<?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="00057947_0001"/>
 I I II<lb/>
COMING TUESDAY:<lb/>
The deadline for filing for SGA elections is March 4.<lb/>
SG A reporter Tim Hampton witl cover all election<lb/>
regulations Tuesday.<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Satisfaction not very satisfying says Micah Harris.<lb/>
See review page 8.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
William and M&amp;jy beat the JUrateS 88-62, in<lb/>
Williamsburg, VA VVednesday. See page 12.<lb/>
'???<lb/>
?he lEaat (Eawltmari<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol.62 No. 40<lb/>
Thursday, February 25,1988<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Gore stresses reforms for<lb/>
the working class in speech<lb/>
By CLAY DEANHARDT<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Tennessee Senator Al Gore<lb/>
those other states all over this<lb/>
Tennessee Senator Al Gore is sorrounded by well-wishers and the media as he approaches the platform coun?T will have an opportunity urged those present to help him<lb/>
to give a speech Tuesday. (Photo by Jon Jordan ? Photolab) to have their say  to have our usher in that new age. "Some<lb/>
Gore emphasized the role of the the American era is ending. It's<lb/>
working man and the small not. The ReaganBush era is end-<lb/>
farmer in America today, saying ing and about time, too he said<lb/>
called for the support of the small these groups had been neglected to a round of the applause,<lb/>
farmer and the common citizen and forgotten during the Reagan "But we're seeing the beginning<lb/>
during a recent campaign swing administration. He portrayed of a new American era, if we can<lb/>
through the Greenville area himsclf as one of that not. havc lcadcrship from a Dcm(y<lb/>
Gore spoke to a group of ap- ing hc had workcd in tobacco for cratic prcsidcnt hc continuod.<lb/>
proximately, 0 supporters on an many ycars as a young man Gorc ?cnt on tQ y that those<lb/>
He said he was bringing a mes- independent Democrats who<lb/>
sage of social justice, to "continue have voted in the past for Rcpub-<lb/>
thc progress that the new south lican candidates need to be<lb/>
has made in greater measure than brought back into the party and<lb/>
many other parts of this country given a candidate that supports<lb/>
to havc a more just society, to have them, too.<lb/>
a society that cares about the Gore went on to express his<lb/>
problems that are not being ad- support for the tobacco farmer<lb/>
dressed today and the federal government's<lb/>
There is a new age in American tobacco program. He noted that<lb/>
politics coming, Gore said, and he he is a tobacco farmer, and that he<lb/>
has voted to support the small<lb/>
family farm while he has been in<lb/>
area farm where his father had<lb/>
campaigned for president in 1965.<lb/>
Gore, who is seeking support in<lb/>
his bid for the democratic nomi-<lb/>
nation for president, focused in<lb/>
his speech on Super Tuesday and<lb/>
the power the south will have in<lb/>
the upcoming election.<lb/>
"This is a time when voters on<lb/>
the grass roots level here and in<lb/>
say he said.<lb/>
people are trying to tell you that<lb/>
Graduation rate up for Pirate athletes<lb/>
By ED WILKERSON<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
A greater percentage of ECU's<lb/>
student-athletes are graduating<lb/>
than ever before, according to an<lb/>
ECU official, and the opinion that the football players on grant-in<lb/>
college athletes are less adept in<lb/>
the academic field than on the<lb/>
playing fields is gradually being<lb/>
dispelled.<lb/>
Pam Penland, ECU's assistant<lb/>
athletic director of academic<lb/>
counseling, feels that the Univer-<lb/>
sity has made significant progress<lb/>
in guiding its student-athletes<lb/>
since the program's inception in<lb/>
1984.<lb/>
"Any student-athlete who<lb/>
comes into our univcrsitv can be<lb/>
assured that the academic sup-<lb/>
athletics who are not capable of<lb/>
performing acceptably in the<lb/>
classroom. Also eliminated are<lb/>
students that have no intention of<lb/>
progressing in the classroom<lb/>
while still competing. This ulti-<lb/>
mately leads to a greater percent-<lb/>
port is there and at no time will student was further promoted as<lb/>
athletics interfere with academ- the result of the National Colle-<lb/>
ics she said. giate Athletic Association's ap-<lb/>
AccordingtotheAthleticCoun- proval of Bylaw 5-l-(j) in 1985.<lb/>
acling Department, 38 percent of The Bylaw stipulates that no stu-<lb/>
dent that has received a score of<lb/>
aid scholarships who matricu- less than 700 on the Scholastic<lb/>
lated in 1982 went on to graduate. Aptitude Test or carries a high age of graduating college athletes<lb/>
Of the non-scholarship football school GPA of less than 2.0 may as coaches are forced to recruit<lb/>
players recruited by the Univer- not participate as an athlete in any more academically inclined high<lb/>
sity who matriculated in 1982, 54 NCAA competition. The Bylaw school athletes,<lb/>
percent graduated. Of the entire also states that "satisfactory prog-<lb/>
freshmen class which came to ress" is to be made by athletes at<lb/>
ECU in 1982 a total of 41 percent all times requiring a minimum of<lb/>
reached graduation. As Penland 24 semester hours to be taken each<lb/>
stated, "It is obvious that the pro- year with a minimum of 12 per<lb/>
gram has had a profound effect semester.<lb/>
upon those athletes which ma- The consequence of this ruling<lb/>
triculatcd in 1982 is the elimination of college fresh-<lb/>
The philosophy of athlete as men being placed into collegiate<lb/>
See IMPROVING, page 2<lb/>
the senate.<lb/>
Later, in response to question-<lb/>
ing, Gore said the health issue and<lb/>
government support for tobacco<lb/>
farmers arc two separate issues.<lb/>
"There is a legitimate role for<lb/>
the federal government to play in<lb/>
providing information about the<lb/>
health consequences of smoking,<lb/>
and I believe in that role. I believe<lb/>
that information should be pro-<lb/>
vided, and I believe it particularly<lb/>
should be provided to young<lb/>
people.<lb/>
"That is a completely separate<lb/>
issue from the issue of who is to<lb/>
grow tobacco. Where arc the eco-<lb/>
nomic benefits going to go?" Gorc<lb/>
asked.<lb/>
See GORE, page 2<lb/>
Farm atmosphere helps Gore<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
As iitint Newi Editor<lb/>
?<lb/>
Vandalism<lb/>
AFROTC incident highlights new<lb/>
trend towards vandalism at ECU<lb/>
Co-op helps<lb/>
findjobs<lb/>
BYJEANWHEBY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If someone approached you<lb/>
with the question "What is East<lb/>
Carolina's best kept secret?" what<lb/>
would you say? Betsy Harper<lb/>
says it is cooperative education.<lb/>
She is the cooperative education<lb/>
program director here at ECU.<lb/>
"The program has been here on<lb/>
campus for 14 years she said.<lb/>
"More people need to find out<lb/>
about it"<lb/>
Cooperative education (co-op)<lb/>
is an educational program based<lb/>
on helping students receive work<lb/>
experience prior to graduation.<lb/>
Co-op offers several work sched-<lb/>
ules: traditional, work study, and<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
The traditional co-op schedule<lb/>
alternates a semester of school<lb/>
and a semester of work. Work<lb/>
study is another co-op schedule<lb/>
that is very popular. This sched-<lb/>
ule allows the student to remain<lb/>
in school and simultaneously re-<lb/>
ceive excellent work experience.<lb/>
Co-op can also find summer jobs.<lb/>
"Work experiences are appro-<lb/>
priately related to educational<lb/>
and career objectives of students<lb/>
On the 'grass roots' at the River<lb/>
Road Ranch outside of<lb/>
In closing a campaign speech Greenville, Gore called on the<lb/>
in Pitt County Tuesday, Senator tobacco farmers to help him or-<lb/>
Albert Gore quoted from the ganize. Gore said in recent years<lb/>
presidential campaign of another he has stood for pro-tobacco legis-<lb/>
Tennessean Andrew Jackson, lation in the senate, even some<lb/>
"Early to bed, early to rise, work legislation that Jessie Helms had<lb/>
like hell and organize voted against.<lb/>
Jackson's quote seems indica- With a barbecue pig, coun-<lb/>
tive of Gore's attitudes towards try?western band to the sides<lb/>
his campaign, or at least his south- and two bails of hay in front of<lb/>
ern campaign. Without mounting Gore's platform, the rustic ranch<lb/>
a big campaign in Iowa or New setting from which Gore choose to<lb/>
Hampshire, Gore is the Missis- speak was a clever move to reach<lb/>
sippi riverboat gambler of 1988 his constituency; farmers. During<lb/>
primary race: He is gambling on his speech he said he understands<lb/>
the southern voters in the March<lb/>
8, Super Tuesday, southern pri-<lb/>
maries.<lb/>
As part of his large scale south-<lb/>
ern campaign, Sen.Gore (D?<lb/>
Tenn) is speaking to people on<lb/>
what he calls the 'grass roots'<lb/>
level. To the homeless and the<lb/>
small farmers of the south, Gore is<lb/>
promising a better life.<lb/>
Stress creeps<lb/>
into life<lb/>
regularly<lb/>
By ANDREW ROSE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
tobacco farming, "With my own<lb/>
hands, I have cut tobacco and I<lb/>
have spiked it Gore said of<lb/>
working on his father's farm in<lb/>
Tennessee.<lb/>
Gore supporters in the crowd<lb/>
of approximately 300 liked what<lb/>
Gore had to say on farming issues.<lb/>
"His stands on farmings are good<lb/>
ones, farmers can't stand<lb/>
Dukakis, so his (Gore's) chances<lb/>
in the south are good. He is the<lb/>
most realistic candidate Cliff<lb/>
Beach, a resident of Greenville,<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Another supporter said he<lb/>
liked Gore's economic plans<lb/>
which call for more competition<lb/>
on international markets. "I like<lb/>
Campus police say tnere have<lb/>
been no arrests made in the case<lb/>
The Air Force KU'l'C sidewalk<lb/>
was defaced between 930 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday and 7:30 a.m. Monday, and that investigations are con-<lb/>
according to campus officials. tinuing.<lb/>
The vandalism on the Wright<lb/>
Auditorium Annex Sidewalk<lb/>
came in the form of a Swastika<lb/>
Emd an atomic mushroom cloud<lb/>
vhich were spraypainted on to<lb/>
he Air Forrr sign.<lb/>
Vandalism has increased over<lb/>
year and 208 in 1986-87. He said<lb/>
the trend is on the rise and sup-<lb/>
ported the expectation by citing<lb/>
nine reported cases of vandalism<lb/>
since Feb. 15.<lb/>
The ECU Crimebusters is offer-<lb/>
the past three years on campus ing a reward for information on<lb/>
according to Capt. Keith Knox of this or any other crime and the<lb/>
ECU Public Safety. Knox said informants are not required to<lb/>
there were 197 reported cases of identify themselves. The number<lb/>
vandalism in tho 1QR54tt schoolfor Crimobusters jj 757?AA<lb/>
his economic agenda and his abil-<lb/>
Nobody is immune to stress ity to develop bi?partisan sup-<lb/>
and pressure. It surrounds us at port in Congress Tim Morris, an<lb/>
all times in the form of tests, part- ECU student.<lb/>
time jobs, roommates, home life During the speech, Gore said<lb/>
inrS-ESKS and relationships. it is about time for the end of the<lb/>
"I feel stress when I have a lot of Reagan?Bush era. The appeal of<lb/>
papers and tests. It seems like they the younger candidate, Gore is 39,<lb/>
all come at once said Elaine is one of the reasons some sup-<lb/>
Smith, a graduate student study- porters are attracted to Gorc. "He<lb/>
ing child development. "You is young and handsome Anna<lb/>
have to take time out for yourself,<lb/>
time to relax<lb/>
Stress management was the<lb/>
topic of the Lunch Time Learning<lb/>
seminar presented by the<lb/>
Committee on Status of Women.<lb/>
and expands classroom learning<lb/>
at both the undergraduate and<lb/>
graduate levels Harper said.<lb/>
Co-op not only provides stu-<lb/>
dents with a large variety of jobs,<lb/>
ranging from restaurant worker<lb/>
to government employee, but also<lb/>
locations. Co-op can find one a job<lb/>
right here in North Carolina or all<lb/>
the way in California.<lb/>
Last year at ECU over 900 stu-<lb/>
See CO-OP, page 2<lb/>
See HINES, page 2<lb/>
Bacom said.<lb/>
Another supporter said that<lb/>
Gore is the best of the many<lb/>
Democrat candidates in the race<lb/>
for the nomination. "He is the<lb/>
most viable Democrat and the<lb/>
best balance to Dole and Bush<lb/>
Ben Turr.age said.<lb/>
'?<lb/>
. . ? ?tjt  ?????-? ' i J. ?. ? ' <lb/>
m .<lb/>
???<lb/>
m mmm m ???<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 25,1988<lb/>
Improving graduation rates please Pirate coaching staff I Sit-in<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Despite this there is still no<lb/>
guarantee that an athlete will<lb/>
succeed academically.<lb/>
For some Pirate coaches having<lb/>
their athletes "get by" just isn't<lb/>
enough. As Pirate basketball<lb/>
coach Mike Stecle states, "I don't<lb/>
want guys just to be eligible, 1<lb/>
want them to be on target to re-<lb/>
ceive a degree<lb/>
Ladies Pirate basketball coach<lb/>
Pat Pearson savs that bv provid-<lb/>
ing academic support, the univer-<lb/>
sity helps to "put things in proper<lb/>
perspective" for the student-<lb/>
athlete and she adds that "The<lb/>
number one priority of the stu-<lb/>
dent is to get their degree<lb/>
Throughout the entire year all<lb/>
grant-in-aid and any other ath-<lb/>
letes having difficulty will be re-<lb/>
quired to attend study halls and<lb/>
will be monitored weekly by<lb/>
progress reports given to the<lb/>
coaches from the Athletic Coun-<lb/>
Eakin responds to questions<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin<lb/>
spoke on future plans for ECU in<lb/>
a question-answer session with<lb/>
students in Greene Dormitorv<lb/>
Wednesday-<lb/>
When questioned on the<lb/>
renovation of the Ledonia S.<lb/>
Wright Afro-American Cultural<lb/>
center, Eakin said he hasn't sure<lb/>
where the funding for the renova-<lb/>
tions would come from, but he<lb/>
spectulatcd that the money<lb/>
would come from student fees.<lb/>
On upgrading campus light-<lb/>
ing. Eakin said he would like to<lb/>
see improvements made to exist-<lb/>
ing lighting. Eakin said a lighting<lb/>
project would probablv be ex-<lb/>
tented over a time period rather<lb/>
than completed at once. Funds for<lb/>
improving the lighting would be<lb/>
allocated from state moncv, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Eakin combined the lighting<lb/>
issue with campus beautification<lb/>
bv saying that improvements<lb/>
need to made for the "total envi-<lb/>
roment oi the campus<lb/>
On the proposed student<lb/>
recreational center, Eakin said<lb/>
that the plans call for a building<lb/>
which would cost appromiatcly<lb/>
$110,000. The price tag for the<lb/>
recreational center would be<lb/>
funded from student fees, accord-<lb/>
ing to Eakin.<lb/>
Renovations for Memorial<lb/>
Gym will be started this summer<lb/>
at an appromiate cost of $15,000,<lb/>
?akin said.<lb/>
Open recreation facilities<lb/>
such as outside basketball courts<lb/>
are slated for construction as soon<lb/>
as suitable locations are found,<lb/>
Eakin said. He said a plot of land<lb/>
west of Mendenhall is one of the<lb/>
preliminary location for the bas-<lb/>
ketball court.<lb/>
An expansion of Joyncr Li-<lb/>
bra rv may be in the works, ac-<lb/>
cording to Eakin. He said the<lb/>
expansion project is still in the<lb/>
planning stages.<lb/>
On proposed SG A legislation<lb/>
considering the instillation of<lb/>
condom dispensers in student<lb/>
residence halls, Eakin would only<lb/>
say he is against the plan.<lb/>
Gore stresses Dem. tradition<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Gore said he stands for a return<lb/>
to the Democratic tradition of<lb/>
years gone by, and called on<lb/>
Democratic presidents as a sym-<lb/>
bol of his beliefs.<lb/>
"I stand for the Democratic<lb/>
party of Franklin Roosevelt, of<lb/>
Harrv Truman, of John Kennedy.<lb/>
I stand for the traditions of our<lb/>
party and a national approach<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
The homeless are a real problem<lb/>
in America, Gore said, and one<lb/>
which needs to be addressed by<lb/>
the next president. During ques-<lb/>
tioning he called for reforms in the<lb/>
welfare system to help the home-<lb/>
less and to hold families together.<lb/>
He also called for universal<lb/>
education and emphasized the<lb/>
role day care will play in<lb/>
America's future.<lb/>
When asked what his admini-<lb/>
stration would do for the students<lb/>
who his campaien so actively<lb/>
courts, Gore called for more ac-<lb/>
cess to student loans and grants.<lb/>
"We need an all out effort to<lb/>
create the best education system<lb/>
in the world, and beyond that the<lb/>
proposals for economic growth<lb/>
and the other issues I have dis-<lb/>
cussed are of concern to students<lb/>
like anybody else he said.<lb/>
He said increasing the educa-<lb/>
tion budget while struggling to<lb/>
create a balanced budget would<lb/>
be a matter of priorities. "1 put out<lb/>
an economic program that clearly<lb/>
needs increased emphasis and<lb/>
attention, and it will receive it in<lb/>
the Gore administration he said.<lb/>
Tuesday's event, a barbecue<lb/>
picnic for Gore supporters, drew a<lb/>
large crowd of area Democrats<lb/>
including many students and<lb/>
SGA representatives.<lb/>
Congressman Charlie Rose of<lb/>
the 8th Congressional District<lb/>
formerly endorsed the Gore can-<lb/>
didacy when introducing the<lb/>
candidate to the crowd.<lb/>
Hines helps end stress<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
The key note speaker was Dr.<lb/>
Larry Hines, an ECU psychology<lb/>
professor.<lb/>
Dr. Hines' first step in dealing<lb/>
with stress was to identify the<lb/>
causes. He said one major cause of<lb/>
stress is inferiority in the form of<lb/>
not being able to handle the given<lb/>
challenge: Intimidation of taking<lb/>
on a big task.<lb/>
Another source of stress is a<lb/>
maladjusted belief system. The<lb/>
belief system is the set of rules<lb/>
which dictate your actions. "You<lb/>
need a positive belief. You must<lb/>
believe you can have an impact on<lb/>
your life he said.<lb/>
Don't let irrational beliefs slip in<lb/>
such as: I failed, and whenever<lb/>
I'm presented with this same situ-<lb/>
ation, I'll fail again, so I'll just<lb/>
avoid the whole thing. An effort<lb/>
needs to be put forth to tackle the<lb/>
challenge.<lb/>
Frustration and conflict are two<lb/>
other elements of stress brought<lb/>
on through the choices involved<lb/>
with decision making Hines said.<lb/>
He stressed the examination of<lb/>
the positive aspects raised in cer-<lb/>
tain decisions over the more nega-<lb/>
Co-op offers opportunities<lb/>
seling Office. Current course<lb/>
grades and class attendance are<lb/>
checked throughout the semester<lb/>
and tutors are always available.<lb/>
Senior defensive back Ellis Dil-<lb/>
lahunt feels strongly that "Being<lb/>
committed to going to a moni-<lb/>
tored study hall three or four<lb/>
nights a week forces you to study<lb/>
and helps to remove distrac-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Pcnland feels that the Athletic<lb/>
Counselor's "close correspon-<lb/>
dence with coaches on a weekly<lb/>
basis" greatly aids in keeping the<lb/>
athletes graduation rate in line<lb/>
u anno Pirate football team, 16 have pro-<lb/>
with the rest of the student body, coached for four years has gone ?raduation dates and the<lb/>
'The coaches depend on us to on to graduate. ? stll enrolled in the<lb/>
provide academic guidance while While success in athletics is<lb/>
helping the student work toward measured by personal achieve-<lb/>
a degree Penland adds, "and in ment, success in the classroom<lb/>
turn they provide the discipline can be measured in much the<lb/>
Citing the overall effectiveness same way. As Penland equates, 1<lb/>
of the program she stated that feel that the best indication of a<lb/>
"Every ECU team carries at least a program's effectiveness<lb/>
2.0 average and that is a signifi-<lb/>
cant improvement from four<lb/>
years ago<lb/>
"The guys who play for me<lb/>
know how important I think aca-<lb/>
demics are coach Stecle stated.<lb/>
Every player that Steele has<lb/>
university.<lb/>
Dillahunt, who is scheduled to<lb/>
graduate this spring, said that he<lb/>
is "proud to bean athlete who will<lb/>
be graduating on schedule He<lb/>
adds "I have seen the study halls<lb/>
whether or no. you have athletes and tutors help out a lot of guys<lb/>
who Play for you for four years and 1 give cred.t to Ms. Penland<lb/>
and Juirnatelgraduate and her staff teMgnS? m<lb/>
Of the 19 seniors on the 1987 andorgan.z.nB my classes<lb/>
tives ones. If you continually look<lb/>
at the negative side of issues,<lb/>
Hines warns, "you'll get stuck in<lb/>
the negative The mind can only<lb/>
entertain one thought at a time<lb/>
and it's possible to have your<lb/>
mind filled with negative<lb/>
thoughts the majority of the time.<lb/>
Pain, discomfort and anxiety<lb/>
are also sources of stress. Anxiety<lb/>
is thought by some to be a symp-<lb/>
tom of stress, but Hines believes it<lb/>
may also be the anticipation of a<lb/>
coming event. In turn, the anxiety<lb/>
feeds the stress and they revolve<lb/>
in a cycle.<lb/>
Hines said the body is shown to<lb/>
handle stress in three ways. The<lb/>
first is the muscular response.<lb/>
This is characterized by tense<lb/>
muscles and tension headaches.<lb/>
Although it is painful, this is the<lb/>
least harmful of responses.<lb/>
The second response is the car-<lb/>
diovascular. This is marked by<lb/>
rapid heart beat and long term<lb/>
effects, includes high blood pres-<lb/>
sure or strokes. The third is the<lb/>
neurohumaural response. It is<lb/>
distinctive in that the body re-<lb/>
sponds with a series of chemical<lb/>
and hormonal changes.<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
dents were placed through co-op<lb/>
in jobs all over the United States,<lb/>
Harper said.<lb/>
To get involved in co-op all one<lb/>
has to do is to go to a cooperative<lb/>
education seminar. These semi-<lb/>
nars are scheduled twice weekly,<lb/>
Monday and Thursday (today at 1<lb/>
p.m. in Rawl 304). If these days are<lb/>
not satisfactory there is a tape<lb/>
available in the Media Center lo-<lb/>
cated in Joyner Library that may<lb/>
be viewed at your convenience.<lb/>
After one has attended the<lb/>
seminar, there is an application to<lb/>
be filled out and turned in to the<lb/>
co-op office located in the new<lb/>
General Classroom Building on<lb/>
the second floor in room 2028. The<lb/>
office is open from 8a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Monday through Friday, and an<lb/>
appointment may be made then<lb/>
to meet with a co-op coordinator.<lb/>
This coordinator is assigned to<lb/>
you through your major and will<lb/>
help you the best job possible.<lb/>
"Please come by before the<lb/>
semester is over Harper said.<lb/>
"We're already placing for the<lb/>
summer and fall<lb/>
Al Gore, a candidate for the Democratic nomination for president,<lb/>
turns to look at the crowd during a speech he gave on a local farm<lb/>
Tuesday. (Photo by Jon Jordan ? Photolab)<lb/>
attte ?a0t Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Ja.nes F. J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Anne Leigh Mallory James Russo<lb/>
Shari Clemens Adam Blankenship<lb/>
Maria Bell<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
MONTHLY KATES<lb/>
0-49 Column inches$4.25<lb/>
50-994.15<lb/>
100-149 4.05<lb/>
150-199 3.95<lb/>
200-249 3 85<lb/>
250 and above3 75<lb/>
COLOR ADVERTISING RATES<lb/>
(Charge in Addition to Regular Space Rate)<lb/>
One color and black$90.00<lb/>
Two colors and black 155.00<lb/>
Inserts<lb/>
5.000 or less 6? each<lb/>
5.001 - 10,000 5.5 each<lb/>
10,001-12,000 C eah<lb/>
BUSINESS HOURS:<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Phones757-6366757-6557<lb/>
757-6558757-6309<lb/>
February<lb/>
? A MONTH TO ?<lb/>
Celebrate<lb/>
t-<lb/>
KROGER SLICED<lb/>
SERVE &amp; SAVE<lb/>
Luncheon<lb/>
Meats<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
?39<lb/>
BLACK<lb/>
HISTORY<lb/>
Ltr.<lb/>
NRB<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE<lb/>
DIET. REGULAR OR<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
Classic<lb/>
99<lb/>
?<lb/>
KRONER<lb/>
All Meat<lb/>
Wieners<lb/>
99<lb/>
QUARTERS<lb/>
Parkay ?<lb/>
Margarine O<lb/>
1<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Qtrs.<lb/>
$109<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
Clausen<lb/>
Pickles . .<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
$199<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Lite Salad <lb/>
Dressing . sL<lb/>
8<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Btls<lb/>
$1<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
J? Bag<lb/>
INDIAN RIVER<lb/>
Red<lb/>
Grapefruit<lb/>
279<lb/>
KROGER PREMIUM<lb/>
QUALITY<lb/>
Multigrain<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
24<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
Loaf<lb/>
KEEBLER SNACKS<lb/>
Cheeblers or<lb/>
Tato Skins<lb/>
g?V?$SS Bag<lb/>
79<lb/>
LIMIT 2 WITH<lb/>
S10 ADD I<lb/>
PURCHASE<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETIES<lb/>
Jeno's<lb/>
Party Pizza<lb/>
10<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
79<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
VARIETIES<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
TASTY<lb/>
LIMIT 2 WITH<lb/>
S10 ADD L<lb/>
PURCHASE<lb/>
Cinnamon<lb/>
Rolls<lb/>
99<lb/>
Items and Prices Effective<lb/>
Sun. Feb. 21, thru<lb/>
Sat. Feb. 27, 1988<lb/>
Copyr.ghS 1918<lb/>
Krof?r Sav-On<lb/>
Quantity M?h<lb/>
Nona Sold<lb/>
'0M O' it?<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd - Greenville<lb/>
(CPS) While an aim<lb/>
wecklong occupation of a L'niv<lb/>
sity of Massachusetts at Amh?-J<lb/>
building that ended Feb. h fj<lb/>
cused attention on ongoing rad<lb/>
tensions on the nation's cai<lb/>
puses, minority students at oil<lb/>
schools continued to complain!<lb/>
mistreatment and administrate,<lb/>
kept apologizing for it.<lb/>
At the University of Iowa, fj<lb/>
example, law school Dean<lb/>
William Hines apologized<lb/>
anecdote told bv federal ludl<lb/>
Gerald Heanev, who rclat<lb/>
J <lb/>
story to a Ian. 30 campus banqi<lb/>
about a "Negro" dcfendaJ<lb/>
dressed in loud clothes and<lb/>
jewelry.<lb/>
The story led some studen<lb/>
walk out of the banquet in pro<lb/>
Hines apologized in writin<lb/>
"anyone who was offend<lb/>
judge's remarks<lb/>
Heanev, Hines added,<lb/>
year juidicial record<lb/>
College<lb/>
apart a<lb/>
(CPS) ? As the primar<lb/>
lurched into high gear,<lb/>
other campus chapter of I<lb/>
lege Republicans (CF<lb/>
apart.<lb/>
Paul Weiss, defeated ii<lb/>
race for the president . I <lb/>
University oi Texas<lb/>
(L'TEP) college Rcpulbicar<lb/>
days later asked the group tn<lb/>
oversees all College K j<lb/>
activities in Texas to rev I<lb/>
him as leader of the LTEP cha<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
The state CRs. moreovi<lb/>
ported!v gave him the chard<lb/>
though Weiss's opponents j<lb/>
it was because Weiss told it he, i<lb/>
Beverly Shclton, had been di<lb/>
elected as ITEP's College Repi<lb/>
licans leader.<lb/>
The acrimony and stri<lb/>
LTEP mirror similar cor I<lb/>
sies that have rocked th e <lb/>
in 1984 a major player in dehvj<lb/>
ing a big student vote tor Ronf<lb/>
Reagan ? during the last y(<lb/>
and has left it divided tfi c<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
At the top oi the organiza<lb/>
national Chairman Stock!<lb/>
Reeves' spring, 1987 can i<lb/>
against John Hester, n<lb/>
the Mississippi Crs. pro<lb/>
divisive charges of bullyu<lb/>
packing conventions with<lb/>
qualified delegates, medd<lb/>
campus and state chapter afl<lb/>
and inappropriately tr<lb/>
align the group with presi I<lb/>
Blacks<lb/>
buildin<lb/>
(CPS) ?About 125 black<lb/>
dents at the University ol I<lb/>
chusctts at Amherst t. - ij<lb/>
campus building Feb. 12<lb/>
mand police prosecute five -J<lb/>
students who allegedly at<lb/>
two black students at a d<lb/>
party.<lb/>
Racial conflicts and<lb/>
insistent demands by mm.<lb/>
students to stop them<lb/>
plagued scores of campu<lb/>
ing the last two school y<lb/>
They seem to have i<lb/>
again since the start of th.<lb/>
term.<lb/>
Black students at Provid<lb/>
College in Rhode Island<lb/>
ample, complained in late Ii<lb/>
arv that affirmative acti<lb/>
Rev. Joseph Lennon di<lb/>
spond well when the) told 1<lb/>
black student had left school<lb/>
Two pass b<lb/>
(CPS)?Onlv twoot<lb/>
versify of Arizona stud)<lb/>
passed a 1962 literacy test Mi<lb/>
sippi blacks were required<lb/>
complete perfectly if they w<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
The Arizona Black Stuj<lb/>
Association asked the srudct<lb/>
take the test during a week-<lb/>
celcbration of Martin Li<lb/>
King's birthday to demons<lb/>
how jim Crow laws were us<lb/>
keep blacks disenfranchised!<lb/>
"If college students today<lb/>
years later ? can't pass, it s<lb/>
pretty impossible to me that<lb/>
college educated blacks ?<lb/>
pass said Peter Raid o<lb/>
Arizona Black Student As:<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
? A -<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 25,1988 3<lb/>
pig staff I Sit-in against racism ends<lb/>
rate football team, 16 have pro-<lb/>
I ted graduation dates and the<lb/>
hers are still enrolled in the<lb/>
uvcrsit)<lb/>
Mllahunt, who is scheduled to<lb/>
iduate this spring, said that he<lb/>
proud to be an athlete who will<lb/>
duating on schedule He<lb/>
; have seen the study halls<lb/>
d tutors help out a lot of guys<lb/>
o credit to Ms. Penland<lb/>
taff tor helping me out<lb/>
nizing my classes<lb/>
arolfnian<lb/>
since 1925.<lb/>
of Advertising<lb/>
?t sentatives<lb/>
