<?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="00058293_0001"/>
Where's the compassion?<lb/>
Rape victims need understanding to heal.<lb/>
4<lb/>
He's back 5<lb/>
Terminator 2 will entertain summer audiences.<lb/>
<lb/>
?ij? lEaat (Kamltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vcx.65 No.38<lb/>
Wednesday, July 24,1991<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
6 Pages<lb/>
mm<lb/>
ounrf Other<lb/>
ECU graduate named editor of music magazine<lb/>
Lawsuit withdrawn in case<lb/>
University of Chapel Hill Student Congress Rep. Eric<lb/>
lYatt withdrew his lawsuit challenging Student Body Presi-<lb/>
dent Matt Heyd'ssumrner appointment of the acting student<lb/>
rxxiv treasurer.<lb/>
The lawsuit was filed on June 12 because of the possible<lb/>
illegality oi Krishna Sung's appointment as acting student<lb/>
body treasurer. Sung was appointed the summer position by<lb/>
1 leyd tii till in for Josh Siegal, student body treasurer, who is<lb/>
vacationing in New York.<lb/>
After the tiling of the lawsuit, Student Supreme Court<lb/>
Chief Justice, Mark Bibbs, put a restraining order against Sung<lb/>
preventing her from distributing money for the SGA.Hk suit<lb/>
was withdrawn at Bibbs' request following the Sung's resig-<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
Siegal will try to perform hisduties from New York, while<lb/>
Bibbs attempts to legislate an appropriate alternative.<lb/>
Colleges chosen for program<lb/>
Six community colleges' in small business centers have<lb/>
been chosen for the Export Outreach Program for 1991 -1992.<lb/>
The program is a joint project between the N.C Community<lb/>
College System and the international trade division of the<lb/>
Department of Economic and Community Development.<lb/>
It is designed to instruct small and intermediate busi-<lb/>
nesses how to reach international markets. The program has<lb/>
already been found to be sucessful with the participation of<lb/>
over 200 businesses last year.<lb/>
By LeClair Harper<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Mark Kemp, a 1983 ECU<lb/>
graduate, has been named<lb/>
editor of the alternative music<lb/>
magazine Option, a bimonthly<lb/>
magazine based in Los Ange-<lb/>
les.<lb/>
Kemp is an Asheboro na-<lb/>
tive. He was an English major<lb/>
and philosophy minor at ECU.<lb/>
After graduation, he stayed in<lb/>
Greenville for abouta year and<lb/>
played in a band, The Trend,<lb/>
and worked at the New Deli.<lb/>
Next, he got a job at a<lb/>
Burlington newspaper, but he<lb/>
wanted to be more than a news<lb/>
writer. Kempsaid it had a been<lb/>
a dream of his to write for a<lb/>
magazine like Rolling Stone or<lb/>
Creem. " always wanted to be<lb/>
in a band or write about it he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Kemp then moved on to<lb/>
New York, in order to fulfill<lb/>
his dream, he said.<lb/>
In New York, Kemp<lb/>
worked a a full-time and free-<lb/>
lance vv nter. He was an assis-<lb/>
tant editor at Discover maga-<lb/>
zine from 1987 to 1989. During<lb/>
trut time, ho also contributed<lb/>
to Option, Creem, Spin and<lb/>
other magazines.<lb/>
After 1989, Kemp worked<lb/>
as a free-lance writer with his<lb/>
work appearing in the Village<lb/>
Voice, the LA. Weekly and<lb/>
other magazines and news-<lb/>
papers throughout the world.<lb/>
Kemp was politically and<lb/>
musically active when he was<lb/>
in Greenville. Besides playing<lb/>
in The Trend, a band he de-<lb/>
scribed as "awful he also<lb/>
played solo acoustic guitar at<lb/>
the Treehouse.<lb/>
He wasn't very active in<lb/>
student media at ECU. "I<lb/>
wrote a little bit for The East<lb/>
Carolinian he said.<lb/>
While he said he didn't<lb/>
haveanvthingbad tosayabout<lb/>
ECU, he said his most impor-<lb/>
tant experiences were outside<lb/>
of the classnxm.<lb/>
"Themost valuable things<lb/>
in Greenville were things not<lb/>
to do with school he said,<lb/>
ci ting the development of long<lb/>
term fnendships as a value of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Kemp's advise for bud-<lb/>
ding journalists at ECU is to<lb/>
"wnte all the time, (and) get<lb/>
out of Greenville<lb/>
"If a student is wanting to<lb/>
write, (Greenville) is not the<lb/>
place to do it he said.<lb/>
Kemp has had the op-<lb/>
portunity to interview top<lb/>
names in the music world in<lb/>
his career. He said his most<lb/>
cantankerous interview was<lb/>
wit h Lou Reed, one of the more<lb/>
difficult was with Michael<lb/>
Stipe of R.E.M and one of the<lb/>
best was with Morrissey.<lb/>
He considered Bob<lb/>
Mould, formerly of Husker<lb/>
Du, the best. "He was the best<lb/>
interview 1 ever had he said.<lb/>
"It was down to earth, like a<lb/>
friend talking to a friend<lb/>
Option covers interna-<lb/>
tional music, focusing on in- magazine is commendable<lb/>
dependent, underground and<lb/>
alternative recordings. It re-<lb/>
views about 300 new releases<lb/>
in each issue.<lb/>
Kemp's goal at Option is<lb/>
"to make it the highest selling<lb/>
music magazine ever he said<lb/>
with a laugh.<lb/>
"Option's philosophy of<lb/>
presenting the best in alterna-<lb/>
tive rock, jazz, world and eth-<lb/>
nic musics in one readable<lb/>
Kemp said in a press release.<lb/>
"Its philosophy is very<lb/>
admirable, and I want to con-<lb/>
tinue that he said.<lb/>
Kemp last visited Green-<lb/>
ville about a year ago on his<lb/>
way to the Outer Banks. He<lb/>
said it looked much the same.<lb/>
Option is available in<lb/>
Greenville at Quicksilver<lb/>
Records and Book Exchange.<lb/>
Mark Kemp, an ECU graduate and native of Asheboro,<lb/>
alternative music magazine based in Los Angeles.<lb/>
PEE cot;r1??y of Jan? Huntingtofi<lb/>
is the new editor of Option, an<lb/>
Greenville citizens march against drugs<lb/>
By Matt Jones<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr Dorothy LeFlore of North Carolina A&amp;T accepts a<lb/>
$17,000 check from Arnold Mitchem of R.J. Reynolds Co.<lb/>
$17,000 granted to N.C State<lb/>
North Carolina Agriculture and Technical State Univer-<lb/>
sity was recently granted $17,000 from the R.J. Reynolds<lb/>
Tobacco Company. The purpose of the grant is to fund<lb/>
agricultural education and enhancement programs adminis-<lb/>
tered bv the university.<lb/>
Dr. Dorothy Leflore, director of corporateand foundation<lb/>
relations, accepted the check for the university. Janet P. Wheeler<lb/>
and Arnold R. Mitchem, both from the company's research<lb/>
and development department, presented the funds.<lb/>
Probe of Housing Department<lb/>
The Department of University Housing on the campus of<lb/>
Chapel Hill is currently being probed by university adminis-<lb/>
trators. The probe is currently underway to alleviate what<lb/>
officials refer to as "small problems" in the department.<lb/>
Donald Boulton, Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs, said<lb/>
that he had been involved in "conservations" with certain<lb/>
members of the department's staff for the last three to four<lb/>
weeks. The Residence Hall Association co-president Scott<lb/>
Peeler said Boulton stressed that the probes were "not an<lb/>
investigation, quote, unquote<lb/>
Boulton gave no information concerning the nature of the<lb/>
probe. Some unconfirmed sources state that it might deal with<lb/>
financial misdealings.<lb/>
ISU student requests bail<lb/>
Mark Nicholson, an Indiana State University student<lb/>
being held without bond on charges of murder, has requested<lb/>
a "reasonable" bail or release on bond and electronically<lb/>
monitored home detention. Nicholson is being held for the<lb/>
murder of an ISU student outside of Ballyhoo Pizza King and<lb/>
Tavern and for the gunshot wounding of a bystander.<lb/>
A group of approximately<lb/>
150 Greenville citizens voiced<lb/>
their disgust with the rising<lb/>
drug problem facing our city<lb/>
last Saturday. The group<lb/>
marched through portions of<lb/>
West Greenville holding signs<lb/>
and banners with anti-drug<lb/>
slogans.<lb/>
The day was as hot as the<lb/>
march was silent. The tem-<lb/>
perature approached triple<lb/>
digits as the group walked<lb/>
through the community. The<lb/>
onlv sound to bt ieard was<lb/>
the cadence of drums played<lb/>
by two oi the marchers.<lb/>
The march against drugs<lb/>
was organized by the West<lb/>
Greenville Neighborhood and<lb/>
Citizens Clean Up and Drug<lb/>
Prevention Task Force. The or-<lb/>
ganization was formed 12<lb/>
months ago to help battle the<lb/>
drug problem. The silent<lb/>
march was formed as part of<lb/>
its one year anniversary.<lb/>
One of the march's pri-<lb/>
mary organizers, Rev. Michael<lb/>
Dixon, believed that the march<lb/>
was a success.<lb/>
"I'm very pleased with the<lb/>
turn out he said in an inter-<lb/>
view after the march. "We got<lb/>
representatives from just<lb/>
about every community in<lb/>
Greenville (and) many from<lb/>
Pitt County. We got great<lb/>
support from law enforcement<lb/>
agencies and the City of Gre-<lb/>
enville ? hats off to them be-<lb/>
cause they did a tremendous<lb/>
job supporting our efforts.<lb/>
"The Mayor even cut her<lb/>
vacation short to be here, so<lb/>
I'm really elated<lb/>
Mayor Nancy Jenkins was<lb/>
one of the speakers appeari ng<lb/>
in a program following the<lb/>
march. The event was held in<lb/>
the auditorium of St. Gabriels<lb/>
church.<lb/>
The Mayor spoke of a<lb/>
need for united efforts to en-<lb/>
sure the end to the problems<lb/>
of our community.<lb/>
"Each one of you here is<lb/>
doing your part in your own<lb/>
own wav she said. "When<lb/>
we talk of a concerted effort,<lb/>
there can be no concert unless<lb/>
everybody singsin their part<lb/>
Dr. Alfred T. Matthews,<lb/>
the vice chancellor of Student<lb/>
Life for ECU, also spoke at the<lb/>
program. He began with his<lb/>
definition of drugs.<lb/>
"Drugs are a cancer upon<lb/>
our society, a cancer upon our<lb/>
community and a cancer upon<lb/>
every individual who lives in<lb/>
that community he said.<lb/>
He spoke of the<lb/>
University's strict position<lb/>
concerning drugs on campus.<lb/>
"EastCarolina University<lb/>
has very little tolerance for<lb/>
drug usage Matthews said.<lb/>
"We have been criticized in<lb/>
recent years for the number of<lb/>
students that we've sus-<lb/>
pended for their involvement<lb/>
with drugs, though they are<lb/>
compared toother institutions<lb/>
within the same system, who<lb/>
suspend less or not at all. I<lb/>
would suggest that it is prob-<lb/>
ably more a reflection of our<lb/>
vigorous enforcement than it<lb/>
is the prevalence of drugs on<lb/>
our campus<lb/>
D. D. Garret, the presiden t<lb/>
of the West Greenville<lb/>
Neighborhood and Citizens<lb/>
Clean Up and Drug Preven-<lb/>
tion Task Force, spoke of his<lb/>
view oi the drug problem in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
"The drug problem is not<lb/>
a black problem, nor is the<lb/>
drug problem a white prob-<lb/>
lem he said. "The drug<lb/>
problem is not about being<lb/>
saw.<lb/>
"So one day, he and his<lb/>
father were walking under a<lb/>
tobacco barn shelter, and the<lb/>
boy saw a nest oi wasps, and<lb/>
he started to back away His<lb/>
father asked him why he<lb/>
didn't throw some rocks at<lb/>
poornoraboutbeingnch.The the wasp nest. The boy's reply<lb/>
drug problem is our problem was Tou see, pop, they are<lb/>
? a people's problem.<lb/>
"Drugs are not the preb-<lb/>
lem. They are the symptoms<lb/>
of the real problem in West<lb/>
Greenville. The real problem<lb/>
is racism and poverty<lb/>
Hecontinued with a story<lb/>
together<lb/>
Laughter filled the room.<lb/>
"1 promise you Garret<lb/>
