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<pb facs="00058218_0001"/>
tttye iEaat (Earoltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 64 No. 35<lb/>
Tuesday, June 27, 1990<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Two occurrences of attempted<lb/>
rape in June; suspects caught<lb/>
By Michelle Castellow<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Two suspects have been ar-<lb/>
rested and charged with attempted<lb/>
rape following separate incidents<lb/>
occurring in the first week of June<lb/>
on the ECU campus, according to<lb/>
a source at ECU Public Safety.<lb/>
Shon Stocks, 17, a Greenville<lb/>
resident has been charged with<lb/>
attempted rape and assault on<lb/>
female; and Nadiem Al-Awar, a<lb/>
student at ECU has been charged<lb/>
with attempted rape of a resident<lb/>
of Jarvis Residence Hall, accord-<lb/>
ing to Lieutenant Rhonda J. Gurley<lb/>
of the ECU Public Safety.<lb/>
Stocks allegedly committed<lb/>
two offenses on two females dur-<lb/>
ing the afternoon of June 1, while<lb/>
Al-Awar allegedly attempted to<lb/>
rape a female in her dorm room on<lb/>
June 7.<lb/>
Gurlev, who is with Public<lb/>
Safety's investigation division, has<lb/>
been accredited with the arrest of<lb/>
the two suspects.<lb/>
According to Gurley, at ap-<lb/>
proximately 2:50 p.m. on June 1,<lb/>
an ECU staff member was walk-<lb/>
ing near the intersection of 9th<lb/>
Street and Lawrence when she was<lb/>
approached bv a young black male<lb/>
riding a mctalic blue mountain<lb/>
bicycle. He rode past her several<lb/>
times before he came up behind<lb/>
her and grabbed her on the but-<lb/>
tocks<lb/>
Then he proceeded to ride off<lb/>
toward Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter. The staff member was fright-<lb/>
ened by the incident and went<lb/>
directly to the ECU department of<lb/>
Public Safety where she gave a<lb/>
statement and discription to the<lb/>
dispatcher, Gurley said. The staff<lb/>
member discribed the suspect's<lb/>
clothing and stated that he was of<lb/>
a slender build but she did not get<lb/>
a clear view of his facial features.<lb/>
During the victim's interview<lb/>
with Gurley, a phone call came in<lb/>
concerning an assault on a female<lb/>
at theampitheaterbehind Fletcher<lb/>
Residence Hall. The discription of<lb/>
the suspect in both cases matched.<lb/>
The second victim, a 20 year old<lb/>
ECU student, was sunbathing<lb/>
when she was awakened by the<lb/>
suspect touching her groin area,<lb/>
according to Gurlev.<lb/>
She sat up abruptly and started<lb/>
to scream for help when he reached<lb/>
out and tore off her swim suit<lb/>
bottom. The suspect then pro-<lb/>
ceeded to flee the scene on his<lb/>
bicycle after a male resident of<lb/>
Fletcher observed the incident and<lb/>
yelled.<lb/>
Both the ECU staff member<lb/>
and the student agreed to give<lb/>
details for a composite photo-<lb/>
graph. From their discretions,<lb/>
Gurlev formed a composite draw-<lb/>
ing of which lames Tripp, a Green-<lb/>
ville police officer, later identified<lb/>
as resembling a black juvenile<lb/>
male. The suspect, oneShon Stocks,<lb/>
was notorious for this kind of ac-<lb/>
tivity, according to Gurley.<lb/>
On Monday morning, Gurley<lb/>
obtained a photo from the Pitt<lb/>
County Sheriff's Department and<lb/>
formed a photo lineup of six black<lb/>
males with the same basic facial<lb/>
characteristics. While compiling<lb/>
the photos, Gurley received a call<lb/>
from another ECU officer at the<lb/>
Pitt County Court House. He in-<lb/>
formed Gurley that Stocks was<lb/>
appearing in court that day on<lb/>
other charges. Immediately, Lieu-<lb/>
See Suspects, page 3<lb/>
Rape Prevention<lb/>
Stalking the parking lot, this ECU Campus Security officer than<lb/>
klessly performs his job. Unfortunately for parking violators, those<lb/>
pink slips will carry higher fines as of August 1 (Photo by Celeste<lb/>
Hoffman � ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Program gives students<lb/>
taste of medical school<lb/>
By Tonia Andres<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A summer program at the<lb/>
ECU's Medical School is allowing<lb/>
future doctors to have a taste of<lb/>
their own medicine.<lb/>
Under the auspices of the<lb/>
Center for Student Opportunities,<lb/>
the eight-week Summer Program<lb/>
for Future Doctors gives an inten-<lb/>
sive preview for premedical stu-<lb/>
dents who are minority andor<lb/>
financially disadvantaged.<lb/>
One aim of the Center is to<lb/>
increase the number of doctors<lb/>
who may have a rooted attach-<lb/>
ment to underserved communi-<lb/>
ties in need of medical doctors, an<lb/>
Any woman is a<lb/>
potential victim<lb/>
By Michelle Castellow<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Warm weather brings out the<lb/>
the best in some people and the<lb/>
worst in others. During the sum-<lb/>
mer months, more people are out<lb/>
and about. Therefore, the sum-<lb/>
mer months should be a time of<lb/>
precaution and prevention. Fe-<lb/>
males, especially, should be well<lb/>
informed on important facts con-<lb/>
cerning issues of rape and sexual<lb/>
assault<lb/>
Sexual assault involves any<lb/>
type of forced sexual activity, in-<lb/>
cluding physical as well as men-<lb/>
tal, emotional, or manipulative<lb/>
force, against a persons will or<lb/>
without consent. Any woman is a<lb/>
potential victim, and attackers are<lb/>
of all types. They may be of any<lb/>
race, appearance, age or social<lb/>
standing, so all women should be<lb/>
conscious and knowledgeable oi<lb/>
all potentially dangerous situ-<lb/>
ations.<lb/>
Lieutenant Keith Knox of<lb/>
ECU's Crime Prevention Division<lb/>
offers these startling facts which<lb/>
everyone should be aware of.<lb/>
� One in four college at some<lb/>
point are victims of rape or sexual<lb/>
assault.<lb/>
� 84 percent of all rape victims<lb/>
are acquainted with their attacker.<lb/>
� 57 percent of these involve<lb/>
date rape.<lb/>
� In the United States one<lb/>
female is sexually assaulted every<lb/>
six minutes.<lb/>
� 90 percent of all acquain-<lb/>
tance or date rapes involve the<lb/>
misuse of alcoholic beverages.<lb/>
� Only about 15 percent of all<lb/>
rapes are reported to the police.<lb/>
Knox stresses the importance<lb/>
of knowing the facts about rape<lb/>
prevention and offers these tips<lb/>
for protection against sexual as-<lb/>
sault.<lb/>
� Be alert of your surround-<lb/>
ings. Use the buddy system when<lb/>
See Prevention, page 3<lb/>
&amp;�' '�<lb/>
Cool Deal<lb/>
With the extremely warm weather of June, it's surpnsmg more campus goers don't follow suit and spend<lb/>
a few moments wading through the fountain in front of Wright Auditorium. (Photo by JD Whitmire �ECU<lb/>
Photo Lab)<lb/>
Dr. E. L. Henderson dies at 105<lb/>
ByMichelle Walker<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. E. L. Henderson, the old-<lb/>
est former professor and adminis-<lb/>
trator of ECU, died at age 105 at<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital on<lb/>
June 17.<lb/>
In 1923, Henderson joined the<lb/>
staff of then East Carolina Teach-<lb/>
ers College. He served as first<lb/>
chairman of the educational ad-<lb/>
ministration and supervision pro-<lb/>
gram, and also of the department<lb/>
of administration and supervision<lb/>
in the School of Education. He<lb/>
directed the student teaching pro-<lb/>
gram as well.<lb/>
During a campus controversy<lb/>
that led to the trial of President<lb/>
Leon Meadows on embezzlement<lb/>
charges, Hendersonand fiveother<lb/>
�faculty members were dismissed<lb/>
for "disloyalty" in 1944, just<lb/>
months before he was to retire.<lb/>
Meadows was convicted and even<lb/>
though many students and The<lb/>
Daily Reflector were on<lb/>
Henderson's side, he never re-<lb/>
turned to teach. He did, however,<lb/>
receive pay for the months entitled<lb/>
to him before his retirement.<lb/>
It was not until the early 1980s<lb/>
that Henderson's name was offi-<lb/>
cially cleared. Dr. Charles Coble,<lb/>
current dean of the School of<lb/>
Education and long-time friend of<lb/>
Henderson, brought his case to<lb/>
the attention of then chancellor Dr.<lb/>
John Howell.<lb/>
"The evidence I saw was clear<lb/>
and 1 decided that Henderson had<lb/>
not been treated fairly Howell<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In 1983, Henderson's faculty<lb/>
status was restored and Howell<lb/>
gave him the rank of professor-<lb/>
emeritus. Howell said he thought<lb/>
Henderson hadn't pursued the<lb/>
case back in 1944 because he was<lb/>
so close to retiring and he did re-<lb/>
ceive his remaining pay, and also<lb/>
Meadows had gone to jail.<lb/>
"The case was somewhat for-<lb/>
gotten Howell said that every-<lb/>
body back then was on his side<lb/>
anyway and giving him profes-<lb/>
sor- emeritus rank was more a<lb/>
gesture than anything else.<lb/>
Henderson wasa nativeof Hill<lb/>
County, Texas. He received his<lb/>
undergraduate degree at the Uni-<lb/>
versity oi Texas and graduate<lb/>
degrees in secondary education<lb/>
and educational administration<lb/>
from Columbia University. He<lb/>
lived in Greenville a few blocks<lb/>
from the ECU campus and re-<lb/>
mained active in the community<lb/>
asa Mason until a few monthsago.<lb/>
From his 98th year on, he cele-<lb/>
brated his birthday with friends in<lb/>
the ECU school of Education. His<lb/>
wife, several years his junior, died<lb/>
within davsof his hundredth birth-<lb/>
duv. Howell said that everybody<lb/>
liked Henderson.<lb/>
"He was a remarkable person.<lb/>
He remained very positive and<lb/>
active up until his last days; we<lb/>
could all trv to be a little more like<lb/>
him<lb/>
Parking fines go on the rise<lb/>
area where the Medical School is<lb/>
already one of the nation's leader.<lb/>
ECU had the highest percent-<lb/>
age of minorities entered in the<lb/>
1988-89yearofall medical schools<lb/>
in North Carolina, according to<lb/>
The New Physician, April 1989. ECU<lb/>
ranked ninth in the nation in 1988-<lb/>
89 for the highest percentage of<lb/>
minorities enrolled in tradition-<lb/>
ally non-minority medical schools.<lb/>
In this summer program there<lb/>
are 16 blacks, 5 whites, 2 Asians<lb/>
and 1 American Indian. In theclass<lb/>
of 24 there are 15 females, which is<lb/>
very unusual according to the<lb/>
program's staff.<lb/>
Dr. Metcalf,associatedeanand<lb/>
See Medical, page 3<lb/>
By Tim Hampton<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Illegal parkers on the ECU<lb/>
campus next fall may be fuming<lb/>
after finding that dreaded pink<lb/>
ticket wedged under the wind-<lb/>
shield wiper blade.<lb/>
On August 1, fines imposed<lb/>
by Public Safety for a multitude of<lb/>
parking and traffic violations will<lb/>
be i ncreased. The la test rise i n f i nes,<lb/>
approved in the last meeting of the<lb/>
Traffic &amp; Parking Committee, is<lb/>
the second such hike in two years.<lb/>
The across the board increase<lb/>
includes jumps ranging from $5 to<lb/>
$35. Offenses such as jaywalking<lb/>
and unregistrated bicycle will<lb/>
carry a $10 fine, the smallest on the<lb/>
list. The penalty for parking in a<lb/>
handicapped-only slot becomes a<lb/>
$50 fine, a more than tripling of the<lb/>
present $15 violation.<lb/>
Other pertinent new fine fees<lb/>
are as follows; unregistered ve-<lb/>
hicle, $35 - a $15 hike; freshmen<lb/>
sticker violation, $25, parking in a<lb/>
no parking area, $25, parking in<lb/>
the wrong zone, $15. All others<lb/>
will see at least a $5 boost.<lb/>
The jump was instituted by<lb/>
the committee as an alternative to<lb/>
raising parking stickers for which<lb/>
students, faculty and staff pur-<lb/>
chase for specific lots, according to<lb/>
Pat Gertz, the assistant director of<lb/>
public safety and a member of the<lb/>
parking board.<lb/>
"Before rising the decal fee,<lb/>
we decided that the person who<lb/>
illegally parks should experience<lb/>
an increase Gertz said.<lb/>
Although the fine hike will<lb/>
help to alleviate the shinking park-<lb/>
ing revenues, it will not prevent<lb/>
the unevitable, Gertz said refer-<lb/>
ring to the enluctability of sticker<lb/>
increasesin the near future. Sticker<lb/>
prices should see a jump by 1991,<lb/>
Gertz said. Revenues from decals<lb/>
and fines revert back to the park-<lb/>
ing and traffic fund to pay for<lb/>
personnel and aid in the purchase<lb/>
of new land for potential parking.<lb/>
Presently, sticker prices at<lb/>
ECU are the lowest of the three<lb/>
largest universities in the state with<lb/>
a $50 annual fee for students, fac-<lb/>
ulty and staff wishing to park on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
At the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill(UNC-CH)<lb/>
and North Carolina State Univer-<lb/>
sity (NCSU), parking stickers can<lb/>
cost as high as $210 per annuam<lb/>
for premium parking slots. Finge<lb/>
parking - slots in a remote section<lb/>
of the campus - are the lowest<lb/>
priced parking decal at NCSU with<lb/>
a yearly fee of $78.<lb/>
Gertz did point out that bi-<lb/>
cycle registration is free at Public<lb/>
Safety for those students who wish<lb/>
to escape the escalating costs of<lb/>
parking all together.<lb/>
Revised Parking Fines<lb/>
(Effective 9190)<lb/>
�Parking Meter Violation $10<lb/>
�Wrong Zone Violation $15<lb/>
�No Parking Area $25<lb/>
�Freshmen Wrong Zone $25<lb/>
�Unregistered Vehicle $35<lb/>
�Moving Violation$35<lb/>
�Handicapped Violations50<lb/>
�Reckless Operation $30<lb/>
�Intentionally Moving Ticket<lb/>
From OneVehicle to Another $20<lb/>
�Dangerous Littering $35<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
2 Live Crew tests First<lb/>
Admendment stands.<lb/>
State and Nation7<lb/>
Applications to col-<lb/>
leges are on decline na-<lb/>
tionwide.<lb/>
Features8<lb/>
Rita Long offers stu-<lb/>
dents advice on listing pri-<lb/>
orioties.<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
Comics6<lb/>
Sports10<lb/>
Dudley High School<lb/>
captures crown in the<lb/>
annual Pirate Basketball<lb/>
camp<lb/>
Inside:<lb/>
Satire Tabloid<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0002"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
4<lb/>
2 The East Carolinian, June 27,1990<lb/>
ECU Briefs<lb/>
Patients to receive care at new clinic<lb/>
Patients with muscular dystrophy will be able to receive clinicil<lb/>
and follow-up care specific to their disease at a new outpatient clinic<lb/>
established by the department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation<lb/>
at the ECU School of Medicine and Pitt County Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
A ribbon-cutting ceremony for the clinic, which will be housed in<lb/>
the Regional Rehabilitation Center at Pitt Memorial, will be held June<lb/>
21 at 10 a.m. Officials from the ECU medical school, Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital, the Muscular Dystrophy Association and the City<lb/>
of Greenville and Pitt County governments will participate.<lb/>
The clinic'sestablishment at the medical center provides a third site<lb/>
for muscular dystrophy patients living in North Carolina to receive<lb/>
services which range from medical evaluation to respiratory, physical<lb/>
and occupational therapy. Other clinics in the state are located at Duke<lb/>
University Medical Center in Durham and North Carolina Memorial<lb/>
Hospital in Chapel Hill. The ECU clinic will operate one day per month.<lb/>
"Theclinic here is patterned after others supported by the Muscular<lb/>
Dystrophy Association said Dr. John Eisele, co-director of the clinic<lb/>
and a specialist in physical rehabilitation. 'The new clinic will incorpo-<lb/>
rate thorough diagnoses and evaluation for this complex disease, a<lb/>
strong collaborative research component, and a linkage to community<lb/>
agencies needed by muscular dystrophy patients and their referring<lb/>
physicians.<lb/>
A $12,51X1 grant has been awarded to the clinic by the Muscular<lb/>
Dystrophy Association for development of the clinic's program.<lb/>
ECU trustees to have short meeting<lb/>
An abbreviated schedule for the quarterly meeting of the ECU<lb/>
board of trustees July 13 has been arranged to fit the university's<lb/>
summer energy-saving schedule. The board will meet at 10 a.m. Friday<lb/>
morning and end its session by 11:30 a.m when the campuses close for<lb/>
the weekend to save utilities costs.<lb/>
The four and a half-day per week schedule has been in effect since<lb/>
May 14. ECU employees work a 40 hour week by reporting at 7:30 a.m.<lb/>
Monday through Friday and having a half hour lunch break.<lb/>
Trustee committees on athletics, development and finance and<lb/>
facilities are scheduled prior to the full board meeting July 13. On July<lb/>
12, trustees, spouses and guests will have a social and dinner at the<lb/>
Chancellor's residence and attend an ECU Summer Theatre production<lb/>
of "The Cocktail Hour<lb/>
Campus Briefs<lb/>
States given new powers on abortion<lb/>
The Supreme Court, in a splintered decision, gave states new<lb/>
powers limiting teen-age girls' access to abortions. The court by a 6-3<lb/>
vote upheld an Ohio law requiring one parent be notified before a<lb/>
female 18 or younger be allowed to have an abortion. In a separate ?-4<lb/>
ruling, the court rejected a Minnesota law requiring notification of both<lb/>
biological parents.<lb/>
Right to die limited by 6-3 vote<lb/>
The U.S. Supreme Court, in a 6-3 vote, gave the state of Missouri the<lb/>
right to stop the Cruzan family from withdrawing tubes to end their<lb/>
daughter's life. If Nancy Cruzan would have made her wishes clear<lb/>
while still competent, her parents could have disconnected life support<lb/>
systems. The court said the state is entitled to guard against potential<lb/>
abuses in such situations.<lb/>
Federal agents raid public housing<lb/>
Federal agents in four cities Monday raided public housing units of<lb/>
suspected drug dealers, but could not go ahead with plans to evict the<lb/>
tenants due to a federal court order that requires there be a hearing<lb/>
before eviction. U.S. marshals served notices of intent to seize leases<lb/>
under a 1988 federal law that allowsevictionsof suspected drug dealers<lb/>
even without a conviction.<lb/>
Judge rules on booby trap case<lb/>
A Denver judge rejected an agreement to keep Philip Connaghan<lb/>
out of jail for reckless manslaughter in settinga shotgun booby trap that<lb/>
killed a suspected burglar in a warehouse. Judge Richard Spriggs<lb/>
ordered Connaghan, 46, to stand trial and face a possible nine-year<lb/>
prison term in thedeath of Michael McComb, 19. Spriggs said thedeath<lb/>
was "non-justifiable<lb/>
U.S. favors helping earthquake victims<lb/>
Americans narrowly favor providing unconditional aid to earth-<lb/>
quake-shattered Iran. About 43 percent of people polled by USA<lb/>
TODAY favored helping quake victims. But 34 percent said they think<lb/>
the USA should help only if U.S. hostages held in Lebanon are released<lb/>
Copynght1990. USA TOOA YIApplt ColUgt InformtUon Sttu-ork<lb/>
Crime Report<lb/>
Along with summertime and warm<lb/>
weather comes the threat of poison ivy<lb/>
By Ralph Gilliland<lb/>
Peer Health Educator<lb/>
Summertime is here which<lb/>
brings people outdoors to enjoy<lb/>
the warm weather. Unfortunately,<lb/>
it also brings many into contact<lb/>
with poison ivv.<lb/>
Poison ivy plants thrive in<lb/>
areas that are warm and humid in<lb/>
the summer. In order to avoid<lb/>
andor treat poison ivy infection<lb/>
it is important to recognize the<lb/>
plant, and be aware of recom-<lb/>
mended prevention and treatment<lb/>
meth(xls.<lb/>
Being able to recognize the<lb/>
poison ivy plant is the kev to<lb/>
avoidance. In eastern states poi-<lb/>
son ivv has three leaflets which<lb/>
.ire smooth edged.<lb/>
Generally, poison ivy can be a<lb/>
shrub, ground cover, or woody<lb/>
vine covered with hairy aerial<lb/>
rootlets<lb/>
Poison ivy enjoys sun and is<lb/>
most common on floodplains.<lb/>
bottomlands, and along edges of<lb/>
forest and road wa vs. In the spring,<lb/>
young leaves appear red and<lb/>
glossy but in summer they turn<lb/>
green.<lb/>
An allergic reaction can be<lb/>
brought on by both direct and<lb/>
indirect exposure to poison ivy.<lb/>
First, direct methods of expo-<lb/>
sure from poison ivv are brought<lb/>
about by touching anv part oi the<lb/>
poison ivy, plant roots, leaves or<lb/>
flowers.<lb/>
indirect methods which bring<lb/>
on an allergic reaction from poi-<lb/>
son ivyarccontact with pets, cloth-<lb/>
ing, and the smoke from burning<lb/>
ivy plants.<lb/>
If you are exposed to poison<lb/>
ivy, an itchy rash mayappear, and<lb/>
in a matter of five to hours vou<lb/>
may experience a painful, persis-<lb/>
tent, and irritating itch accompa-<lb/>
nied by blisters. These blisters<lb/>
contain urushiol which is a com-<lb/>
bination of skin-irntating chemi-<lb/>
cals found in the plant's sticky-<lb/>
sap. The oozing blisters can re-<lb/>
main for up to two to three weeks.<lb/>
Theability to recognize symp-<lb/>
toms of an allergic reaction from<lb/>
exposure to poison ivv will help<lb/>
lead to a fast, effective recovery<lb/>
The symptoms of poison ivy<lb/>
include: redness and minor swill-<lb/>
ing, blisters, bumps and bubbles<lb/>
and itching.<lb/>
If suffering from an allergic<lb/>
reaction from exposure to poison<lb/>
ivy the following treatment meas-<lb/>
ures must be taken immediately<lb/>
or relief. The sooner treatment<lb/>
starts for poison ivy, the better.<lb/>
Handle clothes and shoes<lb/>
carefully until you have had a<lb/>
chance to wash them.<lb/>
Use of soap is not recom-<lb/>
mended. It can spread urushiol<lb/>
over the skin.<lb/>
Apply herbal teas to the rash,<lb/>
not to open sores. Add oatmeal to<lb/>
a bath. Flush with clod water.<lb/>
Bathe in hot water. Applv aloe<lb/>
vera gel. Flush with vinegar.<lb/>
The best way to ensure your-<lb/>
self of not becoming exposed to<lb/>
the poison ivy plant is through<lb/>
proper prevention measures.<lb/>
Avoidanceof the ivv plant is most<lb/>
important. In doing so, the ability<lb/>
to recognize the plant's physical<lb/>
characteristics and know its ta.<lb/>
vorite places of habitat is a n<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
On the other hand, for th,y<lb/>
unfortunateoneswhoareexpt<lb/>
to poison ivy, proper treatment<lb/>
methods listed should by put int.<lb/>
action as soon as possible in order<lb/>
to east the painful, persisting, and<lb/>
irritating itch of poison ivy<lb/>
If the allergic reaction causes<lb/>
any unusual and alarming<lb/>
effects such as swelling,dizzins<lb/>
breathingdifficulryorothersvrnp-<lb/>
tomsofillnessafterbeingexpos.c<lb/>
to poison ivy, contact the Student<lb/>
Health Service at 757-6841<lb/>
"To Your Health" is a wctk <lb/>
health education and informal, n<lb/>
column. Please direct any qu<lb/>
tion, comments or suggestion �<lb/>
757-6794.<lb/>
Emergency services<lb/>
to meet at the Hilton<lb/>
Intoxicated subjects given citations<lb/>
June 18<lb/>
1847�An officer checked out at Carrett Residence Hall in referenct.<lb/>
to alcohol violations. Campus citations were issued.<lb/>
June 19<lb/>
1439 � An officer checked out at Fleming Residence Hall in refer<lb/>
ence to larceny of a table from the lobby.<lb/>
2321 � Three officers responded to Jones Residence Hall in refer<lb/>
ence to an intoxicated male. He was escorted away.<lb/>
June 20<lb/>
1345 � An officer took a wallet larceny report at Public Safety. The<lb/>
owner reported recovery of the wallet.<lb/>
1844 � An officer checked out at Jones Residence Hall in reference<lb/>
to a subject that had hurt his back. The subject did not need transport of<lb/>
rescue.<lb/>
June 21<lb/>
2306 � Two officers responded to Aycock Residence Hall in refer-<lb/>
ence to a report of subjects on the roof.<lb/>
June 22<lb/>
