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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058108_0001"/>
Inside<lb/>
EDITORIALS4<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDSZZI6<lb/>
FEATURES8<lb/>
SPORTSZ'aZ<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Big E gives advice to befuddled students on the<lb/>
Clearly Labeled Satire Page and Chippy graces the<lb/>
controversial page with some Bizarro poetry. Also,<lb/>
check Pirate Comics for the Jimmy Olsen tribute.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
The Pirates take a breather this weekend. Carolyn<lb/>
Justice gives an in depth look at fullback Tim James<lb/>
while defensive standout Robert Jones tells the key to<lb/>
his success, see page 12.<lb/>
?he SaBt (Eamlmtan<lb/>
Vol. bl No. 34<lb/>
Thursday November 10, 1988<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Sample poll of 50 shows little<lb/>
over half of students voted<lb/>
By KM HARRIS<lb/>
Nrv ?<lb/>
A poll of 50 students con-<lb/>
ducted by The East Can ? ian on<lb/>
Wednesday showed that only a<lb/>
little over half, 28, actually voted<lb/>
Ot the 28 students si voted<lb/>
by absentee ballet and the rema i n<lb/>
ing 22 made a special trip home to<lb/>
cast their ballots.<lb/>
1v conscience wouldn't let<lb/>
me not vote. 1 feel like it ! don't<lb/>
vote then I don r.o the right to<lb/>
complain about the way things<lb/>
are going in the country said<lb/>
iohn Carter, a senior English ma-<lb/>
jor who made two hour trip I i<lb/>
Raleigh to vote<lb/>
The 22 students who declined<lb/>
to vote had various reason- for<lb/>
not doing s, Fight ot the 22 said<lb/>
they did not apply tor the<lb/>
absentee ballot. The other 14 stu-<lb/>
dents said they were not regis-<lb/>
tered to vote One student inter-<lb/>
viewed in front of the Student<lb/>
Store said, "It's too much of a<lb/>
hassle to get registered and all<lb/>
that business<lb/>
I wouldn't vote even it 1 was<lb/>
registered said Meleah Cabhart<lb/>
a chemistry student. I don't<lb/>
think that the votes of the general<lb/>
public have any effect on the elec-<lb/>
tion The candidates didn't give<lb/>
us much of a choice anyway<lb/>
Many of the students inter-<lb/>
viewed who were not registered<lb/>
said they didn't follow the elec-<lb/>
tion because as one student said.<lb/>
Both candidates were miserable<lb/>
choices by their respective par-<lb/>
ties. It wasn't worth registering or<lb/>
even voting tor either of the two<lb/>
Students also expressed their<lb/>
displeasure towards the negative<lb/>
campaign used by Bush.<lb/>
Brett Setzer. a general college<lb/>
student and Dukakis supporter<lb/>
said, "1 voted, but am glad to see<lb/>
everything is over with especially<lb/>
the negative Rush ads. I got sick oi<lb/>
seeing both of them ? in the<lb/>
paper, on TV and on the radio<lb/>
In a breakdown oi males and<lb/>
females polled in terms who<lb/>
voted for which candidate the<lb/>
results were as follows:<lb/>
Nine females voted. Six of<lb/>
the nine voted a Democratic<lb/>
ticket. All six cited abortion and<lb/>
child care as the strong issues.<lb/>
The remaining three<lb/>
women said Bush's qualifications<lb/>
swayed them to the Republican<lb/>
ticket.<lb/>
Nineteen males voted.<lb/>
Sixteen oi the 19 chose the<lb/>
Republican ticket. They cited<lb/>
Bush's experience as vice presi-<lb/>
dent, his stance on defense and<lb/>
the death penalty as influential<lb/>
factors.<lb/>
? The threes male who chose<lb/>
the Democratic ticket said<lb/>
Dukakis' environmental and eco-<lb/>
nomic policies were stronger than<lb/>
those ot Bush<lb/>
The No. 1 form of transportation for on campus students is also an easv target for thieves over<lb/>
the holidays. (File Photo, ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Age is no obstacle<lb/>
1 ' ' fcrv- ' ' ???" " i ii i<lb/>
Minors drink despite laws<lb/>
Bv CONSTANCE WARD<lb/>
staff VSnwr<lb/>
This is this Hrst jxirt in a con-<lb/>
tinuing series on the issue of drinking<lb/>
underage at ECU.<lb/>
Learning is not the onlv thing<lb/>
going on at East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity ? underaged drinking is too.<lb/>
There are 15,579 students<lb/>
enrolled at ECL this fall semester.<lb/>
The majority of these students are<lb/>
below the age of 21.<lb/>
Drinking occurs at parties,<lb/>
downtown clubs and dormitory<lb/>
rooms. ECU administrators and<lb/>
campus police officers do what<lb/>
they can to combat the problem,<lb/>
but the students greatly outnum-<lb/>
ber them.<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum is the direc-<lb/>
tor of Residence Life and Housing<lb/>
at ECU. Ms. Fulghum said her<lb/>
main concern is "the effect abu-<lb/>
sive drinking has on students<lb/>
Abusive drinking occurs when<lb/>
alcohol is used for recreational<lb/>
purposes.<lb/>
Ms. Fulghum said many stu-<lb/>
dents have been taken advantage<lb/>
of, placed on police records,<lb/>
passed out outside of buildings<lb/>
and have caused campus prop-<lb/>
erty damage as a result of being<lb/>
drunk.<lb/>
Ms. Fulghum said money is<lb/>
being wasted. She explained that<lb/>
if she does not know who causes<lb/>
property damage to a dormitory,<lb/>
all residents living there have to<lb/>
pay for the repairs.<lb/>
Another person involved<lb/>
with handling drinkers is Keith<lb/>
Knox, a crime prevention officer<lb/>
for ECU. Knox said there is not<lb/>
enough campus police force to<lb/>
watch all students for underaged<lb/>
drinking. But he said the campus<lb/>
police do issue citations to the<lb/>
underaged drinkers that they do<lb/>
find. K iox said 19 and 20-vear-<lb/>
People have been<lb/>
taken advantage of,<lb/>
placed on police rec-<lb/>
ords, passed out out-<lb/>
side of buildings and<lb/>
have caused campus<lb/>
property damage as a<lb/>
result of being drunk.<lb/>
oldsare charged a $25 fine with no<lb/>
permanent record if caught drink-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Knox said during the fall<lb/>
semester of 1987 and the spring<lb/>
semester of 1988, there were 328<lb/>
citations issued to students for al-<lb/>
coholic consumption and 299 cita-<lb/>
tions written for possession of<lb/>
alcohol. He emphasized that they<lb/>
had put extra effort into issuing ci-<lb/>
tations for alcohol use since they<lb/>
Knox said underaged drinking<lb/>
increased on campus after the 21 -<lb/>
age drinking law came into affect.<lb/>
The legal drinking age was<lb/>
raised from 19 to 21 in North<lb/>
Carolina on September 1, 1?86.<lb/>
The change came about after the<lb/>
U.S. Congress passed legislation<lb/>
stating that any state that did not<lb/>
have a minimum drinking age of<lb/>
A by October 1, 1986, would lose<lb/>
5 percent of its federal highway<lb/>
funds for 1987 and an additional<lb/>
10 percent in 1988.<lb/>
The former drinking age for<lb/>
North Carolina was 19 for beer<lb/>
and unfortified wine and 21 was<lb/>
the age for fortified wine of spiri-<lb/>
tous liquor.<lb/>
The drinking age legislation<lb/>
stemmed from studies done on<lb/>
auto accidents and deaths of<lb/>
drunk drivers under the age of 21.<lb/>
The studies, done in several<lb/>
states, indicated that lowering the<lb/>
drinking age increased the num-<lb/>
ber of alcohol-related accidents,<lb/>
while raising it decreased the<lb/>
number.<lb/>
Knox said the number of alco-<lb/>
hol-related accidents for drivers<lb/>
under 21 has decreased slowly in<lb/>
North Carolina. He said there are<lb/>
no exact statistics available.<lb/>
Knox said ECU has more<lb/>
underaged drinkers now than it<lb/>
did before the law changed. He<lb/>
said the underaged students only<lb/>
changed the wavs in which they<lb/>
obtain alcohol.<lb/>
Despite low voter turnout on the national level, Pitt County voters set records for particinatio,<lb/>
(Photo By Thomas Walters, ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
The Dukakis campaign failed<lb/>
due to a plethora of reasons<lb/>
ByJOK HARRIS<lb/>
New Fditur<lb/>
In an interview Wednesdav,<lb/>
Dr. Tinsley Yarbrough talked<lb/>
about the some factors that<lb/>
doomed Dukakis to lose the presi-<lb/>
dential election.<lb/>
"If you want to look at<lb/>
resumes, Bush clearly has the<lb/>
more impressive of the two Yar-<lb/>
borough said. "Bush has done<lb/>
very little in his career. Granted,<lb/>
he has held many positions, but<lb/>
has done verv little in each of<lb/>
them<lb/>
He said neither oi the candi-<lb/>
dates had a particularly strong<lb/>
stand on any one subject. Accord-<lb/>
ing to larbrough, Bush was<lb/>
elected because of his experience.<lb/>
Yarbrough said Dukakis' rec-<lb/>
ord is impressive and has no black<lb/>
marks on it (in reference to Bush's<lb/>
involvement with the Irancontra<lb/>
affair). "In looking at the Dukakis<lb/>
record, it is easy to say that he<lb/>
hasn't done much more than<lb/>
manage Massachusetts<lb/>
In reference to all four of the<lb/>
candidates, Yarbrough said<lb/>
Bcntsen was the most qualified to<lb/>
be running. He said Bentsen was a<lb/>
wise4 edition to the Democratic<lb/>
ticket but Dukakis, despite his<lb/>
knowledge and political back-<lb/>
ground, was not.<lb/>
"Dukakis was a v;i x d choice,<lb/>
hut the image oi a Northeastern<lb/>
liberal with an ethnic background<lb/>
just didn't sit weli with a lot oi<lb/>
people said Yarbrough.<lb/>
He also said Dukakis' physi-<lb/>
cal size was no asset to the cam-<lb/>
paign, "1 le wasn't a powerful fig-<lb/>
ure. I ledidn't radiate (he imageof<lb/>
strength<lb/>
Yarbrough said 1 flunk it is<lb/>
sate to say that Bush won on<lb/>
Reagan's appeal and a much more<lb/>
professionally run campaign<lb/>
According to Yarbrough, the<lb/>
negative advertising played a big<lb/>
part in the Republican victory. 1 le<lb/>
said Bush used the negative ads to<lb/>
define Dukakis as s,tt on crime<lb/>
and soft on patriotism, referring<lb/>
to the Pledge of Allegiance issue.<lb/>
" 1 he Bush campaign manag-<lb/>
ers really knew what thev were<lb/>
doing Yarbrough said. "He had<lb/>
tar more seasoned veterans from<lb/>
other campaigns working for him<lb/>
than the Dukakis camp. It you<lb/>
look at 'he final half-an-hour pur-<lb/>
chased by each candidate on<lb/>
Monday. Bush's was just more<lb/>
slickly put together<lb/>
Another major factor that led<lb/>
to Dukakis' downfall was the<lb/>
Willie Horton ad. Yarborough<lb/>
said the South, which has been<lb/>
traditionally Democratic voted<lb/>
Republican because oi the racial<lb/>
undertone caused bv the ad. "By<lb/>
using the Willie Horton ad. the<lb/>
Republicans made an appeal to a<lb/>
specialized group oi people, and<lb/>
won.<lb/>
Dukakis should have<lb/>
started doing earlier, what he has<lb/>
been doing in the last two weeks<lb/>
Yarbrough said. "I'm not saying<lb/>
he would have won. but it would<lb/>
have been a closer race<lb/>
Yarbrough said as a result of<lb/>
the election the Senate and House<lb/>
are under a Democratic majority.<lb/>
He said, "It's going to be<lb/>
tough going for Bush. He's going<lb/>
to have a hard time getting any-<lb/>
thing passed by either bodv with-<lb/>
out it being thoroughly ques-<lb/>
tioned and debated<lb/>
AIDS is the topic at hand<lb/>
By GARY SANDERSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
AIDS victim Mike Miller, 42,<lb/>
conducted an open forum in<lb/>
Hendrix Theater Tuesday night<lb/>
as part of ECU's AIDS Awareness<lb/>
Week.<lb/>
Miller willingly answered<lb/>
questions from the audience as he<lb/>
handed out pamphlets on the<lb/>
prevention of the disease.<lb/>
"When I first found out that I<lb/>
had full-blown AIDS, my feelings<lb/>
toward the gay community re-<lb/>
flected getting even said Miller.<lb/>
"I've found out that AIDS isn't a<lb/>
gay disease  if I can change my<lb/>
opinion with AIDS, I don't see<lb/>
why others are still so pig-<lb/>
headed<lb/>
He said attitudes are chang-<lb/>
ing but that it's still "one step for-<lb/>
ward, two steps back<lb/>
Miller, a hemophiliac, said he<lb/>
was exposed to AIDS through<lb/>
transfusions following a sailing<lb/>
accident in 1981. "It's a disease<lb/>
that hides 1 had it for five to six<lb/>
years before experiencing symp-<lb/>
toms said Miller. "You're play-<lb/>
ing Russian roulette when you've<lb/>
got the disease inside you<lb/>
Miller said tests conducted<lb/>
showed three college students in<lb/>
every 1000 nationwide have<lb/>
AIDS.<lb/>
"That may not sound signifi-<lb/>
cant until vou find it to be vour<lb/>
J J<lb/>
boyfriend or girlfriend or room-<lb/>
mate he said.<lb/>
Miller stressed that those in-<lb/>
fected have no way oi knowing<lb/>
how many people they've trans-<lb/>
mitted the disease to. "You've got<lb/>
no way of knowing you have the<lb/>
disease unless vou're tested said<lb/>
Miller.<lb/>
He told students the dis-<lb/>
ease could be transmitted<lb/>
through anv exchange of body<lb/>
fluids. The fluids include blood,<lb/>
saliva, feccs, semen or mucous.<lb/>
"All the disease needs is an open-<lb/>
ing said Miller. According to<lb/>
Miller openings include sores or<lb/>
cuts in the mouth, thus the disease<lb/>
could be transmitted through oral<lb/>
sex.<lb/>
Presently, Miller is using<lb/>
a variety of drugs including the<lb/>
Food and Drug Administration-<lb/>
around $700 monthly, down from<lb/>
$1200 per month in 1986.<lb/>
"1 don't think a cure  a vac<lb/>
cine is anywhere close, but they re<lb/>
making progress said Miller.<lb/>
I le is also taking a lot of supple-<lb/>
ments and watching his diet.<lb/>
"I don't know if they're<lb/>
doing any good  but I'm still<lb/>
alive he said. "If I wanted to die,<lb/>
I could do it tomorrow  dying is<lb/>
easy, it's living that's a bitch<lb/>
Miller said since he got the<lb/>
virus, he's had to take I new out-<lb/>
look on life.<lb/>
"I live one ? ime be-<lb/>
cause lite, ton . venture<lb/>
Miller said that i takes a ter-<lb/>
minal illness like AIDS to make<lb/>
you appreciate what you have.<lb/>
He said people "should look<lb/>
around them  it's a beautiful<lb/>
world, a wonderful life<lb/>
Student Health Center Edu-<lb/>
cator Mary Elesha- Adams, the co-<lb/>
ordinator of AIDS Awareness<lb/>
Week said, "We felt that he would<lb/>
be the perfect person to speak<lb/>
since he's not a homosexual<lb/>
She said many people are still<lb/>
under the belief that AIDS is a de-<lb/>
sease which only affects homo-<lb/>
sexuals.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0002"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
v I v Ki'l INIAN<lb/>
NOV 1 Mm K 10<lb/>
Condoms are the sale alternative<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
! m' boon hearing a lot aNmt tlon<lb/>
?ndoms during the p?t year and<lb/>
? week during M!1 Aware<lb/>
? ess Week Uh.it s tin- sciH"?p on<lb/>
.1- i means to nr I<lb/>
against ? ? . ? transmitted i<lb/>
eases (STP s) Vt to ,ib<lb/>
from intei i oui se i ond ?<lb/>
the Ix'st w.n to reduce v<lb/>
chances ol getting oi spn<lb/>
 v ondom oi i ubhei is a<lb/>
t i tike sheath that tits<lb/>
the erect pents When used lOS rhea her<lb/>
 v the condom prevents tamvdia and other <lb/>
ri . the pai tnei s<lb/>
ii ing intercourse<lb/>
Sin tdom prevents the<lb/>
entei ing the pai tnei s<lb/>
lorn can N- used to<lb/>
To Your Health<lb/>
By<lb/>
Mary-Elesha Adams<lb/>
?. ondoms tire<lb/>
and v .in be bought v itlv<lb/>
s iiption I i'f arc also<lb/>
use<lb/>
Whal features<lb/>
KHk tvM inavind<lb/>
I (H?k tor i ondi'ins that use<lb/>
Nonoxynol-9 as i lubricant be<lb/>
cause it is also spermu idal (kills<lb/>
sperm) I ubri .ml also decreases<lb/>
the possibility t condom break<lb/>
agi<lb/>
Never use Vaseline or min<lb/>
nd that natural eral oil it will disintegrate the<lb/>
am I stop the i ond m<lb/>
? Don'l us , ondoms that .ire<lb/>
? thai are not in sealed pa kagos 1 r i<lb/>
N ?i lapan I he destnn s latex<lb/>
' ? ' ndoms. Where i an 1 buy condoms?<lb/>
- ondom has a i he Student I i. alth Servii c<lb/>
i from sells a box ol 1 condoms for $2 .it<lb/>
the pharmai <lb/>
Ja<lb/>
It M<lb/>
i<lb/>
J. lvl<lb/>
Advf tl inj Repiesi<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
I I<lb/>
Budget, Nato and arms reductions top<lb/>
Bush's presidential agenda in 1989<lb/>
DISPLAY AlJVi J I 1<lb/>
 Ml OR M) 1 U I<lb/>
 ' leorge 1 su fxvt I I<lb/>
 I begin his presi will want a statt tl<lb/>
mitn ol oedentia sports .is <lb/>
nation s posed<lb/>
?ficit to around avid keoni<lb/>
 AVO s p nonttos<lb/>
with ? -<lb/>
se i<lb/>
c bobbed across the Hush scai cl e<lb/>
; - 1 up as s<lb/>
??'<lb/>
 It ad? ? ? been I<lb/>
in be sevretai v ol ns<lb/>
k of a to l<lb/>
an Reagan v ad .is<lb/>
sorbed in the tan . -<lb/>
t same time Bush is<lb/>
itorot authorit in an<lb/>
nsof go<lb/>
. -<lb/>
?, in <lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
ext week<lb/>
Margaret<lb/>
man<lb/>
hi<lb/>
talks<lb/>
mong the fii<lb/>
ems facing Bush are the bu I<lb/>
i fii il and tin national debl<lb/>
stem the red ink, Bush has pro<lb/>
ised ! pei ill lead ncgi tia<lb/>
u ie in tions u ithongi ?. it<lb/>
i A TO<lb/>
i 1<lb/>
i i a<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
.<lb/>
i oi r,k1i si<lb/>
Po<lb/>
 - ? - . ?<lb/>
? ? - 1 ?<lb/>
? - -r . -?<lb/>
OperT<lb/>
Monday-Saturday 10-9<lb/>
Sundav 1-6<lb/>
Fall Savings<lb/>
I<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(Except Aigner. Mike and Reebok)<lb/>
1 I<lb/>
? i :<lb/>
tveft<lb/>
for The<lb/>
url !?<lb/>
CORDON'S<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
PREGNANCY CENTER<lb/>
The Center Is Oven<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
10 2<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
9-2:30<lb/>
For an appointment or more infor<lb/>
mation. call 24 Hour Helpline,<lb/>
757 O003<lb/>
K?J ? ? '  Il r c K<lb/>
1 rcen Ilk n<lb/>
PC Pregnancy Tr(<lb/>
nfttlci ' ? I ounselu ?:<lb/>
ii mmmmmmwmwmmm<lb/>
OOPIES 5<lb/>
(Sf<lb/>
P<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
9 5<lb/>
"vice 8 12 x 11 white bond)<lb/>
<lb/>
CJ<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
Fast Copies For Fast Times<lb/>
(Next to Chicos in the Geogretown Shops)<lb/>
Let's Do A Good Turn And End Hunger In America.<lb/>
SUPPORT "SCOUTING FOR FOOD" ? NOVEMBER 12-19, 1988<lb/>
-?<lb/>
<lb/>
; S<lb/>
SCOUTING for FOOD<lb/>
 ?,<lb/>
. ? e St<lb/>
g w<lb/>
e<lb/>
FROl<lb/>
Buv<lb/>
A<lb/>
V<lb/>
k -<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0003"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10,1988<lb/>
Condoms are the safe alternative<lb/>
I've been hearing a lot about<lb/>
condoms during the past year and<lb/>
Jhis week during AIDS Aware-<lb/>
ness Week. What's the scoop on<lb/>
condoms?<lb/>
A condom or "rubber" is a<lb/>
thin rubber-like sheath that fits<lb/>
over the erect penis. When used<lb/>
properly, the condom prevents<lb/>
sperm from entering the partner's<lb/>
body during intercourse.<lb/>
Since a condom prevents the<lb/>
sperm from entering the partner's<lb/>
body, the condom can be used to<lb/>
serve two purposes:<lb/>
1. as a method of contracep-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
2. as a means to protect<lb/>
against sexually transmitted dis-<lb/>
eases (STD's). Next to abstaining<lb/>
from intercourse, condoms are<lb/>
the best way to reduce your<lb/>
chances of getting or spreading<lb/>
AIDS, gonorrhea, herpes, ch-<lb/>
lamydia and other STD's.<lb/>
Condoms are inexpensive<lb/>
and can be bought without a pre-<lb/>
scription. They are also easy to<lb/>
use.<lb/>
What features should you<lb/>
look for in a condom?<lb/>
-Use only latex condoms. Sci-<lb/>
To Your Health<lb/>
By<lb/>
Mary-Elesha Adams<lb/>
entist have found that "natural<lb/>
skin" condoms cannot stop the<lb/>
AIDS virus.<lb/>
-Look for condoms that are<lb/>
made in the USA or Japan. They<lb/>
are superior to other condoms.<lb/>
-Make sure the condom has a<lb/>
reservoir tip (to keep sperm from<lb/>
leaking).<lb/>
-Look for condoms that use<lb/>
Nonoxynol-9 as a lubricant be-<lb/>
cause it is also spermicidal (kills<lb/>
sperm). Lubricant also decreases<lb/>
the possibility of condom break-<lb/>
age.<lb/>
Never use Vaseline or min-<lb/>
eral oil - it will disintegrate the<lb/>
condom.<lb/>
-Don't use condoms that are<lb/>
not in sealed packages. Dryness<lb/>
destroys latex.<lb/>
Where can I buy condoms?<lb/>
-The Student Health Service<lb/>
sells a box of 12 condoms for $2 at<lb/>
the pharmacy.<lb/>
Budget, Nato and arms reductions top<lb/>
Bush's presidential agenda in 1989<lb/>
HOUSTON (AP) ? George<lb/>
Bush is likely to begin his presi-<lb/>
dency with a blaze of summitry<lb/>
on everything from the nation's<lb/>
staggering budget deficit to<lb/>
NATO's foreign policy priorities<lb/>
and arms reductions with<lb/>
Moscow.<lb/>
Bush, whose political inclina-<lb/>
tions have bobbed across the<lb/>
spectrum, promises to brino to the<lb/>
White House a less ideological<lb/>
brand of leadership than Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan.<lb/>
He likely will be more of a<lb/>
hands-on manager than Reagan<lb/>
but not as deeply absorbed in the<lb/>
mechanics of government as<lb/>
jimmy Carter was.<lb/>
At the same time Bush is<lb/>
known as a delegator of authority,<lb/>
a student of the problems of gov-<lb/>
ernance who believes that the best<lb/>
way to chart goals and get things<lb/>
done is to put the right people in<lb/>
the right places.<lb/>
"I suspect that George Bush<lb/>
will want a staff that includes sort<lb/>
of credentialed experts as op-<lb/>
posed to ideological soul mates<lb/>
around him said David Keene, a<lb/>
Republican political consultant<lb/>
who once worked for Bush.<lb/>
James A. Baker III, the former<lb/>
Treasury secretary who was<lb/>
Bush's campaign chairman, is ex-<lb/>
pected to wind up as secretarv of<lb/>
State. Former Sen. John Tower of<lb/>
Texas has been lobbying hard to<lb/>
be secretary of Defense.<lb/>
Bush is expected to keep<lb/>
Nicholas Brady as Treasury secre-<lb/>
tary, Dick Thornburgh as attor-<lb/>
ney general, Lauro Cavazos as<lb/>
education secretarv and Ann<lb/>
McLaughlin as Labor secretary or<lb/>
in another Cabinet post.<lb/>
After a news conference here<lb/>
Wednesday, Bush will return to<lb/>
Washington for a victory rally<lb/>
and then leave Thursday for a<lb/>
four-dav Florida vacation.<lb/>
CITY OF GREENSBORO<lb/>
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MM Irn-n<lb/>
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(Next to Chico's in the Geogretown Shops)<lb/>
He will return to Washington<lb/>
Monday for meetings next week<lb/>
British Prime Minister Margaret<lb/>
Thatcher and West German<lb/>
Chancellor Helmut Kohl.<lb/>
Mrs. Thatcher would like to<lb/>
see a NATO foreign ministers'<lb/>
meeting scheduled for June in<lb/>
London upgraded to a full NATO<lb/>
summit conference to develop<lb/>
strategy for dealing with the<lb/>
Kremlin.<lb/>
Bush already has proposed a<lb/>
NATO summit, so it's likely<lb/>
they'll be talking on the same<lb/>
wave length.<lb/>
A NATO meeting could pave<lb/>
the way for Bush to meet with<lb/>
Soviet President Mikhail S. Gor-<lb/>
bachev. Bush said recently he<lb/>
would like to meet the Soviet<lb/>
leader at "the earliest time" so<lb/>
they can size each other up and<lb/>
determine how to move ahead<lb/>
with strategic and conventional<lb/>
arms talks.<lb/>
Among the first major prob-<lb/>
lems facing Bush are the budget<lb/>
deficit and the national debt. To<lb/>
stem the red ink, Bush has prom-<lb/>
ised to personally lead negotia-<lb/>
tions with Congress on deficit-<lb/>
reduction.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving live East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
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Marti<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - Pro<lb/>
by a strong Republican tide<lb/>
personal populantv, Go<lb/>
Martin won re-election in a s<lb/>
ning landslide that rewards<lb/>
call for an endorsement of al<lb/>
ord that Democrats had brand<lb/>
failure.<lb/>
"I am reassured and<lb/>
charged by the results ot<lb/>
day the beaming 52<lb/>
governor told hundreds o<lb/>
bilant supporter Tuesd<lb/>
after declanng victor<lb/>
Gov. Bob Jordan<lb/>
"The people of North<lb/>
lina have said with their <lb/>
that they respect and suppo<lb/>
leadership that we've<lb/>
last four years and they wa<lb/>
see us move forward tl<lb/>
four years Martin said, pr<lb/>
ing to seek an end to hi<lb/>
feud with Democrati <lb/>
Jordan, 55, who i <lb/>
worst beating,of any North<lb/>
lina Democratic gubernatj<lb/>
candidate this ant<lb/>
Martin's call for unr <lb/>
phoning the winner to<lb/>
gratulations.<lb/>
"The voters have pla<lb/>
trust in Jim Martin over the<lb/>
four vears and I'm sur J<lb/>
will work very hard to man<lb/>
that trust Jordan said.<lb/>
Standing with hi- wife, S<lb/>
and hundreds of disappo<lb/>
Democrats, the lieutenant t<lb/>
nor acknowledged that, "it<lb/>
to lose<lb/>
"I may not like the ded<lb/>
that was made, but 1 accep<lb/>
decision Jordan said. "Ipre<lb/>
you it will not keep me<lb/>
working for the people of<lb/>
Carolina for the rest of mv<lb/>
With 2,368 or 99 perce<lb/>
2,391 precincts re I<lb/>
unofficial returns, Martin<lb/>
1,197,897 votes or 56 percd<lb/>
942,357 votes or 44 p. i j<lb/>
Jordan.<lb/>
Becoming the state's tiH<lb/>
publican chief executive <lb/>
election. Martin earned<lb/>
geographical region excej<lb/>
sparselv populated, rural<lb/>
east.<lb/>
He routed lordan bv<lb/>
2OCM)00v oe?t thetTiednhc<lb/>
rolled up big majorities in<lb/>
counties such as Alamj<lb/>
Buncombe,Forsyth. Guil<lb/>
New Hanover and Wake.<lb/>
Jordan's most staggeriii<lb/>
back came in Mecklenburg<lb/>
state's most populous o<lb/>
where he made a concerted<lb/>
to minimize his losses only<lb/>
Martin win bv a 2-tD-l mart<lb/>
An ABC' exit poll J<lb/>
Read The Eas1<lb/>
Carolinian. Eve<lb/>
Tues. and Thi<lb/>
5t<lb/>
SU<lb/>
De<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
fr<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Buy<lb/>
Anot<lb/>
(With pure<lb/>
Offer H<lb/>
(Not Val<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0004"/><lb/>
olinian<lb/>
ertising<lb/>
tatives<lb/>
mandi<lb/>
hip<lb/>
