Eastern Illinois University The Keep

October 1996

10-7-1996 Daily Eastern News: October 07, 1996 Eastern Illinois University

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This is brought to you for free and open access by the 1996 at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in October by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. a high On the 0/68° INSIDE rebound ly Women\ soccer ream Mixed wins against MONDAY Eastern Illinois University SW Missouri Charleston, Ill. 61920 after losing feelings October 7, 1996 Vol. 82, No. 36 Friday Seminar w focus on pros and 12 pages cons ofinterracial relationships 5 PAGE PAGE S "Tell the truth and don't be afraid" 12 Students encouraged to get politically active

ByTRAVIS SPENCER Editor in chief • Last day to register to vote coming up. STORY -page 5 Many students have a strong opinion regarding abonion. • Clinton/Dole debate. Students also care about the STORV page9 environment and have some­ thing to say about the legal­ need to use it." Heliczer said. members also will call che izalion of drugs. ''!l's our power, we need to take students whose names are on a But srudem:; don't have much advanrnge of iL They need to 20-page List of newly registered interest or loyalty Lo political vote." voters to tell them when and parties. said Therese Heliczer. Easrem Student Government where they can vote on Nov. 5. co-chair of Youth Vote '96. a executive Brian Anderson, who Students have been one of I.he Washington-based coa Ii tion 1s spearheading Eastern voter most effective forces of change dedicated to increasing youth registration. agrees "We want to in America because of organ­ vorcr panicipation in 1996. get as many Eastern students as izing activist campaigns and "Issues arc what students care we can to get out and vote this community service projects. about this year," Heliczer said. year," he said. Heliczer said. ··Young voters don't care as Eastern student leaders have National student organ­ much about political parties as been.encouraging more political izations, such as the U.S. they do certain issues. That's activism for the past few years. Student Association, helped to what we are concerned with, and This school year al<>ne, about organize efforts to stop Con­ that is what motivates us to 1.100 Eastern students have gress from culling over $20 vote." registered lo vote in the General billion in student aid funds. Student organizations across ,__!!!!!!!!!!ll!ll•••••llllli Election. the oatioo encouraging 18- Student environmental groups i.-..... --ll!l"--•!111111•1'!!1!~~~~ are Midnight Tuesday is the last also helped to send more than ,. 25 year-old Americans to cast chance to register to vote. one million signatures on an their vote in the upcoming Anderson said students can environmental bill of rights bill election so their opinions about contact him at 581-5522 or 581- Lo House Speaker Newl Gin­ these issues are heard. 5 I 84 for last minute regist­ grich, Youth Vote '96 officials "Young voters need co know rations. said. NAOKO KOJIMA/Staff photographer they have a voice and that they Anderson said Student Senate Liz Dozier, sophomore business major and srude11r senate member. See VOTE page 2 points out a campaign placard in her window. Cost of tuition is issue in presidential campaign Web pages provide information on candidate platforms By KATIE VANA He signed the Student Loan Refonn Act in Managing editor 1993, creating the Direct Loan Program. ' ' With no cabinet support, which is I.he source of more than 50 percent The rising cost of higher education has (education) is not going to of lhe total amount of loans. Clinton took on "By the ,.., 2000, the caused many srudents and families to rely on the banking industry so the federal s.lngll moat crib! financial aid to help pay for cuiuon. Without be the top of interest. I would hate government could gaio concrol of the loans thing we Cl/I do It lo g!Va 9Yer( single 11, millions of srudents would not be able to to see it happen, the Office of from the banks. Loans are borrowed directly American who wants attend a two or four-year institution. from lhe student aid office, and students are it-the chance lo go Education has done a pretty good IO college,* The federal go,emment plays a large role offered flexible repayment office. in the loan program. The presidential job." Republican presidential candidate Bob candidates have different views on financial Dole is in support of the Republican Budget EllmlNting the Direct - John Flynn Student Loen aid lhaL could cause several changes in the Plan, which will increase funding for student Program lllld rei,tng way students will receive their aid. Eastern's director of financial aid loans almost 50 percent in the next seven on the private sector would..,,. S1.5 In the la'>C year alone. the co~t of college years .. opposes Clinton'-. Direct Student billion over the next tuition has risen 6 percent, nearly twice the homepage on the World Wide Web. Clinton Loan Program accordrng to· a press release 118119f1yMJ'S. rate of inflation. Mo1c than 60 percent of from Bob Dole Campaign headquarters. He iDOLE has increased the minimum Pell Grant students can not afford to auend a four-year scholarshlp from $2,300 to $2.4 70. and has argue!; that eliminating the Direct Student school without financial aid. proposed to increase it LO ~2.700 for 1997. Loan Program and relying on the private In the past four vears. President Bill ''By the year 2000. the single rnost critical sector would save $1.5 billion over the next Clmton has worked to continue the federaJ thing ''e can do is to give ever) s ngle seven years. go\'ernmen1s role 111 financial aid by American who wants it the chance Lo go lo "This would cause a painful process of enhancing several programs. college:· Clinton said on the homepage. eliminauon and then we would have Lo PEROT According to lhe Clinton/Gore '96 See AID page 2 Business students may get .to study in other countries By DION CASSATA students to spend four to six lvarie, dean of the Lumpkin Europe wou Id be able to auend Students participating in the Staff wrirnr months at business schools in College of Business and Applied one of six universities in lhe program would pay Eastern 's Belgium, Germany. Finland. Sciences. United St.ates. tuition. According to a press Representatives from seven France or the Netherlands. The Eastern is one of siit Participating students are release. s tudents would be European universities will be on students also may have the universities in the required to speak the language of responsible for locating and campus today to discuss a opportuni ty to hold part-time that may in the exchange that country well enough to financing their own room, board proposed exchange program that internships in that country. program. Other schools consid­ complete the academic program. and other living expenses. The would allow business students lo "Contemporary business is, ering the proposal include The details and operation of the CEN would help students find a study and in tern in another indeed, international, and it is South west Missouri Stace, proposed program would be residence. country. essential that our business leaders Northwest Missouri State, and the handled by lhe Cultural Exchange Mike McCabe, an Eastern The plan would allow selected of tomorrow have first hand University of Missouri at Rolla. Network, a not-for-profit student pursuing a business full-time Eastern business experience abroad." said Ted The students at the school in organization. See EXCHANGE page 2 2 Monday, October 7, 1996 The Dally Eastern News ======::;:::======--= Oklahoma City bombing gets one step closer to trial date DENVER (AP) - First came the separate trials issue argued last week: Whether McVeigh and issue pushed by Oklahoma City bombmg suspects Nichols should be tried separately. Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols. MaLSch took the maner under advisement, and Next, squabbles over prison food. evidence and is expected to set a trial da1e after he rules...... the media. •·Judge Maisch has been cautious," said Irven & then some is a weekly column covering With a dash of dry wit and Lile calmness of a Box. an Oklahoma City attorney and TV trial ana­ various campus and community events. k.inderganen 1eacher, U.S. Dastricl Judge Richard lyst who attended the pretrial hearing. "Each side Malsch considered them all last week, moving the has been given every opponuruty• ., Oklahoma Cily bombing case one step closer to a McVeigh and Nichols are charged with murder + ONE OF A KIND asm and creativiry as Tricia trial date- or dates. and conspiracy in Lhe April 19. 1995, bombing of does," said Keith Lipke, Prosecutors and defense attorneys alike respect the Oklahoma City Federal Building. which killed Mindy Meehling has been University Board Chairman. " Matsch for his meticulous research and basing his 168 people and injored more Lhan 500. named the student services She seems to be a real team rulings on fac1s, not emotion. lf convicted, Lhey could face the death penalty. Employee of t he month for player which prompted us to They expect no less of him on the most critical September. choose her for our team." Mechling is the e vening The Human Po tential s·ecretary for the campus Committee's purpose is to recreation departmenl and provide multi-cultural pro­ VOTE frompage I secretary for the intramural gramming for the campus. sports program at Eastern. Hersey was elected Lhrough ··1 know that there are issues become politically active. spokeswoman. said in a tele­ She was chosen based on an interview seleclion com­ oul there that s tudents care Anderson said. phone interview Lhat members of "excellence in providing con­ mittee process. about," sbe said. "No maller Rap artis t LL Cool J , on the recording industry combined sistent customer service. per­ .. I think she is going to be what the issue is, there will be at behalf of the Rock the Vole cam­ their motivation in engaging formance of job responsibili­ real good, she's got a lot of least one that every young voLer paign. said voting is one of the young people in the political ties, attitude. evidence of self motivation," said Tom Ryan, cares about." most important actions a young process. improvement and the contri­ vice chair for Uni\ ersiL) Since former Presidem Ronald American can take pan in. Anists such as , lce­ bution or innovative or cost­ Board. Reagan lef1 office in 1988, \'Ot­ "'(Voting) if> a power to affecL T, Green Da) and Hootic and the l>a Ving ideas," said Shirley ers have been more concerned society in a way that you see is Blowfisn. on behaJ( of Rock the Stewart. director of student CONGRATS with the stances politicians take going to be posiuve:· the musi­ Vote. encouraged young services and career services in on particular i:.~ue!'. lhan with cian said m an inter-.iew for the Americans lo vote. a press release. Enstern's chapter of the whicJ1 political party the candi­ Rock The Vote homepage. ·•J "We had a big impact in ·92 ·•she continually strives to Delta Ch i fratemit} rece1ved date is affiliated, Anderson said. think young people should espe­ and are hoping for even more take advantage of continuing the President's Cup and the "'The issues need to be talked cially pay attention because Lhe this year:· she Rudd said ...In education to improve her Award of Excellence this aboUL.' 0 he said. "'Student loans. policy that's implemeoLeu when 1992, we helped increase voter skills and knowledge." said summer at a national conven­ will he big, that should draw dis­ you're 18, or 24 or 25 is the pol­ turnout in the 18-24 age group Uave Duller, dlrecror of cam­ tion. The a'' ards arc the high­ tinr1 inns between che different tcy that's going to affect your by 20 percent. This year we hope pus recreation. est of lhe Awards P rogram candidates. Students should at children when you're 37 and 45 for much more than that. ll' s honors and Lhe fratemiLy's top least cure about that issue."' and SO and 60. So voting is a great Lo have all these music + NEW NAMES form of national recogniLion. Pushes from MTV and other wa)- to voice your op1nion and 3rtists get involved and encour­ Awards are given on the enlenainmenl industries have secure your future." age others to vote ·· The Women' <: Advocacy basis of Lhe amount of com­ encouraged young Americans to Cari Rudd, a Rock the Vote Council ha~ ar JU 1 J its muni r y service. acac.lemjcs newly appointed com nittee and the involvement of the chairs. fraternity members through­ Al Dfrom page I The following wom~n will out Lhe school year. implement lhc ne\\ programs:· said John Flynn, Dole on Education World Wide Wet?c:11c ...1 i.erve for Lhe 1996-97 s~hool ''This goes lo show thal a 1 Eastem's director of financial aid. 'Td hate to see Dole wants the majority of education icadership year; Coles, wards; group of individuals as dedi­ Marilyn a tht> change of a program jusl for sake of change.'' to be given back to Lhe individual states. Jn doing historian and cated to what Lhey do goes a Bonnie Irwin S1udent loans are currently the highest inieresl this, more flexibility will be given to the states. Phj Alpha £:.ta: \lelanie long way." said Keith Lipke. paying loans next to home loans. Clinton has had Dole said. Rawlins and Lauren Smith , president of TnLerfraternity the federal government take control of the loans Flynn said he does nol know who will run the program: Rosemar y Buck Council. trying to reduce the amount of intl!rest :.tudcnts education program without the Department of and Kathr) n Bulver. The Delta Ch.i National pay. said Camille Johnston. lhe communications Education in tact resource center. \1elanie office developed the Awards director for the Clinton/Gore campaign in Illinois. "With no cabinet support, (education) is not \lilts. social; Carol Lund· Program to recognize the Currently in the works is a proposal 10 gtve tax going to be Lhc top of interest," Flynn said. "I g ren, treasur...r and Gail accomplishments that chap­ credits to families for education up 10 ~5.000 in would hate to see it happen. the Office of Mason. Women s Studies ters have made over the past postsecondary education expenses each year. Education has done a pretty good job.'' Minor academic year. said Lipke. according to the homepage and Johnston. Dole and the Republicans also want to increase ''With Clinton the programs will remain in the Pell Grant for the most need) students Lo FILLED IN JUST A REMINDER effect. Thal won't be a negative thing," said $2.440 '" 1996. Flynn. "The:;e are tried and lrue programs, they The Reform Pany presidential candidate Ross Tricia Hersey. senior Anyone interested in sub­ a seem to be working well." Perot has not taken a slron,g stance on education. mining information for Heallh Studies and Sociology & C linton also is working to i ncrease money to Both Lhe Ross Perot for Prestdent '96'" hbfue/>agc Then Some should write or major." has beet>- named lhe students in a work transition program· for those and his ca'"nipaign b€aoq111il't1ts-4 failed to' ilif~wer new University Board Human can Katie Vanu at The Daily aueoding two-year schools. questions on where Perot stands on Lhe issue. · Potentia I Coord1naLor. S&l-2812. or Eastem News, "He wants to give everyone the chance to ll!am Perot would like lO restore the control of "Il 's nice lo have some­ e-mail her at cukav@uxa.­ a skill. so they can get a better job," Johnston schools lo lhe suites and the people, though. w1 ecn.bgu.ecn body th as much enlhusi- said. "We the people - not the federal government - Dole sees the federal government's role as min­ are Lhe only ones that can make our schools Lhe - Katie Vana is the managing editor and a imum lo financial aid. His first major plan is to best in Lhe world for our children," Perot said regular columnist for The Daily Eastern News. abolish the Department of Education. according to according to Lhe homepage.

