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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058220_0001"/>
$z lEafit (Eartfltmatt<lb/>
Vol. 64 No. 37<lb/>
Wednesday July 11,1990<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Program reduces<lb/>
amount of solid<lb/>
waste on campus<lb/>
By Analise Craig<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU started its solid waste management program in March to cut<lb/>
down the amount of waste sent to the Pitt County landfill and since then<lb/>
has success with recycling.<lb/>
"Recycling is onlv a small part of solid waste management says<lb/>
George Armistead of ECU's Occupation, Safety and Health (OSHA)<lb/>
adding, but an important one<lb/>
E U created the program because of North Carolina Senate Bill 111,<lb/>
passed in 1989 which calls for a 25 percent reduction of solid wasted by<lb/>
1993 It ECU can not meet the reduction, Bill 114 gives county landfills<lb/>
authontv to charge a solid waste disposal fee, commonly called a<lb/>
tipping fee.<lb/>
According to Mr. Armistead. the urgency of the program is due to<lb/>
an estimated $300 .OW a ear tipping fee tor ECU to dump waste into the<lb/>
new city land till.<lb/>
"In order to avoid the tipping fee we need to concentrate on<lb/>
resource conservation and recovers savs Armistead.<lb/>
In the past, ECU contracted the disposal of solid and hazardous<lb/>
wastes.<lb/>
ECU spends $490 every three months to remove two 55 gallon<lb/>
drums of such hazardous wastes as used petrolem products such as<lb/>
paint. Some paint is recovered and is sent to a recycling plant where it<lb/>
is converted to usable paint at significant cost-savings.<lb/>
In addition, the university refurbishes dormitory mattresses in-<lb/>
stead of purchasing new ones. Some materials, such as paper, used bv<lb/>
the university, have been recycled and are purchased at a higher price,<lb/>
but companies will remove ECU's used material at no cost to the<lb/>
university. Thanks to the foresight of one of the groundskeepers, ECU<lb/>
purchased a mulcher that will reduce tree limbs to mulch, Armistead<lb/>
said. This was a savings of $60 for every 200 pounds of vegetative waste<lb/>
that would have gone into the landfill.<lb/>
The biggest landfill problem, for ECU and the nation, is paper. An<lb/>
estimated 41 percent of solid waste in landfills throughout the country<lb/>
is paper. ECU produces a vast amount of paper waste.<lb/>
"We (ECU) are recycling about 6,000 pounds of paper a week<lb/>
Armistead said.<lb/>
See Paper, page 3<lb/>
Team saves<lb/>
lives with<lb/>
transplants<lb/>
By Tonia Endres<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The new recycling program on campus allows ECU to recycle 6,000 pounds ot paper every week.<lb/>
Nationwide, 41 percent of all waste is paper. George Armistead of the solid waste management program<lb/>
said recycling is but a part of the overall program. (Photo by ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
The ECU medical school's<lb/>
transplant team can give a new life<lb/>
to those in need of organs.<lb/>
"I'd be dead today if I didn't<lb/>
get a transplant; it's hard to take<lb/>
but those are the facts said Cliff<lb/>
Frelke. Frel ke, of the Eastern Caro-<lb/>
lina Transplant Support Group,<lb/>
had a kidney transplant done by<lb/>
the ECU medical school's trans-<lb/>
plantation program in 1985.<lb/>
The transplantation team has<lb/>
accomplished 250 kidney trans-<lb/>
plants since 1981 and six pancreas<lb/>
transplants since 1986. Karen<lb/>
Parker, R.N helps pa tientsdecide<lb/>
whether to have kidney transplant<lb/>
or dialysis.<lb/>
She spends a lot of time talk-<lb/>
See Kidney, page 3<lb/>
Police work no circus for new chief<lb/>
By Michelle Castellow<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
As oi lune 1990, E Us Depart-<lb/>
ment of Public Safety has a new<lb/>
addition to their police force. After<lb/>
four months of deliberation, ECU<lb/>
Public Satetv has hired Ronnie Avery<lb/>
to fill the shoesof former police chief.<lb/>
Johnnv Rose, and til! them he will<lb/>
indeed.<lb/>
With nearlv 30 years of police<lb/>
work behind him, A very has been<lb/>
exposed to all kinds of situations<lb/>
ranging from riots to rock concerts.<lb/>
University dining services plan<lb/>
for future expansion of facilities<lb/>
By Debra Blake<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Most of us never thought we<lb/>
would see a day the dining serv-<lb/>
ices would be so great that every-<lb/>
one would want to dine on the<lb/>
ECU campus. Maybe that day is<lb/>
coming.<lb/>
Since last September the uni-<lb/>
versity has taken one necessary<lb/>
step � they have hired a Director<lb/>
of Dining Services, Frank J.Salam-<lb/>
mon. Until last fall this job title did<lb/>
not exist, but itappearsasif it will<lb/>
be beneficial.<lb/>
Salammon, who worked with<lb/>
runafiveyearGrowthand Expan-<lb/>
sion Plan of the dining services, as<lb/>
well as establish a future direction<lb/>
for the University to become more<lb/>
involved.<lb/>
Beginning August 1, the five<lb/>
year plan will start by the renova-<lb/>
tion of the'Croatan and Wright<lb/>
Student Store.<lb/>
'These stores will be taken into<lb/>
possession and incorporated as<lb/>
part of the dining services Salam-<lb/>
mon said. "They will operate as<lb/>
full service snack bars<lb/>
The Croatan will have a fast<lb/>
food operation, a chicken franchise<lb/>
and a snack bar. There will be six<lb/>
cashiers. Wright will operate a fro-<lb/>
Canteen for two years as Director<lb/>
of Operations, will administer and zen yogurt bar, a deli, a self-serve<lb/>
Spangled Stars<lb/>
The afterglow of fireworks briefly hung over the Greenville sky on the<lb/>
July Fourth as the city celebrated the 214th birthday of the nation.<lb/>
(Photo by Celeste Hoffman � ECU Photo Lab) <lb/>
hot dog area and a pizza stand with<lb/>
the specialty being personal pan<lb/>
pizza. There will be four cashiers.<lb/>
Meal tickets will be honored at both<lb/>
locations.<lb/>
During the next two years, con-<lb/>
struction of a new facility will begin<lb/>
on college hill. A new building will<lb/>
be built, which will house a kitchen<lb/>
and a dining area.<lb/>
The main focus of this facility<lb/>
will be a food court, which will have<lb/>
different areas available serving<lb/>
different specialties. Oriental, Ital-<lb/>
ian, local and Mexican areas will<lb/>
make up the food court. There will<lb/>
also be a beverage section, salad bar<lb/>
and dessert bar.<lb/>
The facility will be large enough<lb/>
to feed the entire campus. It will<lb/>
take approximately three years to<lb/>
complete. The university plans its<lb/>
opening in 1993.<lb/>
Upon the opening of the new<lb/>
facility, Jones cafeteria will close.<lb/>
Jones will then be renovated and<lb/>
completely changed into an A La<lb/>
Carte and Entertainment Complex.<lb/>
Different foods will be sold by item.<lb/>
After the re-opening of Jones, The<lb/>
Galley will close and re-open as a<lb/>
convenient store.<lb/>
For the last two years there have<lb/>
been discussions of taking the old<lb/>
cafeteria, which is now the Publica-<lb/>
tions building, and making another<lb/>
food court. Salammon said it would<lb/>
be nice to restore the architecture<lb/>
and integrity of the building he<lb/>
considers a landmark.<lb/>
The Growth and Expansion Plan<lb/>
does bring many questions. "There<lb/>
actually will be a partner in helping<lb/>
the university build this compre-<lb/>
hensive food service program. We<lb/>
want the same partner for the five<lb/>
year growth plan Salammon ex-<lb/>
plains.<lb/>
Will that partner be Canteen?<lb/>
According to Salammon there are<lb/>
seven proposals in response to the<lb/>
bid for the food service contract.<lb/>
Also beginning August 1, ARA<lb/>
See Dining, page 3<lb/>
Avery says that one of his most<lb/>
unusual experiences was thecap-<lb/>
hire of an escaped elephant.<lb/>
The full grown elephant<lb/>
escaped from a small circus and<lb/>
wandered through streets and<lb/>
back vards aimlessly.<lb/>
"You should have scon the<lb/>
canine dogs. They didn't know<lb/>
what to think Finally we cot<lb/>
nered it and surrounded it with<lb/>
ourcars. Itjusl leaned upagainst<lb/>
one of the cars and waited for the<lb/>
trainer to get there to take i t back<lb/>
to the circus. It was quite an<lb/>
experience Averv recalled.<lb/>
Averv is a native of Win-<lb/>
ston-Salem who grew up in<lb/>
Pamlico county. He began his<lb/>
police career in 1 1 in ew Bern,<lb/>
where he attended rookie school.<lb/>
According to Avery, he de-<lb/>
cided upon a career as a police<lb/>
officer because then, it was one<lb/>
of the few opportunities which<lb/>
offered job securitv. In 15 he<lb/>
moved to 1A inter Park, Fla. and<lb/>
attended Rollins College where he<lb/>
received a BS degree in Criminal<lb/>
Justice. In addition, Avery also<lb/>
attended one (if the most respected<lb/>
police training institutions in the<lb/>
south, the FBI National Academy<lb/>
in Quanbco, Va.<lb/>
After serving as a patrolman,<lb/>
shift commander and services<lb/>
division commander for 24 years<lb/>
in Winter Park, Fla, Avery moved<lb/>
back to North Carolina to assume<lb/>
the position .is police chief in Wil-<lb/>
liamston in June 1989. Avery<lb/>
describes himself as a progressive<lb/>
individual and feels that he was<lb/>
not professionally matched with<lb/>
his career in WilHamston.<lb/>
"I wanted to push toward<lb/>
progressiv ism faster than William-<lb/>
son wanted to go, Averv said<lb/>
In lune 1990, Avery stepped<lb/>
into the office of police chief for<lb/>
ECU's Department of Public<lb/>
Safetv. He describes the depart-<lb/>
ment as a group of energetic indi-<lb/>
viduals who are striving to build<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
"This is the ideal environment<lb/>
that I have been looking for. ECU<lb/>
is a real challenge for me and I<lb/>
enjoy a challenge Avery said.<lb/>
He is generally supportive of<lb/>
Public Safety and plans to build<lb/>
and train the police department<lb/>
until it is one of the most respected<lb/>
in the country.<lb/>
"We can easily do this with<lb/>
the talent we have on board here<lb/>
Avery said.<lb/>
Avery plans to implement a<lb/>
few minor job assignment changes<lb/>
but says that he has found no ma-<lb/>
jor problems within the depart-<lb/>
ment itself.<lb/>
"It is a good, well trained<lb/>
department, but police work is a<lb/>
fast paced and rapidly changing<lb/>
See Avery, page 3<lb/>
Gov. Martin searches for<lb/>
solutions to budget woes<lb/>
By Margie Morin<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Outlining a plan to protect<lb/>
the state's triple-A bond rating,<lb/>
Governor Jim Martin proposed<lb/>
spendingcutsand asked theN.C.<lb/>
to pass a resolution of intent to<lb/>
adopt a one-cent sales tax in-<lb/>
crease during the 1991 session.<lb/>
Martin said a one-cent sales<lb/>
control over the positionsallocated<lb/>
from the BEP is amended, Martin<lb/>
believes local boards can do more<lb/>
to improve student performance<lb/>
with flexibility over the positions<lb/>
already allocated than if required<lb/>
to stav locked into a prescribed<lb/>
pattemof staffing whichbearslittle<lb/>
relation to their local needs.<lb/>
"Schools have in fact become<lb/>
and must remain our number one<lb/>
priority, but they are not our only<lb/>
Ronnie Avery<lb/>
tax increase that came into effect<lb/>
this July was unavoidable and priority. We have other needin<lb/>
without real cuts in spending corrections,environmentalprotec-<lb/>
even greater tax increases would<lb/>
be needed. He then proposed a<lb/>
sales tax increase for the next<lb/>
biennuim and the coming fiscal<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Martin explained why edu-<lb/>
cation cuts are necessary: "Some<lb/>
will argue that no cuts should be<lb/>
made in public school appropria-<lb/>
tions, but 1 believe that before we<lb/>
raise taxes in this election year,<lb/>
we should show that the non-<lb/>
industrial bureaucracies in edu-<lb/>
cation are not insulated from the<lb/>
economies we order. Aftrer all,<lb/>
that's where most of the growth<lb/>
in school spendinghasoccurred,<lb/>
most of it in the administrative<lb/>
hierarchy, with lesser amounts<lb/>
in teaching positiions<lb/>
Martin said that education<lb/>
cuts can best be achieved if the<lb/>
local control and flexibility in the<lb/>
school management is increased.<lb/>
Asa result, local superintendents<lb/>
will be able to achieve better<lb/>
results than insisting on adding<lb/>
specific poritions in the Basic<lb/>
Educations Plan's six-year-old<lb/>
formula.<lb/>
If the law to extend local<lb/>
tion, higher education, health, law<lb/>
enforcement etc. and these other<lb/>
departments cannot be expected<lb/>
to be the only ones to economize.<lb/>
You have under the consideration<lb/>
a bill to grant a much higher de-<lb/>
gree of management flexibility to<lb/>
the University of North Carolina.<lb/>
And just as it is essential to put<lb/>
school needs and Medicaid and<lb/>
prison needs on the tableI rec-<lb/>
ommend strongly that we also put<lb/>
alongside them the needs for<lb/>
improving services of our vital<lb/>
community college system<lb/>
"It cannot be overemphasized<lb/>
how serious this is. On average, of<lb/>
all the organizations which have<lb/>
been placed on Creditwatch, 90<lb/>
percent of them have been down-<lb/>
graded. The budget must be bal-<lb/>
anced not.only on a cash basis, as<lb/>
required by our Constitution, but<lb/>
must be balanced while including<lb/>
any accrued liabilities.<lb/>
'The second standard we must<lb/>
meet in order for our budget to be<lb/>
permanently' balanced is that<lb/>
recurring expenditures must be<lb/>
covered by recurring revenues. If<lb/>
See Martin, page 3<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
Current recycling ef-<lb/>
forts on campus will pay<lb/>
off in long run.<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
Pirate Comics6<lb/>
State and Nation7<lb/>
Wake County imple-<lb/>
ments program for autis-<lb/>
tic students.<lb/>
Features9<lb/>
Deanna discovers<lb/>
GardnersofSoule.aband<lb/>
plowing new musical<lb/>
fields.<lb/>
Sports11<lb/>
ECU is represented in<lb/>
the Olympic Festival by<lb/>
Damon Desue and Bill<lb/>
Carson.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0002"/><lb/>
2 The East Carolinian, July 11,1990<lb/>
ECU Briefs<lb/>
ECU nursing students named scholars<lb/>
Fourteen students enrolled in the School of Nursing at ECU have<lb/>
been named scholars through a new program established by the N.C.<lb/>
General Assembly to attract more students to the nursing profession<lb/>
and reduce the shortage of practicing nurses in the state.<lb/>
The N.C. Nurse Scholars Program provides merit scholarships<lb/>
ranging from $3,000 to $5,000 per year. The scholarships, available at<lb/>
both state and private institutions in North Carolina offering nursing<lb/>
programs, are given based on academic achievement, leadership po-<lb/>
tential and personal recommendations. Students receiving the scholar<lb/>
ships must peomise to work as a full-time registered nurse in North<lb/>
Carolina for at least one yoar following graduation.<lb/>
The $5,000-a-year scholarshipsto be awarded over the next four<lb/>
years are intended for entering freshmen, non-traditional students,<lb/>
minorities, men or persons who have previously earned degrees and<lb/>
work experience but are changing professions.<lb/>
The $3,000 awards are presented to students who are college<lb/>
juniors, community college graduates pursuing baccalaureate degrees<lb/>
or registered nurses interested in baccalaureate status. The awards<lb/>
cover two years of educational training.<lb/>
Professor to participate in C-SPAN<lb/>
Dr. Ernest Thelpsof the ECU department of communication is one<lb/>
of 35 educators across the nation selected to participate in C-SPAN's<lb/>
biannual seminar for professors in Washington, D.C. August 6-7.<lb/>
Participants were selected from among the more than 2,000 college-<lb/>
level members of "C-SPAN in the Classroom the cable television<lb/>
network's organization for educators in the fields of political science,<lb/>
journalism, communication and law.<lb/>
Dr. Phelps is an associate professor of broadcast communications<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
The seminar includes roundtable discussions and workshops,<lb/>
production of a live, nationally televised viewer call-in program and a<lb/>
reception at the National Press Club. Moderator of the seminar is John<lb/>
Sullivan, associate professor of rhetoric and communication studies at<lb/>
the University of Virginia.<lb/>
Seminar sessions will focus on issues relating to educational uses of<lb/>
C-SPAN's public affairs programs.<lb/>
C-SPAN is a non-profit public affairs cable television network,<lb/>
available to more than 50 million households nationwide and around<lb/>
the world via satellite.<lb/>
Real estate seminars to be held at ECU<lb/>
Two seminars to help real estate appraisers prepare tor licensing<lb/>
and certification exams in real estate appraising will be held at ECU in<lb/>
August.<lb/>
The residential license exam review will be conducted August 9-10<lb/>
and the general certification exam review is scheduled for August lb<lb/>
17. Under new state regulations appraisers must be certified by one of<lb/>
the.se exams to conduct appraisals in North Carolina.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Eastern Carolina Chapter of the Society oi Real<lb/>
Estate Attraisers and the ECU school of business, the seminars will be<lb/>
taught by Dr. Stanley R. Stansell, an ECU professor of business. Stansell<lb/>
is the holder of the Robert Dillard Teer Distinguished Professorship of<lb/>
Business.<lb/>
National Campus Clips<lb/>
Minnesota agrees to pay settlement<lb/>
The University of Minnesota has agreed on a pay equity settlement<lb/>
for 1,400 women employees, following six years of litigation.<lb/>
The agreement increases the salaries of all female professors, ad-<lb/>
ministrators and academic staff members by 3 percent. Those .seeking<lb/>
additional raises may apply to a salary settlement committee. The<lb/>
settlement w '1 cost the university $3 million.<lb/>
Four petitions filed by 17 female academic staff members charged<lb/>
the university with sex discrimination because of a disparity in the<lb/>
salariesofmaleand female university employees, said William Donohue,<lb/>
acting general counsel for the university.<lb/>
A class-action settlement was approved by the Minnesota federal<lb/>
district court in October 1989.<lb/>
Program closes agribusiness gap<lb/>
The University of Illinois has established a program to increase the<lb/>
number of graduates trained in agribusiness and allied fields.<lb/>
Steven Sonka, a professor of agribusiness management and agri-<lb/>
cultural economics who is working on me project, said fewer family<lb/>
farms means fewer farm-family children enrolling in college, leading to<lb/>
a shortage of qualified agribusiness managers.<lb/>
To help solve the problem, the university's College of Agriculture<lb/>
and CollegcofCommerceand Business have joined to providebachelor's,<lb/>
master'sand doctoral programs, with students taking required courses<lb/>
in both colleges.<lb/>
Cffpynght 19 LISA TOP A YAflr CtJbfl tuiiridH.mMui.t<lb/>
Crime Report<lb/>
Wild ducks near Green Residence<lb/>
Hall saved by ECU campus officer<lb/>
July 2<lb/>
2038 - Officer recovered wild ducks north of Greene Residence<lb/>
Hall. They were transported to the police department.<lb/>
July 3<lb/>
0208 � Two officers checked on a report of male subjects in<lb/>
Clement Residence Hall. They were gone on arrival.<lb/>
1031 � An officer responded to a minor vehicle accident on the<lb/>
south side of Wichard. There were no injuries, only damage to the<lb/>
vehicles.<lb/>
July 4<lb/>
0110 � An officer responded on scene to an assault at Wright Circle.<lb/>
July 5<lb/>
0155 � Three officers checked on an intoxicated subject at Fifth and<lb/>
Reade streets. The subject was turned over to the Greenville Police.<lb/>
2321 � Three officers responded to a call at Harrington Field where<lb/>
two subjects were unconscious. Both subjects were taken to the emer-<lb/>
gency room at Pitt Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
July 6<lb/>
1202 � An officer checked on a peeping torn report. The incident<lb/>
occurred in the pool locker room at Minges Colesium July 5.<lb/>
July 7<lb/>
0046 � An officer responded to Fleming Residence Hall in refer-<lb/>
enc to a female screaming. She was playing and was advised to stop.<lb/>
0311 � Two officers went to Wright Circle in reference to two<lb/>
subjects in the fountain. They were issued campus citations.<lb/>
TV Crimt Krpofl u tmhn from official F.CU INAlif Safrfy iogt<lb/>
ECU Regional Devlopment Institute<lb/>
plans July conference in Greenville<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The ECU Regional Develop-<lb/>
ment Institute and the N.C. De-<lb/>
partment of Economic and Com-<lb/>
munity Development Division of<lb/>
Community Assistance in Wash-<lb/>
ington have joined forces to pres-<lb/>
ent a planning conference on July<lb/>
19 at the Hilton Inn in Greenville.<lb/>
"Taking Control of the '90s -<lb/>
Can We Continue to Juggle the<lb/>
Economic, Environmental and<lb/>
Social Issues?" is open to plan-<lb/>
ners, local government and eco-<lb/>
nomic development officials as<lb/>
well as "anyone who is concerned<lb/>
about these issues according to<lb/>
Dick Brockett, a development<lb/>
specialist with the Regional De-<lb/>
velopment Institute (RDI).<lb/>
The conference will provide a<lb/>
preview of the challenges and<lb/>
opportunities facing those in-<lb/>
volved in planning processes<lb/>
during the coming decade, Brock-<lb/>
ett said. Sessions will cover tech-<lb/>
niques for meeting the needs of<lb/>
changing communities and in-<lb/>
sights into future growth and<lb/>
development trends.<lb/>
Scheduled speakers include<lb/>
lames T. Broyhill, secretary oi the<lb/>
NJ.C. Department of Economicand<lb/>
((immunity Development, and<lb/>
Randall Arendt, associate direc-<lb/>
tor of the Center for Rural Massa-<lb/>
chusetts in Amherst, who is noted<lb/>
for his rural planning concepts.<lb/>