said, "thatif wedecentcitizens<lb/>
of Greenville would come to-<lb/>
gether, we could control the<lb/>
drug addicts in our town. Our<lb/>
that expressed the need for problem is that they are scared<lb/>
gathered efforts to battle the of us and we are scared of<lb/>
problems of West Greenville.<lb/>
"I'moften asked whatcan<lb/>
I do asan individual about the<lb/>
drugs in my home, in my<lb/>
street, or in mv neighborhood ?<lb/>
"I am reminded at this<lb/>
time of a young boy who car-<lb/>
ried with him a pocket full of<lb/>
rocks. He would throw them<lb/>
at everything. He'd throw<lb/>
rocks at chickens, he'd throw<lb/>
rocks at birds, he'd throw<lb/>
rocks at cats. He just liked to<lb/>
throw rocks at any animal he<lb/>
them. But if we would come<lb/>
together, we could solve the<lb/>
problem<lb/>
Other speakers at the<lb/>
event included Thelma Jones,<lb/>
supervisor of medicaid for the<lb/>
Pitt County Department of<lb/>
Social Service, Carolvn<lb/>
Kennedy, director of the<lb/>
Pamlico County Department<lb/>
of Social Services and Charles<lb/>
Hinman, chief of the Green-<lb/>
ville Police Department.<lb/>
100<lb/>
80<lb/>
o60<lb/>
L<lb/>
L<lb/>
A<lb/>
R<lb/>
40<lb/>
Inside Wednesday<lb/>
Crime Scene2<lb/>
Classifieds&amp;<lb/>
Editorial4<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
SportsJ<lb/>
A breakdown of<lb/>
"Other University<lb/>
Fees" as paid by<lb/>
full-time students<lb/>
Workshop alerts<lb/>
public of misuse<lb/>
of seatbelts<lb/>
VV<lb/>
 V<lb/>
? Figures come from most recent Schedule<lb/>
of University Fees prepared Sept 19,1990.<lb/>
I Graphic by Doug Morris ? The last CaroBrmin<lb/>
Wv<lb/>
By Matt Jones<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A workshop was held on<lb/>
July 16 in Greenville on the<lb/>
topic of the misuse of seatbelts<lb/>
and airbags to increase public<lb/>
awareness of automobile<lb/>
safety.<lb/>
Motor vehicle crashes are<lb/>
the number one cause of<lb/>
dea tits of Americans under the<lb/>
age of 34. Every 22 minutes<lb/>
someone is killed in a crash,<lb/>
and every two minutes<lb/>
someone is admitted to a<lb/>
hospital because of a crash.<lb/>
At the press conference<lb/>
held after the session, demon-<lb/>
strations were given of vari-<lb/>
ous safety devices and a roll-<lb/>
ovct crash simulator.<lb/>
The speakers at the con-<lb/>
ference included Paul Jones,<lb/>
the director of the North<lb/>
Carolina Governor's High-<lb/>
way Safety Program; Charles<lb/>
Hinman, chief of the Green-<lb/>
ville Police Department and<lb/>
Linda Thompson, vice-presi-<lb/>
dent of Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
Over 100 health and<lb/>
emergency medical profes-<lb/>
sionals, law enforcement offi-<lb/>
cials, automobile dealers, in-<lb/>
surance agents, and other<lb/>
highway safety advocates at-<lb/>
tended the function. The<lb/>
group spent the day listening<lb/>
to advice given by the speak-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
One of the main points<lb/>
made by the presentation was<lb/>
the misuse of automatic safety<lb/>
belts. Many people, the pre-<lb/>
sentation explained, tend to<lb/>
ignore the lap belt portion of<lb/>
an automatic seat belt The<lb/>
See MtsuM, page 2<lb/>
<pb facs="00058293_0002"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
(Eire ?aat (EaroHnian j?, Y ?4 1991<lb/>
B JyuNE<lb/>
Misuse<lb/>
Campus Police respond to assault<lb/>
on a female at Joyner Library<lb/>
July 16<lb/>
I Rddcn Dnve: checked on a ampfehwa person; wme was<lb/>
working on the golf cart that was broken down.<lb/>
047 - Garrett Residence Hall (north): checked out a domestic<lb/>
dispute. IXspute settled. Both subjects left campus<lb/>
July 17 '<lb/>
1H42 Flanagan Building, responded to wall cracking. All contact<lb/>
? i made with proper people.<lb/>
lyrH) Joyner Library: responded to assault on female.<lb/>
0019 Garret! Residence Hall (south): Verbal warning given to<lb/>
1 member tot speeding,<lb/>
lulv 18<lb/>
Flanagan Building. Provided security to the wall falling<lb/>
JOS Carol Belk Building: responded to a report of breaking and<lb/>
entering oi a vehicle.<lb/>
0221 larvis Residence Hall: responded to request from residence<lb/>
full staff to assist with male student hitting locked curfew door with<lb/>
stKkarid being toud.Student referred to administration fordisposition.<lb/>
?3 I larrington Field, stopped automobile for erratic driving.<lb/>
V erbal warning given to student tor driving after dnnking. Vehicle<lb/>
parked and taxi called for occupants.<lb/>
lulv 14<lb/>
i6 I k kJen Driveand Charles Street: assisted a female motorist<lb/>
experiencing morning sickness.<lb/>
!tnikinsArt(enter(north):a?srxmdtitoan-p?rtecidomtk<lb/>
dispute. Subjects located, dispute settled.<lb/>
0335 Willis Building (southeast): checked on an intoxicated male<lb/>
-utt passed out on the ground. Subject revived and released.<lb/>
White Residence 1 lafl (east): responded on scene toa male<lb/>
ubjed tampering with a vehicle. Non-student male was banned<lb/>
July 20<lb/>
0249 Cotton Residence Hall I.obbv:checked on possible male in<lb/>
the lobby. L'nkmnded.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center (north): observed two male<lb/>
subjects tampering with a fork lift. Subjects attempted to elude officers<lb/>
I vt Subjects apprehended.<lb/>
luly-21<lb/>
1051 Wnght Auditorium (south), issued a verbal warning to two<lb/>
ju eniles tor picking up the blue light phone.<lb/>
25 T'vler Residence Hall (north): chocked on a suspicious<lb/>
 ehi( le Vehicle was miming with no one around sanie<lb/>
lulv 22<lb/>
1131 1 ruin Buildingand Mendenhall Student C enter: Checked<lb/>
i til in reference to a subject consuming alcohol on campus. The subject<lb/>
bally warned and poured out the remaining contents.<lb/>
Seventh and amos streets: Slopped subject in the parking<lb/>
' Subject had just damaged a vehicle there. Subject arrested.<lb/>
( nme Scene is taken fnm official Publk Sjfrrv log.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
shoulder belts in that typeof model<lb/>
secure automatically, but in most<lb/>
cases, the lap belt must be fastened<lb/>
by hand.<lb/>
If the lap belt is ignored, then<lb/>
the seat belt system will not work to<lb/>
its full potential. In fact, there have<lb/>
been cases of severe damage to the<lb/>
neck caused by neglecting to fasten<lb/>
the lap belt. At the point of impact,<lb/>
the lower body will slide forward if<lb/>
no lap belt is in place, but the upper<lb/>
body will remain steadfast. The ef-<lb/>
fect is whiplash on the neck, which<lb/>
in some cases have ended in death.<lb/>
The speakers at the conference<lb/>
also emphasized the use airbags.<lb/>
Many passengers mistake the<lb/>
presence of an airbag fora reason to<lb/>
not buckle theirsafcty belts. Studies<lb/>
have shown that this can be a fatal<lb/>
mistake.<lb/>
Air bags and safety belts pro-<lb/>
vide dual protection by compfe-<lb/>
rnenhngonearKthtT'sperfonr?ance.<lb/>
Air bags work only in the case of a<lb/>
frontal collision; safety belts can<lb/>
provide protection from side im-<lb/>
pacts, rear crashes and roll-overs.<lb/>
Also, for an airbag to deploy, the<lb/>
speed of impact must be over 12<lb/>
mph. Thus, a safety belt is needed<lb/>
for impacts at less than this speed.<lb/>
Advertise in<lb/>
CARDUNIAN<lb/>
I<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
Local Open Rate $5.00<lb/>
Student $2.50<lb/>
per column inch<lb/>
Bulk &amp; Frequency Contract<lb/>
Discounts Available<lb/>
Business Hours<lb/>
Monday - Thursday<lb/>
7:30 - 5:00<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
7:30- 11:30<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
Newman Catholic Student Center<lb/>
would like to<lb/>
Invite You to Join Us In Worship<lb/>
Campus Mass Schedule: Summer Sessions May 19 - July 28<lb/>
Sunday: 11:30am and 8:30pm at the Newman Center<lb/>
Weekdays: 8:00am at the Newman Center<lb/>
Wednesdays: 8:00am and 5:30pm<lb/>
For more information call or visit the Center daily between 8:30am and 11pm<lb/>
Fr. Paul Vaeth. Chaplain &amp; Campus Minister<lb/>
954 East 10th SL(At the Foot of College Hill) Phone: 757-3760757-1091<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
-In Concert-<lb/>
Queen Sara<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Thursday, July 25th<lb/>
9:00 pm Central Campus Mall<lb/>
Rbsolutly no coolers or alcoholic beverages allowed<lb/>
Sponsored by ?CU Student Union Special Concerts Committee<lb/>
Rain Site: Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
CHEECH&amp;CHONG'S<lb/>
RATED 00<lb/>
Monday, July 29th<lb/>
9:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Sponsored by ?CU Student Union Films Committee<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
World trade experts to discuss U.S.<lb/>
ties to Third World in conference<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
World trade experts will give<lb/>
ad vice on making business deals in<lb/>
foreign markets when they speak at<lb/>
an ECU conference, Tuesday Aug.<lb/>
Theconference, "US. Economic<lb/>
Ties to the Third World: Opportu-<lb/>
nities for Eastern N.C Businesses'<lb/>
will focus on export trading with<lb/>
developing countries, said Betty A<lb/>
Wilson of the ECU School of Busi-<lb/>
ness.<lb/>
"It wil 1 be a fact-f 1 nd mg session<lb/>
for companies that want to get in-<lb/>
volved and are considering the<lb/>
risks she said.<lb/>
The conference will begin at 1<lb/>
p.m. at the BB&amp;TCenter for Leader<lb/>
ship Development. A $35 registra-<lb/>
tion fee will be charged.<lb/>
John Maxwell Hamilton, a se-<lb/>
nior advisor for the World Bank,<lb/>
and Phil Hubbard,directorof Inter-<lb/>
national Business for the U.S.<lb/>
Agency for International Develop-<lb/>
ment, will give keynote addresses.<lb/>
Hamiltonand I lubbard vvilldiscuss<lb/>
growth trends, market demands,<lb/>
commeraal and political risks and<lb/>
other issues affecbng trade with the<lb/>
developing world, Wilson said.<lb/>
Hamilton isa former journalist<lb/>
for The Chnstian Science Monitor<lb/>
and ABC Radio. He served in the<lb/>
US Agency for International De-<lb/>
velopment during the Carter Ad-<lb/>
ministration and on the House<lb/>
Foreign Affairs Committee before<lb/>
becoming a senior advisor to the<lb/>
World Bank. He is the author of<lb/>
"Mai n Street America and the Third<lb/>
World "and "Entangling Alliances:<lb/>
How the Third World Shapes Our<lb/>
Lives<lb/>
Hubbard,an independent con-<lb/>
sultant, has worked with a number<lb/>
of projects for the U.S. Agency for<lb/>
International Development. He has<lb/>
also managed an oil and gas ex-<lb/>
ploration firm in Colorado and has<lb/>
directed projects to improve eco-<lb/>
nomic development in Alaska.<lb/>
A panel of experts will also join<lb/>
the speakers for an open discussion<lb/>
with the audience. The panel<lb/>
members include Dr. UmeshGulah,<lb/>
a professor of international eco-<lb/>
nomics at ECU; Ed Mayorga, presi-<lb/>
dent of R&amp;E Electronics m<lb/>
Wilmington; Ingeborg Hegenbdrt,<lb/>
di rector of I nternabonal Services for<lb/>
Southern National Bank in Char<lb/>
lotte; Weldon Blanton of the Na-<lb/>
tional Cooperabve Business Asso-<lb/>
ciation in Washington, DC, and<lb/>
Brian j. Harker, director of the<lb/>
Overseas Management Gmup j(,r<lb/>
A.C Monk &amp; Co Inc of Farmville<lb/>
Ernest C. Pearson, assistant<lb/>
secretary for the N.C Department<lb/>
of Community and Economic t -<lb/>
velopment, will moderate the con-<lb/>
ference sessions.<lb/>
Theconference isco-spons nd<lb/>
by ECU International Programs, 'u-<lb/>
Coastal PlainsChapterof the W(-rid<lb/>
