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<pb facs="00058226_0001"/>
.<lb/>
?lje lEaat (Eamltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 64 No.42<lb/>
Tuesday,September 4 1990<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 15,000<lb/>
i8Pages<lb/>
Green movement<lb/>
sprouting in area<lb/>
Count it<lb/>
Tightend Luke Fishet I lute in a 23 yard touchdown pass from<lb/>
quarterba ? ? " Blake during the firs quark r ot Saturday s contest<lb/>
John Ru1h?rtofJ? ?i .to Lab<lb/>
with Louisiana Tech The Pirates claimed the home opene 27-17<lb/>
before 30.000-plus at Hcklen Stadium See Pirates, page U<lb/>
Campus recycling plan thrives<lb/>
Program saves 6,000 pounds of paper a week<lb/>
By Nathaniel Mead<lb/>
SmM tn The fast C jrolinijn<lb/>
What is the purpose ol eco-<lb/>
nomic growth, that most cherished<lb/>
ot modern society's goals? How<lb/>
can we sustain ourselves and our<lb/>
society it we continually degrade<lb/>
the air, water, and soil on which<lb/>
economic production depends?<lb/>
How can we speak ot "prog<lb/>
ress" when the primary use ol<lb/>
technology is to enable a relative<lb/>
few to hoard vast wealth at the<lb/>
expense of the people's heal th and<lb/>
the natural world1 Are we leaving<lb/>
behind a world that mav someday<lb/>
become uninhabitable because ot<lb/>
our present "standard of living"?<lb/>
These are a few of the big<lb/>
questions that the burgeoning<lb/>
Green political movement has put<lb/>
on the political agenda And here<lb/>
in Greenville, a group called the<lb/>
Tar-PamlicoGieenCommittee (or<lb/>
TPGC, named after the watershed<lb/>
that nurtures our indigenous hi-<lb/>
oregjon), has begun addressing<lb/>
such questions in the context ol<lb/>
local development and environ-<lb/>
mental quality. The group has<lb/>
scheduled a series of public meet-<lb/>
ings in September and October to<lb/>
provide an open forum for dis-<lb/>
cussing kev values and guidelines<lb/>
for creating a sustainable society.<lb/>
"Our hope is that these meet<lb/>
ings will give people in this area a<lb/>
chance to understand Green val-<lb/>
ues and look at wavs that such<lb/>
values can be applied to local<lb/>
problems in a creative way says<lb/>
Ray Lee, a spokesperson for the<lb/>
lar-Pamlico Green Committee<lb/>
We believe that problems su has<lb/>
environmental degradation, loss<lb/>
of jobs, poverty, racial injus-<lb/>
tice are intimately related and that<lb/>
i omprehensive solutii rns must tv<lb/>
and can be found<lb/>
Though (ireen p tlities is tar<lb/>
more popular in Europe, says Lee,<lb/>
it holds the potential for capturing<lb/>
the support of a large segment ol<lb/>
the U.S population today, as the<lb/>
coreissuesoft ireenthought the<lb/>
News Analysis<lb/>
health ol our environment and<lb/>
quality ol our lives-apply to eve-<lb/>
ryone In addition Green politics<lb/>
has the potential to Iravs diverse<lb/>
political support. 1 iberals are at<lb/>
tracted to (ireen pragmatism and<lb/>
the deft nse ol civil liberties, while<lb/>
conservatives tend to espouse at-<lb/>
tempts to consei ? ??? hat - best ol<lb/>
the existing natural world.<lb/>
I he political climate seems<lb/>
ripe for such a 'greening" trend<lb/>
After modest investment in renew-<lb/>
ableencrg technology duringthe<lb/>
i arter Administration, this path<lb/>
was wholly abandoned during the<lb/>
Reagan era For eight years the<lb/>
Reagan Administration retrained<lb/>
tackling long-term en ironmental<lb/>
challenges, slashing research and<lb/>
funding tor conservation by 7<lb/>
and research and development ol<lb/>
renewable energy sourcesby v ;<lb/>
In so doing u left the price to be<lb/>
paid bv future generations<lb/>
See Green, page 3<lb/>
I n'i st.it f Reports<lb/>
?a 5ii  pounds ot<lb/>
paper ever) week and has begun<lb/>
other efforts to cut down on waste<lb/>
since starting its solid waste man<lb/>
agemenl program in March.<lb/>
Recycling isonlya small part<lb/>
ol solid w aste management, said<lb/>
George Armistead of El I sOccu-<lb/>
pahon Sitetv and 1 lealth (OS1I At,<lb/>
adding but an important one<lb/>
I he program is try ingto make<lb/>
reevi ling box s visible and easily<lb/>
accessible to both students and<lb/>
faculty on i ampus<lb/>
ll created the program to<lb/>
reduce the amount ol wastesenl to<lb/>
the Pittountv landfill and to<lb/>
adhere to a state law calling tor a<lb/>
25 percent CUl Ol solid waste by<lb/>
1993 If ECl can not meet these<lb/>
standards, the law gives c itv And<lb/>
county landfills the authority to<lb/>
charge a solid waste disposal fee,<lb/>
i ommonly know nasa tipping fee<lb/>
Armistead said that through<lb/>
paper recycling and tree mulch<lb/>
ing. the Solid Waste Management<lb/>
program has diverted HI percent<lb/>
ol its solid waste from entering<lb/>
the county landfill ITus will result<lb/>
m saving in tipping tees, which<lb/>
last year amounted to $300,000<lb/>
"In order to avoid the tipping<lb/>
fee, we need to concentrate on<lb/>
resource conservation and recov-<lb/>
ery, Armistead said.<lb/>
The most pressing landfill<lb/>
problem, tor ECU and the nation,<lb/>
is the growth ot paper waste An<lb/>
estimated 41 percent of all solid<lb/>
waste in landfills throughout the<lb/>
country is paper. I C I produces a<lb/>
vast amount ot paper waste'<lb/>
"We(ECU)arerecyclingabout<lb/>
b,(XX) pounds ol paper a week<lb/>
Armistead said<lb/>
The university purchases re-<lb/>
cycled paper materials at a higher<lb/>
cost, but the paper companies<lb/>
provide a tree removal service ol<lb/>
materials to be recycled.<lb/>
In other areas ot the<lb/>
university's reeve ling program:<lb/>
?Oddorrratoiymattressesare<lb/>
refurbished instead of purchasing<lb/>
new bedding<lb/>
? hanks to the foresight of one<lb/>
ot the groundskeepers, ECU pur-<lb/>
i based .i mulcher that will reduce<lb/>
tree limbs to mule h, thuseliminat-<lb/>
ing the transportation ol the limbs<lb/>
to the dump I he process will<lb/>
translate to a $60 savings for every<lb/>
2iHt pounds ot vegetative waste<lb/>
that would have been transported<lb/>
to the landfill.<lb/>
? Used petroleum productsare<lb/>
sent to reeve line plants to be con<lb/>
vertex! into usable-faints By send-<lb/>
ing the used petroleum to these<lb/>
plants, the university eliminates<lb/>
the need to spend $490 every thr e<lb/>
months to remove the hazardous<lb/>
waste.<lb/>
since IC L is the largest<lb/>
dumper in Pitt C ountv, the<lb/>
university's cutback in trash is a<lb/>
welcomed reduction for thecounty<lb/>
ottu ials. The landfill on Allen<lb/>
Road, opened in lw4, is expected<lb/>
to Close in 1W trem lack o space'<lb/>
"The amount ot trash put in<lb/>
the- landfill in a six-year period<lb/>
wasequivalent tothatof ten years<lb/>
Gary Sutton, solid waste coordi-<lb/>
nator of the I'itt (ountv 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 stric!<lb/>
EPA regulations, i'ittountv has<lb/>
sought a solid waste program to<lb/>
prolong the life ol the future<lb/>
landfill Dumping in the landfill<lb/>
will borctlee ted on taxpayer state-<lb/>
ments and by tipping lees<lb/>
"It is all a matter of dollars and<lb/>
cents, no one, no industry will<lb/>
receive tax breaks, even it they<lb/>
recycle. They will have tet pay tor<lb/>
the use of the land fill'Sutton said.<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 ot solid<lb/>
wa.te management is more im-<lb/>
portant. It's all important button<lb/>
said<lb/>
Citizens can play a maor role<lb/>
in reducing solid waste and they<lb/>
need not loek farther than their<lb/>
own backyard. Sutton said com-<lb/>
posting vard clippings in one's<lb/>
backyard would allow for more<lb/>
space in the landfill and in turn<lb/>
would save taxpayers$60forevery<lb/>
2tX) pounds collected.<lb/>
Recycling is a small part of<lb/>
solid waste management. But in-<lb/>
stead oi being voluntary, it could<lb/>
become mandatory, Sutton said.<lb/>
"The main reasons why recy-<lb/>
cling is important are that separat-<lb/>
ing trash at the dump sites is get-<lb/>
See Paper, page 3<lb/>
ECU biotech will travel<lb/>
to Expo 1990 next month<lb/>
From Staff Reports<lb/>
The ECU biotechnology re-<lb/>
search and training program has<lb/>
been asked to be a part of the N orth<lb/>
Carolina Biotechnology Center's<lb/>
presentation at the International<lb/>
Biotechnology Expo '90 in the San<lb/>
Francisco Bay area October 73-75.<lb/>
Dr. Wendell E. Allen of the<lb/>
ECU Department of Biology cited<lb/>
the link between ECU and indus-<lb/>
try as reason for the ECU program<lb/>
being chosen to participate.<lb/>
ECU has the only graduate<lb/>
degree program in biotechnology<lb/>
in the state and arranges research<lb/>
internships for students with bio-<lb/>
technology companies throughout<lb/>
School of Medicine<lb/>
to hold health forum<lb/>
the U.S.<lb/>
The NCBC display will join<lb/>
over 500 others at IBEX '90, the<lb/>
biggest trade show of biotechnol-<lb/>
ogy instrumentation equipment,<lb/>
product, materials and services to<lb/>
beheld in the I S. The display will<lb/>
include 165 biotechnology initia-<lb/>
tives from across the state<lb/>
Officials stated that over 10,000<lb/>
participants representing 14 other<lb/>
natjonsareexpected toattend IBEX<lb/>
'90.<lb/>
The theme of IBEX '90 is<lb/>
"Biotechnology in the u0s: (,enes.<lb/>
Dreams Shemes.and Machines<lb/>
and the 145 session program will<lb/>
explore frontier developments<lb/>
affecting the future of biotechnol-<lb/>
ogy.<lb/>
t<lb/>
?-??- C?l??l? Hoffman -Photo Lab<lb/>
Recycling effort on campus have begun to save room at the Pitt County landfill Regardless of waste<lb/>
management programs, a new dump is in the works for 1993 to meet the needs of the growing county<lb/>
By LeClair Harper<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
will sponsor its 12th annual Health<lb/>
law Forum September 12 at the<lb/>
Ramada Inn Key speakers will<lb/>
include the inspector general of<lb/>
theUS. Department of Health and<lb/>
Human Services, the N.C attor-<lb/>
ney general, and a Missouri law-<lb/>
yer recently involved in a "right-<lb/>
to-die" case.<lb/>
Richard P. Kusserow, inspec-<lb/>
I tor general of the U S. Department<lb/>
of Health and Human Services,<lb/>
i will deliver the keynote address.<lb/>
1 le is expected to speak on the role<lb/>
of his office in controlling abuse<lb/>
and fraud in the federal Medicare<lb/>
program<lb/>
The Health and Human Serv-<lb/>
; ices Department is the largest fed-<lb/>
eral government agency, repre-<lb/>
senting one-third of the federal<lb/>
budget, and is responsible for<lb/>
identifying fraud, waste, abuse,<lb/>
and inefficiency in the health care<lb/>
system.<lb/>
N.C. Attorney General Lacy<lb/>
Thornburg will talk about investi-<lb/>
gation, enforcement and prosecu-<lb/>
tion of abuse and fraud in the state<lb/>
Medicare program.<lb/>
Missouri lawyer William H.<lb/>
Colbv will discuss legal aspects of<lb/>
the controversial "right-to-die"<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
Colby was lawyer for a Mis-<lb/>
souri couple who wished to re-<lb/>
move nutritive support from their<lb/>
vegetative daughter Nancy<lb/>
Cruzan. The U.S. Supreme court<lb/>
recently decided against the par-<lb/>
ents.<lb/>
Also discussed will be exces-<lb/>
sive regulation of physicians, le-<lb/>
gal aspects of the AIDS crisis and<lb/>
conflicts over accreditation oi<lb/>
hospital medical staffs.<lb/>
"The forum will provide in-<lb/>
sight on a mix of critical legal is<lb/>
sues that will dominate the health<lb/>
care agenda throughout the 90s<lb/>
explained Edward E. Hollowell,<lb/>
director of the forum and adjunct<lb/>
professor of jurisprudence at ECU.<lb/>
"The topics are timely and the<lb/>
speakers are nationally recog-<lb/>
See Health, page 2<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
Bush flippant on<lb/>
following through with<lb/>
campaign promises<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
Personals, For Sale.<lb/>
Help Wanted. For Rent<lb/>
and Services Rendered<lb/>
State and Nation9<lb/>
Killer leaves mes-<lb/>
sage for Gainesville<lb/>
police<lb/>
Features10<lb/>
Comic book collect-<lb/>
ing is not just for kids<lb/>
anymore<lb/>
Sports13<lb/>
ECU wins home<lb/>
opener against Louisi-<lb/>
ana Tech, looks to<lb/>
Florida State Saturday<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0002"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
V<lb/>
(Bljc ?aatEarotinian Sepiember 4,1990<lb/>
f<lb/>
ECU Briefs<lb/>
Nigerian will speak tommorrow on<lb/>
structure of West African politics<lb/>
Dr Oyeleye Oycdiran a jxliti.?il scientist from Nigeria, will<lb/>
arrive today in Greenville for the first Thomas W. Rivers International<lb/>
Studies Symposium entitled "Structural Adjustment in Niger" at<lb/>
ECU Wednesday and rhursday,<lb/>
Oyedtran, a professor at the I ni itv ufLago in the capital city<lb/>
ot Nigeria, will be accompanied<lb/>
b) .1 visiting delegation o( 12<lb/>
Nigerian scholars to speak on<lb/>
the political arena in western<lb/>
Africa<lb/>
i h i diran will address "Af-<lb/>
rica on the Move: The Demo-<lb/>
cratu I psurge in West Africian<lb/>
st.iti-s .it ,i luncheon Wednes-<lb/>
day I he symposium also in-<lb/>
 ludt - an Wednesday evening<lb/>
speech In Professor Erne Ana,<lb/>
lormei hairmanol the National<lb/>
I U. toral c ommission ot Nige-<lb/>
ria, on "1 i lemmas of Democra-<lb/>
tization in Nigeria and West Af-<lb/>
IH .1<lb/>
Oyediran will become the<lb/>
first Rivei s 1 Hstinguished Visit<lb/>
rol International Studies effective an. 10, 1991. He was<lb/>
ran international, one yeai search for an eminent figure<lb/>
t tit -Kit Ol inulluultin.il studies<lb/>
Scottish symposium<lb/>
scheduled this month<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Dr. Ielev e On edit an<lb/>
mg Profesi<lb/>
sole U d .it<lb/>
in the tn l?<lb/>
Noted as a accomplished n h.ik her, i hediran iuis authored and<lb/>
evlited seven K oks and numerous journal articles on the subje t ot<lb/>
Nigeri in poll iiv sand a Iministration I iismost recent book, "Essay on<lb/>
l-ocal Ciovei nment ai i Administration in Nigeria fo uses on the<lb/>
local level,a section ol a government often neglected in Kth African<lb/>
and merican resean li inUi problems with democracy.<lb/>
During hi; teaching t ireer in Nigeria, h held positions at three<lb/>
of Nigeria's top five universities the I niversity ol Ibadan, the<lb/>
University of Ife and th I niversity of lagos. In 1989, he was honored<lb/>
b being named  Ihe lecturei foi UCl.A's prestigious African<lb/>
Studies i iiiiii<lb/>
is inn , i ,i sin ii purti<lb/>
ampus Clips<lb/>
Evans redefines education goals<lb/>
( ,radu<lb/>
.tlld<lb/>
It<lb/>
l U.I<lb/>
ill i i<lb/>
-I.ill<lb/>
 v oi ling  tl i<lb/>
i I 1 i an ! an<lb/>
a sj stem thai is i<lb/>
during thi IWI<lb/>
focus on lour ari in<lb/>
i t ti a lu i s gi i iii i i ii<lb/>
. 'i nation ol tht sch.xi<lb/>
Some ot tin ilans I<lb/>
hnpli inentiiig an<lb/>
i i ? I. ? 11 graduation<lb/>
Creating tra<lb/>
ill, d li .uin i m .<lb/>
Establishing <lb/>
i l si hxils  ithtna<lb/>
and mm i i ilu s<lb/>
I pgrading n<lb/>
1 v tending Ihi<lb/>
inc hide lnum ul i<lb/>
Expanding earh chi<lb/>
I he proposals w ould si<lb/>
suring that studt iits gi<lb/>
alor<lb/>
it of <lb/>
and i.t qualified to<lb/>
: in Indiana r-chool<lb/>
a lu insti ? tion, ill pu ?h tor<lb/>
ra tical, and responsive to local needs<lb/>
gislal i - sion Evans has 19 proposals thai<lb/>
I ed student skills continued improvement<lb/>
il ilit in i miu uium and instruction and ref-<lb/>
funding foi mula.<lb/>
.lie. i mtlined in. lude:<lb/>
ot i v.un that high s? hi.ol students must pass<lb/>
, : . . , ? i tallow students to design person-<lb/>
lo match their interests or areer aspirations.<lb/>
i j i. gi mis 1 i test the i on cpt ol parental choice<lb/>
Hut i 11 ,m i ndisim is or between high schools<lb/>
l . . iph) currii ula.<lb/>
istii ; performance based aw arils program to<lb/>
aids t. i i utstanding schools.<lb/>
Jh. , d and lati h ke programs.<lb/>
iii the state seducational focus towarden-<lb/>
. iate vith skills to become productive<lb/>
The second annual Scottish<lb/>
Heritage Symposium will be held<lb/>
here Sept. 28-30 and will focus on<lb/>
Scottish clan history, Scottish rec-<lb/>
ords of the colonial era and van-<lb/>
ousculturaltraditionsof the Scots.<lb/>
Sessions will be held at the<lb/>
Howard Johnson Hotel and con-<lb/>
vention center here. Symposium<lb/>
co-sponsors are the ECU Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education and the<lb/>
Museum of the Cape Fear, in co-<lb/>
operation with the Scottish Stud-<lb/>
ies Center of St. Andrew's Presby-<lb/>
terian College and the Institute of<lb/>
Scottish Studies at Old Dominion<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Friday's speakers and topics<lb/>
are:<lb/>
2:15 p.m. - "The Clans and the<lb/>
Royal House of Stewart, 1638-<lb/>
174b Dr. Allan Machines, pro-<lb/>
fessor of history at the University<lb/>
of Glasgow;<lb/>
3:30 p.m. - "A Report on the<lb/>
Scottish Records Program Dr.<lb/>
Alexander Murdoch of Ed-<lb/>
inburgh, researcher for the N.C.<lb/>
Colonial Records Project's Scot-<lb/>
tish Records Program;<lb/>
h:45 p.m. (banquet address) -<lb/>
"Scottish Cultural Heritage: The<lb/>
Ongoing Tradition Dr. Edward<lb/>
Cowan, professor of history and<lb/>
chair of Scottish Studies at the<lb/>
University of Guelph, Ontario.<lb/>
Saturday events are:<lb/>
9"30 a.m. - "North Carolina's<lb/>
N.C. Teachers<lb/>
would choose<lb/>
afferent career<lb/>
'Gaidhealtachd' - An Examination<lb/>
of the Gaelic-Speaking Commu-<lb/>
nity William S. Caudill, coordina-<lb/>
tor of the Scottish Heritage Center at<lb/>
St. Andrew's College;<lb/>
10:45 a.m. - "A Heritage Mis-<lb/>
placed: Celtic Myths and Western<lb/>
Culture Dr. Charles W. Sullivan<lb/>
III, professor of English at East Caro-<lb/>
lina University;<lb/>
1:45 p.m. - "18th Century Cum-<lb/>
berland County Tax Records Wil-<lb/>
liam C. Fields of Favetteville, histo-<lb/>
rian, genealogist and editor of the<lb/>
published Cumberland County<lb/>
Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions<lb/>
minutes, 1755-1791.<lb/>
3 p.mpanel discussionwrap-<lb/>
up session featuring all six speakers.<lb/>
Concluding the symposium will<lb/>
be a reception with entertainment at<lb/>
the Museum of the Cape Eear at 3:30<lb/>
p.m. and an 11 a.m Sunday, tradi-<lb/>
tional "Kirkin' o' the Tartans" relig-<lb/>
ious service at Highland Presbyte-<lb/>
rian Church.<lb/>
The Scottish Heritage Sympo-<lb/>
sium is open to all individuals with V.<lb/>
a personal or professional interest in e<lb/>
Scottish history and culture. Teach- <lb/>
ers who attend may receive certifi-<lb/>
cate renewal credit through ECU.<lb/>
The registration fee of $105 in-<lb/>
cludes all sessions, materials, re-<lb/>
freshments and specified meals.<lb/>
Since space is limited, early enroll-<lb/>
ment is advised.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
event is available from the Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education. ECU<lb/>
27858-4353; telephone 1-800-767-<lb/>
9111; fax (919) 757-4350.<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
? oemor<lb/>
mi<lb/>
Senority<lb/>
Nov. 1 will be Senior Day on the ECU campus Tee shirts wil<lb/>
be on sale in front of the Student Store<lb/>
g X2<lb/>
M<lb/>
0tt<lb/>
m<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Every Wednesday Night<lb/>
s  ? m 1<lb/>
lu I i I<lb/>
PRoqESsivE Dance NiqtHi<lb/>
on compact disc<lb/>
? 1 .00 Tall Boys<lb/>
? $1.00 Kamakazee<lb/>
? $2.50 Pitchers<lb/>
(Ladies Free Until 10:30)<lb/>
m -i . <lb/>
<lb/>
now<lb/>
?<lb/>
T<lb/>
'<lb/>
I i<lb/>
members ot -<lb/>
I vans did not <lb/>
lives ould not re<lb/>
llli l<lb/>
in awl<lb/>
etheci i i hi?<lb/>
u t.i iiw rease.<lb/>
t<lb/>
ige, hut said the initia-<lb/>
Electronic, distance learning grows<lb/>
(. i,c ol ti.i i . i -i ndshu liu -i<lb/>
insti iw lu , using di ?tan . rninj<lb/>
of modem distai .<lb/>
media VV Ji.i ma<lb/>
iii. rded ? ideotai <lb/>
fen ik mg, computer<lb/>
munk ations<lb/>
With this n . ,<lb/>
handle it I id I i<lb/>
Education .it the ni<lb/>
making s hoolsand <lb/>
Some of the suggt sti n- in lude<lb/>
Making sure location can supi i i.<lb/>
iiig a two step site 11 rtifii ati n pro 15<lb/>
Assigning adi mate coordinators<lb/>
is<lb/>
deiivt red<lb/>
Setting i vork h j lo 1 frucl<lb/>
tin- use 1 1 distant. leai ning<lb/>
1 i time to li 1 in u<lb/>
Selei ting a sei 1 1 lhal<lb/>
ui and training is the delivery of<lb/>
techniques. A major component<lb/>
?arning is electronicall) based instructional<lb/>
. lude live one vas or two way video, pre-<lb/>
mipulei a -asti d 111 -11 iw lion, telephone con-<lb/>
ased audio graphics and computer telecom-<lb/>
m- nev questions about how to<lb/>
I .11 ' 1 ui Professor in the College of<lb/>
1 Mil rkans is has published a report on<lb/>
ork areas more adaptable to distance learning<lb/>
li -lain c learning by conduct-<lb/>
s to 1 1. h -itt where instruction<lb/>
11 th lea hers and students on<lb/>
is ihe 11.1 dia.<lb/>
sei iiable bv vendors.<lb/>
Making support materials available.<lb/>
Government nits elementary education<lb/>
Ihe federal goi 111 ? dropped its share of the total school<lb/>
doliai spoilt tor public eli liieiitarv and secondary schools by one-<lb/>
third, according to .1 report In the National Education Association.<lb/>
Ihe.M A stud) reveals that the federal government contributed 63<lb/>
h.ti ent of all monk s spent on elementary and secondary education<lb/>
compared tol 2 pen end intributcd in 1989, puttingagreaterburden<lb/>
on state and local communities<lb/>
rhe study noted that state and lot al governments in 1H4 90 added aO<lb/>
but about StM) million to the $11 billion growth in school revenues<lb/>
over 1988-84.<lb/>
The decrease in governn ent aid comes al a time when school enroll-<lb/>
menl is on a steady rise and local school districts will be further<lb/>
pressed to I ome up with more dollars to meet the needs of some 3.5<lb/>
million additional students bv the end of the decade, said the report.<lb/>
Overall enrollment, elementary and secondary, during the 1990s is<lb/>
expected to re h about 44 million, up from the current 40.5 million.<lb/>
According to the report, unrest over inadequate funding of sclnxils<lb/>
set off statewide teacher strikes in West Virginia and Oklahoma, as<lb/>
well as one clay job ai turns in Washington state and Utah<lb/>
USA TODAY'AppIrt nlU-n InformJlion Nrlwork<lb/>
RALH1CH (AP) If they<lb/>
could do it all over again, many<lb/>
North Carolina teachers say they<lb/>
would choose a different career,<lb/>
according to a survey.<lb/>
The survey conducted by the<lb/>
Carnegie Foundation for the<lb/>
Advancement of Teaching and<lb/>
titled "The Condition of Teach-<lb/>
ing" found that most teachers are<lb/>
committed to their work, but are<lb/>
dissatisfied with working condi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The foundation surveyed<lb/>
21,(XX) teachers nationwide, in-<lb/>
cluding 800 in North Carolina, The<lb/>
News and Observer of Raleigh<lb/>
reported Sunday.<lb/>
Twenty-five percent of the<lb/>
North Carolina teachers surveyed<lb/>
said they agreed strongly with the<lb/>
statement "If I had it to do over<lb/>
again, 1 would not become a pub-<lb/>
lic school teacher Another 27<lb/>
percent agreed to the statement<lb/>
"with reservations<lb/>
"That's pretty devastating<lb/>
said Sarah K. Stewart, president<lb/>
of the North Carolina Federation<lb/>
of Teachers. "I think it tells us we<lb/>
have got to pav more attention to<lb/>
the details under which teachers<lb/>
are expected to educate children<lb/>
Compared to their colleagues<lb/>
nationwide, the North Carolina<lb/>
teachers were slightly less satis-<lb/>
fied with their students, their<lb/>
administrators and the general<lb/>
state of the educational system,<lb/>
according to their responses to<lb/>
manv of the survey's questions.<lb/>
North Carolina teachers rated<lb/>
some factors, such as morale, lower<lb/>
than their colleagues nationwide.<lb/>
But in some areas, such as helping<lb/>
set goals for their schools, they<lb/>
cited greater improvements.<lb/>
Sen. J. Richard Conder, D-<lb/>
Richmond, the chairman of the<lb/>
state Senate Education Commit-<lb/>
tee, said he did "not necessarily<lb/>
agree" with the extent of career<lb/>
dissatisfaction indicated by the<lb/>
survey.<lb/>
"A lot of teachers are leaving<lb/>
the profession, especially those in<lb/>
math and science he said. "But<lb/>
with the improved salary situation<lb/>
in North Carolina, I sense teachers<lb/>
are happier than ever<lb/>
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Health<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
nized. We feel we have an out<lb/>
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Physicians, attorneys, hospita<lb/>
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Advertising Representatives<lb/>
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John Semelsberger Steve Walser<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058226_0003"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
iEtje gnat (flarolfnlanStprtMBtH4,1990 3<lb/>
Green<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
President Bush has evinced democratic societv: the tondoncv<lb/>
scant appreciation for the environ- tor politicians to gratitv the imme-<lb/>
nvnt other than his fondness tor diate desires that dominate their<lb/>
golf courses fishing, and national constituents' thinking. Ecological<lb/>
parks The recently revised Clean realities, however, are beginning<lb/>
Mr Act was greatly watered down to press big changes on society<lb/>
K the White House. rheUnionof People in developed democracies<lb/>
( oncemed Scientists stated last are being forced to give up some<lb/>
month that the Bush personal gratifications in order to<lb/>
Administration's staunch refusal repair the planet and ward off<lb/>
to support measures tocurb green- calamities. Taxes on fossil-fuel-<lb/>
house gas emissions (many of based energy use are the most<lb/>
M hu h also promote acid rain and recent example ot this trend,<lb/>
thmning of the ozone layer) is the AccordingtoGreenmanifesto,<lb/>
pnmar) reason the world has changes required to heal our natu-<lb/>
made little progress in solving the ral environment will not necessar-<lb/>
global?. limate crisis<lb/>
1'he Reagan Bush era is only<lb/>
an extreme expression ol a "read-<lb/>
my-lips" tendency inherent in<lb/>
Paper<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
ling hectic and Senate Bill 111 has<lb/>
to be met Sutton said.<lb/>
The bunt ot this whole topic<lb/>
evolvesaroundthepassageof 111,<lb/>
enacted in 1989 to improve the<lb/>
management of solid waste in<lb/>
counties statewide The law lists<lb/>
and goals outlines the<lb/>