0101 � Three officers responded on scene to intoxicated juveniles at<lb/>
Belk Residence Hall.<lb/>
2159 � Two officers responded on scene to Jones Residence Hall in<lb/>
reference to a report of an assault on a female.<lb/>
June 23<lb/>
1800 � An officer responded on scene at Greene Residence Hall in<lb/>
reference to assisting parents in finding their child. The child was<lb/>
located.<lb/>
June 24<lb/>
1359 � An officer escorted orientation student with severe stomach<lb/>
pains to Pitt Memorial Hospital emergency room.<lb/>
June 25<lb/>
0414 � Two of ficers checked on a su spicious subject sou th of Garret t<lb/>
Residence Hall. The subject was identified as a non-student and was<lb/>
advised to leave campus.<lb/>
Tht Crimt Report it tmktn from official ECU PiHe 5ftti log<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
When Hurricane Hugo struck<lb/>
the South Carolina coast and<lb/>
moved through North Carolina<lb/>
last tall,emergency responsecrews<lb/>
puttheirpl.insintoeffect.Buthow<lb/>
well did the plans work?<lb/>
those directly in charge of<lb/>
emergency preparedness and<lb/>
medical servicesduring Hurricane<lb/>
Hugo will meet here lune 22 to<lb/>
share their experiences and les-<lb/>
sons learned during one of the<lb/>
most destructive hurricanes in<lb/>
history. The conference will be<lb/>
held at the Hilton Inn from 8:30<lb/>
a.m. until 4 p.m.<lb/>
Conference co-coordinator<lb/>
Dr. Richard C. Hunt, East Caro-<lb/>
lina University professor of emer-<lb/>
gency medicine and chair of Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital's dis-<lb/>
aster planning committee, said<lb/>
officials will discuss the strengths<lb/>
and weaknesses of their disaster<lb/>
plans. "We hope this conference<lb/>
will provide a forum where those<lb/>
responsible for managing future<lb/>
disasterscan learn from those who<lb/>
experienced Hurricane Hugo<lb/>
Hunt said.<lb/>
Speakers include Dennis<lb/>
Clark, director of the Charleston<lb/>
County Emergency Preparedness<lb/>
Division, recently featured on the<lb/>
Division, recently featured on the<lb/>
CBS program "Rescue 911 Clark<lb/>
oversaw the evacuation of an esti-<lb/>
mated 120.000 Charleston County-<lb/>
residents and commanded the<lb/>
Charleston County Emergency<lb/>
Operations Center during the<lb/>
hurricane.<lb/>
Frank J. Hoffmeister,director<lb/>
of Mecklenburg County Emer-<lb/>
gency Medical Services in Char-<lb/>
lotte, will relate experiences in<lb/>
coord mating the activities of his<lb/>
agency with other emergency<lb/>
services during the preparation<lb/>
for and response to Hurricane<lb/>
Hugo.<lb/>
Dr. Richard V. Aghababian,<lb/>
chairman oi the division of emer-<lb/>
gency medicine at the University<lb/>
of Massachusetts Medical Center<lb/>
and an internationally recognized<lb/>
expert in disaster medicine, will<lb/>
compare! lurricanel fugowith his<lb/>
experiences with cither disasters<lb/>
such as the 188 earthquake in<lb/>
Armenia.<lb/>
Other speakers include Dr.<lb/>
fackson Allison, chairman ol the<lb/>
ECU Department of Emergency<lb/>
Medicine; Leon Boyd,trainmgand<lb/>
quality control supervisor with<lb/>
Charleston County Emergency<lb/>
Medical Services; Dr. Kenneth L.<lb/>
DeHart, director of the Grand<lb/>
Strand General Hospital Emer-<lb/>
gency Department in Myrtle<lb/>
Beach, S.C; Charlie Hall, weather<lb/>
anchor with WCSC-TV in Char-<lb/>
leston; Grandee Hardv, disaster<lb/>
control officer at the Medical<lb/>
University of South Carolina<lb/>
(MUSC) Medical Center; and<lb/>
Alonzo W. Nesmith Jr disaster<lb/>
control officer at MUSC Medical<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Sharky's<lb/>
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"We Free Pour All Our Drinks"<lb/>
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.Wjth this Coupon<lb/>
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Advertising<lb/>
Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Ken Earley<lb/>
Randy Evans<lb/>
Julie Roscoe<lb/>
John Semelsberger<lb/>
Shay Sitfinger<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
per column inch<lb/>
National$5.75<lb/>
Local Open Rate  $4.25<lb/>
Bulk &amp; Frequency Contract<lb/>
Discounts Available<lb/>
<lb/>
Business Hours: Monday - Thursday 7:30 - 5:00 Friday 7:30 -1130 a.m. Phone 757-6366<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0003"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, June 27,1990 3<lb/>
High schoolers gain interest in science careers<lb/>
KCU News Bureau<lb/>
Eighteen high school students<lb/>
are it Ft 11 tor a special two-week<lb/>
program to encourage their inter<lb/>
est in careers m st left) e<lb/>
The rising 10th graders, all<lb/>
minority students from Pitt<lb/>
County, are participating in the<lb/>
BCU Science Track Enhancement<lb/>
Program (s.T.Il). In the program<lb/>
the Students tfe working individu-<lb/>
ally with ECU faculty who teach<lb/>
and conduct research in such ar-<lb/>
eas as biologv, marine science and<lb/>
medicine.<lb/>
"ECU faculty from several<lb/>
several science areas sefVC as<lb/>
mentors to the students said Dr.<lb/>
Mary Ann Rose, assistant to the<lb/>
Chancellor for special assign<lb/>
ments. Dr. Rose helped to develop<lb/>
and initiate the program at ECU<lb/>
five years ago.<lb/>
"The students are assigned to<lb/>
work with a mentor because a<lb/>
canngand inspiringindividualcan<lb/>
often make thedifferencebetween<lb/>
pursuing or abandoning a career<lb/>
choice she said<lb/>
"When mentors adopt stu<lb/>
dents for the two week period, we<lb/>
believe there is a greater likeli-<lb/>
hood of the students pursuing<lb/>
science and mathematics careers<lb/>
she said<lb/>
All but three of the first 20<lb/>
students participating in the pro<lb/>
gram fi ve yea rs ago wi 11 be a ttend -<lb/>
ing college next fall. ECU will<lb/>
continue to follow the students to<lb/>
see if they pursue careers in sci-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
Students chosen for the pro-<lb/>
gram were recommended bv guid-<lb/>
ance counselors in the Pitt county<lb/>
Schools, who submitted names of<lb/>
students to participate in the pro-<lb/>
gram I he final 18 were chosen<lb/>
from this group.<lb/>
The students spend six to<lb/>
seven hoursa day in their assigned<lb/>
duties.<lb/>
"One thing that is different<lb/>
about this program is that wedon't<lb/>
seek the gifted and talented stu-<lb/>
dents said Dr. Christine Fitch,an<lb/>
instructor in the ECU School of<lb/>
Education and the director of<lb/>
STEP.<lb/>
"We're look for the average<lb/>
student who has potential she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"The students experience the<lb/>
practical side of the pbs and learn<lb/>
that these jobs are not just glam-<lb/>
our she said. "They arc exposed<lb/>
to the nuts and bolts of the field of<lb/>
science<lb/>
Some of the students have been<lb/>
assigned to work with medical<lb/>
doctors in the School of Medicine.<lb/>
Othersare working :n the Institute<lb/>
for Coastal and Marine Resources,<lb/>
the Department of Biology and in<lb/>
the Department of Chemistry.<lb/>
In addition, they attend eve-<lb/>
ning seminars on topics dealing<lb/>
with self-esteem, career choices,<lb/>
job expectations, job performance<lb/>
and behavior, and money man-<lb/>
agement. Later this summer the<lb/>
students will visit some other col-<lb/>
lege campuses in the state as well.<lb/>
"We're very encouraged with<lb/>
the results we've seen so far said<lb/>
Dr. Rose. "We feel like we've raised<lb/>
their aspirations for college by<lb/>
exposing them to a university set-<lb/>
ting and we believe many of these<lb/>
young people will be selecting<lb/>
careers in science because of the<lb/>
experiences they've had with our<lb/>
doctors and scientists here at<lb/>
ECU she said.<lb/>
Support for the STEP, pro-<lb/>
gram is provided by Heilig-Mey-<lb/>
ers Furniture Company of Green-<lb/>
ville and the Du Pont Co. of Kin-<lb/>
ston.<lb/>
The STEP, participants and<lb/>
their schools m Pitt County in-<lb/>
clude Frances A Brown and April<lb/>
R. Gray from E.B. Aycock Jr. High<lb/>
School; Temekka S. Barnes, Sha wn<lb/>
D. Bridges, LaTasha Dixon, Sab-<lb/>
nna Gunter and Kevin L Stormer<lb/>
of Farmville Central High School;<lb/>
Jayme E. Bell of �orth Pitt High<lb/>
School; Hope L. Copeland, Gary<lb/>
L. Payton and Roger M. Rice of<lb/>
Ayden Grifton High School;<lb/>
Glenda C. Dar els, Todre C<lb/>
Daniels, Brian N. farper, Delquan<lb/>
D. Lynch and Gv endolyn D. Ty-<lb/>
son of D.H. Con' y High School;<lb/>
and LaTasha Dix x Robert L or-<lb/>
dan and Kevin V Vines of Agnes<lb/>
FulliloveComnv -litv School.<lb/>
DINNER SPECIALS<lb/>
only $5.95<lb/>
Served Sun - Thurs.<lb/>
5 pm -10 pm<lb/>
w<lb/>
REGGAE SPLASH<lb/>
<lb/>
June 30th Morehead City<lb/>
Tickets $15.00<lb/>
Contact Bernie<lb/>
the taste of old mexi co<lb/>
521 Cotanche St. - Greenville<lb/>
757-1666<lb/>
Suspects<lb/>
tenant Gurley contacted the two<lb/>
victims.<lb/>
Neither victim could identify<lb/>
the SUSpeCl from the photo lineup<lb/>
s(i( iurlev tmk them one by one to<lb/>
the court house. The staff member<lb/>
was unable to identify the suspect.<lb/>
I lowever, the Ft l student recog<lb/>
nized him immediately<lb/>
Stocks is currently placed<lb/>
undora$25,000bond and isawait-<lb/>
ine trial in Pitt County jail and due<lb/>
to the charge of attempted rape<lb/>
will be tried as an adult in Pitt<lb/>
County Pistrut Court on August<lb/>
Continued<lb/>
The second incident involv-<lb/>
ing Al-A war occurred on June 7,at<lb/>
approximately 2:30 a.m. at Jarvis<lb/>
dorm, according to Gurley. In this<lb/>
case, both the victim and suspect<lb/>
were acquainted and lived in the<lb/>
larvis Earlier that night, Al-Awar<lb/>
and the victim had spoken at<lb/>
Bogie's Night Club but she left the<lb/>
downtown establishment early<lb/>
because she was intoxicated, ac-<lb/>
cording to Gurley<lb/>
Shortly after 2 am, she re-<lb/>
ceived a knock at her door. The<lb/>
alledged perpetrator was one<lb/>
Nadiem Al-Awar. Gurley stated<lb/>
that Al-Awar "slithered" into the<lb/>
victim's room, closed and locked<lb/>
the door, and began kissing and<lb/>
fondling the victim.<lb/>
Gurley said that according to<lb/>
the victim, he then pushed her<lb/>
down on the bed, and although<lb/>
she was resistmgdunng the whole<lb/>
incident, proceeded to forcefully<lb/>
remove her undergarments<lb/>
against her will. A knock at the<lb/>
door halted Al-Awar temporarily,<lb/>
but he told her not to answer it.<lb/>
igel<lb/>
ageo<lb/>
��ll ut<lb/>
Medical<lb/>
However, she m<lb/>
from i<lb/>
door.<lb/>
The victim stated that if she<lb/>
had not received the knock at the<lb/>
door, she felt that Al-Awar would<lb/>
have taken advantage of her in-<lb/>
toxicated state and would have<lb/>
had sexual intercourse with her<lb/>
without her consent, Gurley said.<lb/>
According to Gurley, Al-Awar<lb/>
has been charged with attempted<lb/>
rape but is out on a S 15,000 bond.<lb/>
No court date has been confirmed<lb/>
at this time<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
director oi Student (pportunities<lb/>
and Minority Affairs,said it might<lb/>
be .i new trend among minority<lb/>
schools that may predict an in<lb/>
crease in women, both black and<lb/>
white, enrolling in medicine<lb/>
Ranging in age from 14 to 50,<lb/>
the Students learn concepts in Si i<lb/>
ences such as biochemistry and<lb/>
physiology; they also learn read<lb/>
ing, studs and communication<lb/>
skilis as well as test preparation<lb/>
for the MCAT (Medical College<lb/>
Admissions Test)<lb/>
"The program has been highlj<lb/>
successful,it ism its twelfth vear<lb/>
Dr. Metcalf said.<lb/>
The "Future Doctor" summer<lb/>
program is aimed to bring stu-<lb/>
dents to the ECU medical school to<lb/>
see it tor themselves. They have<lb/>
the opportunity to prepare and<lb/>
improve their background for<lb/>
medical school.<lb/>
The initial planning started in<lb/>
1976 and the funding for the<lb/>
medical program came in 1978.<lb/>
The federal government deter-<lb/>
mines eligibility for the program<lb/>
since it puts in most of the money.<lb/>
Burroughs-WeUcome also helps<lb/>
out on a local level. Eligibility for<lb/>
the disadvantaged students is<lb/>
determined by their SAT scores<lb/>
andor their economic status.<lb/>
Dr. Metcalf said that thev are<lb/>
not only increasing representation<lb/>
of minorities but in doing so are<lb/>
contributing in fulfilling oneof the<lb/>
missions of the medical school,<lb/>
which is to provide medical edu-<lb/>
cation opportunities to minorities.<lb/>
Dr. Metcalf said, "We feel we are<lb/>
making a very strong and positive<lb/>
contribution to the ECU medical<lb/>
school<lb/>
" There is a limited applicant<lb/>
pool because there are more black<lb/>
college age men in jail than in<lb/>
school. Thereare also limited funds<lb/>
available for their medical educa-<lb/>
tion Dr. Metcalf said. The small<lb/>
numbersof mi nontiesin medicine<lb/>
involve many other factors.<lb/>
Smaller pools may be related<lb/>
to culturally biased tests, although<lb/>
not intentional, are very challeng-<lb/>
ing to the minority student. There<lb/>
Prevention<lb/>
are a lack of sufficient role models<lb/>
and mentors for minorities in the<lb/>
medical field. "There are so many<lb/>
educational opportunities within<lb/>
the small pool that medicine is in<lb/>
competition with so many other<lb/>
professions, like law, engineering<lb/>
and computer science as well as<lb/>
other health professions Dr.<lb/>
Metcalf said.<lb/>
Dr. Saunders, coordinator and<lb/>
counselorof the summer program,<lb/>
said they try to find people who<lb/>
can benefit from the program, who<lb/>
might have a financial or educa-<lb/>
tional battle in medical school. The<lb/>
students rarely have problems in<lb/>
achieving academically; however<lb/>
trouble for many of these very<lb/>
intelligent students lies in com-<lb/>
munication, social or cultural prob-<lb/>
lems.<lb/>
"It's interesting work that I<lb/>
have, the most exciting part is<lb/>
working one to one with the stu-<lb/>
dents Dr. Saunders said.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
�S: &amp; Pumps �verfthing i" ftoC<lb/>
OS9 inon off 52 10 off<lb/>
at least<lb/>
20<lb/>
Store<lb/>
wide<lb/>
10 Gallon Deluxe<lb/>
Freshwater Kit<lb/>
includes<lb/>
� Tank� Air Pump<lb/>
� Hood� Food<lb/>
� Lights<lb/>
� UndergravelFilter<lb/>
� Air Line<lb/>
� Heater � 10 lb. Choice Gravelonly<lb/>
� Net � Decoration � DechlorS39<lb/>
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20 Gallon High<lb/>
Saltwater Kit<lb/>
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� Heater<lb/>
� 20 lb. Crushed Coral<lb/>
only<lb/>
tii-OO<lb/>
PTA Pizza<lb/>
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Coca-Cola<lb/>
Balloons for the Kids<lb/>
Sale Ends Sunday<lb/>
Financing Available<lb/>
Open until Midnight Friday<lb/>
9 a.m. 9 p.m. Saturday<lb/>
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200 Gallon Tank,<lb/>
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$599.00<lb/>
Aquariurt<lb/>
� Be alert of your surround-<lb/>
ings. Use the buddy system when<lb/>
walking or jogging.<lb/>
� If you must walk alone,<lb/>
walk briskly in well lighted areas<lb/>
and walk with confidence.<lb/>
� Know in advance where<lb/>
you are going.<lb/>
� Know your limits and<lb/>
do not overindulge in alcohol use.<lb/>
Do not use drugs.<lb/>
� Trust people with cau-<lb/>
tion and know your dates. Make<lb/>
your feelings clear and be asser-<lb/>
tive.<lb/>
� Trust your instincts. If<lb/>
you feel uneasv or uncomfortable,<lb/>
there is usually a good reason.<lb/>
� Keep doors to automo-<lb/>
biles and homes locked at all times.<lb/>
� Attend Rape Prevention<lb/>
Programs to stay informed.<lb/>
ECU's Crime Prevention<lb/>
Division offers a number of pro-<lb/>
grams concerning rape preven-<lb/>
tion, date and acquaintance rape,<lb/>
and simple self defense. For more<lb/>
information, contact ECU's Crime<lb/>
Prevention Division. Get involved<lb/>
Lo ensure your own safety.<lb/>
SPECIAL BULLETIN FOR ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
ECU LONG ISLAND<lb/>
ICE TEA PARTY IS BACK!<lb/>
IT'S A FRIDAY NIGHT<lb/>
ADVENTURE IN FUN!<lb/>
DATE: Ev.hV Ff o.iy<lb/>
TIME fi00utl.<lb/>
' � . PLACE: P �- .d ) G e<lb/>
i. i � 11 � � �11<lb/>
�M- I<lb/>
14th St. and Charles Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville 757.QQ56<lb/>
RAMADA INN C.RHl NYU U<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0004"/><lb/>
oUje Saat Carolinian<lb/>
Jostl'll L JENKINS JR General Manager<lb/>
Michael G. Martin, tnmmging Editor<lb/>
ADAM Bl ankenship, fhwor oMJivrttsin<lb/>
Tim Hampton, News Editor<lb/>
Makli Morin, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Caroline Cusck, Fortunes Editor<lb/>
DEANNA NfEVGLOGKL Assl Feafure Editor<lb/>
DOUG Morkis, Sports Editor '<lb/>
EARLE M. McAULEY, Asst. Sports I ditor<lb/>
SOOTT Mawvfi i , Satire Editor<lb/>
PaU a GlGEE, Mate and Nation Editor<lb/>
PtIONc; LUONG, Credit Manager<lb/>
STUART RosNER, Business Manager<lb/>
Michael Koie, Ad Tech Supervisor<lb/>
Tory BARBOUR, Circulation Manager<lb/>
TRACY WEED, Production Manager<lb/>
CHARLES WiLUNCHAM, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
STEVE Reid, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Deborah S. Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
iTHAJKitJosreor<lb/>
a pea? mm vk<lb/>
new STINGER,<lb/>
fit EmmCuroluuan has saved iho Fast Carolina campus community since It25, emphasizing information thai directly<lb/>
affects EC students Daring the ECTI summer sessions. I'he East Carolinian publishes once a week with a circulation of<lb/>
5,000 Tht EastVirofillMfl reserves the right to refuse or discontinue any advertisements that discriminate on the basis of<lb/>
age. sex. creed Of national ongin The masthead editorial in each edition does not necessarily represent the views of one<lb/>
individual, but. rather, is a majority opinion t the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all<lb/>
points of vie 1 etters should be limited to 250 words or less. For purposes of decency and brevity. The East Carolinian<lb/>
reserves the right to edit letters for publication 1 etters should be addressed to The Editor. The East Carolinian, Publications<lb/>
Bldi . ECU, Greenville, NC. 2784. or call tW 757 M66.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Wednesday, lime 27. 1990<lb/>
Rap group tests right to free speech<lb/>
i antw2Xiiici ArtwS (JMtr&amp;t�&amp;rrvrt6Z suMj <lb/>
An Ideal View<lb/>
Clothes can never cover the heart<lb/>
It seems that more and more freedoms<lb/>
granted bv the C onstitvition are being challenged<lb/>
each day. Ihe recent case of local governments<lb/>
throughout the nation banning 2 Live Crew's al-<lb/>
bums and concerts is a direct infringement on the<lb/>
group's freedom of speech<lb/>
Federal district judge losoGonzales upheld<lb/>
the Biowatd County Sheriff's Department's charge<lb/>
that the rap group's album Nasty As They Wianm Pi'<lb/>
was obscene. That ruling, in rum, sparked contro-<lb/>
versy throughout the nation. And when 2 L tveCrew<lb/>
gave a concert in Brow ard County a few days later.<lb/>
members of t he ra p group were arrested for viola ting<lb/>
the county's obscenity laws.<lb/>
And. as if the arrests were not enough, sev-<lb/>
eral record stores elsewhere in Florida and Texas<lb/>
have pulled the group's albums from the shelves,<lb/>
tearing they may be arrested ur the same violations.<lb/>
This is one effect ot obscenity rulings that is rarer)<lb/>
mentioned such rulings inevitably lead to unnec<lb/>
essary self censorship, so that a ruling has much<lb/>
farther reaching effects than it has bv law.<lb/>
'ot everyone likes the lyrics of the rap band<lb/>
in fact, for the most part, main people find their<lb/>
messages repulsive. And even though their concerts<lb/>
may contain "vulgar' acts that go along with with<lb/>
their lvncs the fans know what kind ot show they are<lb/>
in for before thev even purchase the tickets But the<lb/>
government should not have the authority to tell<lb/>
these groups that their music is not liked or wanted;<lb/>
that is the duty oi the consumer<lb/>
The consumer is what makes America live<lb/>
His choice determines which markets thrive and<lb/>
which tail 1 ocal governments stepped l nl of line in<lb/>
this case, and it is up to their voters to let them know<lb/>
that thev were wrong<lb/>
Why has the government not taken a harder<lb/>
look at the concerts and albums of some of the<lb/>
nation's comedians1 Eddie Murphy and Richard<lb/>
Prvor, two of the most notorious vulgar (and ob-<lb/>
scene, profane, etc. )eomediansof all time have never<lb/>
faced the challenges 2 Live Crew recently suffered.<lb/>
In recent years, there has been no record of either of<lb/>
the two (or any other comedian for that fact) being<lb/>
arrested tor an obscene concert.<lb/>
Several vears ago, heavy metal star Ozzy<lb/>
Osborne was banned from performing in Greens-<lb/>
boro. N.C for what Greensboro Coliseum promot-<lb/>
ers telt was a vulgar concert. But there was never a<lb/>
court case concerning the situation.<lb/>
Certainly, Murphv.Pryor and others should<lb/>
not be censored. But neither should 2 Live Crew.<lb/>
The case of 2 Live Crew is unique in that the<lb/>
local governments are the guilty parties by choosing<lb/>
to ban the "obscene" material. That alone is wrong<lb/>
viMUM it is the choice of the individual to purchase<lb/>
theatbum or pav to go to the concert The people who<lb/>
buy 2 I ive Crew's albums and see them in concert<lb/>
know exactly what they are going to hear.<lb/>
People have the right to choose what thev<lb/>
want to listen to or what they want to watch. If<lb/>
someone sees a program on television and finds it<lb/>
offensive, he can simply change the channel. In the<lb/>
case ot records, a disclaimer is even placed on the<lb/>
album cover so that the potential buyer will know<lb/>
that the contents contain obscene language.<lb/>
Not onlv do these bans infringe on the First<lb/>
mendment's guarantee of free speech, but they<lb/>
could set a precedent for local governments to start<lb/>
regulating what messages groups may choose to<lb/>
express. Once the machinery is in place for suppress-<lb/>
ing expression of one view, it remains in place for the<lb/>
suppression of others. That's frightening.<lb/>
By Caroline Cusick<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
At a friend's apartment, I saw<lb/>
a picture of a kitten standing with<lb/>
its front paws perched on the nm<lb/>
of a gold fish bowl. l"he kitten<lb/>
alone looked innocent and harm<lb/>
less. However, in the given situ-<lb/>
ation I have reason to suspect the<lb/>
outward appearance of the furry<lb/>
critter was drastically opposed to<lb/>
the intent of its stomach<lb/>
We are a lot like kittens in one<lb/>
since. What we wear on the out-<lb/>
side is totally separate from what<lb/>
we wear on our heartsand minds.<lb/>
Different from the kitten, we<lb/>
can ch(xse how we look on the<lb/>
outside. The kitten has the same<lb/>
fur every day. We change our<lb/>
clothes and change our appear-<lb/>
ance sever times each oi<lb/>
Many times people can tell<lb/>
where we 're going or where we've<lb/>
been' By wTBR wtf weSnTHpW<lb/>
clothes, people can tell it we re<lb/>
going to church to class, to sleep,<lb/>
to exercise or downtown to party.<lb/>
What we choose to wear re-<lb/>
flectsouractivities ur personali-<lb/>
ties, ou r preferenoesand our tastes<lb/>
Our clothes also can reflect our<lb/>
musical preferences. Remember<lb/>
all the Madonna-wanna-besof the<lb/>
past? How did vou know they<lb/>
liked her music7 Their appear-<lb/>
ances gave it away. Teen-age girls<lb/>
in church youth groups wear their<lb/>
hair long and wear black hats to<lb/>
look like Amy Grant. People who<lb/>
like the Grateful Dead often wear<lb/>
tie-dyed clothes with dancing<lb/>
bears and skeletons.<lb/>