Trade Association, the IntematK na <lb/>
Committee of the GreenvilU<lb/>
County Chamber of Commerce, the<lb/>
ECU Regional Development Insri<lb/>
tute and the N.C. Small Business<lb/>
and Technology Development<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
For information and to register<lb/>
call the Office of Professional Pro<lb/>
grams, ECU School of Business<lb/>
(919) 757-6377.<lb/>
ITG Tours USAir<lb/>
July 26-28 ? August 23-25 ? November 1-3, 1991<lb/>
Your Miss Saigon New York Tour Includes:<lb/>
? Roundtrip air via USAir<lb/>
QTwo nights hotel accommodations<lb/>
? Orchestra seat for Miss Saigon<lb/>
? Lunch or late dinner at the Stage Dell<lb/>
Q Lower New York or Upper New York<lb/>
sight-seeing tour<lb/>
Q Admission to the South St. Seaport<lb/>
Museum<lb/>
? Air and hotel taxes<lb/>
? New York City information packet<lb/>
MILFORD PUVZA<lb/>
$459<lb/>
ppdbl occ. single<lb/>
supp: '108<lb/>
OMNI PARK<lb/>
CENTRAL<lb/>
$489<lb/>
ppdbl occ. single<lb/>
supp: '131<lb/>
m<lb/>
ITG Travel Centers<lb/>
RALEIGH 782-2662 CHAPEL HILL 967-1438 WILMINGTON 392-2315<lb/>
DURHAM-RTP 941-5014 OR 1-800-833-1151<lb/>
On your favorite<lb/>
famous brands for the<lb/>
ENTIRE FAMILY<lb/>
including<lb/>
Pappagallo ? Etienne A.gner ? Mia<lb/>
Cobbte ? Joyce ? Selby ? Proxy . Unisa<lb/>
Esprit ? 9 West . Cahco ? Evan Ptcone<lb/>
Enzo ? Sam &amp; Libby ? Westtes ? Bandotmo<lb/>
Ne ? Reebok . Converse ? Borefli ? Keds<lb/>
Head ? LA Gear . K-Swiss ? Dtadora<lb/>
Britiah Knights ? Capeuo ? Tretorn<lb/>
RocKport ? Rorshewn . Hush Puppies<lb/>
Sebago ? Oieg Cassira . Georgw Brutmi<lb/>
Johnston A Murphy . Freeman<lb/>
Dexter . French Shriner<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES C0UP0H<lb/>
TAKE AN<lb/>
E.X.T.R.A<lb/>
OFF LOWEST<lb/>
TICKETED PRICE<lb/>
ENTIRE<lb/>
STOCK<lb/>
Mi,?t ihim coupon ?t vna o( purchoM Not ?ad ?H?K .n, 0m? oM?<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
GREENVILLE BUYERS MARKET<lb/>
MEMORIAL DRIVE<lb/>
CLASSIFIED RATES<lb/>
CLASSIFIED<lb/>
ADRATES<lb/>
Line Ads:<lb/>
For 1st 25 words<lb/>
Students 52.00<lb/>
Non-students . $300<lb/>
Each additional word<lb/>
Display Ads<lb/>
Open Rate per column<lb/>
inch<lb/>
v <lb/>
I fcWB notify the paper m<lb/>
ateiy if your ad is incorrect We<lb/>
will not be responsible foi incor<lb/>
rect ads after the first davo:<lb/>
Iicahon. All classified ads f! S i<lb/>
be prepaid We reserve the right<lb/>
to reject any ad for libel, ofc .<lb/>
lty, andor bad taster<lb/>
and sororities MUST write out ail<lb/>
Creek letters.You must till out<lb/>
vour name, address, phone num-<lb/>
ber, and ID number.<lb/>
SJLMMMDEADLLNE;<lb/>
Monday 440 pen<lb/>
Wednesday issue.<lb/>
DEAD<lb/>
WAITRESS<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
630 PM<lb/>
VOL KNOW WHERE TO GO<lb/>
HELP W<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
from private secto'l<lb/>
vtCall 24 - hr ir<lb/>
?ails 2134144<lb/>
come resrncn.<lb/>
THE W TO M<lb/>
MCrlTl NDEKTr<lb/>
You can earr, gi ? A<lb/>
intern n r ?rth wtl<lb/>
I'lusv. I<lb/>
able business e I<lb/>
junior, senior or p<lb/>
Sind; ?.r Linda '<lb/>
rTOO<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
ECU Grants an<lb/>
Fred Span!<lb/>
Building, Ra<lb/>
Moctda)<lb/>
pm)<lb/>
EXCELLINT<lb/>
Work vour-<lb/>
naouc il<lb/>
portunity Call<lb/>
LAS work: LC<lb/>
Asm<lb/>
04-641<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
and Mran houst<lb/>
preferred Must haw<lb/>
and depend<lb/>
Larry's Carpetland<lb/>
Greenv i N<lb/>
PART-TIME t<lb/>
residents for currN j,<lb/>
SI 5 an hour H<lb/>
and eam extra n<lb/>
752-1179.<lb/>
Free Money!<lb/>
Well, not too free. The East C aroUnian is aa e <lb/>
for News Editor, Features Editor and Assistant <lb/>
Call 757-6366 weekdays, from 9 am to 5<lb/>
FOSDIC<lb/>
1890 SE.<lb/>
SO03 S. Evens<lb/>
Fre?h Oysters, Flounder, Shrimp, Ti,<lb/>
Deviled Crab Cakes, &amp; Clam Strip<lb/>
? Small Shrimp Soli<lb/>
! ? l?nch lC?ZZ?<lb/>
i $2.99 ? To,<lb/>
? Beverage not included ? ?.v??. ?7i<lb/>
' Expires: 7-22-91 I 15?? not l<lb/>
h ? m m"m m 1 Expires: 7<lb/>
Wedncsdou<lb/>
rST<lb/>
PrxxjnsssSvs DcvxB Nightl<lb/>
10 Draft<lb/>
$1.15 Toll Boys $1.00Kamil<lb/>
 ?Ladies Free til 10:30<lb/>
:(<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Bucket Light Night<lb/>
5 bottles for $4.00!<lb/>
$1.15 Tall Boys $1.25 Impt<lb/>
$2.75 Ice Teas<lb/>
 ?Ladies free<lb/>
Bogies Welcomes All Orientation StucJ<lb/>
fR?C Admission Nightly for all<lb/>
orientation students<lb/>
$5.00 4-year Memberships<lb/>
T-Shirt Specials<lb/>
ZZZZZZ3ESEZ:<lb/>
' 1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058293_0003"/><lb/>
July 24. 1991<lb/>
Wst gag (Uarultnfan<lb/>
:o disaiss U.S.<lb/>
;i conference<lb/>
I k mands<lb/>
It l risks and<lb/>
l e with the<lb/>
sfn said<lb/>
iinvilist<lb/>
Monitor<lb/>
v arid<lb/>
tru- House<lb/>
(ten ?<lb/>
? Kird<lb/>
nomKSatE( I ;Ed Mavora.presi,<lb/>
dent ot K&amp;r Electronics it<lb/>
Wilmington; lncoborg Hegenbart,<lb/>
?1m htot inUnutional Services for<lb/>
Southern National Bank in Char-<lb/>
lotte; Weklon Blanlon ot the Na-<lb/>
tional Cooperative Business Asso-<lb/>
ciation in Washington, DC, and<lb/>
Brian I Harker, director of the<lb/>
Overseas Management Group for<lb/>
v Monk &amp; Co Inc. of Farmvifle.<lb/>
Ernes! Pearson assistant<lb/>
secretan foi the N ?. Department<lb/>
nunin. aivi Fconomic De-<lb/>
moderate the con-<lb/>
i isoo sponsored<lb/>
ul Programs,the<lb/>
pter of the World<lb/>
trvlnUTnahonal<lb/>
v IreenvillePitt<lb/>
amberoK minx-roe, the<lb/>
e elopment Insti-<lb/>
 ? null Business<lb/>
De ohpment<lb/>
ihonand to register<lb/>
t Professional Pro-<lb/>
t Business,<lb/>
zcial czAfsu ijoik<lb/>
v (I zsksna.<lb/>
1 Tours USAir<lb/>
? November 1-3, 1991<lb/>
udeh MILFORD PIAZA<lb/>
$459<lb/>
pp dbl occ. single<lb/>
supp: '108<lb/>
IH if<lb/>
rk<lb/>
OMNI PARK<lb/>
CENTRAL<lb/>
$489<lb/>
pp dbl occ. single<lb/>
supp: '13 1<lb/>
el Centers<lb/>
M-1U8 WILMINGTON 392-2315<lb/>
oK 1-800 8VMlrl<lb/>
)H 1-800-562-1 78<lb/>
On your favorite<lb/>
famous brands for the<lb/>
ENTIRE FAMILY<lb/>
including<lb/>
I ???? e ? r ?? Mia<lb/>
loycc ? ? ? ? . Dn?t<lb/>
Esp'1 ? 'i West ? Calico ? Evan Picone<lb/>
Lnro ? Sam &amp; Libby ? Westies ? Bandotmo<lb/>
Ne ? Reebow ? Convefse ? Borelh ? Keds<lb/>
Head ? LA Gear ? K Swiss ? Diadora<lb/>
British Knights ? Capeio ? Tretcxn<lb/>
Rockport Flofsheim - Hush Puppies<lb/>
Sebago ? Oleg Cassmi . Geo?gto Brutim<lb/>
Johnston &amp; Murphy . Freeman<lb/>
Dexte? ? French Shnner<lb/>
0E$ COUPON<lb/>
Q OFF LOWEST '<lb/>
f ENTIRE<lb/>
STOCK<lb/>
??? Hr' ?alid w?h any ofha -??<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
W SHOES<lb/>
ERS MARKET<lb/>
DRIVE<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
CLASS.IFlf 0 RATES?1 1HELP WANTEDiFOR SALEIFOR RENTIFOR RENTiFOR RENT<lb/>
CLASSIFIED<lb/>
AD RATES<lb/>
Line Ads:<lb/>
For 1st 25 words.<lb/>
Students$2.00<lb/>
Non-students$3.00<lb/>
Each additional word05<lb/>
Display Ads:<lb/>
Open Kate per column<lb/>
inch$5 30<lb/>
Please notify the paper immedi-<lb/>
ately if vour ad is lncorrectAVe<lb/>
will not DC responsible fin incor-<lb/>
rect ads after the first day of pub-<lb/>
lication. All classified ads MUST<lb/>
be pre-paid.We reserve the nght<lb/>
to reject any ad for libel, obscen-<lb/>
ity, and or bad taste.Fratemities<lb/>
and sororities MUST write out all<lb/>
Greek letters.You must till out<lb/>
vour name, address, phone num-<lb/>
ber, and ID number.<lb/>
SUMMER DEADLINE<lb/>
Monday, 4:00 pm for<lb/>
Wednesday issue.<lb/>
DEAD<lb/>
WAITRESS<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
6:30 PM<lb/>
YOL KNOW WHERE TO GO<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE:<lb/>
from private sector (up to $20,000<lb/>
vr). Call 24 - hr. message for more<lb/>
details: 213-4-4166,ext95. Nograde<lb/>
or income restrictions. All majors.<lb/>
THE WAY TO MAKE MONEY IS<lb/>
RIGHT UNDER THIS HEADLINE:<lb/>
You can earn good money as a college<lb/>
intern for Northwestern Mutual Life.<lb/>
Plus you get flexible hours and valu-<lb/>
able business experience. If you're a<lb/>
junior, senior, or grad student, call:<lb/>
Sandt or I jnda for an interview, 355-<lb/>
7700.<lb/>
WANTED: Football Managers for<lb/>
ECU. Grants are available. Contact<lb/>
Fred Sponholtzat the Sports Medidne<lb/>
Building, Room 129, or call 757-102,<lb/>
(Monday - Thursday, 9:00 am - 5:00<lb/>
pm).<lb/>
EXCELLENT COMMISSIONS.<lb/>
Work vour own hours marketing dy-<lb/>
namic skincare products. Career op-<lb/>
portunity. Call 756-5679.<lb/>
EASY WORK! EXCELLENT PAY!<lb/>
Assemble products at home. Call for<lb/>
information 501-641-80(8, Ext. 5920.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Part-time driver<lb/>
and warehouse worker. Mornings<lb/>
preferred. Must have driver's license<lb/>
and dependable car. Appl y in person:<lb/>
Larry's Carpetland, 3010 E 10th St,<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
PART-TIME: Earth-safe. Sign up<lb/>
residents for curb-side recycling. Earn<lb/>
$15 an hour Help save the Earth<lb/>
and cam extra money. Call 758-9411,<lb/>
752-1179.<lb/>
WANTED: Musical Instruments for<lb/>
consignment sales: guitars - banjos -<lb/>
mandolins - violins - cellos - bass -<lb/>
horns - amps - keyboards - drums.<lb/>
Gilbert's Music, 2711 E. 10th St. 757-<lb/>
2667. 20 commission cost. Jim and<lb/>
Debbie.<lb/>
MUSIC STUDENTS: 40 discount<lb/>
to you if vou order non-stocked items.<lb/>
We order direct from warehouse.<lb/>
Example: $800 hom - You pay $480<lb/>
plus $6 shipping plus $24 tax - Total<lb/>
$510. Gilberts music, 2711 E 10th St,<lb/>
Greenville. 757-2667.<lb/>
FENDER AMP: 40 watts per chan-<lb/>
nel, excellent tone, great reverb, all at<lb/>
a quality price. $300.00. Call the<lb/>
Sethster at 757-2597.<lb/>
FOR SALE Sofa, rust colored, good<lb/>
condition, 2 pieces S75 or 3 pieces $90.<lb/>
Foam mattresses, king-sized $50.<lb/>
Queen-sized $40. Curtains, long and<lb/>
short. 758-1492.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
MILLER ANALOGIES TEST<lb/>
ADMINISTRATION<lb/>
Due to a national updating of testing<lb/>
materials for the Miller Analogies Test,<lb/>
the ECU Testing Center will not be<lb/>
administering the MAT on Wednes-<lb/>
day, September 4, 1991, as currently<lb/>
scheduled. Testing will resume as<lb/>
scheduled on Wednesday, Septem-<lb/>
ber 18,1991. Candidates should con-<lb/>
sult the new MAT resting schedule,<lb/>
which may be obtained from the<lb/>
Testing Center, 105 Speight Building,<lb/>
ECU, (919)757-6811.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Profes-<lb/>
sional graduate, or mature under-<lb/>
graduate. $200 per month plus 12<lb/>
utilities. Very nice townhouse.<lb/>
Washerdryer included. Non-<lb/>
smoker. Call 757-0467.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
ASAP: Call Wendy (919)728-1447.<lb/>
Qose to campus. Own room, spa-<lb/>
cious. Village Green, great neighbors.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Female<lb/>
non-smoker to share furnished<lb/>
apartment. Private bed room and bath.<lb/>
$180 per month plus 1 3 utilities. Call<lb/>
collect (704)733-5444.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: in young<lb/>
couple's home. Female only. $225 per<lb/>
month indudes utilities. No smok-<lb/>
ing, private bathroom. Kitchen privi-<lb/>
leges. Call 355-5078.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Prefer up-<lb/>
perclassman to share a two bedroom<lb/>
house. Prefer non-smoker. Maturity<lb/>
is required. Call Amy at 830-1624.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
to share a one bedroom apartment.<lb/>
Excellent location, convenient to<lb/>
campus and downtown. Must be<lb/>
