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<pb facs="00058183_0001"/>
W$z lEaHt (ftaralmtatt<lb/>
Utvity tfie Tiist Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 64 No. 1<lb/>
Tuesday, fanuary 9, 1(?0<lb/>
Creenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
28 ?<lb/>
1,750 ECU students<lb/>
graduate at the 1989<lb/>
fall commencement<lb/>
By Thorn .is Barry<lb/>
St.ifr Writer<lb/>
One of ECU'S top academic<lb/>
officials spoke to 1,750 graduates<lb/>
at the fall commenc ement Situr<lb/>
dav, December c, in Minges Coli<lb/>
scum<lb/>
Pr.Marlene Springer, ECU<lb/>
vice chancellor tor academic at<lb/>
fairs, said that education will lead<lb/>
"into a nevorending cycle IM<lb/>
change in .) rapidly changing<lb/>
world.<lb/>
Springer said the basic pTCfll<lb/>
ise of being educated is that "we<lb/>
muttbecurtotisbeings and that<lb/>
to love a life Woffh In ing we mut<lb/>
have curiosiU She added this<lb/>
premise assume th.it human<lb/>
beingsafeessentially imaginative,<lb/>
sell motivating.in,h uriotisbcings<lb/>
who are capable 'I i outinual de<lb/>
vclopment<lb/>
Springer, who is also a profes-<lb/>
sor ot English and a scholar in<lb/>
literature, quoted from the works<lb/>
ofShakospe.irr I HckcrfS, Keatsand<lb/>
other literary figures in defining<lb/>
an educated person<lb/>
Springer Mid "the first symp-<lb/>
tom is intellectual cunosstv and I<lb/>
need for continual growth She<lb/>
also spoke about Shakespeare's<lb/>
( aliban yearning for a life of the<lb/>
imagination, a life of the mind, for<lb/>
something to keep him alive as a<lb/>
person "<lb/>
According to Springer, any<lb/>
student can have more informa-<lb/>
tion processing power than the<lb/>
entire British Isles did in 10. "If<lb/>
we are to nurture an intellectual<lb/>
curiosity, if we are to survive the<lb/>
world as it changes, we must be<lb/>
tolerant people<lb/>
VVe are coming to know more<lb/>
and more as educated people, of<lb/>
two i ultures, the world ot science<lb/>
and the world ot the arts, and that<lb/>
they .ire inextricably intertwined<lb/>
and must be it the human spirit<lb/>
is not only lO endure but to<lb/>
triumph<lb/>
This commencement was the<lb/>
third fall commencement at ECU.<lb/>
This commencement was for<lb/>
graduates who completed degree<lb/>
requirements in the summer ses<lb/>
sions or during the past fall semes-<lb/>
ter<lb/>
Interior Design m,iors Jackie RekJ and Cwyn Setter, along with 1 750 other graduates at ECUS Dec 9 Commencement exercise,<lb/>
trumpet the end of their college years Photo -Tony Rumple (ECU News Bureau)<lb/>
Mobil<lb/>
By Donna Haves<lb/>
St.iff Writer<lb/>
The concerned testimonies of<lb/>
hundreds o! Northarolina resi-<lb/>
dents at a series ot public hearings<lb/>
and a negative report trom a panel<lb/>
of the National Academy of Sci-<lb/>
ences have helped delay the drill<lb/>
ing timetable tor Mobil Oil's pro-<lb/>
posed gas and oil exploration off<lb/>
the North Carolina coast<lb/>
North Carolinians attended a<lb/>
senesof public bearings across the<lb/>
eastern half Of the state in Dei em<lb/>
ber to provide the Minerals Man<lb/>
agement Service (M MS) with both<lb/>
positive and negative feedback on<lb/>
Mobil Oil's draft ot the "Inviron-<lb/>
mental Report on Proposed Ex-<lb/>
ploratory Drilling Offshore North<lb/>
Carolina The report was pub-<lb/>
lished bv the MMSon Nov. 1.<lb/>
Congressman Walter B, Jones,<lb/>
chairman tor the IS. House of<lb/>
Representatives' Committee on<lb/>
Merchant Marine and Fisheries,<lb/>
was one of the speakers at the first<lb/>
heannginManteoonDec.4 Those<lb/>
who testified presented concerns<lb/>
that were echoed throughout the<lb/>
hearing process: Mobil Oil's envi-<lb/>
ronmental report does not ade-<lb/>
quately evaluate the environ-<lb/>
mental impact OR the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Outer Hanks<lb/>
Greenpeace; the international<lb/>
environmental organization, and<lb/>
other environmentalistssponsored<lb/>
a "Concerned Citizens Rally" be-<lb/>
fore the second hearing in Beaufort<lb/>
on Dec. 5. Dome Smith, an ocean<lb/>
ecology expert and a national<lb/>
campaign tor Greenpeace, aid<lb/>
Greenpeace was completely<lb/>
against offshore drilling m North<lb/>
Carolina "There is an alternative<lb/>
tooffshoredrilling((. .reenpeace)<lb/>
feels that the issues ot energy<lb/>
conservation and research devel-<lb/>
opment on workable alternatives<lb/>
are answers to this hasty develop<lb/>
mentofoffshorcresounes, Smith<lb/>
stated<lb/>
Members ot Students tor a<lb/>
Cleaner Earth (SCI), an ECU envi-<lb/>
ronmental organization, spoke at<lb/>
the third hearing in Washington<lb/>
on IXc. 6. Annette (iilchnst, co-<lb/>
founder of S(T said she opposed<lb/>
offshore drilling in Northaro-<lb/>
lina because "drilling is contradic-<lb/>
tory to the coast's established his-<lb/>
tory ot protection<lb/>
An environmental rallv pre-<lb/>
cluded the final hearing in Raleigh<lb/>
on I Vi 7. As the hearing's sched-<lb/>
uled at II p m. closed, about half<lb/>
ot the people who turned out to<lb/>
express their views on offshore<lb/>
drilling had spoken.<lb/>
I he public hearing coincided<lb/>
with the release of an offshore<lb/>
drilling report by a panel of the<lb/>
National Academy of Sciences. The<lb/>
panel, appointed by President<lb/>
Hush, concluded that the U.S.<lb/>
Government has insufficient in-<lb/>
formation for determining the<lb/>
environmental impact of explora-<lb/>
tion leasing off the coasts of Flor-<lb/>
ida and California.<lb/>
Under the present terms, fed-<lb/>
eral waters are available for lease<lb/>
to industry. Mobilhi and its part -<lb/>
nersleased a nine square mile area<lb/>
of the Atlantic Ocean 44 H miles<lb/>
northeast of Cape Hatteras in W81<lb/>
for 103 8 million<lb/>
Environmentalists say North<lb/>
Carolina could havebeen included<lb/>
in the National Academy of Sci-<lb/>
ences study if political opposition<lb/>
to offshore exploration had been<lb/>
stronger before the public hear-<lb/>
ings.Opposition from Republicans<lb/>
and Democratsalike in Florida and<lb/>
California is forcing the Bush<lb/>
Administration to reconsider fu-<lb/>
ture offshore leasing in those two<lb/>
states.<lb/>
The panel determined that the<lb/>
available information is not<lb/>
enough to accurately predict the<lb/>
environmental effect of oil devel-<lb/>
opment and production. Senator<lb/>
Pete Wilson of California said: "It<lb/>
would be rash, imprudent and<lb/>
unforgivable to allow anv leasing<lb/>
off California to occur given these<lb/>
findings. The experts agree that<lb/>
we rust don't have the information<lb/>
we need to assess the nsks involved<lb/>
in outer continental shelf develop-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
interior Department spokes-<lb/>
man Steve Goldstein stated: "We<lb/>
don't think the American public is<lb/>
willing to put the entire continen-<lb/>
tal shelf off limits California and<lb/>
Honda do not ha k e property rights<lb/>
to that land (off the coast). It is<lb/>
owned bv all L .S. citizens. A farmer<lb/>
in Ames, Iowa that needs that oil<lb/>
See Mobil Oil, page 2<lb/>
City drops 80 'failure to disperse' charges<lb/>
s "V<lb/>
 II<lb/>
By Samaittha Thompson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Ellen Nora Kerr speaks with local television reporters about her conviction on Monday She is charged<lb/>
with 'failure to disperse (Photo by J D Whitmire ? Photolab)<lb/>
Eighty 'riot' defendants re-<lb/>
ceived letters stating their charge-<lb/>
from the Halloween incident a!<lb/>
I'ar River Estates had been<lb/>
dropped, and the remaining 54<lb/>
cases were scheduled for Monday.<lb/>
Only two cascs were tried on<lb/>
Monday. However, presiding<lb/>
judge lamesG. Ragan allowed 14<lb/>
students to enter pleas withdraw-<lb/>
ing their ponding charges.<lb/>
Three of the 54 students ne-<lb/>
glected to show in court, and Ragan<lb/>
ordered the arrest of each with a<lb/>
$500secured bond.<lb/>
District Attorney Tom<lb/>
Haigwood said it was impossible<lb/>
to hear all cases on Monday, so the<lb/>
remainder of the cases were spread<lb/>
over a three day period on Jan. 4-<lb/>
10.<lb/>
The 80 students who received<lb/>
dismissal letters had previously<lb/>
had their cases delayed by Judge<lb/>
W. Russell Duke, Jr. to Jan.8. The<lb/>
other 54 students had previously<lb/>
requested that their cases be con-<lb/>
tinued to Ian. 8.<lb/>
Two students were found not<lb/>
guilty of failure todispersecharges.<lb/>
Paul Pisoni and Michael OBnant<lb/>
pleaded not guilty, saying they had<lb/>
been arrested when returning trom<lb/>
the ECU sponsored concert and<lb/>
costume contest.<lb/>
Ellen-Nora Kerr, who was also<lb/>
charged with failure to disperse<lb/>
was found guilty even though the<lb/>
videotape of her arrest at Tar River<lb/>
Estaies was ruled not substantive<lb/>
evidence. Despite Kerr's plea of<lb/>
not guilty, she was convicted of<lb/>
failure to disperse. Her sentencing<lb/>
will be held today.<lb/>
Assistant District Attorney<lb/>
Betsy Warren used five witnesses<lb/>
against Kerr, including Manager<lb/>
of Tar River Jessica Donald, Green-<lb/>
ville Police Chief Jerry Tesmond,<lb/>
Capt. Nelson Stateman, Officer<lb/>
Craig Overby and Officer R.C.<lb/>
Broadway, who arrested Kerr.<lb/>
Kerr's attorney used several<lb/>
defenses, including the fact that<lb/>
the officer's name on the ticket<lb/>
See Court, page 2<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Moving forward into<lb/>
the '90s<lb/>
State and Nation5<lb/>
Volunteers aid in<lb/>
cleaning up<lb/>
Panama<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
Features11<lb/>
Past decade affects<lb/>
future<lb/>
Sports15<lb/>
Pirates fall to George<lb/>
Mason in Minges<lb/>
Decade Review19<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
takes a look back at the<lb/>
1980s<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian January 9,1990<lb/>
5CU Briefs<lb/>
Conference to examine the corporate role of blacks<lb/>
The Black Manager and Corporate America" is the theme for a conference Jan. 17 at ECU.<lb/>
Sponsored by the ECU Division of Continuing Education, the conference program will examine several<lb/>
issues related to blacks in management positions.<lb/>
Presentations by invited speakers will be made during the morning session at the Ramada Inn Green-<lb/>
ville. In the afternoon participants will view a satellite transmission, ion campus, of the Second Annual Black<lb/>
Managers Forum presented by the American Managers Association.<lb/>
The keynote speaker for the morning is Dr. Valeria Lovelace, director of research for the TV show Sesame<lb/>
Street. Her presentation, "Sources of Inspiration for Black Managers will begin at 9:40 a.m. and will follow<lb/>
opening remarks by ECU officials and Mayor Ed Carter of Greenville, an administrator for Burroughs<lb/>
Wellcome Company.<lb/>
Jocelyn D. Evans, director of Banking and Finance at Johnson C. Smith University and Janice D. Sinclair,<lb/>
the state president of the Bankers Educational Society and the personnel representative for United Carolina<lb/>
Bank of Raleigh will speak at 10:45 a.m. Their presentation will be about "Mentoring and Role Modeling<lb/>
Robert Grif fen, manager of the Proctor and Gamble paint in Greenville will be the luncheon speaker on<lb/>
"How a Program to Develop Black Managers Really Works He will be followed by Joseph C High, director<lb/>
of Human Resources for Consolidate Diesel Company of Tarboro who will speak about 'The Multicultural<lb/>
Workforce<lb/>
At 3 p.m. the conference participants will attend a live videoconference of the second annual Black<lb/>
Managers Forum. The forum will feature five speakers who will focus on problems unique to black male and<lb/>
female managers.<lb/>
A registration fee of $130 will be charged to those attending the program. The fee covers instruction,<lb/>
New Hampshire professor speaks on environment<lb/>
Dr. John E. Carroll, professor and coordinator of the Environmental Conservation Program at the<lb/>
University of New Hampshire, will deliver a lecture on "International Studies and the Global Environment"<lb/>
as part of the ECU Thomas Rivers' Distinguished Chair in International Studies Lecture series Jan. 11.<lb/>
The lecture is scheduled at 730 p.m. in Room 1032 of the General classroom Building on the ECU campus<lb/>
and is open to students, faculty and the general public.<lb/>
The Rivers International Studies lectures at ECU arc sponsored bv the College of Arts and Sciences.<lb/>
Mobil Oil<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
have at least temporarily delayed<lb/>
Mobil Oil's exploration timetable<lb/>
to allow for additional study.<lb/>
Many of those who testified at the<lb/>
public hearings stated that they<lb/>
were concerned about the "tem-<lb/>
porary, local and minor" environ-<lb/>
mental impact Mobil Oil's draft<lb/>
report implied.<lb/>
"The enviornmental report<lb/>
says that the environmental im-<lb/>
pact on the North Carolina coast is<lb/>
expected to be very low said Ben<lb/>
Kearns.co-founderof SCE. "I want<lb/>
to know what 'very low' means<lb/>
In the initial timetable, Mobil<lb/>
would have been eligible to begin<lb/>
gas and oil exploration on Mayl.<lb/>
However, the delay imposed by<lb/>
North Carolina of ficials pushes the<lb/>
timetable back long enough to<lb/>
prevent Mobil from drilling dur-<lb/>
ing the May-August 1990 drilling<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Geologic evidence indicates<lb/>
Mobil Oil has a l-in-10 chance of<lb/>
discovering natural gas and a 1-<lb/>
in-100 chance of finding oil off the<lb/>
North Carolina Outer Banks.<lb/>
DAVID'S AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
Is Now Open In Greenville!<lb/>
We sell import and domestic parts and<lb/>
accessories at wholesale prices. We also have<lb/>
a complete servu ; center.<lb/>
Make Us Your One Stop!<lb/>
Welcome Back Students!<lb/>
DAVIDS AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
Forttort &amp; OomMIIC Ptrtl<lb/>
DAVID 5 AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
FrxM" A OQrtm' ?"?<lb/>
import i VW P?r? SOAK'<lb/>
National Campus Clips<lb/>
Chancellor intends to get<lb/>
students 'internationalized'<lb/>
Chancellor Robert Hemenwav has made "inter-<lb/>
nationalizing the University of Kentucky-Lexing-<lb/>
ton campus part of his agenda.<lb/>
Hemenwav is proposing that all students re-<lb/>
ceive international exposure in order to prepare<lb/>
them tor the emerging global economy.<lb/>
"We need to think about whether or not the<lb/>
content of our courses reflects the international con-<lb/>
text in which we live<lb/>
The university has also set up The Cosmopolitan<lb/>
Club, a club designed to bring U.S. and international<lb/>
students together.<lb/>
Caroline Holmes,club advisor said, "There needs<lb/>
to be a greater understanding of the cultural differ-<lb/>
ences students bring with them<lb/>
SMU organizes bookswap<lb/>
The Southern Methodist University Shident<lb/>
Senate has organized a bookswap that it says will<lb/>
save students money.<lb/>
Students wanting to sell books can register<lb/>
through the senate's computer system. In turn, a stu-<lb/>
dent wanting a particular book will receive names<lb/>
and phone numbers of students wanting to sell from<lb/>
the system.<lb/>
Nate Crain of the Student Senate said the idea<lb/>
evolved from complaints about the high cost of<lb/>
booksat the local bookstoresand the stores' low buy-<lb/>
back rate.<lb/>
Pitt students design majors<lb/>
If students at Pittsburgh University can't find a<lb/>
major to suit them, thev can create their own.<lb/>
This program ? called the self-designed major<lb/>
? offers students the opportunity to assemble their<lb/>
own personal 36-credit major in Pitt's College of Arts<lb/>
Court<lb/>
For Parts, For Service Remember<lb/>
We Have It All!<lb/>
For?Oft &amp; DomrNtK PArtl<lb/>
import Svwi'A.uspAttAi! Wc Specialize in German Cars.<lb/>
510 N. Greene St. Greenville. NC<lb/>
830-1779<lb/>
tt&amp;e ?ast Carolinian<lb/>
Director of Advertising<lb/>
James F.J. McKee<lb/>
and Sciences.<lb/>
Students select the courses that will comprise the<lb/>
major and submit them to a dean of the college for<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
Stress of finals shouted out<lb/>
Residents in two dormitories at Oklahoma State<lb/>
University have found a loud way to relieve finals<lb/>
week stress. They scream at each other.<lb/>
One night during finals week, the students<lb/>
propped open the windows that face the other dorm,<lb/>
hunt; their heads out and yelled for five minutes. It's<lb/>
just an organized chaotic break in the imposed 22<lb/>
hour-a-dav study silence.<lb/>
"Everyone is so stressed out with finals said<lb/>
Steve Beatic, hall director in the Kerr-Drummond<lb/>
dorms, "It's basically a stress reliever<lb/>
Resident assistants and floor presidents quiet<lb/>
residents down after the screaming session.<lb/>
"A little noise is good, but too much is bad<lb/>
Beatie said. "Finals aren't going to go away. People<lb/>
still need to be able to study<lb/>
Ball State frat halts pledging<lb/>
A fraternity at Ball State University in Muncie,<lb/>
Ind has eliminated the pledge period for new<lb/>
members in an effort to help end hazing<lb/>
The Ball State chapter of Phi Sigma Kappa re-<lb/>
cently voted to do away with pledging ? an 8-to-20?<lb/>
week period when potential members leam frater-<lb/>
nity history and prove themselves worthy of mem-<lb/>
bership. It is during the pledge period that hazing,<lb/>
including physical and mental abuse, can take place,<lb/>
university officials say.<lb/>
"We've taken the pledge process completely<lb/>
out said Milch 1 lagan. Ball State Phi Sigma Kappa<lb/>
"Hazing makes obedient pledges but not strong<lb/>
members<lb/>
New Phi Sigma Kappa brothers now become<lb/>
active members immediately and hold equal status<lb/>
with other members of the chapter, Hagan said.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Judge Ragan established the<lb/>
opportunity for the fourteen 'riot'<lb/>
defendants to enter a choice of<lb/>
plea bargains. Ten students chose<lb/>
Plan A, which consists of a Prayer<lb/>
for Judgement and payment of<lb/>
court costs. Four students chose<lb/>
Plan B, which involves 25 hours of<lb/>
community service at a cost of<lb/>
$100. All 14 students will still have<lb/>
an arrest record, unless they go<lb/>
back to court to have the arrest<lb/>
removed from their record.<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Phillip V. Cope<lb/>
Kelley O'Connor<lb/>
Patrick Williams<lb/>
Guy J. Harvey<lb/>
Shay Sitlinger<lb/>
Adam T. Blankenship<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
per column inch<lb/>
National Rate$5.75<lb/>
Open Rate$4.95<lb/>
Local Open Rate$4.75<lb/>
Bulk &amp; Frequency Contract<lb/>
;scounts Available<lb/>
business Hours:<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
10:00 - 5:00 pm<lb/>
Phone:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
Crime Report<lb/>
Kidnapping incident and sexual assault<lb/>
in Jarvis dorm reported over holidays<lb/>
 Acheson's<lb/>
Adam's Auto Wash.<lb/>
Amoco<lb/>
Animai House<lb/>
Art &amp; Graphics<lb/>
BACCHUS<lb/>
j Benetton<lb/>
j Best Used Tires <lb/>
BLTs<lb/>
??-??? , slant Replay355-5050<lb/>
.355-2172 ! Intramural Dept757-6443 !<lb/>
355-7515 j ITG355-5075<lb/>
.758-9976 j J T Williams756-7815 j<lb/>
.756-7202 Jetters Beer &amp; Wine758-1515!<lb/>
.752-4620 Jewelry Designs355-0808<lb/>
.757-6793 Kingston Place758-5393 <lb/>
.355-7473 Mad Hatter Muffler758-2306<lb/>
.830-9579 Malpass Muffler758-7676<lb/>
757-1007 McBudget758-9834 I<lb/>
DECEMBER 16<lb/>
0540- Officers respond to alleged sexual assault at<lb/>
Jarvis Hall.<lb/>
0540- Officers escorted a female from Jarvis Hall to<lb/>
the Pitt Countv Memorial Hospital Emergency Room.<lb/>
DECEMBER i 7<lb/>
1811- Report of broken glass door at Minges, main<lb/>
entrance on North side.<lb/>
DECEMBER 18<lb/>
no incidents reported<lb/>
DECEMBER 19<lb/>
1215- Fire alarms activated in Belk, Aycock, Urn-<lb/>
stead, Jarvis, Garrett,<lb/>
Fletcher, White and Clement Halls. The cause was a<lb/>
power failure on Central and West campus.<lb/>
DECEMBER 20<lb/>
1315- Three suspicious Hispanic subjects reported in<lb/>
area of College Hill.<lb/>
DECEMBER 26<lb/>
0539- Broken water line reported in the southeast<lb/>
comer of Ragsdale.<lb/>
DECEMBER 27<lb/>
1653- Suspicious subjects reported outside Jenkins<lb/>
Art Building. Subjects gone on arrival.<lb/>
DECEMBER 30<lb/>
1702- Fire reported in room 217 of Jenkins Art Build-<lb/>
ing. Fire department was already on hand.<lb/>
JANUARY 3<lb/>
2307- Report of possible drug violations in Umstead<lb/>
Hall. Campus citation issued for underage possesion<lb/>
of alcohol<lb/>
JANUARY 4<lb/>
0924- Kidnapping and assault of a female reported at<lb/>
Jones Hall. Incident turned over to detectives.<lb/>
1131- Officer escorted a female from Jones Hall to<lb/>
police department.<lb/>
JANUARY 6<lb/>
2224- Several students given campus citations for<lb/>
underage possesion of alcohol in Jarvis Hall.<lb/>
JANUARY 7<lb/>
0027- Report of three male intoxicated subjects in<lb/>
White Hall.<lb/>
0107- Report of breaking and entering and larceny of<lb/>
a vehicle at Fifth and Reade Street.<lb/>
0129- Officer checked out report of possible drug<lb/>
offense in Aycock. Drug offense was unfounded.<lb/>
The Crime Column is taken from the weekly logs of<lb/>
ECU'S Public Safety Departmant.<lb/>
At The East Carolinian, when we're not:<lb/>
experimenting with DNA,<lb/>
babysitting the Ayatoilah<lb/>
or exposing corrupt government officials,<lb/>
we listen to WZMB-FM ? ECU'S radio station<lb/>
Bogies752-4668<lb/>
Bunny's830-5126<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center355-3233<lb/>
Campus Marketing1-800-9504472<lb/>
I Campus Suites800-365-3615<lb/>
Champions757-0544<lb/>
Charley as355-5000<lb/>
Chico's757-1666<lb/>
I Cliffs Seafood752-3172<lb/>
iCrusry-s758-2233<lb/>
I Crystal Connection756-<lb/>
I Dapper Dan's752<lb/>
David's Automotive830-1779<lb/>
JEbo758-4591<lb/>
j Fosdidcs Restaurant756-2011<lb/>
Gary Reynold's1-800447-8560<lb/>
George's Hair756-6200<lb/>
George's Gulf752-2135<lb/>
Grace Church355-3500<lb/>
Greenvile Athletics Club756-9175<lb/>
Greenvile Opticians752-4018<lb/>
Greenvile Utifties Commission752-7166<lb/>
Gordon?756-1003<lb/>
Hair By Rycke752-6060<lb/>
I Hair Loft355-5980<lb/>
Ron?355-5000<lb/>
 import Car Service 756-9434<lb/>
Memorial Coin &amp; Pawn756-16661<lb/>
Nature Goodness355-0556<lb/>
New Deli758-0080 <lb/>
New East Bank821-1085 I<lb/>
Omar's Express830-0588<lb/>
Optical Palace756-4204<lb/>
Overton's Sporting Goods355-7600<lb/>
Payne's Jewelry355-5090<lb/>
Professional Body Works756-3471<lb/>
Rack Room Shoes355-2519 j<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health Center1-832-0535<lb/>
Real Crisis Center758-4357<lb/>
RemcoEast758-6061<lb/>
Research Information1-800-351-02221<lb/>
Rio355-50001<lb/>
Wverbkitf758-4015<lb/>
Sharkys758-2701<lb/>
Stuart James Company1-800-666-01991<lb/>
Student Stores757-6731<lb/>
Student Union Public Relations757-4715 <lb/>
Southern Eyes355-7695<lb/>
Summerfield Apartments355-6187<lb/>
Swiss Colony756-5650 <lb/>
Total Eclipse355-3531<lb/>
UBE758-26161<lb/>
Western Sartn758-27121<lb/>
WZIfB757-69131<lb/>
?MHM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0003"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
3 The East Carolinian January 9,1990<lb/>
Brower speaks at second<lb/>
annual chancellors forum<lb/>
on economic enhancement<lb/>
By April Draughn<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
I he second annual<lb/>
Chancellor's Forum was hold in i<lb/>
two part sonos on. Ian.3 4 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Tho thomo of the forum was<lb/>
Economic Enhancement: The<lb/>
Delicate Balance<lb/>
The keynote speaker, Or. John<lb/>
Costlow, professor or zoology at<lb/>
1 hike University, opened the first<lb/>
general session. Costlow debated<lb/>
the possibility of a balance between<lb/>
economic growth and preserva-<lb/>
tion ot the environment. hs solu-<lb/>
tion to the problem focused<lb/>
around his theory of "The Ivorv<lb/>
Towers ot Society in which the<lb/>
towers ot academia,bureaucracy,<lb/>
industry and commerce work<lb/>
together to achieve a balance.<lb/>
The second speaker, Dr. Bruce<lb/>
Karrah, vice president tor Safety<lb/>
and Environmental Affairs at Du<lb/>
Ponl vie Nemours, pressed the<lb/>
issue of corporate environmental-<lb/>
ism. Corporate environmentalist<lb/>
is the strategy ot industries issu-<lb/>
ing their own clean up and waste<lb/>
policies in an effort to preserve the<lb/>
environment .while, at the same<lb/>
time ScittsiS ing the needs ol soci-<lb/>
et<lb/>
1 avid Brov er, the first execu-<lb/>
ti cdtrectorol the Sierra c luband<lb/>
founder ol 1 riends ot the Earth,<lb/>
ended the opening session with<lb/>
the question ol how man could<lb/>
continue .it his present rate and<lb/>
?-till preserve the earth 1 le spoke<lb/>
of how there must be a coopera-<lb/>
tive ability in order to save the<lb/>
earth and mankind In addition,<lb/>
Brower posed the question, "What<lb/>
kinds of growth must we have,<lb/>
what kinds of growth can we no<lb/>
longer afford?"<lb/>
The closing session was a fo-<lb/>
rum conducted by state leaders<lb/>
and educators from eastern N.C.<lb/>
rhissession debated the problems<lb/>
that had been posed in<lb/>
Wednesday's session.<lb/>
The second session began with<lb/>
a synthesis of the problem of bal-<lb/>
ance. Dr. Michael Orbach, profes-<lb/>
sor of anthropolgy at ECU, began<lb/>
this session. In his synthesis, Or-<lb/>
bach st res sod that Ainericansmust<lb/>
keep our water clean, educate<lb/>
children and adults about the<lb/>
growing problems, increase pen-<lb/>
alties for violation of environ-<lb/>
mental laws and encourage more<lb/>
volunteerism<lb/>
The perspectives ot the vari-<lb/>
ous leaders were started bv Dr.<lb/>
Stanley Riggs. professor of geol-<lb/>
ogy at East arolina According to<lb/>
RiggS, the U.S. is a technological<lb/>
society that taxes its natural re-<lb/>
sources.<lb/>
Mr William Cobey, lr secre-<lb/>
tarvot thcNorthC arolina Popart<lb/>
ment ol En imnment, 1 lealth and<lb/>
Natural Resources, said, we need<lb/>
public support . encouragement<lb/>
and guidance it we want to move<lb/>
towards the right direction.<lb/>
The final perspective was<lb/>
given by Dr. William R. Mangun,<lb/>
professor ol political science at<lb/>
f AN<lb/>
 iitni ' lolhinq,<lb/>
,)i li 11 If. 'n'll7lWl'S.<lb/>
 ilwin v lurtnturf<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin chats with Environmental forum's speak-<lb/>
ers. (Photo bv Tonv Rumple-ECU News Bureau<lb/>
ECU. According to Mangun, citi-<lb/>
zens need to form policies for the<lb/>
environment and obey thorn.<lb/>
ft I i tti'p into thf pn.it'<lb/>
Start off'our tyw year<lb/>
?Kiht 'By 'Visiting Us!<lb/>
?Buy ? Sett ? 'Trade<lb/>
417 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
There's plenty of FREE<lb/>
parking at our rear<lb/>
entrance off of<lb/>
, ("iitanche r?<lb/>
?"?-? ?752 1750J J<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin<lb/>
adjourned the forum's closing<lb/>
session. Eakin spoke ol the diffi-<lb/>
cult task that citizens have ahead<lb/>
of them His statements ended<lb/>
with, "What we receive in the way<lb/>
of resources will depend on what<lb/>
we give in the wa) ol care and<lb/>
stew ardstup<lb/>
! ort) 1 i I faculty leadersand<lb/>
20 student leaders were involved<lb/>
m the forum. Ilus forum i,is<lb/>
organized hv Dr. (earing ol the<lb/>
English department at East Caro-<lb/>
lina<lb/>
New East Bankcorp offers students<lb/>
full-service checking and savings<lb/>
By Samantha Thompson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
I students, faculty and<lb/>
wiatt now havetheoptionofbafik-<lb/>
jAn; with a ttjil ser iae,in-campu<lb/>
rank, which took over ECU's<lb/>
banking office at Mendenhall on<lb/>
an 5.<lb/>
New East Bank of Greenville<lb/>
will provide more banking serv-<lb/>
ices than previously offered at the<lb/>
student bank.<lb/>
In cur Easy Money Club<lb/>
Account we vecreated a package<lb/>
designed specifically for the needs<lb/>
of EC I students that combines a<lb/>
checking account with unlimited<lb/>
theck writing, discounts on other<lb/>
bank services and a few 'extras'<lb/>
such as tree kev loss protection.<lb/>
accidental death insurance and<lb/>
discounts on travel and recrea-<lb/>
tion, said President Jerry Powell<lb/>
ot the New Hast Hank of C.reen-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Once a student becomes a<lb/>
