's former<lb/>
teammates as well.<lb/>
"It sure is on a lot of peoples'<lb/>
minds said Lowe, one of<lb/>
Gretzky's closest friends in<lb/>
hockey. "Anyone who gets to<lb/>
this game should consider him-<lb/>
self lucky to witness the whole<lb/>
thing. If s history in the mak-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Philadelphia had only four<lb/>
shots in the first period and six in<lb/>
the second. The Hyers broke out<lb/>
in the third, firing 17 shotsatSteve<lb/>
Guenette and scoring twice.<lb/>
'They started to run around a<lb/>
little bk at the end Hyers coach<lb/>
Paul Holmgren said. "1 think we<lb/>
picked it up, too, when we real-<lb/>
ized we weren't playing to our<lb/>
strength<lb/>
After Ron Hextall stopped his<lb/>
first-period breakaway, Lemieux<lb/>
scored twice in the second period.<lb/>
During a 5-on-3 power play, he<lb/>
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Lemieux set up Bob Errcy's<lb/>
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Guenette stopped 23 Phila-<lb/>
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Ron Sutter scored in less than two<lb/>
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Lemieux completed his hat<lb/>
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with five seconds left.<lb/>
Elsewhere, it was Detroit 4,<lb/>
Chicago 3 in overtime and the<lb/>
New York Islanders 3, Vancouver<lb/>
Red Wings 4, Blackhawks 3<lb/>
At Detroit, "Stevie Wonder"<lb/>
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Yzerman, the Red Wings'<lb/>
captain, picked up a puck from a<lb/>
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debut.<lb/>
The dramatic goal capped a<lb/>
late rally for Detroit, which had<lb/>
trailed 3-0.<lb/>
Steve Larmer, Troy Murray<lb/>
and Duane Sutter scored for Chi-<lb/>
cago.<lb/>
Islanders 3, Canucks 2<lb/>
New York handed visiting<lb/>
Vancouver its fourth one-goal<lb/>
loss of the season. Steve Konroyd<lb/>
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ers, winners of three straight.<lb/>
Trevor Linden, Vancouver's<lb/>
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NAVY. YOU ARE TOMORROW. YOU ARE THE NAVY.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Tarhe<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP)<lb/>
In an effort to jump start the T<lb/>
Heels' struggling passing atta<lb/>
Jorth Carolina football coa<lb/>
Mack Brown says he may<lb/>
freshman Todd Burnett at qu�<lb/>
terback Saturday against Georj<lb/>
Tech.<lb/>
"Our problems on offense a<lb/>
very obvious Brown said Tu�<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"We will look at Todd Burr.j<lb/>
this week in practice I don't kn<lb/>
that he'll definitely play San<lb/>
day, but we are not throwij<lb/>
anybody out<lb/>
Brown had origins<lb/>
planned to redshirt Burnett, a<lb/>
foot-5, 195-pounder from J<lb/>
Va. But after the Tar He - ti<lb/>
Semin<lb/>
TALLAHASSEE, Ha I<lb/>
ida State University officil<lb/>
wondered whv their team<lb/>
two notches in The Associal<lb/>
Press weekly football poll al<lb/>
the Serrunoles won their si1!<lb/>
straight game over the weekei<lb/>
It turned out that one meml<lb/>
of the AP's 60-member panel I<lb/>
advertantly left the Seminoles<lb/>
his ballot, accounting for a dj<lb/>
from fifth to seventh.<lb/>
The poll was the subjec<lb/>
talk shows on Tallahassee re<lb/>
stations and a number of new<lb/>
per stories in the state TuescU<lb/>
"It was an oversight on<lb/>
part of the voter and an o ersj<lb/>
on our part for not double-chj<lb/>
ing AP Sports Editor Daj<lb/>
Christian said Tuesday "Wei<lb/>
to ensure it's as honest, of coq<lb/>
and as accurate as such an ui<lb/>
entific survey can be<lb/>
The voter who forj<lb/>
Seminoles blamed the overs<lb/>
on preoccupation with decic<lb/>
where to rank Miami afterI<lb/>
previously No. 1 Hurricanes<lb/>
to Notre Dame 31-30 on Saturd<lb/>