imes Russo<lb/>
Adam Blankenship<lb/>
:rtising<lb/>
$4 25<lb/>
.4.15<lb/>
4.05<lb/>
3.95<lb/>
.3.85<lb/>
3.75<lb/>
SING RATES<lb/>
$90 00<lb/>
155.00<lb/>
bt each<lb/>
 5each<lb/>
5? each<lb/>
01 RS:<lb/>
rida <lb/>
) p.m.<lb/>
D 66<lb/>
?58<lb/>
757-6557<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
i<lb/>
3P<lb/>
W' M. SKROGER<lb/>
All Meat<lb/>
, 4 Wieners<lb/>
Oz99?<lb/>
LAVORS<lb/>
r.2$1 Btls 1<lb/>
KEEBLER SNACKS<lb/>
Cheeblers or<lb/>
HERS Tato Skins<lb/>
r&amp;4<lb/>
 8<lb/>
&amp; Oz<lb/>
.V- Bag<lb/>
79<lb/>
<lb/>
LIMIT 2 WITH<lb/>
S10 ADD L<lb/>
PURCHASE<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
namon<lb/>
oils<lb/>
Ct<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
99<lb/>
M ??s - a. KM<lb/>
" ?;? ? ? ? . -? -  Ml<lb/>
I0URS EVERYDAY<lb/>
lie Bivd - Greenville<lb/>
(CPS) ? While an almost-<lb/>
wecklong occupation of a Univer-<lb/>
sity of Massachusetts at Amherst<lb/>
building that ended Feb. 16 fo-<lb/>
cused attention on ongoing racial<lb/>
tensions on the nation's cam-<lb/>
puses, minority students at other<lb/>
schools continued to complain of<lb/>
mistreatment and administrators<lb/>
kept apologizing for it.<lb/>
At the University of Iowa, for<lb/>
example, law school Dean N.<lb/>
William Hines apologized for an<lb/>
anecdote told by federal Judge<lb/>
Gerald Heaney, who related a<lb/>
story to a Jan. 30 campus banquet<lb/>
about a "Negro" defendant<lb/>
dressed in loud clothes and lots of<lb/>
jewelry.<lb/>
The story led some students to<lb/>
walk out of the banquet in protest.<lb/>
Hines apologized in writing to<lb/>
"anyone who was offended by the<lb/>
judge's remarks<lb/>
Heaney, Hines added, has a 22-<lb/>
ycar juidicial record as "a cham-<lb/>
pion of the downtrodden" and a<lb/>
"civil rights activist<lb/>
Univcristy of Maryland Chan-<lb/>
cellor John Slaughter, meanwhile,<lb/>
issued a statement denouncing as<lb/>
"distasteful and invidious" a flier<lb/>
circulated at College Park last<lb/>
semester that offended Arab stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
The anonymously written flier<lb/>
was a fake ad for "Arab Extra<lb/>
Dry and prompted 28 campus<lb/>
groups to petition Slaughter to<lb/>
make a broad anti-discrimination<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
Campuses, in short, University<lb/>
of Michigan official Henry<lb/>
Johnson told a national confer-<lb/>
ence on campus racism at North-<lb/>
ern Illinois Univcristy Feb. 4, "are<lb/>
truly under seige" by racist fliers,<lb/>
graffiti, vandalism and verbal af-<lb/>
fronts.<lb/>
At the University of Pennsylva-<lb/>
nia in Philadelphia, for example,<lb/>
campus police say two white stu-<lb/>
dents and seven of their friends<lb/>
harassed a black dorm reception-<lb/>
ist in late January, and then ran<lb/>
through dorm hallways shouting<lb/>
racial slurs.<lb/>
"But the good thing Johnson<lb/>
told the campus racism confer-<lb/>
ence the same day Penn charged<lb/>
the two students with racial har-<lb/>
assment "is it's forcing us to really<lb/>
come to grips with the fact that we<lb/>
can't continue to do business as<lb/>
usual<lb/>
Added William Hall of the U.S.<lb/>
Dept. of Justice, "we've seen an<lb/>
upsurge in racial problems. There<lb/>
has been a perceptible increase in<lb/>
the number of intensity of racial<lb/>
violence at institutions of higher<lb/>
learning<lb/>
Hall predicted minority stu-<lb/>
dents like those at Massachusetts<lb/>
would continue to protest in ever<lb/>
more dramatic fashion until ad-<lb/>
ministrators provide more pro-<lb/>
grams meeting their needs.<lb/>
College republicans split<lb/>
apart at University of Tx.<lb/>
(CPS) ? As the primary season<lb/>
lurched into high gear, still an-<lb/>
other campus chapter of the Col-<lb/>
lege Republicans (CR) has split<lb/>
apart.<lb/>
Paul Weiss, defeated in a Feb. 2<lb/>
race for the presidency of the<lb/>
Universitv of Texas at El Paso<lb/>
(UTEP) college Rcpulbicans, five<lb/>
days later asked the group that<lb/>
oversees all College Republians<lb/>
activities in Texas to recognize<lb/>
him as leader of the UTEP chap-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
The state CRs, moreover, re-<lb/>
portedly gave him the charter,<lb/>
though Wciss's opponents claim<lb/>
it was because Weiss told it he, not<lb/>
Beverly Shelton, had been duly<lb/>
elected as UTEP's College Repub-<lb/>
licans leader.<lb/>
The acrimonv and strife at<lb/>
UTEP mirror similar controver-<lb/>
sies that have rocked the group?<lb/>
in 1984 a major player in deliver-<lb/>
ing a big student vote for Ronald<lb/>
Reagan ? during the last year,<lb/>
and has left it divided 1ft ome<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
At the top of the organization,<lb/>
national Chairman Stockton<lb/>
Reeves' spring, 1987, campaign<lb/>
against John Hester, now head of<lb/>
the Mississippi Crs, produced<lb/>
divisive charges of bullying,<lb/>
packing conventions with un-<lb/>
qualified delegates, meddling in<lb/>
campus and state chapter affairs<lb/>
and inappropriately trying to<lb/>
align the group with presidential<lb/>
candidate Jack Kemp.<lb/>
Some state groups ? notably in<lb/>
Florida and California ? have<lb/>
split into factions that barely talk<lb/>
to each other.<lb/>
Now campus chapter like<lb/>
UTEP are being disrupted as well:<lb/>
In December, the Univcristy of<lb/>
Missouri chapter Vice President<lb/>
Mike Young resigned under fire<lb/>
after accusing two other CR offi-<lb/>
cers of embezzlement, vote fraud<lb/>
and Nazism.<lb/>
Young said fellow CR Jeff<lb/>
Kcstcr made anti-Semitic remarks<lb/>
and someday hoped to name<lb/>
himself "fuhrer" of a fascist state<lb/>
he wants to create. He produced a<lb/>
Kester notebook outlining such a<lb/>
plan.<lb/>
Kcstcr admitted to writing the<lb/>
outline, adding, "I have made no<lb/>
statements towards any race or<lb/>
religion that I believe to be true<lb/>
Young also accused CR Presi-<lb/>
dent Shelly Robinett of election<lb/>
fraud.<lb/>
He said Robinett, formerly ex-<lb/>
ecutive secretary of the Missouri<lb/>
state CRs, inflated the number of<lb/>
CRs in the state to help Missouri<lb/>
gain extra votes at last June's na-<lb/>
tional convention.<lb/>
National chairman Reeves and<lb/>
UTEP dissident Weiss have been<lb/>
accused of simialr tactics.<lb/>
Robinett and Kester, denying<lb/>
the accusations, proposed im-<lb/>
peaching Young, who resigned.<lb/>
Michigan State's conserva-<lb/>
ti vces have split into two Republi-<lb/>
can groups, the College Republi-<lb/>
cans and the MSU Campus Re-<lb/>
publicans, formed when one CRs<lb/>
were embarrassed by the group's<lb/>
verbal attacks on homosexuals.<lb/>
CR leader Jeff Holland " is a<lb/>
liability for the group complains<lb/>
Campus Republican President<lb/>
David Murley, adding Holland<lb/>
wastesth group's efforts on point-<lb/>
less "liberal bashing<lb/>
Holland agreed his group has<lb/>
been "immature but explained,<lb/>
"we want to be fun-loving, and<lb/>
have fun with our politics<lb/>
UTEP CRs, too, had spent sev-<lb/>
eral meetings during the fall de-<lb/>
bating whether they should be<lb/>
focusing on immediate student<lb/>
issues like education passing<lb/>
resolutions about Central Ameri-<lb/>
can and the Stategic Defense Ini-<lb/>
tiative.<lb/>
But the internal debate festered<lb/>
into something more when Weiss,<lb/>
chapter President Shelton alleges,<lb/>
misrepresented himself to state<lb/>
leaders as head of the UTEP chap-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
"He said he was the president<lb/>
Shelton told the Prospector, the<lb/>
campus paper.<lb/>
In reply, Weiss told the paper,<lb/>
"we're only interested in doing<lb/>
what's right, and Bcv (Shelton)<lb/>
wasn't doing it<lb/>
"You'd better be prepared to<lb/>
deal with them Hall warned the<lb/>
350 officials from campuses<lb/>
around the country, "or be ready<lb/>
to spend a lot of sleepless nights<lb/>
Even before he began to negoti-<lb/>
ate with the 100-some students<lb/>
who occupied the New Africa<lb/>
House at UMass Feb. 11, UMass<lb/>
Chancellor Joseph Duffey ex-<lb/>
pressed his sympathy for the stu-<lb/>
dents and promised not to have<lb/>
any of them arrested.<lb/>
The students were angered by a<lb/>
Feb. 7 incident in which five white<lb/>
students allegedly beat two black<lb/>
students at a party, and by the<lb/>
actions of the campus police that<lb/>
same night, when they rounded<lb/>
up black people for a linup as they<lb/>
searched for a group suspected of<lb/>
harassing UMass women.<lb/>
The students swore they<lb/>
wouldn't leave New Africa<lb/>
House until Duffey agreed to<lb/>
suspend the five students and the<lb/>
police officers involved in the<lb/>
roundup.<lb/>
The students finally ended the<lb/>
sit-in Feb. 16 after agreeing to let<lb/>
the courts review the cases first,<lb/>
but getting Duffey to agree to<lb/>
change student conduct codes to<lb/>
allow him to make racial harass-<lb/>
ment a cause for suspension, to<lb/>
devote more funds to minority<lb/>
programs and recruiting, and to<lb/>
renovate New Africa House.<lb/>
Sometimes, however, the pro-<lb/>
tests don't work.<lb/>
Ohio State University an-<lb/>
nounced it had signed still an-<lb/>
other black high school football<lb/>
player for its team, despite the<lb/>
efforts of the Coalition Against<lb/>
Racism in Colleges and Univer-<lb/>
isties, which on Jan. 8 asked black<lb/>
athletes to boycott OSU.<lb/>
OSU is reluctant, coalition<lb/>
member Charles Ross said, to hire<lb/>
black coaches or faculty members.<lb/>
Nevertheless, OSU announced<lb/>
on Jan. 28 it had signed star run-<lb/>
ning back Buster Howe, and that<lb/>
black athletes Lawrence Funder-<lb/>
burke, Sonny Ray Jones and O.J.<lb/>
McDuffle remain interested in<lb/>
attending the school.<lb/>
Invites you to a<lb/>
Hurricane<lb/>
Party<lb/>
Friday, February 26, 1988<lb/>
Doors open at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Hurricane's Only $1.99<lb/>
Buy any beverage and get a<lb/>
hotdogfor only 25$<lb/>
This weekend the<lb/>
storm is at PB's<lb/>
Private club for members and guest<lb/>
Bob is still missing?<lb/>
MARATHON<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
"Greek Owned and Operated Since 1979"<lb/>
Check Us Out!<lb/>
Wefve Remodeled<lb/>
?Subs<lb/>
?Sandwiches<lb/>
?Greek Dishes<lb/>
?Salads<lb/>
Call Us - Fast Free Delivery<lb/>
"?Delivery Hours<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
4:00-11:00<lb/>
Saturday &amp; Sunday<lb/>
11:00- 11:00<lb/>
752-0326 or<lb/>
752-3753<lb/>
560 Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
V<lb/>
?;<lb/>
"ECU<lb/>
Blacks take over campus<lb/>
building as racism protest<lb/>
(CPS) ? About 125 black stu-<lb/>
dents at the University of Massa-<lb/>
chusetts at Amherst took over a<lb/>
campus building Feb. 12 to de-<lb/>
mand police prosecute five white<lb/>
students who allegedly attacked<lb/>
two black students at a dorm<lb/>
party.<lb/>
Racial conflicts ? and more<lb/>
insistent demands by minority<lb/>
students to stop them ? have<lb/>
plagued scores of campuses dur-<lb/>
ing the last two school years.<lb/>
They seem to have escalated<lb/>
again since the start of the current<lb/>
term.<lb/>
Black students at Providence<lb/>
College in Rhode Island, for ex-<lb/>
ample, complained in late Janu-<lb/>
ary that affirmative action officer<lb/>
Rev. Joseph Lennon didn't re-<lb/>
spond well when they told him a<lb/>
black student had left school after<lb/>
being raped, and that white male<lb/>
students had verbally harassed<lb/>
other black women students.<lb/>
Lennon resigned Feb. 5, main-<lb/>
taining the complaints "had no<lb/>
serious foundation" and that he<lb/>
found the school's Afro-Ameri-<lb/>
can Society's charges he's biased<lb/>
"profoundly offensive<lb/>
At the University of California-<lb/>
Irvine the same day, black student<lb/>
Shawn Massey threatened white<lb/>
Kappa Sigma fraternity members<lb/>
with "retribution" if they didn't<lb/>
halt an annual contest in which<lb/>
white students used blackface<lb/>
makup and lip-synched to black<lb/>
singing groups' songs.<lb/>
"We've asked you in the past to<lb/>
stop doing these kinds of things<lb/>
Massey said at a special meeting<lb/>
called to discuss the issue, "now<lb/>
we're telling you to do it. If not,<lb/>
Two pass black voting test<lb/>
(CPS) ? Only two of 109 Uni<lb/>
versity of Arizona students<lb/>
passed a 1962 literacy test Missis-<lb/>
sippi blacks were required to<lb/>
complete perfectly if they were to<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
The Arizona Black Student<lb/>
Association asked the students to<lb/>
take the test during a week-long<lb/>
celebration of Martin Luther<lb/>
King's birthday to demonstrate<lb/>
how Jim Crow laws were used to<lb/>
keep blacks disenfranchised.<lb/>
"If college students today ? 25<lb/>
years later ? can't pass, it seems<lb/>
pretty impossible to me that non-<lb/>
college educated blacks could<lb/>
pass said Peter Raid of the<lb/>
Arizona Black Student Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Mississippi's "Negro Voting<lb/>
Requirements" asked prospec-<lb/>
tive voters to answer essay ques-<lb/>
tions about a reprinted passage<lb/>
from the Mississippi constitution.<lb/>
In order to vote, blacks needed to<lb/>
answer the questions perfectly.<lb/>
Spelling and content errors dis-<lb/>
qualified blacks from voting, and<lb/>
those who did not receive a per-<lb/>
fect score were deemed illiterate.<lb/>
The Arizona students who took<lb/>
the test were held to the same<lb/>
standards.<lb/>
Since Mississippi officials<lb/>
graded the essays in a subjective<lb/>
fashion, few blacks were deemed<lb/>
literate and extended voting priv-<lb/>
iligcs.<lb/>
there will be retribution<lb/>
Such threats ? which seem to<lb/>
be a new element of the escalation<lb/>
for racial tensions?also surfaced<lb/>
last fall at Columbia, which has<lb/>
been rocked by racial tensions in<lb/>
recent years. "If you engage in<lb/>
racist activities warned<lb/>
Tanaquil Jones of the Concerned<lb/>
Black Students of Columbia,<lb/>
"you're gonna have to deal with<lb/>
the justice of the streets<lb/>
The responses have been imme-<lb/>
diate. At Cal-Irvine, Kappa Sigma<lb/>
voted to cancel the contest. Prio-<lb/>
vidence President Rev. John F.<lb/>
Cunningham promised to hire<lb/>
more minority faculty members.<lb/>
University of Wisconsin-Madi-<lb/>
son administrators, responding to<lb/>
a fall, 1987, fight between a black<lb/>
and a white student, on Feb. 9<lb/>
unveiled a $4.7 million, three-year<lb/>
plan to recruit more minority stu-<lb/>
dents, create a board to mediate<lb/>
racial conflicts and hire black fac-<lb/>
ulty members.<lb/>
At UMass-Amherst, Chancellor<lb/>
Joseph Duffey quickly tried to<lb/>
meet with the 125 students occu-<lb/>
pying New Africa House on the<lb/>
campus, but was turned away by<lb/>
the students.<lb/>
Duffey replied with a promise<lb/>
to start new anti-racism programs<lb/>
and a reassurance he'd take no<lb/>
reprisals against the occupiers.<lb/>
A Northampton, Mass court<lb/>
will decide Feb. 24 if there is<lb/>
enough evidence to charge six<lb/>
men ? 5 UMass students and a<lb/>
nonstudent ? with assault in<lb/>
connection with the Feb. 7 inci-<lb/>
dent in which the six allegedly<lb/>
attacked two black and one white<lb/>
students as they left a party.<lb/>
32 aerobic workouts a week.<lb/>
If you have a hectice schedule, don't<lb/>
worry, because at The Spa, there<lb/>
are aerobic classes going on all the<lb/>
time. With 32 aerobic workouts a<lb/>
week, you can go to aerobics when<lb/>
it's convenient for you, so you won't<lb/>
have to plan your day around some-<lb/>
one else's schedule. We have also<lb/>
implimented low impact aerobics.<lb/>
These are just some of the reasons<lb/>
The Spa is such a popular health<lb/>
club.<lb/>
And there's much more than aero-<lb/>
bics at The Spa.<lb/>
The Spa offers you state-of-the-art<lb/>
Dynacam exercise equipment, exer-<lb/>
cise bicycles, free weights and quali-<lb/>
fied instructors on hand at all times<lb/>
to help you with your fitness plan.<lb/>
Plus, there are Greenville's largest<lb/>
sauna and steam rooms, a hot<lb/>
whirlpool mineral bath and our<lb/>
tanning bed.<lb/>
Just drop by The Spa in South<lb/>
Park Shopping Center, next to<lb/>
Food Lion, for a tour of the facili-<lb/>
ties, and see why we're Greenville's<lb/>
best health club value.<lb/>
Get an early start on your<lb/>
Spring Break Tan with a<lb/>
Wolff<lb/>
Suntanning<lb/>
System<lb/>
- the world's 1 Tanning Beds.<lb/>
A Package Deal For Only<lb/>
$34.95<lb/>
I Green<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
best health club value.<lb/>
SOUTH PARK SilOIMMNC. CKNTKK<lb/>
GkfcKNVlLLE 7567991<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0004"/><lb/>
?f?? iEaHt (Earnlfman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Daniel Mauser. cMwMHr<lb/>
CLAY DEANHARDT, StmmfmtEM<lb/>
James F.J. McKee. ommnf Arrant<lb/>
TIM Chandler, ? em<lb/>
John Carter. f?m ??<lb/>
Michelle England.z- m.<lb/>
Debbie Stevens<lb/>
Jeff Farmer.? m<lb/>
Tom furr,c?i?w? Mapp<lb/>
Mike Upchurch, m n<lb/>
Jchln; w. Medun. .c<lb/>
Mac Clark,<lb/>
rcrojr .? . -?<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
The greeks<lb/>
Just a group, like others<lb/>
A work of art by David Rawlins on<lb/>
display in Mendenhall has brought<lb/>
an old question back to the forefront<lb/>
for debate: What place, if any, does<lb/>
the greek system have at a univer-<lb/>
si ty?<lb/>
The argument has been going on<lb/>
for vears, with non-greeks arguing<lb/>
that greeks are immature and irre-<lb/>
sponsible, while greeks point out<lb/>
the better points of fraternity and<lb/>
sorority life.<lb/>
There has been evidence to sup-<lb/>
port both sides. Cases oi hazing and<lb/>
vandalism are cited against the<lb/>
greeks, while the system also gives<lb/>
thousands to charities each year.<lb/>
The answer is relatively simple. Of<lb/>
course the greeks have a place on<lb/>
campus, as do all other student<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
Like any other campus group, the<lb/>
greek system has its good points and<lb/>
its bad points. Recent letters have<lb/>
emphasized both. The point is that<lb/>
the greek system is a student group,<lb/>
like hundreds oi others on universi-<lb/>
ties across the country, though it<lb/>
mav have more members than most<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
Many national leaders have<lb/>
sprung from the greek system. It<lb/>
provides a setting for friends to be<lb/>
made, just like other groups do. It<lb/>
also serves as a support system for<lb/>
many oi its members, operating as a<lb/>
"home away from home<lb/>
Undoubtedly there are some prob-<lb/>
lems with the system and with some<lb/>
of its members, as there are with life<lb/>
in general. However, successful<lb/>
s teps have been taken in recent years<lb/>
to end manv oi the re-occuring prob-<lb/>
lems such as hazing and violence.<lb/>
It is unwise for a university to be<lb/>
intolerant oi any student group.<lb/>
That leads to more problems than<lb/>
solutions. There will always be<lb/>
those who support the greek system<lb/>
and those who don't support it, but<lb/>
the best world is one where both<lb/>
sides can be friends.<lb/>
Rawlins' work is a well done work<lb/>
of art. The fact that it has raised so<lb/>
manv temperatures and emotions is<lb/>
testimony to that. While the point of<lb/>
the work may be carried to far (there<lb/>
are underlying images of drugs,<lb/>
date rape and homosexuality that<lb/>
pervade the work), Rawlins defi-<lb/>
nitely made his point in a dramatic<lb/>
fashion.<lb/>
Overgeneralizations by both<lb/>
sides, however, get the university<lb/>
nowhere. Instead, both greeks and<lb/>
non-greeks should work together to<lb/>
make the educational experience the<lb/>
best it can be for all involved.<lb/>
S7s?<lb/>
Greek system not all roses<lb/>
Vandalism<lb/>
It has no place at ECU<lb/>
Freedom of speech is something<lb/>
newspaper people value highly. It is<lb/>
a right guaranteed to all people by<lb/>
the US Constitution. It is a right<lb/>
which many have died for, and<lb/>
which others still sacrifice for.<lb/>
The grafiti someone recently<lb/>
sprayed on the AFROTC sign out-<lb/>
side of the Wright Annex is not an<lb/>
expression of that freedom.<lb/>
There are many ways to express a<lb/>
political point of view in a free soci-<lb/>
ety. You are reading one. Letters to<lb/>
the editor are another. Vandalism is<lb/>
not an acceptable alternative to ei-<lb/>
ther.<lb/>
If the person who committed this<lb/>
vandalism wanted to make a state-<lb/>
ment in art about the AFROTC, per-<lb/>
haps he or she should have done so<lb/>
and had it displayed in the Politicus<lb/>
show. By choosing illegal and un-<lb/>
sightly methods, the spraypainter<lb/>
has done little except show his or her<lb/>
ignorance and disrespect for the<lb/>
work of others.<lb/>
While we all have the right to fell<lb/>
any way we want about the AF-<lb/>
ROTC or any other group, we must<lb/>
chose acceptable ways to display<lb/>
that opinion. Vandalism is not one<lb/>
of them.<lb/>
CRs offer reward for info.<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
I don't know what has happened to<lb/>
the class and values of, I am sure a<lb/>
minority of our students. Monday as<lb/>
I walked by the Air Force ROTC of-<lb/>
fice, I noticed a Nazi Swastika had<lb/>
been painted on Air Force sign and<lb/>
sidewalk emblem. This saddens me to<lb/>
think that some person or group on<lb/>
this campus hasn't any respect or<lb/>
pride for those who defend this great<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
We the College Republicans want<lb/>
the Air Force ROTC to know that we<lb/>
stand behind and are very proud of<lb/>
them. The United States has the best<lb/>
Air Force and other military units in<lb/>
the world. I am sure that Ihe majority<lb/>
of this campus has this view also.<lb/>
We are offering a $50.00 reward for<lb/>
information leading to the arrest of<lb/>
this person or group. Please contact<lb/>
the ECU Campus police with any<lb/>
information you have. Once this per-<lb/>
son has been caught, we will be more<lb/>
than happy to reward you.<lb/>
Without our arm forces this coun-<lb/>
try and the world would have seen a<lb/>
lot more of these evil nazi symbols.<lb/>
Thank God for the United States<lb/>
Armed Forces, you keep us free!<lb/>
Mathew Clarke<lb/>
Bobby R. Hall Jr.<lb/>
College Republicans<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
My reaction to the editorial by Bob<lb/>
Schultz in defense of the greek system<lb/>
here at ECU was one oi boredom with<lb/>
an underlying touch of amusement.<lb/>
Schultz spends line after line trying to<lb/>
make up for the fact that many people<lb/>
hold the opinion that the greek sys-<lb/>
tem has many "serious flaws He<lb/>
attributed the flaws, it any, to the lack<lb/>
of support from both the faculty and<lb/>
the non-greek students on campus.<lb/>
Obviously, Schultz uses his first<lb/>
amendment rights as a vehicle for<lb/>
testing the tolerance level of those<lb/>
who read editorials in hopes of find-<lb/>
ing something that may enlighten<lb/>
them. Instead they are met with noth-<lb/>
ing more than a long winded sermon<lb/>
and a lot of propaganda.<lb/>
First oi all, I know for a fact that the<lb/>
administration at ECU does more<lb/>
than their share in supporting the<lb/>
Greek system and I do mean more<lb/>
than their share. They have appointed<lb/>
personnel whose jobs are designed<lb/>
especially for facilitating Greek life,<lb/>
and these people put a lot of time and<lb/>
effort into doing just that, which in the<lb/>
first;place is subordinate to the main<lb/>
objective of a college which is provid-<lb/>
ing education. Second, the non-greek<lb/>
support has increased visibly since 1<lb/>
have been at ECU. The East Carolin-<lb/>
ian has covered more greek issues this<lb/>
year in order to balance out interests<lb/>
on campus and I do believe that the<lb/>
rest of the student body has done a<lb/>
very good job tolerating the mass<lb/>
amount of repititous "I guess you had<lb/>
to be there" messages that plague the<lb/>
personals each week.<lb/>
I am not "Anti-Greek I even cover<lb/>
greek events for the newspaper from<lb/>
time to time. I must say however that<lb/>
Schultz's article made me think a<lb/>
little. I mean the references to "pride"<lb/>
and "brotherhood" were very touch-<lb/>
ing, Bob, but you seem to have some<lb/>
priorities mixed up and I quote, "It<lb/>
has been said before that it is not the<lb/>
parties, the house, the badge, emblem<lb/>
or songs that make up a fraternity. It is<lb/>
the unseen things ? friendship,<lb/>
brotherhood, character, good citizen-<lb/>
ship, honor, trust, ideals ? these<lb/>
make the fraternity and the man<lb/>
Sounds like the Boy Scouts of<lb/>
America to me.<lb/>
And why do you assume that these<lb/>
are the "unseen" aspects of the greek<lb/>
system? You tell me.<lb/>
If these are the valued characteris-<lb/>
tics then do I qualify? I have brothers<lb/>
also, two to be exact. It's neat ? we<lb/>
even have the same mother. I con-<lb/>
sider myself to have character, and<lb/>
ideals, and the mayor once told me<lb/>
that I was a good citizen in the 5th<lb/>
grade when I participated in the<lb/>
"Let's Keep America Clean" day. So<lb/>
what makes us different? I have a<lb/>
shirt that has my named slapped<lb/>
across the chest, but it is in letters<lb/>
within the English alphabet and I<lb/>
only own one. Could that be it?<lb/>
Schultz also spoke of the fact that<lb/>
fraternities provide "fellowship" and<lb/>
encourage the building of "strong<lb/>
morals and beliefs Personally, I<lb/>
can't recall the last time I had to go<lb/>
through a screening process to have<lb/>
fellowship, and I don't know how I<lb/>
did it, but I did manage to make a few<lb/>
friends out of the 14,000 students on<lb/>
campus. And call me crazy, but I<lb/>
would also like to believe as well as<lb/>
compliment my upbringing, that I<lb/>
brought my own set of morals and<lb/>
beliefs with me when I came to col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
Am I guilty of "generalizing" the<lb/>
greeks? No Bob, you don't need my<lb/>
help for that. I am not striking down<lb/>
the system as a whole, either. I write<lb/>
this with knowledge of the positive<lb/>
aspects that the greek system has<lb/>
which we can all read in Mr. Schultz's<lb/>
article. I am only representing one of<lb/>
manv students with a similiar unified<lb/>
spirit like Schultz only of a differing<lb/>
yet valid point of view.<lb/>
Maybe the system isn't as bad as<lb/>
some say it is. You are right, Mr.<lb/>
Schultz, luckily opinion can't be for-<lb/>
mulated into fact. But greek or not,<lb/>
nothing looks that gixvi. I don't care<lb/>
how much sugar you put on it. Sorry,<lb/>
no sale.<lb/>
Toni Page<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Journ.Pol. Sci.<lb/>
On the Greeks<lb/>
To the eviitor:<lb/>
In response to Bob Schultz.<lb/>
I guess David Rawlins' relief sculp-<lb/>
ture hit the mark a little too hard. Bob,<lb/>
Bob, Bob. Please don't preach matur-<lb/>
ity until you grow up and accept the<lb/>
responsibility for your flaws and<lb/>
shortcomings, rather than attempting<lb/>
to pass them off as the fault of others.<lb/>
I had a good chuckle reading your<lb/>
defense of the greek system at ECU.<lb/>
But vour arguments really are quite<lb/>
weak. Of course there are merits to the<lb/>
svstem; the fundraising and the vol-<lb/>
unteer work is commendable. (Did<lb/>
you know that lots of non greek or-<lb/>
ganizations raise just as much money<lb/>
and provide just as many leadership<lb/>
opportunities' In the present system<lb/>
the bad points f Uwcigh the good.<lb/>
The collectivt attitudes of some of<lb/>
these fraternities and sororities are<lb/>
incredible. No, Bob, I don't think the<lb/>
ostracization takes place within the<lb/>
fraternity, but rather in relation to<lb/>
those outside of the organization.<lb/>
What gives you the right, as a frater-<lb/>
nity brother or sorority sister, to look<lb/>
down on those individuals who have<lb/>
enough self-esteem and strength to<lb/>
pick their own friends?<lb/>
A friend and 1 were helping a<lb/>
Kappa Sigma pledge pick out an out-<lb/>
fit for a Kappa SigTri Sig social. Two<lb/>
of the "brothers" were present. One<lb/>
smiled, said hello and asked if we<lb/>
were Tri Sigs. The instant we said<lb/>
"no the boy pointedly turned away<lb/>
and began talking to his "friend<lb/>
Please. What could possibly make<lb/>
you think you are better than anyone<lb/>
else? I know I am intelligent, person-<lb/>
able, ambitious, and have just as<lb/>
many friends (for free!) as any greek I<lb/>
am acquainted with.<lb/>
Morals, Bob, honor? Keeping tests<lb/>
on file doesn't help anyone leam.<lb/>
(Please explain how this will help<lb/>
"prepare the greek student for life<lb/>
after college when they might actu-<lb/>
ally have to learn information and<lb/>
stand alone). Hazing (however mild)<lb/>
is demoralizing and degrading.<lb/>
Being pressured to stand and sing<lb/>
childish songs is simply laughable.<lb/>
It's one thing for a group like the<lb/>
rugby team to sing because they love<lb/>
it (and they do it so well!), and another<lb/>
thing entirely for a bunch of girls to<lb/>
try to pretend that they're having a<lb/>
swell time standing in public chant-<lb/>
ing about their sorority.<lb/>
There are exceptions; two huge<lb/>
ones that leap to mind are the TKEs<lb/>
and the Sig Eps. These fraternities arc<lb/>
outstanding in that they accept a di-<lb/>
verse group of individuals who<lb/>
(amazing and appalling to the major-<lb/>
ity of frats) are allowed to retain their<lb/>
individuality within the organiza-<lb/>
tion. Here you don't see an overabun-<lb/>
dance of the classic Biff and Buff<lb/>
bucks, duckheads, RayBans, hair-<lb/>
bows, bobs, etc. (dull, dull, dull). Here<lb/>
most of the guys will date and have<lb/>
friendships within and. outside of the<lb/>
greek system. (Imagine!)<lb/>
I think the majority of nongreeks<lb/>
