<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058230_0001"/>
?he i?uBt (Hut clxnxnn<lb/>
Vet 64 N. Jt<lb/>
 ? bf pi<lb/>
imih it 1H 1990<lb/>
Ser ng the East Carolina campus community since 19. 5<lb/>
Cjmi i nvii 11, North Car m ina<lb/>
C<lb/>
ation 12 000<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Gunman surrenders after standoff<lb/>
Distaught man threatens to kill self with<lb/>
high-powered rifle in Whichard Building<lb/>
H 1 ii h.n'l MhtlilUOlil no<lb/>
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; : ,? I .  i I li kill him<lb/>
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Police succeed<lb/>
in diffusing<lb/>
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B rim I lampton<lb/>
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peal1 ng with <lb/>
Students file complaint after<lb/>
city police arrest two cohorts<lb/>
B) M.itt King<lb/>
1 ealii res I ditoi<lb/>
 .r. at th oi<lb/>
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Si'i' t risis, p.iii<lb/>
<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
' ?? Ea ' Carolinia ends ECU Publi Classifieds Persona 1 ' Salt ??? p Wanted. For Ret md Ser .es Renaered State and Nation ???? ranks etgh in ? tl s serious ennI 1 rj 1 1 6 1 ' 1 7 1 th 1 ie 1 9 1<lb/>
Local artists combu pussy cats and politics new art exhibit.in 1 11 1<lb/>
A looW at la weekend's 24-23 loss Virginia Tech Lady Pirates'volieyt team increase record 4-0 over weekendist 1 to 1 aii 1 to 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0002"/><lb/>
W$z lEaat (Earaltmatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.64 No 46<lb/>
Tuessdav,September 18 1990<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Gunman surrenders after standoff<lb/>
Distaught man threatens to kill self with<lb/>
high-powered rifle in Whichard Building<lb/>
By Michael Albuquerque<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Carrying a hunting ritlo. a<lb/>
former Kinston postal employee<lb/>
held police at bay tor approxi<lb/>
mately 55 minutes Monda) at<lb/>
Whichard Building on campus be<lb/>
tore negotiators com inced him to<lb/>
surrender without firing shots<lb/>
Albert l ee itherspoort lr<lb/>
28, of Kinston, entered the K I<lb/>
administrative building at 12:45<lb/>
pni with a.30 U) Winchester rifle<lb/>
in search of his estranged wife,<lb/>
Carol) n baker ithcrspoon.<lb/>
Ms. to ttherspoon w ho works<lb/>
.is ,i secretary at the undergradii<lb/>
ateadmissionsoffice, wasat lun h<lb/>
when her husband arrived<lb/>
Shortly thereafter, he re-<lb/>
turned from lunch but was<lb/>
stopped by another employee in<lb/>
side the building before she<lb/>
reached the office w here her hus-<lb/>
band was waiting.<lb/>
She then escaped into another<lb/>
office along with several cmploj<lb/>
ces and students until university<lb/>
officials and police could evacu-<lb/>
ate them<lb/>
The incident apparentlj<lb/>
started over a domestic dispute<lb/>
between Witherspoon, who re-<lb/>
signed from his postal job Mon<lb/>
day morning, and his wife. Ihe<lb/>
two ha ve been scpa rated for about<lb/>
a vear.<lb/>
"He talked about his wife and<lb/>
son. 1 le was quite distraught i er<lb/>
thedomestk situation, said fames<lb/>
DePuy,the ECU dtrectoi at Public<lb/>
Safety.<lb/>
DePuy, the mam negotiator<lb/>
dealing with the gunman, said<lb/>
there were some rather tense<lb/>
moments during then conversa<lb/>
tion<lb/>
"When we arrived, he was<lb/>
very dug in. very stubborn he<lb/>
said There wore times w hen he<lb/>
would stand right at the window<lb/>
with the rifle under his i htn.<lb/>
Policefirsl learned of the situ<lb/>
ation after Whichard employees<lb/>
called Public Safety to re rt an<lb/>
armed man in their fti .l<lb/>
mandmg to see his wife<lb/>
Although most of th ;<lb/>
ees were at lunch w hen tl<lb/>
den tot i urred.a small . ? ? .<lb/>
trapped in a room in the to hi hard<lb/>
Annex before escaping through<lb/>
an outside window.<lb/>
Bvron Brooks, a student at<lb/>
ECU, entered the building short K<lb/>
after Witherspoon and was among<lb/>
the group that escaped through<lb/>
the tirst tloor window.<lb/>
He pointed the weapon at<lb/>
me and told me to leave the build<lb/>
inc. he said, "so I walked into<lb/>
W hu hard Annex<lb/>
brooks said he was locked in<lb/>
the same room with Albert's w ife<lb/>
and other ECU employees.<lb/>
"II came ilown to him<lb/>
pointing Hi's weapon at me<lb/>
and me pointing mv<lb/>
weapon at him and asking<lb/>
it he'd put his down, I'd put<lb/>
mine down, and he did,<lb/>
thank (.od<lb/>
lames IVI'uv, director<lb/>
of ECU Public Safety.<lb/>
According to Brooks, She<lb/>
was hiding under a desk. She was<lb/>
extremely nervous and crying<lb/>
before thev took us out through a<lb/>
w indow<lb/>
Sophomore Scott Stevens was<lb/>
walking nearthe front of Whkhard<lb/>
when an administrator told him<lb/>
to take cover because a man inside<lb/>
had iiist put a rifle to his fat e and<lb/>
told him to leave.<lb/>
W lien I first s.iw him (W ith-<lb/>
erspoon), 1 was hiding behind a<lb/>
tree in front ii the building, and<lb/>
he was hanging the rifle out the<lb/>
window Stevens said.<lb/>
I moved to another tree to<lb/>
get away, and he followed mv<lb/>
movements with fhefifle,sol txk<lb/>
nil hv sild.<lb/>
ECU Public Safety responded<lb/>
immediately,andSgt. ohn Austin<lb/>
and C pi. Mike lordan were the<lb/>
first officers to respond to the<lb/>
scene<lb/>
More ECU I'iiNk Safet) offi<lb/>
cers, along with Greenville police<lb/>
i lIn ers, sheriff's deputies and Ml<lb/>
agents, arrived at the scene and<lb/>
began rerouting students and tr.if-<lb/>
tii away from the area.<lb/>
IVI'uv. who has had pre i<lb/>
ous experience in these situations,<lb/>
began negotiating with Wither-<lb/>
in upon his arrival.<lb/>
I tried to get a feel for his<lb/>
mental state he said And I tried<lb/>
to start friendly conversation with<lb/>
him.<lb/>
'Everything happened so<lb/>
quickly, our main concern was<lb/>
securing the scone and starting<lb/>
negotiations with him<lb/>
i cording to DePuy, Wither-<lb/>
spoon asked officers to kill him<lb/>
several times during the standoff.<lb/>
"I said, 'that's not going to hap-<lb/>
pen; wo're going to be here for two<lb/>
days, but we're not going to shoot<lb/>
you<lb/>
He occasionally threatened<lb/>
to come outside with it (the rifle)<lb/>
DePuysaid. Hold theoffieersto<lb/>
be ready, that he was coming out<lb/>
with the rifle down<lb/>
DePuy said for some reason.<lb/>
Witherspoon instead moved back<lb/>
inside the doorway.<lb/>
It i ame down to him point-<lb/>
ing his weapon at me and nit'<lb/>
pointing my weapon at lum and<lb/>
asking it he'd put his down. I'd<lb/>
put mine down sikl IVI'uv<lb/>
nd he did thanGod<lb/>
During the standoff, Wither-<lb/>
Spoon asked to see his wife and<lb/>
child and made comments that<lb/>
only he knew where his child was,<lb/>
although this turned on t to bo false,<lb/>
DePuy said<lb/>
"All the officers responded<lb/>
very well to the scene. They did a<lb/>
wonderful job. h there had been<lb/>
hostages, we might have taken<lb/>
more direct action he said.<lb/>
According to police reports,<lb/>
the crime spree began earlier this<lb/>
See Gunman, page S<lb/>
<lb/>
It 11111111111<lb/>
II<lb/>
v t : "771<lb/>
Celeste Hof1mjr Phdo LaD<lb/>
Albert Lee Witherspoon Jr was arrested Monday after holding police<lb/>
at bay with a ntle tor almost an hour Witherspoon entered Whichard<lb/>
Building during lunch hour and demanded to talk with his estranged<lb/>
wife an employee in the undergraduate admicsmnc office<lb/>
 . s!f Hoffman -Pholo L3b<lb/>
James DePuy (right) director of ECU Public Safety negotiates with the gunman before the two had a<lb/>
standoff Shortly afterwords, the gunman dropped his weapon - a 30 caliber lever action rifle<lb/>
Students file complaint after<lb/>
city police arrest two cohorts<lb/>
David Valenzuala- Photo Lab<lb/>
Albert Witherspoon wearing his postal uniform peers out one of the<lb/>
front windows of Whichard The gunman ended the crisis after<lb/>
speaking with police for approximately 45 minutes<lb/>
By Matt King<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Earh Saturday morning two<lb/>
ECU students were arrested in the<lb/>
wake of a gathering that Green-<lb/>
ville police diffused m a manner<lb/>
that was questionable to many<lb/>
witnesses. I ater that dx an offi-<lb/>
cial complaint was filed with the<lb/>
police department by witnesses<lb/>
The complaint states the cir-<lb/>
cumstances o the gathering and<lb/>
listed specific actions by Green-<lb/>
ville police officers that were con-<lb/>
sidered to be outside the realm of<lb/>
police protocol in breaking up a<lb/>
party at 404 larvisSt.<lb/>
John Derek Cam and Elliot<lb/>
Paul Orr wen1 arrested and ini-<lb/>
tially charged with disorderly<lb/>
conduct Cam was released by the<lb/>
magistrate on duty, Mr Wooten<lb/>
because there was no probable<lb/>
cause for the arrest<lb/>
Orr was arrested for disor-<lb/>
derly conduct and then released<lb/>
on a $300 secured bond. Orr was<lb/>
not available for further comment<lb/>
According to witnesses there<lb/>
were roughly 20 people in the<lb/>
house and a few people were on<lb/>
the porch at approximately 3 a.m.<lb/>
when the police arrived<lb/>
"The music was so low that<lb/>
we weren't even having to talk<lb/>
over it sud kim I isman, who<lb/>
was at the scene.<lb/>
"The first time 1 saw or heard<lb/>
any police they were on the porch<lb/>
tell ing people to leave or they would<lb/>
be arrested for trespassing slid<lb/>
1 isman<lb/>
Other witnesses claimed that<lb/>
initially the twoofficersarnved and<lb/>
asked everyone to go into the house<lb/>
Soon after that everyone was being<lb/>
asked to leave by officers that had<lb/>
come into the house.<lb/>
"At one point 1 heard one offi-<lb/>
cer tell oneof the residents that it he<lb/>
didn't get the people out of his<lb/>
house he would be fined and ar-<lb/>
rested said Barb Thompson, wit-<lb/>
ness.<lb/>
The resident responded by<lb/>
saying that the people there were<lb/>
drunk and he couldn't get them to<lb/>
leave said Michelle Maclay.<lb/>
"The police came in the house<lb/>
and said the person that lives here<lb/>
said you all have to leave " said<lb/>
Mary Beth Rohrer, one of the<lb/>
complainants.<lb/>
When the people at the gather<lb/>
ing begin to disperse the police<lb/>
officcrsat the scene, "began yelling<lb/>
and snatching people around, if<lb/>
vou ask any questions the police<lb/>
were just rude said Thompson.<lb/>
Becky Hardee, ECU junior, sud<lb/>
she was sitting on the porch of the<lb/>
houte when ,n officer came up to<lb/>
her and snatched hercupoutof her<lb/>
hand<lb/>
" 1 his is mine now and it you<lb/>
don't leave I'll give you a ticket<lb/>
for trespassing said theotticer,<lb/>
according to 1 lardee.<lb/>
Rod brewer, who was also<lb/>
standing on the porch, was<lb/>
grabbed by a point- officer and<lb/>
yanked off the porch by his shirt<lb/>
according to one witness<lb/>
Maclay was walking down<lb/>
the driveway when officer 1 LD.<lb/>
Mini's approached her. flashing<lb/>
his light in her face. 1 le then, by<lb/>
Maclavs account, pushed heron<lb/>
the shoulder and slapped her cup<lb/>
down<lb/>
"It was the last thing I ex-<lb/>
pected him to do said Maclay.<lb/>
I lines is theotticer tor whom the<lb/>
complaint was tilled.<lb/>
"Girl. I already told you to<lb/>
leave ome is what an officer<lb/>
allegedly said to Rohrer as he<lb/>
pushed her backwards dow n the<lb/>
driveway.<lb/>
At this time Gain, who was<lb/>
standing nearby and being led<lb/>
off the property turned and ask<lb/>
the police officer not to push the<lb/>
girl. Officer Mines, who was<lb/>
behind i ain, along with two<lb/>
other officers grabbed and threw<lb/>
him onto the trunk of a car that<lb/>
was parked in the driveway.<lb/>
According to w itncsscs,Cain<lb/>
See Complaint, page 3<lb/>
Police succeed<lb/>
in diffusing<lb/>
potentially<lb/>
volatile crisis<lb/>
By Tim Hampton<lb/>
News Fditor<lb/>
Bringing Monday's crisis to a<lb/>
non-violent conclusion took a<lb/>
concentrated effort trom area law<lb/>
enforcement officers.<lb/>
Campus police, city police,<lb/>
sheriffs officers state high-<lb/>
way patrolmen converged on<lb/>
V hu hard Building in an effort to<lb/>
secure the ampus from a man<lb/>
brandishing a rifle Albert Lee<lb/>
to itht-rspoon lr , wearing a postal<lb/>
uniform, first threatened to kill<lb/>
himself and Liter requested that<lb/>
police shoot him<lb/>
rWo ampus officers were the<lb/>
tirst to me on the scene after<lb/>
personnel in Whichard telephoned<lb/>
to report that the man was de-<lb/>
manding to sve his wife. , - ?<lb/>
Cpt Michael to lordan and<lb/>
Sgt. fames Austin, ot ECU Public<lb/>
Safety, were the tirst officer to<lb/>
arrive at the scene.<lb/>
"I asked him to put the gun<lb/>
down and hedidn't respond Move<lb/>
or less, he said he was in the mili-<lb/>
tar and he knew how to use the<lb/>
weapon, lordan said.<lb/>
"My officers did a fantastic<lb/>
job Ihe two officers to tirst re-<lb/>
sponse did so within three to tive<lb/>
minutesof the can. They saved the<lb/>
day, lames DePuy, director of<lb/>
Public Safet). said.<lb/>
( ireem ille police, Pitt County<lb/>
sheriffs officers and the highway<lb/>
patrol arrived shortly afterwards.<lb/>
Campus police, with assistance<lb/>
trom the KOIC. cordoned off the<lb/>
area surroundingthecirclein tront<lb/>
of Wright Auditorium. Road-<lb/>
blocks on campus and Fifth Street<lb/>
werequK klv set up todivert spec-<lb/>
tators and motorist from the scene.<lb/>
 ith the threat of the Wither-<lb/>
spoon firing a high-powered. 3d-<lb/>
J0 caliber lever action rifle, the<lb/>
enforcement personnel tookextra<lb/>
precaution to protect those walk-<lb/>
ing on campus.<lb/>
to itherspoon pointed the gun<lb/>
toward the u (side ot the building<lb/>
several times during the 55-nruh-<lb/>
Mteordeal.Theareaaround Wright<lb/>
circle is usually heavily congested<lb/>
during the post-lu ich flow of<lb/>
students, faculty and staff.<lb/>
Campus police sequestered a<lb/>
specialSB1 tactical team trained in<lb/>
negotiations from Raleigh, but<lb/>
DePuy persuaded Witherspoon to<lb/>
See Crisis, page 5<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
commends ECU Public<lb/>
Safety.<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
Personals, For Sale,<lb/>
Help Wanted, For Rent<lb/>
and Services Rendered.<lb/>
State and Nation7<lb/>
Charlotte ranks eighth<lb/>
in nation's serious crime<lb/>
rate.<lb/>
Features9<lb/>
Local artists combine<lb/>
pussy cats and politics in<lb/>
new art exhibit.<lb/>
Sports11<lb/>
A look at last<lb/>
weekend's 24-23 loss to<lb/>
Virginia Tech.<lb/>
Lady Pirates' volleyball<lb/>
team increase record to<lb/>
4-0 over weekend.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0003"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
Sljc Cant iiiriilinijiii September 18,1990<lb/>
ECU Briefs<lb/>
Hallock succeeds Connell as vice<lb/>
chancellor for health sciences<lb/>
Pr AlastairM onnell has resigned as East Carolina University's<lb/>
vice chancellor for health sciences and will be succeeded In Pr<lb/>
lames A Hallock, dean of the E( I School of Medicine<lb/>
I heuniversitN announced that Hallock will continue to serve as<lb/>
dean of the School ol Medk ine and thai the dual appointment will<lb/>
be effective Get 1 thcda following the date of Conncll's resigna<lb/>
lion.<lb/>
Hallock's appointment . confirmed Friday b) Ihe Board of<lb/>
c lovcmors ol the Univerist) of North i arolina, meeting in Chapel<lb/>
Hill<lb/>
Pr Richard R Eakin P I chancellor, said Connell will become<lb/>
a part time special program officer tM E( I and will assist the<lb/>
chancellor with federal pro velopmenl through une, ll,gl<lb/>
Eakin said he was acceptingonnell s resignation with "consid-<lb/>
erable regret I le added that i onnell s isionol new directions for<lb/>
health care lias helped shape the future course ol the health sciences<lb/>
at ECU<lb/>
Connell v as appointed vice hanccllor tor health sciences in the<lb/>
summer ol last year succeeding Pr William E. 1 aupus who had<lb/>
retired from tin-dual post ol vice chancellor health sciences and<lb/>
dean ol the S hiol ol Medk ine<lb/>
1 he I lealth St ien es 1)i ision which I lallock will head includes<lb/>
the E i s. hool ol Medk ine and the Schools of Nursing and Allied<lb/>
I lealth Scient es<lb/>
Buck to become permanent director<lb/>
of materials management at ECU<lb/>
City resident receives alumni status<lb/>
  .  . . i  i . Inn. knrtn that pairi'd A<lb/>
 director of materials management at<lb/>
. has been selected permaneni<lb/>
Allan Scotl Mik k ;I<lb/>
EastCarolina Uni<lb/>
director<lb/>
Materials Manager ; ri f ECl s Division of Business At<lb/>
fairs, is the administrate e component which involves all procure<lb/>
menl responsibilities tor la l s main and medical campuses. These<lb/>
include central stores I ? moving services, fixed<lb/>
assets, insurance, contrai ting and motor fleet management, as well<lb/>
as pur hasin  ship ; iperations<lb/>
Annoui - ipi nt, ECl Vice Chancellor He si<lb/>
ness Affairs Hi hard I Mr Buck has demonstrated ihe<lb/>
technical knowledgi managerial talents and personal characteris-<lb/>
tics necessar) to su la In dor of Materials Management<lb/>
Buck was sel iearch from among 65 candi-<lb/>
dates, Brow n said<lb/>
ECU graduate student to perform<lb/>
piano recital on campus Sept. 21<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
1 he E I Alumni Association<lb/>
bestowed honorary alumni status<lb/>
on a Greenville native and resi-<lb/>
dent Saturday during the<lb/>
organization s annual Leadership<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
Inducted into theClassol 1990<lb/>
was Samuel C. Winchester r<lb/>
technical manager of DuPont's<lb/>
Dacron Staple Division tor east-<lb/>
ern orth Carolina.<lb/>
"Sam W uk hester is an excep-<lb/>
tionally good friend of the univer-<lb/>
sity said David B McDonald,<lb/>
ECU director ol mstitution.il Ad<lb/>
vancement. lor him to do as<lb/>
much tor us as he does saysa lot.<lb/>
An adjure t professor in the<lb/>
ECU School of Business, Win hes<lb/>
ter serves on the E I Foundation's<lb/>
Board ol I Hrectorsand established<lb/>
the university's only fully en-<lb/>
dowed Alumni Honors Scholar-<lb/>
ship in honor of his wife, Sylvia<lb/>
Weeks Winchester, an ECU gradu<lb/>
ate who is a guidance counselor at<lb/>
111 Conley High School.<lb/>
In addition. Winchester was<lb/>
instrumental in arranging a sub<lb/>
stantialeiftfromDuPonttoEC I 's<lb/>
1 le really saved usa bundle<lb/>
said McDonald, who oversaw the<lb/>
fund-raising drive. "We wouldn't<lb/>
have been able to afford the uni-<lb/>
forms without DuPont's help<lb/>
Winchester graduated from<lb/>
N.C. State University in 1961 with<lb/>
a BS degree in chemical engineer<lb/>
ing And holds a master's degree<lb/>
and PhD from Princeton Univer-<lb/>
sity A charter member ol the Inte-<lb/>
grated Manufacturing Systems<lb/>
Engineering Institute at NCSU,he<lb/>
serves on the Planters Hank Board<lb/>
of Directors in Greenville.<lb/>
Winchester was presented<lb/>
with a trained certificate desig<lb/>
nating him as an honorary mem<lb/>
ber of the ECU Alumni Associa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
His outstanding advocacy<lb/>
tor East Carolina has earned him<lb/>
all the rights, honors, privileges<lb/>
and responsibilities of member-<lb/>
ship said Donald Y. Leggett,<lb/>
alumni association executive sec<lb/>
retary.<lb/>
The leadership conference is<lb/>
a one day event sponsored annu-<lb/>
ally by the ECU Alumni Associa-<lb/>
tion to educate its key leaders on<lb/>
the universitv'sprogressand goals<lb/>
tor the future. If is attended by<lb/>
Alumni Association officers and<lb/>
outstanding organization, parti i<lb/>
pation and (reativity<lb/>
"()ne ol the goals the Pur<lb/>
hamOrange Chapter made last<lb/>
