<?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="00058103_0001"/>
Inside:<lb/>
EDITORIALS .w 4<lb/>
FEATURES7<lb/>
SPORTS10<lb/>
Features:<lb/>
ChiPpy gives "Elvira, Mistress of Darkness" two<lb/>
thumbs down, says it had one funny line and that<lb/>
one is questionable, see for yourself on page 7.<lb/>
Sports:<lb/>
The Pirates extend their losing streak at 1-7 and the<lb/>
Miami Hurricanes blow into Ficklen with hopes of<lb/>
lengthening the streak, see page 10.<lb/>
She iEaat (Earnltnian<lb/>
Vol.63 No. 29<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Tuesday October 25,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Knifing mars weekend for two students<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
ewt Editor<lb/>
Two ECU students, Joseph L.<lb/>
Molineauv and Christopher D.<lb/>
Simpson, were knifed at 1:50 a.m.<lb/>
Saturday in the wooded area be-<lb/>
tween Greene Dormitory and the<lb/>
ROTC building.<lb/>
Chief Johnny R. Rose of ECU<lb/>
Tublic Safety said, "Tony L. Sauls,<lb/>
18, of Clayton, NC. was appre-<lb/>
hended by ECU Public Safety an<lb/>
hour-and-a-half later in a nearbv<lb/>
apartment complex and charged<lb/>
with two counts of assault with a<lb/>
deadly weapon inflicting serious<lb/>
injurv<lb/>
Sauls was released Saturday<lb/>
morning on $5,000 bond from the<lb/>
Pitt County Jail.<lb/>
Molmeux and Simpson were<lb/>
taken to Pitt County Hospital<lb/>
where they were treated for mul-<lb/>
tiple lacerations to their heads,<lb/>
faces and arms.<lb/>
The incident, according to<lb/>
Simpson, started when he and<lb/>
Molineaux were in the lobby of<lb/>
Greene Dorm and Sauls was at-<lb/>
tempting to enter.<lb/>
Simpson estimated<lb/>
the number of<lb/>
stitches rendered to<lb/>
Molineaux at<lb/>
30-40 in the facial<lb/>
area and 30-35 in<lb/>
his arm.<lb/>
'The doors were ocked and<lb/>
he was trying to get in said<lb/>
Simpson. "We laughed at him for<lb/>
a minute or two and then let him<lb/>
in. Once he was in, he and Jomo<lb/>
(Molineaux's nickname) started<lb/>
arguing and they took it outside,<lb/>
around to the east side of the<lb/>
dorm. When 1 looked around the<lb/>
comer he had punched Jomo and<lb/>
ran<lb/>
Simpson said he chased Sauls<lb/>
and gave up to check on Molin-<lb/>
eaux.<lb/>
"Jomo was leaning up against<lb/>
a tree when this guy came sneak-<lb/>
ing up behind us with what<lb/>
looked like a knife said<lb/>
Simpson. "He swung at Jomo and<lb/>
cut him from his car to his jaw to<lb/>
the corner of his mouth. Jomo put<lb/>
his arm up to block it and was also<lb/>
cut on the arm.<lb/>
"1 tried to push him away and<lb/>
he hit me in the lip, arm and shoul-<lb/>
der and then caught me in the<lb/>
back of the head. He cut me on the<lb/>
leg when 1 tried to kick him<lb/>
Simpson estimated the num-<lb/>
ber of stitches rendered to Molin-<lb/>
eaux at 30-40 in the facial area and<lb/>
30-35 in hisarm. Molineaux could<lb/>
not be reached for comment.<lb/>
"From what I saw he'll have to<lb/>
have plastic surgery, he was re-<lb/>
ally cut up said Simpson.<lb/>
Simpson received three<lb/>
stitches in his lip, 10 in the back of<lb/>
his head and 15 in his shoulder<lb/>
and arm.<lb/>
Rose said Sauls was arrested<lb/>
with a knife in his possession but<lb/>
added the police arc not sure if it is<lb/>
the same weapon used in the as-<lb/>
sault.<lb/>
Sauls told police that he was a<lb/>
student at N.C. State but police<lb/>
have not confirmed this either.<lb/>
The police were able to appre-<lb/>
hend and identify the assailant<lb/>
with the help of eye witnesses<lb/>
who saw Sauls when he was in the<lb/>
lobby of Greene Dorm.<lb/>
Sauls' court date is set for<lb/>
Nov. 7 in the District Court of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Student and town leaders<lb/>
set Halloween on Monday<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
Nam Editor<lb/>
Amid rumors and controversy, the Halloween celebration is set for<lb/>
Monday night. According to the panel that decided on Monday as<lb/>
the date, this year's Halloween will be no different than last<lb/>
year's(Photo by Thomas Walters, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
As scheduled and empha-<lb/>
sized by the Town Council,<lb/>
Greenville Police Department<lb/>
and SGA President Larry<lb/>
Murphy the Halloween celebra-<lb/>
tion will take place next Monday<lb/>
Night.<lb/>
The rumor of the celebration<lb/>
taking place Saturday night is<lb/>
not true.<lb/>
'The Town Council, bar<lb/>
owners, city and campus police,<lb/>
SRA, SGA, Dean Speier, IFC and<lb/>
the Panhellenic Council met and<lb/>
all decided that Halloween will<lb/>
be on Monday � it's as simple as<lb/>
that Murphy said.<lb/>
Murphy said that since the<lb/>
celebration is on Monday, it will<lb/>
cut down on the number of<lb/>
people coming to Greenville for<lb/>
the party. "It will be more of a<lb/>
Greenville and ECU function<lb/>
"We'll not tolerate people<lb/>
drinking and congregating in the<lb/>
streets on Saturday night said<lb/>
Captain Randy Nichols of the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department.<lb/>
"They're (partiers) welcome to<lb/>
come downtown in their cos-<lb/>
tumes and patronize the bars and<lb/>
do as they please, but Saturday<lb/>
night is just another weekend<lb/>
night<lb/>
He also said the police de-<lb/>
partment along with North<lb/>
Carolina Alcohol Law Enforce-<lb/>
ment (N.C.A.L.E.) officials are<lb/>
aware that more people than<lb/>
usual will be in Greenville on the<lb/>
weekend prior to Halloween<lb/>
because of the home football<lb/>
game. "We have a contingency<lb/>
plan in case things get out of<lb/>
hand Saturday night, we won't<lb/>
hesitate to deploy the people<lb/>
Nichols said.<lb/>
Nichols said the police arc<lb/>
not expecti ng anything out of the<lb/>
ordinary to happen, but are pre-<lb/>
pared in case something does.<lb/>
City Manager Gregory<lb/>
Knowles said Monday night will<lb/>
be a typical Greenville Hallow-<lb/>
een. "Cotanche and Fifth Streets<lb/>
will be barricaded off so the traf-<lb/>
fic can't get through, people will<lb/>
be allowed to gather and drink in<lb/>
the streets as usual � this year will<lb/>
be no different than any other<lb/>
year Knowles said.<lb/>
Knowles added that next year<lb/>
the city wants to sponsor a Hallow-<lb/>
een festival, that is if everything<lb/>
goes well on Monday night.<lb/>
"Each year Halloween costs<lb/>
the city $32,000 said Knowles.<lb/>
"This amount covers payment for<lb/>
clean-up crews, barricading the<lb/>
streets and paying the extra law<lb/>
enforcement personnel.<lb/>
"We would like to take that<lb/>
money and sponsor a Halloween<lb/>
festival out on the village green to<lb/>
get the celebration out of the street.<lb/>
See HALLOWEEN, page 2<lb/>
I Students look at displays set up by the N.C. Highway Patrol on<lb/>
 Thursday as a part of Alcohol Awareness Week (Photo by Thomas!<lb/>
l Walters, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
ECU Democrats give<lb/>
question to Bentsen<lb/>
By BEN SELBY<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
SGA faced with condom resolution<lb/>
By MICHAEL BARTLETT<lb/>
SU� Writer<lb/>
A resolution concerning con-<lb/>
dom vending machines in resi-<lb/>
dence halls of universities in the<lb/>
UNC system was the main topic<lb/>
of the SGA's fifth meeting.<lb/>
The resolution, submitted by<lb/>
Student Welfare Chairman Lee<lb/>
Toler, urged the Board of Gover-<lb/>
nors of the UNC system to require<lb/>
condom vending machines be<lb/>
placed in all residence halls of uni-<lb/>
versities in the UNC system. The<lb/>
proceeds from the sale of con-<lb/>
doms will go to the refilling and<lb/>
maintenance of the vending ma-<lb/>
chines.<lb/>
In backing this issue, Toler<lb/>
said 33,000 people are infected<lb/>
with sexually transmitted dis-<lb/>
eases (STUs) everyday.<lb/>
"There have been 280 cases of<lb/>
AIDS reported on college com-<lb/>
puses nation-wide and that may<lb/>
not seem like a lot. But if you<lb/>
consider current growth trends<lb/>
there will be approximately<lb/>
280,000 cases in 1998. We can not<lb/>
wait until 1998 to implement this<lb/>
plan Toler said.<lb/>
Also supporting the resolu-<lb/>
tion Legislator Jim Layten, said,<lb/>
"If you don't have condom ma-<lb/>
chines there when the occassion<lb/>
arises, then you have another<lb/>
choice to make<lb/>
Another Legislator, Karen<lb/>
Smith, added, "You won't use it if<lb/>
it's not there. There are a lot of<lb/>
diseases going around and every-<lb/>
one needs the protection<lb/>
In a post meeting interview<lb/>
Ms. Smith said she felt that there<lb/>
was a need to increase the accessi-<lb/>
bility of condoms. "We are ma-<lb/>
ture people and parents need to<lb/>
understand that college is differ-<lb/>
ent Smith said.<lb/>
Toler in the same meting said<lb/>
college students are the target<lb/>
group (age wise) being infected<lb/>
by STD's. "If you do not promote<lb/>
A similar resolution<lb/>
was passed by last<lb/>
year's SGA but it was<lb/>
vetoed by Chancellor<lb/>
Eakin. Even though it<lb/>
was vetoed, last year's<lb/>
resolution passed after<lb/>
an hour of affirative<lb/>
and negative debate.<lb/>
This year's resolution<lb/>
passed without any op-<lb/>
position.<lb/>
accessibility and communication<lb/>
then to me you are placinga value<lb/>
on human life<lb/>
Toler went added, "If you<lb/>
save one life you have accom-<lb/>
plished your goal<lb/>
A similar resolution was<lb/>
passed by last year's SGA but it<lb/>
was vetoed by Chancellor Eakin.<lb/>
Even though it vetoed last year's<lb/>
resolution passed after an hour of<lb/>
affirmative and negative debate.<lb/>
This year's resolution passed<lb/>
without any opposition.<lb/>
In a telephone interview after<lb/>
the meeting, Eakin, declined to<lb/>
comment on the condom issue<lb/>
until he has had the opportunity<lb/>
to view the legislation.<lb/>
This SGA purposal will be<lb/>
sent to Eakin; Chairman of the<lb/>
UNC Board of Governors, CD.<lb/>
Spangler and Director of ECU<lb/>
Student Health Services, James<lb/>
McCallum.<lb/>
In other old business, a<lb/>
constitution was passed for the<lb/>
ECU Young Democrats Club.<lb/>
The SGA meetings are open to all<lb/>
students and they meet every<lb/>
Monday at 5 p.m.<lb/>
ECU made history last Thurs-<lb/>
day by taking an interactive part<lb/>
in the Democratic presidential<lb/>
campaign. Broadcasting live from<lb/>
Corpus Christi, Texas, vice-presi-<lb/>
dential nominee Sen. Lloyd<lb/>
Bentsen held a teleconference that<lb/>
included 12 states and 21 univer-<lb/>
sities nationwide.<lb/>
Each school was allowed to<lb/>
ask one question from preselected<lb/>
subject areas. ECU's Bill Carroll,<lb/>
president of the ECU College<lb/>
Democrats asked Sen. Bentsen<lb/>
'What economic advantages the<lb/>
democratic ticket would offer<lb/>
graduating students that a repub-<lb/>
lican ticket wouldn't<lb/>
Bentsen took the opportunity<lb/>
to discuss the trade deficit and<lb/>
how the government needs to<lb/>
plant seed money in American<lb/>
business so that we can compete<lb/>
with economic consortiums that<lb/>
are emerging in Japan and Eu-<lb/>
rope. He said that a sound, do-<lb/>
mestic economic base would offer<lb/>
the greatest security for the fu-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
During his discussion of the<lb/>
Bush-Quayle ticket, Bentsen at-<lb/>
tempted to clarify democratic<lb/>
position on gun-control, the<lb/>
homeless, the deficit, defense<lb/>
spending, and the way of eco-<lb/>
nomic reform.<lb/>
He appealed for additional<lb/>
support from the voters that were<lb/>
tuning in "Don't think your vote<lb/>
doesn't count Bentsen said "It's<lb/>
terribly important<lb/>
Former Democratic presiden-<lb/>
tial candidates Albert Gore and<lb/>
the Rev. Jesse Jackson spoke from<lb/>
Memphis State University. Gore<lb/>
said we didn't need an admini-<lb/>
stration that depended on astrol-<lb/>
ogy for our country's future suc-<lb/>
cess, and Jackson added that it<lb/>
was time for young Americans to<lb/>
come alive and shift gears.<lb/>
State Sen. Russell Walker was<lb/>
at Mendenhall for the event. He<lb/>
said that Dukakis had not con-<lb/>
ceded North Carolina and that it<lb/>
has been a "nip and tuck race in<lb/>
N.C. since the beginning<lb/>
Sen. Harold Hardison, from<lb/>
Deep Run, N.C, said that we live<lb/>
in a day and age of electronics. It<lb/>
(the teleconference) is another<lb/>
step in the political process. He<lb/>
told the group of about 30 stu-<lb/>
dents, that he was from a day<lb/>
when leaders gave young people<lb/>
opportunity. "This is serious<lb/>
business he said. "Economic<lb/>
opportunity for the future is<lb/>
knocking. Think about you re-<lb/>
sponsibilities as an american citi-<lb/>
zen he said.<lb/>
Hardison empahsized how<lb/>
important voting was to the<lb/>
democratic endeavor. "You are<lb/>
the most important person here<lb/>
Tell you self, he concluded, "If it is<lb/>
to be, it is up to me<lb/>
WZMB's silence comes<lb/>
from several problems<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
WZMB is still silent because<lb/>
of complications in having the<lb/>
damaged component, called the<lb/>
exciter, returned from being re-<lb/>
paired.<lb/>
The exciter which maintains<lb/>
WZMB's signal at a frequency of<lb/>
91.3 MHz, burned out one month<lb/>
ago on September 24.<lb/>
Rather than risk losing its li-<lb/>
cense to broadcast, WZMB was<lb/>
forced to suspend operation until<lb/>
the component was fixed. The<lb/>
exciter was sent back to Versa<lb/>
Count, which sold WZMB the<lb/>
exciter five years ?. go, for repairs.<lb/>
In the last month. Versa<lb/>
Count has given General Man-<lb/>
ager Keith Powe the runaround.<lb/>
That is to say, they have not met<lb/>
their promised deadlines on re-<lb/>
pairing and returning the compo-<lb/>
nent.<lb/>
See'ZMB page 2<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0002"/><lb/>
Illl EAS1 CARCH 1MAN<lb/>
I VTOHFR 25, WSH<lb/>
Stress can cause alcoholism<lb/>
1 have a triend who seems to<lb/>
have a drinking problem What<lb/>
can 1 do to help her"<lb/>
Each person deals with stress<lb/>
and problems in their lives differ<lb/>
ently Some withdraw and avoid<lb/>
contact or closeness with outsid<lb/>
ers while others increase their<lb/>
personal contacts Others spend<lb/>
more time than usual on<lb/>
schoolu ork and then some turn to<lb/>
alcohol and other drugs to help<lb/>
them cope<lb/>
It may not be the amount of<lb/>
alcohol someone drinks that<lb/>
causes a problem as much as the<lb/>
reasons behind his or her drink<lb/>
To Your Health<lb/>
By<lb/>
Mary-Elesha Adams<lb/>
ing and the effect oi the drinking<lb/>
on studies, relationships, future<lb/>
plans, and )obs.<lb/>
It you're concerned that a<lb/>
friend has a drinking problem,<lb/>
don't be afraid to bnng it up. Try<lb/>
to show your concern so that you<lb/>
don't cause your tnend to have a<lb/>
defensive reaction It you tell the<lb/>
friend that he or she has a drink-<lb/>
ing problem they will most likely<lb/>
deny it and become angry.<lb/>
A good approach is to ask the<lb/>
person it he or she is concerned<lb/>
with the consequences of drink<lb/>
ing or to ask it he or she has a<lb/>
problem. IV prepared tor possible<lb/>
outlashes from raising the ques-<lb/>
tionofadrinkingproblem Hvenil<lb/>
you raised the issue in an appro<lb/>
priate manner the person may<lb/>
react with detensiveness or de-<lb/>
nial. It's important to remember<lb/>
that you can't take control o<lb/>
anyone's lite and you should not<lb/>
feel guilty about not "helpingher<lb/>
get better<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Si-ruinq llie Eai,t Camlirvi campus � '<lb/>
James F. J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey Spencer M<lb/>
Ri hard-Alan Cook Adam ESIa<lb/>
Ashley E. Dall<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
South<lb/>
cuss alcohol use with you. I lie<lb/>
Counseling Center provides re-<lb/>
source materials about alcohol<lb/>
and drugs.<lb/>
MONTHLY HA<lb/>
0-4') Column ln hes<lb/>
50 99<lb/>
100-149 <lb/>
150 109 <lb/>
20O-249 <lb/>
250 and above<lb/>
3 I .<lb/>
;<lb/>
4<lb/>
Halloween set for Monday<lb/>
Continued trom page 1<lb/>
The plan is to get th<lb/>
groups like fraternities,<lb/>
campus<lb/>
ororities,<lb/>
SRA. SGA and anyone else w<lb/>
wants to help to pitch in and m<lb/>
this thing go<lb/>
Knowles said in order for the<lb/>
citv to sponsor a Halloween festi-<lb/>
blv.<lb/>
am<lb/>
This means no proporU<lb/>
no val the participants in this year's age to the downtown businesses<lb/>
ake celebration "need to act responsi- dispersing at 2:30 a.m. when the<lb/>
 cleaning crews becin their work<lb/>
ZMB may need $14,000<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Because ol the current prob-<lb/>
lems and the fact that the exciter<lb/>
has been a constant problem<lb/>
station engineer Macon Dail s<lb/>
u was purchased, WZMB is bm -<lb/>
ing a new one. in addition, they<lb/>
are buying a new transmitter and<lb/>
power amplifier, mvA arc having<lb/>
routine maintenance work per-<lb/>
formed on their antenna.<lb/>
WZMB will go back on the air<lb/>
if and when their old exciter is<lb/>
returned, but, due in part to Pur-<lb/>
chasing Department policy, the<lb/>
new equipment probably will not<lb/>
be available tor a minimum of<lb/>
thirtv days As soon as the<lb/>
equipment is installed the old<lb/>
exciter will be relegated to the role<lb/>
of backup.<lb/>
Although no one has yet de-<lb/>
cided what company will provide<lb/>
the new equipment, all compa-<lb/>
nies currently under considera-<lb/>
tion have 24-hour hotlines and<lb/>
technical assistance available, so<lb/>
no repeat of the Versa Count epi-<lb/>
sode is likely.<lb/>
The Media board moved<lb/>
Monday to allot WZMB the funds<lb/>
it needs to purchase its new mate-<lb/>
rials and get back io the business<lb/>
of broadcasting.<lb/>
The final tab mav come to as<lb/>
much as $14,000.<lb/>
N.C.A.L.E. officials, are broken<lb/>
each year at Halloween and they<lb/>
want to stop the street celebration.<lb/>
"It the the students help us this<lb/>
year, we'll help them next year.<lb/>
"he festival is something we<lb/>
and showing respect toward the would really like to sponsor, but<lb/>
police and property cooperation is the key Knowles<lb/>
He said eight laws, set by said.<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
I (lharge in A i li!<lb/>
One c. ilor and black<lb/>
fwo col Iv and hUi k<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
I  �<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Frida<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Phones757-6366<lb/>
757-655S<lb/>
Trace<lb/>
in milk<lb/>
MB<lb/>
, incy xjnsellng,Forfurthet nfonral -<lb/>
; V y&amp;ll between j t. ixw! S<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
Triple Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
with Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
$2.00 Frozen Drinks<lb/>
$2,00 Teas<lb/>
$1.00 Cans of Beer<lb/>
Greeks: Bring 3 or<lb/>
more people and all of<lb/>
you will get in free!<lb/>
t<lb/>
iBienvenidos Amigos<lb/>
Open 7 Days For Lunch &amp; Dinner<lb/>
Lunch Specials $3.95<lb/>
Served Mon. -Frl.<lb/>
1 lam till 3pm<lb/>
Dinner Specials $5.95<lb/>
Includes Dessert<lb/>
Served SunThur.<lb/>
After 5pm<lb/>
Late Night Special C m<lb/>
Mexican Pizza GrandeOnly Zj3<lb/>
Sunday-Thursday After 10 CO P M<lb/>
Friday &amp; Saturday After 1100 PM<lb/>
521 Cotancne Street<lb/>
757-1666<lb/>
:<lb/>
if� TF <lb/>
For<lb/>
COP RIGH1 '988  EF<lb/>
TFV AND PRICES G N ft �<lb/>
23 THROUGH SA rURDAI r 29<lb/>
RIGHT TO Lltv" " . AN riTIi  Nl<lb/>
search hre<lb/>
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JN(<lb/>
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ADVERTISEO ITEM POLICY<lb/>
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BANACOL<lb/>
Golden Ripe<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
Pound<lb/>
$<lb/>
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R;jg - Prin<lb/>
Iterr<lb/>
With Stud'<lb/>
<lb/>
CQST CUTTEft<lb/>
(CASH SAVER AM A<lb/>
NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,<lb/>
Diet Pepsi<lb/>
or Pepsi Cola<lb/>
2Liter<lb/>
Play Kroger s NEW<lb/>
Match h Wine Game<lb/>
"Cost Cutter Cash Saverama<lb/>
And You Could Take Home<lb/>
CASHl FREE PRIZES' A Trip<lb/>
To The Carribbean1<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058103_0003"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
y<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25. WM<lb/>
Stress can cause alcoholism<lb/>
I have a friend who seems to<lb/>
have a drinking problem. What<lb/>
can I do to help her?<lb/>
Each person deals with stress<lb/>
and problems in their lives differ-<lb/>
ently. Some withdraw and avoid<lb/>
contact or closeness with outsid-<lb/>
ers while others increase their<lb/>
personal contacts. Others spend<lb/>
more time than usual on<lb/>
school work and then some turn to<lb/>
alcohol and other drugs to help<lb/>
them cope.<lb/>
It may not be the amount of<lb/>
alcohol someone drinks that<lb/>
causes a problem as much as the<lb/>
reasons behind his or her drink-<lb/>
To Your Health<lb/>
By<lb/>
Mary-Elesha Adams<lb/>
ing and the effect of the drinking<lb/>
on studies, relationships, future<lb/>
plans, and jobs.<lb/>
If you're concerned that a<lb/>
friend has a drinking problem,<lb/>
don't be afraid to bring it up. Try<lb/>
to show your concern so that you<lb/>
don't cause your friend to have a<lb/>
defensive reaction. If you tell the<lb/>
friend that he or she has a drink-<lb/>
ing problem they will most likely<lb/>
deny it and become angry.<lb/>
A good approach is to ask the<lb/>
person if he or she is concerned<lb/>
with the consequences of drink-<lb/>
ing or to ask if he or she has a<lb/>
problem. Be prepared for possible<lb/>
outlashes from raising the ques-<lb/>
tion of a drinking problem. Even if<lb/>
you raised the issue in an appro-<lb/>
priate manner the person may<lb/>
react with defensiveness or de-<lb/>
nial. It's important to remember<lb/>
that you can't take control of<lb/>
anyone's life and you should not<lb/>
feel guilty about not "helping her<lb/>
get better<lb/>
It would be helpful for you to<lb/>
learn more about alcohol abuse<lb/>
and alcoholism. The Student<lb/>
Health Center has an excellent<lb/>
brochure entitled "How to Help a<lb/>
Friend With a Drinking Problem"<lb/>
and additional information about<lb/>
alcohol and drugs that you can<lb/>
pick up. BACCHUS, a student<lb/>
alcohol education group, located<lb/>
in 301 Erwin Building has trained<lb/>
student educators who can dis-<lb/>
cuss alcohol use with you. The<lb/>
Counseling Center provides re-<lb/>
source materials about alcohol<lb/>
and drugs.<lb/>
Halloween set for Monday<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
this thing go<lb/>
The plan is to get the campus Knowles said in order for the<lb/>
groups like fraternities, sororities, city to sponsor a Halloween festi-<lb/>
SRA, SGA and anyone else who vai the participants in this year's<lb/>
wants to help to pitch in and make celebration "need to act responsi-<lb/>
ZMB may need $14,000<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Because of the current prob-<lb/>
lems and the fact that the exciter<lb/>
has been a constant problem for<lb/>
station engineer Macon Dail since<lb/>
it was purchased, WZMB is buy-<lb/>
ing a new one. In addition, they<lb/>
are buying a new transmitter and<lb/>
power amplifier, and are having<lb/>
routine maintenance work per-<lb/>
formed on their antenna.<lb/>
WZMB will go back on the air<lb/>
if and when their old exciter is<lb/>
returned, but, due in part to Pur-<lb/>
chasing Department policy, the<lb/>
new equipment probably will not<lb/>
be available for a minimum of<lb/>
thirty days. As soon as the new<lb/>
equipment is installed, the old<lb/>
exciter will be relegated to the role<lb/>
of backup.<lb/>
Although no one has yet de-<lb/>
cided what company will provide<lb/>
the new equipment, all compa-<lb/>
nies currently under considera-<lb/>
tion have 24-hour hotlines and<lb/>
technical assistance available, so<lb/>
no repeat of the Versa Count epi-<lb/>
sode is likely.<lb/>
The Media Board moved<lb/>
Monday to allot WZMB the funds<lb/>
it needs to purchase its new mate-<lb/>
rials and get back to the business<lb/>
of broadcasting.<lb/>
The final tab may come to as<lb/>
much as $14,000.<lb/>
bly<lb/>
This means no property dam-<lb/>
age to the downtown businesses,<lb/>
dispersing at 2:30 a.m. when the<lb/>
cleaning crews begin their work<lb/>
and showing respect toward the<lb/>
