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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058221_0001"/>
?1je HZnBt QlntBlmxnn<lb/>
Vol. 64 No. 37<lb/>
Wednesday, July 18,1990<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Gantt calls for Helms debate<lb/>
Incumbent dismisses overture as 'dog and pony shows'<lb/>
Samuel J. Wornom III was instated as chairman of the ECU Board<lb/>
of Trustees Friday Also during the board meeting, SGA President<lb/>
Allen M. Thomas was sworn in as a member. (Photo by Tony Rumple<lb/>
? ECU News Bureau)<lb/>
Board elects Wornom to chair<lb/>
By Tim Hampton<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Harvey Gantt, the first black<lb/>
U.S. Senate candidate in North<lb/>
Carolina history, has challenged<lb/>
opponent Jesse Helms to debate<lb/>
their conflicting views on topics<lb/>
such as abortion and defense<lb/>
spending.<lb/>
Before an estimated crowd of<lb/>
150 supporters in Greenville<lb/>
Monday, the Democratic candi-<lb/>
date and former mayor of Char-<lb/>
lotte called upon Helms to engage<lb/>
in public discussions in efforts to<lb/>
give, voters a clearer view of where<lb/>
the candidates stand on issues.<lb/>
But Helms said he won't talk<lb/>
turkey and dismissed the poten-<lb/>
tial debates as "dog and pony<lb/>
shows according to the Associ-<lb/>
ated Press. The three-term Senator<lb/>
and former general manager of<lb/>
WRAL-TV was speaking to the<lb/>
National Turkey Federation in<lb/>
Ashevillc as part of his campaign<lb/>
swing this week.<lb/>
In building anticipation for the<lb/>
November election, Gantt and<lb/>
many in the Democratic Party<lb/>
believe the world's eyes will be on<lb/>
the Senate race pitting the pro-<lb/>
gress) ve (?i ntt against the reputed<lb/>
ultra-conservative Republican<lb/>
11 elms.<lb/>
"1 am convinced that North<lb/>
Carolina i going to make a state-<lb/>
ment to the world this year Gantt<lb/>
said in front of the Pitt County<lb/>
Court House during what he<lb/>
termed a "bam-stormmg tour" oi<lb/>
eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Gantt said he remains posi-<lb/>
tive on the cohesion of the Demo-<lb/>
cratic Party in the aftermath of the<lb/>
June 6 run-off with Southport dis-<lb/>
trict attorney Mike Easley.<lb/>
Unlike 1984 candidate Jim<lb/>
1 Junt, Gantt hasn't been forced to<lb/>
gather party unity. "I haven't had<lb/>
to spend time repairing the<lb/>
wounds of our party<lb/>
Former Senator and staunch<lb/>
liberal George McGovcm said in<lb/>
June that Gantt has a better chance<lb/>
of defeating 1 Jelms than any of the<lb/>
past Democratic candidates.<lb/>
"It will be a classic test of the<lb/>
far-right conservative against the<lb/>
liberal democrat, all the elements<lb/>
of a real drama are there<lb/>
McGovcrn said after a lecture stop<lb/>
at ECU on June 30.<lb/>
Monday, Gantt said Helms'<lb/>
stand on abortion was too rigid<lb/>
and too extremist. In other dis-<lb/>
agreement of ideology between the<lb/>
challenger and imcumbent, Gantt<lb/>
said Congress should work fast to<lb/>
cut military spending as a means<lb/>
of reducing the federal deficit.<lb/>
Issucsarenotthconlydispari-<lb/>
ticsamongst theGanttand Helms'<lb/>
camps. Helms hasyieldcd 10 times<lb/>
the amount of campaign funds,<lb/>
according to Federal Election<lb/>
Commission reports released<lb/>
Monday to the AP. As of June 30,<lb/>
Helms had raised $7.9 million<lb/>
while Gantt collected $808,000 ?<lb/>
which doesn't surpass a record-<lb/>
bteakingone-day$1 million fund-<lb/>
raiser for Helms in Charlotte last<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Helms'followers are tradition-<lb/>
ally loyal in giving campaign<lb/>
money. In 1984, Helms raised a<lb/>
record amount for a Congressional<lb/>
election from mostly out of state<lb/>
conservatives. As forecasters pre-<lb/>
dict another bankroll campaign for<lb/>
Helms, Gantt supporters believe<lb/>
the democrat's grassroots appeal<lb/>
will outduel an campaign based<lb/>
on commercialization.<lb/>
DNA research to aid marine life, man<lb/>
From Staff Reports<lb/>
During Friday's ECU Board of<lb/>
Trustees meeting, Samuel J. Wor-<lb/>
nom III became the chairman of<lb/>
the university's governing body.<lb/>
Wornom, a Sanford business-<lb/>
man, was elected to a one-year<lb/>
term and replaces Greenville resi-<lb/>
dent Max Ray lovner, who was<lb/>
ineligible tor re-election to the post<lb/>
Wornom, a lQ- ECU gradu-<lb/>
ate, was appointed to the board by<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
Board of Governors. He is presi-<lb/>
dent of Nouveau Investments Inc.<lb/>
Allen M. Thomas was swor-<lb/>
ned in as the onlv active student<lb/>
on the board. Thomas is the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Association<lb/>
president of ECU.<lb/>
Former chairman oyner will<lb/>
remain on the board atter serving<lb/>
two terms at the head post.<lb/>
By Elizabeth Donaghy<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
DNA research at ECU is suc-<lb/>
cessfully providing new break-<lb/>
throughs in improving the growth<lb/>
and survival of fish, crabs, and<lb/>
oysters in an effort to help related<lb/>
commercial industries as well as<lb/>
deal with other world problems.<lb/>
World hunger and malnutri-<lb/>
tion is one problem that DNA re-<lb/>
search will help case. Through<lb/>
these studies, ECU Scientists may<lb/>
give information about the man-<lb/>
aging and harvesting of sea life in<lb/>
order to increase abundance.<lb/>
Another effort to increase<lb/>
abundance is mitochondrial DNA<lb/>
"fingerprinting which is a tech-<lb/>
nique used to trace the natural<lb/>
migration of fish as well as indi-<lb/>
cate the success in reaching adult-<lb/>
hood. This abundance also bene-<lb/>
fits commercial industries that<lb/>
depend on the sea, sounds and<lb/>
rivers.<lb/>
The Molecular BiologyBio-<lb/>
technology Research and Training<lb/>
Program in ECU's Department of<lb/>
Biology began in 1982, and has<lb/>
since undergone extensive course<lb/>
revision and initiation of new<lb/>
courses, as well as acquiring new<lb/>
teaching and research facilities.<lb/>
Funds obtained through<lb/>
grants given by the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Biotechnology Center have<lb/>
made the success of the biotech-<lb/>
nology program possible. The<lb/>
Biology department established an<lb/>
undergraduate area of concentra-<lb/>
tion in molecular biologybiotech-<lb/>
nology, and this year a Master of<lb/>
Science in Molecular Biology<lb/>
Biotechnology has been approved.<lb/>
This degree program is rare among<lb/>
North Carolina'shigher education<lb/>
institutions.<lb/>
High school students have<lb/>
even shown an interest in this<lb/>
program by sending in over 400<lb/>
requests for information about the<lb/>
undergraduate degree. ECU also<lb/>
plans to start an exchange pro-<lb/>
gram with both faculty and stu-<lb/>
dents to companies and institu-<lb/>
tions in Italy, England, and Swit-<lb/>
zerland.<lb/>
See DNA, page 3<lb/>
Pitt County faces landfill<lb/>
delimma in nea<lb/>
fi<lb/>
By Analise Craig<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Pitt County's garbage prob-<lb/>
lem is growing to mammoth pro-<lb/>
portions and will reach a crisis<lb/>
state when tighter mandates from<lb/>
Raleigh concerning waste reduc-<lb/>
tion go into effect by 1993.<lb/>
A Study bv Renew America<lb/>
estimates more than one half the<lb/>
citiesin America will exhaust their<lb/>
current landfills by 1990. Pitt<lb/>
County is not far behind these<lb/>
cents. No one. no industry will<lb/>
receive tax breaks, even it they<lb/>
recycle. They will have to pay for<lb/>
the use of the landfill Sutton<lb/>
added, "This program will be run<lb/>
by the book<lb/>
Sutton believes that people<lb/>
oversimplify solid waste manage-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"At this point there is no way<lb/>
to determine which part of solid<lb/>
waste management is more im-<lb/>
portant. It's all important says<lb/>
Sutton.<lb/>
Pitt County'sprogram focuses<lb/>
statistics. The landfill on Allen<lb/>
Road, opened in 1974, is expected on collection, landfill, and recy-<lb/>
to close in 1993. cling.<lb/>
"The amount of trash put in Most solid waste is collected<lb/>
the landfill in a six year period was by the county while smaller mu<lb/>
would save tapavers$60forevery<lb/>
200 pounds collected.<lb/>
Recycling is a small part oi<lb/>
solid waste management. But<lb/>
instead of being voluntary, it could<lb/>
become mandatory.<lb/>
"The main reasons why recy-<lb/>
cling is important are that separat-<lb/>
ing trash at the dump sites is get-<lb/>
ting hectic and Senate Bill 111 has<lb/>
to be met says Sutton.<lb/>
The blunt of this whole topic<lb/>
evolves around North Carolina<lb/>
Senate Bill 111, enacted in 1989 to<lb/>
improve the management of solid<lb/>
waste in counties statewide. The<lb/>
equivalent to that of ten years,<lb/>
Gary Sutton, solid waste coordi-<lb/>
nator of the Pitt County Engineer-<lb/>
ing Department, said.<lb/>
Faced with closing the current<lb/>
landfill and the enormous cost of<lb/>
building a new one to meet strict<lb/>
EPA regulations, Pitt County has<lb/>
Bill lists policies and goals, out-<lb/>
lines the state solid waste manage-<lb/>
ment plan and gives each county<lb/>
nicipalities and heavily populated the power to determine local solid<lb/>
areas outside limits of municipal waste management fees.<lb/>
The Pitt County dump is quickly filling. With the recent passage of state laws designed to cut down on solid<lb/>
waste, maybe the county's next landfill - planned for 1993 - will be the last (Photo by Celeste Hoffman ?<lb/>
ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
ties use privatecontract collectors.<lb/>
According to a Pitt County Com-<lb/>
missioners' report on collection,<lb/>
the volume of trash dumped into<lb/>
the landfill is broken down as: 32<lb/>
percent being residential, 49 per-<lb/>
sought a solid waste program to cent commercial, and 19 percent<lb/>
prolong thelifeofthefuture landfill industrial.<lb/>
after it is created. Dumping in the<lb/>
landfill will be reflected on tax-<lb/>
payer statements and by tipping<lb/>
fees, fees charged for the disposal<lb/>
of waste into the landfill with be<lb/>
levied in accordance with state la w.<lb/>
"It is all a matter of dollars and<lb/>
Citizens can play a major role<lb/>
in reducing solid waste, and they<lb/>
need not look farther than their<lb/>
own backyard. Sutton said com-<lb/>
posting yard clippings in one's<lb/>
backyard would allow for more<lb/>
space in the landfill and in turn<lb/>
purpose of the Bill is to:<lb/>
"Regulate in the most eco-<lb/>
nomically feasible, cost-effective,<lb/>
and environmentally safe manner<lb/>
the storage, collection, transport,<lb/>
separation, processing, recycling,<lb/>
and d isposal of solid waste in order<lb/>
to protect the public health, safety,<lb/>
and welfare<lb/>
Bill 111 states that all counties<lb/>
must reduce their solid waste 25<lb/>
percent by 1993. Pitt County's<lb/>
recycling program was started<lb/>
three years ago. Public schools<lb/>
See Landfill, page 3<lb/>
Global housing center<lb/>
to open in October<lb/>
By Michelle Castellow<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
the world.<lb/>
According to Dr. Kenneth<lb/>
Carpenter, a construction manage-<lb/>
ment professor of ECU's School of<lb/>
Industry and Technology, an in-<lb/>
dependent non-profit research<lb/>
center to study the concerns of<lb/>
world housing will be established<lb/>
Hey, that's my car!<lb/>
This is what the loss of $50 looks like before ones very eyes. With<lb/>
the help of a wide-angled tense, our rovering photographer caught<lb/>
this sad scene taking place in front of Brewster Building last week.<lb/>
(Photo by J. P. Whitmire ? ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
This fall ECU will sponsor a<lb/>
major conference on the problems<lb/>
of world housing and will also<lb/>
open a center to study the interna-<lb/>
tional housing problems faced by<lb/>
developing countries throughout through the Departmen of Con<lb/>
r ? struction Management at ECU.<lb/>
The goal of the center is to<lb/>
achieve international recognition<lb/>
as an institute concerned with the<lb/>
dilemmas of third-world housing<lb/>
and to gain research assignment<lb/>
from around the US and other<lb/>
developed countries. The center<lb/>
endeavors to promote global<lb/>
awareness of international shel-<lb/>
tering conditions and through<lb/>
research, education and interna-<lb/>
tional support, find solutions to<lb/>
third-world sheltering problems.<lb/>
The Global Shelter Confer-<lb/>
ence, to be held October 15-16 will<lb/>
initiate the opening of the Global<lb/>
Housing Research Center.<lb/>
Approximately one billion<lb/>
people live without adequate<lb/>
See Housing, page 3<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
The Louisiana abortion<lb/>
Bill is filled with flaws, and<lb/>
tough decisions are going<lb/>
to have to be made.<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
Personals, For Sale,<lb/>
Help Wanted, For Rent<lb/>
and Services Rendered<lb/>
Comics6<lb/>
State and Nation7<lb/>
Voters will voice con-<lb/>
cern over recent savings<lb/>
and loan mess at the vot-<lb/>
ing booths<lb/>
Features8<lb/>
Caroline Cusick re-<lb/>
views 'Jetsons: The Movie'<lb/>
Sports13<lb/>
UNC Board of Gover-<lb/>
nors denies UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill exemption from drug<lb/>
testing<lb/>
<pb facs="00058221_0002"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
2 The East Carolinian, July 18,1990<lb/>
ECU Briefs<lb/>
ECU geologists to conduct workshop<lb/>
A teachers' workshop on the "Mineral and Rock Commodities of<lb/>
N.C will be held July 30-31 at ECU.<lb/>
Laboratory and lecture sessions on the geology and mineral re-<lb/>
sources associated with the geologic provinces of N.C. will be included<lb/>
in the program. A field trip to collect fossils and minerals is also<lb/>
planned.<lb/>
Drs. Charles Q. Brown and Richard Spruill, ECU geologists, will<lb/>
conduct the sessions.<lb/>
The workshop is open to 20 teachers of science at any grade level.<lb/>
Teachers who complete the program will receive renewal credit, a sti-<lb/>
pend and materials that can be used in their classrooms.<lb/>
For more information contact the ECU ScienceMathematics<lb/>
EducationCenter,ECU,Grcenville,N.C27858-4353ortelephone(919)<lb/>
757-6885.<lb/>
The program is sponsored by the ECU Science and Mathematics<lb/>
Education Center, the N.C. Mining Commission and the ECU Depart-<lb/>
ment of Geology.<lb/>
English faculty aids in report writing<lb/>
"Writing Reports That Work a two-session workshop for super-<lb/>
visors and managers "who don't have time to attend workshops will<lb/>
be held at ECU July 24 and 26 from 1 to 4 p.m.<lb/>
Dr. o Allen of the ECU English faculty will lead the sessions, which<lb/>
are scheduled for Room 1028 of the General Classroom Building.<lb/>
Each session will cover aspectsof writing effective, accurate reports<lb/>
? general principles, reader analysis, researching for information,<lb/>
elements of the report and report format.<lb/>
The workshop's purpose is not to make report writing "easy" for<lb/>
the participants, but to help them avoid wasting effort and time in<lb/>
writing poor reports, which can be "incomplete, inaccurate or mislead-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Further information is available from the ECU Division of Continu-<lb/>
ing Education, Erwin Hall, ECU, Greenville, N.C, 27858. Registration<lb/>
can be completed in person, by mail, by FAX (757-4350) or by telephone<lb/>
(757-6143).<lb/>
High school students attend Ventures<lb/>
Ninety-nine high school students from across the state are attend-<lb/>
ing the five-week Summer Ventures in Science and Mathematics pro-<lb/>
gram at ECU.<lb/>
Summer Ventures is an enrichment program for rising high school<lb/>
juniors and seniors. It is held annually at ECU and at five other<lb/>
universities to give the students intensive study in science and mathe-<lb/>
matics.<lb/>
Admission to the program isbased on academic ability and interest<lb/>
in science and mathematics.<lb/>
While on campus the students attend classes designed especially<lb/>
for them, according to Dr. Floyd E. Matthcis, the program's director.<lb/>
Mattheis said the classes go beyond the traditional boundaries of high<lb/>
school science and mathematics.<lb/>
Specifically they learn experimental design, laboratory skills, in-<lb/>
strumentation, mathematical modeling, strategies in mathematical<lb/>
problem solving and exploratory data analysis. Subjects taught are<lb/>
analytical chemistry, archaeology, computer techniques in the chemis-<lb/>
try lab, logic programming, matrix algebra, medicine, phystCS, problem<lb/>
solving and number theory and geometry.<lb/>
National Campus Clips<lb/>
Over 800 are expected to attend the<lb/>
National Public Relations seminar<lb/>
More than 800 superintendents, school board members, principals,<lb/>
teachers, and political and business leaders will attend the National<lb/>
Public Relations Association's annual seminar July 15-19 in Washing-<lb/>
ton, D.C.<lb/>
The leaders will discuss issues surrounding "A Capital Investment;<lb/>
Education's Future Under Construction Virginia Gov. L. Douglas<lb/>