member of the club they are of-<lb/>
fered discounts on a satetv de-<lb/>
4 dollars a month, while services<lb/>
for a bounced check are $18 per<lb/>
overdraw.<lb/>
Vice president tor products<lb/>
and services development for New<lb/>
fcast Bank Corp, Kaye C. Raper<lb/>
said the new office will offer<lb/>
Mastercard and Visa accounts and<lb/>
an Automatic Teller Machine<lb/>
(ATM) service with Relay and<lb/>
Cirrus connections.<lb/>
"We are excited about being<lb/>
able to offer the students, as well<lb/>
as the university faculty and staff,<lb/>
all these services right here on<lb/>
campus' Raper said. "We hope<lb/>
that students from Gold sboro and<lb/>
Fa vetteville will look for New East<lb/>
while at home, and with New East<lb/>
banks opening throughout east-<lb/>
ern North Carolina, ECU students<lb/>
can easily continue banking with<lb/>
New East after graduating<lb/>
As a member of the Federal<lb/>
Deposit Insurance Corporation<lb/>
(I I)1C), the New East bank will be<lb/>
open from u a.m. until 5 p.m<lb/>
Monday through Friday in both<lb/>
the Mendenhall office and the<lb/>
Celebration at the Mendenhall<lb/>
bank office Fuesday, fanuary Ik<lb/>
From 11:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m<lb/>
lunch will be served as WRQU-<lb/>
1 M broadcasts live, awarding<lb/>
giveaway prices fjornjocal byjj t<lb/>
nesses. Five $100 Easy MoncvClub<lb/>
checking accounts and five sets of<lb/>
Rodney Dangcrfield video film<lb/>
libraries will be given away at I JO<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
ADAM'S<lb/>
more (fun just a car wash"<lb/>
COLLEGE<lb/>
STUDENTS!<lb/>
FOR YOUR<lb/>
EYES ONLY!<lb/>
i '<lb/>
(every Tuesday)<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Service &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
111 E. 3rd Street<lb/>
The Iee Building<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
Late Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
1D<lb/>
Pizza Grande '<lb/>
Nacho Grande Price<lb/>
Sun - Thurs after 10pm<lb/>
Fri - Sat after 11 pm<lb/>
tke taste of old mSXie?<lb/>
757-1666<lb/>
' I ????<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
M-F 9 am - 5 piu<lb/>
95<lb/>
FULL SERVICE<lb/>
? All Cloth<lb/>
? Windows Cleaned - Inside &amp; Oui<lb/>
? Complete Vaccuum<lb/>
? Hand Dry<lb/>
? Undercarriage treatment<lb/>
Every Wash Includes<lb/>
FREE Rain Check Takes 15 Minutes!<lb/>
Giue tjoat Cat Thai Aiujef Face!<lb/>
Adam's Auto Wash<lb/>
Corner of Red Banks Rd &amp; Greenville Ilk J<lb/>
Hours: Monday - Saturday Sam - V ttfym<lb/>
Phone: 355-7515<lb/>
iLL-l.1<lb/>
K<lb/>
d<lb/>
5<lb/>
$<lb/>
BACK TO SCHOOL<lb/>
J<lb/>
When:<lb/>
Where:<lb/>
Time:<lb/>
Price:<lb/>
BOOGIE!<lb/>
January 12, 1990<lb/>
Mendenhall Social Room<lb/>
10pm - until<lb/>
$3.00<lb/>
BACK TO LIFE,<lb/>
BACK TO REALITY!<lb/>
Jl<lb/>
C'Ya<lb/>
Ai<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0004"/><lb/>
albx a0t (Earnlituan<lb/>
Shannon Bucki ey, News Editor<lb/>
Carolinf Cusick, Failures :iitr<lb/>
Michael Martin, Sports EMtot<lb/>
Carrie Armstrong, Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Scott Maxwell, Satire Editor<lb/>
Steve Reid, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
MICHAEL Carnes, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
1 AV!D I ERRING, General Manager<lb/>
LOW MAKTIN, Editor<lb/>
JAMES F.J. McKf.E, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Pi lONC LlJONG, Cmii'f Manager<lb/>
STUART ROSNER, Business Manager<lb/>
Pamela Cope, Ad Tech Supervisor<lb/>
Matthew Richter, Circulation Manager<lb/>
TRACY WEEP, Production Manager<lb/>
BEIT I LUITON, Secretary<lb/>
Trie East Carolinian has been serving (he Fast Carolina campus community since 1925, with primary emphasis on in<lb/>
formation most directly affecting ECU students. It is published twice weekly, with a circulation of 12,(XM). The East<lb/>
Carolinian re serves the right to refuse or discontinue any advertisements thai discriminate on the basis of age, sex, creed<lb/>
or national origin. The Last Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view. For purposes of decency and<lb/>
brevity, The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit any letter for publication. Letters should he sent to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, Publications Bldg ECU. Greenville. NC, 27834; or call us at (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Tuesday, January 9, 1990<lb/>
A farewell to the '80s<lb/>
We're changing with the decade<lb/>
For ottr nation, the ll,Hlk hold drastic<lb/>
changes economically, politically and so-<lb/>
cially. As the decade began, our new presi-<lb/>
dent was faced with political turmoil in Iran<lb/>
with United States citizens demanding the<lb/>
release of the IJ S. hostages who wore being<lb/>
held in Tehran Controversial issues such as<lb/>
abortion, AIDS and inflation surfaced in<lb/>
these 10 years, and the country stirred with<lb/>
emotion. Changes were also seen in tech-<lb/>
nology and medicine. The F.ast Carolinian<lb/>
dedicates a special section of today's paper<lb/>
in order to touch on these and other land-<lb/>
mark events of the decade.<lb/>
But even more important than remem-<lb/>
bering the past is setting goals for the future.<lb/>
The vear 1990 marks not only a new year,<lb/>
but a new decide as well. For many of us,<lb/>
the next 10 years will hold significant<lb/>
changes with prospective careers, marriage<lb/>
and families.<lb/>
In keeping with this idea of positive<lb/>
change, The Fast Carolinian is altering its<lb/>
layout style. Our idea is to produce a news-<lb/>
paper that will not only inform, but will<lb/>
also be pleasing to the eve and interesting to<lb/>
the reader. In the next year, expect to see a<lb/>
wider variety of articles reflecting the di-<lb/>
verse events and lifestyles oi the Fast Caro-<lb/>
lina community.<lb/>
As we move into the '90s, it is important<lb/>
for us to remember to use what we' ve learned<lb/>
in our past experiences.<lb/>
Practical ways to save the Earth<lb/>
By Nathaniel Mead<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
Imagine Manhattan under 20 feet of seawater.<lb/>
Imagine massive plagues of dying plants and ani-<lb/>
mals in our nation's forests and grasslands. Imagine<lb/>
all the farmers in eastern North Carolina impelled to<lb/>
take up fishing. Imagine heavy droughts searing the<lb/>
Corn Belt every other summer and food shortages so<lb/>
severe they make Mozambique look like Beverly<lb/>
Hills.<lb/>
These are just a few of the scenarios predicted to<lb/>
occur as the global climate changes. Through such<lb/>
activities as burning fossil fuels, razing forests and<lb/>
producing certain synthetic chemicals, humankind<lb/>
is releasing vast quanities of greenhouse gases into<lb/>
the atmosphere. These gases tend to absorb infrared<lb/>
radiation (heat), preventing it from leaving theatmo-<lb/>
phere. As more heat is trapped in, global warming<lb/>
begins to take place.<lb/>
Climatic chaos may be imminent. As the green-<lb/>
house-heating engine whips into high gear, the fre-<lb/>
quency of droughts, floods, blizzards, tornadoes and<lb/>
hurricanes, is likely to increase. This, in turn, could<lb/>
result in the greatest mass extinction since the last<lb/>
major ice age, when most of North America was<lb/>
encased in a mile-thick sheet of ice. And unlike<lb/>
nuclear war, which dependson the push of a button,<lb/>
the climate crisis is happening now; it is already in<lb/>
motion.<lb/>
No wonder the Environmental Protection<lb/>
Agency considers global heating to be the most<lb/>
critical problem facing the human race.<lb/>
While the nuclear industry seems impenetrable<lb/>
from the common citizen's point of view, the climate<lb/>
crisis is probably more amenable to the impact of<lb/>
consumer power. But what do you, personally, have<lb/>
to do with such threats to global survival?<lb/>
All of our global crisesare fundamentally rooted<lb/>
in human activities. The destiny of the ecosphere is<lb/>
determined by the daily, seemingly petty decisions<lb/>
of the millions of individuals who consume Earth's<lb/>
resources. From the foods we eat to the garbage we<lb/>
generate, each of us makes choices that either pre-<lb/>
serve or harm the environment upon which our sur-<lb/>
vival depends. Thus, we arc at once cause and solu-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Consider these five points as powerful ways to<lb/>
support the process of planetary healing:<lb/>
1. Abstain from Imported Beef. We are all in-<lb/>
creasingly aware of the devastation taking place in<lb/>
the rainforests of South and Central America. Hun-<lb/>
dreds of species are becoming extinct each year, and<lb/>
the rainforests are essential to the stability of global<lb/>
climate. Though poverty plays a role to some extent,<lb/>
the largest tracts of Latin American rainforest are<lb/>
being burned to graze cattle the cheapest way pos-<lb/>
sible so that America's fast food chains can charge<lb/>
five cents less for each hamburger. Boycotting the<lb/>
fast-food chains may be among the most effective<lb/>
means of halting the suicidal, largely irreversible<lb/>
burning of the rainforests.<lb/>
2. Eat Organically-Crown Foods. Our conven-<lb/>
tional agricultural svstem. while productive in the<lb/>
short run, destroys more land and consumes more<lb/>
oil than any other U S. business; it is therefore one of<lb/>
the greatest burdens on our climate svstem. Organic<lb/>
farming, by contrast, conserves land and avoids<lb/>
petroleum-based chemicals by employing ecologi-<lb/>
cal methods of food production. Unless we begin<lb/>
eating in wavs that help stabilize the climate system,<lb/>
we nay verv soon have no food left at all.<lb/>
3. Plant a tree. In China, every able-bodied<lb/>
citizen is required to plant three to five new trees per<lb/>
vear. Imagine how beautiful the towns and cities of<lb/>
the United States would be if we began such a public<lb/>
policy! More importantly, beyond their inherent<lb/>
beauty and manv practical benefits (maintaining<lb/>
groundwater tables, aerating soils, and providing<lb/>
paper, cardboard, lumber, medicines, etc.), trees are<lb/>
among Earth's primary means of maintaining the<lb/>
balance of carbon and oxvgen in the atmosphere.<lb/>
4. Recycle Your Waste. Each of us probably<lb/>
generates enough trash to fill our entire house in one<lb/>
year, and most of this is recyclable. Recycling our<lb/>
paper, cardboard, glass and metal products will<lb/>
stem the tide of pollution, save energy and raw<lb/>
materials, and help us maintain a g(od standard of<lb/>
living. Recycling also affects the climate control sys-<lb/>
tem. Once trees are harvested, it is critical that they<lb/>
not be allowed to rot or burn, for the balance of the<lb/>
atmosphere requires that their fixed carbon stay<lb/>
fixed. Aside from using timber for building pur-<lb/>
poses, harvested wood can be used and saved in the<lb/>
form of recycled paper and cardboard. When you go<lb/>
to the supermarket, ask for a paper bag and reuse or<lb/>
recycle it!<lb/>
5. Drive Your Car Less. It is an inescapable fact<lb/>
that automobiles are contributing to the four biggest<lb/>
environmental crises of all time: the Greenhouse<lb/>
Effect, smog, acid rain and destruction of the ozone.<lb/>
A major byproduct of automobile exhaust (as well as<lb/>
airplane exhaust and farm fertilizer production) is a<lb/>
common gaseous compound called nitrous oxide. If<lb/>
you must drive, at least avoid using a gas guzzling<lb/>
car. Whenever possible, walk, bicycle, rollerskate,<lb/>
lcvitateorusesomeothernon-pollutingmeanstogct<lb/>
around.<lb/>
At this point, you may have some irksome ques-<lb/>
tions to ask. To begin with, like "Why me?" Why<lb/>
can't we rely on the Establishment to make the<lb/>
necessary changes? And why, for that matter, given<lb/>
the awesome magnitude of this problem, aren't all<lb/>
nations moving headlong toward renewable, non-<lb/>
polluting technologies and mandatory, multilateral<lb/>
conservation of the rainforests?<lb/>
Part of the problem lies in the scientific process of<lb/>
fact-seeking. Today, most climatologists agree that<lb/>
the world will warm, but they often disagree on the<lb/>
timing, location, and intensity. The complexities of<lb/>
global climate models are such that virtually any<lb/>
model can be criticized. There are simply too many<lb/>
variables to analyze and integrate even using the<lb/>
most powerful computers Earth. This leads to public<lb/>
confusion, denial, and apathy toward the climate<lb/>
crisis.<lb/>
M<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
<lb/>
Campus Spectrum<lb/>
Recollections of a senior<lb/>
It was a glorious day, that first<lb/>
day of drop add registration at<lb/>
East Carolina University, as I had<lb/>
finally reached my senior stand-<lb/>
ing. No longer did I have to deal<lb/>
with the signing of forms by advi-<lb/>
sors that did not exist, or standing<lb/>
m mile-long linesonly to discover<lb/>
that I was in the wrong depart<lb/>
ment, or to find out, "sorry, your<lb/>
schedule has been tagged due to<lb/>
parking violations" that's<lb/>
everyone's favorite. Never before<lb/>
attending ECU had 1 realized the<lb/>
impact parking has on one's edu-<lb/>
cation<lb/>
Being the humble, restrained<lb/>
person that 1 am, I engaged in the<lb/>
well-known senior sport of "rub-<lb/>
bingitin I think that in the height<lb/>
(if my bliss, ! may have even low-<lb/>
ered myself toademea in ring"Na-<lb/>
na-na-na-na But it truly was<lb/>
glorious to know that never again<lb/>
would I be faced with these under-<lb/>
classmen tribulations!<lb/>
It was well into the semester<lb/>
that some omniscient freshman<lb/>
avenger brought retaliation upon<lb/>
me. It all started when one of mv<lb/>
professors informed me that after<lb/>
accomplishing all class assign-<lb/>
ments, exams, and the like; that 1<lb/>
was not registered for her class.<lb/>
There must have been some mix-<lb/>
up in the infallible university<lb/>
computer system. Yes, my days of<lb/>
gloating were over indeed. This<lb/>
meant real trouble. I immediately<lb/>
began to search for a solution. The<lb/>
first step, a visit to every confused<lb/>
student's savior, my advisor.<lb/>
As I entered her office and sat<lb/>
before her warm, understanding<lb/>
smile, I knew from experience that<lb/>
this was only the beginning of a<lb/>
series of visits. After describing<lb/>
my ill-fated situation, I obtained<lb/>
an official "add form" and began<lb/>
my plight. And what a plight if<lb/>
would prove to be. The first step<lb/>
was to find my professor and ha ve<lb/>
her submit written proof that I<lb/>
had been participating in her class.<lb/>
Of course this was no easy task, as<lb/>
this particular day was one of her<lb/>
designated "research days" and<lb/>
she wasnowhere to be found. After<lb/>
tracking her down, I was then to<lb/>
visit thedean and make her under<lb/>
stand mv dilemma and ho granted<lb/>
permission to receive credit for a<lb/>
missing class. I spent a frustrating<lb/>
21) minutes trying to make a well<lb/>
established college Jean under-<lb/>
stand why my name was missed<lb/>
by the computers. After several<lb/>
explanations, pist when I thought<lb/>
she was beginning to grasp an<lb/>
understanding of my situation, she<lb/>
gave her watch a glance and in<lb/>
formed me that she had to leave to<lb/>
go to lunch. 1 couldn't believe uv,<lb/>
ears as she quickly initialed nu<lb/>
term and vindictively sent me<lb/>
acrosscampus, in the pouring rain<lb/>
nonetheless, to the registrar's ot<lb/>
tice.<lb/>
By<lb/>
Stephanie Emory<lb/>
It's quite a chore to battle your<lb/>
way across our campus on a rainy<lb/>
day, simultaneously jugglim;<lb/>
forms, books, an umbrella and<lb/>
dodging 15,000 other.students<lb/>
with the same. Upon entering the<lb/>
registrar's office, I was given a<lb/>
second form to complete and then<lb/>
took mv place in line with other<lb/>
students, no doubt in the same<lb/>
predicament as me. When 1<lb/>
reached the terminal and my turn,<lb/>
1 had been given the wrong form.<lb/>
Once again, I was told to fill out an<lb/>
additional form and sent to Room<lb/>
105. i reached Room 105, with my<lb/>
completed form, only to be sent<lb/>
back to the room I originally en<lb/>
tered because the people in Room<lb/>
105 didn't know how to handle<lb/>
mv problem. It was at this point<lb/>
that I realized that no one in that<lb/>
building had any clue as to what<lb/>
anyone else there did. So, I de-<lb/>
cided to just randomly pick a room.<lb/>
What, at this point, did I have to<lb/>
lose? Well, mv choke started out<lb/>
well.<lb/>
The secretaries called nn<lb/>
schedule up on the computer and<lb/>
entered the class I had K-en lack<lb/>
ing. Finally! 1 had found help<lb/>
comfort  relief! Could it be that<lb/>
my mind boggling plight that had<lb/>
now been ongoing since morning,<lb/>
was finally resolved? Ot course<lb/>
not. Just as I saw my class being<lb/>
entered and the dark i loud that<lb/>
had been following me all morn<lb/>
ing begin to disappear, I realized<lb/>
that I was only entering the eve of<lb/>
the hurricane. I he secretary's<lb/>
as; istant returned from searching<lb/>
for tm file only to inform me thai<lb/>
i mid not be graduating tin<lb/>
semester because they had not<lb/>
received my file. At that particu<lb/>
lar moment I actually considered<lb/>
tcirorist actions. Nothing would<lb/>
have given me more joy than to<lb/>
jump on top ot the nearest desk.<lb/>
grab the largest staple gun 1 could<lb/>
find, and threaten every employee<lb/>
in the building with their lives<lb/>
unless my wishes tor graduation<lb/>
ere granted. Hut as I rationally<lb/>
considered the consequences, 1<lb/>
calmly requested a second look <lb/>
instead And sure enough my<lb/>
file was miraculously found.<lb/>
1 m sure by now you fnust be<lb/>
wondering it I ever did manage to j<lb/>
solvemysc hedulingproblems, let j<lb/>
alone graduate. The answer is yes<lb/>
Mut not until alter I stood m ap-<lb/>
proximated eighty more lines,<lb/>
paid one hundred and eightv tour<lb/>
more dollars and seventy-seven<lb/>
cents in various parking tickets,<lb/>
library tines, and graduation tees,<lb/>
and lost two class rings in the U.S.<lb/>
Mail. And now, as my diploma<lb/>
hangs proudly in its solid oak<lb/>
frame over my desk, I often pon-<lb/>
der over M hat 1 truly learned from<lb/>
my college experience. 1 realize<lb/>
now, that I probably could have<lb/>
gained the same experience from<lb/>
a d,v. .it Wall Disney World. The<lb/>
only difference is that I would<lb/>
more than likely have mouse ears<lb/>
in that oak frame hanging over<lb/>
my desk instead oi a college di-<lb/>
ploma. Oh well, I've heard mouse<lb/>
ears,ire on their wav out am wav<lb/>
Another problem is conflicting economic inter-<lb/>
ests. Fossil fuels are by far the biggest source of<lb/>
greenhouse gases. Oil companies, automotive in-<lb/>
dustries, and other big businesses pay top scientists<lb/>
to do research which contradicts the more serious<lb/>
climate findings. The result is endless, relatively<lb/>
fruitless debate.<lb/>
What about the White House? Can we expect the<lb/>
Bush administration to save us from this mess?<lb/>
Reagan dissolved the budget for solar energy re-<lb/>
search, which would have been (and still is) among<lb/>
the most sane alternatives to fossil fuel burning.<lb/>
President<lb/>
Bush, for his part, has made some motions to-<lb/>
ward cleaning up the atmosphere, but his proposed<lb/>
Clean Air Act reflected excessive lenience toward<lb/>
automobile manufacturers. (Thankfully, it was heav-<lb/>
ily revised by a senate subcommittee.) And there are<lb/>
other ominous indications that thisadministration is<lb/>
tix) weak to move.<lb/>
For instance, it took Bush, a former Texas oilman<lb/>
and long-time scion of the Rockefeller oil monopoly,<lb/>
two whole weeks before he even on the tragic Alas-<lb/>
kan oil spill. Given his pre-election promises to in-<lb/>
crease offshore oil drilling and open the entire Alas-<lb/>
kan Wildlife Refuge to the oil industry, we can expect<lb/>
little if anything from this administration. Indeed,<lb/>
far from being the environmentalist he claims to be,<lb/>
Bush's bottom line sounds as oily as ever. Don't<lb/>
bother reading his lips, read his mind.<lb/>
Of course, there are many things a responsible<lb/>
government could do. It could, for example, convert<lb/>
our hefty military expenditures into research funds<lb/>
for establishing energy -efficient, non-polluting tech-<lb/>
nologies. It could work to phase out coal and oil<lb/>
altogether, in favor of solar, wind, and hydroelectric<lb/>
power. But let's face it, at best we're talking about the<lb/>
next administration (assuming Bush doesn't get re-<lb/>
elected). And by then it may already be too late to<lb/>
turn the situation around.<lb/>
Rather than waiting tor our government to set<lb/>
the agenda, we must begin to .U it ourselves.<lb/>
ust as every tree counts in fixing atmospheric<lb/>
carbon, so does every human count in regenerating<lb/>
the ecosphere. In this free market system, collective<lb/>
consumption is the ultimate driving force behind<lb/>
economic and environmental policy reform. It is up<lb/>
to each ot us to determine our society's orientation,<lb/>
whether or not it will be ecologically supportive, and<lb/>
whether future generations will have anv future at<lb/>
all.<lb/>
One last parting image: immense cloud sof nasty,<lb/>
buzzing mosquitoes If you think North Carolina<lb/>
alreadv has a mosquitoe problem, wait until the<lb/>
Greenhouse Effect really takes hold. And this is only<lb/>
the tip of the iceberg. I low will the world deal with<lb/>
the myriad new plant pests, tlies carrying encephali-<lb/>
tis and malarial mosquitoes as thev multiply in<lb/>
warmer, increasingly irrigated areas? Massive aerial<lb/>
spraying7 Better bug ropellant?<lb/>
These are not fanciful notions but verv real con-<lb/>
cerns. Think about how voiuou Id help prevent them<lb/>
from coming about in the first place. The starting<lb/>
point for change is voluntary conservation in a<lb/>
wasteful society. It is time to change our careless,<lb/>
irresponsible ways. Pollution is not the problem. We<lb/>
are. By adjusting our life styles, we can support<lb/>
those ecologically oriented business enterprises<lb/>
which maintain ei onomic growth even while reduc-<lb/>
ing the pressure on our natural environment.<lb/>
The time to act sensibly and responsibly is now.<lb/>
And doing it again and again, each day. If you aren't<lb/>
living ecologically, that is, in ways which minimize<lb/>
pollution and help preserve natural habitats,<lb/>
you are part of the problem, and you are making<lb/>
the situation steadily worse. Rather than drown<lb/>
yourself in guilt and denial, be active in the process<lb/>
of planetary healing You are the solution.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0005"/><lb/>
?i lEaBt Qtaroltnfan<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
State and Nation<lb/>
January 9, 1990<lb/>
American volunteers aid<lb/>
in Panamanian cleanup<lb/>
By Juan . Walte<lb/>
(jnnolt News Sen ice<lb/>
?;<lb/>
Danish<lb/>
Phe<lb/>
WASHINGTON A peace<lb/>
tut invasion of Panama is under<lb/>
way .is the United States winds<lb/>
dovs n its military campaign.<lb/>
Nearly 140 IS Amu civil<lb/>
affairs specialists doctors and<lb/>
nurses firefighters and police<lb/>
historians and lawyers an- in<lb/>
Panama to help rebuild thatcoun-<lb/>
trv And they an- all volunteers<lb/>
private citizens serving in the I 5<lb/>
Armv s Civil Affairs C ommands<lb/>
ihit-s answered the call that weni<lb/>
out from the Pentagon within<lb/>
hours after the first soldiers landed<lb/>
in Panama<lb/>
The response has been tre<lb/>
Reserve Command at ion Bragg,<lb/>
 i<lb/>
More than 700 have volun-<lb/>
teered since the United States<lb/>
invaded Panama Dec 20 fhefirst<lb/>
?? specialists were dispatched lo<lb/>
ima during thehristmas<lb/>
kend mother 1 1  left Mon<lb/>
da Mun ot them know some<lb/>
Clean air bill<lb/>
greets Bush's<lb/>
Earth Day<lb/>
celebration<lb/>
call went out tor emcr-<lb/>
workers, veterinarians,<lb/>
gency<lb/>
business managers public admin<lb/>
istrators. construction engineers,<lb/>
public health, agricultural am)<lb/>
sanitation experts. Also, a mili-<lb/>
tai y historian was found In River-<lb/>
dale Md. A memberof l louston's<lb/>
cit council tilled a need tor a<lb/>
Spanish speaking municipal e-<lb/>
pert<lb/>
The mission tor all ot them<lb/>
according to itts:<lb/>
"Go to Panama quickly and<lb/>
work with the IS. military and<lb/>
Panamanian civilians to helpthem<lb/>
m restoring normal health and<lb/>
human services The civil affairs<lb/>
specialists will be in Panama in<lb/>
11 and 139 days.<lb/>
"It's up to (.en (Maxwell)<lb/>
fhurman to decide who and what<lb/>
more he needs We have a list ot<lb/>
people on standby said I itts,<lb/>
refet ring to the general w ho om<lb/>
mands all I s troops in Panama<lb/>
i 'in1 person inv olv ed in the<lb/>
effort to rebuild all aspects ol<lb/>
Panama's civilian life is I t i ol<lb/>
Mike Nicholson, attached h the<lb/>
352nd Civil Affairs( ommand in<lb/>
Kiverdale. Md.<lb/>
"When Panamanians can<lb/>
stand on their feel winch we<lb/>
hope will be in the short term<lb/>
we'll lust pick lip and go home "<lb/>
Nicholson said<lb/>
in addition to the 352nd, there<lb/>
are two other Armv Civil Attairs<lb/>
Commands nationwide the<lb/>
3 1st in California and the 53rd<lb/>
in New York. They alsowerecalled<lb/>
on tor the Panamanian operation<lb/>
as have two other reserve units:<lb/>
the 360th in Southarolma and<lb/>
the 3hlst in Honda.<lb/>
" lTus is the tirst time in 20 or<lb/>
so years that civil affairsunits have<lb/>
States said Nicholson Ihe last<lb/>
time was in Vietnam.<lb/>
Some I v civil affairsspet ial-<lb/>
ists were snt to t irenada in ll,s S,<lb/>
but not until militarv operations<lb/>
there were finished<lb/>
 ; ? write? foi USA f <lb/>
DA<lb/>
i pyMgfel ; m US U iimi<lb/>
Wounded soldiers land at Hunter Army Airfield in Savannah. Ga The soldiers returned to the United<lb/>
States on Christmas Eve. four days alter the American invasion of PanamafPhoto by Charles Hoskinsor<lb/>
Slavs protest in Bulgarici<lb/>
Todorov calls for 'social forum'<lb/>
Hod l ittte Gannett New, St<lb/>
By Richard Benedetto<lb/>
Gannett News Sin ice<lb/>
Environmental issues on<lb/>
the ha. k burner tor a decade<lb/>
moved to the forefront last<lb/>
W ednesday with a bane.<lb/>
President bush proclaimed<lb/>
April 22 as Earth Day 1990 and<lb/>
supported nationwide activities<lb/>
that call attention to environ<lb/>
mental protection He also urged<lb/>
 ongress to quickly passclean-air<lb/>
legislation, a top Bush priorit)<lb/>
bush was reported to be con<lb/>
sidering taxes on manufacture ot<lb/>
paper, glass and plastics to en-<lb/>
courage recycling. New orkGov.<lb/>
Mario Cuomo proposed a $1 u<lb/>
billion bond issue to buy land to<lb/>
Coming to<lb/>
the USAX<lb/>
Nearly a<lb/>
quarter of a<lb/>
million legal<lb/>
residents<lb/>
became<lb/>
US JH<lb/>
citizens <lb/>
in 1988.7<lb/>
y<lb/>
The memo by the Clean Air<lb/>
Working Group, was composed<lb/>
ot 1,950 oil. gas, auto, chemical<lb/>
and other companies affected by<lb/>
tougher clean-air rules The memo<lb/>
says the bill is too costly and would<lb/>
impose too strict pollution-reduc-<lb/>
tion requirements.<lb/>
It expresses a tear that bush<lb/>
will be so anxious to eel a bill<lb/>
help local governments deal with passed that he'll sign anything<lb/>
garbage, and tailed for limits on<lb/>
burying recyclable trash<lb/>
Bush's Earth Day ceremony<lb/>
w as greeted b a blast in an Indus-<lb/>
try memo mappinga gamcplan to<lb/>
stall efforts to railroad i I emo<lb/>
i rat sponsor d i lean air bill<lb/>
through i oner ?<lb/>
Congress hands him ust for the<lb/>
political gains, but bush, at the<lb/>
proclamation ceremony, warned<lb/>
that he would veto any bill that's<lb/>
not "carefully balan ed" to pro<lb/>
tect the nation's economii interest<lb/>
as well as the en ironment.<lb/>
White Mouse spokesman<lb/>
Steve 1 lart calls ridiculous" the<lb/>
notion that Bush traded economic<lb/>
interests tor n environmental<lb/>
feather in his cap<lb/>
"Our (bush administration)<lb/>
bill provides the best alternative<lb/>
to achieve environmental benefits<lb/>
in the most cost -effective way he<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Earl Mallick, chairman of the<lb/>
( lean Air WorkingC iroup.denies<lb/>
it plans a stall<lb/>
"We want to make sure it's a<lb/>
well-thought-out bill he says.<lb/>
Richard Benedetto writes foi USA<lb/>