should command as much, if not<lb/>
more respect than most greeks<lb/>
are individuals who can stand<lb/>
say "I don't want to without feai<lb/>
rejection.<lb/>
joining a fraternity or sororit) is<lb/>
bad. Bv no means 1 was a little sish -<lb/>
which put me on the greek nor<lb/>
border, so to speak. And 1 have beer<lb/>
10 manv a greek parts and bad a :<lb/>
However, you guys need to u<lb/>
that it is a decision, lust a remaimr<lb/>
a nongreck is a decision. Neither is<lb/>
better, for heaven's sake It is infui<lb/>
mg to see this cry ot "honor ideals<lb/>
brotherhood" when the adotosc.<lb/>
condescension towards the<lb/>
greek world" is so blatant. You cai<lb/>
look for support with this kind<lb/>
behavior.<lb/>
Please don't waste time s i<lb/>
pointless rebuttals or getting angn a<lb/>
the trxith; ihmk about changing you<lb/>
attitude instead 1 think tor you :<lb/>
merit support there needs to he<lb/>
tual respect, mutual acceptance, ai<lb/>
mutual understanding. Think abou<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Missy White<lb/>
junior 1<lb/>
Graffiti artist<lb/>
needs to make a<lb/>
public apology<lb/>
To the editor<lb/>
I am writing in response to the gi<lb/>
fiti "artist" who decorated the A<lb/>
Force ROTC sign and logo outside c<lb/>
their offices this past weekend. Since<lb/>
the "artist" decided to equate ou<lb/>
American ROTC with Nanism<lb/>
would like to enlighten them with<lb/>
few facts. More specifically, I would<lb/>
like to compare ROTC with Nazi<lb/>
"military" units.<lb/>
First of all the United States RON<lb/>
program is designed to recruit out<lb/>
standing male and female students<lb/>
for duty as an officer in the militan<lb/>
These students are helped through<lb/>
the college of their choice in order un<lb/>
receive a degree of their choice, rhese<lb/>
students, upon graduation, become<lb/>
officers in the United States militan<lb/>
The military of the United State-<lb/>
used to protect our nation from for-<lb/>
eign interests that would seek to<lb/>
undermine our rights as a nation, rhe<lb/>
people who serve in our ROTC arc a<lb/>
outstanding elite.<lb/>
The comparable "elite" in Nazi<lb/>
Germany was the S.S. units. The Na<lb/>
military body recruited theoutstand<lb/>
ing blond-haired, blue-eyed males<lb/>
from Hitler Youth and indoctrined<lb/>
them with Nazi racial and world<lb/>
views. After this indoctrination was<lb/>
deemed complete, these S.S. men, a<lb/>
opposed to protecting citizens, en<lb/>
gaged in imprisoning, torturing and<lb/>
cold bloodedly murdering many in<lb/>
nocent citizens of Gcrmanv and for-<lb/>
eign lands. Space does not allow me to<lb/>
go into the many horrors inflicted<lb/>
upon Europe by this Nazi "elite<lb/>
It should be obvious now to anyone<lb/>
who can read that the graffiti "artist<lb/>
which expressed himself this week<lb/>
end on the Air Force sign and logo<lb/>
rather than demonstrating antimili<lb/>
tarism, instead expressed his extreme<lb/>
ignorance and slandered the law<lb/>
makers of the United States and<lb/>
members of the ROTC with this asso<lb/>
ciation. If the "artist" reads this letter<lb/>
I sincerely hope you will publicly<lb/>
apologize for your action. Given the<lb/>
ignorance you have displayed, how-<lb/>
ever, I really doubt you can read.<lb/>
Robert Landry<lb/>
Senior!<lb/>
History<lb/>
Conse<lb/>
To the editor<lb/>
Bern McCrad) never ceases<lb/>
amaze me' His Feb lt? lett<lb/>
contra vote correct' I IS SO<lb/>
of liberal error, 1 Hard))<lb/>
where to begin<lb/>
McCrady's claims that I<lb/>
is someho responsible tor Co<lb/>
munist expansion and t<lb/>
are incredible absurdities a<lb/>
dangerous ami freedom K<lb/>
propaganda statements with<lb/>
basis in reaht n hatsoe er<lb/>
I tind it revealing that McCn<lb/>
refuses to comment on ?<lb/>
rrom David Horowitz<lb/>
Marit Horowitz knows mi<lb/>
about what s realh c<lb/>
the world with respect to Co<lb/>
nui n i st e pa nsio n thLir<lb/>
Bern McCradys put<lb/>
YhBecause I tz wc<lb/>
with Communists foi<lb/>
believing the same lies n<lb/>
McCrady believes in and<lb/>
nouncing the anti-O<lb/>
consen ative arnings<lb/>
Communism iut like McCn<lb/>
does tocLn I le know <lb/>
than you and all ot vour b <lb/>
put together Bern Open<lb/>
?sed mind tor a fe <lb/>
and road on<lb/>
Bern: We have rucked o<lb/>
China. I S polic) cou<lb/>
forced this huge nation into<lb/>
Sov iet camp but did not Ch<lb/>
is still Communist brutal .<lb/>
oppressive, whether oi<lb/>
lies on Soviet aid Bern c<lb/>
murder of 70 rr 1<lb/>
people under Chinese<lb/>
like Mao Tse-Tung luck)<lb/>
nonsense!<lb/>
Pern I S polic) forced G<lb/>
into the So iet camp Increc<lb/>
wrong. Horowitz<lb/>
v oars ago Fidel w a a re olutf<lb/>
arv hero to us on the New<lb/>
When Fidel spoke his w<lb/>
were revolutionary musk<lb/>
oars: Freedom with bread I<lb/>
without terror A re<lb/>
neither red nor Mack but Cu<lb/>
olive-green And o in V<lb/>
today: Not Soviet Comm<lb/>
but Nkraraguan sandirusrr<lb/>
the formula Fidel s imitators<lb/>
claim <lb/>
"All of the tine gestures<lb/>
words with which Fidel sed<lb/>
us and won our support<lb/>
open Marxism, the socialist<lb/>
manism. the independents<lb/>
? turned out to be calculated <lb/>
Even as he proclaimed his col.<lb/>
beolive-green. he w asplanni<lb/>
make his revolution Moscow -I<lb/>
"So cvnical was Fidel's stral<lb/>
that at the time und even to<lb/>
as McCrady's letter reveals) it!<lb/>
difficult for manv to comprehj<lb/>
One bv one Fidel began remoi<lb/>
his own comrades from the<lb/>
lutionarv regime and replal<lb/>
them with Soviet-Cuban G<lb/>
munists <lb/>
"Although Fidel removed<lb/>
ciahsts and the Sandinistas<lb/>
moved democrats, the pattei<lb/>
betrayal has been the same<lb/>
"To gain power, both Fidel<lb/>
later the Sandinistas coneq<lb/>
their true intention (a o ic<lb/>
behind a revolutionary he u?<lb/>
rahst democracy). To consoq<lb/>
power they fashioned a secoi<lb/>
(democracy, but only withu<lb/>
revolution), and those whi<lb/>
lieved in the first he werj<lb/>
moved. At the end ot the prj<lb/>
there will beno democracy a<lb/>
To believe in the revolutuj<lb/>
dream is the tragedy ot its<lb/>
porters; to exploit the dream j<lb/>
talent oi dictators<lb/>
Bern: "Continued military)<lb/>
sure combined with a ret us<lb/>
normalize relations has foro<lb/>
Sandinistas to lean dose<lb/>
closer to the Kremlin lncrej<lb/>
wrong. The Soviets were<lb/>
ning to establish a revolutu<lb/>
base in Nicaragua even<lb/>
I Castro's Cuban rcvolutiot<lb/>
were engaged in a massiv el<lb/>
tary build-up in Nicaragua'<lb/>
the Contras even existed c<lb/>
U.S. officially cut ofl aid<lb/>
Sandinistas<lb/>
Horowitz: "In 1957,<lb/>
Fonseca, the founding tatl<lb/>
the Sandinista Front, visit<lb/>
Soviet Union To Fonsecaj<lb/>
Borge and his other comrad<lb/>
Soviet monstrosity was<lb/>
revolutionary dream com<lb/>
In his pamphlet A Nicaragj<lb/>
Moscow, Fonseca procW<lb/>
Soviet Communism his moj<lb/>
Latin America's future.<lb/>
-The vision of a Soviet Ai<lb/>
is now being realized in<lb/>
gua. The commandante dii<lb/>
ate, the army, and the secret<lb/>
are already mirrors of tr<lb/>
Slate not only structuraj<lb/>
in their personnel, trail<lb/>
often manned by agents I<lb/>
Soviet axis<lb/>
Before making wildly<lb/>
? <lb/>
V 4 M?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0005"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 25,1988<lb/>
A-<lb/>
J<lb/>
'EttKEX'Z<lb/>
K<lb/>
11 rose<lb/>
nan most greeks. Thes<lb/>
duals who car. stand and<lb/>
a ithout tear o<lb/>
itcrnih rityisnot<lb/>
mean 1 was a little sister<lb/>
the greek nongreek<lb/>
St I ik. And 1 have beer<lb/>
greek part and I id a blast<lb/>
 ivs need to realize<lb/>
remaining<lb/>
lecision. Neither is<lb/>
c - - sake. Itisinfuriat-<lb/>
this cry of "honor, ideals<lb/>
ither when the adolescen<lb/>
n towards the "non-<lb/>
s so blatant. You carmo<lb/>
k for s  with this kind i<lb/>
time writing<lb/>
ss rebuttals or getting angry at<lb/>
h think about changing your<lb/>
? instead. I think for you U<lb/>
I there needs to be mu<lb/>
:t. mutual acceptance, and<lb/>
ltual understanding. Think aboir.<lb/>
Missy White<lb/>
junior<lb/>
Graffiti artist<lb/>
needs to make a<lb/>
public apology<lb/>
ie e<lb/>
ditor:<lb/>
1 am writing in response to thegraf-<lb/>
artist" who decorated the Air<lb/>
e ROTC sign and logo outside oi<lb/>
- this past weekend. Sine,<lb/>
decided to equate our<lb/>
American ROTC with Naziism, 1<lb/>
would like to enlighten them with a<lb/>
It tacts. More specifically, 1 would<lb/>
: to compare ROTC with Nazi<lb/>
'military" units.<lb/>
First o all the United States ROTC<lb/>
Iprogram is designed to recruit out-<lb/>
standing male and female students<lb/>
- an officer in the military<lb/>
I se students are helped through<lb/>
the college of their choice in order to<lb/>
receive a degree of their choice. These<lb/>
dents, upon graduation, become<lb/>
ers in the United States military.<lb/>
The militarv of the United States is<lb/>
I to protect our nation from for-<lb/>
mterests that would seek to<lb/>
.ermine our rights as a nation. The<lb/>
people who serve in our ROTC are an<lb/>
outstanding elite.<lb/>
The comparable "elite" in Nazi<lb/>
Germany was the SS. units. The Nazi<lb/>
military bodv recruited the outstand-<lb/>
.ng blond-haired, blue-eyed males<lb/>
from Hitler Youth and indoctrincd<lb/>
them with Nazi racial and world<lb/>
views. After this indoctrination was<lb/>
deemed complete, these S.S. men, as<lb/>
opposed to protecting citizens, en-<lb/>
gaged in imprisoning, torturing and<lb/>
cold bloodedly murdering many in-<lb/>
nocent citizens of Germanv and for-<lb/>
eign lands. Spacedoes not allow me to<lb/>
go into the many horrors inflicted<lb/>
upon Europe by this Nazi "elite<lb/>
It should be obvious now to anyone<lb/>
who can read that the graffiti "artist"<lb/>
which expressed himself this week-<lb/>
end on the Air Force sign and logo,<lb/>
rather than demonstrating antimili-<lb/>
tarism, instead expressed his extreme<lb/>
ignorance and slandered the law-<lb/>
makers of the United States and<lb/>
members of the ROTC with this asso4<lb/>
ciation. If the "artist" reads this letter<lb/>
I sincerely hope you will publicly<lb/>
apologize for your action. Given th<lb/>
ignorance you have displayed, how<lb/>
ever, I really doubt you can read.<lb/>
Robert Landi<lb/>
SenioJ<lb/>
Histon<lb/>
Conservatives respond to Bern<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Bern McCrady never ceases to<lb/>
amaze me! His Feb. 16 letter<lb/>
("Contra vote correct") was so full<lb/>
of liberal error, 1 hardly know<lb/>
where to begin.<lb/>
McCrady's claims that the U.S.<lb/>
is somehow responsible for Com-<lb/>
munist expansion and oppression<lb/>
arc incredible absurdities and<lb/>
dangerous anti-freedom Marxist<lb/>
propaganda statements with no<lb/>
basis in reality whatsoever.<lb/>
I find it revealing that McCrady<lb/>
refuses to comment on my quotes<lb/>
from David Horowitz, former<lb/>
Marxist. Horowitz knows more<lb/>
about what's really going on in<lb/>
Sandinistas, even after key<lb/>
Sandinista defector Miranda<lb/>
showed they can't be trusted,<lb/>
"intelligent" ? that is insane!<lb/>
Point made. Now, McCrady<lb/>
says that Sturz cannot be taken<lb/>
Pat<lb/>
th<lb/>
ous statements, Bern, I suggest reforms. And yet, Gorbachev is<lb/>
you get your facts straight. I know hailed and Botha is savaged in our<lb/>
a Nicaraguan-born local man liberal press!<lb/>
who can help you do so. The sanctions which our Con-<lb/>
gress imposed against S. Africa<lb/>
Justin Sturz over President Reagan's veto<lb/>
Junior have not in any way been a factor seriously because he is a I'at i<lb/>
English in Botha's drive to democratize Robertson supporter. Two things<lb/>
his government. Sanctions have should be noted:<lb/>
hurt the S. African government 1- People supporting every<lb/>
very little if any, but they have Republican candidate share<lb/>
hurt the S. African government Sturz's pro-freedom views. The<lb/>
very little if any, but they have Washington Post, the New York<lb/>
hurt S. African blacks a lot by Times, the Boston Globe, the<lb/>
depriving them of their jobs. Miami Herald, U.S. News and<lb/>
One result of sanctions is that World Report ? all have run pro-<lb/>
Africa, Picter W. Botha, clasped capitalism and free enterprise Contra editorials recently, at the<lb/>
the hand of black mayor Essu have fallen into disrepute among very least admitting that the Con-<lb/>
 ? H<lb/>
LOW COST<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to 18 weeks at additional coat. Pregnancy<lb/>
Test, Birth Control, and Problem Pregnancy Counseling, For<lb/>
further information, call 832-0535 (toll free number 1-800-<lb/>
532-5584) between 9 a jtl and S p.m. weekday's. General anes-<lb/>
thesia available.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
South Africa<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In June of 1987, more than 2,000<lb/>
black South Africans in Sharpe-<lb/>
villc chanted, "Botha, Botha,<lb/>
Botha The State President of S.<lb/>
A<lb/>
LEADING EDGE<lb/>
Model D<lb/>
Complete System<lb/>
with Printer<lb/>
$1295<lb/>
e world with respect to Com- Mahlatsi and the two beaming many black S. Africans. The fail- tras and nothing else forced the<lb/>
munist expansion than a hundred men raised their joined hands into<lb/>
the air as the thousands of blacks<lb/>
thundered: "BothaMahlatsi,<lb/>
BothaMahlatsi<lb/>
This was in Sharpeville, re-<lb/>
member, once the scene of bloody<lb/>
Bern McCradys put together<lb/>
Why? Because Horowitz worked<lb/>
with Communists for decades,<lb/>
believing the same lies that<lb/>
McCrady believes in and de-<lb/>
nouncing the anti-Communist<lb/>
conservative warnings about<lb/>
ure of American sanctions to Sandinstas tc dke the few con-<lb/>
change the S. African government cessions they reluctantly made,<lb/>
is being used by the Communists The interesting thing is that all<lb/>
to tell blacks that only commu- of these newspapers are run by<lb/>
nism will deliver them: that capi- loberals, and even they, some<lb/>
talists cannot be trusted, that the against Contra aid until recently,<lb/>
confrontations between police Americans arrived, stayed only to have finally seen the truth about<lb/>
and radicalized blacks. No more.<lb/>
Communism just like McCrady But you didn't carry it in London,<lb/>
does today. He knows a lot more Nor had ABC, NBC, CNN or<lb/>
?han you and all of your buddies anyone else in our country broad-<lb/>
put together, Bern. Open your cast earlier tumultuous reception<lb/>
closed mind for a few minutes of the state prcsidentsby 3 million<lb/>
exploit, and left under pressure. Nicaragua. But there's still<lb/>
Thus, sanctions have made S. enough ignorant liberals in the<lb/>
Africa ripe for communist revolu- House to defeat Contra aid, even<lb/>
tion and overthrow: they have when so many even die-hard lib-<lb/>
also made life miserable for the erals are waking up.<lb/>
and read on.<lb/>
Bern: "We have lucked out in<lb/>
China. U.S. policy could have<lb/>
forced this huge nation into the<lb/>
Soviet camp, but did not China<lb/>
black Christians in the Transvaal<lb/>
town of Moria.<lb/>
No, the average person never<lb/>
sees the truth about South Africa<lb/>
because the truth about the situ-<lb/>
millions of S. African blacks who<lb/>
had jobs with American firms.<lb/>
Sanctions against South Africa<lb/>
have been a total and inhumane<lb/>
failure for the well-meaning pro-<lb/>
is still Communist, brutal, and ation in that country doesn't qual<lb/>
oppressive, whether or not it re- ify as news.<lb/>
2- A letter written by an ameri-<lb/>
can-bashing radical liberal who '<lb/>
trusts in the word of Communists;<lb/>
who calls insanity "common-<lb/>
sense" and "intelligence who<lb/>
resorts to childish and hysterical<lb/>
Includes:<lb/>
Leading Edge Model D<lb/>
? IBM PC XT compatible<lb/>
? 2 - 360k floppy drives<lb/>
? 512k RAM<lb/>
? Monochrome monitor<lb/>
' 20 month warranty<lb/>
Leading Edge Wordprocessor<lb/>
80.000 word spelling corrector<lb/>
Citizen 180D printer<lb/>
? 180 characters per second<lb/>
Graphics &amp; Near Letter Quality<lb/>
System Starter Kit<lb/>
I box diskettes<lb/>
? all software installed<lb/>
printer cable<lb/>
? 500 sheets clean tear paper<lb/>
S &amp; R Computer Associates. Inc.<lb/>
530 Cotanche Street<lb/>
Downtown Greenville (Next to Bicycle Post)<lb/>
757-3279<lb/>
lies on Soviet aid. Bern calls the<lb/>
murder of 70 million innocent<lb/>
people under Chinese dictators<lb/>
like Mao Tse-Tung "lucky What<lb/>
nonsense!<lb/>
Bern: "U.S. policy forced Castro<lb/>
into the Soviet camp Incredibly<lb/>
motors of sanctions. For Marxists,<lb/>
the ill-meaning perpetrators, name-calling to bash and brand<lb/>
sanctions and disinvestment have with ridiculous labels those who<lb/>
succeeded in that they have re- don't agree with him; who en-<lb/>
rightly known among his coun- suited in unemployment and suf- gages in trivial, mean-spirited,<lb/>
trymen of all races as the most fering of blacks which fuels a vio- hypocritical, sanctimonious fin-<lb/>
But the facts are that Botha is<lb/>
progressive leader in his nation's lent, bloody, communist revolu-<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Botha ended apartheid in pub-<lb/>
lic accomodations - in hotels, res-<lb/>
wrong. Horowitz: 'Twenty-five taurants, waiting rooms, toilets,<lb/>
vcars ago Fidel was a revolution-<lb/>
ary hero to us on the New Left<lb/>
When Fidel spoke, his words<lb/>
were revolutionarv music to our<lb/>
ears: Freedom with bread. Bread<lb/>
without terror 'A revolution<lb/>
neither red nor black, but Cuban<lb/>
olive-green And so in Managua<lb/>
today: 'Not Soviet Communism,<lb/>
but Nicaraguan sandinismo' is<lb/>
public swimming pools, and<lb/>
transportation. He ended apart-<lb/>
heid in marriage and sexual rela-<lb/>
tions, in statutory wage discrimi-<lb/>
nation, in trade unions, and in<lb/>
sports. He gave the vote to col-<lb/>
oreds and Asians and brought<lb/>
them into Parliament and into his<lb/>
Cabinet.<lb/>
tion which could very well made<lb/>
S. Africa a satellite of the Soviet<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
David Youmans<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Communica tions<lb/>
Bern bashing<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
ger-pointing when attacking a<lb/>
Presidential candidate he desn't<lb/>
like ? that, my friends, is a letter<lb/>
that really cannot be taken very<lb/>
seriously.<lb/>
Bern, if you think that the<lb/>
United States of America, the<lb/>
greatest country in the history of<lb/>
the world, is to blame for Commu-<lb/>
nist expansion and atrocities; if<lb/>
you think that the United States is<lb/>
the big, bad imperialistic peace-<lb/>
I think its great that right across hating monster and that Commu-<lb/>
from Bern McCrady's appallingly nists are poor, put-upon, defen-<lb/>
Botha is working now to enfran- ignorant propaganda anti-Contra sively crouched victims of U.S<lb/>
thc formula Fidel's imitators pro- chise blacks to elect representa- letter (Feb. 16), there appeared a induced paranoia and oppres-<lb/>
claim  tives to the highest level of gov- hard-hitting letter from pro-free- sion; if you can't stand this coun-<lb/>
"All of the fine gestures and crnment, has abolished the dom Lee Allen, which put the lib- try and its oppressive Capitalistic<lb/>
words with which Fidel seduced blacksionly pass law, arid has erals in the hot seat by asking system ? why don't you just<lb/>
us and won our support ? the fought for and won a huge in- rhetorical questions which re leave?1 <lb/>
open Marxism, the socialist hu- crease in funding for education of vealed just how ridiculous liberal<lb/>
manism, the independents path blacks in an effort to try to achieve views like McCrady's are! I hope<lb/>
? turned out to be calculated lies, equal education opportunities for McCrady read Allen's letter, and I<lb/>
Even as he proclaimed his color to all. And all these are only a small hope the students of ECU will<lb/>
be olive-green, he was planning to part of Botha's accomplishments, have the pleasure of reading his<lb/>
Matthew Clarke<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
SELF-SERVICE<lb/>
COPIES<lb/>
5<lb/>
At Kinkos we offer the highest quality copies at a very low-<lb/>
price. Our other services include binding, collating and a<lb/>
self-serve workspace stocked with all the things you need<lb/>
to put together that project or proposal. Try Kinkos. For<lb/>
great copies. And great deals.<lb/>
kinko's<lb/>
Open early. Open late.<lb/>
open Afeeicencis- ?. <lb/>
321 E. 10th Street (919) 752-0875<lb/>
Monday - Friday 7:OOam - 10:00pm Saturday 9:00am - 6:00pm<lb/>
UlB3fe2<lb/>
make his revolution Moscow-red.<lb/>
"So cynical was Fidel's strategy<lb/>
that at the time (and even today,<lb/>
as McCrady's letter reveals) it was<lb/>
difficult for many to comprehend.<lb/>
One by one Fidel began removing<lb/>
his own comrades from the revo-<lb/>
Sou th Africans of all colors who<lb/>
are not Marxists are astounded<lb/>
that Americans would fail to see<lb/>
and appreciate that President<lb/>
Botha has achieved so much in so<lb/>
short a time.<lb/>
But Americans as a whole fail to<lb/>
attempts at answering Allen's<lb/>
questions.<lb/>
McCrady blasted Justin Sturz<lb/>
for claiming that the vote to cut off<lb/>
aid to the Contras was ignorant<lb/>
and tragic. McCrady called<lb/>
?RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
J BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Sturz's claim "insane,<lb/>
lutionary regime and replacing see and appreciate Botha's re- Well, McCrady, you're wrong<lb/>
them with Soviet-Cuban Com- forms because the liberal media I'll tell you what's insane!<lb/>
munists have deliberately ignored these Trusting Communists to keep Greenville Buyers Market<lb/>
"Although Fidel removed so- reforms. Consequently, most their word ? that is insane! Memorial Drive<lb/>
cialists and the Sandinistas re- Americans have never heard Saying that "U.S. policy forced <lb/>
moved democrats, the pattern of about them. Gorbachev's pitiful Castro into the Soviet camp"? <lb/>
betrayal has been the same. attempts to fool liberals and that is insane!<lb/>
"To gain power, both Fidel and "peace" niks with his "glasnost" Claiming that Communists are j<lb/>
are shown to be truly only for peace with freedom and de- j Opeil MonSat. 10-9<lb/>
TAKE AN J<lb/>
E-X-T-R-A I<lb/>
10<lb/>
OFF!<lb/>
later the Sandinistas concealed<lb/>
their true intention (a Soviet state)<lb/>
behind a revolutionary lie (a plu-<lb/>
ralist democracy). To consolidate<lb/>
power they fashioned a second lie<lb/>
(democracy, but only within the<lb/>
revolution), and those who be-<lb/>
lieved in the first lie were re-<lb/>
moved. At the end of the process<lb/>
there will beno democracy at all<lb/>
To believe in the revolutionary<lb/>
dream is the tragedy of its sup-<lb/>
porters; to exploit the dream is the<lb/>
talent of dictators<lb/>
Bern: "Continued military pres-<lb/>
sure combined with a refusal to<lb/>
normalize relations has forced the<lb/>
Sandinistas to lean closer and<lb/>
closer to the Kremlin Incredibly<lb/>
wrong. The Soviets were plan-<lb/>
ning to establish a revolutionary<lb/>
base in Nicaragua even before<lb/>
Castro's Cuban revolution and<lb/>
were engaged in a massive mili-<lb/>
tary build-up in Nicaragua before<lb/>
the Contras even existed or the<lb/>
U.S. officially cut off aid to the<lb/>
Sandinistas<lb/>
Horowitz: "In 1957, Carlos<lb/>
Fonseca, the founding father of<lb/>
the Sandinista Front, visited the<lb/>
Soviet Union To Fonseca, as to<lb/>
Borge and his other comrades, the<lb/>
Soviet monstrosity was their<lb/>
revolutionary dream come true.<lb/>
In his pamphlet A Nicaraguan in<lb/>
Moscow, Fonseca proclaimed<lb/>
Soviet Communism his model for<lb/>
Latin America's future.<lb/>
"The vision of a Soviet America<lb/>
is now being realized in Nicara-<lb/>
gua. The commandante director-<lb/>
ate, thearmy,and thesecretpolice<lb/>
are already mirrors of the Soviet<lb/>
State ? not only structurally, but<lb/>
in their personnel, trained and<lb/>
often manned by agents of the<lb/>
Soviet axis<lb/>
Before making wildly erronc-<lb/>
comsetic when they are compared mocracy ? that is insane!<lb/>
to Botha's true and democratic Calling those who trust in the<lb/>
IflZZ The newest gathering place in town.<lb/>
Tonight - Thur. Feb. 25th Tonight - Sat. Feb. 27th<lb/>
10 p.m. - 1 a.m. 10 p.m. - 1 a.m.<lb/>
Featuring Featuring<lb/>
. , Mark Johnson Klee Liles<lb/>
Acoustic Rock, playing the best of<lb/>
James Tavlor and Jimmy Buffett<lb/>
Come in for music and<lb/>
dinner &amp; enjoy the best<lb/>
charbroiled food in town.<lb/>
PRIVATE PARTIES AND ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
110 EAST 4TH ST. 919-752-5855<lb/>
Sunday 1-6<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(EXCEPT AIGNER. NIKE AND REEBOK)<lb/>
?LT<lb/>
SPRINGTIME IN LONDON<lb/>
10 Days &amp; Nights in England<lb/>
Only 5<lb/>
Days Left!<lb/>
Only 5<lb/>
Days Left!<lb/>
J<lb/>
f<lb/>
Depart: 6:25 p.m. Mon? May 9<lb/>
from RaleighDurham airport<lb/>
Return: 7:35 p.m. Fri May 20<lb/>
to RaleighDurham airport<lb/>
Transportation: Delta Airlines<lb/>
Hotel: Ladbroke Hotel, Hyde Park, London<lb/>
Price per person: $1200 for Dbl. occupancy<lb/>
Deadline: March 1, 1988<lb/>
For more info:<lb/>
Call Mendenhall Student Center (757-6611)<lb/>
WANT<lb/>
TO<lb/>
TAKE<lb/>
OFF FOR<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
BREAK<lb/>
TIT STYLE?<lb/>
PRESENT YOUR ECU STUDENT ID AND RECEIVE 10<lb/>
DISCOUNT ON ANY BRODY'S MEN'S OR JUNIOR S<lb/>
SWIMSUIT. JUST IN TIME FOR A TROPICAL<lb/>
SPRING BREAK!<lb/>
Brodys tropical sun rises and sets on our sizzling hot swimwear for<lb/>
1988. Plan your getawaypray for scorchers! But first be dazzled<lb/>
by our great selection of scintillating swimwear. All in blazing high<lb/>
impact colors and textures. Brods has the<lb/>
best selection of styles for<lb/>
both men and women by<lb/>
Mcui. instinct. Gotcha,<lb/>
OP. Raisins and Cruz.<lb/>
Carolina East Mai ? The Plaza<lb/>
  ? ?mmmimm " i? ' mftwIMH1 ?- -?? ? -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0006"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
6 THE EAST rAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 25.1988<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
ARE YOU A college student with a light<lb/>
school schedule and hours of free time?<lb/>
Are you enthusiastic, dependable and<lb/>
excited about working in a fashion envi-<lb/>
ronment? Brody's and Brady's for men<lb/>
have part-time openings for individuals<lb/>
able to work flexible hours. Apply at<lb/>
Brody's, Carolina East Mall, M-W, 2 until<lb/>
4 p.m.<lb/>
HELP WANTED to work part time, eve-<lb/>
nings and week-ends through the sum-<lb/>
mer. Applv in person only, at Crazy Joe's<lb/>
Auto Parts, 653 S. Memorial Drive,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
BOOK BUYER earn while you learn!<lb/>
Make you own hours. Be your own boss.<lb/>
Buy books for local book company- Re-<lb/>
spond to Carolina Book Servicees, Box<lb/>
2151, Greenville, N.C, 27836.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Part time interior De-<lb/>
sign Student-send resume to: Designer,<lb/>
3010 East 10th Street, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
HELP WANTED. Part-time interior Do-<lb/>
sign Student-send resume to: Designer,<lb/>
3010 East 10th Street, Greenville, N.C<lb/>
RESIDENT COUNSELOR: interested in<lb/>
those with Human Service background<lb/>
wishing to gain valuable experience in<lb/>
the field. No monetary compensation,<lb/>
however room, utilities and phone pro-<lb/>
vided. Call Marv Smith, The REAL Crisis<lb/>
Center, 758-11ELP.<lb/>
CABIN COUNSELORS and instructors<lb/>
(male and female) for western North<lb/>
Carolina 8 week children's summer<lb/>
camp. Over 30 activcities including Wa-<lb/>
ter Ski, Tennis, 1 leated swimming pool,<lb/>
Go-Karts, Hiking, Art . . . Room, meals,<lb/>
salary and travel. Experience not neces-<lb/>
sary. Non-smoking students write for<lb/>
applicationbrochure: Camp Pinewood,<lb/>
20205 N.E. 3 Court, Miami, Florida,<lb/>
33179.<lb/>
CAPE HATTERAS, N.C. . Summer<lb/>
help needed at EMILY'S SOUNDS1DE<lb/>
RESTAURANT. Available positions for<lb/>
busers, waiters, waitresses and kitchen<lb/>
help. Will train! To start May 15th thru<lb/>
August 20th. 1 lousing available! Call 919-<lb/>
987-2383 (collect).<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
CLASS ACT LIMOUSINES: Don't<lb/>
drink and drive Party in style Call: 757-<lb/>
3240. ' <lb/>
INEED MONEY FOR COLLEGE? Free<lb/>
information on loans and scholarships!<lb/>
available for undergraduate and gradu-l<lb/>
ate students. Write Scholastic Financial<lb/>
Services, 202 Arlington Blvd Suite D.<lb/>
Greenville. State year in school.<lb/>
AIRBRUSH ARTWORKS-Got a rad<lb/>
idea and want it on a T-shirt? Hot colors<lb/>
and artwork reproduced with Airbrush<lb/>
Artwork! T-shirt, sweatshirts, banners.<lb/>
Hand painted one of a kind art work<lb/>
(won't wash out). Professionally air-<lb/>
brushing 1980-1988, recently came up<lb/>
from Daytona, Ha. Paul Hill-752-0607.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING: 18 yrs. expe-<lb/>
rience. Work is done on a computer with<lb/>
a letter quality printer. Low, low rates!<lb/>
Will correct spelling. Call 756-8934 be-<lb/>
tween 5 p.m. and 9 p.m. Ask for Ginger.<lb/>
GUITAR LESSONS are fun! Get new<lb/>
ideas-learn about those neat sounding<lb/>
chords. Learn to write your own songs.<lb/>
Call Bob Gravel at 752-5724 for appoint-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Announces its<lb/>
Grand Opening<lb/>
on<lb/>
March 1st<lb/>
in Greenville<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-2800<lb/>
For more information call:<lb/>
751-1993<lb/>
BARTENDER FOR HIRE: for private<lb/>
parties, social functions, etc. Rates nego-<lb/>
tiable Call Mike at 757-3811 antyime<lb/>
around dinnertime.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer diskettes. 24<lb/>