:The DaUY. Eastern News This W eek's Spe cials Jerry's Wizza &Pub 345-2844 Corner of 4th and Lincoln P lactta DELIVERY BIRTHDAY AD'..-: wit h a 11:00 am to 1:30 am ~ PH01"0 & ME65AGE We accept Visa, Mastercard, and Discover • In "the r------, r------, 't: fl'j)~lf/JJ &einm 1 Large 1 L Half Gallon 1 ~ fNla~u I 1 ToEf>ing Pizza I I of spaghetti and I (Deadlln": 2 &ut1ln.,•e DllY• I and Qt. ol Coke I I a loaf of ~rlic bread I &efore Ad le to Run.) L_ -_ ! '.Z9~ --_J L_ -- ~G_S~ --_J . rr Monday, October 7. 1996 e Dally Eastern News======3 ew rooms vacant for this C&M Video reports ear's Family Weekend evening bomb threat By BRITT CARSON Lincoln Ave. next year studentS oeed to start booking rooms as City editor At 12: 12 a.m. August 25, an soon as possible. explosive device injured one "You generally know you can't gel a bocel around An empl oyee at C&M student and caused $I 00 dam­ Because of cancellations. some lucky students here unless you start looking at least six months Video, 440 Lincoln Ave .. age to I.be building. ny st.i ll be able to secure a hotel or motel room in ahead but you might get lucky if someone can­ reported a bomb threat Jacob Jorgenson, of I021 Charleston area for Family Weekend. cels." said Kin Schmid1. junior chemistry major. His Saturday evening. Greek Court, was cut on his Veena Panchal. manager of the Varsity Inn, 415 mom will drive cwo and a half hours for her third The fire and police depart­ back and his clothes were . Lincoln Ave .. said lhe hotel has some room left Family Weekend since Schmidt began at Eastern. ments responded to a call from damaged when a piece of a r the coming weekend. Kelly Rodgers, desk clerk at the Worthington lnn. the video store at 7: 15 p.m. device struck him. "We had some cancellations and that's how we 920 W. Lincoln Ave .. said usually during Parents Saturday. The police are continuing an ve some rooms left;' she said. ~r might have some Weekend lhe motel fills all 67 rooms for the next According to a fire report, investigation into I.be incidenL alk-ins but f'm not going to deny reservations if coming year. lhe fire department checked Joey's Place, located at 405 ey come. h 's good to leave a couple of rooms "We've been booked up at least for three or four lhe building for any possible Lincoln Ave .. received a bomb devices and made sure it was threat on Sept. 20. : n, in case of problems with the records so every months.'' said Amie Janssen, desk clerk at the 1 gets a room.'' Comfon Inn. Casey. secure. Arny Luebrecht, an emplb)'­ A room for four people al the Varsity Inn would Rebecca Funk. desk clerk at the Arcola Inn The report said the fire ee at Joey's, told police she ost between $55 and $65 and a room for two peo­ Budget Host, said families should plan early for next department did not find any­ answered the phone and an le would cost between $45 and $55. The cost years Family Weekend. thing suspicious. unknown female voice said. ·rrerence depends on the size of the room, Panchal ··r would say at the beginning of January we start Employees at C&M Video "Did you hear about that bomb 'd. making the new books and taking reservations - by declined to comment on the at Ike's? Thought you should The Charleston Econo Lodge, 8 10 W. Lincoln, the middle of summer we book full," Funk said. lhreaL know about Ike's bomb ad rooms available at 5:30 p.rn. on Sunday and by Holiday Inn in Effingham also begins booking The police department because you• m next... :JO p.m. the rooms were gone, said Rocky Patel, families for next year in January. refused to release any informa­ Luebrecht advised the eneral manager. "l just sold my last room," he said. Best Western Regency Inn. Arcola. offers a dis­ tion about the incident. owner. Mori. Grant, of the If the motel gets any more cancellat1ons the onl) count program to families with lower rates for four An explosive device was phone call and he telephoned ms available would be a suite size bed for $65, people and coys for the kids. However, Friday and detonated earlier this semester the police. The police have no esaid. Saturday. are completely full, said J. Ballard, desk at [ke's Tavern, located at 409 suspects at this time. ln order to get a hot.el room for Family Weekend clerk. merican Red Cross falls short of donated blood goal y THERESA GAVUN Last Monday's blood drive staned things off slow by only ctivities editor ' ' We didn't reach our goal, which is collecting 156 pints of blood, 69 pints short of their goal of real unfortunate ... I don't know if this 225 pints. The American Red Cross collected 1,006 pints of blood Tuesday's blood drive picked things up considerably by uring the blood drive last week, falling 169 pints short of was just bad timing." collecting 254 pints, four pints more than their goal of 250 week ·s goal of l, 175 pints. -Dave Cline pints. ··we didn't reach our goal. which is real unfortunate," Wednesday's blood drive aJso remained steady. collecting aid Dave C line, donors services consultant for the Red Cross consultant 247 pints, three pints short of their goaJ of 250 pints. merican Red Cross. "I don· t know if lhis was just bad tim­ Thursday's blood drive staned slowing things down with g .. "We had a lot of people come out and donate (Friday), only 202 pints collected. falling 98 pints short ot lheir goal He added Che lack of don·ors may have been because of which is great," Cline said. of300 pim'>. idtenns, but Lhen said midterms has never before affected The drive helped replenish the current blood supplies and T\vo more blood drives will be held to help make up for e number of donations so dramatically. aid another supplier in the region in need of blood supplies. the lack of blood donated this past week. "We"ve got to make it up," Cline said. Cline said one of the region's blood services in Detroit The first drive will be from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday in The blood drive collected 147 pin~ Friday. falling three was recently descroyed by fire. and other regions in the area Andrews Hall, and the following drive will be Oct. 31 in in~ short of the 150-pint goal. are helping to support I.bis region. Stevenson Hall.