Wilder, who is leading the push.for equal education spending in<lb/>
Virginia, will speak Julyl7 at the NPRA's human relations luncheon.<lb/>
More than 100 speakers representing top school and public rela-<lb/>
tions professionals will address crisis management, recruiting minori-<lb/>
ties, marketing schools and finance elections.<lb/>
Cnpynta 190. USA TODAY.Appk OtHtp llnrwuaumKelwk<lb/>
Crime Report<lb/>
Knowledge of First Aid can make<lb/>
a big difference in an emergency<lb/>
By Suzanne Kellerman<lb/>
Student Health Service<lb/>
What is First Aid? First Aid is<lb/>
immediate care for an injury or<lb/>
illness. Emergency minutes, even<lb/>
seconds can mean the difference<lb/>
between life and death. First Aid<lb/>
fills a "time gap" until medical<lb/>
help arrives. Knowing and ad-<lb/>
ministering First Aid can save a<lb/>
life, relieve pain and prevent fur-<lb/>
ther injuries.<lb/>
Emergency situations are<lb/>
unpredictable and can happen<lb/>
anywhere, at any time, to anyone.<lb/>
Accidents are the leading cause of<lb/>
death among those aged 1 to 44.<lb/>
The time factor in many accidents<lb/>
and sudden illness is critical.<lb/>
People who know First Aid are<lb/>
better able to react calmly and<lb/>
skillfully in emergency situations.<lb/>
Every emergency situation is<lb/>
unique. The First Aid that is<lb/>
administered will depend on the<lb/>
tvpe and severity of the injury or<lb/>
illness, where it occurs, how many<lb/>
victims, etc. But the following<lb/>
rules hold true in anv emergency.<lb/>
Two ECU students banned from<lb/>
library due to lewd sexual conduct<lb/>
July 9<lb/>
2054 ? An officer checked the elevator at Tyler Residence 1 lall in<lb/>
reference to several people stuck and beginning to panic.<lb/>
2241 ?Two officers responded to the area of Green Residence Hall<lb/>
in reference to subjects causing a disturbance. They were identified as<lb/>
transfer students and were advised to leave the area.<lb/>
July 10<lb/>
2352 ? Two officers responded to the power plant in reference to<lb/>
suspicious subjects in the parking lot. They were gone on arrival.<lb/>
July 11<lb/>
1117 ? An officer responded to a call from a staff member in Joyner<lb/>
Library in reference to two subjects involved in lewd sexual conduct.<lb/>
They were banned from the library.<lb/>
July 12<lb/>
0155 ? Two of ficers checked on an intoxicated male at the gate near<lb/>
Fifth and Library streets. He was identified as a student and issued a<lb/>
campus citation for public intoxication. A taxi was called to transport<lb/>
him home.<lb/>
0658 ? An officer responded on scene to an intoxicated subject<lb/>
south of Mendenhall. He was issued a state citation for urinating in<lb/>
public.<lb/>
0047 ? An officer stopped a vehicle for a stop light violation.<lb/>
July 13<lb/>
0233 ? All bluelight phones were checked and found in working<lb/>
condition.<lb/>
July 14<lb/>
0141 ? An officer was east of Umstead Residence Hall in reference<lb/>
to a suspicious subject. The subject was intoxicated and had lost his<lb/>
bearing trying to get home from campus.<lb/>
July 15<lb/>
0237 ? Three officers went to Hardee's in reference to an assault.<lb/>
July 16<lb/>
0031 ? Two officers went to Cotten Residence Hall lobby in refer-<lb/>
ence to female screams. Subjects were gone upon arrival.<lb/>
The Crimt Hrport u takr from nffirlml TCU Pw?Hf S?frl loft<lb/>
Give urgent care first. Urgent<lb/>
care means taking care of any life<lb/>
threatening situations. A good rule<lb/>
to follow isdo not move the victim<lb/>
unless it is absolutely necessary.<lb/>
The victim may have a spinal cord<lb/>
injury and it is best not to move<lb/>
unless the victim will be further<lb/>
endangered by the surroundings.<lb/>
After you have determined that<lb/>
you are not in a dangerous situ-<lb/>
ation:<lb/>
? check victimsconsciousness<lb/>
? check breathing and heart-<lb/>
beat<lb/>
? restoreand maintain brea th-<lb/>
ing and heartbeat if necessary<lb/>
? control heavy bleeding<lb/>
? treat for poisoning<lb/>
? treat for shock<lb/>
? examine the person care-<lb/>
fully for other signs of injury.<lb/>
If you are the only person at<lb/>
the scene of an emergency, get<lb/>
help only after giving urgent care.<lb/>
If someone else is on the scene<lb/>
have that person call 911 or an-<lb/>
other emergency number imme-<lb/>
diately.<lb/>
It is important to know your<lb/>
limits as a first aider. Your job is to<lb/>
maintain the victims condition<lb/>
until professional help arrives. Do<lb/>
only what you are qualified to do.<lb/>
For instance, do not try to give<lb/>
CPR unless you have been trained.<lb/>
Learning First Aid and emer-<lb/>
gency procedures can help save<lb/>
lives. For more information on<lb/>
classes offered in the community<lb/>
call your local American Red Cross<lb/>
office at 752-4222.<lb/>
15 on<lb/>
next visit<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
expires 8190<lb/>
Old ftelk HUH).<lb/>
2nd Floor<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
'Design of the Times offers:<lb/>
? Hairstyling, manicures, pedicures, sculptured nails,<lb/>
? tanning, professional electrolysis and professional .  I<lb/>
? makeup artistry in a luxurious atmosphere OJU-UUiU<lb/>
Consultant discusses<lb/>
management problems<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Construction companiesoften<lb/>
sow the seeds of their own fiscal<lb/>
destruction long before they fi-<lb/>
nally bite the dust, an ECU man-<lb/>
agement consultant says.<lb/>
In a study of hundreds of<lb/>
troubled construction firms, Tho-<lb/>
mas C. Schleifer, a visiting lec-<lb/>
turer in construction management,<lb/>
found that failure for most com-<lb/>
panies resulted from decisions<lb/>
made during profitable years.<lb/>
One of the most common<lb/>
causes of failure was an increase<lb/>
in project sie, according to Sch-<lb/>
leifer in an article published by<lb/>
Robert Morris Associates, the<lb/>
Philadelphia-based national asso-<lb/>
ciation of bank loan and credit<lb/>
officers.<lb/>
According to Schleifer, a con-<lb/>
tracting firm faces a perilous tran-<lb/>
sition when it takes on a project<lb/>
that is significantly larger than its<lb/>
other projects. Although the firm<lb/>
will complete the work, it often<lb/>
fails to make a profit due to inex<lb/>
perience in planning and devel-<lb/>
oping resources for larger jobs.<lb/>
Another widespread cause of<lb/>
failureamongcontractors"isalack<lb/>
of managerial maturity Schleifer<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"The independent, confident<lb/>
entrepreneur who survives the<lb/>
high mortality rate during the six<lb/>
to eight-year start-up period may<lb/>
be unable to shape the more com-<lb/>
plex organization needed to sup-<lb/>
port a larger volume of work he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Waiting too long to establish<lb/>
the organization also can be fatal,<lb/>
Schleifer said.<lb/>
"The contractor who resists<lb/>
change until he has to prove the<lb/>
need for change by having a los-<lb/>
ing year may have waited too<lb/>
long he said.<lb/>
Schleifer said most of the<lb/>
business failures he had studied<lb/>
were preventable. One of the best<lb/>
methods of preventing failure is<lb/>
to maintain an accurate account of<lb/>
finances because a growing com-<lb/>
pany mav be losing monev de-<lb/>
spite a robust appearance, he said.<lb/>
Schleifer is the author of a book<lb/>
about construction contracting<lb/>
and why companies fail to be<lb/>
successful. He has presented pro-<lb/>
grams on this topic throughout<lb/>
the U.S. and in England.<lb/>
Summer Special<lb/>
It's Hot, It's Cold<lb/>
It's Delicious<lb/>
ii<lb/>
Fried Ice Cream<lb/>
- Reg. $2.25<lb/>
? Now only $1.50<lb/>
only<lb/>
at<lb/>
Chico's<lb/>
the taste of old mexico<lb/>
521 Cotanche St. - Greenville<lb/>
757-1666<lb/>
SM<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
is accepting<lb/>
applications<lb/>
for a<lb/>
darkroom<lb/>
technician.<lb/>
Apply at the<lb/>
Publications<lb/>
Buildini<lb/>
Buyer s Guide<lb/>
Bogies752-4668<lb/>
Chicos737-1666<lb/>
Choo-Choo-Thru757-1969<lb/>
Design of the Times830-0030<lb/>
East Coast Music &amp; Video758-1251<lb/>
Flamingo's758-7457<lb/>
Greenville Optician752-4018<lb/>
ITG Travel355-5075<lb/>
Kingston Place 758-5393<lb/>
New Deli758-0080<lb/>
Overton's752-5025<lb/>
Ramada355-8300<lb/>
Rio355-5000<lb/>
Sharkey's757-3881<lb/>
?te SaHt ?ar0lmtan<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 Sitlingcr<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 - 5:00 Friday 7:30 -11:30 a.m. Phone 757-6366<lb/>
<pb facs="00058221_0003"/><lb/>
<lb/>
The East Carolinian, July 18,1990 3<lb/>
4Zfty Presents<lb/>
?ST if EVERY THURSDAY<lb/>
W Student Budget Night<lb/>
Summer Specials<lb/>
? $2.50 Frozen Dacquirls ? $2.50 Ice Teas<lb/>
? $1.00 Imports $2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
? $1.00 TALLBOY CANS<lb/>
 FREE PIZZA <lb/>
LADIES FREE <lb/>
Landfill<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
This Week's Entertainment:<lb/>
have recycled paper for four years.<lb/>
"Kindergarten through the<lb/>
eighth grades have been very re-<lb/>
ceptive to the program' says Sut-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
Private industries have been<lb/>
helpful. Weyerhaeuser donated<lb/>
450 waste receptacles to area<lb/>
schools for paper separation. The<lb/>
Pepsi Company donated<lb/>
dumpsters for aluminum can col-<lb/>
lection to ECU.<lb/>
Incentive programs motivate<lb/>
employees of various PHI Counts<lb/>
departments to recycle. Themoney<lb/>
pooled from recycled goods is<lb/>
dra wn for at the end of each month.<lb/>
1 no more tha t is recycled, t he more<lb/>
money is won by a lucky employee<lb/>
Mr.Sutton is working with George<lb/>
Armistead, coordinator of ECU'S<lb/>
solid waste program, to develop<lb/>
an incentive program for students<lb/>
living in the dormitories.<lb/>
There are five container sites,<lb/>
throughout Pitt County, for recy-<lb/>
clable items. These sites are<lb/>
manned and opened seven days a<lb/>
week from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. The site<lb/>
most convenient to students is<lb/>
located in the Overton's parking<lb/>
lot on Third and jarvis streets.<lb/>
Those sites have green dumpsters<lb/>
for the separation of clear glass,<lb/>
colored glass, paper, aluminium,<lb/>
and plastics. Thecountyproposed<lb/>
opening nine more sites next year.<lb/>
The county has been very<lb/>
successful with it's solid waste<lb/>
management program.<lb/>
"Since the program is three<lb/>
years young, Pitt County has<lb/>
achieved a twenty percent decrease<lb/>
in solid waste, making us one of<lb/>
three leading counties in thestate<lb/>
savs Sutton.<lb/>
Planners to hold institute<lb/>
By Matt King<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Housing<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Fri. 20th &amp; Sat.21st<lb/>
MR. POTATO HE<lb/>
513Cotanch( i<lb/>
(located across Iron Bl<lb/>
?1 . .  Each Wed. Night<lb/>
Iwerv Friday <lb/>
' . Open Mic Niht<lb/>
v 1 Ktremch Large Hour<lb/>
A pin till close " ?<lb/>
$2.00 Pitchers starts at 3pm<lb/>
SI. 10 1 .ongnecks<lb/>
SI.25 Imports<lb/>
758-0080<lb/>
housing facilities. For example,<lb/>
primitive houses made of cactus<lb/>
plant are a common means of<lb/>
shelter in rural areas of Mexico<lb/>
and African nativesareoftentimes<lb/>
found to live in structures made of<lb/>
adobe, sticks or tin.<lb/>
The purpose of the conference<lb/>
is to address this major concern<lb/>
and find sufficient solutions which<lb/>
?a ill best suit the needs of individ-<lb/>
ual third-world countries.<lb/>
"Here in the US we have a<lb/>
different perception of what a<lb/>
house is used for than in develop-<lb/>
ing countries such as India, where<lb/>
people live in four-foot huts just<lb/>
large enough to spread a blanket<lb/>
to lav down at night Carpenter<lb/>
said. He feels that the conference<lb/>
will find answers to the questions<lb/>
people of third- world countriesask<lb/>
about housing facilities.<lb/>
"It's time we stop trying to<lb/>
force our conceptions of what a<lb/>
house should be like and start<lb/>
assessing the needs of the third-<lb/>
world countries. We need to pro-<lb/>
iride types of housing that the<lb/>
Super Sale At<lb/>
Overton'<lb/>
Scott Towels<lb/>
Giant Roll<lb/>
.69<lb/>
Fresh Fryer<lb/>
Leg Quarters<lb/>
101b bag<lb/>
lb . 40c<lb/>
Whole Slab<lb/>
Heel Spare Ribs<lb/>
lb<lb/>
. ooc<lb/>
Grade A<lb/>
Fxtra Large<lb/>
Eggs<lb/>
Dozen  7C)(<lb/>
Oscar Mayer<lb/>
Meat Franks lb pk<lb/>
$ 1.49<lb/>
Budweiser Suitcase<lb/>
Pkg. of 24<lb/>
12 oz cans<lb/>
$11.98<lb/>
Embers Charcoal<lb/>
411) Hag<lb/>
Coke or Diet Coke<lb/>
2 liter bottle<lb/>
.00c limit 2<lb/>
Extras $1.09<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Choice Grade<lb/>
Bone In<lb/>
Shoulder Roast<lb/>
lb$1.69<lb/>
Cottonelle Tissue<lb/>
4 rol pkg.<lb/>
Limit 2 with<lb/>
$10.00 food order<lb/>
00.<lb/>
Our Family<lb/>
Skim Milk<lb/>
Plastic Gallon<lb/>
?Jug<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Natural Light Beer<lb/>
Carton of 12<lb/>
12ozCans<lb/>
$5.39<lb/>
Libby's Vegetables<lb/>
300 size can<lb/>
Garden Peas - Cream<lb/>
Style Com - Whole Kernal<lb/>
Corn - Cut Beans - French<lb/>
Style Beans<lb/>
4 for $1.00<lb/>
Limit 8 combined<lb/>
We now have fresh<lb/>
ground turkey in our<lb/>
Meat Department<lb/>
Western<lb/>
Bone In<lb/>
Full Cut<lb/>
Round Steak<lb/>
lb$1.99<lb/>
Local<lb/>
Silver Queen<lb/>
White Corn<lb/>
Dozen99<lb/>
limit 3 dozen<lb/>
Mastercard<lb/>
Visa<lb/>
American Express<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
Store Hours: Open Sundays 1 pm - 6pm<lb/>
Monday - Saturday 8 am - 8 pm<lb/>
Prices effective-Wednesday July ISthrough Saturday June 21,1990<lb/>
people in developing countries<lb/>
want and build structures from<lb/>
materials that these countries have<lb/>
ready available Carpenter said.<lb/>
I le also stresses the need to move<lb/>
away from imported building<lb/>
materials which are not necessar-<lb/>
ily adequate according to the cli-<lb/>
mate, raw materials and means of<lb/>
construction the individual coun-<lb/>
tries have.<lb/>
"Research is desperately<lb/>
needed on the use of 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/>
The research will include<lb/>
means to create inexpensive mate-<lb/>
rials such as concrete and other<lb/>
mixtures of sand and stone which<lb/>
are easily obtainable and afford-<lb/>
able to home builders in develop-<lb/>
ing countries.<lb/>
The Global Shelter Conference<lb/>
will include speakers Mich as Dr.<lb/>
George McRobte, author on ap-<lb/>
propriate technology and devel-<lb/>
opment issues, Agwa U. Okali,<lb/>
director of the United Nations<lb/>
Center for 1 luman Settlementsand<lb/>
Dr. Mekki Mtewa, director oi the<lb/>
International Development Foun-<lb/>
dation in Washington, D.C.<lb/>
On July 19, local planners,<lb/>
government and economic officials<lb/>
will meet at the Hilton Inn in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
"Taking Control of the '90s -<lb/>
Can We Continue to Juggle the<lb/>
Economic, Environmental and<lb/>
Social Issues?" is open to "anvone<lb/>
whocaresabout these issues says<lb/>
Dick Brockett, a development<lb/>
specialist with the Regional De-<lb/>
velopment Institute (RD1). The<lb/>
ECU Regional Development Insti-<lb/>
tute and a planning group from<lb/>
Washington .C will be hosting<lb/>
the planning conference<lb/>
The conference will provide a<lb/>
preview of the challenges and<lb/>
opportunities facing those in-<lb/>
volved in the planning processes<lb/>
of the next decade, said Brockett.<lb/>
The clinics of the conference will<lb/>
cover techniques for meeting the<lb/>
needs of changing communities<lb/>
and insights into future and devel-<lb/>
opment trends.<lb/>
Scheduled speakers include<lb/>
lames T. Brovhtll. secretary of the<lb/>
N.C. Department of Economic and<lb/>
Community Development. Ran-<lb/>
dall Arendt, associate director of<lb/>
the Center for Rural Massachu-<lb/>
setts in Amherst, who is noted for<lb/>
his rural planning, will also speak.<lb/>
Dr. Bill Haas, a gerontology<lb/>
professor at the University of<lb/>
DNA<lb/>
North Carolina at Asheville, will<lb/>
discuss the impact of retirees on<lb/>
local economics. The Greenville-<lb/>
based consulting firm. Problem<lb/>
Solving Research, Inc will pres-<lb/>
ent an economic forecast for east-<lb/>
em North Carolina.<lb/>
The N C. Department of Envi-<lb/>
ronment, Health and Natural<lb/>
Resources will send two speakers<lb/>
to Greenville to provide insight<lb/>
into future regulations and condi-<lb/>
tions impacting the region's envi-<lb/>
ronment during a session entitled<lb/>
"Applying Environmental l.aws<lb/>
m the ;90s<lb/>
Buses will be provided to<lb/>
transport participants to the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine for teleconfer-<lb/>
ence, "Coastal Area Management<lb/>
Act - Mountain Area Management<lb/>
Act: What Has Happened Since<lb/>
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 the former director<lb/>
of the N.C Division of Coastal<lb/>
Management, who will be in<lb/>
Chapel Hill, and Alan bang, plan-<lb/>
ner for the Asheville field office of<lb/>
the Division of Community Assis-<lb/>
tance, who will e in Asheville.<lb/>
'Teleconferencing will be used<lb/>
more and more in the '90s, so we<lb/>
felt this would be a good way to<lb/>