hisivo<lb/>
(; RATES<lb/>
?<lb/>
I I<lb/>
"?,<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Of AMBICA<lb/>
ING for FOOD<lb/>
kJ<lb/>
? ?i<lb/>
O TURN<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10,1988 3<lb/>
Martin buries Jordan in landslide<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? Propelled<lb/>
by a strong Republican tide and<lb/>
personal popularity, Gov. Jim<lb/>
Martin won re-election in a stun-<lb/>
ning landslide that rewarded his<lb/>
call for an endorsement of a rec-<lb/>
ord that Democratshad branded a<lb/>
failure.<lb/>
"I am reassured and re-<lb/>
charged by the results of this<lb/>
day the beaming 52-vear-old<lb/>
governor told hundreds of ju-<lb/>
Martin favored by majorities of<lb/>
the male and female voters and 17<lb/>
percent of the black voters. His<lb/>
campaign had hoped for 20 per-<lb/>
cent black support.<lb/>
It was a resounding vote of<lb/>
case for a change in leadership, state.<lb/>
Black said. Martin countered with a<lb/>
"Jordan was forced into a campaign that effectively took ad-<lb/>
position of trying, to argue that vantage of favorable economic<lb/>
'we can do better7 without the statistics. Citing the state's low<lb/>
ability to make truly convincing unemployment rate and the<lb/>
ii<lb/>
m<lb/>
:y&amp;?.<lb/>
confidence for the former college arguments as to how it could be 300,000 jobs created during his<lb/>
chemistry professor and six-term<lb/>
congressman elected in 1984 de-<lb/>
spite having no experience in<lb/>
state government and whose rec-<lb/>
ord of steering initiatives through<lb/>
bilant supporters Tuesday night the General Assembly was spotty<lb/>
after declaring victory over Lt. at best.<lb/>
Gov. Bob Jordan. He had urged voters to re-<lb/>
"The people of North Caro- elect him by a wide margin which<lb/>
Una have said with their votes  he said would give him a "man-<lb/>
that they respect and support the date" and send the Legislature's<lb/>
leadership that we've given these Democratic leaders a message to<lb/>
last four vears and they want to cooperate.<lb/>
done he said. "He started out<lb/>
behind and stayed behind all the<lb/>
way through<lb/>
John Crumpler, Jordan's<lb/>
campaign manager, acknowl-<lb/>
edged that "it has turned out to be<lb/>
a tough year to be a Democrat in<lb/>
North Carolina. We ran a good<lb/>
tenure, he said North Carolina<lb/>
was "on a roll" and didn't need to<lb/>
change course.<lb/>
Jordan acknowledged the<lb/>
state's growth but said it was con-<lb/>
centrated in urban areas and<lb/>
warned that the future was grim,<lb/>
citing problems such as wide-<lb/>
see us move forward these next<lb/>
four vears Martin said, promis-<lb/>
ing to seek an end to his four-year<lb/>
feud with Democratic legislators.<lb/>
Jordan, 53, who suffered the<lb/>
worst beating.of any North Caro-<lb/>
lina Democratic gubernatorial<lb/>
candidate this century, echoed<lb/>
Martin's call for unitv after tele-<lb/>
phoning the winner to offer con-<lb/>
gratulati6ns.<lb/>
"The voters have placed their<lb/>
trust in Jim Martin over the next<lb/>
four vears and I'm sure that he<lb/>
J<lb/>
will work verv hard to maintain<lb/>
that trust Jordan said.<lb/>
Standing with his wife, Sarah,<lb/>
and hundreds of disappointed<lb/>
Democrats, the lieutenant gover-<lb/>
nor acknowledged that, 'it hurts<lb/>
to lose<lb/>
"I may not like the decision<lb/>
that was made, but I accept that<lb/>
Martin avoided gloating in<lb/>
his victory statement, praising -<lb/>
Jordan's concession as "states-<lb/>
manlike" and emphasizing the<lb/>
need for unity.<lb/>
He promised an early meet-<lb/>
ing with Democratic leaders and a<lb/>
concerted push for a better work-<lb/>
ing relationship.<lb/>
"I've said before, there's a<lb/>
time for partisanship Martin<lb/>
said. "That's when we have elec-<lb/>
tions. And there'sa time for bipar-<lb/>
tisanship. That's when the<lb/>
election's over<lb/>
Martin's victory appeared to<lb/>
be more a product of his own<lb/>
strengths than of shortcomings in<lb/>
Jordan or his strategy, although<lb/>
observers said the staid Demo-<lb/>
cratic nominee wasn't the ideal<lb/>
challenger at a time when cha-<lb/>
risma and smoothness on televi-<lb/>
campaign, a strong campaign, but spread illiteracy and coastal pol-<lb/>
that's not always enough. lution.<lb/>
Ken Eudy, executive director Martin deflected the "sitting<lb/>
of the state Democratic Party who governor" label with a flurry of<lb/>
spearheaded the effort to tarnish election-year initiatives ranging<lb/>
Martin's image and coined the from a $450 million highway<lb/>
decision Jordan said. "1 promise sion are priceless qualities.<lb/>
"Martin is a very skillful poli-<lb/>
tician said Merle Black, political<lb/>
science professor at the Univer<lb/>
vou it will not keep me from<lb/>
working for the people of North<lb/>
Carolina for the rest of my life<lb/>
With 2,368 or 99 percent of<lb/>
2,391 precincts reporting<lb/>
unofficial returns, Martin had<lb/>
1,197,897 votes or 56 percent to associated himself with jobs, edu<lb/>
phrase "sitting governor attrib-<lb/>
uted the outcome to the<lb/>
governor's personal attractive-<lb/>
ness.<lb/>
"He'san incumbent governor<lb/>
with a lot of hair and teeth and<lb/>
one-liners Eudy said.<lb/>
But Tim Pittman, Martin's<lb/>
campaign spokesman, said Jor-<lb/>
dan sealed his own doom by at-<lb/>
tacking Martin with television<lb/>
commercials including the cele-<lb/>
brated ad in which chimpanzees<lb/>
in business suits portrayed his<lb/>
budget advisers.<lb/>
"At that point the voters just<lb/>
realized that he was being very<lb/>
negative Pittman said. "People<lb/>
realized that he was not going to<lb/>
run a positive campaign and offer<lb/>
an alternative<lb/>
The nominees spent about<lb/>
$10 million between them, a state<lb/>
record for a gubernatorial cam-<lb/>
paign.<lb/>
From the outset, the race's<lb/>
bond issue to a $5 million package<lb/>
of services for the elderly.<lb/>
Satire Page<lb/>
overs<lb/>
ctivate<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
On Greenville's Largest<lb/>
Wide Screen TV<lb/>
This Week<lb/>
Buffalo Bills<lb/>
vs.<lb/>
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8:00 until<lb/>
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Yes, those Twins of<lb/>
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EVERY THURSDAY<lb/>
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sity of North Carolina at Chapel JSt1?<lb/>
Hill He was able to offset every-<lb/>
thing Jordan threw at him. He<lb/>
942357 votes or 44 percent tor<lb/>
Jordan.<lb/>
Becoming the state's first Re-<lb/>
publican chief executive to win re-<lb/>
election. Martin earned every<lb/>
geographical region except the<lb/>
sparselv populated, rural North-<lb/>
east.<lb/>
He routed Jordan by nearly<lb/>
200,000 ces4 the redmoTrt and<lb/>
rolled up big majorities in urban<lb/>
counties such as Alamance,<lb/>
Buncombe,Forsyth, Guilford,<lb/>
New Hanover and Wake.<lb/>
Jordan's most staggering set-<lb/>
back came in Mecklenburg, the<lb/>
state's most populous county,<lb/>
where he made a concerted effort<lb/>
to minimize his losses only to see<lb/>
Martin win by a 2-to-l margin.<lb/>
An ABC exit poll snowed<lb/>
Read The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Every<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
cation, roads  to the point that<lb/>
Martin and Jordan really did not<lb/>
seem to differ very much in terms<lb/>
of fundamental objectives<lb/>
Failing to establish stark dif-<lb/>
ferences between himself and<lb/>
Martin, Jordan could not sell his<lb/>
dan could convince voters Utat<lb/>
Martin had done a poor job and<lb/>
that replacing him would result in<lb/>
substantial, demonstrable change<lb/>
for the better.<lb/>
Jordan portrayed Martin as<lb/>
lazy and unimaginative, with no<lb/>
comprehensive vision and more<lb/>
interest in building the Republi-<lb/>
can Party than in running the<lb/>
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Vt0W 1 4?unt tx&amp; VOTE 0 v?n or uvr)<lb/>
November 10. 1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Pag? 4<lb/>
Voting<lb/>
Fifty million people can be wrong<lb/>
Dust settles. Smoke clears. Vul-<lb/>
tures alight. Maggots are spawned<lb/>
in rotting meat. Writers of editorials<lb/>
dissect presidential elections.<lb/>
Though he'd disagree, Bush's<lb/>
victory is hardly a resounding<lb/>
triumph of conservative values over<lb/>
liberal ones, nor is it the "mandate<lb/>
from mainstream America" he will<lb/>
certainly try to claim. The same<lb/>
people who elected Bush also<lb/>
elected a mostly Democratic Con-<lb/>
gress, so there has certainly been no<lb/>
overwhelming endorsement of<lb/>
whatever values Bush stands for this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
About fifty-five percent of those<lb/>
who voted, which includes only<lb/>
about fifty percent of eligible voters,<lb/>
voted for Bush (the electoral college<lb/>
results are deceptively large). A bit<lb/>
of simple mathematics reveals that<lb/>
this translates to: roughly a quarter<lb/>
of the eligible voters voted for Bush.<lb/>
Approximately the same<lb/>
amount think the sun revolves<lb/>
around the earth, and an even<lb/>
higher percentage can't tell north<lb/>
from south on a map of the world. It<lb/>
is of course not necessarily true that<lb/>
all those who voted for Bush believe<lb/>
these things, but, regardless, it is<lb/>
difficult to lend much weight to the<lb/>
intellectual decisions of such per-<lb/>
sons.<lb/>
In fact, it verges on insanity to<lb/>
believe that the American people ?<lb/>
or, for that matter, any randomly<lb/>
selected group of humans ? is actu-<lb/>
ally capable of governing itself by<lb/>
democracy. Voters now base theii<lb/>
decisions largely or totally on how<lb/>
they feel about a candidate, as op-<lb/>
posed to what they think about tha1<lb/>
candidate's positions. As a result<lb/>
they are easily influenced by the<lb/>
kind of advertising typified by<lb/>
Bush's campaign.<lb/>
The success of sleazy politics is<lb/>
nothing new, of course; 1988 is spe-<lb/>
cial only in that the political han-<lb/>
dlers seemed to be willing to openl)<lb/>
admit that the American populace<lb/>
is, by and large, a bunch of easily-<lb/>
gulled fools who don't mind being<lb/>
led like asses on a rope, provided<lb/>
that they are permitted to retain the<lb/>
fiction that they are making rational<lb/>
and informed decisions.<lb/>
Time and time again, in election<lb/>
after election, one is reminded that<lb/>
the American populace, taken as a<lb/>
whole, is quite stupid. Logical<lb/>
thought on the subject leads inexo-<lb/>
rably to the conclusion that the effec-<lb/>
tive intelligence level of the group is<lb/>
reduced at best to the average level,<lb/>
or at worst to the lowest common<lb/>
denominator.<lb/>
It is senseless to presume that the<lb/>
ordinary man is more fit to govern<lb/>
than is the extraordinary man. Even<lb/>
though a system such as the Ameri-<lb/>
can one is supposed to catapult the<lb/>
most-qualified candidate to office, it<lb/>
is still the voters ? the average per-<lb/>
sons ? who decide which candidate<lb/>
is more qualified.<lb/>
There are many who will claim<lb/>
PUKAM5 TO WIN<lb/>
Yew COULD eXAlAINt-<lb/>
AKjp SAY THAT HE<lb/>
?JST NIY BY A<lb/>
SUM 0<lb/>
that this system is quite justified, as<lb/>
power derives from the masses. But<lb/>
we do not let convicts vote on their<lb/>
wardens. We do not let infants vote<lb/>
on their parents. We do not let zoo<lb/>
animals vote on their keepers. And<lb/>
we should never, ever, ever again let<lb/>
the American people vote on their<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
They have been given the right to<lb/>
vote, and they have been given<lb/>
ample access to the facts, lies by<lb/>
candidates notwithstandng. The<lb/>
vast majority of voters have proved<lb/>
themselves unwilling or unable to<lb/>
avail themselves of these facts and to<lb/>
make an informed decision based<lb/>
upon them. The fundamental pre-<lb/>
cepts of democracy ? that the<lb/>
people are capable of making the<lb/>
right decision and that they will do<lb/>
so at least most of the time ? are<lb/>
clearly in error.<lb/>
Even those who would claim<lb/>
instead that the fundamental pre-<lb/>
cept of democracy is not that people<lb/>
will make the right decision, but that<lb/>
they have the right to make the deci-<lb/>
sion, aren't off the hook. It has long<lb/>
been agreed that a person's right to<lb/>
freedom of speech, for example,<lb/>
does not extend to shouting "fire" in<lb/>
a crowded movie theater. Similarly,<lb/>
the average person does not have<lb/>
the right to decide who his leaders<lb/>
will be unless he makes that decision<lb/>
on the basis of clearheaded, logical<lb/>
thinking.<lb/>
It is quite likely that the oft-in-<lb/>
voked Founding Fathers, were they<lb/>
alive today, would be shocked and<lb/>
revolted at the Frankenstein mon-<lb/>
ster of a government that has been<lb/>
sewn together out of the noble sys-<lb/>
tem they had in mind. Their driving<lb/>
concept was this: if the government<lb/>
is not working properly, it must be<lb/>
repaired or replaced.<lb/>
The current state of affairs shows<lb/>
a political system well beyond re-<lb/>
pair; it must, therefore, be replaced.<lb/>
There must be some method, pref-<lb/>
erably a peaceful one, of implement-<lb/>
ing an Ibsenian democracy ? a<lb/>
government ruled by an aristocracy<lb/>
made up of those members of the<lb/>
population most fit to rule.<lb/>
Unfortunately, this is not likely<lb/>
to happen unless the majority of the<lb/>
people freely consent to it. Other-<lb/>
wise the system would be no better<lb/>
than tyranny.<lb/>
But the majority of the people<lb/>
won't consent to any such thing<lb/>
until they are astute enough and<lb/>
wise enough to realize that that sys-<lb/>
tem is precisely what is necessary.<lb/>
Catch-22: at that same point they<lb/>
will be capable of carrying on an<lb/>
actual democracy, and an Ibsenian<lb/>
democracy will no longer be neces-<lb/>
sary.<lb/>
But in the meantime ? in the<lb/>
milennia until that happens ?<lb/>
American democracy will be an<lb/>
unfair and inequitable system,<lb/>
which rewards candidates who<lb/>
pander to the whims of the least<lb/>
intelligent voters. Yay, Bush.<lb/>
IF Yof WANm<lb/>
BvUM TO WIN<lb/>
Y0v cwu eXAM,v;r-r<lb/>
TH? e?2?iLj?l?<lb/>
ArVP 5AY THAT H6"<lb/>
yON BX AN OVeR-<lb/>
VOHEtMING- 5"7o<lb/>
1<lb/>
nUlllilliiliifiiiiiiiiiTJU iiiummiivi)<lb/>
lf.ll,llfiiiiiiiiiiui.iniiiiiiiPiiiiiii'iiiiiiiii<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes let-<lb/>
ters expressing all points of view.<lb/>
Mail or drop themby our office in the<lb/>
Publications Building, across from<lb/>
the entrance to joyner library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all<lb/>
letters must include the name, major,<lb/>
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and the signature of the authoris).<lb/>
Letters are limited to 300 words<lb/>
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every two weeks. The deadline for<lb/>
editorial material is 5 p.m. Friday for<lb/>
Tuesday papers and 5 p.m. Tuesday<lb/>
for Thursday editions.<lb/>
Bush campaign 'kinder'<lb/>
By HENDRICK HERTZBERG<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
DETROIT? It's 11:29 p.m. Most members of the<lb/>
bloated, redundant Bush press corps (some 120<lb/>
persons) are in their hotel rooms. At 11:30 eyes shift<lb/>
from windows to TV screens. On comes ABC's<lb/>
"Nightline<lb/>
Ted Koppel asks Michael Dukakis how he feels<lb/>
about the fact that the Bush campaign has been, as<lb/>
Koppel puts it, "kicking you in the groin?"<lb/>
Dukakis' answer banishes hope he might have<lb/>
learned something from the debacle of the second<lb/>
debate. He speaks of "expressing concerns" about<lb/>
issues. He plans to "address the concerns of average<lb/>
Americans He says his campaign "will do every-<lb/>
thing we can to address those concerns<lb/>
To be sure, Dukakis says many sensible things<lb/>
over the next 90 minutes, but he says them in an<lb/>
overpoweringly boring way. The drone is all. The<lb/>
world "concerns" continues to get a heavy work-<lb/>
out.<lb/>
In the morning the Bush campaign assumes the<lb/>
gargantuan proportions of a presidential entourage.<lb/>
Secret Service men are everywhere. A huge motor-<lb/>
cade is forming out front. Everyone is consulting<lb/>
schedules full of numbing detail. There hasn't been<lb/>
a press conference in 10 days. A press aide laughs as<lb/>
my request for an interview. Obviously I'm not<lb/>
going to get within a mile of the guy. It's as if he's<lb/>
already won.<lb/>
At 10:08 a.m trailing Walter Mears of the Asso-<lb/>
ciated Press in an attempt to find the temporary<lb/>
press center, I encounter a group of men is suits plus<lb/>
one in a U.S. Olympic Team warm-up jacket and<lb/>
sweatpants: If s George Bush. He greets Mears with<lb/>
great friendliness.<lb/>
"You missed my big press availability over<lb/>
there he says, gesturing in the direction of the<lb/>
hotel's health spa. "Missed a great opportunity to<lb/>
see me naked Mears smiles. "Guy from Newsday<lb/>
was next to me in the sauna Bush continues.<lb/>
"Newsday guy says, 'I don't want to take advantage,<lb/>
but I have to report to my colleagues. When are you<lb/>
going to have a press conference?' I gave him my<lb/>
207-press-conferences thing. 'We've had 207 press<lb/>
conferences since the campaign began. Once every<lb/>
10 days He said, Tou haven't had one in 10 days<lb/>
I said, Hey, look at those numbers<lb/>
An hour later Bush is dressd and reading a<lb/>
speech to the Economic Club of Detroit. The text<lb/>
contains this classic two-sentence non sequitur, this<lb/>
haiku of self-refutation: "Let's cut through the<lb/>
demagoguery. America is No. 1<lb/>
After the speech Bush takes some questions. His<lb/>
answers contain a few of the syntactical nuggets for<lb/>
which I have grown used to panning the stream of<lb/>
his spontaneous talk like an old-time prospector. On<lb/>
the homeless, he admonishes: "Don't drum the pri-<lb/>
vate sector out of the homeless business On drugs,<lb/>
he observes: "Gov. Dukakis and I both have position<lb/>
papers on this?mine, many pages<lb/>
In the afternoon we fly to South Dakota for a<lb/>
rally at the Sioux Falls stockyards. Three hundred<lb/>
people are standing around in a makeshift corral. A<lb/>
sign says WELCOME TO SIOUX FALLS STOCK-<lb/>
YARDS. The podium is made of hay bales. The site<lb/>
makes for good visuals. Good olfactuals, too. The<lb/>
smell of bull, like the sound, is not wholly unpleas-i<lb/>
ant. Bush gives his stump speech.<lb/>
Then the whole entourage goes to Billings,<lb/>
Mont so that Bush can give essentially the same<lb/>
speech in a college gym. Eleven Sioux chiefs stand<lb/>
behind him in full feathers. The speech yields only a<lb/>
single nugget to the syntax prospector, but it's glit-<lb/>
tering one: on gun control, Bush calls himself "a<lb/>
violent opponent" of it.<lb/>
Early the next morning, in Tacoma, Wash Bush<lb/>
accepts the endorsement of the Marine Engineers<lb/>
Beneficial Association, a pro-Reagan union. The<lb/>
press corps is not in a particularly good mood.<lb/>
Nothing resembling news has come its way on this<lb/>
trip.<lb/>
However, a scuffle breaks out. A respectable-<lb/>
looking young man, his hands cuffed behind him, is<lb/>
being hustled out of the hall by a couple of uni-<lb/>
formed cops and a heavy-set plainclothesman in a<lb/>
mudbrown jacket. The young man is bleeding from<lb/>
the nose.<lb/>
"A Bush supporter assaulted a man, and I com-<lb/>
plained about it and I'm gettin' my head bashed<lb/>
against the floor the young man is veiling. As<lb/>
reporters pepper the young man with questions, he<lb/>
gives his age (21), occupation (college student), and<lb/>
political affiliation (Democrat).<lb/>
"What's this guy under arrest for, officer?" I ask<lb/>
one of the uniformed cops. "I have no idea savs the<lb/>
cop. "What's he under arrest for, officer?" I ask the<lb/>
plainclothesman. He says nothing. 'That man, in the<lb/>
brown sports coat the young man is yelling. "He<lb/>
was bashing my head against the floor, against the<lb/>
cement floor "What's he under arrest for?" I again<lb/>
ask the brown jacket. Brown jacket gives me long<lb/>
look. Finally he says, "Failing to disperse when told<lb/>
to<lb/>
On the plane to San Jose, Calif where Bush will<lb/>
toura Silicon Valley high-tech plant, we are told that<lb/>
the young man was arrested for resisting arrest, a<lb/>
favorite ontological puzzler of local law enforce-<lb/>
ment agencies. A Bush press aide tells us that the<lb/>
young man was a Bush supporter who got his<lb/>
bloody nose from a Dukakis supporter's fist. "It isn' t<lb/>
much of a story, but it'll have to do a reporter<lb/>
remarks to no one in particular. "At least it's better<lb/>
than these speeches<lb/>
The trip ends in Los Angeles, with a party at the<lb/>
home of Bob Hope. At one point Bush turns sincere.<lb/>
"I'm not gonna bore you with all the issues he says.<lb/>
"But Barbara and I do feel good about it We're not<lb/>
going to be talking on the negative side any more.<lb/>
I'm sorry Clint Eastwood isn't here. Remember how<lb/>
he'd say 'Make my day'? Now my opponent say<lb/>
'Have a nice vacation' as the prisoners come out of<lb/>
the jails. But now it's gonna be a kinder and gentler<lb/>
finish to this campaign-1 do feel good about it<lb/>
For eight years we've been watching "Death<lb/>
Valley Days with your host, Ronald Reagan. With<lb/>
George and Barbara heading a kinder, gentler cast,<lb/>
the next four years will be one long episode of "The<lb/>
Love Boat<lb/>
Demo<lb/>
WASHINGTON (<lb/>
Democrats bolstered their<lb/>
ity control of the Senate bj<lb/>
mg three-term GOP mi<lb/>
Lowell Weicker of Conn<lb/>
who refused to concede j<lb/>
and by capturing Repu<lb/>
seats in Virginia Nevada aj<lb/>
bra ska<lb/>
Democrats won fou<lb/>
previously held by Repul<lb/>
and the GOP captured twj<lb/>
held by Democrats rai-<lb/>
Democrats margin of co<lb/>
56-44, a two seat gain it<lb/>
crats hold on to Florida<lb/>
Several races were dec<lb/>
narrow tallies, and the co<lb/>
Florida remained extreme<lb/>
and too close to call "VV<lb/>
have a couple of recount<lb/>
w re done said 'Tom V<lb/>
spokesman tor the Rep<lb/>
Senatorial (ampaigr n<lb/>
The GOPs wins c<lb/>
Montana where torme<lb/>
Managem<lb/>
$92 a shan<lb/>
WINSTOh<lb/>
Forsyth County bv.<lb/>
hoping anv sai'<lb/>
stuff their Christmas<lb/>
with cash<lb/>
A management  <lb/>
RJR Nabisco chairman<lb/>
lohnson has offer<lb/>
to make the ompan I<lb/>
leveraged buyout ?'<lb/>
offer bv the investmen<lb/>
Kohlber Kravis R<lb/>
ild giv e stk kholdeJ<lb/>
share A special con<lb/>
sidering buyout<lb/>
will take sealed bids untili<lb/>
At least one stock hrol<lb/>
urging RJR Nabisco shar<lb/>
to take halt the mon<lb/>
Richard Stockton<lb/>
of Norman Stockton In.<lb/>
timing of the RiR Nab<lb/>
will determine how tree<lb/>
spend their capita! gauv<lb/>
"People feel a lit tic1<lb/>
their profit around Chn<lb/>
Stockton said<lb/>
cashmere sweat i<lb/>
wool .<lb/>
Stockton, like other<lb/>
said he had not seen am<lb/>
ers yet with RIR Nabi-<lb/>
burning holes in their p<lb/>
"I haven't heard<lb/>
they've sold their i<lb/>
Richard Pope, owner cj<lb/>
jewelers. "I think folks<lb/>
on it I don't see them gt t<lb/>
less and spending it.<lb/>
Car dealerships alrej<lb/>
planned for a 12 fx reenj<lb/>
in siles this season acd<lb/>
the Winston Salem<lb/>
chants Association<lb/>
"1 would expect thai<lb/>
that money around st<lb/>
would spend it saidNij<lb/>
the owner of Flo Motd<lb/>
But Flow has not ind<lb/>
inventory in anticipat<lb/>
buying craze. "There s<lb/>
of time tor that he saw<lb/>
Neal Kaplan an ii<lb/>
analyst with Interstate<lb/>
lne, told shareholders!<lb/>
wide telephone conferd<lb/>
day night to sell halt ct<lb/>
Nabisco stock now an<lb/>
other half pending a res<lb/>
Read The<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
Tues. and Tl<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
XI<lb/>
CoMedY 2THE k CoMfd'<lb/>
WED v.) WElJ<lb/>
5th St.Entrance<lb/>
Now Open<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
D&amp;D<lb/>
2v6 Bunk Beds S<lb/>
A Savii<lb/>
Bunkies nj<lb/>
available!<lb/>
Use as<lb/>
Various applial<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0006"/><lb/>
uvr)<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Bg?IB<lb/>
nder'<lb/>
SSTOCK-<lb/>
- ITie site<lb/>
tuals too The<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
unplea<lb/>
s-i<lb/>
I<lb/>
 - to Billings,<lb/>
. i<lb/>
v the same<lb/>
:hiefs tand<lb/>
yields only a<lb/>
r. but it's glit-<lb/>
 calls himself "a<lb/>
ma Wash Bush<lb/>
larine Engineers<lb/>
igan union The<lb/>
icularly good mood<lb/>
its way on thi<lb/>
- respectabie-<lb/>
icuffed K'hind him, is<lb/>
I b a couple of uni-<lb/>
plaindothesman in a<lb/>
man is bleeding from<lb/>
ilted a man and 1 com-<lb/>
tttn my head hashed<lb/>
g man is veiling As<lb/>
lan with questions, he<lb/>
(college student), and<lb/>
xtfoi ? iask<lb/>
o idea savs the<lb/>
fficer?" I ask the<lb/>
ng That man. in the<lb/>
man is veiling. "He<lb/>
t the floor, against the<lb/>
lerarrest for?" I again<lb/>
jaeket gives me long<lb/>
to disperse when told<lb/>
w here Bush will<lb/>
plant we are told that<lb/>
resisting arrest, a<lb/>
cal law enforce-<lb/>
aide tells us that the<lb/>
rtei vho got his<lb/>
upporter shst "ltisn t<lb/>
?e b 1 a reporter<lb/>
At least it's better<lb/>
aha party at the<lb/>
)int Bush turns sincere<lb/>
i all the issues he saj s<lb/>
id about it .We'renot<lb/>
Native side anv more<lb/>
It here Remember how<lb/>
low mv opponent say<lb/>
prisoners come out of<lb/>
a kinder and gentler<lb/>
good about it<lb/>
een watching "Death<lb/>
. Ronald Reagan. With<lb/>
a kinder, gentler cast,<lb/>
le long episode of "The<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
IS<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10,1988 5<lb/>