outgoing! $150 per month plus half<lb/>
utilities. Call 830-1906 for details(after<lb/>
12:30).<lb/>
FURNISHED HOUSE $75 each for<lb/>
serious quiet male students. Rural,<lb/>
secluded, rustic! Deposit required.<lb/>
Call (919)584-4848.<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT: Female only. 2<lb/>
bedroom furnished home for rent in<lb/>
nice residential area. $350 per month<lb/>
Call 752-5358.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Male or<lb/>
female. Room available in 3 BR home.<lb/>
Fully furnished with WD. $105mo<lb/>
plus 13 utilities,and SlOOdeposit. 3<lb/>
miles from campus. August 1st. Call<lb/>
355-7282, leave message.<lb/>
Ringgold Towers<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for August<lb/>
1991 - 1 bedroom. 2 bedroom, &amp;<lb/>
Efficcncy Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
A llrauulul Pteot t" I rve<lb/>
?All c?-<lb/>
?Ami Ready To Rcm-<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMKM S<lb/>
28?W E 5ih Sum)<lb/>
? 1 .kjUI Near ECt<lb/>
?Near Major Shopping CeMcn<lb/>
?Across lrocn tlih?a I'alml Suium<lb/>
Ijmilcd Offer S'MX) a monih<lb/>
Contact J T or Ttwntm Vs, Jurats<lb/>
756 7815 or 8W-1937<lb/>
Office open Apt 8. 12 5 Kfm<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS'<lb/>
(lean iikI uki t?ic brAv??n tunmnrd ?jhju:?i <lb/>
encxi,veflVw.tT? ???ei ?nd?cct. ??htrv 4w?<lb/>
CaUl TV C ? i? ijiiu nl IMf) t rauntf 6<lb/>
mmahleaK MDSUHOM RBtl Al S uwpte. ?<lb/>
ttnaics Apartxnert md tnok hewne if AjJea Oat<lb/>
den new Bn.a V?Ue Country Club<lb/>
Contact J T or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756 7815 '<lb/>
Williamsburg<lb/>
Manor<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
Summerfield<lb/>
and<lb/>
Brasswood<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Now<lb/>
1&amp; 2 bedroom<lb/>
energy efficeni<lb/>
apartments with<lb/>
washer and dryer<lb/>
hook-ups.<lb/>
Call<lb/>
Aaron Spam<lb/>
355-6187<lb/>
355-3647<lb/>
Sorry No Pets<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, RHONDA!<lb/>
Free Money!<lb/>
Well, not too free. The East Carolinian is accepting applications<lb/>
for News Editor, Features Editor and Assistant News Editor.<lb/>
Call 757-6366 weekdays, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
 1890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
?yH l 3003 S. Evens 756-2011<lb/>
Fresh Oysters, Flounder. Shrimp, Trout<lb/>
Deviled Crab Cakes, &amp; Clam Strips.<lb/>
? Small Shrimp lcoamiriknVlaer<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
at lunch<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
? with aaaaa ?! any tw awaaaaaj g<lb/>
" One Low Price of Only .<lb/>
. 77 ? $995 I<lb/>
1 Beverage not included ? Beverage not included ,<lb/>
&amp; Expires: 7-ZZ-91 ? Expires: 79 !<lb/>
UJednesdoy<lb/>
Progressive Dance Nfcjht<lb/>
10 Draft<lb/>
$ 1.15 Toll Boys1.00 Kamikazes<lb/>
?Ladies Free til 10:30<lb/>
V-JTTTOP<lb/>
'I<lb/>
T<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Bucket Light Night<lb/>
;?(<lb/>
<lb/>
5 bottles for $4.00!<lb/>
$ 1.15 Tall Boys 1.25 Imports<lb/>
$2.75 Ice Teas<lb/>
?Ladies Free<lb/>
??v<lb/>
T7"<lb/>
Bogies Welcomes Ml Orientation Students I<lb/>
Fft?? Admission Nightly for all <lb/>
orientation students<lb/>
$5.00 4-year Memberships<lb/>
T-Shirt Specials<lb/>
?<lb/>
SiWEH<lb/>
BULLET<lb/>
Adult Entertainment Center<lb/>
Location (Old 264 Playhouse) Big blue building<lb/>
behind Earl's Store on Farmville Highway 264 Alt<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS:<lb/>
Amateur Night (Female Dancers)Cash Prize<lb/>
THURSDAYS:<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Topless" Dancers<lb/>
FRIDAY:<lb/>
One Night Only Ladies Night Out<lb/>
Male Exotic Dancers "The Ultimate Lover"<lb/>
SATURDAYS:<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Topless" Dancers<lb/>
Open Tues.Sat. Doors Open 7:30pm Stage Time 9:30pm<lb/>
Help Wanted: Female Exotic Dancers Needed Call 756-6278<lb/>
3F <lb/>
15<lb/>
This Week's Entertainment<lb/>
Friday luly 26th<lb/>
Bad Bob &amp;<lb/>
The Rockin' Horses<lb/>
Saturday luly 27th<lb/>
Teasing The Korean<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
MonThurs. 11am-3pm<lb/>
Fri. 11am-2am<lb/>
Sat. 9pm-2am<lb/>
513Cotanche<lb/>
(located across from UBE)<lb/>
758-0080<lb/>
<pb facs="00058293_0004"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
oftft i?mt (Entalxmun<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tim C. Hampton, General Manager<lb/>
Matthew B. Skinner, Managing Editor<lb/>
Gregory E. Jones, Director of Advertising<lb/>
LeClair Harper, New Editor jEFF pARKER, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Matt King, Fmtures Editor Margie O'Shea, Classified Ads Technician<lb/>
Matt Mumma, Sports Editor Michael Albuquerque, Business Manager<lb/>
STEVE Reid, layout Manager Larry Huggins, Circulation Manager<lb/>
Lewts CoBit, Copy Editor Stuart Rosner, Systems Engineer<lb/>
Kerry Nesler, Copy Editor Deborah Daniel, Secretary<lb/>
The East Carotmkmhu served the East Carolina campus communii since 1925, emphasizing information mat affects ECU<lb/>
students. Dining summer sessions, he East Carolinian publishes once a week with a circulation of 5,000. The masthead<lb/>
editorial in each edition is the opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes signed letters, limited to 250<lb/>
words, expressing all points at view. We reserve the nght loedit or reject letters. Letters should be addressed to The Editor,<lb/>
Ihs Earn Carolinian, Publications Bklg ECU, Greenville, N.C 2785S. For more, call (919) 757-6366.<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4, Wednesday, July 24, 1991<lb/>
Rape victim needs compassion to heal<lb/>
The Easf Carolinian exists to serve Our<lb/>
duty is to report issues relevant to the uni-<lb/>
vrsitv in a concise and accurate manner.<lb/>
At times, that dutv to serve requires us<lb/>
to criticize university, student and city ot'ti-<lb/>
 ils, even the student bod v. At other times,<lb/>
that duty requires us to be a defender and<lb/>
protector.<lb/>
N nv, our duty forces us to do both.<lb/>
Recently, a female rising freshman was<lb/>
raped. She left Flamingo's in the lateevening<lb/>
with a male friend she knew from high<lb/>
school. They crossed Cotanche Street head-<lb/>
ing for the roof oi the Dough Boy's Pizza<lb/>
building, a gathering spot for area teenag-<lb/>
ers. No one else was there. She was brutally<lb/>
raped; her mother said that she has bruises<lb/>
the size of dinner plates.<lb/>
On Friday, July 18, the Daily Reflector<lb/>
published a story on inconsistencies in local<lb/>
rape statistics. In the story, Greenville Po-<lb/>
lice Chief Charles Hinmaii was quoted as<lb/>
saying: 'Take the incident the other night. I<lb/>
mean, let's be real, OK. To go on the root of<lb/>
i vacant building, even with an acquain-<lb/>
tance, at throe or four in the morning what<lb/>
would a person of reasonable intelligence<lb/>
expect to happen?"<lb/>
Hinman clarified the statement bv<lb/>
phone Monday<lb/>
"There was no intention of being<lb/>
mcompassionate he said. "I think we of-<lb/>
ten make ourselves a target. My intentions<lb/>
were to get across to women that thev should<lb/>
be totally aware of their surroundings <lb/>
and what's going on.<lb/>
"I mean, to climb a ladder to the roof of<lb/>
a building in the early morning hours ? it's<lb/>
like anything is OK and later on it's not OK<lb/>
I hate to see people put themselves in a<lb/>
position to be taken advantage of<lb/>
Hinman's earlier comment, when<lb/>
urnianfied, echoes the misconceptions of<lb/>
those who believe no female is safe to be<lb/>
alone with a male.<lb/>
The tirst comment, when unclarified,<lb/>
carries the undertone common to the ver-<lb/>
min that commit rapes, people without rea-<lb/>
sonable intelligence: She wanted it to hap-<lb/>
pen; she asked for it. Perhaps the encounter<lb/>
became too rough, maybe she changed her<lb/>
mind, or perchance she did not realize what<lb/>
was going on, but she asked tor it.<lb/>
The victim is blameless. It is not her<lb/>
fault. She did not ask for it. Someone raped<lb/>
her. Someone else committed the crime.<lb/>
"Rape begins the moment a woman<lb/>
says no the victim's mother said Monday.<lb/>
"And thev have that right. It's a woman's<lb/>
issue, but it's a man's issue as well<lb/>
In retrospect, the victim put herself at<lb/>
risk ? everyone should exercise caution<lb/>
when they are alone with another. How-<lb/>
ever, looking back and pointing a finger at<lb/>
anyone's mistakes will not change the<lb/>
present, it will certainly not change the<lb/>
victim's present.<lb/>
Everyone needs to learn from this inci-<lb/>
dent. But what is there to learn? Don't trust<lb/>
your friends?<lb/>
The victim was with a friend that<lb/>
evening. She was with someone she thought<lb/>
she could trust, and she lost her trust that<lb/>
evening. That will be one of the hardest part<lb/>
of her to regain; it will also be the greatest.<lb/>
Only through trust will she heal. Only<lb/>
through trust will she be able to find happi-<lb/>
ness and fulfillment through love.<lb/>
A person of reasonable intelligence does<lb/>
not expect his or her body to be violated,<lb/>
they would trust a friend. A person of rea-<lb/>
sonable intelligence would expect compas-<lb/>
sion and understanding after suffering a<lb/>
severe trauma.<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
Editorial about<lb/>
city program<lb/>
seen as negative<lb/>
To The Editor:<lb/>
The East Carolinian deserves<lb/>
some credit for recognizing that it<lb/>
can do something significant about<lb/>
the environment ? and then do-<lb/>
ing it. As you point out, there's no<lb/>
use recycling if no one uses the<lb/>
recycled material.<lb/>
The slight grayness of the<lb/>
paper makes me suspect that you<lb/>
deserve more credit than you're<lb/>
claiming. Perhaps your paper has<lb/>
not been subjected to de-inking<lb/>
and bleaching?environmentally<lb/>
bad processes. Perhaps it has more<lb/>
post-consumer fiber ? the stuff<lb/>
we put in the recycling bins.<lb/>
I understand that paper can<lb/>
claim to be recycled though the<lb/>
major part is virgin fiber and most<lb/>
or all of the rest is envelope trim-<lb/>
mings and other paper that never<lb/>
went to a consumer.<lb/>
On the negative side, your<lb/>
headline and quotations suggest<lb/>
too dismal a picture.<lb/>
Recycling is not dead. The<lb/>
city is delivering several truck-<lb/>
loads of paper a day to our recy-<lb/>
cling center.<lb/>
And plastic sells. It's just that<lb/>
you have to have six or seven tons<lb/>
before the buyer will have a truck<lb/>
pick it up.<lb/>
Fortunately our city and<lb/>
county have room to accumulate<lb/>
it for (hopefully) monthly pick up.<lb/>
As for the market for recycled<lb/>
paper ? it hasn't caught up with<lb/>
the push to recycle. That was ex-<lb/>
pected.<lb/>
So don't be discouraged.<lb/>
With newspapers like yours, and<lb/>
local of finals who aren't into re-<lb/>
cycling for the money, we'll save<lb/>
those trees.<lb/>
Your paper looks great!<lb/>
Edith Webber<lb/>
English Department<lb/>
Emeritus<lb/>
Maxwell's Silver Hammer<lb/>
More federal hypocrisy: Thomas' drug use<lb/>
By Scott Maxwell<lb/>
Editorial Columnist<lb/>
President Bush's nomina-<lb/>
tion of Clarence Thomas to the<lb/>
Supreme Court has been a veri-<lb/>
table cornucopia of hypocrisy.<lb/>
Most amusine: the revela-<lb/>
smoked marijuana The official<lb/>
story, graven on two stone tablets<lb/>
borne down from Mount Sinai bv<lb/>
White House spokeswoman Jud v<lb/>
Smith, is that Thomas smoked the<lb/>