Dr. Bill Haas, a gerontology<lb/>
professcr at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Asheville, will<lb/>
discuss the impact of retirees on<lb/>
local economics and Dr. James<lb/>
Klcckley, president of Problem-<lb/>
Solving Research, Inc a Green-<lb/>
ville-based consulting firm, will<lb/>
present an economic forecast for<lb/>
eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Two officials with the N.C.<lb/>
Department of Environment,<lb/>
Health, and Natural Resources -<lb/>
Jim Mulligan, regional supervisor<lb/>
of the Division of Environmental<lb/>
Management, and John Crew,<lb/>
planning coordinator with the<lb/>
Divisionof Coastal Management-<lb/>
will provide insight into future<lb/>
regulations and conditions im-<lb/>
pacting the region's environment<lb/>
during a session entitled "Apply-<lb/>
ing Environmental Laws in the<lb/>
'90s<lb/>
Buses will be provided to<lb/>
transport participants to the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine for a 3 p.m.<lb/>
teleconference, "Coastal Area<lb/>
Management Act - Mountain Area<lb/>
Management Act: What Has<lb/>
Happened Since the '70s?"<lb/>
The teleconference will be led<lb/>
bv David Owens, assistant direc-<lb/>
tor of the UNC Institute of Gov-<lb/>
ernment and termer director of<lb/>
the N.C. Divisionof iistal Man-<lb/>
agement, who will be in Chapel<lb/>
Hill, and Alan Lang, chief planner<lb/>
for the Asheville field office of the<lb/>
Division of Community Assis-<lb/>
tance, who will participate from<lb/>
Asheville.<lb/>
"Teleconferencing will be<lb/>
used more and more in the '90s, so<lb/>
we felt this would be a good way<lb/>
to demonstrate how it works<lb/>
Brockett said.<lb/>
"Although anyone with the<lb/>
proper equipment will be able to<lb/>
hook up to the teleconference, only<lb/>
those at the medical school will be<lb/>
able to interact with the speakers<lb/>
by asking questions<lb/>
The $25 per person registry<lb/>
tion fee includes lunch and must<lb/>
be paid bv July 12. The price will<lb/>
be $30 on the day of the confer<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
To register or for more infor<lb/>
mation, contact Dick Brockett at<lb/>
the ECU Regional Development<lb/>
Institute, Willis Building, Green<lb/>
ville, N.C. 27858.<lb/>
Choo-Choo Thru<lb/>
Washington Redskins vs Atlanta Falcons<lb/>
Ausust 11th Kenan Stadium<lb/>
PARTY BUS<lb/>
Ticket &amp; Transportation only $50<lb/>
For Info Call Paramore Coach or the Choo-Choo Thru<lb/>
Limited Supply<lb/>
756-1133<lb/>
201 E. 4th Street.<lb/>
Sharky's<lb/>
The Club With (lass<lb/>
Located by Sports Pad on 5th Street<lb/>
Enter through Alley<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Import Night<lb/>
Housing problems to<lb/>
be studied this fall<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
A center to study international<lb/>
housing problems will open at East<lb/>
Carolina University his fall and<lb/>
ECU will also sponsor a major<lb/>
conference on world housing<lb/>
concerns, officials announced<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Dr. Kenneth Carpenter, a<lb/>
professor of construction manage-<lb/>
ment in the School of Industry and<lb/>
Technology, said a center for third<lb/>
world housing research will be<lb/>
established at ECU as an inde-<lb/>
pendent research institute in the<lb/>
Department of Construction<lb/>
Management. He said the center<lb/>
will strive to become a focal point<lb/>
tor third world housing studies<lb/>
and attract research assignments<lb/>
from the U.S. and other countries.<lb/>
To inaugurate ttie center, a<lb/>
two-day Global Shelter Confer-<lb/>
ence will be held Oct 15-16. The<lb/>
conference will provide discussion<lb/>
on world housing problems and<lb/>
will suggest solutions to some of<lb/>
the problems. The conference is<lb/>
expected to draw international<lb/>
attendance.<lb/>
"A housing shortage exists<lb/>
worldwide particularly in devel-<lb/>
oping countries Carpenter said.<lb/>
He said there is an urgent need to<lb/>
find improved shelter in third<lb/>
world countries such as Mexico<lb/>
where dwellings are often made<lb/>
of cactus plants, and in Africa<lb/>
where houses of sticks, tin and<lb/>
mud are commonly found.<lb/>
Carpenter said the ECU cen-<lb/>
ter will establish a formal process<lb/>
for the study of methods and<lb/>
materials proposed for third world<lb/>
use. The studies will help in se-<lb/>
lecting construction materials that<lb/>
are low in cost, safe, hygienic and<lb/>
are appropriate to the country<lb/>
where they will be used.<lb/>
In the past there have been a<lb/>
number of housing projects spon-<lb/>
sored in developing countries by<lb/>
governments and other organiza-<lb/>
tions But Carpenter said many of<lb/>
these housing projects used im-<lb/>
ported building materials that<lb/>
'were expensive, difficult to in-<lb/>
stall, and often inappropriate for<lb/>
the climate or culture<lb/>
"Research is desperately<lb/>
needed on the ue oi truly appro-<lb/>
priate technologies to produce<lb/>
economical, durable, locally ac-<lb/>
ceptable and preferably indige-<lb/>
nous housing materials and de-<lb/>
signs said Carpenter.<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
2 For<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
Domestics<lb/>
SI.00<lb/>
Sharky's is a private club for members and<lb/>
21 year old guests.<lb/>
"We Free Pour All Our Drinks"<lb/>
T SPECIAL MEMBERSHIP <lb/>
 With this Coupon J<lb/>
Buyer's Guide<lb/>
Allied Health Sciences757 - 4437<lb/>
Attic752 - 7503<lb/>
Bogies752 - 4668<lb/>
Chicos757 - 1666<lb/>
Choo-Choo-Thru757 - 1969<lb/>
Eastern Cardiology757 - 1000<lb/>
Greenville Optician752 - 4018<lb/>
ITQ Travel355 - 5075<lb/>
Kingston Place758 - 5393<lb/>
Mew Deli758 - 0080<lb/>
Overtoil's752 - 5025<lb/>
Ramada355 - 8300<lb/>
Rio355 - 5000<lb/>
Sharkeys757 - 3881<lb/>
Stye Saat (Sarflltman<lb/>
Director<lb/>
of<lb/>
Advertising<lb/>
Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Ken Earley<lb/>
Randy Evans<lb/>
Julie Roscoe<lb/>
John Semelsberger<lb/>
Shay Sitlinger<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/>
Business Hours: Monday - Thursday 7:30 - 500 Friday 7:30 -11:30 a.m. Phone 757-6366<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0003"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, July 11,1990 3<lb/>
Avery<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
profession. Therefore, you have to<lb/>
be sharp and stay up with it. That's<lb/>
what we need to do; Keep people<lb/>
abreast of the situations he said.<lb/>
Training is one of Avery's<lb/>
main concerns at ECU. He plans<lb/>
to conduct more skills training in<lb/>
areas such as firearms, defense and<lb/>
pursuit driving, unarmed combat<lb/>
and sensitivity Avery feels that<lb/>
ECU should begin training people<lb/>
tofilluppermanagementpositions<lb/>
instead of ha ving to go outside the<lb/>
department to fill vacancies. Fur-<lb/>
thermore, Avery says he would<lb/>
like to see more formal training for<lb/>
these positions. Being in a college<lb/>
environment, individuals need<lb/>
college level training to adhere to<lb/>
university standards.<lb/>
Avery also feels that individu-<lb/>
als with high positions in police<lb/>
work should attend institutions<lb/>
such as the FBI National Academy<lb/>
or the Southern Tolice Institute in<lb/>
Louisville Ky, to develop police<lb/>
skills to their fullest potential and<lb/>
be aware of all aspects of police<lb/>
work. With this background ex-<lb/>
perience and continual training ,<lb/>
the police department can become<lb/>
one of the most respected depart-<lb/>
ments in the country, he said.<lb/>
Kidney<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
T-Shirts<lb/>
on Sale Now!<lb/>
$10.00<lb/>
ing to the patients and families<lb/>
about transplantation. Parker is in<lb/>
chargeofcoordinatingdonorsand<lb/>
recipientsand post operation care,<lb/>
as well as being on call 24 hours to<lb/>
answer any questions or concerns<lb/>
of her transplant patients.<lb/>
The government pays for all<lb/>
kidney transplants because they<lb/>
arc perfected with a 80-85 percent<lb/>
rate of success from a cadaver<lb/>
kidney and a 90-95 percent suc-<lb/>
cess rate from a living persons<lb/>
kidney.<lb/>
However, the government<lb/>
does not give to pancreas trans-<lb/>
plants because they are more diffi-<lb/>
cult to do and in experimental<lb/>
stages with a 70 percent success<lb/>
rate. Pancreas transplants are only<lb/>
given to juvenile diabetics; those<lb/>
who have had diabetes since child-<lb/>
hood.<lb/>
"I think it's close to perfection;<lb/>
diabetics have a lot of medical<lb/>
problems through out life and<lb/>
therefore continuously need medi-<lb/>
cal help; the government and in-<lb/>
surance should pay for the opera-<lb/>
tions- it would improve the dia-<lb/>
betics life and save everyone<lb/>
said<lb/>
money in the long run<lb/>
Parker.<lb/>
There have been five heart<lb/>
transplants done at the ECU school<lb/>
of medicine; however the heart is<lb/>
the organ the least likely to be re-<lb/>
jected, while the kidney is theorgan<lb/>
the most likely to be rejected.<lb/>
When a patient decides to<lb/>
receive a kidney transplant a do-<lb/>
nor must be found and matched.<lb/>
A kidney can come from a match-<lb/>
ing blood relative, a living non-<lb/>
relative or a cadaver.<lb/>
"The biggest problem is lack<lb/>
of kidneys. We're limited by sup-<lb/>
ply to how many (transplants) we<lb/>
can do said Parker.<lb/>
There are 65 people in eastern<lb/>
North Carolina waiting for kid-<lb/>
neys. Parker said she urges people<lb/>
to talk to their families about<lb/>
donating organs after they have<lb/>
died. She said the lack of knowl-<lb/>
edge about transplants as well as<lb/>
cultural and religious differences<lb/>
may explain the limited supply of<lb/>
organs. Many people do not real-<lb/>
ize that they can live a perfectly<lb/>
normal life with only one kidney.<lb/>
Charles Reid waited fiveyears<lb/>
on dialysisbefore a kidney became<lb/>
available in July of 1984. He was<lb/>
on a waiting list and received a<lb/>
cadaveric kidney.<lb/>
"I've been doing fine and I'm<lb/>
really glad I had it done. I'm just<lb/>
thankful of all the doctors and<lb/>
nurses at the school of medicine<lb/>
said Reid.<lb/>
Frelke was also on dialysis for<lb/>
five years and would have died<lb/>
had he not receive a 16 year old<lb/>
man's kidney.<lb/>
"People just don't realize the<lb/>
importance of donating their or-<lb/>
gans; you could save a life said<lb/>
Frelke He said he recommends<lb/>
people to go to their drivers li-<lb/>
cense off ice and tell them you want<lb/>
to be a donor.<lb/>
"I would like to see more<lb/>
people get involved, people have<lb/>
to realize they can help another<lb/>
life said Frelke. For questions<lb/>
andor contributions please write<lb/>
to the Eastern Carolina Transplant<lb/>
Support Group, co Cliff Frelke,<lb/>
208 Williamsburg Drive, Creen-<lb/>
ville, N.C<lb/>
It depends upon how and<lb/>
where you receive your kidney as<lb/>
Dining<lb/>
to how long it will last. Parker<lb/>
said there isa problem with black<lb/>
donations.<lb/>
Since blacks have a higher<lb/>
rateof kidney failure, sometimes<lb/>
due to hypertension, they are in<lb/>
need of more kidney transplants<lb/>
however fewer blacks donate<lb/>
their organs than whites. The<lb/>
kidney of a white person may<lb/>
not match as well and the body<lb/>
may reject the kidney, therefore<lb/>
they may have to try a second<lb/>
transplant or return to dialysis.<lb/>
"It's real hard on me, it is<lb/>
hard to accept when it (the trans-<lb/>
plant) doesn't work said Parker.<lb/>
The chances are always good but<lb/>
Parker tells her patients the facts.<lb/>
She said she wishes there were<lb/>
some kind of incentive to get<lb/>
people, especially blacks, to do-<lb/>
nate. It is important to educate<lb/>
the public about transplantation.<lb/>
Parker said the point is that<lb/>
transplantations are here in east-<lb/>
ern North Carolina for kidney,<lb/>
heart and pancreas and it is won-<lb/>
derful because peopledon't need<lb/>
to travel so far for important<lb/>
medical care.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Services will begin a five year con-<lb/>
tract as the new food service.<lb/>
Salammon said he is pleased with<lb/>
the choice He said ARA has cor-<lb/>
porate expertise, experience, and<lb/>
an excellent record.<lb/>
They have 14 accounts in<lb/>
North Carolina including the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Greensboro, UNC Wilmington,<lb/>
UNC Charlotte, Wake Forest,<lb/>
Meredith College and Elon. Salam-<lb/>
mon said he hopes ECU can tap<lb/>
into that expertise and he said he is<lb/>
expecting "big things<lb/>
Despite rumors of a manda-<lb/>
tory meal plan for students living<lb/>
on campus, Sal.immon denies any<lb/>
truth to them. Salammon said,<lb/>
"There is discussion that we will<lb/>
go to a mandatory board Fresh-<lb/>
man program in the beginning of<lb/>
the 1993 school year However,<lb/>
he said it is merely speculation<lb/>
and the reason for such actions<lb/>
would be to build new programs.<lb/>
The meal plan is only mandatory<lb/>
in the summer ensuring the uni-<lb/>
versity to have a food service pro-<lb/>
gram during summer school.<lb/>
In the upcoming fall semester,<lb/>
there will be three meal plans to<lb/>
choose from. The 14 MealsWeek<lb/>
Plus Plan provides 14 meals each<lb/>
week plus $100 in a declining bal-<lb/>
ance account. The 9 MealsWeek<lb/>
Plus Plan pro vides nine meals each<lb/>
week plus $100 in a declining bal-<lb/>
ance account. And the Declining<lb/>
Balance Plan allows students to<lb/>
open an account with a minimum<lb/>
of $200 and add money in $50<lb/>
Martin<lb/>
1 SUMMERTIME FUN!<lb/>
ECU STUDENT UNION STYLE<lb/>
Watermelon Feast<lb/>
On the Mall 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday, July 12.<lb/>
Free Watermelon, Seed Spitting Contest!<lb/>
Concert on the Mall<lb/>
CRYSTAL SKY<lb/>
Monday, July 16 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
BingoIce Cream Party<lb/>
Thursday, July 19 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mcndenhall Room 221<lb/>
we restore those two standards, I<lb/>
am confident that our AAA credit<lb/>
rating will deserve to be reaf-<lb/>
firmed<lb/>
According to Martin, even if<lb/>
N.C. did not intend to see bonds<lb/>
for any capital projects, the loss of<lb/>
the triple-A credit rating would<lb/>
injure the reputation for sound<lb/>
fiscal policies that has attracted<lb/>
many large employers.<lb/>
Martin said that it would have<lb/>
the side effect of undercutting the<lb/>
reputatuonsof the citiesand coun-<lb/>
ties whose own credit ratings re-<lb/>
flect their starus as subdivisions of<lb/>
N.C. and it would erode the value<lb/>
and marketability of ouroutstand-<lb/>
ing bonds.<lb/>
According to Martin the prob-<lb/>
lem with an income tax increase is<lb/>
that those who pay the income tax<lb/>
already got a big increase last year<lb/>
because 700,000other taxpayers got<lb/>
excluded from having to pay in-<lb/>
come taxes. Even so, N.C. raises<lb/>
more income tax per capita, on a<lb/>
basisof the total population, than all<lb/>
but seven other states Martin says<lb/>
that N.C. is also in the top 10 states<lb/>
in the total corporate income taxes<lb/>
raised per capita, and that, too, just<lb/>
got raised two years ago. So neither<lb/>
of these income taxes should take<lb/>
another hit.<lb/>
A sales tax increses is the an-<lb/>
swer because the current 5 percent<lb/>
sales tax is not among the top 10<lb/>
states. While it is regressive, with<lb/>
lower income taxpayers paying a<lb/>
relatively higher fraction of income<lb/>
for retail purchases, it should be<lb/>
Paper<lb/>
increments.<lb/>
"Oeclining balance seems to<lb/>
be the most popular Salammon<lb/>
said. "It's a good idea, it's very<lb/>
flexible but it's also expensive<lb/>
Students like declining balance<lb/>
because they like flexibility. They<lb/>
felt they were throwing their<lb/>
money away so we combined<lb/>
the two <lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
remembered that 700,000 lower-<lb/>
income workers were relieved of<lb/>
anv tax just last year.<lb/>
Martin says the safest thing<lb/>
to do is to vote now for the tax<lb/>
increase to take effect next year,<lb/>
but the worst thing to do would<lb/>
be to have it voted down.<lb/>
"This is not easy medicine<lb/>
but with a favorable response I<lb/>
believe that wecan meet not only<lb/>
the needs of N.C, but also de-<lb/>
serve the confidence of those<lb/>
whose judgement is believed so<lb/>
highly in evaluating credit wor-<lb/>
thiness. The problem is real, and<lb/>
it is serious. Let's work together,<lb/>
without rancor and without panic<lb/>
and do what we must do to fix<lb/>
it Martin said.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
There are, however, problems<lb/>
concerning the placement of re-<lb/>
ceptacles in classrwm buildings.<lb/>
"It is against the fire codes to<lb/>
have paper accumulating in the<lb/>
hallways Armistead said.<lb/>
The program is also working<lb/>
on a solution to keep the paper<lb/>
recycling boxes visible and easily<lb/>
accessible to both students and<lb/>
faculty. Through paper recycling<lb/>
and mulching tree clippings, the<lb/>
ECU Solid Waste Management<lb/>
program has diverted 30 percent<lb/>
of it's solid waste from entering<lb/>
the county landfill.<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin feels the<lb/>
university progressed further in<lb/>
Solid Waste Management than<lb/>
UNC. For the program to be suc-<lb/>
cessful, students should pay<lb/>
more attention to not only what<lb/>
they t hrow away, but where they<lb/>
throw it away, according to<lb/>
Armistead.<lb/>
Applications are now being accepted for photographers for the 1990-91 school year. If you have<lb/>
experience with cameras and want to learn more while working with the ECU Media, then apply today<lb/>
at the Media Board Office, Second Floor of the<lb/>
Publications Building.<lb/>
� Presents �<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Willie Tyler &amp; Lester<lb/>
also Pfte Conklin<lb/>
S6 00 Members M00 Guests<lb/>
Wednesday. July 11th<lb/>
m.<lb/>
DOORPKIZt<lb/>
I itW�l� M f( l'�ul Mil artntv l<lb/>
( jiilf r I mlf� mi Sunday uly 22nd<lb/>
with I imo S�r�it byl�� Att<lb/>
- � It and Irom Ihf ontnl<lb/>
VOX I lor Mtuibwi<lb/>
ill (Hi forGtifttt<lb/>
Saturday, July 14th<lb/>
GARDNERS OF S0ULE<lb/>
rmy 5ou"l<lb/>
�Urn, I TWfi<lb/>
Jml� �C<lb/>
nadx<lb/>
V<lb/>
mm m<lb/>
FridayJuly lHh<lb/>
�mm- nvWr. $530 C��-�r�<lb/>
PRESS RELEASE<lb/>
On Saturday night, July<lb/>
14, 1990, the Original<lb/>
Nantucket will perform at<lb/>
The Attic in Greenville,<lb/>
NC. It will be the 1st ap-<lb/>
pearance for the Original<lb/>
Nantucket at the Attic, a<lb/>
club that has been the<lb/>
cornerstone of rock-n-roll<lb/>
in eastern N.C. for 18<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Ihe ORKilNAl. NANTUOlfiT I <lb/>
I jrry UzJtell voc�1�<lb/>
Mike Uz.mII voca.li, keyi, moog baie<lb/>
Tommy Red voc�lt, guitar<lb/>
Eddie Blatr vocmli. sm. keyi<lb/>
(ECU grad)<lb/>
Kenny Soule vocali. drumi,<lb/>
(ECU gnd)<lb/>
Mark Downing lead guitar<lb/>
n� bwl � JI pnfonn maaanaJ manly awn da l�<lb/>
Una aHwma r" � "( of nt � "� thai haw<lb/>
ir-Tt torn hvard hrfor. a<lb/>
FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER<lb/>
THI 0NIV<lb/>
HALE EI0TIC<lb/>
DANCE'S<lb/>
SEI�<lb/>
IHOU0M TO<lb/>
If AB THE<lb/>
ruvGiai<lb/>
NaME<lb/>
SPECIAL BULLETIN FOR ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
ECU LONG ISLAND<lb/>
ICE TEA PARTY IS BACK!<lb/>
THE HIGHEST<lb/>
0UM.ITV<lb/>
HUE �EVUE<lb/>
0aiD "IDE<lb/>
209 East Fifth Street<lb/>
ti,��. totggkjm At AtMc Gtn<lb/>
Thursday, July 12th<lb/>
Don't<lb/>
Miss It!<lb/>
752 - 7303<lb/>
IT'S A FRIDAY NIGHT<lb/>
ADVENTURE IN FUN!<lb/>
DATE: Every Friday<lb/>
TIME: 6 00 until<lb/>
PLACE: Raroada Inn Green v. "t<lb/>
S3 00 17-0 Ice Tea' SI OO.domcstic b-er. 50<lb/>
o Cnv. i Chjrg- fnj-bUiavnts 01 and over<lb/>
rRrF PTA Pia<lb/>
It- : � �; i !jn.  :�� - .�' ard (l.ck . -<lb/>
!i �'�. Bli'iy a r-r.C'ia Bi d Do<lb/>
JUS1 DOM T Y'SS0oT 0 iMj- Fi,<lb/>
RAMADA INN GREENVILLE<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0004"/><lb/>
�he SaHt Carolinian<lb/>
Josn'i i L Jenkins Jk General Manager<lb/>
Mn hah. G. Martin, Mumgmg Editor<lb/>
ADAM BLANKENSHIP, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Tim Hampton, Hews Editor<lb/>
MARC MOKIN, Asst. New Eiiicr<lb/>
Caroline Ciwck, Futures Editor<lb/>
DEANNA NEVCLOSKL Asst reaturt-s Editor<lb/>
DOUC Morris, Sirfs Editor<lb/>
EARI 1 M McAW EY, Ass. Sports Editor<lb/>
S 0T1 MaXWB I, Sartre Editor<lb/>
Pai i GlGEE, Stateand Nation Editor<lb/>
Phoni; LUONG, Credit Manager<lb/>
STUART RiSNER, Business Manager<lb/>
MICHAEL Kole, Ad Tech Supervisor<lb/>
Tohy BARBOUR, Circulation Manager<lb/>
J.D. VVllITMIRE, Production Manager<lb/>
CHARLES Will INC.HAM, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
STEVE REID, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Deborah S. Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
The East i arvlinian has served the East Carolina campus community since 1925, emphasizing informatioa thai directly<lb/>
i fleets ECU students During the ECU summer sessions. The East Carolinian publishes once a week with a circulation of<lb/>
5,000 Tht Eastarotuuan reserves the right to refuse or discontinue tnj tdvertisemems that tliscrmunate on the basis of<lb/>
Bge, sea, creed n nationa origin. Die masthead, editorial in each edition docs not necessarily represent the views of one<lb/>
ituliviilu.il. but, rather, is a majority opinion of the Editorial Board. I hf East (u.hntan welcomes letters expressing all<lb/>
points el view 1 diets should DC limited to 20 words or less. For purposes of decency and brevity, Tht East Carolinian<lb/>
reserves the right to edit letters lor publication. Letters should be addressed to The Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications<lb/>
Rids 1 r Greenville, NC, 27834; or call (919) ' M6.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Wednesday, July 11, 1990<lb/>
Keep the recycling effort going<lb/>
I or some time now. The last Carolinian has<lb/>
supported tht' recycling effort Previous editorials<lb/>
h.n c been w ritten in .in effort to promote awaren ss<lb/>
