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<pb facs="00058118_0001"/>
Inside<lb/>
EDITORIALS4<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS6<lb/>
FEATURES 11<lb/>
SPORTS16<lb/>
Features<lb/>
ECU Freshman works special effects<lb/>
magic in 'DeepStar Six<lb/>
See page 11.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pirates gun down the Midshipmen<lb/>
of Navy Monday Night.<lb/>
See page 16.<lb/>
?fte l-ast Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No.T<lb/>
at<lb/>
Thursday January, 1989<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Mandatory vaccinations<lb/>
Students line up for shots<lb/>
Thomas Walters, one of the 6,000 ECU students required to take a measte vaccination, stood in<lb/>
line Monday to receive a shot of medicine. (Photo hv J.D. Whitmire?Photolab)<lb/>
Campus organization helps Nicaragua<lb/>
By TOM PAGE<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Organization tor Devel-<lb/>
oping Nations is one of many<lb/>
unknown yet very significant<lb/>
groups on campus. The group<lb/>
better known as ODN is a campus<lb/>
branch of a national organization.<lb/>
The chapter at ECU presently has<lb/>
twelve members and has re-<lb/>
mained active for two years, ac-<lb/>
cording to Marianne Exum,<lb/>
ECU's ODC president.<lb/>
"ODN participates in many<lb/>
global projects concerning devel-<lb/>
oping countries. Presently our<lb/>
group is raising money for a verv<lb/>
important project whose goals<lb/>
will have far reaching effects on<lb/>
many people in need in Nicara-<lb/>
gua Exum said.<lb/>
Exum described the fund<lb/>
raiser as "essential" to the net-<lb/>
work of groups building a "soy<lb/>
milk production plant" in Ciudad<lb/>
Sandino a small city outside of<lb/>
Manaugua. The plant project will<lb/>
benefit both children in need oi<lb/>
proper nutrition and also city<lb/>
workers in need of income. The<lb/>
plant will manufacture other soy-<lb/>
products which will generate in-<lb/>
come for the workers while the<lb/>
milk will be distributed to chil-<lb/>
dren and pregnant women free.<lb/>
According to Exum the<lb/>
amount requested for building<lb/>
the plant is $6,762.00. The people<lb/>
of the communitv have organized<lb/>
themselves into cooperatives and<lb/>
are developing the means for the<lb/>
production oi soy beans as well as<lb/>
other basic food crops on a rotat-<lb/>
ing basis. Students of the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Nicaragua have contrib-<lb/>
uted to the planning and logistics<lb/>
of the project and ODN American<lb/>
campus' such as ECU are helping<lb/>
with the funding.<lb/>
"It is the most we can do at<lb/>
such a distance but we have faith<lb/>
in the project and look forward to<lb/>
its completion next year. Our the<lb/>
national ODN chapter is sending<lb/>
one of our ECU members to Nica-<lb/>
ragua this summer so hopefully<lb/>
we will get an update Exum<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The plant, upon completion<lb/>
will produce 10,00020 ml. bags of<lb/>
soy milk daily. The milk will then<lb/>
be distributed throughout the<lb/>
communities to children who will<lb/>
receive one bag a day. Health<lb/>
posts will then distribute the<lb/>
remaining milk to pregnant<lb/>
women. The profit from sales of<lb/>
the other soy products will keep<lb/>
the plant running, according to<lb/>
Exum.<lb/>
"Although ECU's group is<lb/>
only contributing in the construc-<lb/>
tion of the workshop for process-<lb/>
ing the soybeans we are playing a<lb/>
verv important part Exum<lb/>
stated. "We will be working hard<lb/>
with fundraisers such as yard<lb/>
sales, raffles and other projects to<lb/>
pay for the basic construction,<lb/>
plumbing and electrical fixtures<lb/>
that the plant will invariably<lb/>
need<lb/>
Exum encourages all stu-<lb/>
dents with an interest in develop-<lb/>
ing countries to attend ODN<lb/>
meetings and stressed that ODN<lb/>
is not limited to any specific ma-<lb/>
jors.<lb/>
"Our group offers discus-<lb/>
sion, education, project planning<lb/>
and also internships to different<lb/>
countries which is sponsored by<lb/>
the national chapter on a compc-<lb/>
tive basis. The next few intern-<lb/>
ships will be in India, thePhillipi-<lb/>
nes, and Bangledesh Exum said.<lb/>
Natural child birth discussed<lb/>
By TRISH GRAND<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Human Birth: An Evolution-<lb/>
ary Perspective was the topic of<lb/>
interest last Thursday evening as<lb/>
Anthropolgist Wenda Trevathan<lb/>
lectured on the evolutionary se-<lb/>
lection of mid wiferv in childbirth.<lb/>
Dr. Trevathan, assistant pro-<lb/>
fessor of Anthropology at New<lb/>
Mexico State University, spoke on<lb/>
her culmination of years of re-<lb/>
search in the area of mother-in-<lb/>
fant bonding and fetal emergent<lb/>
patterns.<lb/>
Except in a few cases where<lb/>
medical attention is needed, Tre-<lb/>
vathan argued on the importance<lb/>
of the parents' choice between<lb/>
childbirth in a natural setting<lb/>
(such as the home) and a hospital<lb/>
setting. Trevathan points out sev-<lb/>
eral factors occuring thoughout<lb/>
evolution that eventually made<lb/>
midwifery for humans necessary.<lb/>
In trying to measure evolu-<lb/>
tionary success, Trevathan states<lb/>
there are two points to consider:<lb/>
survival and reproductive suc-<lb/>
cess. "It seems to me that there is<lb/>
no single point in an individual's<lb/>
life where those two things come<lb/>
into play more than at the mo-<lb/>
ment of birth said Trevathan.<lb/>
From this premise, Trevathan<lb/>
suggests these two points in evo-<lb/>
lutionary success may have some<lb/>
connection. "The survival of the<lb/>
baby is at stake at that point and<lb/>
the survival oi the mother is at<lb/>
stake and certainly the reproduc-<lb/>
tive success of the mother is at<lb/>
stake said Trevathan.<lb/>
Trevathan recognized sev-<lb/>
eral theories on the importance of<lb/>
understanding human evolution<lb/>
including the hunting hypothesis,<lb/>
language, and culture. However,<lb/>
she concluded that human birth<lb/>
must occur first for these other<lb/>
hypotheses to take place, "so it<lb/>
seemed to me that it is verv critical<lb/>
J<lb/>
to understand this particular<lb/>
process and how the forces of<lb/>
human evolution have been influ-<lb/>
enced bv childbirth<lb/>
Bipedalism (walking upright<lb/>
on two legs), encephalism (brain<lb/>
enlargement), and delivery of a<lb/>
helpless baby all contribute to the<lb/>
need for assistance at the time of<lb/>
birth says Trevathan.<lb/>
The emergence of bipedalism<lb/>
changed the shape of the birth<lb/>
canal for humans. The largest part<lb/>
of a female's pelvis is the front,<lb/>
and the largest part of a baby's<lb/>
head is the back. Therefore, Tre-<lb/>
vathan states that "the large ma-<lb/>
jority of human babies are borr<lb/>
facing away from their mothers<lb/>
This provides problems foi<lb/>
the mother if she were to delivei<lb/>
the baby alone. "Once the head is<lb/>
emerged she is going to have a<lb/>
hard time reaching behind her,<lb/>
pulling it forward as this proce-<lb/>
dure will pull the baby against the<lb/>
normal flection oi hisher body.<lb/>
"I've suggested that it may have<lb/>
been advantageous for women<lb/>
to seek some sort of assistance at<lb/>
birth said Trevathan.<lb/>
With regard to encephaliza-<lb/>
tion, a human baby's head is only<lb/>
22 percent its normal size when it<lb/>
reaches maturity. The mother<lb/>
must care for the needs of her<lb/>
helpless child. Throughout her<lb/>
research in El Paso, TX and Mex-<lb/>
ico, Trevathan suggests that not<lb/>
only is bonding occuring between<lb/>
the mother and child when he<lb/>
she is first born, but some of the<lb/>
mothers behaviors may have sur-<lb/>
vival value which evolved from<lb/>
early humans.<lb/>
The mothers "would begin<lb/>
massaging and rubbing the baby<lb/>
and then they would bring the<lb/>
babies up and fully encompass<lb/>
them said Trevathan. "By mas-<lb/>
saging and rubbing the baby<lb/>
helps to get the respirations<lb/>
going, and helps to warm the<lb/>
baby<lb/>
Trevathan further explains<lb/>
that eye contact with the baby<lb/>
helps to calm and keep the baby<lb/>
See TREVATHAN, page 3<lb/>
By TON I PAGE<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Ledonia Wright Cultural<lb/>
Center smelted of rubbing alcohol<lb/>
as students lined up outside<lb/>
awaiting their measles vaccina-<lb/>
tions. The mandatory vaccina-<lb/>
tions have been issued to over<lb/>
6,000 ECU students and 800 fac-<lb/>
ulty members according to Kay<lb/>
Van Nortwick, Associate Director<lb/>
for Administration at the Student<lb/>
Health Service.<lb/>
A directive has come from<lb/>
the North Carolina Department of<lb/>
Human Resources through the<lb/>
local Health department which<lb/>
requires everyone who falls<lb/>
within a departmental guidelines<lb/>
for immediate re-immunization .<lb/>
According to Van Nortwick<lb/>
one case of student measles has<lb/>
been reported and since then the<lb/>
Health Department has taken<lb/>
protective steps through the Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Service to vaccinate<lb/>
potential virus carriers. As a safe-<lb/>
guard, the Health Department<lb/>
has raised the age of initial vacci-<lb/>
nation to 16 months old and older.<lb/>
"The confusion sets in when<lb/>
we have to determine who needs<lb/>
to get a shot. Since the previous<lb/>
age of vaccination was 12 moruiu<lb/>
old many more people must get<lb/>
vaccinated as a safeguard Van<lb/>
Nortwick said.<lb/>
This means that students and<lb/>
faculty who recieved their vacci-<lb/>
nation before 19o8 need another<lb/>
shot because that vaccine is no<lb/>
longer effective. The main group<lb/>
the infirmary is focusing on are<lb/>
those born after January 1, 1957,<lb/>
according to Van Nortwick.<lb/>
To get into ECU under law<lb/>
students must provide the uni-<lb/>
versity with an updated immuni-<lb/>
zation record. Therefore, as a<lb/>
consequence, in order to get back<lb/>
into classes this week those stu-<lb/>
dents who have been notified<lb/>
must get their measles shot.<lb/>
When asked how the Infir-<lb/>
mary would enforce this policy<lb/>
Van Nortwick explained that a<lb/>
computer list would be sent to all<lb/>
professors with the names of<lb/>
those students who have not re-<lb/>
cieved their shot and those stu-<lb/>
dents would not be allowed to<lb/>
return to class until they are vacci-<lb/>
nated.<lb/>
"Our population is close to-<lb/>
gether Van Nortwick explained,<lb/>
"Students attend classes together,<lb/>
live in dorms together and go<lb/>
downtown. Measles is a highly<lb/>
contagious illness and the possi-<lb/>
bility of an epedemic is always<lb/>
present Van Nortwick said.<lb/>
"1 don't think we will have an<lb/>
epedimic, but it is worth it to take<lb/>
the necessary precautions to pre-<lb/>
vent a potential one, or any more<lb/>
cases Van Nortwick added.<lb/>
The process for checking shot<lb/>
records is a tedious one, accord-<lb/>
ing to Van Nortwick "The<lb/>
infirmary's computers only have<lb/>
shot records on those students<lb/>
enrolled after 19to the rest must<lb/>
be checked by hand one file at a<lb/>
time<lb/>
"The last notifications will g<lb/>
out Monday night at 5:00 and ail<lb/>
students should be notified by<lb/>
Tuesday Van Nortwick said.<lb/>
There is always the possibilitv<lb/>
that some records will be over-<lb/>
looked Van Nortwick ex-<lb/>
plained. "Since this is the case all<lb/>
students and faculty members<lb/>
should update their she' cords<lb/>
if they are in doubt<lb/>
Students being notified will<lb/>
receive a memo from Dr. James<lb/>
McCailumof the Student Health<lb/>
Service. The official notification<lb/>
states that vaccines must be ob-<lb/>
tained by by 8 p.m. Tuesday,<lb/>
January 24 or students may not<lb/>
attend class on Wednesday. The<lb/>
memo stated that "the reason for<lb/>
the urgency is to avoid a measles<lb/>
epidemic on our campus which<lb/>
would possibly necessitate clos-<lb/>
ing school<lb/>
Since the notifications went<lb/>
out on Saturday afternoon Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Service employees<lb/>
have been working overtime and<lb/>
have administered 1.500 measles<lb/>
shots, according to Van Nortwick.<lb/>
"There has been a steady flow<lb/>
of students coming in but we<lb/>
expect many more on Tuesday<lb/>
Van Nortwick said.<lb/>
"Volunteers from various<lb/>
departments on campus, the<lb/>
school oi nursing, as well as the<lb/>
Health Department have helped<lb/>
us out a lot and are greatly appre-<lb/>
ciated. The atmosphere has man-<lb/>
aged t.i remain cheerful with<lb/>
everyone helping out Van<lb/>
Nortwick explained.<lb/>
When asked how students<lb/>
generally reacted to this newly<lb/>
implemented policy one nurse<lb/>
said, "I have been giving vaccines<lb/>
all day and the students don't<lb/>
seem to mmd. Most of them have<lb/>
been very cooperative and we<lb/>
haven't had many complaints<lb/>
Chad Harris, a student, com-<lb/>
mented atter recieving his shot,<lb/>
"It's an inconvenience, but if they<lb/>
have a documented measles case<lb/>
already, then the precautions are<lb/>
worth it<lb/>
" arm hurts, and itsa little<lb/>
See MEASLES, page 2<lb/>
This is a composite of your student government, the SGA, who Monday listened to ECU Athletic<lb/>
Director Dave Hart as he explained ECU's position on NCAA bylaws. (Photo by J.D. Whitmire)<lb/>
Hart speaks on academics<lb/>
ByBENSELBY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Athletic Depart-<lb/>
ment will not recruit students that<lb/>
fail to meet academic require-<lb/>
ments set by the NCAA proposi-<lb/>
tion 48, said ECU Athletic Direc-<lb/>
tor, Dave Hart, speaking to mem-<lb/>
bers of the SGA last night.<lb/>
"We have not eliminated the<lb/>
possibility of recruiting partial<lb/>
qualifiers altogether Hart said.<lb/>
Proposition 48 required that<lb/>
incoming student-athletes have<lb/>
an overall 2.0 GPA and an SAT<lb/>
score of 700. If a student didn't<lb/>
have either, then thev became a<lb/>
non-qualitier, Hart said.<lb/>
Proposition 42 was aimed at<lb/>
programs that abused the num-<lb/>
bers of non-qualifiers and partial<lb/>
qualifiers, Hart said.<lb/>
"Athletics is by far not the<lb/>
most important thing going on at<lb/>
this campus, but it is without<lb/>
question the most visible Hart<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We're trying to build a suc-<lb/>
cessful program, but a program<lb/>
that is operated the right way<lb/>
Hart said. "We're very, very<lb/>
committed to academic excel-<lb/>
lence as well as athletic excel-<lb/>
lence<lb/>
Hart praised the SGA and<lb/>
student body for their support of<lb/>
athletic programs at ECU.<lb/>
"Student leadership is in<lb/>
many ways more Jmnrtrtant than<lb/>
faculty or civ rv dership<lb/>
Hart said.  pie attract<lb/>
good people Arw ality attracts<lb/>
quality<lb/>
'The wav you've supported<lb/>
us at Ficklen Stadium and at<lb/>
Minges Collusium is greatly ap-<lb/>
preciated Hart said. "If you<lb/>
haven't had the opportunity, I<lb/>
hope that you will take the time to<lb/>
support us<lb/>
Hart said a dialogue between<lb/>
ECU and NCSU is still ongoing.<lb/>
"Wecontinue to talk to NCSUand<lb/>
we would like to continue the<lb/>
series Hart said. "But we'd like<lb/>
to see the traffic go both ways<lb/>
See SGA, page 3<lb/>
a<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0002"/><lb/>
TUHFASTCAKOl IMAM<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1989<lb/>
Programs offered abroad<lb/>
By ADAM CORNEOUS<lb/>
Stall Writer<lb/>
Are you one of those lucky<lb/>
students stuck in Greenville for<lb/>
the Summer sessions? You don't<lb/>
have to be.<lb/>
The International Studies of-<lb/>
fice i offering five trip:? to four<lb/>
different countries this Summer<lb/>
for students with a reasonable<lb/>
GPA, Students can take up to six<lb/>
hours of courses which will be<lb/>
transferred for credit at ECU. It<lb/>
also provides an opportunity to<lb/>
visit another country for a month<lb/>
or more at a fairlv reasonable<lb/>
r '<lb/>
If you want to catch that sav-<lb/>
age topical tan and earn course<lb/>
credits at the same time, than<lb/>
maybe a month in 1 leredia, Costa<lb/>
Rica is for you. From May 8 to unc<lb/>
18 ou could gp to a Summer ses-<lb/>
sion at the Universidad Nacional<lb/>
de Costa Rica, located 12 KM (7<lb/>
miles) north oi San Jose, the<lb/>
nation's capital.<lb/>
Its balmy mountain climate<lb/>
maintains a temperature of be-<lb/>
tween 65 and 83 degrees. The<lb/>
entire tour costs $1560.00 for in-<lb/>
state students, $2570.00 for out-<lb/>
of state students. That fee in-<lb/>
cludes housing with experienced<lb/>
host families, dav trips to volcano<lb/>
sites, beach trips, and tours of<lb/>
tropical vegatation. It also in-<lb/>
cludes a visit to a coffee farm, a<lb/>
banana plantation, and some of<lb/>
Costa Rica's major cities.<lb/>
Universidad Nacional de<lb/>
Costa Rica offers studies in an-<lb/>
thropology, including a class in<lb/>
Contemporary Human Problems<lb/>
and Global Issues (ANTH 2020),<lb/>
Area Studies or' Latin America<lb/>
(ASLA 2100. 2200, 2300, and<lb/>
2400), Biology, both field studies<lb/>
and research problems, and Con-<lb/>
versational Spanish (SPAN 1040<lb/>
and 2018 The application dead-<lb/>
line was January 17, but has been<lb/>
extended for one week, ending<lb/>
tomorrow. It you're interested<lb/>
contact Maurice D.Simon. 1002 B<lb/>
in the General Classroom build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
If you're looking for some-<lb/>
thing a little cheaper, another<lb/>
pn gram at UNCR is one spon<lb/>
sored by the School oi Education.<lb/>
It costs $980.00 for in-state stud-<lb/>
im ts and lasts from une 13 to June<lb/>
27. It's a course worth three<lb/>
semester hours of credit and is.<lb/>
open to fifteen education stu-<lb/>
dents. The course' will offer op-<lb/>
portunities to visit public schools.<lb/>
the faculty of the university, a<lb/>
well as a t.mr oi the country's<lb/>
fields and factories. Students will<lb/>
learn how developing and indus-<lb/>
trialized nations work together<lb/>
and get a firsthand look at prob-<lb/>
lems faced by the families in Costa<lb/>
Rica at the same time.<lb/>
For more information contact<lb/>
I V Vila Rosertfeld. The deadline<lb/>
tor applications is February 15.<lb/>
A Summer trip to Ferrara will<lb/>
liter students an opportunity to<lb/>
explore the heritage of Italy at the<lb/>
L'niversitia degli Studi di Ferrara.<lb/>
The University will offer six credit<lb/>
hours oi general college educa-<lb/>
tion requirements, and offers<lb/>
courses in Conversational Italian<lb/>
(1TAL1050) and Arts and Sciences<lb/>
Abroad (ASAB 2100, 2200, and<lb/>
2400).<lb/>
These courses, which focus<lb/>
on the cultural heritage of Italy,<lb/>
M ill deal with the country's politi-<lb/>
cal history, art, music, literature<lb/>
and architecture, as well as its<lb/>
scientific and religious thinkers<lb/>
from the Middle Ages and the<lb/>
Renaissance to the present.<lb/>
Settled between Bologna and<lb/>
the Adriatic Sea, Ferrara still has a<lb/>
Renaissance atmosphere which a<lb/>
visiting student can see in its<lb/>
streets, churches, and monastar-<lb/>
ies.<lb/>
Its location is (nit of the way of<lb/>
the mainstream tourist sites,<lb/>
which provides an ideal atmos-<lb/>
phere tor study. Although it's a<lb/>
small town, it is ranked as one of<lb/>
the most prosperous in Italy, a<lb/>
country which itself "Suffers from<lb/>
economic stability according to<lb/>
Geraldine Laudati, the program's<lb/>
coordinator.<lb/>
Ms. Ferrara says that the resi-<lb/>
dents oi Ferrara are receptive to<lb/>
exhange students, and families<lb/>
frequently hold parties for Ameri-<lb/>
can and Italian students.<lb/>
This year the tours in Italy<lb/>
include five towns, including a<lb/>
trip to Monteva, home of the first<lb/>
Renaissance church, and nearby<lb/>
Robina. Together with Ferrara,<lb/>
these lands used to make up the<lb/>
rule of the Gonzaga family, its<lb/>
palaces containing the mvsteri-<lb/>
ous dwarves houses, which were<lb/>
tiny rooms built for the dwarves<lb/>
who worked as servants there.<lb/>
Another trip, which goes to<lb/>
Florence inlcudes a tour of the<lb/>
Uffitizi Gallery which houses,<lb/>
among other works,<lb/>
Michelangelo's David. Trips to<lb/>
Padua and Bologna, the capital of<lb/>
the district oi Emilia Romagna<lb/>
u inch has gamed fame for its<lb/>
sausage promise tours of the first<lb/>
and second oldest universities.<lb/>
Byzantine mosaics works can<lb/>
be soen in tours oi Venice and<lb/>
Ravenna. These seventh and<lb/>
tweh th century works oi art de-<lb/>
picting bibilical stories are on dis-<lb/>
play in the older churches and<lb/>
repositiories. Mosaic workshops<lb/>
may also be viewed, although<lb/>
scheduled tours are tentative.<lb/>
The University itself, which<lb/>
was founded in 1391, has had<lb/>
such students as Copernicus and<lb/>
Fallopio and today boast a pro-<lb/>
ductive science complex and<lb/>
medical school. The entire trip to<lb/>
Ferrara costs 52480.00 for in-state<lb/>
students, S3280.00 for out-ot-<lb/>
state. For more information on the<lb/>
Ferrara trip please contact Ger-<lb/>
aldine laudati at 757-6250. The<lb/>
application deadline is February<lb/>
1.<lb/>
Looking for something a lttle<lb/>
more cosmopolitan? ECU is also<lb/>
offering trips to London and<lb/>
Paris. From July 7 to August 7you<lb/>
could go to Richmond College in<lb/>
Kensington, located in the West<lb/>
End of London, and get six<lb/>
semester hours for an Advanced<lb/>
English Elective or a Humanities<lb/>
Credit from a variety of classes.<lb/>
Tours to Picadilly Circus,<lb/>
Houses of Parliment, Bucking-<lb/>
ham Palace, and the Tower of<lb/>
London are being offered, al-<lb/>
though the tours are more or less<lb/>
being "played by ear according<lb/>
to Dr. Paul Dowel! the trip's coor-<lb/>
dinator.<lb/>
"We had eight students last<lb/>
summer, "said Dowell. "This<lb/>
summer there may be as many as<lb/>
fifteen and we are expecting that<lb/>
number to grow The price for in-<lb/>
state students is $2456.00,<lb/>
$2894.00 for out-of-statc students.<lb/>
The group will be taking an<lb/>
optional tour to Stratford-Upon-<lb/>
Avon for an additional cost of<lb/>
$149.00. Students will see Mary<lb/>
Arden's house and<lb/>
Shakespeares's Theatre. Tickets<lb/>
to the Theatre are discounted for<lb/>
students. The fee also includes<lb/>
tours to either York or Durham,<lb/>
Canterbury (of Chaucer's Canter-<lb/>
bury' Tales), Bath (site of the<lb/>
world's first planned city), And<lb/>
Greenwich, home of the Prime<lb/>
Meridian, where you can see the<lb/>
Naval Observatorv and theCutty<lb/>
Sark.<lb/>
There is an optional ten-day<lb/>
excursion to Paris, Brussels, and<lb/>
Amsterdam for $595.00 These<lb/>
rates are guaranteed if you get the<lb/>
application in by February 15. Go<lb/>
to Paris for shopping and sight-<lb/>
seeing one dav, then travel to<lb/>
Brussles to see the Mannekin Pis<lb/>
and Grand Place the next. After-<lb/>
wards, you will go to Amsterdam,<lb/>
where you will see collections of<lb/>
Yermeer, Rembrandt, and other<lb/>
Dutch artists, as well as the fa-<lb/>
mous canals and several hundrec'<lb/>
bridges which they flow under.<lb/>
See Dr. Paul Dowell in Gen-<lb/>
eral Classroom building 2202 for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
If the Louvre, the Eiffel tower,<lb/>
Notre Dame, or Musec Picassois<lb/>
is more to your taste, then the<lb/>
department of foreign languages<lb/>
Quake hits Soviet villages<lb/>
MOSCOW (AP) - An earth-<lb/>
quake destroved several moun-<lb/>
tain illages in Tadzhikistan to-<lb/>
day and buried one village under<lb/>
a 45-foot wall of dirt and mud,<lb/>
killing up to 1,000 people, officials<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Almost everybody died<lb/>
said Zainiddin Nasreddinov, edi-<lb/>
tor-in-chief of the official Tazhiki-<lb/>
stan news agency, who visited the<lb/>
buried villageof Sharora in Soviet<lb/>
Central Asia.<lb/>
An preliminary estimate in-<lb/>
dicated about 600 people had died<lb/>
there, he said in a telephone inter-<lb/>
view from Dushanbe, about 10<lb/>
s northeast of Sharora. The<lb/>
popu ition of the village was not<lb/>
ki .n, lut . isreddinov said<lb/>
about 70 families lived there.<lb/>
n i ' at the Dushanbe<lb/>
seisi k ho refused to be<lb/>
tdt ntifk .rlies are large<lb/>
in the area u? ue dwelling often<lb/>
houst s eight to 10 people.<lb/>
"The tot ?1 number of deaths is<lb/>
now evaluated at uo to 1,000<lb/>
said the official Tass news agency.<lb/>
Measles shots required<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
swollen but I'm glad I got it said faculty members who still need to<lb/>
Chris Gallager another student gct their measles shots. The Pitt<lb/>
emerging from the LSVV Cultural County Health Department will<lb/>
t-cntor also be administering the vac-<lb/>
The infirmary will be open cincs,andbothfacilitiesarefreeof<lb/>
Tuesdy January 24 from 8:00 a.m. cnarce<lb/>
to 8:00 p.m. for those students and 8<lb/>
and literatures is offering nine<lb/>
weeks in Paris as well as six hours<lb/>
of credit at the Universitede Paris<lb/>
V (Sorbonne).<lb/>
Students stay at the Foyer de<lb/>
Fstudiantes in the Latin Quarter<lb/>
oi Paris, and tours arc offered of<lb/>
the Musee d'Orsay, Montarte, the<lb/>
Arc de Triomphe, Musee Rodin,<lb/>
and Les Invalidcs. The classes<lb/>
offered at Sarbonne include<lb/>
French Civilization in France<lb/>
(FRench 2116) as well as other<lb/>
special classes in French language<lb/>
and history.<lb/>
The dates are from June 26 to<lb/>
August 2 and there is an optional<lb/>
three-day trip offered which tours<lb/>
the landing beaches of Nor-<lb/>
mandy, Claude Monet's home at<lb/>
Giverny, Chartes, and the island<lb/>
oi Mont-St-Michel in the English<lb/>
Channel. The price for in-state<lb/>
students is $2580.00. Out-of-state<lb/>
costs are $3540.00. and the three-<lb/>
day tour is an extra $205.00. To<lb/>
find out more about the Paris trip<lb/>
contact Dr. Karine Sparrow-Gin-<lb/>
ter, room 3303 of the General<lb/>
Classroom building.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey J Keith Pcarct'<lb/>
Richard-Alan Cook Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95 Local Open Rate $4.75<lb/>
Bulk Rate (Contracts) Frequency (Contracts)<lb/>
100-199 col. inches$4.50 5 Insertions(4 H)<lb/>
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Color Advertising<lb/>
One Color and black$90.00 (l<lb/>
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BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
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It said hundreds died in Sharora<lb/>
but did not give an exact figure.<lb/>
The tremor struck about 1,800<lb/>
miles southeast of Moscow, north<lb/>
of Afghanistan and bordering<lb/>
China, at 2:02 a.m. (6:02 p.m. EST<lb/>
Sunday). It was the strongest<lb/>
quake to hit the Soviet Union<lb/>
since the Dec. 7 quake that struck<lb/>
Armenia and killed about 25,000<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Rescue teams were searching<lb/>
for survivors and soldiers were<lb/>
rushed to the area to keep order<lb/>
and restore communications and<lb/>
power and water to the buildings<lb/>
left standing, said Nasreddinov.<lb/>
Roads into the area were<lb/>
damaged and thousands of head<lb/>
oi cattle were killed, Tass said.<lb/>
Bulldozers and cranes were being<lb/>
sent into the area to help rescuers,<lb/>
the report said.<lb/>
The magnitude of the earth-<lb/>
quake was uncertain.<lb/>
The U.S. Geological Survey in<lb/>
Golden, Colo, said it measured 6.0<lb/>
on the Richter scale.<lb/>
IN OIL OR WATER<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058118_0003"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
N<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1989 3<lb/>
Solidarity urges restraint<lb/>
GDANSK, Poland (AP) - Soli-<lb/>
4arity chairman Lech Walesa<lb/>
urged caution and restraint fol-<lb/>
lowing the independent labor<lb/>
movement's acceptance of Com-<lb/>
munist authorities' offer to dis-<lb/>
cuss its return to legal status.<lb/>
"We are committed to agree-<lb/>
ment " But we have to remain free<lb/>
and self-governing Walesa told<lb/>
about 5,000 people in this Baltic-<lb/>
port on Sunday after announcing<lb/>
the decision by Solidarity's na-<lb/>
tional leadership.<lb/>
The banned trade union<lb/>
federation's statement of accep-<lb/>
tance, issued as its executive<lb/>
committee ended a two-day<lb/>
meeting, was published by the so long struggled to diminish<lb/>
state-run PAP news agency and Solidarity's influence was now<lb/>
ended the union movement's 16- was seeking accord only to calm there will be no need to have a<lb/>
month legal existence with a De- unrest caused by rising inflation general strike" Walesa has said he<lb/>
cember 1981 military crackdown,<lb/>
interning thousands of union ac-<lb/>
tivists.<lb/>
No date has been mentioned<lb/>
for the talks, but both sides have<lb/>
indicated they could begin within<lb/>
a few weeks.<lb/>
Last week, the country's<lb/>
Communist leaders offered the<lb/>
prospect of lifting the seven-year<lb/>
ban on Solidarity on the condition<lb/>
the movement forfeit Western<lb/>
financial aid, embrace socialism<lb/>
and agree to a two-year morato-<lb/>
rium on strikes.<lb/>
and consumer shortages.<lb/>
Poland's foreign debt is $39 bil-<lb/>
lion.<lb/>
"I wish that there be no eu-<lb/>
phoria Walesa cautioned the<lb/>
thousands of supporters after a<lb/>
Mass at St. Brygida's Roman<lb/>
Catholic church. "Anything is still<lb/>
possible<lb/>
"Is it true we will be solving<lb/>
Polish problems in a pluralistic<lb/>
free way? We will see very soon<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Janusz Onyszkicvvicz,<lb/>
The government that had for Solidarity's national spokesman,<lb/>
broadcast as the first item on the<lb/>
national evening news.<lb/>
It clears the way for the first<lb/>
formal talks between Solidarity<lb/>
and the authorities since Poland's<lb/>
leader, Gen. Wojciech jaruzclski,<lb/>
offering a partnership of sorts for<lb/>
tackling Poland's chronic eco-<lb/>
nomic and social ills.<lb/>
Though heartened by the of-<lb/>
fer, wary Solidarity activists said<lb/>
they suspected the government<lb/>
said cooperation between the<lb/>
union movement and oovern-<lb/>
ment now seems "the onlv solu-<lb/>
tion" to Poland's crisis.<lb/>
I le rejected a strike ban, but<lb/>
added: VVe want to discuss eco-<lb/>
nomic reform. " If it works then<lb/>
-<lb/>
ECU to hold Indian program<lb/>
ECU News Hurciu<lb/>
ECU will host a Feb. 22 sym-<lb/>
posium on the native American<lb/>
heritage of Hasten North Carolina<lb/>
focussing on Indian cultures from<lb/>
preshistoric times to the present.<lb/>
Under auspices of the ECU<lb/>
Institute for Historical and Cul-<lb/>
tural Research, the symposium,<lb/>
"In Search of a Lost Heritage<lb/>
will be o interest to native Ameri-<lb/>
cans, social science teachers, ad-<lb/>
vanced high school students, col-<lb/>
lege students and retired persons,<lb/>
according to Dr. Henrv C. Ferrell<lb/>
Jr institute director.<lb/>
The program will include<lb/>
presentations on "Native Ameri-<lb/>
cansTodav by Dr. David K. Elia-<lb/>
des, professor of history and<lb/>
American Indian studies at Pem-<lb/>
broke State University: "The Na-<lb/>
tive American in the Late Prehis-<lb/>
toric Period by Dr. David S.<lb/>
Phelps, professor of anthropol-<lb/>
ogy at ECU; "Cutures in Conflict:<lb/>
the European Intrusion in the 16th<lb/>
and 17th Centuries by Dr. Karen<lb/>
Ordahl Kupperman, professor of<lb/>
history at the University of Con-<lb/>
necticut, and "The Final On-<lb/>
slaught: A Heritage is Lost in the<lb/>
Tuscarora War, " bv Dr. Thomas<lb/>
C. Parramore, professor of history<lb/>
at Meredith College.<lb/>
The Institute for Historical<lb/>
and Cultural Research was estab-<lb/>
lished in the ECU Department of<lb/>
History last year to help discover<lb/>
and preserve the cultural heritage<lb/>
of Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Ferrell said the institute will<lb/>
serve as a clearinghouse for social<lb/>
sciences and humanities disci-<lb/>
plines to work together and pool<lb/>
resources and expertise to pre-<lb/>
serve the cultural history of the<lb/>
region.<lb/>
It works with local historical<lb/>
associations and governmental<lb/>
bodies on projects to identify and<lb/>
develop knowledge of the past,<lb/>
Ferrell said. In addition, it is in-<lb/>
volved in short courses, symosia,<lb/>
technical services and research.<lb/>
Trevathan proposes birth at home<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
fflbm crying. This behavior may<lb/>
rftve evolved from the protection<lb/>
c$a helpless crying baby that may<lb/>
ead preditors to its location.<lb/>
.In contrast, non-human pri-<lb/>
:rtate babies are born facing the<lb/>
rgfcther and the babe's brain is<lb/>
laorc fully developed at birth<lb/>
glose to 30 percent of the brain<lb/>
is developed). Therefore the<lb/>
mother mav assist in the birth and<lb/>
the baby (not as helpless as a<lb/>
human baby) can grab on to its<lb/>
Sther's hair and assist in itsown<lb/>
survival bv beginning to nurse as their babies at home verses a hos-<lb/>
tile mother cleans her baby, pital, it may come from a "deep<lb/>
Manvof these behaviors per- feeling" within the mother that<lb/>
formed by mothers toward their may have originated from some<lb/>
babies suggest survival-oriented evolutionary benefits. These par-<lb/>
evolvement frim early humans, cnts'choices should be taken seri-<lb/>
' It does secmj-aspnab.le to, me ously,torit maynotbejusta'tad<lb/>
that selection favored these kinds<lb/>
of things so that mothers would<lb/>
respond in certain ways to en-<lb/>
hance the chances of their babies<lb/>
surviving said Trevathan.<lb/>
Therefore, Trevathan pro-<lb/>
poses that if mothers want to have<lb/>
that These women decide to have<lb/>
their babies at home says Tre-<lb/>
vathan.<lb/>
GA grants money to ROTC<lb/>
mtinued from page 1<lb/>
"When you're an independ-<lb/>
ent school, you literally have to<lb/>
ome up with 11 games to make<lb/>
Our season Hart said.<lb/>
"Instead of feeling sorry for<lb/>
aaarselves, we need to raise our<lb/>
standard Hart said in reference<lb/>
If last year's overbearing sched-<lb/>
ule<lb/>
S Hart said that plans to in-<lb/>
crease the stadium's capacity to<lb/>
50,000 will be a multi-million dol-<lb/>
lar project that would be privately<lb/>
-funded. He also noted that a re-<lb/>
gional athletic facility would<lb/>
greatly enhance eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
In other business, the SGA<lb/>
appropriated $200 to send two<lb/>
SGA executives to a national con-<lb/>
ference being held in Dallas,<lb/>
Texas.<lb/>
The Air Force ROTC was also<lb/>
granted $1,111 to send members<lb/>
of the Arnold Air Society to an<lb/>
area conclave.<lb/>
On Feb. 6th, Chancellor Rich-<lb/>
ard Eakin is scheduled to speak at<lb/>
the weekly meeting.<lb/>
CLIAHE,<lb/>
??<lb/>
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will not sign any agreement at the<lb/>