hours in and out. Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages. SDF<lb/>
Professional Computer Services, 106 East<lb/>
5th Street (beside Cubbies) Greenville,<lb/>
N.C, 752-3694.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
RED HOT bargains! Drug dealers' cars,<lb/>
boats, pianos repo'd. Surplus. Your area.<lb/>
Ruvers guide 0) 805-687-6000 Ext. S-U66.<lb/>
RICKENBACKER 3606 string guitar,<lb/>
wine red with white binding. 2 years old<lb/>
with hard shell case EC $400. 830 4809.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Schwinn Boy's cruiser, 3-<lb/>
spced with Krvptonite 4 lock Excellent<lb/>
condition. Blackone year oldstored<lb/>
inside. Price negotiable. Call 758-7036.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1983 KnoK Mobile 1 lome, 14 x<lb/>
50, 2 bedroom. Excellent condition,<lb/>
$7,000. Call 758-3067.<lb/>
COME TO NORTH Myrtle Beach for<lb/>
SPRING BREAK. $23 28-40 per night.<lb/>
Low weekly rate. Dcedie Motel, 803-839-<lb/>
2160. After March I, 803-249-1058.<lb/>
1981 WT CHEVETTE, blue vynal into<lb/>
rior. Bucket seats, floor console. Looks<lb/>
and runs like new. Perfect for student,<lb/>
must sell. S2495 00 B.J. Mills, 746-2446 or<lb/>
753-2878.<lb/>
IS IT TRUE vou can buy jeeps for $44<lb/>
through the U.S. government? Gel the<lb/>
facts today! Call 1-312 742-1142 ext 5271 A.<lb/>
FOR SLE: Brand new 2t?" 10 speed bi-<lb/>
cycle. S75.00. Call 753-3569<lb/>
FOR SALE: 079 Subaru Station Wagon, 4<lb/>
wheel drive. SI450.00. Call 752 2284.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1986 honda Interceptor<lb/>
VF500FL-last year for this model. Like<lb/>
new. Meticulously maintained Original<lb/>
owner. Only 8300 miles Chi changed<lb/>
every 2,000miles. 1 Ielmet and brand new<lb/>
Honda cover included $2200.00 Call<lb/>
Bruce at 752-2008.<lb/>
CAN YOU BUY Jeeps, cars, 4 4s seized<lb/>
in drug raids for under $100.00? Call for<lb/>
facts today. 602 837-3401 ext. 711.<lb/>
TROLLS TUX AND TELS Don't pay<lb/>
high prices for your formal wear, try<lb/>
Troll's Tux and Tee's for your formal<lb/>
needs. Traditional and designer models.<lb/>
Special fraternity rates. 757-1007 or 830-<lb/>
1447.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK TSHIRTS: It you<lb/>
thought the Halloween shirts were hot,<lb/>
wait until you see the Spring Break 1988<lb/>
t's. Get them while thev last. Call Phil or<lb/>
Troll at 830-1447 or 757-1007.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
A F3eautiful Place to Live<lb/>
?All New 2 Bedroom<lb/>
?And Ready To Rent<lb/>
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<lb/>
2899 K. 5th Stn-ct<lb/>
? U?catel Near ECU<lb/>
? Near Mjor Shopping Cnttrs<lb/>
?Anoss Krom highway lxalrol Station<lb/>
Limited Offer - S275 a month<lb/>
Contact.) T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756 7S15 or 8:0-19:17<lb/>
Office open - Apt 8. 12 - 5.TO pm.<lb/>
?AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clean and quiet one hc-droom furnished<lb/>
 apartments. c-ner?ir efficient, free water and<lb/>
sewer, optional ?rasheri, dzyexa, cable TV.<lb/>
Couples or singles only. S1'J5 a month. 6<lb/>
month lease. MOBILE IIOMK KKNTA1.S<lb/>
couples or singles. Apartment and mobile<lb/>
homes In Azalea Gardens near Ifcook Valley<lb/>
County Club.<lb/>
 Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams<lb/>
756-7815<lb/>
ROOMMATE(S) needed May-August.<lb/>
Rent (S325) and utilities 12 or 13. 3<lb/>
bedroom, double garage, large yard. Call<lb/>
Margaret or leave nameno. at 752-9532.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Large 3 bed<lb/>
room house located 2 blocks from cam-<lb/>
pus. $150.00 per month plus 13 utilities.<lb/>
Non-smoker. Call 758 7245 and leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Available for<lb/>
April, share 2 bedroom, 1 1 2 bath<lb/>
townhouse at Twin Oaks. $170.00month<lb/>
and 12 utilities, completely furnished<lb/>
except for bedroom. Call Bob at 752-5614.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed: Start<lb/>
ing May 1st to share a 2 bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment includes: Washer, dryer (in apart-<lb/>
ment) garbage disposal and dishwasher.<lb/>
Call Lisa at 758-2587.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS: Apartments for<lb/>
rent. Furnished. Contact Hollie Si-<lb/>
mono wich at 752-2865.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
BILL, JACK, FRANK, STEVE It comes<lb/>
off Thursday, it all comes off on Thursday<lb/>
with Ultraflash. See you boys at the Attic.<lb/>
PI KAPPS: Sorry this is late, but when<lb/>
you have a great social it's hard to make<lb/>
the deadline date. "Dirty Dancing" was<lb/>
the theme, dancing and grinding was<lb/>
everyones' dream. We all had a blast<lb/>
getting down, so let's do it again to the<lb/>
same sound! Love, the Zetas.<lb/>
OFF THE CUFF congratulates our own<lb/>
Barry Scott on a fine victory in Florida. I le<lb/>
will be signing autographs at the tea<lb/>
party Friday.<lb/>
TO AZD PLEDGES and Lambda Chi<lb/>
Alpha: Thanks for our social last Thurs-<lb/>
day night. It was such a "surprise We<lb/>
had a wonderful time and always know<lb/>
we have fun when wo are with you. Let's<lb/>
do it again soon! Love the Sisters of AZD!<lb/>
AOTT: So what does a straner look like?<lb/>
Could he be . . . Could he be. . your<lb/>
neighbor? Find out Friday night.<lb/>
COME TO THE DZ-SAE I lappy 1 lour at<lb/>
the Elbo this Friday-4 until-Why drive<lb/>
anywhere else?<lb/>
1ST PRIZE-$75.0O-Thc All Greek Assas-<lb/>
sination Game by AOTT. Sign up in front<lb/>
of the student store. For more informa-<lb/>
tion, call AOTT at 757-0769. Sign up $1.00.<lb/>
LADIESfor a good timetalk to<lb/>
Chuck, Barry, Stacy, or Rob at Off The<lb/>
Cuff During Friday's EC. Tea Party.<lb/>
OK, FOR THOSE of you who still aren't<lb/>
clear on who rules Friday 1 lappy 1 lour-<lb/>
This is Pi Kappa Phi-This is downtown-<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi rules 1 lappy 1 lour down-<lb/>
town on Tridavs Any questions?<lb/>
RICH THURSTON: From fuy navals<lb/>
to killer roasted toasted almonds, to beers<lb/>
at 9 in the morning and bloody marys. 1<lb/>
have to admit 1 had my doubts about<lb/>
whether or not you would make it to the<lb/>
formal, but you did and I just wanted to<lb/>
say this weekend was the best and Satur-<lb/>
day night was awesome. You were the<lb/>
perfect date. Amanda.<lb/>
DZ-JENNIFER: 1 had a great time this<lb/>
weekend, how about you? I know Kathie<lb/>
and Eric blew it out too-Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day made us new friends-Have fun in<lb/>
S.C. and next week it's time we'll spend.<lb/>
S.P.E.R.S.<lb/>
SHERATON and Off The Cuff would<lb/>
like to thank the Pi Kapps for their busi-<lb/>
ness and hope last weekend was a suc-<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
WIN A FREE semesters tuition (in state).<lb/>
Buy a ticket for only $1.00 from any DZ.<lb/>
Drawing will be held Friday, February 26<lb/>
at the DZ 1 lappy I lour at the Elbo.<lb/>
ELIZABETH-Had a great weekend!<lb/>
Where were you Saturday night, Baby?<lb/>
Love, Jeff.<lb/>
YOPIKA BROTHERS: The ETA'shavea<lb/>
surprise for you, since you gave us a little<lb/>
surprise last weekend. Come prepared!<lb/>
Dizzy bats, tube socks, underwear, and<lb/>
fluids for all. Watch out, women may<lb/>
show up for this one. Check out 3rd<lb/>
Street, Friday, 9 p.m. The Eta Elites.<lb/>
THANK YOU-Larry, formerly of "The<lb/>
Cut Above has moved to California<lb/>
Concepts. He would like to thank all of<lb/>
you for your patronage the last eignt<lb/>
months. Come see him or call at 757-3222,<lb/>
located at 1100 Charles Blvd.<lb/>
TO DZ'S AND THEIR DATES: One<lb/>
more month, we can hardly wait; every<lb/>
Delta Zeta and her date. Dreamgirl's<lb/>
approaching, we're ail psyched out; It's<lb/>
the Va. Beach Sheraton without a doubt.<lb/>
So Sisters and dates hang in there, cause<lb/>
its gonna be so much fun ITS JUST NOT<lb/>
FAIR! P.S. J.G.S.P.Eyou are not going<lb/>
this year!<lb/>
SAE HAPPY HOUR at the Elbo, Fridays<lb/>
from 4-until. $2.00 teas, why drive any-<lb/>
where else??<lb/>
RAFTERS: Tuesday night is rock 'n roll<lb/>
night, free admission, .25 draft.<lb/>
ERIC S.Hope you had<lb/>
birthday! Love, Kathie.<lb/>
a wonderful<lb/>
THE INTELLIGENT COLLEGE STU-<lb/>
DENT demands the most for his or her<lb/>
dollar. Each wants good service at the<lb/>
best possible price. The East Carolina Tea<lb/>
Party was created with you in mind. Off<lb/>
The Cuff thanks you for your support.<lb/>
NEW DELI JAMS on! Dont miss Flipsidc<lb/>
on Friday and 5 Guys Named Moe on<lb/>
Saturday, and don't take my word for it<lb/>
but The Usuals may be there Thursday<lb/>
(call first). Don't forget about open mike<lb/>
nights every Tuesday with SI.10 imports<lb/>
and Dead Wednesdays with .90 16 oz.<lb/>
drafts.<lb/>
LOST: Connecticut drivers license. Need<lb/>
desdperately. Cannot get home before<lb/>
spring break to get new one. Call Ann-<lb/>
758-9168 or 758-0625. Reward offered<lb/>
LOST ? One blue blaer at Sig Ep formal<lb/>
Sat. night due to excessive drunkeness.<lb/>
Need due to excessive lack of funds.<lb/>
Please call Mike at 752-9294.<lb/>
TO THE BEST ROOMMATE IN THE<lb/>
WORLD: Just a note to remind you that<lb/>
you have lots of style King Penguin's<lb/>
I lelper.<lb/>
WMATS YOUR NAME? If you had your<lb/>
group photo made for the Buccaneer you<lb/>
need to send us a list of all current mem-<lb/>
bers names and the group name ASAP!<lb/>
Thanks!<lb/>
WEDNESDAY-LADIES NIGHT at Raf<lb/>
ters. Ladies admitted in free from 8:30<lb/>
10.30 $1.00 wine coolers25 draft.<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL STUDS: Get ready to<lb/>
show off your bodies at the Mr. ECU<lb/>
Contest on March 15 at the Elbo. Girls: bo<lb/>
prepared to see the hottest bodies on<lb/>
campus. For info, call 752-8090.<lb/>
CLAUDIA, I had a great time at Pi Kapp<lb/>
formal, you are one special "chick<lb/>
Thank you for once again making mo<lb/>
smile-now stop hitting me with the<lb/>
band's drumsticks will ya Bob.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI little sister 1 lappy I lour is<lb/>
here-tonight at &amp; a Elbo room, come party<lb/>
with the best group of girls around.<lb/>
SHARI ? We started early, determined<lb/>
to get to Myrtle. One radiator hose, the<lb/>
left speaker. Cokes, apple juice, one bag<lb/>
of Ruffles, a rum and coke and after a<lb/>
scenic tour of Cove City; we arrived in<lb/>
Myrtle beach; 6 hrs. later. Shots, shots and<lb/>
more shots; oops one too many. The con-<lb/>
tinuous partying took its toll. Verbal<lb/>
abuse. The cocktail party and Rumple<lb/>
Mitze at dinner started Sat. evening and<lb/>
the night didn't end until the morning. A<lb/>
broken water glass, dancing on tables and<lb/>
chairs, a cut foot, the time warp, late night<lb/>
in 923, more dancing, and slammers. The<lb/>
whole evening was awesome and you're<lb/>
the funnest formal date who ever lived.<lb/>
Thanks for a great time, Mike.<lb/>
SGA ELECTIONS: Candidates for SGA<lb/>
Executive Officers must file for election in<lb/>
228 mcndenhall by Friday, March 4,1988.<lb/>
PHI BETA SIGMA: Black History Cele-<lb/>
bration Dance. Time: 9 p.m2 p.m Place:<lb/>
American Legion. Date: February 26,<lb/>
1988. Tickets: $2.00 single, $3.00 couple.<lb/>
At the Door: $2.50 single, $3.50 couple.<lb/>
$1 00 cash bar, hors d' oeuvres. Tickets<lb/>
available at Student Book Store.<lb/>
FEE FEE: Sorry about the Houdini trick -<lb/>
a sick sister was in need. I lad a lot of fun!<lb/>
Thanks, Debs.<lb/>
TO MY MIKE: What did I do all last<lb/>
semester? (Thanks for not sending my<lb/>
baby to the glue factory). Carol.<lb/>
NEEDED ? a ride for two people to<lb/>
Miami for spring break. Will chip in for<lb/>
gas. Call Jeff "Damn I need a ride" Parker<lb/>
at 752 - 3432.<lb/>
TO FREAK MAMA ? Don't freak out<lb/>
'cause you finally got a man Need a<lb/>
ride to Greensboro? Whafs his name<lb/>
again, Doug? Love M.F. and J.V.<lb/>
STEPHANIE ? You're a really boss<lb/>
chick and one fabulous babe ? Jeff "I'm<lb/>
in lust" Parker.<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL GREEKS: "Play to<lb/>
Kill AOTT dares you to enter and see if<lb/>
you can stay "alive First prize is sev-<lb/>
enty-five dollars! Good luck.<lb/>
KRISSY ? We warned you before the<lb/>
weekend ? verbally abused and left in<lb/>
Myrtle Beach ? if you yack. But I figured<lb/>
I couldn't go out with you again if I left<lb/>
you in South Carolina. 1 had a blast. Can't<lb/>
wait to see your pictures of dinner so I can<lb/>
remember it. Rumple Mintze 1 Chi<lb/>
Omega 0. Talk to ya soon. Love, James.<lb/>
THE GONG SHOW! Tuesday March 1 at<lb/>
the Attic. $2 00 under 21, $1 00 21 and up.<lb/>
Acts start at 10:00 p.m. Featuring Acts<lb/>
from : TKE, PiKa, Lambda Chi, Sig Ep,<lb/>
SAE, Beta, Phi Tau, Sigma, AOPi, Alpha<lb/>
Phi, Chi O, and AZD. Don't miss your<lb/>
favorite greeks making absolute fools of<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
WHAT A BARGAIN East Carolina Tea<lb/>
$2.00, domestic boor SI .00, and "the kick<lb/>
from down under" 75 cents. FREE FREE<lb/>
FREE Pia at 6:00 p.m. and FREE FREE<lb/>
FREE admission only at Off The Cuff<lb/>
Lounge . . . Greenville Sheraton.<lb/>
KAREN HIEM AND SHARON LEWIS:<lb/>
What a family! this past weekend was a<lb/>
blast and our dates were the best. It was<lb/>
great partying with you guys again I've<lb/>
missed ya. Alpha love, Amanda J.<lb/>
TO THE NEW LADIES OF BLACK<lb/>
AND GOLD: Congratulations from the<lb/>
Ladies of Black and Gold and the Broth<lb/>
ers of Alpha Phi Alpha.<lb/>
HEY HOD AT: Enjoyed last weekend'<lb/>
"Gosh Darn" you missed a killer party<lb/>
Watch out for all night partiers with<lb/>
green magic markers! Hodow.<lb/>
W1LMA, 1 love you<lb/>
wait for Friday-Fred.<lb/>
very much-Can't<lb/>
LESLIE LIEDEL: As our pledging ends<lb/>
we'd like to thank you for everything<lb/>
you've taught us. You have dealt with a<lb/>
lot and we appreciate it. THANKS'<lb/>
You're the best FT around! Love, the<lb/>
BK's.<lb/>
AOTT'S and the "strangers<lb/>
for Friday night, when you<lb/>
stranger, it might bo love at<lb/>
We'll mix and mingle.<lb/>
Got ready<lb/>
meet your<lb/>
first sight<lb/>
we'll dance to<lb/>
some serious jingles. We'll see you at 8:00<lb/>
and be ready to impress that special date'<lb/>
RUSSELL LOWE, Friday was definitely<lb/>
a wild night! Thanks for asking me to bt<lb/>
your date to the mixer. Anne.<lb/>
TELLO: I guess the back door number<lb/>
wasn't so smooth, my apoligies. Eileen<lb/>
Old Fashioned<lb/>
Soda Fountain<lb/>
4 16 Ei-ons SL Mall<lb/>
Across Jrom Gold's Gym<lb/>
PIZZA WAGON<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
?Serving Delicious, thin<lb/>
New York Crust Pizza by<lb/>
the slice or by the whole<lb/>
?Eat in or Take Out<lb/>
Free Delivery -<lb/>
756-1984<lb/>
?If you pick up -<lb/>
$2.00 Off Small<lb/>
$3.00 Off Large<lb/>
Making your favorite pizza<lb/>
is Jack, formerly of<lb/>
Frank s Pizza<lb/>
PANTANA BOB'S ? the alternative<lb/>
Friday afternoon party.<lb/>
RICHARD COX: You are the worst inter -<lb/>
tube water polo player ever, stick to your<lb/>
pom poms<lb/>
TEMPLE, TEMPLE, TEMPLE. You<lb/>
Carolina wimps need to get a gnp. So grip<lb/>
this Temple alT the way Sincerely, the<lb/>
boys from 4, R. 11. M. P.<lb/>
P1KEFETTI!? PIKEFETTI What?<lb/>
Pikefetti Huh? Pikefetti Yo! Pikefetti<lb/>
Word Pikefetti Pikefetti Watch for it<lb/>
in 88 Boss.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA: All Brothers pay real<lb/>
close attention now, we're getting our<lb/>
group picture today at Third Street, so<lb/>
take a bath and put on you letters.<lb/>
TO: Caycee, Lori, Ginger, Susan and J.D.<lb/>
from Eric and Lee. Thanx for your help.<lb/>
Spring Break<lb/>
1988<lb/>
Dive PenneKamp<lb/>
in Key Largo, Fla.<lb/>
$425 .OO<lb/>
For information &amp;<lb/>
Registration call the<lb/>
Rum Runner<lb/>
Dive Shop<lb/>
758-1444<lb/>
 M<lb/>
:?<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
CUT<lb/>
i?<lb/>
b vj u<lb/>
UiiUlitn<lb/>
.?lih.lt"<lb/>
Twice Is nice<lb/>
Consignment Shop<lb/>
Qrand Opening Cdtbration<lb/>
Saturday, Jeb. 27 -10:00-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Shop j or clothing By Liz ClaiBorne, Colours By Julian, (Polo, jeans<lb/>
By Lee and Levi, Shoes At Least 50 'Below listail.<lb/>
Register For50?? wvlnringionBUd<lb/>
Gift Certificate<lb/>
tfmirs.<lb/>
Mm frl 9:305:30<lb/>
Sat. 10-5<lb/>
QntwilU, HC 27858<lb/>
756-AS60<lb/>
XXX<lb/>
V<lb/>
East Carolina Tea<lb/>
Party<lb/>
!No Cover<lb/>
No Cover<lb/>
No Cover $?<lb/>
fltfJCMjlACtop<lb/>
.75 Kangaroo KiwftH .75?<lb/>
"A Kick From Down Under"<lb/>
, All Domestic Bottled Beer<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Teas $2.00<lb/>
<lb/>
(?) Sheraton Greenville<lb/>
Announcement<lb/>
BIKE HIKE<lb/>
Registration for the Intramural Out-<lb/>
door Recreation Bike Hike will be held<lb/>
from Feb. 22 - March 14. The Pre-Trip<lb/>
meeting will be held on March 16 at 4 p.m.<lb/>
The Activity Date will be on Feb. 24 at 6<lb/>
p.m. For more information call 757-6387.<lb/>
"Where fun is 1<lb/>
PFHA<lb/>
The Pre-Professional Health Alliance<lb/>
cordially invites all students and other<lb/>
interested persons to attend out first bi-<lb/>
monthly meeting at Feb. 29th, MSC at 530<lb/>
p.m. We will be discussing health-related<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
OVERSEAS DEV.<lb/>
Overseas Development Network will<lb/>
meet on Thursday, Feb. 25 at 430 p.m. in<lb/>
Speight R-151. We are featuring a video on<lb/>
World Hunger. Anyone interested is in-<lb/>
vited to attend.<lb/>
Bum<lb/>
Purim Puza Party Wed. March 2nd<lb/>
from 530 - 7 p.m. in rooms 8 DEF (down-<lb/>
stairs) in Mendenhall. The food and<lb/>
drinks are free. Come for dinner and meet<lb/>
other Jewish students<lb/>
Ff71I YOUNG DEMOCRATS<lb/>
College Democrats will be meeting<lb/>
tonight at 7:00 in room 238 Mendenhall.<lb/>
Anyone interested is invited to join us. For<lb/>
more information call I lugh at 752-5611.<lb/>
OVERSEAS PEV.<lb/>
Student internships interested in<lb/>
spending a summer (or longer) in remote<lb/>
parts of the world? The Overseas Devel-<lb/>
opment Network is seeking several con-<lb/>
cerned, committed students and recent<lb/>
graduates who are interested in develop-<lb/>
ment. Internships are available in India,<lb/>
Bangladesh, l.atin America, the Philippi-<lb/>
nes, and the Appalachian Mountains.<lb/>
Financial assistance is available. Contact<lb/>
Marianne Exum for more information at<lb/>
home 752-2389 or work 757-6271. Appli-<lb/>
cation deadline is March 15,1988<lb/>
SKA<lb/>
SRA Semiformal Dance: Tickets are on<lb/>
s?' now! The dance will be from 9 pm to<lb/>
1 m on March 18,1988 in the Holiday Inn<lb/>
Holidome with the theme being "One<lb/>
Night in Bangkok See Residence Hall<lb/>
Vice-President for tickets ($3.00 single,<lb/>
$5.00 couple with SRA card and $4.00<lb/>
single, $7.00 couple without SRA card).<lb/>
FOREIGN FILM FANS<lb/>
The European Studies program invites<lb/>
you to a unique view of European society<lb/>
through the art of film. On Tuesday,<lb/>
March 1 at 6:30 pm, Istvan Szabo's film<lb/>
MEPH1STO (1981) will be shown in<lb/>
Joyner Library, room B-04. Mikhail<lb/>
Kalatazov's CRANES ARE FLYING<lb/>
(1957) will be shown on March 15. These<lb/>
films focus on the rise of Nazism and its<lb/>
devastating effects on Europe. All are<lb/>
welcome to attend.<lb/>
INTRAMURALS<lb/>
The Department of Intramural-Recrea-<lb/>
tion Services and the Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Center is sponsoring a Canoe Clinic on<lb/>
Feb. 16 and 18. Registration for this trip<lb/>
will be taken in 204 Memorial Gym from<lb/>
8:00 am to 5:00 pm through Feb. 15.<lb/>
N.C. SYMPHONY<lb/>
"Roberta Peters, soprano, will be the<lb/>
featured soloist with the N.C Symphony<lb/>
on Wednesday, March 16 at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. This final concert of<lb/>
the 1987-88 N.C Symphony Series is<lb/>
made possible by the Pitt Co. N.C Sym-<lb/>
phony chapter and Burroughs-Wellcome<lb/>
Co. Tickets are currently available at<lb/>
Mendenhall Ticket Office (757-6611)<lb/>
KERYGMA<lb/>
A Bible study for those who are serious<lb/>
about studying the Bible. Weekly meet-<lb/>
ings (tentatively Tues. afternoon) will be<lb/>
scheduled to accomodate those who are<lb/>
interested. Kerygma is an interdenomina-<lb/>
tional program sponsored by Presbyte-<lb/>
rian Campus Ministry. For more infor.<lb/>
Call Mike at 752-7240.<lb/>
SAVE THOSE WRAPPERS<lb/>
Deposit all empty Sticklets Natural<lb/>
Flavor Gum packs and Doritos Brand<lb/>
Cool Ranch flavor tortilla chip bags in the<lb/>
U. S. College Comedy Competition dis-<lb/>
plays located in the Student Book Store<lb/>
lobby and Mendenhall. ECU could win a<lb/>
free comedy concert if we collect the most<lb/>
wrappers.<lb/>
CHALLENGE DAY<lb/>
Registration for Intramural Challenge<lb/>
Day wil be held on March 2 from 11 p.m6<lb/>
p.m. in MG 104-A. For more information<lb/>
call 757-6387.<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
There will be meetings every Thursday<lb/>
at 6:00 in the culture center. Everybody<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
MARDir.RAr<lb/>
Tyler I lall be hosting its 2nd annual<lb/>
Mardi Gras Celebration this Thursday<lb/>
Feb. 25th from 7-10 p.m. in the lobby of<lb/>
Tyler. All residence hall students are wel-<lb/>
come and admission is FREE! (Nominal<lb/>
charges for some activities) Live jazz<lb/>
bqand, cajun snacks and lots of New Or-<lb/>
leans fun!<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The National Gamma Beta Phi Honor<lb/>
society will be holding a meeting March 1<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in Jenkins Auditorium. Raffle<lb/>
tickets are available in Mr. Dunlop's office<lb/>
Brewster A 217. Attendance is manda-<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
ECU GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
Come and be a part of the 5th Singing<lb/>
Anniversary of the East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity Gospel Choir, Sunday Feb. 28th at 3<lb/>
p.m. in Hendrix Theatre. Admission is<lb/>
free. All are invited.<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Friday nights are ALIVE more than<lb/>
ever before! Join us at Jenkins Auditorium<lb/>
(Art Building) at 8:00 p.m. Every FRIDAY<lb/>
NIGHT for Christian Fellowship and<lb/>
Bible teaching where JESUS IS LORD!<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP,<lb/>
Students who wish to obtain financial<lb/>
aid for overseas education may apply for<lb/>
a Rivers Scholarship. The appbeation<lb/>
deadline is March 15,1988. For more info,<lb/>
contact the Office of International Studies<lb/>
and Scholarship in Brewster A-117.<lb/>
cdoc ? EtlvQiSi<lb/>
tKU5' the female principle of love,<lb/>
unity, peace, manifests itself in the Equal<lb/>
ghts Organization of Students at ECU.<lb/>
The purpose of EROS is to educate, organ<lb/>
?ze and act in accordance with the femaie<lb/>
exFri?Kw and women's issues. Meetings<lb/>
Vu f 5:00 Aust? 3? For info<lb/>
call 758-3645 or 752-7998.<lb/>
PCC REGISTRATION<lb/>
ntt Community College in Greenville<lb/>
will hold registration for Spring Quarter<lb/>
Wed. March 2. Registration will be held<lb/>
during the following hours: Day - Wed<lb/>
March 2, 8 p.m. to 2 pm. Evening- 6 to8<lb/>
? J?4?9 ? be?m Thursday March<lb/>
L J2 r?? will continue<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
(CPS) ? Tossing a d.<lb/>
chicken ? or even alive one -<lb/>
the court during a college bav<lb/>
ball game now could cost<lb/>
home team 2 points.<lb/>
Hoping to control what it<lb/>
as increasingly unrulv tansl<lb/>
basketball games across the CO<lb/>
try, the National Collegiate<lb/>
letic Association (NCAA)<lb/>
nounced Feb 11 it was impow<lb/>
ing referees to get tough m<lb/>
spectators.<lb/>
Its "reinterpretdtion" of e<lb/>
ing rules lets referees award vi<lb/>
ng teams 2 free throws and<lb/>
Ul refus<lb/>
LivesLe<lb/>
The University o( Iowa will<lb/>
blish an edition of a natit<lb/>
bian magazine because it c(<lb/>
tains photographs of nul<lb/>
r omen, although such a ban nj<lb/>
violate Iowa's human rights q<lb/>
icy forbidding discriminal<lb/>
against gays.<lb/>
Iowa's Human Rights Comi<lb/>
says the university's Pnnt<lb/>
Services violated school poll<lb/>
bidding disenrnmati<lb/>
-igainst homosexuals by refusi<lb/>
! i print "Common LivcsLesbl<lb/>
I ives a national lesbian cultf<lb/>
igazine published by ihv<lb/>
: ? -bian Alliance.<lb/>
But despit the committee's<lb/>
mendation to print the maj<lb/>
"irrespective oi contci<lb/>
Ann<lb/>
ROOM ASSIGNMENTS!<lb/>
Students enrolled Spring Serru<lb/>
1988 who plan to return to East Car.<lb/>
University Fall Semester 19SS and<lb/>
h to be guaranteed residence<lb/>
housing will be required to resen <lb/>
ring the week of Feb 22 2 Pnd<lb/>
rving a room, a student must maa<lb/>
i -Ivance room pavment oi $60.<lb/>
pawnqnt, which must be accompa<lb/>
ghovisiLa application' conti i.i <lb/>
fceTlcd in tne Cashier Office"1<lb/>
Feb. ith(jfpi"W$pr l<lb/>
g off camrVrria,ip1cked<lb/>
in<lb/>
<lb/>
I Krn 201 beginning February 16<lb/>
rations are to be made in the<lb/>
ti e residenc hall offices according<lb/>
wring schedule Students who<lb/>
to return to the same rooms thev<lb/>
. occupy must res i j<lb/>
lay, Feb. 22 -8:30 a.m tol23(<lb/>
: 1:30 p m to 4:00 p.m and Tuel<lb/>
23 -8 30a.m. to 1230p.m.StuJ<lb/>
? ?  wish to return to the same  <lb/>
in which thev reside but differ<lb/>
will be permitted to reserve ro.<lb/>
5day, Feb 23 - 1 30 p m<lb/>
All other returning students<lb/>
mined to reserve rooms or.<lb/>
basis on Wednesday, Feb 24<lb/>
25 and Friday, Feb 26<lb/>
i: h1 p.m. and 1:30pjm to 4<lb/>
residence hall rental rate ha-<lb/>
lo, the 1988- B9 School ear 1 low<lb/>
3o anticipate a small increase in tha<lb/>
rate tor the 1988-89 School ear<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLIC A<lb/>
The CCU College Republican<lb/>
meet every Tuesday night in rooij<lb/>
it7pm<lb/>
POBERTSON<lb/>
5t idents who would like I<lb/>
gathng M.G Fat Roberts<lb/>
President contact Justin Sturz at ;<lb/>
Organizational meeting will be h 1<lb/>
SFJD<lb/>
lents tor Econornk<lb/>
meet every Sun da from 7 ?<lb/>
Mendenhall 8-D For more infon<lb/>
cal! 7v7e0 or 746-6049.<lb/>
CtPUS31INISTRl<lb/>
rship God and cetebrah<lb/>
ion tl is Wednesda night a 5 I<lb/>
the M thodist Student Cent-<lb/>
abk all you can eat meal whidl<lb/>
at the door, SL50 in advance Call<lb/>
for reservations Sponsored b Prj<lb/>
rian and Methodist Campus MiniJ<lb/>
rLIJLRIBELLCLL:<lb/>
There will be practice ever) 1<lb/>
Wednesday and Thunia at 2 3CJ<lb/>
rramural Fields 3 and b behind<lb/>
ColtiS4 urn and on Sundav at 2 0<lb/>
placers welcome<lb/>
PJMETLME<lb/>
Prune Time, sponsored bv<lb/>
Crusade for Christ, meets every Til<lb/>
at 7 10 p.m. in Brewster CUB Eve<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
CJJJJTiEAlXENTEj<lb/>
A meeting will be held on Ti<lb/>
Mar -I 1, 1988. 4:00 p.m in the C<lb/>
Center Interested faculty, staff, aj<lb/>
dents arc invited to attend<lb/>
ICUEQQIB<lb/>
R  Dall trvouts will be held M<lb/>
at 3:30 p m. Report to Scales Field'<lb/>
bring ID. and work out gear for<lb/>
ON TIME<lb/>
NASWCORSO<lb/>
Wanted: Social Work Criminal<lb/>
majo" and intended majors, to<lb/>
meetings. Held the 2nd and 4th<lb/>
each month, at 4:00 p.m in ADiedl<lb/>
bldg, room 110.<lb/>
talii m ???<lb/>
I . . mb <lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0007"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
TI IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 25,1988<lb/>
riHKl'ARY25, 1988<lb/>
mi MV LADIES OF BLACK<lb/>
GOLD Congratulations trom the<lb/>
k uivl Cold and the Broth<lb/>
Vlpha<lb/>
HODAT Enjoyed ta-t weekend!<lb/>
p ssed j killer party<lb/>
tor all nighl par tier, with<lb/>
- - lodow<lb/>
m ver much-Can't<lb/>
I l Vs oui pledging ends<lb/>
 you tor everything<lb/>
dealt with a<lb/>
viate it THANKS'<lb/>
md! Love, the<lb/>
- (let ready<lb/>
meet your<lb/>
rst sight<lb/>
lance to<lb/>
so . ??! at S fjfj<lb/>
al date!<lb/>
is definitely<lb/>
to be<lb/>
mber<lb/>
en.<lb/>
Old Fashioned<lb/>
Soda Fountain<lb/>
PIZZA WAGON<lb/>
East f<lb/>
is. thin<lb/>
si Pizza bv<lb/>
y the whole<lb/>
' rake Out<lb/>
Free Delivery -<lb/>
756-1984<lb/>
k up -<lb/>
00 Off Small<lb/>
00 Off Large<lb/>
tvonte pizza<lb/>
nerlv of<lb/>
nk's Pizza<lb/>
pring Break<lb/>
1988<lb/>
ive PenneKamp<lb/>
Key Largo, Fla.<lb/>
S425.00<lb/>
or information &amp;<lb/>
gistration call the<lb/>
um Runner<lb/>
Dive Shop<lb/>
758-1444<lb/>
fl<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
4111<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
-ts who wish to obtain financial<lb/>
tern education may apply 'or<lb/>
R?ve . .larship The application<lb/>
 arch 15, 1988. For more info.<lb/>
I the Office of International Studies<lb/>
?d Scholarship in Brewster A-117.<lb/>
LR.Q.S.<lb/>
t-ROS, the female pnnaple of love,<lb/>
peace, manifests itself in the Equal<lb/>
Is Organization of Students at ECU-<lb/>
irpose of EROS is to educate, organ-<lb/>
and act in accordance with the female<lb/>
penence and women's issues. Meetings<lb/>
Jesdays, 500 Austin 308. For info.<lb/>
8.3645 or 752-7998.<lb/>
PCCJtECISTRATION<lb/>
Pitt Community College in Greenville<lb/>
Mil hold registration for Spring Quarter<lb/>
IWed March 2 Registration will be held<lb/>
during the following hours: Day - Wed<lb/>
March 2, 8 p.m. to 2 p.m. Evening- 6 to 8<lb/>
I p.m. Classes will begin Thursday, March<lb/>
I and late registration will continue<lb/>
 through March 7 For further info, call 756-<lb/>
3130 Ext 245.<lb/>
Rules penalize rowdy fans<lb/>
(CPS) Tossing a dead<lb/>
i htckert ? or even alive one ? on<lb/>
the court during a college basket-<lb/>
ball game now could cost the<lb/>
home team 2 points.<lb/>
1 loping to control what it sees<lb/>
as increasingly unruly tans at<lb/>
basketball games across the coun-<lb/>
try, the National Collegiate Ath-<lb/>