fall was to v in( hapterof tho'i eai<lb/>
honorsagain said S ott A ells,<lb/>
assistant dim tor of Alumni Rela<lb/>
lions at 1U. '1 laving accepted<lb/>
thatchallenge for themselves, they<lb/>
put forth twn c the energ) effort<lb/>
and enthusiasm to accomplish that<lb/>
goal In doing, so thev greatlv<lb/>
enhanced the image ol E I in<lb/>
their area<lb/>
Among the activities spon<lb/>
sored this past year by the hapter<lb/>
luncheon that paired ana guid<lb/>
ancecounselorswithE I Adi<lb/>
sions (fficials, numerous parties<lb/>
.nul a summer planning retreat a?<lb/>
1 ake iaston tor the board<lb/>
It was as ending ! " ? all<lb/>
that they accomj I ? ?'?<lb/>
said<lb/>
Heather Webb presidi i I<lb/>
.h i epted the award on beh i I I<lb/>
the i hapter She is emj ? ? I ?'<lb/>
Duke University in the payi<lb/>
department<lb/>
1 rank (irayiel, n gtonal man<lb/>
? for I (? Balfoui<lb/>
? ? ? the 1 Kirham I<lb/>
were the first annual E( I Baxter I I r,wasnam? l lunl<lb/>
Ridenhour Memorial.olt lour th<lb/>
nament with the Pirate lubwhk h<lb/>
raised $1500 tor their s holarship<lb/>
fund, a float in the EC I I lome<lb/>
coming Parade, hosting an 1 i( I<lb/>
1 oda rot option tor alumni and<lb/>
hn-h school seniors as well as a<lb/>
oik has put his hi irl i<lb/>
soul nit " hie ing a<lb/>
, i;??. ? . ,  Wells said I li<lb/>
? ? mth (i imii  ?: ?? "<lb/>
. hapter I I ; i<lb/>
raising projci f raisi I i<lb/>
Putt-Putt Golf S3 Games<lb/>
Hav? you play!<lb/>
lat?ly?<lb/>
Putt Putr'CoIS<lb/>
Bin (Ine (lame<lb/>
(let)ih I ree<lb/>
J<lb/>
fund raising drive to purchase<lb/>
new uniforms tor the Marching board members as well as profes<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
i KiPont donated all ol the<lb/>
fabric used tv make the uniforms<lb/>
through an arrangement with the<lb/>
fabric manufacturer DuPont<lb/>
manufactures one ol the fabric s<lb/>
mam fibers at its Kinston plant<lb/>
and tradod more than $10,000<lb/>
worth tor the amount of fabric<lb/>
needed<lb/>
Pianist Bn i ii<lb/>
present a ro it.il on cai<lb/>
( olsby is a gra lual<lb/>
O'Brien.<lb/>
1 ler program willinclud ich Sonata in G Minor for flute<lb/>
and ke board. Robert Schumann's Fantasv Pieces  Opus 73, the<lb/>
Francis Poulenc Sonata I ino,and"Sentimentale"from<lb/>
CvBollings's "Suite I r Fluti Piano<lb/>
Assisting will b i ? '? - indclarinetestCalvinBraxton<lb/>
Ms,oolsb i- ' r the Master of Music degree with<lb/>
a concentration in i graduated from ECU in 198P<lb/>
sional society and chapter repre<lb/>
sentatives.<lb/>
Also presented during the<lb/>
luncheon were the Alumni<lb/>
Association's top awards tor<lb/>
Chapter ol the Year and Volun-<lb/>
teer ol the Year.<lb/>
Ihe Durham. Orange Chap-<lb/>
ter was named C hapterof theN ear<lb/>
tor the second year in a row tor its<lb/>
mei Iv ol Salisbury Md , will<lb/>
l . 1 beginning at 7 p m Ms<lb/>
I and a student of Pr ohn<lb/>
Dangerous inmates face<lb/>
little chance of escape in<lb/>
N.C. correctional facilities<lb/>
1 ler parents an Ml<lb/>
ve . Salisbun, M I<lb/>
II M Miles ol 130 Hollaiu<lb/>
. I<lb/>
; i l ? w Bureau reports<lb/>
Crime Scene<lb/>
Officer warns suspicious subjects for<lb/>
public display of affection on campus<lb/>
September 12<lb/>
-  n offi ?' ked rei rt of stray animal at Tyler Resi-<lb/>
dence Hall; same left fylci vner of the dog was contacted,<lb/>
1659 Officers assist I tvj with fraternity members using<lb/>
a sling shot to prop at vehicles and property Presi-<lb/>
dent voluntary turned r d<lb/>
2059 Officers ked rv report of pizza delivery person<lb/>
before entering Scotl R he ollcge Hill campus area<lb/>
as s,  I for i iti subje ts.<lb/>
September I s<lb/>
0226 An officer si ipped a moped, northwest of the Mamie<lb/>
Jenkins Building, for n I md a stopsign violation. Male<lb/>
student charged with: 1) DW1 2)Stop sign violation 3) No safety<lb/>
helmet 4) False information given to officer 5) Obstruction and delay<lb/>
of officer. Officers assisted<lb/>
September 14<lb/>
1717 An officer was sent to the lobby ol Tyler Residence I lall<lb/>
to investigate the Ian en) i l a bike<lb/>
1819 An officer was dispatched to ones Residence Hall to<lb/>
investigate the report ol a black male knocking on students' dorm<lb/>
rooms. Ibis incident o im d earlier in the day and an officer<lb/>
handled the situation Officers provided back up; suspect was not<lb/>
found All appeared<lb/>
1857 All units were dispatched to the South Side of White<lb/>
Residence Hall wherea fight was reported to be happening with four<lb/>
to six individuals Hie fight was broken up, and all participants<lb/>
involved were banned from campus b) officers Participants were<lb/>
non-students<lb/>
2W An offu er responded to suspicious subjects at the Inter-<lb/>
national House Same given verbal warning for public display of af-<lb/>
fection<lb/>
September 1 <lb/>
(H10 An officer stopp da ehi Scat I ourth and Summit Streets<lb/>
Subject was given to (ity poli e who arrested tor P I.<lb/>
01H Officers resp, mdcd U i breaking and entering in progress<lb/>
Two students were given verbal warning due to intoxication and<lb/>
Luk oi positive ID from complainant.<lb/>
September lh<lb/>
0217 An officer dispersed non student male from Tvler Resi-<lb/>
dence Hall tor sleeping in lobby<lb/>
040f Officers responded to report ol males verbally harassing<lb/>
females at east door of Tyler Residence! lall and trying to gain access.<lb/>
Subjects gone on arrival<lb/>
1V24 An officer took a larceny report tor Tyler resident<lb/>
who had several items taken from her purse<lb/>
2241 An officer was south of loyner to investigate break-<lb/>
ing and entering ol motor vehi? le<lb/>
September 17<lb/>
011f An offk en becked an anonymous report of a stolen<lb/>
van on College Hill Missing vehicle located but had not been<lb/>
reported stolen Owner notified and case turned over to city police.<lb/>
( riatcSCMM islak.n In.m official It U I'ublu. Safety Iors.<lb/>
KINSTON(AP) Duringthe<lb/>
fiscal year from uly I, 1989 to<lb/>
(une JO 1990, J inmates escaped<lb/>
from correctional facilities in<lb/>
Northarolina<lb/>
The thought of nearly 400<lb/>
inmates on the loose could be ter<lb/>
rifying, but the st.ite Department<lb/>
of Correction says that 99 pen ent<lb/>
ol the escapees were low risk<lb/>
inmates who posed little thi eat to<lb/>
citizens.<lb/>
Five ol the esi apes that took<lb/>
place during fiscal 1989-90 were<lb/>
from medium or Jose custody<lb/>
facilities No maximum security<lb/>
inmates escaped in North Caro-<lb/>
lina during fiscal 1989 90<lb/>
State officials say that the sta-<lb/>
tistics prove their point Crimi-<lb/>
nals who are really dangerous<lb/>
stand little chance of escaping from<lb/>
prison in North Carolina.<lb/>
"As these numbers clearly<lb/>
demonstrate, the percept ion (if the<lb/>
problem is far greater than the<lb/>
reality said David (.uth, special<lb/>
assistant to the secretary of the<lb/>
Department ol t Correction<lb/>
C.uth savs the normal escape<lb/>
doesn't fit the popular image of a<lb/>
desperate jailbreak All but one<lb/>
percent of these inmates did little<lb/>
more than simple walk a way from<lb/>
a job site.<lb/>
"Most (minimumcustot.lv)in-<lb/>
mates are verv close to release<lb/>
They are classified as minimum<lb/>
custody because thev are seen as<lb/>
nearing release and not being a<lb/>
threat to the community said<lb/>
David Chester, district manager<lb/>
in the Eastern Region, which is<lb/>
basivl in Greenville.<lb/>
"A good number of them are<lb/>
misdemeanor sentences. Many go<lb/>
out into the community on a daily<lb/>
basis on work release, home<lb/>
leaves study release, emergency<lb/>
leavehe said<lb/>
People who are in minimum<lb/>
Custody bv definition are within<lb/>
five years of release or parole, says<lb/>
Guth.They've had a good enough<lb/>
prison record and an evaluation<lb/>
from the staff that they are consid-<lb/>
ered low-risk to public safety.<lb/>
C.uth savs he believes correc-<lb/>
J<lb/>
tional facilities are a positive addi-<lb/>
tion to any community.<lb/>
"History has shown time and<lb/>
time again that prisons are good<lb/>
neighbors. Certainly we bring<lb/>
inmates to a community. But we<lb/>
also bring our people (employees)<lb/>
to that community he said.<lb/>
"They (prison employees)<lb/>
have kids. They participate in the<lb/>
community. All in all, they're good<lb/>
neighbors.<lb/>
Ihe prisoners should be<lb/>
looked upon as community asset.<lb/>
Guth s.ns, citing work done b<lb/>
inmates in helping with cleanups<lb/>
and emergence aid following the<lb/>
tornados that struck eastern North<lb/>
Carolina in 1984, and duringother<lb/>
disasters.<lb/>
The Suntana<lb/>
5 Visit Plan1 5<lb/>
10 Visit Plan $25<lb/>
15 Visit Plan $30<lb/>
Wolfe Tanning System<lb/>
756-9180<lb/>
Coupon Good Throush 10 31 90<lb/>
3212 South Memorial Drive<lb/>
Visit Captain Williams in tin bh of thi Wright Hliii; from<lb/>
10:00am to 2:00pm. 19-20 Sip Wy or call 1-800-722-6715<lb/>
Buyer's Guide<lb/>
Bex,us7:2-444()<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center757-0003<lb/>
Chico's757-1666<lb/>
Fosdkk's7562011<lb/>
George's Gule Station757-21 3;<lb/>
ITG355-5075<lb/>
Jirrv Lube756-0353<lb/>
Putt Putt Golf758-1 820<lb/>
Suntana756-9180<lb/>
UBE758-2616<lb/>
oHlc SaBt Carolinian<lb/>
Director of Advertising<lb/>
Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Ken Earley Julie Roscoe<lb/>
John Semclsberger Steve VValser<lb/>
Nellie Van Den Dungen<lb/>
Advertising Production Manager<lb/>
Warren Kessler (GraphU Artist<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
National $6.00<lb/>
Local Open Rate $5.00<lb/>
fer column inch<lb/>
Frequency Contract<lb/>
Dicounts Available<lb/>
Business Hours<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
7:30 - 5:30<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0004"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
&amp;ht ?aat (Larulininn September 18.1990 3<lb/>
I<lb/>
Charleston still suffers from Hurricane Hugo, one year later<lb/>
CHARLESTON, S. (AP)<lb/>
One year after Hurricane Hugo<lb/>
smashed ashore packing 135 mph<lb/>
winds,Charleston still bearsscarsol<lb/>
the most destructive hurricane to<lb/>
ever hit the IS mainland<lb/>
Shingles an- missing from the<lb/>
tattered nx'totSt Michael'sEpisco<lb/>
pal (, "him h. theoldestin thecity rhe<lb/>
spin- at tho top ot tin- bell tower has<lb/>
vet to be replaced<lb/>
The ne.irK v. harleston bunt)<lb/>
c ourthouse stands empty its roof<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
to focus on<lb/>
history<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Remembering Our Past<lb/>
Preserving Our Future Restora-<lb/>
tion and Preservation in an<lb/>
Agrarian Setting' isthetopicot an<lb/>
Oct. 12-13 conference sponsored<lb/>
hv the ECU Division ofontinu-<lb/>
ing Education and se oral 1 lalifax<lb/>
county agencies.<lb/>
Conference sessions .ire<lb/>
scheduled tor tho 1 listoric 1 lalifax<lb/>
Visitor (. enter<lb/>
I ho week nd i" ? 'nts in lud<lb/>
tours of antebellum b"i' lings in<lb/>
the ! listoi i I lalifax area and<lb/>
elsewhere in tho Roanoke river<lb/>
Valle and lectures b) speaalists<lb/>
on 18th century architecture, the<lb/>
social history of the South, agri<lb/>
i ultural pra h o- ol the past and<lb/>
restorahon of old dwellings tor<lb/>
modern In ing<lb/>
 highlight of the conference<lb/>
is a Fridav evening progressive<lb/>
dinner .in! home tour in the<lb/>
Whitakers Chapel Community<lb/>
with stops at six restored homes<lb/>
dating from about 1770 to 1880<lb/>
Strawberry Hill, 1rtlo lawn<lb/>
Delphi, ()aks and ellar Planta<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Speakers and their topics are:<lb/>
Architecture of the Area<lb/>
Peter Sandbeck, eastern regional<lb/>
supervisor tor the Division<lb/>
of Art hues arid History<lb/>
"Social 1 ife in the Old South<lb/>
Pr ohn David Smith of the <lb/>
tato Iniversity history faculty,<lb/>
1 ho Art of Restoration<lb/>
Dean Ruedrich of the Historic<lb/>
Preservation Foundation of N.<lb/>
! ploring the Possibilities<lb/>
Bod &amp; Breakfast Arch B.<lb/>
Edwards owner-operator of I he<lb/>
Lords Proprietors Inn. Edenton,<lb/>
New Use, New Life, A Sec-<lb/>
ondhance Ross Steckley,<lb/>
president of an Ontario, Canada,<lb/>
building rehabilitation firm,<lb/>
'Facts of Nature: Biological<lb/>
Thought and Agri ulture Pra ti e<lb/>
in the 1 Mhentury I r.leorge<lb/>
Tern Sharrer, curator of agricul-<lb/>
tureat the Smithsonian Institution,<lb/>
Washington D.(<lb/>
rheconfereni ealso f? aturesa<lb/>
slide film presentation, tours ol<lb/>
Historic Halifax and the sur<lb/>
? uncling countryside and an<lb/>
ea; tern North Carolina pig pi kin<lb/>
Historic Halifax is located in<lb/>
the fertile Roanoke river Valley<lb/>
which was first settled in 1722<lb/>
The town prospered during the<lb/>
18th century as the agrarian<lb/>
economy produced landscaped<lb/>
estates and plantations I ho most<lb/>
well-known occurrence during the<lb/>
late colonial period was the April<lb/>
1?, 1776, ratification ol tho! lalifax<lb/>
Resolves, making North (Carolina<lb/>
the first state to claim indepen<lb/>
dence from Ireal Britain<lb/>
Currently, many of the town<lb/>
and country houses once inhabited<lb/>
bv the local gentry are still stand-<lb/>
ing, some restored asmuseumsor<lb/>
residences, while others are in the<lb/>
process ot restoration Of par-<lb/>
ticular interest architecturally is<lb/>
( ,lon Burnev. a plantation homo<lb/>
built in the highly decorative<lb/>
Federal Tripartite style found only<lb/>
in northeastern Northarolina<lb/>
and Tidewater Virginia<lb/>
A block ot motel rooms has<lb/>
been reserved tor the conference<lb/>
participants at the Hampton Inn<lb/>
ami the Holiday Inn in Roanoke<lb/>
Rapids Conference fee is pet<lb/>
person, which includes lectures,<lb/>
materials, refreshments, tours and<lb/>
some meals Teacher renewal<lb/>
credits are available<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
conference is available from the<lb/>
ECU Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education, Greenville N.C27KS8;<lb/>
phone (919) 757-6143.<lb/>
destroyed. Masking tape still lines<lb/>
its windows in preparation for the<lb/>
Storm which thundered aslioreavear<lb/>
ago this week.<lb/>
But across Meeting Street, c itv<lb/>
1 lall bustles with the business of<lb/>
government, ust as it did that<lb/>
lightless night last Sept 1 when<lb/>
I lugo crashed into Southarolina<lb/>
Hugo's wrath claimed 29 lives<lb/>
on the PS mainland and was felt<lb/>
across hundnis of miles from fish-<lb/>
ing communities on the South Caro-<lb/>
lina coast to mill towns nestled in the<lb/>
North Carolina mountains<lb/>
1 he storm caused an estimated<lb/>
$5.9 billion damage. A vear later, the<lb/>
recovery both physical and emo-<lb/>
tional continues.<lb/>
But for a relatively small, poor<lb/>
state, a iot has Ixvn done in the past<lb/>
12 months to put things Kick in or-<lb/>
der.<lb/>
"It Sa miracle we7 re back where<lb/>
we are given the enormitv of the<lb/>
storm that hit us and the tact that<lb/>
over halt our state was declared a<lb/>
disasterama(iov.CarroBCampbel<lb/>
slid<lb/>
1 le notes the beachos have been<lb/>
mpainsa1 and the tounsm industry<lb/>
has rebounded Millions of dollars<lb/>
have Ixvn spent helping residents<lb/>
put their lives back in order<lb/>
rhe histonc distnet, the heart ot<lb/>
( harleston's tourist economy, was<lb/>
cleaned in quick order. Indeed, visi-<lb/>
tors would have trouble telling<lb/>
C harleston weathered such a severe<lb/>
storm<lb/>
"The rvovctv has Ixvn phe<lb/>
imenalsaid MavorostphP Rilev<lb/>
r "It isalnxst a miracle Irsatribute<lb/>
to tho citizens of the community,<lb/>
rhey didn't ctv or whine or get an-<lb/>
gry. PvorvrxxK' got to work and<lb/>
pi U hod in<lb/>
Iunng the past vear, the city<lb/>
opened a waterfront park and a now<lb/>
visitor's center is neanng comple<lb/>
tion<lb/>
"The city has not onlv recov-<lb/>
ered, this was not a soar we treaded<lb/>
wafer. Riley -<lb/>
rhe recovery among the rural<lb/>
p?. irhastakenk 'ivor Andthesound<lb/>
ot hammers and the buzz of power<lb/>
saws can still be heard on the hard-<lb/>
hit barrier islandsn rtheast ?( town<lb/>
Following Hugo, hundreds of<lb/>
tons of suppbe i I ibout $3.7 mil-<lb/>
lion in donations flo led into<lb/>
. harleston Last month, the final $1<lb/>
million was distributed to relief<lb/>
aeencies<lb/>
f7<lb/>
Happy Congratulations<lb/>
On Your Merry Christmas ?<lb/>
Birthday wedding.<lb/>
<lb/>
?i<lb/>
No matter what the occasion, and even it there is none.<lb/>
University Book Exchange has a card to express your senti-<lb/>
ments. Great cards by Sandra Boynton, Gary Larson, John-<lb/>
Richard Allen-the folks Recycled Paper products and<lb/>
American Greetings love to love. And many more.<lb/>
We don't stop at cards. UBE has a great line ot athletic<lb/>
wear at great prices, including Russell Athletic and<lb/>
Champion. Sweatsuits, t-shirts, shorts, jackets-with or<lb/>
without ECU insignia or your Greek letters.<lb/>
Speaking of ECU memorabilia, UBE lias the worlds<lb/>
largest selection. 1 )ecals, mugs, clocks, pillows, kevchains,<lb/>
music boxes-you name it, we can Pirate it.<lb/>
(With permission, ot course!)<lb/>
Sure, UBE is the best source for school supplies. We're<lb/>
also a good source for paper party supplies, photo albums, and<lb/>
gift items. Were not just for students anymore.<lb/>
While you're here you should visit our sister<lb/>
stores. Art &amp; Graphics and University Frame<lb/>
shop. A full line of supplies for the serious<lb/>
artist, and a frame shop and print gallery.<lb/>
All under one roof. All tor you.<lb/>
?<lb/>
4t p<lb/>
.?<lb/>
<lb/>
Come shop UBE, and have a good day<lb/>
don't be sorry gee we'll miss you it<lb/>
don't.<lb/>
f<lb/>
0j<lb/>
516 South Cotanche Street ? Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
All for you.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0005"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
?tie i?uzt (Earaliman<lb/>
Joseph L. Jenkins Jr General Manager<lb/>
Michael G. Martin, Managing Editor<lb/>
Tim Hampton, News Editor<lb/>
Michael Albuquerque, Asst News Editor<lb/>
Paula GlGEE, State and Nation Editor<lb/>
Matt King, Features Editor<lb/>
Deanna Nevgloski, Asst. Features Editor<lb/>
Doug Morris, Sports Editor<lb/>
EARLE M. McAUl EY, Assi Sports Editor<lb/>
Carrie Armstrong, Special Sections Editor<lb/>
I eCi aik I arper, Copy Editor<lb/>
Amy Edwards, Copy Editor<lb/>
MlCHAtT. LANG, Editorial Production Manager Toby BaRBOUR, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Jeff Parker, Staff Illustrator Stuart Rosner, Systems Manager<lb/>
Chris Norman, Darkroom Technician Phong Luong, Business Manager<lb/>
MARGIE CSHEA, Classified Ads Technician DEBORAH DaNIH S, Secretary<lb/>
The East Carolinian has served the East Carolina campus community since 1925, emphasizing information thai directly<lb/>
affects ECI' students. During the ECU school year. The East Carolinian publishes twice a week w uh a circulation ot 12,000<lb/>
 he Easll 'evolution reserves the right to refuse or discontinue any advertisements thai discriminate on the basis ot age. sex.<lb/>
creed or national origin. The masthead editorial in each edition does not necessarily represent the views ol one individual,<lb/>
hut. rather, is a majority opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points ot view<lb/>
letters should he limited to 250 words or less. For purposes of decency and brevity. The East I arolinian reserves the right<lb/>
to edit letters for publication. Letters should be addressed to The Editor. The East Carolinian. Publications Bldg ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C . 27834; or call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Tuesday, September 18, 1990<lb/>
Public Safety proves professionalism<lb/>
lor many years now, ECU students<lb/>