It was "totally a slip on<lb/>
part the voter said. 1 wot<lb/>
from last week's Top Twenty<lb/>
I think what happened was tr<lb/>
Hying to decide how fat U.<lb/>
Miami, I somehow overloc<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
The voter, not identified<lb/>
der poll guidelines, said he prj<lb/>
blv would have voted the Sent<lb/>
J L<lb/>
les seventh, enough to keep t<lb/>
No. 5 in the final tabulation<lb/>
Christian said this wi<lb/>
poll would stand, adding<lb/>
unfortunate, but it probably<lb/>
rectify itself next week.<lb/>
However, the poll eo<lb/>
versy continues to cause<lb/>
concern among the school's<lb/>
licity people.<lb/>
"We feel, quite frankl<lb/>
hurts the integrity of the<lb/>
said Florida State Sports InK<lb/>
ubn Director Wayne Hoganj<lb/>
Hogan said the error<lb/>
perpetuate itself because j<lb/>
often work off the pre<lb/>
week's poll table. Once listf<lb/>
No. 7, the Seminoles are Iim<lb/>
Wake Fore:<lb/>
look to Cav<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM<lb/>
(AP) - Wake Forest will hJ<lb/>
beat Virginia Saturday to rj<lb/>
in the running for the Af<lb/>
Coast Conference title, but t j<lb/>
feat the Deacons haven t a<lb/>
plished in four years.<lb/>
Deacon coach Bill Doole<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
"I was told that not a<lb/>
on our squad has been pal<lb/>
team that has defeated Yij<lb/>
It's been quite a while<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"This is a big game toi<lb/>
that we're 2-1 in the confer<lb/>
we expect to stay in the raj<lb/>
contend for the ACC chat<lb/>
ship, we must win<lb/>
The Deacons will<lb/>
overcome the Cavaliers' sij<lb/>
speed, Dooley said.<lb/>
"Virginia has the fas<lb/>
ceiver in the ACC in lohn<lb/>
Dooley said at his weekh<lb/>
conference. Tim Finkelstc<lb/>
big-play football player.<lb/>
Wilson is averaging air<lb/>
yards a game rushing and.<lb/>
Moore is an excellent optioj<lb/>
terback. He is a threat it<lb/>
and throwing the football<lb/>
This is the biggest<lb/>
defensive team that I can<lb/>
bcr. On top of their size I<lb/>
experience Three out<lb/>
starters return to the secoj<lb/>
i<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0020"/><lb/>
II IE HAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20, 1988 19<lb/>
: p<lb/>
)TL CHANGE"<lb/>
MIT.<lb/>
<lb/>
R<lb/>
f<lb/>
 VS<lb/>
j<lb/>
Tarheels in search of win<lb/>
CHAPE1 HILL,N.C. (AD<lb/>
n an effort to jump start the Tar<lb/>
Heels struggling passing attack,<lb/>
North Carolina football coach<lb/>
Mack Brown says he may use<lb/>
treshman Todd Burnett at quar-<lb/>
terback Saturday against c Georgia<lb/>
ech<lb/>
Our problems on offense are<lb/>
 r obvious Brown said lues<lb/>
i<lb/>
We will look at lodd Burnett<lb/>
week in practice. 1 don't know<lb/>
at he 11 definitely play Satur-<lb/>
bul we are not throwing<lb/>
 bodj out<lb/>
Brow n had originally<lb/>
armed to redshirt Burnett, a h-<lb/>
vot : 195-pounder from Burke,<lb/>
i But after the lar Heels' 48-3<lb/>
loss to North Carolina State last<lb/>
Saturday, Brown reconsidered.<lb/>
"People asked me 'Why play<lb/>
Todd and give up his freshman<lb/>
season?' Well, we are not giving<lb/>
up the ship. If Todd can improve<lb/>
us in that area, let s go ahead and<lb/>
play Todd now<lb/>
North Carolina is off to its<lb/>
worst start ever.<lb/>
"I am not having fun now<lb/>
Brown said. "1 don't like being 0<lb/>
o. 1 don't enjoy the jokes. Unless<lb/>
you've been through it. you tan<lb/>
not imagine what it does to your<lb/>
family<lb/>
Brown said the Tar 1 leels<lb/>
rivkv start has led to some press<lb/>
ing<lb/>
"Our team is down and struc<lb/>
gling he said. "When you trv so<lb/>
hard to force something to hap<lb/>
pen, you can try too hard and<lb/>
mess things up<lb/>
But the attitude of the team is<lb/>
still positive, Brown said.<lb/>
"We've got no dissension as<lb/>
tar as 1 can tell he said. "There is<lb/>