Democrats gain Senate control<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) broadcaster Conrad Burns edged<lb/>
Democrats bolstered their major- out Democratic Sen. John Mel-<lb/>
ity control of the Senate by oust- cher, who was seeking a third<lb/>
ing three-term GOP maverick term, and in Mississippi, where<lb/>
Lowell Weicker of Connecticut, Rep. Trent Lott. the deputy House<lb/>
who refused to concede defeat, Republican leader defeated Rep.<lb/>
and by capturing Republican<lb/>
seats in Virginia Nevada and Ne-<lb/>
braska.<lb/>
Democrats won four seats<lb/>
previously held by Republicans<lb/>
and the GOP captured two seats<lb/>
held by Democrats, raising the<lb/>
Wayne Dowdy for the seat being<lb/>
vacated by Sen. John Stennis, the<lb/>
Senate's senior Democrat.<lb/>
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas,<lb/>
who went down in defeat with<lb/>
Michael Dukakis as the Demo-<lb/>
cratic vice presidential candidate.<lb/>
Democrats margin of control to did not end Election Day empty-<lb/>
56-44, a two-seat gain if Demo- handed. He won re-election to a<lb/>
crats hold on to Florida. fourth Senate term.<lb/>
Several races were decided by The election decisions give<lb/>
narrow tallies, and the contest in President-elect George Bush the<lb/>
Florida remained extremely tight prosoect of opening his admini-<lb/>
and too close to call. "We might stration with Congress solidly in<lb/>
have a couple of recounts before Democratic hands,<lb/>
we're done said Tom Mason, a "It's going to be tougher<lb/>
spokesman for the Republican said Senate Minority leader Bob<lb/>
Senatorial Campaign Committee. Dole of Kansas, conceding that<lb/>
The GOP's wins came in the GOP's numbers in the Senate<lb/>
Montana where former farm would be shaved in the 101st<lb/>
Management group offers<lb/>
$92 a share in buyout plan<lb/>
W1NSTON-SALEM (AP) - the company's purchase. The<lb/>
Forsyth County businesses arc highest offer so far is $92 a share,<lb/>
hoping any sales of RjR stock will "We see nor nal reason for<lb/>
stuff their Christmas stockings a higher offer Captan said in a<lb/>
with cash. conference linking 33 brokerage<lb/>
A management group led by offices in North Carolina and 13 in<lb/>
RJR Nabisco chairman F. Ross South Carolina.<lb/>
Congress. "We're going to have<lb/>
fewer than we had last year<lb/>
But Sen. Edward M. Ken-<lb/>
nedy, D-Mass said he believes<lb/>
that Bush will find a cooperative<lb/>
spirit on Capitol Hill because "the<lb/>
problems are too important for<lb/>
Congress not to work with the<lb/>
president<lb/>
Connecticut Attorney Gen-<lb/>
eral Joseph Lieberman edged<lb/>
Weicker by a paper-thin margin<lb/>
after a hard-fought campaign in<lb/>
which he accused the senator of<lb/>
pursuing his own brand of liberal<lb/>
politics while ignoring home state<lb/>
concerns.<lb/>
Weicker, who first gained<lb/>
national attention as a gruff, out-<lb/>
spoken member of the Senate<lb/>
Watergate Committee and who<lb/>
became one of the Senate's most<lb/>
liberal and independent mem-<lb/>
bers, refused to concede.<lb/>
"I wish 1 were here to declare<lb/>
a victory or defeat Weicker told<lb/>
supporters. "Unfortunately, I'm<lb/>
not in a position to do either right<lb/>
now<lb/>
But he added: "No matter<lb/>
how all this turnsout. I don't have<lb/>
one single gripe<lb/>
The Senate race in Florida<lb/>
remained too close to call.<lb/>
Republicans had high hopes<lb/>
of picking up the seat of retiring<lb/>
Democrat La wton Chiles in Flor-<lb/>
ida. But Democratic Rep. Buddy<lb/>
MacKay held a narrow lead over<lb/>
conservative Republican Rep.<lb/>
Connie Mack.<lb/>
The race was so tight that a<lb/>
decision might rest in the count-<lb/>
ing of an estimated 100,000<lb/>
absentee ballots. The Mack cam-<lb/>
paign said they expected to do<lb/>
better than MacKay since tradi-<lb/>
tionally a large number of such<lb/>
ballots are cast by military per-<lb/>
sonnel, a group that Mack consid-<lb/>
ers among his constituency.<lb/>
LATE NIGHT<lb/>
THE PLACE TO BE<lb/>
SEVEN NIGHTS A WEEK!<lb/>
7th Anniversary<lb/>
Party<lb/>
Thursday - November 10th<lb/>
Super Anniversary Specials:<lb/>
$1.25 $3.00<lb/>
High balls Champagne<lb/>
$1.00 75$<lb/>
Membership Beer<lb/>
119 East 5th Street<lb/>
(919) 752-8711<lb/>
Private Club<lb/>
For Members &amp; Guests<lb/>
Johnson has offered $92 a share to<lb/>
to make the company private in a<lb/>
leveraged buyout. A competing<lb/>
offer bv the investment firm oi<lb/>
Kohlber Kravis Roberts &amp; Co.<lb/>
would give stockholders $90 a<lb/>
share. A special committee con-<lb/>
sidering buyout propsals says it<lb/>
will take sealed bids until Nov. 18.<lb/>
'That's what most people<lb/>
seem to be doing said William C.<lb/>
McGee Jr a vice president of In-<lb/>
terstate-Johnson Lane. "They're<lb/>
selling a portion and holding the<lb/>
rest<lb/>
Only two local investors at-<lb/>
tended the teleconference at the<lb/>
Winston-Salem office of Inter-<lb/>
s??i<lb/>
comes.<lb/>
At least one stock brokerage is state-Johnson Lane. Local share-<lb/>
urging RJR Nabisco shareholders holders are estimated to own<lb/>
to take half the money and run. more than $2 billion of RJR stock.<lb/>
Richard Stockton, president Brokers have suggested that<lb/>
of Norman Stockton Inc said the shareholders worried about shel-<lb/>
fiming of the RJR Nabisco deal tering their profits from capital-<lb/>
will determine how freely people gains taxes consider making gifts<lb/>
spend their capital gains. of their shares to children or other<lb/>
"People feel a little looser with family members with low in-<lb/>
their profit around Christmas<lb/>
Stockton said, "Maybe buy a<lb/>
cashmere sweater instead of<lb/>
wool<lb/>
r.  r ? , . - 11 ill ?x ii ? ij<lb/>
Stockton, like other retailers,<lb/>
said he had not seen any custom-<lb/>
ers yet with RJR Nabisco profits<lb/>
burning holes in their pockets.<lb/>
"1 haven't heard a soul say<lb/>
they've sold their stock said<lb/>
Richard Pope, owner of Towne<lb/>
jewelers. "1 think folks are sitting<lb/>
on it I don't see them getting care-<lb/>
less and spending it<lb/>
Car dealerships already have<lb/>
planned for a 12 percent increase<lb/>
in sales this season, according to<lb/>
the Winston-Salem Retail Mer-<lb/>
chants Association.<lb/>
"1 would expect that, with all<lb/>
that money around, some people<lb/>
would spend it said Victor Flow,<lb/>
the owner of Flow Motors.<lb/>
But Row has not increased his<lb/>
inventory in anticipation of a<lb/>
buying craze. 'There's still plenty<lb/>
of time for that he said.<lb/>
Neal Kaplan, an investment<lb/>
analyst with Interstate-Johnson<lb/>
Lane, told shareholders in a state-<lb/>
wide telephone conference Mon-<lb/>
day night to sell half of their RJR<lb/>
Nabisco stock now and keep the<lb/>
other half pending a resolution of<lb/>
Read The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Every<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
Pantana Bobs<lb/>
reminds everyone to come party<lb/>
early now that we close<lb/>
at 1:00 a.m.<lb/>
Do Not Run Out of<lb/>
PARTY TIME<lb/>
Attention Fraternities &amp;Sororities: Openings are still<lb/>
available for Fall Semester Fund Raisers.<lb/>
Contact Bob!<lb/>
Pantana's is a private club for members and invited guests only.<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA PI<lb/>
INVITES YOU TO<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR AT FIZZ!<lb/>
Thursday,<lb/>
November 10th<lb/>
Free Nachos<lb/>
and<lb/>
Drink Specials<lb/>
9:00 -1:00 p.m.<lb/>
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SATURDAY<lb/>
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Store Hours: M,T,Th,F 10-6p.m.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058108_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10, 1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FOR RENT: Only two blocks from Joyner<lb/>
I ibrary ? one room of a two bedroom<lb/>
ap.irtment for sublease after December<lb/>
1 lard wood floor, cable TV, fully fur-<lb/>
nished, etc. $150month plus utilities.<lb/>
757 0412.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Female, non<lb/>
smoker. Own room, 1 3 rent, 1 3 utilities.<lb/>
Cai 752-500. Keep trying<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: For<lb/>
Spring Semester SS). King's Row Apts. - 2<lb/>
bedrooms. Contact Kris 830268<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT: 2 bedroom at<lb/>
Tar River Includes wd hookup, cable<lb/>
and water. $380.00a monthutilities. Call<lb/>
758 9589 and ask for Folden.<lb/>
WANTED: Male roommate. 500-H<lb/>
1 astbrook Apts. $125 13 utilities. 758-<lb/>
751 Call anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
lOWNHOUSE FOR SALE: Lexington<lb/>
l (adj Athletic Club)-$42,500?2-bdrms,<lb/>
I 1 2 bths, Indry hkup, hv rm wbay win,<lb/>
kit 'dm area wbar, refrig, stove,<lb/>
dshwshr, Frnch drs open to priv patio w<lb/>
stor rm, adj to prkng lot for easy access, ac-<lb/>
tive hmownrs' assn. 355-6974 after 5.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Can vou buv Jeeps, Cars, 4 X<lb/>
4 s seized in drug raids for under $100.00?<lb/>
Call for facts today 602-837-3401. Ext.<lb/>
711<lb/>
I BSON COMPUTER: IBM Compatable<lb/>
2(. k RAM, 2 floppy drives, monitor,<lb/>
nanuals and software $500. 524-3370,<lb/>
iftei 4 ask for Donna.<lb/>
1983 HONDA 750 SHADOW: 15,000<lb/>
miles, perfect condition, $1200. 524-3370<lb/>
after 4, ask for Donna.<lb/>
MONTE CARLO SS: Metallic blue<lb/>
U ? 0, call 7rv-874r<lb/>
FOR SALE: 14 month membership to the<lb/>
 $150.00, must sell Call 830-6748.<lb/>
1 OR SALE: Can vou buv Jeeps, Cars, 4 X<lb/>
4 s seized in drug raids for under S100.007<lb/>
for tarts today 602-837-3401. Ext.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
STUDENT TYPING SERVICES: Pro-<lb/>
gressive Solutions, Inc offers high-qual-<lb/>
incxpensive 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/>
ngtfa of time. Rates start at $2.00 per<lb/>
. v and-m hide paper and computer-<lb/>
rod spelling check We also offer re'sume'<lb/>
production, and other business and pro-<lb/>
fessional services. Call 757-3111 M-F for<lb/>
more details!<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPY1NG 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/>
I'r ifessional Computer Services, 106 East<lb/>
ti Street (beside Cubbies) Greenville,<lb/>
frl : 752-369.<lb/>
PA RTY 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/>
HELP WANTED<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/>
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/>
ATTENTION ECU FACULTY AND<lb/>
STAFF: Brody's has part-time positions<lb/>
for individuals interested in a flexible<lb/>
work schedule to help stuff that special<lb/>
Christmas stocking Call today for an<lb/>
interview appointment or applv in per-<lb/>
son, Brodv's, Carolina East Mall, M-VV, 2-<lb/>
4 p.m.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Part time Counter Girl<lb/>
wanted at Video-To-Go located onN.C 11<lb/>
beside Fast Fare (Bethel Highway) Apply<lb/>
in person Sunday between 6 p.m. and 8<lb/>
a.m. Hours Flexible<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS: Also cruiseships.<lb/>
$10,000-$lO5,000yr Now Hiring! 320<lb/>
Listings! (1) 805-687-6000 Ext OJ-1166.<lb/>
RESORT HOTELS: Cruiselines, Airlines<lb/>
&amp; Amusement Parks, NOW accepting ap-<lb/>
plications for summer jobs, internships<lb/>
and career positions For more informa<lb/>
tion and an application, write National<lb/>
Collegiate Recreation Service, PO Box<lb/>
8074; Hilton Head. S.C 29998.<lb/>
CHILD CARENANNIES NEEDED:<lb/>
Join our (Nannv Network) of over 800<lb/>
placed bv us in the Northeast (Vie year<lb/>
working with kids in exchange for salaries<lb/>
up to $300.00 per week. Room and board,<lb/>
airfare and benefits We offer TI IE BEST<lb/>
CHOICES in families and locations. Con<lb/>
tact Maureen Carol, A11ELPING 11ANDS<lb/>
INC. Recruitment Councelor, 919-577-<lb/>
5154 (evenings) for brochure and applica<lb/>
tion Featured on NBC's Today Show and<lb/>
October, 1987Working Mother magazine<lb/>
as nationally recognized leader in Nannv<lb/>
placement. Est 1984.<lb/>
PART-TIME COLLEGE MAN: Delivery,<lb/>
warehouse and clean up Larry's Carpet<lb/>
land. 3010 East 10th Street<lb/>
TRAVEL FREE SPRING BREAK! FRA-<lb/>
TERNITIES &amp; SORORITIES INVITED:<lb/>
For information about being a Campus<lb/>
Travel Rep call 800-826-9100 Ask for<lb/>
Steve or Janet.<lb/>
OPPORTUNITY IN THE TRAVEL IN-<lb/>
DUSTRY: The 1 college tour operator is<lb/>
looking for an efficient, responsible, and<lb/>
organized campus representative to mar-<lb/>
ket a Spring Break trip on campus Earn<lb/>
free trips, and good commissions while<lb/>
gaining great business experience For<lb/>
more information call 1-800-999-4300.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
JEFF PRYS: I know it seems like you are<lb/>
far away but our time will come. Love,<lb/>
Rhonda.<lb/>
THE PIKES ARE GOING ON THE<lb/>
ROAD AGAIN: Duke's the word Stay-<lb/>
tuned for more info Dribble, dribble.<lb/>
WOULD YOU LIKE $100?: Then find a<lb/>
Pike and buy a raffle ticket<lb/>
TIM GOMEZ: The Phantom Awaits.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
J.P. CHILDS: CHICK'S. DIG HIM<lb/>
SIG EPS: Celebrate your Fraternal<lb/>
Founders on Nov. 12 at Founder's Day<lb/>
Formal. Blow it all out, you deserve it. -<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon Nov. 1, 1901 - Nov. 1,<lb/>
1988, a continuous Tradition of Excel-<lb/>
lence. ?Mr. William La.ell Phillips.<lb/>
BASKETBALL OFFICIALS MEETING:<lb/>
The Greenville Recreation and Parks<lb/>
Department will be having the first organ-<lb/>
izational meeting for anyone interested in<lb/>
officiating for the men's winter basketball<lb/>
league All interested officials should call<lb/>
830-4543 or 830-4550 for the day and time.<lb/>
SPEECH STUDENTS: Use what you've<lb/>
learned in class by debating issues which<lb/>
are important to you. For more informa-<lb/>
tion call 355-3152 or come by 212 Menden-<lb/>
hall, Monday at 7:00.<lb/>
LISTEN UP EVERYBODY It's that time<lb/>
of year to send your friends messages.<lb/>
Watch out for the Kappa Alpha Lil Sister<lb/>
Turkey Grams in the next week! Get psy-<lb/>
ched to tell a friend hi in a special way.<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI'S: I lad a great time at the<lb/>
Elbo even though we were the only ones<lb/>
there. How about that $50? Let's do it<lb/>
again soon! ?Love, the AZD's.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI LITTLE SISTER<lb/>
PLEDGES: 1 lope Sunday night was more<lb/>
fun than shock The "R word Evans St.<lb/>
and Pepe just to name a few, really helped<lb/>
bring out the true you! ?Love, Your Big<lb/>
Sisters.<lb/>
I STILL LOVE YOU: Just slightly,<lb/>
slightly, more than 1 used too. 1 lappy An-<lb/>
niversary. ?Love, Mookie.<lb/>
J.T Thanks for cheering me up Saturday<lb/>
night. 1 had a great time, hope you did too.<lb/>
I'll even forgive you for not finding me<lb/>
when you should have - you know what I<lb/>
mean. Let's do it again soon. ?Melinda.<lb/>
JIM: Thanks for the talk. ?Renee.<lb/>
J.P 1 love vou - you fool. ?Renee.<lb/>
MIL: Thanks date, it was great. I'm glad<lb/>
we got things straight. Give me a call be-<lb/>
fore next fall and we can relate. ?V.H.<lb/>
DONNIE W What a time we had Sat.<lb/>
night Started with tea ended with<lb/>
Seagrams We had our fill, thanks a mil. I<lb/>
had a blast, we'll do it again. ?Kelly.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: As expected, the formal<lb/>
was a blast - too bad the night flew by so<lb/>
fast! Partying in the rooms seemed the<lb/>
thing to do, hanging out on the jungle gym<lb/>
was pretty fun too. In a circle we all did<lb/>
sing to find that Mandy had gotten an<lb/>
engagement ring. To honor our Pledges,<lb/>
we all did unite to make Rose formal a<lb/>
very special night.<lb/>
CHI-O: For all of us that went $p. your,<lb/>
stranger We had a great time. ?The<lb/>
Pikes<lb/>
THETA CHI: Congrats to Buddy "Mud-<lb/>
I lound" sargent on his wrestling victory<lb/>
at the Greek Olympics! Also to Gary M.<lb/>
and Jere C. on their egg handling abilitiy.<lb/>
Makes you wonder doesn't it.<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA PLEDGES: We hope<lb/>
you had a great time this weekend. We<lb/>
sure did. We love you! ?The Sisters.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI: Looking forward to the luau<lb/>
tonite. Cold liquid flowing will keep ev-<lb/>
eryone knowing that Alpha Phi and Theta<lb/>
Chi are outta sight Come dressed Hawai<lb/>
lan style ready to party for a long, lonp<lb/>
while!<lb/>
ATTENTION GREEKS: Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
Greek God is coming Tuesday, November<lb/>
15 at the Attic at 9:00. Please come help us<lb/>
support the American Lung Association.<lb/>
SAE'S: Thanks for a great time last Thurs.<lb/>
at PJ-PJ! We had a blast. Let's do it again<lb/>
soon! ?Love the Alpha Xi Delta's.<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI: We are all getting psy-<lb/>
ched for tonite. Can't wait to party with<lb/>
you guys. ?Love the Sigmas.<lb/>
TA E A BREATHER: . . Thursday,<lb/>
November 17. Did you know lung cancer<lb/>
is the number one cause of cancer death<lb/>
among men and women. An estimated<lb/>
93.000 men and 46,000 women will die of<lb/>
lung cancer this year. Join Tri Sigma and<lb/>
the American Cancer Society for the Great<lb/>
American Smokeout. Start a new habit<lb/>
you can live with.<lb/>
TO ALL CHI-O BLIND DATES: What a<lb/>
blast and no need to say any more. ?Love,<lb/>
the Chi Omega's.<lb/>
CHI OMEGA PLEDGES: Keep up the<lb/>
good work! You've made us proud! ?<lb/>
Love the sisters of Chi Omega.<lb/>
BARB FROIO, CAROLINE AND<lb/>
ELENA: You sent us on a hunt 1 lalloween<lb/>
Night, With blindfolds and masks, we<lb/>
were a sight! Trick or treating at the Plaza<lb/>
and Theta Chi, We couldn't see a thing but<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
we got by with the help of clues and our<lb/>
Zeta Big Sis that we found in the cemetary<lb/>
in the night mist. Though we were scared<lb/>
in the graveyard and we all threw a fit, We<lb/>
still love you: The Cookie-Monster, Bozo<lb/>
and Gumby-Dammit! ?Love, you little<lb/>
sister's Elizabeth B, April and Shannon<lb/>
ATTENTION CREEK MALES: If you've<lb/>
got the looks and you've got the bod,<lb/>
you've got the chance to be Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
Greek God.<lb/>
THETA CHI: The Zeta's would like to<lb/>
thank you for our "ZTA" pumpkin.<lb/>
Thank you<lb/>
CHRISTA?CONGRATULATIONS<lb/>
Brandon is very lucky to be blessed with<lb/>
you as his mother and to come into a<lb/>
wonderful family like yours. 1 can't wait<lb/>
to see him. ?Love, Susan<lb/>
LISA ADCOCK: The Best Big Sister, get<lb/>
ready for Friday night ?Love your lil<lb/>
sister - Rhonda.<lb/>
ALL GROUPS INTERESTED IN<lb/>
PAINTING THEIR LOGO ON THE<lb/>
STREET IN FRONT OF THE STUDENT<lb/>
STORE: Should attend an organizational<lb/>
meeting Monday, Nov. 14 at 400 in New<lb/>
Classroom Building 1028. Contact Tnpp<lb/>
Roakes if you need more info 757 6611<lb/>
LEM, HAPPY 21ST Let's get ready to gig<lb/>
tonight. 6 kegs of beer for all the ere w - The<lb/>
founding fathers of the 5th Quarter.<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA PHI: What a nuclear<lb/>
wasted time! Thanxs for inviting us over<lb/>
for the festivities. ?Love the AOPi's.<lb/>
BETA LAMBDAS: You girls are the best.<lb/>
What a lucky sorority we are to have you<lb/>
all! Keep up the great work ?Love, The<lb/>
sisters of AOPi<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI: We met you guys<lb/>
with PJ'son. We weren't tired, no signs of<lb/>
a yawn. We played pin the patch on the<lb/>
pirate and twister. What a blast we had<lb/>
with your brothers and our sisters<lb/>
Thanxs to Gary's "Get Hugged Get<lb/>
Kissed this is one social we're glad we<lb/>
didn't miss ?Love the AOPi's.<lb/>
I HAVE A ROOMMATE: Jemma Holey<lb/>
is her name. She plays sports, volleyball's<lb/>
her game Today is her birthday, 1 wanted<lb/>
to say, but she has an away game she has<lb/>
to play Good luck at the game, I know<lb/>
you'll do well. Just go out there and kick<lb/>
some tail My roommate Jemma is such a<lb/>
dear, and to top it off, she now can buy<lb/>
beer! So when you get back we'll have<lb/>
some fun, it's about damn time you're 21'<lb/>
?HAPPY BIRTHDAY, LOVE YOUR<lb/>
ROOMIE'<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR: Tonight instead of<lb/>
Thursday night at Fizz Sponsored by<lb/>
Alpha Nu Pledge Class of Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
9:00 p.m. -1:00 am Great fun, great music<lb/>
and great drinks. Come out and have a<lb/>
blast!<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES:<lb/>
Please call the Alpha Xi Delta house and<lb/>
let us know who your representatives are<lb/>
for Alpha Xi Delta Greek God Contest!<lb/>
758-5677.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal and Confidential Care"<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call for appointment Mon. thni Sat Low<lb/>
Co:t Termination to'2i7 wfcVh Ar pregnancy<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/>
?4<lb/>
LOOKING FOR A DYNAMIC CAREER???<lb/>
Your Best Look<lb/>
Wanted Spring Break<lb/>
Representlve for<lb/>
Natl. Tour Company<lb/>
Great Benefits<lb/>
Call Today<lb/>
SI<lb/>
L<lb/>
TQi.OOO"?<lb/>
r<lb/>
 Specializing In: MANICURES:<lb/>
t French Manicures ? Nail Tips ?<lb/>
rverlays ? Wrapping ? Acrylics ?<lb/>
i EDICURES ? 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 F or<lb/>
M n &amp; Women<lb/>
355-2969 - For Appointment<lb/>
314 Plaa Dr. Greenville<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
? All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
? And Ready To Rent ?<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899  5h Street<lb/>
? Located Near FCU<lb/>
? Across From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
Limited offer-$275 a month<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williama<lb/>
7J6-7815 or 830-1937<lb/>
Office open-Apt. 8,12-530 p.m<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS-<lb/>
Clean and quiet one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, energy efficier.t, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. $205 a month, 6 month<lb/>
lease. MOBILE HOMF. RENTALS - couples or<lb/>
singles. Apartment and mobile homes in Azalea<lb/>
Gardens near I'rook Valley Country Club<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 <lb/>
IfT<lb/>
? -iiod !<lb/>
If so, come and obtain more information on one of<lb/>
the top 10 career professions in health car e today.<lb/>
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY<lb/>
Join Staff and students at the Occupational Therapy<lb/>
Mixer to be held at Mendenhall in Room 244.<lb/>
November 14,1988<lb/>
7:00-9:00 p.m.<lb/>
For more information, call 757-6961.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ALPHA PHI SIGMA<lb/>
All members and potential members are<lb/>
in' it vl to attend a dinner mtg. on Nov. 14<lb/>
at 5 00 at the Western Sizzlin on 10th St.<lb/>
SjGA<lb/>
All groups interested in painting their<lb/>
loo in front of the Student Store should<lb/>
come to 1028 CCB Nov. 14th at 4:00. One<lb/>
representative per group please.<lb/>
PRODUCTIONS COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student Union Productions Commit-<lb/>
tee is having a meeting Nov 14th at 5:30<lb/>
P m in Mendenhall. Please plan to attend.<lb/>
We will be discussing the Tree Trimming<lb/>
I'artv Thanks.<lb/>
MASSAGE-CLINIC<lb/>
P.T. Club is having a massage clinic on<lb/>
Nov 10, 5:30-930 p.m. Buy rickets in<lb/>
advance for $1 lOmin. or at the door for<lb/>
$1.2510 mtn First floor Allied Health<lb/>
Bldg<lb/>
FC COMPUTER CLUB<lb/>
The East Carolina Computer Club will<lb/>
meet in Austin 305 on Nov. 10 at 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
Mrs Margaret Wirth will present info, on<lb/>
the Co-operative Ed. program at ECU. Re-<lb/>
freshments will be served.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
<lb/>
If vou are considering a career in gov 't or<lb/>
a pubbc service area and are currently a<lb/>
freshman or sophomore with at least a B<lb/>
average, you may be interested in the<lb/>
Harry S. Truman Scholarship program<lb/>
which provides up to $7000 annually.<lb/>
Stop by the Office of International Studies,<lb/>
1002 GCB for more info.<lb/>
HONORS CLASSES<lb/>
OFFERED<lb/>
Tired cf falling asleep in crowded audito-<lb/>
riumsQuringdull lectures? Don't despair!<lb/>
If you have a 3 4 GPA, stimulating teach-<lb/>
ers will challenge you in I lonors courses<lb/>
this Spring. See the display ad in this issue<lb/>
for more details, or call Dr. David Sanders<lb/>
at 757-6373 in the 1 lonors Program Office<lb/>
(CCB 1002)<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
:NT<lb/>
You can take part in an active model of the<lb/>
U.S. government. Come and learn how<lb/>
democracy works Please call 355 3152 or<lb/>
come by 212 Mendenhall every Mon. at<lb/>
7:00 to find out more about the NC. Stu-<lb/>
dent Legislature. Everyone is welcome.<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR EC.<lb/>
DEMOCRACY<lb/>
S.E.D will be meeting this Sun. evening at<lb/>
7:00 p.m in Mendenhall room 248. Atten-<lb/>
dance required.<lb/>
CHORALE CONCERT<lb/>
The ECU Chorale, directed by Rhonda<lb/>
Fleming, will perform its annual fall con-<lb/>
cert Fit at 8:15 p.m. in Wright Audito-<lb/>
rium. The concert is free and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS<lb/>
"Expressions" would like to thank every-<lb/>
one that submitted poetry or short stories<lb/>
for the Dec. issue. Since production week<lb/>
begins on Fri we are no longer accepting<lb/>
entries The Dec. issue will feature three<lb/>
sections entitled "Voices "On Campus"<lb/>
and The Arts" so look for it soon.<lb/>
ATTENTION FRESHMEN<lb/>
This spring develop important financial<lb/>
aid and career opportunities by taking<lb/>
MLSC 1001 (Intro, to ROTC and the<lb/>
Army). It's a one hour elective with no<lb/>