demonstrate how thev workhe<lb/>
said Brockett.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
Corner of Third &amp; Jarvis<lb/>
"These arrangements are<lb/>
being sought to promote interest<lb/>
in international biotechnology,<lb/>
add breadth to our program and<lb/>
cement relations between our<lb/>
University and European compa-<lb/>
nies with major research and pro-<lb/>
duction facilities in North Caro-<lb/>
lina says Dr. Wcndall E. Allen,<lb/>
professor of biology and coordi-<lb/>
nator of the program<lb/>
The new faculty members this<lb/>
fall "will bring expertise in mo-<lb/>
lecular immunology and popula-<lb/>
tion molecular biology to the pro-<lb/>
gram and provide further expan-<lb/>
sion of the department's molecu-<lb/>
lar biology research efforts says<lb/>
Allen.<lb/>
In the biotechnology intern-<lb/>
VACATION<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
BAHAMAS<lb/>
3 NIGHTS<lb/>
LAS VEGAS<lb/>
2 NIGHTS<lb/>
CRUISES<lb/>
7 NIGHTS<lb/>
HAWAII<lb/>
3 NIGHTS<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
$189<lb/>
$299<lb/>
$779<lb/>
$395<lb/>
Price, fnim KDl' tMMctoo duubic occupancy CmcelUucm chuga and roOKlKiu may ippl)<lb/>
TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
The Plaza ? Greenville<lb/>
"355-5075 KOO-562-X17K<lb/>
Open MonFri. 9-5 Closed Sal-Sun.<lb/>
SPECIAL BULLETIN FOR ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
ECU LONG ISLAND<lb/>
ICE TEA PARTY IS BACK!<lb/>
IT'S A FRIDAY NIGHT<lb/>
ADVENTURE IN FUN! <lb/>
DATE: Every Friday<lb/>
TIME 6 00 until<lb/>
PLACE: Ram.ida Inn Greenville<lb/>
?' S3 GO 170 Ice Teas, $1 00 domestic brer. 50 cent dratt<lb/>
? INTo Cover Chargeioj shiderts 21 and over<lb/>
? FREE PTAPia ?<lb/>
ante, progressive and un.k<lb/>
Conn?'Alone- Bring a Friend Bring a Dozen.Friends<lb/>
' JUST. DON T (VUSS0UT-0M T-HbFUN"<lb/>
RAMADA INN GRHUNVILLE<lb/>
U' Houkx.H.I<lb/>
ship program, undergraduate<lb/>
upperclassmen as well as gradu-<lb/>
ate students take temporary time<lb/>
off from college in order to spend<lb/>
anvwhere from six months to a<lb/>
J<lb/>
year as fulltime employees in in-<lb/>
dustrial research and development<lb/>
at regional, national and multi-<lb/>
national companies.<lb/>
"Students acquire real world<lb/>
working experience while com-<lb/>
pany participants access univer-<lb/>
sity resources and assess potential<lb/>
employees Allen said. This pro-<lb/>
gram not only improves the at-<lb/>
tractiveness of ECU, it also creates<lb/>
new and promising opportunities<lb/>
for the faculty and students in-<lb/>
vol ved.<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
awarded<lb/>
funding<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
A total of (12300 ?" depart-<lb/>
mental scholarship funds has been<lb/>
awarded to 14 outstanding stu-<lb/>
dents in the ECU Department of<lb/>
Theatre Arts. The awaVds will be<lb/>
applied toward the students' ex-<lb/>
penses this fall.<lb/>
Selma Kaye Huneycutt of<lb/>
Stanfield and Stephanie Dawson<lb/>
of Durham received John D. Mes-<lb/>
sick Drama Scholarships which<lb/>
this year werea warded to students<lb/>
specializing in the field of techni-<lb/>
cal theatre (theatre design and<lb/>
production). Ms. Huneycutt re-<lb/>
ceived a $350 award, and Ms.<lb/>
Davvson, a $500 award.<lb/>
The Messick scholarships<lb/>
derive from a fund established by<lb/>
family and friends of Dr. John<lb/>
Decatur Messick of Wilmington, a<lb/>
former East Carolina president.<lb/>
Seven students received 1990<lb/>
Merrill Scholarships. These<lb/>
awards, given to students in vari-<lb/>
ous dramatic arts fields, derive<lb/>
from an endowment established<lb/>
by the family of the late George<lb/>
Merrill, a former theatre arts stu-<lb/>
dent at ECU.<lb/>
Currently enrolled Merrill<lb/>
scholarship recipients were Roy F.<lb/>
(Scotty) Henley Jr. of Annandale,<lb/>
Vaa technical theatre student who<lb/>
received $3,000; Tammera Melissa<lb/>
Hargett of Charlotte, an acting<lb/>
student who received $1,000; and<lb/>
twodance students ? Diane Mich-<lb/>
elle Pearson of Coldsboro who<lb/>
received $500 and Mary Harden<lb/>
(Beth) Reynolds of Raleigh who<lb/>
received $350.<lb/>
An Amanda Meiggs Loessin<lb/>
Acting Award of $1,100 was given<lb/>
to Jackson Monroe (Jack) Prathcr<lb/>
of Virginia Beach, Va. The award<lb/>
was established by Loessin, a pro-<lb/>
fessional actress.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058221_0004"/><lb/>
?ije SEaat Carolinian<lb/>
JOSEPH L. JENKINS Jr General Manager<lb/>
Michael G. Martin, Managing Editor<lb/>
Adam Blankenship, Director of Advertising<lb/>
TlM HAMITON, News Editor<lb/>
MaRC.1 MORIN, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Caroline Cusick, Features Editor<lb/>
Deanna Nevc.LOSKI, Amt. Features Editor<lb/>
Doug Morris, Sports Editor<lb/>
EARLE M. McAULEY, Asst Sports Editor<lb/>
Scott Maxwell, Satire Editor<lb/>
PAULA Gic.EE, State and Nation Editor<lb/>
PHONG LUONG, Credit Manager<lb/>
STUART RoSNER, Business Manager<lb/>
Michael Kole, Ad Tech SupenHsor<lb/>
TOBY BaRBOUR, Circulation Manager<lb/>
J.D. WlUTMlRE, Production Manager<lb/>
CHARLES VVilLINGHAM, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
Steve Reid, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Deborah S. Daniei, Secretary<lb/>
The East CmaUnim has served the East Carolina campus community since 1925. emphasi.ng information that directly<lb/>
affects ECU students. Dunng the ECl' summer sessions. The East Carolinian publishes once a week with a circulation of<lb/>
s 000 The Fast Caroltnian reserves the right t?refuse or discontinue any advertisements that discriminate on the basis of<lb/>
age sex creed or national origin The masthead ed.tonal in each edition docs not necessarily represent the views of one<lb/>
.mtividual but. rather, is a major.lv opinion of the Ed.tonal Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all<lb/>
points of mow Letters should be limited to 250 words or less. For purposes of decency and brevity. The East Carolinian<lb/>
reserves the nght toed.t letters for publication Letters should be addressed to The Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications<lb/>
Bldg , ECU. Greenville. NC, 27HM. or call (QW) 757 666<lb/>
W 6 ril) AfTC.<lb/>
W GN? &amp;S0P.<lb/>
(<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Wednesday, uhj 18,1990<lb/>
Abortion bill challenges everyone<lb/>
CMT 8E AFPAV To &amp;VE- Bl?oD<lb/>
Attacks on Red Cross were premature<lb/>
Bv Michael G. Martin<lb/>
Managing 1 ditoi<lb/>
An abortion bill passed through the Louisiana<lb/>
House and Senate last week that now rests in the<lb/>
hands of Governor Buddy Roemer The bill, whose<lb/>
passage fudged more than a bit with proper proce-<lb/>
dure, would he the most restrictive abortion law in<lb/>
the nation if enacted.<lb/>
If Roemer signs the bill or allows it to become law<lb/>
without his signature, it will surely give the Supreme<lb/>
Court grounds to test Roe v. Wade. If he vetoes the bill,<lb/>
it will return to the Legislature, which has already<lb/>
proved it can muster the votes to override the veto or<lb/>
even pass a different law ? perhapsone without the<lb/>
present bill's limited exceptions for rape and incest<lb/>
victims. (Indeed, the Legislature originally passed<lb/>
such a bill, which the governor vetoed; the present<lb/>
bill is intended as a compromise )<lb/>
Roemer has a difficult decision to make, but his<lb/>
is not as difficult a choice as the one that faces the<lb/>
people his decision will affect. Whether or not this<lb/>
particular bill becomes law in Louisiana, sooner or<lb/>
later some version of it will, ltseffect will be to return<lb/>
Louisiana to that morally enlightened time when the<lb/>
city abortionist was a coat hanger or a guy with a<lb/>
switchblade, and when women commonly died or<lb/>
were butchered by incompetently performed abor-<lb/>
tions (Naturally, thebill wouldn't affect those women<lb/>
who support it, since they wouldn't have abortions<lb/>
anyway.)<lb/>
The abortion issue has been argued, usually<lb/>
unproductive! v, in the streets and houses (and on the<lb/>
editorial pages) of the nation. It is not The East<lb/>
Carolinian's intention to manufacture yet another<lb/>
restatement of either side's position. Rather, our<lb/>
interest is in the bill's flaws without respect to the<lb/>
moral rectitude of abortion itself.<lb/>
First, the bill states that life begins at conception;<lb/>
if this premise is accepted, it follows that any abor-<lb/>
tion should be considered murder. However, the bill<lb/>
provides for punishing this "murder" ? a premedi-<lb/>
tated act ? with only a 10-year jail term. If abortion<lb/>
is murder, as the overwhelming majority of the<lb/>
Louisiana State Legislature (and the majority of<lb/>
Louisiana's citizens) believes it is, then why is the<lb/>
penalty only 10 years? In most states, murder in the<lb/>
first degree, or premeditated murder, is punishable<lb/>
by life in prison or by death. For that matter, if<lb/>
abortion is murder, why exempt rapists' progeny?<lb/>
Isn't it equally murderous to kill them? At least the<lb/>
original bill had the dubious distinction of Hoing less<lb/>
intellectually dishonest on this point.<lb/>
Indeed, if life begins at conception, should preg-<lb/>
nant touisianan women report the fetus to federal<lb/>
census-takers as an additional child, thereby possi-<lb/>
bly gaining the state a seat or two in Congress when<lb/>
reapportionment comes up? Can they claim the<lb/>
welfare bonus that is normally given for a child? Will<lb/>
everyone in Louisiana have nine months added to<lb/>
their age? Will a Louisianan high schooler a few<lb/>
months short of eligibility for her driver license by<lb/>
conventional reckoning, suddenly find herself be-<lb/>
hind the wheel? Will "notch babies" (those elderly<lb/>
ineligible forSocial Security) have nine months added<lb/>
to their ages, thereby making many of them into<lb/>
Social Security recipients?<lb/>
Lest these seem facetiousquestions, keep in mind<lb/>
that they're all logical implications of the bill's con<lb/>
tention that life begins at conception. The cases will<lb/>
surely come up ? if there's money to be made,<lb/>
there's a lawsuit ? and the only possible answers to<lb/>
such legal questions will either gut the bill's defini-<lb/>
tion of "life ' or break the state treasury or both ?<lb/>
hardlv insignificant considerations for a state in<lb/>
Louisiana's wretched financial condition. Though in<lb/>
most of the aforementioned cases the bulk of the cost<lb/>
falls on the federal government, not Louisiana,<lb/>
Louisiana will foot its share of the bill in any case<lb/>
where an extra nine months of age or an extra "child "<lb/>
would provide a pretext for wheedling the state out<lb/>
of some cash.<lb/>
A further serious problem with the bill is that it<lb/>
distinguishes between two different kinds of rape,<lb/>
and setsdifferent standards for the victimsof each. If<lb/>
a woman felt her life was threatened when she was<lb/>
raped? if, say, she'sraped at gunpoint or knifepoint<lb/>
? the state would allow her to have an abortion. But<lb/>
if the rape was what the bill calls "simple" rape ? if<lb/>
the woman was under the influence of alcohol, or if<lb/>
she was mentally retarded and unable to resist, and<lb/>
the rape was not "forcible" ? the law would restrict<lb/>
her from having an abortion. When is a rape not a<lb/>
rape? Sexual assault, "forcible" or "simple is rape,<lb/>
even when it happens in Louisiana.<lb/>
The bill also requires a rape victim to report any<lb/>
rape to the police within seven days of the occur-<lb/>
rence. If she isn't emotionally able to deal with the<lb/>
rape well enough to tell total strangers about it before<lb/>
her one-week time limit is up, well, she'd better have<lb/>
transportation to neighboring Arkansas or good taste<lb/>
in baby clothes.<lb/>
Roemer currently insists he's hesitating to sign<lb/>
the bill onlv because he thinks women should be<lb/>
granted a month, not a week, to try to come to terms<lb/>
with their ordeal. Roomer's thirty-day limit is as lll-<lb/>
advised as the Legislature's seven days. But whether<lb/>
the limit is seven days or thirty, how does the Legis-<lb/>
lature intend to prevent women from crying wolf?<lb/>
The short time limit is partly an attempt to limit this<lb/>
(by ensuring a woman won't know whether she's<lb/>
pregnant until it's too late), but it's bound to cause<lb/>
more trouble than it saves. If a woman wanted an<lb/>
abortion and suspected she might be pregnant, she'd<lb/>
do better to point the finger anyway, just to be on the<lb/>
safeside - (hereby sendingan innocent man through<lb/>
legal and personal hell. By the time the matter is<lb/>
resolved in the courts (years, even decades, later), the<lb/>
abortion will be long past. As for th? threat of the<lb/>
state suing the woman for false accusation, so what?<lb/>
They'll have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt, in<lb/>
court, that the accused man didn't rape his accuser,<lb/>
and that she brought the suit anyway  try it some-<lb/>
time, if you think it would beeasy. If anything, there<lb/>
will be more false accusationsofrapeasaresultof the<lb/>
time limit, not fewer ? the bill imites them.<lb/>
Or perhaps the Legislature intends that women<lb/>
should wait until "the accused" becomes "the con-<lb/>
victed " ? which should be about when the kid is<lb/>
having its own first baby. Does the Louisiana State<lb/>
Legislature propose that women should keep their<lb/>
legs crossed until the case is decided? Or has it<lb/>
decided to mandate they must keep their legs crossed<lb/>
until they're damn good and ready to fulfill their<lb/>
proper function as Louisiana's breeding stock?<lb/>
lor some tune now Vmenca<lb/>
has been fa ed k ith the V quired<lb/>
Immune Deficieno Syndrome<lb/>
(AIDS) epidemic andth various<lb/>
delimmas that coincide with it<lb/>
Many people have allowed the<lb/>
hysteria surrounding the myths<lb/>
associated with gi ing blood and<lb/>
AIDS, that the) have refused to<lb/>
give to the Red Cross fort ingle al<lb/>
hospitals io run on .i shortage of<lb/>
blood. Othersarc still afraid louse<lb/>
a public water fountains or eat in<lb/>
a restaurant th.it does not use<lb/>
plastic tableware and paper plates<lb/>
Through many advertise-<lb/>
ments and campaigns, the Red<lb/>
Cross, along with ether national<lb/>
agencies, have tried to dispel the<lb/>
myth that one can get AIDS by<lb/>
giving blood. Many people have<lb/>
finally come to their senses and<lb/>
realized that how wrong their<lb/>
beliefs were until last wet k.<lb/>
Inanartii lepublishedby I SA<lb/>
rOD i on uly 11 the RedCross<lb/>
was blasted b a ere prelimi-<lb/>
nary" report release d by the 1 ood<lb/>
and Drug dministration. The<lb/>
article quoted the report, saying<lb/>
that local or national Red C ross<lb/>
officials acted slowly toinvesti-<lb/>
gateand report errors as in screen-<lb/>
ing and record-keeping<lb/>
rhearticlcs'example: a Wash-<lb/>
ington, D. . Red C ross office<lb/>
knew of a substantial amount of<lb/>
people 12 JO) v horn had contracted<lb/>
MDS after a transfusion, and the<lb/>
office tailed to report any case to<lb/>
the FDA, and only a few (four)<lb/>
were reported to the Red Cress<lb/>
headquarters.<lb/>
The irtule went on to sav that<lb/>
the chano s oi contracting AIDS<lb/>
from a transfusion was between<lb/>
one and 40,000, and one and<lb/>
153,000. But nowhere did it give<lb/>
any figures as to how many cases<lb/>
of AIDS were contracted by giv-<lb/>
ing blood However, the article<lb/>
did offer a way to pn<lb/>
.H r$ " m .1 transfusion use<lb/>
.our ov? n bh<lb/>
I ho fact that this ??? isa ? n<lb/>
preliminar) ' report should hav<lb/>
,i lot to say about thecredibility of<lb/>
itscontcnts. V hat kindofdamagi<lb/>
has it done to the Redross? What<lb/>
will this report do to the people<lb/>
that have finally realized that it i<lb/>
safetogiveWood? And what ?<lb/>
those who still aren't qu<lb/>
The report bv the FDA didj<lb/>
nothing but stir up more unneces<lb/>
sary fear into the Amerk in people<lb/>
The Red Cross and othr agencies<lb/>
are ha ing enough trouble trying<lb/>
to expose the truth about AIDS<lb/>
while at the same time, attempt to<lb/>
keep a steady supply of blood to<lb/>
save lives.<lb/>
The fact remain the same V<lb/>
individual can get AIDS by donat-<lb/>
ing blood.<lb/>
Pont be atraid to give blood<lb/>
because you may save someone'?<lb/>
life<lb/>
ven vour ow n.<lb/>
Support group can help with stress<lb/>
Bv Dinah Eng<lb/>
Gannett News Service<lb/>
Last month. 1 played a lous<lb/>
game of goM solely because 1<lb/>
was tired, and didn t know it.<lb/>
1 low. you ask. could .i persi n<lb/>
be tired and not know it?<lb/>
Actually, it is quite cas)<lb/>
you're used to doing a d<lb/>
things at once and don t stop to<lb/>
ask yourself uln<lb/>
Five years ago,arol( )rsbom<lb/>
founded Superwomen's Anony-<lb/>
mous, a support group tor women<lb/>
who were trying to do, be and<lb/>
have u all in their lives<lb/>
At the time, all the women i<lb/>
knew who were super-achu rers<lb/>
were also super-unhappy said<lb/>
Orsborn, co-owner ol a San Fran-<lb/>
cisco public relations firm. There<lb/>
were no choices. N'ou were either a<lb/>
super-achiever, or you were a<lb/>
housewife<lb/>
Orsbom's network of women<lb/>
with similar experiences and feel-<lb/>