letic Association (NCAA) an-<lb/>
session ot the ball if their oppone-<lb/>
nets' fans deliberately delay a<lb/>
game by throwing debris on the rowdyism,<lb/>
court. In the past, only one foul<lb/>
shot was awarded.<lb/>
"We want it called consis-<lb/>
tently said Dr. Edward Steitz of<lb/>
the NCAA's basketball rules<lb/>
committee. "This is the result of a<lb/>
continued increase of fans throw-<lb/>
iounced Feb. 11 it was impower- ing objects like toilet paper, ice<lb/>
ing reterees to get tough with<lb/>
spectators.<lb/>
Its remterpretation" of exist-<lb/>
ing rules kts referees award visit-<lb/>
ing teams 2 tree throws and pos-<lb/>
cudes, dead fish and chickens on<lb/>
the court.<lb/>
"In the past, some players and for making cracks about his<lb/>
coaches even encouraged fan mother.<lb/>
said Steitz. "All I did was hold up a sign<lb/>
Steitz said no single incident led that said 'Your Momma is a<lb/>
to the rules change, but it was Cow Harvey said,<lb/>
anounccd shortly after University After Missouri beat Iowa State<lb/>
of Missouri at Columbia fans 119-93, ISU coach Johnny Orr<lb/>
proviked Iowa State University filed a complaint about the Ant-<lb/>
player Jeff Grayer during a Janu- lers ? known for, among other<lb/>
ary game at Columbia. pranks, greeting the announce-<lb/>
Mizzou's infamous student ment of visitinc teams' players'<lb/>
rooting section, known as the names by shouting "smells like a<lb/>
FIZZThe newest gathering place in town<lb/>
Drink Specials for Every Night of the Week:<lb/>
. - $1.00 Imports<lb/>
OTues. - $2.00 Kamikazees<lb/>
Weds.<lb/>
'Thurs.<lb/>
UI refuses to print "Common<lb/>
LivesLesbian Lives" magazine<lb/>
The University of Iowa will not<lb/>
iblish an edition oi a national<lb/>
ibian magazine because it con-<lb/>
rts photographs of nude<lb/>
omen, although such a ban may<lb/>
late Iowa's human rights pol-<lb/>
? v forbidding discrimination<lb/>
;ainst cays.<lb/>
Iowa's 1 luman Rights Commit-<lb/>
 says the university's Frinting<lb/>
Services violated school policv<lb/>
I idding discrimination<lb/>
vs a national lesbian culture<lb/>
izine published by the UI<lb/>
? Alliarw e.<lb/>
But despit the committee's rec-<lb/>
? tendation to print the maga-<lb/>
spective of content<lb/>
Antlers, teased Grayer so fiercely bus" in unison ? with the Mis-<lb/>
If the crowd doesn't stop, rcfe- he jumped into the stands to si- souri athletic department. Ath-<lb/>
rees can assess a technical foul on lence them. Grayer allegedly letic department officials later<lb/>
the home team coach. threatened Antler Mike Harvey told Antlers representatives to be<lb/>
nicer.<lb/>
So Antlers showed up at MU's<lb/>
next home game against the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Colorado dressed as<lb/>
Ghandi, Pope John Paul II, Abe<lb/>
Lincoln, Santa Claus and other<lb/>
sweet characters, gave visiting<lb/>
coach Tom Miller a box of<lb/>
Valentine'scandy,shouted "good<lb/>
try" when MU players missed<lb/>
shots and, when Missouri took a<lb/>
commanding 21-4 lead, yelled,<lb/>
"sorry about the score<lb/>
The NCAA's Steitz contends<lb/>
the new rule is working, noting<lb/>
even coaches are trying to keep<lb/>
their fans in line.<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
Coach Dean Smith, for instance,<lb/>
interrupted a Jan. 17 home game<lb/>
to admonish some UNC fans<lb/>
waving their arms to distract an<lb/>
opponent trying to shoot a free<lb/>
throw.<lb/>
The opponent, moreover, was<lb/>
Danny Ferry of archrival Duke<lb/>
University, whose Cameron In-<lb/>
door Stadium fans uften are cited<lb/>
as among the most insulting in the<lb/>
land.<lb/>
$1.50 Highballs<lb/>
$2.00 Collins<lb/>
Fri. - $2.00 Margaritas<lb/>
and Tequila Sunrises.<lb/>
Sat. - $2.00 Fireballs<lb/>
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
PARTIES WELCOME<lb/>
Open MonSat.<lb/>
110 E. 4th St. 752 5855<lb/>
interim president Richard refused to listen to the fndings of<lb/>
Remington docs not agree that the thecommittce: a university-man-<lb/>
university discriminated against dated committee established to<lb/>
the Lesbian Alliance, and plans to protect human rights said Tracy<lb/>
uphold the printing ban until a Moore, a magazine staff member,<lb/>
further investigation is com- The Human Rights Committee<lb/>
pletcd. asked UI to adopt a new policy<lb/>
Remington's decision to ignore governing printing at the school,<lb/>
the committee's finding is un- publicly apologize for the inci-<lb/>
precedented, said committee dent and compensate the Lesbian<lb/>
member and Iowa law professor Alliance for costs incurred by the<lb/>
Robert Clinton. 'The committee decision not to publish the maga-<lb/>
homosexuals by refusing has expressed concern about the zinc. The Lesbian Alliance has<lb/>
ommonLivesLesbian central administration's willing- sued UI for revenues lost by the<lb/>
ness to be their own judge in its ban.<lb/>
own case<lb/>
"After having had our case But Remington says UI will not<lb/>
looked at and voted on by the reimburse the group, or acknowl-<lb/>
committee, the administration edge any error, until the litigation<lb/>
blatantly ignored and actually is resolved.<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
w<lb/>
i<lb/>
L<lb/>
M<lb/>
I<lb/>
N<lb/>
G<lb/>
T<lb/>
O<lb/>
N<lb/>
Experience Summer<lb/>
at<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Wilmington<lb/>
For a 1988 Summer<lb/>
School Catalog,<lb/>
write or call:<lb/>
Summer School Director<lb/>
109 Alderman Hall<lb/>
UNC Wilmington<lb/>
601 South College Road<lb/>
Wilmington, NC<lb/>
28403-3297<lb/>
(919) 395-3540<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
?<lb/>
.<lb/>
CHAMBER MUSIC<lb/>
The 1988-1989 Chamber music Series<lb/>
attractions include: Buswell-Parnas-Lu-<lb/>
visi Trio, National Gallery of Art Vocal<lb/>
Ensemble, Tokyo String Quartet, and<lb/>
OREGON. For a brochure detailing the<lb/>
events, contact the Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, 757-6611, ext.<lb/>
266. Office hours are 11:00 a.m6:00 p.m<lb/>
Monday-Friday. This scries is co-spon-<lb/>
sored bv the Department of University<lb/>
Unions and the School of Music<lb/>
PERFORMING ARTS<lb/>
The 1988-1989 Performing Arts Series is<lb/>
sponsoring the following events: The<lb/>
Ohio Ballet, Wynton Marsalis, The Acting<lb/>
Company, The Atlanta Svmphony, PHI-<lb/>
LADANCO, The NY. Gilbert and Sulli-<lb/>
van Plavers in Pirates of Penzance, The<lb/>
Polish National Radio Orchestra, CABA-<lb/>
RET The ECUNC Symphonies in con-<lb/>
cert' with SPECIAL GUEST PIANIST<lb/>
KAREN SI IAVV, and Nadja Salerno-Son-<lb/>
nenberg. For a brochure detailing the<lb/>
events contact the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall, 757-6611, ext. 266. Office<lb/>
hours are 11:00 a.m6:00 p.m Monday-<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
MIME<lb/>
The Student union Special Events<lb/>
Committee presents the world's greates<lb/>
mime-Marcel Marccau-on Wednesday,<lb/>
March 2nd, at 8:00 p.m. in Wright Audito-<lb/>
rium. For tickets, contact the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall, 757-6611, ext.<lb/>
266. Office hours are 11:00 a.m6:00 p.m<lb/>
Monday-Friday.<lb/>
ADVOCATE TRAINING<lb/>
An Advocate Training Program will be<lb/>
offered by the Pitt County Family Vio-<lb/>
lence Program beginning Februray 18,<lb/>
1988 for those interested in exploring vol-<lb/>
unteer or career opportunities in crisis<lb/>
counseling in a family violence shelter<lb/>
program. The course will be conducted by<lb/>
professionals in the fields of domestic vio-<lb/>
lence, law enforcement, social work,<lb/>
counseling, law and the judicial system.<lb/>
All classes, except a courtroom session,<lb/>
will be held at the ECU Allied Health<lb/>
Building, Room 212. Sessions are sched-<lb/>
uled for the evenings of February 18, 23,<lb/>
and 25 from 7:00-9:00 p.m. and Saturday,<lb/>
February 20 and 27 from 9:00 a.m3:00<lb/>
p.m. Reservations are needed by Wednes-<lb/>
day, February 17,1988 and may be made by<lb/>
telephone to Volunteer Coordinatior,<lb/>
Mary OHare, 757-3328. There is no<lb/>
charge for the course.<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR MARTIN<lb/>
Anyone interested in supporting Gov-<lb/>
ernor Martin's re-election campaign,<lb/>
e wiD be practice every Tuesday, please contact EHike Ellis at 758-6472.<lb/>
sday and Thursday at 2:30 on In- SPRING SEM. GRADS.<lb/>
tl Fields 5 and 6 behind Minges Caps and gowns should be picked up in<lb/>
im and on Sunday at 2:00. New Student Stores, Wright Building,<lb/>
welcome. March 22, 23, 24,1988. These are yours to<lb/>
keep providing the graduation fee has<lb/>
PRIME TIME been paid For those receiving the Masters<lb/>
e Time, sponsored by Campus Degree the fee pays for your cap and<lb/>
e for Christ, meets every Thursday g0wn, but there is an extra fee of $12.50 for<lb/>
ROOM ASSIGNMENTS<lb/>
trolled Spring Semestei<lb/>
in to return to East Carolina<lb/>
Semestei 1988 and who<lb/>
anteed residence hall<lb/>
red to reserve rooms<lb/>
week of Feb 22-26 Prior to<lb/>
 .i room, a student must make an<lb/>
. ance room payment of S60. These<lb/>
. nertts, which must be accompanied<lb/>
gftousipa applicatioitcontractp will<lb/>
ed in ffie. CasHiel - Office" begm-<lb/>
i t b UMhfAjpiu???iib iw students<lb/>
' c.mrvma?repVked up in<lb/>
. February 16. Room<lb/>
s are to be made in the respec-<lb/>
ndenchall s according to the<lb/>
? schedule. Students who wish<lb/>
the same rooms they pres-<lb/>
. . rr si reserve rooms on<lb/>
 3:30 a m to 12:30 p.m.<lb/>
' - p m to 4:00 p m. and Tuesday,<lb/>
23 8:30 a.m to 12-30 p.m. Students<lb/>
return to the same buildings<lb/>
i side but different rooms<lb/>
permitted to reserve rooms on<lb/>
23 1:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
ning students will be per-<lb/>
to reserve rooms on a first-come<lb/>
sday, Feb 24, Thursday<lb/>
25 and Friday, Feb 26 - 830 a.m. to<lb/>
p m and 1:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. The<lb/>
e hall rental rate has not been set<lb/>
? - School Year. However, we<lb/>
- pate a small increase in the rental<lb/>
for the 1988-89 school Year.<lb/>
( OI I.F.CE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
LCU College Republicans will<lb/>
every Tuesday night in room 221<lb/>
hall at 7 p.m Call 758-5775 or 752-<lb/>
ROBERTSON<lb/>
would like to help with<lb/>
M.G Pat Robertson elected<lb/>
? contact Justin Sturz at 758-2047.<lb/>
itional meeting will be held soon.<lb/>
SEP<lb/>
for Economic Democracy will<lb/>
every Sunday from 7:00 p.m. in<lb/>
I nhall 8-D. For more information,<lb/>
 r 746-6049.<lb/>
CAREGIVER GROUP<lb/>
A support group has been formed for<lb/>
people who are caring for a parent,<lb/>
spouse, or other loved one at home. The<lb/>
group will meet at St. James United Meth-<lb/>
odist Church at 2000 E. 6th St Greenville,<lb/>
N.C on Tuesday, March 8 from 7 p.m.<lb/>
until 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
AI i I It<lb/>
the; I<lb/>
CoMedf A<lb/>
230NB <lb/>
WED vJ<lb/>
CoMed'i<lb/>
7XW<lb/>
WED<lb/>
5th St. Entrance<lb/>
Now Open<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Ultraflash<lb/>
Female Review<lb/>
ECU $1 wthis ad<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
Du<lb/>
Biel<lb/>
November MTV Basement<lb/>
Tade Winner<lb/>
-?rAJ ?Srr'?.<lb/>
CAMPUS MINISTRIES<lb/>
ship Cod and celebrate Commun-<lb/>
- Wednesday night at 500 p.m at<lb/>
thodisl Student Center. Also avail-<lb/>
you can-eat meal which is $2.00<lb/>
k or, SI.50 in advance. Call 758-2030<lb/>
rvarjons. Sponsored by Presbyte-<lb/>
d Methodist Campus Ministries.<lb/>
ECiFJUSJJTiCLIiB<lb/>
mm Brewster C-103. Everyone is<lb/>
ne<lb/>
riTjriTRAl. CENTER<lb/>
?eting will be held on Tuesday,<lb/>
I, 1988. 4:00 p.m, in the Cutural<lb/>
Interested faculty, staff, and stu-<lb/>
e invited to attend.<lb/>
fc UJFJKnBAUJTKVQUIS<lb/>
all trvouts will be held March 1st<lb/>
m Report to Scales Reldhouse an<lb/>
bring I.D. and work out gear for grass. BE<lb/>
ME<lb/>
NASWCORSO<lb/>
V ? ited Social Work Criminal Justice<lb/>
majors and intended majors, to attend<lb/>
meetings Held the 2nd and 4th Monday<lb/>
each 'nth, at4.O0p.m in Allied Health<lb/>
bldg room 110.<lb/>
vour hood. Announcements are available<lb/>
in the Student Stores, Wright Building.<lb/>
COOPERATIVE ED.<lb/>
The Co-op Education office is now lo-<lb/>
cated on the second floor of the new<lb/>
General Classroom Buildng, Room 2028.<lb/>
Students interested in the program<lb/>
should attend a co-op information semi-<lb/>
nar. For specific seminar times, dates and<lb/>
locations, please check the ECU Calendar<lb/>
of Events or call the co-op office at 757-<lb/>
6979. All students are eligable to Co-op.<lb/>
JOB HUNTING? Come to see us at our<lb/>
new location!<lb/>
jTRftARY SCIENCE<lb/>
Library Science classes start soon:<lb/>
March 1 (for Tues. - Thurs. dasses), and<lb/>
March 2 (for Mon. - Wed. classes). Atten-<lb/>
dance will taken the first day.<lb/>
Sales<lb/>
Available<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
<lb/>
is now accepting applications<lb/>
for advertising sales<lb/>
representatives.<lb/>
Requirements:<lb/>
mimmmmmmmcsmmdbmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmummmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmammKmm<lb/>
Previous Sales Experience<lb/>
Excellent Communication Skills<lb/>
Good Organizational Skills<lb/>
Must Have Own Transportation<lb/>
Basic Computer Knowledge<lb/>
Apply in Person at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Please Include Resume<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
(In Front of Joyner Library)<lb/>
Must be ready to start training<lb/>
No Phone Calls Please!<lb/>
?  ?)<lb/>
im???nm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
THF EAST CAROt INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
FEBRUARY 25, 1988 Page 8<lb/>
Micah can't get no satisfaction from Justine<lb/>
By MICAH HARRIS<lb/>
SuH Wnter<lb/>
The original title of the current<lb/>
Justine Bateman vehicle was<lb/>
"Sweet Little Rock-n-Rollcr<lb/>
Whoever changed it to<lb/>
"Satisfaction had some gall! This<lb/>
has got to be one oi the most<lb/>
unsatisfying movies 1 have ever<lb/>
seen.<lb/>
Screenwriter Charles Purpura<lb/>
shamelessly pulled out every teen<lb/>
rock-n-roll genre cliche in the<lb/>
book, spliced them together,<lb/>
andta-dainstant script. Tell me<lb/>
it you've heard this one before:<lb/>
fenny (Bateman),class<lb/>
valedictorian, wants to have a<lb/>
shot at being a rock and roll star<lb/>
despite her family's insistance she<lb/>
go on to school.<lb/>
Bateman's band could have<lb/>
been played by "The Facts of Life<lb/>
girls except here we have on<lb/>
prissy, high society babe (Daryl:<lb/>
the "good" girl) and two street<lb/>
punk chicklets (Billie and Mooch:<lb/>
the "bad" girls).<lb/>
Am 1 going too fast for you?<lb/>
That's one Blair and two Jo's.<lb/>
What? No Natalie or Tootie?<lb/>
Instead, we have the band's single<lb/>
male member, a post-pubertv<lb/>
Schroeder, classicallv trained,<lb/>
who proves he can rock-n-roll<lb/>
with the best oi em.<lb/>
Anyway, the band makes it to<lb/>
the beach where they try out for greek drama) that Falcon just<lb/>
the summer gig at "Falcon's a hasn't been able to write another<lb/>
club owned by a burned out pop song since his wife died. Of<lb/>
star. Falcon's already decided on course, Justine, flitting abvout<lb/>
another band, but let's them have his place in just a shirt and<lb/>
a shot at it anyway. panties, becomes his Punk-<lb/>
Bateman's band starts off out a Wench-muse. "You pulled a new<lb/>
bad note. The crowd heckles. My song out of a burned out case he<lb/>
palms are sweating  Gosh, do<lb/>
you think they'll get the gig?<lb/>
Yes! They start up again and<lb/>
soon the hecklers all leap from<lb/>
their tables and begin dancing just<lb/>
like in an old Elvis movie. In fact,<lb/>
1 think thislSanold Elvismovie<lb/>
Bateman learns through the<lb/>
bartender (who serves the<lb/>
equivalent function in<lb/>
"Satisfaction" of a chorus in a<lb/>
tells her.<lb/>
A talent scout shows up to<lb/>
check the band out on the final<lb/>
night of their performance. He<lb/>
offers a tour. Bateman turns them<lb/>
down. Why? Pimply Schroeder<lb/>
explains: "He didn't want the rest<lb/>
of us  he just wanted her. I'm<lb/>
sorry, Jenny, I overheard Wasn't<lb/>
there an episode of "The Brady<lb/>
Bunch" with the same plot twist?<lb/>
I'm disappointed in Justine<lb/>
Bastcman. She showed signs of<lb/>
real talent on "Family Ties" by<lb/>
transforming Mallory into more<lb/>
than just a cipcr. Her character,<lb/>
Jenny, is worse than a ciper. She's<lb/>
a cliche.<lb/>
Maybe Bateman just wanted<lb/>
the opportunity to display more<lb/>
of her anatomy and use language<lb/>
that'd make a sailer blush. So<lb/>
Justine has cleavage and a dirty<lb/>
mouth: now she is an "adult"<lb/>
actress. Gosh CHemlock, but I'm<lb/>
impressed<lb/>
Daryl and her yuppie friend:<lb/>
Yuppie: "I just want you to know<lb/>
I think you're really different<lb/>
Daryl: "I can work had at being<lb/>
the same Is it just my thick skull,<lb/>
or does that repartee make no<lb/>
sense at all to you, too?<lb/>
Or what about this touching<lb/>
soliloquy one of the "bad" girls<lb/>
gives to a doberman: "You know<lb/>
what I think of myself, dog? I<lb/>
forget  Just prior to this<lb/>
epiphany, she informs us: "I'm<lb/>
about to puke And what a<lb/>
catharsis it was, I'm sure. Too bad<lb/>
Scripter Purpura is the one who it wasn't in Purpura's lap. Now<lb/>
really deserves a brow bearing, that would have been satisfying.<lb/>
For example, check out this This turkey rates only one half a<lb/>
romantic exchange between cat-head, (f<lb/>
Scanga will present slide -<lb/>
lecture at JenkinsThursday<lb/>
Sfhool of Art Fttss Re leas<lb/>
ECU'S School of Art Visiting<lb/>
Artists Program will sponsor a<lb/>
public slide-lecture bv California<lb/>
based artist Italo Scanga on<lb/>
Thursday at 7:30p.m. in Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium. Scanga's visit and<lb/>
lecture has been scheduled to<lb/>
coincide with Gray Art Gallery's<lb/>
current exhibition, "Enigmatic<lb/>
Inquirv which also features the<lb/>
works of Alison Saar and Richard<lb/>
Reese.<lb/>
Italo Scanga is Italian bom and<lb/>
immigratedto the United States<lb/>
in 1947. Scanga's painted-wood<lb/>
figurative sculpture, painted<lb/>
glass vessels, charcoal drawings<lb/>
and oil paintings combine<lb/>
mythology, psychology,<lb/>
expressionism and primitivism to<lb/>
make dramatic personal<lb/>
statements about the human<lb/>
condition ina culturally tense and<lb/>
perplexing 20th Century.<lb/>
Since receiving his MA in<lb/>
sculpture at Michigan State<lb/>
University in 1961, Scanga has<lb/>
taught at the University of<lb/>
Wisconsin, Brown University and<lb/>
the Rhode Island School of<lb/>
Design. From 197S to present,<lb/>
Scanga os teaching at the<lb/>
University oi California in La<lb/>
folia.<lb/>
His lengthy exhibition record<lb/>
includes One-Person exhibits at<lb/>
Bavlor Art Gallery, Baylor<lb/>
University, Waco, Texas; Henry<lb/>
Gallery, Washington, D.C<lb/>
Whitney Museum of American<lb/>
Art, New York; and Burnet Miller<lb/>
Gallery, Los Angeles.<lb/>
scanga has been awarded<lb/>
grants from such important<lb/>
sources as the Howard<lb/>
Foundation at Brown University;<lb/>
the Copley Foundation; and the<lb/>
National Endowment for the Atrs<lb/>
in both 1973 and 1980.<lb/>
This is a work of art by Italo Scanga, called "Meta IV (Red House)<lb/>
It's made of oil and wood, and is on display in the Gray Art Gallery,<lb/>
even as you read this. Go look at it and get some damn culture in your<lb/>
life.<lb/>
ART!<lb/>
ART!<lb/>
ART!<lb/>
ART!<lb/>
ART!<lb/>
Eastern countries subject of film<lb/>
tCU New? Bureau<lb/>
The mysterious East, a subject<lb/>
of great fascination for the<lb/>
western world ever since Marco<lb/>
Polo's return to Venice with<lb/>
amazing stories of the Orient, is<lb/>
the subject of a travel-adventure<lb/>
film to be screened at East<lb/>
Carolina University Monday.<lb/>
"Portraits of the Great Far<lb/>
East a travel-adventure film<lb/>
narrated by filmmaker Doug<lb/>
Jones, will be shown at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre. Tickets for the<lb/>
film are available at the ECU<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, open<lb/>
weckdavs 11 a.m. - 6 p.m<lb/>
telephone (919) 757-6611, cxt. 266.<lb/>
Jones, who has traveled<lb/>
extensively in the Asian nations<lb/>
during the past 20 years, says the<lb/>
film is "an album of my<lb/>
experiences and a journal of my<lb/>
observations It deals with the<lb/>
rich variety of life and culture of<lb/>
the crescent of Asia, which<lb/>
stretches from Japan to India.<lb/>
Various areas in these two<lb/>
nations and places in between?<lb/>
?Korea, Hong Kong, Thailand,<lb/>
Malaysia1 and Sri Lanka -are<lb/>
visited in MO-tfnimiWf.lVf ' f<lb/>
Jones has Captured the travel-<lb/>
minded imaginations i I<lb/>
audiences across America since<lb/>
19r8. He has presented his films to<lb/>
the National Geographic Society<lb/>
at Constitution Hall in<lb/>
Washington, D.C. and on the<lb/>
states of the Los Angeles Music<lb/>
Center, the Seattle Opera 1 louse,<lb/>
Symphony 1 lall in Atlanta and in<lb/>
numerous auditoriums and<lb/>
theaters throughout the U.S. and<lb/>
Canada.<lb/>
Pizza Taste-off to take place in Scott Dorm<lb/>
This is a picture of an Asian girl doing some Asian stuff in the Travel Adventure film by Doug Jones, to<lb/>
be shown Monday, in Hendrix theater.<lb/>
By LAURA LEE SALAZAR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Welcome to college. There are a<lb/>
handful things that you will<lb/>
definitely need during your years<lb/>
in collopo. thinpv; that yrm will<lb/>
Pickin' the Bones<lb/>
need just to survive: a bankcard, a<lb/>
large plastic drinking cup, a blue<lb/>
book,a backpack, and a hi-liter<lb/>
pen BUT most important of all, a<lb/>
hearty appetite for pizza!<lb/>
For some students, eating pizza<lb/>
U a wooHy if nra rUily rihial<lb/>
You must admit that when you<lb/>
are sitting in your dorm lobby and<lb/>
the pizza delivery person brings<lb/>
in a pizza, your mouth starts to<lb/>
water and the urge to sink your<lb/>
See STUDENTS, page 9<lb/>
Bonehead asks God about Brother Swaggart<lb/>
By CHIPPY BONEHEAD<lb/>
The Faith -3 version<lb/>
BATON ROUGE, LA- Brother<lb/>
Jimmy "I Just Read It For The<lb/>
Articles, Honest" Swaggart<lb/>
announced Sunday he was going<lb/>
to give up preaching to<lb/>
Americans for a while after his<lb/>
excessive plumbing expenditures<lb/>
were revealed to the public.<lb/>
Assemblies of God spokesman<lb/>
Jack Meoff said Brother<lb/>
Swaggart stepped down rather<lb/>
than disclose how he ran up a<lb/>
$97,000 utilities bill in one<lb/>
month<lb/>
Swaggart's wife Francis was<lb/>
more open with the press. "Don't<lb/>
tell me, I'll tell you. I know what<lb/>
ie was doing. Every time you<lb/>
walked by the bathroom, you<lb/>
could hear the faucet running<lb/>
"At first, you know, he said he<lb/>
was replacing the wallpaper<lb/>
under the toilet paper holder, see<lb/>
right here, where the stains are<lb/>
After several minutes of<lb/>
discourse on the spiritual evils of<lb/>
the paperhanger profession,<lb/>
Sister Swaggart returned to the<lb/>
topic at hand. Namely, how the<lb/>
costly water bill occurred.<lb/>
"Well, you know, he just<lb/>
wouldn't let anybody else in here.<lb/>
He said he could do it all himself.<lb/>
Ha, that's a laugh. He never did<lb/>
anything by himself the first ten<lb/>
years of marriage. Don't tell me,<lb/>
I'll tell vou<lb/>
J<lb/>
Brother Swaggart, sequestered<lb/>
in the infamous bathroom since<lb/>
Sunday, responded to questions<lb/>
regarding the high water usage.<lb/>
"Well, the Lord himself, as well as<lb/>
my mother, always told me that a<lb/>
shower used less water than a<lb/>
bath<lb/>
"I am only human. But I<lb/>
believed I could do anything.<lb/>
Forgive me if I felt that the<lb/>
running faucet would help hide<lb/>
my sins from the ears of God and<lb/>
my wife<lb/>
Swaggart also emphasized the<lb/>
act that led him to waste<lb/>
waterWhen I first had to replace<lb/>
the wallpaper, it did take a lot of<lb/>
water to make the paste<lb/>
"So I asked the Lord if I was to<lb/>
use this amount of water<lb/>
anyway,shouldn't I put up some<lb/>
wallpaper that I could use. The<lb/>
Lord Jesus spoke to me,saying<lb/>
something on the order of,<lb/>
'Verily, thou shalt not enjoy<lb/>
pastel<lb/>
Jesus Christ declined to<lb/>
comment, though his<lb/>
spokeswoman. Tipper Gore<lb/>
saidWell, His Majesty is known "Besides, I like pastel. Am I<lb/>
for his dislike of those pastel. He supposed to be the same person as<lb/>
has shown a tendency towards Jesus? Or am I the Holy Ghost? I<lb/>
naked me- uh, I mean stripes in never can remember. I dammit<lb/>
the past After reading his release, He<lb/>
Swaggart went on was whisked into a waiting<lb/>
confessingSince I didn't have a limosine by several burly angels,<lb/>
personal designer like those tacky This paper failed to reach the<lb/>
Bakker people, I had to go with Holy Ghost for comment,<lb/>
my own designs, didn't I? And<lb/>
hanging around our offices all the<lb/>
time. He might attract<lb/>
undesirables<lb/>
And what of the millions of<lb/>
nameless faithful? Miss Eugenia<lb/>
blonde sorority girl's virginity<lb/>
anxiety<lb/>
"Go! Enjoy! Get laid! I don't<lb/>
care. Now excuse me, I'm running<lb/>
late With that, He got into<lb/>
Miss Rhonda was more than<lb/>
generous i n modeling for the new<lb/>
wallpaper<lb/>
"I'd also like to thank Mr. Leotis<lb/>
for the use of his motel for the<lb/>
background shots<lb/>
Swaggart has been ordered not<lb/>
to preach in America for the next<lb/>
three months, but he is free to<lb/>
fulfill overseas commitments that<lb/>
he can't get out of.<lb/>
Agnositics and detractors of<lb/>
Swaggart's ministry have taken<lb/>
this as proof positive that the<lb/>
Middle East, as has long been<lb/>
theorized, really is more<lb/>
powerful than God.<lb/>
God issued a press release at 7<lb/>
a.m. HST (Heaven Standard<lb/>
Time) this morning, which read,<lb/>
"I don't even know this guy. He<lb/>
never cut me in on any of his<lb/>
scams. And I want to see the Arab<lb/>
that can finish anything in seven<lb/>
Hyc KpqjHpq a war "<lb/>
The answering machine did<lb/>
inform callers thatWe're sorry,<lb/>
His Omnipresentness, the Schizo<lb/>
of Supreme Beings, is out. Please<lb/>
don't leave your name or<lb/>
anything. He knows who called.<lb/>
He will contact you if He feels like<lb/>
it<lb/>
Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker<lb/>
were contacted in the bedroom of<lb/>
their Palm Springs home. When<lb/>
asked what they thought of the<lb/>
unfolding Swaggart drama, their<lb/>
official comment was, "BWAH-<lb/>
HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA<lb/>
The Assembles of God have<lb/>
also called for a rehabilitation<lb/>
period of two years for Swaggart,<lb/>
although he may return to the<lb/>
pulpit after the three month ban.<lb/>
Spokesman Meoff explained.<lb/>
"Well, the guy makes $150<lb/>
million a year. By cutting out only<lb/>
three months of his preaching,<lb/>
we'll still make $112 million this<lb/>
year. Also, we don't need him<lb/>
Nameless, 87, in between flowing pick-up and sped off into the<lb/>
tears saidI believe Brother night.<lb/>
Swaggart is God's representative This story came off the wire<lb/>
on Earth. He can paper his walls yesterday, and I thought<lb/>
and run the faucets all he wants everybody would enjoy seeing it.<lb/>
When asked the next question, I can only echo The Big Guv's<lb/>
Miss Nameless replied, "What? comments: Go get laid. Have a<lb/>
What do I think of menstruation? good time and stop writing all<lb/>
I think it's God's curse-what?<lb/>
Masturbation? What is that?"<lb/>
Caught leaving Pink Pirate<lb/>
nightclub, God was questioned<lb/>
about Miss Nameless' comments.<lb/>
"Well, off the record, I just<lb/>
thought it would be a good way<lb/>
to, you know, flush out women's<lb/>
systems. A lot of important stuff<lb/>
goes on down there you know<lb/>
"Oh, the other comment. Well, I<lb/>
never intended for you know<lb/>
to become a sin. For Heaven's<lb/>
sake, it's a good way to pass an<lb/>
evening. I do it Myself. It gets<lb/>
boring in Heaven. Nobody looks<lb/>
like Vanna White up here<lb/>
When pressed for a Final<lb/>
Verdict on the whole morality<lb/>
thing, He replied Look. Lefs get<lb/>
real. I don't have time to worry<lb/>
about every gjJBM hloarhprf<lb/>
that bad poetry<lb/>
Tim, sorry we screwed up your<lb/>
page man. Word. Rik, you sneaky<lb/>
Greek! I'll get you, you bogus<lb/>
dude! Hey ECU, when is that pool<lb/>
by Mcndenhall going get<lb/>
finished? Hey Windblown, you<lb/>
owe me dinner! Did everybody<lb/>
notice Drivin' and Cryin' was<lb/>
number 3 this week? We gone.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
By BRAD BANNISTER<lb/>
Staff Knter<lb/>
Hello YOU. Yes, I mean V H<lb/>
I meant THEM I would ha i<lb/>
so.<lb/>
Now. Today I am going tit ryj<lb/>
experiment in mind control a<lb/>
guess what7 YOU get to fcx<lb/>
subject. Yes, YOU at<lb/>
no choice.<lb/>
O.K. So YOU've not<lb/>
YOU're at a slight disadvantal<lb/>
'Moon<lb/>
LOS ANGELES '?<lb/>
fansof ABC's "Moor<lb/>
gluttons for punishrra<lb/>
may be an asset I -<lb/>
show tins season<lb/>
Not within men<lb/>
television viewers h<lb/>
with so much and<lb/>
"Moonlighting<lb/>
disappointing si<lb/>
and for those who l<lb/>
it is a terrible thing <lb/>
destruct right on tht ?<lb/>
What made this<lb/>
gave it itscharmand ay<lb/>
the scenes between C<lb/>
Shepherd as Maddie i<lb/>
Bruce Willis as David A<lb/>
These two opposite irresi<lb/>
drawn to each other in ?<lb/>
Hopkin<lb/>
turnoutl<lb/>
BY CAROL WETHERINGT<lb/>
A?ut?nt Featurr? f i<lb/>
Pamela Hopkins oi th<lb/>
Department would 1<lb/>
announce ECU's<lb/>
Speaking Festival.<lb/>
speaking contest was held in<lb/>
and was a great success, with<lb/>
120 participants.<lb/>
This year Hopkins hope<lb/>
attract en?' attention &amp; ?n<lb/>