uniform or haircut requirements and en-<lb/>
tails no further obligation. Books are pro-<lb/>
vided. For more info call 2 Lt. Kevin<lb/>
Dunlevy at 757-69716974 or stop by<lb/>
room 343 Rawl.<lb/>
The American Marketing Assoc. will be<lb/>
holding its next meeting this Thurs. at<lb/>
3:30. The meeting will be in room 1032<lb/>
GCB. Our guest speaker will be Don Pack<lb/>
who is the mktg. director for the Empire<lb/>
Brush Co. AH interested are welcome and<lb/>
members are encouraged to attend.<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
Pre Professional Health Alliance invites<lb/>
all health related majors to attend our<lb/>
membership drive meeting on Thurs. at<lb/>
5:30 p.m. in MSC rm. 221. All interested<lb/>
students are encouraged to attend. Your<lb/>
presence will be welcomed!<lb/>
The yearbook staff would like to say<lb/>
"Thank You" to everyone who came out<lb/>
and had their class picture made. Having<lb/>
611 students show their caring about the<lb/>
yearbook has given the Buccaneer staff a<lb/>
new reason to fight to keep this book alive.<lb/>
You have shown all the people who tried<lb/>
to say the yearbook was not worth it, that<lb/>
it really is worth giving a few minutes of<lb/>
your time to say "1 ley, this is my yearbook<lb/>
because I'm in it<lb/>
"CAMPUS SERVICE"<lb/>
Campus Service will be held in Jenkins<lb/>
Aud. Nov. 13 at 10:30 devotion, 11:00<lb/>
worship service. Rev. Rosemarie ONeal<lb/>
will deliver the word of Cod.<lb/>
"JOY NIGHT SERVICE"<lb/>
There will be a "Joy Night Service" on<lb/>
campus, Sat. 12 at 7:30 in Jenkins Aud.<lb/>
(Art Bldg). Sponsored by ECU Christian<lb/>
Fellowship. Minister Steven Pierce deliv-<lb/>
ering the message.<lb/>
FCU COSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
The ECU Gospel Choir is pleased to an-<lb/>
nounce its Fall Concert on Nov. 13 at 3:30<lb/>
p.m. in Hendrix Theatre. Admission is<lb/>
free and everyone is welcome.<lb/>
COSTA-RICA PROGRAM<lb/>
There will be a mandatory meeting for all<lb/>
Biology Club members on Nov. 14th at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. in BIOL-109. Dr. Bellis will be<lb/>
discussing the Costa-Rica program this<lb/>
summer. All others interested are invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
WATER SKI CLUB<lb/>
The East Carolina Water Ski Club will<lb/>
have its first organizational meeting Nov.<lb/>
10 in room 105 Memorial Gym. The meet-<lb/>
ing will be at 5:00. The purpose of the club<lb/>
will be discussed and a short meeting will<lb/>
be held. Anyone interested in Collegiate<lb/>
Competition SkiingRecreational Skiing<lb/>
is welcome. For more info contact<lb/>
Tommy Lewis at 830-0137.<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/>
PITT COUNTY ACLD<lb/>
The next meeting of the Pitt County ACLD<lb/>
will be Nov. 15 at St. James United Meth-<lb/>
odist Church, 730 p.m. If you are inter-<lb/>
ested in becoming a member of the Pitt<lb/>
County ACLD, would like more info or<lb/>
would like to be on our mailing list, please<lb/>
send your address to: Pitt County ACLD,<lb/>
1 Dogwood Court, Greenville, NC.<lb/>
TURKEY TROT<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Turkey<lb/>
Trot registration meeting held Nov. 15 at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. in BIO 103. Make sure you regis-<lb/>
ter and learn what the Turkey Trot is all<lb/>
about!<lb/>
CHALLENGE WEEK<lb/>
Be sure to attend the Intramural Chal-<lb/>
lenge Week registration meeting held<lb/>
Nov. 14 from 11:00 a.m6:00 p.m. in MG<lb/>
104. Challenge Week will be a challenge to<lb/>
see who is the best among all of the chal-<lb/>
lengers.<lb/>
CLC TRANSIT<lb/>
Are you a Pitt County resident, 60 years<lb/>
old or older and need a ride to your medi-<lb/>
cal appointment? The Creative Living<lb/>
Center is offering transportation service<lb/>
to the elderly for medical appointments<lb/>
within Pitt County such as doctors, den-<lb/>
tists, dinics, therapies and the Health<lb/>
Dept. Arrangements for the service must<lb/>
be made at least 24 hours before the sched-<lb/>
uled appointment. Call the Creative Liv-<lb/>
ing Center, 757-0303, to find out the day(s)<lb/>
service is scheduled for your area, then<lb/>
make your medical appointment and res-<lb/>
ervation for transportation.<lb/>
ATTENTIONS GRADUATE<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Academic Computing is in need of<lb/>
Graduate Student Assistants to staff the<lb/>
academic computing labs on campus.<lb/>
These lab assistant positions will be avail-<lb/>
able starting this spring semester and will<lb/>
involve working 10-15 hours a week.<lb/>
Duties will involve providing assistance<lb/>
with users on various computer systems<lb/>
and maintaining computing lab<lb/>
operations. Experience with IBM PC's,<lb/>
Apple Macintosh, or the IBM 4381 Aca-<lb/>
demic Mainframe is preferred but not<lb/>
essential To apply, send your resume or a<lb/>
letter detailing your computer skills to<lb/>
Terry Harrision (Austin 216) or call 757-<lb/>
6401<lb/>
WHATS YQUR OPINION<lb/>
OF THE TEACHER?<lb/>
Duringthe week of Nov. 14-18, a survey of<lb/>
student opinion of instruction will be<lb/>
conducted at ECU. Questionnaires will be<lb/>
distributed in every class with enrollment<lb/>
greater than five. All students will have<lb/>
the opportunity to express opinions on<lb/>
the teaching effectiveness of their instruc-<lb/>
tors in those classes. The survey will be<lb/>
conducted during class time and will take<lb/>
approximately 15 minutes to complete<lb/>
Student par ha pa tion is voluntary and no<lb/>
identities are requested. Instructors have<lb/>
been requested to leave the classroom<lb/>
while the questionnaires are being com-<lb/>
pleted. The teaching effectiveness ques-<lb/>
tionnaire was created by the Faculty Sen-<lb/>
ate Committee for Teaching Effectiveness<lb/>
and the Office of Planning and Institu-<lb/>
tional Research. The results of the survey,<lb/>
along with other information and factors,<lb/>
are used for administrative evaluation of<lb/>
the instructor by the supervising adminis-<lb/>
trator within the department or division.<lb/>
wl<lb/>
Fr<lb/>
en<lb/>
Ix.<lb/>
J<lb/>
n?<lb/>
th<lb/>
s<lb/>
ex<lb/>
ex<lb/>
ex<lb/>
fo<lb/>
I<lb/>
"rv<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
fill<lb/>
he<lb/>
<lb/>
Vi<lb/>
sc<lb/>
?<lb/>
C<lb/>
rr<lb/>
te'<lb/>
if<lb/>
W<lb/>
E<lb/>
at<lb/>
d<lb/>
w<lb/>
ar<lb/>
th<lb/>
si<lb/>
ci<lb/>
o<lb/>
n<lb/>
n<lb/>
3?<lb/>
b<lb/>
n<lb/>
Preside<lb/>
for loss<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP)-Norl<lb/>
lina Democrats resurrect<lb/>
complain! of four years<lb/>
blamed the presidential<lb/>
date for the outcome of sj<lb/>
tests at the top of the ticl<lb/>
"We need to go bad<lb/>
drawing board to presenj<lb/>
form to the voters that's!<lb/>
ling said John Crumi<lb/>
Gov. Bob Jordan's ca<lb/>
manager.<lb/>
A popular Repubn<lb/>
cumbent governor, jim<lb/>
combined with the we.<lb/>
dential ticket of Michai I<lb/>
and Lloyd Bentsen If<lb/>
crats running for statewij<lb/>
partv officials said<lb/>
Martin defeated j<lb/>
Democra ti c nomine<lb/>
of 56 percent to 44 percenl<lb/>
percent of the precin I<lb/>
in an unofficial tallv<lb/>
Rand, D-Cumbcrland, at<lb/>
Mount businessman jim<lb/>
were locked in a c<lb/>
lieutenant governor wij<lb/>
ner leading, 51 percent<lb/>
cent, with 98 percei I<lb/>
counted.<lb/>
Democratic pre;<lb/>
nominee Michael Di ? ?<lb/>
too long to respond<lb/>
from George Bush on gul<lb/>
and furloughs for prison<lb/>
Ken Eudv, Democrat<lb/>
spokesman<lb/>
"We in the South le<lb/>
hard way from fesse H<lb/>
the Congressional C <lb/>
have to respond to th:<lb/>
and pick it up and throwj<lb/>
them Eudv said Tuevi<lb/>
Crumplcr said the<lb/>
Democratic ticket did n<lb/>
state offices in 1984 whi<lb/>
Mondale lost to Roi<lb/>
or 1988<lb/>
But some of the D<lb/>
Partv faithful said tl<lb/>
Democrats because I<lb/>
platform.<lb/>
Jacqueline Brown<lb/>
Forest, a Dukakis volui<lb/>
she was a Democrat be<lb/>
believed the partv was<lb/>
"in the individual, th<lb/>
class common people<lb/>
needs "<lb/>
There s sometfc n<lb/>
ervone in the Democra<lb/>
said Mrs Brown a<lb/>
teacher<lb/>
Even with Dukaki?<lb/>
said, "1 feel I am still on I<lb/>
a winner. I can be proul<lb/>
Sara Stohler of Raj<lb/>
she had been a Dome<lb/>
life because she belie<lb/>
partv concerned aboi<lb/>
rane,e of issues Repu<lb/>
UNC activi:<lb/>
receiving thi<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL (Al<lb/>
University of North Cai<lb/>
dent activists say tN<lb/>
ments have been an<lb/>
what apparently were a<lb/>
stop them from prot<lb/>
police say Ihey arc<lb/>
threats senoush<lb/>
Anne S. Duehnnj<lb/>
from Greensboro, sau<lb/>
returned to her apart!<lb/>
the street from the UTl<lb/>
Hill campus Thursdav<lb/>
telephone cord nppeo;<lb/>
butcher knife ripped<lb/>
mattress with a night d<lb/>
of it.<lb/>
Ms. Duehnng, w<lb/>
has participated in a<lb/>
tests against universil<lb/>
said she later found a<lb/>
freezer that said "Thi<lb/>
bed. Next time youi<lb/>
mouth<lb/>
Joel R Segal a U<lb/>
who organized protesj<lb/>
of Indian activist Edc<lb/>
during his trial tor<lb/>
infc reported to policcj<lb/>
that a threatening phc<lb/>
followed bv a break-ij<lb/>
his Chapel Hill apart<lb/>
one, he said, scribbled I<lb/>
his walls, "You're gon<lb/>
helping Eddie<lb/>
"We are not trl<lb/>
lightly at all said CaJ<lb/>
Pcndergraph of the<lb/>
police department. P<lb/>
said the department<lb/>
poets but was pursui<lb/>
the case.<lb/>
Meanwhile, a<lb/>
freshman hasorgani;<lb/>
rally at 11 a.m. Wedj<lb/>
rially as a reactior<lb/>
"We want to bring it t<lb/>
attention said<lb/>
Christina E. Kendrot<lb/>
Neither Ms.<lb/>
Segal has been inv<lb/>
most controversial<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0008"/><lb/>
m ? ?<lb/>
V<lb/>
the great work<lb/>
-Love, The<lb/>
tlCMA PHI: We met vou guys<lb/>
n We weren't tired, no signs at<lb/>
Ve pla ed pin the patch on the<lb/>
winter What a blast we had<lb/>
brothers and our sisters<lb/>
,ar s V.et Hugged - Get<lb/>
i - me vxial we're glad we<lb/>
ovvtheAOPTs<lb/>
ROOMMATE: lemma Holley<lb/>
C She plays sports volleyball's<lb/>
1 oda) is her birthda 1 wanted<lb/>
It she has an awav game she has<lb/>
Kvxi luck at the game 1 know<lb/>
Ivell Hist go out there and kick<lb/>
I M) roommate lemma is such a<lb/>
to top it oft she now can buy<lb/>
ten you get back we'll have<lb/>
s about damn time vou re 21'<lb/>
PAN LOVE YOUR<lb/>
It OL R Tonight instead of<lb/>
ghi at fizt Sponsored by<lb/>
edge Qass ol Alpha Delta Pi.<lb/>
10 j m Great tun great music<lb/>
s Come out and have a<lb/>
V<lb/>
IED<lb/>
ting Rich<lb/>
ells All<lb/>
Stamped Self<lb/>
?lope<lb/>
t. L.M. - 1<lb/>
5<lb/>
:8518<lb/>
-4<lb/>
MIC CAREER???<lb/>
r.<lb/>
I<lb/>
prtation on one of<lb/>
(health car e today.<lb/>
Itherapy<lb/>
ipational Therapy<lb/>
lall in Room 244.<lb/>
IS8<lb/>
ill 757-6961.<lb/>
?EXTIONS GRADUATE<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
lie Computing is in need of<lb/>
te Student Assistants to staff the<lb/>
ic computing labs on campus<lb/>
j lab assistant positions will be avail-<lb/>
lartmg this spring semester and will<lb/>
jre working 10-15 hours a week.<lb/>
will involve providing assistance<lb/>
lsers on various computer systems<lb/>
maintaining computing lab<lb/>
Irons Experience with IBM PC's,<lb/>
Macintosh, or the IBM 4381 Aca-<lb/>
Main frame is preferred but not<lb/>
lal To apply, send your resume or a<lb/>
etaihng your computer skills to<lb/>
larnsion (Austin 216) or call 757-<lb/>
LATS YOUR OPINION<lb/>
OF THE TEACHER?<lb/>
igtheweekofNov 14-18, a survey of<lb/>
int opinion of instruction will be<lb/>
pcted at ECU Questionnaires will be<lb/>
uted in every class with enrollment<lb/>
than five All students will have<lb/>
??portunity to express opinions on<lb/>
dung effectiveness of their instruc-<lb/>
those classes The survey will be<lb/>
ted during class tune and will take<lb/>
ximatdy 15 minutes to complete.<lb/>
it participation is voluntary and no<lb/>
ues are requested Instructors have<lb/>
requested to leave the dassroom<lb/>
the questionnaires are being com-<lb/>
The teaching effectiveness ques-<lb/>
iire was created by the Faculty Sen-<lb/>
jmmittee for Teaching Effectiveness<lb/>
Office of Planning and Insbru-<lb/>
Research The results of the survey,<lb/>
with other information and factors,<lb/>
for administrative evaluation of<lb/>
uuctor by the supervising admims-<lb/>
within the department or division.<lb/>
Presidential candidate blamed<lb/>
for loss on N.C. ticket outcome<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10,1988 7<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - North Caro-<lb/>
lina Democrats resurrected their<lb/>
complaint of four years ago and<lb/>
blamed the presidential candi-<lb/>
date for the outcome of state con-<lb/>
tests at the top of the ticket.<lb/>
"We need to go back to the<lb/>
drawing board to present a Plat<lb/>
interested in much more limited<lb/>
issues<lb/>
Of particular interest, she<lb/>
said, are college loans because she<lb/>
and her husband will have two<lb/>
children in college next year.<lb/>
"We're seeing what's hap-<lb/>
pened since they cut the loans,<lb/>
form to the voters that's compel- and it's going to make it difficult,<lb/>
ling said John Crumpler, Lt.<lb/>
Gov. Bob Jordan's campaign<lb/>
manager.<lb/>
A popular Republican in-<lb/>
cumbent governor, Jim Martin,<lb/>
combined with the weak presi-<lb/>
dential ticket of Michael Dukakis<lb/>
Mrs. Stohler said.<lb/>
Sen. Marshall Rauch, D-Gas-<lb/>
ton, also criticized the Democratic<lb/>
presidential ticket.<lb/>
To win an election, he said,<lb/>
"you've got to knock your oppo-<lb/>
nent out Dukakis was unable to<lb/>
do that, he said. "Dukakis pro-<lb/>
Mr. Sweet<lb/>
and Lloyd Bentsen to hurt Demo-<lb/>
crats running for statewide office, jected an image of<lb/>
party officials said. Guy Rauch said.<lb/>
Martin defeated Jordan, the But he said Jordan had an<lb/>
Democratic nominee, by a margin image problem of his own - that of<lb/>
of 56 percent to 44 percent with 98 "capable, intelligent gentleman,<lb/>
percent of the precincts reporting, It's hard to win with that kind of<lb/>
in an unofficial tally. Sen. Tony<lb/>
Rand, D-Cumberland, and Rocky<lb/>
Mount businessman Jim Gardner<lb/>
were locked in a close race for<lb/>
headline<lb/>
In addition to problems with<lb/>
the nat'onal ticket, Martin is "ar-<lb/>
ticulate, smart and good-looking<lb/>
lieutenant governor with Gard- and he hasn't done anything good<lb/>
ner leading, 51 percent to 49 per-<lb/>
cent, with 98 percent of precincts<lb/>
counted.<lb/>
Democratic presidential<lb/>
nominee Michael Dukakis waited<lb/>
too long to respond to charges<lb/>
from George Bush on gun control<lb/>
and furloughs for prisoners, said<lb/>
Ken Eudy, Democratic Party<lb/>
spokesman.<lb/>
"We in the South learned the<lb/>
or bad said Sen. Aaron Plyler, D-<lb/>
Union. "He's just been an existing<lb/>
governor<lb/>
Plyler also said Jordan may<lb/>
have hurt himself by being too<lb/>
honest. Jordan "talked at times<lb/>
when he would have been better<lb/>
off not to answer some ques-<lb/>
tions Plyler said.<lb/>
Eudy agreed that Martin was<lb/>
a tough opponent because he was<lb/>
hard way from Jesse Helms and a popular incumbent<lb/>
the Congressional Club that you "He's an incumbent governor<lb/>
have to respond to that garbage with a lot of hair and teeth and<lb/>
and pick it up and throw it back at one-liners Eudy said,<lb/>
them Eudy said Tuesday. Crumpler praised both Jor-<lb/>
Crumpler said the national dan and Martin for sticking to the<lb/>
Democratic ticket did not help in<lb/>
state offices in 1984, when Walter-<lb/>
Mondale lost to Ronald Reagan,<lb/>
or 1988.<lb/>
But some of the Democratic<lb/>
Party faithful said they were<lb/>
Democrats because of the party's<lb/>
platform.<lb/>
Jacqueline Brown of Wake<lb/>
Forest, a Dukakis volunteer, said<lb/>
she was a Democrat because she<lb/>
believed the party was interested<lb/>
"in the individual, the middle-<lb/>
class common people and their<lb/>
needs<lb/>
i There's "sometkmft for e<lb/>
ervonc in the Democratic Party<lb/>
said Mrs. Brown, a substitute<lb/>
teacher.<lb/>
Even with Dukakis' loss, she<lb/>
said, "1 feel I am still on the side of<lb/>
a winner. I can be proud<lb/>
Sara Stohler of Raleigh said<lb/>
she had been a Democrat all her<lb/>
life because she believed ifs a<lb/>
party "concerned about a broad<lb/>
range of issues Republicans are<lb/>
issues in campaign - something he<lb/>
said didn't happen in the lieuten-<lb/>
ant governor's race.<lb/>
Martin he said, has "not come<lb/>
up with something that's patently<lb/>
false and out it on the air<lb/>
The lieutenant governor's<lb/>
race was close because Gardner<lb/>
"is a glib, slick huckster Eudy<lb/>
said. "We let him get by with too<lb/>
much of the lies and distortions<lb/>
for too long without hitting him<lb/>
between the eyes<lb/>
And Rauch issued a warning<lb/>
of what was in store if Gardner<lb/>
won.<lb/>
"The Senate gives power<lb/>
they choose to give he said of the<lb/>
lieutentant governor position as<lb/>
presiding over the Senate. "When<lb/>
we adjourn and die there are no<lb/>
rules<lb/>
Wade Smith, former chair-<lb/>
man of the state Democratic Party<lb/>
and a Raleigh lawyer, said there<lb/>
was nothing else Jordan could<lb/>
have done to win the race.<lb/>
"I think they did everything<lb/>
that they could do Smith said.<lb/>
"We had a very, very fine candi-<lb/>
date who worked very, very hard.<lb/>
It wasn't a night for Democrats to<lb/>
win that race<lb/>
Despite the two losses at the<lb/>
top of the ticket, Crumpler said all<lb/>
was not doom and gloom for<lb/>
Democrats.<lb/>
"In fact, the Democratic Party<lb/>
has been, and I think will continue<lb/>
to be, strong at and Smith said<lb/>
everything could change in the<lb/>
next election, and urged Demo-<lb/>
crats to stay with the party. "Poli-<lb/>
tics is incredibly fluid he said.<lb/>
DOUBLE<lb/>
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Export wytto tkema nek ? the Crmrwn, the Hmo, Ike Comimt, emm the hnrnd fovnuy.<lb/>
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UNC activists<lb/>
receiving threats<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL (AP) - Two<lb/>
University of North Carolina stu-<lb/>
dent activists say their apart-<lb/>
ments have been vandalized in<lb/>
what apparently were attempts to<lb/>
stop them from protesting, and<lb/>
police say they are taking the<lb/>
threats seriously.<lb/>
Anne S. Duehring, a junior<lb/>
from Greensboro, said she had<lb/>
returned to her apartment across<lb/>
the street from the UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill campus Thursday to find her<lb/>
telephone cord ripped out and a<lb/>
butcher knife ripped through a<lb/>
mattress with a night gown on top<lb/>
of it.<lb/>
Ms. Duehring, who recently<lb/>
has participated in several pro-<lb/>
tests against university actions,<lb/>
said she later found a note in her<lb/>
freezer that said, This time your<lb/>
bed. Next time your face, big<lb/>
mouth<lb/>
Joel R. Segal, a law student<lb/>
who organized protests on behalf<lb/>
of Indian activist Eddie Hatcher<lb/>
during his trial for hostage-tak-<lb/>
ing, reported to police last month<lb/>
that a threatening phone call was<lb/>
followed by a break-in Oct. 29 of<lb/>
his Chapel Hill apartment. Some-<lb/>
one, he said, scribbled in pencil on<lb/>
his walls, "You're going to die for<lb/>
helping Eddie<lb/>
"We are not treating this<lb/>
lightly at all said Capt. Ralph V.<lb/>
Pendergraph of the Chapel Hill<lb/>
police department. Pendergraph<lb/>
said the department had no sus-<lb/>
pects but was pursuing leads in<lb/>
the case.<lb/>
Meanwhile, a university<lb/>
freshman hasorganized a campus<lb/>
rally at 11 a.m. Wednesday par-<lb/>
tially as a reaction to the threats.<lb/>
"We want to bring it to everyone's<lb/>
attention said organizer<lb/>
Christina E. Kendrot.<lb/>
Neither Ms. Duehrino nor<lb/>
Segal has been involved in the<lb/>
most controversial campus pro-<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS<lb/>
Why? Because Army ROTC teaches you<lb/>
the teadership and management skills you<lb/>
need for success-in college and in life<lb/>
ARMY ROTC<lb/>
THE SMARTEST COLLEGE<lb/>
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For Further Information Contact<lb/>
Capt. Steve L. Jone<lb/>
(ErwinHall) 757-6967<lb/>
Boneless Whole<lb/>
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SLICE?MTN. DEWePEPSI FREE<lb/>
Regular orJDiet<lb/>
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Eight 0'<lb/>
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Lite<lb/>
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Postage<lb/>
Stamps<lb/>
Prices Good In Greenville, N.C. ? At 703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open Sunday 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. ? Monday thru Saturday 7:00 a.m12 Midnight<lb/>
;al Errors<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0009"/><lb/>
1 IH ? SI l KOI INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10, 1988 Page 8<lb/>
Fantasy signs music<lb/>
? i??,??k<lb/>
By SII PHANIE FOLSOM<lb/>
it VVntt'i<lb/>
What would it he hkc to SCO<lb/>
musi plaving on ttu radio in<lb/>
stead ot g it" v )t to concen<lb/>
trato on someone s hands when<lb/>
tin v s,H.ik insteadol their<lb/>
 OK V<lb/>
Lis a . i ip which pei<lb/>
forms toi K'tii the hearing and.<lb/>
d al v ultun - - ruvi trates on<lb/>
acting musu AnA corned) to<lb/>
show it- audience the art ot sign<lb/>
language.<lb/>
rhc phrase 'i ou hoar even<lb/>
thine that is signed and you sec<lb/>
everything that is said is found<lb/>
on each of their programs as an<lb/>
adequate description ot their to<lb/>
cus<lb/>
When asked w hal the group<lb/>
represented Lara dcock<lb/>
Fantasy's directoi said Fantas<lb/>
is a lot ot thinj - It'sa deal advo-<lb/>
cacy group A lot o: our students<lb/>
van hoar enough or tool enough to<lb/>
cnio the music Fantas) lets the<lb/>
hearing audience know more<lb/>
about doat people and thebeauty<lb/>
ot sign language<lb/>
On November 12,at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
room ?44 Mondonhall. Fantasy<lb/>
will present its hall performance.<lb/>
Iho cost will be $2 and all pro<lb/>
ceeds w ill be returned to the sign<lb/>
language lubfoi its hoi pin fund-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
1 ho program theme is ' Ian<lb/>
tasv. relethon tor lost Causes<lb/>
dvk said 'We wanted to<lb/>
come up with something really<lb/>
ditiv rent It will be a telethon tor<lb/>
ail the lost duses.<lb/>
v )ther members ot the group<lb/>
include chairperson Donna<lb/>
Fowler, Erk lottv. Scott Smith.<lb/>
Cind Nicholson, Cindy Faust,<lb/>
Michelle Burcher Martha Watts,<lb/>
and Karin a lor<lb/>
group consists ot three<lb/>
members with and six members<lb/>
without hearing impairments, so<lb/>
an oral interpreter w ill boon hand<lb/>
to help thoso three follow the<lb/>
aiiMi<lb/>
Skill level ot those portormers<lb/>
range from people in the begin-<lb/>
ning signing olass up to those who<lb/>
aro already interpreters.<lb/>
Fantasy presents smaller per-<lb/>
formances throughout the<lb/>
semoster at such places as<lb/>
churches, elementary schools,<lb/>
and dorms tor public awareness.<lb/>
Susan Wallace, a hearing<lb/>
unpaired student, emphasized<lb/>
the importance of sign language<lb/>
being looked at as a "real lan-<lb/>
guage She said, "Sign language<lb/>
was my first language as opposed<lb/>
to English "<lb/>
When Wallace and other<lb/>
hearing impaired students come<lb/>
to ECU they are guaranteed inter-<lb/>
preters, notetakers, and tutors for<lb/>
their classes. The sign language<lb/>
club, aside from funding Fantasy,<lb/>
lias also started paying tor inter-<lb/>
preters tor outside of class activi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Wallace encouraged people<lb/>
to go and see the performance<lb/>
Saturday night, saying that<lb/>
Hearing people don't need to be<lb/>
scared to go and watch Fantasy<lb/>
because they will also have music.<lb/>
It won't be a silent performance<lb/>
 i<lb/>
Six members of the band Fantasy are practicing for a concert to be Saturday 8 p.m.<lb/>
hall 224. The concert is open to everyone. (Photo by Mark Love?Photolab)<lb/>
Camping the 'Big Flat'<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
??? Idttor<lb/>
Ho you hate the unpredi table Greenville climate1 Instead of driving to Cleveland, why not<lb/>
trip to the "Big Flat So give me Shelter Cove where the mountains exist beside the surf. (Photo<lb/>
by Joseph Davidson Harris?Harrislabl<lb/>
VAE comes<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
(Editor's note: This is part one<lb/>
of a two part story. During the<lb/>
summer, loo Harris and friends<lb/>
adventured the country with a<lb/>
tent. These are some of his experi-<lb/>
ences.)<lb/>
Do you enjoy the adventure<lb/>
ot backpacking, camping, surf-<lb/>
ing, secluded beaches and waking<lb/>
up to see dear, bear raccoons and<lb/>
other wild creatures drinking<lb/>
from the nearest fresh water<lb/>
spring ?<lb/>
It so Big Hat m Shelter<lb/>
(. ove, Calif, is the place tor you.<lb/>
The Hat as the locals call it.<lb/>
is a secluded section of beach and<lb/>
prime surfing spot onl v accessible<lb/>
by helicopter or a treacherous 15<lb/>
mile hike<lb/>
The name big Hat was given<lb/>
to the spot by the legendary<lb/>
surfer, Skip Fry. Fry, considered<lb/>
one oi the fathers of surfing in<lb/>
California, became famous in the<lb/>
sixties for his custom surfboards<lb/>
and surt adventures to exotic<lb/>
places.<lb/>
According to surf lore of the<lb/>
area. Fry set out on foot over the<lb/>
rocky, kelp covered beaches of<lb/>
Shelter Cove because he saw,<lb/>
through binoculars, waves break<lb/>
ing on the furthest point north ot<lb/>
the actual cove. After a full day's<lb/>
hike around the heavily vege<lb/>
tated mountain bases that pro<lb/>
trude into the Pacific, Fry came to<lb/>
anarea void of rocks, trees and the<lb/>