have ridiculed Public Safety officials and<lb/>
officers. From accusing these crime fighters<lb/>
of "frequently stopping (living) at the<lb/>
Krispy Creme to the dubbing them "rent-<lb/>
a-cops students (and some faculty) have<lb/>
made their job somewhat difficult.<lb/>
I lowever, it is time to credit Public<lb/>
Safety for something everyone has<lb/>
seemed to have forgotten they do ?<lb/>
protect the students, administrators,<lb/>
faculty and staff oi ECU.<lb/>
Early Monday afternoon, a gun-<lb/>
man occupied Whichard Building that<lb/>
virtually brought the center of campus to<lb/>
a standstill. After an intense confrontation<lb/>
with the gunman, ECU Director of Public<lb/>
Safety fames DePuy persuaded the armed<lb/>
man to drop his weapon without any<lb/>
This is not an everyday practice by<lb/>
the officers and officials of Public Safety.<lb/>
DePuy put his life on the line for the<lb/>
safety and protection oi the university's<lb/>
employees and students.<lb/>
<lb/>
Credit also needs to be awarded to<lb/>
the quick response and cooperation of<lb/>
other law enforcement agencies that as-<lb/>
sisted Public Safety. The Greenville Po-<lb/>
lice Department, Highway Patrol and the<lb/>
State Bureau oi Investigation were all<lb/>
beneficial in the capture oi the gunman<lb/>
However, the action oi some by-<lb/>
standers wasquitedisturbing. Manvot these<lb/>
bystanders (specifically students) did not<lb/>
understand the seriousness ot the situation.<lb/>
When officers warned that there was a<lb/>
gunman, students acted as if they could not<lb/>
have been a target.<lb/>
Some oi these students, when asking<lb/>
about the situation as they arrived at the<lb/>
scene, also sounded "disappointed" that<lb/>
there had been no shooting. Not only is this<lb/>
immature, but pathetically mane.<lb/>
The events that transpired in<lb/>
Whichard vesterdav wer real, not some-<lb/>
thing off oi the television. People could have<lb/>
really been killed But thanks to DePuy and<lb/>
thecampus police, thegunman was captured<lb/>
and no one was injured.<lb/>
Letter to the Editor<lb/>
American<lb/>
lives should<lb/>
not be risked<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Afterreading Tuesday's, Sept.<lb/>
11, letter to the editor, "The US<lb/>
Must Have a Role in the Middle<lb/>
East I was somewhat disturbed<lb/>
but not surprised as most people<lb/>
support our massive deployment<lb/>
in the Gulf.<lb/>
I do not think that the live of<lb/>
Americans should be risked to<lb/>
guarantee oil shipments for Japan<lb/>
and Europe. Further, I really do not<lb/>
understand why Bush is so very<lb/>
eonoemed about budget cuts and<lb/>
then spends about $47 million per<lb/>
day on his operation. We obvi-<lb/>
ously cannot a f ford to keep this u p,<lb/>
especially if combat is to occur,<lb/>
which would escalate the cost.<lb/>
In addition to the President's<lb/>
inhumane troop deployment,<lb/>
should there be a conflict, I'm not<lb/>
so sure the US is handling this<lb/>
operation in its best interest. On<lb/>
Aug. 12, the New York Times<lb/>
quoted: "The Iraqi crisis has been<lb/>
a sobering experienceIt has<lb/>
demonstrated the limits of Euro-<lb/>
pean power, and it has shown<lb/>
that only the United States can<lb/>
play the rolcof global policeman<lb/>
I cannot find anywhere in the U.S.<lb/>
Constitution where such a role as<lb/>
being "global policeman" is au-<lb/>
thorized.<lb/>
While the massive Middle<lb/>
East deployment was taking place,<lb/>
U.S. Marines went into Libena to<lb/>
rescue American citizens threat-<lb/>
ened by one of the warnng fac-<lb/>
tions. They landed, accomplished<lb/>
their mission and left. This is the<lb/>
correct usage of our military just<lb/>
as the defense of U.S. territory is,<lb/>
and not to stop the aggression of<lb/>
some military dictator in the<lb/>
Middle East.<lb/>
Representative Patricia<lb/>
Schroeder (lCo) supports Presi-<lb/>
dent Bush'sactionbecauseof "oil<lb/>
But she wishes "we had gone in<lb/>
under a United Nations flag<lb/>
Former State Department of-<lb/>
ncialGeorgeW.Ball claimsIf sa<lb/>
United Nabonsaction and urges<lb/>
the President to defend himself by<lb/>
keeping that fact "firmly in the fore-<lb/>
front"<lb/>
Are we or are we not ruled by<lb/>
the UV? It attacked, won't our<lb/>
men's response be dictated by the<lb/>
world body. I know that I sure<lb/>
wouldn't want to be' righting over<lb/>
there, if nations other than the U.S.<lb/>
through the U.N. weredictating the<lb/>
way our military should fight.<lb/>
I think that this crisis or any<lb/>
other one should be formula ted and<lb/>
earned out in the intea'sts of a sov-<lb/>
ereign United Suites of America<lb/>
without anv requirement tor ap-<lb/>
proval by the United Nations,<lb/>
NATO, any other multinational<lb/>
group, or any other nation.<lb/>
Why should we be willing to<lb/>
fight for someone else's interests'<lb/>
and possibly the loss of thousands<lb/>
of American men and women,<lb/>
should there be a conflict? I don't<lb/>
see any other nation deploying a<lb/>
gigantic buildup of military hard-<lb/>
ware or thousands of soldiers.<lb/>
Steve Rowley<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
ttD T IxfT CtR 'Til<lb/>
4<lb/>
;y<lb/>
The youth of today lack strong morals<lb/>
By Darek McCullers<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
This year, 1 have the pleasure<lb/>
ot being a Resident Advisor. One<lb/>
night .is 1 looked out ot my win-<lb/>
dow, I saw some students (who<lb/>
were most likely underage) car-<lb/>
rying .i pack of beer into the resi-<lb/>
dence hall.<lb/>
1 thought about the fact that<lb/>
all ot the RA's and policemen in<lb/>
the world could stop such acts of<lb/>
folly. Ihen ! pondered the qucs<lb/>
lions of what purpose could it<lb/>
serve. At that time, my mind u ent<lb/>
back to a scripture. Exodus 14 4<lb/>
reads. And 1 w ill harden Pha-<lb/>
raohs heart, that he shall follow<lb/>
alter them: and 1 will be honoured<lb/>
upon Pharaoh, and upon all his<lb/>
host; that the Egyptians may know<lb/>
that 1 am the Lord. And they did<lb/>
so<lb/>
1 he 1990s is a time that looks<lb/>
particularly turbulent tor the up-<lb/>
coming youth Fhev are drinking<lb/>
alcohol before the legal age usu-<lb/>
ally early in their teens 1 hey are<lb/>
engaging in premarital sex years<lb/>
. before the age of marriage. I inally,<lb/>
thev exhibit a central attitude of<lb/>
selfishness and lavishnessand lack<lb/>
moral fortitude: thev always give<lb/>
in to peer pressure.<lb/>
As one who matured and<lb/>
dedicated his life to Cod at an<lb/>
earh age, I've always wondered<lb/>
why youth on the whole cannot<lb/>
Stand against the pressure ot their<lb/>
peers. I've always wondered why<lb/>
things are turning out the way<lb/>
they are I he scripture thai 1<lb/>
quoted provides the answer<lb/>
( ,cd has intentionally hard<lb/>
cned their hearts and caused them<lb/>
todo these things so that the world<lb/>
will know that he is I lust as<lb/>
Pharaoh pursued what he con-<lb/>
sidered his worldly possession, the<lb/>
children ot today pursue the<lb/>
jectS Ol prosperity, materialism.<lb/>
and success One will be popular<lb/>
it thev follow thecrowd and party<lb/>
and drink, instead ot studying<lb/>
C )ne w ill be prosperous when they<lb/>
have a BMW or Mercedes Ben<lb/>
One who is a lady-killer, having<lb/>
defiled himself by sleeping with<lb/>
the women ol his choice, is con-<lb/>
sidered Successful. It seems as it<lb/>
today's youth are chasing these<lb/>
things straight into perdition<lb/>
Pharaoh took six hundred<lb/>
chariots and chased the childn i<lb/>
it Israel. The Israelites cross I<lb/>
the Red Sea, but Pharaoh's army<lb/>
was drowned, rhis episode had a<lb/>
dual effect. Pharaoh saw this<lb/>
mirac leand said, "Hisg d is lod<lb/>
Sometimes the worst ol sin<lb/>
ners will become the best of saints<lb/>
The peer pushers lot evil thine<lb/>
of today may bethepreac hersand<lb/>
ministersof tomorrow Secondly<lb/>
we read in Exodus 14:31 nd<lb/>
Israel saw that great work<lb/>
the I ord did upon the Egyptians<lb/>
and the people feared the I ? i<lb/>
and believed the 1 ord<lb/>
1 hose of us who mike it<lb/>
through these times of moral a<lb/>
spiritual decay; those of us vvl<lb/>
make it through our acts of f<lb/>
withourhves.health.and strer I<lb/>
will surely have faith in.ed<lb/>
essi I this storv is that some-<lb/>
times! iodallowsthingstohappi n<lb/>
or a w i kid generations imctimes<lb/>
he allows us to be given to folly so<lb/>
that werecognize Hismajesty i<lb/>
power<lb/>
it we look at the current<lb/>
troubles in this perspective, we<lb/>
will see a miracle generation and<lb/>
not a troubled generation<lb/>
The U.S. celebrates Constitution Week 1990<lb/>
In commemt rati n i I the draft<lb/>
ing signing, ratifying and perfet ting<lb/>
? the Constitute n, former Chief<lb/>
lusHceWarrenE.Burger(196S 1986)<lb/>
wrote :?:? ' ring article on the<lb/>
evolution of the udiciary Brance.<lb/>
When the founding fathers<lb/>
wrote the Constitution during the<lb/>
summer oi 1787, i rearing the struc-<lb/>
ture of a "national judiciary was<lb/>
ease thev left it up to The First<lb/>
Congress. In a summer ot dispute<lb/>
and compromise, this compromise<lb/>
by procrastinationdidnothingmorc<lb/>
than turn over to The Eirst Congress<lb/>
the potentially volatile problem of<lb/>
establishing a federal judiciary.<lb/>
Article 111 of the Constitution<lb/>
merely provided for a "supreme<lb/>
Court, and such interior Courts as<lb/>
the congress may from time to time<lb/>
ordain and establish as well as es-<lb/>
tablishing tenure (during good be-<lb/>
havior) and pay (cannot be dimin-<lb/>
ished while in office) for Supreme<lb/>
Court Justices.<lb/>
The First Congress completed<lb/>
action on the nation's first judicial<lb/>
legislation on Sept. 21. and on Sept.<lb/>
24, 1789, President George Wash-<lb/>
ington signed the judiciary Act of<lb/>
1789, creating the office of Attorney<lb/>
General, 13 federal districts and 13<lb/>
district judgeships and a means to<lb/>
review their decisions. I he judi-<lb/>
ciary Act put the I Vtrut Courts at<lb/>
the base of the pyramid. I he next<lb/>
level was the Federal Circuita mrts<lb/>
and the apex was theSupremeCourt.<lb/>
TositonthefirstSupremeC ourt,<lb/>
President George Washington<lb/>
sought men he had worked with in<lb/>
the past and who shared his philoso-<lb/>
phy of a strong central government<lb/>
nmvotriisnominees.IohnRutWlge<lb/>
ofS.C, James WilsonoJ PaandJohn<lb/>
Blair of Va . served in the Constitu-<lb/>
tional Convention and had signed<lb/>
the document. William Cashing of<lb/>
Mass and lames Iredell of NX had<lb/>
carried the Federalist banner in their<lb/>
state rautving conventions<lb/>
lor the hrstChief usticeof the<lb/>
U.S Washington again turned to a<lb/>
staunch Federalist, lohn ay of V i<lb/>
av was one of the leaders in the<lb/>
state sratiticationbattle tomingwith<lb/>
lames Madison and Alexander<lb/>
Hamilton to author 77k Federalist<lb/>
PirpeTs in support of ratifying the<lb/>
Constitution. Thefirst session of the<lb/>
Supreme Court was scheduled to<lb/>
meet in New York Otv on Feb. 1,<lb/>
1790, but only Chief justice lav and<lb/>
Associate justice lames Wilson had<lb/>
taken the judicial Oath. The next<lb/>
.l. lohn Rutledge and John Blair<lb/>
Ux-k their oaths, and the Court had<lb/>
anofficialquorumand convened for<lb/>
the first time.<lb/>
Forthefirstdecade,thcSupreme<lb/>
Courtdecided few cases. Tne justices<lb/>
spent the majority of their time<lb/>
"riding thecircnit serving the thnv<lb/>
circuits created by the ludibary Act<lb/>
of 1789<lb/>
In the beginning, the Court was<lb/>
not held in high esteem, lohn<lb/>
I farm son ot Man, land refused Presi-<lb/>
dent Washington's nomination to<lb/>
he an Associate ustice to Like the<lb/>
positionofChancellorof Md. It was<lb/>
John Marshall, the fourth Chief jus-<lb/>
tjceof the I s . who set IheC ourt on<lb/>
the path that would eventually gain<lb/>
for it a co-equal status with the Leg<lb/>
islahveand Executive branches.<lb/>
Although Marshall had previ-<lb/>
ously declined an appointment to<lb/>
the Court, he did accept appoint-<lb/>
ment asChief Iusticein 18( i and the<lb/>
year 1801 began a great epcx h in the<lb/>
history of thisCourt and thecountry<lb/>
In his U years as the nation s<lb/>
chief jurist Marshall took part in<lb/>
over 1,000 Court decisions, writing<lb/>
sdS opinions himself. Ihe leader<lb/>
ship and the decisions of Chief lus<lb/>
tier Marshall have been praised Md<lb/>
discussed tor almost 200 years H<lb/>
rhetime Marshall had served 34 years<lb/>
on the Court, in ls4 the Court and<lb/>
the judiciary were firmly established<lb/>
and Marshall was to he known as<lb/>
the "i Ireat Chief justice<lb/>
Amd Noiv . . . IHE IEAaH lor IB If II POLITICAL<lb/>
AD CAHPAION noes to SENATOR JESSE HELMS<lb/>
For the<lb/>
insightful<lb/>
The<lb/>
spellbinding<lb/>
find the most frank,<lb/>
releuant, and gripping<lb/>
Helms commercial ot all . . .<lb/>
z<lb/>
?<lb/>
HE6oTTHBN<lb/>
CAM-UNA VAl-V<lb/>
.Jesse Ewruxi<lb/>
ABORTION ANO I<lb/>
MGHTWTBEHBKB<lb/>
-TO DAY try HAP HA,<lb/>
SUCH ThmS SACK 7?&amp;l.(<lb/>
EN<lb/>
'IVE PALL<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0006"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
5l)c East (Earoltntan September 181990 5<lb/>
Complaints<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
was handcuffed and put into a<lb/>
patrol i,u without resisting in<lb/>
any vv ay tter sitting in the back<lb/>
o! the patrol i,ir lor about ten<lb/>
minutes he was taken to the<lb/>
magistrate's office<lb/>
tter that about eight o! us<lb/>
went down to the magistrate"s<lb/>
office to bail ohnnj out it we had<lb/>
to, said I lardee.<lb/>
I he group wasallow ed to stay<lb/>
in the office tor roughh five min-<lb/>
utes before the magistrate asked<lb/>
them to leave said Ma la)<lb/>
I he group I except tor<lb/>
ohnnv) went outside were we<lb/>
w aited for about 1 5 minutes, w hen<lb/>
the magistrate came outside and<lb/>
ask us what all this was about<lb/>
said I hompson<lb/>
Members ol the group stated<lb/>
that Brewer talked to the magis-<lb/>
trate for about five minutes before<lb/>
he went bac k inside the building.<lb/>
In less than ten minutes Cain<lb/>
was released w ithout a court date,<lb/>
without a bond and without a<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
Me was released because the<lb/>
magistratehad ruled that therewas<lb/>
not probable cause to charge him<lb/>
When the magistrate was<lb/>
askedbv witnesses weream was<lb/>
he saidWe let him co with no<lb/>
m<lb/>
s<lb/>
Celeste Hottman ECU Photo Lib<lb/>
?.?-? Rc enl itt.pn fentofTheta Chi fraternity, accepts a service<lb/>
rd e S ?. . enfietd. Coordinator ot the Pitt County<lb/>
Special Olympk Rc enblatt and the Theta Chi s support the<lb/>
Spe i  -s their philanthropy <lb/>
fine and he doesn't have to go to<lb/>
court. "For all practical purposes<lb/>
he was im arrested said Mr<lb/>
Woolen.<lb/>
The complaint that was filed<lb/>
noted that Cane's hands, "looked<lb/>
hurt and were bleeding<lb/>
Saturday at 9 a.m. five ol the<lb/>
witnesses filed the complaint with<lb/>
the police department, l.t. I. E.<lb/>
Ennis was present while the com-<lb/>
plaint was being filed.<lb/>
I he complainants will be<lb/>
contacted bv C hiet M. Tesmond<lb/>
and informed ot the status ot the<lb/>
complaint.<lb/>
Durham jails<lb/>
begin to<lb/>
overcrowd<lb/>
Dl RHAM (AP) Durham<lb/>
Sherift Roland I eary has made an<lb/>
emergency plea to the county's<lb/>
judges, askitu; them in a letter not<lb/>
to sentem e any more people to jail<lb/>
be ause ot inmate oven rowding.<lb/>
but judges en the District<lb/>
court last week said that while<lb/>
the) s mpathize with the<lb/>
law man splight, thevstillaredut<lb/>
uind to send people u jail in<lb/>
appropriate cases.<lb/>
"My position is that the citi-<lb/>
zens ele ted me to administer us-<lb/>
hce udgeC arolyn lohnsonsaid.<lb/>
I hey elected trie county commis-<lb/>
sioners to take care ot the jail and<lb/>
other sueh problems<lb/>
I earv was on vacation and<lb/>
could not bereac hed tor comment.<lb/>
His letter last month about<lb/>
overcrowding was Addressod to<lb/>
Senior Resident Superior Court<lb/>
fudge Anthony Brannon, who<lb/>
passed it 'ii without comment to<lb/>
other judges<lb/>
I he mam I Hirham County jail,<lb/>
on the top floor ot the courthouse,<lb/>
has ,i l apacity ot 164 inmates, but<lb/>
routinelv houses, more than 2lHV<lb/>
gBwLt ?- ?'??-ay<lb/>
4<lb/>
?: <lb/>
mr<lb/>
Celeste Hotlmjn Photo Lab<lb/>
This house at 404 Jarvis St was the scene ot two arrests mad" early Saturday morning Witnesses state<lb/>
the Greenville police were wrong in their handling of the ordeal and tiled a complaint with the city In the<lb/>
background is the Chancellor s house.<lb/>
Gunman<lb/>
( on tinned from page 1<lb/>
weekend Sundav at 1 58 a m withadcadh<lb/>
Witherspoon allegedU assaulted (? kill<lb/>
his wife, threatened to kill herand<lb/>
her male friend and tired shots at<lb/>
her while she was in a vehicle at<lb/>
l oby Circle in (Ireenville.<lb/>
Later Sunday morning, police<lb/>
had warrants (Mi Witherspoon tor<lb/>
communicating threatsand assault<lb/>
 .<lb/>
E I buhli. Safel ' . ; u .? -d<lb/>
Witherspoon ithav .?? ant-<lb/>
ing a gun assault ' i tn irn<lb/>
in.) lawenforcementofficer,going<lb/>
armed to the terror of people.<lb/>
communicating threats and pos-<lb/>
session ot a weapon on campus.<lb/>
I le  is placed in the Pitt<lb/>
i oimt ail under a $53,000 bond<lb/>
? ? ? ? ? ,vas taki n into  us-<lb/>
: . tv police ser .1 i utstand<lb/>
ing warrants tor assault on a fe-<lb/>
male and communicating threats,<lb/>
bond for these i harges was set .it<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
Newton to vote on liquor<lb/>
NEW rON(AP) Newton community said Newton lawyer<lb/>
residents will go to the polls rues- Allen Wood<lb/>
day to vote in a liquor-by-the-drink Supporters point to the grow th<lb/>
referendum a measure propo that Hickory, 10 miles to the north<lb/>
nents hope will bring growth to west, has seen since it approved<lb/>
the Catawba County tov n. mixed drinks a decade v,o.<lb/>
It would help attract busi- Liquor opponents see<lb/>
nesses and organizations into Hickory's growth, but they ques-<lb/>
Newton and result in increased tion the value ol having mixed-<lb/>
tax revenue and more jobs in the drink sales.<lb/>
Crisis<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
surrender approximately 45 min-<lb/>
utes after arm ing on the location.<lb/>
! eP'c i arried on negotiations<lb/>
with With rsptxm through a front<lb/>
window ol Whichard b protect-<lb/>
ing himself behind a corner post ot<lb/>
the building some Is feet awaj In<lb/>
the final stages of the crisis, DcPu<lb/>
walked closer to the gunman<lb/>
eight feet awa) before Wither-<lb/>
spoon surrendered.<lb/>
Keep informed<lb/>
on the issues,<lb/>
events, and<lb/>
people that shape<lb/>
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S20C cm csl offer r58 7630<lb/>
PM IN-STATE TUITION? Read<lb/>
Residi : i . Status and tuition, the<lb/>
practical pamphlet written by an at-<lb/>
torney on the in state residcnc) ap<lb/>
plication process Now available:<lb/>
student stores. Wright Building<lb/>
rRAVEl FREE  Qualirj Vacations<lb/>
to exotic destinations! rhe mosl af<lb/>
fordabie spring break packages to<lb/>
1AMAK A andAN( I N Fastest<lb/>
wav to free travel and SSS ' SOO-426<lb/>
7710.<lb/>
FOR SAl L: Honda Rebel 250 1985<lb/>
1981SUBARUSEDAN: white, AM,<lb/>
FM cassette, air conditioning. One<lb/>
owner - Must sell. $1400 or best offer<lb/>
Call J55-8152<lb/>
PANDORA'S THRIFT SHOP, is<lb/>
open 10 12 Friday and Saturday<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
MARY REYNOLDS: Happy birth<lb/>
day, girl! I lave a great v' We love<lb/>
you! Love, the Alpha Delta Pi pledges.<lb/>
