<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
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<pb facs="00058113_0001"/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
i<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
EDITORIALS4<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS6<lb/>
FEATURES14<lb/>
SPORTS21<lb/>
Features<lb/>
The Varsity Barber Shop a downtown landmark, pro-<lb/>
prietor, Pat Moore, a barber who gives a true haircut ?<lb/>
minus the frills and high price.<lb/>
See page 14.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Wednesday night at Cameron Indoor Stadium, the top<lb/>
ranked Duke Blue Devils gave the Pirates a taste of<lb/>
what Top Twenty basketball is all about<lb/>
See page 21.<lb/>
Bhz lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 39<lb/>
Thursday December 1,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
26 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
National Security team speaks<lb/>
Defense strategy is prevention<lb/>
By GARY SANDERSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"When you think of the So-<lb/>
viet Union's military, think of<lb/>
something that is big, modern,<lb/>
and modernizing said Colonel<lb/>
F. Edward Ward, a member of the<lb/>
Air University's Air Force Na-<lb/>
tional Security Briefing Team.<lb/>
Ward and a national se-<lb/>
curity briefing team, which has<lb/>
addressed over 1200 military and<lb/>
civilian groups, addressed stu-<lb/>
dents on national defense and<lb/>
security Tuesday at 7 p.m. The<lb/>
team has been in existence since<lb/>
1983 for the purpose of informing<lb/>
the people on national security.<lb/>
He said that the defense<lb/>
strategy of the United States in-<lb/>
cluded the worldwide detercnce<lb/>
of aggression through preventa-<lb/>
tivc measures. "We have to be<lb/>
able to guard against anv conflict,<lb/>
even terrorism and sabotage<lb/>
Ward said.<lb/>
"Basically we guard our po-<lb/>
sition through peaceful negotia-<lb/>
tions,but we will fight if it's neces-<lb/>
sary<lb/>
Ward said that Warsaw<lb/>
Pact nations have overwhelming<lb/>
odds in military equipment.<lb/>
"Thev have NATO na-<lb/>
tions outnumbered 3-to-l in air-<lb/>
craft, 2-to-l in tanks, 5-tol in per-<lb/>
sonnel and 8-to-l in artillery<lb/>
Ward said. "The Soviets have the<lb/>
most military hardware on earth.<lb/>
"Through the years,<lb/>
we've found it in our best interest<lb/>
to ban together with other coun-<lb/>
tries in order to keep world<lb/>
peace<lb/>
He said that the Soviet leader,<lb/>
Lenin, "envisioned a single<lb/>
worldwide communistic state <lb/>
we have no reason to believe that<lb/>
they have abandoned that ideal<lb/>
Me said that the U.S. and its allies<lb/>
keep an eye on world "hot-spots"<lb/>
suchasSouth Africa, Vietnam, the<lb/>
Middle East and Cuba.<lb/>
"Sixty-three percent of<lb/>
the world's oil supply comes from<lb/>
the Middle East  70 percent of<lb/>
Europe's oil comes from the<lb/>
Middle East he said. "We want<lb/>
to keep the Middle East open to<lb/>
everyone  we recently sent an<lb/>
unconditional message to Libyan<lb/>
leader Khaddafy that wasn't ig-<lb/>
nored<lb/>
Ward said U.S. concerns<lb/>
are far-ranging and that Cam<lb/>
Rahn Bay, Vietnam "is the largest<lb/>
Soviet displav of forces outside of<lb/>
the U.S.S.R He said the U.S.<lb/>
"wants to end Apartheid in South<lb/>
Africa" and that "steps have been<lb/>
made in that direction, though<lb/>
people are still suffering<lb/>
"Some people believe<lb/>
that the Soviet arms build-up is<lb/>
due to their belief in a western<lb/>
invasion documented evidence<lb/>
points out otherwise Ward said.<lb/>
He used Afghanistan and Poland<lb/>
asexamples. "TheSoviets pour $4<lb/>
billion into Cuba every year,<lb/>
that's not just coincidence<lb/>
He said that the massive<lb/>
Soviet build-up over the past 20<lb/>
years is an ever-growing threat.<lb/>
"The U.S. edge in quality and<lb/>
technology is closing rapidly and<lb/>
some would sav it has closed<lb/>
Ward said. 'Today the U.S. mili-<lb/>
tary is strong, our capabilities are<lb/>
great but we need to prepare now<lb/>
for the 1990's through continued<lb/>
force modernization  an F-16 is<lb/>
an excellent jet, but put three or<lb/>
four Soviet planes on it, and it's all<lb/>
over he said.<lb/>
Ward said that although<lb/>
the U.S. has made advancements,<lb/>
so too have the Soviets. "The<lb/>
Soviets are not afraid to use legal<lb/>
and illegal means to achieve the<lb/>
technology they desire he said.<lb/>
Col. F. Edward Ward, a member of the Air Force National<lb/>
Security Briefing Team, spoke to students Tuesday on the issues of<lb/>
national securitv and defense.<lb/>
Environmental Blues<lb/>
Hamas dispute PLO claim<lb/>
BETHLEHEM, Occupied<lb/>
West Bank (AP) ? Young parti-<lb/>
san factions, some carrying<lb/>
knives and clubs, shouted threats<lb/>
at each other today in a dispute<lb/>
over the PLO declaration of inde-<lb/>
pendence.<lb/>
Agriculture makes stride<lb/>
Members of the Islamic ex-<lb/>
tremist group Hamas, or Zeal,<lb/>
marched through the city forcing<lb/>
stores shut for a strike they called<lb/>
today on the 41st anniversary of a<lb/>
U.N. resolution calling for crea-<lb/>
tion of the Jewish state.<lb/>
Leaders from the PLO-<lb/>
backed United Leadership of the<lb/>
uprising, who ordered their own<lb/>
strike a day earlier, demanded<lb/>
shopkeepers open their stores in<lb/>
defiance of the fundamentalists'<lb/>
strike call.<lb/>
Palestinian official cancelled<lb/>
Christmas celebrations in Bethle-<lb/>
hem, where Christ was born, in<lb/>
solidarity with the nearly year-<lb/>
long revolt against Israeli occupa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
To try to block anti-Israeli<lb/>
violence during the strike, the<lb/>
army clamped curfews on 14<lb/>
Gaza Strip refugee camps and<lb/>
villages and on seven cities and<lb/>
towns in the occupied West Bank,<lb/>
confining 3000 residents to their<lb/>
homes.<lb/>
About 1.5 million Palestini-<lb/>
ans live in the West Bank and<lb/>
Gaza Strip, which were occupied<lb/>
by Israel from Jordan and Egypt<lb/>
in the 1967 Six Dav War.<lb/>
J<lb/>
The army beefed up patrol<lb/>
the occupied territories and made<lb/>
preventive arrests to reduce the<lb/>
likelihood of confrontations.<lb/>
See PALESTINIANS, page 2<lb/>
By BEN SELBY<lb/>
Suf V r!ier<lb/>
77ns is the second part in a<lb/>
series en the environment by Ben<lb/>
Sdby.<lb/>
"We've made great strides in<lb/>
agricultural practices, but people<lb/>
haven't really looked at agricul-<lb/>
tural practices from the point of<lb/>
view oi what they're doing to the<lb/>
environment Spruill said. "It's<lb/>
only a few people who really have<lb/>
enough understanding to realie<lb/>
that we've got these big non<lb/>
point- sources of pollution<lb/>
around the countrv<lb/>
"We're not looking at the long<lb/>
range in my opinion Spruill<lb/>
said. "The point-sources of pollu-<lb/>
tion become glamorous and the<lb/>
non point-sources of pollution are<lb/>
so broad and so big we just tend to<lb/>
ignore them. They are going to<lb/>
turn out to be significant prob-<lb/>
lems<lb/>
Some farmers believe that if<lb/>
10 pounds of fertilizer will help<lb/>
their crop grow well, then 20<lb/>
pounds will help it grow better.<lb/>
"It's the old idea all over again<lb/>
that if something works, then<lb/>
twice as much ought to work<lb/>
twice as well Spruill said.<lb/>
"We can't just blame<lb/>
industry'said Charles Womble,<lb/>
a local tobacco and peanut farmer.<lb/>
"We're part oi the problem too<lb/>
Obviously, I think we need<lb/>
some mere research Spruill<lb/>
said, but 1 think that we're going<lb/>
down a dangerous path in the<lb/>
state and the countrv in general in<lb/>
that we're putting too much of<lb/>
our effort on remediation solving<lb/>
groundwater problems or pollu-<lb/>
tion problems<lb/>
"I think we need to spend at<lb/>
least an equal amount of time on<lb/>
preventing these problems<lb/>
Spruill said. "I know I learned<lb/>
from my colleague a few days ago<lb/>
that one oi the differences be-<lb/>
tween the U.S. system and the<lb/>
European system is that the Euro-<lb/>
peans seemed to be putting a lot<lb/>
more emphasis on the prevention<lb/>
of the contamination of water and<lb/>
air resources<lb/>
"We're doing a pretty good<lb/>
dogging' in determining where<lb/>
the pollution is ? and let's go<lb/>
clean it up Spruill said sarcasti-<lb/>
callv.<lb/>
"I think we can take a little bit<lb/>
of our resources aw. i'rom the<lb/>
clean- up end, especially in cases<lb/>
where people are not directly<lb/>
impacted, and start putting some<lb/>
educational resources and finan-<lb/>
cial resources, maybe they're one<lb/>
in the same, on prevention of pol-<lb/>
lution said Spruill.<lb/>
"I think that we've gone back-<lb/>
wards in the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion in our assessment of the envi-<lb/>
ronment and the emphasis we've<lb/>
placed on the environment<lb/>
Spruill said. "All the record show<lb/>
that the EPA and the regulatory<lb/>
agencies have been cut<lb/>
extensively<lb/>
Conservation education,<lb/>
technology, and recycling at the<lb/>
local, state, and national levels<lb/>
coupled with decision making on<lb/>
large regional levels may be the<lb/>
key to some of the pollution prob-<lb/>
lems we face today.<lb/>
See RECYCLING, page 2<lb/>
The East Carolinian staff catches the holiday spirit and poses in front of their newfound Christ-<lb/>
mas tree. From all of us to all of you, Happy Holidays! (Photo by Mark Love, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
mniiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiHHNtmmiiwimiiiiiHiiiiiMiu<lb/>
Merry Christmas <lb/>
From the staff of the East Carolinian 1<lb/>
IHNHttHMMMIIinmmHIIIIIHIIIIHIIIHiMHMHIHMM<lb/>
MMMjJIIHM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0002"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CARPI IN TAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1, 1988<lb/>
Palestinians clash with Israeli soliders<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Five Palestinians, including Nasser said the town govern<lb/>
two 14-year-old boys, were shot<lb/>
and wounded in confrontations<lb/>
will remain bare, he said.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Defense Minister<lb/>
Likud bloc asked the Labor Party<lb/>
to join a new coalition govern-<lb/>
with soldiers, hospital officials<lb/>
said.<lb/>
At least 316 Palestinians and<lb/>
11 Israelis have been killed in the<lb/>
nearly year-long revolt against<lb/>
Israeli occupation of the"West<lb/>
Bank and Gaza Strip.<lb/>
ment called off all official celebra-<lb/>
tions, such as the Christmas Even Yitzhak Rabin today urged his ment, offering the rival party two<lb/>
tree for Israeli and Palestinian dig- Labor Party to consider joining a of the four most powerful Cabinet<lb/>
nitarics and the annual Boy Scout coalition government led by the posts,<lb/>
patrols. rival Likud bloc in order to with-<lb/>
Manger Square, usually stand demands for4 controversial<lb/>
decorated wi th bright strings of religious legislation,<lb/>
colored ights, will remain dark On Monday, Prime Minister<lb/>
and the 40-foot Christmas tree Yitzhak Shamir's right-wing<lb/>
Labor leaders are meeting<lb/>
with each other to discuss the of-<lb/>
fer.<lb/>
Recycling is the key to the future<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
"How much would it cost io<lb/>
educate people to recycle all their<lb/>
materials and insure that they do?<lb/>
Or cut down on electricity?"<lb/>
Christian asked. "The cost of edu-<lb/>
cation and the expectation of<lb/>
having education actually work 1<lb/>
don't know he said.<lb/>
Kimberl v Dale reported to the<lb/>
"Greenville times" that: "Ameri-<lb/>
can consumers throw away-<lb/>
enough aluminum to rebuild our<lb/>
entire commercial airfleet every<lb/>
three months; we throw away<lb/>
enough glass bottles and jars to fill<lb/>
the 1350 foot twin towers of New<lb/>
GORDON'S<lb/>
GOLF AND SKI SHOP<lb/>
for all<lb/>
your snowskiing<lb/>
needs<lb/>
?<lb/>
i)<lb/>
<lb/>
x:<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
7S6-1003 Nexl lo Greenville TV and Appliance<lb/>
York's World Trade Center every "If you cut down the amount<lb/>
two weeks; every Sunday, more of energy required by people, it<lb/>
that in 500,000 trees are used to would mean less coal would be<lb/>
produce 88 percent of newspa- burned, which means that you<lb/>
pers that are never recycled; and don't put out as much material<lb/>
we throw away enough iron and<lb/>
steel to continuously supply all<lb/>
the nation's automakers<lb/>
"I think you can go a long way<lb/>
in preventing a lot of problems<lb/>
with proper education and incen-<lb/>
tives to prevent pollution said<lb/>
ECU biologist Dr. Robert Chris-<lb/>
tian (who is not involved in the<lb/>
APES program). "Basically, we're<lb/>
talking about conservation<lb/>
that could lead to acid rain<lb/>
Christian said. 'The end result is<lb/>
that it would be cheaper<lb/>
How much would it cost to<lb/>
educate people to recycle all their<lb/>
materials and insure that they do?<lb/>
Or cut down on electricity?"<lb/>
Warning was issued prior to death<lb/>
MIAMI (AP) ? At least two ets at the end of mechanical arms,<lb/>
months before the amusement The Spider and the Monster each<lb/>
ride collapse that killed a teen-age have six arms ? the Octopus has<lb/>
girl at the Broward County Fair, eight.<lb/>
the ride's manufacturer issued a South Carolina officials<lb/>
bulletin warning of potential heeded the warning about the<lb/>
structural defects in two similar Spider and the Octopus amuse-<lb/>
rides. ment rides in September and did<lb/>
Eyerly Aircraft, maker of the extensive tests on the Monster. A<lb/>
Monster ride that collapsed last South Carolina inspector said the<lb/>
week in Hallandale, warned that the rides are so similar he could<lb/>
part of the arm mechanism on the<lb/>
Spider and Octopus rides was<lb/>
potentially vulnerable to cracks<lb/>
and other problems, The Miami<lb/>
Herald reported today.<lb/>
Those rides, like the Monster,<lb/>
whirl passengers around in buck-<lb/>
not safely ignore the warning.<lb/>
Florida's chief safety inspec-<lb/>
tor Wally Rich said he did not<lb/>
order additional tests because the<lb/>
Monster is nothing like the two<lb/>
rides for which the bulletin was<lb/>
issued.<lb/>
STYLISTS<lb/>
Beth Long<lb/>
Pam Freedman<lb/>
Lmda Jones<lb/>
Tina Getsmger<lb/>
Ricky Narron<lb/>
Lisa Bissell Whitehurst<lb/>
Melody Furci<lb/>
Linda Murrell<lb/>
UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP AND NEWLY REMODELED<lb/>
Beth Perry Long and Keith Long, New Owners<lb/>
SPECIALIZING IN:<lb/>
Cuts for the entire family ? Color ? Perms<lb/>
Highlighting ? Eyebrow and facial waxing<lb/>
Monday - Friday 9:00 UNTIL<lb/>
Saturday by appointment<lb/>
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514 E 14th Street<lb/>
(Between King Sandwich and The Wash House)<lb/>
We carry 3 maior product lines<lb/>
Christmas<lb/>
Is Special<lb/>
Special People<lb/>
deserve a<lb/>
special present.<lb/>
Let us help you<lb/>
pick out just<lb/>
the perfect gift.<lb/>
Handcrafted jewelry, silk &amp; cotton lingerie, handknittcd<lb/>
sweaters, ponchos, and X-mas socks.<lb/>
MonSat. 10-6<lb/>
Thurs. 10-8<lb/>
919 A. Redbanks Rd.<lb/>
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HELP WANTED<lb/>
APPLICATIONS BEING ACCEPTED FOR<lb/>
LAYOUT ARTIST<lb/>
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MONDAY-FRIDAY<lb/>
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at<lb/>
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CAROLINIAN<lb/>
2nd FLOOR<lb/>
PUBLICATIONS BUILDING<lb/>
IN FRONT OF JOYNER LIBRARY<lb/>
No phone calls please<lb/>
?Layout Experience Preferred<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Scruing tlic EOM Carolina campu community since 1925.<lb/>
James F. J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scolt Makey Spencer Meymandi<lb/>
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DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
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0-40 Column inchesS4.25<lb/>
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COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
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BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
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THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
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(<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
Parlia<lb/>
MOSCOW (AP)?P<lb/>
Mikhail S. Gorbachev td<lb/>
Soviet parliament todav<lb/>
gain the nght to veto hisd<lb/>
if it adopts his revised prj<lb/>
to overhaul the Soy<lb/>
system.<lb/>
In a speech opening<lb/>
day soecial session<lb/>
preme Soviet, or parhamej<lb/>
bachev said the Kremlin<lb/>
shio made the veto pi<lb/>
among 88 changes h<lb/>
mended in response I<lb/>
public comments on the<lb/>
tion law and constit<lb/>
amendments out be!<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Two high n<lb/>
from the Baltics, how<lb/>
tered dissan- .<lb/>
elements of the reform p<lb/>
when addressing the<lb/>
signalling the start of a<lb/>
debate in the chambi<lb/>
ual ascent is the norm.<lb/>
Theorigii<lb/>
just five weeks a.<lb/>
widespread criticism<lb/>
changes would con<lb/>
much power in the presic<lb/>
a nation with a ru-<lb/>
ship<lb/>
In a reference t<lb/>
Gorbachev acknc<lb/>
obvious that s n<lb/>
sionsof the bills w i<lb/>
lated precisely er<lb/>
caused quite a I<lb/>
marks in thecours I<lb/>
sions<lb/>
Reading toda <lb/>
RJR sh<lb/>
to buy<lb/>
NEW YORK C<lb/>
bisco Inc. stockh<lb/>
another moment (<lb/>
either to sell their si ii<lb/>
make a windfall pi<lb/>
tight for the next ui<lb/>
chapter in histon<lb/>
rate takeover battle<lb/>
A company-irr.<lb/>
line for a second rou<lb/>
billion-dollar bid a<lb/>
and tobacco conglomei<lb/>
scheduler to expire at 5<lb/>
day, and no decisions<lb/>
pec ted before Wedr ? I<lb/>
Speculation that r<lb/>
offers would emerge pui<lb/>
Nabisco's stock pr<lb/>
share Monday to $9 <lb/>
50 percent above its<lb/>
the takeover saga ixd<lb/>
months ago.<lb/>
At least two<lb/>
known bidders ?a: <lb/>
management group<lb/>
vestment firm Koh 1<lb/>
Roberts k Co. ? were w A<lb/>
revised proposa - I<lb/>
people familiar with<lb/>
process.<lb/>
There wa no ii<lb/>
Monday whether the tfj<lb/>
tender, a group led b) 'ij<lb/>
ment firm First B I<lb/>
planned to alter its bid<lb/>
the first round was co I<lb/>
riskiest but potentia. <lb/>
A special committd<lb/>
Nabisco's outside direof<lb/>
ducting the auct<lb/>
nation's 19th larger<lb/>
company, declined corn<lb/>
whether any additio j<lb/>
had emerged<lb/>
But officials ot AtlaJ<lb/>
RjR Nabisco had said p<lb/>
that the structure for<lb/>
all offers would rem<lb/>
changed from the firs<lb/>
which took place ov<lb/>
In that process<lb/>
were submitted in secrel<lb/>
York law firm reprcsel<lb/>
special committee folk<lb/>
analysis of what the w<lb/>
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The outside direj<lb/>
tended the auction attcj<lb/>
round ended, reflect!<lb/>
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RJR Nabisco s mai<lb/>
offered $100 a share in<lb/>
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billion. Kohlberg Kra<lb/>
$94 a share in cash and<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1988 3<lb/>
Parliament may get veto power<lb/>
MOSCOW (AP) ? President<lb/>
Mikhail S. Gorbachev told the<lb/>
Soviet parliament today it would<lb/>
gain the right to veto his decisions<lb/>
if it adopts his revised proposals<lb/>
to overhaul the Soviet political<lb/>
system.<lb/>
In a speech opening a three-<lb/>
day soecial session of the Su-<lb/>
preme Soviet, or parliament, Gor-<lb/>
bachev said the Kremlin leader-<lb/>
shio made the veto proposal<lb/>
among 88 changes it recom-<lb/>
mended in response to 250,000<lb/>
public comments on the new elec-<lb/>
tion law and constitutional<lb/>
amendments out before the body<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Two high republic officials<lb/>
from the Baltics, however, regis-<lb/>
tered dissatisfaction with<lb/>
elements of the reform program<lb/>
when addressing the plenum,<lb/>
signalling the start of a genuine<lb/>
debate in the chamber where rit-<lb/>
ual ascent is the norm.<lb/>
The original drafts, published<lb/>
just five weeks ago, sparked<lb/>
widespread criticism that the<lb/>
changes would concentrate too<lb/>
much power in the presidency in<lb/>
a nation with a history of dictator-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
In a reference to the outcry,<lb/>
Gorbachev acknowledged, "It is<lb/>
obvious that some of the provi-<lb/>
sions of the bills were not formu-<lb/>
lated precisely enough and<lb/>
caused quite a few critical re-<lb/>
marks in the course of the discus-<lb/>
sions<lb/>
Reading today from a new<lb/>
draft, Gorbachev said the Su-<lb/>
preme Soviet "has the right to<lb/>
veto decrees of the presidium, in-<lb/>
structions of the president of the<lb/>
Supreme Soviet and the leader-<lb/>
ship would be required to account<lb/>
to the legislature "at least once a<lb/>
year<lb/>
Currently, directives from<lb/>
the president are made in the<lb/>
name of the Presidium and are<lb/>
subject to confirmation at the next<lb/>
full session of the Supreme Soviet.<lb/>
But practically, there are no chal-<lb/>
lenges. The Supreme Soviet had<lb/>
its first non-unanimous vote in<lb/>
memory last month.<lb/>
Gorbachev promised that<lb/>
other changes also would pre-<lb/>
serve the Soviet Union's tradi-<lb/>
tional collective style of leader-<lb/>
ship. Under that style, the highest<lb/>
government body - the Presidium<lb/>
of the Supreme Soviet and the<lb/>
highest party body ? the Polit-<lb/>
buro ? are collective bodies.<lb/>
The head of the Presidium is<lb/>
the president, traditionally a<lb/>
ceremonial role.<lb/>
It was not immediately clear<lb/>
whether Gorbachev was giving<lb/>
up his original proposal to<lb/>
strengthen the president's role by<lb/>
giving him chairmanship of the<lb/>
Defense Council and responsibil-<lb/>
ity for overseeing foreign policy.<lb/>
The latest draft of the pro-<lb/>
posed changes also responded to<lb/>
complaints from small republics,<lb/>
including Estonia, Latvia and<lb/>
Georgia, by increasing the repub-<lb/>
lics' representation in one of the<lb/>
houses of the bicameral parlia-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Latvian President Anatoly<lb/>
Gorbunov asked that the reform<lb/>
package be postponed to consider<lb/>
objections by his parliament, in-<lb/>
cluding one to the possibility of an<lb/>
individual occupying several<lb/>
seats in the new Congress of<lb/>
People's Deputies.<lb/>
Another Baltic president,<lb/>
Vitautas Astrauskas of Lithuania,<lb/>
called for a convention to write a<lb/>
new constitution that would give<lb/>
the central government authority<lb/>
to decide issues of national scope<lb/>
and reserve all other matters for<lb/>
the republics.<lb/>
He welcomed Gorbachev's<lb/>
announced changes and accepted<lb/>
the president's proposal to cut off<lb/>
issues of the rights of republics<lb/>
until later.<lb/>
Gorbachev proposed creat-<lb/>
ing a special commission to settle<lb/>
the question of division of power<lb/>
between the 15 Soviet republics<lb/>
and the central government and<lb/>
suggested the deputies limit this<lb/>
session to overhauling the gov-<lb/>
ernment structure.<lb/>
He said the complex ques-<lb/>
tions of the rights of the republics<lb/>
and the powers of local legislative<lb/>
bodies, known as Soviets, or coun-<lb/>
cils, could be left for later.<lb/>
"We have just embarked on<lb/>
reform he said. "In this revolu-<lb/>
tionary period, we are blowing up<lb/>
the old structure The first step<lb/>
in reconstruction is the overhaul<lb/>
before the parliament, he said.<lb/>
Gorbachev rejected com-<lb/>
plaints that the principle or one<lb/>
man, one vote is violated by a plan<lb/>
to let organizations, such as the<lb/>
Communist Party and trade<lb/>
unions, elect one-third of the<lb/>
deputies in a new Congress of<lb/>
People's Deputies.<lb/>
He said the reform clearly<lb/>
states that legislative elections can<lb/>
have multiple candidates, but<lb/>
added that because numerous<lb/>
candidates could be proposed,<lb/>
they must face "preliminary dis-<lb/>
cussion" before their local nomi-<lb/>
nating commissions. It was not<lb/>
known whether the commissions<lb/>
could reject specific candidates.<lb/>
The Soviet leader also hinted<lb/>
at promised future reforms. They<lb/>
include a rewrite of the preamble<lb/>
of the Soviet constitution, includ-<lb/>
ing the "definition of socialist<lb/>
property<lb/>
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STRATFORD ARMS<lb/>
CLUBHOUSE<lb/>
RJR shareholders face dilemma:<lb/>
to buy cheap or sell and profit<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? RJR Na-<lb/>
bisco Inc. stockholders are facing<lb/>
another moment of reckoning,<lb/>
either to sell their shares and<lb/>
make a windfall profit or to sit<lb/>
tight for the next unpredictable<lb/>
chapter in history's biggest corpo-<lb/>
rate takeover battle.<lb/>
A company-imposed dead-<lb/>
line for a second round of multi-<lb/>
billion-dollar bids to buy the food<lb/>
and tobacco conglomerate was<lb/>
scheduled "to expire at 5 p.m. to-<lb/>
day, and no decisions were ex-<lb/>
pected before Wednesday.<lb/>
Speculation that new, fatter<lb/>
offers would emerge pushed RJR<lb/>
Nabisco's stock price up $1 a<lb/>
share Monday to $90, more than<lb/>
50 percent above its value before<lb/>
the takeover saga began two<lb/>
months ago.<lb/>
At least two of the three<lb/>
known bidders?an RJR Nabisco<lb/>
management group and the in-<lb/>
might offer $105 to $118 a share in borrowed money in the takeover<lb/>
plans so far have dwarfed all rec-<lb/>
ords and incited critical scrutiny<lb/>
of such debt-financed deals. In<lb/>
recent years, such deals have<lb/>
enriched many investors but<lb/>
raised questions about the eco-<lb/>
nomic impact of the additional<lb/>
debt load on the companies.<lb/>
cash and securities, or $23.8 bil-<lb/>
lion to $26.8 billion.<lb/>
Wall Street strategists speak-<lb/>
ing on condition they not be iden-<lb/>
tified said there was a widespread<lb/>
presumption that the RJR Na-<lb/>
bisco management group and<lb/>
Kohlberg Kravis would have to<lb/>
raise their previous offers to at<lb/>
least match the potential worth of <lb/>
the First Boston proposal.<lb/>
Of the three bidders, the most<lb/>
uncertainty surrounded First<lb/>
Bostor iich in its original offer<lb/>
propos i using a tax loophole<lb/>
that expires at the end of this year<lb/>
to raise the value of its offer above<lb/>
the others.<lb/>
Under the original plan, the<lb/>
First Boston group would buy<lb/>
RJR Nabisco's tobacco business<lb/>
with a so-called installment note,<lb/>
vestment firm Kohlberg Kravis which would not be subject to a<lb/>
Roberts &amp; Co. ? were working on capital gains tax for a number of<lb/>
revised proposals, according to years, thereby giving the firm<lb/>
people familiar with the bidding additional money to pay share-<lb/>
process, holders a fatter price.<lb/>
There was no indication But that part of the transac-<lb/>
Monday whether the third con- tion would have to be completed<lb/>
tender, a group led by the invest- by Dec. 31 because Congress<lb/>
ment firm First Boston Corp closed the loophole on this capi-<lb/>
planned to alter its bid, which in tal-gains deferment, leaving<lb/>
the first round was considered the many tax experts skeptical about<lb/>
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riskiest but potentially the richest.<lb/>
A special committee of RJR<lb/>
Nabisco's outside directors, con-<lb/>
ducting the auction for the<lb/>
nation's 19th largest industrial<lb/>
company, declined comment on<lb/>
whether any additional bidders<lb/>
had emerged.<lb/>
But officials of Atlanta-based<lb/>
whether First Boston's offer was<lb/>
realistic.<lb/>
The struggle for RJR Nabisco<lb/>
began in late October when the<lb/>
management group led by its<lb/>
chairman, F. Ross Johnson, said it<lb/>
was considering a debt-financed<lb/>
acquisition of the company,<lb/>
RJR Nabisco had said previously maker of hundreds of products<lb/>
that the structure for evaluating ranging from Salem cigarettes to<lb/>
all offers would remain un-<lb/>
changed from the first round,<lb/>
which took place Nov. 18-20.<lb/>
In that process, proposals<lb/>
were submitted in secret to a New<lb/>
York law firm representing the<lb/>
special committee, followed by a<lb/>
analysis of what they were worth<lb/>
and an announcement of the<lb/>
committee's intentions.<lb/>
The outside directors ex-<lb/>
tended the auction after the first<lb/>
round ended, reflecting their<lb/>
view that those proposals were<lb/>
inadequate in substance and<lb/>
price.<lb/>
RJR Nabisco's management<lb/>
offered $100 a share in cash and<lb/>
securities for a total of about $22.7<lb/>
billion. Kohlberg Kravis offered<lb/>
$94 a share in cash and securities,<lb/>
or $21.3 billion. First Boston ??;<lb/>
Del Monte canned fruits.<lb/>
The amount and heavy use of<lb/>
Fast Carolina University s<lb/>
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is taking applications for<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
Deadline: January 20,1989<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Assistant to the President<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
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Deadline: February 17,1989<lb/>
for the 1989-90 Term<lb/>
Any full time student can apply<lb/>
Applications available at Mendenhall Student Center's Information Desk<lb/>
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Chip Carter, M?r-j Er<lb/>
JAMES F.J. MCKEE, Director of Adrtant<lb/>
Ioe Harris, mm m<lb/>
KR1STEN HALBERGporti&amp;ttor<lb/>
Tim Hntirrrir i mm<lb/>
Michelle England, &amp;?ttM.?iW<lb/>
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Jeff Parkerj<lb/>
TOM FUKR,Cir,klum l<lb/>
Susan H dwell, A. m<lb/>
johnW. MEDLIN<lb/>
Mac Clark,<lb/>
December 1,1988<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
P?ge<lb/>
Christmas<lb/>
Meaning obscured by rhetoric<lb/>
Two thousand years or so ago ?<lb/>
so the story goes ? a certain man<lb/>
was born who ended up being<lb/>
nailed to wood. These days, we cele-<lb/>
brate the occasion by trading hast-<lb/>
ily-bought and often insincere gifts.<lb/>
"Christmas is for the children<lb/>
they say. Funny how, once a year,<lb/>
the children are thought of so<lb/>
fondly. The rest of the time, how-<lb/>
ever, ' children are tastelessly ex-<lb/>
ploited and used for political pur-<lb/>
poses. To borrow Garry Trudeau's<lb/>
phrasing, the final presidential de-<lb/>
bate of this year had both candidates<lb/>
exhuming the memories of dead<lb/>
children for political gain.<lb/>
They're used mostly because<lb/>
insisting that something must be<lb/>
done "for the children" stirs up<lb/>
emotions in their parents, who do<lb/>
vote, but the children themselves do<lb/>
not vote. In other words, they're<lb/>
seen but not heard; they have taxa-<lb/>
tion without representation.<lb/>
And, as eventually happens with<lb/>
most oppressed classes, the time has<lb/>
come for a voice from the youngest<lb/>
among us. A Christmastime re-<lb/>
minder.<lb/>
And they sav:<lb/>
"It is not our responsibility to<lb/>
bear the brunt of your frustration<lb/>
with your inability to solve your<lb/>
own problems. You created some of<lb/>
Farewell<lb/>
As another semester ends, The<lb/>
East Carolinian, like other student<lb/>
organizations, must now say goo-<lb/>
dbye to its seniors. Luckily, we're<lb/>
losing very few.<lb/>
Joe 1 larris stepped into the job of<lb/>
news editor this semester after a<lb/>
cross-country trip. Nobody was re-<lb/>
al lv prepared for the work load<lb/>
those first few weeks dumped on us,<lb/>
but after all those weeks of relaxa-<lb/>
tion, I think it hit Joe a little harder<lb/>
than others.<lb/>
But he jammed. He did a great<lb/>
job with the news department this<lb/>
year, especially considering he got<lb/>
little support from the managing<lb/>
editor who knew virtually nothing<lb/>
about hard news. In fact, there were<lb/>
a lot of times that Joe was the news<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Kim Kayes had an idea of what<lb/>
she was getting into. She had been<lb/>
the editor of The Buccaneer, and she<lb/>
knew how late things could get on a<lb/>
publication.<lb/>
As a layout artist, Kim was one of<lb/>
the fastest and always cheerful.<lb/>
With all the upheavals in the sports<lb/>
department, Kim was a happy tran-<lb/>
sition through it all.<lb/>
Other staff members who are<lb/>
leaving or who recently left include<lb/>
former sports editor Doug Johnson,<lb/>
ad rep Spencer Meymundi and as-<lb/>
these problems, you perpetuated<lb/>
others. Contrary to what you appar-<lb/>
ently think, this does not give you<lb/>
the moral authority to tell us how to<lb/>
run our lives.<lb/>
"It's an overused and often<lb/>
badly used phrase, but nonetheless<lb/>
the fact remains that we did not ask<lb/>
to be here. You created us to satisfy<lb/>
your own ego or for whatever other<lb/>
purposes, but we do not owe you<lb/>
anything in return.<lb/>
"When we get pregnant, we are<lb/>
not 'children having children We<lb/>
are not, in fact, children as you use<lb/>
the term. The world has changed<lb/>
and we have changed to adapt. We<lb/>
are expected to act as adults in the<lb/>
face of a difficult and hostile world,<lb/>
even though we are still treated as<lb/>
children. You cannot protect us by<lb/>
shielding us. Knowledge is power,<lb/>
not ignorance.<lb/>
"Solve your own problems, then<lb/>
come to us with ideas of how to solve<lb/>
ours.<lb/>
"But until then, swallow your<lb/>
own bitter medicine: Stop the mad-<lb/>
ness. Leave us alone, to do our<lb/>
drugs, to make our mistakes, to<lb/>
learn our own lessons and to be our<lb/>
own selves ? just as you asked of<lb/>
your own parents.<lb/>
"We will not be used any more.<lb/>
"Merry Christmas.<lb/>
sistant news editor Sean Herring,<lb/>
credit manager Michelle England<lb/>
assistant credit manager Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill and art director John Med-<lb/>
lin.<lb/>
John has cranked out ad after ad,<lb/>
complaining only a little bit. He's<lb/>
also the only other staff member<lb/>
who's been here almost as long as<lb/>
Tim, James, Pete and myself. I and<lb/>
the rest of the staff wish all these<lb/>
people luck in whatever jobs,<lb/>
schools or classes they head for.<lb/>
Reshuffling is the name of the<lb/>
game this month at the paper. Copy<lb/>
editor Stephanie Folsom will be-<lb/>
come the second female managing<lb/>
editor. Tim Hampton will take back<lb/>
his old position of news editor. I will<lb/>
go back to being features editor. We<lb/>
have an entirely new credit depart-<lb/>
ment, and Stephanie Emory is going<lb/>
to take over for John Medlin.<lb/>
One of the lessons I learned this<lb/>
year that hit home is the power the<lb/>
media wields and the temptation to<lb/>
use that power carelessly or igno-<lb/>
rantly. While any medium is a<lb/>
powerful thing, the medium of hu-<lb/>
man communication is perhaps the<lb/>
most powerful of all. During this<lb/>
Christmas season, keep that in mind<lb/>
and remember to be kind or at least<lb/>
decent to your fellow humans and<lb/>
animals. Feed the world, and Have a<lb/>
great holiday season.<lb/>
FIRSTPICTURES0F7HE REAGANBOSH<lb/>
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II<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Gorbachev has vision<lb/>
By MICHAEL KINSLEY<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
A recent survey found that nearly two-thirds of<lb/>
Americans have a favorable opinion of Mikhail<lb/>
Gorbachev. That put him ahead of every foreign<lb/>
leader except Margaret Thatcher. Had Michael<lb/>
Dukakis and George Bush been listed in the survey,<lb/>