and get people involved But the time has come for<lb/>
praise Not only on the ECU campus, but in (Ireen-<lb/>
vtllo and the United States as a whole.<lb/>
Administrators on the ECU campus have<lb/>
taken a serious approach to the disposal ii hazard-<lb/>
ous waste the recycling of paper and the purchase of<lb/>
equipment that will, in the near future, !d to the<lb/>
university's beautification effort The .st was not<lb/>
too much, uM the thought of a lew .cerned people<lb/>
that understand the necessity r protecting the envi-<lb/>
ronment<lb/>
1 he state has also made an etlort to control<lb/>
solid waste disposal by passing legislation that will<lb/>
increase the cost of dumping if a 25 percent reduction<lb/>
of dumping is not reached by 1993 Again, it was the<lb/>
concern brought about by the people of North Caro-<lb/>
lina that forced our state legistatorstors to act on the<lb/>
issiu- ot the environment, and more specifically,<lb/>
recycling<lb/>
On the national level. Congress and mem-<lb/>
bers ol the I louse ot Representatives have heard Bills<lb/>
dialing with the recycling and the environment over<lb/>
and over. Many have passed, while other are being<lb/>
considered at this time At the same time, advertise-<lb/>
ments have been run on television and radios urging<lb/>
people to do their part in the recycling effort.<lb/>
Not everyone will become conscious and do<lb/>
their part, but it the majority will put forth a little<lb/>
effort, phenominal results can be achieved. On the<lb/>
EC U campus alone, rlXX) pounds of paper are being<lb/>
recycled every week Imagine how much paper could<lb/>
be recycled if every university andor city in Amer-<lb/>
ica made the same effort.<lb/>
The ob of recycling is far from over. Every-<lb/>
one, one day, will have to pull his load to protect our<lb/>
earth from resource depletion and the destruction of<lb/>
our environment because ot excessive dumping ot<lb/>
solid waste When everyone finally realizes how<lb/>
important it is to recycle, our homes and lives will<lb/>
take a turn for the best<lb/>
1 it's hope it won't be too late!<lb/>
L. t6 Khit -<lb/>
IT lAvis -Vcvey <lb/>
'XvftfKN �; MAK4S<lb/>
Taking the banks to the cleaners<lb/>
By Richard Prince<lb/>
Iinmil News Service<lb/>
It seems to be unanimous, if<lb/>
you're wondering how somebody<lb/>
could get away clean with $10.8<lb/>
million.<lb/>
"What I'd d i is get it in a plane<lb/>
or a boat and try to take it to a<lb/>
foreign location where nobody is<lb/>
going to ask mc what the source ot<lb/>
mv funds is, confided Gerald L.<lb/>
Hilsher of Tulsa, Okla , formerly<lb/>
the US Treasury official in charge<lb/>
of countering money laundering.<lb/>
'Hie simplest way is to char-<lb/>
ter a plane agreed Inspector<lb/>
Bruce Bouie of the Royal Cana-<lb/>
dian Mounted Police. "Load it on<lb/>
the aircraft and take off to a coun-<lb/>
try where you're reasonably sure<lb/>
few questions would be asked<lb/>
It's been a week and counting<lb/>
since the nation's largest armored<lb/>
truck robbery took place June 26.<lb/>
Two or more robbers held up<lb/>
an 'rmored Motor Service of<lb/>
America Inc truck outside Roch-<lb/>
ester, N.Y after the driver and<lb/>
guard stopped at a convenience<lb/>
store. The robbers bound and<lb/>
gagged the pair, then made off<lb/>
with $10.8 million in cash, police<lb/>
said<lb/>
According to bankers, legisla-<lb/>
tors and law enforcement officials,<lb/>
the thieves picked a good time to<lb/>
stage a heist.<lb/>
With sophisticated money-<lb/>
laundering operations in place<lb/>
around the world to service an<lb/>
estimated $H billion in drug prof-<lb/>
its, $10.8 million could be but a<lb/>
wrinkle in the cash flow.<lb/>
And though governments are<lb/>
starting to come to grips with<lb/>
money-laundering, they're not<lb/>
acting fast enough. Besides, as a<lb/>
Drug finforcement Administra-<lb/>
tion agent told me: "Money laun-<lb/>
dering techniques are (only) as<lb/>
limited as the imagination of the<lb/>
traveler"<lb/>
How imaginative are the<lb/>
thieves? The cash, collected on its<lb/>
way to a Federal Reserve Bank,<lb/>
weighs 1,500 to 1,600 pounds.<lb/>
Would they:<lb/>
� Put it into ice chests, put<lb/>
the chests in a generator, then put<lb/>
the generator inside a crate and fly<lb/>
it out of the country on a small<lb/>
Cessna aircraft? Hilsher says that's<lb/>
what some thieves did with $3<lb/>
million to $4 million.<lb/>
� Hire a professional money<lb/>
launderer? Convicted smuggler<lb/>
Leigh Rich, serving a 30-year term<lb/>
for racketeering, told a Senate<lb/>
committee that launderers<lb/>
charged him 1 percent to 3 percent<lb/>
of the money being processed The<lb/>
1 percent rate applied to $5 mil-<lb/>
lion or more.<lb/>
� Wear smuggler's vests?<lb/>
Create hidden compartments<lb/>
under gas tanks? Fill up spare<lb/>
tires?Theseareall techniques seen<lb/>
by Bouie, of the Mounties' anti-<lb/>
drug profiteering unit.<lb/>
Try the technique known<lb/>
as "smurfing?" Since U.S. banks<lb/>
now require that all deposits over<lb/>
$10,000 be reported, you could<lb/>
hire, say. 10 innocuous looking<lb/>
people to make deposits under<lb/>
$10,000 in 15 different banks.<lb/>
"You could get rid of $10 mil-<lb/>
lion that way in a week Bouie<lb/>
said.<lb/>
� Go to another country and<lb/>
hire other people to fly the money<lb/>
there?On July 2, U.S. agentsextra-<lb/>
dited rancher Daniel James Fowlie<lb/>
from Mexico to Santa Ana, Calif.<lb/>
The teds said Fowlie had as many<lb/>
as a dozen people load up suit-<lb/>
cases hiding up to $600,000. They'd<lb/>
bring it to him in the Netherlands,<lb/>
where he deposited the cash in<lb/>
Dutch banks.<lb/>
U.S. customs did ask the cou-<lb/>
riers if they werecarryingout more<lb/>
than<lb/>
$ 10,000, but they didn't check.<lb/>
You can also buy off bank<lb/>
officials, or have a lawyer make<lb/>
the cash transactions for you. Bank<lb/>
officers are sometimes intimated<lb/>
by lawyers' body language, the<lb/>
experts said.<lb/>
Too, you can set up a legiti-<lb/>
mate business through which you<lb/>
can easily funnel your cash. In<lb/>
South Florida, friends told me of<lb/>
several video-rental stores where<lb/>
See Prince, page 5<lb/>
-lV<lb/>
 f<lb/>
 I LIVE MH FIVE<lb/>
� FE0PLS, SHAX�T KITCMEH, ,<lb/>
U ANP ONt- 3A1HtO0M' -<lb/>
lumistioTUikG1 <lb/>
I LIVE WITH SIX- ���<lb/>
fopuB in OHB- FOoaa, <lb/>
owe PHONE' V<lb/>
 frtML- I LflE<lb/>
 Ht A BASB.ME.NT.<lb/>
HO iTt��N, V� BATHKOOH,<lb/>
i�AKy Pipes ANt<lb/>
A fZAT Fort<lb/>
-��<lb/>
J<lb/>
) IN COLLEGE, I<lb/>
LtZE� A 5ARlfWE<lb/>
'CAN WITH NO VETlLATio<lb/>
STATION<lb/>
OVCR-<lb/>
f<lb/>
AU HAi.f<lb/>
tfeu<lb/>
5TREEX'<lb/>
Under the Boards<lb/>
Shotgun shacks make good homes<lb/>
By Tim fc. Hampton<lb/>
Columnist<lb/>
It is well documented that<lb/>
most college students endure<lb/>
several painstaking years oi im-<lb/>
poverishment and self-sacrifice<lb/>
before leaving on the job exodus<lb/>
to yuppiedom. We take pride in<lb/>
the humble way we live and tend<lb/>
to glorify the extent of our frugal-<lb/>
ity.<lb/>
SikIi is the i.is in housing<lb/>
and living arrangements among<lb/>
college kids. Delving most fire<lb/>
marshal! occupancy codes and<lb/>
proper matching furniture laws,<lb/>
students quickly forget all those<lb/>
years of decency and hygienic<lb/>
training of their youth when ap-<lb/>
proaching the need for shelter No<lb/>
longer are modern day features<lb/>
such as dishwashers, air condi-<lb/>
tioning and running water<lb/>
deemed important.<lb/>
The underlying issue ol all<lb/>
student housing is rent. Once a<lb/>
gathering of these scholars begin<lb/>
discussing the topic ot rent, it s<lb/>
sort of like an auction in which the<lb/>
prize goes to the lowest bidder<lb/>
One discussion ot this sort started<lb/>
the other dav in front of the school<lb/>
store in which a high of $250 was<lb/>
established for a third of a condo.<lb/>
After several speakers said they<lb/>
paid a lot less - between Si2 to<lb/>
$175-one guv said he had them all<lb/>
beat. He said he paid $25 a month<lb/>
for half of a room atop a funeral<lb/>
home in Bethel and was pro<lb/>
nounced winner on the spot.<lb/>
I o rent is not theonly factor<lb/>
involved with gaining respect<lb/>
from one's peers when speaking<lb/>
of housing. Sacrificing all luxury<lb/>
and comfort by living in a hell<lb/>
hole is often looked upon with<lb/>
jealous eves. Of course the more<lb/>
degrading one's surroundingsare,<lb/>
the more one's image as a true<lb/>
survivor of this ravaging battle of<lb/>
college becomes.<lb/>
Waiting to use the bank ma-<lb/>
chine the other day, 1 overheard<lb/>
two girls loudlv chattering about<lb/>
their soap-operic existences. One<lb/>
was telling of how one of their<lb/>
friends go evicted from an Past-<lb/>
ern St. house. Her friend turned to<lb/>
and said something like:<lb/>
Well, that ain't nothing ou<lb/>
know lohnnv, theone who lives in<lb/>
that shotgun shack on Forbes with<lb/>
no heat, a leaking roof and rats in<lb/>
the walk? Well, he<lb/>
Most kids in the post<lb/>
stages choose to take up residu <lb/>
practices with good friends Whil i<lb/>
knowing thy roomie is a crucial<lb/>
consioieration, living w itt. tin best<lb/>
buddy can lead to a qui k deti ri<lb/>
otion of the friendship ramp i<lb/>
quarters seem to onlya rb iti<lb/>
the problem and may cause the<lb/>
utterances of death threats and<lb/>
rude references to one's parent-<lb/>
age But then sometimes it works.<lb/>
1 once knew five guvs from<lb/>
the dorms who became<lb/>
friends and decided to move into<lb/>
a two bedroom apartment in Vil<lb/>
lage I Ireen After using advanced<lb/>
math, they decided that three<lb/>
would have to sleep in one bed<lb/>
room They drew names trom a<lb/>
hat and the three beds were mo<lb/>
into the room. Later that night, the<lb/>
guv in the bed in the middle heard<lb/>
what he thought had to be a r �<lb/>
phenonem.<lb/>
Pth ot his roommates were<lb/>
asleep, but yet were carrying on a<lb/>
conversation According to the<lb/>
middle beddt r the two sleep talk<lb/>
ers were engaged in a coherent<lb/>
trade of words about a basketball<lb/>
game He said they made perfect<lb/>
See Hume, page 5<lb/>
An Ideal View<lb/>
When do rewards for work pay off?<lb/>
By Caroline Cusick<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
1 have another major question<lb/>
to ask. Why do we work ?<lb/>
Yes, 1 am serious. 1 really want<lb/>
to know why.<lb/>
Do we, as human beings, work<lb/>
at our various occupations to bet-<lb/>
ter the society in which we live?<lb/>
Ordo we work forcokj, hard cash?<lb/>
First, let me say 1 realize that<lb/>
money is necessary in this world<lb/>
We have placed value on paper<lb/>
bills and metal coins bv allowing<lb/>
them to be exchanged for foixl,<lb/>
lodging and clothes. All of those<lb/>
things are important.<lb/>
Bevond the necessities, we<lb/>
accumulate wealth of televisions,<lb/>
stereos, compact discs, automo-<lb/>
biles, educations, books, furniture<lb/>
and household appliances. We<lb/>
have taken modernization of the<lb/>
world into our homes and adopted<lb/>
luxury as necessity. Think about it<lb/>
in the United States of America,<lb/>
more homes have television than<lb/>
have indoor plumbing.<lb/>
It people were working onlv<lb/>
tor the necessities of life, few<lb/>
people would work40hoursevery<lb/>
week. Fewer people would die<lb/>
eariv from high blood pressure or<lb/>
stressfrom low-reward )obs. Earn-<lb/>
ing enough money to eat, live<lb/>
indoors and dress comfortably is<lb/>
not that hard.<lb/>
Somehow, that is never<lb/>
enough. We require RECRFA-<lb/>
TIO! We require ENTERTAIN-<lb/>
MENT! Wedeserve A BREAK TO-<lb/>
DAY!<lb/>
We have the right to spend<lb/>
what we earn however we choose<lb/>
and on whatever we choose. We<lb/>
can build treasure chests in our<lb/>
homes and fill them with stuff<lb/>
When we fill those treasure chests,<lb/>
we can build bigger treasure<lb/>
2 Live Crew<lb/>
abuses First<lb/>
Amendment<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I am compelled to respond to<lb/>
your recent editorial (June 27)<lb/>
regarding 2 Live Crew and the<lb/>
right to free speech. First, let me<lb/>
say that I am vehemently opposed<lb/>
to your perspective. I'm sick and<lb/>
tired of that ludicrous so-called<lb/>
First Amendment argument that<lb/>
"if you don't like it you can turn it<lb/>
off Come on fellow journalists,<lb/>
that's a cop-out and you know it.<lb/>
The First Amendmentfree-<lb/>
dom of speech does not give any-<lb/>
one a license to sling oral obsceni-<lb/>
ties before a mass audience�es-<lb/>
pecially one which encompasses<lb/>
highly impressionable youths.<lb/>
What 2 Live Crew, Andrew Dice<lb/>
Clay, Eddie Murphy and other so-<lb/>
called entertainers are espousing<lb/>
is nothing more than blatently<lb/>
obscene, hedonistic atrocities that<lb/>
indeed should be regulated to<lb/>
To the Editor<lb/>
some degree. Otherwise, they will<lb/>
continue to foster a societal cli-<lb/>
mate which provides cheap thrills<lb/>
but doesn't count the cost.<lb/>
For many years, groups like 2<lb/>
Live Crew have hidden behind<lb/>
the First Amendment and have<lb/>
benefited from ill-enforced FCC<lb/>
regulations. Meanwhile, such<lb/>
performers'decadent crudities are<lb/>
sabotaging the traditional values<lb/>
of decency which are fundamen-<lb/>
tal to the heritage of this country.<lb/>
It's about time something is fi-<lb/>
nally being done to stop the non-<lb/>
sense.<lb/>
Furthermore, while these<lb/>
individuals continue to provide<lb/>
such raunchy messages, they in<lb/>
turn are laughing all the way to<lb/>
the bank because so many people<lb/>
havebought into their "entertain-<lb/>
ment Americans have become<lb/>
incorrigibly desensitized to four-<lb/>
letter f-verbs, sacrilegious satire,<lb/>
and contorted representations of<lb/>
sex. Let's hear it for shock value!<lb/>
Finally, the intent of this letter<lb/>
is to issue a blanket edict: Don't<lb/>
use the First Amendment as an<lb/>
excuse to license all ills. After all,<lb/>
chests<lb/>
These massive accumul<lb/>
of stuff are obviously not �� i rth<lb/>
theimportance wegivc them w hen<lb/>
we consider them in light of the<lb/>
Bible and what it teaches<lb/>
Jesus said, "But lav up f r<lb/>
yourselves treasures in hea<lb/>
where neither moth not rust Je<lb/>
strev s and where tl.ievi S do rw t<lb/>
break in or steal, tor where nr<lb/>
treasure is, there will your heart<lb/>
be also " (Matthew 6:20 21)<lb/>
There is nothing wrong �<lb/>
act umulating stuff M( r y is<lb/>
a problem I he Bible m s tl '<lb/>
money is a defense as vs isdom is i<lb/>
defense It also suvs "For the low<lb/>
of money is a root of all sorts ol<lb/>
evil, and some by longing tor it<lb/>
have wandered away from tl<lb/>
faith, and pierced themselvesv� ith<lb/>
many a pang (I limothv 6:10)<lb/>
Money and possessions are<lb/>
See View, page 5<lb/>
you still can't yell fire in a crowded<lb/>
theater<lb/>
David McCreary<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
EnglishJournalism<lb/>
Incinerator<lb/>
may harm<lb/>
Tar River<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
In the next 30 years, Ther<lb/>
malKEM will incinerate about 4<lb/>
billion poundsof hazardouswa te<lb/>
in North Carolina. What will this<lb/>
mean to Pitt County and to the<lb/>
future of North Carolina?<lb/>
If the incinerator is permitted,<lb/>
about 15 billion pounds of incin-<lb/>
erator ash and poisonous sludges<lb/>
will be buried at some North Caro-<lb/>
lina site during the 30-year permit<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Suppose, for example, that the<lb/>
See Letters, page 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, July 11,1990 5<lb/>
VACATION<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
M N OUk<lb/>
BLOWOUT!<lb/>
Weekends i.f.lnlx � &amp; ?<lb/>
2 Nights hotel, airfare, taxes<lb/>
(S;iJ night sl;i required)<lb/>
BAHAM S<lb/>
FRFFPORI<lb/>
3 nights li tin . nSasifM)<lb/>
Hotel, n tiom KIM .<lb/>
laves .s. si i ii i<lb/>
1 AS I (,AS<lb/>
2 nights hotel, air from<lb/>
R)l . taxes awl more<lb/>
CANCU1N<lb/>
MEXICO<lb/>
3 nights holt I .iii from<lb/>
KI1 . transfei s ind taxes<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
$189<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
$299<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
$298<lb/>
I ROM<lb/>
$459<lb/>
Granville County site is chosen<lb/>
CattailCreek,BouldingCreok and<lb/>
Hachers Run drain from this site<lb/>
down into the Tar River. When<lb/>
the landfill leaks, aromatic ear<lb/>
cinogens and toxic metallic com-<lb/>
pounds will pollute the river<lb/>
We should be concerned Wt,<lb/>
our children, our grandchildren,<lb/>
and all who follow us, deserve<lb/>
clean water. What will the Tar<lb/>
River be to anyone, once contami<lb/>
nated hy these wastes<lb/>
Carl Rupert<lb/>
Durham, N.C.<lb/>
Parking fine<lb/>
increase is<lb/>
examined<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Please allow me to comment<lb/>
upon the recent editorial in The<lb/>
East Carolinian (July 3, 1990) that<lb/>
related to parking at the univer-<lb/>
sity and, more specifically, to the<lb/>
recent increase rn traffic and park-<lb/>
ing fines. As chairperson of the<lb/>
University Traffic and Parking<lb/>
Committee, 1 may be able to add<lb/>
some insight and contribute some<lb/>
information for you and your<lb/>
readers.<lb/>
The committee is composed<lb/>
of students, faculty and staff<lb/>
members and reports to the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Business Affairs,<lb/>
Richard Brown. The Department<lb/>
of Public Safety supports the de-<lb/>
liberations of the Committee with<lb/>
data.<lb/>
During the middle 1980s, a<lb/>
studied evaluation of traffic and<lb/>
parking patterns occurred and,<lb/>
since then, parking assignments<lb/>
have more carefully matched the<lb/>
requirements of the various com-<lb/>
ponents of the university. Cam-<lb/>
pus traffic,especially in the streets<lb/>
and parking lots east of Wright<lb/>
Auditorium, has been reduced.<lb/>
You will be pleased to note,<lb/>
for example, that at no time dur-<lb/>
ing the academic year of 1989-90<lb/>
did students with registered auto-<lb/>
mobiles fill all the parking space<lb/>
available to them. These student<lb/>
spaces lie either on main campus,<lb/>
or within easy walking distance<lb/>
or connected by the student-sup-<lb/>
ported bus system.<lb/>
The committee did recom-<lb/>
mend an increase in the fine sys-<lb/>
tem which had received no major<lb/>
review since 1980. Such as action<lb/>
will certainly provide more funds,<lb/>
but it would, the committee be-<lb/>
lieved, further advance a rational<lb/>
approach to traffic and parking at<lb/>
the university. The present park-<lb/>
ing feestrucru re, however, reflects<lb/>
a moderate figure when compared<lb/>
to those of similar universities.<lb/>
For example, rather than fol-<lb/>
low parking regulations, a consid-<lb/>
erable number of students, fac-<lb/>
ulty and staff members used the<lb/>
low fine system as a temporary<lb/>
parking permit that allowed them<lb/>
to park anywhere.<lb/>
This attitude endangered fire<lb/>
lanes, pedestrians and other driv-<lb/>
ers. The handicapped parking<lb/>
spaces mark the only place on<lb/>
campus that those persons with a<lb/>
handicapped registration may<lb/>
park.<lb/>
The editorial referred to the<lb/>
"poor man" being forced by the<lb/>
new fine system to carry the bur-<lb/>
den of additional traffic and park<lb/>
ing costs. If the "poor man" sees fit<lb/>
to ignore the parking and traffic<lb/>
regulations, he will pay more than<lb/>
in the past.<lb/>
Personally, I would prefer no<lb/>
one to violate such regulations,<lb/>
but, if so, then let the scofflaws<lb/>
pay rather than the law abiding<lb/>
campus citizens.<lb/>
Henry C Ferrell, Jr<lb/>
Chair,Traffic and ParkingCommittee<lb/>
Department of History<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
READ<lb/>
mi<lb/>
i INE<lb/>
PRIM<lb/>
I hesc special packages require<lb/>
advance purchase, rates are<lb/>
subject to change, airfare<lb/>
subject to availability, (all<lb/>
for hill details<lb/>
sens1 and continued talking for<lb/>
five minutes.<lb/>
Some students hooseinstead<lb/>
to live bv themselves in one bed<lb/>
room apartments or boarding<lb/>
house situations. The advantages<lb/>
to a personal abode are many:<lb/>
privacy and no more long divi-<lb/>
sion on phone bills seemed to be<lb/>
the biggest. One plus to an one<lb/>
bed room a part men t is the personal<lb/>
bathroom facility. Generally, one<lb/>
bedroom dwellers enjoy the tact<lb/>
thatonlv their butts will touch the<lb/>
toilet seat and onlv their bodies<lb/>
will washed bv the soap in the<lb/>
shower soap dish. Also for those<lb/>
whomonce lived with hairy room-<lb/>
mates, one-bedders can relax in<lb/>
doing that the hair accumulating<lb/>
in the shower drain is their own.<lb/>
Boarding houses are a differ-<lb/>
ent deal. One must overcome the<lb/>
fear of living amongst strangers<lb/>
because one never really knows<lb/>
what sort of psvcho, neurotic, ex-<lb/>
hippie, Vietnam Vet, drug-deal-<lb/>
ing weirdos are living in the other<lb/>
rooms of the house. Although<lb/>
interaction with house-matesis not<lb/>
necessary as in two-bedroom<lb/>
apartment situations, a boarder<lb/>
will inevitable overhear the re-<lb/>
marks made by a fellow boarder.<lb/>
In one boarding house case, a<lb/>
dweller heard the guy down the<lb/>
hall telling the girl in room D that<lb/>
Nyquil can actually be used as a<lb/>
cure for athlete's foot. Big deal.<lb/>
No matter where a college<lb/>
student lives, respect is not lost. It<lb/>
is popular belief that just because<lb/>
someone attends college, thev<lb/>
should be exempt from ridicule<lb/>
concerning housing. It's like the<lb/>
two old men who stood outside ot<lb/>
Harris-Teeter shooting the wind<lb/>
One savs to the other. "Who would<lb/>
possibiy live in that shabby house<lb/>
over there?"<lb/>
"College kids the other re-<lb/>
plied.<lb/>
View<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
The Plaza � Greenville<lb/>
355-5075 K(X)-562-S17H<lb/>
Open MonFri. 9-5 Closed SatSun.<lb/>
A<lb/>
OfficciaisQ jnttalggh, Chapel Hill, RTP &amp; Wilmington<lb/>
n�t bad. However, valuing them<lb/>
above what is true, in right stand-<lb/>
ing with God and pure can be<lb/>
detrimental.<lb/>
The wisest man ever to live,<lb/>