roo )<lb/>
By Terrence Petty<lb/>
1 he ssin iated Press<lb/>
soil A, Bulgaria (AD<lb/>
Angered by the restoration ol<lb/>
ethnic and religious rights to the<lb/>
country's large l urkish minority,<lb/>
thousands ol ethnic Slavs rallied<lb/>
in the capita and shouted down<lb/>
the premier and interior minister<lb/>
In apparent response, Parlia-<lb/>
ment President Stanko lodorov<lb/>
vailed lor a week long "social to-<lb/>
rum to open today on "several<lb/>
i p, ts ol the national question<lb/>
In an evening radiobroadcast<lb/>
atter Sunday's protests, Todorov<lb/>
united members of the public,<lb/>
'aYtfamenV bppfcsition 'gYrups<lb/>
and the ruling C ommumst Party<lb/>
as well as orthodox Christian and<lb/>
Moslem religious leaders Some<lb/>
Bulgarians' anti-Turkish senti-<lb/>
ments are fueled by their Ortho-<lb/>
dox religion and anger over cen-<lb/>
turies Ol Turkish rule.<lb/>
News media controlled by the<lb/>
two month old leadership that<lb/>
11 plat ed hard-liner doi<lb/>
Zhivkov reported that I I tl<lb/>
i ial - who are hold i from the<lb/>
old regime appear d to be usn<lb/>
the ethnic issue to try to ?tall r<lb/>
form, but the media also reported<lb/>
a resurgence ol I urkish national<lb/>
Mil in some areas, quoting wit-<lb/>
ncssesassa) ing I urki h flags ha e<lb/>
been seen flyingoverpublu build<lb/>
ings in one southern cit Premier<lb/>
Georgi Atanasso said the pra<lb/>
tice was illegal<lb/>
1 he demonstrators demand<lb/>
therepealol a I ei 29order allow<lb/>
mg Bulgaria's 1.5 million ethnic<lb/>
lurks aa Moslems to use their<lb/>
? million<lb/>
1 hi go eminent ol I urkey,<lb/>
.?. hi ; I'lile, ina ssoutheast<lb/>
, in ? rder, as well as some Bul-<lb/>
garian lurks ha e blamed<lb/>
Zhivkov'shard 'met ommmunisi<lb/>
followers tor instigating the un<lb/>
rest, which included work stop<lb/>
b) thousandsol peoplemat<lb/>
least five cities on Friday.<lb/>
Bulgaria a one national<lb/>
uvt ountn read banners carried<lb/>
by someot the 10,000 ethnic Slavs<lb/>
.sho demonstrated in Sofia on<lb/>
Sundav outside Alexander Nevski<lb/>
( athedral. Standing m ero-de-<lb/>
e.ree w eat her. the protesters boKHi.<lb/>
hissed or chanted "Resignation!<lb/>
(estimation a AtanassovVfjid<lb/>
Moslem names and pi a. tice their Resig<lb/>
FoliijiojwwifhiiiirestrirtiiWii tli.il  InteiidVh fatv.ttr 1 u<lb/>
so vflu<lb/>
nls Y<lb/>
decision n versed the assimilation<lb/>
polic) introduced by Zhivkov,<lb/>
who forced ethnic rurks to change<lb/>
their names to Bulgarian onesand<lb/>
barred them from speaking 1 urk-<lb/>
ish in public Nationalists among<lb/>
the Slav majority tear the 1 urkish<lb/>
minority is growing too fast and<lb/>
Doses a threat to the country ol<lb/>
merdzhiev tried to address them.<lb/>
In an apparent attempt' to<lb/>
appease the protesters, Atanassov<lb/>
said Bulgarian would remain the<lb/>
official language. But both his and<lb/>
Semerdzhiev's speeches were<lb/>
drowned out<lb/>
See BULGARIA, pag? 7<lb/>
Low incomes are tax-exempt<lb/>
r,rtf t<lb/>
f?N fflfbttntii?ii NrftfoHk<lb/>
Judges ask for court reform<lb/>
RA1 EIGH(AP) District Court judges around<lb/>
the state are circulating a petition urging legislators<lb/>
to takea second look at n stru turing North Carolina's<lb/>
court system, a task which was last undertaken m<lb/>
l2 when the lower i ourt was created.<lb/>
I he resolution, passed last fall by the state Asso-<lb/>
ciation ol District t ourt judges, has set off debate<lb/>
and some hard feelings within the judiciary.<lb/>
The mam thing the judges are kicking about is<lb/>
that wearesori ol treated likesecond-classcitizensin<lb/>
the iudic iar salary-wise, primarily Elton Glenn<lb/>
Tucker, a Pistrii t Court judge In New Hanover<lb/>
County, told The News and Observer of Raleigh<lb/>
? We do a lol ol hard work, and we handle most ol the<lb/>
l . s in the court System, and we feel like we are<lb/>
underpaid ,no looked down on<lb/>
The resolution asks tor the appointment ot a<lb/>
study commission to look into abolishing the two<lb/>
( xnirt judges the resolution calls for raising District<lb/>
c ourt judges' pn to the level ot Superior Court<lb/>
judges, and making their terms of office the same.<lb/>
District ourt judges are elected tor four-year terms;<lb/>
superior Court judges tor eight.<lb/>
Ihe restitution also opposes a legislative pro-<lb/>
posal to replaee the election of appellate judges with<lb/>
appointment by the governor while retaining elec-<lb/>
tions for other judges. All judges should be chosen<lb/>
the same way, either by appointment or election, the<lb/>
resolution says.<lb/>
Advocates of the resolution sav the duties of<lb/>
Districtourt judges are not different enough from<lb/>
those ot the state's78 SuperiorCourt judges to justify<lb/>
the difference in salary. District Court judge's base<lb/>
salary is $60,240, while a Superior Court judge gets<lb/>
$70,992.<lb/>
"It is a subject that the District Court judges want<lb/>
By JIM LUTHER<lb/>
The Associated Press<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) in-<lb/>
flation adjustments to the tax sys<lb/>
tem have freed many lower-in-<lb/>
come workers from having to file<lb/>
a 1989 tax return.<lb/>
Whether you must file a re<lb/>
tumdcpendsonyourfamil) status<lb/>
and your income. A $511 boost in<lb/>
the personal exemption and auto<lb/>
matic increases in the standard<lb/>
deductions to offset inflation have<lb/>
raised the maximum amount ot<lb/>
gross income that a person may<lb/>
earn without filing a return<lb/>
I he general filing thresholds<lb/>
are determined by adding the<lb/>
number of $2,000 personal exemp-<lb/>
tionsand the standard deduction<lb/>
to which an individual or couple<lb/>
is entitled. Ihe additional deduc<lb/>
lion permitted a blind person is<lb/>
not considered in the calculation.<lb/>
I lore are the basi tiling<lb/>
thresholds tor each type o return:<lb/>
SINGLE: You mus? h!c a re-<lb/>
turn it your 1989 gross income<lb/>
subject to tax was $5,100 or more.<lb/>
It you were 65 or older last year,<lb/>
the threshold is$5,850<lb/>
M RR1ED, I II ING<lb/>
IOINTLY: It both spouses are<lb/>
under 65, the threshold is $9 200<lb/>
I he i oupie must have been living<lb/>
together at year end and neither<lb/>
iii.iv be claimed as a dependent on<lb/>
another person's return<lb/>
MARRIED, 1II ING SEPA<lb/>
RA I'Fl i You must file it income<lb/>
was $2,000 or more.<lb/>
HEAD OF HOI SEHOI D: it<lb/>
you are under 65, file it income<lb/>
was at least $6350; it older, the<lb/>
threshold is $7300,<lb/>
The lower tax rates of this til<lb/>
ing status are open to any person<lb/>
who was unmarried on the last<lb/>
.ay ol 1989 and who paid more<lb/>
than halt the COSt ot maintaining<lb/>
tor the full year the principal home<lb/>
ot .it least one qualified relative.<lb/>
That includes a hild, grandchild,<lb/>
parent grandparent, aunt, uncle,<lb/>
niece, nephew or in-law. Cousins<lb/>
don't count<lb/>
QUAI IFY1NG WIDOW: You<lb/>
must tile it you are under 65 and<lb/>
income wasatk i'C ?(V. $7,800<lb/>
II our spouse died m 1989<lb/>
and you did not remarry during<lb/>
the year, you are entitled to file a<lb/>
regular joint return. The same is<lb/>
true it your spouse died in 1990<lb/>
before filing a return<lb/>
A separate set of rules applies<lb/>
t i a taxpayer v ho can be claimed<lb/>
as a dependent by another. In that<lb/>
case you must file a return if:<lb/>
i ou had mi unearned in-<lb/>
come (such as interest and divi-<lb/>
dends) and your earnings were<lb/>
$3,100 or more.<lb/>
See TAXES, page 8<lb/>
Cristiani announces involvement of<lb/>
Salvadoran soldiers in priests' deaths<lb/>
separate trial divisions, District Court and Superior to be addressed publicly, and thev want to be told<lb/>
t ourt in favor of a one-tier system. That, proponents why there is any difference in salary said George<lb/>
sav, would bo more efficient, because judges could Bason, chief District Court judge tor Wake County<lb/>
be assigned w herever thev are needed regardless ot "Thev want somebody to answer what is the magic<lb/>
the type of case. transformation that takes place upon a change from<lb/>
(Opponents sav, however, that under a one-tier one court to the other<lb/>
system, the courts would be bogged down in jury The number and complexity of cases in the Dis-<lb/>
tnals for even minor misdemeanors, most of which tnct Court have grown since the court was estab-<lb/>
cused of sympathizing with leftist<lb/>
rebels, the ass.ul.ints killed the<lb/>
clergymen's housekeeper and her<lb/>
15-year-old daughter.<lb/>
Cristiani did not specify who<lb/>
was implicated or indicate the<lb/>
units, rank or number Of those<lb/>
responsible. 1 lowever, the head<lb/>
of the joint Chiefs of Staff said<lb/>
earlier Sunday night that 47<lb/>
members of an elite battalion<lb/>
now are heard by District Court judges without<lb/>
limes A change, too, would buck a national trend<lb/>
away from I single trial division.<lb/>
Saving that matters handled by the state's 1<lb/>
hshed in Wh2. In fiscal 1987-88, more than 2 million<lb/>
cases were filed in District Court, compared with<lb/>
105,704 m Superior Court.<lb/>
While the Superior Court handles felonies and<lb/>
District Court judges "are as Important, as difficult major civil suits. District Court judges hold non-jury<lb/>
and as complex as matters handled by Superior See JUDGES, page 10<lb/>
By Douglas Grant Mine<lb/>
The Associated Press<lb/>
SAN SALVADOR, El Salva-<lb/>
dor (AP) President Alfredo<lb/>
Cristiani has announced that mili-<lb/>
tarv men committed the Novem-<lb/>
ber massacre of six Jesuit priests<lb/>
Olte oi the most heinous pohti<lb/>
cally motivated crimes of the 10-<lb/>
vear-old civil war<lb/>
"It hasIvendetermined there including two officers, had been moveaheadanditlwkshkethat's<lb/>
wasinvc4vemerttof some elements confined to base and were being the course he is on said Fitzwa-<lb/>
quesHoned in connection with the ter, w ho was traveling with Prcsi-<lb/>
slavings. dtrrt Bush to Honda. Fitzwater<lb/>
No militarv officer has been was non-committal on whether<lb/>
convicted of a politically moti- Cnstiam's announcement affects<lb/>
vatedslayingsincecivil warbroke prospects for continuing U.S. aid<lb/>
OUt in late 1979, though the army to Fl Salvador<lb/>
has been linked to right-wing<lb/>
death squads blamed tor the<lb/>
murders of thousands ot sUS<lb/>
pected leftists m the early RSOs.<lb/>
White House spokesman Martin<lb/>
Fitzwater Monday praised the<lb/>
Salvadoran Investigation and<lb/>
hailed the "greatcourage" of Cris-<lb/>
tiani.<lb/>
We asked the investigation<lb/>
ho thorough and the prosecution<lb/>
oi the armed forces" in the slay-<lb/>
ings, Cristiani said Sunday night<lb/>
in a brief broadcast address.<lb/>
In addition to the priests,<lb/>
educators at a Jesuit-run univer-<lb/>
sity whom the far right had ac-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0006"/><lb/>
age 6<lb/>
oHie SaBt (Hamlinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
January 9, 1990<lb/>
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 At A I ION OR BIG SCREEN TV<lb/>
IM.l SRMSK l'l?TO$l.400l<lb/>
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L??st: Zero Investment<lb/>
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sororities call Ot MO at 1 (800)<lb/>
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Announcements<lb/>
ATTENTION TO ALL<lb/>
asl Carolinian will be changing its<lb/>
ncerning announcements start<lb/>
. un announcements will now<lb/>
? nl) the ist weel ol publication<lb/>
?- it week there will Iv .1 charge of<lb/>
? vords for student orgaruzationa<lb/>
. : for nor student organizations<lb/>
i t additional words wiil K 5<lb/>
NATIONAL COLD SERVICE<lb/>
LRATLRNITV<lb/>
ill h.r e i ish tor prospective members<lb/>
mentsin everyday situah<lb/>
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unteer (lists i ounsetors<lb/>
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pn at Mendenhall in Ian 17 or C .ill<lb/>
sathv al 758 M'i<lb/>
HI Rt'S YOUR CHANCE<lb/>
Jain valuable experience sharpen youi<lb/>
?adershipand communication skills, plan<lb/>
?ntortainment for the FCl1 campus ami<lb/>
'je lots of fun nieStudenl Union is now<lb/>
i ? , 'in; applications l.tr tho following<lb/>
ositions: Minority ArtommitttvChair<lb/>
erson Coffeehouse' mmitteeChairper<lb/>
?on, and Assistant to Bte President If vou<lb/>
hink you're Interested, we want to talk to<lb/>
on .ill us at 757-4715 or stop bv 236<lb/>
.letulenhall for more information (thelast<lb/>
lav to applv is Tuesday, Ian 16. 1090)<lb/>
?tudent Union Making tilings Happen at<lb/>
CL<lb/>
1 LLNS<lb/>
'ail a teen is interested in vour valuable<lb/>
imc We are looking for special tc-ens.<lb/>
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?kills to help other teens in crisis We are<lb/>
iffering training classes for our teen hot<lb/>
line beginning )an 22,1990 for more infor<lb/>
nation i all MarleneTSK 176or758 HELP<lb/>
VOLUNTEER CRISIS COUN-<lb/>
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We need vour axperianoBJ Your achieve<lb/>
PRE-OT STUDI Nls<lb/>
Attention Pre-otstudentsapplicationd ad<lb/>
line for admission is I l590forinforma<lb/>
lion call 757 4411<lb/>
PHYSICAL EDUCATION<lb/>
MAJORS CLUB<lb/>
All Physical Education Majors and in<lb/>
tended majors welcome Semester plans<lb/>
to be discussed jan 11 19908pm MC 144<lb/>
RESUME WORKSHOP<lb/>
Lhci'areer Planning and Placements n<lb/>
ice in the Mlovton I louse tters these one<lb/>
hour programs on beginning a resume tor<lb/>
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will be piven out to the first 2" people to<lb/>
ome to each session No sign up required<lb/>
The next sessions will beheld in theCareer<lb/>
Planning Kixim on .m 8,9 and 11 at 3 pm<lb/>
and o jan 9 at 7 pm<lb/>
FLA.CCHLS.<lb/>
I idavat4pm in Km 307 Erwin Hall the<lb/>
1st BACCHUS meeting tor the new year!<lb/>
And out more about this group that stands<lb/>
tor Boost Alcohol Cons iousnesaoncern<lb/>
ing the I lealth of University Students, and<lb/>
promotes responsible division making<lb/>
regarding the use or non use ot alcohol<lb/>
I lelp plan the welcome back sodal for the<lb/>
i amua and other events for the semester<lb/>
For more info contact Office of sub-tic.<lb/>
Abuse Prevention and Education. 303<lb/>
Erwin Hall, 7S7 67n<lb/>
BIG KIDS<lb/>
hig Kids will meet today at<lb/>
I rwin Hall If our lif<lb/>
I, in ZK<lb/>
has been affecte<lb/>
lot pres ntbyhavingbeenraisedinan<lb/>
alcoholic environment or where other<lb/>
dsyfunction behaviors were present, this<lb/>
croup can help We will be deciding on a<lb/>
?? eular meeting time and location al the<lb/>
?? . of Substance buse Prevention and<lb/>
Education 303 Erwin Hall 757-6793<lb/>
CAMPUS A.A.<lb/>
Contact the Office ol Substance Abuse<lb/>
hvolition and Education, 757-6793, 303<lb/>
Erwin hall, it you want ol establish a<lb/>
campus fellowship of alcoholics Anon)<lb/>
mous Community meeting listings are<lb/>
also av ailable through this office<lb/>
LASAGNE DINNER<lb/>
vVes2fel Christi m i llowship invites vou<lb/>
to our tirst fellowship supper tor the se-<lb/>
mester, lasagne for onl) SI' Wednesday,<lb/>
an 10, 5 pm .it the Methodist Student<lb/>
 enter, ;01 E 5th St, across from Garretl<lb/>
I form Sponsored by Presbyterian and<lb/>
Methodist ampus Ministries<lb/>
ANIMAL RIC.HTS<lb/>
ECU Students foi the Ethical treatment ol<lb/>
Animals will hold a meeting on Tuesday,<lb/>
I.m 9, at 5pm in O B 2016 to plan our<lb/>
activities for the semester New members<lb/>
are welcome For more information call<lb/>
Craigat931 8954<lb/>
(AMPUS CHRISTIAN ILL-<lb/>
LOWSHIP<lb/>
We invite vou to be with us every Weil<lb/>
night at 7pm in Km 212 Mendenhall for<lb/>
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come to be a part of this growing fellow-<lb/>
ship For more info caH752-7199<lb/>
SENIORSGRADUAIETU-<lb/>
DENTS<lb/>
Now is the time to be registered with the<lb/>
( areet Planning and Placement Service in<lb/>
the SoXion House Located between<lb/>
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Degtn<lb/>
sen<lb/>
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wi beheld on ' in 11 12 miJ It-at 2 pm in<lb/>
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INTERVIEW WORKSHOPS<lb/>
Hie career Planning and Placement Serv<lb/>
Ice in the Bloxton 1 louse is ottering these<lb/>
one hour sessions to aid you in developing<lb/>
better interviewing skills A film and ds<lb/>
cussion of how to interview on and ott<lb/>
campus will be shared Thcso soessions<lb/>
are held in the Career Planning room on<lb/>
Ian 12 16 and 22 at 3pm and at 7pm on Jan<lb/>
16<lb/>
STUDENT UNION TRAVEL<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
Now is the time to make those plans tor<lb/>
spring Break The Student Union Travel<lb/>
Committee is sponsoring a Bahamas<lb/>
Cruise, March 3-9. Contact the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office, Mendenhall, 757-4788, tor<lb/>
trip details.<lb/>
ECLLPERIORM1NG ARTS<lb/>
SLRIES<lb/>
The ECU performing ArtsSt ries continues<lb/>
itssuccessiiuo 1990 with the tirst perform-<lb/>
ance Of the new vear The Cannes Cham<lb/>
her Orchestra, with quest flutist Ransom<lb/>
Wilson, will appear in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
on Saturday. Ian 27,8pm Tickets are now<lb/>
on sale at the Central Ticket Office, Men-<lb/>
denhall. 757-4788<lb/>
WZMB-FM<lb/>
WZMB-FM is now accepting applications<lb/>
for Disc jockeys, Newscasters, sportscas-<lb/>
ters, and executive staff positions Applv<lb/>
at the WZMB studios on the second floor of<lb/>
old joyner Library The application dead<lb/>
line Is Tuesday Ian 16 WZMB is an Equal<lb/>
lpportuniiv Employer an I<lb/>
dents .no w el ome t i a; r<lb/>
IMA<lb/>
Ihe Fin in. ?<lb/>
will meet Wed. Ja I rm<lb/>
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he Greenville Ptfi ountv Special CHym<lb/>
pics is recruiting for volunteer coai hesfone<lb/>
hour per week i tor winter and spring<lb/>
?-ports Noexpenencetsnei cssarv although<lb/>
some sports background is helpful. Also a<lb/>
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with mental retardation Coaches are<lb/>
needed tor the following sports bowling,<lb/>
swimming, track and field, gymnastics,<lb/>
tennis, anil roller skating It's a great expe<lb/>
rience! For more information call the<lb/>
Special Olympics at B30 4551.<lb/>
ACT ASSESSMENT<lb/>
The Act Assessment will be ott. red at li I<lb/>
on Sat , Fob 10,1990 Application hlanks<lb/>
are to be completed and mailed to A T<lb/>
Registration,P.O.Box414,Iowat ity Iowa<lb/>
"224 Applications must be postmarked<lb/>
no later than fan 12, H) Applications<lb/>
may beobtamed from me Testing Center,<lb/>
rm 105, Speight Building. ECU<lb/>
SCHOOL Ol ARTS<lb/>
Models needed for figure drawing classes<lb/>
spring semesterontact Connie Follmer<lb/>
7s7-6665, School of Art office or Tran<lb/>
Gordlev 757-4259, lenkins Bldg 1307<lb/>
RECREATION DAY 1990<lb/>
I ooking for a Summer job? Would vou<lb/>
like to be a t the beach' In the mountains?<lb/>
Then consider Recreation Pa On Feb 8,<lb/>
1W) in Memorial Gym over V) rocTea<lb/>
tional emplyers will interview EC U stu<lb/>
dents for summer positions Posuom are<lb/>
available for ail majors For more informa-<lb/>
tion and to sign up for inttn lews contact<lb/>
ui ativn -i<lb/>
?8GCB<lb/>
1<lb/>
N<lb/>
o<lb/>
h<lb/>
s<lb/>
c1<lb/>
MEDICAL STUDENTS<lb/>
Medt rtts or others using the lock<lb/>
it the Health Science 1 ibrary are sub<lb/>
rk kersilligally sear bed<lb/>
ul their knowledge and authoriza<lb/>
md having their personal propert<lb/>
? ,t bv library personnel<lb/>
BASKETBALL TOURNA-<lb/>
MENT<lb/>
Intramural tec services will be heating a<lb/>
pre season basketball tournament Jan l'<lb/>
20 in Memorial Gymnasium Mens and<lb/>
?? omens teams are encouraged to enter at<lb/>
per team Contact Mary Malone at<lb/>
b757 6387 far more information Be sure to<lb/>
register Ian 16 at 5pm in Bio 103<lb/>
ALRObMCIZERS<lb/>
- interested in aerobic fitness class??<lb/>
including toning, beginning fitness, inter<lb/>
? hi !o circuit, and low impact classes<lb/>
should register Ian 16-19in 204Memorial<lb/>
) ymnasium 'lasses are offered daily at a<lb/>
cost of $10 student and S12Facultv-staff<lb/>
tor a 12 class session Drop-m classes are<lb/>
also availavle in S5 increments Call 757-<lb/>
S7 tor details.<lb/>
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FOR<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
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FRIDAY &amp; MONDAY<lb/>
AT<lb/>
5:00 PM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0007"/><lb/>
I he I astarolinian, anuar k, 1jm) 7<lb/>
Noriega has 'variety of defenses' for upcoming trial<lb/>
1 1 Oll 1.1lil O<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058183_0008"/><lb/>
If<lb/>
The East Carolinian, January 9,1990 7<lb/>
Noriega has 'variety of defenses' for upcoming trial<lb/>
By Tony Mauro<lb/>
Gannett News Service<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? Deposed<lb/>
Panamanian strongman Manuel<lb/>
Noriega has at his disposal a vari-<lb/>
ety of defenses that might save<lb/>
him from conviction or from even<lb/>
standing trial at all, some legal<lb/>
experts say.<lb/>
But it isn't two years of mas-<lb/>
sive, adverse publicity that might<lb/>
be Noriega's salvation. Instead,<lb/>
legal experts cite constitutional<lb/>
questions over the U.S. methods<lb/>
of capturing Noriega, and the<lb/>
threat that vital government se-<lb/>
crets could be divulged in open<lb/>
court.<lb/>
Yet Attorney General Dick<lb/>
Thomburgh declares, "There's<lb/>
nothing that's come to our atten-<lb/>
tion that would indicate that this<lb/>
tnal can't go forward<lb/>
Noriega, the erstwhile, self-<lb/>
proclaimed "maximum leader" of<lb/>
Panama, was whisked to Miami<lb/>
before dawn Thursday, two weeks<lb/>
after 24,000 U.S. troops invaded<lb/>
his nation. President Bush said the<lb/>
No. 1 goal of the Dec. 20 invasion<lb/>
was seizing Noriega.<lb/>
After eluding U.S. forces for<lb/>
five days, Noriega sought refuge<lb/>
with the Vatican Embassy in Pan-<lb/>
ama City on Christmas Eve. Alter<lb/>
Bulgaria<lb/>
days of behind-the-scenes deal-<lb/>
ing, Noriega gave himself up.<lb/>
He was indicted Feb. 4, 1988,<lb/>
by federal grand juries in Tampa<lb/>
and Miami on charges of drug<lb/>
trafficking, racketeering and con-<lb/>
spiracy. Total charges carry pen-<lb/>
alties of 290 years in prison and<lb/>
$2.2 million in fines.<lb/>
Noriega's strongest legal strat-<lb/>
egy, most experts agree, would be<lb/>
to force the United States to back<lb/>
off or drop charges rather than<lb/>
release at trial classified or poten-<lb/>
tially damaging material about his<lb/>
years as a paid informant for the<lb/>
Central Intelligence Agency.<lb/>
"His best hope is that there's<lb/>
enough information in that file<lb/>
that'sembarrassing that a deal will<lb/>
be made said University of<lb/>
Michigan law professor Yale<lb/>
Kamisar.<lb/>
"We may well find that he'll<lb/>
walk away with a not-guilty ver-<lb/>
dict said Cherif Bassiouni of<lb/>
DePaul University Collegeof Law.<lb/>
Such an outcome could permit<lb/>
Panama to bring him back for trial<lb/>
on other charges or might enable<lb/>
Noriega to seek exile elsewhere.<lb/>
Whatever the outcome, the<lb/>
prosecution of Noriega will be<lb/>
unlike any other in U.S. legal his-<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
"The Noriega case will pres-<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
ent some novel issues our courts<lb/>
have never faced before says Ellis<lb/>
Rubin, a noted Miami defense<lb/>
lawyer. "We've never before had<lb/>
an invasion of another country<lb/>
aimed at apprehending a criminal<lb/>
suspect to bring him to trial<lb/>
Other possible defense tactics<lb/>
for Noriega include a number of<lb/>
citations of the Constitution:<lb/>
? Claiming that evidence<lb/>
against him was improperly ob-<lb/>
tained by invading U.S. troops, in<lb/>
violation of the Fourth Amend-<lb/>
ment prohibitions against im-<lb/>
proper search and seizure. The<lb/>
Supreme Court is considering a<lb/>
case that would test whether simi-<lb/>
lar constitutional guarantees ap-<lb/>
ply to defendants captured out-<lb/>
side the country.<lb/>
But the Justice Department,<lb/>
Kamisar says, could easily argue<lb/>
that "this was a military opera-<lb/>
tion, and they came upon the evi-<lb/>
dence only incidentally<lb/>
? One of Noriega's former<lb/>
lawyers, Neal Sonnett, says Nori-<lb/>
ega is "entitled under the law to<lb/>
'head of state immunity a dip-<lb/>
lomatic tradition that protect<lb/>
government leaders from prose-<lb/>
cution by enemies. But Justice<lb/>
Department officials dismiss that<lb/>
argument.<lb/>
? The entire way in which<lb/>
Noriega finally surrendered could<lb/>
be cited in a general "due process"<lb/>
defense. He could claim the U.S.<lb/>
invasion deprived him of Consti-<lb/>
tutional guarantees.<lb/>
Noriega's lawyers might try<lb/>
to force the government to drop<lb/>
charges against him rather than<lb/>
disclose government secrets that<lb/>
might prove politically embarrass-<lb/>
ing about U.S. ties to Noriega in<lb/>
the 1970s and early 1980s.<lb/>
Noriega lawyer Steven Kollin<lb/>
said, "We're going to request cer-<lb/>
tain pretrial discovery requests,<lb/>
including certain sensitive docu-<lb/>
ments ? and those documents<lb/>
will get to the truth of this matter<lb/>
Victoria Toensing, a former<lb/>
Justice Department lawyer now<lb/>
ii. j. nvak piuiuii, f.c?j.?.ii ical<lb/>
problems should Noriega's law-<lb/>
yers seek to uncover secret docu-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
"When people are saying he<lb/>
was on the CIA payroll, then you<lb/>
are going to have the more com-<lb/>
plicated level that some of these<lb/>
things regarding sources and<lb/>
methods are classified she said.<lb/>
The most obvious claim Nori-<lb/>
ega can make is that the massive<lb/>
U.S. campaign against him poi-<lb/>
soned the impartiality of any ju-<lb/>
rors. Noriega's Florida lawyers<lb/>
said they will raise that issue to<lb/>
have the charges dismissed.<lb/>
But legal experts say the im-<lb/>
pactof pretrial publicity has weak-<lb/>
ened as a weapon against prose-<lb/>
cution, especially in an age when<lb/>
instant notoriety is common.<lb/>
Among those who have gone to<lb/>
trial after enormous pretrial pub-<lb/>
licity are John Hinckley, who shot<lb/>
President Reagan in 1981; and<lb/>
automaker John DeLorean, tried<lb/>
in 1984 cm drug charges.<lb/>
Hinckley was found not guilty<lb/>
by reason of insanity. A jury<lb/>
cleared DeLorean even though<lb/>
damaging videotapes and other<lb/>
statements were repeated end-<lb/>
lessly in the media.<lb/>
"The DeLorean trial showed<lb/>
that even with intense publicity, a<lb/>
fair trial is possible said his<lb/>
lawyer, Howard Weitzman of<lb/>
Santa Monica, Calif. "But who-<lb/>
ever gets involved in the defense<lb/>
has to work hard at neutralizing<lb/>
the publicity<lb/>
Tony Mauro writes for USA TO-<lb/>
DAY. Anne Sakerand Paula Schwed<lb/>
ofGNS contributed to this report.<lb/>
cconrtght im usa todav<lb/>
AffU ColUfl Imftrmution Nttwotk.<lb/>
BTA said residents from the<lb/>
southern town of Kardzhali, where<lb/>
almost half the 50,000 inhabitants<lb/>
are ethnic Turks, reported seeing<lb/>
Turkish flags on public buildings.<lb/>
Atanassov, in a television address<lb/>
Sunday, said it was "inadmissible<lb/>
to raise the flag of a foreign state at<lb/>
demonstrations and rallies in<lb/>
public and private places<lb/>
He said the interior minister<lb/>
had been told to maintain public<lb/>
peace and "neutralize any anti-<lb/>
constitutional and extremist acts<lb/>
under the framework of law<lb/>
A leader of the independent<lb/>
trade union Pcxikrepa, Nikolai<lb/>
Kolev, called for members to "fight<lb/>
against all destructive forces In a<lb/>
statement broadcast on state tel-<lb/>
evisionhe saidhe thought nation-<lb/>
alistic protests were being spurred<lb/>
by local officials<lb/>
While Petar Mladenov, who<lb/>
took over from Zhivkov as party<lb/>
leader Nov. 10, has moved quickly<lb/>
to put new people in the leader-<lb/>
ship more likely to support demo-<lb/>
cratic reform, few changes have<lb/>
been made at the local level.<lb/>
 <lb/>
.<lb/>
J<lb/>
HAIR<lb/>
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loin Jones . v  , Amy Hat dec<lb/>
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? Individual climate control, remote<lb/>
controlled television with news and movie<lb/>
channels and AMFM clock-alarm radio.<lb/>
Meeting and Banquet Facilities<lb/>