People dress for success, hey<lb/>
dress to impress And if they tried,<lb/>
thev could probably dress to de-<lb/>
press.<lb/>
Americans .ire so obsessed<lb/>
with appearances that the quest<lb/>
for fitness has opened doors to<lb/>
businesses everywhere. 1 don't<lb/>
believe it s all tor the purpose of<lb/>
being healthier Most people diet<lb/>
and exercise to k�k better or. at<lb/>
the very least, look more like eve-<lb/>
ryone else<lb/>
The outward appearance of a<lb/>
�"TJtfWrrWff W JMWlKf thrrurgrr<lb/>
cosmetic surgery, haircuts, diet-<lb/>
ing and exercise or choice of cloth-<lb/>
ing. These things are easy to alter.<lb/>
The clothing of the heart is<lb/>
not aseasv tochange. Wecan never<lb/>
take it oft. We must wear it dav<lb/>
and night We cant use soap to<lb/>
Under the Boards<lb/>
clean it when it gets soiled b v<lb/>
or tears. We can only try topi <lb/>
it from unnecessary bruisi a<lb/>
abuse<lb/>
The Bible savs an exci k- �<lb/>
wife is clothed in stn i<lb/>
dignity 1 doubt that refer � i<lb/>
new brand erf dungarees Stn - g-<lb/>
dignity, shame honor tod<lb/>
tion are all doming- mentii i<lb/>
the Bible that have nothing <lb/>
with fabric or thread<lb/>
Ihe heart is vital for ph k<lb/>
life, as it is tor spiritual lif i<lb/>
told us we should protei I I<lb/>
selves by wearing a overinj j<lb/>
our bodies as well as our h� <lb/>
protect us<lb/>
He said to, "Put on tl i<lb/>
armor ot I kxi, that you n<lb/>
able to stand nrm again t<lb/>
schemes ol the devil I<lb/>
struggle is not against flesh ft<lb/>
blood, but against the ru f'<lb/>
against the powers, against I<lb/>
world forces of thus dnrkm<lb/>
against the spiritual forcesof<lb/>
edness in the heavenly pla- -<lb/>
(Ephesians r11-12)<lb/>
The full armor given to i<lb/>
ted hearts from harm is not r i<lb/>
of metal or fabric but ol faith<lb/>
See Clothes, page 5<lb/>
Gonzo journalist found not guilty<lb/>
By Tim E. Hampton<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
Maybe our judicial system<lb/>
isn't as screwed up as we make it<lb/>
out to be.<lb/>
After all, Dr. Hunter S. Th-<lb/>
ompson - originator of a genre of<lb/>
fiction labeled Gonzi journalism of<lb/>
which arose Tear &amp; Loathing in Las<lb/>
Vegas fame - was recently found<lb/>
not guilty on a crazed array oi bull<lb/>
charges linked to a one-night<lb/>
ordeal which allegedly unravelled<lb/>
like one of the salacious and bibu-<lb/>
lous plots of his novels.<lb/>
The charges assault, sexual<lb/>
assault, illegally possession ot<lb/>
drugs, drug paraphenalia and four<lb/>
sticks of dynamite were thrown<lb/>
out of court bv Colorado state<lb/>
judge Charles Buss, who said it<lb/>
was "unable to establish guilt<lb/>
beyond a reasonable doubt as<lb/>
chronicalized in a recent issue of<lb/>
The Rolling Stone. As a judge in his<lb/>
sable cloak, he might have been<lb/>
expected to say something of that<lb/>
nature, but within the confines of<lb/>
sensibilities, ole judge Buss must<lb/>
have been a bit trickled after lis-<lb/>
tening to the District Attorney's<lb/>
evidence<lb/>
It was if Thompson actually<lb/>
became the dazed and confused<lb/>
persona found in his narratives<lb/>
All the elements were present in<lb/>
his real-life chapter, illicit drug<lb/>
use, a propensity to stumble upon<lb/>
a strange conflict and the appear-<lb/>
ance oi weird characters.<lb/>
The episode began on Febru<lb/>
ary 21 when a former pornogra-<lb/>
phy film actress, former porno<lb/>
producer, former Playboy "Girl oi<lb/>
the BigTen but now present wife<lb/>
oi a Wisconsin ophtalmologist -<lb/>
Gail Palmer-Slater - called Th-<lb/>
ompson, said she was a big fan of<lb/>
the writer of gonzo fame and<lb/>
wanted to meet him<lb/>
Palmer Slater, win v a<lb/>
cationing in nearby Aspen, C<lb/>
rado with her eye doctor hust<lb/>
was invited to Owl<lb/>
Thompson's rural home I<lb/>
the Grammys on ietevisi n ind<lb/>
imbibe alcohol Fromthere I<lb/>
get hazy. She alleges men<lb/>
plate of a white granule sub '<lb/>
passed around the room<lb/>
mg oi rhompson's female J-s<lb/>
tant and two male friends<lb/>
Alter inhibitions ha<lb/>
shead, the guest then r.<lb/>
about rhompson's sexual<lb/>
ence Upon hearing the qu -<lb/>
the host so graciously k<lb/>
hot tub. According t<lb/>
Slater, she declined to<lb/>
writer in the hot rub which n i<lb/>
Fhompson irate. 1 lealleged<lb/>
one of her breasts a harsh t -<lb/>
and pushed the former .x-<lb/>
See Gonzo, page 5<lb/>
Is America's conservative movement dead? Well, what does it matter?<lb/>
fined and maintained conser-<lb/>
vatism since 1968 has now<lb/>
collapsed. Opposition to com-<lb/>
munism has been pretty much<lb/>
irrelevant for some time; op-<lb/>
position to abortion seems to<lb/>
have backfired; and now, say<lb/>
Beckel and others, opposition<lb/>
to taxes may also fizzle out.<lb/>
This seems unlikely. Bush a weakening economy.<lb/>
By Scott Maxwell<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
While it's anything but<lb/>
clear at the time of this writing<lb/>
whether Bush plans to renege<lb/>
on his now-famous (and po-<lb/>
tentially infamous) "no new<lb/>
taxes" promise, his cryptic<lb/>
quasi-hemi-demi-semi-admis-<lb/>
sion that tax increases may be<lb/>
necessary has already long suspected is a closet<lb/>
prompted speculation about moderate) is hardly the bell-<lb/>
wether of conservative trends,<lb/>
and even if he abandoned anti-<lb/>
taxism, "real" conservatives<lb/>
wouldn't necessarily go along.<lb/>
Anyway, Bush probably hasn't<lb/>
abandoned his anti-tax stance;<lb/>
in fact, he probably hasn't yet<lb/>
made up his mind about it. It suring that the state carries out unrestricted conservative so- Rather than advocating dur'<lb/>
seems more plausible that he's its function of serving the citi- cial and economic policies have stitfer penalties for drug ies<lb/>
simply "floating" the idea, as zen. For the past decade, if not left the country in an even in a stupid and misguide! at<lb/>
is his wont, trying to find some longer, liberals have increas- worse mess than Carter left it tempt to prove to the eleftor<lb/>
middle ground between the ingly allowed themselves to be in � the much-touted "longest ate how tough thev are, li4"<lb/>
conservative Republicans he defined solely by contrast to economic expansion in his- politicians should be restdji"?<lb/>
wants to see reelected and the conservatives. Conservatives tory" is a castle built on sand� the Fourth Amendment nint<lb/>
liberal Democrats whose co- set the agenda; liberals oppose and liberals could do a good that have been the major qp1'<lb/>
operation he needs to shore up it. (The liberal is the guy who job of cleaning up. They could alties of the war over dric<lb/>
(whom conservatives have<lb/>
the death of the American<lb/>
conservative movement<lb/>
The common wisdom, as<lb/>
espoused by former Mondale<lb/>
campaign manager Bob Beckel<lb/>
among others, is that the last of<lb/>
the three issues that have de-<lb/>
Whether conservatism is<lb/>
moribund or not, this is as good<lb/>
a time as any for liberals to re-<lb/>
juvenate liberalism. It's pain-<lb/>
ful to admit it, but liberalism in<lb/>
practice has largely degener-<lb/>
ated into a series of petty<lb/>
squabbles which have little if<lb/>
only wants to put half the drug start by pushing for re-regula- They should quit whining<lb/>
usersinjaiDOnallbutacouple tion of some industries that want leadership from Mr wtb<lb/>
of traditionally liberal issues really need it, like the airlines on this issue and set mp<lb/>
� abortion and the environ- In addition, liberals should providing leadership fp<lb/>
ment � liberals have been ex- abandon their current inexpli- their own ranks,<lb/>
clusively reactive rather than cable obsession with banning Liberalism is a potentfclh<lb/>
active. certain naughty words from powerful force for uusV<lb/>
What a waste. Liberals can college campuses, and should social change, and right to<lb/>
do a lot more for the country, instead work to reelect Con- America really needs it i?1 s<lb/>
anything to do with protecting and they should get out there gressmen who voted against not wait for conservatism <lb/>
individual freedoms and en- and do it. A decade of nearly the ban on flag "desecration die first.<lb/>
r<lb/>
�xn��n�ln'in�ii.i.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0005"/><lb/>
<lb/>
The East Carolinian, June 27,1990 5<lb/>
Clothes<lb/>
feith thatGod is who Hesaid Heis<lb/>
the covering which is an armor<lb/>
stronger than any metal known to<lb/>
man.<lb/>
We are told to gird ourselves<lb/>
with truth, and our breastplate<lb/>
which covers and protects our<lb/>
hearts is made of righteousness.<lb/>
Righteousness is not a state of self<lb/>
exaltation placing a person above<lb/>
reproach or correction. The word<lb/>
simply indicates a state of right<lb/>
standing with the Creator.<lb/>
For shoes, we are instructed<lb/>
to wear peace. It is hard to walk<lb/>
over people forourown gam when<lb/>
we wear shoos of peace It's also<lb/>
hard to raise our fists to fight when<lb/>
grounded in peace.<lb/>
Our shield is made of the<lb/>
strongest substance possible, faith.<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
to extinguish flaming arrows, in-<lb/>
sults, threats or anything else that<lb/>
would weaken us. A shield is<lb/>
mobile and can be used to protect<lb/>
any side of us that is being at-<lb/>
tacked. It is held in the hand but a<lb/>
shiled is also a part of armor that<lb/>
can be dropped. For this reason, a<lb/>
firm grasp on our faith, or what<lb/>
we believe, is important.<lb/>
The helmet is of salvation and<lb/>
our only offensive weapon, the<lb/>
sword of the Spirit, is the word of<lb/>
God.<lb/>
What good is all this armor?<lb/>
There is no proof that it exists.<lb/>
Many people argue that there is<lb/>
no proof God exists. Those of you<lb/>
who argue this point, or lean<lb/>
toward a faith-in-logic perspec-<lb/>
tive may never agree with me or<lb/>
even understand my point of view.<lb/>
Nevertheless, my point of view is<lb/>
ideal and unchanging. It comes<lb/>
completely from the Bible and it<lb/>
always will. I didn't originate this<lb/>
view, I only support it.<lb/>
According to the Bible, hav-<lb/>
inga strong heart capable for battle<lb/>
is dependant on prayer, prayer,<lb/>
faith in the word of God, and more<lb/>
prayer.<lb/>
We are at war, often with our<lb/>
selfishness and pride, sometimes<lb/>
with decisions that weigh good<lb/>
and bad and sometimes with other<lb/>
people. All wars are either lost or<lb/>
won.<lb/>
I would like to close with two<lb/>
questions. First: Is your heart well<lb/>
dressed and armed for battle7 And<lb/>
second: Who is winning?<lb/>
Gonzo<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
queen.<lb/>
An complaint to the police<lb/>
ensued The Aspen cops, who were<lb/>
denied a search warrant by the<lb/>
Aspen-based judge, traveled 40<lb/>
miles to find a propitiating judge.<lb/>
Upon the search of Owl Farm, .09<lb/>
gram of cocaine (not enough to<lb/>
numbones' tongue), three Valium-<lb/>
shaped pills, 39 hits of LSD, a<lb/>
plastic casing of a Bic-pen with<lb/>
coke residue, seven ounces of<lb/>
marijuana and four sticksof dyna-<lb/>
mite were found. Thompson, who<lb/>
knew of the possession of the<lb/>
drugs, was oblivious to the find-<lb/>
ings of the TNT.<lb/>
Dynamite aside, the list of<lb/>
illicit substances was relatively<lb/>
obsure compared to the stockpile<lb/>
stored in the trunk of a rented<lb/>
Cadillac convertible enumerated<lb/>
in Fear&amp; Loathing. Nevertheless,<lb/>
the District Attorney pursued the<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
During a May 22 court hear-<lb/>
ing, Thompson's lawyer found a<lb/>
flaw in Palmer-Slater testimony.<lb/>
On the stand, she contradicted<lb/>
earlier statements that she saw<lb/>
Thompson snort the white sub-<lb/>
stances spread on the plate. In the<lb/>
hearing, she said she couldn't<lb/>
actually remember witnessing<lb/>
Thompson snorting.<lb/>
Adding a strange twist to the<lb/>
already almost incredulous tale,<lb/>
Mrs. Palmer-Slater of once lusty<lb/>
hard-core scenes told the Rolling<lb/>
Stone she was glad Thompson beat<lb/>
the rap.<lb/>
It is ironic that Thompson - a<lb/>
writer who admonished readers<lb/>
of the growth of the Orwellean<lb/>
society, who slammed Nixon and<lb/>
the Oakland Raider in the same<lb/>
breath while chugging Crown<lb/>
Royal and smoking hash in The<lb/>
Great Shark Hunt - was free of<lb/>
blame in thisover exaggerated and<lb/>
over emotionalized War On<lb/>
Drugs.<lb/>
There was one sad loss which<lb/>
followed the Wild Grammy Night<lb/>
at the Owl Farm, Thompson's<lb/>
brass hookah - purchased in San<lb/>
Franciso during the height ot<lb/>
1960's experience - remains in<lb/>
police possession.<lb/>
�'The<lb/>
CoMedf-<lb/>
�ZONE <lb/>
627 BILL THOMAS<lb/>
FRED LEWIS<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
�The<lb/>
CoMedY<lb/>
�2DNE<lb/>
74 DAVE HE EN AN<lb/>
CHRIS MARTIN<lb/>
QUADRA NIXX 6JO<lb/>
(FEATURINC JAW FIELDS FORMERLY OF SIDEWINDER)<lb/>
Vf D LX &amp; BANANA BOAT SUNTAN<lb/>
THE HOTFM<lb/>
PRODUCTS PRESENT<lb/>
BEST TAN CONTEST<lb/>
(SEMI-FINALS)<lb/>
OVER $500 IN CASH &amp; PRIZES<lb/>
FRI L-FACTOR FOR MORE INFO THUR5 LEFT EXIT<lb/>
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Submit application and resume to the Managing<lb/>
Editor: Second Floor of the Publications Building<lb/>
(Across from Jovner Library)<lb/>
It was the Deltas against the<lb/>
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M<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058218_0006"/><lb/>
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H oUte SaBt (Earnltnian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
unc27 ,19<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
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ROOMS FOR RENT: Utilities fur-<lb/>
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CATHOLIC STUDENT<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
The Newman Catholic Student center<lb/>
�  � . . worship with them Sunda)<lb/>
and 8 30 p m at the<lb/>
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por<lb/>
�ram Hie cost is cheap while fun and<lb/>
sun are high Call 7" 6387 tor detail- All<lb/>
fat ult st.itt and student- eligibh<lb/>
BICYCLE OUTING<lb/>
Onjune30 1990 be Outdoor Rea<lb/>
Program will be offering a bicycle <lb/>
Register through une 28 Cyclist <lb/>
da 11<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will be a General Meeting at 3 p m<lb/>
on Wednesday lune 27, in the Teletund<lb/>
KiH'm<lb/>
WINDSURFERS, TAKE<lb/>
ANOTHER SHOT!<lb/>
Two additional windsurfing outings tor<lb/>
ha surfers will be offered July 5 and ul)<lb/>
19 through the (Xitdoor Recreation ftp<lb/>
Crimesland Beach and enjo) a healths<lb/>
. irsion filled with fun and sun I all75<lb/>
6387 tor details<lb/>
BEACHVOLLOBALL<lb/>
Get beached and sign up tor intramural<lb/>
beach volleyball ltd v 2 at 4 p m in BIO 103<lb/>
Men's, women's and eo roe teams encour<lb/>
aged to sign up<lb/>
tion i .ill 757 n<lb/>
VOLUNTEI Ks Nl I BJ D EOS<lb/>
RESEARCH STl "<lb/>
"be Sectioi ' ' '<lb/>
icho il of Medi ineii i '� i<lb/>
Student Healtl<lb/>
stud) on the sexual prea I I<lb/>
ru-es We are looking for n<lb/>
18 years and older who h ive i<lb/>
genital herpes If you inti rested i<lb/>
obtaining more information i i w<lb/>
Askew. K N at (919) 551 2 7�<lb/>
WINDSURFING OUTING<lb/>
- p.ut in an in itructiona � � burring<lb/>
�. 28at 3 pn in'1- will<lb/>
. �� . unandsa irdsBeacl<lb/>
while learning ba; rfing t<lb/>
a!1757 638 "� i itioi lost<lb/>
� . <lb/>
-K RUN1500M WALK<lb/>
 . � � z � �<lb/>
V �"� ilk during ��� � ses<lb/>
:� R, gjster ul) : I it4pm in BIO I 0<lb/>
 variety of divisions have been estab<lb/>
I shed Ail facult) staff are en ouraged to<lb/>
register Call 7:C 6387 for details<lb/>
ANXQiyrrMESTS<lb/>
Duetoal �'���� I<lb/>
East �� ���<lb/>
� print a inn ��<lb/>
not advisa<lb/>
n � " � �<lb/>
summi' �� �<lb/>
�ir.j to find � �� ' ' � �' �'<lb/>
one week bej � : �'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0007"/><lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
- gibe �aat (Earolintan<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
June 27 ,199(1<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT:Three-bedroom<lb/>
duplex at 1306-B Willow St. Rent will<lb/>
be $124 per month plus 13 of utili-<lb/>
ties, phone and cable. Central air and<lb/>
close to campus. For more info, con-<lb/>
tact MARC or Pete at 830-3904.<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT: Utilities fur-<lb/>
nished. Walk to school. 757-3543.<lb/>
FOR LEASE: Spacious 2 bedroom<lb/>
apartment 2blocks from campus. Rent<lb/>
includes hot and cold water, sewer,<lb/>
central heat and air, basic cable. Call<lb/>
746-4169.<lb/>
MOTHER WILL PROVIDE FREE<lb/>
ROOM and board near campus to<lb/>
female non-smoker for work ex-<lb/>
change. Call 757-1798.<lb/>
MALE OR FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
WANTED. Walk to school. Utilities<lb/>
furnished. $137.50mo. 757-3543 ask<lb/>
for Larry.<lb/>
RENT, LEASE AND BUY IN THE<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN CLASSIFIEDS.<lb/>
STOP BY FOR DETAILS, NO PHONE<lb/>
CALLS PLEASE.<lb/>
AVAILABLE JULY 1ST for students<lb/>
needing a roommate Lovely 3 bed-<lb/>
room, 2bath townhouse atTwin Oaks<lb/>
fully furnished with laundry facilities<lb/>
and convenient to campus. $225<lb/>
monthly and share utilities. Call Liz<lb/>
Samsel at Clark-Branch Realty, 355-<lb/>
2000 or 946-8667.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
APPLE MACINTOSH SE: 2.5 MB<lb/>
RAM, 20 MB internal hard drive, 800K<lb/>
internal disk drive. All for just $1,800.<lb/>
Call 752-2369, after 3 p.m<lb/>
FOR SALE: Coffee table. $30. Call<lb/>
758-5422 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
'78 4-DOOR CHEVROLET - Good<lb/>
motor, Clean, New tires. New motor<lb/>
parts, little needed. 736-5544 before 6<lb/>
p.m. $700 cash.<lb/>
SURFBOARD-CASTER TWINFIN<lb/>
with leash. $75.00. Alsocaramplifier-<lb/>
Concord, 50 watts per channel, new,<lb/>
still under warranty, $200.00. New<lb/>
asking $125.00. Mike 752-7622.<lb/>
FIND mOR SELL IT) INTHEEAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN CLASSIFIEDS.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
RESUME SERVICES, Desktop Pub-<lb/>
lishing, and Word Processing. 24 hour<lb/>
turnaround Mon-Fn. on most proj-<lb/>
ects. Designer Type. 223 W. 10th,<lb/>
101. 752-1933.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Research pa-<lb/>
pers. Term papers. Letter quality print,<lb/>
pickup and delivery available. Call<lb/>
756-0520.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING (Word<lb/>
Processing) - Term Papers, Resumes.<lb/>
Call 355-4695 Mon - Sat.<lb/>
COMPUTER SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
SEARCH � Locate financial aid 6-25<lb/>
sources guaranteed. Call 1-919-946-<lb/>
4551 or write School Aid, POBox 2546.<lb/>
Washington, NC 27889.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
ATTENTION: POSTAL JOBS! Start<lb/>
$11.41 hour! For application info call<lb/>
(1) 602-838-8885, Ext. M-5285,6 a.m. -<lb/>
10 p.m 7 days.<lb/>
PART-TIME POSITIONS available<lb/>
in: Modeling, Security and Sales.<lb/>
Apply Brady's, The Plaza. Monday-<lb/>
Wednesday, 1-4 p.m.<lb/>
EXCELLENTPART-TIMEJOBS:We<lb/>
are looking for a few ambitious stu-<lb/>
dents to work on an on- campus mar-<lb/>
keting program for major companies.<lb/>
You must be personable and outgo-<lb/>
ing. Excellent earnings. Call Bode or<lb/>
Jenny 1-800-5922-2121<lb/>
FREE TRAVEL BENEFITS! AIR-<lb/>
LINES NOW HIRING! ALL POSI-<lb/>
TIONS! $17,500 -$58,240. Call (1)602-<lb/>
838-8885. Ext. X-5285.<lb/>
FREE TRAVEL BENEFITS! CRUISE<lb/>
SHIPS AND CASINOS NOW HIR-<lb/>
ING! ALL POSITIONS! Call (1) 602-<lb/>
838-8885 Ext. Y-5285.<lb/>
ATTENTION: EARN MONEY<lb/>
WATCHING TV! $32,000 year in-<lb/>
come potential. Details. (1) 602-838-<lb/>
8885 Ext. TV-5285.<lb/>
ATTENTION: POSTAL JOBS! Start<lb/>
$11.41 hour! For application info call<lb/>
(1) 602-838-8885, Ext. M-5285,6 a.m. -<lb/>
10 p.m 7 days.<lb/>
ATTENTION: EASY WORK EXCEL-<lb/>
LENT PAY! Assemble products at<lb/>
home. Details. (1) 602-838-8885 Ext.<lb/>
W-5285<lb/>
ATTENTION: GOVERNMENT<lb/>
JOBS - YOUR AREA! Sl7,840 -<lb/>
569,485. Call (1) 602- 838-8885, Ext. R-<lb/>
5285.<lb/>
ATTENTION: EARN MONEY<lb/>
READING BOOKS! $32,00year<lb/>
income potential. Details. (1) 602-838-<lb/>
H885 Ext. Bk-5285.<lb/>
AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Right<lb/>
Attendants, Travel Agents, Mechan-<lb/>
ics, Customer Service. Listings. Sala-<lb/>
ries to $105K. Entry level positions.<lb/>
Call (1) 805-6876000 Ext. A-1166.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,040 -<lb/>
$59,230yr. Now Hiring. Call (1) 805-<lb/>
687-6000 Ext. R-1166 for current fed-<lb/>
eral list.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,412 -<lb/>
S59 932yr. Now Hiring. Your area.<lb/>
Call (1) 805-687-6000, Ext. R-1166 for<lb/>
listings.<lb/>
ATTENTION: EASY WORK EXCEL-<lb/>
LENT PAY! Assemble products at<lb/>
home Details. (1)602-838-8885 Ext.W-<lb/>
5285.<lb/>
FIND IT (OR SELL IT) IN THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN CLASSIFIEDS.<lb/>
ATTENTION: EARN MONEY TYt-<lb/>
ING AT HOME! 32,000yr incoafc<lb/>
potential. Details. (1)602 -83M885G<lb/>
T5285.<lb/>
PERMANENT PART-TIME PQ<lb/>
TIONS AVAILABLE: Clerical as<lb/>
tant to the Buyer, Ladies and Ml<lb/>
sales, and security. Temporary m4<lb/>
eling positions also available Ad<lb/>
Brody's. The Plaza Mon-Wed 1 V<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Hotel Ham pi<lb/>
Inn Greenville is now accepting j<lb/>
plications for the positionsof full -A<lb/>
night auditor and part time front dj<lb/>
clerk apply in person 3439 S Mol<lb/>
rial Dr Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
NATIONAL MARKETING FII<lb/>
seeks mature student to managt<lb/>
campus promotions for top coml<lb/>
rues this school year. Flexible ruj<lb/>
with earnings potential to S2VK<lb/>
semester. Must be organizes <lb/>
working and money motivated<lb/>
Bode or Jenny at 1-800-5922-21211<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE STL'DFJ<lb/>
WANTED to keep 10 year-old in<lb/>
home for the summer 4 days a vs�<lb/>
Call 756-1759 After 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CATHOLIC STUDENT<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
The Newman Catholic Student Center<lb/>
invites you to worship with them. Sunday<lb/>
Masses: 11 30 a.m. and 8.30 p.m. at the<lb/>
Newman Center, 953 E. 10th St Green<lb/>
ville Weekdays. 8 a.m. at the Newman<lb/>
Center Wednesdays: 530 p.m. at the<lb/>
Newman Center<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will be a General Meeting at 5 p.m.<lb/>
on Wednesday, June 27, in the Telefund<lb/>
Room.<lb/>
Do you want to stop smoking but need<lb/>
some help7 Then this program is for voul'<lb/>
The Student Health Service offers the<lb/>
American Cancer Society Fresh Start Prcv<lb/>
gram to help vou kick the habit Classes<lb/>
run one hour per week for three weeks<lb/>
starting Thursday June 28 at 1 p m ' Class<lb/>
is free of charge Call 757-6794 to sign up or<lb/>
for more information.<lb/>
WINDSURFERS. TAKE<lb/>
ANOTHER SHOT!<lb/>
Two additional windsurfing outings for<lb/>
basic surfers will be offered July 5 and Jul y<lb/>
19 through the Outdoor Recreation Pro-<lb/>
gram. The cost is cheap while the fun and<lb/>
sun are high. Call 757-6387 for detaik All<lb/>
faculty, staff and students eligible<lb/>
BJOCJiQimNG<lb/>
On )une 30, 1990 The Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Program will be offering a bicycle outing<lb/>
Register through June 28 Cyclist pedal to<lb/>
Crimesland Beach and enjoy a healthy<lb/>
excursion filled with fun and sun Call 757<lb/>
6387 for details<lb/>
BFACH VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