police and property.<lb/>
He said eight laws, set by<lb/>
LOW COST<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to :lw�ksatdditi<lb/>
Control, ind Problem Pregnancy Coua<lb/>
call 832-0535 (toll free number. 1-800-S32-S3M) tx<lb/>
p.m. weekdays. General anesthesia available.<lb/>
Ik<lb/>
! RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
DAPPER<lb/>
DAN<lb/>
"Let us Dress you up for Halloween"<lb/>
' I INC<lb/>
JLVVLLKY, COLIU 'iAHlls<lb/>
AND TURN IT UKE<lb/>
iu v-2 r<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
Triple Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
with Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
$2.00 Frozen Drinks<lb/>
$2.00 Teas<lb/>
$1.00 Cans of Beer<lb/>
Greeks: Bring 3 or<lb/>
more people and all of<lb/>
you will get in free!<lb/>
N.C.A.L.E. officials, are broken<lb/>
each year at Halloween and they<lb/>
want to stop the street celebration.<lb/>
"If the the students help us this<lb/>
year, well help them next year.<lb/>
The festival is something we<lb/>
would really like to sponsor, but<lb/>
cooperation is the key Knowles<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving tlw East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
James F. J. McKee. Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey Spencer Mcymandi<lb/>
Richard-Alan Cook Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY RATES<lb/>
0-49 Column Inches��<lb/>
50-994-15<lb/>
100-14905<lb/>
150-199?� J?<lb/>
200-249J-JJ<lb/>
250 and above375<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in Addition to Regular Space Rate)<lb/>
One color and black$9� ��<lb/>
Two colon and black155 ��<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
6� each<lb/>
5.5e each<lb/>
5.000 or 1cm<lb/>
5.001 -10.000<lb/>
10,001-12.0005 Mch<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Phones<lb/>
.757-6366757-6557<lb/>
757-6558757-6309<lb/>
�Blenvenldos Amlgos!<lb/>
Open 7 Days For Lunch &amp; Dinner<lb/>
Lunch Specials $3.95<lb/>
Served MonFri.<lb/>
11am fin 3pm<lb/>
Dinner Specials $5.95<lb/>
Includes Dessert<lb/>
Served SunThur.<lb/>
After 5pm<lb/>
Late Night Special<lb/>
Mexican Pizza GrandeOnly<lb/>
Sunday-Thursday Attar 10:00 P.M.<lb/>
Friday 4 Saturday Attar 11:00 P.M.<lb/>
521 Cotancne Street<lb/>
25<lb/>
757-1666<lb/>
hopKroger<lb/>
COPYRIGHT 1968 - THE KROGER CO. 3<lb/>
ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. OCT. 5<lb/>
23. THROUGH SATURDAY, OCT. 29. 1988. ft<lb/>
IN GREENSVILLE. WE RESERVE THE H<lb/>
RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE<lb/>
SOLD TO DEALERS.<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
� Each of these advertised hems is required to be readily<lb/>
�2 available for sale in each Kroger Store, except as specifically<lb/>
 noted in this ad. If we do run out of an advertised item, we will<lb/>
Sjjjj offer you your choice of a comparable item, when available,<lb/>
ag reflecting the same savings or a raincheck which will entitle<lb/>
5E you to purchase the advertised item at the advertised price<lb/>
3S within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per<lb/>
 item purchased. <lb/>
BANACOL<lb/>
Golden Ripe<lb/>
Banenes<lb/>
Pound<lb/>
Play<lb/>
<lb/>
GLX<lb/>
EOSTCUTTCJ?<lb/>
(CASH saveramaii<lb/>
I IUJ � MWg���<lb/>
South<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) -<lb/>
unpublished government<lb/>
assessing the long-term imj<lb/>
climate changes exoected<lb/>
the "greenhouse effect" pr<lb/>
that the Southeast will see si;<lb/>
cant declines in its wetU<lb/>
crops and forests by the midc<lb/>
the next century.<lb/>
The "greenhouse effectj<lb/>
fers to the warming of the<lb/>
from the growing atmospl<lb/>
concentration of gases that<lb/>
heat from being radiated<lb/>
space. Most greenhouse exj<lb/>
say the Earth will warm oi<lb/>
average by three to eight dei<lb/>
Fahrenheit by the middle of<lb/>
next century.<lb/>
Congress directed the<lb/>
ronmental Protection Agen<lb/>
develop major studies oi<lb/>
greenhouse effect and whaj<lb/>
be done about it.<lb/>
Both studies are expecti<lb/>
be submitted to the lawman<lb/>
Traces ol<lb/>
in milk<lb/>
CANTON, N.C. (AP)<lb/>
search released by the em<lb/>
mental group Greenpeace<lb/>
revived attempts to get<lb/>
pion International Con<lb/>
change the way it makes<lb/>
milk cartons.<lb/>
Greenpeace argues tha<lb/>
bleaching process used at<lb/>
mills pollutes rivers with<lb/>
and that new research showj<lb/>
packaged in bleached paj<lb/>
tons also may contain diox<lb/>
Dioxin nas been linl<lb/>
cancer, liver and immune-sl<lb/>
disorders and a serious skif<lb/>
dition called chloracne.<lb/>
Greenpeace's research<lb/>
milk packaged in plastic<lb/>
bleached paper cartons conl<lb/>
0.04 parts per trillion dio<lb/>
0.75 parts per trillion hart<lb/>
other suspected carcinogel<lb/>
research was conducted bj<lb/>
Ryan, a researcher with tf<lb/>
tario Ministry of Environt<lb/>
i Ottawa.<lb/>
- - 1 wotfMI love to see<lb/>
proposalr"said MifTfeBul<lb/>
of the Clean Water Fund oJ<lb/>
Carolina, one of the ei<lb/>
mental groups that orii<lb/>
LUNC<lb/>
C<lb/>
�<lb/>
II Daily Specialsj<lb/>
II 10 Discount<lb/>
I' Regular Price<lb/>
Items<lb/>
With Student U<lb/>
Kink-<lb/>
to<lb/>
Sponsor oi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0004"/><lb/>
rolinian<lb/>
umuru'ry since 1925.<lb/>
r of Advertising<lb/>
entatives<lb/>
Spencer Meymandi<lb/>
Adam Blankenship<lb/>
t on<lb/>
LTISING<lb/>
S4.25<lb/>
4.15<lb/>
.4.05<lb/>
3 05<lb/>
3 85<lb/>
3.75<lb/>
ING RATES<lb/>
 .� e a. h<lb/>
DURS:<lb/>
rn.<lb/>
57-6557<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
jos! " nner J er Specials $5.95 g ces Dessert J yd SunThur. m 5pm K S425 J<lb/>
11 757-1666 IN<lb/>
A<lb/>
� <lb/>
T�fl<lb/>
s NEW<lb/>
e Game,<lb/>
Saverama<lb/>
Take Home<lb/>
IIZES! A Trip<lb/>
IriDbean!<lb/>
Um 1 � ,mr:<lb/>
'CV<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25,1988 3<lb/>
Southeast may be drying up<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - An<lb/>
unpublished government study<lb/>
assessing the long-term impact of<lb/>
climate changes exoected from<lb/>
the "greenhouse effect" predicts<lb/>
that the Southeast will see signifi-<lb/>
cant declines in its wetlands,<lb/>
crops and forests by the middle of<lb/>
the next century.<lb/>
The "greenhouse effect" re-<lb/>
fers to the warming of the Earth<lb/>
from the growing atmospheric<lb/>
concentration of gases that keep<lb/>
heat from being radiated into<lb/>
space. Most greenhouse experts<lb/>
say the Earth will warm on the<lb/>
average by three to eight degrees<lb/>
Fahrenheit by the middle of the<lb/>
next century.<lb/>
Congress directed the Envi-<lb/>
ronmental Protection Agency to<lb/>
develop major studies on the<lb/>
greenhouse effect and what can<lb/>
be done about it.<lb/>
Both studies are expected to<lb/>
be submitted to the lawmakers in<lb/>
December, but The Associated<lb/>
Press obtained a draft of the sum-<lb/>
mary of the effects report last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
The report, based on current<lb/>
scienti fie glaciers, causing a rise in<lb/>
average sea levels of between 20<lb/>
inches and six and a half feet.<lb/>
"Rising sea level will drown<lb/>
many coastal wetlands, inundate<lb/>
coastal lowlands, increase coastal<lb/>
flooding, erode beaches and in-<lb/>
crease salinity in estuaries the<lb/>
report said, noting that the South-<lb/>
east would be hard hit because it<lb/>
has 85 percent of the nation's<lb/>
wetlands.<lb/>
For a one-meter rise in sea<lb/>
level � just over three feet �the<lb/>
report estimates that 39 percent to<lb/>
64 percent of the wetlands along<lb/>
the South Atlantic coast would be<lb/>
lost, depending on how much<lb/>
effort is made to protect the coast<lb/>
by building bulkheads and lev-<lb/>
ees.<lb/>
The same sea level rise would<lb/>
result in the loss of seven percent<lb/>
to 44 percent of the wetlands<lb/>
along the Southwest Florida<lb/>
coast, 77 percent along the Louisi-<lb/>
ana coast and 75 percent to 85<lb/>
percent along the rest of the Gulf<lb/>
Coast.<lb/>
The study also projects that<lb/>
by the year 2100, a one-meter rise<lb/>
in sea level would inundate 2,850<lb/>
square miles of dry land along the<lb/>
Southeastern coastline if no ef-<lb/>
forts were made to protect the<lb/>
shores, and 2,000 square miles if<lb/>
developed coastal areas are pro-<lb/>
tected.<lb/>
Another major impact of the<lb/>
greenhouse effect would be on<lb/>
fishing and shrimping in South-<lb/>
eastern waters, where 43 percent<lb/>
of the finfish and 70 percent of the<lb/>
shellfish in the United States are<lb/>
harvested.<lb/>
"Warmer temperatures could<lb/>
exceed the thermal tolerance of<lb/>
many marine finfish and shellfish<lb/>
in Southern locations, although<lb/>
the full impacts on marine species<lb/>
is not known at this time the<lb/>
study said. "Many fish and shell-<lb/>
fish may be able to migrate north-<lb/>
ward along coastlines.<lb/>
"The loss of coastal wetlands<lb/>
could lead to reduced popula-<lb/>
tions of fish, especially shellfish.<lb/>
Increased salinity in estuaries<lb/>
could reduce the abundance of<lb/>
freshwater soecies and increase<lb/>
the presence of marine species<lb/>
Agriculture and plant life in<lb/>
the Southeast also would un-<lb/>
dergo major changes as higher<lb/>
temperatures reduce soil mois-<lb/>
ture, change tne length of grow-<lb/>
ing seasons and affect the fre-<lb/>
quency and distribution of rain-<lb/>
fall, the study said.<lb/>
VINTAGE CLOTHING<lb/>
Just In From New York<lb/>
New Shipment of Fine Quality<lb/>
Overcoats<lb/>
London Fog Trench Coats from 12.95-29.95<lb/>
Dress Overcoats 39.95-69.95<lb/>
New Shipment of Jeans In!<lb/>
Faded Levi's from $2.95-$5.95<lb/>
Come To The Coin &amp; Ring Man For<lb/>
Halloween Costumes and Accessories!<lb/>
Layaway Plan Available<lb/>
?�<lb/>
CLOTHES<lb/>
10:00-5:00 M-F<lb/>
10:00-3:00 Sat<lb/>
400 S Evans St.<lb/>
On the corner below "Fizz "<lb/>
�Recycled Clothing (New &amp; Used)<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
Traces of dioxin found higher<lb/>
in milk packaged in cartons<lb/>
CANTON, N.C. (AP) - Re-<lb/>
search released by the environ-<lb/>
mental group Greenpeace has<lb/>
revived attempts to get Cham-<lb/>
pion International Corp. to<lb/>
change the way it makes paper<lb/>
milk cartons.<lb/>
Greenpeace argues that the Canton Plant not dioxin, but re-<lb/>
bleaching process used at paper ducing the plant's brown dis-<lb/>
mills pollutes rivers with dioxin charge into the Pigeon River,<lb/>
and that new research shows milk A coalition of environmental<lb/>
packaged in bleached paper car- groups argued that the company<lb/>
tons also may contain dioxin. could reduce the "color units" of<lb/>
Dioxin nas been linked to its discharge into the river if it<lb/>
rancer, liver and immune-system didn't bleach the paper manufac-<lb/>
disorders and a serious skin con- tured for milk cartons, about 40 of<lb/>
proposed unbleached milk car- money to meet them,<lb/>
tons. "The company said As part of the proposed settle-<lb/>
nodody'd buy unbleached milk ment, the company agreed to<lb/>
cartons and they never went any spend $200,000 on pollution-con-<lb/>
further with it trol equipment and $2 million on<lb/>
When the proposal was first modernizing the mill,<lb/>
made, the issue at Champion's<lb/>
The EPA and North Carolina<lb/>
have agreed to Champion's pro-<lb/>
posal. Before EPA can grant a dis-<lb/>
charge permit, Tennessee still<lb/>
must approve a variance from the<lb/>
state's water-color standards.<lb/>
DO YOU HAVE ANY<lb/>
QUESTIONS ABOUT YOUR<lb/>
LONG DISTANCE<lb/>
SERVICE?<lb/>
Interested in learning about<lb/>
calling plans and special<lb/>
products that may save you<lb/>
money?!<lb/>
Contact Dana Dunlow,<lb/>
Your AT&amp;T<lb/>
Student Campus Manager<lb/>
Here at ECU<lb/>
Call: 752-0856<lb/>
4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
STEVE HARDY'S ORIGINAL BEACH PARTY<lb/>
dition called chloracne.<lb/>
Greenpeace's research found<lb/>
milk packaged in plastic-lined<lb/>
bleached paper cartons contained<lb/>
0.04 parts per trillion dioxin and<lb/>
0.75 parts per trillion furan, an- dropped.<lb/>
the plant's total production.<lb/>
Champion officials said at the<lb/>
time that dairy industry officials<lb/>
would not buy brown milk car-<lb/>
tons, and the proposal was<lb/>
other suspected carcinogen. The<lb/>
research was conducted by John<lb/>
Ryan, a researcher with the On-<lb/>
tario Ministry of Environment in<lb/>
Ottawa.<lb/>
"I would love to see this re-<lb/>
proposal, said Millie Buchanan<lb/>
After years of wrangling, an<lb/>
agreement was reached recently<lb/>
among Champion, the Environ-<lb/>
mental Protection Agency, Ten-<lb/>
nessee and urth Carolina that<lb/>
woufd tfat colorunits going into<lb/>
Champion fought stricter<lb/>
of the Clean Water Fund of North standards, saying it would shut<lb/>
Carolina, one of the environ- the plant rather than spend<lb/>
mental groups that originally<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIAL<lb/>
MONSAT.<lb/>
11AM-3PM<lb/>
12-8 oz. Round<lb/>
Sirloin<lb/>
Potato Bar<lb/>
Sundae Bar<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
tT<lb/>
BLAST<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT <lb/>
Fun After Business Hours <lb/>
Playing tb .����'��� � � ��� �. �<lb/>
�: �. . � �<lb/>
, . <lb/>
Sponsored by Greenville Jaycees &amp; WDLX<lb/>
Thursday, October 27, College Night $2.00 wI.D.<lb/>
Steve Hardy Begins at 7 00<lb/>
Drink Specials All Evening<lb/>
Hot Buffalo Wings til 7:30<lb/>
� � re i<lb/>
STEVE<lb/>
HARDY'St<lb/>
BEACH PARTY<lb/>
wsasasStm<lb/>
RAMADA<lb/>
EDGERTON MANAGEMENT CORP<lb/>
r<lb/>
Daily Specials<lb/>
I 10 Discount on<lb/>
Regular Priced<lb/>
1 Items<lb/>
l With Student I.D.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Hot Bar and Salad Bar only<lb/>
an additional $1.99 with a meal<lb/>
FREE DESSERT BAR<lb/>
with All Steak Dinners<lb/>
TAKE-OUTS OK AY<lb/>
"1<lb/>
I<lb/>
J 2903 E. 10th St. - 758-2712<lb/>
Kinko's wants you<lb/>
to vote in '88<lb/>
4&amp;.<lb/>
Sponsor of the 1988 Election Night Coverage<lb/>
the copv center<lb/>
321 E. 10th St.<lb/>
752-0875<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Suru-Fri. 7 a.m. - 12 p.m.<lb/>
Sat 9 a.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Don't be caught<lb/>
without a gift for your goblin.<lb/>
Large selection of Halloween Cards<lb/>
AvanriRecycled Paper ProductsCarlton<lb/>
Masks � Gifts � Gift Bags &amp; Balloons<lb/>
Official Halloween T-Shirts &amp; Sweat Shirts<lb/>
516 S. Cotanche Street Downtown Greenville<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0005"/><lb/>
SUre lEaat (Earoliman<lb/>
VfnwA itiim�<lb/>
Pete Fernald, cmriM�i<lb/>
Chip Carter, M�.rnf ��<lb/>
JAMES F.J. MCKEE, OictorafAdrtamt<lb/>
Joe Harris, n�- f<lb/>
Douc Johnson, �, ��<lb/>
Tim Hampton, f�h��EAor<lb/>
Mia ielle England, c�i m�<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, sy<lb/>
October 25.1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Stephanie Folsom, oy &amp;.��<lb/>
JEFF PARKER,su7lii�r��or<lb/>
TOM FJRR,CiTculHmMMHMgtr<lb/>
Susan Howell, p�� MaMjr<lb/>
JOI IN W. MEDLIN, Art Chrecto,<lb/>
Mac Clark, Bmma�M�Myr<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Democracy<lb/>
so what's the point?<lb/>
For many years, America has<lb/>
been the world's most vigorous<lb/>
defender of democracy. But what's<lb/>
the point?<lb/>
After all, democracy isn't all it's<lb/>
cracked up to be. Think about it: it is<lb/>
based on the fallacious assumption<lb/>
that the average citizen is as capable<lb/>
of running a country as, say, people<lb/>
who have been born and bred to the<lb/>
job. As Henrik Ibsen put it, democ-<lb/>
racy "places the common cur on the<lb/>
level of the pedigreed pup<lb/>
To demonstrate: Americans are<lb/>
being asked to choose a president<lb/>
who will make decisions in their<lb/>
behalf about such issues as the Stra-<lb/>
tegic Defense Initiative, acid rain,<lb/>
the greenhouse effect and the space<lb/>
race. To make an informed decision<lb/>
about these subjects, they need to be<lb/>
scientifically literate. But a nation-<lb/>
wide survey conducted bv the Na-<lb/>
tional Science Foundation shows<lb/>
that 21 percent of voting-age Ameri-<lb/>
cans think that the sun revolves<lb/>
around the Earth; 17 percent thinks<lb/>
it takes but one day for the Earth to<lb/>
orbit the sun; 20 percent think atoms<lb/>
are smaller than electrons (and a<lb/>
whopping 37 percent had no idea<lb/>
which was larger); 39 percent think<lb/>
lasers work by focussing sound<lb/>
waves (35 percent were unsure); 19<lb/>
percent believe that sound travels<lb/>
faster than light.<lb/>
Americans must be able to make<lb/>
informed decisions about these and<lb/>
other issues. The key word is "in-<lb/>
formed they show an increasing<lb/>
reluctance to get involved in any<lb/>
aspect of the political process, not<lb/>
only voting but also simply gather-<lb/>
ing information about the candi-<lb/>
dates' positions. They are easily<lb/>
persuaded by innuendo and insinu-<lb/>
ation because they don't know<lb/>
enough of the truth to see through<lb/>
the lies. For example: did you know<lb/>
that Michael Dukakis ended the<lb/>
furlough program some time ago, or<lb/>
that George Bush has not shown<lb/>
nearly the sort of interest in educa-<lb/>
tion he would have you believe?<lb/>
Regardless of what they believe,<lb/>
the common citizen actually has<lb/>
virtually no voice in America<lb/>
(which, strictly speaking, is a repub-<lb/>
lic and not a democracy), and it may<lb/>
very well be that this is not such a<lb/>
bad thing.<lb/>
As long as Americans are able to<lb/>
cling to the fiction that they actually<lb/>
have some power over the actions of<lb/>
their government, they will com-<lb/>
placently let their government do<lb/>
just about anything it wants. They<lb/>
want all of the privileges of democ-<lb/>
racy without its attendant responsi-<lb/>
bility. They even show themselves<lb/>
willing to elect a man whose "cre-<lb/>
dentials" include participation in<lb/>
the most stupid foreign-policy ac-<lb/>
tion of this decade, the Iran-Contra<lb/>
affair. , . .<lb/>
As long as they keep up this<lb/>
behavior, Americans will be con-<lb/>
tributing to the failure of a system<lb/>
they claim to hold dear. How can<lb/>
America expect to defend and pro-<lb/>
mote democracy in other parts of the<lb/>
world when Americans can't be<lb/>
bothered to take part in it at home?<lb/>
Mascot needs changing<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Over fall break a few good<lb/>
friends and I travelled down to Flor-<lb/>
ida State to root on the Pirates against<lb/>
the Seminoles. While we were there<lb/>
we realized a few things that should<lb/>
be changed, or at least brought to<lb/>
someone's attention.<lb/>
First of all, we decided to change<lb/>
the Pirate mascot to someone more<lb/>
menacing looking. We do have a<lb/>
good looking Pirate costume. We will<lb/>
keep that, but we want a mean look-<lb/>
ing guy with a patch over one eye,<lb/>
and a big knife in his mouth. He also<lb/>
has to have a stump for a leg. Maybe<lb/>
even a scar or two on his face. That's<lb/>
what we have adopted as our mascot.<lb/>
No more cartoon looking Pirates on<lb/>
the stickers that you can buy, or<lb/>
whatever other paraphernalia that<lb/>
vou can buy.<lb/>
look at Florida State for ex-<lb/>
ample. A mean, lean, menacing fight-<lb/>
ing machine. They had a guy in a<lb/>
funny outfit, but they also had an<lb/>
Indian riding on a horse with a spear.<lb/>
Secondly, crowd participation.<lb/>
East Carolina is way behind the times<lb/>
in this department. Everyone at the<lb/>
game was into it. When the Semino-<lb/>
les scored, the whole crowd started to<lb/>
make a hatchet out of their arms and<lb/>
swing them up and down. It was<lb/>
something to see.<lb/>
What do we do? Slap a few high<lb/>
fives, maybe a forearm bash here or<lb/>
there, but nothing very unified. We<lb/>
decided to make up something that<lb/>
we could do. At first we were going to<lb/>
have everyone take hands in front of<lb/>
them and shake them back and forth<lb/>
like we were shaking down a fence.<lb/>
We decided against that though.<lb/>
Maybe something along the same<lb/>
lines as Florida State, but make a<lb/>
motion like that of cutting someone's<lb/>
head off with the knife that our new<lb/>
mascot has.<lb/>
Thirdy, the fight song. Do we<lb/>
have one? "Hey Hey EC, You Look So<lb/>
Good To Me does not cut it. We<lb/>
could not decide on a fight song, we<lb/>
thought we'd let someone else do<lb/>
that. Hey, we did everything else.<lb/>
Any ideas?<lb/>
Matt Hermes<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
Jones replies<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Mary Fordham, Nicolas Skotter-<lb/>
gard, and Arielle Sturz: thank you for<lb/>
your excellent response. We all share<lb/>
the same concerns: where this coun-<lb/>
try has been and where it is going. Give it a rest. After Bobby Jones,<lb/>
Understandably, you feel Bush Nicolas Skottergaard, and Arielle<lb/>
Quayle would be best for our country Sturz have pointed out all your mis-<lb/>
while I feel the Republicans have run conceptions about both the Repubh-<lb/>
the country agTOund. cans and Democrats, very few people<lb/>
What those responding to myself on this campus take you or your<lb/>
have failed to see is that while Con- opinions seriously. There are many<lb/>
gTess does appropriate moneys, people who get quite a chuckle oft<lb/>
those moneys are managed or mis- your letters though. Maybe next time<lb/>
managed by ReaganBush appoint- you send something in you should<lb/>
ees. To dump national and state try to get it published on the comics<lb/>
problems on the Democrates is unre- page.<lb/>
alistic.<lb/>
ECU funding and statewide<lb/>
improvements in education are due<lb/>
to a Democratic legislative body in<lb/>
Raleigh, NC. You can't blame Demo-<lb/>
crats for everything. It's a bi-partisan<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
I also like the fact that with a new,<lb/>
fresh DukakisBentsen administra-<lb/>
tion, the 235 Reagan Bush political<lb/>
appointees brought up on criminal<lb/>
and unethical conduct charges will<lb/>
be out of a job. Those appointees like<lb/>
Meese, Nofziger, and Deaver will<lb/>
have to get off the ReaganBush<lb/>
"gravy train" and go somewhere else<lb/>
to line their pockets.<lb/>
The furlough program is an<lb/>
impertinent issue to a president and a<lb/>
presidential campaign. Republicans<lb/>
continue, however, to run it into the<lb/>
ground. O.K Dukakis does release<lb/>
dangerous criminals. ReaganBush<lb/>
have not and will not release crimi-<lb/>
nals. They will, however, keep them<lb/>
at the White House where they be-<lb/>
long.<lb/>
Having enjoyed this series of<lb/>
written debate, I applaud you three<lb/>
and other who have shared their<lb/>
views. I hope that in some way, we<lb/>
have motivated the readers to think<lb/>
for themselves. Therefore, I hope<lb/>
Americans will choose the Dukakis<lb/>
Bentsen team and choose to do away<lb/>
with political complacency.<lb/>
Wyatt M. Jones, IV<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Jones criticized<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
To Wyatt M. Jones:<lb/>
Wyatt, haven't you had enough?<lb/>
Aren't you tired of people writing<lb/>
letters to you pointing out the many,<lb/>
many times you've tried to pass lib-<lb/>
eral hype off as facts? I certainly am<lb/>
tired of reading your silly letters in<lb/>
every other issue.<lb/>
Face it, Wyatt. You don't know<lb/>
everthing. That has definately been<lb/>
proven by your misguided and mis-<lb/>
informed liberal views.<lb/>
Edith Smith<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes<lb/>
letters expressing all points of view.<lb/>
Mail or drop them by our office in the<lb/>
Pubications Building, across from<lb/>
the entrance of-royner-Library. V<lb/>
For purposes ofwrificaiion, all $<lb/>
letters must include the name, major.<lb/>
and classification, address, phone-<lb/>
number, and signature of the �<lb/>
authoris). Letters are limited to 300-<lb/>
words or less, double spaced or neatly i<lb/>
printed. All letters are subject toed<lb/>
itingfor brevity, obscenity, and libel,<lb/>
and no personal attacks will be per- �<lb/>
mitted. Students, faculty and stafj <lb/>
writing letters for this page are re-<lb/>
minded that they are limited to one<lb/>
every two weeks. The deadline for<lb/>
editorial material is 5 p.m. Friday forg<lb/>
Tuesday's edition and 5 p.m. Tues-<lb/>