evil weed "several times" in col-<lb/>
lege and "perhaps once" in law<lb/>
school. (Smith also says Judge<lb/>
Thomas "believes it was a mis-<lb/>
take and never repeated it which<lb/>
clashes with her earlier assertion<lb/>
that he repeated it several times.<lb/>
What fun.)<lb/>
Of course, Thomas is "sorry"<lb/>
he sinned, as politicrites usually<lb/>
are when their transgressions are<lb/>
made known to the public. In fact,<lb/>
he claims that, everv single dav<lb/>
since, he has regretted indulging<lb/>
his natural curiosity.<lb/>
Okay, give him the benefit<lb/>
of thedoubt. Everv morning, over<lb/>
corn flakes, Clarence Thomas re-<lb/>
gretfully ruminates about his past<lb/>
flirtation with Demon Hemp. Far<lb/>
be it from me to cast doubt on the<lb/>
eminent jurist's claim.<lb/>
What's hypocritical, though,<lb/>
is George Bush's flat statement<lb/>
that he considers the judge's d ru g<lb/>
use "of no consequence" to the<lb/>
nomination proceedings.<lb/>
"Of no consequence"? What<lb/>
the heck has he been smoking?<lb/>
Isn't this the same George Bush<lb/>
who spouts all that crap about<lb/>
how you should n't ever use drugs<lb/>
at all, even just "experimenting<lb/>
'cuz then you'll get hooked and<lb/>
that'll lead to the hard stuff and<lb/>
vou'll end up a drug-crazed fiend?<lb/>
(Well, Thomas ended up a<lb/>
Reaganoid Republican, so maybe<lb/>
the warning isn't that far off, but<lb/>
still ) Either drugs inevitably<lb/>
ruin your life or they don't; Bush<lb/>
should pick one and stick with it.<lb/>
Even more to the point, isn't<lb/>
this the same George Bush who<lb/>
thinks that federal scholarship<lb/>
money ought to be withheld from<lb/>
college students convicted of drug-<lb/>
related offenses, thereby aborting<lb/>
the careers of many a budding<lb/>
Clarence Thomas? As he denies<lb/>
scholarships to students caught<lb/>
tryingdrugs today, Bush absolves<lb/>
one-time users now in positions of<lb/>
power. If having tried drugs in<lb/>
college is irrelevant to Thomas's<lb/>
fitness for the Supreme Court, then<lb/>
surely it ought to be similarly ir-<lb/>
relevant toa present-dav student's<lb/>
future job opportunities ? but a<lb/>
police record is not considered<lb/>
irrelevant by most employers.<lb/>
If Thomas were going to col-<lb/>
lege or law school today, "experi-<lb/>
mented" exactly the same wav,<lb/>
and got caught, he'd never get a<lb/>
chanceat theSupremeCourt. More<lb/>
likely, he'd soon be stamping out<lb/>
license plates at the state pen, and<lb/>
then where would George Bush<lb/>
tind a conservative black federal<lb/>
ludge he could pretend was the<lb/>
best-qualified person in the na-<lb/>
tion to sit on America's highest<lb/>
court of justice? It bears thinking<lb/>
Food For Thought<lb/>
about.<lb/>
If you're a college student<lb/>
and a drug user, at least episodes<lb/>
like this give you some hope it<lb/>
you're caught. Here are my per-<lb/>
sonal recommendations to all you<lb/>
"experimenters" out there  but,<lb/>
uh, I'm not responsible for dam-<lb/>
ages resulting from following my<lb/>
advice.<lb/>
Step One: when caught, say<lb/>
vou're sorry. It never hurts to say<lb/>
vou're sorTV, especially if vou don't<lb/>
get too specific about what you<lb/>
say you're sorry for. Others feel<lb/>
nice and pompous when you allow<lb/>
them to forgive you.<lb/>
Step Two: deny that you<lb/>
enjoved it. Despite the fact that<lb/>
maniuana and most other drugs<lb/>
invariably produce pleasurable<lb/>
sensations in the imbiber ? that's<lb/>
why people use them, you know<lb/>
? insist that you didn't enjoy it.<lb/>
Americans distrust currently ille-<lb/>
gal drugs because they consider<lb/>
those drugs to be illegitimate<lb/>
sources of pleasure; if you claim<lb/>
you derived no pleasure, vou're<lb/>
already halfway off the hook.<lb/>
Step Three: announce your<lb/>
desire to go into politics ? er,<lb/>
you'd better say "public service"<lb/>
? where you plan to throw behind<lb/>
bars everybody who does what<lb/>
you say you should be forgiven<lb/>
for doing. Though you're not<lb/>
without sin, gleefully cast that first<lb/>
stone.<lb/>
Now, if President Bush ap-<lb/>
plies the same standards to you<lb/>
that he applied to Clarence Tho-<lb/>
mas, he'll grant you a presidential<lb/>
pardon. If he doesn't, try again in<lb/>
five to ten years.<lb/>
Above all, teachers need to care<lb/>
By Michelle Terry<lb/>
Editorial Coiumnist<lb/>
The real value of education<lb/>
is to help the students of today<lb/>
who will help build a better to-<lb/>
morrow.<lb/>
Young people are the future.<lb/>
In order to keep that future bright,<lb/>
we need good teachers who help<lb/>
educate the potential inventors,<lb/>
scientists, doctors and lawyers. It<lb/>
is not only important to teach what<lb/>
is required but to teach young<lb/>
people to dream and to make those<lb/>
dreams come true.<lb/>
The most important tool in<lb/>
teaching is to care about your<lb/>
students' education and, unfortu-<lb/>
nately, there are many teachers<lb/>
who don't really care about their<lb/>
students. There are many kids who<lb/>
go from one grade to the next with-<lb/>
out learning anything.<lb/>
These same kids will end up<lb/>
in jail or dead because they were<lb/>
robbed of the chance to be edu-<lb/>
cated so they can proceed to<lb/>
greater opportunities. Teachers<lb/>
should be concerned about<lb/>
whether or not their students learn<lb/>
what they try to teach them.<lb/>
There are students who do<lb/>
not want to learn but it is up to<lb/>
teachers often times to find the<lb/>
good inside that person and bring<lb/>
it out in them. Teaching is a hard<lb/>
profession tha t shou id not be taken<lb/>
lightly because a teacher has the<lb/>
opportunity to mold a mind to be<lb/>
a great mind or to allow a great<lb/>
mind to be lost.<lb/>
Teachers must inject life into<lb/>
their classrooms because if stu-<lb/>
dents see their teachersenjoy what<lb/>
they are teaching then they will<lb/>
want to learn. Many teachers lose<lb/>
hope in students believing that<lb/>
they will end up being nothing.<lb/>
If a student feels that his<lb/>
teachers have no hope in him then<lb/>
he may not have any hope in<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
There are some students who<lb/>
don't receive any love or attention<lb/>
at home so theonly place that may<lb/>
be able to show him some of this<lb/>
feeling oi hope that he is some-<lb/>
body may be through his teachers.<lb/>
If the school systems don't<lb/>
get teachers who care more about<lb/>
their students than their paychecks<lb/>
then society loses.<lb/>
It is a lossof society of a great<lb/>
mind that could help build our<lb/>
future instead if wedon't take care<lb/>
of our future then we have noth-<lb/>
ing to build upon. Teachers need<lb/>
to realize that they are part of what<lb/>
will happen to our future and<lb/>
whether or not it will be bnght or<lb/>
bleak.<lb/>
s<lb/>
Judgement<lb/>
By Matt Jones<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
"I'll be back"<lb/>
Arnold Schwarzenegger first<lb/>
said those three simple wordsH hen<lb/>
he was still a little-known at tor<lb/>
appearing in a movie from a little-<lb/>
known director ha. k in 1984<lb/>
The movie was called "The<lb/>
Terminator" and it was one of the<lb/>
most successful of 1984, hitting<lb/>
number one for six w ? ?<lb/>
Schwarzenegger and Director John<lb/>
Cameronhavesincegoneonti great<lb/>
fame in their respecti ve fields They<lb/>
have now come hill an le-and thev<lb/>
are back.<lb/>
"Terminator 2: Judgement<lb/>
Day" opened July 3, and a- <lb/>
the topof the movie charts t?three<lb/>
weeks. Urdikemanyrnoviesequeb,<lb/>
this one does its cult predicessor<lb/>
jushce.<lb/>
'Terminator 2" takes p,KV ten<lb/>
years after the first meeti ng of'Sarah<lb/>
Connor with her nemesis The ter-<lb/>
minator is a cyborg killer, a ma-<lb/>
chine endoskeleton surrounded bv<lb/>
human flesh w hose i me n b is to act<lb/>
out its name.<lb/>
Nothing much has changed<lb/>
since the last movie, the machines<lb/>
who rule the world in the future<lb/>
(2029 A.D.i are still attempting to<lb/>
wipeout me sum vorsot the human<lb/>
race. The machines, led bv a<lb/>
supercomputer called Skynet,<lb/>
started a nuclear war on August 27,<lb/>
1997. The date was known bv the<lb/>
survivors as "Judgement Day "<lb/>
Sarah's son, John, is the leader<lb/>
of the survivors who have formed a<lb/>
resistance group against the ma-<lb/>
chines. Thus the machines h pethat<lb/>
by sending their terminators back<lb/>
in time, thev canehminate the leader<lb/>
oi their enemv at the source.<lb/>
. Sajahbeatthetenrunatorinthe<lb/>
first film before John wase en born.<lb/>
In 'Terminator 2 thev trv again<lb/>
with a newer, men' advanced ter-<lb/>
minator, but this time in the year<lb/>
1994 when her son is 10 years old.<lb/>
But JohnConnoranrjcipates the<lb/>
move and programs another ter-<lb/>
minator to go back and protect his<lb/>
younger self. The terminator he<lb/>
sends back however, is not as ad-<lb/>
? ed as tl<lb/>
all ma<lb/>
up<lb/>
As entertain<lb/>
was, ib - I<lb/>
mending<lb/>
2" is a<lb/>
Jcillllfc. A ith S.<lb/>
imf ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
the plot. i<lb/>
surpnses Bu <lb/>
the11 i<lb/>
lohn n . !<lb/>
his mother<lb/>
Then- is<lb/>
for ourv<lb/>
The<lb/>
Th?<lb/>
s?vm a little<lb/>
I<lb/>
who will t.<lb/>
kill this mai i<lb/>
logical :<lb/>
liev <lb/>
to pull the tr<lb/>
ingthe<lb/>
him mi.<lb/>
of the n m ? ? <lb/>
value oi hui<lb/>
not kill i<lb/>
billion<lb/>
Th?<lb/>
seemed<lb/>
Granted, it<lb/>
lievabi<lb/>
enoe fid<lb/>
par I<lb/>
not<lb/>
ena ofS<lb/>
tor <lb/>
the<lb/>
that tx<lb/>
tvreen a hu<lb/>
machin<lb/>
the fact thai<lb/>
chines<lb/>
He<lb/>
cal dd a ces<lb/>
thatevt.<lb/>
very corn<lb/>
Midsummer Nigli<lb/>
By Matt Jones<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
It isn't the'Shakespeare that Mrs<lb/>
Mtlhgan taught mein the 1 Oth grade<lb/>
but I like it.<lb/>
John Sheann did it again. His<lb/>
version of A Midsummer V.<lb/>
Dream opened on Julv 17 to a recep-<lb/>
tive crowd. But. it didn't reallv look<lb/>
like Shakespeare<lb/>
Goneareall the fnllv costumes<lb/>
the thick English accents, and gen-<lb/>
erally speaking the stuffiness. In<lb/>
lieu of tJvsestandardShakespeanan<lb/>
moots, there are imaginative, inno-<lb/>
vative settingsand costumes, actors<lb/>
whocanbeunderstocxi, and a light-<lb/>
hearted, whimsical evening of en-<lb/>
tertainment.<lb/>
lohn Sheann, the artistic pro-<lb/>
ducer of the Summer Theatre and<lb/>
the director of the plav, rewrote the<lb/>
rules to how Shakespeare is done,<lb/>
and did it well. It should be noted<lb/>
that this in itself is not a mean ac-<lb/>
complishment, as it is generally ac-<lb/>
cepted in the theater world that<lb/>
when one plays with Shakespeare,<lb/>
it is easy to do damage.<lb/>
But, there is no damagedone to<lb/>
this production. At the moment<lb/>
upon entenng the theater, it is easv<lb/>
to tell that some changes will be<lb/>
seen. While being ushered to the<lb/>
seats, a camivalesque atmosphere<lb/>
begins with the pipe music heard<lb/>
through the sound system. But it<lb/>
isn't Mendelssohn's classical ren-<lb/>
dition usually accompanied with<lb/>
the play, instead, strangely enough,<lb/>
organ musK from a circus enve-<lb/>
lopes the theater.<lb/>
The front half of the stage is<lb/>
clearly visible and it is easily seen<lb/>
that this is not the setting one would<lb/>
normally expect for a Shakespeare<lb/>
play.<lb/>
Upon further inspection, the<lb/>
musk is explained, the stage is set<lb/>
up in a circus mohf. The key<lb/>
characters<lb/>
the<lb/>
cal sidesho ?<lb/>