cost of Solidarity's independence.<lb/>
Alter Sunday's Mass, about<lb/>
1,000 people marched from the<lb/>
church chanting, "Solidarity!<lb/>
Solidarity! Legalize Solidarity<lb/>
Police blocked the march after a<lb/>
few blocks and the group dis-<lb/>
banded peacefully.<lb/>
Solidarity's statement Sun-<lb/>
day said that by agreeing to nego-<lb/>
tiate its reinstatement, the gov-<lb/>
ernment had met its conditions<lb/>
for beginning the talks authorities<lb/>
first proposed during a series of<lb/>
strikes in August.<lb/>
"VVe arc responding, stretch-<lb/>
ing out our hand because the<lb/>
other side stretched out its hand<lb/>
too said Walesa.<lb/>
Dr. Doucs<lb/>
Zany Showg<lb/>
Wednesday Night January 25th<lb/>
It's the best of Dr. Doug's hilarious comedy.<lb/>
All put on by our own Zany Rio Staff. Lead<lb/>
by none other than our own Zany "Mr. Doug" DJ.<lb/>
Show starts at 10 pm so don't be lateyou<lb/>
don't want to miss this one!<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058118_0004"/><lb/>
SJje iEaat damltman<lb/>
Pete Feknald, owaMou<lb/>
Stephanie Folsom, rt-injrm <lb/>
James F.J. McKee, PiwrtorofUarrm<lb/>
Tim Hampton, n? e?<lb/>
KK1STEN HALBERG,ssiOT<lb/>
Chip Carter, ??? uor<lb/>
Dean Waters, crMgr,<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, s<lb/>
Brad Bannister, g, ?r<lb/>
Jeff Parker, st u?c?<lb/>
TOM FURR, Orcwiifun M?ui$rr<lb/>
SUSAN HOWELL, Production Mflrwgtr<lb/>
Stephanie Emory,a u supcrx?<lb/>
Mac Clark, bw.ssM?u(e<lb/>
January 24. 189<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
MASCOT<lb/>
PeeDee or not PeeDee?<lb/>
That is the question.<lb/>
v<lb/>
 "f<lb/>
A point tor consideration by our Image<lb/>
Enhancement Committee is to narrow<lb/>
down all the symbols used to represent East<lb/>
Carolina?there are over a hundred alto-<lb/>
gether, taking into account all the various<lb/>
stationery and notices sent out from here.<lb/>
Also among those manv images are differ-<lb/>
ent versions of our mascot, the Tirate.<lb/>
The most common image oi the Tirate is<lb/>
the one displayed by the Athletic Depart-<lb/>
ment, the cartoon-style pirate with his<lb/>
scowl and barrel-chested march. Though<lb/>
officially this mascot's name isn't PeeDee,<lb/>
everyone still refers to it by that name.<lb/>
When the school decided to change the<lb/>
old pirate (which looked like a prate) to this<lb/>
new image, several students and alumni<lb/>
protested, but with no results. When the<lb/>
decision was made to let a second-grade<lb/>
class pick the name for the new pirate,<lb/>
people protested again, more vehemently<lb/>
this time, and "officially" the name PeeDee<lb/>
was dropped.<lb/>
In truth, the students opposing the name<lb/>
won nothing, because most people still<lb/>
identify the image with that name. The<lb/>
students lost anyway, because they didn't<lb/>
have a voice in deciding what the mascot<lb/>
that represented them was to look like.<lb/>
Those who did decide the look decided<lb/>
our mascot should look more like UNC's<lb/>
and N.C State's mascots. The change<lb/>
seemed to imply that we were trying to look<lb/>
more like an ACC school.<lb/>
Why? We're not in the ACC, nor going to<lb/>
be a part of it. The old pirate was an image<lb/>
of it's own, and it helped show our indi-<lb/>
viduality. We are not UNC-Chapel Hill or<lb/>
State, and there's no reason we should feel<lb/>
we have to be. If a local survey were to be<lb/>
taken, a large percentage would probably<lb/>
admit they preferred a more realistic pirate.<lb/>
The old pirate may not have looked as pol-<lb/>
ished and professional as the new one, but<lb/>
it was ours and not an imitation of another<lb/>
school's mascot. An ideal solution would be<lb/>
to revise the more realistic pirate and create<lb/>
a new image that we could be proud of, one<lb/>
that was uniquely East Carolina's.<lb/>
Perhaps the time has come to bring the<lb/>
issue of our mascot up for consideration<lb/>
again. Shouldn't the people represented by<lb/>
a svmbol be the ones with the most sav in<lb/>
deciding on it?<lb/>
Student bothered by rascist words<lb/>
FOR THE HOMELESS,<lb/>
,WPER THE REAGAN<lb/>
Iapminisikation;<lb/>
LIFE KfilNSAT<lb/>
CONCEPTION,<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I did not grow up in the South; in<lb/>
fact, 1 grew up in part of this country<lb/>
where a Black American was intrigu-<lb/>
ing, the kind of person everyone<lb/>
wanted to get to know so they could<lb/>
find out more about his lifestyle, and<lb/>
about his black heritage. I also grew<lb/>
up in a part of this culture where<lb/>
every child, by the time he was in<lb/>
seventh grade, knew something<lb/>
about the African culture and the<lb/>
roots of our black population. Black<lb/>
people were my friends, my neigh-<lb/>
bors, my teachers, my doctors  they<lb/>
were people!<lb/>
When 1 moved to the South, I was<lb/>
appalled.<lb/>
Ignorace, bigotry and terrible<lb/>
negative attitudes about race, creed<lb/>
and color are extremely prevalent in<lb/>
theSouth. This is not to say that this<lb/>
doesn't exist in other parts of the<lb/>
country, but never before had 1 seen a<lb/>
person proud to call a Black Ameri-<lb/>
can, (who is the same as a White<lb/>
American with the exception of the<lb/>
amount of melanin produced in their<lb/>
skin,) nigger j. mm<lb/>
What does this word mean to<lb/>
you, that's right, you sitting there<lb/>
reading this, what does it mean to<lb/>
you? To me it means stupidity, not to<lb/>
the person being called this worth-<lb/>
less word, but stupidity on the part of<lb/>
the person saying it. I feel this word<lb/>
should have been abolished right<lb/>
along with slavery. It does not belong<lb/>
in this society, for we have too many-<lb/>
other social ills that need to be dealt<lb/>
with.<lb/>
Martin Luther King Jrsbirlhday<lb/>
was celebrated for the first time this<lb/>
year, in honor of a man with a won-<lb/>
derful dream. Let us honor this man<lb/>
and the incredible good he did to this<lb/>
country by deleting the word<lb/>
"nigger" form every person's vo-<lb/>
cabulary.<lb/>
We have two ears and one<lb/>
mouth, enabling us to listen to twice<lb/>
as much as we sav. I think it is time<lb/>
people actually heard what they<lb/>
were saying, and stopped to think<lb/>
about it. I am positive many oi you<lb/>
would be surprised!<lb/>
Robin M. Andrews<lb/>
junior<lb/>
Anthropology<lb/>
Condom machines<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
On January 12, 1989, 1 read an<lb/>
article in favor of the installation oi<lb/>
condom vending machines on the<lb/>
ECU campus. I think it was a good<lb/>
example of the attitude oi Americans<lb/>
? in addressing their problems. We<lb/>
either throw money at them, often<lb/>
milVptmsof dollars, or find waysto get<lb/>
around them. Ms. Bohannon, author<lb/>
of the January 12 editorial, says a<lb/>
possible solution to sexually trans-<lb/>
mitted diseases like AIDS might be<lb/>
the installation of condom vending<lb/>
machines in the dormitories.<lb/>
If we consider the positive as-<lb/>
pects fo doing this, we'll find that<lb/>
thev are few and uncertain.<lb/>
Condoms might prevent the spread<lb/>
of sexually transmitted diseases<lb/>
Thev might prevent AIDS from be-<lb/>
coming a bigger plague than it al-<lb/>
ready has become. If AIDS could be<lb/>
contracted from casual contact, then<lb/>
we should do everything possible to<lb/>
stop it. However, when it comes to<lb/>
sexual transmission of AIDS, there is<lb/>
only one thing that will stop it: re-<lb/>
sponsibility. This University is m I<lb/>
responsible for the way we choose to<lb/>
live our lives, but only to inform, f<lb/>
you are truly concerned about this<lb/>
disease and the facts about the way it<lb/>
is transmitted, then find out what<lb/>
you're sleeping with before you sleep<lb/>
with it!<lb/>
To install these machines on our<lb/>
campus because other schools do it<lb/>
not only makes ECU a follower in-<lb/>
stead of a leader but also makes us<lb/>
look like we can't have an original<lb/>
thought and is not a reason for future<lb/>
policies. Another negative is that it<lb/>
could affect the financial support oi<lb/>
our outstanding medical school and<lb/>
growing athletic program.<lb/>
Although I am only 1 in 15,000<lb/>
hero at ECU, there is no way I would<lb/>
support East Carolina, either finan-<lb/>
cially when I gpacbiate ot.jn. temple<lb/>
recognition, if these machines are in-<lb/>
troduced. It would show that we not<lb/>
onlv lack morality but also self-re-<lb/>
spect. ECU cannot afford to lose sup-<lb/>
port simply because an overheated<lb/>
student was too lazy to spend 10 min-<lb/>
utes going to the drug store.<lb/>
Michael W. Hunt<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Tropical Chic - Saving the rain forests from their saviors<lb/>
Bv FRED BARNES<lb/>
New Republic<lb/>
In case anyone is wondering where Peter Max<lb/>
has been since the early 1970s, the answer is "in crea-<lb/>
tive retreat according to a spokesman. But now<lb/>
Max is back, and he's determined to use his art "to<lb/>
show his concern for planetary issues especially<lb/>
the preservation of tropical forests. For instance,<lb/>
Max has produced a "quality line of sportswear"<lb/>
that features shirts saying "Save the Rainforest" and<lb/>
"Hug a Tree The proceeds will be donated to Peter<lb/>
Max's bank account. But don't get the wrong idea;<lb/>
Max says he plans to hold a SI million auction of his<lb/>
work, and that money will go to the Rainforest<lb/>
Action Network, a San Francisco-based organiza-<lb/>
tion devoted to linking rain forest activities.<lb/>
That's a lot of linking. Max is but one of many<lb/>
cultural heroes who have lined up for the hottest<lb/>
political cause since world hunger. The British rock<lb/>
star Sting has done a rain forest benefit concert at the<lb/>
Kennedy Center. And the Grateful Dead, though<lb/>
long known for consciousness raising, had never<lb/>
raised it for any specific political cause until last<lb/>
September's benefit concert for tropical forests at<lb/>
Madison Square Garden. The audience received an<lb/>
extensive information kit, including ready-to-send<lb/>
postcards to officials at the World Bank, at the<lb/>
United Nations Environment Program, in Congress,<lb/>
and in Brazil. Also: quotes from band members,<lb/>
including drummer Mickey Hart's meditation on "a<lb/>
profound understanding of man's biochemical rela-<lb/>
tionship with nature Suzanne Vega and Roger<lb/>
Homsby sang at the concert, and Kermit the Frog<lb/>
was featured in a "Save the Rainforests" film.<lb/>
Tropical chic is particularly evident in Washing-<lb/>
ton, D.C. The Smithsonian is featuring a major exhi-<lb/>
bition on rain forests, the National Zoo is raising<lb/>
money to start its own tropical forest, and environ-<lb/>
mental groups are staffing up on lobbyists and<lb/>
grass-roots activists in the area. Among politicians,<lb/>
tropical forest preservation has moved up the charts<lb/>
to rate mention not only by members of Congress,<lb/>
but by former presidents Ford and Carter and Presi-<lb/>
dent Bush.<lb/>
There is one problem with all of this. Backers of<lb/>
the rain forest movement are mostly in the United<lb/>
States or other modern industrialized countries. The<lb/>
rain forests are not. They're mostly in developing<lb/>
countries, which face other, more pressing issues,<lb/>
such as feeding their growing populations. So two<lb/>
questions must be answered. First, why is it our<lb/>
business to tell Brazil, Indonesia, and other forested<lb/>
countries what to do with their forests? And, assum-<lb/>
ing there's an answer to that question, how can we in<lb/>
developed countries convince the forested countries<lb/>
they should listen to us?<lb/>
The standard answer to the first question is that<lb/>
the whole world is affected by tropical deforestation,<lb/>
so everyone should have a say in what happens to<lb/>
the forests. The best-known spillover effect is global<lb/>
warming, caused by emission of carbon dioxide and<lb/>
other gases. Deforestation (often to create farmland<lb/>
or ranch land, or just for the lumber) contributes to<lb/>
the greenhouse effect in two ways: burning the trees<lb/>
releases carbon dioxide into the environment, and<lb/>
cutting them reduces the number of trees on hand to<lb/>
convert carbon dioxide back into oxygen. The effect<lb/>
of deforestation on warming is substantial, perhaps<lb/>
one-third of the effect of all burning of fossii fuels.<lb/>
Estimates of the rate of tropical deforestation vary<lb/>
from 27,000 square miles per year (a bit larger than<lb/>
West Virginia) to 77,000 square miles (Nebraska). At<lb/>
the latter rate, the tropical forests, now covering<lb/>
about seven percent of the world's land surface, will<lb/>
disappear by 2050. Recent satellite photos that show<lb/>
thousands of fires in Brazil, ruining 31,000 square<lb/>
miles of virgin forest per year, suggest the higher<lb/>
number may be more accurate.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the problem of global warming<lb/>
can seem abstract and distant to political leaders<lb/>
struggling with crises of debt, hunger, population<lb/>
growth, and urbanization. More to the point, even if,<lb/>
say, Brazil does recognize the gravity of the green-<lb/>
house effect, why should it sacrifice for the entire<lb/>
world? After all, northern countries don't have a<lb/>
long history of such sacrifice. They got rich by cut-<lb/>
ting their forests and exploiting their minerals. In<lb/>
fact, even since the environmental toll of economic<lb/>
development became evident, northern nations<lb/>
haven't posted a strong record. The United States,<lb/>
for example, has been blocked by political bickering<lb/>
from taking strong action on acid rain. So Third<lb/>
World leaders can justifiably tell us to clean up our<lb/>
own back yard before telling them to clean up theirs.<lb/>
In particular, they can demand that we cut our own,<lb/>
sky-high consumption of fossil fuels, which contrib-<lb/>
utes substantially to global warming.<lb/>
In short, demanding unilateral action from the<lb/>
Southern Hemisphere in the nameof the greenhouse<lb/>
effect is unlikely to do any good. And it may back-<lb/>
fire, since U.S. pressure is easily seen as Yankee<lb/>
imperialism.<lb/>
To be sure, in trying to drive home the urgency<lb/>
of saving the rain forests, we can always note, cor-<lb/>
rectly, that the greenhouse effect is not the only<lb/>
problem. Consider the loss of "biodiversity Tropi-<lb/>
cal forests hold over half of all terrestrial species, and<lb/>
perhaps over 90 percent. Deforestation, at current<lb/>
rates, will lead to a greater extinction of species than<lb/>
accompanied the demise of the dinosaurs. It is hard<lb/>
to reduce this issue to cost and benefits. Ecologists<lb/>
warn about the large and unpredictable effects that<lb/>
would follow such a mass extinction. Scientists<lb/>
worry about losing the world's most complex<lb/>
ecosystems before most species there are even cata-<lb/>
logued, must less studied. Genetic engineers will<lb/>
feel cheated by the loss of their chief feedstock, new<lb/>
genes, just when biotechnology is opening the trop-<lb/>
ics' genetic diversity to myriad new uses. And many<lb/>
people find human-caused extinctions wrong for<lb/>
moral and aesthetic reasons (which, of all the con-<lb/>
cerns about biodiversity, turn out to carry the<lb/>
greatest political clout).<lb/>
Still, with biodiversity as with the green-<lb/>
house effect, the question arises: Why should<lb/>
southern nations especially care? Clearing the<lb/>
forests brings them short-term economic gains?<lb/>
at least to their cattle ranchers and governing<lb/>
elites?even if it impedes sustainable economic<lb/>
development. But the long-term, more abstract<lb/>
benefits of saving the forests accrue mostly to the<lb/>
north. Thafs where the biocngineering and<lb/>
pharmaceutical companies are, and that's where<lb/>
most of the biologists and taxonomists and Na-<lb/>
tional Geographic photographers are.<lb/>
Given that moral suasion is largely uncon-<lb/>
vincing and ineffective, how are we to get tropi-<lb/>
cal nations to do what we want? Some have<lb/>
proposed boycotting imports of beef raised on<lb/>
burned-out forest plantations, or wood logged in<lb/>
non-sustainable ways. This approach may some-<lb/>
times work, but it also risks trade retaliation, and<lb/>
it suggests a moral high ground that we may not,<lb/>
in fact, have. Suppose the tropical countries, or<lb/>
other countries, started boycotting U.S. products<lb/>
whose manufacturer entailed the burning of<lb/>
fossil fuels (i.e most U.S. products). How would<lb/>
we feel about that?<lb/>
The fact is that if the world wants southern<lb/>
nations to stop burning their tropical forests, the<lb/>
world is going to have to pay them to do it. It can<lb/>
either pay them in the same currency, by forging<lb/>
some international environmental agreement<lb/>
under which all nations cut their various contri-<lb/>
butions to the greenhouse effect, or it can pay<lb/>
them with money. For now, the latter is simpler.<lb/>
And the mechanism tor it already exists. The<lb/>
World Bank and the other multilateral develop-<lb/>
ment banks (MDBs), such as the Inter-American<lb/>
Development Bank, make more than $24 billion<lb/>
in loans and credits available each year to devel-<lb/>
oping countries. These agencies have been criti-<lb/>
cized for funding projects that cause great envi-<lb/>
ronmental harm. Because the United States and<lb/>
other developed nations provide the funding,<lb/>
they can require the MDBs to pick projects that<lb/>
preserve the forests. There are signs that this is<lb/>
starting already.<lb/>
The idea of subsidizing the preservation oi<lb/>
rain forests has been picked up by some environ-<lb/>
mental groups in the form of "debt-for-nature<lb/>
swaps" that have offered an attractive deal to<lb/>
debtor nations including Costa Rica, Bolivia, and<lb/>
Ecuador. In these swaps, environmental groups<lb/>
buy up debt in hard-to-gct dollars. In return, the<lb/>
debtor government agrees to make conservation<lb/>
investments in the local currency. The symbol-<lb/>
ism is apt: rather than "borrowing" short-term<lb/>
from their natural resources, the nations reduce<lb/>
debt by preserving those resources. The swaps<lb/>
expand parklands, sponsor environmental edu-<lb/>
cation and research, and provide funding for<lb/>
maintaining parklands that otherwise often exist<lb/>
only in theory.<lb/>
But debt-for-nature swaps remain tiny com<lb/>
pared with the economics of the overall debt prob-<lb/>
lem. A far greater help to the rain forests would be an<lb/>
aggressive debt reduction plan that would directly<lb/>
ease the pressure on developing countries to exploit<lb/>
their resources so rapidly. Tropical forest preserva-<lb/>
tion can become a major issue in LDC debt negotia-<lb/>
tions, joining traditional concerns about promoting<lb/>
democracy and maintaining economic stability.<lb/>
Environmental groups are pushing for such a solu-<lb/>
tion, and Latin American governments arc starting<lb/>
to see how effective the greenhouse effect could be in<lb/>
getting them more debt relief than they receive<lb/>
under the Baker Plan's renewed loans.<lb/>
As the debt-for-nature swaps illustrate, envi-<lb/>
ronmental groups have done a fair amount of hard-<lb/>
nosed thinking about saving the rain forests. And<lb/>
the statements attributed to their celebrity patrons,<lb/>
for the most part, have been strikingly well in-<lb/>
formed. But it's important to remember that con-<lb/>
science alone won't save a single tree, and the for-<lb/>
ested countries are unlikely to respond favorably to<lb/>
stirring moral pleas or self-righteous demands.<lb/>
.?<lb/>
w. ??<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0005"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
THLCASTCAKOUNiAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, H 5<lb/>
Miami now 'under control<lb/>
MI AM HAD - A police of ficer<lb/>
ot a black man in one of the<lb/>
ighborhoods torn bv riots last<lb/>
eek, but a recurrence of the vio-<lb/>
nce that left one dead and stores<lb/>
ted and burned seemed un-<lb/>
k?  authorities said today.<lb/>
"It's under control. It's all<lb/>
iiet Police Sgt. Robert Ed-<lb/>
ards said a tew hours after late<lb/>
- inday s shooting in the Liberty<lb/>
a section.<lb/>
I he man was in stable but<lb/>
" ot critical condition" at lackson<lb/>
Memorial Hospital, said hospital<lb/>
pokesman Mark Santo.<lb/>
Circumstances surrounding<lb/>
oting were not immedi-<lb/>
itely released by police, but<lb/>
I ?. ardssaid only a tew residents<lb/>
 the shooting which cor-<lb/>
?ned off until about 2:30 riot-<lb/>
kvctir) city was best to the Super<lb/>
Police put on shows of force<lb/>
i the troubled black neighbor-<lb/>
hoods of Liberty City and Over-<lb/>
town, where the shooting of a<lb/>
black motorcyclist a week ago<lb/>
today triggered three days of riot-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Many residents of Overtown<lb/>
spent Sunday washing cars, play-<lb/>
ing basketball, cruising the streets<lb/>
past housing projects and watch-<lb/>
ing the San Francisco 49ers defeat<lb/>
the Cincinnati Bengals 20-16.<lb/>
"There's more excitement<lb/>
about the game now than about<lb/>
what happened' said Anthony<lb/>
Rurnes, 28, who donned a Bengals<lb/>
T-shirt to watch the game with<lb/>
fri :nds. "Everything seems nor-<lb/>
m. now<lb/>
A panel ot police officers and<lb/>
Overtown residents were sched-<lb/>
uled to hold their first working<lb/>
meeting today to investigate the<lb/>
shooting of Clement Lloyd, 23,<lb/>
who was shot in the head by Offi-<lb/>
cer William Lozano while being<lb/>
pursued by another officer for<lb/>
speeding.<lb/>
Lloyd was to be buried Mon-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
His passenger, Allen Blan-<lb/>
chard, 24, who suffered fatal inju-<lb/>
ries when the motorcycle crashed,<lb/>
was buried Saturday.<lb/>
The Hispanic officer is on<lb/>
leave with pay pending the probe<lb/>
by local and federal authorities.<lb/>
Miami had agonized about<lb/>
the tarnish to the city's image<lb/>
from rioting during what was<lb/>
supposed to be a week to show-<lb/>
case the city to the world.<lb/>
"Put parties, anxiety behind:<lb/>
It's game day implored a banner<lb/>
headline in The Miami Herald en<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
Police allowed only Super<lb/>
Bowl ticket-holders close to Joe<lb/>
Robbie Stadium north of Miami.<lb/>
Twenty-four people were ar-<lb/>
rested on the grounds on charges<lb/>
ranging from theft to loitering<lb/>
during the Super Bowl.<lb/>
"We didn't get mugged at all.<lb/>
We were going to stay in the hotel<lb/>
because of the rioting, but we<lb/>
were a long ways from it Pat<lb/>
Murphy oi Great Falls, Mont<lb/>
said outside the stadium. "1<lb/>
didn't seeanything going on. " I'll<lb/>
come back<lb/>
Rioting by blacks left one man<lb/>
dead, and 11 cithers wounded<lb/>
with gunshots. Thirteen build-<lb/>
ings were torched and others<lb/>
looted, and 372 people were ar-<lb/>
rested, authorities said.<lb/>
About 150 ot those arrested<lb/>
were unable to pest $250 bail and<lb/>
would not be arraigned again<lb/>
until today, police said. If they<lb/>
plead guilty, thee probably<lb/>
would be released for time<lb/>
served, said Sgt. Mike Mazur, a<lb/>
police spokesman.<lb/>
On Sunday morning, New<lb/>
York civil rights attorney C. Ver-<lb/>
non Mason and two members of<lb/>
Miami's black community an-<lb/>
lounced formation of People<lb/>
Jnited For Justice In Miami.<lb/>
n "TCBV<lb/>
Sweetheart Pies<lb/>
A sweet gift iJcd yom umheart or whole tamilv<lb/>
? ? AckkwtB "TGMT vu?-theart Pie<lb/>
"? v, t.K fret (it Men Vanilla cw .tra?berr fro:en<lb/>
yogurt ?ith almost half the clones ot<lb/>
premium net ream, topped with fresh<lb/>
strawberries. This delettahle dessert<lb/>
is pleasing to the waist as well as rhe<lb/>
taste. So take home a "TC8V"<lb/>
Sweetheart Pie or am ot our<lb/>
rjdkious pies, anj '?hare it with y ti<lb/>
sweetheart.<lb/>
Nobody treats<lb/>
you LIKE<lb/>
TCBV<lb/>
???<lb/>
IV<lb/>
SM<lb/>
Recipient of Federal Grant<lb/>
Program to fight drug abuse I READ<lb/>
325 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville (Beside Little Caesars)<lb/>
$L00 OFF LARGE<lb/>
"TCBV" PIE.<lb/>
"TCBV<lb/>
"V, .Turn im i aypor r?Wr o?Opnn W or gr txy yn . ? srr .a<lb/>
Ma (oru jn.i : pjm.p?fm TBY ? i'?n "wi .??  ? ? n-<lb/>
Offer expires: 2-14-88<lb/>
tt<lb/>
JhtLiunlri) flW hnjun ?<lb/>
1. I- News Kurcju<lb/>
A program to fight substance<lb/>
?e with education is being<lb/>
si tblished at ECU under a<lb/>
? I '?? grant from the U.S. De-<lb/>
11 tmi nt ot Education.<lb/>
! he two year grant will give<lb/>
an office and full-time direc-<lb/>
tor to coordinate drug use preven-<lb/>
and education activities.<lb/>
David A. Susina, a former<lb/>
sid nee counselor at ECU, will<lb/>
? ct the program. A native oi<lb/>
Birmingham, Alabama, Susina<lb/>
as worked with alcohol and<lb/>
rug prevention efforts at ECU<lb/>
for the past six years.<lb/>
Susina said the new program<lb/>
work closely with student<lb/>
ips such as Students Against<lb/>
Drunk Driving (SADD) and<lb/>
BACCHUS, a group that pro-<lb/>
motes responsible drinking. He<lb/>
said the program will also con-<lb/>
duct workshops, coordinate na-<lb/>
tional alcohol and drug aware-<lb/>
ness programs at ECU, provide<lb/>
referrals for people with sub-<lb/>
stance abuse problems, offer a<lb/>
resource library, and plans to<lb/>
organize a campus chapter oi<lb/>
Alcoholics Anonymous.<lb/>
The new program and oiicc<lb/>
was established in January. Of-<lb/>
fices are located in Room 303 of<lb/>
the Erwin Building. The phone<lb/>
number on campus is 757-6793.<lb/>
"We really want to stress the<lb/>
prevention and education aspect<lb/>
oi substance abuse said Susina.<lb/>
"We feel like people have a<lb/>
background of use of substances<lb/>
by the time thev come to college.<lb/>
We want to work with the stu-<lb/>
dents to help them make good<lb/>
and responsible decisions if they<lb/>
choose to use alcohol or drugs<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
The program is the result oi a<lb/>
proposal written by a 1-4 member<lb/>
planning committee of staff, fac-<lb/>
ulty and community profession-<lb/>
als. Jerry Lottcrhos, director of the<lb/>
AlcoholDrug Program in the<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences,<lb/>
chaired the committee.<lb/>
Senility can be side effect of medication<lb/>
ECU New Bureau<lb/>
Epis dcs oi confusion, disori-<lb/>
? ition and forgetfulness in the<lb/>
i rlv often thought to be signs<lb/>
? ility, may also occur as side<lb/>
? -? FrtSrri some medications<lb/>
n m nly prescribed for the<lb/>
I a pharmacist at the ECU<lb/>
ol of Medicine suggests.<lb/>
Dr. Doyle M. Cummings, as-<lb/>
- i int professor oi family medi-<lb/>
and head of clinical phar-<lb/>
: y at the medical school's<lb/>
trnil) Practice Center, will fur-<lb/>
2r his study oi the effects oi<lb/>
i immonly prescribed drugs on<lb/>
elderly through a $125,000<lb/>
I roject funded by the Kate B.<lb/>
? Ids Health Care Trust of<lb/>
 inston-Salem.<lb/>
The philanthropic organiza-<lb/>
n awards S3 million each year<lb/>
non-profit agencies in North<lb/>
ir lina involved in projects di-<lb/>
? d toward alternative and<lb/>
ventive health care.<lb/>
Cummings'three year project<lb/>
ill include the development of a<lb/>
gional resource center for geri-<lb/>
itric pharmacology. Through the<lb/>
center, continuing education pro-<lb/>
grams will be ottered to physi-<lb/>
cians who prescribe medication<lb/>
for their elderly patients.<lb/>
"The elderly are the largest<lb/>
consumers of medication and are<lb/>
at the greatest risk for side effects<lb/>
from these1 drugs said Cum-<lb/>
mings. "Previous research has<lb/>
shown that the elderly eliminate<lb/>
medication at a slower rate than<lb/>
younger adults; therefore, doc-<lb/>
tors and pharmacists need to pay<lb/>
special attention to the drug<lb/>
needs oi this growing segment oi<lb/>
the population<lb/>
Antihistamines, anti-depres-<lb/>
sants, sedatives and blood pres-<lb/>
sure medications can have dra-<lb/>
matic side effects in elderly pa-<lb/>
tients, Cummings said.<lb/>
Depending on the dosages,<lb/>
these drugs can also be respon-<lb/>
sible for falls, changes in behavior<lb/>
and delirium in some patients, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In the project, Cummings<lb/>
plans to work closely with doctors<lb/>
to reduce toxicitv in their elderlv<lb/>
atients while continuing to treat<lb/>
leir primary ailments.<lb/>
CLASS, FACULTY AND<lb/>
STAFF PORTRAITS<lb/>
Portraits for all classes will be taken from Jan. 23 through<lb/>
Jan. 27. Pictures will be taken in the Soda Shop at the<lb/>
Student Store from 9 a.m12 p.m. and 1 p.m4:30 p.m.<lb/>
This is the only opportunity to have your picture taken for<lb/>
the 1989 Buccaneer Yearbook.<lb/>
IT ISN'T YOUR YEARBOOK UNTIL<lb/>
YOU'RE IN IT!<lb/>
New campus buzz words are:<lb/>
(CPS) - In itsannual report of<lb/>
 "buzzwords" that have<lb/>
spread to campuses nationwide,<lb/>
National Association oi Col-<lb/>
ge Stores found a new crop of<lb/>
. words peculiar to colleges<lb/>
ind universities. Among the find-<lb/>
gs:<lb/>
PC<lb/>
A term menaing "politically<lb/>
rivet Alternatively, someone<lb/>
favor of slavery would be "non-<lb/>
?<lb/>
GROOVY<lb/>
When spoken in a sarcastic<lb/>
. it means stodgy or old-fash-<lb/>
CHILI.<lb/>
As a command, oi course, it<lb/>
ins to calm down. Asanadjec-<lb/>
e, however "chillin can mean<lb/>
mething is great, as in "It was a<lb/>
Ilin'CD<lb/>
TALK TO RALPH ON THE<lb/>
BIG Wl IITE PHONE<lb/>
To vomit.<lb/>
GOOB-A-TRON<lb/>
It's one of several recent vari-<lb/>
ations on goober, nerd, grind,<lb/>
geek and dweeb, as in "Revenge<lb/>
oi the Goob-A-Trons<lb/>
GRANOLA<lb/>
A word used to describe<lb/>
someone who dresses or acts as if<lb/>
the 1960s never ended.<lb/>
BITE MOOSE<lb/>
Get lost.<lb/>
PARALLEL PARKING<lb/>
A term meaning sexual inter-<lb/>
course. "Horizontal bop" also<lb/>
enjoyed a vogue as a euphemism<lb/>
for sex. When one kissed, on the<lb/>
other hand, one "played tonsil<lb/>
hockey" or "boxed tonsils<lb/>
Scholarship established<lb/>
ICV Sews Bureau<lb/>
Samuel C. Winchester, Jr. of<lb/>
Jreenville has honored his wife,<lb/>
Sylvia Weeks Winchester,<lb/>
through the establishment of<lb/>
ECU'S first fully endowed<lb/>
Alumni Honors Scholarship.<lb/>
Mrs. Winchester, who holds a<lb/>
master of science in education<lb/>
from East Carol .a, is a guidance<lb/>
counselor at Pitt County's D.H.<lb/>
Qonley High School.<lb/>
The Sylvia W. Winchester<lb/>
Alumni Honors Scholarship will<lb/>
be awarded annuallv to an out-<lb/>
standing senior at D.H. Conley<lb/>
who chooses to attend ECU. The<lb/>
endowment will provide an an-<lb/>
nual $1,000 scholarship for an<lb/>
ECU student, as long as he or she<lb/>
maintains the academic require-<lb/>
ments of the award.<lb/>
Winchester is technical man-<lb/>
ager of DuPont in Kinston. He is a<lb/>
graduate of North Carolina State<lb/>
University and holds a PhD from<lb/>
Princeton University.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0006"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24,1989 5<lb/>
I<lb/>
Miami now 'under control<lb/>
MIAMI (AP) - A police officer<lb/>
gshot a black man in one of the<lb/>
neighborhoods torn by riots last<lb/>
?week, but a recurrence of the vio-<lb/>
lence that left one dead and stores<lb/>
flooted and burned seemed un-<lb/>
glikely, authorities said today.<lb/>
"It's under control. It's all<lb/>
?quiet Police Sgt. Robert Ed-<lb/>
wards said a few hours after late<lb/>
Sunday's shooting in the Liberty<lb/>
City section.<lb/>
The man was in "stable but<lb/>
not critical condition" at Jackson<lb/>
Memorial Hospital, said hospital<lb/>
spokesman Mark Santo.<lb/>
Circumstances surrounding<lb/>
the shooting were not immedi-<lb/>
.ately released by police, but<lb/>
 Edwards said only a few residents<lb/>
? were at the shooting which cor-<lb/>
Kdoned off until about 2:30 riot-<lb/>
Hjkveary city was host to the Super<lb/>
Bowl.<lb/>
Police put on shows of force<lb/>
in the troubled black neighbor-<lb/>
hoods oi Liberty City and Over-<lb/>
town, where the shooting of a<lb/>
black motorcyclist a week ago<lb/>
today triggered three days of riot-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Many residents of Overtown<lb/>
spent Sunday washing cars, play-<lb/>
ing basketball, cruising the streets<lb/>
past housing projects and watch-<lb/>
ing the San Francisco 49crs defeat<lb/>
the Cincinnati Bengals 20-16.<lb/>
"There's more excitement<lb/>
about the game now than about<lb/>
what happened said Anthony<lb/>
Burnes, 28, who donned a Bengals<lb/>
T-shirt to watch the game with<lb/>
friends. "Everything seems nor-<lb/>
mal now<lb/>
A panel of police officers and<lb/>
Overtown residents were sched-<lb/>
uled to hold their first working<lb/>
meeting today to investigate the<lb/>
shooting of Clement Lloyd, 23,<lb/>
who was shot in the head by Offi-<lb/>
cer William Lozano while being<lb/>
pursued by another officer for<lb/>
speeding.<lb/>
Lloyd was to be buried Mon-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
His passenger, Allen Blan-<lb/>
chard, 24, who suffered fatal inju-<lb/>
ries when the motorcycle crashed,<lb/>
was buried Saturday.<lb/>
The Hispanic officer is on<lb/>
leave with pay pending the probe<lb/>
by local and federal authorities.<lb/>
Miami had agonized about<lb/>
the tarnish to the city's image<lb/>
from rioting during what was<lb/>
supposed to be a week to show-<lb/>
case the city to the world.<lb/>
"Put parties, anxiety behind:<lb/>
It'sgameday implored a banner<lb/>
headline in The Miami Herald on<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
Police allowed only Super<lb/>
Bowl ticket-holders close to Joe<lb/>
Robbie Stadium north of Miami.<lb/>
Twenty-four people were ar-<lb/>
rested on the grounds on charges<lb/>
ranging from theft to loitering<lb/>
during the Super Bowl.<lb/>
"We didn't get mugged at all.<lb/>
Recipient of Federal Grant<lb/>
Program to fight drug abuse<lb/>
We were going to stay in the hotel<lb/>
because of the rioting, but we<lb/>
were a long ways from it Pat<lb/>
Murphy of Great Falls, Mont<lb/>
said outside the stadium. "I<lb/>
didn't see anything going on. "I'll<lb/>
come back<lb/>
Rioting by blacks left one man<lb/>
dead, and 11 others wounded<lb/>
with gunshots. Thirteen build-<lb/>
ings were torched and others<lb/>
looted, and 372 people were ar-<lb/>
rested, authorities said.<lb/>
About 150 of those arrested<lb/>
were unable to post $250 bail and<lb/>
would not be arraigned again<lb/>
until today, police said. If they<lb/>
plead guilty, they probably<lb/>
would be released for time<lb/>
served, said Sgt. Mike Mazur, a<lb/>
police spokesman.<lb/>
On Sunday morning, New<lb/>
York civil rights attorney C. Ver-<lb/>
non Mason and two members of<lb/>
Miami's black communitv an-<lb/>
lounced formation of People<lb/>
Jnited Fo? Justice In Miami.<lb/>
"TCBV"<lb/>
Sweetheart Pies<lb/>