state solid aste management plan<lb/>
eivcs each county the power<lb/>
llv mean draconian measures or a<lb/>
lower quality of Hfe. If we commit<lb/>
to doing more with loss, we can<lb/>
provide enough for everybody s<lb/>
need and actually improve the<lb/>
quality of life by improving health<lb/>
at the individual and community<lb/>
levels. To achieve this we need to<lb/>
Openh challenge both the greed<lb/>
dominant in our society and the<lb/>
lainess which past welfare strate-<lb/>
gies have forced on large parts of<lb/>
ourpopulation. With proper plan-<lb/>
ning and education programs, we<lb/>
can encourage sensible adjust-<lb/>
ments in lifestyles, industry, tech-<lb/>
nology, and resource use.<lb/>
"In our view, green politics<lb/>
does not automatically mean forc-<lb/>
ing people to choose between jobs<lb/>
and the environment savs loo.<lb/>
What is needed is a reorientation<lb/>
of the kinds of obs available and a<lb/>
new vision of political action " Lee<lb/>
cites the example of global warm-<lb/>
ing, which requires that we cut<lb/>
back on oil and start using benign<lb/>
energy alternatives. Mobil Oil<lb/>
Corp is now pushing to drill off-<lb/>
shore for gasand oil, and contends<lb/>
that their business would create<lb/>
more jobs But more jobs are to be<lb/>
had, Lee says, in an economy at-<lb/>
tempting to phase out fossil fuels,<lb/>
according to a recent study by the<lb/>
loint Economic Committee of<lb/>
Congress.<lb/>
The Green movement recog-<lb/>
nizes that themes like decentrali-<lb/>
zation often run counter to those<lb/>
of people whose jobs and profits<lb/>
aredepondenton wastef ulnessand<lb/>
degradation of the environment.<lb/>
But thov say that we can no longer<lb/>
afford to deny that the consumer<lb/>
culture and its ethos is one of the<lb/>
main pistons that drives the envi-<lb/>
ronment-destroying economy of<lb/>
perpetual growth. The shift to a<lb/>
greener, more sustainable culture<lb/>
? hence a more beautiful and<lb/>
bountiful environment will call<lb/>
for public education and political<lb/>
persistence.<lb/>
"If nothing else, the Green<lb/>
movement has put some serious<lb/>
questionson the political agenda<lb/>
says Lee, "We believe that the<lb/>
upcoming series of public meet<lb/>
ings will provide people with some<lb/>
sane and creative ways of ap-<lb/>
proaching development as well as<lb/>
sound practical guidelines for<lb/>
making the transition to a better<lb/>
life for people in our region and in<lb/>
the world at large "<lb/>
The first in a series of three<lb/>
meetings, focusing on "ecological<lb/>
wisdom is to be held on Septem-<lb/>
ber 5. The second meeting, dis-<lb/>
cussing "community-based eco-<lb/>
nomics will bo held on Septem-<lb/>
ber 14. The third meeting, on<lb/>
"grassroots politics will be held<lb/>
on October 3. All public meetings<lb/>
will bo held from 730 p.m. to 930<lb/>
p.m. at the Willis Building, located<lb/>
on First Street and Keod St, in<lb/>
downtown Greenville. For more<lb/>
information call: 78 49Qbor830<lb/>
0312 Everyone is invited to par<lb/>
ticipate<lb/>
(Nathaniel Mead is former<lb/>
editorial cotmnntst for the Ea t<lb/>
Carolinian.)<lb/>
Go Pirates<lb/>
East Carolina Friends<lb/>
1990-91 Interest Meetings<lb/>
September 4,5,&amp;6 6:30pm GCB 1017<lb/>
todotermine<lb/>
valso<lb/>
lid waste tees<lb/>
I he law i alls tor.<lb/>
i he regulation of the most<lb/>
? micall feasible cost-effec-<lb/>
ind environmentally safe<lb/>
ai ler for the storage, collection,<lb/>
rtiori separation, process-<lb/>
ing, recyclingand disposal of solid<lb/>
?, in order to protect the pub-<lb/>
lic h ilth safet and welfare<lb/>
Register to<lb/>
vote today.<lb/>
It's more than<lb/>
your right, more<lb/>
than your duty,<lb/>
it's your<lb/>
obligation to<lb/>
your wav of life.<lb/>
Zdf paM cdleae<lb/>
1otcwteeu owth chddnw<lb/>
5-13 (km a special need<lb/>
Jm a, positive adult note<lb/>
model. HemMupislcnmc<lb/>
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attStudetifo, facedty, Sta<lb/>
mddmtiti.<lb/>
vw.v ?-??-? ???-????-<lb/>
. , ,1V .V  ??? -<lb/>
. ? <lb/>
For further information contact<lb/>
Dr. Linda Mooney or Susan Moian, 7"7 688 <lb/>
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<pb facs="00058226_0004"/><lb/>
Stye lEaat (Harnltntan<lb/>
JOSEPH I. fENKINS R General Manager<lb/>
Michael G- Martin, Managing Editor<lb/>
Tim HAMrroN, News Editor<lb/>
Paula Gicfe, State and Nation Editor<lb/>
Matt King, Feature Editor<lb/>
Deanna Nevclosm, Asst features Editor<lb/>
Doug Morris, Sports Editor<lb/>
Earle M. McAuiey, Assi Sports Editor<lb/>
Carrie Armstrong, Special Sections Editor<lb/>
Pi ion ? li h N Business Manager<lb/>
Stuart Rosner, Systems Manager<lb/>
TtM BarbouR, Circulation Manager<lb/>
MlCHAEI I ANG, Editorial Production Manager<lb/>
CHRIS NoRMAM, Darkroom Technician<lb/>
JEFF PaRKF.K, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Deborah S Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
Tru East Carolyn has serve, the E?t Carotin. Ctmpui commumr, ?CC 1925. emphas.ing infonna.u, thaiul<lb/>
2fccttECU students. During the ECU school .l?toC??oliHrti?i??<lb/>
SS rese.es,he ngh, ,orefuse o, discontinue ?, ?h casements -ha, dmnmma.e on ,he haf aPe sex.<lb/>
Z?o nat,onal ong.n The masthead editon.l c u edition does no, necessanly represent the view, o one , n), u.ual.<lb/>
huTratner jor opinion of Uk Editorial Board The East CaroUnian Barnes jnt<lb/>
U?ould he ??. 250 words ? less For purposes ol decency brevity. I He Ea.u C ?? "$<lb/>
toed.t letters for publication I etters should b. ?klre?ed .o The Editor. The East arokman, PubUc.U?u Bid, . EC .<lb/>
Greenvdle. N.C . 2734; or call (9191 757 Mr<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4 Tuesday, September 4,1990<lb/>
Bush needs to reconsider campaign vows<lb/>
During his presidential campaign,<lb/>
George Bush promised the American public a<lb/>
"kinder, gentler nation' and a vow oi "no<lb/>
new taxes But has Bush, along with numer-<lb/>
ous other candidates, reneged on his cam-<lb/>
paign promises? Maybe.<lb/>
The president is currently on the<lb/>
threshold of breaking his no new taxes prom-<lb/>
ise. As a federal bailout ot savings and loan<lb/>
institutions combines with an increasingd ?! i<lb/>
cit, the country's economic status is m some-<lb/>
what oi a state Of disarray And wasteful<lb/>
spendingon programs that havebeen deemed<lb/>
unnecessary or low on the priority list b)<lb/>
economist and legislators have not helped the<lb/>
president's woes in any way<lb/>
One ot the places that this budget<lb/>
crunch has hurt is education. Both on the<lb/>
federal and state level, it seems that education<lb/>
is one of those low priority issues, because it is<lb/>
constantly the one area that continues tobt 'hit<lb/>
when it comes to cutting time<lb/>
The tunnv thing is that when Bush was<lb/>
campaigning, he also vowed to be the educa-<lb/>
tion president 1 las he reneged on this prom-<lb/>
ise too?<lb/>
With the current Persian Gulf crisis,<lb/>
the president has properly destroyed his vow<lb/>
ot a kinder, gentler nation.The threat of losing<lb/>
American soldiers in a foreign land over oil is<lb/>
a show ol force, not kindness or gentleness<lb/>
A look into the history books will find<lb/>
former President fohnson trying to stop the<lb/>
pread ot communism from North Vietnam<lb/>
to South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. In<lb/>
tost the same manner, bush is trying to<lb/>
stop! lussein from gaining a monopoly on the<lb/>
world's richest oil-producing nations ? Ku-<lb/>
wait and Saudi Arabia.<lb/>
It the current administration would<lb/>
take .1 sent us, educational look at the Vietnam<lb/>
conflict, maybeour leaders would reconsider<lb/>
the United States' role in the Middle East.<lb/>
Then again, education is not a priority.<lb/>
The misplaced anger must come to an end<lb/>
By Darek McCullers<lb/>
lditorial Columnist<lb/>
Amidst this lime ol rising ra-<lb/>
cial tensions and hate-based<lb/>
.rimes, one begins to think about<lb/>
the many people who have suf-<lb/>
fered in the most evil system of<lb/>
oppression ever utilized sla-<lb/>
very. One's mind may go back to<lb/>
the atrocities recounted in the<lb/>
documentary on ane Pittman,<lb/>
"Roots" or "Mississippi Burning<lb/>
Such movies serve to remind<lb/>
White America ol what it did to<lb/>
blacks and Black America ot the<lb/>
sufferings it endured I lowever,<lb/>
it can also stir up .1 great deal ot<lb/>
hate, anger and resentment in M<lb/>
rican-Americans<lb/>
One could not explain the<lb/>
very depth ot emotion that arises<lb/>
when these issue are brought to<lb/>
remembrance<lb/>
However, in this article I<lb/>
would like to emphasize the im<lb/>
portance ot putting these things<lb/>
in the past and giving proper<lb/>
place to our anger<lb/>
Often, blacks in Amerit .1 feel<lb/>
like the martyred souls in Revela-<lb/>
tions 6:10 who cried out saying,<lb/>
"1 low long,I )1 ord.hoK and true,<lb/>
dost thou nol judge and avenge<lb/>
our blood on them that dwell on<lb/>
earth?"<lb/>
It is imperative that we un-<lb/>
derstand that judgement does not<lb/>
escape anyone. Sometimes we are<lb/>
punished immediately, such as<lb/>
thecaseot Ananias and Sapphira<lb/>
who committed a sin against lod<lb/>
1 Acts 5:11. Sometimes it is slower<lb/>
as in the case of Pharoah or<lb/>
Pontius Pilate, the executer ot<lb/>
esus.<lb/>
It is my contention that one ot<lb/>
the keys to overcoming this op<lb/>
presston will be to let go and let<lb/>
(iod. We must take the attitude<lb/>
that it wrongs are committed in<lb/>
the area ot race, (d will avenge<lb/>
it<lb/>
However, we cannot be re<lb/>
sponsible tor?. rearing a renewed<lb/>
atmosphere ot racial violence,<lb/>
hatred and tension because it we<lb/>
do, God will udge that also We<lb/>
must understand that 1<lb/>
not reate w rum th apj ?<lb/>
the Tree ol Knowledge d I<lb/>
1 inally, inorder to ?<lb/>
this attitude we must und<lb/>
that we ' annot save the v. ?<lb/>
Rather, we must compli t<lb/>
primary assignment which isbi<lb/>
ing a student We must lei t: ?<lb/>
past be the past and lei n irt<lb/>
K' martyrs<lb/>
1 hisiswhy iod i nmn<lb/>
to us that we should ho ?<lb/>
? in essence prohibit ?<lb/>
All the black n eda<lb/>
 and I r Kii c ; ters 1<lb/>
world will not 1<lb/>
I end ra ism; onh I I cai<lb/>
I he message that I'n<lb/>
ing is realh simple R ;ard<lb/>
ot . II ' ' "? '<lb/>
ot the mam rsbei<lb/>
. ; All hate musl ?<lb/>
?  througl nst and<lb/>
spiritual rcgenerati<lb/>
judgement an<lb/>
I his is the trul<lb/>
your race, creed, c 1<lb/>
C ondition ol servitude<lb/>
Former airline leader depicts 'greed of the 80s<lb/>
Bv Richard Prince<lb/>
( innrtt Nr? J Sen u '<lb/>
Asian journalist<lb/>
trying in the spotlight<lb/>
By Dinah Eng<lb/>
Gannett New Service<lb/>
Connie Chung is trying to<lb/>
have a baby<lb/>
The Sunday anchor of "CBS<lb/>
Evening News and star of "Face<lb/>
to Face with Connie Chung" is the<lb/>
most recognized Asian face in U.S.<lb/>
journalism. Last week, she disap-<lb/>
pointed many at the Asian<lb/>
American Journalists Association<lb/>
national convention by cancelling<lb/>
her appearanceas keynote speaker<lb/>
for thegroup'sannual scholarship<lb/>
banquet.<lb/>
Many were not surprised.<lb/>
"She's never identified with<lb/>
us as an Asian American said<lb/>
one AAJA member. "So many of<lb/>
our young people kxik up to her<lb/>
as a role model, and 1 think that's<lb/>
a mistake. They should be looking<lb/>
to people like Sheryl WuDunn<lb/>
(New York Times correspondent)<lb/>
or you. People who care about<lb/>
helping others and making a dif-<lb/>
ference through their work<lb/>
Being a role model is not easy,<lb/>
and 1 am always surprised when-<lb/>
ever a stranger sees me in that<lb/>
light My position in the Gannett<lb/>
Co. is mid-level management, yet<lb/>
there are SO few Asian Americans<lb/>
at anv management level in<lb/>
newsrooms that I am conscious of<lb/>
being in a spotlight others at mv<lb/>
level are not.<lb/>
During four daysof the AAJA<lb/>
convention in New "lork, I could<lb/>
not walk five feet without being<lb/>
stopped bv colleagues who<lb/>
wanted to network, students who<lb/>
wanted advice or recruiters who<lb/>
wanted to offer me a job It was<lb/>
flattering, tiring and a responsi-<lb/>
bility I do not take hghtlv.<lb/>
A recent Study bv the Amen<lb/>
can Sot lotv of New spa per editors<lb/>
savs 1.25 percent of minority<lb/>
journalists are Asian American A<lb/>
survey commissioned by A A) A<lb/>
this summer found that more than<lb/>
I third of the Asian American<lb/>
journalists polled expect to leave<lb/>
the industrv within five years be-<lb/>
cause of difficulties with man-<lb/>
agement and lack of advancement<lb/>
opportunities in the newsroom.<lb/>
I've been in the business 13<lb/>
years, but I do not stay because<lb/>
my life is about journalism. My<lb/>
life is about building bndges be-<lb/>
tween people, and while 1 am<lb/>
proud to be an Asian American,<lb/>
my interest is in promoting<lb/>
multiculturalism ? equality for<lb/>
all.<lb/>
During the convention, I ran a<lb/>
workshop for students on how to<lb/>
land a job. 1 wish we had had time<lb/>
to talk more about tdking care of<lb/>
ourselves on the job. For getting<lb/>
into a newsroom, or any job set-<lb/>
ting, is only the beginning.<lb/>
Taking care of ourselves on<lb/>
the job can make the difference<lb/>
between surviving in the office<lb/>
and truly doing meaningful work.<lb/>
And this is what role models can<lb/>
teach. Such caretaking means be-<lb/>
ing responsible for ourselves. At<lb/>
work, we negotiate conflicts, and<lb/>
we let go of our need to control<lb/>
what we cannot control.<lb/>
We do not tolerate abuse, and<lb/>
we do not abuse or mistreat others.<lb/>
We work at letting go of fear and<lb/>
owning our own power. We try to<lb/>
learn from mistake, but we for-<lb/>
zive ourselves when we make<lb/>
them.<lb/>
We try not to set ourselves up<lb/>
by taking jobs that can't possibly<lb/>
work out, or jobs that are not right<lb/>
for us. We know there will be great<lb/>
days and not-so-great ones.<lb/>
So Asian page 5<lb/>
A longtime flight attendant<lb/>
with the, harming name ot Happy<lb/>
LaBoy has just spent an<lb/>
uncharming l"1 months out of<lb/>
work She works tor Eastern Air-<lb/>
lines, the once-proud enterprise<lb/>
bankrupted under the leadership<lb/>
of Frank Lorenzo<lb/>
In one of the summer's most<lb/>
welcome de elopments, 1 orenzo,<lb/>
whose Texas Air Corp. was once<lb/>
the nation's largest airline firm (it<lb/>
controlled Continental, Eastern,<lb/>
People Express, New York Air,<lb/>
Texas Air, Frontier) announced he<lb/>
was s! roping down as head Of<lb/>
what was left of the company.<lb/>
La3oy couldn t be happier.<lb/>
Lorenzo came to symbolize<lb/>
what was wrong with corporate<lb/>
America in the '80s. He was<lb/>
greedy. 1 Ic was uncaring. He had<lb/>
little time for doing right things.<lb/>
The summer ot 1990 will be<lb/>
remembered tor the crisis in the<lb/>
Gulf, but for me it had even more<lb/>
significance. Itrepresented the real<lb/>
beginningofthe 1990s?or rather,<lb/>
the time we finallv rid ourselves<lb/>
of the 1980s.<lb/>
We'vebeenhavmgquiteafeMf<lb/>
v Otrections as the stockbrokers<lb/>
call them, since the greed decade<lb/>
finally ended.<lb/>
Lorenzo's was only nv, And<lb/>
make no mistake, he was Mr.<lb/>
Creed In order to "save" C conti-<lb/>
nental, Lorenzo nullified labor<lb/>
contracts by letting the airline go<lb/>
bankrupt. Then, with contracts<lb/>
voided, there were new harsh<lb/>
work rules and meager salaries.<lb/>
The result: a long, bitter strike.<lb/>
Yet while both workers and<lb/>
the company suffered, Lorenzo<lb/>
was shoring up his personal tor-<lb/>
tune Bv the time he bailed out in<lb/>
August, his internal maneuvering<lb/>
made it possible for him to walk<lb/>
away with $27.H million in cash, a<lb/>
salarv of $75,lKX a month tor the<lb/>
next three years, and options to<lb/>
buy Continental stock at bargain<lb/>
prices.<lb/>
A true man of the 80s.<lb/>
The day after Lorenzo quit the<lb/>
airlines, another over zealous<lb/>
capitalist fell. Thisone, a Canadian<lb/>
who had gone on a multibillion-<lb/>
dotlar spending spree for U.S.<lb/>
department stores, was ousted as<lb/>
chairmanandCEOofhisowntirm<lb/>
Robert Campeau ended up<lb/>
bankrupting such well-kr<lb/>
stores as lordan Mars!<lb/>
Bloomingdale's, Abraham n<lb/>
Straus and Bon Marche.<lb/>
C ampeaus actions were par!<lb/>
of the greed mentality fostered by<lb/>
the Keagan administration -<lb/>
whose namesake also underwent<lb/>
a "correction<lb/>
The 'Teflon president wap<lb/>
scratched after a trip to lapan<lb/>
where he ottered up the dignity ot<lb/>
the office for a reported $2 million<lb/>
in speaking tees<lb/>
sfor Reagan's polices well,<lb/>
the summer's surprise K st-seller<lb/>
was The Politics ot R h nd<lb/>
Poor in which conservative po<lb/>
litical analyst Kevin Phillips de<lb/>
scribed,indevastaringdetail,l ?<lb/>
during the Ri agan years the ru h<lb/>
got richer ,nd the poor poorer<lb/>
Worse, the newly ri h wen n<lb/>
people who produced or manu<lb/>
factured things, the people we<lb/>
used to say "made America great.<lb/>
Instead, thev w ere the pel ple W h<lb/>
grate on Americans' money ma<lb/>
nipulators, lawyers, takeover art<lb/>
ists. speculators, junk-bond kings<lb/>
Need 1 cite the rest of the '80s<lb/>
honor roll? Oliver Norm, Ceorgc<lb/>
See Greed, page 5<lb/>
A 'Late Night' look at Greenville<lb/>
By Draughon Cranford<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
So, Greenville has it all<lb/>
Since I've been a student here,<lb/>
I have seen the lovely neon orange<lb/>
and black billboards along side<lb/>
the roads and highways, proudly<lb/>
proclaiming "Greenville Has It All<lb/>
 The billboards hardly im-<lb/>
pressed me, instead they<lb/>
prompted a horrible flash back to<lb/>
the tacky billboards that clutter<lb/>
and pollute Interstate 1-95. You<lb/>
know the ones that keep inform-<lb/>
ing you how far it is to the cheesi-<lb/>
est place on earth. 1 must admit 1<lb/>
didn't believe the billboard any<lb/>
more than it impressed me, until I<lb/>
took a optimistic, but cynical look<lb/>
at the slogan.<lb/>
Now I'mabelieverGreenville<lb/>
really does have it all. I imagine<lb/>
you don't believe me any more<lb/>
than a tacky billboard, but I'm<lb/>
going to convince you! I've com-<lb/>
piled a Top Ten List of what<lb/>
Greenville has. The list will be<lb/>
similar to David Lettcrman's, and<lb/>
much different than the list on the<lb/>
T-shirt that you paid ten bucks<lb/>
for, but my list is not sold in stores.<lb/>
Number 10: Greenville has the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department,<lb/>
only the best and the finest for the<lb/>
Emerald City. No one knows the<lb/>
exact number of officers, and a<lb/>
total will not be available until the<lb/>
census is tallied. But what ever<lb/>
the number is, you can bet it's a<lb/>
magical one. Magical number,<lb/>
meaning it's just enough cops to<lb/>
be sure no one is having fun or<lb/>
illegally parking.<lb/>
Number 9: Greenville has a<lb/>
small state school full of noisy<lb/>
trouble makers that put no money<lb/>
into the economy. TheyjustmaJ<lb/>
noiseand trouble. 1 think the name<lb/>
of the school is East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity, it has onlv about 16,001)<lb/>
students. The good news in the-<lb/>
area; last vear the Greenville ciri<lb/>
council passed a noise ordinand-<lb/>
that will keep the students quiti<lb/>
but they'll still be making trouble).<lb/>
Number 8: Greenville hai<lb/>
numbered streets that intersect, f<lb/>
your confused about what l'r<lb/>
talking about, you should go stan<lb/>
at thecornerof lOthand 5th stree<lb/>
then you'll be confused.<lb/>
Number 7: Greenville has<lb/>
Wal-Mart, (or should I say a<lb/>
Mart with two more letters.) E<lb/>
See Greenville, page 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0005"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
J!?c ?a?t (larolin'iunstPihHBtH 4J990<lb/>
The fourth floor <lb/>
By John Williams<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
People have mentioned the<lb/>
fourth floor of the Science Complex<lb/>
tii nw betore, and though I was a<lb/>
little shocked and curious to see for<lb/>
my self, 1 never made it up there. I<lb/>
lust trusted my imagination of it,<lb/>
and dismissed the task of investi-<lb/>
gating Finally, the other day, 1 saw<lb/>
what was up there and learned that<lb/>
rm imagination had been kind to<lb/>
me<lb/>
1 or those who do not know, lam<lb/>
I referring to a tall glass display case<lb/>
i mi taming a variety of preserved,<lb/>
iht rtcl human ionises. In ignorance,<lb/>
! had imagined a number of glassjars<lb/>
:n that cax full ot torn aldahvde and<lb/>
distorted indehfnite human tissue.<lb/>
What 1 actuaBy snv made my eyes<lb/>
water, my chest pound,and my mind<lb/>
reel w-ith confusion and sadness.<lb/>
I saw babies Dead babies<lb/>
curled up in jars. Some of them<lb/>
i months old some only weeks, they<lb/>
.ill looked like I it tie, white, wrinkled<lb/>
; babies in those damned jars The<lb/>
j twins. even theSpina Bihda fetus.<lb/>
I began to shiver. Maybe it sounds<lb/>
extreme, but 1 imagined them cry-<lb/>
ing in those little jars. 1 wondered<lb/>
what their names would ha vebeen,<lb/>
and wether or not they would have<lb/>
ever ran through a big, open field<lb/>
clutching tight to a kitestnng on a<lb/>
day with no wind 1 imagined them<lb/>
smiling with friendswholeand<lb/>
alive.<lb/>
Maybe they would never have<lb/>
been "wholeandalive Mavbethey<lb/>
would have been bom into poverty<lb/>
and strife, or with some horrible<lb/>
disease or diformitv<lb/>
Where is thecomiort in such an<lb/>
idea7 Was 1 supposed to have<lb/>
breathed a sigh of relief for them1<lb/>
Wipe the sweat from my brow and<lb/>
tell mvself that it's ust as well? Or<lb/>
was I nght to sink even lower<lb/>
knowing that those lives never even<lb/>
had a chance? And not )ust those,<lb/>
but all of the lives that ended before<lb/>
they began.<lb/>
As my mind whirled, and as<lb/>
students and faculty shuttled<lb/>
around me in their scientific frame<lb/>
of mind, I felt like crying.<lb/>
ery city with a large population of<lb/>
police officers should have a Wal-<lb/>
Mart.<lb/>
Number b: Greenville has a<lb/>
Brody's, that'san understatement<lb/>
1 believe there are tour or five<lb/>
Brody's at every shopping mall<lb/>
It's g(HHl there is a place tor us<lb/>
trouble makers to shop, if we de-<lb/>
cide to put money into the<lb/>
economy. iBy the way Brody's is<lb/>
hiring.)<lb/>
Number 5: (.reenville has a<lb/>
Krispv Creme and two Dunken<lb/>
Donuts, not many cities can boast<lb/>
that Then again most cities don't<lb/>
havea Halloween S W. AT team<lb/>
and countless policemen to cow<lb/>
sume 20,000 donuts a d.tv<lb/>
Number 4: Greenville has a<lb/>
reputationofbeingabarAlubtrtv<lb/>
area, especially the downtown<lb/>
a rea<lb/>
Number i: ireenville has<lb/>
many billboards in ihc area that<lb/>
proclaim "Greenville Has It All'<lb/>
Number 2: Greenville has.<lb/>
Hid 1 mention the,reenville Po-<lb/>
lice 1 Vparttnent'<lb/>
Number 1 I Ircenvillc has<lb/>
about eight things .ill together<lb/>
Now I hope your a believer,<lb/>
because "GreenvilleHas It All<lb/>
Do you have an opinion?<lb/>
Whv not write a letter to the<lb/>
editor.<lb/>
Submit all letters to:<lb/>
lhe Fast Carolinian<lb/>
co letters to the Kditor<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
GrrenvHle, NC 27851 4353<lb/>
Asian<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
Wearegentleand loving with<lb/>
people whenever possible, but we<lb/>
are assertive and firm when nec-<lb/>
essary We accept our strengths<lb/>
and build on them We accept our<lb/>
weaknesses and limitations, in-<lb/>
cluding the limitations of our<lb/>
power.<lb/>
Sometimes, we give ourselves<lb/>
a good gripe session to let it all<lb/>
out, to release feelings, but we<lb/>
strive to avoid malicious gossip<lb/>
and other self defeating behaviors.<lb/>
We do not denv negative feelings<lb/>
about another person, but strive<lb/>
to maintain good working rela-<lb/>
tionships wherever possible<lb/>
When we don't know some-<lb/>
thing, we siv SO. When we need<lb/>
help, we ask for it directly. If<lb/>
something gets crav. or we're<lb/>
working with someone who is<lb/>
troublesome, wedonot makeour-<lb/>
selves crazier by denying the<lb/>
problem We accept it and trv to<lb/>
figure out how to take care of the<lb/>
situation, and ourselves.<lb/>
We know we do not have to<lb/>
stav in situations that make us<lb/>
miserable. We stop thinking of<lb/>
ourselves as victims, and work at<lb/>
believing we deserve the best, Em h<lb/>
day, we can enjoy what is yi,<lb/>
solve the problems that are ours to<lb/>
solve and give the gift of ourselves<lb/>
at work.<lb/>
I'I.h mg home and family be-<lb/>
fore work and being a journalist<lb/>
role model wasthechotcet onnie<lb/>
( hung made 1 ler replacement at<lb/>
the A A) A s holarshipbanquel was<lb/>
NB( News M.irv Ah eWilliams,<lb/>
anchor of "Sunday loday<lb/>
Williams, who amew ith four<lb/>
days notice at i bung's request,<lb/>
was placed in the awkward posi<lb/>
t ion of having to defendhung to<lb/>
the Asian American journalists<lb/>
who booed and hissed when it<lb/>
was announced that (hung was<lb/>
not present.<lb/>
Wheredoesa role model draw<lb/>
the linebetwi en i private life and<lb/>
public moments? Williams says it<lb/>
c onus when home and tamilv are<lb/>
the issue I agree. bung's actions<lb/>
iv it s all right tor women who<lb/>
have high-profiles to hoose to be<lb/>
mothers, too<lb/>
( hung made a video tor the<lb/>
banquet wishing A Al well, md<lb/>
offering to appear al r ?t year's<lb/>
convention. Her sincerity would<lb/>
have come across better it she'd<lb/>
included a check tor the A V A<lb/>
si holarship fund as well<lb/>
Role models have to d more<lb/>
than talk<lb/>
Greed<lb/>
Steinbrenner, Pete Rose, the<lb/>
S&amp;l barons, Donald Trump. Ivan<lb/>
Boeskv, corporate golf clubbers<lb/>
who winked al bias7<lb/>
Riding high in the '80s; "cor-<lb/>
rected" in the ,lX)s.<lb/>
Who will be this decade's he-<lb/>
roes ?<lb/>
rhey should be people who<lb/>
focus not on the Frank Lorenzos,<lb/>
but on the Happy LaBoys.<lb/>
Eastern closed its operahons<lb/>
it the airport near Rochester, N.Y<lb/>
a here I a Boy lives, during the<lb/>
strike ! o get to work, La Boy now<lb/>
drives 73 miles to Buffalo, where<lb/>
she boards an Eastern plane for<lb/>
Eastern's hub citv of Atlanta.<lb/>
Whv doesn't she iust move<lb/>
there' larniK "I have two brats<lb/>
who need some attention she<lb/>
says. She's divorced, and an ex-<lb/>
tended family lives in<lb/>
Rochester.<lb/>
Futurists sav we're moving<lb/>
toward more people oriented<lb/>