'J CJ 9 CJ CJ CJ Math Energy Meeting Jerry's tonight in the Grand Ballroom " The Mighty Ducks 3 (PG) 4:15 !'ILK Union at 6:30pm PUB 6:45,9:15 Sat S'Un mm 1:30 CJ CJ Bulletproof(R)Daity 5:'46,8:00, Speaker: Mrs. Flood 1010 Sal Sun mats 2;46 "Probability Games & Activities for eme Measures(R) Daily 4. Enrichment and Practice" Monday Night football 7:30, 10:00 Sat Sun mats 2 00 irst Wives Club(PG)Da1ly 4:30, Remember: ICTM a NCIM checks 9 $3.00 Pitchers 7:00,9:30 Sat Sun mats 1:45 a $5.00 for dues lmmerman(R) Dally 5:30,7·45 9.50 sat Sun mats 2:16 st Mari standing(R) Daily 5:1 Big Screen T.V. 8.00, 10:10 Sat Sun mats 2:30 'J 'J CJ 'J 'J 'J im Kid(PG) Daily 4:30,7:00, 9:20 Sat Sun mats 2:00 hat Thing That You Do (PG) OTS Digital Daily 4:00,7:15, 9·40 Sat Sun mats 1:15

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HAMBURGER Breaded Ravioli Mini Com Dogs 1.75 Fried Clams Everyday Limit Two Ranch Potato Wedges Per Customer · -----ll-M•l#•Jtt•lr1it c Add Cheese • 25¢ c '?•.,,,.. ~ tM ~&~.di-"- o;u: Lettuce, Tomato, & Onion • 25¢ VALRiLMER LOCATED IN1HE EAST WING BASBME.\1 • Monday •Friday 7:00 am •9:00 pm DR"THE~P EJ3 1:ia"hv . • MARTIN LUTHER ~G IR, UNIVERSITY UNION 1:45.4:15 l&.(..l,;4l&IL • ·•·C4,_. .. ,.~ ~••• . • IiI,, •t'"' SM<§ ,,•~t§§fJj Media turns debates into image contest Put on >our hcl met and fasten Stories on the debate have your "eat belt becau-.c if this pre~­ filled I.he new~ in lhe past week. idenlinl election i anything like "The debates and man) ot lhem are about these one~ m the p~l. it "ill be a long. arbilrat) details that should ha\c bumpy ride. are the prime no bearing on someone's vole Wilh lhe fiN debate now com­ chance for the Speculation on which candidate plete. we have officially entered candidates to will .,weal more or which one the hard-core campaigning sea- will look al his watch first i<. not son. Presidential elections are REAGAN BRANHAM sell themselves the best judge of who will be the only one month away. and each Regular columnist " better president. party is going 10 make lhe most of But this is not lhe first rime the Editorials are the opinion of the Editorial Board. this time. media has avoided reponing the Columns are the opinion of the author. The debates nre a prime oppor­ importance of lhe issues dis- tunity for voter~ to see how Bob Dole and President cussed at I.he debates. Clinton measure up to one anolhcr. They are answering the In the 1960 debate between Richard Nixon and John F Monday, October 7, 1996 same questions back-to-back, giving some voters a chance Kennedy, the media painted a picture of Nixon, shifting to compare how each candidate stands on the issues. And around behind hii. podium, as an undesirable presidential PAGE4 for others, this is their chance to find out what lhe issues choice because he was sweating throughout the entire are. event. Although this was probably not an important issue to The debates draw large television viewing audiences. the election. hi!> sweat is still mentioned in the news when partly because they are so entertaining and partly because debate time comes around. not much else is on television during the debates· time Just a few years ago. President Bush looked at his watch The News to feature slots. during Lhe debate. Many questions arose from that one The candidates prepared for weeks for Sunday's fateful small move. Why was he looking at his watch? Did he want event. They understand this event can be a turning point in to know lhe ume. or did he want to know how much lime candidates' stances lheir campaigns. They even broke out the new power tie:. was left on the hot seat? for the occasion. Why does that one small move constitute so much The debates are the prime chance for lhe candidates to debate? He was simply looking at his watch. on campaign issues sell lhemselves and tell voters exactly why they should be The impon.ance of the debates is obvious. But to focw. Americans have a elected. It 1s their opportunity to either answer or avoid attention on appearance rather than discussion and issu questions about the issues that have been lhe focus during raised dunng the debates is 1he wrong way to judge who i number of reasons ELECTION '96 this election year. lhe ~tlcr candida~ • why they should cast According to an Oct. 5 article in the The St. Louis Post Like the Oct. S St. Louis Ppsr Dispa}cli';§!iia, ''Ps>ts i their votes for the Dispa1ch giving voters lips on how to Judge the debates, really matter 1f Bob Dole sweats more lhan U.S. presidential elec­ * .-/;~ 'Think of I.he debates as job interview:.. with the presiden­ tf Clinton's eyes shift more than Dole's?"' tion. ... ' 9ft; ' "'" tial candidates trying to convince voters to give them the It really doesn't, or at least it shouldn't. \_.~. ' J///j- '. ~ job, and you see IJ1e weight they can carry." We need to remember to focus on what is discusse Political-party affil- *-""' llNn\AI TJ.tJ: ISSUES This is exaclly what the debates are for. They are che rather than the candidate's mannerisms and speaking tech iation, religion, age ...... most comprehensive job interviews in the United States. niques. This should be what we remember when we go t and home town regions are a few deciding factors in In the past, lhe media has masked the importance of tJ1e vote, not other small. unimportant details that have no bear how Americans vote. issues that are discussed during lhc debates by focusing on ing on how well each candidate could do as president. But voters need to look past these distinctions and arbitrary details i.uch as who swcalS more or who has better -Reagan Bru11/wm is news editor and a regular columni~ dive into the issues that will affect them in the eye contact. future. We, as voters. need to be ready for the upcoming Nov. 5 election. Knowing that young •t • l Americans are more con- Ed1 or1a cemed with issues rather ==-==-- than age or political affilia­ tion, The Daily Eastern News will prepare its read­ ers for the presidential election by providing them with infonnation on various issues. Student<; deserve to know how presidential candi­ dates Bob Dole. Ross Perot and President Clinton stand on each issue. In the next lhn.i.e weeks. we will report on a vari­ ety of issues mdmling the environment, student aid, abortion, cri me, social security, family values, immigration. affinnat1ve action. welfare. legaliai­ tion of drugs, tobacco and character. Students should read the. e stories and consider ~ impacL, that each politician will have on the var­ '-raus issues before deciding candidate to vote for. Ir\ vital that we are educated and ready m voice our opinion abou1 the issues. Therese Heltczer. co-chair of Youth Vote '96. a Washington-ba.-.ed coalnion that encourages young voter panicipation. said future political leaders \\ill never listen to the concern~ of young Amencans if we don't get involved with politics. Student appreciates lion. rm sick of hearing static at t "Until 18- to 24-year-olds vote and become polit- your turn frequency of 88.9 FM. .. ia~IJy acuvc, P.Qliticians will never listen to them:· WEIU-FM for creativity, she said. "We'll never be a target audience to politi­ Lena Arth uniqueness in music many of the bands from the hereto­ cians if we don't prove to them we are educated and fore mentioned .. artiste;'· compressed junior environmental biolo have a voice." Dear editor their styles maj It's time to get involved. The isS'lles debated WEIU-PM didn't play . I was offered rclaxauon. amuse­ Marshmallow incide among the candidates wiIJ affect us some time in It didn't piny the Blue Meanie~. h ment, entenainmcnt and knowledge didn't play Hall & Oates. Arny Grant our lives - whether now, when we're 35 or when we as the broad spectrum of expression receives too muc and definite!)' not George Strait ln through music was played week after get ready to rcure. fact. the band' tt did play. you (the week. I can't go anywhere within 40 coverage in The New We need to be educated when casting our vote in average reader) probably have nc\.er miles of this town and purchase even less than a month because the results will affect us heard of. a fraction of what was provided for Dear editor. Can we stop with che "Gre for the rest of our ltves. If it did give time to those bands. me. free of charge every day and all those easily accessible. stagnant. night until midnight. Marshmallow Debate?" Tire Dail ovcr-con,umcd bands. l \\!Ouldn't This letter is not for tho'e of you &wem News coverage of this "i"ue feel such a great ... cn'e of 10 ... s. I that had no idea that Eastern even has gone from silly to nau.seating. ~ disrespect intended, but if l ha\~ to could run over 10 Wal-Mart or has -a radio ... ta11on. Either )OU do not ''today's quote Po,itivel) Fourth Street Record and care about lhe music you listen to. or the word ··marshmallo" ··one more pick up their agging l'>tring:-;. are content to consume what you ore while eating m~ breakfust. I'm going What is the first part of politics? Fact is. many of the band' that fed. lose ffi) Rai=-in Bran. Please. I beg) Education. The second? Education. WEIU-FM pla)ed. I ha,en't heard lt b for those that appreciated -.p;tn! me from thnt fate. of. Ever lhink of cxpo!)ure'! On a WEIU-FM for ih in\e\lig.encc. cre­ And the third? Education. dailr basis, I was introduced to new ativity and expansiveness that cannot -Jules Michelet bands. from classical to jan, rock be experienced on any other wave­ (real rock pnd rode). hip hop and length. What a 'crvice. What a ~ta- ..< t I I , . The Dally Eastern News Monday, October 7, 199~ 5 Faculty Senate set to discuss taskforce By CHUCK BURKE • The academic quahfications of Staff wricer Counseling Center ~taffers has been the outstanding concern The Faculty Senate Tuesday The University College became will hear an update from llS an issue last semester amid a Counseling Center task force state of multiple personnel regarding the University changes within the Counseling College's impact on the center. Center, creating an uncertainty of The senace will meet at 2 p.m. what the plan would do to the Tuesday in the former BOG center. Room of Booth Library. • Two counselors with doctor­ Once the taskforce gathers ates Jeft the center after last more information on the semester, and two temporaries Counseling Center's reorganiza­ with master's degrees replaced tion under the proposed them. The taskforce wants to be University College. the senate assured that the positions will be will be able to bener address its filled in the spring with doctor­ stand on the issue, said Gail ate-level personnel. Richard, senate chair. Also adding to the confusion ..1 think the Counseling Center were the retirements last NAOKO KOJIMA/Staff photographer plan is separate," Richard said. "T semester of both Bud Sanders, don 't know how much the former director of the Counseling Clear picture Counseling Center will impact Center, and SbirJey Moore, for­ Holly Bush, junior ele1'}entary education major. draws pictures Saturday afternoon during an eve111, the University College. I guess mer dean of academic develop­ "Window Painting," as a part of Homecoming at the walkway of the Martin Luther King Jr. lhat remains to be seen with ttie ment University Union. task.force report." • '!he tllsldorce also wants to