impression I<lb/>
areattra<lb/>
Thelar.<lb/>
on eitht<lb/>
the names ano<lb/>
andlitania, the<lb/>
the fames. Ob I<lb/>
the impress)! . i<lb/>
whileTitanialoo!<lb/>
reader After tht<lb/>
easy to see that SI<lb/>
" II<lb/>
out the portraits<lb/>
characters exhifc<lb/>
sona of their erfi<lb/>
As the pla<lb/>
motif is fur<lb/>
begin to appear I<lb/>
wear a different!<lb/>
tume. Theseus<lb/>
Duke and Qut<lb/>
"strongmen" ou<lb/>
their characters,<lb/>
players style otj<lb/>
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It a student feels that his<lb/>
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not have any hope in<lb/>
himself<lb/>
rhere are some students who<lb/>
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at hi ? eonly place that mav<lb/>
show him some of this<lb/>
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It the school systems don't<lb/>
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? u tv 1 ses<lb/>
It is a loss of society of a great<lb/>
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AMMAt S<lb/>
Judgement Day terminates summer movie crop<lb/>
By Matt Jones<lb/>
Suf i Writer<lb/>
I'll be back-<lb/>
Arnold Schwarzenegger first<lb/>
said those three simple words when<lb/>
was still a little-known actor<lb/>
?earing in a movie from a little-<lb/>
. own director back in 1984<lb/>
I he movie was called "The<lb/>
Tiiinator" and it was one of the<lb/>
st successful of 1984, hitting<lb/>
imber one for six weeks.<lb/>
 .ireneggerand Director John<lb/>
. i n ti n ha ve si nee gone on to grea t<lb/>
ime in their respective fields. They<lb/>
t now come hill circle-and they<lb/>
, re Kick.<lb/>
Terminator 2: Judgement<lb/>
opened July 3, and as been on<lb/>
. top of the movie charts for three<lb/>
? ceks I nlike many movie sequels,<lb/>
s one does its cult predicessor<lb/>
? ice.<lb/>
Terminator 2" takes place ten<lb/>
i. i rs after the first meeting of Sarah<lb/>
n with her nemesis. The ter-<lb/>
nator is a cyborg killer, a ma-<lb/>
hmeendoskeleton surrounded bv<lb/>
u ma n flesh whose one job is to act<lb/>
out its name.<lb/>
othing much has changed<lb/>
the last movie, the machines<lb/>
vho rule the world in the future<lb/>
29 AD.) are still attempting to<lb/>
Mpeoutthesurvivorsof the human<lb/>
race. The machines, led by a<lb/>
i per computer called Skynet,<lb/>
? rted a nuclear war on August 27,<lb/>
i be date was known by the<lb/>
survivors as "Judgement Day<lb/>
Sarah's son, John, is the leader<lb/>
ur Ivors who have formed a<lb/>
resistance group against the ma-<lb/>
Thus the machines hope that<lb/>
ending their terminators Kick<lb/>
t thevcaneliminate the leader<lb/>
r their enemy at the source.<lb/>
saxah bea t the te rrru nator in the<lb/>
? fUmbefore John waseven born.<lb/>
Terminator 2 they try again<lb/>
a ith a newer, mon- advanced ter<lb/>
,tor, but this time in the vear<lb/>
" I w hen her son is 10 years old.<lb/>
But John Connor anticipates the<lb/>
nove and programs another ter-<lb/>
linatof to go back and protect his<lb/>
lunger self. The terminator he<lb/>
ends Kick however, is not as ad-<lb/>
vanced as the machine's version. It<lb/>
all makes for an interesting match<lb/>
up.<lb/>
As entertaining as the original<lb/>
was, its sequel is more than a senes<lb/>
of unending chases 'Terminator<lb/>
2" is a mon intelligent picture,<lb/>
dealing with several subplots, and<lb/>
even a tinge of morality On that<lb/>
level, the sequel can be viewed as<lb/>
improved<lb/>
Not much more can be said of<lb/>
the plot, as not to reveal anv of its<lb/>
surprises. Butoneshould rcrnember<lb/>
the quote fmm the first movie which<lb/>
John relayed back through time' to<lb/>
his mother The future is not set.<lb/>
There is no fate but w hat we make<lb/>
for ourselves<lb/>
The plot was nearly flawless.<lb/>
There were some scenes that did<lb/>
seem a little unrealistic.<lb/>
1 or instance, in one moment,<lb/>
Sarah has a chance to kill the man<lb/>
who will eventually develop the<lb/>
technology that leads u i the nuclear<lb/>
deaths of three billion people To<lb/>
kill this man would svm to be the<lb/>
logical action and it is hard to be-<lb/>
lieve that she d id n t have the nerve<lb/>
to pull the trigger thereby prevent-<lb/>
ing the disaster. An advocate of the<lb/>
film might replv that the intention<lb/>
of the movie was to emphasize the<lb/>
value of human life, thus she could<lb/>
not kill one man, even to save three<lb/>
billion<lb/>
Ihe advanced terminator also<lb/>
seemed somewhat unrealistic<lb/>
Granted, it is hard to argue the he<lb/>
lievabihtvof some tat UOftSOf a sci-<lb/>
ence fiction plot and to refuse other<lb/>
parts But, somehow though, it is<lb/>
not difficult to imagine the exist<lb/>
encv of Schwarzenegger's termina-<lb/>
tor (oiled a T BOO) Cameron him-<lb/>
self stated that it isnot Kird toaccept<lb/>
the Original terminator<lb/>
Cameron said in a press release-<lb/>
that Khevability of a 'blend be-<lb/>
tween a human component aixi a<lb/>
machiiv component (stems from)<lb/>
the tact that it is now an aspect of<lb/>
everyday life surrounded by ma-<lb/>
chines<lb/>
He went on to sav that "medi-<lb/>
cal advances have also shown us<lb/>
that even the human btxly is just a<lb/>
very complex machine<lb/>
But there is the problem. Al-<lb/>
though the T-800 terminator is just<lb/>
a macine surrounded by human<lb/>
skin, the advanced model (T-1000)<lb/>
is not similar at all.<lb/>
"If the T-800 series can be com-<lb/>
pared to a human Panzer tank, then<lb/>
the T-1000 is a Porsche said<lb/>
Cameron.<lb/>
The T-1000 model isdrastically<lb/>
different from the T-800 having no<lb/>
endoskeleton or skin. It is made out<lb/>
of a type of liquid metal. It is able to<lb/>
transform itself into anything pos-<lb/>
sible, except for objects like guns or<lb/>
explosives which require moving<lb/>
parts and chemicals. Thus we find<lb/>
the T-1000 using itself to create<lb/>
knivesand blunt instruments for its<lb/>
terminating.<lb/>
Sure, thisall soundspretty neat,<lb/>
but isn't it all going a little to far.<lb/>
Where is theT-lGWsCPU, whereis<lb/>
its power source, where is it a ma<lb/>
chtneatall?N'oneof this is explained<lb/>
in the film<lb/>
It is interesting to note that the<lb/>
same people who worked on the<lb/>
movie "The Abyss" (namely<lb/>
Cameron and his special effects<lb/>
crew) worked on 'Terminator 2 If<lb/>
one looks closely, the effects used<lb/>
for the water creatures in "The<lb/>
Abyss" and the effects used for the<lb/>
T-1000 contain a strong resem-<lb/>
blance.<lb/>
Perhaps Cameron liked his ef-<lb/>
fect he found in 'The Abyss" so<lb/>
much that he felt a need to use it<lb/>
again Thus he needed a creature<lb/>
which would tit the description. So<lb/>
he developed the idea of the ad-<lb/>
vanced terminator, created out of<lb/>
the liquid metal, which would take<lb/>
on the same actions as his water<lb/>
creatures Ineffect,Cameron started<lb/>
witha special effect,and sculptured<lb/>
a movie around it.<lb/>
The technology used is indeed<lb/>
impress! ve,bu t it feelslikeCameron<lb/>
suffered believability by including<lb/>
it in this film.<lb/>
The performances in the film<lb/>
were adequate. Schwarzenegger is,<lb/>
as always, believable up to a point.<lb/>
He is great while doing action<lb/>
scenes, and his one-liners are never<lb/>
a disappoi ntment. When emotional<lb/>
scenes come up, he does lack a bit.<lb/>
Luckily, this movie impeded the<lb/>
majority of his emotions, since he<lb/>
plays the role of a machine. At the<lb/>
end though he does have his mo-<lb/>
ment, and the performance is a little<lb/>
under par.<lb/>
Linda Hamilton, on the other<lb/>
hand, gave a marvellous rendition<lb/>
of her character, Sarah. She pre-<lb/>
sented a gruelingly realistic perfor-<lb/>
mance of a woman who has gone<lb/>
over the edge. With the knowledge<lb/>
of a future which includes a nuclear<lb/>
holocaust, it would be hard to re-<lb/>
main emotionally stable, and<lb/>
Hamilton portrays this to the full-<lb/>
est.<lb/>
As for voung John Connor,<lb/>
newcomer Eddie Furlong was cast.<lb/>
Newcomer by the way, means that<lb/>
he has no other acting experience. It<lb/>
was, to put it mildly, the biggest<lb/>
mistake Cameron has made. Fur-<lb/>
long was literally picked otf the<lb/>
street, given a month of acting train-<lb/>
ing, and thrust into the production.<lb/>
It shows.<lb/>
With all the money spent on the<lb/>
production ($90 million, making it<lb/>
the most expensive movie ever<lb/>
made), one ?ould think that<lb/>
Cameron could have gotten a de-<lb/>
cent child actor with some experi-<lb/>
ence. Many come to mind who<lb/>
would have done far better than<lb/>
Furlong.<lb/>
Apart from the film s compara-<lb/>
tively small drawbacks, it was ex-<lb/>
tremely entertaining. Many of the<lb/>
special effects left the audience be-<lb/>
wildered, asking themselves, "How<lb/>
did they do that?"<lb/>
The plot, for the most part, was<lb/>
intricate and well thought, creating<lb/>
a setting for a believable, multi-fac-<lb/>
eted, action picture.<lb/>
The chances look high for the<lb/>
film to make back the $90 million it<lb/>
cost to make. In fact it could cer-<lb/>
tainly take the most of this year's<lb/>
summer films.<lb/>
After all, Schwarzenegger has<lb/>
done it many times before.<lb/>
Photo court?1 of Tri-Stv<lb/>
Androids and acton fill the screen m this summer's biggest movie hit<lb/>
Study habits make,<lb/>
break performance<lb/>
By Michael Harrison<lb/>
Staff Wnter<lb/>
Ptroper planning and organi-<lb/>
zation are essential to your suet e s<lb/>
in college. It might sound simple,<lb/>
but for many students, full rvaliza-<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
By Matt Jones<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
It isn't theShakespearethat Mrs.<lb/>
1 illigan taught mein the UXh grade,<lb/>
? ut I like it.<lb/>
ohn Shearin did it again. His<lb/>
? rsion of A Midsummer Night's<lb/>
I fraamopened on July 17 to a recep-<lb/>
tive crowd. But, it didn't really look<lb/>
iike Shakespeare.<lb/>
( H.neareallthefnllycostumes,<lb/>
the thick English accents, and gen-<lb/>
erally speaking, the stuffiness. In<lb/>
heu of thesestandard Shakespearian<lb/>
in tifs. there are imaginative, inno-<lb/>
. ah vesertingsandcosrumes,actors<lb/>
w hocanbeunderstood,anda light-<lb/>
hearted, whimsical evening of en-<lb/>
tertainment.<lb/>
John Shearin, the artistic pro-<lb/>
ducer of the Summer Theatre and<lb/>
the director of the play. Rewrote the<lb/>
niles to how Shakespeare is done,<lb/>
and did it well. It should be noted<lb/>
that this in itself is not a mean ac-<lb/>
complishment, as it is generally ac-<lb/>
cepted in the theater world that<lb/>
when one plays with Shakespeare,<lb/>
it is easy to do damage.<lb/>
But, there is no damage done to<lb/>
this production. At the moment<lb/>
upon entering the theater, it is easy<lb/>
to tell that some changes will be<lb/>
seen While being ushered to the<lb/>
seats, a carnivalcsque atmosphere<lb/>
begins with the pipe music heard<lb/>
through the sound system. But it<lb/>
isn't Mendelssohn's classical ren-<lb/>
dition usually accompanied with<lb/>
the play, instead, strangely enough,<lb/>
organ musk from a circus enve-<lb/>
lopes the theater.<lb/>
The front half of the stage is<lb/>
clearly visible and it is easily seen<lb/>
that this is not the settingone would<lb/>
normally expect for a Shakespeare<lb/>
play.<lb/>
Upon further inspection, the<lb/>
music is explained, the stage is set<lb/>
up in a circus motif. The key<lb/>
characters's names an- written on<lb/>
the walls of the set, with their pic-<lb/>
tures painted above them, in a typi-<lb/>