rugged terrain an enormous<lb/>
tlat area on a point which stuck<lb/>
nit further than the rest. Thus ho<lb/>
labeled it Big Hat.<lb/>
Hie Hat, an almost h<lb/>
hold word to people ot the (lar<lb/>
berville, Arcata and Shelter Cove<lb/>
(all small California towns lo-<lb/>
cated 50 or so miles from the Ore-<lb/>
gon border) is little known t<lb/>
outsiders, and they want to keep it<lb/>
that way. Actually, it you go there<lb/>
asking for directions the locals<lb/>
will send you south instead ot<lb/>
north My friendsand 1 found out<lb/>
about the spot from the uncle ot<lb/>
one oi the guvs traveling with us<lb/>
Wo set out on the first Satur<lb/>
day m August not only toconquer<lb/>
the uncrowded waves that the<lb/>
point produces, bu' to seclude<lb/>
ourselves from society and all its<lb/>
modern amenities for a week<lb/>
The journey begins simple<lb/>
enough. The first type of terrain<lb/>
encountered are hard-packed<lb/>
black sand beaches which<lb/>
absorb every ounce oi the sun's<lb/>
heat as the dav wears on. Plentv i -t<lb/>
water is ne i<lb/>
cannot b can<lb/>
?. rhu<lb/>
how t' mak<lb/>
 m pills<lb/>
men us fi<lb/>
. ? ? ?<lb/>
:<lb/>
in<lb/>
sa i i ? i<lb/>
11 he i . I<lb/>
? ? es stra<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
dai .<lb/>
In this n<lb/>
i ? i<lb/>
hike r wi<lb/>
heav sol<lb/>
Stump d I<lb/>
surfer, come<lb/>
area as a ??? - -<lb/>
rock to I<lb/>
the win <lb/>
bel<lb/>
rhi m<lb/>
tl<lb/>
mi r se<lb/>
and si ?<lb/>
The hike h ??<lb/>
tidedoesn I<lb/>
the mam I ? i<lb/>
See SI<lb/>
11 I Vev. rU, rcau<lb/>
PicMnl the Rones<lb/>
The Evils of Chungism<lb/>
National Gallery of Art Vocal Arts Ensemble will be coming<lb/>
to W i ight Auditorium, Nov. 14 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Be the third caller<lb/>
BylEFl GIBSON<lb/>
Under the now logo "The<lb/>
Now Ro I ? WZM Bis bringing<lb/>
you more music and more gifts!<lb/>
That's rig! I free gifts tart<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
in<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
'vG<lb/>
The Attic<lb/>
The Bond<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
Triple Maniacs<lb/>
Susie's<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
T.S. Boogie<lb/>
The Attic<lb/>
The Bcomers<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Kicks<lb/>
The ttic<lb/>
Five Guys Named Moe<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
ing Friday, November 11, it is<lb/>
WZMB's annual "Christmas In<lb/>
November<lb/>
Everyday this month WMB<lb/>
w ill be giving listeners a chance to<lb/>
win one of many fabulous prizes<lb/>
e cry two hours. On the sound of<lb/>
igh bells listeners can call the<lb/>
station al 757 6913 for a chance to<lb/>
win.<lb/>
lust lx the third caller and<lb/>
win.it s that easy All v ou have to<lb/>
do is listen and call.<lb/>
No! only o you hear great<lb/>
music, you get great gifts ranging<lb/>
from free passes and tee-shirts to<lb/>
tree food. Some of the sponsor's<lb/>
include 1 he Attic, The New Deli,<lb/>
Record Bar, East Coast Music and<lb/>
Video, Hank's Homemade Ice<lb/>
Cream, Subway and Little<lb/>
( easar's<lb/>
But that isn't all WMB is<lb/>
planning a concert at the Attic<lb/>
sometime this month featuring<lb/>
1 Martell and more prizes.<lb/>
Other give-aways include free<lb/>
major concert tickets, so Ozzy<lb/>
Osbome and Bad Company fans<lb/>
listen to The New R(Kk 91" be-<lb/>
cause they may have something<lb/>
to make you a happv WZMB lis-<lb/>
h nor<lb/>
The National Gallery oi Art<lb/>
Vocal Arts Ensemble will perform<lb/>
at ECU Nov. 14, at 8 p.m. in Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre. The concert is part of<lb/>
the 19S8-89 Chamber Music Se-<lb/>
ries, co-sponsored by the HC.L<lb/>
Department oi University Unions<lb/>
and the ECU Sohool oi Music.<lb/>
The ensemble consists ot<lb/>
Rosa Lamoreaux, soprano; Bev-<lb/>
erly Benso, contralto; Samuel<lb/>
Gordon, tenor and Robert Ken-<lb/>
nedy, baritone. George Marios is<lb/>
the ensemble's artistic director<lb/>
and pianist<lb/>
The ECU program will in-<lb/>
clude a set of 16th century madri-<lb/>
gals, five selections by Felix Men-<lb/>
delssohn, Benjamin Britten's<lb/>
"Canticle II Abraham and Isaac<lb/>
Tchaikovsky's "live Duets for<lb/>
Soprano and Contralto" Charles<lb/>
lves' "American Sentimental Bal-<lb/>
lads" and four selections by<lb/>
Rossini.<lb/>
Founded just three years<lb/>
ago, the Ensemble has been fea-<lb/>
tured in numerous concert ap-<lb/>
pearances at the National Gallery<lb/>
oi Art in Washington, D. C. The<lb/>
gallery hasoffered a weeklyseries<lb/>
of tree concerts continuously<lb/>
since 1942.<lb/>
Earlier this year, the en-<lb/>
semble appeared at leading sum-<lb/>
mer music festivals in Europe. Its<lb/>
1988 tour schedule comprises<lb/>
appearances in Maryland and<lb/>
Virginia as well as North Caro-<lb/>
lina<lb/>
Hie National Gallery of Art<lb/>
Vocal Arts Ensemble has received<lb/>
critical acclaim for its interpreta-<lb/>
tions of music for two, three and<lb/>
four voices, ranging from medie-<lb/>
val balladry to contemporary<lb/>
pieces.<lb/>
Tickets to the Ensemble's<lb/>
ECU concert are $8 each and may<lb/>
be purchased at the campus Cen-<lb/>
tral Ticket Oiicv in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, telephone (919)<lb/>
757-6611,0x1. 2r6<lb/>
BY GERALDO BONEHEAD<lb/>
Not A Tmah Journal!<lb/>
Hello. I'm Geraldo Bone-<lb/>
head. Today, I am here to pres-<lb/>
ent shocking evidence of a grave<lb/>
danger facing our young<lb/>
people. This column is not for<lb/>
the squeamish.<lb/>
I will present startling evi-<lb/>
dence of a new cult that is tak-<lb/>
ingoverthemindsofouryoung<lb/>
people. Our young people, per-<lb/>
haps your very own young<lb/>
people, may have had contact<lb/>
with this shocking, startling<lb/>
new cult ? Chungism.<lb/>
Startling as it may seem, lit-<lb/>
erally thousands of young<lb/>
people are worshipping NBC<lb/>
newsperson Connie Chung.<lb/>
While Ms. Chungdeniesknowl-<lb/>
edge of this shocking cult, there<lb/>
is startling evidence that proves<lb/>
she is the object of many shock-<lb/>
ing rituals designed to bring<lb/>
teenagers power over their fel-<lb/>
low man.<lb/>
David B. is a sophomore at<lb/>
East Carolina University. He<lb/>
was a loner, as many of our<lb/>
young people are when they<lb/>
first arrive at college. Like many<lb/>
young people his age, he en-<lb/>
joyed watching television.<lb/>
He remembers the first time<lb/>
he saw Connie Chung on TV. "1<lb/>
was in my dorm room. My<lb/>
roommate told<lb/>
me there was someone 1 should<lb/>
watch on channel seven<lb/>
"I wasn't sure I should. My<lb/>
parents always told me not to<lb/>
watch NBC. But I wanted to by<lb/>
it you know, just to see what<lb/>
it was like. Now 1 wish 1 hadn't<lb/>
David has been under psy-<lb/>
chiatric care for three months<lb/>
now. Before that, he actively<lb/>
participated in many of the bi-<lb/>
zarre and shocking rituals that<lb/>
Chungists perform. It wasdur-<lb/>
ing one of these ntuals that he<lb/>
realized the startlingly cruel<lb/>
nature of his fellow Chungists.<lb/>
"My roommate and I had<lb/>
been worshipping Connie for a<lb/>
while by ourselves. Then he told<lb/>
me some of the other guys on<lb/>
the hall worshipped her too.<lb/>
and that 1 should come over<lb/>
and pray with them sometime<lb/>
he recalls.<lb/>
"1 just figured it would be a<lb/>
good way to meet some more<lb/>
people. I went to this guy's room<lb/>
one night during the NBC<lb/>
Nightly News. He was dressed<lb/>
in kimono, and he had a black<lb/>
wig on. His face was all made<lb/>
up to resemble Connie<lb/>
"I went in. There was about<lb/>
15 guys in there. They were all<lb/>
chanting, 'Conniechung, Con-<lb/>
niechung, Conniechung in real<lb/>
low voices. There was a big out-<lb/>
line of a peacock drawn on the<lb/>
floor in chalk, with candles<lb/>
burning at each curve<lb/>
I asked David if he had been<lb/>
shocked by this startling turn of<lb/>
events. David stops for a mo-<lb/>
ment before continuing, "it's<lb/>
hurts to remember all this. The<lb/>
doctors say I should talk about<lb/>
it  but I keep remembering<lb/>
how shocked I was and how<lb/>
much I wanted to do it at the<lb/>
same time<lb/>
"Anyway, I kneeled down,<lb/>
and the priest kneeled in front<lb/>
of the TV. He began asking<lb/>
Connie for the strength to over-<lb/>
throw his teachers, and the<lb/>
answers to their macro-econom-<lb/>
ics test Then he - he <lb/>
David, obviously shaken by<lb/>
the shocking ordeal, has to<lb/>
pause a moment. Readers, avert<lb/>
your eyes at these next para<lb/>
graphs if you are easily upset.<lb/>
The event David descril<lb/>
is shocking and startling to say<lb/>
the verv lea st Paren ts a re urged<lb/>
to send their young people<lb/>
oi the rexur before i ntinuing.<lb/>
"He took an economi<lb/>
textbook and he ripp d<lb/>
pages out c ripped them<lb/>
and then smeared some kind<lb/>
stuff on them ho said<lb/>
theholvbuHKlotv onr .<lb/>
Itsmelledliki stalt ducksai<lb/>
warmed over in ed<lb/>
bird fat<lb/>
"He burned t:<lb/>
started - r aming<lb/>
sacrifice. Pow ;s - ? .<lb/>
ing! O Dark Goddess . ! tiu<lb/>
Nightly News! (lift th humbk<lb/>
voung people with the I<lb/>
of Media Vengeance! In the<lb/>
name oi Savitch, Rather and<lb/>
Chung  1 summon the<lb/>
David remembers littl?<lb/>
tcr that He claims that a 'mistv<lb/>
form appeared in the room and<lb/>
it spoke to us Startled bv the<lb/>
turnofevents, he fled and a!Ud<lb/>
his parents that night, hogging<lb/>
them for permission to come<lb/>
home.<lb/>
1 informed police later that<lb/>
David had heard startling ru-<lb/>
morsof a Chungist church built<lb/>
near a cemetery in Greenville<lb/>
Police searched, but found no<lb/>
evidence of such a shrine<lb/>
But this is not an isolated<lb/>
case. 1 have interviewed many<lb/>
other young people all (nor<lb/>
America. Everywhere, but ?i<lb/>
pecially in the Bible Belt, our<lb/>
voung people arc turning to<lb/>
Chungism As a form oi rebel<lb/>
lion, as a way to meet people or<lb/>
even to seek revenge on others<lb/>
this shocking problem is not<lb/>
going away.<lb/>
This has been Geraldo<lb/>
Bonehead, wishing you and<lb/>
your young people a safe, and<lb/>
Chung-free lite.<lb/>
At<lb/>
ASHEBOF(' fcP)<lb/>
first, it could pass for a people's<lb/>
hospital. Then yo . admit<lb/>
ting door<lb/>
Zoo ha<lb/>
It's big em<lb/>
u<lb/>
??<lb/>
ailing grizzl) ?-<lb/>
And it leads to a ward with s.<lb/>
creature com! ?<lb/>
stocked with can ? .<lb/>
nnmate food and feline food A<lb/>
pool that runs wa mal<lb/>
sick alligator le<lb/>
t a a homosM k p<lb/>
equipment thai u<lb/>
30-inch spar ? i , r<lb/>
a small bir I<lb/>
recovery room<lb/>
It'sa ? ?<lb/>
where<lb/>
It is tat<lb/>
r rederick M ir 11 i<lb/>
ennarv M<lb/>
Zoological I<lb/>
Officials at trv z -<lb/>
porters a pi<lb/>
new $2 mill<lb/>
that is the first pr -<lb/>
pleted in the a<lb/>
expansion<lb/>
The S<lb/>
. . pansion. wl<lb/>
exhibit an<lb/>
for the<lb/>
MacLai<lb/>
LOS - ?<lb/>
Make me<lb/>
MacLaine told I<lb/>
mmakers ai<lb/>
her word<lb/>
The result<lb/>
new film, 'Madame<lb/>
? ? hich has been ha<lb/>
few dissent- asM<lb/>
mphant debut a- ?<lb/>
!SS. Some ma)<lb/>
been a<lb/>
that - r ?<lb/>
In the<lb/>
she plav<lb/>
who bullu-<lb/>
gifted pup<lb/>
greatness<lb/>
soon, she ci ts - I<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Tlu<lb/>
i ' reientingJv, Oreafhn4 urc it<lb/>
anyone who opposes h - he<lb/>
oks several years ?<lb/>
own r4<lb/>
I : ? take I<lb/>
I<lb/>
wrong <lb/>
When the 5 vas<lb/>
proposed to her -he admitted it<lb/>
gave her pause1<lb/>
"But I decided there au<lb/>
many wond rl<lb/>
out there tor mo to worn<lb/>
image Mv imag n<lb/>
:em me much<lb/>
hearty la<lb/>
1 did S utsatzk.<lb/>
od her i ve ha .<lb/>
ing teachers -<lb/>
teacher v h<lb/>
that if you<lb/>
teacher, sh( d<lb/>
her life she s.<lb/>
To prepan<lb/>
the usuall) d<lb/>
allowed hers.<lb/>
She collected ch ?<lb/>
aged costumes to tit the' -<lb/>
instructed the techi<lb/>
Turn off the k<lb/>
makes actresses<lb/>
me from the side I need all<lb/>
help I can get I<lb/>
gamin look '<lb/>
Mad aine pr<lb/>
look from the time pi<lb/>
kVallis spotted her oi<lb/>
1- Carol Hanev - i<lb/>
"Pajama Game<lb/>
Althoue<lb/>
variety of roles<lb/>
seemed to prefer her<lb/>
granting nomination<lb/>
Came Runr<lb/>
ment" and Irma La D<lb/>
 ter another nomination in<lb/>
"The Turning Point i<lb/>
won the big pri2<lb/>
Endearment in 1<lb/>
1<lb/>
Surf<lb/>
I and<lb/>
camp<lb/>
Continued frompage 8<lb/>
ated bv these mam mouth b<lb/>
ders It not timed properly hikers<lb/>
will find themselves sprinting<lb/>
around these boulders to escape<lb/>
the rising tide<lb/>
Once the tide made it impos<lb/>
Sibletohikearoundoneofthcout-I<lb/>
crops and we were forced to climb<lb/>
one of the barnacle encrusted<lb/>
moss carpeted boulders an esti<lb/>
mated 50 feet to the top lugging<lb/>
30-40 pound backpacks and suii<lb/>
boards. Once at the top hikers au<lb/>
not safe from the onslaught oi<lb/>
waves<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0010"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Fantasy signs music<lb/>
By STEPHANIE FOLSOM<lb/>
Sut! Writer<lb/>
of sign language.<lb/>
ning signing class up to those who<lb/>
On November 12, at 8 p.m. in are already interpreters.<lb/>
What would it be like to see<lb/>
music playing on the radio, in-<lb/>
stead of hearing it? Or to concen-<lb/>
trate on someone's hands when<lb/>
they speak, instead of their voice?<lb/>
Fantasy, a group which per-<lb/>
forms for both the hearing and<lb/>
deaf cultures, concentrates on<lb/>
acting, music, and comedy to<lb/>
show its audience the art of sign<lb/>
language.<lb/>
The phrase "You hear every-<lb/>
thing that is signed and you see<lb/>
everything that is said" is found<lb/>
room 244 Mendenhall, Fantasy<lb/>
will present'its Fall performance.<lb/>
The cost will be $2 and all pro-<lb/>
ceeds will be returned to the sign<lb/>
language club for its help in fund-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The program theme is "Fan-<lb/>
tasy Telethon for Lost Causes<lb/>
Adcock said, "We wanted to<lb/>
Fantasy presents smaller per-<lb/>
formances throughout the<lb/>
semester at such places as<lb/>
churches, elementary schools,<lb/>
and dorms for public awareness.<lb/>
Susan Wallace, a hearing<lb/>
impaired student, emphasized<lb/>
the importance of sign language<lb/>
being looked at as a "real Ian-<lb/>
"on up with something really guage" She said, "Sign language<lb/>
different. It will be a telethon for wasmyfirstlanguageasopposed<lb/>
a? the lost causes ?? Bnghsh- <lb/>
Other members of the group hearing impaired students come<lb/>
include: chairperson Donna to ECU they are guaranteed inter-<lb/>
Fowler, Eric Totty, Scott Smith, preters, notetakers, and tutors for<lb/>
U Cl V limit ni? ?? ??? ?? ?" ??" '  ? " ? J ? "I  . ,<lb/>
on each of their programs as an Cindy Nicholson, Cindy Faust, their classes. The sign language<lb/>
adequate description of their fo-<lb/>
cus.<lb/>
When asked what the group<lb/>
represented, Lara Adcock,<lb/>
Fantasy's director, said, "Fantasy<lb/>
is a lot of things. It's a deaf advo-<lb/>
cacy group. A lot of our students<lb/>
can hear enough or feel enough to<lb/>
enjoy the music. Fantasy lets the<lb/>
hearing audience know more<lb/>
Michelle Burcher, Martha Watts,<lb/>
and Karin Naylor.<lb/>
The group consists of three<lb/>
members with and six members<lb/>
without hearing impairments, so<lb/>
an oral interpreter will be on hand<lb/>
to help those three follow the<lb/>
music.<lb/>
club, aside from funding Fantasy,<lb/>
has also started paying for inter-<lb/>
preters for outside of class activi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Wallace encouraged people<lb/>
to go and see the performance<lb/>
Saturday night, saying that<lb/>
"Hearing people don't need to be<lb/>
scared to go and watch Fantasy<lb/>
k<lb/>
Zoo<lb/>
Six members of the band Fantasy are practicing for a concert to be Saturday 8 p.m. in Menden<lb/>
hall 224. The concert is open to everyone. (Photo by Mark Love?Photolab)<lb/>
Skill level of these performers because they will also have music,<lb/>
about deaf people, and the beauty range from people in the begin- It won't be a silent performance<lb/>
Camp<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
Newt Editor<lb/>
 ? ??4<lb/>
through binoculars, waves break- water is needed for this hike, but it<lb/>
ing on the furthest point north of cannot be carried it is too<lb/>
the actual cove. After a full day's heavy. Thus, we quickly learned<lb/>
how to make use of water purifi -<lb/>
hike around the heavily vege-<lb/>
tated mountain bases that pro-<lb/>
trude into the Pacific, Fry came to<lb/>
an area void of rocks, trees and the<lb/>
rugged terrain ? an enormous<lb/>
flat area on a point which stuck<lb/>
out further than the rest. Thus he<lb/>
labeled it Big Hat.<lb/>
The Flat, an almost house-<lb/>
editor's note: This is part one<lb/>
of a two part story. During the<lb/>
summer, Joe Harris and friends<lb/>
adventured the country with a<lb/>
tent. These are some of his experi-<lb/>
ences.)<lb/>
Do you enjoy the adventure<lb/>
of backpacking, camping, surf-<lb/>
ing, secluded beaches and waking hold word to people of the Car<lb/>
berville, Arcata and Shelter Cove<lb/>
(all small California towns lo-<lb/>
cated 50 or so miles from the Ore-<lb/>
gon border) is little known to<lb/>
outsiders, and they want to keep it<lb/>
that way. Actually, if you go there<lb/>
asking for directions the locals<lb/>
will send you south instead of<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
up to see dear, bear, raccoons and<lb/>
other wild creatures drinking<lb/>
from the nearest fresh water<lb/>
spring?<lb/>
If so "Big Flat in Shelter<lb/>
Cove, Calif, is the place for you.<lb/>
The "Flat as the locals call it,<lb/>
is a secluded section of beach and<lb/>
cation pills (iodine) and the nu<lb/>
merous fresh water springs flow-<lb/>
ing down from the mountains<lb/>
After the first three to foui<lb/>
miles, the sandy beach turns c<lb/>
one littered bv car-sized boulder<lb/>
sanded smooth from centuries o<lb/>
weathering and entire driftwood<lb/>
trees, strays which escaped thl<lb/>
log floatillas that jam the rivers o<lb/>
Northern California.<lb/>
The journey gets extremeh<lb/>
dangerous from here to the end '<lb/>
In this particular stretch, th.it v<lb/>
came to call "boulder heaven<lb/>
hiker without steel shanked<lb/>
heavy soled boots is in troubfc<lb/>
Do you hate the unpredictable Greenville climate? Instead of driving to Cleveland, why not<lb/>
trip to the "Big Flat So give me Shelter Cove where the mountains exist beside the surf. (Photo<lb/>
by Joseph Davidson Harris?Harrislab)<lb/>
National Gallery of Art Vocal Arts Ensemble will be coming<lb/>
to Wright Auditorium, Nov. 14 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Be the third caller<lb/>
By JEFF GIBSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Under the new logo "The<lb/>
New Rock 91 WZM B is bringing<lb/>
you more music and more gifts!<lb/>
That's right, free gifts. Start-<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
in<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
NRG<lb/>
The Attic<lb/>
The Bond<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
Triple Maniacs<lb/>
Susie's<lb/>
Fxiday<lb/>
T.S. Boogie<lb/>
The Attic<lb/>
The Bcomers<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Kicks<lb/>
The Attic<lb/>
Five Guys Named Moe<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
VAE comes<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
ECU Newt Bureau<lb/>
The National Gallery of Art<lb/>
Vocal Arts Ensemble will perform<lb/>
at ECU Nov. 14, at 8 p.m. in Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre. The concert is part of<lb/>
the 1988-89 Chamber Music Se-<lb/>
ries, co-sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
Department of University Unions<lb/>
and the ECU Sohool of Music.<lb/>
The ensemble consists of<lb/>
Rosa Lamoreaux, soprano; Bev-<lb/>
erly Benso, contralto; Samuel<lb/>
Gordon, tenor and Robert Ken-<lb/>
nedy, baritone. George Manos is<lb/>
the ensemble's artistic director<lb/>
and pianist.<lb/>
The ECU program will in-<lb/>
clude a set of 16th century madri-<lb/>
gals, five selections by Felix Men-<lb/>
delssohn, Benjamin Britten's<lb/>
"Canticle II: Abraham and Isaac'<lb/>
Tchaikovsky's "Five Duets for<lb/>
Soprano and Contralto" Charles<lb/>
Ives' "American Sentimental Bal-<lb/>
lads" and four selections by<lb/>
Rossini.<lb/>
Founded just three years<lb/>
ago, the Ensemble has been fea-<lb/>
tured in numerous concert ap-<lb/>
pearances at the National Gallery<lb/>
of Art in Washington, D. C. The<lb/>
gallery has offered a weekly series<lb/>
of free concerts continuously<lb/>
since 1942.<lb/>
Earlier this year, the en-<lb/>
prime surfing spot only accessible n?rttv ?Y menJs anc ' rouruJ ouj Stumped toes, the enemy of ever<lb/>
by helicopter or a treacherous 15 about the sppt from thejuyjf of- c- rf come vcrv eSsnVin tty<lb/>
I nic ftte , , one of the guys traveling with us.<lb/>
- The name Big Flat was given We set out on the first Satur-<lb/>
to the spot by the legendary day in August not only to conquer<lb/>
surfer, Skip Fry. Fry, considered th? uncrowded waves that the<lb/>
one of the fathers of surfing in point produces, bu to seclude<lb/>
California, became famous in the ourselves from society and all its<lb/>
sixties for his custom surfboards modem amenities for a week.<lb/>
and surf adventures to exotic The journey begins simple<lb/>
places. enough. The first type of terrain<lb/>
According to surf lore of the encountered are hard-packed,<lb/>
area, Fry set out on foot over the black sand beaches ? which<lb/>
rocky, kelp covered beaches of absorb every ounce of the sun's<lb/>
Shelter Cove because he saw, heat as the day wears on. Plenty of<lb/>
0<lb/>
.areVi asrSSult iffpiiqJMgMrP1111<lb/>
rock to rock in an effort to avok<lb/>
the winding maze of driftw(o<lb/>
below.<lb/>
The mountains come strati<lb/>
down into the ocean, thus, in<lb/>
mense outcrops of granite jut oi<lb/>
and serve as impassible obs tucle<lb/>
The hike has to be tuned so tl -<lb/>
tidedoesn'tmaroor you on one J<lb/>
the many beaches that are sepei<lb/>
See SURF, page 9<lb/>
?n:<lb/>
tfrtt'th Kones<lb/>
The Evils of Chungism<lb/>
i<lb/>
BYGERALDOBONEHEAD<lb/>
ing Friday, November 11, it is<lb/>
WZMB's annual "Christmas In<lb/>
November<lb/>
Everyday this month WZMB<lb/>
will be giving listeners a chance to<lb/>
win one of many fabulous prizes<lb/>
every two hours. On the sound of<lb/>
sleigh bells, listeners can call the<lb/>
station at 757-6913 for a chance to<lb/>
win.<lb/>
Just be the third caller and<lb/>
win, it's that easy. All you have to<lb/>
do is listen and call.<lb/>
Not only do you hear great -<lb/>
music, you get great gifts ranging semble appeared at leading sum<lb/>
from free passes and tee-shirts to mer music festivals in Europe. Its<lb/>
free food. Some of the sponsor's 1988 tour schedule composes<lb/>
appearances in Maryland and<lb/>
Virginia as well as North Caro-<lb/>
lina.<lb/>
The National Gallery of Art<lb/>
Vocal Arts Ensemble has received<lb/>
critical acclaim for its interpreta-<lb/>
tions of music for two, three and<lb/>
Hello. I'm Geraldo Bone-<lb/>
head. Today, I am here to pres-<lb/>
ent shockirevidimeeofejpve<lb/>
danger facing our young<lb/>
people. This column is not lor<lb/>
the squeamish.<lb/>
I will present startling evi-<lb/>
dence of a new cult that is tak-<lb/>
ing over the mindsof our young<lb/>
people. Our young people, per-<lb/>
haps your very own young<lb/>
people, may hams had contact<lb/>
with mis shocki startling<lb/>
new cult?Gismjpam.<lb/>
Startlingasit may seem,lit-<lb/>
erally thousands of yoi<lb/>
(people ere<lb/>
newsperson<lb/>
VtWeMs.C<lb/>
include: The Attic, The New Deli,<lb/>
Record Bar, East Coast Music and<lb/>
Video, Hank's Homemade Ice<lb/>
Cream, Subway and Little<lb/>
Ceasar's.<lb/>
But that isn't all WZMB is<lb/>
planning a concert at the Attic<lb/>
ing rituals designed to bring<lb/>
teenagers power over their lei-<lb/>
low man.<lb/>
David B. is a sophomore at<lb/>
East Carolina University. He<lb/>
was a loner, as many of out<lb/>
young people are when they<lb/>
first arrive at college. Like many<lb/>
young people his age, he e?r<lb/>
joyed watching television.<lb/>
He reineners the first time<lb/>
he saw Connie Chung on TV. 1<lb/>
was in my dorm room. My<lb/>
roommate, -? tola,<lb/>
me there was someone I should<lb/>
ing or. of these rituals that he<lb/>
resized the startiinidy cruel<lb/>
nature of his feSow Chungjste<lb/>
"My roommate and I had<lb/>
been worshipping Connie for a<lb/>
while by ourselves. Then he told<lb/>
me some o( the other guys on<lb/>
the hall worshipped her too,<lb/>
and mat ! should come over<lb/>
and pray with them sometime'<lb/>
he recalls.<lb/>
"I Just figured it would be a<lb/>
good way to meet some more<lb/>
peoptelwerutomisguy'sroorn<lb/>
one night during the NBC<lb/>
Nightly News. He was dressed<lb/>
, and he had a black<lb/>
wig on. His face was all made<lb/>
up to resemble Connie<lb/>
1 went in. There wasabout<lb/>
15 guys in there. They were ail<lb/>
chanting, Xnniechung, Con-<lb/>
tedxurCormiechungtnrea<lb/>
towvoice. There wasabigout-<lb/>
Une of a peacock drawn on the<lb/>
floor in M with candles<lb/>
burning at each curve.<lb/>
iaatodDavidifhehadbeen<lb/>
sometime this month featuring four voices, ranging from medie-<lb/>
T.J. Martell and more prizes.<lb/>
Other give-aways include free<lb/>
major concert tickets, so Ozzy<lb/>
Osborne and Bad Company fans<lb/>
listen to "The New Rock 91" be-<lb/>
cause they may have something<lb/>
to make you a happy WZMB lis- Student Center, telephone (919)<lb/>
iener 757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
val balladry to contemporary<lb/>
pieces.<lb/>
Tickets to the Ensemble's<lb/>
ECU concert are $8 each and may<lb/>
be purchased at tlie campus Cen-<lb/>
tral Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
parents always told me not to<lb/>
WatohNBC But I wanted to try<lb/>