w S-enate mein~rs Bil1 Kirk and hear the positions of the universi­ French Fraker last week founded ry's deans and department chairs Poshard and Winters to debate the taskforce as a fact finding regarding the Counseling Center mission to clear up the Univer­ under the plan. sity College's hazy approach Members from neither group 'Traditional conservative values' on agenda toward the Counseling Center. are available to attend Tuesday's By KERRIE BERGAN Peterson Park in Mattoon. gressman Posbard, said Poshard The taskforce was set up to senate meeting but will come Staff writer lo a rematch of the 1994 cam­ has no expectations of whal will examine several issues: later this month, Richard said. paign, Poshard and Winters are be discussed. Congressman Glenn Poshard, competing for the 19th Con­ "I would guess chat he will dis­ D-Marion, and Republican chal­ gressional District seat that cuss whatever is on the minds of lenger Brent Winters of Martins­ Poshard currently holds. the retired teachers," Black said. ville will face the voters in person The candidates will each be Winters' campaign office said Tuesday at a candidate·~ forum. allotted time for a speech and Winters will focus on "traditional The forum, sponsored by the then an opportunity for rebuttal. conservative values" such 3'> Coles County Retired Teachers After U1at. they wiU field ques­ .. budget issues, truces, the righc lo Association. will be at I :30 p.m. tions from the audience. life and common sense gun con­ in the DeMars Center near Paul Black. an aide t~ . C.On~ tro\... Voter reQlstration ends 'tomorrow Tuesday is the last day to register to vote for St. and the drivers license facility. the Nov. 5 generaJ election. • In M auoon: City Clerk's Office, 208 N. l 9th Students "'ho slilJ have not registered can do St.. Mattoon Public Library, 1600 Charleston so on campus by contacting Brian Anderson. the Ave. and Manoon drivers license facility. student vice president for financial affairs, at Many area banks are aJso registering voters. either the Student Government office at 5522 or Anyone unable to get to a place of registration by contacting Anderson at Stevenson RaJI. can call the Counry Clerlc.'s office at 348-0501 or Students who wish to register off campus can 258-050 I to make arrangements. do so at the following locations: Students need to bring a picture I.D. when reg­ • In Charleston: County Clerk's Office in the istering. courthouse. Charleston public library. 7 J2 Sixth Pianist to perform with faculty members By THERESA GAVLIN who will be playing piano. will be performing clarinet. Activities editor Tudorica, a Poland native, A total of sh pieces will be came to the United States as a performed, including a piece for Eastern faculty members wiJl Fulbright scholar and currently flute aJone, several contempo­ be performing a music recital lives in Terre Haute, Ind., Boyd rary pieces. a baroque piece and tonight with a pianist from said. a classical piece, Boyd said. Indiana. Boyd will also be performing Boyd said she has been The performance wiJJ take a chamber piece for flute. clar­ rehearsing for about five weeks place at 7:30 p.m. at the Dvorak inet and bassoon. with Tudorica for this perfor­ Concert Hall in the Fine Ans She will be playing with mance. Bloom county? Building. Bernard Borah, an assistant pro­ Some of their pieces will be Graduate students of historical administration, Jean11ine Pedersen Diane Boyd, an associate fessor in the music department, performed together and some (left), and Casey Connell (right), make bloom as a part of a class pro­ professor of music, will be per­ who will be perfonning bassoon separately, Boyd said. gram Sunday afternoon at Lincoln Log Cabin Stare Hisroric Site dur­ forming flute and piccolo in and Richard Barta, a professor "I'm looking forward to the ing 1996 Harv.est Frolic and Trades Fair. pieces with Larysa Tudorica, in the music department, who performance," Boyd said.

NEED AN HIV TEST? Monday Night Football!! Free, Anonyt1lous Testing and Counseling Is available at the Coles County Health Department 825 I 8th Street in Charlest0n c/\iarty's Testing also provided at &stem's Health Service after hours on Thursdays 49 Call the Health Department to make an ~edChickenw/Fries $3 appointment for either testing site 50 348-0530 I 258-0530 *" $j PITCHERS £cehouse and Lice /" 16oz Bun LIGHT WIDE MOUI'H BoTILES On Ice $ j Bratwurst during the game Pittsburgh v.s. Kansas City _._.. 1111111 6 Monday, 0 ctober 7, 1996 The Dally Eastern News Pros and cons of intercultural •Rj. relationships to be discussed -=-·Better Ingredients. By THERESA GAVLIN "The main purpose of this Seven people will aid Gomes Better Pizza. Activities editor seminar is to bring around issues m the discussion. she said. These of interculmral relationships. to people have had or currently are Lucy Gomes, an adviser for bring around things that work in an imercultural relationship. 348-8282 minority students at Eastem, will and things that do not work, and Gomes said the discui.sion is Serving Chc11/eston 8. Easter ll/lnois Unlve/"3/ty talk to the Eastern community how to respect each other's cul­ open to anyone wishing to attend about the pros and cons of dating ture." Gomes said. and anyone wishing to share their ,------people from different back­ The 1nformaiion about these experiences "'ith intercullural • SUPER COUPON ~I: grounds. relattonships and current imercul rclauonshtps. e ~ The Life Ski I Is Seminar, LUral issues will also be dis­ .. 1 encourage people to come : Monday Nite Foot ball Special ~ I "lntercultural Relationships," cussed, Gomes said. and share (about their inlcrcultur­ 1 One Large One Topping Pizza : will held be at noon today in the "A lot of people wam to knov. aJ relationship!.)." Gomes said. Kansas Room of the Manin what lhe consequences will be of The workshop is sponsored by : s599 : Luther King Jr. University 1mercuhural relauonships," Eastem's Counseling Cenrer and I +t.ui I Union. Gomes said. there is oo charge to auend. 9/19196 :I 1 E.qilr~ --"'""""'--- ~~~ "4UmNllDA>"1S>~- v :I AIDS walk held in remembrance L-- ~ ------~ and fight against the disease . WASHINGTON (AP) - fnfants in strollers, cou- "The fight is not over until all our loved ones are pies hand-in-hand, dogs wearing red ribbons made safe," she said. their way around the streets of the nation's capital 'Those who craveled the walking tour's full 6.2 Sunday in an annual trek to raise money for the care miles raised more than $2 million for AIDS pro­ of AIDS padents. grams at the Whitman-Walker Clinic, which pro- O rganizers estimated that more than 15,000 peo- vides housing. medical and other forms of care for pie panicipa1ed io the l 0th annual AJ OS Walk Washington-area AIDS patients. Washington. which began and ended at the Ellipse Reports just out show the District of Columbia between the White House and the Washington area, where AIDS is the third highest cause of Monument. death, is number one in the nation in !:be incidence The walk is the largest fundraising event in the of new AIDS infections. District of Columbia. but similar events are held in Tourist Annie Davis, of Melbourne, Australia. major cities across the country. who said she has several friends living with HIV F~SI" Tipper Gore, the vice president's wife and the and ArDS. walked in the mar{:h. "I think Lhis is walk's honorary chairwoman. sent Lhe walkers on great·· she said. ''You get people acknowledging their way with an appeal to keep up the search for a AIDS. and that's what you want." Many panici­ YOU LL cure to the dfacase :that has ki lled 300,000 people in pants wore T-shirts and held banners in • emem- che United States. bra.nee of loved ones lost to AIDS. FI~F~AI<® Reporter.buried after body found in river IAAAAX CHICAGO (AP) - A 6 1-year­ Brown died o f drowning, but They say Brown's crusade old court reporter who used 10 friends and family say they can­ against liquor and tobacco bill­ don a disguise on raids 10 obliter­ not accept lhe official version that boards in the black neighbor­ JOHN'S® ate tobacco and liq uor billboards he accidentally fell or jumped in hoods of Chicago's South Side is proving as puzzling in death as the river to commit suicide. created enemies. he was in life. B rown , they say, had a morbid They noted Lbat his car had CHARLESTON Henry M. Brown J r.. alias fear or the water. twice been vandalized in recent "Mandrake," was buried last More than 400 friends and sup­ weeks while it was parked near week after his fully-clothed body porters of Br own's campaign his downtown office. was found floating in the Chicago signed a pet ition asking the "He fought Lhe tobacco and River. Chicago Police Departmem to dig alcohol industry, and they did not 345-1075 The Cook Cou nty Medical deeper into !:be circumstances sur­ like him," said Brown's fiancee, "WE'LL BRING 'EM TO YA." Examiner's office r uled that rounding his death. Regina Wooley. CCOPYRJGHT 1993 JIMMY JOHN'S JNC.

