<?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">
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<pb facs="00058121_0001"/>
EDITORIALSInside4<lb/>
 1 ASSIFIEDS FEATl RES6<lb/>
 7<lb/>
SPORTS11<lb/>
:<lb/>
Features<lb/>
The day in a life of a pirate mascot<lb/>
See page 7.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pirates beat William and Mary<lb/>
See page 11.<lb/>
She<lb/>
(Haraltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
 ol  o. 4"<lb/>
rhursday I ebruary 2, 1989<lb/>
Greenville, (<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,0(X)<lb/>
2 IS blotter hits confiscated<lb/>
Student charged for selling LSD<lb/>
By I1M HAMPTON<lb/>
An E( I student vvasarrested<lb/>
Sunday morning for possession<lb/>
ol<lb/>
te to unpred. table Greenville thi w eek, bringing 7<lb/>
i s decided to spend the plaving volleybal! on<lb/>
0degree temperatures and short?<lb/>
the mall. (Photo by Mark I ove<lb/>
Program pushes for<lb/>
drug prevention<lb/>
SI 'after a man, who had alleg-<lb/>
edly taken the drug, asked for<lb/>
medical attention, according to<lb/>
campus security officials.<lb/>
Jeffrey Allen Turner, 19, of<lb/>
157 Aycock Resident Hall was<lb/>
arrested early Sunday morning<lb/>
tor possession with the intent to<lb/>
sell and deliver Lysergic acid di-<lb/>
etlw lamide ! SD), according to .<lb/>
R Rose, c hief of ECU campus se-<lb/>
curity.<lb/>
Turner, who was tree on a<lb/>
S3,000 bond, was arrested on a<lb/>
second charge Monday of posses<lb/>
sion and the sale of LSD. The Pitt<lb/>
County Magistrate set a second<lb/>
bond of $5,000 for Turner.<lb/>
According to Rose, two EC I<lb/>
campus policemen talked to a<lb/>
student near Tyler dormitory<lb/>
early Sunday morning Hie stu-<lb/>
dent said he wasn't feeling good<lb/>
or 'on a bad trip' and asked tor<lb/>
assistance to Pitt Memorial Hos<lb/>
pitial.<lb/>
The student walked into<lb/>
some of the officers and requested<lb/>
medical aid Rose said.<lb/>
The anonymous student led<lb/>
polios to the investigation of<lb/>
urner While investigating room<lb/>
157 Ayco k, detectives found 218<lb/>
hits dt l.si). ac ording to Rose<lb/>
The confiscated LSD was on<lb/>
sheets, or blotter term. LSD,<lb/>
popularly known as a id, is a<lb/>
psy he tive hallucinogenic<lb/>
dnij<lb/>
I in r aj peared in court an.<lb/>
? r a probable cause hearing.<lb/>
Rose said Turner court date will<lb/>
probable be !0 days from the ini-<lb/>
tial heanrv,<lb/>
MARTIN<lb/>
. - - "Val ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
- . :<lb/>
-<lb/>
I nee<lb/>
n will be<lb/>
i i <lb/>
?<lb/>
,ms<lb/>
.? ad<lb/>
I<lb/>
TIL'S :<lb/>
? groups<lb/>
that will<lb/>
ting<lb/>
4<lb/>
 it deals witl ssues sur<lb/>
res alcohol<lb/>
n offer-<lb/>
iwarc ness programs so stu-<lb/>
dents can understand what alco-<lb/>
? 5 and what it can do to them.<lb/>
.? make good deci-<lb/>
? s about choosing to drink or<lb/>
Irinl<lb/>
ffice of Substance<lb/>
.b. A Prevention and Edu-<lb/>
iti  5 pen for self-referrals<lb/>
ind is ottering confidential one-<lb/>
? one counceling tor students<lb/>
with alcohol and drug-related<lb/>
? ?blems.<lb/>
According to Susina, the of-<lb/>
e hopes to establish a campus<lb/>
chapter of Alcoholics Anony-<lb/>
mous (AA) this semester.om-<lb/>
munitv chapters are accessible to<lb/>
students until the campus<lb/>
chapter is formed<lb/>
Susina said the office will also<lb/>
? rm a chapter of Adult Children<lb/>
? '? . oholicsi Ac OA). Accord<lb/>
? Susina there is a growing need<lb/>
tor this group on campus to give<lb/>
support to students with alcohol<lb/>
problem in the family.<lb/>
The office, located in Erwin<lb/>
301, serves as a resource library<lb/>
with video tapes and pamphlets<lb/>
available Call 757-6793 tor more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
SGA passes new Spring<lb/>
election procedures<lb/>
M HMP10<lb/>
lenf . ernment<lb/>
lection<lb/>
efforts to<lb/>
? time to hear<lb/>
ffice hold-<lb/>
id ' ek to ? am<lb/>
ii I lates will<lb/>
cks to vie for<lb/>
ci tming<lb/>
: ?rding to<lb/>
ken ?1 the legis<lb/>
br ?ught theelec-<lb/>
lent before the<lb/>
: ? ntatives, vnd the<lb/>
eek will allow for<lb/>
irti ipation in the ele<lb/>
tveeks, it gives<lb/>
S more time to hold<lb/>
nd ? ? terstocvaluate<lb/>
d ites 1 lelms said<lb/>
: i ? spring election'<lb/>
n held th. week follow<lb/>
? ik Helms said th<lb/>
va ation is not<lb/>
good placement for the elections.<lb/>
1 lelms also introduced legis-<lb/>
lation in the weekly s .A meeting<lb/>
which changes the period be-<lb/>
tween the primary and run off<lb/>
elections from the traditional two<lb/>
weeks to one week.<lb/>
"There is no reason tor there<lb/>
to be two weeks between clec<lb/>
tions Helms said The run off<lb/>
eK tion decides a vu tir from the<lb/>
two top vote-getters who emerge<lb/>
from the primary election<lb/>
Helms feels students have<lb/>
be, n apathetic concerning the<lb/>
run oft elections in the past years.<lb/>
I le said the root oi the problem is<lb/>
the two week period between<lb/>
elections Two weeks after the<lb/>
initial election, "People are going<lb/>
to torget what is happening<lb/>
Helms said<lb/>
A total of 1,034 students,<lb/>
roughly 6.6 percent oi the stu<lb/>
dents, voted in last spring's run<lb/>
off elections<lb/>
In addition, the legislation<lb/>
passed Monday moves the filing<lb/>
period U r candidates to one week<lb/>
prior to spring break.<lb/>
49L<lb/>
David Mayr, the recently elected president of the Student Union,<lb/>
plans to continue on the progress of the previous adminstration.<lb/>
(Photo by Angela Pridgen?Photolab)<lb/>
Professors are overpaid<lb/>
and underworked<lb/>
(CPS) Professors who curl<lb/>
up by the fireplace with this<lb/>
winter's new book about .vhat's<lb/>
wrong with colleges Charles<lb/>
Sykes' "Profscam" might end<lb/>
up throwing it in. This hotlv de-<lb/>
bated expose depicts academi-<lb/>
cians as overpaid, underworked<lb/>
prima donnas who "almost<lb/>
singlehandedly destroyed the<lb/>
university as a center tor learn-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
College teachers, Sykes said,<lb/>
are no good<lb/>
They have been made fat and<lb/>
complacent by tenure, he<lb/>
charged, which trees them to<lb/>
abandon their students in favor of<lb/>
chasing money and prestige<lb/>
through office politicking, useless<lb/>
research and big grants.<lb/>
"They have distorted univer-<lb/>
sity curriculums to accomodate<lb/>
their own narrow and selfish in-<lb/>
terests Svkes writes.<lb/>
These interests are so trendy<lb/>
that they produce "curriculums<lb/>
that look like they were designed<lb/>
by a game show host Syker<lb/>
added in an interview.<lb/>
To Sykes, profs are reponsiblc<lb/>
for a variety of ills like "pseu-<lb/>
doscience "junkthink" and<lb/>
Student Union elects<lb/>
Mayr as new president<lb/>
By MIm McIWIS<lb/>
SUH Wntf<lb/>
List week, the Student I nion<lb/>
elected a new president. Da I<lb/>
Mayr, who says he plans I<lb/>
pand on existing programs.<lb/>
Presently the chairperson for<lb/>
the films committee, Mayr will<lb/>
become president April 22. Mayr<lb/>
has been active in the Student<lb/>
nion tor tour years and is very<lb/>
optimistic about the upcoming<lb/>
year.<lb/>
When asked to discuss future<lb/>
plans tor the Student Union,<lb/>
David said. "I want to improve<lb/>
upon the outgoing administra-<lb/>
tions progress Mayr feels that<lb/>
Karen Pasch, the current presi-<lb/>
dent, has done a lemarkable job.<lb/>
During her adminstration,<lb/>
Pasch has made strides promot-<lb/>
ing the campus of minority ori-<lb/>
ented programs and has worked.<lb/>
to develop a more cohesive or-<lb/>
ganization within the Union.<lb/>
Mayr wants to continue to create<lb/>
unification between the mem-<lb/>
bers of the Student Union pro-<lb/>
gram board in order to better<lb/>
serve the student body.<lb/>
Eventually Mayr hopes to<lb/>
make ECU stud ;nts more aware<lb/>
o the Student Union's activities<lb/>
by working with WMB to help<lb/>
promote the programs. Mayr<lb/>
also predicts that the Popart<lb/>
ment oi Student Life, and the<lb/>
Student Union will start work<lb/>
ing together. The Student Union<lb/>
will program the Department ol<lb/>
Student Life's events and in turn<lb/>
Student Life will promote the<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
"Basicall , ill try to work<lb/>
with Student Life in promoting<lb/>
our events and we will assist in<lb/>
? ramming events like the<lb/>
i lill lam . Mayr said.<lb/>
lliis arrangement is just one<lb/>
: the mam that has been<lb/>
n  for the new year. Mayr<lb/>
hopes that hisenergy ,iv.A enthu-<lb/>
siasm v ill cause a chain reaction<lb/>
among the other members.<lb/>
Most ot the students at ECL<lb/>
don't understand what the Stu-<lb/>
lent L nion is all about. What<lb/>
does this rL tnizationdo,how is<lb/>
it funded, who's it1 charge?<lb/>
The Student Union consists of<lb/>
11 committees including, chair-<lb/>
person tor each committee,<lb/>
president, and assistant presi-<lb/>
dent. Each committee is respon-<lb/>
sible for creating a budget with<lb/>
the alloted monies<lb/>
Every student, whether they<lb/>
are awareof itornot, helps make<lb/>
tl-as allocation possible. When<lb/>
tuition- are paid, there's a per-<lb/>
centage that goes toward "other<lb/>
fees " Most ot the money from<lb/>
these fees goes toward ECU ath-<lb/>
letics and only a fourth goes to<lb/>
the Student Union.<lb/>
Not all ot the committees will<lb/>
receive the same amount of<lb/>
money Tor example, the Film<lb/>
committee will receive more<lb/>
funding than the Major Concert<lb/>
committee since more film pro-<lb/>
ductions are ottered to the stu-<lb/>
dent-<lb/>
One of the members, Steve<lb/>
Sunmers, Chairperson ot the<lb/>
Major Concerts committee,<lb/>
thinks David Mayr will be a real<lb/>
See MAYR, page 2<lb/>
"twist(ing) the ideals oi academic<lb/>
freedom into a system in which<lb/>
thev are accountable to no one<lb/>
"A lot of undergrads go to<lb/>
some oi the most prestigious uni-<lb/>
versities in the country, like the<lb/>
Univeristv of Michigan, Berkeley,<lb/>
even I larvard,based on the repu-<lb/>
tations of their professors Sykes<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"What they find is something<lb/>
very different from what thev and<lb/>
their parents have been led to<lb/>
expect. Thev think they'll be<lb/>
learning at the feet of those profes-<lb/>
sors &amp;rA what thev find is, if they<lb/>
see those professors at all, it's as a<lb/>
blur in the parking lot<lb/>
Svkes maintained it can all be<lb/>
changed by eliminating tenure.<lb/>
Such a proposal, naturally, is<lb/>
not without detractors. Sykes'<lb/>
idea, noted Dr. Jonathan Knight<lb/>
if the American Association of<lb/>
University Professors (AAUP),<lb/>
would destroy academic free-<lb/>
lorn.<lb/>
"Svkes says eliminating ten-<lb/>
re will keep everybody on their<lb/>
toes Knight said. "More likely<lb/>
it'll keep everybody on their<lb/>
knees<lb/>
See PROFESSORS, page 2<lb/>
Hey, where did that guy come from? This maintenance man<lb/>
comes up for air and to check out the weather. (Photo by Mark<lb/>
Love?Photolab)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058121_0002"/><lb/>
<lb/>
EDITORIALSInside??A<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS FEATURES?6<lb/>
M 7<lb/>
SPORTS11<lb/>
Features<lb/>
The day in a .Ug of a pirate mascot<lb/>
See page 7.<lb/>
HWHWPWH'WB<lb/>
. f <lb/>
SporM<lb/>
Pirates Jeat William and Mary<lb/>
Sec page 11. $<lb/>
She iEaat (Earoltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 47<lb/>
Thursday February 2,1989<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
28 blotter hits confiscated<lb/>
Student charged for selling LSD<lb/>
Warm weather came to unpredictable Greenville this week, bringing 70 degree temperatures and shorts<lb/>
out of the closet. This crew decided to spend the playing volleyball on the mall. (Photo by Mark Love?<lb/>
Photolab)<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
i<lb/>
An ECU student was arrested<lb/>
Sunday morning for possession<lb/>
of LSD after a man, who had alleg-<lb/>
edly taken the drug, asked for<lb/>
medical attention, according to<lb/>
campus security officials.<lb/>
Jeffrey Allen Turner, 19, of<lb/>
157 Aycock Resident Hall was<lb/>
arrested early Sunday morning<lb/>
for possession with the intent to police<lb/>
sell and deliver Lysergic acid di-<lb/>
ethyl amide (LSD), according to J.<lb/>
R. Rose, chief of ECU campus se-<lb/>
curity.<lb/>
Turner, who was free on a<lb/>
$5,000 bond, was arrested on a<lb/>
second charge Monday of posses-<lb/>
sion and the sale of LSD. The Pitt<lb/>
County Magistrate set a second<lb/>
bond of $5,000 for Turner.<lb/>
According to Rose, two ECU<lb/>
campus policemen talked to a<lb/>
student near Tyler dormitory<lb/>
early Sunday morning. The stu-<lb/>
dent said he wasn't feeling good<lb/>
or 'on a bad trip' and asked for<lb/>