larger group, explaining thai<lb/>
Public speaking is<lb/>
important, not to<lb/>
broadcasting or speech m<lb/>
but to everyone. D<lb/>
accountants and tec<lb/>
students all need to haw<lb/>
speaking skills<lb/>
The contest covers mm<lb/>
areas of speech. Whether y<lb/>
speaking forte be inl I<lb/>
persuasive, prose or di<lb/>
duo, there is something<lb/>
everyone. There's<lb/>
impromptu sales category<lb/>
Everyday we<lb/>
informative speech in one vs a<lb/>
Students t<lb/>
eat<lb/>
pizza<lb/>
Continued from page B<lb/>
teeth into a piece of juicy piz<lb/>
uncanny.<lb/>
If this is the case with j<lb/>
you need to be in Scott C<lb/>
basement Wednesday Marc<lb/>
Scott House Council wil<lb/>
having a pizza taste-oft from<lb/>
7 p.m. Scott Dorm Resu<lb/>
Director Tarn Riggs said A<lb/>
had no problem in getting<lb/>
companies to donate pizzas<lb/>
The pizzas will he donatex<lb/>
Dominoes, Four Star Pi<lb/>
Frank's Pizza, the Galle)<lb/>
Ceasar's,TizzaTransit A<lb/>
Pizza Inn and Tizza Wagon<lb/>
Admission is $2 per person<lb/>
if you don't have an SRA<lb/>
drinks will be $30. Each pe<lb/>
will get two pieces of pieo<lb/>
pizza for$2. After all thepizzj<lb/>
been eaten, ballots wil<lb/>
distributed and participant-<lb/>
vote on which pizza taste<lb/>
best.<lb/>
Monev earned will go td<lb/>
Scott Dorm House Co<lb/>
programs. Riggs said thai<lb/>
taste-off is open to the a<lb/>
 campus and that anvone can<lb/>
Us long as supplies last.<lb/>
Riggs said, "We should<lb/>
plenty of pizza  each coml<lb/>
?id that they would d(<lb/>
ingle item pizzas<lb/>
Scott House Council pro?<lb/>
ive included a house co<lb/>
ig-pickin' and a dating gai<lb/>
The pizza companies wil<lb/>
giving out free were haj<lb/>
?lp out.<lb/>
According to Riggs, the I<lb/>
riRinated from a mag<lb/>
article that featured a pizza<lb/>
ff at Spring Hill Coll<lb/>
Alabama.<lb/>
? : . i ?  ?<lb/>
9 ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0009"/><lb/>
1988 Page 8<lb/>
ustine<lb/>
And her vuppie friend:<lb/>
S just want you to know<lb/>
nk you're really different<lb/>
1 can work had at being<lb/>
me Is it fust my thick skull,<lb/>
that repartee make no<lb/>
at all to you, too?<lb/>
what about this touching<lb/>
one of the 'bad girls<lb/>
v .i doberman: "You know<lb/>
1 think o myself, dog7 1<lb/>
lust prior to this<lb/>
te informs us I m<lb/>
puke ' And what a<lb/>
I m sure. Too bad<lb/>
sn Purpura's lap Now<lb/>
Id have been satisfying.<lb/>
? . rates only one half a<lb/>
RT!<lb/>
RT!<lb/>
RT!<lb/>
RT!<lb/>
RT!<lb/>
Ct of film<lb/>
lavsi and Sri Lanka-??are<lb/>
tci in t?0-fniniitffihti ? ?"?Jifi<lb/>
- captured the travel-<lb/>
imaginations of<lb/>
?. ?  America since<lb/>
le has presented his films to<lb/>
tphic Society<lb/>
-titution Hall in<lb/>
n, D.C. and on the<lb/>
he Los Angeles Music<lb/>
r, the Seattle Opera House,<lb/>
 lall in Atlanta and in<lb/>
?rous auditoriums and<lb/>
uers throughout the U.S. and<lb/>
lada.<lb/>
Scott Dorm<lb/>
mut admit that when you<lb/>
I sitting in vour dorm lobby and<lb/>
pizza deliver' person brings<lb/>
:za, vour mouth starts to<lb/>
I md the urge to sink your<lb/>
See STL DENTS, page 9<lb/>
ggart<lb/>
ide sorority girl's virginity<lb/>
Enjoy! Get laid! I don't<lb/>
c Now excuse me, I'm running<lb/>
With that, He got into a<lb/>
Ik ip and sped off into the<lb/>
bit<lb/>
us story came off the wire<lb/>
itcrday, and I thought<lb/>
srybody would enjoy seeing it.<lb/>
an only echo The Big Guv's<lb/>
lments: Go get laid. Have a<lb/>
d time and stop writing all<lb/>
it bad poetry.<lb/>
"im, sorry we screwed up your<lb/>
c man. Word. Rik, you sneaky<lb/>
! I'll g. t you, you bogus<lb/>
le! Hey ECU, when is that pool<lb/>
Mcndenhall going get<lb/>
lished? Hey Windblown, you<lb/>
re me dinner! Did everybody<lb/>
Itice Drivin' and Cryin' was<lb/>
jmber 3 this week? We gone.<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
ss<lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
(<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 25,1988 9<lb/>
ECU Student can control vour mind:YOU<lb/>
By BRAD BANNISTER<lb/>
Staff Writer <lb/>
Hello YOU. Yes, I mean YOU. If<lb/>
I meant THEM I would have said<lb/>
so.<lb/>
Now. Today I am going to try an<lb/>
experiment in mind control. And<lb/>
guess what? YOU get to be the<lb/>
subject. Yes, YOU are. YOU have<lb/>
no choice.<lb/>
O.K. So YOU've noticed that<lb/>
YOU're at a slight disadvantage.<lb/>
Since this is my article, I am in<lb/>
control of "YOU But that's mere<lb/>
formality, my friend. Like I said,<lb/>
YOU have no choice. Go to the<lb/>
next paragraph.<lb/>
Thank YOU. Let's try a simple<lb/>
word game first. I'll say a word<lb/>
and YOU say the first thing that<lb/>
comes to YOUr mind.<lb/>
Here we go:<lb/>
Boy.<lb/>
"Girl<lb/>
Good. YOU've got it. Let's try<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Eat.<lb/>
"Food<lb/>
Jerk.<lb/>
"Brad<lb/>
Hey, watch it YOU! Or in my<lb/>
next article I'll sic EVERYBODY<lb/>
on YOU.<lb/>
Moving right along. Let's give a<lb/>
go at a little hypnotism. Listen<lb/>
very closely:<lb/>
YOU are a policeman.<lb/>
Now YOU arc a shoe salesman.<lb/>
Now YOU are a ballerina.<lb/>
Ha! Ha! (giggle,smirk, etc.) Oh,<lb/>
gosh. Sorry for the laughing, but<lb/>
YOU looked funny in those tights.<lb/>
Time out. Let's take a break. Get<lb/>
me some coffee, would YOU?<lb/>
Sluuurp. Mmmmm. Thanks,<lb/>
YOU.<lb/>
Next testmental telepathy.<lb/>
I'm going to ask YOU for the<lb/>
meaning of a foreign expression<lb/>
and then I, through mental<lb/>
telepathy, will give YOU the<lb/>
answer. YOU relay the answer<lb/>
back to me. Ready?<lb/>
What is the meaning of the<lb/>
Spanish phrase "No se'?"<lb/>
"I don't know<lb/>
Right!<lb/>
Last test. Look up in the top<lb/>
right hand corner of this page and<lb/>
tell me what that dirty word<lb/>
brings to vour mind.<lb/>
Ha! Made YOU look YOU dirty<lb/>
crook, YOU stole YOUr mother's<lb/>
pockctbook.<lb/>
'Moonlighting' has disappointing year<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AD ? If loyal<lb/>
tans of ABC's "Moonlighting" are<lb/>
gluttons for punishment, that<lb/>
may be an asset for watching the<lb/>
show this season.<lb/>
Not within memory have<lb/>
television viewers had to put up<lb/>
with so much and gotten sc little.<lb/>
"Moonlighting" is the most<lb/>
disappointing show this season,<lb/>
and for those who loved the show<lb/>
it is a terrible thing to see it self-<lb/>
destruct right on the screen.<lb/>
What made this show go, what<lb/>
gave it itscharm and appeal, were<lb/>
the scenes between Cybill<lb/>
Shepherd as Maddie Hayes and<lb/>
Bruce Willis as David Addison.<lb/>
These two opposites, irresistibly<lb/>
drawn to each other in a love-hate<lb/>
relationship, made the screen<lb/>
sparkle with their witty repartee.<lb/>
But Shepherd's pregnancy<lb/>
caused a dilemma for the show's<lb/>
producers. Instead of shooting<lb/>
around it, as most series do, they<lb/>
made it a part of the story. Allyce<lb/>
Beasley, who plays Miss Dipesto,<lb/>
was also pregnant, but on the<lb/>
show she ignored it. Besides, with<lb/>
her layered look, it was hard to<lb/>
tell.<lb/>
It might have seemed a smart<lb/>
move at the time to incorporate<lb/>
Shepherd's pregnancy into the<lb/>
story. But as it had turned into<lb/>
labor for the viewers.<lb/>
Maddie, telling no one she was<lb/>
pregnant, went off to Chicago to<lb/>
brood with her parents. David<lb/>
was left to deal with her absence.<lb/>
"Moonlighting" was left to<lb/>
slowly twist in the wind.<lb/>
It was embarrassing watching<lb/>
the show deal with her absence. It<lb/>
squirmed and made up stories<lb/>
like someone caught in a lie. The<lb/>
whole point of watching<lb/>
"Moonlighting" was to see those<lb/>
two carry on like Spencer Tracy<lb/>
and Katherine Hepburn in<lb/>
"Woman of the Year The cases<lb/>
they solved were merely an<lb/>
excuse to get them together so<lb/>
could disagree.<lb/>
And when Shepherd and Willis<lb/>
finally got back together, it wasn't<lb/>
any better. Forget the dialogue.<lb/>
"Moonlighting" turned into<lb/>
"Days of Whine and Roses<lb/>
Although Shepherd had twins,<lb/>
Maddie is still pregnant. She told<lb/>
David the baby's not his.<lb/>
But the clincher was when she<lb/>
announced she had married a<lb/>
stranger ? a whole new<lb/>
character, Dennis Dugan as a<lb/>
businessman she met on the train<lb/>
from Chicago ? on impulse.<lb/>
Maddie, married on impulse?<lb/>
Maddie, the woman who<lb/>
wouldn't cross the street on<lb/>
impulse? David is standing there<lb/>
with egg on his face, trying to grin<lb/>
through it. What a low blow.<lb/>
What a letdown for the audience.<lb/>
Where is the famous "Dallas"<lb/>
shower when we need it? Tell us<lb/>
the season was only a dream and<lb/>
not a nightmare.<lb/>
Maddie and David have<lb/>
become an unfunny, bickering<lb/>
couple who have overstayed their<lb/>
welcome. It was nice while it<lb/>
lasted, but the magic is gone.<lb/>
Alright, I've reached my<lb/>
conclusion. The reason YOU do<lb/>
what I say is that YOU respect<lb/>
those above YOU. Whoa now,<lb/>
don't get me wrong. All I am<lb/>
saying in a roundabout way is<lb/>
that I is the first person and YOU<lb/>
is the second. (Those of you who<lb/>
didn't understand my conclusion<lb/>
in the last sentence probably think<lb/>
me illiterate. But that's O.K.)<lb/>
Anyway, thanks for<lb/>
volunteering.<lb/>
Oh, one more thing before YOU<lb/>
goWhat did YOU think of my<lb/>
experiment?"<lb/>
"Well, golly gee. Brad. It's been<lb/>
the most meaningful and exciting<lb/>
moments of my life. You deserve a<lb/>
raise<lb/>
YOU said it!<lb/>
1 release YOU from my power.<lb/>
GIVE BLOOD<lb/>
Hopkins anticipates big<lb/>
turnout for Speech Show<lb/>
BY CAROL WETHERINGTON<lb/>
AMUUnt Features Editor<lb/>
Pamela Hopkins of the Speech<lb/>
Department would like to<lb/>
announce ECU's second<lb/>
Speaking Festival. The first<lb/>
speaking contest was held in 1987<lb/>
and was a great success, with over<lb/>
120 participants.<lb/>
This year Hopkins hopes to<lb/>
attract the; tttenuo ot&amp;&amp; ?Men<lb/>
larger group, explaining that, "<lb/>
Public speaking is very<lb/>
important, not to just<lb/>
broadcasting or speech majors,<lb/>
but to everyone. Dentists,<lb/>
accountants and technical<lb/>
students all need to have strong<lb/>
speaking skills<lb/>
The contest covers nine diffemt<lb/>
areas of speech. Whether your<lb/>
peaking forte be informative,<lb/>
persuasive, prose or dramatic<lb/>
duo, there is something here for<lb/>
everyone. There's even an<lb/>
impromptu sales category.<lb/>
Everyday we give an<lb/>
informative speech in one way or<lb/>
Students to<lb/>
eat pizza<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
teeth into a piece of juicy pizza is<lb/>
uncanny.<lb/>
If this is the case with you, then<lb/>
you need to be in Scott Dorm<lb/>
basement Wednesday, March 3.<lb/>
Scott House Council will be<lb/>
having a pizza taste-off from 5:30-<lb/>
7 p.m. Scott Dorm Resident<lb/>
Director Pam Riggs said, "We've<lb/>
had no problem in getting the<lb/>
companies to donate pizzas<lb/>
The pizzas will be donated by:<lb/>
Dominoes, Four Star Pizza,<lb/>
Frank's Pizza, the Galley, Little<lb/>
Ceasar's, Pizza Transit Authority,<lb/>
Pizza Inn and Pizza Wagon.<lb/>
Admission is $2 per person and<lb/>
if you don't have an SRA card,<lb/>
drinks will be $.50. Each person<lb/>
will get two pieces of pieces of<lb/>
pizza for$2. After all the pizza has<lb/>
been eaten, ballots will be<lb/>
distributed and participants will<lb/>
vote on which pizza tasted the<lb/>
best.<lb/>
Money earned will go toward<lb/>
Scott Dorm House Council<lb/>
programs. Riggs said that the<lb/>
taste-off is open to the entire<lb/>
campus and that anyone can enter<lb/>
as long as supplies last.<lb/>
Riggs said, "We should have<lb/>
plenty of pizza  each company<lb/>
said that they would donate<lb/>
single item pizzas<lb/>
Scott House Council programs<lb/>
have included a house council<lb/>
pig-pickin' and a dating game.<lb/>
The pizza companies will also<lb/>
be giving out free were happy to<lb/>
help out.<lb/>
According to Riggs, the idea<lb/>
originated from a magazine<lb/>
i article that featured a pizza taste-<lb/>
off at Spring Hill College in<lb/>
Alabama.<lb/>
another, so why not take<lb/>
advantage of an opportunity to<lb/>
exhibit your ability to inform?<lb/>
Also, how many times have you<lb/>
had to persuade someone,<lb/>
whether it be with an idea of your<lb/>
own, a bandwagon theory or to<lb/>
make a simple decision?<lb/>
Persuasion is something we will<lb/>
all use in our lifetimes, so why not<lb/>
learn to do it righthave fun doing<lb/>
It, and ,vym apnzfi jo, th process?<lb/>
All speeches will be prepared<lb/>
by the student , excluding the<lb/>
impromptu speeches. They will<lb/>
be given to you by the contest<lb/>
administrators and you will be<lb/>
given seven minutes to work up a<lb/>
great sales pitch and try your<lb/>
darndest to sell it.<lb/>
A really neat category is<lb/>
ceremonial speech. In this area<lb/>
you introduce someone or pay<lb/>
tribute to someone. How well do<lb/>
you think you could do that?<lb/>
Think about it. How amny times<lb/>
a day do you introduce friends or<lb/>
relatives to each other?<lb/>
Now to all those education<lb/>
majors around campus, here's<lb/>
your chance to shine. All you<lb/>
have to do is tell a story VVhat<lb/>
could be easier? All of us have<lb/>
that little bit of drama in us that<lb/>
enables us to put a special flair<lb/>
into tcllinc a story. All you have<lb/>
to do is tell it in front of judges!<lb/>
And for the interpreting minds,<lb/>
you might be interested in the<lb/>
prose or poetry categories. Mind<lb/>
you, now, these are two separate<lb/>
categories, so don't get them<lb/>
confused.<lb/>
For the theater-lovers, there's<lb/>
dramatic interpretation and<lb/>
dramatic duo. Can you choose a<lb/>
scene from a movie or play and<lb/>
give a dramatic interpretation of<lb/>
it? If so, give it a try! Then there's<lb/>
dramatic duo. You just grab a<lb/>
partner and interpret a scene from<lb/>
a movie or a play; you don't act it<lb/>
out, but instead choose a focal<lb/>
point and react to each other.<lb/>
So there you have a very general<lb/>
overview of the categories. Think<lb/>
about it. Take a challcnge!The<lb/>
contest will be held in April; the<lb/>
prelimnaries taking place on the<lb/>
5th and the final rally the 6th. The<lb/>
winner will be awarded a<lb/>
certificate and public recognition<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Sign up is being held in<lb/>
Whichard Annex, outside room<lb/>
116, but you must sign up before<lb/>
March 18th. Ms. Hopkins' office<lb/>
is in 116 if you need more<lb/>
information or you call 757-6576.<lb/>
BONEHEAD LIVES<lb/>
Don't Let The<lb/>
Winter Blues Get<lb/>
You Down<lb/>
Celebrate Spring<lb/>
Early At<lb/>
<lb/>
MMUJUUimtUUKlrt J i<lb/>
521 Cotanchc St. 757-lti(t<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
'Til the first day of spring (Mar. 20)<lb/>
Any of these exotic drinks<lb/>
only<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
Mai Tai<lb/>
Acapulro Cooler<lb/>
Blur Hawaiian<lb/>
Tequila Sunrise<lb/>
Planter's Punch<lb/>
jcoupon<lb/>
X value I<lb/>
towards the purchase of<lb/>
J Beef Fajitas for 2 <lb/>
? Tender marinated strips of beef grilled to perfection I<lb/>
&amp; served at your table In a sizzling platter with flour I<lb/>
? tortilla, guacamole, hot sauce, beans and a salad. ?<lb/>
Limit 1 per visit Offer good thru Mar 20 with this ad<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
NOT ALL COPIES<lb/>
ARE BLACK &amp; WHITE<lb/>
Tickets only $2 for<lb/>
first hour daily.<lb/>
Three Men and A<lb/>
Baby - PG<lb/>
Brain Damage - R<lb/>
Shoot To Kill - R<lb/>
NOW OFFERS<lb/>
COLOR COPIES<lb/>
? Instant Service<lb/>
? Copies from slides<lb/>
? Copies to overhead projectors<lb/>
? Copies from books<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
(Next to Chicos in the Georgetown Shops)<lb/>
?W5P<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
BUCCANNER MOVIES<lb/>
756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
<lb/>
RATED PG 2nd Big Week<lb/>
MOON STRUCK<lb/>
1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20<lb/>
RATED R 3rd Big Week<lb/>
ACTION JACKSON<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:15<lb/>
Harrison Ford in<lb/>
Starts Friday FRANTIC<lb/>
RATED R 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:20<lb/>
?<lb/>
- ? CLIP THIS COUPON<lb/>
georges<lb/>
hair designers<lb/>
Pale isn't your color.<lb/>
Klafsun Sun tanning Beds<lb/>
World's 1 Tanning System<lb/>
n<lb/>
i<lb/>
Get An Early Start On!<lb/>
Your Spring Break Tan. <lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
.I<lb/>
10 Visits Regularly $40<lb/>
NOW ONLY $35.00<lb/>
This Special Expires 2-29-88<lb/>
756-6200- OPEN 8:30 AM TO 9:00 PM<lb/>
<lb/>
MASS CONFUSION<lb/>
Friday, February 26th at 8:00<lb/>
Funk. Rhythm, and Blues<lb/>
AT THE UNDERGROUND<lb/>
U<lb/>
mmsm<lb/>
feathering place<lb/>
Downstairs at<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Free Munchies<lb/>
??? ?i?r?i?i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0010"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 25, 1988<lb/>
Digital Recording is revolutionized in 1988<lb/>
BURUNGTUN,ii.c.LAn?In<lb/>
recent years, digital recording<lb/>
technology has revolutionized<lb/>
the world s music markets<lb/>
through computerized record-<lb/>
making, compact discs and the<lb/>
controversial new digital audio<lb/>
tape.<lb/>
ou a Burlington company<lb/>
hopes to revolutionize the<lb/>
world's audio cassette markets<lb/>
with a new digital tape<lb/>
duplication proces called DAAD.<lb/>
DAAD, which stands for<lb/>
Digital Audio Analog<lb/>
Duplication, was created by the<lb/>
engineering unit ot American<lb/>
Multimedia Inc. in Burlington.<lb/>
American Multimedia i the<lb/>
nation's largest independent<lb/>
audio tape duplicating company.<lb/>
With funding from RCA its<lb/>
concept Design unit created<lb/>
DAAD which transform digitally<lb/>
mastered music directly to retail<lb/>
cassettes,eliminating the need for<lb/>
stly, short-lived master tapes.<lb/>
The company is just beginning<lb/>
to market DAAD machines. The<lb/>
it one will go out toQTI,a tape-<lb/>
duplicating firm affiliated with<lb/>
RC located in Wcaverville, N.C,<lb/>
near Ashville. Rich Wartzog,<lb/>
QTI's manager of tape electronic<lb/>
development, sauys DAAD<lb/>
should substantially improve<lb/>
cassette tape duplication.<lb/>
C urrcntly, when we do our )ob<lb/>
itch correctly, we're<lb/>
capable of very good sound, but<lb/>
I perfect sound every time<lb/>
Wartzog sa s. We re looking for<lb/>
a very good improvement in that<lb/>
srd<lb/>
The impetus behind<lb/>
 D was keeping<lb/>
the cassette viable against its<lb/>
co m pe ti tion. A me rica n<lb/>
nedia had an undeniable<lb/>
since most of its<lb/>
business comes from audio<lb/>
iplication; for Concept<lb/>
p rfecting DAAD was<lb/>
Wc I hide that fact<lb/>
.rt Farrow . Concept Design's<lb/>
dire engineering saysWe<lb/>
 about it<lb/>
DAAD i already a proven<lb/>
financial boon to American<lb/>
Multimedia, which has eight-<lb/>
figure annual sales. Concept<lb/>
Design's sales are currently about<lb/>
$2 million a vear, and DAAD will<lb/>
double that. Farrow says. He<lb/>
expects the companv's business<lb/>
to be in the $3-4 million range for<lb/>
1988 ? all because of DAAD.<lb/>
Our entire year's production<lb/>
schedule of this unit is sold<lb/>
Farrow says.<lb/>
Unlike digital audio tape,<lb/>
DAAD uses conventional audio<lb/>
cassettes, the double-sided kind<lb/>
which replaced 8-track tapes in<lb/>
the 1970s and can now be found in<lb/>
most car and home stereo<lb/>
systems The single-sided DAT,<lb/>
on the other hand, more closely<lb/>
resembles a miniature<lb/>
videocassette and requires new<lb/>
machines for playback and<lb/>
recording.<lb/>
Record labels oppose DAT<lb/>
because it allows perfect CD-<lb/>
quality home recording of CDs,<lb/>
LPs and cassettes. Each<lb/>
successive copy of a DAT tape<lb/>
theoretically sounds as good as<lb/>
the original.<lb/>
DAAD, on the other hand, is not<lb/>
adaptable to home-taping<lb/>
technology. It allows the record<lb/>
labels to release DAT-quality<lb/>
cassettes to consumers without<lb/>
the risk that customers could<lb/>
reproduce their own copies free.<lb/>
And it's economical, Farrow<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"It's a cost reduction for them<lb/>
he says. "It doesn't make the<lb/>
cassette more expensive to<lb/>
produce<lb/>
By this time next year, he<lb/>
predicts, all of RCA and Warner<lb/>
Brothers' retail cassettes will be<lb/>
duplicated by DAAD.<lb/>
The cassette has been cursed by<lb/>
a reputation for sound quality<lb/>
somewhat inferior to the LP and<lb/>
markedly worse than the CD.<lb/>
Even so, in recent years the<lb/>
cassette has replaced the vinyl LP<lb/>
as the record industry's top-<lb/>
selling product.<lb/>
"Right now, the cassette is<lb/>
literally king Farrow says. "We<lb/>
set out mostly to try to improve<lb/>
'Tiger9s Tale9 is silly<lb/>
movie, even Annie<lb/>
Marge ret canft save it<lb/>
If an award is given for silliest<lb/>
movie of the vear, "A Tiger's<lb/>
Tale" is likely to have a few<lb/>
serious competitors. It's not<lb/>
offensive, not insulting ? just<lb/>
plain silly.<lb/>
And it's too bad because a lot of<lb/>
the ingredients in this romantic<lb/>
comedy had potential for<lb/>
nething better. Ingredient No.<lb/>
1 is Ann-Margaret, an actress with<lb/>
much skill and innate dignity<lb/>
that she almost saves the film. But<lb/>
? quite.<lb/>
She is cast as Rose Butts, the<lb/>
divorced mother oi a wild teen-<lb/>
ace daughter in a nondescript<lb/>
Texas town. Rose worksasanurse<lb/>
by day but spends her nights<lb/>
nursing lonely drunks.<lb/>
Into her bored, sad life comes<lb/>
her daughter's castoff teen-age<lb/>
boyfriend, Bubber, who becomes<lb/>
smitten with the mother and<lb/>
n't take no for an answer.<lb/>
Thus begins an unlikely May-<lb/>
December romance between the<lb/>
naive 19-year-old and themiddlc-<lb/>
d mom. But once the two begin<lb/>
to cuddle, no one seems to know<lb/>
what to do next, least of all<lb/>
scriptwriter Peter Douglas, who<lb/>
also directs.<lb/>
He diverts our attention to a few<lb/>
subplots. There's B ubber's<lb/>
dilemma over whether to give up<lb/>
his pet tiger, Valentino (the most<lb/>
enchanting perfomer of this flick).<lb/>
And there's Bubber's widowed<lb/>
father's dilemma over whether to<lb/>
marry again. The father, a retired<lb/>
veterinarian who keeps snakes<lb/>
around the house, is portrayed by-<lb/>
Charles Durning, another gifted<lb/>
actor whose efforts are wasted<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Finally, a crisis is created to<lb/>
bring Rose and Bubber back into<lb/>
focus. It turns out that her<lb/>
daughter, Shirley, enraged by her<lb/>
Mom's unconventional affair, has<lb/>
had her revenge. Before she left to<lb/>
live with her father, she poked a<lb/>
hole in Rose's birth control<lb/>
device. Can you guess the result?<lb/>
The rest ot the plot is so<lb/>
preposterous you have to laugh.<lb/>
It should be mentioned that a<lb/>
major flaw from the outset is the<lb/>
ladk of even the smallest spark of<lb/>
chemistry between Ann-<lb/>
Margaret and her teen-aged<lb/>
lover, C. Thomas Howell, a<lb/>
gangly, wholesome kid with a<lb/>
Texas accent who would seem<lb/>
more likely to fall in love with a<lb/>
horse.<lb/>
"A Tiger's Tale" is rated R for<lb/>
sexual subject matter.<lb/>
WZMB names Top 13<lb/>
224 Top 13<lb/>
1. Sister of Mercy ?<lb/>
"Floodland "? Elcktra<lb/>
2. Firehose "If'n "?SST<lb/>
3. Driving 'n Crying ? "The<lb/>
Whisper Tames the Lion "?<lb/>
Island Records<lb/>
4. Arms of A Kimbo ? "This Is<lb/>
Not the Late Show "? 688<lb/>
Records<lb/>
5. The Accelerators ? "The<lb/>
Accelerators "? Profile<lb/>
6. Robin Hitchcock ? "Globe<lb/>
of Frogs "? Rcglitinity<lb/>
7. Jerry Harrison ? "Casual<lb/>
Gods "? Sire Records<lb/>
8. The Gun Club ?' Mother<lb/>
Juno'? Red Rino Records<lb/>
9. The Triffids ? "Calenture<lb/>
"? Island Records<lb/>
10. Midnitc Oil ? "Diesel Dust<lb/>
"? Columbia Records<lb/>
11. The GodFathers ? "Birth,<lb/>
School, Work, Death "? Epic<lb/>
12. Various Artist ? "These<lb/>
Dogs Live in the Garage "? ARF!<lb/>
ARF! Records<lb/>
13. The Slammin' Watusis ?<lb/>
"Slammin' Watusis "? Epic<lb/>
Pirate Police<lb/>
Line<lb/>
Only in the East Carolinian<lb/>
upon the product<lb/>
The DAAD machine is fairly<lb/>
unimpressive. About the size of a<lb/>
file cabinet, it is merely a 49-inch<lb/>
tall white box with a black lid,<lb/>
housing sophisticated computer<lb/>
components. Each unit sells for<lb/>
about $105,000.<lb/>
Beyond the initial investment in<lb/>
the DAAD machine, Farrow says,<lb/>
record companies should bo able<lb/>
to save 20-25 percent on cassette<lb/>
manufacturing. Three DAAD-<lb/>
made cassettes can be<lb/>
manufactured for the cost of one<lb/>
DAT tape, he says, because oi the<lb/>
elimination of master tape copies<lb/>
necessary for mass duplication,<lb/>
which cost about $2(K) apiece.<lb/>
DAAD stores all the music on a<lb/>
one megebyte computer hard<lb/>
disk - which can dump all its<lb/>
information in only three seconds<lb/>
converting it back to a<lb/>
traditional analog recording tor<lb/>
duplication.<lb/>
With DAAD, each tape copy is<lb/>
as good as the first because it's all<lb/>
digital. Additionally, the<lb/>
technology eliminates problems<lb/>
normally associated with music<lb/>
cassettes, such as hiss and<lb/>
distortion.<lb/>
Sound quality is not the only<lb/>
advantage: it's also fast. Music<lb/>
cassettes can be duplicated by<lb/>
DAAD at a speed of 80:1 80<lb/>
times taster than it would take to<lb/>
reproduce the same cassette on a<lb/>
conventional tap: recorder The<lb/>
current industry standard is M 1<lb/>
Record companies tn-d for<lb/>
some time to develop DA A!)<lb/>
type systems themselves with<lb/>
little success, Farrcv<lb/>
though Concept Design finalh<lb/>
perte ted the system, the patent<lb/>
went to the creator ol the original<lb/>
concept.<lb/>
" i hes ,ir thingisit wasissu<lb/>
to a Japcncse ompan and I<lb/>
couldn't build it Fan says<lb/>
A Fish Story<lb/>
You Can<lb/>
Believe!<lb/>
Vl?n von 1mi xc.lttuxl tlH' l.iril<lb/>
rth.it kind ' ,im! Mi 'w i. sll '<lb/>
'? i' iIw.jvs htii "  ?<lb/>
t.int-th , ? . ?? ini In im lie mi U-i ' ; '<lb/>
? H li (?- ? isl, !<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ' ' ,  K slil s  N<lb/>
??' '<lb/>
U 1 i: ? ' ? . -v . .<lb/>
????<lb/>
. :n iwi , . ? . id 1.1 i V<lb/>
 ???<lb/>
tui wi ? ? it n Id.<lb/>
.(HI Vkisl 1 ,1<lb/>
StVil ? VM X i i , ? <lb/>
SAV A CENTER<lb/>
The freshest way to Save.<lb/>
AAP CHILLED<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
Limit One With Add $10 Purchase<lb/>
98<lb/>
Peanut<lb/>
Butter<lb/>
AfC<lb/>
Grape<lb/>
Jelly L<lb/>
I pn<lb/>
Kraft<lb/>
Dressings<lb/>
. K-QT rN<lb/>
Chocolate Pnpp<lb/>
Milk rnccL<lb/>
99<lb/>
89?<lb/>
86<lb/>
Eggs<lb/>
doz. B<lb/>
Limit Two Doz With Add'I $10 Purchase<lb/>
Chili With<lb/>
Beans<lb/>
?? ? - ? ? ??<lb/>
Aunt Jemima<lb/>
Syrup<lb/>
Pancake<lb/>
Mix<lb/>
?.????<lb/>
Uncle Ben's<lb/>
Rice<lb/>
79<lb/>
Turkey<lb/>
Drumsticks<lb/>
MEAT OR BEEF<lb/>
FRANKS<lb/>
390<lb/>
179<lb/>
Fresh QQC<lb/>
Nectarines OO<lb/>
Jumbo<lb/>
Pineapples<lb/>
1<lb/>
QUARTERS<lb/>
Parkay<lb/>
Margarine<lb/>
CREAMY<lb/>
Duke's<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
FAMILY PACK FRESH<lb/>
Fryer<lb/>
Drumsticks<lb/>
JUMBO<lb/>
29<lb/>
11b ymif<lb/>
pkg m0<lb/>
Limit Two With Add I $10 Purchase<lb/>
REG OR BUTTER FLAVOR<lb/>
Crisco<lb/>
Shortening<lb/>
78<lb/>
Limit One With Add'l $10 Purchase<lb/>
SELECTED DUNCAN HINES<lb/>
Layer<lb/>
Cake Mix<lb/>
49?<lb/>
California<lb/>
Broccoli<lb/>
.79<lb/>
Limn One With Add I $10 Purchase<lb/>
68<lb/>
Limit Two With Add I $10 Purchase. <lb/>
SNOW WHITE<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Cauliflower<lb/>
1<lb/>
COUNTRY INN<lb/>
Uncle Ben's<lb/>
Rices<lb/>
NTRY MIX<lb/>
Kozy Kitten 439<lb/>
Cat Food<lb/>
A&amp;P REGULAR OR<lb/>
19 Crinkle Cut<lb/>
A&amp;l ?- - Nl ? R<lb/>
Chili Hot<lb/>
Beans 3<lb/>
1<lb/>
00<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
BUTTERMILK -4 PAC-<lb/>
Pillsbury<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
2<lb/>
99<lb/>
Bay<lb/>
Scallops<lb/>
 ??' -V, ' <lb/>
4<lb/>
99<lb/>
OQ0 Ocean Perchj99<lb/>
0 Fillets ?<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
Firelogs 5<lb/>
Duracell<lb/>
Batteries<lb/>
1<lb/>
19<lb/>
1<lb/>
69<lb/>
89<lb/>
FARM FRI HP <lb/>
Catfish<lb/>
Fillets<lb/>
3<lb/>
99<lb/>
PEPSI FREE ? DIET PEPSI FREE<lb/>
DIET PEPSI-MT DEW<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
2,r 88<lb/>
Limit Two With Add I $10 Purchase<lb/>
FRITO-LAY TOST.TO FtOUND<lb/>
NACHO ? TRADITIONAL<lb/>
Tortilla<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
PERDUE<lb/>
Turkey<lb/>
Breast<lb/>
DELI ? CHEESE ? BAKERY ITEMS<lb/>
AVAILABLE IN SOME STORES<lb/>
Colgate QQC<lb/>
Toothpaste 5757<lb/>
SEE STORE FOR DETAILS<lb/>
30HO ? 10W30 ? tOW40 ? 20W50<lb/>
Havoline<lb/>
Motor OH<lb/>
fiSPiSQT-BTLS AT89? 4.4$<lb/>
LESS MAIL-IN REBATE -i.M<lb/>
FINAL<lb/>
COST<lb/>
AFTER<lb/>
REBATE<lb/>
Fruit<lb/>
Newtons<lb/>
Prune<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
64<lb/>
1" C3 99" SSS2. 259 8SEr,99<lb/>
TY; F<lb/>
DELK<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
79<lb/>
?"?? N ? ? I<lb/>
Ice<lb/>
Cream<lb/>
A N ?? ?<lb/>
1-fo Italian<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
01 29 EZ-Foil<lb/>
 Bakeware<lb/>
69"<lb/>
REG OR LOW SALT<lb/>
Ritz<lb/>
Crackers<lb/>
SEE STORE FOR DETAILS<lb/>
WE SELL U.S. POSTAGE STAMPS AT POST OFFICE PRICES<lb/>
WE SELL AMERICAN EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS25c EA.<lb/>
Prices Good in Greenville. N C At 703 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Open Sunday 7:00 AM to 11 00 P.M<lb/>
Monday Thru Saturday 7:00 A.M12 Midnight<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB 21 THRU FEB 27 1988 QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED<lb/>