Get beached and sign up for intramural<lb/>
beach volleyball July 2 at 4 p.m. in BIO 103.<lb/>
Men's, women's and co-rec teams encour<lb/>
aged to sign up. For additional informa-<lb/>
tion call 757-6387<lb/>
VOLLTNTEERS NEEDED FOR<lb/>
RESEARCH STLDV<lb/>
The Section of Infectious Diseases ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine in conjunction with the<lb/>
Student Health Center is conducting a<lb/>
study on the sexual spread of herpes vi<lb/>
ruses. We arc looking for men and women<lb/>
18 years and older who have never had<lb/>
genital herpes If you are interested in<lb/>
obtaining more information, call Jean<lb/>
Askew, R.N. at (919) 551-2578.<lb/>
WLNrSURJJJSCQLTjrMi<lb/>
Take part in an instructional windsurfing<lb/>
outing tune 28 at 3 p m Participants will<lb/>
enjoy the sun and sand at Whichards Beach<lb/>
while learning basic windsurfing tech-<lb/>
niques Call 757-6387 for information Cost<lb/>
i�. onlv S4.<lb/>
5K X1INA50QM WALK<lb/>
Recreational Services will be hosting a 5K7<lb/>
1 VX)M Walk during second summer ses-<lb/>
sion. Register July 10 at 4 p m in BIO 103<lb/>
A variety of divisions have been estab-<lb/>
lished AH faculty, staff are encouraged to<lb/>
register Call 757-6387 for details<lb/>
Due to alimited amour fspa t f-t<lb/>
East Carolinian may not l<lb/>
able to print all announccmen I<lb/>
not advisable to rehf on these in<lb/>
mmtantentaasasolem m<lb/>
munkatwn However during -�<lb/>
summer months we :��� try m<lb/>
hard to find room for uourannoung<lb/>
ments. So. send them in � at least<lb/>
one iveek before publication<lb/>
' T II -agliiliailUBii<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0008"/><lb/>
June 27,1990<lb/>
Slfte gaat (gamltman<lb/>
State and Nation<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Decline expected in college<lb/>
applications for next vear<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) � North<lb/>
Carolina's colleges and universi-<lb/>
ties are choosing next year's stu-<lb/>
dents from a smaller applicant<lb/>
pool, but school officials say en-<lb/>
rollment should remain stable<lb/>
decline, the school expects this<lb/>
year's freshman class to be about<lb/>
the same size as last year's, which<lb/>
was about 3,200 students.<lb/>
Ms. Polk said the smaller<lb/>
applicant pool had not affected<lb/>
di -spite j substantial drop in other the quality of this year's fresh-<lb/>
states. men.<lb/>
Officials at the state's two The decrease in the college-<lb/>
largest universities � N.C. State applicant pool is the result of<lb/>
University and the University of decliningbirthratessincethebaby<lb/>
orth Carolina at Chapel Hill � boom. Colleges and universities<lb/>
said that despite a drop in their have countered the decline in re-<lb/>
applicant pools they expected this<lb/>
year's freshman class to remain<lb/>
about the same size as last year's.<lb/>
t NCSU, the 1989 class com-<lb/>
prised about 3,400 students, said<lb/>
leorge Dixon, the school's direc-<lb/>
tor of admissions. The shrinkage<lb/>
in this year's applicant pool means<lb/>
State has placed fewer stu-<lb/>
dents on its waiting list.<lb/>
At NCSU, 500applicants were<lb/>
placed on a waiting list last year,<lb/>
but only 350 are on the list this<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
At UNC-Chapel Hill, the<lb/>
applicant pool declined by 10<lb/>
percent, or about l,6O0applicants,<lb/>
said Barbara Polk, associate direc-<lb/>
tor of undergraduate admissions.<lb/>
She said that even with the<lb/>
cent years by enrolling non-tradi-<lb/>
tional students. But many colleges<lb/>
are finding the drop too steep to<lb/>
overcome.<lb/>
Evan Sun, a statistician at the<lb/>
state Department of Public Instruc-<lb/>
tion, said that based on birth rates,<lb/>
it would be five or six years before<lb/>
the number of college-age students<lb/>
increases.<lb/>
One reason the quality of next<lb/>
year's freshmen should be high,<lb/>
school officials say, is the higher<lb/>
admission standards taking effect<lb/>
this fall for all 16 schools in the<lb/>
UNC system.<lb/>
In contrast to UNC-CH and<lb/>
NCSU, the number of applications<lb/>
has increased or remained stable<lb/>
at three of the state's predomi-<lb/>
nantly black institutions.<lb/>
The higher admission stan-<lb/>
dards were expected to hit the<lb/>
state's predominantly black<lb/>
schools the hardest, but only N C.<lb/>
Central University said it expects<lb/>
the standards to limit the number<lb/>
of freshmen it enrolled this year.<lb/>
At NCCU the number of ap-<lb/>
plicants increased, but because of<lb/>
the standards this fall's class will<lb/>
be smaller, said Nancy Rowland,<lb/>
the university's admissions direc-<lb/>
tor. Last year's freshman class<lb/>
numbered 990 students, but this<lb/>
year Ms. Rowland said she ex-<lb/>
pects the class to be between 850<lb/>
and 900 students.<lb/>
Another factor in the expected<lb/>
decline is the school's new em-<lb/>
phasis on reducing its percentage<lb/>
of out-of-state students, she said.<lb/>
But Ms. Rowland said she<lb/>
thought the decline in enrollment<lb/>
would be balanced in part by a<lb/>
better retention rate because of<lb/>
students' being more qualified.<lb/>
Despite earlier fears, officials<lb/>
at two predominantly black<lb/>
schools � Fayettevilte State Uni-<lb/>
versity and VVinston-Salem State<lb/>
University � said this week that<lb/>
the new standards would not<lb/>
cause new problems.<lb/>
Orion pictures approve movie<lb/>
sequel to 'Bull Durham'<lb/>
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) �<lb/>
Vion Pictures has approved a<lb/>
movie sequel to "Bull Durham<lb/>
the smash summer hit of 1988<lb/>
.vhich grossed more than $50<lb/>
million. Filming in Durhamcould<lb/>
start bv the fall of 1991.<lb/>
Producer Thorn Mount con-<lb/>
firmed those plans from his Bur-<lb/>
bank. Calif office.<lb/>
We intend to make a sequel<lb/>
to Hull Durham MounttoldThe<lb/>
iDurham Morning Herald in an in-<lb/>
terview published Saturday.<lb/>
We've been working with Orion<lb/>
for about four or five months, but<lb/>
we just recently got the approval<lb/>
to make the film<lb/>
Mount estimated that about<lb/>
two-thirds of the sequel will be<lb/>
filmed in Durham.<lb/>
Wnter-director Ron Shelton,<lb/>
a former minor-league ballplayer,<lb/>
is currently working on the sequel<lb/>
screenplay. Shelton's original<lb/>
screenplay received an Academy<lb/>
Award nomination.<lb/>
'I can't tell you the plot, but I<lb/>
can tell you it will be set at least<lb/>
partially in Durham Mountsaid.<lb/>
"It involves the same three char-<lb/>
actersat latter stages in their lives<lb/>
The original starred Kevin<lb/>
Costner, Susan Sarandon and Tim<lb/>
Robbins. All three have been<lb/>
approached about starring in the<lb/>
sequel, Mount said.<lb/>
The original was filmed pri-<lb/>
marily in Durham during the fall<lb/>
of 1987. Shooting lasted about<lb/>
three months and involved some<lb/>
2,500 "extras most of whom filled<lb/>
the stands of Durham Athletic<lb/>
Park.<lb/>
Miles Wolff, owner of the<lb/>
Durham Bulls, said accomodating<lb/>
a film crew for the first movie<lb/>
wasn't easy.<lb/>
"It was a headache Wolff<lb/>
said We told them we didn't<lb/>
want them to come back, but it<lb/>
was so successful. <lb/>
Wolff said he would have no<lb/>
problem welcoming Mount back<lb/>
to Durham. Wolff said that with<lb/>
his ball club occupying the sta-<lb/>
dium April through August, the<lb/>
fall of 1991 would be the most<lb/>
likelv time to start filming.<lb/>
Orion Pictures spent a re-<lb/>
ported $8.5 million to film "Bull<lb/>
Durham" and another $10-11<lb/>
million promoting it.<lb/>
Mount, 41, is a former Dur-<lb/>
ham resident who now runs his<lb/>
own production company, Liberty<lb/>
Pictures.<lb/>
Other Mount productions<lb/>
include "Tequila Sunrise "The<lb/>
Deer Hunter" and "Animal<lb/>
House<lb/>
Statewide manhunt for<lb/>
convicted murderer continues<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) � Officials<lb/>
are pressing their search for Roger<lb/>
Lee McQueen, a convicted mur-<lb/>
derer who escaped from a job<lb/>
assignment last week, by issuinga<lb/>
nationwide alert and the most<lb/>
recent photograph available.<lb/>
McQueen, 51, wasserving two<lb/>
life sentences for two murders at<lb/>
the time of his escape. It is because<lb/>
of his record that Department of<lb/>
(Orrechon officials say he should<lb/>
be considered dangerous.<lb/>
We're following every lead,<lb/>
regardless of where it's at said<lb/>
lim Byrum, the program director<lb/>
for the Division of Prisons.<lb/>
"He traveled extensively on<lb/>
his last escape. The South, the<lb/>
West, up in the Northeast. The<lb/>
only area we don't have any clues<lb/>
on are Oregon and Washington<lb/>
State. Everything else, we're cov-<lb/>
ering, and we're also looking at<lb/>
those two states<lb/>
McQueen escaped from a<lb/>
Missouri prison, where he was<lb/>
serving a sentence for murder. He<lb/>
was apprehended in Pennsylva-<lb/>
nia and returned to North Caro-<lb/>
lina and tried for the two murders<lb/>
in Fayetteville. He was convicted<lb/>
for those murders in 1977.<lb/>
Department of Correction<lb/>
spokesman BUI Poston said<lb/>
McQueen was on a work detail<lb/>
from the Greene Correctional<lb/>
Center, working at the state High-<lb/>
way Patrol office in Greenville.<lb/>
Officials said McQueen was one<lb/>
of the better adjusted prisoners<lb/>
and had just one infraction since<lb/>
being imprisoned and had earned<lb/>
a work detail position.<lb/>
'We have not drawn any con-<lb/>
clusions as to how he made his<lb/>
escape. One moment he was there,<lb/>
the next moment he was not there<lb/>
Byrum said. "We don't know if he<lb/>
had a ride, hitchiked or walked<lb/>
off. Nothing has developed on<lb/>
that<lb/>
SBI searches air terminals, buses<lb/>
Agents retreat from traditional patrol<lb/>
When agents of the State Bu-<lb/>
reau of Investigation look for<lb/>
drugs these days they are more<lb/>
likelv to locus on bus and air ter-<lb/>
minals than the backwaters of the<lb/>
coast or a clandestine airstrip<lb/>
in recent vears, agents have<lb/>
concentrated their drug interdic-<lb/>
tion efforts on bus and air termi-<lb/>
nals, retreating from the traditional<lb/>
patrol of the state's 3,375 miles of<lb/>
beaches, inlets and coastal rivers<lb/>
that form a nook-and-cranny<lb/>
shoreline long known as a haven<lb/>
for smugglers.<lb/>
It's been four vears since the<lb/>
bureau cracked a major coastal<lb/>
smuggling operation � the kind<lb/>
of cases that occasionally yielded<lb/>
huge hauls of marijuana and other<lb/>
drugs.<lb/>
They7 re not smuggling by the<lb/>
water as much says David R.<lb/>
Marshall, the supervisor for the<lb/>
SBI'sCoastal District. "Cocaine is<lb/>
the drug oi choice. They can do it<lb/>
bv air, land or sea. I'm sure some is<lb/>
getting bv us, but I don't think as<lb/>
much is coming in<lb/>
As the bureau looks for drugs<lb/>
stashed bv the new breed of tran-<lb/>
sient smugglers, italsoisinvolved<lb/>
in another relatively new strat-<lb/>
egy: street-level undercover cam-<lb/>
paignscoordinated with local law-<lb/>
enforcement agencies across the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
But the effectiveness of some<lb/>
of the most highly publicized of<lb/>
those- efforts is in question.<lb/>
In Chad bourn, a small Colum-<lb/>
bus County town, 97SBI agents �<lb/>
part of a 113-agent force � swept<lb/>
down last year in a Friday-night<lb/>
raid heralded as the largest in the<lb/>
state's history. But to date, the 14<lb/>
arrests have produced only five<lb/>
convictions.<lb/>
'Chadbourn was political<lb/>
grandstanding at its worst says<lb/>
lawyer loseph B. Cheshire V of<lb/>
Raleigh. Purely pabulum for the<lb/>
public. They don't need to do that<lb/>
This transformation of the<lb/>
SBI's drug efforts, several years in<lb/>
the making, comes at a time when<lb/>
Li. Gov. James C. Gardner, a Re-<lb/>
publican, has proposed establish-<lb/>
ing a new state drug agency. The<lb/>
proposed agency would be con-<lb/>
trolled bv Democratic Attorney<lb/>
General Lacv H. Thomburg, as is<lb/>
Flag burning<lb/>
and the voters<lb/>
Voters were asked if they<lb/>
were more likely or less likely<lb/>
to vote for their congressional<lb/>
representative if he or she<lb/>
voted against constitutional<lb/>
amendment outlawing flag<lb/>
burning:<lb/>
More likely25<lb/>
Less likely<lb/>
No effect31<lb/>
41<lb/>
Source: KRC Communications<lb/>
Research telephone poll of 1,004<lb/>
registered voters on June 17.<lb/>
Sampling error, 3�.<lb/>
Keith Carter. GNS<lb/>
Spotted fever epidemic said to be par for the course<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) � North<lb/>
Carolina this hot season has been<lb/>
home to an estimated one in four<lb/>
f the nation's cases of Rocky<lb/>
Mountain spotted fever, but health<lb/>
officials say that is par for the<lb/>
course.<lb/>
As of June 1, North Carolina<lb/>
had 14 cases of the sometimes<lb/>
deadly disease, nearly a quarter of<lb/>
the cases reported nationwide by<lb/>
the Centers for Disease Control in<lb/>
Atlanta, said Dr. Janet Fischer, a<lb/>
professor of medicine who spe-<lb/>
cializes in tick-home illnesses at<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
North Carolina is believed to<lb/>
be a hotbed of Rocky Mountain<lb/>
spotted fever because of a warm<lb/>
climate that spurs outdoor activ-<lb/>
ity and plentiful underbrush in<lb/>
which ticks thrive. But the villain<lb/>
in the disease is not the tick. It is a<lb/>
bacteria called Rickettsia rickettsii.<lb/>
The bacteria is carried by<lb/>
about 3 percent of ticks and is<lb/>
transferred when a tick is attached<lb/>
to its victim while feeding.<lb/>
Children, older people and<lb/>
black men are particularly at risk,<lb/>
Ms. Fischer said in a recent inter-<lb/>
view.<lb/>
While 60 percent of cases are<lb/>
in children over 1 year old, "the<lb/>
mortality is higher in people in the<lb/>
mature years of life she said.<lb/>
"But there need be no mortality<lb/>
except in black males if thedisease<lb/>
is treated early<lb/>
Black males appear to have a<lb/>
higher risk of death because of an<lb/>
inherited deficiency of a certain<lb/>
enzyme, Ms. Fischer said.<lb/>
Antibiotics usually prevent<lb/>
the spread of the disease until the<lb/>
body's immune system can fight<lb/>
it, Ms. Fischer said. But since only<lb/>
60 percent of victims realize they<lb/>
have received a tick bite, getting<lb/>
treatment early can be difficult.<lb/>
After the bite, the initial lesion<lb/>
disappears and symptoms may<lb/>
not begin for a week, Ms. Fischer<lb/>
said. The initial symptoms are<lb/>
similar to those from the flu, with<lb/>
general muscle aches, headache<lb/>
and fever.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the bacteria has<lb/>
entered cells and begun multiply-<lb/>
ing. When they begin damaging<lb/>
capillaries, usually in the first four<lb/>
to six days, the characteristic rash<lb/>
breaks out below the skin, Ms.<lb/>
Fischer said. The rash begins in<lb/>
the extremities, where the cooler<lb/>
body temperature is most hospi-<lb/>
table to rickettsia, then spreads<lb/>
throughout the body.<lb/>
However, 10 percent of vic-<lb/>
tims never have a rash and an-<lb/>
other 10 percent may not notice it<lb/>
because it lasts only a short time.<lb/>
The lesions that cause the rash<lb/>
don't stop there, Ms. Fischer said.<lb/>
The lesions are also on the<lb/>
internal organs, the lungs, brain,<lb/>
kidney, liver she said.<lb/>
Through an unknown mecha-<lb/>
nism, the bacteria is able to leave<lb/>
infected cells and enter new ones,<lb/>
Ms. Fischer said. Antibiotics,<lb/>
which cannot enter the cells, fight<lb/>
the disease by stopping the proc-<lb/>
ess of spreading.<lb/>
the SBI � but would be separate<lb/>
from the SBI.<lb/>
The Gardner plan represents<lb/>
a threat to the bureau, because<lb/>
drugs are big business for the SBI,<lb/>
The News and Observer reported<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Over the vears, as the needsof<lb/>
local law-enforcement agencies<lb/>
have changed, the SBI has shifted<lb/>
more and more of its resources to<lb/>
drug investigations. In 1978, drug<lb/>
cases represented 38 percent of<lb/>
the SBI's work. By 1989, the figure<lb/>
had soared to 63 percent, and the<lb/>
bureau now employs h8 drug<lb/>
agents out of its 174-agent force.<lb/>
As the prevalence of d rug use<lb/>
has increased, the importance of<lb/>
the SBI has increased says<lb/>
Raleigh Police Chief Frederick K.<lb/>
Heineman. "There is a direct rela-<lb/>
tionship between the growth in<lb/>
drugs and our use of the SBI<lb/>
Thomburg savs taking drug<lb/>
enforcement away from the SBI<lb/>
would be "a serious mistake"<lb/>
because it would set up, in effect,<lb/>
competing la w-enforcement agen-<lb/>
cies.<lb/>
Volunteerism<lb/>
of students<lb/>
increases<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) � North<lb/>
Carolina college students are still<lb/>
out to get a job, but increasingly,<lb/>
they want to change the world<lb/>
too, say school officials, noting a<lb/>
rise in student volunteerism.<lb/>
"The last couple of years, stu-<lb/>
dents seem more aware said<lb/>
Caroline Craig, who coordinates<lb/>
service programs at Davidson<lb/>
College. "Thev come to Davidson<lb/>
asking if therc'sarecyclingcenter,<lb/>
if there's homeless shelter, if<lb/>
there's a literacy program<lb/>
Students at the liberal arts<lb/>
college nearCharlotte have helped<lb/>
build homes for the needy and<lb/>
operate a campuswide recycling<lb/>
program. More than 100 have<lb/>
trained to serve as tutors for grade-<lb/>
school and high school students.<lb/>
James F. Keith Jr who directs<lb/>
Guilford College's student intern-<lb/>
ships and service programs, says<lb/>
the students arriving on campus<lb/>
appear to be more socially con-<lb/>
scious than their peers a few years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
More than half of the Greens-<lb/>
boro school's 1,700 students do-<lb/>
nate their energies to philanthropic<lb/>
causes ranging from tutoring pris-<lb/>
oners and refugees to working in<lb/>
retirement homes and housing<lb/>
projects.<lb/>
"I see things over the past five<lb/>
years as having radically<lb/>
changed Keith told The News and<lb/>
Observer of Raleigh in an inter-<lb/>
view published Sunday. "The<lb/>
(career) aspirations of students are<lb/>
every bit as strong, but they're<lb/>
bringing with them strong con-<lb/>
cerns for the environment, for<lb/>
human justice, for peace � much<lb/>
more than perhaps a lot of stu-<lb/>
dents five years ago"<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0009"/><lb/>
�lje iEast (Carolinian<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Features<lb/>
�.<lb/>
June 17,1990<lb/>
Pacemaker helps<lb/>
man live normally<lb/>
Sharpshooter wins competition<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
In a fashion somewhat reminiscent of Clint Eastwood, R.L. "Jack"<lb/>
Parks is blowing away mvths that people with heart pacemakers are<lb/>
best confined to front-porch rocking chairs.<lb/>
Parks, a 71-years-young resident of the coast near Cape Carteret,<lb/>
N .C, recently earned age group first-team All-America status from the<lb/>
20,000-member National Skeet Shooting Association (NSSA). To those<lb/>
of you who aren't "shooters that simply means that Parks and three<lb/>
other persons aged 70 and over are downright handy when it comes to<lb/>
knocking little clay pigeons out of the sky with a shotgun. So handy, in<lb/>
fact, that last year Parks also equalled a world record for a .410 caliber<lb/>
shotgun by hitting a mind-blowing 99 out of 100 targets during NSSA<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
He did all that despite the fact that he has a cardiac pacemaker<lb/>
battery implanted in his upper left chest. Or, it could be argued, he did<lb/>
all that because of the pacemaker.<lb/>
A burly retired Marine who survived a bout with cancer, Parks isn' t<lb/>
the kind to go scurrying off to a doctor for every little bump and bruise.<lb/>
That's why he wasn't overly concerned several years ago when he<lb/>
began having fainting spells. Nothing too serious�he'd just "blip out"<lb/>
for an instant, usually while resting. Then at a match in Rocky Mount<lb/>
two years ago, he was about to shoot when it happened again. Con-<lb/>
cerned that he might endanger others, he decided to act.<lb/>
Parks was referred to a cardiologist at the ECU School of Medici no.<lb/>
who diagnosed a slow heartbeat. More precisely, he had an electrical<lb/>
short in the circuitry that produces a regular heartbeat. When that<lb/>
happens, either as the result of disease or a buildup of calcium deposi ts.<lb/>
the natural electrical impulse must be supplied artificially by a pace-<lb/>
maker.<lb/>
About the size of woman's compact, the pacemaker batterv is<lb/>
implanted just under the skin on one side of the upper chest. One or<lb/>
more wirescarrying an electrical charge connect the battery to the heart.<lb/>
The device has become almost commonplace; 200 are implanted each<lb/>
year at Pitt County Memorial Hospital in a relatively simple and safe<lb/>
surgical procedure.<lb/>
Parks admits he was fearful of the changes a pacemaker might<lb/>
bring. But his doctors and nurses convinced him that "it wouldn't<lb/>
interfere with mv life, except that it would make a better lifestyle tor<lb/>
me His onlv request was that the pacemaker be implanted in his left<lb/>
side "so 1 can still shoot" with the shotgun stock against his right<lb/>
shoulder.<lb/>
See Pacemaker, page 9<lb/>
Total Recall7 matches<lb/>
actor's average roll<lb/>
Sunshine paradise<lb/>
Nat Taylor (lett), Maria Milani (center; and Michelle McKmght avoid air conditioning and enjoy the heat of<lb/>
the day by taking advantage of the summer sun Photo by J D Whitmire � ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Air conditioners make hot<lb/>
months more tolerable<lb/>
(AP) � Air conditioners are a<lb/>
real btessingduring the hot, humid<lb/>
days of summer, rhey not only<lb/>
cool, but also remove moisture,<lb/>
tilter dirt and Just and replace<lb/>
stale air with fresh.<lb/>
To accomplish all this, they<lb/>
use large amounts of electricity,<lb/>
so there's a pnee for this comfort.<lb/>
Here are some tips toensure cost<lb/>
efficient operation o( your air<lb/>
conditioner. How Air( ondition<lb/>
ers Work<lb/>
An air conditioner works on<lb/>
thepnnciplethata liquid (a refrig-<lb/>
erant) absorbs heat (cools the<lb/>
room) when it expand- into a gas,<lb/>
then gives off heat (to the out-<lb/>
doors) when it isagaincompressed<lb/>
into a liquid.<lb/>
it circulates the refrigerant<lb/>
through two sets ol coils in one<lb/>
continuous lKp rhe evaporator<lb/>
coil cools the room while the con-<lb/>
 nser coil gives oft heat to the<lb/>
outdoors. Between them is an<lb/>
insulating barrier that keeps the<lb/>
two parts from working against<lb/>
each other. Near the barrier as<lb/>
part oi the rcfriger int loop is a<lb/>
compressor which i irculates the<lb/>
refrigerantandcornpressesit l"wo<lb/>
tans help transfer the heat from<lb/>
the .nr to the coils and to the out-<lb/>
doors IoGet our Money's Worth<lb/>
Install the aii conditioner as<lb/>
far as possible from exterior doors<lb/>
to prevent draft- and cross-venti-<lb/>
lation from warming the cooled<lb/>
air<lb/>
Make sure there are no ob-<lb/>
structions, such .is chairs or drap-<lb/>
eries, in front ot the unit.<lb/>
Direct the cnts upward so<lb/>
you get cool air at the upper levels<lb/>
of the room. It will drift down<lb/>
naturally because cool air is heav-<lb/>
ier than warm air<lb/>
Seal or weatherstrip all gaps<lb/>
around the unit and around exte-<lb/>
rior doors and windows. Other-<lb/>
wise, the unit will have to work<lb/>
harder to remove heat and hu-<lb/>
miditv. To Maintain in Optimum<lb/>