still hope. I didn't come here for<lb/>
one year. 1 didn't come here to run<lb/>
from a challenge. 1 knew when I<lb/>
took the job we had some prob<lb/>
iems to deal with, some rebuild<lb/>
ing to olo<lb/>
Brown said support from<lb/>
within the university community<lb/>
has been helpful.<lb/>
It the tans were up there in<lb/>
the stands booing and saying we<lb/>
want to fire the coach, that would<lb/>
lx a negative Brown said "But<lb/>
they are not doing thai<lb/>
I ast week, quai tei ba ks t �n<lb/>
a than 1 la II and Deems Ma) com<lb/>
pleted onh seven ol 28 passes for<lb/>
)ust 62 yards, no torn hdow ns and<lb/>
four interceptions lln w realso<lb/>
sacked ti�� limes<lb/>
It Burnett plays Saturday it<lb/>
will mean nineol the I .u I leel;<lb/>
true freshman have played this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Brow n .�'� � annoum ed tart<lb/>
ing offensive guard Steve Stein<lb/>
bacher was "very doubtful" foi<lb/>
the (Georgia lech j im iftei suf<lb/>
fcring i pulled hamsti i linst<lb/>
the Wolfpa k 1 hat would !� i<lb/>
junior v ail W atts as tlv tartei<lb/>
Seminoles drop on oversight<lb/>
1 Al LAHASSEE, Fla Flor-<lb/>
State University officials<lb/>
vlered v In their team slid<lb/>
notches in f"he Associated<lb/>
ss weekly football poll after<lb/>
Seminoles won their sixth<lb/>
U game over the weekend.<lb/>
It turned out that one member<lb/>
the AB's 60-member panel in-<lb/>
ertantly left the Seminoles off<lb/>
ballot accounting tor a drop<lb/>
m fifth to seventh.<lb/>
Hie poll was the subject of<lb/>
� shows on Tallahassee radio<lb/>
stationsand a number of newspa-<lb/>
per stories in the state Tuesdaj<lb/>
It was an oversight on the<lb/>
I of the voter and an oversight<lb/>
Mir part for not double-check-<lb/>
ng -XT Sports Editor Darrell<lb/>
ristian said Tuesday. "We try<lb/>
nsure it's as honest, of course,<lb/>
md as accurate as such an unsci-<lb/>
entific survey can be "<lb/>
The voter who forgot the<lb/>
Seminoles blamed the oversight<lb/>
on preoccupation with dividing<lb/>
where to rank Miami alter the<lb/>
previously No. 1 Hurricanes lost<lb/>
toNotre Dame 31 30 on Saturday.<lb/>
It was "totally a slip on mv<lb/>
part the oter said 1 worked<lb/>
from last week's Top Twenty, but<lb/>
I think what happened was that in<lb/>
trying to decide how tax to drop<lb/>
Miami, 1 somehow overlooked<lb/>
Honda State<lb/>
ITie voter, not identified un-<lb/>
der poll guidelines, said he proba-<lb/>
bly would have voted the Semino-<lb/>
les seventh, enough to keep them<lb/>
No. 5 in the final tabu ition.<lb/>
Christian said this week's<lb/>
ill would stand, adding, "It's<lb/>
unfortunate, but it probably will<lb/>
rectify itself next week<lb/>
However, the poll contro-<lb/>
versy continues to cause great<lb/>
oncern among the school's pub<lb/>
ity people.<lb/>
"We feel, quite frankly, it<lb/>
hurts the integrity of the poll<lb/>
said Honda State Sports Informa-<lb/>
n Director Wayne Hogan.<lb/>
Hogan said the error could<lb/>
rpetuate itself because voters<lb/>
ften work off the previous<lb/>
week's poll table. Once listed as<lb/>
No. 7, the Seminoles are likely to<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
look to Cavs<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.<lb/>
V) - Wake Forest will have to<lb/>
Ivat Virginia Saturday to remain<lb/>
the running for the Atlantic<lb/>
�asti inference title, but that's a<lb/>
feat the Deacons haven't accom-<lb/>
plished in four years, Demon<lb/>
�eacon coach Bill Poolev said<lb/>
I uesday.<lb/>
"I was told th.it not a player<lb/>
on our squad has been part of a<lb/>
am thai has defeated Virginia.<lb/>
it's been quite a while Doolev<lb/>
sdl.l<lb/>
"This is a big game for us in<lb/>
thai we're 2-1 in the conference It<lb/>
we expect t stav in the race and<lb/>
-intend for the AC( champion-<lb/>
hip, we must win<lb/>
Hie I )eacons will have to<lb/>