r------000»1 DAYSA WBFJC

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• Monday, October 7, 1996 ·~::::.::::-..:-:_::..::c:=:::':::'.::.=::=::_::::=:=====-===--===::;:=-c=====-:=-=~ -~~~ 7 eace renegotiations turn bloody Christopher says peace or Israelis -and Palestinians talks may face destruct·on EREZ. Gaza (AP) - Hour' EREZ CHECKPOINT. Gaza meeting was intended 10 "renew before Lhe start of crucial lsraeh­ trip (AP) - At a dusty border the -.ystem of ll1J'>t thai is a condi­ Palestinian negotiations Sunday. ' ' It is a very danger- eckpoint c;urrounded lly fences tion for progress:· The talks took Secretar) of Slate Warren ous situation ... no nd watchtowers. Israelis and place a1 the drab. military-style_ Christopher told leaders from both ale~tinians tned Sunday to rcs­ compound at Erez that embodies <>ide:,, lhat lhe peace process started one should underestimate uc a peace effort bloodied by Lhe unequul. frustrating relation­ five years ago faces possible the potential for violence in un baltles ship belween lsraeli~ and de.c;trucl1on wilhoul quick progre!>!> But they broke for the night Palestinians in lhe talks. this region." ·ithout coming to an agreement Here, tens ol thousands of He conveyed lhat message 10 a n their mam obl>tacle: whether ro But the session ended after Pafo.. uman laborcl'l\ U\Cd ro cru~s mid-afternoon mee110g in ... Warren Christopher 'adjul>l" the agr~ements signed by only three hours. with both sides daily into Israel looking for work. Jerusalem with Israeli Prime he two sides in 1993. as Israel saying onl} that they were com Israeli re~tncuons 11nposed after Minister Benjamin Ne1.anyahu and Secretary of State an1s. The Palestinians have mitted to chc lsrael-PLO peace terrorist bombing:> began in 1995 later was driven to 1h1s dusty fu~ed to renegotiate the agree­ accordc; The talks were expected have meant that only a fraction of Isracli-Ga7a border crossing to shortJy after Christopher left o ent. to continue Monday. the work lorce can enter C\ en deliver the i.ame admon1uon 10 1he 75-minute drive back l Plenty of food had been taken "We are detc~incd to preserve when the gates are open Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. Jerusalem. 10 the meeting site in case the lhe peace process and give it Concrete cubes the size of After conferring with both. The parties will get m substan al ks between Dan Shomron, every chance. We will be able to refrigerators are posilioned on the Christopher suggested that hi:,, live issues later in the week. wit. ~rael's former military c hief. and put the peace process on track road to guard against potential car effon.c; had not been wasted. With Ross doing his best to ensure that alestinian negotiator Saeb when we start 1mpJemenung the bombers coming out the crowded, Arafol standing at his side just misunder~tandings be1ween ther ·at - with U.S. envoy Dennis agreements," Erakat said. "We are Palestinian-ruled Ga.ta Strip. a~er nightfall, Christopher said he don't get out of hand. U.S. offi­ oss sitting in - lasted deep into also determined co end all force of where Palestinian leader Yasser had received a clarification from cials will maintain a continuou' c night. viole nce." S ho m ron said the Arafat has his headquaners. both sides 1hat they intend to presence at the uilks. negotiate "within the four comers" One of the most troublesome of agreemencs previously negotiat­ issues is the status of the We.... ed. Bank city of Hcbrp11, where a fe\l lfttle Pope to get appendix removed He acknowledged, however. hundred Israelis live in uneasy that some •·adjustments" may be intimacy with nearly I 00,000 VATICAN CITY (AP) - Patients in casts and lation that he suffers from a more serious illness. needed co take into account chang­ Palestinians. bandages crowded i nto windows and balconies The Vatican bas denied every ropon about a chronic ing circumstances. Christopher said the Netanyahu­ Sunday to greet Pope John Paul 11 as he entered a condition. Offici als said that failure by Arafat summit meeting last week Rome hospital for an operation lo remove an Leaving the hospital, the Vatican's secretary of either side to accept the validity of in Washington "broke the cycle of inflamed appendix.. state, Cardinal Angelo Sodano. said anyone making existing agreements could have violence" tha1 had produced 76 The 76-year-old pontiff. wearing a white cassock, g uesses abou1 lhe pope's health is "practicing put the process back 10 square one Palestinian and Israeli deaths the walked s lowly from his car into the Gemelli witchcrnft medicine." and played into the hands of previous week a nd great!) Polyclinic HospjtaJ. It wilJ be tl1e pope's sixth operation at the hospital extremists on both sides. enhanced mutual mistrusL 1be operation will be Tuesday morning, said hos- since surgery in 1981. when he was wounded in an "11 is a very dangerous situa­ Later a senior official, who pital spokesman Giuseppe Pallanch. attempted assassination in St. Peter's Square. tion," Christopher told CNN briefed reporters on condition he Patients flocked to windows and balconies. Some His last operation wai; a hip replacement in April before the meeting with not be identified by name. said the wore casts or bandages and some used wheelchairs. 1994. Ne1.anyahu. ··No one should under­ Palestinians and {St"adi leadership "Good luck. Good luck.'' yelled some of the near- The pontiff is staying in a private I 0th-floor suite estimate the potentJal for violence seem chastened hy 1h~ prospect Jy 300 people al the hospital enuance. The pope chat includes a tiny chapel dedicaced Lo the Black in this region." To Christopher. the lhat the peace proce-;~ might col­ waved to the crowd. Madonna of Czestochowa, the Virgm Mary icon parties cannot afford a breakdown lapse. f~presidlRt, OSC#Luigi ScnJfaro, greeted the. dear to Roman Calholics in P.oland. John Pa.ul is in th~ talks- "The partie!> t\eeO t'b­ - "'"fhey'l&kett t my~._. ~*I pOpelnside. Polish. use this momeoL," he said at one stepped back from tL 1he officia, 'Tm very woaied for him," said a nun. Sister Jn his last Vatican appearance before entering the point, said. After the Washington sum­ Valentina. who had waited for the pope for hours. hospiral, John Paul brought 16 people a step closer Wnh U.S. Ambassador Dennis mit. the hraelis moved quickly lO The pope's recurring boucs of fevers and the loss to sainthood and asked the faithful to for him. pray Ross al hand. the Palestinian and improve the climate, easing certain of his once-boundless vigor have led to open specu- The 2 112 hour ceremony put his stamina to the tesL lsraeli negotiators began their dis­ restrictions on Palestinia ns that cussions on procedural issues here had been in effect for month~ .

FRIDAY "Au-You-CAN-EAT" EIU vs. WIU FAMil. Y WEEKEND SPAGHETII DINNER FOOTBALL GAME BRUNCH 4:00 - 8:00PM KlCKOPF 1: 30PM 8:00 AM - 12:00 NOON RATIISKELLER, UNI\ . UNION O'BRIEI\ STADlUM UNIV. UNION B ALLROOMS FAMILY NIGHT BUFFET B-1-N-G-O . ~ i..uther King, Jr. University lllli 7:00 - 11:00PM 4:30 -7:00PM ~ . ~o nnnoncnGaoG ~ i;;;t UNIV. UNION B ALLROOM UNN. UNION BALLROOMS ~ Euiern m-i. Um~ THE DOOBIE BROTIIERS IN CONCERT 6:00PM & 9:00PM LANTZ GYMNASJUM Monday, October 7, 1996 8 cl ass i fi ec advertis ing~==-Th-e Dal-ly East- em-===-News ---Help-- Wanted For Rent Announcements r:.~ '2-\!. .Qi ps LOVE LAUGHTER AND MUSIC WANTED UPPER-CLASSMAN NO TIME FOR LAUNDRY? CALL NAIT meeting tonight at 5 p.m. in Kiehm Hall Room 219. Everyone FALL FAM HELP NEEDED. describe our old Victorian home OR GRADUATE, female non­ DONNAll 345-3454 GET OUR 15 Experience Preferable. 346-2994 and town. Couple, married 9 smoker to share a 2 bedroom fur­ POUND BAG SPECIAL. interested is welcome ______10111 years wishes for baby. Full-time nished apartment. McAr1hur ______10/ 11 EPSILON SIGMA ALPHA volleyball tonight 9:15 p.m. Lantz. If you can NEED CASH? WE BUY cd's , mom. Expenses Paid. Call Mary Manor 345-2231 . INTERESTED IN LAW not make it you MUST Call Suzanne. ______1V9 ALPHA PSI O M EGA meeting 5 p .m tonight Paris Room. tapes, video games. Music & Roger 1 ·800-484-9445 ext. SCHOOL? If so, there will be law Exchange.234·3668 9197 QUIET 2 BEDROOM FUR­ school representatives in the Homecoming update and don't forget your dues must be turned in by ______1~9 ______10/11 NISHED APARTMENT. McArthur Martlnsvllle Room of the Union on the end up this meeting. DON'T BE LATE. NATIONAL PARKS HIRING­ Manor. 345-2231 October 8th from 1-3 p.m.I OMEGA PSI PHI Informational on Wed. Oct 9, 7•9 p.m. Afro Culiural Center. Posi1ions are now available at WE ARE A YOUNG, PROFES­ Everyone is welcome National Parks. Forests & Wildlife SIONAL couple desperately ______10/8 BETA PHI Pl Beta Week Oct. 7-11, 1996 Preserves. Excellent benefits + seeking the opportunity to love, MALE SENIOR ART MAJOR BETA PHI Pl Sorority Appreciation Day for ladles of Zeta Phi Beta Is bonuses! Call 1-206-971-3620 adore and nuture your chlld. We needing couch to sleep on until today, Oct. 7, 1996 Lost and Found BLACI( GREEK COUNCIL committee meeting tonight 7 p.m. Student ext. N56387. can offer your child a wami and semesters end. Will help with ______10/11 loving immediate and extended LOST TENNIS BRACELET. rent/expenses. Please call 348- Life Office. All committee heads need to be present CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING­ family. Please help make our REWARD. SENTIMENTAL 5292 BLACK GREEK COUNCIL meeting 7 p.m. Martinsville Room Eam up ot $2,000+/month work­ VALUE. 345-6944 .,.....______10/7 MATH ENERGY general meeting tonight 6:30 p.m. Grand Ballroom. dreams come true and call ______10/9 ing on Cruise Ships or Land-Tour Michael and Julie at f-800-644· SARAH ZlZAK of Tri Sigma. Your PHI GAMMA NU executive board meeting 5:30 p.m. in Lumpkin Hall companies. World travel. 1701 access #96 doing a great Job! Your big sis is Conference Room on 3rd floor Seasonal & rull·time employment proudI UNIVERSITY DEMOCRATS meeting tonight 9:30 p.m. Coleman Hall avanable. No experience neces­ 121. Important upcoming events will be discussed. Everyone welcomel Announcements ,_..-...,..-,------1on HOMECOMING ELECTIONS meeting tonight at 9 p.m. in the sary. For more information call 1- HEY ROBIN We love you-time to ue 206-971-3550 ext. C57387. Sublessors BOB YOUNG Hey, why you gotta pany. Ike's Ike's Ike's! Love Liz Arcola/Tuscola Room. All candidates are expected to atten~ . 10/11 be like 1hat on your 22nd and Kelly UB HOMECOMING SPIRIT meeting tonight at 9 p.m. in the Sullivan PAINTERS WANTED Experie~ 1·2 FEMALES TO SHARE one Birthday? It's all kool·n-lhe gang. 10/7 Room. All ASO reps to attend necessary. Great pay. Full or Part room. Spacious apartment, We got nuttln' but love for yal ,....H..... EY_R_O_ Bl_N_H_l_CK_M_A_N_O_F ASA UB HOMECOMING ACTIVITIES meeting tonight at 9 p.m. In the Orchard Par\<. 345-5322 Shelbyville Room. All ASO reps are to attend too time. Call ACP Now! 1(800) 626- Lov______e, the girls of 1206 1on You are doing an awesome job 6267 10/8 and all of us pearls love you l INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FEllOWSHIP chapter prayer tonight al ______10112 s""'"'u-=-B,...LE=-s""'s""'o'""R,,_.,.N'""E'""E""'D'"""E ..... D-x L 2 TRl·SIGMA: Thank you for all You're the best! Alpha Love, Liz 9 p.m. in the Kansas Room, 3rd floor Union CHRISTMAS IS COMllNG AVON bedroom apartment with pool your help with sigma slam'n' Jami ______1017 DELTA SIGMA Pl meeting tonight at 6 p.m. in Lumpkin Room 17. HAS LOTS OF GIFTABLES. Earn table! Water and trash included. Sigma Love, Jam and Jani<:e Please remember wear professional attire all dayl extra money now. 345-4197. 345-5197 ______10/7 DELTA SIGMA THETA "Movie Night" tonight from 7·9 p.m. at the ______10131 ______1~4 THE LADIES O F PHI SIGMA house. Join us for the "Kiel< Off' of Alcohol Awareness Week FEMALE SUBLESSOR NEEDED SIGMA would like to wish every­ DELTA SIGMA THETA "Red Ribbon Handout" today and tommorrow Wanted for the Spring Semester 97 one Good luck In the 1st Anual In the Union from 9-3:30 p.m. Come and pick up your ribbons to show $200/rnonth. Call Michelle at Paintball Tournament your support 345-1603. BLACK STUDENT UNION BSU at its best Plzzafest meeting. Oct. 8 al ______1 0/11 --,------1on 6 p.m. in Thomas Hall Lob_b~. Gome~ mit . iofo.wi~ gel.Ji snack. SPRING BREAK '97 EARN WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, anq Everyone Is invlfed. · ' • C ASHI HIGHEST COMMIS­ FEMALE SUBLESSOR NEEDED Roosevelt University, and POWER meeting at 6 p.m. tonglght in the Mezzanine. Info call St/81@ SIONS. TRAVEL FREE for Spring Semester 97. Close to Hamline Representatives of each 348-5021 ON •..•.•O N LY 13 SALESlll campus. $145/mo. own room. Law school will be on campus CARMAN HALL COUNCIL tonight at 8 p.m. in the lobby. Elections for JAMAICA, CANCUN, BAHAMAS, Call 346-0725 Tuesday, October 8 In the Kansas FLORIDA, PADRE FREE INFO .~-=----,.,,,...-,---..,,---...,.,.-W11 room of the Union from 1 :00 pm AHA representative will also be held PHI ALPHA ETA meeting tonight 8 p.m. In Coleman Hall Room 219. PACKET! CALL SUNSPLASH 1• NICE 1 BDRM. APARTMENT. for until? at 1~8 We're having a nutrition speaker. Bring dues and banquet RSVP. Call 800-426-7710 WWW.SUN· 1 person or couple. $325 spring, ______SPLASHTOURS.COM summer negotiable. 348-8504. JAMIE BECKER happy Birthday! Peggy at 581·5489 if you cannot make lt or have questions. ______10/9 10/11 Get ready to go ou1 and get crazy KAPPA DELTA Pl new candidate selection today at 4:30 p.m. at IHOP. FEM=~AL..,..,,E,.,S,,.u=B-,--L=Es,,--s,_.,o,_,R,...W-ANTED Exec. board officers to select new candidates and prepare envelopes. SPRING BREAK '97. LOWEST this weekl Sara PRICES TO FLORIDA, for Spring Semester. $190/mo. ______ion Your help Is neededl STUDENT VOLUNTEER CENTER board meeting tonight at 7 p.m. In JAMAICA. CANCUN, BAHAMAS, Call 348-0071 ATTENrlON ALL STUDENTSll! & CARNIVAL CRUISES. HIRING =,..,-.,---,--,-..,,.,-~--10(7 GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS te Oakland Room CAMPUS REPS. ENDLESS FEMALE SUBLESSOR needed AVAILABLE FROM SPON· HABITAT FOR HUMANITY meeting tonight at 7 p.m. in the Paris SUMMER TOURS. 1·800-234· for Spring Semester. Large house SERSll! NO REPAYMENTS, Room near the square. $165/mo. Call INTRAMURALS Pici