Condition<lb/>
Be sure to turn off and unplug<lb/>
the unit before working on it.<lb/>
Regula rl v clea n t he gn 1 le wi th<lb/>
a soft doth, mild soap and warm<lb/>
See Cool, page 9<lb/>
Clocks<lb/>
create a<lb/>
new trend<lb/>
(AD H vou love mod rp<lb/>
design but can't afford a status<lb/>
sofa or a work of art, buy a clock<lb/>
Novelty clocks tor not a lot 01<lb/>
monev are a phenomenon thea<lb/>
da vs. courtesy of the inexpensive<lb/>
vet accurate quartz movement<lb/>
The 2-inch-square self-contained<lb/>
movement, about S2 via mai<lb/>
order, allows a designer to create<lb/>
a unique dock that will run tor<lb/>
several years on a single A A Kit<lb/>
tery.<lb/>
"Everyone knows the dock<lb/>
face and the position of the hands<lb/>
vi well that you can take liberties<lb/>
with its design says Steven Holt<lb/>
of Zebra Design. "So what vou a �<lb/>
today is a rich series of experi<lb/>
ments questioning ust how leg<lb/>
lble the telling of time has to be<lb/>
The kit, about $20. includes a<lb/>
quartz movement in a mold'<lb/>
plastic case with three hands<lb/>
dots as numerals and a pap-<lb/>
template to construct a circle<lb/>
the wall. All mount with adlu<lb/>
sive.<lb/>
Some designers; such as ribt<lb/>
KalmanofM&amp;Co, New York, ha?<lb/>
created dock faces withnumera<lb/>
that are incorrect or in the wron<lb/>
place I'he are for that sma<lb/>
segment ot the public that is read<lb/>
for confusion, parody and hi.<lb/>
mor savs K tlmart.<lb/>
Another source oi inspiration<lb/>
is the verbal metaphor. Emili<lb/>
Ambasz's Hare and TortoiseC kx<lb/>
consists oi a glass-covered rircu<lb/>
lar field on which the-hour hand i-<lb/>
a plastic tortoise and the minul<lb/>
hand a hare In a verbal pun ti<lb/>
hanging clock is suspended on a<lb/>
wire clothes hanger<lb/>
(AP) � At last, a slam-bang,<lb/>
body-count space movie with<lb/>
brams!<lb/>
Th: comment about "Total<lb/>
Recall" can be taken two ways:<lb/>
First, the plot hinges on brain al-<lb/>
teration that permits weary work-<lb/>
ers a century hence to experience<lb/>
exciting vacations without board-<lb/>
ing a jet. Second, the film has been<lb/>
Coming up<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
WRQR Comedy<lb/>
Zone<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Echoes Farm<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Centerfold<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
Modern Logic<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Quadranix<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
Bad Bob &amp;<lb/>
The Rockin' Horses<lb/>
made with a mind-bending imagi-<lb/>
nation rarely seen since the first<lb/>
"Star Wars<lb/>
Derived from a short story by<lb/>
Phillip K. Dick, 'Total Recall" has<lb/>
been in the works for 10 years. The<lb/>
credits reflect its many stages:<lb/>
story by Ronald Shusett &amp; Dan<lb/>
O'Bannon and Jon Povill, screen-<lb/>
play by Shusett &amp; O'Bannon and<lb/>
Gary Goldman.<lb/>
Paul Verhoeven undoubtedly<lb/>
was the galvanizing force that<lb/>
brought the tale to reality. The<lb/>
Dutch director has a rare talent for<lb/>
the violently bizarre, as evidenced<lb/>
by "Robocop<lb/>
Arnold Schwarzenegger leads<lb/>
a sterile Iifeintheyear 2084 (lotsof<lb/>
Orwellian references here). He<lb/>
works long hours with a jackham-<lb/>
mer before returning to his bare<lb/>
apartment and his wife, Sharon<lb/>
Stone. His dreams are haunted by<lb/>
adventures on Mars with a dark<lb/>
beauty, Rachel Ticotin.<lb/>
Against his wife's wishes,<lb/>
Schwarzenegger enrolls at Rekall,<lb/>
Inc a travel agency that implants<lb/>
fantasy vacations in the minds oi<lb/>
its customers. Oops, the machine<lb/>
goes blooey, and poor Arnold is<lb/>
immersed in a deadly battle. He<lb/>
See Recall, page 9<lb/>
'RoboCop' repeats<lb/>
violence in sequel<lb/>
(AP) - Halfway through<lb/>
"RoboCop 2 vou tind yourself<lb/>
wondering: Is this a satire oi the<lb/>
heavy artillerv-superhero movies?<lb/>
Or it is simply the most loathsome<lb/>
example of the genre?<lb/>
Despite the opaque humor of<lb/>
the futuristic TV commercials<lb/>
("Now that we have destroyed<lb/>
the ozone layer, use Sunblock<lb/>
5000"), you decide that these<lb/>
moviemakers are playing it for<lb/>
real.<lb/>
"RoboCop 2" offers yet an-<lb/>
other argument against sequels.<lb/>
The first movie was cannily<lb/>
directed by Taul Verhoeven with<lb/>
a number ot real surprises and no<lb/>
small amount of violence.<lb/>
The new director is lrvin Ker-<lb/>
shner, a qualified pro (The Em-<lb/>
pire Strikes Back") who seems<lb/>
Strairjacketed by an excessive<lb/>
script (bv Frank Miller and Wav-<lb/>
Ion Green).<lb/>
The first five minutesare pure<lb/>
hellishness The Amazon rain for-<lb/>
est has been destroyed by a nu-<lb/>
clear mishap. The U.S. surgeon<lb/>
general is assassinated while<lb/>
preaching against a new narcotic.<lb/>
A drug treatment center is fire-<lb/>
bombed. Mobs loot Detroit as the<lb/>
police go on strike. An old lady<lb/>
pushing a grocery cart of used<lb/>
cansisnearty rundown by aspeed<lb/>
ing car A mugger robs her, the<lb/>
he is stomped bv a pair ot Ama<lb/>
zons.<lb/>
Time for RoboCop.<lb/>
He zaps dozens ot bad guvs.<lb/>
butheisdismemberedbv the drug<lb/>
kingpins. After staging a come-<lb/>
back, he faces a graver danger<lb/>
Omni Consumer Products ha-<lb/>
invented a RoboCop 2 with the<lb/>
aim of destroying RoboCop I<lb/>
More appalling than the re-<lb/>
lentless butchery is the had taste<lb/>
The Detroit mayor explodes in<lb/>
vulgarisms when he is foiled by<lb/>
the evil head ot Omni. A cute'<lb/>
scene shows Little Leaguers loot:<lb/>
ing an electronics store, led by<lb/>
their coach. Six-vear-olds spoul<lb/>
obscenities. One of the sadistic<lb/>
drug leaders is a bov of 12 or 14<lb/>
Much of me same cast isback,<lb/>
An accomplished actor, Peter<lb/>
Weller was ideal as the tirsi<lb/>
RoboCop. his gaunt face and oth-<lb/>
erworldly eves fitting the role<lb/>
Here, he struts like a chorus<lb/>
member in The March ot tK<lb/>
Wooden Soldiers<lb/>
Nancy Allen adds a much<lb/>
needed note of humanity as his<lb/>
See RoboCop, page 9<lb/>
Listing priorities simplifies decision making<lb/>
Read Along with Rita Long<lb/>
Dear Rita:<lb/>
I have a mother that wasover-<lb/>
protective when 1 was growing up<lb/>
and now that I am in college, she<lb/>
still tries to make all my decisions<lb/>
for me. 1 appreciate her advice but<lb/>
I do think if sabout time for me to<lb/>
make my own decisions. How can<lb/>
I tell her in a way that won't be<lb/>
disrespectful? Signed, Respect.<lb/>
Dear Respect:<lb/>
Sometimes you have to ad-<lb/>
dress situations bluntly. You could<lb/>
say something like this, "I appre-<lb/>
ciate all the good things you have<lb/>
taught me, but now 1 want to put<lb/>
some of your good teaching into<lb/>
practice. Even it 1 make a mistake,<lb/>
learning how to correct it will be<lb/>
good for me Or you may be more<lb/>
comfortable saving, "I don't mean<lb/>
any harm but as long as I'm de-<lb/>
pending on you for all my deci-<lb/>
sions, I will not be able to stand on<lb/>
my own two feet Whatever you<lb/>
say, try to leave your mom in a<lb/>
positive light.<lb/>
Dear Rita:<lb/>
I have a problem of indeci-<lb/>
siveness. For instance, if I need a<lb/>
blouse, I'll go to the store and see<lb/>
two I really like but can only af-<lb/>
ford one. At this point, it seems as<lb/>
if I can never make up my mind<lb/>
which one I should get. This inde-<lb/>
cisiveness has spread to other areas<lb/>
of my life. How can I put a stop to<lb/>
this? Signed, Indecisive.<lb/>
Dear Indecisive:<lb/>
Make a list of the things you<lb/>
need most. Set them in an order of<lb/>
priority reflecting your greatest<lb/>
needs. Then make some short-term<lb/>
goals and long-range goals and<lb/>
do your best to stick with wha<lb/>
you set tor yourself.<lb/>
If you think about the thing?<lb/>
you intend to do before you dc<lb/>
them, you can save yourself en<lb/>
ergy, frustration, and time. Aftei<lb/>
you set goals, ask yourself what e<lb/>
the quickest and most effective<lb/>
way to achieve these goals. If tht<lb/>
problem is big enough to call tr<lb/>
your attention, it may be robbing<lb/>
you of stamina and a better sell<lb/>
image. Making smaller decisioru<lb/>
will become easier once yot<lb/>
achieve order in handeling voui<lb/>
affairs.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0010"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, June 27,1990 9<lb/>
Campus Voice<lb/>
What are you doing to beat<lb/>
the summer heat?<lb/>
Sherard Rogers, 21<lb/>
senior, Accounting<lb/>
 like to stay cool by undressing and<lb/>
laying in front of a large fan. I also<lb/>
;pend as much time as possible in an<lb/>
onditioned building, even if it<lb/>
leans being at work<lb/>
Ronnie Tope, 25<lb/>
Junior, Psychology<lb/>
"I prefer the heat to the cold any day.<lb/>
I'd much rather spend my sunny after-<lb/>
noons out of doors playing basketball<lb/>
with friends<lb/>
Michael "Buzz" Jones, 18<lb/>
sophomore, Buisness<lb/>
I'm pretty laid back anyway 1 Stay<lb/>
cool mostly by enjoying the air-condi-<lb/>
tioned dorms and hanging out with<lb/>
friends. I also trv and spend a lot of<lb/>
ime with my girlfriend<lb/>
Matt Hedrick, 18<lb/>
Freshman, Physics<lb/>
"1 haven't really been staying cool. 1<lb/>
like hanging out with friends, playing<lb/>
tennis and volleyball. I also head lor<lb/>
the beach whenever I get the chance<lb/>
Kimberle Gooden, 20<lb/>
Tunior, Speech Pathology<lb/>
1 spend a lot of time cooling oft in<lb/>
the dorms. Sometimes I go swim-<lb/>
ming with friends at the pool over at<lb/>
IVedgewood Apartments and enjoy<lb/>
i sunshine.<lb/>
�Compiled by Jessica Riggs<lb/>
(Photos by Celeste Hoffman � ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Music Notes<lb/>
Cool<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
water. Do not use waxes or clean-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
Clean or replace the filter<lb/>
monthly. On most units, the filter<lb/>
is mounted behind the grille on<lb/>
the front of the unit. It can be taken<lb/>
out after the grille is removed. If it<lb/>
is a reusable filter, wash it in de-<lb/>
tergent and water, then rinse and<lb/>
squeeze the excess water between<lb/>
newspapers and reinstall Replace<lb/>
torn filters and ones made from<lb/>
fiberglass.<lb/>
With the filter out, vacuum all<lb/>
accessible surfaces. If the alumi-<lb/>
num evaporator fins are bent,<lb/>
gently straighten them with a<lb/>
putty knife so no fins are touch-<lb/>
ing. Troubleshooting Tips.<lb/>
� Does Not Run:<lb/>
Check the outlet with a work<lb/>
clogged with dust: vacuum them.<lb/>
� Unit Cools Poorly:<lb/>
Make sure there arc no air<lb/>
gaps between the unit and the<lb/>
window, between window sashes<lb/>
or around other windows and<lb/>
doors.<lb/>
Filter may be clogged with<lb/>
dust: wash or replace it.<lb/>
Evaporator fins may be bent.<lb/>
Straighten them gently with a<lb/>
putty knife.<lb/>
The ventilator door in the<lb/>
barrier, which controls the flow of<lb/>
outdoor air into the room, may be<lb/>
stuck in an open position.<lb/>
� Excessive Noise:<lb/>
Tighten screws on trim or<lb/>
exterior panels; secure window<lb/>
mounting supports. If window<lb/>
rattles, insert wooden wedges or<lb/>
Position the air conditioner<lb/>
cabinet so its outdoor side is<lb/>
slightly lower then the indoor side.<lb/>
Evaporator fins may be bent.<lb/>
� Bad Odor:<lb/>
A musty odor may mean<lb/>
waterhascollcctedinthebasepan<lb/>
because the drain hole is clogged.<lb/>
Push a stiff coat hanger wiredown<lb/>
the drain hole to remove debris.<lb/>
An oil or tobacco smell means<lb/>
the evaporator fins may need to be<lb/>
vacuumed.<lb/>
For help on a home repair or<lb/>
improvement project, write<lb/>
Reader's Digest, P.O. Box 700,<lb/>
Pleasantville, NY 10570-7000.<lb/>
THROUGH JULY llTH . .<lb/>
BUY 1 CASSETTES OR<lb/>
CDS &amp; SAVE io<lb/>
OFF REGULAR PRICE<lb/>
vnecK ineouuei wmi a ���� �  u<lb/>
,ng lamp. If the lamp does not pieces of folded cardboard be-<lb/>
light, replace the fuse or reset the tween the window and window<lb/>
circuit breaker in your home's jamb,<lb/>
central electrical supply panel. � Unit Frosts Up:<lb/>
Makesurenootherappliancesare Avoid using when outdoor<lb/>
plugged into the same circuit as temperature drops below 70 de-<lb/>
vour air conditioner. grees- , � <lb/>
Y . Fan Runs But Cooling Sys- Filter may be clogged by dust.<lb/>
��m rw Mot wash or replace it.<lb/>
'denser �ns may be � Moisture Drip, .n,o Roonv<lb/>
11 �9 CHARLES BLVD<lb/>
GREENVILLE NC<lb/>
78 � 4XS1<lb/>
NOW OFFERING J<lb/>
2 DAY VIDEO �<lb/>
AND NINTENDO I<lb/>
RENTALS! <lb/>
io OFF ALL PURCHASES<lb/>
X 3W OVER $4.00!<lb/>
- 4th ; (VIDEO RENTALS NOT INCLUDED)<lb/>
?�.S�?�y <lb/>
Recall<lb/>
has a new identity as a secret agent<lb/>
for rebels fighting the despotic<lb/>
regime on Mars. He boards a tour-<lb/>
ist rocket to Mars to discover<lb/>
what's what.<lb/>
Danger springs from every<lb/>
corner, but Arnold is fast enough<lb/>
to zap his attackers, which he does<lb/>
often. He continues searching for<lb/>
clues of who he is and what has<lb/>
gone before. The quest is totally<lb/>
gripping, even though the final<lb/>
liberation of Mars is a bit much.<lb/>
Pacemaker<lb/>
This summer is going to be the hottest with scorching<lb/>
, u releases from Vixen, Stryper, Extreme, Winger, Ratt,<lb/>
' Bullet Boys, Anthrax and Guy Mann-Dude. Speaking of<lb/>
v releases, Poison's "Flesh and Blood" IP is due out on<lb/>
July 10 The LP's first video single "Unskinny Bop" had its<lb/>
ivorld premier on MTV last week Poison will begin a<lb/>
irld tour in support of the album on September 1.<lb/>
Steve Vai's "Passion and Warfare" LP is doing very well<lb/>
for this. Whitesnake guitarist. Vai and the rest of the Snakes<lb/>
touring the country with their successful effort "Slip of<lb/>
; the Tongue At the shows, Vai will perform cuts from his<lb/>
i loLP for all vou guitar maniacs!<lb/>
 hile we're on the subject of tours, San Francisco-based<lb/>
: Faith No More will be concerning this summer support-<lb/>
their latest smash album "The Real Thing This<lb/>
sically divers- and influential act will be coming to The<lb/>
Boathouse in Norfolk, Va on July 21. You can catch their<lb/>
it video single "Epic" on MTV.<lb/>
Diamond David Lee Roth and mega-metalists Megadeth<lb/>
, announced the new guitarists that will be joining them<lb/>
in their respective bands. Jason Becker is the new axeman<lb/>
for Roth, and six-stringer Marty Friedman has joined Dave<lb/>
i Mustaine and company. Becker and Friedman are a umm<lb/>
of Cacophony, a band that ripped out some of the fastest<lb/>
md most incredible guitar work to date, before they parted<lb/>
! ways to expand their horizons.<lb/>
Thus past weekend, newly-formed Eavetteville act Street<lb/>
I ethal made their first club performance at The Carousel in<lb/>
(Ireensboro when they opened for Last Child. Stree<lb/>
Lethal recently had some personnel changes when vocalist<lb/>
limmy Walker left the band prior to the weekend shows.<lb/>
Replacing Walker is Sid Starling, a frontman with some<lb/>
Jooth and powerful vocal chords. Street Lethal is geared<lb/>
n.toplaywithLastChildatArslungeinJacksonvilleon<lb/>
Thursday Last Child's extensive road tours have turned<lb/>
Qhis foursome into one of the tighest acts on the metal<lb/>
circuit Street Lethal is headed in the same direction with<lb/>
tight and talented players, and great originals that keep the<lb/>
audiences rockin<lb/>
Tipper Gor, Greenville's own homeboys from hell, is<lb/>
making its way to The Attic on July 7. Don'X s one of the<lb/>
heaviest thrash bands to invade Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
On Saturday, there will be a reggae sunsplash concert<lb/>
n Ddiuiu y, information call<lb/>
going on in Atlantic Beacn, in �-� rui<lb/>
WZMB at 757-6656. mM1(,<lb/>
And flnally, SHU W'S<lb/>
Mug in Fayetteville on Thursaay, rnuay<lb/>
Until thenturn up the music and keep rockin !<lb/>
�Compiled by Dearma Nevgloski <lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
Shooting is a big part of Jack<lb/>
Parks' life. He picked up the hobby<lb/>
during World War II, when he<lb/>
was an aerial gunner for dive<lb/>
bombers. The Marine Corps used<lb/>
skeet shooting to train the gun-<lb/>
ners to hit a moving target.<lb/>
In skeet shooting competition,<lb/>
contestants may shoot up to 500<lb/>
rounds with four different cali-<lb/>
ber-size shotguns. The man or<lb/>
woman who hits the most targets<lb/>
wjnsn0 Small task when you<lb/>
consider that the "pigeons" are<lb/>
travelingat60to70milesperhour<lb/>
up to 30 yards away.<lb/>
To make the All-American<lb/>
team, Parks had to perform well at<lb/>
not one but numerous regional<lb/>
and national shooting matches,<lb/>
including the World Skeet Shoot-<lb/>
ing Championship in San Anto-<lb/>
nio, Texas. He traveled several<lb/>
thousand miles and went through<lb/>
about 35,000 rounds of ammuni-<lb/>
tion in the course of a year.<lb/>
"It's kind of a strenuous<lb/>
game Parks said, but that should<lb/>
be no problem for a man who cuts<lb/>
his own firewood, tends a garden,<lb/>
and still works part-time as a water<lb/>
well contractor.<lb/>
"He's as healthy as a horse<lb/>
said Dr. William C. Reeves, head<lb/>
of cardiology at ECU. Reeves,<lb/>
himself a shooter, regards Parks<lb/>
as the perfect counterpoint to the<lb/>
mythology about pacemakers.<lb/>
"There is an attitude that<lb/>
people who have pacemakers are<lb/>
somehow incapacitated said<lb/>
Reeves. "It'sabsolutely incorrect<lb/>
The only medical limitations<lb/>
on Parks are annual checkups and<lb/>
periodic monitoring of his pace-<lb/>
maker battery which, astonish-<lb/>
ingly, can be done in about five<lb/>
minutes via telephone.<lb/>
Parks hopes his experience<lb/>
helps others view pacemakers�<lb/>
and people with pacemakers-Hi<lb/>
little differently. They're not just<lb/>
getting older, they'reWell, you<lb/>
know.<lb/>
Says Parks: "I'm still enjoying<lb/>
life and in some cases I think I'm<lb/>
getting better at it<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
'Total Recall" is tailor-made<lb/>
for Schwarzenegger's bulging<lb/>
frame and lighthearted brutality.<lb/>
Except for the villainous Ronny<lb/>
Cox, the rest of the cast is little-<lb/>
known (the star's $10 million sil-<lb/>
ary apparently depleted the cast<lb/>
budget). But all performed well,<lb/>
especially Ticotin and Stone<lb/>
Star billing should also go to<lb/>
production designer William<lb/>
Sandell, cincmatographer Jost<lb/>
Vacano, and makeup artist Rob<lb/>
Bottin. They depicted an Earth and<lb/>
Mars that make the 21st century<lb/>
seem uninviting.<lb/>
The Tri-Star Pictures release<lb/>
was produced by Buzz Feitshans<lb/>
and Ronald Shusett. The R rating<lb/>
reflects course language, excessive<lb/>
violence and nudity (including a<lb/>
three-breasted mutant woman).<lb/>
Running time: 109 minutes.<lb/>
NEWMAN<lb/>
Catholic Student Center<lb/>
Would like to<lb/>
Welcome The Summer Students<lb/>
and<lb/>
Invite You to Join Us In Worship<lb/>
Campus Mass Schedule<lb/>
Summer Sessions May 13 - July 22<lb/>
Sunday: 11:3() am and 8:30 pm at the<lb/>
Newman Center<lb/>
Weekdays: 8:00am at the Newman Center<lb/>
Wednesday: 8:00am and 5:30pm<lb/>
For more information about these and other programs,<lb/>
call or visit the Center daily between 8:30 am and 11:00 pm<lb/>
Fr. Paul Vaeth, Chaplain &amp; Campus Minister<lb/>
953 East 10th St. (At the Fool of College Hill)<lb/>
757-3760757-1991<lb/>
Pre 4th of July Super Sale At<lb/>
Overton s<lb/>
PORTERHOUSE<lb/>
STEAKS<lb/>
lb$3.59<lb/>
Grade A<lb/>
Whole Fryers<lb/>
lb 59<lb/>
Fresh Meaty<lb/>
Beef Spare Ribs<lb/>
lb$1.19<lb/>
Kraft Orange Juice<lb/>
12 gallon paper<lb/>
carton<lb/>
990<lb/>
Limit 2<lb/>
Country Cane<lb/>
Blended Sugar<lb/>
4 lb bag880<lb/>
Limit 1 with<lb/>
$10.00 food order.<lb/>
Boneless<lb/>
Top Sirloin<lb/>
Steaks<lb/>
lb$3.69<lb/>
Pepsi Products<lb/>
2 liter bottle<lb/>
$1.09<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
Ground FreshDaily<lb/>
3lbs or more<lb/>
lb $1.29<lb/>
Bold Detergent<lb/>
Giant Box<lb/>
980<lb/>
Fresh Chicken<lb/>
Breast Sale<lb/>
Split Chicken Breast<lb/>
lb$L49<lb/>
Boneless Chicken Br.<lb/>
lb$2.79<lb/>
Breyer's All<lb/>
Natural Ice Cream<lb/>
12 gallon carton<lb/>
$2.79<lb/>
Embers Instant<lb/>
Lite Charcoal<lb/>
4 lb bag<lb/>
Kraft Macaroni<lb/>
&amp;Cheese Dinner<lb/>
7 oz box<lb/>
2 for $1.00<lb/>
Libby's Truckload<lb/>
Sale<lb/>
Garden Peas - Cream<lb/>
Style Com - Whole Kernal<lb/>
Com - Cut Beans - French<lb/>
Style Beans<lb/>
3 for $1.00<lb/>
Limit 6 combined<lb/>
RoboCop<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
! faithful sidekick.<lb/>
TheOrion Pictures releasewas<lb/>
produced by Jon Davison and was<lb/>
rated R, apparently for violence<lb/>
and language.<lb/>
If "RoboCop 2" gets an R and<lb/>
"Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down and<lb/>
"Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer"<lb/>
are condemned to an X, is there<lb/>
something terribly wrong with the<lb/>
rating system?<lb/>
Keliogg's Rice<lb/>
Krispies 13oz box<lb/>
Buy 1 get 1 free<lb/>
$2.59<lb/>
Busch Beer<lb/>
Regular or Light<lb/>
Carton of 12-12 oz cans<lb/>
$4.79<lb/>
Salad Fixins:<lb/>
Bell Peppers -<lb/>
Cucumbers 5 for $1.00<lb/>
Local Snap Beans<lb/>
lb690<lb/>
Local Vine Ripened<lb/>
Tomatoes . . lb . . 690<lb/>
Hunt's Ketchup<lb/>
Plastic Quart Bott!e<lb/>
990<lb/>
Sfnro Hours:<lb/>
Open Sundays 1 pm - 6pm<lb/>
Monday - Saturday 8 am - 8 pm<lb/>
Prices effective Wednesday June 27<lb/>
through Saturday June 30,1990<lb/>
Mastercard-Visa<lb/>
American Expressgfelcome<lb/>
OVECK<lb/>
5<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
Corner of Third &amp; Jarvis<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0011"/><lb/>
�IE �aat (Harolmfan<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
June 27,1990<lb/>
Steele teaches<lb/>
fundamentals<lb/>
Bv Doug Morris<lb/>
Sports Kditor<lb/>
Students frornaQ over the state<lb/>
have boon learning about basket-<lb/>
ball in Minges Collesium during<lb/>
Mike Steele's Pirate basketball<lb/>
camp. he Mrst week of the an-<lb/>
nual camp taught children from<lb/>
agem to l . rhesechildrencome<lb/>
for the day and go home at night.<lb/>
rhesecond week sees high-school<lb/>
students age 12 and over. Most of<lb/>
these students come with their<lb/>
coaches. Their week is spent m<lb/>
intensive training.<lb/>
"We Mart at 7:30 in the morn-<lb/>
ing, -viul Mike Steele, head coach<lb/>
of ECl s basketball team. "We<lb/>
wake them up and coach them<lb/>
until about 10:30 at night, so it's<lb/>
constant basketball Steele said<lb/>
that thestudentsareallowed some<lb/>
time to lookaround. "Thev'vegot<lb/>
a chance to swim and to see the<lb/>
campus, but pretty much, it's<lb/>
basketball<lb/>
1 he high-school camp is di-<lb/>
vided into two leagues. ,i "pro"<lb/>
league which is comprised of<lb/>
mostly juniors and seniorsin high-<lb/>
school, o a "college" league<lb/>
which is mostly junior varsity or<lb/>
boys w ho did not come with their<lb/>
schools. We've got somewhere<lb/>
around 10 teams in each league<lb/>
Steele said.<lb/>
It's a team camp Steele<lb/>
explained. 'It gives the.oachesa<lb/>
chance to spend all ov for a whole<lb/>
week with their players Steele<lb/>
said that the camp is also good for<lb/>
� the coaches. "It gives the coaches<lb/>
f a chance to get to know us, and us<lb/>
a chance to know them. "hey see<lb/>
how we do things. Some things, 1<lb/>
think they like, and some things<lb/>
they do the way that they want to<lb/>
do them. I think it's a good expe-<lb/>
rience for them<lb/>
Steele said that the camp fo-<lb/>
cuses on basics. "We do all funda-<lb/>
mental work at different times.<lb/>
We do some defensive work and<lb/>
some offensive work and then we<lb/>
put them together. We put them<lb/>