k you know, ton to tat moil<lb/>
to nc?ift? NkMvIwaahl hdarL<lb/>
Da vid hat bean under ???<lb/>
cmatrk cut tor tfwee mo&amp;Mi<lb/>
firvMT Htnrm tihttlL Wt<lb/>
tHrF'V ? tirWtr? rSTrOT nttt<lb/>
BSdaSt<lb/>
even David stops for a mo-<lb/>
rnent before continuing. "It's<lb/>
hurts to rismenibwau this. The<lb/>
doctors say I should talk about<lb/>
It but I keep lemernbermg<lb/>
how shockad was - and how<lb/>
much I wanted to do k at the<lb/>
sameume.<lb/>
"Anyway, I kneeled down,<lb/>
awitheprte kneeled m front<lb/>
ot the TV. He tog asking<lb/>
Ccnteforthemthtoover<lb/>
mrow his teachers, and the<lb/>
katoetThtnhe-he<lb/>
itfltat<lb/>
The event David describes<lb/>
is shocking and startling to say<lb/>
the very least. Parentsare urged<lb/>
to send their young people out<lb/>
of the room before continuing.<lb/>
"He took an economics<lb/>
textbook and he  ripped the<lb/>
pages out He ripped them out<lb/>
and then smeared some kind of<lb/>
stuff on them  he said it was ?<lb/>
rheholybloodofConnieChung. L-n<lb/>
It smelled like stale duck sauce,<lb/>
warmed over in micro waved k <lb/>
bird fat<lb/>
"He burned the pages, and<lb/>
sta, "d screaming, Accept our i<lb/>
sacrince, Powers of Broadcast t<lb/>
ing! O Dark Goddess of the i .<lb/>
Nightly News! Gift thy humble j<lb/>
young people with the Powers<lb/>
of Media Vengeance! In the 4.<lb/>
name of Savitch, Rather and f<lb/>
Chung I summon thee "<lb/>
David remembers little af-<lb/>
ter that. He claims that a "misty<lb/>
form appeared in the room, and<lb/>
it spoke to us Startled by the<lb/>
turnof events, he fled and called<lb/>
his parents that night, begging<lb/>
them for permission to come<lb/>
home.<lb/>
1 informed police later that<lb/>
David had heard startling ru-<lb/>
mors of a Chungist church built<lb/>
near a cemetary in Greenville.<lb/>
Police searched, but found no<lb/>
evidence of such a shrine.<lb/>
But this is not an isolated<lb/>
case. I have interviewed many<lb/>
other young people all over<lb/>
America. Everywhere, but es-<lb/>
pecially in the Bible Belt, our<lb/>
young people are turning to<lb/>
Chungism. As a form of rebel-<lb/>
lion, asa way to meet people or<lb/>
even to seek revenge on others,<lb/>
mis shocking problem is not<lb/>
gomgaway.<lb/>
this has been Geraldo<lb/>
Bonehred, wishing you and<lb/>
your young people a safe, and<lb/>
ASHEBORO, N.C. (AP) ? At<lb/>
irst, it could pass for a people's<lb/>
tospital. Then you see the admit-<lb/>
ing door.<lb/>
If s big enough to handle an<lb/>
ailing grizzly bear ? or three.<lb/>
And it leads to a ward with some<lb/>
creature comforts: a kitchen,<lb/>
stocked with cans of "Zu Preem"<lb/>
.rimate food and feline food. A<lb/>
jool that runs warm to make a<lb/>
ack alligator less snappy. Or cold,<lb/>
for a homesick polar bear. X-ray<lb/>
equipment that can capture the<lb/>
30-inch span of a gorilla's chest, or<lb/>
small bird's wing. A padded<lb/>
recovery room<lb/>
It's a zoo, but it isn't St Else-<lb/>
where.<lb/>
It is ? take a breath ? the<lb/>
Frederick Moir Hanes, M.D Vet-<lb/>
erinary Medical Center at the N.C<lb/>
Zoological Park.<lb/>
Officials at the zoo gave re-<lb/>
porters a preview Tuesday of the<lb/>
new $2 million veterinary center<lb/>
that is the first project to be com-<lb/>
pleted in the zoo's North America<lb/>
expansion.<lb/>
The $30 million, 200-acre<lb/>
expansion, which will double the<lb/>
exhibit area of the zoo, is named<lb/>
for the continent whose animals,<lb/>
MacLai<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ?<lb/>
"Make me look bad Shirley<lb/>
MacLaine told the astonished<lb/>
filmmakers, and they took her at<lb/>
her word.<lb/>
The result can be seen in the<lb/>
new film, "Madame Sousatzka<lb/>
n which has been hailed ? with a<lb/>
few dissents ? as MacLaine's tri-<lb/>
umphant debut as a character<lb/>
actress. Some may argue that she<lb/>
has been a character all her life,<lb/>
but that's neither here nor there.<lb/>
In the John Schlesinger film<lb/>
she plays an aging piano teacher<lb/>
who bullies and browbeats her<lb/>
gifted pupils until they approach<lb/>
greatness: if they leave her too<lb/>
soon, she erases them from her<lb/>
life.<lb/>
The actress plays the role<lb/>
unrelentingly, breathing tire at<lb/>
anyone who opposes her will. She<lb/>
looks several years beyond her<lb/>
own 54.<lb/>
"1 didn't take my makeup<lb/>
off she said. "I just put it in the<lb/>
wrong places<lb/>
When the Sousatzka role was<lb/>
proposed to her, she admitted it<lb/>
gave her pause.<lb/>
"But I decided there are too<lb/>
many wonderful. eccentric parts<lb/>
out there for me to worry about<lb/>
my image. My image never did<lb/>
concern me much She gave a<lb/>
hearty laugh.<lb/>
"I did Soutsatzka because I<lb/>
loved her. I've had so many danc-<lb/>
ing teachers like that the kind of<lb/>
teacher who was so proprietary<lb/>
that if you went to another<lb/>
teacher, she'd just put you out of<lb/>
her life she said.<lb/>
To prepare for "Sousatzka<lb/>
the usually disciplined MacLaine<lb/>
allowed herself to gain 25 pounds.<lb/>
She collected clunky jewelry and<lb/>
aged costumes to fit the role. And<lb/>
she instructed the technicians:<lb/>
'Turn off the key light (which<lb/>
makes actresses look good). Light<lb/>
me from the side. I need all the<lb/>
help I can get to get rid of this<lb/>
gamin look<lb/>
MacLaine profited from that<lb/>
look from the time producer Hal<lb/>
Wallis spotted her on Broadway<lb/>
as Carol Haney's replacement in<lb/>
"Panama Game<lb/>
Although she has played a<lb/>
variety of roles, the Academy<lb/>
seemed to prefer her as a tart,<lb/>
granting nominations for "Some<lb/>
Came Running 'The Apart-<lb/>
ment" and "Irma La Douce Af-<lb/>
ter another nomination in 1977 for<lb/>
"The Turning Point she finally<lb/>
won the big prize for Terms of<lb/>
Endearment" in 1983.<lb/>
Surf<lb/>
and<lb/>
camp<lb/>
Continued frontpage 8<lb/>
by these mammouth boul-<lb/>
. If not timed properly, hikers<lb/>
find themselves sprinting<lb/>
md these boulders to escape<lb/>
i rising tide.<lb/>
Once the tide made it impos-<lb/>
i to hike around one of the out-<lb/>
and we were forced to climb<lb/>
the barnacle encrusted,<lb/>
carpeted boulders an esti-<lb/>
i 50 feet to the top lugging<lb/>
I pound backpacks andsurf-<lb/>
js. Once at me top hikers r<lb/>
safe from the onslaught<lb/>
of<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0011"/><lb/>
??f<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
rday 8 p.m in M n<lb/>
2 Flat"<lb/>
I ' me vcrv rilv in th<lb/>
 <lb/>
ngism<lb/>
The event David describes<lb/>
shocking and startling to say<lb/>
ie very least Parents are urged<lb/>
to send theii g peopk<lb/>
rf the roi re continuing.<lb/>
"He look an economics<lb/>
srtbook and he ripped the<lb/>
ages out. He ripped them oul<lb/>
ind then smeared some kind of<lb/>
ktuffontheoi rw said it was<lb/>
?tehoiyfc odo( . Chung.<lb/>
It smefled like stale dm k sauce,<lb/>
armed ver in n<lb/>
t"<lb/>
"He bumtd the f ages, and<lb/>
Halted screai<lb/>
Kriria<lb/>
ng! O Dark G ddc - of the<lb/>
tightly News' Gift thy humbk<lb/>
poung people with the Powers<lb/>
Media Vengeance! In the<lb/>
?me of Savitch. Rather an.1<lb/>
"hung  T summon thee<lb/>
David remembers little at<lb/>
lerthat He claims that a "mtsrv<lb/>
lorm appeared in the room, and<lb/>
It spoke to us Startled by the<lb/>
irnof events, he fled and railed<lb/>
Jus parents that rught, begging<lb/>
hem for permission to come<lb/>
me.<lb/>
f informed police later that<lb/>
)avid had heard startling ru-<lb/>
xrsof a Chungist church built<lb/>
kear a cemetary in Greenville<lb/>
Pohce searched, but found no<lb/>
Evidence of such a shrine<lb/>
But this is not an isolated<lb/>
base. I have interviewed many<lb/>
Kher young people all over<lb/>
merica. Everywhere, but es-<lb/>
rially in the Bible Belt, our<lb/>
ung people are turning to<lb/>
Thungism. As a form of rebel<lb/>
ion, as a way to meet people or<lb/>
ken to seek revenge on others<lb/>
is shocking problem is not<lb/>
)ing away.<lb/>
This has been Geraldo<lb/>
nehead, wishing you and j<lb/>
Iwr young people a safe, and i<lb/>
i-hung-free life<lb/>
v ? ??<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10.1988 9<lb/>
Zoo has hospital for bears<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
ASHEBORO, N.C. (AP) ? At<lb/>
first it could pass for a people's<lb/>
hospital. Then you see the admit-<lb/>
ting door.<lb/>
It's big enough to handle an<lb/>
ailing grizzly bear ? or three.<lb/>
And it leads to a ward with some<lb/>
creature comforts: a kitchen,<lb/>
stocked with cans of "Zu Preem<lb/>
On Thursday, donors and<lb/>
state officials will be on hand to<lb/>
dedicate the new center and hold<lb/>
an open house for the public.<lb/>
When the doctors and technicians<lb/>
birds, flora and fauna will popu-<lb/>
late it. North America follows<lb/>
Africa as the second continental<lb/>
exhibit at the zoo.<lb/>
The equipment and its sepa-<lb/>
rate facilities for quarantine and set up shop, the center won't be<lb/>
for breeding make the new veteri- open to the public,<lb/>
nary center one of the finest in the N.C. Zoo officials worked<lb/>
nation, said Les Schobert, the with their counterparts in San<lb/>
pnmate food and feline food. A zoo's general curator. The facility Diego, Washington and Balti-<lb/>
SSi1?8 Warm ?? J replaces a temP?rary treatment more to fine-tun?thedesign of the<lb/>
kalhgatorlesssnappy.Orcold, unit that is smaller than the new<lb/>
for a homesick polar bear. X-ray exam room<lb/>
equipment that can capture the 'It's kind of like moving from<lb/>
j .V mchspanofagonlla'schest,or an efficiency apartment into the<lb/>
a small bird s wing. A padded Taj Mahal said Schobert, who<lb/>
recovery room<lb/>
The breeding facility also will<lb/>
be a place of respite for some ani-<lb/>
mals and birds that simply get<lb/>
nettled by all the people watching<lb/>
them ? such as the Victoria<lb/>
Crown pigeon, Morris said.<lb/>
Eventually, the breeding<lb/>
space will enable the zoo to in-<lb/>
crease its involvement in the Spe-<lb/>
cies Survival Program, a national<lb/>
program of captive breeding,<lb/>
from gorillas to other species,<lb/>
Schobert said.<lb/>
Nearby is a special quaran-<lb/>
tine building where most animals<lb/>
will be placed when they arrive at<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION FOR<lb/>
STUDENTS WHO NEED<lb/>
HONEY FOR COLLEGE<lb/>
Every Student is Eligible for Some Type of<lb/>
Financial Aid Regardless of Grades or Parental Income.<lb/>
?W? have a data bank ot over 200,000 llatings of scholarships,<lb/>
fellowships, grants, and loans, representing over $10 billion In private<lb/>
?actor funding.<lb/>
? Many scholarships are given to students based on their acadomic<lb/>
interests, career plans, family heritage and place of residence<lb/>
? There's monay available for students who have boon newspaper car<lb/>
riara, grocery clerks, cheerleaders non smokers  ate<lb/>
? Results GUARANTEED<lb/>
It's a zoo, but it isn't St. Else-<lb/>
where.<lb/>
It is ? take a breath ? the<lb/>
Frederick Moir Hanes, M.D Vet-<lb/>
eri nary Medical Center at the N.C.<lb/>
Zoological Park.<lb/>
Officials at the zoo gave re-<lb/>
porters a preview Tuesday of the<lb/>
new $2 million veterinary center<lb/>
j hat is the first project to be com-<lb/>
pleted in the zoo's North America<lb/>
evpansion.<lb/>
The $30 million, 200-acre<lb/>
expansion, which will double the<lb/>
l vhibit area of the zoo, is named<lb/>
for the continent whose animals,<lb/>
center, which is tailor-made for<lb/>
the mix of animals-that will live at<lb/>
the state-supported zoo, about six<lb/>
miles south of Asheboro.<lb/>
v.v ?v, Under construction for 18Kvv.?, ? ;<lb/>
was sporting a tie decorated with months, the 12,000-square foot the zoo. It has separate spots for<lb/>
white gorillas. hospital features a surgical unit, large, powerful animals such as<lb/>
This, frankly, is our pay- an indoor and outdoor nursery chimps and gorillas, for hoofed<lb/>
back to the animals Schobert for newborns, a veterinary library<lb/>
said, as he stood inside the light- and a necropsy ? or animal au-<lb/>
filled special breeding facility that topsy ? unit,<lb/>
is part of the center. "We've had The 3,400-square foot breed-<lb/>
the animals on exhibit all this ing facility for mammals and<lb/>
CALL<lb/>
ANYTIME<lb/>
For A Free Brochure<lb/>
(800) 346-6401<lb/>
f<lb/>
1<lb/>
rime Now it's time for us to pay<lb/>
the animals back<lb/>
The opening of the center<lb/>
coincides with the arrival of the<lb/>
zoo's new veterinarian, R. Wil-<lb/>
liam Torgerson. Torgerson, 40,<lb/>
was most recently senior veteri-<lb/>
narian at Chicago's Brookfield<lb/>
Zoo.<lb/>
birds will further the zoo's efforts<lb/>
in captive breeding, said Schobert<lb/>
and Ron Morris, the zoo's curator<lb/>
for birds. They're hoping the pri-<lb/>
vacy and the quiet will promote<lb/>
breeding among some of the zoo's<lb/>
shyer inhabitants ? such as the<lb/>
dik-dik and the gerenuk, two<lb/>
African antelopes.<lb/>
animals, such as bison and elk,<lb/>
and for birds, fish and sea ani-<lb/>
mals.<lb/>
The state of North Carolina,<lb/>
through appropriations made by<lb/>
the General Assembly, paid most<lb/>
of the $1.95 million price tag for<lb/>
the center. b<lb/>
MacLaine<lb/>
with role<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Las Vegas and Broadway revues,<lb/>
1ake me look bad Shirley author of best-selling books and<lb/>
 . <lb/>
MacLaine told the astonished<lb/>
filmmakers, and they took her at<lb/>
her word.<lb/>
The result can be seen in the<lb/>
new film, "Madame Sousatzka<lb/>
? which has been hailed ? with a<lb/>
few dissents ? as MacLaine's tri-<lb/>
umphant debut as a character<lb/>
actress. Some may argue that she<lb/>
has been a character all her life,<lb/>
but that's neither here nor there.<lb/>
In the John Schlesinger film<lb/>
she plays an aging piano teacher<lb/>
who bullies and browbeats her<lb/>
gifted pupils until they approach<lb/>
greatness: if they leave her too<lb/>
soon, she erases them from her<lb/>
j life.<lb/>
The actress plays the role<lb/>
 unrelentingly, breathing tire at<lb/>
 anyone who opposes her will. She<lb/>
looks several years beyond her<lb/>
own 54.<lb/>
"I didn't take my makeup<lb/>
off she said. "I just put it in the<lb/>
wrong places<lb/>
When the Sousatzka role was<lb/>
proposed to her, she admitted it<lb/>
gave her pause.<lb/>
"But I decided there are too<lb/>
many wonderful, eccentric parts<lb/>
out there for me to worry about<lb/>
my image. My image never did<lb/>
concern me much She gave a<lb/>
hearty laugh.<lb/>
"I did Soutsatzka because I<lb/>
loved her. I've had so many danc-<lb/>
ing teachers like that the kind of<lb/>
teacher who was so proprietary<lb/>
that if you went to another<lb/>
teacher, she'd just put you out of<lb/>
her life she said.<lb/>
To prepare for "Sousatzka<lb/>
the usually disciplined MacLaine<lb/>
allowed herself to gain 25 pounds.<lb/>
She collected clunky jewelry and<lb/>
aged costumes to fit the role. And<lb/>
she instructed the technicians:<lb/>
Turn off the key light (which<lb/>
makes actresses look good). Light<lb/>
me from the side. I need all the<lb/>
help I can get to get rid of this<lb/>
camin look<lb/>
MacLaine profited from that<lb/>
look from the time producer Hal<lb/>
V allis spotted her on Broadway<lb/>
as Carol Haney's replacement in<lb/>
Tajama Game<lb/>
Although she has played a<lb/>
variety of roles, the Academy<lb/>
seemed to prefer her as a tart,<lb/>
granting nominations for "Some<lb/>
Came Running "The Apart-<lb/>
ment" and "Irma La Douce Af-<lb/>
 ter another nomination in 1977for<lb/>
The Turning Point she finally<lb/>
won the big prize for "Terms of<lb/>
Endearment" in 1983.<lb/>
Surf<lb/>
and<lb/>
camp<lb/>
Continued frompage 8<lb/>
a ted by these mammouth boul-<lb/>
ders. If not timed properly, hikers<lb/>
will find themselves sprinting<lb/>
around these boulders to escape<lb/>
the rising tide.<lb/>
Once the tide made ?t impos-<lb/>
sible to hike around one of the out-<lb/>
crops and we were forced to climb<lb/>
one of the barnacle encrusted,<lb/>
moss carpeted boulders an esti-<lb/>
mated 50 feet to the top lugging<lb/>
30-40 pound backpacks arefsurt-<lb/>
boards. Once at the top hikers are<lb/>
not safe from the onslaught of<lb/>
waves.<lb/>
ru of soul-seekers. She is per-<lb/>
ectly willing to spoof her own<lb/>
claims of reincarnation ? but on<lb/>
her own terms.<lb/>
Asked about her life today,<lb/>
she responded with a giggle:<lb/>
"Where am I? Who am I? Maybe<lb/>
I'll be Sousatzka for a year.<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
11.t.i Shiit?iiiC I Ir 7'? OOmn<lb/>
Ends Thursday<lb/>
FEDS<lb/>
Now Showing<lb/>
GORILLAS IN THE<lb/>
MIST<lb/>
CHILD'S PLAY<lb/>
Starting Friday<lb/>
NOW SHOWING AT<lb/>
HENDRIX<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 10<lb/>
thru Sunday Nov. 13<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Get ready to join America's number<lb/>
one naem 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/>
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sure car repairs are done<lb/>
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Here s how the Life-<lb/>
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Across from U.B.E<lb/>
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November &amp;December Entertainn<lb/>
Fri Nov.4Valence<lb/>
Sat Nov.5Channel Cats<lb/>
?Thur Nov.10The Bond<lb/>
Fri Nov.1 1The Boomers<lb/>
Sat Nov.12Rve Guys Named Moe<lb/>
Fri Nov.18Liquid Sound<lb/>
Sat Nov.19Roily Gray &amp; Sunfire<lb/>
Closed for Thanksgiving November 24-27<lb/>
Thur<lb/>
Dec.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Sat<lb/>
Swamp Gypsies Folk Celtic &amp;<lb/>
Improv (9 pm-11 pm)<lb/>
Knockedout Loaded<lb/>
High Water Blues Band<lb/>
The Lemon Sisters &amp; The<lb/>
Rutabaga Brothers<lb/>
The Patterson (R&amp;RRfcB)<lb/>
dosed for Christmas December 24 - January 3,1989<lb/>
?VOID when band is scheduled<lb/>
FriDec.2<lb/>
SatDec.3<lb/>
FriDec.9<lb/>
Dec.<lb/>
10<lb/>
Entertainment This Weekend<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 10 The Bond<lb/>
Fri Nov. 1 1 The Boomers<lb/>
Sat Nov. 12 Rve Guys Named Moe<lb/>
Haura Men Jk Tuts. 11-10 p.m.<lb/>
Wtd. 11 1 ? m.<lb/>
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Fit 11 - 1 ajn. Sat. 12 p m. - 1 ajn.<lb/>
START SLIMMINi<lb/>
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UR BANK ACCOl<lb/>
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Our newly remodeled<lb/>
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A complete health<lb/>
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The Spa has trained<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058108_0012"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10,1988<lb/>
The Clearly Labeled<lb/>
??ft (S?ff?llfiEiil?tfm<lb/>
aftfiff? IPas<lb/>
Quote of this week's epi-<lb/>
sode of -Batmen" ? "ton<lb/>
greedy bone In my body<lb/>
eries ooVHnssah, ??"<lb/>
?ah<lb/>
? The Rlddler<lb/>
In with 'Mr. Fall' are the layered look,Bush<lb/>
 i?inrtainint and verv<lb/>
rr<lb/>
Dear Earl,<lb/>
Why did Bush win?<lb/>
Signed, Foli Sci Major<lb/>
Dear Polly,<lb/>
1 don't mean to sound chau-<lb/>
vinistic, but the election came<lb/>
down to advertising and the male<lb/>
vote. What do most guys do dur-<lb/>
ing the weekend?<lb/>
They lounge, watch ball and<lb/>
watch beer comrnericials. And<lb/>
while Busch isn't spelled like<lb/>
Bush, it sounds the same, so guys<lb/>
got this image that hey, George<lb/>
likes to lounge around on Satur-<lb/>
days and let Barbara bring him<lb/>
beers.<lb/>
The word bush has histori-<lb/>
cally always been on men's<lb/>
minds. Whether it's doing yard<lb/>
work or going downtown, guys<lb/>
have always thought about bush,<lb/>
Busch and Bush.<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
Dear Big E,<lb/>
I tried to register today for<lb/>
next semester and they wouldn't<lb/>
let me get my courses because 1<lb/>
owned $60 in parking tickets.<lb/>
What gives E? What is the deal?<lb/>
Signed, Moneyless and Class-<lb/>
less<lb/>
Eear Classy,<lb/>
What gives? Your wallet.<lb/>
What is the deal? Did somebody<lb/>
say deal?<lb/>
Friendless<lb/>
Dear Bill,<lb/>
Nobody likes me. In grade<lb/>
school, kids use to spit at me. Now<lb/>
I'm in college and people play<lb/>
pranks on me all the time. One<lb/>
morning 1 had a physics exam and<lb/>
some penny locked me in. They<lb/>
always steal my towel when I take<lb/>
a shower, causing embarassment<lb/>
when I have to run down the<lb/>
dorm hall nude only to find my<lb/>
room locked.<lb/>
Bill, 1 eat all by myself in the<lb/>
cafeteria and talk to the licnaise<lb/>
potatoes.<lb/>
Unsigned<lb/>
Dear Lienaise,<lb/>
My name ain't Bill. Having a<lb/>
little pity party aren't we? 'No-<lb/>
Signed, Rawl de LaVonganza<lb/>
ECU Alumni, 1987<lb/>
(Editor's Note: This is a real<lb/>
letter. The writer, who says his<lb/>
name is Rawl but is really Ralph,<lb/>
even had the nerve to write his<lb/>
own advice. Come on Ralph. All<lb/>
right here is his advice to himself)<lb/>
Dear Rawl,<lb/>
You ignorant (censored,<lb/>
come on Ralph, we can't print<lb/>
that). The layered look is an an<lb/>
Very entertaining and very<lb/>
insightful. So why does everyone<lb/>
pick on fat girls these days, any-<lb/>
way? Come on people, can't<lb/>
someone pick on the neo-hippies<lb/>
for just once.<lb/>
Neo-hippies are those guys<lb/>
who wear tye-dyes and go un-<lb/>
bathed to protest the status quo.<lb/>
Visually and odorously, they<lb/>
achieve their objective of being<lb/>
different. They wish the 8(ys were<lb/>
the 6Crs and for the return of radi-<lb/>
cal causes. Most neo-hippies say<lb/>
body likes me Boo Roo, I'm<lb/>
crying for you. Maybe I'mbeing a<lb/>
little hard on you, Beav, I'm sorry.<lb/>
What the hey, I'll be your friend. v<lb/>
Maybe we can guzzle some nual ritual performed by heavy t wigh jrd Nixon were<lb/>
Jonestown Pepsi together and talk girls around the world. They are presicjent they could ha ve<lb/>
on our walkee-talkee. Hey, celebrating the end of Mr. Sum- 4U;??fav??<lb/>
maybe we can collect pine cones<lb/>
together. For starters, could you<lb/>
lend me $500 so I can pay my<lb/>
bookie?<lb/>
Layered Look<lb/>
Dear Big E,<lb/>
mer (aka the season of bikini and<lb/>
skimpy clothing).<lb/>
It is not uncommon for fat<lb/>
girls to go entirely without sex<lb/>
during Mr. Spring and Mr. Sum-<lb/>
mer. However, with the arrival of<lb/>
Mr. Fall and Mr. Winter, heavy<lb/>
girls can cover (hide) their fat with<lb/>
As I was walking down the baggy clothing. (My editor says<lb/>
street, I heard two large (rather we can't print the rest of Ralph's<lb/>
heavy) girls saying "Mr. Fall has advice, all except "whence dis-<lb/>
arrived. The layered look, the lay- robing, he sees a warthog")<lb/>
ered look, yeah What do you<lb/>
think this means? Dear Ralph,<lb/>
something to riot about.<lb/>
Gee-whiz, come on Ralph,<lb/>
come on people, the fat girl jokes<lb/>
are no longer chic. Why not harp<lb/>
on people who drive Chevettes or<lb/>
friends who constantly bum<lb/>
money or people who frequent<lb/>
buffetswhich of course brings<lb/>
us back to fat girls. (Ralph 1, Earl<lb/>
0)<lb/>
E"<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
Greenville, N.C 27834<lb/>
Student depossesses spirit-filled Ouija Boards<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C (BP) ?<lb/>
A rash of possessed Ouija Boards<lb/>
in the Emerald City has prompted<lb/>
an ECU occult major to go into the<lb/>
ghostbusting business.<lb/>
Thuibton Eames, or "Bippy"<lb/>
as "friends and other dead folk<lb/>
call me he said, started Give Up<lb/>
the Ghost Inc. after several friends<lb/>
asked him to exorcise their Ouija<lb/>
boards.<lb/>
"I was eating lunch one day<lb/>
and this girl in my Intermediate<lb/>
Demonology class told me her<lb/>
board had been bleeding every<lb/>
time she used it Eames said. "1<lb/>
told her I'd take a look at it, and<lb/>
that's how it all started<lb/>
According to Eames, the board<lb/>
was possessed by the soul of an<lb/>
irate mother of two, hit over the<lb/>
head by the board and killed.<lb/>
"During a seance, she told us that<lb/>
a clerk at the toy store biffed her<lb/>
upside the head while she was<lb/>
trying to shoplift a Cabbage Patch<lb/>
doll a couple of years ago<lb/>
"I reasoned with her. I told<lb/>
her I'd find the clerk's address if<lb/>
she'd get out of the board. She did,<lb/>
and my friend didn't have any<lb/>
trouble after that he added.<lb/>
And the clerk? "Man, ghosts<lb/>
are really dumb. You can tell them<lb/>
anything. I didn't even pick up the<lb/>
phone book to look for the guy.<lb/>
How am I supposed to find some<lb/>
guy that worked at a toy store<lb/>
back in 84?" Eames asked.<lb/>
Despite this unusual method<lb/>
of putting the dead to rest, Eames'<lb/>
reputation grew. More and more<lb/>
local ci tizens began requesting his<lb/>
services. Eventually, he quit<lb/>
school, hired long-time friend II-<lb/>
lyana Blomquist as his assistant<lb/>
and opened up Give Up The Ghost.<lb/>
located on 1313 13th Street,<lb/>
the business takes on almost any<lb/>
request of the supernatural na-<lb/>
ture. As he lights up a Marlboro<lb/>
light, Eames recalls one of his<lb/>
weirdest cases.<lb/>
"We got a call from this old<lb/>
lady. Said she had quails in her<lb/>
shower. I told her it was a job for<lb/>
the SPCA, but she told me it was<lb/>
an very scary quail he said.<lb/>
"Well, we got there and sure<lb/>
enough, Vice President-elect<lb/>
Quayle's astral body was floating<lb/>
around her bathroom, watching<lb/>
her take showers. The trick was to<lb/>
get rid of the ghost, without harm-<lb/>
How did he get around that<lb/>
little problem? "I used .44 Moore-<lb/>
Bissette spectral magnum on it. It<lb/>
may have had some physical re-<lb/>
percussions on his brain over the<lb/>
next four years. We'll just have to<lb/>
see he added with a chuckle.<lb/>
Even dumber than most earth<lb/>
art smacks of Svlvia Plath.<lb/>
Jody, Buffy and Mr. French return<lb/>
Surprise party held<lb/>
EMERALD CITY, N.C. (EP)<lb/>
? Two renters of an area house<lb/>