overcome the Cavaliers' size and<lb/>
speed, Doolev said.<lb/>
"Virginia has the fastest re-<lb/>
eiver in the AC C in ohn Ford<lb/>
Doolev said at his weekly press<lb/>
i onferonce. Tim Finkelston is a<lb/>
big-play football player. Marcus<lb/>
Wilson is averaging almost 90<lb/>
yards a game rushing and Shawn<lb/>
Moore isan excellent option quar-<lb/>
terback. He is a threat running<lb/>
and throwing the football.<lb/>
"This is the biggest Virginia<lb/>
defensive team that I can remem-<lb/>
ber. On top of their size they have<lb/>
experience Three out of four<lb/>
starters return to the secondary<lb/>
remain No. 7 unless a higher-<lb/>
ranked team is upset, he said, and<lb/>
that could keep Honda State from<lb/>
being invited to one ol the major<lb/>
postseason bowl games<lb/>
"This little quirk (it fateould<lb/>
work in the long run to be a detri-<lb/>
ment 1 logansaid. "We want it to<lb/>
be made right. A lot ol things<lb/>
could change, but you never<lb/>
know<lb/>
After a 45-21 victory over East<lb/>
Carolina on Saturday, Florida<lb/>
state fell two places, behind Ne<lb/>
braska and undefeaU d West Vu<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
Nebraska, 6-1, moved from<lb/>
seventh to fifth after defeating<lb/>
No. 10 Oklahoma State 62-42<lb/>
West Virginia, 6 0, was idle and<lb/>
remained No. 6.<lb/>
"We've won six straight ball<lb/>
games  West Virginia moves in<lb/>
front ol us and they didn't play<lb/>
1 logan said.<lb/>
Florida State coach Bobbv<lb/>
B' d n said s tht i<lb/>
despite th<lb/>
"I've always I I tht<lb/>
polls and I've i be-<lb/>
he er in the I I've<lb/>
alwa) s �� ikei I the<lb/>
playoffs I" i Id e in<lb/>
the polls<lb/>
"It the n i ��<lb/>
that someb<lb/>
the I op i wenty, I d think that<lb/>
would take care ol itsell if it is<lb/>
corrected he added<lb/>
i t v � w '<lb/>
te us in<lb/>
Month of fundays<lb/>
OKTOBERFEST '88<lb/>
Come celebrate the season with<lb/>
good food and good times this<lb/>
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For a light breezy lunch,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058102_0021"/><lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20.1968 19<lb/>
EARLY IS HAMPTON<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Last Week - (7-2-1)<lb/>
Overall - (49-19-1)<lb/>
Syracuse<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Puke<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Vanderbilt<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
Tenn State<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
UCLA<lb/>
OIL CHANGE"<lb/>
pointment<lb/>
l do for vou:<lb/>
1 service!<lb/>
s ad)<lb/>
v shirt!<lb/>
fd �<lb/>
IMIT.<lb/>
K' recen<lb/>
ir. medical<lb/>
m ire<lb/>
�tudents should sign up at the<lb/>
u � contact<lb/>
;ment Center<lb/>
"HE NAVY.<lb/>
Tarheels in search of win<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C (AP) �<lb/>
In an effort to jump start the Tar<lb/>
Heels' struggling passing attack,<lb/>
North Carolina football coach<lb/>
Mack Brown says he may use<lb/>
freshman Todd Burnett at quar-<lb/>
terback Saturday against Georgia<lb/>
Tech.<lb/>
"Our problems on offense are<lb/>
very obvious Brown said Tues-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"We will look at Todd Burnett<lb/>
this week in practice. I don't know<lb/>
that he'll definitely play Satur-<lb/>
day, but we are not throwing<lb/>
anybody out<lb/>
Brown had originally<lb/>
planned to redshirt Burnett, a 6-<lb/>
foot-5, 195-pounder from Burke,<lb/>
Va. But after the Tar Heels' 48-3<lb/>
loss to North Carolina State last<lb/>
Saturday, Brown reconsidered.<lb/>
"People asked me 'Why play<lb/>
Todd and give up his freshman<lb/>
season?' Well, we are not giving<lb/>
up the ship. If Todd can improve<lb/>
us in that area, lef s go ahead and<lb/>
play Todd now<lb/>
North Carolina is off to its<lb/>
worst start ever.<lb/>