? Meeting space for up to 650 people.<lb/>
? Carolina Ballroom can be adapted to<lb/>
fit any size meeting, banquet or reception.<lb/>
CharleyO's Restaurant<lb/>
You'll find that reading CharleyO's menu is an<lb/>
experience in itself. Specialties created by our<lb/>
chef in the tradition of great American<lb/>
cuisine are receiveing rave reviews.<lb/>
Rio! The Club<lb/>
Greenville's most exciting bar offers drink<lb/>
specials, dancing and holiday celebrations<lb/>
every day of the year in an upbeat atmosphere.<lb/>
HILTON INN<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058183_0009"/><lb/>
<lb/>
8 The East Carolinian, January 9, 1990<lb/>
N.C. doctors avoid malpractice suits<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) Physicians<lb/>
in North Carolina may be doing a<lb/>
better job of policing themselves<lb/>
than their counterparts across the<lb/>
country, helping to keep state<lb/>
malpractice insurance from sky-<lb/>
rocketing and litigation to a mini-<lb/>
mum, experts sav.<lb/>
In a recent article in the lour<lb/>
nal of the American Medical As-<lb/>
sociation, Peter jacobson, a re-<lb/>
searcher at The Rand Corp con-<lb/>
cluded that it is equally important<lb/>
for doctors to police themselves<lb/>
better and to improve the quality<lb/>
of care that they give<lb/>
Medical Mutual Insurance of<lb/>
North Carolina, a physician-<lb/>
owned insurance company that<lb/>
primarily offers malpractice insur-<lb/>
ance, has a three-person consult-<lb/>
ing staff. The consultants review<lb/>
the administrative aspects of a<lb/>
doctoi practice, looking closely<lb/>
at the various systems that can<lb/>
lead to lawsuits when thev are not<lb/>
working properly, said Dianne<lb/>
Reinoso, Medical Mntual's loss-<lb/>
prevention manager.<lb/>
"For example, we look at the<lb/>
flow of paperwork that's gener-<lb/>
ated from lab tests and diagnostic<lb/>
tests to make sure that the patient<lb/>
IS actually tested that the spe. i<lb/>
men goes to the lab, that a test<lb/>
result is generated, th.it it comes<lb/>
Kick to thi' doctor is put on his<lb/>
desk and in the patient record and<lb/>
that the patient is informed she<lb/>
said A breakdown anywhere in<lb/>
that process means the potential<lb/>
for somebody to get hurt<lb/>
The risk-management con-<lb/>
sultants also closely monitor<lb/>
claims that Medical Mutual and<lb/>
other insurers pay and the types<lb/>
of errors that lead to those claims,<lb/>
hen we go into physician of-<lb/>
fices looking tor those kind of<lb/>
things she told The News and<lb/>
Observer of Raleigh.<lb/>
Also, a national computer data<lb/>
bank 1 i xpected to begin operat-<lb/>
ing this year, alerting hospitals<lb/>
and licensing boards about doc-<lb/>
tors with bad records.<lb/>
From the W70s through he<lb/>
mid-1980s, medical-malpractice<lb/>
lawsuits rose sharply in the United<lb/>
States with specialists Mich as<lb/>
surgeons, obstetricians and gyne-<lb/>
cologists most likely to be sued<lb/>
Nationally, claimsagainst each 100<lb/>
doctors more than doubled be-<lb/>
tween 1975and 1985,whileclaims<lb/>
against obstetricians and gyne-<lb/>
cologists tripled between 1976and<lb/>
1981, according to the JAMA ar-<lb/>
ticle.<lb/>
In North Carolina, few medi-<lb/>
cal malpractice suits go to trial<lb/>
and most face long odds against<lb/>
winning, according to a study bv<lb/>
the Duke University Private Ad-<lb/>
judication Center. The study, re-<lb/>
leased in the fall, found that the<lb/>
average juryaward in NorthCaro-<lb/>
lina was $48,063, far below the<lb/>
multimillion-dollar verdicts that<lb/>
insurance companies sometimes<lb/>
cite when thev raise their premi-<lb/>
ums.<lb/>
Since 1987, all North Carolina<lb/>
hospitals have been required bv<lb/>
the state to have a nsk-manage-<lb/>
ment program. As the name sug-<lb/>
gests, "risk management" involves<lb/>
taking steps to limit a hospital or<lb/>
doctor's potential exposure to lia-<lb/>
bility. For example, malpractice<lb/>
insurance companies are provid-<lb/>
ing consultants to help doctors<lb/>
identify and correct problems that<lb/>
could get them in trouble.<lb/>
Pamela kirks, the director of<lb/>
risk management and underwrit-<lb/>
ing for the North Carolina 1 lospi-<lb/>
tal Reciprocal Insurance Exchange,<lb/>
said hospital risk-management<lb/>
programs attempt to identify ar-<lb/>
eas of potential "nk exposure" in<lb/>
which a patient could be harmed<lb/>
Such efforts might include ensur-<lb/>
ing that opera ting rooms are prop-<lb/>
erly equipped to monitor a<lb/>
patient's blood oxygen level or<lb/>
drafting procedures to make sure<lb/>
that patients are stabilized and<lb/>
accompanied bv proper medical<lb/>
personnel when transferred to<lb/>
another facility.<lb/>
Patricia Hodgson, director of<lb/>
communications for the N.C.<lb/>
Medical Society, said the state's<lb/>
doctors arc acutely aware of how<lb/>
important risk-management pro-<lb/>
grams and sanctions are in reduc-<lb/>
ing malpractice.<lb/>
The Federation of State Medi-<lb/>
cal Boards, a national association<lb/>
of state medical-licensing boards,<lb/>
has recommended that state<lb/>
boards be more effective in<lb/>
"watch-dogging the medical<lb/>
profession, she said.<lb/>
In North Carolina, Bryant<lb/>
Paris, executive secretary of the<lb/>
state Board of Medical Fxaminers,<lb/>
said the board disciplines a num-<lb/>
Eft<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
urac?0Mw<lb/>
Why not come by the REAL Crisis Intervention Center: 912 E.<lb/>
10th Street: or call 758-HELP. For Free Confidential Counseling or<lb/>
Assistance.<lb/>
Our Volunteers and Staff are on duty 24 hrs. a day, year around,<lb/>
in order to assist you in virtually any problem area you might have.<lb/>
Our longstanding goal has always been to preserve and enhance the<lb/>
quality of life for you and our community.<lb/>
Licensed And Accredited By The State of North Carolina<lb/>
? .??? i??? rr&amp;<lb/>
Taxes<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
You are married and 65 or<lb/>
older and had unearned income<lb/>
of at least $1,100. If you are un-<lb/>
married and 65 or older with some<lb/>
unearned income, you must file<lb/>
once total income tops$1,250. Anv<lb/>
person under age 65 with any<lb/>
unearned income must file if total<lb/>
income is $500 or more.<lb/>
There are still more its, ands<lb/>
and buts Regardless of all those<lb/>
thresholds, you still must tile a<lb/>
return it<lb/>
You had net self-employ-<lb/>
ment earnings of at least $400.<lb/>
You received anv advance<lb/>
earned-income credit in vour<lb/>
paychecks.<lb/>
You owe any special taxes,<lb/>
such as the alternative minimum<lb/>
tax. a tax (n premature withdraw-<lb/>
als from an Individual Retirement<lb/>
Aoount, or Social Security tax vou<lb/>
did not report to your employer.<lb/>
Even if your income is low<lb/>
enough that you do not have to<lb/>
file,you -till must file if taxes were<lb/>
withfv I and you want a refund.<lb/>
You a ? mist file to receive the<lb/>
earned-income credit.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY AMOCO<lb/>
We have moved from<lb/>
University Exxon on<lb/>
1101 East 5th St. to<lb/>
University Amoco on<lb/>
101 East 10th St.<lb/>
( Across from Famous Pizza)<lb/>
All Complete Muffler Shop<lb/>
? 24 Hour Towing<lb/>
Any Kind of Repair Service<lb/>
101 Kast lOthSt.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
Telephone:<lb/>
(919) 758-9976<lb/>
Greenville Square - next to Kmart<lb/>
919-355-0556<lb/>
nature's goodness<lb/>
Health Food &amp; Grocery<lb/>
? Vitamins ? Cosmetics ? Organic Produce<lb/>
? Macro Biotic Foods ? Home Products ?<lb/>
? Bulk Grains ? Herbs ? Spices ?<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd SE<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
ber of physicians every year In<lb/>
1988, seven of the state's 19,438<lb/>
medical doctors had their licenses<lb/>
suspended or revoked; another lit<lb/>
voluntarily surrendered their li<lb/>
censes and ?4 others were dis. i<lb/>
plined, usually by being put on<lb/>
probation.<lb/>
Last year, 12 doctors had their<lb/>
licenses suspended or revoked; 15<lb/>
voluntarily surrendered their li<lb/>
censes, and 20 were disciplined<lb/>
Beginning this year, these actions<lb/>
will be recorded in a national<lb/>
computer database, the National<lb/>
Practitioner Data Bank, whu !i<lb/>
hospitalsandlicensingbo.irdsu ill<lb/>
use to screen doctors who appK<lb/>
for privileges.<lb/>
Hospital and licensing offi-<lb/>
cials say the new data bank w ill be<lb/>
of obvious use in weeding out<lb/>
doctors who get in trouble in one<lb/>
state and then set up practice in<lb/>
another.<lb/>
ROFESSIONAL<lb/>
BODY WORKS<lb/>
ONE OF NORTH CAROLINA'S<lb/>
I AR( iESTBODY REPAIR I AC IIII IKS<lb/>
- 1 Yk. J6.000 WARRAN IV<lb/>
? GUARAN1 liD PAIN! MATCHING<lb/>
? l PQ' M in REPAIRS FOR Al I<lb/>
MAkl-S VH M )i)l I S<lb/>
? 1IIIM) PAIN ll. fcNDREFINISHING<lb/>
rECHNICIANS<lb/>
BINK'S "BAKED ON PAINT FACIIJTES1<lb/>
24 HOI R WRlKIR SERVICE<lb/>
756-3471<lb/>
NIGHT W RECKER SERVICE DIAL 756-7595<lb/>
4(X) Greenville Boulevard ? Greenville, NC<lb/>
756-7202<lb/>
11<lb/>
ANIMAL HOUSE<lb/>
rlington Blvd. "Greenville,<lb/>
(<lb/>
? Full Line Of Pet Supplies ? Marino &amp; Tropical<lb/>
Fish ? Birds, Reptile &amp; Small Animals ? Pond Fish<lb/>
&amp; Supplies ? Live &amp; Frozen Food ? Hills &amp; IAMS<lb/>
? Aquatie Plant &amp; Tank Decorations ? Aquarium<lb/>
Installation &amp; Maintenance<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Student Union Board of Directors<lb/>
is taking applications lor<lb/>
STUDENT UNION PRESIDENT<lb/>
Deadline: Januar) l(. 1990 A:<lb/>
STUDENT UNION COMMITTEE<lb/>
CHAIRPERSONS &amp;<lb/>
PRODUCTION COMMITTEE<lb/>
CHAIRPERSON<lb/>
Deadline: February 23, 1990<lb/>
For the 1990- 1991 Term<lb/>
Anv full - time student can apply<lb/>
Applications available at Meiulenhall Student Centers<lb/>
Information Desk anil Room 236 - Student Union.<lb/>
WELCOME BACK<lb/>
AAITs<lb/>
From Your Friends at the<lb/>
Thanks For Your Support<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0010"/><lb/>
<lb/>
8 The East Carolinian, January 9,1990<lb/>
N.C. doctors avoid malpractice suits<lb/>
RALEIGH(AP) ?Physicians ooiog mt iikeiy to sued.<lb/>
in North Carolina may be doing a NaHonally.claimsagainsteach 100<lb/>
better job of policing themselves doctors than doubled be-<lb/>
than their counterparts across the tween 1975and 1985, whileclaims<lb/>
country, helping to keep state agains, obstetricians and gyne-<lb/>
malprachce insurance from sky- cologiststripled between 1976and<lb/>
rocketing and litigation to a mini-<lb/>
mum, experts say.<lb/>
In a recent article in the jour-<lb/>
nal of the American Medical As-<lb/>
sociation, Peter Jacobson, a re-<lb/>
searcher at The Rand Corp con-<lb/>
cluded that it is equally important<lb/>
for doctors to police themselves<lb/>
better and to improve the quality<lb/>
of care that they give.<lb/>
Medical Mutual Insurance of<lb/>
North Carolina, a physician-<lb/>
owned insurance company that<lb/>
primarily offers malpractice insur-<lb/>
ance, has a three-person consult-<lb/>
ing staff. The consultants review<lb/>
the administrative aspects of a<lb/>
doctor's practice, looking closely<lb/>
at the various systems that can<lb/>
lead to lawsuits when they art not<lb/>
working properly, said Dianne<lb/>
Reinoso, Medical Mntual's loss-<lb/>
prevention manager.<lb/>
"For example, we look at the<lb/>
1981, according to the JAMA ar-<lb/>
ticle.<lb/>
In North Carolina, few medi-<lb/>
cal malpractice suits go to trial<lb/>
and most face long odds against<lb/>
winning, according to a study by<lb/>
the Duke University Private Ad-<lb/>
judication Center. The study, re-<lb/>
leased in the fall, found that the<lb/>
average jury award in North Caro-<lb/>
lina was $48,063, far below the<lb/>
multimillion-dollar verdicts that<lb/>
insurance companies sometimes<lb/>
cite when they raise their premi-<lb/>
ums.<lb/>
Since 1987, all North Carolina<lb/>
hospitals have been required by<lb/>
the state to have a risk-manage-<lb/>
ment program. As the name sug-<lb/>
risk management and underwrit-<lb/>
ing for the North Carolina Hospi-<lb/>
tal Reciprocal Insurance Exchange,<lb/>
said hospital risk-management<lb/>
programs attempt to identify ar-<lb/>
eas of potential "risk exposure" in<lb/>
which a patient could be harmed.<lb/>
Such efforts might include ensur-<lb/>
ing that operating rooms are prop-<lb/>
erly equipped to monitor a<lb/>
patient's blood oxygen level or<lb/>
drafting procedures to make sure<lb/>
that patients are stabilized and<lb/>
accompanied by proper medical<lb/>
personnel when transferred to<lb/>
another facility.<lb/>
Patricia Hodgson, director of<lb/>
communications for the N.C.<lb/>
Medical Society, said the state's<lb/>
doctors are acutely aware of how<lb/>
important risk-management pro-<lb/>
grams and sanctions are in reduc-<lb/>
ing malpractice.<lb/>
The Federation of State Medi-<lb/>
cal Boards, a national association<lb/>
gesta, "risk management" involves of state medical-licensing boards,<lb/>
taking steps to limit a hospital or<lb/>
doctor's potential exposure to lia-<lb/>
bility. For example, malpractice<lb/>
insurance companies are provid-<lb/>
flow of paperwork that's gener- ing consultants to help doctors<lb/>
ated from lab tests and diagnostic identify and correct problems that<lb/>
tests to make sure that the patient<lb/>
is actually tested, that the speci-<lb/>
men goes to the lab, that a test<lb/>
result is generated, that it comes<lb/>
back to the doctor, is put on his<lb/>
desk and in the patient record and<lb/>
that the patient is informed she<lb/>
said "A breakdown anvwhere in<lb/>
J<lb/>
that process means the potential<lb/>
for somebody to get hurt<lb/>
The risk-management con-<lb/>
sultants also closely monitor<lb/>
claims that Medical Mutual and<lb/>
other insurers pay and the types<lb/>
of errors that lead to those claims.<lb/>
"Then we go into physician of-<lb/>
fices looking for those kind of<lb/>
things she told The News and<lb/>
Observer of Raleigh.<lb/>
Also, a national computer data<lb/>
bank is expected to begin operat-<lb/>
ing this year, alerting hospitals<lb/>
and licensing boards about doc-<lb/>
torswun<lb/>
could get them in trouble.<lb/>
P.imela Kirks, the director of<lb/>
has recommended that state<lb/>
boards be more effective in<lb/>
"watch-dogging" the medical<lb/>
profession, she said.<lb/>
In North Carolina, Bryant<lb/>
Paris, executive secretary of the<lb/>
state Board of Medical Examiners,<lb/>
said the board disciplines a num-<lb/>
<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
Why not come bj the MEAL Crisis Interrentita i<lb/>
10th Street; or call 75 HELP, For Free Confide<lb/>
Assistance.<lb/>
Our Volunteers and Staff are on duty 24 hrs. a I<lb/>
In order to assist you In virtually any problem area<lb/>
Our longstanding goal has always been to preserve<lb/>
quality of life for you and our community.<lb/>
Licensed And Accredited By The State of Ms<lb/>
tedsjaau<lb/>
mid-1980s, medical-malpractice<lb/>
lawsuits rose sharply in the United<lb/>
States, with specialists such as<lb/>
surgeons, obstetricians and gyne-<lb/>
Taxes<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
?You are married and 65 or<lb/>
older and had unearned income<lb/>
of at least $1,100. If you are un-<lb/>
married and 65 or older with some<lb/>
unearned income, you must file<lb/>
once total income tops$l ,250. Any<lb/>
person under age 65 with any<lb/>
unearned income must file if total<lb/>
income is $500 or more.<lb/>
There are still more ifs, ands<lb/>
and buts. Regardless of all those<lb/>
thresholds, you still must file a<lb/>
return if:<lb/>
?You had .net self-employ-<lb/>
ment earnings of at least $400.<lb/>
-You received any advance<lb/>
earned-income credit in your<lb/>
paychecks.<lb/>
?You owe any special taxes,<lb/>
such as the alternative minimum<lb/>
tax, a tax on premature withdraw-<lb/>
als from an Individual Retirement<lb/>
Account,orSocial Security taxyou<lb/>
did not report to your employer.<lb/>
Evrn if your income is low<lb/>
enough that you do not have to<lb/>
file, you still must file if taxes were<lb/>
withhri and you want a refund.<lb/>
You a" o must file to receive the<lb/>
earned-income credit.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY AR<lb/>
We have moved from<lb/>
University Exxon on<lb/>
1101 East 5th St. to<lb/>
University Amoco on<lb/>
101 East 10th St.<lb/>
(Across from Famous Pizza)<lb/>
? All Complete Muffler Shop<lb/>
? 24 Hour Towing<lb/>
? Any Kind of Repair Service<lb/>
101 East 10th St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
Telephone:<lb/>
(919) 758-9976<lb/>
Greenville Square - next to Kmart<lb/>
919-355-0556<lb/>
nature's goodness<lb/>
Health Food &amp; Grocery<lb/>
? Vitamins ? Cosmetics ? Organic Produce<lb/>
? Macro Biotic Foods ? Home Products ?<lb/>
? Bulk Grains ? Herbs ? Spices ?<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd SE<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
ber of physicians every year. In<lb/>
1988, seven of the state's 19,438<lb/>
medical doctors had their licenses<lb/>
suspended or revoked; another 10<lb/>
voluntarily surrendered their li-<lb/>
censes and 24 others were disci-<lb/>
plined, usually by being put on<lb/>
probation.<lb/>
Last year, 12 doctors had their<lb/>
licenses suspended or revoked; 15<lb/>
voluntarily surrendered their li-<lb/>
censes, and 20 were disciplined<lb/>
Beginning this year, these actions<lb/>
will be recorded in a national<lb/>
computer database, the National<lb/>
Practitioner Data Bank, which<lb/>
hospitalsand licensing boards will<lb/>
use to screen doctors who apply<lb/>
for privileges.<lb/>
Hospital and licensing offi-<lb/>
cial s say the new data bank will be<lb/>
of obvious use in weeding out<lb/>
doctors who get in trouble in one<lb/>
state and then set up practice in<lb/>
another.<lb/>
ROFESSIONAL<lb/>
BODY WORKS-H<lb/>
ONE OF NORTH CAROLINA'S<lb/>
LARGEST BODY REPAIR FACILITIES<lb/>
? 3 YR36.000 WARRANTY<lb/>
? CilIARANTFFD PAINT MATCHING<lb/>
? TOP QUALITY RHPAIRS FOR ALL<lb/>
MAKFS AND MODELS<lb/>
? CERTIFIED PAINTING AND REFFNISHING<lb/>
TECHNICIANS<lb/>
 BINK'S "BAKED - ON" PAINT FACIUTES<lb/>
24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE<lb/>
'<lb/>
f<lb/>
756-3471<lb/>
NIGHT WRECKER SERVICE DIAL 756-7595<lb/>
4(X) Greenville Boulevard ? Greenville, NC<lb/>
<lb/>
756-7202<lb/>
ANIMAL HOUSE<lb/>
422 Arlington Blvd. ? Greenville, NC<lb/>
? Full Line Of Pet Supplies ? Marine &amp; Tropical<lb/>
Fish ? Birds, Reptile &amp; Small Animals ? Pond Fish<lb/>
" t&amp; Frozen Food ? Hills &amp; IAMS<lb/>
&amp; Tank Decorations ? Aquarium<lb/>
lation &amp; Maintenance<lb/>
arolina University's<lb/>
 Board of Directors<lb/>
iking applications tor<lb/>
r UNION PRESIDENT<lb/>
idline: January 19, 1990 &amp;<lb/>
STUDENT UNION COMMITTEE<lb/>
CHAIRPERSONS &amp;<lb/>
PRODUCTION COMMITTEE<lb/>
CHAIRPERSON<lb/>
Deadline: February 23, 1990<lb/>
For the 1990 -1991 Term<lb/>
Any full - time student can apply<lb/>
Applications available at Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
Information Desk and Room 236 - Student Union.<lb/>
WELCOME BACK<lb/>
AAn's<lb/>
From Your Friends at the<lb/>
Thanks For Your Support<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0011"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
The Hast Carolinian, January 9, 1990 9<lb/>
Opposition groups question dissolution<lb/>
of East Germany's secret police force<lb/>
ion) t<lb/>
Mted l'i<lb/>
iuczka<lb/>
?s IVnti'i<lb/>
la . icstioned<lb/>
t load<lb/>
tanv s<lb/>
sov ret<lb/>
md al<lb/>
id in ?Od ,i<lb/>
'tins.<lb/>
p emo<lb/>
pj iition<lb/>
ispt lui.Mr,<lb/>
- ? tuture<lb/>
Mil ofti<lb/>
i ocurit<lb/>
were<lb/>
?n<lb/>
<lb/>
cptancc<lb/>
nor t tan<lb/>
Modrow's transitional Cabinet by<lb/>
the opposition, which has boon<lb/>
unable to present a unified front<lb/>
t pposition groups earlier had<lb/>
threatened to leave the talks over<lb/>
w hat they charge are government<lb/>
efforts to preserve a domestic in-<lb/>
lelligence network that could stitle<lb/>
the reform movement<lb/>
Roll Henrich of New Forum,<lb/>
the largest opposition group, dis-<lb/>
closed what he said was a draft<lb/>
telex prepared by secret police<lb/>
agents in thecity of l.era on Dec. 9,<lb/>
urging authorities in Fast Berlin<lb/>
to 'paralyze" the opposition.<lb/>
1 lenrich said he was uncer-<lb/>
tain it the telex was ever dis-<lb/>
patched, but contended it "called<lb/>
tor a coup" to end the democratic<lb/>
reform movement. Communist<lb/>
Partv chief t.regor Gysi and rep-<lb/>
resentatives ol other traditionally<lb/>
Communist allied parties said<lb/>
they were unaware o the mes-<lb/>
sage<lb/>
Democratic A w a k en l n g<lb/>
leader Wolfgang Schnur de-<lb/>
manded that the national<lb/>
prosecutor's office and the Inte-<lb/>
rior Ministrv appear before repre-<lb/>
sentatives ot the opposition and<lb/>
government.<lb/>
The Mod row government.<lb/>
formed after a peaceful popular<lb/>
October revolution toppled hard-<lb/>
line Communist leaders, has<lb/>
promised to create the conditions<lb/>
tor free and tair elections on May<lb/>
b.<lb/>
Astalksresumed Monday,the<lb/>
opposition demanded that the<lb/>
government disarm agents ot the<lb/>
formerStateSecuriryOfticeby Ian<lb/>
14 and drop plans to set up a new<lb/>
agency to succeed it before the<lb/>
May elections. Peter Koch,an offi-<lb/>
cial named by the government to<lb/>
oversoe dissolution ot the sci ret<lb/>
police, said authorities plan to<lb/>
confiscate all ot the former<lb/>
agency's arms by the end ot this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Former agents are already<lb/>
barred fromaccessto weapons lie<lb/>
said. Reports last month by the<lb/>
official ADN news agenc) said<lb/>
the force had been disbanded.<lb/>
Modrow said in an interview<lb/>
Sunday with Austrian television<lb/>
that a security tori, e is need d to<lb/>
prevent the spread ot right wing<lb/>
extremism in East C lermany.<lb/>
Bunny's Grill<lb/>
Open 7 Days A Week<lb/>
Mori - Sat 1 hint - 2am<lb/>
Sun 5pm - Midnight<lb/>
Lunch Specials<lb/>
M - Chicken &amp;. Cheese on Pita ($3.50)<lb/>
T- Turkey Sub ($3.50)<lb/>
W - Fajita - Chicken or Heel ($4 25)<lb/>
Th - 6" Steak &amp; Cheese ($3.50)<lb/>
F - 6" Chicken Cheese Sub ($3.50)<lb/>
60oz Pitchers $1.99<lb/>
Student Special Monday Night<lb/>
6pm 9pm all Sands iches (lc<lb/>
FREE Deliver) (min.ordci 55.00)<lb/>
No I vlici) mi Spe. ials<lb/>
Located Next to Stop Sho<lb/>
1 owntown Greenville<lb/>
830-5126<lb/>
Authorities arrest cult leader<lb/>
close to the Mexican border<lb/>
 D,i id Sedeno<lb/>
? ijted Press<lb/>
 ill leader<lb/>
' i :iih of five was<lb/>
ithori ties who<lb/>
. i f v ? found in his<lb/>
: former Sunday-school<lb/>
?? Ri rganized . hurchoi<lb/>
its inc )hio, was ar-<lb/>
1 i btederal agents<lb/>
r old wife,Mice, and the<lb/>
i ! )amon, alsi were arrested<lb/>
? n childrenKristen, 10,<lb/>
? takeninto protective<lb/>
poi ialagent incharge<lb/>
1 ICCOand Firearms<lb/>
t of apprehension Kirt-<lb/>
:?: maid K Andolsek said<lb/>
I rens arrests In recent<lb/>
days, Kirtland police had been keeping close watch<lb/>
ot the homes ot residents who w ere once threatened<lb/>
by 1 undgren.<lb/>
I he I .undgrens were scheduled to appear Monday<lb/>
m a state court tor extradition proceedings to Ohio,<lb/>
w here they face charges including aggravated mur<lb/>
der and kidnapping.<lb/>
1.undgren broke away from the Reorganized<lb/>
Church and persuaded other members to follow<lb/>
him, officials said. The group once lived on a 15 acre<lb/>
farmnear the Cleveland-area town, where investiga-<lb/>
tors last week unearthed five bodies. Authorities<lb/>
believe the five are Dennis Avery, his wife,heryl,<lb/>
and their three young daughters.<lb/>
Investigators believe the Avervs were killed in<lb/>
mid-April and buried in a common grave under the<lb/>
bam. Searches of the Southern California motel room<lb/>
and a nearby storage area rented by leftrev Lund-<lb/>
gren uncovered numerous weapons, including an<lb/>
AR-15 assault rifle, as well as ammunition, knives<lb/>
and gas masks, Vita said.<lb/>
"They had camping gear, web gear that the<lb/>
military would wear ? things that can sustain you<lb/>
up m the mountains he said.<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Because<lb/>
reading<lb/>
is funda-<lb/>
mental.<lb/>
(and the paper is<lb/>
free)<lb/>
EAR<lb/>
it '<lb/>
W<lb/>
' 1<lb/>
 11<lb/>
't o<lb/>
 -<lb/>
W<lb/>
ii<lb/>
<lb/>
"?"V <lb/>
NX " II<lb/>
<lb/>
Welcome Back! Check Out<lb/>
Second Semester Skiing!<lb/>
200 E. Greenville Blvd. 756-1003<lb/>
Registration for all trips and workshops begin Wednesday, January 10 at 3:00pm In 113 Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
Registration will be held through the pre-trlp meeting date for each trip and through the day of each workshop. A<lb/>
minimum deposit of $10 Is required for all trips unless otherwise noted.<lb/>
Spring 1990 Workshop Information Outdoor Adventure Trip Schedule<lb/>
<lb/>
sea<lb/>
??<lb/>
i<lb/>
L<lb/>
Outdoor Smorgasbord: A special event fea-<lb/>
ttr rig outdoor cooking techniques and food sam-<lb/>
pling, video presentations and trip package give-<lb/>
aways1 Wednesday, January 24 at 7pm in 113<lb/>
Memonal Gymnasium Free of Charge<lb/>
Outdoor Photography. Learn how to get<lb/>
that perfect outdoor photo' Wed Feb. 7 in 113<lb/>
' rtorialGymnasium $2. Students, $3 Faculty-<lb/>
staff-guest<lb/>
C anoeing I: Basic instruction on types, care,<lb/>
equipment, safety and canoe strokes Thurs ,<lb/>
Feb 15 at 7 30pm In the Memorial Gym Pool $2<lb/>
Students. $3 Faculty-staff-guest<lb/>
Kayaking I: Basic instruction covering equip-<lb/>
ment safety, wet exit &amp; Eskimo roll Thurs, Feb<lb/>
22 at 7 30pm in the Memorial Gym pool $2<lb/>
ctudpnts. $3Faculty-staf1 guest<lb/>
Outdoor Gourmet: Experiment with open<lb/>
fire trail and dutch oven cooking Acquire a taste<lb/>
'or this unique activity1 Wed , March 14 at 5pm at<lb/>
picnic area adiacent to Memorial Gym $3Stu-<lb/>
? ? ts $4 Faculty statf-guest<lb/>
CanoeKayak II: Take a trip on the Tar and<lb/>
learn river navigation, water exit, safety and<lb/>
-troKos Meet at Memorial Gym at 8 30am $3<lb/>
ludents, $4 Faculty-staff-guest<lb/>
Backpacking: Introduce yourself to wilder-<lb/>
ness manners, types of boots, packs, costs and<lb/>
meal planning Tues March 20 at 5pm m BD101<lb/>
$2'Students, $3Faculty-staff guest<lb/>
Bicycle Touring: Begin instruction in week-<lb/>
end and long distance touring, basic repairs and<lb/>
more Wed . March 28 at 7pm in D101 Brewster<lb/>
(2 Students, $3Facutty staff guest<lb/>
Windsurfing I: Beginning instruction includes<lb/>
nqqing, terminology, equipment and practice<lb/>
Thurs April 5 and Tues , April 10 at 7 30pm in<lb/>
Memorial Gym Pool $27Students. $3Faculty-<lb/>
statf guest<lb/>
Ski Wintergreen, Va. Two days of prime downhill skiing highlight this winter adventure in the Blue Ridge<lb/>
Mountains. Wintergreen offers a challenge to the expert and novice skier with elevation of 4,450 feet and<lb/>
over a thousand foot drop. Cost includes transportation, lodging, lift tickets and Apres ski party. $20day ski<lb/>
rental and food are additional. Tnp takes place February 3-4. Enrollment limit of 14 participants. Pre-tnp<lb/>
meeting will be held Wed Jan. 31 at 5pm in BD101. $99Students. $110Faculty-staff-guest.<lb/>
Spring Break Beach Extravaganza Find yourself in sunny Key Largo and Key West, Florida March<lb/>
3-10. You'll enjoy some of the Southeast's finest beach and nautical locations including camping at John<lb/>
Pennekamp Coral Reef, snorkelmg, sailing and windsurfing. Don't miss the famous Key West sunsets'<lb/>
Costs include transportation, equipment, most food, lodging and special activity fees. $275Students.<lb/>
$300Faculty-staff-guest.($100 deposit required.) Attend the pre-tnp meeting Wed March 21 at 5pm in<lb/>
BD101.<lb/>
Canoeing Spend two days of canoeing down 16 miles of the Cape Fear River and enjoy diverse plant<lb/>
and animal life as well as a few class II rapids.Evenings will be spend around the campfire at the Raven<lb/>
Rock State Park, March 23-25. Cost includes equipment, food and transportation. $20Students, $25<lb/>
Faculty-staff-guest. A pre-tnp meeting will be held Wed March 21 at 5pm in BD101.<lb/>
Backpacking Tip-toe through the Rip Rap Trail in Shenandoah National Park, Va. March 30-Apni 1 The<lb/>
two days of moderate hiking feature spring blooms, water falls and excellent scenic views. Cost includes<lb/>
equipment, food and transportation. $20Students, $25Faculty-staff-guest. A pre-tnp meeting will be held<lb/>
Wed March 28 at 5pm in BD101<lb/>