assistance to Pitt Memorial Hos-<lb/>
pitial.<lb/>
"The student walked into<lb/>
some of the officers and requested<lb/>
medical aid Rose said.<lb/>
The anonymous student led<lb/>
to the investigation of<lb/>
Turner. While investigating room<lb/>
157 Aycock, detectives found 218<lb/>
hits of LSD, according to Rose.<lb/>
The confiscated LSD was on<lb/>
sheets, or blotter form. LSD,<lb/>
popularly known as acid, is a<lb/>
psychoactive hallucinogenic<lb/>
dg-<lb/>
Turncr appeared in court Jan.<lb/>
30 for a probable cause hearing.<lb/>
Rose said Turner's court date will<lb/>
probably be 10 days from the ini-<lb/>
tial hearing.<lb/>
Student Union elects<lb/>
Mayr as new president<lb/>
By MINDY McINNlS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Program pushes for<lb/>
drug prevention<lb/>
By LORI MARTIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Office of Substance<lb/>
Abuse axkd t revenuon -aftdJcuiu<lb/>
cation is sponsoring National<lb/>
Collegiate Drug Awareness Week<lb/>
from Feb. b-12.<lb/>
According to Director David<lb/>
A. Susina, a video, "America<lb/>
Hurts-The Drug Epidemic will<lb/>
be shown at Joyner Library as part<lb/>
of the week's activities. "It is a half<lb/>
hour video about substance abuse<lb/>
in America today Susina said.<lb/>
"After the video tape, we will<lb/>
have a discussion about what is<lb/>
going on around campus with<lb/>
substance abuse The video will<lb/>
be shown on Tuesday at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
zation that deals with issues sur-<lb/>
rounding responsible alcohol<lb/>
use Susina said. "We are offer-<lb/>
ing awareness programs so stu-<lb/>
dents can understand what alco-<lb/>
hol is and what it can do to them.<lb/>
Then they can make good deci-<lb/>
sions about choosing to drink or<lb/>
not to drink<lb/>
The Office of Substance<lb/>
Abuse and Prevention and Edu-<lb/>
cation is open for self-referrals<lb/>
and is offering confidential one-<lb/>
on-one counceling for students<lb/>
with alcohol and drug-related<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
According to Susina, the of-<lb/>
fice hopes to establish a campus<lb/>
chapter of Alcoholics Anony-<lb/>
mous (AA) this semester. Com-<lb/>
munity chapters are accessible to<lb/>
Joyner B-04.<lb/>
During the week, programs ECU students until the campus<lb/>
will be given in the residence<lb/>
halls, and information will be<lb/>
available for those interested 'a<lb/>
knowing more about alcohol and<lb/>
drug abuse prevention.<lb/>
Susina said his office will be<lb/>
working to coordinate programs<lb/>
and activities already being ad-<lb/>
ministered on campus. The sub-<lb/>
stance prevention office alcng<lb/>
with SRA, SCA, BACCHUS, ECU<lb/>
Public Safety and other groups<lb/>
chapter is formed.<lb/>
Susina said the office will also<lb/>
form a chapter of Adult Children<lb/>
of Alcoholics (ACOA). According<lb/>
to Susina, there is a growing need<lb/>
for this group on campus to give<lb/>
support to students with alcohol<lb/>
problem in the family.<lb/>
The office, located in Erwin<lb/>
301, serves as a resource library<lb/>
wil 1 decide on strategies that will video and ppts<lb/>
be employed in 1989 for fighting available q 757793 for more<lb/>
alcohol and drug abuse.<lb/>
"BACCHUS is a peer organi- information.<lb/>
SGA passes new Spring<lb/>
election procedures<lb/>
David Mayr, the recently elected president of the Student Union,<lb/>
plans to continue on the progress of the previous adminstration.<lb/>
(Photo by Angela Pridgen?Photolab)<lb/>
Professors are overpaid<lb/>
and underworked<lb/>
Last week, the Student Union<lb/>
elected a new president, David<lb/>
Mayr, who says he plans to ex-<lb/>
pand on existing programs.<lb/>
Presently the chairperson for<lb/>
the films committee, Mayr will<lb/>
become president April 22. Mayr<lb/>
has been active in the Student<lb/>
Union for four years and is very<lb/>
optimistic about the upcoming<lb/>
year.<lb/>
When asked to discuss future<lb/>
plans for the Student Union,<lb/>
David said, "I want to improve<lb/>
upon the outgoing administra-<lb/>
tions progress Mayr feels that<lb/>
Karen Pasch, the current presi-<lb/>
dent, has done a lemarkable job.<lb/>
During her adminstration,<lb/>
Pasch has made strides promot-<lb/>
ing the campus of minority ori-<lb/>
ented programs and has worked<lb/>
to develop a more cohesive or-<lb/>
ganization within the Union.<lb/>
Mayr wants to continue to create<lb/>
unification between the mem-<lb/>
bers of the Student Union pro-<lb/>
gram board in order to better<lb/>
serve the student body.<lb/>
Eventually Mayr hopes to<lb/>
make ECU students more aware<lb/>
of the Student Union's activities<lb/>
by working with WZMB to help<lb/>
promote the programs. Mayr<lb/>
also predicts that the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Student Life, and the<lb/>
Student Union will start work-<lb/>
ing together. The Student Union<lb/>
will program the Department of<lb/>
Student Life's events and in turn<lb/>
Student Life will promote the<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
"Basically, we will try to work<lb/>
with Student Life in promoting<lb/>
our events and we will assist in<lb/>
programming events like the<lb/>
'Hill Jam Mayr said.<lb/>
This arrangement is just one<lb/>
of the many that has been<lb/>
planned for the new year. Mayr<lb/>
hopes that his energy and enthu-<lb/>
siasm will cause a chain reaction<lb/>
among the other members.<lb/>
Most of the students at ECU<lb/>
don't understand what the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union is all about. What<lb/>
does this organization do, how is<lb/>
it funded, who's in charge?<lb/>
The Student Union consists of<lb/>
11 committees including, chair-<lb/>
person for each committee,<lb/>
president, and assistant presi-<lb/>
dent. Each committee is respon-<lb/>
sible for creating a budget with<lb/>
the alloted monies.<lb/>
Every student, whether they<lb/>
are aware of it or not, helps make<lb/>
this allocation possible. When<lb/>
tuitions are paid, there's a per-<lb/>
centage that goes toward "other<lb/>
fees Most of the money from<lb/>
these fees goes toward ECU ath-<lb/>
letics and only a fourth goes to<lb/>
the Student Union.<lb/>
Not all of the committees will<lb/>
receive the same amount of<lb/>
money. For example, the Film<lb/>
committee will receive more<lb/>
funding than the Major Concert<lb/>
committee since more film pro-<lb/>
ductions are offered to the stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
One of the members, Steve<lb/>
Sommers, Chairperson of the<lb/>
Major Concerts committee,<lb/>
thinks David Mayr will be a real<lb/>
See MAYR, page 2<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
New Editor<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association passed new election<lb/>
procedures Monday in efforts to<lb/>
give students more time to hear<lb/>
views from potential office hold-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
Instead of one week to cam-<lb/>
paign for office, candidates will<lb/>
now have two weeks to vie for<lb/>
SGA positions in the coming<lb/>
spring elections, according to<lb/>
Marty Helms, speaker of the legis-<lb/>
lature.<lb/>
Helms, who brought the elec-<lb/>
tion rules admendment before the<lb/>
student representatives, said the<lb/>
additional week will allow for<lb/>
campus participation in the elec-<lb/>
tion process.<lb/>
"By giving two weeks, it gives<lb/>
organizations more time to hold<lb/>
forums and for voters to evaluate<lb/>
the candidates Helms said.<lb/>
In the past, spring election'<lb/>
have been held the week follow<lb/>
ing spring break. Helms said th<lb/>
week after the vacation is not<lb/>
good placement for the elections.<lb/>
Helms also introduced legis-<lb/>
lation in the weekly SGA meeting<lb/>
which changes the period be-<lb/>
tween the primary and run off<lb/>
elections from the traditional two<lb/>
weeks to one week.<lb/>
"There is no reason for there<lb/>
to be two weeks between elec-<lb/>
tions Helms said. The run-off<lb/>
election decides a victor from the<lb/>
two top vote-getters who emerge<lb/>
from the primary election.<lb/>
Helms feels students have<lb/>
been apathetic concerning the<lb/>
run-off elections in the past years.<lb/>
He said the root of the problem is<lb/>
the two week period between<lb/>
elections. Two weeks after the<lb/>
initial election, 'Teople are going<lb/>
to forget what is happening<lb/>
Helms said.<lb/>
A total of 1,034 students,<lb/>
roughly 6.6 percent of the stu-<lb/>
dents, voted in last spring's run<lb/>
off elections.<lb/>
In addition, the legislation<lb/>
passed Monday moves the filing<lb/>
period for candidates to one week<lb/>
prior to spring break.<lb/>
(CPS)? Professors who curl<lb/>
up by the fireplace with this<lb/>
winter's new book about what's<lb/>
wrong with colleges? Charles<lb/>
Sykes' "Profscam"? might end<lb/>
up throwing it in. This hotly de-<lb/>
bated expose depicts academi-<lb/>
cians as overpaid, underworked<lb/>
prima donnas who "almost<lb/>
singlehandedly destroyed the<lb/>
university as a center for learn-<lb/>
 - - n<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
College teachers, Sykes said,<lb/>
are no good.<lb/>
They have been made fat and<lb/>
complacent by tenure, he<lb/>
charged, which frees them to<lb/>
abandon their students in favor of<lb/>
chasing money and prestige<lb/>
through office politicking, useless<lb/>
research and big grants.<lb/>
"They have distorted univer-<lb/>
sity curriculums to accomodate<lb/>
their own narrow and selfish in-<lb/>
terests Sykes writes.<lb/>
These interests are so trendy<lb/>
that they produce "curriculums<lb/>
that look like they were designed<lb/>
by a game show host" Sykes<lb/>
added in an interview.<lb/>
To Sykes, profs are reponsible<lb/>
for a variety of ills like "pseu-<lb/>
doscience "junkthink" and<lb/>
"twist(ing) the ideals of academic<lb/>
freedom into a system in which<lb/>
they are accountable to no one<lb/>
"A lot of undergrads go to<lb/>
some of the most prestigious uni-<lb/>
versities in the country, like the<lb/>
Uni veristy of Michigan, Berkeley,<lb/>
even Harvard, based on the repu-<lb/>
tations of their professors Sykes<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"What they find is something<lb/>
very different from what they and<lb/>
their parents have been led to<lb/>
expect. They think they'll be<lb/>
learning at the feet of those profes-<lb/>
sors acl what they find is, if they<lb/>
see those professors at all, ifs as a<lb/>
blur in the parking lot<lb/>
Sykes maintained it can all be<lb/>
changed by eliminating tenure.<lb/>
Such a proposal, naturally, is<lb/>
not without detractors. Sykes'<lb/>
idea, noted Dr. Jonathan Knight<lb/>
Df the American Association of<lb/>
University Professors (AAUP),<lb/>
would destroy academic free-<lb/>
iom.<lb/>
"Sykes says eliminating ten-<lb/>
re will keep everybody on their<lb/>
toes Knight said. "More likely<lb/>
it'll keep everybody on their<lb/>
knees<lb/>
See PROFESSORS, page 2<lb/>
Hey where did that guy come from? Thia maintenance man<lb/>
comet up for air and to check out the weather. (Photo by Mark<lb/>
10vt-FHetoU:N<lb/>
<pb facs="00058121_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARYS IJM<lb/>
A third of southern high school grads<lb/>
need remedial courses in college<lb/>
(CPS)? More than a third of<lb/>
the students? 36 percent? who<lb/>
graduate form high school in the<lb/>
South need remedial courses to<lb/>
move on to college-level work, the<lb/>
Southern Regional Education<lb/>
Board iSREB) has found.<lb/>
It's not much better else-<lb/>
where. Southern college fresh-<lb/>
men are "right in with everybody,<lb/>
no worse and no better said<lb/>
SREB research associate Dr.<lb/>
Ainslev Abraham, who con-<lb/>
ducted the studv.<lb/>
"The only national study<lb/>
done on this showed that 37 per-<lb/>
cent of the students entering col-<lb/>
lege needed remedial math, 29<lb/>
percent needed (remedial) read-<lb/>
ing and 31 percent needed (reme-<lb/>
dial) writing Abraham said<lb/>
The number "far exceeds any<lb/>
reasonable estimate of those stu-<lb/>
dents who may be 'falling<lb/>
through the cracks of secondary<lb/>
education SREB reported. "The<lb/>
implications of these large num-<lb/>
bers are serious<lb/>
"Colleges have always ad-<lb/>
mitted students who were under-<lb/>
prepared. Some students are<lb/>
admitted who don't have all the<lb/>
requirements in one area or an-<lb/>
other Abraham explained.<lb/>
Some say it's because of the<lb/>
nature of high schools.<lb/>
"The need for remediation is<lb/>
the downside of minimal (high<lb/>
school) graduation requirements<lb/>
because some students are just<lb/>
working for what they have to do<lb/>
to gef that diploma noted Frank<lb/>
Burtnctt, executive director of the<lb/>
National Association of College<lb/>
Admissions Counselors.<lb/>
Reforms at the high school<lb/>