corporate and public policies<lb/>
Corporate life, they sav. will in-<lb/>
clude on-site child care and flexible<lb/>
working hours. Even parental<lb/>
leave.<lb/>
Businesses, they say, will have<lb/>
to provide continuous employee<lb/>
training as automation and com-<lb/>
puter revolutions eliminate many<lb/>
low-literacy fobs<lb/>
Workers over age 30 will find<lb/>
themselves more in demand.<lb/>
The so-called "underclass'<lb/>
will have to be educated and<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
trained, or else we won't have<lb/>
enough citizens to staff our busi-<lb/>
nesses.<lb/>
In "Rich and Poor Thillips<lb/>
finds historical precedent to sug<lb/>
gest that the 1990s will be a time<lb/>
for populism.<lb/>
"Poverty, hunger and<lb/>
homelessness" ranked ust below<lb/>
drugs as the nation's most im-<lb/>
portant problem, voters told a<lb/>
Republican pollster last October.<lb/>
Sounds like President Bush<lb/>
was on to something with his now-<lb/>
abandoned talk of a kinder,<lb/>
gentler America "<lb/>
The '90s are ripe for heroes<lb/>
who can give that rhetoric wings<lb/>
For persims w<lb/>
Shin to applv f. -rmral Manager, s.op h the Vtedhl Bnwd I Mfc? the M xt door .ln ?n the right<lb/>
Keep informed of the<lb/>
issuses, events and<lb/>
people affecting the<lb/>
ECU campus and<lb/>
community<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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j Suhscribe to<lb/>
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scumx the last Carolina campus community since 125<lb/>
m ? Mil ?I M ' <lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0006"/><lb/>
Septi mber 4.1990<lb/>
Ul)t lEiiit (fiarulinian<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY<lb/>
NEED C ASH? Nl I I) MOM ?<lb/>
NEED c.Kl ENI m ' j am now<lb/>
buying an) football basketball,<lb/>
and baseballiards i u ha e Am<lb/>
year am shap I llgive von i fail<lb/>
amount . .ill I im s 10 ? U<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
WORD I'KOi 1 SSING AND<lb/>
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c aiarantet ilui<lb/>
iiti i<lb/>
i uptt<lb/>
?fl hand written page ?'? ' I ro<lb/>
ti" sional i i imputt r Sen i? es 10b<lb/>
F.i ! 5h ? ? I ; ? d?uhbie si<lb/>
VT I IM C)l KAPI i K I' I I<lb/>
RAPI. in at 11 rd.i ll Rape<lb/>
t nsis c entet and Ih I I Curo<lb/>
iinian a u male reportei is vn illing<lb/>
to meet with yon to help prevent<lb/>
othei rapes on u , to ko p<lb/>
 ? c? ntidi i ill Rape<lb/>
( , is Center a I - I ' r wrili<lb/>
U, 'he Fast Carol Ca<lb/>
ii ??:<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
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vale patio, storage. Sheraton Vil-<lb/>
lage $192mo 13utilities. Call<lb/>
155 H25or 75?vr8H4iask lor 1 k?n)<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: to share 2 bedroom<lb/>
house Rent $125a month plus l '<lb/>
J utilities Own room Musi be<lb/>
hod smoker Across the street<lb/>
from ampus. Call 752 Sr<lb/>
ROOMMA1 E NEEDED: Female<lb/>
sr Own room and bath V<lb/>
D, fireplace, dishwashei out<lb/>
more! $133 and 1 3 Utilities<lb/>
Heritage Village 355-3988 Dena<lb/>
or Amy<lb/>
I I MM t ROOMMA I I<lb/>
vs 11 1 : to share house on<lb/>
Eastern st I oca ted near campus<lb/>
S BR 2 1 2 bath C all tor details<lb/>
immediately! 757 3434 or 757<lb/>
0161<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
? LID M MAI t R H MM 11 :<lb/>
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hi LVi; 1U i!<lb/>
e to campu i nvmth<lb/>
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Vug .i r iraO<lb/>
ROOMMAT1 i M )? D to<lb/>
share bedroom 2 1 2 hath apt<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
BRODY'S HAS PAR! -1 IM1<lb/>
SAI I S POSI I l()s IN l N-<lb/>
IORS AND ACCESSORH S<lb/>
Enio men handisediscounl w hik?<lb/>
working in an exciting fashion<lb/>
clothing area Apply Brod) s I he<lb/>
Plaza, rues Fri, 1 4 p m<lb/>
BRODY'S lOR MEN: is looking<lb/>
tor personable and responsible<lb/>
part time associates who .ire<lb/>
fashion forward Flexible hours<lb/>
Must enjoy people. Merchandise<lb/>
dis ount Apph Brod) 's I he<lb/>
Plaza I ues Fri, 1-4 p m<lb/>
SECURITY POSI 1 IONS<lb/>
AMl ABLE: in a retail i'in iron<lb/>
men! All hours (ireat tor v rimi<lb/>
nal Justice Majors Apply Brody s,<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
The Plaza, I ues Fri I -4 p m<lb/>
I HI GREENV II 1 I RE( Rl<lb/>
ATION ANDPARKS ll PAR!<lb/>
MEN! IS KI CRLI1 ING FOR<lb/>
FAII SOCCER O Ac Ills. I he<lb/>
pn cram w ill begin in September<lb/>
and the hours (t work will v.h<lb/>
between ; Ml p m and  t1 p m<lb/>
Monday thru I ridaj with some<lb/>
Saturday work rcquiied Ap<lb/>
proxinuih h 15-21) hours per wee<lb/>
Program u ill last until mid No<lb/>
vembei Knowledg? ofsoccerand<lb/>
the skills to i' ?? h s.? , ri funda<lb/>
mentals team play and strategies<lb/>
to youth ages 5 15 Rate ol pay<lb/>
will be$3 85 to $4 25pei hour I or<lb/>
lutthei inform ition i all Ben lames<lb/>
i 18(1 4543 or 830-4! I<lb/>
Ml I I IPI I S I VSHION c ON-<lb/>
Sl I 1 AN I. Vttt nttonolh ge<lb/>
Students! Would vou liki to make<lb/>
an extra fcltX) pel week and have<lb/>
fun doii ? it? I h 1 hre Sales I h<lb/>
vision ol mi 1it .is Premiei<lb/>
Modulai f- mllothing on pan<lb/>
is seeking i andidati ? t rl I<lb/>
t .ii ;<lb/>
relativ es Set out own houi ?<lb/>
youi ow nboss rhi<lb/>
ness I am a high s I ichi<lb/>
and ihi -is in pail ? hu oh<lb/>
Afti ? ill workisaparl. I a!1919<lb/>
 1044 .ik t. rBn nd iorl ivea<lb/>
message<lb/>
A1R1 INI SNOW HIR1N ?<lb/>
Attendants I i.o el fi I M?<lb/>
i hat it ? v ustonv i ee. I ,vi<lb/>
ings s ilarii stoS<lb/>
positti ms .ill ll) Si hS7-?s(XMl<lb/>
I t A-l h<lb/>
(,t) I RNM1 NIBS: $16 112<lb/>
JS9.932 r Novs Hiring Youi<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
areaall(l)Si)rf87 wKM), Ext.R<lb/>
1 livi tor listings<lb/>
ATTENTION: LAR.N MOMY<lb/>
READING BOOKS! $32,000 <lb/>
. ,u m. ome potential Details. (I <lb/>
h02 838 8885 i xt BK-5285,6aarv<lb/>
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I INI S NOW HIRING! Al I PO<lb/>
SI 11( r .s! $17,500 $5840 IV<lb/>
i.nls (1)602-838 8885 Ext 5285<lb/>
ATTENTION: POSTAL OHS!<lb/>
Start $11 41 'hour' I or application<lb/>
info call (1)602 838 8885, Exl M<lb/>
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t Dl Kit R HI I C I 1 KK: tor<lb/>
bus surgical center Prefei Allied<lb/>
Health or Nursing student who<lb/>
h.is.ij.ir Hourly wage &amp; mile<lb/>
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758 1747.<lb/>
1 OOKING FOR:a fraternity, so<lb/>
ront v.orstiulont organization that<lb/>
? , uld like to make $500 SI.OH)<lb/>
fur .i one wei k on campus mar<lb/>
ketingpn jeel Must be organized<lb/>
and hardworkingall enny or<lb/>
ki in at (800) 592 2121<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
niht with vou guvs was a blast,<lb/>
can't wait to partv again' love,<lb/>
the pledges and sisters ot Alpha<lb/>
C hi Helta<lb/>
RUSH THETA CHI.<lb/>
GhT ON THE CHANCELLOR'S<lb/>
GOOD SIDE:and promote E I<lb/>
(live campus tours, travel to eon<lb/>
ventions, help admissions ofhce<lb/>
recruit hih sh(Ki! students. oin<lb/>
E U Ambassadors and make a<lb/>
difference V isit our membership<lb/>
booths Sept. 4 - 11 at the Student<lb/>
Store and Mendenhall.<lb/>
PACE IS IKE<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
withH 1 SONpatchesirx lu<lb/>
Size5 package$75 00. Si<lb/>
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sturdy $12 orb I<lb/>
refrigi rati ? "<lb/>
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PERSONALS<lb/>
1 AMHDA C til Al PHA: It<lb/>
started out with a formal escort by<lb/>
: , Lan bda C hi's, all<lb/>
. d nut in their oats and tu's<lb/>
With roses in one hand and a drink<lb/>
m the other, we got wild and crazy<lb/>
kvitheven brother Doorsopened<lb/>
and "lit i .inn' a s ream' I WO<lb/>
j ambdahi'sco o l in sha ing<lb/>
earn We were ill coered in<lb/>
. n am and pun h Nodoubt those<lb/>
in bdahi s and Alpha eta<lb/>
I Vita's ui u a v ild bunch Pre!<lb/>
I AMHDA CHI Al PHA FRA-<lb/>
II UNITY: would like to invite<lb/>
everyone to Rl SH on Sepl 4 7.<lb/>
I or more information or tor rides<lb/>
call 757 1367.<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL GIRLS: Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Phi Little Sister Rush' Sept<lb/>
II 12 from 8 p m 10p.m. Come<lb/>
out mm- meet the Brothers and<lb/>
Sisters. 472 W. 5th St. Call 757-<lb/>
3516 it rules are needed<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
1988 HONDA NXrSSO: Excellent<lb/>
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commuting long short distances<lb/>
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FOR: $75.00, large and small air<lb/>
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ATTENTION NURSING<lb/>
STUDENTS:Two nursing uni<lb/>
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Includes 2 dresses and lab coal<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
RESEARCH INFORMATION<lb/>
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an soft8 '<lb/>
800 351 0222<lb/>
? ??? ? ma!ion<lb/>
J10O0<lb/>
Plus a haru e o<lb/>
SMMKi more<lb/>
Call 1 80092 028 I xt 0<lb/>
GO<lb/>
PIRA TES<lb/>
&amp;m&amp;&amp;&amp;im$<lb/>
?iex:?c ? x je-x' s5Sftx6fi(W8ll<lb/>
M HOOLK I MODI 1 S<lb/>
Nil Dl D<lb/>
v' Ii I- m edod '? i i ig ii ? Dra <lb/>
ing . Ii m - s io, 1 i and 1 <lb/>
NV uA vi dra' i t I riday.<lb/>
?i h to( onnic ! alnei "n I" ol 't<lb/>
ArtOEficeoi rranGordley lenkins<lb/>
1307 lei  6259 Mon, Wed. In<lb/>
8 - 1<lb/>
Al I'M A  lilt IMJ (.A<lb/>
Al I'll A CHI?MI I ' N itional<lb/>
S n ice! r.itrnnu  II Jits first<lb/>
general meeting tonight at 7in<lb/>
Mi ndenhall 212 Ml a live, inac-<lb/>
tive .uni assistant ? : tin is areen-<lb/>
couraged to atl<lb/>
ICL GOSPI I I lb ??iv<lb/>
i ; . EC1 Gi ; Choir will<lb/>
sis. 11, ,er .i  ,i  ? n I ues<lb/>
.Li Se teinbi ll ip.m<lb/>
K ,i 224 N ?! id? nl<lb/>
(??' nvi I in<lb/>
p.t, lii ipati ' lames<lb/>
i hompson at H - i ! ?<lb/>
Washington il ? I ;<lb/>
ion to th? .1 b? <lb/>
(.  ? 111 till '<lb/>
LC. L v,t S1 ' I sJtOIK<lb/>
oin the ECU I hoir! H<lb/>
dk .i. Ilim for joinmj - ptembi i<lb/>
12th Rehersal ai V i dnes<lb/>
day il 5al the ter.O m<lb/>
out and join th fun<lb/>
A,v I Elight uill t<lb/>
ANGI1 I 1 IOHI<lb/>
? , their<lb/>
Rush s pt 4 " al " p m al Ihe<lb/>
 right Ann. ? ?? ft. For more<lb/>
it ti rmatii n atut ' light<lb/>
 me iiiciir sh i night<lb/>
KL WOMI N b it) vLK<lb/>
CLLB<lb/>
P( i omt ? - - or t lub is off<lb/>
Io another succes fulyeai Allnew<lb/>
and old playei s are w v i?m Im<lb/>
p?irtant meeting Sepl 5 at 4 00<lb/>
pm in ihe General lassniom<lb/>
building Room 1001! ome join<lb/>
the learn tor another victorious<lb/>
s?son Anyquestions, i all lean or<lb/>
Krrn.it 758-0714'<lb/>
NLRbING MAJORS<lb/>
East i arolina Associatii n it<lb/>
Nursing Students iK ANS) will<lb/>
have first meeting September 6, at<lb/>
lit iia m , in room 201. Freshman<lb/>
are welcome. Come &amp; see what<lb/>
ECANS is doing this semestei<lb/>
LAST CAROLINA HONOR S<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
li WO will be holding its tirst<lb/>
meeting of the year on Thursday,<lb/>
August 30th, at 5 p m. In the<lb/>
basement ot Fleming Hall ? en<lb/>
tral Campus Meeting Room). The<lb/>
group is open to all honor students<lb/>
who are interested in joining in<lb/>
social and academic activities with<lb/>
other honor students Pizza and<lb/>
refreshments will be served. ome<lb/>
and join us'<lb/>
STOP SMOKING!<lb/>
I ?n vou wanttoki kthhabit' I hen<lb/>
sign up tor the Ameru anan er<lb/>
Society Smoking Cessation Pro<lb/>
gram to be held al the tudenl<lb/>
1 lealtM !enter. The program is free<lb/>
ofchargetoallECl I students, staff,<lb/>
and faculty. Program starts on<lb/>
Wed . Sopt 5, and lasts tor tour<lb/>
i onsecutive weeks Program nine<lb/>
isJO 430. all757 6794 to sign<lb/>
up and tor more information<lb/>
HONORS SEMINARS<lb/>
Anybody intending to submit a<lb/>
proposal tor an Honors Seminar<lb/>
should submit proposal bv 1 n<lb/>
day, August H I990,or as soon as<lb/>
possible. If not able to submit the<lb/>
proposal m written form, please<lb/>
call DavidSanders(757-6373)with<lb/>
your idea lor more information,<lb/>
see David Sanders in the Honors<lb/>
Office, 1002 A General Classroom<lb/>
Building<lb/>
CHI ALPHA OMEGA<lb/>
FIND MORI rO THIS I IFE<lb/>
RUSH CHI AI PHA OMEGA<lb/>
Sept 4th 7th. 4th Campus wide<lb/>
mixer, 8 11 in Ledonia Wright<lb/>
( ultural Center th lee (ream<lb/>
social, 8-9 Mendenhall Coffee<lb/>
house Mh 7th Formal Rush<lb/>
(potential pledges only) Menden<lb/>
hall Rm 221.8- 10. "How good<lb/>
and pleasant it is ,? hen<lb/>
dw ell locethi i inunil<lb/>
jolliers<lb/>
I 1 I IMA I L I KIslU I<lb/>
l Itimate (frisbee) practice is i uv<lb/>
running at 1 Ul C? ttomvt( olleg<lb/>
I hli i.n ii' -s from Hu wstei I on<lb/>
I uesda Wednes.lay Ihursdav<lb/>
and Sunday Pick up N? ??. IRATE<lb/>
Disc there 1 or into on prat live or<lb/>
disc call 752 7538! I .o HORZ!<lb/>
Dv I SS1U ? s, RH S<lb/>
A scries ol discussions on th<lb/>
compn hensive philosophies de-<lb/>
 eloped by the preen polity J<lb/>
parties in Europe will begin nn<lb/>
Wednesday .September? I he first<lb/>
discussion will le on the "run<lb/>
ciples ol Ecological Wisdom <lb/>
will be led by Drs Prem Seghal<lb/>
and Amy i lanm n I h? second<lb/>
disi ission 'CommuniU Hi- l<lb/>
II onomii s will be the i pit nn<lb/>
i t, ibet I Ml mtvtings will be<lb/>
held in (he Willis ti u In i unl ut<lb/>
and Read Streets and ill I? pin<lb/>
7 M 1 or moie intoi mat ion call<lb/>
the lar Pamlico lreen ommitti i<lb/>
.it 758 u0t<lb/>
t f, l CREW II M<lb/>
1 he EC1 ? lew 1 earn is ha ing i<lb/>
meeting t n all those w ho are in-<lb/>
terested in joining in fhursday,<lb/>
sit 6,at7p m rhe meeting will<lb/>
U- held on tin 2nd floor ol Men<lb/>
denhall it youi an I make it con<lb/>
t.ut ohn lu.iitis (931 9191) or<lb/>
Mike Snip s ' 2 1 v"<lb/>
MWANASCLCH<lb/>
Attention ECU Students former<lb/>
kevlub and c in le K members<lb/>
,ire nn ilevl lO dinner by Ihe<lb/>
Greenville KiwanasC lub Please<lb/>
call i" 01J6<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS MAGAZINE<lb/>
The A P Pacemaker av .rA win<lb/>
rung Expressions Magazine isnow<lb/>
accepting poetry short stories,<lb/>
fiction, non fiction articles,etc tor<lb/>
review Accepted submissions,<lb/>
except poetry will be paid75per<lb/>
column inch Offices are located<lb/>
in the Publications Bldg. across<lb/>
trom ioyner I ibrar<lb/>
Ul SCHOOL OF MUSIC<lb/>
EVENTS<lb/>
SEP1 6: Faculty Recital bv lav A<lb/>
I lerson, baritone, with ohn B.<lb/>
o Hneii piano (8 15p.m Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall, free) SEP1 8:Senior<lb/>
Recital Scotl lane, horn piano<lb/>
13:15 p m . Fletcher Recital Hall,<lb/>
freelSEPT. 10: Faculty Recital by<lb/>
Brad Foley, saxophone, with lohn<lb/>
B )' Brien piano (8:15p m .<lb/>
Hetchei Retital Hall, free) DIAL<lb/>
757-4370 FOR IHl-sc HOOL OF<lb/>
Ml SI 'S RECORDED CALEN-<lb/>
DAR<lb/>
LCC LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
E I Law Society will be having a<lb/>
nwetingSept. 10,1990,Mondayin<lb/>
Ragsdale 218 al ri I5p.m Anyone<lb/>
interested in law or becoming a<lb/>
lawywr please attend For more<lb/>
nfonnatoncallSonyal oveat931<lb/>
I 91<lb/>
v L WAILRSRICLCB<lb/>
, , i v l Waterski C lub is meet<lb/>
ing luesday, September 4th in<lb/>
Mend, nhall al 9p.m New mem-<lb/>
bers please attend or contact Marty<lb/>
at 8 10 9 i79 or lackie at 756-8603.<lb/>
Al 1LNIION SIC DENTS<lb/>
It your I iPA is J 3 or higher and<lb/>
vou have between 7 and 96credit<lb/>
hours please come t the Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi Smoker ou I uesdav<lb/>
"npt 4 at 7 p m in (.CP 1031.<lb/>
Dress is somi formal ("shirt and<lb/>
lie") and refreshments will be<lb/>
served afterwards We're looking<lb/>
torw aid to meeting vou. Phi Sigma<lb/>
Pi National Honor Fraternity<lb/>
EDUCATION MAJORS<lb/>
Ihe Department ot Speech lan-<lb/>
guage and Auditory Pathology<lb/>
(SI AP) will be providing the<lb/>
Speech and hearing screening for<lb/>
allstudentsehgible for admission<lb/>
to the Upper Division of Teacher<lb/>
Education on Monday, September<lb/>
It), Tuesday, September 11; and<lb/>
Wednesday, September 12,1990.<lb/>
The Department will be testing<lb/>
from 5 to 6:30p m each day NO<lb/>
AITOIN 1MLN1 IS NEEDED<lb/>
(first come basis). Phe sl.AP De-<lb/>
partment is located in Belk Annex<lb/>
on C harles Street Thank you<lb/>
PURE GOLD DANCLRS<lb/>
Pure Gold Dancer Varsity tryouts<lb/>
will bc held September 17 &amp;18<lb/>
from 6:30-8:30p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Seven sxits kir the varsity team<lb/>
will lx tilled al this rime<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
The Greenville-Pitt County Spe-<lb/>
cial Olympics will be conducting<lb/>
a training schixil Sept. 22 at lavciv<lb/>
Park tor anyone interested in<lb/>
volunteering to coach soccer for<lb/>
special athletes. No experience is<lb/>
needed We are also looking for<lb/>
i oaches tor basketball, equestrian,<lb/>
bowling, powerlifting, gymnastics<lb/>
and swimming All interested<lb/>
persons should contact Greg<lb/>
Epperson at the Special Oiympi<lb/>
office, 830-4551.<lb/>
LOSE WEIGHT NOW!<lb/>
Lose weight the healths wav and<lb/>
keep those pounds off! The Stn<lb/>
dent health C enter offers a weigh!<lb/>
control program which combines<lb/>
nutrition education and behavior<lb/>
modification to assist you in losing<lb/>
extra pounds. Program is free ot<lb/>
charge to all ECU students The<lb/>
class is held every Tuesday at<lb/>
1p.m. in the Student Health Cen<lb/>
ter. Call 757-674 to sign up and<lb/>
for more information!<lb/>
CONTRACEPTIVE. CLASSES<lb/>
learn about the various methods<lb/>
of contraception and their effec<lb/>
tivencssrates.Classalsodiscusses<lb/>
Men's and Women's health issues<lb/>
and the prevention of sexuallv<lb/>
transmitted diseases. Classes are<lb/>
held at the Student Health Center<lb/>
every Mondav at 2p.m. and every<lb/>
Thursday at 3p.m. Call 757-7vM<lb/>
for more information.<lb/>
AI KOK<lb/>
I he Air Force Othcei<lb/>
tion lest will Iv givi I<lb/>
temberannd 15 October 1990 foi<lb/>
thoseindi iduals inti<lb/>
forceommissi m<lb/>
3rd door U<lb/>
up.<lb/>
ma ti n<lb/>
PHI ETA S1G: I '<lb/>
Utenl ?h i<lb/>
in 1 uesda Septeml i 111<lb/>
5 M 'p.in inC ,etn rail<lb/>
1008 nyqucsbi ?<lb/>
ELEMENTARY EDUCATION<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
Attention! All 1 arh l hild<lb/>
and Intermediate Ma)? rs k "<lb/>
91 officers nl th?<lb/>
Educatii n ib would -<lb/>
vitevou too<lb/>
ol the e.tr i ?. and Intel<lb/>
i luhs have merj<lb/>
1 he met ting v ill i Spei<lb/>
J08 Wednesda S pi i <lb/>
planning for a gn at V i 11 So ii<lb/>
and bring your friends<lb/>
a<lb/>
FOUND Al JONis<lb/>
CAFET1 BJ S<lb/>
A men s high s hoil i lass i<lb/>
c hristopher roole 1988 Pnnceti<lb/>
I ligh St hool<lb/>
LCI AMBASSADORS<lb/>
IVn t forget the ieneral Mi i<lb/>
on Wednesda) Septembei -<lb/>
p in Room 221<lb/>
NATIONAL fyTUDENl L<lb/>
CHANGE<lb/>
l-i L students- Wh nt?t spend<lb/>
exciting semester oi yeai at ne<lb/>
over 90 colleges or universities<lb/>
the US and earn college credit t<lb/>
wards graduation It vou have<lb/>
GPA ot 2 5 or better vu , an pa<lb/>
ECU tuition ar.il avoid the re<lb/>
tape normally associated ivitl<lb/>
transferring toanotherinstitution<lb/>
ln't miss thisopportunitv to v-<lb/>
new places, travel, and take o<lb/>
new challenges For more infoi<lb/>
mation contact Stephanie L aiu h.<lb/>
in GO 1002,757-6769<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0007"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
GU?e gagt (fiaroif nfan September 4,1990 7<lb/>
Solar flight lands at Kitty Hawk<lb/>
CURRITUCK (AP) The<lb/>
first solar-powered GMSt-to-coast<lb/>
flight neared its goal at tho birth<lb/>
place c4 mechanized flight as its<lb/>
pilot drew within )5mtlesof Kitty<lb/>
Hawk.<lb/>
Weather conditions allowed<lb/>
Mm Seeker to flv 124 miles Sun-<lb/>
day before landing in Currituck<lb/>
about 6:10 p.m said lack White<lb/>
house a spokesman tor thv Sun<lb/>
Seeker Project Pilot Eric Raymond<lb/>
hoped to complete his fournev<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
He was running out ol lilt<lb/>
ind landed at Currituck in North<lb/>
Carolina, about J5 miles north of<lb/>
I irst I light Airport at kitt<lb/>
I lawk Whitehouse said<lb/>
Raymond lefl 1 unenberg<lb/>
( tunty AirportnearVictoria,Va<lb/>
shortly before noon Sunday said<lb/>
a hitehouse.<lb/>
Raymond, who left Desert<lb/>
( enter, Calif on ury 16, was to<lb/>
ho landed around 2 p m Mon<lb/>
d.u in the same area where Or<lb/>
ville and Wilbur Wright made<lb/>
the tirst powered thght m 1CH3.<lb/>
1 he 33 yearold former na-<lb/>
tional hang gliding champion<lb/>
hopes to show the potential of<lb/>
solar power. 1 he plane takes off<lb/>
under a solar-powered motor<lb/>
turning the propeller, then flies<lb/>
like a glider.<lb/>
Supporters planned an elabo-<lb/>
rate rev option tor Raymond.<lb/>
Members ol the kitty Hawk<lb/>
t (eights HangGlidingSchool,the<lb/>
;cst such operation in the<lb/>
vs oi Id, were to present Raymond<lb/>
champagne, roses and a gift of a<lb/>
leather aviator jacket with a pic<lb/>
tun ol theSunSeekerontheback,<lb/>
said spokesman Nancy McWil-<lb/>
liams<lb/>
Weliketopmrnoteanything<lb/>
that has to do with this kind of<lb/>
alternative energy that has to with<lb/>
flight Ms M Williams said Sun-<lb/>
dae<lb/>
Astro-carrying Columbia set for liftoff<lb/>
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.<lb/>
(AP) ? The countdown began<lb/>
today for N AS As third attempt to<lb/>
launch Columbia with the Astro<lb/>
observatory alter engineers solved<lb/>
the latest problem to befall the<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
Liftoff is scheduled tor 1.20<lb/>
am. EOT Thursday. It will be the<lb/>
first shuttle launch in more than<lb/>
tour months - the longest gap<lb/>
between missions since flights<lb/>
resumed following the 198nChal-<lb/>
lenger disaster.<lb/>
It s been a long, hot summer,<lb/>
and we're just glad to be getting<lb/>
back into the flight business said<lb/>
NASA spokesman Hick Young.<lb/>
The shuttle fleet had been tempo-<lb/>
tank grounded after hydrogen<lb/>
leaks were discovered on two of<lb/>
the three orhitors, including Co-<lb/>
lumbia.<lb/>
 ASA decided on a Thursday<lb/>
launch after re-establishing full<lb/>
contact with the X-ray telescope<lb/>
inside Columbia's cargo bay. The<lb/>
telescope is one of four that consti-<lb/>
tute the $150 million Astro obser-<lb/>
vatory.<lb/>
Contact between the instru-<lb/>
ment and launch control comput-<lb/>
ers was lost Wednesday night af-<lb/>
ter the cargo bav doors were closed,<lb/>
and NASA scrubbed Saturday's<lb/>
launch attempt.<lb/>
Workers installed a new elec-<lb/>
tronic component for the telescope<lb/>
inside the cargo bay and finished<lb/>
testing it Sunday.<lb/>
Engineers also had trouble<lb/>
verifying the telescope's ability to<lb/>
send signals over a radio link that<lb/>
would be used during the flight.<lb/>
The problem was caused by faulty<lb/>
software and was corrected Sun-<lb/>
day, Young said.<lb/>
Columbia's liftoff would have<lb/>
been delayed until at least Friday<lb/>
if the problem had not been solved<lb/>
bv midnight Sunday, Young said.<lb/>
That's when workers planned to<lb/>
begin freezing the argon used to<lb/>
keep the X-ray telescope's instru-<lb/>
ments cold.<lb/>
Columbia was supposed to<lb/>
have gone up May 30, but hydro-<lb/>
gen leaked during fueling and<lb/>
NASA called off the launch. At-<lb/>
lantis was the next shuttle sched-<lb/>
uled to fly, but its classified Penta-<lb/>
gon mission wasdelayed from July<lb/>
to November when it, too, was<lb/>
found to have hydrogen leaks.<lb/>
Columbia returned to the<lb/>
launch pad in August with new<lb/>
hydrogen lines.<lb/>
NASA has not sent up a shuttle<lb/>
since April, when Discovery ear-<lb/>
ned the flawed Hubble Space Tele-<lb/>
scope into orbit.<lb/>
Columbia has a crew of seven<lb/>
astronauts, the largest since Chal-<lb/>
lenger.<lb/>
Four of the crew members are<lb/>
astronomers who will work in non-<lb/>
stop shifts to operate Astros three<lb/>
ultraviolet telescopes dunng the<lb/>
nine to 10-day mission. Astro will<lb/>
return to Earth with the shuttle<lb/>
and might be used again on a later<lb/>
flight.<lb/>
Astro is designed to observe<lb/>
some of the hottest objects in the<lb/>
universe, including a comet and a<lb/>
supernova. It will be the first<lb/>
shuttle mission in five years dedi-<lb/>
cated entirely to scientific research.<lb/>
It's a matter of SENIORITY<lb/>
A Salute to Seniors<lb/>
September 6, 10 ? 2pm<lb/>
In front of Student Stores<lb/>
T-shirts available<lb/>
Free Cokes &amp; Free Computer Info<lb/>
Live Remote -ECls Own 11 Zl 91.3<lb/>
BUILD A TR<lb/>
THE REBEL<lb/>
East Carolina I niversirVsNational Avvard-Wmning<lb/>
FAMOUS<lb/>
literary-Art Magazine<lb/>
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS<lb/>
FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS:<lb/>
ASSISTANT EDITOR<lb/>
PROSE EDITOR<lb/>
POETRY EDITOR<lb/>
Applications are available, and should he left<lb/>
with the Media Board Secretary in the Publications<lb/>
building by Friday, September 7.<lb/>
It you have questions, call 757-6502 or 758-9680<lb/>
SINCE 1980<lb/>
Open 7 Davs a Week<lb/>
7.S7-127S or 757-0731<lb/>
1(K)E. 10 Street<lb/>
Corner of 10 &amp; Evans<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
We Deliver Items That Others Don't<lb/>
Hot Oven Subs- Steak &amp; Cheese Pepper Steak<lb/>
Meatballs- Speghetti- Lasagna- Manicotti<lb/>
Burgers &amp; Sandwiches<lb/>
WEDNESDAY SUPER SPECIAL<lb/>
60 oz. Pitcher of Beer only 99tf<lb/>
PARTY SPECIALS (Delivered)<lb/>
The BIG 2<lb/>
2 10" Piza<lb/>
2 Toppings (your choice)<lb/>
2 8" Hot Oven subs (your choice)<lb/>
2 Cheese Cakes<lb/>
2 2 liter Cokes<lb/>
ONLY $22.22<lb/>
TION<lb/>
PHI KAPPA PSI FRATERNITY<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
HOME OF SOUTHERN GENTLEMEN<lb/>
IMMEDIATE LEADERSHIP OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
ABBREVIATED PLEDGE PERIOD<lb/>
BECOME A FOUNDING FATHER<lb/>
NO HAZING!<lb/>
When you step through the doors of the<lb/>
newly renovated KA House, you'll<lb/>
understand why KA seeks only men of the<lb/>
best character. And you'll see why our<lb/>
chapter at East Carolina has been Chosen<lb/>
as "The Model Kappa Alpha Chapter of the<lb/>
Nation" for 1990-91.<lb/>
Interested men stop by between 8-11<lb/>
Tuesday - Friday, meet representatives from<lb/>
each sorority, and enjoy refreshments by<lb/>
Hickory Ham's.<lb/>
500 E. 11th St. (near East Coast Music)<lb/>
7 5 7<lb/>
0 12 8<lb/>
Refreshments<lb/>
?R rides AND<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0008"/><lb/>