A swt? gift idea your sweetheart or whole family<lb/>
will love. A delicious "TMV" Sweetheart Pie<lb/>
- fat-free Golden Vanilla or strawberry frozen<lb/>
yogurt with almost half the calories of<lb/>
premium ice cream, topped with fresh<lb/>
strawberries. This delectable dessert<lb/>
is pleasing to the waist as well as the<lb/>
taste. So take home a "TCtV"<lb/>
Sweetheart Pie or any of our<lb/>
delicious pies, and share it with vour<lb/>
sweetheart.<lb/>
Nobody treats<lb/>
YOU LIKE<lb/>
"tcbv:<lb/>
!??TCBY Svsttms. 1m<lb/>
325 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville (Beside Little Caesars)<lb/>
READ<lb/>
$1-00 OFF LARGE<lb/>
tcbv; PIE.<lb/>
rVitccmcfMriiacoi<lb/>
"i brio ??MM Ow onto jm ;mvtm or cmmmt pm<lb/>
i tm am u? m Jm Ng pod n ?h? ?rt am mtm a<lb/>
Offer food aw m pumipmmi XTf' ? tarn Can m fa at com<lb/>
Offer expires: 2-14-88<lb/>
"TCBV"<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
A program to tight substance<lb/>
abuse with education is being<lb/>
established at ECU under a<lb/>
$139,000 grant from the U.S. De-<lb/>
partment of Education.<lb/>
The two year grant will give<lb/>
ECU an office and full-time direc-<lb/>
tor to coordinate drug use preven-<lb/>
tion and education activities.<lb/>
David A. Susina, a former<lb/>
residence counselor at ECU, will<lb/>
direct the program. A native of<lb/>
Birmingham, Alabama, Susina<lb/>
has worked with alcohol and<lb/>
drug prevention efforts at ECU<lb/>
for the past six years.<lb/>
Susina said the new program<lb/>
will work closely with student<lb/>
groups such as Students Against<lb/>
Drunk Driving (SADD) and<lb/>
BACCHUS, a group that pro-<lb/>
motes responsible drinking. He<lb/>
said the program will also con-<lb/>
duct workshops, coordinate na-<lb/>
tional alcohol and drug aware-<lb/>
ness programs at ECU, provide<lb/>
referrals for people with sub-<lb/>
stance abuse problems, offer a<lb/>
resource library, and plans to<lb/>
organize a campus chapter of<lb/>
Alcoholics Anonymous.<lb/>
The new program and office<lb/>
was established in January. Of-<lb/>
fices are located in Room 303 of<lb/>
the Erwin Building. The phone<lb/>
number on campus is 757-6793.<lb/>
"We really want to stress the<lb/>
prevention and education aspect<lb/>
of substance abuse said Susina.<lb/>
"We feel like people have a<lb/>
background of use of substances<lb/>
by the time they come to college.<lb/>
VVe want to work with the stu-<lb/>
dents to help them make good<lb/>
and responsible decisions if they<lb/>
choose to use alcohol or drugs<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
The program is the result of a<lb/>
proposal written by a 14 member<lb/>
planning committee of staff, fac-<lb/>
ulty and community profession-<lb/>
als. Jerry Lotterhos, director of the<lb/>
AlcoholDrug Program in the<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences,<lb/>
chaired the committee.<lb/>
Senility can be side effect of medication<lb/>
ECU Newt Bureau<lb/>
Episodes of confusion, disori-<lb/>
cntation and forgetfulness in the<lb/>
elderly, often thought to be signs<lb/>
of senility, mav also occur as side<lb/>
efPccits'rorrlrometrrediCarrons'<lb/>
commonly prescribed for the<lb/>
aged, a pharmacist at the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine suggests.<lb/>
Dr. Doyle M. Cummings, as-<lb/>
sistant professor of family medi-<lb/>
cine and head of clinical phar-<lb/>
macy at the medical school's<lb/>
Family Practice Center, will fur-<lb/>
ther his study of the effects of<lb/>
commonlv prescribed drugs on<lb/>
the elderly through a $125,000<lb/>
project funded by the Kate B.<lb/>
Reynolds Health Care Trust of<lb/>
Winston-Salem.<lb/>
The philanthropic organiza-<lb/>
tion awards $3 million each year<lb/>
to non-profit agencies in North<lb/>
Carolina involved in projects di-<lb/>
rected toward alternative and<lb/>
preventive health care.<lb/>
Cummings' three year project<lb/>
will include the development of a<lb/>
regional resource center for geri-<lb/>
atric pharmacology. Through the<lb/>
center, continuing education pro-<lb/>
grams will be offered to physi-<lb/>
cians who prescribe medication<lb/>
for their elderly patients.<lb/>
"The elderly are the largest<lb/>
consumers of medication and are<lb/>
at the greatest risk for side effects<lb/>
from these drugs said Cum-<lb/>
mings. "Previous research has<lb/>
shown that the elderly eliminate<lb/>
medication at a slower rate than<lb/>
younger adults; therefore, doc-<lb/>
tors and pharmacists need to pay<lb/>
special attention to the drug<lb/>
needs of this growing segment of<lb/>
the population<lb/>
Antihistamines, anti-depres-<lb/>
sants, sedatives and blood pres-<lb/>
sure medications can have dra-<lb/>
matic side effects in elderly pa-<lb/>
tients, Cummings said.<lb/>
Depending on the dosages,<lb/>
these drugs can also be respon-<lb/>
sible for falls, changes in behavior<lb/>
and delirium in some patients, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In the project, Cummings<lb/>
plans to work closely with doctors<lb/>
to reduce toxicity in their elderlv<lb/>
patients while continuing to treat<lb/>
their primary ailments.<lb/>
CULTY AND<lb/>
ORTRAITS<lb/>
1 be taken from Jan. 23 through<lb/>
taken in the Soda Shop at the<lb/>
112 p.m. and 1 p.m4:30 p.m.<lb/>
y to have your picture taken for<lb/>
caneer Yearbook.<lb/>
ARBOOK UNTIL<lb/>
E IN IT!<lb/>
New campus buzz words are:<lb/>
(CPS)?In its annual report of<lb/>
new "buzzwords" that have<lb/>
spread to campuses nationwide,<lb/>
the National Association of Col-<lb/>
lege Stores found a new crop of<lb/>
slang words peculiar to colleges<lb/>
and universities. Among the find-<lb/>
ings:<lb/>
PC<lb/>
A term menaing "politically<lb/>
correct Alternatively, someone<lb/>
i n favor of slavery would be "non-<lb/>
PC<lb/>
GROOVY<lb/>
When spoken in a sarcastic<lb/>
tone, it means stodgy or old-fash-<lb/>
ioned.<lb/>
CHILL<lb/>
As a command, of course, it<lb/>
means to calm down. As an adjec-<lb/>
tive, however "chillin can mean<lb/>
something is great, as in "It was a<lb/>
chillin' CD<lb/>
TALK TO RALPH ON THE<lb/>
BIG WHITE PHONE<lb/>
To vomit.<lb/>
GOOB-A-TRON<lb/>
It's one of several recent vari-<lb/>
ations on goober, nerd, grind,<lb/>
geek and dweeb, as in "Revenge<lb/>
of the Goob-A-Trons<lb/>
GRANOLA<lb/>
A word used to describe<lb/>
someone who dresses or acts as ii<lb/>
the 1960s never ended.<lb/>
BITE MOOSE<lb/>
Get lost<lb/>
PARALLEL PARKING<lb/>
A term meaning sexual inter-<lb/>
course. "Horizontal bop" also<lb/>
enjoyed a vogue as a euphemism<lb/>
for sex. When one kissed, on the<lb/>
other hand, one "played tonsil<lb/>
hockey" or "boxed tonsils<lb/>
? i<lb/>
Scholarship established<lb/>
ECU Newt Bureau<lb/>
Samuel C. Winchester, Jr. of<lb/>
Greenville has honored his wife,<lb/>
Sylvia Weeks Winchester,<lb/>
through the establishment of<lb/>
ECU'S first fully endowed<lb/>
Alumni Honors Scholarship.<lb/>
Mrs. Winchester, who holds a<lb/>
master of science in education<lb/>
from East Carolina, is a guidance<lb/>
counselor at Pitt County's D.H.<lb/>
Qonley High School.<lb/>
The Sylvia VV. Winchester<lb/>
Alumni Honors Scholarship will<lb/>
be awarded annually to an out-<lb/>
standing senior at D.H. Conley<lb/>
who chooses to attend ECU. The<lb/>
endowment will provide an an-<lb/>
nual $1,000 scholarship for an<lb/>
ECU student, as long as he or she<lb/>
maintains the academic require-<lb/>
ments of the award.<lb/>
Winchester is technical man-<lb/>
ager of DuPont in Kinston. He is a<lb/>
graduate of North Carolina State<lb/>
University and holds a PhD from<lb/>
Princeton University.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0007"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24,1989 5<lb/>
X<lb/>
Miami now 'under control'<lb/>
s<lb/>
MIAMI (AP) - A police officer<lb/>
?shot a black man in one of the<lb/>
neighborhoods torn by riots last<lb/>
?week, but a recurrence of the vio-<lb/>
glence that left one dead and stores<lb/>
Sloo ted and burned seemed un-<lb/>
Shkely, authorities said today.<lb/>
i'it's under control. It's all<lb/>
.quiet Police Sgt. Robert Ed-<lb/>
 wards said a few hours after late<lb/>
Sunday's shooting in the Liberty<lb/>
fCity section.<lb/>
The man was in "stable but<lb/>
 not critical condition" at Jackson<lb/>
I Memorial Hospital, said hospital<lb/>
I spokesman Mark Santo.<lb/>
Circumstances surrounding<lb/>
I the shooting were not immedi-<lb/>
iately released by police, but<lb/>
I Ed wards said onlv a few residents<lb/>
J<lb/>
 were at the shooting which cor-<lb/>
Idoned off until about 2:30 riot-<lb/>
5uvearv city was host to the Super<lb/>
Bowl.<lb/>
Police put on shows of force<lb/>
in the troubled black neighbor-<lb/>
Lloyd was to be buried Mon-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
His passenger, Allen Blan-<lb/>
chard, 24, who suffered fatal inju-<lb/>
ries when the motorcycle crashed,<lb/>
speeding<lb/>
Recipient of Federal Grant<lb/>
hoods of Liberty City and Over-<lb/>
town, where the shooting of a<lb/>
black motorcyclist a week ago<lb/>
today triggered three days of riot-<lb/>
ing-<lb/>
Many residents of Overtown was buried Saturday,<lb/>
spent Sunday washing cars, play- The Hispanic officer is on<lb/>
ing basketball, cruising the streets<lb/>
past housing projects and watch- leave with pay pending the probe<lb/>
ing the San Francisco 49ers defeat by local and federal authorities,<lb/>
the Cincinnati Bengals 20-16. Miami had agonized about<lb/>
"There's more excitement the tarnish to the city's image<lb/>
about the game now than about from rioting during what was<lb/>
what happened said Anthony supposed to be a week to show-<lb/>
Burnes, 28, who donned a Bengals case the city to the world.<lb/>
T-shirt to watch the game with "Put parties, anxiety behind:<lb/>
friends. "Everything seems nor- It's game day implored a banner<lb/>
mal now headline in The Miami Herald on<lb/>
A panel of police officers and Sunday.<lb/>
Overtown residents were sched: Police allowed only Super<lb/>
ulcd to hold their first working Bowl ticket-holders close to Joe<lb/>
meeting today to investigate the Robbie Stadium north of Miami,<lb/>
shooting of Clement Lloyd, 23, Twenty-four people were ar-<lb/>
who was shot in the head by Offi- rested on the grounds on charges<lb/>
cer William Lozano while being ranging from theft to loitering<lb/>
pursued by another officer for during the Super Bowl.<lb/>
"We didn't get mugged at all.<lb/>
We were going to stay in the hotel<lb/>
because of the rioting, but we<lb/>
were a long ways from it Pat<lb/>
Murphy of Great Falls, Mont<lb/>
said outside the stadium. "I<lb/>
didn't see anything going on I'll<lb/>
come back<lb/>
Rioting by blacks left one man<lb/>
dead, and 11 others wounded<lb/>
with gunshots. Thirteen build-<lb/>
ings were torched and others<lb/>
looted, and 372 people were ar-<lb/>
rested, authorities said.<lb/>
About 150 of those arrested<lb/>
were unable to post $250 bail and<lb/>
would not be arraigned again<lb/>
until today, police said. If they<lb/>
plead guilty, they probably<lb/>
would be released for time<lb/>
served, said Sgt. Mike Mazur, a<lb/>
police spokesman.<lb/>
On Sunday morning, New<lb/>
York civil rights attorney C Ver-<lb/>
non Mason and two members of<lb/>
Miami's black community an-<lb/>
nounced formation of People<lb/>
Jnited For. Justice In Miami.<lb/>
"TCBV"<lb/>
Sweetheart Pies<lb/>
A swtft gift idea your sweetheart or whole family<lb/>
will love. A delicious "TCfV" Sweetheart Pie<lb/>
- 96 fat-free Golden Vanilla or strawberry frozen<lb/>
yogurt with almost half the calories of<lb/>
premium ice cream, topped with fresh<lb/>
strawberries. This delectable dessert<lb/>
is pleasing to the waist as well as the<lb/>
taste. So take home a "TCfV"<lb/>
Sweetheart Pie or any of our<lb/>
delicious pies, and share it with your<lb/>
sweetheart.<lb/>
Nobody treats<lb/>
YOU LIKE<lb/>
"TCBV!<lb/>
l?<lb/>
SM<lb/>
1961 TCBY Svsifms, he.<lb/>
325 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville (Beside Little Caesars)<lb/>
Program to fight drug abuse I READ<lb/>
$L00 OFF LARGE<lb/>
TCBV PIE.<lb/>
 ft! " m? IM ? SOI pOOd l (MUM ? .IK IK OCWt orfm<lb/>
OHn fat oiut aunufamf TCBY' ? urn Cufc ??  ? a mm.<lb/>
Offer expires: 2-14-88<lb/>
fViKiTnmiLhicouooBOrtawixamnt; Om Old. m coast. BR c<lb/>
I<lb/>
"TCBV<lb/>
Tht CnuMtr Best mqurt.<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
A program to tight substance<lb/>
abuse with education is being<lb/>
established at ECU under a<lb/>
$139,000 grant from the U.S. De-<lb/>
partment ot Education.<lb/>
The two year grant will give<lb/>
ECU an office and full-time direc-<lb/>
tor to coordinate drug use preven-<lb/>
tion and education activities.<lb/>
David A. Susina, a former<lb/>
residence counselor at ECU, will<lb/>
direct the program. A native of<lb/>
Birmingham, Alabama, Susina<lb/>
has worked with alcohol and<lb/>
drug prevention efforts at ECU<lb/>
for the past six years.<lb/>
Susina said the new program<lb/>
will work closely with student<lb/>
groups such as Students Against<lb/>
Drunk Driving (SADD) and<lb/>
BACCHUS, a group that pro-<lb/>
motes responsible drinking. He<lb/>
said the program will also con-<lb/>
duct workshops, coordinate na-<lb/>
tional alcohol and drug aware-<lb/>
ness programs at ECU, provide<lb/>
referrals for people with sub-<lb/>
stance abuse problems, offer a<lb/>
resource library, and plans to<lb/>
organize a campus chapter of<lb/>
Alcoholics Anonymous.<lb/>
The new program and office<lb/>
was established in January. Of-<lb/>
fices are located in Room 303 of<lb/>
the Erwin Building. The phone<lb/>
number on campus is 757-6793.<lb/>
"We really want to stress the<lb/>
prevention and education aspect<lb/>
of substance abuse said Susina.<lb/>
"We feel like people have a<lb/>
background of use of substances<lb/>
by the time they come to college.<lb/>
We want to work with the stu-<lb/>
dents to help them make good<lb/>
and responsible decisions if they<lb/>
choose to use alcohol or drugs<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
The program is the result of a<lb/>
proposal written by a 14 member<lb/>
planning committee of staff, fac-<lb/>
ulty and community profession-<lb/>
als. Jerry Lottcrhos, director of the<lb/>
AlcoholDrug Program in the<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences,<lb/>
chaired the committee.<lb/>
Senility can be side effect of medication<lb/>
ECU Nni Bureau<lb/>
Episodes of confusion, disori-<lb/>
cntation and forgetfulness in the<lb/>
elderly, often thought to be signs<lb/>
of senility, may also occur as side<lb/>
efrcytsn1rrSrrtkmctTTtiic:aTtons?'<lb/>
commonly prescribed for the<lb/>
aged, a pharmacist at the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine suggests.<lb/>
center, continuing education pro-<lb/>
grams will be offered to physi-<lb/>
cians who prescribe medication<lb/>
for their elderly patients.<lb/>
"The elderly are the largest<lb/>
consumers of medication and are<lb/>
at the greatest risk for side effects<lb/>
from these drugs said Cum-<lb/>
mings. "Previous research has<lb/>
patients while continuing to treat<lb/>
their primary ailments.<lb/>
CULTY AND<lb/>
ORTRAITS<lb/>
1 be taken from Jan. 23 through<lb/>
taken in the Soda Shop at the<lb/>
L-12 p.m. and 1 p.m4:30 p.m.<lb/>
y to have your picture taken for<lb/>
caneer Yearbook.<lb/>
ARBOOK UNTIL<lb/>
E IN IT!<lb/>
Dr. Doyle M. Cummings, as- shown that the elderly eliminate<lb/>
medication at a slower rate than<lb/>
younger adults; therefore, doc-<lb/>
tors and pharmacists need to pay<lb/>
special attention to the drug<lb/>
needs of this growing segment of<lb/>
the population<lb/>
Antihistamincs, anti-depres-<lb/>
sants, sedatives and blood pres-<lb/>
sure medications can have dra-<lb/>
matic side effects in elderly pa-<lb/>
sistant professor of family medi-<lb/>
cine and head of clinical phar-<lb/>
macy at the medical school's<lb/>
Family Practice Center, will fur-<lb/>
ther his study of the effects of<lb/>
commonlv prescribed drugs on<lb/>
the elderly through a $125,000<lb/>
project funded by the Kate B.<lb/>
Revnolds Health Care Trust of<lb/>
Winston-Salem.<lb/>
The philanthropic organiza- tients, Cummings said<lb/>
tion awards $3 million each year<lb/>
to non-profit agencies in North<lb/>
Carolina involved in projects di-<lb/>
rected toward alternative and<lb/>
preventive health care.<lb/>
Cummings' three year project<lb/>
will include the development of a<lb/>
regional resource center for geri-<lb/>
atric pharmacology. Through the<lb/>
Depending on the dosages,<lb/>
these drugs can also be respon-<lb/>
sible for falls, changes in behavior<lb/>
and delirium in some patients, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In the project, Cummings<lb/>
plans to work closely with doctors<lb/>
to reduce toxicity in their elderlv<lb/>
New campus buzz words are:<lb/>
(CPS)? In its annual report of<lb/>
icw "buzzwords" that have<lb/>
spread to campuses nationwide,<lb/>
the National Association of Col-<lb/>
lege Stores found a new crop of<lb/>
slang words peculiar to colleges<lb/>
and universities. Among the find-<lb/>
ings:<lb/>
PC<lb/>
A term menaing "politically<lb/>
correct Alternatively, someone<lb/>
in favor of slavery would be "non-<lb/>
PC<lb/>
GROOVY<lb/>
When spoken in a sarcastic<lb/>
tone, it means stodgy or old-fash-<lb/>
ioned.<lb/>
CHILL<lb/>
As a command, of course, it<lb/>
means to calm down. As an adjec-<lb/>
tive, however "chillin can mean<lb/>
something is great, as in "It was a<lb/>
rhillin' CD<lb/>
TALK TO RALPH ON THE<lb/>
BIG WHITE PHONE<lb/>
To vomit.<lb/>
GOOB-A-TRON<lb/>
It's one of several recent vari-<lb/>
ations on goober, nerd, grind,<lb/>
geek and dweeb, as in "Revenge<lb/>
of the Goob-A-Trons<lb/>
GRANOLA<lb/>
A word used to describe<lb/>
someone who dresses or acts as ii<lb/>
the 1960s never ended.<lb/>
BITE MOOSE<lb/>
Get lost.<lb/>
PARALLEL PARKING<lb/>
A term meaning sexual inter-<lb/>
course. "Horizontal bop" also<lb/>
enjoyed a vogue as a euphemism<lb/>
for sex. When one kissed, on the<lb/>
other hand, one "played tonsil<lb/>
hockey" or "boxed tonsils<lb/>
Scholarship established<lb/>
ECV New I Bureau<lb/>
Samuel C. Winchester, Jr. of<lb/>
Greenville has honored his wife,<lb/>
Sylvia Weeks Winchester,<lb/>
through the establishment of<lb/>
ECU'S first fully endowed<lb/>
Alumni Honors Scholarship.<lb/>
Mrs. Winchester, who holds a<lb/>
master of science in education<lb/>
from East Carolina, is a guidance<lb/>
counselor at Pitt County s D.H.<lb/>
Gonley High School.<lb/>
The Sylvia VV. Winchester<lb/>
Alumni Honors Scholarship will<lb/>
be awarded annually to an out-<lb/>
standing senior at D.H. Conley<lb/>
who chooses to attend ECU. The<lb/>
endowment will provide an an-<lb/>
nual $1,000 scholarship for an<lb/>
ECU student, as long as he or she<lb/>
maintains the academic require-<lb/>
ments of the award.<lb/>
Winchester is technical man-<lb/>
ager of DuPont in Kinston. He is a<lb/>
graduate of North Carolina State<lb/>
University and holds a PhD from<lb/>
Princeton University.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0008"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
THE tAsT CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24,1989<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
Immediately Non-smoker. To share 3<lb/>
bedroom house. Will have own bed-<lb/>
room. 175 00 per month plus 13 utili-<lb/>
ties. 5 minutes from school. Call<lb/>
Pamela at 758-7142.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Stratford<lb/>
Arms til end of semester. $170.00 a<lb/>
month, 12 utilities. Call 756-5183 or<lb/>
324-3354.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: To<lb/>
share nice 3 bedroom apt. Only<lb/>
SI 20 00 mon th, 1 3 utilities. Available<lb/>
Feb. 1st. Call 752-3678.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Two bedrm. unfur. apt.<lb/>
$220 00, available Feb.Mar. Call 758-<lb/>
7078.<lb/>
ONE MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
To sublease apartment two blocks from<lb/>
campus (list 1. Walking distance from<lb/>
school, downtown, and many other<lb/>
places Sublcascr has option to furnish<lb/>
his bedroom or use existing furniture.<lb/>
Microwave, toaster oven, color TV<lb/>
with cable. Costs only $150 per month<lb/>
plus utilities. Call today! 757-0412.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: MF 13<lb/>
rent &amp; utilities, own room, close to<lb/>
campus. Call 758-8283.<lb/>
WANTED: Female of Male to share 2<lb/>
bedroom, 1 bath duplex. 34 miles<lb/>
from campus? 150.00 a month and 1<lb/>
2 utiltities. Unfurnished. Call Dina 752-<lb/>
8907.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Starting<lb/>
March 1st. Responsible female. Geor-<lb/>
getown Apts. Within walking distance<lb/>
to campus and downtown. 12 rent. 1<lb/>
2 utilities. Free cable. Call 830-1758.<lb/>
Leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
1979 VW RABBIT. Blue, AMFM ra-<lb/>
dio, air, good condition. $1000. 830-<lb/>
4910<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1986 Black Dodge Daytona<lb/>
Turbo Z. Tilt; cruise; air; leather; sun-<lb/>
roof; CS handling package. Very sharp.<lb/>
Low mileage; excellent condition. 830-<lb/>
1584.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 81 Chcvette in good condi-<lb/>
tion with nice stereo. Asking $1,000.00.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Britches Great Outdoors<lb/>
brown leather jacket. Size 40 regular.<lb/>
The fatigued leather look. Very cool &amp;<lb/>
stylish. Six months old! SI80.00.<lb/>
FOU SALE: Two couches, S25.00 each.<lb/>
One matching chair, $10.00. Call 355-<lb/>
4562.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Stereo, Exc Cond 1 year<lb/>
old, $85 00; Nike Cycling Cleats, Brand<lb/>
New CCX $40.00; Prince Graphite Pro<lb/>
Tennis Racket 1 lOhead size$90.00with<lb/>
double Prince Thermo Bag. Call 752-<lb/>
5274 after 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
DEPENDABILITY FOR SALE: 78<lb/>
Datsun B210. New brakes, muffler, tail<lb/>
pipe, head gasket. Wheels balanced<lb/>
and aligned. Runs great. Make an offer!<lb/>
758-8949.<lb/>
FOR SALE: House in Farmville, 2<lb/>
bedroom, 1 12 baths. Walking dis-<lb/>
tance of downtown. Excellent condi-<lb/>
tion. S39.000 00 205 Crimmersburg St.<lb/>
758-2232.<lb/>
KEG COOLER: Regrigeratcs to 28<lb/>
degrees F. Includes tap &amp; gauges<lb/>
S75O0. 1 pair realistic home stereo<lb/>
speakers. 60 watts each. Great for<lb/>
Dorms or Apts. S60.00pr. Call after 4.<lb/>
756-0580.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Washers, Dryers, Refrig-<lb/>
erators, Freezers, Stoves $100.00 it up.<lb/>
Guaranteed. Also have used furniture<lb/>
at reasonable prices. Call 746-6929.<lb/>
1979 MAZDA GLC: 4 speed, AC,<lb/>
AM-FM cassette, new tires 1100.00Call<lb/>
752-6554.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Pioneer Reciever, VSX<lb/>
2000, 50 wc remote $200. Call 756-<lb/>
7265.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT SEIZED VE-<lb/>
HICLES: From SlOO: Fords. Mercedes.<lb/>
Corvettes. Cheyys. Surplus. Buyers<lb/>
Guide (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. S-1166.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
PARTY: If you are having a party and<lb/>
need a D.J. for the best music available<lb/>
for parties: Dance, Top 40, &amp; Beach.<lb/>
Call 355-2781 and ask for Morgan.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHO-<lb/>
TOCOPYING SERVICES: We offoi<lb/>
typing and photocopying services. Wc<lb/>
also sell software and computer disk-<lb/>
ettes. 24 hours in and out. Guaranteed<lb/>
typing on paper up to 20 hand written<lb/>
pages. We repair computers and print-<lb/>
ers also. Lowest hourly rate in town.<lb/>
SDF Professional Computer Services,<lb/>
106 East 5th Street Ojeside Cubbies)<lb/>
Greenville. NC 752-3694.<lb/>
NEED A D.J Hire the ELBO D.J. call<lb/>
early and book for your formal or<lb/>
party. 758-1700, ask for Diljon or leave<lb/>
a message.<lb/>
PAPERS TYPEDRESUMES COM<lb/>
POSED: Call 756-9136.<lb/>
CHILDCARE AVAILABLE: Near<lb/>
campus ? experienced babysitter<lb/>
cares for my 1 1 2 year old child in mv<lb/>
home and can care for another. For<lb/>
information call Dr. Susan McCannon.<lb/>
Campus 6800, home 758-3827.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
CJ'S WANTS YOU: Every position<lb/>
open. We are putting together the best<lb/>
wait staff, cooks, and prep personnel to<lb/>
make CJ's the best restaurant team in<lb/>
East Carolina. Call between 2-5 pm for<lb/>
appointment M-F. Ask for Casey. 355-<lb/>
3543.<lb/>
WANTED: Bartenders. Male or Fe-<lb/>
male. For more information call 746-<lb/>
2319.<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED:<lb/>
Interested in making money part-time<lb/>
photographing campus activities? No<lb/>
experience necessary, we train. If you<lb/>
are highly sociable, have a 35 mm<lb/>
camera, and transportation, please call<lb/>
between noon and 5 p.m M-F, at 1-<lb/>
800-722-7033.<lb/>
FEMALE RESIDENT COUNSELOR:<lb/>
Interested in those with human service<lb/>
background wishing to gain valuable<lb/>
experience in the field. No monetary<lb/>
compensation, however room, utilities<lb/>
and phone provided. Mary Smith<lb/>
REAL Crisis Center 758-HELP.<lb/>
STUDENT NEEDED: To post adver-<lb/>
tising materials on campus bulletin<lb/>
boards. Work own hours with good<lb/>
pay. Write Campus Advertising, P.O.<lb/>
Box 1221, Duluth, GA 30136-1221. (404)<lb/>
873-9042.<lb/>
BAE COMPUTER NEEDS: Respon<lb/>
sible student to represent our com-<lb/>
puter. Incentive bonus plan. Interested<lb/>
persons please send resume to 3563<lb/>
Ryder Street, Santa Clara, CA 95051<lb/>
HELP WANTED: ShippingReciev-<lb/>
ing person, part-time. Warehouse<lb/>
work and delivery within 250 mile<lb/>
radius. Must have no classes at least 2<lb/>
week days. Good driving Tecord. Pre-<lb/>
fer underclassmen. Call Tommy 756-<lb/>
8500 9 to 5.<lb/>
COACH: Experienced for USS Sum-<lb/>
mer Swim Team. References required<lb/>
Apply: Tarboro Swim Club P.O Box<lb/>
1301 Tarboro. NC 27886.<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICA-<lb/>
TIONS: For Counselors, Water Front<lb/>
Director, Asst. Swim Instructors<lb/>
Friendly Day Camp is a summer dav<lb/>
camp for mentally and physically<lb/>
handicapped children &amp; adults Please<lb/>
write or call The Special Populations<lb/>
Program, P.O. Box 590, Raleigh, NC<lb/>
27602 (919) 755-6832.<lb/>
FREE SPRING BREAK VACATION<lb/>
IN CANCUN Become a College<lb/>
Tours representative on your campus<lb/>
and get a free trip. Nothing to buy ?we<lb/>
provide everything you need. It's a<lb/>
little work for alot of fun! Call 1-800-<lb/>
727-0005.<lb/>
BARMAIDS WANTED: 1<lb/>
No experience needed, will train, rvius<lb/>
be 21 yrs. old. Excellent tips. Call 758<lb/>
0058, ask for Manager.<lb/>
Part-time<lb/>
rain. Must<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
AKC REGISTERED GOLDEN RE-<lb/>
TRIEVER PUPPIES: 3 males priced at<lb/>
$150 to $225. Call 746-2517<lb/>
HEY CREEKS: Have you heard about<lb/>
the party at Rafters?<lb/>
REWARD: For the return of a GOLD<lb/>
TONE WATCH LOST Wed. afternoon.<lb/>
Has incredible sentimental value. Call<lb/>
758-9694.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI LITTLE SISTERS:<lb/>
Thanks for your help and support.<lb/>
Brothers.<lb/>
The<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI BROTHERS: Good<lb/>
luck with rush, we hope it will be the<lb/>
best ever lor you Ya'll are doing a great<lb/>
job with the house?we're proud of<lb/>
you. -Love. The Little Sisters<lb/>
TO ALL FRATERNITIES: Good luck<lb/>
with rush! We hope everyone has great<lb/>
success! -Theta Chi.<lb/>
ATTENTION MEN: Theta Chi wants<lb/>
to extend an imitation to attend rush<lb/>
the 23, 24, 25 in Aycock's basement<lb/>
Come see what makes us ECU's best<lb/>
kept secret!<lb/>
FRATERNITY CHAMPS IN FOOT-<lb/>
BALL, VOLLEYBALL AND<lb/>
BOWLING Theta Chi let's keep it up<lb/>
this semester. We're number 2 in<lb/>
Chancellor's Cup points, let's end up<lb/>
number 1. BC is watchin' you!<lb/>
THETA CHI'S CLAYTON WIL-<lb/>
LIAMS: Is the new 1FC Vice President<lb/>
Congrats Clavdawg, keep up the good<lb/>
work. Roll Chi!<lb/>
THETA CHI: We don't want to be the<lb/>
biggest, just the best<lb/>
FRATERNITIES: I lore's to you And a<lb/>
rush th.it is swell. Alpha i Delta sup-<lb/>
port you We're wishing you well!<lb/>
SKI HAWKSNEST PARTY: Chris,<lb/>
Rob, Suzanne, Russell, Kim, Jennv,<lb/>
Shelly, John H, Beth, John T Fred.<lb/>
Mike. &amp; Lvnn. We took off late Friday<lb/>
at 3, Mike &amp; Shelly got lost before we<lb/>
could leave. At eleven o'clock the party<lb/>
began, we broke out the keg and all<lb/>
gave a hand. Some things were said<lb/>
that we'd rather forget, but let's hear<lb/>
them again so we can all get red: "Are<lb/>
vou crazy7" "Are those se?"<lb/>
"Pubba can't count that high 'Have<lb/>
vou ever had hair that ?" "GET UP<lb/>
"Did you hear that noise outside?" 1 lad<lb/>
any car trouble lately, Rob? Chris?<lb/>
what a laugh! Russell?is that a vulture<lb/>
or is that fAWS? Where's N.Y. City,<lb/>
Suzanne? Want Mime Texas Pete Hot<lb/>
Sauce, Fred 'Kim, if you wake us up<lb/>
again, you're DEAD Wiped out on<lb/>
any sleds lately, Beth? John 11, we love<lb/>
vour Michael J. dances! The Rapping<lb/>
Came?Questions. BETH AND KIM,<lb/>
THANKS BUNCHES, LET'S DO IT<lb/>
AGAIN! Pike is it!<lb/>
LOST: Black onvx ring with 3 dia-<lb/>
monds?lost Sat Jan. 14 at the Elbo?<lb/>
Reward Call Teresa at 758-8120.<lb/>
FRATERNITIES: Good luck with<lb/>
rush' We hope you all get a terrific<lb/>
pledge class -Love, the sisters and<lb/>
pledges of Alpha Phi.<lb/>
PI KAPP: Congrats tin<lb/>
house! -Love, Alpha Phi.<lb/>
a fantastic<lb/>
TKFS: We had a wild time Thursday<lb/>
night The party was great and we'll<lb/>
have to do it again! Love, Delta Zeta.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA PLEDGES: The party<lb/>
Thursday night was a blast! It was truly<lb/>
a great way to begin the New Year!<lb/>
Love, the sisters of Delta Zeta.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: We would like to wish<lb/>
all the fraternities a successful spring<lb/>
rush.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI: Congratulations on<lb/>
your new house. It ltxiks great. The<lb/>
Sigmas.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: We would like to con-<lb/>
gratulate the new officers: President: Holly<lb/>
Condrev; V.P. Rush. Kirstin Fakes; V.P.<lb/>
Pledge :MandyParish;CorrespondingSec-<lb/>
retary: Kathy Ulrich; RecordingSecrctary:<lb/>
Susanne Brown; Treasurer: Melinda<lb/>
Walker; Panhellenic: Melanie Gibson and<lb/>
Melinda Lentine; and House Manager:<lb/>
Lisa Weber. Good Luck!<lb/>
MAKE HISTORY HAPPEN TODAY: Go<lb/>
Pika Spring Rush 89 at the Attic ? 24th<lb/>
- 26th<lb/>
BE A PART OF COLLEGE: Not just a<lb/>
number "Rush Pi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA: "Success has its privi-<lb/>
leges<lb/>
THE INVITATION IS NEAR: The "Pika"<lb/>
regional conference is here! 14 chapters<lb/>
come to ECU Jan. 27th - 29th.<lb/>
NEGR:LJAMAICA:Spnng Break. 8 days<lb/>
and 7 nights, airfare out of Charlotte. Prices<lb/>
start at $499. For more details call Tripp at<lb/>
758-9177.<lb/>
GOOD LUCK TO ALL FRATERNITIES:<lb/>
On a successful rush this week. The Sig-<lb/>
mas.<lb/>
BETA LAMBDA'S ? AOPI'S: 1 can't wait<lb/>
until Roseball! Remember ? this night is<lb/>
for y'all! Do vou know the Big I? Feelin'<lb/>
kinda mello w Your "PT" forever ? Heidi<lb/>
AOPi: Presents the 1989 officers: Pres.<lb/>
Patty Glander,VP ? Lisa Gale, VP Pledge<lb/>
Trainer ? Beth Beanev, Chapter Treas-<lb/>
urer Stacey Coode, Recording Sec.<lb/>
Dawn Hansen, Corresponding<lb/>
Amy Smith, Chapter Relations<lb/>
Barbour, House Manager ? Felicia<lb/>
Parker, Rush Chrmn ? Amanda Brewer,<lb/>
Asst. Rush Chrmn ? Stephanie Patton.<lb/>
Panhellenic Del. ? Kimm Ruark,<lb/>
Panhellenic Exec. ? Heidi Schaffer,<lb/>
Membership Ed ? Georgeann<lb/>
Athanaclos, Fundraising ? Tern Edelen,<lb/>
Scholarship ? Becky Carter, Social Chrmn<lb/>
? Angie Lineberry, PR ? Diana Ditzler,<lb/>
Songleader ? Robin Sprigg, I listonan -<lb/>
Debbie Schroeder, K of R ? Leslie Liedel,<lb/>
Intramural Rep. ? Jennifer Flesca, and<lb/>
Alumni Relations ? April Peterson Good<lb/>
luck to everyone in their office<lb/>
AOPI'S: Get ready to gig all night! Rose<lb/>
ball is approaching<lb/>
Read The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Every<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
Wanna have a Great<lb/>
SPRING BREAK? Spend<lb/>
8 days and 7 nights in<lb/>
Sunny Daytona Beach.<lb/>
$190 for Transportation<lb/>
and Lodging.<lb/>
Dall Dave at<lb/>
758-8001<lb/>
to insure a seat.<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. xm<lb/>
Co?t Trrmlratlon to 7Q vrrka of prrffnarv<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
StmOf &amp;u 6i4T<lb/>
Get the information you need<lb/>
college financing. coege selection<lb/>
caree' giyciance and<lb/>
SATACT es: preparation<lb/>
6 EGordor7st - Kinston. NC 28501 ,919) 523-6414<lb/>
GEROLD JARMON<lb/>
Educational Consultant<lb/>
Schedule by<lb/>
Appointment Only<lb/>
Sec.<lb/>
? Pani<lb/>
Special Bonus Diskettes Soec'al<lb/>
514"DSDD<lb/>
$4.95 per box ol 10<lb/>
Verbatim Diskettes<lb/>
514"DSDD<lb/>
$7.95 per box ol 10<lb/>
SDF Professional Computers, Inc.<lb/>
106 East 5th St Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
752-3694<lb/>
HOUSE OF HATS<lb/>
for<lb/>
LADIES HATS AND<lb/>
ACCESSORIES<lb/>
(Latest Styles and<lb/>
Colors)<lb/>
403 Evans St.<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27834'<lb/>
(Downtown Mall) 758-3025<lb/>
OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
Tri County Homes. Inc. is expanding it's sales force over all<lb/>
of eastern North Carolina. If you are energetic, enthusiastic,<lb/>
honest, and need an income of more than $25,000.00 a<lb/>
year "HERE IS YOUR CHANCE<lb/>
If you are looking for a company that offers benefits like life<lb/>
insurance, disability insurance, as well as a retirement<lb/>
program<lb/>
CALL 1-800-672 4503<lb/>
and ask for Karen Lambert. A scheduled<lb/>
confidential interview will be arranged.<lb/>
SALES<lb/>
POSITION<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
Challenge<lb/>
Responsibility<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Advancement<lb/>
First Wachovia means unlimited potential for personal<lb/>
growth and career advancement for outstanding hast Carolina<lb/>
University graduates. Individual who are ready to accept the<lb/>
challenges of a career in the financial sen ices industry, contact<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement for an interview or further<lb/>
information. First Wachovia<lb/>
recruiters will be on campus FIRS 1<lb/>
for interviews February' 2. WACHOVIA<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
for an<lb/>
Advertising Sales<lb/>
Representative.<lb/>
Requirements:<lb/>
?Previous Sales Experience<lb/>
?Good Personality &amp;<lb/>
Professional Appearance<lb/>
?Excellent Communication<lb/>
Skills<lb/>
?Good Organizational Skills<lb/>
Must Be Dependable &amp; Show<lb/>
Initiative &amp; Enthusiasm<lb/>
?Must Have The Desire To<lb/>
Excel<lb/>
Apply in Person at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Please Include Resume<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