had a small surprise when they<lb/>
came home Saturday night. Three<lb/>
hundred people were partying in<lb/>
their homestead.<lb/>
"I couldn't believe it. I came<lb/>
back from downtown and there<lb/>
were people drinking beer on my<lb/>
roof David Sanderson said.<lb/>
Sanderson said his stereo was<lb/>
on full blast as people danced on<lb/>
his bed while eating his fried<lb/>
chicken. Several individuals were<lb/>
said to be passed out in the<lb/>
house's shower with the water<lb/>
running. Other partiers urinated<lb/>
on the carpet, according to police<lb/>
reports.<lb/>
"I don't care if they wrecked<lb/>
the place, but man they didn't<lb/>
have to go and eat our chicken<lb/>
tendant Rob Phipps said.<lb/>
Police estimate the damage to<lb/>
be $150 for the cost of cleaning the<lb/>
carpets and replacing the internal<lb/>
components to two comodes.<lb/>
"Why did they have to steal<lb/>
the insides of our Johns? I mean<lb/>
they took the ball, the lever, the<lb/>
chain, the stopper, everything.<lb/>
Only someone cruel will do that to<lb/>
a man Sanderson said in rage.<lb/>
Sanderson and Phipps said<lb/>
they would have called the cops<lb/>
earlier, but one of the partiers had<lb/>
thrown the phone in the trees.<lb/>
"These guys had no mercy<lb/>
Phipps said in disgust.<lb/>
After police broke up the<lb/>
party, the cops issued a $50 fine to<lb/>
Sanderson and Phipps for hold-<lb/>
ing a disruptive meeting. Irate,<lb/>
the two ECU students had only<lb/>
obscene words to say in reference<lb/>
to the police.<lb/>
Finally at 4:30 a.m the room-<lb/>
mates were able to sleep.<lb/>
"Right when I hit the sack,<lb/>
some dimwit came pounding on<lb/>
my bedroom window. He wanted<lb/>
to know where the party was. Out<lb/>
of the graciousness of my heart, I<lb/>
threw him a cold Busch and told<lb/>
him to go the hell home Sander-<lb/>
son said.<lb/>
HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (BP) ?<lb/>
With the success of the revived<lb/>
"Munsters" syndicated television<lb/>
show, other popular black and<lb/>
white reruns are getting a second<lb/>
shot at life.<lb/>
"The New Munsters which<lb/>
features all new actors in the roles<lb/>
of Herman, Lily, Eddie and<lb/>
Grandpa Munster, supplies the<lb/>
plot device that the family fell<lb/>
asleep 20 years ago, and is woken<lb/>
up in the 80s to "laugh and charn<lb/>
their way through more modem<lb/>
misadventures as the press re-<lb/>
lease said.<lb/>
The high ratings the show<lb/>
received on its premiere last week<lb/>
has prompted studio heads to<lb/>
scavenge their vaults in hopes of<lb/>
finding some more oldies but sel-<lb/>
laWes. High on the list of most<lb/>
probable shows are:<lb/>
"The New I Love Lucy"?<lb/>
Already in pre-production, this<lb/>
color version will have Ricky,<lb/>
I ucv, Fred and Ethel step through<lb/>
a time warp and end up in 1989.<lb/>
The laughs will flow as they try to<lb/>
cope with technology, MTV and<lb/>
the loss of Li'l Ricky, who<lb/>
swept up into limbo during their<lb/>
trip.<lb/>
"The All New My Three Sons"<lb/>
? Chip, Emie,Robbie, Uncle<lb/>
Charlie and the son nobody ever<lb/>
remembers, return after twenty<lb/>
years of space flight. Seems they<lb/>
were picked to be the first average<lb/>
family to voyage at faster than<lb/>
light speeds. Playing Ernie will be<lb/>
Axl Rose with a haircut.<lb/>
"Return of Family Affair" ?<lb/>
Jody, Dad and Mrs. Beasley re-<lb/>
turn for more tender humor. Out<lb/>
of reverence for the dead actors<lb/>
who poitaayed Buffy and Mr.<lb/>
French (explained as dying when<lb/>
thawed out too quickly when their<lb/>
cryogenic capsules opened), their<lb/>
parts will not be recast.<lb/>
"The New OLDER Patty Duke<lb/>
Show" - An aging Patty again<lb/>
plays those lovable twin cousins<lb/>
with a new and exciting twist <lb/>
they're both married and their<lb/>
husbands can't tell them apart!<lb/>
It's way out, wacky and kinky<lb/>
humor for the whole family.<lb/>
Redskins lose spread on purpose<lb/>
WASHINGTON D.C (EP) ?<lb/>
For the seventh time in nine<lb/>
games the Washington Redskins<lb/>
have again failed to beat the bet-<lb/>
ting spread. Some gamblers say<lb/>
the Redskin front office is doing it<lb/>
on purpose.<lb/>
In the dwindling moments of<lb/>
Sunday's game between Wash-<lb/>
ington and the New Orleans<lb/>
Saints in RFK stadium, Washing-<lb/>
ton had the ball on the 10 yard-<lb/>
line, first and goal. After three<lb/>
consecutive running plays, the<lb/>
"They could of<lb/>
scored a touchdown<lb/>
Skins offense had to settle for a<lb/>
game winning field goal.<lb/>
"That's just great, but geez<lb/>
they could of scored a touchdown<lb/>
and beat the four-point and beat the four point line, but no cently purchased BMW.<lb/>
Some of the ?<lb/>
line, but no they had to<lb/>
kick a field goal and<lb/>
make me lose the family<lb/>
ranch'<lb/>
was<lb/>
they had to kicka field goal and . " or ine cntcism<lb/>
make me lose the family ranch Plaf on e shoulders of Full-<lb/>
loesph L. Oser said. Oser had t?ck Timmy Smith, who carried<lb/>
$30,000 bet on Washington. th ?" tw,ce Pn?r to the field<lb/>
"This ain't the first time they g01 klck<lb/>
done it. They did it up in Green- "Hey man, I got hit. When I<lb/>
bay, they done it seven times this g h,t fal1 down-l ain' tr?g to<lb/>
JoeSph L. User, season. Something is fishy. Some-<lb/>
Disgruntled gambler x k? thHe make if y?u ?<lb/>
me Oser said.<lb/>
Bizarro pomes<lb/>
Jimmy Olsen am dumb.<lb/>
Even dumber than most earth<lb/>
peeples.<lb/>
But me like him as Porcupine<lb/>
boy.<lb/>
That am better super power than<lb/>
Bizarro Freeze Vision.<lb/>
Maybe Jimmy Olsen is really<lb/>
Sylvia Plath.<lb/>
Me never know for sure.<lb/>
Am me through yet?<lb/>
? Bizarrol<lb/>
Wow! Me<lb/>
am poet!<lb/>
Me am Bizarro.<lb/>
number one.<lb/>
Me write pome. It not rime<lb/>
like stoopid Earth peeples<lb/>
pomes.<lb/>
Me pome not full of adjejectives<lb/>
Me think them am stoopid.<lb/>
Just like earth peeples.<lb/>
Me can express self fine<lb/>
with pronouns.<lb/>
Me. you. dog named blue.<lb/>
Uh-oh.<lb/>
me rhyme like earth peeple.<lb/>
Me kill self now.<lb/>
Hello.<lb/>
Hello.<lb/>
Uh-oh. Killing Bizarro self for<lb/>
art smacks of Sylvia Plath.<lb/>
Better come back to life now.<lb/>
Good-Bye.<lb/>
Good-Bye.<lb/>
-Bizarro 1<lb/>
Three suffer from lack of grilled cheese<lb/>
1<lb/>
No one asked for Mr. Oser's<lb/>
opinion. Hey, we won the game<lb/>
didn't we? Head Coach Joe<lb/>
Gibbs said as he started his re-<lb/>
fix no game Smith said. "You<lb/>
like my new chains? Smith said<lb/>
showing off a multitude of<lb/>
shi ny, 24 carrot necklaces.<lb/>
OSSIPEE, N.C. (EP) ? At<lb/>
least three people have become<lb/>
sick in this small rural community<lb/>
from the lack of grilled cheese<lb/>
sandwiches. Residents say the<lb/>
epidemic started after Lee's Mart,<lb/>
the primary sandwich supplier of<lb/>
Ossipee, was officially closed<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Lee E. Lee, the owner of Lee's<lb/>
Mart (also called the Altamahaw<lb/>
Mall), filed for bankruptcy Mon-<lb/>
day after a history of credit prob-<lb/>
lems. Affectionately known as<lb/>
Tee to the second power or 'Lee<lb/>
squared' by patrons, Lee had to<lb/>
fight back the tears when discuss-<lb/>
ing the closing of his business.<lb/>
"I started this place back in<lb/>
1951 as a grill and on November<lb/>
10,1951, exactly 37 years ago to-<lb/>
day, I sold my first grilled cheese<lb/>
sandwich Lee said before<lb/>
breaking down in sorrow.<lb/>
Disgruntled customers of<lb/>
Lee's protested the store's closure<lb/>
Tuesday by carrying signs and<lb/>
chatting "Bring Back Lee's" in the<lb/>
gravel lot in front of the store. One<lb/>
sign was reported to have said "I<lb/>
want a Lee's grilled cheese<lb/>
One protester took time out to<lb/>
talk with EP. "First it was them<lb/>
revenuers coming down from<lb/>
Raleigh on us Ossipee people, but<lb/>
now it's the communist bankers<lb/>
"Hey, think about this, you<lb/>
city people, where am I going to<lb/>
buy a quality grilled cheese sand-<lb/>
wich now that Lee's is closed<lb/>
down? Resident Scott Walker<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Although Lee sold more than<lb/>
greasy sandwiches from his store<lb/>
(at one time Lee offered quality<lb/>
clothing, three for a dollar and<lb/>
attractive lawn ornaments), most<lb/>
customers say they will miss the<lb/>
grill the most.<lb/>
Lee wouldn't release his fa-<lb/>
mous method for preparing his<lb/>
grill, but would say "I used an pig<lb/>
organ for grease<lb/>
Still Walker isn't happy with<lb/>
the closing. "My wife Carole has<lb/>
developed a dependency on them<lb/>
grilled cheese sandwiches. My<lb/>
kids are addicts too. I tried to<lb/>
make some sandwiches myself to<lb/>
stop their trembling, but they<lb/>
went into convulsions and said<lb/>
"Daddy, it ain't a Lee's grilled<lb/>
cheese<lb/>
While doctors at nearby Ala-<lb/>
mance County Hospi rial work on<lb/>
a serum to help the Walker clan,<lb/>
vigilante Jim Walton plans to reo-<lb/>
pen Lee's Mart whether the au-<lb/>
thorities like it or not.<lb/>
"If we don't open Lee's,<lb/>
Ossipee's youth will resort to<lb/>
crime and misbehavin The Alta-<lb/>
mahaw Mall is more than just a<lb/>
little rural store, it's a way of life<lb/>
for these here people Walton<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Temperatures in Florida<lb/>
not on Emeralites' minds<lb/>
GREENVILLE (EP) ? Do<lb/>
people in Greenville really care<lb/>
how warm it is in Florida? Ac-<lb/>
cording to a recent poll conducted<lb/>
by EP, Greenvillians don't give a<lb/>
flying damn about the heat of<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
A reported 96 percent of those<lb/>
polled said they were more con-<lb/>
cerned about Dan Quayle's hair-<lb/>
spray than the climate in the or-<lb/>
ange juice state. Another one per-<lb/>
cent of the people said they had<lb/>
never heard of Florida.<lb/>
1 thought it was part of<lb/>
Cuba was one of the responses<lb/>
to the polled question. 'There are<lb/>
just a whole lot of other things to<lb/>
be concerned about I don't really<lb/>
care how hot it gets in Florida,<lb/>
said another Emerald City native.<lb/>
EP conducted the poll after<lb/>
receiving a letter from Ex<lb/>
Greenvillian Pat Mollory who<lb/>
said it was 89 degrees in Key<lb/>
West. One polle commented<lb/>
"Who the hell does this Mollory<lb/>
guy think he is, anyway?"<lb/>
Instead of thinking of the<lb/>
Florida weather, citizens of the<lb/>
Green City think more about:<lb/>
?Who is going to be the next<lb/>
ECU head football coach, 41 per-<lb/>
cent :<lb/>
The sorry state of ECU'i<lb/>
campus roads, 22 percent<lb/>
The endless lines at the beef<lb/>
stores, 20 percent I<lb/>
J<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
;?;<lb/>
I<lb/>
h ? ?<lb/>
fi9RC -? '   .<lb/>
 1. t .<lb/>
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(<lb/>
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Undercover Cats<lb/>
FLA'<lb/>
Old BOY WCAj<lb/>
AUM HAS DCS-<lb/>
.YOUR R?SCU?RS'<lb/>
BREAK. HUH ?<lb/>
NO? THEN 06ScRv<lb/>
JH? V6WS<lb/>
Inside joke<lb/>
u<lb/>
f?j fyEt&amp;iT'&amp;'py<lb/>
?1 tU.<lb/>
JL<lb/>
ustf<lb/>
Hex Bic Head!<lb/>
ro&amp;iE THEKBi A<lb/>
To m'S M)<lb/>
own 5iriRE<lb/>
Cub Reporte<lb/>
Answer these questions to<lb/>
Olsen trivia knowledge!<lb/>
1. Jimmy was sometimes ki<lb/>
What was his identity?<lb/>
2. Who was the girl Jimnv<lb/>
got brushed off by? (Hint-I<lb/>
3. Jimmy had a signal wat<lb/>
summon his pal Supermai<lb/>
sound it made.<lb/>
4. Besides being "Superm<lb/>
another nickname. What<lb/>
5. Who were the youths<lb/>
and occasionally helped hi<lb/>
(Not the Jimmy Olsen Fanj<lb/>
6. Easy- What colors were<lb/>
bow tie?<lb/>
7. Difficult- Before he wa?<lb/>
was Jimmy's job at the D?<lb/>
8, What did Jimmy alwa?<lb/>
that got the old editor so<lb/>
,9. Name the homosexual<lb/>
i-Jimmy in the Superman mi<lb/>
10. How did Jimmy die in<lb/>
line before John Byrne du<lb/>
I Superman continuity?<lb/>
paoi SuiiquSn q pan<lb/>
put 11913-9 uoiSaiXoqi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0013"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
v<lb/>
t<lb/>
US<lb/>
y<lb/>
entertaining and verv<lb/>
ll So why does everyone<lb/>
at girls these days, any-<lb/>
one on people, can't<lb/>
pick on the neo-hippies<lb/>
hice.<lb/>
-hippies are those guys<lb/>
lar rye-dyes and go un-<lb/>
li protest the status quo.<lb/>
 and odorously, thev<lb/>
their objective of being<lb/>
t They wish the 8(ys were<lb/>
ind for the return of radi<lb/>
j?s. Most neo-hippies say<lb/>
Ish Richard Nixon were<lb/>
ident so they could have<lb/>
rc. to riot about,<lb/>
-whiz, come on Ralph,<lb/>
i people, the fat girl jokes<lb/>
jnger chic Why not harp<lb/>
le who drive Chevettes or<lb/>
who constantly bum<lb/>
li r people who frequent<lb/>
.which of course brings<lb/>
to fat girls. (Ralph 1, Earl<lb/>
itions Building<lb/>
?lie. N.C 27834<lb/>
)ards<lb/>
did he get around that<lb/>
Jblem? 1 used 44 Moore<lb/>
xvtr.il magnum on it. It<lb/>
n had some physical re-<lb/>
Ions on his brain over the<lb/>
r years. We'll just have to<lb/>
ladded with a chuckle<lb/>
dumber than most earth<lb/>
:ksof Svlia Plath.<lb/>
turn<lb/>
incc for the dead actors<lb/>
rtayed Buff) and Mr.<lb/>
(explained as dying when<lb/>
out too quickly when their<lb/>
uc capsules opened), their<lb/>
li il not be recast<lb/>
Le New OLDER Patty Duke<lb/>
 - An aging Patty' again<lb/>
lose lovable twin cousins<lb/>
It ew and exciting twist <lb/>
both married and their<lb/>
Ids can't tell them apart'<lb/>
ly out, wackv and lanky<lb/>
for the whole family.<lb/>
ose<lb/>
Mo one asked for Mr. Oser's<lb/>
p. Hey, we won the game<lb/>
we? Head Coach Joe<lb/>
said as he started his re-<lb/>
purchased BMW.<lb/>
me of the critcism was<lb/>
on the shoulders of Full-<lb/>
immy Smith, who carried<lb/>
ill twice prior to the field<lb/>
lick.<lb/>
ley man, I got hit. When I<lb/>
1 fall down. I ain't trying to<lb/>
game Smith said. "You<lb/>
ly new chains? Smith said<lb/>
jng off a multitude of<lb/>
24 carrot necklaces.<lb/>
cheese<lb/>
and misbehavinThe Alta-<lb/>
w Mall is more than just a<lb/>
(rural store, it's a way of life<lb/>
Kse here people Walton<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
les' minds<lb/>
wther Emerald City native.<lb/>
conducted the poll after<lb/>
ring a letter from Ex-<lb/>
kvillian Pat Mollory who<lb/>
it was 89 degrees in Key<lb/>
One polle commented<lb/>
the hell does this Mollory<lb/>
link he is, anyway?"<lb/>
istead of thinking of the<lb/>
a weather, citizens of the<lb/>
City think more about:<lb/>
fho is going to be the next<lb/>
?ad football coach, 41 per-<lb/>
sorry state of ECU's<lb/>
is roads, 22 percent<lb/>
? endless lines at the beer<lb/>
20 percent<lb/>
Undercover Cats<lb/>
By Parker The Avatar<lb/>
By Harris and Haselrig<lb/>
Big Head!m<lb/>
OH Ml<lb/>
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"QOHAFIEt'<lb/>
Cjac ibENcE<lb/>
Cub Reporters Quiz<lb/>
r It's better than Clint Howard Day!<lb/>
- It's more important than Groundhog Day!<lb/>
Look  in Fun and Games, it's Superman's Pal<lb/>
Answer these questions to test YOUR<lb/>
Olsen trivia knowledge!<lb/>
1. Jimmy was sometimes known as a superhero.<lb/>
What was his identity?<lb/>
2. Who was the girl Jimmy loved but always<lb/>
got brushed off by? (Hint- If s Lois Lane's sister<lb/>
3. Jimmy had a signal watch that he could<lb/>
summon his pal Superman with. Describe the<lb/>
sound it made.<lb/>
4. Besides being "Superman's Pal Jimmy had<lb/>
another nickname. What was it?<lb/>
5. Who were the youths that admired Olsen<lb/>
and occasionally helped him out of jams?<lb/>
(Not the Jimmy Olsen Fan Club.)<lb/>
6. Easy- What colors were Jimmy's jacket and<lb/>
bow tie?<lb/>
7. Difficult- Before he was a cub reporter, what<lb/>
was Jimmy's job at the Daily Planet?<lb/>
8. What did Jimmy always call Perry White<lb/>
that got the old editor so steamed?<lb/>
19. Name the homosexual actor who portrayed<lb/>
Jimmy in the Superman movies.<lb/>
10. How did Jimmy die in the Alan Moore story-<lb/>
line before John Byrne changed (destroyed) the<lb/>
Superman continuity?<lb/>
a From "The Ki.<lb/>
 iBi<lb/>
No, Jimmy isn't being conceited, he really did g ,yot MEAH 1 AH characters copyright DC Comics. Word,<lb/>
have fans all over; the world, outer space, i ive got fans<lb/>
Dimension-X, the bottled city of Kandor, and<lb/>
even Atlantis! The Jimmy Olsen Fan Club<lb/>
often stepped in to control his life.<lb/>
Kid With the Golden Touch"<lb/>
Day!<lb/>
From "Jimmy Olsen, Freak!<lb/>
Jimmy often got the cold shoulder<lb/>
from Lucy<lb/>
But sometimes the shoe was on the<lb/>
other foot!<lb/>
Like many of us, Jimmy<lb/>
got depressed and lost<lb/>
interest in living. Though<lb/>
Superman wasn't around,<lb/>
he was saved by Lori<lb/>
Lemaris, the mermaid!<lb/>
From "Jimmy Olsen,<lb/>
Wolf-Man<lb/>
pjoi 9uiuir9ii Xq painaoipaia s?m h 01 wnQajM n?W 6 WHD '9 JUfcalllfffg pa<lb/>
jpue uaajo 9 uoiSaq XoqsMafuupj<lb/>
During his misadventures, Jimmy met up<lb/>
with lots of beautiful famous starlets!<lb/>
From "Jimmy<lb/>
the Soda-Jerk'<lb/>
Jimmy's pal Superman would often<lb/>
take time out from his busy world-<lb/>
saving schedule to hang out at<lb/>
drugstores and have a good laugh at<lb/>
young Olsen's misfortunes!<lb/>
Fun and Games by Jeff Parker,<lb/>
Beppo the Supennonkey's Pal<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0014"/><lb/>
?:<lb/>
THE HAST CAROi INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10, 1988 'age 1 2<lb/>
7 am the key to my success<lb/>
Fullback meets challenge<lb/>
The Temple front line is flattened by the Pirate offensive line as Tim James scrambles for<lb/>
extra yardage (Photo by Neil Johnson).<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
Tim James, East Carolina's<lb/>
senior fullback, has never been<lb/>
one to back away from a chal-<lb/>
lenge. He meets each defender<lb/>
with the same grunt, the same<lb/>
intensity, the same desire. The<lb/>
rewards, especially this year,<lb/>
have been small. The Tirates are 1 -<lb/>
8 but James is having a banner<lb/>
season as the ECU fullback.<lb/>
"I am the key to my success<lb/>
said James. "No one can do the<lb/>
work for me. My coaches may be<lb/>
very helpful in one aspect of my<lb/>
career, but it's me that has to con-<lb/>
tinue to work hard and stay in<lb/>
shape. That has allowed me to<lb/>
rush for 1,000 yards in my career<lb/>
James hit the 1,000 yard pla-<lb/>
teau against Miami, rushing for 74<lb/>
vardson 17 carries. For his career.<lb/>
yards per game.<lb/>
James came to East Carolina<lb/>
after a stellar career at Hartsville<lb/>
High School. A four-year letter-<lb/>
man, he rushed for 1,570 yards as<lb/>
a senior and was named to the<lb/>
South Carolina Shrine Bowl team.<lb/>
Having a great high school, or<lb/>
college career, was just a dream in<lb/>
1980, when James was a freshman<lb/>
at Hartsville.<lb/>
It was then that, while wres-<lb/>
tling in P.E. class, he seriously<lb/>
injured the fourth and fifth verte-<lb/>
"No one can do the work<lb/>
for me  Tim James<lb/>
by the Tampa Bay Buccanneers<lb/>
last year. Simpson, who goes<lb/>
down as one of the best fullbacks<lb/>
in ECU history has nothing on<lb/>
James, said ECU fullback coach<lb/>
Jeff Fela of James.<lb/>
"Tim has great football<lb/>
sense adds Fela. "He is strong<lb/>
enough to run over you and quick<lb/>
enough to get arou nd you. He also<lb/>
has soft hands that make him an<lb/>
outstanding receiver<lb/>
James and Simpson are also<lb/>
compared equally by many oth-<lb/>
ers, but James feels that he'll sur-<lb/>
pass Simpson because of his ver-<lb/>
satility.<lb/>
"We are two very different<lb/>
types of runners said James.<lb/>
"Although we both are very-<lb/>
strong and able to get the yards<lb/>
when thev count, I am versatile<lb/>
brae in his back. The injury was so<lb/>
serious that his doctor made a<lb/>
diagnosis that James would not be<lb/>
able to play football again. Weigh- and capable of plaving the outside<lb/>
ing 185 at the time, James got a and finding the openings as well<lb/>
second opinion at the Duke Medi- as the inside. Anthony was more<lb/>
he has 1,065 yards on 227 carries, cal Center. After surgery and one an 'up-the-middle' type of runner<lb/>
a 4.7 yard per carry average. For<lb/>
the season, the Hartsville, S.C<lb/>
native, has rushed for 536 yards<lb/>
on 115 carries, a 4.7 yard per carry<lb/>
average. Against the five Top-20<lb/>
schools on the ECU schedule this<lb/>
year, James has rushed for 72.6<lb/>
ready to play<lb/>
year off, he was<lb/>
football again.<lb/>
After a successful high school<lb/>
career, James came to East Caro-<lb/>
lina. He plaved for three years<lb/>
behind standout fullback An-<lb/>
thony Simpson, who was dratted<lb/>
who never saw much action any-<lb/>
where but the inside<lb/>
Being prepared when oppor-<lb/>
tunity knocks is what James is<lb/>
striving for when the season ends.<lb/>
And, with his work ethic, he<lb/>
should have no problem.<lb/>
Jones measures up to tough<lb/>
'88 Pirate Football schedule<lb/>
Tim lames outruns the Hurricane defense for an East Carolina first down. James hit the 1,000<lb/>
yard rushing mark after rushing for 74 yards on 17 carries against Miami.<lb/>
Dream match-ups for NBC<lb/>
IAP ? - Picture this scenario:<lb/>
On Nov. 26, No. 1 Notre<lb/>
Dame beats No. 2 Southern Cal<lb/>
assuming the Trojans are still No.<lb/>
2 after playing UCLA on Nov. 19.<lb/>
Meanwhile, No. 3 Miami<lb/>
wins its last three regular-season<lb/>
games, which also may be assum-<lb/>
ing too much because the Hurri-<lb/>
canes play LSU, Arkansas and<lb/>
Brigham Young.<lb/>
1 That would send Notre Dame<lb/>
and Miami into the bowl season<lb/>
ranked 1-2<lb/>
Now, picture thii scenario:<lb/>
You re NBC. You've just lost<lb/>
the nch. glamorous Rose Bowl to<lb/>
ABC. But you now have the Fiesta<lb/>
Bowl in the same time slot.<lb/>
If you've shelled out $300<lb/>
million for the Summer Olympics<lb/>
and the right to televise such<lb/>
spine-tingling, audience-grab-<lb/>
bing events as rhythmic gymnas-<lb/>
tics and synchronized swimming,<lb/>
surely you can come up with<lb/>
another few million for a Notre<lb/>
Dame-Miami rematch which,<lb/>
given Notre Dame, given Miami<lb/>
and given the ill-will between the<lb/>
two schools, would blow the Rose<lb/>
Bowl right out of the TV ratings<lb/>
box.<lb/>
Forget it. It won't happen.<lb/>
As of Tuesday evening, Notre<lb/>
Dame apparently had not made<lb/>
up its mind which bowl to grace<lb/>
its presence, even though the Irish<lb/>
have more suitors than Zsa Zsa<lb/>
Gabor had husbands.<lb/>
"Anybody that plays Notre<lb/>
Dame is going to fill the stands<lb/>
and the airwaves from Rome to<lb/>
Tokyo Florida State coach<lb/>
Bobby Bowden said. "Especially<lb/>
Rome<lb/>
The most popular scenario<lb/>
has Notre Dame playing No. 4<lb/>
West Virginia in the Fiesta Bowl.<lb/>
Both the Fiesta Bowl's executive<lb/>
director and president will be in<lb/>
East Rutherford, N.J on Saturday<lb/>
to see West Virginia play Rutgers.<lb/>
Remember, this is the weekend<lb/>
when bowl invitations become<lb/>
semi-official, one week ahead oi<lb/>
the Nov. 19 "official" selection<lb/>
date.<lb/>
Notre Dame is idle on Satur-<lb/>
dav, which means there should be<lb/>
seats on flights in and out of South<lb/>
Bend if the Fiesta Bowl is inclined<lb/>
to send someone in that direction.<lb/>
But, says Fiesta Bowl bigwig<lb/>
Bill Shover, "There's no deal.<lb/>
We've talked very seriously to<lb/>
both of them, they've talked to<lb/>
each other, but there's no deal<lb/>
It seems that where Notre<lb/>
Dame and Miami are concerned,<lb/>
"This town ain't big enough for<lb/>
both of us And it doesn't matter<lb/>
whether the town is South Bend,<lb/>
site o this year's game; Miami,<lb/>
where thev arc scheduled to meet<lb/>
next year (remember that Notre<lb/>
Dame coach Lou Holtz suggested<lb/>
See NBC, page 13<lb/>
Spikers defeated<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
women's volleyball team will<lb/>
begin play in the Colonial Athletic<lb/>
Conference tournament tomor-<lb/>
row. They enter the tournament<lb/>
on a down note, however, follow-<lb/>
ing Tuesday nights defeat at the<lb/>
hands of the University of North<lb/>
Carolina-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The women played a tough<lb/>
match, but fell prey to the stronger<lb/>
Tarheel squad 2-15,5-15 and 1-15.<lb/>
The loss gave the Tirates a record<lb/>
of 7-17 for the regular season and<lb/>
the win moved the Tarheels to 24-<lb/>
8.<lb/>
The Tirates and first year head<lb/>
coach Judy Kirkpatrick will travel<lb/>
to American University in Wash-<lb/>
ington D.C to participate in the<lb/>
CAC tournament. The tourna-<lb/>
ment runs from Nov. 10 to Nov.<lb/>
13. Fast Carolina enters tourna-<lb/>
ment play ?vith a league record of<lb/>
0-5, placing them in sixth place.<lb/>
By CHARLES BLOOM<lb/>
Sports Informjtion Director<lb/>
For a true freshman, East<lb/>
Carolina's Robert Jones has surely<lb/>
measured up to the task oi the<lb/>
Pirates' tough schedule.<lb/>
One year ago, the 6-2, 218<lb/>
pound Blackstone, Va. native,<lb/>
was playing at Fork Union Mili-<lb/>
tary Academy. Two years ago,<lb/>
Jones was knocking heads in<lb/>
Virginia's AA Southside District.<lb/>
Today, he leads the Pirate<lb/>
defense against teams like South<lb/>
Carolina, West Virginia, Florida<lb/>
State, Syracuse and Miami.<lb/>
"1 play football. It doesn't<lb/>
matter the competition said<lb/>
Jones. "You do your best. 1 don't<lb/>
care how big or how small my<lb/>
Opponent is, I'll play them as they<lb/>
come<lb/>
Jones is currently tied for fifth<lb/>
in tackles on the squad with 39,25<lb/>
of them coming by himself. He<lb/>
had 13 tackles and one tackle for<lb/>
loss against top 10 ranked West<lb/>
Virginia. Ik' had 10 tackles, one<lb/>
pass deflection and one forced<lb/>
tumble against Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana. Six tackles in an earlier<lb/>
game against South Carolina gave<lb/>
ECU coaches a glimpse of what<lb/>
was to come.<lb/>