ings grew to 10,000 members As<lb/>
peers began developing stress-<lb/>
related illnessi s, (Jrsbi rn and her<lb/>
husband Daniel decided to cut<lb/>
back their work hours from 0 a<lb/>
?.seek to SO. i"hey downsized their<lb/>
staff from 18 to tour and moved<lb/>
into a smaller home.<lb/>
? irpnse,w ithin three<lb/>
irs business was back to its<lb/>
I revious profit level with halt the<lb/>
staff . en more surprisingly,<lb/>
profits started to i tceed monthly<lb/>
o.iis. without am increase in the<lb/>
. rk  eek.<lb/>
plefearil th) don'twork<lb/>
these long hours, the) 11 lose their<lb/>
saidrsborn. "I nless<lb/>
emplov? rs see the need tor a I<lb/>
anced life, employees will just bum<lb/>
out.<lb/>
As nun began joining the<lb/>
ranks o( Superwomen's Anony-<lb/>
mous, Orsbom decided to change<lb/>
the name of the group to Over-<lb/>
achievers Anonymous, and focus<lb/>
on changing the consciousness of<lb/>
corporate America.<lb/>
foday, almost three quarters<lb/>
Under the Boards<lb/>
of Overachievers Anonymou?<lb/>
members a re men. The group now<lb/>
at 500 members, are people in<lb/>
positions of power v ho are trying<lb/>
to spread the gospel of a balanced<lb/>
life at various management<lb/>
Personal valuesand int <lb/>
are at odds with material<lb/>
Mostbusinessesaredrivenb) I<lb/>
not by v ision and purpose<lb/>
Wonderful words Bui<lb/>
don t have to wait tor <lb/>
America to begin nurturing<lb/>
human resources. V e an I<lb/>
g a life that values who<lb/>
are not what we do, V<lb/>
: i u're not doing so<lb/>
g? I i lit of work on tin.<lb/>
tak work home at night. While<lb/>
you're at theoffice, love your -<lb/>
or find out what you love I<lb/>
and switch fobs.<lb/>
Spend time with your friends<lb/>
andfamil) Do everything you can<lb/>
to be happy. You deserve it<lb/>
Play golf<lb/>
- n a : ? n<lb/>
-? i.arw '?'  ??<lb/>
Columnist ventures into Duplin County<lb/>
By Tim E. Hampton<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
It wasoneof those scary times<lb/>
in life when 1 thought I'd never<lb/>
return home. When we finally<lb/>
came back to the tenement shack<lb/>
with the peeling paint, it looked<lb/>
more like Biltmore House than a<lb/>
house on Biltmore<lb/>
First off, me and Tobin didn't<lb/>
pick the best weekend to go to the<lb/>
beach. Skip Weathers on the TV<lb/>
said it was going to rain and<lb/>
Tobin's neighbor said it was bad<lb/>
luck to travel on Friday the 13th.<lb/>
We didn't take no mind, gassed<lb/>
up Tobin's 1963 Falcon, looked at<lb/>
the sky and said "it ain't going to<lb/>
rain" and put the top down.<lb/>
Pulling away from the mini<lb/>
mart, the thunderous noise of the<lb/>
Falcon'sunmuffled exhaust made<lb/>
usdeaf.Tobinsayshe really needs<lb/>
to fix the hole in the pipe where<lb/>
thesmokebellowsout,buthekind<lb/>
of likes the sound and besides it<lb/>
irritates the neighbors who irri-<lb/>
tate him with screaming babies<lb/>
and superstitions and the such.<lb/>
About the time Tobin started<lb/>
going 70 and the steering wheel<lb/>
started shaking and the signs said<lb/>
slow down because you are getting<lb/>
near Ayden, it started to rain for<lb/>
the first time. So we pulled off to<lb/>
the side of the road near a field of<lb/>
corn and put up the top as sheets<lb/>
of rain were drenching our cloth-<lb/>
ing with household pets.<lb/>
Stopping in Kinston, Tobin<lb/>
Knight one of them caffine-tree,<lb/>
sugar-free, sodium-free, choles-<lb/>
terol -free, taste-free drinks be-<lb/>
cause he doesn't like staying up<lb/>
late pondering how much salt and<lb/>
weight he put on, and 1 picked a<lb/>
100-ounce fountain drink that was<lb/>
too big to hold with one hand and<lb/>
got hota minuteafterit wasbought<lb/>
because the ice melted- With the<lb/>
sun out again, we put the topdown<lb/>
for the second time. Everything<lb/>
was fine until we got to the Duplin<lb/>
County line.<lb/>
It was partially robin's fault<lb/>
because even before we ap-<lb/>
proached the line, he started on<lb/>
and on about how poor and de-<lb/>
pressed and backward and red-<lb/>
neck Duplin County wasand how-<lb/>
it had the most poverty of any of<lb/>
the 100 little squares on the North<lb/>
Carolina map. Tobin was flooring<lb/>
the Falcon down a long straight<lb/>
awav when we saw where the<lb/>
counties divided, and that's the<lb/>
first time we seen the foreshadow-<lb/>
ing. On our side the sun was shin-<lb/>
ing, in Duplin it was raining house-<lb/>
hold pets, but Tobin didn't slow<lb/>
down none, just said it wouldn't<lb/>
rain long.<lb/>
After a mile or so of driving in<lb/>
the rain with the top still down,<lb/>
we skidded and slid into a field. It<lb/>
must be state law that farmers<lb/>
must plant com on one side oi the<lb/>
road and tobacco on the other<lb/>
because sure enough we were<lb/>
suddenly in a whole field of fu-<lb/>
ture packs of Marlboro and cans<lb/>
of Copenhagen and pouches of<lb/>
Red Man and the such. Tobin said<lb/>
he was sorrv that 90 of my 100<lb/>
ounces of drink spilled all over<lb/>
my shorts, but he honestly be-<lb/>
lieved he could drive with the<lb/>
water dripping in his eyes<lb/>
Red mud will eventuallv wash<lb/>
out oi white clothing, or so said<lb/>
Tobin's Mom when we arrived at<lb/>
the beach all red-like from push-<lb/>
ing the Falcon. She fed us some<lb/>
home cooking, made us gurgle<lb/>
some Lavons and pronounced us<lb/>
good as new. We did some beach<lb/>
thingslikegettingplumrnetedand<lb/>
thrashed about by the waves and<lb/>
stubbing our toes on the pier be-<lb/>
fore going back to the Tobin fam-<lb/>
ily beach trailer to eat large quan-<lb/>
tities of grilled red meat.<lb/>
In canying out the beach ver<lb/>
sion of the family cookout, Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Tobin relived the potato<lb/>
salad, slaw and nbeye steak rit-<lb/>
ual. Mrs. was in the kitchen creat-<lb/>
ing the fixings by no set recipe<lb/>
After peeling and dicing, she said<lb/>
some mystic bird told her the nght<lb/>
amount of vinegar to soak into the<lb/>
cabbage and how much Duke's<lb/>
See Trip, page 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058221_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian, July 18,1990 5<lb/>
1109 CHARLES BLVD 758 - 4151<lb/>
OUR LARGEST<lb/>
PARKING LOT<lb/>
SALE EVER!<lb/>
? HUNDREDS OF<lb/>
PREVIOUSLY VIEWED<lb/>
VIDEOS $8.00 t<lb/>
UP<lb/>
? CLEARANCE T-SHIRTS,<lb/>
LPS, USED CDS, NEW<lb/>
CDS, CASSETTES, &amp;<lb/>
MORE<lb/>
10 OFF REGULAR<lb/>
PRICE INSIDE STORE<lb/>
SAT JULY 21,<lb/>
11 AM - 6 PM I<lb/>
Trip<lb/>
Continued from page 4<lb/>
Sharky's<lb/>
The Club With Class<lb/>
Located by Sports Pad on 5th Street<lb/>
Enter through Alley<lb/>
the potatoes should wade in. It<lb/>
was more than past experience of<lb/>
fixing mixing that helped her.<lb/>
Like Prometheus, Mr. got all<lb/>
into fire. First, the charcoal was<lb/>
arranged in a predetermined pat-<lb/>
tern, then fooom; fire was reincar-<lb/>
nated. The steaks had been mari-<lb/>
nating in some secret family sauce<lb/>
overnight and were placed on the<lb/>
grill like something sacred. He<lb/>
kept glancing at his watch to turn<lb/>
the meat with precision just like<lb/>
his daddy done before him.<lb/>
The next day it rained so we<lb/>
watched a bunch of hand sorneand<lb/>
healthy women hit golf balls on<lb/>
TV' before flicking over to watch<lb/>
those guys thai wear them real<lb/>
tight shorts, ind ride bikes in 7 our<lb/>
ing The Frame<lb/>
After anottu-r big meal, Tobin<lb/>
anil l were all bloated and haling<lb/>
life because we ate too much, but<lb/>
we agreed the Emerald City wasa<lb/>
calling so Tobin said his family<lb/>
goodbye and we go! back into the<lb/>
Falcon.<lb/>
It turned il.uk near Wilming-<lb/>
ton and I thought we'd never find<lb/>
the new i 40, but we did and then<lb/>
exited onto Highway ll. All the<lb/>
eating and thrashing ot waves<lb/>
made me sleepy and (drifted for a<lb/>
long stretch, i wasawakentowhal<lb/>
l thought was the sounds of 21 ive<lb/>
Crew's bass player, but then I<lb/>
remembered the Falcon's Philco<lb/>
radio hadn't worked in ages.<lb/>
"What is that boom, she boom,<lb/>
hom, boom?" I asked. Tobin said<lb/>
it was the water pump. Just our<lb/>
luck, we had just entered Duplin<lb/>
County.<lb/>
There were few cars rolling<lb/>
through Duplin seeing how late it<lb/>
was; none felt like stopping until<lb/>
two headlights appeared from no<lb/>
where. It was a wrecked Chevy<lb/>
pick-up with the word ? Chevy<lb/>
? painted on every which direc-<lb/>
tion including the windows and<lb/>
the mud flaps. Out came five rather<lb/>
healthy gentlemen with beards,<lb/>
Tluirs.<lb/>
Import Night<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
2 For<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
The Hilton<lb/>
207 S. W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(919) 355-5000<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
Domestics<lb/>
$ 1.00<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
L<lb/>
Sharky's is a private club for members and<lb/>
21 year old guesis.<lb/>
"We Free Pour All Our Drinks"<lb/>
"SPEC IAI 7mI MB E R S hTp<lb/>
With this Coupon <lb/>
Rio's Summer<lb/>
Concert Series<lb/>
Featuring your<lb/>
favorite bands:<lb/>
$1.25 Drafts &amp;r Other<lb/>
Drink Specials<lb/>
This Thursday's Band is<lb/>
BRUCE FRYE &amp; HIS BAND<lb/>
from Greenville N.C.<lb/>
a<lb/>
(t r<lb/>
Keep informed of the<lb/>
issuses, events and<lb/>
people affecting the<lb/>
ECU campus and<lb/>
community<lb/>
all wearing billed caps that en-<lb/>
dorsed fertilizer brands. I tasted<lb/>
the blood of the steak in my fiery<lb/>
stomach.<lb/>
Tobin and 1 were about as<lb/>
scared as we could be because<lb/>
there was a foreboding scuffle to<lb/>
the mens' bootsand aneerie sound<lb/>
of the tobacco spit streaming from<lb/>
their beards.<lb/>
"Well, if it ain't two college<lb/>
boys coming back from the beach.<lb/>
Look at that one with the Bobsie<lb/>
Twin's haircut and the other with<lb/>
them idiot neon shorts one of the<lb/>
boot wearers said.<lb/>
Thedrivcrof the truck affixed<lb/>
his eyes on the Falcon's grill and<lb/>
said, "These boys been driving a<lb/>
Ford, you knowed they ain't no<lb/>
good<lb/>
"Yeah another said from<lb/>
behind his facial hair, "don't ya'll<lb/>
know Ford stands for Fixed Or<lb/>
Repaired Daily<lb/>
The youngest one was all<lb/>
excited like he was on his first<lb/>
hunting tnp and said:<lb/>
"What we going to do with<lb/>
them Dee-dee, I say we towed 'em<lb/>
over toTroxlcr'sLakeand pop her<lb/>
open<lb/>
And then a sweet smell roll-<lb/>
ing from either the corn sideor the<lb/>
tobacco side soaked the air with<lb/>
sympathy for stranded motorists<lb/>
suddenly thrust in new environs<lb/>
and permeated the moment of<lb/>
horror built up in my head.<lb/>
"Yeah, hitch them upand tow<lb/>
them to Troxler's so we's can take<lb/>
a look under the hood thedriver<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Pretty cool guys after all. They<lb/>
did the work in no time and would<lb/>
only take a 20 spot. Just because<lb/>
these men live in the poorest coun-<lb/>
ties in one of the most depressed<lb/>
regions within the most illiterate<lb/>
state, didn't mean they were heart-<lb/>
less, base and vile.<lb/>
Tobin says there must always<lb/>
be a story to the moral and 1 guess<lb/>
this one is people are rust people,<lb/>
no matter what they believe in<lb/>
and no matter if they live in a<lb/>
Duplin or a Pitt.<lb/>
<lb/>
j nd<lb/>
Sc4<lb/>
 'he q spe,<lb/>
.<lb/>
" ??" ?-vT "S, rti<lb/>
 v-N. ??  ??? <lb/>
 ? tZ"???? r???J<lb/>
fm<lb/>
Stye iEaat (Earolfman<lb/>
Subscription Form<lb/>
 "Ui<lb/>
ectUre<lb/>
cS52!<lb/>
Name:<lb/>
r?<lb/>
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<lb/>
gi<lb/>
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Date to Begin:<lb/>
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Return to:<lb/>
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Publications Bldg ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb/>
Office hours: Monday-Thursday, 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m<lb/>
Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.<lb/>
Subscribe to<lb/>
The East Carolini,<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
<pb facs="00058221_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
gttte fSgj Carolinian<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
July 18, 199U<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
MALE OR FEMALE ROOM-<lb/>
MATES WANTED. Walk to<lb/>
school. Utilities furnished.<lb/>
$13730mo. 757-3543 ask for<lb/>
1 arrv<lb/>
Ml PtO: rwo female roommates<lb/>
to share master bedroom with<lb/>
rivatc bath inbedroom apart-<lb/>
ment in lar River. $128 monthly<lb/>
is 14 utilities Available Aug<lb/>
? i v-nt.K t k ole at 752 569<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
R s i ; Made in England<lb/>
; speed touring bike Bi it<lb/>
? ? n good v ondition<lb/>
lassn . ' . luded $4(1 75S<lb/>
I5IKI FOR SALE: larthmiser,<lb/>
. . . and a hall e.u s old<lb/>
ik! I l? nt v ondition $115,<lb/>
??:? v all Deborah, 1 p m -<lb/>
run at 758 s 95<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
et us help vou find education<lb/>
.is- scholarships - grants &amp;<lb/>
ins- Write: Collegeaid P.O Box<lb/>
li , ? hineton C 278S9 Call<lb/>
si ME SERVICES: Desktop<lb/>
publishing, and word processing.<lb/>
24 hour turnaround Mon-Fri. on<lb/>
most projects. Designer Type. 223<lb/>
W. 10th, 101. 752-1933.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICES: Research<lb/>
papers, term papers, letter quality<lb/>
print, pickup and delivery avail-<lb/>
able. Call 756-0520.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING<lb/>
(word processing) term papers,<lb/>
Ivi'Mlllli"<lb/>
Call:<lb/>
4c<lb/>
1on-Sat.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Medical student couple with 6-<lb/>
month old infant needs baby-sit-<lb/>
ter 1days per week in our home.<lb/>
Must love children and have own<lb/>
transportation. $25 per day. 752-<lb/>
6434.<lb/>
BABYS11 1 IK: Need loving de-<lb/>
pendable person to care for 20<lb/>
month old in my home 2-3 da s a<lb/>
w eek 8 5 p.m. Must have ov n ear<lb/>
to transport child to pre-school 2<lb/>
mornings a week (9:30-12:30).<lb/>
Prefer a non-smoker and some-<lb/>
one able to make a long term<lb/>
commitment to job. References re-<lb/>
quired.Call Sarah after 5 p.m. 758-<lb/>
3t00.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Immediate<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
opening for computer sales per-<lb/>
son, apply between 3 and 5p.m.<lb/>
SDF Computers 106 E. 5th street,<lb/>
Greenville, N. C 27858.<lb/>
"ATTENTION: GOVERNMENT<lb/>
HOMES FROM SI (U-repair) !<lb/>
Delinquent tax property. Repos-<lb/>
sessions. Call 1 602-838-8885, Ext.<lb/>
GH-5285<lb/>
FREE TRAVEL BI Mill S! AIR-<lb/>
LINES NOW HIRING! ALL PO-<lb/>
SITIONS! SI7(H) - $58,240. Call<lb/>
(1)602-838-8885 Ext X-5285<lb/>
FREE TRAVEI BENEFITS!<lb/>
CRUISE SHU'S AND CASINOS<lb/>
NOW HIRING! A! 1 POSI-<lb/>
TIONS! Call 11 i1 838 8885 Ext.<lb/>
i -5285.<lb/>
ATTENTION: POSTAL JOBS!<lb/>
Start $11.41 hour! For applica-<lb/>
tion info call 111602 ; 8885, Ext.<lb/>
M-5285, 6 a.m. -10 p.m 7 day s.<lb/>
ATTENTION: EASY WORK EX-<lb/>
CELLENT PA i! Assemble prod-<lb/>
ucts at home. Details. (1) 602 838-<lb/>
8885 Ext W-5285.<lb/>
ATTENTION: GOVERNMENT<lb/>
JOBS - YOUR AREA! $17,840-<lb/>
$69,485. Call (1)602-838-8885, Ext.<lb/>
R-5285.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
ATTENTION: EARN MONEY<lb/>
READING BOOKS! $32,000<lb/>
year income potential. Details. (1)<lb/>
602-838-8885 Ext. Bk-5285.<lb/>
AIRLINES NOW HIRING, flight<lb/>
attendants, travel agents, mechan-<lb/>
ics, customer service. Listings,<lb/>
salaries to $105K. Entry level po-<lb/>
sitions. Call (1) 805-6876000 Ext.<lb/>
A-1166.<lb/>
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,412-<lb/>
$59,932yr. Now hiring. Your<lb/>
area.CalI(l)805-687-6000,Ext.R-<lb/>
1 lec for listings.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
WANTED: boy's Earth Cruiser<lb/>
bicycle all 752-4215 leave mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
HOUSE SITTING: Graduate<lb/>
couple interested. Will eare tor<lb/>
garden,pets, etc. in exchange for<lb/>
housing. Call 752-6216.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
CINDY, vou have made the<lb/>
summer hotter than ever.You are<lb/>
definitely thegreatest. 1 can't wait<lb/>
until it rains again. Love Tommy.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
Part-Time Help Wanted j<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 you. We<lb/>
will work around students schedule. Call<lb/>
752-4018 and ask for manager to set up an<lb/>
interview.<lb/>
? Good Working Conditions ?<lb/>
EDITOR NEEDED<lb/>
FOR THE 1990-<lb/>
1991 BUCANEER,<lb/>
IF INTERESTED<lb/>
! CALL 757-6009<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CAT HOI 1C STUDENT<lb/>
Cl MIR<lb/>
 vman Catholic Student Center<lb/>
vorship with them. Sunday<lb/>
ind 8.1 p.m .it the<lb/>
? ? ? ? i 10th St Green<lb/>
ivs 8 a.m at the Newman<lb/>
Inesdavs i:30 p m at the<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED<lb/>
FJQR RESEARCH STL PY<lb/>
The Section of Infectious DiseasesECL)<lb/>
School 't Medicine m conjunction with the<lb/>
Sin.lent Health Centet is conducting a<lb/>
study on the sexual spread ot herpes i<lb/>
ruses We are looking for men and women<lb/>