The Daily Eastern News ACROSS a Opposer 67 Fixed fee Classified Ad Form 1 Shut noisily 17 Trounce • Church song s Trouser p arts nEd itlon a I came: Lat. .oW.W.llgon TO Soup pods • Iridium, e.g. Downy duck 71 Parenthetical Name: ______H Soundof •t remark contentment a It grows fro m Address: ______the neck power ta Cleveland's nA.C./D.C. 44 Bedevil lake n ctassmate .. N eighbor o f 16 Playing marble Phone: ______Stu dent 0 Yes O No B elg. t7 Sale stipulation 47 Lab cultu re DOWN Dates to run ------­ ta Bum bling Carol .. National Guard Burnett ro te 1 Q uarrel building 2 Verdant Ad to read: 20 Prefix with IO Three Rivers meter a lndySOO's Stadium team Luyendyk 22 Cumberland A. S2Lack locale • Simon& 54 1169 erupter Garfunk el hit 13 Real estate unit ss Clean air grp . UnderClasslflcatlon of:------uStysound • Picnic quaff sa Stallio n's mate •Bungle Expiration code (office use only) ______•Pharmacist 's •Fishhawk 7 Essence weight M Greer Pat800 accepting ad.______Com posltor____ _ Garson • Made clothes a Nitwit Oscar-winning •19550scar no. word8/days Amount due:$ _____ nSlgnup rote actress Payment: Cl Cash Cl Check Cl Credit ------10Kindofu Head'• salad Check number ______opposite ta--time (never) ,_"'°""'°"'I. .... ti "--we forget• •1 Matisse NMadame •1 Autumn tool ti Regarding subjects Bovaty It French 101 Z1 Ruaaian space a.Lake of the N Partner of cons verb station Ozarks' river a? Italian wine ea Vintage •Popular M Kind of eclipse center •Club- Japanese beer •Lechers' looks •Daredevil • Okla.-t

It Pays to Advertise in the Daily Eastern... lW e ws • I '~!.;. •, . • • The Dally Eastern News October 7, 1996 9 Challenging each other all the way, Debate coaches Clinton and Dole clash in debate see Clinton as HARTFORD. Conn. (AP) - President promise to cut taxes by 15 percent and the Clinton and Bob Dole clashed vigorous}y I.heme that Clinton is a wanned over liber­ the winner over the role of the federal government. al. tax cuts, Medicare and the strength of the Clinton held fast to his assertion that the WASIBNGTON (AP) - President Clinton economy Sunday night in a prime-lime "Dole-Gingrich" 1995 Republican budgel won Sunday night's debate against Bob ~~ Dole in Lhe vic:w of six of seven college and debate crilical to the Republican chal­ would have devastated Medicare. Dole lenger's comeback hopes. retorted: "Stop scaring the seniors, Mr. high school debate coaches. Standing just a few feet apart on a red­ Presidenl." He said the GOP budget They faulted Dole for failing to rebut carpeled stage, Clinton and Dole chal­ increased spending on Medicare, just not Clinton's charge that his tax plan would lenged each other agaio and again during "We are better off than we were four as much as Democrats wanted. cause painful cuts in Medicare spending - a 90-minute showdown that ushered in the years ago_ let's keep it going," Clinton Dole vigorously promoted his $548 bil­ but praised him for making effective use of fmal month of the White House campaign, said in taking credit for 10 million new lion taX. cut plan, saying it was time to put humor. Their fast-paced exchanges were often jobs and making his case for a second more money in the pockets of everyday The seventh member of The Associa!e,d pointed and ranged from lbe causes of ris- term. Dole, clearly nervous in the debate's working Americans. '1 want che govern­ Press' debate panel. Dallas Perkins, director fog teen drug use to the role of the opening minutes, disagreed. Under ment to pinch pennies for a change instead of forensics at Harvard University, called it American military at the dawn of the 21st Clinton. he said, "Americans are working of the American families," Dole said. a tie. century. harder and paying higher taxes." Clinton called it a "$550 billion tax He said Dole "managed to demonstrate an ''I trust the people, the president austs Dole recalled Clinron's own admission scheme" that would either make the empathy which a lot of people didn't chink the government," Dole said in trying to that in 1993 he "had raised taxes too deficit explode or require unacceptable he had. Thal was thought to be Clinton's cast the Democratic incumbent as a liberal much." A bit later, Clinton recalled a cuts in Medicare and education. strength." hiding behind conservative election-year decade-old quote from Dole's running There was an early light moment on Assigning the candidates from one to five rhetoric. Dole pointedly recalJed the presi- mate. Jack Kemp. who said Dole "never this subject as Dole told moderuor Jim pomts on five criteria - reasoning, evidence. dent's 1994 health-care initiative .. hq- I rn~t.a lal{ ~e didn't hi ke." Lehrer he would get the tax cut, and "so organiz.ation, refutauon, cross-examination wanted to imf>Os~ ~n thevAmerican poo- The rBu shn~ Theater in downtown will the former president:' Clinton and presentati,on - the judges awarded pl~" ~ Hartf6rd was the site for the first of two laughed and said. "l need it" Clinton a total of 175 points to I 60 lot 15¢1e. Clinton ignored the criticism of that 90-minute October debates between Dole also took aim at Clinton's foreign A perfect score would have been 210. failed proposal but offered a vigorous Clinton and Dole, both one-on-one policy. "Saddam Hussein is better off than "Clinlon repeatedly said the vast majority defense of his record - and of what be encounters because of a controversial he was four years ago," Dole said of the of experts said it couldn't be done without said was carefully targeted government decision to exclude Ross PeroL Iraqi dictator. cutting Medicare. and that was never denied activism. As examples, he cited banning Trailing by significant margins in most Further, Dole said, Clinton had been (by Dole)," said William Southworth. debate certain assault weapons and making it national and key state polls. Dole was run­ too soft on Communist regimes in Cuba coach at the U niversity of Redlands in harder for cigareue companies to target ning short of lime to build support for a and North Korea. Clinton countered that Redlands, Calif. children. Republican campaign anchored on a the criticisms were off base. Perot says debates 'interesting' but does not tal~ about problems WASHINGTON (AP) - Ross that we cannot let the counoy fall off and lhat will be a Lough game," Perot also insisted that he "'ill stay 1992, when he appeared in the Perot said Sunday the presidential of." Perot said. Perot said on CBS' "Face the in I.he race, regardless of hie; exclu­ debates with Clinton and Presidcnl deba1e that he was excluded from Perot appeared on lhe show short­ Nation." sion from lhe debates and his diffi­ Bush. But the debate commL'ision was ·•interesting to listen to.'' but ly after tht: presadenual debates Perot, who I05l a court battle to culne.' m buying television air time. ruled that he ..Jlould not be allowed neither President Clinton nor between Clinion and Dole 10 reverse the decision b;,. the ''We will be in thi" race to the end to p-.tnic1pa1.e llus year because his Republican rival Bob Dole talked Hartford, Conn. It is a favorilc Perot Commission on Presidential because J want lhe American people national poll suppon b running in about the real problems I.he counll)' forum. who declared his candidacy Debates that shut him out of the to vote their conscience." he said. single wgit..'> and he doesn't have a face.s. on King's show in 1992 and debated face-offs. took his case to the nation The Texas billionaire appeared on chance co win. "TL was interesting to listen to," Vice President Gore on lhe NAFfA Sunday. He appeared on CBS and a a 30-minute infomerical on ABC Dole's campaign, which sees a Perot said on CNN's "Larry King agreement in 1993. 30-minute infomercial on ABC prior two hours before lhe debate began. strong Perot candidacy as more Live.'' "My concern is that they Perot had predicted earlier to the debates. and on !he King show Sitting with running mate Pat damaging to Dole than Clinton, never went Lo lhe core problems. Sunday thnl after going one-on-one afterward to tlnswer I.he same que.c;­ Choate. Perot complained about his embraced that decision. Perot pre~ The core problem is that we have with Clinton, Dole would regret that tions posed to Clinton and Dole. exclusion from I.he debates and I.he dieted in advance that Clinton and two parties that comrol our go,em­ PerOl wa-; kept from participating in ''They've done everything lhey 120 days granted to the Federal Dole would avoid discussion of the ment'' lhe presidential debates. can to freeze us OUL We'\e got them Eleclion Commi~..,ion to review that issues he sees as ke~·. including ho\\ He also said neither candidate "Senacor Dole will probably be bracketed tonight That'i; one exam­ deci,ion. to overhaul enti1lemen1 program~ really addressed I.he counoy's fanan­ missing me a lot. He would wish ple of our s1rntegy," said Perot. the "They could make a decision ~uch as Medicare and Social cial situation. that there wru. a third person there billionaire Texan running at the head quickly. but they won't." he said. Security to prevenl a financial mcll­ "We are on a financial precipice because it\ just one-on-one 1omghL of his Refonn Party. Perot won 19 pem!nl of the vote in down in lhe furure. advertising==~~