"I am not having fun now<lb/>
Brown said. "I don't like being 0-<lb/>
6.1 don't enjoy the jokes. Unless<lb/>
you've been through it, you can-<lb/>
not imagine what it does to your<lb/>
family<lb/>
Brown said the Tar Heels'<lb/>
rocky start has led to some press-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"Our team is down and strug-<lb/>
gling he said. "When you try so<lb/>
hard to force something to hap-<lb/>
pen, you can try too hard and<lb/>
mess things up<lb/>
But the attitude of the team is<lb/>
still positive, Brown said.<lb/>
"We've got no dissension as<lb/>
far as I can tell he said. "There is<lb/>
still hope. I didn't come here for<lb/>
one year. I didn't come here to run<lb/>
from a challenge. I knew when I<lb/>
took the job we had some prob-<lb/>
lems to deal with, some rebuild-<lb/>
ing to do<lb/>
Brown said support from<lb/>
within the university community<lb/>
has been helpful.<lb/>
"If the fans were up there in<lb/>
the stands booing and saying we<lb/>
want to fire the coach, that would<lb/>
be a negative Brown said. "But<lb/>
they are not doing that<lb/>
Last week, quarterbacks Jon-<lb/>
athan Hall and Deems May com-<lb/>
pleted only seven of 28 passes for<lb/>
just 62 yards, no touchdowns and<lb/>
four interceptions. They were also<lb/>
sacked five times.<lb/>
If Burnett plays Saturday, it<lb/>
will mean nine of the Tar Heels' 20<lb/>
true freshman have played this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Brown also announced start-<lb/>
ing offensive guard Steve Stein-<lb/>
bacher was "very doubtful" for<lb/>
the Georgia Tech game after suf-<lb/>
fering a pulled hamstring against<lb/>
the Wolfpack. That would leave<lb/>
junior Carl Watts as the starter.<lb/>
Seminoles drop on oversight<lb/>
Month of fundays<lb/>
OKTOBERFEST '88<lb/>
Come celebrate the season with<lb/>
P good food and good times this<lb/>
month at Annabelle's Restaurant.<lb/>
For a light breezy lunch,<lb/>
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excitement, October at<lb/>
Annabelle's is simply<lb/>
wunderbar! Come join<lb/>
TALLAHASSEE, Ha.� Flor-<lb/>
ida State University officials<lb/>
wondered why their team slid<lb/>
two notches in The Associated<lb/>
Tress weekly football poll after<lb/>
the Seminoles won their sixth<lb/>
straight game over the weekend.<lb/>
It turned out that one member<lb/>
of the AP's 60-member panel in-<lb/>
advertantly left the Seminoles off<lb/>
his ballot, accounting for a drop<lb/>
from fifth to seventh.<lb/>
The poll was the subject of<lb/>
talk shows on Tallahassee radio<lb/>
stations and a number of newspa-<lb/>
per stories in the state Tuesday.<lb/>
"It was an oversight on the<lb/>
part of the voter and an oversight<lb/>
on our part for not double-check-<lb/>
ing AP Sports Editor Darrell<lb/>
Christian said Tuesday. "We try<lb/>
to ensure it's as honest, of course,<lb/>
and as accurate as such an unsci-<lb/>
entific survey can be<lb/>
The voter who forgot the<lb/>
Seminoles blamed the oversight<lb/>
on preoccupation with deciding<lb/>
where to rank Miami after the<lb/>
previously No. 1 Hurricanes lost<lb/>
to Notre Dame 31 -30 on Saturday.<lb/>
It was "totally a slip on my<lb/>
part the voter said. "I worked<lb/>
from last week's Top Twenty, but<lb/>
I think what happened was that in<lb/>
trying to decide how faj: .to drop �<lb/>
Miami, I somehow overlooked<lb/>
Honda State<lb/>
The voter, not identified un-<lb/>
der poll guidelines, said he proba-<lb/>
bly would have voted the Semino-<lb/>
les seventh, enough to keep them<lb/>
No. 5 in the final tabulation.<lb/>
Christian said this week's<lb/>
poll would stand, adding, "It's<lb/>
unfortunate, but it probably will<lb/>
rectify itself next week<lb/>
However, the poll contro-<lb/>
versy continues to cause great<lb/>
concern among the school's pub-<lb/>
licity people.<lb/>
"We feel, quite frankly, it<lb/>
hurts the integrity of the poll<lb/>