W.llklh I<lb/>
N<lb/>
L<lb/>
H<lb/>
j -<lb/>
I lltit It<lb/>
WV <lb/>
fT'<lb/>
I he AN N<lb/>
MP<lb/>
-<lb/>
???<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
1<lb/>
;rt.<lb/>
1<lb/>
mm <lb/>
? 3, -???-<lb/>
MB ???-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0011"/><lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
nl988<lb/>
tal tape recorder. The<lb/>
rent industry standard is 64:1.<lb/>
Record companies tried for<lb/>
a ne time to develop DAAD-<lb/>
type systems themselves with<lb/>
little si ss Farrow says. Even<lb/>
though Concept Design finally<lb/>
led the system, the patent<lb/>
e creator of the original<lb/>
? -a vwiMssued<lb/>
mpan and thev<lb/>
it Farrow sis.<lb/>
Red Seedless<lb/>
Grapes<lb/>
Red<lb/>
Plums<lb/>
88<lb/>
88<lb/>
Fresh QQrt<lb/>
Nectarines OO<lb/>
Jumbo<lb/>
Pineapples<lb/>
-29<lb/>
JUMBO<lb/>
California<lb/>
Broccoli<lb/>
79<lb/>
SNOW WHITE<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Cauliflower<lb/>
A&amp;p , 419<lb/>
Firelogs 5 t<lb/>
Duracell<lb/>
Batteries<lb/>
Colgate<lb/>
1<lb/>
69<lb/>
Toothpaste 55J<lb/>
 SEE STORE FOfl DETAILS<lb/>
30HD ? 10W30 ? 10W40 ? 20W50<lb/>
Havoline<lb/>
Motor Oil<lb/>
LESS MAIL-IN REBATE<lb/>
FINAL<lb/>
COST<lb/>
AFTER<lb/>
REBATE<lb/>
64<lb/>
Windshield<lb/>
Washer<lb/>
99?<lb/>
EZFoil<lb/>
Bakeware<lb/>
e<lb/>
y<lb/>
??<lb/>
y<lb/>
jf S<lb/>
Walkin' The Plank<lb/>
NlExi ON THE Li6E, RidinCj Mis<lb/>
-SPtOM, MACl Tt FlEmSuE-<lb/>
KVFR.AND TUt OtJLV AHlLLE-Tt.<lb/>
IN LiEC??RAoSEN, NJiCn- f?V<lb/>
3-n<lb/>
"That way lies Madness the ou wizard shazam, m?<lb/>
Orpheus: Nightvvalker<lb/>
B) Gl RGANUS and HARRIS<lb/>
PC . ? 'tSoa<lb/>
ANP HE'S GOT THE 60LO t<lb/>
IN FACT HE'S SO 600D WE'KE L<lb/>
giving him all the medals yJ<lb/>
THE RulANlsS)<lb/>
ARE STUMEpKVvboJ '<lb/>
Nick.wake up<lb/>
what are- vou<lb/>
D0IN6?<lb/>
Na,(?EALLV,YOU LIE'<lb/>
COMRADE. 1AKL<lb/>
OUE Oi- MV<lb/>
X<lb/>
ANP Ht-Rt'S A 80CX<lb/>
uft A urfi-t When<lb/>
YOU OfcT BACK. TO<lb/>
LtNiNORAP <lb/>
I ndercover Cats<lb/>
AHFR r-c ziat' ft r<lb/>
By PARKER<lb/>
Hellion; Underwritten<lb/>
By Tirrell (pronounced muck-encrusted)<lb/>
B6FORC YOU TAKE<lb/>
'OVtK. This STRIP, t<lb/>
N?6 0SOv AMSVtRS<lb/>
 YoOFROM Efi.BTH<lb/>
l 02 ?(oops- iMAii&amp;<lb/>
lQuesrioJ) to you tnol<lb/>
PEK HoSS HAS tOCK<lb/>
yJO?5eveR 86?N too<lb/>
J siteic? ?" voue??<lb/>
" Sow a memm of tmc<lb/>
I ?h(MMus , woST Ca&amp;r<lb/>
 RbM6&amp;lS A??- YoO<lb/>
iMlCAWf, CiY,lMeJ)t8L?<lb/>
J AJHAZJU6D YOU HA-K<lb/>
 AUV w6K0f SSf5 - Qr,<lb/>
? ??  <lb/>
??Tt ?<lb/>
I  . ? ). i v ST?VE - -H-<lb/>
V . . ?'?. ?<lb/>
pi Lt MYFIN6CR?<lb/>
- - -  ? ??? - (?<lb/>
? - ?-  ? " . . v - V  <lb/>
? -?:?-?,? y- ?v <lb/>
si ?<lb/>
rt&amp; i.<lb/>
:i-7-<lb/>
By FR1BDR1CH<lb/>
i-i<lb/>
C'TvjCgC'r'lc, oRTy Buts, A mTH<lb/>
? -v i;<lb/>
. , -v. <lb/>
 "f <lb/>
GOOOOOp <lb/>
?. ?<lb/>
TP? To Lf7<lb/>
 - ???-<lb/>
?? ft<lb/>
?  1<lb/>
<lb/>
3 ? ? i ? ' ?? 9 '?- tAAi<lb/>
- ? , - <lb/>
r<lb/>
 ? ?'? To e v vTTr.<lb/>
Campus Comics<lb/>
fMK IS OH JSL<lb/>
5<lb/>
B BARBOl R<lb/>
X TRASHING THAT<lb/>
TH(N rV&amp;OtTTttrVT;<lb/>
HUH? ,jv.<lb/>
FWOPi<lb/>
APOrA "ROOM IS A<lb/>
?DANGEROUS ?Le<lb/>
WHEN YOU'8 PlOKT(t6<lb/>
WITH YOOR vHATE!<lb/>
V<lb/>
The AU-Micah Edition of<lb/>
 <lb/>
"77i Cutting Edge of Humor"<lb/>
i<lb/>
Connect the Cats<lb/>
to spell out the most<lb/>
"boss" word in the world!<lb/>
T?CHAlllwee, FAMOUS<lb/>
3P0IOS H?0<lb/>
if<lb/>
IM'T M0M6 OF<lb/>
B6yS60TAOUIfSfl<lb/>
10<lb/>
JEFF PrR6R <lb/>
lJ5 3? W ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
,S. hNItM. WHATnIS,<lb/>
 EV?RYft5 IN CArTOOWLANP'<lb/>
fit<lb/>
m<lb/>
n<lb/>
 OKAY SOTHflte AREriT AMY RELiSES,AZ6Sy OR GAMES exccPT A COU?CT<lb/>
-S The potS BliT W? PlfT L6VE ?M THIS ?MM PARlO IT UMC$ o<lb/>
Stated fVfEft HASrtOTHifciG UJcCTHlSOOUY R?Al?R' YOU<lb/>
AR? THfc LOCKY OMCS O ClOJOV IT WHILE you CAW TH?SC AK?<lb/>
Fimcst colics w thc wesreM HemisF??R?,4MP I'm prou<lb/>
i TO B6TM5 AAST6R oF TMtf PASC. KJOVJ, CMjflY THC RATIlCS tf?<lb/>
VStCTBM 6FM0UlgS TO 66 USgp FSg MtCAH HAtKlSCMJMMSfk<lb/>
il 5 cat heads: A work of art: "Excalibur Cocteau's "Beauty and the Beast,<lb/>
 ? "Black Orpheus Rarer than ambergris. Totally Boss.<lb/>
?MMH W4 cat hcads: a movie ?y craftsmen at their peak: "Vertigo "It's a Wonderful Life The kind "thpy<lb/>
don't make em like they used to" so don't hold your breath.<lb/>
fttfW 3 cat heads: A solid film with flashes of brillance: "The Lost Boys "Roxanne Worth seeing once<lb/>
or twice with your best babe. Or by yourself for that matter.<lb/>
lgX 2 cat heads: An average movie. Entertaining once but not worth buying someone else's popcorn.<lb/>
? ? "Monster Squad The Hidden Wait for the video tape<lb/>
 1 cat hcad:Forget even the video. Watch something of infinitely better quality like "People's<lb/>
 Court<lb/>
M 12 catheads: Ghastly as the metaphor implies. Totally unboss.<lb/>
GO0D6WEF<lb/>
MlCAH HARRIS,<lb/>
,JWB<lb/>
MuT. Pictured here are the cocreators<lb/>
of the Fun N Games?, and House<lb/>
Ad stars in their own right, Jeff<lb/>
'The touchy cartoonist" Parker and<lb/>
sidekick, the bonehead, as they<lb/>
soar through uncharted copy space<lb/>
in search of unedited life forms.<lb/>
'i i WJW ?!? WnH?'l<lb/>
M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0012"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
FEBRUARY 25, 1988 Page 12<lb/>
William &amp; Mary breaks to early lead;<lb/>
routs Pirates, 88-62, in CAA battle<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports I ill!or<lb/>
East Carolina ran into a fired up<lb/>
band oi Indians Wednesday night<lb/>
in Williamsburg, Va. and came<lb/>
ou ton the short end of the bat tie as<lb/>
William vk Marv routed the Pi-<lb/>
rates SS-b2 in Colonial Athletic<lb/>
Association action.<lb/>
The loss dropped the Pirates to<lb/>
S-IS overall tor the season and to<lb/>
3-10 in the CAA, while the Tribe<lb/>
improved to 9-17 overall and to 5-<lb/>
8 in the CAA.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary wasted little<lb/>
time developing a comfortable<lb/>
lead in the first half behind the hot<lb/>
shooting of Mark Batzel and<lb/>
limmy Apple. With the Tribe<lb/>
holding on toa slim 13-11 lead,me<lb/>
twosome helped helped William<lb/>
&amp; Mary go on a 12-0 spurt to grab<lb/>
a 23-1 Head.<lb/>
Batzel scored on a layup to push<lb/>
the score to 19-11. Apple followed<lb/>
that score with a pair of 3-point-<lb/>
ers. Batzel added the final point of<lb/>
the run by connecting on the front<lb/>
end of a pair of free throws.<lb/>
For the came, the Tribe con-<lb/>
nected on six-of-10attempts from<lb/>
the 3-point stripe.<lb/>
The Tribe lead crew to 16 points<lb/>
late in the first half when Greg<lb/>
Burzell scored on a trey with just<lb/>
under three minutes remaining in<lb/>
the half to make the score 41-25.<lb/>
Seconds later, after a Pirate free<lb/>
throw, Burzell drilled another 3-<lb/>
pointer to push the William &amp;<lb/>
Mary lead up to 18,44-26.<lb/>
Four consecutive free throws by<lb/>
the Tribe la te i n the half gave them<lb/>
their biggest lead of the opening<lb/>
20 minutes at 48-26. The two<lb/>
teams ended the first half of play<lb/>
with the Tribe holding firmly to a<lb/>
50-29 lead.<lb/>
The second half did not get<lb/>
much better for the Tirates as the<lb/>
Tribe would let them get no closer<lb/>
than 12 points in the final 20 min-<lb/>
ute frame.<lb/>
For the game, the Tribe hit an<lb/>
impressive 57.9 percent from the<lb/>
floor as they were true on 33-of-57<lb/>
field goals. The Pirates, on the<lb/>
other hand, connected on only<lb/>
39.7 percent ot their shots from the<lb/>
field.<lb/>
Batzel and Burzell led the way<lb/>
for the Tribe in scoring bv firing in<lb/>
21 points each. Center Tim Trout<lb/>
added 17 points and pulled down<lb/>
a dozen rebounds, while Apple<lb/>
finished with 11 points as the<lb/>
senior members of William &amp;<lb/>
Marv received a fine farewell in<lb/>
their last home game.<lb/>
The Pirates were led inscoring<lb/>
by Cus Hill's 18-point effort. Reed<lb/>
Lose finished with 12, while fresh-<lb/>
man Stanley Love chipped in 11<lb/>
points, while hauling in nine car-<lb/>
oms.<lb/>
The Pirates will wind up their<lb/>
regular season Saturday when<lb/>
they play host to UNC-Wilming-<lb/>
ton in a CAA battle in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. The game will carry a<lb/>
7:30 p.m. tipoff.<lb/>
Tickets for UNC-W set<lb/>
for early sale on Friday<lb/>
Due to an anticipated large<lb/>
crowd for the East Carolina vs.<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington men's basket-<lb/>
ball game this Sat Feb. 27 in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, ECU students<lb/>
will be allowed to begin picking<lb/>
up the tickets for the contest on<lb/>
Fri. Feb. 26 at 8 a.m.<lb/>
That policy was announced by<lb/>
ECU ticket manager Brcnda Ed-<lb/>
wards to alleviate the long lines<lb/>
that could occur prior to the 7:30<lb/>
p.m. tipoff scheduled for Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
ECU students, with proper<lb/>
identification, can pick up their<lb/>
normal allotment of tickets for<lb/>
the game until 5 p.m. on Friday.<lb/>
The Minges Coliseum ticket of-<lb/>
fice will re-open at 5 p.m. on Sat-<lb/>
urday for anv remaining tickets.<lb/>
The ECU-UNCW game, which<lb/>
will be the final regular season<lb/>
game of the year for Mike Steele's<lb/>
Pirates, was a sellout last year.<lb/>
Also, as part of the pre-game<lb/>
hype for Saturday's game, ECU<lb/>
cheerleaders will be throwing<lb/>
1,000 shakers into the crowd<lb/>
prior to the game.<lb/>
The shakers, which are spon-<lb/>
sored by the University Book Ex-<lb/>
change, have a coupon on each<lb/>
good for a $1 discount on mer-<lb/>
chandise at U.B.E.<lb/>
The Pirate cheerleaders arc also<lb/>
requesting that every student<lb/>
and member of the crowd remain<lb/>
standing at the outset of the con-<lb/>
test until the Pirates score their<lb/>
initial points.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
(Jus Hill takes the ball to the hole in the Pirates' earlier loss this season to<lb/>
William &amp; Mary in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Pirates look to snap drought with Seahawks<lb/>
One or the best rivalries in the<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association will<lb/>
be renewed Saturday night as<lb/>
Hast Carolina hosts UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington in the final regular<lb/>
season contest prior to the league<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
The Pirates were 8-17 and 3-9 in<lb/>
CAA action prior to a Feb. 24<lb/>
game at William &amp; Marv, while<lb/>
UNCW was 13-12 and 7-5 prior to<lb/>
hosting league-leading<lb/>
Richmond on Wednesdav.<lb/>
The series record is virtually<lb/>
dead even as ECU owns a 15-13<lb/>
lead in the 28 meetings. UNCW,<lb/>
however, has won the last seven<lb/>
contests, including a 71-69 last-<lb/>
second win in Wilmington on Jan.<lb/>
30.<lb/>
While the game will not have<lb/>
too great an impact on the league<lb/>
standings, it holds significant<lb/>
importance for first-year ECU<lb/>
coach Mike Steele.<lb/>
"We have a lot of intangibles on<lb/>
the line going into the Wilming-<lb/>
ton game Steele said. "First, you<lb/>
always want to go into the league<lb/>
tournament on a winning note.<lb/>
Also there is the fact that we have<lb/>
lost seven straight to one of our<lb/>
biggest rivals, and that is some-<lb/>
thing that we need to stop.<lb/>
"UNCW has really got a fine<lb/>
balance of inside-outside players,<lb/>
and we don't have anyone to<lb/>
match up well with (6-8 center<lb/>
Larry) Houzer. He beat us down<lb/>
the stretch by just jumping over<lb/>
our guys and hitting the big b?-<lb/>
kets<lb/>
In that game, ECU held as much<lb/>
as a ten-point lead early in the<lb/>
second half before the Seahawks<lb/>
fought back to take the lead with<lb/>
just one minute to play.<lb/>
But UNCW's Houzer tied the<lb/>
score with a jumper in the lane,<lb/>
and the Pirates held the ball for<lb/>
the final shot in regulation. Hin-<lb/>
ton missed a three-point attempt<lb/>
with five seconds to go and ECU<lb/>
was whistled for a foul with one<lb/>
second to play.<lb/>
The Seahawks' Roy Walker hit<lb/>
both ends of the one-and-onc to<lb/>
give UNCW thchomccourt win in<lb/>
front of a sellout crowd. It also<lb/>
marked the second straight ECU<lb/>
defeat to the Seahawks at the<lb/>
buzzer. The Pirates lost in the first<lb/>
round of the CAA tourney to<lb/>
UNC-W last season on a three-<lb/>
pointer at the buzzer by Brian<lb/>
Rowsom (59-58 win).<lb/>
The ECU-UNC-W game will be<lb/>
the final regular season game<lb/>
prior to the conference tourna-<lb/>
ment to be held March 5-7 in<lb/>
Hampton, VA.<lb/>
Probable starters for the<lb/>
Seahwks Saturday night include<lb/>
6-6 forward Roy Walker, 6-6 for-<lb/>
ward Greg Bender, 6-8 center<lb/>
Larry Houzer, 6-0 guard Willie<lb/>
Williams and 6-2 guard Mark<lb/>
Gary.<lb/>
Lady Pirates lose seventh straight<lb/>
With four starters scoring in<lb/>
double figures, ECU's women's<lb/>
basketball team was still unable to<lb/>
break their losing streak Monday<lb/>
night as it fell to conference rival<lb/>
William and Mary.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates traveled to<lb/>
Williamsburg with hopes of<lb/>
breaking their six game losing<lb/>
streak but William and Mary had<lb/>
other ideas as they defeated ECU<lb/>
67-62.<lb/>
Things looked good for the<lb/>
Lady Pirates as they were tied at<lb/>
the half 34-34 but once again it<lb/>
was fouls and good free throw<lb/>
shooting by the opponent that did<lb/>
ECU in.<lb/>
William and Mary made seven-<lb/>
of-13 free throw attempts in the<lb/>
second half whereas the Lady<lb/>
Pirates were not given the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to make any from the line.<lb/>
ECU had a better night of shoot-<lb/>
ing than in the recent games as<lb/>
they shot 43.9 percent from the<lb/>
field compared to the Lady<lb/>
Tribe's 41.5 percent.<lb/>
Rebounding also played a key<lb/>
part in the Lady Pirates defeat as<lb/>
William and Mary outrebounded<lb/>
them 33 to 48.<lb/>
ECU was lead by guard Irish<lb/>
Hamilton's 14 points. Gretta Sav-<lb/>
age led the Lady Pirates rebound-<lb/>
ing with 10 rebounds and also<lb/>
tossed in 13 points.<lb/>
Other Lady Pirates in double<lb/>
figures were Chris O'Connor<lb/>
with 11 points and Rose Miller<lb/>
with 10 points.<lb/>
The Lady Tribe was led by the<lb/>
play of forward Tiffany Stone.<lb/>
Stone scored 20 points for William<lb/>
and Mary and was the Tribe's<lb/>
second leading rebounder with<lb/>
11.<lb/>
Beth Hairfield was the games<lb/>
leading rebounder with 14.<lb/>
The Ladv Pirates travel to UNO<lb/>
Wilmington on Saturday as their<lb/>
finish up to the regular conference<lb/>
season. ECU who has now lost<lb/>
seven consecutive games will face<lb/>
the Ladv Seahawks who carlv in<lb/>
J J<lb/>
the season handed them a 75-56<lb/>
loss at Minges<lb/>
? CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
IRS playoffs now in full gear<lb/>
Chris O'Connor breaks to the basket for a layup in a earlier Lady Pirate<lb/>
contest against American in Minges Coliseum. O'Connor and the Pirates<lb/>
are stuck in a seven-game losing streak.<lb/>
Ruggers win first;<lb/>
ready for second<lb/>
The ECU rugby team started it's<lb/>
spring season last Saturday by<lb/>
posting a 9-6 victory against the<lb/>
tough UNC-W Seahawks.<lb/>
The game was marked by<lb/>
ECU'S domination and their ina-<lb/>
bility to score. "We played most of<lb/>
the game on the attacking half of<lb/>
the field and came out feeling like<lb/>
we won by the skin of our teeth"<lb/>
said one of ECU'S mud-covered<lb/>
rueecrs. Team captain Bullhead<lb/>
Hihn attributed ECU'S slug-<lb/>
eishness to the muddy conditions<lb/>
and first game rustincss. Mr.<lb/>
Hahn went on to say, that overall<lb/>
the team looked real good and has<lb/>
a good chance of going unde-<lb/>
feated this spring.<lb/>
The Pirate Ruggers would like<lb/>
to thank all those faithful fans<lb/>
who braved Saturdays bad<lb/>
weather in Wilmington. The<lb/>
rugby team would also like to<lb/>
extend an invitation, for all who<lb/>
enjoy hard hitting action, to come<lb/>
and see the Pirates take on<lb/>
Guilford College at 1 p.m. on Sat-<lb/>
urday, behind the Allied Health<lb/>
Fields.<lb/>
Playoff action is now in full<lb/>
swing at IRS.<lb/>
In basketball action, C-Ya, River<lb/>
Rats, The Zoo, Sliced Bread, Phi<lb/>
Kappa Keg, Crushed Ice, The<lb/>
Wheel, We're Gonna Get You,<lb/>
P.E and the Bulldogs all ad-<lb/>
vanced in Monday night action.<lb/>
C-Ya, led by Jon Phillips 16<lb/>
points, downed Hoops-R-US, 48-<lb/>
36. The winners will take on<lb/>
Crushed Ice, who downed Alco-<lb/>
holics "B 62-47, behind V.<lb/>
Odom's 21 points.<lb/>
The Wheel ousted pre-scason<lb/>
favorite the All-Madden team in a<lb/>
hard fought 52-48 contest. The<lb/>
Wheel led by just one-point at the<lb/>
half and used a tough zone de-<lb/>
fense to gain the victory. The<lb/>
Wheel advances to take on P.E<lb/>
which downed the Lost Boys in<lb/>
another close matchup, 45-42.<lb/>
The River Rats and Phi Tappa<lb/>
Keg will meet in second round<lb/>
action after posting opening wins.<lb/>
The River Rats, led by Steven<lb/>
Garrett's 17 points, downed<lb/>
Kappa Alpha "A" 60-53, while<lb/>
Phi Tappa Keg narrowly escaped<lb/>
Frostbite, 32-31.<lb/>
Maurice Taylor scored 12<lb/>
points and teammate David Har-<lb/>
ris added eight as the Zoo sur-<lb/>
vived a run by the Born Losers, 59-<lb/>
50. The Zoo won advances to take<lb/>
on We're Gonna Get You. Allen<lb/>
Whiting and Walter Wilson com-<lb/>
bined for 27 points to led We're<lb/>
Gonna Get You in their 46-41 win<lb/>
over the ECU Christian Fellow-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
Sliced Bread and the Bulldogs<lb/>
also advance to face one another.<lb/>
Sliced Bread beat BECO's 59-47,<lb/>
while Anthony Nichols scorched<lb/>
the nets for 31 points as the Bull-<lb/>
dogs beat the Celtics, 62-24.<lb/>
Men's Independent action con-<lb/>
tinues tonight.<lb/>
In Inner Tube Water Polo action<lb/>
Monday, the Belk Babes won by<lb/>
forfeit over Alpha Omicron Pi,<lb/>
and Alpha Xi Deta beat Alpha Phi,<lb/>
7-5. The two winners meet Sun-<lb/>
day night at 8:30 p.m. in Memorial<lb/>
Pool. In Men's Independent ac-<lb/>
tion, Phi Sigma Pi downed Sigma<lb/>
Phi Epsilon "C" 7-5 to earn the<lb/>
right to meet the Belk Ball Slin-<lb/>
gers. Airpolo Attack was to face<lb/>
Umstead Yellow Cloud in the<lb/>
other playoff contests. In Frater-<lb/>
nity action, TKE "A" was to face<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau "A and Sigma<lb/>
Phi Epsilon "A" took on Pi Kappa<lb/>
Alpha "A The All-Campus fi-<lb/>
nals will be played Sunday night<lb/>
at 8 O'clock in Memorial Pool.Co-<lb/>
Rec Bowling first-round action<lb/>
has been completed, and IMA<lb/>
Reek's top picks are still in the<lb/>
running. Wild &amp; Innocent, Scrags,<lb/>
Todd &amp; the 3 Disciples, and Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi are all survivers of first-<lb/>
round play.<lb/>
Wild &amp; Innocent beat the Belk<lb/>
Pinheads. They advance to meet<lb/>
the Belk DPI's, winners over<lb/>
Campus Crusade II. Todd &amp; the 3<lb/>
Disciples advanced by way of<lb/>
forfeit over the Jones Head Pins.<lb/>
They will meet the Pin Crushers,<lb/>
who ousted Campus Crusade III.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi advanced by forfeit<lb/>
over the Belk Pi Topplcrs, and the<lb/>
Jarvis Rocks beat jamin Jarvis.<lb/>
Those two winners will face each<lb/>
other in second round action.<lb/>
Scrags faces Ten Pin Express,<lb/>
winners over the Belk Ten Pins.<lb/>
The All-Campus Co-rcc Bowl-<lb/>
ing championship is set for Mon-<lb/>
day afternoon at 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
CONGRATS TO ROY C.<lb/>
BEST Roy is the second winner<lb/>
of the Department of Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services equipment<lb/>
giveaway. You too could be a win-<lb/>
ner! Just stop by Memorial Gym<lb/>
and fill out a giveaway entry<lb/>
form. It's that easy!<lb/>
Is your body ready for the<lb/>
beach? If not, make sure you sign<lb/>
up for the next session of fitness<lb/>
classes. There are several differ-<lb/>
ent classes to choose from, includ-<lb/>
ing aerobics, toning, aquarobics,<lb/>
exercise W.I.S.E.LY, and<lb/>
SUPRCLASS. The next session<lb/>
begins March 14 and runs<lb/>
through April 22. Registration<lb/>
opens on Tuesday, March 1<lb/>
through Friday, March 4, and<lb/>
again March 14 and 15.<lb/>
Cost per session (12 classes) is<lb/>
$10 for students and $12 for fac-<lb/>
ultystaff members. All classes<lb/>
are available on a drop-in basis<lb/>
with the purchase of a ticket,<lb/>
which is available in Memorial<lb/>
Gvm, Room 204.<lb/>
Sports Club action gets under<lb/>
way this weekend. The mens<lb/>
rugby team takes on Guilford<lb/>
College at 1 p.m. Saturday, and<lb/>
the women's soccer team faces<lb/>
N.C. State at 2 p.m. Sunday. Both<lb/>
are home matches. The Lacrosse<lb/>
team kicks off its schedule with a<lb/>
full weekend of action. On Satur-<lb/>
day, Elon College visits and on<lb/>
Sunday, Catholic University<lb/>
comes to town. Both games are 2<lb/>
p.m. starts. Pack a picnic and cone<lb/>
on out for some ECU sport club<lb/>
fun<lb/>
Outdoor recreation activity is<lb/>
increasing with the rise in tem-<lb/>
peratures. Registration is now<lb/>
open for the Bike Hike and the<lb/>
Backpacking Trip.<lb/>
The Bike Hike is a 35-mile route<lb/>
scheduled for March 20. The cost<lb/>
is just $5 and registration is open<lb/>
through March 14.<lb/>
The Backpacking trip is set for<lb/>
March 25-27. The cost is $30 and<lb/>
all equipment, transportation and<lb/>
food is included. Registration will<lb/>
be held through March 21. For<lb/>
more information on either of<lb/>
these upcoming events, call 757-<lb/>
6387 or stop by Memorial Gym,<lb/>
Room 204.<lb/>
Can the T.A. Patrol and the<lb/>
Flunkies repeat? You'll find out<lb/>
soon enough! Softball registration<lb/>
opens March 15th! Stay tuned to<lb/>
IMA RECK for more details!<lb/>
?<lb/>
ACCc<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP)-An NCAA<lb/>
barring coaches from goir<lb/>
I the floor to break up fights<lb/>
to be changed because they can<lb/>
'critical in quieting a tense sit<lb/>
ation, Atlantic Coast Con:<lb/>
coaches say.<lb/>
"They one guv ou den I<lb/>
to get thrown out is the h<lb/>
coach' Duke coach M<lb/>
Krzyzewski said Tuesd<lb/>
there is any kind r r.<lb/>
person that could calm t<lb/>
ation down is the home I<lb/>
coach. To eliminate that is ?<lb/>
foolish<lb/>
The coaches, during tl<lb/>
weekly teleconference, sai 11<lb/>
at several basketball gam<lb/>
the weekend reinforced tl<lb/>
position ot the new rule<lb/>
Women<lb/>
In the opening mal<lb/>
spring season, ECL's ?<lb/>
tennis team dropped a T<lb/>
sion Monday to c ?<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
In Wilmington, mc<lb/>
won tour singles mal<lb/>
doubles wins r I<lb/>
Seahawks clinched<lb/>
Susan Mattocks<lb/>
seeded player<lb/>
UNC-W's Karen ohn 3-6 <lb/>
In the number I<lb/>
ECU's Holly Murray was i )<lb/>
fcated; this time by V<lb/>
Blair en<lb/>
CALGARY, Alberta I V<lb/>
nic Bair was a blur.<lb/>
Down the ice she can,<lb/>
ing the first straightaway in<lb/>
women's Olympic 500-meter<lb/>
at a pace that made the orangel<lb/>
silver of her skating skin - 1<lb/>
run together the way they ml<lb/>
on a painter's palette.<lb/>
At the edge oi the Olv<lb/>
Oval, an official rang a huge i-j<lb/>
bell, the signal to the skaters<lb/>
had one lap to go, 400 m<lb/>
more. At that moment, Bo)<lb/>
Blair listened for a special so<lb/>
a sound that would tip hei<lb/>
about just how well that<lb/>
vital, 100 meters had gone<lb/>
?"? "??fn?i?C5- 1 -hear th-<lb/>
nouncer she said. "I try to lij<lb/>
for that<lb/>
The scoreboard flashed<lb/>
message. Split time: 10:55<lb/>
onds. The announcer<lb/>
it. It was a world record, a - rl<lb/>
two-hundredths of a <lb/>
faster than the time her E.<lb/>
man rival, Christa Rothenbuij<lb/>
Tarkani<lb/>
WASHINGTON ?hl<lb/>
than a decade after the <lb/>
first tried to suspend<lb/>
kanian as basketball c a<lb/>
University of Nevad j<lb/>
the case will go b<lb/>
premc Court.<lb/>
The court on Monda agreej<lb/>
hear an NCAA appea<lb/>
vada decision barring the N J<lb/>
from suspending Tar- <lb/>
alleged illegal recruitir<lb/>
other violations.<lb/>
Tarkanian declined c<lb/>
on the court's action, b<lb/>
Lionel, his attorney, said i<lb/>
concerned. . . I'm conhden<lb/>
position is right<lb/>
Lionel said the case -<lb/>
be heard sometime at tor Octt<lb/>
possibly carlv next a. 1 sm<lb/>
decision was poss som<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
The NCAA ordered I N<lb/>
suspend Tarkanian in 1?<lb/>
two years and put the schod<lb/>
probation. Tarkanian w ona<lb/>
order blocking the susj<lb/>
however, and has conl<lb/>
coach at the school.<lb/>
"We are pleased th<lb/>
prcme Court has agt eed<lb/>
the decisions ot the n,<lb/>
courts NCAA spokesman<lb/>
Marchiony said "c eq<lb/>
Supreme Court to focui<lb/>
general question ot whethe<lb/>
members of the N( - 01<lb/>
rules governing themsdve<lb/>
student-athetles and OOJ<lb/>
with respect to mu-u-oUol<lb/>
athletic matters<lb/>
"The NCAA maintain<lb/>
regulation of student athki<lb/>
cruitment, admission nnar<lb/>
aid matters and the eondil<lb/>
institutions, students auLv<lb/>
in these areas should be Id I<lb/>
NCAA membership, and M<lb/>
deemed 10 be govemnnu<lb/>
tions. We Uxk forward II<lb/>
discussion of these tue <lb/>
US Supreme Court ?<lb/>
NCAA official said Tarkl<lb/>
rmmmm<lb/>
m twmmmMv0qi0imw0K nwif<lb/>
M?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0013"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 25,1988 13<lb/>
iicr lts this season to<lb/>
wks<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
. C A game will be<lb/>
- isori game<lb/>
:e touma-<lb/>
d March 5-7 in<lb/>
A.<lb/>
rs for the<lb/>
ght include<lb/>
. ? ilker, 6-6 for-<lb/>
g Bender, 6-8 center<lb/>
guard VVillvo<lb/>
6-2 guard MarV.<lb/>
iht<lb/>
was the Tribe's<lb/>
under with<lb/>
n H i was the games<lb/>
under with 14.<lb/>
- ttes travel to UNC-<lb/>
n Saturday as their<lb/>
r gular conference<lb/>
has now lost<lb/>
games will face<lb/>
iwks who earlv in<lb/>
: Jed thrn d 75-56<lb/>
-CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
f gear<lb/>
?<lb/>
? n gets under<lb/>
- nd. The menjs<lb/>
takes on Guilford<lb/>
p.m. Saturday, and<lb/>
5 soccer team faces<lb/>
1 p.m. Sunday. Both<lb/>
The Lacrosse<lb/>
? 5 off its schedule with a<lb/>
? nd of action. On Satur-<lb/>
visits and on<lb/>
University<lb/>
? n Both games are 2<lb/>
Pack a picnic and cone<lb/>
- some ECU sport club<lb/>
r recreation activity is<lb/>
ith the nse in tem-<lb/>
?. Registration is now<lb/>
the B.ke Hike and the<lb/>
g Trip.<lb/>
Bike Hike is a 35-mile route<lb/>
r March 20. The cost<lb/>
5 and registration is open<lb/>
Match 14<lb/>
The Backpacking trip is set for<lb/>
'arch 25-27. The cost is $30 and<lb/>
quipment, transportation and<lb/>
d is included. Registration will<lb/>
held through March 21. For<lb/>
wre information on either of<lb/>
 se upcoming events, call 757-<lb/>
37 or stop bv Memorial Gym,<lb/>
m 204.<lb/>
Can the T.A. Patrol and the<lb/>
Flunkies repeat? You'll find out<lb/>
oon enough! Softball registration<lb/>
pens March 15th! Stay tuned to<lb/>
'MA RECK for more details!<lb/>
ACC coaches upset over rule of the bench<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP)-An NCAA rule<lb/>
barring coaches from going onto<lb/>
the floor to break up fights needs<lb/>
to be changed because they can be<lb/>
critical in quieting a tense situ-<lb/>
ation, Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
coaches say.<lb/>
They one guy you don't want<lb/>
to get thrown out is the home<lb/>
coach' Duke coach Mike<lb/>
Krzyzewski said Tuesday. "If<lb/>
there is any kind of riot, the one<lb/>
person that could calm the situ-<lb/>
ation down is the home team's<lb/>
coach. To eliminate that is kind of<lb/>
foolish<lb/>
The coaches, during the ACC's<lb/>
weekly teleconference, said fights<lb/>
at several basketball games over<lb/>
the weekend reinforced their op-<lb/>
position ot the new rule.<lb/>
"It's a horrible rule and I think Barakat said the officials indi-<lb/>
we need to do something about catcd thay could control the play-<lb/>
it Clemson Coach Cliff Ellis ers on the court, but not ones<lb/>
said, "The coach is really the one coming off the bench,<lb/>
that can control it (fighting) and But Baraket said, "It's unfair to<lb/>
there he is on the bench while ask them (the officials) to be po-<lb/>
players are knocking the heck out licemen<lb/>
of one another Under the new rule, Barakat<lb/>
Major fights broke out last Sat- said, coaches arc assessed a tech-<lb/>
urday in a Big East Conference nical foul for each player who<lb/>
game involving Georgetown and comes off the bench and gets in-<lb/>
Pittsburgh, and a Metro Confer- volvcd in an altercation. A coach<lb/>
ence game involving Louisville is thrown out of the game after<lb/>
and South Carolina. three technical fouls.<lb/>
"This weekend was horrible for Barakat said there is a fine line<lb/>
college basketball Ellis said.<lb/>
Fred Barakat, ACC supervisor of<lb/>
officials, said the NCAA insti-<lb/>
tuted the rule after seeing an in-<lb/>
crease in bench personnel being<lb/>
between taking control of a con-<lb/>
test early by calling fouls closely,<lb/>
contest but then again, we don't the Hoyas' rough play is physical players, he said the time<lb/>
want to turn it into a bloodbath "wrong has come to take unnecessary<lb/>
either Baraket said. "They play very hard and very violence out of the college game.<lb/>
The ACC has been relatively clean Smith said. "Some of you "Same old story. . . wait until<lb/>
void of major confrontations in out there aren't used to the fights something drastic happens<lb/>
the past several years, coaches we used to have in 1960s in the Cremins said about this past<lb/>