in some of our drills and then the<lb/>
kids get to work on them with<lb/>
their coaches<lb/>
"We'd liketothink they'll pick<lb/>
up some things fundamentally<lb/>
said Steele, "but it gives them a<lb/>
chance to play five league games<lb/>
against other people and other<lb/>
teams. Itreallvgivesthemachance<lb/>
to have a week of intensified bas-<lb/>
ketball During the week, the<lb/>
teams compete against each other<lb/>
and the winner receives a trophy.<lb/>
Steele said the camp does<lb/>
more than just give experience.<lb/>
"It helps in a number of ways<lb/>
Steele said. "It gives these people<lb/>
a chance to see East Carolina and<lb/>
a chance to meet a lot of people,<lb/>
plus it gives us a chance to work<lb/>
with some of the players and<lb/>
coaches<lb/>
ECL' has not signed any of the<lb/>
players who have gone through<lb/>
the camp in the past "Not yet<lb/>
Steelestressesbut wvw ill. We've<lb/>
already seen some sophomores,<lb/>
juniors and freshmen from last<lb/>
year that we're recruiting<lb/>
Steele said that the camp is<lb/>
larger every year. "The day camp<lb/>
has grown from about 30 or 40<lb/>
kids. We had about 85 or 90 this<lb/>
time. It's the same with the team<lb/>
camp We've had about 45 or 50<lb/>
kids and now we're up to about<lb/>
100. We're real pleased with the<lb/>
progress we've made<lb/>
Charlotte's footall<lb/>
stadium delayed<lb/>
Officials to shoot for '93<lb/>
These "fro division champions from Dudley High School celebrate<lb/>
their win with the trophy held high at Mike Steele s Pirate basketball<lb/>
camp (Photo by Celeste Hoffman � ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) � A<lb/>
Charlotte official said Monday he<lb/>
doesn't believe an NFL football<lb/>
stadium can be completed in time<lb/>
for the opening of the 1992 season.<lb/>
Loy McKeithen, the former<lb/>
chairman of Charlotte Uptown<lb/>
Development Corp. who isassem-<lb/>
bling land for the stadium, said<lb/>
the start of construction probably<lb/>
will be delayed a few months for<lb/>
relocation of underground utili-<lb/>
ties and a business.<lb/>
Buta spokesman for the group<lb/>
seeking the football franchise<lb/>
downplayed the chance of delay<lb/>
and its significance.<lb/>
"We feel we can work around<lb/>
the bottlenecks said Mark<lb/>
Richardson of Richardson Sports<lb/>
Group. "If we have to be ready by<lb/>
fall of '92, we can still hit that<lb/>
timetable<lb/>
Other options, Richardson<lb/>
said, would be to play the first<lb/>
1992 games away or in a univer-<lb/>
sity stadium.<lb/>
The stadium, to be built by<lb/>
Richardson Sports if and when it<lb/>
wins a National Football league<lb/>
franchise, will go in a southwest<lb/>
corner of uptown Charlotte be-<lb/>
side 1-277 and Mint Street.<lb/>
Construction is expected n<lb/>
take at least 21 months. So whether<lb/>
it can be finished by September<lb/>
1992, the earliest possible expan<lb/>
sion date, will become clear in<lb/>
coming months.<lb/>
McKeithen said two key (a.<lb/>
tors are the relocations of WAV<lb/>
Grainger Inc. and of Southern Bel!<lb/>
lines buried in the area.<lb/>
Both moves are expected to tx<lb/>
finished in December. Construe<lb/>
tion of the stadium tor 1992 was<lb/>
originally to start in October<lb/>
The delay won't matter it tin<lb/>
NFL decides to expand in 1993<lb/>
The league's expansion commit-<lb/>
tee has met once but said nothing<lb/>
"At this time, the league has<lb/>
the flexibility to go either '92 or<lb/>
'93 said Richardson "Theslower<lb/>
the expansion committee moves,<lb/>
the more it looks like '93<lb/>
Intramurals boast winners in all sports<lb/>
By Jeanette Roth<lb/>
IKs<lb/>
In the first summer session,<lb/>
three men's softball teams battled<lb/>
for the title with Montezumas<lb/>
Revenge meeting the DPl's in the<lb/>
championship later this week.<lb/>
Cedric Howard, Ken Poss and<lb/>
Mark Taggart have provided the<lb/>
offensive firepower tor Mon-<lb/>
teuma, while Paul Springer and<lb/>
Lee Fleming have had the hot bats<lb/>
for the DPI's The men of<lb/>
Montezuma s Revenge, led by<lb/>
their fearless aptain Monty Rish<lb/>
have also been important to the<lb/>
success ot theCo-Rec champions,<lb/>
Boys &amp; Girls, ackie Robinson and<lb/>
Kelly Fields have provided excel-<lb/>
lent fielding and timely hitting for<lb/>
Bovs &amp; Girls, while Bryan Ken-<lb/>
nedy, Holly Eckman and Pete<lb/>
Clemens lead the runner up. Si-<lb/>
lent Attack<lb/>
In3-on-3BasketbalU'dRather<lb/>
be Balhn' survived the hot shoot-<lb/>
ing of Rodney Boyceand Brandon<lb/>
Eleby to defeat Bad Boys 11 in the<lb/>
title game. Shane Wells'ball han-<lb/>
dling and passing sparked I'd<lb/>
Rather be Ballm'through the tour-<lb/>
nament, but it was Lynn Johnson,<lb/>
who was nearly unstoppable in<lb/>
the title game as he scored from<lb/>
every way imaginable. Also<lb/>
making a strong showing were<lb/>
"The Full Effect" and RS contin-<lb/>
gent of Damn Evans, GregGoode<lb/>
and Robbie Gupton known as<lb/>
"Heavy D and the Boyz"<lb/>
The pin action at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center was fast and tun<lb/>
ous as Bvron Kennedy outlasted<lb/>
Scott Smith for the men's title and<lb/>
Kelly Eckman held off Paige<lb/>
Richardson in the women's divi-<lb/>
sion. High scores go to Kelly<lb/>
Eckman with a 18 game, and<lb/>
Paige Richardson with a 192.<lb/>
The tennis singles wound<lb/>
See Intramurals page 12<lb/>
Clemson football player faces<lb/>
charges of assault and battery<lb/>
CLEMSON, S.C. AP) �<lb/>
Clemson defensive tackle Chester<lb/>
McGlockton could face discipli-<lb/>
narv action pending the outcome<lb/>
of charges stemming from an early<lb/>
morning fight outsidea nightclub.<lb/>
Coach Ken Hattield said.<lb/>
McGlockton, a 6-foot-5, 296-<lb/>
pound sophomore from VVhitev-<lb/>
llle, .C, wascharged Sunday by<lb/>
Clemson city police with three<lb/>
counts of simple assault and bat-<lb/>
tery and one count of public disor-<lb/>
derly conduct, Police Chief<lb/>
lohnson Link said in a news re-<lb/>
lease Monday.<lb/>
McGlockton, 20, was released<lb/>
on $1,800 personal recognizance<lb/>
bond. A hearing has been set tor<lb/>
July 11, Link said.<lb/>
McGlockton could receive a<lb/>
fine of $200 or up to 30 days in jail<lb/>
for each count. Link said.<lb/>
Hatfield, who spoke for 90<lb/>
minutes with McGlockton on<lb/>
Mondav, said the player should<lb/>
"tell the truth get a lawyer and<lb/>
prepare a defense. McGlockton,<lb/>
like all football players who live in<lb/>
the athletic dormitory, has an<lb/>
unlisted telephone number and<lb/>
could not be reached for comment<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Hatfield said he planned to<lb/>
investigate the incident himself.<lb/>
Any disciplinary action, if Hat-<lb/>
field believed appropriate, proba-<lb/>
bly would come after the case is<lb/>
resolved. 'There is something to<lb/>
be learned from all of this Hat<lb/>
field said<lb/>
McGlockton was arrested at<lb/>
ter police received an anonymous<lb/>
telephone call about 2 am. Sun<lb/>
dayaboutahghtat the entranced<lb/>
Village Green Apartments adia<lb/>
cent to a popular Clemson lounge<lb/>
called "The Zoo Link said<lb/>
"As a result of information<lb/>
received from witnesses and vic-<lb/>
tims police charged McGIock-<lb/>
ton, Link said.<lb/>
"The football staff regrets the<lb/>
recent incident involving Chester<lb/>
McGlockton said Dick Ellis, as<lb/>
sistant athletic director for foot<lb/>
See Clemson page 12<lb/>
Quit making all that racket<lb/>
Ireland, Italy to face each<lb/>
other in World Cup action<lb/>
Michelle Wood enjoys her summer afternoon with a tennis match Here she demonstrates her back-<lb/>
hand as she tries to defeat her opponent (Photo by J D Whitmire � ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Ga.Tech considers move to SEC<lb/>
ATLANTA (AP) - Georgia<lb/>
Tech, which resigned from the<lb/>
Southeastern Conference in 14,<lb/>
has shown an interest in getting<lb/>
back in.<lb/>
Athleticsdirector Homer Rice<lb/>
said he would listen if approached<lb/>
by the SEC to leave the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference and rejoin the<lb/>
SEC, although he said he has not<lb/>
been approached.<lb/>
Football coach Bobby Ross<lb/>
said he feels the same, adding that<lb/>
most Sou them prospects recrui ted<lb/>
by Tech have "an SEC mentality<lb/>
But basketball coach Bobby<lb/>
Cremins was less enthused.<lb/>
"I'm for the ACC he said.<lb/>
"I'm an ACC man all the way.<lb/>
That's one of the reasons I came to<lb/>
Georgia Tech. I really think Tech<lb/>
is embedded in the ACC, and 1<lb/>
believe we're there to stay<lb/>
The Yellow Jackets won their<lb/>
second ACC basketball champi-<lb/>
onship last season and went to the<lb/>
Final Four.<lb/>
The SEC has not identified its<lb/>
target schools, but Southwest<lb/>
Conference member Arkansas has<lb/>
acted on the SEC's mood to ex-<lb/>
pand its roster from 10 schools<lb/>
and agreed to hold formal conver-<lb/>
sations with league officials.<lb/>
"I think all of our people are in<lb/>
line with the ACC, but if some-<lb/>
thing came along, you'd have to<lb/>
listen Rice said. "It's not a matter<lb/>
of greed, but a matter of survival<lb/>
in the television market<lb/>
After Tech resigned from the<lb/>
SEC, football and basketball at-<lb/>
tendance plummeted and recruit-<lb/>
ing suffered. In'l 976 then athletics<lb/>
See SEC page 12<lb/>
ROMF (AD � Italy doesn't<lb/>
allow goals. Ireland doesn't lose<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Both continued their streaks<lb/>
Monday in entirely different ways.<lb/>
The host Italians, seeking an<lb/>
unprecedented fourth World Cup,<lb/>
beat Uruguay 2-0on goals by Sal-<lb/>
vatore Schillaci and Aldo Serena.<lb/>
Ireland, in its first appearance at<lb/>
the world soccer championships,<lb/>
survived 120 minutes of scoreless<lb/>
plav and won a penalty kick shoot-<lb/>
out over Romania 5-4.<lb/>
The teams meet in the quar-<lb/>
terfinals in Rome on Saturday.<lb/>
"This is the World Cup and<lb/>
every game is hard, every team is<lb/>
hard Schillaci said of the<lb/>
matchup with the lnsh.<lb/>
It will be hard for anyone to<lb/>
beat Italy's defense, which has an<lb/>
unblemished record so far. The<lb/>
Italians have beaten Austria and<lb/>
the United States 1-0, Czechoslo-<lb/>
vakia and Uruguay 2-0.<lb/>
"1 think our midfield is our<lb/>
real sourceof strength said Luigi<lb/>
De Agostini. "We have mobile<lb/>
playersand never give other teams<lb/>
a fixed point of reference that they<lb/>
can attack<lb/>
Italian coach Azeglio Vicini<lb/>
almost seems to take the impene-<lb/>
trable defense in stride.<lb/>
"It is something we depend<lb/>
on he said. "We always attacked<lb/>
and created quite a few plays. In<lb/>
the second half, we were able to<lb/>
break the tie. It was an important<lb/>
step against a very difficult oppo-<lb/>
nent<lb/>
The next opponent not only<lb/>
will be difficult but inspired. It has<lb/>
been 19 months since the Irish were<lb/>
beaten and, even though they have<lb/>
not won in regulation time here,<lb/>
nobody has defeated them, either<lb/>
"Just think Coach Jack<lb/>
Charlton said, "we are through to<lb/>
the quarterfinals in our first World<lb/>
Cup. I promised them at the start<lb/>
that we would take them to Rome<lb/>
and we've made it<lb/>
Barely. The heroes this time<lb/>
were the goalie and the gunner.<lb/>
Goalkeeper Paddy Bonne:<lb/>
guessed nght, dived nght and<lb/>
stopped the fifth penalty kick in<lb/>
the shootout, by Daniel f imotte<lb/>
"I read the way he walked up<lb/>
to the ball Bonner said.<lb/>
David O'Leary, known as<lb/>
"Gunner" with Arsenal of the<lb/>
English first division, then walked<lb/>
up to the ball and put it into the<lb/>
right comer of the net for the vie<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
'To walk on and score the<lb/>
winner, it was a dream OLearv<lb/>
said. The lads said: Takethetifth<lb/>
one So I did<lb/>
"I left it completely to them<lb/>
Charlton said. "There were plenty<lb/>
of willing takers. David O'Leary<lb/>
has had to wait a long time to get<lb/>
on to the team, but he accepted<lb/>
without hesitation the responsi-<lb/>
bility of scoring the final goal. He<lb/>
did Ireland proud<lb/>
When O'Leary scored, the<lb/>
players surged onto the field and<lb/>
mobbed him, while nearly 20,000<lb/>
See World Cup page 12<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0012"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, June 27,1990 11<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Czyz KO's Maynard in seventh round<lb/>
Bobby Czyz , the one-time light heavyweight champion defeated<lb/>
up and comer Andrew Maynard Sunday with a seventh-round knock-<lb/>
out at Atlantic City. Czyz (36-5, 25 KOs) floored Maynard with a right<lb/>
hand Maynani, his left eve swollen shut, appeared able to continue but<lb/>
let referee Frank Cappuccino count him out. Two judges had the fight<lb/>
even at that point; the other had Czyz comfortably ahead.<lb/>
Andrctti wins Indy race in Portland<lb/>
Michael Andretti held off a challenge from his father, Mario, to win<lb/>
the Budweiser-G.I. loo's 2(X) lndy-car race Sunday at Portland, Ore.<lb/>
ndretti finished 3�2 seconds ahead of his father for his second victory<lb/>
m two weeks. His average speed of 110.673 mph is a track record,<lb/>
heating the 103 qS4 by Emerson Fittipaldi last year.<lb/>
Spinks announces another comeback<lb/>
Former world heavy weight boxing champion Leon Spinks said he<lb/>
auncha comeback inSeptembei by lighting a kick-boxer in South<lb/>
i Afterward, he will return to the USA for the real thing. His last<lb/>
i omeback ended in 1988 with a 1-8-1 record and 33 second loss tolast-<lb/>
second substitute opponent Tony Morrison. Spinks, 3b, is refereeing<lb/>
wrestling matches<lb/>
Giants may rent land for new stadium<lb/>
1 he Santa Clara, Calif City Council will discuss Tuesday a pro<lb/>
al b cit) manager Jennifer Sparacino that would force baseball's<lb/>
I ranciscot iiants to pay Santa Clara rent it the team builds a stadium<lb/>
�,t land The team wants to uy 120 acres ot municipal property<lb/>
ent free to build a 45,000 seatstadium Sparacino has proposed a $5.4<lb/>
k n annual rent<lb/>
Fastest time of the year set in Minnesota<lb/>
, Monica Track Club 4x100 relay ot Mark WithdSpOOn,<lb/>
Burrell, Floyd Heard and Carl Lewis had the fastest time in the<lb/>
rid this year, 38.56, in Saturday'sSika Bram International Track &amp;<lb/>
Id Meet at Blaine Minn The mark came in a rerun, alter Santa<lb/>
, and Arizona each dropped batons in the first race, won by the<lb/>
� da W 26).<lb/>
Secret wins cross-country bicycle race<lb/>
Hornets' pick to<lb/>
be based on talent �IjfS<lb/>
si Mr<lb/>
so ret finished the "Race Across America" in a<lb/>
2 hours and 16 minutes. Secret, 37, ol Scottsdale,<lb/>
de ut ot 1 luntington Beach,Calif une 16. The 2Ji6 mile trip<lb/>
lay at Atlantu City.<lb/>
Bullets, Kings, J azz make three-way trade<lb/>
a three wav deal with the Washington Bullets and "vcramento<lb/>
. the Utah azz got Washington's leff Malone The Bullets sent<lb/>
Mai ne and a 1991 second round pick to the Kings forb-lOcenter Pervis<lb/>
rhe Kings then dealt Malone and a second-round pick ir.<lb/>
Inesday's draft to the la tor guard Bobby Hanscn, center Eric<lb/>
. ier and Utah s first and second-round picks Wednesday.<lb/>
, Flay ers Association files antitrust suit<lb/>
rhe NFL Players Association, seeking to protect itsgrowing licens-<lb/>
business, has filed an antitrust suit against the National Football<lb/>
. the NF1 Management Council, and NFL Properties. THE<lb/>
�t i king $40 million in damages. They charge NFL properties<lb/>
. trying to sign star players to licensing agreements.<lb/>
NCAA investigates UTEP basketball<lb/>
( A is investigating recruiting practices at Texas-hl Paso<lb/>
' involving a star high school boys basketball player who was brought<lb/>
� I IIT s program without a diploma. In his senior year at Los<lb/>
Angeles jenshaw I ligh, ohn Staggers had so many unexcused ab-<lb/>
sences that he failed to graduate. Staggers said UTEP coaches, in 1988,<lb/>
� meed free housing, meals and transportation for him<lb/>
( HARLOTTE (AP) � The<lb/>
Charlotte Hornets' No. 5 pick in<lb/>
the upcoming NBA draft will<lb/>
depend on which player will help<lb/>
them improve on a disappointing<lb/>
second season in which they won<lb/>
just 19 games.<lb/>
The Hornets management has<lb/>
vowed to take the best player<lb/>
available regardless of need.<lb/>
"We'll be taking a guard or a<lb/>
small forward said Allen Bns-<lb/>
tow, vice president of basketball<lb/>
operations. "We won 19 games<lb/>
last vear.That'snot a delicate mix.<lb/>
We're going to raise our talent<lb/>
level with this year's draft<lb/>
Hornets coach Gene Littles<lb/>
concurred.<lb/>
"We need a player who will<lb/>
make us more competitive, who'll<lb/>
help us win a few more games<lb/>
he said-<lb/>
Charlotte played it coy Mon-<lb/>
day, giving low hints about the<lb/>
player they hope to select.<lb/>
"Did 1 give it away? Can you<lb/>
read between the lines Bnstow<lb/>
joked after discussing some of the<lb/>
college stars in Wednesday'sdraft<lb/>
with reporters at the Hornets' of-<lb/>
fices.<lb/>
Most basketball experts pre-<lb/>
dict 6-foot-9 Syracuse forward<lb/>
IVrnckC oleman will go first when<lb/>
the New jersey Nets pick.<lb/>
Until recently, Georgia lech<lb/>
swingman Dennis Scott was<lb/>
touted as the No. 2 pick. But con-<lb/>
cerns about his weight have come<lb/>
up and his stock has gone down in<lb/>
some circles.<lb/>
Should Scott be around when<lb/>
the Hornets pick, there's a good<lb/>
chance he'll be their pick.<lb/>
He'sby far the best offensive<lb/>
talent in the draft Bnstow said.<lb/>
1 ot the Hornets, there's an<lb/>
obvious need that likely won't be<lb/>
tilled by this draft center.<lb/>
So the attention turns primar-<lb/>
ily to a strong slate of guards.<lb/>
including Gary Payton, Kendall<lb/>
GUI, Chris ackson and Rumeal<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
"This isn't a marquee draft<lb/>
said Littles.<lb/>
Bnstow spent a lot of time<lb/>
Monday talking about GUI, a 6-<lb/>
foot-5 guard out of Illinois, and 6-<lb/>
foot-8 LaSalle forward Lionel<lb/>
Simmons.<lb/>
"A guy like Kendall Gill will<lb/>
find his minutes Bnstow said.<lb/>
"1 le's that kind of competitor<lb/>
As for Simmons, the Hornets<lb/>
official said: "1 like his toughness.<lb/>
He can put the ball on the floor<lb/>
and he sa good shooter. He's also<lb/>
an unselfish player and hisconsis-<lb/>
tencv is superb. He's done the<lb/>
same things for four years at La-<lb/>
Salle.<lb/>
"Perhaps he is the safest pick<lb/>
in the draft. He doesn't do any-<lb/>
thingspectacularHe'snotsuper<lb/>
quick. He's like a decathlon ath-<lb/>
lete<lb/>
Both Littles and Bnstow said<lb/>
Jackson, who averaged 29 points a<lb/>
game in his two seasons at ISU,<lb/>
would probably not fit into the<lb/>
Hornets mix.<lb/>
"He'll be a big draw at the<lb/>
gate and he's going to sell tickets<lb/>
Bnstow said. "We don't need to<lb/>
sell tickets<lb/>
Jackson is one of five point<lb/>
guards who figure to go high in<lb/>
the draft.<lb/>
Besides JacksonandGill, other<lb/>
potential picks at that position<lb/>
include Oregon State's Payton.<lb/>
Michigan's Robinson and Travis<lb/>
Slavs out of Texas.<lb/>
Bnstow listed his top three<lb/>
point guards in Wednesday'sdratt<lb/>
as Payton, Jackson and Robinson.<lb/>
Hornets officials were tight-<lb/>
lipped about possible second-<lb/>
round selections, but said there<lb/>
may be some good talent left when<lb/>
they pick .Wth.<lb/>
This draft is as deep as an)<lb/>
I've been associated with said<lb/>
BristowAlotofplayersaregoing<lb/>
to stick with their teams '<lb/>
TTiebigquestion mark is Scott,<lb/>
who tore up the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conferenceafter losing JOpounds<lb/>
Some observers sav he's put a lot<lb/>
,t weight back on during the off-<lb/>
season.<lb/>
1 he fact that he gamed<lb/>
weight doesn't bother me but it<lb/>
should bother Dennis Scott said<lb/>
Bnstow, who added that the Hor-<lb/>
net- were unable to bnng the 6-<lb/>
foot-8 (-eorgia Tech star in for an<lb/>
interview-<lb/>
He's the one guy we can't<lb/>
find he said.<lb/>
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Night<lb/>
Johnson wins $50,000 in dunk contest<lb/>
oey Johnson, brother of Boston Celtics guard Dennis Johnson, won<lb/>
the vertical dunk contest in Monday's One-on-One Collegiate C hal-<lb/>
lenge .it the Convention Center in Atlantic City. The b-4 Johnson<lb/>
Junk �n a basket that was raised to 11 feet, 7 inches to win the $50,000<lb/>
firs! prizi<lb/>
Leonard-Hearns fight may be delayed<lb/>
A proposed third Sugar Ray Leonard-Thomas Hearns tight tenta<lb/>
lively set foi November is bogged down in negotiations because<lb/>
1 eonard insists 1 learns weigh no more than 160 pounds. Leonard won<lb/>
their first meeting in 1980; the rivals fought to a controversial draw last<lb/>
lune.<lb/>
Tj<lb/>
jela barred from running in marathon<lb/>
Ernest Tjelaof Lesotho, who won the 1989 San Francisco Marathon,<lb/>
has been barred from the uly 1 race because he ran in a cross-country<lb/>
ra e in south Africa. In 1988, Tjela wasbarred from the Seoul Olympics<lb/>
because he ran in Sou Africa earlier that year.<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
Grand Slam winners<lb/>
Players who have won all<lb/>
four Grand Stem events<lb/>
'Wimbledon, French Open.<lb/>
Australian Openin the<lb/>
same year: <lb/>
Player<lb/>
Steffi Graf<lb/>
<lb/>
J<lb/>
Margaret Smith Court<lb/>
Rod Laver<lb/>
Maureen Connolly<lb/>
Don Budge<lb/>
Country<lb/>
West Germany<lb/>
Australia<lb/>
Australia<lb/>
USA<lb/>
USA<lb/>
Year<lb/>
1988<lb/>
1970<lb/>
1962<lb/>
1953<lb/>
1938<lb/>
Source Raquetball Manufacturers Association<lb/>
Rod Little, Gannett News Service<lb/>
Winners need<lb/>
to fight to win<lb/>
at Wimbledon<lb/>
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)<lb/>
Ivan Lend! won ugly. Boris<lb/>
Becker won dirty.<lb/>
The top two seeds survived<lb/>
surprisingly tough challenges in<lb/>
Monday's first round at Wimble-<lb/>
don And they weren't particu-<lb/>
larly concerned about the lack of<lb/>
beauty in their efforts.<lb/>
Lendl, the top seed, lost four<lb/>
ot the opening five games against<lb/>
22-year-old Christian Miniussi,an<lb/>
Argentine ranked 116th in the<lb/>
world. Though he recovered to<lb/>
win 3-6,6-4,6-3,64, he seemed to<lb/>
struggle at times with the low<lb/>
bounce ot the ball off the carefully<lb/>
manicured grass courts.<lb/>
"I just had a terrible time with<lb/>
the timing' said Lendl, beginning<lb/>
his annual quest for the only ma-<lb/>
jor title that haseluded him. "Every<lb/>
court plays differently and 1 just<lb/>
couldn't get any rhythm on the<lb/>
return of serve<lb/>
Lendl skipped the clay-court<lb/>
season and has concentrated on<lb/>
grass for the past few months to<lb/>
prepare himself for Wimbledon.<lb/>
Bu t he seemed to be suffering from<lb/>
his traditional aversion to grass in<lb/>
the opening set.<lb/>
"I was a bit nervous at first<lb/>
he said. "1 was not feeling com-<lb/>
fortable with the low bounces I<lb/>
was getting. But I got used to it a<lb/>
little bit and I hit some good re-<lb/>
turns<lb/>
While Lendl was battling the<lb/>
See Wimbledon page 12<lb/>
Rio's Summer<lb/>
Concert Series<lb/>
Featuring your<lb/>
favorite bands:<lb/>
:$ 1.25 Drafts &amp; Other :<lb/>
Drink Specials <lb/>
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Direct from Charlotte, NC<lb/>
UPCOMING BANDS!<lb/>
July 5th<lb/>
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r e 1 a<lb/>
e d dress<lb/>
cod<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0013"/><lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Czyz KO's Maynard in seventh round<lb/>
Bobby Czyz , the one-time light heavyweight champion defeated<lb/>
