<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058191_0001"/>
?j? i?tiBt (Humlxnmn<lb/>
Serving the 'East Carolina campus community, since 192?<lb/>
Vol. 64 No. 8<lb/>
Thursday, February 1, 1990<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
lb P<lb/>
Committee to<lb/>
sponsor African<lb/>
debt forum<lb/>
Bv April Praughn<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The African Studies Commit<lb/>
!tv of ECU will sponsor a forum<lb/>
entitled 'Structural Adjustment<lb/>
and the International Monetary<lb/>
Fund in Africa" on Feb. 5. 1 bo<lb/>
fbfum will beheld in Room 1032of<lb/>
theGeneral Classroom Buildingat<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Ihe issue of the rising debt in<lb/>
Africa will be debated bv Dr S !<lb/>
Osensade an economist for the<lb/>
International Monetary Fund i<lb/>
branch of the World Bank and<lb/>
Pr Haider Khan an economist<lb/>
with the I niversity of I enver<lb/>
Dr. Mulu Wubneh said that<lb/>
the whole isue of debt in Africa is<lb/>
a problem that the World Bank has<lb/>
been trying to combat since the<lb/>
beginning of the 1980s. In 1970<lb/>
Africa's debt was $6 billion bal<lb/>
looning to $130 billion in 1987<lb/>
According to Wubneh chair for<lb/>
the African Studies Committee,<lb/>
around !0tO 70 percent of African<lb/>
export earnings are used to iy<lb/>
the debt I le also said that the Debt<lb/>
Service Ratio, the ratio of export<lb/>
eafningsused to calculate the d? I<lb/>
in some countries has risen dra<lb/>
matieallv since 1980 in M<lb/>
hicjuc. the debt ratio was up<lb/>
per ent in 1987<lb/>
?n response to these I gun s<lb/>
jUPiWW fMh-k i?ffftng ?<lb/>
conditionally programs u im<lb/>
African countries, rhese programs<lb/>
would force African narii ms to cut<lb/>
government expenditures such as<lb/>
social and cdm ational programs,<lb/>
to liberalize trade, and to allow the<lb/>
agricultural prodin er prices to rise.<lb/>
1 ho African nations that o not<lb/>
agree to participate in the program<lb/>
will not receive loan money from<lb/>
the World Hank<lb/>
Ihe program, still in effect,<lb/>
initially began in the 1980s includ-<lb/>
ing such countries as Malawi,<lb/>
rogo Ghana and Kenya. Nearly<lb/>
30countries participated in PW.<lb/>
According to studies conducted<lb/>
bv the World Hank, the ttuan<lb/>
countries that have been involved<lb/>
in thi ditionaliH programs<lb/>
have done well Buf some econo-<lb/>
mists dispute that conclusion sav-<lb/>
ing that these countries havc.m tu-<lb/>
ne '??? orse.<lb/>
Some African nations n<lb/>
Other ? mists like khan are<lb/>
 ?? i that the poor will suffer<lb/>
the mi st if the conditionalitv pro-<lb/>
es rhe arguments<lb/>
: ? are tl at the program<lb/>
i uts the subsidiarv funds in coun-<lb/>
tries that arealreadv suffering from<lb/>
Osens II represent the<lb/>
? nal Monetat) i ufKfs<lb/>
. ill tr and defend<lb/>
structural adjustment plan<lb/>
Khan w ill giv to ?unter-perspee-<lb/>
thai the llvfFs pi<lb/>
nai its<lb/>
hi r mostl) l<lb/>
rv fed<lb/>
?t 12 ? 0 hOOfi on the same<lb/>
,?n there w iH be i brow oa<lb/>
. tufe" tor the 1 niversity faculty<lb/>
in ? 8 Brewsfer. Ihepub-<lb/>
i is invited I attend both the<lb/>
rure and the forum.<lb/>
Dave Huc.aboe and his puppy Nittany strolled through the Mall yesterday, enjoying the unseasonably ??<lb/>
by J D. Whitmire?ECU Photo Lab.) <lb/>
ECU graduate named to All-USA team<lb/>
By Sarah Martin<lb/>
Stafl Writer<lb/>
Rebei ea i ouise I )enson a<lb/>
December 19891I graduate and<lb/>
i Irifton n.ito ? w as si let fed fo the<lb/>
ISA . . i ? I SA ; 0 ' V a<lb/>
domic learn with Ihird learn<lb/>
honors.<lb/>
fseing a member of the Aca-<lb/>
C learn brings national ret.<lb/>
Ognition to those students that<lb/>
have achieved a high degree of<lb/>
success m their intended fields.<lb/>
Ihe hrst Team is awarded $2500<lb/>
to further their studies and re-<lb/>
seaT( h<lb/>
After being nominated by the<lb/>
FCU Department of i hcmMrv,<lb/>
Penson then moved to the next<lb/>
phase of mpetition At this level<lb/>
she taeed T4s other nominees tor<lb/>
spots on the A. ademu 1 earn. The<lb/>
nine judges looked tor students<lb/>
with the qualifies of leadership.<lb/>
communit) service, creativity,<lb/>
initiative and scholarship By the<lb/>
.?nd of Pc ember, the judges,<lb/>
. omposed of uni ersif) presidents<lb/>
and members of national educa-<lb/>
tion councils and agencies, had<lb/>
selected Penson along with W<lb/>
ither college students.<lb/>
When isked about her reac-<lb/>
tion to receiving this award. Pen-<lb/>
son said, I was quite surprised<lb/>
and it was totally unexpected tone<lb/>
coming out of a small school and<lb/>
to be recognied nationally<lb/>
Dr. C hia-vu Li, the chemistrv<lb/>
department chairman and<lb/>
Denson's quantitative chemical<lb/>
analysis professor, characterized<lb/>
her as "just a good student, aver<lb/>
, but . . . highly motivated.<lb/>
"She would go the extra mile<lb/>
outside the regular curriculum<lb/>
required i 1 said. "She was not<lb/>
the top of her class, she was 4th in<lb/>
a class of 15. It was onlv that she<lb/>
was determined and worked<lb/>
hard<lb/>
When asked what keeps her<lb/>
SO motivated, Penson replied,<lb/>
"The idea ot finding ar actual<lb/>
vaccine tor the pneumococeal vi-<lb/>
rus and knowing that I'd be help-<lb/>
ing sp many people keeps me<lb/>
going<lb/>
I Vnstn, 23, is currently work-<lb/>
ing at the National Institute ol<lb/>
Health lIH) in IVthesda, Marx<lb/>
land. She was awarded tor .<lb/>
research on a possible va ine<lb/>
designed. This particular vaccirw<lb/>
was created tor an upper n spir i<lb/>
torv tr.ut disease related to pneu<lb/>
monia that children are m. re mi.<lb/>
teptibie to. ine pmmwmovo ??<lb/>
virus has manv different strains<lb/>
with each having itsownqualii<lb/>
Denson discovered the sri<lb/>
that she focused on at Mil<lb/>
the help of other researchers -<lb/>
put the vaccine togeth r.<lb/>
the supervision of ShousiM<lb/>
Ph. P. at IH, she is cwri<lb/>
doing antibody response tests on<lb/>
the vaccine using mice, whicl<lb/>
the first stage of testing, it<lb/>
vaccine proves to he via!<lb/>
mice, she will move on '<lb/>
mammals, then the vaccine o<lb/>
possiblv become available U<lb/>
humans.<lb/>
She graduated from the North<lb/>
Carolina School of Science<lb/>
Math in Purham where she ?<lb/>
"the change from rural t. a<lb/>
more intense academic atmos-<lb/>
art<lb/>
it<lb/>
I<lb/>
Hal Pines holds the ladder as Scott Austin works on the lighting<lb/>
for the production of "Come Back to the Five and Dime. Jimmy<lb/>
Dean. Jimmy Dean" (Photo by JD Whitmire - ECU Photo<lb/>
Lab)<lb/>
Alumni Association looks<lb/>
to recruit at Senior Send Off<lb/>
.<lb/>
By Mindy Mdnnis<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The F( U Alumni Association<lb/>
will present its annual "SfttiW<lb/>
Send Off" thisTuesdavfrom4p.m.<lb/>
to 6 p.m. at the Attic in downtown<lb/>
Creenville.<lb/>
The program is iesigned for<lb/>
seniors whoaregraduatingin Mav<lb/>
or December and who are inter-<lb/>
SGA seeks to unify students<lb/>
Student leaders invited to reception<lb/>
By Samantha Thompson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A re option for campus load<lb/>
ers will be held Feb 5 from 7 p.m<lb/>
to('p m in the Multipurpose Room<lb/>
at Mendonhall Studententer to<lb/>
help umfv campus groups, ofgan<lb/>
iers said<lb/>
Student (.overnment Assoi i,i<lb/>
tion Vice President Jennifer Van<lb/>
df-rburg initiated the original idea<lb/>
of a reception for campus leaders<lb/>
The purpose of the reception.<lb/>
Renee( undiff.anorganiernf the<lb/>
event, is to gel leaders from all<lb/>
tvpes of groups on campus In<lb/>
ilived with bit at r groups<lb/>
are doing<lb/>
Student leaders of campus<lb/>
organizations who plan to attend<lb/>
the fei option need to call the S( ,A<lb/>
office to reserve a soat at the event<lb/>
ihe SGA office number is 7S7-<lb/>
17 and organiers ask that res-<lb/>
ervations In1 made as soon as pos-<lb/>
sible<lb/>
Over N' people have btffl<lb/>
invited to the re option iih hiding<lb/>
the presidents, vice presidentsand<lb/>
adviSOfS of various organizations<lb/>
,iiiiI (luhs throughout the I ampus,<lb/>
organizers said "Basically, everv<lb/>
(ampus organization is invited<lb/>
i aytofi said<lb/>
Member o( It Media Board,<lb/>
SC.A and the Residence 1 lall As-<lb/>
MKiation were also invited to at-<lb/>
tend<lb/>
Phone, h the event is sponsored<lb/>
by the 9CA Chancellor Richard<lb/>
Fakin is paving for a portion of the<lb/>
bill through his Discretionary<lb/>
fund Normally, student leaders<lb/>
are invited to ahnstmas recep-<lb/>
tion given bv the chancellor every<lb/>
year Pue to pressing business,<lb/>
Fakin was not able to sponsor the<lb/>
event this year Ihe Feb 5 recep-<lb/>
tion will replace Ihehnstmas<lb/>
reception, organizers said<lb/>
The purpose of the reception<lb/>
is to unify students, Hadley said,<lb/>
See leader, pae 2<lb/>
ested in becoming a part of the<lb/>
ECU Alumni Association.<lb/>
Scott Wells, assistant director<lb/>
of alumni, said The Institutional<lb/>
Advancement staff, The Institu-<lb/>
tional Alumni staff, Pitt County<lb/>
Alumni Chapter members and<lb/>
faculty members will all be at the<lb/>
Attic to show students the impor-<lb/>
tance of becoming an alumni. "We<lb/>
want to give the students a cap-<lb/>
sule version of what this school<lb/>
can do for them<lb/>
Wells said that the Senior Send<lb/>
Off will give students an idea on<lb/>
the importanceof being an alumni.<lb/>
"We want graduating students to<lb/>
have an identity through the Uni-<lb/>
versity<lb/>
"You would be surprised how<lb/>
manv people are starved for infor-<lb/>
mation about ECU Wells said.<lb/>
" They want to know general infor-<lb/>
mation on things like football<lb/>
games, scholarships, etc. We pro-<lb/>
vide this information through the<lb/>
36 alumni chapters that we have<lb/>
nationwide<lb/>
Fred Stock, senior class presi-<lb/>
dent, is part of the Senior Send Off<lb/>
Committee that organized the<lb/>
program last (X tober. Stock says<lb/>
that the object of the program is to<lb/>
insure future communication be-<lb/>
tween seniors and the Alumni<lb/>
Center after the seniors graduate.<lb/>
"I think it's important for gradu-<lb/>
ates to establish a bridge ' ' '<lb/>
Alumni Center; that way they an<lb/>
keep up with what's going on at<lb/>
ECU"<lb/>
According to Wells, ECU'S<lb/>
Senior Send Off is structured in<lb/>
similarity toClemson Universitvs<lb/>
Senior Send Off. "iast year we<lb/>
offered a program for seniors<lb/>
called, SIN (Senior Information<lb/>
Night), it didn't have a big turn<lb/>
out, so that's why we changed the<lb/>
format she said.<lb/>
This vears program will tea<lb/>
ture door prizes such asdinmr tor<lb/>
two at the King and Queen, .om-<lb/>
pact discs from Fast Coast Music<lb/>
&amp; Video and Corned vone passes<lb/>
memberships and tickets to an<lb/>
upcoming ma)or concert event<lb/>
from the Attic. Pizza, a golf um<lb/>
brella, a health club membership,<lb/>
grocenes and t-shirts will be do-<lb/>
nated by Pizza Transit Authority,<lb/>
ECU Student Store, Champions<lb/>
Health Club, Harris Teeter, BL I I<lb/>
and Carolina Imprints.<lb/>
AH graduating seniors that<lb/>
attend the event are eligible to win<lb/>
the prizes, says Wells. "All they<lb/>
need to do is present a valid I C L<lb/>
l.D. and fill out a change of ad<lb/>
dress card when they first arrive<lb/>
Admission is free and refresh-<lb/>
ments will be provided<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Editorial 4<lb/>
teatti<lb/>
:<lb/>
ClassM eds6<lb/>
State and Nation8<lb/>
Jc 2t-<lb/>
tion that couid save the<lb/>
Outer Bar-<lb/>
Features 10<lb/>
A tuxedo ' fery<lb/>
special occasion<lb/>
Sports14<lb/>
Men's basketballer<lb/>
Reed Lose stands close<lb/>
to Pirate record<lb/>
INSERT:<lb/>
ECU'S Digest<lb/>
Brief readings in<lb/>
satire<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian, February 1,1990<lb/>
ECU Briefs<lb/>
Workshop to focus on practical uses of<lb/>
census information in education<lb/>
Census Bureau official George Dairy will conduct ? workshop for<lb/>
educators leh to demonstrate the potential of using census data as<lb/>
part ot school programt<lb/>
The !990Geneus Education Projei t will In-conducted at Menden<lb/>
hall Student Center at ECU from ! p nv until p.in It it designed for<lb/>
K 12 teat hers, supervisors, ind coordinators, especially social studies<lb/>
flnd mathematics teachers<lb/>
The session will introduce participants to classroom resources<lb/>
available from the Census Bureau and provide a framework for includ-<lb/>
ing census concepts and data In the curriculum.<lb/>
Public educators can learn at home<lb/>
A home study ami field experience course on the geological and<lb/>
natural histories ol the national parks will be offered tins spring by the<lb/>
ECU Science Mathematics Education Center.<lb/>
The course, tor public school teachers, is designed to stimulate<lb/>
interest in the national parks as a resource tor instructional activities in<lb/>
the earth sciences and environmental studies it will bo taught bv Dr.<lb/>
Richard I Manger, a professor ot geology at ECU.<lb/>
Thecoursework will be divided into three parts Parts I and II will<lb/>
require completion ot tic home study lessons and one summary<lb/>
session on April 28 lut ill will be a May 1-6 field trip to the<lb/>
Shcnatuloah National Park in Virginia<lb/>
National Campus Clips<lb/>
A&amp;T football player pulls water gun<lb/>
on cops, charged with armed robbery<lb/>
A North Carolina Mi 1 football player was arrested and charged<lb/>
with armed robbery for trying to rob a I fomino's Pizza driver on Ian 12.<lb/>
Medical School adds two<lb/>
pediatricians to faculty<lb/>
ECU Wws Bureau<lb/>
ipon turned out to be what University oi North Carolina at<lb/>
The weapt<lb/>
Greensboro Director ol Public Satetv Jerry Williamson called "arealts<lb/>
He lookuy, water gun "<lb/>
ThehK l student, Robert l dwards, tailed to rob the deliver)<lb/>
man. and tried to escape from polk e detection at a dance being held at<lb/>
In 1988, lie was a Fulbrighl Scholar i<lb/>
.it the l niversity ol Aarhus in<lb/>
 Denmark He also held academic<lb/>
Two pediatricians have as posts at Michigan, Ohio State and<lb/>
turned academic positions al the the Medk alollege ol (leorgia<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine Dr Alex Sang,apediatriccardiologist,<lb/>
F.Robertson joins the Departmenl has special research interest in<lb/>
ot Pediatrics as .? professor and pediatru cardiac catheterization<lb/>
Pr Charlie . Sang as an assistant and the development oi pediatric<lb/>
professor. atheros lerosis.<lb/>
Robertson comes to F. Ufrom Preceding his E U appoint<lb/>
the Medicalollege ol Wisconsin ment, he ompleted a fellowship<lb/>
where he was professor of pedial in pcdiatrU cardiology .it Baylor<lb/>
rus At E I he w ill due. i the ollege ol Mcdi me m I louston,<lb/>
fellowship program in neonatal lexas<lb/>
perinatal medicine I lis primarj<lb/>
research interest is Ihc stud) ol He received his bachelor's<lb/>
factors affe ting bilirubin binding degree at the I niversityol Missis<lb/>
tiialbumin sippi and his medical degree at<lb/>
A graduate ol the medical lulanel niversityinNewOrleans<lb/>
school at the I niversit) ol Vii Aftoi medical school, he com-<lb/>
ginia, Robertson also holds a pletedapediatrii residency at the<lb/>
master's degree in biochemistry i niversit) ol lev.is Medical<lb/>
from the University oi Michigan. School in I allas.<lb/>
ECU student business<lb/>
organization given AMA<lb/>
DAVIDS AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
Is Now Open In (Ireenville!<lb/>
We sell import and domestic parts and<lb/>
accessories at wholesale prices. We also have<lb/>
a complete service center.<lb/>
Make Us Your One Stop!<lb/>
For Parts, For Service Remember<lb/>
We Have It All!<lb/>
We Specialize in German C ars<lb/>
, n A v  ?'??-? Sow ? ?<lb/>
510 N. Greene St. Greenville, NC<lb/>
830-1779<lb/>
?ast<lb/>
Directorofadvertising<lb/>
James F.J. McKee<lb/>
??IAvertisim Vtepresen tative.<lb/>
national award<lb/>
Hi .<lb/>
the Cone<lb/>
Halli<lb/>
IHM11 V<lb/>
t Elliot University Center. Outside the dance<lb/>
Edwards pulled his "gun" on poli e<lb/>
rhecun looked so real thai .i policeman would have been justified<lb/>
it he had shot I dwards, Williamson st.iul.<lb/>
Males ask for escorts at UNC-G<lb/>
I lu- American latketim<lb/>
ution h.is named ,i student<lb/>
nrcaniation al I ? I the<lb/>
1 x'n, Nievviadomski,a icepresi<lb/>
Jent foi I he i haptei She said tlu-<lb/>
award w ill be presented to the<lb/>
. haph i during ? ' pi ial mooting<lb/>
? nl.inned dunnt l.itketinc.<lb/>
1 he l niversitv ol North Carolina .it t ireensbon<lb/>
.UIHMls osn<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
system<lb/>
th.it I<lb/>
LIss-IAi'i<lb/>
1 its female students since l979isnowbeingasked<lb/>
to begin providing the sen ice to males as well l he request came after<lb/>
a No 10 armed robbei ol .i male student<lb/>
hnsin<lb/>
ret ipient ('I a national av.it'<lb/>
(Earaltman<lb/>
Gu .1. Harvej<lb/>
Shaj Sitlinger<lb/>
dani I. Blaitkenship<lb/>
Phillip . Cope<lb/>
kellov O't 'minor<lb/>
Patrick N illiams<lb/>
fhel CU?hapterolthe mcri<lb/>
M.i! ketinil Unk is an .innu.il<lb/>
.in<lb/>
.i.ii<lb/>
krli<lb/>
V<lb/>
ation<lb/>
? en<lb/>
i.l nationally<lb/>
beenawardedtheAM l fficionc draVN ?"t11<lb/>
to tlu<lb/>
TOlessloU<lb/>
Award recoenizine outstandini<lb/>
performance in <lb/>
l.ini<lb/>
une. .i<lb/>
ml<lb/>
organizing.<lb/>
.1 tOW till'<lb/>
H is these<lb/>
1. I chai<lb/>
Hov<lb/>
e rr<lb/>
'Nt<lb/>
Din<lb/>
tot ol Public Safety lerrv Williamson said<lb/>
i'i<lb/>
that the service has been limited to serving females to protect them from<lb/>
sexual assaults, and csi oi t s) stem does not have available resources to<lb/>
meet the demand to serve both genders<lb/>
S. Carolina parking tickets go hi-tech<lb/>
l In-1 niversity of South Carolina Parking and Vehicle Registratton<lb/>
Department Isimplementinga nevi hand heldcomputei parking ticket<lb/>
system Students with excessive tickets v ill be towed Instantaneously<lb/>
riui. ardinal ricket rrackssystemean store upto I5,0001icenseordecal<lb/>
numbers, and will save Hmc In handwriting tickets and money to<lb/>
employ a vl.u.i entry operator needed to t pe Information into a com<lb/>
puter.<lb/>
Parking patrolmen kcj m license and decal numbers along with<lb/>
make, color and violation ol the cai and the computer prints .?ticket<lb/>
The patrolmen transfer tin- computer to .i personal computer<lb/>
Colleges consider new bill's impact<lb/>
Colleges have taken notice ot a bill that would lorn- themto report<lb/>
the number or crimes that happen on their campus to students, their<lb/>
parents and applicants<lb/>
Rep Hill Goodling, K t. introduced the bill to Congress In Sep<lb/>
tember because "students of ten have<lb/>
and university campuses<lb/>
Students, parents and faculty me<lb/>
they should know about crimes on<lb/>
order to take measures to protect tin<lb/>
1 lowever, colleges and universit<lb/>
lead to recruiting fewer students aiu<lb/>
aw ai<lb/>
ed the honor<lb/>
It is<lb/>
d tli<lb/>
,iiii veai hi<lb/>
let has re<lb/>
in.i<lb/>
laotet h.<lb/>
from the Amerii an Marketing<lb/>
Association in 1989 last spring<lb/>
the AM presented the Pmgram<lb/>
mine. Award to E l M the Annual<lb/>
AMA Colleciatc v ontereni e in<lb/>
f marketing and the impact it has<lb/>
.mi the h es ol people I he theme<lb/>
foi II is ' i lebrate Marketing<lb/>
it Maki i I ixxl I ife Better<lb/>
I hel CL'CI ipti rol the M A<lb/>
is i ,?n pi is .i ol ? tudents w ith a<lb/>
interest in business markctingand<lb/>
mmunn ations Approximately<lb/>
students are members ol the<lb/>
ftlS&amp;LWYSViyi L$3 IS I'Wi<lb/>
per column inch<lb/>
.$5.75<lb/>
National Rale<lb/>
Open Rate$4.9f<lb/>
local Open RaleS4.7:<lb/>
Hulk<lb/>
Phone:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
 1requeue) ton tract<lb/>
Discounts Availible<lb/>
(Business'Hours:<lb/>
Monda -Friday<lb/>
10:00 -5:00 pm J<lb/>
New Orleans I he av an<lb/>
mos<lb/>
tin<lb/>
liapti i<lb/>
,u i i<lb/>
iinphshment<lb/>
.illvl<lb/>
eo.i i:<lb/>
,u hiee<lb/>
.1<lb/>
As a pmfessii nal busine<lb/>
organization, tlu<lb/>
Wl A<lb/>
crates in much the same mannei<lb/>
as siuiesstul businesses, said<lb/>
Denson<lb/>
Continued from page I<lb/>
which helped me ti<lb/>
.llli<lb/>
a i.u-MllKicscnscui sct i rs support thiIlllV I'll V 1 bill whothink<lb/>
andanmnd collej,e campuses in<lb/>
'ins.1Ives.<lb/>
ics t?arthat reporting crum?s will<lb/>
.1 facllll't to their aimpuses.<lb/>
my held,<lb/>
program,<lb/>
' hs Wi<lb/>
? 1h<lb/>
she a.<lb/>
aid. I hrough the<lb/>
iO woiked at Bui<lb/>
?me p iNMinine, re<lb/>
search on the time ot i hemi? al<lb/>
buyer's Guide<lb/>
in thine, Paper.<lb/>
355-6212<lb/>
roih<lb/>
TOCCsst's.<lb/>
Denson performed resean<lb/>
it the ECt si)<lb/>
Medu<lb/>
me<lb/>
under the super ision ol<lb/>
To Your Health<lb/>
bcrt<lb/>
i<lb/>
rner an<lb/>
Wa<lb/>
iver<lb/>
By Suzanne<lb/>
Keilerman<lb/>
Student Health advises to<lb/>
cut down on dietary fats<lb/>
Most nutrition and health experts agree that<lb/>
most Americans eat too much fat. Most of the fat<lb/>
consumed is unnecessary tor good nutrition and<lb/>
can even be detrimental to our health.<lb/>
The body needs tat to Junction and tats are the<lb/>
most concentrated source ol food energy Pats like<lb/>
carbohydrates and proteins are sources of energy<lb/>
Pats provide nine calories for every gram of food<lb/>
where asonty tour calories tor every gram of protein<lb/>
and carbohydrate. The body will use whatever fat<lb/>
is needed for energy but excess fat does not simply<lb/>
disappear. It is stored In fatty tissues in various<lb/>
parts of the body.<lb/>
Fats m tiHKi supply essential tatty acids. Some nutrients are<lb/>
described as "essential" because they are in fact necessary and because<lb/>
they must be consumed in our foods since the body either cannot<lb/>
produee them or cannot product them in adequate amounts, l.inoolic<lb/>
acid is an essential fatty acid that is important to prevent drying and<lb/>
flaking of the skin and to help create hormone like substances needed<lb/>
for your body processes.<lb/>
Fat deposits in the body act as stored energy and also as insulation<lb/>
and protection for body organs Fats also serve as earners for fat-<lb/>
soluble vitamins A, D, B and aid in their absorption.<lb/>
Everyone needs fat in their diets, but the question is how much fat<lb/>
and what kind? Most fats are den ved from animal or vegetable and are<lb/>
described aseitherunsaturatod or saturated. Fats are made upof chains<lb/>
of carbon atoms When all of the carbon atoms are linked with<lb/>
hydrogen atoms the fatty acid is considered to be saturated, or Riled<lb/>
with hydrogen If one or two carbon atoms is missing it is call a<lb/>
monounsaturated fat. If several carbon atoms arc empty it is call a<lb/>
See Health, page 7 <lb/>
lhis research included the stud<lb/>
ies. TheEffectol DrugMarketing<lb/>
Practices on Ph) acian's Prescrib<lb/>
ing Habits "Techniques for<lb/>
Improving Health Maintenence"<lb/>
and "Ways to Improve the Smok-<lb/>
ing Cessation of Residents' Pa<lb/>
dents" under the supervision ot<lb/>
Pr Robert Turner and Dr. Leo<lb/>
Waivers. The health mainteneiue<lb/>
study which she assisted Waivers<lb/>
on is currently up tor publication<lb/>
by the Archives ot Internal Medi-<lb/>
cine.<lb/>
Denson iscurrcntlj awaiting<lb/>
acceptance into medical school<lb/>
where she would like to become a<lb/>
research physician, and she said<lb/>
she then hopes to return to North<lb/>
Carolina to live.<lb/>
C<lb/>
Leaders<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
especially the leaders on campus.<lb/>
Circulating ideas, communicating,<lb/>
and answering questions are ust<lb/>
Of few of the attempts of the reccp<lb/>
tion, Hadley added.<lb/>
The Canteen Co. is scheduled<lb/>
to cater the event, serving I van<lb/>
ety of hot and cold hors d'oeuvres<lb/>
and beverages.<lb/>
Fosdick's756-2011<lb/>
George's Ciulf752-2135<lb/>
ll&amp;U Block756-9365<lb/>
Harris leeter758-6800<lb/>
Hillcresl lanes756-2020<lb/>
Instant Replay355-5050<lb/>
McDonald's752-1114<lb/>
Memorial Coin &amp; Pawn752-7736<lb/>
New Deli758-0080<lb/>
Overtoil's Supermarket752-5025<lb/>
Die Park Theatre752-7649<lb/>
Peebles804-447-7071<lb/>
l'ia Hut752-4445<lb/>
Plaza Theatre756-0088<lb/>
Public Safety757-6294<lb/>
Rack Room355-2519<lb/>
Research Information1-800-351-0222<lb/>
RingRold Towers752-2865<lb/>
Student Union757-4715<lb/>
Sunchase Tours303-226-0226<lb/>
T. Ventures830-4034<lb/>
Faffs Office Supply756-4224<lb/>
Triangle Women's Health1-800-433-2930<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0003"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, February 1,1990<lb/>
I<lb/>
Travel and adventure<lb/>
await in 'Greece' film<lb/>
FCC News Bureau<lb/>
Work continues<lb/>
Wesley Boyette (top) and ontinuetoworkonthe<lb/>
expansion joints at Mei ill Studeni rrter. (Photo by J.D. Whit-<lb/>
mire I CU Photo i at<lb/>
ECU to host high school<lb/>
Academic Quiz Bowl<lb/>
"Greece: Apollo to Zorba a<lb/>
travel documentary film narrated<lb/>
by its maker, 1 ynnBramkamp,will<lb/>
be screened at E l Feb. 15,aspail<lb/>
of ECU'S 1989-90 rravel-Adven-<lb/>
ture Film Series. The screening will<lb/>
begin at 8 p m. in I lendrix rheatre.<lb/>
This film visit lo the southern<lb/>
European land ot ancient Kistory<lb/>
and mythology offers glimpses ol<lb/>
itN scenic islands and various his-<lb/>
toric sites, including the Acropo-<lb/>
lis, Corinth and Delphi. Ancient<lb/>
ruins are contrasted with footage<lb/>
of modem Athens.<lb/>
Noted s the ' radle ol civili-<lb/>
zation" as well as ,w international<lb/>
playground, Greece attracts<lb/>
crowdsof vacationers every sum-<lb/>
mer. Ancient Greeks would still<lb/>
recognize the natural wonders of<lb/>
the country, from the pine cov-<lb/>
ered mountains in tin- north to the<lb/>
Samana C lorge in , rete,filmmaker<lb/>
Bramkamp sa s<lb/>
' Beinp sailors themselves they<lb/>
would marvel at the sleek yachts<lb/>
and cruise ships, hut feel at home<lb/>
among the fishing b its that still<lb/>
fill the picturesque (Ireek harbors<lb/>
he noted.<lb/>
Drama and storytelling have<lb/>
always been part of the Greek tra<lb/>
dition, the filmmaker said, and<lb/>
through the Greeks still practice<lb/>
ancient crafts of embroidery,<lb/>
weaving, pottery and carving,<lb/>
residents of Greece's modern cit-<lb/>
iesare "embracing the future,eager<lb/>
forall the innovation and change it<lb/>
promises<lb/>
1 lighlightsof "Greece: Apollo<lb/>
to Zorba" include King Minos'<lb/>
palace ol Knossos on Crete, the<lb/>
medieval city of Rhodes, with its<lb/>
perfectly preserved Street of the<lb/>
Knights, the sacred island Patmos,<lb/>
where St. ohn wrote the "Apoca-<lb/>
lypse" and Kastoria, location of<lb/>
(Ireece's unique pieced-fur indus-<lb/>
try.<lb/>
Admission to the film is by<lb/>
"ravel-Adventure Film Series<lb/>
eason ticket or bv single ticket,<lb/>
available at the ECU Central Ticket<lb/>
Office at $4 each.<lb/>
A theme dinner featuring tra-<lb/>
ditional Creek dishes will be<lb/>
served in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, adjacent to Hendrix The<lb/>
atre, beginning at 6:30 pan. Dinner<lb/>
tickets, which must be purchased<lb/>
at least two days in advance, are<lb/>
ss 95 each.<lb/>
WHY WAIT<lb/>
FOR YOUR<lb/>
TAX REFUND<lb/>
WHEN YOU CAN<lb/>
GET YOUR MONEY FAST!<lb/>
Use H&amp;R Block's Rapid Refund Program<lb/>
It's a loan against your expected federal income ta refund.<lb/>
ailable whether ll&amp;R Block prepares your lav return or not.<lb/>
IT'S FAST! H&amp;R BLOCK<lb/>
For more details or see it you quality call H&amp;R Block now.<lb/>
Greenville Square M- F 9 - Wesi End Buyers Market<lb/>
7S6 9365 Sat &amp; Sun 9 5 7Sfl i;w<lb/>
INC<lb/>
I t l Sews Bureau<lb/>
ms ol<lb/>
eastern Is<lb/>
schools v ill p<lb/>
ond I<lb/>
this Satu<lb/>
 pi ?<lb/>
chap' ?<lb/>
ciation and<lb/>
i lonorst<lb/>
HI :<lb/>
each<lb/>
it the irts<lb/>
1111.)<lb/>
wienie literature<lb/>
? I I<lb/>
, i? form p? ? I<lb/>
- rctt tsecT l.P. OUUW<lb/>
Bo 1 program with points<lb/>
i rect ansv? ei s<lb/>
Ii? ? , ating schools were<lb/>
: ??. m among 23 who ap<lb/>
11 compete in the 1990bowl,<lb/>
n Anema ol i ireenville,<lb/>
IcntofthePittC ountyalumni<lb/>
A re bowl play off was<lb/>
held on campus Ian "<lb/>
- !30 scholarships will lv<lb/>