he doubtless would have finished ahead of them,<lb/>
too. And with good reason. Gorbachev, more than<lb/>
either presidential candidate, has "the vision<lb/>
thing"? a clearly articulated view of where his<lb/>
nation, and the world, should be heading.<lb/>
Gorbachev's national vision, of course, consists<lb/>
of perestroika and glasnost: the movement of the<lb/>
Soviet economic and political systems (respectively)<lb/>
away from rigid, topdown control toward the West-<lb/>
ern model of feedom. Gorbachev's global vision is a<lb/>
retread of former California Governor Jerry Brown's<lb/>
"spaceship earth" platform.<lb/>
Nations, Gorbachev notes, are increasingly<lb/>
faced with common problems that are best ad-<lb/>
dressed internationally: environmental threats, ter-<lb/>
rorism, the cost of mutual military buildup, the<lb/>
prospect of nuclear apocalypse, or of economic<lb/>
apocalypse in financially integrated world. Increas-<lb/>
ingly, we're all in the same boat. In technical par-<lb/>
lance, this means nations are playing a "non-zero-<lb/>
sum game in which the contestants can all win, if<lb/>
they cooperate, or all lose, if they don't.<lb/>
Gorbachev is right. One of the simplest truths<lb/>
about international afffairs is that over this century<lb/>
they have become more non-zero-sum. Similarly,<lb/>
there's no doubt that Gorbachev has correctly diag-<lb/>
nosed the maladies of the Soviet economy: commu-<lb/>
nism is an inherently unproductive economic sys-<lb/>
tem, and things look especially bleak for totalitarian<lb/>
communism in the information age, when prosper-<lb/>
ity depends on the diffuse distribution of potent<lb/>
information processing and transmitting machines.<lb/>
The interesting questions aren't about<lb/>
Gorbachev's diagnosis, but about his prescrip-<lb/>
tions? their likely efficacy, his real motivations in<lb/>
espousing them, and the Western responses they call<lb/>
for. If reporters did n't so slavishly follow the rules of<lb/>
campaign discourse defined by television, these<lb/>
questions might have been addressed in depth by<lb/>
George Bush during his election campaign. Alas,<lb/>
they weren't. Yet they will persist. So, for his benefit,<lb/>
we offer this handy guide to questions that should<lb/>
have been much debated this fall.<lb/>
1. Is Gorbachev for real? Yes. There is a virtual<lb/>
consensus that his reform program is much more<lb/>
than mere talk. Even Jeane Kirkpatrick has lately<lb/>
praised growing religious and intellectual freedom<lb/>
in the Soviet Union and suggested that the U.S.S.R.<lb/>
may be heading toward a promotion from totalitar-<lb/>
ian to authoritarian regime (no small step, in her<lb/>
lexicon).<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
Indeed, the new freedom of expression, while<lb/>
still far short of American standards, is in some ways<lb/>
dramatic enough to be puzzling. In the West, the<lb/>
intial take on glasnost was that it was entirely subor<lb/>
dinate to perestroika; either Gorbachev thought (as<lb/>
many think) that some measure of political freedom<lb/>
is essential to fruitful economic freedom, or he was<lb/>
using free speech to woo the intelligentsia, or both<lb/>
But it turns out that glasnost is keeping pace with.<lb/>
even outpacing, perestroika.<lb/>
To be sure, the Soviet steps toward a qua<lb/>
capitalistic economy sound more than tentative<lb/>
Citizens are to be allowed to buy shares in industrial<lb/>
enterprises? a "stock market" is what the Soviet<lb/>
finance minister called the new system; Western<lb/>
capitalists will be allowed a controlling interest in<lb/>
joint ventures; and farmers, while still no citizens an<lb/>
allowed actually to own land, will be able to lease ir<lb/>
for decades. But aspiring entrepreneurs still suffo-<lb/>
cate in red tape. And, most important, the Soviet-<lb/>
have resisted the invisible hand itself: freely floating<lb/>
prices, which bring supply and demand into har-<lb/>
mony.<lb/>
2. Does Gorbachev really believe his own space<lb/>
ship earth rhetoric? Whether he does or not, much of<lb/>
the world seems to, and he has expoitcd this tact<lb/>
brilliantly. Indeed, for all the Reagan<lb/>
administration's foreign policy triumphs (notably in<lb/>
upping the price of Soviet expansion, thereby<lb/>
heightening the contradiction bet wen a communist<lb/>
economy and an expensive empire), Reagan-suf-<lb/>
fered a historic lapse in surrendering the center stage<lb/>
Of world opinion to Gorbachev. He" ruTS'rfiell'to<lb/>
mount a comeback by sounding kinder, gentler, and<lb/>
more like Jerry Brown. (Recently, for example, he<lb/>
endorsed the use of the World Court? not an insti-<lb/>
tution he has always paid homage to ? to resolve<lb/>
some U.SSoviet disputes.) But there's more u ork to<lb/>
be done on the global p.r. front.<lb/>
George Bush must recapture the leadership of<lb/>
international opinion, recognizing (a) that the<lb/>
people of the world love to think oi themselves as<lb/>
being fellow passengers on a giant spaceship; and (b)<lb/>
that in many ways they really arc. Through dramatic<lb/>
proposals for making the planet less tense, he can<lb/>
win friends, influence people, and find out whether<lb/>
Mikhail Gorbachev truly is a reasonable man, as<lb/>
opposed to merely a clever one. Would Gorbachev,<lb/>
for example, pull Soviet soldiers out of Eastern<lb/>
European countries in exchange for a partial with-<lb/>
drawal of American troops from Western Europe?<lb/>
How about a conventional arms pact that?<lb/>
unlike past nuclear arms treaties? would actually<lb/>
save both side some money? How about clearer<lb/>
rulesof the road to circumvent future mi litary entan-<lb/>
glements in the Third World? Bush perfunctorily<lb/>
alluded to questions like this during the campaign,<lb/>
but he didn't sound as if he had lost any sleep over<lb/>
them. He shouldn't get to the next election the same<lb/>
way.<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/>
Utters must include the name, major,<lb/>
classification, address,phone number<lb/>
and the signature of the authoris).<lb/>
Letters are limited to 300 words<lb/>
or less, double -spaced, typed or<lb/>
neatly printed. All letters are sub-<lb/>
ject to editing for brevity, obscenity<lb/>
and libel, and no personal attacks will<lb/>
be permitted. Students, faculty and<lb/>
staff writing letters for this page are<lb/>
reminded that they are limited to one<lb/>
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/>
I<lb/>
U.N. d<lb/>
Genev<lb/>
UNITED NATION!<lb/>
Unless the United State'<lb/>
decision to deny Yasser<lb/>
entry visa, the I<lb/>
Palestine will shift to .<lb/>
the PLO chairman a Cx<lb/>
sembly, diplomats said<lb/>
Arab represc<lb/>
planned to introduce a ri<lb/>
today in the United Naf<lb/>
deplores the US acti<lb/>
pones debate on<lb/>
nowduled for Thursdai<lb/>
least next month, and<lb/>
State Department to<lb/>
visa.<lb/>
Saturday's decision!<lb/>
tary of State George I<lb/>
bar Arafat from tl<lb/>
grounds he was ar<lb/>
acts of terrorism on<lb/>
and has been wide<lb/>
dozens of countries, inci<lb/>
Arab world and such staj<lb/>
allies as Britain, Canada!<lb/>
tralia.<lb/>
Only Israe! I<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
In Washington,<lb/>
Department said <lb/>
decision to deny the<lb/>
"firm and final<lb/>
A senior U.N fj <lb/>
condition of ar - j<lb/>
United States still -<lb/>
Arafat a visa, another r<lb/>
probably will i.<lb/>
moving the assen<lb/>
but diplomats say th<lb/>
enough votes, and a sn<lb/>
jority in the 30 membei<lb/>
shift the assemble wh.<lb/>
would be able to sp? i -<lb/>
U.N legal counsel<lb/>
gust Fleischhauer tol<lb/>
eommttce he U.S. decil<lb/>
Renowf<lb/>
guilty<lb/>
BOSTON (AP) ?<lb/>
nation's top psychiat<lb/>
signed from Harvard<lb/>
School's faculty after a<lb/>
another school recognizJ<lb/>
rized passages in the pj<lb/>
writings dating back 22j<lb/>
Dr. Shervert Frazit<lb/>
mer director of the Nati<lb/>
tute of Mental Healtl<lb/>
Health resigned last ul<lb/>
Harvard professor ani<lb/>
McLean Hospital, a p<lb/>
hospital affiliated withl<lb/>
versitv.<lb/>
Frazier did not di<lb/>
findings oi a facultv c<lb/>
that investigated the a;<lb/>
but said the plagiarism<lb/>
vertent, accordn<lb/>
Adelstein, dean of acadj<lb/>
crams at the medical<lb/>
"He has accepted<lb/>
dence of the committej<lb/>
stein said.<lb/>
"But he has asci<lb/>
events to his method of <lb/>
mg and composing pa<lb/>
Harvard officials<lb/>
da v the plagiarism was;<lb/>
Paul Scatcna, a graduatJ<lb/>
in cognitive sciences atl<lb/>
versitv of Rochester.<lb/>
Scatena said in i<lb/>
interview he read<lb/>
Frazier's papers while<lb/>
ing phantom pain, a buij<lb/>
sation that patients<lb/>
feel from a limb that has!<lb/>
putated.<lb/>
Scatena said he fou<lb/>
incorrect citations in tl<lb/>
and recognized paragr,<lb/>
had been lifted from aj<lb/>
: other researchers. He saj<lb/>
the passages to Dr.<lb/>
Tosteson, dean of the!<lb/>
Medical School, in Aura<lb/>
Tosteson anj<lb/>
Frazicr's resignation in<lb/>
letter to the faculty<lb/>
made public by the<lb/>
Monday, says a faculty c<lb/>
investigated the allegaf<lb/>
concluded that plagiaj<lb/>
curred in four papers<lb/>
Frazier between 1966 ai<lb/>
Frazier could not<lb/>
for comment Monday<lb/>
men at Harvard and<lb/>
Hospital said he was ov<lb/>
and unreachable.<lb/>
He did not return<lb/>
left at the hospital, and tl<lb/>
at his home went unansj<lb/>
Three of the discreJ<lb/>
pers are about phantom<lb/>
fourth is on "psychiatj<lb/>
gency management<lb/>
The papers, which<lb/>
lished in medical joui<lb/>
textbooks, were intej<lb/>
"teaching instruments"<lb/>
not purport to present<lb/>
search data, Adelstein<lb/>
One of Frazier's c<lb/>
said he thought the foi<lb/>
nation was an overreacl<lb/>
"It's not as if he stq<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0005"/><lb/>
;ion<lb/>
i<lb/>
hel<lb/>
th<lb/>
xn while<lb/>
 ays<lb/>
V csl the<lb/>
? subor<lb/>
 (as<lb/>
i edom<lb/>
- r ho w as<lb/>
? oth<lb/>
ic with<lb/>
quasi<lb/>
tentative,<lb/>
lustrial<lb/>
So uM<lb/>
rest in<lb/>
ns a re<lb/>
tse it<lb/>
u I<lb/>
nto har-<lb/>
" space-<lb/>
ichol<lb/>
I this fact<lb/>
igan<lb/>
ibl in<lb/>
? r by<lb/>
111 n i s I<lb/>
? h 5 to<lb/>
: ind<lb/>
. le, lie<lb/>
I an intt-<lb/>
solve<lb/>
tthei a ork to<lb/>
ihip o(<lb/>
ii the<lb/>
?'OS ?.i -<lb/>
Iramatic<lb/>
he can<lb/>
? . hether<lb/>
n an, as<lb/>
a ould C iorbachev,<lb/>
 out i ! Eastern<lb/>
il with-<lb/>
.  pei<lb/>
: ' ih tt<lb/>
I ictually<lb/>
irer<lb/>
tan-<lb/>
ush perfunctorily<lb/>
? during the campaign,<lb/>
ad lost anv sleep over<lb/>
? next election the same<lb/>
page are<lb/>
?:d to one<lb/>
. tents faculty and<lb/>
itirix<lb/>
icd that they .? im<lb/>
two weeks. The deadline for<lb/>
il mater hit l 5 r m Fnday for<lb/>
y paper and 5 p.m. Tuesday<lb/>
hursday editions.<lb/>
u voi Apour<lb/>
0CTIN6 THS<lb/>
A B-IB ?<lb/>
V<lb/>
TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN'<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1988<lb/>
U.N. delegation will go to<lb/>
Geneva so Arafat can speak<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
UNITED NATIONS (AP) ?<lb/>
Unless the United States erases its<lb/>
decision to deny Yasser Arafat an<lb/>
entry visa, the U.N. debate on<lb/>
Palestine will shift to Geneva so<lb/>
lates the 1947 U.SU.N. Head- slap in the face, of equal measure,<lb/>
quarters Agreement to the host to every member of this organiza-<lb/>
rountry to grant the United Na- tion<lb/>
hons. The Soviet Union and China,<lb/>
"The agreement does not and U.S. allies France, Spain,Svve-<lb/>
the FLO chairman a General As- contain a reservation of the right den and Norway, amone others<lb/>
sembly, diplomats said<lb/>
Arab representatives<lb/>
planned to introduce a resolution<lb/>
today in the United Nations that<lb/>
deplores the U.S. action, post-<lb/>
pones debate on Palestine<lb/>
nowduled for Thursday until at<lb/>
least next month, and urges the<lb/>
State Department to grant the<lb/>
visa.<lb/>
Saturday's decision by Secre<lb/>
to bar the entry of those who rep-<lb/>
resent, in the view of the host<lb/>
country, a threat to its sovereignty<lb/>
and security Flcischhauer said.<lb/>
Many nations in the world<lb/>
body said the U.S. action coun-<lb/>
tered what they described as the<lb/>
Palestine Liberation<lb/>
Organization's move toward<lb/>
modernization with its declara-<lb/>
tion of Palestinian independence<lb/>
Km- oi State George P. Shultz to Nov. 15 that also implicitly recog<lb/>
bar Arafat from the country on rtized Israel.<lb/>
grounds he was an "accessory" to jhc PLCs U.N. oberver,<lb/>
Zuhdi LabibTerzi, said "We have<lb/>
a message of peace that we want<lb/>
to bring to the General Assembly<lb/>
through Chairman Arafat. The<lb/>
to<lb/>
acts of terrorism on Americans<lb/>
and has been widely criticized by<lb/>
dozens of countries, including the<lb/>
Arab world and such staunch U.S.<lb/>
allies as Britain, Canada and Aus-<lb/>
tralia.<lb/>
Only Israel backed the U.S.<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
In Washington, the State<lb/>
Department said Mondav the U.S.<lb/>
decision to deny the visa was<lb/>
"firm and final<lb/>
A senior U.N. official said on<lb/>
condition of anonymity if the<lb/>
United States still refuses to grant<lb/>
Arafat a visa, another resolution<lb/>
probably will called this week for<lb/>
moving the assembly to Geneva<lb/>
but diplomats say they have<lb/>
enough votes, and a simple ma-<lb/>
jority in the 30 member body to<lb/>
shift the assembly where Arafat<lb/>
would be able to speak.<lb/>
U.N. legal counsel Carl-Au-<lb/>
gust Flcischhauer told a U.N.<lb/>
commttee he U.S. decision vio-<lb/>
said Arafat should be allowed to<lb/>
speak.<lb/>
Tunisia, where the PLO has<lb/>
its headquarters, said refusing the<lb/>
visa "hinders the work of the<lb/>
United Nations as an instrument<lb/>
tor bringing about peace and se-<lb/>
curity in the world<lb/>
Aducious Maksoud said<lb/>
Monday that "if in 24, 36 or 48<lb/>
hours at the latest, if there is no re-<lb/>
versal, we will have no option but<lb/>
to go to a country which respects<lb/>
its obligations to the United Na-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Arafat called the U.S. move "a<lb/>
sheer violation of the interna-<lb/>
tional law and the U.N. charter"<lb/>
DOUBLE<lb/>
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United States is imposing some and said Washington was ignor-<lb/>
obstacles that would impede easy ing international backing for the<lb/>
access, so we have to do it some-<lb/>
where else<lb/>
The U.N. Committee on Rela-<lb/>
tions with the Host Country<lb/>
heard numerous speakers assail<lb/>
the U.S. decision to bar Arafat<lb/>
from speaking to the General<lb/>
Assembly.<lb/>
The chairman of the Commit-<lb/>
tee on Relations with the Host<lb/>
Countrv, Prince Constantine<lb/>
Moushoutas of Cyprus, said "the<lb/>
vast majority" felt the United<lb/>
States had violated the Headquar-<lb/>
ters Agreement, but the commit-<lb/>
tee took no action.<lb/>
Iraqi Ambassadador Ismat<lb/>
Kittani told the same committee:<lb/>
"The decision by Washington is a<lb/>
independent state of Palestine,<lb/>
proclaimed this month by the<lb/>
Palestine National Council, the<lb/>
PLO's parliament-in-exilc.<lb/>
"Why are they afraid that l<lb/>
speak to world public opinion<lb/>
and explain the new Palestinian<lb/>
decisions?" Arafat said in<lb/>
Baghdad, Iraq.<lb/>
State Department spokesman<lb/>
Charles Redman said the shift to<lb/>
Geneva was necessarv because<lb/>
other PLO spokesmen in New-<lb/>
York could speak instead of Ara-<lb/>
fat.<lb/>
"Probably no other country in<lb/>
the world has worked as hard at<lb/>
the peace process as the United<lb/>
States has Redman said.<lb/>
Renown Harvard pyschiatrist<lb/>
guilty of plagiarizing book<lb/>
BOSTON (AP) ? One of the<lb/>
nation's top psychiatrists re-<lb/>
signed from Harvard Medical<lb/>
School's faculty after a student at<lb/>
another school recognized plagia-<lb/>
rized passages in the professor's<lb/>
writings dating back 22 years.<lb/>
Dr. Shervert Frazier, 67, for<lb/>
mer director of the National Insti-<lb/>
tute of Mental Health Mental<lb/>
Health resigned last week as a<lb/>
Harvard professor and head of<lb/>
McLean Hospital, a psychiatric<lb/>
hospital affiliated with the uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
Frazier did not dispute the<lb/>
findings of a faculty committee<lb/>
that investigated the allegations,<lb/>
but said the plagiarism was inad-<lb/>
vertent, according to Dr. S. James<lb/>
Adelstein, dean of academic pro-<lb/>
grams at the medical school.<lb/>
"He has accepted the evi-<lb/>
dence of the committee Adel-<lb/>
stein said.<lb/>
"But he has ascribed the<lb/>
events to his method of note-tak-<lb/>
ing and composing papers<lb/>
Harvard officials said Mon-<lb/>
day the plagiarism was spotted by<lb/>
Paul Scatena, a graduate student<lb/>
in cognitive sciences at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Rochester.<lb/>
Scatena said in a telephone<lb/>
interview he read several of<lb/>
Frazier's papers while research-<lb/>
ing phantom pain, a burning sen-<lb/>
sation that patients sometimes<lb/>
feel from a limb that has been am-<lb/>
putated.<lb/>
Scatena said he found many<lb/>
incorrect citations in the papers<lb/>
and recognized paragraphs that<lb/>
had been lifted from articles by<lb/>
other researchers. He said he sent<lb/>
the passages to Dr. Daniel C.<lb/>
Tosteson, dean of the Harvard<lb/>
Medical School, in August.<lb/>
Tosteson announced<lb/>
Frazier's resignation in a Nov. 23<lb/>
letter to the faculty. The letter,<lb/>
made public by the university<lb/>
Monday, saysa faculty committee<lb/>
investigated the allegations and<lb/>
concluded that plagiarism oc-<lb/>
curred in four papers written by<lb/>
Frazier between 1966 and 1975.<lb/>
Frazier could not be reached<lb/>
for comment Monday. Spokes-<lb/>
men at Harvard and McLean<lb/>
Hospital said he was out of town<lb/>
and unreachable.<lb/>
He did not return messages<lb/>
left at the hospital, and the phone<lb/>
at his home went unanswered.<lb/>
Three of the discredited pa-<lb/>
pers are about phantom pain. The<lb/>
fourth is on "psychiatric emer-<lb/>
gency management<lb/>
The papers, which were pub-<lb/>
lished in medical journal and<lb/>
textbooks, were intended ?as<lb/>
"teaching instruments" and did<lb/>
not purport to present new re-<lb/>
search data, Adelstein said.<lb/>
One of Frazier's colleagues<lb/>
said he thought the forced resig-<lb/>
nation was an overreaction.<lb/>
"It's not as if he stole a great<lb/>
idea from someone or published<lb/>
someone else's research as if it<lb/>
was his own said Dr. Seymour<lb/>
Netv, professor emeritus oi psy-<lb/>
chiatry and senior scientist at the<lb/>
National Institute oi I lealth.<lb/>
But Dr. Miles Shore, director<lb/>
-of-the ?Masaaehusctts Mewta"<lb/>
Health Center, said: "Academic<lb/>
institutions have a very important<lb/>
obligation to guarantee the scien-<lb/>
tific integrity of what goes on<lb/>
within their walls and I think<lb/>
Harvard<lb/>
action<lb/>
took the appropriate<lb/>
And Harvard spokesman<lb/>
Peter Costa said: "The universitv<lb/>
takes very seriously any charges<lb/>
of plagiarism because that's what<lb/>
we're, about the search for' trehfi<lb/>
and knowledge<lb/>
The university hasbeen hit bv<lb/>
other allegations of scientific mis-<lb/>
conduct in recent vears.<lb/>
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KINKO'S COPIES: Needs full or part<lb/>
time campus sales representative. 1 lourly<lb/>
wage plus commission. SalesGood<lb/>
Communication skills helpful. Call Con-<lb/>
nie or Yates M-F daytime at 752-0875.<lb/>
TWO STUDENTS NEEDED: To help<lb/>
care for toddlers on Thursday mornings<lb/>
from 9-11:30 a.m. Begin January 5th. Must<lb/>
have transportation. Call Mrs. Dunn at<lb/>
355-6852.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
TO THE 4TH FLOOR CLEMENT. It's<lb/>
been a great semester with all of you<lb/>
Study hard for finaLs and do well. 1 look<lb/>
forward to next semester. Happy Holi-<lb/>
days! ?Love, Joan.<lb/>
LOST-N-FOUND: Lost 6 months old<lb/>
white ChowGerman Shepherd mixed.<lb/>
Answers to Bailey. Lost in the East 2nd<lb/>
Street area. Has brown leather collar. Call<lb/>
Carmen Smith 758-4443 -h; 551-4495 -w.<lb/>
REWARD.<lb/>
W,W - B.W BILLY JOE: I am very proud<lb/>
of you, I know you're happy too! To think<lb/>
you don't have one degree, now you have<lb/>
two! It's going to be hard getting used to<lb/>
you not being around. AT&amp;T, your busi-<lb/>
ness has been bound. Beach trips, long<lb/>
dinner sits and wild late night acts, are not<lb/>
about to end. Not only do I Love You, You<lb/>
Are My Best Friend. I'd wish you luck in<lb/>
your future, but I know it will be great!<lb/>
Afterall, I have all intentions of remaining<lb/>
your mate! ?Very Proud, Cole.<lb/>
AOPI'S: Merry Christmas! And Happy<lb/>
Founder's Day ? Ninety-one years of<lb/>
excellence!<lb/>
LINDA, LESLIE, JILL, APRIL, MICH-<lb/>
ELLE, MELISSA, JILL, DIANE AND<lb/>
BETH: Happy Holidays! Good luck on<lb/>
finals! You're a great staff! ?Love, Joan.<lb/>
AOPI'S: Wishing everyone Happy Holi-<lb/>
days and a Festive New Year Good Luck<lb/>
on exams.<lb/>
AOPI'S: Get ready for next semester ? it<lb/>
will be one to remember<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA PI: Wishes everyone<lb/>
gcxxl luck on his or her last papers, proj-<lb/>
ects, and exams!<lb/>
HAPPY HOLIDAYS: From Alpha Delta<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
HAPPY HAPPY BIRTHDAY CASSIE<lb/>
LANE Thanks for all the fun. ?Love<lb/>
you, Wade.<lb/>
CHRISTOPHER: I love you buga Good<lb/>
luck on your finals, I know you'll do<lb/>
great ?Love, Joan.<lb/>
BYE ALDOG: To all busdrivers, 2nd<lb/>
floor Scott Hall residents, Ed, Shannon,<lb/>
Matt, Billy, Kyle, Stewart &amp; Paul, it's been<lb/>
great knowing ya'U, it's been real, go wild<lb/>
in the spring. Bye Chris.<lb/>
THE SISTERS AND PLEDGES OF<lb/>
ZETA TAU ALPHA: Would like to wish<lb/>
everyone good luck on their exams.<lb/>
AMI B Cocktail this year promises to be<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
great! Maybe this year I'll leave with my<lb/>
date. No smashed liquor ? drink it, it's<lb/>
quicker. Don't trash your dress and I'll try<lb/>
not to stress - Here's to Recovery! ? Love<lb/>
U, Missie B.<lb/>
STACY: I had a great time meeting you<lb/>
Tuesday night. I hope you liked the eggs!<lb/>
Let's do something soon! ?Jay.<lb/>
J.L.D Thanks for helping me out this<lb/>
week. Don't give up on me. ?Love, RE.<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA PLEDGES: Have a<lb/>
great Christmas &amp; best of luck on exams!<lb/>
?Love the sisters.<lb/>
HOLLY &amp; DONNA: You have been a<lb/>
terrific help on the floor. Thanks for all<lb/>
your support and for your ear in times of<lb/>
trouble. You're the best of friends! ?Love<lb/>
Joan.<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA COCKTAIL<lb/>
DATES: Get psyched to have a blast!<lb/>
'Cause we saved the best for last! Can't<lb/>
wait. ?Love the Alpha Xi Delta's.<lb/>
FRATERNITIES &amp; SORORITIES: Good<lb/>
luck on exams &amp; have a safe and Merry<lb/>
Christmas. ?Love the Alpha Xi Delta's.<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI: Wishes a belated<lb/>
congratulations to our new brothers:<lb/>
David Baird, Robert Barto, Scott<lb/>
Crawford, Tony Geouge, Greg Gentry,<lb/>
Ronnie Giles, John Gist, James Grey, Eric<lb/>
Halus, Kevin Harris, Don Harvey, Chris<lb/>
Herman, Steve Huston, Chip Lanier, Scott<lb/>
Mulwee, Chris McHenry, Billy Schiff,<lb/>
Haywood Tyndall, Brady White, Randy<lb/>
Wynn, Jason Yoder. Keep up the enthusi-<lb/>
asm, next semester will be the best yet!<lb/>
KA BROTHERS &amp; LITTLE SISTER<lb/>
PLEDGES: Everyone get siked, it's that<lb/>
time of year, our annual Christmas party<lb/>
is tomorrow, Friday, Dec. 2. Little Sister<lb/>
Pledges have done a great job and we look<lb/>
forward to seeing you as sisters.<lb/>
THE WAY CAMPUS FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
TWIG FELLOWSHIPS: Are available<lb/>
every Tuesday and Thursday at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
at 2007 Tiffany Dr. in Heritage Village<lb/>
Call 355-5164 for details. Hot Bible! Great<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
Fellowship!<lb/>
S.L.J If it's $120 for the night, how much<lb/>
for the weekend?<lb/>
ECU BUSDRIVERS: To Joanna; To Scott,<lb/>
alias Pedro who had Tl IE party; To Chris<lb/>
A whose bravery enables him to pull out<lb/>
in front of Mack trucks; To Angela, we<lb/>
miss you; To Jan, the man-hater, To Stevie,<lb/>
that's a big roger doger 4 good buddy; To<lb/>
Dennis, not to be confused w Dennis the<lb/>
"Menace To Johnny, have you seen your<lb/>
cousin today - it's Ivan's fault; To Chris<lb/>
W fix your car door &amp; maybe you won't<lb/>
get left at P.W. anymore; To Leanne, the<lb/>
AOPi's own; To George, who will always<lb/>
be a rookie; To Allen, "better late than<lb/>
never" Spainhour; To Darrell, is he a bus<lb/>
driver?; To Glen, Glen who?; To Ryland,<lb/>
who won the "most hrs of the year<lb/>
award To Marcus, are you sure you're<lb/>
25?; To Rob, the legend lives on. . . ; To<lb/>
Paul, whose keeping the beer industry<lb/>
alive; To Bill, Are the nails in the box ar<lb/>
ranged in secret code? I'm tellin' Lynn. It's<lb/>
been a great SAFE semester! Thanks for<lb/>
everything and remember . The radio is<lb/>
for Transit use only, Don't speed on 5th<lb/>
St &amp; watch out for oncoming Mercedes!<lb/>
?Love, Stef.<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI CONGRATU-<lb/>
LATES ITS NEW OFFICERS Paul Sulli-<lb/>
van, Pres; Gary I loffman, Vice Pres; Greg<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
Vacek, Tres Joey Stanaland, Rec Secre<lb/>
tary; Bruce Liner, Sergeant at Arms; Mik<lb/>
Daly, Marshall.<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI: Congratulates its<lb/>
graduating seniors: John "Slate" Carter<lb/>
Craig Belcher, and David Daughton<lb/>
Good Luck in the Real World'<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI LITTLE SISTFR<lb/>
PLEDGES: Get Ready' Tonight's the<lb/>
night!<lb/>
Buy, sell or say hello via The<lb/>
East Carolinian Classified<lb/>
Ads.<lb/>
Deadlines for Tuesday's<lb/>
paper is Friday at 4p.m. and<lb/>
Thursday's paper is Mon-<lb/>
day at 4p.m.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
Your Best Look<lb/>
Specializing In: MANICURES:<lb/>
French ManicuresNail Tips<lb/>
Overlays Wrapping Acrylics<lb/>
PEDICURES-SKIN CARE:Body<lb/>
Wrapping'Face &amp; Body Waxing<lb/>
FacialsDeep Pore Cleansing<lb/>
Acne TreatmentsMuscle Tone<lb/>
TreatmentsComplete Line Of<lb/>
Therapeutic Skin Care Products For<lb/>
Men &amp; Worn en<lb/>
355-2969 - For Appointment<lb/>
314 Plaza Dr Greenville<lb/>
OUR RESUMES<lb/>
MAKE A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE<lb/>
? f .i ??? Mtga - id ?.?,  ?????? ? market<lb/>
? i nga ?? .?? tfessn i i toolnng resume by A. . ; ,<lb/>
), -r ne i i kages lei fou i hooM balioen ph ?.<lb/>
tse ;vntnq ,v basir WC' '?'<lb/>
,f" edtKeon ?p oH?? irw? oes! anop at oap?' m<lb/>
ei . ope ?"? ?? i ? toe aea<lb/>
FAST copies<lb/>
for fast rwes<lb/>
? .1I HtW<lb/>
I . ? ras$ ?x'?<lb/>
ACCU I<lb/>
BSCOPY<lb/>
THE resume PEOPLE<lb/>
A Beautiful Place to Live<lb/>
? All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
? And Ready To Rent ?<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
? Ux-ated Near ECU<lb/>
? Across From Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
Limited offer-$275 a month<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
7S?-7S1S or ?30-137<lb/>
Office open-Apt 8,12-5:30 p.m<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS-<lb/>
Ck-an and quirt one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only $205 a month, 6 month<lb/>
lease. MOBILE HOME RENTALS - couples or<lb/>
?singles Apartment and mobile homes in Azalea<lb/>
Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.<lb/>
Contact j.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal and Confidential Care"<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call for appointment Mon. thru Sat. Low<lb/>
Coat Termination to 20 weeks of pregnancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
HtCOS i ire GrVrgefow" sior<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Subscription Form<lb/>
Name:<lb/>
Address:<lb/>
Date to Begin:<lb/>
Complimentary.<lb/>
Amount Paid:<lb/>
Date to End:<lb/>
.Individual<lb/>
Business:<lb/>
-Date Paid:<lb/>
Rate Individual $2S per yearBuflncw $15 per ymr<lb/>
feturn to: The East Carolinian, Publications Bldg, ? ECU. Cmavflle. NC 27KSS-4153<lb/>
ADVERTISING STAFF<lb/>
I would like to take this opportunity to thank all of<lb/>
you for your hard work and dedication this<lb/>
semester. This semester has been the most success-<lb/>
ful semester the Advertising department has ever<lb/>
had. I think we are building the foundation for a<lb/>
tradition of quality service and excellence. The East<lb/>
Carolinian's success is a direct result of your hard<lb/>
work.<lb/>
I look forward to next semester with high expecta-<lb/>
tions. I would like to wish each of you a happy and<lb/>
safe Holiday Season. I will see you all next year.<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Christian Fellowship will be held every<lb/>
Thurs. at 6:00 in the Culture Center. You<lb/>
are invited to join us.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
study for Fall Semester andor Spring<lb/>
Semester, you are encouraged to contact<lb/>
the Co-op office about off-campus place-<lb/>
ments. Call 757-6979 or come by the GCB,<lb/>
room 2028.<lb/>
LQST?<lb/>
Something missing in your life? We've<lb/>
found it and we want to share it with you.<lb/>
Jenkins Art Auditorium. EVERY Fri.<lb/>
night at 7:00.<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
If you are challenged everyday with prob-<lb/>
lems that you find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
us for the uncompromised word of Cod.<lb/>
Every Fri. night at 700 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
COOPERATIVE EP.<lb/>
Cooperative Ed a free service offered by<lb/>
the University, is designed fo help you<lb/>
find career-related work experience be-<lb/>
fore you graduate. We would like to<lb/>
extend an invitation to all students to at-<lb/>
tend a Co-op Information Seminar in the<lb/>
GCB (see schedule below for Nov. semi-<lb/>
nars). The only bonuses we can offer you<lb/>
for taking time from your busy schedule<lb/>
are: 'extra cash to help cover the cost of<lb/>
college expenses or perhaps to increase<lb/>
your "fun" budget, ?opportunities to test<lb/>
a career choice if you have made one or to<lb/>
explore career options if undecided about<lb/>
a future career, and a highly "market-<lb/>
able" degree, which includes a valuable<lb/>
career-related experience, when you<lb/>
graduate. Co-op Seminars?Fall, 1988:<lb/>
Thurs Dec. 1,1 p.m rm. 2010; and Mon<lb/>
Dec. 5, 4 p.m rm. 2006.<lb/>
BAHAMAS OR CANCUN?<lb/>
Let the Student Union Travel Committee<lb/>
take you to a new and exciting place for<lb/>
Spring Break '89. Shop in the world's<lb/>
marketplace, plan on eating 5-6 times a<lb/>
day, dip in the pool, play shufflcboard, get<lb/>
a tan, just relax . cruise the Bahamas for<lb/>
5 days4 nights CjR if cruising the ocean<lb/>
blue is not for you, then come with us for<lb/>
7 days and nights in Cancun, Mexico.<lb/>
While in Cancun, stay in a hotel that is on<lb/>
one of Cancun's finest beaches. Just relax<lb/>
and enjoy the sun and beach on this gor-<lb/>
geous island of paradise Check out our<lb/>
affordable prices at Central Ticket Office<lb/>
at Mendenhall (757-6611).<lb/>
GEQUES<lb/>
Group photographs will not be taken after<lb/>
Dec. 5. If your org. has not had their pic-<lb/>
ture taken by Dec. 5, they will not appear<lb/>
in the 1989 BUCCANEER. Call 757-6501<lb/>
and leave date &amp; time for the photo to be<lb/>
taken. Please give two days notice for the<lb/>
photographer.<lb/>
CLASS PICTURES<lb/>
There will be another session for students<lb/>
to have their class pictures taken for the<lb/>
1989 Buccaneer. If you were turned away,<lb/>
or did not get the chance to have them<lb/>
taken last time, you may have them taken<lb/>
Jan. 23-27, 1989. Come by the Buccaneer<lb/>
office &amp; sign tip on the sheet posted on the<lb/>
door. We are located on the 2nd floor of<lb/>
the Publications Bldg. in front of Joyner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
EDUCATION MAIORS<lb/>
The School of Education is sponsoring a<lb/>
workstudy trip to Puebla, Mexico dur-<lb/>
ing spring break (March 4-12, 1989).<lb/>
Opportunities are available to observe ed.<lb/>
in Mexico, teach, and travel. All ed. majors<lb/>
are invited to participate. Applications<lb/>
are in the Dean's office, Speight Bldg. For<lb/>
more info contact Marianne Exum at 757-<lb/>
6271. Application deadline ? Dec. 12.<lb/>
ALL LITTLE SISTER ORG.<lb/>
Get your group photo taken for the Bucca-<lb/>
neer today. Call 757-6501 to set up an appt.<lb/>
The last day to get a picture taken is Dec.<lb/>
5.<lb/>
TRAVEL COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student Union Travel Committee has<lb/>
scheduled a meeting today at 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
Please plan to attend! (Group photos for<lb/>
the yearbook will be taken at 5:00 p.m. at<lb/>
this meeting). Thanks!<lb/>
CASWELL CENTER'S<lb/>
PROJECT INSIDEOUT<lb/>
This is a unique opportunity to examine a<lb/>
state institution for persons with mental<lb/>
retardation. Project InsideOut is an in-<lb/>
tensive 3 12 day live-in experience de-<lb/>
signed to expose persons in the field to the<lb/>
entirety of the facility. It provides an in-<lb/>
valuable learning experience for students.<lb/>
This year's project will be held Feb. 1-4,<lb/>
1989. If you have any questions, please<lb/>
contact 559-5100.<lb/>
NATIONAL STUDENT<lb/>
EXCHANGE<lb/>
Interested in exploring new places? Na-<lb/>
tional Student Exchange provides an ex-<lb/>
citing opportunity for ECU students to<lb/>
attend one of over 80 colleges or universi-<lb/>
ties across the U.S. Live in another part of<lb/>
the country and experience college life in<lb/>
a different setting for a semester or a year.<lb/>
ECU students pay the same tuition and<lb/>
fees as at ECU, and avoid the red tape<lb/>
normally associated with transferring to<lb/>
another institution. For more info, and<lb/>
applications, contact Stephanie Evancho<lb/>
or Dr. Maurice Simon, 1002 GCB or call<lb/>
757-6769.<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
The Graduate Mgmt. Admission Test<lb/>
(GMAT) will be offered at ECU on Jan. 28,<lb/>
1989. Application blanks are to be com-<lb/>
pleted and mailed to GMAT; Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, Box 966-R, Princeton, N.J.<lb/>
08540. Applications must be postmarked<lb/>
no later than Dec. 26,1988. Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the ECU Testing<lb/>
Center, Room-105, Speight Bldg.<lb/>
Gj&amp;E<lb/>
The Graduate Record Exam (GRE) will be<lb/>
offered at ECU on Feb. 4,1989. Applica-<lb/>
tion blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to GRE, Educational Testing Serv-<lb/>
ice, Box 955, Princeton, N.J. 08540. Appli-<lb/>
cations must be postmarked no later than<lb/>
Dec. 27, 1988. Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Room-105, Speight Bldg.<lb/>
'A CHRISTMAS CELEBRA-<lb/>
TION"<lb/>
The Greenville Choral Society will pres-<lb/>
ent "A Christmas Celebration" with the<lb/>
Tar River Orchestra and Chorus on Dec.<lb/>
10 at 8:00 p.m. in Wright Auditorium. Dr.<lb/>
Rhonda Fleming, director of the<lb/>
Greenville Choral Society has announced<lb/>
that this concert will be one that the entire<lb/>
family will enjoy featuring approximately<lb/>
300 performers. A pre-concert program<lb/>
beginning at 7:30 p.m. will feature the<lb/>
Suzuki Violins of Eastern N.C. and the<lb/>
Greenville Suzuki Assoc Joanne Bath, co-<lb/>
ordinator. The Tar River Orchestra and<lb/>
Chorus, I lernan Murno, will be appear-<lb/>