(In Front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
No Phone Calls Please!<lb/>
-J<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
Mangers needed for varsity football<lb/>
Pick up application at office in Minges.<lb/>
757-6029.<lb/>
COOP EDUCATION<lb/>
Interested in a summer job with a<lb/>
resort, camp, or recreational facility? Feb.<lb/>
9th, ECU will host over 50 agencies look-<lb/>
ing for summer employees. Come by or<lb/>
call Co-op Ed. for more info, on your ca-<lb/>
reer opportunities, 757-6979, GCB 2028.<lb/>
EDUCATION MAIORS<lb/>
It's not too late to submit your appli-<lb/>
cation for the workstudy trip to Pueblo,<lb/>
Mexico for Spring Break (March 4-12). If<lb/>
you're concerned about th expense -<lb/>
don't be. Fund ratting efforts will be a<lb/>
group endeavor. What a great opportu-<lb/>
nity to travel while sharing your talents<lb/>
and skills in a local school. Applications<lb/>
are available in R-154, Speight. For more<lb/>
info contact Marianne Exum at (w) 757-<lb/>
6271 or (h) 830-9450.<lb/>
GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
The ECU Gospel Choir is now ac-<lb/>
cepting new members for the Spring<lb/>
Semester. If you enjoy singing, we invite<lb/>
you to stop by the Ledonia Wright Cul-<lb/>
tural Center on Wed. afternoons at 5 p.m.<lb/>
during rehearsals. Deadline Jan. 25.<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Our next mtg. will be at 6 p.m. in GC1014<lb/>
on Jan. 19. All members and other inter-<lb/>
ested students, please attend.<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED<lb/>
Normal and allergic volunteers needed<lb/>
for Asthma research at the ECU Dept. of<lb/>
Medicine. Study purchase a patient<lb/>
ranges from blood donation to allergen<lb/>
challenge. All volunteers will be compen-<lb/>
sated. If interested, call 551-3159.<lb/>
MINORITY STUDENT OR-<lb/>
GANIZATION<lb/>
The Minority Student Organization will<lb/>
meet Jan. 24,1989, Tues. at 5 pm in Speight<lb/>
129. All are invited and encouraged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
CO-REC BOWLING<lb/>
A registration meeting for intramural co-<lb/>
rec bowling teams will be held Jan. 24 at 5<lb/>
pm in Biology 103. Two men and two<lb/>
women required per team. Don't miss it.<lb/>
1NNERTUBE W ATERPOLO<lb/>
A registration meeting for innertube wa-<lb/>
terpolo by the intramural-recreational<lb/>
services department will be held Jan 31 at<lb/>
5p.m. in Biology N102. Mens and Worn-<lb/>
ens teams will be formed.<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
Psi Chi will hold its first meeting of the<lb/>
Spring semester to elect new officers on<lb/>
Jan. 25 at 4p.m. in the Psi Chi library (Rawl<lb/>
302). Attendance is manditory. If you can<lb/>
not attend, please leave a note in the Psi<lb/>
Chi mailbox.<lb/>
GRApiJATTNG NURSING<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
In order to receive your Nursing Pin by<lb/>
April, 1989, orders must be placed in the<lb/>
Student Stores, Wright Building, no later<lb/>
than Feb. 3,1989. Orders should be placed<lb/>
at the Jewelry Counter. Orders must be<lb/>
paid in full when the order is placed.<lb/>
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
Amnesty International will meet Jan 25,<lb/>
at 8pm at the St. Paul's Episcopal Church,<lb/>
401 E. 4th St. in the upper floor. Students<lb/>
welcome. For more information call<lb/>
Calvin Mercer 6121- Philosophy Dept.<lb/>
WOMEN'S FRISBEE<lb/>
It's time to play that "Ultimate" game<lb/>
once again. We had a great time and sea-<lb/>
son last semester and look forward to a<lb/>
better one this time around! Come join us<lb/>
at the bottom of College Hill on Sunday's.<lb/>
Monday's, Wednesday's and Thursday's<lb/>
at 3p.m.<lb/>
HELP YOUR PEERS!<lb/>
The Dept. of Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Services is looking for Adapted Recrea-<lb/>
3<lb/>
hon Peer 1 lelpers 1 hese individuals<lb/>
assist handicapped individuals acrp<lb/>
M<lb/>
it 757-6387 for additioggl<lb/>
I<lb/>
campus take part in recreational activi.<lb/>
Be a BIG HELr this semester Conti<lb/>
Kathleen<lb/>
info.<lb/>
EDUCATION MAIORS<lb/>
ALMU<lb/>
5<lb/>
The Dept. of Speech-Language St Ai<lb/>
torv Pathology (SLAP) will be provk<lb/>
the speech and hearing screening for<lb/>
students eligible for admission to<lb/>
Upper Division of Teacher Education<lb/>
Jan 23,24 and 25 The Dept. will be re<lb/>
from 5 00 to 6.30 each day NO APPOIP<lb/>
MENT IS NEEDED (first come basis)<lb/>
SLAP Dept. is located in Belk Annex jpfr<lb/>
Charles St.<lb/>
TRAVEL COMMITTEE<lb/>
Hey you guys! Come join the fun on<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1W9 7<lb/>
<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Student Union Travel Committee's cruise<lb/>
to the BAHAMAS over Spring Break<lb/>
There will be dancing, swimming, relax<lb/>
,mg .ind tons of other things to do aboard<lb/>
ship. All transportation and "all you can<lb/>
?" on the Carnival ship" The ship will<lb/>
dock at Freeport and Nassau, so come on<lb/>
B and shop until you drop in the world's<lb/>
biggest marketplace'<lb/>
r<lb/>
l<lb/>
<lb/>
my<lb/>
LACROSSE CMJg<lb/>
Anyone interested m playing lacrosse<lb/>
?this Spring A mandatory meeting will be<lb/>
held Km 2r jt -1 (X) p.m in Rawl 306.<lb/>
HANG GLIDING<lb/>
N-ar through the ea air at Nags I lead,<lb/>
N C with IM-REC services. A hang glid-<lb/>
ing trip has been scheduled at reduced<lb/>
rates tor April IS Register Feb 31 April<lb/>
; in 204 Memorial Gym Want to kxunv<lb/>
pnore? Call Pat Cox at 757-6387.<lb/>
FITNESS OLYMPICS<lb/>
Compete tor the gold in titness bv taking<lb/>
part in the 1989 FITNESS OLYMPICS<lb/>
? ompetition This one day event has such<lb/>
activities as a stationary bicvcle. rclav<lb/>
obstacle course, flexibility and strength<lb/>
endurance tests plus more, more, mote<lb/>
R? g st r Jan 30 in 204 Memorial Gym for<lb/>
the 1 eb 2 e ent m Minecs Coliseum Call<lb/>
rvs, for mort<lb/>
?tails<lb/>
M<lb/>
si: PER CIRCUIT!<lb/>
Dectrif) our titness workout with a spe-<lb/>
cialized circuit training program Tins<lb/>
program alternates aerobic fitness with<lb/>
muscular strength endurance exercise.<lb/>
Registration ends Jan. 20 for these Mon<lb/>
and Wed classes meeting from 630 7 .V1<lb/>
p m in NIC. 108. For additional into, call<lb/>
ECU GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
. c L Gospel Choir has done it again'<lb/>
"We're having another give away just in<lb/>
 me to relieve vour financial stress. Your<lb/>
525 00 is only .25 cent and begins<lb/>
i aigh Ian 27from 9-3 p.m. at the<lb/>
chai<lb/>
Jan<lb/>
Stui<lb/>
!<lb/>
re Stop by and give us your<lb/>
1 ? o v <lb/>
support (Drawing to beheld Fri. at OOaf<lb/>
Student Store).<lb/>
RUN FOR CANCER<lb/>
PI ? '? ga the co ed National<lb/>
? Fral m : is sp? nsoring a 24-<lb/>
m :? i Cancel on April 14 and 15<lb/>
? American Cancer Society. For<lb/>
 all i leather at 758-9550, Bryan<lb/>
? - 3 or Ri se Richards at<lb/>
- chapter of the Amencan<lb/>
Society Find out about entering a<lb/>
r donating money materials, 1 lelp<lb/>
ic battle against cancer bv support-<lb/>
ing Alpha Phi Omega and the American<lb/>
Cancer Society in the 24-hour Run for<lb/>
Cancer<lb/>
MASSAGE CLINIC<lb/>
The P.T. Club is having a Massage Clink-<lb/>
on Ian 30 from 5:30-9.30 p.m. Tickets are<lb/>
SI10 minutes in advance; $1.2510 min-<lb/>
utes at the door. Just "do it<lb/>
WE NEED YOUR EXPERI-<lb/>
ENCE!<lb/>
Your achievements in everyday situ-<lb/>
ations can be useful to others. Earn that<lb/>
feeling of accomplishment. Real Crisis<lb/>
Center is recruiting volunteer crisis coun-<lb/>
selors We will be ottering training classes<lb/>
in this enriching field beginning Jan. 30<lb/>
Call 758-HELP or come bv 312 E. 10th St.<lb/>
CLASS, FACULTY ck STAFF<lb/>
YEARBOOK PICTURES<lb/>
Yearbook photographs are now being<lb/>
taken' It you have never been in the year-<lb/>
book, now is your chance. Remember, it's<lb/>
not vour yearbook until you're in it. 1 lours<lb/>
are from am. - 12 p m. &amp; 1 p.m. - 4 30<lb/>
p.m. tins week only in the Student Store<lb/>
Soda shop<lb/>
ACCQLNTLG MAJORS<lb/>
The Accounting Sooiet .? will have its first<lb/>
Spring Semester meeting on Jan. 30at 3.00<lb/>
p at. in 1032 GCB. All interested students<lb/>
are encouraged to attend. Refreshments<lb/>
will be served after the meeting. Profes-<lb/>
sional attire is recommended<lb/>
SOCIETY FOR THE<lb/>
ADVANCEMENT OF MAN-<lb/>
AGEMENT<lb/>
There will be a meeting of SAM on Feb<lb/>
1 at 3:00 p m. in GCB 102S. Representa<lb/>
fives trom Wachovia Hank Operations<lb/>
Dept will be speaking Thev will also be<lb/>
recruiting This meeting is in conjunction<lb/>
with the Decision Science Society and all<lb/>
members .ire encouraged to attend.<lb/>
Guests are welcome<lb/>
INTERMEDIATE<lb/>
EDUCATION CLUB<lb/>
The Intermediate Ed Club will hold its<lb/>
first meeting of the Spring Semester on<lb/>
Ian. 25 a: 3:00 pin in Speight 512. The<lb/>
guest speaker, Marianne Exum, will dis<lb/>
cuss the "Experience Education in Mex-<lb/>
ico" program. All intermediate education<lb/>
majors are welcome.<lb/>
CORAL REEF DIVE CLUB<lb/>
The Dive Club will be meeting Jan 30 m<lb/>
Mendenhall mi 248 at 8 p.m. We will be<lb/>
discussing the upcoming Spring Break<lb/>
trip. Newcomers are welcome to attend<lb/>
For more info, contact David Angel at<lb/>
355 3546.<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
There will be a meeting Jan. 31 in rm. 1031<lb/>
at 4 p.m. New members arc welcome<lb/>
HILLEL<lb/>
1 hllel, a Jewish Student Organization will<lb/>
be having a welcome back partv on Jan<lb/>
26th. It will be from 8 p m. until7 at Strat<lb/>
lord Arm's Clubhouse Music, snacks,<lb/>
and soda will be provided. For more info<lb/>
or rides, call Sarah at 830-4443.<lb/>
cce<lb/>
CCF would like to invite you to our bible<lb/>
studveverv Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Rawl 130.<lb/>
Bring vour Bible and a friend as we study<lb/>
the book of 1 lebrews. Call Inn at 752-7N1'<lb/>
if you need a ride or further info<lb/>
RHOEPSILON<lb/>
The Real Estate society will hold a meeting<lb/>
Jan. 2 at 3 p m. in GCB 3014 The speaker<lb/>
will be Conlev Branch. 1 le will speak on<lb/>
the local Greenville market for both com<lb/>
mercial and residential property A short<lb/>
business meeting will be held afterwards<lb/>
Ev ervone is welcome to come and join in<lb/>
SMS<lb/>
The Society of Manufacturing Engineers<lb/>
is having its tirst organizational meeting<lb/>
for the new year The meeting will be held<lb/>
in Rawl 106 at 5.30 on Jan. 25. Discussion<lb/>
will include tows, certification examina-<lb/>
tion, and the Egg Drop contest A mem-<lb/>
bers and interested persons are urged to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
MSC<lb/>
There will be a dance at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center on Ian. 27th t 8 50 pin<lb/>
The MSC is located at 501 E 5th St across<lb/>
from Carrett Dorm. Free refreshments,<lb/>
tree admission. Call 758-2030 or 752-724)<lb/>
for details.<lb/>
CJH.I ALP H AQMEG A<lb/>
The brothers of Chi Alpha Omega invite<lb/>
any young chnstian men who are inter<lb/>
ested in pledging a Christian Social Fra<lb/>
temity, to attend their rush on an 21 and<lb/>
25 trom 8-9 p.m. meeting in the Bio build<lb/>
ing lobby. For more into, contact: Dean<lb/>
Laves 752-S23s or Michael Hodges 752<lb/>
7071.<lb/>
figh<lb/>
?? ?<lb/>
. ?C<lb/>
?y0v? fluV ? '??"<lb/>
TOT<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Coming Attractions<lb/>
TXT,<lb/>
AlliiPiic?ltcj)ff(t)it(Pi LflJ<lb/>
k<lb/>
AHMAD JAMAL<lb/>
Wednesday, January 25<lb/>
8pm HendHx Theater<lb/>
Tickets ECU Students $4.00<lb/>
All others $6.00<lb/>
Sponsored by the Special Concerts Committee<lb/>
MOVIES OF THE WEEK<lb/>
DIE HARD -R<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 26-29 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
and<lb/>
THE DECLINE OF WESTERN CIVILATION,<lb/>
PART II: THE METAL YEARS -R<lb/>
Friday, Jan. 27-28 at 11 p.m.<lb/>
All films are FREE to ECU Students with<lb/>
valid ECU I.D.<lb/>
Sponsored By the Committee<lb/>
Stop by the Student Union table in front of<lb/>
the Student Store Mon 23-25 and fill out the<lb/>
survey and you may win a dinner for 2 at the<lb/>
Hilton<lb/>
WHAT DO YOU THINK?<lb/>
The Student Union Special Concerts Committee wants<lb/>
to know what concerts you would like to have at ECU.<lb/>
An opinion box is located next to the information<lb/>
desk in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Stop by and help us to bring you<lb/>
the concerts of your choice.<lb/>
h<lb/>
COMMUNION<lb/>
Worship Cod and celebrate Communion<lb/>
this Wed. at 5 p.m. at the Methodist Stu<lb/>
dent Center then enjoy a delicious, all<lb/>
 oil-can eat home axiked meal and good<lb/>
fellowship. The meal is $2 at the door,<lb/>
SI 50 for members. Oil 758-2030 for info<lb/>
Sponsored bv Presbyterian and Method-<lb/>
ist Campus Ministries.<lb/>
A MA<lb/>
The American Mktg Assoc. will be hold<lb/>
ing its first meeting of this semester on Jan<lb/>
2d The meeting will be held in rm 11)37<lb/>
CCH at 3:30p.m. The guest speaker will be<lb/>
Diana Crowd who is the Mktg. Director of<lb/>
"The Rio The Club. All those interested<lb/>
are welcome and old members arc en<lb/>
couraged to attend<lb/>
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will host arch rival UNC<lb/>
Wilmington on Jan 2Sth. Ttpoff will be at<lb/>
7 p m At halttime, along with the<lb/>
Quincey's Dinner giveaway, a stupid pet<lb/>
tucks contest will be held<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
The LCU College Republicans will meet<lb/>
Jan 25 and every Wed. at 7 p.m in 212<lb/>
Mendenhall Please call 752 8359 for info<lb/>
BOWL TEAM<lb/>
Any student interested in becoming a<lb/>
member of the ECu World Geography<lb/>
Bowl Team, which will compete at Duke<lb/>
on Feb 25 against other North Carolina<lb/>
colleges and universities, come to the In<lb/>
ternational House, 306 E. Ninth St, at 5<lb/>
p.m. on Jan 26 for a qualification match<lb/>
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT<lb/>
The Student Financial Management A' so<lb/>
ciatior. mil hold a meeting on Jan 25 at<lb/>
430 p.m. in rm 3009 GCB. Our guest<lb/>
sH-aker will beCvrus B Follmer, who is a<lb/>
certified registered planner and regis-<lb/>
tered investment advisor for Follmer Fi-<lb/>
nancial Services. All interested students<lb/>
are invited to attend the meeting.<lb/>
LQSI?<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/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Chnstian Fellowship will be held every<lb/>
Thurs at 6 p m in the Culture Center<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 bv the GCB,<lb/>
room 2028<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
It you are challenged everyday with prob<lb/>
lems that you find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
vis tor the uncompromised word of God<lb/>
Every Fn night at 700 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
A<lb/>
sfc<lb/>
s<lb/>
s?<lb/>
N<lb/>
.0s0<lb/>
f?<lb/>
HOW'<lb/>
Classic<lb/>
R&amp;B<lb/>
,NN G?<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
IPHI KAPPA TA<lb/>
fc??<lb/>
.sr<lb/>
?)<lb/>
?A<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
FIFTH ST<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
TENTH ST<lb/>
I Want You<lb/>
To Be A Phi Tau!<lb/>
, out m wm ?ou<lb/>
Mon. 8:00-11:00 - Meet the Phi Tau's at Memorial Gym<lb/>
Tues. 8:00-11:00 - P zza with the Sorority Girls of Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
Wed. 8:00-11:00 - Subs with the Sorority Girls of Chi Omega<lb/>
Thurs. 8:00-11:00 - Meet the Brothers and Little Sisters of Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
-For More Information or a Ride Call 757-1319<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0010"/><lb/>
'4<lb/>
I'lirrAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24.1989<lb/>
'Stealth' blimp is underway<lb/>
ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. low price Hoschstetler said.<lb/>
(AP) ? A "Stealth" blimp being As they bob in the wind out-<lb/>
developed in Pasquotank County side mammoth hangars along the<lb/>
could open a new era in thedevel- Pasquotank River, blimps look<lb/>
opment of military and civilian elegant and playful - unlikely<lb/>
blimps, officials say candidates for combat duty. But<lb/>
The airship is great for any- the Sentinel 5000 airship will be a<lb/>
and submarine hunters during<lb/>
both world wars, he said.<lb/>
But the Navy scrapped the<lb/>
last of its airships in 1962 as high-<lb/>
speed bombers and high-altitude<lb/>
missiles became the chief military<lb/>
The naval airship would ac-<lb/>
company groups of patrolling<lb/>
Navy surface ships. It would be<lb/>
equipped with advanced "over-<lb/>
the-horizon" and "lookdown"<lb/>
high-resolution radars to detect<lb/>
thing you want to do that requires<lb/>
you to be up in the air for a long<lb/>
rime said Ron Hoschstetler oi<lb/>
Airship Industries USA Inc<lb/>
which is developing the experi-<lb/>
high-technology warrior, com-<lb/>
plete with sophisticated radar blimp<lb/>
threats. Planes, helicopters and low-flying attack planes and mis<lb/>
ground stations replaced the siles. Radar-absorbing materials<lb/>
and sensing gear to protect U.S.<lb/>
Navy ships.<lb/>
'We arc really at the begin-<lb/>
mental naval airship under a $169 ningof a new airship age Hoch-<lb/>
million Navy contract. stetler said.<lb/>
'And airships can buy you a Airships were used effec-<lb/>
lot more time in the air for a low, lively as observation platforms<lb/>
The new naval airship's elec-<lb/>
tronic gear and its ability to stay<lb/>
aloft for long periods at low cost<lb/>
will make it an important tool in<lb/>
airborne early-warning, anti-sub-<lb/>
marine warfare and logistics,<lb/>
Hochstctler said.<lb/>
in the airship will reduce ar<lb/>
enemy's ability to detect it on<lb/>
radar.<lb/>
The Navy awarded the con-<lb/>
tract to build and design the air-<lb/>
ship in June 1987 .<lb/>
Murderer Ted Bundy to fry today<lb/>
STARKE, Fla. (AP) ? Ted<lb/>
Bundy has confessed to 19 more<lb/>
killings, but Florida's highest law-<lb/>
enforcement official calls the con<lb/>
demned murderer a "conniver"<lb/>
i ho should die in the electric<lb/>
chair as scheduled.<lb/>
Bundy's appointment with a<lb/>
that much about people. He's<lb/>
trying to manipulate the system<lb/>
again. This time, I don't think it's<lb/>
going to work<lb/>
Salt Lake County sheriff's<lb/>
Detective Dennis Couch said<lb/>
Sunday night that Bundy men-<lb/>
tioned his involvement in up to<lb/>
Colorado and one woman in<lb/>
Washington state just to whet the<lb/>
appetite of law enforcement<lb/>
said VVoodard, who called<lb/>
Bundv's llth-hour statements a<lb/>
"hoax<lb/>
"1 am disappointed that, in<lb/>
psychiatrist Monday has gener- eight Utah killings, at least two<lb/>
ated speculation that the suspect<lb/>
in up to three dozen slavings will<lb/>
try to halt his execution.<lb/>
But Gov. Bob Martinez reaf-<lb/>
firmed his vow "that he has no<lb/>
intention of delaying the execu-<lb/>
tion beyond Tuesday morning<lb/>
press secretary Jon Peck said<lb/>
Sunday night.<lb/>
Bundy is scheduled for exe-<lb/>
cution at Florida State Prison on<lb/>
Tuesday for the 1978 rape and<lb/>
murder of a 12-vear-old Lake Citv<lb/>
girl, one of three people Bundy<lb/>
killed in Florida.<lb/>
The 42-ycar-old law school<lb/>
dropout s under his fourth death<lb/>
warrant.<lb/>
During the past four days,<lb/>
Bundy has admitted killing 19<lb/>
young women in Washington,<lb/>
Utah, Idaho and Colorado.<lb/>
"Ted Bundy is a conniver and<lb/>
he's a mass killer Florida Attor-<lb/>
ney General Bob Buttcrworth<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I don't think he reallv cares<lb/>
more than authorities had be-<lb/>
lieved.<lb/>
Farlier Sunday, Bundy con-<lb/>
fessed to two murders in Idaho,<lb/>
where officials had never linked<lb/>
him to any killings.<lb/>
He also provided investiga-<lb/>
tors Friday and Saturday with<lb/>
details of eight Washington kill-<lb/>
ings and one in Colorado for<lb/>
w hich he has long been suspected<lb/>
but never charged.<lb/>
Like Butterworth, Colorado<lb/>
Attorney General Duane Woo-<lb/>
dard also criticized Bundy's new<lb/>
cooperation, accusing the killer of<lb/>
stringing along investigators to<lb/>
avoid execution.<lb/>
Woodard, who discussed<lb/>
Bundy confessions at length with<lb/>
Washington state Attorney Gen-<lb/>
eral Ken Eikenberrv on Saturday<lb/>
his closing hours when he had the warrants, lost an appeal to the<lb/>
opportunity to inform authorities U.S. Supreme Court a week ago,<lb/>
oi the whereabouts of bodies, he<lb/>
didn't do it<lb/>
Bundy's attorneys have an<lb/>
open avenue of appeal to the U.S.<lb/>
Supreme Court, but also could tonight,<lb/>
ask Martinez for a stay on<lb/>
grounds that Bundy wouldn't<lb/>
understand the charges against<lb/>
him or the severity of the sen tence<lb/>
at the time of execution.<lb/>
P'<lb/>
"1 guess they figure it ain't<lb/>
over till it's over Bundy's attor<lb/>
nevs worked late Sunday.<lb/>
Bundy, who has been on<lb/>
death row at the prison since Julv<lb/>
1979 and survived three death<lb/>
and no other court has offered a<lb/>
reprieve.<lb/>
If all appeals fail, final prepa-<lb/>
rations for execution would begin<lb/>
In Tacoma, Wash where<lb/>
Bundy was raised, word oi the<lb/>
confessions shocked his mother,<lb/>
Louise.<lb/>
"If and when that claim is<lb/>
raised, it would require the gover-<lb/>
nor to stay the execution and<lb/>
appoint a team of three psychia-<lb/>
trists to interview Bundy, which<lb/>
we are fully prepared to do if the<lb/>
need arises Peck said.<lb/>
'The key here is timing, but<lb/>
the end result will be the same. It<lb/>
night, said Bundy has failed to could slowdown the process, but<lb/>
give investigators from either the sentence is going to be carried<lb/>
state much new information. out and it's going to be carried out<lb/>
"I le picks out one woman in very soon<lb/>
"If Ted did do these things,<lb/>
and if indeed he is substantiating<lb/>
it with facts that he really did<lb/>
those things  oh  it's the most<lb/>
devastating news of our lives<lb/>
she said, shaking her head and<lb/>
sighing as her husband, John, sat<lb/>
silently across the room.<lb/>
Thomas Leach, whose 12-<lb/>
vear-old daughter, kimberlv, was<lb/>
Bundv's last victim, doubted the<lb/>
execution would proceed, saying,<lb/>
"They ain't going to do nothing<lb/>
CAROLINA MINI<lb/>
ZULr,<lb/>
STORAGE<lb/>
I .?  In Units<lb/>
Low Monthly Rates<lb/>
Insurance Avalade<lb/>
7 Day Per ? ? - ?'??cess<lb/>
Comme'Cia! &amp; Housenokj<lb/>
Bectrc.il Outie A. ?.? ?<lb/>
Conae'e &amp; Steet<lb/>
Construction<lb/>
Moving No PlaceTo Store<lb/>
Your Belongings? $15.00 &amp; up<lb/>
Need More Space<lb/>
1 Store Furniture<lb/>
 Room For Studio Space<lb/>
RENT ANY SIZE<lb/>
ST (RAGE UNIT Al<lb/>
RECEIVE trd M 'NTH<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
3275 LANDMARK ST.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
355-3000<lb/>
;<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
rubricate<lb/>
Annual Winter Sale<lb/>
All Fall &amp; Winter<lb/>
Merchandise.<lb/>
Some Spring &amp;<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
Merchandise.<lb/>
Selected Jewelry<lb/>
and Accessories.<lb/>
40<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
MonSat. 10-6<lb/>
Thurs. 10-8<lb/>
919 A. Redbanks Rd.<lb/>
Arlington Village<lb/>
756-1058<lb/>
WORLD'S LARGEST FRATERNITY<lb/>
RECIPEINT OF:<lb/>
-TOP SCHOLAR AWARD (PAST 3 YEARS)<lb/>
-GREEK MAN OF THE YEAR<lb/>
-TOP GREEK ATHLETE<lb/>
MEMBERS INVOLVED IN:<lb/>
-STUDENT GOVERNMENT<lb/>
-EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
-WZMB<lb/>
-ECU IRATES<lb/>
-ECU RUGBY<lb/>
-RESIDENT ADVISORS<lb/>
-ECU Marching Band<lb/>
-ROTC<lb/>
-SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
ji<lb/>
Tuesday January 24<lb/>
Pizza Nite<lb/>
RUSH DATES<lb/>
Wednesday, January 25<lb/>
Sub Nite<lb/>
From 8-11 pm each night<lb/>
For Rides and Information Call 757"3U4Z<lb/>
the House at the Bottom of the Hilt<lb/>
Thursday, January 26<lb/>
Cookout with a Sorority<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0011"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
r<lb/>
I lit . i A<lb/>
Abortion protest in D.C.<lb/>
30C<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
ZMtC<lb/>
:C<lb/>
D0C<lb/>
30C<lb/>
<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)<lb/>
 I housands of anti-abortion dem-<lb/>
onstrators converged on the<lb/>
ation's capital today to culmi-<lb/>
nate a series ot nationwide pro<lb/>
sts against the Supreme Court's<lb/>
 o' 3 decision legalizing abortion<lb/>
I eonard Dinegar ot the Na-<lb/>
tional Right to bite Committee<lb/>
said organizers hoped to match<lb/>
last year's turnout ot 50,000<lb/>
people tor what has become an<lb/>
annual reminder ot the divisive<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
The debate has taken on<lb/>
added tntensirv this war, with a<lb/>
reconstituted Supreme Court<lb/>
considering a Missouri vase with<lb/>
b e potential to result in signifi-<lb/>
cant changes in the legal doctrine<lb/>
verning abortion.<lb/>
The Washington protest<lb/>
capped a seriesol demonstrations<lb/>
marking the loth anniversary oi<lb/>
the Roe vs Wade decision declar<lb/>
ing that women's privacy rights<lb/>
allow them to make their own<lb/>
decisions on abortion<lb/>
Thousands oi anti-abortion<lb/>
demonstrators marched on Sun-<lb/>
dae in St. Paul, Minn . Little Ro k<lb/>
Ark , Allentown, Pa boston and<lb/>
Burlington, Yt , while large pro-<lb/>
choice rallies were held in Pitts-<lb/>
burgh, bos Angeles And Seattle.<lb/>
President George Bush<lb/>
planned to speak to the anti-abor-<lb/>
tion demonstrators in Washing-<lb/>
ton today via a telephone hookup<lb/>
similar to that used by former<lb/>
President Reagan to address the<lb/>
same group last year.<lb/>
The rally on the Ellipse, south<lb/>
of the White 1 louse, also was to<lb/>
include speeches by Sen. Gordon<lb/>
I. 1 lumphrey, R-N.l and Reps.<lb/>
Robert K. Dornan, R Calif and<lb/>
Christopher Smith, R-N.J.<lb/>
After the rally the anti-abor-<lb/>
tion protestors planned a parade<lb/>
along Constitution Avenue to<lb/>
Capitol Hill, reversing the route<lb/>
taken just a few daysearlier by the<lb/>
newly inaugurated bush.<lb/>
In addition, a group calling<lb/>
itsell Rachel's Rescues said it<lb/>
planned a "din . t action" ettort to<lb/>
prevent women from obtaining<lb/>
abortions. The group declined to<lb/>
disclose the location ot its<lb/>
annt d eti rl<lb/>
Moi ? ii<lb/>
re met<lb/>
p merits i ?l<lb/>
a Planned<lb/>
Parenthood office in Burlingti mi<lb/>
Vt , by 40 pro-choice demonstra<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
The two sides faced each<lb/>
other from across the street, with<lb/>
each group singing, clapping and<lb/>
maintaining their distance.<lb/>
"Right-to-life is not a political<lb/>
issue said Bishop John Marshall,<lb/>
the leader of Vermont's Catholii<lb/>
diocese. "It is not a matter tor the<lb/>
politicians to decide. It is a reli-<lb/>
gious and moral issue already<lb/>
decided by God<lb/>
In downtown Pittsburgh.<lb/>
about 1,200 pro-choice marchers<lb/>
joined a "March lor Women's<lb/>
Lives They were met at the Al-<lb/>
leghenv County morgue by about<lb/>
10 anti-abortion marchers.<lb/>
The pro civ. ice march is i<lb/>
preceded K a rail) at which<lb/>
Eleanor Smcal, a termer National<lb/>
Organization for Women pro:<lb/>
dent, said, "Some people want to<lb/>
save their souls by spilling the<lb/>
blood oi innocent women. That<lb/>
isn't Christianit) . It's hypcx i i<lb/>
The church has no business dicta t<lb/>
ing the policies ot this countn<lb/>
Atter her remarks, many in<lb/>
the crowd turned, shook tl<lb/>
ers and yelled ' Shame,<lb/>
? ? sh ime it the anti abor-<lb/>
I, , . ?<lb/>
act. ?ss<lb/>
tion ; r ?!? :? i<lb/>
?et.<lb/>
! he Su !?? Court<lb/>
agreed I .? a Missouri case<lb/>
in w hi( ha ! ral court<lb/>
strut kdowna strii cent stateanti-<lb/>
la as unconstitutional.<lb/>
In its appeal, the si ite urged re<lb/>
vei .il ot Roe vs Wade, and the<lb/>
Reagan administration filed a<lb/>
 the Missouri case an<lb/>
' ap ropriati . : irtunity" to re<lb/>
n ider the !a: 22, I 3, deci-<lb/>
. n.<lb/>
Attorney ? , Dick<lb/>
rnburg ? ; ? . ?; ;<lb/>
tne  ; . agan ap<lb/>
Kenned<lb/>
rturn<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED Hf LP?<lb/>
Why not com by th? REAL Cruir Intwnronlton C?nt?r 31 2 ?<lb/>
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Quayle conveys pro-life desire<lb/>
Write a letter<lb/>
to the Editor<lb/>
WL ALWAYS<lb/>
NEED LEADERS<lb/>
Thr Air Race is k?jkin fcir<lb/>
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CAPT RANDY HOUSTON<lb/>
757-6598<lb/>
ijpaitership rJttiVTr starts rVrr<lb/>
WASHINGTON AP Vice<lb/>
V'i dent Pan Quayle assured<lb/>
Jnti-aborhon leaders today that<lb/>
jhe Bush administration shan<lb/>
their desire to overturn the land-<lb/>
mark Supreme Court decision<lb/>
k galizing abortion.<lb/>
We have a lot ol crusades<lb/>
Quayle said, noting that ' I have<lb/>
been involved with a lot ol people<lb/>
ir. mv state! Indiana1 on this issue<lb/>
ildn t think of a more apj<lb/>
ftriate group to be meeting ?-?. ith<lb/>
rtly before tl i etir<lb/>
She Old Executh e Otti 1 1<lb/>
 mti-abortion leaders called<lb/>
for a nal i tl pravcr crusade<lb/>
. . it , ime as thousands ol di m-<lb/>
: Orators com  thecapi<lb/>
tal to culmin itea sei : natit n-<lb/>
?. ide pi test again ; tl I ? vs<lb/>
 le Supreme c !ourt det 11 ii<lb/>
Quayle said I  . delighted<lb/>
to sil dow n "u ith arious c n<lb/>
'?' ? ncies inl r st A in the pres-<lb/>
ervatii mI life "<lb/>
 ien a it ; i?; u r asked<lb/>
ther the Bush administration<lb/>
could succeed in getting the I r<lb/>
Roe vs. Wade det isi( n rever ?<lb/>
Q : ivle rt plied, " I ime will tt ll<lb/>
We have the same c mmitmi nt.<lb/>
1 le said it was impoi tant I il<lb/>
ieone stand up and speak I i<lb/>
"those people who are not yet<lb/>
? i rn "<lb/>
White H ise chief of<lb/>
ohn Sununu accompanil d<lb/>
Quavle to the met tii c and tl<lb/>
vice president said Sununu was<lb/>
re because he wanted to hi<lb/>
the visitors' view s.<lb/>
Bush stresses integrity to staff<lb/>
WASHINi rON (AP)<lb/>
Prcs d? nt Bu led iring <lb/>
 : - in his V<lb/>
1urn brightly well after dark<lb/>
instructed hs senior staff tndavto<lb/>
)U' in 1 : .? i1 " irs  av I<lb/>
t: appearance of i nflicl I<lb/>
U : St.<lb/>
 et - . I - work Bush siki '<lb/>
at a brief ceremony in the East<lb/>
Room at which 65 members were<lb/>
sworn-in bv Vice President<lb/>
Quavle.<lb/>
Bush was to preside later in<lb/>
(he da at his first Cabinet meet-<lb/>
ire, and was als ? to address anti<lb/>
at rtion demonstrators thr <lb/>
rsl a rkingda) t I :<lb/>
irc  e are about to ei<lb/>
cealh i;reat adventure<lb/>
urn <lb/>
Bus<lb/>
: : : mi  ; I<lb/>
Sununu attended I ? cere<lb/>
mony but did m : rai - his i<lb/>
hand; he had been sworn m bv<lb/>
Ouavie privad  ? arlier todav.<lb/>
t le said he e p i ted loni<lb/>
hours and I ard '??? i irk . But tl<lb/>
-nghourscan result ma new Oj<lb/>
p irtuhitv for all<lb/>
Bu reiterated that his t ; bus ?  turn ng I is atten-<lb/>
rity was tackling the budget tion to business after a S25n illion<lb/>
. ,   aueural extra aean i<lb/>
: I  . h he w ill tocus en<lb/>
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? ?<lb/>
untrv,<lb/>
: ? r the<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
iki ?: .<lb/>
. n. ccni<lb/>
'6<lb/>
to pre<lb/>
me<lb/>
i iter and n n in in an<lb/>
Quavli had been is! ;<lb/>
? -  eai in the staff. 1 le<lb/>
i ,k? I tin ii U to rai e their rij I<lb/>
ind md take the oath ti i "si :<lb/>
x?rt and defend the onstitution<lb/>
?: the United States" nd to "well<lb/>
: faithfully discharge the du-<lb/>
1 le planned to ad Ii<lb/>
ib rtion protest i??? nl el<lb/>
 : s uthol tl eV hitel<lb/>
del nbtral n ? as cal 11<lb/>
test tl ie Suj : ? me irt's I<lb/>
1973, di cisii m Ii .? ilizing<lb/>
irch and rail i I e sam<lb/>
in pre ious eai <lb/>
uipse<lb/>
oPPmani<lb/>
MENS WEAR<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Tarrytown Mall, Rocky Mount<lb/>
iome of the lapses that <lb/>
tl White i louse si if! :<lb/>
President Reagan, gave special tjos 0f the office oi which 1 am<lb/>
fen : hasis to the need to maintain proud to enter<lb/>
tK highest of ethical standards.<lb/>
"It's not really very compli-<lb/>
cated. It's a question ol knowing<lb/>
pght from wrong, avoiding con<lb/>
?icts of interest, bending over<lb/>
Backwards to see that there's n -<lb/>
evi n a perception of a conflict ol<lb/>
interest the new president said<lb/>
'ur actions must ah a) -1 i<lb/>
ot the highest integrity<lb/>
Bush addressed his stafl il<lb/>
S - a m. By then, he had already<lb/>
been at work for more than an<lb/>
"It's my first official act,<lb/>
Qu i le quipped. At one point, as<lb/>
tl e v aces ol children in the audi-<lb/>
ence began to rise, Bush inter-<lb/>
: ii led his speech and joked: "I'm<lb/>
. ' ; : the re s imei nc else's kids.<lb/>
He ? I that having his 10<lb/>
grandchildren in the White<lb/>
House .ill weekend had been<lb/>
something 1 an ordeal. "In the<lb/>
last 48 hours, they've been<lb/>
ever) v here'he said.<lb/>
Among those sworn in were<lb/>
i meeting with Quayle at a national security adviser brent<lb/>
S owcroft; David Hates Jr secre-<lb/>
tary to the Cabinet; Richard C.<lb/>
i'he president indicated he Breeden, assistant for issues<lb/>
a.m. breakast session am<lb/>
.  I of statt ohn Sununu.<lb/>
txpected a similar work ethic<lb/>
from members oi his staff. He<lb/>
rf ealed for understanding from<lb/>
 . who watched the cere-<lb/>
mony.<lb/>
"Your husbands and wives<lb/>
U' embarking on an ordeal that is<lb/>
la au to be a time-consuming<lb/>
ih iis; Andrew 11. Card Jr<lb/>
di putv to thechiel of staff; David<lb/>
! ? man ? cmmunications di-<lb/>
rector; Marlin hitwater, press<lb/>
tan ; Bo) di n (lrap, coun-<lb/>
sel to the  icent; Frederick D.<lb/>
Mc( lure, assistant lor legislative<lb/>
ifl lirs;and Roger B, Porter,assis<lb/>
New Tax law<lb/>
To help you understand th new tax law, the IRs<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058118_0012"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
4<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24. 1989 9<lb/>
Abortion protest in D.C.<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ?<lb/>
Thousands of anti-abortion dem-<lb/>
onstrators converged on the<lb/>
nation's capital today to culmi-<lb/>
nate a series of nationwide pro-<lb/>
Burlington, Vt while large pro-<lb/>
choice rallies were held in Pitts-<lb/>
burgh, Los Angeles and Seattle.<lb/>
President George Bush<lb/>
planned to speak to the anti-abor-<lb/>
tests against the Supreme Court's tion demonstrators in Washing-<lb/>
1973 decision legalizing abortion, ton today via a telephone hookup<lb/>
Leonard Dinegar of the Na- similar to that used by former<lb/>
ional Right to Life Committee President Reagan to address the<lb/>
id organizers hoped to match same group last year.<lb/>