King Solomon, understood the<lb/>
purpose of labor and wealth. He<lb/>
v rote. "Enjoy life with the woman<lb/>
whom von love all the days oi<lb/>
your fleetim; life which (docl) has<lb/>
given (Hi under the sun; for this is<lb/>
vour reward in life, and in your<lb/>
toil in which you have labored<lb/>
under the sun (Ecclesiastes 9:9)<lb/>
And Moses, the only man God<lb/>
allowed to see Himself with<lb/>
humans eyes, wrote that we need<lb/>
more than necessities � food,<lb/>
shelter and clothes - to live. He<lb/>
wrote, "And (God) humbled vou<lb/>
and let you be hungry, and fed<lb/>
you with manna which you did<lb/>
not know, nor did your fathers<lb/>
know, that He might make you<lb/>
understand that man does not live<lb/>
bv (food) alone but man lives by<lb/>
everything that proceeds out of<lb/>
the mouth of the Lord (Deuter-<lb/>
onomy 8:3)<lb/>
Have vou ever noticed that<lb/>
"everything that proceeds out of<lb/>
the mouth of the Lord" can not be<lb/>
bought with money? Wages<lb/>
earned and hours worked have<lb/>
nothing to do with this necessity<lb/>
So why do we work? Is it<lb/>
gTeed? Is it to get by? Or is it to<lb/>
have a defense, to give God what<lb/>
is his and to establish His cove-<lb/>
nant on earth?<lb/>
Prince<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
no one cared whether the videos<lb/>
were ever returned.<lb/>
It's not that governments<lb/>
aren't moving internationally to<lb/>
counterattack.<lb/>
Two years ago, Congress<lb/>
passed the Kerry Amendment,<lb/>
designed to force foreign coun-<lb/>
tries to report U.S. currency de-<lb/>
posits over $10,000. If they don't,<lb/>
they're to be denied access to the<lb/>
U.S. banking system. Negotiations<lb/>
continue.<lb/>
In April, a task force of 16<lb/>
Western nations produced 40 rec-<lb/>
ommendations designed to pro-<lb/>
mote joint international action.<lb/>
They present those recommenda-<lb/>
tions to the Economic Summit in<lb/>
Houston July 9-11.<lb/>
Remember, too, that these<lb/>
nations have built up bank depos-<lb/>
its by not asking quest ions. Chang<lb/>
ing now requires a major shift in<lb/>
mindset.<lb/>
CC-Tyf !W UMTUM1 �ppCiV<lb/>
At�'<lb/>
HOMEMADE<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
CUISINES<lb/>
VEGGIE<lb/>
DISHES<lb/>
Sandwiches<lb/>
includes Fries)<lb/>
Grilled Breast of Chicken4.25<lb/>
Grilled Roast Beef &amp; Swiss3.50<lb/>
Club Sandwich4.25<lb/>
Veggie Burger3.25<lb/>
Taco Salad4.50<lb/>
Tostada - cheese3.95<lb/>
beef or chicken4.95<lb/>
Flamingo's Cheesesteak4.75<lb/>
Dinners<lb/>
T-Bone Steak (.16 oz.)<lb/>
Rilxye Steak (6 oz )<lb/>
Stuffed Potato<lb/>
Fettucine Alflamingo's<lb/>
Enchilada - Beef or Chicken<lb/>
Just Cheese<lb/>
Cancun Dinner<lb/>
El Grande Burrito<lb/>
Burrito - Bean<lb/>
With chicken or beef<lb/>
Spaghetti Dinner<lb/>
The Right Direction is a Career in Medical Records<lb/>
M, ,K an. . , th fi Id f health infor-<lb/>
m iti m management li is � here compute!<lb/>
technoli bu in �s management and the<lb/>
 nib are industry come together, creating<lb/>
c hallcnging and rewarding careers.<lb/>
At streei in meow al ret i rds means being part<lb/>
. 4 a U ttal health care team - and ma king a vital<lb/>
contribution It means almost unlimited<lb/>
potential for professional and personal<lb/>
growth It means financial opportunity. It<lb/>
means futureemployment security because<lb/>
there is a serious shortage of qualified<lb/>
medical record practitioners.<lb/>
Point yourself toward success. Ask vour<lb/>
advisor about preparation for a career in<lb/>
medical records or contact us<lb/>
Department of Medical Record<lb/>
Administration<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
(919) 757-4437<lb/>
Appetizers<lb/>
Flamingo's Spud Skins 4.95<lb/>
Mex Skins 4.95<lb/>
Nachos 4.95<lb/>
with chicken or beef and beans 5-95<lb/>
Guacamole Dip 3-25<lb/>
Mozzarella Sticks 4.25<lb/>
Cajun I lamnigo Wingers 4.50<lb/>
10.95<lb/>
6.95<lb/>
3.95<lb/>
7.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
4.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
4.50<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
4.25<lb/>
With meatballs or sausage 4.95<lb/>
Lasagna 6.25<lb/>
Manicotti 5.50<lb/>
Taco Salad 4.50<lb/>
Chefs Speciality Salad 4.50<lb/>
House Salad 3.25<lb/>
Tostada - Cheese Only 3.95<lb/>
With beef or chicken 4.95<lb/>
Chicken Salad Plate 4.25<lb/>
i 24 HOUR<lb/>
! BREAKFAST<lb/>
i<lb/>
FLAMINGO'S<lb/>
CAFE<lb/>
L<lb/>
ALSO SERVING<lb/>
LUNCH &amp; DINNER<lb/>
ALL ABC PERMITS<lb/>
CORNER OF 10TH AND CHARLES BLVD.<lb/>
BUY ONE <lb/>
MEAL <lb/>
THE 2ND IS !<lb/>
12 OFF!<lb/>
-j<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0006"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, July 11,1990 5<lb/>
lb<lb/>
VACATION<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
NI YORK<lb/>
BLOWOUT!<lb/>
Weekends uf.luh 19 .V 26<lb/>
2 Nights kuilel, airfare, taxes<lb/>
(Sal. night sta required)<lb/>
BAHAMAS<lb/>
FRKRPORT<lb/>
3 inliu IN nu i ssasinn<lb/>
Hotel, n from KIM .<lb/>
f.ixt v &amp; mi v ii t<lb/>
1 AS I, AS<lb/>
2 nights hotel, air from<lb/>
RDI . taxes .iikI more<lb/>
(AM IN<lb/>
MEXICO<lb/>
3 nights holt I .in ti imi<lb/>
KIM . (r.insli i s ittcl t.i�s<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
$189<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
$299<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
$298<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
$459<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
READ<lb/>
nu<lb/>
FINE<lb/>
PRIM<lb/>
I lusc special packages require<lb/>
advance purchase, rates are<lb/>
subject to change, airfare<lb/>
subject to availability, (all<lb/>
tor lull details<lb/>
Granville County site is chosen<lb/>
CattailCreek,BouldingCreek,and<lb/>
Hachers Run drain from this site<lb/>
down into the Tar River. When<lb/>
the landfill leaks, aromatic car<lb/>
dnogens and toxic metallic com-<lb/>
pounds will pollute the river<lb/>
We should be concerned We,<lb/>
our children, our grandchildren,<lb/>
and all who follow us, deserve<lb/>
clean water. What will the Tar<lb/>
River be to anyone, once contami-<lb/>
nated by these wastes?<lb/>
Carl Rupert<lb/>
Durham, NIC.<lb/>
Parking fine<lb/>
increase is<lb/>
examined<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Please allow me to comment<lb/>
upon the recent editorial in The<lb/>
East Carolinian (July 3, 1990) that<lb/>
related to parking at the univer-<lb/>
sity and, more specifically, to the<lb/>
recent increase tn traffic and park-<lb/>
ing fines. As chairperson of the<lb/>
University Traffic and Parking<lb/>
Committee, 1 may be able to add<lb/>
some insight and contribute some<lb/>
information for you and your<lb/>
readers.<lb/>
The committee is composed<lb/>
of students, faculty and staff<lb/>
members and reports to the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Business Affairs,<lb/>
Richard Brown. The Department<lb/>
of Public Safety supports the de-<lb/>
liberations of the Committee with<lb/>
data.<lb/>
During the middle 1980s, a<lb/>
studied evaluation of traffic and<lb/>
parking patterns occurred and,<lb/>
since then, parking assignments<lb/>
have more carefully matched the<lb/>
requirements of the various com-<lb/>
ponents of the university. Cam-<lb/>
pus traffic, especially in the streets<lb/>
and parking lots east of Wright<lb/>
Auditorium, has been reduced.<lb/>
You will be pleased to note,<lb/>
for example, that at no time dur-<lb/>
ing the academic year of 1989-90<lb/>
did students with registered auto-<lb/>
mobiles fill all the parking space<lb/>
available to them. These student<lb/>
spaces lie either on main campus,<lb/>
or within easy walking distance<lb/>
or connected by the student-sup-<lb/>
ported bus system.<lb/>
The committee did recom-<lb/>
mend an increase in the fine sys-<lb/>
tem which had received no major<lb/>
review since 1980. Such as action<lb/>
will certainly provide more funds,<lb/>
but it would, the committee be-<lb/>
lieved, further advance a rational<lb/>
approach to traffic and parking at<lb/>
the university. The present park-<lb/>
ing fee structure, however, reflects<lb/>
a moderate figure when compared<lb/>
to those of similar universities.<lb/>
For example, rather than fol-<lb/>
low parking regulations, a consid-<lb/>
erable number of students, fac-<lb/>
ulty and staff members used the<lb/>
low fine system as a temporary<lb/>
parking permit that allowed them<lb/>
to park anywhere.<lb/>
This attitude endangered fire<lb/>
lanes, pedestrians and other driv-<lb/>
ers. The handicapped parking<lb/>
spaces mark the only place on<lb/>
campus that those persons with a<lb/>
handicapped registration may<lb/>
park.<lb/>
The editorial referred to the<lb/>
"poor man" being forced by the<lb/>
new fine system to carry the bur-<lb/>
den of additional traffic and park-<lb/>
ing costs. If the "poor man" sees fit<lb/>
to ignore the parking and traffic<lb/>
regulations, he will pay more than<lb/>
in the past.<lb/>
Personally, I would prefer no<lb/>
one to violate such regulations,<lb/>
but, if so, then let the scofflaws<lb/>
pay rather than the law abiding<lb/>
campus citizens.<lb/>
Henry C. Fcrrcll, Jr.<lb/>
Chair, Traffic and Parking Committee<lb/>
Department of History<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
sense and continued talking for<lb/>
five minutes<lb/>
Some studentsh oseinstead<lb/>
to live by themselves in one-bed<lb/>
room apartments or boarding<lb/>
house situations. The advantages<lb/>
to a personal abode are main<lb/>
privacy and no more long divi<lb/>
sion on phone bills seemed to be<lb/>
the biggest. One plus to an one<lb/>
bedroom a part men t is the personal<lb/>
bathroom facility Generally,one-<lb/>
bedroom dwellers enjoy the tact<lb/>
thatonlv their butts will touch the<lb/>
toilet seat and only their bodies<lb/>
will washed bv the soap in the<lb/>
shower soap dish. Also for those<lb/>
whomonce lived with hairy room-<lb/>
mates, one-bedders can relax in<lb/>
doing that the hair accumulating<lb/>
in the shower drain is their own.<lb/>
Boarding houses are a differ-<lb/>
ent deal. One must overcome the<lb/>
fear of living amongst strangers<lb/>
because one never really knows<lb/>
what sort of psycho, neurotic, ex-<lb/>
hippie, Vietnam Vet, drug-deal-<lb/>
ing weirdos are living in the other<lb/>
rooms of the house. Although<lb/>
interaction with house-matesis not<lb/>
necessary as in two-bedroom<lb/>
apartment situations, a boarder<lb/>
will inevitable overhear the re-<lb/>
marks made by a fellow boarder.<lb/>
In one boarding house case, a<lb/>
dweller heard the guy down the<lb/>
hall telling the girl in room D that<lb/>
Nyquil can actually be used as a<lb/>
cure for athlete's foot. Big deal.<lb/>
No matter where a college<lb/>
student lives, respect is not lost. It<lb/>
is popular belief that just because<lb/>
someone attends college, they<lb/>
should be exempt from ridicule<lb/>
concerning housing. It's like the<lb/>
two old men who stood outside of<lb/>
Hams-Teeter shooting the wind<lb/>
One says to the other: "Who would<lb/>
possibly live in that shabby house<lb/>
over there?"<lb/>
"College kids the other re-<lb/>
plied.<lb/>
TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
The Plaza � Greenville<lb/>
355-5075 S(X)-562-S17X<lb/>
Closed SatSun.<lb/>
Open MonFn. 9-5 Closed SatSun.<lb/>
OfficeiahQ inRaHugh, Chapel Hill, RTP &amp; Wilmington<lb/>
View<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
net bad. However, valuing them<lb/>
above what is true, in right stand<lb/>
ing with God and pure can be<lb/>
detrimental.<lb/>
The wisest man ever to live,<lb/>
King Solomon, understood the<lb/>
purpose of labor and wealth. 1 le<lb/>
wrote, "Enjoy life with the woman<lb/>
whom vou love all the days of<lb/>
your fleeting life which (God) has<lb/>
given vou under the sun; for this is<lb/>
your reward in life, and in your<lb/>
toil in which you have labored<lb/>
under the sun (Ecclesiastes 9:9)<lb/>
And Moses, the only man God<lb/>
allowed to see Himself with<lb/>
humans eyes, wrote that we need<lb/>
more than necessities � food,<lb/>
shelter and clothes � to live. He<lb/>
wrote, "And (God) humbled vou<lb/>
and let you be hungry, and fed<lb/>
you with manna which you did<lb/>
not know, nor did your fathers<lb/>
know, that He might make you<lb/>
understand that man does not live<lb/>
by (food) alone but man lives by<lb/>
everything that proceeds out of<lb/>
the mouth of the Lord (Deuter-<lb/>
onomy 8:3)<lb/>
Have vou ever noticed that<lb/>
"everything that proceeds out of<lb/>
the mouth of the Lord" can not be<lb/>
bought with money? Wages<lb/>
earned and hours worked have<lb/>
nothing to do with this necessity.<lb/>
So why do we work? Is it<lb/>
greed? Is it to get by? Or is it to<lb/>
have a defense, to give God what<lb/>
is his and to establish His cove-<lb/>
nant on earth?<lb/>
Prince<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
no one cared whether the videos<lb/>
were ever returned.<lb/>
It's not that governments<lb/>
aren't moving internationally to<lb/>
counterattack.<lb/>
Two years ago. Congress<lb/>
passed the Kerry Amendment,<lb/>
designed to force foreign coun-<lb/>
tries to report U.S. currency de-<lb/>
posits over $10,000. If they don't,<lb/>
they're to be denied access to the<lb/>
U.S. banking system. Negotiations<lb/>
continue.<lb/>
In April, a task force of 16<lb/>
Western nations produced 40 rec-<lb/>
ommendations designed to pro-<lb/>
mote joint international action.<lb/>
Thev present those recommenda-<lb/>
tions to the Economic Summit in<lb/>
Houston July 9-11.<lb/>
Remember, too, that these<lb/>
nations have built up bank depos-<lb/>
its by not askingquestions. Chang<lb/>
mg now requires a major shift in<lb/>
mindset.<lb/>
COpyrifto 1990 USA TUMI Avpk l Nkjc<lb/>
The Right Direction is a Career in Medical Records.<lb/>
Mcdi at record is the field of health infor-<lb/>
mation inanagemeni It is where computer<lb/>
technology, busin �� management and the<lb/>
health care industry come together, creating<lb/>
( hallenging and rev arding careers.<lb/>
A career in medical rei ords means being part<lb/>
of a total health care team-andmakingavtol<lb/>
contribution It means almost unlimited<lb/>
potential for professional and personal<lb/>
growth It means financial opportunity. It<lb/>
means future employment security because<lb/>
there is a serious shortage of qualified<lb/>
medical record practitioners.<lb/>
Point yourself toward success. Ask your<lb/>
advisor about preparation for a career in<lb/>
medical records or contact us<lb/>
Department of Medical Record<lb/>
Administration<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences<lb/>
East Carolina I 'niversity<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
(919) 757-4437<lb/>
HOMEMADE<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
CUISINES<lb/>
VEGGIE<lb/>
DISHES<lb/>
Sandwiches<lb/>
(includes Fries<lb/>
Grilled Breast of Chicken 4.25<lb/>
Grilled Roast Beef &amp; Swiss 3.50<lb/>
Club Sandwich 4.25<lb/>
Veggie Burger 3.25<lb/>
Taco Salad 4.50<lb/>
Tostada - cheese 3-95<lb/>
beef or chicken 4.95<lb/>
Flamingo's Cheesesteak 4.75<lb/>
Dinners<lb/>
Appetizers<lb/>
Flamingo's Spud Skins 4.95<lb/>
Mex Skins 4.95<lb/>
Nachos 4.95<lb/>
with chicken or beef and beans 5.95<lb/>
Guacamoie Dip 3.25<lb/>
Moz.arella Sticks 4.25<lb/>
Cajun Flamnigo Wingers 4.50<lb/>
T-Bone Steak (16 oz.)10.95<lb/>
Ribeye Steak (6 oz.)6.95<lb/>
Stuffed Potato3.95<lb/>
Fettucine Alflamingo's7.95<lb/>
Fnchilada - Beef or Chicken5.95<lb/>
Just Cheese4.95<lb/>
Cancun Dinner8.95<lb/>
El Grande Burrito5.95<lb/>
Burrito - Bean4.50<lb/>
With chicken or beef5.95<lb/>
Spaghetti Dinner4.25<lb/>
With meatballs or sausage 4.95<lb/>
Lasagna6.25<lb/>
Manicotti5.50<lb/>
Taco Salad4.50<lb/>
ChePs Speciality Salad4.50<lb/>
House Salad3.25<lb/>
Tostada - Cheese Only3.95<lb/>
With beef or chicken4.95<lb/>
Chicken Salad Plate4.25<lb/>
ir 24 HOUR<lb/>
! BREAKFAST<lb/>
i<lb/>
BUY ONE<lb/>
MEAL J<lb/>
THE 2ND IS <lb/>
12 OFF! <lb/>
icorner 5?.�-4!P.5AMjes md<lb/>
ALSO SERVING<lb/>
LUNCH &amp; DINNER<lb/>
l<lb/>
FLAMINGO'S<lb/>
CAFE<lb/>
ALL ABC PERMITS<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0007"/><lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Silt Eaot (garoltniattj<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
July 11,1990 1 <lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
MAI E OR FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
WANTED. Walk to school Utilities<lb/>
furnished. $l37.50mo. 757-3543 ask<lb/>
tor 1 arrv<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
80 Honda CM400T Motorcycle Low<lb/>
� ileape, good condition with helmet<lb/>
n Kl or best offer Call 757-3356 after 5<lb/>
 m<lb/>
liridgestOfM Racing Bicycle 21"<lb/>
e Suntour accushift, excellent<lb/>
 ,1'ion $125 Call 757-3356 after 5<lb/>
S Im inn l.e 1 our Luxe 21" Lrame bi-<lb/>
cycle. 27" wheels. Racks front and<lb/>
reai $100 Call 757-3356 after 5 pjm.<lb/>
n ricket, valid to &amp;-2-90, anv citv<lb/>
dbyUSAir,Roundtrip,$259 Is<lb/>
ii  in sour name, absolutely loit!<lb/>
WO 9125.<lb/>
I i mud and matted art posters for<lb/>
sale Mona Lisa, Duret'S rabbit, De-<lb/>
it oix winter scene, I'lm cathedral,<lb/>
tofsiXI ondonscenes,kittens.From<lb/>
� yti 747-2221.<lb/>
(. abbage Patch dolls for sale Alt w<lb/>
. .1 h.nr green eyes. $15 each. 747-<lb/>
llings for sale: -amethyst setinsilver,<lb/>
52 � amethyst &amp; diamond in white<lb/>
 Id -17V Call 747-2221<lb/>
 h pav rent? 10X 60" mobile home<lb/>
us!<lb/>
i i.i<lb/>
Knoll Estates tor sale, $6000.<lb/>
HI rV908&amp;leavemessageor(919)<lb/>
� 19 tor appt.<lb/>
ali- Mountain-type bike, 10<lb/>
I pton link included Onlv<lb/>
i v .ill F58-0998 or SVM07.V<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, 1 etter quality pnnt.<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 Schiml Aid, PO Box<lb/>
254h, Washington, N C, 27889<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
HELP WANTED; Fart time help<lb/>
wanted to work in lab at Greenville<lb/>
Opticians Help wanted through<lb/>
summer andall next school year. No<lb/>
experience necessary We will train<lb/>
you We will work around students<lb/>
schedule Call 752-4018 and ask tor<lb/>
ma nager to set up an interviewihx.1<lb/>
working conditions.<lb/>
We need responsible people that<lb/>
would like to earn $50 every other<lb/>
weekend Filling refrigerated coolers<lb/>
aT grocery stores. Jeffreys Beer and<lb/>
Wine North CreeN Street ext , 758-<lb/>
1515. Applv in person<lb/>
Get a head start on the fall semester<lb/>
with a part-timF position in Mens<lb/>
I adtes Children Apparel Sales, Store<lb/>
Security and Modeling Applv at<lb/>
Brody's, The Plaa. Mon Wed, 1-4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
"ATTENTION: GOVERNMENT<lb/>
HOMES FROM $1 (U-repair)!<lb/>
Delinquent tax property. Reposses-<lb/>
sions. Call l-o0Z-83o-8885, Ext. GH-<lb/>
5285<lb/>
FREE TRAVEL BENEFITS! AIR<lb/>
LINES NOW HIRING! ALL POSI-<lb/>
TIONS! $17,500-&amp;sg 240. Call (1)602-<lb/>
838-8885. Ext. X-52R5.<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: POSTAL JOBS! Start<lb/>
$11.41 hour! For application infocall<lb/>
(1)602-838-8885, Ext. M-5285, h a.m. -<lb/>
10 p.m 7 days.<lb/>
ATTENTION:EASY WORK EXCEL-<lb/>
LENT PAY! Assemble products at<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
home. Details.<lb/>
W-5285.<lb/>
1) h02-838-8885 Fxt.<lb/>
ATTENTION: GOV1 RNMENT<lb/>
JOBS - YOUR AREA! $17,840 -<lb/>
$69,485.Call(1)602 838-8885,Ext K-<lb/>
5285.<lb/>
ATTENTION: EARN MONEY<lb/>
READING BOOKS!$32,00yearin-<lb/>
come potential Details. (1) W32-838-<lb/>
8885 Ext. Bk-5285<lb/>
AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Might<lb/>
Attendants, Travel Agents, Mechan-<lb/>
ics, Customer Service Listings Sala-<lb/>
ries to S105K Entry level positions.<lb/>
Call (1)805-6876000 1 t A-1166.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT IOBS $16,412<lb/>
$59,932yr. Now Ftiring Your area<lb/>
Call (1)805-687-6000 Ext K llh6for<lb/>
listings<lb/>
cm<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
Part-Time Help Wanted<lb/>
Greenville Opticians<lb/>
Part-time help wanted to work in lab at<lb/>
Greenville Opticians. Help wanted through<lb/>
summer and all next school year. No expe-<lb/>
rience necessary. We will train yon. We<lb/>
will work around students schedule. Call<lb/>
752-4018 and ask for manager to et up an<lb/>
interview.<lb/>
� Good Working Conditions �<lb/>
KINGSTON<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
WE HAVE SEl 'ERA<lb/>
OPENINGS FOR STl 'DENT<lb/>
RENTALS FOR FALL SEMESTER<lb/>
INTERESTED STUDENTS SHOl 'I.D<lb/>
CALL 758 - 5393<lb/>
BUILT SPECIFICALLY FOR ECl STl DIMS<lb/>
WE PROVIDE: FULLY FURNISHED VPARTME:<lb/>
AIL GLASSESDISHES SI1 I<lb/>
DISHWASHERPOTS &amp; PANS<lb/>
MAS. SERVICE<lb/>
SWIMMING POOL &amp;LOTS<lb/>
Al A PRICE THAT WILL COMPETI WITH I'HI IM)I '<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CATHOLIC STUDENT<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
� Newman Catholic Student Center<lb/>
�s you to worship with them Sunday<lb/>
M issos 11 30 .im and B M pm at the<lb/>
Newman Center, 953 E 10th St Green<lb/>
Weekdays 8 am at the Ni-wman<lb/>
� i Wednesdays 5 JO p m at the<lb/>
� Ccntet<lb/>
WINDSURFERS, TAKE<lb/>
ANOTHER SHOT!<lb/>
One additional windsurfing outing for<lb/>
basic surfers will he offered lulv 19 through<lb/>
theCHitdixir Recreation Program ThcCOSt<lb/>
is cheap while the tun and sun are high<lb/>
Call 737 Vv for details. All faculty, staff<lb/>
and students eligible<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED<lb/>
FQR RESEARCH STUDY<lb/>
The Section of Infectious DiseasesECU<lb/>
School of Mediane in conjunction with<lb/>
the Student 1 leallh Center is conducting a<lb/>
�tudv on the sexual spread of herpes vi<lb/>
ruv-s We are looking for men and women<lb/>
i s r.irs .in.) . Idi � '�� ho I av<lb/>
genital herp<lb/>
obtaining more i<lb/>
Askew, K N .it � �<lb/>
Read The East Carolinian<lb/>
Due to a limited amount of space, The East. � linianmayn to <lb/>
 print all anntmncements.lt is not advisable t rely nti<lb/>
as a sole means of communication. However, during<lb/>
willtry extra hard to find room for your ann urn �� nl<lb/>
at least one week before publication.<lb/>
I In<lb/>
elassie Law<lb/>
Jl6T IN-<lb/>
r�e :rme wa<lb/>
-o CN6HJLf TWE<lb/>
ciiy Afwt rri<lb/>
1aiN6 ouvt6XX<lb/>
(KTM&amp;H WJfV<lb/>
umtH IT-1<lb/>