? ? led to members ol the win-<lb/>
team, and tour $100 s holar<lb/>
lo the runner up team<lb/>
iiiestions m nbers Each of the top two<lb/>
teams will also receive a $100<lb/>
?? ? ? hool libraries.<lb/>
i his year's bowl matches are<lb/>
See Quiz, page 7<lb/>
5SS<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
Washington Highway (N C 33 EtGreenville North Caroline<lb/>
Phone 752 3172<lb/>
Mon. thru Thurs. Night ?<lb/>
t Carol<lb/>
?<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
Plate<lb/>
$3.75<lb/>
Pf<lb/>
OFFICE SUPPLIES, SCHOOL<lb/>
SUPPLIES, SOCIAL STATIONERY, GUTS,<lb/>
GREETING CARDS<lb/>
422 ARLINGTON BLVD<lb/>
(Opposite rrn plaza)<lb/>
756-4224<lb/>
? Typewriter Paper<lb/>
? Resume Paper<lb/>
? Typewriter Ribbons<lb/>
? Drawing Pads<lb/>
? Drafting Supplies<lb/>
? Report Covers<lb/>
? Ring Binders<lb/>
? Composition Hooks<lb/>
For Ml Your School Supply Needs<lb/>
Great Selection,<lb/>
Price and Service<lb/>
M- F9:30 - 6:00<lb/>
Stot&amp;30-5:00<lb/>
New faculty<lb/>
named to<lb/>
School of<lb/>
Business<lb/>
1 C I Now i Hurojii<lb/>
MEMORIAL COINS<lb/>
&amp;PAWN<lb/>
Two administrate appoint<lb/>
ments have been announced in the<lb/>
K lit" il ol Business at ; iro<lb/>
lina I niversity<lb/>
Dr Ri hard I Kerns, busi<lb/>
ness professor, has been nan<lb/>
associated dean for omputi i ?<lb/>
ices, and William ! . Whittman has<lb/>
been named director of computer<lb/>
services Both appointment<lb/>
madeb) 1 r. Ernest B. I hr deanot<lb/>
the School of Business<lb/>
Kerns has directed I<lb/>
sition, operation and applicatii<lb/>
of computer te hi for the<lb/>
School of Business for 16 years<lb/>
uringthisfx ri i thecompul .<lb/>
facilities in the School ol Busin ?<lb/>
havegfown froma single terminal<lb/>
connect! d to the R searchTria i<lb/>
Park computer system toa system<lb/>
w ith over 90 inter. onne ted per<lb/>
 ma i , uters and a midrai<lb/>
computer<lb/>
Kerns joined the F. i facull<lb/>
in 1973 aft? r - ompleting his d<lb/>
rotate in ph sm s at the i niversit)<lb/>
of Virginia ami h MBA at E I<lb/>
He has been involved in i<lb/>
(;is campus - i i' " s  im<lb/>
proe computing at 1(1 and<lb/>
within the I niversitj I North<lb/>
Carolina system<lb/>
Whittman, a 1?turer in I<lb/>
! Nppartmen! ol Decision Sciences,<lb/>
will direct the operational mai<lb/>
McmentofthemiclrangecomputeT<lb/>
installed as part of the ECU-IBM<lb/>
( omputerIntegrated Manilla tur<lb/>
ing project 1 le will also assist with<lb/>
the operation of other computer<lb/>
facilities m the School of Business<lb/>
Whittman holds m MA de<lb/>
gfee from the I nrversitj of North<lb/>
Dakota and n MBA from H I<lb/>
He JDifWd BO as a lei turer in<lb/>
1WV<lb/>
i N S<lb/>
C( UN SI PP1 IIS<lb/>
Dl MONDS .T(l 1-VISIONS<lb/>
? VCRS<lb/>
? CAM! HAS<lb/>
?<lb/>
? STEREOS<lb/>
? Ml SICALINSTR1 MENTS<lb/>
?COINS<lb/>
All<lb/>
INSIAV! CASH 1 OANS<lb/>
WE BUY GOLD SILVER<lb/>
Transactions Strictly Confidential<lb/>
65? K tnorial I i<lb/>
7 5 2-7736<lb/>
(Jreenv ilh<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Alumni Association<lb/>
Proudly Presents<lb/>
For Seniors Only<lb/>
The Attic<lb/>
Tuesday, February 6<lb/>
4:00 pm - 6:00 pm<lb/>
No Cover Charge, just bring your<lb/>
I.P and join the rest of the<lb/>
Class of 1990<lb/>
For a<lb/>
"Senior Send Off"<lb/>
Refreshments! Raffles!<lb/>
?onsored By:<lb/>
Sp<lb/>
Champions Health Cluh<lb/>
ECU Student Store<lb/>
lit is<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
East Coast Music &amp; Video<lb/>
Pizza Transit Authority<lb/>
Carolina Imprints<lb/>
The Attic<lb/>
review<lb/>
'30<lb/>
Summer Student<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
Opportunity<lb/>
Available<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
ORIENTATION<lb/>
STAFF<lb/>
Pick Up Application Packet<lb/>
209 Whichard<lb/>
Deadline: Feb. 21,1990 ? 12:00pm<lb/>
.<lb/>
-4<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0004"/><lb/>
?he iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
David HERRING, General Manager<lb/>
Lori Martin, Editor<lb/>
JAMES F.J. McKee, Director ofAdvertising<lb/>
OSEPH 1 Jenkins Jr Newt Editor Phonk. Liking, Credit Manager<lb/>
Apam CoRNEUUS, Asat, News Editor Stijart ROSNER, Business Manager<lb/>
Caroi ine CusiCK, Features Editor Pamela Cope, Ad Tech Supervisor<lb/>
John Ticker, Asst. Features Editor MATTHEW RlCHTER, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Mr hah Martin, Sports Editor TRACY Weed, Production Manager<lb/>
Thomas I. Bakk VI, Asst. Sports Editor Steve REID, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Carrii ARMSTRONG, Entertainment Editor Mk'haii Carnes, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
Scon Maxwell, Satire Editor Beth Lupton, Secretary<lb/>
1 lie East Carolinian has been serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925, with pi unary emphasis on in-<lb/>
formation mosi direx tl affecting ECU students. It is published twice weekly, with .1 circulation ol 12,000. The East<lb/>
Carolinian reserves the nghi to refuse or discontinue any advertisements that disenmin tie on the Kims ol age, sex,<lb/>
creed or national origin. Tin' East Carolinian welcomes tetters expressing .ill poinis ol lew F01 purposes ol decency<lb/>
and brevity, li ic l ast Carolinian reserves the right to edit any letter for publication Letters should be sent to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, Publications Bkfaj ECU, Greenville, NC, 27834; or call us ai (919) 1 ' fi 166<lb/>
nmmi<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Thursday February 1 , 1990<lb/>
Where does the killing end?<lb/>
The death penalty is a difficult issue lo<lb/>
debate With the recent sentencing of lames r<lb/>
Upchurch ill for the 1988 stabbing of a Wash-<lb/>
ington, N C man, many eastern North Caro-<lb/>
linians are faced with the Issue up close. Is the<lb/>
death penally morally and ethically justified?<lb/>
And is it a practical solution to theannilation ol<lb/>
irime' "here are definitely two sides to the<lb/>
issue<lb/>
me argue th.it murder should be<lb/>
punishable b) deathsimply because it is wrong.<lb/>
(mi six iet is based on a system that supports<lb/>
the death penalty and it a person commits the<lb/>
r she must face the consequences In<lb/>
the  . ' p hurch his crime was premedi-<lb/>
tated and i knew the possible consequences<lb/>
ol hu a ' In order to maintain the laws our<lb/>
soc iety s established, Upchurch must accept<lb/>
his punishment.<lb/>
1 host, against the death penalty may<lb/>
say that it does not act as a deferent against<lb/>
 ii<lb/>
murder The United l tal ; is one ol the few<lb/>
modern nati'i eathasa punish-<lb/>
ment for a crimt Yet out crime rate persists at<lb/>
a high level It could be s.iui thai the death<lb/>
penalty is murder itself and is an inhumane and<lb/>
uncivilized way to approach the problem. At<lb/>
terall, it's the same as murder, just spoken in<lb/>
different words.<lb/>
The Upchurch case presents an even<lb/>
morecomplex situation 1 heconvicted man has<lb/>
vowed to starve himseli in order to die with<lb/>
dignity 1 he state's response to thai is to force<lb/>
teed, him So wespend ta pa) ers money to keep<lb/>
him alive for however 1 ? tn 15 take to appeal<lb/>
the case, and then we turn irounda year or two<lb/>
later to kill him h bet i mes a i is t y lo.<lb/>
Where does il all end? Oui prisons are<lb/>
areadv overcrowded and many oi the state-<lb/>
funded mental institutions are inefficient. Yet<lb/>
killing is killing whether it's legal or not.<lb/>
Friends make the difference<lb/>
By Dinah Eng<lb/>
Gannett News Service<lb/>
I haven't seen him in a vearor<lb/>
more. I le'sone of the most ethical<lb/>
andcaring politicians I know, and<lb/>
he loves me,<lb/>
We've known each other more<lb/>
than a decade now, and while he<lb/>
occasionally hintsatwantingmore<lb/>
than friendship, I make it clear<lb/>
that that will never bo<lb/>
file thing is, he's married, and<lb/>
even it lit weren't, 1 wouldn't be<lb/>
interested in him romantically. But<lb/>
I love him as a friend, and von<lb/>
don't walk awav from friends.<lb/>
So we chat on the phone,<lb/>
usually when he's facing a tough<lb/>
political decision, and promise to<lb/>
make a date tor lunch, which we<lb/>
never ilo<lb/>
Politicians are smooth talkers,<lb/>
and whether they're in Congress,<lb/>
on your local school board, or in<lb/>
vour offii e, it's hard to know who<lb/>
they really ?re because they put<lb/>
on different faces for different<lb/>
constituents Sometimes it's hard<lb/>
for them to remember who they<lb/>
really are<lb/>
That s why they need friends<lb/>
people who have no agenda<lb/>
except friendship. People who can<lb/>
l?y without fear. VVhv would<lb/>
i, (-mid ifP ' liki that<lb/>
It's a shame District ot Co-<lb/>
lumbia Mayor Marion Barry didn't<lb/>
have more triends.<lb/>
On Jan. 18, the mayor of the<lb/>
nation's capital was arrested in a<lb/>
hotel room by FBI agents who<lb/>
videotaped him allegedly smok-<lb/>
ing crack cocaine in the company<lb/>
of a female friend, Hael Diane<lb/>
"Kashooda" Moore.<lb/>
Barrv, who has btvn linked<lb/>
with a convicted drug dealer,<lb/>
lashed out at the media before his<lb/>
arrest, saving reports of various<lb/>
questionable incidents were ra-<lb/>
cially motivated by those who<lb/>
wanted to see a black mayor fail.<lb/>
He vehemently denied that he<lb/>
used drugs, and people believed<lb/>
him. His political friends rallied<lb/>
around him, preparing to an-<lb/>
nounce his candidacy for a fourth<lb/>
term. Then Rasheeda Moore<lb/>
called.<lb/>
Barry seems to have been<lb/>
surrounded bv a "family of<lb/>
friends who are typical of those<lb/>
found in alcoholic or substance<lb/>
abusecases. Usually, thealcohohc<lb/>
is supported in his or her addic-<lb/>
tion bv family and triends who<lb/>
deny that the person is alcoholic<lb/>
Instead of helping the person<lb/>
admit an addiction, the friends<lb/>
ignore the problem, becoming co-<lb/>
dependents themselves.<lb/>
Oil, men and water don't mix<lb/>
By Nathaniel Mead<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
It almost seems too good to be<lb/>
true. Democratic representative<lb/>
Walter B. (ones, Sr has introduced<lb/>
legislation to prohibit any oil or<lb/>
gas exploration off our beloved<lb/>
Outer Banks until at least late 1991.<lb/>
I he proposed bill, 1 IK. 3861, has<lb/>
pre ? dents in (California and Flor-<lb/>
ida, where other sensible states-<lb/>
men have responded similarly to<lb/>
.i growing chorus ol public dis-<lb/>
dain lor offshore oil drilling. The<lb/>
environmental law strategy is ot<lb/>
course heartily welcomed by the<lb/>
thousands of eco-activists who<lb/>
have sought ways everything<lb/>
from boycotts to mass demonstra-<lb/>
tions to splashing oil over the State<lb/>
Capital building to squelch<lb/>
Mobil's offshore drilling ambi-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Jones' bill a imes as a big sur-<lb/>
prise to those who have been fol-<lb/>
lowing his interactions with the<lb/>
oil industry in recent years. The<lb/>
record shows that Jones has long<lb/>
supported the oil industry. Why<lb/>
he should suddenly conic around<lb/>
is ,i mvsterv Perhaps he beeves<lb/>
the court case has little chant e oi<lb/>
succeeding. On the other hand,<lb/>
perhaps he has actually come to<lb/>
his senses. That sometimes hap-<lb/>
pens, even with politicians.<lb/>
It passed, loins' bill would<lb/>
annul Mobil Oil Corps plan to<lb/>
sink a smgle test well about 4<lb/>
miles northeast ol C ape 1 latteras<lb/>
K this May Hie bill would ban all<lb/>
drilling activities, approval ol per-<lb/>
mits and issuance oi new leases<lb/>
off the Outer Banks until October<lb/>
1991. It would also establish an<lb/>
environmental sciences review<lb/>
panel to conduct the stud v not<lb/>
the U.S. Minerals Management<lb/>
Service or Mobil's own small le-<lb/>
gion of scientists, who have as-<lb/>
sured us that the drilling opora-<lb/>
In the case oi Marion Barrv,<lb/>
the circle oi co-dependents goes<lb/>
bevond the mayor's family and<lb/>
personal triends. We in the city of<lb/>
Washington saw the struggles of a<lb/>
man linked with drugs, and did<lb/>
nothing to help him.<lb/>
We allowed his problem to be<lb/>
masked bv hischargesthata racist<lb/>
press corps was persecuting him.<lb/>
We allowed him to go into the<lb/>
schools and tell our youngsters<lb/>
that they should not take drugs,<lb/>
without forcing him to explain<lb/>
whv he kept company with con-<lb/>
victed drug dealers.<lb/>
And we encouraged him to<lb/>
run for office again, by not hold-<lb/>
ing his feet to the tire tor a rising<lb/>
tide oi murders and street crime<lb/>
related to drug abuse in the Dis-<lb/>
trict.<lb/>
It's not too late to bridge those<lb/>
mist.ikes We can learn from the<lb/>
Barrv fiaseo, and encourage our<lb/>
leaders todeal with personal prob-<lb/>
lems before they become political<lb/>
ones<lb/>
In all streasofour lives, we can<lb/>
move more quickly to help people<lb/>
when trouble is apparent, and not<lb/>
dose our eves to it.<lb/>
It stheonly way we'll become<lb/>
bettor friends.<lb/>
turn would pose no risks to our<lb/>
coast. 'Trust us, we have the tech-<lb/>
nology Mobil's lim Martin re-<lb/>
peatedly tells the press. (Martin<lb/>
has been in the oil businessa long,<lb/>
long time.)<lb/>
Firmly grounded in ecologi-<lb/>
cal principle, lones' bill is a plea<lb/>
for enlightened restraint in our<lb/>
commerce with the natural w rid<lb/>
"Shutting, down the offshore oil<lb/>
and gas program ofl North t !aro-<lb/>
lina until such timeaseveryone<lb/>
federal, state and local decision<lb/>
makers, as well .is the public'<lb/>
has adequate information on<lb/>
which to base a decision about the<lb/>
development oi these reourcesisa<lb/>
reasonable approach hesays. In<lb/>
other words, think before you take<lb/>
major risks with the natural world<lb/>
I he proposed ban is preventive<lb/>
medicine at its best, tor what's at<lb/>
stake is nothing less than the fu<lb/>
hire of our entire eastern C arohna<lb/>
coastline.<lb/>
The Outer Banks are unique<lb/>
in mam respects. The magnifi<lb/>
cent stretch oi barrier islands is<lb/>
lined with white sandy beaches<lb/>
and relatie pristine waters,<lb/>
offering a magical haven f i<lb/>
people and v ildlifc alike I he<lb/>
C htter Banksalso protei t the <lb/>
marle-Pamlico estuary, second<lb/>
largest estuary in the I 5 after<lb/>
I hesapeake Bay Anything which<lb/>
threatens to despoil this ai<lb/>
should be (ought, and the oil in-<lb/>
dustry is surelv, at this point, the<lb/>
ugliest threat imaginable One<lb/>
only need recall the Alaskan oil<lb/>
disaster ol March 24, 1989 some<lb/>
II million gallons oi oil clogged<lb/>
Prince William Sound's countless<lb/>
baysand inlets, as wcllasthestom-<lb/>
ac hs, fur and feathersol thousands<lb/>
of otters, sea lions, seabirds and<lb/>
fish. The oil is still there, in the<lb/>
sand, under the rocks, and in the<lb/>
thousands of creatures victimized<lb/>
by the spill<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
1 he oil companies tell us tl ?<lb/>
offshore oil drilling is difl i<lb/>
that the pipeline will besafi r I<lb/>
a tanker-oriented operation I<lb/>
of course no system is absolut<lb/>
fool-prooi Blowouts of und r<lb/>
ter wells and leaks in underwati -<lb/>
pipes havcoccurred, or ? asioi<lb/>
with drastic onscqueni esto<lb/>
habitat and  ildlifc 1 he Janu<lb/>
1969 blowoutof an under il<lb/>
well in theSanta Barbara I<lb/>
resulted in the contamination I<lb/>
ab nt I1 mill - ' ilil rnia<lb/>
lineand thedeath of thousand<lb/>
birds. Although stricter safet<lb/>
standards have been imposed<lb/>
drilling and transporting oj i<lb/>
tionssince then, the world contin-<lb/>
ues to experience frequent, I<lb/>
- . eoilcontaminationofallkind!<lb/>
! he question seems to be w hen<lb/>
not whether lethal spills be<lb/>
i . me a tac t oi life.<lb/>
Despite- the- vacuous assur-<lb/>
ances ol Mobil's "experts" and<lb/>
members ol the U s. Miner<lb/>
Management Service (MMS)<lb/>
many North Carolinians believe<lb/>
it's not worth risking a drill<lb/>
operatioi I fi ;ularfv<lb/>
e tperu nces som ltd<lb/>
offshore wi rld.t<lb/>
spills else ?? ? intrv,<lb/>
. publi-<lb/>
cized spill b i ? von in New Yorl<lb/>
,rc killing seabirds and marine<lb/>
mammals at this vei t. Il<lb/>
Mobil gets its way, the beaut) I<lb/>
our coastli i be- irretrieva<lb/>
bly lost.<lb/>
 ban on offshore oil dnli<lb/>
should prompt us to begin look-<lb/>
ing tor other ways to meet our<lb/>
energy needs. We are a nation<lb/>
drunk oil, consuming more oil on<lb/>
average than other industrialized<lb/>
nations And we have neglected<lb/>
conservation. It the Reagan-Bush<lb/>
team had not gutted the fuel ("ffi<lb/>
ciency standards set in the 'is fc<lb/>
See (ones, page 5<lb/>
A 'new direction' for America?<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
A recent focusof attention has<lb/>
been the fiscal policies of the U.S.<lb/>
government. This scrutiny has<lb/>
come from two directions. First of<lb/>
all, the policy has been scrutinized<lb/>
in terms of excessive defense<lb/>
spending. Secondly, it has been<lb/>
scrutinized in terms of the sad<lb/>
inadequacy of focus on the many<lb/>
and diverse domestic issues of<lb/>
importance. Today, I would like<lb/>
to submit an alternative proposal<lb/>
to those being considered by our<lb/>
leaders today. This proposition<lb/>
will challenge those who are cur-<lb/>
rently in positions of responsibil-<lb/>
ity in America to put aside their<lb/>
selfish interests and lead us in a<lb/>
new direction for the 'Ws.<lb/>
Shortly before his death in<lb/>
18, Dr. Martin Luther King r.<lb/>
was calling for a restructuring of<lb/>
American society and orientation<lb/>
so that it would not be a failure to<lb/>
those who needed it most. He said<lb/>
these words in criticism of a po-<lb/>
tentially self-defeating domestic<lb/>
and international policy: "Every<lb/>
now and then I go back and read<lb/>
Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the<lb/>
Roman Empire and 1 come and<lb/>
look at America and 1 say to my-<lb/>
self, The parallels are frighten-<lb/>
ing In order to understand the<lb/>
necesity for a new direction, one<lb/>
can look to the demise of the<lb/>
Roman Empire. After great pe-<lb/>
riod of prosperity, this empire<lb/>
began to fall for several reasons<lb/>
fhat include the following:<lb/>
1) They could not continue to<lb/>
support its international respon-<lb/>
sibilities and this affected theecon-<lb/>
omy and domestic prosperity.<lb/>
2) The older generation did<lb/>
not prepare the vouth to ensure a<lb/>
sound future (economically, mili-<lb/>
tarily, etc) and other more ca-<lb/>
pable countries took over.<lb/>
3)The structure of society was<lb/>
further decayed by a decline in<lb/>
morals and values. All of these<lb/>
characteristics andor problems<lb/>
can be observed in America today<lb/>
making reform necessary to pre-<lb/>
vent a similar fate. In order to<lb/>
remain prosperousand strong, we<lb/>
must make the commitment to<lb/>
revamp our fiscal policy as well as<lb/>
domestic programming.<lb/>
Bush's proposed budget in-<lb/>
cluded $303.3 billion in defense<lb/>
spending which is a 2 percent<lb/>
budget cut. This measure is insuf-<lb/>
ficient. 1 fed that the budget must<lb/>
be cut by at least 10 percent per<lb/>
year for 5 years to total a 50 per-<lb/>
cent reduction by 1995. This con-<lb/>
stitutes.1 iivingsof approximately<lb/>
$151,600,000,000. This can be<lb/>
achieved by several measures to<lb/>
includethe following: 1) Closing<lb/>
of excessive bases. 2) Drastic cuts<lb/>
in nuclear weaponry. 3) Signifi-<lb/>
cant curtailing of research proj-<lb/>
ects including SDI. 4) Reduction<lb/>
of active duty forces. 5) Stream-<lb/>
ling and re-evaluation of overseas<lb/>
commitments.<lb/>
All this "Peace Dividend"<lb/>
could then be reinvested in do-<lb/>
mestic development in a proper<lb/>
tion like this: $50 billion to social<lb/>
development (in addition to exist-<lb/>
ing budget), $r() billion to crime<lb/>
prevention and enforcement, $5<lb/>
billion to technological and edu-<lb/>
cational development, $300 mil-<lb/>
lion to burgeoning democracies<lb/>
and 53(H) million to a reserve fund<lb/>
(emergencies, etc.)<lb/>
All this cm bo achieved bj<lb/>
simple pragmatism in the area ot<lb/>
defense in this age when we are<lb/>
pressing tor peace. This nop Mrec<lb/>
tion may seem liberal or unrealis-<lb/>
tic lo some but I see it as essential<lb/>
to the survival ot us all!<lb/>
Darek Ma ullers<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
(.enoral College<lb/>
University<lb/>
misplaces<lb/>
priorities<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
With dwindling natural re-<lb/>
sources and overflowing landfills,<lb/>
it isreallv doubtful that we should<lb/>
worn' about the "homelv" ap-<lb/>
pearance of recycling containers<lb/>
The need for recycling will con-<lb/>
tinue, and in the future perhaps<lb/>
the containers can be, as William<lb/>
Morris thought they should be,<lb/>
both beautiful and functional.<lb/>
C.T. MarUxcia<lb/>
L-pN'ssor ul usvjlbolocj<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, February 1, 1990 5<lb/>
Jones<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
c arter, we would be burning<lb/>
300,000 fewer barrels of oil a day.<lb/>
t lundredsofbillionsofdollarsare<lb/>
wasted each year because indus<lb/>
try and government have collabo-<lb/>
rated toeliminatean) incentiveto<lb/>
save energy. tin I nited Statrs<lb/>
now spends 10 percent of its gross<lb/>
iiation.il product on energy; (apart<lb/>
shmhKpercenl<lb/>
But as oil slicks, acid ram and<lb/>
Ihc pn enhouse cffc 11 ontinuo to<lb/>
threaten life on a global s ale<lb/>
promotion of solar energy and<lb/>
? ithei renewable energy tec hnolo<lb/>
pies has become the mosl sane<lb/>
stratej foi cur i ollective well<lb/>
being and future survival R<lb/>
placing a ban on offshore oil drill<lb/>
ing, tin' I - government will<lb/>
eventually be compelled to lie<lb/>
vote more attention u improved<lb/>
auto fttu iencv standards and re-<lb/>
search aivi development ol non-<lb/>
polluting renewable energy<lb/>
sour es<lb/>
5 meda . 't i.ourse vp will<lb/>
have to phase out oil altogether<lb/>
Eliminating oil as a fuel source for<lb/>
automobiles would drasticalh<lb/>
reduce carbon emissions and, in<lb/>
turn slow the pat eof clobal warm<lb/>
ing In addition, large scale con-<lb/>
verse ntocthanol fuel would open<lb/>
a vast new market lor struggling<lb/>
farmers. In this vein, Exxon says<lb/>
their N C based oil business<lb/>
would reatc more jobs 1 ho truth<lb/>
is, more jobs are to be had in an<lb/>
economy attempting to phase out<lb/>
fossil fuels I or instance, the util<lb/>
it v industry pro ides only five jobs<lb/>
for each $1 million ol investment;<lb/>
by contrast, homo weatheriz.ition<lb/>
programs cmplo SO people foi<lb/>
thesameinvestment Multinah ?<lb/>
Monitor, Km 1 eb 1989) recent<lb/>
stud) b) the loin I 1 t onomit c nni<lb/>
mittee ol Congress com ludes that<lb/>
,m i nergj polii dedi a ted to<lb/>
maximizing out nation s i n<lb/>
officienc and its iwol renewable<lb/>
resources i ould add nearly three<lb/>
million workers to the nations<lb/>
emplo menl rolls<lb/>
Walter IV ones det ision to nip<lb/>
the problem at the bud nggests<lb/>
that he does not bm the mtiquated<lb/>
argument bv President Bu: h w h ?<lb/>
has oil running in his vein<lb/>
with plent) of holt .ten I no<lb/>
doubt I, that we need to drill off<lb/>
shore because we need the oil<lb/>
I nlikc hush and other politic ians,<lb/>
(ones genuinely cares about the<lb/>
long term health of I arth and its<lb/>
inhabitants thankfully he has<lb/>
the foresight to strive to preserve<lb/>
our pristine coastline and to give<lb/>
our children the future they de-<lb/>
serve<lb/>
ones lias started the ball roll-<lb/>
ing, but it will take more than a<lb/>
bill or two to keep the oil indus-<lb/>
tries from raping the Continental<lb/>
Shell and potentially destroying<lb/>
the Kiter Hanks Those of us who<lb/>
care more lor the quality of life<lb/>
(oursand the wild creatures') than<lb/>
foi Mobile's profiteering interests<lb/>
know exactly where we stand.<lb/>
I he next step will entail some<lb/>
heftv letter writing to our rcpre<lb/>
sentatives and senators. I Vn i<lb/>
forget ever) letter represents<lb/>
hundreds of future votes in the<lb/>
politic ian's eye. So take up the<lb/>
pen and speak your piece<lb/>
there s still tune to save our coast.<lb/>
 ntil quite recently, the su-<lb/>
?( er rit h oil ' ompanies have al-<lb/>
wasS been .ible to buy their way<lb/>
into anv drilling situation they<lb/>
ired Alaska is a case in point.<lb/>
Mol i v nl undoubtedly try to do<lb/>
the same, and it w ill have plenty<lb/>
ol support from the Bush admini-<lb/>
stration. We must all be prepared<lb/>
to fight a long and dirty battle<lb/>
v, ith those idiots in hum places<lb/>
s ho still believe oil isa good idea<lb/>
U<lb/>
-r-$<lb/>
1 doz. LongStem<lb/>
Roses<lb/>
Boxed w baby's<lb/>
breath <lb/>
k. A<lb/>
&amp; greens<lb/>
757-1007<lb/>
5th St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
L<lb/>
winter ladies' shoes boots,<lb/>
handbags 'and accessories.<lb/>
Buyer's Market Memorial DrJ<lb/>
I I Greenville NC '<lb/>
Preview f90<lb/>
Summer Student Leadership<lb/>
Opportunity Available<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
ORIENTATION STAFF<lb/>
Pick Up Application Packet<lb/>
209 Whichard<lb/>
Deadline: Feb. 21, 1990 ? 12:00pm<lb/>
PARKING AM) TRAFFIC APPEALS BOARD<lb/>
Beginning February 1, 1990, students, staff, and faculty will<lb/>
have the right to appeal, in writing, a campus citation issued for<lb/>
violations ofthe ECU Parking and Traffic Regulations. Appro-<lb/>
priate forms and information regarding the Appeals System<lb/>
will be furnished to the appellant by Traffic Services. The form<lb/>
must be completed and returned to Traffic Services w ithin ten<lb/>
(10) business days of the citation date.<lb/>
Further information regarding the Appeals System is available<lb/>
at the Traffic Service Office located at 609 East 10th Street or<lb/>
by telephoning 757-6294<lb/>
The new<lb/>
MacintoshPottable.<lb/>
the ttandord<lb/>
Macintosh keyboard<lb/>
is nnli m<lb/>
An Active Matrix U linvn<lb/>
displays text and graphics as rtspfj<lb/>
as am other Macintosh<lb/>
Battery power levels<lb/>
can be displayed on the<lb/>
screen, mth lou power<lb/>
awnings posted<lb/>
tiUlt'truithUlh<lb/>
6 12 hours oj<lb/>
:? rtabie i mpiitm<lb/>
bef n battery<lb/>
needs nxharymg<lb/>
That l  ft 5 times<lb/>
longer than most<lb/>
portables<lb/>
The (MX 68000<lb/>
mu.njfmcessvr<lb/>
operates at lb<lb/>
megahertz?tuve<lb/>
the speed f the<lb/>
Macintosh SE<lb/>
The tm kbattjunchons<lb/>
as an mUratfd<lb/>
pmnting device<lb/>
Its best features<lb/>
ate onesyou already know.<lb/>
Intn ducing the new Apple1 lacint( gh ? Pi rtabk<lb/>
a minuter, the p rttk that fes all the features y? w'd<lb/>
expect t) find in a Macinti eh. And then s mix<lb/>
s i n x hj can get (he same intuitive graphic<lb/>
interface, and have the ability to nan virtually al! airrvnt<lb/>
vera ?ns i i Macinti sh s Await? .ill in ne<lb/>
easy-trxany, portable package<lb/>
And special features let v u take it anywhere<lb/>
Such as built-ir, features that give you long battery<lb/>
lite and intelligent pu (wer management ()r ih He that<lb/>
pn wide supeti r graphic capabilities while providing<lb/>
full-width, wide-angle viewing under .ilmost anv<lb/>
lighting o nditi n<lb/>
sti p in t day ti i see the new Nlacmti h Pi stable?<lb/>
.ill tin- a mvenieive i i pi tuble a minuting. without<lb/>
having K i a ?mpn urase a thing<lb/>
Featured here.<lb/>
For more information contact:<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0006"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
The East Carolinian, February 1,1990 5<lb/>
Jones<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
Carter, we would be burning<lb/>
300,000 fewer barrels of oil a day.<lb/>
Hundredsofbillionsofdollarsare<lb/>
wasted each year because indus-<lb/>
try and government have collabo-<lb/>
rated to eliminate any incentive to<lb/>
save energy. The United States<lb/>
now spends 10 percent of its gross<lb/>
national product on energy; Japan<lb/>
spends 5 percent.<lb/>
But As oil slicks, acid rain, and<lb/>
the greenhouse effect continue to<lb/>
threaten life on a global scale,<lb/>
promotion of solar energy and<lb/>
other renewable energy technolo-<lb/>