USE YOUR RIGHT TO VOTE!<lb/>
VOTE P K Mill ISSA HARGET<lb/>
FOR SGA SECRETARY<lb/>
PHI BETA SIGMA will be sponsor-<lb/>
ing a chess tournament tor all Greek<lb/>
Fraternities and campus organiza-<lb/>
tions. Get cash prizes, tournament<lb/>
chess set and a trophy will be<lb/>
awarded Con tact Sorel (752 5580)for<lb/>
more information. Pre- registration<lb/>
MSCS mal Room at 6p.m. September<lb/>
N Registration: 5;30 p.m September<lb/>
24. Ms Social Room. S30per tc im<lb/>
THE BROTHERS OF SIGMA PL-<lb/>
would Uke to congratulate the 1 all '<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
RESEARCH ilFORMATION<lb/>
Lagesl Library rjl information in U S<lb/>
all subiects<lb/>
800 351 0222<lb/>
TOllFBK<lb/>
HOTLKK<lb/>
Or rush S H?$??rch inloimitwn<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
lilt YEARBOOK OF CAST<lb/>
CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW<lb/>
? ? NG ACCEPTFD FOR THE<lb/>
- 1 YtARBO - ?? '?<lb/>
R SCHOOL'S HISTORY<lb/>
NTA r THE f "<lb/>
DIA BOAP JETARY IN<lb/>
???? ? ?? CATIONSBUI<lb/>
IF YOU HAVE ANV<lb/>
pledge class: Chris Knowles, Mike<lb/>
Alban, Mike Anthony, Eric Avers<lb/>
Scott Bodhar, Davis Brown, Potsy<lb/>
Curtis, Bryan Deans, Ryan 1 <lb/>
Andy Kunz,Derrick Llewellyn, l"on<lb/>
Nason, Todd Stitik,and DUftori Wil<lb/>
liams it's going to be a great semes<lb/>
ter<lb/>
RITA PHIS: We hope you had as<lb/>
much fun as we did at Big I " ?<lb/>
Sster hunt You guys arc loinj I<lb/>
great job. 1 ov the sisters I '?<lb/>
Phi<lb/>
CHRISTY: 1 hai ks from my<lb/>
heart,with all my rw arl n u s for<lb/>
saying you'll guide me, hand and<lb/>
glove. From this point, ifsl irdl -<lb/>
just what things will<lb/>
show me things I'd otl<lb/>
1 ove, (ackie Your Alpha Phi 1 il Sis<lb/>
ATTENTION: LSS SI I DINTS:<lb/>
The first 1 SSSocM t) ? ?<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
I<lb/>
N<lb/>
JUST<lb/>
ONE<lb/>
WFCK<lb/>
tarn<lb/>
S10OO in one<lb/>
in ; rganiation<lb/>
Plus a chance at<lb/>
S5000 more!<lb/>
; his program works<lb/>
investment ? ? ? '? I<lb/>
Call 1 8009324)528 Ext. 50<lb/>
I NIVERS11 Y ' rMKNTS<lb/>
. - 11 <lb/>
? ? ? il :<lb/>
?'? i- M i r Vf<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
; or 1 mm<lb/>
, Il. .<lb/>
? AZA LEA IKIM NS?<lb/>
- , ? ?<lb/>
? . ? ?<lb/>
? -r 1 v ? . <lb/>
"<lb/>
, i<lb/>
? ? ? : -<lb/>
 - ' 1'A in<lb/>
?<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
Km 14<lb/>
<lb/>
41<lb/>
M . il<lb/>
I it (Ta -<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
WE NEED<lb/>
SELF-MOTIVATED<lb/>
STUDENTS.<lb/>
EARNUPT0S10HR.<lb/>
Market credit cards on campus<lb/>
Flexible Hours<lb/>
Only 10 positions availaole<lb/>
Call Now<lb/>
1-800-950-8472 Ext. 20<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
.V <lb/>
 arolina Prcunarw v etif? r<lb/>
1 L M <lb/>
( I<lb/>
N(<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
1 I -<lb/>
ATTLNTION STLT3LNTS<lb/>
Didn't forget to take your student ID<lb/>
cards along with your ticket to the<lb/>
football games. 5rudent ticket pick-<lb/>
up ' uesda) fhuraday.<lb/>
ADOPTION SUPPORT GROUP<lb/>
September meeting will K Tuesday,<lb/>
the ISth at first Presbyterian Church<lb/>
in Greenville at 7 p m Search refer-<lb/>
ralsavailabte Call52-1891 formore<lb/>
information.<lb/>
LMVIRSIT i UNIONS<lb/>
I bvou have the magic we're looking<lb/>
for? rhe 1990 Madrigal Dinnersare<lb/>
in need f .in expert slight-of-hand<lb/>
gag gimmicks and illusions per<lb/>
former (ireatfood ,good pay, and an<lb/>
excellent venue todisplay your talent<lb/>
To interview<lb/>
Marshall at 757-47<lb/>
this position call<lb/>
LLNUILONSLKILS<lb/>
The ECU Committee on the Status of<lb/>
Women is the sponsor of the9th An-<lb/>
nual LUNCH I IMF I EARNING -<lb/>
LUNCHEON SERIES rhis year the<lb/>
series will focus on pay equitv.The<lb/>
tirst seminar will be held Tuesday,<lb/>
September 18th, and features Sandra<lb/>
Bftbb, President of North Carolina<lb/>
Equity Sandra Babb will speak on<lb/>
pay equity issues in North Carolina.<lb/>
The presentation will begin at 12.30<lb/>
p.m. in the Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter, Room 244 Purchase selections<lb/>
from Mendenhall Dining Services or<lb/>
bring a bag lunch<lb/>
PHYSICAL THERAPY<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
All general college pre-physical<lb/>
thcrapv sophomores or higher, who<lb/>
plan on applying to the May 1991<lb/>
class should report to the Physical<lb/>
Therapv Dept. office, Bclk Annex HI<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences) no<lb/>
later than the end of September to<lb/>
confirm your eligibility and pick up<lb/>
an admissions packet.<lb/>
FENCING CLLTB<lb/>
For those who are interested in fenc<lb/>
ing or in a forming a fencing club,<lb/>
please meet at 8 p ;r I lm sciav, Sep-<lb/>
tember 18, basement ol Memorial<lb/>
Gym, or call lohnson 1 am at 72-<lb/>
3052, evenings<lb/>
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
The Financial Management Associa-<lb/>
tion will meet on Tuesday, Septem-<lb/>
ber 18, at 2:15 p.m. inGCB 1007.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
(lamma Beta Phi will meet Tuesday,<lb/>
September 18 in Room 244<lb/>
Mendenhall at 8 p.m Officers will<lb/>
meet at 7:30 p m.<lb/>
slu DEFENSE<lb/>
DEMONSTRATION<lb/>
The East Carolina TaeKwon Do Club<lb/>
will hold a self defense demonstra-<lb/>
tion on September 19, at 9 p.m in<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium downstairs.<lb/>
Thisdemoisopentoanyone,maleor<lb/>
female, who is interested in self de-<lb/>
fense or the martial arts This also<lb/>
servesasan information pemxi about<lb/>
Tae Kwon Do or self defense classes.<lb/>
Call Robat880-5183 for ndesor infor-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
STUDENT HEALTH CENTLR<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
The Health Center will be open<lb/>
weekendsdunngthefall semester on<lb/>
Saturdays and Sundays from 2 p.m<lb/>
to 4 p.m. Call 757-6841 for more in-<lb/>
formation.<lb/>
PC USERS'GROUP<lb/>
QFGRLLNVILLE<lb/>
Next meeting of the PC Users' Croup<lb/>
will be September 20,7p.m. in Austin<lb/>
205, FCC Campus.<lb/>
SCHOOl Ol MUSIC EVI MS<lb/>
Dial 757-4370 tor the FCC School ol<lb/>
Music's 'Recorded (. alendar<lb/>
NATIVE AMERICANS<lb/>
I he Native Americans of Fast C aro-<lb/>
lina University will meet Wednes-<lb/>
day, September 19, at 6 p m at 302<lb/>
11m Street, Apt 5, Tar Kier Estates<lb/>
call Cheryl 757-1039 or Maria s<lb/>
3816 tor directions or rides<lb/>
ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION<lb/>
Students tor Environmental Action<lb/>
wiUbcha ing a meeting cm Wednes-<lb/>
day, September 19, at 5:15 p m. The<lb/>
meeting will be held in Rwm 212 ol<lb/>
Mendenhall student Center We will<lb/>
discuss recycling on FCC Campus<lb/>
and what you can do to help. Take<lb/>
action and participate, because it is<lb/>
up to us to change the world.<lb/>
law socicn<lb/>
EC I Law Society will be having a<lb/>
meeting cm Monday, September 24<lb/>
in Ragsdale, Room 218 at 5:15 p.m.<lb/>
SLl I ??-MEDICATION CLINIC<lb/>
The Student Health (enter offers a<lb/>
sel f-careMedication Clinic toall ECU<lb/>
Students. Over the counter medica-<lb/>
tions such as decongestants and anri-<lb/>
histamines tor the treatment of colds<lb/>
are available at no cost. The clinic is<lb/>
open Monday thru Friday from 8<lb/>
a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Call<lb/>
757-6841 for more information.<lb/>
PEMOTOR &amp; PHYSICAL<lb/>
ITTNESS COMPETENCY TEST<lb/>
The Physical Education Motor and<lb/>
Physical Fitness Competency Test is<lb/>
Scheduled as follows: Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum, 12 noon on Friday, September<lb/>
28,1990. A passing score on this tost<lb/>
is required of all students pnor to<lb/>
declaring Physical Education as a<lb/>
major. 1 Maintaining an average I-<lb/>
score i 4 on the si-item test bat-<lb/>
ter 2 Having a 1 score of 45 on the<lb/>
aerobics run "Any student with a<lb/>
medical condition that would<lb/>
cntraindicate participation in the<lb/>
testing should contact Mike<lb/>
Mc ammon or l . lay Israel at 7"<lb/>
4688. o be exempted from any por-<lb/>
tion of the test, you must have a<lb/>
physician's excuse A detailed sum-<lb/>
mary oi the test components is<lb/>
available in the I iuman Performance<lb/>
Laboratory Room 371, Sports Medi-<lb/>
cine Building, "lour physicians' ex-<lb/>
cuse must specifically state from<lb/>
which item you are exempt.<lb/>
CAMPUS GIRL SCOUTS<lb/>
It you were a Cirl Scout and would<lb/>
like to continue, or if you have never<lb/>
been one but would like more infor-<lb/>
mation, please call 752-6823 for<lb/>
Debbie, or 931-9706 for Karen.<lb/>
WORKSHOP FOR PARENTS<lb/>
A workshop is being held on Thurs-<lb/>
day. September 27 trom 6:30 - Q<lb/>
p m, tin writing Individual Educa-<lb/>
tion Plans (IEP) for Exceptional<lb/>
Children. It will be held at the Belk<lb/>
Building on Charles Street Parents<lb/>
and Professionals are encouraged to<lb/>
come who have an interest in children<lb/>
with physical andor mental handi-<lb/>
caps, leamingdisabilihes.ora chronic<lb/>
illness. There is no fee and child care<lb/>
will be provided by calling and mak-<lb/>
ing a reservation. For more informa-<lb/>
tion or to make rc'servahons for child<lb/>
a re, con tact Sand y Stcele a 1757-4494.<lb/>
ALLERGYSJtOIS<lb/>
Away tmm your family doctor for<lb/>
the first time and not sure where to go<lb/>
for your allergy shots? Then call the<lb/>
Shident Health Center at 757-6841!<lb/>
Allergy vaccines are given by ap-<lb/>
pointment by a registered nurse. You<lb/>
supply the antigen, and an injection<lb/>
schedule from your allergist! Avail<lb/>
able Mon - Fn 8 a.m. - 12 noon and 1<lb/>
- 4 p m<lb/>
ATTENTION: ELEMENTARY<lb/>
EDUCATION CLUB MEMB1 Ks<lb/>
There will be a meeting September I ?<lb/>
at4p.m.in308Speight. Thetopii ????<lb/>
be the Model Clinic Teaching Pro<lb/>
gram<lb/>
LCL AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will be a General Meeting in<lb/>
Mendenhall. Room 221 at 5 p.m. on<lb/>
Wednesday, September 1Q.<lb/>
UNlVERSm MARSHA1<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
Any student interested in serving as<lb/>
a University marshal tor the 1990-91<lb/>
school vear may obtain an applica<lb/>
turn from Room 212 VVhichard Sru<lb/>
dents must be classified as a junior by<lb/>
the end ot Fall Semester 19M1 and<lb/>
have a 3.0 academic average to in-<lb/>
eligible Return completed applica<lb/>
tion to RcHim 212, VVhichard by Sep-<lb/>
tember 28.<lb/>
PI SIGMA ALPHA<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha , the National Politi-<lb/>
cal Science Honor Society, will be<lb/>
having its first meeting if the vear on<lb/>
Monday. September 24, at 4p.m. in<lb/>
the Political Science Library (IV<lb/>
105). Old members as well as new,<lb/>
eligible members arc requested to<lb/>
attend. Plans for the vear will be dis-<lb/>
cussed. Please let Mrs Smith, POl s<lb/>
Secretary or Dr. Scavo know if you<lb/>
will be unable to attend<lb/>
DECISION SCIENCES SOCIETY<lb/>
Decision Sciences Society is having a<lb/>
meeting on Wednesday. September<lb/>
19 at 4:30 p.m. in GCB Room 3007<lb/>
Anyone interested in becoming a<lb/>
member or in finding out more about<lb/>
Decision Sciences is encouraged to<lb/>
? -<lb/>
SI l M V<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
K 1R<lb/>
n<lb/>
11<lb/>
nan and M v' ?<lb/>
. v ?<lb/>
c e n tci ? '<lb/>
.  Vednes<lb/>
p m.and ghtfoi<lb/>
It<lb/>
cooked ? " : '<lb/>
hearing impaired<lb/>
more inform iti i<lb/>
MUSK LAN BRU( l FRY1<lb/>
 com' ? HOUSi<lb/>
1 rt Student Union ise<lb/>
( ommitta ? r E el ry?<lb/>
Tuesday Sej erl8<lb/>
1 Ip.m in the coffei<lb/>
Mendenha - tei Re<lb/>
fn shn ents willbi provided and ad<lb/>
m sv. -?- i frei<lb/>
lNTRAMLRAl SEQBXS<lb/>
Registration dates and times tor in-<lb/>
tramural sports will be as follows<lb/>
Badminton ?J ? -ember 18 5<lb/>
p.m.BIO 103; Almost Anything<lb/>
Goes. September is, 5 30 p m BIO<lb/>
103; Raquetteball Singles, September<lb/>
25 5 ? p.m BIO 103 Swim Meet<lb/>
September26,5p.m PlOh'H o Rec<lb/>
Water Basketball September 26 5 W<lb/>
p ntBIO 103 t ome by and regis-<lb/>
ter" All activities are open to stu-<lb/>
dents, faculty and statt<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0008"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Si<lb/>
September 18,1990<lb/>
CBlic lEast QTarolintan<lb/>
7<lb/>
Bush says Gulf<lb/>
crisis in hands<lb/>
of Saddam<lb/>
?SHINGTON 'AD<lb/>
ent Bush making his case<lb/>
irecl ? tht Iraqi people, says<lb/>
th.for Iraq to a oid a t win is to end its t Kuwait li.it d ision is in the hands ? n Bushsaidin id In ?- broadcast over<lb/>
ele ision Sunday toda was meeting with<lb/>
. uss the Persian<lb/>
1 .u!t,sand h? at firsthand from<lb/>
Se n? State lames A Baker<lb/>
III ab? thi $14 billion pledged<lb/>
b meri i's allies tor the gull<lb/>
irned earl) Sunday<lb/>
da mission to Europe<lb/>
? the Mid I duringwhich<lb/>
he solicited help tor the costly<lb/>
d in the Saudi desert.<lb/>
bush has accused Saddam<lb/>
ibout his intentions.<lb/>
sident made good<lb/>
n ,i promise to let his people hear<lb/>
Bush s appeal, taped last<lb/>
Inosda)<lb/>
Iraqi television broadcast the<lb/>
?d Sundd e ening in<lb/>
? hiding the rabie<lb/>
? translation and cap<lb/>
li d b the State IV<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
: Idam answered Bush's<lb/>
- with ridicule, disdain and<lb/>
aking through a<lb/>
th li up leader said<lb/>
Iress .as lull ot lies<lb/>
tradictions<lb/>
Bush s national security d-<lb/>
? ow roft, said Sun-<lb/>
5141 ion in pledges<lb/>
i . ted from Saudi<lb/>
i .est rerman) .theI nited<lb/>
Emirates and other allies<lb/>
. ??. he irtv arming ex-<lb/>
led i tion against<lb/>
have here is the<lb/>
immunity rising up<lb/>
? m outrage! us a t ot ag-<lb/>
. m S nv v roft said on( BS-<lb/>
the Nation<lb/>
Bush, m his message, empha-<lb/>
: that Iraq stands isolated<lb/>
gainst worldwide<lb/>
?ndemnation<lb/>
Charlotte ranks<lb/>
eighth in serious<lb/>
crime statistics<lb/>
Kuwaitis flee homeland while<lb/>
food becomes more scarce<lb/>
KHAFJl, Saudi Arabia I V<lb/>
Kuwaitis fleeing through i<lb/>
suddenly opened border crossing<lb/>
s.n tood is becoming scarcer in<lb/>
their homeland and Iraqi soldiei ?<lb/>
are trying to quell resistanci b)<lb/>
blowing up blocks ot houses.<lb/>
rheir government in-exile<lb/>
called the unannounced weekend<lb/>
exodus of several thousand Ku<lb/>
waitis the first allowed b) ll<lb/>
in about .1 month e idem c that<lb/>
Iraq's Saddam I lussein intern I<lb/>
depopulate Kuwait anel move in<lb/>
his own people<lb/>
One refugee, the 45 year-old<lb/>
owner ot an investment ompan<lb/>
said "peopleare not obe) ingthcm<lb/>
(the Iraqis) 50 they want to get rid<lb/>
ot us<lb/>
Iraqi soldiers confiscated all<lb/>
identity documents, including car<lb/>
registrations, from those leaving<lb/>
the oil-rich emirate, refugees said<lb/>
They said the Iraqis apparently<lb/>
wanted to make it dittuult tor<lb/>
am i<lb/>
on t<lb/>
had<lb/>
W ,ll!<lb/>
' :<lb/>
turn.<lb/>
1 talh wasa ailable<lb/>
mbcr ot refugees who<lb/>
d into Saudi Arabia at<lb/>
ce word spread in Ku-<lb/>
? i that Iraq was lift-<lb/>
tu ns o'i departure<lb/>
le border p. 1st the onlv<lb/>
sing between the<lb/>
l ho<lb/>
s.<lb/>
ti me<lb/>
waitis w he<lb/>
a l<lb/>
appar<lb/>
i ntl) made the journey, refugees<lb/>
included a r'uposlav woman<lb/>
married to a Kuwaiti and about 20<lb/>
 : iudi offi ials said<lb/>
: , . aid the) w t re too<lb/>
ov rwhelmed with paperwork to<lb/>
gi e exa? t t igui es.<lb/>
id not announced<lb/>
the b rdei ling, i he refugees<lb/>
learned ot it b) ? mouth<lb/>
,n could only speculate on the<lb/>
reasoning behind it<lb/>
i he Kuwaiti Cabinet dis-<lb/>
?I the deelo<lb/>
l Ussi. o<lb/>
ipment in an<lb/>
emergency meetingSunda) in the<lb/>
southwestern resort of ait, where<lb/>
the govemment-in-exile has es-<lb/>
tablished its headquarters.<lb/>
Afterward, it issued a state<lb/>
ment saying the border opening<lb/>
reflected a new Iraqi policy of<lb/>
'getting the Kuwaitis out after<lb/>
stripping them ot their identity<lb/>
papers, and bringing in Iraqis to<lb/>
settle in Kuwait.<lb/>
Kuwaiti leaders have previ-<lb/>
ously accused Saddam of intend-<lb/>
ing to eventually repopulate Ku<lb/>
wait with Iraqis.<lb/>
On Sunday, Mercedes,<lb/>
Chevrolet Suburban jeeps and<lb/>
stores of other expensive ears<lb/>
stretehed 500 yards from the<lb/>
i heckpointasSaudi border police<lb/>
checked vehicles and demanded<lb/>
some identification.<lb/>
1 here's just too many of<lb/>
them to handle. It's a very slow<lb/>
procedure getting them through<lb/>
See Kuwaitis page 8<lb/>
( HARI TU: (AP) orth<lb/>
( arolina's largest city has the<lb/>
nation's eighth-highest serious<lb/>
crime rate, with violence spread-<lb/>
ing to s hools and playgrounds.<lb/>
Statistic s through August, re<lb/>
leased Friday by the state, show<lb/>
h. mi ides inharlotte are up 36<lb/>
percent, armed robbery up 55<lb/>
per ent rape up 30 percent.<lb/>
Already this month, there<lb/>
have been eight more killings At<lb/>
this rate,( harlotte will average a<lb/>
homicideevery31 2 days in 1990.<lb/>
By the end of this month, five<lb/>
more( harlotte residents probably<lb/>
m ill be slain. I he tilth person will<lb/>
be t harlotte s 73rd homicide vic-<lb/>
tim in 1990, tying iw all-time<lb/>
hiunii ide record.<lb/>
By comparison, Raleigh<lb/>
with half ofharlotte's population<lb/>
had 15 homicides last year. In<lb/>
1989 violent crime rates tor North<lb/>
( arolina, only Fayelteville 2.2<lb/>
per 100 000 people) topped Char-<lb/>
lotte (2,050 per 100,000).<lb/>
I he iolenl crime rate is<lb/>
shm king said Me klenburg Su-<lb/>
ra riorourt lodge Sam Wilson.<lb/>
"We re promoting a sense of<lb/>
lawlessness People feel like they<lb/>
can shoot people with impunity<lb/>
mong the vu tims:<lb/>
MarcusC .ner.a 15 year-old<lb/>
( ochrane junior I ligh student shot<lb/>
in the head and killed at Myers<lb/>
Park I ligh S hool after a football<lb/>
game 1 le was an innocent by-<lb/>
stander.<lb/>
lett 1 angston, a counselor<lb/>
t r troubled youths, shot to death<lb/>
hv junior high school stwdonfi in<lb/>
an armed robbery. Both of his sus-<lb/>
pected killers were 14<lb/>
I irnis amont, 15, shot in<lb/>
the head by a robKT who wanted<lb/>
his Philadelphia Eagles jacket.<lb/>
Other homicides were less<lb/>
publicized 1 eslie Wilson, killed<lb/>
by .1 stray bullet as she ran from a<lb/>
group of arguing men; Carlotta<lb/>
ones, 27, killed by a bullet through<lb/>
the window of her Ford Mustang;<lb/>
Dennis Eugene Miller, 34, shot<lb/>
dead Sept 4 in the westbound lane<lb/>
ot West sdh Street in an apparent<lb/>
robbery.<lb/>
Conventional wisdom among<lb/>
homicide investigators is that most<lb/>
slayings are not committed by<lb/>
strangers, but rather by husbands,<lb/>
wives,loversoracquaintances But,<lb/>
in Charlotte in recent years and<lb/>
across the country, that's less and<lb/>
less true<lb/>
'When you read about people<lb/>
driving along the street getting<lb/>
shot, that'scause for corn em said<lb/>
MecktenburgSuperiorCourt udge<lb/>
Shirley Fulton. "You would hope<lb/>
you could leave your house and go<lb/>
about your business without get-<lb/>
ting shot<lb/>
Of Charlotte's 68 homicides<lb/>
this year, police said 17 were do<lb/>
mestic. 34 were drug-related and<lb/>
14 were committed during another<lb/>
felony, usually armed robbery.<lb/>
Most of the ictims and the<lb/>
suspects are young. Most of the<lb/>
weapons used were guns 40<lb/>
handguns, five shotguns.<lb/>
"It's the mix of ingredients<lb/>
guns, drugs and youth said<lb/>
( harlotte policemdr Bruce<lb/>
Treadaway. "We are concerned<lb/>
about the increased assaults on<lb/>
innocent bystanders that seems<lb/>
U be the trend all over the a untry<lb/>
As bad as Charlotte's homicide<lb/>