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before It should run. Monday, October 7, 1996 The O.JJy Lutem News ====~~~~~~~~~~~~ PREGNANT? HAVE KIDS? Western loses perfect record, The Coles County Health Department Offers: WIC • Family Case Management • Immunizations • School ~ ical s • Fam1~ Planning Services • comes to Eastern with 4-1 mark Free HIV Testing and Counseling Sycamo re~ recovered two fum­ By JOSH HARBECK 1996 Associate spon:. editor bles. fOOTl!ALL Calf to find out wflat we can do for you! ~~ Indiana State did gain more 348-0530 / 258-0530 • 825 18th Street, Charleston ff,,\\f Cont. O'cnill Western Illinois wi ll not • yardo; on the ground, outru<;hing office hours 8:30-4:30 Monday • Friday come to Eastern Saturday with a the Leathernecks 171-150. Murr.iy State 3.0 4-1 perfect record Westem finally did get on the Eastern Illinois 3-0 4·0 The Leathernecks dropped Eastern Kenwcky 2.0 2-3 hoard with a five-play. 43-yard their first game of the sea~on Tennessee Tech 1-1 2-2 drne capped off by a Brian Saturday, lo ~ ng 10·7 at home to Tennessee State 1-1 2·3 Knuckels 16-) ard trot to the Indiana Stak SE Missouri St. 1-2 1-3 cnd7one The touchdO\\ n came Western h.1d more first Middle Tennessee 0-2 2·3 nenrly four minutes into the ays downs, mon: passing yards. Tennessee-Martin 0-2 0-4 fourth quarter. more offen:-1\e play:. and more Austin Peay 0-2 0-5 T he drive took lesi. than a time of pos:.eo;s ion than the minute 10 complete. but ii was Sycamores But the RESULTS as c lose as Western would Lcathemed:s couldn't get on the Saturday come. dvertise board. Eastern Kenwcky '45. SE Missouri 0 For the game, Knuckles Indiana ~ ate didn't rack up Murray State 51, Austin Peay 7 rushed 30 times for 122 yards us Tenn. Tech 21. Tenn-Martin 1'4 (2 the points l tiler, but their 10- and the touchdown. He also had 01) first half po 1h were enough to six catches for 43 yards. Tennessee St. 43, Lane College 26 win the gan e Middle Tenn. 30, Jacksonville St. 23 The Leathernecks came into The Sycamores went up 7-0 the game lhe 22nd ranked team on a 17-yard touchdown run by looked like lbe bener team. in the Spomnetwork I-AA top Jason Polle! and extra point The Lealbemecks gained 332 25 poll Indiana Sale was not Little Caesars· kick by Scou Collins at the yard" to ISU's 261. ranked. 13:57 mark of the first quarcer. In passing yards, Wes tern's In week three of thii. season, Collins added an 18-yard Jeff Hccklinski was 24-of-33 for Eastern handed Indiana State a field goal I ate in the second 199 y.1rds. 35-16 defeat 345-4743 • 3 W. Lincoln quarter thnt proved to be the The turnover baule was even. Western comes to Charleston r------~-, game winner. Western picked off a pass and at I · 30 p m Saturda) for a I 1 IARGE 1 TOPPING I On the -;tat sheet, Western Family Weekend game. recovered a fumble while the : & AN ORDER OF CRAZY BREAD : I I 'Baseba{{ pfayoff rountf-up Cardinals have no fear in NLCS ! $ 22 ! I I 9{atitma{ League Ylmerican League ST LOL IS (AP) - The St. I I Lout'> Cardinal« have never lost a Divisional Series (be•t of 5) Divisional Series (best of 5) playoff series. and they don't : ~~~m~~~ : seem overly worried about facing St. Louh wins aeries 3-0 Baltimore wins series S·1 the Atlanta Braves. L------~~~!m.!~~---~ Baltimore 1o. Cleveland 4 "They're more relaxed than we Now D ELIVERING S A-r & SuN Baltimore 6, Cleveland 4 are right now. but we're going to NOON - CLOSE Cleveland 9. Baltimore 4 h:ne fun," Brian Jordan c;aid. Baltimore 4, Cleveland 3 (12) "We're on a high and we're going Atlanta wins aenes 3-0 to la) it on the line." Atfanl.d 2, L.A. 1 (10) New York wins series 3-1 After sweeping the NL West Atlanta 3. L.A. 2 Texas 6, New York 2 champion Padres, the Cardinals Atlanta 5, L.A 2 New York 5, Texas 4 (12) are 4-0 in playoff series. New York 3, Texas 2 That includes a sweep of NCLS (FOX) New York 6, Texas 4 Atlanta back in 1982. when St. Louis 0 Atlanta (Wed.) ALCS (NBC) \\.1lhe McGee was a rookie and SL LOUIS @ Atlanta (Thurs.) Ozzie Sm1th was in the first of Atlanta @ St. Louis {Sat.) Baltimore @ New York (Tues.) his 15 seasons with the Cardinals Atlanta @ St. Louis (Sun.) Baltimore @ New York (Wed.) Atlanta @ St. Louis (Mon.)' New York @ Baltimore (Fri.) The Braves, 9-4 against St. St. Louis @ Atlanta (Wed.t New York @ Baltimore (Sat.) Louis in the regular season. have St. Louis @ Atlanta (Thurs.r New York @ Baltimore (Sun.)· been 10 lhree of the last four Baltimore @ New York (Tues.)" World Series. Baltimore @ New York (Wed.)" The Cardinals are making their firs1 postseason appearance in • If necessary • if necessary nine years . Counseling Associates SPIKERS frompage/2 ---=---- oulSide bitter Lindsey Celba had digs and cwo block assiSlS. Abbott who had 16 kills and 22 Licensed psychiatrists and master's-prepared 12. The Eagles (3-2, 4-13) were digs. Harper d1o;hed out 61 assists led by ophomore outside h11ter Eastem defeated the Eagles in therapists as.5ist clients in addressing: and 10 digs Along with the 21 Lauren Mackey who had a game­ kills 70-61, in assists 63-52 and +) anxiety and depression kills, Sommer .tdded 20 digs, one h igh 22 kills and also added 23 tied lhem in digs 96-96. •> chemical dependency solo block arid live block assists. digs. Eastem continues play against Sophomore o utside hitter Another player who came conference leader Middle + eating disorders Missy Hollenkamp contributed through for the Eagles was Tennessee State Univers ity on •> family and intimate relationships six kills, two service aces. 11 senior outside hitter Mis"y Thursday night at Lantz. + other behavioral health issues

Counseling Associates is located in confiden­ EVANSVIL LErrompagel2 tial offices in the Sarah Bush Lincoln Medical every one came to piny," he said E\ eryone Adding in~ull to injur)', the Panthers will he Office Pavilion. To make an appointment or played hard." without the u'c of Henry Ospina for the next to learn more, call 258- or 348-4042. And that i'i not just coach speak. Eustcrn played game Ospina picked up his fifth yellow card, and every player thi.:) took to the gam lcClements will have to .,it out. Sarah Bush Li11co/11 Behavioral Hmltll Seroices believes Lha1 the team played beHcr 1n unday's Gerry Prather nnd Joe Sp11lina also recci.,,ed game than it did in it's game wuh Loyola­ cautions lor Ew,tcrn, Receiving cautions for thC' also offers a pnrHal lzospitalization program and Chic:igo. \\ h1ch 1hey lo~t 2-1. Aces were Delgado, Lue. and Boyer. inpatient services. Bui despite the fact that McCJernent' swept lbe The game was also the fiN in \\hich both Bnnn pines clear of ub . the Aces out