ing with the Greenville Society. Tickets<lb/>
are available from Cha Rich Music Co.<lb/>
and Piano and Organ Distributors of<lb/>
Greenville. Group rates are available. For<lb/>
info call Stephen Vaughn, 752-6154. This<lb/>
program is sponsored in part by Carolina<lb/>
Telephone and Greenville Cable TV.<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT<lb/>
Private and semi-private. Applications<lb/>
now being accepted for Spring semester.<lb/>
Male or female. Cost of room for one<lb/>
semester is (double room) $520 00 Spon-<lb/>
sored by Wesley FoundationMethodist<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
OVERSEAS PEVELQPjVlENT<lb/>
The Overseas Development Network<lb/>
(ODN) is having an end ot the semester<lb/>
holiday dinner on Dec. 1 at 6 p.m. Every-<lb/>
one bring a covered dish - anyone inter-<lb/>
ested is welcome to come I ocation: 210 S.<lb/>
Pitt St For moreinfo call Marianne Exum<lb/>
(h) 830-9450 or (w) 757-6271.<lb/>
P.E. MOTOR &amp; PHYSICAL<lb/>
FITNESS TEST<lb/>
Place. Minges. Time and date: 10:00 a.m<lb/>
Dec. 6 (Reading Day). A passing score on<lb/>
this test is required of all students prior to<lb/>
declaring P.E. as a major. 1) Maintaining<lb/>
an average T-score of 45 on the six-item<lb/>
test battery. 2) Having a T-score of 45 on<lb/>
the aerobics run. "Any student with a<lb/>
medical condition that would eontraindi-<lb/>
cate participation in the testing should<lb/>
contact Mike McCannon or Dr. Gay Israel<lb/>
at 757-6497. To be exempted from any<lb/>
portion of the test, you must have a<lb/>
physician's excuse. A detailed summary<lb/>
of the test components is available in the<lb/>
Human Performance Lab (room 113,<lb/>
Minges). Your physicians' excuse must<lb/>
specifically state from which items you<lb/>
are exempt.<lb/>
COMPUTER CLUB<lb/>
The East Carolina Computer Club will<lb/>
meet in Austin 223 on Dec 1 at 330 p.m.<lb/>
We will have refreshments, deode on a<lb/>
design for the club shirts and discuss the<lb/>
Jan programming contest.<lb/>
SELF-HELP POSITION<lb/>
(Part-time Clerk Typist and Reception-<lb/>
ist). The Dept. of Political Science seeks <lb/>
reliable, conscientious, and efficient stu- ;<lb/>
dent with strong skills and some experi-<lb/>
ence to assist staff and faculty in a variety<lb/>
of activities. Good typing, copying and '<lb/>
clerical skills are desired. Please contact .<lb/>
Mrs. Cynthia Smith, Brewster A-124 per- ?<lb/>
sonally or by telephone, 757-6030, 8 30"<lb/>
am. to 5:00 p.m MonFri. We will be:<lb/>
hiring as soon as possible.<lb/>
-I<lb/>
CO-OP POSITIONS<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
1. IOG summer intern program in state?<lb/>
government. Majors: Political Science,<lb/>
Journalism, Biology, Foreign Lang TheC.<lb/>
atre Arts, School of Art, Ed Social Work,?<lb/>
Computer Science and others interested;<lb/>
in state govt. Dates: 6189-81183<lb/>
Weeks: 10. Hoursweek: 40. Positions: 30<lb/>
Salary: $5hour Housing. Meredith Co??<lb/>
lege. Location: Raleigh, N.C Deadline: lg?<lb/>
2789. Class Soph Jr Sr. 2) NC sta<lb/>
Ann<lb/>
govt. (Discover ? ?<lb/>
ships. Majors Vai - .1<lb/>
1189. Salary A; . . J<lb/>
hon' N C Class Soph j<lb/>
GPA: 2 5 or greater H . ;<lb/>
Positions 10 .j<lb/>
10. For more in!<lb/>
tact OvOp Ed. in 20281<lb/>
INDUSTRIA1 IKll.<lb/>
Industrial Te<lb/>
.ng Gard<lb/>
Flanagan Bldg I l<lb/>
ase and seefoi<lb/>
struction avr.<lb/>
info i- giver<lb/>
JQINTHi<lb/>
Are youii<lb/>
If so, thei<lb/>
involved ???. l<lb/>
Mitchell<lb/>
WASHir<lb/>
lie Democrat- I<lb/>
George Mitchell I f'<lb/>
majority leadi rand I<lb/>
will guide th<lb/>
its coming si rr<lb/>
George Bush<lb/>
sources said.<lb/>
Mitchell v.<lb/>
do? a1 meeting b mtm<lb/>
vOi. ? te after first i n<lb/>
missing a ma<lb/>
against Senat i<lb/>
I la wan and Bennett<lb/>
Louisiana, said the -<lb/>
spoke on tl<lb/>
nymity.<lb/>
Far r in the d<lb/>
cans re- !?? ' : :<lb/>
leader.<lb/>
Mitchell, v<lb/>
to the Senate in 19fi<lb/>
in 1982 and r <lb/>
month, will succeed R<lb/>
Byrd, D-VV.Va<lb/>
-tep down as majoril<lb/>
become chairmai<lb/>
?Appropriations Com<lb/>
Although the least -<lb/>
the three car<lb/>
considered a str ng . <lb/>
for the pa rtv A New E r<lb/>
W'<lb/>
TO<lb/>
SUPP<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0007"/><lb/>
Tl IF EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1988 7<lb/>
res (oej sunaland, Rev Secre<lb/>
Ir Bruce L inor Sergeant at Arms, Mike<lb/>
Marshal<lb/>
HA SIGMA TH1 Congratulates its<lb/>
.iuating seniors lohn "Sate Carter.<lb/>
md David Daughton<lb/>
? Real World!<lb/>
H V SIGMA PHI LITTLE SISTER<lb/>
IH.ls , ; Ready! tonight s the<lb/>
uy, sell or sa hello via The<lb/>
cist Carolinian Classified<lb/>
Ads.<lb/>
Deadlines for Tuesday's<lb/>
.per is Fridaj at 4p.m. and<lb/>
rhursday's paper is Mon-<lb/>
da at 4p.m.<lb/>
SP1 i CLASSIFIED<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
A 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/>
men! Mon thru SaL Low<lb/>
o 20 werits of prrgnanry<lb/>
1 800-433-2930<lb/>
G STAFF<lb/>
? nity to thank all of<lb/>
and dedication this<lb/>
he most success-<lb/>
partment has over<lb/>
mndation for a<lb/>
Hence. The East<lb/>
lit of vour hard<lb/>
with high expecta-<lb/>
ou a happy and<lb/>
u all next year.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
v (Discover the Real World) intern<lb/>
ips Majors: Various Dates: 6589 8<lb/>
. I 89 salary: Approx. $200week. I oca<lb/>
?. n N.C Class Soph, year complete<lb/>
PA 2.5 or greater Hoursweek 40.<lb/>
Positions 100 Deadline: 12789. Weeks<lb/>
' For more info and applications, con-<lb/>
? , t Co CY Ed in 2028 GCB, 757-6979.<lb/>
IXDUSTR1 AL TECH.<lb/>
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JOIN THE CR'5<lb/>
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this Thur night in Mendonhall at 7:00<lb/>
p m<lb/>
BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
There will be a dinneraward party for all<lb/>
Biology Club members Pec 6th at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. at the Golden Coral A sign up sheet<lb/>
is located by room Biol N 101. All mem-<lb/>
bers shoul.l attend<lb/>
"CHRISTMAS IN OLD<lb/>
MLSQN'<lb/>
A treasure of earl) twentieth century<lb/>
architectur. will be featured on the Old<lb/>
Wilson Historic District Association's<lb/>
third annu.y 'Christmas in Old Wilson'<lb/>
tour of hones, Dec. 11, 130-6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served Tickets may<lb/>
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Council. My kitchen, Krmgles, Inc. or the<lb/>
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243 1009.<lb/>
WORK STUDY POSITIONS<lb/>
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Ihe Foreign bang Dept has several posi-<lb/>
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POSITIONS AVAILABLE<lb/>
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MEN'S FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
"here will be a final meeting tonight at<lb/>
8:00. The place is 102 Biltmore St.<lb/>
WASII1NGTON (AP) - Sen-<lb/>
ile Democrats today elected<lb/>
(leorge Mitchell oi Maine as theit<lb/>
majority leader and the man who<lb/>
Ail guide the chamber through<lb/>
its coming skirmishes with<lb/>
icorge Bush's White House,<lb/>
sources said.<lb/>
vtitchell was elected in the<lb/>
clo'jd meeting by a unanimous<lb/>
vOi - . te after first narrowly<lb/>
missing a majority in his race<lb/>
igainst Senators Daniel Inouve of<lb/>
; la wan and Bennett lohnston of<lb/>
! ouisiana, said the sources v ?<lb/>
-poke on the condition oi ano-<lb/>
nymity.<lb/>
Earlier in the day, Republi-<lb/>
cans re-elected Bob Dole as their<lb/>
leader.<lb/>
Mitchell, who was appointed<lb/>
to the Senate in 1980, was elected<lb/>
in 1982 and re-elected earlier this<lb/>
rtonth, will succeed Robert C.<lb/>
Byrd, D-W.Va who decided to<lb/>
step down as majority leader to<lb/>
become chairman oi the Senate<lb/>
Appropriations Committee.<lb/>
Although the least senior oi<lb/>
ihe three candidates, Mitchell is<lb/>
t onsidered a strong spokesman<lb/>
for the partv. A New England lib-<lb/>
eral, the former federal prosecu-<lb/>
tor and judge has a regutation as a<lb/>
skilled, thoughtful legislator.<lb/>
Mitchell garnered 27 votes on<lb/>
the first ballot, one short of a ma-<lb/>
jority among the 55 Democrats in<lb/>
the new Senate. When it became<lb/>
apparent he would eventually<lb/>
win a majority, the sources said,<lb/>
his colleagues approved his<lb/>
nomination unanimously.<lb/>
Mitchell, 55, is a liberal like<lb/>
Inouve but less tradition-bound.<lb/>
He appealed to Democrats<lb/>
seeking someone who would<lb/>
appear less ideological but still<lb/>
could act as a strong public<lb/>
speaker fcr the party.<lb/>
Hawaii's Inouve, at 64 the<lb/>
oldest and most senior in the<lb/>
Senate, pi .ched himself as the<lb/>
most experienced of the three. His<lb/>
liberal voting record is in line with<lb/>
traditional Democrats.<lb/>
Johnston, 56, is the most con<lb/>
servativeof the three. I lecited his<lb/>
Southern roots and parliamen-<lb/>
tary skill.<lb/>
The th roe candidates, besides<lb/>
representing different regions,<lb/>
offered different perspectives for<lb/>
the Democrats.<lb/>
Mitchell will lead Democrats<lb/>
Aside from those broad<lb/>
themes, the candidates appealed<lb/>
to their colleagues on very per-<lb/>
sonal issues such as demands for<lb/>
choice committee assignments<lb/>
and changes in the Senate rules<lb/>
and schedule.<lb/>
Dole, the Kansas senator who<lb/>
recently has been meeting with<lb/>
Bush to settle their differences,<lb/>
was re-elected in a voice vote that<lb/>
reinstalled three Republican offi-<lb/>
cers who faced no opposition,<lb/>
said Walt Riker, Dole's spokes-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Alan Simpson, R-Wyo was<lb/>
re elected minority whip; Bill<lb/>
Armstrong, R-Colo was re-<lb/>
turned as chairman of the Repub-<lb/>
lican Policy Committee, and Thad<lb/>
Cochran, R-Miss was kept on as<lb/>
GOP secretary, Rixcr said.<lb/>
The GOP conference chair-<lb/>
man, Sen. John Chafee, R-R.I de-<lb/>
feated challenger Frank Murkow-<lb/>
ski, R-Alaska, by 28-17 to retain<lb/>
his post, Riker said. Sen. Don<lb/>
Nickels, R-Okla defeated Sen.<lb/>
John McCain, R- Ariz on a vote of<lb/>
28-17 to head the National Repub-<lb/>
lican Senatorial Committee.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058113_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1.1988<lb/>
Bush, Dole may collaborate<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;3M<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - gotiators on the first day of his<lb/>
George Bush is promising to work presidency to deal with Congress,<lb/>
with former rival Bob Dole on Bush is expected to send<lb/>
forging an early budget accord Congress only a sketchy blue-<lb/>
but says "we're not naive" about print of his budget proposals in-<lb/>
the ease of reaching accommoda- stead of rewriting the budget<lb/>
tion with majority-party Demo- President Reagan will submit in<lb/>
crats in the Senate. early January.<lb/>
The president-elect was The vice president said he<lb/>
meeting with Senate Republicans promised Dole "the White House<lb/>
Dole had a one-word answer:<lb/>
"No<lb/>
"That's a good thing to end<lb/>
on said Bush, who repeatedly<lb/>
vowed no new taxes during his<lb/>
campaign.<lb/>
Bush on Monday continued<lb/>
to fill top slots in his administra-<lb/>
tion with government veterans,<lb/>
announcing that Fitzwater,<lb/>
two more Cabinet appointments<lb/>
within the next few days. Transi-<lb/>
tion sources said he would select<lb/>
former Senate Armed Services<lb/>
Committee Chairman John<lb/>
Tower of Texas as defense secre-<lb/>
tary and Texas oilman Robert<lb/>
Mosbacher as commerce secre-<lb/>
tary.<lb/>
On the budget front, Defense<lb/>
today at a breakfast in the Capitol will cooperate in every way pos- Reagan's spokesman for the past Secretary Frank Carlucci said<lb/>
after a private lunch Monday with sible with Congress two years, would stay on.<lb/>
the Senate minority leader. He said he planned to work "I think he's the best Bush<lb/>
Bush also said he's getting cooperatively with Republicans said of Fitzwater. He represents<lb/>
readv to name some new people<lb/>
to his Cabinet after making a<lb/>
string of holdover appointments,<lb/>
including Mondav's announce-<lb/>
ment that Marlin Fitzwater would<lb/>
stay on as chief White House<lb/>
spokesman.<lb/>
After Monday's lunch with<lb/>
Dole, also attended by Bush's<lb/>
choice for budget director, Rich-<lb/>
ard G. Darman, the vice president<lb/>
told reporters: "We're going to<lb/>
address the budget deficit early<lb/>
on.<lb/>
"We both agree that working<lb/>
towards getting this deficit down<lb/>
is priority, and the timing of<lb/>
whatever actions I take will be<lb/>
shaped, largely shaped, by a lot of<lb/>
input from Capitol Hill<lb/>
"We're not naive he added.<lb/>
"There'll probably be some times<lb/>
when we differ with the majority<lb/>
party up there Bush has said he<lb/>
will appoint deficit reduction nc-<lb/>
Van Hecke wants<lb/>
Democrats to<lb/>
choose next chair<lb/>
DURHAM (AP) ? Mate<lb/>
Democratic Chairman Jim Van<lb/>
Hecke savs a nominating commit-<lb/>
tee, which consists of all Demo-<lb/>
cratic Council of State members<lb/>
and other party officials, should<lb/>
be created to choose the next party<lb/>
chairman.<lb/>
Traditionally, the Democrat<lb/>
holding the highest elected state<lb/>
'? office, either lieutenant governor<lb/>
or governor, selects the chairman<lb/>
and then the Democratic Execu-<lb/>
tive Committee ratifies the choice.<lb/>
But for the first time in North<lb/>
Carolina's historv, a Democrat is<lb/>
not holding either office.<lb/>
"The committee would con-<lb/>
sist of a broad-based group of<lb/>
people that would look to the<lb/>
: grass roots of the party to find a<lb/>
: new chairman said Van Hecke,<lb/>
who noted that he had not<lb/>
? worked out the details of the<lb/>
: nominating committee.<lb/>
 Sen. Terry Sanford should<lb/>
have a say in the matter, he said.<lb/>
"There will not be a situation (this<lb/>
? year) where there's one titular<lb/>
? leader we're looking to and<lb/>
whose lead we'll follow he said,<lb/>
"but certainly Sen. Sanford will<lb/>
play a major role in the direction<lb/>
: the party's going in, as will other<lb/>
: party officials<lb/>
; The Council of State called a<lb/>
I meeting two weeks ago to pro-<lb/>
? pose that a new board of directors,<lb/>
consisting of Sanford, former<lb/>
: Gov. Jim Hunt, the eight Council<lb/>
 of State members, Lt. Gov. Bob<lb/>
s Jordan and former Senate Major-<lb/>
l itv Leader Tonv Rand, be formed<lb/>
to make the decision.<lb/>
The meeting was postponed,<lb/>
however, after an outcry from<lb/>
black leaders in the state because<lb/>
no women or blacks were invited<lb/>
to the meeting.<lb/>
Rep. Dan Blue of Wake<lb/>
County noted that the membersof<lb/>
the proposed board of directors<lb/>
were all white men over the age of<lb/>
40. The meeting has not been re-<lb/>
scheduled yet.<lb/>
"I recognize the role that<lb/>
(Council of State members) have<lb/>
to play Van Hecke told the<lb/>
Durham Morning Herald Tues-<lb/>
day. "They are elected statewide<lb/>
in both chambers and "reach out<lb/>
to Democrats as well<lb/>
Bush said he would meet<lb/>
soon with whomever Senate<lb/>
Democrats elected todav to sue-<lb/>
ceed Sen. Robert C. Byrd as major-<lb/>
ltv leader. Bush has alreadv met<lb/>
the old and the new. He repre-<lb/>
sents the Reagan administration<lb/>
and he also represents the Bush<lb/>
administration. "This is continu-<lb/>
ity in the best sense<lb/>
Fitzwater had been Bush's<lb/>
press secretary from 1985-87. He<lb/>
Monday he was proceeding with<lb/>
plans to submit to Bush a fiscal<lb/>
1990 Pentagon budget request<lb/>
that would include money to in-<lb/>
Supplies &amp; Decorations<lb/>
Cups, Plates, Streamers<lb/>
Tree Ornaments<lb/>
Room Decorations<lb/>
ECU Discount With LD.<lb/>
"Anything Paper'<lb/>
Bells Fork Square 355-6212<lb/>
.ft<lb/>
with House Speaker Jim Wright, will take the job on Jan. 20. Until<lb/>
then, Sheila Tate will continue to<lb/>
serve as press secretary for Bush's<lb/>
transition.<lb/>
Fitzwater, 46, called the offer<lb/>
to stay "a wonderful opportu-<lb/>
nity" but joked, "I think 1 repre-<lb/>
sent the old and the older<lb/>
Asked when the new team he<lb/>
has promised would begin to<lb/>
D-Texas.<lb/>
Both Bush and Dole pro-<lb/>
nounced their political rivalry,<lb/>
which reached a bitter climax<lb/>
during the New Hampshire pri-<lb/>
mary, a dead issue.<lb/>
"The election is over and we<lb/>
both have obligations and cer-<lb/>
tainly mine is to help him become<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
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a great president and I intend to appear, Bush said: "Stay tuned for<lb/>
do that Dole said. the changes. We'l 1 be getting to<lb/>
Asked if taxes would have to them soon<lb/>
be raised to eliminate the deficit. Bush was expected to name<lb/>
as<lb/>
UnttdWK<lb/>
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Van Hecke, who was ap-<lb/>
pointed by Lt. Gov. Bob Jordan<lb/>
three years ago, has decided not to<lb/>
seek the position again. Executive<lb/>
Director Ken Eudy has also an-<lb/>
nounced his intention to resign in<lb/>
January.<lb/>
and I want to make sure that they<lb/>
and other elected officials are all<lb/>
j represented in the process of<lb/>
j choosing a new chairman<lb/>
But he said he did not like<lb/>
j Council of State's proposal for a<lb/>
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Its n<lb/>
convino<lb/>
Macintol<lb/>
PerstJ<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058113_0009"/><lb/>
he<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1.1MB 9<lb/>
ations<lb/>
learners<lb/>
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ions<lb/>
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Just their signatuie<lb/>
It's never been difficult for students to<lb/>
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Persuading them to write the check,<lb/>
however, is another thing altogether.<lb/>
Which is why Apple created the Student<lb/>
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Simply pick up an application f lijF<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058113_0010"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
I<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMh R I, 1988<lb/>
Twister was too close for radar<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? The Na-<lb/>
tional Weather Service did not<lb/>
begin issuing tornado warnings<lb/>
until 38 minutes after the first tor-<lb/>
nado touched down in western<lb/>
Wake County because the twister<lb/>
was too close to radar to monitor,<lb/>
authorities sav.<lb/>
"If you are looking straight<lb/>
up at a storm you can't see much<lb/>
said Rod Gonski, a meteorologist<lb/>
with the weather service at<lb/>
Raleigh Durham International<lb/>
airport.<lb/>
it's like looking at a pencil at<lb/>
point blank Gonski said. "You<lb/>
can't tell if it's a pencil or a dot in<lb/>
the middle of a circle<lb/>
Gonski said the tornado that<lb/>
struck north Raleigh early Mon-<lb/>
day, killing two children and in-<lb/>
juring more than 100 people,<lb/>
could not have been predicted,<lb/>
even with advanced radar svs-<lb/>
tems.<lb/>
"Even in hindsight it would<lb/>
have been very difficult to predict<lb/>
that we would have severe dam-<lb/>
age from this storm Gonski said.<lb/>
The weather service oiiicc in<lb/>
Raleigh was operating without a<lb/>
critical earlv-waming tool ? a<lb/>
weather radar that has been bro-<lb/>
ken since Nov. 20. Meterologists<lb/>
debated whether the radar's<lb/>
absence kept them from issuing a<lb/>
tornado warning as early as they<lb/>
might have.<lb/>
All agreed, however, that the<lb/>
current weather radar ? even<lb/>
when working ? doesn't have<lb/>
the early-warning capability of an<lb/>
experimental radar-computer<lb/>
system, called NEXRAD, that<lb/>
should be installed at the 173<lb/>
weather stations across the<lb/>
United States by 1995.<lb/>
Gonski said his office's radar<lb/>
would have been rendered use-<lb/>
less by the heavy rains that del-<lb/>
uged the radar site at the airport.<lb/>
"The air around the radar site<lb/>
was heavy laden with moisture<lb/>
he said. "The rain absorbs and<lb/>
scatters energy from the radar so<lb/>
that there is not enough returned<lb/>
to the signal<lb/>
Gonksi said radars at Volens,<lb/>
"a Charlotte and Wilmington<lb/>
are covering the Raleigh-Durham<lb/>
area.<lb/>
"The radar coverage was<lb/>
adequate he said.<lb/>
But meteorologists at the<lb/>
National Severe Storm Labora-<lb/>
tory in Norman, Okla and the<lb/>
National Severe Storm Forecast<lb/>
Center in Kansas City, Mo said<lb/>
the lack of a radar probably ham-<lb/>
pered weather forecasting efforts<lb/>
at Raleigh-Durham.<lb/>
Fred Mosher, chief of techni-<lb/>
cal development at the Kansas<lb/>
City forecast center, said the<lb/>
weather stations at Volens, Char-<lb/>
lotte and Wilmington would not<lb/>
give meteorologists as accurate a<lb/>
radar picture of Raleigh-Durham<lb/>
as their own radar.<lb/>
"The beam gets wider as you<lb/>
get further away, so you have less<lb/>
resolution the further away you<lb/>
are Mosher told The Greens-<lb/>
boro News &amp; Record.<lb/>
"Normally if there's a strong<lb/>
thunderstorm in the area, you<lb/>
take the local radar, look for sig-<lb/>
natures in the storm like liquid<lb/>
water high up in the cloud he<lb/>
said. "That's an indication of a<lb/>
strong storm. It's difficult to do<lb/>
that from far away<lb/>
Mosher agreed that a storm<lb/>
out break over or near a radar site<lb/>
would diminish forecasters' abil-<lb/>
ity to see thunderstorms that have<lb/>
the potential to spawn tornadoes.<lb/>
But Don Burgess, a research<lb/>
meteorologist at the storm labora-<lb/>
tory in Norman, said, "At least<lb/>
they would have seen the storms<lb/>
forming or perhaps moving into<lb/>
the Raleigh-Durham area<lb/>
Joe Dean, state secretary of<lb/>
Crime Control and Public Safety,<lb/>
said 15 minutes' warning might<lb/>
have made the difference be-<lb/>
tween life and death Monday- But<lb/>
he added that because the storms<lb/>
hit when most people were<lb/>
asleep, it's hard to sav how many<lb/>
would have heard a tornado<lb/>
warning.<lb/>
"In a disaster, the strongest<lb/>
partner 1 have is the media Dean<lb/>
said. "If you aren't watching TV<lb/>
or aren't listening to the radio,<lb/>
vou don't know<lb/>
Gonski said the storms were<lb/>
spawned by the collision of a cold<lb/>
front into a warm, moist air mass<lb/>
over the eastern part of the state.<lb/>
He said temperatures on Sunday<lb/>
ranged in the 70s and humidity<lb/>
was similar to summertime lev-<lb/>
els. Two jet streams located over<lb/>
the state also contributed to the<lb/>
development of the twisters, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But Gonski said that when the<lb/>
cold front entered the state, it did<lb/>
not exhibit the qualities of a po-<lb/>
tentially damaging storm.<lb/>
'The front had some history<lb/>
of causing severe weather in pre-<lb/>
vious days he said. "As it en-<lb/>
tered North Carolina, it did not<lb/>
have severe weather associated<lb/>
with it<lb/>
"The front looked a lot more<lb/>
friendly as it entered the Caroli-<lb/>
nas than when it exited Gonski<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Thunderstorms began to<lb/>
develop as the cold front collided<lb/>
with the warm air Sunday night.<lb/>
Gonski said that when the thun-<lb/>
derstorms grew to an elevation of<lb/>
about 30,000 to 40,000 feet, their<lb/>
tops were "blown off" by two jet<lb/>
streams.<lb/>
The high level winds then<lb/>
pulled more air up into the<lb/>
storms. "Suppose you had a fire-<lb/>
place and then you blew a wind<lb/>
across the top of the chimney,<lb/>
Conski said. "You would in-<lb/>
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MONDAY<lb/>
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crease the temperature of the fire<lb/>
because you intensify the un-<lb/>
draft<lb/>
"And the whole thing wont<lb/>
off in a matter of minutes, liter-<lb/>
ally<lb/>
The first tornado strike oc-<lb/>
curred just northeast of the air-<lb/>
port. A clock on a tower at Hart-<lb/>
ford Hills Apartments was stuck<lb/>
at 1:07, apparently the time elec-<lb/>
tricity was disrupted.<lb/>
CLIFF'Sf<lb/>
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The Elbo<lb/>
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IM<lb/>
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$2.00 Frozen<lb/>
16 oz.<lb/>
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ThursSun.<lb/>
prime<lb/>
I NEW YORK AP<lb/>
(S may cut back on I<lb/>
(fhnstmas presents<lb/>
rfction's I . <lb/>
tjeir prime It<lb/>
percent, thehij<lb/>
years, son<lb/>
 The inci<lb/>
iigratebyaha<lb/>
viere announ<lb/>
vfere the fourth t! . .<lb/>
: Many ecoi i <lb/>
predicting a pi<lb/>
recent weel<lb/>
rates in the I i<lb/>
fcien rising due to ini il<lb/>
lation and I<lb/>
iA foreign exchai<lb/>
I "It comes as i<lb/>
tact, they 'banks<lb/>
hjblpback longer than<lb/>
said Edward <lb/>
economist foi rudentia<lb/>
Securities Inc<lb/>
The prime rate i<lb/>
bank's costs fbon<lb/>
including inter I -<lb/>
ings a - unts<lb/>
deposit, and tr.<lb/>
creases in oth i<lb/>
The rate<lb/>
because banki i<lb/>
tor calculat .<lb/>
rate loans a: :<lb/>
many types<lb/>
able-rate cons in -<lb/>
home equity .<lb/>
"It's clear v. il<lb/>
be absorbir<lb/>
?<lb/>
Sentencing hem<lb/>
looked into for<lb/>
death row inamfc<lb/>
RALEIGH<lb/>
tor North Carolina<lb/>
inmates are a -<lb/>
prcmeCour: I<lb/>
premeCourl I<lb/>
the way murderers an <lb/>
to die. a decision I tal<lb/>
as many a- B :<lb/>
Attorney - ? - I<lb/>
rr an inmat J<lb/>
tence the stati S<lb/>
affirmed. sa a I S 5<lb/>
Court rulii<lb/>
also appl es to <lb/>
Sgjepfficials "I<lb/>
inoh which said the Majrykl<lb/>
system tilted too mu<lb/>
death sentences d<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
The stal<lb/>
its most n : ? - .<lb/>
Nov I7t( seta<lb/>
tence ol<lb/>
convicted in 198:<lb/>
formerbossata i -<lb/>
laundry.<lb/>
The U.S. S<lb/>
ordered the state<lb/>
sider I loyd s sentei<lb/>
an earlier rulinj<lb/>
striking down M u<lb/>
sentence proced stl<lb/>
court concluded that : I<lb/>
land ruling did r I<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Now law ersi rM K ?<lb/>
petitioned the U.S.<lb/>
Court to mle that I I<lb/>
decision. Mills vs Man <lb/>
overturns North Cai - p<lb/>
cedure.<lb/>
"The petition says I<lb/>
applies to North Carolina a<lb/>
reported distinctions i <lb/>
the North Carolina Suj<lb/>
Court were unava<lb/>
Robert Mahler d i<lb/>
N.C. Death Penalt <lb/>
Center, which ass sts<lb/>
death-row inmates<lb/>
lie said he expe ted the co<lb/>
would decide next spi<lb/>
whether to accept the appc<lb/>
Similar petitions j<lb/>
on behalf of Llo<lb/>
inmates. Mahler said.<lb/>
But a lawyer m the state<lb/>
torney General - Office<lb/>
state would urge the<lb/>
preme Court to deny the<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
We feel like our Su I<lb/>
Court is correct, that our statutj<lb/>
different, and there is no reaj<lb/>
for the US. Supreme Co<lb/>
grant a review, said Senior l?<lb/>
utv Attorney General fame<lb/>
Coman.<lb/>
"Generalh when we feel J<lb/>
court is correct on a position trl<lb/>
have taken, then generally we l<lb/>
file a petition asking that u'urtf<lb/>
review) be denied<lb/>
The state Supreme Court J<lb/>
series of 5-2 decisions, ha sf<lb/>
that North Carolina's procedj<lb/>
does not have the defects that cj<lb/>
corned the U.S. Supremo Coui<lb/>
Mills vs. Maryland.<lb/>
The U.S. Supreme Court<lb/>
that in the Maryland system,<lb/>
rors in a murder trial thought U<lb/>
had to agree unanimously<lb/>
mitigating factors.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0011"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1988<lb/>
Twister was too close for radar<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? The Na-<lb/>
tional Weather Service did not<lb/>
begin issuing tornado warnings<lb/>
until 38 minutes after the first tor-<lb/>
nado touched down in western<lb/>
Wake County because the twister<lb/>
was too close to radar to monitor,<lb/>
authorities say.<lb/>
"If you are looking straight<lb/>
upat a storm you can't see much<lb/>
said Rod Gonski, a meteorologist<lb/>
with the weather service at<lb/>
Raleigh Durham International<lb/>
airport.<lb/>
"It's like looking at a pencil at<lb/>
point blank Gonski said. "You<lb/>
can't tell if it's a pencil or a dot in<lb/>
the middle of a circle<lb/>
Gonski said the tornado that<lb/>
struck north Raleigh early Mon-<lb/>
day, killing two children and in-<lb/>
juring more than 100 people,<lb/>
could not have been predicted,<lb/>
even with advanced radar sys-<lb/>
tems.<lb/>
"Even in hindsight it would<lb/>
have been very difficult to predict<lb/>
that we would have severe dam-<lb/>
age from this storm Gonski said.<lb/>
The weather service office in<lb/>
Raleigh was operating without a<lb/>
critical early-warning tool ? a<lb/>
weather radar that has been bro-<lb/>
ken since Nov. 20. Meterologists<lb/>
debated whether the radar's<lb/>
absence kept them from issuing a<lb/>
tornado warning as early as they<lb/>
might have.<lb/>
All agreed, however, that the<lb/>
current weather radar ? even<lb/>
when working ? doesn't have<lb/>
the early-warning capability of an<lb/>
experimental radar-computer<lb/>
system, called NEXRAD, that<lb/>
should be installed at the 173<lb/>
weather stations across the<lb/>
United States by 1995.<lb/>
Gonski said his office's radar<lb/>
would have been rendered use-<lb/>
less by the heavy rains that del-<lb/>
uged the radar site at the airport.<lb/>
"The air around the radar site<lb/>
was heavy laden with moisture<lb/>
he said. "The rain absorbs and<lb/>
scatters energy from the radar so<lb/>
that there is not enough returned<lb/>
to the signal<lb/>
Gonksi said radars at Volens,<lb/>
Va Charlotte and Wilmington<lb/>
are covering the Raleigh-Durham<lb/>
area.<lb/>
"The radar coverage was<lb/>
adequate he said.<lb/>
But meteorologists at the<lb/>
National Severe Storm Labora-<lb/>
tory in Norman, Okla and the<lb/>
National Severe Storm Forecast<lb/>
Center in Kansas City, Mo said<lb/>
the lack of a radar probably ham-<lb/>
pered weather forecasting efforts<lb/>
at Raleigh-Durham.<lb/>
Fred Mosher, chief of techni-<lb/>
cal development at the Kansas<lb/>
City forecast center, said the<lb/>
weather stations at Volens, Char-<lb/>
lotte and Wilmington would not<lb/>
give meteorologists as accurate a<lb/>
radar picture of Raleigh-Durham<lb/>
as their own radar.<lb/>
"The beam gets wider as you<lb/>
get further away, so you have less<lb/>
resolution the further away you<lb/>
are Mosher told The Greens-<lb/>
boro News &amp; Record.<lb/>
"Normally if there's a strong<lb/>
thunderstorm in the area, you<lb/>
take the local radar, look for sig-<lb/>
natures in the storm like liquid<lb/>
water high up in the cloud he<lb/>
said. "That's an indication of a<lb/>
strong storm. It's difficult to do<lb/>
that from far away<lb/>
Mosher agreed that a storm<lb/>
out break over or near a radar site<lb/>
would diminish forecasters' abil-<lb/>
ity to see thunderstorms that have<lb/>
the potential to spawn tornadoes.<lb/>
But Don Burgess, a research<lb/>
meteorologist at the storm labora-<lb/>
tory in Norman, said, "At least<lb/>
they would have seen the storms<lb/>
forming or perhaps moving into<lb/>
the Raleigh-Durham area<lb/>
Joe Dean, state secretary of<lb/>
Crime Control and Public Safety,<lb/>
said 15 minutes' warning might<lb/>
have made the difference be-<lb/>
tween life and death Monday. But<lb/>
he added that because the storms<lb/>
hit when most people were<lb/>
asleep, it's hard to say how many<lb/>
would have heard a tornado<lb/>
warning.<lb/>
"In a disaster, the strongest<lb/>
partner I have is the media Dean<lb/>
said. "If you aren't watching TV<lb/>
or aren't listening to the radio,<lb/>
you don't know<lb/>
Gonski said the storms were<lb/>
spawned by the collision of a cold<lb/>
front into a warm, moist air mass<lb/>
over the eastern part of the state.<lb/>
He said temperatures on Sunday<lb/>
ranged in the 70s and humidity<lb/>
was similar to summertime lev-<lb/>
els. Two jet streams located over<lb/>
the state also contributed to the<lb/>
development of the twisters, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
But Gonski said that when the<lb/>
cold front entered the state, it did<lb/>
not exhibit the qualities of a po-<lb/>
tentially damaging storm.<lb/>
"The front had some history<lb/>
of causing severe weather in pre-<lb/>
vious days he said. "As it en-<lb/>
tered North Carolina, it did not<lb/>
have severe weather associated<lb/>
with it<lb/>
"The front looked a lot more<lb/>
friendly as it entered the Caroli-<lb/>
nas than when it exited Gonski<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Thunderstorms began to<lb/>
develop as the cold front collided<lb/>
with the warm air Sunday night.<lb/>
Gonski said that when the thun-<lb/>
derstorms grew to an elevation of<lb/>
about 30,000 to 40,000 feet, their<lb/>
tops were "blown off" by two jet<lb/>
streams.<lb/>
The high level winds then<lb/>
pulled more air up into the<lb/>
storms. "Suppose you had a fire-<lb/>
place and then you blew a wind<lb/>
across the top of the chimney,<lb/>
Gonski said. "You would in-<lb/>
crease the temperature of the fire<lb/>
because you intensify the up-<lb/>
draft<lb/>
"And the whole thing went<lb/>
off in a matter of minutes, liter-<lb/>
ally<lb/>
The first tornado strike oc-<lb/>
curred just northeast of the air-<lb/>
port. A clock on a tower at Hart-<lb/>
ford Hills Apartments was stuck<lb/>
at 1:07, apparently the time elec-<lb/>
tricity was disrupted.<lb/>
CLIFF'S?55<lb/>
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Weekend Specials<lb/>
?Beer, Wine Brown Baggin O.K.<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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v2?00 Or1 (with this ad)<lb/>
126 Greenville Blvd. Phone 756-2579 Hours: MonFri. 8 a.ra6 p.m. St. til 5<lb/>
Coupon Service Specials<lb/>
r<lb/>
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r<lb/>
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Based on the popular L'Astrology greeting cards, these high quality black ceramic mugs feature the<lb/>
brilliantly colored male and female astrological figures outlined in gold. Each 8 oz. mug is packaged ia Its<lb/>
own unique black and gold gift box.<lb/>
Available At:<lb/>
GREETINGS!<lb/>
211 W. 14th St Suite C<lb/>
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(919) 830-01 05<lb/>
While you're there see our African-American Heritage Christmas Cards also!<lb/>
j JUith. JWsJpjm With This Coupon<lb/>
We accept Visa, Mastercard, Money Express, American Express, Dayton Charge and BF Goodrich.<lb/>
COGGINS CAR CARE<lb/>
320 W. Greenville Blvd Greenville, N.C, Phone 756-5244<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
On Greenville's Largest<lb/>
Wide Screen TV<lb/>
This Week<lb/>
L.A. Rams<lb/>
vs<lb/>
Chicago Bears<lb/>
$2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
$1.00 Miller Long Necks<lb/>
$1.50 Highballs<lb/>
Ramada Inn<lb/>
(Formerly Shearton of Greenville)<lb/>
rreenvllle Blvd. ? 3SS-21<lb/>
The Elbo<lb/>
Presents Ladies Night<lb/>
All Ladies Free All Night<lb/>
Come Early Drink Specials All Night<lb/>
Friday: Free Pizza<lb/>
$50 Cash for Sorority and Fraternity<lb/>
with best attendance<lb/>
Sign up when you enter<lb/>
$2.00 Frozen<lb/>
16 oz.<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
ThursSun.<lb/>
rime<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)-Consul<lb/>
? s may cut back on big-tl<lb/>
( hristmas presents now that tl<lb/>
r ition's biggest banks boost)<lb/>
t eir prime lending rates to It<lb/>
r. ?rcent, the highest level in 3 ll<lb/>
y ?rs, some analysts said.<lb/>
1 The increases in the key lei<lb/>
iig rate by a half percentage po<lb/>
vfere announced Monday ai<lb/>