gies has become the most sane<lb/>
strategy for our collective well-<lb/>
being and future survival. Bv<lb/>
placing a ban on offshore oil drill-<lb/>
ing, the U.S. government will<lb/>
eventually be Compelled to de-<lb/>
vote more attention to improved<lb/>
auto efficiency standards and re-<lb/>
search and development of non-<lb/>
polluting, renewable energy<lb/>
sources.<lb/>
Somedav, of course, we will<lb/>
have to phase out oil altogether.<lb/>
Eliminating oil as a fuel source for<lb/>
automobiles would drastically<lb/>
reduce carbon emissions and, in<lb/>
turn,slow the pace of global warm-<lb/>
ing. In addition, large-scale con-<lb/>
version toethanol fuel would open<lb/>
a vast new market for struggling<lb/>
farmers. In this vein, Exxon says<lb/>
their N.C-based oil business<lb/>
would create more jobs. The truth<lb/>
is, more jobs are to be had in an<lb/>
economy attempting to phase out<lb/>
fossil fuels. For instance, the util-<lb/>
ity industry provides only five jobs<lb/>
for each $1 million of investment;<lb/>
bv contrast, home weatherization<lb/>
programs employ 50 people for<lb/>
thes.imeinvestment(Mufitifi('Mii<lb/>
Monitor, anFeb 1984). A recent<lb/>
study by the join! Economic Com-<lb/>
mittee of Congress concludes that<lb/>
"an energy policy dedicated to<lb/>
maximizing our nation's energy<lb/>
efficiency and its use of renewable<lb/>
resources could add nearly three<lb/>
million workers to the nation's<lb/>
employment rolls<lb/>
Walter H.Jones' decision to nip<lb/>
the problem at the bud suggests<lb/>
that hedoes not buvtheantiquated<lb/>
argument bv President Hush, who<lb/>
has oil running in his veins (along<lb/>
with plenty oi cholesterol, no<lb/>
doubt), that we need to dnll off-<lb/>
shore because we need the oil.<lb/>
Unlike Bush and other politicians,<lb/>
Jones genuinely cares about the<lb/>
long-term health of Earth and its<lb/>
inhabitants. Thankfully, he has<lb/>
the foresight to strive to preserve<lb/>
our pristine coastline and to give<lb/>
our children the future they de-<lb/>
serve.<lb/>
Jones has started the ball roll-<lb/>
ing, but it will take more than a<lb/>
bill or two to keep the oil indus-<lb/>
tries from raping the Continental<lb/>
Shelf and potentially destroying<lb/>
the Outer Banks. Those of us who<lb/>
care more for the quality of life<lb/>
(oursand the wild creatures') than<lb/>
for Mobile's profiteering interests<lb/>
know exactly where we stand.<lb/>
The next step will entail some<lb/>
hefty letter-writing to our repre-<lb/>
sentatives and senators. Don't<lb/>
forget: every letter represents<lb/>
hundreds of future votes in the<lb/>
politician's eye. So take up the<lb/>
pen and speak your piece ?<lb/>
there's still time to save our coast.<lb/>
Until quite recently, the su-<lb/>
per-rich oil companies have al-<lb/>
ways been able to buy their way<lb/>
into any drilling situation they<lb/>
desired. Alaska is a case in point.<lb/>
Mobil will undoubtedly try to do<lb/>
the same, and it will have plenty<lb/>
of support from the Bush admini-<lb/>
stration. We must all be prepared<lb/>
to fight a long and dirty battle<lb/>
with those idiots in high places<lb/>
who still believe oil is a good idea.<lb/>
Preview 9?<lb/>
Summer Student Leadership<lb/>
Opportunity Available<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
ORIENTATION STAFF<lb/>
Pick Up Application Packet<lb/>
209 Whichard<lb/>
Deadline: Feb. 21,1990 ? 12:00pm<lb/>
Xl<lb/>
PARKING AND TRAFFIC APPEALS BOARD<lb/>
Beginning February 1, 1990, students, staff, and faculty will<lb/>
have the right to appeal, in writing, a campus citation issued for<lb/>
olationsofthe ECU Parking and Traffic Regulations. Appro-<lb/>
forms and information regarding the Appeals System<lb/>
furnished to the appellant by Traffic Services. The form<lb/>
? completed and returned to Traffic Services within ten<lb/>
usiness days of the citation date.<lb/>
li information regarding the Appeals System is available<lb/>
Traffic Service Office located at 609 East 10th Street or<lb/>
ephoning 757-6294<lb/>
Thenew<lb/>
MadntoshPortable.<lb/>
The standard<lb/>
Macintosh keyboard<lb/>
is halt m<lb/>
An Actuv Matrix LCD screen<lb/>
displays text and graphics as ensply<lb/>
as any other Macintosh<lb/>
? Battery power leivk<lb/>
can be displayed on the<lb/>
screen, with lou-power<lb/>
uamings posted<lb/>
automatically<lb/>
6-12 hours of<lb/>
portable computing<lb/>
before battery<lb/>
needs recharging<lb/>
That sup to 5 times<lb/>
longer than most<lb/>
portables<lb/>
TheCMOS68000<lb/>
microprocessor<lb/>
operates at 16<lb/>
megahertz?twice<lb/>
thespeedofthe<lb/>
Macintosh HE<lb/>
The trackball functions<lb/>
as an integrated<lb/>
pointing device<lb/>
Its best features<lb/>
are ones you already know.<lb/>
Introducing the new Apple Macintosh Portable<lb/>
computer, the portable that offers all the features you d<lb/>
expect to find in a Macintosh. And then some.<lb/>
So now you can get the same intuitive graphic<lb/>
inteiface, and have the ability to run virtually ail cuirent<lb/>
versions of Macintosh software?all in one<lb/>
easy-Knarry, portable package.<lb/>
And special features let you take it anywhere.<lb/>
Such as buik-in features that give you long battery<lb/>
life and intelligent power management. Orthosethat<lb/>
provide superior graphics capabilities while providing<lb/>
full-width, wide-angle viewing under almost any<lb/>
ligfairig condition.<lb/>
Stop in today to see the new Macintosh Portable?<lb/>
all the convenience of portable computing, without<lb/>
having to compromise a thing.<lb/>
Featuredhere.<lb/>
For more information contact:<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
C1989 AfpkCcmm.lm: Apt. r Apple km MkMo m tpmd w?m of Apple Qmpmm. mt<lb/>
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Is fiir fraternity Sorority or?lub<lb/>
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READING BOOKS! $32,000year<lb/>
income potential Details (1)602-838<lb/>
8885 Ext Hk 5285<lb/>
MARK! I DISC OVER C RIPI1<lb/>
CARDS on youi campus Flexible<lb/>
1 lours Earn as much as510.00hour<lb/>
(nl ten positions available Call 1 0v<lb/>
950-8472, ext 3<lb/>
PART-TIME slink AND SAI IS:<lb/>
1 leav v lifting required Apply al the<lb/>
Youth Itoiitunie Arlington Village<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
REWARD OFF! Kl n Forli st.very worn<lb/>
brown stuffed animal dog Possibly,<lb/>
dropped near Croatan I; found please<lb/>
SPRING HKI K Cancun<lb/>
mas Bermuda 1 ow est ?. i<lb/>
iranl ev ? ? latioi<lb/>
 ided<lb/>
or Atlanta flights from S329 ! I ? Flips<lb/>
ire selling tit! Kin t mi is out!? . ? ?<lb/>
?? 2579for details<lb/>
PI KAPPA 1 I'll :  aru. I ?<lb/>
out and part) tl us during thi<lb/>
superb wl I el s do il again soon ackie<lb/>
and the: s staff<lb/>
CONDOMS BY MAIL. 25 varieties<lb/>
brands, sampler packs and giftccrufK ales!<lb/>
Frei bro hures Write hj ajthw ise ' I I<lb/>
- re imooi !vi s-270 Raleigh V 27613<lb/>
or call I 'si1 933 130<lb/>
SAH 1HI BAHAMAS SPRING BRI k<lb/>
S35i ?perpersoi u ludes food sl ?<lb/>
irrai ements norkelii ? g ir fishing<lb/>
gear and iptaii Sail five Bahama Islands<lb/>
; ling Nassau and Bimini Need<lb/>
deposits tmmediat C all at 83 B27<lb/>
BAH M s CRI Is! ? 6 days 52 ? ?<lb/>
i an ui - daysS3 ? I all 931 S114or758<lb/>
124 -pring Breal rravel 1-800 638 si.<lb/>
MPM MC; .?. I like I thank the<lb/>
??Ms ind Vlpha Phi foi their help with<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
M PHA PHI I ad i great time atthe I C<lb/>
A i lame Post garni part) was Awesome<lb/>
Vlpha Sigs<lb/>
your support and help with rush Phi Tans<lb/>
CHI OM1CA: Thanks lor all yOUf hlp<lb/>
vTth nish We are looking forward to the<lb/>
next time we get together Phi laus<lb/>
TANJA REEVES: lam looking forward to<lb/>
spending the semester with the best Phi<lb/>
Tan Sweetheart there is Your Big Bro,<lb/>
Kuss<lb/>
PHI TAC SWEETHEARTS: rhank you<lb/>
tor making casino night a big ha with the<lb/>
brothers and rushtH-s Special thanks to<lb/>
Buflv Satterfieid Stacy Mercier, Phyllis<lb/>
Caruso, Tricaa Page. Kim Smothers, Anne<lb/>
Miller and Gay Stevens<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS: to Karen Prevost<lb/>
tor being elected Panhelleme President<lb/>
YOU are the N-st' We love you the I k ?<lb/>
eta Pledges<lb/>
OH 1A IA S1SM RS rhanks for all<lb/>
the support sou gave us on our cat wash<lb/>
and especially KAs tor all the help  ove<lb/>
the Pledges<lb/>
DEI TAHA Would like to thank Mane<lb/>
Ivntus. our housemother, for ben<lb/>
us for 10 strong years We lovi<lb/>
look forward to man v years! i come<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS SLSAN<lb/>
NORMdl Panhellenu V'i. e Presidet<lb/>
We know you will do a great )ob'  <lb/>
; .ur sisters and pledges ot (hi Omega<lb/>
C Hi OMEGA Would like to congratulate<lb/>
the new 1990 Panhellenic Exec President<lb/>
Karen Prevost, V I'res Svis,in Home<lb/>
Secretary Amy Harris, rreasurei ?<lb/>
Manning and Membership SomaTun ?<lb/>
 ove . The "hi (niiy,as<lb/>
TO COACH SHIlt AND IHf EC1<lb/>
BASK! IBAI I If AM I ? gratu at<lb/>
on your win against UNCW! W rebehind<lb/>
hi 100'<lb/>
The Alpha Phis<lb/>
on i a f rAPiiot.IS:We  h P<lb/>
forward to the big sispart.? Weove)<lb/>
Ihe Sisters<lb/>
CONGR ATI l 11)SsK K 1 <lb/>
PRI os i For v?i<lb/>
dent We '? i<lb/>
pport <lb/>
ever) isp 1 f thi ???<lb/>
 i Si<lb/>
 rn M ION Al Islls<lb/>
Student Pirah 1 lul. ?i. ?<lb/>
Picken Sal Fel? ? ??<lb/>
theAn ?.<lb/>
i lub social rHm 3Cand<lb/>
53omi out fi ?. <lb/>
the Pirates  . ?? ?. ; ??:? i ?i??<lb/>
M PHA I'I I I A PI<lb/>
We appreciate .i.<lb/>
DISPLAY Cl ASSIFIEDS<lb/>
I HI IAC HI W( lid Uki ?<lb/>
the new pledges for Spnnj ?<lb/>
are in for a bias; ? ? going<lb/>
to love it rhe Brothi rsof ThetaChi<lb/>
Oil rI PAS i PH VOMH RON PI'S<lb/>
AND KAPPA SIGMAS -<lb/>
ji;d agon) on me '?'? oooa<lb/>
boredom and excessive mis ? ? ?'?<lb/>
!t it weren (for the I ws ?.? N.<lb/>
had a ball Woooah! Gl n md<lb/>
agony on me Ehel i<lb/>
ITCE: New Year's eve came a littl<lb/>
time, but it w.is oertainh ?'tii the<lb/>
 e fs f, i the great hmi u la<lb/>
VDR<lb/>
I AMBDA c HI M I'M night<lb/>
u.is a blast  look forv<lb/>
with you guvs aga I '<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS SONIA<lb/>
FURNER: we km ??? .<lb/>
membership chairman foi<lb/>
Love )?our Sisters of Alpha D i<lb/>
DISPI A CLASSIFI1 DS<lb/>
?l PHA sic, rhanks tor the post gar<lb/>
partylLet'strytogettogetheragaii I ?<lb/>
the week' I ove be Alj ha Mhis<lb/>
SIGMA PI Pre-downtown was i I<lb/>
We ve .?. ?eragau ooi<lb/>
rhe Alpha Phis<lb/>
si. I t rhanks foi . ?  . . ?<lb/>
watch ? ? iperbowl with) ta W ?<lb/>
?;??? .? the AlphaPhi!<lb/>
K KI PHI VOS1 ? i maki<lb/>
? H ? ?  ' ' ? . . . ? ? ' ' - ? <lb/>
l;s v toii man<lb/>
naki msseen<lb/>
ir Ifour heart are breaking rl ?<lb/>
. .  then ' ? us we always 1<lb/>
kVi ? r fru lshi ivill never end<lb/>
? spe .i ?? ? ? :<lb/>
Pl? I laZeta<lb/>
I i;iH 159J<lb/>
<lb/>
s(. I PS<lb/>
ll'l PI EDGES '?'??<lb/>
rskal Everytl<lb/>
ich t ver <lb/>
lll? 1) B s K 1 I B A 1 1<lb/>
? ? ? . ii i - ill W1J<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS ' the new<lb/>
mtiates of Phi Tau tow<lb/>
rCBriani hnl kastert - - ?<lb/>
? . .rner Scott I .r.MKir- Sam<lb/>
?? ?? : '?' ? nes, Vii eK nolx I r a n .<lb/>
?" eve Hall,<lb/>
? - ?  ? 'invis<lb/>
sisUK o(HI OMI GA<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
??? pefull<lb/>
vac gel - ? - - ?<lb/>
IHI SlsIiRs Of p'<lb/>
I like I (tend<lb/>
? ' ? ? . ? ? pal ???<lb/>
king forward tod  agan<lb/>
nispt , ci assimi ns<lb/>
I<lb/>
$2500.00<lb/>
Credit line<lb/>
guaranteed!<lb/>
?No credit ("heck<lb/>
?No Securit) Deposit<lb/>
i'ou cannot be turned<lb/>
down for a<lb/>
(iold Credit Card<lb/>
BANC LINE<lb/>
AMERICA<lb/>
$2500 Instant line of<lb/>
credit<lb/>
Cash withdrawal up to<lb/>
SI 250.00<lb/>
830-4034<lb/>
Dark Room Technician<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Experience Required<lb/>
Must Be Familiar with<lb/>
Halftones &amp; PMT's<lb/>
Apply in Person at<lb/>
?le iEafit Carolinian<lb/>
The Publications Building<lb/>
(No Phone Calls Please)<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
i(vMKS PRQGRAM<lb/>
4 if<lb/>
g<lb/>
about t<lb/>
Khniiild<lb/>
A(.l 1 FLIGHT<lb/>
(.QASTAL FITN1 SS IMI R<lb/>
 fcrosis will<lb/>
 ? ? sCenterot<lb/>
? la Kallam. chairman of<lb/>
ROW INC,<lb/>
 t Mik? 2-S002<lb/>
l"t- U'lh<lb/>
KL<lb/>
so(i rGLACHES NJ l PEP<lb/>
rhe Gi ? Recreation and Parks<lb/>
depart! i re ruibng fot 12 16 part<lb/>
miii'm h ? i hes for the spring program<lb/>
Applicants must possess s ?ne knowledge<lb/>
in soccer skills ind have pattern e to w rK<lb/>
witl u Applicants must t- able to<lb/>
. .i h young people, apes IS in soccer<lb/>
fundamentals Hours approximately V7<lb/>
pm Monday thru Friday, Some night and<lb/>
. eel end c aching Program will N'in in<lb/>
M.ir. h Salarv rate is S3 to S4 2 per<lb/>
hour Applicants will be accepted M.irtin.i;<lb/>
i,hi J1 Contact Ben James at 830-4567<lb/>
AHHA<lb/>
! Ii A meeting Mon l:eb S at 3 pan in the<lb/>
V an 1 andingham room tome ano1 learn<lb/>
how ro build ovir profes6 ion al wardrobe<lb/>
New members welcome!<lb/>
SOCWC1 APPLICATIONS<lb/>
FOR SPRING SLMESTER 1990<lb/>
Applications to the maor must be tilled<lb/>
out and returned by Feb 1 First interviews<lb/>
must U' completed bv Feb 23 Second<lb/>
interviews (group meeting) will be held on<lb/>
Feb 27 and 28 at 3 pm in Pagsrlale 218.<lb/>
Applicants who have completed the first<lb/>
interview must attend one of the group<lb/>
interviews with Mr Cartman<lb/>
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
We invite you to be with us every wed<lb/>
nipht at 7 pm in rm. 212 Mendenhall for<lb/>
prayer and bible studv Everyone is<lb/>
welcome to be a part ot this growing<lb/>
fellowship. For more info, call 752-7199<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
North Carolina Student Legislature Are<lb/>
vou ready to change the world? MC SL is<lb/>
for you. It you enjov debate, having fun,<lb/>
and having a purpose come by Mondav<lb/>
nights at 7 pm in 248 Mendenhall<lb/>
CAMPUSXRLDADEFQR<lb/>
CHRIST<lb/>
Check out primetime - Campus Cnisade<lb/>
for Christ's weekly meeting We meet at<lb/>
7:30 every Thurs night in 1026 GO for<lb/>
great Bible teaching, skits refreshments ?<lb/>
FUN Everyone welcome<lb/>
ECU MODERN CLUB<lb/>
"The FCL Model L'n (.lub will be having a<lb/>
FREECarWashatCl's.ontreenvilleBlvci<lb/>
on Feb 3rd starting at 11 am. Come plav<lb/>
volleyball, eat and drink while we wash<lb/>
your car Donations will be accepted.<lb/>
ECU MODEL UN CLUB<lb/>
The ECU MUN Club will be having a bake<lb/>
sale Tues Feb 6th in front ot the ECU<lb/>
student Stores Come get some between<lb/>
class snacks and help us raise money<lb/>
AFROTC DETACHMENT ?00<lb/>
0NL1<lb/>
Tues Feb 13,19s0 "Valentine's Social" at<lb/>
Bogie's time TBA. Guys! Don't miss the<lb/>
Angel Auction.<lb/>
NORTHCARQLINA<lb/>
TEACHING FELLOWS<lb/>
Freshman Teaching Fellows will meet on<lb/>
February at s pm in slight 129 Mr Jim<lb/>
Pmknev will speak on the subteet ot time<lb/>
management Sophomore Fellows will<lb/>
meet on Febniarv 12 at 5 pm in Speight<lb/>
Mr Owen Kiagsburj will be the guest<lb/>
speaker<lb/>
RESIDENT ADVISOR<lb/>
C AN DID ATES NEEDED<lb/>
The Dept of Resident Education is now<lb/>
accepting applications tor RA positions<lb/>
Qualifications tor KA position<lb/>
Oua 1 ifications Full time student while<lb/>
employed. 2 2 C.PA, clear udiaal record,<lb/>
and conflict free schedule Applications<lb/>
deadline for Fall 1990employment: 216<lb/>
90 Applications can be picked up at any<lb/>
resident hall office or the Departmental<lb/>
oltice<lb/>
See announcements, page 7<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0008"/><lb/>
Upchurch threatens prison fast<lb/>
The East Carolinian, February 1,1990 9<lb/>
El IZABETH( m ,N.( (AP)<lb/>
James B Upchurch HI asserted<lb/>
his innocence and threatened to<lb/>
starve himself after he was sen<lb/>
tenced to death for killing a Wash<lb/>
Uigton c . businessman.<lb/>
I'm not cattle to be fattened<lb/>
for slaughter' Upchurch said<lb/>
ruesday after a jury and judge<lb/>
de ided he should die<lb/>
Speaking calmly and politel)<lb/>
I pi hurch said he was "appalled<lb/>
and shocked m the verdict" and<lb/>
Was surprised the jury had lis<lb/>
terted to "two confessed murder<lb/>
ers, referring to the two men<lb/>
one ol them the victim's Mi pson<lb/>
who had testified the and<lb/>
P<lb/>
inned t!<lb/>
ia me.<lb/>
upcnurcn, z w .in i on u tti<lb/>
a week ago in the beating and<lb/>
stabbingd ithol I eith PeterVon<lb/>
Stein, an executive at National<lb/>
Spinning Co in his home on ul)<lb/>
'88 as part of at onspira to<lb/>
gain an inheritance He also was<lb/>
com i? led f assault of tht<lb/>
? ife, Bonnie I ou Bates <lb/>
Ian en tit-1 i him<lb/>
on-<lb/>
P<lb/>
ii<lb/>
lurine<lb/>
oiirt luvlj,<lb/>
ed i p<lb/>
I Utdeatl<lb/>
i lu'm,)s<lb/>
v u tun s<lb/>
n Stein<lb/>
,lrx and<lb/>
ird ?<lb/>
? tied<lb/>
nil <lb/>
?' Ivan!<lb/>
.itt-<lb/>
I<lb/>
Gorbachev<lb/>
iku<lb/>
lornai he<lb/>
bv<lb/>
Mmi-ti<lb/>
nat<lb/>
'M i ? - '<lb/>
u<lb/>
<lb/>
sch '<lb/>
r tall<lb/>
Edtiard A<lb/>
air '<lb/>
nenl lid it had<lb/>
ited Pi ? las!<lb/>
m.iv<lb/>
tributed<lb/>
tO .1IU !<lb/>
Ii r ?<lb/>
ire that<lb/>
I f Kan<lb/>
TasK force<lb/>
( ontir -d from pagi s<lb/>
n ? ?  nd i erv<lb/>
icemen, 1 eed 1<lb/>
. . ? . . .<lb/>
vlll be inil " the<lb/>
In t opera I 1 ricy<lb/>
e M a r i m ? ? 1 ; ri<lb/>
marih for tra in ind nitru<lb/>
ho. - ? i i ? ? : tion and main<lb/>
i mo ' ituation maps patrol briefing and debriefing proce<lb/>
lures and inf( mat i inah sis<lb/>
I he INS also expt I Marines to<lb/>
oventualU be used ith I ordei<lb/>
patrol personnel manning obser<lb/>
 at ion posts in the southwt si<lb/>
Prior to a isumingduties w ith<lb/>
the INS, the Marines are sched-<lb/>
uled to undergo a i ertifii ation<lb/>
pibcess with bordei patrol ag nts<lb/>
1 ho 11 rtitu atii 'ii training i1 tv ists<lb/>
of lnsfriK tion in law enton ement<lb/>
procedures, dine interdiction<lb/>
techniques, tracking, dcU ting<lb/>
border breakthroughs and border<lb/>
I itrol operations<lb/>
Opposition<lb/>
1990, but he gets an automatic<lb/>
appeal totheslateSupremei ourt.<lb/>
s the sentence was announced,<lb/>
pchurch's mother, (oAnn kra<lb/>
met, reached up and hugged her<lb/>
on. He reached around and pat-<lb/>
ted the back of her head before she<lb/>
left the- courtroom in tears.<lb/>
"1 intend to take mv life bv<lb/>
iNtme Upchurch told the judge<lb/>
after the sentencing, "I want todie<lb/>
 ith as much honor and dignity<lb/>
s 1 can scrape together<lb/>
But David Guth, spokesman<lb/>
?or the state Department oi I r<lb/>
lection, said Upchurch would be<lb/>
force fed, if necessary. Watts or<lb/>
dered Upchurch placed on a sin<lb/>
i ide watch.<lb/>
"We will monitor him medi<lb/>
i ally and keep track of his situta-<lb/>
tion and if he refuses to eat and<lb/>
medical intervention is necessary<lb/>
that could involve IV (intrave-<lb/>
nous feeding) (.nth said "We're<lb/>
not going to let him starve himself<lb/>
' i death, but then again we've not<lb/>
going to set up an IV the moment<lb/>
I ??? walks through the door. We'll<lb/>
have to see it he follows through<lb/>
:i his threats I sualh these hun<lb/>
,i<lb/>
h ikes last about two meals<lb/>
 on stein's stepson, hrist<lb/>
I her Wayne Pritchard, and (?er<lb/>
aid Neal Henderson, have plead d<lb/>
: uilty to aiding and abetting sec-<lb/>
i nd degree murder and aiding<lb/>
and abetting assault w ith a deadly<lb/>
weapon with intent to kill inflict-<lb/>
ing serious injury. They testified<lb/>
Upchurch committed the killing<lb/>
I'ntchard's sentencing hear-<lb/>
ing was going on when the jury<lb/>
came back with Upchurch's sen-<lb/>
tence. Pritchard's hearing was<lb/>
expected to continue Wednesday<lb/>
Pritchard, who sat with his<lb/>
mother in the courtroom as<lb/>
t .Hire n v n .i d to die,<lb/>
testified during the trial that he<lb/>
had promised Upchurch and<lb/>
1 ienderson money and expensive<lb/>
-ports cars to kill his parents.<lb/>
Prosecution witnesses said<lb/>
Pritchard, who planned to kill his<lb/>
parents to inherit p.irt of their 52<lb/>
million estate, remained in Raleigh<lb/>
while t he other two went to Wash-<lb/>
ington.<lb/>
1 he defense had said during<lb/>
closing arguments Monday that it<lb/>
would lx' unfair tor Upchurch, a<lb/>
former student at North Carolina<lb/>
State I niversitv, to face the death<lb/>
penalty while two other self-con-<lb/>
fessed participants in the slaving<lb/>
face life in prison plus 20 years.<lb/>
The jury, which also could<lb/>
have recommended life in prison,<lb/>
deliberated about six and a half<lb/>
hours Monday and "uesday be-<lb/>
fore announcing the sentence. A<lb/>
death sentence had to be unani-<lb/>
mous. The two formsof death tor<lb/>
a prisoner in orth Carolina are<lb/>
lethal injection or the gas cham-<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
! believe that this particular<lb/>
k cupation stems from sim ere<lb/>
U clings, from sincere support for<lb/>
process ot percstroika that is<lb/>
under wav in the Soviet Union<lb/>
H dnadze said. "1 le v as the<lb/>
one who spearheaded this ardu<lb/>
ous but holy struggle<lb/>
baker, asked about the rumor<lb/>
on Tuesday, told reporters: "We're<lb/>
following the story, as I know you<lb/>
are, and we'll have a comment if<lb/>
we ever determine it's something<lb/>
more than jusi a rumor.<lb/>
IMAGINE YOURSELF<lb/>
 Having a major leadership role on campus.<lb/>
- Projecting a positive image of ECU.<lb/>
 Meeting University and community VIP's,<lb/>
government officials, and alumni leaders.<lb/>
Membership Booths open at the Student Stoic and<lb/>
it Mendenhall Jan. 29 Feb. I, 8 am - 2:30 pm and<lb/>
Feb. 2,8 am - 5:00 pm<lb/>
ED AMBASSADOR!<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
tinue c ommunist rule<lb/>
"We believe il s illegal for the<lb/>
Front to hold politic al power and<lb/>
take part in elei lions at the same<lb/>
time Bra an de lared I uesda)<lb/>
I hat is why we have split into I<lb/>
provisional National Council, to<lb/>
hold legislative power on the one<lb/>
hand, and the National Salvation<lb/>
Front, whit h is to take part in the<lb/>
elections as a political organiza<lb/>
tion. on the other "<lb/>
(Q.) Interested in becoming a<lb/>
buyer or store manager<lb/>
with a major retailer?<lb/>
(A.) Join Peebles Department<lb/>
Stores' Executive<lb/>
Training Program.<lb/>
Training Program Offers:<lb/>
?starting Salary 118.000 S19.4O0<lb/>
bawd 'in experience<lb/>
? Associate Discounts on Purchases<lb/>
? Paid l ife Insurant t<lb/>
? Paid HospJtaliaatlon and Dental Insurance<lb/>
? Paid Sw k i eave<lb/>
? Paid Vacations A Holidays<lb/>
? sreef Advsncenwnl Potential<lb/>
? Retirement Benefits<lb/>
? Tuition Assistance<lb/>
??- md man . ?<lb/>
? ? .? ?<lb/>
. M '? ' ' i' (i 111<lb/>
i<lb/>
I pro<lb/>
Mall rrumr to<lb/>
Peebles Im<lb/>
i mi Moyei<lb/>
A-ist iir Human Resources<lb/>
( )nr JVrhlrs Strrrt<lb/>
South Mill VA 1 147(1 fSO. I<lb/>
Or. romr bu and ISITSJSta iiilh u<lb/>
irhn wr visit vour rampua<lb/>
I ?. ill goud tl i - ?i i- not '<lb/>
.  rom Bui II you an read) lo ?<lb/>
i bu rr or atari nun w i "O ?r u iiim<lb/>
to work hard w hsvr ? tnilntrm pranun<lb/>
drslgfied lo hrlp you reach your goal Vou<lb/>
in.i.i t?? vrflllng lo retocale prrtodlraliy<lb/>
?Intint training four year rourgedrgret<lb/>
.v 'tMi(i:i prt Im ii il<lb/>
Interviews will be<lb/>
Held at Your<lb/>
Career Placement<lb/>
Office on<lb/>
March 16. 1990<lb/>
iVlaTTIaflfafM<lb/>
f ?U?U?aTO?y<lb/>
4n I .ml I'pi"<lb/>
I mWnifr<lb/>
bor.<lb/>
Upchurch also received a life<lb/>
sentence on the burglary convic-<lb/>
tion, which is the maximum; 20<lb/>
years on the assault charge, the<lb/>
maximum; and six years on con-<lb/>
spiracy charge. All sentences are<lb/>
to run consecutively.<lb/>
In closing arguments, defense<lb/>
lawyer Wayland Sermons Jr. said<lb/>
there were mitigating factors that<lb/>
should result in a life sentence,<lb/>
rather than death. Sermonsargued<lb/>
that Upchurch's involvement in<lb/>
the fantasy game "Dungeons and<lb/>
Dragons" "created a blur between<lb/>
fantasy and reality<lb/>
Hut prosecutors told jurors<lb/>
there is nothing to mitigate or<lb/>
lessen the culpability" of the<lb/>
defendant's crime. District Attor-<lb/>
nev Mitchell Norton said<lb/>
? pc hurch had not shown "one bit<lb/>
of remorse, except when the ver-<lb/>
dict came down  "<lb/>
Hillcrest Lanes !<lb/>
Memorial Drive 756-2020<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
GAME<lb/>
I Bowl One GameT Receive 1<lb/>
I Another Game FREE With I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
This Coupon.<lb/>
Limit 1 Coupon Per Person.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
Services &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
III R 3rd St.<lb/>
The Lee Building<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
M-F 9 am-5 pm<lb/>
F.N. Wolf &amp; Co Inc.<lb/>
Investment Bankers<lb/>
Full Service National Brokerage Firm<lb/>
Will be On Campus Recruiting<lb/>
Thursday Feb. 8,1990<lb/>
Seeking Entry - Level Positions For<lb/>
Account Executives<lb/>
Stockbrokers<lb/>
All majors Considered Training<lb/>
Sign Up in the Placement Office<lb/>
For More Information<lb/>
Raleigh Office<lb/>
Stan Van Etten<lb/>
800-537-2190<lb/>
Virginia Beach Office<lb/>
George Hubbard<lb/>
804-498-1100<lb/>
Space is Limited<lb/>
Make A Giant Statement of Love?<lb/>
2fi &amp; 6 inch Heart Balkx.ns Plus Air W?lkers ?.ll ciid our mcij;e loud &amp; clear<lb/>
Come Choose Your Balloons I-arly for !)clicr on Valentine's Day<lb/>
Plus Pers?nahe?i Certificates. Cards &amp; Silk Rose lhal actualK mmtM Real'<lb/>
Bells Fork Square<lb/>
ANYTHING PAPER<lb/>
355 -6212<lb/>
The Student Union Special<lb/>
Concerts Committee presents<lb/>
the Richard Smallwood Singers<lb/>
. <lb/>
icAatcl Smallwood Suigqk.5<lb/>
AM<lb/>
- i. T . ? ? S<lb/>
A ? - ? S.<lb/>
Sunday Feb. 11, 1990<lb/>
8:00 pm Wright Auditorium<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
$6.00<lb/>
$8.00<lb/>
Students with ID<lb/>
Group Tickets (15 persons or more)<lb/>
General Admission <lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0009"/><lb/>
Sire Saat Qlarulmfan<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
Features<lb/>
February ,V<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
Downtown store<lb/>
offers formal wear<lb/>
By oc Horst<lb/>
sun Writer<lb/>
Among the re? cut v hanges in 'i cording to 1 ranck, thobusi<lb/>
the appearance ol the do ntow n lu'ss s geared tor the entire i om<lb/>
area is one building that sttinds munity, but it has a spot ial intei<lb/>
out from the rest est in the fraternities sororities<lb/>
Across from HI I s and K' othei students fhe current<lb/>
Omar's Expresson East Fifth Street offei ol a fraterntt) and sorority<lb/>
resides the concept of painting an special ol $34 unhides shoes.<lb/>
entire building to resemble a tux pleated pants andachoiceofcum<lb/>
isio I his rev olu<lb/>
in painting bring<lb/>
 concept merbund and tie color is one wa<lb/>
'I<lb/>
lit it<lb/>
l encouraging ollege student:<lb/>
newest business 1 nivorsit lot on a budget to frequent the slon<lb/>
nial eai<lb/>
We aKo hope to do wodcJ<lb/>
meo<lb/>
Les Eranck Richard Bramle ? proms in the surroundin<lb/>
and Bill Overman own I niversih areas of Farmville vden, Bethe<lb/>
Formal Wear in a joint venture<lb/>
We specialize in the traditional<lb/>
and formal tuxedo v itha sideline<lb/>
and others I ram k said<lb/>
I here are main features ot<lb/>
I ni ersit 1 ormal ear that<lb/>
in the wholes.de of flowers, said appeal to the full time col!?<lb/>
Les I ram k hen asked abo<lb/>
ut th<lb/>
We cai<lb/>
competition in Greenville Fran k pu'K UP and deliver tuxedos for<lb/>
said In mv opinion we've col students, and we are verv flexibli<lb/>
the h<lb/>
IP :<lb/>
see I (i ma! pact? 1 I<lb/>
Radio station turns<lb/>
on in New Bern<lb/>
In 1 OUg Morris<lb/>
Stafl Writer<lb/>
. da s ago W S I M K ,r<lb/>
bi ? lv isting the sounds of waves<lb/>
rasl  on a bea h a , mi miod<lb/>
b the calls ol sea gulls squawk<lb/>
; ? Oci asionalh ,n announcers<lb/>
v ould boom out, v oming<lb/>
Phursdav morning at seven<lb/>
o clock the radio station for the<lb/>
nineties Catch the wave, Ihurs<lb/>
t seven a.n 'A a Nineh<lb/>
? ?? ? niton, New Bern,Gre? ne<lb/>
i his morning i ase Ritter<lb/>
im i dward ;l can tlu ir tirst<lb/>
1 Coming up <lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