ast year's turnout of 50,000 The rally on the Ellipse, south<lb/>
pie for what has become an of the White House, also was to<lb/>
innual reminder of the divisive<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
The debate has taken on<lb/>
include speeches by Sen. Gordon<lb/>
J. Humphrey, R-N.H and Reps.<lb/>
Robert K. Dornan, R-Calif and<lb/>
iddcd intensity this year, with a Christopher Smith, R-N.J.<lb/>
reconstituted Supreme Court After the rally the anti-abor-<lb/>
zonsidering a Missouri case with tion protestors planned a parade<lb/>
the potential to result in signifi- along Constitution Avenue to<lb/>
Cant changes in the legal doctrine Capitol Hill, reversing the route<lb/>
Pverning abortion. taken just a few days earlier by the<lb/>
The Washington protest newly inaugurated Bush,<lb/>
gapped a series of demonstrations In addition, a group calling<lb/>
inarking the 16th anniversary of itself Rachel's Rescues said it<lb/>
he Roe vs. Wade decision declar- planned a "direct-action" effort to dent, said, "Some people want to<lb/>
ng that women's privacy rights prevent women from obtaining save their souls by spilling the<lb/>
iillow them to make their own abortions. The group declined to<lb/>
kiecisions on abortion. disclose the location of its<lb/>
Thousands of anti-abortion<lb/>
demonstrators marched on Sun- planned effort.<lb/>
May in St. Paul, Minn Little Rock, More than 500 opponents of<lb/>
fek Allentown, Pa Boston and abortion were met at a Planned<lb/>
Parenthood office in Burlington,<lb/>
Vt by 40 pro-choice demonstra-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
The two sides faced each<lb/>
other from across the street, with<lb/>
each group singing, clapping and<lb/>
maintaining their distance.<lb/>
"Right-to-life is not a political<lb/>
issue said Bishop John Marshall,<lb/>
the leader of Vermont's Catholic<lb/>
diocese. "It is not a matter for the<lb/>
politicians to decide. It is a reli-<lb/>
gious and moral issue already<lb/>
decided by God<lb/>
In downtown Pittsburgh,<lb/>
about 1,200 pro-choice marchers<lb/>
joined a "March For Women's<lb/>
Lives They were met at the Al-<lb/>
legheny County morgue by about<lb/>
40 anti-abortion marchers.<lb/>
The pro-choice march was<lb/>
preceded by a rally at which<lb/>
Eleanor Smeal, a former National<lb/>
Organization for Women presi-<lb/>
blood of innocent women. That<lb/>
isn't Christianity. It's hypocrisy.<lb/>
The church has no business dictat-<lb/>
ing the policies of this country<lb/>
After her remarks, many in<lb/>
the crowd turned, shook their<lb/>
jQuayle conveys pro-life desire<lb/>
fingers and yelled, "Shame,<lb/>
shame, shame" at the anti-abor-<lb/>
tion protesters, who stood across<lb/>
the street.<lb/>
The Supreme Court has<lb/>
agreed to review a Missouri case<lb/>
in which a lower federal court<lb/>
struck down a stringent state anti-<lb/>
abortion law as unconstitutional.<lb/>
In its appeal, the state urged re-<lb/>
versal of Roe vs. Wade, and the<lb/>
Reagan administration filed a<lb/>
brief calling the Missouri case an<lb/>
"appropriate opportunity" to re-<lb/>
consider the Jan. 22, 1973, deci-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Attorney General Dick<lb/>
Thornburgh expressed hope on<lb/>
Sunday that the high court, with<lb/>
the addition of new Reagan ap-<lb/>
pointee Anthony Kennedy, will<lb/>
use the Missouri case to overturn<lb/>
Roe vs. Wade.<lb/>
"My guess is that they will<lb/>
return the regulation of abortions,<lb/>
like many health and safety ques-<lb/>
tions, to the states Thornburgh<lb/>
said on the NBC program "Meet<lb/>
the Press<lb/>
a letter<lb/>
to the Editor<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
3MC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
3tC<lb/>
30C<lb/>
IS<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
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Our Vohmtoors and Staff n on duty 24 hrm. a day. yoar around.<lb/>
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Our longatandlng oaol haa always boon to p?f and onhanco<lb/>
tbo quality of Wo lor you and our eonwmmNf.<lb/>
Ujaajaj d tmmmttmt o tim itm i imhk enm<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
30C<lb/>
30C<lb/>
30C<lb/>
WASHINGTON v'AP) ? Vice<lb/>
President Dan Quayle assured<lb/>
nti-abortion leaders today that<lb/>
the Bush administration shares<lb/>
leir desire to overturn the land-<lb/>
ark Supreme Court decision<lb/>
?galizing abortion.<lb/>
"We have a lot of crusades<lb/>
?)uayle said, noting that "I have<lb/>
been involved with a lot of people<lb/>
In mv state (Indiana) on this issue.<lb/>
SOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
3UC<lb/>
WE ALWAYS<lb/>
iD LEADERS<lb/>
m T .LaaJ LW The Air Force is looking lor<lb/>
VvPJ im pifcts. navigators .<lb/>
 Afl II I rrussileers. engineers<lb/>
flJfV managers and more Our poa-<lb/>
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 OTP through Air Force ROTC<lb/>
 As an Air Force ROTC cadet ymM be trained<lb/>
P in leadership and management practices bu may<lb/>
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After graduation, you'll have all the prestige and respon-<lb/>
sibility of an Air Force off km bull discover a new world<lb/>
where youll be challenged to ecd and rewaided far your<lb/>
success. Let us gh you the details today<lb/>
ing, anti-abortion leaders called<lb/>
for a national prayer crusade.<lb/>
That came as thousands of dem-<lb/>
onstrators converged on the capi-<lb/>
tal to culminate a series of nation-<lb/>
wide protests against the Roe vs.<lb/>
Wade Supreme Court decision in<lb/>
1973.<lb/>
to<lb/>
Quayle said he was delighted<lb/>
sit down "with various con-<lb/>
couldn't think of a more appro- tituencies interested in the pres-<lb/>
riate group to be meeting with ervation of life<lb/>
Shortly before the meeting in<lb/>
he Old Executive Office Build- vVhcn a reporter asked<lb/>
whether the Bush administration<lb/>
could succeed in getting the 1973<lb/>
Roe vs. Wade decision reversed,<lb/>
Quayle replied, "Time will tell.<lb/>
We have the same commitment<lb/>
He said it was important that<lb/>
someone stand up and speak for<lb/>
"those people who are not yet<lb/>
born<lb/>
White House chief of staff<lb/>
John Sununu accompanied<lb/>
Quayle to the meeting, and the<lb/>
vice president said Sununu was<lb/>
there because he wanted to hear<lb/>
the visitors' views.<lb/>
Bush stresses integrity to staff<lb/>
lAi<lb/>
killer 1 he lighr .burn well after <lb/>
president Bush, declaring the da.r,k ar?Und th,S ' BuSh<lb/>
fiehts in his White House will  . , . , ?,<lb/>
Wum brighily well after dark . He h.e exPccd, J"<lb/>
' mmseniorstafHTtt,ndhard w0" But thcsp<lb/>
It in long hours and afeid even 'srscaesultma newep-<lb/>
.e appearance of contlict-of-in- ponuratytoraii.<lb/>
Bush reiterated that his top<lb/>
priority was tackling the budget<lb/>
tant for domestic policy.<lb/>
Sununu attended the cere-<lb/>
mony but did not raise his right<lb/>
hand; he had been sworn m .by<lb/>
Quayle privately ljSBdftES3ayi<lb/>
rest.<lb/>
"Let's go to work Bush said<lb/>
t a brief ceremony in the East<lb/>
om at which 65 members were<lb/>
orn-in bv Vice President Dan<lb/>
ayle.<lb/>
Bush was to preside later in<lb/>
ie day at his first Cabinet meet-<lb/>
rig, and was also to address anti-<lb/>
bortion demonstrators through<lb/>
telephone hookup.<lb/>
The new president, on his<lb/>
rst working day, told the gather-<lb/>
deficit which he will focus on<lb/>
throughout the week, beginning<lb/>
with a meeting Tuesday with<lb/>
congressional leaders.<lb/>
"We have an immense oppor-<lb/>
tunity to make life better for the<lb/>
people in this country he said.<lb/>
"We can, by hard work, make this<lb/>
a safer and more secure country.<lb/>
Quayle had been asked by<lb/>
Bush to swear in the staff. He<lb/>
Bush was turning his atten-<lb/>
tion to business after a $25 million<lb/>
inaugural extravaganza.<lb/>
<lb/>
Ig "we are about to embark on a askcd thc aides to raisc thcir right<lb/>
Bally grlat adventure hands and take the oath to "sup-<lb/>
Bush, seeking to prevent the port and defend the Constitution<lb/>
me of the lapses that plagued 0f tne United States" and to "well<lb/>
le White House staff of former and faithfully discharge the du-<lb/>
rcsident Reagan, gave special tjes 0f tne office of which I am<lb/>
inphasis to the need to maintain pr0ud to enter<lb/>
le highest of ethical standards. "it's my first official act<lb/>
It's not really very compli- Quayle quipped. At one point, as<lb/>
ated. It's a question of knowing the voices of children in the audi-<lb/>
He planned to address anti-<lb/>
abortion protesters on the Ellipse,<lb/>
just south of the White House. The<lb/>
demonstration was called to pro-<lb/>
test the Supreme Court's Jan. 22,<lb/>
1973, decision legalizing abor-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Reagan addressed the annual<lb/>
march and rally in the same fash-<lb/>
ion in previous years.<lb/>
ght from wrong, avoiding con-<lb/>
icts of interest, bending over<lb/>
ekwards to see that there's no<lb/>
en a perception of a conflict of<lb/>
terest the new president said.<lb/>
"Our actions must always be<lb/>
' the highest integrity<lb/>
Bush addressed his staff at<lb/>
30 a.m. By then, he had already<lb/>
n at work for more than an<lb/>
ur, meeting with Quayle at a<lb/>
15 a.m. breakast session and<lb/>
ith chief of staff John Sununu.<lb/>
The president indicated he<lb/>
cpected a similar work ethic<lb/>
from members of his staff. He<lb/>
ippealed for understanding from<lb/>
ouses who watched the cere-<lb/>
mony.<lb/>
"Your husbands and wives<lb/>
?e embarking on an ordeal that is<lb/>
own to be a time-consuming<lb/>
r<lb/>
ence began to rise, Bush inter-<lb/>
rupted his speech and joked: "I'm<lb/>
glad they're someone else's kids<lb/>
He hinted that having his 10<lb/>
grandchildren in the White<lb/>
House all weekend had been<lb/>
something of an ordeal. "In the<lb/>
last 48 hours, they've been<lb/>
everywherehe said.<lb/>
Among those sworn in were<lb/>
national security adviser Brent<lb/>
Scowcroft; David Bates Jr secre-<lb/>
tary to the Cabinet; Richard C.<lb/>
Breeden, assistant for issues<lb/>
analysis; Andrew H. Card Jr<lb/>
deputy to the chief of staff; David<lb/>
Demarest, communications di-<lb/>
rector; Marlin Fitzwater, press<lb/>
secretary; C. Boyden Gray, coun-<lb/>
sel to the presicent; Frederick D.<lb/>
McUure, assistant for legislative<lb/>
affairs; and Roger B. Porter, assis-<lb/>
New Tax Law<lb/>
To help you understand the new tax law, the IRS<lb/>
has two new publications. Publication 920explains<lb/>
changes affecting individuals and Publication<lb/>
921 explains changes affecting businesses. Both are<lb/>
free. Ask for one at any IRS office or call the IRS<lb/>
Tax Forms number in your phone book.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058118_0013"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1989<lb/>
Freshmen are down, broke<lb/>
(CPS)? This year's freshmen<lb/>
are depressed, disappointed and<lb/>
debt-ridden, the biggest survey of<lb/>
national student attitudes re-<lb/>
ported Jan. 9.<lb/>
The findings of the American<lb/>
Council on Education and Uni-<lb/>
versity oi California at Los Ange-<lb/>
les (UCLA) annual survey of<lb/>
308,000 freshmen paint a picture<lb/>
ot collegians "who are not san-<lb/>
guine about the future summa-<lb/>
rized UCLA's Kenneth Green.<lb/>
A record number of students,<lb/>
for example, reported frequently<lb/>
feeling "overwhelmed" and de-<lb/>
pressed.<lb/>
"We have verv high suicide<lb/>
rates among college students<lb/>
now added Alexander Astin,<lb/>
the UCLA professor who directs<lb/>
the survey. He attributes them to<lb/>
tremendous pressures on young<lb/>
people to achieve Whatever the<lb/>
reason, 10.5 percent of the<lb/>
nation's freshmen reported feel-<lb/>
ing "depressed" frequently, up<lb/>
from S.3 percent of 1987's fresh-<lb/>
men and 8 2 percent of the 1985 to help college students from low-<lb/>
freshman class. and middle-income families"<lb/>
More than one of every five Astin concluded<lb/>
freshmen felt "overwhelmed by As a result, he said, "the bur-<lb/>
all I have to do den of paying for college has<lb/>
Green added freshmen may shifted increasingly to students<lb/>
be unhappier than previous gen-<lb/>
erations because "a large number<lb/>
than ever before are not attending<lb/>
their first-choice college<lb/>
"First-choice" colleges are<lb/>
often expensive, and the survey<lb/>
indicated students are not getting<lb/>
enough financial aid to afford<lb/>
them. Those who are getting aid<lb/>
are getting it in the form of loans<lb/>
that have to be repaid.<lb/>
Only 15.6 percent of the stu-<lb/>
dents entering college for the<lb/>
Fall '88 term recieved Pell<lb/>
Grants, which don't have to be<lb/>
repaid. It was the lowest level in<lb/>
the survey's history, Green said.<lb/>
In 1980, almost a third of the fresh-<lb/>
men got grants.<lb/>
"The federal government has,<lb/>
in effect, cut back on most of the<lb/>
financial aid programs intended<lb/>
their families and the nation's<lb/>
colleges and universities<lb/>
The resulting money pres-<lb/>
sure apparently has changed the<lb/>
way the freshmen view the world,<lb/>
Astin and Green said. The eco-<lb/>
nomic recession that plagued<lb/>
families nationwide in the earlv<lb/>
1980s and continues to plague<lb/>
them in many farm and energy<lb/>
states changed the students, too.<lb/>
"These are the children of<lb/>
economic upheaval Green said.<lb/>
"The recession of the '80s was<lb/>
worse than anything since the<lb/>
Depression (of the 1930s). Their<lb/>
loss of faith and preoccupation<lb/>
with jobs comes from that<lb/>
A record number of freshmen<lb/>
- 72.6 percent - said they were<lb/>
going to college primarily to get<lb/>
higher-paying jobs later in life.<lb/>
By contrast, a majority of<lb/>
freshmen in 1968 viewed "the<lb/>
college years as a timeforlcarning<lb/>
and personal development<lb/>
Green said.<lb/>
This year's freshmen "are like<lb/>
their grandparents who experi-<lb/>
enced the Depression<lb/>
Many people report still hav-<lb/>
ing nightmares about final 20<lb/>
years after graduating from col-<lb/>
lege, Dr. Anne Shurling, a psy-<lb/>
chology professor at Transylva-<lb/>
nia University in Kentucky, re-<lb/>
ported Jan. 9.<lb/>
Shurling surveyed people<lb/>
who graduated from Transylva-<lb/>
nia from 1968 to 1978, and found<lb/>
that 27 had bad dreams about<lb/>
finals while they were in school.<lb/>
Of the people who had the<lb/>
dreams, 82 percent said they still<lb/>
occasionally have nightmares<lb/>
about the tests.<lb/>
Finals, Shurling said, consist<lb/>
oi "three or four days of intense<lb/>
pressure that is repeated at the<lb/>
end of each semester.<lb/>
RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS<lb/>
$2750.00 , <lb/>
J?H ?0A0<lb/>
YOUR UNCLE WANTS<lb/>
TO PAY FOR COLLEGE. BUT ONLY<lb/>
IF YOU'RE GOOD ENOUGH.<lb/>
Army ROTC scholarships pay full tuition<lb/>
and provide an allowance for fees and<lb/>
textbooks. Find out if you qualify.<lb/>
ARMY ROTC<lb/>
THE SMARTEST COLLEGE<lb/>
COURSE YOU CAN TAKE.<lb/>
Budweiser ad on campus phone book is<lb/>
said to be 'explicitly sexist'<lb/>
(CPS)? A Budweiser ad on<lb/>
the back of Florida Atlantic<lb/>
University's campus phone direc-<lb/>
tory is "explicitly sexist some<lb/>
FAL" residents say, and could lead<lb/>
to a campus bovcott of other prod-<lb/>
ucts from Anheuser-Busch,<lb/>
which brews Bud.<lb/>
The ad, which features three<lb/>
women in Budweiser bathing<lb/>
suits provocatively sprawled on a<lb/>
Budweiser towel, has run in<lb/>
scores oi publications on other<lb/>
campuses without much formal<lb/>
comment.<lb/>
Mike Fleming of Fleishman<lb/>
Hillard, the company's St. Louis<lb/>
public relations firm, contended<lb/>
he's received no other complaints<lb/>
about the ad.<lb/>
But at FAU, a group largely<lb/>
from the Women's Studies De-<lb/>
partment, circulated petitions<lb/>
asking students not to "consume<lb/>
nor purchase Budweiser beer<lb/>
and encourage others to do the<lb/>
same" because thev are "morallv,<lb/>
intellectually and aesthetically<lb/>
offended by the Budweiser ad<lb/>
To pacify those upset by the<lb/>
ad, FAU's University Relations<lb/>
office is offering gummed labels<lb/>
to cover the back of the phone<lb/>
directory. FAU's student paper,<lb/>
The Atlantic Sun, reported about<lb/>
60 labels have been distributed.<lb/>
"Women aren't being ex-<lb/>
ploited in the ad. The complaints<lb/>
are not justified. I feel it's a whole-<lb/>
some ad maintained James<lb/>
Orthwein, president of Double-<lb/>
Eagle Distributors, which distrib-<lb/>
utes Bud around FAU.<lb/>
Some FAU facultv and stu-<lb/>
dents agreed.<lb/>
'There are no professors with<lb/>
their hands on the butts of stu-<lb/>
dents in it noted Prof. Raymond<lb/>
McAllister. "We just don't have<lb/>
the time or monev to waste on an<lb/>
J<lb/>
issue like this. Damn, we choose<lb/>
the stupidest places to make our<lb/>
stand<lb/>
"If they (Budweiser) keep up<lb/>
this tradition joked FAU stu-<lb/>
dent president Mariann Row-<lb/>
land, "there better be some guys<lb/>
on next year's director)<lb/>
"We believe our promotional<lb/>
posters are balanced in terms of<lb/>
malefemale representation the<lb/>
company relied in a statement to<lb/>
College Tress Service.<lb/>
Fleishman Hillard spokes-<lb/>
man Tom Lang noted Anheuser-<lb/>
Busch produces "literally hun-<lb/>
dreds" of posters "including both<lb/>
men and women A poster for<lb/>
iving Cobra Malt Liquor, another<lb/>
company brand, features Fred<lb/>
Williamson "who is widely recog-<lb/>
nized as one of the top male<lb/>
models in the countrv.<lb/>
than Geraldo!<lb/>
more<lb/>
than Sally Jesse Rapheal!<lb/>
It's the Return of the the<lb/>
scandalous, the libelous (but<lb/>
ALWAYS Clearly Labeled)<lb/>
Fast Carolinian Satire Page!<lb/>
Offer uid where prohibited bv law.<lb/>
Riverbluff<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
Welcomes Students to Come By<lb/>
And See<lb/>
Our 2 Bedroom and 1 Bedroom<lb/>
Garden Apartments.<lb/>
?Fully Carpeted<lb/>
? Large Pool<lb/>
?Free Cable<lb/>
?Bus Service1.5 miles from campus<lb/>
? U nder New 1 anagement<lb/>
10th Street Ext. to Riverbluff Rd<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
.?<lb/>
SIGMA<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
EPSILON ?<lb/>
"The Best Wants to Make vou Better For Life<lb/>
f ECL's LARGEST FRATERNITY<lb/>
1987-88 INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL'S<lb/>
"MOST OUTSTANDING CHAPTER AWARD"<lb/>
RECIPIENT<lb/>
?1988 WINNER OF "ECU SPIRIT AWARD"<lb/>
?240 CHAPTERS NATIONALLY<lb/>
?2 HOUSES AND A PARTY ROOM<lb/>
?590,000 IN SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
AWARDED ANNUALLY<lb/>
(CHANCELLOR'S CUP CHAMPS<lb/>
4 YEARS RUNNING<lb/>
?Ami<lb/>
?s<lb/>
?<lb/>
s<lb/>
?<lb/>
iu"v<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
. i m ?<lb/>
Tan 24th<lb/>
Meet Ladies of Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Tan 25th<lb/>
Meet Ladies of Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
Tan 26th<lb/>
Brothers and Rushees Onlv<lb/>
BEST LOCATION ON CAMPUS<lb/>
(Across from Garrett Hall)<lb/>
Call 757-0487 or 757-0305 or<lb/>
830-9647 or 830-9646<lb/>
For Information or a Ride<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0014"/><lb/>
TH? E-ASTC AROI INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
 A<lb/>
-nonsense leader Marius Weyers and timid cadet Miguel Ferrer track down the monster in<lb/>
Deepstar Six a Tri-Star picture. Weyers and Ferrer play but two of the film's stereotypical<lb/>
0s.<lb/>
ECU freshman helps<lb/>
make horror movies<lb/>
BvCHIP CARTi R<lb/>
<lb/>
unique make-up job to simulate<lb/>
Siamese twins joined at the face.<lb/>
 Most of these special effects<lb/>
a freshman, Paul Pisoni follow the same process. Pisoni<lb/>
said that he first sculpts the crea-<lb/>
ture, head, or body in clav. Then a<lb/>
plaster cast is molded around the<lb/>
sculpture. Latex or other materi-<lb/>
als are floured into the mold and<lb/>
the creatures are tilled with poly-<lb/>
urcthanc foam. Fiberglass and<lb/>
acrylic paint pro ide the finishing<lb/>
touches.<lb/>
Originally from New York,<lb/>
Pisoni and his family now live in<lb/>
Im, "War" from Troma Winterville. At 13, intrigued by<lb/>
clay animation and special effects<lb/>
magazines, he began making di-<lb/>
nosaur movies in his workshop.<lb/>
A tew years later he got a job<lb/>
?t expern nee in two di-<lb/>
ers '?. ng w ith restor-<lb/>
s I ?  'ew York mu-<lb/>
i -  : ked make-<lb/>
. effects lor two<lb/>
iti t : the so, the Tri-<lb/>
 tar Six Pi-<lb/>
I on an exploding<lb/>
Iped paint the 700<lb/>
reated cut<lb/>
i,<lb/>
c oxic A veneer'<lb/>
rps( - ii  applied a<lb/>
helping to restore statues in a<lb/>
museum. After that, he heard<lb/>
about a correspondence course in<lb/>
make-up and special effects.<lb/>
After taking the course, he<lb/>
sent his portfolio to California,<lb/>
where Mark Shostrum, special<lb/>
effects director for "Deepstar"<lb/>
hired him. Pisoni spent three<lb/>
months in 1A. working on the<lb/>
movie, returning home to start<lb/>
college.<lb/>
Working among all the props<lb/>
made tor recent movies made 1 fe<lb/>
interesting tor Pisoni. A head with<lb/>
a slug-creature burrowing outoi<lb/>
it sat in the corner oi the work-<lb/>
shop. "It startled me about 5<lb/>
See STUDENT, page 15<lb/>
Violent Femmes get religion<lb/>
By CHIP CARTER<lb/>
stj Writci<lb/>
"3"  Violent Femmes,<lb/>
SK-sh Records.<lb/>
 n ? km ? where this<lb/>
ajimefi m. 1 wasunderthe<lb/>
irssion th(  i lent Femmes<lb/>
up. I'm glad they're still<lb/>
arund, but on "3 (iordon Gano<lb/>
shiws that he's even more full oi<lb/>
tkspirit than before.<lb/>
album's title is mislead-<lb/>
is the Femmes fourth<lb/>
aj he title is a refercn e to<lb/>
th r - tian trinity The Fa-<lb/>
r s, n and i loly Ghost.<lb/>
. . us punk is an anomaly<lb/>
in music world, though<lb/>
r is drawing a lot oi atten-<lb/>
? . its smarmy metal-lite E<lb/>
But Gano and the<lb/>
s were rockin' and<lb/>
r-rt . hin' vears before Strvper<lb/>
ir first can oi mousse.<lb/>
! i mmes self-titled first<lb/>
Lr . is prettv much a table-<lb/>
stompin' thrash mix of post-teen<lb/>
angst. When "Hallowed Ground"<lb/>
hit the stores, it didn't do so well.<lb/>
The music was still the sparse<lb/>
guitar 'n drums that character-<lb/>
ized the first record, but 1 think the<lb/>
subject matter, like the disturbed<lb/>
farmer throwing his daughter in<lb/>
the well and the religious slant,<lb/>
turned some folks off.<lb/>
Talking Head ferry Harrison<lb/>
produced "The Blind Leading the<lb/>
Naked which balanced secular<lb/>
topics 'including the hilarious<lb/>
"Old Mother Reagan" and almost<lb/>
propagandic songs ("Faith") with<lb/>
the most diverse musical experi-<lb/>
mentation the Femmes had tried<lb/>
vet.<lb/>
()n "3 the Femmes are pro-<lb/>
ducing themselves. They are still<lb/>
walking a tightrope between the<lb/>
saved and the damned,and while<lb/>
they seem committed to the side<lb/>
of the angels, their best moments<lb/>
come in fits oi demonic, musical<lb/>
possession.<lb/>
"Fat" is a great little countri-<lb/>
fied ditty concerning revenge and<lb/>
reconciliation. "1 hope you got<lb/>
fat1 hope you got really i:<lb/>
Cause if you got really really i,v<lb/>
you just might want to see me<lb/>
come back 1 low can you argue<lb/>
with logic like that?<lb/>
Two songs later, Gano lets<lb/>
loose on "Nothing Worth Living<lb/>
For a ballad worthy of whine-<lb/>
meister Mornsey himself. While<lb/>
the Femmes don't ever fall into<lb/>
the same bleak pit the Smiths dug<lb/>
tor themselves, cuts like this or.e<lb/>
makeyou wonder how long it w 11<lb/>
be before they do.<lb/>
Brian Ritchie and Victor 1 e-<lb/>
Lorenzo still use their instru-<lb/>
ments to balance out Gano's mo-<lb/>
rose lyrics, but their tunes never<lb/>
get as fast or as loud as they did on<lb/>
previous albums.<lb/>
Even "Mother oi a Girl a<lb/>
direct descendant of "Gone,<lb/>
Paddy, Gone is a pale echo of<lb/>
the aural miracles oi the past. It<lb/>
Gano reformed the Femmes to<lb/>
spread the word, my advice is he<lb/>
better do it a little louder, or no<lb/>
one's going to hear it.<lb/>
'Deepstar Six' misses<lb/>
By MIC AH HARRIS<lb/>
Sum Write!<lb/>
Director Sean Cunningham's<lb/>
"Deepstar Six" isa slow leak from<lb/>
beginning to end. Through a<lb/>
combination of bland characteri-<lb/>
zation, cliches, and lame editing,<lb/>
the movie maintains the lethargic<lb/>
pace oi a sea turtle on drv land.<lb/>
Set in the near future, "Deep-<lb/>
star Six" follows IV. ohn Van<lb/>
Gelder (Marius Weyers) and his<lb/>
crew ol undersea explorers as<lb/>
they install a deepsea missile<lb/>
base.<lb/>
Blowing up a cavern on the<lb/>
location, the crew releases a !<lb/>
ous monster. It's only one of sev-<lb/>
eral SNAFUS this crack tram per<lb/>
forms. Whether or not the im pt<lb/>
crew will kill themselves bel re<lb/>
the monster does g ni i il<lb/>
only tension in the film.<lb/>
Even so. this movie has its<lb/>
good points. Two or three at least<lb/>
Harry Mandfredini's score<lb/>
evokes the eerie ambiance oi the<lb/>
undersea world. Mac Ahlberg's<lb/>
I .iotographv conveys the claus-<lb/>
trophobia of a sea baseI he model<lb/>
work at the movie's beginning is<lb/>
beautifully crafted. so is 'ia<lb/>
Peoples' flat stomach.<lb/>
Itemizing the movie's bad<lb/>
points isas easy as shooting fish in<lb/>
a ba rrel. The basic pl it isa ren la ke<lb/>
oi an obscure '60s mi<lb/>
nation Inner Space Borrowing<lb/>
an idea is nogreat crime, but fl<lb/>
ingitout with cliches is, espe( i<lb/>
when the characters are so<lb/>
cliched.<lb/>
Our intrepid crew includes<lb/>
the virile hero (Greg E igan), the<lb/>
beautiful, dedicated scientist<lb/>
Peoples), the hero's wisecracking<lb/>
pal (Matt McCoy), the cadet<lb/>
can't take the strain (Miguel er-<lb/>
ror' and the no-nonseni .<lb/>
(Weyers).<lb/>
'1 he re are eight more<lb/>
tors, including the monster.<lb/>
spotlight-sharing obscures<lb/>
focus so badly that e t n the d i<lb/>
tor loses track of them. Instea : I<lb/>
attempting character dev<lb/>
ment, we are green such cur<lb/>
remarks about our heroes I il u<lb/>
plans, one wants to reunite with<lb/>
family, buying that littleiece I<lb/>
farmland, etc. These cheap shots<lb/>
at audter ? ? sympathies occur<lb/>
bel re the character<lb/>
his personal dream is<lb/>
: "? te to all marine biology<lb/>
il '? u should find your-<lb/>
' in an undersea lab with a<lb/>
t air your fondest<lb/>
ir ams or your butt is gone.<lb/>
V t only d es flat ch. icteri-<lb/>
zal npi lu audience indiffer-<lb/>
ence during action sequences.<lb/>
? scenes are edited to evoke<lb/>
all the excitement oi staring into<lb/>
an aquarium. And to c,p the in-<lb/>
ane pacing, we ha1.e a contrived<lb/>
? ? ' ending t ks as<lb/>
it was filmed after the<lb/>
? ? ' ' ?<lb/>
? ? n ' tui - are ? p irently<lb/>
froi : 60s Irwn<lb/>
md we'i ?? It<lb/>
?' i kev pi<lb/>
- ? :  il ? as gai<lb/>
m 11 ' ird s<lb/>
? itive minds<lb/>
bi hind pstar Six should be<lb/>
set adrift r bai I I a desert<lb/>
;  so much as a<lb/>
: :  . :  . . Cai<lb/>
See related story, below left<lb/>
ECU student Paul Pisoni poses with one of his creations ? Siamese twins joined at the face<lb/>
The twins appeared in the film "Troma's War<lb/>
Dead Milkmen's new album<lb/>
sounds like their old albums<lb/>
By CHIP CARTER<lb/>
Staft V ntcr<lb/>
"Beelzebubba" ? 1 he Dead<lb/>
Milkmen, Enigma Records.<lb/>
Without realizing it, The<lb/>
Dead Milkmen have created a<lb/>
new deity. Beelzebubba could be<lb/>
called Lord oi the Retried Album.<lb/>
So naming their fourth l.p after<lb/>
him could bean ironic stabat their<lb/>
own inadequacies but I doubt it.<lb/>
It's not that "Beelzebubba" is<lb/>
a bad album. It's just more oi the<lb/>
same. The Milkmen, like 10,000<lb/>
Maniacs, are a cool band with<lb/>
some great songs. I just don't care<lb/>
to listen 45 minutes of either band<lb/>
in cme sitting.<lb/>
Incidentally, the Milkmen are<lb/>
a thrash-happy band live, and a<lb/>
two-hour show goes b quicker<lb/>
than beer through your bladder<lb/>
The Maniacsusualh dragon unl<lb/>
then do whateversii letl ?<lb/>
out currently.<lb/>
The mam problem with the<lb/>
new album could be lead s<lb/>
Rodney Anonymous. His voici<lb/>
was ingratiating tor the first two<lb/>
albums, just grating on the last<lb/>
two.<lb/>
To his credit, he stretches a<lb/>
little this time out. On cuts like<lb/>
"RC's Mom he gets away from<lb/>
the nasal growl that he's wal-<lb/>
l ?wed in for three records. And on<lb/>
the next cut, "Stuart he starts<lb/>
s rt amii   th w rds like Lee<lb/>
Vii  ? 1 to do.<lb/>
? - ?  - lock<lb/>
? -1 is as fun and Ich : j as I i<lb/>
?' r hits Bit<lb/>
; ill Dj ' thing AH<lb/>
e tunes sound like<lb/>
. - : ? I : wavvay<lb/>
? us - tl it ? ?. Ived into sub-<lb/>
t ure si<lb/>
krl never<lb/>
n .u hesl amekind fc) nicism<lb/>
or insight that the others did.<lb/>
Musically, the new album is<lb/>
better than ever. In some waysil s<lb/>
a spht personality half the<lb/>
songs are breaking new ground<lb/>
and the other hall sound like they<lb/>
see Mil KM! V page 15<lb/>
Fraternities drawing fire, making changes<lb/>
 BRUNSWICK, N I.<lb/>
14 newly pinned col-<lb/>
frati rnity pledges, roused by<lb/>
tlv members' spee hes and their<lb/>
;t desire to belong, were led<lb/>
? stairs into the darkened<lb/>
imbda Chi Alpha basement and<lb/>
vd up in front of the bar.<lb/>
' n sent the lights, revealing<lb/>
e final stage of the pinning<lb/>
ht. I Lore sat 200 "kamikazes<lb/>
?tent vodka concoction.<lb/>
I hey drank.<lb/>
fames Callahan of North Ber-<lb/>
n drank until hedropped dead.<lb/>
the 18-vear-old's alcohol<lb/>
last winter at Rutgers Uni-<lb/>
Irsity was one of a string of scan-<lb/>
ls at fraternity houses around<lb/>
?untrv that have brought<lb/>
re pressure for reforms of the<lb/>
feck -letter brotherhoods.<lb/>
With their futures at stake,<lb/>
iternities are responding.<lb/>
Bars in many fraternity<lb/>
fuses are being closed and ad-<lb/>
visers are returning. And the<lb/>
National Interfraternity Confer-<lb/>
ence is considering a total ban on<lb/>
pledging.<lb/>
"It's not easy to change the<lb/>
culture, but until we do I think<lb/>
there are going to be very bad<lb/>
days ahead for fraternities says<lb/>
John Creed on, a Rutgers assistant<lb/>
provost. Since Callahan's death,<lb/>
Creedon has led the push for fra-<lb/>
ternity reforms at Rutgers.<lb/>
"Fraternities are under fire as<lb/>
never before says Eileen Ste-<lb/>
vens, a national anti-hazingactiv-<lb/>
ist. Mrs. Stevens has traveled the<lb/>
country since her son died 10<lb/>
vears ago after drinking too much<lb/>
during a hazing at Alfred Univer-<lb/>
sity in upstate New York.<lb/>
"Their very future is in<lb/>
jeopardy Mrs. Stevens says. "I<lb/>
think we'vecome to a point where<lb/>
the people who supervise them<lb/>
realize the problems are<lb/>
enormous, and they're just not<lb/>
sure what to do about it<lb/>
The problems boil down to<lb/>
two hard-dying traditions ?<lb/>
drinking and hazing.<lb/>
Critics call fraternities an<lb/>
anachronism.<lb/>
"Fraternities have been en-<lb/>
gaged, like the brontosaurus, in a<lb/>
futile struggle against a changed<lb/>
climate Earl Smith, dean at<lb/>
Colby College, wrote last year in<lb/>
the Chronicle oi Higher Educa-<lb/>
tion. Fraternities have been<lb/>
banned at Colbv since 1984, when<lb/>
administrators decided they no<lb/>
longer fit in at the college in Wa-<lb/>
terville, Maine.<lb/>
Fraternity leaders say the<lb/>
scandals are relatively few, that<lb/>
elitism charges are unfounded<lb/>
and that the positives such as<lb/>
friendship, leadership develop-<lb/>
ment and community services far<lb/>
outweigh any negatives.<lb/>
But over the past two years,<lb/>
defenders of the fraternity system<lb/>
have winced at a series oi inci-<lb/>
dents. In addtion to the Rutgers<lb/>
death:<lb/>
? Four members oi the<lb/>
Univeristy of Alabama chapter oi<lb/>
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, the largest<lb/>
national fraternity, were arrested<lb/>
on charges oi selling cocaine.<lb/>
I'hev were accused oi making<lb/>
some oi the drug deals out of the<lb/>
stately chapter house.<lb/>
? At the University oi Lowell<lb/>
in Massachusetts, six fraternity<lb/>
members were charged under the<lb/>
state's tough anti-hazing law over<lb/>
a stunt that sent a pledge to the<lb/>
hospital with a body temperature<lb/>
of 109. The members had bundled<lb/>
the victim in a sleeping bag and<lb/>
turned on heaters nearby.<lb/>
? A former University ot<lb/>
Delaware student claimed in a<lb/>
lawsuit that someone dumped<lb/>
caustic oven cleaner over his head<lb/>
during a fraternity "I lell Night<lb/>
But nothing stirred an outcry<lb/>
likeCallahan'sdeathatRutgers. It<lb/>
inspired nearlyadozenbillsin the<lb/>
Newjersy Legislature aiK. is cited<lb/>
by fraternity critics nationally.<lb/>
That probably had more<lb/>
impact on ib than any other haz-<lb/>
ing incident says lohnathan<lb/>
Brant, director ot the National<lb/>
Interfraternity Conference.<lb/>
The reprisals against Lambda<lb/>
Chi Alpha were switt and harsh<lb/>
The Rutgers chapter was dis-<lb/>
banded Ad the house doors<lb/>
slammed shut<lb/>
The 2K) other fraternities were<lb/>
ordered to pull out theirbasement<lb/>
bars, which had become standard<lb/>
equipment at Rutgers fraternities,<lb/>
and make other reforms.<lb/>
It could have been worse.<lb/>
In recent years, more than a<lb/>
dozen colleges have banned.<lb/>
Greek-letter organizations. Bo-<lb/>
sides Colby University, fraterni-<lb/>
ties are passe at Amherst College<lb/>
and the University of Lowell, both<lb/>
in Mass i  and Frank n<lb/>
and M ii ' all in Lancastt r Pa<lb/>
At the Pennsylvania (<lb/>
"the trustees felt the fraternities<lb/>
had been reduced in many wavs<lb/>
to underage drinking clubs savs<lb/>
college spokesw man Patti<lb/>
Lawson.<lb/>
I he mounting pressure<lb/>
against fraternities threatens<lb/>
what has been a steadily rising<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
Undergraduate fraternity<lb/>
membership has climbed to<lb/>
400,000, according to the inter-<lb/>
fraternity conference That's mere<lb/>
than double the I970figuresanda<lb/>
170,000 increase since l?v<lb/>
Unlike the Greek system's<lb/>
golden age of the lu?os, this hey-<lb/>
day has come in a relatively unsu-<lb/>
pcrvised environment, campus<lb/>
administrators note. Gone are the<lb/>
housemothers, strict rules and<lb/>
other formalities that once charac-<lb/>
See ACTIVISTS, page 15<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0015"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1989<lb/>
"Drug war" turns high-tech<lb/>
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas<lb/>
(AP) ? Flying wingtip-to-wing-<lb/>
tip with suspected smugglers or<lb/>
buzzing a boat to get a better look,<lb/>
the air crews of the U.S. Customs<lb/>
Service are on the front line in the<lb/>
war on drugs.<lb/>
Equipped with high-tech<lb/>
radar that can spot a plane 200<lb/>
milesaway, they roam the skicsat<lb/>
20,000 feet or skim the waters of<lb/>