vlere the fourth this year.<lb/>
Many economists have be<lb/>
predicting a prime rate hike<lb/>
recent weeks because inteH<lb/>
rtes in the bond markets hi.<lb/>
b?en rising due to inflation spe<lb/>
Ution and the dollar's weakn<lb/>
ift foreign exchange.<lb/>
; "It comes as no surprise<lb/>
fjet, they (banks) seem to h;<lb/>
hjelpback longer than I expected<lb/>
sid Edward Yardeni, chi<lb/>
economist for Prudential-Ba<lb/>
Securities Inc.<lb/>
The prime rate reflects.<lb/>
bpnk's costs of borrowing moni<lb/>
including interest it pavs on sJ<lb/>
iogs accounts or certificates<lb/>
deposit, and trails more subtle<lb/>
creases in other interest rates.<lb/>
The rate is watched clos<lb/>
because bankers use it as a ba<lb/>
for calculating interest on corr<lb/>
rate loans and for determinil<lb/>
many types of fixed and adjul<lb/>
able-rate consumer loans, such<lb/>
home equity loans.<lb/>
"It's clear that consumers<lb/>
be absorbing higher borrowii<lb/>
Sentencing bein;<lb/>
looked into for<lb/>
death row inamti<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? Attornc<lb/>
for North Carolina death-d<lb/>
inmates are asking the U.S.<lb/>
preme Court to overrule state!<lb/>
preme Court decisions upholdi<lb/>
the way murderers are sentenc<lb/>
to die, a decision that could aff'J<lb/>
as many as 80 death-row inmat<lb/>
Attorneys for Dock Mel<lb/>
Jr an inmate whose death s?<lb/>
tence the state Supreme Court 1<lb/>
affirmed, say a U.S. SupreJ<lb/>
Court ruling in a Maryland Cc<lb/>
also applies to North Carolij<lb/>
SHf pfficials contend that the i<lb/>
ina. which said the , MtryU<lb/>
system tilted too much in favor<lb/>
death sentences, does not appl v<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The state Supreme Court,<lb/>
its most recent ruling, refus<lb/>
Nov. 17 to set aside the death i<lb/>
tence of Oscar Lloyd, who w<lb/>
convicted in 1985 of killing<lb/>
former boss at a Cherokee Coui<lb/>
laundry.<lb/>
The U.S. Supreme Court<lb/>
ordered the state court to recc<lb/>
sider Lloyd's sentence in light<lb/>
an earlier ruling by the U.S. co<lb/>
striking down Maryland's dei<lb/>
sentence procedure. But the stl<lb/>
court concluded that the Mai<lb/>
land ruling did not apply to Noj<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Now lawyers for McKov h?<lb/>
petitioned the U.S. Suprej<lb/>
Court to rule that the Maryl<lb/>
decision, Mills vs. ' land, a<lb/>
overturns North Carolina's<lb/>
cedure.<lb/>
"The petition savs that Ml<lb/>
applies to North Carolina, and <lb/>
reported distinctions relied onl<lb/>
the North Carolina Suprej<lb/>
Court were unavailing<lb/>
Robert Mahler, director of<lb/>
N.C. Death Penalty Resou)<lb/>
Center, which assists lawyers<lb/>
death-row inmates.<lb/>
He said he expected the coj<lb/>
would decide next spril<lb/>
whether to accept the appeal.<lb/>
Similar petitions are planr<lb/>
on behalf of Lloyd and ot<lb/>
inmates, Mahler said.<lb/>
But a lawyer in the state<lb/>
torney General's Office said<lb/>
state would urge the U.S.<lb/>
preme Court to deny the<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"We feel like our Suprej<lb/>
Court is correct, that our statutl<lb/>
different, and there is no rea<lb/>
for the U.S. Supreme Court<lb/>
grant a review, said Senior <lb/>
uty Attorney General Jame<lb/>
Coman.<lb/>
"Generally when we feel<lb/>
court is correct on a position tl<lb/>
have taken, then generally we <lb/>
file a petition asking that (furtj<lb/>
review) be denied<lb/>
The state Supreme Court,<lb/>
series of 5-2 decisions, has<lb/>
that North Carolina's procedj<lb/>
does not have the defects that c<lb/>
cerned the U.S. Supreme Coui<lb/>
Mills vs. Maryland.<lb/>
The VS. Supreme Court<lb/>
that in the Maryland system<lb/>
rors in a murder trial thought n<lb/>
had to agree unanimously<lb/>
mitigating factors.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0012"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1, 1988 11<lb/>
Oyster Bar<lb/>
3.65 <lb/>
I<lb/>
als I<lb/>
1 CHANGE"<lb/>
ervice!<lb/>
j<lb/>
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rj pecifieations)<lb/>
88<lb/>
1<lb/>
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e Rotation<lb/>
ij.i <lb/>
88<lb/>
oodrich.<lb/>
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56-5244<lb/>
tght<lb/>
nity<lb/>
Prime rate hits highest level in three years<lb/>
: NEW YORK (AD - Consum-<lb/>
ers may cut back on big-tag<lb/>
(Christmas presents now that the<lb/>
ration's biggest banks boosted<lb/>
teir prime lending rates to 10.5<lb/>
ffercent, the highest level in 3 12<lb/>
?ars some analysts said<lb/>
The increases in the kev lend-<lb/>
ateby a halt percentage point<lb/>
vferc announced Monday and<lb/>
were the fourth this year.<lb/>
Many economists have been<lb/>
predicting a prime rate hike in<lb/>
recent weeks because interest<lb/>
rtes in the bond markets have<lb/>
tfcen rising due to inflation specu-<lb/>
lation and the dollar's weakness<lb/>
A foreign exchange.<lb/>
It comes as no surprise. In<lb/>
fact they (banks) seem to have<lb/>
back longer than I expected<lb/>
;aid Edward Yardeni, chief<lb/>
economist for Prudential-Bache<lb/>
urities Inc.<lb/>
The prime rate reflects a<lb/>
vnk s cots of borrowing money,<lb/>
u luding interest it pays on sav-<lb/>
;s accounts or certificates oi<lb/>
posit, and trails more subtle in-<lb/>
reasesin other interest rates.<lb/>
The rate is watched closely<lb/>
because bankers use it as a basis<lb/>
?or calculating interest on corpo-<lb/>
rate loans and for determining<lb/>
manv types oi fixed and adjust-<lb/>
trate consumer loans, such as<lb/>
home equity loans.<lb/>
"It's clear that consumers will<lb/>
be absorbing higher borrowing<lb/>
Sentencing being<lb/>
looked into for<lb/>
death row inamtes<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? Attorneys<lb/>
for North Carolina death-row<lb/>
inmates are asking the U.S. Su-<lb/>
erne Court to overrule state Su-<lb/>
preme Court decisions upholding<lb/>
? he way murderers are sentenced<lb/>
to die, a decision that could affect<lb/>
. - many as 80 death-row inmates.<lb/>
Attorneys for Dock McKoy<lb/>
"r an inmate whose death sen-<lb/>
tence the state Supreme Court has<lb/>
affirmed, sav a U.S. Supreme<lb/>
Court ruling in a Maryland case<lb/>
also applies to North Carolina,<lb/>
?tar officials contend that therul-<lb/>
?&amp; which said the. Mar viand<lb/>
system tilted too much in favor of<lb/>
death sentences, does not apply in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The state Supreme Court, in<lb/>
ts most recent ruling, refused<lb/>
v. 17 to set aside the death sen-<lb/>
tence of Oscar Lloyd, who was<lb/>
convicted in 1983 of killing his<lb/>
?rmer boss at a Cherokee County<lb/>
lundry.<lb/>
The U.S. Supreme Court had<lb/>
ordered the state court to recon-<lb/>
sider Lloyd's sentence in light of<lb/>
an earlier ruling by the U.S. court<lb/>
striking down Maryland's death<lb/>
sentence procedure. But the state<lb/>
irt concluded that the Mary-<lb/>
land ruling did not apply to North<lb/>
 Carolina.<lb/>
Now lawyers for McKoy have<lb/>
titioned the U.S. Supreme<lb/>
art to rule that the Maryland<lb/>
sion Mills vs. Maryland, also<lb/>
erturns North Carolina's pro-<lb/>
cure.<lb/>
"The petition savs that Mills<lb/>
i pplies to North Carolina, and the<lb/>
- p rted distinctions relied on by<lb/>
North Carolina Supreme<lb/>
urt were unavailing said<lb/>
: bert Mahler, director of the<lb/>
.C. Death Penalty Resource<lb/>
nter, which assists lawyers for<lb/>
leath-rovt inmates.<lb/>
1 le said he expected the court<lb/>
"aid decide next spring<lb/>
hether to accept the appeal.<lb/>
Similar petitions are planned<lb/>
behalf of Lloyd and other<lb/>
mates, Mahler said.<lb/>
But a lawyer in the state At-<lb/>
rney General's Office said the<lb/>
tte would urge the U.S. Su-<lb/>
preme Court to deny the peti-<lb/>
ns.<lb/>
"We feel like our Supreme<lb/>
( i uirt is correct, that our statute is<lb/>
fferent, and there is no reason<lb/>
r the U.S. Supreme Court to<lb/>
grant a review, said Senior Dep-<lb/>
. Attorney General James .<lb/>
man.<lb/>
"Generally when we feel our<lb/>
court is correct on a position they<lb/>
have taken, then generally we will<lb/>
file a petition asking that (further<lb/>
review) be denied<lb/>
The state Supreme Court, in a<lb/>
series of 5-2 decisions, has said<lb/>
that North Carolina's procedure<lb/>
does not have the defects that con-<lb/>
cerned the U.S. Supreme Court in<lb/>
Mills vs. Maryland.<lb/>
The U.S. Supreme Court said<lb/>
that in the Maryland system, ju-<lb/>
rors in a murder trial thought they<lb/>
had to agree unanimously on<lb/>
mitigatir.g factors.<lb/>
costs in December or early nexi<lb/>
year said William V. Sullivan,<lb/>
an economist for the investment<lb/>
firm Dean Witter Reynolds Inc.<lb/>
But some economists said it<lb/>
was unclear whether the rate-hike<lb/>
would adversely affect the econ-<lb/>
omy, specifically consumer buy-<lb/>
ing habits<lb/>
"I think the direct effect is<lb/>
pretty small because generally<lb/>
consumers aren't affected bv<lb/>
modest increases in interest<lb/>
rates said James L. Kochan,<lb/>
chief fixed-income strategist for<lb/>
Merrill Lynch Capital Markets<lb/>
Inc.<lb/>
But Yardeni said some con-<lb/>
sumers might cut back on spend-<lb/>
ing and buying only things that<lb/>
they can afford<lb/>
There's an underlying sense<lb/>
ol uneasiness because so many<lb/>
people have been through rough<lb/>
times even when the economy<lb/>
was strong. The prime rate hike<lb/>
coming into the Christmas season<lb/>
may make people more cau-<lb/>
tious he said.<lb/>
The financial markets had no<lb/>
major reaction to Monday's an-<lb/>
nouncement. Stock and bond<lb/>
prices rose modestly, while the<lb/>
dollar held firm against other<lb/>
major currencies.<lb/>
Sullivan said the markets also<lb/>
are prepared for further increase's<lb/>
in interest rates.<lb/>
Federal Reserve Board Chair-<lb/>
man Alan Greenspan has warned<lb/>
of higher short-term rates unless<lb/>
lawmakers work to trim the huge<lb/>
federal budget deficit, a key factor<lb/>
in the recent weakening of the<lb/>
dollar.<lb/>
"There's a building percep-<lb/>
tion in the marketplace that the<lb/>
Fed is, in fact, tightening condi-<lb/>
tions  Sullivan said.<lb/>
Sullivan and other econo-<lb/>
mists predicted the Fed might<lb/>
soon raise its discount rate, or the<lb/>
interest it charges on loans to<lb/>
banks, and if that happens, the<lb/>
banks might raise rates again.<lb/>
"I'd look for something (from<lb/>
the Fed) in the next two weeks<lb/>
said Yardeni.<lb/>
USDA Choice Boneless Full Cut<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058113_0013"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1988 11<lb/>
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ervice!<lb/>
d)<lb/>
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1<lb/>
prime rate hits highest level in three years<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Consum- costs in December or early next<lb/>
s may cut back on big-tag year said William V. Sullivan,<lb/>
hristmas presents now that the an economist for the investment<lb/>
ition's biggest banks boosted firm Dean Witter Reynolds Inc.<lb/>
teir prime lending rates to 10.5 But s?me economists said it<lb/>
jrcent, the highest level in 31 2 ws unclear whether the rate-hike<lb/>
?ars, some analysts said.<lb/>
The increases in the key lend-<lb/>
i Jg rate by a half percentage point<lb/>
vfere announced Monday and<lb/>
vfere the fourth this year.<lb/>
Many economists have been<lb/>
predicting a prime rate hike in<lb/>
recent weeks because interest<lb/>
rgtes in the bond markets have<lb/>
tfeen rising due to inflation specu-<lb/>
lation and the dollar's weakness<lb/>
ii foreign exchange.<lb/>
"It comes as no surprise. In<lb/>
tact, they (banks) seem to have<lb/>
help back longer than I expected'<lb/>
s&amp;id Edward Yardeni, chief<lb/>
economist for Prudential-Bache<lb/>
Securities Inc.<lb/>
The prime rate reflects a<lb/>
bank's costs of borrowing money,<lb/>
including interest it pays on sav-<lb/>
ings accounts or certificates of<lb/>
deposit, and trails more subtle in-<lb/>
creases in other interest rates.<lb/>
The rate is watched closely<lb/>
because bankers use it as a basis<lb/>
tor calculating interest on corpo-<lb/>
rate loans and for determining<lb/>
many types of fixed and adjust-<lb/>
able-rate consumer loans, such as<lb/>
home equity loans.<lb/>
"It's clear that consumers will<lb/>
be absorbing higher borrowing<lb/>
Sentencing being<lb/>
looked into for<lb/>
death row inamtes<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? Attorneys<lb/>
for North Carolina death-row<lb/>
inmates are asking the U.S. Su-<lb/>
preme Court to overrule state Su-<lb/>
preme Court decisions upholding<lb/>
the way murderers are sentenced<lb/>
to die, a decision that could affect<lb/>
as many as 80 death-row inmates.<lb/>
Attorneys for Dock McKoy<lb/>
Jr an inmate whose death sen-<lb/>
tence the state Supreme Court has<lb/>
affirmed, say a U.S. Supreme<lb/>
Court ruling in a Maryland case<lb/>
also applies to North Carolina.<lb/>
Sgje officials contend that the rul-<lb/>
ing which said the Maryland<lb/>
systbm tilted too much in favor of<lb/>
death sentences, does not apply in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The state Supreme Court, in<lb/>
its most recent ruling, refused<lb/>
Nov. 17 to set aside the death sen-<lb/>
tence of Oscar Lloyd, who was<lb/>
convicted in 1985 of killing his<lb/>
former boss at a Cherokee County<lb/>
laundrv.<lb/>
J<lb/>
The U.S. Supreme Court had<lb/>
ordered the state court to recon-<lb/>
sider Lloyd's sentence in light of<lb/>
an earlier ruling by the U.S. court<lb/>
striking down Maryland's death<lb/>
sentence procedure. But the state<lb/>
court concluded that the Mary-<lb/>
land ruling did not apply to North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Now lawyers for McKoy have<lb/>
petitioned the U.S. Supreme<lb/>
Court to rule that the Maryland<lb/>
decision, Mills vs. Maryland, also<lb/>
overturns North Carolina's pro-<lb/>
cedure.<lb/>
"The petition says that Mills<lb/>
applies to North Carolina, and the<lb/>
reported distinctions relied on by<lb/>
the North Carolina Supreme<lb/>
Court were unavailing said<lb/>
Robert Mahler, director of the<lb/>
N.C. Death Penalty Resource<lb/>
Center, which assists lawyers for<lb/>
death-row inmates.<lb/>
He said he expected the court<lb/>
would decide next spring<lb/>
whether to accept the appeal.<lb/>
Similar petitions are planned<lb/>
on behalf of Lloyd and other<lb/>
inmates, Mahler said.<lb/>
But a lawyer in the state At-<lb/>
torney General's Office said the<lb/>
state would urge the U.S. Su-<lb/>
preme Court to deny the peti-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"We feel like our Supreme<lb/>
Court is correct, that our statute is<lb/>
different, and there is no reason<lb/>
for the U.S. Supreme Court to<lb/>
grant a review, said Senior Dep-<lb/>
uty Attorney General James J.<lb/>
Coman.<lb/>
"Generally when we feel our<lb/>
court is correct on a position they<lb/>
have taken, then generally we will<lb/>
file a petition asking that (further<lb/>
review) be denied<lb/>
The state Supreme Court, in a<lb/>
series of 5-2 decisions, has said<lb/>
that North Carolina's procedure<lb/>
does not have the defects that con-<lb/>
cerned the U.S. Supreme Court in<lb/>
Mills vs. Maryland.<lb/>
The U.S. Supreme Court said<lb/>
that in the Maryland system, ju-<lb/>
rors in a murder trial thought they<lb/>
had to agree unanimously on<lb/>
mitigating factors.<lb/>
would adversely affect the econ-<lb/>
omy, specifically consumer buy-<lb/>
ing habits<lb/>
"I think the direct effect is<lb/>
modest increases in interest<lb/>
rates said James L. Kochan,<lb/>
chief fixed-income strategist for<lb/>
Merrill Lynch Capital Markets<lb/>
Inc.<lb/>
But Yardeni said some con-<lb/>
sumers might cut back on spend-<lb/>
ing and buying only things that<lb/>
they can afford<lb/>
"There's an underlying sense<lb/>
pretty small because generally of uneasiness because so many<lb/>
consumers aren't affected bv people have been through rough<lb/>
times even when the economy<lb/>
was strong. The prime rate hike<lb/>
coming into the Christmas season<lb/>
may make people more cau-<lb/>
tious he said.<lb/>
The financial markets h no<lb/>
major reaction to Monday's an-<lb/>
nouncement. Stock and bond<lb/>
prices rose modestly, while the<lb/>
dollar held firm against other<lb/>
major currencies.<lb/>
Sullivan said the markets also<lb/>
are prepared for further increases<lb/>
in interest rates.<lb/>
Federal Reserve Board Chair-<lb/>
man Alan Greenspan has warned<lb/>
of higher short-term rates unless<lb/>
lawmakers work to trim the huge<lb/>
federal budget deficit, a key factor<lb/>
in the recent weakening of the<lb/>
dollar.<lb/>
"There's a building percep-<lb/>
tion in the marketplace that the<lb/>
Fed is, in fact, tightening condi-<lb/>
tions  Sullivan said.<lb/>
Sullivan and other econo-<lb/>
mists predicted the Fed might<lb/>
soon raise its discount rate, or the<lb/>
interest it charges on loans to<lb/>
banks, and if that happens, the<lb/>
banks might raise rates again.<lb/>
"I'd look for something (from<lb/>
the Fed) in the next two weeks<lb/>
said Yardeni.<lb/>
USDA Choice Boneless Full Cut<lb/>
ROUND<lb/>
STEAK<lb/>
USDA Choice<lb/>
Beef Boneless<lb/>
runny<lb/>
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Prices in this ad<lb/>
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1988.<lb/>
Christmas 0 no<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058113_0014"/><lb/>
12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER L lSS<lb/>
r<lb/>
Bush has to fill vacancy in Tokyo<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ?At<lb/>
least one of the 100-odd American<lb/>
ambassadors that President-elect<lb/>
George Bush must select could<lb/>
rank in importance with many of<lb/>
the Cabinet choices now drawing<lb/>
most of the nation's attention.<lb/>
Bush must select the succes-<lb/>
sor to former Senate Democratic<lb/>
leader Mike Mansfield, retiring<lb/>
after a record 11 vearsasambassa<lb/>
dor to Tokyo.<lb/>
The job is important simply<lb/>
because Japan has become so<lb/>
important to America in the late<lb/>
20th Century.<lb/>
Together the two countries<lb/>
account for 40 to 50 percent of<lb/>
world economic output. They<lb/>
have one of the world's most com-<lb/>
plex, emotionally-charged and<lb/>
changing relationships.<lb/>
Mansfield calls the U.SJapa-<lb/>
nese relationship the most impor-<lb/>
tant in the world and says that<lb/>
during his tenure in Tokyo it has<lb/>
changed from that of uncle-<lb/>
nephew to brother-brother.<lb/>
Complicating the love-hate<lb/>
feelings often felt between coun-<lb/>
tries are deep cultural and lan-<lb/>
guage differences and japan's<lb/>
new world importance.<lb/>
In only four decades, Japan<lb/>
has transformed itself from a<lb/>
humble, defeated American en-<lb/>
emy to a U.S. protege and loyal<lb/>
ally, an economic superpower<lb/>
and rival, U.S. creditor, landlord<lb/>
and occasional critic.<lb/>
During the election cam-<lb/>
paign, Bush took positions on is-<lb/>
sues such as Japan's military and<lb/>
foreign aid role and trade.<lb/>
To demands that japan in-<lb/>
crease military spending and re-<lb/>
lieve some of the U.S. defense<lb/>
burden, Bush a bomber pilot<lb/>
against Japan in World War II -<lb/>
noted that Japan's Asian neigh-<lb/>
bors still remember the war and<lb/>
"remain very sensitive to the issue<lb/>
of Japanese rearmament<lb/>
He suggested that Japan rap-<lb/>
idlv boost its share of global eco-<lb/>
nomic aid, a catetory in which it is<lb/>
about to surpass the United<lb/>
States. But that, too, could create<lb/>
other conflicts, because Japan is<lb/>
already becoming a rival to U.S.<lb/>
dominance of such international<lb/>
institutions as the World Bank.<lb/>
On trade, Bush is expected to<lb/>
take President Reagan's general<lb/>
line of seeking to brake protec-<lb/>
tionist efforts to restrict Japanese<lb/>
imports into the United States<lb/>
while encouraging sharpened<lb/>
U.S. competitiveness.<lb/>
Reagan and Yasuhiro<lb/>
Nakasone, the Japanese prime<lb/>
minister from 1982-87, developed<lb/>
a first-name relationship un-<lb/>
precedented in the two countries'<lb/>
history. Their personal connec-<lb/>
tion helped the nations weather a<lb/>
rough period marked by U.S.<lb/>
pressure against Japanese domes-<lb/>
tic barriers, alleged unfair trade<lb/>
practices and insular thinking<lb/>
inappropriate for a country<lb/>
grown rich by exporting.<lb/>
Noboru Mekalaka Takeshita,<lb/>
Nakasone's successor, said dur-<lb/>
ing a White House visit that he<lb/>
also had gotten on a first-name<lb/>
basis with the U.S. president.<lb/>
Tokyo news reports say he hopes<lb/>
to visit Washington early in the<lb/>
Bush presidency to cultivate the<lb/>
same kind of relations.<lb/>
Announcing his retirement,<lb/>
Mansfield said he felt he could<lb/>
leave "with our heads high The<lb/>
U.S. trade deficit with Japan, ac-<lb/>
counting for $57 billion of a global<lb/>
deficit of $170 billion in 1987, is fi-<lb/>
nally narrowing, he said, as a re-<lb/>
sult of hard-bargained market-<lb/>
openings, the costlier yen and<lb/>
cheaper dollar and efforts by<lb/>
Nakasone and Takeshita to boost<lb/>
Japanese domestic consumption<lb/>
and imports.<lb/>
Names mentioned as early<lb/>
candidates for the Tokyo post in-<lb/>
clude Michael H. Armacost,<lb/>
undersecretary of state for politi-<lb/>
cal affairs, who has served in<lb/>
Tokyo; Gaston Sigur, assistant<lb/>
secretary of state for East Asian<lb/>
and Pacific affairs; and Lamar<lb/>
Alexander, the former Tennessee<lb/>
governor instrumental in bring-<lb/>
ino Japanese factories to his state .<lb/>
East Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
State grants two Republican Senator<lb/>
candidates election vote recounts<lb/>
RALEIGH tAP) ? As the<lb/>
state Board of Elections certified<lb/>
results in the Nov. 8 elections, it<lb/>
also granted recounts for two Re-<lb/>
publican challengers in a Senate<lb/>
race won by Russell Walker, and<lb/>
in another Senate race in which in-<lb/>
cumbent R.P. "Bo" Thomas fell<lb/>
264 votes short of re-election.<lb/>
The board on Tuesday de-<lb/>
clared Gov. Jim Martin the official<lb/>
winner of the governor race, or-<lb/>
dered new elections in local races<lb/>
in Duplin Countv, and called for a<lb/>
second recount in a state Senate<lb/>
race.<lb/>
The state board's action gave<lb/>
final approval to most ot the re-<lb/>
sults of the Nov. S election includ-<lb/>
ing state voters choice of Martin, a<lb/>
Republican, over Democrat Bob<lb/>
Jordan, in the governor's race and<lb/>
that of Vice President George<lb/>
Bush, a Republican, over the<lb/>
Democratic nominee, Michael<lb/>
Dukakis, in the presidential race.<lb/>
In the District 16 Senate race,<lb/>
in which Walker appeared to<lb/>
have won another term, unofficial<lb/>
returns show Democratic incum-<lb/>
bent Sen. Wanda Hunt a clear<lb/>
winner with 50,608 votes. Walker<lb/>
won the second seat with 48,170<lb/>
votes. The two-seat district is<lb/>
made up of four counties ?<lb/>
Chatham, Moore, Orange, and<lb/>
Randolph.<lb/>
Trailing Walker were Repub-<lb/>
licans Max Reece Jr. with 47,978<lb/>
votes, and Robert "Bob" Crump,<lb/>
with 47,978. A recount was auto-<lb/>
matic for Reece under a state law<lb/>
that requires them when unoffi-<lb/>
cial returns show a difference of 1<lb/>
percent or less between winning<lb/>
and losing candidates.<lb/>
But the board voted also to<lb/>
order a recount for Crump, who<lb/>
trailed Walker by 568 votes,<lb/>
which is also within 1 percent of<lb/>
the vote given Walker even<lb/>
though he was not the candidate<lb/>
"with the next highest number of<lb/>
votes" as provided by state law.<lb/>
A recount was also ordered in<lb/>
Senate District 29 where Thomas,<lb/>
D-Hendersonville, was a third-<lb/>
placc finishei in the two-seat dis-<lb/>
trict with 49,038 votes, trailing<lb/>
Republican C.W. I lardin of Can-<lb/>
ton, who won 49,302 votes.<lb/>
The board also voted to order<lb/>
Macon County Board of Elections<lb/>
to conduct a probable cause hear-<lb/>
ing on Thomas' request for a new<lb/>
state senate election in that<lb/>
countv. said N.C. Elections Direc-<lb/>
tor Alex Brock.<lb/>
The purpose of the probable<lb/>
cause hearing is to conduct a legal<lb/>
forum at which the board divide<lb/>
whether to hold evidentiary hear-<lb/>
ing oi the complaints Brock<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"They've got to consider it<lb/>
he said, rhat's what the order<lb/>
will require Macon County Board<lb/>
of elections to do. Whatever they<lb/>
do is appealable to the state<lb/>
board<lb/>
Macon County election offi-<lb/>
cials will decide when the prob-<lb/>
able cause hearing will be held,<lb/>
but it will not be held until after<lb/>
the recount. Brock said.<lb/>
"I'm encouraged by the fact<lb/>
they ordered the hearing Tho-<lb/>
mas said when reached in Raleigh<lb/>
Tuesday evening. "Nothing has<lb/>
changed, but I'm still confident<lb/>
that the big board will find that<lb/>
the Macon County elections<lb/>
board erred in the manner in<lb/>
which the electronic voting ma-<lb/>
chines were programmed. I'm<lb/>
certain of that. It's as obvious as<lb/>
the nose on vour face<lb/>
The state board declared<lb/>
Democrat John Lewis Jr the<lb/>
winner over Republican Donald<lb/>
L. Smith for a seat on the state<lb/>
Court of Appeals, but withheld<lb/>
final certification pending a noon<lb/>
deadline on Thursday for Mr.<lb/>
Smith, who trailed by 15,858.<lb/>
votes, to call for a recount.<lb/>
In other action, voters in<lb/>
Duplin County will go back to the<lb/>
polls again to elect two county<lb/>
commissioners and three school<lb/>
board members after the state<lb/>
board ruled that a programming<lb/>
error on voting machines had<lb/>
made it impossible to get an accu-<lb/>
rate count of the votes there.<lb/>
The programming error re-<lb/>
sulted in some straight-ticket vot-<lb/>
ers casting ballots for board<lb/>
members and commissioners in<lb/>
Other districts, according to Du-<lb/>
plin County officials.<lb/>
CELEBRATE YOUR<lb/>
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Get cash for your books???hard cover or paperback whether used on<lb/>
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Sell them at:<lb/>
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t<lb/>
HU I S1 t. KOI IN! N<lb/>
Features<lb/>
: MBER 1,<lb/>
?88 'age<lb/>
Pat finds diversity at Varsity Hair Cut<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
features I .<lb/>
With the blinds pulled and<lb/>
the glass door dead bolted,<lb/>
Greenville's own Flovd the bar-<lb/>
ber. Pat Moore, sweeps up the<lb/>
dailv gathering ot blond, brown<lb/>
and grev hair clippings front his<lb/>
orange tiled floor.<lb/>
Reflecting into the combina-<lb/>
tion of kvks. Pat looked up and<lb/>
said 'I enjoy this. It snot like it sa<lb/>
job. 1 meet a lot ot people 1 would<lb/>
never have met.<lb/>
Moore, proprietor of Varsitv<lb/>
i lairCutonCotancheSt. has seen<lb/>
hair stvles come and c ? ind bar-<lb/>
bershops evolve into the multi-<lb/>
chair, appointment onlv format.<lb/>
No appointment is needed to see<lb/>
Pat. and even it vou wanted to set<lb/>
up an appointment, you can t Pa:<lb/>
does t have a pi ' ?' ng<lb/>
but Pat traditional barber<lb/>
stvle is still thiving January will<lb/>
mark the22nd c ir the i I. w hite<lb/>
and blue barb' r p ' hass n<lb/>
downtown next I ' pv - Pool<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
o appointments after 21<lb/>
years, 1 ain't tooling around with<lb/>
something that works Pat says<lb/>
while t inghisbl ick lowl p Ri i<lb/>
boks<lb/>
LateTuesda noon, a bar-<lb/>
rage of fresh hair stvle seekers<lb/>
op m d Pat sd or.Sitting i si<lb/>
tall, an angular male E L student<lb/>
marveled in the wall mirror at<lb/>
Pat's creation of a faded look<lb/>
A conformist punk style, the<lb/>
laded look requires the sides of<lb/>
the head to be skinned while the<lb/>
op remained several inches long.<lb/>
As with the change in hair stvles,<lb/>
Pat has moved with the times.<lb/>
'When 1 first started, all the<lb/>
college bovs wanted flat tops,<lb/>
now it s ,i varietv ol things, Pat<lb/>
sa i as he adjusts his gold-<lb/>
rimmed glasses. Beside the<lb/>
taded look Pat will accomo-<lb/>
date anv request trom the spiked<lb/>
look to Mohawk. Although he<lb/>
doesn't cut main vvomens hair<lb/>
as shaved the sides of some<lb/>
K l-<lb/>
ECl girls heads<lb/>
? diversity in clientele pay<lb/>
p tti nagetoVarsitv I lair Cut and<lb/>
njovs that element of his<lb/>
work Besides lawyers and busi-<lb/>
pie who work down-<lb/>
IC ollar workers, stu<lb/>
 '? anet students visit<lb/>
i<lb/>
'at - next customer, Rav<lb/>
mend has been a loyal client for<lb/>
20 years. Raymond steps his w ork<lb/>
boots to the stool and ask for a<lb/>
trim of his grev hair.<lb/>
1 one goes by fast don't it<lb/>
Rav mond<lb/>
"When vou are working, it<lb/>
reallv goes b fast Raymond<lb/>
savs above the subtle musax es-<lb/>
caping trom a small two speaker<lb/>
stereo.<lb/>
Before Pat can pull the vvisk<lb/>
brush trom his back pocket and<lb/>
dust oii Raymond's neck, a<lb/>
couple, the man wearing Knits<lb/>
and jeans, enter the barbershop<lb/>
just before close. Pat addresses<lb/>
them both by their name. Tat<lb/>
takes pride in his ability to re-<lb/>
member clients' names.<lb/>
1 try to remember names. 1<lb/>
like to know my customers per-<lb/>
sonally Pat savs.<lb/>
It'salready after the 5:30clos-<lb/>
ing and Pat anticipates the man in<lb/>
the boots to be his last customer of<lb/>
the day. But this afternoon is a<lb/>
busy one for Pat as a mother pulls<lb/>
her two sons through the glass<lb/>
door.<lb/>
The fussy mother tugs the<lb/>
smaller oi the two bovs, a tired<lb/>
whiner, in the direction oi the<lb/>
barber's chair with a bold 1964<lb/>
emblem on its bottom. Once the<lb/>
bov is bibbed and is snapped in,<lb/>
the mother orders to cut the bangs<lb/>
an inch and to cut the back close.<lb/>
Pat tries to cheer the bov up,<lb/>
but his whines presist. Changing<lb/>
the heads on the electric razor<lb/>
with proficiency, Pat angles the<lb/>
buzz tool around the contours oi<lb/>
the bin's neck. "Now that wasn't<lb/>
too bad was it?"<lb/>
Still standing near the chair,<lb/>
the mother calls her eldest boy, a<lb/>
13-year-old, to the stand. Reluc-<lb/>
tantly, he folds his Sports Illus-<lb/>
trated and shuffles aeross the<lb/>
floor. The mother once again<lb/>
barks cutting instructions, which<lb/>
include a chopping to a long front,<lb/>
to which the boy squeals "Oh,<lb/>
Mom<lb/>
As a stern look grows on the<lb/>
mother's ico, Pat becomes the<lb/>
mediator by saying "We'll fix vou<lb/>
up The boy slouches in the bar-<lb/>
ber chair with somewhat oi a op-<lb/>
timistic demur, he knows he can<lb/>
trust Pat; you see, Pat has cut his<lb/>
hair since the 13-year-old was a<lb/>
tyke.<lb/>
Pat has a lot of returning cus-<lb/>
tomers and in some families he<lb/>
cuts the hair oi three generations.<lb/>
And some wouldn't trust their<lb/>
hair with anyone else but Pat.<lb/>
"A couple oi my customers<lb/>
have left Greenville, but still come<lb/>
back to see me Pat savs with his<lb/>
ever present smile. "1 still cut the<lb/>
man's hair who modeled for me<lb/>
when I went to get my barber's<lb/>
license. Cecil Hinnant is his<lb/>
name<lb/>
Now 6:15 on a Tuesday eve-<lb/>
ning, Pat would usually be home<lb/>
about this time, but he is not too<lb/>
upset about it. As he dumps the<lb/>
collection oi hair clippings, a<lb/>
melting pot oi locks, into the trash<lb/>
bin and pulls his sleeves through<lb/>
a blue wind breaker, Pat wishes us<lb/>
a good night and savs his pat-<lb/>
ented "Come back and see me<lb/>
What could b - better than surfing in the tens of kelps oi the Big FlatPictured here is oe Harris, the now<lb/>
ex-News Editor who has flown this journalism coop, while hi- hvs to master this wave of kelp.<lb/>
'Tar River Poetry' now out<lb/>
BvTODl) LOVI-TT<lb/>
stiff Writer<lb/>
"It's printed on an ivory<lb/>
parchment sort of paper, so it has<lb/>
a warm, welcoming feel to it<lb/>
says editor Peter Makuck, and<lb/>
indeed this is the feelingone expe-<lb/>
riences with a reading ot the hHh<lb/>
anniversary edition of Tar River<lb/>
Poetry.<lb/>
From more humble begin-<lb/>
nings in the late 1961 sasa forum<lb/>
for local poets. Tar River Poetry<lb/>
has evolved into a journal oi<lb/>
broad scope which accepts sub-<lb/>
missions from writers and critics<lb/>
of national stature.<lb/>
In fact it is. 10 years after the<lb/>
establishment of its present form<lb/>
and name, rated by Writer's Di-<lb/>
gest as one of the top 50 publu a<lb/>
tions tor poetry. And deservedly<lb/>
so. As Ralph . Mills, Ir . author<lb/>
and critic, has said, Iar River<lb/>
Poetry is "edited with quiet bril-<lb/>
liance. Favoring no particular<lb/>
school, movement of clique, it has<lb/>
published a broad spectrum of<lb/>
poets.<lb/>
The criteria have always<lb/>
been the quality of the individual<lb/>
poem. The critical pieces in its<lb/>
review pages have been consis<lb/>
tentlv thoughtful and independ-<lb/>
ent Mills said.<lb/>
In a world where there is no<lb/>
money to be made in poetry, the<lb/>
fact that praises of the journal<lb/>
such as Mills' ring consistently<lb/>
true is perhaps responsible Tar<lb/>
River Poetry's longev ity. Makuck<lb/>
states that "it's important that Tar<lb/>
River Poetry has survived for 10<lb/>
years because literary journals<lb/>
come and go. The life expectam v<lb/>
is about five years. Fen years<lb/>
dearly means that the university<lb/>
lieves in what we're doing, and<lb/>
that wo're valuable enough to<lb/>
receive financial support<lb/>
1 he hHh aniversary edition is<lb/>
a celebratory double issue which<lb/>
contains a rich offering oi poetry<lb/>
and fouressavs. Much of the writ-<lb/>
ing is, . .at, professor at<lb/>
Mate I nivei tyof New York, has<lb/>
said oi Iar River Poetry in gen-<lb/>
eral, "written not just for other<lb/>
poets and academics, but tor the<lb/>
general public The poems are<lb/>
clear, precise, and tend to be in-<lb/>
volved with close inspection of<lb/>
thing and e ents rather than with<lb/>
the inner layers of the poet's<lb/>
mind<lb/>
lor example, there is bred<lb/>
( happell's "Relativity a poem<lb/>
which applies Einstein's revolu-<lb/>
tionary theory to the way we see<lb/>
things in our daily hv es.<lb/>
I et us suppose anobserver<lb/>
observing within this system. I o<lb/>
him all things are systematic<lb/>
Within our own lives, our actions<lb/>
have meaning because we are<lb/>
familiar with the system of things<lb/>
that we live in. Yet at the speed of<lb/>
light, the normal laws of physics<lb/>
that govern our systems seem to<lb/>
disappear, and as we begin to<lb/>
employ the technology of relativ-<lb/>
ity and the power of the atom, our<lb/>
ability (and perhaps our desire) to<lb/>
understand one another collapse.<lb/>
The separate systems veer to-<lb/>
gether and apart and this inabil-<lb/>
ity to undc rstand each other "is<lb/>
punctuated by the blackened<lb/>
matchstem that was Nagasaki<lb/>
by our possession and use ii the<lb/>
atomic bomb.<lb/>
Pat Moore, a Greenville barber, cuts a customer's hair while catch-<lb/>
ing up on the town gossip. (Photo by Tom Walters-Photolab)<lb/>
Surfing in a kelp laden coast<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
News f'ditor<lb/>
(Editor's note: This is the<lb/>
long awaited second part of<lb/>
Joseph Davidson Harris's jour-<lb/>
ney to the west coast waves and<lb/>
' moaiwMiiiiiji) '? "?? ??-?-?<lb/>
As we reached the top, waves<lb/>
pounded the rock and threw a<lb/>
drenching spray laden with kelp<lb/>
over us for nearly two hours<lb/>
raingearisa must.Contrary to our<lb/>
beliefs, the tide did recede and<lb/>
allowed us down.<lb/>
lust because the tide is going<lb/>
down is no indication that there is<lb/>
enough room between the water<lb/>
and rocks to walk on. Still an hour<lb/>
after we started hiking again, we<lb/>
were still being soaked by the left-<lb/>