level will help, "but there will<lb/>
always be some student who slip<lb/>
through the cracks even if the<lb/>
schools were perfect said<lb/>
SREB's Abraham.<lb/>
"Right now, it's just that there<lb/>
are very large numbers<lb/>
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Professor have poor work habits<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Many of the ages' greatest<lb/>
thinkers? trom Socrates to Jesus<lb/>
to Galileo to Freud to even certatn<lb/>
scholars during the McCarthy era<lb/>
in the United States? lost jobs.<lb/>
money, reputations and even<lb/>
their lives tor pursuing ideas that<lb/>
the political or religious leaders ot<lb/>
their day found offensive.<lb/>
Tenure arose as a way to pro-<lb/>
tect them and the masses oi more<lb/>
anonymous college teachers from<lb/>
the political whims of administra-<lb/>
tors, who might otherwise suc-<lb/>
cumb to community pressure to<lb/>
punish professors engaged in<lb/>
misunderstood or unpopular re-<lb/>
search.<lb/>
The author who wants to<lb/>
dump tenure is. ironically, him-<lb/>
self the son of a professor, the late<lb/>
lav G. Svkes, who was a journal-<lb/>
ism professor at the Univeisty of<lb/>
Wisconsin-Milwaukee.<lb/>
'Trofscam" grew out of a<lb/>
1985 article written by the senior<lb/>
Svkes for Milwaukee Magazine,<lb/>
then edited by his son. In the<lb/>
piece, entitled "The Sorcerers and<lb/>
the Seven-And-A-Half Week<lb/>
the senior Svkes accused his col-<lb/>
leagues of poor work habits.<lb/>
"It generated a gigantic re-<lb/>
sponse the vounger Svkes, who<lb/>
isajounalist, recalled. "Theletters<lb/>
and calls indicated that this thing<lb/>
had touched a nerve. The admini-<lb/>
stration and lots of faculty (at the<lb/>
University of Wisconsin-Milwau-<lb/>
kee were outraged. But some<lb/>
faculty, students and parents said<lb/>
'Yeah, this is absolutely correct<lb/>
A fter hi s f a ther7 s dea th, Svkes<lb/>
set out to develop the article into a<lb/>
book and, in the process, came to<lb/>
focus on the quality of college<lb/>
Prankster disrupts<lb/>
sexuality class<lb/>
?<lb/>
(CPS)? A "prankster" dis-<lb/>
mpted a human sexuality class at<lb/>
the U niversity of Washington Jan.<lb/>
9 bv tlvrowing a live rooster from<lb/>
the classroom balcony and shout-<lb/>
ing "Suck my cock<lb/>
The rooster was killed when it<lb/>
hit the floor.<lb/>
UW campus police are inves-<lb/>
tigating the incident, Psychology<lb/>
210 lecturer Lois McDermott re-<lb/>
ported.<lb/>
McDermott said similar inci-<lb/>
dents have happened every term<lb/>
she's taught the class, but that the<lb/>
rooster typically is released in a<lb/>
way that it lands safely. This is the<lb/>
first time there's been a fatality.<lb/>
"This time I forgot to look out<lb/>
for it, and was feeling pretty bad<lb/>
that I forgot to warn the stu-<lb/>
dents she said.<lb/>
In retrospect, McDermott<lb/>
said she should have known the<lb/>
time for the prank was drawing<lb/>
near. Just before class, a "young<lb/>
man" gave her a plate on which a<lb/>
banana and two oranges were<lb/>
arranged to look like male genita-<lb/>
lia, announcing "I just wanted to<lb/>
give you this" before turning and<lb/>
leaving the classroom.<lb/>
teaching.<lb/>
. He found that most profs<lb/>
teach only seven-and-a-half to ?<lb/>
hours a week. Thev leave instruct-<lb/>
ing and guiding students to grad<lb/>
assistants, who Sykes said, now<lb/>
comprise a "bitter academic un-<lb/>
derclass" often of foreigners who<lb/>
can't speak understandable Eng-<lb/>
lish.<lb/>
"I have to admit 1 was ap-<lb/>
palled Sykes said, "at how<lb/>
deeply ingrained the comtempt<lb/>
for teaching is<lb/>
People who like and are goiKl<lb/>
at teaching often don't get tenure<lb/>
because thev may not be good at<lb/>
publishing, Svkes contended.<lb/>
"To be a teacher in higher<lb/>
education is virtually to commit<lb/>
professional suicide he said.<lb/>
It would be different without<lb/>
tenure. 'Tenure corrupts, ener-<lb/>
vates and dulls higher educa-<lb/>
tion Svkes wrote in "Profscam<lb/>
Mayr<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
"kick in the pants type Presi-<lb/>
dent Sommers wants the cur-<lb/>
rent programs to be readjusted<lb/>
with a little more flavoring and<lb/>
strongly believes Mayr is the<lb/>
Knight, one of Sykes' most<lb/>
vocal critics, disagreed emphati-<lb/>
cally.<lb/>
"Svkes believes that by elimi-<lb/>
nating tenure, you'll weed out the<lb/>
deadwood and the incompetents,<lb/>
people won't get free rides<lb/>
Knight argued. Yet bosses who<lb/>
ing their bosses by asking to weed<lb/>
out their bad colleagues.<lb/>
Consequently, it's likely<lb/>
Sykes' system would lead to more<lb/>
deadwood, not less, Knight main-<lb/>
tained.<lb/>
Without the job security ten-<lb/>
hire incompetents often are loathe ure give them, Knight added, the<lb/>
to admit later they made a hiring best professors would move on to<lb/>
mistake, and untenured teachers where the real money is: private<lb/>
would be unlikely to risk anger- industry.<lb/>
Schools are drug-<lb/>
free, says professor<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
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Scott Makey I Keith Pcarcc<lb/>
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(CPS)? Schools already are<lb/>
drug-free, a Western Kentucky<lb/>
University professor has asserted.<lb/>
The reason is that students<lb/>
are getting high off campus in-<lb/>
stead.<lb/>
A "scant" 2 to 3 percent of all<lb/>
adolescents use drugs on their<lb/>
school grounds, WKU Prof. Ron<lb/>
percent smoked marijuana.<lb/>
They favored ingesting it all<lb/>
in the privacy of cars or their own<lb/>
homes, not in schools.<lb/>
Adams added his survey<lb/>
found inner city kids used drugs<lb/>
less than students in other areas.<lb/>
"We may be laboring under a false<lb/>
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Adams did conclude that<lb/>
teenager's use of drugs and alco-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058121_0004"/><lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2,1989 3<lb/>
Leaders scrap over program<lb/>
INTRODUCING:<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? While say-<lb/>
ing they did not expect a House-<lb/>
Senate fight over the Basic Educa-<lb/>
tion Program, leaders of the two<lb/>
groups exhibited different levels<lb/>
of commitment to the plan, which<lb/>
Gov. Jim Martin called a "sacred<lb/>
cow" after his proposal to scale it<lb/>
back for one year drew protests.<lb/>
"I believe there are no sacred<lb/>
cows in the state budget process<lb/>
House Speaker Joe Mavretic, D-<lb/>
tdgecombe, said Tuesday at a<lb/>
news conference with Sen. Hen-<lb/>
son Barnes, D-Wayne. He said he<lb/>
had always considered the BEP<lb/>
flawed.<lb/>
Barnes, Senate president pro<lb/>
tern, said, "Most of us believe the<lb/>
BEP, though it may not be a sacred<lb/>
cow, it has a lot of importance to<lb/>
this state. I think a majority of the<lb/>
senators are supporting it very<lb/>
strongly<lb/>
The BEP, designed to provide<lb/>
a basic level of instruction to all<lb/>
North Carolina schoolchildren, is<lb/>
being phased in over eight years<lb/>
and will cost an extra $800 million<lb/>
per year when fully imple-<lb/>
mented. The fifth-year install-<lb/>
ment scheduled for fiscal 1989-90<lb/>
will cost $113 million.<lb/>
Because of lagging tax collec-<lb/>
tions, the Legislature is expected<lb/>
to have only $232 million for per-<lb/>
manent additions to the budget.<lb/>
Martin in December proposed<lb/>
halving the BEP installment for<lb/>
1989-90 but retreated in the face of<lb/>
legislators' protests.<lb/>
He called for full funding in<lb/>
his budget proposal, but said BEP<lb/>
implemenation and other top pri-<lb/>
orities such as prison construction<lb/>
might leave no money for a pay<lb/>
raise before April 1990, when he is<lb/>
proposing raises of 5.7 percent for<lb/>
teachers and 4.5 percent for other<lb/>
employees. Facing a storm of<lb/>
protest from teachers and state<lb/>
workers, Martin and the legisla-<lb/>
tive leadership have been scram-<lb/>
bling to find money to start the<lb/>
pay raise earlier.<lb/>
Mavretic said he had in-<lb/>
structed House Appropriations<lb/>
Committee Chairman David Dia-<lb/>
mont, D-Surry, to "lift every rock"<lb/>
for items that could be cut from<lb/>
the budget. Some legislators have<lb/>
said the BEP should undergo the<lb/>
same scrutiny for possible sav-<lb/>
ings as other programs, but others<lb/>
say it should be untouchable.<lb/>
Barnes and Mavretic ap-<lb/>
peared divided on that score. In<lb/>
1984, Mavretic was chairman of a<lb/>
committee involved in the debate<lb/>
over whether to establish the BEP<lb/>
and a career ladder program for<lb/>
teachers.<lb/>
He said he voted against both<lb/>
programs as conceived by the<lb/>
State Board of Education. "I've<lb/>
never changed my personal posi-<lb/>
tion that the BEP had flaws and<lb/>
that the career ladder was de-<lb/>
signed to fail Mavretic said.<lb/>
Asked whether he was sug-<lb/>
gesting that the BEP should be<lb/>
considered less important than<lb/>
pay raises, Mavretic said every<lb/>
General Assembly is obligated to<lb/>
review major state programs.<lb/>
"And if this assembly chooses to<lb/>
look at the BEP, that is what as-<lb/>
semblies are supposed to do he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Barnes said the program<lb/>
might need some fine-tuning but<lb/>
"we would not want to delay it<lb/>
unless we had to On other is-<lb/>
sues:<lb/>
- Bames said he hoped the<lb/>
Senate would pass a bill to give<lb/>
the governor veto power and al-<lb/>
low the Legislature to override<lb/>
vetoes by a two-thirds or three-<lb/>
fifths margin. Mavretic said he<lb/>
favored veto power as part of a<lb/>
package that might include repeal<lb/>
of succession, a change in the way<lb/>
judges are selected, and other<lb/>
moves to preserve the balance of<lb/>
power.<lb/>
-Bames said he would vote<lb/>
against a state lottery but would<lb/>
not lobby his colleagues to do like-<lb/>
wise. Mavretic said the issue to be<lb/>
decided is whether North Caro-<lb/>
linians want legal gambling and,<lb/>
if so, what form would raise the<lb/>
most money.<lb/>
He said his research indicated<lb/>
that wagering on horse and dog<lb/>
races would generate more reve-<lb/>
nue than a lottery.<lb/>
Wednesday - LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
- $2.00 Ice Teas!<lb/>
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Hatcher, Jacobs file law suit<lb/>
HF THt BUN ALWtftS ShlNES 1<lb/>
SunSational<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? A battle<lb/>
that began one year ago with the<lb/>
takeover of a Robeson County<lb/>
newspaper continued as two<lb/>
Tuscarora Indians filed a lawsuit<lb/>
charging that attempts to<lb/>
extradite and prosecute them on<lb/>
kidnapping charges are part of a<lb/>
"campaign of harassment and<lb/>
intimidation Eddie Hatcher and<lb/>
Timothv Jacobs filed a lawsuit in<lb/>
U.S. District Court in Raleigh on<lb/>
Tuesday, asking a federal judge to<lb/>
block their extradition on 14 state<lb/>
charges of kidnapping stemming<lb/>
from the takeover of The Robe-<lb/>
sonian a year ago today.<lb/>
The suit, which also was filed<lb/>
by the Robeson County Defense<lb/>
'Committee, names Gov. Jim Mar-<lb/>
tin, Attorney General Lacy Thorn-<lb/>
burg, SB1 Director Robert Mor-<lb/>
gan, Superior Court Judge Joe<lb/>
freeman Brijt, Robeson County<lb/>
iPv&amp;tnct Attorrw,y - Richard<lb/>
'Townsend and Sheriff Hubert<lb/>
Stone, as well as deputies and SBI<lb/>
:agents, as defendants. The suit<lb/>
shows that the people of Robeson<lb/>
County "are a changed People<lb/>
defense attorney Lewis Pitts told a<lb/>
crowd of about 50 people at a<lb/>
news conference in front of the<lb/>
county courthouse in Lumberton.<lb/>
"No longer will they sit by<lb/>
.and take the reign of terror and<lb/>
the oppression, and this lawsuit<lb/>
reflects their changed attitude<lb/>
said Pitts who represents Jacobs.<lb/>
They are calling the emperor<lb/>
naked. That's the positive spirit<lb/>
here one vear after the takeover<lb/>
But fhornburg said the state<lb/>
did not intend to stop pressing for<lb/>
the extradition of the two Indians.<lb/>
"It is clear that this lawsuit repre-<lb/>
sents a thinly disguised effort to<lb/>
prevent the state of North Caro-<lb/>
lina from pursuing the<lb/>
extradition and criminal prosecu-<lb/>
tion of Mr. Hatcher and Mr.<lb/>
Jacobs for holding 14 innocent<lb/>
people at gunpoint and against<lb/>
their will Thomburg said.<lb/>
"The state will do everything<lb/>
within its power to see that these<lb/>
individuals are extradited to<lb/>
North Carolina to stand trial on<lb/>
state charges The suit asks for at<lb/>
least $10,000 in damages from<lb/>
each of the 20 defendants and a<lb/>
judgement "declaring unconsti-<lb/>