IS yean and older who have never had<lb/>
genital herpov If vou are interested in<lb/>
obtaining more information, call lean<lb/>
Askew, ft N at (919) 551-2578<lb/>
JOINTHF R.F.A.l.TTAM<lb/>
The 1 Vpartment of Recreational Services<lb/>
of ECU has several openings for fall I990as<lb/>
Recreational Education Activity Leaders<lb/>
These individuals help to market, pro<lb/>
mote and publicize Recreational Services<lb/>
programs and services Apply today in<lb/>
2M Christenbury Gymnasium Persons<lb/>
are needed to represent College 1 iill. West<lb/>
Campus, Central Campus, oil campus<lb/>
housing, Creek, organizations jnd the<lb/>
Medical School For additional informa<lb/>
bon, contact leannette Roth in 204 Oinv<lb/>
tenburv or call 757 6387<lb/>
6WQWKLMLKIS<lb/>
Due to a limited amount of space, TheEasl Carolinian may ? I ?<lb/>
to pint all announcements. It is not advisable to rely n ll<lb/>
as a sole means of communication. However, during ???:<lb/>
will try extra hard to Hnd room for your announcements Si<lb/>
at least one week before publication.<lb/>
"he Classic Law<lb/>
By Reid<lb/>
The New Stuff<lb/>
By Preston "you're hired" Jones<lb/>
ANAEROBICS<lb/>
<pb facs="00058221_0007"/><lb/>
?he iEaBt (ffaroHntati<lb/>
lulu 18 1990<lb/>
State and Nation<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Voters show concern<lb/>
of savings and loan<lb/>
scandel at the polls<lb/>
?TON P. (AP to certainly reduce the re-election<lb/>
rate for incumbents<lb/>
nepoll Republican strategist Kevin<lb/>
ii i disgruntled Phillips calls it "20th centurj<lb/>
it and Repub America's most costly scandal<lb/>
s iindthe rhe 30-year tab could reach $500<lb/>
nt theii r inthevoting billion. And politicians are scram<lb/>
bting for cover.<lb/>
its I I Rep Ben ones, Ia . w as<lb/>
percenl ill the crisis presiding at a town meeting in<lb/>
ious up from !mj per<lb/>
.1 blame I emo<lb/>
nd Republii .his emialh<lb/>
? ?a till govern<lb/>
i themonc) losl<lb/>
I A ill dO<lb/>
, I Kb solvu nsis, 62<lb/>
Stone Mountain, Ga last week<lb/>
when a constituent slipped him .i<lb/>
note reading, 1 lard time for S&amp;L<lb/>
crime<lb/>
Rep Stev eiundei son K<lb/>
Wis found similar emotions in<lb/>
Wisconsin's farmland, where a<lb/>
t ?n alsmvolved voter told him the S&amp;l scandal is<lb/>
the congressional equivalent ol<lb/>
nl sa how the cri liN atergate.<lb/>
.tin<lb/>
fter i .n - el igi oi mg th<lb/>
r o b 1 e m out i I 11 I 11 ? ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i . id<lb/>
md i i<lb/>
ol i lusoi minus 1<lb/>
poi nts<lb/>
tti im line bad ni w - lor<lb/>
k i ne r e tec t u i<lb/>
has been .i sharp<lb/>
i umbt nts poll tem '? ?'?' '? :<lb/>
ivs 1 )emocrati poll<lb/>
'uiriiin.iiii. tl<lb/>
Newsweek magazine<lb/>
drove the costs home by calculate<lb/>
thai tor tiu cost oi thi<lb/>
bailout, the govcrnmnl could<lb/>
 i i haul tin nation s ?-? ater sa s<lb/>
enough mi mcj lefl over I tarl<lb/>
UanS st Uexandria, Va fixing highways<lb/>
s ai<lb/>
I he si anda! hasai '<lb/>
about enough iamous name President<lb/>
 tin prime fat<lb/>
U.S.Army plans to close ROTC<lb/>
program at UN C-Wilmington<lb/>
? '<lb/>
 r<lb/>
lina at Wilmington<lb/>
? ; i 1<lb/>
I<lb/>
it<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
an<lb/>
?, n<lb/>
I if i<lb/>
id i :<lb/>
i ident<lb/>
ester in<lb/>
? II<lb/>
. ram<lb/>
inasanrt. nsioncenl<lb/>
( ampbeil L niversirj I N( V has<lb/>
boon a host school since 1v<lb/>
1 anna said he doe nol know<lb/>
N W would trv to maintain<lb/>
program by seeking "cross-<lb/>
illment" status, meaning a<lb/>
gram would boat IW, but<lb/>
il would be run in conjunction<lb/>
 ith another school and the Army<lb/>
vi uld continue to support it, but<lb/>
on a iniuh smaller basis<lb/>
rhe pr gram op i ah s on an<lb/>
innual budget ol about ?<lb/>
the Anns 11.uina said. 1 he<lb/>
funds are used for salaries, a<lb/>
iubsistence allowance tor cadt ts<lb/>
scholarships n operating ex-<lb/>
's, sui h as uniforms. The<lb/>
university contributes another<lb/>
fXX) annually, he said.<lb/>
OTC offers scholarships to<lb/>
students who agree to perform<lb/>
military service after graduation.<lb/>
W holarship will pay up to$7,000<lb/>
per year or 80 percent of the full<lb/>
taition, 1 (anna said<lb/>
Nine people eight military<lb/>
and onecivilian are employed<lb/>
in UNCW's program, 1 lannasatd.<lb/>
Military personnel will be trans-<lb/>
fcrred to other assignments as the<lb/>
?am winds down. The pro-<lb/>
gram plans to send students to an<lb/>
advanced training camp next<lb/>
summer in Fort Bragg, he said.<lb/>
Teachers scores for math<lb/>
certification rank low<lb/>
Washington residents suffer from<lb/>
ancer-causing doses of radiation<lb/>
?<lb/>
l near the Hanford nuclear reserva<lb/>
ridavendorsed tion in eastern Washington<lb/>
ingneai about one person in 20 absorbed<lb/>
mts to com dangerous amounts of radiation<lb/>
, , (.posure ' i possible from 1941 b<lb/>
I , fradiation "It'sa fairness issue said Rep<lb/>
rhcy w re reacting to a new RonWyden,D OreWhenpeople<lb/>
, ,? people living are injured by the government,<lb/>
Where radiation fell<lb/>
i m counties received radiation during the summer of<lb/>
I . from the H.tntord Nuclear Reservation. Experts estimate<lb/>
received high doses of radioactive iodine<lb/>
. twet m 1944 and 1947:<lb/>
 Seattle'?7<lb/>
miles<lb/>
Hanford<lb/>
site<lb/>
? Source:<lb/>
spent nuclear fuel rods are<lb/>
melted to make plutonium<lb/>
? Duration: Called 1-131. it<lb/>
has a halt life of 8 days and<lb/>
is considered harmless after<lb/>
80 days<lb/>
? Effects: Thyroid gland,<lb/>
which regulates the body's<lb/>
growth and metabolism, has<lb/>
a tendency to become<lb/>
cancerous between at 600-<lb/>
1,800 rads (radiation ab-<lb/>
sorbed doses).<lb/>
? Normal dose: The body<lb/>
normally absorbs 1 rad over<lb/>
three years from natural<lb/>
radiation such as radon or<lb/>
cosmic rays<lb/>
Keith Carter GNS<lb/>
government should be there<lb/>
ti take care of them<lb/>
Wyden represents Portland,<lb/>
Ore .? major city downstream<lb/>
from the Hanford nuclear weap-<lb/>
ons plant on the Columbia River.<lb/>
Rep. Sid Morrison, a Republi-<lb/>
can who represents the Hanford<lb/>
aiea. said he plans to "begin the<lb/>
process ol finding compensation<lb/>
with the understanding that what<lb/>
we know already suggests that<lb/>
there are health effects<lb/>
Other lawmakers from the<lb/>
ionexpressed similar thoughts,<lb/>
though many acknowledged the<lb/>
difficulty of undertaking such a<lb/>
venture<lb/>
"What Morrison proposes is<lb/>
fair said Rep. Al Swift, D-VVash.<lb/>
I he problem is, the president just<lb/>
asked us for a three-iuarter-tril-<lb/>
lion dollar debt extension. Every-<lb/>
Ihing that wedoa rou nd here from<lb/>
now on is going to be measured<lb/>
linst that startling fact<lb/>
Congress has established<lb/>
precedent in recent years for<lb/>
compensating people, injured or<lb/>
made ill by government radiation<lb/>
exposure.<lb/>
Under a I486 agreement with<lb/>
the Republic of the Marshall Is-<lb/>
lands, the United States agreed to<lb/>
pay $131) million to the inhabi-<lb/>
tants of several atolls contami-<lb/>
nated by radioactive fallout from<lb/>
66 nuclear tests conducted during<lb/>
the I940sand '50s. The islands are<lb/>
2500 miles west of Hawaii.<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) ? A<lb/>
state official is defending the cut-<lb/>
off score for certification as a math<lb/>
teacher In North Carolina, which<lb/>
is easier than almost any of the 15<lb/>
states that give the Educational<lb/>
Testing Service math teacher test<lb/>
The State Board (of Educa-<lb/>
tion) sets the scores, but the board<lb/>
knows if they go below or above<lb/>
the validated score, they are in<lb/>
jeopardy says lone Perry, direc-<lb/>
tor of teacher education services<lb/>
for the NC Department of Public<lb/>
Instruction.<lb/>
A prospective teacher only has<lb/>
to correctly answer about 38 per-<lb/>
cent of the questions on the 150<lb/>
multiple-choice test to Decertified<lb/>
to teach math in the state. North<lb/>
Carolina's cutoff score is 510.<lb/>
Only Kentucky, with a cutoff<lb/>
of 500, ranks lower. The median<lb/>
score is 543.<lb/>
The math scores are from the<lb/>
National Teachers Examination, a<lb/>
four-part test widely used as a<lb/>
requirement f r teachers entei tng<lb/>
the profession.<lb/>
States Um t arbitrarily .set a<lb/>
cutoff score, Ms P? rrv told the<lb/>
Greensboro News &amp; R . ? t- am<lb/>
of tea hci ? and collt ge education<lb/>
professionals exa<lb/>
tional test to determine whether<lb/>
each question was'part of the<lb/>
state's teachei urri ulum .iMi if<lb/>
correctly answ? ring the question<lb/>
was necessan tor tea ding math.<lb/>
They determined what a<lb/>
teacher must know in order to<lb/>
teach Ms. P rry said.<lb/>
Of the 15 states tin' highest<lb/>
cutoff score is n inalifornia.<lb/>
Prospective tea hers there ha e to<lb/>
correctly answ er 55 percent of the<lb/>
questions. In Syuth Carolina, the<lb/>
cutoff is 560; 32b is the minimum<lb/>
in Tennessee and 80 in Virginia<lb/>
In 1987-88, the latest scon's<lb/>
available. 14 percent ol North<lb/>
Carolina's prospective teachers<lb/>
failed to score above 10 on the<lb/>
math section oi the N I H.<lb/>
Orange County<lb/>
D.A. reverses<lb/>
decision en<lb/>
album ban<lb/>
( HAPEL HILL (AP) ? A<lb/>
controversial rap group record<lb/>
abelod obscene will be back on<lb/>
the shelves in Orange County<lb/>
lecause the public wants it there,<lb/>
I 'istru t Attorney Carl Fox says.<lb/>
1 artier this week, Fox labeled<lb/>
the 2 hive Crew album "As Nasty<lb/>
As They Wanna Be" repulsive. He<lb/>
said he would prosecute anyone<lb/>
whosold or distributed the record<lb/>
m Orange County.<lb/>
S hoolkids Records, the only<lb/>
re. ord store in the county to sell<lb/>
the album, stopped sales on Tues-<lb/>
ay after police officers warned<lb/>
employees they could be arrested.<lb/>
Im said Friday he changed<lb/>
us mind because ot the reaction of<lb/>
?eople in (ha pel 11 ill -<lb/>
The state law on obscenity<lb/>
allows a community to decide<lb/>
w hat is i .bscene, and the people in<lb/>
( hapel Hill seem to want the al-<lb/>
bum to be sold, said Fox<lb/>
"In the last couple days, I've<lb/>
had thehance to gauge the com-<lb/>
munity standards on it he said.<lb/>
"1 think the community is suppor-<lb/>
tive of it being sold<lb/>
On Thursday, Durham<lb/>
t ounty District Attorney Ron<lb/>
St phens t illowed Fox's action by<lb/>
banning sale of the album.<lb/>
Chapel 1 hllhasditt'erent stan-<lb/>
dards than most other communi-<lb/>
ties Fox said<lb/>
Fox said he thought the com-<lb/>
munity bases its standards on a<lb/>
liberal way of thinking that allows<lb/>
freedom of expression.<lb/>
' I got a lot calls about it, and<lb/>
I've read a lot about it he said.<lb/>
Fox said he received about 60<lb/>
telephone calls or letters, some<lb/>
supportive, "but the ones, for the<lb/>
most part in Chapel Hill, were not<lb/>
. i ry supportive<lb/>
Fox also said he likely will<lb/>
loosen restrictions on X-rated<lb/>
 ideotapesin the next few months.<lb/>
Stephen Akin, co-manager of<lb/>
Schoolkids Records, said Friday<lb/>
that he had not received official<lb/>
word that the store could sell the<lb/>
album but was glad to hear the<lb/>
ban on 2 Live Crew had beenlifted.<lb/>
"I think most people weren't<lb/>
happy with it he said. "We were<lb/>
supposed to meet with the civil<lb/>
liberties people, but 1 guess we<lb/>
.son t have to now<lb/>
be album contains graphic<lb/>
descriptions of sexual acts and<lb/>
contains vulgar language.<lb/>
Fox said he did not want to set<lb/>
himself up as the one who decides<lb/>
the community standards.<lb/>
Coastal park opens wheelchair<lb/>
ramp to seashore for beach access<lb/>
ATLANTIC BEACH (AP)<lb/>
For Merlene Hilton, the reigning<lb/>
Miss Wheelchair North Carolina,<lb/>
the wait lasted 10 years.<lb/>
When her family left Catawba<lb/>
County and headed for the coast<lb/>
for vacations, she usually stayed<lb/>
by the pool, where she could get<lb/>
around on her own.<lb/>
But on Friday, she was able to<lb/>
play in the sand and frolick in the<lb/>
waves just like everybody else,<lb/>
after the opening of a ramp that<lb/>
provides access to the beach at<lb/>
Fort Macon State Park to those<lb/>
who use wheelchairs.<lb/>
"This is wonderful she said<lb/>
as she zipped down the pine plank-<lb/>
ing toward the ocean. "This is a<lb/>
great day<lb/>
The new ramp is thought to<lb/>
make Fort Macon the first wheel-<lb/>
chair-accessible beach in the<lb/>
Southeast.<lb/>
Gov. Jim Martin officially<lb/>
opened the $60,000 project at a<lb/>
ribbon-cut ting ceremony Friday.<lb/>
Until now, the only way dis-<lb/>
abled visitors could get to the<lb/>
beach at Fort Macon ? the most<lb/>
used state park ? was by making<lb/>
an appointment with a ranger to<lb/>
be delivered onto 1 the sand by tour-<lb/>
wheel-drive.<lb/>
Jck.Iv Merntt, park superinten-<lb/>
dent, told The News and Observer oi<lb/>
Raleigh that such excursions were<lb/>
a dailv occurrence at Fort Macon.<lb/>
It wasn't a problem for the rang-<lb/>
ers, he said, but it seemed a incon-<lb/>
venience for those visitors, who<lb/>
had to rel v on the rangers to come<lb/>
back and get them when thev were<lb/>
ready to leave.<lb/>
The state park features Fort<lb/>
Macon, the brick foi tress that went<lb/>
under construction in 1826 as a<lb/>
defense against pirates and other<lb/>
invaders. Most people who conn<lb/>
10 visit the pai k take tor granted<lb/>
being able to pull into the bath<lb/>
house parkin lot and walk out<lb/>
onto the sand. But like most state<lb/>
parks, only parts of the facility<lb/>
were accessible to people who<lb/>
couldn't maneuver stepsordunes.<lb/>
The state added entrance<lb/>
ramps on both sides of the bath<lb/>
housebuilding, along with wheel-<lb/>
chair-accessible rest rooms and<lb/>
drinking-water fountains. A long,<lb/>
crooked arm of a boardwalk<lb/>
reaches from the building, over<lb/>
the dune and onto the sand, giv-<lb/>
ing wheelchair riders, children in<lb/>
strollers, and the elderly their first<lb/>
easy stroll on the beach. At the top<lb/>
of the dune, workers built a cov-<lb/>
ered shelter to allow visitors a<lb/>
sweeping view of the sand.<lb/>
In addition, the park has been<lb/>
equipped with two "sand-riks<lb/>
beach-going rickshaws made of<lb/>
plastic piping that can go from the<lb/>
sand to the water. Fitted with<lb/>
parasols, they look like beach<lb/>
loungechairson giant blue wheels.<lb/>
Until statedesignerscomeup with<lb/>
a water and sand-proof chair that<lb/>
can be operated by the rider, dis-<lb/>
abled visitors will need a friend to<lb/>
pick up the front end of the chairs<lb/>
and pull them into the waves.<lb/>
Officials said there were plans<lb/>
to similarly upgrade other parks<lb/>
in the state, including one at Ken-<lb/>
Lake, the Zeb Vance Birthplace<lb/>
near Ashcville and Reed Gold<lb/>
Mine near Charlotte. Balsam Lake<lb/>
Recreational Area, in the Nan-<lb/>
tahala National Forest in Transyl-<lb/>
vania County, also is being con-<lb/>
verted for wheelchair access.<lb/>
Dozensofpark visitors, many<lb/>
in wheelchairs or on crutches, at-<lb/>
tended the ceremony.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058221_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Features<lb/>
July IS, 1990<lb/>
'Jetsons: The Movie'<lb/>
blends traditional and<lb/>
computer animation<lb/>
By Caroline Cusick<lb/>
Features Fditor<lb/>
Meet (. krge letson his<lb/>
bo Elroy daughter udy <lb/>
lane his wife those are lyrics<lb/>
instantly recognized when placed<lb/>
with the theme song that made<lb/>
them popular.<lb/>
I he letsons t ame into Amen<lb/>
canhomes 27 earsago Sineethen,<lb/>
they have become household<lb/>
friends; almost everyone knows<lb/>
them by name<lb/>
In 1990, the letsons have bro-<lb/>
ken out ot the rV tube and ex-<lb/>
panded into the realm ot the big<lb/>
screen letsons The Movie' is<lb/>
the first motion picture of the ani-<lb/>
mated famih created by William<lb/>
I lanna m loseph Barbcra.<lb/>
? tis I he Mo ie written<lb/>
' ' rks begins a new<lb/>
? letsonfamih In<lb/>
 s are made<lb/>
However the are made tactfully<lb/>
and skilltulk . going irtually un-<lb/>
I to iewers<lb/>
As the modern technology of<lb/>
? e letsons lifestyle seemed fan<lb/>
ias to the audiences of l3,they<lb/>
! ave become reality to the view-<lb/>
? 990 W ith the materializa-<lb/>
tion of lap size computers, mov<lb/>
ing sidewalks, and phones with<lb/>
 ideo s reens, hanges had to bo<lb/>
made reviving the fantasy flavor<lb/>
ol gadgets and conviences within<lb/>
the animated galaxy.<lb/>
New gadgets found in the<lb/>
motion pi ture are<lb/>
? l-D holographic parks, in<lb/>
i hie h people may conjure up any<lb/>
. v t setting to experience and<lb/>
? 1 uturc houses where the<lb/>
interior buildsitself. Walls appear,<lb/>
phones follow their owner around<lb/>
the house and dog walks are<lb/>
available to help keep the family<lb/>
pet (or lather) in shape.<lb/>
? ars that drive themselves<lb/>
to work so theoccupantscandrink<lb/>
their morning coffee, read the<lb/>
paper and e on at the touch of a<lb/>
button allow the automobile to<lb/>
dress and groom them.<lb/>
? Space age sporting equip-<lb/>
mfntsuch as basketball anti-grav-<lb/>
ity boards allow players to hover<lb/>
off the ground and enjoy a game<lb/>
f hoops<lb/>