CRIME 10(L&amp;<lb/>
AR UeAWHCr<lb/>
-rutt rVc�0F<lb/>
-rMOfrS TrWm<lb/>
W OOROTT.<lb/>
cRtfS0 UN-<lb/>
THAT THIS<lb/>
Too Fak<lb/>
M PLAGUE 3M"5<lb/>
squirrels shhshh�<lb/>
Ccnt'v <lb/>
ShH-$HH�<lb/>
fc-V�-<lb/>
B R<lb/>
Hr - bHH<lb/>
<lb/>
1 "�" �' A<lb/>
<lb/>
)<lb/>
B<lb/>
b<lb/>
t!<lb/>
a<lb/>
y<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
r<lb/>
r<lb/>
e<lb/>
Z ;rr<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
By R &amp; R<lb/>
Mooni verse<lb/>
By Angela Reid<lb/>
Hak.1 ne Biuy<lb/>
T"c?PA7 : THt AfANcv E-TOwHefit Of Tpe i.<lb/>
PAY MaHT<lb/>
�. ��lA'PV<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0008"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
My 10,1990<lb/>
Wit gggf (SaroHnfan<lb/>
State and Nation<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Wafce County introduces<lb/>
program for autistic students<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) � After<lb/>
Bucky Reagan was diagnosed as<lb/>
being autistic, his parents went<lb/>
through what his mother recalls<lb/>
.is five painful, soul searching"<lb/>
vears before they found a school<lb/>
thai satisfied them.<lb/>
When they did, thev pulled<lb/>
up si.ikis from their home and<lb/>
business in Little Rock, Ark and<lb/>
moved to Apex so they could<lb/>
enroll him in the Wake County<lb/>
school system.<lb/>
Within four weeks, we knew<lb/>
our son had improved more than<lb/>
he had in years Christine Re-<lb/>
agan said. Even if we went bank-<lb/>
rupt and everything went sour,<lb/>
m- tvould have stuck with it<lb/>
I he Reagans are among a<lb/>
a ing number of families who<lb/>
arc moving to Wake C.uinty to<lb/>
take advantage of its program for<lb/>
iron with autism.<lb/>
! he number of autistic chil-<lb/>
dren in Wake schools has almost<lb/>
quadrupled since 1981, while the<lb/>
total number of students has<lb/>
grown by about 50 percent. In the<lb/>
past two years, the number of<lb/>
autistic children grew from 44 to<lb/>
65.<lb/>
Autism is a disorder that af-<lb/>
fects communication and behav-<lb/>
ior. People with autism may have<lb/>
peculiar speech patterns, such as<lb/>
repeating others' words or laugh-<lb/>
ing inappropriately. They may be<lb/>
insensitive to pain or unrespon-<lb/>
sive to sound, and their behavior<lb/>
may be extremely passive or over-<lb/>
active. They have difficulty inter-<lb/>
acting normally with others, par-<lb/>
ticularly with their peers.<lb/>
All these symptoms, plus the<lb/>
fact that some autistic children<lb/>
also are learning disabled or<lb/>
mentally retarded, mean that it<lb/>
takes intense effort and individ-<lb/>
ual instruction to teach them.<lb/>
The Little Rock school system<lb/>
offered special education pro<lb/>
grams but did not have teachers<lb/>
trained in autism or classes spe-<lb/>
cifically for children such as Bucky,<lb/>
said Mrs. Reagan. The Reagans<lb/>
started searching outside the state<lb/>
for a school when their child was<lb/>
7. He was 8 1 2 when he entered<lb/>
Wake schools.<lb/>
The strongest drawing card<lb/>
for the Reagans was Division<lb/>
TEACCH, a statewide program<lb/>
based in Chapel Hill that provides<lb/>
consultation and training on deal-<lb/>
ing with autism to both teachers<lb/>
and families.<lb/>
TEACCH � Treatment and<lb/>
Education of Autistic and Related<lb/>
Communication Handicapped<lb/>
Children � and its director and<lb/>
founder, Eric Schopler, are known<lb/>
worldwide for their work with<lb/>
autism.<lb/>
TEACCH works closely with<lb/>
school systems in developing<lb/>
programs and doing research<lb/>
about autism. The program trains<lb/>
teachers in understanding and<lb/>
working with autism. It also trains<lb/>
See Austistic, page 8<lb/>
U.S. Navy picks up man for<lb/>
desertion fourteen years later<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) � Anthony Casturao left the<lb/>
I S Navy in 196. On that both Casturao and the<lb/>
Navy agree.<lb/>
But 14 yearjlater, the35 year-old Lillingtonman<lb/>
now finds himself cleaning floors and mowing grass<lb/>
.it tru Vn v s Norfolk Naval Base after being picked<lb/>
up last montft bv officials who say he never was<lb/>
discharged from the service.<lb/>
Casturaff's family and the Navy disagree about<lb/>
the cit stances of Casturao's 1976 departure.<lb/>
But a 11:30 p.m. on June 22, authorities arrested<lb/>
( astui ri desertion charges, and since then he has<lb/>
been an unhappy guest oi the U.S. government.<lb/>
Navy has since shaved his moustache, cut<lb/>
nd outraged his family.<lb/>
We are so completely drained, we don't know<lb/>
ire;vmingor going his wife, Linda Casturao,<lb/>
said ! riday. Mrs. Casturao has not seen her husband<lb/>
since his arrest. Casturao also left two children in<lb/>
Lillington.<lb/>
She said her husband, who went absent without<lb/>
leave tor 29 days in 1976, was told by his superiors<lb/>
that he was to be discharged from the Navy after he<lb/>
rted back to his submarine, the L'SS lames<lb/>
Monroe.<lb/>
She said he received a general discharge, follow-<lb/>
ing misconduct charges, but he does not have the<lb/>
paperwork to prove it.<lb/>
Naval officials Mid Casturao is officially a de-<lb/>
serter because he did not stick around long enough<lb/>
to be released officially.<lb/>
"According to Navy records, he was not legally<lb/>
discharged from the Navy Lt. Cmdr. Mike Todd,<lb/>
spokesman for the Norfolk naval base, told the News<lb/>
ami Observer of Raleigh. "Records further indicate<lb/>
that he was in the process of transferring from a ship<lb/>
to the Transient Personnel Unit in Norfolk to be<lb/>
discharged in 1976, but we have no record of his re-<lb/>
porting aboard to process that discharge<lb/>
Casturao told his wife this week that he could<lb/>
not talk to reporters about his case. His Navy attor-<lb/>
neys also declined to comment.<lb/>
Todd said officials could not comment on<lb/>
Casturao's case until his records had been reviewed.<lb/>
Casturao, who grew up in Florida, had been<lb/>
assigned to the USS James Monroe when he went<lb/>
AWOL for those 29 days, his wife said. But he was<lb/>
See Navy, page 8<lb/>
Wilmington residents return<lb/>
home after illegal landfill fire<lb/>
All MINGTON(AP)�Doz-<lb/>
ns of people have returned to<lb/>
their homes as (lames began to die<lb/>
ata landfill fire that had filled the<lb/>
air with cancer-causing benzene.<lb/>
At least 69 people were forced<lb/>
out of 25 homes Thursday, two<lb/>
days after the blaze began at the<lb/>
illegal landfill on private property<lb/>
near the New Hanover County<lb/>
lirport<lb/>
The fire continues to smolder,<lb/>
but there is no longer any chemi-<lb/>
cal hazard, said Dan Summers,<lb/>
the county's emergency service<lb/>
director. The residents were al-<lb/>
lowed to return to their homes<lb/>
about 4 p.m. Friday.<lb/>
Summers said officials were<lb/>
considering using farm irrigation<lb/>
equipment to tap into a well and<lb/>
flood the pit, which is at least 45<lb/>
feet deep.<lb/>
The 1 12-acre pit containing<lb/>
tires and construction debris is on<lb/>
land owned by Alex Trask Jr who <lb/>
has no permit for the landfill, offi-<lb/>
cialssaid.<lb/>
"He is operating illegally by<lb/>
operating a non-permitted demo-<lb/>
lition landfill said Steve Reid,<lb/>
spokesman for the state Solid<lb/>
Cool-hot clash creates wild<lb/>
storms<lb/>
7.<lb/>
Cool air that's pushing out steamy heat will<lb/>
combine with a jet stream disturbance to trigger<lb/>
violent thunderstorms today in the Northeast<lb/>
and mid-Atlantic states. <lb/>
High above the earth, 100 mprt jet<lb/>
stream winds are pushing along a<lb/>
disturbance � a pool of slowly<lb/>
rotating cold air.y '<lb/>
S&amp;Z&amp;sFr<lb/>
�:3<lb/>
Cool, dry air<lb/>
advancing from<lb/>
the northwest ,<lb/>
shoves<lb/>
hot, humid<lb/>
air upward,<lb/>
where" Its<lb/>
moislure<lb/>
begins<lb/>
condensing<lb/>
Into<lb/>
thunderstorms<lb/>
The Jet stream<lb/>
disturbance helps pull<lb/>
warm, humid air upward,<lb/>
which strengthens the<lb/>
thunderstorms.<lb/>
Source Bill Limmer, Weather Services Corp<lb/>
Web Bryant. Gannon News Service<lb/>
No more avoiding jury duty<lb/>
says state Supreme Court<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) � People will<lb/>
no longer be allowed to whisper<lb/>
their possibly embarrassing rea-<lb/>
sons for avoiding jury duty into a<lb/>
judge's ear.<lb/>
A decision by the state Su-<lb/>
preme Court "isgoing to pu t some<lb/>
people in a real awkward posi-<lb/>
tion said John H. Watters, an<lb/>
assistant attorney general who<lb/>
failed in a unique attempt to get<lb/>
the court to change its mind.<lb/>
In the decision, filed last<lb/>
month, the justices ordered a new<lb/>
trial for a defendant who had been<lb/>
sentenced to death for the murder<lb/>
of a Burke County man. The court<lb/>
said Roland DouglasSmith's right<lb/>
to be present at all stages of his<lb/>
trial had been violated when the<lb/>
judge had heard jurors' excuses<lb/>
privately, at the bench.<lb/>
Potential jurors "are going to<lb/>
be saying things in public that in<lb/>
some cases are hard enough to sa v<lb/>
to one person Watters said.<lb/>
"Somebody who has just been<lb/>
released from prison and their<lb/>
citizenship rights have not been<lb/>
restored, they don't want to stand<lb/>
up in the back of the courtroom<lb/>
and yell, 'Judge, I just got out of<lb/>
jail for armed robbery. How about<lb/>
excusing me?'<lb/>
"Or somebody who has an<lb/>
invalid mother, or who was just-<lb/>
diagnosed with cancer. And one<lb/>
common thing with older jurors,<lb/>
they just could not sit through a<lb/>
morning session of court. They<lb/>
had to go to the bathroom all the<lb/>
time<lb/>
Thecourtthisweekdismissed<lb/>
a motion by Watters asking it to<lb/>
withdraw the opinion. It was the<lb/>
first time in the memory of court<lb/>
officials that the court had been<lb/>
asked to take back a decision.<lb/>
The ruling will apply only in<lb/>
cases of murder defendants on trial<lb/>
for their lives, Watters said. It also<lb/>
will affect only potential jurors<lb/>
brought into the courtroom after a<lb/>
case has been called for trial. Ju-<lb/>
rors who get excused before a case<lb/>
begins or before the date they<lb/>
report for jury duty would not be<lb/>
affected.<lb/>
The court, in thcopinion writ-<lb/>
ten by Associate Justice Burley B.<lb/>
Mitchell Jr ordered a new trial for<lb/>
Smith, who had been on death<lb/>
row. He wasconvicted of murder-<lb/>
ing R.C. Johnson during a break-<lb/>
in at a building Johnson owned<lb/>
outside Hildebran in Burke<lb/>
County.<lb/>
Justice Mitchell noted that the<lb/>
state constitution granted Smith<lb/>
the nght to be present throughout<lb/>
the trial.<lb/>
'The process of selecting and<lb/>
impaneling the jury is a stage of<lb/>
the trial at which the defendant<lb/>
hasa nght to be present he wrote.<lb/>
"Therefore, it was error for the<lb/>
trial court to exclude the defen-<lb/>
See Jury, page 8<lb/>
Greensboro demolishes railway<lb/>
Waste Management Division.<lb/>
Trask refused to return calls<lb/>
concerning the incident.<lb/>
Workers with the state Divi-<lb/>
sion of Environmental Manage-<lb/>
ment measured benzene concen-<lb/>
trations of 60 parts per million at<lb/>
the fire, Wayne Cook, regional<lb/>
supervisor for the air quality sec-<lb/>
tion, said Thursday.<lb/>
Using a computer modeling<lb/>
program, he calculated the ben-<lb/>
zene level to be 10 ppm 1,000 feet<lb/>
from the fire and 0.05 ppm 2,000<lb/>
feet away.<lb/>
Highest auto insurance<lb/>
Rank<lb/>
1<lb/>
Ave<lb/>
rag�<lb/>
<lb/>
Premium<lb/>
Per car<lb/>
$834.76<lb/>
733.66<lb/>
$691.05<lb/>
S673.18<lb/>
5620.33<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) � Just<lb/>
after appearing in Time magazine<lb/>
to illustrate despair in the South, a<lb/>
longtime favorite drinking place<lb/>
for street people has been bull-<lb/>
dozed.<lb/>
Officials for the city and Nor-<lb/>
folk Southern Railway say the<lb/>
timing of the demolition and the<lb/>
Time photo were purely coinci-<lb/>
dental.<lb/>
The railroad, which owned the<lb/>
former gas station, knocked down<lb/>
the structure June 22, according to<lb/>
city inspection department rec-<lb/>
ords.<lb/>
That was the same week Time<lb/>
magazine published a photo of<lb/>
two people in chairs in front of the<lb/>
decrepit and empty station, which<lb/>
bordered the downtown rail<lb/>
freight yard. The city's gleaming<lb/>
new skyline appears in the back-<lb/>
ground.<lb/>
The picture sought to illus-<lb/>
trate despair in Greensboro and<lb/>
was part of an article titled 'The<lb/>
Legacy of Segregation The photo<lb/>
was placed above one taken at the<lb/>
elegant Blandwood Ball that<lb/>
shows a black waitress carrying a<lb/>
tray and a white patron in a dinner<lb/>
jacket.<lb/>
The story said that despite the<lb/>
abolition of segregation, blacks<lb/>
and whites in Greensboro still live<lb/>
in separate societies.<lb/>
Walter Simmons, assistant<lb/>
superintendent of city building<lb/>
inspections, sayshe was not aware<lb/>
of the Time photo and article until<lb/>
this week. He says the inspections<lb/>
department began a move to rid<lb/>
the block of the building last<lb/>
November.<lb/>
"For years, we have been get-<lb/>
ting complaints about the place<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
A man named Charles, stand-<lb/>
ing near the cleared site, said, "1<lb/>
hated to see it go because I drank<lb/>
there. You didn't have to worry<lb/>
about the cops. "They would just<lb/>
pass on by in 1987 couldn't see<lb/>
Key West's G-string rage<lb/>
on many North Carolina<lb/>
National average $517.71<lb/>
Source: A.M. Best Company, 1990, Federal Highway Administration<lb/>
Julie Stacey, Gannett News Service<lb/>
WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH<lb/>
(AP)�Thongs may be all the rage<lb/>
in Key West, but the skimpy swim-<lb/>
suits resembling G-strings are<lb/>
barely to be found on North Caro-<lb/>
lina beaches, locals say.<lb/>
'You see a few every once in a<lb/>
while. You don't see them often<lb/>
said 22-year-old Brian Canady.<lb/>
Carroll Benfield, 41, con-<lb/>
firmed that report.<lb/>
i just saw one with the little<lb/>
string she said. "I told my hus-<lb/>
band I wish he had been out there<lb/>
so he would haveseenit. He would<lb/>
have loved it<lb/>
The Wrightsville Beach Board<lb/>
of Aldermen sent the town attor-<lb/>
ney to the law library a few weeks<lb/>
ago to see if it is possible to ban<lb/>
them, a possibility that disturbs<lb/>
some and delights others.<lb/>
"It's not like they're just walk-<lb/>
ing out here naked. It's just bare<lb/>
buns. Buns are buns. Everybody's<lb/>
seen buns said John DiLeo, 24.<lb/>
"It's exposing yourself. It's Amer-<lb/>
ica. It's doing what you want to<lb/>
do. If you got it to flaunt, go for it<lb/>
Julie Cobb, 16, could not quite<lb/>
bring herself to see it that way.<lb/>
"I think it's nasty because<lb/>
people who wear them look really<lb/>
gross Miss Cobb said. "Nobody<lb/>
wants to see that<lb/>
A few noted that in other<lb/>
you turn the bottle up The<lb/>
station's originsarecloudy,but for<lb/>
many years it was a Spur service<lb/>
station. Later, John Enoch oper-<lb/>
ated a used car dealership there.<lb/>
Enoch said he closed the car busi-<lb/>
ness in 1987after the railroad raised<lb/>
his rent. The place has been aban-<lb/>
doned since then.<lb/>
Enoch said even when he had<lb/>
his business there, loiterers in-<lb/>
vaded the property after hours to<lb/>
drink and sleep. The spot was a<lb/>
favorite hangout because it was<lb/>
shaded, near therailyard and close<lb/>
to several places that sold cheap<lb/>
wine.<lb/>
The station may be gone, but<lb/>
the people aren't. They sit in chairs<lb/>
amid the rubble and on a nearby<lb/>
wall that borders the sidewalk. One<lb/>
regular said the city should have<lb/>
left the old place alone.<lb/>
'They should be messing with<lb/>
places where drugs are sold in-<lb/>
stead of with us he said.<lb/>
not popular<lb/>
beaches<lb/>
equally civilized partsof the world<lb/>
a thong is nothing to cluck about<lb/>
because bare breasts and bare<lb/>
fannies on the beaches are the<lb/>
order of the day.<lb/>
'I'd wear it in Rio, but not<lb/>
here said Dr. Tracy Collins, 28.<lb/>
"It doesn't go along with the cul-<lb/>
tural and social standards around<lb/>
here<lb/>
Yet, if thong wearers are so<lb/>
hard to find, why the fuss?<lb/>
Mark Wilson, 20, has a theory.<lb/>
Recently, two friends visited him<lb/>
from Florida and he speculated<lb/>
that the novel sight of them strid-<lb/>
ing across the sands spurred the<lb/>
See G-string, page 8<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0009"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
I<lb/>
JLJhe East Carolinian, July 10,1990<lb/>
Around the State<lb/>
U.S. Court of Appeals to decide on a<lb/>
Murphy businessman's guilty plea<lb/>
ASHEVILLE - Murphv businessman and convicted drug dealer<lb/>
Charles McHan, who is being held in an Alabama penitentiary, docs not<lb/>
know yet if a federal Court of Appeals will allow him to withdraw his<lb/>
guilty plea<lb/>
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals won't consider until at least<lb/>
October McHan's contention that U.S. District Judge Richard Voorhecs<lb/>
erred in not allowing him to take back his plea.<lb/>
In addition, the U.S. attorney's office also has entered an appeal.<lb/>
Prosecutors want the court to review Voorhees' decision to impose a<lb/>
lesser sentence than called tor under federal sentencing guidelines for<lb/>
such a crime.<lb/>
McHan, 45, is serving 52 months in the federal penitentiary at<lb/>
Maxwell Field Air Force Base in Montgomery, Ala. Also fined $100,000,<lb/>
he pleaded guilty Sept. 20, N88, to possessing 200 pounds of marijuana<lb/>
with intent to deliver. He was arrested in El Paso, Texas, four months<lb/>
earlier after negotiating with a federal undercover agent to buy the<lb/>
drug.<lb/>
In documents before the appellate court, McFlan says he is inno-<lb/>
cent. He says he would not have pleaded guilty had he known the<lb/>
government was investigating him on charges of conducting a continu-<lb/>
ing criminal enterprise. His pica could be taken as an admission of guilt<lb/>
during the upcoming criminal enterprise trial.<lb/>
McHan has charged that the three defense attorneys who helped<lb/>
him enter his plea knew or the possibility of the criminal enterprise<lb/>
investigation but did not till him.<lb/>
Autistic<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Leg<lb/>
gath<lb/>
al representatives from 42 states<lb/>
er in Asheville for conference<lb/>
ASHEVILLE Afour day meeting of the National Association of<lb/>
Attorneys General began Sunday as states' top legal representatives<lb/>
gathered to discuss common issues.<lb/>
Representatives from 42 states, plus Ctiarn and Puerto Rico, were<lb/>
due at the meeting � including 37 attorney s general. Also coming were<lb/>
families, corporate observers and legal experts from Canada, Taiwan,<lb/>
Korea and the Soviet Union Total attendance should be about 300.<lb/>
North Carolina Attorney C ienor.il t.acy J. Thomburg is hosting.<lb/>
"A host of important issnes" will be discussed m many meetings,<lb/>
which continue through Wednesday, Thomburg said Sunday.<lb/>
"I just got out of an anti-trust meeting he said. "We'll discuss<lb/>
environment; that's-getting more and moreattentum. Consumer issues<lb/>
are high on the agenda<lb/>
"Insurance is of major importance. We'll discuss laws as they relate<lb/>
to children. We'll talk about civil rights. We'll review Supreme Court<lb/>
decisions and their impact on the states<lb/>
The attorney s general will also share "innovative programs and<lb/>
ideas" that make the job easier and more efficient "In North Carolina,<lb/>
for example, we have a seminar for the military each year, discussing for<lb/>
them applicable North Carolina laws<lb/>
N.C. adopts a newmedical system into<lb/>
the state's emergency response plan<lb/>
R Al EJGH North Carolina has incorporated the National Disas-<lb/>
ter Medical System into its state emergency response plan, officials said<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
"This agreement is further proof that North Carolina has the best<lb/>
emergency preparedness program in the nation, said Joe Dean, secre-<lb/>
tary of state Department of Crime Control and Public Safety.<lb/>
NDMS is a cooperative effort of the U.S. Department of Health and<lb/>
Human Services, Department of Defense and Veterans Affairs, the<lb/>
Federal Emergency Management Agency, state and local governments<lb/>
and the private sector.<lb/>
The system is desigiv A to assist in catastrophes where state and<lb/>
local medical resources are overwhelmed. Dean said.<lb/>
If NDMS were activated, the state would assist in transporting<lb/>
patients from major airports to participating hospitals. NDMS would<lb/>
agree to reimburse the state and hospitals in a national emergency and<lb/>
provide assistance in the event of local disasters.<lb/>
Person County Sheriff detains two men<lb/>
for questions following shooting<lb/>
parents to help their children learn<lb/>
at home<lb/>
Families usually come to<lb/>
North Carolina to be close to<lb/>
TEACCH, which has six centers<lb/>
across the state. In the Triangle,<lb/>
they tend to choose Wake because<lb/>
it is a large school system that<lb/>
offers a comprehensive program,<lb/>
said lee M. Marcus, clinical direc-<lb/>
tor of the Chapel Hill TEACCH<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Matty Chaddertoncame from<lb/>
the Dominican Republic in 1987<lb/>
after the Florida psychologist who<lb/>
diagnosed her 6-year-old son rec-<lb/>
ommended she contact TEACC11<lb/>
She cheeked school systems in<lb/>
Asheville, Charlotte and Wake<lb/>
Countv before deciding to settle<lb/>
in Wake<lb/>
She liked therangeot services<lb/>
in Wake schools. Of the 107 el.iss<lb/>
rooms for autistic children in the<lb/>
state's 134 school systems, 12 were<lb/>
in Wake schools. Wake's program<lb/>
offered classes for children at every<lb/>
age, from preschool through high<lb/>
school.<lb/>
"Thegood thing about North<lb/>
Carolina is that we parents can<lb/>
work together in partnership with<lb/>
the professionals she said. "In<lb/>
Latin America, thev don't get<lb/>
involved so much, the parents into<lb/>
the problem<lb/>
WakeschMI officials also have<lb/>