(51ic ?aBt(?aroHntan September 4,1990<lb/>
Jesse Helms campaign portrays<lb/>
Harvey Gantt as soft on defense<lb/>
RALEIGH(AP) Usingvideo<lb/>
footage of Iraqi loader Saddam<lb/>
Hussein and U.S. troops in Saudi<lb/>
Arabia, the campaign of Sen fesse<lb/>
Holms has begun broadcasting a<lb/>
television ad seeking to portray<lb/>
his opponent as sott on defense.<lb/>
The 30-second commercial<lb/>
seeks to draw a contrast between<lb/>
the U.S. response to Iraq's military<lb/>
action and Democrat Harvey<lb/>
Cantt's position that defense<lb/>
spending could be cut.<lb/>
Responding to the commer-<lb/>
c ial,( .antt s.iui he supported Presi<lb/>
dent Bush's handling tA the crisis<lb/>
in the Persian Gulf, and the I Vmo<lb/>
cratic candidate said he backed<lb/>
the US. troops stationed there<lb/>
"This is just another example<lb/>
of esse Helms trying to make<lb/>
himself a superpatriot and trying<lb/>
to demean the integrity of Ins<lb/>
opponent i iantt told reportersin<lb/>
Winston-Salem Friday.<lb/>
The commercial came a<lb/>
Helms prepared to visit U.S. troops<lb/>
in the Saudi Arabia Helms is trav-<lb/>
eling as part of a congressional<lb/>
delegation.<lb/>
The Helms commercial fea-<lb/>
tures puturesot tanks, of gas masks<lb/>
and of Hussein.<lb/>
Iraq Saddam Hussein, a<lb/>
brutal dictator with one of the<lb/>
world slargestarmiesarmed with<lb/>
chemical weapons anannouncer<lb/>
says in the Helms commercial.<lb/>
American troops meet the threat<lb/>
going in harm's way. Should we<lb/>
cut defense $300 billion? Senator<lb/>
Helms sjvs No, we can't take that<lb/>
nsk Harvey Gantt says, 'Yes, cut<lb/>
defense up to $300 billion<lb/>
Gantt told The News and<lb/>
Observer of Raleigh that it 'made<lb/>
sense" for the nation to cut back in<lb/>
defense spending "over the long<lb/>
haul But he said that for Helms<lb/>
to suggest that means he's soft on<lb/>
defense1 is untrue.<lb/>
"1 think the voters understand<lb/>
very clearly that Harvey Gantt<lb/>
stands behind the president and<lb/>
stands behind our troops (.antt<lb/>
said "They're my brothers and<lb/>
sisters and neighbors also. And<lb/>
we want to see them protei ted<lb/>
Up she goes<lb/>
An i CU cheerleader is boosted high by thn I her tea<lb/>
dunnq the ilf of the 1 rta Tech game S ?<lb/>
RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS<lb/>
YOUR UNCLE WANTS<lb/>
TO PAY FOR COLLEGE. BUT ONLY<lb/>
IF YOU 'RE GOOD ENOUGH.<lb/>
MoreToThisLife<lb/>
4-<lb/>
If you seek Him. He will be found by you 2 chr 15 2b<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
CHI ALPHA OMEGA<lb/>
September 4-7<lb/>
4th- MIXER (open invitation to guys &amp; girls)<lb/>
"Let them praise His name with dancing Ps 1493<lb/>
8-11 Ledonia Wright Culture Center<lb/>
5th- jce cream social (open invitation to guys &amp; girls)<lb/>
"Come all you who are thirsty is.551<lb/>
8-9 Mendenhall Coffee House<lb/>
6 &amp; 7th- Formal Rush (potential guy pledges only)<lb/>
"How good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell<lb/>
together in unity' Ps.133:1<lb/>
8-10 221 Mendenhall<lb/>
XA?2<lb/>
"FRATERNITY FOR ETERNITY"<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0009"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Su'wtoi) 4.1990<lb/>
She gaat Cffaroltnian<lb/>
STATE &amp; NATION<lb/>
9<lb/>
N.C. airport plans for<lb/>
hostages arrival<lb/>
Workers prepare food, phones<lb/>
Nuclear weapons not ruled out<lb/>
Percentage of U.S. residents who advocate the use of nuclear<lb/>
weapons against Iraq in these situations:<lb/>
55<lb/>
"<lb/>
i IGH I -P Usually<lb/>
ro w nrkers prepare tor<lb/>
ities the) hope w ill never<lb/>
? then wa<lb/>
Hut over the weekend state<lb/>
no workers prepared Ra<lb/>
I Hirham International Air<lb/>
in ev? nl the w ish will<lb/>
about tht release of<lb/>
ii ,ins from Kuu ait and Iraq.<lb/>
i airport is one oi three on<lb/>
ist Co it designated to re-<lb/>
-stages it thev arc released<lb/>
;e numl i -<lb/>
ens oi w oil ers Sunday<lb/>
' ing phone linos, bank<lb/>
i? ilities, kitchens, child care<lb/>
? s airline computers at<lb/>
lirport<lb/>
t, see this place real<lb/>
' tit .4 hours said oe<lb/>
 v retan oi crimecon-<lb/>
ubli satet) as Ke sur-<lb/>
oncourse in the<lb/>
linal B ' All Ameri-<lb/>
thoir tuiit rscn?ssed.<lb/>
?. man tor the I s<lb/>
? . ilth and Human<lb/>
this past week that<lb/>
eh a ?' harleston<lb/>
ii mal irport in South<lb/>
, and a third civilian air-<lb/>
 ' i ? ashington likely<lb/>
? i - arc<lb/>
: . tliner<lb/>
, American<lb/>
n arrived at<lb/>
? 1 irport in<lb/>
i. j I he) bad been hos-<lb/>
nth in the afU rmath<lb/>
! Kir. ,nt<lb/>
An estimated 3,000 Americans<lb/>
and thousands of other foreigners<lb/>
are believed still hold hostage.<lb/>
"We were told bv Washington<lb/>
that it they are released, they're 95<lb/>
percent sure we will be one oi the<lb/>
reception points Dean said.<lb/>
The repatriation center being<lb/>
set up in Raleigh could handle<lb/>
about 500arrivalsata time, foseph<lb/>
Myers, director of the N.C. Divi-<lb/>
sion oi Emergency Management,<lb/>
told the Greensboro News &amp;<lb/>
Record.<lb/>
Myers said 200 state emer-<lb/>
gency workers, social workers and<lb/>
volunteers from the Red Cross and<lb/>
the Salvation Army are on call to<lb/>
staff the terminal, which has been<lb/>
vacant tor the past year.<lb/>
As oi Sunday afternoon, air-<lb/>
port crews had cleaned out the<lb/>
terminal and were preparing cus-<lb/>
toms and luggage areas, testing<lb/>
phones and ham radios and hook-<lb/>
ing up computer terminals to help<lb/>
in travel connections<lb/>
Albert Thompson, a state so-<lb/>
cial services administrator, said<lb/>
workers were trying to foresee any<lb/>
possible needs, including loans,<lb/>
psychologic al counseling medical<lb/>
exams and accommodations tor<lb/>
relatives from other states<lb/>
Dean said 'he federal govern-<lb/>
ment had contacted North (aro<lb/>
lina because the state already has a<lb/>
plan in place last tested in 1987<lb/>
and has experience with several<lb/>
recent natural disasters, including<lb/>
Hurricane Hugo md two major<lb/>
tornadoes<lb/>
36<lb/>
25?c<lb/>
majw<lb/>
If Iraqis<lb/>
deliberately kill<lb/>
U.S. hostages<lb/>
If Iraqis use If Iraqis invade<lb/>
chemical weapons another country<lb/>
against U.S. troops<lb/>
Source: USA TODAY Poll<lb/>
Marty Baumann, Gannett News Service<lb/>
Killer left message in Florida slaijings<lb/>
GAINESVILLE, Ha. (AP)<lb/>
With one day to go before classes<lb/>
resume at the University oi<lb/>
Honda, police Monday were<lb/>
studying what thev vaguely de-<lb/>
scribed as "messages" left by the<lb/>
killer oi five college students.<lb/>
Investigators on Sunday also<lb/>
said they reduced their list of prime<lb/>
suspects from eight to tour, and<lb/>
clues left by the killer are helping.<lb/>
The slayingS have terrorized<lb/>
the campus, where students are<lb/>
on a labor Day break until Tues-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"The messages were given to<lb/>
us from the crime scenes said<lb/>
police It Sadie Darnell. "The<lb/>
messages are indirect that we're<lb/>
interpreting to be messages of<lb/>
some importance<lb/>
Hie killer left no notes or other<lb/>
writings, she said, declining to<lb/>
provide further details. Sheriffs<lb/>
Lt. Spencer Mann added that no<lb/>
"calling cards" were found on the<lb/>
bodies. "It's not a signature-type<lb/>
homicide he said.<lb/>
Autopsies on Tracy Inez<lb/>
Paules and Manuel Taboada,both<lb/>
23, showed thev died of stab<lb/>
wounds similar to those that killed<lb/>
the other victims, Mann said. Un-<lb/>
like the first three, the bodies of<lb/>
Miss Paules and Taboada were<lb/>
not mutilated.<lb/>
Mann would not say whether<lb/>
the same weapon was used in all<lb/>
five slayings.<lb/>
Police said an Ohio fugitive,<lb/>
58-year-old Warren Virgil Tinch,<lb/>
was dropped from their "prime<lb/>
suspects" list. Tinch is sought in<lb/>
Ohio in the stabbing death of a 52-<lb/>
ycar-old woman and is suspected<lb/>
of stealing cars in Ocala and<lb/>
Gainesville a week before the kifl-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
Mann would not say whether<lb/>
18-year-old Edward Lewis<lb/>
Humphrey is among the top four<lb/>
suspects and would not Otherwise<lb/>
disclose who is on the list.<lb/>
Humphrey, a part-time fresh-<lb/>
man at the university whom au-<lb/>
thorities describe as emotionally<lb/>
troubled, is in jail on SI million<lb/>
bail tor allegedly assaulting his<lb/>
79-vear-old grandmother and has<lb/>
been questioned as a suspect.<lb/>
Miss Paules and Taboada<lb/>
were found Tuesday at the apart-<lb/>
ment thev shared at a complex<lb/>
where Humphrev lived for a few<lb/>
weeks this summer. A neighbor<lb/>
See Slaytnrjs, page 10<lb/>
? r<lb/>
Counting costs<lb/>
An estimated 250 million people will be counted<lb/>
l the current Census, with significant in<lb/>
creases in the Southwest. Per capita<lb/>
cost to conduct the Census:<lb/>
Pope blames power, profit<lb/>
for Africa's problems<lb/>
Source: Census Bureau<lb/>
Bob Laird, Gannett News Service<lb/>
SONGEA, Tanzania (AP)<lb/>
Pope John Paul 11 decried today<lb/>
the failure of development in Af-<lb/>
rica, blaming a thirst for power<lb/>
and profit for plunging the conti-<lb/>
nent into poverty and injustice.<lb/>
"How many young people in<lb/>
Africa are deeply affected by the<lb/>
lack of hope that overshadows<lb/>
their future the pope said on the<lb/>
third day of a 10-day African tour.<lb/>
John Paul flew from the<lb/>
country's commercial capital, the<lb/>
port city of Dar es Salaam, 380<lb/>
miles to southwestern Songea to<lb/>
celebrate Mass.<lb/>
The pope was greeted by tra-<lb/>
ditional dancers and music, people<lb/>
singing hymns and ululating.<lb/>
About 25,000 people attended the<lb/>
service, which was held in an open<lb/>
field in the African savannah.<lb/>
"Certainly it is not easy for<lb/>
people, especially young people,<lb/>
to be self-giving and generous<lb/>
when thev see around them so<lb/>
much poverty and suffering, so<lb/>
manv instances of neglect and in-<lb/>
justice he said in his homily.<lb/>
John Paul said the hopes of<lb/>
manv Third World countries have<lb/>
been dashed by hunger, malnu-<lb/>
trition, crime and corruption.<lb/>
1 le compared the situation to<lb/>
the chaos disenbed in the Book of<lb/>
Genesis ? the world was a<lb/>
"formless void and there was<lb/>
darkness over the deep.<lb/>
"Manv problems of develop-<lb/>
ment, no matter how overpower-<lb/>
ing, can be solved if there is a new<lb/>
attitude diametrically opposed to<lb/>
a selfish desire for profit and the<lb/>
thirst for power<lb/>
The pope was to fly to north-<lb/>
western M wanza, on the shores of<lb/>
Lake Victoria, later in the day to<lb/>
bless 100 patients at an Episcopal-<lb/>
run hospital, make a speech and<lb/>
dine with the archbishop, Monsi-<lb/>
gnor Anthony Mayala.<lb/>
Bush plans<lb/>
for third<lb/>
summit<lb/>
KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine<lb/>
(AP) President Bush is return<lb/>
ing to Washington for a hectic few<lb/>
davs of preparation before his<lb/>
third summit meeting with Soviet<lb/>
President Mikhail Gorbachev.<lb/>
As aides scrambled to work<lb/>
out logistics and prepare an<lb/>
agenda for the hastily called<lb/>
summit, Bush was concluding a<lb/>
three-week vacation in Maine<lb/>
Mondav that he took under the<lb/>
cloud of the Persian Gulf crisis<lb/>
He returns to Washington two<lb/>
days after announcing that he<lb/>
would meet with the Soviet leader<lb/>
in Helsinki next Sunday<lb/>
Bush spent Sunday h isting his<lb/>
longtime friend, evangelist Billy<lb/>
Graham, at his seaside vacation<lb/>
home. The pair went to two<lb/>
churches for morning services.<lb/>
"These are rather trying tones<lb/>
and right now 1 would suggest we<lb/>
get our strength from being one<lb/>
nation under Cod bush told the<lb/>
congregation at the First Congre<lb/>
gational Church.<lb/>
Officials said Hush's on day<lb/>
summit with Gorbachev will .ikely<lb/>
entail about five hours of talks,<lb/>
focusing on the Persian Gulf crisis.<lb/>
They said the two men would also<lb/>
discuss conventional armsredw -<lb/>
lion talks between the two n itions<lb/>
and regional issues, including<lb/>
Cambodia and Afghanistan<lb/>
The president said he was<lb/>
pleased with Soviet cooperation<lb/>
on a number of global issues<lb/>
"1 think it is important al this<lb/>
uncture that we discuss isu. not<lb/>
just as they relate to Europe and<lb/>
try to update where we can on<lb/>
these arms negotiations, but also<lb/>
to discuss the Middle EatI?e<lb/>
president said.<lb/>
On the Persian Gulf, one offi-<lb/>
cial said of the two superpowers:<lb/>
'We're comparing notes. We<lb/>
would be explaining where we<lb/>
think the situation is, where we<lb/>
would go<lb/>
Side meetings between aides<lb/>
are not planned for this summit,<lb/>
said the official, who spoke on<lb/>
condition of anonymity. Such<lb/>
sessions usually are standard<lb/>
during summit meetings.<lb/>
Another official described the<lb/>
one-dav session as more an "in-<lb/>
formal meeting" between the two<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
On the subject of conventional<lb/>
arms talks, one official said the<lb/>
twoleadersdiscussion "would iust<lb/>
be a review" of the continuing<lb/>
negotiations to reduce Soviet and<lb/>
U.S. troop strength in Europe<lb/>
Bush has said he does not ex-<lb/>
pect the Soviet Union to mediate<lb/>
between Iraq and the United<lb/>
States. But the administration<lb/>
would welcome anv pressure<lb/>
Gorbachev can bring aga nst Iraq.<lb/>
See Summit, page 10<lb/>
Kuwaiti rebels may plan raids on troops<lb/>
I Arabia (AP)<lb/>
douins sit under<lb/>
? uarding a building identi-<lb/>
I b) a new sign outside as hoas-<lb/>
offices of the Kuwaiti govem-<lb/>
ivexik s Ministry of Oil<lb/>
his is the forward lommand<lb/>
,  the Kuwaiti resistance<lb/>
ement its day to -i opera-<lb/>
. in, hide smuggling ammuni-<lb/>
n tnd communicatkms equip-<lb/>
enl into Iraqi occupied Kuwait,<lb/>
Kuwaiti exiles s?)<lb/>
Ine Saudi -Kuwaitborderir.just<lb/>
e miles to the north.<lb/>
All the operations to Kuwait<lb/>
ne via Khar? said a senior Km-<lb/>
?n guerrilla leader who spoke<lb/>
condition of anonymity out of<lb/>
? .rot Iraqi reprisals.<lb/>
Ml communications, all or-<lb/>
ders all border crossings You<lb/>
iiw tht- trucks, the aerials he said.<lb/>
1 le said the resistance move-<lb/>
ment has already recruited thou-<lb/>
sands of volunteers fmm among<lb/>
the estimated 70,000 Kuwaiti rtfc-<lb/>
gees in Saudi Arabia.<lb/>
A senior Saudi official, speak -<lb/>
ingon condition of anonymity, said<lb/>
Sunday that the Kuwaiti resistance<lb/>
is "growing in strength" and step-<lb/>
ping up its attacks on the Iraqi oc-<lb/>
cupiers.<lb/>
An Associated Press reporter<lb/>
visited the Kuwaiti resistance head-<lb/>
quarters last week. Over the week-<lb/>
end, the Saudi government barred<lb/>
journalists from traveling to Khafji<lb/>
without an official escort<lb/>
The resistance and the Kuwaiti<lb/>
army, which has offices nearby, re-<lb/>
main loyal to the government in-<lb/>
exile headed by Kuwait'semirjaber<lb/>
al-Ahmed al-Sabah. The govern-<lb/>
ment is based in Taif, in southwest<lb/>
Saudi Arabia.<lb/>
Thertxi-green-whittand-black<lb/>
Kuwaiti flag flies outside the<lb/>
building, which is also the new<lb/>
headquarters of the Kuwait branch<lb/>
of the Arabian Oil Co a concern<lb/>
Kuwaiti exiles say is jointly owned<lb/>
by the Kuwaitis, Saudis and Japa-<lb/>
nese.<lb/>
That is somehow appropriate<lb/>
because Kuwait's oil wealth guar-<lb/>
antees that the resistance movement<lb/>
will not lack for funds. Saudi officials<lb/>
estimate that the Kuwaiti govern-<lb/>
ment -in-exile has access to assets<lb/>
worth about $10) billion.<lb/>
The Kuwaiti guerrilla leader<lb/>
said moncv is not a problem. "What<lb/>
we need is weapons he said.<lb/>
Some arms have been obtained<lb/>
from Iraqi defectors, he said. Others<lb/>
came from the arsenal of Kuwait's<lb/>
National Guard, which Kuwaitis<lb/>
broke into a day after the Aug. 2<lb/>
Iraqi invasion.<lb/>
The guerrilla leader refused to<lb/>
providedetailsaboutU.S.assistance<lb/>
to the Kuwaiti resistance, except to<lb/>
say that Americans were involved<lb/>
in recruiting Kuwaiti refugees for<lb/>
training in Saudi Arabia.<lb/>
Last week, several US. televi-<lb/>
sion networks reported thattheCIA<lb/>
and Army Special Forces troops<lb/>
were helping the Kuwaiti resistance<lb/>
organizehit-and-runattackson Iraqi<lb/>
occupiers.<lb/>
No Americans were involved<lb/>
in the fighting, but Kuwaiti fighters<lb/>
based near theSaudi-Ku wait border<lb/>
were reported to be getting intelli-<lb/>
gence, weapons, radios, advice on<lb/>
target selection and instruction from<lb/>
U.S. advisers, the networks said.<lb/>
President Bush would not con-<lb/>
firm directly that his administra-<lb/>
tion is supporting the Kuwaiti re-<lb/>
sistance. But, he said, "In a broad<lb/>
way, I support the Kuwaiti under-<lb/>
ground. 1 support anybody who<lb/>
can have a hand in restoring legiti-<lb/>
macy there to Kuwait and to getting<lb/>
the Iraqis out of Kuwait<lb/>
The Kuwaiti guerrilla organizer<lb/>
said the resistance is still in its for-<lb/>
mative stages. It is headed by three<lb/>
Kuwaiti sheiks ? two based in<lb/>
Khafji and one in Hafr Al-Batin to<lb/>
the west near King Khalid Military<lb/>
City, a major Saudi military base, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In addition to coordinating at-<lb/>
tacks on Iraqi troops inside Kuwait,<lb/>
the resistance runs a radio and<lb/>
television station.<lb/>
U.S. reserves<lb/>
r-Air Force: 136,331<lb/>
Marines: 80,128<lb/>
Army:<lb/>
593,832<lb/>
Navy: 238,061<lb/>
Coast Guard: 117,211<lb/>
National Guard<lb/>
452,387<lb/>
Air<lb/>
Force<lb/>
117,653<lb/>
Source: Department of Defense<lb/>
Marty Baumann, GNS<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0010"/><lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
101 ?b ?qgt (flarollntan September 411990<lb/>
Around the State<lb/>
French students plan trip to N.C. city<lb/>
WAYNESVILLE ? French students in Haywood County schools<lb/>
will have the opportunity to practice their language skills in October<lb/>
with a group of ninth-graders from France.<lb/>
And in the process, they should make some international friends<lb/>
and gain some first-hand knowledgeabout French culture, according to<lb/>
Sheila Dale, who originated the idea of the French-American exchange.<lb/>
Fortv-two ninth-graders from Dijon, France, will am ve in Hay wood<lb/>
County Oct. 21 and live in American homes until they leave Nov. 1.<lb/>
They will be accompanied by Ms. Dale and four other adults.<lb/>
During their stay here, they will go into French classes in the county<lb/>
schools to teach French songs, game and dances to the American<lb/>
students.<lb/>
They have also practiced a musical presentation of French, English,<lb/>
German, Spanish. Latin and Creole songs that they will perform for<lb/>
American groups of all ages.<lb/>
Trenton man arrested for murder of wife<lb/>
TRENTON ? A Trenton man was charged with murdet Saturday<lb/>
following the shooting death of his wife.<lb/>
Samuel Cnffin, 43, allegedly shot his wife Mane Griffin, also 43,<lb/>
with a pistol during a domestic dispute at about 4 p.m. Saturday,<lb/>
according to loncs County Sheriff Wesley Mallard.<lb/>
Gnttin was arrested on an open chargeot murder and awaits a first<lb/>
appearance in lones County District Court Tuesday in Trenton.<lb/>
Griffin's two minor childrenare in the custody of relatives, Mallard<lb/>
said<lb/>
Fayetteville drive-in finally closes gates<lb/>
FAYFTTEV1LLE ? Drive-ins are traditionally associated with<lb/>
making out and fogging up the windows, but there wasn't much<lb/>
privacy Sunday night at the Fox Drive-ln Theatre.<lb/>
It was the drive-in's last hurrah and it was packed.<lb/>
Glenda and George Bean met at a dnve-in nine years ago and have<lb/>
been going ever since That night, thev saw James Bond's 'For Your<lb/>
Eyes Only" at The Fort dnve-in.<lb/>
Sunday at the Fox, thev planned to see "Total Recall "Q&amp;A<lb/>
NavySeats Back to the Future Part 111 "The Demon is Loose" and<lb/>
"Angel Town if thev could stay awake that long.<lb/>
And thev had their three children in tow so the whole familv could<lb/>
say apod-bye to Favetteville's last drive-in.<lb/>
I ox Manager Richard McKinnev said he would give a speaker to<lb/>
everyone at the last show. And by 10:30 p.m that was about 730 cars.<lb/>
Gastonia baby-sitter finds infant dead<lb/>
GASTOMA -Gastonia police are investigating the Sundav after-<lb/>
noon death of a 7-month-old baby found dead by his baby-sitter<lb/>
Don Conrad, Gaston County's acting medical examiner, said<lb/>
Markice Gardiner died between 11.45 a.m. and 12:45 p.m. He said there<lb/>
were no external signs of injury on the child, who was lying on his back<lb/>
on the floor in an upstairs bed room, wearing only a diaper.<lb/>
Detective Keith Friday said police are investigating.<lb/>
Conrad, who said he's ruled out suffocation and trauma, was to<lb/>
conduct an autopsy Monday.<lb/>
Neighbors told police that Markice's mother, 21-year-old Angle<lb/>
Gardiner, came rushing home from her job at Hardee's when she heard<lb/>
about her son<lb/>
Two familv friends had been taking care of Markice and Ms<lb/>
Gardiner's three older children.<lb/>
Two men arrested for Whiteville murders<lb/>
FAYETTEVILLE ? Sherman Elwood Skipper, accused of two<lb/>
murders in Bladen County, was arrested late Saturday after a man<lb/>
walked into the Columbus County Sheriff's Department and said<lb/>
Skipper had been holding him captive for a week.<lb/>
That man, 43-year-old Mark Anthony Smith, also was arrested by<lb/>
Bladen Countv sheriff's deputies in connection with the murders.<lb/>
Both men are in the Bladen County Jail in Ehzabethtown without<lb/>
bail, officials said.<lb/>
The men, both from the Whiteville area, were charged with two<lb/>
counts of first-degree murderin the Aug. 25 shoohngdeathsof Skipper's<lb/>
girlfriend, Aileane Blackwell Pittman, 56, of Bladenboro, and her 18-<lb/>
year-old grandson. Nelson Fipps, also of Bladenboro.<lb/>
Smith told deputies that he had been held against his will by<lb/>
Skipper for a week, said Lt. Jim Hardin of the Columbus County<lb/>
Sheriff's Department<lb/>
Skipper, 48, was arrested in the motel near Jacksonville at about 11<lb/>
p.m. Saturday, said Bladen County Sheriff Earl Storms.<lb/>
Clerk kills man after attempted robbery<lb/>
CHERRYVILLE ?A teen-age clerk squelched an attempted armed<lb/>
robbery at a small Cherry ville grocery store Saturday afternoon when<lb/>
he allegedly shot and killed the assailant, police said.<lb/>
According to Cherryville police, ShaneSeagle, 17, a clerk at Southside<lb/>
Grocery, fired several shots at the would-be robber about 1:15 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
The suspected robber, ChnsHogue, 31, address not a vailable,died<lb/>
of mu 1 tiple gunshot wounds, said Gaston County Coroner Don Conrad<lb/>
Police said Hogue entered the store, flashed a gun and demanded<lb/>
money But Seagle pulled out a revolver and shot Hogue, said Cherryville<lb/>
police officer DA. Houston.<lb/>
Authorities said no charges had been filed Saturday evening in<lb/>
connection with the incident. Police plan to review the case with the<lb/>
Gaston County district attorney's office on Tuesday.<lb/>
Former Monroe official charged with<lb/>
two counts of posession of stolen goods<lb/>
MONROE ? Former Union County Agricultural Extension Direc-<lb/>
tor M C. Howell Jr. has been charged with possessing stolen property.<lb/>
Howell, 47, of Monroe was charged Thursday with two counts of<lb/>
receiving stolen goods, said Monroe Public Safety Chief Bobby Kilgore.<lb/>
Kilgore said Howell told officers he did not know the items were<lb/>
stolen when he purchased them from an individual.<lb/>
A tool box, tools and an assortment of other items, all believed to be<lb/>
stolen, were confiscated from Howell's home and are being held as<lb/>
evidence pending trail, Kilgore said.<lb/>
According to a la w enforcement officer who asked not to be named,<lb/>
the tools are valued at about $1,000. Other confiscated stolen goods,<lb/>
including household items and a mink coat, are said to be valued at<lb/>
approximately $4,300.<lb/>
Howell was released pending a Sept. 27 court date.<lb/>
Howell resigned as Agricultural Extension director in May follow-<lb/>
ing an investigation into allegations he billed the state and county for<lb/>
the same travel expenses.<lb/>
Large grant gives small<lb/>
businessman a chance<lb/>
QUALITY FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
ASHEV1LLE (AP) A recent<lb/>
$1 million grant to the Self-Help<lb/>
Credit Union of Western North<lb/>
Carolina will provide more loans<lb/>
to individuals and businesses who<lb/>
fall through the cracks of the tra-<lb/>
ditional financial world<lb/>
Since it began two vears ago,<lb/>
the regional office of the credit<lb/>
union has made loans to people<lb/>
with ground breaking ideas but<lb/>
little capital. Among the credit<lb/>
union's clients have been a curb-<lb/>
side recycling service, a food co-<lb/>
operative, a child-care center and<lb/>
a gift shop in a rural community.<lb/>
In addition, the credit union<lb/>
provides loans for people seeking<lb/>
affordable housing.<lb/>
"We are reaching people on<lb/>
the margin said Tom Byers, spe-<lb/>
cial assistant to the chancellor at<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
at Asheville and chairman oi the<lb/>
credit union's advisory board.<lb/>
The credit union has made<lb/>
$500,060 in loans this year and<lb/>
$1.25 million since the Asheville-<lb/>
based office serving the region<lb/>
opened.<lb/>
The grant, from a donor who<lb/>
wants to remain anonymous, will<lb/>
boost the credit union's ability to<lb/>
support budding businesses and<lb/>
first-time homeowners.<lb/>
? We can make $5 in loans for<lb/>
every $1 we have in reserves. That<lb/>
means we are ready to make up to<lb/>
$5 million in loans here over the<lb/>
next few years Byers said.<lb/>
The credit union provides<lb/>
loans as small as $1,000 that tradi-<lb/>
tional financial institutions shy<lb/>
away from, said oyce Harrison,<lb/>
the western North Carolina asso-<lb/>
ciate director<lb/>
In addition to smaller<lb/>
amounts, the credit union pro-<lb/>
vides loans to businesses that do<lb/>
not havca high profit margin such<lb/>
aschild-care centers, Ms. Harrison<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Asheville credit union is<lb/>
one of three offices in North Caro-<lb/>
lina. The others are in Charlotte<lb/>
and Durham, the city where the<lb/>
credit union was founded six years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