?  ?? <lb/>
Homeboy Madhouse<lb/>
0' ROCKEFELLERS<lb/>
The Stegmonds TTir<lb/>
Echo's Farm<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
JEW DELI<lb/>
Mind Over Matter<lb/>
CKEFELLERS<lb/>
' a ZMB's 8th Birth<lb/>
day<lb/>
he Sex Police<lb/>
Sc<lb/>
In Limbo<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Panic<lb/>
FIZZ<lb/>
Klee Lyles<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Do the Riht Thing<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
Funkenstein<lb/>
o ROCKEFELLERS<lb/>
New Era<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Chairman of the<lb/>
Board<lb/>
FIZZ<lb/>
The List<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Do the Right Thing<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Do the Right Thirls<lb/>
morning broad ast v ith n.<lb/>
WVVi is a new i idi station<lb/>
broad asting out ol New ; ? 11<lb/>
orth v arohna ' ; i statioi<lb/>
owned b W&amp;B a local broad<lb/>
casting company tromGi Idsl i<lb/>
North v aroiina VVVVi is the<lb/>
company s first property hi<lb/>
casting at the euuo alent ol <lb/>
watts<lb/>
nnmg in t Vtober ol . ?- ?<lb/>
 's. was on the air for approxi<lb/>
mateh threis. On 1 e 2 1<lb/>
they went otf thi lii to rei ? iti<lb/>
tation ITiestatioi mi ?<lb/>
percent mpact d k, di i ering<lb/>
the best sound a i ible t : n<lb/>
WV iplanstoplayanadull<lb/>
? ti :? poran and I ; I rty mi <lb/>
ini hiding su h artists as Iton<lb/>
ohn, Anita Baki ? I .enesis Reel<lb/>
wood Ma. ii ITh l igles rhey<lb/>
boast that they will fc play<lb/>
: .? greatervai ty fmu thai<lb/>
any oth? r statin in ti1 area<lb/>
1 he musi will haye a er<lb/>
up beat feel to it, saidase Kit<lb/>
? ? disk jo key at I pi cram di-<lb/>
:?, tor al A A '? : tn es that<lb/>
the station vy ill is aiming to play<lb/>
w hat the audien e asks tor Ihe<lb/>
alsoplai ' i spend more time play<lb/>
?  niusi( and less time talk i<lb/>
rhey want their programming to<lb/>
be relevant to tins market area.<lb/>
WA i wants to be erv v is<lb/>
ible on the streets, rhey are gi ing<lb/>
t i trv to be invoh ed w ith ,is many<lb/>
? ? nts in the area as possible We<lb/>
 in! to be a station tor thi<lb/>
irea and not just t i t m Kit<lb/>
ter said<lb/>
The waking crew, Casey Kit<lb/>
See Radio, pace 12<lb/>
Lexicon<lb/>
Mushrooming<lb/>
Answers from<lb/>
Tuesday's paper<lb/>
1 Lilting I) rh th<lb/>
mic<lb/>
2 Mulish A stub<lb/>
born<lb/>
3 Enigma C puzzle<lb/>
? Arcade C cov<lb/>
ered passageway<lb/>
5 Spindly A long<lb/>
slender<lb/>
6 Hulk B broken<lb/>
down ship<lb/>
Cosset B pamper<lb/>
8 Parlay B in<lb/>
crease.<lb/>
9 Trundle B roll<lb/>
along<lb/>
10 Apercu B in<lb/>
sight<lb/>
ECU comic<lb/>
represents<lb/>
campus<lb/>
I? v Suzan I awlei<lb/>
Stjtt Wi lei<lb/>
. .<lb/>
?<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
Penguins in disguise<lb/>
Weai - hart<lb/>
m and Les Frar<lb/>
lire?ECU Phot:<lb/>
See (<lb/>
Pay television takes over market<lb/>
( mint! r<lb/>
n s t : <lb/>
tans sitnne, in<lb/>
t be the nh<lb/>
vear - <lb/>
fa vori ti . I .<lb/>
wc and i al<lb/>
pay tor the<lb/>
ITial ?<lb/>
Mai .<lb/>
indu "<lb/>
distant tut:<lb/>
the si : :<lb/>
'r ?'? ?<lb/>
watv hi ?<lb/>
pa ;??? predict<lb/>
Sible ?? ?? m <lb/>
 : ?? :<lb/>
I ' ' ' ?;<lb/>
 , ???.<lb/>
are i n free televi n I rthi<lb/>
the. entun<lb/>
ITie threat pav-pei<lb/>
?:??'?<lb/>
real one : . I it tl<lb/>
tional Ass(H iation I Hi id<lb/>
has declared lanuan I r?<lb/>
 ision Month ' and kit ked<lb/>
ambitious adverb<lb/>
:v er<lb/>
?<lb/>
pn.i ?nes<lb/>
stav s o<lb/>
1 asl -1<lb/>
1? rrrn( r <lb/>
??<lb/>
av<lb/>
pay-IliO tl It 1n md l<lb/>
. ?'ti evei '1 ? ? isl<lb/>
. res? ?<lb/>
?? iPcro ?<lb/>
?. utt!VW. : '  ? I Serii?<lb/>
? ?esfall pre lpa v- pei.<lb/>
. n i"ma iv. ? ? playott. . ii -<lb/>
iew;k tl ' '? ? i<lb/>
freeOt sp. ? ' ?event<lb/>
f1?;be p,t. : ? ?<lb/>
igCTthink pi ?!? V <lb/>
?<lb/>
'?la kn. ?<lb/>
lelp ? rtain. and mai<lb/>
?. fast i 'os, ; ? ?  , md it<lb/>
nvhethei . . i big cms for I<lb/>
:  ii i reality ot hiv Sma i - ?. ke?<lb/>
? t rei baseba I nei<lb/>
ble . - writes cent, s?ivs there is no d<lb/>
ivill fuel the shift I ? oelevi major I . nesei<lb/>
sion ? . v oa pei ? ? ?<lb/>
ney "Wefeel it svervimpi<lb/>
ay: 5ible I ore and all our fans to see our<lb/>
i more tor t! . mparties to says Small. In thi ? i<lb/>
campaign acquire programmii future we will i t go to<lb/>
? b'onts<lb/>
LSOt' i! <lb/>
rn<lb/>
Movie shows Nazi influence<lb/>
I OS A( ,11 ES I ?) The<lb/>
neo-Nazi movemenl is familiar<lb/>
todder for don udramas, so Lionel<lb/>
( hetwvnd dccidinl to trv a differ-<lb/>
ent approach make a ! movie<lb/>
that explores the attraction ot<lb/>
Nazism tor ordinary people.<lb/>
'VVhv d' v.t'y ordinary<lb/>
people bei ome Nazis? vu won't<lb/>
find the answer to thai on the front<lb/>
page of newspapers i hetwynd<lb/>
said " en can't make a<lb/>
docudrama about how decent<lb/>
people are seduced bv this dark<lb/>
shadow Tins is at autionarytale "<lb/>
"So Proudly We Hail which<lb/>
( BS broad asts tonight, tells par<lb/>
.ilk'l stories ot three young men<lb/>
and a college professor who view<lb/>
the extremist group as the answer<lb/>
ti i their problems<lb/>
In LTV Adelt 1 litter staged<lb/>
the beer hall putsch in Munich<lb/>
( hetwvnd said He was sent to<lb/>
ail, w here he w rote Mem kampt '<lb/>
f k had oi ? 11 wits, yet<lb/>
within six year the Nazis were a<lb/>
major force in I . It you<lb/>
can do that a broken-<lb/>
down telephone sv stem, what can<lb/>
ho accomplished in this dv of<lb/>
computers, television and fax<lb/>
machines? Imagine what a sophis-<lb/>
ticated, technically aware group<lb/>
could di in this ? ountn<lb/>
The two-hour movie stars<lb/>
David Sou1 as a charismatic white<lb/>
supremacist who heads a group<lb/>
called the Aryan Resurgence<lb/>
Movement Edward Herrmann<lb/>
plavs a professor who accepts<lb/>
Soul's offer to publish his theory<lb/>
on cultural differences to avoid a<lb/>
threatened loss ot tenure if he'<lb/>
doesn't publish a sehoiarly work.<lb/>
( had I owe, Billy Morrissette<lb/>
and Peter I obson also star us three<lb/>
voting drifters recruited as skin-<lb/>
heads by Raphael Sbarge.<lb/>
"There aren t enough evil<lb/>
people to a complish the purposes<lb/>
of these leaders, said 'hetwvnd.<lb/>
who also served as the movie's<lb/>
executive producer rhevaccom-<lb/>
plish their coaK bv convincing<lb/>
ordinary people that the cure tor<lb/>
their problems is to get rid of<lb/>
people who a re not like them 1 he)<lb/>
conviiK e them that lews 'coloreds'<lb/>
and homosexuals are behind their<lb/>
tnubles<lb/>
"This movie doesn t hae a<lb/>
happv ending It has what 1 think<lb/>
is a realistic ending. 1 "he move<lb/>
ment isn't destroyed. You can't<lb/>
kill a dragon with one blow<lb/>
"This a story without the<lb/>
obvious victims. You tell it in a<lb/>
context that separates them trom<lb/>
their u Inns I he issues are not<lb/>
clear cut It may take viewers a<lb/>
while to see what these people are<lb/>
up to The neo-Nazis succeed bv<lb/>
addressing issues ?<lb/>
other politicians I<lb/>
voice being hea<lb/>
1 hetwvnd said hi<lb/>
that people a<lb/>
fionot issueson tele<lb/>
W es.iv upfl<lb/>
this ston 11 he said<lb/>
?- levs ('t w hat extn misn<lb/>
thiscountry Wedidn t res. .<lb/>
to death It doesn t stand I<lb/>
extremism in mer i<lb/>
( hetw nd usuall v is i<lb/>
ated w ith movies that ha ea p<lb/>
ol view In 1988 he wr <lb/>
I leal a Nation the storv bt<lb/>
the letnam V ar Memoi<lb/>
Washington Other me k -<lb/>
(.hide " ii m Clear River (<lb/>
dren in the ?. rossfire and ' I<lb/>
acle on Ice I hs feature films an<lb/>
The Apprentu eship ol D<lb/>
KravitZ ' and Hanoi Hilton<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0010"/><lb/>
)<lb/>
(Silt iEaat (HutalMun<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
Features<lb/>
February 1,1990<lb/>
Downtown store<lb/>
offers formal wear<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Among the recent changes in<lb/>
the appearance of the downtown<lb/>
area is one building that stands<lb/>
out from the rest.<lb/>
Across from BLT's and<lb/>
Omar's Expresson East Fifth Street<lb/>
resides the concept of painting an<lb/>
entire building to resemble a tux-<lb/>
edo. This revolutionary concept<lb/>
in painting brings to Greenville its<lb/>
newest business. University For-<lb/>
mal Wear.<lb/>
Les Franck, Richard Bramlev,<lb/>
and Hill Overman own University<lb/>
Formal Wear in a joint venture<lb/>
"We specialize in the traditional<lb/>
and formal tuxedo, with a sideline<lb/>
m the wholesale of flowers said<lb/>
Les Franck. When asked about the<lb/>
competition in Greenville, Franck<lb/>
said, "In mv opinion, we've got<lb/>
the best prices tor buying or rent<lb/>
ing a tuxedo in town<lb/>
According to Franck, the busi-<lb/>
ness is geared for the entire com-<lb/>
munity, but it has a special inter-<lb/>
est in the fraternities, sororities<lb/>
and other students. The current<lb/>
offer of a fraternity and sorority<lb/>
special of $34 includes shoes,<lb/>
pleated pants.and achoiceofcum-<lb/>
merbund and tie color is one way<lb/>
of encouraging college students<lb/>
on a budget to frequent the store.<lb/>
"We also hope to do weddings<lb/>
and proms in the surrounding<lb/>
areas of Farmville, Ayden, Bethel,<lb/>
and others Franck said.<lb/>
There are many features of<lb/>
University Formal Wear that<lb/>
appeal to the full-time college<lb/>
student. Franck said, We can<lb/>
pick-up and deliver tuxedos for<lb/>
students, and we are very flexible<lb/>
with the amount of time (usually<lb/>
See Formal, page 11<lb/>
Radio station turns<lb/>
on in New Bern<lb/>
By Doug Morris<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Two days ago, 993 FM began<lb/>
broadcasting the sounds of waves<lb/>
crashing on a beach accompanied<lb/>
by the calls of sea gulls squawk-<lb/>
ing Occasionally, an announcers<lb/>
voice would boom out, "coming<lb/>
Thursday morning at seven<lb/>
o'clock: the radio station for the<lb/>
nineties. Catch the wave, Thurs-<lb/>
day at seven a.m Wavy Ninetv-<lb/>
me,Grifton. New Bern,Greenev-<lb/>
ille<lb/>
This morning, Casey Ritter<lb/>
and Jim Ed wards began their first<lb/>
Coming up<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
NEW DHL I<lb/>
Homeboy Madhouse<lb/>
0 ROCKEFELLERS<lb/>
The Stegmonds<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Echo's Farm<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
Mind Over Matter<lb/>
0" ROCKEFELLERS<lb/>
'WZMB's 8th Birth-<lb/>
day<lb/>
The Sei Police<lb/>
ft<lb/>
In Limbo<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Panic<lb/>
FIZZ<lb/>
Kiee Lyles<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Do the Right Thing<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
Funkenstein<lb/>
0' ROCKEFELLERS<lb/>
New Era<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Chairman of the<lb/>
Board<lb/>
FIZZ<lb/>
The List<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Do the Right Thing<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
Do the Right Thing<lb/>
morning broadcast with WVVY.<lb/>
WVVY is a new radio station<lb/>
broadcasting out of New Bern,<lb/>
North Carolina. The station is<lb/>
owned by W&amp;B, a local broad-<lb/>
casting company from Goldsboro,<lb/>
North Carolina. WVVY is the<lb/>
company's first property, broad-<lb/>
casting at the equivalent of 5(),(XX)<lb/>
watts.<lb/>
Beginning in October (if 1989,<lb/>
WVVY was on the air tor approxi-<lb/>
mately three months. On Dec. 21,<lb/>
they went off the air to renovate<lb/>
the station. The station is now 100<lb/>
percent compact disk, delivering<lb/>
the best sound available today.<lb/>
WVVY plans to play an adult-<lb/>
contemporary and top-forty mix<lb/>
including such artists as Elton<lb/>
John, Anita Baker, Genesis, Fleet-<lb/>
wood Mac, and The Fagles. They<lb/>
also boast that they will be play-<lb/>
ing a greater variety of music than<lb/>
any other station in the area.<lb/>
"The music will have a very<lb/>
up-beat feel to it said Casev Rit-<lb/>
ter, disk jockey and program di-<lb/>
rector at WVVY. He stresses that<lb/>
the station will be aiming to plav<lb/>
what the audience asks for. Thev<lb/>
also plan to spend more time play-<lb/>
ing music and less time talking.<lb/>
Thev want their programming to<lb/>
be relevant to this market area.<lb/>
WVVY wants to be very vis-<lb/>
ible on the streets. They are going<lb/>
to try to be involved with as many<lb/>
events in the area as possible. "We<lb/>
want to be a station for the whole<lb/>
area, and not just New Bern Rit-<lb/>
ter said.<lb/>
The waking crew, Casey Rit-<lb/>
See Radio, page 12<lb/>
Lexicon<lb/>
Mushrooming<lb/>
Answers from<lb/>
Tuesday's paper<lb/>
1 Lilting: D. rhyth-<lb/>
mic<lb/>
2 Mulish: A. stub-<lb/>
born;<lb/>
3 Enigma: C puzzle<lb/>
4 Arcade: C cov-<lb/>
ered passageway<lb/>
5 Spindly: A long,<lb/>
slender<lb/>
6. Hulk: B broken-<lb/>
down ship;<lb/>
7 Cosset: B pamper<lb/>
8. Parlay: B. in-<lb/>
crease;<lb/>
9 Trundle B roll<lb/>
along<lb/>
10 Apercu: B in-<lb/>
sight<lb/>
Penguins in disguise<lb/>
Owners of University Formal Wear Richard Bramtey BM Overman and Les Frank model their merchan-<lb/>
dise in front of their store on Fifth Street (Photo by J D Whitmir&amp;?ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
ECU comic<lb/>
represents<lb/>
campus<lb/>
By Suzan Lavvler<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The greatest reward of beinj<lb/>
a comic is "just making peoj<lb/>
laugh according to EC Ustu<lb/>
Mike Swinson. Mike "Peai<lb/>
Swinson won the campus corned .<lb/>
competition on Jan 23. at Mend ?<lb/>
hall. He is currently a sophomi n<lb/>
majoring in "registration<lb/>
His routine "kept them la<lb/>
ing the whole time" and contains .<lb/>
insights on girlfriends, comrrw<lb/>
cials, sex and drugs. Swinson d I<lb/>
his impression of an E U trv<lb/>
man and senior. The freshn .<lb/>
drinks a beer and passes out, tl<lb/>
senior sees the freshman pa<lb/>
out and asks, "Hey dude .<lb/>
gonna finish that K'rr'<lb/>
After winning the com<lb/>
tion, Swinson said, I w.is ovi<lb/>
whelmed rhecrowd wasgn<lb/>
The tape i t hisperformarw <lb/>
with tapes from 24 other i ill<lb/>
will be sent to Jerry Steinfield<lb/>
will select a regional winm r i<lb/>
asked what he though t hisch u<lb/>
were, he replied, "one in 25 "<lb/>
The regional winners a r<lb/>
the nation will perform at Da<lb/>
tona Beach. Anoverall winner ?<lb/>
be selected and sent to Nevs -<lb/>
ci ry for a 30-day promotiona! I<lb/>
Swinson started doing stai<lb/>
up comedy on a whim Hewa?<lb/>
a club on amateur night and his<lb/>
fnends urged him to get on si<lb/>
See Comic, page 11<lb/>
Pay television takes over market<lb/>
Gannett News Service<lb/>
It's Super Bowl Sunday in the<lb/>
year 2(XX). You settle into your<lb/>
favorite chair, open a cold bever-<lb/>
age and call the cable company to<lb/>
pay for the game.<lb/>
That's right, pay for the game.<lb/>
Many close to the broadcast<lb/>
industry think that in the not-so-<lb/>
distant future, the fans sitting in<lb/>
the stadiums won't be the only<lb/>
people shelling out ready cash to<lb/>
watch big-time sporting events.<lb/>
"Eventually everything will be<lb/>
pay-per-view predicts Craig<lb/>
Sibley, communications manager<lb/>
for Adelphia (able Co which<lb/>
serves the Philadelphia suburbs.<lb/>
"I hope (major sporting events)<lb/>
areon free television for the rest of<lb/>
the century<lb/>
The threat pay-per-view poses<lb/>
to "tree television" appears to be a<lb/>
real one ? so real that the Na-<lb/>
tional Association of Broadcasters<lb/>
has declared January "Free Tele-<lb/>
vision Month" and kicked off an<lb/>
ambitious advertising campaign<lb/>
to persuade viewers that "free<lb/>
television" may be an endangered<lb/>
species as pv per view television<lb/>
grows more powerful.<lb/>
Cable representatives say<lb/>
phones start ringing when pay-<lb/>
per-view events are advertised.<lb/>
Major pne fights and pro-wres-<lb/>
tling matches have become main-<lb/>
stays on the pay per-view circuit<lb/>
Last summer The Rolling Stones<lb/>
and TTu'Who performed pay-per-<lb/>
view concerts.<lb/>
Whether or not pay-per-view<lb/>
will eventually swallow the "free<lb/>
television" market is something<lb/>
Mark l.ockard, general manager<lb/>
of Suburban Cable Co near Phila-<lb/>
delphia, savs remains uncertain.<lb/>
"Things are changing so fast;<lb/>
whether it's (pay-per-view for big<lb/>
games) is going to !? a reality or<lb/>
not remains to be seen<lb/>
Siblev says simple rconornks<lb/>
will fuel the shift from "freetelevi-<lb/>
sion" to pay-per-view<lb/>
"The bottom line is money<lb/>
says Sibley. "It costs more and<lb/>
more for the cable companies, to<lb/>
acquire programming<lb/>
Bill Taatfe, a senior editor and<lb/>
former television-radio critic for<lb/>
Sports Illustrated magazine, savs<lb/>
pay-per-view television will prove<lb/>
so profitable to cable TV compa-<lb/>
nies that more and more sporting<lb/>
events will be telecast.<lb/>
While Taatfe doesn't think<lb/>
"crown jewels" such as the Super<lb/>
Bowl and World Series will ever<lb/>
fall prey to pay-per-view, he savs<lb/>
many of the regular season and<lb/>
playoff games will.<lb/>
"I do think the great majority<lb/>
of sporting events will eventually<lb/>
be pay-per-view Taatfe says. "I<lb/>
think professional sports as we<lb/>
know them are becoming more<lb/>
and more upscale. They're really<lb/>
dose to the wall and it's danger-<lb/>
ous for them<lb/>
jim Small, a spokesman for<lb/>
baseball commissioner Fay Vin-<lb/>
cent, says there is no danger of<lb/>
major league games ending up on<lb/>
pay-per-view.<lb/>
"We feel it's very important for<lb/>
all our fans to see our events<lb/>
says Small. "In the foreseeable<lb/>
future we will not go to pay-per-<lb/>
view. I would K surprise! it j<lb/>
ever happened It s definite!)<lb/>
something we are not interest I<lb/>
in<lb/>
Sports broadcast representa<lb/>
tives from the major networks art<lb/>
equally confident that pay-per-<lb/>
view will not wipe out free ti .<lb/>
evison<lb/>
Mark Carlson, director<lb/>
sports for CBS-TV, says <lb/>
view does not pose a threat t.<lb/>
network television.<lb/>
"We have always expre:<lb/>
the view that sporting events k<lb/>
always remain on pay-free tek<lb/>
sion says Carlson.<lb/>
But as pay-per-view star; s<lb/>
ing bigger and bigger evi nl<lb/>
the price tag of major spoil<lb/>
events continue to rise, Adelphia s<lb/>
Sibley wonders how long the n<lb/>
works and cable stations can<lb/>
out.<lb/>
"It's going to get to the <lb/>
where the cable companies and<lb/>
big three networks just won't be<lb/>
able to afford these big games<lb/>
Sibley savs.<lb/>
CCopynuhl 10. LSA TOIA Apple ;  <lb/>
Information rtwork.<lb/>
Movie shows Nazi influence<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? The<lb/>
neo-Nazi movement is familiar<lb/>
fodder for docudramas, so Lionel<lb/>
Chetwynd decided to try a differ-<lb/>
ent approach: make a TV movie<lb/>
that explores the attraction of<lb/>
Nazism for ordinary people.<lb/>
"Why do good, ordinary<lb/>
people become Nazis? You won't<lb/>
find the answer to that on the front<lb/>
page of newspapers Chetwynd<lb/>
said. "You can't make a<lb/>
docudrama about how decent<lb/>
people are seduced by this dark<lb/>
shadow. This isa cautionary tale<lb/>
"So Proudly We Hail which<lb/>
CBS broadcasts tonight, tells par-<lb/>
allel stories of three young men<lb/>
and a college professor who view<lb/>
the extremist gToup as the answer<lb/>
to their problems.<lb/>
"In 1923, Adolf Hitler staged<lb/>
the beer hall putsch in Munich<lb/>
Chetwynd said. "He was sent to<lb/>
jail, where he wrote 'Mein Kampf<lb/>
He had only a few followers, yet "There aren't enough evil<lb/>
within six years the Nazis werea people to accomplish the purposes<lb/>
major force in Germany. If you of these leaders said Chetwynd,<lb/>
can do that with just a broken- who also served as the movie's<lb/>
down telephone system, what can. executive producer. "Theyaccom-<lb/>
be accomplished in this datrfJ pitsh their goals bv convincing<lb/>
computers, television<lb/>
machines? Imagine<lb/>
 I.ordinary people that the cure for<lb/>
ir problems is to get rid of<lb/>
ticated, technically a<lb/>
could do in this country<lb/>
people whoare not like them They<lb/>
convince them that Jews, 'coloreds'<lb/>
tand homosexuals are behind their<lb/>
jjrtmblcs.<lb/>
"This movie doesn't have a<lb/>
y ending. It has what 1 think<lb/>
?' realistic ending. The move-<lb/>
t isn't destroyed. You can't<lb/>
 kill a dragon with one blow.<lb/>
The two-hour<lb/>
David Soul as a<lb/>
supremacist who<lb/>
called the Aryafc<lb/>
Movement fidWard<lb/>
plays a professor who<lb/>
Soul's offer to publish<lb/>
on cultural difference<lb/>
threatened loss of<lb/>
doesn't publish a schola<lb/>
Chad lowe, Billy Morriapette<lb/>
and Peter Dobson also star aatfcn?<lb/>
young drifters recruited a&amp;!)tiftr<lb/>
heads by Raphael Sbargev; up to. The neo-Nazis succeed by<lb/>
"This a story without the<lb/>
Obvious victims. You tell it in a<lb/>
context that separates them from<lb/>
?heir victims. The issues are not<lb/>
clear cut. It may take viewers a<lb/>
4 while to see what these people are<lb/>
addressing issues that frighten<lb/>
other politicians. Theirs is the only<lb/>
voice being heard<lb/>
Chetwynd said he's concerned<lb/>
that people accept the presenta<lb/>
tion of issues on television as truth<lb/>
"Wesayupfront that we made<lb/>
this story up he said. "It's just<lb/>
one view of what extremism is in<lb/>
thiscountry. We didn't research it<lb/>
to death. It doesn't stand for all<lb/>
extremism in America<lb/>
Chetwynd usually ts associ-<lb/>
ated with movies that have a point<lb/>
of view. In 1988, he wrote "To<lb/>
Heal a Nation the story behind<lb/>
the Vietnam War Memorial in<lb/>
Washington. Other movies in-<lb/>
clude "Evil in Clear River "Chil-<lb/>
dren in the Crossfire" and "Mir-<lb/>
acle on Ice His feature films arc<lb/>
"The Apprenticeship of Duddy<lb/>
Kravitz" and "Hanoi Hilton<lb/>
?<lb/>
M<lb/>
L-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0011"/><lb/>
Health<lb/>
Continued from page 2<lb/>
polyunsfttuntted tat.<lb/>
Conerally, fats that are satiiratccl<lb/>
are solid at room temperature.<lb/>
I 'naaturated fats are fluid at room<lb/>
temperature. Unsaturatod fats are<lb/>
t.Jts that you will want to avoid or<lb/>
eat very little of are butter, high fat<lb/>
cheese, coconut oil, palm oil, lard,<lb/>
egg volk and vegetable oil. Try to<lb/>
choose monounsaturated or poly-<lb/>
unsaturated fats.<lb/>
When cooking try to bake and<lb/>
boil foods rather than fry. If f you<lb/>
must fry, use polyunsatur.ited or<lb/>
monounsaturated oils.<lb/>
Read labels carefully and try to<lb/>
determine that amount and types<lb/>
of fat contained in foods.<lb/>
Quiz<lb/>
Continued from page 3<lb/>
scheduled for 244 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center and will be held<lb/>
from 9 a.m. until noon, and from<lb/>
1:30 to6:30 p.m. Between sessions,<lb/>
all bowl participants will be guests<lb/>
at a luncheon featuring remarks<lb/>
bv ECU Chancellor Richard Eakin<lb/>
and Greenville Mayor Nancy Jen-<lb/>
kins.<lb/>
Anema said he is pleased with<lb/>
the interest among area schools in<lb/>
participating in the 1990 KCU<lb/>
Bowl. The bowl has already be-<lb/>
come one of ECU's "finest tradi-<lb/>
tions he said.<lb/>
Co-sponsors of the FCU Bowl<lb/>
are Burroughs Wellcome Co<lb/>
NCNBand WNCT-TV with addi-<lb/>
tional assistance provided by sev-<lb/>
eral area business firms.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
ECU Student Store Wright Building<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING SPECIAL<lb/>
$2.00 Off<lb/>
24Exp<lb/>
OR<lb/>
$1.00 Off<lb/>
12 1 -p &amp; Dw<lb/>
 Color Print Film Developing &amp; Processing<lb/>
Offcr Good Feb. 1 Feb. 28. 1990<lb/>
skillT<lb/>
1 ojrrung how to improve vour study skills<lb/>
?i-i greater sue cos in GoUcse The following<lb/>
mm v ours- .ind workshops can help you<lb/>
prepare tor the added workload of college<lb/>
or help to Increase your grade pint average.<lb/>
Ml sessions will be held in J13 Wright<lb/>
Building February 5, Monday Test<lb/>
raking, 3 4 40 pm February 6, Tuesday<lb/>
resl raking 4 4 40 pm You mav attend all<lb/>
the topic sessions or choose the ones where<lb/>
ViHI m'?l the most improvement<lb/>
ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING<lb/>
 throe p.irt workshop offered to students<lb/>
it NO cost rv the University Counseling<lb/>
entei February 1. H, 15- Thursdays All<lb/>
three sessions will be conducted from .4 4<lb/>
pm in 412 Wright Building (757-6661)<lb/>
Vssertiveness training can sharpen vour<lb/>
? Tpersonal skills and help you target<lb/>
persona) goals The workshop will focus<lb/>
n helping members distinguish between<lb/>
issertive aeeressive, and nonasserttve<lb/>
? ' ivicrs Participants ?.m lejrn how to<lb/>
 ?. ress themselves directh ,ind openh<lb/>
nterpersonal situations in<lb/>
i ? ? which neither compromises<lb/>
: viJual beliefs nor offend others Please<lb/>
i ounseitngCenter for Registration<lb/>
IMPROVING YOUR SIl'l)<lb/>
SKILLS<lb/>
in ? : how to improve vour study skill<lb/>
? r greater success in college The following<lb/>
mil course and workshops i an help you<lb/>
. pare tor the added workload of college<lb/>
? help to increase vour grade point<lb/>
?v rage -Ml sessions will be held in 414<lb/>
;hl Building lanuar) 29, Monday<lb/>
Management 1 2:30pm;January30,<lb/>
: iesda MakingandUsingNolea-l-2:30<lb/>
Iv mu.irv 31, Wednesday - Efficient<lb/>
Reading- l - 30pm,Febtuar) I.Thursday<lb/>
rest Liking 1 2 30pm You may attend<lb/>
.ill the topic sessions or choose the Mies<lb/>
. iere you need the most improvement<lb/>
FCU SPANISH CLUB<lb/>
te members of the ECU Spanish Club<lb/>
will nits't for lomersation and dinner at<lb/>
(. hico s on Feb 7 ai : pm<lb/>
WES2FEL<lb/>
WesZfel is a Christian fellowship which<lb/>
welcomes) all students, and is sponsored<lb/>
jointly bv the Presbyterian and Methodist<lb/>
Campus Ministries Come to the Methodist<lb/>
Student tenter (301 E th, across from<lb/>
Garret) dorm) this Wednesday night at 5<lb/>
pm and every Wednesday night for a<lb/>
delicious, all you can eat home cooked<lb/>
meal (2 2") with a short program<lb/>
afterwards Signed tor the hearing<lb/>
impaired C.ill7"S 2000 more information<lb/>
SKATEBOARD CLUB<lb/>
It vou are Interested in Skateboarding,<lb/>
having a challenging place to skate, and<lb/>
slashing frontside grinds, there will be a<lb/>
meetingThurs night Feb lstat7:00at).C<lb/>
I'ark, 2000 Cedar I ane Main Office Bid<lb/>
1 RLE FLORIDA SPRING<lb/>
BREAK!<lb/>
Tarn $600 and a free trip in one month part<lb/>
time Call Steve at (800)826-9100<lb/>
Al KOIC<lb/>
Vttenti n to all tl ' rested in<lb/>
becoming air foi ?  . Mr I orce<lb/>
Officer Qu '  ' N1 OQT) will be<lb/>
administered i 1 it 1 pm in Km MW<lb/>
In the Wright Annex Comesignupal Km<lb/>
J08 or iust show up 11iursd.iv<lb/>
ECU SHCQOL OF MUSIC<lb/>
EVENTS IAN. 30- FEB. 6<lb/>
ECU Symphonic Wind Ensemble and i . U<lb/>
la Ensemble, William W Wiedrich and<lb/>
v arroll V' Dashiell, !r, Directors deb 2.<lb/>
8:15 p.m Wright Auditorium, free)<lb/>
Scholarship Benefit ii of the Friends of<lb/>
the FCC School of Music, featuring th?<lb/>
ECU Symphon) Orchestra Robert Hause,<lb/>
conductor and soloists Donna Pease,<lb/>
meo soprano ai, 1 lav A Pierson,<lb/>
baritone (Feb 3 730p.m Hilton Inn;call<lb/>
757-6851 hr ticket Information) (anet<lb/>
Warren Wright Senior Voice Recital (Feb<lb/>
feOO pm, Fletcher Recital Mail, free);<lb/>
lanette Fishnell, organist Facult) Recital<lb/>
(Feb 6,8 13p.m .First Presbyterian Church<lb/>
14th and Kim, tree) Dl 1 757 4370 1' R<lb/>
THESCHOOl OFMUSICS"RECORDI D<lb/>
CALENDAR OF EVENTS<lb/>
FREE THROW CONTEST<lb/>
IM REC Services will be hosting a free<lb/>
throw contest in Memorial Gymnasium<lb/>
February 8 beginning at 4:00 pm Drop-in<lb/>
and take a shot at this vears title ECU ID's<lb/>
required tocompete For more information<lb/>
call 757? h.487<lb/>
RACQUETBALL DOUBLE<lb/>
Registration for 1M-REC Services<lb/>
racquetball doubles com petition will be<lb/>
held February h at r 00 pm in Biology 10.4.<lb/>
For further information call 757-6387<lb/>
MOVING SALE<lb/>
Sat Feb 4,7:00 a.m. until. Indoors rain at<lb/>
shine Furniture. TV, ping pong table, mid-<lb/>
size refrigerator, electric heaters, lamps,<lb/>
clothes, and MOKE' 6 miles west of<lb/>