tutional the campaign of intimi-<lb/>
dation and harassment" it alleges<lb/>
is being conducted in Robeson<lb/>
County.<lb/>
against Hatcher and Jacobs in<lb/>
December, the questioning of<lb/>
people who support the two Indi-<lb/>
ans and alleged attempts by<lb/>
prosecutors or investigators to<lb/>
question the two men without<lb/>
their attorneys present. The suit<lb/>
was filed under a federal civil<lb/>
rights law that allows suits by<lb/>
people whose federal constitu-<lb/>
tional or legal rights have been<lb/>
violated by state or local officials.<lb/>
The suit says the federal court<lb/>
should intervene on grounds that<lb/>
the state prosecution and other<lb/>
alleged incidents of intimidation<lb/>
and harassment are an attempt to<lb/>
stop the plaintiffs from exercising<lb/>
their civil rights. The two defen-<lb/>
dants held up to 20 people hos-<lb/>
tage for 10 hours at The Robe-<lb/>
sonian newspaper office in Lum-<lb/>
berton.<lb/>
They were charged with hos-<lb/>
tage-taking and firearms viola-<lb/>
tions, but a federal jury in October<lb/>
found them innocent of all<lb/>
charges. A special session of the<lb/>
Robeson County grand jury re-<lb/>
turned the 14 kidnapping charges<lb/>
Dec. 6.<lb/>
Hatcher was freed on $25,000<lb/>
bond posted by the National<lb/>
Council of Churches, but fled to<lb/>
New York after being released.<lb/>
He is now in the custody of the<lb/>
Shoshone-Bannock Indians on<lb/>
the Fort Hall Reservation in<lb/>
Idaho, where he is seeking refuge.<lb/>
"Just because I'm not in North<lb/>
Carolina doesn't mean I'm not in<lb/>
their hair Hatcher said in a tele-<lb/>
phone interview. "It's sad that the<lb/>
taxpayers of North Carolina are<lb/>
having to finance this vindictive<lb/>
campaign against me and the<lb/>
Robeson County Defense<lb/>
Committee by corrupt county<lb/>
officials, but more so by the assis-<lb/>
tance and protection of state offi-<lb/>
cials including the Attorney Gen-<lb/>
eral and the governor he said.<lb/>
 I shall not back down<lb/>
Jacobs, who fled the day the<lb/>
indictments were returned, is liv-<lb/>
ing at the Onondaga I ndian Reser-<lb/>
vation in New York pending an<lb/>
extradition hearing in late Febru-<lb/>
ary. The suit says the investiga-<lb/>
tors and Townsend advised fam-<lb/>
ily members and friends of Jacobs<lb/>
that he should not use attorneys<lb/>
from Christie Institute South of<lb/>
Carrboro, the public interest law<lb/>
firm that won his acquittal in fed-<lb/>
eral court.<lb/>
It says they also encouraged<lb/>
Jacobs to criticize Hatcher "to<lb/>
disrupt the joint defense that they<lb/>
had been presenting" and to inter-<lb/>
fere with the relationship be-<lb/>
tween Jacobs and his attorneys.<lb/>
The suit says the advice left Jacobs<lb/>
"confused and uncertain<lb/>
Jacobs, in a telephone inter-<lb/>
view in January, said he had gone<lb/>
to The Robesonian with Hatcher<lb/>
because he believed Hatcher<lb/>
would harm the hostages if he<lb/>
went by himself. Jacobs also said<lb/>
that Hatcher had ruined his life.<lb/>
Shortly after that interview,<lb/>
Hatcher left the Onondaga Reser-<lb/>
vation for Idaho. The suit says the<lb/>
state prosecution "was brought<lb/>
and is being maintained in bad<lb/>
faith and as an integral part of the<lb/>
campaign of intimidation and<lb/>
harassment<lb/>
Robeson County Sheriff's<lb/>
Department spokesman Bill Price<lb/>
said he had talked with Stone,<lb/>
who is on sick leave, "and he said<lb/>
he would have no comment on it<lb/>
Townsend said he had not seen a<lb/>
copy of the suit by late Tuesday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
"I feel like 1 should look at it<lb/>
before I say anything, and might<lb/>
not even want to say anything<lb/>
then he said. "From what I have<lb/>
heard, it just sounds like more of<lb/>
the same thing they've been say-<lb/>
ing all along<lb/>
Spokesmen for others named<lb/>
in the suit said they could make no<lb/>
immediate comment.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058121_0005"/><lb/>
?Jie lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the lat Carolina .ampus . .?mmuniln mi.<lb/>
PETE FERNALD, Central Manage<lb/>
Stephanie Folsom, M?-rnt u,u?<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, cwot,Advening<lb/>
Tim Hampton, nt? l Brad Bannister, cy m,<lb/>
KRISTENHALBERG,sr?.Etor JEFF PARKER, St Wiiitiiin<lb/>
Chip Carter, r?t?? ? Tom Furr, emulation Manager<lb/>
Susan Howell, pr?. Mr Debbie Stevens, s?<lb/>
Dean Waters, m M?-ier Stepi ianie Emory, t?a sm<lb/>
Stephanie Singleton, g e Mac Clark, ??.?? Manager<lb/>
February 2.1989<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Pago 4<lb/>
Helicopters<lb/>
The new way to legally invade privacy<lb/>
"In the far distance, a helicopter<lb/>
skimmed down between the roots<lb/>
 it was the Police Patrol, snooping<lb/>
into people's windows<lb/>
Justice bren an's dissent from a<lb/>
recent Supreme Court ruling ended<lb/>
with this frighteningly appropriate<lb/>
quote from 19S4. The ruling in ques-<lb/>
tion allows police to spy on citizens<lb/>
and search their property without a<lb/>
warrant, as long as the police take<lb/>
this action while inside a helicopter.<lb/>
Apparently, neither the right to pri-<lb/>
vacy nor freedom from unwar-<lb/>
ranted search applies if the agents or"<lb/>
the law manage to keep their feet off<lb/>
the ground.<lb/>
Specifically, the case in question<lb/>
was Florida vs. Riley. Michael Riley,<lb/>
a resident of New Port Richey, Flor-<lb/>
ida, was growing marijuana plants<lb/>
in a greenhouse in his backyard.<lb/>
Pasco County detectives had been<lb/>
tipped off to the crime, but, rather<lb/>
than follow normal procedure, they<lb/>
sent a police helicopter to search<lb/>
Riley's back yard from 400 feet.<lb/>
Unfortunately for Riley, some<lb/>
roof panels were missing from his<lb/>
greenhouse. The police spotted the<lb/>
plants, then applied for a warrant.<lb/>
The Florida Supreme Court cor-<lb/>
rectly ruled that the search was<lb/>
unconstitutional. However, a ma-<lb/>
jority of the U.S. Supreme Court<lb/>
ruled that since FAA regulations<lb/>
would have allowed a civilian pilot<lb/>
to fly where the police helicopter<lb/>
had gone, the police were perfectly<lb/>
within their rights.<lb/>
Apparently no one bothered to<lb/>
point out to Chief Justice William<lb/>
Rehnquist and his Spanish Rehnqui-<lb/>
sition that, for one thing, civilian<lb/>
pilots simply don't happen to buzz<lb/>
people's back yards. Nor does it<lb/>
seem that the majority noticed the<lb/>
full implications of this ruling: no<lb/>
citizen now has any reasonable ex-<lb/>
pectation of privacy under an open<lb/>
sky. Privacy in one's own baci; yard<lb/>
once meant having a fence; now it<lb/>
may require a roof too.<lb/>
The ruling docs more than<lb/>
threaten to turn police into peeping<lb/>
toms, though it threatens that too.<lb/>
Mere voyeurism would be less dis-<lb/>
tressing than the fact that police can<lb/>
now legally ? at any time, for any<lb/>
reason, with neither a warrant nor<lb/>
probable cause ? spy on citizens.<lb/>
The attorney general's office<lb/>
called the ruling a defeat for the<lb/>
drug trade and a "major plus" for<lb/>
law enforcement. It is both. But law<lb/>
enforcement carried too far is totali-<lb/>
tarianism. It is oppression. It is the<lb/>
idea that the citizen exists to serve<lb/>
the State ? an idea once identified<lb/>
more with communism than with<lb/>
democracy.<lb/>
Certainly, there are a few advan-<lb/>
tages to a totalitarian state. Mus-<lb/>
solini made the trains run on time. In<lb/>
addition, such states often have less<lb/>
of a crime problem. But how far can<lb/>
it go? How much individual free-<lb/>
dom need be sacrificed frw-rtwum<lb/>
venience of those who enforce the<lb/>
laws? Where does it end?<lb/>
The decisive votes in the case<lb/>
came, not surprisingly, from Reagan<lb/>
appointees. It is an ugly legacy Re-<lb/>
agan left: the "war on drugs" has<lb/>
assumed more importance than the<lb/>
rights of human beings. And Reagan<lb/>
left behind not only a Supreme<lb/>
Court apparently bent on burning<lb/>
the Bill of Rights, but also a succes-<lb/>
sor willing to do even more damage.<lb/>
With decisions like Riley, the<lb/>
State edges ever closer to destroying<lb/>
the fundamental rights of individu-<lb/>
als. It illustrates the true nature of<lb/>
the threat to democracy: a populace<lb/>
walling to be lulled by material<lb/>
comfort into accepting the gradual<lb/>
erosion of its freedoms. The state of<lb/>
Florida didn't win this case ? Big<lb/>
Brother did.<lb/>
New meal plan policy spells out<lb/>
no choice for dorm students<lb/>
r the editor:<lb/>
Once again the administrators of<lb/>
this university have :learly and bla-<lb/>
tantly shown their complete lack of<lb/>
regard for the students wishes and<lb/>
judgment. 1 lore, i am referring to the<lb/>
burden that will be thrown onto the<lb/>
shoulders of those students who en-<lb/>
joy living in the resident halls but do<lb/>
not like the meal plan. The reasoning<lb/>
is very simple, no matter how much<lb/>
this measure will improve thequality<lb/>
of dining services, there will be a large<lb/>
group of people who will not want it.<lb/>
As cine of my fellow SGA members<lb/>
put it, "Thisis America and nobody is<lb/>
going to tell me what to buy<lb/>
Furthermore, the University has<lb/>
established the Student Government<lb/>
- Association as the student political<lb/>
body and this entity overwhelmingly<lb/>
BPPWSRJ this measure td fix strong<lb/>
arm tactics to "guarantee" thesuccess<lb/>
of a program, rhec rucial point here is<lb/>
the fact that the higher ups and deci-<lb/>
sion makers do not give a damn about<lb/>
what the students think or desire. Ob-<lb/>
viously, the wheels of big business,<lb/>
and this is very much a business deci-<lb/>
sion, are more important than the<lb/>
students' rights to free choice. And<lb/>
frankly, I am disgusted<lb/>
Steve Sommers<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
PolsPhil<lb/>
Bonehead fan<lb/>
enjoyed article<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
In response to Michael .<lb/>
Bennett's letter about Chippy<lb/>
Bonehead's article "Tips For Casual In the past year, the two finest<lb/>
Sex" I must point out that we don't teachers 1 have had were denied ten-<lb/>
live in a neatly ordered world. Just ure. Why did they not receive tenure?<lb/>
One simple reason ? they didn't<lb/>
because he doesn't appreciate Do- ,av .hc acadenw administration's<lb/>
praved Humor" is no reason to deny m(? Thev jy , condlK.t <lb/>
research. It didn't matter that they<lb/>
were well respected bv all oi their<lb/>
students, they just didn't conduct<lb/>
enough research. They felt that they<lb/>
were doing their job ? to teach the<lb/>
student. What good can all of this<lb/>
research and publishing of materials<lb/>
do for me, the student?<lb/>
I believe that the university<lb/>
needs to step back and look at what<lb/>
this system has caused. I have had<lb/>
professors that could not even com-<lb/>
municate with the class but that<lb/>
the rest of the "East Carolinian<lb/>
readers from this brief respite from<lb/>
reality.<lb/>
Sure this article fueled my desire<lb/>
for rape, small bald women, Siamese<lb/>
twins, and large beds, but if you<lb/>
don't like it, I'd like to borrow your<lb/>
quote and sav, 'Tough luck dude<lb/>
This obviously was not a format<lb/>
for the discussion of today's social<lb/>
problems. Also, don't give me that<lb/>
responsibility of the press crap. Half<lb/>
the time the only thing -worth read didn't matter, thev were doing re-<lb/>
News and Observer" aTe ?4?arch. It doesn't seem to matter that<lb/>
ing hi the<lb/>
the "Doonesbury" and Bloom<lb/>
County" political cartoons. Did you<lb/>
know there is "Penguin Lust" in<lb/>
Bloom County?<lb/>
Chippy, keep up the good work,<lb/>
the next interlude is for vou!<lb/>
Robert G. Price<lb/>
Grad Student<lb/>
INDT<lb/>
Tenure versus<lb/>
Teaching<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
The time has come for the ad-<lb/>
ministration of ECU to look at the<lb/>
damage that is being done by the<lb/>
present tenure system.<lb/>
no-one is1 teaming a thing frbWi the<lb/>
professor; that professor had done<lb/>
research and gotten articles pub-<lb/>
lished. He had played the game and<lb/>
won, even if the people that matter,<lb/>
the students, had lost.<lb/>
I challenge vou, the academic<lb/>
administration of ECU, to step back<lb/>
and look at the quality of teachers<lb/>
you have lost because thev didn't<lb/>
play by your rules. Look at some oi<lb/>
the teachers that passed your tenure<lb/>
test but have no idea as to how to<lb/>
teach a class.<lb/>
Please take our teacher evalu-<lb/>
ations seriously or don't waste our<lb/>
time by asking us to fill them out.<lb/>
If you continue to trv and become<lb/>
a research institution, vou are onlv<lb/>