Racer kicker Rob high six sacks. sion ll Lane College in a non-conference ssociate s orts editor Han hlt five field goals Southeastern·s offense was limited to affair. (tying a school record) 132 yards. as the Indians never got further Staie quarterback Todd Valentine com­ Eight Ohio Valley Conference teams and four PATs. For the than the Eastern 36-}ard line. pleted 15 of his 28 passes for 218 yards ere in action Lhis week. six of which season. Hart is 14-of- Colonel linebacker Tony McCombs had and four touchdowns in the win. ere involved in conference games. 16 in field goals and a seven tackles. two sacks and an intercep­ He was named co-OVC newcomer of Murray State remained undefeated and perfect 20-of-20 i n tion returned 32 yards· for a touchdown. the week. l over first place in the con ference PATs. and he was named OVC defensive player TSU is 1-l in the OVC and 2-3 overall ith a 3-0 league record. The Governors' offense was held in of the week. Middle Tennessee 30, J acksonville Eustern Kentucky also remained unde­ check, gaining 143 yards on the day. Tennessee Tech 21, Tennessee-Martin State 23: eated, but Austin Peay and Tennessee­ For their efforts in the game. Cherry 14 (20 T): The Blue Raiders picked up their first anin both lost their second conference was named ave offensive player of the In a batcle berween two teams yec to road win o f the season, upping the ir ames. week, and Hart was named the OVC spe­ earn a conference win, Tennessee Tech record lo 2-3. The game was a non-con­ Murray State 51, Austin Peay 7: cial teams player of the week. was the team to post the vicrory - after ference contest, so their OVC record of 1- The Racers' offense gained 519 total Eastern Kentucky 45, Southeast two overtimes. 1 remained the same. ards, and quarterback Mike Cherry com­ Missouri 0: OVC co-newcomer of the week, Brant J unior q uarterback Jonathan Quinn leted 20 of his 32 passes for 263 yards Eas te rn Ke ntucky ke pt its record Billen, rushed for 112 yards for Tech; his made bis first start since opening day, and four touchdowns in Murray's domina­ against Southeast perfect, winning for the 32-yard touchdown run tied the game at hit 16-of-26 passes for 2 16 yards and two tion of the Gov-emors. seventh time in the seven games between 14. touchdowns. Austin Peay was down 6-0 through lhe rwo teams. Tennessee-Martin fell to 0-2 in confer­ The Bl ue Raiders ended their stretch of most of the second quarter, but Murray The Colonels have now won 22 straight ence and 0-4 overall. four road games out of five to begin the scored 18 points in the last seven minutes ave home games. Tennessee State 43, Lane College 26: season, and begin a two-game homestand f the half to open their lead. Eastern's d efense also had a season TSU racked up 459 yards against divi- against Austin Peay Saturday. LEAGUEfrompage/2-=--~-==-=~===------buhhle gum, tha1 is how l would failed to connect on them. Still. sum up today·s game for us;· Ballard said his team was the B.cc:wer &aid "~e were dOwn tt> ' ' Band Aids, bailing dominant one in this contest even our tourth sweeper when No. JO twine and bubble though the Panthers did not play 1Jamie Dobbs) went down A gum. that is how I the aggre-.c;i\ e .;tyle of soccer couple of our starters were sick they have been pla) ing all season and we were a little bea1 up after would sum up long. playing against Illinois State on today's game for us." .. We were the dominant team Saturday." out there but we have to play at a Early on, the advantage in - Rob Brewer cenain level in order to be com­ numbers showed tor Lhc Panthers. SW Missouri head coach pe t11i ve in the Mvc:· Ballard as they controlled the l\'!mpo of said ·•1 told the girls that we have the game by keeping the ball in to be one of the top two team~ in Southwest Missouri territory dur­ both Diane Markus and Alma our conference because the those ing the first 10 minute.., of play. Ayala in the final 10 minutes of two teams get a bye in the fir.a But despite several scoring the half, though. Eastern never round of the conference tourney:· opportunities for the Panthers. managed to get anything going Brewer agreed, adding that the I.he Bears' defense held ns own. before going into the intermis­ chances co score were there for Eastern also ran into trouble sion. hi:. team. The second half was vinually a "'~sop~™ fQrn'Jlrd Tracie "It was a good game and an S1rFer. t e leadingscorerin the carbon copy of the first 45 min­ entertaining game." Brewer said. nation coming into the weekend. utes since Eastern continued t<> "We did well despite the num­ limped off the field with 36 min­ control the time of possession bers. We just didn't finish on utes left in the half. However, she and the scoring opponunities. some of our chances." did return in the second half. Junior Kendra Williamson In Friday·s game against the After a failed scoring attempt nearly ~cored 1wo minutes into Flyers. the Panthers once again by Southwest. Panther sopho­ the half and freshman Kelly had opportunities to score, as more midfielder Valerie Pourch G ilbert missed on a scoring they finhhed the game v.ith 15 sent a shoL past a diving Beth opponunity five minutes later. shots compared to lhc 12 shots Schneider at the 20 minute mark The Bears tried to sh1fl the taken by Dayton. to give Eastern a 1-0 lead. It momentum their way with two However. the Flyers struck would end up being the only goal scoring chances of their own, bu1 fin;t with a goal 12 minutes into IBE MASAYUKl/Staff photographer in a game in which Eastern out­ freshman goalie Angel the game to take a 1-0 lead. Eastem '.f Miclzelle Macumber (4J makes o play on tlze ball Sunday. Giangiorgi, who had two saves shot Southwest 20-4. Despite Strother came back to knot the more goals in the second half to we came back today to win,., on the day. held her own in the giving up the goal. Schneider fin­ game at 1- t on an assist by Beth build a 3-1 cusl1ion that would Ballard said. "Hopefully we'll be box en route to the shutout. ished with eight saves. Au:;:-in 14 minutes later and this stick, ending Eastem's undefea1- able to regroup and refocu-s this During the last 30 minutes of Sophomore Jennifer Cech score would hold going into the ed streak at nine. week in practice to gcr ready for the game. both teams bad their picked up the assist on the goal. break. .. It was a tough loss for us. but Depaul and Western Michigan." Despite scorin& attempts by share of scoring chances but both But the Flyers pounded in two ~

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So far this season, the Pamher women's soccer team has been effective at making good first impressions. The Panthers starLed off the season at 9-0 in their first year a~ a Missouri Va lley Conference team and despite having that streak broken by a 3-1 loss at Dayton Friday afternoon in Ohio, the lady booters came back on Sunday afternoon co take a l-0 win from MVC foe Southwest Missouri State, giving Eastern win their first ever MVC contest. "It was a win,·· Panther head coach Steve Ballard said of his team's close win on Sunday after· noon at Lakeside Field. "We weren't playing wel l. and it seemed like we were a step slow­ er today then we have been." The win pushes Eastern to 10-1 on the season and to 1-0 in MVC action. Southwest head coach Rob Brewer. whose ream fell to 7-5 overall and to 0-2 in MVC play because of the loss, said the loss was partially due to the lack of IBE MASAYUKVStaff photographer players he had available for Eastem's Val Porch (6) pws the ball between rwo Southwest Missouri defenders. Porch scored the Panthers' lone goal in Eastern's 1-0 win over Sunday·s game. the Bears Sunday. The Panthers lost their first game this season Fliday at Dayton, dropping a 3-1 decision. But the win Sunday put Eastern at "Band Aids. bailing twine and 10-1 on the s·e~o11. It a"lso marked the first ever win for the Panthers in the Missouri Valley Conference. See LEAGUE page I 1 Men's sgccer team drops 5-0 decision at Evansville By ANDREW GRANGER of the Missouri Valley ends play. Evansville rounded out the scoring by Staff wriLer Conference. The loss Evansville added another tally five converting a give away into a goal in the dropped Eastern to 4-6 minutes later when Pedro Delgado 87th minute. T he men's soccer team opened their for the year. received as pass from Scott Bragg, who "It was really tough," head coach Tim conference season on Sunday by travel­ Evansville put in the in tum had received it from Mike Lue. McClements said. "They've got a very ing to Evansville to square off against the first goal w hen for­ The goal gave the Aces a 2-0 lead going good team. top 25 in the country." Aces, but Lhe Panthers came up short, ward S hawn ·Boyer into the half. As of Monday Evansville was also losing 5-0. beaded in a comer kick Pedro Delgado recorded his second fifth in tbe Great Lakes Region. It was the first conference game for from mid fielder Jose goal of the match when he one Limed a McClements stated that although the both teams. Evansville, now 8-2 on the Londono in the 19th L...__-....::-....=--- -' through pass from C. W. Raines. team lost, he was pleased with the team's season and coming off an over time loss minute. Brian Ritschel At the 80:20 mark, Craig Stone con­ performance. to defending national champion Boyer was second in verted a pass from s ubsti tu te Toby "There was a posili ve note in that Wisconsin, showed why it's on top of the the MVC in scoring going into last week- Walton. See EVANSVILLE page I 0 Spikers split weekend games, move to 9-1O on the season By MATI WILSON solo blocks. Staff writer Junior setter K:m1 Harper contribmed 39 assists, three kills and five digs. Freshman The Panther volleybaJl team shot down Meleah Culler also played well Leading tbe the Eagles of Morehead State University team w1lh 12 digs. had three lulls and three on Friday nighL hut were defeated bv the service aces Colonels of Eastern Kentucky l niversity The Colonels (2-4, 6-9) were led in kills Saturday night by junior mitltlle blocker Amy Merron who Eastern (5-2 in the OVC. 9-10 overall) had a game-high 22 ki Us. Merron, the Ohio was defeated by Eastern Kentucky in Jive Valley Conference leader in hitting per­ games, 15- 11, 5-15. 15-9. 9-15 and 15-10. centage, had a percentage of .421. Merron. "We didn't pass well at the ~tart of the who is also the OVC leader in blocks per match and we starred in a line-up thut had a game. haJ seven block assists in 1his few too many enors in receiving and serv­ match. ing," Ralston :.aid. "Eascem K