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Student Stores<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
Slayings<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Student union Board of Directors<lb/>
is taking applications for<lb/>
Day-Student Representatives<lb/>
for the 1990-91 Term<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
said Humphrey was romantically<lb/>
interested in Miss Paules and of-<lb/>
ten wailed for her by the pool.<lb/>
Police took prints of<lb/>
Humphrey's feet in tail, and two<lb/>
officers in hip wadersSunday used<lb/>
a metal detector to search a creek<lb/>
next to hi apartment complex,<lb/>
Darnell said. Tolice said all they<lb/>
found was an old street sign.<lb/>
The victims were students at<lb/>
either the university or Santa Fe<lb/>
Community College. Their deaths<lb/>
terrified classmates, including<lb/>
about 100 who dropped out or<lb/>
transferred.<lb/>
University President John<lb/>
Lombardi said campus security<lb/>
was tight.<lb/>
We believe this community<lb/>
to be as safe as any other univer-<lb/>
sity community in America he<lb/>
said. "Would 1 send my child back<lb/>
to the University of Florida? Yes, I<lb/>
would<lb/>
Student body President<lb/>
Michael Browne said that his<lb/>
classmates are stall afraid but that<lb/>
dropping out would be a mistake.<lb/>
"Above all, we must not be held<lb/>
hostage to our fears he said.<lb/>
"Giving up will not solve any-<lb/>
thing<lb/>
Also slain v ere Christina<lb/>
Powell, 17, of Jacksonville; Sonya<lb/>
Larson, 18, of Deerfield Beach, and<lb/>
Christa Hoyt, 18, of cwbcrry.<lb/>
All lived in off-campusavtrrvMiN<lb/>
and were discovered beginning<lb/>
Aug. 26.<lb/>
Summit<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
a longtime recipient of Soviet arms.<lb/>
Bush said he has not spoken<lb/>
to Gorbachev since Iraq invaded<lb/>
Kuwait on Aug. 2. He said he has<lb/>
not telephoned Gorbachev ?<lb/>
something he has done to many<lb/>
other world leaders ? "Because I<lb/>
had anticipated seeing him<lb/>
Bush proposed the meeting to<lb/>
Gorbachev a week ago. He held<lb/>
his proposal so closely that several<lb/>
top White House staff members<lb/>
did not know about it when they<lb/>
were in the Soviet Union last week.<lb/>
They were there with White<lb/>
House Chief of Staff John Sununu<lb/>
at Gorbachev's request to explain<lb/>
the technical workings of the U.S.<lb/>
executive branch. Sununu was<lb/>
informed of the arrangements for<lb/>
the summit meeting but was not a<lb/>
key player in setting it up, aides<lb/>
said.<lb/>
White House staff members<lb/>
met Sunday to begin working on<lb/>
logistical details and plans for<lb/>
contacting their Soviet counter-<lb/>
parts.<lb/>
"Everybody's scrambling to<lb/>
put their pieces together one<lb/>
official said.<lb/>
Bush's wife, Barbara, and<lb/>
Gorbachev's wife, Raisa, also will<lb/>
travel to Helsinki.<lb/>
Responsibilities:<lb/>
Qualifications:<lb/>
Selecting the Student Union President<lb/>
Approving Committee Chairpersons<lb/>
Approving the Student Union Budget<lb/>
Setting Policy for the Student Union<lb/>
Full Time Student<lb/>
Resides Off Campus<lb/>
Independent<lb/>
DeacUine To Apply: Friday, September 7, 1990<lb/>
Applications can be picked up at the<lb/>
Student Union Office - Room 236 Mendenhall<lb/>
i.i'Kanor ? tt 'nth Pninzini'<lb/>
1. install 'nri Filter<lb/>
1. uimralf' Kasxis u Requiml<lb/>
4 'W &amp; fifl Tmnsmuwn Fluid<lb/>
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t W &amp; Fill Bnkf Fluid<lb/>
1.1 hrrk i F'ii ?"vrr ,emru) Fuui<lb/>
I Tmek &amp; Fu HnaoK Wtisnr- Fluid<lb/>
I 'W 4 Fill Battery as Rcjuirrd<lb/>
H.ietk Air Filter<lb/>
W.i'Serk Wiper Blades<lb/>
12. , iliae firm ? P-ver pressure<lb/>
IS. .acuunintrrurr<lb/>
14. Wash Fztrrmr WimUncs<lb/>
?lptoiiuiru<lb/>
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jiffy kibe<lb/>
SERVICE HAS A LOT<lb/>
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chassis, to vacuuming your interior. ,m. i m mj<lb/>
And at JiflyLube? you get this complete 14-point service using quality products- Wlul TlB HU<lb/>
including tree top-offs of all fluids between semces-in a matter of minutes. Without an<lb/>
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126'Greenville Blvd. Phone: 756-2579 Hours: MonKn. 8a.m. - 6p.m. Sat. til 5p.m.<lb/>
SHA$OFg<lb/>
RECEIVE 20D<lb/>
When you bring this coupon in<lb/>
after 4pm weekdays or anytime<lb/>
Saturday and Sunday<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Sun - Thurs<lb/>
10- 10<lb/>
CORNER OF<lb/>
CHARLES ST.<lb/>
&amp; 14th<lb/>
Fri &amp; Sat<lb/>
10-11<lb/>
Expires Sept 12, 1990<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0011"/><lb/>
September 4,1990<lb/>
glhe lEast (Earnlinian<lb/>
tt<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
Comics become<lb/>
solid investment<lb/>
By Louis Coble<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Do vou remember all those<lb/>
comic books that vou or your<lb/>
mother threw out when you were<lb/>
young? Well, vou can kick your-<lb/>
self now, because those comics are<lb/>
probablv worth a lot of money<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Comics are one of today'shot-<lb/>
test trends in the market of<lb/>
collectable and investments. The<lb/>
reasons tor comics new found<lb/>
value vary as greatly as the comics<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
The most obvious reason for<lb/>
the value of comicsasa collectable<lb/>
is their age. Comics first made<lb/>
their first really noticeable ap-<lb/>
pearance back in the earlv 1930s.<lb/>
Any item that old can be con-<lb/>
sidered an antique, but the fact<lb/>
that so few comics from that era<lb/>
survive today make comics truly<lb/>
collectable. A IX Action Comic<lb/>
No. 1 printed in 1938 is worth<lb/>
nearlv $28.ro0 in near-mint condi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The comic contains the first<lb/>
appearance of Superman and was<lb/>
worth .10 cents when it was pub-<lb/>
lished A complete 575-issue set<lb/>
in good condition ot Detective<lb/>
Comics can bring an estimated<lb/>
SI 18,000 to the collector who can<lb/>
manage to find a buyer.<lb/>
The Detective Comics con tain<lb/>
the first appearance of Batman and<lb/>
that single comic today is worth<lb/>
$35,000 in near-mint condition.<lb/>
V et. age is not the only thing that<lb/>
makes a comic valuable.<lb/>
The comic's following or<lb/>
popularity can greatly influence<lb/>
the value oi the comic. If a comic-<lb/>
is not popular then it des not sell<lb/>
and dealers have little use tor them.<lb/>
A popular comic creates a<lb/>
market for itself. A good example<lb/>
of this is the title X-men, which has<lb/>
branched off into six different titles<lb/>
and still sells more than 15 billion<lb/>
copies a month. An X-men No. 1 is<lb/>
worth about $1,100, and many ot<lb/>
its later issues are worth a great<lb/>
deal.<lb/>
On the other side, a title that<lb/>
does not start out strong and does<lb/>
not sell a lot of copies can create a<lb/>
market for i tself by later becoming<lb/>
popular. Bv not having produced<lb/>
very manv first copies, the now<lb/>
popular comic's first issues are<lb/>
rare and thus more valuable.<lb/>
Teenage Mutant Ninja<lb/>
Turtles' success as a collectable<lb/>
can be contributed to low popu-<lb/>
larity in the beginning. Since the<lb/>
movie and cartoon show, the<lb/>
comic Teenage Mutant Ninja<lb/>
Turtles has had a dramatic increase<lb/>
in value. A No. 1 issue is now<lb/>
worth SI SO.<lb/>
Often a comic's value is di-<lb/>
rectfy related to who wroteordrew<lb/>
the comic. A great manv ot the<lb/>
readers and collectors follow spe-<lb/>
cific writers and artists from comic<lb/>
to comic.<lb/>
Writers and artists like Alan<lb/>
Moore (Swamp Thing), Frank<lb/>
Miller (Batman: The Dark Knight<lb/>
Returns),Grant Mornstmi Animal<lb/>
Man and Todd McFarlane<lb/>
(Spiderman) all have large fol-<lb/>
lowings. Also, a signed or<lb/>
autographed copy of a comic can<lb/>
double or triple a comic's value<lb/>
An appearance of a particular<lb/>
character, whether it is a guest<lb/>
appearance or not, can increase a<lb/>
comic's value as well. Many read-<lb/>
ers and collectors will buy a comic<lb/>
simply because a particular char-<lb/>
acter makes an appearance.<lb/>
Perhaps one of the biggest<lb/>
problems with comic collecting is<lb/>
getting started. A person can not<lb/>
See Comics, page 12<lb/>
'Exorcist III'<lb/>
saved by cast<lb/>
chemistry<lb/>
By Joe Horst<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Harry Taylor ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Eddie Sutton and Clifton Rouse stand at desk of their comic book exchange, "Heroes are Here Too<lb/>
Album compiles N.C music<lb/>
By Beth Ellison<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Raleigh based Mammoth<lb/>
Records may not have given<lb/>
record contracts to some ot the<lb/>
talent to be found here in the label's<lb/>
home state, but they did manage<lb/>
to issue a relatively accurate<lb/>
sampling. Out now is "Fre-<lb/>
quency a compilation album of<lb/>
bands either from or based in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
It has its ups and downs, but,<lb/>
overall, it isa success. I requency '<lb/>
features some of North Carolina's<lb/>
more established bands as well as<lb/>
Mmie new ones.<lb/>
The album starts out with<lb/>
some long-awaited material from<lb/>
The Veldt. This new song from<lb/>
The Veldt isOK and features some<lb/>
pretentious linear notes.<lb/>
Listeners are then ottered a<lb/>
really good track from Raleigh's<lb/>
Vanilla Trainwreck (playing in<lb/>
town soon) and a Dillon Fence<lb/>
song featured on the band's LP.<lb/>
Finger, And Siamese Urbain and<lb/>
recent North Carolina adopters A<lb/>
Picture Made, have three of the<lb/>
best songs on the album, no<lb/>
question. Very rockin<lb/>
Then, alas, a new song from<lb/>
Mary On The Dash titled "Salt<lb/>
Alter a iong bout of turmoil the<lb/>
band managed togetitself together<lb/>
and record an excellent new song.<lb/>
The mood-ridden Blackgirls<lb/>
otter up "broken leg a swirling,<lb/>
ethereal, not terribly accessible<lb/>
song It is a gixd song with lim-<lb/>
ited appeal. Leap (if Faith, a band<lb/>
with quite a history, supplies an-<lb/>
other cool song, "Overcome<lb/>
'Ineir current line-up has been<lb/>
together since 1969, but the various<lb/>
members have played with UV<lb/>
From, the dBs, the Wygals, Let's<lb/>
Active and Hedge V collectively.<lb/>
Even Goldsboro, N.C. gets in on<lb/>
things with thrash-metal band<lb/>
Kurupshure.<lb/>
I he most disappointingsongs<lb/>
on the recording come from two of<lb/>
the area's more popular<lb/>
bands,Johnnv Quest and The<lb/>
Popes.<lb/>
Both bands supply this other-<lb/>
wisecool album with tunes they've<lb/>
been playing live for ages (Lady<lb/>
Cop and Cornerhouse respec-<lb/>
tively), and they would've been<lb/>
better left unrecorded. Their stu-<lb/>
dio material shows some serious<lb/>
inabilities, i.e. JQ's lead singer has<lb/>
a rotten voice and ThePopessound<lb/>
like they're bored to death.<lb/>
Nevertheless, thesetwo bands<lb/>
were included as an obvious must.<lb/>
Their fans will like it just because<lb/>
it's them. "Frequency" is a fairly<lb/>
great representation of what's<lb/>
going on in N.Cs happening al-<lb/>
tcmative world.<lb/>
Mammoth Records is a po-<lb/>
tentially good independent label<lb/>
that could get this area, and others<lb/>
as well, some deserved attention<lb/>
if it could onlv shake some of its<lb/>
inabilities and just do it.<lb/>
If you've been to themoviesat<lb/>
all this summer, vou know by now<lb/>
that this has been one tor the se-<lb/>
quels. Die Hard II "YoungGuns<lb/>
II "Gremlins II" and "Robocop<lb/>
11" are just a few that have pre-<lb/>
miered in the last few months. One<lb/>
sequel that probablv should have<lb/>
been trashed before it got to the<lb/>
theaters is William Peter Blattv's<lb/>
"The Exorcist HI<lb/>
Dtrei ted by JamesC Robinson<lb/>
and Joe Roth, this movie is me-<lb/>
diocreatbest. Whenfirst watching<lb/>
the movie, one is caught up in the<lb/>
bizarre and unexplained happen-<lb/>
ingsin Georgetown of Washington,<lb/>
1)But around the middle ot the<lb/>
movie, the oddity wears off and<lb/>
becomes boring.<lb/>
This film goer expected at least<lb/>
some of same gory detail of the<lb/>
first movie but wasdisat pointed<lb/>
to have to wait until the last five<lb/>
minutes to get it. Though it's nec-<lb/>
essary to see any of the previous<lb/>
"Exorcists" tounderstand thisone,<lb/>
this third installment is one too<lb/>
manv<lb/>
rheonly good thing about this<lb/>
movie is the chemistry between<lb/>
the main actors.<lb/>
GeorgeC .Scott, whoplaysthe<lb/>
police officer that handled the<lb/>
young priest's death fifteen years<lb/>
ago, is commanding as always.<lb/>
Given a role that uses his acting<lb/>
ability to the fullest, Scott plays off<lb/>
very well vith Ed Flanders and<lb/>
Brad Dourfin.<lb/>
Flandersand Scott pair oft well<lb/>
as the pnest and the disbelieving<lb/>
cop, and have manv humorous<lb/>
moments trying to prove to each<lb/>
other that they really don't care as<lb/>
much as thev do. Dourfinaisodoes<lb/>
an excellent job as the possessed<lb/>
See Exorcist, page 13<lb/>
'Clockwork Orange7<lb/>
portrays dark future<lb/>
By Rich Ternan<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Anthonv Burgess first pub-<lb/>
lished "A Clockwork Orange" in<lb/>
1963. This dark and violent por-<lb/>
trayal of a not too distant future<lb/>
revolves around fifteen-year-old<lb/>
gang-leader and narrator of the<lb/>
story, Alex.<lb/>
Later, this novel was made<lb/>
into a Stanley Kubrick film. Un-<lb/>
fortunately, like the American<lb/>
version of this classic, it is missing<lb/>
the final chapter.<lb/>
When Burgess was asked if<lb/>
thisbothered him, he replied, "Yes,<lb/>
1 hate having two different ver-<lb/>
sions of the same book. The US.<lb/>
edition has a chapter short, and<lb/>
hence the anthmological plan is<lb/>
messed up.<lb/>
Also the implied view of juve-<lb/>
nile violence as something to go<lb/>
through and grow out of is miss-<lb/>
ing Fascinating in itself is the<lb/>
command of linguistics that Bur-<lb/>
gess used in creating the slang<lb/>
employed by the characters.<lb/>
This was a Russian influenced<lb/>
version ot English used to down<lb/>
play the raw response expected<lb/>
from pornography. The story be-<lb/>
gins with Alex, "your humble<lb/>
narrator asking his three droogs<lb/>
(gang-members), "What's it go-<lb/>
ing to be then, eh?" As they sit in<lb/>
the Korova Milkbar.<lb/>
The Milkbar, not having a li-<lb/>
quor license, sold milk-plus, milk<lb/>
plus Vcllocet, Synthemesc, or<lb/>
Drencrom, which "would give you<lb/>
a nice quiet horrow-show 1? min-<lb/>
utesadmiringBogand all HisHoly<lb/>
Angels and Saints in your left shoe<lb/>
with lights bursting all over your<lb/>
mozg<lb/>
After a few hours of this, one<lb/>
would be ready for a few "good<lb/>
lashings of the ultra-violence or<lb/>
Dirtv Twenty to one meaning<lb/>
beating and tormenting citizens<lb/>
on the night streets, muggings,<lb/>
rape, gang-war, or anything else<lb/>
which might catch the mind of our<lb/>
young hero-narrator.<lb/>
These" things include the "old<lb/>
surprise visit" which was tricking<lb/>
someone into opening their door,<lb/>
rushing in, smashing and thrash-<lb/>
ing the residents, and then bru-<lb/>
tal Iv raping whoever was there<lb/>
that was worth the effort while<lb/>
beaten husbands or brothers were<lb/>
forced to watch.<lb/>
Eventually Alex is betrayed<lb/>
bv his droogs, arrested and sen-<lb/>
tenced to fourteen years for among<lb/>
other things, "the accidental kill-<lb/>
ing of a person<lb/>
In prison Alex is drawn to the<lb/>
Chaplain or "Pnson Charlie" for<lb/>
several reasons. It offers him a<lb/>
chance to I isten to classical record -<lb/>
ings, in the form of the "holy music<lb/>
by ). S. Bach and G. F. Handel<lb/>
which is probablv the most im-<lb/>
portant thing in young Alex's life.<lb/>
He even becomes interested<lb/>
in the Bible, "1 read all about the<lb/>
scourging and the crowning with<lb/>
thorns and then the cross veshch<lb/>
and all that cat, and 1 viddied bet-<lb/>
ter that there was something in it.<lb/>
While the stereo played bitsof<lb/>
lovely Bach I closed my glazzies<lb/>
and viddied myself helping in and<lb/>
even taking charge of the<lb/>
tolchocking and the nailing in ,<lb/>
being dressed in a like toga that<lb/>
was the height of Roman fash-<lb/>
ion<lb/>
After serving two years, the<lb/>
state chooses to use Alex as a trial<lb/>
run for a new technique in re-<lb/>
forming criminals, promising to<lb/>
free him in less than a fortnight,<lb/>
thus gaining his consent.<lb/>
This new technique in-<lb/>
volves giving Alex a injection<lb/>
which causes him to feel "real sick,<lb/>
like that at any moment 1 might<lb/>
snuff it and then making him<lb/>
watch film after turn ot violence,<lb/>
torture, rape and the like.<lb/>
All the while Alex's head is<lb/>
strapped immovable and his eye-<lb/>
lids held open with wire clips. He<lb/>
begins to associate the contents of<lb/>
the films with the almost<lb/>
unendurable sick feeling caused<lb/>
bv the serum injected into him.<lb/>
Unfortunately, Alex is also<lb/>
conditioned against classical mu-<lb/>
sic, it being used as the background<lb/>
score for manv of the films.<lb/>
Alex is released, unwilling to<lb/>
defend himself (feeling it better to<lb/>
be hit than to hit, lest the sickness<lb/>
should come upon him) he is un-<lb/>
able to exist in society.<lb/>
He realizes that he has become<lb/>
a clockwork orange, which by<lb/>
Burgess' definition is something<lb/>
"that has the appearance of an<lb/>
organism lovely with colour and<lb/>
juice but is in fact only a clockwork<lb/>
tov to be wound up by C .od or the<lb/>
Devil or the state<lb/>
In other words, Alex has had<lb/>
conditions imposed on him<lb/>
appropiate to a mechanical cre-<lb/>
ation: incapable of free choice.<lb/>
Alex, realizing all of this, tries<lb/>
to commit suicide, and while not<lb/>
succeeding in freeing himself of<lb/>
life, he does, after "a long black<lb/>
black gap of it might have been a<lb/>
million years" wakes up in a hos-<lb/>
pital free of his conditioning<lb/>
against both music and violence.<lb/>
This is where the American<lb/>
version and the Kubrick film end<lb/>
See "Clockwork page 13<lb/>
A scaled model of new museum project to begin this fall<lb/>
Greenvillle Art Museum<lb/>
plans $1 million expan-<lb/>
sion project<lb/>
By Stuart Oliphant<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the upcoming weeks the<lb/>
Greenville Museum of Art will<lb/>
start a project of expansion that<lb/>
will increase the museum's floor<lb/>
space bv 7,000 square feet.<lb/>
The new edition will give the<lb/>
museum a major exhibition wing,<lb/>
a vault, a workshop, a sophisti-<lb/>
cated shipping and receiving area<lb/>
andamultifacetedcommonsarea.<lb/>
According to Nelson Britt,<lb/>
CM As director, the design of the<lb/>
new edition, especially the ship-<lb/>
ping and receiving area, will en-<lb/>
able the museum to bring in exhi-<lb/>
bitions normally not seen in east-<lb/>
em North Carolina. Also, with<lb/>
the new edition GMA will have<lb/>
the scope to become a major re-<lb/>
gional museum.<lb/>
Expanding on the importance<lb/>
of the upcoming shipping facility,<lb/>
Britt said, "you just don't take an<lb/>
artwork and shove it through the<lb/>
back door, which is basically what<lb/>
we've been doing<lb/>
Bruce Five, a local architect,<lb/>
designed the new edition to be<lb/>
compatible with the Victorian style<lb/>
of the current building. The mu-<lb/>
seum wanted to avoid a structure<lb/>
that resembled a flying saucer.<lb/>
What the museum settled for is a<lb/>
combination of old Victorian el-<lb/>
egance with a slightly modern<lb/>
approach,seen in the new edition's<lb/>
distinctive roof line.<lb/>
Next week, GMA will negoti-<lb/>
ate the building contract for the<lb/>
expansion project, putting the ac-<lb/>
tual ground breaking ceremony<lb/>
about two weeks away. As of<lb/>
now, the total cost of the pro)CCt<lb/>
including landscaping, paving,<lb/>
etc. comes to 730,000 dollars.<lb/>
For more information, contact<lb/>
the Greenville Museum of Art, 802<lb/>
South Evans Street, phone.758-<lb/>
194r.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0012"/><lb/>
725lie ?a0tHaraltntan September 4,1990<lb/>
Features Briefs<lb/>
Job related diseases kill<lb/>
People in the USA are more likely to die from a disease<lb/>
tcquired through their job than from any other preventable cause of<lb/>
death The non profit National Safe Workplace Institute<lb/>
estimates that 71,428 people died from an occupational illness in<lb/>
1QS - 1.5 times mitre than car accident deaths. Occupational illness<lb/>
can occur from exposure to toxic chemicals, indoor air pollution and<lb/>
stress.<lb/>
Infant mortality is down<lb/>
1 he U.S. infant death rate reached a record low, while life<lb/>
expectancy reached a record high in 1W. The National Center for<lb/>
Health Statistics reports Q. of every 1,000 babies died before their<lb/>
first birthdays down from 9.9 in ll?SS. The decline in infant deaths<lb/>
has slowed recently tor black infants, who are twice as likely to die<lb/>
as whites.<lb/>
Health club membership down<lb/>
Memberships in health clubs are slowing to a crawl, says USA<lb/>
 Ikl P lhis is forcing them to look for innovative programs<lb/>
designed to hold members Here are the newest wrinkles. More<lb/>
interest in child fitness programs; and cashingin on the golfing<lb/>
boom Also some i lubs are turning racquetball and tennis courts into<lb/>
indoor rolt courses<lb/>
More men get plastic surgery<lb/>
In 1988, the most recent year tor which data is available, JO<lb/>
percent of all plastic surgery clients were male up nearly 10<lb/>
percent from the previous year, according to the American Academy<lb/>
oi ("osmotic Surgery and the American Society of Liposuction<lb/>
Surger) lop three cosmetic procedures for men liposuction to<lb/>
dimmish love handles, nose surgery and hair transplants<lb/>
Second-borns tend to rebel<lb/>
Second horns tend to rebel against the status quo while tirst born<lb/>
children tend to be preservers of tradition and institutions, s.ns<lb/>
Septemb r s Redbook magazine. Dr. Benjamin Spock says it is<lb/>
common tor the second child to feel frustrated by the realization<lb/>
that he she can never catch up with the tirst and that the older<lb/>
sibling is believed to be the parents' favorite<lb/>
More flyers requesting meals<lb/>
More people are asking tor special meals on airplanes five<lb/>
- a mam this year as in the past two, says Doug Miller ot<lb/>
Northwest irlines Reasons hotter awareness oi nutrition and<lb/>
i ? people are demanding hitter airline cuisine; and an<lb/>
reasingly diverse flying public Special meals available:<lb/>
tarian; fruit plates; gluten free and lowarbohydrate.<lb/>
ATM - it's the comming thing<lb/>
Adaptations ot cash mat hines are proliferating tast, says I SA<lb/>
v EEKEND ! he ubiquitious teller Hones hand out everything from<lb/>
airline tickets to vide rentals At the University oi Iowa, students<lb/>
can pay tuition via the maHune.aiui lowans can pay utility hills<lb/>
the same v,i Other uses elsewhere: return iar rentals, buy movie<lb/>
tickets and concession vouchers.<lb/>
New gear fits women jocks<lb/>
Sporting-goods companies are finding a growing market tor<lb/>
?pecially designed women's items. ust out the Optima Softball<lb/>
Hove rom Wilson - ,1 velcro wristband and finger iinirgs that start<lb/>
loser to the palm than in a man's glove Other companies are<lb/>
offering: proportioned backpacks; lighter, shorter olt clubs; and<lb/>
at. her bod) protectors with poly reinforced breast plates.<lb/>
Florientals are hottest scents<lb/>
Florientals are the hottest scents around, says Septembers<lb/>
1 ssence magazine. They are so stirring because ol their provocative<lb/>
juxtaposition of floral and musk. asmine is a popular note tor many<lb/>
tionentals, including Avons' Undeniable; Glamour by Beverly<lb/>
lillsCale Hayman; and Christian La<lb/>
( roi k's tM la vie'<lb/>
Kitchen Korner<lb/>
Downtown tandom offers quality<lb/>
for the tightest of budgets<lb/>
Po you often get tired ot eating the same thing over and over?<lb/>
: iir answer is ves, then there is a solution: two restaurants with<lb/>
ist enough change of pace to satisfy anyone. Chinatown hxpress<lb/>
ind Alfredo's SJ.Y. Pizza are two restaurants that are extremely<lb/>
iitterent from each other and offer the change of pace we all need.<lb/>
Chinatown Express serves great authentic Chinese food at very<lb/>
reasonable prices Chinatown has great combo specials for only<lb/>
J I !9 ' he -pet i.ils in hide two entrees, an eggroll, fried rice and a<lb/>
f? 'i tune ookie Snip with the special is only $0 35.<lb/>
Athinatown you can eat in, take out, or have it delivered.<lb/>
vluerv is only available Monday Friday from 4:30-9:30 p.mand<lb/>
i only offered to students in the dorms or in surrounding areas. It's<lb/>
nice to see someone stand up and support the students Chinatown<lb/>
Ixpress, "old work! prices tor new world people<lb/>
hinatown is located at ?X b 5th St (across from the Stop Shop<lb/>
I ind Bogie's)<lb/>
Alfredo's N Y Pizza serves pizza, calzone, strombolis, pizza by<lb/>
he slue and beer The pizza is excellent and best of all it's only a<lb/>
lollar a slice, a large slice, can't beat that. Alfredo's also offers<lb/>
Psubs that are hard to beat in (.reenville<lb/>
The best deal at Alfredo's may be the extra-large pitcher of cold<lb/>
Iraught beer for only $2 (X) Whatever you decide to go with you.re<lb/>
sure to enjoy it. Alfredo's otters delivery also, from Wednesday-<lb/>
Saturday from 11 a.nv-2 am. Alfredo's NY Pizza, "The place to<lb/>
e Alfredo's is located at 21 Ha 5th Stacross from the Stop Shop<lb/>
and Bogie's)<lb/>
So the next time you and your friends need a change of pace<lb/>
with out a large price try Chinatown or Alfredo's and enjoy.<lb/>
?Reviewed by Draughon Cranford<lb/>
SETA holds Comics<lb/>
semester's<lb/>
first meeting<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
By Mike Albequerque<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU chapter of SETA<lb/>
(Students tor the Ethical Treatment<lb/>
of Animals) held its first meeting<lb/>
of the semester last Tuesday to<lb/>
hold elections and discuss a ten-<lb/>
tative agenda for the 1990-91 aca-<lb/>
demic vear.<lb/>
Craig Spit, president oi<lb/>
SETA, spoke before a group of 24<lb/>
students, 14 of whom were at-<lb/>
tending for the first time Because<lb/>
the ma jontv of ihecrowd was new.<lb/>