going to hurt the ones that this uni-<lb/>
versity is supposed to be here for, the<lb/>
college student.<lb/>
Tripp Roakes<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Four ways of helping Gorbachev and the United States<lb/>
By JOHSU A MURAVCHIK<lb/>
New Republic<lb/>
Two days before Mikhail Gorbachev's dramatic<lb/>
speech to the United Nations, his aides were quoted<lb/>
in the Washington Post promising a "Christmas<lb/>
present" to the American people. In the same<lb/>
morning's paper, you could also read about contin-<lb/>
ued Soviet peace negotiations in Saudi Arabia with<lb/>
representatives of the Afghan mujaheddin ; about<lb/>
political reform in Hungary that would establish<lb/>
freedom of speech and association; and about plans<lb/>
in the People's Republic of China to sell stock in<lb/>
state-owned industries to private investors.<lb/>
What is going on here? What is going on is the<lb/>
deepest crisis of the Communist system since its in-<lb/>
vention, a crisis that amounts to almost complete<lb/>
ideological collapse. The joke now popular in East-<lb/>
ern Europe asks: What is socialism? Answer: The<lb/>
longest road to capitalism.<lb/>
George Bush's goal should be to move Commu-<lb/>
nist countries further and faster down the road to<lb/>
capitalism ? and to democracy. Of course, we can-<lb/>
not know Gorbachev's true intentions. But by shak-<lb/>
ing things up in the Soviet Union, he has set in<lb/>
motion processes that he cannot necessarily control.<lb/>
What we need to do is influence the current course of<lb/>
change by exploiting the openings created through<lb/>
glasnost and perestroika .<lb/>
The object of the game over the next four years<lb/>
should be to help these societies move from totali-<lb/>
tarianism to mere authoritarianism, which the gov-<lb/>
ernment may not be the servant of the people but at<lb/>
least does not try to control so many aspects of their<lb/>
lives. That movement, clearly, is already under way.<lb/>
TotaliUrianism has failed. For all the terror and<lb/>
torture; for all the intimidation and indoctrination;<lb/>
for all the internal espionage and the gulags; for all<lb/>
the endless rivers of blood, there is no "new man<lb/>
Recall Karl Marx's beatific image ? a man who<lb/>
would hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon,<lb/>
and write poetry in the evening. Instead, our new<lb/>
socialist man featherbeds in the morning, waits in<lb/>
lines in the afternoons, and drinks himself into a<lb/>
stupor in the evenings.<lb/>
But there is also no new man in the raw totalitar<lb/>
ian sense envisioned by Orwell: an obedient au-<lb/>
tomaton. Nowhere is this utter failure of the totali-<lb/>
tarian project more clear than in Poland. Not only<lb/>
does virtually the whole population partake in a<lb/>
spiritual life through the Church that is beyond the<lb/>
reach of government; the Poles also have access to a<lb/>
vast network of independent publishing and cul-<lb/>
tural ventures, an independent economy, and inde-<lb/>
pendent social welfare programs ? even insurance<lb/>
companies that will reimburse any criminal fines<lb/>
imposed by the state for partaking in this under-<lb/>
ground world. The eventual resul t of all this could be<lb/>
to leave the state an empty shell that controls the<lb/>
organs of state power and nothing else ? the very<lb/>
antithesis of the totalitarian project.<lb/>
Indeed, Poland and Hungary today offer us an<lb/>
imageofa historic transformation ? thedetotalitari-<lb/>
anization of the Communist world. Of course we<lb/>
hope for more; we want democratization. But even<lb/>
without democratization, the transformation from<lb/>
totalitarianism to merely authoritarian dictatorship<lb/>
would be ? to borrow a phrase ? a great leap for-<lb/>
ward, especially if it meant dictatorship based, as<lb/>
Gorbachev says he intends, on the rule of law. If<lb/>
change went only that far it would constitute a great<lb/>
deliverance. But it could also set the stage for a<lb/>
subsequent transformation to democracy. To go<lb/>
from authoritarianism to democracy is to travel an<lb/>
alrcadv well-worn path. It is the trip from totalitari-<lb/>
anism to authoritarianism that is the uncharted jour-<lb/>
ney.<lb/>
To encourage that journey, Bush must, first of<lb/>
all, continue to do those things that have already<lb/>
pushed the Communist countries this far. We must<lb/>
maintain our military strength and be tough-<lb/>
minded in our diplomatic dealings with the Com-<lb/>
munist world And we must keep the pressure on the<lb/>
Soviet empire by renewing support to anti-Commu-<lb/>
nist insurgencies. But we must also devise tactics<lb/>
that will lead to further detotalitarianization, and<lb/>
that means maximizing contacts between our world<lb/>
and theirs.<lb/>
1. Bring back the bourgeoisie. Maximizing contacts<lb/>
does not mean bailing out the Soviet and Warsaw<lb/>
Pact economies. It is in our interest for perestroika to<lb/>
succeed by virtue of a shift of resources from the<lb/>
Soviet defense budget to the civilian economy. It is<lb/>
not in our interest to obviate that shift by aiding their<lb/>
state economics. Nonetheless, we have every inter-<lb/>
est in the growth of private enterprise in Communist<lb/>
countries. The number of private cooperatives in the<lb/>
Soviet Union is reported to be in the tens of thou-<lb/>
sands. In some Eastern European countries there<lb/>
may be even more. One of the first things we should<lb/>
do is to encourage private investment in these ven-<lb/>
tures. The Overseas Private Investment Corpora-<lb/>
tion, or some similar agency, could reduce the risk of<lb/>
U.SSoviet joint ventures by insuring willing<lb/>
American investors at subsidized rates.<lb/>
2. let them grow their own food. Gorbachev has<lb/>
sought to encourage private farming by offering 50-<lb/>
year leases - a step toward out and out land owner-<lb/>
ship. One of several reported obstacles to this reform<lb/>
is the shortage of agricultural machinery suitable for<lb/>
small-scale farms. It is in our interest to help the<lb/>
Soviets import or produce such equipment, whether<lb/>
by encouraging our own manufacturers to set up<lb/>
joint ventures or by providing direct subsidies for<lb/>
the purchase of such equipment. Their farmers<lb/>
could also benefit from the know-how our own<lb/>
farmers could provide through exchange programs.<lb/>
3. Plug them into the Information Age. Few per-<lb/>
sonal computers are made in the Communist coun-<lb/>
tries. Philip Merrill, a former State and Defense<lb/>
Department official, points out that there are untold<lb/>
thousands of PCs here that are a few years old and<lb/>
virtuallv without value on the American market. He<lb/>
J<lb/>
urges creation of a mechanism for their whole-<lb/>
sale export to individuals, or schools, or volun-<lb/>
tary associations in Communist countries. Re-<lb/>
member, personal computers, especially when<lb/>
equipped with printer and modem, are powerful<lb/>
tools of individual expression and political<lb/>
communication. Their proliferation could sub-<lb/>
stantially decentralize the flow of ideas in coun-<lb/>
tries where even Xerox machines arc kept under<lb/>
lock and key.<lb/>
4. Open more windows to the West. We ought<lb/>
to explore every possible means of providing the<lb/>
Communist countries with movies, television<lb/>
programs, video tapes, books, and periodicals.<lb/>
Look, for example, at the insidious liberalizing<lb/>
effect that even the spread of Western popular<lb/>
music has had on Soviet youth. Our own regular<lb/>
daily cultural fare would be equallv corrupting.<lb/>
Now that the Soviets have stopped jamming<lb/>
m me radio broadcasts, we ought to explore tech-<lb/>
nologies that would allow us to beam television<lb/>
programs into the Communist countries from<lb/>
great distances.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058121_0006"/><lb/>
Tl IE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2, 1989 5<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
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ONE MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: To<lb/>
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FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed imme-<lb/>
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APARTMENT FOR RENT: 2 br 1 block<lb/>
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ROOMMATE WANTED: To share 3<lb/>
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8885 Ext. GH 5285.<lb/>
'81 PONTIAC WAGON: AMFM, air,<lb/>
wire wheels, great shape, very depend-<lb/>
able, teacher's car, $2,500.00 758-0341<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
TRS-80 COLOR COMPUTER III: In<lb/>
dudes disk drive, programs, blank disks<lb/>
and more. $34000 or BO Call Frank at<lb/>
355-0793 Leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 living room table lamps.<lb/>
Call after 5:00 p.m. 758-5422.<lb/>
2 SOFAS FOR SALE In good condition,<lb/>
$55 each. 1 wood recliner with ottoman<lb/>
asking $50. Call 757-0202 or 752-6554.<lb/>
CAN YOU BUY: Jeeps, Cars, 4 X 4's<lb/>
Seized in drug raids for under $100.00?<lb/>
Call for facts today. 602-837-3401. Ext. 711.<lb/>
LASER PRINTER USERS HP and<lb/>
Apple laser printer toner cartridges can be<lb/>
recycled! Huge $$ savings. Satisfaction<lb/>
guaranteed. For details call RANDMONT<lb/>
at 1-800-332-3658.<lb/>
AMSTRAD PC 1512: IBM compatible, 20<lb/>
MB hard drive. 360 KB disk drive, mouse,<lb/>
color monitor, microsoft MSDOS V3.2,<lb/>
digital research DOS plus, "GEM Desk-<lb/>
top "Gem Paint "Gem Doodle "Basic<lb/>
2 Assorted games &amp; business software<lb/>
included. $1350.00. 756-6805.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
Union Program Board; 'plan and promote<lb/>
the annual Student Union Banquet; select<lb/>
and plan Union decorations and recep-<lb/>
tions; 'select committee members and co-<lb/>
ordinate and head committee meetings.<lb/>
Applications being taken until February<lb/>
3.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS: Also Cruiseships<lb/>
$10,000-$105,000yr Now Hiring! 320<lb/>
Listings! (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. OJ-1166.<lb/>
CABIN COUNSELORS &amp; INSTRUC-<lb/>
TORS: (Male and Female) for western<lb/>
North Carolina 8 week children's camp<lb/>
Over 30 activities including Water Ski,<lb/>
Tennis, Heated swimming pool, Go-<lb/>
K?rts, Hiking, Art Room, meals, salary<lb/>
and travel. Experience not necessary.<lb/>
Non-smoking students write for applica-<lb/>
tionbrochure: Camp Pinewood, 20205-1<lb/>
N.E. 3 Court, Miami, Florida 33179.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
FEMALE RESIDENT COUNSELOR:<lb/>
Interested in those with human service<lb/>
background wishing to gain valuable<lb/>
experience in the field. No monetary com-<lb/>
pensation, however room, utilities and<lb/>
phone provided. Mary Smith REAL Crisis<lb/>
Center 758-HELP.<lb/>
STUDENT NEEDED: To post advertis-<lb/>
ing materials on campus bulletin boards.<lb/>
Work own hours with good pay. Write<lb/>
Campus Advertising, P.O. Box 1221, Du-<lb/>
luth, GA 30136-1221. (404) 873-9042.<lb/>
BAE COMPUTER NEEDS Responsible<lb/>
student to represent our computer Incen-<lb/>
tive bonus plan. Interested persons please<lb/>
send resume to 3563 Ryder Street, Santa<lb/>
Clara, CA 95051.<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS:<lb/>
For Counselors, Water Front Director,<lb/>
Asst. Swim Instructors Friendly Day-<lb/>
Camp is a summer day camp for mentally<lb/>
and physically handicapped children &amp;<lb/>
adults. Please write or call The Special<lb/>
Populations Program, P.O. Box 590,<lb/>
Raleigh, NC. 27602 (919) 755-6832.<lb/>
FREE SPRING BREAK VACATION IN<lb/>
CANCUN Become a College Tours rep-<lb/>
resentative on your campus and get a free<lb/>
trip. Nothing to buy?we provide every-<lb/>
thing you need. It's a little work for alot of<lb/>
fun'Call 1-800-727-0005.<lb/>
TUTORS NEEDED: For all business<lb/>
dase? Contact boa at Academic Coun-<lb/>
seling, Dept of Athletics 757-6282 or 757-<lb/>
1677.<lb/>
RESORT HOTELS: Cruiselines, Airlines,<lb/>
&amp; Amusement Parks, NOW accepting<lb/>
applications for spring and summer jobs,<lb/>
internships, and career positions. For<lb/>
more nformation and an application;<lb/>
write national Collegiate Recreation Serv-<lb/>
ice; PO Box 8074; Hilton Head, SC 29938.<lb/>
$10-$15HOUR PROCESSING MAIL<lb/>
T HOME: Weekly check guaranteed.<lb/>
For details write V &amp; E Enterprises 14263<lb/>
San Pablo Ave Suite 111 Un Pablo. CA<lb/>
94806.<lb/>
NEW ENGLAND BROTHERSISTER<lb/>
CAMPS: (Mass.) Mah-Kee-Nac for Boys<lb/>
Danbee for Girls. Counselor positions for<lb/>
Program Specialists: All Team Sports,<lb/>
especially Baseball, Basketball, Field<lb/>
Hockey, Soccer and Volleyball; 25 Tennis<lb/>
openings; also Archery, Riflery and Bik-<lb/>