day for Thursday's edition.<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
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/>
Bush's role in Irangate never questioned<lb/>
By BARBARA THOMAS<lb/>
CimpM Spwtniw<lb/>
Vice President George Bush has succeeded in<lb/>
doing what former president Richard Nixon utterly<lb/>
failed to do: he has participated a major political<lb/>
scam yet somehow avoided the heat of media cover-<lb/>
age and litigation. How in the world did George<lb/>
accomplish this?<lb/>
Why hasn't the media more openly and aggres-<lb/>
sively probed Bush's association with Irangate?<lb/>
Why hasn't he been given a lie-detector test or at<lb/>
least put on the stand during the Iran-conrra hear-<lb/>
ings? But probably the most serious question of all is,<lb/>
how does Bush have the gall to run for President<lb/>
after his covert dealings with Noriega and the<lb/>
Ayatollah?<lb/>
George Bush's acknowledged support for the<lb/>
secret arms shipments to Iran has been interpreted<lb/>
as a sign of his loyalty to Presiden t Reagan's policies,<lb/>
and the press seems to have accepted this association<lb/>
rather easily. But there's other evidence that Bush,<lb/>
far more than anyone else, actually coordinated the<lb/>
arms-for-hostages negotiations, and that he con-<lb/>
ferred upon Oliver North the power necessary to<lb/>
carry it out.<lb/>
Anyone who has read either Men of Zeal (an<lb/>
account of Irangate by the bipartisan team of sena-<lb/>
tors, William Cohen and George Mitchell) or The<lb/>
Iran-Contra Connection (by a select team of investiga-<lb/>
tors, including Peter Dale Scott, former senior fellow<lb/>
at the International Center for Development Policy<lb/>
in Washington) will have trouble believing Bush's<lb/>
claim that he was only dimly aware of the Iranian<lb/>
arms sale and had no idea that it amounted to an<lb/>
arms-for-hostages swap.<lb/>
According to these sources, based on the several<lb/>
months of investigations following the scandal,<lb/>
Bush was present at two meetings in January 1986<lb/>
during which the president was briefed on, and<lb/>
approved, the plan to swap arms for hostages. In<lb/>
July 1986, Bush received a briefing on the arms sales<lb/>
from an Israeli official. Bush's aide Craig Fuller, the<lb/>
only other person present, took many notes and then<lb/>
prepared a memorandum that has the Israeli official<lb/>
referring to the release of hostages at least five times,<lb/>
and noting at least once that that was a primary<lb/>
purpose of the sale.<lb/>
But the crucial evidence that Bush has been lying<lb/>
about Irangate comes, curiously enough, from<lb/>
George himself. After saying for more than a year<lb/>
that he went along with the arms deal without any<lb/>
knowledge of the hostage connection, he told Dan<lb/>
Rather in their celebrated confrontation, "I went<lb/>
along with it because  I heard about Mr. Buckley<lb/>
(a hostage) being tortured to death  So if I erred, I<lb/>
erred on the side of trying to get those hostages out<lb/>
of there (Oops).<lb/>
Yet Bush, a former CIA director, continues to<lb/>
profess ignorance of this connection between arms<lb/>
and hostages. Meanwhile, the American public and<lb/>
mass media remain relatively mute on the issue.<lb/>
Most politicians looking for reelection are either fed<lb/>
up with Irangate or are hard-pressed to prod the<lb/>
Reagan administration further. Unfortunately, if<lb/>
Bush takes office, he will be immune from prosecu-<lb/>
tion pertaining to his role in Irangate because such<lb/>
litigation would only apply to his term as V.P.<lb/>
Bush's knowing support for the Iran-Contra<lb/>
Arms Deal is at least worth requesting a lie-detector<lb/>
test, and if s a sad commentary on American politics<lb/>
that Mr. Bush is even allowed to run for president<lb/>
And it says a lot about Bush's spineless character<lb/>
that he declined to engage Michael Dukakis in an-<lb/>
other debate, not to mention in a "real" debate�that<lb/>
is, without a panel of media interviewersmodera-<lb/>
tors. Were it not for the power of America's consen-<lb/>
sus-making machinery, were it not for the fact that<lb/>
Bush is now hiding (and probably praying) froms<lb/>
truth-seeking reporters, we would see a landslide<lb/>
election in favor of Michael Dukakis.<lb/>
Irangate was clearly the biggest political scam �<lb/>
since Watergate, and stands out as the biggest blem- <lb/>
ish on Reagan's otherwise shiny record. Bush didn' 11<lb/>
learn from the errors of Nixon � he certainly failed <lb/>
to prove himself a good liar. Had he been truly loyal I<lb/>
to Reagan, Bush would have acknowledged his roleig<lb/>
as key orchestrator of the Iran-Contra Arms Deal,�<lb/>
and then followed North and Poindexter when they j<lb/>
left the White House. Solely on the basis of his lack of<lb/>
integrity, it would be a horrendous mistake to ek "<lb/>
Bush as our next president.<lb/>
Racial<lb/>
(CPS) � It may have been<lb/>
most frightening outbreak<lb/>
campus racism of the year so f<lb/>
Then, too, it could be a case<lb/>
student newspaper misn portij<lb/>
a simple fight<lb/>
Or it could be an instance<lb/>
university refusing to address I<lb/>
kind of racial tensions present<lb/>
many campuses and thus, as<lb/>
nonty students contend, end<lb/>
encouraging<lb/>
"It's a cover-up' asserts<lb/>
heen Murray, a black student<lb/>
says that on Sept 18 he<lb/>
chased from the State UniveH<lb/>
of New York at Brockpor - <lb/>
pus nightclub by about a dol<lb/>
white students� most ot<lb/>
members of the wrestling teai<lb/>
wielding bats and club- and<lb/>
ing racial insults at run i<lb/>
had brawled with two t the<lb/>
It is, in any case � .<lb/>
kind of incident students anj<lb/>
mirustrators have been<lb/>
to avoid.<lb/>
Exactly two year- j<lb/>
October, 1986, in a stnkir<lb/>
lar event, five white I nivers<lb/>
Massachusetts at Ami �<lb/>
dents topped off the<lb/>
ment about the outcome<lb/>
York Mets-Boston Rt<lb/>
Series game by beating<lb/>
classmate.<lb/>
Since then, racial<lb/>
spread alarminlv I<lb/>
nationwide Fights<lb/>
marches and even student<lb/>
erupted at Farleigh Dickil<lb/>
and Mississippi State uniJ<lb/>
ties, at Dartmouth, Tompf<lb/>
Cortland, Rodgers State<lb/>
Hampshire colleges as well<lb/>
universities of Cahfoi<lb/>
Berkeley, Illinois and M I<lb/>
to name but a few.<lb/>
The unprecedented str<lb/>
confrontations � probar.<lb/>
ceeded in modern college hil<lb/>
only by the violence and n<lb/>
that marred the first tm<lb/>
grate the universities ot Alal<lb/>
and Mississippi in the late<lb/>
and early sixties proi<lb/>
fears colleges would reman<lb/>
regated forever.<lb/>
In response, manv ccj<lb/>
-e Student Union<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
With<lb/>
Special Guests<lb/>
THE<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0006"/><lb/>
ip<lb/>
Red<lb/>
nging<lb/>
st After Bobbv Jones,<lb/>
rgaard, and Arielle<lb/>
pointed out all your mis-<lb/>
- about both the Republi-<lb/>
mocrats, very few people<lb/>
pus take you or vour<lb/>
seriously There are many<lb/>
�ho get quite a chuckle oft<lb/>
r though Maybe next tune<lb/>
J something in vou should<lb/>
t t it published on the comics<lb/>
Edith Smith<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
orum<lb/>
ules<lb/>
"he East Carolinian icelcomes<lb/>
- expressing all points of view.<lb/>
or drop them by our office in the '�<lb/>
tcations Building, across from<lb/>
itrance ofoynerLibrary M<lb/>
I<lb/>
votes of aerification, allm<lb/>
i must include the name, major I<lb/>
rlassiHcation, address, phone<lb/>
ber, and signature of the<lb/>
horis). Letters are limited to 300-<lb/>
 - less. double spaced or neat.<lb/>
tied. All letters are subject to ed-<lb/>
Ig for brevity, obscenity, and libel, -<lb/>
no personal attacks will be perx<lb/>
h-J Students, faculty and staff j<lb/>
wing letters I r this page are re-�S<lb/>
I that they are limited to one .<lb/>
two weeks. The deadline for J.<lb/>
tonal material is 5 p.m. Friday fot <lb/>
sday's edition and 5 p.m. fues<lb/>
for Thursday's edition.<lb/>
pectrum<lb/>
ules<lb/>
�x<lb/>
In addition to the "Campus:<lb/>
lm" section of the editorial<lb/>
;e, the East Carolinian features<lb/>
"Campus Spectrum This is<lb/>
opinion column by guest writ-<lb/>
from the student body and<lb/>
ilty. The columns printed in<lb/>
"Campus Spectrum" will<lb/>
Main current topics of concern<lb/>
the campus, community or<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
The columns are restricted in<lb/>
itent only with regard to rules .<lb/>
rammar and decency. Persons<lb/>
mitting columns must be will-<lb/>
; to accept byline credit for their<lb/>
rts, as no entries from ghost<lb/>
Iters will be published.<lb/>
ed<lb/>
worth requesting a lie-detector<lb/>
imentary on American politics<lb/>
allowed to run for president<lb/>
Hit Bush's spineless character<lb/>
igage Michael Dukakis in an<lb/>
Mention in a "real" debate�that<lb/>
media interviewersmodera<lb/>
K power of America's consen-<lb/>
ts, were it not for the fact that<lb/>
Kand probably praying) fromv<lb/>
�rs, we would see a landslide<lb/>
Iichael Dukakis.<lb/>
Irly the biggest political scam<lb/>
stands out as the biggest blem-j<lb/>
ise shiny record. Bush didn't I<lb/>
)f Nixon � he certainly failed g<lb/>
liar. Had he been truly loyal I<lb/>
Id have acknowledged his role k<lb/>
If the Iran-Contra Arms Deal,<lb/>
rth and Poindexter when they j<lb/>
lely on the basis of his lack i<lb/>
la horrendous mistake to el<lb/>
lident.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25,1988 5<lb/>
Racial incident rips Brockport<lb/>
SF2 Z may been the have tried to teach white students recalled, and interviewed "15 to<lb/>
most frightening outbreak of to appreciate diversity and, as 20 witnesses" who verified<lb/>
campus racism of the year so far. UMass race relations Prof. Meyer Murray's story of being chased bv<lb/>
in a Case of Weinberg put it, ease black stu- club-brandishing white students<lb/>
?S�2 Tl?aper misreP�rtin8 dents' s�� of isolation and al-<lb/>
a simple fight ienahon<lb/>
nnivL a?inCC�a T un.versities of Florida,<lb/>
university refusing to address the M.chigan and Cal.forn.a-Santa<lb/>
kind of racial tensions present on BwfcS as well as Duke and Penn<lb/>
State, among others, have spon<lb/>
many campuses and thus, as mi-<lb/>
nority students contend, end up<lb/>
encouraging.<lb/>
"It's a cover-up asserts Sta-<lb/>
heen Murray, a black student who<lb/>
says that on Sept. 18 he was<lb/>
chased from the State University<lb/>
of New York at Brockport's cam-<lb/>
pus nightclub by about a dozen<lb/>
white students� most of them<lb/>
But campus officials dispute<lb/>
it all.<lb/>
It "was not a racial incident<lb/>
contends Brockport spokes-<lb/>
woman Gloria Peterson. It was a<lb/>
fight between two students, "and<lb/>
members of the wrestling team� berg notes<lb/>
wielding bats and clubs and yell- " And at the University of Mis<lb/>
sored carefully integrated parties it just so happens that one is black<lb/>
and "sensitivity" sessions to pre- and one is white<lb/>
vent troubles this fall. "Friends of one of the stu-<lb/>
But such efforts don't always dents got involved. Wrestlers<lb/>
help. were never involved. The situ-<lb/>
"Minorities are not streaming ation was quickly mediated and<lb/>
to UMass even though the univer- everyone went out to dinner and<lb/>
sity has done a lot of things to put the situation behind them,<lb/>
make it more appealing Wein- The Stylus story was confused. It<lb/>
was a garbled mess Peterson<lb/>
ing racial insults at him after he<lb/>
had brawled with two of the men.<lb/>
It is, in any case, exactly the<lb/>
kind of incident students and ad-<lb/>
ministrators have been working<lb/>
to avoid.<lb/>
Exactly two years ago, in<lb/>
October, 1986, in a strikingly simi-<lb/>
lar event, five white University of<lb/>
Massachusetts at Amherst stu-<lb/>
dents topped off their disappoint-<lb/>
ment about the outcome of a New<lb/>
York Mets-Boston Red Sox World<lb/>
Series game by beating up a black<lb/>
classmate.<lb/>
Since then, racial tensions<lb/>
spread alarmingly to campuses<lb/>
nationwide. Fights, sit-ins,<lb/>
marches and even student strikes<lb/>
said.<lb/>
sissippi, for example, an un-<lb/>
known arsonist in August burned<lb/>
down a house that was about to<lb/>
become the first Fraternity Row<lb/>
building ever used by black stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
In fact, officials quickly as-<lb/>
signed any campus racial prob-<lb/>
lems to The Stylus, not to any<lb/>
simmering relations between stu-<lb/>
dents. 'The story was not accu-<lb/>
In early October, black Uni- "Si fSSS <lb/>
versify of Texas math major Ken- dcntj2hn Vaide ?tenn8-<lb/>
neth Avery filed a complaint �. mCM ha T<lb/>
iti-t- a l- (t- more serious because of the article<lb/>
against UT-Austin police officers, � -ru c i � u  � n<lb/>
in The Stylus, echoed Vice Presi-<lb/>
who had detained him because<lb/>
 . . .� , , ueni lor ;<lb/>
they were looking for a "black McC ,r<lb/>
man with a briefcase �y<lb/>
dent for Student Affairs John<lb/>
Prof. Fred Powell, the paper's<lb/>
advisor, defended his journalists.<lb/>
"It was a good story. The staff did<lb/>
its homework<lb/>
Still others think public rela-<lb/>
tions-conscious officials are blam-<lb/>
And a SUNY-Brockport stu-<lb/>
dent sensitivity seminar didn't<lb/>
prevent the events of Sept. 18.<lb/>
Murray recounts a scary story<lb/>
of getting into a scuffle with two<lb/>
wTestling team members after .<lb/>
erupted at Farleigh Dickinson they bumped while dancing at the ing the paper as a way to protect<lb/>
and Mississippi State universi- campus nightclub. Heeding ad- the wresUing team and, to deflect<lb/>
ties, at Dartmouth, Tompkms- vice to go outside to "cool off he criticism of the campus, simply<lb/>
Cortland, Rodgers State and then reportedly heard 15 white ignore the real fears of minority<lb/>
Hampshire colleges as well as the students, mostly wrestlers, were students,<lb/>
universities of California- looking for him, yelling racial<lb/>
Berkeley, Illinois and Michigan, insults. McCray denies it, saying the<lb/>
to name but a few. -Tm nol prejudiced or anv - mcidcnt wasn't serious enough to<lb/>
The unprecedented string of thing a dorm resident assistant ,menl formaI discipline and be-<lb/>
confrontations � probably ex- allegedly said in explaining why hev,ng Jt was better solved<lb/>
ceeded in modern college history she initiallv wouldn't let the flee- throu8h "mediation" he helped<lb/>
only by the violence and rioting jng panicked Murray take refuge<lb/>
that marred the first tries to inte- in her building, "but he's black<lb/>
grate the universities of Alabama Later that RA's bovfnend, also a<lb/>
and Mississippi in the late fifties resident advisor, threatened to<lb/>
and early sixties � provoked cut Murrav "up into pieces<lb/>
fears colleges would remain seg- The Stylus, the campus's stu- telephone threats,<lb/>
regated forever. dent paper, jumped on the story, "The president doesn't know<lb/>
In response, many colleges Executive Editor Vince Gonzales what's going on Murray said.<lb/>
arrange.<lb/>
Murray, however, doesn't<lb/>
agree it's solved, claiming one of<lb/>
the wrestlers involved remains<lb/>
hostile and that he's still getting<lb/>
The Student 3non<lb/>
Special<lb/>
 og i<lb/>
u<lb/>
Concerts Committee<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
October<lb/>
Hfe<lb/>
ifli11 Ea<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
<lb/>
ly<lb/>
1988<lb/>
With<lb/>
Special Guests<lb/>
chck<lb/>
s<lb/>
TICKETS HOW available AT Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
LIMIT BBSS jffij PERSON<lb/>
BEgnig E1CSEQ0SEI of f66 Tte,so"he ���<lb/>
"They did nothing for me. I'm<lb/>
pissed. I'll always have to keep<lb/>
my guard up<lb/>
"They're not solving any-<lb/>
thing said Yolanda Brisbane,<lb/>
president of the Organization of<lb/>
Students of African Descent<lb/>
(OSAD). "Students feel like it was<lb/>
swept under the rug<lb/>
"What I know is what I see<lb/>
said OSAD member Floyd<lb/>
Wilmoth. "The wrestlers are still<lb/>
on the team, and that looks like<lb/>
the university condones what<lb/>
they did<lb/>
Regardless of what actually<lb/>
happened Sept. 18, they say,<lb/>
Brockport has had its break-<lb/>
downs in racial harmony.<lb/>
In a Student Affairs Office<lb/>
survey taken last year � and<lb/>
which Brockport officials in Sep-<lb/>
tember initially refused to let the<lb/>
Stylus see � a majority of stu-<lb/>
dents said they thought there<lb/>
were racial problems on campus.<lb/>
Some students, asked how to<lb/>
solve them, wanted to "ship<lb/>
blacks back to Africa" and "kick<lb/>
white students off campus Sty-<lb/>
lus Editor Gonzales said.<lb/>
Officials now dismiss the<lb/>
survey results as "unscientific"<lb/>
and not reflective of how Brock-<lb/>
port students feel.<lb/>
But the assertions, denials<lb/>
and counter denials now being<lb/>
hurled across the campus proba-<lb/>
bly have become less important<lb/>
than the perceptions�justified or<lb/>
not� that the school can be dan-<lb/>
gerous for its black students.<lb/>
"If a black man sees a bunch of<lb/>
wrestlers walking across campus,<lb/>
he's going to think twice ex-<lb/>
plained Tabatha Crayton, Brock-<lb/>
port Student Government's mi-<lb/>
nority affairs coordinator.<lb/>
"One should be very careful<lb/>
in downgrading these incidents<lb/>
Weinberg warned. 'They're not<lb/>
of incidental significance. They<lb/>
can turn into a bigger onslaught of<lb/>
racial violence. They can be a seri-<lb/>
ous indicator of bigger prob-<lb/>
lems<lb/>
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Panama Jack &amp; Other Exclusive Name Brands.<lb/>
Located Next to Tons of Toys - S. Memorial Drive<lb/>
Hours: 10-6 Mori. - Sat. (Fri. &amp; Sat, til 9)<lb/>
Visit Our Other Locations<lb/>
Hwy. 64 East Between H ?Q Wegt<lb/>
Bethel and Tarboro Morehead City, N.C<lb/>
Conetoe, N C w d . &amp; �<lb/>
Wed. -Sat. 9-5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0007"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25,1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
T Ht<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
ASAP: To share a 3-bedroom townhouse.<lb/>
No deposit, private bedroom, private<lb/>
bathroom. $183.33mo.13 utilities.<lb/>
Fireplace, tanning beds, sauna, weight-<lb/>
room and more. Call 355-0700.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Christian<lb/>
male roommate to share new mobile<lb/>
home. 10 minutes from campus. Non-<lb/>
smoker, please. Call Hugh at 756-6851<lb/>
after 500 p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
$112.50 rent and 12 utilities. Call 758-<lb/>
1480, ask for Tanya after 530. Needed<lb/>
immediately.<lb/>
NEED FEMALE ROOMMATE: To share<lb/>
2 bed 112 bath Townhouse. Non-<lb/>
smoker. $185 12 util. Located in Wil-<lb/>
liamsburg Manor off Hooker St Contact<lb/>
Kathy, 756-7797<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Prefer male,<lb/>
smoker to share large house. $100 month,<lb/>
13 utilities. Freshly painted. Close to<lb/>
campus. Call: 758-0897.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To share 2 bed-<lb/>
room apt. near campus. Must be mature.<lb/>
$165 per month covers rent, utilities,<lb/>
phone &amp; cable TV. Call 757-3811.<lb/>
TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT: Need a<lb/>
short-term lease while house being built<lb/>
or renovated, looking for area to settle in<lb/>
permanently, on temporary job assign-<lb/>
ment in Greenville, or finishing intern-<lb/>
ship or semester in school? Nice 2-stry, 2<lb/>
bdrm. 112 baths, lndry hkup, liv rm w<lb/>
bay win kit din area wbar, refrig,<lb/>
stove, dshwshr, Fmch drs opn to priv<lb/>
patio wstor rm, adj to prkng lot for easy<lb/>
access, no pets, active hmownrs' assn.<lb/>
355-6974 after 5.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1984 Mazda B-2000 Pick-up.<lb/>
High road miles. Topper. New tires. Ex-<lb/>
cellent condition $3400. Call 757-6281.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Nice sifa, king size mattress,<lb/>
twinsize mattress, kitchen chairs, round<lb/>
table Make offer 752-3886.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1982 Vokswagon Jetta. 5<lb/>
speed. Diesal 87K Excellent condition.<lb/>
$2700. Call 757-6281<lb/>
FOR SALE 1971 Cutlass, rebuilt 350<lb/>
engine, 2 dr. black over red, almost fully<lb/>
restored. $2500 or best offer. Call (8-5) 757-<lb/>
6611, Ext. 271, (5-10 p.m.) 355-0363.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Couch, matching chair and<lb/>
rediner. In good condition. $300.00 for all<lb/>
3 pieces. Call 752-7513 after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
AQUARIUM: 40 gallon with lighted<lb/>
hood, undergravel filter and stand. $160.<lb/>
Call 825-0808 after 5:00.<lb/>
IBM PC: Loaded, 512 K, 20 MB Drive 2360<lb/>
K Floppies. CGA, parallel, serial. $795.00.<lb/>
Call Mike at 355-3247.<lb/>
COUCH FOR SALE: Full size vinyl<lb/>
couch, folds down to bed, dark brown,<lb/>
only $30, call Scott at 752-4825.<lb/>
FOR SALE: JVC car amp 50x50 w $100;<lb/>
Pioneer car amp GM-2000 lOOx 100 w $175;<lb/>
752-7391 after 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fisher studio-standard port-<lb/>
able stereo system. Dual cassette, digital,<lb/>
CDline in jack. Two months old In des-<lb/>
perate need of money. Paid $250, will<lb/>
negotiate. Call 752-9511.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Government homes from<lb/>
$1.00. "U Repair Also tax delinquent<lb/>
property. Call 805-644-9533 Ext. 1052 for<lb/>
info.<lb/>
TOWNHOUSE FOR SALE: Lexington Sq<lb/>
(adj Athletic Club) - $42,500�2 bdrms, 1<lb/>
12 bths, lndry hkup, liv rm wbay win,<lb/>
kitdin area wbar, refrig, stove dshwshr,<lb/>
Fmch drs open to priv patio wstor rm,<lb/>
adj to prkng lot for easy access, active<lb/>
hmownrs' assn. 355-6974 after 5.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
STUDENT TYPING SERVICES: Pro-<lb/>
gressive Solutions, Inc offers high-qual-<lb/>
ity, inexpensive word processing and<lb/>
other services for the student. Our high<lb/>
speed laser printing systems yield the<lb/>
highest possible quality in the shortest<lb/>
length of time. Rates start at $2.00 per<lb/>
page, and include paper and computer-<lb/>
ized spelling check. We also offer<lb/>
Re'sume' 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/>
752-3694.<lb/>
PARTY: If you're having a party and need<lb/>
a D.J. for the best music available for par-<lb/>
ties dance, top 40 &amp; beach. Call 355-2781,<lb/>
ask for Morgan.<lb/>
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/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING: 19 years ex<lb/>
perience. Work done on Apple computer<lb/>
with letter quality printer. Low rates. Will<lb/>
correct spelling. Call 756-8934 between 5-<lb/>
9 p.m. and ask for Ginger.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
HELP WANTED Are you a college shi<lb/>
dent or faculty member in need of spend-<lb/>
ing money? Brody's is accepting applica-<lb/>
tions for part-time sales and customer<lb/>
service positions. Apply in person,<lb/>
Brody's, 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/>
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<lb/>
Production Manager, WNCT-TV, P.O.<lb/>
Box 898, Greenville, NC. 27834. EOE.<lb/>
YOUTH BASKETBALL COACHES: The<lb/>
Recreation and Parks Department is re-<lb/>
cruiting for part-time youth basketball<lb/>
coaches for the winter program Appli-<lb/>
cants must possess some knowledge of<lb/>
basketball skills and have the ability and<lb/>
patience to work with youth. Applicants<lb/>
must be able to coach young people, ages<lb/>
9-18, in basketball fundamentals. Hours<lb/>
are from 3 p.m. - 7 p.m Monday thru<lb/>
Friday, and some night and weekend<lb/>
coaching The program will extend from<lb/>
December 1 to mid-February. Salary rate<lb/>
is $3.55 to $4.35 per hour Applications<lb/>
will be accepted starting October 20.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
Contact Ben James at 830-4543.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK TOUR PROMOTER-<lb/>
ESCORT: Energetic person, (MF), to<lb/>
take signups for our FLORIDA tours. We<lb/>
furnish all materials for a successful pro-<lb/>
motion. Good PAY and FUN. Call CAM-<lb/>
PUS MARKETING at 1-800-777-2270.<lb/>
HIRING Federal government jobs in<lb/>
your area and overseas. Many immediate<lb/>
openings without waiting list or test. $15-<lb/>
68,000. Phone call refundable. (602) 838-<lb/>
8885. Ext. 5285.<lb/>