Spit began the meeting with a<lb/>
brief historv of SETA and its par-<lb/>
ent organization PET A (People for<lb/>
the bthical Treatment of Animals)<lb/>
SHTA was formed on the ECU<lb/>
campus on February 28, lMHs?,<lb/>
following a nationally increased<lb/>
awareness in animal rights which<lb/>
began with the founding of PET A<lb/>
in 1980.<lb/>
According to Spit, the pri-<lb/>
mary purpose of SETA is to rep<lb/>
resent students who support ani-<lb/>
mal liberation and to be a "voice<lb/>
tor the animals<lb/>
"We're not looking to be . .<lb/>
antagonists to researchers here<lb/>
he said. "Our primary goal istobe<lb/>
an educational organization<lb/>
Among the main concerns, t<lb/>
SETA are discouraging the use ot<lb/>
animals in medical research, ag<lb/>
ricultural farms and tor enter<lb/>
tainment.<lb/>
"Personally, I believe agri<lb/>
cultural farms are a more impor<lb/>
tant issue Spit said. But re<lb/>
search is probably more of a con<lb/>
corn among most ot our mem<lb/>
bers<lb/>
According to Spit, the av-<lb/>
erage member of SETA tends to be<lb/>
IiKt.iI. open-minded, intelligent<lb/>
and holds a strong concern tor<lb/>
environmental issuesaswell. I ast<lb/>
vear.SH IA had approximately 15-<lb/>
1 dues-paying members. Mem<lb/>
horship fees are currently $10 per<lb/>
vear orper semester<lb/>
Although SETA is an animal<lb/>
rights organization, then' are n(i<lb/>
requirements tor members per<lb/>
taming to clothing or other prod<lb/>
UCtSderived tromaninvils Spit<lb/>
said they prefer to educate new<lb/>
members and promote voluntary<lb/>
acceptance oi their ideas rather<lb/>
than pressure those who are new<lb/>
to the group<lb/>
"I'd like to encourage stu<lb/>
dents who might be interested to<lb/>
Come in and discuss the issues<lb/>
they have a problem with he<lb/>
said. "Perhaps we can both reu h<lb/>
an understanding ot each other's<lb/>
views<lb/>
One of the events St TA will<lb/>
be involved with this vear is<lb/>
"Triangle Animal Awareness<lb/>
Weekend which will be held<lb/>
October 5-7 in Raleigh. The event<lb/>
will bring various SETA groups<lb/>
from around the state together to<lb/>
hear noted animal rights speakers.<lb/>
Among the speakers sched-<lb/>
uled to be in attendance is N.C.<lb/>
State professor and philosopher<lb/>
Tom Regan, whoisalsotheauthor<lb/>
ot "The Case for Animal Rights<lb/>
"The weekend is designed to<lb/>
be1 motivational to our members<lb/>
Spit said.<lb/>
Other items that are tenta-<lb/>
tively scheduled for SHTA's<lb/>
agenda this year are educational<lb/>
fur demonstrations, campaigns<lb/>
against fast food chains and a<lb/>
studv monitoring the ECU medi-<lb/>
cal school's experimentation with<lb/>
animals.<lb/>
"We subscribe to Tom<lb/>
Regan's philosophy that this is an<lb/>
extension of evolution and that<lb/>
animals have feelings, too Spitz<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The organization's next<lb/>
meeting is tonight at 5:00 p.m. in<lb/>
the central campus meeting room<lb/>
in the basement of Fleming dorm.<lb/>
This will be an informal, social<lb/>
meeting to welcome new mem-<lb/>
bers, and animal-free refreshments<lb/>
will be served. Plans will also bo<lb/>
finalized for a fund-raising car<lb/>
wash scheduled for this weekend.<lb/>
just go out and buv a tew comics<lb/>
and expect to make money.<lb/>
Comics are like any other in-<lb/>
vestment: a person has to oo re-<lb/>
search, spend money and take<lb/>
their time. One ot the first things<lb/>
a potential collector should invest<lb/>
in is a price guide and a tew other<lb/>
books<lb/>
i he Official Overstreel<lb/>
Comk Book (!uide" is (nv of the<lb/>
N'tter guides and costs approxi-<lb/>
mately $13.00. Some other Koks<lb/>
that might prove useful are "In-<lb/>
vesting in Comics, the Complete<lb/>
Investor's Guide to Collectable<lb/>
Comi Books" by D.W Howard<lb/>
and "Collecting omi Books by<lb/>
M.uvi.i I eiter<lb/>
"he next stop in collecting is<lb/>
to find a few current titles that are<lb/>
popular and start receiving the<lb/>
titles.is they tome out. It is a good<lb/>
REAJP TEE<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
idea to locate all ot the local deal<lb/>
ers in one's area and visit their<lb/>
shops<lb/>
The next step a new collector<lb/>
should doisfindone to three titles<lb/>
to start collecting. It a beginner<lb/>
does not center on just a few titles,<lb/>
they'll find their resources<lb/>
stretched too thin to cover any<lb/>
title properly.<lb/>
Another helpful suggestion is<lb/>
to become friends or a regular with<lb/>
a specific dealer so that heshe<lb/>
can inform one of new titles, ?c.ood<lb/>
deals or valuable information.<lb/>
1 he followingisa list ot help-<lb/>
ful hints in collecting comu s.<lb/>
?Start with titles from the'60s<lb/>
and '70s These titles are not too<lb/>
expensiveandarelikely to increase<lb/>
m value<lb/>
?ollectcomi thatareineood<lb/>
or better condition<lb/>
?Always store your<lb/>
airtight. a id tret' bag<lb/>
backings and in an upright<lb/>
lion<lb/>
?Be prepared to t.i?<lb/>
losses along with your gain<lb/>
?not rush your coll ?<lb/>
? Po not lot your :<lb/>
preference in i omi sconti<lb/>
investments<lb/>
?Always keep an i .<lb/>
new i omi s that will bt I<lb/>
Also featured in this )s i<lb/>
breakdownentitled V.<lb/>
! oday on the urrent -1 ?<lb/>
ket and industry i t  I<lb/>
and collet table b 1 ddi<lb/>
and lifton Rouse who ow n<lb/>
operate "1 leroes Are i I<lb/>
located dow ntow i tl<lb/>
(ireenv ille, M<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is now accepting applications for General Manager.<lb/>
Stop by the Media Board office for more information<lb/>
(Second floor of the Publications Building)<lb/>
There is a difference<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
SIGMA NU<lb/>
v FRATERNITY<lb/>
LOOK FOR UPCOMING ADS.<lb/>
FOR RUSH INFO CALL 758-6756<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
ILStudent Union<lb/>
MAKINGtyJlHINGS HAPPEN AT ECU<lb/>
Stop by our booth in front of<lb/>
the Student Stores on Tues, Wed, or Thurs<lb/>
to be a part of the student union.<lb/>
What's Happening at ECU?<lb/>
Call the Program Hotline 757-6004<lb/>
This Week at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Wed Sept. 5 8pm<lb/>
Thurs Sept. 6 7 &amp; 9pm<lb/>
 Fri. &amp; Sat Sept 7 &amp; 8 8pm<lb/>
THE<lb/>
BEAR<lb/>
Sun. Sept. 2 &amp; 8pm<lb/>
ECU ID or Current Films Pass Is Required for Admission<lb/>
Applications are now being accepted<lb/>
for the following positions<lb/>
Productions Committee Chairperson<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee Chairperson<lb/>
Special Concerts Committee Chairperson<lb/>
Forum Committee Chairperson<lb/>
Coffeehouse Committee Presents<lb/>
Comedian Todd Yohn<lb/>
Tues. Sept. 1 1th in the Coffeehouse<lb/>
on the ground floor of Mendenhall<lb/>
?ADMISSION IS FREE<lb/>
PUN<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
l<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0013"/><lb/>
alu Euai y arulinianSi p?i mbeh 4. 990<lb/>
 n<lb/>
'Drugstore Cowboy' to<lb/>
kick off the week's films<lb/>
What's 1 lot Today<lb/>
By Chris Gallagher<lb/>
Matt Writei<lb/>
ronight s tilm feature at<lb/>
1 lendrix rheatrc opens a week cA<lb/>
movies th.u have received high<lb/>
praises from critics but earned<lb/>
little mom .it Ihe box office<lb/>
Drugstoreowbo) t ilory<lb/>
and The Beat all contain mi<lb/>
portanl messages to theit .nub<lb/>
on? es<lb/>
I'he main message .ill three<lb/>
les delivei is thai there is<lb/>
nothing w rone w ith struggling for<lb/>
t ou inib need out of life<lb/>
message is even explored<lb/>
ugh the n esof a young bear<lb/>
1 )rugstoreowbo) s a<lb/>
mo ic told w ith a thn .ul of insane<lb/>
i .s hu b makes it one of the<lb/>
: absorbing movies to come<lb/>
around in .i long time The storx<lb/>
It rs around a group of young<lb/>
nunals in lgl who general!)<lb/>
icf intend to be bad but vs hose<lb/>
esrnn awa from thembe ause<lb/>
Irugs<lb/>
 he movie stars Mat! Dillon<lb/>
as Bob Hughes and Kelh 1 ynchas<lb/>
s w ito Diane rhe relationship<lb/>
tween lob and Diane is inter<lb/>
ting to look .it .livl is reminis<lb/>
I, t a modern da Bonnie .nA<lb/>
! lie all gn a! mo ies, Drug<lb/>
s a fantastic ex<lb/>
? -a nptw riting and<lb/>
? rough the explora<lb/>
ir.u ters, wecan<lb/>
sth believe that our lives are<lb/>
,i iv make them out to K<lb/>
r is an in aluable his<lb/>
?' rtainmenf that<lb/>
mid 1 i Ihe best picture<lb/>
? i il War era film recalls<lb/>
? ?? ? first all bl.uk<lb/>
m ? t 1 nder Ihe<lb/>
nld "1 Robert<lb/>
s (Matthew Broderii k<lb/>
k men eager ti-<lb/>
ll! lor their adopted countrx<lb/>
, d to h<lb/>
treatedas equals b ewujguptheu<lb/>
Clockwork<lb/>
continued from page,11<lb/>
il version thelasf<lb/>
, ? r v !? our ld friend and<lb/>
rator w ith three now droogs<lb/>
 in the Milkbar Samesong<lb/>
nd verse,yel Mex isnolonget<lb/>
happy with the ultra violence<lb/>
fact it sbecomequitea bore and<lb/>
ng soul searching realizes<lb/>
th.it it s "time he had a w ife and a<lb/>
malenk googoogooing<lb/>
ilchickiwick to call him<lb/>
ida<lb/>
And the final i hapter ends<lb/>
You have been everywhi<lb/>
with vour little droog Alex Mit<lb/>
with him and you have<lb/>
; i .) some of the most grahzny<lb/>
it. hnies old Bog ever made all<lb/>
irolddroog Alex And all<lb/>
 was that 1 was young<lb/>
But now as I end this story<lb/>
rs I am no! young, not no<lb/>
s, ?, Mex like groweth<lb/>
Buf you,Omy broth<lb/>
n member sometimes th little<lb/>
?? ,tt was Amen And all thai<lb/>
lives alongside white troops<lb/>
Glory" concentrates on tin<lb/>
livesof these determined soldiers<lb/>
rhese brave men know thai thov<lb/>
may die in battle and it the) do<lb/>
survive, thov will be returning to<lb/>
livesof poverty "d oppression<lb/>
It is the courageous belief of<lb/>
 ictory that drives these nun on<lb/>
and it makes the final battle se<lb/>
quence even more tragic Staged<lb/>
with surprising savagery by di<lb/>
rector Edward Zwick (co creator<lb/>
of thirtv something"),theassauh<lb/>
which defeats these brave heroes<lb/>
lingers in the mind tor some lime<lb/>
rhe Bear is the story of a<lb/>
voung cub orphaned when his<lb/>
mother is killed by a falling boul<lb/>
der I ett to tend tor himself, the<lb/>
young bear eventually meets up<lb/>
with an adult male brown beai<lb/>
who is being chased b a pair of<lb/>
hunters The two bears soon find<lb/>
themselves relying on ea h other<lb/>
in order to escape death<lb/>
I i? .1 KidI 1i ,miiii s t,i inesl in<lb/>
New Spidit ill.Punishei<lb/>
Mill!blod.lt .WolC Mill iuinal Man<lb/>
' l, il s hit iii a 11 11mi,<lb/>
i in ; titlei oinii ? ih.it ire .? h! ol<lb/>
 nu nli , t iMi 1<lb/>
ma iniSlld? 1 in IIIt M.i Spidi 1 nun<lb/>
Halm inHull.<lb/>
I'eenagiM, 11. i n 1 viii,i1 ? . 1U 111<lb/>
1 llltll sSh ide tin hai.III<lb/>
1 in! tl,1 isiv . I'ltles<lb/>
H I'll1 . 1 1 . , i , 1 1 111 Ml<lb/>
"Drugstore t owboj w 1<lb/>
screen tonighf at 8 00 p m in<lb/>
Hendrix rheatrc Glon will<lb/>
screen on ITiursday at 7:00 and<lb/>
i tXip m ,andagainon 1 ridayand<lb/>
Saturday at 8 W p m The Bear,<lb/>
second attrachon of the lamiK<lb/>
t ilm Series, will screen on Sunday<lb/>
ai00and 8 00 p m<lb/>
Admission to the Student<lb/>
t nionFilmsisfree with valid EC l<lb/>
I P card and current semester a<lb/>
nvitv sticker or with a cunvnl<lb/>
semester I ilm PassCard available<lb/>
tor $10 from the Central Hcket<lb/>
t Vffice Mendenhall Studenten<lb/>
lei s mhii 6:00p.TO Mond.o<lb/>
Friday, r, 4788<lb/>
With either form of admis<lb/>
sion ou may bring one guest<lb/>
! or more information on the film<lb/>
and other programs sponsored b<lb/>
theStudenl I nion pleaseca<lb/>
471?<lb/>
;<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIALS<lb/>
only $3.95<lb/>
Served Mon Fri<lb/>
11 am 3 pm<lb/>
the taste of old mexico<lb/>
521 Cotanche St. - Greenville<lb/>
757 -1666<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
ECU'S 1 Fraternity<lb/>
Exorcist'<lb/>
continued from page,11<lb/>
and lends an air of insanity<lb/>
md madness to the character thai<lb/>
few actors could mat h<lb/>
In a minor note E I gradu<lb/>
,t, Manley Pope has a minor role<lb/>
is an angel in the afterlife<lb/>
All mall 'Ihe Exorcisf 111" is<lb/>
proof thai sometimes movies are<lb/>
? . , o without sequels loo<lb/>
i hemphasison the weird and<lb/>
ton 110, n plot make this movie<lb/>
lious and dull to see it you<lb/>
liked the first or second Exor<lb/>
then don't ruin it and see this<lb/>
hopefully l.?t installment<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
1989-1990 nterfratemity Councils<lb/>
"Most Outstanding Fraternity Award"<lb/>
1987 - '89 Honored as being oneoi the top twenty overall Sig Ep<lb/>
Chapters in the nation<lb/>
?1984 - 89 Won overall sports (hampion; hip among all fraternities at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
- 2 Houses and a party room.<lb/>
Located at the corner of 5th and Summit<lb/>
i Across from (larrett IKtlli<lb/>
For Information<lb/>
Call<lb/>
757-0487<lb/>
SfiCLilfa Sfijaib SfiCLiah Smlih<lb/>
Meetthcbul.es Meotthelad.es Brothers &amp; Bid Ntghl<lb/>
Of Sigma Sigma of Alpha Xi Rushees hil<lb/>
<lb/>
ill<lb/>
;??????? i<lb/>
?-?<lb/>
Sigma<lb/>
Delta<lb/>
757-0305<lb/>
<lb/>
Simply the Best<lb/>
ff<lb/>
NO EXPERIENCE<lb/>
NECESSARY<lb/>
APPLY NOW!<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
come by our booth at<lb/>
the Student Stores<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday,<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Sept 4,5, &amp; 6<lb/>
Applications will be<lb/>
available for anyone?<lb/>
interested in becoming<lb/>
a member in ECU's<lb/>
premier programing<lb/>
organization!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0014"/><lb/>
?bc gqot (!IarnlinfanSEP7CMecff 4.1990<lb/>
113<lb/>
'Drugstore Cowboy' to<lb/>
kick off the week's films<lb/>
What's Hot Today<lb/>
By Chris Gallagher<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Tonight's film feature at<lb/>
1 lendrix Theatre opens a week of<lb/>
movies that have received high<lb/>
praises from critics, but earned<lb/>
little money at the box office.<lb/>
"Drugstore Cowboy "Glory"<lb/>
and "The Bear" all contain im-<lb/>
portant messages to their audi-<lb/>
ences.<lb/>
The main message all three<lb/>
movies deliver is that there is<lb/>
nothing wrong with struggling for<lb/>
what you truly need out of life.<lb/>
This message is even explored<lb/>
through the eyes of a young bear.<lb/>
"Drugstore Cowboy" is a<lb/>
movie told with a thread of insane<lb/>
logic which makes it one of the<lb/>
most absorbing movies to come<lb/>
around in a long time. The story<lb/>
centers around a group of young<lb/>
criminals in 1971 who generally<lb/>
do not intend to be bad, but whose<lb/>
lives run away from them because<lb/>
of drugs.<lb/>
The movie stars Matt Dillon<lb/>
as Bob Hughes and Kelly Lynch as<lb/>
his wife Diane The relationship<lb/>
between Bob and Diane is inter-<lb/>
esting to look at and is reminis-<lb/>
cent of a modern day Bonnie and<lb/>
Clyde.<lb/>
Like all great movies, "Drug-<lb/>
store Cowboy" is a fantastic ex-<lb/>
ample of good scriptwriting and<lb/>
fine acting. Through the explora-<lb/>
tion of the ma in characters, we can<lb/>
honestly believe that our lives are<lb/>
what we make them out to be.<lb/>
"Glory" is an invaluable his-<lb/>
torical piece of entertainment that<lb/>
should have won the best picture<lb/>
of 189.<lb/>
The Civil War-era film recalls<lb/>
theexporiencesof the first all-black<lb/>
fighting regiment Under the<lb/>
charge of 2-vear-old Col. Robert<lb/>
Gould Shaw (Matthew Broderick),<lb/>
hundreds of black men, eager to<lb/>
fipht for their adopted country,<lb/>
prove their fierce desire to be<lb/>
treated aseqt?ls by g?W9ftup theu<lb/>
Clockwork'<lb/>
lives alongside white troops.<lb/>
"Glory" concentrates on the<lb/>
livesof these determined soldiers<lb/>
These brave men know that they<lb/>
may die in battle, and if they do<lb/>
survive, they will be returning to<lb/>
lives of poverty and oppression.<lb/>
It is the courageous belief of<lb/>
victory that drives these men on,<lb/>
and it makes the final battle se-<lb/>
quence even more tragic. Staged<lb/>
with surprising savagery by di-<lb/>
rector Edward Zwick (co-creator<lb/>
of "thirty-something"), theassault<lb/>
which defeats these brave heroes<lb/>
lingers in the mind for some time.<lb/>
"The Bear" is the story of a<lb/>
young cub orphaned when his<lb/>
mother is killed by a falling boul-<lb/>
der. Left to fend for himself, the<lb/>
young bear eventually meets up<lb/>
with an adult male brown bear<lb/>
who is being chased by a pair of<lb/>
hunters. The two bears soon find<lb/>
themselves relying on each other<lb/>
in order to escape death.<lb/>
"Drugstore Cowboy" will<lb/>
screen tonight at 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre. "Glory" will<lb/>
screen on Thursday at 7:00 and<lb/>
9:00p.m and again on Friday and<lb/>
Saturday at 8:00 p.m. 'The Bear<lb/>
second attraction of the Family<lb/>
Film Series, will screen on Sunday<lb/>
at 2:00 and 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Admission to the Student<lb/>
Union Films isfree with valid ECU<lb/>
ID. card and current semester ac-<lb/>
tivity sticker, or with a current<lb/>
semester Film PassCard available<lb/>
for $10 from the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter, 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m Monday-<lb/>
Friday, 757-4788.<lb/>
With either form of admis-<lb/>
sion, you may bring one guest.<lb/>
For more information on the films<lb/>
and other programs sponsored by<lb/>
theStudent Union,pleasecall 757-<lb/>
4715.<lb/>
(?host RiderComics to invest in:<lb/>
New SpidermanFunisher<lb/>
Aliens vs. PnvlatorsWolverine<lb/>
Animal Man<lb/>
What's ho! in a long run<lb/>
ning title:Comics that are gcxd col<lb/>
X-menlee tables:<lb/>
Ama?ing SpidermanOKI Spiderman<lb/>
BatmanHulk<lb/>
Teenage Mutant NinjaExcalibur<lb/>
TurtlesShade the C hanging Man<lb/>
Fantastic lourDisney Titles<lb/>
MashGreen 1 antern<lb/>
NO EXPERIENCE<lb/>
NECESSARY<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIALS<lb/>
only $395<lb/>
Served Mon - Fri<lb/>
11 an<lb/>
521 Cotan:<lb/>
I-N <lb/>
757<lb/>
VOT<lb/>
continued from page,11<lb/>
But in the original version, the last<lb/>
chaptei has our old friend and<lb/>
narrator with three new droogs,<lb/>
sitting in the Milkbar. Same song,<lb/>
second verse, yet Alex is no longer<lb/>
happy with the "ultra-violence<lb/>
in fact it's become quite a bore and<lb/>
after long soul searching realizes<lb/>
that it's "time he had a wife and a<lb/>
malenky googoogooing<lb/>
malchickiwick to call him<lb/>
dadada<lb/>
And the final chapter ends<lb/>
with You have been everywhere<lb/>
with your little droog Alex, suf-<lb/>
fering with him, and you have<lb/>
vidd ied some of the most grahzny<lb/>
bratchnies old Bog ever made, all<lb/>
on to your old droog Alex. And all<lb/>
it was was that l was young.<lb/>
But now as 1 end this story,<lb/>
brothers, 1 am not young, not no<lb/>
longer, oh no. Alex like groweth<lb/>
up, oh yesBut you, O my broth-<lb/>
ers, remember sometimes thy little<lb/>
Alex Mtat was. Amen. And all that<lb/>
cal"<lb/>
Exorcist'<lb/>
PPLY NOW!<lb/>
L&amp;fc - - ?<lb/>
RUS<lb/>
ECUfs 1 Fra<lb/>
continued from page,11<lb/>
man and lends an air of insanity<lb/>
and madness to the character that<lb/>
few actors could match.<lb/>
In a minor note, ECU gradu-<lb/>
ate Manley Pope has a minor role<lb/>
as an angel in the afterlife.<lb/>
All in all, The Exorcist III" is<lb/>
proof that sometimes movies are<lb/>
better off without sequels. Too<lb/>
much emphasis on the weird and<lb/>
too little on plot make this movie<lb/>
tedious and dull to see If you<lb/>
liked the first or second "Exor-<lb/>
cist then don't ruin it and see this<lb/>
hopefully last installment.<lb/>
TR'IB<lb/>
FAP11<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
1989-1990 Interfraternity Councils<lb/>
ffMost Outstanding Fraternity Award"<lb/>
?1987 - 89 Honored as being one of the top twenty overall Sig Ep<lb/>
Chapters in the nation.<lb/>
-1984 - 89 Won overall sports championship among all fraternities at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
- 2 Houses and a party room.<lb/>
Located at the corner of 5th and Summit<lb/>
(Across from Garrett Hall)<lb/>
Meet the ladies Meet the ladies<lb/>
of Sigma Sigma of Alpha Xi<lb/>
Sigma. D113<lb/>
For Information<lb/>
Brothers &amp; Bid Night rAQ1<lb/>
RusheesOnly 737-UW <lb/>
757-0305<lb/>
<lb/>
Simply the Best"<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
come by our booth at<lb/>
the Student Stores<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday,<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Sept 4, 5, &amp; 6<lb/>
Applications will be<lb/>
available for anyone<lb/>
interested in becoming<lb/>
a member in ECU's<lb/>
V.<lb/>
premier programing<lb/>
organization!<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0015"/><lb/>
She ?it1 i?ixntWu'mnSt rn mif n 4,1990<lb/>
Si<lb/>
14 uhe t?nt vinriinnuiusMf vm h 4, ii - - - <lb/>
Anne Klein, N.Y. designer, is just a 'regular guy'<lb/>
 M'i He is opi' of Seventh<lb/>
 etme's top destgrtets But von<lb/>
 011 cafcn him Iutm hingal New<lb/>
Yofk's gJafnouf festaufants <lb/>
tuna ssttdwk h .it his desk is rrtore<lb/>
like it<lb/>
The wom.in next door (w ets<lb/>
his krfhes fe do celebrities whose<lb/>
tirt names telegraph ins!<lb/>
gnition Optfah andandu i Yet<lb/>
' is n.ime is nol as well known .is<lb/>
R ilph'si.is in 1 .iurt nl tarvin -<lb/>
IS in Klein<lb/>
Heisl otiisDell Olio, Ihe de<lb/>
igttet behind the nnr Klon Ki<lb/>
hel t 4? he is one of the<lb/>
mtliienti.il designers in America,<lb/>
presiding ovef i fashion empire<lb/>
hat accotmtsfot some Uf<lb/>
1 e.ir in ret.nl sales<lb/>
Besides Ihe l<lb/>
BC airs new<lb/>
tall comedy<lb/>
l(s.H ES M<lb/>
? Involves 1 lol of i .<lb/>
ftfleChfisYoungkilled lb I<lb/>
fweefi hfief stints in frofil of<lb/>
.imer.i he taughf bin i<lb/>
k;)it,ir<lb/>
In his dfessing fooffi on fhe<lb/>
? t (?f the new -V'( I omtth<lb/>
Mafrled People, m whi h he<lb/>
n s ,i f9 ye&amp;t old hew l Ai<lb/>
?ofig is stfurnrninj<lb/>
- iectnc guitar whi. ft, he says, is<lb/>
:he kind linn Hehdfi Used ki<lb/>
?l.iv<lb/>
I sit here ind pl.n fl<lb/>
nt.ir th.in I d<lb/>
( s,n s Mn-i<lb/>
Uttef tor n<lb/>
ifnefhing fhaf<lb/>
U re ni't USi<lb/>
.?? s word -<lb/>
HI!V<lb/>
t-h ( )m n it ?<lb/>
?iphM .i y at v. ? ? ? ' ? m<lb/>
1 1 ? ? .<lb/>
itef mhi in Max rl<lb/>
p the I I itfu '<lb/>
Ip He stars in ihe movie<lb/>
B00V of Lovi !u ? ? bvf<lb/>
id the ihniit 1 Rtirn stone<lb/>
ie out later tins year<lb/>
Married teo if<lb/>
?iree f.cnrr.itii'H ' ; Who<lb/>
? v, pi.n s ,1 teen ?<lb/>
ludi pt w ho mart led his high<lb/>
hool sm irf<lb/>
Megan idtlivan ir. '<lb/>
. 4rmstr<lb/>
oomel ou It fw ingj n<lb/>
If the first tune K,i fflfiha and<lb/>
uh.ir.i Mofltgomerydrethi nidi 1<lb/>
tuple, with three jfown 1 hildn ?<lb/>
? ho own the brow nstom I<lb/>
ii I 1 ptr.il Park<lb/>
Ihe series is ip ,i ? I<lb/>
itgrowth of 1 ive In 1 oung<lb/>
id wanted to wofl i i with<lb/>
. 1 reafors Rob 5t rnin and<lb/>
mdeftt g 1 ra? 1 1 he shi iw was<lb/>
'veloped fort BS.btitwasswepf<lb/>
u win n h ti Sagansk) b<lb/>
cad of programming and wi nf<lb/>
MM<lb/>
tier 1 iv In 1 olumbta<lb/>
le Islon wanted oung to star<lb/>
atiothi ' 1 ??? I vsanted lo<lb/>
rt with Ihe same w riters I<lb/>
, td Pro h, 1. 1 in iu" up<lb/>
iih th. . im ept of thi<lb/>
hlh t. i.i.i, ? ? '?<lb/>
w,e.something Icould ? in<lb/>
 v- botighl ??? ? ??? ? 1<lb/>
then dropped Ihe show l' I i<lb/>
dered 11 episodes<lb/>
I believe in people more than<lb/>
ijOi ts N oupe. -iv I ttki<lb/>
nepe who doe .1 projei t lor<lb/>
righl ri asons l hal sw h.) i did<lb/>
Kunestone rhedirei tot v illard<lb/>
up 'ii w roii' tin  reenj<lb/>
short story he had read jears<lb/>
 i ? in tin- morning aft 1<lb/>
orking ?n nighi everyi ne w 1 ?<lb/>
iilipr, his halt bul Ihis gti s gol<lb/>
, imllc on his fa e 1 Ie s mak ing<lb/>
the movie he s ,iUv.i s wanted lo<lb/>
ip,ike<lb/>
It w,p, th.it ,i lor Hook of<lb/>
?e ind ihis show 1 e been In<lb/>
m.itiops when people hati d<lb/>
what the were doing 1II nevt 1<lb/>
u t mytelf get into ? sttuatton like<lb/>
ih.it tglin I want to work with<lb/>
people who want to be then<lb/>
 u d bettet have 1 lot of eothu<lb/>
isrp ind un entive N' au-e on, e<lb/>
u start it s .ill dow nhill<lb/>
 oungM) ?thebe?t thing he !<lb/>
, verdone vvasa pilot wilhi .rah.up<lb/>
i hapnwn, the late membel ot the<lb/>
Montv Pythoftcowedy troupe "I1<lb/>
nail that idgy Python humor. <lb/>
s,iv s It went riv.ht over the he.nK<lb/>
ot thi- network ptOpkl<lb/>
Klein designer spiu-tswear.<lb/>
Dell'f iio oversees Anne Klein II<lb/>
and Anne Klein viresses IVll'Olio<lb/>
sppH'riM-s Anne Klein II with two<lb/>
, o designers. I aunched in ll?sias<lb/>
a bridge between designer<lb/>
sportswear and cafeef-gifl tash-<lb/>
upis it otters the clean, classic<lb/>
II i M'o is known tor at<lb/>
p.? pi . i in girls an affof I<lb/>
 fSCOSl aK'Ut 1300 instead c4<lb/>
th $6fl to fftfltl Pof one ot his<lb/>
,ii signer jx ki ts<lb/>
? 1 so im.iHiphis.mention are<lb/>
tt new irm Kfetn retail stores.<lb/>
? (ing iP.I- I one roteervthing<lb/>
tt.it I VII I'ho designs. II) stores<lb/>
are being rell.xi out mrr the next<lb/>
five 5 earne Opened in Minne-<lb/>
ApofiSa ??? '? ,r fgO i'd ope has just<lb/>
ned ip Manhasset,K-<lb/>
None of this success has gone<lb/>
toIVll Olio's head He's the most<lb/>
regular guy you could meet His<lb/>
work uniform is hardly a fashion<lb/>
statement chinos, beige hucksand<lb/>
a white shirt, sleeves rolled up<lb/>
and buttons straining over an<lb/>
ample stomach<lb/>
Backstage at a recent fashion<lb/>
show, amid some of America's<lb/>
most gorgeous cover girls in<lb/>
various stages of undress, the<lb/>
Brooklyn born Dell'Oliolooksltke<lb/>
a stagehand who wandered in by<lb/>
mistake But from the way Linda<lb/>
1 vangelista and the other models<lb/>
respond, 1 t'sclear who is in charge<lb/>
Ihe models love him. So do his<lb/>
customers.<lb/>
Louis' clothes are stylish<lb/>
w ithout being too high fashion<lb/>
says Jennifer Aubrey Jacobs, the<lb/>
stylist who dresses Oprah W tnfrey<lb/>
for TV. Winfrey wore Dell'Olio s<lb/>
clothes.<lb/>
Skinny or fat, tall or short<lb/>
all women look good in his clothes<lb/>
A masterful tailor, DeH'Olio cuts<lb/>
to show off assets and hide flaws<lb/>
"I like clothes that make a<lb/>
statement but don't scream, " savs<lb/>
DellOlio "Women don t want to<lb/>
be unsure of themselves Fven if<lb/>
they have the best bodiesin the<lb/>
world Dell'Olio's designs are<lb/>
"very todav without being 1m<lb/>
posing I don't want to kill people<lb/>
with my clothes loan Collins<lb/>
wears Anne Klein So does<lb/>
Kathleen Sullivan andher and<lb/>
Candice Bergen, both as herself<lb/>