over "washers enormous waves<lb/>
that seemingly come from no-<lb/>
where and catch unsuspecting,<lb/>
weary hikers.<lb/>
The third leg oi the hike is<lb/>
over cut shale. The shale is angled<lb/>
toward the sea from years oi the<lb/>
ocean's erosive forces.<lb/>
1 Ifking over this is almost like<lb/>
In "Spilled Bruce Bennett<lb/>
makes a keen observation about<lb/>
the seemingly undeserved anger<lb/>
and frustration we give to simple<lb/>
accidents.<lb/>
"It's not the liquid spreading<lb/>
on the floor nor indeed the park-<lb/>
ing ticket, missed apointment, or<lb/>
lost keys, all annoyances common<lb/>
to everyday existance. These<lb/>
things are "scarcely cause for sobs<lb/>
that will not stop Instead, it is<lb/>
"everything you ve ever spilled,<lb/>
and more that causes the anger.<lb/>
As the overturned glass falls and<lb/>
its contents spread on the floor,<lb/>
we react to not just it, but to the<lb/>
abundance of mistakes we have<lb/>
made, and helplessness that<lb/>
comes with knowing that we will<lb/>
make them again.<lb/>
Among the critical essays<lb/>
O J<lb/>
which follow the poetry, there is<lb/>
"Elvis Astride Pegasus Jim<lb/>
I'lledge's look at rock music as a<lb/>
background for the remembered<lb/>
experiences of poets who grew up<lb/>
during the formation of rock and<lb/>
roll, and now vvriteabout the Stars<lb/>
they listened to.<lb/>
There is, as Elledge notes, a<lb/>
mythology in rock music that<lb/>
invokes a myriad oi emotions,<lb/>
concepts, memories oi Vietnam<lb/>
and phrases such as "yeah, yeah,<lb/>
yeah In light of this fact, it is not<lb/>
surprising that poets such as Gary<lb/>
Soto, Albert Goldbarth, and Rich-<lb/>
ard Blessing among others,<lb/>
should vvriteabout the artists who<lb/>
created the recollections oi their<lb/>
generation.<lb/>
The essay's title recalls the<lb/>
Greek myth of Bellerophon<lb/>
astride the winged horse, facing<lb/>
S?? POETRY, page 15<lb/>
Pickin' the Bones<lb/>
walking down the curved side oi<lb/>
a drainpipe. We had to lean in<lb/>
towards the curvature and walk<lb/>
on our toes using our hands in<lb/>
some areas. In most places of this<lb/>
particular stretch, it is rnfposfeible<lb/>
to walk upright or without using<lb/>
"?4w -tomrte ??flrWttilrrmf $fp ? r "<lb/>
If the intense curve of what<lb/>
we came to call "hell's mile isn't<lb/>
bad enough, then the moss and<lb/>
barnacles are. These two-to-three<lb/>
miles are littered with barnacles<lb/>
and painted with moss. The moss<lb/>
is as slick, it not more, than ice. If<lb/>
vou lose' your tooting, thankfully<lb/>
none of us did, you scrape alone<lb/>
the razor-like barnacles into the 51<lb/>
degree w a tor.<lb/>
After a brief climb to the top<lb/>
ot a ridge vou come up on an<lb/>
immense green plateau fed by a<lb/>
moi tain stream complete<lb/>
wit! cut-throat trout and small<lb/>
mouth bass. This is Big Rat. The<lb/>
onlysoundsare the rolling waves.<lb/>
,n occasional buz from a cricket<lb/>
and the water boiling through<lb/>
rocks in the stream.<lb/>
Ihehikeisn t over vet, but all<lb/>
the dangerous parts are ?<lb/>
bind. From here on out, the hi -<lb/>
is - ver the flat era?land.<lb/>
it fiv ? but<lb/>
ie are ar ??' ing<lb/>
pared I ? nes<lb/>
Once the camp area is<lb/>
hod. a"Si<lb/>
inkling of ci ilization na<lb/>
a weathered and branch'<lb/>
trunk reads - ? rs res<lb/>
enjoy. Take what vou . n oth.<lb/>
imp I the stream<lb/>
get well away from it B ars drink<lb/>
and fish from it da .  arc<lb/>
to take pictures of them, do it fi<lb/>
a distance.<lb/>
When vou set up camp I<lb/>
foodstuffs from high tree limb<lb/>
rope, or the raccoons will have a<lb/>
regular feast. In the week that we<lb/>
were there, three loaves of w heat<lb/>
bread, numerous packs of Oodles<lb/>
of Noodles, granola bars<lb/>
trailmix were scavenged r<lb/>
by raccoons.<lb/>
The uncrowded waves<lb/>
well worth the hike.<lb/>
See SPOTS, page 15<lb/>
Bonehead wraps up the year 1988<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
"It's Not My Problem Anymore<lb/>
Well, it seems it's that time<lb/>
oi year again. I have to wrap up<lb/>
thiscolumn for the year. And it's<lb/>
been a great year, hasn't it? Just<lb/>
think back at all the fun things<lb/>
that happened in 1988 <lb/>
On the social front, Dirtv<lb/>
Dancing and endless beer com-<lb/>
mercial meant one thing to this<lb/>
country ? Sexually Transmit-<lb/>
ted Diseases. Whether it was<lb/>
AIDS, herpes or that old<lb/>
standby cervical cancer, Ameri-<lb/>
cans lived in mortal fear of the<lb/>
question, "What do we do after<lb/>
the bars close?"<lb/>
This problem was exacer-<lb/>
bated in North Carolina, where<lb/>
ABC laws close all bars at 1 a.m.<lb/>
during Daylight Savings Time.<lb/>
So far, no one at the ABC has<lb/>
offered an explanation for this<lb/>
bizarre law. It must get darker at<lb/>
1 a.m. in the winter than it does<lb/>
in the summer.<lb/>
On the musical end of the<lb/>
scale, there were few bright<lb/>
pots. SPIN magazine came<lb/>
back, Tracy Chapman got the<lb/>
national exposure she deserved<lb/>
and X didn't break up.<lb/>
The Cars did though, REM<lb/>
sold out, drivin' 'n cryin' didn't,<lb/>
and cover versions of old hits<lb/>
made money for artists who<lb/>
couldn't come up with stuff of<lb/>
their own.<lb/>
Weatherwise, the atmos-<lb/>
phere finally went on strike and<lb/>
those ozone scabs finally got a<lb/>
shot at the jobs they've begged<lb/>
jfor. Raleigh survived, a tornado<lb/>
that deep in my heart I know<lb/>
God was sending to wipe out<lb/>
Greenville. I guess ever. Cod s<lb/>
aim is a little off those days.<lb/>
Whose isn't!1 America<lb/>
proved hor political aim is still<lb/>
the stagnant status quo oi the<lb/>
right-wing conservatives. But in<lb/>
the end, it didn't reallv matter.<lb/>
The only guv qualified to be<lb/>
president blew it by picking on a<lb/>
defenseless moron.<lb/>
And the whole campaign<lb/>
degenerated into a contest to see<lb/>
which potential First Lady had<lb/>
buried the most children. Who<lb/>
needs it? Thank God for cable<lb/>
television.<lb/>
What a plethora of choices!<lb/>
Greenville Cable TV alone ot-<lb/>
ters five religious channels. The<lb/>
Weather Channel, ESPN, CNN<lb/>
and MTV were big favorites<lb/>
among college students. In fact,<lb/>
these channel seemed tailor-<lb/>
made for us.<lb/>
Channels that show the<lb/>
same thing every hour, have lots<lb/>
oi commercials and require the<lb/>
attention span of a small house-<lb/>
hold appliance were big busi-<lb/>
ness again this year. No reason<lb/>
why thev won't be next year too.<lb/>
Ted Turner truly is a veritable<lb/>
god.<lb/>
Vanna White became the<lb/>
Goddess of Love, causing sev-<lb/>
eral hundred mythology profes-<lb/>
sors to commit suicide. " The<lb/>
Cosbv Show" went into syndi-<lb/>
cation and can now be seen 24<lb/>
hours a day, providing wit,<lb/>
warmth and wisdom for mil-<lb/>
lions of divorced parents, run-<lb/>
away kids and other remnants<lb/>
ot the nuclear familv.<lb/>
At the mo ies, ta<lb/>
traction and Ran bo<lb/>
proved America likes to watch<lb/>
sequels and psychos, and se-<lb/>
quels with psychos are big<lb/>
money. Michael Keaton signed<lb/>
to play batman in the i<lb/>
movie, throwing the comi<lb/>
industry back 20 yeai<lb/>
Otherwise, comics<lb/>
pretty well. Robin the<lb/>
Wonder bit the Bat-dust SPIN<lb/>
featured hip comic books r<lb/>
larlv in their mag. and <lb/>
Groening's cartoon fillers on<lb/>
The Tracey Ullman Shi ???<lb/>
wore the fui I I ir m<lb/>
media.<lb/>
And w hat changes doe.<lb/>
Year of the Dragon breathe<lb/>
The Emerald Cit) ?Well, thecitv<lb/>
got $8 million from a deceased<lb/>
widow, but thev didn't get a tat-<lb/>
too parlor on Fifth Street.<lb/>
We hist Halloween and<lb/>
gained a now look for D . .<lb/>
Reflector. No new parking<lb/>
spaces appeared for FCC stu<lb/>
dents, but pink parking tickets<lb/>
multiplied like bunnies on j<lb/>
speed.<lb/>
A squirrel man ran ram-<lb/>
pant, Bonehead and Big E go!<lb/>
evicted and The Human Mega-<lb/>
phone died horribly. I got<lb/>
turned into a question on a jour-<lb/>
nalism test. It was a strange<lb/>
year.<lb/>
What to look for in 1989?<lb/>
More taxes, more death and :<lb/>
most probably another Tiffanv<lb/>
album. Please, God. Send more i<lb/>
tornadoes. And )ust wake me <lb/>
when it's over. Y all take care<lb/>
Spots<lb/>
c ontinued I<lb/>
There u<lb/>
.? duce ?<lb/>
andm I<lb/>
point, th(:<lb/>
tionthal brcal<lb/>
low bd<lb/>
moul<lb/>
ei '<lb/>
tl<lb/>
wi<lb/>
,nt mw<lb/>
n ? ? . .<lb/>
ern .<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
tra .<lb/>
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rt I<lb/>
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int 1<lb/>
Poetr<lb/>
fess beset by l<lb/>
? ker the i<lb/>
can Dream thai s<lb/>
itabh lost<lb/>
? l. ?<lb/>
(<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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?e<lb/>
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nj<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058113_0017"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROI INI AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1988 Page 14<lb/>
Pat finds diversity at Varsity Hair Cut<lb/>
Bv TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Kcjturcs t ditor<lb/>
With the blinds pulled and<lb/>
the glass door dead bolted,<lb/>
Greenville's own Floyd the Bar-<lb/>
ber, Pat Moore, sweeps up the<lb/>
dailv gathering of blond, brown<lb/>
and grev hair clippings from his<lb/>
orange tiled floor.<lb/>
Reflecting into the combina-<lb/>
tion of locks. Tat looked up and<lb/>
said "I enjoy this. It's not like it's a<lb/>
job. I meet a lot of people I would<lb/>
never have met<lb/>
Moore, proprietor oi Varsity<lb/>
Hair Cut on Cotanche St has seen<lb/>
hair styles come and go and bar-<lb/>
bershops evolve into the multi-<lb/>
chair, appointment only format.<lb/>
No appointment is needed to see<lb/>
Pat, and even if you wanted to set<lb/>
up an appointment, you can't, Tat<lb/>
doesn't have a phone listing.<lb/>
But Pat's traditional barber<lb/>
Style is still thiving, January will<lb/>
mark the 22nd year the red. white<lb/>
and blue barber pole has spun<lb/>
downtown next to Happy's Pool<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
"No appointments, after 21<lb/>
vears, 1 ain't fooling around with<lb/>
something that works Pat says<lb/>
while tvinghisblack, low topRee-<lb/>
boks.<lb/>
Late Tuesday afternoon, a bar-<lb/>
rage of fresh hair style seekers<lb/>
opened Tat's door. Sitting in stool<lb/>
tall, an angular male ECU student<lb/>
marveled in the wall mirror at<lb/>
rat's creation of a "faded look<lb/>
A conformist-punk style, the<lb/>
faded look" requires the sides of<lb/>
the head to be skinned while the<lb/>
top remained several inches long.<lb/>
As with the change in hair styles,<lb/>
Pat has moved with the times.<lb/>
"When I first started, all the<lb/>
college boys wanted flat tops,<lb/>
now it's a variety oi things Pat<lb/>
says as he adjusts his gold-<lb/>
rimmed glasses. Beside the<lb/>
"faded look Pat will accomo-<lb/>
date any request from the spiked<lb/>
look to Mohawk. Although he<lb/>
doesn't cut many womens' hair<lb/>
he has shaved the sides of some<lb/>
ECU girls' heads.<lb/>
A diversity in clientele pay<lb/>
patronage to Yarsitv Hair Cut and<lb/>
Pat enjoys that element oi his<lb/>
work. Besides lawyers and busi-<lb/>
ness people who work down-<lb/>
town, blue collar workers, stu-<lb/>
dents and exchange students visit<lb/>
Pat.<lb/>
Pat's next customer, Rav-<lb/>
mond, has been a loyal client for<lb/>
20 vears. Raymond steps his work<lb/>
boots to the stool and ask for a<lb/>
trim of his grev hair.<lb/>
'Time goes by fast, don't it<lb/>
Ravmond<lb/>
"When you are working, it<lb/>
reallv goes by fast Raymond<lb/>
savs above the subtle musax es-<lb/>
caping from a small two speaker<lb/>
stereo.<lb/>
Before Pat can pull the wisk<lb/>
brush from his back pocket and<lb/>
dust off Raymond's neck, a<lb/>
couple, the man wearing boots<lb/>
and jeans, enter the barbershop<lb/>
just before close. Pat addresses<lb/>
them both by their name. Pat<lb/>
takes pride in his ability to re-<lb/>
member clients' names.<lb/>
"1 trv to remember names. I<lb/>
J<lb/>
like to know my customers per-<lb/>
sonally Pat says.<lb/>
It's already after the 5:30 clos-<lb/>
ing and Pat anticipates the man in<lb/>
the boots to be his last customer of<lb/>
the day. But this afternoon is a<lb/>
busy one for Pat as a mother pulls<lb/>
her two sons through the glass<lb/>
door.<lb/>
The fussy mother tugs the<lb/>
smaller of the two boys, a tired<lb/>
whiner, in the direction of the<lb/>
barber's chair with a bold 1964<lb/>
emblem on its bottom. Once the<lb/>
boy is bibbed and is snapped in,<lb/>
the mother orders to cut the bangs<lb/>
an inch and to cut the back close.<lb/>
Pat tries to cheer the boy up,<lb/>
but his whines presist. Changing<lb/>
the heads on the electric razor<lb/>
with proficiency, Pat angles the<lb/>
buzz tool around the contours of<lb/>
the boy's neck. "Now that wasn't<lb/>
too bad was it?"<lb/>
Still standing near the chair,<lb/>
the mother calls her eldest boy, a<lb/>
13-year-old, to the stand. Reluc-<lb/>
tantly, he folds his Sports Illus-<lb/>
trated and shuffles across the<lb/>
floor. The mother once again<lb/>
barks cutting instructions, which<lb/>
include a chopping to a long front,<lb/>
to which the boy squeals "Oh,<lb/>
Mom<lb/>
As a stern look grows on the<lb/>
mother's face, Pat becomes the<lb/>
mediator by saying "We'll fix you<lb/>
up The boy slouches in the bar-<lb/>
ber chair with somewhat of a op-<lb/>
timistic demur, he knows he can<lb/>
trust Pat; you see, Pat has cut his<lb/>
hair since the 13-year-old was a<lb/>
tyke.<lb/>
Pat has a lot of returning cus-<lb/>
tomers and in some families he<lb/>
cuts the hair of three generations.<lb/>
And some wouldn't trust their<lb/>
hair with anyone else but Pat.<lb/>
"A couple of my customers<lb/>
have left Greenville, but still come<lb/>
back to see me Pat says with his<lb/>
ever present smile. "I still cut the<lb/>
man's hair who modeled for me<lb/>
when I went to get my barber's<lb/>
license. Cecil Hinnant is his<lb/>
name<lb/>
Now 6:15 on a Tuesday eve-<lb/>
ning, Pat would usually be home<lb/>
about this time, but he is not too<lb/>
upset about it. As he dumps the<lb/>
collection of hair clippings, a<lb/>
melting pot of locks, into the trash<lb/>
bin and pulls his sleeves through<lb/>
a blue wind breaker, Pat wishes us<lb/>
a good night and says his pat-<lb/>
ented "Come back and see me<lb/>
Pat Moore, a Greenville barber, cuts a customer's hair while catch-<lb/>
ing up on the town gossip. (Photo by Tom Walters-Photolab)<lb/>
Surfing in a kelp laden coast<lb/>
By JOE HARRIS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
(Editor's<lb/>
What could b e better than surfing in the tons of kelps of the Big FlatPictured here is Joe Harris, the now<lb/>
ex-News Editor who has flown this journalism coop, while he tiys to master this wave of kelp.<lb/>
'Tar River Poetry' now out<lb/>
note: This is the<lb/>
long awaited second part of<lb/>
Jo$efh Davidson Harris's jour-<lb/>
neirto.tfienwestcoast -waves and<lb/>
MnofflWiUiiiuir ' ?? ??-?? <lb/>
As we reached the top, waves<lb/>
pounded the rock and threw a<lb/>
drenching spray laden with kelp<lb/>
over us for nearly two hours ?<lb/>
raingear is a must. Contrary to our<lb/>
beliefs, the tide did recede and<lb/>
allowed us down.<lb/>
Just because the tide is going<lb/>
down is no indication that there is<lb/>
enough room between the water<lb/>
and rocks to walk on. Still an hour<lb/>
after we started hiking again, we<lb/>
were still being soaked by the left-<lb/>
over "washers enormous waves<lb/>
that seemingly come from no-<lb/>
where and catch unsuspecting,<lb/>
weary hikers.<lb/>
The third leg of the hike is<lb/>
over cut shale. The shale is angled<lb/>
toward the sea from years of the<lb/>
ocean's erosive forces.<lb/>
Hiking over this is almost like<lb/>
ByTODDLOVETT<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
"It's printed on an ivory<lb/>
parchment sort of paper, so it has<lb/>
a warm, welcoming feel to it<lb/>
says editor Peter Makuck, and<lb/>
indeed this is the feelingone expe-<lb/>
riences with a reading of the 10th<lb/>
anniversary edition of Tar River<lb/>
Poetry.<lb/>
From more humble begin-<lb/>
nings in the late 1960's as a forum<lb/>
for local poets, Tar River Poetry<lb/>
has evolved into a journal of<lb/>
broad scope which accepts sub-<lb/>
missions from writers and critics<lb/>
of national stature.<lb/>
In fact it is, 10 vears after the<lb/>
establishment of its present form<lb/>
and name, rated by Writer's Di-<lb/>
gest as one of the top 50 publica-<lb/>
tions for poetry. And deservedly<lb/>
so. As Ralph J. Mills, jr author<lb/>
and critic, has said, Tar River<lb/>
Poetry is "edited with quiet bril-<lb/>
liance. Favoring no particular<lb/>
school, movement of clique, it has<lb/>
published a broad spectrum of<lb/>
poets.<lb/>
The criteria have alwavs<lb/>
been the quality of the individual<lb/>
poem. The critical pieces in its<lb/>
review pages have been consis-<lb/>
tently thoughtful and independ-<lb/>
ent Mills said.<lb/>
In a world where there is no<lb/>
money to be made in poetry, the<lb/>
fact that praises of the journal<lb/>
such as Mills' ring consistently<lb/>
true is perhaps responsible Tar<lb/>
River Poetry's longevity. Makuck<lb/>
States that "it's important that Tar<lb/>
River Poetry has survived for 10<lb/>
years because literary journals<lb/>
come and go. The life expectancy<lb/>
is about five years. Ten years<lb/>
clearly means that the university-<lb/>
believes in what we're doing, and<lb/>
that we're valuable enough to<lb/>
receive financial support<lb/>
The 10th aniversary edition is<lb/>
a celebratory double issue which<lb/>
contains a rich offering of poetry<lb/>
and four essays. Much of the writ-<lb/>
ing is, as Bill Katz, professor at<lb/>
State University of New York, has<lb/>
said of Tar River Poetry in gen-<lb/>
eral, "written not just for other<lb/>
poets and academics, but for the<lb/>
general public. The poems are<lb/>
clear, precise, and tend to be in-<lb/>
volved with close inspection of<lb/>
thing and events rather than with<lb/>
the inner layers of the poet's<lb/>
mind<lb/>
For example, there is Fred<lb/>
Chappell's "Relativity a poem<lb/>
which applies Einstein's revolu-<lb/>
tionary theory to the way we see<lb/>
things in our daily lives.<lb/>
"Let us suppose an observer<lb/>
observing within this system. To<lb/>
him all things are systematic<lb/>
Within our own lives, our actions<lb/>
have meaning because we are<lb/>
familiar with the system of things<lb/>
that we live in. Yet at the speed of<lb/>
light, the normal laws of physics<lb/>
that govern our systems seem to<lb/>
disappear, and as we begin to<lb/>
employ the technology of relativ-<lb/>
ity and the power of the atom, our<lb/>
ability (and perhaps our desire) to<lb/>
understand one another collapse.<lb/>
"The separate systems veer to-<lb/>
gether and apart and this inabil-<lb/>
ity to understand each other "is<lb/>
punctuated by the blackened<lb/>
matchstem that was Nagasaki<lb/>
by our possession and use of the<lb/>
atomic bomb.<lb/>
In "Spilled Bruce Bennett<lb/>
makes a keen observation about<lb/>
the seemingly undeserved anger<lb/>
and frustration we give to simple<lb/>
accidents.<lb/>
"It's not the liquid spreading<lb/>
on the floor nor indeed the park-<lb/>
ing ticket, missed apointment, or<lb/>
lost keys, all annoyances common<lb/>
to everyday existance. These<lb/>
things are "scarcely cause for sobs<lb/>
that will not stop Instead, it is<lb/>
"everything you've ever spilled,<lb/>
and more that causes the anger.<lb/>
As the overturned glass falls and<lb/>
its contents spread on the floor,<lb/>
we react to not just it, but to the<lb/>
abundance of mistakes we have<lb/>
made, and helplessness that<lb/>
comes with knowing that we will<lb/>
make them again.<lb/>
Among the critical essays<lb/>
which follow the poetry, there is<lb/>
"Elvis Astride Pegasus Jim<lb/>
Elledge's look at rock music as a<lb/>
background for the remembered<lb/>
experiences of poets who grew up<lb/>
during the formation of rock and<lb/>
roll, and now write about the stars<lb/>
they listened to.<lb/>
There is, as Elledge notes, a<lb/>
mythology in rock music that<lb/>
invokes a myriad of emotions,<lb/>
concepts, memories of Vietnam<lb/>
and phrases such as "yeah, yeah,<lb/>
yeah In light of this fact, it is not<lb/>
surprising that poets such as Gary<lb/>
Soto, Albert Goldbarth, and Rich-<lb/>
ard Blessing among others,<lb/>
should write about the artists who<lb/>
created the recollections of their<lb/>
generation.<lb/>
The essay's title recalls the<lb/>
Greek myth of Bellerophon<lb/>
astride the winged horse, facing<lb/>
S(e POETRY, page 15<lb/>
Pickin' the Bones<lb/>
walking down the curved side of<lb/>
a drainpipe. We had to lean in<lb/>
towards the curvature and walk<lb/>
on our toes using our hands in<lb/>
some areas. In most places of this<lb/>
particular strdtclfftt is mfposBiblt?<lb/>
. to walk upright or without using<lb/>
Ht ?haHdfe'ujBUUUiuHUrl JtVpport;<lb/>
If the intense curve of what<lb/>
we came to call "hell's mile isn't<lb/>
bad enough, then the moss and<lb/>
barnacles are. These two-to-three<lb/>
miles are littered with barnacles<lb/>
and painted with moss. The moss<lb/>
is as slick, if not more, than ice. If<lb/>
you lose your footing, thankfully<lb/>
none of us did, you scrape along<lb/>
the razor-like barnacles into the 50<lb/>
degree water.<lb/>
After a brief climb to the top<lb/>
of a ridge you come up on an<lb/>
immense green plateau fed by a<lb/>
mov itain stream ? complete<lb/>
witl cut-throat trout and small<lb/>
mouth bass. This is Big Flat. The<lb/>
only soundsarc the rolling waves,<lb/>
an occasional buzz from a cricket<lb/>
and the water boiling through<lb/>
rocks in the stream.<lb/>
The hike isn't over vet but all<lb/>
the dangerous parts are well be-<lb/>
hind. From here on out. the hiking<lb/>
is over the flat grassland, only<lb/>
about five miles remains, but<lb/>
these are anything but difficult<lb/>
compared fo the previous ones.<lb/>
Once the camp area is<lb/>
reached a'sniall sign ? 'the'onlv<lb/>
inkling of civilization ? nailed to<lb/>
a weathered and branchless tree<lb/>
trunk reads, "Surfers: respect and<lb/>
enjoy. Take what you came with<lb/>
Don't camp by the stream ?<lb/>
get well away from it. Bears drink<lb/>
and fish from it dailv. If vou want<lb/>
to take pictures of them, do it from<lb/>
a distance.<lb/>
When you set up camp hang<lb/>
foodstuffs from high tree limbs bv<lb/>
rope, or the raccoons will have a<lb/>
regular feast. In the week that we<lb/>
were there, three loaves of wheat<lb/>
bread, numerous packs oi Oodles<lb/>
of Noodles, granola bars and<lb/>
trailmix were scavenged nightlv<lb/>
by raccoons.<lb/>
The uncrowded waves are<lb/>
well worth the hike.<lb/>
See SPOTS, page 15<lb/>
Bonehead wraps up the year 1988<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
"If t Not My Problem Anymore<lb/>
Well, it seems it's that time<lb/>
of year again. I have to wrap up<lb/>
this column for the year. And it's<lb/>
been a great year, hasn't it? Just<lb/>
think back at all the fun things<lb/>
that happened in 1988 <lb/>
On the social front, Dirty<lb/>
Dancing and endless beer com-<lb/>
mercial meant one thing to this<lb/>
country ? Sexually Transmit-<lb/>
ted Diseases. Whether it was<lb/>
AIDS, herpes or that old<lb/>
standby cervical cancer, Ameri-<lb/>
cans lived in mortal fear of the<lb/>
question, "What do we do after<lb/>
the bars close?"<lb/>
This problem was exacer-<lb/>
bated in North Carolina, where<lb/>
ABC laws close all bars at 1 a.m.<lb/>
during Daylight Savings Time.<lb/>
So far, no one at the ABC has<lb/>
offered an explanation for this<lb/>
bizarre law. It must get darker at<lb/>
1 a.m. in the winter than it does<lb/>
in the summer.<lb/>
On the musical end of the<lb/>
scale, there were few bright<lb/>
spots. SPIN magazine came<lb/>
back, Tracy Chapman got the<lb/>
national exposure she deserved<lb/>
and X didn't break up.<lb/>
The Cars did though, REM<lb/>
sold out, drivin' 'n cryin' didn't,<lb/>
and cover versions of old hits<lb/>
made money for artists who<lb/>
couldn't come up with stuff of<lb/>
their own.<lb/>
Weatherwise, the atmos-<lb/>
phere finally went on strike and<lb/>
those ozone scabs finally got a<lb/>
shot at the jobs they've begged<lb/>
tor. Raleigh vjYed frm-naHn<lb/>
that deep in my heart I know<lb/>
God was sending to wipe out<lb/>
Greenville. I guess even God's<lb/>
aim is a little off these days.<lb/>
Whose isn't? America<lb/>
proved her political aim is still<lb/>
the stagnant status quo of the<lb/>
right-wing conservatives. But in<lb/>
the end, it didn't really matter.<lb/>
The only guy qualified to be<lb/>
president blew it by picking on a<lb/>
defenseless moron.<lb/>
And the whole campaign<lb/>
degenerated into a contest to see<lb/>
which potential First Lady had<lb/>
buried the most children. Who<lb/>
needs it? Thank God for cable<lb/>
television.<lb/>
What a plethora of choices!<lb/>
Greenville Cable TV alone of-<lb/>
fers five religious channels. The<lb/>
Weather Channel, ESPN, CNN<lb/>
and MTV were big favorites<lb/>
among college students. In fact,<lb/>
these channel seemed tailor-<lb/>
made for us.<lb/>
Channels that show the<lb/>
same thing every hour, have lots<lb/>
of commercials and require the<lb/>
attention span of a small house-<lb/>
hold appliance were big busi-<lb/>
ness again this year. No reason<lb/>
why they won't be next year too.<lb/>
Ted Turner truly is a veritable<lb/>
god.<lb/>
Vanna White became the<lb/>
Goddess of Love, causing sev-<lb/>
eral hundred mythology profes-<lb/>
sors to commit suicide. "The<lb/>
Cosby Show" went into syndi-<lb/>
cation and can now be seen 24<lb/>
hours a day, providing wit,<lb/>
warmth and wisdom for mil-<lb/>
lions of divorced parents, run-<lb/>
away kids and other remnants<lb/>
of the nuclear family.<lb/>
At the movies, "Fatal At-<lb/>
traction" and "Rambo III"<lb/>
proved America likes to watch<lb/>
sequels and psychos, and se-<lb/>
quels with psychos are big<lb/>
money. Michael Keaton signed<lb/>
to play Batman in the new<lb/>
movie, throwing the comic book<lb/>
industry back 20 years.<lb/>
Otherwise, comics did<lb/>
pretty well. Robin the Boy<lb/>
Wonder bit the Bat-dust, SPIN<lb/>
featured hip comic books regu-<lb/>
larly in their mag, and Matt<lb/>
Groening's cartoon fillers on<lb/>
"The Tracey Ullman Show"<lb/>
were the funniest thing in any<lb/>
media.<lb/>
And what changes did the<lb/>
Year of the Dragon breathe into<lb/>
The Emerald City? Well, the city<lb/>
got $8 million from a deceased<lb/>
widow, but they didn't get a tat-<lb/>
too parlor on Fifth Street.<lb/>
We lost Halloween and<lb/>
gained a new look for The Daily<lb/>
Reflector. No new parking<lb/>
spaces appeared for ECU stu-<lb/>
dents, but pink parking tickets<lb/>
multiplied like bunnies on<lb/>
speed.<lb/>
A squirrel man ran ram-<lb/>
pant, Bonehead and Big E got<lb/>
evicted and The Human Mega-<lb/>
phone died horribly. I got<lb/>
turned into a question on a jour-<lb/>
nalism test. It was a strange<lb/>
year.<lb/>
What to look for in 1989?<lb/>
More taxes, more death and<lb/>
most probably another Tiffany<lb/>
album. Please, God. Send more<lb/>
tornadoes. And just wake me<lb/>
when it's over. Y'all take rare.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Spots<lb/>
Continued from page<lb/>
There are three si<lb/>
produce prime waves,<lb/>
and most clearly visible sj<lb/>
point, then lherc is an in<lb/>
tion that breaks over rocl<lb/>
low tides and also a bea4<lb/>
located in front of tl<lb/>
mouth.<lb/>
When the wind is<lb/>
north, endless amounts<lb/>
wrap from the north sic<lb/>
point inward producing!<lb/>
the most tubular wave if<lb/>
em California. Clean H<lb/>
allow for top-to-bottom<lb/>
excess of five minute<lb/>
trademark of the point<lb/>
is unndable at low tide<lb/>
the kelp is so thick it actuj<lb/>
down your board. It<lb/>
place to warm-up U j I<lb/>
ing and confidence read<lb/>
other two spots.<lb/>
At low tide the ii :<lb/>
we named the "boilerroi<lb/>
cause of the num -<lb/>
which caused visible sw ij<lb/>
boiling when the wave<lb/>
up, begins to work. 11 is oi<lb/>
three feet deep over the<lb/>
makes taking-off a crucial<lb/>
ver of do or die consequf<lb/>
Here, surfers need <lb/>
alert to dodge the vane<lb/>
that become exposed as tl<lb/>
suck up into shallower wj<lb/>
boilerroom i s not a spot<lb/>
it if there is the least ai<lb/>
doubt in your ability.<lb/>
important thing to reml<lb/>
the closest medical help i<lb/>
by foot.<lb/>
The creek mouth<lb/>
hairy spot. The take ottj<lb/>
lble from the beach d<lb/>
enormous rock protruc<lb/>
Poetr<lb/>
Continued from p;<lb/>
the Chimera. Elvis Pre<lb/>
contrast, defeated by<lb/>
faces. He is a composite<lb/>
shattered individual, ar<lb/>
fessional ist, beset by tht<lb/>
of the generation he re<lb/>
and is finally defeated,<lb/>
sense, Presley is the pre<lb/>
rocker, the achiever of tl<lb/>
can Dream that sours, ai<lb/>
itably lost.<lb/>
Poet Brendan Galv<lb/>
that "there may be a she<lb/>
chic poetry magazine. b<lb/>
consistently more in<lb/>
than Tar River Poetry<lb/>
the quality of the journal<lb/>
is an acurate measurii<lb/>
ment for its own worth<lb/>
speaks louder than any<lb/>
or review. Emily Dickil<lb/>
said that nature is al<lb/>
house, and art is a hous<lb/>
to be haunted. Tar Rivei<lb/>
a haunting literary joui<lb/>
Copies of the lOtfcj<lb/>
sary edition are $6, andl<lb/>
able at the Student Supl<lb/>
i<lb/>
3<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
fl<lb/>
cl<lb/>
ti<lb/>
si<lb/>
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?NV.SNV.V<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0018"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1988 15<lb/>
:ut<lb/>
n coast<lb/>
be-<lb/>
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i - but<lb/>
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area is<lb/>
Inly<lb/>
nailed to<lb/>
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pectand<lb/>
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?tream ?<lb/>
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I i t fi<lb/>
lang<lb/>
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ghtly<lb/>
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s page 15<lb/>
ear1988<lb/>
riid<lb/>
: i the<lb/>
??? to<lb/>
. ?? ll,thecity<lb/>
' tgeta tat-<lb/>
and<lb/>
kfoi<lb/>
new parking<lb/>
- ?'? '?"?d for ECU stu-<lb/>
. but pinkparking tickets<lb/>
: hke bunnies on .<lb/>
squirrel man ran ram-<lb/>
Ponehead and Big E got<lb/>
.i and The Human Mega-<lb/>
died hornblv. 1 got<lb/>
1 into a question on a jour-<lb/>
i test It was a strange :<lb/>
hat to look tor in 1989?<lb/>
taxes, more death and<lb/>
probably another Tiffany<lb/>
l Please God Send more<lb/>
iocs And mst wake me <lb/>
t s over. , all take care. <lb/>
Spots produce prime waves<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
There are three spots that the ocean. The rock is frequented<lb/>
produce prime waves. The first by elephant seals that choose to<lb/>
and most clearly visible spot is the sun themselves from this posi-<lb/>
point, then there is an inside sec- tion. Here, if you don't make the<lb/>
tion that breaks over rock shelf on<lb/>
low tides and also a beach break<lb/>
located in front oi the creek<lb/>
mouth.<lb/>
When the wind is from the<lb/>
north, endless amounts of waves<lb/>
ducing county in the United<lb/>
States. According to natives of<lb/>
Shelter Cove, the mountains are<lb/>
littered with marijuana farms and<lb/>
owners have no tolerance for the<lb/>
snooping hiker.<lb/>
One resident told useachyear<lb/>
take off the rock eats you.<lb/>
We surfed all these spots<lb/>
without incident. Each of us<lb/>
started at the point and graduated people go hiking in the hills and<lb/>
to the boilerroom and then to the never return. He said the farms<lb/>
creek mouth. Everyday, all the are booby-trapped with every-<lb/>
wrap from the north side of the spots had waves, it was a matter of thing from anti-personnel mines<lb/>
point inward producing perhaps do I feel like walking to the point to doberman pinchers,<lb/>
the most tubular wave in North- or do I want to hassle with the When planning to make the<lb/>
em California. Clean faces that seals at the creek mouth. hike, make sure your equipment,<lb/>
The seals at creek mouth are including your body, is in good<lb/>
everywhere chasing bait fish that working order. The hike is so ex-<lb/>
feed off the rocks. It seems they treme that faulty equipment or a<lb/>
(the seals) pop up at the most in- muscle pull for that matter, could<lb/>
opportune moments ? usually force an early departure or end<lb/>
during the take off they'd appear<lb/>
directly in front of vou, just<lb/>
allow for top-to-bottom rides in<lb/>
excess of five minutes, are the<lb/>
trademark oi the point. This spot<lb/>
is unridable at low tide because<lb/>
the kelp is so thick it actually bogs<lb/>
down your board. It is a good<lb/>
place to warm-up to get the tim-<lb/>
ing and confidence readv for the enough to break concentration<lb/>
other two spots.<lb/>
At low tide the inside section<lb/>
we named the "boilerroom be-<lb/>
cause of the numerous rocks<lb/>
which caused visible swirling and<lb/>
boiling when the waves sucked<lb/>
up, begins to work. It is only about<lb/>
three feet deep over the shelf; this<lb/>
makes taking-off a crucial maneu-<lb/>
ver of do or die consequences.<lb/>
Here, surfers need to be very<lb/>
alert to dodge the various rocks<lb/>
that become exposed as the waves<lb/>
suck up into shallower water. The<lb/>
boilerroom is not a spot to attempt<lb/>
it if there is the least amount of<lb/>
doubt in vour ability. The most<lb/>
important thing to remember is<lb/>
the closest medical help is 15 miles<lb/>
by foot.<lb/>
The creek mouth is another<lb/>
hairy spot. The take off isn't vis-<lb/>
ible from the beach due to an<lb/>
enormous rock protruding from<lb/>
Poetry<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
the Chimera. Elvis Presley is in<lb/>
contrast, defeated by what he<lb/>
faces. He is a composite person, a<lb/>
shattered individual, and a con-<lb/>
fessionalist, beset by the problems<lb/>
of the generation he represents,<lb/>
and is finally defeated. In a larger<lb/>
sense, Presley is the prototypical<lb/>
rocker, the achiever of the Ameri-<lb/>
can Dream that sours, and is inev-<lb/>
ltablv lost.<lb/>
Poet Brendan Galvin has said<lb/>
that "there may be a slicker, more<lb/>
chic poetry magazine, but none is<lb/>
consistently more interesting<lb/>
than Tar River Poetry Indeed,<lb/>
the quality of the journal's content<lb/>
is an acurate measuring instru-<lb/>
ment for its own worth, one that<lb/>
speaks louder than any summary<lb/>
or review. Emily Dickinson once<lb/>
said that nature is a haunted<lb/>
house, and art is a house that tries<lb/>
to be haunted. Tar River Poetry is<lb/>
a haunting literary journal.<lb/>
Copies of the 10th anniver-<lb/>
sary edition are S6, and are avail-<lb/>
able at the Student Supply Store.<lb/>
At Big Flat there are only a<lb/>
few alternatives to surfing ?<lb/>
thereisnoM-TV. Fishing, reading<lb/>
and lying in the sun are the obvi-<lb/>
ous suggestion. Hiking in the sur-<lb/>
rounding mountains is not rec-<lb/>
ommended because of the mari-<lb/>
juana farms.<lb/>
Big Flat is in Humboldt<lb/>
County, the No. 1 marijuana pro-<lb/>
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drated foods are the ticket. Store<lb/>
all bread, etc. in ziplock bags. A<lb/>
sharp knife, waterproof matches,<lb/>
iodine pills, rope, a snakebite kit,<lb/>
and a simple first-aid kit are a<lb/>
water looking toward the shore<lb/>
and sec five or six deer casually<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058113_0019"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1.188<lb/>
Man has musical obsession<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? John<lb/>
McGlinn is a cherubic 35-year-old<lb/>
with a passion, some might call it<lb/>
an obsession, for authentic ver-<lb/>
sions of old musicals.<lb/>