been willing to expand the pro<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
caught and spent three weeks in<lb/>
the brig.<lb/>
"He was 22 years old and<lb/>
didn't want to be in Navy she<lb/>
said. "All the charges were<lb/>
dropped<lb/>
Mrs. Casturao said she was<lb/>
confused about why the Navy<lb/>
would begin looking tor her hns<lb/>
band after 14 years.<lb/>
He has lived in North (. aro<lb/>
lina about 10 vears, ami has not<lb/>
tried to hide his identity, she said<lb/>
"We file lanes every year she<lb/>
said. And he pays child support to<lb/>
children from his first marriage,<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Mrs. Casturao said her bus<lb/>
band is not sure what happened to<lb/>
hisdischarge papersafter he hitch-<lb/>
hiked to his sister's home in North<lb/>
Carolina in 97b.<lb/>
"His ex-wife or sister or<lb/>
mother may have them she said.<lb/>
In the meantime Navy offi-<lb/>
cials have assigned Casturao to a<lb/>
transit personnel unit in Norfolk.<lb/>
"They puthimonai tivediitv,<lb/>
gram as new needs were identi<lb/>
fied, Marcus said.<lb/>
"They've just been at the fore<lb/>
front of developing what's needed<lb/>
next he said. "When it was time<lb/>
to develop a program tor older<lb/>
autistic children, they wereamong<lb/>
the first in the country certainly<lb/>
in the state "<lb/>
Wake's attractiveness to par<lb/>
ents of autistic children indicates<lb/>
that the schools are doing some<lb/>
thing right. Hut the program has<lb/>
its costs.<lb/>
Children with autism are<lb/>
among the most expensive to<lb/>
educate. According to Wake<lb/>
schools figures, each autistic child<lb/>
costsS 11.1187 to educate in the iw<lb/>
90 school year.<lb/>
Hut the money the m hods re<lb/>
ceive for handicapped children<lb/>
doesn't reflect the differences in<lb/>
cost lor different handicaps. The<lb/>
federal government provides $300<lb/>
for each child identified asexcep<lb/>
tional regardless ot the handi<lb/>
cap<lb/>
I he state sets aside a lump<lb/>
sum eat h year tor special educa<lb/>
tion anil divides those dollars<lb/>
evenly among all such students in<lb/>
the state. The dollar amount jvi<lb/>
child arus with the number ot<lb/>
students vying tor that mone)<lb/>
said lames Fatata, director ot spe<lb/>
cial programs for Wake schools<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
working hun e et v day she said<lb/>
" The are making him strip floor<lb/>
shine shoes, mow yards<lb/>
Officials .it the construction<lb/>
company where asturao works<lb/>
were surprised by the whole inci-<lb/>
dent,<lb/>
"I le s a good . raftsman 1i<lb/>
reliable, very competent said<lb/>
Warren fortes, safety manager tor<lb/>
Fluor I anie! Inc<lb/>
So tar, the a impany has kept<lb/>
open his slot as a millwright and<lb/>
welder, and co workers have<lb/>
taken up a collection to help re<lb/>
place the paycheckshe has missed.<lb/>
Jury<lb/>
ROXBORO Two Granville County men were shot to death<lb/>
Sunday night at a gameroom about five miles west of the Person-<lb/>
C.ranville County line, authorities said.<lb/>
Mike Parham, 24, and Steve Price, 29, of Berea in Granville County<lb/>
were pronouneed dead a 11 he scene, according to Person County Sheriff<lb/>
Krnest Dixon.<lb/>
Another man �a Mexican naive whose name hasn't been released<lb/>
- was taken to Puke Medical Center by air ambulance, Dixon said. He<lb/>
�vas in critical condition Monday.<lb/>
Two suspects are in custody for questioning, Dixon said, but no<lb/>
i harges have been filed. I he State Bureau of Investigation is assiting in<lb/>
the investigation.<lb/>
The bodies of the t wo have been sent to the state medical examiner's<lb/>
office in Chapel Hill for autopsies.<lb/>
Wake County plans a group home for<lb/>
AIDS patients in the Raleigh area<lb/>
RALEIGH - The way was cleared Monday for AIDS Services<lb/>
Agency of Wake County to start operating a group home for AIDS<lb/>
patients in Raleigh next month.<lb/>
A motion to block licensing of the facility by some residents in a<lb/>
subdivision wasdismissed by U.S. District Count Judge George Greene.<lb/>
Greene said he dismissed the case because he found nothing to<lb/>
substantiate a con vena nt signed by property owners that only blood<lb/>
relatives should reside in the homes.<lb/>
Some residents said they plan more lawsuits to block the facility,<lb/>
while others said they would move.<lb/>
Brevard phone company raises rates<lb/>
BREVARD Citizens Telephone Co. filed Friday with the N.C<lb/>
Utilities Commission for a substantial increase in its residential and<lb/>
business service rates, its first increase since 1983. The proposed an<lb/>
increase of 56 percent for residents and 69 percent for businesses.<lb/>
� Compiled from Associated Press wire reports<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
dant, counsel and the court re<lb/>
porter from its private communi-<lb/>
cations.with the prospective ju-<lb/>
rors<lb/>
He continued, "We are confi-<lb/>
dent that the actions of the trial<lb/>
court were in good faith and re-<lb/>
sulted from its concern for the<lb/>
efficient conduct of the selection<lb/>
of the jury. Nevertheless, we must<lb/>
vacate the verdictsand judgments<lb/>
entered against the defendant<lb/>
The trial judge, Claude S. Sit-<lb/>
ton of Morganton, told The News<lb/>
and Observer of Raleigh he had<lb/>
followed a routine procedure<lb/>
when he had allowed potential<lb/>
jurors to approach the bench and<lb/>
to talk with him privately. At that<lb/>
point, he was reviewing their<lb/>
qualifications, he said, and they<lb/>
had not yet been swom in as pro-<lb/>
spective jurors.<lb/>
Sitton said the ruling not only<lb/>
would subject some jurors to<lb/>
embarrassment but also would<lb/>
make jury selection take longer.<lb/>
WANTED: ECU GIRLS <lb/>
Would you be interested in being <lb/>
photographed in bathing suit for :<lb/>
Calendar photos? The only re- <lb/>
quirement is that you will be at- <lb/>
tending ECU during the 1990 91 ;<lb/>
year. We are looking for a variety;<lb/>
of girls from sororities, school :<lb/>
organizations, athletics, cheer- :<lb/>
leaders, dancers and any other I<lb/>
student just plain interested! If j<lb/>
interested please submit a brief �<lb/>
response and photo (if available) �<lb/>
to P.O. Box 7163, Greenville, NC :<lb/>
27835 ASAP.<lb/>
This Week's Entertainment:<lb/>
Fri. 6th<lb/>
Had Boh &amp; The<lb/>
Koekin' Horses<lb/>
$1.10 Long Neck<lb/>
Sat. 7th<lb/>
The Veldt<lb/>
 Every Friday <lb/>
The Extremely Large Hour<lb/>
J pin till close<lb/>
$2.001'itchcrs<lb/>
SI 10 Longnecks<lb/>
$1.25 Imports<lb/>
513 Cotanche St.<lb/>
(located acrosi from UBE)<lb/>
Each Wed Night<lb/>
Open Mic Night<lb/>
Sign up<lb/>
starts at 3pm<lb/>
758-0080<lb/>
G-string<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
Board of Aldermen to action.<lb/>
The thong species is consid<lb/>
erably less rare in Florida than in<lb/>
Wrightsville Beach, he said.<lb/>
"That's why they were so sur-<lb/>
prised at everyone looking at<lb/>
them<lb/>
Despite their diminutive size,<lb/>
thong bathing suits are not cheap.<lb/>
They average about $50. But why<lb/>
are stores bothering to sell them if<lb/>
no one is wearing them to the<lb/>
beach?<lb/>
'For as many as you sec, we<lb/>
sell a lot more said Jim Lassiter,<lb/>
owner of the Aussie Island Surf<lb/>
Shop. "I think they're more back-<lb/>
yard bathers than beachgoers<lb/>
Super Sale At<lb/>
Overtoil's<lb/>
Fresh Medium<lb/>
Size Shi imp<lb/>
lb$4.99<lb/>
Whole Slah<lb/>
Heel' Spare Ribs<lb/>
b<lb/>
990<lb/>
Grade A<lb/>
Extra Large<lb/>
Eggs<lb/>
Dozen  79<lb/>
Bold Detergent<lb/>
Giant Box 42 oz<lb/>
.990<lb/>
Limit 1 with $10 food order<lb/>
Yellow Onions<lb/>
White Potatoes<lb/>
Green Cabbage<lb/>
Your Choice<lb/>
5 lbs tor $1.00<lb/>
Local<lb/>
Silver Queen<lb/>
White Corn<lb/>
Dozen99?<lb/>
Limit 3 dozen<lb/>
Fresh Fryer<lb/>
Leg Quarters<lb/>
10b bag<lb/>
1 b49c<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Whole Rib Eyes<lb/>
Sliced into steaks free<lb/>
1 lb$2.69<lb/>
Pepsi Products<lb/>
2 liter bottle<lb/>
.99c Limit 2<lb/>
Extras  .$1.09<lb/>
Banquet<lb/>
Frozen Cream Pies<lb/>
14 oz pkg.<lb/>
.590<lb/>
Libby's Vegetables<lb/>
300 size can<lb/>
Garden Peas - Cream<lb/>
Style Com - Whole Kernal<lb/>
Com - Cut Beans - French<lb/>
Style Beans<lb/>
4 for $1.00<lb/>
Limit 8 combined<lb/>
Western Choice Grade<lb/>
Bone In<lb/>
Shoulder Roast<lb/>
lb$1.69<lb/>
Western Choice Grade<lb/>
Bone In<lb/>
Chuck Roast<lb/>
lb. . $1.49<lb/>
Smithfield<lb/>
Regular Only<lb/>
Bacon<lb/>
12ozpkg. . .$1.39<lb/>
You<lb/>
Save at<lb/>
Overtons<lb/>
Deli Specials:<lb/>
Turkey Breast<lb/>
or<lb/>
Cooked Ham<lb/>
lb$2.99<lb/>
Super Buy!<lb/>
Store Hours: Open Sundays 1 pm - 6pm<lb/>
Monday - Saturday 8 am - 8 pm<lb/>
Priees effective Wednesday July 11 through Saturday June 14,1990<lb/>
Mastercard<lb/>
Visa<lb/>
American Express<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
Corner of Third &amp; Jarvis<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0010"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
�<lb/>
lual<lb/>
hilo<lb/>
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pin<lb/>
tod<lb/>
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red<lb/>
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I'W<lb/>
pre<lb/>
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Ihe<lb/>
Ik<lb/>
Mil<lb/>
all<lb/>
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it<lb/>
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v<lb/>
ulyllJ99Q<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Folk musician considers<lb/>
herself a sensitive rebel<lb/>
i p Shawn( oh in w a<lb/>
itcd about bringing a telephoi<lb/>
.�i a long cord onto the stage . I<lb/>
v n. ork s Bottom 1 ine so h�<lb/>
loyfriend in Nashville amid heai<lb/>
�Hr show.<lb/>
 worked.<lb/>
1 ingsareworkingtheseda) s<lb/>
r( olvin after many years i<lb/>
rdues Shehungin singing<lb/>
guitar, writing songs I lei<lb/>
� rstalbum for Columbia Records<lb/>
. id On on which one v.m<lb/>
t,ir influences of Joni Mitchell<lb/>
is � ir songs she wrote and si�<lb/>
wrote with John Leventhal<lb/>
 e w ork she k ent to a folk<lb/>
. .� . in I ellurid olo<lb/>
s the folk re n al heats 14<lb/>
- likes to call herself the<lb/>
rl ol the sensitive I' ibes<lb/>
she says: l' e alwaj s been .1<lb/>
I refused to go to school<lb/>
. hen I was in seventh<lb/>
I hated it It didn't dp a 1. I<lb/>
 social reputation<lb/>
i !vin sang backup on<lb/>
- izanne Vc-ga's "l.uka" and Vega<lb/>
sings on her "Diamond in tin<lb/>
Rough Coivin sang bat kup tor a<lb/>
Homsby album and he plays<lb/>
on Something To Believe<lb/>
I lei name wasShawna, mck-<lb/>
name Shawn, when she was bom<lb/>
inVermillion.S D. "My fatherhad<lb/>
an advertising newspaper. When<lb/>
I was 10. he sold it and went back<lb/>
to v hppl and got a Ph.D. in psy-<lb/>
cholog) rhat necessitated two<lb/>
mies to I ondon, (Canada, for a<lb/>
 k .11 and a halt 1 lefinished school<lb/>
in v arbondale, Illinois, where !<lb/>
w nl to high school. My parents<lb/>
still In e there<lb/>
Mv father was a big folk-<lb/>
musi fan We had guitars around<lb/>
the house<lb/>
W hen 1 .is young I sang<lb/>
� ill live nights a week in<lb/>
I .1 ! .1 dsand smoked and drank.<lb/>
r 1 . iii c ti ok a beating 1 went to<lb/>
 stin lov.is, and sang some<lb/>
country. I went back to c arbon<lb/>
dale and took spe� h therapy in-<lb/>
stead nl singing lessons. 1 had to<lb/>
quit singing tor a year I hal w as<lb/>
hard<lb/>
11 sanganv, thingldidn't<lb/>
like M . problem was I fell in love<lb/>
with too many musical styles, one<lb/>
after another. I would go bca part<lb/>
ot that parti ular scene. I can imi-<lb/>
tate a lol of styles very easily. It<lb/>
took a lot of time for me to find my<lb/>
own<lb/>
She liked high school, and<lb/>
studied art and film. "I was a rebel<lb/>
a t home. M v fa mily made me mad.<lb/>
1 felt Ihey didn't understand me. 1<lb/>
set mv self apart in order to main-<lb/>
tain mv identity, in ways that don't<lb/>
seem as important now.<lb/>
"1 was brought up with what<lb/>
1 thought was unhealthy concern<lb/>
tpr appearance and show and<lb/>
pretense and good vibes. Itbugged<lb/>
me. That's the kind Pt stuff I'm<lb/>
angry about, having to circum-<lb/>
vent your nature and personality<lb/>
tpr the sake of appearances. As a<lb/>
woman you're supposed to be<lb/>
docile.<lb/>
"I've never gotten married. I<lb/>
feel I've never let myself get to-<lb/>
tally under some guy's thumb<lb/>
she moved to New Yprk in<lb/>
late 1980 and in the decade played<lb/>
in nine er 10 bands<lb/>
( olvin says that when she and<lb/>
electric guitarist Leventhal met,<lb/>
"We were impressed with each<lb/>
other musically. We started writ-<lb/>
ing songs tPgether, pretty pop-<lb/>
oriented. 1 hked them, but never<lb/>
See Rebel, page 10<lb/>
Gardners of Soule members Robert Kearns. Audley F-reed Phillip Garde 1 Michael Gardner and Kenny<lb/>
KSS ol hard rock musac to Ihe Ail on Friday (Photo courtesy ot Chns Seward)<lb/>
Gardners of Sonle build upon<lb/>
a diverse music background<lb/>
Using colors can frustrate<lb/>
inexperienced decorators<lb/>
By Deaiuta Nevgloski<lb/>
Assistant Features 1 Jitor<lb/>
Color is the rrugi (I<lb/>
� n h me decorating. It 1 an<lb/>
llusionof light and space<lb/>
add excitement to lifeless rooms<lb/>
and lull the senses with suj<lb/>
lions ol nch textures<lb/>
T TYt vc the Egyptians<lb/>
 ing linen mummv. loll -<lb/>
n ligoblue saysl �. n I <lb/>
idding tongue-in cheek<lb/>
� i 4 di signer sheets IK tfu<lb/>
7tl entun theinteriordesignei<lb/>
Sir Iskk New ten had 1 l '�<lb/>
! that the human eye 1 an<lb/>
 n at li ast 10 mill �n<lb/>
m an infinite pt 1 trum<lb/>
1 cspite man's longs) ;<lb/>
� � it) forcok r few pcoph 1<lb/>
to use it to enharw e Iheii<lb/>
- rhey have little pr blem<lb/>
, what tlu like says IV<lb/>
insecurit � � rte 1 j<lb/>
rig to select therightshad ind<lb/>
bine it with others<lb/>
Pi terson, co founder ol tl<lb/>
11 til Designs wallcovering md<lb/>
� design firm, offers the<lb/>
r t<lb/>
rooms usually<lb/>
venter on toi es from one domi-<lb/>
nai.1 1 ilor family I se a contrast-<lb/>
ing color onlv as an a .1 rtt and<lb/>
use it sparingly t av �d a patch-<lb/>
v!k. ifeel kcolv siv ; alettecan<lb/>
bf� nd ftrrnishings ot different pe-<lb/>
riods and styles. I ienerally, the<lb/>
form thi more intense<lb/>
t! ei �1 � canbe<lb/>
� t oler proportions are as<lb/>
imi ortant as the color. "Picturea<lb/>
m with a hot red<lb/>
accent, v rsus a warm red room<lb/>
I uched with neutral gray two<lb/>
very-different spaces in the same<lb/>
two tone scheme<lb/>
� 1 arger masses in the room<lb/>
, fas draperies and cabinetry<lb/>
have a strong presence. I nless<lb/>
you want these to dominate, se-<lb/>
lect p. -u ained 1 olors.<lb/>
. hoose a color in keeping<lb/>
. ttharoom spurpose Enlivenan<lb/>
ti A-ithbold tones but choose a<lb/>
quieter hue for kitchen or bed-<lb/>
m 1 . � 1 spend a lot ol<lb/>
 coloi to rearrange space.<lb/>
ontrasting paint or paper on one<lb/>
. all breaks up a square room's<lb/>
boxiness Monochromatic (single<lb/>
color) schemes can camouflage<lb/>
decorating problems such as col-<lb/>
umns or ceiling pipes. Play up an<lb/>
architectural Strong point like a<lb/>
fireplace or window bay by paint-<lb/>
ing it two shades lighter pr darker<lb/>
than the rest ol the room.<lb/>
� To visuallv expand a room,<lb/>
choose light tones. Use flowing<lb/>
solid colors for paint pr a small<lb/>
pattern wallcovering that does not<lb/>
stop the eye. Aggressive tones<lb/>
make a room seem smaller.<lb/>
A lighter took both indoors<lb/>
and out is the trend, according to<lb/>
Ken Charbonneau pt Benjamin<lb/>
Moore &amp; Co Montvale, Nl- To<lb/>
lighten raw wood floors, trim,<lb/>
doors, cabinets and furniture,<lb/>
Charbonneau suggests an oil-<lb/>
based stain in oneof several pastel<lb/>
tints. It gives the excitement of<lb/>
color without masking the wood<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
By controlling the amount of<lb/>
stain applied or by applying it,<lb/>
then wiping it off, it's possible to<lb/>
van the effect. Experiment on a<lb/>
small area until you get the took<lb/>
you want, says Charbonneau.<lb/>
As the average American<lb/>
See Color, page 10<lb/>
Having alreadv lett their mark on the North<lb/>
Carolina musk scene, guitarists Michael Gardner<lb/>
and Audley breed, vocalist Phillip Gardner, drum<lb/>
mer Kenny Soule and bassist Robert Kearns are Ik k<lb/>
to conquer the scene in a whole new way with<lb/>
Gardners ol Soule.<lb/>
For most bands in the circuit today,common in-<lb/>
fluences among members are a must. However, in<lb/>
this Raleigh-based outfit, diversity is something that<lb/>
helps the quintet establish themselves as musicians<lb/>
and survive musically among the millions of bands<lb/>
that spring up each year.<lb/>
With roots being planted in blue grass, hard rock<lb/>
and the full-explosion ol the British Invasion, (iard<lb/>
ners of Soule otters rock of the ls and then some.<lb/>
Gardners of Soule first took formation whan the<lb/>
Gardner brothers teamed up with the classically-<lb/>
trained Soule last year.<lb/>
Soon alter, the rest ol its members followed to<lb/>
round out the group.<lb/>
Together, the Gardners and Soule have 2 years<lb/>
of playing experience. Mi hael lardner is a well-<lb/>
known musician who has played with mam bands<lb/>
inLondonandLosAngelesbeforesetUinginRaleigh.<lb/>
Gardner is especially known tor his work in area<lb/>
favorite PKM<lb/>
Phillip Gardner, the ba i main lyricist, has<lb/>
inkedsonj t irDebraD M md has several cred-<lb/>
its pnl'KM's Rocl Erotica<lb/>
Having t.ur. i with top-n. h act Nantucket,<lb/>
soule. who com fn tl family, provided<lb/>
backbeat for th V paving his dues on<lb/>
stages a ross �'�<lb/>
1 reed and K ims 1 mj st membersto<lb/>
completethe line �, ��r their contributions<lb/>
to the North ar ili are endless<lb/>
Freed ea tripes in bands like<lb/>
The Point and east coast pow 'l 1 use? idewinder. A<lb/>
native of the Wilmi I eed currently ap-<lb/>
pears with Raleigh �ct<lb/>
Kearns who i Hid N. . tinds his<lb/>
n its in blui<lb/>
skilled musu 1 in<lb/>
Keamsis current<lb/>
Lovti<lb/>
(ininoi- 1 5<lb/>
that includes the� 1<lb/>
tor "All 1 see is F �<lb/>
YourMouth Is" s<lb/>
their second dei<lb/>
Yen can hi 11<lb/>
rock-n-roH in tlu ii<lb/>
Friday. Theii liv<lb/>
plenty of musical divi -<lb/>
in the North Carolina 1<lb/>
�<lb/>
A well-<lb/>
is well as the bass,<lb/>
 reed in ryol<lb/>
, s� ng demo out<lb/>
II t Welera-<lb/>
ur� louth Where<lb/>
� nishingup<lb/>
I<lb/>
lie play original<lb/>
1 s, t at the Attic on<lb/>
ht-tprward with<lb/>
sur to, sot a trend<lb/>
Clothes make strong impressions<lb/>
Well put together men<lb/>
rate second glances<lb/>
Measure<lb/>
your political<lb/>
awareness<lb/>
Time will tell<lb/>
This sundial located beh.nd the Croatan, may spark more energy<lb/>
ation A campus rumor indites electric clocks across campus<lb/>
���, atthe close ot office hours leaving studnets dependen<lb/>
on sund.a.s like th.s one (Photo byJDWhrtm,re -ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
1 mm . lothesm i 1 ntm ike<lb/>
the man, but the) sure help him<lb/>
catch a woman s eve<lb/>
And if a man wants the once-<lb/>
pver more than once, what he<lb/>
wears must be well kept, teel good<lb/>
to the touch, imply a sense of self-<lb/>
assurance � and be draped on a<lb/>
trim body-<lb/>
"1 don't think there's a mating<lb/>
code of fashion says Gerald<lb/>
Rothberg, editor of Men's (iukte<lb/>
to Fashion magazine, "but a man<lb/>
who dresses comfortably, not<lb/>
faddish, exudes a sense of himsel t<lb/>
and attracts women<lb/>
However, women today ex<lb/>
pect men to have a selection of<lb/>
clothes because there are main<lb/>
more fashion options, says Gerald<lb/>
Mathews,executive vice president<lb/>
of Saks Fifth Avenue.<lb/>
"Women he says, "appreci-<lb/>
ate men who possessotherdimen-<lb/>
sionsof style besides simplv stand-<lb/>
ing on the train platform each<lb/>
morning in a black suit with .m<lb/>
attache case<lb/>
Women also appreciate men<lb/>
who dress in a way that is comple-<lb/>
mentary to them, says Sami Di-<lb/>
nar, a Beverly Hills, Calif haber-<lb/>
dasher. "That shows they're talk-<lb/>
ing the same language<lb/>
In other words, if she's in<lb/>
Chanel, he shouldn't show up<lb/>
wearing The Gap.<lb/>
Nancie S. Martin, editor of<lb/>
Playgirl magazine, say s it isn' t just<lb/>
the clothes that count, but what<lb/>
women associate with them.<lb/>
'Take tuxedos, for example<lb/>
she says. "Every man looks ele-<lb/>
gant m a tu 1 ause il<lb/>
the v hoU fanta<lb/>
champagne, dancing till dawn and<lb/>
Tom Cruise at the Oscars.<lb/>
Uniforms - police blue<lb/>
ankee pinstripes, doctor's white<lb/>
fall into the same category. Not<lb/>
pnlydotheycreUeanaura,thc n<lb/>
pre-packaged, so the look is tool<lb/>
proof.<lb/>
Men who are in good shapi<lb/>
are the lucky ones. They have mow<lb/>
clothing options and in a pinch<lb/>
can pair jeans with almost am<lb/>
thing. According to Martin, that's<lb/>
a plus.<lb/>
"A woman's favorite look on<lb/>
a man - hands-down, without<lb/>
question is tight blue jeans,<lb/>
she says. "1 get tens of letters from<lb/>
readers whenever we do a jeans<lb/>
pictorial<lb/>
Why eans?<lb/>
"Women like to look at men<lb/>
gpingaway she says. "If s one of<lb/>
their favorite body parts.<lb/>
"Unfortunately, you onlv get<lb/>
to look at the rear view after<lb/>
they've left<lb/>
Activewear also attracts the<lb/>
female eye. "When a man wears a<lb/>
pair of hot-looking shorts she<lb/>
savs, "it evokes, the image of ath-<lb/>
letic vitality<lb/>
This look works only if he has<lb/>
the build.<lb/>
That's even more important<lb/>
than a Giorgio Armani custom-<lb/>
made suit Said one editor of Cos-<lb/>
mopolitan magazine.<lb/>
Yet men of a certain girth<lb/>
should not despair. They have<lb/>
See Clothes, page 10<lb/>
rkcourt,<lb/>
Ihe widow of the<lb/>
font r' hihppmespresident, was<lb/>
charges of:(a) bribery<lb/>
anj , on; (b) racketeering<lb/>
and fraud; (c) tax evasion.<lb/>
; Soviet President Mikhail<lb/>
( iori . , vsaid he and the rest of<lb/>
thee ommunist leadership would<lb/>
resign � 1 il nusted byopeneleo-<lb/>
tiom lb) 1 �viet citizens aren't<lb/>
better oti in two years; (c) only<lb/>
u satisfied they had<lb/>