and TV's Murphy Brown<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Media Board<lb/>
is now accepting applications for<lb/>
General Manager lor the 1990-91<lb/>
academic year lor the<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
(yearbook)<lb/>
and<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Please apply at the Media Board Office,<lb/>
2nd floor Publications Building.<lb/>
Phone: 757-6009<lb/>
All Applicants should have a<lb/>
2.5 made point average.<lb/>
Deadline for filing: 9790<lb/>
S.GA MOIONS '90-91<lb/>
vi 1 i IION DAY WEDNESDAY 19.1990<lb/>
HI? FOR POSITIONS BY<lb/>
SEPT 5,1990 5:00 PM<lb/>
S.GA. OFFICE IN MENDENHALL<lb/>
POSITION AVAILABLE:<lb/>
EXECl riTVE OFFICERS:<lb/>
VICE PRESIDENT<lb/>
SECRETARY<lb/>
DORM REPS<lb/>
DAY REPS.<lb/>
All. CXASS OFFICERS<lb/>
? $10.00 FILING FEE<lb/>
MANDATORY CANDIDATE MEETING<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, SEPT.5,7:00PM<lb/>
FOR MORE INFO CALL<lb/>
7574726<lb/>
The organizations listed above are the 01<lb/>
ones that can be compared to the<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
Experience.<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
Te<lb/>
ba<lb/>
th.<lb/>
tic<lb/>
rru<lb/>
wi<lb/>
17<lb/>
se;<lb/>
qu<lb/>
tw<lb/>
an<lb/>
ag<lb/>
his<lb/>
qu<lb/>
19<lb/>
15<lb/>
28<lb/>
to<lb/>
Ins<lb/>
Gc<lb/>
to<lb/>
Pr<lb/>
he<lb/>
mj<lb/>
P<lb/>
t<lb/>
S<lb/>
in,<lb/>
m<lb/>
1<lb/>
(<lb/>
INFO: Ride<lb/>
757-0127<lb/>
DATES<lb/>
Sept 4, 5, 6, &amp; 7<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0016"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
ui ?tt Caat (Earoltntan Septembeb 4.1990<lb/>
gill<lb/>
(AP) He is one of Seventh<lb/>
Avenue's top designers. But you<lb/>
won't catch him lunching at New<lb/>
York's glamour restaurants. A<lb/>
tuna sandwich at his desk is more<lb/>
like it.<lb/>
The woman next door covets<lb/>
his clothes. So do celebri t ies whose<lb/>
first names telegraph instant rec-<lb/>
ognition: Oprah and Candice efl<lb/>
his name is not as well known as<lb/>
Ralph's (as in Lauren) or Calvin s<lb/>
(as in Klein)<lb/>
.He is Louis Dell'Olio, the de-<lb/>
signer behind the Anne Klein la-<lb/>
bel. At 42 he is one of the most<lb/>
influential designers in America,<lb/>
presiding over a fashion empire<lb/>
that accounts for some $rtXl mi 11 ion<lb/>
I vear in retail sales.<lb/>
Besides the high-end Anne<lb/>
ABC airs new<lb/>
fall comedy<lb/>
LOS ANGFLES (AD Act-<lb/>
ing involves a lot of waiting nd<lb/>
whileChris Young killed the hours<lb/>
between brief stints in front ot the<lb/>
camera he taught himsolt to play<lb/>
the guitar.<lb/>
In his dressing room on the<lb/>
set of the new ABC comedy sonos<lb/>
"Married Teople in which he<lb/>
plays a 19-year-old newlywed.<lb/>
Young is strumming a white<lb/>
electric guitar which, he savs, is<lb/>
the kind limi Hendrix and Id<lb/>
Play<lb/>
"I sit here and plav more<lb/>
guitar than 1 do work on the set<lb/>
he says. "Music gives me another<lb/>
outlet for mv creative energv It's<lb/>
something that's your own and<lb/>
vou're not just saving somebody<lb/>
rise's words<lb/>
Young, who graduated trom<lb/>
high Khod in suburban Phila-<lb/>
delphia a year ago. is starring in<lb/>
bis third series. He was the com-<lb/>
puter whiz in "Max Headroom"<lb/>
ind the love-struck teenager in<lb/>
"Live-In He stars in the movie<lb/>
Book of Love due m October,<lb/>
and the thriller "Runestone also<lb/>
due out later this year.<lb/>
"Married People" looks at<lb/>
three generations of couples who<lb/>
live in a New York brownstone<lb/>
"loung plays a teen-age college<lb/>
student who married his high<lb/>
school sweetheart, played by<lb/>
Megan Gallivan. Jay Thomas and<lb/>
Bess Armstrong play a babv-<lb/>
boomer couple facing parenthood<lb/>
tor the first time. Ray Aranha and<lb/>
Barbara Montgomery are the older<lb/>
couple, with three grown children,<lb/>
who own the brownstone house<lb/>
near Central Park.<lb/>
The series is in a sense an<lb/>
outgrowth of "Live-In Young<lb/>
had wanted to work again with<lb/>
the creators, Rob Sternin and<lb/>
Prudence Fraser. The show was<lb/>
developed for CBS, but was swept<lb/>
out when Jeff Sagansky became<lb/>
head of programming and went<lb/>
to ABC.<lb/>
After "Live-In Columbia<lb/>
Television wanted Young to star<lb/>
in another series. "I wanted to<lb/>
work with the same writers, Rob<lb/>
and Pru he says. "They came up<lb/>
with the concept of three couples<lb/>
of different ages in the same house.<lb/>
It was something I could be a part<lb/>
of<lb/>
CBS bought seven episodes,<lb/>
then dropped the show. ABC has<lb/>
ordered 13 episodes<lb/>
"I believe in people more than<lb/>
projects Young says. "1 like<lb/>
someone who does a project for<lb/>
the right reasons. That's why 1 did<lb/>
Runestone Thedirector, Willard<lb/>
( arToll,wrotethescreenplayfrom<lb/>
a short story he had read years<lb/>
ago. At 7 in the morning, after<lb/>
working all night, everyone was<lb/>
pulling his hair, but this guy's got<lb/>
a smile on his face. He's making<lb/>
the movie he's always wanted to<lb/>
make.<lb/>
'It was that way for 'Book of<lb/>
Love' and this show. I've been in<lb/>
situations where people hated<lb/>
what they were doing. I'll never<lb/>
let myself get into a situation like<lb/>
that again. I want to work with<lb/>
people who want to be there.<lb/>
You'd better have a lot of enthu-<lb/>
siasm and incentive because once<lb/>
you start it's all downhill<lb/>
Young says the best thing he's<lb/>
ever done wasa pilot with Graham<lb/>
Chapman, the late member of the<lb/>
Monty Python comedy troupe. "I<lb/>
had that edgy Python humor he<lb/>
says. 'It went right over the heads<lb/>
of the network people<lb/>
Klein designer sportswear,<lb/>
Dell'Olio oversees Anne Klein II<lb/>
and Anne Klein dresses. Dell'Olio<lb/>
supervises Anne Klein 11 with two<lb/>
co-designers. Launched in 1983 as<lb/>
a bridge between designer<lb/>
sportswear and career-girl fash-<lb/>
ions, it offers the clean, classic<lb/>
shapes Dell'Olio is known for at<lb/>
prices working girls can afford.<lb/>
Jackets am about $300 instead of<lb/>
the 0O to $800 for one of his<lb/>
designer jackets.<lb/>
Abo grabbing hisattentionare<lb/>
the new Anne Klein retail stores.<lb/>
Selling under one rooi everything<lb/>
that Dell'Olio designs, 10 stores<lb/>
are being rolled out over the next<lb/>
five years. One opened in Minne-<lb/>
apolis a vear ago, and one has just<lb/>
opened in Mirihamt, N.Y.<lb/>
None of this success has gone<lb/>
to Dell'Olio's head. He's the most<lb/>
regular guy you could meet. His<lb/>
work uniform is hardly a fashion<lb/>
statement: chinos, beige bucks and<lb/>
a white shirt, sleeves rolled up<lb/>
and buttons straining over an<lb/>
ample stomach.<lb/>
Backstage at a recent fashion<lb/>
show, amid some of America's<lb/>
most gorgeous cover girls in<lb/>
various stages of undress, the<lb/>
Brooklyn-bom Dell'Olio looks like<lb/>
a stagehand who wandered in by<lb/>
mistake. But from the way Linda<lb/>
Evangelista and the other models<lb/>
respond, it' sclear who is in charge.<lb/>
The models love him. So do his<lb/>
customers.<lb/>
"Louis' clothes are stylish<lb/>
without being too high fashion<lb/>
says Jennifer Aubrey Jacobs, the<lb/>
stylist who dressesOprah Winfrey<lb/>
for TV. Winfrey wore Dell'Olio's<lb/>
clothes.<lb/>
Skinny or fat, tall or short ?<lb/>
all women look good in hisclothes.<lb/>
A masterful tailor, Dell'Olio cuts<lb/>
to show off assets and hide flaws.<lb/>
"I like clothes that make a<lb/>
statement but don't scream says<lb/>
Dell'Olio. "Women don't want to<lb/>
be unsure of themselves. Even if<lb/>
they have the best bodiesin the<lb/>
world.Dell'Olio's designs are<lb/>
"very today without being im-<lb/>
posing. I don't want to kill people<lb/>
with my clothes. Joan Collins<lb/>
wears Anne Klein. So does<lb/>
Kathleen Sullivan and Cher and<lb/>
Candice Bergen, both as herself<lb/>
and TV's Murphy Brown.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Media Board<lb/>
is now accepting applications for<lb/>
General Manager for the 1990-91<lb/>
academic year for the<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
(yearbook)<lb/>
and<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Please apply at the Media Board Office,<lb/>
2nd floor Publicatioi<lb/>
Phone: 757-4<lb/>
All Applicants sho<lb/>
2.5 grade point <lb/>
Deadline for filin<lb/>
S.GA HMOl<lb/>
FIETTION DAY WEDN1<lb/>
FILE FOR FOSmONS BY<lb/>
SEFT 5,1990 5:00 FM<lb/>
S.GA. OFFICE IN MENDENHALL<lb/>
POSITION AVAILABLE:<lb/>
FECUITVE OFFICERS:<lb/>
VICE PRESIDENT<lb/>
SECRETARY<lb/>
DORM REPS<lb/>
DAY REPS.<lb/>
ALL CLASS OFFICERS<lb/>
$10.00 FILING FEE<lb/>
J<lb/>
MANDATORY CANDIDATE MEETING<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, SEPT.5,H<lb/>
FOR MORE INFO CALL<lb/>
7574726<lb/>
The organizations listed above are the 01<lb/>
ones that can be compared to the<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
Experience.<lb/>
INFO: Ride<lb/>
757-0127<lb/>
DATES<lb/>
Sept 4. 5. 6. &amp; 7<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0017"/><lb/>
-?<lb/>
StPTEMBER4J990<lb/>
(Ufa ?a0t (Earnlinian<lb/>
15<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
?;i?sli<lb/>
Pirates appear polished in first game of season<lb/>
Team beats Louisiana<lb/>
Tech Bulldogs, 27-17<lb/>
By Tim Hampton<lb/>
News dilor<lb/>
When ECU and 1 ouisiana<lb/>
a h last met, one vear ago, the<lb/>
ittledtoa29-29tie. It was a game<lb/>
that the Pirates did not play par<lb/>
utarly well. Saturday night they<lb/>
Made up for their past mistakes<lb/>
,? uh an impressively smooth 27<lb/>
1 ictorv over the Bulldogs in the<lb/>
ison opener for both teams<lb/>
Inonlv his second career start<lb/>
.larterback left Mlake rushed tor<lb/>
two touchdowns and passed tr<lb/>
'other score Blake, who started<lb/>
tins! Miami last season faced<lb/>
is first start as ECU'S primary<lb/>
larterback last night I he h 2,<lb/>
5 junior passed tor 14 yards<lb/>
; completions in 23 attempts<lb/>
UthoughECl compiledor .<lb/>
- yards total offense compared<lb/>
: ech's 422, the Pirate del<lb/>
i er?fed Bulldog quarterbat k<lb/>
? ohnson three times leading<lb/>
ree ECU scores.<lb/>
Phis is a big big win f i<lb/>
ram, ECU's second yi i<lb/>
: coach Bill 1 ewis sa I<lb/>
?mght we were wi ; i<lb/>
i in all aspe ts ol the game<lb/>
r the Bulldog's I<lb/>
i c innected on a 30-yard held<lb/>
ECU marched 71 yards<lb/>
as Blake scored on a I<lb/>
vard keeper with 4 4" reman<lb/>
the first quarter<lb/>
s point after gave 11<lb/>
? ice. a lead the pirates<lb/>
would not relinquish<lb/>
1 ewi - ud ECU's first di<lb/>
.parked, b)<lb/>
gan swrap-upot Bulldog<lb/>
back Michael Riehar I<lb/>
for a five yard loss, set the tone for<lb/>
the game. Afterbeingon the one-<lb/>
 .ud line, the Bulldogs settled for<lb/>
a field goal<lb/>
1 oi tunateh . we had some<lb/>
d things happen around our<lb/>
il line that allowed us to give<lb/>
them three rather than seven<lb/>
1 r w is said<lb/>
W ith Blakeand tightend Luke<lb/>
R 1 isher providing the offensive<lb/>
pun h, thel rat( defense held the<lb/>
buii gs scon for 27 minutes<lb/>
until tl 11 mark in the third<lb/>
quartet Fisher, the E( I often<lb/>
sue captain caught to?.r passes<lb/>
. ards in hiding a 23ard<lb/>
Blake with 1 27 left in<lb/>
the fust<lb/>
E I s second score, an Im<lb/>
perato Jl yard field goal, was et<lb/>
ip b) defensive back Danen<lb/>
in num s interception of .i (ene<lb/>
41. With<lb/>
tin utng to<lb/>
rter, I knald<lb/>
? . EC! econdary<lb/>
? , ass and aA<lb/>
p irch<lb/>
 ? ? U h<lb/>
pec i ' ilso<lb/>
 . ? md quarter<lb/>
ting bulldogs in<lb/>
Starting al<lb/>
nd 16,1 ouisi<lb/>
. , d  ? to ad ance<lb/>
. ball a? ross midfield until the<lb/>
end ol rd quarter 1 ew is<lb/>
sa ' g game Aid an<lb/>
imp '? 'rv<lb/>
.? had some good things<lb/>
I ? ? isintl ki kinggai<lb/>
i en, ught punt? i - iooti did a<lb/>
See Pirates, page 16<lb/>
John Ruth?rtord ? Photo Lab<lb/>
Sophomore runmngback Cedric Van Buren breaks through the Louisiana Tech line for a 5 yard gam Van Buren was instrumental ,n the<lb/>
second quarter surge by the pirates in which they scored 10 points<lb/>
Blake leads ECU's offense to first win<lb/>
By Earlc McAuley<lb/>
Assistant Sports t dilor<lb/>
Junior left Blake led the EC I<lb/>
Pirates to a 27 17 ictory over the<lb/>
I ouisiana lech Bulldogs in his<lb/>
debut as the starting quarterback<lb/>
for the Pirates<lb/>
Blake siu some action last<lb/>
?n pla ing behind I ra is<lb/>
offense<lb/>
"I think left Hlake is to bo<lb/>
commended for his performance<lb/>
r"( U head coach Mill lewis said<lb/>
"1 thought left was really nervous<lb/>
at the beginning of the ball game<lb/>
but he settled down after making<lb/>
a couple of poor throws earl v Ik-<lb/>
had a couple of Kills with nothing<lb/>
on them<lb/>
"He reallv settled down, got<lb/>
Hunter, even starting in the Mi-<lb/>
ami game, but this is his first sea- his fee on the ground. I thought<lb/>
sen as full-time head ol the Pirate that he played well enough that<lb/>
we an going to have a chance to<lb/>
be reallv solid at the quarterback<lb/>
position lewis continued.<lb/>
Mlake was named player of<lb/>
the game bv the members of the<lb/>
media in attendance at Saturday's<lb/>
game. He threw 23 passes with 1 5<lb/>
receptions for 149 yards, includ-<lb/>
ing one touchdown. He also ran<lb/>
tor two more touchdowns and did<lb/>
not throw any interceptions.<lb/>
"I was real nervous, I didn't<lb/>
settle down until the third quar-<lb/>
ter' Mlakelaughed "Allofushad<lb/>
those butterflies, but after a few<lb/>
hits everybody started to settle<lb/>
down, that is except me<lb/>
Defensively the Pirates were<lb/>
led bv Robert lones. erry Dillon.<lb/>
Ernie 1 ogan and Ed Mrogdon. The<lb/>
defensive corps were able to keep<lb/>
the Bulldogs from scoring in the<lb/>
first halt after allow inga field goal<lb/>
on Tech's opening drive<lb/>
That drive was very impor-<lb/>
See Blake, page 16<lb/>
ACC officials considers<lb/>
induction of Florida State<lb/>
lohn Rulherford Photo Lab<lb/>
Sailinq through the air<lb/>
Our roving photographer faught this student f lying through the air to catch a fr.sbee As the air cools<lb/>
2 Sy be able to enjoy their tovonte outdoor act.vit.es without qo.ng crazy from the heat<lb/>
IAI LAHASSEE,Fla.(AP)<lb/>
Honda tate might like to become<lb/>
a member of the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
( onference, but first the ACC has<lb/>
to decide whether it wants to<lb/>
expand.<lb/>
Commissioner GeneCorrigan<lb/>
said Sunday that Honda State is<lb/>
the only school currently being<lb/>
considered bv the ACC. But he<lb/>
(autioned that the eight members<lb/>
aren't sure it they want to A No<lb/>
9.<lb/>
"It (would) bring us into the<lb/>
state ol Florida and 1 think that's<lb/>
the key Corrigan said at a news<lb/>
conference following a visit by 11<lb/>
AC C officials. "That's the key more<lb/>
than anything else<lb/>
Corngan said the ACC dele-<lb/>
gates were impressed with Flor-<lb/>
ida State's facilities and what he<lb/>
described as "the character of the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
"We were tremendously<lb/>
impressed with the way Florida<lb/>
State goes about its business<lb/>
Corrigan said, adding that the<lb/>
ACC officials were aware of Flor-<lb/>
ida State's Sept. 30 deadline for<lb/>
making a division.<lb/>
Florida State officials have<lb/>
been noncommittal about their<lb/>
future, but university President<lb/>
Bernard Sliger said last month that<lb/>
the odds favor joining an all-sports<lb/>
conference, most likely the ACC<lb/>
or Southeastern Conference.<lb/>
The Seminoles presently are<lb/>
an independent in football but<lb/>
compete in the Metro Conference<lb/>
in all other sports.<lb/>
Six of the ACC's eight mem-<lb/>
bers must approve Flonda State<lb/>
for an invitation to be extended.<lb/>
ACC members now include Geor-<lb/>
gia Tech, Clemson, Wake Forest,<lb/>
Duke, North Carolina, North<lb/>
Carolina State, Virginia and Mary-<lb/>
land. Only Clemson and North<lb/>
Carolina State did not have repre-<lb/>
sentatives at the meeting.<lb/>
'We ve gone trom no interest<lb/>
10 high interest Corngan said.<lb/>
"Honda State has provided a great<lb/>
focus for us<lb/>
See ACC, Page 16<lb/>
N.C. State shuts out Western<lb/>
Carolina, 67-0 in season opener<lb/>
I<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) Tyrone<lb/>
u kson and Aubrey Shaw led a<lb/>
. mishing ground attack and<lb/>
North Carolina State'3 d fense<lb/>
held Western Carolina without a<lb/>
first down to tie a national record<lb/>
as the Wolfpack rolled to a 67-0<lb/>
season-opening victorv Saturday<lb/>
The Wolfpack offense gained<lb/>
'? 00 yards on the ground to fall <lb/>
.ards short of a school record Hi<lb/>
defense, Western Carolina never<lb/>
rrossed midfield and didn't ret-<lb/>
old a first down<lb/>
The NCAA record book<lb/>
doesn't list losing teams with no<lb/>
first downs in a game<lb/>
N.C. State also broke a school<lb/>
record for fewest total yards al<lb/>
lowed Western Carolina managed<lb/>
17 yards, breaking the Wolfpack<lb/>
school mark of 34 allowed against<lb/>
Duke in 1946.<lb/>
Jackson and Shaw each scored<lb/>
two tow hdownsas the Wolfpa k<lb/>
i t tensive front opened huge hi lies<lb/>
st the smaller Catamounts<lb/>
ai kson, replai ing injured<lb/>
starter Anthony Barbourwho'sout<lb/>
tor the season with a knee injury,<lb/>
s ored on runs of 1 and 7 yards in<lb/>
the first halt as the Wolfpack<lb/>
opened up a 3(M) cushion against<lb/>
the Division I A A Catamounts<lb/>
The Wolfpack outgained the<lb/>
Catamounts 340 4 in the opening<lb/>
halt. 170 ot which came on the<lb/>
ground Western arolina, play-<lb/>
ing under its third coach in less<lb/>
than a vear, never approaching<lb/>
midheld in the period, its deepest<lb/>
penetration to itsown 32-yard line.<lb/>
Jackson's opening Si orecame<lb/>
on the Woltpack's first possession<lb/>
and after the game's first bigbreak.<lb/>
On the second play of the<lb/>
series, a bad pitch by Wolfpack<lb/>
quarterback Charles Davenport<lb/>
Kansas devastated at home<lb/>
by Virginia in a 59-10 romp<lb/>
was recovered by the Catamounts<lb/>
near midfield. Mut an offsides<lb/>
penalty nullified the play and<lb/>
Jackson scored on a 1-yard run<lb/>
five plays later.<lb/>
Davenport, a junior who re-<lb/>
dshirted last season to learn from<lb/>
record-setting quarterback Shane<lb/>
Montgomery, hit his first four<lb/>
passes, including a 42-yard scor-<lb/>
ing strike to Bobby lurgens mid-<lb/>
way through the first quarter.<lb/>
The Wolfpack defense re-<lb/>
corded two safeties in the half<lb/>
before Shaw scored on a 2-yard<lb/>
mn with 10:43 left before inter-<lb/>
mission<lb/>
Jackson's second score gave<lb/>
the Wolfpack a 32-0 lead late in the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
Shaw broke loose on a 50-yard<lb/>
burst up the middle on the open-<lb/>
ing possession of the second half<lb/>
to push the lead to 46-0.<lb/>
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) -It<lb/>
won't bo the scenery the Virginia<lb/>
Cavaliers remember about their<lb/>
tnp to Kansas. And it probably<lb/>
won't be the way their opponent<lb/>
took advantage of every opportu-<lb/>
nity to make the game close.<lb/>
I he predominant memory of<lb/>
everv member of the Virginia trav-<lb/>
eling partv will no doubt be the<lb/>
heat, which reached 130 degrees<lb/>
on the artificial turf, according to<lb/>
Kansas officials, in the third quar-<lb/>
ter Saturday of Virginia's 59-10<lb/>
romp.<lb/>
Accustomed to cool Atlantic<lb/>
breezes, the young men from the<lb/>
Eastern Seaboard hardly knew<lb/>
what to think of the Midwestern<lb/>
oven.<lb/>
"I'm ready to go back. This<lb/>
was terrible' said Virginia quar-<lb/>
terbackShawn Moore, who passed<lb/>
for three touchdowns and ran for<lb/>
a fourth. "It's a different kind of<lb/>
heat<lb/>
Despite the heat, Moore and<lb/>
his teammates had fun celebrat-<lb/>
ing their first-ever season opener<lb/>
as a ranked team. Moore passed<lb/>
and ran for touchdowns 16 sec-<lb/>
onds apart at the end of the first<lb/>
ha If, giving the 15th-ranked Cava-<lb/>
liers a 31-0 lead. Kansas did not<lb/>
score a touchdown until Roger<lb/>
Robben went over on a 1-yard<lb/>
plunge late in the fourth period.<lb/>
"You have to train in the des-<lb/>
ert to play here Virginia Coach<lb/>
George Welsh said. "I think we<lb/>
played well. 1 think we held up<lb/>
pretty well. We didn't have any<lb/>
guys run out of gas<lb/>
The Jayhawks might have<lb/>
made a game of it if they had held<lb/>
on to just half the bad passes that<lb/>
Moore threw in the first half. At<lb/>
least four potential interceptions<lb/>
were dropped.<lb/>
"I'm doing a good job oi hid-<lb/>
ing mv feelings said Kansas<lb/>
Coach Glen Mason. "I'm very<lb/>
o nbarrassed by the score. Maybe<lb/>
humiliated is a better word<lb/>
"If they didn't make the mis-<lb/>
takes and they would catch the<lb/>
balls, it would have been 20-14 at<lb/>
the half Welsh said.<lb/>
It was the most points Kansas<lb/>
has surrendered in an opener since<lb/>
Navy Preflight went on a 61-0<lb/>
binge in 1942.<lb/>
"We just didn't expect them<lb/>
to be that good said Kansas de-<lb/>
fensive tackle Dana Stubblefield.<lb/>
The Cavaliers' 564 yards of<lb/>
total offense more than doubled<lb/>
the Kansasoutput. Moorehit 16of<lb/>
27 passes for 254 yards and three<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
I leiiit five of six passes in an<lb/>
See Virginia, Page 16<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0018"/><lb/>
t?Z<lb/>
(5ie tafit (flarflKnf an September 4,1990<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Blake<lb/>
Mitchell to sign $15 million contract<lb/>
Kevin Mitchell will sign a contract Friday that will make him one<lb/>
of the four highest-paid players in baseball. Mitchell, 28, has agreed to<lb/>
a guaranteed, four-year, $1. million contract with the San Francisco<lb/>
Giants. Hisdeal matches thatofteammateWillClark and trailsOakland's<lb/>
Jose Canseco (5 years, $23.5 million) and the New York Yankees' Don<lb/>
Mattingly (5 years, $19.3 million).<lb/>
Bears, Buccaneers win in preseason<lb/>
The Chicago Bears and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers won NFL<lb/>
preseason games Thursday. Donald Igwcbuike kicked two field goals,<lb/>
Steve Christie added a third and Rodney Rice returned a pass intercep<lb/>
tion 37 yards for a touchdown as Tampa Bay beat the New York Jets 23-<lb/>
14. Rookie running back Johnny Bailey scored two fourth-quarter<lb/>
touchdowns as Chicago beat the Buffalo Bills 35-7 in Columbia, S.C.<lb/>
Several deals occur in National League<lb/>
There were several deals Thursday involving National league East<lb/>
teams. The Montreal Expos acquired Orlando Mcrcado on waivers<lb/>
from the New York Mets and the Mets acquired Fat Tabler from the<lb/>
Kansas City Rovals for minor league pitcher Archie Corbin. The Phila-<lb/>
delphia rhillics traded Carmelo Martinez to the Pittsburgh Pirates for<lb/>
Wcs Chamberlain, Julio Pcguero and a player to be named.<lb/>
Lemond looks for world championship<lb/>
The USA's Greg LeMond Sunday will begin his attempt to become<lb/>
the first cyclist in history to win both the Tour de France and World<lb/>
Championships in consecutive years. LeMond will be assisted by a U.S.<lb/>
team that includes Andy Hampsten, Gary Mulder, David Farmer and<lb/>
Ron Kiefel, all of Boulder, Colo and U.S. pro champion Kurt Stockton<lb/>
of Santa Barbara, Calif.<lb/>
Olympic committee, Baltic republics talk<lb/>
Sports officials from the Baltic republics met with the head of the<lb/>
InternationalOlympicCommitteein Lausanne,Switzerland,Thursday<lb/>
to talk about athletic independence from the Soviet Union. They were<lb/>
told that a political solution was the key, but both sides were urged to<lb/>
place the good of their athletes first. The IOC said it would set up a<lb/>
special panel to study the matter.<lb/>
Bubka loses for first time in seven years<lb/>
World pole vault rccordholder Sergei Bubka of the Soviet Union<lb/>
lost his first major event in seven years Thu rsday, failing to clear 19 feet,<lb/>
1 4 inches in the European Track and Field Championships.<lb/>
Womens volleyball team beat Japan<lb/>
The USA's women's volleyball team beat Japan (1S-13,15-5, 11-15,<lb/>
15-13) Thursday in Beijing to qualify for semifinals in the World<lb/>
Volleyball Championship China faces the USA and the Soviet Union<lb/>
meets Cuba in Friday's semifinals.<lb/>
Trent disqualified in South Carolina<lb/>
Glenn Trent III, 13, found himself m the deep rough this week.<lb/>
Monday, Trent shot the lowest score in the history of the Du Pont World<lb/>
Amateur Handicap Championship golf tournament - an 88, which was<lb/>
adjusted to a 52 because of his 36 handicap Thursday, Trent and six<lb/>
other golfers - all with similarly high handicaps - were disqualified<lb/>
from the Myrtle Beach, S.C, tournament.<lb/>
tant for Tech as the Bulldogs pro-<lb/>
gressed all the way inside the ECU<lb/>
10 yard line, but did not yield a<lb/>
touchdown. ECUwasaidedbyan<lb/>
illegal procedure penalty against<lb/>
the Bulldogs, and then Dillon<lb/>
threw Tech's running back Mi-<lb/>
chael Richardson for a 5 yard loss.<lb/>
On the day Tech quarterback<lb/>
Gene Johnson threw 44 times with<lb/>
21 completions and three inter-<lb/>
ceptions.<lb/>
Tech did amass more total<lb/>
yards than the Pirates, but with<lb/>
theinterceptionsand two fumbles,<lb/>
both of which were recovered by<lb/>
the Pirates they couid not get coord mated Lewis said, refer<lb/>
.i a l  ? ? i , lli L.WMlVl.lH<lb/>
many points on the boai<lb/>
Many of 1 ch's yard U20)<lb/>
i one in tl'i final two m ites f<lb/>
the game, long after the outcome<lb/>
hadbeendetermined V. played<lb/>
well at tunes, and then if ? were<lb/>
times when we didn't h ? e it all<lb/>
nng to the secondary<lb/>
The defense has a very ditti<lb/>
cult tk ahead of them next week<lb/>
as the Pirates head into Tallahas<lb/>
see to play Florida State Univer-<lb/>
sity. The Seminoles are ranked<lb/>
preseason top five in every majoi<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
good job in backing them up<lb/>
Lewis said.<lb/>
In the third quarter, the pi-<lb/>
rates came up with another big<lb/>
defensive play with free safety Ed<lb/>
Brogdon intercepting Johnson at<lb/>
the 50. Nine plays later, Blake du-<lb/>
plicated his first-quarter feat with<lb/>
ACC<lb/>
a four-yard scamper to the right<lb/>
corner of the end zone, propelling<lb/>
the Pirates to their largest lead at<lb/>
24-3 with 2:25 left in the third.<lb/>
ECU, who finished 5-5-1 last<lb/>
season, will take on Florida State<lb/>
in their first road game of the year<lb/>
next Saturday.<lb/>
Recycle this newspaper.<lb/>
The ACC, best-known athleti-<lb/>