ing; other openings include Performing<lb/>
Arts, Fine Arts, Yearbook, Photography,<lb/>
Cooking, Sewing, Rollerskating, Rock-<lb/>
etry, Ropes, Camp Craft; All Waterfront<lb/>
activities (Swimming, Skiing, Sailing,<lb/>
Windsurfing, CanoeingKayak). Inquire<lb/>
J &amp; D Camping (Boys) 190 Linden Ave<lb/>
Clen Ridge, NJ 07028; Action Camping<lb/>
(Girls) 263 Main Road, Montville, NJ<lb/>
07045. Phone (Boys) 201-429-8522; (Girls)<lb/>
201-316-6660.<lb/>
ATTENTION - HIRING Government<lb/>
pbs - your area. Many immediate open-<lb/>
ings without waiting list or test. $17,840-<lb/>
$69,485. Call 602-838-8885. Ext. R5285.<lb/>
ARE YOU OUTGOING? Do you enjoy<lb/>
talking on the phone? If so, we have the job<lb/>
for you! Telemarketing positions open for<lb/>
spring semester starting immediately.<lb/>
Work for ECU and get paid while you gain<lb/>
valuable telemarketing skills. Hours are 7<lb/>
?9 p.m. daily; earn extra spending<lb/>
money without cutting into study time!<lb/>
Call Cindy at 7574215 or 757-6072 for an<lb/>
appointment.<lb/>
APPLICATIONS FOR STUDENT<lb/>
UNION PRODUCTIONS CHAIRPER-<lb/>
SON: Job description: 'serve on Student<lb/>
SINGERS WANTED If you've sung in a<lb/>
chop is and would be interested in a low-<lb/>
pressure singing experience, come and<lb/>
sin in Choral Lab. 3-4 Mon. &amp; Wed. Fac-<lb/>
ulty Welcome. Call Dr. Rhonda Fleming,<lb/>
757-6331 for more information.<lb/>
ECU STUDENT INTERESTED IN CAR<lb/>
POOLING: From New Bern to ECU<lb/>
MonTuesThurs. Call Bernard 637-5779<lb/>
in New Bern.<lb/>
BIG MONEY! BIG PRIZES Ware Talent<lb/>
Show coming soon!<lb/>
BE ON THE LOOKOUT: For information<lb/>
concerning Ware Talen Show coming<lb/>
soon. Big money! Big prizes!<lb/>
SOUND MIXTURES DJ SERVICE:<lb/>
Midwinter update. Alpha Omicron Pi's?<lb/>
I'm ready, Let's get wild at Roseball!<lb/>
AZD's?1 predict an epidemic of cabin<lb/>
fever next week; Looking forward to it!<lb/>
Sig Eps?let's get loud and obnoxious in<lb/>
Myrtle! (But beware the foamy whirl-<lb/>
pool). PERSONALS?Cool Daddy?your<lb/>
buddy Ramone skipped town with my<lb/>
great tee-shirts. Ernie?don't ask me to<lb/>
scratch. Heim?1 hate Janet. Water r<lb/>
Chick?beware the pigs head priz. <lb/>
Tracy?bring some dead. Ronda?stop<lb/>
lookin' at that ring. Nooche?we'll miss<lb/>
you in Mvrtle. Mary Leslie?you can't<lb/>
scratch! That's all for now. Call Sound<lb/>
Mixtures for the best party DJ Service. Ask<lb/>
for Bob. You know, the guy who drinks all<lb/>
those Naturals behind the tables. Yeah,<lb/>
the warranty guy. Dial 752-4916.<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR: Tonight and every<lb/>
Thursday night. 9 p.m. until. Drink spe-<lb/>
cials and more. The Fizz ?Pika.<lb/>
NEW CHI OMEGA SISTERS: Congratu<lb/>
lations and thanks for a sweet party. ?<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon.<lb/>
NUCLEAR WASTE OR WASTED: That<lb/>
social was the GRANDDADDY. Tri-Sig,<lb/>
thanks for a great time. ?Sigma Phi Epsi<lb/>
Ion. PS Ben get a room keyj.<lb/>
DESPERATELY SEEKING: That secret<lb/>
Trl-Sig to rock Jesse I. Bass. ?Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon. 752-8096<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU, SIGMA ALPHA<lb/>
EPSILON AND PIKA, TOO It was our<lb/>
pleasure to help each of you! I lope your<lb/>
rush was as successful as could be 'cause<lb/>
the Alpha Xi Delta's know the rushees<lb/>
pledged a GREAT fratemtiy!<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PLCretchen, Iknow<lb/>
all and will tell all so beware! Get psyched<lb/>
for Saturday night ?Eileen.<lb/>
ATTENTION GIRLS KA Little Sister<lb/>
Rush is coming up soon and you are in-<lb/>
vited. Feb. 7th &amp; 8th from 8:00 to 11:00<lb/>
p.m. at the KA 1 louse. Look in Tuesday's<lb/>
paper for more details.<lb/>
SIGMA NU LIL' SISTER RUSH: Wed<lb/>
and Thurs 8:30-10:00 p.m. Join the ad-<lb/>
ventuie. Become a member of "The White<lb/>
Rot. Court<lb/>
SIGMA i r: LIL' SISTERS: We might not<lb/>
say it, but we appreciate all the things you<lb/>
do for us cry much. Thanks for the out<lb/>
standing support at rush. ?Love, the<lb/>
Brothers<lb/>
TO MARY ELI FN DARLA, KAREN,<lb/>
LORRAINE, AN ? TACEY: Thanks for<lb/>
all that special DZ if port during rush-<lb/>
Love, theSij.t.u Nu brothers.<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA Pi. We appreciate your<lb/>
help during rush on Tuesday and party-<lb/>
ing with us Friday night. We'll have to do<lb/>
it again soon! ?Lambda Chi's.<lb/>
RING0LD TOWERS<lb/>
NOW TAKING LEASES FOR FALL<lb/>
SEMESTER 89. EFFICIENCY 1 &amp; 2<lb/>
BEDROOM APARTMENTS. FOR<lb/>
INFO. CALL 1IOLLIE SIMONOWIC11<lb/>
AT 752-2865<lb/>
AZD'S: Just getting ready to rage Thurs-<lb/>
day. ?Love, the Pikes.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS BILLY SES-<lb/>
SOMS AND FRED REHERMAN: On a<lb/>
fine job with PIKE rush.<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA LIL' SISTERS<lb/>
Enough said.<lb/>
CAROLINA'S REGIONAL CONFER-<lb/>
ENCE: East Carolina Pikes?Scholastic<lb/>
Award?Most Improved Chapter. Piece-<lb/>
a-cake.<lb/>
PIKA LIL' SISTER RUSH: Feb. 6 7. The<lb/>
Attic. Watch for further details.<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI: Welcomes every-<lb/>
one downtown to enjoy their Thursday<lb/>
night at our Rockefellers happy hour.<lb/>
THE ALPHA XI DELTA PLEDGES:<lb/>
Would like to announce the sale of Mono-<lb/>
gram Lollipops for American Lung Asso-<lb/>
ciation. Come by the Student Store Mon<lb/>
Feb. 6-Thurs Feb. 9 from 8-2. Help us<lb/>
support American Lung with these great<lb/>
Valentine's gifts for only .75 cent!<lb/>
AOPI'S &amp; THEIR DATES: It's finally<lb/>
here the weekend has come. Roseball is<lb/>
the formal, pledges have tunes to hum.<lb/>
Beta Lambda's dress in white, don't forget<lb/>
this is your night! But don't get too proud<lb/>
to boast, 'cause your big sisters will be<lb/>
giving you a roast And to all the dates<lb/>
who attend this function?get ready to gig<lb/>
at the AOPi party junction. Don't forget<lb/>
the pre-Roseball jam?if anyone can party<lb/>
the AOPi's can BANK ON IT<lb/>
LOST ID behind the Attic Sat. night.<lb/>
Initials on I.D. are VS.?was in blue<lb/>
leather ID. holder. $50 reward if returned.<lb/>
Please contact Pam or Tricia at 752-6105 or<lb/>
758-6731. PLEASE!<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON EXTENDS: A<lb/>
hearty thanks to Sigma Sigma Sigma and<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi for their help with RUSH.<lb/>
WELCOME PLEDGES OF SIGMA PHI<lb/>
EPSILON "Have fun and lets see some<lb/>
hard work It's more than worth it. ?<lb/>
Brothers.<lb/>
Wanna have a Great<lb/>
SPRING BREAK? Spend<lb/>
8 days and 7 nights in<lb/>
Sunny Daytona Beach.<lb/>
$190 for Transporta-<lb/>
tion and Lodging.<lb/>
Dall Dave at<lb/>
758-8001<lb/>
to insure a seat.<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
"Personal and Confidential Care"<lb/>
FREE Pregnancy<lb/>
Testing<lb/>
M-F 8:30-4 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 10-1 p.m.<lb/>
Triangle Women's<lb/>
Health Center<lb/>
Call for appointment Mon thru Sat- Low<lb/>
Cost Termination to 20 weeks of pregnancy<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
j-<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA AM'S jerry<lb/>
1 lardesty, Bryce Dillard, Clay Rockett,<lb/>
Chad Clark, Ken Attkisson, Brian Ander<lb/>
son, Joel Mauney, Steve Barn well, Parker<lb/>
Dudley, Brett Stancil and Rhett Spencer<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: Way to go Basketball<lb/>
team! Keep up the jammin' job<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: Congratulations to Lon,<lb/>
Jessica, and Catherine. We love you!?!<lb/>
AZD AND AOPI: You were both the class<lb/>
acts at our rush. Thanks so much for help<lb/>
ing out. 1 lope to get together again soon<lb/>
?Love?The Sigma Alpha Epsilon's.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU: Partying with you was<lb/>
quite an adventure. And down in the<lb/>
basement was the best thirst quencher.<lb/>
The new pledges and brothers are reallv<lb/>
cool. No one can beat the Phi Kappa Tau's<lb/>
when it comes to poo! Thanks a lot, let's<lb/>
do it again! ?Love, the Alpha Xi Delta's<lb/>
GIRLS, GUYS: Poolside parties and ma<lb/>
jor tanning at Daytona Beach, Spring<lb/>
Break '89. Call Keith, Kelly, Ron and<lb/>
Wayne at 752 4693 for more information<lb/>
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON AFTER-<lb/>
NOON DELIGHT: Check it out Bet you<lb/>
a dollar you chicken out this Friday at 5:30<lb/>
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Would like<lb/>
to congratulate the new pledges for their<lb/>
wise choice Get ready for a great<lb/>
semester ?The Brothers<lb/>
Read The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Every<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
Reminder<lb/>
Commercial establishments<lb/>
or events at commercial establishments,<lb/>
regardless of the sponsor, can only be<lb/>
ach ertised in the display classified section<lb/>
Boxers Wanted:<lb/>
March 28, 29, 30<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Boxer Registration<lb/>
757-3042 or 830-1094<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
APPLICATIONS ARE BEING<lb/>
ACCEPTED FOR POSITIONS ON<lb/>
BOTH THE JUDICIAL, HONOR<lb/>
AND REVIEW BOARDS.<lb/>
ALL INTERESTED PERSONS<lb/>
SHOULD PICK UP APPLICATIONS<lb/>
AT THE SGA OFFICES,<lb/>
2ND FLOOR OF MENDENHALL.<lb/>
Look for Your Sweetheart's Message<lb/>
in<lb/>
Lovetines<lb/>
in the<lb/>
February 14th issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Leave your sweetheart a special message<lb/>
in the Valentine's Day issue of The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Messages are only $1.00 so come<lb/>
by the East Carolinian today!<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ART GALLERY<lb/>
Gallery Security Postion, must be quali-<lb/>
fied for university work study program.<lb/>
Hours: Mon. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sat. 10a.m. to<lb/>
5 p.m. and additional hours during the<lb/>
week (10 to 15 hours per week). If inter-<lb/>
ested, please call Connie ? 757-6665 or<lb/>
Lou Anne 757-6336.<lb/>
TirrORS NEEDED<lb/>
Tutors needed for all business classes.<lb/>
Contact Lisa at Academic Counseling,<lb/>
Dept of Athletics ? 757-6282 or 757-1677.<lb/>
RACOUETB ALL DOUBLES<lb/>
A registration meeting for Intramural rac-<lb/>
quetball doubles teams will be held Feb. 7<lb/>
at 3:U0 p.m. in Biology 103. Men's and<lb/>
women's partners are welcome!<lb/>
FREE THROW CONTEST<lb/>
A free throw contest sponsored by Intra-<lb/>
mural- Recreational Services will be held<lb/>
Feb. 9 in Memorial Gym from 3:00-5:00<lb/>
p.m. and in Minges Coliseum from 8:00-<lb/>
10.00 p.m. Winners will receive Intramu-<lb/>
ral championship t-shirts. Register on-site<lb/>
with your ECU ID.<lb/>
SLAM DUNK CONTEST<lb/>
Registration for the annual Intramural<lb/>
slam dunk contest will be held Feb. 14 at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. in BIO N-102. Women as well as<lb/>
men are invited to sign-up. The goal will<lb/>
be adjusted for women participants. Mi-<lb/>
chael and Michelle Jordans should attend.<lb/>
WEIGHT LIFTING CONTEST<lb/>
Muscle and muscleless bound men and<lb/>
women should attend the Intramural<lb/>
registration meeting for the annual<lb/>
weight lifting contest Feb. 20 at 5:00 p m.<lb/>
in GCB 1026.<lb/>
COPING WITH STRESS<lb/>
A free mini-class offered by the ECU<lb/>
Counseling Center for students: You<lb/>
can?identify sources of stress, make<lb/>
positive changes, manage your response<lb/>
to stressful situations, learn to relax, im-<lb/>
prove self confidence. Feb. 6,8, 10 &amp; 13 in<lb/>
329 Wright Bldg. from 3-4 p.m. No ad-<lb/>
vance registration is required. Call or stop<lb/>
by the Counseling Center for further info.<lb/>
(316 Wright Bldg. 757-6661).<lb/>
IMPROVING YOUR STUDY<lb/>
SKILLS<lb/>
Learning how to improve your study<lb/>
skills for greater success in college. The<lb/>
following mini course and workshops can<lb/>
help you prepare for the added workload<lb/>
of college or help to increase your grade<lb/>
point average. All sessions will be held in<lb/>
313 Wright Bldg. Feb. 6: Test taking?3-<lb/>
430 p.m. Feb. 7: Test taking?3-430 p.m.<lb/>
You may attend all the topic sessions or<lb/>
choose the ones where you need the most<lb/>
improvement.<lb/>
FINANCIAL AID ORIENTA-<lb/>
TION<lb/>
Information and applications for 1989-90'<lb/>
Feb. 9, 4:00 p.m Hendnx Theatre?MSC<lb/>
RAFFLE<lb/>
The ECU Gospel Choir will be having a<lb/>
raffle Jan. 30-Feb. 3 in front of Student<lb/>
Store. First prize: 7-inch herringbone "I<lb/>
LOVE YOU" bracelet from Saslow's Jew-<lb/>
elry. Second prize: jumbo decorated<lb/>
cookie from Cookie Co Carolina East<lb/>
Mall. Third prize: Floral arrangement<lb/>
from Julians, tickets are .50 cent. Drawing<lb/>
Feb. 3 at 3 p.m. at Student Store.<lb/>
SOPHOMORES AND IRS<lb/>