C.reenvilleon old 2M-just eastContentneu<lb/>
Campgrounds behind Windham Bros.<lb/>
Contractors For more info call 753-370B.<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED<lb/>
n estimated 4 to 4 million American<lb/>
women .ue battered each year by their<lb/>
husbands rpa triers New Directions, the<lb/>
Pitt Count) Family Violence Program,<lb/>
needs volunteers to learn about legal<lb/>
protection available lor women who are<lb/>
victims ol abuse To volunteer time or<lb/>
receive more information call ?2-4ll<lb/>
trail ing tor volunteers will Iv scheduled<lb/>
in February<lb/>
ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY<lb/>
Arnold Air Society, which is a service<lb/>
fraternity within Air Force KOTC, is<lb/>
? p. insuring a blood drive on Feb S, '90. The<lb/>
blood drive will be held from 12 to b and<lb/>
will be held at Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
ANIMAL RIGHTS<lb/>
! r Hal Daniel will speak to ECU SETA on<lb/>
Animal Cognition" Tuesday, February 6,<lb/>
at 5 pm in GO 20it A brief business<lb/>
meeting will follow Thepubhc is welcome<lb/>
EARTH DAY MEETING<lb/>
rhursday,7:30p.m at Jav Cee I'ark U4th<lb/>
and Cedar I ane)Comeone,comeal Town<lb/>
and gown together and support Earth Pay<lb/>
First organizational nun-ting CaU830-456?<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
FRIDAY NIGHT<lb/>
I IS &amp; OVER WCOLLEGE I.D)<lb/>
The Club<lb/>
EXPRESS<lb/>
SKI BUS<lb/>
Departs Rio every Friday at<lb/>
2:30 am for Winter Place<lb/>
FREE SlYLE<lb/>
DANCE CONTEST<lb/>
EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT<lb/>
OVER $2,000 IN CASH AND PRIZE GIVE-AWAYS<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
sMAIL MUMCM LARCL<lb/>
Cheese Pizza<lb/>
Cheese and 1 Topping<lb/>
Each Additional Topping<lb/>
SPECIALTY PIZZAS<lb/>
Pepperont Lovers<lb/>
Cheese Lovers Plus<lb/>
Meat I overs <lb/>
Supreme<lb/>
Super Supreme<lb/>
S 15<lb/>
S 80<lb/>
t 65<lb/>
ST in<lb/>
$7 10<lb/>
S7 10<lb/>
$7 It)<lb/>
$735<lb/>
S 80<lb/>
$9.75<lb/>
$9.75<lb/>
$9.75<lb/>
SIi) 55<lb/>
$9.45<lb/>
$10.40<lb/>
S 95<lb/>
SI2 40<lb/>
$1230<lb/>
$1230<lb/>
$1230<lb/>
SI4 23<lb/>
GREAT PIZZA HUTK PIZZA<lb/>
DELIVERED! 752-4445<lb/>
Bgyasm hours<lb/>
SUN. THURS. 4 PM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
FRI.&amp;SAT. 4PM TO 1:00 AM<lb/>
LIMITED DELIVERY AREA<lb/>
DELIVERY CHARGE 75<lb/>
LARGE $9.99 SPECIALTY<lb/>
A LARGE MEAT LOVER'S<lb/>
PEPERONI LOVER'S<lb/>
CHEESE LOVER'S PLUS<lb/>
OR A LARGE SUPREME<lb/>
COUPOII FOR PIZZA HOT DBUVERT ONLT AND EXPIRES 22190.<lb/>
?or good in conjuhctioh WITH ant other DISCOUNT.<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
Invites You To A Reception For<lb/>
Campus Leaders<lb/>
February 5, 1990<lb/>
7pm to 9 pm Multipurpose Room,<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Please R.S.V.P. At The SGA Office<lb/>
757-4726<lb/>
Sunday MorningsEat,Eat,Eat!<lb/>
MCDONALD'S<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
HOTCAKES<lb/>
Sunday mornings until 10:30a.m. we're serving up all the hotcakes with syrup<lb/>
and butter you can eat. No limit. No kidding! All for only $1.25 plus tax. And<lb/>
have to do is sit back, relax and enjoy while the special Hotcakes Hostess kee<lb/>
'em coming! Offer good at all McDonald's in Greenville.<lb/>
'sausage is extra iv tam?<lb/>
Offer good only on Sunday mornings in February. S2rS? ilWfc.<lb/>
GREAT TASTE.<lb/>
all you<lb/>
ps<lb/>
ClMtMcOonaM (Corporation<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0012"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
?Jrc gafit (garolfnfan<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
State and Nation<lb/>
February 1,1990<lb/>
Proposed law prohibits drilling<lb/>
By Donna Haves<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
(Congressman Walter B. ones<lb/>
has introduced legislation to at<lb/>
least temporarily stop oil and gas<lb/>
exploration oft the North Caro-<lb/>
lina coast<lb/>
Meanwhile supporters and<lb/>
opponentsol MobilOil'sproposed<lb/>
exploration continue to debate the<lb/>
environmental impacl of drilling<lb/>
waste.<lb/>
ones, hairman tor the! louse<lb/>
Merchant Marine and Fisheries<lb/>
Committee, the committee that<lb/>
holds jurisdiction over theoffshore<lb/>
oil and ib program, followed<lb/>
through w ithhisl ember prom-<lb/>
ise to Study oil and gas explora-<lb/>
tion ott the North Carolina coast.<lb/>
fhe Outer Banks Protection<lb/>
ct prohibits any decision that<lb/>
would continue oil and gas leas-<lb/>
ing exploration or development<lb/>
off the North Carolina coast until<lb/>
een<lb/>
new impact studies had 1<lb/>
mpl<lb/>
 i<lb/>
spee h to the 1 louse, 1<lb/>
an<lb/>
to North<lb/>
Gorbachev<lb/>
denies<lb/>
resignation<lb/>
allegations<lb/>
MOSCOW (AP) President<lb/>
Mikhail S.Gorbachev Wednesday<lb/>
denied a U.S. broadcast report that<lb/>
he isconsidering resigning hispost<lb/>
as( ommunist Party chief.<lb/>
'No one has said this, and I<lb/>
certainly didn't make any such<lb/>
si it ment the Soviet president<lb/>
 ?: part) general secretary said.<lb/>
' nv such suggestions are<lb/>
mdless<lb/>
1 he Cable News Network<lb/>
rted I uesdav, quoting an<lb/>
titicd part) source, that<lb/>
rl i. he had spent eight days<lb/>
I up at his country house<lb/>
ide Moscow with his top<lb/>
ad isers, where he wasconsider-<lb/>
resigning his leadership ol the<lb/>
source was quoted as<lb/>
saving Gorbachev would have<lb/>
retained the presidency,a govem-<lb/>
rti position he proposes to<lb/>
convert from a largely ceremonial<lb/>
t to a substantive one.<lb/>
"1 have no intention of doing<lb/>
' (iorbachev said when asked<lb/>
ut the report during a photo<lb/>
ion at the start of a Kremlin<lb/>
? Hi  ?'? ith President elect 1 er-<lb/>
? ollor de Mellooi Brazil.<lb/>
rhe NN report touched off a<lb/>
temporary flurry of selling on<lb/>
, i tern stock markets and Secre-<lb/>
tary of State lames A. Baker 11!<lb/>
said he did not know how to re-<lb/>
spond to what he termed "a ru-<lb/>
mor<lb/>
Carolina) that oil and gas devel-<lb/>
opment off our coast will not spell<lb/>
environmental disaster. Prove to<lb/>
us that the technology is available<lb/>
to safely explore and develop<lb/>
deepwater offshore resources, and<lb/>
prove to us that the beauty, re-<lb/>
sources and wav ot life of the Outer<lb/>
Hanks will not bo jeopardized by<lb/>
the Mobil plan.<lb/>
The issue of offshore energy<lb/>
development in this frontier area<lb/>
provokes myriad questions which<lb/>
must be answered K'tore the U.S.<lb/>
Secretary of Interior can be ex-<lb/>
pected to make a reasoned deci-<lb/>
sion about whether or not to ap-<lb/>
prove the Mobil plan<lb/>
(ones said his legislation "puts<lb/>
in motion the mechanism to an-<lb/>
swer these questions, and to en-<lb/>
sure that they are answered fully<lb/>
and completely, prohibits any<lb/>
decision before Oct. 1,1991 (ones<lb/>
added that the prohibition in-<lb/>
cludes all other offshore oil and<lb/>
gas activities.<lb/>
(ones' bill cites the environ-<lb/>
mental fragility and beauty of the<lb/>
Outer Banks, the potential adverse<lb/>
effects of oil and gas development<lb/>
on the state's fishing and tourism<lb/>
industries, the inability of. the<lb/>
Environmental Report released in<lb/>
November to "in any way allay<lb/>
these concerns and the conclu-<lb/>
sions of a National Academy of<lb/>
Sciences report as the reasons for<lb/>
introducing the legislation.<lb/>
In a 1989 panel report by the<lb/>
National Academy of Sciences it<lb/>
said that offshore exploration<lb/>
should be stopped off the coasts of<lb/>
California and Honda because of<lb/>
a lack of thorough environmental<lb/>
information.<lb/>
(ones' legislation would cre-<lb/>
ate an Environmental Sciences<lb/>
Review Panel that would conduct<lb/>
ecological and socioeconornic<lb/>
studies and additional occano-<lb/>
graphic studies "to obtain suffi-<lb/>
cient information about all signifi-<lb/>
cant conditions, processes and<lb/>
environments which influence,OT<lb/>
may be influenced, by oil and gas<lb/>
leasing, exploration and develop-<lb/>
ment activities offshore North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
The review panel would be<lb/>
r; . Fast changes<lb/>
) Constitutional am V? <lb/>
1 i:C5- Qb<lb/>
vv. ?v.<lb/>
1 v<lb/>
 T<lb/>
firm<lb/>
M<lb/>
Tl'Ia<lb/>
'rnonfhs<lb/>
'V<lb/>
9 V2l<lb/>
Source Congressional Research Service Web Bryan! Gannon News Service<lb/>
composed of one marine scientist<lb/>
selected by the Secretary of Inte-<lb/>
rior, one marine scientist selected<lb/>
bv the Governor of North Caro-<lb/>
lina, and one person each from the<lb/>
disciplines of physical oceanogra-<lb/>
phy, ecology and sociology to bo<lb/>
selected from nominations made<lb/>
bv the National Academy of Sci-<lb/>
ences. As Jones' proposal is being<lb/>
considered, supporters and Oppo-<lb/>
nents of Mobil Oil's proposed<lb/>
exploration are still debating the<lb/>
environmental impact of drilling<lb/>
waste.<lb/>
The US. Environmental Pro-<lb/>
tection Agency (EPA), the agency<lb/>
responsible for monitoring ocean<lb/>
discharges beyond state waters,<lb/>
called a public hearing in Manteo<lb/>
on Tuesday for all parties to pres-<lb/>
ent their views.<lb/>
EPA officials have said that it<lb/>
proposes to allow Mobil Oil to<lb/>
dump its waste in the Atlantic<lb/>
Ocean, but opponents of the plan<lb/>
argue that drilling waste contains<lb/>
potentially toxic chemicals and<lb/>
heavy metals.<lb/>
During the drilling process,<lb/>
clav and chemicals are poured into<lb/>
the well, and the drill bit brings up<lb/>
cuttings with chromium, cad<lb/>
mium and other heavy metals. I or<lb/>
every barrel of oil a well produces,<lb/>
a barrel ii a mixture ot sea water<lb/>
and chemicals is dumped un-<lb/>
treated into the ocean.<lb/>
James C. Martin, the project<lb/>
manager for Mobil's proposed test<lb/>
well, said that the drilling dis-<lb/>
charges are not hazardous, but<lb/>
Lisa Spcer ol the Natural Re<lb/>
sources Defense Council, an envi-<lb/>
ronmental group based in New<lb/>
York, said: Everybody views their<lb/>
own little dumping project as a<lb/>
drop in the bin ket. When you add<lb/>
it all up though, you're talking<lb/>
about an assault on the ocean We<lb/>
see it already with the garbage<lb/>
and needles washing up on the<lb/>
shore<lb/>
Japanese<lb/>
factory<lb/>
jobs up<lb/>
The number of<lb/>
U S residents<lb/>
employed at<lb/>
1.043 Japanese-<lb/>
owned factories in<lb/>
the USA has<lb/>
nearly tripled<lb/>
since 1985<lb/>
ttemall ade Orj.i- . ??<lb/>
in Thorrass GNS<lb/>
Federal task force aids<lb/>
local drug enforcers<lb/>
By David Trevino<lb/>
si a 11 Writer<lb/>
National Cemetary in Raleigh<lb/>
reaches its maximum capacity<lb/>
rulingC ommunist Party<lb/>
has traditionally been the power<lb/>
base tor Soviet leaders. However,<lb/>
the party has been widely blamed<lb/>
tor failing to solve the country's<lb/>
dire economic crisis, and reformist<lb/>
m ik rsaredernandingthatthe<lb/>
Communists give up their monop-<lb/>
oly on power.<lb/>
I he presidency has become a<lb/>
more visible and substantive po-<lb/>
sition in re entmonths.Still, there<lb/>
is little question that the party's<lb/>
Politburo and Central Committee<lb/>
retain the political power.<lb/>
( Iorbachev told journalists he<lb/>
had just returned from the south.<lb/>
apparently referring to his retreat<lb/>
on the Black Sea, where he was<lb/>
preparing foT next week's meet-<lb/>
ing of the (Ommunist Party's<lb/>
verning Central Committee,<lb/>
whu his planning a potential criti-<lb/>
cal parts congress for the fall.<lb/>
1 he meeting comes at a time<lb/>
.?t political turmoil for(.orbachev<lb/>
and the ruling Communists. The<lb/>
breakaway I ithuanian Commu-<lb/>
nist Partv refected Gorbachev's<lb/>
efforts to bring it back within the<lb/>
fold and the president was forced<lb/>
to send troops into the warring<lb/>
Si lUthern republicsof Armenia and<lb/>
Azerbaijan to restore order and<lb/>
See Gorbachev, page 9<lb/>
By Kirstin Eakes<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The seven-acre National<lb/>
Cemetery in Raleigh, N.C has<lb/>
almost reached capacity, accord-<lb/>
ing to a Department of Veterans<lb/>
Affairs report.<lb/>
All a vailablegravesites for the<lb/>
burial of casketed remains will bo<lb/>
used by this month, the report<lb/>
stated. Cemetery Director Leon B.<lb/>
Murphv said, "As of today Wed-<lb/>
nesday 1 have 14 available sites<lb/>
left<lb/>
Murphy said when the sites<lb/>
are filled, casketed burials will be<lb/>
limited to interment of a spouse Of<lb/>
eligible children of a family<lb/>
member buried in the cemetery<lb/>
"We will continue to have space<lb/>
for cremated remains Murphv<lb/>
added, "and our staff will con-<lb/>
tinue to maintain the grounds<lb/>
The cemetery, established m<lb/>
186K with 1,lri interments of<lb/>
Union soldiers, holds more than<lb/>
5,000 buried remains, including<lb/>
548 unknown soldiers.<lb/>
According to the VA, mem-<lb/>
bers of the armed forces and hon-<lb/>
orably discharged veterans qual-<lb/>
ify for burial in national cemeter-<lb/>
ies. Spouses and unmarried chil-<lb/>
dren of those eligible also qualify<lb/>
for burial. The report stated the<lb/>
VA handlesgraveside preparation<lb/>
and burial, furnishes a headstone<lb/>
or marker and a flag, and pro-<lb/>
vides perpetual care.<lb/>
Two of three other North<lb/>
Carolina national cemeteries still<lb/>
have casket gravesites available.<lb/>
According to a VA release, the<lb/>
New Bern National Cemetery will<lb/>
have gravesites until 1993, and<lb/>
Salisbury National Cemetery<lb/>
should remain open until 2010.<lb/>
Wilmington National Cemetery.<lb/>
however, has reached capacity.<lb/>
 milit.ir. unit ? ? I illy<lb/>
designed to funnel Dej irti ? I '<lb/>
Defense issets I<lb/>
forccment agert<lb/>
traffk kinginthcsouthwi si! nil<lb/>
"states was a tr it I last s<lb/>
her at Fort Bliss, lex is<lb/>
Theumt, know n as oint Task<lb/>
Force6wasa ti it las<lb/>
expanding r the armed fon es<lb/>
are to play in the bush<lb/>
administration's v ar ?n drugs.<lb/>
JTF 6 was initially proposed<lb/>
by the hairman of the Joint ??<lb/>
of Statt. Arm) I ent ral l olin J.<lb/>
Powell wh? n he I I the U.S.<lb/>
Forces 'on  ter-<lb/>
son in (ieorgi i  6 will plan<lb/>
and coordinate military sup; rl<lb/>
for operation? border<lb/>
between the I nited States and<lb/>
Mexico.<lb/>
TF-complemfiifsan ??? i s<lb/>
agreement betweei ;ra<lb/>
tion and Natural I i<lb/>
(INS! and the ' I<lb/>
provide joint training and<lb/>
lance operations along the south-<lb/>
west bord r ol the I nited States.<lb/>
Made pub inCV tober 1989 that<lb/>
agreement marked the first full-<lb/>
time use ol active duty military<lb/>
personnel in supp rl fMr Bush s<lb/>
war on drugs within the borders<lb/>
of the United States<lb/>
! 11 6 supplies intellig<lb/>
information, training and milil<lb/>
personnel. It also supplies hard-<lb/>
ware, air and ground transp ?i ta<lb/>
tion and advice to government<lb/>
agencies in the region In addi-<lb/>
tion, military personnel will assist<lb/>
law enforcement<lb/>
cargo inspections, reconnaissa<lb/>
operatic ns and pro ide trai ; i<lb/>
tation and logistical support f r<lb/>
Drug Enforcement Admira -<lb/>
ti( n Dl raids <lb/>
U.SMexicai rdei<lb/>
T1 6 will coordinate ill ?<lb/>
? itl .r iliandrugenl ??<lb/>
? ag n ies through an<lb/>
brella agency known as Opera<lb/>
tion Alliai ce which oversees the<lb/>
effortsoi variousfederal,stateand<lb/>
al agencies involved in drug<lb/>
inu rdu tior i ngth border<lb/>
guidelines, J<lb/>
6isexpected to be used only wl<lb/>
,i civilian agency lacks adequate<lb/>
rt j to i arry out a spe<lb/>
operation. Ih.?t civilian agency<lb/>
would issue a formal request to<lb/>
Operation Alliance whkh wou<lb/>
then re iewtheagency'splansand<lb/>
forv? ard the request to TF 6<lb/>
Based upon the information<lb/>
and plans submitted by Opera<lb/>
fion Alliaiue, JT1 would review<lb/>
reuuests arwt"dcc t nTnewBMBP<lb/>
tanct themilitary  illoffcr <lb/>
6 would pass the request and its<lb/>
recommendations through the<lb/>
U.S Forces nd and the<lb/>
int( hiefsof Staff to theOfficeol<lb/>
the Secretary ol Defense? 61 Ofor<lb/>
final approval.<lb/>
it it is determined that mili-<lb/>
tary units can best meet the needs<lb/>
outlined in the Opera tion Alliam e<lb/>
n quest, OSD will authorize TF-6<lb/>
to notify specific units approved<lb/>
to furnish the support. 1 he au-<lb/>
thority to approve requests tor<lb/>
military assistance is expected to<lb/>
be delegated to levels lower than<lb/>
(S1) in the future as they become<lb/>
more routine TF-6 currently<lb/>
See Task force, page 9<lb/>
Murphv said the VA his<lb/>
committed $135 million in fed-<lb/>
eral matching funds SO North<lb/>
Carolina can develop more state<lb/>
veterans' cemeteries. Black, Moun-<lb/>
tain, N.C,Camp Leleune,and Port<lb/>
Bragg are areas under review as<lb/>
possible future sites.<lb/>
Driver admits to not<lb/>
returning to scene<lb/>
Opposition wins concession<lb/>
Romanian leaders share power<lb/>
. . , ? ?-v 1.1 Afc nmnrln ih.i 1 jnrvo.irv; In be ACtiVO intlmi-<lb/>
BUCHAREST, Romania (AP)<lb/>
?The revolutionary government,<lb/>
bowing to opposition pressure, has<lb/>
agreed to share power until May<lb/>
elections and says it will split into<lb/>
two groups ? one to govern and<lb/>
the other to contest elections.<lb/>
ers, a transcript of which was made<lb/>
available to The Associated Press.<lb/>
The announcement came late<lb/>
Tuesday and there was no imme-<lb/>
diate response from the opposi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The concessions follow grow<lb/>
Opposition groups had an- ing public dissatisfaction with the<lb/>
gnly criticized the ruling National<lb/>
Salvation Front, vhich assumed<lb/>
power during the bloody Decem-<lb/>
ber revolt that toppled Nicolae<lb/>
Ceausescu, for reneging on its<lb/>
promise to run the country only<lb/>
until the elections.<lb/>
They had demanded the in-<lb/>
terim government not field candi-<lb/>
dates in elections it will oversee<lb/>
and accused it of trying to estab-<lb/>
lish one-parry rule. Critics noted<lb/>
that the front controls the mili-<lb/>
tary, bureaucracy and industry<lb/>
and has restricted opposition ac-<lb/>
cess to the mass media.<lb/>
Senior front member Silviu<lb/>
Brucan offered the coalition gov-<lb/>
ernment and announced the split<lb/>
in comments to selected report-<lb/>
front's ruling tactics and intema<lb/>
tional criticism of it for allowing<lb/>
pro-government demonstrators to<lb/>
besiege the headquarters of two<lb/>
opposition parties on Monday.<lb/>
Opposition leaders claimed they<lb/>
had been the target of government-<lb/>
organized harassment, noting that<lb/>
what appears to be active intimi-<lb/>
dation of legiti mate organizations<lb/>
which are seeking a legitimate,<lb/>
independent role in Romania's<lb/>
new political orderState Depart-<lb/>
ment spokeswoman Margaret<lb/>
Tutwiler said in Washington.<lb/>
Schifter met with opposition<lb/>
leaders Tuesday and was to con-<lb/>
fer with key government figures<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
The demonstrators Monday<lb/>
broke into Liberal Party headquar-<lb/>
ters and surrounded the offices of<lb/>
the National Peasant Party, forc-<lb/>
ing its president to flee in an ar-<lb/>
many of the protesters were work- mored personnel carrier provided<lb/>
crs who arrived in the capital in by authorities. On Sunday, thou-<lb/>
government-owned trucks and sands of protesters had con verged<lb/>
hUSes. on government headquarters,<lb/>
On Tuesday, the U.S. State demanding the front share power<lb/>
Department accused the front of or resign.<lb/>
intimidating the opposition and<lb/>
said department of human rights<lb/>
director Richard Schifter was in<lb/>
Bucharest "forcefully stating our<lb/>
concerns<lb/>
"We are deeply troubled by<lb/>
Many opposition groups have<lb/>
accused the front ? which is<lb/>
composed of military officers,<lb/>
intellectuals and disaffected<lb/>
Communists ? of seeking to con-<lb/>
See Opposition, page 9<lb/>
LEXINGTON, Va.(AP) Hie<lb/>
man charged with the hit and-run<lb/>
death ot a Washington and Lee<lb/>
University coed from North Caro-<lb/>
lina cried after the accident but<lb/>
did not return to the scene, ac-<lb/>
cording to a statement he gave<lb/>
police.<lb/>
"I iist wish to hell it would<lb/>
not have happened Charles B.<lb/>
"Blake" Comer, 21, told police in a<lb/>
taped interview Nov. 30, Lexing-<lb/>
ton Police Chief Bruce Beard said<lb/>
Tuesday during Comer's prelimi-<lb/>
nary hearing. "And 1 wish I'd had<lb/>
the courage to step forth when it<lb/>
did happen<lb/>
Marv Ashley Scarborough, a<lb/>
freshman from Raleigh, N.C was<lb/>
struck bv an automobile and killed<lb/>
early on March 16, 1989. Comer,<lb/>
who was a Washington and Pee<lb/>
senior at the time, was arrested<lb/>
following an anonymous tip.<lb/>
Washington and Lee spokesman<lb/>
Brian Shaw said Comer, from<lb/>
Greenville, S.C, no longer attends<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
Beard read Comer's sta tement<lb/>
in open court during the hearing<lb/>
on hit-and-run and involuntary-<lb/>
manslaughter charges. General<lb/>
District Court fudge loseph Hess<lb/>
certified the charges to a grand<lb/>
jury following the 90-minute hear-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
beard testified that Comer first<lb/>
denied to him that he ran over Ms.<lb/>
Scarborough in the early-morn-<lb/>
ing hours of March 16,1989. Then,<lb/>
Beard said,Comerbrokeintotears<lb/>
and said he w anted to tell the truth.<lb/>
Authorities said Comer went<lb/>
on to siy that he had had two<lb/>
Itvrsat a fraternity party that night<lb/>
and was dm ing through Lexing-<lb/>
ton when he saw a woman to one<lb/>
side<lb/>
Right when I was about to<lb/>
pass, she stumbled. 1 couldn't<lb/>
swerve. I hit Ashley Scarborough<lb/>
Comer is said to have told Beard.<lb/>
"For the tirst 15 seconds, I thought,<lb/>
'What was thaC It didn't hit me at<lb/>
first.<lb/>
"I was petrified. I wish 1 could<lb/>
have stopped and gone back, but 1<lb/>
didn't. I knew it was a person. It<lb/>
was just like, when you'rednving<lb/>
down the street you pass people.<lb/>
You don't look at them.  All of a<lb/>
sudden, she stumbled out in the<lb/>
road and I hit her '<lb/>
Comer said he went home and<lb/>
"panicked according to Beard.<lb/>
"It was like, 'What should 1<lb/>
do Should 1 go back? Comer<lb/>
said he resolved to go back, "but 1<lb/>
was just too scared, and didn't,<lb/>
and I just stayed in my room,<lb/>
crying over what I had done<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0013"/><lb/>
The Fast Carolinian, February 1,1990 11<lb/>
Campus Voice<lb/>
What is the 1 environ-<lb/>
mental problem on campus?<lb/>
Tonya Pender, 20<lb/>
Sophomore-Nursing<lb/>
"Pollution, like littering is the main<lb/>
problem. Students ought to be lined it<lb/>
they are caught littering<lb/>
Ed Reese, 2 1<lb/>
Junior?Criminal Justice<lb/>
Cigarette smoking is the problem. It<lb/>
ought to be banned from the library,<lb/>
catetena and classrooms You should<lb/>
only be allowed to smoke in vour dorm.<lb/>
Being caught smoking should be pun-<lb/>
ished on a demerit system<lb/>
Science studies men<lb/>
and masculinity<lb/>
i<lb/>
Jonathan Grauel, 20<lb/>
E; Junior?ArtEnglish<lb/>
"The worst thin is the mud lots we um<lb/>
tor parking. There is a lack ol responsi-<lb/>
! bility m providing decent parkin<lb/>
&amp; Instead we tear up the land in those<lb/>
mud loK "<lb/>
Nelson Scott 20<lb/>
Junior?LSS<lb/>
The photo lab is horrible. Phere are<lb/>
mushrooms growing on the walls, the<lb/>
ventilation is poor and the lab is clo i to<lb/>
an asbestos contaminated area I he ad-<lb/>
ministration is slack for not moving it to ?<lb/>
Arnie Cullipher, 25<lb/>
Senior-Fnlish<lb/>
" 1 he university still uses stvrofoam cups.<lb/>
The Mendenhall snack center,the Student<lb/>
Store, the Croatan and the .alley all use<lb/>
stvrotoam containers What do Menden-<lb/>
i. <lb/>
hall and lones do about re lin<lb/>
??<lb/>
(ianncit News Service<lb/>
Men, it's vour turn under the<lb/>
microscope.<lb/>
From testosterone-driven ca-<lb/>
rtvrs to shopping h.ibits men,<lb/>
manhood and masculinity arc<lb/>
being studied like never before.<lb/>
"The number of serious stud-<lb/>
ies of men hasmushroomed'says<lb/>
Eugene K August, who began<lb/>
teaching "Modem Men: Images<lb/>
and Reality" at the University of<lb/>
Dayton eight years ago.<lb/>
i )ncc a lonely specialty, men's<lb/>
studies arc now offered on more<lb/>
than 200 i ampuses. there's a<lb/>
quarterly fournal "Men'sStud-<lb/>
ics Review a Men's Studies As-<lb/>
sociation and doens of men's<lb/>
study groups across the country.<lb/>
Win- all the guy tuss1<lb/>
I think it's a result of the<lb/>
women's movement, and someof<lb/>
their complaints about men says<lb/>
Alvm Baraff, founder of the six-<lb/>
war old Men enter m Washing-<lb/>
ton. 1) C.<lb/>
Mm Barafl says,arejusl trying<lb/>
i ,n h up. ' Women have been<lb/>
marching along now tor 2(1-30<lb/>
years and we as men have been<lb/>
standing by and watching the<lb/>
parade and not jumping in<lb/>
I here seems to be no limit to<lb/>
the male minutiae researchers are<lb/>
willing to examine.<lb/>
Man talk Men are more<lb/>
aggressive Language users, domi-<lb/>
nate conversations even when<lb/>
outnumbered by women and<lb/>
when they converse with each<lb/>
other usually talk about "things"<lb/>
rather than personal issues, at-<lb/>
"Do The Right Thing'<lb/>
jit Is A Great Film.<lb/>
J it is n entntaintnq upbeat x?ous ? r ot l(<lb/>
fabulous:<lb/>
-Compiled by Marjorie L McKinstry<lb/>
Feature Briefs<lb/>
Church membership drops<lb/>
Membership in meru an Protestant churches is dropping, ac ord-<lb/>
ing to sociologists. Reasons young people leavii I religion;<lb/>
fading distinctions between d? nominations; and smaller pools ol new<lb/>
members becauseof the low birth rate for educated middK iss whites<lb/>
Warmth and hospitality are replacing the country rwspherein<lb/>
most American churches, soci ;ists say. hurches reeting<lb/>
members when they arrive tor sen h es and offering I iked pies<lb/>
to prospective members ("hey also are making i spe ial effort to<lb/>
provide information and answer questions about met i hip.<lb/>
Enviromentalism seizes nation<lb/>
Environmental groups are following the lead of th itt I ?? ivand<lb/>
banding together to raise money to promote their individual caus<lb/>
such as clean air, clean water and recycling. Sponsored b) the I nviroi<lb/>
mental Federation ol America, the 1 und for the Environment solii it<lb/>
money through payroll deductions from .??<lb/>
employees. Environmental information is bi<lb/>
sumers via the telephone newcxample rhel'ei<lb/>
I ouncil isoperatinga toll fn ? tlin toad ;v. e? all" r:<lb/>
are earthtrundle 1 he council staffs the n in I i i<lb/>
from 10a m to 4 p m 1 51 and from 7 a m tti 1 ;? m<lb/>
nl tii ! coi pora'<lb/>
du tsth<lb/>
-TO PR'<lb/>
Americans cutback on expensive purchases<lb/>
Americans plan to cut back on major purchase; tra el ai h n<lb/>
lion, according to a national surve) conducted b) rheGallupOrgar<lb/>
zanonand Hank Advertising News About 6 percent of tl i I llOOadull<lb/>
polled said they plan to reduce their expenditures this<lb/>
Manufacturers make safer paper product<lb/>
Manufacturers are mov ing tow ard dioxin tree paper produ ts I he<lb/>
latest development: lollipops with unbleached paper sticks manufac-<lb/>
tured by Glenn Foods of Woodmere, N.Y. Dioxin is a toxi bj product<lb/>
of the chlorine bleaching process used to make paper white<lb/>
Money market accounts gain popularity<lb/>
( ertitn atcs ot deposit and money market accounts are becoming<lb/>
more popular with savers, a national survey indicates. CM 1,000adults<lb/>
polled by The Gallup Organization, 45 percent plan to put mone) into<lb/>
CDs this year and 38 percent plan to use money market accounts A year<lb/>
ago, 39 percent said they would invest m( I s and 31 percenl said they<lb/>
would use monev market accounts.<lb/>
Comic<lb/>
cording to a report out of the Col-<lb/>
lege of William and Mary in Wil<lb/>
liamsburg, Va.<lb/>
? Boy talk. Boys are men of<lb/>
few words, giving shorter re-<lb/>
sponses than their female counter<lb/>
parts. The typical boy response to<lb/>
a question: yes or no, according to<lb/>
a study of 30 preschoolers and<lb/>