NEED MALE AND FEMALE DANC-<lb/>
ERS FOR PRIVATE PARTIES: Also<lb/>
need ladies 18-36 years of age for a legs<lb/>
video. Earnings of $50 per hour and more.<lb/>
Apply in person Monday through Friday,<lb/>
4 pm to 5.30 p.m. to Promotions Co<lb/>
2708-A E. 10th Street. No phone calls.<lb/>
ATHLETIC MANAGERS NEEDED:<lb/>
Contact Fred in Minges Coliseum. 757-<lb/>
6029.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
THE WAY CAMPUS FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
TWIG FELLOWSHIPS: Are available<lb/>
every Tuesday and Thursday at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
at 2007 Tiffany Dr. in Heritage Village.<lb/>
Call 355-5164 for details. Hot Bible! Great<lb/>
fellowship!<lb/>
THURSDAY IS FIZZ DAY Come to Pi<lb/>
Kappa Alpha's happy hour. Free nachos<lb/>
and drink specials.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA LITTLE SISTER<lb/>
PLEDGES: You are doing a great job. We<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
couldn't ask for a better group of girls.<lb/>
Keep up the Pi Kappa Alpha standard. �<lb/>
The Brothers.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA AND AZD: Always a<lb/>
great combination. Thanks for a Daddy<lb/>
Time. �The Pikes.<lb/>
I.A.K Thank you for an awesome fall<lb/>
break. I'll never forget that kiss. I love you<lb/>
now and forever. �J.E.L.<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON: Congratulations<lb/>
on the new improvements to the house.<lb/>
Good luck in your continuous strive for<lb/>
EXCELLENCE. (PS. Baltic Blue is the<lb/>
DADDY!)<lb/>
PS1 CHI MEMBERS: There will be a<lb/>
regular meeting on Thursday October<lb/>
27th at 4:00 p.m. in room 302.<lb/>
NEW DELI WANTS YOU: To welcome<lb/>
back the original sounds of UNCLE<lb/>
GREEN on Friday. Come jam to the best<lb/>
reggaerock of the AMATEURS Satur-<lb/>
day. Celebrate Halloween with BAD BOB<lb/>
&amp; the ROCKINCHORSES on Monday<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
AMY LEE: Happy birthday and all that<lb/>
mushy stuff �Love, Mother Mary and<lb/>
the Boys<lb/>
DONT FORGET TO BUY: The new<lb/>
"Nightmare on 5th St T-shirt C onta<lb/>
any Zeta or call 757-0643 and 75S 7357<lb/>
WENDY, SARA AND TESSA<lb/>
wanted you to know that we appreciate all<lb/>
of the time and support you give us<lb/>
Love, The Zeta Pledges<lb/>
CANDYGRAMS FROM 1a<lb/>
PLEDGES: $30 in front of Student -<lb/>
Oct. 24-28 FREE DELIVERY! Don't h<lb/>
mean on Halloween<lb/>
NIGHTMARE ON 5TH ST HALLOW-<lb/>
EEN SHIRTS ARE HERE Contact am<lb/>
Zeta or call 756-7357 or 7S7 0M3<lb/>
NEED CASH? Have baseball cards? <lb/>
Earlvis, the mad baseball buyer !<lb/>
damn good money for cards of an) �<lb/>
any shape, and any condition If ou i<lb/>
party money. Big E is the one to tali<lb/>
6366, leave a message<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<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 Plaa Dr Greenville<lb/>
MENS HAIRSTYLING<lb/>
STYLE CUT 7��<lb/>
WALK-INS WELCOME<lb/>
20 YEARS OF SERVING ECU<lb/>
2 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS<lb/>
Kastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
(Arroas from Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
IVhlnd Car Quest Auto Part<lb/>
2800 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
� All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
� And Ready To Rent �<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E.5th St reel<lb/>
� Located Near ECU<lb/>
� Acrou From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
Limited offer-$275 a month<lb/>
Contact IT. or Tommy William<lb/>
7-781� or 830-1W7<lb/>
Office open-Apt 8,12-530 p.m<lb/>
�AZALEA GARDENS-<lb/>
Clean and quiet one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartmenU, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. $195 a month, 6 month<lb/>
lease MOBILE HOME RENTALS-couples or<lb/>
singles. Apartment and mobile homes in Azalea<lb/>
Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
 756-7815 <lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal and Confidential Can<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 a; � nt Mm Ami Ssrt. Lou<lb/>
CostTeiimitation to 20 weeka C �� �<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
The Secret Of Getting Rich<lb/>
Amazing Book Tells All<lb/>
Free Offer Details - Rush Stamped Self<lb/>
Addressed Envelope<lb/>
Wayne Humphries, Dept. L.M. - 1<lb/>
Rt. 1 Box 215<lb/>
Beulaville, NC 28518<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
Cooperative Education, a free service of-<lb/>
fered by the University, is designed to<lb/>
help you find career-related work experi-<lb/>
ence before you graduate. We would like<lb/>
to extend an invitation to all students to<lb/>
attend a Co-op Information Seminar in the<lb/>
GCB (see schedule below for Oct. Semi-<lb/>
nars). The only bonuses we can offer you<lb/>
for taking time from your busy schedule<lb/>
are:<lb/>
�extra cash to help cover the cost of college<lb/>
expenses or perhaps to increase your<lb/>
"fun" budget,<lb/>
'opportunities to test a career choice if you<lb/>
have made one or to explore career op-<lb/>
tions if undecided about a future career,<lb/>
and<lb/>
�a highly "marketable" degree, which<lb/>
includes a valuable career-related experi-<lb/>
ence, when you graduate.<lb/>
Come by to see us today!<lb/>
Thurs Oct. 27, 4 p.m rm. 2006; Mon<lb/>
Oct. 31, 4 p.m rm. 2006.<lb/>
ART VOCAL ENSEMBLE<lb/>
The National Gallery of Art Vocal En-<lb/>
semble will perform in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
on Nov. 14 at 8:00 p.m. This event is part of<lb/>
the Chamber Music Series. Four great<lb/>
voices create one excellent sound, in jour-<lb/>
ney exploring an almost limitless reper-<lb/>
toire. Tickets go on sale Oct. 24. For further<lb/>
details, contact The Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall, or call 757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
SHOULD WE RECEIVE<lb/>
THE j OR THE - IN GPA'S?<lb/>
The Credits Committee is currently<lb/>
studying the question of whether the<lb/>
undergraduate grading system should be<lb/>
modified to allow the award and record-<lb/>
ing of pluses and minuses, in addition to<lb/>
the current letter grades. As the first step<lb/>
- in our study of this issue, the committee<lb/>
has scheduled an open meeting to allow<lb/>
faculty and students to present their feel-<lb/>
ings, concerns, and ideas. The meeting<lb/>
will be held on Nov 17from3:00-5:00p.m.<lb/>
in room c 103, Brewster. Interested indi-<lb/>
viduals are invited to attend the meeting<lb/>
at any time during this period The<lb/>
committee will be available during the<lb/>
entire two hours to listen to the comments<lb/>
and recommendations of anyone who<lb/>
desires to present his or her views. If you<lb/>
have any questions or if you desire addi-<lb/>
tional info you may contact Professor<lb/>
Frank Wondolowsld (3136 GCB, phone<lb/>
757-6599) or myself (BN108C Science<lb/>
Complex, phone 6306).<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Christian Fellowship will be held every<lb/>
Thurs. at 6:00 in the Culture Center. You<lb/>
are invited to join us.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
study for Fall Semester andor Spring<lb/>
Semester, you are encouraged to contact<lb/>
the Co-op office about off-campus place-<lb/>
ments Call 757-6979 or come by the GCB,<lb/>
2028.<lb/>
LOST?<lb/>
Something missing in your life? We've<lb/>
found it and we want to share it with you.<lb/>
Jenkins Art Auditorium. EVERY Fri.<lb/>
night at 7:00.<lb/>
CLASS FICTUKES<lb/>
Any student wishing to have a class pic-<lb/>
ture taken for the yearbook now has that<lb/>
chance. Class photographs will be taken<lb/>
Oct. 31 -Nov. 4 in the Student Store from 9<lb/>
a.m. till 12 p.m. and 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
each day. The yearbook is not your year-<lb/>
book until you are in it.<lb/>
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/>
CQ-REC FLAG FQQTPAU<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Co-Rec<lb/>
Flag Football meeting held Oct. 25 at 5:00<lb/>
pm. in B1O103. Play begins shortly after-<lb/>
ward! Interested in officiating? Attend the<lb/>
first officials clinic Oct. 25 at 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
MG102. For additional info call Dave<lb/>
Hall at 757-6387.<lb/>
lNEER<lb/>
The 1987 yearbooks have come in. Any-<lb/>
one who would like a copy of it may come<lb/>
by the office and pick one up. We are<lb/>
located in front of Joyner Library in the<lb/>
Publications Bldg.<lb/>
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/>
WYNTON MARSALIS CON-<lb/>
CJEKT<lb/>
The Dept. of University Unions is proud<lb/>
to present Wynton Marsalis in conoert<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/>
RESIfMF WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning k 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/>
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 I lealth 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 3:00-5:00 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
ECU STUDENTSSTAFF<lb/>
LSS SOCIETY<lb/>
Volunteers, old clothes &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/>
AMNESTY INT'L.<lb/>
Amnesty International meets every<lb/>
fourth Wed. at 8 p.m. at St. Paul's Epis-<lb/>
copal Church, 401 E. 4th St in the upper<lb/>
floor - enter from the 4th street entrance.<lb/>
Next meeting: Oct. 26.<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 later than 400 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 Club chal-<lb/>
lenges EC! IO 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/>
INTENDED SLAP MAIORS<lb/>
All General College students who have in-<lb/>
dicated 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/>
II O OKTOBERFEST<lb/>
The 1LO Oktoberfest will take place on<lb/>
Oct. 26 from 6-9:30 p.m. in Mendenhall,<lb/>
244. The ECU "Schmutrigs" band will<lb/>
play from 7-9 p.m. The menu consists of<lb/>
rolls, Knockwurst, Sauerkraut, German<lb/>
potato salad and dessert. There will also<lb/>
be beer (for anyone 21 or over) and other<lb/>
refreshments. Tickets are $2.50 and are<lb/>
available from 1LO representatives or the<lb/>
Dept. of Foreign Languages and Litera-<lb/>
tures. They will be on sale through Oct. 19.<lb/>
No sales at the door.<lb/>
BADMINTON CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Badminton Club will have a<lb/>
meeting at Memorial Gym, room 105, Fri<lb/>
Oct. 28 at 5-6:00 p.m. Open to all students,<lb/>
faculty &amp; staff.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHJ<lb/>
The National Gamma Beta Phi Honor<lb/>
Society will hold a meeting today at 8 p.m.<lb/>
in Jenkins Auditorium.<lb/>
FCII LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Our next meeting will be Nov. 3 at 7:00 in<lb/>
GCB 1012. All members please attend.<lb/>
ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING<lb/>
A three part workshop offered to students<lb/>
at no cost by the University Counseling<lb/>
Center. Nov.3,10, and 17 (Thursdays). All<lb/>
three sessions will be conducted from 3-4<lb/>
p.m. in 312 Wright Bldg. Assertiveness<lb/>
Training can sharpen your interpersonal<lb/>
skills and help you target personal goals.<lb/>
The workshop will focus on helping<lb/>
members distinguish between their asser-<lb/>
tive, aggressive, and nonassertive behav-<lb/>
iors. Participants can learn how to express<lb/>
themselves directly and openly, and re-<lb/>
spond to interpersonal situations in a<lb/>
manner which neither compromises indi-<lb/>
vidual beliefs nor offends others. Please<lb/>
call the Counseling Center (757-6661) for<lb/>
registration.<lb/>
ESLCHJ<lb/>
There will be a mandatory meeting and<lb/>
initiation of new members to Psi Chi (The<lb/>
National Honor Society in Psychology) on<lb/>
Thurs. at 4:00 in the Psi Chi library in<lb/>
Rawl rm. 302.<lb/>
HEALTH CAREERS DAY<lb/>
All students in the Nursing and the Allied<lb/>
Health careers are encouraged to attend<lb/>
this event in the Carol Belk Bldg. on Oct.<lb/>
31 from 1-5 p.m. Over 75 health care insti-<lb/>
tutions will be on the first and second<lb/>
floors of the Allied Health Bldg. Come out<lb/>
and learn of the opportunities in PT, OT,<lb/>
Nursing, SOCW, Recreational Therapy,<lb/>
PSYC, Music Therapv, Medical Records,<lb/>
FNIM, CDFR, SPED, SLAP, Rehabilita-<lb/>
tion Counseling and Clinical Laboratory<lb/>
Science.<lb/>
V.A.F,<lb/>
The VAF is holding its annual Beaux Arts<lb/>
Ball Mon. night at the Attic with musical<lb/>
guests Big Kids and The Bond. Tickets are<lb/>
S4 advance at Jenkins Art Bldg. or S5 at the<lb/>
door. Door prizes and costume prizes will<lb/>
be given out during the night's festivities.<lb/>
CONSTRUCTION MGMT.<lb/>
Dept. of Construction Mgmt. Fall Semi-<lb/>
nar Series: Oct. 26�"Brick Masonry-<lb/>
Design, Detailing 4 Construction Nov.<lb/>
16�"Importance of the Critical Path<lb/>
Method of Scheduling Construction All<lb/>
seminars held at 630 p.m. in room 1031 of<lb/>
the GCB. For more info call 757-6707.<lb/>
EARLY CHILDHOOD CLUB<lb/>
Attention all Early Childhood Ed. Majors:<lb/>
The next (EQ2 meeting will be held Wed<lb/>
at 4:00 p.m. in Speight 308. Come and<lb/>
make your flannel board!<lb/>
REGISTRATION FOR<lb/>
GENERAL COLLEGE<lb/>
General College students should contact<lb/>
their advisors the week of Oct. 31 - Nov. 4<lb/>
to make arrangements for academic<lb/>
advising for spring semester, 1989. Early<lb/>
registration begins Nov. 7 and ends Nov.<lb/>
11.<lb/>
COSTA RICAN PIANIST.<lb/>
PJLAR AGU11AR<lb/>
Pilar Aguilar will perform a solo recital<lb/>
Oct. 26th at 8:15 p.m. in the A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall. Her visit is jointly sponsored<lb/>
by the ECU Latin American Studies<lb/>
Committee, Office of International Pro-<lb/>
grams, and the School of Music. The con-<lb/>
cert and the reception are free and open to<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
FINANCIAL MGMT. ASSOC.<lb/>
Everyone is welcome to attend the stu-<lb/>
dent Financial Mgmt. Assoc. meeting on<lb/>
Wed. The meeting will be held in room<lb/>
3009 of the GCB at 4:30. The guest speaker<lb/>
will be Jim Westmoreland. He is the Assis-<lb/>
tant Director for Career Planning &amp; Place-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
COOPERATIVE EDUCATION<lb/>
PJLVLAJDRS CLUB<lb/>
WANTED" ALL P E Majors or inl<lb/>
majors to help support our club N<lb/>
DUES�Just FL'V" Meeting to N<lb/>
Thurs. at 800 p m in Minges rex m 142<lb/>
Please attend�plan1- about State i<lb/>
tion in Greensboro to be discuss<lb/>
to see vou mere.<lb/>
TILGATJLPARTY<lb/>
in<lb/>
Representatives of the Walt Disney World<lb/>
Company will be on campus to recruit EC<lb/>
students for their College Program. A<lb/>
seminarpresentation will be conducted<lb/>
Nov. 9. Students from all majors are in-<lb/>
vited to participate. Positions in guest<lb/>
relations, attractions, merchandising and<lb/>
food services, among others are available.<lb/>
Contact the Office of Cooperative Ed. in<lb/>
the GCB for details.<lb/>
Come join the ECU P E. Major Club<lb/>
celebrating the 1st Annual P.E Majors<lb/>
Club Tailgate Partv on Sat at 11:30 a m<lb/>
for the Miami game We will provide the<lb/>
chicken�please bring vour own bevel<lb/>
ages. ALL HPERS STUDENTS AND<lb/>
FACULTY ARE INVITED TO ATTEND<lb/>
AND BRING FRIENDS We will K to<lb/>
cated at the corner of Elmhurst Field�<lb/>
behind the scoreboard of Eicklen Ma<lb/>
dium. 1 lOPE TO SEE OU 111LRE1<lb/>
PHQiaGEAPHY SHOW<lb/>
Faces, structure and architectures of<lb/>
North and Central American Earth a<lb/>
seen by Ernst Habrkhs Ct 24 Nov <lb/>
Reception Wed, 700 p.m Mendenhall<lb/>
Gallery.<lb/>
AMERICAN MKTG, ASSCK,<lb/>
The American Mktg Assoc will K hold<lb/>
ing its next meeting Thurs at 3 p m The<lb/>
meeting will be held in the GCB in room<lb/>
1032 We will have a guest speaker from<lb/>
Wal-Mart All interested persons are in<lb/>
vited. All members are encouraged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
KARATE CLUB<lb/>
ECU Karate Club will meet Mon &amp; Wed<lb/>
nights at B 15 in Memorial Gym, tor inter-<lb/>
ested beginners, advanced students<lb/>
Thurs. 730.<lb/>
CQMMLZX1Q3<lb/>
Worship God and celebrate Communion<lb/>
this Wed night atpm at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center then eofd) a delicious, all<lb/>
you-can eat home cooked meal and good<lb/>
fellowship The meal is S2 at the door,<lb/>
$1 50 for members Call 758-2030 for info<lb/>
Sponsored by Presbyterian and Method<lb/>
ist Campus Ministries<lb/>
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
CCF would like to invite you to our Bible<lb/>
Studies everv Tues night at 7:00 pm. in<lb/>
Rawl 130 Bring a friend For more info<lb/>
call Jim at 752-7199.<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
If you are challenged everyday with prob-<lb/>
lems that you find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
us for the uncompromised word of God<lb/>
Every Fri. night at 7:00 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
1<lb/>
��<lb/>
Elvira shows good taste in t<lb/>
film. Unpleasant<lb/>
Greenvilt<lb/>
comic sh<lb/>
B) i ARLVIS H MPUV<lb/>
5j � � i I freak<lb/>
Ann � g<lb/>
bool<lb/>
i<lb/>
asked I i<lb/>
perpk - �n.<lb/>
-<lb/>
little inflated th<lb/>
asked<lb/>
-  � .<lb/>
.lent t E ked <lb/>
heprepared tot xplainbut i<lb/>
was the oi<lb/>
After the qirl purchased<lb/>
X-men comics, Reid return�<lb/>
seat behind his table<lb/>
Greenville's first ba<lb/>
j<lb/>
- - '<lb/>
bridg his nose, Reid<lb/>
Some - she 11 unders<lb/>
law- � scare<lb/>
Reid wa-<lb/>
ter up tables at the Rai<lb/>
Inn banquet room. Ba;<lb/>
cards, the latest entry to the w<lb/>
oi outnumbl<lb/>
coin - and com t - at tl <lb/>
Once thought to be ju�<lb/>
kids, baseball avered<lb/>
reached investment status. i<lb/>
ingb) showgoei -I<lb/>
glimpse oi all the immol<lb/>
Aaron Mays, Mantle. Re<lb/>
Re ggie<lb/>
ike a miniature Bai<lb/>
Hall of Fame, ene glass sa<lb/>
comer table held all the sultl<lb/>
swat. There was a 11 Mj<lb/>
Mai � ' " tag<lb/>
w ith .i 56 ai nd<lb/>
Yogi Berra at -<lb/>
' While the kids milled<lb/>
'Clean a<lb/>
a sleep-i<lb/>
Bv BKN SI LB<lb/>
stj"lrB�-<lb/>
CleanandSober may<lb/>
most sobering and sleep-in<lb/>
mo ie ol the year<lb/>
It is an attempt to oj<lb/>
thirty days in the life et<lb/>
Pew nter I Michael Keaton),<lb/>
mercial real estate sail<lb/>
whose life has hit bottoml<lb/>
of drug and alcohol abuse<lb/>
The script is very assj<lb/>
and character develop?<lb/>
non-existent<lb/>
The movie begins w�t<lb/>
sheveled and hung-over<lb/>
on the phone in bedrooi<lb/>
abort-2.000 he emhezzW:<lb/>
his agency. He snorts aca<lb/>
lines - the camera backs up<lb/>
ing the bared KM torn of al<lb/>
fulby built blonde lavtn<lb/>
down in his bed.<lb/>
Payton sets � coke-hnl<lb/>
ror on the pillow beside hj<lb/>
joking that she'll need a<lb/>
start. He is unaware thatj<lb/>
the night she suffered a<lb/>
tack from which she wi'<lb/>
cover<lb/>
Unfortunately, the<lb/>
doesn't recover cither<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0008"/><lb/>
Ll IVb: Happ) btrtrui.iv and all that<lb/>
hv stuff! Lov� Mother Mary and<lb/>
: 1 FORGE1 rO BUi The new<lb/>
-�t T shirt ' Contact<lb/>
i � and 756-7357"<lb/>
lPN sK XNH TESSA: ust<lb/>
Ja  � kr w that we appreciate �B<lb/>
. time ami support you give vis. �<lb/>
NDYCRIMS f ROM ZTA<lb/>
�HEDGES - n front f Student Store<lb/>
?428 Rl VERY! lVn t be<lb/>
: la loween<lb/>
bcHTMARI ON TH SI HALLOW-<lb/>
Its SHIRTS Kf JUKI Contact any<lb/>
r737 1643<lb/>
i ED CASH? - t-jll cards? CaD<lb/>
I s - mad baseball buyer 1 pjv<lb/>
� Mr cards ot jp wear,<lb/>
any condition If you need<lb/>
I the one to rail 757-<lb/>
DISPLA CLASSIFIED<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
 indi onfidential 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/>
-v<lb/>
1-800 433-2930<lb/>
etting Rich<lb/>
ik Tells All<lb/>
ush Stamped Self<lb/>
Envelope<lb/>
Dept. L.M. - 1<lb/>
x 215<lb/>
iC 28518<lb/>
r l. MAJORS CUB<lb/>
IN '<lb/>
led<lb/>
No<lb/>
I May rs - �<lb/>
holp - port<lb/>
;2<lb/>
ven-<lb/>
TAILGATl PARTY<lb/>
Come pin the 1 '�' i in<lb/>
nual T E Majors<lb/>
Club Tailg � Sal i� " ; ! a m<lb/>
Miami gar � vide the '<lb/>
. � pleas own bever-<lb/>
5 Ml HPERS 5T1 DENTS AND<lb/>
MVn TO ATTEND<lb/>
�  � � � be lo<lb/>
cated r - nhurst Field�<lb/>
rd of Rcklen Sta<lb/>
5EEYOUTHI<lb/>
PHOTOGRAFHY SHQW<lb/>
i . s � � a I tures ol<lb/>
aj Central American Tarth as<lb/>
 nby Ernst 1 la i hs Oct 24 Nov Q<lb/>
� � �  7 � p rr MendenhaD<lb/>
AMERICAN MKTG. ASSQC<lb/>
i VKtg As<lb/>
its no! meeting Thurs at S p m The<lb/>
be hold in the GCB in room<lb/>
will have a guest speaker from<lb/>
 � All interested persons are in<lb/>
members are encouraged to<lb/>
KARATE CLUB<lb/>
ill meet Mnn &amp; Wed<lb/>
n Memorial Gym for inter-<lb/>
� ners advanced students<lb/>
rs I<lb/>
COMMUNION<lb/>
d and celebrate Communion<lb/>
�ht at p m at the Methodist<lb/>
r then enjoy a delicious, ail-<lb/>
vou can ea? home cooked meal and good<lb/>
wship The meal is S2 at the door.<lb/>
Hi � r members Call758-2030for mfo<lb/>
iponsored bv Presbyterian and Mithod-<lb/>
ist Campus Ministries<lb/>
QAN1PU5 CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
CCF would like to invite vou to our Bible<lb/>
Studies every Tues night at 7 00 pm. in<lb/>
Rawl 10 Bnng a friend For more info ,<lb/>
call Rm at 752-7199<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
it vou are challenged everyday with prob-<lb/>
lems that vou find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
us for the un com promised word of God<lb/>
Every Fn night at 700 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
OCTOBER 25, 1988 Page 7<lb/>
Elvira' movie gets<lb/>
ig zero star rating<lb/>
Elvira shows good taste in tee-shirts and toilet paper in her new<lb/>
film. Unpleasant dreams!<lb/>
Greenville's first card,<lb/>
comic show is success<lb/>
Bv EARLVIS HAMPTON<lb/>
Sufi baseball card freak<lb/>
Among thousands of comic<lb/>
books, baseball cards and coins, a<lb/>
precocious girl wearing glasses<lb/>
asked the man behind a table a<lb/>
perplexing question.<lb/>
"Aren't these prices just a<lb/>
little inflated the young girl<lb/>
asked the comic book collector.<lb/>
Steve Reid, an Art graduate stu-<lb/>
dent at ECl , looked at the girl as<lb/>
he prepare to explain but "Yeah" <lb/>
was the only thing to come out<lb/>
Alter the p,irl purchased two<lb/>
X -men comics, Reid returned to a<lb/>
seat behind his table, at<lb/>
Greenville's first baseball card,<lb/>
coin and comic show Sunday-<lb/>
Pushing his glasses' rims to the<lb/>
bridge ol his nose, Reid said<lb/>
"Someday she'll understand the<lb/>
laws of scarcity<lb/>
Reid was among thirty collec-<lb/>
tors to set up tables at the Ramada<lb/>
Inn's banquet room. Baseball<lb/>
cards, the latest entry to the world<lb/>
of collectables, outnumbered<lb/>
coins and comics at the show.<lb/>
Once thought to be just-for-<lb/>
kids, baseball cards have recently<lb/>
reached investment status. Walk-<lb/>
ing by, show goers could catch a<lb/>
glimpse of all the immortals;<lb/>
Aaron, Mays, Mantle, Rose and<lb/>
Reggie<lb/>
Like a miniature Baseball<lb/>
1 iall of Fame, one glass case on a<lb/>
comer table held all the sultans of<lb/>
swat. There was a 1961 Mickey<lb/>
intle with a $175 price tagalong<lb/>
with a '36 Aaron, $150 and a '57<lb/>
"i ogi Berra at $75.<lb/>
While the kids milled around<lb/>
the baseball cards and the comic<lb/>
tables, the parents gawked at the<lb/>
silver and gold coins. Tugging at<lb/>
their sleeves for more money, the<lb/>
kids couldn't understand how<lb/>
anyone would pay good new<lb/>
monev for old,old money.<lb/>
ECU Dean Ron Spcier held<lb/>
his table near the door with his<lb/>
son. Speier stood patiently be-<lb/>
hind his table as an Atlanta<lb/>
Braves' fan bought a set of this<lb/>
year's Braves cards. "That will be<lb/>
. 6Q jeeots pled5CcdhlhjeL Braves<lb/>
aren't worth that much Speier<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Returning to Reid'sbooth, the<lb/>
comic book man took time out to<lb/>
chow on a hamburger. Inbetween<lb/>
bites, he tried to explain the law of<lb/>
scarcity, an explanation he<lb/>
couldn't relate to the young girl.<lb/>
"As things become more<lb/>
popular, people want to hold on<lb/>
to them and their value goes up.<lb/>
Right now it seems baseball cards<lb/>
are hot and a lot of people are<lb/>
wanting to collect, but comics are<lb/>
still a good investment Reid<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"From a seller's standpoint,<lb/>