said Florida State Sports Informa-<lb/>
tion Director Wayne Hogan.<lb/>
Hogan said the error could<lb/>
perpetuate itself because voters<lb/>
often work off the previous<lb/>
week's poll table. Once listed as<lb/>
No. 7, the Seminoles are likely to<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
look to Cavs<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.<lb/>
(AP)  Wake Forest will have to<lb/>
beat Virginia Saturday to remain<lb/>
in the running for the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference title, but thaf s a<lb/>
feat the Deacons haven't accom-<lb/>
plished in four years, Demon<lb/>
Deacon coach Bill Dooley said<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
"I was told that not a player<lb/>
on our squad has been part of a<lb/>
team that has defeated Virginia.<lb/>
It's been quite a while Dooley<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"This is a big game for us in<lb/>
that we're 2-1 in the conference. If<lb/>
we expect to stay in the race and<lb/>
contend for the ACC champion-<lb/>
ship, we must win<lb/>
The Deacons will have to<lb/>
overcome the Cavaliers' size and<lb/>
speed, Dooley said.<lb/>
"Virginia has the fastest re-<lb/>
ceiver in the ACC in John Ford<lb/>
Dooley said at his weekly press<lb/>
conference. Tim Finkelston is a<lb/>
big-play football player. Marcus<lb/>
Wilson is averaging almost 90<lb/>
yards a game rushing and Shawn<lb/>
Moore is an excellent option quar-<lb/>
terback. He is a threat running<lb/>
and throwing the football.<lb/>
'This is the biggest Virginia<lb/>
defensive team that I can remem-<lb/>
ber. On top of their size they have<lb/>
experience. Three out of four<lb/>
starters return to the secondary<lb/>
remain No. 7 unless a higher-<lb/>
ranked team is upset, he said, and<lb/>
that could keep Florida State from<lb/>
being invited to one of the major<lb/>
postseason bowl games.<lb/>
"This little quirk of fate could<lb/>
work in the long run to be a detri-<lb/>
ment Hogan said. "We want it to<lb/>
be made right. A lot of things<lb/>
could change, but you never<lb/>
know<lb/>
After a 45-21 victory over East<lb/>
Carolina on Saturday, Florida<lb/>
State fell two places, behind Ne-<lb/>
braska and undefeated West Vir-<lb/>
Bowden said he likes the polls<lb/>
despite the mistake,<lb/>
ginia. "I've always supported the<lb/>
Nebraska, 6-1, moved from polls and I've always been a be-<lb/>
seventh to fifth after defeating liever in the polls he said. "I've<lb/>
No. 10 Oklahoma State 62-42. always spoken out against the<lb/>
West Virginia, 6-0, was idle and playoffs because I do believe in<lb/>
remained No. 6. the polls<lb/>
"We've won six straight ball "If the reason we dropped is<lb/>
games  West Virginia moves in that somebody didn't vote us in<lb/>
front of us and they didn't play the Top Twenty, I'd think that<lb/>
Hogan said. would take care of itself if it is<lb/>
Florida State coach Bobby corrected he added.<lb/>
the fun and get into<lb/>
the spirit of<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058102_0022"/><lb/>
<lb/>
20<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 20, 18<lb/>
Ford wary of the Wolfpack<lb/>
CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) �<lb/>
ure, Clemson was impressive in<lb/>
whipping previously unbeaten<lb/>
Duke, but Coach Danny Ford is<lb/>
hesitant to praise the No. 9 Tigers<lb/>
too much.<lb/>
"They haven't turned the<lb/>
corner yet Ford said Tuesday at<lb/>
his weekly news conference.<lb/>
They have it in 'em to play well.<lb/>
11 they show up and play well that<lb/>
would be what we'd like.<lb/>
Whether we can get it out of them,<lb/>
as coaches, remains to be seen<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
The Tigers have a chance for<lb/>
some revenge Saturday against<lb/>
North Carolina State or they<lb/>
could accomplish a dubious first<lb/>
under Ford.<lb/>