With the new gadgets have<lb/>
none new w isdom and moral les-<lb/>
Coming Up<lb/>
 UOsd<lb/>
y<lb/>
sons. The him sends a story of a<lb/>
family who is relocated by the<lb/>
lather's job. With one day's notice<lb/>
the wife, kids, dog, maid and<lb/>
household goods are packed and<lb/>
relocated from earth to the Orbit-<lb/>
ing One Astroid.<lb/>
The transition goes smoothly<lb/>
because the family isexcited about<lb/>
George's promotion and new job<lb/>
with Spacely Sprockets The move<lb/>
is looked upon as an adventure<lb/>
Theonlv item of value broken<lb/>
m the move is Judy's heart. Leav-<lb/>
ing earth before her date with rock<lb/>
star Cosmk Coz puts her into a<lb/>
deep depression lasting until her<lb/>
trip to the Astroid's shopping mall<lb/>
where she meets another musi<lb/>
 ian, Apollo Blue, whoishalfgreen<lb/>
and half blue<lb/>
Upon arrival at their new<lb/>
home, the letsons come in contact<lb/>
with new neighbors. Becoming<lb/>
good friends they combine their<lb/>
skills and efforts to solve a mvs-<lb/>
terv of sabotage and help a race of<lb/>
teddy boar-tvpo creatures<lb/>
This situation helps "letsons<lb/>
The Movie" convey the value of<lb/>
friendship, conservation and pres-<lb/>
ervation of the natural state ot<lb/>
creation, the value ot living crea-<lb/>
tures over the almightv dollar and<lb/>
the importance oi strong family<lb/>
unity.<lb/>
As an animated production,<lb/>
the presentation is smooth and<lb/>
successful due to the voices used<lb/>
and the art and depth displayed.<lb/>
The three-dimensional qual-<lb/>
ity of the animation and art work<lb/>
makes the picture appear true to<lb/>
life although it is clearly fantasy.<lb/>
This was established through a<lb/>
combination of traditional and<lb/>
computer animation techniques.<lb/>
A staff of 7S worked on the tradi-<lb/>
tional animation. Computer ani-<lb/>
mation was provided by Symbol-<lb/>
ics Graphics Division, Inc.<lb/>
Hanna explained that the<lb/>
computer animation is effective<lb/>
because it gives a spectacular and<lb/>
crisp look. The computer anima-<lb/>
tion brought depth and dimen-<lb/>
sion to the picture that was impos-<lb/>
sible to duplicate through tradi-<lb/>
tional methods.<lb/>
"Jetsons: The Movie" features<lb/>
some of the most advanced com-<lb/>
puter graphics genera ted imagery<lb/>
available tor animated features.<lb/>
The vocal cast was a close to<lb/>
original as possible George<lb/>
O'Hanlon was brought back for<lb/>
the voice of George Jetson and<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Summer Dance Madness<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
WRQRomedy one<lb/>
lw nn i<lb/>
( pen Mu Night<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
I laroka<lb/>
 1Z<lb/>
(pen Mu Nighl<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Ice Water Mansion<lb/>
NLVV DELI<lb/>
Mr Potato Head<lb/>
FIZZ<lb/>
snakes &amp; Angels<lb/>
HARD TIMES<lb/>
Little Rock<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Rock Cinema<lb/>
NEW DtLI<lb/>
Mr Potato Head<lb/>
HARD TIMES<lb/>
little Rock<lb/>
Fans flock<lb/>
to Raleigh<lb/>
for show<lb/>
I he i irateful i <lb/>
celebrates 2<lb/>
By A oner.<lb/>
Staff Wri1.1<lb/>
I Carl<lb/>
?<lb/>
iwaitn ' ? tart<lb/>
i lead si<lb/>
' ' 1<lb/>
i lornsbv and tin<lb/>
? '<lb/>
1 1 l ?<lb/>
in th<lb/>
"Jetsons The Movie" was produced and din t i Hanna eti ti<lb/>
film, made for all age audiences, shows tt ? "? I of n al ng lot<lb/>
Bringing bar favorite characters introdu ? d in 1 ?? ? II e film up lat<lb/>
IVnm Singleton returned to res<lb/>
time her voice role as lane<lb/>
O'Hanlon died in Februan 1989<lb/>
after finishing his role for "let<lb/>
sons The Movie "<lb/>
udy etson's was voiced I<lb/>
Tiffany, a new member of the jet<lb/>
son elan Tiffany pcrf irmed three<lb/>
songs in 'Jetsons: The Movie "1<lb/>
Always Thought I'd See You<lb/>
Again " i OU and Me" and<lb/>
"Home These songs were writ<lb/>
ten in joint efforts by 1 im lames.<lb/>
Steve NK C lintock, I'hiK 'demand<lb/>
George robin and Mark Mancina<lb/>
1 he voice ot Mr. Spacely is<lb/>
performed by Mel Plane Plane is<lb/>
also the voice behind Bugs Bunny<lb/>
Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Barnej<lb/>
Rubble, Pino, Foghorn 1 eghorn<lb/>
and Iweetv Bird, letsons: I he<lb/>
Movie" was Plain's final feature<lb/>
film Blanc died in uly 1989.<lb/>
Don Mcssi k, the voici ol<lb/>
Astro, has been several fanv<lb/>
canines 1 lis voice hasbeen tied to<lb/>
Scooby Poo and vther Poo char<lb/>
acters since 1969 In addition to<lb/>
dogs, Messick voiced Ranger<lb/>
Smith and Pool oon Ni ogi Pear<lb/>
Newcomer Patric Zimmer<lb/>
man replat ed I aws Butler foi ti<lb/>
voiceoi Elroy letson Zimmerman<lb/>
has also voiced Auggie Doggie<lb/>
and Dixie the Mouse<lb/>
. .<lb/>
romlves owns the Quicksilver Records and Book E<lb/>
downtown on r ifth St 1 he ost.it lishment is populat lor exel trvging<lb/>
records, tapes and books (Photo by eleseleH ffman ECUPhoto<lb/>
lab)<lb/>
?? ?1 . iyin; 1<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
? th sv re<lb/>
parades <lb/>
:i<lb/>
iti a3<lb/>
'?<lb/>
i definite<lb/>
anc Pal.an i : V: ???? . o<lb/>
?<lb/>
in.King 1 SI) Aside tr.<lb/>
fan pro-1 ' rheF<lb/>
" rth u<lb/>
- summ r 1<lb/>
id s25l i<lb/>
? :<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
tori ,ionit ?<lb/>
Cold Sweat releases long-awaited album<lb/>
By Deanna Nevgloski<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
Get ready to perspire with the<lb/>
debut LP from MCA recording<lb/>
artists Cold Sweat.<lb/>
With the release of Break (hit,<lb/>
this Los Angeles-based heavy<lb/>
metal quintet shows plenty of<lb/>
promise with eleven killer tunes<lb/>
guaranteed to make you break into<lb/>
a dripping, cold sweat.<lb/>
Recorded at L. AsSound City<lb/>
and produced by Kevin Beamish<lb/>
(Y&amp;T, Leatherwolf, Saxon), Cold<lb/>
Sweat offers an honest, but defi-<lb/>
nitely hard rockin' vinyl that<lb/>
makes them a major contender for<lb/>
other bands across the nation<lb/>
Cold Sweat, a moniker taken<lb/>
from an old Thin Lizzy song, fea-<lb/>
tures Rory Cathey on lead vocals.<lb/>
Marc Ferrari and Enk damans on<lb/>
guitars, Chris McLernon on bass<lb/>
and Anthony White on drums.<lb/>
Opening up the album is a<lb/>
kickin' rocker about a car race<lb/>
titled "Four on The Hoor" and is<lb/>
followed by the probable first<lb/>
videosingle "Cryin' Shame' a<lb/>
catchy, melody-laden tune that<lb/>
will have listeners singing along<lb/>
by the chorus' end.<lb/>
"Lovestruck" and "Killing<lb/>
Floor" have a hard-edged, blues<lb/>
taste, while the beautiful, pow t<lb/>
ballad "Waiting in Vain" adds a<lb/>
softer beat to the boa vy C old Svs ea t<lb/>
sound<lb/>
Through many trying times,<lb/>
which involved member and band<lb/>
name changes, Cold Sweat sut<lb/>
fered one of their most difficult<lb/>
hardships when former lead vo<lb/>
calist, Oni Logan, left the then<lb/>
named Ferrari to join another<lb/>
band<lb/>
That was also the .ame day<lb/>
the band was to sign a label deal<lb/>
and begin recording the lorn;<lb/>
awaited, debut album<lb/>
Six monthsdown the road and<lb/>
20 demos later, Cathey stepped<lb/>
in to save the band from fa ing the<lb/>
heartache of a broken band and<lb/>
dream.<lb/>
Cathey, 22, who had been<lb/>
playing in the southeast club i ir<lb/>
cuit for seven and a hall years, got<lb/>
the Cold Sweat gig after he flew<lb/>
out to l. A. and auditioned. Cathey<lb/>
signed a major label deal in less<lb/>
than a week.<lb/>
"fake Phis Heart of Mine<lb/>
and "Let's Make Love Tonight"<lb/>
are radio ready tunes that clearly<lb/>
show the vocal talents ofat he a<lb/>
Fayetteville, N.C native who<lb/>
pl.e, ed for I ? p pulai<lb/>
(libraltar<lb/>
Putin . , list ol influential<lb/>
favorite front men in lude ?? of I<lb/>
rate (Qu ensi yche) left Keith<lb/>
I i i sla), Ra (all n (Badland<lb/>
: asti in Bac h (Skid Row I, Rob<lb/>
i lalford (judas Priest) and R bert<lb/>
Plant<lb/>
A vex alist with more than just<lb/>
a hint of blues inhispij ath )<lb/>
goes forth thn it in the i cellent<lb/>
blues rock numb i I istful<lb/>
Money w hi h is about a materi<lb/>
alistic, I loll) w od t pe lady<lb/>
Alter foui y ars and foui al<lb/>
hums w ith Kot I, 1 erian, 28 v en<lb/>
lured out on his ow n to foi m a<lb/>
band that would allow musical<lb/>
freedom among its members<lb/>
Ferarri, who is influenced b<lb/>
'70s rock like 1 e-1 Zeppelin and<lb/>
Kiss, approaches the guitar in a<lb/>
strong and blues), traditional<lb/>
st k?,anddoesn'tover emphasia<lb/>
the instrument's sound like a lot<lb/>
ot guitarists in metal bands tend<lb/>
to di<lb/>
Proof of this (an be heard on<lb/>
the instrumental li icra, ' a nu i<lb/>
acouslk guitar piece that Ferrari<lb/>
illustrates w ith passion and musi<lb/>
cal flair<lb/>
(iamans, 20, a nati e of New<lb/>
Hampshire, savs I ? nes trom<lb/>
the Rand) Rho ids Eddie Van<lb/>
i i ilen school i I pla) ing<lb/>
I Ie uses the conU mj i rar<lb/>
. : ,i appn h that allows him<lb/>
. ipout fasl guitai riffsand licks.<lb/>
(iamans earned some of his<lb/>
li i al - ti i s w hile piv. ing tor<lb/>
w avsted,and met Ferrari through<lb/>
Pete Way (I FO, Waysted)<lb/>
rogether, both six-stringers<lb/>
(rcate a i mj limentary double-<lb/>
i (c assault<lb/>
I orming the hoa .Ik kbeat<lb/>
, told Swt at are V hite and<lb/>
M I ernon White, who had been<lb/>
drumming foi Mark Slaughter<lb/>
(VinnieVim ent ln asion Slaugh<lb/>
ter) out in I as ' eg is i ame to the<lb/>
1 tnd when Badland si ireg( hais<lb/>
on introduced him to 1 erian.<lb/>
c hio native NU I ernon, origi-<lb/>
nally a guitarist, joined therh) thm<lb/>
section and thus a tight, hard<lb/>
dm in' b.u kbeat w as formed.<lb/>
1 ong Wa) I )own, a song<lb/>
that McLernon says defines the<lb/>
band's sound is a great, no non<lb/>
sense rocker 1 he rock and raun<lb/>
( In lump theam is followed<lb/>
by I lusi Wanna Make love to<lb/>
 on a track originall) recorded<lb/>
by I oghat<lb/>
C old Sweat d s more than<lb/>
jushcetothesong h<lb/>
trills, straight hi<lb/>
make it sound like<lb/>
i iriginal<lb/>
i ou ma ha e i night (<lb/>
Sweat at 1 he Flamu<lb/>
1 ,n ette ille arly last i<lb/>
forethe i<lb/>
they opened up t. ? avatj<lb/>
. onccrtizing ti<lb/>
summer.(!old su eal<lb/>
at the Sup r Ro k<lb/>
Mannheim. West I<lb/>
Septeml or 1 w ith VN I -<lb/>
Aerosmith, I i son<lb/>
Queens! yche Vixen i<lb/>
Front I hat s prcth .<lb/>
band w ith onh a di<lb/>
A band who has i<lb/>
the talent and thelcx I<lb/>
is on their wa to su<lb/>
w ith a killer polished d<lb/>
that is honest .nid ,<lb/>
Irom the heart<lb/>
And theband'slivesh tv<lb/>
clearly show down to-earth<lb/>
sicians with great attitudi s at<lb/>
knack for playing fast drum rock<lb/>
n roll musk<lb/>
Alter list, nine, to tl ? -<lb/>
ler, no tiller i,i band motto) al<lb/>
bum, get read to break ml<lb/>
sweat<lb/>
Juh<lb/>
c<lb/>
li<lb/>
t,<lb/>
 ? r<lb/>
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.1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058221_0009"/><lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
- @hc iEagt (garglfnUm<lb/>
Features<lb/>
July 18,1990<lb/>
'Jetsons: The Movie'<lb/>
blends traditional and<lb/>
computer animation<lb/>
By Caroline Cusick<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
"Meet George Jetson  his<lb/>
boy Elroy  daughter Judy <lb/>
Jane his wife" ? these are lyrics<lb/>
instantly recognized when placed<lb/>
with the theme song that made<lb/>
them popular.<lb/>
The jetsons came into Amcri-<lb/>
canhomcs 27 yearsago. Since then,<lb/>
they have become household<lb/>
friends; almost everyone knows<lb/>
them by name.<lb/>
In 1990, the Jetsons have bro-<lb/>
ken out of the TV tube and ex-<lb/>
panded into the realm of the big<lb/>
screen. "Jetsons: The Movie" is<lb/>
the first motion picture of the ani-<lb/>
mated family created by William<lb/>
Manna and Joseph Barbera.<lb/>
"Jetsons: The Movie' written<lb/>
bv Dennis Marks, begins a new<lb/>
adventure for the letson family. In<lb/>
the film, many changes are made.<lb/>
However, they are made tactfully<lb/>
and skillfully, going virtually un-<lb/>
noticed to viewers.<lb/>
As the modem technology of<lb/>
the Jetsons' lifestyle seemed fan-<lb/>
tasy to the audiences of 1963, they<lb/>
have become reality to the view-<lb/>
ers of 1990. With the materializa-<lb/>
tion of lap-size computers, mov-<lb/>
ing sidewalks, and phones with<lb/>
video screens, changes had to be<lb/>
nude reviving the fantasy flavor<lb/>
of gadgets and conviences within<lb/>
the animated galaxy.<lb/>
New gadgets found in the<lb/>
motion picture are:<lb/>
? 3-D holographic parks, in<lb/>
which people may conjure up any<lb/>
type of. setting to experience and<lb/>
enjoy.<lb/>
? Future houses where the<lb/>
interior buildsitself.Wallsappear,<lb/>
phones follow their owner around<lb/>
the house, and dog walks are<lb/>
available to help keep the family<lb/>
pet (or father) in shape.<lb/>
? Cars that drive themselves<lb/>
to work so theoccupantscandrink<lb/>
their morning coffee, read the<lb/>
paper anr1 even at the touch of a<lb/>
button allow the automobile to<lb/>
dress and groom them.<lb/>
? Space age sporting equip-<lb/>
ment such as basketball anti-grav-<lb/>
ity boards allow players to hover<lb/>
off the ground and enjoy a game<lb/>
ofchoops.<lb/>
With the new gadgets have<lb/>
come new wisdom and moral les-<lb/>
sons. The film sends a story of a<lb/>
family who is relocated by the<lb/>
father's job. With one day's notice<lb/>
the wife, kids, dog, maid and<lb/>
household goods are packed and<lb/>
relocated from earth to the Orbit-<lb/>
ing One Astroid.<lb/>
The transition goes smoothly<lb/>
because the family isexci ted about<lb/>
George's promotion and new job<lb/>
with Spacely Sprockets. The move<lb/>
is looked upon as an adventure.<lb/>
The only item of value broken<lb/>
in the move is Judy's heart. Leav-<lb/>
ing earth before her date with rock<lb/>
star Cosmic Coz puts her into a<lb/>
deep depression lasting until her<lb/>
trip to the Astroid's shopping mall<lb/>
where she meets another musi-<lb/>
cian, Apollo Blue, who ishalf green<lb/>
and half blue.<lb/>
Upon arrival at their new<lb/>
home, the Jetsons come in contact<lb/>
with new neighbors. Becoming<lb/>
good friends they combine their<lb/>
skills and efforts to solve a mys-<lb/>
tery of sabotage and help a race of<lb/>
teddy bear-type creatures.<lb/>
This situation helps "Jetsons:<lb/>
The Movie" convey the value of<lb/>
friend shi p, conserva tion and pres-<lb/>
ervation of the natural state of<lb/>
creation, the value of living crea-<lb/>
tures over the almighty dollar and<lb/>
the importance of strong family<lb/>
unity.<lb/>
As an animated production,<lb/>
the presentation is smooth and<lb/>
successful due to the voices used<lb/>
and the art and depth displayed.<lb/>
The three-dimensional qual-<lb/>
ity of the animation and art work<lb/>
makes the picture appear true to<lb/>
life although it is clearly fantasy.<lb/>
This was established through a<lb/>
combination of traditional and<lb/>
computer animation techniques.<lb/>
A staff of 78 worked on the tradi-<lb/>
tional animation. Computer ani-<lb/>
mation was provided by Symbol-<lb/>
ics Graphics Division, Inc.<lb/>
Hanna explained that the<lb/>
computer animation is effective<lb/>
because it gives a spectacular and<lb/>
crisp look. The computer anima-<lb/>
tion brought depth and dimen-<lb/>
sion to the picture that was impos-<lb/>
sible to duplicate through tradi-<lb/>
tional methods.<lb/>
"Jetsons: The Movie" features<lb/>
some of the most advanced com-<lb/>
puter graphics genera ted imagery<lb/>
available for animated features.<lb/>
The vocal cast was a close to<lb/>
original as possible. George<lb/>
OHanlon was brought back for<lb/>
the voice of George Jetson and<lb/>
Fans flock<lb/>
to Raleigh<lb/>
for show<lb/>
The Grateful Dead<lb/>
celebrates 25 years<lb/>
By Anne Paul<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Jetsons: The Movie" was produced and directed by William Hanna (left) and Joseph Barbera (right). The<lb/>
film, made for all-age audiences, shows the effect of relocating for career purposes on the family unit<lb/>
Bringing back favorite characters introduced in 1963, the film updates the Jetsons future-fantasy world<lb/>
Penny Singleton returned to res-<lb/>
ume her voice role as Jane.<lb/>
OHanlon died in February 1989<lb/>
after finishing his role for "Jet-<lb/>
sons: The Movie<lb/>
Judy Jetson's was voiced by<lb/>
Tiffany, a new member of the Jet-<lb/>
son clan. Tiffany performed three<lb/>
songs in "Jetsons: The Movie "I<lb/>
Always Thought I'd See You<lb/>
Again "You and Me" and<lb/>
"Home These songs were writ-<lb/>
ten in joint efforts by Tim James,<lb/>
Steve McClintock, Phil Colemand,<lb/>
George Tobin and Mark Mancina.<lb/>
The voice of Mr. Spacely is<lb/>
performed by Mel Blanc. Blanc is<lb/>
also the voice behind Bugs Bunny,<lb/>
Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Barney<lb/>
Rubble, Dino, Foghorn Leghorn<lb/>
and Tweety Bird. "Jetsons: The<lb/>
Movie" was Blanc's final feature<lb/>
film. Blanc died in July 1989.<lb/>
Don Messick, the voice of<lb/>
Astro, has been several famous<lb/>
canines. His voice has been tied to<lb/>
Scooby-Doo and other Doo char-<lb/>
acters since 1969. In addition to<lb/>
dogs, Messick voiced Ranger<lb/>
Smith and Boo Boo on "Yogi Bear<lb/>
Newcomer Patric Zimmer-<lb/>
man replaced Daws Butler for the<lb/>