the one difference between base-<lb/>
ball cards and comics is the bulk.<lb/>
Those guys (he points to a base-<lb/>
ball card vendor) can carry most<lb/>
of their stuff in one box while we<lb/>
(comic book freaks) have to lug all<lb/>
these boxes Reid said.<lb/>
With the new craze over<lb/>
nostaglia, investors are liquidat-<lb/>
ing their stocks and bonds and are<lb/>
buying cards and comics. And<lb/>
finally, Greenville has had its first<lb/>
show.<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
Staff Can Man<lb/>
Okay. The basic plot of "El-<lb/>
vira, Mistress of the Dark" goes<lb/>
something like this. Horror movie<lb/>
hostess inherits haunted house,<lb/>
house burns down, she inherits a<lb/>
fortune from the evil uncle that<lb/>
burned her house in the first<lb/>
place, and then uses the money to<lb/>
finance her lifetime dream of star-<lb/>
ring in a Las Vegas revue.<lb/>
Now what? What does one<lb/>
say about "Mistress of the Dark"<lb/>
to fill up 18 inches of space that<lb/>
hasn't been said in the preceding<lb/>
paragraph? One interprets. One<lb/>
expounds great truths about film<lb/>
industry trends. One bullshits.<lb/>
"Elvira" doesn't leave much<lb/>
to interpret. Granted, it was in-<lb/>
tended to be campy, like the B-<lb/>
movies she shows on her syndi-<lb/>
cated show. But camp movies fail<lb/>
nine times out of 10 when the<lb/>
producers don't try to make a<lb/>
straight movie.<lb/>
The "Batman" television<lb/>
show was funny because Adam<lb/>
West and Burt Ward really<lb/>
thought they embodied the heroic<lb/>
ideal. Cassandra Peterson (Elvira)<lb/>
knows she isn't a goofy bimbo,<lb/>
thus her Elvira comes off sound-<lb/>
ing like a stereotypical goofy<lb/>
bimbo.<lb/>
And that is what ultimately<lb/>
drags this film down more than<lb/>
anything. If Elvira had played as a<lb/>
hip hexmeister, or a supremely<lb/>
brainless spellcasting slut, the<lb/>
movie might have been saved.<lb/>
The atmosphere of the movie<lb/>
also lacked realism. Bringing her<lb/>
character out into the daylight<lb/>
was Peterson's first mistake.<lb/>
While putting Elvira in the ultra-<lb/>
moral setting of Fallwell, Mass.<lb/>
has potential, Elvira really wasn't<lb/>
shocking enough in appearence<lb/>
or attitude to cause the reactions<lb/>
she did.<lb/>
But the town folk reacted<lb/>
violently. Almost as whacked out<lb/>
as the people in the small town<lb/>
"Footloose" took place in. 1 have<lb/>
yet to find a small town that really<lb/>
outlaws dancing. Beer, maybe,<lb/>
but not dancing.<lb/>
One of the most disappoint-<lb/>
ing things in this movie was the<lb/>
hyped up special effects. Prom-<lb/>
ised by the press releases to see a<lb/>
High Noon' witchy warfare"<lb/>
sequence during the climax of the<lb/>
movie, I was let down hard when<lb/>
I witnessed a few bolts of magic<lb/>
lightning and a fiery sneeze.<lb/>
Hardly a wizards' duel.<lb/>
"Superman III" had better effects<lb/>
than this.<lb/>
The high points of the movie<lb/>
are the inclusion of a Screamin'<lb/>
Jay Hawkins song ("I Put A Spell<lb/>
On You"�unfortunately sung by<lb/>
some nobody session singer and<lb/>
not Screamin' Jay) and when El-<lb/>
vira turns to the audience after the<lb/>
telegram concerning her inheri-<lb/>
tance is received and says, "Is that<lb/>
riming or what?"<lb/>
Let us not forget the numer-<lb/>
ous sexual double-entendres. The<lb/>
filmmakers want us to believe<lb/>
Elvira is the new Mac Wet, but<lb/>
most of Elvira's one-liners fell flat<lb/>
 a condition you'd think impos-<lb/>
sible with cleavage like that.<lb/>
By far the best line in the<lb/>
movie came after the theater<lb/>
owner drops a marquee letter on<lb/>
her head. When asked how her<lb/>
head is, she calmly replies'Well,<lb/>
I've never had any complaints If<lb/>
more of her dialogue had been<lb/>
that quick, I would have more<lb/>
respect for her.<lb/>
Onto the expounding. Peter-<lb/>
son once belonged to the same<lb/>
comedy troupe as Paul Reubens.<lb/>
For $150, do we know who this is?<lb/>
Survey says  Pee Wee Herman.<lb/>
Right.<lb/>
Now, hasn't Pee Wee made a<lb/>
few movies? Hasn't Jim Varney<lb/>
(aka the unfunny redneck Ernest<lb/>
P. Worrel) also just completed<lb/>
another movie to be released<lb/>
come Christmas? I think so. What<lb/>
does all this mean?<lb/>
Aside from the fact that my 18<lb/>
inches is almost up, it means that<lb/>
these people are parlaying their<lb/>
character bits, which are admit-<lb/>
tedly funny in small doses, into<lb/>
big bucks in the movies. So what<lb/>
does the future look like?<lb/>
"Church Lady Got Married<lb/>
where the lovable but tough on<lb/>
Satan talk shoe hostess goes back<lb/>
in time to rearrange her life and<lb/>
prevent the coming of the Anti<lb/>
Christ, 'Throw Rosie From the<lb/>
Train where the bouncy diner<lb/>
waitress is saved from her son's<lb/>
plotting by super absorbent<lb/>
Bounty� and "It's a Wonderful<lb/>
Lie where the Lying Guy tries to<lb/>
kill himself. An angel shows him<lb/>
that he really will see Vanna<lb/>
White naked, the Lying Guy de-<lb/>
cides to live, but finds out the<lb/>
angel was lying to him.<lb/>
Elvira (Cassandra Peterson) mugs while talking on the phone in<lb/>
her new film, "Elvira, Mistress of the Dark<lb/>
Nesbitt, gallery director,<lb/>
defines motivating force<lb/>
Bv DEBRA BLAKE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
But my favorite is, of course,<lb/>
"Bonehead � The Movie where<lb/>
members of The East Carolinian<lb/>
Revenge Squad break out of the<lb/>
Phantom Zone and wreak havoc<lb/>
in Greenville while a temporarily<lb/>
unfunny Bonehead contemplates<lb/>
whether sex is more important<lb/>
than humor.<lb/>
That's the review for now. I'm<lb/>
the Bonehead and I am outta here.<lb/>
'Clean and Sober' has<lb/>
a sleep-inducive effect<lb/>
By BEN SELBY<lb/>
StaffWriler<lb/>
"Clean and Sober" may be the<lb/>
most sobering and sleep-inducive<lb/>
movie oi the vear.<lb/>
It is an attempt to observe<lb/>
thirtv davs in the life of Darryl<lb/>
Poynter (Michael Kcaton), a com-<lb/>
mercial real estate salesman<lb/>
whose life has hit bottom because<lb/>
of drug and alcohol abuse.<lb/>
The script is very assuming<lb/>
and character development is<lb/>
A very insincere Payton<lb/>
checks into a drug treatment clinic<lb/>
to hide from the authorities. There<lb/>
he meets fellow patient Charlene<lb/>
'Charli' Sanders (Kathy Baker), a<lb/>
typical female crane operator.<lb/>
As mysteriously as his co-<lb/>
caine habit came about, his drug<lb/>
recovery began. He substituted<lb/>
his obsession for drugs with an<lb/>
infatuation for an impossible rela-<lb/>
tionship with the already at-<lb/>
tached Sanders. The relationship<lb/>
doesn't survive and neither does<lb/>
the movie.<lb/>
"Clean and Sober" gives us a<lb/>
taste of Michael Keaton in a non-<lb/>
non-t xistent.<lb/>
IT�e movie begins with a di-<lb/>
sheveled and hung-ovcr Payton<lb/>
on the phone in bedroom lying comedic role. He's good. But the<lb/>
about52,000 he embezzled from script is very bad. Hopefully we'll<lb/>
his agency. He snorts a couple of see Keaton again soon in a funny -<lb/>
lines - the camera backs up reveal- flavored jam of a different sort.<lb/>
mg the bared bottom of a beauti- One redeeming quality of the<lb/>
fully built blonde laying face- film exists, in that drug abuse is<lb/>
down in his bed. shown as a miserable and dead -<lb/>
Payton sets a coke-lined mir- end street; help is available, how-<lb/>
ror on the pillow beside her head, ever, if you want it.<lb/>
joking that she'll need a jump - Ron Howard produced this<lb/>
start. He is unaware that during spine-softening gem and ifs clear<lb/>
the night she suffered a heart at- that Opy was do,<lb/>
tack from which she will not re- tempt. If anyone asks you to see<lb/>
covcr. "Clean and Sober be smart,<lb/>
Unfortunately, the picture<lb/>
doesn't recover either. JUST SAY NO!<lb/>
She will drive hundreds of<lb/>
miles to pick up paintings for an<lb/>
art show or work extra-long hours<lb/>
to ensure a successful exhibit. She<lb/>
is Perry Nesbitt, director of Gray<lb/>
Art Gallery, and it is obvious she<lb/>
defines the word "motivation<lb/>
Nesbitt has been the director<lb/>
for four years and is always opti-<lb/>
mistic where the gallery is con-<lb/>
cerned. She is always pushing and<lb/>
striving to do better and feels sTTe"<lb/>
docs a goad job with the budget<lb/>
she has. Although she is grateful<lb/>
to the Vice Chancellor and SGA<lb/>
for providing additional funds,<lb/>
money seems to be the only diffi-<lb/>
culty.<lb/>
Nesbitt says her peers con-<lb/>
sider her shows to be the finest.<lb/>
She says, "I try to show work<lb/>
that's of interest to the commu-<lb/>
nity and artists who wouldn't be<lb/>
shown in North Carolina<lb/>
The gallery has been re-<lb/>
viewed in National Art Journals<lb/>
and they do funding and catalogs<lb/>
that are distributed nationally<lb/>
each year.<lb/>
Gray Art Gallery has an<lb/>
average of seven or eight shows a<lb/>
semester and a variety of work<lb/>
throughout the year. The art stu-<lb/>
dents show in the gallery twice a<lb/>
year and the graduate students<lb/>
have a Thesis Show, depending<lb/>
on when they graduate.<lb/>
In the summer they have a<lb/>
show that is strictly voluntary.<lb/>
"The gallerv is here to spark<lb/>
people's imagination Nesbitt<lb/>
said. "It's to show people what art<lb/>
is and what art can be, and to push<lb/>
them beyond what they're com-<lb/>
fortable with.<lb/>
At the present time the gal-<lb/>
lery is "Celebrating Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina Artists Nesbitt says,<lb/>
"All the authors are very strong<lb/>
artists, each of them in his own<lb/>
wav" <lb/>
e,Tc"?$vs SMnRBSttTrfBtivate<lb/>
the audience and have soothing<lb/>
work along with some that's<lb/>
threatening. "We want everyone<lb/>
to come Nesbitt said. The art<lb/>
changes everv month and we<lb/>
have a lecture series<lb/>
The lectures are given by crit-<lb/>
ics and visiting artists. They wel-<lb/>
come the public and enable<lb/>
people to understand the works<lb/>
of an artist.<lb/>
There is an Art Enthusiasm<lb/>
Group that provides an outreach<lb/>
to the community. It tries to pro-<lb/>
vide film series, museum visits<lb/>
and luncheons for fundraising.<lb/>
Preparations for a show usu-<lb/>
ally begin anywhere from six<lb/>
months to a year ahead of time for<lb/>
planning. Even though Nesbitt<lb/>
savs she has no definite plans for<lb/>
next year, she did say she hopes to<lb/>
do an International Art Exhibit of<lb/>
Contemporary Italian Artists<lb/>
someday.<lb/>
Halloween has long history,<lb/>
known as Samhain by Celts<lb/>
ECU Newt Bureau<lb/>
GREENVILLE � Want to<lb/>
glimpse the future? October 31<lb/>
may be the best day for such vi-<lb/>
sions if you can accept the beliefs rnarrY- BY going to a graveyard<lb/>
of the ancient Celtic people who one might see the faces ot those<lb/>
with visions of things to come.<lb/>
Young women would sit on the<lb/>
church steps in hopes of seeing<lb/>
visions of the men thev would<lb/>
lived in Britain, Wales, Ireland<lb/>
and Scotland hundreds of years<lb/>
ago, says an ECU professor.<lb/>
It was the Celts, you see, who<lb/>
brought us the old and honored<lb/>
tradition of Halloween. But the<lb/>
Celts didn't call it Halloween. To<lb/>
them it was Samhain. It was a time<lb/>
to celebrate the ending of the har-<lb/>
vest season and the beginning of a<lb/>
new year.<lb/>
The Celts believed it was also<lb/>
a time when spirit ancestors could<lb/>
return to the physical world to "to<lb/>
see how things are going says<lb/>
Dr. Charles W. Sullivan, an ECU<lb/>
who might be next to die.<lb/>
There were also big celebra-<lb/>
tions with food and drink, games<lb/>
and costumes. Children roamed<lb/>
the streets, just as they do today,<lb/>
asking for treats and promising<lb/>
mischief if none were given.<lb/>
There were huge bonfires<lb/>
which Sullivan said may be de-<lb/>
rived from the words "bone<lb/>
fires He said the older celebra-<lb/>
tion, if traced back far enough,<lb/>
probably involved sacrifices. It<lb/>
was considered a way of making<lb/>
amends and restoring bala ice.<lb/>
One tradition that has be-<lb/>
Fm anf!2J"r Look at these big kids trying to look up the nice ladies' dresses. Little<lb/>
opey at mis ai �u�u��.�, u,� u. �, ;nt;n� n;� icid� � hand from c.rppn-<lb/>
do they know that its just a painting. Big Kids, a band from Greens-<lb/>
boro will be playing with The Bond Halloween at the Attic in a big<lb/>
masquerade party called Beaux Arts Ball.<lb/>
English professor who specializes come a part of Halloween began<lb/>
in folklore and the myths of the with the carving of turnips and<lb/>
Celts. other vegetables to make lanterns,<lb/>
'There was a little bit of a some with faces. "Jack of the Lan-<lb/>
break between the old year and tern" was an early folklore charac-<lb/>
when the new year would begin ter, an unfortunate soul who lost<lb/>
Sullivan says. "They believed that his head and periodically returns<lb/>
the boundaries between our to look for it. Sullivan said the<lb/>
world and the other world broke Halloween celebration adopted<lb/>
down and the spirits of their an- this folklore character. The carv-<lb/>
cestors could come into their ing of the jack o' lantern from a<lb/>
houses. To make sure the spirits pumpkin is an American tradi-<lb/>
felt at home the people left food tion.<lb/>
out for them, so they wouldn't While these early celebra-<lb/>
play tricks and raise any kind of a tions were pagan in belief they<lb/>
ruckus Sullivan said. had nothing to do with the so-<lb/>
It was a time, too, when the Sec SABBATH, page 9<lb/>
spirits might provide the living<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0009"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25,1988<lb/>
Koske's act is a living bomb<lb/>
SHELBY, NC (AP) - Benny<lb/>
"Boom Boom" Koske's work<lb/>
place is like the eye of a hurricane.<lb/>
All is calm and serene within<lb/>
his tiny nucleus; but just across<lb/>
the line, chaos prevails.<lb/>
Koske is the "All-American<lb/>
Human Bomb" who blows him-<lb/>
self up for a living hundreds of<lb/>
rimes each year.<lb/>
He climbs in a box, ignites a<lb/>
charge and everything around<lb/>
him is blasted into smithereens<lb/>
while he remains intact, more or<lb/>
less.<lb/>
But things can go wrong and<lb/>
when thev do, he shifts out of the<lb/>
hurricane's calm eye into its angry<lb/>
body.<lb/>
It is no fun place to be. One<lb/>
time he got second- and third-<lb/>
degree burns over bO percent of<lb/>
his body.<lb/>
The blasts have broken his<lb/>
legs twice and cracked his ribs.<lb/>
"I've got lacerations all over<lb/>
my body Koske said recently.<lb/>
"And 1 still have a little ring-<lb/>
ing in my ears<lb/>
More than one person has<lb/>
asked Koske: "Isn't this a hell of a<lb/>
way to make a living?"<lb/>
The All-American Human<lb/>
Bomb agrees.<lb/>
"I respect the act he says,<lb/>
hands shaking slightly as he<lb/>
blinks through bloodshot eyes.<lb/>
"I'm scared every time I get into<lb/>
the box. I'd be lying if I didn't say-<lb/>
that. No two shows are ever the<lb/>
same. I never know what to ex-<lb/>
pect<lb/>
Koske also blows himself up<lb/>
inside automobiles. The entire<lb/>
vehicle is demolished and, if all<lb/>
goes right, he steps out unharmed<lb/>
- if a case of jangled nerves isn't<lb/>
counted.<lb/>
It is a scary, dangerous, com-<lb/>
pletely unconventional way to<lb/>
bring home the bacon; but Koske<lb/>
has been doing it for 15 years.<lb/>
On the plus side, he gets to<lb/>
travel all over the world, enjoy<lb/>
applause from appreciative audi-<lb/>
ences and meet interesting<lb/>
people<lb/>
"I make a comfortable liv-<lb/>
ing he said. "I'm going to keep<lb/>
on going for five more years and<lb/>
then get into promoting stunts. I<lb/>
won't pass this one on. vVhen I'm<lb/>
done, I'm hanging it up<lb/>
The! lumanBoinbgrewupin<lb/>
Talm Bay, Fla the only child of a<lb/>
show business couple who ran<lb/>
concessions at circuses and carni-<lb/>
vals. He had two homes: Palm Bay<lb/>
and the road.<lb/>
Both places he had access to<lb/>
old carney pros like the "Human<lb/>
Torpedo It looked like great fun,<lb/>
climbing into a cannon and get-<lb/>
ting shot into the air over a tall<lb/>
Ferris wheel.<lb/>
The show biz bug sank its<lb/>
teeth into Koske. He joined Joie<lb/>
Chitvvood's Helldriversand later<lb/>
ran his own thrill show called<lb/>
Hollywood Death Dodgers.<lb/>
On a thrill-show swing<lb/>
through Canada, Koske caught a<lb/>
carney act by a Russian per-<lb/>
former. It was a corker. The Rus-<lb/>
sian sat in a chair and blew him-<lb/>
self up with dynamite.<lb/>
"I watched him and got an<lb/>
idea Koske recalls. "I didn't<lb/>
think too much of sitting in a<lb/>
chair. I thought I'd do it ina coffin-<lb/>
like box<lb/>
Koske debuted the act at a<lb/>
benefit show for his church. The<lb/>
blast kicked him out of the box<lb/>
and soundly rattled him.<lb/>
"I put it back on the drawing<lb/>
board Koske said.<lb/>
He came up with a five-<lb/>
charge combination of low-grade<lb/>
explosives which he packed in-<lb/>
side the box.<lb/>
"It's enough to blow up a<lb/>
small safe or full-size automo-<lb/>
bile he says.<lb/>
Atmospheric conditions de-<lb/>
termine the size of the explosive<lb/>
charges.<lb/>
"If it's too not, I've got to take<lb/>
some out he says. "And if it's<lb/>
colder, I add another cnarge<lb/>
Four years ago in El Ccntro,<lb/>
Calif the temperature hit 110<lb/>
degrees and turned his trick into a<lb/>
flirtation with death.<lb/>
When the smoke settled, his<lb/>
body was covered with golfball-<lb/>
sized welts. After the severe<lb/>
burns, he could no longer get in-<lb/>
surance, although he carries in-<lb/>
surance for the public and has the<lb/>
appropriate federal licenses.<lb/>
Koske is married, but his wife<lb/>
stays home and looks after their<lb/>
26cocker spanieis. VVhen she trav-<lb/>
els, it is to dog shows.<lb/>
The Human Bomb plays fairs<lb/>
gjand openings and all sorts of<lb/>
other events. Television is a big<lb/>
outlet. He has been on such pro-<lb/>
grams as 'The Mike Douglas<lb/>
Show "What's My Line?" "Real<lb/>
People a Bob Hope special on<lb/>
HBO and "Thicke of the Night<lb/>
The act takes him all over the<lb/>
United States and Canada, Mex-<lb/>
ico, Central and South America<lb/>
and Japan.<lb/>
The time arrives for Koske to<lb/>
make his debut at the Cleveland<lb/>
County Fair. His box sits atop a<lb/>
trailer adjacent to the pig race area<lb/>
and a crowd gathers to watch<lb/>
behind a rope.<lb/>
The Human Bomb appears in<lb/>
a cape, helmet, leather suit, hoots<lb/>
and gloves. He looks worried. His<lb/>
hands are shaking.<lb/>
As Koske climbs into the box,<lb/>
spectators wisely put their fingers<lb/>
into their ears.<lb/>
The bang is a big one. Pieces<lb/>
of the box fly in all directions.<lb/>
"Is he allrioht?" someone in<lb/>
the audience asks about the<lb/>
crouching figure left on the stage.<lb/>
Koske slowly moves to his knees<lb/>
and then takes a bow. The whole<lb/>
act has taken about four minutes.<lb/>
"I'm a nervous wreck when<lb/>
the show's over Koske says. "I<lb/>
have to take a cold shower. It takes<lb/>
me half-an-hour to get down to<lb/>
earth again<lb/>
fi<lb/>
rs<lb/>
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WANTED:<lb/>
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CLASS PORTRAITS<lb/>
Portraits for all classes will be taken from Oct. 31 through<lb/>
Nov. 4. Pictures will be taken in the Soda Shop at the<lb/>
Student Store from 9 a.m12 p.m. and 1 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
This is the only opportunity to have your picture taken for<lb/>
the 1989 Buccaneer Yearbook.<lb/>
mi iiiii���f�t�w�'w?7w�TT"WTWTw;wwwTw'T,y�WTi?�<lb/>
liiviifiil<lb/>
Mir<lb/>
It Isn't Your Yearbook Until You Are In It!<lb/>
THENIGHT BEFORE<lb/>
October 28,1988<lb/>
� 5:00 until<lb/>
� LOCALS ONLY<lb/>
�SEE YOU<lb/>
� 3QO advance TICKETS<lb/>
� Bring any Coors Light Product &amp;Get 1QQ OFF<lb/>
coolers welcome � no glass<lb/>
n<lb/>
NSF<lb/>
CHICAGO (AP) f<lb/>
500 years after Copernicus<lb/>
lated that the Earth rei<lb/>
around the sun, milliol<lb/>
Americans think otherwi:<lb/>
gests a poll that found vast<lb/>
bers of the nation's adults I<lb/>
tifically illiterate<lb/>
In the early 16th centuj<lb/>
Polish astronomer Nichola<lb/>
ernicus laid the foundatK<lb/>
modern astronomy with hi:<lb/>
centric theory.<lb/>
Many Americans mist;<lb/>
believe that laser beams<lb/>
cused sound waves and ti<lb/>
States<lb/>
(AP) � Statesville's si<lb/>
at luring production for<lb/>
movies may seem to havi<lb/>
pened overnight, but it real<lb/>
the culimination of longj<lb/>
work, officials say.<lb/>
The city is hosting its<lb/>
ever premiere partv this w<lb/>
celebrate "A Stoning In J-<lb/>
County a made-for-TY<lb/>
filmed in July and August<lb/>
dell Countv<lb/>
The movie, starring kej<lb/>
of "thirty-something,<lb/>
Perlman of "Beautv an<lb/>
Beast" and "LA. Law<lb/>
Eikenberry, is about an<lb/>
family who has its rehgiol<lb/>
liefs tested when a babv i<lb/>
dentally killed bv local teei<lb/>
Paula Wynck oi the N.<lb/>
Office in Raleigh recalk<lb/>
Statesvillebecame the local<lb/>
the S3 million movie<lb/>
"We got a call from tl<lb/>
ducer (Don Goldman), wl<lb/>
looking for some Amish<lb/>
Sabba<lb/>
Continued from pag<lb/>
called "Witches'Sabbath �<lb/>
devil's holiday These are<lb/>
that arose after Christ<lb/>
 "When the Christian:<lb/>
up into western Europe thej<lb/>
to take over the festival<lb/>
found there. Rather than<lb/>
stampout a popular festival<lb/>
much easier to convert it,<lb/>
van savs.<lb/>
The church accepted<lb/>
dition of Samhain festiv.<lb/>
thev reorganized it so it wo<lb/>
in with what thev establisl<lb/>
"All Saints Day" on Novj<lb/>
recognize the saints, anc<lb/>
Souls Day" on Nov. 2, to ho<lb/>
rest of those who had del<lb/>
life on Earth. They also cl<lb/>
the name for the festival oni<lb/>
to "All Hallows (All Holy<lb/>
Sullivan said the<lb/>
made similar concession w<lb/>
celebration of Christmas,<lb/>
moving into northern an<lb/>
em Europe the Christian<lb/>
celebrated the birthday of<lb/>
in January but then coi<lb/>
their Christ Dav celebratioj<lb/>
an ancient solstice festival<lb/>
observed on Dec. 25.<lb/>
Unlike Christmas whil<lb/>
quicklv absorbed by thecj<lb/>
the tradition for All Sainl<lb/>
and All Souls Dav are alm<lb/>
gotten. But the "Hallows<lb/>
Halloween festival coni<lb/>
with manv oi the same tra<lb/>
and practices that were<lb/>
ved in the earlv Celtic fj<lb/>
always on Oct 31.<lb/>
The devil was not a pai<lb/>
original Halloween norl<lb/>
witches a part of the Celtil<lb/>
tion either, according to SJ<lb/>
In fact the name "witchef<lb/>
given bv the church to<lb/>
who served as healers ill<lb/>
societies. Sullivan said the<lb/>
may have believed thai<lb/>
women, somehow, det<lb/>
from the power of the chui<lb/>
its teachings.<lb/>
He said that in all off<lb/>
search on Celtic folklo<lb/>
mythology he has seen nv<lb/>
in the original Halloweet<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"I think one of the nic<lb/>
in recent years is that peoj<lb/>
become more aware of tl<lb/>
background of Hallow<lb/>
the fact that it has come<lb/>
us from an old, Celtic, pre<lb/>
tian celebration he said.<lb/>
But while many of<lb/>
traditions continue todaj<lb/>
are some exceptions.<lb/>
Halloween is now a<lb/>
businesses that sell car<lb/>
costumes, a day for chile<lb/>
have some fun, and a<lb/>
Linus to look, once again, <lb/>
Great Pumpkin he said.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0010"/><lb/>
iig Goblins &amp;<lb/>
le Goblins.<lb/>
ave All Your<lb/>
een Costumes<lb/>
accessories.<lb/>
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f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25,1988 9<lb/>
NSF says Americans illiterate<lb/>
CHICAGO (AP) � Nearly<lb/>
500 yeare after Copernicus postu-<lb/>
lated that the Earth revolves<lb/>
around the sun, millions of<lb/>
Americans think otherwise, sug-<lb/>
gests a poll that found vast num-<lb/>
bers of the nation's adults "scien-<lb/>
tifically illiterate<lb/>
In the early 16th century, the<lb/>
oms are smaller than electrons,<lb/>
said Jon Miller, director of the<lb/>
Public Opinion Laboratory at<lb/>
Northern Illinois University, who<lb/>
conducted a nationwide survey<lb/>
for the National Science Founda-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
In a July telephone survey,<lb/>
2,041 adults 18 or older were<lb/>
Americans are scientifically illit-<lb/>
erate Miller said Sunday. "It's a<lb/>