Clemson has never lost to the<lb/>
same team three straight seasons<lb/>
under Ford since he took over as<lb/>
head coach in 1978. That could<lb/>
change when Clemson goes to<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C to face the<lb/>
Wolfpack.<lb/>
N.C State has beaten the Ti-<lb/>
gers two straight years and is<lb/>
coming off an impressive 48-3<lb/>
victory over arch-rival North<lb/>
Carolina. A year ago, N.C. State<lb/>
grabbed a 30-0 half time lead and<lb/>
held on to defeat the Tigers 30-28<lb/>
in Death Valley. Clemson was<lb/>
ranked seventh in the nation at<lb/>
the time and had won 11 straight<lb/>
games.<lb/>
While Ford insisted the streak<lb/>
isn't on his mind, he clearly would<lb/>
like to end it Saturday.<lb/>
"If I could block and tackle<lb/>
and go in there, I could break it<lb/>
Ford said. "But 1 don't get to play<lb/>
you know. I'd be very competi-<lb/>
tive; I'd do my durndest to break<lb/>
it. But all I can do is sit over there<lb/>
on the sidelines with my hands in<lb/>
my pockets and see if our football<lb/>
team can do it<lb/>
"Everything that we've ever<lb/>
done at Clemson our football<lb/>
team's done anyway. I hope<lb/>
they're ready to play. I haven't<lb/>
had to block anybody yet, or<lb/>
tackle anybody. I've been run<lb/>
over a couple of times when I<lb/>
couldn't get out of the way on the<lb/>
sideline<lb/>
"Our football team is capable.<lb/>
Three in a row, that ain't bad.<lb/>
Somewhere down the road it<lb/>
might be 10. Then I'd be in bad<lb/>
trouble. I know that Coach (Dick)<lb/>
Sheridan is an excellent coach and<lb/>
all that, but I'm really not con-<lb/>
cerned about him blocking me or<lb/>
tackling me. I'm concerned about<lb/>
how our people respond to play-<lb/>
ing against an excellent football<lb/>
team who has beaten our fanny<lb/>
the last two years and done it<lb/>
well<lb/>
Ford said his Tigers should<lb/>
have no trouble getting ready this<lb/>
year to play the Wolfpack.<lb/>
"We really shouldn't have a<lb/>
reason to go up there and not be<lb/>
fully prepared to play he said.<lb/>
"You've got to be a double idiot to<lb/>
have been beaten twice and think<lb/>
you can go up there and win by<lb/>
just showing up<lb/>
The Tigers, who have won<lb/>
two straight Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference titles are coming off a 39-<lb/>
17 victory over previously unde-<lb/>
feated Duke at Death Valley to<lb/>
push their record to 5-1 overall<lb/>
and 3-0 in the ACC. N.C. State is 5-<lb/>
1 and 3-1.<lb/>
Instant replay for colleges?<lb/>
(AP) � In the wake of the flap<lb/>
that arose following Notre<lb/>
Harne's controversial 31-30 vic-<lb/>
tory over Miami, might college<lb/>
football go the way of the NFL and<lb/>
adopt the instant replay? "I hope<lb/>
not says Dave Nelson, secre-<lb/>
tary-editor of the NCAA Football<lb/>
Rules Committee.<lb/>
Not only is Nelson, former<lb/>
head coach and athletic director at<lb/>
the University of Delaware and<lb/>
now the dean of the school of<lb/>
physical education there, the<lb/>
nation's guru when it comes to<lb/>
football rules, he also was an aer-<lb/>
ial photographer during World<lb/>
War 11.<lb/>
So he knows whereof he<lb/>
speaks when he says that "the<lb/>
camera atop the press box ma v be<lb/>
75 feet up in the air, the camera in<lb/>
the end zone may be 35-40 yards<lb/>
away, and they're subject to unbe-<lb/>
lievable distortion and unbeliev-<lb/>
able parallax problems<lb/>
"I'm not enamored with re-<lb/>
plays. To begin with, they're not<lb/>
absolute. You can't assume the<lb/>
camera is perfect<lb/>
Nelson says the instant replay<lb/>
has never been seriously dis-<lb/>
cussed because it would have to<lb/>
be available for every game and<lb/>
the cost would be cxhorbitant.<lb/>
The NFL needs it for onlv 14<lb/>
games a week.<lb/>
What he would like to see is<lb/>
an end to split officiating crews.<lb/>