up-andomer Andrew Maynard Sunday with a seventh-round knock-<lb/>
out at Atlantic City. Czyz (36-5,25 KOs) floored Maynard with a right<lb/>
hand Maynard, his left eye swollen shut, appeared able to continue but<lb/>
let referee Frank Cappuccino count him out. Two judges had the fight<lb/>
even at that point; the other had Czyz comfortably ahead.<lb/>
Andretti wins Indy race in Portland<lb/>
Michael Andretti held off a challenge from his father, Mario, to win<lb/>
the Budweiser-G.l. Joe's 200 Indy-car race Sunday at Portland, Ore.<lb/>
Andretti finished 3.92 seconds ahead of his father for his second victory<lb/>
in two weeks. His average speed of 110.673 mph is a track record,<lb/>
beating the 103.984 by Emerson Fittipaldi last year.<lb/>
Spinks announces another comeback<lb/>
Former world heavyweight boxing champion Leon Spinks said he<lb/>
will launch a comeback in September - by fighting a kick-boxer in South<lb/>
Korea Afterward, he will return to the USA for the real thing. His last<lb/>
comeback ended in 1988 with a 1-8-1 record and 33-second loss to last-<lb/>
second substitute opponent Tony Morrison. Spinks, 36, is refcreeing<lb/>
pro wrestling matches.<lb/>
Hornets' pick to<lb/>
be based on talent<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) � The tency is superb. He's done the<lb/>
Charlotte Hornets' No. 5 pick in same things for four years at La-<lb/>
the upcoming NBA draft will Salic.<lb/>
depend on which player will help<lb/>
them improve on a disappointing<lb/>
second season in which they won<lb/>
just 19 games.<lb/>
The Hornets management has<lb/>
vowed to take the best player<lb/>
available � regardless of need<lb/>
"Perhaps he is the safest pick<lb/>
in the draft. He doesn't do any-<lb/>
thing spectacular  He'snot super<lb/>
quick. He's like a decathlon ath-<lb/>
lete<lb/>
Both Littles and Bristow said<lb/>
Jackson, who averaged 29 points a<lb/>
We'll be taking a guard or a game in his two seasons at LSU,<lb/>
Giants may rent land for new stadium<lb/>
The Santa Clara, Calif City Council will discuss Tuesday a pro-<lb/>
posal by city manager Jennifer Sparacino that would force baseball's<lb/>
San Francisco Giants to pay Santa Clan rent if the team buildsa stadium<lb/>
on city land. The team wants to use 120 acres of municipal property -<lb/>
rent-free- to build a 45,000-seat stadium. Sparacino has proposed a $5.4<lb/>
million annual rent.<lb/>
Fastest time of the year set in Minnesota<lb/>
The Santa Monica Track Club 4x100 relay of Mark Witheispoon,<lb/>
1 eroy Burrell, Floyd Heard and Carl Lewis had the fastest time in the<lb/>
world this year, 38.56, in Saturday's Sika Bram International Track &amp;<lb/>
Field Meet at Blaine, Minn. The mark came in a rerun, after Santa<lb/>
Monica and Arizona each dropped batons in the first race, won by the<lb/>
Florida Clippers (39.26).<lb/>
Secret wins cross-country bicycle race<lb/>
Bicyclist Michael Secret finished the "Race Across America" in a<lb/>
record seven days, 23 hours and lb minutes. Secret, 37, ol' Scottsdale,<lb/>
An ,rt Jo out of Huntington Beach, Calif June 16. The 2,8i 6-mile trip<lb/>
ended Sunday at Atlantic City.<lb/>
Bullets, Kings, Jazz make three-way trade<lb/>
In a three-way deal with the Washington Bullets and Sacramento<lb/>
Kings, the Utah jazz got Washington's Jeff Malone. The Bullets sent<lb/>
Makmeanda 1991 second-round picktotheKingsfor6-10centerPervis<lb/>
Ellison. The Kings then dealt Malone and a second-round pick lr.<lb/>
Wednesday's draft to the Jazz for guard Bobby Hanscn, center Eric<lb/>
I eckner and Utah's first- and second-round picks Wednesday.<lb/>
Players Associatdojn filesantitrust suit<lb/>
The NFL Players Association, seeking to protect its growing licens-<lb/>
ing business, has filed an antitrust suit against the National Football<lb/>
League, the NFL Management Council, and NFL Properties. THE<lb/>
NFLPA is seeking $40 million in damages. They charge NFL properties<lb/>
with illegally trying to sign star players to licensing agreements.<lb/>
NCAA investigates UTEP basketball<lb/>
The NCAA is investigating recruiting practices at Texas-El Paso<lb/>
involving a star high school boys basketball player who was brought<lb/>
into UTEP's program without a diploma. In his senior year at Los<lb/>
Angeles Crenshaw High, John Staggers had so many unexcused ab-<lb/>
sences that he failed to graduate. Staggers said UTEP coaches, in 1988,<lb/>
arranged free housing, meals and transportation for him.<lb/>
Johnson wins $50,000 in dunk contest<lb/>
Joey Johnson, brother of Boston Celtics guard Dennis Johnson, won<lb/>
the vertical dunk contest in Monday's One-on-One Collegiate Chal-<lb/>
lenge at the Convention Center in Atlantic City. The 6-4 Johnson<lb/>
dunked on a basket that was raised to 11 feet, 7 inches to win the $50,000<lb/>
first prize.<lb/>
Leonard-Hearns fight may be delayed<lb/>
A proposed third Sugar Ray Leonard-Thomas Hearns fight tenta-<lb/>
tively set for November is bogged down in negotiations because<lb/>
Leonard insists Hearns weigh no more than 160 pounds. Leonard won<lb/>
their first meeting in 1980; the rivals fought to a controversial draw last<lb/>
une.<lb/>
Tjela barred from running in marathon<lb/>
Ernest Tjela of Lesotho, who won the 1989 San Francisco Marathon,<lb/>
has been barred from the July 1 race because he ran in a cross-country<lb/>
race in South Africa. In 1988, Tjela was barred from the Seoul Olympics<lb/>
because he ran in South Africa earlier that year.<lb/>
irWy 1990. UiA KXMVMff Cslltp InprmMxm Ntlmtrk<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
small forward said Allen Bris-<lb/>
tow, vice president of basketball<lb/>
operations. "We won 19 games<lb/>
last year. That's not a delicate mix.<lb/>
We're going to raise our talent<lb/>
level with this year's draft<lb/>
Hornets coach Gene Littles<lb/>
concurred.<lb/>
"We need a player who will<lb/>
make us more competitive, who'll<lb/>
help us win a few more games<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Charlotte played it coy Mon-<lb/>
day, giving few hints about the<lb/>
player they hope to select<lb/>
would probably not fit into the<lb/>
Hornets mix.<lb/>
"He'll be a big draw at the<lb/>
gateand he's going to sell tickets<lb/>
Bristow said. "We don't need to<lb/>
sell tickets<lb/>
Jackson is one of five point<lb/>
guards who figure to go high in<lb/>
the draft.<lb/>
Besides Jackson and Gill, other<lb/>
potential picks at that position<lb/>
include Oregon State's Payton,<lb/>
Michigan's Robinson and Travis<lb/>
Mays out of Texas.<lb/>
Bristow listed his top three<lb/>
"Did 1 give it away? Can you pointguardsinWednesday'sdraft<lb/>
read between the lines Bristow as Payton, Jackson and Robinson,<lb/>
joked after discussing some of the Hornets officials were tight-<lb/>
college stars in Wednesday's draft lipped about possible second-<lb/>
with reporters at the Hornets' of- round selections, but said there<lb/>
Grand Slam winners<lb/>
"Players whcXhave won all<lb/>
fbir Grand S�m events<lb/>
(Wimbledon, Rench Open,<lb/>
Australian Qpenin the<lb/>
same "year:<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Player<lb/>
Steffi Graf<lb/>
Margaret Smith Court<lb/>
Rod Laver<lb/>
Maureen Connolly<lb/>
Don Budge<lb/>
A ,4" Country<lb/>
r West Ge<lb/>
Germany<lb/>
Australia<lb/>
Australia<lb/>
USA<lb/>
USA<lb/>
Year<lb/>
1988<lb/>
1970<lb/>
1962<lb/>
1953<lb/>
1938<lb/>
Source: Raquetball Manufacturers Association<lb/>
Rod Little, Gannett News Service<lb/>
fices.<lb/>
Most basketball experts pre-<lb/>
dict 6-foot-9 Syracuse forward<lb/>
Derrick Coleman will go first when<lb/>
the New Jersey Nets pick.<lb/>
Until recently, Georgia Tech<lb/>
swingman Dennis Scott was<lb/>
touted as the No. 2 pick. But con-<lb/>
cerns about his weight have come<lb/>
upand his stock hasgonedown in<lb/>
some circles.<lb/>
Should Scott be around when<lb/>
the Hornets pick, there's a good<lb/>
chance he'll be their pick.<lb/>
He'sbv far the best offensive<lb/>
talent in the draft Bristow said.<lb/>
For the Hornets, there's an<lb/>
obvious need that likely won't be<lb/>
tilled by this draft � center.<lb/>
So the attention turns primar-<lb/>
ily to a strong slate of guards,<lb/>
including Gary Payton, Kendall<lb/>
Gill, Chris Jackson and Rumeal<lb/>
Rebtnson.<lb/>
"This isn't a marquee draft<lb/>
said Littles.<lb/>
Bristow spent a lot of time<lb/>
Monday talking about Gill, a 6-<lb/>
foot-3 guard out of Illinois, and 6-<lb/>
foot-8 LaSalle forward Lionel<lb/>
Simmons.<lb/>
"A guy like Kendall Gill will<lb/>
find his minutes Bristow said.<lb/>
"He's that kind of competitor<lb/>
As for Simmons, the Hornets<lb/>
official said: "I like his toughness.<lb/>
He can put the ball on the floor<lb/>
and he's a good shooter. He's also<lb/>
an unselfish player and hisconsis-<lb/>
Winners need<lb/>
to fight to win<lb/>
at Wimbledon<lb/>
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)<lb/>
� Ivan Lendl won ugly. Boris<lb/>
Becker won dirty.<lb/>
The top two seeds survived<lb/>
surprisingly tough challenges in<lb/>
Monday's first round at Wimble-<lb/>
don. And they weren't particu-<lb/>
larly concerned about the lack of<lb/>
beauty in their efforts.<lb/>
Lendl, the top seed, lost four<lb/>
of the opening five games against<lb/>
22-year-old Christian Miniussi,an<lb/>
Argentine ranked 116th in the<lb/>
world. Though he recovered to<lb/>
win 3-6,6-4,6-3,6-4, he seemed to<lb/>
struggle at times with the low<lb/>
bounce of the ball off the carefully<lb/>
manicured grass courts.<lb/>
"I just had a terrible time with<lb/>
the timing said Lendl, beginning<lb/>
his annual quest for the only ma-<lb/>
jor title tha t haseluded him. "Every<lb/>
court plays differently and I just<lb/>
couldn't get any rhythm on the<lb/>
return of serve<lb/>
Lendl skipped the clay-court<lb/>
season and has concentrated on<lb/>
grass for the past few months to<lb/>
prepare himself for Wimbledon.<lb/>
Bu t he seemed to be su f f ering from<lb/>
his traditional aversion to grass in I<lb/>
the opening set.<lb/>
"I was a bit nervous at first<lb/>
he said. "I was not feeling com-<lb/>
fortable with the low bounces I<lb/>
was getting. But I got used to it a<lb/>
little bit and I hit some good re-<lb/>
turns<lb/>
While Lendl was battling the<lb/>
See Wimbledon page 12<lb/>
may be some good talent left w hen<lb/>
they pick 39th.<lb/>
"This draft is as deep as any<lb/>
I've been associated with said<lb/>
Bristow A lot of players are going<lb/>
to stick with their teams<lb/>
The bigquestion mark isScott,<lb/>
who tore up the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conferenceafter losing 30 pounds.<lb/>
Some observers say he's put a lot<lb/>
ol weight back on during the off-<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"The fact that he gained<lb/>
weight doesn't bother me but it<lb/>
should bother Dennis Scott said<lb/>
Bristow, who added that the Hor-<lb/>
nets were unable to bring the 6-<lb/>
foot-8 Georgia Tech star in for an<lb/>
interview.<lb/>
"He's the one guy we can't<lb/>
find he said.<lb/>
The East Carolinian, June 27,1990 11<lb/>
VACATION<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
NEW YORK<lb/>
BLOWOUT!<lb/>
Weekends of July 19 &amp; 26<lb/>
2 Nights hotel, airfare, taxes<lb/>
(Sat. night stay required)<lb/>
BAHAMAS<lb/>
FREEPORT<lb/>
3 nights Princess Casino<lb/>
Hotel, Air from RDU,<lb/>
taxes &amp; service<lb/>
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TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
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Closed Sat Sun<lb/>
Open Mon.Tri.l) Closed Sat Sun<lb/>
QttVs also in Raleigh, Chapel Hill. RTF Wilmington<lb/>
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Every<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
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i Drafts &amp; Other<lb/>
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This Thursday's Band is;<lb/>
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Direct from Charlotte, NC<lb/>
UPCOMING<lb/>
July 5th<lb/>
July 12th<lb/>
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Cream of Sou<lb/>
Impulse Ride<lb/>
Bruce Frye 8t<lb/>
Band<lb/>
relaxed dress code<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0014"/><lb/>
12 The East Carolinian, June 27,1990<lb/>
Flutie to sell fax machines and play for CFL<lb/>
VANCOUVER, British Co-<lb/>
lumbia (AP) � Doug Flutie will<lb/>
be throwing footballs and selling<lb/>
fax machines for British Columbia<lb/>
Lions owner Murray Pezim.<lb/>
Flutie, the 1984 Heisman Tro-<lb/>
phy winner, signed a one-year<lb/>
contract with an option year with<lb/>
the CFL team that includes a two-<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
year personal services contract<lb/>
with Pezim.<lb/>
 worked some unique con-<lb/>
tracts in the past, especially with<lb/>
the USFL Flutie said. "We have<lb/>
another unique deal here<lb/>
Terms of the contracts were<lb/>
not disclosed, but Pezim said his<lb/>
business deal with the former<lb/>
Boston College star would include<lb/>
the marketing of a product that<lb/>
allows personal computers to<lb/>
function as fax machines.<lb/>
Pezim said the two contracts<lb/>
could make Flutie, released by the<lb/>
New England Patriots in the off-<lb/>
season, the highest-paid player in<lb/>
the CFL.<lb/>
"Murray made it happen<lb/>
said Flutie.<lb/>
Flutie, who played for the<lb/>
New Jersey Generals in the USFL<lb/>
in 1985 and played for the Chi-<lb/>
cago Bears and New England in<lb/>
the NFL, was not interested in<lb/>
beinga second-stringer in theNFL<lb/>
anymore.<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
ball. "From our information, the<lb/>
case is still under investigation<lb/>
Dave Winn, director of stu-<lb/>
dent development at Clemson,<lb/>
said the school has no other infor-<lb/>
mation about the incident.<lb/>
"We would expect to receive<lb/>
a complete report when the city<lb/>
police investigation isconcluded<lb/>
Winn said. "We will then examine<lb/>
this incident thoroughly and take<lb/>
whatever action is appropriate<lb/>
Eric S. Freshwater, 22, who<lb/>
graduated fromClemson this year<lb/>
with a mechanical engineering<lb/>
degree, said he was walking away<lb/>
from the tavern when he was hit<lb/>
from behind.<lb/>
"I didn't see it coming' Fresh-<lb/>
water said. "Atnotimedid I curse<lb/>
or shout at Chester. 1 just asked<lb/>
him what wasgoingon, and he hit<lb/>
me two more times until some<lb/>
people pulled him off<lb/>
Freshwater, who is 6-foot-2<lb/>
and weighs 165 pounds, went to<lb/>
the hospital after suffering head-<lb/>
aches and becoming nauseated<lb/>
and dizzy. He said doctors diag-<lb/>
nosed a concussion.<lb/>
Three of his friends were also<lb/>
assaulted, as well as another man<lb/>
not with his group, Freshwater<lb/>
said. He said he and his friends<lb/>
were at the tavern for about two<lb/>
hours but never saw or spoke to<lb/>
McGlockton.<lb/>
McGlockton "was just going<lb/>
crazy Freshwater said. "We were<lb/>
attacked. It wasn't a fight<lb/>
McGlockton, who was listed<lb/>
behind Otis Moore at left tackle<lb/>
going into spring practice, tied for<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Conference lead<lb/>
in sacks with seven last season<lb/>
despite playing in just 32 percent<lb/>
of the team's plays.<lb/>
Overall, McGlockton had 31<lb/>
tackles in just 280 plays, including<lb/>
10 stops for losses. Perhaps his<lb/>
biggest play of the season came<lb/>
against West Virginia in the Gator<lb/>
Bowl when he knocked the ball<lb/>
loose from quarterback Major<lb/>
Harris at the 9-yard line and re-<lb/>
covered in the end zone for at<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
down to the final matches as Lara-<lb/>
lyn Turk defeated Donna Fowler<lb/>
to win the women'sdivision, while<lb/>
Boyce Hudson swung past Ken-<lb/>
neth Fanner to take the men's<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
Twelve tnsbee launches took<lb/>
to the ECU course in the disk golf<lb/>
tournament and Larry Leonard's<lb/>
44 and Sam Nicholson's 50 were<lb/>
the leading scores. Dee Orndorff<lb/>
(61) and Kristi Bahr (66) had the<lb/>
top women's scores.<lb/>
HTi presents<lb/>
�Tr if EVERY THURSDAY<lb/>
W Studei<lb/>
Student Budget Night<lb/>
Summer Specials<lb/>
$2.50 Frozen Dacquiris $2.50 Ice Teas<lb/>
$1.00 Imports � $2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
� $1.00 TALLBOY CANS<lb/>
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LADIES FREE <lb/>
Time to split<lb/>
These cheerleaders relax while watching their fellow campers cheer in<lb/>
leading camp Be sure to notice the girl soaring at tree level at the top<lb/>
J D. Whitmire � ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
the heat at ECU'S annual cheer-<lb/>
center of the picture Photo by<lb/>
This Week's Entertainment:<lb/>
Wed.27 th<lb/>
Fri. 29th<lb/>
SEC<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
director Doug Weaver attempted<lb/>
to get Tech back into the SEC.<lb/>
Tech joined the ACC in 1978.<lb/>
"Football would be the big-<lb/>
gest lure (to the SEC) Rice said.<lb/>
World Cup<lb/>
"But would it outweigh the bene-<lb/>
fits of being in the ACC? That's the<lb/>
big question<lb/>
Ross cited logistical reasons<lb/>
for rejoining the SEC.<lb/>
"We recruit against more SEC<lb/>
schools than ACC he said. "Our<lb/>
location creates natural rivals with<lb/>
great tradition � Tennessee,<lb/>
Auburn, Alabama, etc<lb/>
Open Mic Night Modern Logic<lb/>
$1.10 Long Neck<lb/>
Sat. 30th<lb/>
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4 pro till close<lb/>
$2.00 Pitchers<lb/>
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Each Wed. Night<lb/>
Open Mic Night<lb/>
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starts at 3pm<lb/>
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Irish fans sang, waved flags and<lb/>
hugged each other in celebration.<lb/>
The Romanians played well<lb/>
under the most difficult of circum-<lb/>
stances � unrest back home.<lb/>
Wimbledon<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
"it could be that the events cited about us<lb/>
had some effect on the players The excitement of the second<lb/>
Coach Emerich Jenei said. "Foot- round concludes with Yugoslavia<lb/>
ball also helped keep the calm at against Spain at Verona and Eng-<lb/>
home because everyone was ex- land playing Belgium at Bologna.<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
bounces, Becker was simply trying<lb/>
to stay on his feet. The three-time<lb/>
winner repeatedly slipped and<lb/>
skidded on the grass, often while<lb/>
charging the net.<lb/>
"It was very, very wet and<lb/>
soft Becker said after his 7-6,7-6,<lb/>
7-5 Centre Court victory over Luis<lb/>
Herrera of Mexico. "The first<lb/>
round is always difficult, but on<lb/>
such a court it is more difficult<lb/>
Becker made his task more<lb/>
complicated by getting off to a<lb/>
slow start with lOdoublefaultsin<lb/>
the opening set. But he came<lb/>
through in crucial moments, cap-<lb/>
ping the first tie-breaker 7-2 with a<lb/>
pair of aces and claiming the sec-<lb/>
ond tie-breaker 7-4.<lb/>
The second seed got so used<lb/>
to flopping on the slick grass that<lb/>
he even took an extra dive late in<lb/>
the third set to mimic Herrera,<lb/>
who had lunged for a shot.<lb/>
Herrera, 18, ranked 199th in<lb/>
the world, displayed fine touch<lb/>
but did not have the power to<lb/>
contend with Becker.<lb/>
Lendl and Becker were not<lb/>
the only men who struggled<lb/>
Monday. Former champion Pat<lb/>
Cash recovered from a 2-1 deficit<lb/>
in sets and a leg injury to defeat<lb/>
253rd-ranked Dimitri Poliakov of<lb/>
the Soviet Union, while seventh<lb/>
seed Brad Gilbert of Piedmont,<lb/>
Calif overcame a similar deficit<lb/>
against Yugoslavia's Bruno Ore-<lb/>
sar.<lb/>
Frenchman Yannick Noah, the<lb/>
No. 16 seed, was not as lucky,<lb/>
losing in three quick sets to quali-<lb/>
fier Wayne Ferreira. Noah, who<lb/>
has always had trouble on grass,<lb/>
said he was not able to move well<lb/>
on the slippery surface.<lb/>
"Wimbledon isn't really a<lb/>
place where I feel comfortable<lb/>
he said after falling 6-4,6-3,6-2 to<lb/>
the 18-year-old Ferreira. "This yea r<lb/>
I tried to block out all the negative<lb/>
thoughts I have about playing on<lb/>
grass<lb/>
Several other men's seeds had<lb/>
easier afternoons. Ninth-seeded<lb/>
American Jim Courier, No. 10<lb/>
Jonas B. Svensson of Sweden and<lb/>
two Frenchmen, No. 11 Guy For-<lb/>
get and No. 15 Henri Leconte, all<lb/>
won in straight sets.<lb/>
V U I :�<lb/>
Teachers,<lb/>
Take Note<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Vehicle<lb/>
Preregistration<lb/>
Otflcw of Traffic Services<lb/>
Department of Public Safely<lb/>
E<lb/>
Era<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
JUNE 15TH<lb/>
DEADLINE<lb/>
EXTENDED<lb/>
AVOID THE LINES<lb/>
AT MENDENHALL<lb/>
NIE Workshops<lb/>
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The N.C. Newspaper in Education (NIE) Foundation and<lb/>
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programs for you!<lb/>
II<lb/>
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Find out how newspapers can be used m m youi classroom needs.<lb/>
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on (dates)<lb/>
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Raleigh. N.C. 27607<lb/>
(919) 787-5181<lb/>
The workshop Is In the following region (circle one)<lb/>
12 3 4 5 6 7 8<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0015"/><lb/>
INSIDE:<lb/>
House<lb/>
Republicans<lb/>
insist:<lb/>
"we're not<lb/>
politicizing<lb/>
flag issue"<lb/>
S<lb/>
Ml.iifc llii<lb/>
-s<lb/>
INSIDE:<lb/>
House<lb/>
Republicans<lb/>
plan<lb/>
flag-based<lb/>
campaign<lb/>
ads<lb/>
page 6<lb/>
Obscenity ruling spawns imitators<lb/>
The Amalgamated Press<lb/>
"Oh, yeah? Well, then, 'La Bamba'<lb/>
is obscene federal d istrict Judge Ray<lb/>
Diculous ruled Monday. 'Take that,<lb/>
Gonzo<lb/>
Diculous was referring to Fort<lb/>
Lauderdale federal district Judge Jose<lb/>
Gonzo, who touched off a firestorm of<lb/>
judicial reaction when he ruled that 2<lb/>
Live Crew's rap album Nasty As They<lb/>
Wanna Be was legally obscene, de-<lb/>
spite contrary testimony provided by<lb/>
several expert witnesses.<lb/>
Judges in thirty-eight states have<lb/>
issued similar rulings in the wake of<lb/>
Gonzo's pronouncement, leaving the<lb/>
record industry in a state of total<lb/>
confusion.<lb/>
For example, Massachusetts fed<lb/>
eral district Judge Whitebread Yup-<lb/>
pie ruled that country music was<lb/>
obscene, pointing out that "most of it<lb/>
talks about wife-beating, adultery, a I<lb/>
coholism, and so on � hardly the<lb/>
kind of thing we can allow young<lb/>
children to listen to<lb/>
However, Yuppie's ruling did not<lb/>
longgo uncontested,asGangof Sena<lb/>
tors' Wives Who Unfairly Use Their<lb/>
Unelected Positions to Squash Free<lb/>
Speech (G5WWUUTUPSFS) high<lb/>
priestess "Tipsy" Gore quickly rushed<lb/>
to country music's defense. "Country<lb/>
music is not obscene; it's simply a<lb/>
glorification of good old-fashioned<lb/>
American values said Gore. Things<lb/>
like wife-beating, adultery and alco-<lb/>
holism. I'rnagainstdirty language and<lb/>
sex being mentioned in any song �<lb/>
unless it's in a country music song, of<lb/>
course. But that couldn't be because<lb/>
my husband is a senator from Tennes-<lb/>
see or anything like that. No way<lb/>
Her disagreements with Yuppie's<lb/>
ruling aside, Gore, who has long<lb/>
advocated banning or labelling al-<lb/>
bums she personally thinks others<lb/>
shouldn't listen to, considers Judge<lb/>
Gonzo's ruling "a big plus. How can<lb/>
we teach our children how to decide<lb/>
for themselves what music to listen<lb/>
to, other than by taking away from<lb/>
them anything we don't like? How<lb/>
can we produce thinking and reason-<lb/>
ing adults who resist censoring others<lb/>
and who resist censorship imposed<lb/>