cal sideshow fashion It give, the<lb/>
impression that each of the players<lb/>
are attractions at a travellingcircus.<lb/>
The largest of the paintings an1<lb/>
on either side of the stage, carrying<lb/>
the names and pictures of Oboron<lb/>
and Titania, the King and Queen of<lb/>
the fairies. Oberon's portrait gives<lb/>
the impression of a circus psychic,<lb/>
whileTitania looks more likea palm<lb/>
the likes of which would be seen on<lb/>
trapeze artists or tightrope walkers.<lb/>
As the play progresses, the land<lb/>
of the fairiesis visited. But when the<lb/>
front half of the stage is rolled back<lb/>
at the startof the second act,no dark<lb/>
wood is seen, as one might expect.<lb/>
Instead, the set holds the makings<lb/>
of a funhouse. It is elaborate. The<lb/>
scene is nearly unbelievable.<lb/>
The set features a giant mouth<lb/>
(yes, a giant mouth), surrounded<lb/>
by two large hands holding a fork<lb/>
reader. After the play begins, it is and a spoon. A catwalk sits along<lb/>
easy tosee that Shcann had thought the back of the stage, with slides<lb/>
coming down on<lb/>
either side, to al-<lb/>
low the actors to<lb/>
travel from back to<lb/>
front. When the<lb/>
actors need to go<lb/>
back up, they sim-<lb/>
ply climb up the<lb/>
ringers of the<lb/>
hand. It is Shear<lb/>
(excuse the pun)<lb/>
imagination.<lb/>
In addition to<lb/>
the changes made<lb/>
in the set, Shearin<lb/>
also spruces up the<lb/>
comedy in the<lb/>
play.Hedoesliftle<lb/>
more than add<lb/>
certain expres-<lb/>
sions here or dif-<lb/>
ferent actions<lb/>
there, but it does<lb/>
Photo couiMy oi a. o wwimif the trick. To say the<lb/>
out the portraits well, as both of the least, it is quite a bit more entertain-<lb/>
characters exhibit a bit of the per-<lb/>
sona of their effigies.<lb/>
As the play begins, the circus<lb/>
motif is furthered. As the characters<lb/>
begin to appear onstage, they each<lb/>
wear a different style of circus cos-<lb/>
mg than the BBC version you would<lb/>
see on public television.<lb/>
The acting is also quite enjoy-<lb/>
able. All of the characters deserve<lb/>
equal commendations. Most nota-<lb/>
blyisHeniyStrozier'sperfdrmance<lb/>
tume. Theseus and Hippolyta, the as Bottom, one of the players. He<lb/>
Duke and Queen, wear typical gives the role the talent which is<lb/>
"strongmenoutfits,appropriateto always needed to express<lb/>
urcharactereTherestofthemain Shakespeare's comedic intentions,<lb/>
players style other circus outfits, There are some small disap-<lb/>
"Terminator 2: Judgement<lb/>
Dav" is now playing at the<lb/>
Bucanneer Theater. Call 756-3307<lb/>
for show-times.<lb/>
pHendrix<lb/>
pointments such as Paul Lombardi,<lb/>
playing the role of Puck. Although<lb/>
he embodies a somewhat minor<lb/>
character, he does speak the last<lb/>
lines of the play which are probably<lb/>
the most memorable. ("If we shad-<lb/>
ows have offended, think but this<lb/>
and all is mended) The words,<lb/>
seem to bounce off Lombardi, as if<lb/>
he doesn't really feel them, but<lb/>
merely reads them, retracting some<lb/>
of the impact of the play. Much of<lb/>
his performance seems similarly<lb/>
disjointed.<lb/>
Jack Young, who played<lb/>
Lysander, could also improve his<lb/>
performance. Though it is not from<lb/>
lack of effort, in fact, he seems to try<lb/>
too hard. He puts forth too much<lb/>
emotion in his lines, as if trying to<lb/>
win a melodrama award.<lb/>
The others characters perform<lb/>
flawlessly, each adding to their re-<lb/>
spective roles. But, in the end, it all<lb/>
flows back to the director. Without<lb/>
Shearin's influence, the play would<lb/>
be only a fraction of itself.<lb/>
The most fabulous facet of<lb/>
Shearin'sproduction concerns how,<lb/>
as far as dialogue is concerned, ex-<lb/>
tremely close to Shakespeare's<lb/>
original he has adhered. He does<lb/>
change quite a bit near the end, but<lb/>
trust me, it is for the better. The last<lb/>
twenty minutes of the play are sure<lb/>
tocreate an eternal smileonall those<lb/>
who watch.<lb/>
O.K so sure, it isn't the<lb/>
Shakespeare you're used to But<lb/>
if s good.<lb/>
Maybe we should call it ?<lb/>
Shakesheann.<lb/>
? ? ??<lb/>
A Midsummer Night's Dream<lb/>
will be playing nightly at 8:15 at<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre through Satur-<lb/>
day. Tickets are $15, although stu-<lb/>
dents may obtain tickets for 12<lb/>
price at the box office from 8 to 8:15<lb/>
on the night of the performance<lb/>
they would like to attend.<lb/>
professor.<lb/>
Finally, don't worry any more<lb/>
than vou absolutely have to ? that<lb/>
instructor will probably still be<lb/>
teaching the sameclassatteryou've<lb/>
mowed onto other things.<lb/>
Partici paring in a class is much<lb/>
more enjoyable than being a pas-<lb/>
sive listener. Go to class prepared<lb/>
and feel free to offer pieces of infor-<lb/>
tion of that fact can be big news.<lb/>
Many college students wander<lb/>
aimlessly amund thecampus. from mation, even opinions, about sub-<lb/>
class to class. Socializing with peels Most professors like students<lb/>
friends, listening to Led Zeppelin<lb/>
and watching "In Living Color<lb/>
monopolize their schedules Then<lb/>
they wonder why they made a 5<lb/>
CPA.<lb/>
Others really try to do well but<lb/>
seemingly cannot find enough dme-<lb/>
to do everything thev need to do.<lb/>
Suggestions are nowoffered in this<lb/>
college-career-saving, life-sparing<lb/>
article to spend your time more<lb/>
effectively. Any sugge.stion, no<lb/>
matter how mundane it may st xi nd,<lb/>
can make more efficient use of yiur<lb/>
valuable time.<lb/>
To begin, lay out the clothes<lb/>
you plan to wear ahead of time so<lb/>
that your sleepy mind won't take<lb/>
an especially long time in the<lb/>
morning to decide what to wear.<lb/>
Keep your books, keys, wallet<lb/>
and money in the same place all the<lb/>
who offer insight into a topic But<lb/>
don't go overboard and try to<lb/>
dominate the class.<lb/>
An instructor's mistake, an<lb/>
unclear passage in a textbook and<lb/>
contusing directions can make any<lb/>
subject unclear. So ask questions.<lb/>
Ask for another explanation or a<lb/>
more detailed one. Asking for ex-<lb/>
amples can tremendously clarify a<lb/>
vague topic<lb/>
Questions that could require<lb/>
lengthy answers should be written<lb/>
in vour notebooks to ask the teacher<lb/>
after class.<lb/>
Ask other students for help,<lb/>
especially if your professor isn't<lb/>
recepti ve to students' questions. So,<lb/>
don't sit next to stupid people.<lb/>
Someone who says "bogus" and<lb/>
"dude" a lot can be a big tip-off.<lb/>
In lectures, pay careful atten-<lb/>
time so you won't have to spend hon to your professors's opening<lb/>
hours looking for them. and cking remarks and listen for<lb/>
Plan TV viewing ahead of time key words in lectures, which can be<lb/>
if you tend to watch it too long. If among the following: 'The reason<lb/>
you get a TV guide, circle all pro-<lb/>
grams you plan to watch for the<lb/>
week and stick to it; watch nothing<lb/>
that isn't circled.<lb/>
Do your work as soon as pos-<lb/>
sible to save time for recreation<lb/>
is this The basic idea is  Notice<lb/>
that Take note of Remember<lb/>
that A major development<lb/>
Supporting material can<lb/>
greatly clarify unclear material. So<lb/>
listen for the appropnate words<lb/>
later.DoassJgnmentsaheadoftime that signal upcoming supporting<lb/>
to give yourself extra time later in information, such as 'Tor example<lb/>
the week,if you wantit. Plan some- , For instance  FurtK -more <lb/>
thing fun to do after you finish Also  On the other hand  In<lb/>
your work. A trip downtown to contrast Similarly <lb/>
Cubbie's or Substation could be Conclusionsareoftensignaled<lb/>
theboostyouneed torush through by such phrases as "From this we<lb/>
the rest of your work. can see In conclusion Finally<lb/>
HangupthephoneHanphone msummaryAsaresultand<lb/>
conversations with a friend in ad<lb/>
vance for a time when you both<lb/>
will be free.<lb/>
Bad professors seem to appear<lb/>
in a torrential flood for some stu<lb/>
Therefore<lb/>
In conversations, most mean-<lb/>
ing comes from body language and<lb/>
tone of voice. So watch for main<lb/>
ideas through the instructor's use<lb/>
dents. Nevertheless, always be of gestures, posture, facial expres-<lb/>
prepared,ontimeandtrynottogo sion pauses in speech and tone of<lb/>
to sleep. voce<lb/>
Don't blow up at the instruc- Remember that notes are per-<lb/>
tor,either,disaster would beirnmi- rwipsthebestieiiuorcementofwhat<lb/>
nent Ask a teacher you like or a you hear in class. Borrow<lb/>
counselor for advice when you're someone's notes to get any infor-<lb/>
in difficult situations. mation you might have misaed,<lb/>
Also make sure you aren't do- especially if you were daydream-<lb/>
ing anything to irritate or anger the mgurtcontrollably.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058293_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
(She ?Eaflt (Earolinian<lb/>
July 24,1991<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Pittsburgh smashes Atlanta 12-3<lb/>
By Matt Mumma<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
In the second of a three-game<lb/>
series against the Atlanta Braves,<lb/>
Pittsburgh came up on the winning<lb/>
side of a 12-3 stomp.<lb/>
Gary Red us hit a grand slam<lb/>
over the centerfield fence in the fifth<lb/>
inning and rookie John VVehner<lb/>
went 5-for-5 in his second major<lb/>
league appearance of his career that<lb/>
helped the Pirates over the Braves<lb/>
at Three Rivers Stadium.<lb/>
The Braves won the first game<lb/>
of the series Monday 7-3, but the<lb/>
Pirates returned Teusday night with<lb/>
a vengance. Pittsburgh had 16 hits<lb/>
compared to Atlanta's paltry four.<lb/>
The Braves did, however, start<lb/>
out with an early lead in the first<lb/>
inning as Otis Nixon lead off the<lb/>
game with a single.<lb/>
Nixon stole second and scored<lb/>
on a fielders choice off the bat of<lb/>
Terry Pendelton. In the second in-<lb/>
ning Jeff Treadway hit a two-run<lb/>
homer that put the Braves up 3-0.<lb/>
Atlanta was to get only two<lb/>
more hits the rest of the game as<lb/>
Doug Drabek overcame his early<lb/>
inning jitters to retire the Braves<lb/>
three-in-a-row in the third and<lb/>
fourth innings.<lb/>
If it was the fiersome Pirate<lb/>
onslaught, a more focused and<lb/>
insistant Drabek or a combination<lb/>
of the two, the Bra vescertai nl v OOU Id<lb/>
not match the Pirate bats.<lb/>
The Pirates scored four runs on<lb/>
six hits in the third inning that put<lb/>
them in the lead for good at b-3. An<lb/>
RBI singleby Robby Bonds, Wehner<lb/>
and a two-run single by Mike<lb/>
LeVallier were the major contribu-<lb/>
tors in the inning.<lb/>
The inning would nothavebeen<lb/>
so bad for starting pitcher Charlie<lb/>
Leibrandt if the Braves fielding<lb/>
would have been better. Jay Bell's<lb/>
single to left was flubbed by Dion<lb/>
Sanders, Bobby Bonilla's grounder<lb/>
missed the outstretched glove of<lb/>
Pendleton and two consecutive<lb/>
grounders to Treadway were<lb/>
botched, one of which should have<lb/>
been a double play.<lb/>
In thefifth inning the Pittsburgh<lb/>
bats increased their lead to seven<lb/>
runs. Bonds and Weher singled and<lb/>
Jose Lind was hit by a pitch that<lb/>
loaded the bases.<lb/>
After LeVallier and Drabek<lb/>
floundered at the plate, Redus<lb/>
stepped up and hita two-outgrand<lb/>
slam. It was the fourth grand slam<lb/>
oi his career and came at an oppor-<lb/>
tune time as it was hisonly hit of the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