Earn over $60000 this summer. Ear?<lb/>
$100 00 a month during your last two<lb/>
vears in college Become a part of the<lb/>
Army ROTC Dept here at ECU. Attend<lb/>
the summer officer leadership course at<lb/>
Fort Knox, Kentucky Info, meeting will<lb/>
bo held on Feb 9 at 1800 hours in room 339<lb/>
Rawl It's not too late for you to earn a<lb/>
commission prior to graduation. For more<lb/>
info, contact Cap Steve L Jones, Rawl<lb/>
344, 757-6974<lb/>
The Ultimate Chance for all students to<lb/>
show their artistic talents! The Spring art<lb/>
aim petition will be accepting entries Feb<lb/>
13-17 from 3-5 p.m. in rm 221 Mendcn-<lb/>
hall. Entry fee is $3.00entry and each<lb/>
<pb facs="00058121_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2, 1989<lb/>
<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
person mav submit 3 pieces First place<lb/>
SI75.00, 2nd place $125 00, 3rd place<lb/>
$75.00 and 5 honorable mentions of<lb/>
S25.00. The Illumina reception will be Fob<lb/>
20, 7-9 p.m. in Mendenhall Gallery Unse<lb/>
lected pieces must be picked up bv Feb. 19<lb/>
or no later than Feb 20 by 3 p.m. due to<lb/>
lack of storage<lb/>
MINORITY STT DENTORG.<lb/>
The Minority Student tg will meet Feb<lb/>
2 at b 00 p.m in Speight 129. All are invited<lb/>
and encouraged to attend<lb/>
PARTIC1PANTS NEEDED<lb/>
Participants for asthma research study-<lb/>
Males age IS-45, with mild to moderate<lb/>
asthma. Compensation available Please<lb/>
call 551-3159<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR<lb/>
CHRIST<lb/>
Looking for fellowship, fun and having<lb/>
Cod's word? You are welcome to attend<lb/>
"Prime Time" held at Rawl in rm 130?<lb/>
every Thurs at 7 30 p.m Refreshments<lb/>
served<lb/>
MEN'S BASKETBALL<lb/>
The Pirates are back at Minges on Teb 4th<lb/>
against powerful Richmond Tipoff will<lb/>
be at 7.30. There will be a pom-pom give-<lb/>
away prior to the game as well as the<lb/>
Honda shootout and Pure Gold Dancers<lb/>
at half time. Come out and join the fun and<lb/>
support Pirate athletics.<lb/>
RUGBY CLUB<lb/>
ECU Rugbv Club begins its spring prac<lb/>
tice on Jan. 31, and Feb. 1 &amp;2at330 behind<lb/>
the Allied Health Bldg For more info , call<lb/>
758-5893. All Athletes Welcome'<lb/>
P.E. MAJORS CLUB<lb/>
Wanted All PE Majors or intended ma<lb/>
jora to attend our meeting PC Majors<lb/>
meeting Feb. 2 at 8:00 pm in rm 142<lb/>
Minges. Please attend?we need your sup-<lb/>
port No Dues?just Fun.<lb/>
INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE<lb/>
Interested in spending this summer in<lb/>
remote parts of the world1 The Overseas<lb/>
Development Network (ODN) is spon-<lb/>
soring internships for students and recent<lb/>
graduates in the Philippines, India, Bang<lb/>
ladesh, Nicaragua, Bolivia, Belize, and<lb/>
our own Appalachian mountains Any<lb/>
maior can applv. Length of stay varies<lb/>
from 3-6 morths For more info, contact<lb/>
Marianne Exum (h) 830-9430 &amp; (w) 757-<lb/>
6271. Hurrv' Application Deadline?<lb/>
Feb. 15.<lb/>
ODN<lb/>
Overseas Development Network will be<lb/>
meeting in 247 MSC at 5 p.m. Feb. 2 All<lb/>
members and people interested in helping<lb/>
third world countries please come! For<lb/>
more info, call Tonya Bahv hm 830-8888<lb/>
wk 757-6611 ext 221<lb/>
NAVIGATORS<lb/>
"Flight 730 the weekly get-together of<lb/>
the Navigators, continues its streak of<lb/>
good Bible study every Thur 7:30-9 in<lb/>
Biology 103 The non-stop, no-frills meet<lb/>
mg is designed to help you develop a<lb/>
closer walk with God. In-flight refresh<lb/>
ments served No ticket required; just<lb/>
reserve vour time<lb/>
PSJLCJil<lb/>
It you are interested in a career in the field<lb/>
of Psychology, you owe it to yourself to<lb/>
become a member of Psi Chi- The national<lb/>
honor socieitv in Psyc. Prospective mem<lb/>
bers mav pick up applications in Rawl KM<lb/>
and have them completed and returned<lb/>
bv Feb 3 An unofficial copy of your tran<lb/>
scripts must accompany your application<lb/>
To applv, cumulative gpa for graduate<lb/>
students and seniors 3 2, juniors 3.0 and<lb/>
sophomores 2.8. Prospective members<lb/>
must have completed 9 hours in Psyc.<lb/>
courses with a "B" average or better<lb/>
PHI BETA SICMA<lb/>
There will be a Sigma Dove Interest meet<lb/>
ing Feb. 2, at 6 p.m in rm 20Q0 CCB All<lb/>
voung ladies are inuted to come<lb/>
rhere will be an Informal Smoker on Feb<lb/>
2at7p m in rm 2000 GCB. All voung men<lb/>
are invited to come Blue Phi!<lb/>
C ANDY-O-GRAMS<lb/>
Inter varsity will be selling cand) o<lb/>
grams tor Valentine's Dav in front of the<lb/>
Student Store Feb. 8 10. Proceeds will go<lb/>
towards 1 labakkuk coming to ECU in late<lb/>
March<lb/>
PHYSICAL IP. MOTOR AND<lb/>
FITNESS COMPETENCY<lb/>
TEST<lb/>
A passing score on this test is required t<lb/>
all students prior to declaring physical ed<lb/>
as a major 'Maintaining an average T<lb/>
score ot 45 on the six item test battery and<lb/>
having a T-scoreof45on the aerobics run)<lb/>
The test will be given at Minges Coliseum<lb/>
on Feb 3 at 12 30 p.m. Any student with a<lb/>
medical condition that would contraindi<lb/>
cate participation in the testing should<lb/>
contact Mike McCammon or Dr Gav Is<lb/>
rael at 757-6497 To be exempted from any<lb/>
portion of the test, you must have a<lb/>
physician s excuse A detailed summar)<lb/>
of the test components is available in the<lb/>
Human Perforamnce Lab (rm 113<lb/>
Minges) Your physician's excuse must<lb/>
specifically state from which items you<lb/>
are exempt<lb/>
SCHOOL OF MUSIC<lb/>
ECU School of Music Events Ian. 31- Fi b<lb/>
6: Faculty Recital, Elliot Frank, guitarist<lb/>
(Feb. 1, 8:15 p.m. Fletcher Recital Hall,<lb/>
free); Sydney Carlson, graduate flute re-<lb/>
cital (Feb 2, 7p.m Fletcher Recital I lall<lb/>
free); Dean Laves, voice and Jennifer W il<lb/>
hams piano, senior recitals (Feb. 3,7 p.m<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall, free); guest jazz<lb/>
performer Roger Pemberton with ECU<lb/>
Rememberings<lb/>
Antique<lb/>
Nuiili Main<lb/>
Crafts Gift<lb/>
stn-?'t. Farmville<lb/>
753-7333<lb/>
V<lb/>
Sale<lb/>
10-25 Off<lb/>
Antique Qah furniture<lb/>
Now Thru The End Of February<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
Friday 5-9 pm<lb/>
Saturday 10-5 pm<lb/>
Sunday 1-5 pm<lb/>
Specials On<lb/>
Handwoven Ponchoes,<lb/>
Sweaters &amp; Throws<lb/>
Register Now<lb/>
to get on the<lb/>
Mexican<lb/>
Connection<lb/>
to<lb/>
Cancun, Mexico<lb/>
Courtesy of Chico's &amp;<lb/>
American Airlines<lb/>
And win a Trip for Two<lb/>
7 Days - 6 Nights<lb/>
Crown Piazza Hotel<lb/>
? Register anytime at Chico's in<lb/>
Rocky Mount or Greenville<lb/>
 two trips will be given away!)<lb/>
? Corona Beer will be giving<lb/>
away promotional items<lb/>
So purchase nce&amp;ur ? You need not be present to win<lb/>
Must be 18 years old to register<lb/>
'fi.<lb/>
Jazz Ensemble and ECU Symphonic V ind<lb/>
Ensemble (Feb. 3, 8 15 p m Wright Audi<lb/>
torium, free); Andv Miskavage, senioi<lb/>
clarinet recital (Feb h, 7 p.m , Fletcher<lb/>
Rectial Hall)<lb/>
S1JBSTANCE ABUSE PRE-<lb/>
VENTIQN<lb/>
National Collegiate Drug Awarenes<lb/>
Week, be a responsible participant, I<lb/>
12 Come see a special screening of: Arnei<lb/>
ica Hurts: The Drug Epidemic. 1. b 7, ,<lb/>
p.m. in BcM (inner Library View tin<lb/>
short video and stav to discuss what is<lb/>
happening on campus concerning sub<lb/>
stance abuse prevention For more info<lb/>
call or come by the office ot substance<lb/>
abuse prevention and ed , 757 6793, 303<lb/>
Frmn<lb/>
SPEECH-LA NGUA (JAM)<lb/>
HEARING SYMPOSIUM<lb/>
STUDENT EXCHANGE<lb/>
Int. rested in exploring new places7 Aca-<lb/>
d mi. adventure? National Student Fx<lb/>
? h mge provides an exciting opportunity<lb/>
for E U students to attend one of over 80<lb/>
leges ur universities across the U.S<lb/>
I ive in .mother part of the country and<lb/>
experii ice college life in a different set<lb/>
tin); tor a semester or a vear. ECU students<lb/>
pay the same tuition and fees Js at ECU,<lb/>
and avoid the red tape normally associ-<lb/>
ated with transferring to another institu<lb/>
lion For more into and applications<lb/>
please come to an info session on Feb 6,al<lb/>
1 Ml in room 1006 X H<lb/>
Hank's Homemade Ice Cream, Frozen<lb/>
Yogurt and Sorbet<lb/>
? DOPTT FORGET<lb/>
31 E. 10th St. (Next to Wendy.) haws DELrvERS,<lb/>
 1 Vanilla In U.S.A. 88-89 6 pm  clo? mm? d-T<lb/>
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Delivery 758OOOO<lb/>
50 ? OFF VALENTINE<lb/>
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ORDERS IF ORDERED<lb/>
PRIOR TO 2889<lb/>
(Expires 288MJ<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
The lth Annual Speech 1 .nguage and<lb/>
Hearing Symposium will K' held in the<lb/>
Rrodv Medical Science Bide,?nlb 16-17<lb/>
Conducting the workshopswill be Mar<lb/>
lone A Turowski, M " CO' from<lb/>
until 5 p.m. Feb 16 and 1 .nid M i urcr<lb/>
man, D.Ed from 8:30 until Ip.m 1 eb 17<lb/>
For more info contact 1 on vpivo Dept<lb/>
ot Speech-Language &amp; Auditory Pathol<lb/>
ogy ECU. Greenville, " 127s vs 919<lb/>
757-6961,<lb/>
COOPERATIV1Fi)<lb/>
Cooperath e 1 d .1 fro ?sei<lb/>
the I Iniverity, is designed ti iTelp vo<lb/>
career related work eperen befon<lb/>
you graduate We would liki'to exl nd ai<lb/>
tn itation toall students t ? ?? nd .i i<lb/>
info. Seminar in the (! B<lb/>
spring '89 Feb 2,1 p m , ro.014<lb/>
6,1 p m , ro nil 014 Ft<lb/>
2016; Feb 13,4 p m , room' ? ?? . ? .<lb/>
1 p.m roomlOU; 1 eb 2"p.m r n<lb/>
1014; Feb. 23,4 p.m room 2;? . : .<lb/>
p m , room 2016<lb/>
Be a part of<lb/>
National Collegiate Drug Awareness Week<lb/>
February 6-12<lb/>
<lb/>
special screening of<lb/>
AMERICA HURTS:<lb/>
The Drug Epidemic<lb/>
Tues Feb. 7 at 7 pm<lb/>
B04 Joyner Library<lb/>
sponsored by<lb/>
Substance Abuse Prevention<lb/>
&amp; Education Office<lb/>
757-6793 303 Erwin<lb/>
52lCotanche 757-1666<lb/>
<lb/>
CRUISE THE BAHAMAS WITH THE<lb/>
CARNIVAL CRUISE LINES DURING<lb/>
SPRING BREAK<lb/>
(deadline to sign up is right around THE CORNER.)<lb/>
PRICE PER PERSON: $499.00 (quad)<lb/>
$525.00 (Non-ECU students)<lb/>
(All transportation included as well as meals on the ship!)<lb/>
?Be treated like royalty<lb/>
?Eat exquisite meals<lb/>
?Get a head start on your tan<lb/>
SPONSORED BY<lb/>
THE STUDENT UNION TRAVEL COMMITTEE.<lb/>
For more Information contact the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center,<lb/>
Phone 757-6611<lb/>
?MtMMi ran m mn - ?<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058121_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
FEBRUARY, W VAUi 7<lb/>
Mascots get into their jobs<lb/>
By ALICIA FORD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Picture this. It's fourth quar-<lb/>
ter during the ECU homecoming<lb/>
game. The Pirates are on the other<lb/>
team's 20-yard line, up by three<lb/>
points, and getting ready to score<lb/>
again. The crowd is one, huge,<lb/>
chanting mob ready to explode.<lb/>
Suddenly, you find yourself<lb/>
being picked up in the air and<lb/>
passed up into the stands. Help-<lb/>
less, you arc carried up into the<lb/>
hundreds of screaming fans,<lb/>
being passed back and forth like a<lb/>
rag doll.<lb/>
Think this could never hap-<lb/>
pen to you? Well, it could if you<lb/>
are an ECU Pirate mascot. He is<lb/>
the person who is at all the games<lb/>
and fundraisers dressed up like a<lb/>
pirate to bring the team good luck.<lb/>
The Pirates currently have<lb/>
two mascots who perform not<lb/>
only at games, but also at swim<lb/>
meets, soccer meets, parades,<lb/>
fundraisers, and special Pirate<lb/>
Club activities.<lb/>
Doug Gavlord, a 21-year-old<lb/>
junior from Elizabeth Town, NC,<lb/>
has been a Pirate mascot since<lb/>
spring semester 1987. An envi-<lb/>
ronmental health major, he heard<lb/>
of an opening for a mascot from<lb/>
his suitcmates, who were all ECU<lb/>
cheerleaders. They persuaded<lb/>
Gaylord to try out, and he has<lb/>
been a mascot for the Pirates ever<lb/>
since.<lb/>
"I enjoy going to the games,<lb/>
and being able to participate ac-<lb/>
tively, on the field, is a big rush<lb/>
Mid Gaylord.<lb/>
The other Pirate masot is<lb/>
sophomore David Bailey. A com-<lb/>
munications art major from<lb/>
Raleigh, Bailey has worked for the<lb/>
Pirates since last spring, and plans<lb/>
to continue doing it until gradu-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
"It's really a lot of fun. I get to<lb/>
go to all the games and meet all<lb/>
different kinds of people said<lb/>
Bailey.<lb/>
the mascots travel with the<lb/>
cheerleaders to in-state games.<lb/>
For out-of-state games the mas-<lb/>
cots and cheerleaders fly with the<lb/>
team. Gaylord and Bailey take<lb/>
turns going to each game and<lb/>
Pirate activity.<lb/>
If one has a test or something<lb/>
important to do that weekend,<lb/>
then the other will take his place.<lb/>