by others, except by teaching our kids<lb/>
ECU SNAPSHOTS<lb/>
meaningless statistics that shape our campus<lb/>
We're Wasting More Time Declaring Stuff Obscene!<lb/>
I oooo -A<lb/>
5000-<lb/>
1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990<lb/>
Year<lb/>
a 11 he ea rhest possi ble age tha t i f you' re<lb/>
bigger than somebody else, you can<lb/>
tell them what to do? Face it: any<lb/>
music that discusses sex and violence,<lb/>
promotes sex and violence. Except<lb/>
country music, of course. Country<lb/>
music is different. I like it. So do my<lb/>
husband's constituents<lb/>
Gore and the GSWWUUTUPSFS<lb/>
were also very pleased by an Ala-<lb/>
bama court ruling in which federal<lb/>
district judge Gud Olboy mandated<lb/>
that any records sold in the state would<lb/>
have to have all the lyrics printed on<lb/>
the outside of the album. Also in the<lb/>
ruling, judge Olboy used much the<lb/>
same reasoning to declare that movie<lb/>
theaters would have to print all the<lb/>
words to all the movies being shown<lb/>
on the back of each ticket sold, that<lb/>
television shows would have to print<lb/>
to the screen all the words that would<lb/>
be spoken in each show immediately<lb/>
before the show aired, and that pub-<lb/>
lishers would have to print all the<lb/>
words to everv book on the outside of<lb/>
the book. "No way anybody in this<lb/>
state is gonna be exposed to anything<lb/>
that might offend em read part of<lb/>
Olbos ruling � or, at least, that's<lb/>
what it looked like it said; it's hard to<lb/>
read crayon.<lb/>
The spate of rulings has resulted<lb/>
in several albums besides Nasty As<lb/>
They Wanna Bebeingdeclared obscene,<lb/>
as intolerant judges, law enforcement<lb/>
officialsand community groups work<lb/>
together to use their newly discov-<lb/>
ered ability to ban whatever they don't<lb/>
like or understand Among the more<lb/>
prominent artists whose works have<lb/>
been outlawed were Barry Manilow,<lb/>
whom judge Robin Wrights accused<lb/>
of "pandering to the questionable<lb/>
tastes of white, middle- to upper-<lb/>
middle-classcity dwellers and Milli<lb/>
Vanilli. The ruling that Milli Vanilli<lb/>
was obscene was the only such decla-<lb/>
ration contested by no one.<lb/>
2 LiveCrew hasprofited from the<lb/>
widespread controversy, both<lb/>
through increased record sales and<lb/>
through their newfound martyr status.<lb/>
But perhaps the performer who has<lb/>
most benefited is Madonna, whose<lb/>
recent sexually explicit dancing in<lb/>
Toronto was only a prelude to the<lb/>
smut-peddling she now engages in.<lb/>
Her new album, Nasty As A Madonna<lb/>
Wanna Be, contains several songs<lb/>
alreadv deemed obscene by anti-free-<lb/>
speech groups, even though the al-<lb/>
bum hasn't yet been released. The<lb/>
song that most offended the<lb/>
GSWWUUTUPSFS and other groups<lb/>
is titled "Vague which contains os-<lb/>
tensibly objectionable lines like<lb/>
Obscenity's where you find it<lb/>
Scientific discovery<lb/>
yields important insight<lb/>
Thf Amalgamated Prkss<lb/>
Shortly after researchers made the<lb/>
disquieting discovery of the first hard<lb/>
evidence of the huge black hole at the<lb/>
centerof our galaxy, scientistsat FCU's<lb/>
Center for Ascertaining Things ascer-<lb/>
tained the reason for t he ongoi ng state<lb/>
budget crisis that has been plaguing<lb/>
education.<lb/>
It seems that, just as the great<lb/>
concentration of stars at the center of<lb/>
the galaxy creates a black hole into<lb/>
which surrounding stars are drawn,<lb/>
the great concentration of wealth in<lb/>
the hands of incompetent state legis-<lb/>
latorscreates a fiscal black hole which<lb/>
drains off money that might other-<lb/>
wise be used for worthy causes. Like<lb/>
providing scholarships for the poor,<lb/>
for example, or improving ECU'S li-<lb/>
brary, or even funding Chancellor<lb/>
Bach Hurtm's little campus beautifi-<lb/>
cation project<lb/>
The Center's director, Dr. Hi<lb/>
Brow, says the fiscal black hole is a<lb/>
serious problem, but is doubtful that<lb/>
anything can be done about it.<lb/>
"As far as we can tell, this fiscal<lb/>
black hole has existed put-near for-<lb/>
ever, like bureaucracy" said Dr. Brow.<lb/>
"And it'll probably last until incom-<lb/>
petence and stupidity cease to exist,<lb/>
and I think we all know when that's<lb/>
likely to happen<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0016"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
DEBATE<lb/>
Plain Talkin'<lb/>
By Alvin Newhart<lb/>
ECU Today founder<lb/>
I just finished listening to that<lb/>
rap album that got banned, whad-<lb/>
dayacallit � Nasty As A Saibr, or<lb/>
somethin' � and I get the feeling<lb/>
that if I coulda understood a word of<lb/>
it, I'da been really offended.<lb/>
Okay, as soon as that ruling was<lb/>
passed, I ran out and got a copy of<lb/>
the album. I'm not ashamed to admit<lb/>
it. Don't tell my wife, of course, but<lb/>
thaf s different. Ethel � that's my<lb/>
wife � she don't know nothing<lb/>
about music.<lb/>
Anyways, 1 bought the album<lb/>
because I heard on the TV that it had<lb/>
lotsa offensive lyrics and graphics<lb/>
depicting sex, and I thought, hey, if<lb/>
j if s bad enough to piss off the au-<lb/>
thorities, it's good enough for me.<lb/>
But Nasty As Can of Beans wasn't<lb/>
dirty at all. At least, not so I could<lb/>
tell. I wasn't really sure there was<lb/>
anything obscene until I read the<lb/>
lyric sheet. And there it was, plain as<lb/>
day: about a hundred million times<lb/>
these guys talk about sex and what<lb/>
they're gonna do when they screw<lb/>
these chicks and whatnot. Boy, I<lb/>
spent a lot of time holding that thing<lb/>
with one hand, it you get my drift.<lb/>
But the issue is, should this al-<lb/>
bum be for sale at all? I say no. It's a<lb/>
real disappointment, you wanna<lb/>
know what I think. In my opinion,<lb/>
those guys should either describe<lb/>
the sex clearly and distinctly, so we<lb/>
can use both hands for whatever we<lb/>
happen to be doing while we're lis-<lb/>
tening, or they shouldn't go around<lb/>
getting federal judges to call it ob-<lb/>
scene.<lb/>
Bill 0 Rights<lb/>
An opposing view<lb/>
Judge's ruling<lb/>
was wrong<lb/>
Banning Nasty As They Wanna<lb/>
Be is nothing short of ludicrous. It's<lb/>
not as if the album's listeners<lb/>
(Hi!lt'susagain! Wejust thought<lb/>
we'd cut in to say that this time, we're<lb/>
going to print the opposing viewpoint<lb/>
in itsentirety. Really. )ust thought you 'd<lb/>
like to know)<lb/>
symptoms, not the disease. Af-<lb/>
ter all, who is it hurting? Who has<lb/>
been harmed as a result of listening<lb/>
to<lb/>
(Oh, by the way wejust wanted<lb/>
to let you know, if you win some money<lb/>
in one of those Coke� Cool Cans, don't<lb/>
drink the stuff inside!)<lb/>
obscene, but if 1.7 million people<lb/>
bought it, doesn't that lead the judge<lb/>
to question his decision? Suppose<lb/>
(By now, you have of course grasped<lb/>
the awful truth. We are cutting off the<lb/>
opposing view. But hey � if a federal<lb/>
judge can do it, we can do it.)<lb/>
Published by Offense Unlimited<lb/>
� a division of Mapplethorpe<lb/>
Manuscripts�.<lb/>
Published every other week,<lb/>
unless there are more pressing<lb/>
considerations. Like, for<lb/>
example, if The Simpsons is on.<lb/>
Just to dispel the rumors, Jesse<lb/>
Helms has never lifted a finger<lb/>
to help.<lb/>
ECU Today is a satirical<lb/>
publication which has been<lb/>
shown to cause cancer in lab<lb/>
rats. It has also been declared<lb/>
legally obscene in Broward<lb/>
County, Florida, where police<lb/>
and judges apparently have<lb/>
nothing better to do than forcibly<lb/>
shut off outlets for young<lb/>
people's frustration and anger at<lb/>
a system which spends most of<lb/>
its time shutting off outlets for<lb/>
their frustration and anger.<lb/>
CORRECTION! Due to our lax fact-checking standards and<lb/>
relentless disregard for the truth, yesterday's issue was completely wrong<lb/>
about absolutely everything. We reluctantly apologize for the resultant stock<lb/>
market crash and ensuing worldwide panic.<lb/>
HUOTELINES<lb/>
"U can't touch this<lb/>
� Federal district lud$e lose Gonzo,<lb/>
Explaining the effect of his ruling on the 2 Live Crew album<lb/>
"Man, that's some lousy f�ing bulls�! That obscenity s�, like, im-<lb/>
pinges on my f-ing First Amendment rights and s� like that. That a�hole<lb/>
judge better f�ing 'pologize, or me and my boys are gonna f him up<lb/>
� 2 Live Crew's lead vocalist.<lb/>
Articulating his response<lb/>
"The fighting in Palestine grew worse today, as protesters pelted Israeli<lb/>
soldiers with rocks and garbage. Soldiers responded by  oh  sorry,<lb/>
wrong page<lb/>
� One of our reporters,<lb/>
Soon to be fired<lb/>
Is the album Nasty As They Wanna Be obscene? And, by the way, have you heard a word of it'<lb/>
M. Pact, 32<lb/>
Rich executive<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
Well, I'll tell you one thing. They<lb/>
shouldn't be allowed to say all that<lb/>
disgusting stuff. I mean, I'm revolted<lb/>
by their language, and if disagree<lb/>
with it, why should you be able to<lb/>
listen to it?<lb/>
No, I haven't heard a second of<lb/>
the album. Why, do you think it mat-<lb/>
ters?<lb/>
T. Vortwo, 32<lb/>
Camel trainer<lb/>
Crifton, NC<lb/>
I'll teil you what'g obscene. It's<lb/>
human beings forced to sleep in the<lb/>
streets ot our country It's children<lb/>
and druggies being used as excuses to<lb/>
strip us of our freedoms. It's a school<lb/>
system whose graduates can't read.<lb/>
It's � what? I'm under arrest? Damn<lb/>
� I knew I should have moved out of<lb/>
Broward County before I said this.<lb/>
X. Kated, 32<lb/>
Hit man<lb/>
Ay den, NC.<lb/>
b'h  freedom ol speech! No?<lb/>
Free press! Net that, either? Urn<lb/>
did I sav "freedom of speei li"I did ?<lb/>
Okay, I already said "free speech"<lb/>
how about "free press"? I said that,<lb/>
too,huh? No unreasonable search and<lb/>
seizure' No? Well, okay then, I admit<lb/>
it: I can't think of a single constitu-<lb/>
tional right that I think is safe today.<lb/>
V. Amihere U<lb/>
I Ivis biographer<lb/>
Chocominity M<lb/>
I think Broward ounty, Florida,<lb/>
would be.i great place to live because<lb/>
I know that my friends the police<lb/>
would keep me safely cocooned in my<lb/>
little artificial world, far removed from<lb/>
thetroublesof life, securein the knowl-<lb/>
edge that nobody was hearing any-<lb/>
thing that might offend me. At least<lb/>
until someone shot me in the head<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
I<lb/>
s<lb/>
3<lb/>
a<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058218_0017"/><lb/>
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It's only a joke; please don't write or phone. Thank you. � ECU TODAY � June 27, 1990 � 3<lb/>
Comic-style films multiply<lb/>
Tm Amalgamated Pklss<lb/>
With the recent spate of success-<lb/>
ful films like Batman. Vho Framed Roger<lb/>
Rabbit Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,<lb/>
and, most recently, Dick Tracy, comics<lb/>
and cartoons are back with a venge-<lb/>
ance. And filmmakers are rushing to<lb/>
crassly exploit them.<lb/>
Though studios are traditionally<lb/>
reluctant to talk about projects under<lb/>
development. The Amalgamated<lb/>
Press, m the finest tradition of investi-<lb/>
gative journalism, managed todigout<lb/>
of its files several compromising<lb/>
photos which persuaded studio heads<lb/>
to overcome their reticence.<lb/>
First, the sequels: various studios<lb/>
will be releasing sequels of their hit<lb/>
films, such as Batmen; Oh, So THAT'S<lb/>
Who Framed Roger Rabbit! (to be fol-<lb/>
lowed by So Who Framed Roger Rabbit<lb/>
THIS Time?); Teenage Mutant Ninja<lb/>
Snapping Turtles: This Time, They're<lb/>
Mad; and Dick Tracy 2: Electric Bugaloo<lb/>
(which may instead be titled Dick Tracy<lb/>
2: Madonna's Naked!).<lb/>
However, several original mov-<lb/>
ies are also planned, like Try-Stair's<lb/>
What's-His-Name � You Know, The<lb/>
Little Black And White Dog Who Talks<lb/>
Funny, and Pairofmounts' Jessica Rub<lb/>
bit: The Early Years, When She Needed<lb/>
the Money. Each of these films will be<lb/>
released after about eighteen years i t<lb/>
saturation advertising, and each will<lb/>
haveitsownlineofdollsanda related<lb/>
game at McDonald trumps.<lb/>
Disney Studios wouldn't tell us<lb/>
about most of its upcoming releases,<lb/>
which means vou'll soon be seeing<lb/>
some very interesting photographs<lb/>
involving studio officials, jungle gyms<lb/>
and underage horses. However, we<lb/>
did manage to get them to reveal the<lb/>
titles to their The Little Mermaid sequels<lb/>
The Even Littler Mermaid, The Even-<lb/>
Littler-Than-That Mermaid, The Micro-<lb/>
scopic Mermaid, and The So-Darn-Small<lb/>
We-Could-Hardly-Find-Her-ln-Order-<lb/>
To-Make-This-Film Mermaid.<lb/>
Other studiosare pondering more<lb/>
"quiet" films � like Divided Artists'<lb/>
ScoobyDoo Reunion. Insider gossip has<lb/>
it that Fred is now totally bald, and<lb/>
that Scooby Doo is developing cata-<lb/>
racts and kidney problems and may<lb/>
sxn have to be put to sleep. In a<lb/>
similar vein, Touchrock Pictures is<lb/>
considering The Flintstones Check Into<lb/>
a Nursing Home.<lb/>
The Oscar for "Most Honest Title<lb/>
if the Academy gives such a thing,<lb/>
will ha ve to go to Orison's God's Gift to<lb/>
Merchandising.<lb/>
The most surprising story of all<lb/>
came from Cosmological Studios.<lb/>
Studio head Lois Commondenomi-<lb/>
nator, who asked not to be named,<lb/>
revealed that the studio plans to re-<lb/>
lease a detective comicfilm called<lb/>
Trick Dacy, starring Tom Hanks as the<lb/>
title character and Roseanna Arquette<lb/>
asa lovely femmefatale by the name of<lb/>
Breathless Maloncy Detective Dacy<lb/>
will have an assortment of innovative<lb/>
gadgets in his crime-fighting arsenal,<lb/>
such as a three-way wnst radio (which<lb/>
Commondenominator describes as<lb/>
"kind of like a two-way wrist radio,<lb/>
but with conference-call capability").<lb/>
Commondenominator further<lb/>
stated that Dacy "will wear a trench<lb/>
coat and hat which look yellow, but<lb/>
areactuallya kind of of-yellowCom-<lb/>
mondenominator describes the film<lb/>
as "nothing at all like Dick Tracy,<lb/>
honest and has already announced<lb/>
plans to "think of some pretext to rip<lb/>
the film brutally out of the director's<lb/>
hands and mangle it beyond recogni-<lb/>
tion, like we did with the television<lb/>
release of Brazil<lb/>
This season's TV shows go nuts with cliffhanger finales<lb/>
By Chippy Bonehead<lb/>
ECU Today<lb/>
In the tradition of such great net-<lb/>
work television cliffhangers as "Who<lb/>
shot JR.? syndicated shows arc now<lb/>
enticing audiences with season fina-<lb/>
les that hinge on life-or-death situ-<lb/>
ations for the characters, hoping to<lb/>
boost ratings and win fall renewals.<lb/>
Star Trek: The Next Generation<lb/>
ended its 89-90 season with Captain<lb/>
Picard facing certain death aboard an<lb/>
alien vessel. Fox Network off icialsand<lb/>
producers of other shows have re-<lb/>
leased teasers of other shows' cliff-<lb/>
hangers to watch for this week.<lb/>
The Simpsons' Bart will dream<lb/>
about his sixteenth birthday, when<lb/>
Marge and Homer go out of town and<lb/>
he hires a hooker to open a brothel in<lb/>
the Simpson home for the weekend.<lb/>
The series will end as Bart drives<lb/>
Homer'scaroffthedockoftheSpring-<lb/>
field pier.<lb/>
Superboy will finally bed girl-<lb/>
friend Lana Lang. Just as they are<lb/>
about to consummate their relation-<lb/>
ship, they will discover arch-enemy<lb/>
Lex Luthor has embedded kryptonite<lb/>
in her diaphragm.<lb/>
America's Most Wanted Home Vid-<lb/>
eos has a double treat in store for view-<lb/>
ers. As the sea rch for f(xtagc of George<lb/>
and Barbara Bush in the shower con-<lb/>
tinues, host Bob Saget will be bludg-<lb/>
eoned to death by the studio audience<lb/>
for telling them to "enter those votes"<lb/>
just one time too many.<lb/>
Small Wonder's adorable robot<lb/>
Vicki will turn out to be a renegade<lb/>
Fembot from the old Bionk Woman<lb/>
series. Her programming will go be-<lb/>
serk and she'll try to rip the faces off<lb/>
the adorable family she lives with.<lb/>
And finally, the wacky New<lb/>
Munsters will seeaClive Barker movie.<lb/>
The show will fade out as Heman,<lb/>
Lily and the gang realize their true<lb/>
calling as tcrnfying creatures of the<lb/>
night and start hanging out behind<lb/>
Fast Fares across the nation, killing<lb/>
and violently brutalizing teenagers.<lb/>
ECU SNAPSHOTS<lb/>
meaningless statistics that shape our campus<lb/>
We're Restricting More First Amendment Freedoms!<lb/>
1<lb/>
!<lb/>
1982 1984 1986 1988<lb/>
Year<lb/>
1990<lb/>
1992<lb/>
Got a normal and healthy interest<lb/>
in sexually explicit material<lb/>
that certain brain-damaged<lb/>
federal district judges<lb/>
might declare obscene?<lb/>
Do you share the rest of the<lb/>
American public's inexplicable<lb/>
and downright nosy interest in<lb/>
the private lives of celebrities?<lb/>
Then tune in to:<lb/>
Rob Lowe's Sexiest<lb/>
Home Videos<lb/>
onlv on ABC, 9 PM Sundays<lb/>
And if seeing Madonna in lingerie<lb/>
in Dick Tracy just isn't enough<lb/>
for you, then you'll want to tune in<lb/>
Sean Penn's Sexiest<lb/>
Home Videos<lb/>
at 9:30!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0018"/><lb/>
iii i mm'in� � r<lb/>
4 � June 27, 1990 � ECU TODAY � It's only a joke; please don't write or phone, hank you<lb/>
1<lb/>
House holds scintillating debate<lb/>
   n .r I r.nW not lh.it I mi I<lb/>
I ill AV1AI (.AMAH I) Pi<lb/>
This past week, the HoUM "I<lb/>
RepinrnltHvfi vv.is thi scene of on<lb/>
of the most original, thought provok-<lb/>
ing, �cintillating debates in all of time,<lb/>
even better than the Lincoln Douglas<lb/>
debates of more than a century be-<lb/>
fore. Let's listen in:<lb/>
Rep. Barney Flagg, D-SC, took<lb/>
the floor in support of the amend-<lb/>
ment, saying, "We ha ve to protect the<lb/>
flag Veterans support this, and we all<lb/>
know that the fact that they fought in<lb/>
a war means they have the right to<lb/>
restrict other people's freedoms. Little<lb/>
children pledge allegiance to the flag,<lb/>
and if we vote against the amend-<lb/>
ment, they'll be permanently brain-<lb/>
damaged and they'll all end up like<lb/>
Barney Frank, not that I mean any-<lb/>
thing by that. Most important, the<lb/>
voters are for it � and if the majority<lb/>
of people thinks something, then it<lb/>
must be true, even if they think that<lb/>
slavery is okay or that the Earth is flat.<lb/>
Uh, could I have thirty more seconds?<lb/>
Now, I don't intend to make this a<lb/>
political issue. Patriotic Americanscan<lb/>
disagree. But not unless they're actu-<lb/>
ally commie subversives<lb/>
Rep. PatSchredder, D-Colo then<lb/>
took the floor to argue against the<lb/>
amendment, saying, "The flag is a<lb/>
piece of fabric; the Constitution is the<lb/>
Attention, foreign<lb/>
governments!<lb/>
If you need help<lb/>
locating dangerous<lb/>
fugitives from justice,<lb/>
you'll want to try the<lb/>
CIA's Activist Location<lb/>
Program!<lb/>
ClA-ALP's courteous<lb/>
staff will take your call<lb/>
and locate your<lb/>
fugitive within 30<lb/>
minutes, or you<lb/>
get the service<lb/>
absolutely freel<lb/>
Guaranteed!<lb/>
Fast service, fully<lb/>
guaranteed, and all for<lb/>
the low, low price of<lb/>
just 30 pieces of silver!<lb/>
Well, we did a pretty<lb/>
good job with Mandela,<lb/>
didn't we?<lb/>
fabru ofotircountry When lla; burn<lb/>
en deface the flag, they're really Jusl<lb/>
(Ida. ing them selves (r wmethtng<lb/>
like that. Uh,C�uW I have thirty more<lb/>
seconds? Anyway, vote against the<lb/>
flag amendment, bet ause if you don't<lb/>
you're obviously for censorship, and<lb/>
you're probably also a commie sub-<lb/>
versive<lb/>
Minority Whip "Salamander"<lb/>
Gingrich, R-Ga , then took the floor in<lb/>
support of the amendment, saying,<lb/>
"We have to protect the flag. Veterans<lb/>
support this, and we all know that the<lb/>
fact that they fought in a war means<lb/>
they have the right to re�trict other<lb/>
people's freedoms. Little children<lb/>
pledge allegiance to the flag, and if we<lb/>
vote against the amendment, they'll<lb/>
be permanently brain-damaged and<lb/>
they'll all end up like Barney Frank,<lb/>
not that I mean any thing by that. Most<lb/>
important, the voters are for it � and<lb/>
if the majority of people thinks some-<lb/>
thing, then it must be true, even if they<lb/>
think that slavery is okay or that the<lb/>
Earth is flat. Uh, could I have thirty<lb/>
more seconds? Now, 1 don't intend to<lb/>
make this � plit� al issue Patrioti<lb/>
Americans can disagree. Bill not un<lb/>
less they're m tually commie wbver<lb/>
sives<lb/>
I It m te Speaker I nm f ooley then<lb/>
took the floor to argue against the<lb/>
amendment, saying, "The flag is a<lb/>
piece of fabric; the Constitution is the<lb/>
fabric of our country. When flag-burn-<lb/>
ers deface the flag, they're really just<lb/>
defacing themselves. Or something<lb/>
like that. Uh, could I have thirty more<lb/>
seconds? Anyway, vote against the<lb/>
flag amendment, because if you don't<lb/>
you're obviously for censorship, and<lb/>
you're probably also a commie sub-<lb/>
versive<lb/>
Rep Bill Shootme, R-Mich then<lb/>
took the floor in support of the amend-<lb/>
ment, saying, "We have to protect the<lb/>
flag. Veterans support this, and we all<lb/>
know that the fact that they fought in<lb/>
a war means they have the right to<lb/>
restrict other people's freedoms. Little<lb/>
children pledge allegiance to the flag,<lb/>
and if we vote against the amend-<lb/>
ment, they'll be permanently brain-<lb/>
damaged and they'll all end up like<lb/>
Barney Frank, not th.it I mi i i �<lb/>
thing by that. Most important the<lb/>
voters are for it and if themajonty<lb/>
of people thinks something, then it<lb/>
must be true, even if they think that<lb/>
slavery isokay or that the Earth is Hat<lb/>
Uh,could I have thirty more seconds7<lb/>
Now, I don't intend to make this a<lb/>
political issue. Patriotic Ameruans( an<lb/>
disagree. But not unless they're actu-<lb/>
ally commie subversives<lb/>
Rep. Tim Christmascard, R-N.C,<lb/>
then took the floor to argue against<lb/>
the amendment, saying, "The flag is a<lb/>
piece of fabric; the Constitution is the<lb/>
fabric of our country. When flag-burn-<lb/>
ers deface the flag, they're really just<lb/>
defacing themselves. Or something<lb/>
like that. Uh, could I have thirty more<lb/>
seconds? Anyway, vote against the<lb/>
flag amendment, because if you don't<lb/>
you're obviously for censorship, and<lb/>
you're probably also a commie sub-<lb/>
versive<lb/>
RepG. V. Montgomery wards, Li-<lb/>
Miss then took the floor in support of<lb/>
the amendment, saying well, you<lb/>
get the picture.<lb/>
Arnold Schwarzenegger<lb/>
is<lb/>
Ronald Reagan<lb/>
in the hyper-mega-blockbuster hit of the century:<lb/>
TOTAL LACK<lb/>
OF RECALL<lb/>
"It's a movie<lb/>
� Gene Shallit<lb/>
'Two thumbs<lb/>
� Siskel &amp; Ebert<lb/>
"Unintelligible<lb/>
Arnold Schwarzenegger<lb/>
"Yes, I believe I may have seen that<lb/>
film at some point but I'm afraid<lb/>
I don't recall any specifics at<lb/>
this time. You know, I think I'd<lb/>
remember a lot more if Nancy<lb/>
didn't always talk so damn much <lb/>
it's really hard to concentrate<lb/>
� Konald Reagan<lb/>
Directed by Arnold Schwarzenegger. Produced by Arnold Schwarzenegger. Filmed by Arnold<lb/>
Schwarzenegger. Kdited by Arnold Schwarzenegger. Popcorn popped by Arnold Schwarzenegger.<lb/>
Written by some sociopathie jerk who evidently doesn't mind bastardizing the hell out of one of<lb/>
Philip K. Dick's many brilliant works.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058218_0019"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>