White Water Rafting A weekend in Hot Springs, NC is a wonderful way to open the month of April<lb/>
rafting down the French Broad River One day will be spent hiking through the Pisgah National Forest You<lb/>
can be rockin' and rollm' at a cost of $55Students. $65Faculty-staff-guest. Cost includes transportation.<lb/>
equipment, food and special activity fees A pre-tnp meeting well be held Tues, April 3 at 5pm in BD101<lb/>
Bicycling Tour the county roads on a loop trail from Greenville to Grimesland park and then return to<lb/>
Greonville for an exhilarating 25 miles. Cost includes food and sag wagon. Trip takes place April 7 at a cost<lb/>
of $7Students, $10Faculty-staff-guest. A pre-tnp meeting will be held Wed April 4 at 5pm in BD101<lb/>
Beach Camping Enjoy the 892 acre Hammocks Beach State Park. You'll have ample time for hiking.<lb/>
fishing, swimming, sun bathing, and interpretive study. Cost includes equipment, food and transportation<lb/>
This beach bonanza takes place April 21-22. Costs are $20Students. $25Faculty-staff-guest. A pre-tnp<lb/>
meeting will be held Wed Apnl 18 at 5pm in BD101.<lb/>
For additional information regarding all outdoor recreatton programs, v.sit the Outdoor Recreation Center in 113 Memonal Gymnasium<lb/>
Monday &amp; Friday from 11:30am-1 30pm or 3 OOpm-6 00pm and Tuesday-Thursday 3 OOpm-6 00pm Call 757 6387 or 757-6911<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0012"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
The East Carolinian, January 9, 1990 9<lb/>
Opposition groups question dissolution<lb/>
of East Germany's secret police force<lb/>
By I ony Czuczka<lb/>
Asstn. fated Press Writer<lb/>
ami<lb/>
crat<lb/>
rcpn<lb/>
talks<lb/>
vs ith<lb/>
ic <lb/>
EAST BERLIN (AP) Oppo-<lb/>
sition groups Monday questioned<lb/>
assurances byommunisl lead-<lb/>
ers tli.it (? ist v Germany's secret<lb/>
poli c is being disbanded and iil-<lb/>
leged th.it one unit had urged i<lb/>
o stop demo r.itR- reforms.<lb/>
n- opposition group Dertto-<lb/>
cning s.iul opposition<lb/>
i n: itives were suspending<lb/>
on i ist i iermany's future<lb/>
the overnmcnl until offi-<lb/>
cialsexplain thedomestic security<lb/>
ituation Mondav s t.ilks wore<lb/>
covered on national television.<lb/>
A i nllapsc o( the talks could<lb/>
endanger the tenuous acceptance<lb/>
(it Communist Premier Hans<lb/>
Mod row's transitional Cabinet by<lb/>
the opposition, which has been<lb/>
unable to present a unified front.<lb/>
Opposition groups earlier had<lb/>
threatened to leave the talks over<lb/>
what they charge are government<lb/>
efforts to preserve a domestic in-<lb/>
telligence network that could stifle<lb/>
the reform movement.<lb/>
Rolf Henrich of New Forum,<lb/>
the largest opposition group, dis-<lb/>
closed what he said was a draft<lb/>
telex prepared by secret police<lb/>
agents in the city of Geraon Dec. 9,<lb/>
urging authorities in East Berlin<lb/>
to "paralyze" the opposition.<lb/>
Henrich said he was uncer-<lb/>
tain if the telex was ever dis-<lb/>
patched, but contended it "called<lb/>
for a coup" to end the democratic<lb/>
reform movement. Communist<lb/>
Party chief Gregor Gysi and rep-<lb/>
resentatives of other traditionally<lb/>
Communist-allied parties said<lb/>
they were unaware of th? mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
Democratic Awakening<lb/>
leader Wolfgang Schnur de-<lb/>
manded that the national<lb/>
prosecutor's office and the Inte-<lb/>
rior Ministry appear before repre-<lb/>
sentatives of the opposition and<lb/>
government.<lb/>
The Modrow government,<lb/>
formed after a peaceful popular<lb/>
October revolution toppled hard-<lb/>
line Communist leaders, has<lb/>
promised to create the conditions<lb/>
for free and fair elections on May<lb/>
6.<lb/>
As talks resumed Monday, the<lb/>
opposition demanded that the<lb/>
government disarm agents of the<lb/>
former State Security Office by Ian.<lb/>
19 and drop plans to set up a new<lb/>
agency to succeed it before the<lb/>
May elections. Peter Koch, an offi-<lb/>
cial named by the government to<lb/>
oversee dissolution of the secret<lb/>
police, said authorities plan to<lb/>
confiscate all of the former<lb/>
agency's arms by the end ot this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Former agents are aheadv<lb/>
barred from access to weapons, he<lb/>
said. Reports last month by the<lb/>
official ADN news agency said<lb/>
the force had been disbanded.<lb/>
Modrow said in an interview<lb/>
Sunday with Austrian television<lb/>
that a security force is needed to<lb/>
prevent the spread of right-wing<lb/>
extremism in East Germany<lb/>
Bunny's Grill<lb/>
Open 7 Days A Week<lb/>
Mon - Sat 11am - 2am<lb/>
Sun 5pm - Midnight<lb/>
Lunch Specials<lb/>
M - Chicken &amp; Cheese on Pita ($3.50)<lb/>
T - Turkey Sub ($3.50)<lb/>
W - Fajita - Chicken or Beet ($4.25)<lb/>
Th - 6" Steak &amp; Cheese ($3.50)<lb/>
F - 6" Chicken Cheese Sub ($3.50)<lb/>
60oz Pitchers $1.99<lb/>
Student Special Monday Night<lb/>
6pm - 9pm all Sandwiches 99c<lb/>
FREE Delivery (mm. order $5i?)<lb/>
No Delivery on Specials<lb/>
Located Next to Stop Shop<lb/>
Downtown Greenville 830-5126<lb/>
Authorities arrest cult leader<lb/>
close to the Mexican border<lb/>
By David Sedeno<lb/>
1 he Associated Press<lb/>
lllvl<lb/>
1<lb/>
tcac<lb/>
lesu<lb/>
n .il?t I W A cull leader<lb/>
gs ol an c hio family ot five was<lb/>
i m border by authorities who<lb/>
survivalist gear were found in his<lb/>
?1 room and a storage locker.<lb/>
effrcv 1 urtdgfen, 39, a former Sunday-school<lb/>
I tour guide in the Reorganized Church of<lb/>
? '  i .liter Day Saints in Ohio, was ar-<lb/>
uts de the motel Sunday by federal agents<lb/>
heriffs.<lb/>
underen's 8-ye<lb/>
com<lb/>
ar-old wife. Alice, and the<lb/>
yearn ld st m. Damon, also were arrested<lb/>
therl undgren children - Kristen, 10,<lb/>
Caleb. 9,ai n, 15 were taken into protective<lb/>
i ustody said ndrewV'ita.thespocialagentincharge<lb/>
? tl reau ol Wcohol, Tobacco and Firearms<lb/>
office in 1 os ngeles.<lb/>
relieve a lot of apprehension Kirt-<lb/>
 c officer Ronald K Andolsek said<lb/>
? II the Lundgrens' arrests. In recent<lb/>
days, Kirtland police had been keeping close watch<lb/>
of the homes of residents who were once threatened<lb/>
by Lundgren.<lb/>
fhe Lundgrens were scheduled to appear Monday<lb/>
in a state court for extradition proceedings to Ohio,<lb/>
where they face charges including aggravated mur-<lb/>
der and kidnapping.<lb/>
Lundgren broke away from the Reorganized<lb/>
Church and persuaded other members to follow<lb/>
him, officials said. The gToup once lived on a 15-acre<lb/>
farm near the Cleveland-area town, where investiga-<lb/>
tors last week unearthed five bodies. Authorities<lb/>
believe the five are Dennis Avery, his wife, Cheryl,<lb/>
and their three young daughters.<lb/>
Investigators believe the Averys were killed in<lb/>
mid-April and buried in a common grave under the<lb/>
barn. Searches of the Southern California motel room<lb/>
and a nearby storage area rented by Jeffrey Lund-<lb/>
gren uncovered numerous weapons, including an<lb/>
AR-15 assault rifle, as well as ammunition, knives<lb/>
and gas masks, Vita said.<lb/>
"They had camping gear, web gear that the<lb/>
military would wear ? things that can sustain you<lb/>
up in the mountains he said.<lb/>
The East<lb/>
11 <lb/>
 7 <lb/>
' ? ? y<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? s 0<lb/>
 '<lb/>
- -<lb/>
Welcome Back! Check Out<lb/>
Second Semester Skiing!<lb/>
DRDON'S<lb/>
Greenville Blvd. 756-1003<lb/>
Outdoor Recreation Opportunities ? Intramural-Recreational Services<lb/>
Spring 1990 Workshop Information<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
Outdoor Smorgasbord: A special event fea-<lb/>
turing outdoor cooking techniques and tood sam-<lb/>
pling, video presentations and trip package give-<lb/>
aways1 Wednesday, January 24 at 7pm in 113<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium. Free of Charge<lb/>
Outdoor Photography. Learn how to get<lb/>
?hat perfect outdoor photo! Wed Feb. 7 in 113<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium. $2 Students, $3 Faculty-<lb/>
staff-guest<lb/>
Canoeing I: Basic instruction on types, care,<lb/>
equipment, safety and canoe strokes. Thurs<lb/>
Feb. 15 at 7:30pm In the Memorial Gym Pool $2<lb/>
Students, $3Faculty-statf-ouest.<lb/>
Kayaking I: Basic instruction covering equip-<lb/>
ment safety, wet exit &amp; Eskimo roll Thurs Feb.<lb/>
22 at 7:30pm in the Memorial Gym pool. $2<lb/>
Students. $3Facutty-staft-guest<lb/>
Outdoor Gourmet: Experiment with open<lb/>
fire, trail and dutch oven cooking. Acquire a taste<lb/>
for this unique activity1 Wed , March 14 at 5pm at<lb/>
picnic area adjacent to Memorial Gym $3Stu-<lb/>
dents. $4Facutty-staff-guest<lb/>
CanoeKayak II: Take a trip on the Tar and<lb/>
learn river navigation, water exit, safety and<lb/>
strokes Meet at Memorial Gym at 8 30am. $3<lb/>
Students, $4Faculty-staff-guest<lb/>
Backpacking: Introduce yourself to wilder-<lb/>
ness manners, types ot boots, packs, costs and<lb/>
meal planning Tues. March 20 at 5pm in BD101<lb/>
$2Students, $3Faculty-staff-guest<lb/>
Bicycle Touring: Begin instruction in week-<lb/>
end and long distance touring, basic repairs and<lb/>
more Wed , March 28 at 7pm in D101 Brewster.<lb/>
$2Students.$3Faculty-statf-guest.<lb/>
Windsurfing I: Beginning instruction includes:<lb/>
rigging, terminology, equipment and practice.<lb/>
Thurs , April 5 and Tues , April 10 at 7:30pm in<lb/>
Memorial Gym Pool $2Students, $3FacuRy-<lb/>
staff guest<lb/>
Your Passport to Adventure<lb/>
Registration for all trips and workshops begin Wednesday, January 10 at 3:00pm In 113 Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
Registration will be held through the pre-trtp meeting date for each trip and through the day of each workshop. A<lb/>
minimum deposit of $10 Is required for all trips unless otherwise noted.<lb/>
Outdoor Adventure Trip Schedule<lb/>
Ski Wintergreen, Va. Two days of prime downhill skiing highlight this winter adventure in the Blue Ridge<lb/>
Mountains. Wintergreen otters a challenge to the expert and novice skier with elevation of 4,450 feet and<lb/>
over a thousand foot drop. Cost includes transportation, lodging, lift tickets and Apres ski party. $20day ski<lb/>
rental and food are additional. Trip takes place February 3-4. Enrollment limit of 14 participants. Pre-trip<lb/>
meeting will be held Wed Jan. 31 at 5pm in BD101. $99Students, $110Faculty-staff-guest.<lb/>
Spring Break Beach Extravaganza Find yourself in sunny Key Largo and Key West, Florida March<lb/>
3-10. You'll enjoy some of the Southeast's finest beach and nautical locations including camping at John<lb/>
Pennekamp Coral Reef, snorkeling, sailing and windsurfing. Don't miss the famous Key West sunsets!<lb/>
Costs include transportation, equipment, most food, lodging and special activity fees. $275Students,<lb/>
$300Faculty-staff-guest.($100 deposit required.) Attend the pre-trip meeting Wed March 21 at 5pm in<lb/>
BD101.<lb/>
Canoeing Spend two days of canoeing down 16 miles of the Cape Fear River and enjoy diverse plant<lb/>
and animal life as well as a few class II rapids.Evenings will be spend around the campfire at the Raven<lb/>
Rock State Park, March 23-25. Cost includes equipment, food and transportation. $20Students, $25<lb/>
Faculty-staff-guest. A pre-trip meeting will be held Wed March 21 at 5pm in BD101.<lb/>
Backpacking Tip-toe through the Rip Rap Trail in Shenandoah National Park, Va. March 30-April 1. The<lb/>
two days of moderate hiking feature spring blooms, water falls and excellent scenic views. Cost includes<lb/>
equipment, food and transportation. $20Students, $25Faculty-staff-guest. A pre-trip meeting will be held<lb/>
Wed March 28 at 5pm in BD101.<lb/>
White Water Rafting A weekend in Hot Springs, NC is a wonderful way to open the month of April<lb/>
rafting down the French Broad River. One day will be spent hiking through the Pisgah National Forest. You<lb/>
can be rockin' and rollin' at a cost of $55Students, $65Faculty-staff-guest. Cost includes transportation,<lb/>
equipment, food and special activity fees. A pre-trip meeting well be held Tues April 3 at 5pm in BD101.<lb/>
Bicycling Tour the county roads on a loop trail from Greenville to Grimesland park and then return to<lb/>
Greenville for an exhilarating 25 miles. Cost includes food and sag wagon. Trip takes place April 7 at a cost<lb/>
of $7Students, $10Faculty-staff-guest. A pre-trip meeting will be held Wed April 4 at 5pm in BD101<lb/>
Beach Camping Enjoy the 892 acre Hammocks Beach State Park. You'll have ample time for hiking,<lb/>
fishing swimming, sun bathing, and interpretive study. Cost includes equipment, food and transportation.<lb/>
This beach bonanza takes place April 21-22. Costs are $20Students, $25Faculty-staff-guest. A pre-tnp<lb/>
meeting will be held Wed April 18 at 5pm in BD101.<lb/>
For additional information regarding all outdoor recreation programs, visit the Outdoor Recreation Center in 113 Memorial Gymnasium<lb/>
Monday &amp; Friday from 11:30am-1:30pm or 3:00pm-6:00pm and Tuesday-Thursday 3:00pm-6:00pm. Call 757 -6387 or 757-6911<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0013"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
10 The I .ist Carolinian, January 9, i?wn<lb/>
Greensboro's smoking ban<lb/>
provokes angry smokers<lb/>
By Paul Nowell<lb/>
Associated Press s ritci<lb/>
GREENSBOW X W ind<lb/>
Barton lit up hei so? ind. igii<lb/>
ot the luin h hour and .no rod r<lb/>
the 'Non Smoking Seel<lb/>
just across the r mal '<lb/>
dov ntovN n ciroonsl i<lb/>
rant<lb/>
1 think it sstupid It ? i joko<lb/>
lu' said about the ctt now<lb/>
smoking regulation il? to<lb/>
est in the nation s No ; ti<lb/>
st.itr It w.i passed<lb/>
hypocritu al<lb/>
shoes who are no better I<lb/>
body else<lb/>
I lei co-workei i<lb/>
agreed<lb/>
" rhe go ernntcnt ii .u k-<lb/>
down on little bitt) things thai<lb/>
don't amount to a i ?l b<lb/>
said NN. tkin m '<lb/>
smokes five cigai<lb/>
lunch It jusl irk mi<lb/>
rwotablesaw i h e?pP "?'<lb/>
stein wasenjo ingaci ??.??.? iii<lb/>
his coffee and newspapti ' nttki<lb/>
his fellow diners th ttori<lb/>
didn't seem to boi<lb/>
I think it s i ? ?? m I ?ik<lb/>
thing  Ik il<lb/>
Uvlk out<lb/>
rhe smokine, : i ? .vi ?t into<lb/>
effect on New 1'eai Kv in tht<lb/>
iit ot nearh .v"<lb/>
Judges<lb/>
trials of i nmin il<lb/>
orsand presideo i<lb/>
non jury trials ?l<lb/>
ing Ic-s than 1<lb/>
domestic cases also at<lb/>
to Distrii t c ourl i ifti ? ?<lb/>
as ,i 'people s court<lb/>
the nature ol fhe<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Hut such casescai<lb/>
ing nd legally diffu ull<lb/>
Court judges cnusl v r al<lb/>
i ated in the lnirt ol North C arc<lb/>
lin?a tobaci o country<lb/>
I v spiii- vocal opposition from<lb/>
t hi' tobacco industry, the contro<lb/>
 ci sial measure passed by a slun<lb/>
l73-ote margin out ol nearly<lb/>
' AX) cast in a November refer<lb/>
dum<lb/>
In subseout nt months, meet<lb/>
" ? were held between (ity offi<lb/>
ialsandbusinessownersso there<lb/>
wore Hi' surprises Many restau<lb/>
rantsand iit.nl stores already were<lb/>
1 .?, w ith the restrictions,<lb/>
id cit :kosman lack lard-<lb/>
Mot i i them w ere glad they<lb/>
didn t have to alienate their i us<lb/>
wr were he said<lb/>
 hile i ircensboro doesn't<lb/>
rank up there with tobacco towns<lb/>
like Winston Salem or Durham, it<lb/>
th homeol I orillard Inc whic h<lb/>
. iwport. Kent and True<lb/>
ic irettes and employs 2, MH)<lb/>
pie.<lb/>
North Carolina produces<lb/>
labout two thirds ol the nation's<lb/>
flui n 11 ba co v tin h is used<lb/>
ettes With 14,000<lb/>
? tai mcrs, the 1 ar I leel<lb/>
' ; I . lluod It<lb/>
i i t!i v itilin,i S<lb/>
turers prod in e<lb/>
, ? if all domestu<lb/>
ran h<lb/>
It this was Indiana oi some<lb/>
other state where tobacco isn't<lb/>
grown there would be farless t iti<lb/>
i ism (lardner said<lb/>
I he ordinani e bans smirking<lb/>
in elevators grocery and depart<lb/>
monl stores and requires n itau<lb/>
rants seating f0 or more I" ? t<lb/>
aside al least 25 percent foi non<lb/>
smokers. Alter a one yeai grace<lb/>
period, customers w ho ignore the<lb/>
warnings can be lined $2 ' I he<lb/>
grace period dor .n't apply to busi<lb/>
nesses, who can bi fined immedi<lb/>
atoly for failing to i ost the no<lb/>
smokine, signs or asking i us<lb/>
tomer to extinguish a lit (igarette.<lb/>
According to a brochure<lb/>
mailed out last month to atlei ted<lb/>
businesses, it will be up to the<lb/>
owner ot the business to enforce<lb/>
the law<lb/>
"That person will ask the ol<lb/>
tender to comply the brochure<lb/>
says It the offender docs not<lb/>
comply the person in charge ma<lb/>
ask the person to leave. It the per<lb/>
son does not leave when asked to<lb/>
do so the person in charge mam<lb/>
call the appropriate publi offi ial<lb/>
to issue a civil citation or ill the<lb/>
police to charge thi pet i ith<lb/>
trespassing<lb/>
Tie enforcement i ?? isi?n<lb/>
are con fu sine to some business<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
ft<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
Open<lb/>
 Monday - Saturday 10 - 9<lb/>
I Sunday 1 - 6<lb/>
I<lb/>
Our Everyday Low Price<lb/>
(Except, Aigncr, Nike, and Reebok)<lb/>
tribution in which<lb/>
lei! eciuall) and referee emo<lb/>
fights o or c hild supj oi:<lb/>
ilc i .i -os once were<lb/>
died so mtetmally that court<lb/>
il ed thi m hearing<lb/>
S  ju ? niles hae law-<lb/>
 ors and tht ir i i . require full<lb/>
attention to due proi ess<lb/>
VII ol these pressures have<lb/>
been big topics .it meetings ol the<lb/>
I district C ourt judge<lb/>
tor years. Restructuring ol the<lb/>
courts mas be among the firsl is<lb/>
sues taken up by a judicial confer<lb/>
ence proposed by i hiel lustice<lb/>
lames Exum Ir<lb/>
Thent i onfi rent to in luch<lb/>
all the states judges would be<lb/>
long, would make recommenda<lb/>
tions on policies relating to the<lb/>
judiciary.<lb/>
tt&amp;S CONDENSED<lb/>
VACATION GUIDE<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
J<lb/>
JUST ADD WATER<lb/>
BAHAMAS CRUISE<lb/>
3 4 days from '455<lb/>
CARIBBEAN CRUISE<lb/>
7 davs from ' 1(195<lb/>
New York<lb/>
2 nts. from<lb/>
GET THINGS STIRRING<lb/>
$259<lb/>
Ski Colorado<lb/>
5 nts ti<lb/>
Atlantic City<lb/>
2 nts. from<lb/>
$<lb/>
279<lb/>
$589<lb/>
HEAT UNTIE WARM<lb/>
trorn<lb/>
Key West<lb/>
3 nts from<lb/>
Orlando<lb/>
3 nts from<lb/>
$459<lb/>
$289<lb/>
Daytona Beach<lb/>
3 nts. from . <lb/>
Kree Port, Bahamas<lb/>
3 nts from <lb/>
-389<lb/>
$331<lb/>
COME ANO GET IT<lb/>
ITG lias these and many more winter vacations for you All rates above<lb/>
from Greenville and'or Kinston and'or Raleigh Advance bookings and i<lb/>
details All rates pr person based on two sharing<lb/>
355-5075<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
,fjr<lb/>
? '<lb/>
r- r<lb/>
eenville I Athletic Club<lb/>
lyBTTmrudi TjT4Tr-niiriiiJtrnTi<lb/>
TUJ<lb/>
140 OAKMONT DRIVE ? GREENVILLE, N.C. ? TEL. 919756-9175<lb/>
The Ultimate Athletic Club<lb/>
?Steam &amp; Sauna<lb/>
?Hot Tubs<lb/>
?Juice Bar<lb/>
?Tanning Studio<lb/>
?Cardiovascular Center<lb/>
Racquetball<lb/>
Nautilus<lb/>
?Gymnasium<lb/>
?Indoor Track<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
RATES<lb/>
&amp;?<lb/>
??<lb/>
?j<lb/>
i?KJ&amp;<lb/>
?-<lb/>
Call or visit us today!<lb/>
We've got a membership plan just for you!<lb/>
?CORPORATE<lb/>
?INDIVIDUAL<lb/>
?STUDENT<lb/>
?GUEST RATES<lb/>
?FAMILY<lb/>
$125<lb/>
?Swimming Pool<lb/>
?Pro Shop<lb/>
?Free Weights<lb/>
?Aerobics Excercise<lb/>
Nursery<lb/>
per<lb/>
semester<lb/>
M<lb/>
Open 7 Days A Week<lb/>
Mon.Fri. 6 am- 10 pm<lb/>
Sat &amp; Sun. 8 am - 9 pm<lb/>
vSJiL,<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0014"/><lb/>
<lb/>
10 The East Carolinian, January 9,1990<lb/>
Greensboro's smoking ban<lb/>
provokes angry smokers<lb/>
By Paul Nowell<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) Cind<lb/>
Barton lit vip her second cigarette<lb/>
of the lunch hour and sneered at<lb/>
the "Non-Smoking Se tion" sign<lb/>
just across the room at Donnic S l<lb/>
downtown Greensboro restau-<lb/>
rant<lb/>
"1 think it'sstupid. It sa joke<lb/>
she said about the city s now<lb/>
smoking regulations, the tough<lb/>
est in the nation's No I tobacc <lb/>
state. "It was passed b) a I ?l oi<lb/>
hypocritical goody-good) two<lb/>
shoes who are no better than am<lb/>
body else<lb/>
Her co-worker. Sheila Ktkins,<lb/>
agreed.<lb/>
"The government cracks<lb/>
clown on little bittv things that<lb/>
don't amount to a hill of pearls<lb/>
said Ms. Atkins, who said she<lb/>
smokes five cigarettes during<lb/>
lunch. "It just irks me <lb/>
Twotablesawav. Tosop'rYHorn<lb/>
stein was en joying a dJrfWwJth<lb/>
his coffee and newspaper ' Jrtfrke<lb/>
his fellow diners the restrit tkms<lb/>
didn't seem to bothct him<lb/>
"1 think it's a gii? and take<lb/>
thing, he said I think it will<lb/>
work out.<lb/>
The smoking rules went into<lb/>
effect on New Year's Da in this<lb/>
city of nearly 200,000 people lo<lb/>
cated in the heart of North Caro-<lb/>
lina tobacco country.<lb/>
Despite vocal opposition from<lb/>
the tobacco industry, the contro-<lb/>
versial measure passed by a slim<lb/>
173-vote margin out of nearly<lb/>
W),000 cast in a November refer<lb/>
endum.<lb/>
In subsequent months, meet-<lb/>
ings were held between city offi-<lb/>
i ialsand business owners so there<lb/>
were no surprises. Many restau-<lb/>
rantsand retail stores already were<lb/>
complying with the restrictions,<lb/>
said city spokesman lack Gard-<lb/>
ner.<lb/>
"A lot of them were glad they<lb/>
didn't have to alienate their cus-<lb/>
tomers we were he said.<lb/>
While Greensboro doesn't<lb/>
rank up there with tobacco towns<lb/>
like Winston-Salem or Durham, it<lb/>
isthehomeofLorillard Inc which<lb/>
makes Newport, Kent and True<lb/>
cigarettes and employs 2,3(H)<lb/>
people.<lb/>
North Carolina produces<lb/>
(about two-thirds of the nation's<lb/>
flue-cured tobacco, which is used<lb/>
to make cigarettes. With 14,000<lb/>
tobacco farmers, the Tar Heel<lb/>
state's annual imp is valued at<lb/>
sn! million. North Carolina's<lb/>
cigarette manufacturers produce<lb/>
about 36 percent ot all domestic<lb/>
brands.<lb/>
Judges<lb/>
"If this was Indiana or some<lb/>
other state where tobacco isn't<lb/>
grown there would be fartess criti-<lb/>
cism Gardner said<lb/>
The ordinance bans smoking<lb/>
in elevators, grocery and depart-<lb/>
ment stores and requires restau<lb/>
rants seating 50 or more to set<lb/>
aside at least 25 pen ont tor non-<lb/>
smokers. After a one year grace<lb/>
period, customers who ignore the<lb/>
warnings can be fined $2. The<lb/>
grace period doesn't apply to busi<lb/>
nesses, who can be fined immedi<lb/>
ately tor failing to post the no<lb/>
smoking signs or asking a cus-<lb/>
tomer to extinguish a lit cigarette.<lb/>
According to a brochure<lb/>
mailed out last month to affected<lb/>
businesses, it will be up to the<lb/>
owner ot the business to enforce<lb/>
the law.<lb/>
"That person will ask the of-<lb/>
fender to comply the brochure<lb/>
says. "If the offender does not<lb/>
comply the person in charge may<lb/>
ask the person to leave. If the per-<lb/>
son does not leave when asked to<lb/>
do so the person in charge many<lb/>
call the appropriate public official<lb/>
to issue a civil citation, or call the<lb/>
police to charge the person with<lb/>
trespassing. '<lb/>
The enforcement provisions<lb/>
are confusing to some business<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
trials of criminal misdemean-<lb/>
ors and preside over bi tl rj<lb/>
non-jury trials of civil suit im ol<lb/>
ing less mart $10,000. juvenile and<lb/>
domestic cases also arc assigned<lb/>
to District Court, often described<lb/>
as a "people s court because ot<lb/>
the nature ot the cases that go<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Bat such cases can It v n nch-<lb/>
mg and legally difficult. District<lb/>
Court )udges must wroMle. with<lb/>
equitable distribution in which<lb/>
a divorcing couple's property is<lb/>
divided equally and referee emo-<lb/>
tional tights over child support<lb/>
and custody.<lb/>
uvenile cases once were<lb/>
handled so informally that court<lb/>
officials called them "hearing-<lb/>
cttes Now juveniles have law-<lb/>
yers, and their cases require full<lb/>
attention lo due process.<lb/>
AU of these pressures have<lb/>
been big topics at meetings of the<lb/>
District Court judges association<lb/>
for years. Restructuring of the<lb/>
courts may be among the first is<lb/>
sues taken up by a judicial confer-<lb/>
ence proposed by Chief fustice<lb/>
lames Exum r.<lb/>
The new conference, to which<lb/>
all the state's judges would be-<lb/>
long, would make recommenda-<lb/>
tions on policies relating to the<lb/>
judiciary.<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
I Open<lb/>
 Monday - Saturday 10 - 9<lb/>
I Sunday 1 - 6<lb/>
n<lb/>
to OFF I<lb/>
I Sunday 1-6 Our Everyday Low Price<lb/>
I (Except, Aigner, Nike, and Reebok)<lb/>
I?' i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
ITGfS CONDENSED<lb/>
VACATION GUIDE<lb/>
New York<lb/>
2 nts. from<lb/>
JUST ADD WATER<lb/>
BAHAMAS CRUISE CARIBBEAN CRUISE<lb/>
3-4 days from ?455 7 days from '1095<lb/>
GET THINGS STIRRING<lb/>
$279<lb/>
$<lb/>
259<lb/>
Atlantic City<lb/>
2 nts. from<lb/>
$589<lb/>
HEAT UNTIL WARM<lb/>
Ski Colorado<lb/>
5 nts. from<lb/>
Key West<lb/>
3 nts. from<lb/>
Orlando<lb/>
3 nts. from<lb/>
$459<lb/>
$289<lb/>
COME AND GET IT<lb/>
Daytona Beach<lb/>
3 nts. from <lb/>
Free Port, Bahamas<lb/>
3 nts. from <lb/>
$389<lb/>
$331<lb/>
.?;?, (nr ,? ra(es ahove iude airfares, room &amp; m I<lb/>
ings and other restrictions apply tali for<lb/>
The Piaza<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
r i<lb/>
eenville<lb/>
tl<lb/>
r <lb/>
m<lb/>
i v.<lb/>
LI<lb/>
GTlJ<lb/>
140 OAKMONT DRIVE ? GREEN, -3756-9175<lb/>
The Ultimate Athletic Club<lb/>
Steam &amp; Sauna<lb/>
?Hot Tubs<lb/>
?Juice Bar<lb/>
Tanning Studio<lb/>
Cardiovascular Center<lb/>
?Racquetball<lb/>
?Nautilus<lb/>
?Gymnasium<lb/>
?Indoor Track<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
RATES<lb/>
Call or visit us today!<lb/>
We've got a membership plan just for you!<lb/>
?INDIVIDUAL ?CORPORATE<lb/>
?STUDENT ?GUEST RATES<lb/>
?FAMILY<lb/>
$125<lb/>
i<lb/>
(UKEfel<lb/>
m mi.<lb/>
?M 1<lb/>
,1ii<lb/>
? vS<lb/>
?Swimming Pool<lb/>
?Pro Shop<lb/>
?Free Weights<lb/>
Aerobics Excercise<lb/>
?Nursery<lb/>
per<lb/>
semester<lb/>
Open 7 Days A Week<lb/>
MonFri. 6 am - 10 pm<lb/>
Sat. &amp; Sun. 8 am - 9 pm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0015"/><lb/>
giic iSaat QIarultntan<lb/>
Pave II<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Gadgets<lb/>
influence<lb/>
markets<lb/>
of the '80s<lb/>
H Michelle Walker<lb/>
st.ttt V ritor<lb/>
 . .<lb/>
?nd<lb/>
I<lb/>
ndlessa<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I -Mir-<lb/>
 i I i<lb/>
?<lb/>
PEOPI I<lb/>
ick?<lb/>
priot<lb/>
?<lb/>
?? ? , . <lb/>
itivefema<lb/>
made t fa<lb/>
? e in pub<lb/>
Srr I V &amp;4e e.M't' 1 i<lb/>
Lexicon<lb/>
Mushrooming<lb/>
  ittd in<lb/>
I I ipatiate ' to leai nut;<lb/>
H be r.? iinnn l ?(' I '<lb/>
1 Pontificate join h pun<lb/>
i develoj I) speak an<lb/>
k i memoi ies B<lb/>
, i history I' i11<lb/>
i Abstinence reluctance<lb/>
H indifference had<lb/>
attitude; i self denial<lb/>
. i ?b rinth tunnel; B<lb/>
bridge t road; 11 mae<lb/>
f. onstam redundant;<lb/>
it lnde? ision agreeable;<lb/>
D faithfulness<lb/>
? Portend make belies ??<lb/>
h hollow opening; i pledge<lb/>
.in- v. ord; P indu ate<lb/>
-itt rehand<lb/>
s ritivate to flirt; I.<lb/>
laugh; clean; D drew up<lb/>
9. Titillate A spruce up; B<lb/>
shiver; C tease D. oxi it?<lb/>
pleasantly<lb/>
10 Abrogate A. to abolish;<lb/>
B to judge to enter; D<lb/>
cross examine<lb/>
Compiled by MaH Richtei<lb/>
rno band wtWbe moving to Calil ?rnia<lb/>
a mu weei on the west coast<lb/>
? ?? the Attic on Friday<lb/>
Band plays farewell show<lb/>
fipper (lor roc ks the Attic again<lb/>
Bj I H)iin,i gloski<lb/>
II<lb/>
? ? . :? . I plays with a lot of<lb/>
in plavers .ant match without<lb/>
?<lb/>
nd not I ? i ? ' nger Kinlaw on drums. Heproba-<lb/>
tartixi 'Id walk Sure,hehashis<lb/>
own style, but u'? pri i last, rhythmic thrash beats that<lb/>
it ?  ?'? it<lb/>
ti, ?  i, ? ktckin ? ms, ripper Gor got the crowd<lb/>
I , ian ve. Many even dared to jump on stage<lb/>
thrasl . picaltl ' th, ba d lefinit. ourages the performances of tfie<lb/>
p  returned to the crowd by doing stage dives and flip. It s<lb/>
: ? an fun with their<lb/>
? I I ippei i ? ? ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
get tl tarted . i r t are Andy Bodi <lb/>