He has proposed it before, to no<lb/>
avail, and he will include it when<lb/>
he sends out his annual question-<lb/>
naire to coaches before their Janu-<lb/>
ary convention.<lb/>
"I've been concerned more<lb/>
than once about split crews and<lb/>
this year I've heard more com-<lb/>
plaints than any ever. One team<lb/>
thinks the other team's crew is<lb/>
incompetent and thinks they're<lb/>
not going to get a fair shake<lb/>
Certain nonconference<lb/>
games have eliminated split<lb/>
crews. When Penn State visits<lb/>
Alabama this weekend, all the<lb/>
officials will be from the South-<lb/>
eastern Conference. When Ala-<lb/>
bama risited Penn State last year,<lb/>
they came from the Collegiate<lb/>
Independents Football Officiat-<lb/>
ing Association.<lb/>
That was the agreement<lb/>
when Bear Bryant and Joe Paterno<lb/>
contracted for the long-term se-<lb/>
ries.<lb/>
The Notre Dame-Miami<lb/>
game had four CIFOA officials<lb/>
and three from the Southern Inde-<lb/>
pendents (SIFOA), the gTOup<lb/>
Miami uses. The CIFOA supplies<lb/>
officials for nine Eastern schools,<lb/>
plus Notre Dame.<lb/>
Rudd fined $6,000 for actions<lb/>
DAYTONA BEACH, Ha.<lb/>
(AP) - NASCAR officials fined<lb/>
eky Rudd $6,000 Tuesday after<lb/>
reviewing Sunday's Holly Farms<lb/>
A0Q Winston Cup stock car race in<lb/>
North Wilkesboro, N.C.<lb/>
Rudd, a native of Chesai<lb/>
cake, Va and Dale Earnhardt of<lb/>
Kannapolis, N.C, had been in-<lb/>
volved in a pair of bumping inci-<lb/>
dents with about 40 laps left in the<lb/>
400-lap race. Both were warned<lb/>
and sent to the rear of the field for<lb/>
a restart after a caution period.<lb/>
Rudd and Earnhardt got to-<lb/>
gether again late in the race.<lb/>
Earnhardt spun sideways on lap<lb/>
395 and was hit by a Ford driven<lb/>
by Mark Martin of Batesville, Ark.<lb/>
Officials determined Rudd's dri v-<lb/>
ing was responsible.<lb/>
Rudd drives a Buick owned<lb/>
by Kenny Bernstein of Indianapo-<lb/>
lis, Ind.<lb/>
Earnhardt drives a Chevrolet<lb/>
fielded by Richard Childress of<lb/>
Winston-Salem, N.C.<lb/>
5th street<lb/>
Subway<lb/>
Delivers!<lb/>
Give us a call<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
SOMETHM'<lb/>
FR0MSUBWAY<lb/>
Buy One Sub Get<lb/>
Another For 99�<lb/>
fWith purchase of Medium Drinks)<lb/>
Offer Expires Oct 31 1988<lb/>
Tail-Gate With Overtoil's<lb/>
Whole Fryers<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Limit 4 please with $10.00 food order<lb/>
Packer's Label<lb/>
Frozen French<lb/>
Fried Potatoes<lb/>
2 forl00<lb/>
2 lb. bag<lb/>
Bounty Towels<lb/>
Giant roll<lb/>
Ground Fresh Daily<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
5 lbs. or more<lb/>
Donald Duck<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
$59<lb/>
12 gallon carton<lb/>
New Crop<lb/>
Florida Orangi<lb/>
5 lb. bag<lb/>
Merico Butter-<lb/>
Me-Not Biscuits<lb/>
3 for $1.00<lb/>
Large can<lb/>
Charmin Tissue<lb/>
4 roll package<lb/>
Country Cane<lb/>
Sugar<lb/>
99<lb/>
4.4 lb. bag<lb/>
Limit one bag per customer per order with $10.00<lb/>
food order excluding advertised specials<lb/>
Round Steak<lb/>
$1.79<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Golden Valley<lb/>
Pears<lb/>
29 oz. can<lb/>
Bold Detergent<lb/>
Giant 42 oz box<lb/>
Limit one box per customer per order with SI0.00<lb/>
food order excluding advertised specials<lb/>
Golden Ripe<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
Prices effective Sunday, October 23-Tuesday, October 25, 1988<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Mastercard &amp; Visa Accepted<lb/>
W1C - Food Stamps Welcome<lb/>
Store Hours<lb/>
Open Sundays 1 p.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Monday-Saturday, 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
211 Jarvis Street<lb/>
2 Blocks From E.C.U.<lb/>
OVEPTONS<lb/>
Supem<lb/>
<pb facs="00058102_0023"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>