elementary students at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Michigan.<lb/>
? Hormones talk. It seems<lb/>
men's testosterone levels influence<lb/>
career paths, says a study out of<lb/>
Georgia State University. Actors<lb/>
scored tops in testosterone charts<lb/>
of 92 men in seven categories, (ol-<lb/>
io wed bv football players, physi-<lb/>
cians, professors, firemen, sales-<lb/>
men and ministers.<lb/>
Other mysteries of manhood<lb/>
will be mulled as Hobart college<lb/>
in upstate New York begins its<lb/>
month-long fifth annual confer-<lb/>
ence on "Men and Masculinity"<lb/>
this week.<lb/>
Also, Warren Farrell, the San<lb/>
Diego-based author of "Why Men<lb/>
Are The W.iv They Are" (Berkley<lb/>
Books, $4.95), is gearing up to add<lb/>
to the research pile with the 1991<lb/>
release of "Ten Myths About<lb/>
Men<lb/>
There's still many to be un<lb/>
covered, examined and quantified,<lb/>
he maintains. "Real men's studies<lb/>
is ust in its embryonic stages<lb/>
says Farrell.<lb/>
Most researchers agree it will<lb/>
take at least another decade ol<lb/>
research on men for them to be as<lb/>
hilly understood as women.<lb/>
Ctopyhnht 11?0, USA TOI)A Applr I ollrg<lb/>
Information Vrtwork.<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
5<lb/>
ft  o . ??<lb/>
D6TH?I8?<lb/>
K :i<lb/>
Playing February 1 - 4, 1990<lb/>
8:00 PM MINDKIX THEATRE<lb/>
? i km unit sum m id ?<lb/>
Sponsored b) SiobVM I nl? I ilms CoNunittet<lb/>
I just got up there 1 enjoyed it so showlike The Tonight Show (with<lb/>
much, I did it again lay Leno that is) and Late Night<lb/>
$winson has performed at with David Lettcrman.<lb/>
(. OConutS comedy club in Honda, Asa student, Swinson is busy<lb/>
Impressions in New Bern, and at with classes and his job at Little<lb/>
the Attic. 1 le said he always gets Caesar's. But he hopes that one<lb/>
the "jitterbugs and butterflies" day, instead of working on papers<lb/>
before he goes on, but it getseasier and pizzas, he Tl be working on<lb/>
the more stage time he gets. punchlines.<lb/>
I le's not discouraged bv the<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 Fast 10th St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27S5S<lb/>
Telephone:<lb/>
(919)758-9976<lb/>
hecklers and the occasional for-<lb/>
gotten joke because he said the<lb/>
laughter makes up for it. "If you<lb/>
can make one person laugh, you've<lb/>
done your job. If sou makeevery-<lb/>
one laugh it's the ultimate high<lb/>
Swinson said performing<lb/>
comedy is a great way to meet<lb/>
pe? pie "Theycomeuptoyouafter<lb/>
the show and sav 'good job' or<lb/>
 mi sui ked' or whatever Swen-<lb/>
: is an outgoing guy who likes<lb/>
try oul new material on unsus-<lb/>
? ting bystanders in the bank line<lb/>
. In re er.<lb/>
Swinson is inspired bv lav<lb/>
ioand Robin Williams,but says<lb/>
tries to develop his own style.<lb/>
does impressions of Ronald<lb/>
? igan (Well. .), Howard Cosell,<lb/>
i Bear, and Robin Leach.<lb/>
I le hopes to work as a come-<lb/>
?? In the future and said he<lb/>
uld love to have his own talk<lb/>
Formal<lb/>
EXPERIENCE LEADERSHIP.<lb/>
GROWTH. INVOLVEMENT.<lb/>
Be a part of the Student Union<lb/>
positions available<lb/>
? Coffeehouse Committee Chairperson<lb/>
? Minority Arts Committee Chairperson<lb/>
? Student Dnion Committee Members<lb/>
If you think xou'tc interested, we'd like to tcilk to<lb/>
you. Call us at 757-4715 or stop by 236<lb/>
Mendenhall for more information. Last day to apply<lb/>
for Chairperson is Fri, Feb. 9, 1990<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
The anti-rop!3 for<lb/>
the weekOf 12990<lb/>
1. Milli Vanilli8. Cher<lb/>
2. Tiffany9. Debbie Gibson<lb/>
3. Warrant10. The Boys<lb/>
4. Tesla11. New Kids on the<lb/>
5. Babyface12. Bon Jovi<lb/>
6. Poison13. Chunky A<lb/>
7. Bonham<lb/>
?Compiledby able? WZMB disc jockeys<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
two to three working days) that<lb/>
the student needs the tuxedo for<lb/>
Also, thebusiness'slocation is very<lb/>
convenient for the student who<lb/>
lacks a ca r or other means of trans-<lb/>
portation.<lb/>
Open from noon to 6 p.m.<lb/>
Mondays through Fridays and<lb/>
from noon to 7 p.m. on Saturdays,<lb/>
I'm versi t v Forma 1 Wea r is an easy,<lb/>
convenient, and inexpensive way<lb/>
to either buy or rent a tuxedo.<lb/>
For more information con-<lb/>
cerning tuxedos for formals,<lb/>
weddings, or proms, call Univer-<lb/>
sity Formal Wear at 830-9409.<lb/>
Applications are now<lb/>
being accepted for<lb/>
satire and<lb/>
entertainment writers.<lb/>
Apply in the<lb/>
publications building.<lb/>
Preview '90<lb/>
Summer Student Leadership<lb/>
Opportunity Available<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
ORIENTATION STAFF<lb/>
Pick Up Application Packet<lb/>
209 Whichard<lb/>
Deadline: Feb. 21, 1990 ? 12:00pm<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0014"/><lb/>
12 The East Carolinian, February 1,1990<lb/>
High school students<lb/>
protest plastic foam<lb/>
THOMASVILLE,N.C(AP)<lb/>
Some rhomasville I hgh students<lb/>
are protesting eating habits al the<lb/>
school's cafeteria but they .ire not<lb/>
questioning the food. ust the<lb/>
containers in which it is served.<lb/>
About 25 students, most of<lb/>
them members of a new environ-<lb/>
mental dub (.ailed the Student<lb/>
Fnvironment.il A tionl eague,are<lb/>
protesting the use of plastic foam<lb/>
trays at the cafeteria, which thev<lb/>
s.iv is unecological<lb/>
lo register their discontent,<lb/>
the students stand quietly in the<lb/>
serving line, armed only with<lb/>
plastic trays and plates and non-<lb/>
disposal utensils<lb/>
ITus is ,i peaceful protest to<lb/>
let people know where we stand<lb/>
said club president Brian Styers.<lb/>
"We're eoine to Jo this every<lb/>
bags or bringing their own plates<lb/>
to take through the serving line,<lb/>
Mrs. Stump said<lb/>
Assistant Principal lames<lb/>
Carmichael watched the protest<lb/>
and said students were handling<lb/>
themselves in "an appropriate<lb/>
manner<lb/>
"They're not disrupting any-<lb/>
thing or keeping people from eat-<lb/>
ing he said. "And 1 think they're<lb/>
still managing to let people known<lb/>
how they feel about the situation<lb/>
Plastic loam products are not<lb/>
biodegradable and the products<lb/>
contain chlorofJuorocarbons that<lb/>
deteriorate the ozone layer and<lb/>
may poison the human body, the<lb/>
students said.<lb/>
In the overall environmental<lb/>
picture, (plastic) foam tras may<lb/>
be a small part. Styers said. "But<lb/>
Members of Omega Psi Phi support the community by cleaning up<lb/>
Filth Street (Photo by Kristine Schachinger?ECU Photo Lai<lb/>
Radio<lb/>
TrTTOrrirTTTrinrg tz-srrs-frrvrrrrrrrvrrrrrrrrrr<lb/>
?<lb/>
Wv ANitWv<lb/>
Continued from page li)<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
? Our one year anniversary is here to thank you and<lb/>
tor your patronage we offer you these specials:<lb/>
t J HI Y ONEGET ONE FREE : . i3<lb/>
 CHICKEN DINNER J All ApjHt 1CTS Z<lb/>
? Does not include bevcra ratuity. II I V )r  i I'for I"<lb/>
' ndui Inrcsu ng only. ' M ? l,LL tUC I?<lb/>
5 ' 9:00pm j<lb/>
expires: 2 1-90 ! <lb/>
IJ.Is<lb/>
Wednesday, and hopefully, more it's a starting place, and it's some<lb/>
people will join ns week to week thing we as students can do<lb/>
Several classmates stopped by "H" students said they will<lb/>
club secretary Valerie Whitlock's continue protesting the use ol the<lb/>
table out of curiousity and found ,ravs even though Bonnie Bar-<lb/>
themselves invited to reduce waste nett,foodservicedirector,andDan<lb/>
and fight environmental pollution. Cockman, school principal, said<lb/>
People are noticing said alternatives are too expensive,<lb/>
sophomore shley Finch lub members said the) were<lb/>
News ol the demonstration encouraged by the interest of their<lb/>
circulated b word of mouth, and classmates and that the hope to<lb/>
many students ratine, from the<lb/>
cafeteria's plastu foam ti a) s<lb/>
Wednesday ml thev would have<lb/>
participated in the protesl it they<lb/>
had known about it.<lb/>
I he administration didn't<lb/>
want us putting y posters or<lb/>
ad ertising (the demonstration)<lb/>
said English teacher and club<lb/>
adviserPhyllisStump. "But 1 think<lb/>
people are catching on<lb/>
Some teachers also are bring-<lb/>
ing their lun hes to school inpaper<lb/>
influence the habits ol the entire<lb/>
student bodv. But, the students<lb/>
acknowledge, they v ill have a v av<lb/>
to go in making preservation and<lb/>
i vation second nature in<lb/>
their ow n h es.<lb/>
I didn t bring any silver-<lb/>
ware sophomore Will Wcldon<lb/>
admitted with a sheepish grin. I<lb/>
guess I'll iust have u use pl,isti<lb/>
and take it home, u ash it and sue<lb/>
it<lb/>
terand im Edwards, includes such<lb/>
personalities as Hubert Hubert<lb/>
and the Rev. Swindell I . Daily<lb/>
They will discuss current events.<lb/>
both local and abroad and vili<lb/>
take calls to let listeners talk about<lb/>
things that interest them. I he<lb/>
waking crew has been n the air<lb/>
before at another station in the<lb/>
same market area. Kitter said.<lb/>
1 hestation'sgeneral managei<lb/>
is i toward Wilcox,and his da ugh<lb/>
ter, 1 eigh Wilcox, is a student at<lb/>
ECU. Also, Inn Edwards, the n<lb/>
host and producer ol the waking<lb/>
i ri vs was a PI at I i I s mvn<lb/>
WZMBin IQ85.<lb/>
rhe DJsfor WVVi an<lb/>
I. ? , I) a.m Case<lb/>
Rilter and hm i d ?? ards,<lb/>
10.00 a.m. to m "? l p m<lb/>
Michael Brady,<lb/>
to 7:110 p.m <lb/>
; loo er.<lb/>
7 1X1 to midnight Kellev<lb/>
Batchelor, and<lb/>
midnight to 6 I" I a m . (.wen<lb/>
I hi mas<lb/>
1 er mere information about<lb/>
wavy 99, WVV , call the request<lb/>
line at 1 R(M1 26 1318 or in w<lb/>
Bern, 633<lb/>
:<lb/>
li<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
?<lb/>
CJ'<lb/>
ucs - Sat 11 -<lb/>
Sun 11 10<lb/>
103 E. Greenville BKd<lb/>
$55 347?<lb/>
5jljULflJLDJLaaJL!Lfl .JLOJULQJLOJUULaJUULflJLBJL<lb/>
Read The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
' Show Pianino PrJ<lb/>
w<lb/>
Shows Starting F<lb/>
ir ol the Koses K I<lb/>
k<lb/>
 ii<lb/>
s ii S<lb/>
Stella i I'd 13)<lb/>
Sal M Ml'<lb/>
T Born on the 4ih oi JuT (R ii<lb/>
S ii Mil ?<lb/>
? Suceanm 3 3Z?SL<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now accepting<lb/>
applications for dark room technition.<lb/>
Applications can he obtained in the publications building<lb/>
Steel Magnolias (PG I<lb/>
Sol Sui h  I<lb/>
I )ri. m Miss Iaisj i I't<lb/>
Si<lb/>
It Wl falkinu l'<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
? PnkHmtf<lb/>
L<lb/>
Famil) Business tR<lb/>
Week lays 7:00 &amp; ? CM)<lb/>
Sun: - I 0 <lb/>
FRISCO<lb/>
e? 11 i<lb/>
J<lb/>
Upcoming February Entertainment<lb/>
Thurs. Feb 1<lb/>
I lomebov Madhouse<lb/>
Fri. Fcb 2<lb/>
Mind Over Matter<lb/>
Hours ot Uper;tlinn<lb/>
Mi n 1 1 am 8 pm<lb/>
lues 1 lam !ai<lb/>
Wed I 1 am 1 am<lb/>
Ihurs 11 am " :<lb/>
In 1 1 am ? 1<lb/>
Sal 1 2 noon - 1 ai<lb/>
? II Band Nil<lb/>
eiose at 1 am<lb/>
Sat. F'ch 3<lb/>
Funkenstein<lb/>
513 Cotanche St.<lb/>
 a ross from I<lb/>
I a h I ties. &amp; Wed. Might<lb/>
(pen Mie Niti(<lb/>
in up<lb/>
starts at 3pm<lb/>
758-0080<lb/>
Frosty Morn<lb/>
Bacon<lb/>
12 oz pkg<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Whole Rib Eyes<lb/>
lb $2.99<lb/>
990<lb/>
Deli<lb/>
Roast Beef<lb/>
lb $4.49<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
White<lb/>
Grapefruit<lb/>
3 for $1.09<lb/>
Big Top<lb/>
Franks<lb/>
12 oz. pkg.<lb/>
89C<lb/>
Store Hours:<lb/>
Open Sunday 1 pm - 6 pm<lb/>
Monday - Saturday 8 am - 8 pm<lb/>
Quality Rights Reserved<lb/>
Corner of Third &amp; Jarvis<lb/>
Price Effective:<lb/>
Wednesday. January 24<lb/>
through Saturday February 3. 1990<lb/>
Campbell's<lb/>
Chicken Noodle Soup<lb/>
10 oz can<lb/>
390<lb/>
Fab Detergent<lb/>
Family Size -<lb/>
9lbs 3ozs<lb/>
$2.50 Off Label<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
Kraft Deluxe<lb/>
Macaroni &amp; Cheese<lb/>
Dinners<lb/>
14 oz box<lb/>
$1.39<lb/>
Nature's Choice<lb/>
Apple Juice<lb/>
12 gallon jug<lb/>
990<lb/>
Bud &amp; Bud Light<lb/>
Suitcase Size<lb/>
24-12 oz cans<lb/>
$10.99<lb/>
Our Family<lb/>
Homogenized Milk<lb/>
Gallon Plastic Jug<lb/>
$2.49<lb/>
Coca - Cola Products<lb/>
2 liter bottle<lb/>
990<lb/>
limit 4<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0015"/><lb/>
I he IV.nl k<lb/>
inn<lb/>
SRftS!<lb/>
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By Robinson Rich's Nuthouse<lb/>
rw rana Poueea, t<lb/>
By Rich<lb/>
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?  ? A VtMt iptATv itw xrr- WAJOA. ? MV wTff urfAS WftfctrcD<lb/>
? : IT'S nor )<lb/>
"I ' .<lb/>
ojK<lb/>
11?<lb/>
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Hex, he Won ler Pig<lb/>
B Mason<lb/>
? ? t<lb/>
? ? - i- ?<lb/>
1 E U ? <lb/>
11 1 HI FIVt i WCH b<lb/>
ii<lb/>
, K I<lb/>
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Adventures t k .<lb/>
com 'o<lb/>
 kemple<lb/>
' r.<lb/>
? V<lb/>
C.ambda Gambda 11<lb/>
liv Ell<lb/>
Whiskers 'n'li<lb/>
l. lohn Shull<lb/>
j:tocT?P. juntas t was<lb/>
ptsmjpi mwaf?imwsu?im i?<lb/>
Oa ?  5f: Ljftir ' WHAT'S UPjSt-Rl<lb/>
rr jis'SA.R.t'We-Mrf" ? Hot pucv aft. , . .<lb/>
A4EJJT&amp;A7<lb/>
 &amp;. INSTKuCTi w<lb/>
a<lb/>
AqE-NT 69<lb/>
CIRi<lb/>
S . ccS :u lrm: ?<lb/>
Bv liul<lb/>
, K0mi ' AMTMCXCrtOtAAh<lb/>
GMMttHAT!<lb/>
fgeepoM ?<lb/>
v<lb/>
S<lb/>
ri<lb/>
By Mvicho Frijtlo-<lb/>
20 ALL-NEW<lb/>
HAUNTING LY<lb/>
BEAUTITUL<lb/>
RECORDINGS<lb/>
SUC H AS<lb/>
BEETHOVEN<lb/>
AMAZING GRACE<lb/>
Solitude<lb/>
olujife. fthopin<lb/>
BiRcLsof Winter<lb/>
Jhc Beans<lb/>
Jchaikoii?ki's<lb/>
Overt art' T81Z<lb/>
AND H?S GUT-VRENCHING<lb/>
(jXheme from 2001 )<lb/>
NO I AMIUMU t IN S low <lb/>
Aa iwitAay? Ors<lb/>
TO<lb/>
ORDER CALL<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0016"/><lb/>
Sftc ?afit Carolinian<lb/>
Page 14<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
February 1,1990<lb/>
"3S<lb/>
vyT4<lb/>
IIRiSU<lb/>
?Mi:A J )<lb/>
f a<lb/>
j<lb/>
Lose closes in<lb/>
on ECU records<lb/>
mm ? ess. I le laj i I<lb/>
By 1 isa Spiridopoulos<lb/>
Sufi Wrilei rianc Valli 1 <lb/>
The 1990 men stennis le<lb/>
Head coach Or Bill <lb/>
im serve up a new season this weekend as they travel to Durham to play Duke and Campbell on Saturday afternoon<lb/>
and the netters hope to avenge losses from both teams from last year (Photo courtesy of Sports Information)<lb/>
lor the past 13; - - in amptill i i nns ivai i<lb/>
ball has been an important part of ofthi eycai<lb/>
Reed I osc's life i . layed Vtvl iward In t<lb/>
basketball for 1 past<lb/>
lour eai s, and gearing i ? ? ? ' ?<lb/>
toward the end of hi ? last season can i i<lb/>
in a l'u i mi<lb/>
I hr ? I<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
I 5hoice and ??? ? i first I<lb/>
ior loads tin ? with Mid Penn Conl<lb/>
1 I I points per gam I cui ? '? i two tn<lb/>
the All Di<lb/>
. ' n the M<lb/>
i<lb/>
n ntl Shi ots ?<lb/>
free thr w I<lb/>
"It's li ird I<lb/>
time I ose said ou ha<lb/>
i<lb/>
sa rifice a lot t ' ath I I know il<lb/>
Pirate netters look to capture CAA crown<lb/>
i<lb/>
B) I lun oo Inn<lb/>
stall ni. i<lb/>
Pr Bill Mi<lb/>
theECLi men stem<lb/>
his second<lb/>
Pirates lookii g to bi<lb/>
gram and capture tr I<lb/>
Athletic Vssocial<lb/>
Moore has five pkn . n<lb/>
ing from last season sti 1(1 squad,<lb/>
aswell asfivenewcon<lb/>
lohn Hudson, Vndre Moreau<lb/>
te.im captain Ion M 1 amb, Mark<lb/>
Vecchiolla MarkDn ns mdtrans-<lb/>
ter uan V,an<lb/>
team with leadership and expei<lb/>
ence w Nile freshmen<lb/>
rows Samir founsi r,A Wade<lb/>
Uiles sh? ujd add depth<lb/>
We expect to build, i<lb/>
amoi so that wc i an<lb/>
work toward Mel amb<lb/>
said nd that is to w in the con-<lb/>
ference '?' lefinil lieve that<lb/>
we c an v. ' it till are tar<lb/>
l it.<lb/>
With non-conference teams<lb/>
 Mar) land North Carolina,<lb/>
rth Caiolina State and the<lb/>
1. of Pennsylvania Inch<lb/>
matt h season, the<lb/>
? tes ultimate coal w ill be to<lb/>
thi Colonial Athletic<lb/>
Association championship In<lb/>
. March, the team plans to<lb/>
travel to Floiida to p!a tree<lb/>
conference this year he contin<lb/>
ued. "Because most of our matches<lb/>
w ill be decided in doubles pla<lb/>
Alvarez, one ol the newest<lb/>
additions k the team is an All-<lb/>
American transfer from North<lb/>
? cnville junior t. bllege Na<lb/>
tional junior College i hampion-<lb/>
ships in 1987 and 1988<lb/>
Moore said. "It's going to be a<lb/>
dogfight between us. William &amp;<lb/>
Mary, Richmond and lames<lb/>
Madison (last years champs I e<lb/>
expect to have a better season than<lb/>
last year ifwecanstavhealttn<lb/>
lete, but it s en reward<lb/>
The reward I<lb/>
innuin a - in rentl)<lb/>
fourtl .<lb/>
194 ind<lb/>
a ss i s t s I<lb/>
"I trj tobeu<lb/>
bal he said<lb/>
Irvine I<lb/>
ion 1 bask<lb/>
at:<lb/>
mat h? s over a 1 da span.<lb/>
We did our schedule on<lb/>
purpose Mooresaid "Weliketo<lb/>
pla the competition butplaying<lb/>
? i i these big si hools means<lb/>
we II have to travel to them<lb/>
We definitelj hae a diffi-<lb/>
cult sv bedule this year, especiall)<lb/>
with the kng a was games, said<lb/>
s But we're all in this to<lb/>
gether,and we all have a common<lb/>
e,oal. and that is to win theconfer-<lb/>
ence<lb/>
i hir doubles 'teams) are a<lb/>
? - ; ke tor us winning the<lb/>
Moore has his team training<lb/>
lor two to three hours a day, five<lb/>
times during the week. During<lb/>
Alvarez played tennis in his the weekends, the players prac-<lb/>
home countr) ol the Dominican<lb/>
Republic, and was a membei on<lb/>
the Davis Cup team lie also<lb/>
played in the Pan American games<lb/>
and captured a bronze medal in<lb/>
the Central American games<lb/>
1 really behove that we have<lb/>
a good team this year Alvarez<lb/>
said We're working real hard on<lb/>
tice for a couple ol hours and fol<lb/>
low a mental training session on<lb/>
Sunday nights<lb/>
"This is the best team that 1<lb/>
have ever coached Moore said.<lb/>
"Roth attitude-wise and playing-<lb/>
wise<lb/>
The team will kit k ? t Atom<lb/>
our doubles right now and u it seasonFeb.3withapairofmatches<lb/>
comes through, then I think we against Puke and Campbell in<lb/>
ha ea great chanceat winning the Durham, N.C 1 he Pirate netters<lb/>
conference. lost to the Blue Devils 0 61astyear<lb/>
We realh like our chances in Durham, and fell to the Camels<lb/>
on winning the conference 4-5 at home.<lb/>
inc.<lb/>
m t an<lb/>
onl) : ?<lb/>
I'd ward- :<lb/>
Hecana<lb/>
plateau this year<lb/>
u71 y,<lb/>
4.9 poi . . ?<lb/>
n irk<lb/>
In .<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I I<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I .<lb/>
what 1  hat <lb/>
. .<lb/>
b? i i<lb/>
lh<lb/>
Fans question late coverage of ACC games<lb/>
PI Rl IAM, N.<lb/>
lanti C oast v rmf -<lb/>
coaches and ?<lb/>
late with mam k ague gam s and<lb/>
tew of them like it But adminis-<lb/>
trators sa it's often ne essarv<lb/>
1 don't know an) l d) who<lb/>
particular!) likes9o'clockgames<lb/>
said John Swof ford, 1 N i hath<lb/>
leticdircctor But in order to have<lb/>
the kind ol conference television<lb/>
package tl at we have, in terms o(<lb/>
the number of I uposures as ui <lb/>
as the lucrative contra ts, some ol<lb/>
it becomes nc cssary<lb/>
Television arid the money it<lb/>
producesforathleti( d? partments<lb/>
are the mam motivation I i<lb/>
late-starting games<lb/>
1 don't think an) coach has<lb/>
expressed a strong :oi lir fa i ra<lb/>
hlv for9o'clock starts, irgi<lb/>
Terry I lolland said 1 think w e've<lb/>
all sort of lived w ith it<lb/>
Duke leads the league with<lb/>
seven p.m. starts including<lb/>
?. ith( lemson.<lb/>
Clcmson North Carolina and<lb/>
an lina State ha e five<lb/>
?? Mar) land lour (. ieor<lb/>
gia lech, irginia and Wake 1 or-<lb/>
cst throe.<lb/>
? ames scheduled tor 9 p.m.<lb/>
. I) begin botw eon VM0 and<lb/>
9:13 because ol introductions and<lb/>
television pre game analysis. A<lb/>
close game with a lot of fouling<lb/>
and the obligator) IV timeouts<lb/>
can stretch the came until nearly<lb/>
11:30 p.m. Players and coaches<lb/>
condtk t post game interviewsand<lb/>
take their showers and they're<lb/>
usual!) not leaving the arena be-<lb/>
fore midnight<lb/>
1 he real burden is for the road<lb/>
team, which must either spend<lb/>
the night and miss those classes<lb/>
the next morning or travel until<lb/>
the wee hours and catch what can't<lb/>
be miu h more than a nap at best.<lb/>
"The problem on the road is<lb/>
one of fatigue and the team cet-<lb/>
ting back in time to gel to class<lb/>
Swofford told the Durham VI rn<lb/>
in$H ?? : n some instances, vou<lb/>
can t c,ot commerical flights out<lb/>
after a game and that leaves you<lb/>
needing to charter back in order<lb/>
tor the players to be back in time<lb/>
for class the next morning<lb/>
Not everyone dislikes the late<lb/>
starts<lb/>
1 wouldn't be in favor ot<lb/>
doing away with them Pukes<lb/>
Mike Krzvzewski said. We<lb/>
shouldn't look at this as two ex-<lb/>
tremes. In other words: i s all<lb/>
bad. or we're all good.<lb/>
"We get a lot out of being on<lb/>
TV. rhe kids do, too. It san educa-<lb/>
tional experience. It a kid was in<lb/>
drama, and they had a chance to<lb/>
have their play put on 9 o'clock on<lb/>
ESPN nationally, they would<lb/>
make adjustments. ou )ust can't<lb/>
go overboard there. In other<lb/>
words, have a balance and keep<lb/>
things in perspective<lb/>
Krzyzewski and Maryland<lb/>
coach Gary Williams both said it s<lb/>
not so much the 9 p m. start but<lb/>
the next game that counts.<lb/>
"I think it vou plav late on<lb/>
fhursday, vou should give that<lb/>
team an opportunity to plav ou a<lb/>
Sunday instead ot a Saturday, or<lb/>
least a Saturday night<lb/>
Krzyzewski said.<lb/>
 illianis said: I'd just like to<lb/>
six1 somehow if it can be worked<lb/>
out in the scheduling. We played<lb/>
our first game against Wake I or-<lb/>
est in the conference at g o'clock<lb/>
on Thursdav night. And then we<lb/>
had to go plav at Clemson in the<lb/>
afternoon that Saturday. So we<lb/>
had to travel all day on Friday.<lb/>
"It was realty difficult to get<lb/>
there. I'd just like to see both teams<lb/>
from that t p.m.) game be able to<lb/>
plav their next game at home, not<lb/>
have to travel. ITiere are some<lb/>
things vou can do to balance that<lb/>
See Time, page 16<lb/>
Senior guard forward Reed Lose s piay has taken him toward the top ol<lb/>
the Pirate record books He needs only 29 more points to reach the<lb/>
1000-pomt plateau Photo by J.D. Whitmire ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Teams finish strong in 3-on-3<lb/>
intramural action at Furman<lb/>
Splash!<lb/>
The ECU swimming and diving teams finished the regular season with a pair of wins over the Duke Blue<lb/>
Devils Jan 20 Head coach Rick Kobe now has to prepare his squads for the CAA Championships that are<lb/>
c;rhPrtiiiftdtorFeb 8-10 in Wilmington (Photo by Garrelt Kilhan<lb/>
ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
By Jeannette Roth<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
Two squads from the fall 1US<lb/>
3-on-3 basketball season repre-<lb/>
sented ECU in regional play Su-<lb/>
per Bowl weekend at Furman<lb/>
College. The Fellows, last year's<lb/>
Sehick Super I loops 3-on-3 cham-<lb/>
pions, tried for a second straight<lb/>
title but fell short of South Caro-<lb/>
lina State. Steven Maxwell, Rich-<lb/>
ard Clark, RonWilson and Nick<lb/>
laekson made the trip to Furman<lb/>
defeating Appalachian State,<lb/>
Lenoir-Rhvne, Campbell, Francis<lb/>
Marion and Lander (S.C.) before<lb/>
falling in the quarterfinals of the<lb/>
single elimination tournament.<lb/>
Wilson dominated play for<lb/>
The Fellows until he went up<lb/>
against the powers of South Caro-<lb/>
lina Mate. 1 he Fellows came up<lb/>
short 37-33. South Carolina State<lb/>
advanced to the final game a :amst<lb/>
Winthrop c ollege, which will be<lb/>
played during the halftimc ol the<lb/>
Charlotte Hornel Phoenix Suns<lb/>
game March 29<lb/>
Inwomenspla) v.1 Preroga<lb/>
five, the ladies second place fin-<lb/>
isher of tall 1989 3 on-3 play, en-<lb/>
joyed a successful weekend b)<lb/>
defeating South C arohna-<lb/>
Sumpter, Lenoir Rhyne, and<lb/>
Coastalarolina Community<lb/>
College before bowing to the same<lb/>
foe who betclled the men S team -<lb/>
South Carolina Mate.<lb/>
(. Hir Prerogative, led byhris<lb/>
Waters. Bet ky lanning, Kim Floyd<lb/>
and Valerie Roberts advanced to<lb/>
the quarterfinal round before<lb/>
being defeated. Floyd led Our<lb/>
Prerogativeplaj withgutsy point<lb/>
guard performances, pure outside<lb/>
ting and unselfish assists<lb/>
South Carolina State women ad-<lb/>
vance to the final contest against<lb/>
t iuilford College during halftime<lb/>
of the Hornets game.<lb/>
Hay wood Dillahunt repre-<lb/>
sented K U during the Sehick<lb/>
Super Hoops tournament as a<lb/>
tournament official Dillahunt<lb/>
officiated 10 contests during the<lb/>
weekend having been selected on<lb/>
his strong performance during<lb/>
E I intramural 3on-3 basketball<lb/>
play. Fur nun ga e so oral schools<lb/>
the opportunity to send qualified<lb/>
officials to the tournament<lb/>
Dillahunt was asked to offici-<lb/>
ate perhaps the most competitive<lb/>
contest of the weekend bv calling<lb/>
See IRS, page 16<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0017"/><lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Officials decline to name offender<lb/>
l athlete tested positive tor drugs at the Commonwealth<lb/>
Auckland. New Zealand, officials said Tuesday Thev de-<lb/>
?ts the athlete, but took awav a gold medal won bv weight<lb/>
taplin ol Wales and two silvers and a bronze from litter<lb/>
lur Paul o( India tor failing drug tests.<lb/>
Pro Bowl will miss Montana, Elway<lb/>
ro Bow I won't be a rematch of Super Bowl quarterbacks<lb/>
ohn Elway as both players withdrew from Hawaii's<lb/>
t injuries. Montana, the Super Bowl MVP, will be<lb/>
ington s Mark Kvpien. L'lway's replacement has not<lb/>
lv i v as to replace Cincinnati's Boomer Esiason, who<lb/>
Sears's Anderson declares free agency<lb/>
I us s Neat Anderson says he will become a tree<lb/>
vhen he becomes eligible. Anderson, who is the<lb/>
hei for the past three seasons, is currently involved<lb/>
- tvith team officials.<lb/>
VVakiihuri wins Games' Marathon<lb/>
glasWakiihuri pulled away in the final 1,(MX) meters to<lb/>
nwealth Games' Marathon Monday. VVakiihuri, the<lb/>
nand 188 Olympic silver medalist finished in two<lb/>
seconds. Australia's Steve Moneghetti finished in<lb/>
r?g the tape seven seconds later.<lb/>
mil holds Grand Slam race margin<lb/>
ton .it the Australian Open Sunday gave him 600<lb/>
nts race in the $6 million Grand Slam Cup. The<lb/>
nine the world's In top male tennis players based<lb/>
naments 1 he 16 will meet in December in West<lb/>
? ill take home S2 million, with the runnerup<lb/>
tzona lawmakers want Grand Prix<lb/>
rsare tr ing to amend a law that prevents the use<lb/>
: tain tunes ot the year to make sure the Iceberg<lb/>
downtown Phoenix takes off March 1. The bill<lb/>
to allow Formula One-type fuels in the city's<lb/>
Mil is in the books because oi pollution tears.<lb/>
official holds team's application<lb/>
rcuit may be minus the McLaren- londa team this<lb/>
mments from Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna, said<lb/>
: resident of the International Auto Sports Federa-<lb/>
n was held up because Senna, who won the<lb/>
irged that last year's championship was<lb/>
ch.<lb/>
? ranee's Alain Prost.<lb/>
nitu tan wins downhill race in France<lb/>
it I loeflehner won his second World Cup downhill<lb/>
d i s Monday at Val d'Isere, France. Switzerland's<lb/>
the surprise winner of the super-giant slalom, win-<lb/>
Iup title. Locher is making a comeback alter a<lb/>
ident last summer.<lb/>
idock challenges Dokes for title<lb/>
 weight boxing champion Michael Dokes will<lb/>
izi r Ruddock Apnl 4 at Madison Square Garden in<lb/>
- s WBA Intercontinental title. Mike Weaver and<lb/>
? Smith, two former heavyweight champions, will<lb/>
Bowl II generated publicity<lb/>
officials said thev deliberately ended their Bud<lb/>
 :h a w inning" plav that would have been illegal<lb/>
.vaspart of a mass marketing plan to generate free<lb/>
aIikIi thev s.iv worked. The plav generated TV<lb/>
tgame press reports.<lb/>
I i<lb/>
al Olympics moves out of U.S.<lb/>
me in its 22-year history, the United States will not<lb/>
V inter Special Olympics,officials said. Instead,<lb/>