rate is. it could be worse, says<lb/>
Treadaway.<lb/>
"Our hospitals have had a lot<lb/>
of practice keeping our murder rate<lb/>
down he said. "We have a lot ot<lb/>
poo pit walkingarourktonw, who<lb/>
?three or four vearsao, would have<lb/>
been part ot our homicide statis-<lb/>
tics "<lb/>
Wilson, the North Carolina<lb/>
Parole Commission's former<lb/>
chairman, agrees with city council<lb/>
member Richard Vinroot and<lb/>
Charlotte Mayor Sue Mvnck that<lb/>
North Carolina must build more<lb/>
prisons.<lb/>
"These criminals know we're<lb/>
See Crime page 8<lb/>
Unique warning<lb/>
Dopes now warning signs along Interstate 5<lb/>
in Diego will curb fatal auto podostnan accidents<lb/>
Wetlands pose major concerns for developers<lb/>
WILMINGTON (AP) "No<lb/>
net loss it's to wetlands what "no<lb/>
new taxes" was to taxpayers<lb/>
yw) thistitTM it's developers who<lb/>
art vvoi d rii  whether to take<lb/>
I 'resid nl it hi ?v ?rd,<lb/>
North c arolina ranks ninth 111<lb/>
the nation tor the amount of wet-<lb/>
land losses. In the last 200 sears.<lb/>
; ?lillion a res ha been lost,<lb/>
ac ordineU I S t ishand Wildlife<lb/>
Sen ice figures.<lb/>
! would reall) love to talk to<lb/>
President Bush and a At him it he<lb/>
re,i!b understood what he said<lb/>
? n he said no more wetlands<lb/>
would be lost said i- ourtney<lb/>
Hackney, a biology professor at<lb/>
the University ol North Carolina<lb/>
t V ilmineton. "I think he had no<lb/>
idea the bottle he'd uncorked with<lb/>
that statement<lb/>
Like a lot of other people who<lb/>
are watching Bush's campaign<lb/>
pledge ot "no net loss" unfold,<lb/>
Hackney believes bush was<lb/>
thmkmgot "splashable" wetlands<lb/>
the salt marshes, lakes and<lb/>
ponds that nm the nation's coast<lb/>
and<lb/>
But bush didn't qualify his<lb/>
statement, and now people are<lb/>
beginning to realize that "no net<lb/>
loss might have tar-reaching<lb/>
implications.<lb/>
Developers accept the need to<lb/>
protect the state's fragile marshes,<lb/>
said Ken Stewart, director ol the<lb/>
development-oriented Economic<lb/>
Alliance. Those areas are impor-<lb/>
tant to the state's fishermen, since<lb/>
they provide food and habitat for<lb/>
saltwater tish.<lb/>
But the need to protect poco-<lb/>
sm wetlands upland swamps,<lb/>
usually covered with evergreen<lb/>
shrubs and trees is harder tor<lb/>
developers to swallow, Stewart<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Developers have trouble see-<lb/>
ing great environmental value in a<lb/>
field ot pines that sits miles away<lb/>
from the coast's sensitive sounds,<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Stewart's group recently re-<lb/>
leased a study that attempts to<lb/>
show the economic impact wet-<lb/>
land regulations could have on<lb/>
tour coastal counties lhe group<lb/>
estimates New Hanover County<lb/>
could lose almost $16 billion it<lb/>
developers aren't allowed to build<lb/>
on wet inland areas.<lb/>
The group advocates more<lb/>
lenient rules that would recognize<lb/>
the value ot a wetland. The niles<lb/>
would guarantee preservation ot<lb/>
pristine marshes, but they would<lb/>
be more flexible in controlling<lb/>
development of inland wetlands,<lb/>
which Stewart's group considers<lb/>
less valuable.<lb/>
Nationwide, 117 million acres<lb/>
of wetlands havealready been lost<lb/>
to drainage projects, farming,<lb/>
forestry and urban development<lb/>
projects. Fish and Wildlife Service<lb/>
figures show That's more than<lb/>
half ot the nation's original wet-<lb/>
lands.<lb/>
ixperts claim AIDS spreading at<lb/>
ilarming rates in all social levels<lb/>
i RHAM (AP) AIDS is<lb/>
reasing at an alarming rate in<lb/>
rtharolina, and every social<lb/>
1 . inomi class has reason to<lb/>
erned, experts say.<lb/>
1 es already account for<lb/>
tut halt the number Of AIDs<lb/>
in North Carolina, social<lb/>
? rkers sav<lb/>
rhc one thing that connects<lb/>
dDS patients) is that it's an op-<lb/>
mistk disease said John<lb/>
mv. executive director of<lb/>
lina AIDS Project in Char-<lb/>
tie<lb/>
It takes advantage of people<lb/>
mnoi use the health care<lb/>
arm And now we're seeing it<lb/>
1 ng very poof inner-city resi-<lb/>
nts, Conley said.<lb/>
W men are getting AIDS from<lb/>
oial partners who use intrave-<lb/>
us drugs or have been with<lb/>
someone who has, exports sa)<lb/>
'The bottom line is it's not<lb/>
just drug users, it's partners ot<lb/>
drug users said Louise Move,<lb/>
executive director ol lYiad 1 lealth<lb/>
Project in Greensboro. "And it's<lb/>
not necessarily injectable drug<lb/>
users. Some people are going to<lb/>
crack houses and trading sex tor<lb/>
the drugs They're doing drugs,<lb/>
but they got the AIDS through<lb/>
sex<lb/>
Recent statistics showed that<lb/>
the rate of infection bv acquired<lb/>
immune deficiency syndrome in<lb/>
the Raleigh-Durham area rose<lb/>
from 9.7 per 100,000 in 1988 89 to<lb/>
19.1 per 100,(MX) in 1989-90 The<lb/>
Triangle cities have a higher rate<lb/>
than Greensboro, 9.7, ami (bar<lb/>
lotte, 9.3.<lb/>
"In ten years, 1 think we'll be<lb/>
caught up to the big cities said<lb/>
Louise Burton Mston,anoutreach<lb/>
worker with All ? learinghouse<lb/>
and Network enter in Durham.<lb/>
nd experts said it will not be<lb/>
lone before the disease becomes<lb/>
more common among teen ag rs.<lb/>
"The concern is foi teen-<lb/>
agers, said Beth h AHister, ex-<lb/>
ecutive director ot Hospice ol<lb/>
Wake County and a former<lb/>
president ol .AIDS Services of<lb/>
Wake County. "That's another<lb/>
wh ie population. Thev're not<lb/>
using sate sex Ibis state is not<lb/>
getting the sale sex education into<lb/>
the schools How can we get the<lb/>
word to junior and senior high<lb/>
students it we uin't sav the word<lb/>
sox1"<lb/>
Ihe reason voung people are<lb/>
at risk now is partly because ot the<lb/>
incubation period of the disease,<lb/>
See AIDS, page 8<lb/>
Ringing up sales taxes<lb/>
State sales tax provided $93.4 billion, 32.9 of total revenue,<lb/>
for the 50 states in 1989. States with the highest sales tax:<lb/>
8.0<lb/>
7.0<lb/>
Connecticut New Jersey Rhode Island Washington<lb/>
Source: Tax Foundation<lb/>
Marty Baumann, Gannett News Service<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0009"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
?<lb/>
8<lb/>
QHl IfuatUlnrultnian September 18,1990<lb/>
Around the state<lb/>
Minorities recruited to participate<lb/>
in a national hone-marrow registry<lb/>
in KIIXM<lb/>
I he tust federally funded drive to recruit<lb/>
minorities to parti( ip ?te in a national bone-marrow registry was<lb/>
In Id Sund ,v i" ! 'urh<lb/>
Bom marrow transplants have been successful in saving the<lb/>
lives of people u ith cancer and immune deficiency diseases, but<lb/>
minorities Hue i problem finding donors, said 1 isa I larpolr, a<lb/>
spokesman to th nuncan Redross in I hirharn<lb/>
I lu- Viti. mi Ma o Donor Program has received federal<lb/>
mone ? t ol bone-marrow typing. People<lb/>
between th ??? I md ?f are eligible for testing.<lb/>
Voters in Clemmonsdecide on the<lb/>
sale of liquor by the drink<lb/>
CLFM' tors in lemmons will decide Hiesday<lb/>
ivhetru r I ot liquor by the drink and Mt AlU<lb/>
store<lb/>
rhe ?? ' ouncil called for the referendum in<lb/>
lul aid m the Winston-Salem ABC system said<lb/>
that Clemi t up to $b8,000 in profits during the<lb/>
Mist veai<lb/>
Horace first ol tin- ABC system in Winston<lb/>
Salem d Id save money by operating an ABC<lb/>
its large neighboring city.<lb/>
Men ? First Baptist hurch in Clemmons are cam-<lb/>
paigning igainsi the sale ol ah ohol, comparing the money made<lb/>
from liquor sale tint spent tocombat alcohol problems.<lb/>
N.C . Equity's Women's Agenda<lb/>
Project decides on issues<lb/>
rhov debated sex education, better pay for<lb/>
teacl ? Hindu loi battered women's programs<lb/>
nrned Saturday participants in North<lb/>
i arol - Women s genda Project emerged with the<lb/>
women s is van) to push in the General Assembly<lb/>
during ?<lb/>
f them representatives of women's<lb/>
tte Saturday to help draft a 1991 92<lb/>
'<lb/>
11 " ? th arolina women<lb/>
: mportant were<lb/>
? ? ? ? h al option tor all women<lb/>
i ? r battered women's programs and<lb/>
mum wage Now$"V80 thefederal<lb/>
mimmun ? !5inApril I he state wage is still<lb/>
le sexuality curriculum in the publi<lb/>
schi ? formation about reproduction and<lb/>
birth<lb/>
Landmark torn down to make room<lb/>
for proposed NFL stadium<lb/>
: . rapsare all that is left of Good<lb/>
pita ? pened 99 years ago .is the first<lb/>
tal for bla ks<lb/>
: ark building will be cleared away by<lb/>
iv i n psed l I stadium near uptown<lb/>
( harli tte<lb/>
I ? i in 1891. it was the only hospital<lb/>
? ed to practice before the mid-<lb/>
ion Is in M ntv.<lb/>
Wilmington itv council considers<lb/>
ordinance to open sidewalk cafes<lb/>
Ml" Pasta primavera and ratatouille may<lb/>
soon be as common a sight on downtown Wilmington sidewalks<lb/>
ascami irists and skateboarders with attitudes.<lb/>
ingdowntown restaurants toopenside-<lb/>
:? I b the( ity Council Tuesday.<lb/>
"What ? nd to do is make an already charming commu-<lb/>
nity down hi n more so said Ferry Fisher, the owner of<lb/>
ir ii,d restaurant on Market Street.<lb/>
Nsheri man of the Outdoor Dining Committee<lb/>
h drafted the proposed ordinance,<lb/>
rheordii ch would apply only to thecentral business<lb/>
distrw I i restaurant to obtain a permit from thecitv<lb/>
toopen a idi<lb/>
tt i ith the state Alcoholic Beverage Control Board<lb/>
havea ipprovi the sale and consumption oi<lb/>
hecit approves the ordinance, Fisher<lb/>
said<lb/>
Tornado hits Carteref County causing<lb/>
power outages and minor damages<lb/>
 tornado touched down in C arteret<lb/>
Saturday, overturning a car and<lb/>
I minor damages, according to the<lb/>
md county officials.<lb/>
injuries reported, sheriff's department<lb/>
Mi REHI ' 11<lb/>
( . lUrttY a! ll  ? 1<lb/>
causing ;<lb/>
National '<lb/>
rhen<lb/>
, - aid<lb/>
II ripped the roof off an newh; (ompleted<lb/>
buildii t ? concession stand and tore down power<lb/>
: t H irktrs Mand. about 20 miles east of<lb/>
M, ?<lb/>
i' vere known, Rhodes said.<lb/>
Bill to give permanent wildeness<lb/>
status could languish due to Crisis<lb/>
Iuhii ! ill to give permanent wilderness status to<lb/>
13,000 acres in the Pisgah National forest could languish in<lb/>
.ubcommittei iset ongress is preoccupied with the Persian<lb/>
Gulf crisis ai ? an aide to I S Rep C 'ass Rallenger said<lb/>
I ridav<lb/>
Ihendi I 'i id Murray, said valuable groundwork has been<lb/>
laid for the bill even if it does not pass before Congress adjourns<lb/>
at the end l ir<lb/>
compiled by Associated Press reports<lb/>
AIDS<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
she said. It can take several years<lb/>
tor symptoms of the disease to<lb/>
appear<lb/>
"People who were in junior<lb/>
and senior high school a few years<lb/>
ago, they are susceptible Ms<lb/>
McAllister said. "People who<lb/>
didn't know Now, six or seven<lb/>
years later, here thev come with<lb/>
the virus<lb/>
The AIDS experts agreed that<lb/>
the disease eventually will affect<lb/>
everyone whether thev contract<lb/>
it or not.<lb/>
It could be disastrous tor local<lb/>
economies because taxpayers<lb/>
would have to foot the bill when<lb/>
state agencies react to the epi-<lb/>
demic, Ms McAllister said And<lb/>
Medicaid costs will increase as<lb/>
well as hospital fees<lb/>
This is not jvist about AIDS<lb/>
she said "It's about poor people.<lb/>
How are we going to get them<lb/>
health care? The predictions are<lb/>
that the health care systems liter-<lb/>
ally are going to implode<lb/>
Ins Fuller, coordinator and<lb/>
health educator tor AIDS Clear-<lb/>
inghouse in Durham,a grassroots<lb/>
organization serving 10 counties,<lb/>
said more money is needed for<lb/>
education and support services<lb/>
Kuwaitis<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
K cause they havenodcx uments<lb/>
said i VV stern diplomat stationed<lb/>
at the border to monitor the trat<lb/>
tic.<lb/>
A committee ol Kuwaitis at<lb/>
the border screened refugees,<lb/>
askingquestionsabout such things<lb/>
as membership in local organiza<lb/>
tions aiidi officials have ex-<lb/>
pressed concern the Iraqis opened<lb/>
the border to sneak in Spies and<lb/>
terrorists<lb/>
Kuwaitis said the Iraqis have<lb/>
blown up or burned up to 20<lb/>
hMisesat a time in neighborhoods<lb/>
where Iraqi soldiers were killed<lb/>
by resistance fighters<lb/>
The Iraqis also were sealing<lb/>
off whole neighborhoods to con-<lb/>
duct house-to-house searches,<lb/>
looking for resistance maternal and<lb/>
the several hundred Westerners<lb/>
still reported in hiding, the refu-<lb/>
gees said<lb/>
Saddam's troops have plun-<lb/>
dered most public property<lb/>
carting off everything trom hos-<lb/>
pital mat himrv to street lights<lb/>
but have generally stayed out ot<lb/>
Kuwaiti homos<lb/>
Crime<lb/>
Continued from paga 7<lb/>
not going to punish them for as-<lb/>
saults with deadly weapons, for<lb/>
larceny, for having cocaine Wil-<lb/>
son said "There's a sense that<lb/>
anything goes ? a sense that<lb/>
nothing is going to happen to them<lb/>
it thev commit a crime This is<lb/>
wrong.<lb/>
"We can do something about<lb/>
it. It we can keep these people<lb/>
locked up longer and impose real<lb/>
punishment, we can change this "<lb/>
District Attorney Peter<lb/>
( alchnst thinkscnmeinCharlottc<lb/>
is out of control. The prosecutor<lb/>
blames much of the problem on<lb/>
the lack of resources ? everything<lb/>
trom prisons and jails to prosecu-<lb/>
tors and judges.<lb/>
In the past 10 years, Gilchnst<lb/>
has been given only two new<lb/>
prosecutors ? one full time, the<lb/>
other temporary ? while the<lb/>
caseload for his 21 assistant dis-<lb/>
trict attorneys has almost doubled<lb/>
The number of felony charges has<lb/>
increased from 4,388 in 1980 to<lb/>
7,944 in 1999.<lb/>
"Government has a responsi-<lb/>
bility to protect its citizens<lb/>
Gilchnst said. "And the govern-<lb/>
ment is not protecting its citizens<lb/>
m Charlotte<lb/>
Charlotte, the country's 30th<lb/>
largest city with about 357,000<lb/>
residents, had the eighth-highest<lb/>
serious-crime rate among cities<lb/>
with populations more than<lb/>
300,000, according to the U S. De-<lb/>
partment of justice.<lb/>
So far, the rising crime rate<lb/>
isn't affecting all parts of the city<lb/>
equally. The safer areas up-<lb/>
town and east and southside<lb/>
neighborhoods, are still relatively<lb/>
sate, according to a studv of Char-<lb/>
lotte crime by John Mark, a Uni-<lb/>
versity of North Carolina at<lb/>
Charlotte geography student who<lb/>
also worksasa Charlotte building<lb/>
inspector<lb/>
Mark, whose study consid-<lb/>
ered the connection between en me<lb/>
and poverty, lack of education and<lb/>
substandard housing, said part ot<lb/>
the problem is that in poor<lb/>
neighborhoods, "Police are the<lb/>
enemy. Nobody wants the police<lb/>
around<lb/>
Vinroot said Charlotte police<lb/>
are doing a good )ob.<lb/>
"We are arresting them at as<lb/>
great a rate as ever before, but<lb/>
thev can't get into the jails. They're<lb/>
right back on the streets as quick<lb/>
w we arrest them<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
BSN<lb/>
Sn DENTS.<lb/>
<lb/>
ter the ir Force<lb/>
immediately after gradua-<lb/>
tion ? without waiting for the<lb/>
results ot your Mate Boards. You<lb/>
i an earn great benefits as an Air<lb/>
Force nurse officer And if selected<lb/>
during our senior year, you may<lb/>
qualify tor ,i five-month internship<lb/>
at a major ir Font' medical facili-<lb/>
t lo apply, you'll need an overall<lb/>
2 50 I if'A i"t a head start in the<lb/>
ir Force Call<lb/>
St; I I)AVK LEONARD<lb/>
MUION-TO-STATION COLLECT<lb/>
919-4X3-6747<lb/>
? ?ri c rx.  - -<lb/>
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Where<lb/>
When<lb/>
Sponsored by<lb/>
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?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0010"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
i<lb/>
September 18,1990<lb/>
QJJtc iEast (ffaruHntan<lb/>
$<lb/>
N.C Symphony<lb/>
plans fall<lb/>
visit to Wright<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
1?WtlfPrf<lb/>
K Heather Modi in<lb/>
Siafl Wtiii<lb/>
? i in erl o( the 1990-<lb/>
"Mi I ,trrn ille by the<lb/>
 ii lin.i Sy mphom W ill<lb/>
1 Imii i.i i ep 27, .it vp in<lb/>
? Auditorium rhe con<lb/>
n d In Till ? ountv<lb/>
tlio . S mphony<lb/>
ng with ttii s in<lb/>
i he rleon uger, .)<lb/>
pi i itu singei<lb/>
 lormance<lb/>
; ? ult.ito lubilate,<lb/>
ang to .i telev iscd<lb/>
' " ?" million people<lb/>
Vndrew s wedding<lb/>
 N t nil d ko r'l?'s<lb/>
pei.i- n h as thi'<lb/>
? ? i )pera .in.) ! .1 St .il,i<lb/>
igoi has made 10<lb/>
' w ide tours<lb/>
i toe the 27th uger w U<lb/>
? I r 111 Ex ultatc hihilid<lb/>
? .nil Strauss Meinem and<lb/>
kinde I ranz I ehar 5 Meine<lb/>
npen tie kussen to hcitl<lb/>
h inn Strauss zardas" from<lb/>
ipera 1 )ic Fledermas and<lb/>
lions In ()st ar Straus.<lb/>
I) ? hi Ira is under the<lb/>
f condut tor (ierhardl<lb/>
??nan Zimmerman has<lb/>
1 w ith the l sv mphony<lb/>
' 2 Prior to j ining<lb/>
1 1 1  1<lb/>
nductoi 'i tht Si loins<lb/>
?? Or hestra a position<lb/>
? ii 1 i.b am ed from<lb/>
ml onductor<lb/>
rrenth . 'immerman di<lb/>
? 1 . ntsbi tvvi ' nhisma<lb/>
btHMta ilht Nil 11 tharolina<lb/>
? ?n I ofldut tor and his<lb/>
? ; IS the I 111! I'<lb/>
. ? Canton, Ohio<lb/>
tra I ; al u<lb/>
. ?rar position<lb/>
d isor tor I in<lb/>
' h imbor r<lb/>
rm 1' 1 ? 1<lb/>
rture " : ?<lb/>
 1 i<lb/>
.<lb/>
? ?. ? ittanottm n.i<lb/>
? it Suite in D ma 1<lb/>
I r a, O p u s ' l<lb/>
- ? ? informatu n 1 all<lb/>
hall Studnel enter<lb/>
I ii kel oin, ? (757 1788)<lb/>
- ? for ad ' ind$<lb/>
ind cnior cil izons<lb/>
ECU broadcasting<lb/>
instructor reflects on<lb/>
past experiences<lb/>
Celeste Hottmdn ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Mai l fward ytve! lei s paintings exume the dark side ot Helm; tan politK s rhe Sylvesters' artworks<lb/>
eei ndi play al Arlington Hall in the Arlington Village 1 hi pping 1 entei<lb/>
Local artists' exibition combines<lb/>
political, whimsical expression<lb/>
By Michael Harrison<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
Catherine Wkrkern was born<lb/>
in Kansas City, Missouri (pro-<lb/>
nounced "Missou-ruh" it you'rea<lb/>
native) on September 2, 1956 She<lb/>
was the last c hild out ot lour to he<lb/>
horn to her parents ,w the only<lb/>
girl<lb/>
I ike all families, her family<lb/>
had problems, but overall, her on her resumes, and more job ot<lb/>
childhood was very wholesome fers began to come<lb/>
1 lie onlv different e bt I ?? 1 en her<lb/>
family and rhe Brady Bunch, she<lb/>
said, was that she and her broth-<lb/>
ers were born to the same parents.<lb/>
television football i Sun-<lb/>
father's military background, so<lb/>
she went to graduate school and<lb/>
got her master's degree in com-<lb/>
mumcations. It was a move she<lb/>
does not recommend to commu-<lb/>
nications majors unless they<lb/>
are going to teat h Shediscovered<lb/>
that perspective employers were<lb/>
,n tually intimidated by her new<lb/>
degree Eventually she began to<lb/>
not mention her master's decree<lb/>
I moling obs, however, was<lb/>
always a diflit nit pro ess in all,<lb/>
she sent off more than 501 (resumes<lb/>
and went on about 200 job inter-<lb/>
views With stub unswaggering<lb/>
days was virtually a routineevent, perseverance, she would always<lb/>
By oe Horsl<lb/>
st.Ut Wilier<lb/>
i ombining pussy atsand<lb/>
politics Mart. EdwardSylvestre<lb/>
and Victoria 1 liggins Sylvestre<lb/>
have come up w ith a new and<lb/>
exi itine arl 1 xhibition. Cur<lb/>
"The Wall" will ret ognizi<lb/>
Sylvestre's imagery as the same<lb/>
stvle.<lb/>
Higgins-Sylvestre's sculp<lb/>