the Gulf of Mexico.<lb/>
They know the thrill of an<lb/>
airborne chase.<lb/>
"It seems like what we're<lb/>
doing is an act of war says radar<lb/>
detection specialist Steve<lb/>
MacDonald as he scans the skies<lb/>
on his radar screen.<lb/>
Using five four-engine P3<lb/>
Orions the size of airliners and<lb/>
two smaller twin-engine E2C<lb/>
Hawkeyes, the Customs Service<lb/>
runs its surveillance detection<lb/>
operations here at the Corpus<lb/>
Christi Naval Air Station on the<lb/>
Gulf of Mexico.<lb/>
These crews have a tough job.<lb/>
They are responsible for patrol-<lb/>
ling the vast Gulf and the U.S<lb/>
Mexican border from Texas to<lb/>
California. Their equipment often<lb/>
fails. They get little help from<lb/>
countries south of the border.<lb/>
The system of tethered radar<lb/>
balloons that will someday re-<lb/>
lieve much of their border cover-<lb/>
age is behind schedule ? only<lb/>
four of a planned 17 are opera ting.<lb/>
But they are excited about<lb/>
their new $20 million P3 outfitted<lb/>
by its builder, Lockheed, with an<lb/>
airborne early warning (AEVV)<lb/>
radar dome on top ? similar to<lb/>
that of an Air Force Airborne<lb/>
Warning and Control plan<lb/>
(AW ACS).<lb/>
On this plane, radar opera tors<lb/>
sit at two computer keyboards,<lb/>
where they can track planes 200<lb/>
miles away, assign color codes to<lb/>
friendly and suspect aircraft, and<lb/>
direct Customs planes on a chase.<lb/>
A second dome plane is due in<lb/>
April and Customs hopes for a<lb/>
total of four.<lb/>
Stanley Adams, a Customs<lb/>
pilot and surveillance branch<lb/>
supervisor, likened current detec-<lb/>
tion coverage to hiding a pea in a<lb/>
shell game.<lb/>
"You keep moving the cover-<lb/>
age around hoping to hit the<lb/>
right place on the right night.<lb/>
This is not first-class flying.<lb/>
This is flying with erratic tem-<lb/>
perature controls that can leave<lb/>
you sweating, or can keep a soda<lb/>
ice cold without a refrigerator.<lb/>
This is flying on a roller<lb/>
coaster, because during a chase,<lb/>
the pilots have little time to find<lb/>
"windows" through rough<lb/>
weather.<lb/>
This is flying in the three-seat<lb/>
radar compartment of an E2C,<lb/>
which is so narrow that a quarter<lb/>
turn of a chair is all the room you<lb/>
have. It is so noisy on the plane<lb/>
built for aircraft carriers that spe-<lb/>
cial earplugs are required.<lb/>
Compared to the Hawkeye,<lb/>
the P3 is a luxury, with a refrigera-<lb/>
tor and a microwave oven.<lb/>
On a recent winter'snight, the<lb/>
P3 is patrolling over the Gulf of<lb/>
Mexico when a call from a Cus-<lb/>
toms intelligence agent in Hous-<lb/>
ton sends the crew on a 200-mile<lb/>
chase.<lb/>
The pilots gun the four prop-<lb/>
jet engines and the airspeed indi-<lb/>
cator jumps from 240 knots to 360<lb/>
knots.<lb/>
As the plane bumps through<lb/>
the clouds, two radar operators<lb/>
search for their target on their<lb/>
screens.<lb/>
"Did they say his lights were<lb/>
off?" one crew member asks an-<lb/>
other on the radio.<lb/>
"No self-respecting smuggler<lb/>
would keep his lights on one of<lb/>
the pilots responds.<lb/>
The thrill of the chase, as<lb/>
happens too often, evaporates<lb/>
when the P3 arrives in the target<lb/>
area. The suspect cannot be<lb/>
found, perhaps because he had<lb/>
already landed at a remote air-<lb/>
strip.<lb/>
Sometimes, though, the Cus-<lb/>
toms fliers strike pay dirt.<lb/>
"A couple of weeks ago we<lb/>
chased a plane that landed on Cat<lb/>
Island in the Bahamas savs ra-<lb/>
dar operator Buck Benham. "The<lb/>
drug plane had dumped its load<lb/>
at the airport. We saw cars headed<lb/>
for the airport to pick up the<lb/>
drugs. We sent in a helicopter.<lb/>
They rounded up the plane and<lb/>
pilot. We kept circling 150 feet off<lb/>
the ground trying to identify the<lb/>
vehicles, and the smugglers were<lb/>
running every which way<lb/>
When looking for boats, Cus-<lb/>
toms planes fly right over the top<lb/>
of vessels and then circle them to<lb/>
get an identification.<lb/>
"I wonder what they think<lb/>
down there says one crew<lb/>
member as the four-engine plane<lb/>
buzzes a fishing boat.<lb/>
As the plane skims the Gulf<lb/>
waters, the pilots have on their<lb/>
laps a list of suspicious boats pro-<lb/>
vided by Customs' intelligence<lb/>
officers.<lb/>
A fishing boat is spotted<lb/>
heading for the Alacran Reef<lb/>
about 80 miles from the Yucatan<lb/>
Peninsula of Mexico. The reef has<lb/>
a sheltered lagoon and sheds,<lb/>
where Customs believes drugs<lb/>
arc stored.<lb/>
The plane circles several<lb/>
times, and bingo ? one of the<lb/>
boats on the intelligence list is<lb/>
spotted. The Coast Guard is noti-<lb/>
fied and will send a cutter to see<lb/>
whether there are drugs aboard.<lb/>
Customs' chances of spotting<lb/>
suspicious planes increase dra-<lb/>
matically when the P3 radar dome<lb/>
J<lb/>
plane is flying.<lb/>
Radar operator Edward<lb/>
Smith locks onto a target by sim-<lb/>
ply touching the monitor. He sees<lb/>
the target's position, course,<lb/>
speed and altitude.<lb/>
As planes appear on the<lb/>
screen as little squares, Smith<lb/>
color-codes his displays: green for<lb/>
friendly planes, yellow for un-<lb/>
known aircraft and red for hostile.<lb/>
Smugglers often try to evade<lb/>
detection by flying in an unusual<lb/>
air corridor at slow speed and low<lb/>
altitude with no lights, small tail<lb/>
numbers or with their numbers<lb/>
painted over. There is no trans-<lb/>
ponder signal.<lb/>
If the radar plane wants an-<lb/>
other Customs aircraft to tail a<lb/>
suspect, the computer is pro-<lb/>
grammed to give the chase plane<lb/>
the right heading and speed.<lb/>
The computer screen dis-<lb/>
plays the angle needed for con-<lb/>
vergence, and keeps changing the<lb/>
speed, course and altitude the<lb/>
Customs plane must maintain.<lb/>
There are two computer screens<lb/>
and each can handle three inter-<lb/>
cepts simultaneously.<lb/>
Little crosses on the screen<lb/>
automatically plot a smuggler's<lb/>
course, something that once was<lb/>
computed manually bv an<lb/>
operator.<lb/>
In the future, Customs com-<lb/>
mand centers thousands of miles<lb/>
away will be able to transmit their<lb/>
radar pictures to the flying plat-<lb/>
form and have the P3 direct a<lb/>
chase.<lb/>
When the AEW is flying, the<lb/>
four other P3s serve as long-range<lb/>
tracking planes that can keep a<lb/>
suspect on their radar for hun-<lb/>
dreds of miles.<lb/>
But over the United States,<lb/>
the P3 will often call in a shorter-<lb/>
range tracker, possibly a jet inter-<lb/>
ceptor, and a Blackhawk helicop-<lb/>
ter carrvine a team of officers who<lb/>
can land quickly and make ar-<lb/>
rests.<lb/>
The job is not without danger.<lb/>
Adams notes that the domed<lb/>
aircraft can be spotted from apart-<lb/>
ments that line the bay outside the<lb/>
base. "People can sit there with<lb/>
binoculars and can tell what time<lb/>
we're leaving.<lb/>
"We don't tell the tower<lb/>
where we're going. We're maneu-<lb/>
vering all the time. Wecontrol the<lb/>
planning, go on short notice and<lb/>
keep communications secure<lb/>
Smith suspects that air traffic<lb/>
controllers in Mexico "can moni-<lb/>
torour search patterns and tip oii<lb/>
smugglers<lb/>
"Look in the bay he says.<lb/>
"There are 30 or 40 shrimpers<lb/>
working at night. All you need is<lb/>
a high frequency radio to call<lb/>
bases in Mexico. We give fake<lb/>
return to base calls to flush these<lb/>
CUTS OUt<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/>
A BEAUTIFUL PLACE<lb/>
?ALL NEW 2 BEDROOMS<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 E. 5th Street<lb/>
(Ask us about our special rates to change leases, and<lb/>
discounts for January rentals)<lb/>
?Located near ECU<lb/>
?Near major Shopping Centers<lb/>
?ECU Bus Service<lb/>
?Onsite laundry<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815 or 758-7436<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
CLEAN AND QUIET one bedroom furnished<lb/>
apartments, energy efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. $215 a month. 6 month<lb/>
lease.<lb/>
MOBILE HOME RENTALS<lb/>
Couples or singles. Apartments and mobile<lb/>
homes in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley<lb/>
Country Club.<lb/>
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
 LAMBDA CHI ALPHA<lb/>
BACKED BY TRADITION<lb/>
RUSH EAST CAROLINA'S<lb/>
OLDEST AND MOST<lb/>
ESTABLISHED FRATERNITY<lb/>
VtfE UEQfEatp LIVES 09i<lb/>
JANUARY 24<lb/>
SLIDE SHOW<lb/>
JANUARY 25<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
HORSE RACES<lb/>
JANUARY 26<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
Mfc<lb/>
CALL FOR RIDES<lb/>
757-1367<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0016"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
V<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1989 13<lb/>
Council rebuilds the Globe<lb/>
LAKE LURE, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
supporters of the arts in Ruther-<lb/>
ford County hope to add a new<lb/>
t4urist attraction to the shores of<lb/>
1 ike Lure in the next two years ?<lb/>
a historically detailed replica of<lb/>
tQe Globe Theater where many of<lb/>
Jiakespeare's plays debuted.<lb/>
"1 think our chances of build-<lb/>
ilig it are very good said Mat-<lb/>
t iew McEnnernev, head of the<lb/>
I utherford County Arts Council,<lb/>
llrhich launched a fund-raising<lb/>
ifcmpaign tor the $2.5 million<lb/>
nroject earlier this month.<lb/>
The replica would likely be<lb/>
tfie historically accurate recrea-<lb/>
tion since the Globe Theater was<lb/>
destroyed in London in U44,<lb/>
Supporters said.<lb/>
"The fact of the project having<lb/>
clme this far is quite remarkable<lb/>
S&amp;id McEnnerney, 46. 'The sort of<lb/>
lavid and Goliath quality oi it ?<lb/>
ft's in a rural area with (the sup-<lb/>
pvrO oi small organizations, and<lb/>
? on ? 1 think that might turn out<lb/>
b be an asset in the end<lb/>
McEnnernev said if all goes<lb/>
well, construction on the lb- to20-<lb/>
nded, 100-foot diameter Globe<lb/>
Cbuld begin in July or August oi<lb/>
this year, on the northwestern<lb/>
itiore oi Lake Lure, near the<lb/>
t?wn's community center.<lb/>
The planned theater, which<lb/>
would contain about 800 seats on<lb/>
three tiers, should open by late<lb/>
spring 1990 at the earliest or late<lb/>
spring 1991 at the latest, said<lb/>
McEnnerney ? who sees the<lb/>
project as a tribute to North<lb/>
Carolina's role as a first colony, in<lb/>
addition to the Globe itself.<lb/>
Crews will also work on an<lb/>
$11.4 million to SI 1.7 million park<lb/>
featuring exhibits on North<lb/>
Carolina's heritage, nature trails<lb/>
and a parking area on the total<lb/>
12.9-acre site. The park, says<lb/>
McEnnerney, would be com-<lb/>
pleted in segments and should<lb/>
take five to seven years to finish.<lb/>
McEnnerney got the idea fora<lb/>
Globe replica from a book on the<lb/>
famous theater by C. Walter<lb/>
Hodges. Hodges, an expert on<lb/>
Elizabethan drama and the Globe,<lb/>
visited Lake Lure four or five<lb/>
years ago at the request oi local<lb/>
arts patrons.<lb/>
It was Hodges who spotted<lb/>
the land on the lake's north shore<lb/>
and urged the Arts Council to<lb/>
acquire it as the theater's site. The<lb/>
land, owned bv the town of Lake<lb/>
Lure, has been turned over to the<lb/>
non-profit Globe Playhouse Inc<lb/>
formed by the arts council.<lb/>
If the project fails to get off the<lb/>
ground within three years, own-<lb/>
ership oi the 12.9-acre tract re-<lb/>
verts to the town of Lake Lure.<lb/>
Mayor L.C. Michelon said he<lb/>
hopes that doesn't happen.<lb/>
"1 think it would be great if<lb/>
the project becomes a reality he<lb/>
said. "It would be a Mecca for<lb/>
those coming into the area as well<lb/>
as a cultural center for the county.<lb/>
 1 see it as a real boon<lb/>
Rutherford County has no<lb/>
cultural center now, he said. Lake<lb/>
Lure, which has no schools and<lb/>
only a small library, would also<lb/>
gain an educational center if the<lb/>
Globe and associated park are<lb/>
built.<lb/>
North Carolina's two re-<lb/>
gional Shakespeare companies ?<lb/>
the N.C. Shakespeare Festival in<lb/>
1 ligh Point and the Charlotte<lb/>
Shakespeare Company ? have<lb/>
expressed interest in the replica,<lb/>
which would likely host some of<lb/>
those troupe's performances.<lb/>
McEnnernev said the arts<lb/>
council wants to raise about<lb/>
$800,000 (or its equivalent in<lb/>
donated work or resources) be-<lb/>
fore construction can begin. As<lb/>
the project progresses, public and<lb/>
private matching funds may be<lb/>
available, he said, and could pay<lb/>
up to half the project's total cost.<lb/>
McEnnernev acknowledges<lb/>
the project "isn't a sure thing but<lb/>
remains committed to his dream<lb/>
"Some people say, 'Why here<lb/>
in rural North Carolina?' And oi<lb/>
course we say, 'Why not?"<lb/>
Hodges, in a telephone inter-<lb/>
view with The Ashexnlle Citizen<lb/>
from his Lewes, England, home<lb/>
about 50 miles south of London,<lb/>
feels the same way.<lb/>
"Lake Lure, in many senses<lb/>
. would appear to be off the map,<lb/>
but it is the kind of place that can<lb/>
make the map come to it Hodges<lb/>
said. "It would certainly draw<lb/>
very great attention, enormous<lb/>
interest<lb/>
The chances of the Lake Lure<lb/>
Globe's construction are good,<lb/>
I lodges said, if key backers dem-<lb/>
onstrate faith in the project. He<lb/>
said he looks forward to having<lb/>
Shakespeares's laboratory rise<lb/>
once again.<lb/>
"Oh, I would be overjoyed ?<lb/>
I'd be over the moon Hodges<lb/>
said.<lb/>
READ<lb/>
THE<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sanborn's "Sunday" succeeds<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? David<lb/>
inborn, probablv the world's<lb/>
only professional alto saxophone<lb/>
flayer hosting a TV variety show,<lb/>
$?vs that even the sponsors seem<lb/>
Surprised at the favorable ratings.<lb/>
Since October, Sanborn has<lb/>
Ifcen co-host of "Sunday Night a<lb/>
weekly late-night musical variety<lb/>
now on NBC affiliates. His co-<lb/>
pst is fools Holland, keyboardist<lb/>
the English pop band Squeeze,<lb/>
ho once hosted an English TV<lb/>
lusical variety show, "The<lb/>
ijibe<lb/>
"The ratings have been prettv<lb/>
' oci Sanborn savs. "I think it<lb/>
irprised everybody, the spon-<lb/>
includcd. It's not exactly a<lb/>
Pnderful time slot, 12:30 Sun-<lb/>
iv nights<lb/>
Sanborn, 43, had his first<lb/>
md and cut the first of his dozen<lb/>
:ordings in 1975. He played<lb/>
ith the Chicago-Style Paul But-<lb/>
rfield Blues Band for four years<lb/>
irting in I9h7. He also toured<lb/>
ith Stevie Wonder, Gil Evans,<lb/>
Rolling Stones, David Bowie,<lb/>
nes Taylor, Linda Ronstadt,<lb/>
:kie Lee Jones, the Brecker<lb/>
lothers and others.<lb/>
He's been a semi-regular with<lb/>
band on "Late Night with<lb/>
ivid Letterman<lb/>
The idea for the variety show,<lb/>
says, "was presented to me as a<lb/>
kiation where guest musicians<lb/>
)uld sit in with a house band<lb/>
it would be a pretty eclectic<lb/>
Ix of musicians. That appealed<lb/>
me.<lb/>
"I thought it would be worth-<lb/>
tile doing, to show people who<lb/>
linanly wouldn't get to be on<lb/>
nmercial TV, like Eddie Palmi-<lb/>
David 'Fathead' Newman,<lb/>
jttv Wright, Al Green, Marianne<lb/>
lithfull, NRBQ, Sonny Rollins,<lb/>
Slim Gail lard. If we can do some-<lb/>
thing ot high quality on TV and<lb/>
people like it, we've accom-<lb/>
plished something<lb/>
On "Sunday Night Sanborn<lb/>
plays the saxophone every week.<lb/>
He says, "On an ideal show, we<lb/>
get somebody contemporary and<lb/>
an artist who has been around a<lb/>
longer time. Ivan Neville is a<lb/>
young singer and Ruth Brown has<lb/>
been around since the 1930s. That<lb/>
would be a model show<lb/>
The biggest problem with<lb/>
"Sunday Night" so far, Sanborn<lb/>
says, has been finding musicians<lb/>
whose touring schedules permit<lb/>
them to appear.<lb/>
Another problem is the lack<lb/>
of time for talk. "It's infuriating<lb/>
Sanford says. You have 30 sec-<lb/>
onds to do an in-depth interview<lb/>
with a musician. There's no way<lb/>
you can avoia sounding superfi-<lb/>
cial<lb/>
Sanborn's "The Jazz Show" is<lb/>
syndicated, tor the third season,<lb/>
to about 130 radio stations b<lb/>
Westwood One Radio Network.<lb/>
JANUARY CLEARANCE<lb/>
MEN<lb/>
Rugby Shirts<lb/>
Flannel Shirts<lb/>
Corduroy Shirts<lb/>
Sweats<lb/>
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SWEATERS 2 for $5<lb/>
ALL JEANS $1 OFF<lb/>
WOMEN<lb/>
Dresses<lb/>
Skirts<lb/>
Sweats<lb/>
IHf CLOTHES<lb/>
At<lb/>
10:00-5:00 M-F<lb/>
10:00 3:00 SAT.<lb/>
(closed for Lunch<lb/>
12:30-1:30)<lb/>
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400 S. Evans St.<lb/>
On the corner below "Fizz"<lb/>
?Recycled clothing (New &amp; Used)<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
Travel Values at ITG are<lb/>
Running Hot An<lb/>
Check out our low airfares and vacation packages<lb/>
to the surf and sand, or the ice and snow, and ev-<lb/>
erywhere in between. Call ITG and Save.<lb/>
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NEW YORK<lb/>
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THE required Prices Dased on off pea Travel travel o oinef nays sightly higher Fares are<lb/>
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READ T1ese paKages -nciude aiiare. holet nd more Pacags are or varying lengths Ad<lb/>
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TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
355-5075<lb/>
MONDAY FRIDAY 9.00 A M -5 00 P.M.<lb/>
?0i<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
JOIN IN!<lb/>
At Alpha Sigma Phi there is always something<lb/>
going on. And we believe that something is a<lb/>
unique and special experience. A fraternal expe-<lb/>
rience where a group of men from different<lb/>
backgrounds come together to form a strong<lb/>
bond of brotherhood. We encourage you to visit<lb/>
t Aius during rush to see for yourself, and JOIN IN!<lb/>
1?EE3'<lb/>
RUSH WEEK:<lb/>
Tues, Jan 24: Sub Night w Brothers &amp; Little Sisters<lb/>
Wed, Jan 25: Pool &amp; Pizza w Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority<lb/>
Thurs, Jan 26: Oral Bid Night<lb/>
For Ride Info: 757-3516<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0017"/><lb/>
<lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1989<lb/>
Will to Power mixes hits<lb/>
(AP)? Bob Rosenberg shiv-<lb/>
ers in the first cold weather he has<lb/>
encountered since he was 13 and<lb/>
his family moved from Philadel-<lb/>
phia to Miami.<lb/>
Sacrifices coexist with re-<lb/>
wards in having a hit record.<lb/>
Rosenberg has traveled to New<lb/>
York's winter to b "tcrviewed<lb/>
about Will to Power's op-dance<lb/>
hit, "Free Baby a medley of Peter<lb/>
Frampton's "Baby, I Love Your<lb/>
Way" and Lynyrd Skynyrd's<lb/>
"Free Bird The single, which<lb/>
was No. 1 in December in both<lb/>
Cashbox and Billboard best-<lb/>
selling charts, is from the debut<lb/>
LP "Will to Power on Epic.<lb/>
First, Rosenberg is asked<lb/>
about the group's militant-<lb/>
sounding name, Will to Power. "I<lb/>
read a lot of philosophy is<lb/>
Rosenberg's surprising reply. "I<lb/>
borrowed the name from Fricd-<lb/>
nch Nietzsche. His sister put to-<lb/>
gether a book, a collection of his<lb/>
notes, The Will to Power<lb/>
"Nietzsche said life is not just<lb/>
the will to survive. It goes farther.<lb/>
It's the will to master something,<lb/>
have power over something. 1 like<lb/>
his quote, 'A strong life masters its<lb/>
environment<lb/>
He adds: "I read different<lb/>
philosophers. The thing 1 like<lb/>
about Nietzsche is it seems like he<lb/>
writes to the hermit. I'm pretty<lb/>
much a loner<lb/>
He was shy as a child, Rosen-<lb/>
berg says, and still is, though he<lb/>
has been able to remove the sun-<lb/>
glasses behind which he formerly<lb/>
hid.<lb/>
Rosenberg, whose history<lb/>
before Will to Power is longer<lb/>
than the group's existence, like<lb/>
making a melange of recordings<lb/>
and sounds, which he could do<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
During his freshman year in<lb/>
college in Tampa, Fla he was a<lb/>
nightclub bouncer. He noticed<lb/>
that the disc jockey wasn't in<lb/>
physical danger and had the<lb/>
chance to meet girls, so he set up a<lb/>
mobile DJ companv, doing par-<lb/>
ties, weddings and bar mitzvahs.<lb/>
He says: "Being shy, I<lb/>
couldn't get myself on the mike<lb/>
announcing the bride. What 1 did,<lb/>
I was a rapper, probably the first<lb/>
in Horida, in 1980. People were<lb/>
doing it in New York at the time<lb/>
"I didn't do well in school. I<lb/>
left. My parents weren't too<lb/>
happy about that. 1 moved back to<lb/>
Miami and started a company for<lb/>
parties, age 8 through 80.1 always<lb/>
got them dancing, no matter how<lb/>
old thev were"<lb/>
His mother, known as Gloria<lb/>
Mann before she married, had a<lb/>
hit record in 1955 singing the<lb/>
Penguins' "Earth Angel It also<lb/>
became a hit for the Crew Cuts.<lb/>
A small Miami club, Big<lb/>
Daddy's, hired Rosenberg as Dj.<lb/>
He says: "They gave me Sunday<lb/>
and Monday nights. 1 built up<lb/>
those nights, over three years. I<lb/>
longed to work at a big nightclub.<lb/>
Looking back, I'm glad I didn't. At<lb/>
a small place, I really had to work<lb/>
to get people dancing. In a big<lb/>
nightclub you can do about any-<lb/>
thing and they'll dance<lb/>
In 1982 he finished second in a<lb/>
televised Forida D contest. No<lb/>
job offers resulted. Rosenberg<lb/>
recalls: "The positive thing is it<lb/>
got me more invoved in mixing<lb/>
separate songs together. I slowed<lb/>
down doing parties and experi-<lb/>
mented with creative multiple<lb/>
edits for hours and hours<lb/>
He started giving them free to<lb/>
two Miami radio stations. "It was<lb/>
getting my name out there. They<lb/>
were getting requests for these<lb/>
things<lb/>
Then program director Bill<lb/>
Tanner of WHQT, new in 1985,<lb/>
hired him to mix dance, pop and<lb/>
black music. Says Rosenberg,<lb/>
"Within two months Bob Rosen-<lb/>
berg 'hot mixes' were the attrac-<lb/>
tion of the station. Ratings went<lb/>
way up.<lb/>
"I had compilation mixes. 1<lb/>
started doing specialty mixes, a<lb/>
Madonna mix of all her songs.<lb/>
Bruce Springsteen, end-of-the-<lb/>
year mixes. They were six or eight<lb/>
songs in five minutes, sounding<lb/>
like one long song. They became<lb/>
the most sought-after items there,<lb/>
from call-ins. I'd add sound ef-<lb/>
fects, things from my answering<lb/>
machine His Run D.M.C. mix<lb/>
was the station's most popular cut<lb/>
in 1986.<lb/>
He made a rap record, "Mi-<lb/>
ami Vice about the city's streets.<lb/>
Pantcra Records got a ccasc-and-<lb/>
desist order from the TV show<lb/>
and had to stop selling it.<lb/>
Rosenberg says: "One time I<lb/>
heard a song, 'Drcamin in my<lb/>
head. I put it on tape in about 20<lb/>
minutes. 1 heard it so clearly 1<lb/>
thought it was a previously re-<lb/>
leased song.<lb/>
"A week later 1 met Suzi Carr<lb/>
in a nighclub Jellybean was spin-<lb/>
ning records. She went there to<lb/>
see him. I was just there. She intro-<lb/>
duced herself, said she's a singer.<lb/>
I said I wrote a song and am look-<lb/>
ing for a singer. 1 played a cassette<lb/>
for her. She wasn't impressed; it<lb/>
sounded elementary to her. I told<lb/>
her it's going to be a big hit<lb/>
Carr finally sang "Drcamin<lb/>
which became a 1987 single on<lb/>
Thrust Records. She and saxo-<lb/>
phonist Dr. J, her partner when<lb/>
she sang in Miami nightclubs,<lb/>
joined Rosenberg to become Will<lb/>
to Power.<lb/>
"The record took off Rosen-<lb/>
berg says. "We couldn't press<lb/>
enough. I was shrink-wrapping<lb/>
them. It's lucky Epic came along<lb/>
and saved me He left the radio<lb/>
station.<lb/>
Epic asked if Rosenberg had<lb/>
other songs, for an LP. He said he<lb/>
did, even though he didn't He<lb/>
wrote "Say It's Gonna Rain sent<lb/>
it as a sample and wrote six more<lb/>
songs in a week. All are on the<lb/>
album. Carr, who co-wrote two<lb/>
s mgs on Miami Sound Machine's<lb/>
"Primitive Love" album, and<lb/>
W.B. Brown Jr. co-wrote "Show<lb/>
Me the Way<lb/>
Will to Power is looking for-<lb/>
ward to a full-fledged tour.<lb/>
Rosenberg has ideas for remixing<lb/>
"Drcamin thinking it could be<lb/>
hit again, and ideas for a follow-<lb/>
up album.<lb/>
The video for "Free Baby"<lb/>
helped it, Rosenberg says. "I'm<lb/>
critical of a lot of things. I'm<lb/>
happy with the way the video<lb/>
came out He says thai he and<lb/>
Carr, who looks glamorous in the<lb/>
video, "go together, off and on<lb/>
The video was shot on Long<lb/>
Island, N.Y. "Everything worked<lb/>
out except we lost time when I<lb/>
was stopped for not wearing a<lb/>
motorcycle helmet. The van in<lb/>
front of us had a camera. A cop<lb/>
came next to me and forced me off<lb/>
the read. He turned out to be a<lb/>
nice guy. But he held on to my<lb/>
license, which made me nervous<lb/>
for the rest of the shoot.<lb/>
"There was a police helicop-<lb/>
ter overhead. The guys were film-<lb/>
ing; we should have used that in<lb/>
the video<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyers Market<lb/>
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3 BIG DAYS TO SAVE!<lb/>
r<lb/>
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(Across from<lb/>
Gold's Gyro)<lb/>
"1<lb/>
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Buy any meal (breakfast, plate lunch, or<lb/>
sandwich) and get one of equal value<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
Not Included: Drink. Dessert or<lb/>
Expires Feb. 28. 1989<lb/>
ax<lb/>
Lawmakers suffer burn-out<lb/>
after risitig to top of field<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Young lawmakers usually arrive<lb/>
in Raleigh fresh and eager, but<lb/>
their energy level almost inevita-<lb/>
bly dies off as they get to the point<lb/>
that they can advance no further,<lb/>
observers say.<lb/>
In addition, they begin to feel<lb/>
strained from the mounting pres-<lb/>
sures of family, work and public<lb/>
service.<lb/>
'It becomes a question of<lb/>
whether they can hang on and<lb/>
make a living at the same time<lb/>
said Walter De Vries, who heads<lb/>
the N.C. Institute of Politics, a<lb/>
school that aims to groom<lb/>
younger people with widely var-<lb/>
ied backgrounds for public serv-<lb/>
ice.<lb/>
Although the state pays its<lb/>
legislators a part-time salary,<lb/>
being a senator or representative<lb/>
is virtually a full-time job. The<lb/>
General Assembly's biennial long<lb/>
session lasts at least six months.<lb/>
And if the legislator serves on<lb/>
study committees, he can find<lb/>
himself traveling to Raleigh for<lb/>
meetings several times a week.<lb/>
'They're working in their<lb/>
first full term probably 80 or 90<lb/>
percent of the time in the Legisla-<lb/>
ture, and probably 40 or 50 per-<lb/>
cent of their second term De<lb/>
Vries said.<lb/>
"I had the energy to do it for<lb/>
14 years, and I just ran out of en-<lb/>
ergy said former Rep. Richard<lb/>
Wright, D-Columbus. "If you had<lb/>
tripled the salary and said, 'Here's<lb/>
more money, but you're going to<lb/>
have the same responsibilities in<lb/>
Raleigh I still wouldn't have run<lb/>
again. It just gets too stressful<lb/>
Wright was 29 years old,<lb/>
single and full of enthusiasm<lb/>
when he first packed his suitcase<lb/>
to go to Raleigh for a session of the<lb/>
General Assembly.<lb/>
Fourteen years later, after<lb/>
climbing about as near as one can<lb/>
get to the top of the state House's<lb/>
power structure, Wright packed<lb/>
his legislative career into boxes<lb/>
and carted them home to Tabor<lb/>
city. The Columbus County<lb/>
Democrat had chosen not to seek<lb/>
an eighth term.<lb/>
Southeastern North Carolina<lb/>
has sent a long string of young<lb/>
men u Raleigh in the past 17<lb/>
years, The Wilmington Morning<lb/>
Star said. Among them: former<lb/>
Reps. S. Thomas Rhodes of New<lb/>
Hanover County, Tommy Harrel-<lb/>
son and Tom Rabon of Brunswick<lb/>
County and Ron Taylor of Bladen<lb/>
County; former 9en? Julius A.<lb/>
"Chip Wright of New Hanover<lb/>
County; current Reps. Wright,<lb/>
Harry Payne, D-New Hanover,<lb/>
Alex Hall, D-New Hanover and E.<lb/>
David Redwine, D-Brunswick;<lb/>
and Sen. R.C. Soles, D-Columbus.<lb/>
All were in their 20s or 30s<lb/>
when first elected, and many<lb/>
were single.<lb/>
The most recent representa-<lb/>
tives ? most notably Payne,<lb/>
Wright and Hall ? have moved<lb/>
dramatically in the power struc-<lb/>
ture, gaining more stature with<lb/>
each two-year term. Climbing<lb/>
with them are other young legis-<lb/>
lators from across the state.<lb/>
In an annual survey of legisla-<lb/>
tors' effectiveness, nine of the 20<lb/>
most-effective House members<lb/>
during the General Assembly's<lb/>
1987 long session were younger<lb/>
than 50. In the Senate, six of the<lb/>
top 20 were younger than 50. The<lb/>
median age in both chambers is<lb/>
55.<lb/>
"There is a level of leadership<lb/>
that is moving fast forward said<lb/>
William C. Rustin jr a lobbyist<lb/>
for the N.C. Retail Merchants<lb/>
Association. "That is the 36-to 45-<lb/>
year-old group"<lb/>
They are noted, Rustin said,<lb/>
for their "fresh ideas, the energy<lb/>
to make things happen, willing-<lb/>
ness to make a commitment. <lb/>
They are builders rather than<lb/>
sustainers<lb/>
Traditionally, legislntors<lb/>
have won recognition for their<lb/>
influence over the state budget.<lb/>
The House and Senate's mosl<lb/>
powerful members ? House<lb/>
Speaker Liston Ramsey; Rep.<lb/>
Billy Watkins, D-Granville; and<lb/>
Sen. Kenneth C. Royall Jr D-<lb/>
Durham, all more than a decade<lb/>
beyond the legislature's median<lb/>
age ? hold the purse strings at<lb/>
budget time.<lb/>
Most of the younger legisla-<lb/>
tors play little or no role in the<lb/>
budgeting process. Rather, they<lb/>
are identified with a particular<lb/>
legislative fight or an issue they<lb/>
took to the forefront of the legisla-<lb/>
tive agenda.<lb/>
"There's always been a few<lb/>
younger people who are willing<lb/>
to take on the system, but there are<lb/>
a few more of those now said<lb/>
Hawk Johnson, a lobbyist for<lb/>
cigarette manufacturer Philip<lb/>
Morris Inc. "  Ifs getting to be<lb/>
more of a trend. Ifs trending<lb/>
toward a trend<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan. 26<lb/>
9:00 - 1:00<lb/>
Lip Sync contest<lb/>
Grand Prize<lb/>
2500.<lb/>
$100<lb/>
UU 1st prize for each<lb/>
round<lb/>
There will be four rounds in four weeks.<lb/>
Entrants can sign up at the ELBO,<lb/>
or for more information<lb/>
Call 758-4591<lb/>
$2.00 frozen drinks specials ALL NIGHT<lb/>
$1.00 cansALL NIGHT<lb/>
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,<lb/>
.<lb/>
V<lb/>
r- ,<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0018"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
ll-iLiiAsi CakOLiNian<lb/>
JANUAKV 24. 19M 15<lb/>
<lb/>
Activist groups pour pressure on frats<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
terized fraternity life.<lb/>
But some college administra-<lb/>
tions are starting to reintroduce<lb/>
the supervision. It's met with re-<lb/>
sistance from many fraternity<lb/>
chapters, but some are starting to<lb/>
respond.<lb/>
Resident advisers have<lb/>
moved into chapter houses on the<lb/>
University of Southern<lb/>
California's fraternity row. Fra-<lb/>
ternities have gone completely<lb/>
dry at Indiana University, home<lb/>
to one of the strongest Greek sys-<lb/>
tems in the country<lb/>
The fraternities' national<lb/>
magazines abound with denun-<lb/>
ciations of alcohol abuse, sexism<lb/>
and racism.<lb/>
A recent edition of Alpha Tau<lb/>
G?2? ,0,l0T8 a df"?ki"8 ?TStS?r?SS<lb/>
binee at two Dnvatp nri rlnKc  ? wir. cam<lb/>
binge at two private social clubs<lb/>
Fifteen Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
members were charged with ag-<lb/>
gravated hazing in Callahan's<lb/>
Omega's publication chronicles death. They have yet to come to<lb/>
that fraternity's efforts to halt a trial, but a conviction wouldcarry<lb/>
national liquor promotion geared a maximum penalty of 18 months bodv was fnrroH<lb/>
puses.<lb/>
Joseph Disccnza, a lawyer for<lb/>
Lambda Chi's board of trustees,<lb/>
acknowledges there was "peer<lb/>
pressure" for the pledges to drink.<lb/>
But Discenza contends that no-<lb/>
to male college students. in jail and a $7,500 fine.<lb/>
The governing body of Zeta "I've had calls from all across<lb/>
Beta Tau voted in September to mc country says James Meisel, a<lb/>
end pledging, an idea being stud- Hackensack lawyer who is repre-<lb/>
ied by the national Greek council, senting Callahan's mother.<lb/>
Callahan's death came a few "Among the people I've talked to<lb/>
days after more than 40 Princeton university people, crusader<lb/>
students were treated for alcohol groups ? there's a consensus that<lb/>
He says Callahan's own reck-<lb/>
less behavior was to blame for his<lb/>
death, which an autopsy attrib-<lb/>
uted to23ounccsofaIcoholanda<lb/>
434 percent blood alcohol content<lb/>
? more than four times the local<lb/>
limit. b<lb/>
"This one isolated incident<lb/>
says nothing says Discenza, an<lb/>
alumnus of the Rutgers Lambda<lb/>
Chi Alpha chapter. "It says if<lb/>
someone really wants to drink a<lb/>
lot they can. It could have hap-<lb/>
pened just as easily in my base-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Michael Stcinbruck, a Delta<lb/>
Phi member, is leading a fight<lb/>
against the Rutgers<lb/>
administration's latest proposal<lb/>
for reform ? a requirement that<lb/>
each chapter have an adult, live-in<lb/>
adviser.<lb/>
Stcinbruck, 23, has a scrap-<lb/>
book full of press clippings about<lb/>
his chapter's work raising money<lb/>
for New Brunswick homeless<lb/>
shelters and other causes. He be-<lb/>
lieves the university has ignored<lb/>
the good works of fraternities and<lb/>
acted in a reactionary fashion to<lb/>
Callahan's death.<lb/>
,t??. unwuiiiiy. ? ????. ,w ???? o?r- wa.unxusuMiidt This one isolated inc<lb/>
Student participates in scaring audiences<lb/>
Continued from paee 11 tical jokes. "One morning a guy School is the most prominent possibility of more movie<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
times when I'd come in in the<lb/>
morning half-asleep. You'd think<lb/>
somebody was just staring at<lb/>
you<lb/>
Other props made good prac-<lb/>
tical jokes. "One morning a guy<lb/>
came in and I took one of the arms<lb/>
from Henrietta (a ghoul from<lb/>
"Evil Dead 2") that was ripped<lb/>
off, and I stuck the hand in behind<lb/>
t he door and scared the crap out of<lb/>
him<lb/>
promi<lb/>
thing in Pisoni's future. He is<lb/>
studying sculpture and finding<lb/>
out more about traditional art. "I<lb/>
want to broaden my horizons, "<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
But he doesn't rule out the<lb/>
work.<lb/>
He says he would like to go down<lb/>
to Florida and investigate the<lb/>
possibilities there. The new stu-<lb/>
dios at Disney seem to be a good<lb/>
place to continue his growing<lb/>
career.<lb/>