achw - heir goals and vindi-<lb/>
, ,  rmciples.<lb/>
I A Boston jury convicted a<lb/>
coupteof involuntary manslaugh-<lb/>
ter in the deathoftheir212-year-<lb/>
oldson after they had denied him<lb/>
conventional medical treatmentin<lb/>
accordance with their beliefs as:<lb/>
(a) Mormons; ib) lehovah's Wit-<lb/>
nesses; lc)( hnstian Scientists.<lb/>
4. Ihe government said it<lb/>
would hold an international auc-<lb/>
rion in late September via satellite<lb/>
for properties worth more than $1<lb/>
million each: ta) acquired from<lb/>
insolvent savings and loan insti-<lb/>
tutions; 0j) on military bases that<lb/>
are being phased out; (c) seized<lb/>
from convicted drug dealers.<lb/>
5. After investigating charges<lb/>
that equipment was being stolen<lb/>
from the federal Lawrence Liver-<lb/>
more Laboratory in California to<lb/>
buy illegal drugs, the General Ac-<lb/>
counting Office said that: (a) more<lb/>
than $45 million worth of equip-<lb/>
ment was missing; (b) large<lb/>
amounts of chemicals that could<lb/>
be used to make drugs were miss-<lb/>
See News Quiz, page 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0011"/><lb/>
10 The East Carolinian, July 11,1990<lb/>
Campus Voice<lb/>
What do you like and<lb/>
dislike about summer<lb/>
school?<lb/>
Chris Spach, 23<lb/>
Senior, Construction Management<lb/>
"1 like the convenience of finishing class early<lb/>
in the day. You also get your classes over with<lb/>
in five weeks. 1 don't like the problems with<lb/>
the air-conditioning in Austin, though<lb/>
Dimnc Beaman, 20<lb/>
Sophomore, Education<lb/>
1 like the fact that you don't have to learn all<lb/>
the unnecessary stuff. The professors don't<lb/>
teach more than you have to know. 1 dislike<lb/>
being at the same class every morning at eight<lb/>
o'clock<lb/>
M.iury Smith, 21<lb/>
Senior, Marketing<lb/>
"Summer Session is pretty laid back and you<lb/>
h.i e mere et a chance to get to know your pro-<lb/>
fessors. I he sesMon goes by Ux quickly though,<lb/>
and classes don't go by quickly enough<lb/>
Mark Warren, 26<lb/>
Senior, Marketing and Management<lb/>
"I like that it goes by really fast. The classes are<lb/>
easier and there are no big projects. 1 don't<lb/>
enjoy being inside during the summer, espe-<lb/>
cially when classes are so long. It also burns<lb/>
you out for the fall and spring<lb/>
Paige Allen, 22<lb/>
Senior, History<lb/>
"For one thing, it's way too hot and they won't<lb/>
turn the air-conditioning on. 1 like that it's<lb/>
short and I get out early. Then 1 have the rest<lb/>
oi the dav to do what 1 want<lb/>
Joy Newsome, 21<lb/>
Senior, Communications<lb/>
"You're not able to take off on vacation when<lb/>
opportunity knocks. 1 do like the fact that I'm<lb/>
getting ahead for the upcoming semester and<lb/>
that the classes are easier<lb/>
�Compiled by Jessica Riggs<lb/>
(Photos bv J.D. Whitmire � ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
Music Notes<lb/>
Read along for advice from Rita Long<lb/>
Dear Rita:<lb/>
I have a girlfriend who is very<lb/>
dear to me. I know her boyfriend,<lb/>
and I also know that he is unfaith-<lb/>
ful to her. He is afraid I will tell<lb/>
her. Should I tell her, or should I<lb/>
just keep it to myself?<lb/>
Signed, Friend.<lb/>
Dear Friend:<lb/>
If you are certain about her<lb/>
boyfriend and you feel you must<lb/>
do something, try to find out if she<lb/>
suspects her boyfriend is unfaith-<lb/>
ful to her. She may already know<lb/>
her boyfriend is interested in<lb/>
someone else, and may be ignor-<lb/>
ing it by choice. If she indicates a<lb/>
suspicion that something is going<lb/>
on, then you could tactfully get<lb/>
her to talk about it.<lb/>
This is a delicate situation. If<lb/>
she does not know about his un-<lb/>
faithful actions and you area close<lb/>
friend, whom she knows would<lb/>
not lie to her, then your loyalty<lb/>
should be to your friend. Tell her<lb/>
in a tactful way. If you keep the in-<lb/>
formation hidden from her, you<lb/>
would be protecting and showing<lb/>
loyalty to her boyfriend.<lb/>
Dear Rita:<lb/>
I have a friend who is cur-<lb/>
rently in jail. His sister's boyfriend<lb/>
committed a crime and the boy-<lb/>
friend threatened to kill her if she<lb/>
she said anything. To save her life,<lb/>
she told the police that her brother<lb/>
(my friend) committed the crime.<lb/>
Now he is in jail and may go to<lb/>
prison if his sister does not tell the<lb/>
truth. What can I do to help?<lb/>
Signed, Help.<lb/>
Dear Help:<lb/>
If you can talk bo the girl, tell<lb/>
her that she is being held by fear<lb/>
from the threat o( her boyfriend.<lb/>
One way to dilute fear is to expose<lb/>
it. Tell her to confess the truth to<lb/>
the police and let them protect her<lb/>
from this man. She can tell her<lb/>
boyfriend that the police know<lb/>
the truth and they are protecting<lb/>
her and that he is being watched.<lb/>
Dear Rita:<lb/>
I have two girlfriends who got<lb/>
into a misunderstanding because<lb/>
one had the tendency to be un-<lb/>
truthful In fact, she makes up<lb/>
stories about almost everything.<lb/>
My other girlfriend is fed up with<lb/>
her lving. Is there any help for one<lb/>
who habitually lies'<lb/>
Signed, Friends.<lb/>
Dear Friends:<lb/>
1 suggest psychiatric help tor<lb/>
her. You do not need a friend wh� i<lb/>
lies. You can suggest thatsheseek<lb/>
proper help.<lb/>
Until she does, it may be wis<lb/>
to avoid her.<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
felt great about them. That went<lb/>
on two or three years.<lb/>
"What 1 think is the truest part<lb/>
of my musical personality is when<lb/>
1 trv to figure songs out on acous-<lb/>
tic guitar. One time when I got a<lb/>
piece of music from him 1 trans-<lb/>
posed the whole mess down to<lb/>
one acoustic guitar. He had a big<lb/>
rhvthm 'n' blues arrangement.<lb/>
The Ivrics got better and more<lb/>
personal.That'show that evolved.<lb/>
I get music from him. If it strikes a<lb/>
chord, 1 write Ivrics.<lb/>
"We were a couple for a while.<lb/>
When you break up with some-<lb/>
body, there's usually a nice period<lb/>
of time where you don't have to be<lb/>
around them. We kind of kept<lb/>
working. It was a little odd. We<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
liked the work a lot so it was worth<lb/>
it<lb/>
Her breakthrough came when<lb/>
they "were able to write songs<lb/>
people were noticing. There<lb/>
started to be a bit of a buzz she<lb/>
says.<lb/>
The Fast Folk Cooperative in<lb/>
Greenwich Village put out<lb/>
monthly recordings bv new art-<lb/>
ists. "College radio in Boston loved<lb/>
those records and through pin-<lb/>
ing them I got a following in Bos<lb/>
ton Colvin says.<lb/>
"Also, 1 always equated the<lb/>
worth of myself with my talent. I<lb/>
think I had to learn that mv talent<lb/>
wasa gift and something 1 got a lot<lb/>
out of. But I'm worthy in a lot of<lb/>
other ways<lb/>
"Applications are now being<lb/>
accepted for features<lb/>
writers. If vou have ambition<lb/>
and would like experience to<lb/>
accompany it, write for<lb/>
The East Carolinian.<lb/>
fe5y Presents<lb/>
1S if EVERY THURSDAY<lb/>
Color<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
home gets smaller, families must<lb/>
learn to live in more modest spaces<lb/>
with little architectural interest.<lb/>
But small doesn't have to be bor-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
A small room, for example,<lb/>
doesn't have to be whi te, says New<lb/>
York interior designer Bunny<lb/>
Williams. Paint the walls a soft<lb/>
salmon color and the woodwork<lb/>
creamy white for an illusion of<lb/>
spaciousness without boredom,<lb/>
"Light colors make you less a ware<lb/>
of those low ceilings that are the<lb/>
norm in today's housing market<lb/>
she says.<lb/>
W Studci<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/>
 FREE PIZZA <lb/>
LADIES FREE <lb/>
Clothes<lb/>
Boston's funky metal outfit Extreme is currently in a<lb/>
California studio working on the follow up to their self-<lb/>
titled debut on A&amp;M Records. Helping out on a few tracks<lb/>
are Skid Row's Sebastian Bach and fellow Bostonians Aer-<lb/>
osmith. The new LP titled "ExtremeB: Porno Graffitti" (the<lb/>
misspelling of graffiti is intentional) is slated for late sum-<lb/>
mer release.<lb/>
Aerosmith has released a new video compilation that<lb/>
includes videos from their triple-platinum ablum "Pump<lb/>
The home video is titled Things That Go Pump in the Night<lb/>
and features "Love in an Elevator "Janie's Got a Gun<lb/>
and both clips of "What it Takes<lb/>
Attention all Dokken fans: Don Dokken has put to-<lb/>
gether a band that will release its first effort "Up From the<lb/>
Ashes" this summer. Former Dokken guitarist George<lb/>
Lynch has branched out on his own and will premiere his<lb/>
new band, the Lynch Mob, on the forthcoming LP due out<lb/>
in September. Other summer releases include LP's from<lb/>
Dirty White Boy, Doro, Sweet F.A Winger, Ratt, Cheap<lb/>
Trick, Living Color, King's X, Anthrax and Queensryche.<lb/>
The Bay Area Thrash Awards were held this past month.<lb/>
Taking awards for Best Vocals and Best Guitar were<lb/>
Testament's Chuck Billy and Alex Skolnick.<lb/>
Britny Fox is still looking for a new vocalist. If you're<lb/>
interested, send a tape to Power Star Mgt, 6981 North Park<lb/>
Dr. West, Suite 618, Pennsauken, N.J 08109. The Philly<lb/>
quartet is looking for someone with a "bluesy good voice,<lb/>
nothing operatic<lb/>
You can see Vince Neil (Motley Crue) and Jon Bon<lb/>
Jovi in two separate movies this summer. Neil will play a<lb/>
rock singer who gets incinerated in Andrew Dice Clay's<lb/>
"The Adventure of Ford Fairlane In "Young Guns , " Bon<lb/>
Jovi gets shot while escaping from prison in his cameo role.<lb/>
Both frontmen also perform songs on each of his movie's<lb/>
soundtrack. The Dice flick is due out in theaters today.<lb/>
On the North Carolina homefront, Tom Pardue, former<lb/>
guitarist for Fayetteville's Last Child, is currently in search<lb/>
of area musicians who want to jam. If you're interested in<lb/>
putting together a band, Pardue is a guitar player with<lb/>
plenty of playing and writing talent. You can contact<lb/>
Pardue at (919) 864-4931 or (919) 425-0951.<lb/>
Next week, Music Notes will give you the scoop on new<lb/>
Greenville-based band Get It Up, which features members<lb/>
from 180 Proof. Until then, keep rockin<lb/>
�Compiled by "Dizzy" Deanna Nevgloski<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
options, too, thanks to the current<lb/>
relaxed, fluid look in menswear.<lb/>
"Based on my experience talk-<lb/>
ing with female fashion editors�<lb/>
not to mention my wife who has<lb/>
very definite opinions saysChip<lb/>
Tolbert, fashion director of the<lb/>
Men's Fashion Association in "ew<lb/>
York, "men's clothes should skim<lb/>
the body<lb/>
Grace Mirabella, editor of a<lb/>
fashion magazine bearing her<lb/>
name, likes navy blazer and gray<lb/>
flannels.<lb/>
"American men who dress in<lb/>
a classic way have an awful lot of<lb/>
dash she says. "It wasoncecalled<lb/>
an English type of dressing and<lb/>
now is done by designers such as<lb/>
Ralph Lauren<lb/>
News Quiz<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
ing; (c) nothing seemed to be miss-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
6. The New England Journal<lb/>
of Medicine reported a new study<lb/>
had found many effects of aging<lb/>
on the body could be reversed by:<lb/>
(a) megadoses of vitamins; (b)<lb/>
treatment with human growth<lb/>
hormone.<lb/>
7. This nation's minister of the<lb/>
economy announced that its gov-<lb/>
ernment had decided to open the<lb/>
nation's economy � the eighth<lb/>
largest in the West � to imports<lb/>
and free trade: (a) Brazil; (b) Ja-<lb/>
pan; (c) Switzerland.<lb/>
8. The South African govern-<lb/>
ment said it was temporarily sus-<lb/>
pending plans to kill, for dog food<lb/>
and aphrodisiacs, 30,000: (a) ele-<lb/>
phants; (b) golden tamarind<lb/>
monkeys; (c) seals.<lb/>
ANSWERS: l.b 2.b 3.c 4.a 5a<lb/>
6.b 7.a 8.c.<lb/>
Help<lb/>
conservation<lb/>
efforts by<lb/>
recycling this<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
� � � � Now Taking � ��'�"<lb/>
Applications for<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Government<lb/>
Association<lb/>
Transit Manager<lb/>
Applicants must apply on:<lb/>
� July 11 �<lb/>
� July 12 �<lb/>
or<lb/>
� July 16<lb/>
before 5:00 p.m. in the S.G.A.<lb/>
office or<lb/>
S.G.A. Transit Office<lb/>
second floor of Mendenhall<lb/>
A minimum G.P.A. of 2.0 is required<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0012"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
July 11,1990<lb/>
She �aHt Carolinian<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
Larkin to<lb/>
leave ECU<lb/>
for Disney<lb/>
By Sharon Anderson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Traci Larkin played four years<lb/>
an the ECU softball team She<lb/>
pined friendship, good gTades, a<lb/>
chance for a internship and many<lb/>
neat memories. The graduated<lb/>
senior is from Georgia and said<lb/>
her main influence was her dad.<lb/>
"My dad was my coach ever since<lb/>
1 w.is ten, until 1 came to ECU<lb/>
I arkin started playing slow-<lb/>
pitch softball when she was ten<lb/>
aiui started fast-pitch when she<lb/>
was 13. She also played slow-<lb/>
njtch at her high school in Geor-<lb/>
gia She was recruited to come to<lb/>
ECl<lb/>
larkin claimed, 'i went to<lb/>
camps in high school at the Uni-<lb/>
verMtv of South Carolina. 1 was<lb/>
toidabouta pitching and catching<lb/>
camp in Pennsylvania. So, I went<lb/>
up there and made some really<lb/>
good contacts At the camp in<lb/>
Pennsylvania, Larkin met many<lb/>
college coaches who helped by<lb/>
teaching her how to market her-<lb/>
self to other colleges. Larkin said,<lb/>
! made a little resume and I had a<lb/>
video tape and I sent it out<lb/>
Kathv Arendson wasLarkins'<lb/>
coach at the Camp in Pennsylva-<lb/>
nia. Arendson is the softball coach<lb/>
tor Eastern Illinois. She wascoach-<lb/>
ing tor Northwestern University<lb/>
at the time of the camp. Arendson<lb/>
played for a nationally known<lb/>
amehire softball team. Larkin<lb/>
declared, "Mrs. Arendson inspired<lb/>
me. She sort of took me under her<lb/>
wing and helped me out. She<lb/>
actually helped me get my schol-<lb/>
IRS spends $18<lb/>
million to build<lb/>
new facility<lb/>
By Earle McAuley<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Ever have one of those days?<lb/>
Analise Craig hits again and again to practice getting out of a sand trap. Craig is taking golf as her Physical<lb/>
Education class this summer (Photo by J D. Whitmire � ECU Photo lab)<lb/>
Desue, Carson to represent<lb/>
East team at Olympic Festival<lb/>
 . � � . 1 i"VJ fV �. .1. .� � iMir l<lb/>
While Larkin was on her re-<lb/>
cruiting trip, she recieved a call<lb/>
from Sue Manahan, ECU'S soft-<lb/>
ball coach. Larkin remembers,<lb/>
We drove up the hill and I saw<lb/>
everyone laying out in the sun<lb/>
and plaving volleyball and I said<lb/>
Oh my God, I've found my<lb/>
home<lb/>
To be on the softball team at<lb/>
ECU, the players had to have a 2.0<lb/>
or better every semester. Larkin<lb/>
said, "Coach Manahans' standards<lb/>
on grades were a little bit higher.<lb/>
If we didn't have a 2.5 every se-<lb/>
mester, we had a study hall<lb/>
When Urkin entered ECU her<lb/>
freshman year there were 10 fresh-<lb/>
man on the team. They all became<lb/>
dose fnends and eight of them<lb/>
graduated together this spring.<lb/>
She said, "We played together for<lb/>
four years and they were my clos-<lb/>
est friends in school.<lb/>
1 made some really good<lb/>
fnends I know I will always keep<lb/>
in touch with. I think 1 kind of had<lb/>
it easier than some people because<lb/>
1 had those few close friends that 1<lb/>
spent so much time with<lb/>
Larkin's career record is 30<lb/>
wins and 18 losses. Her record for<lb/>
last year was seven wins, and three<lb/>
losses. This record was the second<lb/>
best out of the four pitchers on the<lb/>
team She played 15 games. She<lb/>
had one save, one shutout and<lb/>
five complete games. During the<lb/>
season she gave up 59 hits, 36<lb/>
See Larkin, page 12<lb/>
Sports Information<lb/>
ECU'S Damon Desue and<lb/>
head track coach Bill Carson will<lb/>
take part in the 1990 Summer U .S.<lb/>
Olympic Festival to be held July<lb/>
12-15 in Minneapolis, Minn.<lb/>
Desue, a rising sophomore at<lb/>
ECU, will represent the East team<lb/>
at the Festival, running in the 100-<lb/>
mctersand the 4 x 100 meter relay.<lb/>
In the spring, Desue, from<lb/>
Virginia Beach, Va placed sec-<lb/>
ond in the 100-meters and fourth<lb/>
in the 200-meters at the 1C4A<lb/>
Championships.<lb/>
"1 think my performance at<lb/>
the IC4A's helped a lot in earning<lb/>
me this chance Desue said,<lb/>
Monday from his home in Vir-<lb/>
ginia Beach. "Thev needed sprint-<lb/>
ers and someone to run the relay<lb/>
and Coach Zinno remembered<lb/>
how well I ran at that meet<lb/>
Desue is the third ECU run-<lb/>
ner to compete at the Olympic<lb/>
Festival. Otis Mclvin competed for<lb/>
the South team in the early 80s<lb/>
and Lee Vernon McNeill was a<lb/>
gold-medal winner with the<lb/>
South's 4 x 100 meter relay team in<lb/>
1987.<lb/>
Carson, the head coach of the<lb/>
Pirates for the past 24 years, was<lb/>
selected as sprint coach for the<lb/>
South team.<lb/>
"I was very honored to get the<lb/>
chance to coach the South team<lb/>
said Carson. "We should have a<lb/>
good meet for the South in<lb/>
sprints<lb/>
George Williams of St.<lb/>
Augustine's will serve as the head<lb/>
coach for the South's track team,<lb/>
while Carson will concentrate on<lb/>
the 100 and 200-meter events and<lb/>
4 x 100 and 4 x 400 meter relays.<lb/>
Carson coached the 1990 ECU<lb/>
4 x 400 meter relay team which<lb/>
earned All-Americanhonorsin the<lb/>
indoor season in March. He has<lb/>
coached a total of 23 All-Ameri-<lb/>
cans at ECU during his coaching<lb/>
tenure.<lb/>
In addition to the opportunity<lb/>
to coach at the Olympic Festival,<lb/>
Carson was also elected this year<lb/>
as president of the IC4A's. The<lb/>
oldest track club in America, the<lb/>
lC4A's has over 100 member<lb/>
schools, including ECU. The Pi-<lb/>
rates have finished in the top-ten<lb/>
of the outdoor meet champion-<lb/>
ships in six of the last seven sea-<lb/>
sons and hold the league's record<lb/>
in the 4 x 400 meter indoor relay, 4<lb/>
x 100 meter outdoor relay and the<lb/>
200-meter outdoor.<lb/>
ECU plans to spend 18 million dollars in the next three years on a<lb/>
new sports recreation facility. According to Nancy J. Mize, the ECU<lb/>
recreational sports director, "We are looking at '93 or '94 as the comple-<lb/>
tion date for the project<lb/>
The project, according to Mize, is "to build a complex that will be<lb/>
able to meet all of the recreation needs of the campus, we are currently<lb/>
not able to do that due to lack of space<lb/>
The facility, according to Mize, will have "14 racquetball courts, six<lb/>
basketball courts, three multi-purpose aerobics rooms, a fitness testing<lb/>
lab, a weight roomcardiovascular center, a conference room, a train-<lb/>
ing sports care room, a student lounge, a laundry room, equipment<lb/>
check-out center, outdoor equipment area, lectureclassroom, locker<lb/>
rooms, an administrative area an indoor swimming pool which may be<lb/>
indooroutdoor with a retractable roof, and a golfarcherybatting<lb/>
area<lb/>
Also inside the edifice will be an indoor track. According to Mize<lb/>
"It will be suspended on the second level and go around the six<lb/>
basketball courts<lb/>
According to Mize, "The overall size of the building will be 165,000<lb/>
square feet This would put us in the same range as the other<lb/>
universities in the North Carolina system, many of whom have built<lb/>
similar facilities in the past few years.<lb/>
Mize said, "The budget cuts will not effect this project since it is<lb/>
going to be totally student funded The money is going to come from<lb/>
a tuition increase of 18 dollars a semester.<lb/>
This facility may be placed in a variety of different locations. The<lb/>
main outlook now is for the area between the commuter parking lot on<lb/>
college hill and Jones residence hall. Other proposed sites have been for<lb/>
the parking lot adjacent to Mendcnhall Student Center, the intramural<lb/>
fields, or the land at the Allied Health Center.<lb/>
If the site is in the area adjacent to Jones hall Mize said, "parking<lb/>
should not be a problem. The main time that the facility will be used is<lb/>
after three p.m. and the commuter lot is usually empty by that time.<lb/>
There will also be parking on the other side where the Elm Street<lb/>
Gymnasium is currently Mize also added "If we do build in the<lb/>
Mendcnhall area, (in the current parking lot) we would build a parking<lb/>
deck to make up for the 200 spaces that would be lost<lb/>
In order for the project to get underway it must first be approved<lb/>
See IRS, page 12<lb/>
Basketball coaches look for new players<lb/>
Evaluate prospective players before early signing period<lb/>
By Doug Morris<lb/>
Sports Fditor<lb/>
Basketball coaches Chris Ben-<lb/>
etti, Scott Lewis and Mike Steele<lb/>
left July 4 to begin evaluating<lb/>
players who they will try to get to<lb/>
sign with ECU later this year "This<lb/>
period is an evaluation period<lb/>
said Benetti, a full-time assistant<lb/>
coach with ECU'sbasketball team.<lb/>
"I can't say a word. I ran sit on the<lb/>
sideline. All lcandoisevaluateor<lb/>
watch. Then in the contract pe-<lb/>
riod, we can actually talk to them.<lb/>
"Eachcoachhashisown tech-<lb/>
nique he explained. "There's<lb/>
not one set method that's going to<lb/>
get you a player. It's such an<lb/>
imperfect science, but it's the most<lb/>
important thing we do, because<lb/>
there's no doubt, the better play-<lb/>
ers make the better team. Better<lb/>
players make you a better coach-<lb/>
ing staff as well, and we're all<lb/>
chasing after that great player. A<lb/>
bunch of Blue Edwards running<lb/>
around, that's what we need<lb/>
Benetti said that high school<lb/>
students are under a great deal of<lb/>
pressure until they sign with a<lb/>
college. "There are some players<lb/>
that are getting mail twice a day<lb/>