.ittli guitar ol i '?'? esl rhvt<lb/>
n pla ing musu at it-<lb/>
? ? ir ear.n ll<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
I atet on in I<lb/>
I Mi't.i<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
tarewell how may have to<lb/>
i he  ill be moving to<lb/>
:  ipul ited I os Angeles<lb/>
:<lb/>
t s vocais  ?<lb/>
 les is San 1 rancisco, ?.wd de-<lb/>
- - the homeboys<lb/>
theit by the Bay.<lb/>
hv r iwd that I ipper (lor will be<lb/>
? rthCa ilina out West And. of course<lb/>
?<lb/>
? the best o( luck!<lb/>
January 9, 1990<lb/>
Cool<lb/>
marches<lb/>
on<lb/>
A decade of<lb/>
fashion:<lb/>
By Jill Conti<lb/>
SUM Writer<lb/>
urKi k<lb/>
i u ma ns<lb/>
I . rtv<lb/>
: shirts,<lb/>
-S. deck<lb/>
When we look at our parents'<lb/>
old photographs, weal way s laugh<lb/>
and say "You wore that? Ha! Ha<lb/>
Bat, jost take a look at some oi<lb/>
your own old s hod pictures and<lb/>
see what von wore in the past 10<lb/>
years<lb/>
If vou thought bell-bottomed<lb/>
jeans and big collars wentout with<lb/>
the '70s. think again Believe it or<lb/>
not. the early '80s saw is in much<lb/>
the same shape as the late 7 te<lb/>
did.<lb/>
But, we did not sufferin those<lb/>
groovy threads tor long lothes<lb/>
became tailored neater Sud-<lb/>
 .??? have<lb/>
KTOSSy<lb/>
<lb/>
? n. a breed i I<lb/>
? ' pre<lb/>
; ?-? : ???-????<lb/>
monogrammed sweat i<lb/>
shoes, and called itself Biff or<lb/>
Muttv it became important to the<lb/>
preppy creature to look like ev-<lb/>
eryone else And evi ryone did<lb/>
The day shoulder pad- burst<lb/>
onto the scene r uldered<lb/>
people everywhere st d up and<lb/>
cheered- The bigger nd broader<lb/>
your shoulders, the better. Some<lb/>
found this look flattering: others<lb/>
felt like a caricature of Arnold<lb/>
bchwarzennager<lb/>
It became a real treat to watch<lb/>
some girl with size nine thighs<lb/>
shoved in a size five mini-skirt rr<lb/>
to climb a set of stairs gracefully<lb/>
The short-trends or "bee-<lb/>
boppingfashion ' were around for<lb/>
a quick time but left a lasting<lb/>
impression. Who can forget those<lb/>
wonderful: luorescent green pink,<lb/>
and orange materials that were<lb/>
used to make everything from t-<lb/>
shirts to mittens?<lb/>
And how many young<lb/>
women today will admit to, at one<lb/>
time, owning a piece oi clothing<lb/>
that made vou a Madonna wan-<lb/>
nabe<lb/>
The end oi the '80s saw influ-<lb/>
ence from our past returning to<lb/>
haunt us, bet we did not seem to<lb/>
care. Tie-dyed shirts, longer skirts<lb/>
and vests once again appeared on<lb/>
the scene, thus time with an '80s<lb/>
tlair to them<lb/>
Expressing indi iduality<lb/>
through clothing became impor-<lb/>
tant. IheonK complicated factor<lb/>
is that everyone did it the same<lb/>
w,n<lb/>
i hroughout the 80s, labels<lb/>
were important. From Gloria<lb/>
Vanderbilt to cola companies.<lb/>
What names can we look forward<lb/>
to in our clothing in th '90s? An<lb/>
example Pee Wee Herman.<lb/>
Enough said God help us.<lb/>
Time shapes the lives of our generation<lb/>
By ohn I uckci<lb/>
 .sf.t.ini 11 .lititfs I liitoi<lb/>
s thede ide a me to a do ??<lb/>
I i. Mind m sell reflei to  on the<lb/>
I is is and the igml ml enl ? <lb/>
m lifedui ing this period I omost<lb/>
urrentl) attending E ' the<lb/>
80s have easily h ei th n<lb/>
infiui nti.il period ol ir livi<lb/>
I Hiring the H0 out growth<lb/>
as human beings rea hod i phy i<lb/>
cal and mental zenith 1 he ev nts<lb/>
t these impressionable e irs<lb/>
.?? i.i IK propelled us into a world<lb/>
At- are continually forced to face<lb/>
ind ai i ept In the future, V hat we<lb/>
experienced will have a major<lb/>
etttt t tn the continuing develop<lb/>
men! of our generation as a viable<lb/>
force in the world ol the 1990s<lb/>
In the early years ol the de<lb/>
ade we encountered the impoi<lb/>
tant transition from childhood to<lb/>
pre Uvns and teens No longer were<lb/>
we allowed to eniov the simple<lb/>
t a hi ??? ithoul  orry<lb/>
r parent ire w<lb/>
irned foi (he first turn<lb/>
, ?  i: ? . ?! I. ? , ? P Ollltv<lb/>
and how omplic ited it i ould<lb/>
ii In es<lb/>
v, i n din in the w orst<lb/>
Iii! .1 On e loonage years,came<lb/>
the appe.tr.tiv e ol body hair in<lb/>
iinlamih.n places a phenomena<lb/>
we were l itei told was called<lb/>
puberty Kl hrst this majoi life<lb/>
, hange '?? a ? aiuithei stu k throw n<lb/>
into th fiery tin moil ol our lues<lb/>
during teenagegrov th Buteven-<lb/>
tuallv, this phenonn na lead us to<lb/>
an een more impoitanl discov<lb/>
ery of human nature sexuality<lb/>
s the endless problemscon-<lb/>
nev ted w ith the tide of puberty<lb/>
ebbed away, events in our lues<lb/>
became easier to handle .nd eas<lb/>
lit to understand 1 he ovcrbur<lb/>
dening early teens ga e way to the<lb/>
evcitmg late teens<lb/>
Wo moved from the lows of<lb/>
the i Id blues and b ing<lb/>
? ? . ? .<lb/>
t, . to the big leaguese<lb/>
thougl i' ind lifi i ;1 ? iool.<lb/>
"In the not decade<lb/>
we'll be the ones<lb/>
making things<lb/>
happen. The !cl)0s<lb/>
.iro ours, and wo<lb/>
own them<lb/>
During this alteration ot teen-<lb/>
age life we discovered that living<lb/>
could actually bepleasurable We<lb/>
had our lust important relation-<lb/>
ships outside of the family, and<lb/>
we realized the importance of<lb/>
friends Most of us fell in love tor<lb/>
the titst tune and for many, with<lb/>
love, came our first sexual encoun-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
s we grew, we gradually<lb/>
accepted out roles in American<lb/>
culture, defining our interests and<lb/>
developinga omfortaWe niche in<lb/>
i iidav social structure. Foot-<lb/>
ball, hot dogs, apple pie and, espe-<lb/>
cially, Chevrolet played important<lb/>
roles in our lives as we began to<lb/>
enjoy luxuries of the adult world,<lb/>
such as the freedom that came<lb/>
with a driver s liscence.<lb/>
Not to say things were all<lb/>
peaches and cream. Many of us<lb/>
had our tirst brush with one of<lb/>
life's most somber events. We<lb/>
understood death, as a relative<lb/>
pa ssed a wa v or the beau ty of you th<lb/>
was nipped in the bud as someone<lb/>
close died in an accident.<lb/>
Then we were seniors in high<lb/>
school. We were registering to<lb/>
vine, going to the prom, register-<lb/>
ing for the draft, and making the<lb/>
big decision on what course our<lb/>
life would take when the big day<lb/>
finally came, and we graduated.<lb/>
For all oi us here at ECU, our<lb/>
choice was to attend college and<lb/>
further our education Today, we<lb/>
are still learning and growing,<lb/>
existing on the edge of the true<lb/>
adult world.<lb/>
A dose friend summarized the<lb/>
past and the importance our lives<lb/>
will have in the 1990s. He simply<lb/>
stated. 'The eighties are over. In<lb/>
the next decade we'll be the ones<lb/>
making things happen. The 1990s<lb/>
are ours, and we own them<lb/>
In all. our lives continually<lb/>
changed in the 1980s, as we grew<lb/>
in the most important era in our<lb/>
lives. As citizens of the most<lb/>
powerful nation on earth, the<lb/>
nineties bring to us the possible<lb/>
beginning of a bright future. A<lb/>
futurethatisourstomakeorbreak,<lb/>
bend or shape, in a fashion we<lb/>
deem reasonable. Hopefully, we<lb/>
will have the strength to grasp it,<lb/>
and make the best of the limited<lb/>
time we have.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0016"/><lb/>
She iEagt (garolmtan<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
Features<lb/>
January 9,1990<lb/>
Gadgets<lb/>
influence<lb/>
markets<lb/>
of the '80s<lb/>
By Michelle Walker<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
People, gadgets, games and<lb/>
crazes. Multitudes o tads<lb/>
bloomed, nourished and fizzled<lb/>
during the '80s.<lb/>
Remember the people we<lb/>
dressed like, laughed at, envied<lb/>
and adored? And all those inno-<lb/>
vations that made our lives easier<lb/>
bv enhancing our social hours?<lb/>
What about all the fashions we<lb/>
just had tohaveand couldn't wait<lb/>
to slip our bodies into?<lb/>
Spend rig endless amounts of<lb/>
money on things to keep us enter-<lb/>
tained, we indulged and bought<lb/>
every gameand gadget we could<lb/>
get our hards on. Finding our<lb/>
attention spins to be quite short,<lb/>
we ended up stuffing our closets<lb/>
and attics witi all those crazes tor<lb/>
which we had so eagerly emptied<lb/>
our pockets.<lb/>
We became cellulite and cho<lb/>
lesterol conscbus, and decided it<lb/>
was time to whip ourselves into<lb/>
shape, lane Fcnda and Richard<lb/>
Simmons, becowingquite wealthy<lb/>
in the process, were among the<lb/>
first to lead us inour battle against<lb/>
the bulge. We jogged, walked,<lb/>
aerobicized, pumped, tanned,<lb/>
sweated and fretted ourselves to<lb/>
death. However,even though we<lb/>
had our new, sew, thin bronzed<lb/>
bodies, AIDS decided that we<lb/>
needed to be medest with them<lb/>
and that casual tea. wasn't cool,<lb/>
condoms were familous.<lb/>
Along with our healthy frames<lb/>
of mind, we also grew aware of<lb/>
sivial needs and pulled together<lb/>
to help starving children and des-<lb/>
titute farmers Remtmber<lb/>
PEOPLE<lb/>
?Michael Iack?on. with his<lb/>
white glove and dazhng perform-<lb/>
ances, had a pnvafc life that was<lb/>
a mystery to us. Sc we imagined,<lb/>
pried, and fabricated until he<lb/>
wrote the autobiographic Moon<lb/>
walker, which filled to reveal<lb/>
anything wedidn t already know.<lb/>
?Madonna, tHe most popular<lb/>
and provocative female singer of<lb/>
the '80s, made t fashionable to<lb/>
wear lingerie in public.<lb/>
See Decade, page 14<lb/>
Lexicon<lb/>
Mushrooming<lb/>
Answers printed in<lb/>
Thursday's paper<lb/>
1. Expatiate: A. to clear out;<lb/>
B. be generous; C. ignore; D.<lb/>
discoursee<lb/>
2. Pontificate: A. join; B. punj<lb/>
ish; C. develop; D. speak au-<lb/>
thoritatively<lb/>
3. Repast: A. memories; B.<lb/>
peace; C. history; D. meal<lb/>
4. Abstinence: A. reluctance;<lb/>
B. indifference; C. had<lb/>
attitude; D. self denial<lb/>
5. Labyrinth: A. tunnel; B.<lb/>
bridge; C. road; D. maze<lb/>
6. Constancy: A. redundent;<lb/>
B. indecision; C. agreeable;<lb/>
D. faithfulness<lb/>
7. Portend: A. make believe<lb/>
B. hollow opening; C. pledge<lb/>
one's word; D. indicate<lb/>
beforehand<lb/>
8. Titivate: A. to flirt; B.<lb/>
laugh; C. clean; D. dress up<lb/>
9. Titillate: A. spruce up; B.<lb/>
shiver; C. tease; D. excite<lb/>
pleasantly<lb/>
10. Abrogate: A. to abolish;<lb/>
B. to judge; C. to enter; D.<lb/>
cross?exam ine<lb/>
?Compiled by Matt Richter<lb/>
Tipper Gor band members John Kinlaw, Andy Bedrosian Stacey Little and John West played their tarewell show at the Attic on Friday.<lb/>
The band wiH be moving to California, as they try to further a musical career on the west coast<lb/>
Band plays farewell show<lb/>
Tipper Gor rocks the Attic again<lb/>
By Deanna Nevgloski<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
On Friday night, Tipper Cor, the notorious "homeboys from<lb/>
hell played their farewell show at the Attic.<lb/>
To get things started. Tipper Gor tags are Andy Bedrosian on<lb/>
vocals and bass, Stacey Little on lead guitar, John West on rhvthm<lb/>
guitar and vocals and John Kinlaw on drums.<lb/>
Tipper Gor is a band of metalists who play no-nonsense and<lb/>
poseur-free thrash. Yeah, they are a typical thrash band that takes<lb/>
pleasure in playing music at its loudest, fastest and heaviest forms,<lb/>
but they are one of the tew and fiercest thrash bands to invade<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Together for a year and toe months, 1 ipperGor put on a rousing<lb/>
two-hour set that had the rowdy Attic crowd entertained all night.<lb/>
Hie Greenville bashers kk ked the night ott at 11 p in and rocked<lb/>
the night away with some killer original tunes like Letter !o<lb/>
James a song to lames iettiek! t Metallica. and their new effort<lb/>
"Bugs In A Jar which is about the recent breakdown of the Berlin<lb/>
Wall.<lb/>
Later on in the showcase, rhvthm six-stringer. West, belted (nit<lb/>
the raw sounds of Metallica's "Seek and Destroy West's vocals<lb/>
were tough and raw, yet not scratchy like most thrash vocalists.<lb/>
Little's lead guitar playing is cut and dry; he plays with a lot of<lb/>
speed and brilliance that most young players can't match without<lb/>
extensive practice.<lb/>
And not to leave out mosh-monger Kinlaw on drums. He proba-<lb/>
bly started playing the dm ms before he could walk. Sure, he has his<lb/>
own style, but it's probably the very fast, rhythmic thrash beats that<lb/>
lead me to believe that.<lb/>
After a few kickin' slam anthems, Tipper Gor got the crowd<lb/>
headbangin' harder than ever. Many even dared to jump on stage<lb/>
with the band who definitely encourages the performances of the<lb/>
pit. Tney returned to the crowd by doing stage dives and flip. If s<lb/>
easy to see that ripper Gor enjoys good, clean fun with their<lb/>
audiences.<lb/>
Tipper Gor fans who didn't catch the farewell show may have to<lb/>
wait two or three years to see Upper Gor. They will be moving to<lb/>
California this month to take on the over-populated Los Angeles<lb/>
music scene<lb/>
However, just north of I s Angeles is San Francisco, and de-<lb/>
pending on how the scene in Los Angeles looks, "the homeboys<lb/>
from hell" may take their show to the City by the Bay.<lb/>
Bedrosian said to the hvper crowd that Tipper Gor will be<lb/>
representing .room ilk North Carolina out West. And, of course,<lb/>
we would all like to wish Tipper Gor the best of luck!<lb/>
Cool<lb/>
marches<lb/>
on<lb/>
A decade of<lb/>
fashion:<lb/>
By Jill Conti<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
When we look at our parents'<lb/>
old photographs, we always laugh<lb/>
and say "You wore that? Ha! Ha<lb/>
But, just take a look at some of<lb/>
your own old school pictures and<lb/>
see what you wore in the past 10<lb/>
years.<lb/>
If you thought bell-bottomed<lb/>
jeans and big collars wen t ou t wi th<lb/>
the '70s, think again. Believe it or<lb/>
not, the early '80s saw is in much<lb/>
the same shape as the late '70s<lb/>
did.<lb/>
But, we did not suffer in those<lb/>
groovy threads for long. Clothes<lb/>
became tailored?neater. Sud-<lb/>
denly, it became important to have<lb/>
a designer's name across your back<lb/>
pockets.<lb/>
A new breed of humans<lb/>
evolved known as the preppy. The<lb/>
preppy wore pink and green shirts,<lb/>
monogrammed sweaters, deck<lb/>
shoes, and called itself Biff or<lb/>
Muffy. It became important to the<lb/>
preppy creature to look like ev-<lb/>
eryone else. And everyone did.<lb/>
The day shoulder pads burst<lb/>
onto the scene, round-shouldered<lb/>
people everywhere stood up and<lb/>
cheered. The bigger and broader<lb/>
your shoulders, the better. Some<lb/>
found this look flattering; others<lb/>
felt like a caricature of Arnold<lb/>
Schwarzennager.<lb/>
It became a real treat to watch<lb/>
some girl with size nine thighs<lb/>
shoved in a size five mini-skirt try<lb/>
to climb a set of stairs gracefully.<lb/>
The short-trends or "bee-<lb/>
bopping fashion" were around for<lb/>
a quick time but left a lasting<lb/>
impression. Who can forget those<lb/>
wonderful fluorescent green pink,<lb/>
and orange materials that were<lb/>
used to make everything from t-<lb/>
shirts to mittens?<lb/>
And how many young<lb/>
women today will admit to, at one<lb/>
time, owning a piece of clothing<lb/>
that made you a "Madonna wan-<lb/>
nabe<lb/>
The end of the '80s saw influ-<lb/>
ence from our past returning to<lb/>
haunt us, bet we did not seem to<lb/>
care. Tie-dyed shirts, longer skirts<lb/>
and vests once again appeared on<lb/>
the scene, this time with an '80s<lb/>
flair to them.<lb/>
Expressing individuality<lb/>
through clothing became impor-<lb/>
tant. The only complicated factor<lb/>
is that everyone did it the same<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Throughout the '80s, labels<lb/>
were important. From Gloria<lb/>
Vanderbilt to cola companies.<lb/>
What names can we look forward<lb/>
to in our clothing in th '90s? An<lb/>
example?Pee Wee Herman.<lb/>
Enough said. God help us.<lb/>
1<lb/>
By John Tucker<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
As the decade ca me to a close,<lb/>
I found myself reflecting on the<lb/>
1980s and the significant events of<lb/>
my life during this period. To most<lb/>
of uscurrently attending ECU. the<lb/>
'80s have easily been the most<lb/>
influential period of our lives.<lb/>
During the '80s, our growth<lb/>
as human beings reached a physi-<lb/>
cal and mental zenith. The events<lb/>
of these impressionable years<lb/>
socially propelled us into a world<lb/>
we are continually forced to face<lb/>
and accept. In the future, what we<lb/>
experienced will have a major<lb/>
effect on the continuing develop-<lb/>
ment of our generation as a viable<lb/>
force in the world of the 1990's.<lb/>
In the early years of the dec-<lb/>
ade, we encountered the impor-<lb/>
tant transition from childhood to<lb/>
preteensand teens. No longer were<lb/>
we allowed to enjoy the simple<lb/>
freedom of a life without worry<lb/>
under our parents care. As we<lb/>
grew, we learned for the first time<lb/>
the importance of responsibility<lb/>
and how complicated it could<lb/>
make our lives.<lb/>
And then, during the worst<lb/>
part of these teenage years, came<lb/>
the appearance of body hair in<lb/>
unfamiliar places, a phenomena<lb/>
we were later told was called<lb/>
puberty. At first, this major life<lb/>
change was another stick thrown<lb/>
into the fiery turmoil of our lives<lb/>
during teenage growth. But even-<lb/>
tually, this phenomena lead us to<lb/>
an even more important discov-<lb/>
ery of human nature ? sexuality.<lb/>
As the endless problems con-<lb/>
nected with the tide of puberty<lb/>
ebbed away, events in our lives<lb/>
became easier to handle and eas-<lb/>
ier to understand. The overbur-<lb/>
dening early teens gave way to the<lb/>
exciting late teens.<lb/>
We moved from the lows of<lb/>
the middle school blues and being<lb/>
pimply unwanted (we felt) young<lb/>
teens, to the big leagues (we<lb/>
thought), and life in high school.<lb/>
'In the next decade<lb/>
we'll be the ones<lb/>
making things<lb/>
happen. The 1990s<lb/>
are ours, and we<lb/>
own them<lb/>
During this alteration of teen-<lb/>
age life we discovered that living<lb/>
could actually be pleasurable. We<lb/>
had our first important relation-<lb/>
ships outside of the family, and<lb/>
we realized the importance of<lb/>
friends. Most of us fell in love for<lb/>
the first time, and for many, with<lb/>
love, came our first sexual encoun-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
As we grew, we gradually<lb/>
accepted our roles in American<lb/>
culture, defining our interests and<lb/>
developing a comfortable niche in<lb/>
everday social structure. Foot-<lb/>
ball, hot dogs, apple pie and, espe-<lb/>
cially, Chevrolet played important<lb/>
roles in our lives as we began to<lb/>
enjoy luxuries of the adult world,<lb/>
such as the freedom that came<lb/>
with a driver's liscence.<lb/>
Not to say things were all<lb/>
peaches and cream. Many of us<lb/>
had our first brush with one of<lb/>
life's most somber events. We<lb/>
understood death, as a relative<lb/>
passed a way or thebeauty of youth<lb/>
wasnipped in the bud as someone<lb/>
close died in an accident<lb/>
Then we were seniors in high<lb/>
school. We were registering to<lb/>
vote, going to the prom, register-<lb/>
ing for the draft, and making the<lb/>
big decision on what course our<lb/>
life would take when the big day<lb/>
finally came, and we graduated.<lb/>
For all of us here at ECU, our<lb/>
choice was to attend college and<lb/>
further our education. Today, we<lb/>
are still learning and growing,<lb/>
existing on the edge of the true<lb/>
adult world.<lb/>
A close friend summarized the<lb/>
past and the importance our lives<lb/>
will have in the 1990s. He simply<lb/>
stated, The eighties are over. In<lb/>
the next decade we'll be the ones<lb/>
making things happen. The 1990s<lb/>
are ours, and we own them<lb/>
In all, our lives continually<lb/>
changed in the 1980s, as we grew<lb/>
in the most important era in our<lb/>
lives. As citizens of the most<lb/>
powerful nation on earth, the<lb/>
nineties bring to us the possible<lb/>
beginning of a bright future. A<lb/>
future that isours to makeorbreak,<lb/>
bend or shape, in a fashion we<lb/>
deem reasonable. Hopefully, we<lb/>
will have the strength to grasp it,<lb/>
and make the best of the limited<lb/>
time we have.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0017"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
j.<lb/>
12 The East Carolinian, January 9,1990<lb/>
Music creates more than atmosphere<lb/>
By David W. Trevino<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Nothing, absolutely nothing,<lb/>
conies dose to recreating the magic<lb/>
of live music.<lb/>
Discussions about the alleged<lb/>
superiority of digital technology<lb/>
or questions about the varying<lb/>
levels of harmonic distortion be-<lb/>
t ween different electronic compo-<lb/>
nents become ridiculously irrelc-<lb/>
v ant. In comparison to the experi-<lb/>
ence of seeing people , just like<lb/>
you and vet vvondrouslv differ-<lb/>
ent, who can vibrate the air you<lb/>
breathe into, it becomes something<lb/>
bewitchingry divine.<lb/>
The space age technology of<lb/>
the most complex, sophisticated,<lb/>
expensive, quadriphonic system regularly offers opportunities to<lb/>
seeks only to reproduce sound. warm humanity at the hearth of<lb/>
But even the most magnificently jve music. And, unlike the pol-<lb/>
engineered compact disc does not ished, processed, packaged, pro-<lb/>
show human intensity burningon<lb/>
the face of an alto saxophonist<lb/>
blazing through a hot jazz solo.<lb/>
The passionate precision ot a<lb/>
symphony orchestra weaving<lb/>
together all the themes of Mozart's<lb/>
"lupiter" until one takes command<lb/>
and brings the piece to its soaring<lb/>
finale is invisible on the finest<lb/>
cassette tapeor the best long-play-<lb/>
ing record album. The dickering<lb/>
images broadcast by MTV are<lb/>
shadows of the energy radiated<lb/>
by a percussion ensemble as it<lb/>
ignites "The Barbarian<lb/>
The ECU School of Music<lb/>
motcd products which ooze from<lb/>
the radio in your car, the public<lb/>
address system at the mall or the<lb/>
two-inch speaker on your televi-<lb/>
sion, each live performance is an<lb/>
individual, unreproduciblc treas-<lb/>
ure.<lb/>
A power failure on the night<lb/>
of Lynn Booth's graduate saxo-<lb/>
ington, opened that evening's<lb/>
program with a Mozart concerto<lb/>
performed on a stage illuminated<lb/>
by flickering candlelight.<lb/>
That kind of enchantingexpe-<lb/>
nence resonates in your heart for-<lb/>
ever.<lb/>
The students and faculty of<lb/>
the School of Music have spent<lb/>
years practicing to master the in-<lb/>
tricate incandescence within each<lb/>
instrument, and each public per-<lb/>
formance is preceded by hours of<lb/>
Ski lintergreen zvitfi<lb/>
Overtoil's<lb/>
tyo<lb/>
frfr<lb/>
phone recital on March 22, 188 exacting private rehearsal. These<lb/>
left the A Fletcher Music Center talented people labor for some-<lb/>
shrouded in gloomy darkness, but<lb/>
in the recital hall, the show went<lb/>
on.<lb/>
After a brief delay, Booth and<lb/>
her accompanist, Alisa Weather-<lb/>
Professor acts in major movie<lb/>
CUl LOWHEE?Western<lb/>
Carolina University theater pro-<lb/>
fessor Stephen Avers soon will be<lb/>
acting alongside a couple of the<lb/>
biggest names in show business?<lb/>
Ibm Cruise and Robert Duvall.<lb/>
Avers, assistant profeor of<lb/>
speech and theater arts at West-<lb/>
ern, has won a role in the major<lb/>
motion picture "Days of Thun-<lb/>
der and will spend the first 12<lb/>
vecks ot 1990 portraying a mem<lb/>
vt ot a NASCAR racing team pit<lb/>
i rew.<lb/>
In 'Daysof fhunderCruise<lb/>
will star as an ambitious young<lb/>
Indianapolis-style race car driver<lb/>
who breaks into the NASCAR<lb/>
circuit. Duvall will portray the pit<lb/>
crew chief,and Randy Quaid will<lb/>
play the race team owner. Austra<lb/>
lian aaress Nicole Kidman, in her<lb/>
American him debut, has the role<lb/>
ot a doctor who treats Cruise after<lb/>
an accident and falls in love with<lb/>
directed extensively in WCU the- short period of time that it you<lb/>
atrical productions will be work- went for popcorn, you' would have<lb/>
turn.<lb/>
Avers, who has acted and<lb/>
ingprimarily with Duvall in "Days<lb/>
of Thunder<lb/>
"This is an enormous oppor-<lb/>
tunity for the university's theatre<lb/>
department he said. "During<lb/>
some of those 12 weeks, we'll be<lb/>
working side by side for 12 hours<lb/>
adav,sixdaysa week. We'll either<lb/>
hate each other or like each other<lb/>
when were working together in<lb/>
tho conditions<lb/>
U ers hopes to persuade pro-<lb/>
ducers o( Days of Thunder" to<lb/>
allow WCU theatre arts students<lb/>
(Mi to the set to watch the movie<lb/>
being made. "I want them to sen?<lb/>
that it takes three or four or five<lb/>
hours to get one shot lasting 10 to<lb/>
20 seconds. I want them to get to<lb/>
see the way that acting for the<lb/>
camera works and to see why<lb/>
acting for the camera can be such<lb/>
a pain.<lb/>
"When I've been in movies in<lb/>
the past I was on screen for such a<lb/>
IF NURSING IS IN<lb/>
YOUR FUTURE, JOIN<lb/>
AIR FORCE<lb/>
ROTC TODAY.<lb/>
Today's world needs quali-<lb/>
fied nurses. You can beiin an<lb/>
outstanding career now by joining<lb/>
Air Force ROTC<lb/>
You'll be eligible for scholarship assis-<lb/>
tance programs that bring down the cost of<lb/>
college. When you graduate, you'll be recognized,<lb/>
saluted, and respected as an Air Force officer You will be<lb/>
treated as a knowledgeahle. valuable nursing professional<lb/>
Start now. Call<lb/>
LTCOL BILL PATTON<lb/>
757-6597<lb/>
?georgss<lb/>
hair designers<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
756-6200<lb/>
Stanton Square<lb/>
757-0076<lb/>
r<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Washington Square Mall<lb/>
975-1022<lb/>
Congratulations on a<lb/>
Happy New Year!<lb/>
$2.00 OFF<lb/>
All Haircuts<lb/>
with this Ad<lb/>
Expires: 1-22-90<lb/>
probably missed me. That's not<lb/>
the case in this movie<lb/>
Ayers has appeared in four<lb/>
othermovies, including small roles<lb/>
in "NashvilleThe Bermuda<lb/>
TriangleWest of Hester Street"<lb/>
and "Destination America He<lb/>
See Professor, page 13<lb/>
thing more than the opportunity<lb/>
to provide background music at<lb/>
football games; they do it to enrich<lb/>
the texture of the world in which<lb/>
we all live.<lb/>
The gift they offer is available<lb/>
to all; not just those with fine arts<lb/>
degrees in music theory or ma-<lb/>
trons from distinguished Boston<lb/>
families or the residents of Eight-<lb/>
eenth Century Vienna. The treas-<lb/>
uresof Beethoven, Pat Mewthany,<lb/>
Shostavich, Illinois Jacquet, Bach,<lb/>
Billy Joel, Mahler and all the other<lb/>
hues of the musical spectrum are<lb/>
available to anyone.<lb/>
All you have to do is attend<lb/>
one of the many concerts offered<lb/>
bv the ECU School of Music.<lb/>
Sign Up Today For Overton's Sports Center's<lb/>
One Day Snow Ski Trip to Wintergreen, VA.<lb/>
Trips are scheduled for each Wednesday<lb/>
through February.<lb/>
$55.00<lb/>
Includes Rental<lb/>
Equipment, Lift Tickets, Round Trip<lb/>
Transportation, and Continental<lb/>
Breakfast.<lb/>
Sign Up Early for Best Availability!<lb/>
Call 355-7600 for more information<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
M - F<lb/>
.9'<lb/>
9-7<lb/>
Sal. 8 - 6<lb/>
Overtoils v<lb/>
111 Red Banks Rd.<lb/>
Greenville,V<lb/>
The ECU Campus Ministers and The<lb/>
Inter- Christian Council<lb/>
invites you to participate in these<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
Baptist Student Union<lb/>
511 E 10th St. (next to Wendy's)<lb/>
Monday 5:30 (meal &amp; meeting)<lb/>
Thursday 7:00 worship<lb/>
Provide an opportunity personal &amp;<lb/>
community spiritual growth<lb/>
Contact: Bob Clyde<lb/>
Baptist Campus Minister 752 - 4646<lb/>
Kelley Brame, Campus Ministry Intern, 752-4646<lb/>
Mitch Wright. President. 931-9902<lb/>
r<lb/>
Episcopal Campus Ministers<lb/>
5:30pm Wednesdays.St. Paul<lb/>
Episcopal Church 401 E. 4th St.<lb/>
Weekly Eucharist, supper, programdiscus-<lb/>
sion after supper, retreats, service, projects<lb/>
Contact:<lb/>
Mrs. Marty Gartman. Episcopal Campus<lb/>
Ministeries, 752-3482<lb/>
Dr. Jim Smith, ECU Deacon &amp; advisor to<lb/>
group, 757-6936<lb/>
Sarah Poulos, ECU student, 757-0366<lb/>
The Navigators<lb/>