fairly dire situation<lb/>
Polish astronomer Nicholas Cop- asked about 75 questions on basic<lb/>
ernicus laid the foundation for science, Miller said. The survey<lb/>
modern astronomy with hishelio- had a margin of error of plus or<lb/>
centric theory. minus 3 percentage points.<lb/>
Many Americans mistakenly ,<lb/>
believe that laser beams are fo- I! rJuhs show that �"<lb/>
cused sound waves and that at- very basic ,dcas' vast numbers of<lb/>
The results indicate many<lb/>
Americans have little idea of what<lb/>
presidential candidates are talk-<lb/>
ing about when they list key is-<lb/>
The results of the survey sues such as the Strategic Defense<lb/>
haven't been fully tabulated yet, Initiative, acid rain, the green-<lb/>
but it appears that 93 percent to 95 house effect and the space race, he<lb/>
percent would have to be consid-<lb/>
ered scientifically illiterate, lack-<lb/>
ing fundamental knowledge of<lb/>
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scientific vocabulary, methodol-<lb/>
ogy and an understanding of<lb/>
science's impact on the world,<lb/>
said Miller. The group's 1985 sur-<lb/>
vey found a 95 percent illiteracy<lb/>
rate.<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Leon Ledcrman, who last<lb/>
week was named co-winner of the<lb/>
1988 Nobel Prize for physics and<lb/>
is director of the Fermi National<lb/>
Accelerator Laboratory in Bata-<lb/>
via, called the latest findings<lb/>
"pretty devastating<lb/>
Statesville made site of three films<lb/>
(AP) � Statesville's success<lb/>
at luring production for three<lb/>
movies may seem to have hap-<lb/>
pened overnight, but it really was<lb/>
the culimination of long, hard<lb/>
work, officials say.<lb/>
The city is hosting its first-<lb/>
ever premiere party this week to<lb/>
celebrate "A Stoning In Fulham<lb/>
County a made-for-TV movie<lb/>
filmed in July and August in Ire-<lb/>
dell County.<lb/>
The movie, starring Ken Olin<lb/>
of "thirtysomething Ron<lb/>
Tori man of "Beauty and the<lb/>
Beast" and "L.A. Law's" Jill<lb/>
Eikenberry, is about an Amish<lb/>
family who has its religious be-<lb/>
liefs tested when a baby is acci-<lb/>
dentally killed by local teenagers.<lb/>
Paula Wyrick of the N.C. Film<lb/>
Office in Raleigh recalled how<lb/>
Statesville became the location for<lb/>
the $3 million movie.<lb/>
"We got a call from the pro-<lb/>
ducer (Don Goldman), who was<lb/>
looking for some Amish coun-<lb/>
Sabbath<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
called "Witches' Sabbath" or "the<lb/>
devil's holiday These are names<lb/>
that arose after Christianity<lb/>
tvedinto western Europe<lb/>
try she said. Danny Heam,<lb/>
president of the Greater<lb/>
Statesville Chamber of Com-<lb/>
merce, informed her there was an<lb/>
Amish community in the north-<lb/>
em part of Iredell County.<lb/>
"Danny and his committee<lb/>
dropped everything, ran out and<lb/>
shot some photos, brought them<lb/>
to a one-hour developer and<lb/>
shipped them overnight to Los<lb/>
Angeles she said.<lb/>
Statesville is currently the<lb/>
location of a third movie, "The<lb/>
Feud a comedy being produced<lb/>
by a New York film company.<lb/>
Make Up To $1000 In One Week!<lb/>
Student Organizations,<lb/>
Fraternities, Sororities needed for<lb/>
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Must be motivated and organized.<lb/>
Call 1-800-932-0528 ext. 28.<lb/>
x<lb/>
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a a<lb/>
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your sanity and your good taste! The Bonehead and Earlvis have<lb/>
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This may be the end of decency as we know it<lb/>
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Free Admission<lb/>
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$2 For 2nd, 3rd, &amp; 4th <lb/>
plus you keep the Mason Jar<lb/>
Free non-alcoholic drinks for <lb/>
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Must be 21 to enter and have valid I.D.<lb/>
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203 W. Greenville Blvd. � 355-2666<lb/>
y<lb/>
Mind tfiw AD.<lb/>
"When the Christians came<lb/>
up into western Europe they tried<lb/>
to take over the festivals they<lb/>
found there. Rather than try to<lb/>
stampout a popular festival it was<lb/>
much easier to convert it Sulli-<lb/>
van says.<lb/>
The church accepted !he tra-<lb/>
dition of Samhain festival but<lb/>
they reorganized it so it would tie<lb/>
in with what they established as<lb/>
"All Saints Day" on Nov. 1, to<lb/>
recognize the saints, and "All<lb/>
Souls Day" on Nov. 2, to honor the<lb/>
rest of those who had departed<lb/>
life on Earth. They also changed<lb/>
the name for the festival on Oct. 31<lb/>
to "All Hallows (All Holy) Eve<lb/>
Sullivan said the church<lb/>
made similar concession with the<lb/>
celebration of Christmas. Before<lb/>
moving into northern and west-<lb/>
ern Europe the Christian Church<lb/>
celebrated the birthday of Christ<lb/>
in January but then combined<lb/>
their Christ Day celebration with<lb/>
an ancient solstice festival being<lb/>
observed on Dec. 25.<lb/>
Unlike Christmas which was<lb/>
quickly absorbed by the culture,<lb/>
the tradition for All Saints Day<lb/>
and All Souls Day are almost for-<lb/>
gotten. But the "Hallows Eve" or<lb/>
Halloween festival continues<lb/>
with many of the same traditions<lb/>
and practices that were obbser-<lb/>
ved in the early Celtic festival,<lb/>
always on Oct. 31.<lb/>
the devil was not a part of the<lb/>
original Halloween nor were<lb/>
witches a part of the Celtic tradi-<lb/>
tion either, according to Sullivan.<lb/>
In fact the name "witches" was<lb/>
given by the church to women<lb/>
who served as healers in rural<lb/>
societies. Sullivan said the priests<lb/>
may have believed that these<lb/>
women, somehow, detracted<lb/>
from the power of the church and<lb/>
its teachings.<lb/>
He said that in all of his re-<lb/>
search on Celtic folklore and<lb/>
mythology he has seen no "evil"<lb/>
in'the original Halloween tradi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"1 think one of the nice things<lb/>
in recent years is that people have<lb/>
become more aware of the deep<lb/>
background of Halloween and<lb/>
the fact that it has come down to<lb/>
us from an old, Celtic, pre-Chris-<lb/>
tian celebration he said.<lb/>
But while many of the old<lb/>
traditions continue today there<lb/>
are some exceptions.<lb/>
Halloween is now a day for<lb/>
businesses that sell candy and<lb/>
costumes, a day for children to<lb/>
have some fun, and a day for<lb/>
Linus to look, once again, for the<lb/>
Great Pumpkin he said.<lb/>
ATLANTA<lb/>
BOSTON<lb/>
CHARLOTTE.<lb/>
CWCAOO �<lb/>
tJtjLUI<lb/>
LAQUARWA.<lb/>
UK ANGELES.<lb/>
t18�<lb/>
�1M<lb/>
� $7�<lb/>
$198<lb/>
.�178<lb/>
- tas�<lb/>
Money<lb/>
NEWARK$196<lb/>
ORLANDO�$218<lb/>
PWLAOELPHA�91M<lb/>
PITTSBURGH $178<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO�$378<lb/>
SAVANNAH�$58<lb/>
WASHINGTON$148<lb/>
.8218<lb/>
?ASK ABOUT OUR COMPANION FARES!<lb/>
i are roundtrlpb�td on midweek travel. Tickets are nonrefundable with<lb/>
no charges allowed. RcacrvsOonamustbe made a mtnteium of7 days In advance.<lb/>
Mom we aubject to change without noace.<lb/>
CTreenville<lb/>
�&amp; travel center<lb/>
nf) Arlington Blvd Suite M<lb/>
756-1521<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
m<lb/>
Coming Attractions<lb/>
��L,<lb/>
EER DAY<lb/>
November 2.1988<lb/>
3:00 PM - 5:30 PM<lb/>
Regional Rehabilitation Center at PCMH<lb/>
Junior and Senior college students from the surrounding area<lb/>
who have declared a major or are interested in nursing or allied<lb/>
health are invited to tour the Center and to meet the staff. Depart-<lb/>
ments participating are Nursing, Physical Therapy. Occupational<lb/>
Therapy, Speech &amp; Hearing Therapy, Social Work, Therapeutic<lb/>
Recreation, Psychology and Medical Records.<lb/>
There will be representatives from nursing and allied health re-<lb/>
cruitment who will be available to answer questions pertaining<lb/>
to employment and personnel benefits.<lb/>
Join us at Career Day from 3:00 to 5:30 p.m November<lb/>
2, 1988.<lb/>
People Care More Here<lb/>
PITT COUNTY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL<lb/>
200 Stantonsburg Road � P0 Box 6028 � Greenville NC 27835 � (919) 551 4100<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW<lb/>
Faces, structures and architectures of<lb/>
North and Central American Earth As seen by<lb/>
ERNST HABRICHS<lb/>
October 24- November 18<lb/>
Mendenhall Gallery<lb/>
Opening Reception Wednesday, October 26 at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
MOVIE OF THE WEEK<lb/>
CRY FREDOM - R<lb/>
Wednesday, October 26 at 8:00 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
DONALD WOODS<lb/>
Anti-Arpartheid Activist<lb/>
CRY FREEDOM is based on his life story<lb/>
He will speak Thursday, October 27 at 8:00 in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS<lb/>
GYPSY ROSE<lb/>
Saturday, October 29 at 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
In Mendenhall, in the Underground<lb/>
HORROR MOVIE LOCK-IN<lb/>
CARRIE THE OMEN TEXAS CHAIN SAW MASSACRE<lb/>
Costume Contest, Prizes, Shrieks and Howls<lb/>
Sunday, October 30-1:30 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0011"/><lb/>
1HI I ASI CAROI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBER 25, 1W8 Page U)<lb/>
Pirates continue their losing streak as<lb/>
they fall to the Orangemen of SU 38-14<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Sports 1 ditor<lb/>
With the Pirates dropping<lb/>
their sixth game in as man) out-<lb/>
ings, one question seems to be on<lb/>
the minds (it main Pirate fans<lb/>
When will this madness end ?<lb/>
On Saturday the Pirates were<lb/>
pummelled by the Orangemen of<lb/>
Syracuse 38-14 in what may verj<lb/>
well have been ECU'S poorest<lb/>
showing this season "1 thought<lb/>
thev (Syracuse) did a good job of<lb/>
stopping our option Pirate<lb/>
Coach Art Baker said. "We didn't<lb/>
throw the ball weli. I am disap-<lb/>
pointed about the offense and the<lb/>
way we moved the ball.<lb/>
The Pirates started the game<lb/>
at a disadvantage. They were<lb/>
penalized ten yards before a sec-<lb/>
ond had ticked off the clock as a<lb/>
result of two sucessive Robb<lb/>
Emperato kick-offs that dribbled<lb/>
along the turf before going out of<lb/>
bounds As it tm ned out, this was<lb/>
merelj a harbingei for the rest o(<lb/>
the d<lb/>
Aftci a successful kick-off by<lb/>
the Pirates, Svracuse started the<lb/>
tnst drive of the d.w on thcirown<lb/>
41-aid line. 1 he Orangemen<lb/>
took the ball down totheone-yard<lb/>
line behind the running ol Robert<lb/>
Drummond, who accounted tor<lb/>
29 of the ' yards of the series.<lb/>
including a one yard plunge tor<lb/>
the s. ore.<lb/>
Drummond carried 10 times<lb/>
in the first halt for 103 yards, and<lb/>
amassed 117 ards on the d.iv, a<lb/>
career best. KM Ireene added the<lb/>
extra point, and S racuse held the<lb/>
early 7 0 lead.<lb/>
Flu- Pirates moved the ball<lb/>
well on their first possession,<lb/>
driving down to the S racuse 25<lb/>
before turning the ball over on<lb/>
downs, when, on a fourth and<lb/>
three, Travis 1 lunter tumbled the<lb/>
ball (Mi the exchange. Although<lb/>
Tim lames recovered the ball, it<lb/>
still went over to the Orangemen.<lb/>
Taking advantage of the turn-<lb/>
over, Svra( use drove the ball 74<lb/>
vards in seven plays, scoring<lb/>
when Michael Owens went in<lb/>
from lb yards out. Greene added<lb/>
the extra point, giving Svracuse a<lb/>
14 Oedge.<lb/>
Hie Pirates mustered their<lb/>
only successful drive of the halt<lb/>
on their next series, taking the ball<lb/>
74 vards down to the 20 behind<lb/>
the running and passing of<lb/>
Hunter, who hit Al Whiting and<lb/>
Walter Wilson on passesof 19and<lb/>
12 yards, respectively. Willie<lb/>
Lewis capped the drive with a 20-<lb/>
yard scamper around the right<lb/>
side tor the touchdown. Imperato<lb/>
added the extra Hunt, and the<lb/>
Svracuse lead was cut in half, 14-<lb/>
7. It was the first time this season<lb/>
that Svracuse had given up a<lb/>
touchdown in the first quarter.<lb/>
This situation changed<lb/>
quickl) , how ever, when Syracuse<lb/>
scored on their next possession,<lb/>
Willie lewis escape!<lb/>
on the dav. The Pirate offense struggled all afternoon. (Photo b "I homas Walters- Photo 1 ab.)<lb/>
IRS crown champs<lb/>
taking the ball 63 yards down to<lb/>
the ECU three before Daryl<lb/>
Johnston took the ball up the gut<lb/>
for the score. 21-7, Orangemen.<lb/>
Hunter was intercepted on<lb/>
the Pirates' next possession by<lb/>
Syracuse linebacker Terry<lb/>
Wooden at the Syracuse 30-yard<lb/>
line, and he returned it 16 yards to<lb/>
the 46 before being pulled down.<lb/>
Two plays and :32 later, the Or-<lb/>
angemen had their fourth touch-<lb/>
down of the day, after quarter-<lb/>
back Todd Philcox hit Deval<lb/>
Glover for a 44-yard gain and then<lb/>
Owens for the 11-yard score.<lb/>
Greene added the point after, and<lb/>
the Orangemen held a command-<lb/>
ing 28-7 lead.<lb/>
The Pirates were forced to<lb/>
punt after three plays on the ensu-<lb/>
ing series, and the Orangemen<lb/>
once again began a drive for the<lb/>
end zone, but the drive stalled as<lb/>
the defense stiffened behind two<lb/>
tackles by rover Flint McCallum<lb/>
for a loss of 15 yards. Svracuse<lb/>
was forced to attempt a 40-yard<lb/>
field goal, which soared through<lb/>
the uprights, giving SU a 31-7<lb/>
half time lead. These 31 points<lb/>
were the most scored on the Pi-<lb/>
rates in a first half since the 1986<lb/>
season, when the Nittany Lionsof<lb/>
Penn State amassed 35 points in<lb/>
the half.<lb/>
The second half of the game<lb/>
was much more subdued that had<lb/>
been the first, with only one<lb/>
touchdown coming from each<lb/>
squad. This was due in part to a<lb/>
much stingier Pirate defense.<lb/>
ECU had a chance to score<lb/>
first in the second half after mov-<lb/>
ing the ball 56 vards to the<lb/>
Svracuse 24. Thev stalled here,<lb/>
and Imperato came in to try a 41 -<lb/>
yard field goal. The attempt<lb/>
failed, and the Pirates came away<lb/>
empty.<lb/>
The sole SU score of the half<lb/>
came in the wanning moments of<lb/>
the third quarter when, with :17<lb/>
left, Drummond capped a 29-yard<lb/>
drive with a three-yard run off<lb/>
right tackle for the score. The extra<lb/>
point was good, giving SU a 38-7<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
The look on Junior Robinson's tace expifssos i :�<lb/>
than words could hope to. (Photo by Mar Startari<lb/>
The Pirates once again denied<lb/>
themselves of a score late in t!<lb/>
fourth period when Charlie 1 i-<lb/>
bretto fumbled at the SU 12. rhej<lb/>
did, however, score on their next<lb/>
possession when, with :19 left to<lb/>
play, Libretto hit Jarred Moody in<lb/>
the end zonefora five-yard tou h-<lb/>
down.<lb/>
"1 would be remiss it 1 didn't<lb/>
say the reason for the results for<lb/>
today were that we were playing a<lb/>
good football team Baker said<lb/>
after the game. "People thoughl<lb/>
thev would come out here and be<lb/>
flat, but they are a well-coached<lb/>
football team and they were ready<lb/>
to play.<lb/>
ghl<lb/>
d efforl ' .<lb/>
linst thn e<lb/>
weeks �<lb/>
have been.<lb/>
V e ha .<lb/>
� I . k and<lb/>
tough,  e. O<lb/>
are at  '<lb/>
don t have an) thi 1<lb/>
it "<lb/>
! ra is (lunter i �. st sun<lb/>
up the Pirati - t- � ti<lb/>
poml: us getting truUvO-u.<lb/>
We're talkii  il ut it all thetim<lb/>
wc jusl need to do it It's a in nl<lb/>
thing. We ha1 I<lb/>
wav to lose<lb/>
(IRS)  The intramural tlag<lb/>
football season came to a close last<lb/>
Thursday evening in two forms:<lb/>
rout and rumble. The rout at the<lb/>
hands of the women's champion,<lb/>
the Enforcers and rumble as 4th<lb/>
Ay cock upset Theta Chi in the<lb/>
men's all-campus game.<lb/>
In the ladie's contest, Jodi<lb/>
Rodriguez forced her way into the<lb/>
end zone four times for the En-<lb/>
forcers. Add two more touch-<lb/>
downs from lody Hite and an<lb/>
additional Laura Conway score<lb/>
and vou come up with a 43-0<lb/>
spanking.<lb/>
On the other side oi the score-<lb/>
board were sorority champions<lb/>
Delta Zeta, 5-0, who were able to<lb/>
pass the 50-yard line only once in<lb/>
the contest. Beth Hopkins and<lb/>
Melissa Lord gave a gallant effort<lb/>
but were unable to capitalize. The<lb/>
D.Zs admitted going in to the<lb/>
competition that their ultimate<lb/>
goal was "just to score" against<lb/>
the perennial Enforcer power<lb/>
house.<lb/>
Cheryl Curtis and Laura BYl<lb/>
los shared Enforcer quarterback<lb/>
duties. The only weak element of<lb/>
the Enforcer attack was in their<lb/>
attempts to score the point after<lb/>
Thev missed on seven attempts,<lb/>
but. at 43-0, this weakness seemed<lb/>
non-existent. Congratulations<lb/>
Enforcers.<lb/>
The men'scontest wasaction-<lb/>
packed from the outset. A<lb/>
pumped up and heavily favored<lb/>
Theta Chi squad hit the field full<lb/>
of confidence, towering over the<lb/>
underdog 4th Aycock, it not onk<lb/>
in stature, but fan power as well.<lb/>
Chris Jones lead the Theta Chi<lb/>
attack but soon fell into trouble as<lb/>
he threw crucial interceptions<lb/>
early on.<lb/>
Joel Saunders, captain and<lb/>
quarterback for 4th Avcock, an-<lb/>
swered with key pass comple-<lb/>
tions to Eric Williams and Louis<lb/>
Presurti. This all freshman squad<lb/>
was in peril of ever completing<lb/>
the regular season as mismanage-<lb/>
ment and lack oi organization<lb/>
ended in a last minute admittance<lb/>
to the league. In the semi-final<lb/>
contest versus the Mutant Surf<lb/>
Doctors, 4th Aycock found them-<lb/>
selves on the losing end oi a 26-6<lb/>
half time score. A miraculous<lb/>
comeback for this "team of des-<lb/>
tiny" brought them into the land<lb/>
of Theta Chi.<lb/>
4th Aycock intercepted six<lb/>
passes in the final contest. Jerry<lb/>
Gouveia scored the only points in<lb/>
the contest during the first half for<lb/>
4th Aycock as defense ruled over<lb/>
the rest oi play. Congratulations<lb/>
4th Aycock squad members: Jerry<lb/>
Gouveia, Greg Rosen, Louis Pre-<lb/>
sutti, Mark Harris, Ant Andujar,<lb/>
Brian Huffman, Joel Saunders,<lb/>
Eric Williams and George Mazza.<lb/>
4th Aycock upset Theta Chi to sweep the men's finals victory, defeating Theta Chi by a single scon<lb/>
ECU swimmers set for season<lb/>
after a record setting meet<lb/>
�UWTl'l JW<lb/>
The Enforcers, pictured here, took the title of champions after defeating Delta Zeta in the finals.<lb/>
By KR1STEN HALBERG<lb/>
Assistant Sportt rdttor<lb/>
The East Carolina Swimming<lb/>
and Diving team is off to a roaring<lb/>
start as they ended their pre-sea-<lb/>
son schedule last Thursday in the<lb/>
Purple and Gold meet, setting<lb/>
nine meet records.<lb/>
"We swam very well said<lb/>
Head Coach Rick Kobe. "We are<lb/>
much faster than last year. 1 feel<lb/>
very confident going into the<lb/>
opener on Nov. 5 against Ameri-<lb/>
can University<lb/>
The Purple and Gold meet, a<lb/>
meet where the Pirates compete<lb/>
against themselves, saw the gold<lb/>
team reign for both the men and<lb/>
the women as the final for the men<lb/>
was 100-86 and for the women, 88-<lb/>
71.<lb/>
Kobe and the diving coach<lb/>
Jon Rose were equally as pleased<lb/>
with the ECU divers as one of the<lb/>
nine Purple and Gold meet rec-<lb/>
ords came from the divers.<lb/>
"The squad is coming along<lb/>
real well this early in the season<lb/>
said Rose.<lb/>
Returning senior and number<lb/>
one diver last year, Sherry<lb/>
Campbell dominated both the<lb/>
women's one-meter and three-<lb/>
meter boards capturing first in<lb/>
each event.<lb/>
Celeste Cordova set a new<lb/>
freshmen record in the one-meter<lb/>
dive event capturing second place<lb/>
while Jennifer Grove snagged<lb/>
second on the three-meter board.<lb/>
Terry Smith gave a solid per-<lb/>
formance for the men as he placed<lb/>
first in both the one and three-<lb/>
meter diving events.<lb/>
Freshman Sean Kennedy was<lb/>
described by Kobe as having<lb/>
"good potential" as he placed<lb/>
second in both diving events.<lb/>
Returning sophomore Scott<lb/>
Milligan did not dive Thursday<lb/>
due to a broken finger.<lb/>
In the swimming compel<lb/>
tion, the meet ku ki d off with th<lb/>
first Purple and (. Jold re rd in t!<lb/>
men's 400-yard medley rela<lb/>
when the team of Mark O Brien<lb/>
Raymond Kennedy, red Chris<lb/>
tensen and Billv 1 laughton swan<lb/>
it in 3 41.0.<lb/>
The team of 1 eslie o Wilsoi<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers, Patrici �<lb/>
Walsh and Chris 1 utker came i<lb/>
at 4:13.38 to give them first in th<lb/>
women's 400-yard medley relax<lb/>
Next on the list for the nut<lb/>
was the 100-yard freestyle. This<lb/>
time Andy Jeter came out on top<lb/>
in 10:15.5. The women sav<lb/>
Carolyn Green swim tor first in<lb/>
10:57.2.<lb/>
The next Purple and t<lb/>
record was set in the 200 ard<lb/>
freestyle. Page Holt was th<lb/>
proud victor when she came in at<lb/>
2:00.7. Walsh followed in 205.0.<lb/>
See EC, page 11<lb/>
State pull<lb/>
(AP) - orth C arolina<lb/>
finds itself in the position it<lb/>
wanted to be in all season long,<lb/>
but the Wolfpack also has some<lb/>
unexpected company in its bid for<lb/>
the Atlantic I<lb/>
title.<lb/>
Saturday's 10-3<lb/>
the ninth ranked Tigers led the<lb/>
Wolfpack to the top of the confer<lb/>
once with a 4-1 mark N C Stah<lb/>
has two ACC games left aN<lb/>
trip to Virginia and a home date<lb/>
with Duke on the t. 1 lowing v<lb/>
end. It must win those v<lb/>
take the title, and at the sam<lb/>
hold off the Tigers and a su-<lb/>
ing Maryland team, both<lb/>
are 3-1 in the ACC<lb/>
'This one was thi -<lb/>
Wolfpack linebacker - Aue:<lb/>
said. "But we've got<lb/>
ones still in front<lb/>
two more conl<lb/>
against teams that usual<lb/>
a lot oi troubli<lb/>
Tailback Or<lb/>
for a 5-yard touchdov<lb/>
10:04 left to plaj<lb/>
to victory. Ther.<lb/>
defense didn I<lb/>
penetrate pat the N<lb/>
EC swimmers<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
The men s30-) ard fre I<lb/>
saw John Farrell shine<lb/>
grabbed first b hall a second ii<lb/>
1:47.8. Mark.<lb/>
ond with his tim<lb/>
Wendy Smith claime 1 I<lb/>
the women s I rd fre<lb/>
w hen she touched the wa<lb/>
while Lutker, w ith a time i<lb/>
came in second<lb/>
For the mer - 5<lb/>
rvle, Enck PL .<lb/>
of the pack to claim first ir 22<lb/>
Billv Haughton came in second al<lb/>
23.1 and Andv Johns reo<lb/>
third in 23.2.<lb/>
Jennifer Muench set<lb/>
record in the women - - �<lb/>
individual medly event wh<lb/>
swam in at 2:16.9 Nc<lb/>
later was Wilson at 2 17.6<lb/>
Tom Holsten won the n<lb/>
200-yard individual me<lb/>
his time of 2 02 3 w rule Ra)<lb/>
Kennedy secured second n<lb/>
2:02.5.<lb/>
Yet another record was s<lb/>
this time in the women's 200-yan<lb/>
butterflv when Shelly Mick,<lb/>
claimed victory in her time i<lb/>
2:13.S. Soon to follow was Robi<lb/>
Wicks in 2:14 2<lb/>
Andv Ichns hole. <lb/>
able lead in the mer s<lb/>
butterfly when he swam in a<lb/>
2:004. Four seconds later (<lb/>
tensen touched the wa<lb/>
him the second place title<lb/>
Page Holt's time of 55 <lb/>
enough to break the old Purpl)<lb/>
and Gold record as well as<lb/>
her a first place title in<lb/>
women's 100-yard freest<lb/>
In the same ever: i<lb/>
a close race decided the �<lb/>
it was Enck Hovos who came o<lb/>
on top with his time of<lb/>
three tenths of a second beri<lb/>
Hovos was Billy Haug<lb/>
his time oi 50 6<lb/>
The men broke the i<lb/>
ord when George Wall<lb/>
for 2.01.94 in the 200-yai<lb/>
stroke. Shelly Mica w or I<lb/>
women in 2 21 3.<lb/>
No one was near<lb/>
Morns in the women -<lb/>
freest vie when she came<lb/>
5:24.4. giving her an easj l<lb/>
over second place finisher I e-<lb/>
lo Wilson who came in at 5 M<lb/>
It was closer tor <lb/>
when Mark Cook swam a 4 - I<lb/>
500-yard freestyle givir<lb/>
� place. Soon to follow was<lb/>
place time of 4 59 2 b ohn<lb/>
roll.<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers cru a<lb/>
the rest of the swimmers il<lb/>
earned herself a ne <lb/>
Gold record when she swam<lb/>
women s200-vard hreasttrok<lb/>
2 24<lb/>
Ravmond Kenned)<lb/>
closer race tor first in the me)<lb/>
200-vard breaststroke emerj<lb/>
victorious with his time of 2:1<lb/>
Onlv two seconds behind<lb/>
John Springer when he came<lb/>
2.18.4.<lb/>
The men ended the meet <lb/>
high note as thev set a new Put<lb/>
and Gold record in the 400-vj<lb/>
freestvle relay. The team of Tf<lb/>