cally for its basketball programs<lb/>
and well-regarded academically,<lb/>
has sought to upgrade its caliber<lb/>
of football since Corrigan became<lb/>
commissioner.<lb/>
Corrigan said he attended<lb/>
Florida State's 24-21 victory over<lb/>
Clemson in 1988, a win that was<lb/>
set up by a last-minute fake punt<lb/>
deep in FSU territory. Corrigan<lb/>
said it was the "gutsiest" coaching<lb/>
decision he'd seen.<lb/>
Earlier thisyear, ACCofficials<lb/>
decided against expansion, but<lb/>
that decision was rescinded at a<lb/>
July meeting when it became<lb/>
apparent that several major foot-<lb/>
ball powers were realigning<lb/>
"We're pretty comfortable the<lb/>
way we are said Corrigan, not-<lb/>
ing the advantages of havingeight<lb/>
schools for scheduling and tour-<lb/>
nament play.<lb/>
Penn State, a long-time indc<lb/>
pendent, moved to the Big Ten;<lb/>
Arkansas bolted the Southwest<lb/>
Conference after 76 years to join<lb/>
theSECanJ Notre Dame insured<lb/>
its independent status with a h<lb/>
crative television contract with<lb/>
NBC.<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
80-yard drive late in the second<lb/>
quarter to set up his own 2-yard<lb/>
touchdown run. Then two plays<lb/>
later, Kansas quarterback Chip<lb/>
Hilleary fumbled while being<lb/>
sacked. The Cavaliers took pos-<lb/>
session on the 13 and Moore<lb/>
immediately found Brian Satola<lb/>
Hill wins<lb/>
GTE with<lb/>
15-under<lb/>
for a 31-0 halftime lead.<lb/>
"I think we were all too<lb/>
pumped up and we just went out<lb/>
there and got embarrassed said<lb/>
Hilleary, who wasmaking his first<lb/>
start. "We were flying high going<lb/>
into the game<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
Maryland looks for athletic director<lb/>
(AP) A search committee will begin next week to interview at least<lb/>
five finalists for the University of Maryland's vacant post of athletic di-<lb/>
rector, The Washington Post reported Friday.<lb/>
Among the finalists was former Maryland basketball star Len<lb/>
El more, who is an attorney and CBS Sports commentator. Others on the<lb/>
list include four current athletic directors ? Cory Johnson of Long<lb/>
Beach State, Dave Hart of East Carolina, Charles 1 larrisof Arizona State<lb/>
and Oval Jaynes of Colorado State.<lb/>
Sources told The Post that interviews could begin as early as<lb/>
Tuesday, and the university hopes to select a successor to Lew Perkins<lb/>
within three weeks after that.<lb/>
William E Thomas, chairman of the search committee, had said<lb/>
previously that the panel would recommend three names to campus<lb/>
president William E. Kirwan, who will make the final decision.<lb/>
Elmore told the newspaper that while he's flattered to be included<lb/>
among the finalists, he hasn't applied for the job and wasn't sure he<lb/>
would accept it if offered.<lb/>
Graf, Agassi move into fourth round<lb/>
(AP) Top-seeded Steffi Graf, seeking her first Grand Slam title<lb/>
since January, struggled Sunday before defeating Elna Rcinach &amp;4,3-<lb/>
6,6-1 to move into the fourth round of the U.S. Open.<lb/>
It was the first time the defending women's champion had lost a set<lb/>
at the National Tennis Center since last year's title match.<lb/>
It t(H)k 1 hour, 45 minutes, about an hour longer than she usually<lb/>
stays on court.<lb/>
Two other women's seeds also were winners in early matches<lb/>
Sunday. Sixth seeded Arantxa Sanchez Vicario defeated Patty Fendick<lb/>
6-2,6-1 and No. 7 Katenna Maleeva beat Raffaella Reggi 64, 6-0.<lb/>
In men's singles, fourth-seeded Andre Agassi had little problem<lb/>
with Franco Davin, moving into the fourth round.<lb/>
Griffey's make major league history<lb/>
(AP) The Gnffeys ? 20 year-old Ken Jr. and his dad, Ken, 40 ?<lb/>
made major league history and magic moments Friday night, leading<lb/>
the Seattle Mariners over the Kansas City Royals 5-2.<lb/>
The Griffeys were the first father and son to play together in the big<lb/>
leagues, and they didn't disappoint With one out in the first inning,<lb/>
Griffey Sr. singled and Griffey Jr. followed with another single, and<lb/>
both wound up scoring<lb/>
Then, in the sixth inning, the elder Griffey threw out Bo Jackson<lb/>
trying to stretch a single into a double. He cleanly fielded the ball off the<lb/>
bullpen wall in left field and threw a strike to second baseman Harold<lb/>
Reynolds.<lb/>
The Mariners, who signed Griffey on Wednesday after he cleared<lb/>
waivers when he was released by Cincinnati, scored their three runs in<lb/>
the opening inning off Storm Davis (7-10) on four singles.<lb/>
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ?<lb/>
Bruce Crampton did al! the work.<lb/>
Mike Hill got the victory.<lb/>
Crampton made up a three-<lb/>
shot deficit with five straight bird-<lb/>
ies only to lose to Hill in a playoff<lb/>
Sunday at the GTE North Seniors<lb/>
Classic.<lb/>
"Six birdies and no bogeys.<lb/>
What can 1 say? It's a good, solid<lb/>
round of golf" said Crampton,<lb/>
whose 6-under 66 made him a<lb/>
runner-up for the second straight<lb/>
week.<lb/>
In sudden death, Hill used a<lb/>
sand wedge to hit a 98-yard sec-<lb/>
ond shot to within three inches of<lb/>
the cup. He tapped in for birdie to<lb/>
win his first-ever playoff and his<lb/>
second PGA Senior tournament<lb/>
of the year. He earned $67,500.<lb/>
Hill closed with a 4-under 68<lb/>
for a 54-hole total of 201,15-under<lb/>
on the 6,695-yard Broadmoor<lb/>
Country Club layout.<lb/>
Playing in the final group,<lb/>
Crampton, Hill and Douglass<lb/>
traded the lead among themselves<lb/>
for 18 holes.<lb/>
"When somebody in the<lb/>
group is really playing good, even<lb/>
though you may be even-par, it<lb/>
makes you feel like you're shoot-<lb/>
ing 80 Hill said. "I hung in there.<lb/>
Once I got in the playoff, I felt<lb/>
really confident<lb/>
Trailing by a stroke, Hill bird-<lb/>
ied the 482-yard 17th hole to tie<lb/>
Crampton.<lb/>
Crampton nearly won on the<lb/>
18th, but his birdie attempt from<lb/>
the fringe rolled to a stop at the<lb/>
edge of the cup.<lb/>
In the playoff, Crampton's<lb/>
approach landed beyond the green<lb/>
and he sent his third shot skidding<lb/>
past the cup. That left him a long<lb/>
putt for par.<lb/>
Douglass, the leader through<lb/>
the first two rounds, was third at<lb/>
203. Harold Henning shot a 69 for<lb/>
a 205, while Rocky Thompson and<lb/>
George Archer shot 67s to finish at<lb/>
206.<lb/>
ii?fc(x<lb/>
"THE GREEK LEADER OF THE f90S<lb/>
Sept 4-7<lb/>
'TH&amp;tdeH&amp;ztC Student &amp;eHte<lb/>
1&amp;mm244<lb/>
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Tonight Wednesday<lb/>
Sub Night Casino Night<lb/>
Meet the brothers with Chi Omega<lb/>
and the ladies of -hors' devoures<lb/>
Delta Zeta<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Brotherhood Night<lb/>
pizza<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Bid Night -<lb/>
party with<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
For Further Information Call<lb/>
Mike 830-6954 Buddie 830-3928<lb/>
j<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0019"/><lb/>
h Carolina hoUK Duke lo 177 yards tor 21-10 victory<lb/>
Take another look<lb/>
IHODIST<lb/>
XTCEXFFR<lb/>
 hoi si:<lb/>
Ho<lb/>
tb<lb/>
fti and<lb/>
in men I<lb/>
low l s<lb/>
EREE EREE<lb/>
ct<lb/>
efe&amp;<lb/>
s42.1)<lb/>
355-7695<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
? w<lb/>
-4 a.<lb/>
() M S A<lb/>
 i J WAY I'M): Peer Partners and Tutors<lb/>
Office of.Minority Studenl Vffairs (OMSA) is<lb/>
students who have College Work Suid<lb/>
to work with its Peer Partners and Peer<lb/>
Program. omplete job description and<lb/>
,tions are available in 10 W hi hard.<lb/>
w ? Y<lb/>
L1<lb/>
A<lb/>
?<lb/>
4<lb/>
Law<lb/>
s<lb/>
J04 i hard Building I U-nsion 64l5<lb/>
ORG 1 VHOWI MI I 1 r a.<lb/>
uesday, September i I lllH)<lb/>
7:00pm<lb/>
1031 General Classroom Building<lb/>
"Back to I ifeBack to Reality"<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0020"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
'<lb/>
ghg gagt (Earoltntan September 4J99017<lb/>
South Carolina holds Duke to 177 yards for 21-10 victory<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) ?<lb/>
Bobby Fuller helped push aside<lb/>
some of the memories from the<lb/>
"odd Kllis era at South Carolina.<lb/>
Fuller, the quarterback who<lb/>
ransferred from Appalachian<lb/>
State two vears to join Coach<lb/>
Sparky Woods, shone in his debut<lb/>
lor the Gamecocks.<lb/>
He passed for 177 yards and<lb/>
two touchdowns Saturday as<lb/>
uith Carolina opened its season<lb/>
oth a 21-10 victory over Duke.<lb/>
1 was proud of Bobby Fuller<lb/>
l might Woods said. "We put a<lb/>
t oi pressureonhim and Duke<lb/>
a lot oi people in his face<lb/>
lllis, who set 29 school ree-<lb/>
ds while at South Carolina, was<lb/>
, (. lamecocks' starting quarter-<lb/>
ly k the past four vears.<lb/>
Not only do the Gamecocks<lb/>
tve .i new quarterback, but<lb/>
? ey ve got a new defense that ?<lb/>
he first ti me in recent years ?<lb/>
, its on a pass rush that matters.<lb/>
"1 in proud of our defensive<lb/>
. ime Woods said. They played<lb/>
cal and put a lot of pressure<lb/>
n the quarterback<lb/>
South Carolina's defense,<lb/>
 hich was led bv eight tackles by<lb/>
Keith McDonald, was changed to<lb/>
a four-man front this season.<lb/>
"I'm glad we went to a four-<lb/>
man front said Woods, whose<lb/>
defensive unit held Duke to just<lb/>
177 yards total offense and 41<lb/>
yardsrushing. "It wasa real plus<lb/>
Last season, Duke averaged<lb/>
323 yards per game in the passing<lb/>
category alone.<lb/>
Blue Devil coach Barry<lb/>
Wilson,meanwhile.attributed the<lb/>
loss to playing "too sloppy" al-<lb/>
though he said he was pleased<lb/>
with the Duke defense.<lb/>
"We've got to tighten up a lot<lb/>
of things on offense said Wilson,<lb/>
who was making his debut. "1 was<lb/>
afraid that our offensive line might<lb/>
have some trouble with their de-<lb/>
fensive line<lb/>
Fuller, a junior who had to sit<lb/>
out last season after transferring,<lb/>
had touchdown passes of 9 and 11<lb/>
yardsin the first half of the schools'<lb/>
season-opener.<lb/>
Fuller's first TD pass, a 9-<lb/>
yarder to running back Albert<lb/>
Haynes, came with 5:28 left in the<lb/>
first quarter and made it 7-0.<lb/>
Duke's only first-half scoring<lb/>
came on a 36-yard field goal by<lb/>
Randy Gardner late in the first<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Mike Dingle, who had 113<lb/>
yards on 22 carries, scored the<lb/>
Gamecocks' second touchdown in<lb/>
the second quarter. He bulled his<lb/>
way over right tackle from 1 yard<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Fuller's second TD pass went<lb/>
11 yards to wide receiver Robert<lb/>
Brooks to end the first-half scor-<lb/>
ing and give South Carolina a 21-<lb/>
3 lead.<lb/>
South Carolina had 262 yards<lb/>
total offense, 177 from Fuller, who<lb/>
completed 16 of 23.<lb/>
Both teams turned conserva-<lb/>
tive in the second half. Duke got<lb/>
its final points on a third-quarter<lb/>
touchdown drive that ended with<lb/>
a 1 -yard plunge by tailback Randy<lb/>
Cuthbert, who gained S3 yards on<lb/>
18 carries.<lb/>
Duke's fate was sealed with<lb/>
3:09 left when quarterback Billy<lb/>
Ray was intercepted by linebacker<lb/>
Patrick Hinton, who ran the ball<lb/>
backtoDuke's23.TheGamecocks<lb/>
were unable to score in the closing<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
Last year, South Carolina also<lb/>
opened at home against Duke and<lb/>
won 27-21. The Gamecocks were<lb/>
6-4-1 in 1989. Duke finished 8-4<lb/>
and tied Virginia for the ACC title.<lb/>
This week. South Carolina will<lb/>
play host to North Carolina. Duke<lb/>
next plays Sept. 15 at Northwest-<lb/>
em.<lb/>
Take another look<lb/>
NFL officials reviewed fewepraylast year than in 1988,<lb/>
but reversed them more often N A u fl<lb/>
S3 ,?.i 11A' lAi<lb/>
Source: National Football League<lb/>
Bob Laird, Gannett News Service<lb/>
METHODIST<lb/>
STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
Comer of 5th &amp; Holly<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept. 5th<lb/>
, at 5:00pm<lb/>
Door prizes, cook-out and<lb/>
entertainment<lb/>
COME JOIN US<lb/>
FREE FREE FREE<lb/>
RUSH Sept 4-7, 8-11 p.m. For rides call 756-2149<lb/>
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nature ? goodness<lb/>
HEALTH FOOD &amp; GROCERY<lb/>
?vitamins ?cosmetics -organic -produce -spices -herbs -home products<lb/>
?macrobiotic foods -tye dyes -guatemalan -clothing ?jewelry -cards ?crystals'<lb/>
703 S.E. Greenville Blvd. 355-0556<lb/>
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Located in the Plaza Mall Front Entrance<lb/>
Phone:<lb/>
?New Age Music ?Books 'Oils 'Incense -Cards ?Quartz Crystals ?Minerals 'Clems -Jewell)<lb/>
?Gift Items ?Guatemalan &amp; Indian Clothing<lb/>
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OMSA<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Peer Partners and Tutors<lb/>
The Office of Minority Student Affairs (OMSA) is<lb/>
hiring students who have College Work Study<lb/>
awards to work with its Peer Partners and Peer<lb/>
Tutor Program. Complete job description and<lb/>
applications are available in 204 Whichard.<lb/>
OMSA 204 Wichard Building Extension 6495<lb/>
?r.<lb/>
&amp;$$,<lb/>
,A B L E<lb/>
1 ALLIED BLACKS lor LEADERSHIP and EQUALITY<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING<lb/>
Tuesday, September 11,1990<lb/>
7:00pm<lb/>
1031 General Classroom Building<lb/>
"Back to Lif eBack to Reality"<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0021"/><lb/>
<lb/>
Free From First Citizens Bank.<lb/>
Limited Edition Prinis,Suitable For Hanging<lb/>
Hang out and be cool in our 100 cotton T. To get this free shirt, open a<lb/>
QuickSilver student account with S50 or more. You 11 get unlimited access at all our ATMs;<lb/>
no-minimum-balance checking limit, 12 checks per month I; student credit card I ISA or<lb/>
MasterCard). ,tou also get check safekeeping, pi us your first order ot 50 checks tree. All this<lb/>
tor a flat S monthly service charge. Its the best deal on campus in banking and T-shirts.<lb/>
FIRST<lb/>
CITIZENS<lb/>
BANK<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0022"/><lb/>
T<lb/>
t<lb/>
(<lb/>
j From Rrst Citizens Bank.<lb/>
Limited Edition Prinis,Suitabi? Ior Hanging<lb/>
Hang out and be cool in our 100 cotton T. To get this free shirt, open a<lb/>
OuickSilver student account with $50 or more. You'll get unlimited access at all our ATMs;<lb/>
no-minimum-balance checking (limit, 12 checks per month); student credit card (VISA or<lb/>
MasterCard). You also get check safekeeping, plus your first order of 50 checks free. All this<lb/>
fnr a flat $3 mnnthlv service charge. It's the best deal on campus in banking and T-shirts.<lb/>
FIRST<lb/>
CITIZENS<lb/>
BANK<lb/>
Member FDrC and your community<lb/>
'Suhni m nilu ffpMri Mm v?A??i MfiMM nyuireahstter ?kvcnilit amifirsi mir Isliirtsmnkthk- ?iuk supplies last<lb/>
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19<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
FRATERNITIES<lb/>
90<lb/>
Dear Fraternity Rushee:<lb/>
Welcome to East Carolina University! lam<lb/>
glad that you chose this University and I hope<lb/>
you have a deep interest in our fraternity system.<lb/>
There is a wide variety of groups to choose<lb/>
from. Each one offers something unique to its<lb/>
members. Fraternities allow an individual to get<lb/>
involved in intramurals, scholarship programs,<lb/>
other organizations and, of course, social 1 will be around during the entire week to<lb/>
activiues. Whatever you want, some fraternity answer any of your questions about overall rush<lb/>
will offer it. and IFC. Your decision to join our fraternity<lb/>
It is important to ask many questions, if not system could be the best one yet!<lb/>
more than the fraternity will ask. Ask them about<lb/>
financial responsibilities, scholarships and study Sincerely,<lb/>
sessions, pledge requirements, as well as where Randy J. Royal<lb/>
they were founded. IFC President<lb/>
RUSH VOCABULARY fall 1990 rush schedule<lb/>
Fraternity - The name that applies to all Greek letter organization that are<lb/>
characterized by ritual, a pin, and a strong time of friendship<lb/>
Chapter - The local group of the larger national organization<lb/>
Greek - A mcmberof a fraternity, so called because the organization bcarGrcek<lb/>
letters.<lb/>
Active - A fraternity man who has formally been initiated by his chapter<lb/>
Legacy - A prospective member whose fatheror brother is an alumnus or active<lb/>
member of a certain fraternity<lb/>
Recommendation - A statement to die fraternity concerning the qualifications<lb/>
of a prospective teacher.<lb/>
Big Brother - An older brother within the fraternity who acts in helping you in<lb/>
many ways dunng and after your plcdgcship.<lb/>
Rushing - The process of fraternity membership selection consisting of care-<lb/>
fully planned and scheduled parties so that rushecs and fraternities can become<lb/>
better acquainted.<lb/>
Formal Rush - A series of parties given by each fraternity during a specified<lb/>
period which is scheduled and governed by Intcrfraicrnity Council.<lb/>
Informal Rush -That penod in which any group that is eligible may rush and<lb/>
pledge a man without scheduled biding and parties.<lb/>
Rush Chairman - An active mcmberof a fraternity who plans and executes rush<lb/>
functions for his house.<lb/>
Bid - A formal invitation to pledge a fraternity.<lb/>
Pledge - One who has been accepted as a probationary member of a group.<lb/>
Pledgeship - A period of training in the history, ideals, and traditions of the<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
Initiation - The formal ceremony dunng which a man takes his final vows lor<lb/>
full membership into his fraternity.<lb/>
Illegal Rushing - Rushing out of designated periods in a manner which docs not<lb/>
comply with IFC regulations<lb/>
Alumnus - An initiated member who is no longer in college.<lb/>
Monday, September 4thChapter Parties<lb/>
8:00 P.Ml 1:00 P.M.<lb/>
Tuesday, September 5th<lb/>
8:00 P.Ml 1:00 P.M.<lb/>
Chapter Parties<lb/>
Wednesday, September 6th  . Chapter Parties<lb/>
8:00 P.Ml 1:00 P.M.<lb/>
Friday, September 7thChapter Bid Night<lb/>
6:00 PM8:00 P.M.<lb/>
East Carolina University fraternities do not discriminate on the<lb/>
basis of race, color or creed Membership selection is a subjective<lb/>
one and a number of factors are taken into consideration in<lb/>
issuing invitations to join<lb/>
RUSH TIPS: DO'S AM) DON'TS<lb/>
1 BF. CONFIDENT OF YOURSELF. A fraternity will be affected<lb/>
by your body and verbal language. A firm handshake is vital to a good first<lb/>
impression.<lb/>
2. LOOK YOUR BEST AT ALL TIMES You probably will not get<lb/>
a bid from a fraternity because of" the way you dress and look, but your<lb/>
appearance can KEEP you from getting a bid.<lb/>
3. NEVER BE ARROGANT! Try' not tl) acl as if y?u wcrc alrcadv<lb/>
a pledge or brother of the house. If a house plans on inviting you back.<lb/>
they will.<lb/>
4. NEVER HESITATE TO INTRODUCE YOURSELF When you<lb/>
are introduced to someone, repeat his or her name. However, with all the<lb/>
people that you will meet, do not led like you have to remember<lb/>
everyone's name.<lb/>
5. ASK QUESTIONS if there is anything that you want to know about<lb/>
the fraternity: finances, sports, grades, activities, etc.<lb/>
6. Just because a lot of guys from your IIOMETOWN are in a certain<lb/>
fraternity, or just because you think one or more of your FRIENDS are<lb/>
going to pledge acertain fraternity, this DOES NOT necessarily mean that<lb/>
the fraternity is right for YOU Pledge the fraternity that can do the most<lb/>
for you and where you feel most comfortable.<lb/>
7. Attend the parties of AS MANY different fraternities as you can.<lb/>
especially if you are not sure about which fraternities you are interested<lb/>
in. In other words, SHOP AROUND. Besides, it's a great chance to get<lb/>
to know more about the Greek system which you are about to join<lb/>
8. If you have any questions about rush or need advice in a particular<lb/>
situation, come by the IFC office in Mendenhall Student Center or call<lb/>
757-4706. We are here to help'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058226_0024"/><lb/>
AIO<lb/>
rhc Alpha Sigma Pttl fraternity a?natu null ?<lb/>
I mversitv Alpha Sig has been askmg gi ? haptcr on the campus ot L<lb/>
manv years I'hev give annual; to Lhc Amenin I ung C. latiofi am ?? i-<lb/>
active ntmnural academic and social life If youarc interested in rushing a<lb/>
go hv and vimi Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
B?n<lb/>
Beta rhetaPi BOM ol the oldest fraternities in the rutu ?; founded on August X<lb/>
From a small town in (hio has stemmed one ot the- greatest fraternities even Here on<lb/>
this campus we strive to combine all aspects oi tratcrnitv life social academic<lb/>
athletic as well as rnans other activities which show the das to d life of a very tight<lb/>
brotherhood<lb/>
IKT<lb/>
Youfcolk'gc yeafs&amp;caprunc opportunity to challenge vourscll Itu mean il<lb/>
most i'I tiie classes, people anil situalu ms vou encountci hrai<lb/>
this I'tn K.app.i I au is comprised ol a solid brotherhoodinvolved in i<lb/>
Lam pus activities We are also very strong on a national level tth ? ihaptci<lb/>
across the counlrv and aboiii ssimkki m acadi rrih 4-holaj hi awai ! d annu.illv<lb/>
through our hcadquartcis llw advantages ol fraternity rTiemrxi : , lonotendupori<lb/>
graduation Hi i kappa Fau graduates have to opportunity to get tog Lheralth) hi<lb/>
every yeafaalunxru events, sue haft Kornecorutng So go ahead and halleng ,oui<lb/>
jfCl involved with a fraternity<lb/>
II<lb/>
and ,<lb/>
I loUl<lb/>
AXO<lb/>
Delta S gma I hi was charteredat East Carolina i ?<lb/>
to better it i -<lb/>
? . ? ;  ??, ' u ' ' ?? ?<lb/>
j <lb/>
r witi ?<lb/>
KA<lb/>
KI<lb/>
 .<lb/>
Since then trived to<lb/>
? lieu on I'd ?? ?<lb/>
pot fi r ii  r between ?? w<lb/>
listance fi 1 he <lb/>
brotherhood an 1 through thaihi thcrhoodvke wiHconi<lb/>
nto the future<lb/>
AXA<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha is a fraternity, ol honest friendship Vse have ovci - l!? frai<lb/>
chapters nationally Being a Lambda Chi means becoming apart oi a brothcrhtxxl ol<lb/>
men whose friendship will last a lifetime Being a Lambda (hi means knowing thai<lb/>
there will always be someone who cares about you. someone who will be anxious 10<lb/>
help you over those rough spots inlile he Lambda Chi j invite you to become apart<lb/>
of their association Come bv and look us over, we think you w ill be glad von did'<lb/>
cDKF<lb/>
Phi Kappa Psi is the newest fraternity on the ECU campus still in lolony status<lb/>
Nationally founded in February of IH52at Jefferson College. Phi Psi has been on the<lb/>
ECU campus for 2 years and is fast becoming a working part ol theainpus (ircck<lb/>
systsm. During rush, if you arc interested in rushing a fraternity. try Phi Kappa I'si<lb/>
We might be just what you're looking for in Our college lite<lb/>
PORe 2<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I HKha 1. <lb/>
i ? in 'I .nil ux 'ii<lb/>
m .il iln r<lb/>
ll II lOUfS4.ll<lb/>
riKA<lb/>
 , , a '??'? '? ??? ? ? ? don Man ti i ! -?'? .ii ilii Em ?  ;in.i<lb/>
' ii il i ? .1 ii. ha I Lai at pi idc in th u mvolvi im m<lb/>
?lllll he community hi i ??? i r . bartered .ii I I ix  oj .i, and ha<lb/>
nourished u he oiu ol the gi al upportci ol the (ireck . .i. n II you'ri ihinkmj<lb/>
"I g ? '?' ? Ji check out Pi Kappa Alpha n nu. n oik i?I the Ix i<lb/>
le . ; . lie<lb/>
11 K1<lb/>
-  , .i ('In a.i harti red al Pa . M ? mng have<lb/>
. i be a . ii .i ung nu ii Uiserv .i.r can<lb/>
ler a vai r ?l activitit to excel in ra . a slri mg  . i im to<lb/>
niunity erviu .iiid .n n lor th upped '?s known to have a<lb/>
Irotig ?octal program and hold many majoi ? ul through tout lh ? jf Wi havi i<lb/>
. r, .trong alurnm a oc talion thai hcl in . rtdcavor ' m eholarship program<lb/>
: ; ur brothers as situlent So remember when you'i in a rush to th<lb/>
only av Ci) r'l KAPP!<lb/>
IN<lb/>
At f .i,iarolina Sigma Nu is a combination ol rich Lradiln n an.I t? tin mhi rhi<lb/>
Pirsi chartered in I'w. ihi. l.ia lie La chapter i l Sigma Nu is among the oldest ol all<lb/>
hraLnemiues ji I c I Fraternity lile a Sigma Nu oilers man) things lr ail it.<lb/>
members an active ocial hie, strong supn lor atiilelies, community ervite, and<lb/>
academics Nationally. Sigma Nu is among the best in all categories VS iih over 2 kJ<lb/>
i Iwipters and I () diou and brothers, it is die third largest fraternity internationally Its<lb/>
comprehensive Educational Foundation (L E A D.J provides many scholarships and<lb/>
offers many great leadership development programs We encourage vou to Mush<lb/>
Sigma Nu and above all i( kl IK'<lb/>
ije<lb/>
 ' '<lb/>
? thai a I as pi tiding iuii i . pfioi i<lb/>
. . i <lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
III<lb/>
III<lb/>
i j I proud ing men the<lb/>
, ; d brotherhood. Will ?<lb/>
? i th ia damma ? v, v nied ruin mall ? and ha u<lb/>
?'? i ' . M ' (ui nati orl  a  ui haptei<lb/>
? al East Carolina w I I ir bonds ii near liter and the community<lb/>
1 im  hati .i? Sigma TauCJamina fraternity the most unicuc and diversified<lb/>
on campus Sigma lau Cam ma taking tradition to tomorrow<lb/>
IKE<lb/>
lau KappaEpsdon, lounded in 189?, has become u?e largest internalional fraternity<lb/>
with around 365 chapters in the I S and Canada KEcalliitscIf "the fraternity fcu<lb/>
life" and over I OD.UX) members worldwide arc proving it through their interest in the<lb/>
Iralerinty that continues long after graduation I Kl parUcipales in activities ranging<lb/>
from sports and scholastics to community projec Ls If you like what vou hear, come<lb/>
on down to Lhe bottom ol the hill to the IKE house and find our if TKE is (or you.<lb/>
0X<lb/>
Alter being oil campus lor 15 years The la (hi ds reinstalled al ECl m the fall of<lb/>
l?HK Iheia (hi is based on diversity anil unit) among the brothers The high<lb/>
standards and goals thai wc arc continually setting lor this frjicrnttv make Then Chi<lb/>
a unique and successful organization v? ilh the increasing number ol pledges each<lb/>
semester. Theta Chi can only become stronger<lb/>
page 3<lb/>
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EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
FRATERNITY LOCATIONS<lb/>
Hooker Road<lb/>
a<lb/>
n<lb/>
Evans street<lb/>
Charles Street<lb/>
od ot t<lb/>
College Hill Drive<lb/>
H<lb/>
to<lb/>
Summit street<lb/>
Fraternities W ithout<lb/>
Housing At This Time<lb/>
OX<lb/>
LN<lb/>
ETT<lb/>
page 4<lb/>
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