voiceof Elroy Jetson. Zimmerman<lb/>
has also voiced Auggie Doggie<lb/>
and Dixie the Mouse.<lb/>
Tom Ives owns the Quicksilver Records and Book Exchange located<lb/>
downtown on Fifth St. The establishment is popular for exchanging<lb/>
records, tapes and books. (Photo by Celsete Hoffman?ECU Photo<lb/>
Lab) <lb/>
On July 10, the parking fields<lb/>
outside Carter-Finley stadium<lb/>
became the scene of tie dyed tans<lb/>
awaiting the start of the (irateful<lb/>
Dead show.<lb/>
Asthecrowd filtered in, Bruce<lb/>
Hornsby and the Range played,<lb/>
opening for the San Franrisco-<lb/>
based group.<lb/>
The Dead took the stage a! 7<lb/>
p.m. to bring slight relief to the<lb/>
35,000 fans who had been waiting<lb/>
in the sweltering heat of summer<lb/>
To lessen the damage of the<lb/>
weather, people with water hoses<lb/>
were abundantly spraying the<lb/>
congregation t tans<lb/>
Shortly after I In- id bt gan<lb/>
their concert, a thunderstorm<lb/>
drenched the stadium. 1 lowever,<lb/>
fire officials said more than UK)<lb/>
fans had been treated for medical<lb/>
problems before the storm, over<lb/>
50 of them for heat exhaustion.<lb/>
Atop the stage. The Dead be<lb/>
gan their performance with "lack<lb/>
Straw Thev continued with fa-<lb/>
vorites such as "Uncle John's<lb/>
Band "Stella Blue" and "Aiko<lb/>
Aiko The song selection was<lb/>
good because the band played old<lb/>
favorites instead of their newer,<lb/>
trendy songs.<lb/>
Displaying two wide screens<lb/>
and using them well with elabo-<lb/>
rate images and close ups, I he<lb/>
Grateful Dead entertained fans<lb/>
who could not see the stage clearly<lb/>
Also on the screens were Occa<lb/>
sional parades of the dancing<lb/>
bears, a symbol of The Dead.<lb/>
They played until 10.30 p. in<lb/>
with a 30- minute break. The band<lb/>
ended the concert with "Not Fade<lb/>
Away a definite crowd pieaser,<lb/>
and an encore of "Broke Down<lb/>
Palace<lb/>
About 50 people were arrested<lb/>
for drug charges, manv of them<lb/>
involving LSD.<lb/>
Aside from the arrests, most<lb/>
fans present enjoved the music.<lb/>
The Raleigh show marked the<lb/>
only North Carolina appearance<lb/>
this summer for The Grateful<lb/>
Dead's 25th anniversary tour<lb/>
T-shirts with Bart Simpson<lb/>
wearing a tie dye holding a cake<lb/>
with one burning candle and<lb/>
"Happy Birthdav Dude" weresold<lb/>
for the occasion at the concert<lb/>
Cold Sweat releases long-awaited album<lb/>
By Deanna Nevgloski<lb/>
Assistant Feature Editor<lb/>
Get ready to perspire with the<lb/>
debut LP from MCA recording<lb/>
artists Cold Sweat.<lb/>
With the release of Break Out,<lb/>
this Los Angeles-based heavy<lb/>
metal quintet shows plenty of<lb/>
promise with eleven killer tunes<lb/>
guaranteed tomakeyou break into<lb/>
a dripping, cold sweat.<lb/>
Recorded at L-AsSoundCity<lb/>
and produced by Kevin Beamish<lb/>
(Y&amp;T, Leatherwolf, Saxon), Cold<lb/>
Sweat offers an honest, but defi-<lb/>
nitely hard rockin' vinyl that<lb/>
makes them a major contender for<lb/>
other bands across the nation.<lb/>
Cold Sweat, a moniker taken<lb/>
from an old Thin Lizzy song, fea-<lb/>
tures Rory Cathey on lead vocals,<lb/>
Marc Ferrari and Erik Gamans on<lb/>
guitars, Chris McLernon on bass<lb/>
and Anthony White on drums.<lb/>
Opening up the album is a<lb/>
kickin' rocker about a car race<lb/>
titled Tour on The Floor and is<lb/>
followed by the probable first<lb/>
videosingle "Cryin' Shame a<lb/>
catchy, melody-laden tune that<lb/>
will have listeners singing along<lb/>
by the chorus' end.<lb/>
"Lovestruck" and "Killing<lb/>
Floor" have a hard-edged, bluesy<lb/>
taste, while the beautiful, power<lb/>
ballad "Waiting in Vain" adds a<lb/>
softer beat to the heavy Cold Sweat<lb/>
sound.<lb/>
Through many trying times,<lb/>
which involved member and band<lb/>
name changes, Cold Sweat suf-<lb/>
fered one of their most difficult<lb/>
hardships when former lead vo-<lb/>
calist, Oni Logan, left the then-<lb/>
named Ferrari to join another<lb/>
band.<lb/>
That was also the same day<lb/>
the band was to sign a label deal<lb/>
and begin recording the long-<lb/>
awaited, debut album.<lb/>
Six monthsdown the road and<lb/>
250 demos later, Cathey stepped<lb/>
in to save the band from facing the<lb/>
heartache of a broken band and<lb/>
dream.<lb/>
Cathey, 22, who had been<lb/>
playing in the southeast club cir-<lb/>
cuit for seven and a half years, got<lb/>
the Cold Sweat gig after he flew<lb/>
out to LA. and auditioned. Cathey<lb/>
signed a major label deal in less<lb/>
than a week.<lb/>
"Take This Heart of Mine"<lb/>
and "Lef s Make Love Tonight"<lb/>
are radio-ready tunes that clearly<lb/>
show the vocal talents of Cathey,a<lb/>
Fayetteville, N.C, native who<lb/>
played for the one-time popular<lb/>
Gibraltar.<lb/>
Cathey's list of influential<lb/>
favorite frontmen include Geoff<lb/>
Tate (Queensryche), Jeff Keith<lb/>
(Tesla), Ray Gillen (Badlands),<lb/>
Sebastian Bach (Skid Row), Rob<lb/>
Halford (Judas Priest) and Robert<lb/>
Plant.<lb/>
A vocalist with more than just<lb/>
a hint of blues in his pipes, Cathey<lb/>
goes for the throat in the excellent<lb/>
blues-rock number "Fistful of<lb/>
Money which is about a materi-<lb/>
alistic, Hollywood-type lady.<lb/>
After four years and four al-<lb/>
bums with Keel, Ferrari, 28, ven-<lb/>
tured out on his own to form a<lb/>
band that would allow musical<lb/>
freedom among its members.<lb/>
Ferarri, who is influenced by<lb/>
'70s rock like Led Zeppelin and<lb/>
Kiss, approaches the guitar in a<lb/>
strong and bluesy, traditional<lb/>
style,and doesn't over-emphasize<lb/>
the instrument's sound like a lot<lb/>
of guitarists in metal bands tend<lb/>
to do.<lb/>
Proof of this can be heard on<lb/>
the instrumental "Riviera a nice<lb/>
acoustic guitar piece that Ferrari<lb/>
illustrates with passion and musi-<lb/>
cal flair.<lb/>
Gamans, 20, a native of New<lb/>
Hampshire, says he comes from<lb/>
the Randy Rhoads-Eddie Van<lb/>
Halen school of playing.<lb/>
He uses the contemporary-<lb/>
guitar approach that allows him<lb/>
to rip out fast guitar riffs and licks.<lb/>
Gamans earned some of his<lb/>
musical stripes while playing for<lb/>
Waysted, and met Ferrari through<lb/>
Pete Way vUFO, Waysted).<lb/>
Together, both six-stringers<lb/>
create a complimentary double-<lb/>
axe assault.<lb/>
Forming the heavy backbeat<lb/>
of Cold Sweat are White and<lb/>
McLernon. White, who had been<lb/>
drumming for Mark Slaughter<lb/>
(Vinnie Vincent Invasion, Slaugh-<lb/>
ter) out in Las Vegas, came to the<lb/>
band when Badland'sGregChais-<lb/>
son introduced him to Ferrari.<lb/>
Ohio native McLernon, origi-<lb/>
nally a guitarist, joined the rhythm<lb/>
section and thus a tight, hard-<lb/>
drivin' backbeat was formed.<lb/>
"Long Way Down a song<lb/>
that McLernon says defines the<lb/>
band's sound, is a great, no-non-<lb/>
sense rocker. The rock and raun-<lb/>
chy "Jump the Gun" is followed<lb/>
by "I Just Wanna Make Love to<lb/>
You a track originally recorded<lb/>
by Foghat.<lb/>
Cold Sweat does more than<lb/>
justice to the song. In tact, these no<lb/>
fnlls, straight-forward musicians<lb/>
make it sound like a Cold Swe it<lb/>
original.<lb/>
You may have caught Cold<lb/>
Sweat at The Flaming Mug in<lb/>
Fayetteville early last month, be-<lb/>
fore the release of the a lbum, when<lb/>
they opened up for Savatc.ge.<lb/>
Concertizing throughout the<lb/>
summer, Cold Sweat will perform<lb/>
at the Super Rock '90 Festival in<lb/>
Mannheim, West Germany on<lb/>
September 1 with Whitesnake<lb/>
Aerosmith, Poison, Dio,<lb/>
Queensryche, Vixen and The<lb/>
Front. That's pretty good tor a<lb/>
band with only a debut album.<lb/>
A band who has the sound,<lb/>
the talent and the look. Cold Swea t<lb/>
is on their way to super stardom<lb/>
with a killer, polished debut effort<lb/>
that is honest and comes straight<lb/>
from the heart.<lb/>
And theband'sliveshowcases<lb/>
clearly show down-to-earth mu-<lb/>
sicians with great attitudes and a<lb/>
knack for playing fast, dn vin' rock-<lb/>
n-roll music.<lb/>
After listening to this "all kil<lb/>
ler, no filler" (a band motto) al-<lb/>
bum, get ready to break into a cold<lb/>
sweat.<lb/>
n<lb/>
r?<lb/>
V<lb/>
i<lb/>
b<lb/>
S<lb/>
<pb facs="00058221_0010"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
 She JEafit (Karolfman<lb/>
July 18,1990<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Deaths<lb/>
lirtked to<lb/>
tackling<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL (API - Most<lb/>
permanent injuries among high<lb/>
school football players in 1Q8<lb/>
resulted from tackling or being<lb/>
i,k kli d t researcher .it the Uni-<lb/>
? of NorthCarolinaatChapel<lb/>
Hill Mid<lb/>
u hesneed tobcreminded<lb/>
even 'ear to emphasize that kids<lb/>
I uld nc er Nock or tackle with<lb/>
hcii headsdow n said Frederi k<lb/>
(i Mueller, who monitors foot-<lb/>
? ill related deaths and cata-<lb/>
strophii injuries in the I nited<lb/>
ites This is not only against<lb/>
I he rules in high school and col<lb/>
ge but it also is very danger-<lb/>
ous<lb/>
In 1968, for example, before a<lb/>
rule i hange prohibiting using the<lb/>
head as the initial contact point in<lb/>
blocking and tackling. 56 players<lb/>
tin d from injuries<lb/>
Pirt ot the problem results<lb/>
from kids watching the pros on<lb/>
suiulav afternoon he said.<lb/>
Somebody will make a tackle<lb/>
with his head, and the announcer<lb/>
will s.iy what a great tackle it was.<lb/>
That's really the last thing an-<lb/>
nouncers should be saying on<lb/>
national television because it en-<lb/>
courages the kids to do it wrong<lb/>
The Fourteen spinal cord in-<lb/>
juries in 1989 that caused perma-<lb/>
nent paralysis were the highest<lb/>
number of severe in juries recorded<lb/>
in this country from football in the<lb/>
past 13 years, he said.<lb/>
In addition, 1 football play-<lb/>
ers died during the 1989 season<lb/>
from trauma, heart failure or heat<lb/>
stroke said Mueller, professor of<lb/>
physical education at UNC-<lb/>
apclHill.<lb/>
"The number of deaths we<lb/>
consider directly attributable to<lb/>
toot ball dropped from six in 1988<lb/>
to tour in 1989, which is as low as<lb/>
we have seen he said "Still, the<lb/>
increase in cases of permanent<lb/>
paralysis concerns us. and it is<lb/>
something that coaches, players<lb/>
See Deaths page 10<lb/>
Time to take a break<lb/>
T?ese g,?s p.Cce one-on-one a, a k babaU ejmp ggjg ?jgE&amp;B<lb/>
coach of ECUS women's basketball team, runs the camp. (Photo by J. P. wnnmire<lb/>
Mackey to face charges of<lb/>
cocaine use, drunk driving<lb/>
CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleve-<lb/>
land State University basketball<lb/>
coach Kevin Mackey, who has<lb/>
tested positive for cocaine use, has<lb/>
"a serious problem his lawyer is<lb/>
quoted as saying.<lb/>
Mackey pleaded innocent<lb/>
Monday to misdemeanor charges<lb/>
of driving under theinfluenceand<lb/>
consuming alcohol in a motor<lb/>
vehicle. His plea came after police<lb/>
arrested him Friday night when<lb/>
they saw him leave a suspected<lb/>
drug house with a woman, enter<lb/>
his car and drive erratically.<lb/>
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer,<lb/>
in today's editions, quoted David<lb/>
Roth as saying Mackey told him<lb/>
he was "so out of it that anything<lb/>
could have happened. He was<lb/>
dazed and confused. That's how<lb/>
messed up he was. l jfe was a blur.<lb/>
"I le will not deny or run from<lb/>
the truth Roth said. "When 1 say<lb/>
he has a serious problem, 1 mean<lb/>
serious. It it was a one-time mis-<lb/>
take, as if he just happened to run<lb/>
into it, then 1 would call it an un-<lb/>
fortunate incident<lb/>
Mackey will seek a medical<lb/>
leave of absence, said Roth, who<lb/>
plans to meet today with univer-<lb/>
sity officials.<lb/>
"1 want them (Cleveland State)<lb/>
to understand that when you have<lb/>
an illness, that bad things can<lb/>
happen to you<lb/>
Police Lt. Martin Flask said<lb/>
Monday, several hours after the<lb/>
arraignment, that a urine sample<lb/>
Mackev voluntarily provided<lb/>
during the booking process re-<lb/>
vealed he was legally intoxicated<lb/>
bv alcohol. Traces of cocaine<lb/>
showed up in a drug screening.<lb/>
The Cleveland Police<lb/>
Department's scientific investiga-<lb/>
tive unit was "unable to deter-<lb/>
mine the frequency or intensity of<lb/>
use Mask said. "This additional<lb/>
issue, bemg the presence of co-<lb/>
caine, will ultimately be presented<lb/>
to a prosecutor for review.<lb/>
Cleveland State spokesman<lb/>
Ed Mayer said university lawyers<lb/>
were determining what steps to<lb/>
take in light of the police findings.<lb/>
"We hope to ha vea resolution<lb/>
in the next couple of days Mayer<lb/>
said. "It doesn't look good for<lb/>
Kevin right now, but we haven't<lb/>
taken any legal action at this time<lb/>
The university on Wed nesday<lb/>
announced it signed Mackey to a<lb/>
two-year contract containing base<lb/>
salaries of $85,000 next season and<lb/>
$90,000in 1991-92.0utsideincome<lb/>
from television and radio shows,<lb/>
endorsements and summer camps<lb/>
could have nearly doubled the<lb/>
base.<lb/>
Mackev came to Cleveland<lb/>
State as head coach in 1983 from<lb/>
Boston College, where he had been<lb/>
an assistant. His 1985-86 Vikings<lb/>
team went 29-4 and reached the<lb/>
regional semifinals of the NCAA<lb/>
See Mackey, page 10<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill to<lb/>
consider drug testing<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL (AP) ? Stressing unanimity, the governing body<lb/>
of the state's public colleges refused to grant North Carolina's flagship<lb/>
university an exemption from a mandatory drug-testing policy for<lb/>
student athletes.<lb/>
The University of North Carolina Board of Governors voted Friday<lb/>
to instruct the UNC-Chapel Hill trustees to adopt the mandatory<lb/>
program alter the trustees last month balked at the policy out of<lb/>
concerns over its legality<lb/>
The matter is one of such basic importance that we cannot leave it<lb/>
to Ix addressed in 1" p. itcntiatly different ways said Robert "Roddy"<lb/>
lones, the outgoing chairman oi the Hoard of Governors "I hat is the<lb/>
difference and that is why, after due conskk ration ot the local and other<lb/>
issues, we made our decision to require mandatory testing<lb/>
rhe board is thegovemingbody of the state's l6puWicuniversiHes.<lb/>
I ifteenof the schools have athletic programs, with the North Carolina<lb/>
School of the Arts in Winston-Salcm the only campus without an<lb/>
intercollegiate athletics program.<lb/>
Ihe UNC-Uiapel Hill trustees voted last month to ask that the<lb/>
school be allowed to continue its voluntary drug-testing program<lb/>
rather than adopt a mandatory program.<lb/>
Earl "Phil" Phillips, the chairman of the UNC-Chapel Hill Board of<lb/>
Trustees, said Friday that the board would take up the matter again at<lb/>
its next meeting in August. But he would not predict what it would<lb/>
decide.<lb/>
"I understand where the Board of Governor is coming from and 1<lb/>
do respect their position as well Phillips said. "(Athletes) are role<lb/>
models for North Carolinians and we need to be sure that they project<lb/>
the proper image, and testing is a deterrent<lb/>
Phillips wid the trustees split on a voice vote when deciding to ask<lb/>
for the exemption. He said the trustees had concerns about the fairness<lb/>
and constitutionality- of a mandatory drug-testing program.<lb/>
Walter Davis and J. Aaron Prevost were the only members of the<lb/>
Board of Governors to vote against the resolution.<lb/>
"If the legislature passed a law saying this Board of Governors had<lb/>
to take a drug test, I'm sure there would be a war. Or if this Board of<lb/>
Governors passed a resolution saying the academic community had to<lb/>
take it there would be a war Davis said. "Until such a time that it is<lb/>
mandatory for the students and the rest of the university system, I think<lb/>
it is rank discrimination and I feel that very deeply<lb/>
Jones said there were no court decisions barring the board from<lb/>
imposing the policy.<lb/>
"1 remind all of us that the Board of Governors and the president<lb/>
have acknowledged from the beginning that there arc legal and consti-<lb/>
tutional issues involved in this problem and how we deal with it, Jones<lb/>
' System campuses have been instructed to implement a mandatory<lb/>
drug-testing program by this fall. The Board of Governors endorsed the<lb/>
policy last August as one of the recommendations resulting from an<lb/>
investigation of North Carolina State University's basketball program.<lb/>
System leaders formulated a draft policy and circulated it to all<lb/>
campuses. Schools were instructed to examine the model and design<lb/>
similar policies. . .<lb/>
The police studied bv the UNC-Chapel Hill trustees is nearly<lb/>
identical to the system prototype. The policy calls tor preseason testing<lb/>
and unannounced random testing throughout the year. It would apply<lb/>
See Drug testing, page 10<lb/>
Douglas splits with King, clears<lb/>
road to title defense in Las Vegas<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) Heavy-<lb/>
weight champion lames "Buster<lb/>
Douglas reached a settlement<lb/>
today with promoter Don king<lb/>
w- chelearsthewayforanOct.25<lb/>
title defense against Evander<lb/>
Holyfield in Las Vegas.<lb/>