Hie Freshman All-America<lb/>
candidate started his first game<lb/>
against South Carolina at defen-<lb/>
sive end. He also started there the.<lb/>
next week against Southern Mis-<lb/>
sissippi. The next week, against<lb/>
LSL, found him starting at inside<lb/>
linebacker - a position where he is<lb/>
currently situated.<lb/>
"I was surprised at starting so<lb/>
early said Jones. "Due to the<lb/>
injuries we had on defense, the<lb/>
coaches told me I had to start.<lb/>
Coach (.Richard) Bell (defensive<lb/>
coordinator) came to me and<lb/>
wanted me to play linebacker. I<lb/>
never say 'no' to any of the<lb/>
tches. But, I had only one week<lb/>
to learn to play the position<lb/>
The season was going well for<lb/>
onesuntil the Honda State game.<lb/>
He -uttered a twisted knee<lb/>
against the Seminoles in the first<lb/>
quarter and had to sit the rest of<lb/>
the contest. He also missed the<lb/>
Syracuse game.<lb/>
"1 hated it a lot said Jones. "I<lb/>
wanted to play real bad. The<lb/>
sports medicine staff told me to<lb/>
stay out. They said that I had three<lb/>
years to go and thev didn't want<lb/>
me to jeopardize my career<lb/>
The future looks bright for<lb/>
Robert Jones. Not only does he<lb/>
have great football skills, but he<lb/>
has his academic goals in sight as<lb/>
well. He is majonng in business<lb/>
management and has his sights<lb/>
set for a career after his playing<lb/>
davs are over.<lb/>
"1 still have a lot of work to do<lb/>
on the field, but I'm here to get an<lb/>
education said lones.<lb/>
The East Carolina women's volleyball team will be entering the Colonial Athletic Tourna-<lb/>
ment with an 0-5 record in the CAC. The Pirates are 7-17 for the regular season.<lb/>
WEEKEND ECU SPORTS<lb/>
UPDATE<lb/>
Sat. 2 p.m. - Men and women<lb/>
Swim and Dive team vs. Old<lb/>
Dominion<lb/>
Minges Pool - Minges<lb/>
Coliseum<lb/>
Sat. 7:30 p.m. -Men's<lb/>
Basketball Scrimmage<lb/>
Minges"Coliseum<lb/>
Sat. and Sun. lla.m5p.m. -<lb/>
Ultimax Men's and Women's<lb/>
Frisbee Club Tournament<lb/>
Intramural Fields behind<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
The Pirate Booty<lb/>
Where have all the Pirate fans gone?<lb/>
Inexperi<lb/>
(AP- The score at halftime<lb/>
was Giants 26, Cowboys 0, and<lb/>
the Dallas fan was talking about<lb/>
how the C owboys ought to bag<lb/>
the seas in, get the first pick in the<lb/>
draft and take UC1 A quarterback<lb/>
Troy Aikman as their rebuilding<lb/>
block.<lb/>
Then Kevin Sweeney ent ?<lb/>
the game th (iiants started play-<lb/>
ing perfectoffense and Sv i<lb/>
threw tor thre I ichd wns Dal-<lb/>
las lost 29-21 hut, for the moment<lb/>
at least, their quarterba I<lb/>
lems seemed less pressing<lb/>
It's hardly fa r ?<lb/>
Sweetv v an insta<lb/>
stellar performance in a wmi ai<lb/>
ready lust "I'm sure the Giants<lb/>
didn't know what ' h<lb/>
said. "1 didn't knovv what I<lb/>
pect<lb/>
But ad ' -<lb/>
replacement from Fr<lb/>
the list<lb/>
Hornets<lb/>
( H '?<lb/>
The Chai tl<lb/>
rirst NBA vn I i<lb/>
ling carei r, and tl<lb/>
the man who p? 1 the<lb/>
fight to win tl ?<lb/>
pital bed sufferii .<lb/>
"Thisone is i ?<lb/>
Charlotte Hon -<lb/>
Tri pucka<lb/>
team to a I<lb/>
over tl i<lb/>
"We'll brii<lb/>
row. Get <lb/>
The team s l<lb/>
Georoe Shinn, -<lb/>
str k<lb/>
was listed in - i<lb/>
the neur<lb/>
unit at Charlom '<lb/>
pita!<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
Sport Fditor<lb/>
Hello sports fans.<lb/>
Welcome to the new and<lb/>
improved Pirate Booty, just in<lb/>
time for the close of football sea-<lb/>
son and the beginning of basket-<lb/>
ball season. This is Kristen Hal-<lb/>
rg, your very own sportseditor,<lb/>
be:<lb/>
coming to you from the East Caro-<lb/>
linian. Doug Johnson, your old<lb/>
sports cditoj, won't be with us<lb/>
any longer due to the end of the<lb/>
semester senior cram. I'm sure<lb/>
you seniors can relate to that.<lb/>
After all, we all want to graduate<lb/>
sooner or later.<lb/>
So, for now, you will have to<lb/>
settle for me.<lb/>
Now some of you may feel a<lb/>
little uneasy about a female in<lb/>
charge of the en tire sports section.<lb/>
Some are prone to think that<lb/>
women simply don't know that<lb/>
much about sports.<lb/>
Well, let me reassure you<lb/>
otherwise. As an avid East Caro-<lb/>
lina sports fan and an active ath-<lb/>
letic participant, my interest and<lb/>
knowledge in the area of sports is<lb/>
comparable to that of any sports<lb/>
crazed fool, male or female.<lb/>
But my goal here is not to<lb/>
compare myself to the work of a<lb/>
man, but to simply do my very<lb/>
best to give you total coverage of<lb/>
all aspects of East Carolina Sports.<lb/>
After all, The East Carolinian is for<lb/>
the students.<lb/>
Having said that, there is one<lb/>
thing that I would like to bring to<lb/>
you, the students, attention. This<lb/>
gripe is in the area of attendance.<lb/>
To my dismay, I noticed, as the<lb/>
football season progressed, the<lb/>
diminishing attendance at the<lb/>
home games.<lb/>
What's the deal folks?<lb/>
Now I know how frustrating<lb/>
it can be to continuously witness<lb/>
fumbles on the goal line, missed<lb/>
field goals and various other bro-<lb/>
ken up scoring opportunities, but<lb/>
come on guys! I know that a 2-8<lb/>
season isn't anything to get psy-<lb/>
ched over, but give the football<lb/>
players a break. It's not like they<lb/>
went out there wanting to lose. 1<lb/>
know for a fact that around 12,000<lb/>
people at the Syracuse game was<lb/>
only a third of what could fill the<lb/>
35,000 seat capacity at Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium. That's less than the at-<lb/>
tendance at the university. (I'll<lb/>
have to admit though, Miami was<lb/>
an improvement).<lb/>
So now that you sit and won-<lb/>
der what the point is that I write<lb/>
this column when football season<lb/>
is nearly over and we don't even<lb/>
have any more home games to<lb/>
redeem ourselves, I'll tell you<lb/>
Why not get out there and sup-i<lb/>
port the Pirate Basketball pro-<lb/>
grams? With the new season ap-<lb/>
proaching and the chance of<lb/>
ECU's first winning season in a<lb/>
long time, fan support will be<lb/>
crucial to the success of the team.<lb/>
Now what better way to increase<lb/>
the moral of our players than to<lb/>
pack the newly renovated Minges<lb/>
Colliseum? Why not get out there<lb/>
this Saturday at 7:30 p.m. for the<lb/>
second men's basketball scrim-<lb/>
mage and the the following Satur-<lb/>
day at 7 p.m. for the women's<lb/>
alumni game? We'll see you out<lb/>
on the court!<lb/>
?<lb/>
fully<lb/>
?<lb/>
intentii<lb/>
from the in ? s<lb/>
v ard. "we knew<lb/>
ything w<lb/>
(leoi<lb/>
Most of the<lb/>
Shinn's stroke onl) minuti<lb/>
tore the game during a I<lb/>
announcement to the<lb/>
18,865 at the Charlotte (<lb/>
The Hornets respon 3<lb/>
ing their hearts out.<lb/>
The 1 lomets tool<lb/>
the third quarter an i rtRei<lb/>
finished the job, &amp; -<lb/>
16second-half pointsin the I<lb/>
period<lb/>
Tripucka sc red a gan i<lb/>
24 points for the Hon I<lb/>
eran forward Kurt Kan<lb/>
17 points and pulled 1 :<lb/>
Charlotte s 62 reboui<lb/>
"Before the came Trip Id<lb/>
said. 'Dick came over and sak<lb/>
Twenty-five points I i<lb/>
won't accept anything less<lb/>
he was serious as hell <lb/>
that: Serious as heck<lb/>
Rex Chapman scored<lb/>
points Bogues navig<lb/>
through full-court pressure I ll<lb/>
points and three assists Micha<lb/>
Holton made two third-quart<lb/>
steals to build an 11-point .<lb/>
Reid. the 33-year-old i I<lb/>
who plaved for 10 seasons a<lb/>
Houston, scored<lb/>
the last two minute- 14 -<lb/>
secure the victor)<lb/>
NBC bids for<lb/>
Fiesta Bowl<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
both schools consider dreppn<lb/>
the remaining two games oi th<lb/>
contract1 or Phoenix.<lb/>
A Fiesta Bowl official quetj<lb/>
Holtz as saying his playa<lb/>
oouldn'tspend a week in the sai<lb/>
town with the Miami team w<lb/>
out uglv incidents<lb/>
This is all somewhat stranj<lb/>
All the animosity seems to be<lb/>
Notre Dame's part apparenj<lb/>
having sprung from Miami -<lb/>
rout of the Irish in Coach Gei<lb/>
Faust's 1985 swansong<lb/>
Holtz's party line is that<lb/>
beat them (Miami) once and<lb/>
have nothing to gain bv plav<lb/>
them again Besides, no rcmaj<lb/>
has ever been real good 1 havd<lb/>
qualms about who we play , n<lb/>
whatsoever. I'm not afraid to<lb/>
Miami again, but that's not<lb/>
decision<lb/>
Don't weep for NBC, thoi<lb/>
It may have Notre Dame in<lb/>
Fiesta Bowl, followed by Miai<lb/>
the Orange Bowl That's the<lb/>
est thing to a rematch you<lb/>
expect.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0015"/><lb/>
!<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10,1988 13<lb/>
llenge<lb/>
) Buccanneers<lb/>
- n who goes<lb/>
best fullbacks<lb/>
r ha nothing on<lb/>
back coach<lb/>
it football<lb/>
I le is strone<lb/>
C<lb/>
 ou and quick<lb/>
ridou. Me also<lb/>
make him an<lb/>
on are alo<lb/>
by manv oth-<lb/>
- that he'll S<lb/>
- a ise of his ver-<lb/>
rj different<lb/>
said lames<lb/>
oth are very<lb/>
cot the vards<lb/>
m vc rsatile<lb/>
 the outside<lb/>
. enings as well<lb/>
. was more<lb/>
I runner<lb/>
 much action anv-<lb/>
 o<lb/>
j w hen oppor-<lb/>
i lames is<lb/>
ion &amp; season ends<lb/>
rk ethic he<lb/>
loush<lb/>
edule<lb/>
id ruy one week<lb/>
p ation<lb/>
ring well for<lb/>
State game.<lb/>
a ? : knee<lb/>
- in the first<lb/>
il the rest of<lb/>
- missed the<lb/>
? said ones I<lb/>
? real bad. The<lb/>
staff told me to<lb/>
?hat I had three<lb/>
id they didn't want<lb/>
ize my career<lb/>
oks bnght for<lb/>
 I only does he<lb/>
skills, but he<lb/>
s in sight as<lb/>
in business<lb/>
and has his sights<lb/>
r his plaving<lb/>
? ' work to do<lb/>
ut I'm here to get an<lb/>
lid ?  s<lb/>
letic Tourna-<lb/>
lar season<lb/>
lie?<lb/>
ind we don't even<lb/>
 am more home games to<lb/>
- -es, I'll tell you<lb/>
? n ' ' ut there and sup-<lb/>
the Pirate Basketball pro-<lb/>
vVith the new season ap-<lb/>
i hmg and the chance of<lb/>
- first winning season in a<lb/>
tinu fan support will be<lb/>
ial to the success of the team.<lb/>
a hat better way to increase<lb/>
noral of our players than to<lb/>
newly renovated Minges<lb/>
sewn? Why not get out there<lb/>
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. for the<lb/>
tad men's basketball scrim-<lb/>
?e and the the following Sarur-<lb/>
at , p.m. for the women's<lb/>
mi game" We 11 see you out<lb/>
he court!<lb/>
Inexperienced quarterbacks start<lb/>
(AP) ? The score at halftime<lb/>
was Giants 26, Cowboys 0, and<lb/>
the Dallas fan was talking about<lb/>
how the Cowboys ought to bag<lb/>
the season, get the first pick in the<lb/>
viraft and take UCLA quarterback<lb/>
 rov Aikman as their rebuilding<lb/>
block.<lb/>
Then Kevin Sweeney entered<lb/>
the game, the Giants started play-<lb/>
ing perfectoffense and Sweeney<lb/>
threw for three touchdowns. Dal-<lb/>
las lost 29-21 but, for the moment<lb/>
at least, their quarterback prob-<lb/>
lems seemed less pressing.<lb/>
It's hardlv fair to make<lb/>
Sweeney an instant hero after a<lb/>
cllar performance in a game al-<lb/>
ready lost. "I'm sure the Giants<lb/>
lidn't know what to expect he<lb/>
said. "1 didn't know what to ex-<lb/>
pect<lb/>
But add the one-time strike<lb/>
placement from Fresno State to<lb/>
the list oi youngsters and the<lb/>
NFL's quarterback shortage sud-<lb/>
denly looks less drastic than when<lb/>
the season started.<lb/>
Rookies Chris Chandler of<lb/>
Indianapolis and Kelly Stouffer of<lb/>
Seattle are currently starting and<lb/>
while Stouffer may go back to the<lb/>
bench now that Dave Krieg is<lb/>
healthy, he has looked oood<lb/>
enouqh to hold out some hope for<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
Beyond them is a group of<lb/>
second- and third-year men, led<lb/>
by Chris Miller of Atlanta, who<lb/>
are beginning to establish them-<lb/>
selves in the way that Jim Everett<lb/>
of the Rams, another third-year<lb/>
quarterback, already has.<lb/>
Others include Bubby Blister<lb/>
of Pittsburgh, Steve Beuerlein of<lb/>
the Los Angeles Raiders. Mark<lb/>
Rypien of Washington and Don<lb/>
Majkowski of Green Bay, plus<lb/>
Bobby Hebert of New Orleans,<lb/>
who after three seasons in the<lb/>
USFL and three in the NFL, has<lb/>
finally harnessed his physical<lb/>
talents into Jim Mora's control<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Miller is almost universally<lb/>
admired. "I don't think there's<lb/>
any question he'll be a star in this<lb/>
league General Manager Jim<lb/>
Finks of the Saints said.<lb/>
In fact, while the Falcons are<lb/>
3-7, they are 3-4 in games in which<lb/>
Miller has played. One of those<lb/>
defeats was a 26-20 loss to Dallas<lb/>
which Atlanta may have won had<lb/>
Miller not sprained his ankle in<lb/>
the third quarter, and another was<lb/>
a 23-16 loss to the Giants, in which<lb/>
New York scored 17 points in the<lb/>
last five minutes to erase a 16-6<lb/>
Atlanta lead.<lb/>
There's also a bit of irony to<lb/>
the quarterback situation.<lb/>
Beuerlein, on injured reserve<lb/>
as a rookie last year, is fourth in<lb/>
the AFC quarterback ratings. But<lb/>
after starting the season, he sat on<lb/>
the bench for four games in favor<lb/>
of Jay Schroeder, for whom the<lb/>
Raiders have up two high draft<lb/>
choices and Pro Bowl offensive<lb/>
tackle Jim Lachey, whom they<lb/>
could use desperately right now.<lb/>
Schroeder, meanwhile, was<lb/>
supplanted by Rypien, who in the<lb/>
five games he played while Doug<lb/>
Williams was out with an appen-<lb/>
dectomy, threw 13 touchdown<lb/>
passes and got himself a rating of<lb/>
114.1, by far the best in the league.<lb/>
Unlike Schroeder, Rypien is re-<lb/>
maining silent now that he's back<lb/>
on the bench. In fact, they're<lb/>
selling sweatshirts in Washington<lb/>
with pictures of Williams and<lb/>
Rypien and the caption "United<lb/>
Together<lb/>
Then there's Vinny Testav-<lb/>
erde, whose 22 interceptions lead<lb/>
the league and whose rating of<lb/>
50.8 is last among the 31 quarter-<lb/>
backs rated. Schroeder, at 52.8,<lb/>
ranks 30th.<lb/>
TONIGHT IS RIGHT<lb/>
? FOR DINNER AT<lb/>
t ANNABELLE'S.<lb/>
Escape from the world of ordinary cuisine and<lb/>
discover the extraordinary tastes of Annabelle's<lb/>
Restaurant. At Annabelle's<lb/>
'ou'll find a variety of<lb/>
delectable dinner entrees,<lb/>
including your favorite<lb/>
, chicken and<lb/>
food dishes, as well<lb/>
 pasta and stir fry<lb/>
specialties. So treat<lb/>
yourself right.<lb/>
Make tonight the<lb/>
night. For dinner<lb/>
at Annabelle's.<lb/>
Hornets win one for ailing owner<lb/>
CHARLOTTE. N.C. (AP) ? Grant Gondrezick's layup Norm Nixon's free throw<lb/>
he Charlotte Hornets won their with 41 seconds left pulled the with 1:43 left pulled Los Angeles<lb/>
rst NBA victory of their fledg- Clippers within 57-55 at halftime, within 106-100, but Reid scored<lb/>
ng career, and they did it while but Charlotte gradually pulled the next six points for Charlotte.<lb/>
the man who spearheaded the away in the third quarter on a 15- Quenton Dailey paced the<lb/>
light to win the team lay in a hos- 9 run to take a 72-64 lead with 7:04 Clippers with 18 points,<lb/>
pital bed suffering from a stroke, left in the period.<lb/>
This one is for you, George,<lb/>
rebounds.<lb/>
"A great crowd witnessed a<lb/>
great win, said Tripucka, who<lb/>
scored six of his points during a<lb/>
decisive third quarter run.<lb/>
'This gives a message to the<lb/>
harlotte Hornets forward Kelly<lb/>
rripucka said after leading his<lb/>
a m to a 117-105 victory Tuesday<lb/>
ver the Los Angeles Clippers.<lb/>
We'll bring you the ball tomor-<lb/>
?w. Get well fast<lb/>
The team's principal owner,<lb/>
ieoroe Shinn, suffered a mild<lb/>
stroke Tuesday afternoon and<lb/>
was listed in serious condition in<lb/>
the neurological intensive care<lb/>
unit at Charlotte Memorial Hos-<lb/>
pital.<lb/>
Doctors expect him to recover<lb/>
fully.<lb/>
Charlotte coach Dick Harter<lb/>
intentionally shielded his players<lb/>
from the news of Shinn's stroke<lb/>
before the game, explaining after-<lb/>
ward, "we knew there wasn't<lb/>
anything we could do for<lb/>
George<lb/>
Most of the plavcrs heard<lb/>
shinn's stroke only minutes be-<lb/>
fore the game during a general<lb/>
announcement to the crowd of<lb/>
18,865 at the Charlotte Coliseum.<lb/>
The Hornets responded by play-<lb/>
ing their hearts out.<lb/>
The Hornets took control in<lb/>
the third quarter, and Robert Reid<lb/>
finished the job, scoring 10 of his<lb/>
16 second-half points in the fourth<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Tripucka scored a game-high<lb/>
24 points for the Hornets and vet-<lb/>
eran forward Kurt Rambis added<lb/>
7 points and pulled down 14 of<lb/>
Charlotte's 62 rebounds.<lb/>
"Before the game Tripucka<lb/>
said. "Dick came over and said<lb/>
Twenty-five points tonight! I<lb/>
won't accept anything less And<lb/>
he was serious as hell. Correct<lb/>
that: Serious as heck<lb/>
Rex Chapman scored 18<lb/>
points. Bogues navigated<lb/>
through full-court pressure for 14<lb/>
points and three assists. Michael<lb/>
Holton made two third-quarter<lb/>
steals to build an 11-point lead.<lb/>
Reid, the 33-vear-old veteran<lb/>
vho played for 10 seasons with<lb/>
Houston, scored seven points in<lb/>
the last two minutes 14 seconds to<lb/>
secure the victory.<lb/>
NBC bids for<lb/>
Fiesta Bowl<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
both schools consider dropping<lb/>
the remaining two games of their<lb/>
contract), or Phoenix.<lb/>
A Fiesta Bowl official quoted<lb/>
Holtz as saying his players<lb/>
couldn't spend a week in the same<lb/>
town with the Miami team with-<lb/>
out ugly incidents.<lb/>
This is all somewhat strange.<lb/>
All the animosity seems to be on<lb/>
Notre Dame's part, apparently<lb/>
having sprung from Miami's 58-7<lb/>
rout of the Irish in Coach Gerry<lb/>
Faust's 1985 swansong.<lb/>
Holtz's party line is that "we<lb/>
beat them (Miami) once and we<lb/>
have nothing to gain by playing<lb/>
them again. Besides, no rematch<lb/>
has ever been real good. I have no<lb/>
qualms about who we play, none<lb/>
whatsoever. I'm not afraid to play<lb/>
Miami again, but that's not my<lb/>
decision<lb/>
Don't weep for NBC, though.<lb/>
It may have Notre Dame in the<lb/>
Fiesta Bowl, followed by Miami in<lb/>
the Orange Bowl. That's the clos-<lb/>
est thing to a rematch you can<lb/>
expect.<lb/>
18 points, while<lb/>
Benoit Benjamin added 17. Reggie NBA that when you come into our<lb/>
The advantage grew to 90-79 Williams scored 15 points, and place, we are going to scrap and<lb/>
by the end of the third quarter. Ken Norman had 15 points and 15 hustle and play you hard Reid<lb/>
said. <lb/>
RESTAURANT PUB<lb/>
Theftn Mnn-Thurc 11:50 AM-11:00 PM<lb/>
Orwnvilt Blvd. Fn-Sar 11:50 AM - Mdrnghf<lb/>
756-0515 Sunday 12 Noon ? 11 fl) PM<lb/>
UI wasn't rubbing<lb/>
it in-1 just wanted<lb/>
Eddie to know<lb/>
the score of<lb/>
last night's garnet<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
u<lb/>
J5VO<lb/>
Go ahead and gloat. You can<lb/>
nib it in all the way to Chicago<lb/>
with XT&amp;lT Long Distance Service.<lb/>
Besides, your best friend Eddie<lb/>
was the one who said your team<lb/>
could never win three straight.<lb/>
So give him a call It costs a<lb/>
lot less than you think to let him<lb/>
know who's headed for the Playoffs.<lb/>
Reach out and touch someone?<lb/>
If youd like to know more about<lb/>
AJSlT products and services, like<lb/>
International Calling and the AT8T<lb/>
Card, call us at 1 800 222-0300.<lb/>
Alex Sum ? University of Washington ? Class of 1990<lb/>
AT&amp;T<lb/>
The right choice.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058108_0016"/><lb/>
n<lb/>
14<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10,1988<lb/>
AARGH, MATEYS!<lb/>
The Fearless Football<lb/>
Forecast will be<lb/>
back NEXT WEEK!<lb/>
Georgia Tech looks for win<lb/>
READ THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
ATLANTA (AP) ? Wake news conference that Wake ment the two.<lb/>
Forest's experience-laden secon- Forest's secondary, with senior "They'r experienced, they're<lb/>
dary stands between Georgia cornerbacks A.J. Green and Tony au gOOCj athletes, they run well<lb/>
Tech and its last chance at win- Mosley, could prevent Tech from ancj they're very tough and ag-<lb/>
ning an Atlantic Coast Confer- seeing its first 1988 ACC victory, grcssive Ross said. 'They can<lb/>
ence game this season, Tech "I think they are two of the<lb/>
Coach Bobby Ross said Tuesday, best cover people in the league<lb/>
The two ACC teams square Ross said. "They can really play<lb/>
the pass exceptionally well<lb/>
really play the pass exceptionally<lb/>
well<lb/>
off Saturday in Winston-Salem,<lb/>
N.C. Georgia Tech goes into the<lb/>
game with an 0-6 record in the<lb/>
ACC and 3-6 overall, while Wake<lb/>
Forest is 3-2 in the ACC and 5-4<lb/>
overall.<lb/>
Ross said during his weekly<lb/>
Ross said Wake Forest Coach<lb/>
Bill Dooley has a tight defensive<lb/>
combination in Greene and Mos-<lb/>
ley, and three-year starting free<lb/>
safety Ernie Purnsley compli-<lb/>
"I think that this has been the<lb/>
best secondary in the league<lb/>
Ross said. "Bill Dooley teams<lb/>
always play good defense<lb/>
Ross said senior cornerback<lb/>
Cedric Stallworth will miss<lb/>
Saturday's game with a knee in-<lb/>
jury, but inside linebacker Don<lb/>
Lear, who has been out with a<lb/>
sprained knee, should be ready to<lb/>
Last season, Wake Forest<lb/>
forced nine turnovers and seven<lb/>
interceptions on its way to a 33-6 play,<lb/>
victory. Ross said that game gave<lb/>
his players "first hand" knowl- Junior Gerald Chamblin will<lb/>
edge of Wake Forest's defensive replace Stallworth in the lineup,<lb/>
capabilities.<lb/>
Ross said.<lb/>
UNC-W Hoopster assaults officer<lb/>
WILMINGTON (AP) ? An<lb/>
18-vear-old freshman basketball<lb/>
player at the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Wilmington pleaded<lb/>
gn il tv Tuesday to assaulting a law<lb/>
officer and three other charges<lb/>
stemming from a September inci-<lb/>
dent at WrightsviUe Beach.<lb/>
Under the terms of a plea Washington, Iowa, is<lb/>
agreement, Matt Fish has to per- Seahawks' tallest player<lb/>
form 80 hours of community serv- averaged 15.2 points<lb/>
G. Tucker signed the agreement McPherson's first recruit last fall.<lb/>
Tuesday. WrightsviUe Beach police<lb/>
Seahawk coach Robert were called to a party Sept. 16, and<lb/>
McPherson said Fish would have tried to arrest Fish, who was<lb/>
to abide bv special rules to remain drinking a beer on the street, ae-<lb/>
on the basketball team. The sea-<lb/>
son will begin Nov. 25.<lb/>
Fish, a 6-foot-10 native of<lb/>
the<lb/>
He<lb/>
15.2 points and 10.7<lb/>
ice, pay a WrightsviUe Beach law<lb/>
officer $152 for breaking his eye-<lb/>
glasses, and counsel youths as<lb/>
part oi a New Hanover County<lb/>
schools' substance abuse pro-<lb/>
gram. He also has to write a public<lb/>
letter of apology to be printed in<lb/>
the UC-Wilmington<lb/>
student newspaper.<lb/>
If Fish complies by May 3, his<lb/>
record may be cleared, New Ha-<lb/>
nover District Court Judge Elton<lb/>
ECU signs<lb/>
ers<lb/>
rebounds per game as a high<lb/>
school senior and was<lb/>
cording to police reports.<lb/>
Charles Lineberry, Fish's<lb/>
lawyer, said Fish turned and ran<lb/>
when police approached him.<lb/>
Fish collided with Officer J.N.<lb/>
Smith, who is about a foot shorter<lb/>
than Fish, Lineberry said.<lb/>
The collision, Lineberry said,<lb/>
gave the officer a mild concussion<lb/>
and broke Smith's eyeglasses. The<lb/>
police report said Fish committed<lb/>
the assault by "throwing and<lb/>
knocking Officer Smith to the<lb/>
pavement causing serious bodily<lb/>
iniury<lb/>
Fish was charged with assault<lb/>
on a law officer, resisting arrest,<lb/>
drinking alcohol in public and<lb/>
underage drinking.<lb/>
?Prices are roundtrip based on midweek travel. Tickets<lb/>
are nonrefundabte with no changes allowed. Reservations<lb/>
must be made a minimum of 14 days In advance. Prices<lb/>
are subject to change without notice.<lb/>
Crreenville<lb/>
 travel center<lb/>
200 Arlington Blvd Suite M<lb/>
756-1521<lb/>
-<lb/>
play<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
East Carolina signed two junior<lb/>
college players - one from North<lb/>
Carolina and another from South<lb/>
Carolina - and a Raleigh prep star<lb/>
on the first day of the early signing<lb/>
period Wednesday, school offi-<lb/>
cials announced.<lb/>
All three of the players<lb/>
signed are six-foot-six.<lb/>
Darrell Overton averaged<lb/>
12.4 points and 11.6 rebounds per<lb/>
game last season as a freshman at<lb/>
Craven Community College. The<lb/>
190-pounder was a three-year<lb/>
starter at Edenton Holmes High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
At North Greenville Junior<lb/>
College in Rock Hill, S.C, last<lb/>
season, Jon Hardin averaged 14.0<lb/>
points and 8.5 rebounds in lead-<lb/>
ing his team to a 24-6 record.<lb/>
Forward D.J. Morgan of<lb/>
Raleigh Athens Drive High<lb/>
School averaged 13.0 points and<lb/>
8.0 rebounds per game last season<lb/>
as a Junior in leading his team to a<lb/>
21-4 record.<lb/>
Wednesday was the first day<lb/>
of the week-long early signing<lb/>
period, during which high school<lb/>
seniors and junior college players<lb/>
may sign national letters of intent<lb/>
with four-year schools.<lb/>
 TVestern Steer<lb/>
 Family<lb/>
STEAKH0VSE<lb/>
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Tea Party<lb/>
Every Thursday <lb/>
at 4:00 p.m. f <lb/>
Free Admission lw x<lb/>
All Night g<lb/>
$3 First Iced Tea<lb/>
$2 For 2nd, 3rd, &amp; 4th<lb/>
plus you keep the Mason Jar<lb/>
Free non-alcoholic drinks for<lb/>
designated drivers.<lb/>
Must be 21 to enter and have valid I.D.<lb/>
High Energy Music provided by Connie!<lb/>
Rogers, Greenville's Hottest D.J.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058108_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>