He is the man behind a new<lb/>
and virtually complete recording<lb/>
of "Show Boat nearly four hours<lb/>
of music and dialogue from one of<lb/>
Broadway's greatest musicals.<lb/>
The new recording, using the<lb/>
original orchestrations and pro-<lb/>
duced bv EM 1-Angel at a reported<lb/>
cost of $500,000, is pretty much<lb/>
what the first-night audience<lb/>
heard on Dec. 27, 1927, when<lb/>
"Show Boat opened at<lb/>
Broadway's Ziegfeld Theater.<lb/>
A lot of the music hasn't been<lb/>
heard since, at least not in the way<lb/>
theatergoers experienced it more<lb/>
than b0 years ago. Over the years,<lb/>
the orchestrations have been<lb/>
"modernized songs dropped,<lb/>
dialogue cut and some of the<lb/>
show's more racially offensive<lb/>
lyrics softened or eliminated.<lb/>
J<lb/>
'Show Boat written by Jer-<lb/>
ome Kern and Oscar Hammer-<lb/>
stein II, is one of the musical<lb/>
theater's most influential and<lb/>
enduring works.<lb/>
Based on Edna Ferber's epic<lb/>
novel, it tells the unhappy love<lb/>
storv of Magnolia Hawks,<lb/>
daughter oi a showboat captain,<lb/>
and Gaylord Ravenal, a charming<lb/>
but irresponsible gambler.<lb/>
Their tale, spanning four dec-<lb/>
ades, unfolds against a backdrop<lb/>
oi black oppression as well as<lb/>
miscegenation, unlikely topics for<lb/>
the frivolous musicals of the<lb/>
1920s. Its score produced such<lb/>
classic love songs as "Make Be-<lb/>
lieve "Can't Help Lovin' Dat<lb/>
Man "You Are Love "Why Do<lb/>
I Love You?" and "Bill" as well as<lb/>
Ol' Man River one of the most<lb/>
stirring songs ever heard on a<lb/>
Broadway stage.<lb/>
For the recording, McGlinn<lb/>
assembled a cast from the worlds<lb/>
oi opera, musical comedy and<lb/>
theater. Frederica vonStade sings<lb/>
Magnolia; tenor Jerry Hadley<lb/>
plays Ravenal, a role more likely<lb/>
to be sung today by a baritone;<lb/>
Teresa Stratasis the doomed Julie;<lb/>
Bruce Hubbard, who appeared in<lb/>
the 1983 Broadway revival, is the<lb/>
black stevedore Joe, and in a bit of<lb/>
inspired casting, 95-year-old Lil-<lb/>
lian Gish speaks the small part ?<lb/>
some seven lines ? of the old<lb/>
woman who recognizes the aging<lb/>
Magnolia and Ravenal at the<lb/>
musical's poignant and stirring<lb/>
finale.<lb/>
The musical was recorded in<lb/>
the summer of 1987 during 16<lb/>
separate three-hour sessions, one<lb/>
in New York to accommodate<lb/>
MissGish and the rest at London's<lb/>
famous Abbey Road studios.<lb/>
McGlinn conducted the Lon-<lb/>
don Sinfonietta and used the<lb/>
Ambrosian Chorus, an English<lb/>
choral group, to sing both the<lb/>
white and black choral numbers.<lb/>
It wasn't planned that way.<lb/>
Originally, a black chorus from<lb/>
the Glyndebourne production of<lb/>
"Porgy and Bess" was to sing the<lb/>
black choral parts. A problem<lb/>
developed with the very first lyr-<lb/>
ics the audience hears when the<lb/>
curtain goes up. It's a group of<lb/>
black stevedores singing, "Nig-<lb/>
gers all work on de Mississippi,<lb/>
niggers all work while de white<lb/>
folks play<lb/>
Those lyrics were from the<lb/>
original production. By the time<lb/>
the 1936 film version was re-<lb/>
leased, the line was changed to<lb/>
"Darkies all work on de Missis-<lb/>
sippi The 1946 Broadway ver-<lb/>
sion had it, "Here we all work on<lb/>
de Mississippi McGlinn wanted<lb/>
to use the original lyrics.<lb/>
The chorus refused and de-<lb/>
manded changes. McGlinn de-<lb/>
clined, and he was supported by<lb/>
the record company.<lb/>
'The use of the word 'nigger'<lb/>
is being used specifically to paint<lb/>
a picture of a desperately cruel<lb/>
and unhappy time in American<lb/>
history McGlinn says.<lb/>
"I would have given up the<lb/>
chance to make the record if I had<lb/>
to change the words because one<lb/>
of the things I felt was that the<lb/>
piece derived its power from the<lb/>
fact that it did its best, considering<lb/>
the conventions of the time, to<lb/>
look at life truthfully he says.<lb/>
For Broadway buffs, the re-<lb/>
cording, which takes up three<lb/>
compact discs, three records or<lb/>
three cassettes, is a trove of un-<lb/>
known music.<lb/>
There is more than an hour's<lb/>
worth of material that includes<lb/>
songs dropped from the produc-<lb/>
tion, written for the 1928 London<lb/>
production or the 1936 Irene<lb/>
Dunne film version or the 1946<lb/>
Broadway revival for which Kern<lb/>
composed "Nobody Else But<lb/>
Me the last song he wrote before<lb/>
he died.<lb/>
stembo's<lb/>
THE ORIGINAL HARDEE<lb/>
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'This Morning' turns one<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? Harry "I used to watch Jack Faar and I've got this thing to go to, would<lb/>
Smith's arm shoots up in the air just used to be fascinated by char- you go with me? Just go with<lb/>
midsentenee and he snaps his<lb/>
fingers.<lb/>
"You know what it was? I'll<lb/>
tell vou what it was! The seed was<lb/>
planted in high school, because I<lb/>
had an English teacher and we<lb/>
had to write a term paper.  I<lb/>
couldn't come up with anything<lb/>
and (the teacher) John Gulassa<lb/>
said. Here's some books. Why-<lb/>
don't vou read these and see what<lb/>
you think?' And he gave me 'On<lb/>
the Road by lack Kerouac.<lb/>
'That was the beginning of<lb/>
the end for me. You know, the<lb/>
beginning of the end which<lb/>
turned out to be the great begin-<lb/>
ning<lb/>
Smith, 37, was searching his<lb/>
memory for the genesis of the<lb/>
storv of how a kid from a small<lb/>
blue-collar town in the Midwest<lb/>
found himself in New York City<lb/>
as co-host of a network morning<lb/>
news show.<lb/>
CBS This Morning" cele-<lb/>
brates its first anniversary this<lb/>
week. Though it is still struggling<lb/>
in the ratings behind NBC's<lb/>
"Today" and ABC's "Good Morn-<lb/>
ing America Smith and co-host<lb/>
Kathleen Sullivan have devel-<lb/>
oped an easy-going rapport, and<lb/>
the network seems content to let<lb/>
them develop a following.<lb/>
The pressure doesn't seem to<lb/>
get to Smith, the most likely suc-<lb/>
cessor to Charles Kuralt as CBS'<lb/>
resident laid-back philosopher.<lb/>
Smith's feet-on-the-ground<lb/>
attitude comes from deep Mid-<lb/>
western roots and a strict reli-<lb/>
gious upbringing. His father<lb/>
worked two jobs, as a policeman<lb/>
and a milkman. Smith was the<lb/>
youngest of eight children, most<lb/>
of whom "got married pretty<lb/>
young and went out into the<lb/>
world and got real jobs and had<lb/>
real lives Smith said. "I was the<lb/>
youngest and kind of a surprise. I<lb/>
got a little bit more attention than<lb/>
the other ones did, had a rich fan-<lb/>
tasy life about doing something<lb/>
other than going to work at the<lb/>
Youngstown Sheet and Tool<lb/>
Most ol those fantasies re-<lb/>
volved around television.<lb/>
Tahnee Welch<lb/>
works hard<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? Tahnee<lb/>
Welch says it was difficult grow-<lb/>
ing up as the child of a sex symbol,<lb/>
but she doesn't fault her mother,<lb/>
Raquel.<lb/>
"She's a hard worker. She's<lb/>
always taken care of herself. My<lb/>
mother has never, never, never<lb/>
been supported by anyone the<lb/>
26-vear-old Welch said. "So I had<lb/>
it in my mind that I had to do it<lb/>
myself! I have this pride<lb/>
The younger Welch insists<lb/>
she won her part in the 1985 film,<lb/>
"Cocoon on merit, not because<lb/>
of her mother. Welch also appears<lb/>
in the recently released "Cocoon:<lb/>
The Return<lb/>
"They said I never paid my<lb/>
dues Welch said in an interview<lb/>
in December's Gentlemen's<lb/>
Quarterly.<lb/>
acters like Oscar Levant Smith<lb/>
said. "Certainly in my realm of<lb/>
existence there wasn't anyone<lb/>
real like that, and wouldn't it be<lb/>
interesting to meet people and<lb/>
know people like that?<lb/>
me.<lb/>
A "convenience date" to the<lb/>
opera led to romance and later<lb/>
marriage.<lb/>
'I don't know if I can do it<lb/>
Despite a budding interest in forever. I saw where Jane Pauley<lb/>
literature and philosophy, Smith celebrated 12 years and I don't<lb/>
went to college on a football schol- know if I could do that Smith<lb/>
arship and planned to be a high- said,<lb/>
school football coach. He at-<lb/>
tended Central College in Pella,<lb/>
Iowa, an intellectually "danger-<lb/>
ous" place for a young jock, he<lb/>
said, "because they said, 'Here are<lb/>
books. How would you like to.<lb/>
read them?' And so 1 did, and my<lb/>
notions about being a football<lb/>
coach were short-lived<lb/>
He graduated with a degree<lb/>
in communications and theater.<lb/>
After a stint as a public TV talk-<lb/>
show host in Denver, he moved<lb/>
over to KMGH-TV, the CBS affili-<lb/>
ate. There he anchored the noon<lb/>
news with another reporter. An-<lb/>
drea Joyce. Their courtship<lb/>
sounds right out of "Broadcast<lb/>
News<lb/>
"We were just buds Smith<lb/>
said. "We worked very hard and<lb/>
were very career-oriented and all<lb/>
that sort of stuff, so professional<lb/>
that neither of us would have ever<lb/>
considered going out. We used to<lb/>
convenience date You know,<lb/>
HERALDING THE CHRISTMAS SEASON<lb/>
Annual Christmas Concert<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
The "ECU Symphonic 'Wind Ensemble<lb/>
pbert Tonto, Conducting<lb/>
'Thursday, 'December 1, 1988 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
'Wright Auditorium, TCU Campus<lb/>
With a program of traditional favorites and<lb/>
popular classics as well as a special visit<lb/>
from Santa, himself1.<lb/>
Admission Free to the Public<lb/>
Sponsored By:<lb/>
Friends of the School of Music<lb/>
change the meaning<lb/>
of "tie one on1<lb/>
December 6th 6:00 p.m. for a<lb/>
MADD RED RIBBON CANDLELIGHT VIGIL.<lb/>
AT 801-803 E. 5th St.<lb/>
MAD<lb/>
 . .<lb/>
Sponsored by Sigma Sigma Sigma &amp; Delta Zeta<lb/>
1985 Mothers Against Drunk Driving<lb/>
m<lb/>
?:<lb/>
W<lb/>
Y<lb/>
BptttyV<lb/>
. JjlT<lb/>
? tuff;<lb/>
? ? i. ' V" ?? ?<lb/>
 - ?  - ? -<lb/>
&amp;&amp;?,<lb/>
It took Galileo 16 years to master the universe.<lb/>
You have one night.<lb/>
It seems unfair. The genius had all that time. While you have a few<lb/>
short hours to learn your sun spots from your satellites before the<lb/>
dreaded astronomy exam.<lb/>
On the other hand, Vivarin gives you the definite advantage. It helps<lb/>
keep you awake and mentally alert for hours. Safely and conveniently. So<lb/>
even when the subject matter's dull, your mind will stay razor sharp.<lb/>
If Galileo had used Vivarin, maybe he could have mastered the solar<lb/>
 fa7,0? Revte with VIVARIN:<lb/>
VIVARIN<lb/>
sv-<lb/>
Traveli<lb/>
legenda<lb/>
ALBANY, N.Y. (APJ<lb/>
true legend of the Ti<lb/>
Wilburys began when<lb/>
Har er, elSOn i<lb/>
needed to record an excri<lb/>
short notice and invited tv<lb/>
dinner companions to lei<lb/>
voices.<lb/>
Nine davs and 10 son<lb/>
the result was one of thosl<lb/>
accidents that proves<lb/>
more to the music busin<lb/>
accountants and estates.<lb/>
Vou won't find the.<lb/>
George Harrison, Bob DvJ<lb/>
Orbison, Tom Petty a<lb/>
Lynne on "Volume Onj<lb/>
debut album by the od I<lb/>
Traveling Wilburys. But t<lb/>
classes and pseudonyn<lb/>
hide those familiar tal<lb/>
"We definitely did<lb/>
treat this like a sup - J<lb/>
Petty, or Charles . <lb/>
Harris, nmentii reds<lb/>
and Orbison over<lb/>
spring that h ? ? <lb/>
? -<lb/>
The other tv. . j ?<lb/>
him put tog ? r a song<lb/>
The fon<lb/>
rrieve his guitar, whicl 1<lb/>
Petty's California hou :<lb/>
visit a few days earlier I<lb/>
The lead Heartbreak' <lb/>
asked to join in on the re<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
say 'Da<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL. NIC.<lb/>
By day, Pat Sanford and cc<lb/>
ers at the Orange County<lb/>
Protection Society are ? <lb/>
down beaver dams Andbl<lb/>
the animals are bu j<lb/>
back.<lb/>
Beavers, virtually I<lb/>
the turn of the centur.<lb/>
ming their wav inl <lb/>
suburban areas like Ra<lb/>
napolis, .C. and Myrtle!<lb/>
S.C wreaking havoc wf<lb/>
they go.<lb/>
Some people have rej<lb/>
by getting permits to kill<lb/>
?P<lb/>
See MCA<lb/>
At<lb/>
Friday, Dec<lb/>
?ik -<lb/>
ygsSSMk<lb/>
l t ? Afford lonuinv ciftrirw fquMkni ii(r?"<lb/>
ndnflrr ?Bmhwlnc I'M<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0020"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1, 1988 17<lb/>
HARDEE<lb/>
ue<lb/>
IDA<lb/>
ch Fries<lb/>
ers<lb/>
mng<lb/>
1 ? ?<lb/>
MI VIGII .<lb/>
;ina &amp; IK lta Zeta<lb/>
v inq<lb/>
erse<lb/>
sssSb<lb/>
fee<lb/>
Traveling Wilburys combine the<lb/>
legendary rock careers of five<lb/>
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) ? The Since all the nearby studios<lb/>
true legend of the Traveling were booked, the three amigos<lb/>
Wilburys began when George had to impose on another friend<lb/>
Har er, Nelson Wilburv who had recording facilities in his<lb/>
needed to record an extra song at house. Dylan said he'd be glad to<lb/>
short notice and invited two of his offer his assistance.<lb/>
dinner companions to lend their<lb/>
voices.<lb/>
Nine days and 10 songs later,<lb/>
the result was one of those happy<lb/>
accidents that proves there's<lb/>
more to the music business than<lb/>
accountants and estates.<lb/>
You won't find the names<lb/>
"We all sat around the grass<lb/>
at Bob's house and wrote this<lb/>
song called Handle With Care'<lb/>
and recorded it that night' Petty<lb/>
recalled. "When it was all done it<lb/>
sounded really good<lb/>
Much too good, they thought,<lb/>
for a B-side. So they kept on writ-<lb/>
George Harrison, Bob Dvlan, Rov ing and recording.<lb/>
Orbison. Tom Petty and Jeff<lb/>
Lynne on "Volume One the<lb/>
debut album by the oddlv-named<lb/>
Traveling Wilburys. But the dark<lb/>
glasses and pseudonvms can't<lb/>
hide those familiar talents.<lb/>
"We definitely didn't want to<lb/>
treat this like a supergroup said<lb/>
Petty, or Charles T. Wilburv Jr.<lb/>
Harrison mentioned toLvnne<lb/>
and Orbison over dinner last<lb/>
"It was a very innocent thing,<lb/>
reallv Petty said. "We were just<lb/>
kind of enjoying it and we were<lb/>
deep into it before we realized<lb/>
almost what we were doing<lb/>
That spontaneity, and a lot of<lb/>
humor, comes through on the<lb/>
record. "Volume One" sounds<lb/>
like a group of friends, albeit e-<lb/>
tremelv talented friends, enjoying<lb/>
themselves together. All five<lb/>
spring that he needed a new B- trade lead and backing vocals and<lb/>
side for a 12-mch single release, strum guitars.<lb/>
The ether two said thev'd help The results are a cross be-<lb/>
hirn put together a song. tween Harrison's early '70s solo<lb/>
The former Bcatle had to re- work and the electronic flourishes<lb/>
tneve his guitar, which he'd left at Lvnne brought to the Electric<lb/>
Petty's California house during a Light Orchestra, Orbison's "Not<lb/>
visit a few days earlier, Pcttv said. Alcne Anv More" is in the vein<lb/>
The lead Hcartbreakcr was also he's mined for a quarter-century<lb/>
asked to join in on the record. and the three songs Dylan domi-<lb/>
Orange County Animal workers<lb/>
say 'Dam those beavers'<lb/>
nates are some of his best work in<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The song "Dirty World"<lb/>
pokes fun at Prince with a series of<lb/>
sexual double-entendres and the<lb/>
wickedly funny "Tweeter and the<lb/>
Monkey Man" is littered with<lb/>
Bruce Springsteen references.<lb/>
Credit a non-rocker, Prince<lb/>
Charles of Britain, with the name<lb/>
Traveling Wilburys, Petty said.<lb/>
Harrison and Lynne per-<lb/>
formed at the Prince's Trust con-<lb/>
cert last year and were compli-<lb/>
mented by the host following the<lb/>
show, he said. The prince said the<lb/>
two should form a band, and<lb/>
when they asked for a name, he<lb/>
suggested the Traveling<lb/>
Wilburys, Petty said.<lb/>
The quintet quickly adopted<lb/>
the persona. Harrison is identi-<lb/>
fied throughout as Nelson<lb/>
Wilbur Lynne is Otis Wilbury,<lb/>
Orbison is Lefty Wilbury and<lb/>
Dylan's called Lucky.<lb/>
The whimsical liner notes<lb/>
explain that "the original<lb/>
Wilburys were a stationary<lb/>
people who, realizing that their<lb/>
civilization could not stand still<lb/>
forever, began to go for short<lb/>
walks<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C (AP) ?<lb/>
Bv daw Pat Sanford and co-work-<lb/>
ers at the Orange County Animal<lb/>
Protection Society are breaking<lb/>
down beaver dams. And by night,<lb/>
the animals arc building them<lb/>
back.<lb/>
Beavers, virtuallv extinct at<lb/>
the turn of the century, are swim-<lb/>
ming their way into urban and<lb/>
suburban areas like Raleigh, Kan-<lb/>
napolis, N.C. and Myrtle Beach,<lb/>
S.C wreaking havoc wherever<lb/>
they go.<lb/>
Some people have retaliated<lb/>
by getting permits to kill the bea-<lb/>
vers. The Town of Chapel Hill<lb/>
bought a trap and destroved four.<lb/>
Ms. Sanford has asked for a<lb/>
chance to rid them in a more<lb/>
humane way ? bv luring them<lb/>
upstream.<lb/>
"There's no easy answer<lb/>
Ms. Sanford said. "In this specific<lb/>
case, we're trying to make the<lb/>
habitat undesirable. If we kill off<lb/>
all the beavers there and leave the<lb/>
habitat, other beavers will move<lb/>
in. Then you'd have to set up a<lb/>
system of constantly killing bea-<lb/>
vers.<lb/>
"So we're destroying their<lb/>
41 wmm<lb/>
<lb/>
W 11 Pi<lb/>
dams, draining their lake, and<lb/>
hope they' 11 move upstream<lb/>
In Chapel Hill, the beaver<lb/>
colony settled along Booker<lb/>
Creek of the U.S. 15-501 bypass.<lb/>
The lake made bv the beavers is so<lb/>
J<lb/>
deep water is backed up in back-<lb/>
yards of homes in the Ridgcwood<lb/>
subdivision.<lb/>
Sanford said her group's aim<lb/>
is to drain the lake and keep it<lb/>
drained even if the beavers repair<lb/>
their dams. The trick, Sanford<lb/>
said, is to lay plastic pipes, perfo-<lb/>
rated with holes, perpendicular to<lb/>
the dam.<lb/>
? ? 1 J ???? 1 i win I<lb/>
See MCA Recording Artists FEMME FATALE<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
At The<lb/>
Friday, December 2 with Special Guest S.L.A.M<lb/>
AVAILABLE ON MCA COMPACT DISCS,<lb/>
KQ CASSETTES AND RECORDS.<lb/>
At<lb/>
georges<lb/>
hair designers<lb/>
For the latest in<lb/>
Contemporary Hair Styling<lb/>
 '<lb/>
? European Trained Hair Stylists<lb/>
Free Consultation ? Latest New Fall Fashions<lb/>
? 1 Indoor Tanning System<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
Open 'til 9 p.m.<lb/>
tfwppy fHowDwys<lb/>
756-6200<lb/>
Stadium Cleaners &amp; Shirt Laundry<lb/>
mmrmm<lb/>
BmWGXQWQMM<lb/>
Located at Corner of 10th &amp; Cotanche Streets<lb/>
 j8-2701 (Next to Hardee's McDonald's)<lb/>
?ALTERATIONS ?FLUFF &amp; FOLDING<lb/>
Bring in Any 3<lb/>
Items &amp; Pay For<lb/>
2one is cleaned<lb/>
FREE.<lb/>
(lxxvsl priced gamu-nt is clearved free)<lb/>
Present this coupon when<lb/>
you bring in your clothes<lb/>
Bring In 3 and<lb/>
Get 1 FREE.<lb/>
(Lotucst pru? garment is cL-awd Jnecl<lb/>
Present this coupon when<lb/>
you bring in your clothes<lb/>
Bring In 4 and<lb/>
Pay For 3<lb/>
1 is FREE.<lb/>
lLou ;  . ' s . .  ? ,v.<lb/>
Present this coupon when<lb/>
you brim in your clothes<lb/>
&amp;feS ?7 c,eln? IIMm mmOk ? 4PKZi2E!S3SS4t<lb/>
m ?<lb/>
j<lb/>
Now is the season for big<lb/>
savings on your college<lb/>
ring. Order now. opt for<lb/>
March deliver) and you<lb/>
can save<lb/>
on a gold ArtCarved ring<lb/>
It's your opportunity to<lb/>
own a ring of the finest<lb/>
style and quality, backed<lb/>
by the ArtCarved Full<lb/>
Lifetime Warranty. At a<lb/>
price you'll thank us for.<lb/>
Don't miss it!<lb/>
The Quality.<lb/>
The Craftsmanship.<lb/>
The Reward You Desert e<lb/>
Dec. 7 - 9<lb/>
9 a.m. - 4 p.m.<lb/>
Student Store Lobby<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Date<lb/>
C 1988 ArtCarved Class Rings.<lb/>
Time<lb/>
Place<lb/>
$20 Deposit Required<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0021"/><lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
IS<lb/>
THE CAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1.1 J8T<lb/>
Bridges make good presents<lb/>
DENVER (AP) ? Stumped want a bridge?<lb/>
for a Christmas present for the Cities, counties, park and rec-<lb/>
person who has everything? How reation districts, land developers<lb/>
about a bridge? ? anyone who wants to preserve<lb/>
The state Highway Depart- some road history and save some<lb/>
ment has honest-to-goodness his- of the enormous cost of building a<lb/>
toric bridges available to anyone new trestle is interested in the<lb/>
who will give them good homes bridges, said Sally Tearce, staff<lb/>
and will haul them away. historian for the department.<lb/>
But seriously, who would Bridges in the 3-year-old<lb/>
"Adopt-A-Bridge" program are<lb/>
scheduled for replacement be-<lb/>
cause they are deteriorating or<lb/>
impractical for modern traffic.<lb/>
Eighteen bridges, most made<lb/>
of steel trusses, are eligible for the<lb/>
program, Pcarce said. But so far<lb/>
only three have reached some<lb/>
stage of being moved mainly be-<lb/>
cause of the difficulties in relocat-<lb/>
ing them.<lb/>
Moving expenses vary. For<lb/>
example, to disassemble and relo-<lb/>
cate all four, 185-foot-long spans<lb/>
of the Fifth Street Bridge in Grand<lb/>
junction is estimated to cost be-<lb/>
tween $360,000 and $480,000. For<lb/>
a single span: $120,000.<lb/>
??<lb/>
Couple fill house with loads of shaving<lb/>
cream, win ten thousand big ones<lb/>
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AD ?<lb/>
Albert and ludv Linkenberg<lb/>
started with 1,200 cans of shaving<lb/>
cream and finished with a house<lb/>
filled 2 feet deep with mintv-<lb/>
smelling cream and $10,000.<lb/>
The Kentucky couple lath-<lb/>
ered up radio station WI.RS-FM<lb/>
for the five-digit shave bv fulfill-<lb/>
ing the station's contest challenge<lb/>
Hilarious libel<lb/>
suit dismissed<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ?A;<lb/>
dismissed Jackie Mason's el<lb/>
mt against a Florida woman who<lb/>
tiled a paternity suit against the<lb/>
comedian.<lb/>
U.S. District Judge John<lb/>
Keenan threw out Mason's law-<lb/>
suit Monday for lack of personal<lb/>
jurisdiction.<lb/>
Mason last vear sued Ginger<lb/>
Reiter and her mother, Miriam<lb/>
Oliver, alleging libel, invasion of<lb/>
privacy, copyright infringement<lb/>
and unjust enrichment, over a live<lb/>
stage production Oh Jackie Oh<lb/>
on which they collaborated.<lb/>
Ms. Reiter's paternity lawsuit<lb/>
in Florida is pending. Mason's<lb/>
attorney. Jay D. Kramer, declined<lb/>
comment on Monday's ruling,<lb/>
saying he had not yet seen it.<lb/>
There was no answer at the<lb/>
Port Washington offices of Ms.<lb/>
Reiter's lawyers when called for<lb/>
comment Monday evening.<lb/>
"What would you do for<lb/>
$10,000?"<lb/>
A committee chose the shav-<lb/>
ing-cream idea because it created<lb/>
an atmosphere that was ran but<lb/>
safe, said Toncv Brooks, president<lb/>
of Radio One, which owns WLRS.<lb/>
It the Linkenbergs were un-<lb/>
successful, the station would<lb/>
have let the runner-up try his<lb/>
stunt swimming across the<lb/>
Ohio River with a bottle of wine<lb/>
and glasses cemented to a card<lb/>
table on his back, Brooks said.<lb/>
Before the Linkenbergs began<lb/>
their stunt Monday, the carpet<lb/>
and the furniture in their two-<lb/>
bedroom, one-story bungalow<lb/>
were covered with plastic.<lb/>
This was Judy's idea Link-<lb/>
enberg declared at one point.<lb/>
The Linkenbergs, with help<lb/>
from friends and relatives, emp-<lb/>
tied the last can more than five<lb/>
hours later.<lb/>
The Linkenbergs, though<lb/>
thousands of dollars richer, will<lb/>
have to subtract taxes, cleanup<lb/>
costsand$880for the 1,200 cans of<lb/>
Colgate regular, menthol and aloe<lb/>
shaving cream.<lb/>
Read The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Take a Break From<lb/>
School and Work<lb/>
i1<lb/>
Buy One Specialty Sandwich<lb/>
andGet 2nd Sandwich<lb/>
of Equal or Lesser Value<lb/>
12 Price<lb/>
Between 3 p.m. &amp; 8 p.m. Expiration 12-22-88<lb/>
. Not Good With Any Other Special Offers .<lb/>
Entertainment For The Weekend<lb/>
Dec. 1. Swamp Gypsies Folk Celtic<lb/>
&amp; Improv (9 p.m1 1 p.m.)<lb/>
Dec. 2. Rhythm Persuaded (formally Knocked Out Loaded)<lb/>
Dec.3. Highwatcr Blues Hand<lb/>
Dec. 9, The Ix-mon Sisters &amp; The Rutabaga Brothers<lb/>
Dec. 10, The Patterson (R&amp;RR&amp;B)<lb/>
Closed For Christmas Dec. 24 Jan. 3<lb/>
Hours of Operations<lb/>
Mon-Tups<lb/>
llam-lOpm<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
11 jm-1 pm<lb/>
Thur.<lb/>
11 am- i 1 pm<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
llim-Um<lb/>
Satu rd ay<lb/>
12 nocn- ui<lb/>
OF FLOWERS &amp; GIFTS MC<lb/>
GREENVILLE SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
355-7888 <lb/>
Holiday Specials? Long Stem Roses<lb/>
(in vases)<lb/>
Through Christmas:<lb/>
(1 Doz.)$30.00<lb/>
(12 Doz.)$17.00<lb/>
(3) Roses$12.00<lb/>
(1) Rose$ 7.00<lb/>
ALX ARRANGEMENTS SPECIALLY PRICED!<lb/>
ADDITIONAL 10 DISCOUNT ALL ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
ST<lb/>
Event: Jeckyl<lb/>
Organized By: WZMB AND THE ATTIC<lb/>
Date: Sat December 3rd<lb/>
Location: THE ATTIC<lb/>
COPY EDITORS<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
Experience A Plus!<lb/>
Apply at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Publications Building - 2nd Floor<lb/>
(In front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
No Phone Calls Please<lb/>
<lb/>
  vV.V.V.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Overton's Grocery Wishes<lb/>
For A Safe &amp; Happy Holiday Season<lb/>
For All Students &amp; Staff<lb/>
Prices effective Wednesday, November 30-Saturday, December 3,1988<lb/>
Fresh Fryer<lb/>
Leg Quarters<lb/>
29 <lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Kornland<lb/>
Bacon<lb/>
.b $1.09<lb/>
Boneless Chuck<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
$1.49<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Ground Fresh Daily<lb/>
Fresh Ground Beef<lb/>
5 lbs. or more<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
97 <lb/>
Breyers All Natural<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
12 gallon carton<lb/>
$3.69<lb/>
Richfood Jumbo<lb/>
Eggs<lb/>
dozen 135 t<lb/>
Duncan Hines<lb/>
Cake Mix<lb/>
Yellow only17 oz. box<lb/>
69<lb/>
Natural Light Beer<lb/>
12-12 oz. cans<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
Palmolive Liquid<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
22 oz. bottle regular or lemon lime<lb/>
99 $<lb/>
Fab Detergent<lb/>
Giant 42 oz. box<lb/>
99 0<lb/>
Lima one with10.00 food order<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
All 2 Liter Products<lb/>
890<lb/>
Store Hours,<lb/>
Open Sundays 1 p.m6 p.m<lb/>
Monday-Saturday, 8 a.m. - 8 p.m<lb/>
1IJ<lb/>
?:<lb/>
sr<lb/>
211 Jarvis Street 2 Blocks from ECU<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
OVERTON'6<lb/>
Jjjflferffl<lb/>
'Ain't got no<lb/>
Overkill<lb/>
I ndercover C<lb/>
m<lb/>
IA<lb/>
Kar<lb/>
?<lb/>
YOii 9E?jt&amp;ik<lb/>
S<lb/>
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?  -<lb/>
? c<lb/>
W<lb/>
Bye Big Head:<lb/>
'k'SBcsl I<lb/>
?4 a V j<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0022"/><lb/>
<lb/>
torn<lb/>
atuivvich<lb/>
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Value<lb/>
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RS<lb/>
5<lb/>
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Moor<lb/>
v)<lb/>
SHI S<lb/>
SON<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
LSt<lb/>
49<lb/>
:sh Daily<lb/>
iund Beef<lb/>
It<lb/>
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99<lb/>
re Liquid<lb/>
rgent<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
3<lb/>
?<lb/>
p.m hpm<lb/>
- i.n "pin<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ain't got no sleiah with reindeer, ain't no sack on my back- you'll see me comin in a bi black cadiiiac, 'cause it's Chri' mas -Elvis, from<lb/>
'Christmas . . . Christmas . . . Christmas . . . Christmas . . . " - The Jordanairres, same son? Santa's Back In Town<lb/>
15 v Eriedrich<lb/>
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Bv Parker<lb/>
60 h<lb/>
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By Harris and Haselri ;<lb/>
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SSI<lb/>
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Guess meaesoei<lb/>
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SLc. . I i7?&amp; Die THAfiLQS4tv<lb/>
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THE BIG LAW<lb/>
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Big Head!<lb/>
U-i"<lb/>
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Bv Hardister<lb/>
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YOlA COPY ScFOR.<lb/>
THESE IfTTLBteM<lb/>
Turn I )J).<lb/>
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Dwu Johnson: HE QUIT and got a real job.<lb/>
 -t r ?- ?? ? ? ? ?????<lb/>
ft -4<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
DAY<lb/>
JlSSl<lb/>
o<lb/>
2)<lb/>
3.<lb/>
Fun and (James bids a cheese fondue to Hey Big Head a very tunny and<lb/>
raucous strip that is leaving our grand page, to go to State and probably be<lb/>
printed in The Tecnician, a newspaper Irarm report) that couldn't be tunny it<lb/>
j it tried. Give 'em heck, Steve<lb/>
M 6.<lb/>
cafe<lb/>
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8.<lb/>
10.<lb/>
11.<lb/>
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<lb/>
7<lb/>
Tliar's iilit, you thought it v.14 ncvci get acre, bu; boy were you wrong!<lb/>
Ifs WZMB day and we're giving you the chance to actually SEE some of the<lb/>
Dee-jays! They actually have a lot mere, but ;ve could only tit a small amount<lb/>
here. So that this can stiii be a game, vve're going to play "Match the Faces to<lb/>
the Names Fun, huh? Even ii you get the answers right, you may still not<lb/>
know their actual identities since WZMB people have the annoying habit of<lb/>
7 calling themselves names otfett than their own. There were other pictures oi<lb/>
of these people lo choose from, but Photolab was nice enough to DECIDE FOR<lb/>
US which pictures would be used. As if I couldn't pick 'em out m elf! Why,<lb/>
I'll fix those- oh, never mind. Listen to ZMB, celebrate WZMB DAY, and have<lb/>
"n tlvis Christmad Eflgaibk Answers <lb/>
A. Herman D. TreyBicn G. Andylewis J? Kirk "KP" Preston g rr<lb/>
B. Trey Bien E. Jeff Morkett H. The Lizard K- J- Todd S<lb/>
C. Small Mike F. Beth I. Roger Mortis E. Jill Skylark ? G<lb/>
RADIO Roger Mortis is in actuality JOE HARRIS, News Editor H S<lb/>
SECRET: of the East Carolinian! Bye, Joe, have a nutsy, crazy lite - X<lb/>
 and find some work in the real world.<lb/>
x<lb/>
ir<lb/>
CM<lb/>
u 'Z<lb/>
?a -<lb/>
C "3<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0023"/><lb/>
20 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1988<lb/>
The last Clearly Labeled <lb/>
The last clearly la-<lb/>
beled quote of the<lb/>
semester: Fortune<lb/>
nf thg iu?nr v?rs the hold<lb/>
OJ tlie year rlaming Carrot<lb/>
Hate mail makes E return to school<lb/>
Dr. E.<lb/>
Right now, 1 only have one<lb/>
major problem. See, there is a cer-<lb/>
tain portion of the East Carolinian<lb/>
that really pisses me off ? your<lb/>
sorry section! And since you are<lb/>
finally leaving, after six years, you<lb/>
have acruallv solved at least one<lb/>
J<lb/>
person's problem, my own!<lb/>
Thank you. 1 truly am glad you're<lb/>
leaving! Besides, you're not origi-<lb/>
nal (Copying Morton Downey Jr<lb/>
come on!)<lb/>
In utmost disrepect,<lb/>
Dr. "Nice"<lb/>
P.S. Get a decent haircut, it's<lb/>
just not a smartass journalist's<lb/>
image.<lb/>
Dear Dr. Dick Head,<lb/>
Didn't your momma ever tell<lb/>
vou not to write hate mail? Since<lb/>
vou didn't sien vour letter or<lb/>
address your envelope, I feel obli-<lb/>
gated to give you a fitting nomen-<lb/>
clature and thus ? Dick Head.<lb/>
In the past, some have called<lb/>
the E an incompetent 8-year-old.<lb/>
Some have called the E a user of<lb/>
scatological language. Some have<lb/>
said E is a sexist individual. But<lb/>
never has the E been so offended<lb/>
as when he read this vixenous<lb/>
conspiracy contrived within the<lb/>
babbling rivers of Hades.<lb/>
So like any fine, outstanding<lb/>
yellow journalist from the citadels<lb/>
of integrity, the E went home to<lb/>
eat turkey. While gorging on a<lb/>
folk load of white meat, E turned<lb/>
to Dad and said "I have been of-<lb/>
fended by a lowly virulent scum<lb/>
who has no sense of good satirical<lb/>
advice<lb/>
Stabbing the plated hill of<lb/>
stuffing with a surge of boiled<lb/>
blood, Senior E glared at Junior E<lb/>
authoritatively, "Return to the<lb/>
domainsof the Emerald City, sock<lb/>
a second degree and resume your<lb/>
Big E column<lb/>
So, just for you Dick Head,<lb/>
I'm back.<lb/>
P.S. That is really a good anal-<lb/>
ogy you used, cooaring the E to<lb/>
Morton Down r. It makes so<lb/>
much sense. Do . ney is on syndi-<lb/>
cated T.V. (making millions) dis-<lb/>
cussing the political ramifications<lb/>
of handgun control while the Big<lb/>
E (not making jackshit) is burning<lb/>
the midnight oil at this college<lb/>
paper writing to a person he<lb/>
hates. You are probably one of<lb/>
these people who has problems<lb/>
distinguishing between black and<lb/>
white.<lb/>
P.P.S. If you really think I<lb/>
wear my hair as pictured, you<lb/>
must have the same mentality as<lb/>
one of those highschool mutants<lb/>
who park at the Fast Fare on Fri-<lb/>
day nights.<lb/>
And another thing I am not a<lb/>
doctor, I just play one on T.V.<lb/>
Just&amp;sk<lb/>
Big E<lb/>
Special K<lb/>
white chocolate. Since then, I read<lb/>
where some people actually eat<lb/>
dirt, so I ate a bucket of the red<lb/>
stutf. Then it was pencil lead. E, do<lb/>
I have a bad sickness?<lb/>
Dirt Eater<lb/>
Dear E,<lb/>
I love to eat. I eat food. I eat al-<lb/>
most everything. My problem is<lb/>
that I have started to eat a lot of<lb/>
non-food products. It started<lb/>
about a month ago when I was<lb/>
brushing my teeth. The more I<lb/>
brushed, the more I liked the taste<lb/>
of Close-up, so I ate the whole<lb/>
tube.<lb/>
After the Close-up experi-<lb/>
ence, I tried the bathroom soap<lb/>
and to my surprise it tasted like<lb/>
Unsigned<lb/>
Dear Dirt Eater,<lb/>
No, you are perfectly normal.<lb/>
I jusi finished off my first Pinto<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
Anti-State<lb/>
Dear Earlvis,<lb/>
Several weeks ago, I visited<lb/>
the N.C. State campus. The stu-<lb/>
dents over there told me that they<lb/>
are much smarter and better lov-<lb/>
ers than ECU students. Earlvis, is<lb/>
this true? What do they know that<lb/>
we don't know?<lb/>
Signed, Wolfpack envy<lb/>
Dear Frank,<lb/>
First of all, you have to under-<lb/>
stand the mentality of a State (I'm<lb/>
sorry, Raleigh Farm Institute is<lb/>
not deserving of upper case let-<lb/>
ters, from now on it will be ?<lb/>
state) student. Since state's main<lb/>
focus has always been agricul-<lb/>
ture, most state students major in<lb/>
Farming and subsequently spend<lb/>
a lot of time with pigs and cows. In<lb/>
the barnyard, I guess it is true,<lb/>
they are smarter and do make<lb/>
better lovers.<lb/>
Dateless<lb/>
BigE,<lb/>
I am the only person I know<lb/>
who doesn't have a boyfriend. My<lb/>
friends say I'm pretty and fun to<lb/>
be with. I don't understand what<lb/>
the problem is.<lb/>
At parties and downtown,<lb/>
cute guys always ask me to dance<lb/>
all night long and eventually to go<lb/>
home with them. Sometimes I go,<lb/>
sometimes I don't. I never like to<lb/>
be a flirt and I'm not very obvious<lb/>
when I'm around someone I'm<lb/>
interested in. But I don't under-<lb/>
stand it when guys don't ask me<lb/>
out. If I attract them so easily and<lb/>
have a good time (not what you're<lb/>
thinking of a good time) bu t really<lb/>
have fun, why don't they call me?<lb/>
Signed,<lb/>
Wanting Someone to Love<lb/>
Dear Young and Reststop,<lb/>
So, you don't know anybody<lb/>
who doesn't have a boyfriend.<lb/>
My, my. Sounds like either you<lb/>
hang around a lot of fags or a lot of<lb/>
whores.<lb/>