But Pittsburgh had not finished<lb/>
with the Atlanta pitching staff that<lb/>
is to say Bonilla was not done.<lb/>
Bonilla hit a two-run shot just<lb/>
over the leftfield fence that put the<lb/>
Pirates up 12-3. It was his 52 RBI of<lb/>
the seasonand he as he went 2-for 5<lb/>
with a double.<lb/>
Wehner, who played in his<lb/>
second major league game of his<lb/>
career was a bright young face in<lb/>
the Pirate lineup. He played third<lb/>
base as well as anyone could expect<lb/>
and hisfive singles and RBI showed<lb/>
that he can hit against a playoff<lb/>
contending team.<lb/>
Atlanta now drops to three<lb/>
games behind the division leading<lb/>
Dodgers who have a homestand<lb/>
with the Philadelphia Phillies. The<lb/>
Braves will play Pittsburg again<lb/>
Wednesday with ace Tom Glavine<lb/>
on the mound.<lb/>
NBA most racially integrated of all sports<lb/>
(AP) ?When it comes to mi-<lb/>
nority hiring, the NBA gets am A,<lb/>
'he NFL gets a C and baseball gets<lb/>
aC<lb/>
Northeastern University's<lb/>
Center for the Study of Sport in<lb/>
Society gave the sports these grades<lb/>
in a report. When it comes to im-<lb/>
provement, the NBA gets another<lb/>
A, the NFL gets a C and baseball<lb/>
gets another C<lb/>
"It is very disheartening to see<lb/>
how little progress has been made<lb/>
in major league baseball said Ri-<lb/>
chard Lapcnkk, the center's direc-<lb/>
tor. There are very few blacks<lb/>
holding those positions<lb/>
Rich Levin, a spokesman for<lb/>
commissioner Fay Vincent, said the<lb/>
study was flawed.<lb/>
"We have minorities in a van-<lb/>
ety of positions, from the National<lb/>
League president to secretaries to<lb/>
marketing and public relations<lb/>
people Levin said.<lb/>
This is the second year the cen-<lb/>
ter issued its "Racial Report Card<lb/>
Last year, when the center is-<lb/>
sued its first Racial Report Card, it<lb/>
found opportunities were increas-<lb/>
ing for minorities with the major<lb/>
sports leagues.<lb/>
'The 1991 version is less opti-<lb/>
mistic due to either stagnation or<lb/>
decline in key indicators aside from<lb/>
on-the-field play the report said.<lb/>
The NBA led in nearly all cat-<lb/>
egories: 72 percent of its players are<lb/>
black, down from 75 percent last<lb/>
vear. The league had six black head<lb/>
coaches in 1990-91, in Cleveland,<lb/>
Seattle, Houston. New York, Char-<lb/>
lotte and Washington.<lb/>
Baseball has two black manag-<lb/>
ers, in Kansas Cifv and Toronto<lb/>
Frank Robinson started the season<lb/>
as Baltimore's manager but was<lb/>
fired and became the Orioles' as-<lb/>
sistant general manager. Football<lb/>
has one black head coach, in Los<lb/>
Angeles.<lb/>
Black NFL players increased to<lb/>
rl percent from bO percent the pre-<lb/>
vious year. Baseball reversed a 10-<lb/>
year decline in black players with a<lb/>
1 percent increase, to 18 percent. In<lb/>
the early 1980s, 24 percent of major<lb/>
league players were black.<lb/>
The NBA led in black front-<lb/>
office hiring, with black general<lb/>
managers in Los Angeles, Cleve-<lb/>
land, New Jersev Minneapolis and<lb/>
Denver ? a 40 percent increase<lb/>
from 1989-90. Blacks also held top<lb/>
management positions with Wash-<lb/>
ington and Golden State. In addi-<lb/>
tion, the Bullets hired Susan<lb/>
O Mallev as club president, the first<lb/>
woman to hold the job in any sport.<lb/>
Baseball has had one black GM<lb/>
- - Bill Lucas of the Braves, who<lb/>
died in 1979 ? and the NFL has<lb/>
never had one.<lb/>
While the number of black NFL<lb/>
assistant coaches dropped a per-<lb/>
centage point to 16 percent, com-<lb/>
missioner Paul Tagliabue got high<lb/>
marks for appointing blacks to key<lb/>
league K"bs,mcludingexecu five vice<lb/>
president Harold Henderson, drug<lb/>
advisor Dr. Lawrence Brown and<lb/>
Baker-Finch wins British Open<lb/>
SOLTHPORT, England (AP)<lb/>
?Conventional wisdom holds that<lb/>
major golf toumamentsareYiot won<lb/>
by the champion so much as thev<lb/>
are lost by the contenders.<lb/>
Ian Baker-Finch has heard that<lb/>
said from both sides now, from win<lb/>
and lose, and still somehow, it was<lb/>
the illusion of success that he re-<lb/>
called. Until Sunday, he really had<lb/>
not understood success at all.<lb/>
In 1984 and 1990, Baker-Finch<lb/>
made up half of the final group on<lb/>
the final day of the championship<lb/>
and both times the man who played<lb/>
alongside him finished the tourna-<lb/>
ment by hoisting the silver claret<lb/>
jug above his head.<lb/>
And so for the briefest moment<lb/>
during this final round, exactly<lb/>
when the sailing seemed the<lb/>
smoothest, he found himself won-<lb/>
dering whether it could happen<lb/>
again. Whether, after all this time<lb/>
and all that heartbreak, he was go-<lb/>
ing to become that somebody in-<lb/>
stead of remaining that hyphen-<lb/>
ated somebody-else.<lb/>
And then he remembered that<lb/>
learning from losing was the requi-<lb/>
site lesson for learning to win ?<lb/>
and in that regard, he was already a<lb/>
success.<lb/>
'Tve been at this for a long<lb/>
time Baker-Finch said Sundav,<lb/>
that same silver jug now pressed<lb/>
tightly against his chest, "and the<lb/>
pain of those other couple times<lb/>
gave me the strength to do it to-<lb/>
day<lb/>
Indeed. Hecuta swath through<lb/>
the minefield of Royal Birkdale with<lb/>
the assurance of a man in posses-<lb/>
sion of the only map. He cut the<lb/>
heart out of his competitors with<lb/>
birdies on five of the first seven<lb/>
holes. Then he sat back, knowing<lb/>
that for once, he had the luxury of<lb/>
just keeping it close, plucking the<lb/>
occasional birdie and waiting to see<lb/>
how much strength ? if any ? the<lb/>
rest of them had left.<lb/>
One by one, thecontendersand<lb/>
pretenders fell away.<lb/>
Three-time champion Seve<lb/>
Ballesteros ? who had run him<lb/>
over en route to the 1984 champion-<lb/>
ship at St. Andrews ? started the<lb/>
Putt-Putt Golf<lb/>
4&amp; Ec.c<lb/>
Students &amp; Staff<lb/>
BuyiGame<lb/>
75S-I8ZO io RiverPlay x FREE Bluff RdOpen Daily 9:00 am Sun 1:00 pm<lb/>
day a stroke behind Baker-Finch at<lb/>
3 under par, but was never a threat<lb/>
after bogeying two of the first three<lb/>
holes.<lb/>
Two-timeand defending Open<lb/>
champion Nick Faldo ? who had<lb/>
virtuall v ignored Baker-Finch while<lb/>
crafting his own legacy with a<lb/>
record-setting performance last year<lb/>
? was never in the hunt after a 75<lb/>
on Saturday.<lb/>
Former Open champion and<lb/>
countryman Greg Norman ? in<lb/>
whose shadow Baker-Finch and a<lb/>
host of other talented Australians<lb/>
continue to languish ? got as close<lb/>
as 2-under, but his charge was<lb/>
nothing more than a distant echo.<lb/>
In fact, the last shot anyone took<lb/>
with any chance of wounding<lb/>
Baker-Finch was fired by playing<lb/>
partner Mark OMeara at No. 17.<lb/>
After a birdie at the 15th left him 4-<lb/>
under and within four shots,<lb/>
OMeara launched an eagle putt<lb/>
from eight feet that caught the left<lb/>
edge of the cup, danced along the<lb/>
back lip and spun out.<lb/>
"1 guess I can talk like a person<lb/>
with experience now Baker-Finch<lb/>
said, "instead of a person who is<lb/>
still gaining experience. Experience<lb/>
means going out there and playing<lb/>
like you know how<lb/>
spokesman Reggie Roberts.<lb/>
In addition, 30 percent of the<lb/>
assistant coaches in the NFL-spon-<lb/>
sored World League of American<lb/>
Football are black. The WLAF has<lb/>
no black head coaches.<lb/>
While overall minority man-<lb/>
agement jobs in the NFL dropped a<lb/>
percentage point to 6 percent, blacks<lb/>
moved into key roles with Chicago,<lb/>
New England, San Diego and<lb/>
Philadelphia.<lb/>
Thereport said baseball's move<lb/>
to put minonties into management<lb/>
has slowed since the fury over Al<lb/>
Campanis' statement in 1987 that<lb/>
blacksdidn't have the "necessities"<lb/>
to be in management.<lb/>
With the exception of the 1989<lb/>
appointment of Bill White as NL<lb/>
president, the highest-ranking black<lb/>
executive in pro sports, the study<lb/>
said there has been little progress.<lb/>
Baseball issued a report in De-<lb/>
cember that said blacks held 9 per-<lb/>
cent of the front office jobs over the<lb/>
last two years, up from 6 percent<lb/>
from 1988. Total minority employ-<lb/>
ment accounted for 15 percent.<lb/>
Blacks held 10 percent of the<lb/>
jobs in the baseball commissioner's<lb/>
office last year, the same as 1988 and<lb/>
down from 13 percent in 1989. Total<lb/>
minority employment was 21 per-<lb/>
cent. There were no black or His-<lb/>
panic executives or department<lb/>
heads.<lb/>
Rp? -h r <lb/>
PUmp it UP 0R-?CO Photo Ub<lb/>
An ECU student pumps iron m the gym at Memorial.<lb/>
LeMond falls behind,<lb/>
still contender in Tour<lb/>
GAP, France (AP) ? The re-<lb/>
ports of Greg LeMond's demise in<lb/>
the Tour de France may have been<lb/>
greatly exaggerated.<lb/>
Down from a fall and almost<lb/>
out of it after a coupleof exhausting<lb/>
mountain stages, LeMond re-<lb/>
bounded witha surpnsebrea kawav<lb/>
in the final 9 miles of Monday's lMh<lb/>
leg.<lb/>
After a weekend of self-doubts<lb/>
and confronted with a bkxxi test<lb/>
that revealed too many white cells,<lb/>
LeMond gained 26 seconds on<lb/>
leader Miguel Indurain to close the<lb/>
gap to 4 minutes, 42 seconds.<lb/>
However, LeMond remained in<lb/>
fifth.<lb/>
"I had a big breakdown at V'al<lb/>
Louron but now I am back in the<lb/>
race in my head he said.<lb/>
The race has six more stages<lb/>
before concluding in Paris on Sun-<lb/>
day. Next is today'sclimbup 1'Alpe<lb/>
d'Huez, a 6,100-foot mountain that<lb/>
LeMond has had success on.<lb/>
LeMond was second last vear<lb/>
inthe climb toGianniBugnoof Italv<lb/>
but gained almost 12 minutes on<lb/>
Indurain.<lb/>
However Indurain was in a<lb/>
different situation then. He was<lb/>
nding for Pedro Delgado, the<lb/>
Spanish team leader, and was used<lb/>
up in an effort to tire out the oppo-<lb/>
sition. Now Delgadoisl6:30behind<lb/>
out of contention and must help<lb/>
Indurain.<lb/>
Still, LeMond's performance<lb/>
raised his hopes and caused some<lb/>
concern in the pack by the way he<lb/>
attacked.<lb/>
He went ahead with about nine<lb/>
other nders. Then, in the last 3.2<lb/>
miles, he poured it on and only<lb/>
Marco Lietti of Italy stayed with<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Lietti took the stage but<lb/>
LeMond was just two seconds be-<lb/>
hind, letting up at the finish.<lb/>
The mai n pack, which included<lb/>
Indurain, came in about 28 seconds<lb/>
behind.<lb/>
arf<lb/>
Dail Rood- ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Don't drink the water<lb/>
The pools at Minges and Memorial are available for those who are seeking escape from the heat<lb/>
Ammummmvmswwlar Ltllldill? SCJlfOOd<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS<lb/>
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French Fries S2.99<lb/>
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Sirloin Steak St Shrimp $6.95<lb/>
? Snow Craning.<lb/>
All U Can-Eat $9 99<lb/>
'LunutdluaiQUu)<lb/>
Country Fried Steak S3.75<lb/>
 Snow Crab Lap<lb/>
All- I Can Hat $9.99<lb/>
(LimlCd Ijme. QJfjx)<lb/>
Seafood Platter $8 49<lb/>
Shrimp A Flounder<lb/>
Lunch $4 25 Dinner $6.49<lb/>
105 Airport Rd.<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
NEW SUMMER HOURS<lb/>
11AM 9 PM Mon-Sat<lb/>
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The East Carolinian is now<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058293_0007"/>
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