tures are focused on the subjet 11?l<lb/>
eats. I ler thesis of work beingt ats<lb/>
she explained the reason tor her<lb/>
1 hetcc: "I've always loved 1 ats<lb/>
When I finish a s ulptureol one il<lb/>
e .is 11 1<lb/>
tenth beinp displayed at Ar<lb/>
lington Hall in the Arlington gives me the same ft<lb/>
Village shopping center, this gave birth to a child ih.se ulp<lb/>
lures fulfill my need foi mothei<lb/>
hood.<lb/>
I hough Ln I vest re - iy s thai<lb/>
painting is (junker for<lb/>
Higgins-Sylvestre says thai hi<lb/>
"keeps thespontaneityol the work<lb/>
by adding beads, tqy s, etc to the<lb/>
sculpture I he one other w ork<lb/>
1 liggins-Sylvestrc has on display<lb/>
is titled "Musing hi Men w hii h<lb/>
deals with teminist v lew s<lb/>
exhibition is two fat eted<lb/>
ivlvestre's paintings dealing<lb/>
w ith lesse I Iclms and oppres<lb/>
sion and I liggins svIvestre's<lb/>
sculptures, which focus on cats<lb/>
,?p,i the mtrc v himsical side ol<lb/>
 o ?siu pAtntHigfr are<lb/>
primarily acryli on canvas,<lb/>
t'hicl in his ? ? ords, is faster<lb/>
? I ill i motions to tlow<lb/>
He also uses im-<lb/>
lo relate his v iews on<lb/>
1 li'lnis and I ii Ims ! tarn e to<lb/>
n Is UPS The eihpsed<lb/>
1 ? ?een in some of<lb/>
vb 1 in s paintings is used to<lb/>
1 ib'Ii ?? 'the use .uiA abuse<lb/>
? t liristianilv<lb/>
nothor predominant im<lb/>
! . in the paintings is ' I he<lb/>
hei w ho, v ith a pig<lb/>
tout and liea v jowls, reflects<lb/>
Ii , minded i-w on All1s<lb/>
md its victims " Sy Ivestre<lb/>
niotes l' 'lms rants and raves<lb/>
ibtuil people ? ith Ml S, and<lb/>
then wants to take the medit ine<lb/>
, from pi ople w ho need<lb/>
? 1 ih fansoK ieraldS arf's<lb/>
Both artists have displays<lb/>
throughout NorthC arolinaand<lb/>
in Washington, D.C . and have<lb/>
received awards tor their<lb/>
showings Sylvestre's most re-<lb/>
cent accomplishment was the<lb/>
sale of lour goblets to the Sheik<lb/>
ol Qatar Now on permanent<lb/>
display at the! mbassy of Qatar<lb/>
in W ashington, 11 C Sylvestre<lb/>
nginalb did the goblets tor<lb/>
,vork and received a<lb/>
t foi them<lb/>
t toen Monday I riday from<lb/>
10-6 and Saturday from 114,<lb/>
ihn,ton I lall .allerv will be<lb/>
tunning this exhibit until Oc-<lb/>
tober I I ocaled at 690 Arling<lb/>
iin Village, contact the gallery<lb/>
1!  2426 tor metre mforma<lb/>
1 ii t.<lb/>
and attcr thai game on l she<lb/>
and her brothers would play<lb/>
football in the yard Whenever<lb/>
she would get a hold ol the ball to<lb/>
make a touchdown, her brothers,<lb/>
tint nice to tackle their baby sister,<lb/>
would stand still to let her pass<lb/>
foreseeing an empty victory, she-<lb/>
would stream, "Come on, guvs,<lb/>
you're not playing tair'<lb/>
The first time she heard about<lb/>
the Beatles was in'63. "Why would<lb/>
anyone want to call themselves a<lb/>
'beatle she asked herself at the<lb/>
time. The singing group's name,<lb/>
however, did not keep her from<lb/>
lining their music the tirst time<lb/>
she heard it She has been a fan<lb/>
ever since.<lb/>
Wu kern holds warm memo-<lb/>
nesot her father, who died in 1981<lb/>
after a long battle w ithcanccr. 1 lis<lb/>
find employment stnner or later<lb/>
But sometimes the jobs were not<lb/>
enjoyable<lb/>
1 he worst job she slid she had<lb/>
was at a men's uniform factory m<lb/>
Missouri Her duties were to in-<lb/>
spect pants as they came off the<lb/>
assembly line, but the concrete<lb/>
tloor that she had to stand on for<lb/>
hours and an air conditioner unit<lb/>
that blew directly on her made<lb/>
work very uncomfortable She<lb/>
quit alter her first five-hour shift<lb/>
More employment camt with<lb/>
an "educational program associ-<lb/>
ated with the business commu-<lb/>
nity and although she liked mam<lb/>
of the people she worked with,<lb/>
certain practices ot higher-ranking<lb/>
officials disagreed with her s,?,in<lb/>
she was looking tor work else-<lb/>
where.<lb/>
It was after this job that<lb/>
special and memorable features<lb/>
were his laugh and "twinkling Wkrkern wasstruckwith what she<lb/>
eyes ' He was 1u1tea neat guv teels was perhaps her greatest<lb/>
she said fondly. Now. While driving, she was<lb/>
Wkrkern graduated from high struck from behind by another<lb/>
school in "4, one ot 54 students driver "I didn't have mv seafbelt<lb/>
She then entered Central Missouri<lb/>
state University, ' home ol the<lb/>
mules and earned her commu-<lb/>
nications degree. I he world is<lb/>
truly a global village, she said,<lb/>
and the concepts and technology<lb/>
on she said. The crash left her<lb/>
with two herniated disks in her<lb/>
back She experienced pain as<lb/>
never before, and her left staved<lb/>
numb. The pain was constant,<lb/>
and with strong muscle relaxers<lb/>
rhe art of Victoria Htggir<lb/>
Ikjhthaerted to  md toy<lb/>
Celeste Hoftman ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
?1 incorporates many<lb/>
ot communications and broad- and pain medication she saw cv-<lb/>
casting never tailed to fascinate erything through a thick haze.<lb/>
her Once she was finished with At the time ol the accident<lb/>
school,shcentered the work force, doctors insisted that despite the<lb/>
Her first job after college was intense pain, the injury was not<lb/>
the executive director position ot severe enough to do an X-ray. She<lb/>
a visitor's bureau in Kansas, but was told she would simply have<lb/>
attracting visitors to Kansas, she to live with the pain Mental an-<lb/>
said, was not a very easy thing to guish then surfaced "Ijustcan'l<lb/>
,U at times, mu eventually she live like this, she said,<lb/>
left but not for another job Luckily, she discovered a<lb/>
rime was running out to take clinic that specialized in treating<lb/>
advantage ol special financial back injuries. She- was taught<lb/>
benefits tor education through her<lb/>
See Instructor, page 10<lb/>
Greenville resident provides male<lb/>
students with off-campus housing<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse sets season schedule<lb/>
By Michael Harrison<lb/>
Stjfl Writer<lb/>
Mrs I annie Peel mov M to<lb/>
r, ? nville with her late husband<lb/>
? ?? 1 iU- rt Peelin I946 Bat kthen,<lb/>
said, there were not enough<lb/>
- for studt nts to live W hen<lb/>
. I ,?, t Ht that she and hei hus<lb/>
, were going to build a house<lb/>
 n- uickly approached and<lb/>
, feed it they could possibly<lb/>
mmodate some students.<lb/>
It took a while to convince Mr<lb/>
. i but eventually he agreed to<lb/>
tarl renting rooms in their yet to<lb/>
. . .iiipleted newh. meat506l a I<lb/>
?'111<lb/>
1 1 o?l housing ol 1 ours, did<lb/>
? . (ist in 1946, so it was soon<lb/>
i i, 1 that they would rent rooms<lb/>
? male students only It'sapoHcy<lb/>
thai has remained Mrs IVel is<lb/>
ii k and forthright with her opin<lb/>
ions and sivs that she fell that te<lb/>
males would have been more diffi<lb/>
ult to control rhe) d have run<lb/>
me"it, she slid<lb/>
In the fall ot that tirst year, the<lb/>
hi,l, nts moved in, although the<lb/>
house was not ? ven completely<lb/>
I mil<lb/>
I here wasn't even a honl<lb/>
door, Mrs INiKiid with.uhu. kle<lb/>
B th. - ? "nd v. ar.housingfoi<lb/>
university studentsbecameaneven<lb/>
bigger problem. Roomsatthehouse<lb/>
design! rl tor twt 1 petple were soon<lb/>
holding three<lb/>
I he tudentsdid notcareifthey<lb/>
had to sleep on the- tloor, though.<lb/>
"They werejustglad they had a<lb/>
place to stav Mrs Peel said.<lb/>
Rules of the household were<lb/>
never formally written. Mrs Peel<lb/>
aid 'hat everyone automatically<lb/>
knew wtv'i 'hev could and could<lb/>
not do.<lb/>
kit. hen privileges were never<lb/>
given either A cafeteria on campus<lb/>
was open during breakfast, lunch<lb/>
and upper hours.<lb/>
In m. ?rc ret enl years, she had al<lb/>
I. 1st one tenant complain about not<lb/>
having kitchen privileges It was<lb/>
too expensive to eal out, he had<lb/>
slid.<lb/>
Mrs Peel did not relent, how-<lb/>
ever,and thesimerestrn turn would<lb/>
continue to W enforced End ol<lb/>
discussion.<lb/>
In 1946, room rent was hftivn<lb/>
dollars a month for each tenant, a<lb/>
fee that was lower than anyone else's<lb/>
in tow 1 today, the rent tor each<lb/>
tenant is eighty live dollars, a foe<lb/>
that is pro! aolv still cheaper than<lb/>
, ??. 1 iv one else s, though shehasHx-n<lb/>
thinking about going up to ninety<lb/>
dollars<lb/>
The rent is all that the tenants<lb/>
pay; there are no extra charges for<lb/>
eltvtricitv, utilities or the phone All<lb/>
long distance calls are to be made<lb/>
collect.<lb/>
Upon entering the house, a<lb/>
SiTseof tranquility seems to t.lter<lb/>
through the n .111 1 be a . ning<lb/>
over the front porchkeepsoutmiM h<lb/>
sunlight, as well asalot of the stifling<lb/>
summer heat A sitting, room is<lb/>
situated on either side" ot the ! ?yer<lb/>
Ahead is the dining, room,<lb/>
which houSCS .1 table she' bought<lb/>
around 1918. It was one ot the In t<lb/>
pieces of furniture she ever bought.<lb/>
The house's lovely antkjuefur<lb/>
nishings create a feeling ol perma<lb/>
nence; everything probably looked<lb/>
very mue h the same in 1946. The<lb/>
house was furnished as soon as she<lb/>
and her husband moved in, and<lb/>
gradually she accumulated other<lb/>
things that are now plat ed here and<lb/>
there throughout the first floor.<lb/>
Upstairs are six bedrooms and<lb/>
two bathrooms. It was the second<lb/>
floor that once housed her tvv sons<lb/>
and enough tenants to lill the rest of<lb/>
the available space<lb/>
Relations between Mrs Red<lb/>
and her tenants have always<lb/>
beengotxl. Occasionally,oneol her<lb/>
"bovs" would even come to her tor<lb/>
See Peel, page 10<lb/>
The East Carolina Playhouse is pleased to<lb/>
announce its 1990-91 season. Season tickets will go<lb/>
on sale for the general public beginning Sept. 17,<lb/>
WK and will go cost only $30 for five outstanding<lb/>
productions.<lb/>
Season rickets entitle the subscriber to one<lb/>
reserved seat ticket for each of the five scheduled<lb/>
productions. Tteboxofficeisopen Monday through<lb/>
! riday from 10a.m. until 4 p.m and is located in the<lb/>
 ibbv of the McC.innis Theatre.<lb/>
The season will open on Oct. 17 with<lb/>
Threepenny Opera This musical bears the cre-<lb/>
dentialsof having been the longest-running musical<lb/>
show in the history of the America theatre when it<lb/>
ended its six -and-a-quarter years' run in New York<lb/>
and gave the world such song-hits as "Mack the Knife<lb/>
and 'Tirate Jenny<lb/>
Next will be N. Richard Nash's come h hit, "The<lb/>
Rainmaker on Nov. 30, Dec. 1, 3, and 4,1990. This<lb/>
romantic comedy is set in a ranch house in the South-<lb/>
west at a time of searing drought.<lb/>
Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Beth ("Crimes<lb/>
of the Heart") Henley's comk romp, 'The Wake of<lb/>
Jamey Foster will open on Feb. 15, 1991, with the<lb/>
additional performances on Feb. 16,18, and 19.<lb/>
The season's fourth show, Tennessee Williams'<lb/>
"The Glas Menagerie one oi the American theatre's<lb/>
r ?Sl compelling and universally acclaimed dramatic<lb/>
works, will be presented March 22,23,25 and 26,1991.<lb/>
See Theatre, page 10 <lb/>
Environmental group emerges on campus<lb/>
By Heather Modlin<lb/>
Staft Writer<lb/>
There is a new group emCTging<lb/>
on campus. Students forthe Mother<lb/>
Earth (SFME),an environrnentally<lb/>
. onscious club organized by senior<lb/>
MicheleCrane.held its tirst meeting<lb/>
on Thursday, Sept. 13.<lb/>
liie organization lsentirely new<lb/>
to I (. U. 'To my knowledge, there<lb/>
was no active organization on<lb/>
i ampus Ihat's why I wanted to<lb/>
put it together. It's not for me. It's<lb/>
tor IX I We reallv need it Crane<lb/>
said<lb/>
( rane worked during thesunv<lb/>
mcr establishing an affiliation with<lb/>
 c state's chapter ot student En-<lb/>
vironmental Action Coalition<lb/>
(SE AC). Thegroups will shareideas,<lb/>
but will remain separate.<lb/>
Since the club is new, the first<lb/>
order of business will be to elect<lb/>
officers and write the constitution<lb/>
Immediate plans include recycling<lb/>
and tree planting protects. Craneis<lb/>
optimistic and hopes that even<lb/>
though ECU has not had a full-scale<lb/>
recycling program, accomplish-<lb/>
ments can be made.<lb/>
SFME will also be traveling to<lb/>
Illinois, October 5-7 with SEAC to<lb/>
attend a nationwide invitational<lb/>
conference called Catalyst. There,<lb/>
different groups will come together<lb/>
to share ideas concerning environ-<lb/>
mental issues.<lb/>
Crane foresees no immediate<lb/>
problems with theorganizationa-id<lb/>
would eventually like to expand<lb/>
the club into a variety ol commit-<lb/>
tees, so as to cover even more issues.<lb/>
"In the future, I would like to<lb/>
see a very active club, with a full-<lb/>
scale recycling program and a lot of<lb/>
committees workingoncampusand<lb/>
in Greenville I think I'd like to see<lb/>
more students become more aware<lb/>
of what is going on. A lot of people<lb/>
don't do anything because they<lb/>
don't know Maybe we can help<lb/>
educate students Cranesakl<lb/>
For interested students, the<lb/>
group will meet weekly on Thurs-<lb/>
day at 5:15 pan at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0011"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
ULL<lb/>
Blje EaatOIaralinian September 18,1990<lb/>
This Week in Film<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre starts with classic<lb/>
cult favorites, ends with fantasy film<lb/>
This week the Hendrix rheatre films run the gamut from fad<lb/>
to fiction to fantasy I"he cinematic entertainment kicks off Wed<lb/>
nesda) nighl with a docucomedy double feature: "Heavy Petting"<lb/>
and Atomk Cafe rhe tense undersea military drama "The I Unit<lb/>
for Red October" mivciis rhursday through Saturday. And the<lb/>
magical "Willie Wonka and theChocolate Factory" rounds out the<lb/>
week as Sunda) s family feature matinee.<lb/>
I ho docucomedy double feature otters unique films by Obie<lb/>
Benzand Pierce Raffcrty thai have becomecult favorites. The two<lb/>
documentaries combine newsreel footage, government archives,<lb/>
motion pictures, and television programs in exploration of two<lb/>
major facets ol lite during the 1950s sex and fear.<lb/>
I lea Petting examines techniques used to instruct adoles-<lb/>
i cnts about sex and so ial condu t during the post World War 11.<lb/>
pre sexual revolution time frame rhe film tics together lips from<lb/>
those cornball sex cdu ation films th.it you may have soon in sev-<lb/>
enth grade it your school s budge! was skimpy enough. Some ol<lb/>
the footage comes from an old filmollcction clung to by a ?. orrupt<lb/>
old school official who, fortunately tor our filmmakers, disobeyed<lb/>
orders to destroy it<lb/>
Interspersed with thefilmfootageareconfessionsand testimo-<lb/>
nies from vour parents contemporaries. David Byrne traces the<lb/>
pet tin stages from a male s perspec five David 1 ettcrmanantago<lb/>
tv.st Sandra Bcrnhard talks about he days ot playing doctor Poet<lb/>
UleiH iinsbergdis usses being punished for a sexual faux pas. and<lb/>
the late Abbic 1 loffman rumps around the screen in relating his<lb/>
participation in f"h? Great Circle Jerk ol 1951<lb/>
Atomicate is ,i mind boggling compendium ot misinfor<lb/>
ition aimed at selling nuclear war to the American public as it it<lb/>
were a now brand ei laundry detergent. The film explores "nuclea-<lb/>
rosis, pervasive when the cold war was at its chilliest ma manner<lb/>
that is both educational and hilarious It you've never seen nor<lb/>
even hoard ot a docu omcd . these films are not to be missed,<lb/>
rhe long awaited screen version ot " I he 1 lunl tor Red A to<lb/>
her, based on 1 onH lancvs best selling novel,is another film that<lb/>
should not bo missed. 1 ho box office giant features Sean Connery<lb/>
as a legendary So iet submarine commander who seizes control ot<lb/>
I state ot the art super silent, ultra high-tech Soviet sub. which<lb/>
has just been taken ott the bKs ks The commander approaches<lb/>
initiating World War 111m an attempt to carry cut his own private<lb/>
?  Mec Baldwin stars as the voung American intelligence<lb/>
? a'? ? risks his career and the lives of his crew i,i carrying out<lb/>
an operation based on a hum h<lb/>
The film directed bv ohn Mc I iernan ("Die 1 bud I, is touch.<lb/>
suspenseful and thrilling Spc? ial attention was paid in ensuring<lb/>
that the set design and the protocols carried out by thecharat tors<lb/>
were accurate b I s Nlav standards rhe result is a fact-based<lb/>
store ot w hat can happen v hen a powerful military loader de ides<lb/>
to live by a higher code ot personal ethics.<lb/>
Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory 'is a children's cult<lb/>
classic, if there is such a thing Gene Wilder plays chocolate-churn<lb/>
ing billionaire who hosts five innocent children on a tour through<lb/>
his fantastic chocolate factory. The movie is a parable about greed<lb/>
and bad manners related m 9ong by poetic and wiseOompa 1 oom-<lb/>
pas<lb/>
hown m continuation ot the newly instituted tamih filmseries,<lb/>
Willie Wonka .iyi the 'hocolate Factor) will be shown Sunday,<lb/>
Sept 23a; 2 and H p m The 1 lunt tor Red O tober will beshown<lb/>
Thursday, Sepl 20 .it 7 and 9 20 p r.i . t riday, September ?1 and<lb/>
Saturdav Sepl 22 at s p m rhe docucomedy double feature will<lb/>
be shown Wednesday, September 19. "Heavy Petting" will begin<lb/>
at8p.m "AtomieCafe startsat9:20 Admission to Student Union<lb/>
films at Hondnx rheatre is absolutely free with a valid ECU stu-<lb/>
dent ID with a current u ti ltv sticker.<lb/>
1 ho Student Union Films . bmmittee would like to thank last<lb/>
c oast Music and Video for the use ol their videotapes in the review<lb/>
ot these films.<lb/>
? Compiled by Malt Buj and 1 isa Marie ernigan<lb/>
Kitchen Korner<lb/>
Honey mustard chicken, orange<lb/>
pork chop add spice to cooking<lb/>
Every now and then it is nice to have a meal at home to enjoy<lb/>
It may also allow you to test vour cooking abilities and mavbo trv<lb/>
to impress someone with a nice, romantic dinner<lb/>
Here are a couple ol recipes to start you on your way:<lb/>
Honey Mustard Chicken<lb/>
(Servos two)<lb/>
two boneless chicken breast<lb/>
one small jar of Grey Poupon Mustard<lb/>
34 cup of honey<lb/>
two pinapple rings for garnish<lb/>
Take 34 cup of honey and about 4 tablespoons of mustard tor<lb/>
to taste) and mix in medium sized bowl. Then place both chicken<lb/>
breasts in honey mustard sauce. I et breast marinate for at least 5<lb/>
minutes Heat frying pan or skillet to medium heat then place<lb/>
breast in pan, suing sauce tor later C(Mk breast for 4-5 minutes on<lb/>
medium heat (in both sides then pour saute over breast in pan and<lb/>
cover let simmer for 1-2 minutes and place on plate with pine-<lb/>
apple rings mi top of breasts<lb/>
Orange Pork Chops<lb/>
(serves two)<lb/>
two large pork chops or two medium boneless pork chops<lb/>
one orange<lb/>
one cup orange juice<lb/>
12 cup sugar<lb/>
one tablespoon cornstarch<lb/>
one pmch of cinnamon<lb/>
Take juice and pulp from orange, cup (if orange juice, 1II cup<lb/>
sugar, cornstarch and cinnamon and mix thoroughly in bowl Then<lb/>
place pork chops in frying pan on high heat and cook until light<lb/>
brown on both sides Pour 1 2 of the orange sauce in pan and let<lb/>
simmer (covered) for 5 minutes. Place on plate and cover with<lb/>
remaining orange sauce.<lb/>
Both of these recipes are excellent when served with rice and<lb/>
a green vegetable of your choice. Good luck and have an enjoyable<lb/>
meal<lb/>
? Compiled by Draughon Cranford II<lb/>
Instructor<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
numerous stretches and exercises.<lb/>
which essentially keep pressure<lb/>
oft her back bv making her legs<lb/>
stronger Thebackclinu , shohvls<lb/>