Every Thursday Night 7 - 9prn in<lb/>
Biology 103<lb/>
Singing, sharing. Bible Study and leaching<lb/>
in a family atmosphere<lb/>
Contact:<lb/>
Kenny Jenkins 757-60520523<lb/>
Cheryl Rogers 931-9297<lb/>
Dave McCreary 355-4941<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ<lb/>
7:30pm Brewster C - 103<lb/>
teaching, singing, fun,<lb/>
refreshments<lb/>
Contact:<lb/>
Jeff Brannon 752-9630<lb/>
Hope Hughes 752-8139<lb/>
Tommy Dove 757-1273<lb/>
ECU Christian Fellowship<lb/>
Every Thursday Night at 6pm in the<lb/>
Cultural Center<lb/>
a great time for Prayer, praise, singing, and<lb/>
teaching the word<lb/>
Contacts.<lb/>
Waymonn Burton , Chairperson, 931-7157<lb/>
John Lemon, Vice Chairperson, 931-8176<lb/>
Stephanie Pearson, secretary, 931-8566<lb/>
ftjtes fat<lb/>
Wesfel Christian<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
5:00 Wednesday. Methodist<lb/>
Student Center 501 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Fellowship meal, worship, programs. Bible studies,<lb/>
retreats<lb/>
Contact:<lb/>
The Rev. Dan Earnhardt,<lb/>
Methodist Campus Minister. 758-2030<lb/>
The Rev. Michelle "Mike" Burcher,<lb/>
Presbyterian Campus Minister, 752-7240<lb/>
Rhonda Wooten, President. 931-8560<lb/>
Newman Catholic<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
953 E. 10th St. 757-3760757-1991<lb/>
Mass: Sunday - 11:30am Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Cultural Center;8:30pm Newman Center<lb/>
Religious, social and community - oriented<lb/>
programs to enrich college life<lb/>
Contact<lb/>
Rev. Paul Vaeth, Chaplain 757-1991<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0018"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Social skills open doors for kids<lb/>
The East Carolinian, January 9,1990 13<lb/>
DES MOINES, Iowa (AD<lb/>
She teaches telephone manners to<lb/>
businessmen and social graces to<lb/>
college grads. but etiquette expert<lb/>
Marjebelle Young Stewart says<lb/>
teaching hard-luck kids at a juve-<lb/>
nile home where she once lived<lb/>
gives her the most satisfaction.<lb/>
"These social skills will take<lb/>
them places that money or power<lb/>
won't go she says. "You don't<lb/>
have to have a good upbringing,<lb/>
but you have to have the look of<lb/>
it<lb/>
Stewart, 52, left the home in<lb/>
Council Bluffs, now called Chil<lb/>
dren Square USA, at age 10 and<lb/>
never looked back until appear-<lb/>
ances on talk shows to promote<lb/>
her books or talk about her work<lb/>
made her realize she needed to<lb/>
face her past.<lb/>
1 had all those feelings of<lb/>
desertion, loneliness she recalls.<lb/>
At age r, she and three sib-<lb/>
lings were removed from their<lb/>
parents' custody and placed in<lb/>
wha t was then know n as the Chris-<lb/>
tian Home Association. Their fa-<lb/>
ther had walked out and their<lb/>
mother, a songwriter and inven-<lb/>
tor, couldn't afford to keep the<lb/>
children, she said.<lb/>
They were in the juvenile<lb/>
home for four years. Stewart,<lb/>
remembering the place as "grim<lb/>
didn't return until threeyearsago.<lb/>
"1 was a basket case when I<lb/>
first went back. 1 remember being<lb/>
so frustrated and embarrassed<lb/>
when Donahue or Griffin would<lb/>
say, 'Oh, I'm sure you must have<lb/>
had a wonderful upbringing So 1<lb/>
went back there and confronted<lb/>
my feelings<lb/>
She offered to teach a short<lb/>
course in manners and etiquette,<lb/>
and school director Andy Ross<lb/>
accepted. So residents ? thereare<lb/>
about 80 who stay an average of 18<lb/>
months ? learn the fine art of<lb/>
holding a fork correctly, sending<lb/>
thank-you notes to the hostess,<lb/>
tucking in shirts and closing<lb/>
mouths while chewing.<lb/>
"Wehave troubled kids Ross<lb/>
says. "Some are abused, some get<lb/>
into trouble with the law<lb/>
By the time they arrive at<lb/>
Children Square, their expecta-<lb/>
tions of life are at rock bottom, he<lb/>
says. "But we have high expecta-<lb/>
tions, and kids will respond to<lb/>
that<lb/>
Now that the etiquette pro-<lb/>
gram is well underway, Stewart<lb/>
leaves the teaching to local people,<lb/>
but she attends the graduations.<lb/>
"Manners will take you any-<lb/>
where says Stewart, who now<lb/>
lives in Kewanee, 111 and has<lb/>
written numerous books on the<lb/>
topic, the most recent "Can Mv<lb/>
Bridesmaids Wear Black?"<lb/>
"Etiquette is a set of traffic rules,<lb/>
how to get from one point to an-<lb/>
other gracefully she says. "And<lb/>
they love it. We give them a high<lb/>
that's healthy<lb/>
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Fresh sirlion with mushroom gravy<lb/>
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Country cookin' with mushroom<lb/>
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One-Third Pound Bacon<lb/>
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Ground fresh daily.<lb/>
Catch -of-the-Day$2.99<lb/>
Fine fish for a lite lunch.<lb/>
Chicken Breast Ptatters$2.99<lb/>
Choose from Teriyaki, Barbecue,<lb/>
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The great taste of our dinner steak,<lb/>
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Luncheon-Sized Sirloin Tips$2.99<lb/>
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and peppers or mushroom gravy.<lb/>
Game cards discourage drug use<lb/>
2903 Tenth St.<lb/>
758-2712<lb/>
Astern<lb/>
Sizzun<lb/>
COLUMBIA,S.C(AP) Fans<lb/>
attending the Clomson-Marvland<lb/>
basketball game Saturday after-<lb/>
noon will get more than just a seat<lb/>
to watch the Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference teams battle at Littlejohn<lb/>
 oliseum.<lb/>
rhcy "vn. 111 also recei e a sol ol<lb/>
In trading cards featuring color<lb/>
pictures ot eat h Figer player and<lb/>
coach on the trout and an anti-<lb/>
drug message and a short biogra-<lb/>
ph on the Hip side<lb/>
'We are ust trying to send a<lb/>
message tor all our kids lor<lb/>
everybody to stay drug free<lb/>
said John Seketa sports promo-<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
Continued from page 12<lb/>
also appeared in numerous TV<lb/>
commercials. But he says none ol<lb/>
those previous roles holds a candle<lb/>
to his part in Pavs of Thunder<lb/>
Avers originally auditioned<lb/>
tor the part of the highway patrol-<lb/>
man, a scene in which he would<lb/>
hare hadvnk three or four lines.<lb/>
Bm Pirecwjjuyitt, vho4i<lb/>
reRed "Top"fkin" an'cl "Poverty<lb/>
HillsCop was so impressed with<lb/>
Avers audition that he wanted him<lb/>
tor the role oi a pit crew member.<lb/>
As news of Avers' role has<lb/>
spread across the VY(T campus,<lb/>
faculty members and students<lb/>
have asked him, "Aren't you<lb/>
scared? Afterall,thisisTom Cruise<lb/>
and Robert Duvall<lb/>
"I'm not scared, but I'm not<lb/>
going to go down there and give<lb/>
Robert Duvall acting lessons, ei-<lb/>
ther. I'm a good actor, and it will<lb/>
bea pleasureand an honor to work<lb/>
with people like that, but I'm not<lb/>
scared. I am excited<lb/>
tions director at Clemson. "We<lb/>
know there is a problem in his<lb/>
country, and we want to help try<lb/>
to solve it. We feel this is one way<lb/>
to help solve it<lb/>
The cards also are a promo-<lb/>
tion device.<lb/>
With classes not resuming<lb/>
alter Christmas break until next<lb/>
week. Clemson hopes the cards<lb/>
and other promotions will help<lb/>
bring fans to the game, which<lb/>
begins at 4 p.m.<lb/>
"1'irst, our students are still<lb/>
off campus. It's a good drawing<lb/>
card for us Seketa said. "Second,<lb/>
we have approximately 200 high<lb/>
school cheerleaders coming to the<lb/>
game who will be the cheerlead-<lb/>
ers for the game.<lb/>
"Third, because our student<lb/>
body is not on campus, we did a<lb/>
mailing to all high schools in a<lb/>
two-hour radius of Clemson, in-<lb/>
viting them out Seketa said<lb/>
during a telephone interview Fri-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The first 2,000 high school<lb/>
students will be admitted free to<lb/>
the game, he said.Seketa estimated<lb/>
some 300 high sch(Hls received<lb/>
the mailing.<lb/>
"With these high school stu-<lb/>
dentscomingin Seketa said, "we<lb/>
thought it would bea good idea to<lb/>
hand thecardsout because they're<lb/>
the ones the message is for<lb/>
The cards feature head-and<lb/>
shoulder pictures oi the plavers,<lb/>
with their name, number, year and<lb/>
position. On the back, a short bi-<lb/>
Ography of the player or coach is<lb/>
included along with "Tips from<lb/>
the Tigers which feature various<lb/>
anti-drug messages.<lb/>
A total of 2,500 sots of the cards<lb/>
will be given out Saturday.<lb/>
This is the second year<lb/>
Clemson has handed out the cards.<lb/>
The idea started throe years ago<lb/>
when the ACC's four North Caro-<lb/>
lina schools handed out similar<lb/>
cards at games.<lb/>
Last year, all eight conference<lb/>
schools ? at the request of the<lb/>
league office ? gave out the cards,<lb/>
Seketa said.<lb/>
"1 haven't heard of anv other<lb/>
conference doing this he said.<lb/>
"But I have heard of individual<lb/>
schools doing it<lb/>
Seketa said he received 15 to<lb/>
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20calls after Clemson gaveout the<lb/>
cards last year from people who<lb/>
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weren't the only ones who wanted<lb/>
the cards.<lb/>
"1 ?ist year, cill the guys on the<lb/>
team wanted some ot the cards<lb/>
Seketa said. "They would ask the<lb/>
manager or the trainer It's such a<lb/>
unique idea. It's sort of like having<lb/>
your own Topps baseball card<lb/>
Seketa has heard from the<lb/>
Tigers this year mainly because he<lb/>
just got the cards late Thursday.<lb/>
Along with giving the cards<lb/>
out at the Maryland game,<lb/>
Clemson will give the cards to its<lb/>
plavers when they go to local high<lb/>
schools to talk about staving a wav<lb/>
from drugs.<lb/>
This year, Carolina Pride, a<lb/>
meat company that paid for the<lb/>
printing of the cards, will pass out<lb/>
an additional 2,501) sets of the<lb/>
cards, Seketa said.<lb/>
But do the cards actually do<lb/>
anv good? Seketa believes so.<lb/>
"If you do help just one per-<lb/>
son he said, "1 think it's worth-<lb/>
while<lb/>
Upcoming January Entertainment:<lb/>
Jan. Thurs. 11<lb/>
Naugahyde<lb/>
Chihuahua's<lb/>
Jan. I-n 19<lb/>
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Bad Bob &amp; The<lb/>
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Jan. Sat. 13<lb/>
The Stegmonds<lb/>
Jan. Fn 26<lb/>
The Mood<lb/>
Jan. Sat. 27<lb/>
TheNcw Deli's 8th Anniversity Bash<lb/>
Featuring:<lb/>
 In Limbo<lb/>
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 Flat Duo Jets<lb/>
Great beer specials<lb/>
WZMB Live Remote<lb/>
Door Prizes<lb/>
Doors open at 6:30 pm<lb/>
Advance tickets $6.<lb/>
at the door $7.<lb/>
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I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0019"/><lb/>
14 The East Carolinian, January 9,1990<lb/>
Prototype shatters public perception<lb/>
Electric car outpaces Nissan model<lb/>
. . r-i . ? 11 nnn. TVin Imn-irt tvimltl uspa n<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Gen-<lb/>
eral Motors Corp. unveiled a<lb/>
prototype electric car it says out-<lb/>
paces some ?as-burning sports<lb/>
cars and runs twice as far between<lb/>
charges than previous electric<lb/>
models<lb/>
The two-seater Impact, which<lb/>
tapers at the rear like a Citroen,<lb/>
can travel 120 miles at 55 mph<lb/>
before recharging and zooms from<lb/>
0 to 60 mph in eight seconds, GM<lb/>
Chairman Roger Smith said at a<lb/>
news conference Wednesday.<lb/>
"The public perceives electric<lb/>
vehicles as golf carts Smith said.<lb/>
"The Impact absolutely shatters<lb/>
that perception<lb/>
GM showed a film in which<lb/>
the Impact outpaced a Mada<lb/>
Miata and a Nissan 300 ZX on a<lb/>
level-ground acceleration test.<lb/>
John Zwerner, GM's execu-<lb/>
tive director of advanced product<lb/>
engineering, said the prototype<lb/>
has never been crash-tested or<lb/>
passed other government tests and<lb/>
would go into production only if<lb/>
extensive tests find a market for it.<lb/>
Boasting a top speed of 75<lb/>
mph, the Impact can be charged<lb/>
halfway in as little as half an hour<lb/>
and almost fully recharged in six<lb/>
hours, GM said. Most electric<lb/>
vehicles need up to 12 hours for a<lb/>
full recharging.<lb/>
Decade<lb/>
Electricca ire virtually non-<lb/>
polluting and are under close scru-<lb/>
tiny in Los Angeles by environ-<lb/>
mental officials who are enacting<lb/>
stringent air quality rules.<lb/>
He declined to reveal how<lb/>
much GM had spent developing<lb/>
the vehicle or to estimate a price,<lb/>
although he said it would have to<lb/>
be competitive in price with exist-<lb/>
ing, internal combustion-powered<lb/>
cars.<lb/>
A person driving a gas-pow-<lb/>
ered car in Los Angeles 10,000<lb/>
miles a year might now spend<lb/>
about $30 a month on fuel and<lb/>
another $10 on maintenance,<lb/>
Smith said.<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
The Impact would use a maxi-<lb/>
mum of12 per month in electric-<lb/>
ity under the same conditions, but<lb/>
would still cost about twice as<lb/>
much to operate because the bat-<lb/>
teries must be replaced every<lb/>
20,(KX) miles, adding another $70 a<lb/>
month to operating costs, Smith<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Zwerner said that withinthree<lb/>
years, improvements in batteries<lb/>
may make it possible for the Im-<lb/>
pact to double its battery life to<lb/>
40,000 miles, which would make<lb/>
operating costs nearly equal to<lb/>
those of gas-powered cars.<lb/>
The 120-mile range is not<lb/>
expected to be improved much,<lb/>
officials said.<lb/>
?Eddie Murphv, master of stand up comedy,<lb/>
made us laugh until we cried on "Saturday Night<lb/>
live' and then divided hecould act and singas well,<lb/>
?loan Rivers, who was obnoxiously funny for a<lb/>
while, co-hosted "TheTonight Show was fired and<lb/>
now can get on vour nerves during her very own<lb/>
daytime talk show Could you shut up. Tlease?"<lb/>
Trine-ess Di and Fergi helped us believe in fairy<lb/>
tales, while showing us that princesses and duch-<lb/>
esses are human too.<lb/>
Stephen King, alias Richard Bachman, was such<lb/>
,i prolific writer of honor novels and screen plays<lb/>
that he needed two identities to get the work done.<lb/>
?William lVrrv. alias The Refrigerator" was<lb/>
he a defensive lineman, a ninningb.uk. a tight end or<lb/>
a back-up singer"<lb/>
Mke lYson. the undisputed, heavy weight<lb/>
boxing champion of the world, made multitudes of<lb/>
newspaper and magazine headlines when he lost in<lb/>
a game of hearts to actress Robin Givens.<lb/>
MORE PEOPLE? Freddy Kruger. lason<lb/>
Spuds Mckenzie. Garfield. E1 .Mr. T .Rambo.<lb/>
. .Max Ileadroom 1 he Keatons. TheCosbys. .bat<lb/>
Man. . Noriega.<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
 Health spas and gymnasiums abounded.<lb/>
? Aerobics became the first and most popular<lb/>
way lo shape up, with tast paced walking coming in<lb/>
dose second.<lb/>
?First there was the lane Fonda Home Workout<lb/>
video and then a rash of videos began to appear on<lb/>
the video Stores' shelves, lanet lones, Elle McPhear-<lb/>
son and numerous others homed in on this profitable<lb/>
enterprise.<lb/>
?Reeboks stepped into the athletic shoe limelight<lb/>
followed bv Avia, L. A. Gear and others.<lb/>
?Weight Watchers and Nutra System? basked<lb/>
m the benefits from the health-crazed decade.<lb/>
'People no longer had to wait for the summer<lb/>
sun to get that golden skin. With the invention of the<lb/>
tanning bed came the year-long tan, tanning salons<lb/>
and premature wrinkling.<lb/>
And if vour teeth were boring or weren't white<lb/>
enough, you could always decorate them with intri-<lb/>
cate gold caps or whiten them with Epismilc.<lb/>
?The incurable AIDS virus tragically claimed<lb/>
thousands of lives and caused all human beings to<lb/>
rethink their morals. However, the condom business<lb/>
flourished.<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
?Video games and arcades became extremely<lb/>
popular among all age groups and served as plots<lb/>
and scenes for several movies.<lb/>
?First there was Atari?. Do you remember what<lb/>
it looked like? And those wonderful games: Break-<lb/>
out, Space Invaders, Asteroids, and Tank. Then came<lb/>
lntelevision?, Nintendo?and most recently,Sega?.<lb/>
?Nintendo?. Everybody had to have one. If you<lb/>
didn't have one or you couldn't afford to buy the<lb/>
game cartridges, no problem, you could just pop<lb/>
over to the nearest video rental store and rent them.<lb/>
 As VCRs became more affordable, video rental<lb/>
stores nourished, and the movie industry protited<lb/>
enormously You could rent movies from grocery<lb/>
stores convenience shops, and just about anywhere<lb/>
merchants could pack them in<lb/>
?MTV revolutionized the music industry and<lb/>
became the largest, most popular cable program<lb/>
worldwide Its first broadcast was on 8-8-81.<lb/>
'People lost interest in the mind boggling, multi-<lb/>
colored puzzle, Rubik sC ube. which spawned sev-<lb/>
eral similar puzzles, )ust as quickly as they had<lb/>
become fascinated with it.<lb/>
?Dungeonsand 1 Wagons, .1 board and dice game<lb/>
that required in-depth participation, captured and<lb/>
ignited the imaginations of every pla ver, sometimes<lb/>
failing to release them.<lb/>
MORE INNOVATIONS AND FADS?Com-<lb/>
pact Disk players. . Fax machines. Personal Com-<lb/>
puters. . Cordless telephones .Mini televisions,<lb/>
recorders and telephones. Walkman radios. . .Car<lb/>
signs "Baby on Board . .Cabbage Patch dolls. .<lb/>
.Break (.lancing. . .Punk rock. .Swatch watches. .<lb/>
.lzod and Polo everything. . San Fernando Valley. .<lb/>
.Disposable cameras.<lb/>
MORALS<lb/>
?After the drug tilted '70s, a burnt-out America<lb/>
adopted the "Just siv no motto and decided to try<lb/>
to go drug free.<lb/>
?MADD, Mothers Against Drunk Driving,<lb/>
SADD, Students Against Drunk Dnving,andRADD,<lb/>
Rock Against Drunk Driving, were organized and<lb/>
most everybody started to listen. Even Beer compa-<lb/>
nies such as Budweiser and COOTS began to partici-<lb/>
pate in the fight and aired commercials promoting<lb/>
wise drinking habits.<lb/>
?The AIDS vims deterred sexual promiscuity.<lb/>
What will the '90s bring? Probably more expen-<lb/>
sive things for us to waste our money on, and more<lb/>
fashions for us to fill our closets with. Will fat and<lb/>
pale be in? Will we find a cure for cancer and AIDS?<lb/>
Who will we laugh at and who will we model our-<lb/>
selves after?<lb/>
Investigation<lb/>
brings truth<lb/>
to a Florida<lb/>
legend<lb/>
1 AKFCITY. Fla.(AP) ?Old<lb/>
less may lust be more than a leg-<lb/>
end<lb/>
A skeleton wearing old shoes<lb/>
discovered in an underwater cave<lb/>
is believed by many to be the<lb/>
remains of Jess Preston, the sub-<lb/>
ject of 50-year-old lore in this north<lb/>
Florida town.<lb/>
While investigators have yet<lb/>
to confirm an identity, they be-<lb/>
lieve a tale of a man drowning in<lb/>
the spring may prove true, Sheriff<lb/>
TomTramel said Thursday.<lb/>
Two divers in "Old Jess Hole"<lb/>
near the Sante Fe River found the<lb/>
skeleton<lb/>
Shoes found on the skeleton<lb/>
are about 50 years old, said Co-<lb/>
lumbia County sheriff's Lt. Jim<lb/>
Wells.<lb/>
Some residents say the man<lb/>
disappeared near the spot where<lb/>
the skeleton was found. His coat<lb/>
was found nearby, and relatives<lb/>
and friends held a funeral service<lb/>
by the deep spring.<lb/>
Investigators arc awaiting a<lb/>
report from forensic anthropolo-<lb/>
gist William Maples. A prelimi-<lb/>
nary report indicated the skeleton<lb/>
was that of a white male 5-foot-7<lb/>
to 5-foot-8 who may have suffered<lb/>
from Down's syndrome or a re-<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0020"/><lb/>
(jjfoe East Glaroltnian<lb/>
Page 25<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
January 9,199C<lb/>
Turnovers<lb/>
cost ECU<lb/>
big win<lb/>
By kristen Halberg<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
1 Msappointment lingered<lb/>
throughout Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Monday night as the Pirates fell to<lb/>
lv'S? A champion George<lb/>
Mason, 63 56 in front of a crowd of<lb/>
near!) 4,500<lb/>
fhe Pirates had hoped to rec<lb/>
oncile .in embarrassing loss to<lb/>
(leorge Mason earlier in the sea<lb/>
son a 79 o 1 final .it the<lb/>
Chaminade Christmas Classic.<lb/>
its .i game we needed to win<lb/>
it home, ECU coach Mike Steele<lb/>
satd We re taking it very badly.<lb/>
It s a game we should have won.<lb/>
1 urnovers were .i major fac<lb/>
tor in the outcome .is George<lb/>
Mason scored 17 ol 63 points ofl<lb/>
tumov ers (AH v om<lb/>
ttiM onl nine total turno ers<lb/>
I r w as tlir different e in the<lb/>
in Steele said<lb/>
' Vsptte the score, the Pirates<lb/>
I an intense game hustling<lb/>
? minating the boards<lb/>
;houtthegame ECl had JO<lb/>
unds on the night 18 of them<lb/>
being in the first half, rhe Patriots<lb/>
ih managed seven rebounds in<lb/>
the first hall as the) ended with 19<lb/>
? the game<lb/>
It wasanawful game to lose<lb/>
Steele commented. "We did eve-<lb/>
? thing we needed to do. It was .i<lb/>
frustrating game because we<lb/>
I laved hard enough and played<lb/>
mpetitively<lb/>
' he Pirates showed potential<lb/>
tor a victory in the first half, when<lb/>
Lady Patriots<lb/>
fall to ECU<lb/>
Gray carves path with<lb/>
24 point performance<lb/>
By Dave Reichelt<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
led the Patriots V 25<lb/>
halftime I ho Pirates took a<lb/>
?it<lb/>
ECU'S TimBrov i to the basket a<lb/>
action in Minges im<lb/>
the CAA Phol by Angi i I :?"<lb/>
I i rgeM i i<lb/>
lost ? ? 'ati<lb/>
ECU PI ?<lb/>
ith inM ? la) sCAA<lb/>
8 overall 1-1 m<lb/>
J<lb/>
Strong defensive play in tho<lb/>
final minutes helped tho Lady<lb/>
Piratos of ECU to their first CAA<lb/>
victory Monday night as they<lb/>
defeated the Lady Patriots of<lb/>
George Mason 78-68 in Patriot<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
unior forward Sarah Gray<lb/>
poured in 24 points (12-20 from<lb/>
the field) and nine rebounds to<lb/>
pace the Lady Pirates to their<lb/>
seventh win ol the season. Gray<lb/>
led all scorers, but suffered an<lb/>
injury with five minutes remain<lb/>
ingand wastakenoutof thegame<lb/>
? I'm happy to win our fr<lb/>
conference game head coach Pat<lb/>
Pierson said following the game<lb/>
"Especially when it came on the<lb/>
road<lb/>
(iray had 14 first halt points<lb/>
that helped the 1 ady Pirates build<lb/>
a 33-21 lead with 4:51 remaining<lb/>
But a 16-4 run by the 1 ady Patri-<lb/>
ots, and several key turnovers by<lb/>
the 1 d Pirates led to a loss ol<lb/>
momentum just before halftime.<lb/>
Antoinette Johnson sank a three-<lb/>
pointer tor GMU withonesecond<lb/>
remaining to end the GMl rally<lb/>
and tie the score at 37 during inter-<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
After trading several baskets.<lb/>
Sarah Gray<lb/>
the 1 ady Pirates regained the lead<lb/>
at the 17:25 mark ol the second<lb/>
halt when Iray made two ol her<lb/>
ten second half points ECL gained<lb/>
a comfortable67 57 lead as senior<lb/>
guard Irish 1 lamilton hit a short<lb/>
jumper with just under 10 min-<lb/>
utes remaining in the game.<lb/>
1 lowever, the Lady Patriots<lb/>
staged yet another comeback<lb/>
when Karen Bruining and fresh<lb/>
man forward I auraTetersparked<lb/>
See Cray, page 17<lb/>
rnnd tor mrrrrer time with a little<lb/>
o er 14 minutes remaining in the<lb/>
first halt when senior Heed 1 ose<lb/>
hit a three point jump shot 1 ose<lb/>
had 11 points in the game, and<lb/>
needsonlv 105 more points before<lb/>
reaching the 1,000 point mark in<lb/>
his tour vear career with the Pi<lb/>
rates<lb/>
1 he Patriots rallied late in the<lb/>
first half as they regained their<lb/>
' id with a littleovor tour minutes<lb/>
? pla) Robert Dykes stole the<lb/>
ball scored on a layup and was<lb/>
fouled by rim Brown Aftersink-<lb/>
ine the tree throw, the Patriots<lb/>
The votes are in; Miami wins championship<lb/>
Bv Kick Warner<lb/>
1 he Assiu iated Press<lb/>
supporters ol loot<lb/>
broad astei<lb/>
1 lurrii anc: piel 1 th<lb/>
team.<lb/>
'lt'svet v lepn<lb/>
moments after le<lb/>
Dame finished se<lb/>
tvau: heat the Irish 27-10. puter he said. "You get so many<lb/>
'? .?? tennisErickson points for even game you win<lb/>
and so many points for every game<lb/>
he<lb/>
lt ?<lb/>
1 feel<lb/>
were up.1: 21<lb/>
he two teams exchanged the<lb/>
see Mason, page 17<lb/>
ball playofl couldn't have asked<lb/>
fora finer finish 1 wo great teams<lb/>
Miami and Notre Dame triggered cxceptionallybadforo<lb/>
one great debate over the No 1<lb/>
team and how it should be s<lb/>
lee ted<lb/>
Miami won the national cham<lb/>
pionship in the Associated Press<lb/>
poll, but otre 1 ame 11 ach Lou<lb/>
1 loltz thinks the sports n ritersand<lb/>
SinccMiamiand Notn I' tme<lb/>
each lost one game Holtsaid the<lb/>
Irish should ave won the national<lb/>
title because the played the most<lb/>
difficult schedule in the country.<lb/>
But Miami supportt rs argue that<lb/>
the Muni, a nes deserve to be No 1<lb/>
says the debate w ill a i derate the<lb/>
nun el rd a championship<lb/>
of! in 1 i ision i <lb/>
o question about it he<lb/>
said. I realh believe down the<lb/>
road there w ill be a playofl sys-<lb/>
tem<lb/>
a <lb/>
your opponent wins<lb/>
I loltz said the national title is<lb/>
mythical because it isn't decided<lb/>
on the held.<lb/>
"There isn't a best team he<lb/>
said. "There isn't a best team on<lb/>
dto sa) whether each play. We weren't better than<lb/>
he favored a playoff, but he oi- Colorado on evervplay. It's an up<lb/>
tered another alternative. and down thing, but you look at it<lb/>
" rhe national championship over the long run, who was the<lb/>
should be determined by com- most consistent. That'show I look<lb/>
at it.<lb/>
Miami won its third national<lb/>
championship in six years by<lb/>
beating Alabama 33-25 in the<lb/>
Sugar bowl on Monday night.<lb/>
Notre Pame defeated No. 1 Colo-<lb/>
rado : 1 -6 in the Orange Bowl, but<lb/>
it wasn't enough to boost the Irish<lb/>
to the top even though it was their<lb/>
eighth victory over a bowl team.<lb/>
Miami also was chosen No. 1<lb/>
in United Press International's<lb/>
coaches pill, and bv I ISA Today-<lb/>
See Irish, page lb<lb/>
Pirates sink Navy<lb/>
fo r ft rstco nfe re nee<lb/>
win of season<lb/>
Bv Dave<lb/>
Staff<lb/>
MeCreary<lb/>
Writer<lb/>
A stolen in boundspassand a<lb/>
layup by E( U's lettrev Whitaker<lb/>
proved to be what the Pirates<lb/>
needed to spark tire Saturday<lb/>
night at Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Whitaker's basket at the<lb/>
buzzer gave the Pirates a 37-30<lb/>
halftime lead and set the momen-<lb/>
tum as the Pirates sank Navy's<lb/>
Midshipmen 75-55 in their first<lb/>
i olonial Athletic Association<lb/>
game this year.<lb/>
"I thought Whitaker's play<lb/>
was the biggest of the game<lb/>
Pirate coach Mike Steele said. "It<lb/>
was probably as big a play at the<lb/>
end ol .t bait as we've had this<lb/>
season<lb/>
l sing team effort with tour<lb/>
players m double figures, E I<lb/>
snapped a two game losing streak<lb/>
and evened their overall record to<lb/>
7-7 on the season.<lb/>
Navy led by as many as seven<lb/>
points early in the game, but the<lb/>
Piratespiinedmomentumandthe<lb/>
Midshipmen flew into a tailspin<lb/>
ECU extended their lead to 12 in<lb/>
thesotond half when IkeC opeland<lb/>
cored underneath and Gus Hill<lb/>
((inverted a three point play.<lb/>
Navy followed w ith a buckel but<lb/>
EC I scored two more tunes to go<lb/>
ahead b) 1 and from that point,<lb/>
never relinquished a comfortable<lb/>
lead<lb/>
It was our besl game so tar<lb/>
c opeland said, following a 14<lb/>
point performance, including a<lb/>
team high sex en rebounds<lb/>
"We ve worked reall) hard in<lb/>
practice the List few days and it<lb/>
paid off<lb/>
Navy started the game with<lb/>
tire in their eyes, hitting seven oi<lb/>
nine from the field, in luding a<lb/>
pair ol ; pointers, to take a 16 9<lb/>
lead at the 15 13 mark ol the first<lb/>
halt.<lb/>
"I was lootemed at first be<lb/>
cause we really pra ti ed hard this<lb/>
week Steele said "We knew<lb/>
they'd shoot the ball well, but our<lb/>
guys plaved consistently and<lb/>
didn't panic (when the) fell be<lb/>
hind) "<lb/>
I he Pirates indeed did not<lb/>
panu as the) found their range<lb/>
with a timely 17 footer from Reed<lb/>
Lose, a short jumper from<lb/>