Stebbins, Tim Boyd. Bl<lb/>
Haughton and Mark Cook<lb/>
ished off the meet w ith their<lb/>
rung time and new record!<lb/>
320.05.<lb/>
And finally, for the wool<lb/>
the 400-vard freestyle relay enl<lb/>
w!th Chantal Morns, Rcj<lb/>
Wicks, Wendy Smith and 1<lb/>
Holt claiming first place<lb/>
their time of 3:55 4.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0012"/><lb/>
<lb/>
)<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBER 25,1988 Page 10<lb/>
Pirates continue their losing streak as<lb/>
they fall to the Orangemen of SU 38-14<lb/>
By DOUG JOHNSON<lb/>
Spam Editor<lb/>
With the Pirates dropping<lb/>
their sixth game in as many out-<lb/>
ings, one question seems to be on<lb/>
the minds of many Pirate fans.<lb/>
When will this madness end?<lb/>
On Saturday the Pirates were<lb/>
pummelled by the Orangemen of<lb/>
Syracuse 38-14 in what may very<lb/>
well have been ECU'S poorest<lb/>
showing this season. "1 thought<lb/>
they (Syracuse) did a good job of<lb/>
stopping our option Pirate<lb/>
Coach Art Baker said. "We didn't<lb/>
throw the ball well. I am disap-<lb/>
pointed about the offense and the<lb/>
way we moved the ball<lb/>
The Pirates started the game<lb/>
at a disadvantage. They were<lb/>
penalized ten yards before a sec-<lb/>
ond had ticked off the clock as a<lb/>
result of two sucessive Robb<lb/>
Imperato kick-offs that dribbled<lb/>
along the turf before going out of<lb/>
bounds As it turned out, this was<lb/>
merely a harbinger for the rest of<lb/>
the day.<lb/>
After a successful kick-off by<lb/>
the Pirates, Syracuse started the<lb/>
first drive of the day on their own<lb/>
41-yard line. The Orangemen<lb/>
took the ball down to the one-yard<lb/>
line behind the running of Robert<lb/>
Drummond, who accounted for<lb/>
29 of the 51 yards of the series,<lb/>
including a one-yard plunge for<lb/>
the score.<lb/>
Drummond carried 10 times<lb/>
in the first half for 103 yards, and<lb/>
amassed 117 yards on the day, a<lb/>
career best. K.J. Greene added the<lb/>
extra point, and Syracuse held the<lb/>
early 7-0 lead.<lb/>
The Pirates moved the ball<lb/>
well on their first possession,<lb/>
driving down to the Syracuse 25<lb/>
before turning the ball over on<lb/>
downs, when, on a fourth and<lb/>
three, Travis Hunter fumbled the<lb/>
ball on the exchange. Although<lb/>
Tim James recovered the ball, it<lb/>
still went over to the Orangemen.<lb/>
Taking ad vantage of the turn-<lb/>
over, Syracuse drove the ball 74<lb/>
yards in seven plays, scoring<lb/>
when Michael Owens went in<lb/>
from 16 yards out. Greene added<lb/>
the extra point, giving Syracuse a<lb/>
14-0 edge.<lb/>
The Pirates mustered their<lb/>
only successful drive of the half<lb/>
on their next series, taking the ball<lb/>
74 yards down to the 20 behind<lb/>
the running and passing of<lb/>
Hunter, who hit Al Whiting and<lb/>
Walter Wilson on passes of 19 and<lb/>
12 yards, respectively. Willie<lb/>
Lewis capped the drive with a 20-<lb/>
yard scamper around the right<lb/>
side for the touchdown. Imperato<lb/>
added the extra point, and the<lb/>
Syracuse lead was cut in half, 14-<lb/>
7. It was the first time this season<lb/>
that Syracuse had given up a<lb/>
touchdown in the first quarter.<lb/>
This situation changed<lb/>
quickly, however, when Syracuse<lb/>
scored on their next possession,<lb/>
Willie Lewis escapes Syracuse defenders in route to the end zone for one of the Pirates' two scores<lb/>
on the day. The Pirate offense struggled all afternoon. (Photo by Thomas Walters- Photo Lab.)<lb/>
IRS crown champs<lb/>
taking the ball 63 yards down to<lb/>
the ECU three before Daryl<lb/>
Johnston took the ball up the gut<lb/>
for the score. 21-7, Orangemen.<lb/>
Hunter was intercepted on<lb/>
the Pirates' next possession by<lb/>
Syracuse linebacker Terry<lb/>
Wooden at the Syracuse 30-yard<lb/>
line, and he returned it 16 yards to<lb/>
the 46 before being pulled down.<lb/>
Two plays and :32 later, the Or-<lb/>
angemen had their fourth touch-<lb/>
down of the day, after quarter-<lb/>
back Todd Philcox hit Deval<lb/>
Glover for a 44-yard gain and then<lb/>
Owens for the 11-yard score.<lb/>
Greene added the point after, and<lb/>
the Orangemen held a command-<lb/>
ing 28-7 lead.<lb/>
The Pirates were forced to<lb/>
punt after three plays on the ensu-<lb/>
ing series, and the Orangemen<lb/>
once again began a drive for the<lb/>
end zone, but the drive stalled as<lb/>
the defense stiffened behind two<lb/>
tackles by rover Flint McCallum<lb/>
for a loss of 15 yards. Syracuse<lb/>
was forced to attempt a 40-yard<lb/>
field goal, which soared through<lb/>
the uprights, giving SU a 31-7<lb/>
halftime lead. These 31 points<lb/>
were the most scored on the Pi-<lb/>
rates in a first half since the 1986<lb/>
season, when theNittany Lions of<lb/>
Penn State amassed 35 points in<lb/>
the half.<lb/>
The second half of the game<lb/>
was much more subdued that had<lb/>
been the first, with only one<lb/>
touchdown coming from each<lb/>
squad. This was due in part to a<lb/>
much stingier Pirate defense.<lb/>
ECU had a chance to score<lb/>
first in the second half after mov-<lb/>
ing the ball 56 yards to the<lb/>
Syracuse 24. They stalled here,<lb/>
and Imperato came in to try a 41-<lb/>
yard field goal. The attempt<lb/>
failed, and the Pirates came away<lb/>
empty.<lb/>
The sole SU score of the half<lb/>
came in the wanning moments of<lb/>
the third quarter when, with :17<lb/>
left, Drummond capped a 29-yard<lb/>
drive with a three-yard run off<lb/>
right tackle for the score. The extra<lb/>
point was good, giving SU a 38-7<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
The look on Junior Robinson's face expresses his feelings better<lb/>
than words could hope to. (Photo by Mar Startari - Photo I ah.)<lb/>
The Pirates once again denied<lb/>
themselves of a score late in the<lb/>
fourth period when Charlie Li-<lb/>
bretto fumbled at the SU 12. They<lb/>
did, however, score on their next<lb/>
possession when, with :19 left to<lb/>
play, Libretto hit Jarrod Moody in<lb/>
the end zone for a five-yard touch-<lb/>
down.<lb/>
"I would be remiss if I didn't<lb/>
say the reason for the results for<lb/>
today were that we were playing a<lb/>
good football team Baker saii<lb/>
after the game. "Pecqjle thougrjk<lb/>
they would come out here and be<lb/>
flat, but they are a well-coached<lb/>
football team and they were ready<lb/>
to play.<lb/>
"1 thought our player gave <lb/>
good effort. It's tough to go up<lb/>
against three opponents in thn. -<lb/>
weeks that are as physical as the<lb/>
have been.<lb/>
"We have another touj h<lb/>
game next week and anotht i<lb/>
tough week of practice. Our kid<lb/>
are a tough group, and they jusl<lb/>
don't have anything to show h<lb/>
it<lb/>
Travis Hunter best summed<lb/>
up the Pirates' seasdta �' 0<lb/>
pbidLilts feettrngc frt&amp;uanfe�<lb/>
We're talking about it all the time<lb/>
we just need to do it. It's a menial<lb/>
thing. We have been finding a<lb/>
way to lose<lb/>
(IRS) � The intramural tlag<lb/>
football season came to a close last<lb/>
Thursday evening in two forms:<lb/>
rout and rumble. The rout at the<lb/>
hands of the women's champion,<lb/>
the Enforcers and rumble as 4th<lb/>
Aycock upset Theta Chi in the<lb/>
men's all-campus game.<lb/>
In the ladie's contest, Jodi<lb/>
Rodriguez forced her way into the<lb/>
end zone four times for the En-<lb/>
forcers. Add two more touch-<lb/>
downs from Jody Hite and an<lb/>
additional Laura Conway score<lb/>
and you come up with a 43-0<lb/>
spanking.<lb/>
On the other side of the score-<lb/>
board were sorority champions<lb/>
Delta Zeta, 5-0, who were able to<lb/>
pass the 50-yard line only once in<lb/>
the contest. Beth Hopkins and<lb/>
Melissa Lord gave a gallant effort<lb/>
but were unable to capitalize. The<lb/>
D.Zs admitted going in to the<lb/>
competition that their ultimate<lb/>
goal was "just to score" against<lb/>
the perennial Enforcer power-<lb/>
house.<lb/>
Cheryl Curtis and Laura Bel-<lb/>
los shared Enforcer quarterback<lb/>
duties. The only weak element of<lb/>
the Enforcer attack was in their<lb/>
attempts to score the point after.<lb/>
They missed on seven attempts,<lb/>
but, at 43-0, this weakness seemed<lb/>
non-existent. Congratulations<lb/>
Enforcers.<lb/>
The men's contest was action-<lb/>
packed from the outset. A<lb/>
pumped up and heavily favored<lb/>
Theta Chi squad hit the field full<lb/>
of confidence, towering over the<lb/>
underdog 4fh Aycock, if not only<lb/>
in stature, but fan power as well.<lb/>
Chris Jones lead the Theta Chi<lb/>
attack but soon fell into trouble as<lb/>
he threw crucial interceptions<lb/>
early on.<lb/>
Joel Saunders, captain and<lb/>
quarterback for 4th Aycock, an-<lb/>
swered with key pass comple-<lb/>
tions to Eric Williams and Louis<lb/>
Presutti. This all freshman squad<lb/>
was in peril of ever completing<lb/>
the regular season as mismanage-<lb/>
ment and lack of organization<lb/>
ended in a last minute admittance<lb/>
to the league. In the semi-final<lb/>
contest versus the Mutant Surf<lb/>
Doctors, 4 th Aycock found them-<lb/>
selves on the losing end of a 26-6<lb/>
halftime score. A miraculous<lb/>
comeback for this "team of des-<lb/>
tiny" brought them into the land<lb/>
of Theta Chi.<lb/>
4th Aycock intercepted six<lb/>
passes in the final contest. Jerry<lb/>
Gouveia scored the only points in<lb/>
the contest during the first half for<lb/>
4th Aycock as defense ruled over<lb/>
the rest of play. Congratulations<lb/>
4th Aycock squad members: Jerry<lb/>
Gouveia, Greg Rosen, Louis Pre-<lb/>
sutti, Mark Harris, Ant Andujar,<lb/>
Brian Huffman, Joel Saunders,<lb/>
Eric Williams and George Mazza.<lb/>
4th Aycock upset Theta Chi to sweep the men's finals victory, defeating Theta Chi by a single score.<lb/>
ECU swimmers set for season<lb/>
after a record setting meet<lb/>
The Enforcers, pictured here, took the title of champions after defeating Delta Zeta in the finals.<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
AmWuI Sports Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina Swimming<lb/>
and Diving team is off to a roaring<lb/>
start as they ended their pre-sea-<lb/>
son schedule last Thursday in the<lb/>
Purple and Gold meet, setting<lb/>
nine meet records.<lb/>
"We swam very well said<lb/>
Head Coach Rick Kobe. "We are<lb/>
much faster than last year. I feel<lb/>
very confident going into the<lb/>
opener on Nov. 5 against Ameri-<lb/>
can University<lb/>
The Purple and Gold meet, a<lb/>
meet where the Pirates compete<lb/>
against themselves, saw the gold<lb/>
team reign for both the men and<lb/>
the women as the final for the men<lb/>
was 100-86 and for the women, 88-<lb/>
71.<lb/>
Kobe and the diving coach<lb/>
Jon Rose were equally as pleased<lb/>
with the ECU divers as one of the<lb/>
nine Purple and Gold meet rec-<lb/>
ords came from the divers.<lb/>
"The squad is coming along<lb/>
real well this early in the season<lb/>
said Rose.<lb/>
Returning senior and number<lb/>
one diver last year, Sherry<lb/>
Campbell dominated both the<lb/>
women's one-meter and three-<lb/>
meter boards capturing first in<lb/>
each event.<lb/>
Celeste Cordova set a new<lb/>
freshmen record in the one-meter<lb/>
dive event capturing second place<lb/>
while Jennifer Grove snagged<lb/>
second on the three-meter board.<lb/>
Perry Smith gave a solid per-<lb/>
formance for the men as he placed<lb/>
first in both the one and three-<lb/>
meter diving events.<lb/>
Freshman Sean Kennedy was<lb/>
described by Kobe as having<lb/>
"good potential" as he placed<lb/>
second in both diving events.<lb/>
Returning sophomore Scott<lb/>
Milligan did not dive Thursday<lb/>
due to a broken finger.<lb/>
In the swimming compcti<lb/>
tion, the meet kicked off with the<lb/>
first Purple and Gold record in thr<lb/>
men's 400-yard medley relav<lb/>
when the team of Mark O'Brien<lb/>
Raymond Kennedy, Ted Chris<lb/>
tensen and Billy Haughton swam<lb/>
it in 3:41.0.<lb/>
The team of Leslie Jo Wilson.<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers, Patricia<lb/>
Walsh and Chris Lutker came in<lb/>
at 4:13.38 to give them first in the<lb/>
women's 400-yard medley relay<lb/>
Next on the list for the men<lb/>
was the 100-yard freestyle. This<lb/>
time Andy Jeter came out on top<lb/>
in 10:15.5. The women saw<lb/>
Carolyn Green swim for first in<lb/>
10:57.2.<lb/>
The next Purple and Gold<lb/>
record was set in the 200-yard<lb/>
freestyle. Page Holt was the<lb/>
proud victor when she came in at<lb/>
2.O0.7. Walsh followed in 2:05.0.<lb/>
See EC, page 11<lb/>
State pull:<lb/>
(AP) � North Carolina State<lb/>
finds itself in the position it<lb/>
wanted to be in all season long,<lb/>
but the Wolfpack also has some<lb/>
unexpected company in its bid for<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
title.<lb/>
Saturday's 10-3 victory over<lb/>
the ninth-ranked Tigers led the<lb/>
Wolfpack to the top of the confer-<lb/>
ence with a 4-1 mark. N.C. State<lb/>
has two ACC games left, a Nov. 5<lb/>
trip to Virginia and a home date j<lb/>
with Duke on the following week-<lb/>
end. It must win those games to<lb/>
take the title, and at the same time<lb/>
hold off the Tigers and a surpris-<lb/>
ing Maryland team, both of which <lb/>
are 3-1 in the ACC.<lb/>
"This one was the best yet'<lb/>
Wolfpack linebacker Scott Auerl<lb/>
said. "But we've got a lot of tough<lb/>
ones still in front of us. We've got<lb/>
two more conference games!<lb/>
against teams that usually give usI<lb/>
a lot of trouble<lb/>
Tailback Chris Williams rani<lb/>
for a 5-yard touchdown withj<lb/>
10:04 left to play to lead N.C. State<lb/>
to victory. Then the Wolfpackl<lb/>
defense didn't allow Clemson tol<lb/>
penetrate past the N.C. State 30-1<lb/>
EC swimmersi<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
The men's 200-yard freestylej<lb/>
saw John Farrell shine as he<lb/>
grabbed first by half a second u<lb/>
1:47.8. Mark Cook settled for sec-<lb/>
md with his time of 1:48.3.<lb/>
Wendy Smith claimed first n<lb/>
the women's 50-yard freestyU<lb/>
hen she touched the wall in 37.<lb/>
hile Lutker, with a time of 27.7J<lb/>
me in second.<lb/>
For the men's 50-yard fre<lb/>
tyle, Erick Hoyos sprinted ahea<lb/>
of the pack to claim first in 22.71<lb/>
Billy Haughton came in second a J<lb/>
23.1 and Andy Johns receive<lb/>
third in 23.2.<lb/>
Jennifer Muench set the nex<lb/>
record in the women's 200-yarc<lb/>
individual medly event when she<lb/>
swam in at 2:16.9. Nearly a seconc<lb/>
later was Wilson at 2:17.6.<lb/>
Tom Holsten won the men i<lb/>
200-yard individual medly wit!<lb/>
his time of 2:02.3 while Raymone<lb/>
Kennedy secured second ii<lb/>
2:02.5.<lb/>
Yet another record was set<lb/>
this time in the women's 200-yarc<lb/>
butterfly when Shelly Micki<lb/>
claimed victory in her time<lb/>
2:13.8. Soon to follow was Robu<lb/>
Wicks in 2:14.2.<lb/>
Andy Johns held a comfort<lb/>
able lead in the men's 200-yare<lb/>
butterfly when he swam in<lb/>
2:00.4. Four seconds later, Chris<lb/>
tensen touched the wall to gi1<lb/>
him the second place title.<lb/>
Page Holt's time of 55.29 w�<lb/>
enough to break the old Purplj<lb/>
and Gold record as well as givj<lb/>
her a first place title in<lb/>
women's 100-yard freestyle.<lb/>
In the same event for the mei<lb/>
a close race decided the victor, bi<lb/>
it was Erick Hoyos who came oi<lb/>
on top with his time of 50.3. Ju<lb/>
three tenths of a second behin<lb/>
Hoyos was Billy Haughton wit<lb/>
his time of 50.6.<lb/>
The men broke the next re<lb/>
ord when George Walters swi<lb/>
for 2:01.94 in the 200-yard bac<lb/>
stroke. Shelly Mica won it for �<lb/>
women in 2:21.3.<lb/>
No one was near Chant<lb/>
Morris in the women's 500-ya<lb/>
freestyle when she came in<lb/>
5:24.4, giving her an easy victoj<lb/>
over second place finisher LesT<lb/>
Jo Wilson who came in at 5:34.<lb/>
It was closer for the<lb/>
when Mark Cook swam a 4:<lb/>
500-yard freestyle giving him fij<lb/>
place. Soon to follow was a secoj<lb/>
place time of 4.59.2 by John �i<lb/>
rell.<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers crust<lb/>
the rest of the swimmers �I<lb/>
earned herself a new Purple<lb/>
Gold record when she swam<lb/>
women's 200-yard breaststrok<lb/>
2:26.4.<lb/>
Raymond Kennedy, u<lb/>
closer race for first in the mc<lb/>
200-yard breaststroke, emers<lb/>
victorious with his time of 2:lj<lb/>
Only two seconds behind<lb/>
John Springer when he came<lb/>
2:18.4.<lb/>
The men ended the meet i<lb/>
high note as they set a new Pd<lb/>
and Gold record in the 400-y<lb/>
freestyle relay. The team of Td<lb/>
Stebbins, Tim Boyd, Bl<lb/>
Haughton and Mark Cook<lb/>
ished off the meet with their<lb/>
ning time and new recoi<lb/>
320.05.<lb/>
And finally, for the woi<lb/>
the 400-yard freestyle relayr<lb/>
with Chantal Morris, 1<lb/>
Wkks� Wendy Smith and<lb/>
Holt claiming first place<lb/>
their time of 355.4.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0013"/><lb/>
I '<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
10 19<lb/>
rseason<lb/>
meet<lb/>
i intl<lb/>
rela<lb/>
i R<lb/>
I<lb/>
I'at:<lb/>
. e thfm fi r- t n<lb/>
� ' ard medley relay<lb/>
n the li-t for the nm �<lb/>
I ird freestyle. Ih<lb/>
 ter came out on I<lb/>
The women sav<lb/>
reen swim tor hrt ii<lb/>
Purple and (<lb/>
; in the 200 yard<lb/>
le Tage Hlt was th<lb/>
l ia h�. n she v ame in a;<lb/>
-h followed in 2 05.0<lb/>
See EC, page 11<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25,1988 11<lb/>
State pulls upset, in hunt for ACC crown<lb/>
(AP) � North Carolina State<lb/>
finds itself in the position it<lb/>
wanted to be in all season long,<lb/>
but the Wolfpack also has some<lb/>
unexpected company in its bid for<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
title.<lb/>
Saturday's 10-3 victory over<lb/>
the ninth-ranked Tigers led the<lb/>
Wolfpack to the top of the confer-<lb/>
ence with a 4-1 mark. N.C. State<lb/>
has two ACC games left, a Nov. 5<lb/>
trip to Virginia and a home date<lb/>
with Duke on the following week-<lb/>
end It must win those games to<lb/>
take the title, and at the same time<lb/>
hold off the Tigers and a surpris-<lb/>
ing Maryland team, both of which<lb/>
are 3-1 in the ACC.<lb/>
This one was the best yet<lb/>
Wolfpack linebacker Scott Auer<lb/>
said. "But we've got a lot of tough<lb/>
ones still in front of us. We've got<lb/>
two more conference games<lb/>
against teams that usually give us<lb/>
a lot of trouble<lb/>
Tailback Chris Williams ran<lb/>
for a 5-yard touchdown with<lb/>
10:04 left to play to lead N.C. State<lb/>
to victory. Then the Wolfpack<lb/>
defense didn't allow Clemson to<lb/>
penetrate past the N.C. State 30-<lb/>
EC swimmers<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
The men's 200-yard freestyle<lb/>
saw John Farrell shine as he<lb/>
grabbed first by half a second in<lb/>
1:47.8. Mark Cook settled for sec-<lb/>
ond with his time of 1:48.3.<lb/>
Wendy Smith claimed first in<lb/>
the women's 50-yard freestyle<lb/>
when she touched the wall in 37.1<lb/>
while Lutker, with a time of 27.7,<lb/>
came in second.<lb/>
For the men's 50-yard frees-<lb/>
tyle, Erick Hoyos sprinted ahead<lb/>
of the pack to claim first in 22.7.<lb/>
Billy Haughton came in second at<lb/>
23.1 and Andy Johns received<lb/>
third in 23.2.<lb/>
Jennifer Muench set the next<lb/>
record in the women's 200-yard<lb/>
individual medly event when she<lb/>
swam in at 2:16.9. Nearly a second<lb/>
later was Wilson at 2:17.6.<lb/>
Tom Holsten won the men's<lb/>
200-yard individual medly with<lb/>
his time of 2:02.3 while Raymond<lb/>
Kennedy secured second in<lb/>
2.02.5.<lb/>
Vet another record was set,<lb/>
this time in the women's 200-yard<lb/>
butterfly when Shelly Micka<lb/>
claimed victory in her time of<lb/>
2:13.8. Soon to follow was Robin<lb/>
Wicks in 2:14.2.<lb/>
Andy Johns held a comfort-<lb/>
able lead in the men's 200-yard<lb/>
butterfly when he swam in at<lb/>
2:00.4. Four seconds later, Chris-<lb/>
tensen touched the wall to give<lb/>
him the second place title.<lb/>
Page Holt's time of 55.29 was<lb/>
enough to break the old Purple<lb/>
and Gold record as well as give<lb/>
her a first place title in the<lb/>
women's 100-yard freestyle.<lb/>
In the same event for the men,<lb/>
a close race decided the victor, but<lb/>
it was Erick Hoyos who came out<lb/>
on top with his time of 50.3. Just<lb/>
three tenths of a second behind<lb/>
Hoyos was Billy Haughton with<lb/>
his time of 50.6.<lb/>
The men broke the next rec-<lb/>
ord when George Walters swam<lb/>
for 2:01.94 in the 200-yard back-<lb/>
stroke. Shelly Mica won it for the<lb/>
women in 2:21.3.<lb/>
No one was near Chantal<lb/>
Morris in the women's 500-yard<lb/>
freestyle when she came in at<lb/>
5:24.4, giving her an easy victory<lb/>
over second place finisher Leslie<lb/>
Jo Wilson who came in at 5:34.1.<lb/>
It was closer for the men<lb/>
when Mark Cook swam a 4:56.2<lb/>
300-yard freestyle giving him first<lb/>
place. Soon to follow was a second<lb/>
place time of 4:59.2 by John Far-<lb/>
rell.<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers crushed<lb/>
the rest of the swimmers and<lb/>
earned herself a new Purple and<lb/>
Gold record when she swam the<lb/>
women's 200-yard breaststroke in<lb/>
2:26.4.<lb/>
Raymond Kennedy, in a<lb/>
closer race for first in the men's<lb/>
200-yard breaststroke, emerged<lb/>
victorious with his time of 2:16.3.<lb/>
Only two seconds behind was<lb/>
John Springer when he came in at<lb/>
2:18.4.<lb/>
The men ended the meet on a<lb/>
high note as they set a new Purple<lb/>
and Gold record in the 400-yard<lb/>
freestyle relay. The team of Todd<lb/>
Stebbins, Tim Boyd, Billy<lb/>
Haughton and Mark Cook Fin-<lb/>
ished off the meet with their win-<lb/>
ning time and new record of<lb/>
3:20.05.<lb/>
And finally, for the women,<lb/>
the 400-yard freestyle relay ended<lb/>
with Chantal Morris, Robin<lb/>
Wicks, Wendy Smith and Page<lb/>
Holt claiming first place with<lb/>
their time of 3:55.4.<lb/>
yard line.<lb/>
'This is by far the biggest win<lb/>
we've had over them Wolfpack<lb/>
quarterback Shane Montgomery<lb/>
said. "We thought we'd be able to<lb/>
score more, but this is the tough-<lb/>
est defense we've played<lb/>
against<lb/>
Clemson coach Danny Ford<lb/>
suffered the rare indignity of los-<lb/>
ing to one team for the third<lb/>
straight time.<lb/>
"We made some critical, criti-<lb/>
cal mistakes Ford said. "In our<lb/>
kicking game, we had a high snap,<lb/>
we missed two field goals that<lb/>
were makeable. But I'm in charge<lb/>
of the kicking game, so that's my<lb/>
fault<lb/>
Maryland joined the chase for<lb/>
the title and a berth in the Florida<lb/>
Citrus Bowl with a 34-24 victory<lb/>
over Duke. Wake Forest fell from<lb/>
contention with a 34-17 loss to<lb/>
Virginia. North Carolina snapped<lb/>
four losing streaks at once and<lb/>
perpetuated another with its 20-<lb/>
17 victory over Georgia Tech.<lb/>
After spotting Duke a 16-0<lb/>
lead, the Terrapins got within 16-<lb/>
14 at halftime, then rallied with a<lb/>
Neil ODonnell touchdown pass<lb/>
and two Dan Plocki field goals.<lb/>
Dennis Spinelli scored a fourth-<lb/>
quarter touchdown to seal the<lb/>
victory, raising Maryland's rec-<lb/>
ord to 4-3 overall.<lb/>
"We're right in the heat of it<lb/>
O'Donnell said. "We've just got to<lb/>
keep playing hard week in and<lb/>
week out<lb/>
"I tried to stay away from<lb/>
reading all the preseason stuff. I<lb/>
knew when we came back and<lb/>
went through our two-a-day<lb/>
practices that we had a good foot-<lb/>
ball team he said. "We'll just<lb/>
keep playing hard and see what<lb/>
happens<lb/>
Duke's bid for the league title<lb/>
was virtually ended with the loss,<lb/>
which dropped their record to 5-2<lb/>
and 1-2.<lb/>
"It is disappointing. We were<lb/>
in position (in the ACC race) if we<lb/>
would have played a lot better<lb/>
Duke coach Steve Spurrier said.<lb/>
"Now, we are going to try and<lb/>
regroup and play better<lb/>
Wake Forest couldhave been<lb/>
part of the tie for second place<lb/>
with a victory over Virginia. But<lb/>
Cavalier quarterback Shawn<lb/>
Moore ruined those ideas, pass-<lb/>
Haunted House<lb/>
sponsored by Greenville Jaycee's<lb/>
1121 Evans Street<lb/>
October 27-31<lb/>
7:00 p.m. until<lb/>
$3 adults $1 10 &amp; under<lb/>
Freak'em Out!<lb/>
Tinsel Wigs &amp; Makeup<lb/>
Available At<lb/>
Anything Paper<lb/>
Bells Fork Square<lb/>
Party Decorations And Other<lb/>
Freaky Items Galore!<lb/>
Halloween Balloons Too!<lb/>
w<lb/>
Remeber ECU Students<lb/>
Receive A Discount<lb/>
With Your I.D.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Hwy 43 South<lb/>