was invaluable to her "I could<lb/>
literally feel myself getting stron<lb/>
ger every day she said She<lb/>
continues todothcexercises every<lb/>
morning lor an hour. Even skip<lb/>
ping one J will allow painful<lb/>
pressures to creep into her lu k<lb/>
Reflecting on theac c ident,she<lb/>
said ithanged her life Enjo) ing<lb/>
life seemed to take higher priority,<lb/>
because the fragility ot it daw ned<lb/>
on her with full intensity I lor<lb/>
next jobata flower shop rcinfon ed<lb/>
that idea. She said, People cs<lb/>
sent i.i IK get flowers three limes in<lb/>
their lives when the) reborn,<lb/>
w hen they get married and v hen<lb/>
theydie ' It would be depressing<lb/>
she said, especially on nice days<lb/>
when a large number of funeral<lb/>
w reaths and arrangements had to<lb/>
be prepared rhat job helped ko p<lb/>
her in touch with life s brutal re<lb/>
,i<lb/>
llltU's<lb/>
( athy tools thai w ith e i i <lb/>
ui o ent in her life there i<lb/>
opposite good event ol equal in<lb/>
tensity It has been consistenth<lb/>
proven to her, she said i oubts to<lb/>
o, .i o . a,  ii ?<lb/>
she never does Shesaid that when<lb/>
she was in elementary school she<lb/>
refused to touch a live snake in<lb/>
si it'in e lass 1 lu'Si h K'l pruii i al<lb/>
came and while holding her - till<lb/>
? he pM ssed hei hand i nt the<lb/>
snake Ml the other students<lb/>
pointed and laughed It was a<lb/>
toi nblo ep 11 !<lb/>
( athv is also ivell informed<lb/>
about state and national t ;<lb/>
Sheav idly supp it-1 lar i iantl<lb/>
tor (. Senator i ' hddle<lb/>
i ast( risis he ha mixed feel<lb/>
I he i ountn mui redui e it I<lb/>
pendoIH W'lV'll<lb/>
sheadmits, m re.i i<lb/>
c athv isop n to di uss more<lb/>
personal matters ti i i<lb/>
she said '? ith full 11 r<lb/>
rolati. mshipsin the pa -t ha ? ? i<lb/>
II 111 (v i I I ha i '<lb/>
v t found tl Sh?<lb/>
Jis, i : .vever. that<lb/>
UuI I<lb/>
omowhei<lb/>
<lb/>
ncs (er I ireei<lb/>
ma litetimi<lb/>
here at I v I is her 11 rd<lb/>
iter ai<lb/>
HUNGRY PIRATI<lb/>
The 'Biggest 'Surrito<lb/>
'You ve 'EverSeen!<lb/>
cnchili<lb/>
Citiai inteed in till m<lb/>
$3.45<lb/>
i<lb/>
that outlook surt<lb/>
time ot the iccid<lb/>
?? in thai terrible situa<lb/>
come until two and a halt years<lb/>
later when shedlSi overed theb.u k<lb/>
i linic<lb/>
It was while she was working<lb/>
in the flower shop that Edgar<lb/>
1 asine, the former c hairman of the<lb/>
rheatre Arts Apartment who<lb/>
retired last semester honed her<lb/>
and presented her v ith job ??;<lb/>
portunity here at E 1 she to k i<lb/>
plant' here, checked things mil<lb/>
found a Ma e to live and a. i epted<lb/>
the job She began August S8and<lb/>
now s,i s that until E( I eight! ? i<lb/>
months was the long ' he stayed<lb/>
w ith any one job<lb/>
1 love te.u hmg, shi<lb/>
matter of fa th 1 vene er rruidi<lb/>
such a difference in other pe ; li<lb/>
lives Iea hing, she feels ha:<lb/>
THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO<lb/>
BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY.<lb/>
'  '<lb/>
? ' II<lb/>
Ilk'IllKl i t tlv<lb/>
v ri. The c.lcluc<lb/>
iiuu i ? ;  '<lb/>
s stem in w ! ik i<lb/>
i in oi u .UK oiik ' ?<lb/>
? r t he<lb/>
I<lb/>
Surse ?, Vl  '<lb/>
4<lb/>
O I! I 11! I<lb/>
I<lb/>
n.1"). Un ill u 'II tree:<lb/>
ii os i ea nine sne reeis nas<lb/>
taught hoi even more about<lb/>
broadcasting She does ? .? <lb/>
deal o( outsidereadingai di: n<lb/>
well informed and confident<lb/>
enough about the subject so tl tl<lb/>
she could now d? an en tin lass<lb/>
v ithout a sun1 i ' it her sid<lb/>
1 hestv eofI i tures<lb/>
is lighthi at ted and tun ll is<lb/>
corn. she said, but life is ti o<lb/>
short to be l in d iv.d miserable<lb/>
She also said thai she adapts into<lb/>
'k t tea hing methods thequalitn s<lb/>
she respected most in her teachers<lb/>
Intentionalh humiliating her<lb/>
students, she said, i- something<lb/>
Theatre <lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
Eastan lii a ' ai ? i riv iti<lb/>
. ill close the playhouse season on<lb/>
Vpril24,25,26and27, with its<lb/>
galvaniceverungofdance. Afavor-<lb/>
ite with area residents the evening<lb/>
will feature a varied program ol<lb/>
modern, ballet and jazz dance.<lb/>
The original choreography ot<lb/>
he East Carolina University Dance<lb/>
Faculty will be performed by the<lb/>
most gittod students in the profes<lb/>
sional dance programs within the<lb/>
Departmentol rheatre Arts. Thisis<lb/>
an annual event that is a "mustsee<lb/>
tor all ages<lb/>
Season tickets are on sale at<lb/>
Mc annis rheatre box office, Mon-<lb/>
day through Friday, from lOa.m<lb/>
until 4 pin Tor more information,<lb/>
call 757-6829<lb/>
Peel<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
advice tor some common "every<lb/>
day problem Many past tenants<lb/>
have even kept in touch with her.<lb/>
Mrs Pool is now nmetv one<lb/>
years old She describes herself as<lb/>
being independent<lb/>
she is also strong willed and<lb/>
spunky Sheisana tivemembero<lb/>
a kx al Baptist i hurch .is well as a<lb/>
Senior Citizens organization.<lb/>
As tor her family she seems to<lb/>
hold a high degree ot love and ,k<lb/>
miration<lb/>
"Mv grandfather, Kader<lb/>
Kadorlillev. had a street named af-<lb/>
ter him she notes graciously In<lb/>
addition to her church and (lub<lb/>
activities, she spends much of her<lb/>
time tending her home and sard<lb/>
I here is iw outside help<lb/>
ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALL YOU CAN BE<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
tudent Union<lb/>
Makin<lb/>
HIN<lb/>
gs Happen at ECU<lb/>
Do You Know<lb/>
What is Going on at ECU<lb/>
f Not Call the Program<lb/>
Hotline 757-6004<lb/>
This Week at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Double Feature<lb/>
nnjpsi n<lb/>
Wed Sept. 19 8pm<lb/>
IHf<lb/>
-roR-<lb/>
RED OCTOBER<lb/>
Thurs Sept 20<lb/>
7 &amp; 9pm<lb/>
Fri Sat Sept. 2 1 ,22<lb/>
8 pm<lb/>
W Sun Sept 23 2&amp;8pm<lb/>
.CU ID or Current Films Pass Is Required for Admission<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Musician Bruce Frye<lb/>
Tues Sept 1 8<lb/>
9pm-11pm<lb/>
In the Coffeehouse on the<lb/>
Ground Floor of Mendenhall<lb/>
L<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0012"/><lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
11<lb/>
tShg ?agt QIarolinian<lb/>
Sfptfmber 18.1990<lb/>
wh<lb/>
<lb/>
S:SySft:v:S:?5xS?S:SS?S ?: 5<lb/>
Hokies come from behind to defeat ECU 24-23<lb/>
By Earle McAuley<lb/>
Assistant Sports vlitor<lb/>
 irginia rechblocked anextra point attempt late<lb/>
the fourth quarter to beat the Pirates 24-23 in<lb/>
n stadium Saturday night<lb/>
: i, I head coach bill 1 ewis Kt his tirst home<lb/>
 in two seasons in front oi ?3,810fans, the tilth<lb/>
si rowd in Ficklen histor<lb/>
?? present at the game sav a first hall which<lb/>
da large number oi penalties for both squads,<lb/>
tal Six were against ECl for 60 yards and five<lb/>
. icd against the 1 lokies also lor 60 ards<lb/>
In the tirst quarter ECt return man Cedric<lb/>
ren received theopening kickoff and returned<lb/>
;rds to the EC I 36 1 he Pirates proceeded to<lb/>
dow n the field -md svl.red on a David I )aniels<lb/>
from the lech 13 yard line<lb/>
i inthefoltowingdnvcthe Pirates were successful<lb/>
. pmg the Hokies and forced rechtopunt E I<lb/>
?an their drive at their ew n -e en vard line 1 he<lb/>
drive was penalty ridden, the most significant being<lb/>
off-setting on a tlee flicker pass from Erik booker to<lb/>
1 lunter (iallimore tor 7 yards.<lb/>
However ECU wasabletoovercome this mishap<lb/>
and 10 plays later junior quarterback left Blakeran in<lb/>
tor a one yard touchdown giving ECU a 14-0 lead<lb/>
with 4:29 left in the tirst quarter<lb/>
In the second quarter lech replaced junior<lb/>
quarterback Rodd Wooten with junior Will Furrer.<lb/>
Furrer passed 19 times with 14completions tor 237<lb/>
yardsand two touchdowns. There was no big deal<lb/>
about putting in Furrer in the second quarter We<lb/>
planned to do it the whole time, said Virginia lech<lb/>
head coach Frank Beamer.<lb/>
On thedrive after Furrer entered the game lech<lb/>
scored. The drive featured two key passes of 31 and<lb/>
-UK ards.both to sophomore tailback Vaugn 1 lebron.<lb/>
The Pirates countered with a seven-play drive<lb/>
which was kept alive by Blake's 31-yard pass to<lb/>
Gallimore The series resulted in a 43-yard line drive<lb/>
held goal by senior place kicker Rob Imperato, giv-<lb/>
ing ECU the lead at 17-7 with 3:34 left in the halt.<lb/>
Less than a minute later Furrer connected with<lb/>
sophomore tailback Tony Kennedy tor a 69 yard<lb/>
touchdown. That would complete the seoring tor the<lb/>
tirst halt, with the score 17-14<lb/>
The second halt began with lech receiving the<lb/>
ball ou their own 25 vard line, alter a 22 ard kk kolt<lb/>
return from junior return man Marcus Mickel E l s<lb/>
defense held and lech punted the ball out of bounds<lb/>
on the ECU 42 vard line<lb/>
1 hat set up the key driveof the game E U drove<lb/>
to the Hokies 1-yard line and had a 2nd and goal<lb/>
situation On the next play junior fullback David<lb/>
Daniels tumbled and lech's junior linebacker An-<lb/>
thony Pack intercepted the ball and returned it 75-<lb/>
yards to the ITT. 24 vard line.<lb/>
The 1 lokies were unable to score in the ensuing<lb/>
series and Thomas missed a 22-vard attempt "We<lb/>
were clinging to a 17-14 lead in the third quarter, but<lb/>
that one play saw the momentum definitely shift,<lb/>
lewis said.<lb/>
After stifling the ECU offense in three downs,<lb/>
Tech retained possession after a 49-yard punt from<lb/>
:t? ?,?s j.<lb/>
W <lb/>
- e runs the ball in for the Pirates' second touchdown of the game<lb/>
junior lohn ett. Four plays later Furrer connected<lb/>
with sophomore strong end Bo Campbell for a 31-<lb/>
vard touchdown That gave Tech the lead for good.<lb/>
1 he Pirates began to mount a drive but were<lb/>
stymied on Techs 36 yard line after a crucial holding<lb/>
penalty set them back to their own 49-yard line.<lb/>
I welve plavs later Thomas hit on a 35-yard field goal<lb/>
to give the Hokies a 24-17 lead.<lb/>
Alter the kickoff ECU drove to the Tech 37-yard<lb/>
line, d on the next play Daniels ran 37-yardsup the<lb/>
middle tor a touchdown. This would complete the<lb/>
seoring in the game as Imperato's point after attempt<lb/>
was blocked. lett.whoholdsforlmperato, attempted<lb/>
to run the ball into the end zone but was stopped on<lb/>
the two-yard line.<lb/>
"The snap washigh and the operation was a little<lb/>
bit slow The ball never seemed to get up It hap-<lb/>
pened so last, vou don't know if the snap was real<lb/>
good. They got some inside penetration and one of<lb/>
their inside people jumped said Lewis.<lb/>
The Pirates were able to get the ball back for one<lb/>
last attempt with 1:47 remaining in the game. How-<lb/>
ever they were unable to convert. Tech received the<lb/>
ball alter a hobbled handoff with 48 seconds re-<lb/>
maining. Furrer stepped down and ran the clock out<lb/>
to finish the contest.<lb/>
I hey kept our backs against the w il! all night<lb/>
long 1 thought it was a great game from a great<lb/>
burw h of guvs We scratched, bit, clawed and did<lb/>
everything wecould do (defensively) said Beamer.<lb/>
lett Blake was voted the player of the game by<lb/>
the media in attendance ' I think Jeff Blake put on<lb/>
one of the most courageous performances I've ever<lb/>
seen 1 le went out and did everything that needed to<lb/>
be done to help this football team win the game said<lb/>
lewis.<lb/>
I think the whole team played a real solid game.<lb/>
 e made a couple of mistakes here and therethose<lb/>
m ere the breaks. Virginia Tech came up with the big<lb/>
pld . s and we didn't capitalize on our big plavs We<lb/>
played hard and we never gave up said Blake.<lb/>
ECL goes toSouthwestern Louisiana to play the<lb/>
Rajin' Cajuns next Saturday at 8 p.m<lb/>
N.C.State's<lb/>
Terry Jordan<lb/>
disappointed<lb/>
Florida State becomes ninth team in the ACC Clemson<lb/>
squeaks by<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
lidi ?<lb/>
tie<lb/>
?. ? ? . ?? irouna<lb/>
? ?? . irterback<lb/>
? v. - ? md hedidn't<lb/>
: : ? ? a  hen his tss .<lb/>
? ?.?<lb/>
rdai id a rocky debut as<lb/>
? ? ?: for the injured<lb/>
nport. 1 le did com-<lb/>
I 21 passes for 181 yards<lb/>
i third-quarter touchdown,<lb/>
? t was counterbalanced with<lb/>
nterccptions and two<lb/>
s The 20-15 victory did<lb/>
to lift his postgamc spirits.<lb/>
I he win was great My in-<lb/>
. lual performance was not<lb/>
I .it all Jordan said as he<lb/>
 ? Eighl was just the right<lb/>
? r the Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ferenci until last week, but several<lb/>
??? ils sav the sudden growth<lb/>
spurt brought on with the addition<lb/>
: lorida State is still a perfect tit.<lb/>
1 think everybody at the end<lb/>
, ? i pretty exhausting day felt that<lb/>
we considered everything as fully<lb/>
as wecould, said lorn Spragens,<lb/>
faculty representative to the league<lb/>
trom Duke. "Even the schools thai<lb/>
were against expansion were cer-<lb/>
tainly perfectly w illingtoextend a<lb/>
warm welcome<lb/>
In the spanol 24 hours, 1 londa<lb/>
State went from being a football<lb/>
independent with basketball af-<lb/>
filiation in the Metro Conference,<lb/>
to the ninth member of what has<lb/>
been considered the nation's pre-<lb/>
mier basketball league. It also<lb/>
marked the tirst major move tor<lb/>
the ACC since Georgia Tech joined<lb/>
12 years ago.<lb/>
It's the third major move by a<lb/>
collegiate conference this year,<lb/>
following the switch by Arkansas<lb/>
from the Southwest Conference to<lb/>
the Southeastern Conference, and<lb/>
Penn State's decision to join the<lb/>
Big 10.<lb/>
"The window oi opportunity<lb/>
for me was to get into the state of<lb/>
Honda said ACC commissioner<lb/>
Gene Corrigan in a telephone in-<lb/>
terview. "There are more college<lb/>
athletes that come out oi the state<lb/>
of Honda than anywhere except<lb/>
California. And. it's jus! a great<lb/>
opportunity tor us.<lb/>
'What our people felt was that<lb/>
this is an outstanding opportu-<lb/>
nity to get into the state. It does a<lb/>
lot of different things for us<lb/>
Todd Turner, the new athletic<lb/>
director at North Carolina State,<lb/>
had earlier s unded the concern<lb/>
of some in the league that any<lb/>
expansion should consider the<lb/>
AC l. s reputation tor academics<lb/>
as well as athletics. He u.is con-<lb/>
vinced after the pick that the league<lb/>
had made the right move.<lb/>
"It's a fine academic institu-<lb/>
tion with a top (light athletics<lb/>
program. They embrace the phi-<lb/>
losophy that we hold as important<lb/>
in the ACC lurnersavs ' ITievTe<lb/>
committed to our reform package<lb/>
that we've been a proponent of<lb/>
Honda State might not have<lb/>
projected the academic image that<lb/>
some in the ACC wanted. But in<lb/>
the midst of discussions between<lb/>
the two parties, Spragens says the<lb/>
evidence came in as to the lalla-<lb/>
hassee school's reputation.<lb/>
"The day that they met with<lb/>
us tor the first time was the day<lb/>
that it wasannounced that Honda<lb/>
State had won the$50miHkm grant<lb/>
from the National Science foun-<lb/>
dation to become the site of re-<lb/>
search into ultra-strong magne-<lb/>
tism. Spragens savs, noting that<lb/>
Honda Stale beat out the Massa-<lb/>
chusetts Institute of Iechnologv<lb/>
tor the grant<lb/>
I hat was something that<lb/>
opened people's eves. too. It<lb/>
opened Mils eves, that's tor<lb/>
sure Spragens says. People<lb/>
were probably a good bit more<lb/>
impressed than they expected to<lb/>
be<lb/>
spragens says the ACC went<lb/>
into the idea of expansion by look-<lb/>
ing tor a school which shared its<lb/>
values Already, Honda State has<lb/>
said it will close its athletes-only<lb/>
dormitory and do other things in<lb/>
keeping with the league's attempt<lb/>
at changing the face of college<lb/>
athletics.<lb/>
See ACC. page 12<lb/>
ed into his street clothes in<lb/>
N.C StatclcK kerroom. foday<lb/>
 ed me that Terr) Jordan has<lb/>
?  way to go and a lot of room<lb/>
? t impn ivement.<lb/>
rdan's preparations tor his<lb/>
start including considerable<lb/>
i with the tirst team during<lb/>
: r ngdrills-Hewasbattlingwith<lb/>
 ivenport for the job when a knee<lb/>
rain put Davenport out of action.<lb/>
I here was no formal an-<lb/>
mcement ol ordan's move to<lb/>
starting role Davenport was<lb/>
ipparently struggling to get<lb/>
? mgh the week's practices after<lb/>
iffering a bruised right shoulder<lb/>
the loss at ieorgia Tech. All<lb/>
i. h I k k Sheridan said during<lb/>
.seek was that if Davenport<lb/>
. dn't play, Jordan would be<lb/>
tarter<lb/>
All along, though, the6-foot-<lb/>
iophomore from Tampa, Ha<lb/>
i I i feeling that the game would<lb/>
? all his.<lb/>
I had a hunch that I might be<lb/>
ible to start said Jordan, a<lb/>
nephew of former Pallas Cow-<lb/>
boys' great Lee Roy Ionian<lb/>
"I'd been ninning with the<lb/>
first team and I guess that was<lb/>
more or less it, plus the fact that<lb/>
Charles' shoulder was sore he<lb/>
said "It's more non-verbal com-<lb/>
munication. They really don't have<lb/>
to come out and say anything<lb/>
rhe coaches didn't say much,<lb/>
hut Jordan might have been talk-<lb/>
ing to himself by the end of the<lb/>
See Jordan,page 12<lb/>
Lady Pirates boost<lb/>
record to 4-0<lb/>
Sports Information<lb/>
l he l ady Pirates increased their record to 4-0 this weekend by<lb/>
defeating The Virginia Commonwealth Lady Ramsl2-15,15-8,15-<lb/>
10,11-15, 15-13 and the 1 ady Eagtesof Winthrop College 13-2,15-<lb/>
3, 15-10.<lb/>
In Friday's game against VCU,the Lady Pirates fought five hard<lb/>
games to come out with the win. Head coach Martha McCaskill<lb/>
said. "Any time vou go five games and win it's great It's a<lb/>
tremendous high for the kids because that's really tough<lb/>
Hitter Rhonda lackson (18 kills) and Wendy Shi.lt ilM kills)<lb/>
ignited the ECL) offense and helped in sealing the wilt Setter<lb/>
shannon McKay had 38 assists and 12 digs.<lb/>
"We had a lot of heart and determination that really helped us<lb/>
pull through said McCaskill. "We rust went alter it and nude very<lb/>
smart plavs<lb/>
In the Winthropcollegegame Saturday, the Lady Piratesdowned<lb/>
the I .dv Eagles in three straight sets. Coach McCaskill was proud<lb/>
of her team for being able to play so well after such a big win.<lb/>
"I'm glad we didn't come out flat. A lot of times a team gets<lb/>
drained after a win like that, but we came out upand ready to play<lb/>
she said<lb/>
The lady Pirates received strong performances by Jackson (7<lb/>
kills, 8 digs),Christine Belgado (? kills) and McKay who anchored<lb/>
the offense with 28 assists.<lb/>
I he lady Pirates also picked up additional honors this weekend.<lb/>
FCC has been ranked No. 2 in the nation for hitting percentages by<lb/>
the American V ollevball Coaches Association and Jackson was<lb/>
named the CAA player of the week for her performances this<lb/>
weekend. ??-?-??<lb/>
ECU will take to the road on Tuesday to face the AVCA s tn<lb/>
ranked Lady Tarheels of the University of North Carolina.<lb/>
The Lady Pirate volleyball team is still undefeated at 4-0 after<lb/>
playing VCU and Winthrop College this weekend.<lb/>
BALTIMORE (AP) ? Doug<lb/>
Thomas returned a kickoff for a<lb/>
touchdown and set up the winning<lb/>
score with a 37-yard reception as<lb/>
No. lb Clemson beat Maryland<lb/>
18-17 on Saturday m an Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference game.<lb/>
The Tigers (2-1 overall, 1-1 in<lb/>
the ACC) drove n8 yards for the<lb/>
go-ahead touchdown with 7:59<lb/>
left, then held Maryland to two<lb/>
first downs the rest of the way An<lb/>
interception by Dexter Davis ?<lb/>
his second of the game and<lb/>
Clemson's third ? with 2:23 left<lb/>