The deal was officially an-<lb/>
nounced at 9:42 a.m. by I S. Dis-<lb/>
trict Judge Robert W. Sweet as the<lb/>
trial entered its third week. The<lb/>
details were hammered out in a<lb/>
lengthy bargaining session which<lb/>
began over the weekend and ran<lb/>
into late Monday.<lb/>
Under the settlement, King<lb/>
Tsnks a lot<lb/>
Ray Lew.s. a graduate" student here at ECU, puts away equipment<lb/>
after an intermediate swimm.ng class. The sw.rnmers; used the<lb/>
snorkels and masks (Photo by J D. Whitm.re - ECU Photo Lab)<lb/>
will not be involved in promoting<lb/>
Douglas' first title defense, said<lb/>
Douglas' manager, John Johnson.<lb/>
The Oct. 25 bout with Holyfield<lb/>
will be helil at Steve Wynn's ho-<lb/>
tel-casino. The Mirage, he said.<lb/>
The hotel was Douglas' co-<lb/>
defendant in the suit filed by King.<lb/>
Douglas has not fought since his<lb/>
stunning Feb. 10 knockout of ex-<lb/>
champion Mike Tyson in Tokyo.<lb/>
The spiky-haired promoter<lb/>
will be involved in handling<lb/>
Douglas' second fight, although<lb/>
not as the champion's promoter,<lb/>
Johnson said. King will then be-<lb/>
come Douglas' promoter as per<lb/>
thedealcutbcforetheTysonupsct.<lb/>
"My rights are restored said<lb/>
King, who finally paid Douglas a<lb/>
promised $100,000 bonus for de-<lb/>
feating Tyson. "I'm keeping my<lb/>
word on the fight in Tokyo. I'm a<lb/>
man of my word<lb/>
Johnson, who has branded<lb/>
King a liar and worse during the<lb/>
trial, said they were pleased with<lb/>
the settlement.<lb/>
"I'm very happy. I don't care<lb/>
what he says said Johnson, ges-<lb/>
turing at King. "He can say what-<lb/>
ever the hell he wants<lb/>
Douglas was not in the court-<lb/>
room when the settlement was<lb/>
reached. Johnson said he was out<lb/>
shopping with his son, spending<lb/>
some of King's payment.<lb/>
King and Donald Trump re-<lb/>
ceived a flat cash payment to back<lb/>
off the Holyfield fight,but all sides<lb/>
had agreed not to detail the<lb/>
amount.<lb/>
The settlement was an-<lb/>
nounced on the day Douglas was<lb/>
scheduled to testify against King<lb/>
in the suit.<lb/>
Douglas, Johnson and The<lb/>
See Douglas, page 10<lb/>
A real skins game<lb/>
These kids listen to advice in the hot sun at B.ll Lew.s' Pirate Football Camp. They come to the camp<lb/>
from high schools ali over the state (Photo by J. D. Whitm.re - ECU Photo Lab) <lb/>
Co-rec water basketball a good<lb/>
wav to beat the summer heat<lb/>
By Stuart Oliphant<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
During Summer Session at<lb/>
ECU, students must face the swel-<lb/>
tering heat associated with a typi- possession for five seconds while<lb/>
? . i?- . ??1 ?? mmmi r?Mn rr<lb/>
cal North Carolina summer. The<lb/>
heat is unrelenting, making out-<lb/>
door sports activities almost un-<lb/>
bearable. There is, however, a<lb/>
sport at ECU which combines the<lb/>
fast paced action of basketball with<lb/>
the cool comfort of swimming:<lb/>
water basketball.<lb/>
To someone who has never<lb/>
In the first half of action, the<lb/>
Sitting Ducks received the ball. It<lb/>
was then quickly turned over to<lb/>
Silent Attack. Heather Ebberwine,<lb/>
recovered the ball and put up a<lb/>
shot for the Ducks, but the shot<lb/>
was blocked. The ball was then<lb/>
!ogetadearshot"smgisbas, passed to Wade Perry, who<lb/>
callv the same as in regular bas- quickly scored tor the Ducks. Si-<lb/>
Certain adaptations had to be<lb/>
made: instead oi standing, each<lb/>
player sits in an innertube. Al-<lb/>
though dribbling is impossible,<lb/>
players can keep the ball in their<lb/>
paddling to find an open man or<lb/>
ketball with oneexception: women<lb/>
are awarded three points per shot,<lb/>
whereas men are awarded two<lb/>
points per shot.<lb/>
The action in water basketball<lb/>
is extremely fast paced. In Silent<lb/>
seen the sport played, the thought Attack's game against the Sitting<lb/>
of playing basketball in the water<lb/>
producesa bizarre mental picture.<lb/>
Playing basketball in the water<lb/>
would seem to have definite limi-<lb/>
tations. Dribbling the ball down<lb/>
court would seem impossible.<lb/>
Ducks on July 9 at Memorial Gym,<lb/>
Loti Faulk and Traci Brown domi-<lb/>
nated the scoring for the Attack,<lb/>
while Brandon Brown and Scott<lb/>
lent Attack made an effort to re-<lb/>
taliate, but the ball was stolen.<lb/>
Silent Attack then received the<lb/>
ball and started a scoring drive<lb/>
that put them ahead 20-18 at the<lb/>
half. Both teamscomplained about<lb/>
fouling. The refcrree took notice<lb/>
of both teams complaints, paying<lb/>
closer attention to fouling. The<lb/>
game stayed close with equal<lb/>
scoring coming from both sides.<lb/>
Smith set up most of the scoring Silent Attack managed to keep<lb/>
opportunities. cir lcad and capture a 42-36 win<lb/>
<pb facs="00058221_0011"/><lb/>
10 The East Carolinian, July 18,1990<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Douglas<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
Tour de France standings unchanged<lb/>
In Monday's 106-mile stage of the Tour De France, French rider<lb/>
Charly Mottet won in a breakaway in 4 hours, 13 minutes, 56 seconds.<lb/>
But most of the top riders held back tor the mountains, so the overall<lb/>
standings changed little. Leader Claudio Chiappucci gained three<lb/>
seconds on the top riders. Eric Breukink of the Netherlands is second,<lb/>
Greg LeMond of the USA is third.<lb/>
Teltscher defeats Tarango in three sets<lb/>
Eliot Teltscher, playing his first tournament in two years, won 6-4,<lb/>
4-6, 6-3 against etf Tarango in Monday's first round of the $415,000<lb/>
Sovran Bank Tennis Classic at Washington, D.C. Teltscher next plays<lb/>
No. 2 seed Brad Gilbert. None of the eight seeded players competed<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
SEC will not make any hasty decisions<lb/>
Southeastern Conference Commissioner Roy Kramer said that any<lb/>
expansion of the conference will not be done hastily. "These are serious<lb/>
decisions and they're not going to be made overnight he said. "If it<lb/>
doesn't happen bv the start of football season, that doesn't mean<lb/>
discussions are not continuing<lb/>
Edwards will transfer to Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
Texas A&amp;M announced that Georgetown guard David Edwards<lb/>
will transfer to A&amp;M this fall. The5-11,170-pound Edwardsmustsitout<lb/>
this season but will have three years of eligibility remaining. He played<lb/>
in all 31 games for the Hoyas last season, averaging 5.4 points and 2.3<lb/>
rebounds.<lb/>
Champion donates uniforms to NBA<lb/>
Champion Products Inc. will give away custom-made uniforms to<lb/>
all 27 teams in the National Basketball Association and will receive<lb/>
exclusive rights to market similar merchandise to U.S. and Canadian<lb/>
retailers. The four-year contract announced Monday covers uniforms,<lb/>
practicewear and pregame warm-up outfits but not shoes and socks.<lb/>
Celtics win court decision against Shaw<lb/>
A U.S. appeals court in Boston ruled in favor of the Boston Celtics<lb/>
Mondav in the their contract dispute with guard Brian Shaw. The court<lb/>
affirmed a lower court decision that Shaw must terminate his contract<lb/>
with II Messaggero, an Italian team he played for last season. U.S.<lb/>
District ludge A. David Mazzone ruled )unc 27 that Shaw must honor<lb/>
the contract he signed with the Celtics.<lb/>
Ripkin opens adult education center<lb/>
Baltimore Orioles shortstop Cal Ripken threw out the first book at<lb/>
the opening of a basic education program in Baltimore that helps adults<lb/>
learn to read and do math. The Ripken Learning Center, named for<lb/>
Ripken and his wife, Kelly, who donated $250,000 to build the center,<lb/>
provides counselors, computers and individual attention from teach-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
Andretti wins third race of the season<lb/>
Michael Andretti started from the pole position and led 105 of 150<lb/>
laps Sunday to win the Marlboro Grand Prix auto race at the Meadow-<lb/>
lands in East Rutherford, N.J. Andretti, who won for the third time this<lb/>
season, finished 38.18 seconds ahead of CART scries leader Rick Mears.<lb/>
Too Fabi was third. Mears leads the points standings with 101 to 88 each<lb/>
for Andretti and Emerson Fittipaldi.<lb/>
Sampras and Sabatini win in Tokyo<lb/>
Tete Sampras beat Jaime Yzaga and Gabriela Sabatini trounced<lb/>
Ann Grossman to win the men's and women's titles respectively in the<lb/>
$250,000 Gunze World tournament at Tokyo. Sampras, ranked 18th in<lb/>
the world, beat Yzaga 6-1, 6-4. Wimbledon champion Stefan Edbcrg<lb/>
dropped out of the tournament with a bruised knee. Top-seeded<lb/>
Sabatini beat Grossman, ranked 44th in the world, 6-0, 6-1.<lb/>
USGA plans to re-examine future sites<lb/>
The U.S. Golf Association, which held its U.S. Women's Open at a<lb/>
private club that has no black members, will re-examine its position in<lb/>
selecting sites for future championships. The announcement came<lb/>
amid protests by ARISE Coalition (Against Racism In Sports Events)<lb/>
which picketed the Atlanta Athletic Club, where the tournament was<lb/>
being held this weekend.<lb/>
Mayweather retains lightweight title<lb/>
Roger Mayweather retained his WBA Americas super lightweight<lb/>
title with a unanimous 10-round decision against Terrence Alii Sunday<lb/>
at Atlantic City, N.J. Judges Tommy Kazmarek scored the bout 98-92;<lb/>
Debbie Barnes scored it 100-90 and Al DeVito scored it 97-93, all for<lb/>
Mayweather. Mayweather, 29, might next meet WBA junior welter-<lb/>
weight champion Juan Coggi.<lb/>
CG?pynta 1990 USA TODAYAppk Cailtp InprmMm Nttwk.<lb/>
Mirage hotel and casino in Las<lb/>
Vegas sued King in Nevada for<lb/>
breach of contract, asserting that<lb/>
King tried to overturn Buster's<lb/>
defeat of Tyson.<lb/>
King responded by suing The<lb/>
Mirage for tortious interference<lb/>
for its signing of Douglas to a two-<lb/>
fight contract despite an existing<lb/>
King-Douglas deal. He also sued<lb/>
Douglas and Johnson for breach<lb/>
of contract.<lb/>
The Nevada suit was stayed<lb/>
pending resolution of the other<lb/>
case,but the Manhattan settlement<lb/>
will end that litigation.<lb/>
Mackey<lb/>
Douglas, a Columbus native,<lb/>
rose from an eighth-round knock-<lb/>
down to defeat the heavily favored<lb/>
Tyson. King protested after the<lb/>
fight, saying Douglas received a<lb/>
long count in the eighth. He called<lb/>
for Tyson to retain the crown.<lb/>
King has testified his actions<lb/>
were an effort to force a Tyson-<lb/>
Douglas rematch.<lb/>
King, who had an exclusive<lb/>
promotional deal with Douglas,<lb/>
serves as Tyson's business man-<lb/>
ager and has limited power of<lb/>
attorney for Tyson.<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
Choo-Choo Thru<lb/>
Washington Redskins vs Atlanta Falcons<lb/>
Ausust 11 th 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/>
0M<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
"A leave for Kevin will enable<lb/>
him to return to g(xd health Roth<lb/>
said. 'He is willing to take a drug<lb/>
test every da y for the rest of his life<lb/>
if need be. I don't know what more<lb/>
he could do to confront this <lb/>
University President John A.<lb/>
Flower suspended Mackey indefi-<lb/>
nitely after learning oi the arrest.<lb/>
Mackey, 43, on Monday ap-<lb/>
peared with his wife, Kathleen,<lb/>
and Roth before Cleveland Mu-<lb/>
nicipal udge Carl B. Stokes.<lb/>
Mackey made no comment<lb/>
during the arraignment or when<lb/>
approached by reporters.<lb/>
Mackey and Alma Masscy,36,<lb/>
were stopped Friday about 8:30<lb/>
p.m. a half-block from the house,<lb/>
Lt. Michael Thome of the city<lb/>
police narcotics unit said.<lb/>
Ms. Massey pleaded innocent<lb/>
Mondav in Municipal Court to<lb/>
child endangering and speeding<lb/>
charges filed previously. Police<lb/>
said they found suspected heroin<lb/>
and drug paraphernalia, includ-<lb/>
ing a svnnge and spoon, in her<lb/>
parse after the arrest.<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
?'? <lb/>
-v.<lb/>
Pos. Name, team<lb/>
GamesChances Year<lb/>
1B<lb/>
2B<lb/>
3B<lb/>
SS<lb/>
C<lb/>
P<lb/>
Steve Garvey, San Diego<lb/>
Ryne Sandberg, Chi. Cubs<lb/>
Don Money, Milwaukee<lb/>
Cal Ripken Jr Baltimore<lb/>
Warren Rosar, Philadelphia<lb/>
Wilbur Wood, Chi. White Sox<lb/>
1591,319 (1984)<lb/>
90430<lb/>
86257<lb/>
80362<lb/>
117605<lb/>
8832<lb/>
1989)<lb/>
1974<lb/>
1990)4<lb/>
(1946<lb/>
(1968)<lb/>
f<lb/>
??<lb/>
?'?<lb/>
i ? through Wednesday<lb/>
Source: The Sporting News,<lb/>
The Complete BAStBALL Record Book 1990<lb/>
ting<lb/>
SEt<lb/>
cS<lb/>
m<lb/>
Deaths<lb/>
guard<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
and parents need to<lb/>
against<lb/>
The annual football study,<lb/>
which began in 1931, is based on<lb/>
information from newspaper ac-<lb/>
counts, the National Collegiate<lb/>
Athletic Association and the Na-<lb/>
tional Federation of State High<lb/>
School Associations. There also are<lb/>
about 150 volunteers who moni-<lb/>
tor sports accidents in their areas<lb/>
and forward information to<lb/>
Mueller.<lb/>
All the deaths directly attrib-<lb/>
utable to football and most of the<lb/>
permanent injuries occurred<lb/>
among high school students and<lb/>
resulted from tackling or being<lb/>
tackled, Mueller said. Eight of the<lb/>
deaths considered indirectly re-<lb/>
lated to the sport involved some<lb/>
form of heart failure. There were<lb/>
two heat stroke deaths, and one<lb/>
player was struck by lightning.<lb/>
All players should undergo<lb/>
annual physical examinations, but<lb/>
screening 1.6 million players for<lb/>
heart disease may be prohibitively<lb/>
expensive, he said. For that rea-<lb/>
son, some deaths from heart fail-<lb/>
ure may be unavoidable. Deaths<lb/>
from heat stroke, however, almost<lb/>
always can be prevented, he said.<lb/>
It also is also a good idea for<lb/>
parents to know what coaches are<lb/>
doing to takecareof their sons, the<lb/>
researcher said. If coaches do not<lb/>
have a preseason meeting to de-<lb/>
scribe their program, parents<lb/>
should ask about safety.<lb/>
Drug testing<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
to all of the about 600 athletes at<lb/>
the state's flagship university.<lb/>
The basic test to be used is a<lb/>
urinalysis, but the proposed pol-<lb/>
icy says other tests could be used<lb/>
if desired by administrators at the<lb/>
individual universities. Like the<lb/>
system policy, the UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill version places a strong em-<lb/>
phasis on drug education.<lb/>
Elizabeth City State Univer-<lb/>
sity and UNC-Wilmington have<lb/>
adopted mandatory drug-testing<lb/>
programs since asked to do so.<lb/>
Both Appalachian State Univer-<lb/>
sity and East Carolina University<lb/>
had mandatory drug-testing pro-<lb/>
grams in place before the request<lb/>
came down from the Board of<lb/>
Governors.<lb/>
Elys McLean-Ibrahim, Gannett News Sorvtae<lb/>
Sports Vite$<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
Apply in<lb/>
person at the<lb/>
Publications<lb/>
Building across<lb/>
from Joyner<lb/>
mm<lb/>
?jy.aaty<lb/>
Read The East Carolinian<lb/>
i<lb/>
KINGSTON<lb/>
PLAGE<lb/>
WE HAVE SEVERAL<lb/>
OPENINGS FOR STUDENT<lb/>
RENTALS FOR FALL SEMESTER<lb/>
INTERESTED SJUDENTS SHOULD<lb/>
CALL 758 - 5393<lb/>
BUILT SPECIFICALLY FOR ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
WE PROVIDE: FULLY FURNISHED APARTMENTS '<lb/>
ALL GLASSESDISHESSILVERWARE<lb/>
DISHWASHERPOTS &amp; PANS<lb/>
MAIL SERVICE<lb/>
SWIMMING POOL ft LOTS MORE!<lb/>
AT A PRICE THAT WILL COMPETE WITH THE DORMS!<lb/>
Student Union Presents<lb/>
Bingoke Cream Party<lb/>
Thursday, July 19 3 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Room 221<lb/>
Free Ice Cream, Games, Prizes<lb/>
"COOL FUN IN THE SUMMERTIME"<lb/>
Watermelon Feast on the Mail<lb/>
Monday, July 23 3 p.m.<lb/>
Free Watermelon, Seed Spitting Contest<lb/>
fi SLICE-OF-SUMMER FUN<lb/>
<lb/>
it<lb/>
SO'j<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR??<lb/>
LONGEST IN TOWN<lb/>
ALL ABC PERMITS<lb/>
HAPPY DAW!<lb/>
SERVING:<lb/>
MON - SAT 7 A.M. - 2 A.M.<lb/>
SUN 1 P.M. -2 A.M.<lb/>
DAILY DRINK SPECIALS<lb/>
SUN IMPORT NIGHT $1.00<lb/>
MON PITCHERS $2.00<lb/>
TUES LYNCHBURG LEMONADE $2.00<lb/>
WED MARGARITA NIGHT $2.50<lb/>
THURS HIGHBALLS $1-75<lb/>
FRI DOMESTICS $100<lb/>
SAT LONG ISLAND ICE TEA NIGHT $3-00<lb/>
MIDNIGHT MUNCHIES<lb/>
(outdoor seating available)<lb/>
Flamingos Spud Skins $4.95 Guacamole Dip<lb/>
Potatoe skins with your choice<lb/>
of bacon, chicken, or beef.<lb/>
Aiex Skins $4.95<lb/>
Spicy potatoe skins with ground<lb/>
beef and jalepeno peppers.<lb/>
Nachos $4.95<lb/>
A big platetful oven-baked and<lb/>
served with your choice of cheese,<lb/>
chicken, or beef &amp; beans.<lb/>
Chicken or Beef &amp; Beans 5-95<lb/>
$325<lb/>
Fresh avocado and spices<lb/>
served with crunchy tortilla chips.<lb/>
Mozzarella Sticks $4.25<lb/>
Mozzarella cheese, lightly<lb/>
breaded then fried to a golden<lb/>
brown.<lb/>
Cajun Flamingo Wingers $4.50<lb/>
Generous portion of tangy chicken<lb/>
wings marinated In our own special<lb/>
sauce with a blend of secret<lb/>
ingredients.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058221_0012"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>