355-621 2<lb/>
PEPSI PLAYER OF THE WEEK<lb/>
Hint McCallum, THIS WEEKS PLAYER OF THE WEEK<lb/>
HOMETOWN-Rowland NC<lb/>
East Carolina vs Syracuse - Against The Orangemen, Flint had 9<lb/>
tackles, 4 of these accounting for a loss of 2" yards for the SU<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
PERSONAL INFORMATION- Flint is a senior majoring in Indus-<lb/>
trial Technology emphasizing electronics He is the son of Mary<lb/>
McCallum, he is nicknamed Flintstone<lb/>
CONGRATULTIONS TO Hint McCallum, FROM PEPSI-COLA.<lb/>
MUCH CONTINUFD SI JCCFSS<lb/>
ing for two touchdowns and run-<lb/>
ning for a third. The Virginia de-<lb/>
fense intercepted Mike Elkins<lb/>
four times in shutting down the<lb/>
Demon Deacon attack, and the<lb/>
Cavaliers also recovered a<lb/>
fumble.<lb/>
Virginia is 3-4 and 2-2, and<lb/>
Wake Forest dropped to 4-3 and 2-<lb/>
2.<lb/>
At Chapel Hill, the Tar Heels<lb/>
ended a nine-game losing streak<lb/>
stretching back to last season, an<lb/>
eight-game losing streak in Kenan<lb/>
Stadium, Mack Brown's personal<lb/>
six-game losing streak and a five-<lb/>
game ACC slide.<lb/>
The Tar Heels, 1-6 and 1-2 in<lb/>
the ACC, were not assured of the<lb/>
victory until Georgia Tech<lb/>
placekicker Thomas Palmer mis-<lb/>
sed a 48-yard field goal with the<lb/>
clock running out in front of<lb/>
42,000 homecoming fans. Georgia<lb/>
Tech fell to 2-5 and 0-5.<lb/>
"This doesn't mean we're any<lb/>
better than we were Brown said.<lb/>
"It just means we put things<lb/>
together for one afternoon and<lb/>
won our first football game. That<lb/>
takes some pressure off, but also<lb/>
puts some on.<lb/>
Weird, Wild, Colorful<lb/>
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STUDENTS<lb/>
i iet rc.idv to oin America's number<lb/>
I one name in tomporarv help. Kelly<lb/>
' Services can help vou make the most<lb/>
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Secretaries<lb/>
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Light Industrial<lb/>
Call or stop in and let us toll you about our<lb/>
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BUSCH GARDRNS � 1 HE Oi I) COUNTRY<lb/>
AUDITIONS'89<lb/>
The Stars Are Out All Day!<lb/>
? Auk rica's premici<lb/>
theme park in Wil<lb/>
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ducting auditions foi<lb/>
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auditions<lb/>
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mfi nm ("�<lb/>
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lean l i ind Phillips: Rms<lb/>
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12 00 r. 00 p.m.<lb/>
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Ksth n h hearsal Hall<lb/>
V ' <lb/>
Gamins jQ�<lb/>
� �� t &amp; .�<lb/>
SALES POSITION AVAILABLE<lb/>
The East Carolinian 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/>
Must be Dependable &amp; Show Initiative &amp; Enthusiasm<lb/>
Must Have The Desire to Excel<lb/>
Apply in Person at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Please Include Resume<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
No Phone Calls Please!<lb/>
FANTASTIC<lb/>
FALL AIR FARES<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
NEW YORK$178<lb/>
BUFFALO$168<lb/>
ATLANTA$188<lb/>
ORLANDO$210<lb/>
CHICAGO$203<lb/>
EL PASO$378<lb/>
WASHINGTON$168<lb/>
BALTIMORE$168<lb/>
DALLAS$288<lb/>
OMAHA$238<lb/>
MIAMI$220<lb/>
DES MOINES<lb/>
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TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
TNI PLAZA-ORIINVILLI<lb/>
MON.ni. A.M. TIL S M.<lb/>
355-5075<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0014"/><lb/>
����' , � -<lb/>
�<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25. IMS 11<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
tpresses his feelings better<lb/>
Mar Startari - Photo I ab )<lb/>
"1 thought our players gave i<lb/>
id effort It's tough to go up<lb/>
nnst three opponents in thn c<lb/>
ks that are as physical as tlu-v<lb/>
fee been.<lb/>
We have another tough<lb/>
ne next week and anotlu i<lb/>
igh week of practice. Our kid -<lb/>
a tough group, and they ju<lb/>
n't have anything to show for<lb/>
Travis Hunter best summed<lb/>
the Pirates' soakto -�&amp; th<lb/>
iixl: ite fcet tinge tntilr-zan<lb/>
re talking about it all the time.<lb/>
just need to do it. It's a mental<lb/>
ng. We have been finding a<lb/>
iv to lose<lb/>
i ' -a<lb/>
Theta Chi by a single score.<lb/>
r season<lb/>
meet<lb/>
In the swimming compel:<lb/>
Jn, the meet kicked off with trV<lb/>
t Purple and Gold record in tri-<lb/>
m's 400-yard medley relav<lb/>
en the team of Mark O'Brien.<lb/>
ymonu Kennedy, Ted Chris<lb/>
isen and Billy Haughton swam<lb/>
n 3:41.0.<lb/>
The team of Leslie Jo Wilson.<lb/>
?redith Bridgers, Patricia<lb/>
ilsh and Chris Lutker came in<lb/>
4:13.38 to give them first in the<lb/>
men's 400-yard medley relay<lb/>
Next on the list for the men<lb/>
is the 100-yard freestyle. Thi<lb/>
e Andy Jeter came out on top<lb/>
10:15.5. The women saw<lb/>
krolvn Green swim for first in<lb/>
57.2.<lb/>
The next Purple and Gold<lb/>
ord was set in the 200-yard<lb/>
?style. Page Holt was the<lb/>
ud victor when she came in at<lb/>
7. Walsh followed in 2:05.0,<lb/>
See EC, page 11<lb/>
State pulls upset, in hunt for ACC crown<lb/>
yard line. and two Dan Plocki held goals, ing for two touchdowns and run-<lb/>
This is by far the biggest win Dennis Spinelli scored a fourth- ning for a third. The Virginia de-<lb/>
kj(MMk�.�uwfc�-t �� . LJ . fense intercepted Mike Elkins<lb/>
four times in shutting down the<lb/>
(AP) � North Carolina State<lb/>
finds itself in the position it , . . .   .<lb/>
wanted to be in all season lone. �m had over lhem' Wolfpack quarter touchdown to seal the<lb/>
but the Wolfpack also has some nMlrt�ack Shane Montgomery victory, raising Maryland's rec-<lb/>
urexpectedcompanymitsbidfor said. We thought we'd be able to ord to 4-3 overall,<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Conference score more, but this is the tough- "We're right in the heat of it<lb/>
title. est defense we've played ODonnell said. "We've just got to<lb/>
Saturday's 10-3 victory over a8i�?" ' keeP Playing hard week in and<lb/>
the ninuVrtiked Tigers led the JTf� "�? F?"<lb/>
Wolfpack to the top of the confer- suffered the rare indignity of los-<lb/>
ence with a 4-1 mark. N.C State " ff team for " "<lb/>
has two ACC games left, a Nov. 5 straight time<lb/>
week out<lb/>
trip to Virginia and a home date<lb/>
with Duke on the following week-<lb/>
end. It must win those games to<lb/>
take the title, and at the same time<lb/>
"I tried to stay away from<lb/>
reading all the pre-season stuff. I<lb/>
knew when we came back and<lb/>
went through<lb/>
our<lb/>
Ve made some critical, criti-<lb/>
cal mistakes Ford said. "In our<lb/>
kickinggame,wehadahighsnap, practices that we had a good foot- Stadium, Mack Brown's personal<lb/>
we missed two field goals that ll eam he said. 'Wll just<lb/>
Demon Deacon attack, and the<lb/>
Cavaliers also recovered a<lb/>
fumble.<lb/>
Virginia is 3-4 and 2-2, and<lb/>
Wake Forest dropped to 4-3 and 2-<lb/>
2.<lb/>
At Chapel Hill, the Tar Heels<lb/>
ended a nine-game losing streak<lb/>
stretching back to last season, an<lb/>
two-a-day eight-game losing streak in Kenan<lb/>
i good f� . <lb/>
"W e 11 just six-game losing streak and a five-<lb/>
game ACC slide.<lb/>
The Tar Heels, 1-6 and 1-2 in<lb/>
the ACC, were not assured of the<lb/>
victory until Georgia Tech<lb/>
placekicker Thomas Palmer mis-<lb/>
sed a 48-yard field goal with the<lb/>
clock running out in front of<lb/>
hold off the Tigers and a surprise wrmkeable. But I'm in charge ppjaying hard and see what<lb/>
ingMarylandteaZbomofwWch the kicking game, so thafs my happens.<lb/>
are 3-1 in the ACC. ftult Duke's bid for the league title<lb/>
"This one was the best yet was virtually ended with the loss,<lb/>
Wolfpack linebacker Scott Auer Maryland joined the chase for which dropped their record to 5-2<lb/>
said. "But we've got a lot of tough the title and a berth in the Florida and 1-2.<lb/>
ones still in front of us. We've got Citrus Bowl with a 34-24 victory<lb/>
two more conference games over Duke. Wake Forest fell from "It is disappointing. We were 42,000 homecoming fans. Georgia<lb/>
against teams that usually give us contention with a 34-17 loss to in position (in the ACC race) if we Tech fell to 2-5 and 0-5.<lb/>
a lot of trouble Virginia. North Carolina snapped would have played a lot better "This doesn't mean we're any<lb/>
Tailback Chris Williams ran fo" losing streaks at once and Duke coach Steve Spurrier said. better than we were Brown said,<lb/>
for a 5-yard touchdown with popetuated arwther with its 20- "Now we are coine to try and "It just means we put things<lb/>
10:04 left to play to lead N.C. State 17 victory over Georgia Tech. reerouD and Dlav better" together for one afternoon and<lb/>
to victory. Then the Wolfpack 5 WaKke Forest could have been won our first footba11 S3�6-That<lb/>
defense didn't allow Chanson� ter spotting Duke a 16-0 part of the tie for second place tak Pressure off'but also<lb/>
penetrate past the N.C. State 30- lead, the Terrapin! got within 16- with a victory over Virginia But P�tssomeon.<lb/>
14 at halftime, then rallied with a Cavalier quarterback Shawn<lb/>
Neil CDonnell touchdown pass Moore ruined those ideas, pass-<lb/>
Weird, Wild, Colorful<lb/>
Halloween Clothes<lb/>
rpatvte<lb/>
GoVJvs<lb/>
We've Got Anything And Everything<lb/>
o�<lb/>
The Coin &amp; Ring Man<lb/>
10:00-5:00 M-F<lb/>
10:00-3:00 Sat. 400 S. Evans<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
EC swimmers<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
The men's 200-yard freestyle<lb/>
saw John Farrell shine as he<lb/>
grabbed first by half a second in<lb/>
1:47.8. Mark Cook settled for sec-<lb/>
ond with his time of 1:483.<lb/>
Wendy Smith claimed first in<lb/>
the women's 50-yard freestyle<lb/>
when she touched the wall in 37.1<lb/>
while Lutker, with a time of 27.7,<lb/>
came in second.<lb/>
For the men's 50-yard frees-<lb/>
tyle, Erick Hoyos sprinted ahead<lb/>
of the pack to claim first in 22.7.<lb/>
Billy Haughton came in second at<lb/>
23.1 and Andy Johns received<lb/>
third in 23.2.<lb/>
Jennifer Muench set the next<lb/>
record in the women's 200-yard<lb/>
individual medly event when she<lb/>
swam in at 2:16.9. Nearly a second<lb/>
later was Wilson at 2:17.6.<lb/>
Tom Holsten won the men's<lb/>
200-yard individual medly with<lb/>
his time of 2:02.3 while Raymond<lb/>
Kennedy, secured second in<lb/>
2:025.<lb/>
Yet another record was set,<lb/>
this time in the women's 200-yard<lb/>
butterfly when Shelly Micka<lb/>
claimed victory in her time of<lb/>
2:13.8. Soon to follow was Robin<lb/>
Wicks in 2:14.2.<lb/>
Andy Johns held a comfort-<lb/>
able lead in the men's 200-yard<lb/>
butterfly when he swam in at<lb/>
200.4. Four seconds later, Chris-<lb/>
tensen touched the wall to give<lb/>
him the second place title.<lb/>
Page Holfs time of 55.29 was<lb/>
enough to break the old Purple<lb/>
and Gold record as well as give<lb/>
her a first place title in the<lb/>
women's 100-yard freestyle.<lb/>
In the same event for the men,<lb/>
a close race decided the victor, but<lb/>
it was Erick Hoyos who came out<lb/>
on top with his time of 503. Just<lb/>
three tenths of a second behind<lb/>
Hoyos was Billy Haughton with<lb/>
his time of 50.6.<lb/>
The men broke the next rec-<lb/>
ord when George Walters swam<lb/>
for 2:01.94 in the 200-yard back-<lb/>
stroke. Shelly Mica won it for the<lb/>
women in 2:213.<lb/>
No one was near Chantal<lb/>
Morris in the women's 500-yard<lb/>
freestyle when she came in at<lb/>
5:24.4, giving her an easy victory<lb/>
over second place finisher Leslie<lb/>
Jo Wilson who came in at 5:34.1.<lb/>
It was closer for the men<lb/>
when Mark Cook swam a 456.2<lb/>
500-yard freestyle giving him first<lb/>
place. Soon to follow was a second<lb/>
place time of 459.2 by John Far-<lb/>
rell.<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers crushed<lb/>
the rest of the swimmers and<lb/>
earned herself a new Purple and<lb/>
Gold record when she swam the<lb/>
women's 200-yard breaststroke in<lb/>
2:26.4.<lb/>
Raymond Kennedy, in a<lb/>
closer race for first in the men's<lb/>
200-yard breaststroke, emerged<lb/>
victorious with his time of 2:163.<lb/>
Only two seconds behind was<lb/>
John Springer when became in at<lb/>
2:18.4.<lb/>
The men ended the meet on a<lb/>
high note as they set a new Purple<lb/>
and Gold record in the 400-yard<lb/>
freestyle relay. The team of Todd<lb/>
Stebbins, Tim Boyd, Billy<lb/>
Haughton and Mark Cook Fin-<lb/>
ished off the meet with their win-<lb/>
ning time and new record of<lb/>
3:20.05.<lb/>
And finally, for the women,<lb/>
the 400-yard freestyle relay ended<lb/>
with Chantal Morris, Robin<lb/>
Wicks, Wendy Smith and Page<lb/>
Holt claiming first place with<lb/>
their time of 3554.<lb/>
Haunted House<lb/>
sponsored by Greenville Jaycees<lb/>
1121 Evans Street<lb/>
October 27-31<lb/>
7:00 p.m. until<lb/>
$3 adults $1 ini<lb/>
�V� ��! "��-<lb/>
I<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
GeJ ready to join America's number<lb/>
one name in temporary help. Kelly<lb/>
Services can help you make the most<lb/>
of your free time this semester by<lb/>
offering the flexibility to earn some<lb/>
great cash while still being able to<lb/>
earn good grades. We have a variety<lb/>
of short and long term assignments,<lb/>
nany of which do not require special<lb/>
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�Secretaries<lb/>
�Typists<lb/>
�WP and DE Operators<lb/>
�General Clerical<lb/>
� I ioHfr Tru-incH-il<lb/>
i P!<lb/>
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With Your I.D.<lb/>
BUSCH GARDRNS � THE OLD COUNTRY<lb/>
AUDITIONS c89<lb/>
The Stars Are Out All Day!<lb/>
America's premier<lb/>
theme park in Wil-<lb/>
liamsburg, Va. is con-<lb/>
ducting auditions for<lb/>
over 250 singers, danc-<lb/>
ers, musicians, variety<lb/>
artists, actors, techni-<lb/>
cians, and supervisors.<lb/>
You could be part of the<lb/>
magic that truly makes<lb/>
Busch Gardens an enter-<lb/>
tainment "experience<lb/>
So get your act together<lb/>
and 'shine' at our 198�<lb/>
auditions.<lb/>
Auditions: I to n mins f-Of jikiuionjl<lb/>
infomianon call l-80O-2M-Vi.<lb/>
Audition Dates:<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C.<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 2, 1988<lb/>
1:00-4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Iniversiry of<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Elliott I niversiry Center<lb/>
lexander and Phillips Rms.<lb/>
Wll.I IAMSBURG<lb/>
VIRGINIA<lb/>
Sunday. Dec. II, 1988<lb/>
12:00 S.00 p.m.<lb/>
Bus. h Gardens<lb/>
Festhaus Rehearsal Hall<lb/>
oS<lb/>
Jty'u. ham<lb/>
n ftirmatnc ction F.ual Opportunity Kmpbiver M<lb/>
Hwy 43 South<lb/>
355-6212<lb/>
PEPSI PLAYER OF THE WEEK<lb/>
Hint McCallum, THIS WEEK'S PLAYER OF THE WEEK<lb/>
HOMETOWN-Rowland, NC<lb/>
East Carolina vs Syracuse - Against The Orangemen, Flint had 9<lb/>
tackles, 4 of these accounting for a loss of 23 yards for the SU<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
PERSONAL INFORMATION- Flint is a senior majoring in Indus-<lb/>
trial Technology emphasizing electronics. He is the son of Mary<lb/>
McCallum, he is nicknamed "Flintstone<lb/>
CONGRATULTICWS TO Hint McCallum, FROM PEPSI-COLA.<lb/>
MUCH CONTINUED SUCCESS.<lb/>
POSITION AVAILABLE<lb/>
nian is now accepting applications for an<lb/>
ertising sales representative.<lb/>
Requirements:<lb/>
Previous Sales Experience<lb/>
Good personality &amp; professional Appearance<lb/>
Excellent Communication Skills<lb/>
Must be Dependable &amp; Show Initiative &amp; Enthusiasm<lb/>
Must Have The Desire to Excel<lb/>
Apply in Person at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Please Include Resume<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
No Phone Calls Please!<lb/>
FANTASTIC<lb/>
FALL AIR FARES<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
NEW YORK$178<lb/>
BUFFALO$168<lb/>
ATLANTA$188<lb/>
ORLANDO$210<lb/>
CHICAGO$203<lb/>
EL PASO  .$378<lb/>
WASHINGTON$168<lb/>
BALTIMORE$168<lb/>
DALLAS$288<lb/>
OMAHA$238<lb/>
MIAMI$220<lb/>
DES MOINES$298<lb/>
LOS ANGELES$358<lb/>
HOUSTON$248<lb/>
SEATTLE$368<lb/>
CLEVELAND$168<lb/>
DETROIT$178<lb/>
PHOENIX$348<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA$194<lb/>
DENVER$268<lb/>
COLUMBUS OH$158<lb/>
ST. LOUIS$218<lb/>
Col Us For The Lowest Fore To Your Destination<lb/>
Read the Ftea Pftet: These fares era subject to chang Seats are limited r Day advance reservation are required. Prices<lb/>
based on off peak travel. Travel on other days slightly higher. Fares are non refundabtefnon changeable end must be our-<lb/>
chased within 24 hours of reservations. Fares over Thanksgiving and Christmas are higher<lb/>
 CALL US FOR HOLIDAY RESERVATION<lb/>
JJL<lb/>
<lb/>
TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
355-5075<lb/>
TM.sej.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058103_0015"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25,1988<lb/>
Mountaineers extend streak<lb/>
r<lb/>
(AP) � There's been no stop-<lb/>
ping West Virginia's running<lb/>
game this season, but quarterback<lb/>
Major Harris says his throwing<lb/>
arm is getting itchy.<lb/>
"We were winning earlier in<lb/>
the season running, so we were<lb/>
sticking with that Harris said.<lb/>
"But now I think we're going to<lb/>
start opening up a little bit more<lb/>
and let me throw.<lb/>
"I've proven I can throw the<lb/>
bail. I just want to keep on throw-<lb/>
ing and keep on improving my<lb/>
parsing<lb/>
Harris was 15 of 21 passing<lb/>
tor a career-high 297 yards and<lb/>
three touchdowns Saturday in the<lb/>
sixth ranked Mountaineers' 59-<lb/>
19 rout of Boston Colleg?. The<lb/>
sophomore also ran for 75 yards<lb/>
and two touchdowns, giving him<lb/>
a total of 372 yards � nine more<lb/>
than the Eagles gained in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Top-ranked UCLA also won<lb/>
easily, defeating Arizona 24-3.<lb/>
But four ranked teams lost Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
North Carolina State beat No.<lb/>
9 Clemson 10-3, Kentucky topped<lb/>
No. 11 Georgia 16-10, No. 20<lb/>
Michigan downed No.14 Indiana<lb/>
31-6, and Oregon beat No. 17<lb/>
Washington 17-14.<lb/>
In other Top Ten games, it<lb/>
was No. 2 Notre Dame 41, Air<lb/>
Force 13: No. 4 Miami 57, Cincin-<lb/>
nati 3; No. 5 Nebraska 48, Kansas<lb/>
State 3; No. 7 Florida State 66,<lb/>
Louisiana Tech 3; No. 8 Okla-<lb/>
homa 17, Colorado 4, and No. 10<lb/>
uburn 33, Mississippi State 0.<lb/>
In the rest of ' .e Second Ten,<lb/>
it was No. 12 Wyoming 61, Utah<lb/>
18; No. 13 Arkansas 26, Houston<lb/>
21; No. 15 Oklahoma State 49,<lb/>
Missouri 21, and No. 19 Syracuse<lb/>
38, East Carolina 14.<lb/>
No. 16 Louisiana State and<lb/>
No. 18 South Carolina did not<lb/>
play.<lb/>
No. 1 UCLA 24, Arizona 3<lb/>
Quarterback Troy Aikman,<lb/>
� ho passed for 283 yards and<lb/>
three touchdowns, led UCLA, 7-0.<lb/>
But he said, "It's too early to.<lb/>
be caught up in winning the na-<lb/>
tional championship. We still<lb/>
have a few more games to play<lb/>
UCLA's defense shut out<lb/>
Arizona until Doug Pfaff kicked a<lb/>
35-yard field goal with 55 seconds<lb/>
left.<lb/>
No. 2 Notre Dame 41, Air<lb/>
Force 13<lb/>
At South Bend, Tonv Rice and<lb/>
Ricky Watters provided the offen-<lb/>
sive punch and Notre Dame's<lb/>
defense shut down Air Force's<lb/>
powerful wishbone attack as the<lb/>
Irish improved to 7-0.<lb/>
Rice passed for one touch-<lb/>
down and ran for another, while<lb/>
Watters caught two touchdown<lb/>
passes. Rice's 36 rushing yards<lb/>
gave him 404 for the season,<lb/>
breaking Joe Theismann's school<lb/>
quarterback record of 384, set in<lb/>
1970.<lb/>
No. 4 Miami 57, Cincinnati 3<lb/>
At Miami, Steve Walsh threw<lb/>
five touchdown passes as the<lb/>
Hurricanes, 5-1, rebounded from<lb/>
last week's one-point loss to<lb/>
Notre Dame.<lb/>
Walsh threw scoring passes<lb/>
to five different receivers, tying<lb/>
Bernie Kosar's school record for<lb/>
touchdown throws in a game. The<lb/>
Miami quarterback completed 19<lb/>
of 23 passes for 286 yards with no<lb/>
interceptions.<lb/>
No. 5 Nebraska 48, Kansas St.<lb/>
3<lb/>
At Manhattan. Kan Tyreese<lb/>
Knox scored four touchdowns as<lb/>
Nebraska set an NCAA record<lb/>
with its 27th consecutive winning<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Nebraska, 7-1, had shared the<lb/>
Division I-A record with Ala-<lb/>
bama and Penn State. Penn State<lb/>
established the major college<lb/>
mark of 26 straight winning years<lb/>
from 1939 through 1964 and Ala-<lb/>
bama matched it from 1958<lb/>
through 1983.<lb/>
Knox scored on runs of 2,6,2<lb/>
and 26 yards.<lb/>
No. 7 Florida St. 66, Louisiana<lb/>
Tech 3<lb/>
At Tallahassee, defensive<lb/>
backs Deion Sanders and Dedrick<lb/>
Dodge scored on interception re-<lb/>
rums, and Terry Anthony and<lb/>
Bruce LaSane each caught two<lb/>
touchdown passes for Florida<lb/>
State.<lb/>
But the Seminoles, 7-1, suf-<lb/>
fered a setback when senior quar-<lb/>
terback Chip Ferguson, ranked<lb/>
sixth nationally in passing, left the<lb/>
game in the second quarter with a<lb/>
mild separation of the left shoul-<lb/>
der.<lb/>
No. 8 Oklahoma 17, Colorado<lb/>
14<lb/>
At Boulder, R.D. Lashar's 22-<lb/>
yard field goal with 8:15 left gave<lb/>
Oklahoma the Big Eight victory.<lb/>
It was the first successful field<lb/>
goal of the season for Oklahoma,<lb/>
which had missed its only previ-<lb/>
ous attempt. The Sooners, 6-1<lb/>
overall and 3-0 in the conference,<lb/>
extended their winning streak to<lb/>
12 games over the Buffaloes.<lb/>
No. 9 Clemson 3, N.C State 10<lb/>
At Raleigh, Chris Williams'<lb/>
5-yard touchdown run with 10:04<lb/>
left in the fourth quarter gave<lb/>
North Carolina State its third<lb/>
straight victory over Clemson.<lb/>
It was the first time Clemson<lb/>
has lost three games to the same<lb/>
team under Coach Dany Ford.<lb/>
N.C. State is 6-1 overall and 4-1 in<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Conference.<lb/>
No.10 Auburn 33, Mississippi<lb/>
St.O<lb/>
At Auburn, James Joseph ran<lb/>
for 126 yards and Shane Morris<lb/>
intercepted three passes as the Ti-<lb/>
gers handed the Bulldogs their<lb/>
sixth straight loss.<lb/>
The Tigers, 6-1 overall and 3-<lb/>
1 in the Southeastern Conference,<lb/>
have beaten State seven consecu-<lb/>
tive times.<lb/>
At Lexington, a 48-yard dash<lb/>
by Alfred Rawls for a third-quar-<lb/>
ter touchdown sparked Ken-<lb/>
tucky.<lb/>
The touchdown by Rawls,<lb/>
who finished with 128 yards on 15<lb/>
carries, gave Kentucky a 13-10<lb/>
lead as time expired in the third<lb/>
period. Kentucky's victory ended<lb/>
a 10-game losing streak against<lb/>
Georgia and improved its record<lb/>
to 3-4 overall and 1-3 in the SEC.<lb/>
No.12 Wyoming 61, Utah 18<lb/>
At Laramie, Randy Welniak<lb/>
threw three touchdown passes<lb/>
and ran for another score, helping<lb/>
Wyoming remain undefeated.<lb/>
Wyoming, 8-0 overall and 5-0<lb/>
in the Western Athletic Confer-<lb/>
ence, checked the nation's top-<lb/>
ranked offense with a tenacious<lb/>
rush that repeatedly forced quar-<lb/>
terback Scott Mitchell from the<lb/>
pocket. Utah, 2-5 overall and 1-4<lb/>
in the WAC, gained 356 yards �<lb/>
186 below its nation-leading<lb/>
mark.<lb/>
21<lb/>
No. 13 Arkansas 26, Houston<lb/>
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Kentucky 16, No.11 Georgia<lb/>
At Houston, Arkansas' Ken-<lb/>
dall Trainor kicked four field<lb/>
goals and senior quarterback John<lb/>
Bland guided the offense in his<lb/>
first career start.<lb/>
Trainor extended his field<lb/>
goal string to 15 in a row with<lb/>
kicks of 29,46, 23 and 49 yards as<lb/>
the Razorbacks improved to 7-0<lb/>
overall and 4-0 in the Southwest<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
No. 20 Michigan 31, No. 14<lb/>
Indiana 6<lb/>
At Ann Arbor, fullback Leroy<lb/>
Hoard ran for three touchdowns,<lb/>
including a pair of 54-yarders, as<lb/>
Michigan handed Indiana its first<lb/>
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The victory moved the Wol-<lb/>
verines into first place in the Big<lb/>
Ten with a 3-0-1 conference rec-<lb/>
ord. They are 4-2-1 overall.<lb/>
No. 15 Oklahoma St. 49, Mis-<lb/>
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At Stillwater, Hart Lee Dykes<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058103_0016"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>