from schools. Bill Freider, he was<lb/>
at Michigan, now he's at Arizona<lb/>
State. He has the reputation that<lb/>
he swamps the kid. He'll call two<lb/>
or three timesa day until they'll fi-<lb/>
nally say 'Coach Freider, I don't<lb/>
want you to call me anymore, I'm<lb/>
comming to your school<lb/>
However, according to Ben-<lb/>
etti, this kind of pressure is com-<lb/>
mon around here also. "One re-<lb/>
cruit, and 1 can't mention hisna me,<lb/>
but his mother was so tired of an-<lb/>
swering the phone and having it<lb/>
be for her son, she got him a pri-<lb/>
vate line until he makes his deci-<lb/>
sion where he's going to go to<lb/>
school. You hear stories like that<lb/>
and I guess thats how coaches<lb/>
write books later on.<lb/>
"I would say, on average, and<lb/>
this is a safe average, every one of<lb/>
thekidsonour list arebeingcalled<lb/>
by between 25 and 100 schools,<lb/>
and sometimes they won't even<lb/>
know who's called them there will<lb/>
be so many phone calls<lb/>
Benetti explained how ECU<lb/>
does its recruiting. 'Three of us<lb/>
go out said Benetti, "What we<lb/>
try to do is, Scotty and I, the two<lb/>
assistants, we'll go to different<lb/>
places. Now what we'll do is<lb/>
coordinate where we're going to<lb/>
meet three times during the month<lb/>
because we're going to be gone<lb/>
roughly 30 days.<lb/>
"Aboutevery week to lOdays,<lb/>
Scotty and I are going to meet<lb/>
because what we're doing is we're<lb/>
not just going out and looking<lb/>
blankly, we're actually following<lb/>
certain players that we've talked<lb/>
to for some of them as many as<lb/>
three years. Others, maybe we<lb/>
just got into contact with them last<lb/>
season, but we're going to follow<lb/>
their progress and what we're<lb/>
trying to do is to find who's better<lb/>
and who do we want<lb/>
According to Benetti, the two<lb/>
assistant coaches do the investiga-<lb/>
tive work and then tell Steele<lb/>
where he needs to go. "We'll see<lb/>
Coach Steele more than we see<lb/>
each other<lb/>
Benetti said that catching up<lb/>
with the players he needs to find<lb/>
can sometimes be tough. "You<lb/>
know what camps they're going<lb/>
to, and that's just the national<lb/>
camps, that has nothing to do with<lb/>
the summer leagues that are going<lb/>
on, or just even in the outside play-<lb/>
grounds. You know 'where are<lb/>
you going to play tonight, well,<lb/>
I'm going to play down on fifth<lb/>
and Elm Street at eight o'clock'<lb/>
See Players, page 12<lb/>
Pirate coach<lb/>
explains<lb/>
NCAA rules<lb/>
By Doug Morris<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Chris Benetti<lb/>
Germany does well in Tour<lb/>
de France and world cup<lb/>
Will he choke?<lb/>
, W ertltKa� names an summer The final game to determine the champion<lb/>
asss zstztssssx - � ��<lb/>
BESANCON, France (AP) �<lb/>
Olaf Ludwig has two reasons to<lb/>
celebrate.<lb/>
On Sunday afternoon, he<lb/>
became the first East German to<lb/>
win a stage in the Tour de France.<lb/>
East Germans are racing in the<lb/>
famed cycling event for the first<lb/>
time, and Ludwig, the Olympic<lb/>
champion in the road race, is<lb/>
making an impression.<lb/>
On Sunday evening, he<lb/>
watched West Germany beat<lb/>
Argentina to win the World Cup<lb/>
in soccer. Ludwig said that he<lb/>
wanted West Germany to win as<lb/>
unification approaches.<lb/>
Ludwig was followed across<lb/>
the finish line in the eighth stage<lb/>
from Epinal to Besancon by Johan<lb/>
Museeuw of Belgium and Ron<lb/>
Kiefel of the United States.<lb/>
Ludwig sprinted across the<lb/>
finish line at the front of a group of<lb/>
14 riders who had broken away<lb/>
from the main pack.<lb/>
Sunday, the tour settled down<lb/>
after Saturday's time trial. Raul<lb/>
Alcala of Mexico won that impres-<lb/>
sively to leap in contention while<lb/>
Greg LeMond, the favorite, was<lb/>
just fifth, placed 14th there.<lb/>
Overall Ronan Pensec of<lb/>
France is 17 seconds behind Steve<lb/>
Bauer. Italian ClaudioChiappucci<lb/>
is third at 1:07 back. Alcala is fifth<lb/>
at:19 with LeMond seventh, trail-<lb/>
ing by 10:09.<lb/>
The rules set by the NCAA<lb/>
that govern the recruiting of play-<lb/>
ers can be very complicated.<lb/>
According to ChrisBenetti, A full-<lb/>
time assistant coach of ECU's<lb/>
basketball team, "Even the coaches<lb/>
don't understand all these rules<lb/>
The rules are layed out in the<lb/>
NCAA Manual. Benetti said, "This<lb/>
is like our bible as far as the dates<lb/>
the NCAA gives us, when we can<lb/>
and can't recruit. Then in the<lb/>
contact period, we can actually<lb/>
talk to them<lb/>
There are only three people<lb/>
who are allowed to recruit play-<lb/>
ers: the head-coach and the two<lb/>
full time assistants. "That's what s<lb/>
allowed by the NCAA. Coach<lb/>
Steelecan go because he's the heao.<lb/>
coach, and then you can add<lb/>
myself and Scott Lewis, the other<lb/>
full-timer<lb/>
Benetti said that the distinc-<lb/>
tion between full time and part<lb/>
time is purely organizational. "It<lb/>
has nothing to do with the hours<lb/>
that you work. It's designated by<lb/>
the NCAA. A lot of people want<lb/>
to change the wording, like 'on-<lb/>
campuscoach' instead of a recruit-<lb/>
ing coachorafull-tirnecoach. Full-<lb/>
time means we can go out on the<lb/>
road and recruit<lb/>
Recruiting is divided up into<lb/>
four separate periods: the evalu-<lb/>
ation period, the contact period,<lb/>
the quiet period, and the dead<lb/>
period. There are only a few times<lb/>
when coaches are allowed to re-<lb/>
cruit players.<lb/>
Benetti stressed that this pe-<lb/>
riod of time is important. "It used<lb/>
to be an unlimited amount of time<lb/>
you could recruit, and now if s<lb/>
very specific. You'vegotl60days<lb/>
to go out and recruit" he said.<lb/>
During the evaluation period,<lb/>
the coaches can only watch the<lb/>
players, lean sit on the sideline<lb/>
See Rules, page 12<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0013"/><lb/>
12 The East Carolinian, July 11,1990<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
West Germany wins World Cup, 1-0<lb/>
The World Cup ended Sunday when West Germany's Andreas<lb/>
Brehme made a penalty kick with six minutes to play to give his team<lb/>
a 1-0 victory against defending champion Argentina. Both teams ad-<lb/>
vanced to the final by winning penalty-kick shootouts. It was the first<lb/>
shutout in a final. Argentina got only one shot on goal.<lb/>
Edberg claims second Wimbledon title<lb/>
No. 3 Stefan Edberg notched his second men's Wimbledon title,<lb/>
dethroning No. 2 Becker e-2, b-2,3-6,3-6,6-4 in Sunday's final. Edberg<lb/>
won his first title two years ago, defeating Becker in the final. Jana<lb/>
Movotna and Helena Sukova won their second women's doubles title<lb/>
in a row and Tom Gullikson successfully defended his 35-and-over title<lb/>
Sunday against his twin brother, Tim.<lb/>
Watkins wins tournament by five strokes<lb/>
Lanny Wadkins, playing 50 miles from his native Richmond, Va set<lb/>
a tournament record at IS-under-par 266 to win the Anheuser-Busch<lb/>
Golf Classic Sunday in Williamsburg, Va. Wadkins, who hadn't won<lb/>
since the 1988 Colonial National Invitation, finished five strokes ahead<lb/>
of runner-up Larry Mie in hislth PGA Tour victory.<lb/>
Sullivan wins Grand Prix after pit fire<lb/>
Danny Sullivan won Sunday's Cleveland Grand Prix after a pit fire<lb/>
put race leader Al Unser I r and two of his crew members out of the race<lb/>
and into hospitals. Defending champion Emerson Fittipaldi was third<lb/>
and Mario Andretti, the final driver on the lead lap, was fourth. One lap<lb/>
back were lohn Andretti and 1990 Indianapolis 500 winner Arie<lb/>
Luyendyk.<lb/>
Harvard triumphant in Henly Regatta<lb/>
1 larvard University's varsity heavyweight eight rowing team turned<lb/>
in one of its finest performances of this season at the Henley Royal<lb/>
Regatta in England. Harvard's three-length victory Sunday against<lb/>
London University won the prestigious Ladies' Tlate in six minutes, 36<lb/>
seconds. Last year, Harvard's varsity heavyweight eight team reached<lb/>
the finals but lost in a re-row.<lb/>
Charlotte getting prepared for the NFL<lb/>
Lawvcrs for the city of Charlotte, N.C and the Richardson Sport<lb/>
Group say they are dose to ironing out final details for bringing an NIL<lb/>
stadium to Charlotte. This week, they plan to show the 120-page<lb/>
agreement to the City Council, which will vote on the plans July 23.<lb/>
Spartanburg, S.C, businessman Jerry Richardson and his son Mark<lb/>
want the 70,000-seat stadium ready for 1992.<lb/>
Committee selects sites for tournament<lb/>
The Women's Basketball Committee of the NCAA selected the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Iowa in Iowa Otv as a site of one of four regionals for the 1993<lb/>
Division 1 basketball championships. Other sites: Virginia Common-<lb/>
wealth (Richmond), Stephen E. Austin (Nacogdochcs, Texas) and<lb/>
Montana (Missoula).<lb/>
Fans greet West German team and riot<lb/>
Tens of thousands of fans greeted West Germany's World Cup cham-<lb/>
pions Monday, a day after four people were killed and hundreds<lb/>
injured alter jubilant street celebrations turned violent. More than 120<lb/>
people were arrested and at least 60 police officers were among the<lb/>
injured. The wild celebrations began moments after West Germany's 1 -<lb/>
0 victory against Argentina in Sunday's final at Rome.<lb/>
Lendl maintains number one ranking<lb/>
Despite his Wimbledon loss, Ivan Lendl retained his No. 1 world<lb/>
ranking in men's tennis Monday. Sweden's Stefan Edberg, who beat<lb/>
Lendl in a semifinal and Boris Becker in the final, is No. 2, ahead of<lb/>
Becker.<lb/>
Torre mentioned for St. Louis manager<lb/>
Joe Torre said Monday he would be willing to listen to the St. Louis<lb/>
Cardinals if they approach him about becoming manager. Torre is a<lb/>
broadcaster for the California Angels. He has managed the New York<lb/>
Mets and Atlanta Braves and was a player for the Cardinals. He and<lb/>
former Cardinals coach and Houston manager Hal Lanier have been<lb/>
mentioned as possibilities for the Cards job.<lb/>
Lemieux to have back surgery today<lb/>
Mario Lemieux of the Pittsburgh Penguins will have part of a hcrni-<lb/>
atcd disk removed Wednesday, but doctors say there is a 90 percent<lb/>
chance he will be ready to play in the Penguins' season opener Oct. 4.<lb/>
Lemieux decided on surgery after back pain, which hampered him<lb/>
throughout the 1989-90 National Hockey League season and kept him<lb/>
out of 21 games, persisted this summer.<lb/>
CCopyng to 1490. USA hHiA VMff CaUrjc InprmMxm Network.<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
Players<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
and there's a lot of recruiting that<lb/>
goes on that way. It's not just the<lb/>
camps that you hear about<lb/>
Benetti said that there is more<lb/>
to recruiting than just talking to<lb/>
the players. "Also when you're<lb/>
on the road, you've got to get a<lb/>
good feel for who else is recruiting<lb/>
that person. All of a sudden, if the<lb/>
kid has really improved and you<lb/>
lookand there's Duke, North Caro-<lb/>
lina and Syracuse and they're<lb/>
going to battle each other for him,<lb/>
well, thechance is, not to say you're<lb/>
never going to get a player like<lb/>
that, but chances are that his inter-<lb/>
ests maybe have changed<lb/>
Although they like to be able<lb/>
to stay in the state, Benetti said<lb/>
that sometimes that is not pos-<lb/>
sible. "It depends on what our<lb/>
needsareand what the state has to<lb/>
offer. The last couple of years<lb/>
we've gotten players form 5'9 to<lb/>
about 6'6. It's not a good year in<lb/>
the state for players 67 and over.<lb/>
There's just not that many, and<lb/>
when you take into account that<lb/>
m���! S?<lb/>
Golf s overtime champs<lb/>
Golfers who have won the most PGA Tour<lb/>
tournament playoffs: <lb/>
Player Wins <lb/>
Arnold Palmer 114<lb/>
JackNfckiaus 113<lb/>
mm<lb/>
there's 13 Division I schools in<lb/>
North Carolina, practically all of<lb/>
us need bigger players and all of<lb/>
us need better players, but the size<lb/>
iswhatalotoftherecruitingbattlcs<lb/>
are over<lb/>
Benetti said that the recruit-<lb/>
ing this year is very important to<lb/>
next year's team. "We're losing<lb/>
three seniors that played on the<lb/>
inside for us. Stanley Love has<lb/>
been with us for four years. He<lb/>
was one of our first recruits. Dar-<lb/>
ryl Overton and Tim Brown: there<lb/>
are three players that we're going<lb/>
to count on heavily this year to<lb/>
guard the inside he said.<lb/>
"You try to replace what you<lb/>
lose Benetti explained, "We've<lb/>
got an incoming recruit, Joe Bright-<lb/>
well. He's 6'7, maybe closer to 6'8.<lb/>
He's never played for us, but we're<lb/>
just going to speculate that he's<lb/>
going to be pretty good. Issac<lb/>
Copeland in the sophomores, at<lb/>
6'8: he got a lot of minutes as a<lb/>
freshman last year, but then you<lb/>
don't see any 6'10s; you don't see<lb/>
any 6' 11 s up there<lb/>
Still, Benetti said that they do<lb/>
have some leeway in their recruit-<lb/>
ing this year 'This is the first year<lb/>
where if they (the recruits) can<lb/>
come in and beat some of those<lb/>
other players out, then we know<lb/>
we've done a good job of recruit-<lb/>
ing. If they have to wait their turn,<lb/>
then that's pretty good too be-<lb/>
cause we feel like we've got some<lb/>
pretty good players now in the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
"Ike Copeland is only going<lb/>
to get better, and he's a real bright<lb/>
spot in our program. For us to<lb/>
bring in somebody that is gomgo<lb/>
to beat Ike out, if we do that then<lb/>
asa recruiter, we'vedoneour job<lb/>
Benetti said that teams should<lb/>
try to improve every year. How-<lb/>
ever, he said that this can be hard<lb/>
to do. "After a while, it gets hard,<lb/>
like a North Carolina or a Duke.<lb/>
Sometimes it's not that easy to<lb/>
replace a Danny Ferry or a Chris-<lb/>
tian Latncr. Some programs can<lb/>
bring in players like that every<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"For us, I think our goal is to<lb/>
replace a Blue Edwards. If we can<lb/>
get a better player than what Blue<lb/>
was for us, then we've done a<lb/>
great job in the recruiting. Some<lb/>
people think you'll never get<lb/>
another Blue Edwards, but that's<lb/>
our Job<lb/>
According to Benetti, Ed-<lb/>
wards is still helping ECU basket-<lb/>
ball, even though he is no longer<lb/>
playing. "When You've got a Blue<lb/>
Edwards that has made it to pro-<lb/>
basketball, any time he steps out<lb/>
on the court and a kid is watching<lb/>
him play and they say 'Blue<lb/>
Edwards � East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity' that sticks in his mind where<lb/>
he really dosen't know you, but at<lb/>
least he's heard from you<lb/>
Benetti said that the reason<lb/>
ECU'srecruitinghasbeeti success-<lb/>
ful so far is because they know:<lb/>
"Whatever advantage you think<lb/>
you can seize ou t there, you try to<lb/>
go for it<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
said Benetti. "Alllcandoisevalu-<lb/>
ate or watch. Then in the contact<lb/>
period we can actually talk to<lb/>
them<lb/>
"During that contact period,<lb/>
they have to allow people into<lb/>
their homes to talk to Mom and<lb/>
Dad. This is the first time legallv<lb/>
we've been able to talk to them<lb/>
face to face unless they come to<lb/>
our campus on what is called an<lb/>
unofficial visit.<lb/>
"If you were a recruit and you<lb/>
came up here to visit with me, I<lb/>
could talk to vou all dav if I wanted.<lb/>
there's no limit to that visit, but<lb/>
the minute you stepped off my<lb/>
campus, if it wasn't a contact pe-<lb/>
ri(xi, all I could sav is hello' to<lb/>
you. Anything other than that<lb/>
would be a recruiting violation.<lb/>
When some schools get into<lb/>
trouble, these are what they vio-<lb/>
late. It's easy to violate one of<lb/>
them unless vou watch thedates<lb/>
During a quiet period, the<lb/>
recruiter can onlv see or talk to a<lb/>
player if that player comes to his<lb/>
campus. During a dead period,<lb/>
students may not make unofficial<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
bv the house. Mize said "it is<lb/>
currently in the second reading in<lb/>
the house and it must pass the<lb/>
third reading before it isapproved.<lb/>
This bill is related to all UNC fa-<lb/>
cilities that have self-liquidating<lb/>
projects, all of these projects have<lb/>
been worked into one bill, one for<lb/>
the house and one for the senate<lb/>
The hours of operation, ac-<lb/>
cording to Mize, are going to be<lb/>
based on the needsdesires of the<lb/>
students "we will be establishing<lb/>
a student board to set the policies,<lb/>
if the students want us to be open<lb/>
from six am until midnight then<lb/>
that's what we will do, weekends<lb/>
are the same way<lb/>
One change that is not going<lb/>
to affect the students is that fac-<lb/>
ulty are going to be required to<lb/>
pay a fee for use of the facility.<lb/>
Mize said: "they will not be re-<lb/>
quired to pay, but if they want to<lb/>
utilize the facility they will have to<lb/>
pay the same thing as the stu-<lb/>
dents. ($70.00 a year)<lb/>
The current facility, Christian-<lb/>
berry Memorial Gymnasium,<lb/>
which has been serving the uni-<lb/>
versity since 151 will thenbeused<lb/>
for health and physical education<lb/>
classrooms.<lb/>
Bv the year 1994 we will hope-<lb/>
fully have a brand new complex in<lb/>
which each student may partici-<lb/>
pate in all of hisher athletic en-<lb/>
deavors. "It could be a reality by<lb/>
1993, 1994 said Mize.<lb/>
visits to the recruiter's campus. In<lb/>
addition, the recruiter can not<lb/>
speak at nor attend an event where<lb/>
a player may be. In both situ-<lb/>
ations, however, the recruiter may<lb/>
send letters and make phone calls<lb/>
to the plaver he is interested in.<lb/>
If a recruiter sees a player<lb/>
during any period other than a<lb/>
contact period, he is limited in<lb/>
what he can say to him. 'They call<lb/>
it the 'bump' rule explained<lb/>
Benetti, "I can bump into you and<lb/>
say 'hello but that's it, that's as<lb/>
far as the conversation can go. It's<lb/>
really funny. If I could get you on<lb/>
a pay phone in that corner, we<lb/>
could talk for an hour. I mean<lb/>
some of the rules seem to be really<lb/>
stupid, but I guess they made the<lb/>
rules because somebody sooner<lb/>
or later has broken them<lb/>
The better the player the ear-<lb/>
lier the recruitingcan start. Imean,<lb/>
there are people who are recruit-<lb/>
ing sixth and seventh graders, and<lb/>
when I say recruiting, that may<lb/>
mean just a phone call every month<lb/>
and a letter every week<lb/>
Benetti also said that he feels<lb/>
some of the rules governing re-<lb/>
cpji ting shoud be stricter, There's<lb/>
no limit (on age) he stated,<lb/>
"That's one of the things I think<lb/>
the NCAA, and thaf s the organi-<lb/>
zation that, of course, makes all of<lb/>
our rules, they're really going to<lb/>
take a look at that because it used<lb/>
to be where if you were recruiting<lb/>
a sophomore, that wasconsidered<lb/>
very early. Now, if you're not<lb/>
talking to that sophomore, you're<lb/>
considered probably late in the<lb/>
recruiting game<lb/>
Larkin<lb/>
Tom Watson $<lb/>
SamSnead I 8<lb/>
B Casper U8<lb/>
Michele D. Thome, Gannett News Service<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
runs, 35 walks and 26 strikeouts<lb/>
and her ERA yvasa .182.<lb/>
Larkin had a designated hit-<lb/>
ter while she played for ECU. She<lb/>
said, 'They would say, 'You have<lb/>
one job and I would get so mad<lb/>
and say. If I'm going to pitch, I<lb/>
want to bat<lb/>
Some of Larkins favorite<lb/>
teams to play were Florida State<lb/>
and University of South Carolina.<lb/>
She said, "I like playing against<lb/>
the tougher teams. It was hard,<lb/>
there was a lot of pressure, but 1<lb/>
guess I felt like I did better<lb/>
Larkin has been told that she<lb/>
does not look like a sof tball player.<lb/>
She said, "It's really funny, when<lb/>
I tell people I'm from Georgia they<lb/>
sayWhat are you doing up here?'<lb/>
and I say, 'I got recruited for soft-<lb/>
ball' and they always say, Toil<lb/>
play softball? You don't lood like<lb/>
a softball player I just laugh<lb/>
Larkin does not have any fu-<lb/>
ture plans to play softball. She<lb/>
claims there is "nothing more I<lb/>
can do with it She said, "I might<lb/>
coach, like a little girls team, for<lb/>
little league<lb/>
Larkin, a communications<lb/>
major focusing on management,<lb/>
wants to go into convention sales.<lb/>
She has an internship at Walt<lb/>
Disney World doing convention<lb/>
sales. �<lb/>
She said, "I'm hoping it will<lb/>
turn into something permanent,<lb/>
but if I can't stay on, I am going to<lb/>
try to go to graduate school at<lb/>
Florida State or Colorado State<lb/>
Larkin was a life guard down<lb/>
in Florida two yearsago and claims<lb/>
she "fell in love with it She also<lb/>
saidThey are opening a Disney<lb/>
World outside of Paris. To work<lb/>
in Paris and work for Disney<lb/>
would be a dream come true<lb/>
Sports Writers'<lb/>
meeting today<lb/>
at two p.m.<lb/>
Be there.<lb/>
EASTERN CARDIOLOGY, P.A.<lb/>
Eric B. Carlson, M.D.<lb/>
is pleased to announce<lb/>
the association of<lb/>
M. Earl Heard III, M.D.<lb/>
in the practice of Cardiology<lb/>
and Electrophysiology<lb/>
Starting July 2, 1990<lb/>
at<lb/>
Suite 10 - Medical Pavilion<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
(919) 757-1000<lb/>
The Hilton<lb/>
207 S. W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(919) 355-5000<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
Rio s Summer<lb/>
Concert Series<lb/>
Featuring your<lb/>
favorite bands:<lb/>
$ 1.25 Drafts &amp; Other �<lb/>
Drink Specials I<lb/>
This Thursday's Band is:<lb/>
Just Back from L.A. California<lb/>
Impulse Ride<lb/>
UPCOMING BANDS!<lb/>
July 19th Bruce Fryc fie<lb/>
Band<lb/>
July 26th Sec You<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
3 Pair of Paul<lb/>
McCartney tickets<lb/>
to be given away<lb/>
WDLX Live Remote<lb/>
r e 1 a x e d dress<lb/>
code<lb/>
<pb facs="00058220_0014"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>