Milkmen's "Bad Party" has best message<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
came off "Big Lizard in Mv Back-<lb/>
yard<lb/>
"Smokin' Banana Peels" con-<lb/>
tain some Donovan riffs that<lb/>
surge into some of the hardest<lb/>
thrash the Milkmen have ever<lb/>
played. "Born to Love Volcanoes"<lb/>
and "Everybody's Got Nice Stuff<lb/>
But Me" are the same kind of<lb/>
repetitious one-joke songs that<lb/>
characterized their first album.<lb/>
The best songs on "Beelzebubba"<lb/>
have to be "Brat in the Frat and<lb/>
"Bad Party<lb/>
"Bad Party" is hilarious not<lb/>
only for the mad organ notes<lb/>
undercutting the chorus, but also<lb/>
for a complete slam on the worst<lb/>
band in the world. "God, I really<lb/>
hate thismusicI can'tstand Gene<lb/>
Loves Jezebel If there is a God in<lb/>
heavenI'm sure that band will<lb/>
burn in hell<lb/>
that.<lb/>
It's about time someone said<lb/>
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GREENSBORO (AP) ? For<lb/>
years, when thecountyfairwasin<lb/>
town, men flocked to the girlie<lb/>
shows.<lb/>
These days, fair managers are<lb/>
trying to kill the carny, girlie-<lb/>
show reputation. But it's easier<lb/>
said than .lone.<lb/>
Two dozen fair managers<lb/>
gathered Friday in an upstairs<lb/>
meeting room at the Holiday Inn-<lb/>
Four Seasons to talk about clean-<lb/>
ing up that image. They want to<lb/>
make the fair a wholesome family<lb/>
event that includesambling musi-<lb/>
cians, mimes and magicians, and<lb/>
involves local people in cheer-<lb/>
leading contests, bake-offs, live-<lb/>
stock shows.<lb/>
But downstairs, among the<lb/>
exhibits, an Ohio promotion firm<lb/>
pushed its own brand of family<lb/>
entertainment ? an all-girl mud<lb/>
wrestling show. "A real crowd<lb/>
plcaser, a show for the entire<lb/>
family said the letters under-<lb/>
neath a picture of 15 leggy women<lb/>
in tight, white tank tops and short<lb/>
shorts.<lb/>
That's not exactly what the<lb/>
350 fair managers at the annual<lb/>
convention of the N.C. Associa-<lb/>
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mind for family entertainment.<lb/>
Nowadays, that kind of show<lb/>
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Greenville. NC 27858<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058118_0019"/><lb/>
1 HI EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
ECU wins its first on Navy soil<lb/>
Midshipmen rally but fall to Pirates<lb/>
By MARK BARBER<lb/>
V- n m 5porta I ditoi<lb/>
respectively. Mote, a previously jumper and a 12 footer from the<lb/>
redshirtcd freshman, continues to left baseline, following an initial<lb/>
pla tearless, aggressive ball three pointer by Navy's o<lb/>
against stronger opponents. Gottschalk.<lb/>
ANNAPOLIS - The US Naval Going into the game, ECU After a baseline drive and<lb/>
Academ pulled out some big coach Mike Steele pointed out basket by Kelly the Pirates vyere<lb/>
guns Mondav night in order to that to win the ballgame, the Pi- ;?p 6-3. Gottschalk hit another<lb/>
.i n . I- u ui i i j one shot, this time lust inside the<lb/>
stop the Pirates ot Eait Carolina rates would have to plav solid , ? .  . . .<lb/>
1,1 i ? , , i three-point ranee anol Keuuw k<lb/>
Universitv. But when the smoke defense, in both transition and , ? . ,   . i<lb/>
ui .i pi, k,i .i ii o . took an inside ob trom I avis to<lb/>
tinallv cleared, the Pirates had protecting the post 1 he Pirates<lb/>
indered a 70-63 victory from<lb/>
the hosting Midshipmen. shipmen to onlv tour points otl<lb/>
Using a whole team effort the fast break, each coming after q"?? six j<lb/>
I'lv'lvvliMU.l l v ? -l - i ? iv vv <lb/>
 , , ,  vi, score, putting the Academy up 7-<lb/>
did just that, holdme, the Mid s <lb/>
, 6. K I then reeled oft another<lb/>
w I<lb/>
ith to<lb/>
'avers in double tig- Naw steals in the first half.<lb/>
uros ECU won their first game in the post. E( U allowed<lb/>
ever at Naw, and came out ot only 10 points, but six of those<lb/>
their two game road swing with a were late in the game alter the<lb/>
I 1  : The Pirates lost to Pirates were pulled back outside<lb/>
Ann rican University Saturday by tl hot touch of Navy guards<lb/>
ECU ahead by 14 at the 12:40 Eric Harris and Bobby lones.<lb/>
mark in the second hah after a fast Another key for the Pirates it<lb/>
k : . ket by freshman Casey they were to win, according to<lb/>
Mote suddenly found them- Steele, was for the team to get of I<lb/>
selves ahead by only two points to a fast start, and that they did as<lb/>
following a barrage of three-point Hill pepped in an eight-foot<lb/>
.? ils four in all. by Navy.<lb/>
Not to be denied the win the<lb/>
Pirates got timely buckets from<lb/>
 r ird Blu Ed wards and clutch<lb/>
thi  - from left Kelly to in-<lb/>
suh the victory. ECU is now 9-8<lb/>
overall on the season. 3-3 in the<lb/>
v olonial Athletic Association.<lb/>
while Navy falls to 3-13 and 0-7.<lb/>
GusHill started the late surge<lb/>
: r the Pirates on an inside buck I<lb/>
off a sharp pas from Kelly. After<lb/>
a Midshipmen turnover, Ed-<lb/>
wards drove inside ocr av s<lb/>
- 6 I ddie Roddick to sere and<lb/>
a is I ?ulcd on the play. Edwards'<lb/>
iritv shot tell through to put the<lb/>
rates ahead 62-55.<lb/>
ECU and Naw each scored<lb/>
The most the Pirates could<lb/>
pull ahead was by five, and the<lb/>
Midshipmen fought back to catt h<lb/>
ECUat20-20. From there, the lead<lb/>
shifted from one team to the other,<lb/>
with ECU closine out die halt<lb/>
with the advantage.<lb/>
With Na vahead 3 V30, Mod<lb/>
went to the line v ith a one and<lb/>
one opportunity and made good<lb/>
on both attempts. Taking advan-<lb/>
tage of steals from Reed 1 osc and<lb/>
Kelly, 1 dwards sank two baskets<lb/>
in the pamt, putting the Pirates up<lb/>
by three, '??? 13. I he half ended<lb/>
with Kelh putting in a layup on a<lb/>
dish from Kenny Murj hy at the<lb/>
buzzer, nd E( 1' w ent into the<lb/>
intermission with a W S3 lead.<lb/>
In each halt o( ; la 1 till got<lb/>
the Pirates going carl Blue<lb/>
closed out strong and the middles<lb/>
wen sandw iched with stn ng all-<lb/>
around play from Kelly and M '<lb/>
EC! also c I ;tr ng ! I ei ?<lb/>
I ose and Stanle) I th oi<lb/>
whose hands a used probl<lb/>
Naval i I fense.<lb/>
i CU n ? . lo tks ahead t a<lb/>
? ; ; ad mat nst l ival<lb/>
I NC  ilmingl ird iv The<lb/>
match w ill be a halli i ? ? r the<lb/>
: : ? ? isUN" K ? .<lb/>
to i ?)? c hit k fn m a I<lb/>
f ught 1 i ???- K6-S5. at I i i<lb/>
American '  rsity in '?. i<lb/>
tion Mi mdav nigl it<lb/>
<lb/>
ic final tour mm-<lb/>
i igl.i i ??<lb/>
six ot I . I - poir ts c mir g<lb/>
from Kelly at the free-throw line,<lb/>
at the scoring tor the<lb/>
me.<lb/>
I dwards led all scorers in the<lb/>
c imt ??? ith 21 points, tour Kcw<lb/>
is season's average. Hill was<lb/>
next tor the Pirates with 13, w<lb/>
Kell and M te each had - as r<lb/>
chs in the c imc with 12 ai 11<lb/>
In I as! year's action against Navy ECLs<lb/>
Hill fight for the ball against tl i<lb/>
 ear's game 90-88 but had trouh e M<lb/>
Pirates (Photo by 1 1 Photo I ab).<lb/>
ECU swimmers<lb/>
drown Blue I)eils<lb/>
? KRIS! I N M.M.BI RC<lb/>
I  .<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
The women take their mark as they await the sound of the shot signaling the beginning ot the ra c<lb/>
t Photo b i im Povle).<lb/>
Eades too tough for Pirates<lb/>
By MARK BARBER<lb/>
SDorta Wr'i In<lb/>
nutcs out of the game after injuring his<lb/>
"In the first half, we wen shooting hand on a drive inside,<lb/>
horrible Steele said alter tin and.onh nuwrten  ? rre-ei ter-<lb/>
game. "We played with no emo- ing the contest wa ll rthis<lb/>
The theme coming from tion, we got hurt on the transition third persoi I al, which I id<lb/>
-? ishington, D.C these days, ?wewercasbadaswecouldbe Steele to take him out tor<lb/>
. anks to new president George The Pirates controlled the remainder ot the half at the 9:23<lb/>
Bush is There's a New Breeze opening tip-off, and immediately mark<lb/>
  American University went up 2-0 on a 10-foot jumper lvo quick baskets by center<lb/>
I kthetl me into their Bender by Edwards. Eagle sophomore Ron Draper and a three-point goal<lb/>
Arena Saturday night and Brock Wortman then went to by Wortman began the second<lb/>
promptly breezed bv East work for AU, hitting three outside half for American, and the Eagli<lb/>
lina's Pirates, walking awav shots, which allowed the Eagles to quickly built a 55-29 lead. The<lb/>
:? is B2-68 victory, begin work on the inside. Wort- Pirates began to play with the<lb/>
The Eagles took ad vantage of man made three from 16, 12, and intensity they had missed in<lb/>
Pirate miscues in the first half, 21 feet, respectively, to send first half at that point.<lb/>
33 percent shooting and American to their 124 lead.<lb/>
. ? ?<lb/>
ia<lb/>
Kennv<lb/>
back<lb/>
siowiv U 1111<lb/>
;ame. i irst, (.us 1 lill<lb/>
made two layups to pull the<lb/>
:? . Edwards'scant six minutes ECl struggled to get back in the <lb/>
 playing time, to jump out to an the game, but the closest they Murphy,<lb/>
earlv lead. While ECU scored the '?? aid get would be five down, on into thi<lb/>
? bucket of the game, the Al a rebound layup by Kennv<lb/>
lad came back to re them- Murphy at the 11:40 mark in the rates to within 22. Eagle guard<lb/>
selves, and before one could sav half. The Eagles, however, started Rodney Holmes hit a 12-foot<lb/>
nauguration Weekend the getting the ball inside on the baseline jumper to put AU ahead<lb/>
I ?? s were staring at a 12-4defi- shorter Pirates, and went into the 59-35.<lb/>
cit fr m which they never recov- intermission with a solid 39-23 Alter an E timeout.<lb/>
eTQ(i. lead. Murphy sank two tree throw.<lb/>
use ECU head coach Mike No help to Pirate efforts in the<lb/>
Sto e's words, the Pirates were firsthalf was the absence of senior drove<lb/>
. after the first five forward Blue Edwards, who came lead to 20 with 13 minutes to play.<lb/>
then stole the ball from At an<lb/>
m for a basket to c 'o ?<lb/>
ne<lb/>
Murph tl ? ki d tl<lb/>
awav Hem  ?'?<lb/>
arid Edward i <lb/>
in. I ? n i : -<lb/>
. ? ' ntinuedtocl the<lb/>
: rica n lead, 1 t<lb/>
i ild get w, 12, at 72h .vil<lb/>
"22 : ' ning ccordinc I<lb/>
St i Ic, tl it A-asn t g ? d i ,h.<lb/>
"Sure we cami ick I<lb/>
but that's n tf( urorfi e,vvhi<lb/>
w hat you rve I to do<lb/>
be in I<lb/>
"In the second half, wt laved ike<lb/>
we have to play if we wa I vin<lb/>
 ? , but th it's no g? m d hi<lb/>
v  aln ?. out I the gan<lb/>
Edwards, who nly<lb/>
minutes in the const" I id I<lb/>
Pirates in so ?? ing w ith 22 ; ints,<lb/>
wl ile ! lill had 15 and v<lb/>
lu- ! I2 A merit an ? as leadu<lb/>
with21 pointsfroml ? i i u I 12<lb/>
frc;in Woi tman. I'he PiraU s wen<lb/>
out-rebounded m the game 44-29.<lb/>
St ? le said he is i. n ? i<lb/>
about the lackluster performance<lb/>
from his Pirates, pointing out t; it<lb/>
See EAGLES, page 17<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
C Wed<lb/>
; Villiai md M<lb/>
. ? . : m and dn<lb/>
I ? ng into conlei<lb/>
ict ne loss alsi<lb/>
? UNC VN edni ?  PI<lb/>
it Dukel39-1 7<lb/>
- w as a ?- I vict r I i<lb/>
is Head . -<lb/>
.t This was the I<lb/>
met I we ha e ever had.<lb/>
But : lid not stoj<lb/>
i s t a v ic ton I n rd<lb/>
lee "1 Wkl R:<lb/>
IRS sponsors events<lb/>
ECU Women prevail-<lb/>
break losing streak<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Sr?i V r.trr<lb/>
torw ard Sarah,rav lead the 1 ady<lb/>
Pirates efforts with six points as<lb/>
E U trailed 22-25 at the halt.<lb/>
" In the second hah, senior<lb/>
East Carolina's women'sbas- Ruard Pam Williams sparked<lb/>
kctba ? tm brok ? two game ECU with back to back layups at<lb/>
nc streak oi Saturday as it the 17:00 mark. Williams effort<lb/>
ed the Lady 1'irates regain a<lb/>
31-28 lead they they would hold<lb/>
for the remainder of the game.<lb/>
Past Carolina improved its<lb/>
shooting m the second halt to 47<lb/>
percent while the Lady Eagles<lb/>
dropped to 17 percent.<lb/>
freshman forward Tonya<lb/>
I largrove scored fourteen points<lb/>
?en minutesof'thegameVPCU in th sond hlf vi,g hcr a<lb/>
onlv hit one layup and one career high 17 rx)ints for the game<lb/>
freethrow while American only as ECU gradually pulled away<lb/>
hit one layup. The score, with 'rom American and went on to<lb/>
10 14 remaining before the halt, their secondAA win of the sea-<lb/>
was 5-2, ECU.<lb/>
ted its second conference win<lb/>
of the season with a victory over<lb/>
American University, 66-43, in<lb/>
Mingi -l liseum.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, now 7-7 i I<lb/>
the year and 2-3 in conference<lb/>
plav, got off to a slow start against<lb/>
the Lad) Eagles as they shot just<lb/>
20 percent in the tirst halt. In the<lb/>
son.<lb/>
As the offense began produc-<lb/>
Senior Gretta Savage scored<lb/>
13 points for the Lady Pirates and<lb/>
ing for both the LCL and Amen-  .<lb/>
" vv. i i u i u,r.c co pu ed down In rebounds. Har-<lb/>
can, the lead changed hands se - h u' M<lb/>
era! times in the first half. Junior See LADY PIRATES, page 18<lb/>
? ltd met<lb/>
? and Flo Jo ha<lb/>
. ommon pic gold x<lb/>
course! Now, t n ad I . 1<lb/>
thin your j ? ??<lb/>
ECU Recreation il<lb/>
I ! hursda. Fel<lb/>
asFlTN'i S )l ' v ?<lb/>
n the a in M ,es G<lb/>
in is t ims ot fault tafl<lb/>
? ? nt: te in a cari t<lb/>
fitnessoriented ai ti iti sfi<lb/>
;  . bic c n la I<lb/>
obstacle 11 ?urse<lb/>
Registration is an. ; ! in 2 I<lb/>
Mi moi lal v ' " nasium and isfn i<lb/>
: ehai go. - Opening ceremi nies<lb/>
? ? n al v pm with medal v<lb/>
m rs receiv ing t shii ts and huj<lb/>
gers tor their efforts<lb/>
Int t a mural Rec Sei u es<lb/>
 ants Men of Steel ' for a<lb/>
bulkbuilderscin uit training, las<lb/>
called SI 1 ERC1RCUI 1 (Women<lb/>
i Iron vv U omed as vell). Ev iv.<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday from<lb/>
i-  7:30 p m (his specialt) lass<lb/>
challenges partic -pants with i<lb/>
diovascular fitness and muscular<lb/>
strength enduran c componei I<lb/>
Individuals may register through<lb/>
Ian 20 in Memorial G mnasium.<lb/>
With the onset and onslought<lb/>
o! ATC basketball action begin<lb/>
ning in 1989, let us not forget the<lb/>
men and women of Intramural<lb/>
basketball who will slam, jam and<lb/>
f( r<lb/>
(Photo by Mark Love, ECU Photo Lab).<lb/>
<lb/>
2 S '<lb/>
<lb/>
5 Si jA<lb/>
? ?5<lb/>
RE ??8i<lb/>
v -nit??'<lb/>
an2 ()n sitt regison IruiC$<lb/>
tube Water Polo 315 pm<lb/>
Nit-i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0020"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1989 Page 16<lb/>
ECU wins its first on Navy soil<lb/>
Midshipmen rally but fall to Pirates<lb/>
By MARK BARBER<lb/>
Acting Asjt Sports Editor<lb/>
redshirted freshman, continues to<lb/>
play fearless, aggressive ball<lb/>
? against stronger opponents.<lb/>
ANNArOLIS ? The U.S. Naval Going into the game, ECU<lb/>
Academv pulled out some big coach Mike Steele pointed out<lb/>
guns Mondav night in order to that to win the ballgame, the Ir-<lb/>
respectively. Mote, a previously jumper and a 12-footcr from the Kelly, Edwards sank two baskets<lb/>
stop the Pirates of East Carolina<lb/>
University. But when the smoke<lb/>
finallv cleared, the Pirates had<lb/>
plundered a 70-63 victory from<lb/>
the hosting Midshipmen.<lb/>
Using a whole team effort<lb/>
rates would have to play solid<lb/>
defense, in both transition and<lb/>
protecting the post. The Pirates<lb/>
did just that, holding the Mid-<lb/>
shipmen to only four points off<lb/>
the fast break, each coming after<lb/>
left baseline, following an initial<lb/>
three-pointer by Navy's Joe<lb/>
Gottschalk.<lb/>
After a baseline drive and<lb/>
basket by Kelly, the Pirates were<lb/>
up 6-3. Gottschalk hit another<lb/>
long shot, this time just inside the<lb/>
three-point range, and Reddick<lb/>
took an inside lob from Davis to<lb/>
in the paint, putting the Pirates up<lb/>
by three, 36-33. The half ended<lb/>
with Kelly putting in a layup on a<lb/>
dish from Kenny Murphy at the<lb/>
buzzer, and ECU went into the<lb/>
intermission with a 38-33 lead.<lb/>
In each half of play, Hill got<lb/>
the Pirates going early. Blue<lb/>
closed out strong and the middles<lb/>
with four players in double fig- Navy steals in the first half.<lb/>
ures, ECU won their first game in the post, ECU allowed<lb/>
ever at Navy, and came out of only 10 points, but six of those<lb/>
their two game road swing with a were late in the game after the<lb/>
1-1 split. The Pirates lost to Pirates were pulled back outside<lb/>
score, putting the Academy up 7- were sandwiched with strong all-<lb/>
6. ECU then reeled off another around play from Kelly and Mote,<lb/>
quick six points to go up 12-7. ECU also got strong defense from<lb/>
The most the Pirates could Lose and Stanley Love, both of<lb/>
pull ahead was by five, and the whose hands caused problems for<lb/>
Midshipmen fought back to catch the Naval offense.<lb/>
American University Saturdav-<lb/>
ECU, ahead by 14 at the 12:40<lb/>
mark in the second half after a fast<lb/>
break bucket by freshman Casey<lb/>
Mote, suddenly found them-<lb/>
by the hot touch of Navy guards<lb/>
Eric Harris and Bobby Jones.<lb/>
Another key for the Pirates if<lb/>
they were to win, according to<lb/>
Steele, was for the team to get off<lb/>
ECU at 20-20. From there, the lead<lb/>
shifted fromone team to thcothcr,<lb/>
with ECU closing out the half<lb/>
with the advantage.<lb/>
With Navy ahead 33-30, Mote<lb/>
went to the line with a one-and-<lb/>
ECU now looks ahead to a<lb/>
tough road matchup against rival<lb/>
UNC-VVilmington Saturday. The<lb/>
match will be a challenge for the<lb/>
Pirates, as UNC-VV will be looking<lb/>
to bounce back from a hard-<lb/>
Hill<lb/>
selves ahead by only two points to a fast start, and that they did as<lb/>
following a barrage of three-point<lb/>
goals, four in all, by Navy.<lb/>
Not to be denied the win, the<lb/>
Pirates got timely buckets from<lb/>
forward Blue Edwards and clutch<lb/>
free throws from Jeff Kelly to in-<lb/>
sure the victory. ECU is now 9-8<lb/>
overall on the season, 3-3 in the<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association,<lb/>
while Navy falls to 3-13 and 0-7.<lb/>
Gus Hill started the late surge<lb/>
for the Pirates on an inside bucket<lb/>
off a sharp pass from Kelly. After<lb/>
a Midshipmen turnover, Ed-<lb/>
wards drove inside over Navy's<lb/>
6'6" Eddie Reddick to score and<lb/>
was fouled on the play. Edwards'<lb/>
charity shot fell through to put the<lb/>
Pirates ahead 62-55.<lb/>
ECU and Navy each scored<lb/>
eight points in the final four min-<lb/>
utes, six of ECU'S points coming<lb/>
from Kelly at the free-throw line,<lb/>
to close out the scoring for the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Edwards led all scorers in the<lb/>
game with 21 points, four below<lb/>
his season's average. Hill was<lb/>
next for the Pirates with 15, while<lb/>
Kelly and Mote each had season<lb/>
highs in the game with 12 and 10<lb/>
one opportunity and made good fought loss, 86-85, at the hands of<lb/>
on both attempts. Taking advan- American University in CAA ac-<lb/>
popped in an eight-foot tageof steals from Reed Lose and tion Monday night.<lb/>
In Last year's action against Navy, ECLs' Reed Lose ami (.us<lb/>
Hill fight for the ball against their opponent. Navy won last<lb/>
year's game 90-88 but had trouble Monday night against the<lb/>
Pirates (Photo by ECU Photo Lab).<lb/>
ECU swimmers<lb/>
drown Blue Devils<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
Sports Fditor<lb/>
The women take their mark as they awaiftne sound of the shot signaling the beginning of the race<lb/>
(Photo by Tom Doyle).<lb/>
Eagles too tough for Pirates<lb/>
By MARK BARBER<lb/>
Sport Writer<lb/>
out of the game after injuring his Murphy then knocked the ball<lb/>
from AU's Fred Tillman,<lb/>
The theme coming from<lb/>
Washington, D.C. these days,<lb/>
thanks to new president George<lb/>
Bush, is 'There's a New Breeze<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
"In the first half, we were shooting hand on a drive inside,<lb/>
horrible Steele said after the and, only moments after re-enter-<lb/>
game. "We played with no emo- ing the contest, was called for this<lb/>
tion, we got hurt on the transition third personal foul, which lead<lb/>
?we were as bad as we could be Steele to take him out for the<lb/>
The Pirates controlled the remainder of the half at the 9:23<lb/>
away<lb/>
and Edwards took the ball in for<lb/>
the slam to make the score 59-41.<lb/>
ECU continued to close on the<lb/>
opening tip-off, and immediately mark.<lb/>
Blowing American University went up 2-0 on a 10-foot jumper<lb/>
took the theme into their Bender<lb/>
Arena Saturday night and<lb/>
promptly breezed by East<lb/>
Carolina's Pirates, walking away<lb/>
with an easy 82-68 victory.<lb/>
The Eagles took advantage of<lb/>
Pirate miscues in the first half,<lb/>
namely, 33 percent shooting and<lb/>
Blue Edwards' scant six minutes<lb/>
of playing time, to jump out to an<lb/>
earlv lead. While ECU scored the<lb/>
first bucket of the game, the AU<lb/>
squad came back to score them-<lb/>
selves, and before one could say<lb/>
"Inauguration Weekend the<lb/>
Pirates were staring at a 12-4 defi-<lb/>
cit, from which they never recov-<lb/>
ered.<lb/>
To use ECU head coach Mike<lb/>
Steele's words, the Pirates were<lb/>
out of the game after the first five<lb/>
Ron Draper and a three-point goc<lb/>
by Wortman began the second<lb/>
half for American, and the Eagles<lb/>
by Edwards. Eagle sophomore<lb/>
Brock Wortman then went to<lb/>
work for AU, hitting three outside<lb/>
shots, which allowed the Eagles to quickly built a 55-29 lead. The<lb/>
Pirates began to play with the<lb/>
intensity they had missed in the<lb/>
first half at that point<lb/>
Dow<lb/>
the aggressi<lb/>
begin work on the inside. Wort-<lb/>
man made three from 16,12, and<lb/>
21 feet, respectively, to send<lb/>
American to their 12-4 lead.<lb/>
ECU struggled to get back in<lb/>
the game, but the closest they Murphy, slowly climbed back<lb/>
would get would be five down, on into the game. First, Gus Hill<lb/>
a rebound layup by Kenny made two layups to pull the Pi-<lb/>
Murphy at the 11:40 mark in the rates to within 22. Eagle guard<lb/>
half. The Eagles, however, started Rodney Holmes hit a 12-foot<lb/>
getting the ball inside on the baseline jumper to put AU ahead<lb/>
shorter Pirates, and went into the<lb/>
intermission with a solid 39-23<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
No help to Pirate efforts in the<lb/>
first half was the absence of senior<lb/>
forward Blue Edwards, who came<lb/>
American lead, but he closest they<lb/>
could get was 12, at 72-60 with<lb/>
5:22 remaining. According to<lb/>
Two quick baskets by center Steele, that wasn't good enough.<lb/>
Draperanda three-point goal "Sure we came back to within 12,<lb/>
but that's not four or live, which is<lb/>
what you need to do if you want<lb/>
be in the ballgame Steele said.<lb/>
"In the second half, we played like<lb/>
we have to play if we want to win<lb/>
games, but that's no good when<lb/>
nbv26,IECU, sparkedbv your already out of the game<lb/>
?essive play of Kenny Edwards, who only played 23<lb/>
minutes in the constest, lead the<lb/>
Pirates in scoring with 22 points,<lb/>
while Hill had 15 and Murphy<lb/>
had 12. American was leading<lb/>
with 21 points from Draper and 12<lb/>
from Wortman. The Pirates were<lb/>
out-rebounded in the game 44-29.<lb/>
Steele said he is concerned<lb/>
Alter a tough defeat on the<lb/>
road by the UNC Tarheels Wed-<lb/>
nesday, the ECU Swim and Dive<lb/>
team traveled back home, re-<lb/>
gained their pride and took to the<lb/>
water to blow past the Blue Devils<lb/>
oi Duke University Saturdav.<lb/>
The win against the Blue<lb/>
Devils finished out the regular<lb/>
season schedule for the Pirates.<lb/>
ECU swam its final two meets<lb/>
against two Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference teams. One of them, UNC,<lb/>
happened to be the ACC champi-<lb/>
ons in 1987-88.<lb/>
The women, who beat Duke<lb/>
140-97, are 8-2 going into the Co-<lb/>
lonial Athletic Association Cham-<lb/>
pionships in February. The only<lb/>
losses came from UNC Wednes-<lb/>
day- and from William and Mary<lb/>
earlier in the season.<lb/>
The men, who stand at 9-1,<lb/>
hold the best winning percentage<lb/>
ever bv an ECU swim and dive<lb/>
program going into conference<lb/>
action. Their one loss also came<lb/>
from UNC Wednesday. The men<lb/>
beat Duke 139-107.<lb/>
"This was a good victory for<lb/>
us Head Coach Rick Kobe said.<lb/>
"We feel great. This was the finest<lb/>
dual meet we have ever had<lb/>
But ECU did not stop with<lb/>
just a victory. Two records were<lb/>
also broken and one tied a<lb/>
Saturday's meet, all by womea<lb/>
freshmen swimmers.<lb/>
Page Holt created a nef<lb/>
freshman record in the 200-yanJ<lb/>
freestyle as she easily surpassed<lb/>
Duke;s K. Thayer bv more than<lb/>
two seconds when she touched<lb/>
the wall in 1:55.78.<lb/>
The 1000-yard freestyle saw a<lb/>
new freshman record as well asj<lb/>
varsity record by Chantal Morr.<lb/>
No one came near to chaMcngu<lb/>
her as she swam the 1000-vai<lb/>
freestyle in 10-36.98, more than<lb/>
seconds ahead of the pack.<lb/>
Jenny Muench tied the E<lb/>
freshman record in the 200-yai<lb/>
individual medley - - ie edge<lb/>
teammate Leslie jo Wilson by<lb/>
more than a second when sift<lb/>
swam a 2:13.42.<lb/>
Commending the ECU vic-<lb/>
tory even more was the tact th<lb/>
the Pirates were not in the best<lb/>
health prior to the meet again<lb/>
Duke.<lb/>
"We had swimmers  iii<lb/>
were sick and a couple didn9(<lb/>
even swim and we just cked<lb/>
up and swam hard, Kobe i ?<lb/>
plained. "It's always nice to be<lb/>
someone in the ACC<lb/>
The men had some fine pei<lb/>
fonnancesas well.They swept tl<lb/>
1000-yard freestyle with J.L<lb/>
Lewis leading the pack in a time i.<lb/>
9:41.37. Mark Cook claimed sel<lb/>
See TANKERS, page 18<lb/>
I<lb/>
IRS sponsors events<lb/>
59-35.<lb/>
After<lb/>
an ECU timeout,<lb/>
Murphy sank two free throws, about the lackluster performance<lb/>
then stole the ball from AU and from his Pirates, pointing out that<lb/>
drove in for a basket to close the<lb/>
lead to 20 with 13 minutes to play.<lb/>
See EAGLES, page 17<lb/>
ECU Women prevail<lb/>
break losing streak<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's women's bas-<lb/>
ketball team broke a two game<lb/>
losing streak on Saturday as it<lb/>
posted its second conference win<lb/>
of the season with a victory over<lb/>
American University, 66-43, in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, now 7-7 on<lb/>
the year and 2-3 in conference<lb/>
play, got off to a slow start against<lb/>
the Lady Eagles as they shot just<lb/>
20 percent in the first half. In the<lb/>
first ten minutes of the game, ECU<lb/>
only hit one layup and one<lb/>
freethrow while American only<lb/>
hit one layup. The score, with<lb/>
10:14 remaining before the half,<lb/>
was 5-2, ECU.<lb/>
As the offense began produc-<lb/>
ing for both the ECU and Ameri-<lb/>
can, the lead changed hands sev-<lb/>
eral times in the first half. Junior<lb/>
forward Sarah Gray lead the Lady<lb/>
Pirates efforts with six points as<lb/>
ECU trailed 22-25 at the half.<lb/>
In the second half, senior<lb/>
guard Pam Williams sparked<lb/>
ECU with back to back layups at<lb/>
the 17:00 mark. Williams effort's<lb/>
helped the Lady Pirates regain a<lb/>
31-28 lead they they would hold<lb/>
for the remainder of the game.<lb/>
East Carolina improved its<lb/>
shooting in the second half to 47<lb/>
percent while the Lady Eagles<lb/>
dropped to 17 percent.<lb/>
Freshman forward Tonya<lb/>
Hargrove scored fourteen points<lb/>
in the second half, giving her a<lb/>
career high 17 points for the game<lb/>
as ECU gradually pulled away<lb/>
from American and went on to<lb/>
their second CAA win of the sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Senior Gretta Savage scored<lb/>
13 points for the Lady Pirates and<lb/>
pulled down 15 rebounds. Har-<lb/>
See LADY PIRATES, page 18<lb/>
(IRS) ? What do Janet Evans,<lb/>
Greg Louganis and Flo Jo have in<lb/>
common? Olympic gold, oX<lb/>
course! Now, the road to gold is<lb/>
within your grasp as well.<lb/>
ECU Recreational Services<lb/>
has designated Thursdav, Feb. 2<lb/>
as FITNESS OLYMPIC DAY. Get<lb/>
in on the action in Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum as teams of faulty, staff and<lb/>
students compete in a variety of<lb/>
fitness oriented activities from the<lb/>
stationary bicycle relay to the<lb/>
obstacle course.<lb/>
Registration is Jan. 30 in 204<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium and is free<lb/>
of charge. Opening ceremonies<lb/>
begin at 8 p.m. with medal win-<lb/>
ners receiving t-shirts and hug-<lb/>
gers for their efforts.<lb/>
lntramural-Rcc Services<lb/>
wants "Men of Steel" for a<lb/>
bulkbuilders circuit training class<lb/>
called SUPER CIRCUIT (Women<lb/>
of Iron welcomed as well). Every<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday from<lb/>
6:30-7:30 p.m this specialty class<lb/>
challenges participants with car-<lb/>
diovascular fitness and muscular<lb/>
strength endurance components.<lb/>
Individuals may register through<lb/>
Jan 20 in Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
Don't miss the following I<lb/>
With the onset and onslought Sport registration deadlines: G<lb/>
of ACC basketball action begin- REC BOWLING Jan 24.5pm Biol<lb/>
wham their way into the inirami<lb/>
ral record books. Once again, re?<lb/>
istration numbers are high as 101<lb/>
men's and 15 women's teai<lb/>
have signed up to participate.<lb/>
And, as usual, the Intramura<lb/>
Prognosticator IMA RECK wi<lb/>
attempt to designate the top tivC<lb/>
men's and women's competitor<lb/>
for 1989. Hey, give lma a breakj:<lb/>
The Bengals made it to the Su<lb/>
Bowl!<lb/>
Men<lb/>
1. The Fellows<lb/>
2. The Dream Team<lb/>
3. Kappa Alpha<lb/>
4. Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
5. Fried City Gang<lb/>
Women<lb/>
1. Pomili Power<lb/>
2. Scrags<lb/>
3. Delta Zeta<lb/>
4. Our Perogative<lb/>
5. Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
ECU's Mechelle Jones sets the ball up for a rirat<lb/>
(Photo by Mark Love, ECU Photo Lab).<lb/>
ning in 1989, let us not forget the<lb/>
men and women of Intramural<lb/>
basketball who will slam, jam and<lb/>
ogy 103; NIKE 3 point shoot-oi<lb/>
Jan 25; On-site registration li<lb/>
tube Water Polo Jan 31,5 pm Bio"<lb/>
N102.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0021"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE LAST CAROllMAN<lb/>
AR 2 5 1989 17<lb/>
Tar Heels win against the burdened Wolfpack - end win streak<lb/>
(AP) ? January has been a<lb/>
month of mixed emotions for<lb/>
North Carolina State and coach<lb/>
Jim Valvano, and this weekend<lb/>
only compounded the pressure.<lb/>
The Wolfpack was on a 10-<lb/>
game winning streak, the last six<lb/>
Of which had come this month.<lb/>
However, the team was playing<lb/>
under the burden of allegations<lb/>
that the school's basketball pro-<lb/>
gram was corrupt. The charges<lb/>
were revealed on the dust jacket<lb/>
of a forthcoming book and were<lb/>
published by a Raleigh newspa-<lb/>
per two weeks ago.<lb/>
N.C. State's streak ended in<lb/>
Chapel Hill, where the Tar Heels<lb/>
took a nerve-wracking 84-81 vic-<lb/>
tory. During halftime of the na-<lb/>
tionally televised game, a former<lb/>
Wolfpack student manager told<lb/>
NBC Sports that the public would<lb/>
be "shocked and appalled" at the<lb/>
allegations in the book, "Personal<lb/>
Fouls<lb/>
Then, with the game on the<lb/>
line. Scott Williams took an in-<lb/>
bounds pass, then passed it back<lb/>
to the Wolfpack's Chucky Brown,<lb/>
whose three-point shot to send<lb/>
the game into overtime glanced<lb/>
off the rim.<lb/>
Williams' pass reminded<lb/>
many oi the play that gave the Tar<lb/>
1 leels the national championship<lb/>
in 1982, when Georgetown's Fred<lb/>
Brown passed the ball to North<lb/>
Carolina's James Worthy in the<lb/>
closing seconds to preserve the<lb/>
62-61 victory.<lb/>
"But the crudest blow oi all<lb/>
was lotting their kid pass the- ball<lb/>
to us N.C. State coach Jim Val-<lb/>
vano said. "1 can see Dean (North<lb/>
Carolina coach Smith) in tin<lb/>
huddle right now saying Throw<lb/>
in to Scott and then throw it right<lb/>
to Brown<lb/>
"I'm almost glad it didn't go<lb/>
in Valvano said. "I don't think 1<lb/>
could have taken another five<lb/>
minutes<lb/>
If Valvano was in pain, then<lb/>
so was Smith. The Tar Heels were<lb/>
leading 82-72 with 46 seconds left<lb/>
before Brian Howard hit a pair of<lb/>
three-point baskets, Chris Corchi-<lb/>
ani hit a jumper and Avie Lester<lb/>
had a free throw. North<lb/>
Carolina's only response was two<lb/>
free throws by Steve Bucknall<lb/>
with 12 seconds remaining.<lb/>
Smith found a moment to see<lb/>
the humor in the closing seconds,<lb/>
saying there was one thing that<lb/>
disappointed him.<lb/>
Brown didn't stop to thank<lb/>
Scott for the pass Smith said.<lb/>
North Carolina is 16-3 and<lb/>
part of a three-way tie in the ACC<lb/>
with a 3-1 record. N.C. State fell to<lb/>
12-2 and also is 3-1 in the league,<lb/>
as is Clcmson.<lb/>
In other ACC action, Wake<lb/>
Forest capped a dismal week for<lb/>
Duke, handing the Blue Devils a<lb/>
75-71 defeat, which was certain to<lb/>
take the Blue Devils out of their<lb/>
No. 1 position. Clemson stopped<lb/>
Western Carolina 77-60 and on<lb/>
Sunday, No. 2 Illinois defeated<lb/>
Georgia Tech 102-93.<lb/>
The Blue Devils took a 91-71<lb/>
beating from No. 13 North Caro-<lb/>
lina on Wednesday, but went to<lb/>
Greensboro hoping to extend a<lb/>
nine-game winning streak in the<lb/>
series with the Demon Deacons.<lb/>
Instead, Wake Forest ran up a 15-<lb/>
point lead in the second half, then<lb/>
needed freshman Derrick<lb/>
McQueen's leadership and some<lb/>
clutch free throw shooting to pull<lb/>
off the upset.<lb/>
Wake Forest climbed to 9-6<lb/>
and 2-4 as McQueen scored a ca-<lb/>
reer-high 20 points.<lb/>
"As the ACC season goes<lb/>
along, we're doing much better<lb/>
McQueen said. "I'm understand-<lb/>
ing my role a lot better. Things are<lb/>
picking up, things are coming<lb/>
along<lb/>
McQueen picked up his<lb/>
fourth foul with nine minutes left,<lb/>
but he scored eight of his points<lb/>
after that, helping to stave oii a<lb/>
Duke comeback and leading the<lb/>
Blue Devils to their second<lb/>
straight loss.<lb/>
Duke is 13-2 and 3-2.<lb/>
The Blue Devils rallied to 68-<lb/>
64 after two free thnnvs bv Greg<lb/>
Koubek, but Wake Forest held oft<lb/>
the second rally by hitting seven<lb/>
oi nine free throws in the last<lb/>
minute.<lb/>
Danny Ferry went on a sec-<lb/>
ond-half tear, scoring 14 straight<lb/>
points at the start of the period<lb/>
and 21 of his 29 in the half. Phil<lb/>
Henderson had 17 for the Blue<lb/>
Devils.<lb/>
At Clemson, Elden Campbell<lb/>
scored 19 points in 21 minutes to<lb/>
lead the Tigers to their fifth<lb/>
straight victory and a 12-3 record<lb/>
At Champaign, 111 Kennv<lb/>
Battle scored 2 points Sunday as<lb/>
Illinois rallied to stake its claim to<lb/>