assured the Tigers of the victory<lb/>
after last week's loss to Virginia.<lb/>
Maryland (2-1,0-1) lost to the<lb/>
Tigers for the fourth straight time<lb/>
despite 266 yaras passing by Scott<lb/>
Zolak, who was 18-for-43.<lb/>
Maryland ?ook a 17-12 lead<lb/>
with 10:25 remaining in the game<lb/>
on a 39-yard field goal by Dan<lb/>
DeArmas.<lb/>
On Clemson's next series, the<lb/>
Tigers faced third-and-7 from their<lb/>
35 when Thomas caught a short<lb/>
pass from DcChanc Cameron and<lb/>
sprinted to the Maryland 28. Five<lb/>
plavs later, Cameron hit Rudy<lb/>
Hams with a 12-yard pass for the<lb/>
winning touchdown.<lb/>
After beinglimitedtoone first<lb/>
down in the first quarter, Mary-<lb/>
land scored two touchdowns in<lb/>
the second period to take a 14-10<lb/>
halftimelead.<lb/>
With Clemson leading 3-0,<lb/>
GeneThomascaught a third-down<lb/>
pass from Zolak at the Tigers' 25,<lb/>
twisted away from Jerome<lb/>
Henderson and completed the 43-<lb/>
yard scoring play for 7-3 lead with<lb/>
nine minutes left in the half.<lb/>
Clemson bounced nght back<lb/>
when Doug Thomas took the en-<lb/>
suing kickoff at the 2, found an<lb/>
opening in the middle and outran<lb/>
three Terrapins to the end zone.<lb/>
Thomas' second 98-yard kickoff<lb/>
return of the season made him the<lb/>
first player in school history to<lb/>
return two kickoffs for touch-<lb/>
downs in the same year.<lb/>
Maryland responded with a<lb/>
64-yard drive that was kept alive<lb/>
when Zolak connected with Barry<lb/>
Johnson for a 27-yard completion<lb/>
See Clemson, page 12<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0013"/><lb/>
<lb/>
if<lb/>
T<lb/>
2 '<lb/>
?3t)e iaiat ylnrnlinian September181990<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Hall of Fame inducts new members<lb/>
RALEIGH ? Harvey Reid r who holds the state record for<lb/>
high school basketball victories, will be among tour men inducted<lb/>
into the North Carolina High School Athletic Association Hall of<lb/>
Fame in November.<lb/>
Joining Reid in the Hall of Fame this year will be Bill Futsler,<lb/>
a former Rockingham football coach and Richmond County<lb/>
athletic director; Jay Robinson, a former coach and three-time<lb/>
NCHSAA president; and Simon Terrell, a co.ich at Warrenton,<lb/>
Cary and Durham High and former executive secretary of the<lb/>
NCHSAA.<lb/>
Reid ranks among the top 20 high school basketball coaches<lb/>
in the countrv with an 8G3-198 overall record His teams at Flm<lb/>
Citv and Wilson like have won seven state titles and have been<lb/>
ninners-up five times, including the past two years.<lb/>
Futsler wasa three-sport coat h dunnghis4lVvear career. His<lb/>
Rockingham football learns had a 28 year record of 22w4-H<lb/>
with 13 conference championships and tour tate titles.<lb/>
Robinson, currentlv vice president for public affairs for the<lb/>
University of North Carolina was county school superintendenl<lb/>
in Stanlv. Cabarrus and Mecklenburg. He also spearheaded the<lb/>
effort to build the current NCHSAA offices.<lb/>
Terrell was the NCHSAA chief executive from 1967 to 1984.<lb/>
During his coaching career, he led CafV to the 1954 1-A basketball<lb/>
title.<lb/>
Parham inducted into Hall of Fame<lb/>
Jordan<lb/>
Tennis 1 lall of Fame will induct<lb/>
arh im during ceremonies Nov. 17<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
continued from page 12<lb/>
Please excendse your right to vote<lb/>
CHARLOTTE TheN.C<lb/>
Eton men's tennis coach I om P<lb/>
in Greensboro<lb/>
Tarham began his college coaching career at Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian or the Carolinas Conference, where his teams won 278<lb/>
matrnesand lost 7S over a 19-ycar span In lShhe moved to Flon<lb/>
of the South Atlantic Conference, where he is 59-18 and the<lb/>
viihT of last year's NAIA national championship.<lb/>
Farham has twice been selected N Al A Coach of the Year and<lb/>
recently was inducted into the NAIA 1 lall of Fame.<lb/>
Also being recognized is ohn Peddycord. 1 le is honored tor<lb/>
his many years of service to the promotion of tennis from the local<lb/>
level to the national level, where he is serving as chairman ot<lb/>
Junior Creative tennis tor the IS. Tennis Association.<lb/>
Broadwell wins mackerel tourney<lb/>
ATI ANTIC BEACH LonnieBroadwell and his son, Boyce<lb/>
Broadwell, reeled in a 38.05 pound king mackerel to win the<lb/>
Hatdec's Atlantic Beach king Mackerel Tournament.<lb/>
They took home $47,000 in the 1 2th annual tournament The<lb/>
two-day event ended Saturday.<lb/>
Both Broad wells were fishing in their first Hardee's Atlantic<lb/>
Beach King Mackerel tournament, which had b74 boats regis-<lb/>
tered<lb/>
Boyce Broadwell said he and his father were trying to repair<lb/>
two dead batteries when the fish hit their bait<lb/>
Clemson upsets WFU in soccer<lb/>
4KR. SAl.FM Forward lames Glenn scored two<lb/>
go. is to Jead Clemson past No Wake Forest in Atlantic Co .st<lb/>
Conference soccer Sunday.<lb/>
(ilenn opened up scoring in the first halt. He rebounded a<lb/>
shot from Wake Forest keeper Matt Olson in to the lower left-hand<lb/>
corner of the box.<lb/>
Wake Forest came back shortly more than a minute later.<lb/>
Sophomore midfielder RaimodeVries blasted a right tooted shot<lb/>
from the six-yard line past Tiger keeper Jaro Zawislan.<lb/>
But toward the end of the first halt,iemson midfielder<lb/>
Thomas Najjar scored a second Tiger goal And (-lenn finished ot t<lb/>
the scoring effort shortly after the second half opened.<lb/>
Wake Forest improved to 3-2-1 and iV2 in the ACC. Clemson<lb/>
f' 11 to 5-1 with a 2-0 conference record.<lb/>
Sheehan wins LPGA tournament<lb/>
KFNT, Wash. Tatty Sheehan. who lost the U.S. Open when<lb/>
she blew a nine-shot lead, didn't lei the LFC.A's Safeco Classic-<lb/>
escape her grasp Sunday when she nosed with a final round of 2-<lb/>
under-par 70 for a nine-stroke victory.<lb/>
Sheehan finished with an lH-under 270 total over the 6,222-<lb/>
yard Meridian Valley Country Club course. Deb Richard finished<lb/>
second at 279 and Martha Foyer third at 280.<lb/>
Massengale defeats Hill by one<lb/>
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) Don Massengale shot an<lb/>
6-under-par65 to capture the rain-shortened PGASeniors' Grand<lb/>
Rapids Open by one stroke Sunday with an Sunder 134 total on<lb/>
the 6,453-yard Elks Club Highland Course.<lb/>
Dave Hill, the first-round leader of the 36-hole tournament,<lb/>
had a chance to tie Massengale, but his tec shot on the final hole<lb/>
went out of bound sand hebogeyed the hole for a 71 and a second-<lb/>
place tie with Terry Dill and Larry Laoretti<lb/>
McEnroe wins tennis challenge<lb/>
PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP) ? John McEnroe defeated Paul An-<lb/>
nacone, a late replacement when a wrist injury sidelined Jimmy<lb/>
Connors, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2 in the final of the Tennis Challenge on<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
? Comptttd from Attoctmttd I'mm Krportl<lb/>
first quarter. The Wolfpack lost a<lb/>
fumbleon its first possession, then<lb/>
gave up a safety when the center<lb/>
snapped the ball of the punter's<lb/>
head and out of the end zone.<lb/>
N.C. State's third possession<lb/>
ended in a Jordan fumble and led<lb/>
to a Wake Forest field goal. The<lb/>
last two plays of the fourth drive<lb/>
were an 8-vard quarterback sack<lb/>
and a Jordan interception<lb/>
Jordan finally maneuvered the<lb/>
Wolfpack into Wake Forest tern<lb/>
tory from his own 20 to the Demon<lb/>
Feacon 19. He broke past the line<lb/>
of scrimmage, then lost the handle<lb/>
on the football and gave it back to<lb/>
Wake Forest. That might havebeen<lb/>
the last straw for some.<lb/>
"I don't think that it affected<lb/>
me at all. 1 just went out there and<lb/>
I made mistakes, and that's part of<lb/>
the game he said.<lb/>
Jordan came out in the third<lb/>
quarter and his first pass became<lb/>
thefifth N.C. State turnover. Wake<lb/>
Forest turned it into a touchdown<lb/>
but it would be the last time the<lb/>
Demon Deacons would be in<lb/>
control.<lb/>
Phil Barnhill threw an inter-<lb/>
ception and Jordan threw an ap-<lb/>
parent touchdown pass to William<lb/>
Turner. A holding penalty negated<lb/>
the score.<lb/>
"1 tried to keep mv cool out<lb/>
there. Next play, we came back<lb/>
and scored said Jordan, who<lb/>
came back on the next plav and<lb/>
threw a 33-vard touchdown pass<lb/>
to Reggie Lawrence<lb/>
Hegot the victory, and though<lb/>
Sheridan wasn't pleased with his<lb/>
team's performance, he did have<lb/>
encouraging words for Jordan<lb/>
I'm very proud of Terry Jor-<lb/>
dan. It was a tough game tor him<lb/>
in a lot of ways, but I know I'm<lb/>
proud oi his performance,<lb/>
Sheridan said<lb/>
Next weekend comes Mary-<lb/>
land, but Jordan isn't harboring<lb/>
I anv thoughts of leading the first<lb/>
offense again<lb/>
"I would be surprised. I don't<lb/>
know how Charles' shoulder is<lb/>
going to feel he said.<lb/>
on third and-12 from the Terra<lb/>
pins' 47. Six plays later, Irov<lb/>
Jackson scored from the 1 to make<lb/>
it 14-10.<lb/>
The Terrapins threatened to<lb/>
increase1 the lead late in the half,<lb/>
driving from their own 36 to the<lb/>
Clemson 17 before Henderson<lb/>
ended thebidwithan interception.<lb/>
Maryland blew two more<lb/>
scoring opportunities in the<lb/>
opening minutes ol the third<lb/>
quarter. IVArmas was wide right<lb/>
on a 47-yard held goal attempt.<lb/>
and after the Terrapins recovered<lb/>
the Tigers' fourth tumble ol tin-<lb/>
game at the Clemson 30, Davis<lb/>
intercepted Zolak's pass at the<lb/>
Clemson 2.<lb/>
The Tigers pulled within 14<lb/>
12 with 5:20left in the third quarter<lb/>
when Zolak, operating from the<lb/>
shotgun formation, was toned to<lb/>
smother a high snap in the end<lb/>
zone tor a safety-<lb/>
RECYCLE<lb/>
this newspaper<lb/>
'cause if you don't,<lb/>
someone else will.<lb/>
Attention Jewish Students.<lb/>
I Icrc is the Temple Bayt Shalom<lb/>
Schedule for the Holidays:<lb/>
RoshjjashanaJL-Sept. 19 at 7:30 pm and<lb/>
Sept. 20 at 9 am and 7:30 pm<lb/>
VomKippur- Sept. 28 at 6:30 (Kol Nidre)<lb/>
and Sept. 29 at 9 am - 1:30 and<lb/>
5 pm -Sundown plus community<lb/>
break fast.<lb/>
Also Please Look For Upcoming<lb/>
Events In Our Flyers.<lb/>
( all Sharon 931-7811 or Mike 756-4930 for ride info.<lb/>
ACC<lb/>
In the Locker<lb/>
Pro pick producers<lb/>
Colleges with the most National<lb/>
Football League draft picks this year.<lb/>
continued from page 12<lb/>
One facade that will be<lb/>
changed is that of schedules by<lb/>
theexisting schools. Theresa good<lb/>
side and a bad side. Spragens<lb/>
notes.<lb/>
There is a certain magic to<lb/>
eight. Once vou break that, then<lb/>
there's really no reason that 10 is<lb/>
better than nine' Spragens said.<lb/>
"In scheduling terms, both in<lb/>
f ootba 11 a nd ba sketba 11, t here a re a<lb/>
lot of good reasons that nine is<lb/>
better than 10<lb/>
Football will provide some<lb/>
problems because current ACC<lb/>
schools will have to alter sched-<lb/>
ules already arranged through the<lb/>
end of the decade that provide for<lb/>
an eight-game league format. Bas-<lb/>
ketball adds two more conference<lb/>
games and a different type of<lb/>
headache.<lb/>
"It really constrains what we<lb/>
can do in terms of national<lb/>
matchups, which are important to<lb/>
us and important to the confer-<lb/>
ence he said. "We can swallow<lb/>
two more conference games and<lb/>
make those adjustments, but if we<lb/>
were going to go up four games<lb/>
from where we are now, that<lb/>
would cause us very serious<lb/>
problems<lb/>
Florida State will be able to<lb/>
compete for championships in<lb/>
most sports starting with the 1991 -<lb/>
92 school year.<lb/>
Already, there's been talk of<lb/>
adding a 10th team to the league<lb/>
lineup that now includes North<lb/>
Carolina, North Carolina State,<lb/>
Duke, Wake Forest, Georgia Tech,<lb/>
Clemson, Virginia, Maryland and<lb/>
Florida State. Corngan says it's<lb/>
not out of the question, though it's<lb/>
not currently at the top of discus-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
"One of our schools would<lb/>
have to really get out there and<lb/>
promote another team to get con-<lb/>
sideration he says.<lb/>
Spragens says the question is<lb/>
premature right now.<lb/>
"I think there are a couple of<lb/>
schools within theconference who<lb/>
may have their eye on one or two<lb/>
other schools he said. "I don't<lb/>
think there's going to be any fur<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058230_0014"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
t<lb/>
(She iEaat (Carolinian September 18,1990 13<lb/>
Olympic committee debates location for<lb/>
100th birthday of modern Games in '92<lb/>
Two Americans share the lead in the Canadian open<lb/>
KYO ' Om<lb/>
ired an end Uh1.i in the<lb/>
' :tUv<lb/>
, n sth Scssi<lb/>
.ill reach its <lb/>
t foi<lb/>
'? ? inta a nd<lb/>
? i be the<lb/>
<lb/>
h Toi f behind<lb/>
lax i'<lb/>
l<lb/>
id silver<lb/>
u<lb/>
?<lb/>
should become the privileged<lb/>
forum for the encounter, refltn<lb/>
t ion and lionoi the rising ton es<lb/>
t our w orW<lb/>
I he address broke little new<lb/>
? I but touched upon the<lb/>
: ? ts impaet o( the i risis in the<lb/>
i asl the ih onom? nd<lb/>
political problems tat ing the s?'<lb/>
viet I nu-ii and Fastern Europe,<lb/>
rl - to end apartheid in South<lb/>
Atru.i and the spread of drugs<lb/>
throughout mh iety<lb/>
! lu- ICX . one ?-t the world s<lb/>
biggest organizations with 167<lb/>
n her nations was the p <lb/>
umbrella under which answers<lb/>
could be found to such problems,<lb/>
Samararw h said<lb/>
By establishing betw i en<lb/>
them a kind 't Olvmpu truce in<lb/>
;withthehopesandi<lb/>
,t our lime, ttu-M- rising I<lb/>
v ould come together beneath tho<lb/>
symbol ir tin- five interlinked<lb/>
rings to make a reality<lb/>
 aluesi easek?sslvpro laimedand<lb/>
i easele; - ed tnto question<lb/>
?, .I1, r  eltare t<lb/>
all.sohdanh and pe e he said.<lb/>
rhe bidding for 96 started<lb/>
re than three iirs ago and<lb/>
iuirii ts i nd imid creal<lb/>
urw iTtaintv<lb/>
Members have said tor sev-<lb/>
eral months that choosing among<lb/>
die six candidates wasoneH their<lb/>
toughest jobs because all had solid<lb/>
proposals, with Athens, Greece,<lb/>
adding the historical element as<lb/>
the birthplace ot the ancient<lb/>
( Mympk s and tht' site ot their re-<lb/>
birth in 1896.<lb/>
I honestly think most ot the<lb/>
KX members remain undecided,<lb/>
said Agustin Arroyo, a veteran<lb/>
member from Ecuador. "What<lb/>
makes them decide? It s different<lb/>
for everyone. It depends on what<lb/>
details they pay attention to. what<lb/>
their interests are.<lb/>
V iths-7Kmemlvrspresent.<lb/>
the winner needs 44 votes<lb/>
Samarant h traditionally does not<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
this<lb/>
SELF DEFENCE<lb/>
DEMONSTRATION<lb/>
? .?. . DO<lb/>
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ON PRINCESS CRUISE LINES $rQr<lb/>
30 DAY STANDBY SPECIAL FROM U7J<lb/>
695<lb/>
795<lb/>
OAkVll.l.F, Ontario (AT)<lb/>
A couple of Americans share the<lb/>
lead, but there's a pair ot Canadi-<lb/>
ans in position to break a 36-year-<lb/>
old non-winnmi; string in their<lb/>
national go It championship<lb/>
"When vim look up and see a<lb/>
rellowCanadian playing well, it's<lb/>
a great feeling said veteran Dave<lb/>
Barr, one stroke ott'the first-round<lb/>
lead in the Canadian Open<lb/>
Two shots back of Parr and in<lb/>
a 14 man tie tor fourth was Rich-<lb/>
ard okol, also verv much in the<lb/>
chase tobecome the first Canadian<lb/>
to win this national title since Pat<lb/>
Fletcher in 1954<lb/>
"It sa great race to be in We're<lb/>
riding on each other's momen-<lb/>
tum said okol. who recorded a<lb/>
i areer best, ninner-uptintsh three<lb/>
s eeks ago.<lb/>
ohn Cook, on the rebound<lb/>
trom wrist and hand surgerv that<lb/>
threatened his caret r. and Brad<lb/>
Faxon shared the top spot with<lb/>
65s, 7-under-par on the relatively<lb/>
benign C.len Abbey Colt Club.<lb/>
"It's about as easy as you're<lb/>
going to see it said Cook, who<lb/>
won this title in 1983. "The winds<lb/>
v.ere calm and it was playing<lb/>
short<lb/>
loth Cook and Faxon, who<lb/>
has vet to win in a seven-season<lb/>
PGA lour career, credited their<lb/>
short games as the major reason<lb/>
tor their high standing<lb/>
"Chipping and putting umi-<lb/>
aiiv are mv strong points, but ob-<lb/>
viouslv this was a little better than<lb/>
usual Faxon said Thursday<lb/>
He one putted 1 1 times, m-<lb/>
(. hiding tour birdies trom 20 teet<lb/>
(r more and a !5-f 'oter to save par<lb/>
and a piece of the lead on the final<lb/>
hole He did not make a bogey<lb/>
"Chipping left me. mv short<lb/>
game left me I've probably<lb/>
worked on it more in the last two<lb/>
months than 1 have in mv other 10<lb/>
years (as a touring pro put to-<lb/>
gether he said.<lb/>
The vork paid oft with a<lb/>
couple of 30-foot birdie putts and<lb/>
a 75 toot pitch inbirdieonhis 17th<lb/>
hole<lb/>
When that one went in. I<lb/>
knew it was ioing to be a good<lb/>
ending to the day, no matter what<lb/>
1 did on the last hole Cook said.<lb/>
He made bogev there, rust as<lb/>
hedid on his first hole In between,<lb/>
however, he recorded nine birdies.<lb/>
"more than I had .ill of last week<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058230_0015"/><lb/>
14 L<lb/>
?bc ?a?t UJnrnlintan September 18,1990<lb/>
I would Ye bought a Macintosh even without<lb/>
the student discount.<lb/>
Greg Gallent<lb/>
Consume' Economics and Housing<lb/>
Cornell University<lb/>
. .<lb/>
'hefirsttin it aMacini si Iwasii i Jiat<lb/>
ked Its a vv ?rk i ?l an i sav( the si . k "<lb/>
pneingand ' i v i - v;i ibi( lis gel<lb/>
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 pa ? learn.and rkii g n them ai<lb/>
 gr i ling experience ! asi ar. a hi<lb/>
igl ' ;? ' lerkii J ' r : . r tgaii "<lb/>
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urs.W I at a waste<lb/>
? sh. on the other hand, is a logical<lb/>
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ir paper, no! on how to get it o?<lb/>
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()e vnierked with;a Marinttsh,<lb/>
there's no turning back"<lb/>
( omc to tlu- VfacFest September 20 in the soda shop in<lb/>
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Vh d) xj pie k ve Macint ?sh'?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058230_0016"/><lb/>
s<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
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i&amp;lie Cast (Earolfnfan September 18,1990<lb/>
x<lb/>
<lb/>
I would've bought a Macintosh even without<lb/>
the student discount.<lb/>
Greg Gallent<lb/>
Consumer Economics and Housing<lb/>
Cornell University<lb/>
The first time I saw a Macinu sh. I as immediately<lb/>
hooted. Its a work of art. I saw the student<lb/>
pricing and my next itm ve was (bvi hjs: get me.<lb/>
"Some other c wnputers are cheaper, but they're<lb/>
a pain to learn, and working on them can he<lb/>
a grueling experience. Last year, a friend<lb/>
bought another kind of computer against<lb/>
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hours.What a waste.<lb/>
"lacmu )sh. t?the other hand, is a logical<lb/>
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what's m your paper, not on how to get it on<lb/>
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learning new programs because they all work<lb/>
in the same way.<lb/>
'Once )uve )rked with a Macintosh,<lb/>
there's no turning back<lb/>
Come to the MacFest September 20 in the Soda Shop in<lb/>
Wright Building or call Jeff Mills at T-631 for more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058230_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>