be<lb/>
u<lb/>
hosted bv the cities of Schladming and<lb/>
uestions arise on player's road bills<lb/>
in i hools responsible for seeing that bills of student<lb/>
niversity of Nevada-Las Vegas officials will ask the<lb/>
ficials want the NCAA to clarify the rule. Nine<lb/>
asketball players have been suspended for one<lb/>
pay incidental charges at hotels where the team<lb/>
n the road last season.<lb/>
iT; '?? ISA ' 'i'M Apple Gothic idbruMfisR NtfvoHi<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
Racquetball: court position<lb/>
adjustment<lb/>
I mov "c; cioser to<lb/>
?? tve puts<lb/>
? rthe<lb/>
0) left Hand or ngh<lb/>
' hand serve from<lb/>
the center court;<lb/>
M ?? towards<lb/>
itl ot the ba<lb/>
? ,dewai<lb/>
A&amp;T, Central continue<lb/>
rivalry despite fight<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C AP)<lb/>
North( arolinaC entraland North<lb/>
Carolina A&amp;T have come a long<lb/>
way in athletics and they'll lit-<lb/>
erally go a little farther from now<lb/>
on to preserve their rivalry.<lb/>
Stung by a basketball game<lb/>
turned free-for-all that involved<lb/>
players, tans and even members<lb/>
ot the pep band, officials ot the<lb/>
two predominantly Mack schools<lb/>
decided that rather than end their<lb/>
tootball and basketball competi<lb/>
tion, they would instead change<lb/>
the arenas. Instead ot playing on<lb/>
the respective campuses, neutral<lb/>
courts and fields in their areas<lb/>
would be used.<lb/>
"You can't denigrate or elimi<lb/>
nate that which is good .is it per-<lb/>
tains to the education of our stu<lb/>
dents. We are absolutely deter-<lb/>
mined to assure the fact that this<lb/>
single incident does not accom-<lb/>
plish that end North Carolina<lb/>
A&amp; I chancellor I'd ward Fort said.<lb/>
Under terms of a joint agree-<lb/>
ment announced during a news<lb/>
conferenceon Tuesday, the Sept. 1<lb/>
season-opening football game<lb/>
between the schools will be played<lb/>
at a larger stadium. The game,<lb/>
scheduled for N.C. Central's<lb/>
11,500-seat O'Kellv Stadium,<lb/>
could be played in stadiums rang-<lb/>
ing from a 33,000-seat facility at<lb/>
Duke to 55,000 at North Carolina.<lb/>
Aggie Stadium, where North<lb/>
Carolina A&amp;T plays its home foot-<lb/>
ball games, seats 17,000. Thegame<lb/>
scheduled there could be moved<lb/>
to nearby Wake Forest and C ?roves<lb/>
?stadium, which seats )l,000.Offi<lb/>
cials said they expected to move<lb/>
the games to mutually approved<lb/>
locations so long as travel can be<lb/>
kept ti ,i minimum.<lb/>
We think that be auseol the<lb/>
longstanding rivalry and the ex<lb/>
traordinary interest in these tw<lb/>
teams  we II have lo go to the<lb/>
expertise and advise of cur ath<lb/>
leticdirec tors of v hat sites ue II<lb/>
go with 1 ort said.<lb/>
North Carolina AA I is the<lb/>
home team tor the next basketball<lb/>
game, since the game whu h was<lb/>
suspended because ol the fight<lb/>
was declared a no-contest. That<lb/>
game, and all future basketball<lb/>
games between the schools, will<lb/>
bo played at a neutral location.<lb/>
Neither school has a large<lb/>
basketball arena, and officials<lb/>
speculate that there ma have been<lb/>
See Rival, page 16<lb/>
Fosdick's<lb/>
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Crab Leg &amp; Shrimp<lb/>
with 2 cups of chowder<lb/>
j 2 Small Platters<lb/>
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I 2 Regular Platters $15.95<lb/>
I Special Good Monday thru Thursday H ??<lb/>
 i  i<lb/>
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Dine in ()nlv<lb/>
Expires Feb. 15, WO ?<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
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2903 S. Evans St.<lb/>
Call 756-2011<lb/>
OPEN for LUNCH<lb/>
Sun-Fri at 11:00<lb/>
 INSTANT REPLAY<lb/>
ONE HOUR PHOTOS AND PORTRAITS<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
(next to Annabelle's)<lb/>
355-5050<lb/>
Your pictures get the right<lb/>
touch. Right here. Right away.<lb/>
Don't take chances: brine your film to us for bright<lb/>
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J 2nd Set Of Prints<lb/>
I At time of processing I<lb/>
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ne free reprint wkh I u,lh ru,llu,f  ? I<lb/>
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nlargcntenl up t 11 x ! i<lb/>
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PORTRAIT<lb/>
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Valentine's Special<lb/>
$29.95<lb/>
(Normally $50.70)<lb/>
 Prices include Sitting Fee<lb/>
2-SxlO's<lb/>
3 - 5x7's<lb/>
12 - wallets<lb/>
INSTANT REPLAY<lb/>
i li? I .ist Carolinian, February 1, 1990 15<lb/>
<lb/>
Cruise to<lb/>
Freeport-<lb/>
bdf"<lb/>
6 Niy,u<lb/>
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1-800-321-5911<lb/>
from<lb/>
'Depending on oreak dates and length of stay<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0018"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, February 1,1990 15<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
1 ? ??MWMV<lb/>
Officials decline to name offender<lb/>
.ii<lb/>
IIUX<lb/>
 third athlete tested positive for drugs at the Commonwealth<lb/>
nes in Auckland, New Zealand, officials said Tuesday. They de-<lb/>
ed to .dent. I v the a thlete, but took away a gold medal won by weight<lb/>
ifter Ricky I hapJin of Wales and two silvers and a bronze from lifter<lb/>
Subrata Kumar Paul of India for failing drug tests.<lb/>
Pro Bowl will miss Montana, Elway<lb/>
undavs Pro IV wl won't bea rematch of Super Bowl quarterbacks<lb/>
e Montana and lohn Elway as both players withdrew from Hawaii's<lb/>
because o( injuries, Montana, the Super Bowl MVP, will be<lb/>
iced b) Washington's Mark Rypicn. Elway's replacement has not<lb/>
i named Elway was to replace Cincinnati's Boomer Esiason, who<lb/>
 thdrev earlier.<lb/>
Bears's Anderson declares free agency<lb/>
1 hicago Bears's Neal Anderson says he will become a free<lb/>
"hursda) when he becomes eligible. Anderson, who is the<lb/>
s leading rusher for the past three seasons, is currently involved<lb/>
contract talks with team officials.<lb/>
Wakiihuri wins Games' Marathon<lb/>
ny.Vs Douglas Wakiihuri pulled away in the final 1,000 meters to<lb/>
the Commonwealth Games' Marathon Monday. Wakiihuri, the<lb/>
i hampion nd 1988 Olympic silver medalist finished in two<lb/>
1 minutes, 27 seconds. Australia'sSteve Moneghetti finished in<lb/>
lace reaching the tape seven seconds later.<lb/>
Lend holds Grand Slam race margin<lb/>
endl's victory at the Australian Open Sunday gave him 600<lb/>
- to lead the points race in the $6 million Grand Slam Cup. The<lb/>
??; 11 determine the world's 16 top male tennis players based<lb/>
ilam tournaments. The 16 will meet in December in West<lb/>
1 he mner will take home $2 million, with the runnerup<lb/>
million.<lb/>
Arizona lawmakers want Grand Prix<lb/>
gislators are trying to amend a law that prevents the use<lb/>
fuels at certain times of the year ? to make sure the Iceberg<lb/>
md Prix in downtown Phoenix takes off March 1. The bill<lb/>
id tin- law to allow Formula One-type fuels in the city's<lb/>
present bill is in the books because of pollution fears.<lb/>
IA SI official holds team's application<lb/>
?rand Pn circuit may be minus the McLaren-Honda team this<lb/>
? i use .? comments from Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna, said<lb/>
eBalestre, president of the International Auto Sports Federa-<lb/>
team's application was held up because Senna, who won the<lb/>
d i hampionship, charged that last year's championship was<lb/>
I to tav or France's Alain Prost.<lb/>
H1?-Vtwrtrian wins downhill race in France<lb/>
m ! ic-lmut Hoeflehner won his second World Cup downhill<lb/>
) in three days Monday at Val d'Isere, France. Switzerland's<lb/>
Lo? her was the surprise winner of the super-giant slalom, win-<lb/>
irst World Cup title. Locher is making a comeback after a<lb/>
motor vele accident last summer.<lb/>
Ruddock challenges Dokes for title<lb/>
orld heavyweight boxing champion Michael Dokes will<lb/>
hi Raor" Ruddock April 4 at Madison Square Garden in<lb/>
rk for Pokes' WBA Intercontinental title. Mike Weaver and<lb/>
n? rusher Smith, two former heavyweight champions, will<lb/>
under<lb/>
iercard.<lb/>
Bud Bowl II generated publicity<lb/>
I i user-Busch officials said they deliberately ended their Bud<lb/>
Super Howl with a "winning" play that would have been illegal<lb/>
i !u move was part of a mass marketing plan to generate free<lb/>
publicity, which they say worked. The play generated TV<lb/>
lysand postgame press reports.<lb/>
Special Olympics moves out of U.S.<lb/>
or the first time in its 22-vear history, the United States will not<lb/>
itth ti i national Winter Special Olympics, officials said. Instead,<lb/>
(lames will be co-hosted by the cities of Schiadming and<lb/>
ui ? ustria.<lb/>
Questions arise on player's road bills<lb/>
. mu h are schools responsible for seeing that bills of student<lb/>
are pnd University of Nevada-Las Vegas officials will ask the<lb/>
School officials tvant the NCAA to clarify the rule. Nine<lb/>
Las Vegas basketball players have been suspended for one<lb/>
? i failing to pav incidental charges at hotels where the team<lb/>
? a nik on the road last season.<lb/>
COpynb IW, USA TODAYApple Cotltp Inform Nttvork<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
A&amp;T, Central continue<lb/>
rivalry despite fight<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
North Carolina Central and North<lb/>
Carolina A&amp;T have come a long<lb/>
way in athletics ? and they'll lit-<lb/>
erally go a little farther from now<lb/>
on to preserve their rivalry.<lb/>
Stung by a basketball game<lb/>
turned free-for-all that involved<lb/>
players, fans and even members<lb/>
of the pep band, officials of the<lb/>
two predominantly black schools<lb/>
decided that rather than end their<lb/>
football and basketball competi-<lb/>
tion, they would instead change<lb/>
the arenas. Instead of playing on<lb/>
the respective campuses, neutral<lb/>
courts and fields in their areas<lb/>
would be used.<lb/>
"You can't denigrate or elimi-<lb/>
nate that which is good as it per-<lb/>
tains to the education of our stu-<lb/>
dents. We arc absolutely deter-<lb/>
mined to assure the fact that this<lb/>
single incident does not accom-<lb/>
plish that end North Carolina<lb/>
A&amp;Tchancellor Edward Fort said.<lb/>
Under terms of a joint agree-<lb/>
ment announced during a news<lb/>
conference on Tuesday, the Sept. 1<lb/>
season-opening football game<lb/>
between the schools will be played<lb/>
at a larger stadium. The game,<lb/>
scheduled for N.C. Central's<lb/>
11,500-scat O'Kelly Stadium,<lb/>
could be played in stadiums rang-<lb/>
ing from a 33,(X)0-seat facility at<lb/>
Duke to 55,000 at North Carolina.<lb/>
Aggie Stadium, where North<lb/>
Carolina A&amp;T plays its home foot-<lb/>
ball games, seats 17,000. The game<lb/>
scheduled there could be moved<lb/>
to nearby Wake Forest and Groves<lb/>
Stadium, which seats 31,000. Offi-<lb/>
cials said they expected to move<lb/>
the games to mutually approved<lb/>
locations so long as travel can be<lb/>
kept to a minimum.<lb/>
"We think that because of the<lb/>
longstanding rivalry and the ex-<lb/>
traordinary interest in these two<lb/>
teams  we'll have to go to the<lb/>
expertise and advise of our ath-<lb/>
leticdirectors of what sites we'll<lb/>
go with Fort said.<lb/>
North Carolina A&amp;T is the<lb/>
home team for the next basketball<lb/>
game, since the game which was<lb/>
suspended because of the fight<lb/>
was declared a no-contest. That<lb/>
game, and all future basketball<lb/>
games between the schools, will<lb/>
be played at a neutral location.<lb/>
Neither school has a large<lb/>
basketball arena, and officials<lb/>
specula te tha t there may ha ve been<lb/>
See Rival, page 16<lb/>
Racquetball: court position<lb/>
adjustment<lb/>
. N and moving closer<lb/>
? ? ,v,i aKer the serve puts<lb/>
ire r th? opponent<lb/>
? i ?? adt down the<lb/>
? ua can bo cut off<lb/>
I ? s a-der for the<lb/>
ei t to hit a ,<lb/>
cros?<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
j INSTANT REPLAY<lb/>
ONE HOUR PHOTOS AND PORTRAITS<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
(next to Annabelle's)<lb/>
355-5050<lb/>
Your pictures get the right<lb/>
touch. Right here. Right away.<lb/>
Don't take chances: bring your film to us for bright<lb/>
beautiful color prints, enlargements and reprints.<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
2nd Set Of Prints J Reprints<lb/>
I At lime of processing 1 one free reprint with<lb/>
I Limit 2 rolls j each two purchased<lb/>
One Coupon per visit ? One Coupon per visit<lb/>
expires: 2-7-90 I expires: 2-7-90<lb/>
r<lb/>
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Enlargements J<lb/>
 with purchase of any color <lb/>
Ienlargcmeni up to 1 l"x 14" a<lb/>
Receive 2nd Knlirgemeni FRKK I<lb/>
 limit 2 <lb/>
? expires: 2-7-90 ?<lb/>
PORTRAIT<lb/>
STUDIO<lb/>
VaCentine s Special<lb/>
$29.95<lb/>
(Normally $50.70)<lb/>
 Prices include Sitting Fee<lb/>
2-8xl0's<lb/>
3 - 5x7's<lb/>
12-wallets<lb/>
 INSTANT REPLAY<lb/>
Cruise to JJP<lb/>
Freepo-<lb/>
aSSSS- .<lb/>
rtaC m<lb/>
Fly to<lb/>
Nassau,<lb/>
m<lb/>
Call 1-800-622-4262<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
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DINNER<lb/>
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$5.95<lb/>
Served Sunday thru<lb/>
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tkc taste of old ffiiSd??<lb/>
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Z DON'T MANT<lb/>
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SOUTH PADRE ISLAND<lb/>
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MUSTANG ISLAND<lb/>
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CALL TOLL FREE TODAY<lb/>
1-800-321-5911<lb/>
from<lb/>
?Depending on creak dates and length of stay.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0019"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
16 The East Carolinian, February I, 1990<lb/>
Lose<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
He hid a career game high of very supportive and I owea lot to<lb/>
31 points in the consolation game them<lb/>
of the Musk City Invit.ition.il in Lose, a Leisure Systems Stud<lb/>
Nashville, lennessee, and made ies major, is looking to take some<lb/>
the All-Tournament team. For hi9 time ofl after his graduation in<lb/>
performance in the tournament, May He has no real plans to pla<lb/>
he was named CAA Player of the basketball after graduating but<lb/>
Week. Th.it year he was also hon said, It (he opportunity otnesup<lb/>
ored as the Offensive flayer ol the I'd like to continue to play.<lb/>
()m v I graduate, I think ! m<lb/>
reallv ging to miss .ill tin .? d<lb/>
hint's we had .is ,i learn said<lb/>
We ve .ill gotten to h so li ?<lb/>
I ingoing to miss it I m going to<lb/>
miss th.it i l t w hen I ct t cut<lb/>
N ear for the Pirates<lb/>
Asa junior, Lose averaged 7<lb/>
points and 3.4 rebounds per game<lb/>
lie had f?7 assists ami scored a<lb/>
season high I" points in the Pi<lb/>
rates pig wm over American in<lb/>
theCAA tournament. American<lb/>
head coa hEd rapscottsaid, I've<lb/>
gol.) lot ol rcspe t for Reed I ose<lb/>
that kid can shoot it He was<lb/>
awarded theE( U oaches Award<lb/>
lor tus efforts that ear<lb/>
I le attributes much ol Ins<lb/>
success to his two biggest fans, his<lb/>
parents I'hev arereallv involved<lb/>
in what I do, ' lie said " Ihev are<lb/>
Rival<lb/>
f ontinued from ; ige 15<lb/>
mere than the listeel capacity of said<lb/>
'HI inside the orhett enter etl t<lb/>
v. hen the fight erupted tor<lb/>
(liven our experier c nol ball chool<lb/>
Move!<lb/>
i ior Gus I till driver, toward anothei i<lb/>
lo the goal blocked (Photo courtesy of j 11<lb/>
only in I hirhambutalsoint In ?<lb/>
boro, we will absolutely be look<lb/>
ing t(r a sitt' that definitely out<lb/>
strips that number I ort said<lb/>
"We don't have the money ol<lb/>
some of the big time sports opera<lb/>
lions that pertain to newconstrui<lb/>
lion and all that So obviously,the<lb/>
immeiti i y ol the . hallenge was<lb/>
identifying sites that could acco<lb/>
I not let a<lb/>
incidenl . ? ?? ?? <lb/>
; an end t<lb/>
ship N.<lb/>
? ? . i aid<lb/>
showi I<lb/>
at ea h othei<lb/>
 . .<lb/>
modate larcer than 6,000 Fort hurt in '<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
the South Carolina sute v I m<lb/>
man semifinal contest I h game<lb/>
itself consists ol halt court pl.n<lb/>
with s minute tunning halves<lb/>
llurtv three men's teams com<lb/>
peted from around the region<lb/>
while 14 women's teams took part<lb/>
1 he top two teams from each<lb/>
round robin plavadvanced to th<lb/>
final single elimination tourna<lb/>
merit<lb/>
?Scores term around the IS1<lb/>
(Intramural Sports 1 eague)<lb/>
basketball<lb/>
Sig l:p B' ? Phi !au 5B<lb/>
Kappa Mpha  Bet.1 Iheta<lb/>
Pi 32<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi 4: -hi<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
69ers 65 - Hie Posie 14<lb/>
Full Effect 45 1'inn.nlell<lb/>
Almost 1 tome Bo) s ; t. p<lb/>
the Press 33<lb/>
1 one. Necks 59 (.olden i .o<lb/>
phers 37<lb/>
?lame of the week I ateral<lb/>
Ventricle s nuscephalus<lb/>
(iuess where these guvs hail<lb/>
from' The lateral entricletopped<lb/>
Anuscephalus in the rearendef<lb/>
?I oul l'la ol the week 1 he<lb/>
Fellows s i oo I h pe<lb/>
Only three pl.n ers from both<lb/>
squads left thecourt without fouls<lb/>
I he offk i.ils give a big thanks to<lb/>
Darrvl Somcrvtlle,Ste cMaxwi II<lb/>
and Ronald limes I tu Fellows<lb/>
hooped too 11 pe 65 45<lb/>
?Rout of the Monthlub:Bust<lb/>
a Move over Alpha Sigma Phi l i<lb/>
Sisters. Alpha 5igma Phi were tl.it<lb/>
out busted 45-11 However, the<lb/>
1 il Sisters exhibited great sports<lb/>
manship Michelle I lardison am<lb/>
1 amberline Moose led the bust <lb/>
Mo e surge.<lb/>
Harris feeler<lb/>
PRICES AS LOW AS ANYBODY'S, WHY SHOP ANYWHERE ELSE?<lb/>
Prices Effective Wednesday, January 31 Through Tuesday, February 6, 1990<lb/>
93 Lean Pferdue<lb/>
Ground Turkey<lb/>
$<lb/>
Time<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Williams said It's just as im<lb/>
portant not to take television for<lb/>
granted<lb/>
We shouldn't get spoiled<lb/>
Williams said. "I would h.ne<lb/>
given anything to have been on<lb/>
television as a player. So you've<lb/>
uot to keep those things in mind,<lb/>
tl' "<lb/>
Then there are the tans, some<lb/>
of whom must travel trom out ol<lb/>
town<lb/>
We have a large arena now<lb/>
and we have some season ticket<lb/>
holders who live three hours<lb/>
awav. SwoWord sud I hat puts<lb/>
them aw tul late getting home<lb/>
Even so. Swofford said he<lb/>
rarely hears anyone complain<lb/>
when the I'ar Heels pl.iv whai is<lb/>
perceived as a big game<lb/>
'When it sa I hike game or an<lb/>
NSlate game, the arena is full;<lb/>
you don't hear anybody complain<lb/>
about it. he said it it's a game<lb/>
maybe not quite of that magni<lb/>
tude or that rivalry, then it be<lb/>
comes more ol .1 t.u tor<lb/>
l he most the conference can<lb/>
do tboul 9 p ni games. Swofford.<lb/>
said, is trv to spread the games<lb/>
among all the teams as ovenlv as<lb/>
possible<lb/>
i nlcssyou want to pa) quite<lb/>
I tuiam kal prue to totallv elin.i<lb/>
nate them, he said<lb/>
Donald Duck<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
$<lb/>
Moores<lb/>
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Fresh Fruit Imported From Chile<lb/>
2X&amp;. ? i - al-<lb/>
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Cereal 6Jw<lb/>
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Coffee i30i<lb/>
Folgers Gourmet QQ<lb/>
Coffee JL.277<lb/>
1.89<lb/>
Tropicana<lb/>
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1400 Charles Boulevard - University Center Shopping Center - Greenville, NC<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0020"/><lb/>
16 The East Carolinian, February 1, IfW<lb/>
Lose<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
He had a career game high of very supportive and I owe ? lot to<lb/>
31 points in the consolation game thorn<lb/>
of the Music City- Invitational in<lb/>
Nashville. Tennessee, and made<lb/>
the All-Tournament team. For his<lb/>
performance in the tournament<lb/>
he was named CAA Player oi the<lb/>
Week That year he was also hon-<lb/>
ored as the Offensive Plaver of the<lb/>
i<lb/>
Year tor the Pirates<lb/>
As a iiuuor. Lose averaged 7.7<lb/>
pointsand 3.4 reboundspergeme.<lb/>
He had 67 assists and scored a<lb/>
Mason high 17 points in the Pi-<lb/>
rales' big win over American in<lb/>
the CAA Tournament American<lb/>
head coach Ed lapscottsaul. Tve<lb/>
got a tot of respect tor Reed lose<lb/>
that kid can shoot it He was<lb/>
awarded the ECUCoaches' A waul<lb/>
tor his efforts that year.<lb/>
He attributes much ot his<lb/>
success to his two biggest tans, his<lb/>
parents. They are really involved<lb/>
in what 1 do he said. "They are<lb/>
Lose, a Leisure Systems Stud<lb/>
ies major, is looking to take some<lb/>
time off after his graduation in<lb/>
May. I le has no real plans to plav<lb/>
basketball after graduating but<lb/>
said, "it theopportuntt) comesup<lb/>
I'd like to continue to plav<lb/>
"Once I graduate, 1 think I m<lb/>
really going to miss all the good<lb/>
tunes we had as a team he said<lb/>
"We've .ill gotten to be so close<lb/>
I'm going to missil I'm going to<lb/>
miss thai a lot when I ept out<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
the South Carolina State vs I'm<lb/>
man semifinal contest The game<lb/>
itself consists Ot halt court pl.w<lb/>
with S-minute running halves<lb/>
rhirty three men's teams com<lb/>
peted from around the region<lb/>
while 14 women steams took part.<lb/>
1 he top two teams from each<lb/>
round robin plav advanced to the<lb/>
tmal single elimination tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
?Scores form around the 1S1<lb/>
vIntramural Sports I eaguc)<lb/>
Basketball<lb/>
Sig Ep B" 59 - Phi Tau 58<lb/>
kappa Alpha 5 - beta Theta<lb/>
Pi 32<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi 4: - Chi<lb/>
Upl ega24<lb/>
69ers65 - Ihe Posie 14<lb/>
Full Effect 45 - Pinnacle 41<lb/>
Almost Home Boys 38 Stop<lb/>
the Press 33<lb/>
Long Necks 3? - C.olden Go-<lb/>
phers 37<lb/>
?Game ot the week: lateral<lb/>
Ventricle vs. Anuscephahis<lb/>
Guess where these guvs hail<lb/>
from? The lateral Ventricle topped<lb/>
Anuscephahis in the rear ender .<lb/>
?Foul riav of the week: The<lb/>
Fellows vs Too Hype<lb/>
Only three players from both<lb/>
squads left the court without fouls.<lb/>
The officials give a big thanks to<lb/>
Parrvl Somerville, Steve Maxwell<lb/>
and Ronald Hines. The Fellows<lb/>
hooped Too Hype 65-45.<lb/>
? Rout of the Month Club: bust<lb/>
a Move over Alpha Sigma Phi LiP<lb/>
Sisters. Alpha Sigma Phi were flat<lb/>
out busted 45-11. However, the<lb/>
LU Sisters exhibited great sports-<lb/>
manship Michelle Hardison and<lb/>
Tambertine Moose led the bust A<lb/>
Move surge'<lb/>
Time<lb/>
Rival<lb/>
Continued from page 15<lb/>
Move!<lb/>
Senior Gus Hill drives toward another Pirate basket, but has the<lb/>
j to the goal blocked Photo courtesy ot Sports Information)<lb/>
lane<lb/>
more than the listed capacity of<lb/>
7,5(X) inside the Corbott Center<lb/>
when the tight erupted.<lb/>
"Given our experience, not<lb/>
only in Durham butalsoinGreens<lb/>
horo. we will absolutely be look-<lb/>
ing for a site that definitely out-<lb/>
strips that number Fort said<lb/>
"We don't have the money of<lb/>
some of the big-time sports opera-<lb/>
tions that pertain to now construc-<lb/>
tion and all that So,OCA umsl v. the<lb/>
immediacy of the challenge was<lb/>
identifying sites that could acco-<lb/>
modate lareer than 6j000,m Fort<lb/>
said<lb/>
No sites have et been i. hosen<lb/>
tor either the football or basket-<lb/>
bail games, offi ialsot both schools<lb/>
said<lb/>
"We simpl) could not let an<lb/>
incident, however tragic, really<lb/>
bring an end to a rich n tatknv-<lb/>
ship NM I ntral chancellor<lb/>
1 yronza Rk hmond said<lb/>
Videotapes ol the incident<lb/>
showed students swinging chairs<lb/>
at each other Seven people were<lb/>
hurt in the tie.hi<lb/>
Continued from page 14<lb/>
off<lb/>
Williams said it's just as im-<lb/>
portant not to take television for<lb/>
granted.<lb/>
"We shouldn't get Spoiled<lb/>
Williams said. "1  would have<lb/>
given anything to have been on<lb/>
television as a plaver. So you've<lb/>
got to keep those things in mind,<lb/>
too<lb/>
Then there are the fans, some<lb/>
of whom must travel from out of<lb/>
town.<lb/>
"We have a large arena now,<lb/>
and we have some season-ticket<lb/>
holders who live three hours<lb/>
away Swofford said That puts<lb/>
them awful late getting home<lb/>
Even so, Swofford said he<lb/>
rarely hears anyone complain<lb/>
when the Tar Heels play what is<lb/>
perceived as a big game<lb/>
"When it's a Duke game or an<lb/>
N.C State game, the arena is full;<lb/>
you don't hear anybody complain<lb/>
about it he said. "If it's a game<lb/>
maybe not quite of that magni-<lb/>
tude or that rivalry, then it be-<lb/>
comes more of a factor<lb/>
The most the conference can<lb/>
do about 9 p.m. games, Swofford<lb/>
said, is try to spread the games<lb/>
among all the teams as evenly as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
"Unlessyouwanttopayquite<lb/>
a financial price to totally elimi-<lb/>
nate them he said.<lb/>
Harris teeter<lb/>
PRICES AS LOW AS ANYBODY'S, WHY SHOP ANYWHERE ELSE?<lb/>
Prices Effective Wednesday, January 31 Through Tuesday, February 6,1990<lb/>
93 Lean Perdue<lb/>
Ground Turkey<lb/>
$<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
!Rtt<lb/>
Slips<lb/>
64 Oz.<lb/>
g$sffin?zr- i i l<lb/>
Coca-Cola,<lb/>
Sprite<lb/>
i-r<lb/>
ScotTissue<lb/>
4Pk<lb/>
Fresh Fruit Imported From Chile<lb/>
???" . ?tf<lb/>
PeachesrPIums<lb/>
Or Nectarines Lb<lb/>
Jergens Ever Soft<lb/>
Lotion<lb/>
Teddy Grahams O CO<lb/>
Cereal i5o2??30<lb/>
Maxwell House<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
Folgers Gourmet 1 QQ Pillsbury<lb/>
Coffee i,o l.S77 Biscuits<lb/>
4Pk ?<lb/>
130z<lb/>
1.89<lb/>
Tropicana<lb/>
Twisters 46 oz<lb/>
1.59 feS??E<lb/>
7 25 0z<lb/>
89<lb/>
.99<lb/>
Selects '<lb/>
Ea<lb/>
Huggies<lb/>
Diapers<lb/>
More Value<lb/>
Cookies<lb/>
9.69<lb/>
? <lb/>
TheBespQaliUfDeli-Bakierii!<lb/>
Virginia Brand<lb/>
12 Inch Single<lb/>
Topping Pizza<lb/>
Fori-iSlfc<lb/>
h- v !r, IT M I ? ? ??? ' v ir. ' narv 9 i1 In Tin- CivriviiV' ktr Onfy<lb/>
w. Ohm n? Right To Lmut QuMNtai N - I To omkem W? fjteiiy A?pt Ndml Bvi Stamps<lb/>
1400 Charles Boulevard ? University Center Shopping Center - Greenville, NC<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0021"/><lb/>
s only o K? Please don wr?e or phone. manyoCWsFe<lb/>
I afflict 99 of all college students<lb/>
I AM JOE'S<lb/>
BOUNCED CHECK<lb/>
B John PKKANOSE<lb/>
I strike without warning. I<lb/>
am excruciatingly embarrass-<lb/>
ing, yet I occur with a fre-<lb/>
quency that most statisticians<lb/>
would find erotic. I begin with<lb/>
a few simple strokes of the<lb/>
pen and can end up with such<lb/>
' devastating consequences as<lb/>
bankruptcy-<lb/>
I am Joe's bounced check.<lb/>
He tried to avoid me, but he<lb/>
didn't take the necessary pre-<lb/>
cautions. I can strike for many<lb/>
reasons, but in Joe's case, I am<lb/>
due to his constant belief that<lb/>
his deposit will beat me to the<lb/>
bank.<lb/>
Joe is not alone in this mis-<lb/>
conception. Over 99 of all<lb/>
other college students believe<lb/>
that poking my account num-<lb/>
bers out with an X-Acto<lb/>
blade, or folding, spindling<lb/>
and otherwise mutilating me<lb/>
will slow my inexorable trek<lb/>
to his checking account. He's<lb/>
wrong.<lb/>
There are other factors<lb/>
which can contribute to my<lb/>
elasticity, such as many banks'<lb/>
policy of tagging student ac-<lb/>
counts on their computers, so<lb/>
that any check a student writes<lb/>
is either posted within an hour<lb/>
or is delayed eighteen weeks.<lb/>
The good news is, I am<lb/>
preventable. Students are be-<lb/>
ginning to learn that it is not<lb/>
really their money they are<lb/>
using, it is their friendly finan-<lb/>
I AM JOE'S<lb/>
telling him tl at he now owed<lb/>
the bank eighteen dollars in<lb/>
service charges, Kocco was<lb/>
drafting a letter of his owi<lb/>
sending me to some ex-Ma<lb/>
rin . ??Vv) rui<lb/>
are wl<lb/>
 en<lb/>