Gopeiand and some tenacious<lb/>
See Tailspin, page 17<lb/>
IRS plans ski trip<lb/>
in early February<lb/>
By jeannette Roth<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
Oh, how time flies!<lb/>
t (;u head i ich Mi<lb/>
Pirates  55 &amp;A ?<lb/>
seum I heleambroke a<lb/>
by Garret! KiMian t i (<lb/>
? ete checks the scoreboard during the<lb/>
? N ivy Saturday night m Minges Coh-<lb/>
?game losing streak with the win (Photo<lb/>
? ib<lb/>
The Department ol Intramu-<lb/>
ral Recreational Services is offer-<lb/>
ing you a "Passport to Adven-<lb/>
ture" with a variety of workshops<lb/>
and adventure trips highlighting<lb/>
the spring of 1990.<lb/>
To start out the semester of<lb/>
activities, and Outdoor Smorgas-<lb/>
bord will be offered free of charge<lb/>
for all faculty, staff and students<lb/>
Wednesday, January 24 at 7:00 pm<lb/>
in 113 Memorial Gymnasium. This<lb/>
special event will feature outdoor<lb/>
cooking techniques and food<lb/>
sampling.<lb/>
TheORC (Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Center) workshop schedule is<lb/>
highlighted by several unique<lb/>
sessions. An outdoor photogra-<lb/>
phy session will be held Feb. 7.<lb/>
Canoeing and kayaking<lb/>
classes will also be offered during<lb/>
the month of February. These<lb/>
workshops are designed to intro-<lb/>
duce participants to basic skills<lb/>
needed to further enjoy the sport.<lb/>
I'he workshop also serves as a<lb/>
prerequisite clinic for an ORC<lb/>
excursion on the Cape Fear River<lb/>
during the month of March.<lb/>
Outdoor Cooking, Backpack-<lb/>
ing, Bicycle Touring and<lb/>
Windsurfing round out the work-<lb/>
shop schedule. It interested in any<lb/>
oi these sessions, IM-REC Serv-<lb/>
ices distributes information re-<lb/>
garding these workshops in 204<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
? To begin the 1990 dven-<lb/>
ture ripSeries, IM REC Services<lb/>
is sponsoring an ORC Come and<lb/>
Ski Weekend Snowskiing excur-<lb/>
sion to Wintergreen, Virginia.<lb/>
February 3-4 are prime ski days<lb/>
presenting a challenge tor every<lb/>
level ol skier Costs tor this trip<lb/>
include transportation, lodging,<lb/>
lift tickets, and an Apres ski party.<lb/>
Ski rentals are $20 w hile food<lb/>
will be additional, The package<lb/>
will be $99 tor students m $110<lb/>
tor faculty staff, guests ITiere is<lb/>
a limited numberof spaces. If inter<lb/>
ested,call 757-6387 or 757-6911 for<lb/>
more details.<lb/>
? Begin the new decade with<lb/>
fitness run through IRS array of<lb/>
wellness programs tor faculty<lb/>
staff and students. Aerobic fitness<lb/>
classes areoltered daily, geared at<lb/>
full body maintenance Classes<lb/>
include: aerobics, circuit training,<lb/>
low impact aerobics, beginning<lb/>
fitness, Hi-lo. Interval training,<lb/>
toning and bellv busters.<lb/>
Supra Class is making a re-<lb/>
turn appearance in 1990 each<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday from<lb/>
6:30-800 pm Twelve classes cost<lb/>
$10 for students and $20 for fac-<lb/>
ultystaff.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0021"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
16 The East Carolinian January 9, 1990<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Baltimore set to host 1993<lb/>
All-Star game<lb/>
Baltimore will be the sito of the 1993 All-Star<lb/>
Game, officials said Thursday. Team officials hope to<lb/>
have the midsoason baseball classic played in Camden<lb/>
Yards, the city'sproposed stadium, which isexpected<lb/>
to he ready bv the QIJ2 season Baltimore last hosted<lb/>
the major league's all-star event in 1958.<lb/>
USA prepares for World<lb/>
Cup soccer<lb/>
The U.S. National Soccer team opens training<lb/>
camp Friday at La folia, Calif as it prepares tor its<lb/>
tirst appearance in 40 years at the World Cup. The<lb/>
team will practice through Ian IS and compete next<lb/>
at the Marlboro Cup in Miami Feb. 2 and 4.<lb/>
Dravecy undergoes surgery<lb/>
Irish<lb/>
22b4 seconds broke the almost 10-year-old mark of<lb/>
15:345 held bv Margaret Groos. 1 lor time at the three-<lb/>
mile mark was the second fastest time indoors by a<lb/>
woman at that distance.<lb/>
Coghlan win streak<lb/>
continues with third win<lb/>
Irishman Eamonn Coghlan won his third race in<lb/>
nine days since coming out ot retirement. Coghlan,<lb/>
37, who returned to racing last week after he retired<lb/>
in 1987, took the lead in the final 100 meters ot the mile<lb/>
race at the Dartmouth Relays in 1 lanover, N.l L,after<lb/>
he and Bill Mullanev had run stride tor stride Cogh<lb/>
Ian finished in 4:05.9. Mullanev finished in 4:07.58.<lb/>
Race horse auction begins<lb/>
Goodbye I lalo. one ot horse racing's leading fe-<lb/>
males, willbcauctioned at kt.vnoland'sanuar I iorsc<lb/>
ot All Ages Sale, which begins today I lu- throe da)<lb/>
sale also includes Wishing Well, dam ol the 1989<lb/>
Pave Dravecky, 33, the former San Francisco Kentucky Derby and Breeders Cup Classic winner<lb/>
Giants player who staged a remarkable comeback Sunday Silence. Goodbye Halo is one ol the 1,048<lb/>
after cancer surgery on his pitching arm, has under- horses and five stallion shares catalogued tor the<lb/>
gone surgery again to remove another tumor from his auction,<lb/>
left arm. Dravecky retired in October alter doctors<lb/>
found the tumor. Officials said it will be several days<lb/>
before they know if it is cancerous.<lb/>
South Africans meet with<lb/>
Olympic Conmitte<lb/>
International OrrtpTfEomniittee officials will<lb/>
UVA's O'Brien interviews<lb/>
with Navy for new job<lb/>
Navy officials met with I niversityol irginia as<lb/>
sistant coach Tom O'Brien, the fourth candidate inter-<lb/>
ested in the job, according to published reports<lb/>
Navy officials have already met with former<lb/>
Detriot Lionscoach Darryl Rogers, William and Mary<lb/>
coach Jimmye Laycock and Marshall coach George<lb/>
Chaump. Navy's head coach Elliot Uzelac was fired<lb/>
last month.<lb/>
U.S. swimmers win at<lb/>
Australian meet<lb/>
Three L ,S. sw iminers took tophonois.it antntei<lb/>
national meet at Perth, Australia Sunda) ulie Koli<lb/>
won the women's 400-meter individual medle in 4<lb/>
minutes 54.57 seconds and Summer Sanders won t lu<lb/>
women's 200-meter butterfly in 2:13.60. Teammate<lb/>
The committee will meet with 22 stadium and arena Bert Pippengerwon the men's 200-meter butterfly in<lb/>
officials around the country. The world governing 2:01.59.<lb/>
body will choose 8 to i? s.tos May fair wins golf pro-am<lb/>
Zephyrs get minority Owner pro golfer Bill Mayfairand his amateur partner<lb/>
Denver Zephyrs owner John Dikeou got a boost Mark Sollenberger won the Bob SimondsPing Pro<lb/>
in his bid to bring major league baseball to Denver Scratch Invitational tournament at Scottsdale, An;<lb/>
when theCoors Brewing Co. became minority owner The two shot 9-under par 63 in the final round to<lb/>
of the team. The agreement will also makeCoorsthe finish at 20-under lat Troon Goll Qub. In second<lb/>
minority owner of any futureexpansion team. The place were pro Bob lord and Ins amateur partnei<lb/>
Zephyrs are a Milwaukee brewers Class AAA farm Kevin King, who combined tor a 65 198.<lb/>
Hall of Famer hospitalized<lb/>
"BasebalfHall ot Famei Roy Campanella was in<lb/>
serious but stable condition Sunday at Northridj<lb/>
Hospital in Northridge, Calif, fhe 68-year-old former<lb/>
catcher is being treated for complications from diarx<lb/>
tes and respiratory problems from a cold<lb/>
meet with South African (jrmpicCommittee mem<lb/>
bcrs on Tuesday in Paris &amp;w South African group<lb/>
has been unrecognised by the lOt tor 20 years. Offi-<lb/>
cials hope the meeting will result in relaxing the<lb/>
sports boycott and posSmlv speed up removing apart<lb/>
heid.<lb/>
World Cup officials tour<lb/>
USA for future sites<lb/>
The World Cup Organizing Committee begins a<lb/>
10-week tour of the 0SA tor possible sites to hold<lb/>
soccer matches for the 1994 World Cup tournament.<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Glaffveotinnoo Fifteen<lb/>
vacancy in Atlanta<lb/>
Houston Oilers coach Jerry Glanville met Thurs-<lb/>
day with the Atlanta Falcons to discuss their coaching<lb/>
vacancy. Glanville, whose job is in jeopardy with<lb/>
Houston, has one year left on his contract with Hous-<lb/>
ton. He met Wednesday with Oilers owner Bud<lb/>
Adams. Glanville earlier met with Falcons president<lb/>
Rankin Smith r. and other club officials.<lb/>
Dolphins owner Robbie<lb/>
dies in Miami<lb/>
foe Robbie, 73, owner ot the National Football<lb/>
League's Miami Dolphins, died Sunday at a Miami<lb/>
area hospital. Robbie's death was confirmed by his<lb/>
son Paul and Dolphins coach Don Shula. Robbie,<lb/>
despite denials by himself and management, ap-<lb/>
peared to be in ill health and, was reportedly seen at a<lb/>
Dolphin home game in a wheelchair.<lb/>
5,000-meter record broken<lb/>
The women's5,000-meters world indoor record<lb/>
was shattered bv almost 12 seconds Sunday bv Lynn<lb/>
Jennings of Newmarket, N.H. at the Dartmouth Re-<lb/>
lays at Hanover, N.H. Jennings' timeot 15minutes,<lb/>
Continued from page 15<lb/>
coaches' poll, and by USA<lb/>
roday-CNN. Notre Dame was<lb/>
dropped to third, one point be-<lb/>
hind Florida State,by URL<lb/>
I lolt saidWebeat the ACC<lb/>
champ, we beat the Big Ten champ,<lb/>
we beat thePac- I0champ,webeat<lb/>
the Big Eight champ and we beat<lb/>
the top two independents in the<lb/>
Fast.<lb/>
"I don't think anybody has<lb/>
ever played a tougher schedule<lb/>
than we did this season<lb/>
The 1 lurricanest 11-1) jumped<lb/>
from No. 2 to No. 1, Notre Dame<lb/>
(12-1) rose from fourth to second<lb/>
andv"olorado(lM)felltoNo.4in<lb/>
the final poll.<lb/>
Miami received 39 first-place<lb/>
votes and 1,474 points, with Notre j<lb/>
Dame getting 19 first-place votes<lb/>
and 1,452 points. The other two<lb/>
first-place votes went to No. 3<lb/>
Honda State.<lb/>
The 22-point margin was the<lb/>
second-closest since the A?began<lb/>
its postseason poll in 19f8.<lb/>
Brigham Young edged Washing-<lb/>
ton by 20 points at the end of the<lb/>
1C?S4 season.<lb/>
"There is no doubt in my mind<lb/>
that we re the best team in the<lb/>
country Ericksonsaid. "Regard-<lb/>
less of what an vono else says, we're<lb/>
No. I<lb/>
I lorida State, which won 10<lb/>
straight after starting the season<lb/>
with two losses, moved up two<lb/>
spots alter routing Nebraska 41<lb/>
17 m the Fiesta Howl Michigan,<lb/>
w hichentered the Rose Bowl with<lb/>
an outside shot at the national title,<lb/>
dropped from third to seventh<lb/>
atter losing 17-10 to Southern Cat.<lb/>
Tennessee, which beat Arkan-<lb/>
sas Jl-27 in the Cotton Bowl, fin-<lb/>
ished fifth in the final poll. Round-<lb/>
ing out the Top 10 were Auburn,<lb/>
Michigan, Sou thorn Cal, Alabama<lb/>
and Illinois<lb/>
Nebraska was Hth, followed<lb/>
by Ctemson, Arkansas, Houston,<lb/>
Penn State, Michigan State, Pitts-<lb/>
burgh, Virginia, Texas Tech, Texas<lb/>
A&amp;M, West Virginia, Brigham<lb/>
Young Washington, Ohio State<lb/>
and Arizona.<lb/>
! JIUUU II1U1JI<lb/>
COPIES 52<lb/>
(Self Service 8 12 x 11 white bond)<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
Fast Copies For Fast Times<lb/>
(Next toChico's in the Georgetgown Shops)<lb/>
Lakers' take home the cash<lb/>
Grace Church<lb/>
Welcomes<lb/>
EVERYONE<lb/>
Back!<lb/>
We Wish You a<lb/>
Happy &amp; Safe<lb/>
New Decade!<lb/>
Grace Christian<lb/>
Fellowship Meets Even<lb/>
2nd Monday Night<lb/>
at Mendenhall<lb/>
HWJI MV9 UMU<lb/>
"?CTrWHT1<lb/>
4ma<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
Associated Press<lb/>
releases top 25 men's<lb/>
basketball poll<lb/>
The Top Twenty Five teams in the Associated<lb/>
Press college basketball poll, with first-place votes in<lb/>
parentheses, records through Jan. 7, total pointsbased<lb/>
on 2S-24-2S-22-21-20-19-18-17-16-15-14-13-12-11-10<lb/>
9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 and last week's ranking:<lb/>
Here's a New Year's :<lb/>
Resolutions<lb/>
You Can Live With <lb/>
If You Choose To Drink<lb/>
Be Responsible<lb/>
RecordPtsI'vs<lb/>
1 Kansas(45)15-01,5682<lb/>
2 Georgetown l Id)11 01,5323<lb/>
3 Michigan (1)10-11i<lb/>
4 Oklahoniid)10-0?6<lb/>
t Missouri ' 1 in i1,2807<lb/>
6 Syracuse10-11,2731<lb/>
7 UN .?l 15610<lb/>
8 Illinoisii 11.1274<lb/>
1 Georgia TechJ(M)12<lb/>
0 Duke10-295313<lb/>
11. Louisville102949-<lb/>
12. Arkansas10 2s7714<lb/>
.1 Indiana10-1-9<lb/>
14 LSU8278711<lb/>
!s St John'sB268616<lb/>
i6 Minnesota10-164224<lb/>
17 N Carolina St11254718<lb/>
18 ArizonaB 254111<lb/>
19 UCLA42373IS<lb/>
20 Memphis St.9 135721<lb/>
21 LaSalle8-128717<lb/>
22 Oregon St.11 22b423<lb/>
23 Loyola Marymount) "?2s22s<lb/>
24 Alabamaia-12322<lb/>
25 Xavier,()hio9 177<lb/>
Southeastern slopes report<lb/>
skiing conditions<lb/>
As of January 6, 1996<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Appalachian 40 inch base Fight -lopes open Groomed surface<lb/>
Night skiing.<lb/>
1 atalixher 14 inch base Five slopes open Machine-groomed<lb/>
surface Night skiing<lb/>
Wound lar- 1 inch base Two slopes open Granular surface<lb/>
sY.iiy Mountain 30 inch base Three slopes open Wet granular<lb/>
surface Night skiing<lb/>
'kilieech 40inchbase 13 slopes Open Wet granular surface Night<lb/>
?-knng.<lb/>
StifUmkuuM 26 inch base Sixatopesopen Ckanutafsurface-Nighl<lb/>
skiing<lb/>
Siejar Mountain 48 inch base 16 slopes open LOOM granular<lb/>
surface Night skiing<lb/>
Wulf laurel 23 inch base Five slopes open Wat Granular oondl<lb/>
tions Night skiing<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Hryce Rrv-rt 22 inch base Four slopes open Granular surface<lb/>
Night sknng.<lb/>
Ma-inuttrn 30 inch base Seven slopes open Machine-groomed<lb/>
surface Night skiing<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
Canaan Valley 38 inch base Eleven slopes open Machine-groomed<lb/>
surface New machine made snow Night skiing<lb/>
SilverCrtek: 29inch base Twelve slopes open New machine -made<lb/>
snow Groomed surface<lb/>
riainuftir 44 inch base Thirty three slopes open. New machine<lb/>
made snow Machine groomed surface<lb/>
Winterplace 23 inch has Seventeen slopes open Wet granular<lb/>
surface NUlht skiing<lb/>
Don't Drink and Drive<lb/>
Join B.A.C.C.H.U.S.<lb/>
First Meeting for Spring<lb/>
Semester Tuesday, January 9<lb/>
at 4:00 pm 307 Erwin Hall<lb/>
"FREE"<lb/>
Campus Wide Welcome Back Social<lb/>
January 16.1990<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Social Room<lb/>
For More information contact:<lb/>
Office of Substance Abuse Prevention and Education<lb/>
303 Erwin Hall 757-6793<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0022"/><lb/>
Tailspin<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
defense The Navy lead was trimmed to two, and<lb/>
! ose gave the Pirates the 17-16 edge with a crowd<lb/>
pleasing Vpointer<lb/>
lose led all scorers in the game with 18 points<lb/>
( opeland was next for the Pirates with 14, while F fill<lb/>
added !3 and Tim Brown finished with 11<lb/>
"Tim and Ike have been getting more aggressive<lb/>
inside our last few games Steele said<lb/>
The two teams traded leads several times late in<lb/>
the first half, but the Pirates held on to a slim lead<lb/>
thanks to several treys from I ose and 1 hil and solid<lb/>
plav in the post from Copeland<lb/>
The Pirate defense allowed onlv one Midship-<lb/>
man to reach double figures, Nick Maruskh, who<lb/>
was good tor 13 points. "Every game starts on the<lb/>
defensive end torus Pirate Reed I ose said "That's<lb/>
where our pnde is "<lb/>
last Carolina played a steady game in the sec<lb/>
ond half, stietching the lead by as many as 23 points<lb/>
Mason<lb/>
when Steve Richardson hit back-to-back 3 pointers.<lb/>
Navy, however, never could get back on track, shoot<lb/>
ing 10 for 28 in the second half and turning the ball<lb/>
over 15 times.<lb/>
"This is the poorest we've played Navv coach<lb/>
Pete Herrman said "I thought we plaved well for the<lb/>
first 15 minutes, but we just didn't sustain at all in the<lb/>
second half '<lb/>
Navy entered the game a 1-8 mark on the season<lb/>
But in their first eight games, the Midshipmen only<lb/>
lost bv more than 10 points on one occasion, a 14<lb/>
point loss 10 Auburn<lb/>
Coach Steelc said he was pleased with the Pi-<lb/>
rates' performance but quickly focused on the next<lb/>
task at hand: "We're not celebrating this win until<lb/>
after Monday's game against George Mason he<lb/>
said "We need to be 2-0 (in the conference) when we<lb/>
go on the road "<lb/>
Continued from page IS<lb/>
lead two more times before the Pirates, with 1:28<lb/>
remaining in the halt, went on a scoring binge and<lb/>
scored six more points two of them by Lose with<lb/>
three seconds remaining in the half.<lb/>
Hut the Patriots would come out fighting in the<lb/>
second period of plav as they slowly began to shut<lb/>
down the Tirate offense GMU outscored ECU N-8<lb/>
in the last 9:57 of the game and did not allow the<lb/>
Pirates to score a point tor over five minutes in that<lb/>
time. ECU lost their lead for good with four minutes<lb/>
left to play<lb/>
We outplayed them tot the most part ot Ihe<lb/>
came except for a stretch there. I ose said. Thev<lb/>
couldn't cover our inside guys btitm the second half,<lb/>
thev were getting pushed up<lb/>
hinior Tim Brown led the Pirates in scoring and<lb/>
mding as he had It points and eight rebounds<lb/>
torthemghf Freshman Ikeopeland sank 13 points<lb/>
and had three boards, while senior (.usl 1 ill added 12<lb/>
points and six rebounds to the Pirates losing effort.<lb/>
Meanwhile, on the (Ml bench. Mike Hargett<lb/>
Gray<lb/>
was the leading scorer for the Patriots as he was able<lb/>
to score 21 points against the Tirate defense. Sieve<lb/>
Smith had 15 points and two rebounds tor the night,<lb/>
and Mitch Madden added 11 points and three re<lb/>
bounds to the GMU statistics<lb/>
"This was a very big win for us GMU Coach<lb/>
Frnie Nestor said "We are pleased with the effort<lb/>
ECU is now 7-8 overall, 1-1 in the conference<lb/>
George Mason moves to 9- on the season and 2-0 in<lb/>
the conference, defeating UNC-Wilmington earlier<lb/>
in the season<lb/>
George Mason continues its strong lead in the<lb/>
K U (.Ml' series as thev have compiled 1m wins in<lb/>
the 19 times the two teams have met. The Patriots<lb/>
have also won the last nine games straight in the<lb/>
series<lb/>
K  begins rf two game conference road trip<lb/>
Saturday when thev face American and lames<lb/>
Madison Thev return to Minges Ian 20 to battle<lb/>
William &amp; Marx-<lb/>
Continued from page IS<lb/>
with 44" remaining to play I'eter finished with<lb/>
 points, two shy of Brummg s team high of 17.<lb/>
The GMU tun was ended .is sophomore guard<lb/>
Toina Coley sank four of EC U's eight straight free<lb/>
throws to give the Lad) Pirates a 76 68 lead. Sopho-<lb/>
more forward lonva Hargrove made two of her 12<lb/>
points on a layup that ga e the 1 ady Pirates the ten<lb/>
point win<lb/>
Hamilton finished with 13 points for ECU, while<lb/>
freshman guard (.avnor O'Ponnell had 12. C'olev<lb/>
and junior guardforward Kenneva Wilson both<lb/>
( 1 with six tor the l-ady Pirates.<lb/>
During the Christmas holidays, Ihe I .ady Pirates<lb/>
toppled Winthtop 105-61 in Minges Coliseum, led by<lb/>
lonva Hargrove 9 22 points (9 of 9 from the field)<lb/>
She received the ("AA Player oi the Week tor the<lb/>
second time this season for her outstanding effort in<lb/>
the win.<lb/>
Theldv Pirates also traveled to( ireenville S (<lb/>
to plav in the Furmar. Christmas (. lassie In the<lb/>
opening round, ECU toppleci Princeton 86-78, led b<lb/>
Hargrove s 24 point performance. But lurm.m<lb/>
proved to be too strong in the championship mn<lb/>
with a 78-63 defeat over the Lady Pirates. 1 largrove<lb/>
ami Sara Crav were both named to the all-tourna<lb/>
ment team<lb/>
Coach Piers?on and the team return home to<lb/>
MingesCoIiseum Saturday night with a 7-3 record as<lb/>
thev host C AA toe American University in a 7 p.m.<lb/>
matchup. WZMB will begin coverage at r 4 p m<lb/>
1fic jNfoit Company<lb/>
of (jrccnviik: Ltd.<lb/>
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Welcomes Students To Come By And See<lb/>
Our 2 Bedroom Townhouses and<lb/>
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? Fully Carpeted<lb/>
? Large Pool<lb/>
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? Bus Service 1.5 miles from campus<lb/>
? Under New Management<lb/>
? On Site Maintenance<lb/>
10th St. Ext. To Rivcrbiuff Rd.<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
1<lb/>
The Fastarolinian, January 9, 1990 17<lb/>
flheSunssCotorfy<lb/>
Welcome Back!<lb/>
We have selected Sausage &amp;<lb/>
Cheese's from 35 to $2.95!<lb/>
Carolina Easl Mall<lb/>
756-5650<lb/>
205 E. 5th St<lb/>
FORMAL WEAR<lb/>
830-9409<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Rebel Without A Cause<lb/>
Wednesday, January 10,1990<lb/>
What's Up?<lb/>
PROGRAM HOTLINE<lb/>
757-6004<lb/>
TJPpplications are now being<lb/>
accepted for the following positions:<lb/>
Chairperson, Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
? Chairperson, Coffeehouse<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
? Assistant to the President<lb/>
Interested? Call us at 757-4715 for more<lb/>
info or stop by 236 Mendenhall to pick up<lb/>
an application.<lb/>
The deadline to apply is Tuesday,<lb/>
Jan. 16,1990-5:00pm<lb/>
STUDENl UNION<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0023"/><lb/>
Tailspin<lb/>
Continued from page IS<lb/>
defense. The Navy lead was trimmed to two, and<lb/>
Lose gave the Pirates the 17 16 edge with a crowd-<lb/>
pleasing 3-pointer.<lb/>
Lose led all scorers in the game with 18 points<lb/>
Copeland was next for the Pirates with 14, while Hill<lb/>
added 13 and Tim Brown finished with 11.<lb/>
'Tim and Ike have been getting more aggressive<lb/>
inside our last few games Steele said.<lb/>
The two teams traded leads several times late in<lb/>
the first half, but the Pirates held on to a slim lead<lb/>
thanks to several treys from Lose and Hill and solid<lb/>
play in the post from Copeland.<lb/>
The Pirate defense allowed only one Midship-<lb/>
man to reach double figures, Nick Marusich, who<lb/>
was good for 13 points. "Every game starts on the<lb/>
defensive end for us Pirate Reed Lose said. That's<lb/>
where our pride is<lb/>
East Carolina played a steady game in the sec-<lb/>
ond half, stretching the lead by as many as 23 points<lb/>
Mason<lb/>
when Steve Richardson hit back-to-back 3-pointers.<lb/>
Navy, however, never could get back on track, shoot-<lb/>
ing 10 for 28 in the second half and turning the ball<lb/>
over 15 times.<lb/>
"This is the poorest we've played Navy coach<lb/>
Pete Herrman said. "I thought we played well for the<lb/>
first 15 minutes, but we just didn't sustain at all in the<lb/>
second half<lb/>
Navy entered the game a 1-8 mark on the season.<lb/>
But in their first eight games, the Midshipmen only<lb/>
lost by more than 10 points on one occasion, a 14-<lb/>
point loss to Auburn.<lb/>
Coach Steele said he was pleased with the Pi-<lb/>
rates' performance but quickly focused on the next<lb/>
task at hand: "We're not celebrating this win until<lb/>
after Monday's game against George Mason he<lb/>
said. "We need to be 2-0 (in the conference) when we<lb/>
goon the road<lb/>
Continued from page 15<lb/>
lead two more times before the Pirates, with 1.28<lb/>
remaining in the half, went on a scoring binge and<lb/>
scored six more potato two of them by Lose with<lb/>
throe seconds remaining in the half.<lb/>
But the Patriots would come out fighting in the<lb/>
second period of play as they slowly began to shut<lb/>
down the Pirate offense. GMU outscored ECU 19-8<lb/>
in the last 9:57 of the game and did not allow the<lb/>
Pirates to score a point for over five minutes in that<lb/>
time. ECU lost their lead for good with four minutes<lb/>
left to play<lb/>
Wo OUtpltycd them tor the most part of tho<lb/>
game except for a stretch there lose said. "They<lb/>
couldn't cover our inside guvs but in tho second half,<lb/>
thov wore getting pushed up<lb/>
Junior Tim Brown led tho Tiratos in scoring and<lb/>
rebounding as ho had 14 points and eight rebounds<lb/>
tor tho night Freshman Iko Copeland sank 13 points<lb/>
and had throe boards, while .senior (.Jus 1 hll added 12<lb/>
points and six rebounds to the Pirates' losing effort.<lb/>
Meanwhile, on tho GML bench. Mike Hargett<lb/>
Gray<lb/>
was the leading scorer for the Patriots as he was able<lb/>
to score 21 points against the Pirate defense. Steve<lb/>
Smith had 15 points and two rebounds for the night,<lb/>
and Mitch Madden added 11 points and three re-<lb/>
bounds to the GMU statistics.<lb/>
This was a very big win for us GMU Coach<lb/>
Ernie Nestor said. "We are pleased with the effort<lb/>
ECU is now 7-B overall, 1-1 in the conference.<lb/>
George Mason moves to 9-6 on the season and 2-0 in<lb/>
the conference, defeating UNC-Wilmington earlier<lb/>
in the season.<lb/>
George Mason continues its strong lead in tho<lb/>
ECU-GMU series as they have compiled lb wins in<lb/>
the 19 times the two teams have met. The Patriots<lb/>
have also won tho last nine games straight in the<lb/>
series.<lb/>
ECU begins a two-game conference road trip<lb/>
Saturday when they face American and lames<lb/>
Madison. They return to Minges an. 20 to battle<lb/>
William it Mary.<lb/>
Continued from page 15<lb/>
?<lb/>
with 4:47 remaining to play. Tatar finished with<lb/>
15 points, two shy of Bruining's team high of 17.<lb/>
The GMU run was ended as sophomore guard<lb/>
Toina Coley sank four of ECU'S eight straight free<lb/>
throws to give the Ladv Pirates a 7b-bS load. Sopho-<lb/>
more forward Tonva Hargrove made two of her 12<lb/>
potato on a layup that gave the Lady Pirates the ten<lb/>
point win.<lb/>
Hamilton finished with 13 points for ECU, while<lb/>
freshman guard Gaynor O'Donnoll had 12. Coley<lb/>
and junior guard forward Konnoya Wilson both<lb/>
tJnhhff with six for the Lady Pirates.<lb/>
During the Christmas holidays, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
toppled Winthrop 105-bl inMingesColiseum,ledby<lb/>
Tonya Hargrove's 22 points (9 of 9 from the field).<lb/>
She received the CAA Player of the Week for the<lb/>
second time this season for her outstanding effort in<lb/>
the win.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates also traveled to Greenville. S C<lb/>
to play in the Furman Christmas Classic. In tho<lb/>
opening round, ECU toppled Princeton 8b-78, led by<lb/>
Hargrove's 24-point performance. But Furman<lb/>
proved to be too strong in the championship game<lb/>
with a 78-63 defeat over the Lady Pirates. Hargrove<lb/>
and Sara Gray were both named to the all-tourna-<lb/>
ment team.<lb/>
Coach Piarson and the team return home to<lb/>
Minges Coliseum Saturday night with a 7-3 record as<lb/>
they host CAA foe American University in a 7 p.m.<lb/>
matchup. WZMB will begin coverage at 6:45 p.m.<lb/>
Irve CiC Qmvpmy<lb/>
of Qrtawiik Ltd.<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S FIRST FULL SERVICE<lb/>
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TANNING SESSION<lb/>
$2.00 Per visit<lb/>
Limited Time Only<lb/>
River Bluff<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
Welcomes Students To Come By And See<lb/>
Our 2 Bedroom Townhouses and<lb/>
1 Bedroom Garden Apartments.<lb/>
? Fully Carpeted<lb/>
? Large Pool<lb/>
? Free Cable<lb/>
? Bus Service1.5 miles from campus<lb/>
? Under New Management<lb/>
? On Site Maintenance<lb/>
10th St. Ext. To Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
758-4015<lb/>
1<lb/>
The East Carolinian, January 9,1990 17<lb/>
Welcome Back!<lb/>
We have selected Sausage &amp;<lb/>
Cheese's from 350 to $2.95!<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
756-5650<lb/>
0-9409<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Rebel Without A Cause<lb/>
Wednesday, January 10,1990<lb/>
What's Up?<lb/>
PROGRAM HOTLINE<lb/>
757-6004<lb/>
4<lb/>
applications are now being<lb/>
"accepted for the following positions:<lb/>
? Chairperson, Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
? Chairperson, Coffeehouse<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
? Assistant to the President<lb/>
?<lb/>
Interested? Call us at 757-4715 for more<lb/>
info or stop by 236 Mendenhall to pick up<lb/>
an application.<lb/>
The deadline to apply is Tuesday,<lb/>
Jan. 16,1990 - 5:00pm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058183_0024"/><lb/>
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<pb facs="00058183_0025"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>