Sorry for that out burst. A lot<lb/>
of guys are reluctant to ask a<lb/>
female out unless the girl lays<lb/>
some subtle or not so subtle hints.<lb/>
Here's some examples: "Hey,<lb/>
what are you doing this week-<lb/>
end?" "Gee, I haven't been to a<lb/>
nice restaurant in a long time<lb/>
"You know the last good movie I<lb/>
saw was Gone With the Wind<lb/>
Or how about the blunt ap-<lb/>
proach: "Wanta come over and<lb/>
tilt some aluminum and vacuum<lb/>
some bingers?" or if you aren't<lb/>
into brain cell damage say<lb/>
"Wanta come over and gurgle<lb/>
some Pepsi and pig on some<lb/>
twinkies?" Or, if you aren't into<lb/>
the glucose scene, say, "Wanta<lb/>
come over and read some Vergil<lb/>
and recite some Homer?" Or, if<lb/>
you aren't into becoming a total<lb/>
dweeb, say, "Wanta come?"<lb/>
You see, the possiblities are end-<lb/>
less.<lb/>
Dear Big E,<lb/>
We had a major virgin friend<lb/>
last year, who was deathly afraid<lb/>
of curing his problem. He was<lb/>
even afraid to share hisbed with a<lb/>
girl when he was asked to. For the<lb/>
sake of hiding his name, we will<lb/>
call him "Special K The problem<lb/>
began whe he met what is now his<lb/>
first girlfriend, we will call her<lb/>
"Helga<lb/>
"Special K" is so whipped<lb/>
"Helga" made him drop out of the<lb/>
fraternity he was pledging. She<lb/>
won't even let him read the "Big<lb/>
E" column because she is afraid he<lb/>
will get wise to her. He is also<lb/>
doing very dumb things. During<lb/>
Halloween, she made him dress<lb/>
up as a raisin and he hates raisins.<lb/>
She also uses his head as a foot rest<lb/>
on the bus.<lb/>
His grades are suffering and<lb/>
he has even missed a mid-term<lb/>
exam because of her.<lb/>
His attitude has changed en-<lb/>
tirely. He use to listen to good<lb/>
music, now he listens to satanic<lb/>
cult chants and Bible stories. His<lb/>
dressing style changed from<lb/>
Izod's to torn jeans with putrid<lb/>
green sports coat with an orange<lb/>
scarf.<lb/>
Although all this is bad, the<lb/>
real problem is that she won't let<lb/>
him party with his friends. This is<lb/>
causing much concern because<lb/>
we have heard rumors that she is<lb/>
making him have a vasectomy<lb/>
because she doesn't like con-<lb/>
doms.<lb/>
It would be a different story if<lb/>
his girlfriend even looked half-<lb/>
way good, but she is a roadbeast<lb/>
from Hell.<lb/>
We hope you can give him<lb/>
some advice and with any luck at<lb/>
all he will read your column.<lb/>
Signed<lb/>
Men Against Road Beasts.<lb/>
Dear Guy With the Whipped<lb/>
Friend,<lb/>
So she made him dress up like<lb/>
a raisin, hilarious. It's a shame<lb/>
when good friends get whipped.<lb/>
Have you ever noticed whipped<lb/>
people insist on calling their girl<lb/>
friendsboy friends every ten<lb/>
minutes just to ask stupid ques-<lb/>
tions? It's kind of like the ten-<lb/>
minute ticker of stupidity. "What<lb/>
have you been doing? Really,<lb/>
what kind of tooth brush did you<lb/>
brush your teeth with?"<lb/>
In "Special K's" particular<lb/>
case, it sounds like we have lost<lb/>
another Bush clone to the Neo-<lb/>
hippies. All the way from a frat<lb/>
boy to a hallucinogenic highway<lb/>
can man. This may be an lrrever-<lb/>
sable personalitv trait but let's try<lb/>
this.<lb/>
Hey Special K, yeah this is the<lb/>
Big E, can I ask you some ques-<lb/>
tions?<lb/>
When is the last time Helga<lb/>
shaved her underarms?<lb/>
The last time you and Helga<lb/>
had a fight, who lost and was<lb/>
forced to drive to the store and<lb/>
purchase some feminine hy-<lb/>
giene?<lb/>
Have you ever been told that<lb/>
when you talk on the phone with<lb/>
Helga that you sound likea plead-<lb/>
ing baby?<lb/>
Have you, Special K, ever<lb/>
been forced to listen to The Grate-<lb/>
ful Dead against your will?<lb/>
Special K, if you are in our<lb/>
reading vortex please answer<lb/>
these questions and I will deter-<lb/>
mine the severity of your Helga<lb/>
obsession.<lb/>
Send your problems to:<lb/>
BigE<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
Greenville, N.C, 27834<lb/>
Till next semester, cheerio<lb/>
and don't let the dick heads of-<lb/>
fend you.<lb/>
Squirrel Man commits suicide in jail<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (BP) ?<lb/>
The strange saga of Greenville's<lb/>
"squirrel man" is finally at its end.<lb/>
The monster apparently commit-<lb/>
ted suicide in the Greenville Jail<lb/>
cell that was his home during the<lb/>
last weeks of his life.<lb/>
Klicky-Klicky, the squirrel<lb/>
creature from another dimension<lb/>
accused of murder, maintained<lb/>
his innocence to the end. He re-<lb/>
peatedly told authorities of an evil<lb/>
twin brother who was responsible<lb/>
for several area murders.<lb/>
Whether or not he was right<lb/>
remains to be seen. Klicky was<lb/>
pronounced dead on arrival at<lb/>
Pitt Memorial Hospital Wednes-<lb/>
day night. The coroner's official<lb/>
reports indicate that the death<lb/>
was a suicide.<lb/>
Klicky was found in his jail<lb/>
cell Wednesday afternoon. A rope<lb/>
was tied around his neck. "He<lb/>
was hanging a couple feet off the<lb/>
ground when I got there Police<lb/>
Chief Gordon O'Hara said during<lb/>
a press conference. "I knew his<lb/>
neck was broke the minute I saw<lb/>
him. But he hung on until we got<lb/>
him cut down<lb/>
O'Hara said that Klicky mut-<lb/>
tered one word before he lost<lb/>
conciousness completely.<lb/>
"Sounded like 'Omohundro or<lb/>
some such thing. I didn't make<lb/>
head or tail um he stops for a<lb/>
moment, in respect for the dead<lb/>
creature he came to know as a<lb/>
friend. "I didn't know what it<lb/>
was<lb/>
A memorial service is being<lb/>
held Saturday afternoon in Fick-<lb/>
len stadium after ECU's com-<lb/>
mencement services. The event is<lb/>
being held by the Pitt County<lb/>
SPCA.<lb/>
Next semester, The East Caro-<lb/>
linian will run a series of inter-<lb/>
views with Klicky, recorded sev-<lb/>
eral days before his death. The<lb/>
series will run next semester for as<lb/>
many weeks as the public lets us.<lb/>
The transcripts of the inter-<lb/>
view reveal much of Micky's life<lb/>
before he came to our dimension,<lb/>
his viewpoint on life here and<lb/>
details of his tragic last days of<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Anyone with info.mation<lb/>
concerning the meaning of the<lb/>
squirrel man's last word, or sight-<lb/>
ings of the elusive evil twin, are<lb/>
urged to call The East Carolinian at<lb/>
757-6o6.<lb/>
Holy rollers hit downtown Greenville<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (BP) ?<lb/>
Forget Heritage USA and Oral<lb/>
Roberts University. The new hip<lb/>
hangout for religious hucksters is<lb/>
downtown Greenville.<lb/>
Encouraged by the city's dis-<lb/>
missal of the pagan Halloween<lb/>
show. They're green and don't need around town recognize the need<lb/>
Jovi recruits mostly outside stealth fighters. They have their for spiritual and aquatic salva-<lb/>
Carolina East Mall on Friday own personal defense system. If tion<lb/>
nights. "I'm trying to give these everyone wore needles, the Tolerance and Jovi both ac-<lb/>
young people some hope and commies would never bother us cept tax-deductable donations<lb/>
direction in their lives. While ifs a again from their followers. So far, nei-<lb/>
good practice to spend time in the Tolerance passes out cartoon thcr has earned enough to acquire<lb/>
holiday, a slew of new religions malls, you need some spiritual pamphlets on Fifth Street. The a headquarters, but Jovi is negoti-<lb/>
have sprung up in the Emerald guidance in how to shop, and<lb/>
City, and ministers are scram- what the most shine-free make-<lb/>
bling to convert ECU students up products really are. Thafs<lb/>
and Greenville citizens.<lb/>
Father Gibson Jovi of The<lb/>
Holy Church of MTV is the most<lb/>
prominent of the new pastors. His<lb/>
followers now number 18, mostly<lb/>
teenage girls from Rose High<lb/>
tracts contain parables of sinners<lb/>
who end up in an icy hell because<lb/>
they wasted water. One pamphlet<lb/>
McFerrin assaulted<lb/>
NEW YORK, NY (BP) ? Pop<lb/>
star Bobby McFerrin, who rose to<lb/>
fame this fall with his hit video<lb/>
and song "Don't Worry, Be<lb/>
Happy was assaulted by almost<lb/>
100 people today in his New York<lb/>
apartment.<lb/>
McFerrin was beaten, tied up,<lb/>
covered in excrement and forced<lb/>
to watch as the group of vigilantes<lb/>
calling themselves Seventy<lb/>
People Against Musical Sht,<lb/>
SPAMS, tortured his pet canary<lb/>
and destroyed his apartment.<lb/>
The leader of SPAMS, Craig<lb/>
Drivel, issued a statement to the<lb/>
press. "We had to take action.<lb/>
That inane song continues to be<lb/>
played across the nation. It's re-<lb/>
ally an evil song<lb/>
The release explained that the<lb/>
"admittedly catchy" tune and<lb/>
"chuckleheaded lyrics" meant to<lb/>
inspire optimism in the public<lb/>
conciousness had the opposite<lb/>
effect on many people. "I person-<lb/>
ally would go into a kitten-stran-<lb/>
gling rage whenever I heard the<lb/>
first few notes play on the radio<lb/>
Drivel said.<lb/>
Drivel said he went before<lb/>
Congress in an attempt to halt all<lb/>
airplay of the song legally, but<lb/>
"the senators and reps, were all<lb/>
humming and tapping their pen-<lb/>
cils as they heard the proposal'<lb/>
he said. 1 found out later that<lb/>
President Reagan liked the song<lb/>
and ordered it played every hour<lb/>
on the hour on the Muzak systems<lb/>
in all government buildings<lb/>
The SPAMS leader also cred-<lb/>
its the Republican election victory<lb/>
to the song. "It was a devious<lb/>
campaign ploy. People heard the<lb/>
song and thought 'Hey. Things<lb/>
must be good right now. I'll vote<lb/>
Republican he said.<lb/>
Though Drivel had the single<lb/>
checked by several studios, he<lb/>
found no backwards masking to<lb/>
help support his claim. Desperate<lb/>
for an end to the "optimism mad-<lb/>
ness he felt was taking over the<lb/>
country, he formed SPAMS and<lb/>
planned the attack on McFerrin as<lb/>
a public protest.<lb/>
After the assault, McFerrin<lb/>
was taken to a nearby hospital. Al-<lb/>
though the diagnoses was shock,<lb/>
McFerrin seemed cheerful as he<lb/>
smiled at reporters before being<lb/>
wheeled into the operating room.<lb/>
"Don't worry hesaidBe happy<lb/>
OoocKXooooeeeeoooooo<lb/>
why MTV is a valuable guide for has a frozen Satan rising from a<lb/>
these teens refrigerator, laughing at vegetari-<lb/>
On the other end of the spec- ans he has tricked into a meat<lb/>
trum, Reverend N. Tolerance of locker.<lb/>
the Church of St. Mary of the Cacti The moral i s abstinence, even<lb/>
lures followers with the promise in the face of temptation. The<lb/>
Their doctrine includes a daily 0f an afterlife filled with peace, vegetarians end up cooking the<lb/>
worship service in the Menden- happiness and low-moisture des- beef with a Bic? lighter. They arc<lb/>
hall Student Center. ert vegetation. "Admittedly, it's a rescued a few hours later, but<lb/>
Disciples watch an hour of strange philosophy Tolerance freeze in hell after they die due to<lb/>
MTV in the Mendenhall televi- admits'But have you ever seen their lapse,<lb/>
sion room and pray to Veejay an unhappy cactus?" "The kids that hang out at the<lb/>
Adam Curry. Church members "No, and I'll tell you why he Fast Fare laugh at the booklets,<lb/>
are encouraged to purchase Vidal answers. "Cacti are God's chosen but they'll freeze in hell for scoff-<lb/>
Sassoon? products and try out for plants. Cacti store their own wa- ing at the Lord Tolerance ex-<lb/>
the "Remote Control" game ter and don't bother anyone else, plains. "But the elderly ladies<lb/>
Raleigh tornado victim suffers in treeless Boneian Manor<lb/>
at.ng with school officials for the<lb/>
permanent use of Mendenhall.<lb/>
When asked if either of them<lb/>
had secret pasts they thought<lb/>
might come back to haunt them,<lb/>
they shook their heads. After the<lb/>
interview, Tolerance came back<lb/>
in. "I had my fingers crossed he<lb/>
said. "I did once read the Sports<lb/>
Illustrated Swimsuit issue. But I<lb/>
was absolved<lb/>
He scurries out again, drop-<lb/>
ping a cartoon tract in his wake.<lb/>
The title says it all, "Somebody<lb/>
Goofed On the cover, a blue and<lb/>
white devil licks his lips at a pros-<lb/>
trate sinner.<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (BP) ? The<lb/>
tornado that struck Raleigh with-<lb/>
out warning Sunday night had<lb/>
devastating effects on one Raleigh<lb/>
woman.<lb/>
Divorcee Penny Bonehead,<lb/>
mother of the infamous newspa-<lb/>
per columnist Chippy Bonehead<lb/>
and mistress of stately Bonehead<lb/>
Manor at Vauxhill-by-the-Gutter,<lb/>
suffered property losses totalling<lb/>
over $25 to the million-dollar<lb/>
Bonehead estate.<lb/>
"We don't have a single tree<lb/>
left in the yard. And since that<lb/>
sewer running under our yard is<lb/>
flooding again, there's nothing to<lb/>
stop the water. The backyard is<lb/>
falling in and no one gives a damn<lb/>
but me she wailed.<lb/>
Aside from trees all over the<lb/>
yard, the Bonehead driveway is<lb/>
cluttered with fallen branches.<lb/>
"And who had to go out and clean<lb/>
it up? Me she exclaimed. "My<lb/>
wonderful sons stayed in<lb/>
Greenville where it was safe. I had FATHER is supposed to take care<lb/>
just raked the yard, too, and me of these things, but he's too busy<lb/>
with my back acting up again.<lb/>
"I can't afford to hire people<lb/>
to clean up this place. I'm the face<lb/>
of poverty she explained. "Their<lb/>
buying pianos. Well, what goes<lb/>
around comes around, I'll tell<lb/>
you<lb/>
Other damage included a<lb/>
twisted gutter, and several<lb/>
shingles ripped from the roof. It<lb/>
was an act of God. It's a miracle<lb/>
I'm alive, no thanks to my fam-<lb/>
ily she declared. Other members<lb/>
of the Bonehead familv could not<lb/>
be reached for comment.<lb/>
Study says college gambling uncontrollable<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (BP) ?<lb/>
College gambling is getting out of<lb/>
control, a government study<lb/>
shows. The study, conducted by<lb/>
ECU Director of Such Studies<lb/>
Rhea Searcher, says that college<lb/>
students will place bets on "just<lb/>
about anything<lb/>
The study was conducted in<lb/>
the form of a survey. Participants<lb/>
were asked questions such as<lb/>
"Have you ever gambled? If so,<lb/>
was it with money? How much?<lb/>
Would you bet on the ECU foot-<lb/>
ball team? Would you take the<lb/>
under on an intramural game?<lb/>
Would you bet that Dan Quayle<lb/>
will ever have an original idea?"<lb/>
"Those that answered ques-<lb/>
tions positively have been recom-<lb/>
mended to school psychologists<lb/>
for treatment Searcher said.<lb/>
"But they are proving to be diffi-<lb/>
cult patients<lb/>
One patient in particular, "Big<lb/>
E" (his real name),proved to be a<lb/>
compulsive gambler. Dr. Cra-<lb/>
nium Dwindler saidBig E' is a<lb/>
compulsive gambler<lb/>
"He bets orderlies on the<lb/>
amount of pills he can take. He<lb/>
recites the Sports Hotline scores in<lb/>
his sleep. If you mention the Re-<lb/>
dskins, he starts foaming at the<lb/>
mouth. I could tell by the bone<lb/>
structure of his face he was a<lb/>
hopeless gambler Dwindler<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"It's sad to see so many young<lb/>
minds going to waste. How much<lb/>
you want to bet three of them<lb/>
never get better-paying jobs than<lb/>
the average Burger King? cashier<lb/>
for the rest of their lives? Five<lb/>
bucks?' he said. "I'll give you 10<lb/>
to one odds<lb/>
Pirat<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGF<lb/>
Astitunt Sport I ditor<lb/>
In an almost deal<lb/>
packed Cameron indoor<lb/>
it was a battle of David<lb/>
Goliath ? the 2-0 East (<lb/>
Pirates vs. the nation's<lb/>
one ranked Duke Blue<lb/>
This time the results were<lb/>
of the Giant, as Dul<lb/>
ECU 95-46.<lb/>
For the first eight mi<lb/>
Lady Pi<lb/>
for the t<lb/>
By CHRIS SIK.l<lb/>
4?i9tam Sport<lb/>
Coming off a third pi<lb/>
ish in the Appalachian Si<lb/>
eraton last weekend, th(<lb/>
Pirates had the formidable<lb/>
playing at Duke  lj<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Despite poor sh I<lb/>
first half, the Lad)<lb/>
were still close on the si -<lb/>
ECU trailed at halftime 1<lb/>
34-29.<lb/>
But the Duke fai - I<lb/>
Blue Devil team came out:<lb/>
the second half. Behind tivi<lb/>
plav of center Sue Harni<lb/>
forward Ellen Langhi, Du<lb/>
control of play. The t<lb/>
Coach<lb/>
Bv KRISTIN HALBI<lb/>
Sport I dltOf<lb/>
With ha-ketba -<lb/>
daily underway, there isc<lb/>
thing that is missing for thl<lb/>
ers and the fans at East Caj<lb/>
actual conference plav.<lb/>
Theriratesd.Miot begj<lb/>
ing CAA teams until la<lb/>
William and Mary, and a!<lb/>
this might seem like a<lb/>
Coach Mike Steele isn't v<lb/>
"The conference is thj<lb/>
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anv more emphasis v j<lb/>
than anv other game St<lb/>
plained. "We look at each<lb/>
bei ng of eq ual impo rt a n ce.<lb/>
AOPi fal<lb/>
reigns ovl<lb/>
(IRS) ? The Gutti<lb/>
bowled 74 pins over<lb/>
Omicron Ti while the men<lb/>
Prerogative easily defeatec<lb/>
Chi B to take the champion<lb/>
the Intramural bowling ti<lb/>
Tuesdav.<lb/>
Lana Rexrod and<lb/>
Lutv led theGurter Girls' b<lb/>
averages but lennifer Slot!<lb/>
Stacv Quhn and kristen i-<lb/>
pulled theirweght as well<lb/>
lead the team o a victor<lb/>
Holi<lb/>
Just in case anyoi<lb/>
cided to stav in Greei<lb/>
for the holidays, here)<lb/>
update of Winter<lb/>
games played at homj<lb/>
Men's Basketball!<lb/>
Games to be hel<lb/>
Minges Coliseui<lb/>
Sat. Dec. 3 - ECU<lb/>
Campbell 7:30 p.<lb/>
Sat. Dec. 10-EC<lb/>
Radford 7:30 p.i<lb/>
Tues. Dec. 27 - ECLl<lb/>
University of Maryl<lb/>
Baltimore 7:3f p.<lb/>
Fri. Dec. 30 - EC1<lb/>
Texas Christian 7:3i I<lb/>
Mon. Jan. 16 - EC<lb/>
George Mason 7:30<lb/>
Women's Basket!<lb/>
Games to be hel<lb/>
Minges Coliseui<lb/>
FrL Dec. 2 - Lady Pi<lb/>
Classic<lb/>
ECU vs. UNC-<lb/>
lotte 8 p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0024"/><lb/>
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br comment.<lb/>
trollable<lb/>
ills he can take. He<lb/>
orts Hotline scores in<lb/>
you mention the Re-<lb/>
tarts foaming at the<lb/>
uld tell by the bone<lb/>
his face he was a<lb/>
ambler Dwindler<lb/>
to see so many young<lb/>
to waste. How much<lb/>
o bet three of them<lb/>
?ttcr-paying jobs than<lb/>
Burger King? cashier<lb/>
of their lives? Five<lb/>
said. "I'll give you 10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
DECEMBER 1, 1988 Page 21<lb/>
Pirates fall to No. 1 team in the country<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
In an almost deafening,<lb/>
packed Cameron indoor stadium<lb/>
it was a battle of David verses<lb/>
Goliath ? the 2-0 East Carolina<lb/>
Pirates vs. the nation's number<lb/>
one ranked Duke Blue Devils.<lb/>
This time the results were in favor<lb/>
oi the Giant, as Duke pounded<lb/>
ECU 95-46.<lb/>
For the first eight minutes of<lb/>
the game, the blue and white clad<lb/>
Duke fans were more than a little<lb/>
nervous. The Pirates kept it tight<lb/>
with the Blue Devils despite some<lb/>
missed shots and turnovers. At<lb/>
12:49 in the first half, ECU trailed<lb/>
by only six, 16-10.<lb/>
But a technical on Duke coach<lb/>
Mike Krzyzewski, ignited the<lb/>
fans and the team. With crisp<lb/>
passing and complete domina-<lb/>
tion on the boards, Duke<lb/>
stretched their lead to a comfort-<lb/>
able margin. With 5:35 remaining<lb/>
in the first half, John Smith hit a<lb/>
jumper to stretch the lead to 16,<lb/>
37-21. Duke never looked back<lb/>
from there as they cruised to a 24-<lb/>
point lead at halftime 49-25.<lb/>
"I thought the first 10 minutes<lb/>
of the game we played some of<lb/>
our best ball said ECU coach<lb/>
Mike Steele. "But 12 minutes into<lb/>
the game, I look up and we are<lb/>
down 16. They are a great club<lb/>
and much improved over last<lb/>
year's squad<lb/>
The number one team in the<lb/>
country came out fired up the<lb/>
second half after a lackluster start<lb/>
of the game. "I thought we came<lb/>
out a little flat said Duke coach<lb/>
Mike Krzyzewski. "We played Duke came out firing on all<lb/>
well in the second half. We played cylinders in the second half. After<lb/>
with a lot of tenacity. The team a ,l,s Hil' three-point basket for<lb/>
played unselfish and made the ECL cut lhc ,ead to 21, Duke<lb/>
extra pass that led to easy bas- See DUKE race 22<lb/>
kets 'Y &amp;<lb/>
Lady Pirates prove to be no match<lb/>
for the tough Blue devils of Duke<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
half-time lead for Duke steadily gated to shooting three-pointers<lb/>
grew to as much as 33 by the end the last four minutes of the game<lb/>
of the game, 93 to 60. to try to cut into a 30-point Duke<lb/>
The Blue Devils passed the lead. The Lady Pirates shot an<lb/>
Coming off a third place fin- ball with pin-point accuracy and amazing 16 three-pointers<lb/>
ish in the Appalachian State-Sh- showed great patience on offense, throughout the game, but con-<lb/>
era ton last weekend, the Lady They worked the ball inside the nected on just four.<lb/>
Pirates had the formidable task of paint all night for easy layups or Duke was lead in the scoring<lb/>
playing at Duke Wednesday short jumpers. Robin Baker's by Harnett who had a game high<lb/>
night. seven assists and fine handling of 23 points. Leigh Morgan and<lb/>
Despi tc poor shooting in the the ECU press set up opportunity Langhi added 17 apiece and<lb/>
first half, the Lady Pirates (1-2) after opportunity for the Blue Marcy Peterson chipped in with<lb/>
Devils. 16 off the bench.<lb/>
The Lady Pirate matched up Sarah Gray lead the way for<lb/>
statistically with Duke for the the Pirates with 20 points and<lb/>
game in all categories except one eight rebounds. Gray was the<lb/>
shooting percentage. Duke only ECU player to score in<lb/>
double figures. Pam Williams<lb/>
added nine and freshman Mech-<lb/>
orward Ellen Langhi, Duke took for this low percentaage was the<lb/>
itrol of play. The five-point fact that the Pirates were rele- bee lauy i-ika its, page z<lb/>
w ore still close on the scoreboard.<lb/>
ECU trailed at halftime by five,<lb/>
54-29.<lb/>
But the Duke fans aiiu the<lb/>
Blue Devil team came out fired up<lb/>
the second half. Behind the strong shot 54 percent, while ECU shot a<lb/>
play o center Sue Harnett and mere 30.4 percent. A big reason<lb/>
U<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
Greta Savage attempts to dribble in for the layup in a game against American University last vear.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, who lost to American 46-54, did not fare any better with Duke on Wednesday as<lb/>
they were beaten 60-93 (Photo by ECU Photo Lab).<lb/>
com<lb/>
Coach Steele looks ahead to CAA's<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
Sports fditor<lb/>
With basketball season offi-<lb/>
;lv underwav, there is onlv one<lb/>
thing that is missing for the play-<lb/>
? - and the fans at East Carolina -<lb/>
actual conference play.<lb/>
The Pirates do not begin play-<lb/>
ing CAA teams until Jan. 7 at<lb/>
William and Mary, and although<lb/>
(his might seem like a setback,<lb/>
Coach Mike Steele isn't worried.<lb/>
"The conference is the most<lb/>
important thing, but we don't put<lb/>
any more emphasis on one game<lb/>
than any other game Steele ex-<lb/>
plained "We look at each game as<lb/>
being of equal importance. All the<lb/>
preseason games are games that<lb/>
will get us ready for conference<lb/>
play<lb/>
Steele is more concerned with<lb/>
the fact that this year there will be<lb/>
more home games before confer-<lb/>
ence play begins, Last year the<lb/>
Pirates only had three home<lb/>
games of their first 11 game<lb/>
stretch. But this year, the Pirates<lb/>
will play six out of the first 12<lb/>
games at home. And to Coach<lb/>
Steele, that will make all the<lb/>
difference.<lb/>
"I'm excited we have a chance<lb/>
to have some home games<lb/>
Steele said. "Hopefully we will<lb/>
get used to playing some games at<lb/>
home, get some experience and<lb/>
have some success before the<lb/>
conference<lb/>
Steele is also using the delay<lb/>
in playing conference teams as an<lb/>
acc-in-the-hole to keep team spir-<lb/>
its up. "The thing that the confer-<lb/>
ence does is if you struggle a bit,<lb/>
you can say, look, we have a new<lb/>
season coming up. If you're not,<lb/>
then you can say, we're playing<lb/>
well, now that we're going into<lb/>
the conference play, let's keep<lb/>
going<lb/>
Steel and his Pirates have a<lb/>
tough road to travel before play-<lb/>
ing CAA Conference teams. With<lb/>
the likes of South Carolina, Geor-<lb/>
gia Tech, Mississippi State and<lb/>
No. 1 Duke all to look forward to<lb/>
before Jan. 7, the Pirates are in for<lb/>
some tremendous competition.<lb/>
And with the doubts that<lb/>
loom over the Pirates regarding<lb/>
these elite teams, there is also<lb/>
optimism as far as Steele is con-<lb/>
cerned. With the Duke game<lb/>
coming up on Wednesday, Steele<lb/>
is anticipating a learning experi-<lb/>
ence for his Pirates.<lb/>
"Dukeisa game where we get<lb/>
a good guarantee and we don't<lb/>
have to travel very far. More<lb/>
importantly, it gives us a chance<lb/>
to play in the ACC and gives us a<lb/>
chance to play one of the top<lb/>
teams in the country which will be<lb/>
great experience for us<lb/>
Duke has signed a three-year<lb/>
contract with East Carolina.<lb/>
AOPi falls to Gutter Girls ? Our Prerogative<lb/>
reigns over Theta Chi B for IRS bowling titles<lb/>
(IRS) ? The Gutter Girls<lb/>
bowled 74 pins over Alpha<lb/>
Omicron Pi while the men of Our<lb/>
Prerogative easily defeated Theta<lb/>
Chi B to take the championship in<lb/>
the Intramural bowling finals on<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Lana Rexrod and Melissa<lb/>
l.utvled the Gutter Girls'bowling<lb/>
averages but Jennifer Slothower,<lb/>
Stacy Quhn and Kristen Halberg<lb/>
pulled their we;ght as well to help<lb/>
lead the team o a victory over<lb/>
AOPi.<lb/>
In the other lane, Theta Chi B<lb/>
were defeated by this years "team<lb/>
most likely to enter a sport Our<lb/>
Prerogative. The gentleman from<lb/>
Theta Chi B (their A team also<lb/>
made it to the playoffs) tried to<lb/>
stay with them, but the strike fe-<lb/>
vered team of Steve Kuykendall,<lb/>
Ronnie Strong and the brother<lb/>
duo of Terry and Todd Turington<lb/>
were just too strong and remained<lb/>
victorious.<lb/>
Prognosticator IMA RECK unblemished to take final game,<lb/>
sees the future sports concluding Women's volleyball:<lb/>
with these outcomes: Good, Bad and Ugly remain<lb/>
Women's soccer: Really Great, Unstoppable and Unde-<lb/>
Rottens wins by landslide. feated.<lb/>
Men's soccer: Grand To catch all the highlighted<lb/>
Poobah kicked out of champion-<lb/>
ship game.<lb/>
Men's 3 on 3 basketball:<lb/>
The Fellows capture yet another<lb/>
title. , ,<lb/>
Women's 3 on 3 basket-<lb/>
ball: The Untouchable remain<lb/>
action, be sure to read the spring<lb/>
preview edition of A Break in the<lb/>
Action after the holidays.<lb/>
Speaking of previews, spring<lb/>
1989 marks the initiation of sev-<lb/>
See INTRAMURALS, page 22<lb/>
An intense Mike Steele studies statistics while approaching the<lb/>
court for the second half of play against UNC-Greensboro. The<lb/>
Pirates were unsuccessful against Duke on Wednesday, but Steele<lb/>
is pleased with the performance of his team (Photo by ECU Photo<lb/>
Lab).<lb/>
Holiday update<lb/>
Just in case anyone de-<lb/>
cided to stay in Greenville<lb/>
for the holidays, here is an<lb/>
update of winter sports<lb/>
games played at home.<lb/>
Men's Basketball -<lb/>
Games to be held in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Sat. Dec. 3 - ECU vs.<lb/>
Campbell 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. Dec. 10 - ECU vs.<lb/>
Radford 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Tues. Dec. 27 - ECU vs.<lb/>
University of Maryland-<lb/>
Baltimore 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Fri. Dec. 30 - ECU vs.<lb/>
Texas Christian 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Mon. Jan. 16 - ECU vs.<lb/>
George Mason 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Women's Basketball -<lb/>
Games to be held in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Fri. Dec. 2 - Lady Pirate<lb/>
Classic<lb/>
ECU vs. UNC-Char-<lb/>
lotte 8 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. Dec. 3 - Lady Pirate<lb/>
Classic -<lb/>
Consolation Game<lb/>
1 p.m.<lb/>
Championship Game<lb/>
3 p.m.<lb/>
Thu. Jan. 5 - ECU vs.<lb/>
Campbell 7 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. Jan. 7 - ECU vs. Wil-<lb/>
liam and Mary 7 p.m.<lb/>
Mon. Jan. 9 - ECU vs.<lb/>
Richmond 7 p.m.<lb/>
Thu. Jan. 12 - ECU vs.<lb/>
North Carolina A&amp;T<lb/>
7 p.m.<lb/>
Men and Women<lb/>
Swim and Dive Team -<lb/>
Games to be held in<lb/>
Minges Pool<lb/>
Sat. Dec. 3 ECU vs.<lb/>
Richmond 2 p.m.<lb/>
Sat Jan. 14 ECU vs. UNO<lb/>
Wilmington 2 p.m.<lb/>
Pirate's Booty<lb/>
Rules for Pirate fan etiquette<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Hello sport's fans.<lb/>
Welcome to the final edition<lb/>
of Pirate's booty for the semester.<lb/>
Today's topic to boot will focus on<lb/>
basketball game etiquette.<lb/>
Now I was at the home game<lb/>
game on Monday when the Pi-<lb/>
rates dominated 68-49 against a<lb/>
good UNC-Greensboro team and<lb/>
I must say I was slightly im-<lb/>
pressed with the modest 3,954<lb/>
turnout in Minges Coliseum, al-<lb/>
though it could have been much<lb/>
better (I know most of you had<lb/>
returned back to school for the<lb/>
holidays by then).<lb/>
However, now that you, the<lb/>
fans, are trying to make an effort<lb/>
to attend the games, proper eti-<lb/>
quette is mandatory and must be<lb/>
learned to ensure an exciting sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
I noticed that the fans were<lb/>
greatly lacking in excitment and<lb/>
enthusiasm during much of the<lb/>
game. As the Pirates proceeded to<lb/>
romp over UNC-G, it took a con-<lb/>
traversial technical call on ECU's<lb/>
Reed Lose to get the crowd up on<lb/>
its feet and into the game.<lb/>
I have come to the conclusion<lb/>
that ECU fans don't know how to<lb/>
act at basketball games. So, to<lb/>
make things les confusing on the<lb/>
fans, I've decided to give you, the<lb/>
fans, four simple but mandatory<lb/>
rules to follow when going to<lb/>
basketball games.<lb/>
The first rule to proper bas-<lb/>
ketball etiquette is in regards to<lb/>
cheering. There is a general rule at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum that, unless<lb/>
there is an extenuating circum-<lb/>
stance (which there never is and<lb/>
there never will be), noise is not<lb/>
prohibited. This means you may<lb/>
use your voice to yell, scream,<lb/>
holler and basically make your<lb/>
vocal chords ache from overuse.<lb/>
Try it. No one will think you're<lb/>
nuts.<lb/>
Rule number two deals with<lb/>
standing. Minges also has an ex-<lb/>
tended policy of permitting fans<lb/>
to stand during any duration of<lb/>
the game. You could stand<lb/>
through the entire game if you<lb/>
wanted to. The real trick however,<lb/>
comes with standing and cheer-<lb/>
ing at the same time, although, I<lb/>
assure you, it's easy to get the<lb/>
hang of.<lb/>
The third rule focuses on fan<lb/>
participation with the cheerlead-<lb/>
ers. Come on guys. Cheerleading<lb/>
is supposed to be fun and reward-<lb/>
ing, but for them, it sure looks<lb/>
more like work trying to get the<lb/>
fans to yell "Purple and merely<lb/>
participate in psyching the bas-<lb/>
ketball team up. Fans, be more<lb/>
considerate to the cheerleaders.<lb/>
Cheerleaders, I know its frustrat-<lb/>
ing. Keep up the good work.<lb/>
Finally, rule number four<lb/>
deals with staying for the entire<lb/>
game. The fans at Monday's game<lb/>
were pretty good about this. Most<lb/>
decided to be present for the en-<lb/>
tire event although some did<lb/>
trickle out with a good five min-<lb/>
utes left of playing time. If there is<lb/>
any trouble remembering thi<lb/>
rule, remember what Mom use<lb/>
to say: It's rude to get up from the<lb/>
dinner table before everyone is<lb/>
done eating.<lb/>
These rules I have outlined<lb/>
are not hard and may be followed<lb/>
in any order. The key here is to<lb/>
actually abide by them.<lb/>
But the real beauty of these<lb/>
rules is that they can be applied to<lb/>
any sport, not just basketball.<lb/>
WINTER SPORTS<lb/>
RECORD<lb/>
(As of Wed. Nov. 30)<lb/>
Men's Basketball 2-1<lb/>
Women's Basketball 1-2<lb/>
Men's Swimming 5-0<lb/>
Women's Swimming 4-1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0025"/><lb/>
22<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1988<lb/>
match<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
Continued from page 21<lb/>
rattled off the next 13 points. All<lb/>
American Danny Ferry capped<lb/>
off the run with a three-pointer at<lb/>
16-21 in the second half. This put<lb/>
Duke up by 34, 62-28.<lb/>
The Pirates tried to mount a<lb/>
comeback, but Duke's height and field goals in a row which is an<lb/>
rest of the Duke team more than<lb/>
picked up the slack.<lb/>
lead by Alaa<lb/>
18 points.<lb/>
Duke was<lb/>
Abdclnaby's<lb/>
Abdelnaby hit all nine of his field<lb/>
goal attempts. This gives him 19<lb/>
superior bench strength were just<lb/>
too much for the smaller Pirates.<lb/>
ECU could never cut the lead to<lb/>
less than two.<lb/>
The Duke team played every-<lb/>
one who dressed out and all but<lb/>
three Duke players scored. The<lb/>
Pirates did an admirable job hold-<lb/>
ing Ferry to just 11 points, but the<lb/>
ACC record and just six shy of<lb/>
Roy Voelkel's NCAA record of 25<lb/>
straight field goals. John Smith<lb/>
added 16 points off the bench for<lb/>
Duke and Robert Brickey and Phil<lb/>
Henderson each had 12.<lb/>
The Pirates, who shot a low<lb/>
32.1 percent from the field, were<lb/>
led by Reed Lose's 13 points<lb/>
The win gave Duke coach<lb/>
coming in off the bench. Gus Hill Krzvzcwski 250 career wins and<lb/>
added 11 and Blue Edwards he says he is happy to be ranked<lb/>
scoied ten for the visiting Pirates.<lb/>
Besides their cold shooting,<lb/>
Duke's edge in rebounds was the<lb/>
vital and deciding difference in<lb/>
the game. Duke pounded the<lb/>
glass for 44 rebounds, an over two<lb/>
to one margin over the Pirates<lb/>
who had just 21 rebounds.<lb/>
"We tried to box out but with<lb/>
their incredible height it made it<lb/>
difficult said Coach Steelc. "We<lb/>
played a hard physical game.<lb/>
They missed shots in the first half<lb/>
but we couldn't get anv re-<lb/>
bounds<lb/>
number one in the country. "1<lb/>
think its good we are number one.<lb/>
Evervone wants to be number<lb/>
one said Krzvzewski.<lb/>
ECU now has to regroup and<lb/>
face a tough Campbell squad,<lb/>
"last wars team bounced back<lb/>
well after a defeat. We will have to<lb/>
see how this team does said Pi-<lb/>
rate coach Steele<lb/>
The Pirates, 2-1, will host the<lb/>
Campbell Camels on Saturday<lb/>
Dec. 3 at 7:30p.m. in MingesColi-<lb/>
seum.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to 18 weeks at additional cost. Preg-<lb/>
nancy Test. Birth Control, and Problem Pregnancy<lb/>
Counseling. For further information, call 832 0535 (toll<lb/>
free number : 1-800-532-5384) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.<lb/>
weekdays. General anesthesia available.<lb/>
LOW COST ABORTIONS UP TO 12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
PARKER'S<lb/>
Parachuting is a new club at ECU<lb/>
(IRS) ? Do you want a taste ot<lb/>
the ultimate high Now you can<lb/>
. Legally! East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
tvas finally recognized sport<lb/>
parachuting as a club.<lb/>
The cost of the first jump is<lb/>
with safety precautions.<lb/>
The student is also paying for<lb/>
a jumpmaster, fuel for the aircraft<lb/>
and the repair and maintenance of<lb/>
the aircraft. All of this is covered<lb/>
by the initial $100 payment with<lb/>