wr I em1<lb/>
rassed I worth!<lb/>
- with ?? ?  '<lb/>
. . . , print<lb/>
bol, tl em so they gei<lb/>
lt Joe and others like 1 i<lb/>
by charging his acco i<lb/>
money he doesn't have.<lb/>
.lection agencies I<lb/>
bad bad places. When 1 end<lb/>
up at a collection agents,<lb/>
chances are 1 will end <lb/>
stuffed into one o( oe'smany<lb/>
existing orifices, or perhaps<lb/>
the collection agency people<lb/>
will create a whole new orifice<lb/>
in Joe in which to stuff me.<lb/>
Broken Fingers And Torn<lb/>
BOUNCEDCHECK<lb/>
Ligaments. The next daw<lb/>
found oe checking into the<lb/>
local hospital loi some minor<lb/>
injuries. Stitches were u<lb/>
quin sewupthenev i<lb/>
Jot<lb/>
 AM JOE'S<lb/>
cial institution's. Thebacl news<lb/>
is, manv students still mistak-<lb/>
enly believe they are not face-<lb/>
less cogs in the corporate<lb/>
machine and must be dealt<lb/>
with severely.<lb/>
Faulty Advice. oe had<lb/>
been studying hard one night.<lb/>
His roommate said if Joe<lb/>
would write a check for a pizza<lb/>
delivery, he would pay Joe<lb/>
back next Tuesday "But I<lb/>
don't have enough money in<lb/>
my account for a pizza. My<lb/>
check will bounce and then I'll<lb/>
 have to pay a service charge<lb/>
I Joe said.<lb/>
Joe's roommate told Joe to<lb/>
tear a small rip in the compu-<lb/>
terized numbers printed on<lb/>
my lower left corner. "That<lb/>
will keep the bank computer<lb/>
confused for a week or so, till<lb/>
I can pay you back Joe's<lb/>
roommate said.<lb/>
Joe's roommate was<lb/>
wrong. Sophisticated new<lb/>
systems already in use at most<lb/>
WUNCED CHECK<lb/>
banks can use computer simu-<lb/>
lations to identify the ripped<lb/>
number. A backup system is<lb/>
also being instituted. Sexually<lb/>
frustrated littleold ladies with<lb/>
poor eyesight tape me back<lb/>
together, search the files for a<lb/>
signature match, then go to<lb/>
your home or place of busi-<lb/>
ness and rip your pubic hair<lb/>
out<lb/>
Joe's first mistake was to<lb/>
listen to his roommate.<lb/>
A Letter. Two days later,<lb/>
Joe received some news about<lb/>
me from his bank. His bank <lb/>
told him I had been returned<lb/>
to the pizza parlor for insuffi-<lb/>
cient funds. That means that<lb/>
when the pizza deliverers tried<lb/>
to exchange me for cash, Joe's<lb/>
bank said, "Sorry, wrong an-<lb/>
swer. Thank you for playing<lb/>
and returned me to them.<lb/>
This upset the pizza store's<lb/>
owner, a large ex-Marine<lb/>
named Rocco. Even as the<lb/>
bank was sending Joe a letter<lb/>
9<lb/>
How a 30Vr improvement<lb/>
can make you feel<lb/>
Q: I' ve he;<lb/>
ow?<lb/>
100 better<lb/>
j . I avebeer<lb/>
. nn<lb/>
pa ?<lb/>
the bank the co sed<lb/>
old-i i<lb/>
"tal luttahi<lb/>
red<lb/>
e : il currency in most stat<lb/>
they also took his stereo, tele-<lb/>
vision and VCR as "collate!<lb/>
foe is recovering nicely. 1 ie<lb/>
is considered a credit risk, and<lb/>
therefore is no longer able to<lb/>
have a checking account. Thus,<lb/>
joe and I have parted com-<lb/>
pany, though cuts oi me re-<lb/>
main in his intestinal tract<lb/>
I'll miss Joe, but I know<lb/>
somewhere soon, I'll meet<lb/>
someone just like him.<lb/>
10<lb/>
: -<lb/>
Q: ?<lb/>
, , e quite profits trge orpo-<lb/>
ns<lb/>
? Q: So it keeps me fr i iking when I have a bladder<lb/>
control problem?<lb/>
A: In a nutshell<lb/>
q. But what about the smell? Deep-End I doesn't any-<lb/>
thing about the smell does it? So ifs really just a way to part<lb/>
me from my money while giving me a false sense of conn-<lb/>
dence? . , <lb/>
A: Pretty much, yeah But hey - we re shameless.<lb/>
Live again ? with Deep-End?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0022"/><lb/>
February 1. 1990 ? ECU'S Digest ? It's only a joke, please don't write or phone Thank you.<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
omedyQ<lb/>
It's Lotsa Laffs! yl7f<lb/>
When my boyfriend and I<lb/>
came down from New Jersey<lb/>
to visit the campus of a south-<lb/>
ern university I was thinking<lb/>
of attending, we noticed two<lb/>
surprising phenomena. First,<lb/>
there seemed to be police eve-<lb/>
rywhere; and second, all of<lb/>
the people we met were very<lb/>
friendly. But it wasn't until<lb/>
we returned to our car after a<lb/>
tour of the campus that my<lb/>
boyfriend was really sold on<lb/>
my going away to college by<lb/>
myself.<lb/>
You see, on the front wind-<lb/>
shield of his parked car was a<lb/>
ticket. On one side of the ticket<lb/>
a twenty-dollar fine was<lb/>
checked, and the other side<lb/>
read, "WELCOME TO THE<lb/>
CAMPUS<lb/>
"Honey he told me, "with<lb/>
all these cops and all this hos-<lb/>
pitality, I'll never have to<lb/>
worry about your getting<lb/>
raped on this campus Ha,<lb/>
ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.<lb/>
? Contributed bv Robin Blind<lb/>
My college health profes-<lb/>
sor was explaining the mir-<lb/>
acles of the female anatomy.<lb/>
"Women experience their<lb/>
worst moods when their fe-<lb/>
male hormones are at their<lb/>
lowest levels he told us. A<lb/>
girl in the back row raised her<lb/>
hand. "It stands to reason,<lb/>
then she said, "that that's<lb/>
when a woman is most like a<lb/>
man Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha,<lb/>
12<lb/>
Don't Let These<lb/>
Myths<lb/>
Ruin Your Adolescence<lb/>
Condensed from "Kids: Stay<lb/>
Away From Sex! It's Bad<lb/>
By Randall Terry<lb/>
Despite all that has been<lb/>
written and said about sex,<lb/>
misinformation on the subject<lb/>
is still a major cause of prob-<lb/>
lems among adolescents.<lb/>
Yes, if s true. Twenty-four<lb/>
years after Masters and<lb/>
Johnson published that vi-<lb/>
cious book of Satanic lies,<lb/>
Human Sexual Response,<lb/>
America's precious young<lb/>
people show signs of believ-<lb/>
ing the sex myths promul-<lb/>
gated by this evil tome. ECU's<lb/>
Digest wants to saveour young<lb/>
people from these horrible,<lb/>
vile, nasty untruths.<lb/>
? Myth: Sex is fun and<lb/>
14<lb/>
ha, ha, ha<lb/>
CAMPUS COMEDY<lb/>
? Contributed bvnthj Rj;<lb/>
It was my first dav at col-<lb/>
lege, and boy, was I nervous' I<lb/>
was travelling across campus<lb/>
to my first class when I looked<lb/>
down and realized I was only<lb/>
wearing a pair of socks!<lb/>
It didn't seem so funny<lb/>
then, but now that I'm out of<lb/>
prison I can laugh about it.<lb/>
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha,<lb/>
ha.<lb/>
? Contributed by X PdMR<lb/>
A few years ago my uni-<lb/>
versity sponsored a drive to<lb/>
raise funds for a bell tower.<lb/>
The whole school pitched in.<lb/>
The newspaper held a design<lb/>
contest, the art school drew<lb/>
the best design, and the in-<lb/>
dustrial tech department de-<lb/>
veloped a state-of-the-art<lb/>
hourly chiming system. Al-<lb/>
though the bell tower was<lb/>
never constructed, this year<lb/>
the student union finally made<lb/>
their contribution: a campus-<lb/>
wide hourly broadcast of the<lb/>
bells ringing from the bell<lb/>
tower of our rival school. Ha,<lb/>
ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.<lb/>
? Contributed bv Mm ln?a lower<lb/>
Last Saturday night the<lb/>
campus police at my school<lb/>
received a call. They re-<lb/>
sponded! Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha,<lb/>
ha, ha, ha, ha.<lb/>
? Contributed bv Chris I' Cream<lb/>
Do you hare a contribution tor Campus Comedy' Why not send it in? At EC U S<lb/>
: Digest well pay you a whopping 75( per column inch. That's almost enough to live<lb/>
 on if you don't Me eating. And if you work and slave for us tor tour long months, we<lb/>
might consider raising your pay to a dizzyingI per inch! Think of what you could<lb/>
do with that kind of money! Staggers the imagination, doesn t it1<lb/>
Of course, if you re an editor, we wont pay you for your writing HO mutter how<lb/>
much you write. But we will give you a measly salary. Good deal, huh'<lb/>
DON'T LET THESE SEX MYTHS<lb/>
glamorous.<lb/>
It's not, kids. I know, be-<lb/>
cause I've tried it. It's a sinful,<lb/>
lustful gratification of the<lb/>
body's baser needs.<lb/>
Except for the orgasm;<lb/>
that's nice. And so is the fore-<lb/>
play. And the afterglow.<lb/>
Okay, so maybe it is fun<lb/>
and glamorous. So what?<lb/>
? Myth: You can have safe<lb/>
sex if you use a condom.<lb/>
Wrong again, kiddies. Oh,<lb/>
sure, you might be safe from<lb/>
STD's and pregnancy  but<lb/>
what about YOUR IMMOR-<lb/>
TAL SOUL?! Try putting a<lb/>
condom over that!<lb/>
No, I'm afraid The Big G<lb/>
instantly condemns to Hell<lb/>
i anyone who dabbles in sexual<lb/>
activity outside of marriage<lb/>
? or even inside marriage,<lb/>
except when it's to create more<lb/>
little kiddies. And even then,<lb/>
women shouldn't enjoy it.<lb/>
Why? Because The Big G<lb/>
RUIN YOUR ADOLESCENCE<lb/>
hates it when people have fun,<lb/>
that's why. Especially women.<lb/>
Next myth.<lb/>
? Myth: Sex is okay if it's<lb/>
between two people who love<lb/>
each other, whether or not<lb/>
they're married.<lb/>
Nice try, bucko. But I'm<lb/>
afraid we'll not stand for that<lb/>
infernal tomfoolery. Sex is<lb/>
dirty, disgusting, vile and<lb/>
putrid, no matter how you<lb/>
look at it ? unless, of course,<lb/>
you look at it as an enlight-<lb/>
ened, intelligent, informed<lb/>
adult capable of making deci-<lb/>
sions without the aid of a work<lb/>
of fiction thousands of years<lb/>
old. Not that I'd know.<lb/>
? Myth: Theauthorof this<lb/>
article is a total buffoon,<lb/>
clinging desperately to<lb/>
antedeluvianattitudesabout<lb/>
sex in a futile effort to justify<lb/>
his outdated views of moral-<lb/>
ity.<lb/>
Am not.<lb/>
15<lb/>
U<lb/>
3<lb/>
u<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0023"/><lb/>
<lb/>
X<lb/>
I<lb/>
It's only a joke, please don't write or phone. Thank you. ? ECU'S Digest . February 1, 1990<lb/>
Using<lb/>
chemical<lb/>
weapons in<lb/>
the war<lb/>
over drugs<lb/>
Saving our<lb/>
Policemen<lb/>
Will new 'W)t hran<lb/>
drHnjhrnits mane our<lb/>
ottoM cofR rnrre fit0<lb/>
fvige S<lb/>
How the<lb/>
Liberals<lb/>
Are<lb/>
Ruining<lb/>
America<lb/>
page 12<lb/>
BOOK SECTION<lb/>
Trcrnd Censor<lb/>
REAL-LIFE DRAMA<lb/>
"PLEASE,<lb/>
HELP ME<lb/>
FIND MY<lb/>
CAR KEYS<lb/>
AiSO.OOvaiue- -free!<lb/>
'Jebruary I 1990<lb/>
REAL-LIFE DRAMA<lb/>
EClTs Digest "PLEASE, HELP<lb/>
?ECU J 961 ItUfJ? 'Rgad Satire ?Tabloid<lb/>
, No' Slop<lb/>
( "Pg -L" !???<lb/>
I Am Joe's Bounced f'he.<lb/>
; lUve ? Ma 01 My Owl I Mm<lb/>
Thou mmmj DImmmb!<lb/>
Why Your "e? l.ie I? h HQ I "J?Ml<lb/>
Common Poiple BgHllMlUHMMMi Peopie<lb/>
Lazy LlMI OltI Without ? Hume<lb/>
Your Naming Home May Be try Jig M U You'<lb/>
I"he Starting Truth Iug ire M)! Vfafc!<lb/>
sui.it. and Satan One am: we Same'<lb/>
k ? Not we Humidity. ?! we ftl<lb/>
K.Os SUV Away l-rcm So' 111 Bio<lb/>
Kjd? l-iiier to Your Parents' They're Ciood'<lb/>
Lik?atliM Ho?toSp?KThem.How.nSiup I hen<lb/>
( Vx Little Puppie and CXher Sj.h SmI<lb/>
? V?M Spouse CkMfcaj On You1<lb/>
Why Women Are Duir-wr Than Mm Ami I M '?<lb/>
la Dcciuon or Ar.y'JVg<lb/>
( Viillni rksun Iie kpilcene t? i Kea. Mu<lb/>
AhhmwW? Solve Them WMi fiala!<lb/>
It'iwe liMMi Wh Mefur Country Vial!<lb/>
CmirgeButn Cocuervativehnough ' lltMH MM<lb/>
Ho To Be loully Maajca mi immtm<lb/>
MwftM Domxty )' 1 0? ,<lb/>
o? fitlaaor 1 9<lb/>
; Danforih Qmiylt 6 I<lb/>
"lad SlO'ltl'<lb/>
 i?3t<lb/>
limmy j ??lil"<lb/>
Jimmy Sttwari<lb/>
O .OV<lb/>
ftitJall Tt"y<lb/>
'Family CiH.lt"<lb/>
'Family Sama't'<lb/>
"family kttommai<lb/>
i 14<lb/>
1<lb/>
I 9<lb/>
1971 i<lb/>
1 2<lb/>
; o<lb/>
i<lb/>
. i<lb/>
1 ?6? <lb/>
i '<lb/>
'Fam.ly Uttagix'<lb/>
2?<lb/>
on S?t??' 1 l6<lb/>
L'karho Htilo I<lb/>
1,?, j7?? 1 0 <lb/>
yo?? ?ay !?<lb/>
.? ??? ?<lb/>
Patrick 8??J? I '<lb/>
SECTION<lb/>
CProt<lb/>
S (<lb/>
O Wjj j?j<lb/>
1?65<lb/>
Personal Ulance. I 3 ? MaiMal Newt. I J ? Ovx.u. QMataMl<lb/>
(iibie?. 13 ? Ptcircujje Speen. I ? I -ghter. M Brci?<lb/>
MedKtr. I J ? Enn.rur.g Your Poer CJver Worui. I I ? UMMJ I ?'?'<lb/>
In Dm Here iU?in.  1 ? MSKJ IJ A Uiy'i W-rt. ? MM<lb/>
Dm Comedic Call)11 ? A IWM d Por.leri-e Pwnu. ! 1<lb/>
"PXSE, HELP ML<lb/>
handuTiting, but something<lb/>
was wrong. Sheivasfacin$death<lb/>
from terrorists when sk wrote<lb/>
this, Jesus thought, suddenly<lb/>
frightened. Or maybe just in a<lb/>
hurry.<lb/>
"I forgot to pick up bread<lb/>
at the store this morning the<lb/>
note read. "Need some for<lb/>
dinner. Please go to the store<lb/>
and pick it up. Am at<lb/>
Grandma's, XXXOOO<lb/>
I've got to get that hreuxi,<lb/>
Jesus told himself. I've just got<lb/>
to.<lb/>
1 le ran to his room, grab-<lb/>
bing everything he'd need ?<lb/>
his wallet, his shirt, his spade-<lb/>
ling compound ? but some-<lb/>
thing was missing.<lb/>
He couldn't find his car<lb/>
keys.<lb/>
Oh, no, Jesus thought, now<lb/>
frantic. Where did I leave my<lb/>
keys?<lb/>
Jesus ripped apart every-<lb/>
thing in the room, starting with<lb/>
UNO MY CAR KEYS<lb/>
his bed. Then he was brought<lb/>
up short by a chilling<lb/>
realization. If it snows, I'm dead,<lb/>
he thought, almost matter-of-<lb/>
factly. I'd better build a bonfire.<lb/>
Jesus ran out to the back<lb/>
yard and chopped down the<lb/>
towering oak tree that graced<lb/>
the yard. I le knew his parents<lb/>
loved the tree, but there was<lb/>
no choice. He broke off a<lb/>
couple of branches and car-<lb/>
ried them back to his room.<lb/>
Jesus doused the room<lb/>
with kerosene and tossed a<lb/>
match into it. The room went<lb/>
up like a torch.<lb/>
Nou he thought seriously,<lb/>
I'd better get those keys,<lb/>
Jesus searched the rest of<lb/>
the house while his room was<lb/>
burning, but his keys were<lb/>
nowhere to be found. Desper-<lb/>
ate now, he suddenly recalled<lb/>
what his Sunday School<lb/>
teacher had told him the week<lb/>
before: when you get in a jam,<lb/>
ME FIND MY<lb/>
CAR KEYS<lb/>
Young Jesus Christf igure was alone,<lb/>
searching desperately for his car keys.<lb/>
Now survival depended on his<lb/>
weakest ability: thinking.<lb/>
By Schlock Meister<lb/>
A tender and loving six-<lb/>
teen-year-old whose parents<lb/>
had given him a car for his<lb/>
birthday just a few weeks<lb/>
before, Jesus Christfigure was<lb/>
unprepared for the danger that<lb/>
confronted him that Saturday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
He had been out playing<lb/>
basketball with some friends<lb/>
on that beautiful Iowa morn-<lb/>
ing, and had come home to<lb/>
work on a project that was<lb/>
due for school in a few days.<lb/>
When he entered his house<lb/>
through the back door, he saw<lb/>
the note pinned to the refrig-<lb/>
erator. It was in his mother's<lb/>
1<lb/>
"PLEASE, HELP ME FIND MY CAR KEYS<lb/>
I pray. This certainly is a jam, he<lb/>
thought.<lb/>
Jesiis dropped tc his knees,<lb/>
bowed his head, and prayed<lb/>
aloud. "Help me find my keys,<lb/>
God he moaned. "Please,<lb/>
help me find my car keys<lb/>
j At that moment, the smoke in<lb/>
the air overcame Jesus, and he<lb/>
fell unconscious. It was 2:14<lb/>
PM.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Lee Vmealone, the<lb/>
Christfigures' reclusive but<lb/>
stupid neighbor, noticed the<lb/>
smoke pouring from the win-<lb/>
dows of the house next door at<lb/>
3:47 pm. Instantly, he wan-<lb/>
dered aimlessly over to see if<lb/>
anything was wrong.<lb/>
Lee strolled around the<lb/>
house,occasionally scratching<lb/>
at his genitals. He knew he<lb/>
had to get in to see if anyone<lb/>
was inside, but how?<lb/>
Lee yawned, contemplat-<lb/>
ing whether he should just<lb/>
forget about the fire and go eat<lb/>
some Quacker? brand Crack-<lb/>
lin' Oat Wheat Bran Grape Nut<lb/>
Wheat Wheat Oat Bran Nut<lb/>
Bran Oat Bran PsylHum &amp;<lb/>
Fibre Cereal. But then he was<lb/>
brought up short by a sudden<lb/>
thought: My God, I can't eat<lb/>
cereal at a time like thisl I'm outta<lb/>
milk<lb/>
Quickly, he decided to<lb/>
break into the Christfigures'<lb/>
house to see if any milk had<lb/>
survived the raging fire. They<lb/>
keep it in the fridge, don't they? I<lb/>
bet it'll still be cooll There has to<lb/>
be milk in there somewhere. There<lb/>
just has to.<lb/>
Lee tried the back door and<lb/>
found it unlocked.<lb/>
 don't like it, he thought<lb/>
warily. Too easy. I bet it's a trap.<lb/>
Lee ripped another branch<lb/>
off the recently felled oak tree<lb/>
and used it to break a win-<lb/>
dow. Then he realized he was<lb/>
too fat to climb in the window,<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0024"/><lb/>
2 . February 1,1990- ECU'S D.gest . It's only a joke, please don't write or phone. Thank you<lb/>
'PLEASE, HELP ME<lb/>
soheentered through the door<lb/>
after all, brandishing the oak<lb/>
branch like a club.<lb/>
"Come at me he<lb/>
screamed, hoping to scare oft<lb/>
anyone who might be hiding<lb/>
in the dense smoke, waiting to<lb/>
kill him "Come on<lb/>
Eventually, he found the<lb/>
fridge and took the half gallon<lb/>
of milk he found inside Be-<lb/>
fore he left, he tossed the oak<lb/>
branch on the still-blazing fire.<lb/>
At 5:20 pm, Lee suffered a<lb/>
sudden attack of guilt and<lb/>
called the police to tell them<lb/>
about the milk he'd stolen.<lb/>
When the phone rang at the<lb/>
police department, it was<lb/>
answered by Enid Frump, a<lb/>
sharp-eyed, clever young of-<lb/>
ficer who had been with the<lb/>
Iowa City PD for only a few<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
"Listen Lee said humbly.<lb/>
"You'vegotta listen tome You<lb/>
FIND MY CAR KEYS<lb/>
have to arrest me I stole a<lb/>
container oi milk from my<lb/>
next-door neighbors<lb/>
"We don't handle cases<lb/>
like that Hnid said, her light-<lb/>
ning-quick brain instantly<lb/>
perceiving the nature ot the<lb/>
problem and working out a<lb/>
solution. "They're too small,<lb/>
even for Iowa City. I suggest<lb/>
you just buy another container<lb/>
of milk and sneak it into their<lb/>
house as soon as possible<lb/>
"I can't Lee lamented.<lb/>
"The place is on fire<lb/>
"On fire?" Enid shot back,<lb/>
her highly trained mental re-<lb/>
flexes leaping into action like<lb/>
a cat leaping onto something<lb/>
it felt like leaping onto pretty-<lb/>
quickly. "A fire? Where? Dear<lb/>
God, vou have to tell me<lb/>
where<lb/>
He told her where.<lb/>
?<lb/>
The Iowa City Fire Depart-<lb/>
ment leapt into action at pre-<lb/>
PLEASE.HEL1 ME 1<lb/>
"StOJ that bleed i:<lb/>
Nurse ' mn inded Dr.<lb/>
Che ? ' ilt<lb/>
'??<lb/>
- ? ?<lb/>
:<lb/>
:<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
?:<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
chai ?<lb/>
always ren i i ' i?? ? ?<lb/>
lor'  ?<lb/>
was almost ver. Chevy . i<lb/>
finishing up with the m St<lb/>
delk iteof surgical procedi<lb/>
that a surgeon can learn: re-<lb/>
moving ail n oney iron i<lb/>
pan f i v. i I while arous-<lb/>
ing a little oi the patient s ire<lb/>
as possible.<lb/>
However, Chevy was not<lb/>
just an average surgeon - he<lb/>
was the best, and this was an<lb/>
mm . ki ? <lb/>
operation he had pert' n<lb/>
? ? '<lb/>
erl<lb/>
into the ? ? m patu<lb/>
.<lb/>
hevy pen n ?<lb/>
asn i -?<lb/>
ted ell ??<lb/>
he pei n itted hii elf to<lb/>
n all) really drunk Thei<lb/>
permitted himself to go to bed<lb/>
with that cute little blond in-<lb/>
tern who'd been eyeing him<lb/>
ever since she started work-<lb/>
"PLEASE,HELPME<lb/>
risely 11:13 PM. This was a bit<lb/>
strange, since the police had<lb/>
called them at 5:23.<lb/>
Anyway, the tiretighting<lb/>
team that raced to the<lb/>
Christfigures' home was ?<lb/>
bv veteran firefighter 1-?<lb/>
Strong. left, a manlv, barrel-<lb/>
chested, wavy-haired, dark-<lb/>
complected dude, wrested a<lb/>
megaphone free from the side<lb/>
of the fire truck and began<lb/>
barking orders to his men.<lb/>
"Art, art he barked. "Arf,<lb/>
art<lb/>
His men stared back in<lb/>
confusion.<lb/>
Mm Cud, Jeff said, almost<lb/>
losing his perfect composure<lb/>
for a nanosecond. They can't<lb/>
understand me. Have they all<lb/>
gone deaf? Oraml ? aml ? am<lb/>
I barking again?<lb/>
Quickly, he decided it was<lb/>
the latter. He began giving his<lb/>
men orders again ? this time<lb/>
in a language thev could<lb/>
FIND SAY CAR KEYS<lb/>
understand.<lb/>
"Connect that hose up to<lb/>
the plug thing over there he<lb/>
commanded,taking I argeof<lb/>
the situation like a real man<lb/>
alwaysdoesNo,n end<lb/>
? the other end<lb/>
As soon as the hose had<lb/>
been connected up properly,<lb/>
Jeff muscled his men aside and<lb/>
struck a heroic pose. The fire-<lb/>
light reflected fiercely from his<lb/>
determined features.<lb/>
Jeff stroked the hose firmly,<lb/>
feeling the pressure build up<lb/>
inside it as it filled with water.<lb/>
When he could stand the an-<lb/>
ticipa tion no more, he grasped<lb/>
the nozzle, crying out in ec-<lb/>
stasy as he bathed the fiery<lb/>
inferno in jet after jet of spray.<lb/>
Soon the fire was out. The<lb/>
hose lost pressure and became<lb/>
limp. Jeff became limp, too,<lb/>
sinking into a deep, contented<lb/>
sleep.<lb/>
.<lb/>
"PLEASE, HELP ME FINl VI I i<lb/>
: then Then, he permitted<lb/>
?  -n-<lb/>
<lb/>
. : .<lb/>
? If I ' :<lb/>
ill ij the<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
.<lb/>
I iren I<lb/>
I i<lb/>
il<lb/>
: , ? ' apparent rea<lb/>
. I<lb/>
.? ?<lb/>
in a ikeil ' ' '<lb/>
myseli<lb/>
it s all al out<lb/>
CQMIN6 NEXT ISSUE:<lb/>
i -<lb/>
eclusive interview with country singer N<lb/>
? Real-life drama: "What do you mea<lb/>
you don't take checks?"<lb/>
? Manuel Noriega's latest plot to deprive our<lb/>
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insistence or. nis rights!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0025"/><lb/>
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TWO GRAND PRIZES<lb/>
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,St t<lb/>
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SEARS EXTRA CREDIT SWEEPSTAKES<lb/>
OFFICIAL RULES<lb/>
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY To enter this National Sweepstakes,<lb/>
complete the credit application Fold, seal and mail the application Postage<lb/>
is already paid If you do not wish to apply for SearsCharge at this time, you<lb/>
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and address and the word SearsCharge on a 3 x5 pece of paper mail in<lb/>
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Limit one entry per student<lb/>
computer (Model ?PC6400) IValue $1,370). Second Part $1,000 cash<lb/>
awarded to accredited college named by winner of First Part; 25 Third<lb/>
Prize: Marantz Stereo System IModel 99636) IValue $1.400): 40 Fourth<lb/>
Prize: RCA VCR I8VR475) (Value $900) 10,000 Fifth Prize: $5 Sears<lb/>
Grft Certificate<lb/>
Winners will be selected at random in a national drawing from all entries<lb/>
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whose decisions will be final All 10.079 prizes worth approximately<lb/>
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Prizes- Two 2-Part Grand Prizes: First Part 1990 Pontiac Sunbird (Value<lb/>
$17 000) Second Part $5 000 cash awarded to accredited college named<lb/>
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Vacation (Caribbean or Mexican villages only one week for 2 persons<lb/>
including round -trip coach air transportation club accommodations double<lb/>
, iai . . iirport transfers $500 cashi (Approx value $5 000 ea I<lb/>
? ; , - iwa Jedl I redrted 'oqe named by winner<lb/>
Part S?com trad pe sonal<lb/>
Sweepstakes open to all residents of the USA age 18 or older except<lb/>
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Marden-Kane. Inc Void where prohibited or restricted by law Limit one prize<lb/>
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All entries become the property of Sears, Roebuck and Co and none will be<lb/>
returned Winners will be notified by mail All taxes on prizes are the<lb/>
responsibility of the winners Winners names and likenesses may be used<lb/>
for promotional purposes without additional compensation No substitution<lb/>
or transfer of prizes Winners may be required to sign an affidavit of eligibility<lb/>
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Sears is not responsible for lost, late or m.sdirected mail<lb/>
For a list of major winners.<lb/>
Spars Credit Card Winners<lb/>
send a stamped self-addressed envelope to<lb/>
PO Box 09 Sayreviiie. NJ 08871<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0028"/><lb/>
THIS SECOND PRIZE WOULD<lb/>
MAKE TERM PAPERS A BREEZE'<lb/>
10 SECOND PRIZES FROM SEARS<lb/>
AMSTRAD PC 6400<lb/>
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And a Sears check for<lb/>
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THIS THIRD PRIZE<lb/>
MAKES BEAUTIFUL MUSIC<lb/>
25 THIRD PRIZES FROM SEARS<lb/>
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$5 SEARS GIFT CERTIFICA TES<lb/>
to spend at Sears any<lb/>
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??<lb/>
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i<lb/>
I<lb/>
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YOU CAN ENJOY ALL THAT CREDIT<lb/>
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PO Box 1150 Grai I R ipids MN 55 "?'??  ent? es must be re e<lb/>
May ??' 1990 Limit one entry per student<lb/>
. ? - " send my pr ze '<lb/>
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Street<lb/>
C'ty State- p<lb/>
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ID 26<lb/>
f.fwrw<lb/>
??<lb/>
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THIS SECOND PRIZE WOULD<lb/>
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10 SECOND PRIZES FROM SEARS<lb/>
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And a Sears check for<lb/>
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mis mint prize h<lb/>
MAKES BEAUTIFUL MUSIC<lb/>
25 THIRD PRIZES FROM SEARS K<lb/>
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to spend at Sears any<lb/>
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WITH SEARSCHARGE,<lb/>
YOU CAN ENJOY ALL THAT CREDIT<lb/>
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CREDIT IS USUALLY EASIER WHILE<lb/>
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Complete this easy student application to get SearsCharge<lb/>
and enter the sweepstakes. If you do not wish to apply for SearsCharge<lb/>
at this time, you may still en?er the sweepstakes Write your name, address, and<lb/>
school name and address and the word SearsCharge on a 3 x 5 piece<lb/>
of paper mail m a separate envelope to Sears Extra Credit Sweepstakes.<lb/>
P 0 Box 1150. Grand Rapids. MN 55745 All entries must be received by<lb/>
May 31.1990 Limit one entry per student.<lb/>
In the event I m a winner, send my prize to<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Street<lb/>
City. State. Zip<lb/>
Sears, Roebuck and Co. Credit Account Application<lb/>
ID 26<lb/>
esy titles are ootiona Ayi . ar" HeO ??, appy 'o' a senate account<lb/>
ast Same<lb/>
Crry<lb/>
Sooa. Security Number<lb/>
Aqe<lb/>
State Zp Code<lb/>
State Z.p Code<lb/>
Number en Dependents<lb/>
eicudmg Applicant<lb/>
Are you a<lb/>
permanent resjenr<lb/>
es<lb/>
No<lb/>
Monthly Ren! y<lb/>
Mortgage Payments S<lb/>
Mo<lb/>
long"<lb/>
Full Time<lb/>
Part T,me<lb/>
Oateot<lb/>
Graduation<lb/>
Crry<lb/>
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C?y<lb/>
Stale Zip Code<lb/>
Net Income<lb/>
iTake Home Payi $<lb/>
 Monthly<lb/>
 Weekly<lb/>
NOTE Alimony child support or separate maintenance income need not 6e revealed<lb/>
ft you do not wish ? nave 1 considered as a Basis kx paying this obligation<lb/>
Name Account<lb/>
Carried in<lb/>
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Ba.arx t-<lb/>
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Savmgs I<lb/>
Checking I<lb/>
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? ?? ? , .i ?? . .? nt r ?? ???. k si m and I omptywrtha terrm ? ??arsCharge agreement A  ' ?? ? tears ' i .?<lb/>
? , m naei ?? ?? ?. i i' i ipproved ? ? . ???. i  ? h ,?.i"?rt.v :?. .i? ? .it" ?? ?? , ?? ??? .1 ode ?? i ? ??? ? ? <lb/>
?   ?-  ? 1 . recM en  ymei land 1 ? i . and i? report '? ; ? persor 1 and bureau ? pertorn t ??.? t<lb/>
?   ? ,  ?   ? ??  .??'?? aea ?. 1 '?? ' i' ? ? ? uMwrjmcj r.i.i   '? ice ?'?? ? v I ?  H ? ?? ai ?? ?<lb/>
Signature of Appiican<lb/>
??! ? lit .? ?'??? . . ?? ? '?'? HDETAii<lb/>
igreen ? ? Be<lb/>
r je lie<lb/>
 1989 Sears. Roebuck and Co<lb/>
Vi IS n HERE<lb/>
<pb facs="00058191_0030"/><lb/>
IMPORTANT SEARSCHARGE CREDIT TERMS<lb/>
M ? i A . . ? ?? ? ? ' ?<lb/>
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