said ACC weekend's fights. "I think coaches<lb/>
Not so in the 1960s, according to Smith said six players in the can help the matter. If I would go<lb/>
North Carolina Dean Smith, or in ACC in the 1960s were placed on out there and grab (Tom) Ham-<lb/>
the 1970, when Georgia Tech probation by the league office for monds, I would think he would<lb/>
Coach Bobby Cremins was a fighting. Smith said only one of listen to me. I don't know, he may<lb/>
those players ever got suspended.<lb/>
In 1970, Cremins said his team-<lb/>
mates ruled by intimidation.<lb/>
"With our New York back-<lb/>
grounds everybody talked about<lb/>
member of the feared South Caro-<lb/>
lina Gamecocks.<lb/>
"We (the conference) have been<lb/>
here 35 years Barakat said.<lb/>
Maybe time has helped us. We us being in gangs Cremins said.<lb/>
or lettine players engage in physi- have learned and grown from the "We became the hoods of the<lb/>
Krzyzewski said it's time to<lb/>
start punishing players who<lb/>
throw punches in games.<lb/>
"Any kid leaving the bench<lb/>
should be thrown out of the game<lb/>
and kids that throw punches<lb/>
cal contact under the basket<lb/>
"We don't want to turn<lb/>
time Smith, who played Geor- league. It did effect us. I think it should be suspended. Punching<lb/>
the getown in the 1982 NCAA Cham-<lb/>
involved in on-court fighting, game into a free throw shooting pionship game, said criticism of<lb/>
Women netters aced in first match<lb/>
In the opening match of the<lb/>
spring season, ECU'S women's<lb/>
tennis team dropped a 5-4 deci-<lb/>
sion Mondav to conference rival<lb/>
NC -Wilmington.<lb/>
In Wilmington, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
v on tour singles matches but two<lb/>
doubles wins for the Lady<lb/>
Seahawks clinched the win.<lb/>
Susan Mattocks. ECU's top-<lb/>
seeded player was defeated by<lb/>
UNC-W's Karen John, 3-6, 0-6.<lb/>
In the number two bracket,<lb/>
ECU's lolly Murray was also de-<lb/>
feated; this time by Wilmington's<lb/>
Melissa Tyynismaa, 6-2, 6-7,3-6.<lb/>
Karla Movie recorded ECU's<lb/>
first win as she handed Lady<lb/>
Seahawk, Jackie Tolson a 4-6,6-2,<lb/>
6-0 lose.<lb/>
Hoyle's win was followed by<lb/>
ECU's fourth and fifth seeded<lb/>
players also winning their<lb/>
matches. Number four seeded Jill<lb/>
Hobson defeated Wend v Todd, 6-<lb/>
3,4-6,7-5 and Joey Millard won 4-<lb/>
6, 6-2, 6-4 over Tricia Terrell.<lb/>
Kyle Rcid, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4.<lb/>
UNC-W took control of the<lb/>
doubles round and handed ECU<lb/>
loses in two of three matches.<lb/>
Tyynismaa and John defeated<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, now 0-1 on<lb/>
the season, look for their first win<lb/>
Thursday, as they host Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College. The Men's ten-<lb/>
nis team will travel to Atlantic<lb/>
hurt us at times.<lb/>
"We never backed off a fight<lb/>
Cremins added. "We even en-<lb/>
joyed it at times. I think if you<lb/>
aren't careful the articles start<lb/>
getting to you<lb/>
While Cremins played with<lb/>
has no business in basketball he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
A punishment with "some<lb/>
teeth" to it would take care of the<lb/>
problem Smith said, refusing to<lb/>
say what that punishment would<lb/>
encompass.<lb/>
ECU's Hoylc and Millard 2-6,6-1, Christian on Friday and the host<lb/>
3-6, while Ferrcll and Gray dc- Old Dominion on Monday.<lb/>
featcd ECU's third-seeded<lb/>
doubles pair 0-6, 4-6.<lb/>
Mattocks and Murray, who<lb/>
rank at the second seed in doubles<lb/>
for the Lady Pirates, defeated<lb/>
In an extra singles match, ECU's ? Lady Seahawks' Tolson and Todd<lb/>
Ellen Harrell was victorious over 5-7, 6-2, 6-1.<lb/>
ECU Tennis will be playing it's<lb/>
first home matches of the season<lb/>
at Riverbirch tennis courts on<lb/>
Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Thursday match will begin at<lb/>
3:00 p.m.<lb/>
? CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Blair ends dream race with the gold<lb/>
CALGARY, Alberta (AP- Bon-<lb/>
nie Bair was a blur.<lb/>
Down the ice she came, cover-<lb/>
ing the first straightaway in the<lb/>
women's Olympic 500-meter race<lb/>
at a pace that made the orange and<lb/>
silver of her skating skin seem to<lb/>
run together the way they might<lb/>
on a painter's palette.<lb/>
At the edge of the Olympic<lb/>
Oval an official rang a huge hand<lb/>
had clocked just minutes before.<lb/>
Traveling at that pace, how-<lb/>
ever, you can't always hear the<lb/>
announcer. But Bonnie had a<lb/>
backup. The fans.<lb/>
"You can tell from the crowd<lb/>
reaction she said, "if it's food,<lb/>
they go, 'Aaaah I was hoping for<lb/>
that<lb/>
She got it, and she heard it.<lb/>
The roar seemed to envelope<lb/>
bell, the signal to the skaters they thcarena, pouring down from the<lb/>
had one lap to go, 400 meters top of the building to the ice. It<lb/>
more. At that mome  Bonnie<lb/>
Blair listened for a special sound,<lb/>
a sound th.it would tip her off<lb/>
about just how well that first,<lb/>
? ital, 100 meter had gone.<lb/>
? rTfffcs- i 'hear the<lb/>
500. She was clocked in 10.57 for<lb/>
the first 100 meters and another<lb/>
record 39.12 for the race.<lb/>
turn, her legs pumping, her arms<lb/>
swinging in perfect synchroniza-<lb/>
tion with her legs. This was the<lb/>
The gauntlet had been thrown, turn where Dan Janscn's coura-<lb/>
NowitwasBlair'sjobtopickitup. geous 500-meter race had ended<lb/>
She certainly noticed<lb/>
Rothcnburger's time, even if she<lb/>
did not watch her achieve it. But it<lb/>
wasn't about to spoil Bonnie's<lb/>
special night.<lb/>
'It didn't scare me that much<lb/>
in a fall a week before. Blair nego-<lb/>
tiated it comfortably.<lb/>
Into the backstretch she skated<lb/>
for another long straightway. It<lb/>
was here that Janscn's 1,000-me-<lb/>
ter race ended with another crash<lb/>
she said. "I knew I could go faster landing. But there would be no<lb/>
nouncer she said. "I try to listen<lb/>
tor that<lb/>
The scoreboard flashed the<lb/>
message. Split time: 10:55 sec-<lb/>
onds. The announcer confirmed<lb/>
it. It was a world record, a slender<lb/>
two-hundredths of a second<lb/>
taster than the time her East Ger-<lb/>
man rival, Christa Rothcnburger,<lb/>
was a throaty sound, a roar that<lb/>
told Bonnie she was skating in a<lb/>
very special race.<lb/>
"I knew 1 was ahead of Christa<lb/>
she said, "and that gave me a little<lb/>
extra oomph<lb/>
Earlier, Blair had skated non-<lb/>
chalantly in an inner lane, seem-<lb/>
ingly oblivious as Rothcnburger,<lb/>
skating in the night's second pair,<lb/>
stepped to the starting line.<lb/>
The East German, owner of a<lb/>
than that.<lb/>
And that's what she did.<lb/>
"I got off to a very good start<lb/>
Blair said. "The best start of my<lb/>
life<lb/>
Encouraged by the "Aaaahh<lb/>
endorsing that assessment, Blair<lb/>
went into overdrive.<lb/>
tumble for Blair. She circled into<lb/>
the second turn, moving at a spec-<lb/>
tacular pace.<lb/>
The scoreboard, calibrated in<lb/>
hundredths of seconds, was<lb/>
blinking an unmistakable mes-<lb/>
sage. Bonnie Blair, who skates so<lb/>
fast that she once filled in on a<lb/>
men's relay team and helped<lb/>
their race,<lb/>
them win their race, '<lb/>
Being that close or ahead on world record pace.<lb/>
the opener was a big boost she<lb/>
said. "My openers have not been<lb/>
pending world record of 39.39 as good as I would like. Today, it<lb/>
seconds set on this same rink in all came together<lb/>
December, skated a sensational She hurtled around the first<lb/>
Tarkanian to be tried again<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)-More<lb/>
than a decade after the NCAA<lb/>
first tried to suspend Jerry Tar-<lb/>
kanian as basketball coach at the<lb/>
I niversity of Nevada-Las Vegas,<lb/>
case will go before the Su-<lb/>
preme Court.<lb/>
The court on Monday agreed to<lb/>
hear an NCAA appeal of a Ne-<lb/>
arranged for a student to get a "B" gators.<lb/>
grade without attending class, The judge ruled "in favor of a<lb/>
provided free aid fare to a stu- popular, local personality" sub-<lb/>
dent-athlete, encouraged indi- stituting his views "for that of 21<lb/>
viduals to give the NCAA false independent teachers and ad-<lb/>
information to impede its probe, miunistrators who heard all of the<lb/>
falsely certified UNLV's program evidence the NCAA's appeal<lb/>
as being in compliance with said.<lb/>
NCAA rules and failed to com- In the earlier decision, the state<lb/>
vada decision barring the NCAA port with high ethical standards, court said the myeshhon was<lb/>
from suspending Tarkanian for The Nevada Supreme Court based largely on recollections by<lb/>
alleged ndegal recruiting and ruled last August that the NCAA investigators of interviews with<lb/>
otevkfeto violated Tarkanian's constitu- their sources. Notes of the inter-<lb/>
Tarkanian declined comment tional rights by failing to afford . MtJf<lb/>
u i c ui? .innnmrocc in ins t i? voar after the fact, the state court said.<lb/>
on ecou?s ac0Hb" J"? l,Zn ? ? ?id Tarkanian and<lb/>
Lionel, his attorney, said Imnot investigation.<lb/>
concerned. . . I'm confident our<lb/>
position is right<lb/>
Lionel said the case will likely<lb/>
be heard sometime after October,<lb/>
possibly early next year. Me said a<lb/>
decision was possible sometime<lb/>
next vear.<lb/>
And she knew it.<lb/>
As she crossed the finish line,<lb/>
the clock showed 39.10, two-hun-<lb/>
dredths of a second faster than<lb/>
Rothcnburger, two-hundredths<lb/>
of a second that meant a gold<lb/>
medal. Bonnie Blair thrust her<lb/>
arms in the air in triumph.<lb/>
Then, for the first time in 39<lb/>
seconds, you could tell the orange<lb/>
from the silver.<lb/>
Greenville's Hottest<lb/>
New Combination<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
16 oz. Tea &amp; Bag of Chips with<lb/>
purchase of any sandwich<lb/>
also<lb/>
2 For 1 WASH<lb/>
M-F til 8 p.m.<lb/>
DON'T FORGET<lb/>
Tuesday is college Night at<lb/>
4th St 264 Bypass and now at the<lb/>
Wash Pub<lb/>
2510 E. 10th St.<lb/>
752-5222<lb/>
(This offer expires February 29,1988)<lb/>
0H1 n k.?.<lb/>
r.hinocp Restaurant<lb/>
' 4J<lb/>
f <lb/>
L-<lb/>
<lb/>
in NCAA vs. Tarkanian, NCAA<lb/>
officials said Tarkanian was<lb/>
treated fairly.<lb/>
They also argued that Tar-<lb/>
kanian, a 30-year coaching vet-<lb/>
eran who has been at UNLV since<lb/>
The NCAA ordered UNLV to 1973, got a "home court" advan-<lb/>
suspend Tarkanian in 1977 for tage by taking his case to a Ne-<lb/>
two vears and put the school on vada state judge who overruled<lb/>
probation. Tarkanian won a court the finding of the NCAA mvesti-<lb/>
order blocking the suspension,<lb/>
however, and has continued to<lb/>
coach at the school.<lb/>
"We are pleased the the Su-<lb/>
preme Court has agreed to review<lb/>
the decisions of the Nevada<lb/>
courts NCAA spokesman Jim<lb/>
Marchiony said. "We expect the<lb/>
Supreme Court to focus on the<lb/>
general question of whether the<lb/>
members of the NCAA can adopt<lb/>
rules governing themselves, the<lb/>
studcnt-athetles and coaches<lb/>
with respect to intercollegiate<lb/>
athletic matters.<lb/>
"The NCAA maintains that<lb/>
regulation of student-athlete re-<lb/>
cruitment, admission, financial<lb/>
aid matters and the conduct of<lb/>
institutions, students and coaches<lb/>
in these areas should be left to the<lb/>
NCAA membership, and not be<lb/>
deemed to be governmental ac-<lb/>
tions. We look forward to a full<lb/>
discussion of these issues in the<lb/>
U.S. Supreme Court<lb/>
NCAA officials said Tarkanian<lb/>
In the appeal acted on Monday UNLV officials presented signed<lb/>
affidavits by those the NCAA<lb/>
interviewed in which the wit-<lb/>
nesses contradicted the NCAA's<lb/>
evidence.<lb/>
Read<lb/>
the<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
?SMSaolW<lb/>
y WE'VE OPT<lb/>
We've got a summer you won't be able<lb/>
to resist at Tar River Estatesstroll<lb/>
along the river trail, picnic by the pool<lb/>
and enjoy our quiet wooded area. Our<lb/>
exceptional 1 bedrooms offer private<lb/>
patios, clubhouse and 24-hour<lb/>
maintenance: all just minutes from<lb/>
ECU and Medical Center.<lb/>
Hours: 9-5:30 Weekdays. 1-5 Saturday and Sunday.<lb/>
752-4225<lb/>
1400 Willow St.<lb/>
Professionally managed by Shelter<lb/>
Management Group<lb/>
?Now taking deposits for summer and Tali only on 1<lb/>
and 2 bedrooms.<lb/>
TarKiveryJ<lb/>
Daily Lunch Special S2?5(J<lb/>
Soup: Wonton, Egg Drop or Hot &amp; Sour (Choice of one)<lb/>
Egg Roll and Fried Rice with main course.<lb/>
Mon: Chicken Szechuan or Shrimp Chow Mein<lb/>
Tues: Double Cooked Pork or Chicken Chow Mein<lb/>
Wed: Kung Pao Chicken or Sweet &amp; Sour Pork<lb/>
Thurs: Chicken Cashewnuts or Pepper Steak<lb/>
Fri: Moo Goo Gai Pan or Sweet &amp; Sour Chicken<lb/>
All kinds of Beer 99$ Before 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
SUNDAY BUFFET (12:00-3:00) $4.95 All You Can Eat<lb/>
DIFFERENT MENU WEEKLY &amp; VARIOUS DESSERTS. SOUP AND FRESH ICE TEA<lb/>
355-5360 Take Out Service<lb/>
520 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Hwy. 264 Bypass (Close to Toyota East)<lb/>
-Thurs. 11:30 AM-10:00 PM<lb/>
11:30 AM-11:00 PM<lb/>
5:OOPM-ll:O0PM<lb/>
12 Noon-10:00 PM<lb/>
&amp;.<lb/>
ESTATE?<lb/>
?WaiterWaitress Help Needed<lb/>
?Private Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
?Offering Special Menu For Groups (10 persons or more)<lb/>
?All ABC Permits ? ? ? ?. ? ?<lb/>
" 'TnNNElTsPECIAr ? BUY ONE GET ONE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Of Equal Or Less Value For Entree Only, Not Including<lb/>
Chefs Speclalttles.Lobster Dish &amp; Family Dinner, ej, March 31. 1968<lb/>
?? -mW mt ?iun? ?? ??-<lb/>
 P<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0014"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 25,1988<lb/>
Top spots remain the same in weekly poll<lb/>
The best in hoops<lb/>
By TIM CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
1. PURDUE (22-2) ? The<lb/>
Boilermakers withstood a tough<lb/>
effort from Bobby Knight's<lb/>
Hoosiers over the weekend to<lb/>
claim a 95-85 victory. Todd<lb/>
Mitchell led the way to victory<lb/>
with a game-high 24 points. Even<lb/>
more impressive for Mitchell was<lb/>
the fact that he scored 21 of his<lb/>
points in the second half. The<lb/>
victory kept the Boilermakers<lb/>
alone atop the Big Ten standings.<lb/>
The Boilermakers will put their<lb/>
top-notch ranking on the line<lb/>
tonight at home against Big Ten<lb/>
foe Illinois.<lb/>
2. TEMPLE (23-1) ? The Owls<lb/>
turned some heads and earned a<lb/>
lot of respect Sunday when they<lb/>
thumped North Carolina 83-66 in<lb/>
the Dean Dome. Mike Vrccswyck<lb/>
led the way with 26 points,<lb/>
including five 3-pointers. The win<lb/>
was impressive, but one must<lb/>
consider that the Owls had not<lb/>
played since the previous<lb/>
Tuesday and the Tar Heels had<lb/>
played on both Thursday and<lb/>
Saturday. The Owls added<lb/>
another victory to their win list<lb/>
Tuesday night when they eeked<lb/>
out a 62-61 over West Virginia on<lb/>
the road. Vreeswyck again led the<lb/>
way in that contest by chipping in<lb/>
22 points. The victory over the<lb/>
Mountaineers locked up the<lb/>
Atlantic 10 regular season title for<lb/>
the Owls.<lb/>
and Harvey Grant fired in 22<lb/>
apiece. Billy Tubbs had his<lb/>
runnin' club back on the court last<lb/>
night in a tough Big Eight battle<lb/>
against Kansas.<lb/>
4. ARIZONA (25-2) ? The<lb/>
Wildcats survived a major scareat<lb/>
Pauley Pavillion Saturday when<lb/>
they slipped past UCLA 78-76 in<lb/>
overtime to improve to 14-1 in the<lb/>
PAC-10 Conference. Sean Elliot<lb/>
led the way with 24 points,<lb/>
including the shot that sent the<lb/>
game into overtime. No doubt<lb/>
Elliott is on Walt Hazzard's hit list<lb/>
this week. The Wildcats will try to<lb/>
keep their winning streak alive<lb/>
Saturday when they travel to<lb/>
Arizona State for a conference<lb/>
battle.<lb/>
5. DUKE (20-3) ? The Blje<lb/>
Devils scored an impressive<lb/>
come-from-bchind 74-70 victory<lb/>
over Kansas in Allen Field House<lb/>
over the weekend on national<lb/>
television. Guard Quin Snyder<lb/>
led the way with a career-high 21-<lb/>
point effort. Snyder knocked in<lb/>
seven of his points in the overtime<lb/>
period for the Blue Devils. Danny<lb/>
Ferry also fired in 20 points for<lb/>
Duke. The Blue Devils were back<lb/>
in action in the ACC race<lb/>
Wednesday night with a tough<lb/>
battle on the road against North<lb/>
Carolina State in Reynolds<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
3. OKLAHOMA (24-2) ? The<lb/>
Sooners' winning streak grew to<lb/>
10 straight games over the<lb/>
weekend when thev routed a<lb/>
tough New Mexico squad 120-<lb/>
100. Stacey King paced the<lb/>
scoring in the victory with 31<lb/>
points, while Mookie Blaylock<lb/>
6. NEVADA-LAS VEGAS (23-<lb/>
3) ? The Runnin' Rebels pushed<lb/>
their Pacific Coast Athletic<lb/>
Association record to 12-2 over<lb/>
the weekend by toppling San Jose<lb/>
State 85-68. Gerald "Big Daddio"<lb/>
Paddio led the way for the Rebels<lb/>
with 23 points, while Jarvis "Had<lb/>
a Good Night" Basnight chipped<lb/>
in 20. Prediction: the Rebels will<lb/>
win their 24th game of the season<lb/>
tonight when they battle Pacific in<lb/>
a league contest.<lb/>
7. MICHIGAN (22-4) ? The<lb/>
Wolverines disposed of in-state,<lb/>
Big Ten Conference rival<lb/>
Michigan State 77-67 Monday<lb/>
night behind 33 points from Glen<lb/>
"The Ice" Rice. The win boosted<lb/>
Michigan to 11-2 in the<lb/>
conference, only one game behind<lb/>
leader Purdue. Gary "The<lb/>
General" Grant helped the<lb/>
Wolverines cause with six points<lb/>
during a key 10-0 spurt in the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
8. NORTH CAROLINA (20-4)<lb/>
? The Tar Heels commited a<lb/>
gaudy 27 turnovers Sunday and<lb/>
got outscored 19-0 at the start of<lb/>
the second half in losing to<lb/>
Temple 83-66 at home. Jeff Lebo<lb/>
led the way for the Tar Heels by<lb/>
hitting from the land of the treys<lb/>
for 18 points. The Tar Heels nearly<lb/>
lost on Saturday in the Dean<lb/>
Dome before finally slipping past<lb/>
Maryland 74-73 after watching a<lb/>
14-point lead dissappear. Dean<lb/>
Smith will try to regropup his<lb/>
squad in time for Sunday's ACC<lb/>
battle against Clemson.<lb/>
9. BRIGHAM YOUNG (22-2)<lb/>
? Brigham Young nailed<lb/>
Colorado State 75-67 Tuesday<lb/>
night behind 24 points from<lb/>
Michael Smith. The Cougars<lb/>
broke out to a 15-4 lead in the<lb/>
game and never looked back. The<lb/>
Cougars also won on Saturday by<lb/>
taking a 72-70 skin-of-the-teeth<lb/>
victory over Hawaii. Jeff<lb/>
Chatman led the way in that game<lb/>
with 22 points, but the win was<lb/>
not secured until Brian Taylor<lb/>
knocked in a pair of free throws in<lb/>
the waning seconds.<lb/>
10. PITTSBURGH (19-4)?The<lb/>
Panthers ran int a buzz saw<lb/>
Monday night in falling to Seton<lb/>
Hall 89-72 in Big East Conference<lb/>
action. Demetreus Gore led the<lb/>
way for the Panthers in the defeat<lb/>
with 18 points, while Jerome<lb/>
"Backboard Pain" Lane had 13.<lb/>
The Panthers fate was a little<lb/>
different Saturday when they<lb/>
knocked off Georgetown 70-65.<lb/>
Charles Smith paced the Panthers<lb/>
in that game with 25 points, while<lb/>
Lane added 15 and Gore 12.<lb/>
11. SYRACUSE (20-6) ? The<lb/>
up-and-coming Orangemen<lb/>
slipped past Connecticut 73-71<lb/>
Saturday thanks to a steal of an<lb/>
inbounds pass and a dunk in the<lb/>
waning seconds by Stevie<lb/>
Thompson. Sherman Douglas led<lb/>
the scoring for Syracuse with 18<lb/>
points, while Derrick Coleman<lb/>
ripped down 17 caroms in the<lb/>
contest. The Orangemen will be<lb/>
back in action tonight with a Big<lb/>
East battle against Providence.<lb/>
12. KENTUCKY (18-5) ? The<lb/>
Wildcatslost their second straight<lb/>
game Saturday when they<lb/>
traveled to the land of the Gators<lb/>
and came out on the short end of a<lb/>
83-76 score. The Wildcats also lost<lb/>
to Tennessee earlier in the week.<lb/>
Rex Chapman led the way for the<lb/>
Wildcats in the loss to Florida<lb/>
with 22 points, while his<lb/>
teammate Ed Davender chipped<lb/>
in 17. Kentucky was trying to get<lb/>
back on the winning track in the<lb/>
Southeastern Conference race last<lb/>
night with a game against<lb/>
Louisiana State in Rupp Arena.<lb/>
13. IOWA (18-7) ? The<lb/>
Hawkeyes shot a brilliant 64<lb/>
percent from the floor Saturday to<lb/>
roll past Big Ten opponent<lb/>
Minnesota 107-86. Jeff Moe and<lb/>
Roy Marble led the scoring for the<lb/>
Hawkeyes in the contest with 24<lb/>
points apiece. Iowa was back on<lb/>
the hardwood last night with<lb/>
another conference game against<lb/>
Northwestern.<lb/>
87-84 in Reynolds Coliseum.<lb/>
Duane Ferrell and Tom<lb/>
Hammonds both pumped in 28<lb/>
points to silence the crowd in<lb/>
Raleigh. The Yellow Jackets will<lb/>
be back in action tonight battling<lb/>
Virginia in an ACC matchup.<lb/>
15. LOYOLA MARYMOUNT<lb/>
(22-3) ? The Lions scored 82<lb/>
points in the second half to spark<lb/>
a 142-127 rout of Pepperdine in a<lb/>
West Coast Athletic Association<lb/>
game. The win, which was the<lb/>
19th in a row for the Lions, was<lb/>
aided with a school-record 51<lb/>
field goals. Bo Kimblc led the way<lb/>
for the Lions with a career-high 36<lb/>
point effort. Hank Gathers added<lb/>
32 and Mike Yoest 25 for the<lb/>
Lions, who clinched the<lb/>
conference title with the win.<lb/>
Loyola Marymount will be back<lb/>
in action tonight against St.<lb/>
Mary's.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
16. NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
STATE (18-6) ? The Wolf pack<lb/>
fell on hard times over the<lb/>
weekend when Georgia Tech<lb/>
knocked them off 87-84 at home.<lb/>
Chucky Brown scored 23 points<lb/>
for the Wolfpack in the loss, while<lb/>
Charles Shacklcford added 19<lb/>
and Vinny Del Negro 11. The Pack<lb/>
had another tough battle last<lb/>
night as Duke came to town for an<lb/>
ACC showdown.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
17. BRADLEY (20-4) ? I have<lb/>
thought all year long that Hersey<lb/>
Hawkins was the sole reason for<lb/>
the Braves' success. Monday's<lb/>
122-107 victory over Detroit did<lb/>
little to change my mind.<lb/>
Hawkins, who averages 34.4<lb/>
points a game, knocked in a<lb/>
career-high 63 points to pace the<lb/>
Braves in that win. Hawkins also<lb/>
paced the Braves to a 78-71 win<lb/>
over Illinois State Saturday by<lb/>
firing in 34 points. The later point<lb/>
total almost sounds like an off<lb/>
night when you arc talking about<lb/>
Hawkins.<lb/>
18. VANDERBILT (17-6) ?<lb/>
Thanks to Kentucky's loss to<lb/>
Vanderbilt, the Commodores<lb/>
gained a share of first place in the<lb/>
Southeastern Conference by<lb/>
slipping past Georgia 77-71<lb/>
Saturday. The win boosted the<lb/>
Commodores mark to 10-5 in the<lb/>
SEC and kept title hopes alive and<lb/>
well. Vanderbilt was trying to<lb/>
hold onto its share of the SEC lead<lb/>
last night with a conference game<lb/>
against pesky Auburn.<lb/>
19. FLORIDA (19-8) ? The<lb/>
Gators moved to within one-halt<lb/>
game of first place in the SEC race<lb/>
Saturday by defeating Kentucky<lb/>
83-76 at home. The Norm Sloan<lb/>
coached squad, currently 9-5 in<lb/>
the SEC, were paced by an<lb/>
impressive32 points from Verr.on<lb/>
Maxwell. The Gators were back<lb/>
on the hardwood trying to keep<lb/>
their SEC title hopes alive last<lb/>
night with a game against<lb/>
Tennessee at home.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
20. WYOMING (20-5) ? The<lb/>
Cowboys are back on the winning<lb/>
track and heading back up the<lb/>
polls. The latest win for the<lb/>
Cowboys came at the expense of<lb/>
Colorado State. Reggie Fox paced<lb/>
the 57-50 Wyoming victory with<lb/>
13 points, while Fcnnis Dembo<lb/>
added 12. The Cowbovs will<lb/>
battle Western Athletic<lb/>
Conference foe Utah tonight at<lb/>
home.<lb/>
14. GEORGIA TECH (19-6) ?<lb/>
Bobby Cremins has got the<lb/>
Yellow Jackets playing tough at a<lb/>
key time of the year. The latest<lb/>
victim for Tech was North<lb/>
Carolina State as the Yellow<lb/>
Jackets disposed of the Wolfpack<lb/>
PAH) ADVERTISEMENT<lb/>
INTRAMURAL - RECREATIONAL SERVICES<lb/>
SURFIN U.S.A.<lb/>
Look out all you Bahama Momasl Come March 6th, the surfs up! The<lb/>
East Carolina University Surf Club will hit the waves for a National<lb/>
Surfing Scholastic Association sanctioned event - a team trails surf off<lb/>
against Florida clubs.<lb/>
Club President Johnny Ghee, a senior ConstrucUon Management<lb/>
major from Virginia Beach, says the surf club is one of the largest sports<lb/>
clubs on campus. There are 28 active surfers in the club and attendance<lb/>
at meetings has even reached 80. Ghee says the key is that the club is<lb/>
more than just a bunch of surfers, it's a club for anyone who loves the<lb/>
sounds of the surf.<lb/>
East Carolina hopes to put its own invitaUonal tournament into action<lb/>
this season at Atlantic Beach, with members surfing against the likes of<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington, UNC-Chapel Hill and the University of Delaware. How-<lb/>
ever. Ghee says its not easy for North Carolina teams to host an event<lb/>
such as the upcoming tournament in the Bahamas. The reason is simple.<lb/>
The water is just to cold to attract the Florida teams, and that is where<lb/>
most of the competitors originate.<lb/>
The Surf Club meets one to two times each month, and Ghee says<lb/>
members are from all over the eastern United States. If you'd like more<lb/>
information about the East Carolina Surf Club, call the IRS at 757-6387.<lb/>
WHERE FUN IS 1<lb/>
FIT BIT<lb/>
2nd Session Fitness Classes<lb/>
Registration for second session fitness classes will<lb/>
be held March 1-4 and 14-15 from 9:00 a.m4:00<lb/>
p.m. in MG 102. Second session classes will begin<lb/>
March 14. Pick up a complete class schedule in 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
w??j???wM????.ww ??'MVW41<lb/>
KeM&amp;'au'jArj<lb/>
COMING ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
<lb/>
izzzzzzz2zzzznzzzzz2zzzznzzzzzzn2znzzzzzz22nmzznn2znznnnm!L<lb/>
Softball Registration 11 a.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
MG 104-A- March 15<lb/>
Tennis Doubles Registration 5 p.m.<lb/>
Bio N-106 - March 16<lb/>
Mixed Doubles Registration 5 p.m.<lb/>
MG 104-A - March 16<lb/>
Co-Rec Volleyball Registration 6 p.m.<lb/>
MG 102 - March 23<lb/>
Co-Rec Super Sport Registration 7 p.m.<lb/>
MG 102 - March 23<lb/>
INTRA ACTION<lb/>
HOTLINE<lb/>
757-6562<lb/>
For around the clock information<lb/>
Are you a couch potato? Sitting around waiting for something<lb/>
exciting to do? Why not try your luck at the ECU Frisbee Disc<lb/>
Course? The course is open all day every day for all Greenville<lb/>
residents and East Carolinians. Your dog ate your frisbee huh?!<lb/>
Well, with a valid ECU ID, you can check out your own disc at the<lb/>
Equipment Check-Out Center located in 115 Memorial Gym.<lb/>
LCI FRISBEE DISC COURSE<lb/>
ima neck's<lb/>
top picks<lb/>
IMA RECK TAKES SECOND STAB AT BASKETBALL RANKINGS<lb/>
(after falling on face in first round)<lb/>
"7<lb/>
1. THE FELLOWS<lb/>
2. THE DREAM TEAM<lb/>
ffi<lb/>
9.<lb/>
af ?<lb/>
r-?<lb/>
rest<lb/>
rooms<lb/>
batting<lb/>
cage<lb/>
I ! <lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
6<lb/>
@- - -?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
rv<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
iea1?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
AHU:TCE PUTT-AtlXiMfi<lb/>
?? nu.6uuteic<lb/>
<lb/>
Mr<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
3. MANTRONIX<lb/>
4. HERE'S THE BEEF<lb/>
5. SLICED BREAD<lb/>
6. CTA<lb/>
7. TAU KAPPA EPSILON<lb/>
8. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON<lb/>
9. SCOTT CELTICS<lb/>
CHARLES ST.<lb/>
10. ALL -MADDEN TEAM<lb/>
.The Cream de Mint of all intramural<lb/>
teams. Just ask the team they beat<lb/>
166-16. (Yes that is a correct score) I'm<lb/>
putting my money on these homeboys.<lb/>
.These guys (the football team) have<lb/>
finally found an explosive offense.<lb/>
Another 100-point performer. If the<lb/>
pairings are right, the finals will be The<lb/>
Fellows vs. The Dream Team.<lb/>
. Still riding high from preseason tour-<lb/>
nament victory. Strong team because<lb/>
they play like a teamand having the<lb/>
raw talent helps.<lb/>
. Made there way into the top ten from<lb/>
nowhere. Ima Reck figures they have<lb/>
earned their spot by beefing up their<lb/>
inside game.<lb/>
.In at number five simply because they<lb/>
are the best thing sinceno. I can't do<lb/>
it.<lb/>
. Speedy team. Always chanting team<lb/>
name as they blow by defenders on the<lb/>
fast break.<lb/>
The TKE's not only box but are pretty<lb/>
good at hoops too. Look for a major<lb/>
battle to come about with Sigma Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon in the Fraternity finals.<lb/>
See above.<lb/>
Have been impressive but with a name<lb/>
like the Celtics, what do you expect?<lb/>
Should take the Men's Residence Hall<lb/>
title.<lb/>
Okay, so they're 1-2. But this is the<lb/>
All-Madden team and it will make a<lb/>
comeback. Right Guys?<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS: ROY C. BEST<lb/>
You are the second winner in the IRS EQUIPMENT GIVEAWAY. Be<lb/>
to stop by room 204 Memorial Gym and claim your new volley-<lb/>
 ball. Be sure to enter the next giveaway to be held March 14.<lb/>
CLOSING BOm m ?<lb/>
All Informal Recreation Facilities will close at 2:00 p.m. on Friday. March 4 for Spring Break and will remain closed<lb/>
through Sunday, March 13. Regular Informal Recreation hours will resume Monday, March 14.<lb/>
PAID ADVERTISEMENT<lb/>
M"taMvH<lb/>
MliimiiinWiiw1<lb/>
?w mm?M? iawmi"Wrw?K?tf" <lb/>
?I ? l ii iHpllp II ' " ?"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057947_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>