5100 and includes everything you cach additional jump costing $15<lb/>
need to jump. The first jump in- which covers much the sace ex<lb/>
he would exit the aircraft at the<lb/>
appropriate altitude and count to<lb/>
ten. He would then deploy the<lb/>
main chute.<lb/>
The average student can<lb/>
reach the necessary skill level for<lb/>
freefall on his sixth jump. After<lb/>
reaching freefall status, the next<lb/>
eludes 2-3 hours of on-the-ground penses as the initial jump with the goal may be to receive a class "A"<lb/>
training by a qualified instructor<lb/>
covering several different aspects<lb/>
such as emergency procedures,<lb/>
exiting the aircraft, canopy con-<lb/>
trol "od how to land.<lb/>
Rental of the student<lb/>
equiment is covered in the initial<lb/>
cost and the student rig is loaded<lb/>
exception of the ground school.<lb/>
The ultimate goal of all sky-<lb/>
divers is freefall. Freefall is when<lb/>
the student exits the aircraft and it<lb/>
is his responsibility to deploy the<lb/>
main canopy.<lb/>
For example, if a student was<lb/>
going to make a 10 second delay,<lb/>
iscencc, allowing one to jump<lb/>
anywhere in the UNited States<lb/>
without hazing to repeat the<lb/>
coursework and progression ot<lb/>
jumpsunder another certified<lb/>
trainer.<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
Mike Richardson at 7524860<lb/>
Intramural picks in for end of the season<lb/>
. ??? ? i! ?l,r??.V-i<lb/>
Continued from page 21<lb/>
eral new activities amidst the<lb/>
numbers of competitive intramu-<lb/>
ral sports. NIKE sports, in coop-<lb/>
eration with Intramural-Recrea-<lb/>
tional services will sponsor this<lb/>
vears special event, The NIKE 3-<lb/>
point SHOOT OUT. As bracket<lb/>
winners advance, so do the list of<lb/>
awards provided by NIKE sports<lb/>
including: tennis shoes, bags, jer-<lb/>
seys, sweat suits etc. Registration<lb/>
will be held January 25 - so come<lb/>
suited up and ready to play.<lb/>
The month of February marks<lb/>
the second annual slam dunk<lb/>
competition. Billed in the past as<lb/>
strictly a man's event. This year,<lb/>
ladies will have the opportunity<lb/>
to slam as an adjusted height goal<lb/>
will be used for the competition.<lb/>
Wordhasit that IntfamuraTs own<lb/>
JMA.RECK; will compete in this<lb/>
vears stam festival. Registration<lb/>
will be held on the 14th at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. inBION102.<lb/>
March is a hot month for in-<lb/>
tramural sport action as the fol-<lb/>
lowing deadlines are scheduled:<lb/>
?softball registration on<lb/>
the fourth<lb/>
tennis doubles registra-<lb/>
tion on the fourteenth<lb/>
pre-season softball<lb/>
sponsored by Miller on the four-<lb/>
teenth<lb/>
swim meet on the fif-<lb/>
teenth<lb/>
Co-rec volleyball and<lb/>
indoor soccer on the twenty-first<lb/>
Budwciser Sport Day<lb/>
and Tennis Mixed Doubles on the<lb/>
twenty-eighth<lb/>
The annual intramural SLUG<lb/>
Fest will be held in April so soft-<lb/>
ball squads should get their teams<lb/>
together callv in the hopes of<lb/>
success of last years all nighter ha;<lb/>
paved the way for a new weekend<lb/>
format.<lb/>
For a comprehensive sched-<lb/>
ule of all the springs upcoming<lb/>
intramural sports events, be sure<lb/>
to pick up an activity calendar in<lb/>
204 Memorial Gym or look for<lb/>
your copy in a variety of campus<lb/>
locations.<lb/>
Thysical Fitness Opportuni-<lb/>
ties increase as well this coming<lb/>
spring with the development of<lb/>
Bellv Busters aerobics, Fitness<lb/>
Olympics, Brown Bag Luncheons<lb/>
and Fitness Assessments. In addi-<lb/>
tion, the aerobics, aquarobics,<lb/>
toning, weight training work-<lb/>
shops and facultystaff fitness<lb/>
programs remain on the schedule<lb/>
with specific registration dead-<lb/>
lines posted in a seperate Physical<lb/>
Fitness schedule card 'located in<lb/>
204 Memorial Gvmnasium.<lb/>
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Miami<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, NX I<lb/>
They said it was just anc<lb/>
night, another game Deepdi<lb/>
however, none of the Chai<lb/>
1 lornets would have like 1 <lb/>
a it the) had been the hi ?<lb/>
of the winless Miami Heat<lb/>
"Thiswasa win, thi . n<lb/>
win against anybody Cha<lb/>
zoach Dick Harter said i<lb/>
team's third victory m 13ga<lb/>
99-84 triumph over the Hea<lb/>
need all the<lb/>
though 1 wouldi ?<lb/>
read the papers in the itk<lb/>
and seen where they ender<lb/>
losing streak<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
? ts wer ntei ted in<lb/>
not n<lb/>
?<lb/>
played rd <lb/>
capability j<lb/>
game, ' Kemptoi<lb/>
Mian tva<lb/>
midway thr<lb/>
. m ter and rr -<lb/>
Citadel c<lb/>
the coac<lb/>
ASHEVILLE '<lb/>
Charlie Taa?-<lb/>
del to its fii<lb/>
NCAA I-A A<lb/>
was named the 5<lb/>
ence c ?ach I I<lb/>
Taafl<lb/>
the school I - f7<lb/>
in balloting -i<lb/>
ferenci SportsM liaAssocI<lb/>
Marshall coach Georg<lb/>
finished - r I<lb/>
followed<lb/>
Satterfield with three ? <lb/>
em. Carolina<lb/>
and East Tenr se tat<lb/>
Don Riley<lb/>
The C tad<lb/>
the cor ferei 18-4<lb/>
in; -<lb/>
Soi rn in I<lb/>
I-AA p tst Saturdal<lb/>
Bui I<lb/>
? tones<lb/>
t bv I<lb/>
?<lb/>
?. - -<lb/>
Zurbrieg w<lb/>
World Cu<lb/>
VALTHORENS<lb/>
Switzerland<lb/>
gen won - nd J<lb/>
World Cupra<lb/>
ingtheg 'J<lb/>
?<lb/>
Double OI n <lb/>
ist Mb ??<lb/>
start in the firs<lb/>
qual I<lb/>
I<lb/>
first ? ? Vustriaj<lb/>
Nierlich b<lb/>
combined tim<lb/>
9.32 seconds<lb/>
Nierlich. who ha 3<lb/>
time in the final run. was<lb/>
1P 2 09 ;s with two rr<lb/>
ans, Hans Fnn ai<lb/>
Mayer, third and t<lb/>
wasclockedin2 1<lb/>
at 2:11.21.<lb/>
It was Zui n -<lb/>
reer vi tory He w n the i<lb/>
Super-G on Sunday in<lb/>
ding, Austria.<lb/>
Mustaf nami<lb/>
rookie of we<lb/>
GREENSBORO N C i<lb/>
lerrod Mustaf of Marvlai<lb/>
named the Atlantic<lb/>
Conference's first rookie<lb/>
week Tuesday by the<lb/>
Coast Sports Writers Assc<lb/>
Mustaf, a 6-foot-lQ f<lb/>
from Greenbelt, Md so<lb/>
points and grabbed lt re<lb/>
in two games m leadingl<lb/>
land to the ehampionshu<lb/>
Freedom Bowl Tournai<lb/>
Irvine, Calif.<lb/>
Ladv Pirates<lb/>
fall to Blue<lb/>
Continued from pag?<lb/>
ellc Jones had eight.<lb/>
Gray has lead the Pj<lb/>
the scoring all three gai<lb/>
season Gray, who did<lb/>
last season due to a kn<lb/>
has come back to be thl<lb/>
spot for the Lady Pirates <lb/>
off to a 1-2 start for secc<lb/>
coach Pat Pierson.<lb/>
Pierson and the Lad<lb/>
will resume action on<lb/>
Nashville, Tenn. against I<lb/>
bilt and will play again o<lb/>
against Tennessee State.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0026"/><lb/>
'S<lb/>
Id<lb/>
Cole<lb/>
i n<lb/>
b<lb/>
ou<lb/>
t ready<lb/>
pletely<lb/>
RY.<lb/>
;e.<lb/>
Miami falls to Charlotte 99-84<lb/>
MALPASS<lb/>
MUFFLER<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
They said it was just another<lb/>
night, another game. Deep down,<lb/>
however, none of the Charlotte<lb/>
 fomets would have liked to face<lb/>
il if they had been the first victim<lb/>
of the winless Miami Heat.<lb/>
This was a win, the same as a<lb/>
win against anybody Charlotte<lb/>
;oach Dick Harter said of his<lb/>
team's third victory in 13 games, a<lb/>
99-84 triumph over the Heat. "We<lb/>
need all the wins we can get, al-<lb/>
ugh 1 wouldn't have liked to<lb/>
read the papers in the morning<lb/>
and seen where they ended their<lb/>
losing streak<lb/>
Tim Kcmpton said the Hor-<lb/>
net- were interested in winning,<lb/>
not necessarily beating the Heat.<lb/>
We felt if we came out and<lb/>
played hard and played to our<lb/>
capabilities, we would win the<lb/>
game kempton said.<lb/>
Miami was close, having led<lb/>
midway through the second<lb/>
quarter and making a serious run<lb/>
at ending its early-season futility<lb/>
in the fourth period. But one of the<lb/>
key players in the battle of the<lb/>
NBA babies highlighted a fourth-<lb/>
period run. He scored five points<lb/>
in a 9-0 spurt to lead Charlotte out<lb/>
of a 77-76 nailbiter into an 86-76<lb/>
cushion which Miami couldn't<lb/>
answer.<lb/>
"I get more and more com-<lb/>
fortable every game. I listen to the<lb/>
olderguysand that helpsmeout<lb/>
said Chapman, who had a rookie-<lb/>
season high of 22 points.<lb/>
"Coming in cold off the bench<lb/>
is tough and it takes me a few<lb/>
minutes to get going he said.<lb/>
"I'm still not shooting as well as<lb/>
I'd like. I'm missing easy shots<lb/>
If his eye is off, then<lb/>
Chapman's timing has made up<lb/>
for the deficiency right now.<lb/>
Charlotte trailed 29-26 after<lb/>
Dwayne Washington's 15-foot<lb/>
lean-in jumper with 7:50 left be-<lb/>
fore halftime.<lb/>
Chapman retaliated, starting<lb/>
an 11-0 run and scoring nine<lb/>
points in the burst to give Char-<lb/>
lotte a 37-29 lead with 5:50 left in<lb/>
the second quarter.<lb/>
Washington's layup with 7:09<lb/>
left to play brought Miami within<lb/>
77-76 after it had trailed by as<lb/>
much as 14 in the third quarter.<lb/>
There was Chapman again, how-<lb/>
ever. He led a 9-0 run with five<lb/>
points, burning the Heat once<lb/>
again.<lb/>
"We played hard enough tc<lb/>
stop their runs. That was the key<lb/>
to our victory Harter said. "We<lb/>
need to do this in all of our<lb/>
games<lb/>
Chapman has chosen to ig-<lb/>
nore thecritics who said he wasn't<lb/>
ready to play in the NBA. He also<lb/>
chose to turn his back on compari-<lb/>
sons between him and Miami's<lb/>
first-round draft pick, Rony<lb/>
Seikaly.<lb/>
"Seikaly's a great player but<lb/>
just had a bad night Chapman<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Charlotte's fourth sellout<lb/>
crowd of 23388 booed Seikaly<lb/>
during the team introductions,<lb/>
when he approached the scorer's<lb/>
table and every time he touched<lb/>
the ball. It was retribution for his<lb/>
comments last spring in which he<lb/>
said he didn't want to play for<lb/>
Charlotte.<lb/>
"This crowd really didn't<lb/>
bother me because I'm used to<lb/>
playing infront of big crowds<lb/>
Seikaly said. "This is a beautiful<lb/>
place with a great atmosphere<lb/>
and super fans<lb/>
Robert Reid scored 17 points,<lb/>
Kurt Rambis had 13 points in<lb/>
three quarters and Michael<lb/>
Holton finished with 10 for the<lb/>
Hornets, who won by their big-<lb/>
gest margin this season. Kelly<lb/>
Tripucka, the Hornets' leading<lb/>
scorer, sat out the game with a<lb/>
strained hamstring.<lb/>
Washington scored a career-<lb/>
high 18 points for Miami. Grant<lb/>
Long had 14 points, Pat Cum-<lb/>
mings scored 13 and Rory Spar-<lb/>
row had 10.<lb/>
BRAKE SERVICE<lb/>
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AUTO PARTS<lb/>
758-7676<lb/>
Greenville. NC<lb/>
Citadel coach named<lb/>
the coach of the year<lb/>
ASHEVILLE, N.C (AP) ?<lb/>
Charlie Taaffe, who led The Cita-<lb/>
del to its first appearance in the<lb/>
NCAA I-AA playoffs this season,<lb/>
was named the Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence coach of the vear.<lb/>
J<lb/>
Taaffe, in his second season at<lb/>
the school, collected 64 of 79 votes<lb/>
in balloting by the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference Sports Media Association.<lb/>
Marshall coach George Chaump<lb/>
finished second with 10 votes,<lb/>
followed by Furman coach Jimmy<lb/>
Satterfield with three and West-<lb/>
ern Carolina coach Bob Waters<lb/>
and East Tennessee State coach<lb/>
Don Riley with one apiece.<lb/>
The Citadel finished 5-2 in<lb/>
the conference and 8-4 overall,<lb/>
including a 38-20 loss to Georgia<lb/>
Southern in the first round of the<lb/>
I-AA playoffs last Saturday. The<lb/>
Bulldogs finished 4-7 in 1987.<lb/>
The eieht victories were the<lb/>
most by the school since 1971,<lb/>
when The Citadel finished 8-3.<lb/>
The All-Southern Conference<lb/>
Zurbrieg wins<lb/>
World Cup<lb/>
VAL THORENS, France (AP)<lb/>
- Switzerland's Pirmin Zurbrig-<lb/>
gen won his second straight<lb/>
World Cup race Tuesday, captur-<lb/>
i ng the giant slalom amid fog and<lb/>
rain.<lb/>
Double Olympic gold medal-<lb/>
ist Alberto Tomba had the fastest<lb/>
start in the first run, but was dis-<lb/>
qualified for missing a gate.<lb/>
Zurbriggen, leading after the<lb/>
first run, held off Austria's Rudi<lb/>
ierlich by 16. The Swiss skier's<lb/>
combined time was two minutes,<lb/>
9.32 seconds.<lb/>
N'ierlich, who had the fastest<lb/>
time in the final run, was second<lb/>
in 2:09.38 with two more Austri-<lb/>
ans, Hans Enn and Helmut<lb/>
Mayer, third and fourth. Enn's<lb/>
?? as clocked in 2:10.02 with Mayer<lb/>
at 2:11.21.<lb/>
It was Zurbriggen's 33rd ca-<lb/>
reer victory. He won the opening<lb/>
Super-G on Sunday in Schlam-<lb/>
ding, Austria.<lb/>
Mustaf named<lb/>
rookie of week<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C.(AP) ?<lb/>
lerrod Mustaf of Maryland was<lb/>
named the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference's first rookie of the<lb/>
week Tuesday by the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Sports Writers Association.<lb/>
Mustaf, a 6-foot-10 forward<lb/>
from Greenbelt, Md scored 35<lb/>
points and grabbed 16 rebounds<lb/>
in two games in leading Mary-<lb/>
land to the championship of the<lb/>
Freedom Bowl Tournament in<lb/>
Irvine, Calif.<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
fall to Blue Devils<lb/>
Continued from page 21<lb/>
elle Jones had eight.<lb/>
Gray has lead the Pirates in<lb/>
the scoring all three games this<lb/>
season. Gray, who did not play<lb/>
last season due to a knee injury,<lb/>
has come back to be the bright<lb/>
spot for the Lady Pirates who are<lb/>
off to a 1-2 start for second-year<lb/>
coach Pat Pierson.<lb/>
Pierson and the Lady Pirates<lb/>
will resume action on Dec. 15 in<lb/>
Nashville, Term, against Vander-<lb/>
bilt and will play again on Dec. 17<lb/>
against Tennessee State.<lb/>
team was also announced, with<lb/>
Marshall wide receiver Mike Bar-<lb/>
ber and running back Ron Darby<lb/>
heading five repeat selections on<lb/>
the 25-man squad.<lb/>
Barber, who has caught 73<lb/>
passes heading into Saturday's<lb/>
playoff game against Marshall, is<lb/>
the league's all-time leading re-<lb/>
ceiver, with 243 receptions.<lb/>
Darby has rushed for 1,226<lb/>
yards in 12 games after rushing<lb/>
for 1,506 yards in 15 games last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Other repeat selections in-<lb/>
cluded Marshall right end Sean<lb/>
Doctor, Furman offensive tackle<lb/>
Fe Cowan and Tennessee-Chat-<lb/>
tanooga defensive lineman Tony<lb/>
Bo wick.<lb/>
VMI wide receiver Mark<lb/>
Stock was the top vote-getter on<lb/>
the offense, receiving 76 votes<lb/>
Furman senior linebacker Jeft<lb/>
Blankenship was the top defen-<lb/>
sive vote-getter, receiving 73<lb/>
votes.<lb/>
L<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
APPLICATIONS BEING ACCEPTED FOR<lb/>
Staff Writers<lb/>
APPLY IN PERSON<lb/>
MONDAY-FRIDAY<lb/>
10 a.m4 p.m.<lb/>
THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
2nd FLOOR<lb/>
PUBLICATIONS BUILDING<lb/>
IN FRONT OF JOYNER LIBRARY<lb/>
No phone calls please<lb/>
Fun After Business Hours <lb/>
Playing the Very Best m Beach.<lb/>
Top 40. Oldies and Dance Musk<lb/>
Steve Hardy Begins at 7:00<lb/>
Drink Specials All Evening<lb/>
Hot Buffalo Wings 'til 7:30<lb/>
STEVE<lb/>
HARDY'S<lb/>
BEACH PARTY<lb/>
jVPTF<lb/>
RAMADA<lb/>
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is having a<lb/>
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Running a 12 Price Sale on First Quality!<lb/>
We have added irregulars to this location for your shopping convenience.<lb/>
Located Next to Tons of Toys - S. Memorial Drive<lb/>
Hours 10-6 MonSat. (Fri. &amp; Sat. til 9)<lb/>
Visit Our Other Locations<lb/>
Hwy. 64 East Between Hwy 7Q Wesl<lb/>
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Conetoe, N.C. WedSat. 9-5<lb/>
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Prisoners of old-fashioned<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058113_0027"/><lb/>
24<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1,1988<lb/>
Playoff hopes dim for Redskins<lb/>
r<lb/>
w. jyyrcyO (A)The I" addition to gauging his Gibbs would dearly love to<lb/>
V ashington Redskins have re- team's character over the upcom- see his team rebound against the<lb/>
Tut leSt?.plaJing? in8 three "?s, Gibbs will at- Eagles, who are perched atop the<lb/>
the season with only their selt- tempt to determine which players NFC East with an8-5 record<lb/>
are worth keeping around for<lb/>
next year. "We're walking into some-<lb/>
esteem on the line<lb/>
Last year at this time, the<lb/>
Redskins had already wrapped<lb/>
up the NFC East title. Now, how-<lb/>
ever, the defending Super Bowl<lb/>
champions are mired in a three-<lb/>
game losing streak that has left<lb/>
them at 6-7 and with virtually no<lb/>
hope of making it back to the play- tney want to see what we can do<lb/>
of fs. when the chips are down<lb/>
"It's a pride factor for them, : Even defensive end Dexter<lb/>
kind of a test of what's inside of Manley, who leads the Redskins<lb/>
vou Coach Joe Gibbs said Mon- vvitn 10 sacks, isn't totally sure<lb/>
3 wants to keep his SSfcthat'S S0jAn8 !? te<lb/>
nh? ?k  tou8h t0 overcome. We know<lb/>
job. That's what the coaches will<lb/>
be looking at Rypien said.<lb/>
"They've seen what we can do<lb/>
under ideal conditions, and now<lb/>
tough<lb/>
that Gibbs said. "It's going to be<lb/>
a real test for us. Very few people<lb/>
will give us much of a chance in<lb/>
this one<lb/>
For his part, Rypien is looking<lb/>
forward to giving the Eagles a bit<lb/>
of what the Redskins have been<lb/>
experiencing this season as de-<lb/>
fending world champions.<lb/>
"Now we can take some licks<lb/>
at someone else Rypien said.<lb/>
"People have risen up to play<lb/>
the Redskins this year. Now we<lb/>
ha ve a chance to get them to spend<lb/>
the holidays the same way as us,<lb/>
watching the playoffs on TV<lb/>
day. "It's a situation where you're<lb/>
going to have to really want it<lb/>
bad<lb/>
The Redskins harbored hopes<lb/>
oi returning to the playoffs until<lb/>
Sunday, when the Cleveland<lb/>
Browns twice came from behind<lb/>
to register a 17-13 victory. With<lb/>
that loss, Washinoton all'but as-<lb/>
sured itself of becoming the fifth<lb/>
defending Super Bowl champion<lb/>
in the last nine to miss the play-<lb/>
offs.<lb/>
"I'd say the odds are prettv<lb/>
gloomy said Redskins quarter-<lb/>
back Mark Rypien, named the<lb/>
team's starter next Sunday<lb/>
against the Philadelphia Eagles.<lb/>
Since Gibbs took over as head<lb/>
coach in 1981, Washington has<lb/>
been among the league's most<lb/>
successful franchises. But now the<lb/>
Redskins have lost four out of five<lb/>
and their incentive for the remain<lb/>
whether he'll be around next sea-<lb/>
son when Washington tries to<lb/>
pick up the pieces.<lb/>
"Some guys are going to be<lb/>
out of here. I may be one of them<lb/>
he declared.<lb/>
While it appears ludicrous to<lb/>
throw Gibbs' name in among the<lb/>
people in the organization who<lb/>
must worry about job security, the<lb/>
NFL's winningest active coach<lb/>
discussed the possibility.<lb/>
"I can only lose so many<lb/>
games and (owner) jack Kent<lb/>
Cooke is going to tell me, 'Hey,<lb/>
Joe, I can't go any further Gibbs<lb/>
said. "But let me say this: I don't<lb/>
worry one bit about that<lb/>
Gibbs, in fact, thought he and<lb/>
the Redskins might one day de-<lb/>
rive something positive out of a<lb/>
season that has been ruined by,<lb/>
among other things, injuries,<lb/>
costly turnovers and countless<lb/>
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dcr of the season has nothing to do un?mely penalties<lb/>
with playoff booty. "Sometimes the downturns<lb/>
"You've got to take the bad and me tough times make you a<lb/>
times with the good times to see better person, a better coach, a<lb/>
what you're made of offensive better player he said. "It's been<lb/>
a long time since we lost like this,<lb/>
and now we've got to find out<lb/>
what we're made of<lb/>
tackle Joe Jacoby said. "We'll find<lb/>
out about that the next three<lb/>
weeks<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
ranked<lb/>
20th in Southeast<lb/>
(AP) ? After what he's en-<lb/>
dured the last couple of years,<lb/>
Don DeVoe isn't about to be over-<lb/>
come by joy just because his Ten-<lb/>
nessee basketball team is ranked<lb/>
20th in the country this week.<lb/>
After opening with a 118-86<lb/>
romp over Tennessee Tech, Ten-<lb/>
nessee began its quest for the<lb/>
Southeastern Conference title<lb/>
with an 84-76 victory at Missis-<lb/>
sippi.<lb/>
"We may be in the top 20, but<lb/>
we weren't favored to win the<lb/>
game DeVoe said. "So rankings<lb/>
really don't mean that much.<lb/>
We'd like to be number one, but<lb/>
on April 7<lb/>
DeVoe, among the highly<lb/>
respected coaches in the country,<lb/>
has been a success at every stop<lb/>
during a career that is in its 18th<lb/>
season, 88-45 and a National In-<lb/>
vitation Tournament title at Vir-<lb/>
ginia Tech, 29-25 in two years of<lb/>
reviving a downtrodden Wyo-<lb/>
ming program, and 187-126 two<lb/>
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nessee.<lb/>
DeVoe got the call after Ten-<lb/>
nessee struggled to an 11-16 mark<lb/>
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lowers, swept three games<lb/>
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see won 18, 21, 20, 20, 21 and 22<lb/>
games and played in either the<lb/>
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Interest in basketball was<lb/>
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ing the earlier DeVoe teams.<lb/>
Tennessee was the only new<lb/>
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Twenty, although there was shuf-<lb/>
fling of positions among the other<lb/>
19.<lb/>
Duke, No. 1 in the preseason<lb/>
poll, was the choice for the second<lb/>
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The Blue Devils, who beat The<lb/>
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West V<lb/>
(AD ? West Virginia cos<lb/>
Don Nehlcn has no quarrel wj<lb/>
being ranked No. 3, for now.<lb/>
But if the Mountaineers bJ<lb/>
No. 1 Notre Dame in the Fie<lb/>
Bowl and don't win the natioi<lb/>
championship, Nehlen will<lb/>
the roof.<lb/>
The Fiesta Bowl may ru<lb/>
lined up Notre Dame and <lb/>
Virginia, the nation's only<lb/>
beaten teams (both are 11 -0), bi<lb/>
war of words between West j<lb/>
giniaand second-ranked Miam<lb/>
under way.<lb/>
"If West Virginia was to mc<lb/>
above us, as long as we coi I<lb/>
to win, that would be the last<lb/>
you'd hear me talk al<lb/>
credibility of the polls Mia<lb/>
coach Jimmy Johnson said M<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"I would become a<lb/>
proponent for the play ffS)<lb/>
because I would say the i<lb/>
ridiculous if that haj :<lb/>
"I love Jimmy fohnsc<lb/>
Nehlen replied, "but I<lb/>
trying to plant soi j<lb/>
crafty little turke)<lb/>
ing Miami I'd be- d <lb/>
thing. But he's got lour I J<lb/>
that the winner oi the Fiesta Bol<lb/>
should be the national chaj<lb/>
pion<lb/>
The argument will K<lb/>
academic if Notre Dam, <lb/>
West Virginia.<lb/>
And the Irish, fresh from a l<lb/>
10 victory over Southern Calif<lb/>
nia in Saturday's 1-2 s 1<lb/>
were a near-unanimous ch<lb/>
the nation's top 3<lb/>
team Monday in the As J<lb/>
Press' next-to-last n<lb/>
poll.<lb/>
The setback dropped - il<lb/>
ern Cal from second place I<lb/>
and cost the Trojans their s<lb/>
the national champ;<lb/>
Defending national ,<lb/>
pion Miami, an 18-16 wim<lb/>
previously unbeaten ArkansJ<lb/>
EAC names<lb/>
players of wee<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C(AP<lb/>
Howard University quark- <lb/>
Lee DeBose and North Caroluj<lb/>
A&amp;T linebacker Demetrius Han<lb/>
son were named as the Easier<lb/>
Athletic Conference offens <lb/>
and defensive players of the yei<lb/>
on Tuesday.<lb/>
DeBose, a 5-foot-9,<lb/>
pound senior from Gainesvill<lb/>
Ha passed for 1,458 yards and<lb/>
touchdowns and ran for549yan<lb/>
and four touchdowns in leadinj<lb/>
Howard to a 7-4 record.<lb/>
He received nine oi 20 votes<lb/>
Delaware State running bad<lb/>
Reginald Barnes, who claimed<lb/>
five votes, lei the league in rush1<lb/>
ing with 1,336 yards in 10 games<lb/>
Honda A&amp;M return special<lb/>
ist Howard Huckabv. who set<lb/>
NCAA Division I-A A record w.ti<lb/>
four punt returns for touch!<lb/>
downs, received four votes anf<lb/>
Bethune-Cookman quarterbad<lb/>
Anthony Thomas received I <lb/>
remaining two votes.<lb/>
Harrison, a b-4, 215-poun<lb/>
junior from Atlanta, led the con<lb/>
ference with 125 tackles. He rel<lb/>
corded two interceptions, threi<lb/>
fumbles and two quarterbad<lb/>
sacks.<lb/>
Hamson received six vote<lb/>
nipping Honda A.&amp;M defensiv<lb/>
end Bryan Brewer, who had I<lb/>
votes. Brewer had 34 tackles<lb/>
eluding nine sacks, and returned<lb/>
an interception for a touchdown!<lb/>
South Carolina State nose tacklj<lb/>
David Ammons received threi<lb/>
votes and Delaware State defer<lb/>
sive back Marvin Bright Morgai<lb/>
State tackle William Foveand Re<lb/>
thune-Cookman safety Jeffei<lb/>
Alexander received two vote<lb/>
each.<lb/>
Harrison and DeBose al:<lb/>
lead the all-conference team anl<lb/>
nounoed Tuesday. The duo wen<lb/>
among nine repeaters named tJ<lb/>
the team.<lb/>
The honors were chosen hi<lb/>
league coaches, sports informal<lb/>
tion directors and a selected panej<lb/>
of sportswnters.<lb/>
This Coupon good for one (V<lb/>
page of incredibly advanced.j<lb/>
scientifically tested, pretty<lb/>
much guaranteed to offend<lb/>
most rational beings, humor<lb/>
material.<lb/>
Redeem every Thursday for I<lb/>
The Clearly Labeled Satire<lb/>
Page<lb/>
TTie finest humor fc f frf<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0028"/><lb/>
TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
nfCILMBER 1.1988 25<lb/>
iNTER<lb/>
or-<lb/>
ON<lb/>
Q70<lb/>
IIES<lb/>
HES<lb/>
RIES<lb/>
l own<lb/>
it<lb/>
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'<lb/>
 -<lb/>
' -Jg5<lb/>
HER GARMENTS<lb/>
West Virginia in battle for No. 1<lb/>
<lb/>
(AP) - West Virginia coach<lb/>
Don Nehlen has no quarrel with<lb/>
being ranked No. 3, for now.<lb/>
but if the Mountaineers beat<lb/>
No. 1 Notre Dame in the Fiesta<lb/>
bowl and don't win the national<lb/>
championship, Nehlen will hit<lb/>
the roof.<lb/>
The Fiesta Bowl mav have<lb/>
lined up Notre Dame and West<lb/>
Virginia, the nation's onlv un-<lb/>
beaten teams (both are 11-0), but a<lb/>
war of words between W7cst Vir-<lb/>
ginia and second-ranked Miami is<lb/>
under way.<lb/>
It West Virginia was to move<lb/>
above us, as long as we continue<lb/>
to win, that would be the last time<lb/>
vou'd hear me talk about the<lb/>
dibility of the polls Miami<lb/>
?ach Jimmy Johnson said Mon-<lb/>
dav.<lb/>
I would become a strong<lb/>
? ponent for the playoff system,<lb/>
ause ! would say the polls are<lb/>
culous if that happened.<lb/>
1 love limmy Johnson<lb/>
Nehlen replied, "but he's just<lb/>
ng to plant some seeds that<lb/>
i ft little turkey. If I werecoach-<lb/>
Miami I'd be doing the same<lb/>
ing. But he's got to understand<lb/>
that the winner of the Fiesta Bowl<lb/>
should be the national cham-<lb/>
i he argument will become<lb/>
ademic it Notre Dame beats<lb/>
 est Virginia.<lb/>
And the Irish, fresh from a 27-<lb/>
 :ctorv over Southern Califor-<lb/>
nia in Saturday's 1-2 shootout,<lb/>
re a near-unanimous choice as<lb/>
he nation's top college football<lb/>
im Monday in the Associated<lb/>
: s next-to-last regular-season<lb/>
The setback dropped South-<lb/>
. ? n Cal from second place to fifth<lb/>
:ost the Trojans their shot at<lb/>
national championship.<lb/>
Defending national cham-<lb/>
n Miami,an IS-lb winner over<lb/>
iouslv unbeaten Arkansas,<lb/>
EAC names <lb/>
players of week<lb/>
GKFFNSBORO, N.C.(AP) ?<lb/>
iward University quarterback<lb/>
DeBose and North Carolina<lb/>
A&amp;T linebacker Demetrius Harri-<lb/>
n were named as the Eastern<lb/>
Athletic Conference offensive<lb/>
? I defensive players of the year<lb/>
?? I uesday.<lb/>
DeBose, a 5-foot-9, 160-<lb/>
und senior from Gainesville,<lb/>
passed for 1,45S yards and 20<lb/>
uch d(i wns and ran for 549 yards<lb/>
: four touchdowns in leading<lb/>
ward to a 7-4 record.<lb/>
1 le received nine of 20 votes.<lb/>
aware State running back<lb/>
ginald Barnes, who claimed<lb/>
five votes, led the league in rush-<lb/>
 .?. ith 1,33b yards in 10 games.<lb/>
I lorida A&amp;M return special-<lb/>
? 11oward Huckaby, who set a<lb/>
NCAA Division l-A A record with<lb/>
ir punt returns for touch-<lb/>
: iwns, received four votes and<lb/>
thune-Cookman quarterback<lb/>
Anthony Thomas received the<lb/>
remaining two votes.<lb/>
Harrison, a 6-4, 215-pound<lb/>
junior from Atlanta, led the con-<lb/>
ference with 125 tackles. He re-<lb/>
corded two interceptions, three<lb/>
fumbles and two quarterback<lb/>
sacks.<lb/>
Harrison received six votes,<lb/>
nipping Florida A&amp;M defensive<lb/>
end Bryan Brewer, who had five<lb/>
votes. Brewer had 54 tackles, in-<lb/>
cluding nine sacks, and returned<lb/>
an interception for a touchdown.<lb/>
uth Carolina State nose tackle<lb/>
tvid Ammons received three<lb/>
. tes and Delaware State defen-<lb/>
ive back Marvin Bright, Morgan<lb/>
State tackle William Foyeand Be-<lb/>
th une-Cookman safety Jeffery<lb/>
Alexander received two vote?<lb/>
I h.<lb/>
Harrison and DeBose also<lb/>
lead the all-conference team an-<lb/>
nounced Tuesdav. The duo were<lb/>
among nine repeaters named to<lb/>
the team.<lb/>
The honors were chosen by<lb/>
league coaches, sports informa-<lb/>
ti( n directors and a selected panel<lb/>
i -I sportswnk rs.<lb/>
This Coupon good for one (1)J<lb/>
page of incredibly advanced, m<lb/>
scientifically tested, pretty ?<lb/>
much guaranteed to offend R<lb/>
most rational beings, humor a<lb/>
material. ?<lb/>
Redeem every Thursday for <lb/>
The Clearly Labeled Satire .<lb/>
Page. ?<lb/>
"The finest humor for the ?<lb/>
price ?<lb/>
moved up from third place to<lb/>
second and West Virginia jumped<lb/>
from fourth to third. It was the<lb/>
Mountaineers' highest ranking<lb/>
of a possible 1,200 points from a<lb/>
nationwide panel of sports writ-<lb/>
ers and sportscasters.<lb/>
Miami, whose only loss was<lb/>
31-30 at Notre Dame when the<lb/>
Hurricanes disdained a tie with45<lb/>
seconds left and tried a two-point<lb/>
conversion pass that failed, re-<lb/>
ceived one first-place vote and<lb/>
1,124 points. The Hurricanes, 9-1,<lb/>
conclude their regular season Sat-<lb/>
urday night against Brigham<lb/>
Young.<lb/>
The other two first-place<lb/>
votes went to West Virginia,<lb/>
which totaled 1,069 points.<lb/>
"I hope West Virginia beats<lb/>
Notre Dame Johnson said. "If<lb/>
West Virginia beats Notre Dame,<lb/>
it means they've beaten two<lb/>
teams ranked in the Top Twenty<lb/>
(West Virginia beat Syracuse 31-9<lb/>
on Nov. 19).<lb/>
"Now, let's compare sched-<lb/>
ules. We beat the preseason num-<lb/>
ber one (Florida State 31-0), we<lb/>
lost by a point to the current No. 1<lb/>
and we lost control of our destiny<lb/>
when we didn't kick the extra<lb/>
point. We beat the Big Ten cham-<lb/>
pions (Michigan 31-30), the co-<lb/>
champions of the Southeastern<lb/>
Conference (LSU 44-3) and the<lb/>
champions of the Southwest<lb/>
Conference (Arkansas) and we're<lb/>
playing the champions of the Big<lb/>
Eight (Nebraska) in the Orange<lb/>
Bowl<lb/>
"If the number one team loses<lb/>
at the end of the year, the number<lb/>
two team should go up<lb/>
Not so, according to Nehlen.<lb/>
"Being number three does't<lb/>
bother me too much he said.<lb/>
"But when the number three team<lb/>
plays the number one team in the<lb/>
Fiesta Bowl, there's no question in<lb/>
my mind that the winner should<lb/>
be the national champion. It has<lb/>
to be because number t w already<lb/>
has lost to number one<lb/>
Florida State, which finished<lb/>
second to Miami a year ago but<lb/>
has won 10 straight games since<lb/>
their opening loss to the Hurri-<lb/>
canes, trounced Florida 52-17and<lb/>
climbed from fifth to fourth with<lb/>
1,013 points, followed by 10-1<lb/>
Southern Cal with 946 points.<lb/>
Nebraska, 11-1, held on to<lb/>
sixth place with 891 points and 10-<lb/>
1 Auburn, a 15-10 winner over<lb/>
Alabama, remained seventh with<lb/>
865 points.<lb/>
UCLA, 9-2, rose from ninth<lb/>
place to eighth with 733 points,<lb/>
just nipping Arkansas, 10-1,<lb/>
which slipped from eighth to<lb/>
ninth with 731 points. Oklahoma,<lb/>
9-2, again rounded out the lop<lb/>
Ten with 649 points.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058113_0029"/><lb/>
)<lb/>
V<lb/>
26 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 1, 1988<lb/>
AEAND<lb/>
A<lb/>
,v<lb/>
c<lb/>
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m<lb/>
W:<lb/>
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i3<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
There May Be Prizes<lb/>
In Your Textbooks<lb/>
When you sell them for cash at the ECU<lb/>
Student Store. Bring your course books<lb/>
to the bookstore at the end of the term<lb/>
and sell them for cash. For each book<lb/>
you sell, you'll receive a sweepstakes<lb/>
game piece. You'll know immediately if<lb/>
you're a winner. See participating<lb/>
bookstore for details.<lb/>
'While supplies last.No purchase necessary to win.<lb/>
TANi<lb/>
A<lb/>
ALOHA HAWAII LTD.<lb/>
in<lb/>
Windjammer<lb/>
Look what you could win (over 200,00 prizes)<lb/>
?L.E.D. Watches<lb/>
?Sport Wallets<lb/>
?Volkswagen Cabriolets<lb/>
?Hawaiian Vacations<lb/>
?Tandy 1000 TX PCX's<lb/>
?Windjammer "Barefoot"<lb/>
Cruises<lb/>
?19 inch Color TV's<lb/>
?4 12 inch TV's with AMFM<lb/>
Stereo &amp; Cassette<lb/>
?Seiko Wrist Watches<lb/>
?Cubbies T-shirts<lb/>
?Portable RadioCassettes<lb/>
?AMFM Stereo Clock Radios<lb/>
?AMFM Portable Stereos<lb/>
?Personal Stereo Cassette<lb/>
Players<lb/>
?Cubbies Cheeseburger Lunch<lb/>
Special (Voted 1 Hotdog, 1<lb/>
Cheeseburger and Best Place to eat<lb/>
lunch by the Greenville Times).<lb/>
-?<lb/>
ECU Student Stores<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0030"/><lb/>
OUT OF STUDYING<lb/>
EXAMS.<lb/>
Call us.<lb/>
Serving<lb/>
Central Greenville<lb/>
.and ECU Campus<lb/>
758-6660<lb/>
1201 Charles Blvd<lb/>
Serving East Greenville<lb/>
752-6996<lb/>
Rivergate Shopping Center<lb/>
Serving West Greenville<lb/>
756-9998<lb/>
2405 W. Dickinson Ave<lb/>
Serving Ayden<lb/>
and Winterville<lb/>
746-4042<lb/>
106 N Lee St<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
11 00am-1am Sun -Thurs<lb/>
11 00am-2amFn &amp; Sat<lb/>
Hours may vary tron roret i ?<lb/>
DOMINO'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
DELIVERS<lb/>
$9.99<lb/>
SPECIAL!<lb/>
Order or delicious 16" pizza with<lb/>
one topping and four cans of<lb/>
Coca Cola classic for<lb/>
(Price includes tax.)<lb/>
 .<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Addn<lb/>
itii : ? ?? inly<lb/>
? ; ? ? ;  i Not va I witl  ? " i "? i<lb/>
muary 15. 1988<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
FSI-9<lb/>
36.99<lb/>
SPECIAL!<lb/>
Order one delicious 12" pizza with<lb/>
one topping and two cans of Coca<lb/>
Cola classic for only S6.99!<lb/>
(Price includes tax.)<lb/>
?'?? part : ' ng stores only<lb/>
One coupon per pizza Not valid with any other offer<lb/>
??? i good through January 15. 1988<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
FSI-6<lb/>
$1<lb/>
OFF!<lb/>
Order one delicious 12" pizza with<lb/>
one or more toppings and get<lb/>
S1 OFF!<lb/>
?'?? part pattng ston<lb/>
 .  i N t valid with any othei offer<lb/>
?? ? good through January 15. 1988<lb/>
.<lb/>
t<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
Order one delicious 16" pizza with<lb/>
two or more toppings and get<lb/>
$2 OFF!<lb/>
At participating stores only<lb/>
One coupon per pizza Not valid with any other c"<lb/>
Offer good through January 15. 1988<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
Limited deliver area<lb/>
:SI-1<lb/>
fsi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058113_0031"/>
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