the No. 1 spot in college basket-<lb/>
ball.<lb/>
The lllmi, down bv 45-31 a:<lb/>
the half, outscored the Yellow<lb/>
Jackets 21-10 in the second over-<lb/>
time to stav unbeaten at 17-0, the<lb/>
best start in the school's history.<lb/>
INTRAMURAL RECREATION<lb/>
FACILITY HOURS<lb/>
MFMORIAL G MNASIUMGARRETT WEIGHT ROOM<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Wed. 12:00 noon-1:30 pmMonThurs. 3:00 pm- 9:00 pm<lb/>
Friday 11:30 am-1:30 pmFri &amp; Sun. 1:00 pm- 5:00 pm<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues. 4:00 pm- 9:00 pm<lb/>
Wed &amp; Thurs. 3:00 pm- 9:00 pm<lb/>
Friday 3:00 pm- 7:00 pmMEMORIAL SWIMMING<lb/>
Saturday 11:00 am-5:00 pmFOOL<lb/>
Sunday 12:00 noon-5:00 pm<lb/>
Mon- Fri 7:00 am- 8:00 am<lb/>
MonFri. 12:00 noon-1:30 pm<lb/>
MEMORIAL WEIGHT ROOMMon. &amp;: Wed. 3:00 pm- 9:00 pm<lb/>
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 3:00 pm- 9:30 pm<lb/>
Mon- Thurs. 10:00 am- 9:007:30 pm-9:00 pm<lb/>
pmFriday 3:00 pm- 7:00 pm<lb/>
Friday 10:00 am- 7:00 pmSaturday 11:00 am- 5:00 pm<lb/>
Saturday 11:00 am-5:00 pmSunday 12:00 noon- 5:00 pm<lb/>
Sunday 12:00 noon- 5:00 pm<lb/>
MINGES WFIGHT ROOMMINGES SWIMMINC FOOL<lb/>
MonThurs. 3:00 pm-S:45<lb/>
pmMon. Wed.Fri. 7:30 pm-9:30 pm<lb/>
Friday 3:00 pm- 6:45 pmTues. &amp; Thurs. 6:00 pm- 8:00 pm<lb/>
Sunday 12:00 noon-5:00 pmSunday 12:00 noon - 5:00 pm<lb/>
Chi Chi wins big on one hole<lb/>
LA QU1NTA, Calif. (AP) ?<lb/>
Chi Chi Rodriguez won only one<lb/>
hole but earned $120,000 and Billy<lb/>
Casper increased his winnings to<lb/>
$80,000 Sunday with a playoff<lb/>
victory over Arnold Palmer in the<lb/>
Senior Skins Game.<lb/>
Rodriguez, 53, who collected<lb/>
$300,000 of the $360,000 purse at<lb/>
the inaugural Senior Skins a year<lb/>
ago, was blanked for all but one<lb/>
hole in the 1989 renewal. But that<lb/>
hole, the 16th, was worth<lb/>
$120,000.<lb/>
Eagles beat the ECU Pirates<lb/>
Continued from page 16<lb/>
"Right now, other teams are pull-<lb/>
ing oii our guards in order to<lb/>
double-team Blue, and we aren't<lb/>
doing anything about it. We've<lb/>
got to do something to draw some<lb/>
attention awav from Blue, and<lb/>
that means that our guards have<lb/>
got to be able to score<lb/>
ECU,8-8 overall and 2-3 in the<lb/>
conference after the AU game,<lb/>
prepares for a matchup this week<lb/>
against conference foe UNC-W<lb/>
on the road.<lb/>
<lb/>
HThe East Carolinian and the Sports Section<lb/>
wish Chris Siegel,<lb/>
 Assistant Sports Editor, j<lb/>
la speedy recovery following recent surgery. I<lb/>
We know it's living hell! Hang In There Chris!<lb/>
F.Y.I . - 807c of all American's who<lb/>
get appendicitis have to have their<lb/>
V appendix removed. J<lb/>
SEE THE<lb/>
LATE, LATE SHOW<lb/>
OPEN 'TIL<lb/>
MIDNIGHT<lb/>
VUien you need copies, sou need Kinkos<lb/>
kinko's<lb/>
(919) 752-0875<lb/>
321 East Tenth Street<lb/>
OPEN MON THRU FRI<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
SUN.<lb/>
Greenviile<lb/>
7 AM TILL 12 PM<lb/>
9 AM TILL 6 PM<lb/>
2 PMTILL 12 PM<lb/>
THETA CHI<lb/>
fraternity<lb/>
Spring RUSH 89<lb/>
RUSH WILL BE HELD AT<lb/>
The Aycock Dorm<lb/>
Basement<lb/>
Tuesday, Jan. 24th<lb/>
Wednesday Jan. 25th<lb/>
(Thursday, Jan. 26th,<lb/>
By Invitation Only)<lb/>
For Further Info Call<lb/>
830-3802 or 830-6682<lb/>
Tuesday. Jan. 24<lb/>
Meet the Girls of Alpha Omicron Pi<lb/>
Wednesday. Jan. 25<lb/>
Meet the Girls of Alpha Zeta Delta<lb/>
Thursday. Jan. 26<lb/>
Meet the brothers of Sigma Alpha Epsilon<lb/>
?Become Charter Member<lb/>
?Largest National Fraternity<lb/>
Join Sigma Alpha Epsilon and<lb/>
make a Difference<lb/>
Time:<lb/>
7:00 - 10:00 Each Night<lb/>
402 E. 4th Street<lb/>
Need a Ride?<lb/>
Call 758-5793<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0022"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
18<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24,1989<lb/>
ECU tankers beat Duke<lb/>
Continued from page lb<lb/>
ond place when he swam in at<lb/>
10:02.09 and George Walters<lb/>
settled for the third place spot in<lb/>
10:04.82.<lb/>
Walters was again one oi the<lb/>
top three, this time on the top in<lb/>
the 200-yard backstroke as he<lb/>
claimed first with his time oi<lb/>
1:59.78. Tom Holsten was handed<lb/>
second when he swam a 2:02.00.<lb/>
Raymond Kennedy re-<lb/>
mained victorousin the 200-yard<lb/>
breaststroke when he swam in at<lb/>
2:12.00. ohn Springer claimed<lb/>
third in 2:15.74. right behind<lb/>
Duke's C. Roy who came in at<lb/>
2:12 40.<lb/>
Wednesday was a long day<lb/>
for the Pirates, for both the men<lb/>
and the women, as the fully-<lb/>
funded UNC team easily swam<lb/>
past the non-revenue swim pro-<lb/>
gram of ECU.<lb/>
"We swam good Kobe said,<lb/>
"They're just a better team than<lb/>
we are<lb/>
!t was not onlv the loss that<lb/>
hurt ECU, but UNC's 149-89 vic-<lb/>
tory made the hopes for the ECU<lb/>
men to break their longest win-<lb/>
ning streak record disappear. The<lb/>
men were 8-0 prior to the contest<lb/>
and one more win would have<lb/>
shattered the record for the long-<lb/>
est winning streak in ECU swim-<lb/>
ming history. The Pirates will<lb/>
have to wait until next year as the<lb/>
men remain tied with the old rec-<lb/>
ord of eight wins in a row.<lb/>
The women fared no better as<lb/>
their losses were increased to two<lb/>
as a result of Wednesdav's action<lb/>
in Chapel Hill when Carolina<lb/>
won 134-96.<lb/>
The upcoming CAA action<lb/>
looks hopeful for the Pirate swim-<lb/>
mers according to Coach Kobe.<lb/>
The men's only competition will<lb/>
come from Navy has the edge<lb/>
though according to Kobe asthey<lb/>
won the CAA championship in<lb/>
the 1987-88 season.<lb/>
The women, according to<lb/>
Kobe, might have a tougher time<lb/>
as, again, Navy has more of an<lb/>
edge on the Lady Pirate swim-<lb/>
iruTs.<lb/>
Forty-niner's labeled the80's team<lb/>
MIAMI (AP) - - Ten years oi<lb/>
dealing with deadlines, pushing<lb/>
aside pressure and certifying<lb/>
their greatness had prepared the<lb/>
San Francisco 49ers for this. In the<lb/>
best of all Super Bowl finishes,<lb/>
thev claimed the 1980 as their<lb/>
decade.<lb/>
Thev had Joe Montana and<lb/>
Jerrv Rice and Roger Craig, the<lb/>
usual stars, and John Taylor, an<lb/>
unexpected hero. They had the<lb/>
poise, resourcef nine sand guts to<lb/>
stare down defeat, urive 92 yards<lb/>
in less than three minutes and<lb/>
snatch Sunday's NFL champion-<lb/>
ship from the Cincinnati Bengals,<lb/>
20-16.<lb/>
Ultimately, thev had earned<lb/>
the label 'Team of the Decade<lb/>
with their third Super Bowl<lb/>
crown of the '80s.<lb/>
"We battled through great<lb/>
odds tonight to win the game<lb/>
said Bill Walsh, who hedged after<lb/>
the game on whether he would<lb/>
retire as 49ers coach. "It's acul mi-<lb/>
nation of years of hard work and a<lb/>
quarterback who ib one oi the<lb/>
greatest of all time<lb/>
Montana and Rice who was<lb/>
named Most Valuable Player with<lb/>
11 catches for a record 215 yards,<lb/>
engineered the magnificent<lb/>
march. Tavlor culminated it with<lb/>
his only reception, a 10-yarder tor<lb/>
the winning touchdown with 34<lb/>
seconds left.<lb/>
Montana completed eight of<lb/>
: ine passes on the drive through a<lb/>
Bengals defense that had not<lb/>
folded down the stretch of any<lb/>
game this season.<lb/>
"It's got to be one of our best<lb/>
aid Montana, who added yet<lb/>
another jewel to his sparkling 10-<lb/>
vear career. In that span, Montana<lb/>
has led the 49ers to three Super<lb/>
Bowl victories in as many tries.<lb/>
"In the situation in this typeof<lb/>
game, being down by a field goal<lb/>
and to come back and win it, that<lb/>
way has got to rank right up<lb/>
there<lb/>
It docs. In 22 previous Super<lb/>
Bowls, no team had staged such a<lb/>
reversal in the dying moments.<lb/>
The 49ers' turnaround Sunday<lb/>
was as dramatic as they come.<lb/>
And it provided a crushing<lb/>
ending to Cincinatti's own turn-<lb/>
around, in which the Bengals<lb/>
went from 4-11 and racked by<lb/>
dissension in 1987 to the best rec-<lb/>
ord in the NFL and to 34 seconds<lb/>
from their first Super Bowl cham-<lb/>
lip.<lb/>
"All oi us are devastated<lb/>
defensive end Jason Buck<lb/>
-aid We know it's possible we'll<lb/>
never get another chance, never<lb/>
get this close again<lb/>
The Bengals were so close<lb/>
that, after Jim Breech's third field<lb/>
goal gave them a 16-13 lead, some<lb/>
of them felt secure.<lb/>
"I did feel like we had it won<lb/>
corncrback Eric Thomas said,<lb/>
"because of the way the defense<lb/>
played all year. On the last drive<lb/>
of every game, we would get them<lb/>
out of there and make sure we<lb/>
came out with a win.<lb/>
"But Joe Montana showed<lb/>
great leadership and Jerry Rice<lb/>
asserted himself as a great, great<lb/>
receiver<lb/>
Taking over at their 8, the<lb/>
49ers staged the most memorable<lb/>
march the Super Bowl has seen.<lb/>
Rice had catches of 7,17 and 27 to<lb/>
set up the decisive touchdown.<lb/>
But it was not Rice who<lb/>
scored it.<lb/>
"Who would you throw it<lb/>
to?" said Taylor, who had<lb/>
dropped the only pass sent his<lb/>
way. "J.R. is the best in the game,<lb/>
he was making all the big plays.<lb/>
"But I wanted it. I dropped that<lb/>
one. I messed up and I had to<lb/>
make up for it<lb/>
He did. Splitting the coverage<lb/>
of Cincinnati's safeties in the end<lb/>
zone, Taylor got free, Montana<lb/>
spotted him and completed his<lb/>
23rd pass in 36 attempts, finishing<lb/>
with a record 357 yards.<lb/>
"We were going to score a<lb/>
KAPPA<lb/>
ALPHA<lb/>
touchdown even if we had to<lb/>
throw Joe through the air 10 yards<lb/>
to do it center Randy Cross said.<lb/>
The final game of Cross' career<lb/>
wasn't up to his normal level - his<lb/>
poor snap forced Mike Cofer to<lb/>
blow a 19-yard field goal, the<lb/>
shortest miss in Super Bowl his-<lb/>
torv.<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
Continued from page 16<lb/>
grove was second in rebounding<lb/>
with nine.<lb/>
For the Lady Eagles, whose<lb/>
record dropped to 3-13 on the<lb/>
year and 1-4 in CAA play, Felicia<lb/>
Young had 12 points and seven<lb/>
rebounds in American's losing<lb/>
effort.<lb/>
East Carolina will take a<lb/>
break until Saturday when CAA-<lb/>
rival UNC-Wilmington comes to<lb/>
town for the first meeting of the<lb/>
1989 season. Last season, UNC-W<lb/>
captured two victories over the<lb/>
1.ad v Pirates. The first, a 75-56 win<lb/>
at Mingesand then a 74-64 win at<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
East Carolina holds the series<lb/>
record over the Lady Seahawks 9-<lb/>
5 and look to avenge last years<lb/>
sweep by capturing their third<lb/>
CAA victory.<lb/>
 Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
? f ? Daily Special<lb/>
??jjL ?0) 6 oz. Sirloin with Shrimp<lb/>
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AWHALUAniL . Frie9 Qf Bakfd potato<lb/>
Cole Slaw and Hushpuppies.<lb/>
only $5.99<lb/>
105 Airport Road<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
MEMORIAL COINS<lb/>
&amp; PAWN<lb/>
? BASEBALL CARDS<lb/>
?STAMPS<lb/>
?COINSUPPLIES<lb/>
?DIAMONDS<lb/>
?TELEVISIONS<lb/>
?VCR's<lb/>
 -CAMERAS<lb/>
AX -STEREOS<lb/>
WW -MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS<lb/>
?COINS<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS-WI BUY<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
All Transactions Strictly Confidential<lb/>
752-7736<lb/>
GRI I N 11 I 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
655MEMORIAL DRIVE<lb/>
? llll UfU<lb/>
ATTENTION BSN<lb/>
CLASS OF 1989.<lb/>
The Air Force has a special pro-<lb/>
gram for 1989 BSNs If selected<lb/>
you can enter active duty soon<lb/>
after graduation?without waiting<lb/>
for the results of your State Boards<lb/>
"fo qualify, you must have an overall<lb/>
2 75 GRA. After commissioning,<lb/>
you'll attend a five-month intern-<lb/>
ship at a major Air Force medical<lb/>
facility Ifs an excellent way to pre-<lb/>
pare for the wide range of experi-<lb/>
ences you'll have serving your<lb/>
country as an Air Force nurse of-<lb/>
ficer. For more information, call<lb/>
MSGT NICK NERO<lb/>
919-850-9549<lb/>
STATION-TO-STATION COLLECT<lb/>
sr<lb/>
Dear Rushee,<lb/>
As you are contemplating rushing a fraternity this spring,<lb/>
a number of doors will be opened to you. Here at Kappa Alpha,<lb/>
we offer the door like no other.<lb/>
As a rushee, you must choose the organization which you<lb/>
wish to join. A fraternity of men with whom you will live for<lb/>
the next four years, and whom you will call your brothers for<lb/>
the rest of your life.<lb/>
We believe that you will agree that, in fact, Kappa Alpha is<lb/>
the most unique and traditional of any college fraternity. We<lb/>
strive for both unity and selection.<lb/>
Won't you come by and sample a bit of Southern Tradition?<lb/>
Good Luck Rushees!<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
7-11 PM<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Jan. 24<lb/>
w our<lb/>
Southern Belles<lb/>
THE BROTHERS OF GAMMA RHO<lb/>
CHAPTER OF KAPPA ALPHA ORDER<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Jan. 25<lb/>
Come celebrat<lb/>
Robert E. Lee's B-Day<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Jan. 26<lb/>
By Invitation<lb/>
For Rides &amp; Info: Call 757-0128<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0023"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
(<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24.1989 19<lb/>
<lb/>
San Francisco wins Super Bowl in last seconds<lb/>
MIAMI (AP) ? In the final<lb/>
minutes of the Super Bowl, as the<lb/>
"in Francisco 49ers drove me-<lb/>
thodically down the field to the<lb/>
-inning touchdown, they carved<lb/>
i permanent niche for themselves<lb/>
lin history.<lb/>
This was not just the most<lb/>
jdramatic drive in Super Bowl his-<lb/>
tory, this was a drive that ex-<lb/>
plained just who and what this<lb/>
 team is all about. This was a drive<lb/>
that certified the 49ers as special.<lb/>
There was a championship to<lb/>
be decided on one drive. The chal-<lb/>
lenge was there for Cincinnati.<lb/>
Stop San Francisco now and win<lb/>
the Super Bowl. The problem is, at<lb/>
crunch time, it's awfully tough to<lb/>
stop San Francisco.<lb/>
Anybody who's watched Joe<lb/>
Montana operate this offense,<lb/>
anybody who's paid the least bit<lb/>
of attention to the cool efficiency<lb/>
of this team ? not this season, but<lb/>
this decade ? knew the Bengals<lb/>
were in trouble.<lb/>
Certainly the 49ers knew it.<lb/>
"I kept saying to myself, 'We<lb/>
just have to be us" center Randy<lb/>
Cross said. "You just know we're<lb/>
going to win. Somehow, some<lb/>
way, we find a way<lb/>
There was a time this season<lb/>
when the San Francisco 49ers<lb/>
were 6-5, mediocre at best, were<lb/>
traveling a road to nowhere. The<lb/>
difference between them and<lb/>
other teams drifting through that<lb/>
kind of season is that they are the<lb/>
49ers. They found a way to turn it<lb/>
around.<lb/>
That may be why Coach Bill<lb/>
Walsh enjoyed this 20-16 victory<lb/>
so much. He has won before. It<lb/>
shouldn't be so special. But it is.<lb/>
"Compared to the other two,<lb/>
this will be remembered as one of<lb/>
the greatest because we had to<lb/>
come back at the end and win it in<lb/>
the last seconds. This team has<lb/>
great character. They just hung in<lb/>
there<lb/>
Faced with 92 yards to travel<lb/>
and just over three minutes to do<lb/>
it, the Niners simply set about the<lb/>
task. There was no panic, no des-<lb/>
peration, no frenzy. There was<lb/>
cool professionalism ? poise, the<lb/>
players called it?the hallmark of<lb/>
a team that now owns three Super<lb/>
Bowl championships in this dec-<lb/>
ade.<lb/>
Earlier, the offense had<lb/>
operated as if it were playing in<lb/>
quicksand ? and the way the sod<lb/>
was coming up in the middle of<lb/>
the field at joe Robbie Stadium,<lb/>
they might as well have been.<lb/>
But now the game was going<lb/>
to be decided. Faced with pre-<lb/>
cious few clicks on the clock and<lb/>
that long expanse to cover, San<lb/>
Francisco is the team and Joe<lb/>
Montana is the quarterback you<lb/>
want.<lb/>
Blue Devils no longer No. 1<lb/>
If Cleveland with Jim Brown<lb/>
and Otto Graham owned football<lb/>
in the '50s, and Vince Lombardi's<lb/>
Green Bay Packers set the stan-<lb/>
dard for the '60s; if Pittsburgh's<lb/>
four Super Bowl championships<lb/>
were the exclamation mark of the<lb/>
70s, then the 49ers and Montana,<lb/>
winners of three Super Bowls,<lb/>
deserve to be called the 'Team of<lb/>
the '80s<lb/>
Those other teams were dy-<lb/>
nasties, built around great players<lb/>
who won and then won again. But<lb/>
the NFL has moved into the era of<lb/>
parity and Super Bowl teams<lb/>
don't come back for encores that<lb/>
quickly. All of which makes the<lb/>
accomplishment of Montana<lb/>
more remarkable.<lb/>
The first time the 49ers won<lb/>
the Super Bowl, he was throwing<lb/>
to Dwight Clark and Freddie<lb/>
Solomon. Seven years later, he's<lb/>
throwing to John Taylor and Jerry<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) ? It<lb/>
was fun while it lasted for top-<lb/>
ranked Duke.<lb/>
The Blue Devils were a pre-<lb/>
season pick for No. 1 and stayed<lb/>
there. Last week, their reign came<lb/>
to a tumultuous halt. First, 13th-<lb/>
ranked North Carolina raided<lb/>
Durham and took a 91-71 victory.<lb/>
Duke then went on the road and<lb/>
Wake Forest pulled off a 75-71<lb/>
upset.<lb/>
"It's fun when people are<lb/>
rating you number one and pat-<lb/>
ting you on the back and telling<lb/>
you how good you are. That's<lb/>
superficial fun Krzyzewski<lb/>
Said.<lb/>
"Now, a lot of those same<lb/>
people are saying 'you're over-<lb/>
rated, you're not good he said.<lb/>
"That's not fun, is it? What I think<lb/>
we need to do is get back into the<lb/>
middle, where we say 'What do<lb/>
we think of ourselves?<lb/>
Duke had run up 13 straight<lb/>
victories, but they weren't all<lb/>
thrillers to Krzyzewski. The Blue<lb/>
Devils beat Wake Forest in De-<lb/>
cember, but the 94-88 triumph<lb/>
might have been a portent of<lb/>
things to come, especially since it<lb/>
was the narrowest victory margin<lb/>
in the streak.<lb/>
"Coach has tried to tell us all<lb/>
year guard Quin Snyder said.<lb/>
"It was like a time bomb waiting<lb/>
to explode<lb/>
Wake Forest set off another<lb/>
explosion behind freshman Der-<lb/>
rick McQueen, who scored 20<lb/>
points and kept the Demon Dea-<lb/>
cons going in the face of the Blue<lb/>
Devils comeback.<lb/>
"People were saying 'What<lb/>
was wrong with Duke?<lb/>
McQueen said in reference to the<lb/>
December game. "I think we were<lb/>
a big part of what was wrong with<lb/>
Duke. I'm glad that it ended like<lb/>
this this time<lb/>
Since reaching its Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference schedule, Duke<lb/>
has found its domination difficult<lb/>
to maintain. Its 55 percent field<lb/>
goal accuracy falls off to 50 per-<lb/>
cent in league contests, whereas<lb/>
opponents are shooting 47 per-<lb/>
cent in league games against 40<lb/>
percent overall.<lb/>
Duke is being outrebounded<lb/>
by an average of 39-31 in the ACC,<lb/>
including a 43-27 disparity in the<lb/>
loss to North Carolina. Wake For-<lb/>
Rice. The result is the same. They<lb/>
still win championships.<lb/>
"We did make it here with<lb/>
three different teams and that<lb/>
makes the accomplishment<lb/>
unique Walsh said.<lb/>
The constant, though, is<lb/>
Montana. He takes the pieces of<lb/>
the puzzle and puts mem to-<lb/>
gether. He does whatever is nec-<lb/>
essary to win.<lb/>
He was not the MVP of this<lb/>
Super Bowl. Eleven catches for<lb/>
215 yards earned that award for<lb/>
Jerry Rice, Montana's spindly<lb/>
wide receiver with the legs of a<lb/>
thoroughbred. Yet Montana was<lb/>
the architect of this victory, the<lb/>
man who made it all come to-<lb/>
gether.<lb/>
On the day after quarterbacks<lb/>
Bob Griese and Terrv Bradshaw<lb/>
were named finalists for the Hall<lb/>
of Fame, the 49crs' passer as-<lb/>
sembled some more arguments<lb/>
for his eventual induction.<lb/>
cst outrebounded Duke 41-34.<lb/>
Also, both Duke and its oppo-<lb/>
nents are hitting 70 percent of<lb/>
their free throws in the ACC. In<lb/>
the loss Saturday, Wake Forest hit<lb/>
18 of 26 free throws for 69.2 per-<lb/>
cent; Duke was 17 of 29 for 58.6<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
"Our free throw shooting<lb/>
really hurt us today Krzyzewski<lb/>
said. "You have to put points on<lb/>
the board. We missed a lot of free<lb/>
throws and thev hit theirs, and<lb/>
that's to their credit<lb/>
Danny Ferry has been the<lb/>
offensive spark. He scored 14<lb/>
straight points against the Demon<lb/>
Deacons and 21 of his 29 points in<lb/>
the second ha! at the 6-foot-10<lb/>
Ferry has spei tnelast week with<lb/>
the pain of a bad lower back.<lb/>
"Danny usually can play 40<lb/>
minutes and be bouncy. Now,<lb/>
you can see that he gets tired<lb/>
Krzyzewski said.<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIAL<lb/>
Savage honored<lb/>
Greta Savage was named<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
women's basketball player-of-<lb/>
thc-week on Monday.<lb/>
Savage helped the Lady Pi-<lb/>
rates split a pair of conference<lb/>
games against American Univer-<lb/>
sity and George Mason Univer-<lb/>
sity. She scored 30 points and<lb/>
grabbed 24 rebounds in the two<lb/>
contests.<lb/>
Against American on Satur-<lb/>
day, Savage scored 13 points and<lb/>
had a career high 15 rebounds.<lb/>
She scored 17 points and<lb/>
pulled down nine boards against<lb/>
the Lady Patriots of George Ma-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
On the week, Savage shot 67<lb/>
percent from the field and 86 per-<lb/>
cent from the free throw line.<lb/>
Savage and the Lady Pirates<lb/>
take to the court again on Satur-<lb/>
day, Jan. 28, when they play host<lb/>
to UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
MONSAT.<lb/>
11 AM -3 PM<lb/>
12-8 oz. Round<lb/>
Sirloin<lb/>
Potato Bar<lb/>
Sundae Bar<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
r<lb/>
Daily Specials<lb/>
10 Discount on<lb/>
Regular Priced<lb/>
Items<lb/>
With Student I.D.<lb/>
Hot Bar and Salad Bar only<lb/>
an additional $1.99 with a meal<lb/>
FREE DESSERT BAR<lb/>
1 with All Steak Dinners<lb/>
TAKE-OUTS OKAY<lb/>
rr<lb/>
J 2903 E. 10th St. - 758-2712<lb/>
STUDENT UNION FORUM<lb/>
COMMITTEE SURVEY<lb/>
Please take a few minutes to answer the following questions<lb/>
concerning the Student Union Forum Committee. The results of this<lb/>
survey will he used in determining future lectures.<lb/>
The Student Union Forum Committee provides lectures, debates, sym-<lb/>
posiums, and other frelated programs that will interest, challenge, and<lb/>
entertain the University Community. The committee is made up<lb/>
primarily of STUDENTS using student activity FEES.<lb/>
What topics would you be interested in seeing addressed<lb/>
on campus?<lb/>
Women's Issues Racism National PoliticsCrime Homeless Sex<lb/>
State PoliticsAIDS<lb/>
Foreign Relations Economy Child AbuseActors Sports Environment<lb/>
Media Other release snecifvl<lb/>
<lb/>
Please check your primary sources of information. Posters Around Campus Local Radio Public<lb/>
East Carolinian Classified AdsAnnouncements<lb/>
East Carolinian Advertise-Pieces of Eight Magazine<lb/>
ments Daily ReflectorEntertainer TV Public Announcements<lb/>
ECU Hotline (757-6004)<lb/>
WZMB 91.3<lb/>
Other (please specify)<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Please name some speakers of interest to you.<lb/>
For further information on this committee, please call Allen Manning,<lb/>
Chairperson, at 757-6611, ezt. 210.<lb/>
Please return this survey to the Information Desk at Mendenhall<lb/>
I? Student Centc c or a Student KS?11?<lb/>
 Union Forum fl 5Sk I h<lb/>
 Committee Member. 3 aWlIJi<lb/>
I HM ??III'<lb/>
LEADERSHIP:<lb/>
76<lb/>
71<lb/>
85<lb/>
85<lb/>
100<lb/>
23<lb/>
OF THE U.S. CONGRESS ARE GREEK<lb/>
OF THOSE LISTED IN WHO'S WHO IN AMERICA<lb/>
ARE GREEK<lb/>
OF THOSE LISTED IN FORTUNE 500 ARE GREEK<lb/>
OF ALL SUPREME COURT JUSTICES ARE GREEK<lb/>
CHANCELLORS AND DEANS OF MAJOR COLLEGES<lb/>
AND UNIVERSITIES ARE GREEK<lb/>
U.S. PRESIDENTS ARE GREEK<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP:<lb/>
BETTER G.P.A.<lb/>
10 MORE GRADUATION<lb/>
COMMUNITY SERVICE:<lb/>
$7 MILLION TO CHARITY<lb/>
850.000 HOURS TO VOLUNTEER COMMUNITY<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
KE<lb/>
T,ET THE RECORD SPEAK FOR ITSELF<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
803 HOOKER ROAD<lb/>
756-7731<lb/>
CALL FOR A RIDE<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0024"/><lb/>
f V <lb/>
20 THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24,1989<lb/>
THE E.C.U<lb/>
INTERFRATERNITY<lb/>
COUNCIL INVITES<lb/>
YOU TO RUSH '89!<lb/>
(Pi Kappa &amp;&amp;<lb/>
SG3 Hooker Road<lb/>
752-6927<lb/>
nK0<lb/>
Number of chapter Nationally: Over 120<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: December 10,1904<lb/>
College of Charleston. SC<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Charlotte, North Carolina<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Gold, White, Blue<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: PUSH<lb/>
(Play Unites for the Severely Handicapped)<lb/>
New House Ready For Spring Semester<lb/>
What make this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Strongest Alumni Association<lb/>
Thi "Kappa Tau<lb/>
DKT<lb/>
409 Elizabeth St<lb/>
757-1319<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 100<lb/>
Date and Place o founding: March 17,1906<lb/>
Miami University<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Oxford, Ohio<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Havard Red and Old Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Children's Heart Foundation<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Encourage Brothers to be involved in campus function.<lb/>
(Pi Kappa Alpha nKA<lb/>
Corner 5th k. Elizabeth 752773<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 150<lb/>
Date and Place of Pounding: March 1,1868<lb/>
University of Virginia<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Memphis, Tennessee<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Garnet and Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization:<lb/>
What make this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Group effort in reaching goals<lb/>
Sigma 'Tau Qamma ITT<lb/>
508 W. 5th St. 757-0127<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: Over 100<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: June 28,1920<lb/>
Central Missouri State Teachers College<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Wamnsburg, Missouri<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Blue and White<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization:<lb/>
Greenville Boys Club<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Academics, Individuality<lb/>
Kappa Sigma KI<lb/>
700E10thSt. 752-5543<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 200<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: December 10,1869<lb/>
University of Virginia<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Charlottesvlik, Virginia<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Scarlet, White, Green<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Muscular Dystrophy<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha A X A<lb/>
Tues Jan. 24th<lb/>
8-11 pm<lb/>
Wed Jan 25th<lb/>
8-11 pm<lb/>
Thur Jan. 26th<lb/>
8-11 pm<lb/>
fratcnuttj ie . . .<lb/>
To be in a ttatainity is not merely to be in a social<lb/>
club Fraternities are a way of lite. We share ex<lb/>
penses as well a; experiences, and we are responsi-<lb/>
ble to each other tor cur own actions We live oft<lb/>
campus, for the moat part, yet we are very active on<lb/>
campus We enjo a good relationship with our<lb/>
university's administration and, in the past few<lb/>
decades, have become a major part of the univer-<lb/>
sity's student life.<lb/>
ffiill fraternities hurt tuy gnibca?<lb/>
? No, there's every evidence that joining a fraternity<lb/>
improves your chances 01 graduating.<lb/>
? 33 of men on campus without fraternities will<lb/>
graduate, and<lb/>
? 47 of non-member on campuses with frater-<lb/>
nities graduate, bnv<lb/>
? 65 of all fraternity members graduate.<lb/>
? Scholarship programs of fraternities produce<lb/>
greater academic success, and better achievement<lb/>
for you.<lb/>
Social "JGife . .<lb/>
It never can be said that fraternity people don't en-<lb/>
toy a good social life Getting to know many different<lb/>
people is only natural among such a close-knit<lb/>
group One seems to fall into a wealth of oppor-<lb/>
tunities for things to do with his spare time Events<lb/>
such as Greek Week Is just an example of some of<lb/>
the activities that fraternities plan during the year<lb/>
c&amp;fjfctks<lb/>
Fraternity men enjoy an active athletic existence<lb/>
Whether it be track meets, field events or in-<lb/>
Wamurals. we enioy competing against one another<lb/>
in one sport or another<lb/>
SOD E Elizabeth St.<lb/>
757-137<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: Over 200<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: November 2,1909<lb/>
Boston University<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Indianapolis, Indiana<lb/>
Fraternity Colon: Purple, Green, Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: March of Dimes<lb/>
What makes tills Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Diversity<lb/>
Tau "Kappa "Lpsilon TKE<lb/>
951E10l?.St 757-3042<lb/>
Nu mber of Chapters Nationally: Over 350<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: January 10, 1899<lb/>
IllinoUWesleyan University<lb/>
National Hsadquarters Location:<lb/>
Indianapolis, Indiana<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Cherry, Cray<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization:<lb/>
St hades Children Hospital<lb/>
What masks this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
Indrviduausm, Campus Involvement<lb/>
Beta Theta "Pi B6n<lb/>
P.O. Boa 7192<lb/>
RUSH 1110-B Conunche St. 757-1840<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationaily Over i00<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: Augusts, 1839<lb/>
Miami, Ohio<lb/>
National Headquarter Location<lb/>
Miami, Ohio<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Pink and Blue<lb/>
Philanthropic Organizstion<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Brother helping Brothers<lb/>
Grnrral Fraternity Facts<lb/>
a<lb/>
All but two U.S. Presidents since 1825 have been fraternity men. Sixteen Vice-Presidents have been fraternity men.<lb/>
? 63 of the U.S. President's Cabinet members since 1900 have been fraternity men.<lb/>
? 71 of the Who's Who in America listees are fraternity members.<lb/>
 76 of the U.S. Senators &amp;. Representatives are fraternity members.<lb/>
? 85 (40 of 47) of the U.S. Supreme Court Justices since 1910 have been fraternity men.<lb/>
 85 of the Fortune 500 executives are fraternity members.<lb/>
 Of the nation's 50 largest corporations. 43 are headed by fraternity members.<lb/>
Rush is open to all<lb/>
Male College Students<lb/>
Regardless of<lb/>
Classification or G.P.A.<lb/>
(Delta Sigma (Phi<lb/>
AIO<lb/>
510E.10tr.St.<lb/>
757-0313<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally Over 115<lb/>
Dateand Place of Founds December 10. 1899<lb/>
College of the City of New York<lb/>
National Headquarters I ocation:<lb/>
Indianapolis. Indiana<lb/>
Fraterrity Color. Nile Green. White<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization March of Dimes<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
The Fraternity of Engineered leadership<lb/>
Sigma (Phi "Epsilon<lb/>
505 E. 5th St.<lb/>
757-0487<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: Almost 300<lb/>
Dateand Place of Founding: November 1, 1901<lb/>
University of Richmond, Virginia<lb/>
National Head quarters Location:<lb/>
Richanoad, Virginia<lb/>
Fratem ity Colors: Purple, Red<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Heart Fund<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique<lb/>
Diversity<lb/>
Sigma Alpha "Epsilon 2 A E<lb/>
402 E. 4th St.<lb/>
758-5W<lb/>
Number of Chapters Nationally: Over 200<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding March 9. 1856<lb/>
Univensty of Alabama<lb/>
National Headquarters o j r<lb/>
Evanston, Illinois<lb/>
Htstonal: First Greek letter Fraternity founded in south<lb/>
Only southern Fraternity founded before<lb/>
Civil War that still exists<lb/>
National policy against Hazing<lb/>
Fraternity Colors Purple. Gold. White<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique.<lb/>
Those given and accepting bids will be charter<lb/>
members and part of the Alpha Pledge Class.<lb/>
(Kappa Alpha<lb/>
800 E. 11th St<lb/>
rv,28<lb/>
KA<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: Over 150<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding Decerrfcer 21. 1865<lb/>
Washington and Lee<lb/>
National Headquarters location:<lb/>
Lexington, VA<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Crimson and Old Gold<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Muscular Dystrophy<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
1st Fraternity on Campus<lb/>
"Theta Chi<lb/>
210Whichard<lb/>
ex<lb/>
830-0912<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: 155<lb/>
Dateand Place of Founding: 1856<lb/>
Norwich University, Norwich, Vermont<lb/>
National Headquarters 1 ocation<lb/>
Trenton, New Jersey<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Red and White<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Ronald McDonald House<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Personal development and service to Alma-Mater<lb/>
Alpha Sigma (Ph<lb/>
i<lb/>
AIt<lb/>
422 W SthSt.<lb/>
757-351<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally: Over 50<lb/>
Dateand Place of Founding December 6.1845<lb/>
Yale University<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Delaware, Ohio<lb/>
Fraternity Colors: Cardinal and Stone<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: American I -ung Association<lb/>
What makes this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Individuality that comes together to form a ck-?e brotherhood<lb/>
Sigma 9u<lb/>
221 Mendenhall<lb/>
IN<lb/>
757-6824<lb/>
Number of Chapter Nationally Over 200<lb/>
Date and Place of Founding: January 1. 1864<lb/>
Virginia Military Institute. Leainton. Virginia<lb/>
National Headquarters Location:<lb/>
Lexington, Virginia<lb/>
Fraternity Color. Black, Gold and White<lb/>
Philanthropic Organization: Kidney Foundation<lb/>
What make this Fraternity Unique:<lb/>
Founded against hazing and First Social Fraternity on<lb/>
campus to receive National Aihliation (source for the claim<lb/>
is the February 13,1958, The East Carolinian)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058118_0025"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>