If neither can make it, the athletic<lb/>
marketing assistant, Joe Lcskay,<lb/>
will fill in for them.<lb/>
To become a mascot, you<lb/>
have to trvout with thechecrlcad-<lb/>
ers, usually in both the spring and<lb/>
the fall. Aspiring mascots may be<lb/>
asked to perform gymnastics,<lb/>
display emotion, and act out pan-<lb/>
tomimes like riding a bike or<lb/>
walking against the wind.<lb/>
"When 1 tried out there were<lb/>
only four other guys with me. I<lb/>
was a little nervous, but it onlv<lb/>
took about 20 or 30 minutes, and I<lb/>
was fairly confident of winning<lb/>
Gaylord commented.<lb/>
Head checrleading coach<lb/>
Peggy Smith decides who be-<lb/>
comes a Pirate mascot. The en-<lb/>
trant who displays the most en-<lb/>
ergy and enthusiasm wins.<lb/>
The mascots receive some<lb/>
instructions as to what to do on<lb/>
the field, but they are allowed a<lb/>
Angela Marie Michel lives a day in the life of a theater major. The Greenville native returned<lb/>
home after three years as a computer science major at Wake Forest to study acting. (Photo by<lb/>
J.D.Whitmire, ECU Photolab) a m ? A m 1 ? r g<lb/>
i A day in the life of<lb/>
a theater maj or<lb/>
WZMB Top 13<lb/>
1. Trotsky Icepick- "Baby<lb/>
2. The Name- "Dangerous<lb/>
Times"<lb/>
3. Lou Reed- "New York"<lb/>
4. The Replacements- "Don't<lb/>
Tell A Soul"<lb/>
5. Angst- "Cry For Happy"<lb/>
6. Violent Femmes- "3"<lb/>
7. Wonder Stuff- "Eight<lb/>
Legged Groove Machine"<lb/>
8. Legal Reins- "Please, The<lb/>
Pleasure"<lb/>
9. Dinosaur JrBug"<lb/>
10. Girl TroubleHit It Or<lb/>
Quit It"<lb/>
11. Death of Samantha-<lb/>
"Where The Women Wear The<lb/>
Glory And Men Wear The<lb/>
Pants"<lb/>
12. Throwing Muses-<lb/>
"Hunkpapa"<lb/>
13. X-Men- "X-Men"<lb/>
By SCOTT MAXWELL<lb/>
AuUtant Features Editor<lb/>
Angela Marie Michel is ar-<lb/>
guably the most outgoing indi-<lb/>
vidual in a group well-known for<lb/>
being outgoing individuals.<lb/>
Michel is a theater major.<lb/>
Until three years ago, Michel<lb/>
was at Wake Forest University,<lb/>
majoring in Computer Science<lb/>
because she didn't know what she<lb/>
really wanted to do. She returned<lb/>
to her hometown of Greenville to<lb/>
finish college and find something<lb/>
she liked.<lb/>
Michel credits ECU's general<lb/>
college requirements with her<lb/>
entry into theater. To satisfy a GC<lb/>
requirement, she took a speech<lb/>
class.<lb/>
front of, say, 500 people ? how<lb/>
many people have that kind of<lb/>
guts?"<lb/>
Monday mornings begin at<lb/>
9:30 with Meizner class, which<lb/>
teaches, appropriately enough,<lb/>
the Meizner acting technique.<lb/>
Michel describes the technique by<lb/>
quoting Sandy Meizner himself,<lb/>
who called it "Realitv of doing<lb/>
under imaginary circumstance<lb/>
Students aren't allowed to cover<lb/>
anything up, which Michel says<lb/>
helps them get to know them-<lb/>
selves.<lb/>
'The teacher, Don Biehn, has<lb/>
done a lot in the theater. He's got<lb/>
a lot of experience, and he doesn't<lb/>
pull punches with you<lb/>
Though there is plentv of<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
this<lb/>
weekend<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Susie's:<lb/>
Suspect<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
Spiral<lb/>
Attic-<lb/>
Max Creek<lb/>
Mendenhall:<lb/>
Willow<lb/>
(through Sunday)<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
Liquid Sound<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
The Point<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
Bad Bob &amp; the Rocking Horses<lb/>
Attic:<lb/>
Jackyl<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
New Deli:<lb/>
Open Mike Night<lb/>
This led to production pressure, Michel speaks glow<lb/>
work, which gave her a chance to ingly of the class and of Biehn,<lb/>
hang around theater people. She saying "I had no clue how to act<lb/>
liked them so much and was so<lb/>
interested in what they did that<lb/>
she decided to become a theater<lb/>
major.<lb/>
Michel says that the theater<lb/>
department isn't like other de-<lb/>
partments ? it maintains a re-<lb/>
and he's teaching me how to act<lb/>
From 2 to 3 Michel has an<lb/>
English class, Shakespearean<lb/>
Tragedies. Then at 3 she's back to<lb/>
the theater, to a directing class<lb/>
taught by the chairman of the<lb/>
Theater Arts Department himself,<lb/>
laxed and informal atmosphere in Edgar Loessin.<lb/>
which most students call profes- Members of the class direct<lb/>
sors by their first names. either a one-act play or one act of<lb/>
"On the other hand she a two-act play, and they select<lb/>
says, "there's lots of superficial- their cast from members of the<lb/>
lty. It's very competitive, and class. The projects are staggered<lb/>
there's a lot of pretended concern so that students direct their own<lb/>
and superficial friendships, a lot plays for part of the semester and<lb/>
of jealousies. Theater majors are available as cast for the rest.<lb/>
aren't just one big mass of non-<lb/>
conformists ? there are a lot of<lb/>
people who are too afraid to open<lb/>
up and are actually superficial<lb/>
Michel's major complaint<lb/>
Michel is currently rehears-<lb/>
ing for a play directed by Nina<lb/>
Blanchard. Later this semester,<lb/>
however, she will be directing the<lb/>
first act of "The Exercise a play<lb/>
about ECU'S theater department by Lewis John Carlino<lb/>
is that she feels it is underfunded. Michel is not involved in the<lb/>
"I wish the SGA would give theater department's current pro-<lb/>
us more money  for example, duction, "Boys in the Band but<lb/>
we can't hire people to build sets she is currently rehearsing for a<lb/>
so we have to get students to do it. theater workshop, "The Early<lb/>
The costumcrs and scenic artists Girl The workshop production,<lb/>
have money problems too. I don't directed by Catherine Edwards,<lb/>
think the SGA realizes our pre- will be presented on Feb. 17 and<lb/>
dicament 18 in Messick. The play is about<lb/>
Why does she like theater so relationships among seven<lb/>
much? Michel replies without women who "just happen to be<lb/>
hesitation: "It'sexciting Despite<lb/>
long hoursand hard work, Michel<lb/>
finds theater work fun.<lb/>
"I get bored pretty easily, too,<lb/>
and theater keeps me entertained.<lb/>
I think that's what's so great about<lb/>
theater ? it entertains me and<lb/>
others at the same time. Besides,<lb/>
to go up there and expose yourself<lb/>
physically and psychologically in<lb/>
prostitutes.<lb/>
With all this pressure, Michel<lb/>
looks forward to the weekend as<lb/>
an opportunity to unwind. She<lb/>
has been getting bored with<lb/>
downtown Greenville because<lb/>
"the bars are all starting to look<lb/>
alike ? although Rafters is look-<lb/>
See MICHEL, page 8<lb/>
wide range of choices.<lb/>
"We mostly do what we<lb/>
want. You have to judge for your-<lb/>
self what to do by what's happen-<lb/>
ing in the game and what's going<lb/>
on with the crowd says Bailey.<lb/>
Both mascots use the same<lb/>
costume and both admit it can get<lb/>
unbearably hot, especially at the<lb/>
beginning of football season. If a<lb/>
but ton pops off or a zipper breaks,<lb/>
they usually repair it themselves.<lb/>
Costumes in need of major repairs<lb/>
arc sent to the dry cleaners.<lb/>
They usually wear shorts and<lb/>
a T-shirt underneath, then attach<lb/>
a fiberglass rib cage in order to<lb/>
have that famous Pirate physique.<lb/>
Over the ribcage, they usually<lb/>
wear a fwtball jersev or ECU T-<lb/>
shirt.<lb/>
"I remember the first game I<lb/>
went to as the mascot Barley<lb/>
muses. "It was parents' weekend,<lb/>
and about ninety degrees. I<lb/>
thought I was going to suffocate,<lb/>
and by the time the game was over<lb/>
I was dripping sweat. But you get<lb/>
used to it after a while; it's not that<lb/>
See MASCOTS, page 8<lb/>
The ECU Pirate mascot smiles and brings good luck to the Pirate<lb/>
athletic program.<lb/>
Students spice up walls with art<lb/>
By DEANNA NEVGLOSKI<lb/>
Staff Wn'er<lb/>
What do you do when the<lb/>
walls of your dorm hall begins to<lb/>
look dull and boring? The fifth<lb/>
floor of Tyler Dorm has the an-<lb/>
swer? murals.<lb/>
It all started when resident<lb/>
advisor Camille Koonce and her<lb/>
neighbors Caroline Cusick and<lb/>
Trade Weist decided to brighten<lb/>
up the often dismal appearances<lb/>
of their dorm walls. Thev decided<lb/>
J<lb/>
to add a touch of color and lifebv<lb/>
painting the walls.<lb/>
The murals, which definitely<lb/>
add color, are great. The theme is<lb/>
a re-creation of the late 50s and<lb/>
early 60s music scene.<lb/>
The painting of a huge- heart to push the idea through to Resi<lb/>
bursting through a hotel reminds denee Life and Housing<lb/>
us of the Elvis Presley classic Residence Life and Housing<lb/>
"Heartbreak Hotel A collection allowed the residents o the fifth<lb/>
of 45 singles bearing the names of floor to come up with colored<lb/>
songs like "Please Mr .Postman" drawings thev would use as a<lb/>
and "Splish Splash" take us back sketch for the murals. The<lb/>
to the sweet sound of some oldies<lb/>
but goodies.<lb/>
Although this may all sound<lb/>
like fun and games, it was more<lb/>
than just that. The most difficult<lb/>
job was getting the idea ap-<lb/>
proved.<lb/>
In order to get things started.<lb/>
Linda Barkand, residence direx<lb/>
sketches were approved and the<lb/>
fifth floor began work on creating<lb/>
a happy and colorful atmosphere<lb/>
for their floor<lb/>
For he past two weeks, the<lb/>
residents on the fifth floor have<lb/>
been painting the walls to meet<lb/>
the deadine from Housing. After<lb/>
the walls were completed.<lb/>
tor at Tyler Dorm, had to present Carolyn Fulghum, director for<lb/>
the idea to the area coordinator for Residence Life and Housing<lb/>
College Hill. After their approval stopped by the dorm to inspect<lb/>
for paint use, Barkand proceeded See MLRALS, page 8<lb/>
The residents of the fifth floor of Tyler dorm have taken their walls and turned them into eye-<lb/>
pleasing murals. (Photo by J.D. Whitmire, ECU Photolab)<lb/>
Pichin' tht Bones<lb/>
Bonehead peruses personals<lb/>
BY CHIPPY BONSfEAD<lb/>
Whenever I pick up a<lb/>
newspaper, 1 feel compelled to<lb/>
look at the personal ads.<lb/>
Whether ifs that paragon of<lb/>
Journalistic integrity, THe<lb/>
Weekly World News, or that<lb/>
Raleigh ad rag The Spectator,<lb/>
they ail have entire sections<lb/>
devoted to finding a compat-<lb/>
ible male through correspon-<lb/>
dence.<lb/>
Depending on your mood,<lb/>
personal ads can crack you up,<lb/>
if your love life is in a<lb/>
shambles, chances are you<lb/>
won't find these desperate<lb/>
cries for attention nearly aa<lb/>
humorous as you should.<lb/>
I love to near people de-<lb/>
scribe themselves in pint.<lb/>
"Sincere, lonely, considerate<lb/>
Christian female, seek! new<lb/>
friend to share new year with.<lb/>
Love outdoors. No drugs or<lb/>
smokes. Photo, 4<lb/>
Not bad.<lb/>
In 23 word<lb/>
to tell everyone In 4<lb/>
lady.<lb/>
Bow bout the duck who<lb/>
wrote, "Adventure-seeking<lb/>
Southern belle, Bruce Lee fan.<lb/>
Wants pen-pal or casual sex<lb/>
partner. Tenn. area a plus, but<lb/>
wifi travel<lb/>
Now there's a woman!<lb/>
Not only does she get into<lb/>
kung-fu, she's willing to travel<lb/>
to have sex with you! Now <lb/>
which one had a realistic ex-<lb/>
pectation of the guys who read<lb/>
personals?<lb/>
Men are pretty lame when<lb/>
it cornea to espousing their<lb/>
qualities in a limited number<lb/>
of words. Nine times out of 10,<lb/>
men end up paying five or six<lb/>
dollars more, because they<lb/>
want to Kst all their hobbies.<lb/>
Take this one tor example.<lb/>
"Handsome, husky, father of<lb/>
small child. Seeks monoga-<lb/>
mous relationship with home-<lb/>
Good conversationel-<lb/>
: rock music, snug-<lb/>
 sofa, bowling,<lb/>
,okt movies, read-<lb/>
Guide? and make your new<lb/>
mate some popcorn, it don't<lb/>
get any better than this!<lb/>
On the other end of the<lb/>
male spectrum, you have the<lb/>
sincere sportsman. "Looks,<lb/>
age unimportant?honesty is.<lb/>
Must have sunny disposition.<lb/>
Like camping, fishing, hiking,<lb/>
skydiving, skateboarding,<lb/>
elephant safaris, Sumo wres-<lb/>
tling. Must be able to keep up<lb/>
with my active lifestyle<lb/>
1 don't think this guy<lb/>
could keep up with his own<lb/>
lifestyle. How does he find<lb/>
time to go to work and mow<lb/>
the ?"?<lb/>
you peruse the per-<lb/>
sonals as much aa I do, you<lb/>
notice certain repetitive<lb/>
themes. One is the sincerity<lb/>
thing. Everyone is dead seri-<lb/>
ous about finding the perfect<lb/>
mate.<lb/>
Another thing<lb/>
personals ara wten<lb/>
people aged<lb/>
folks have finally<lb/>
thsyte too old to<lb/>
<pb facs="00058121_0009"/><lb/>
if<lb/>
I<lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2,1989<lb/>
Chip isn't the only bone around<lb/>
URBAN A, 111. (AP) ? Plastic<lb/>
bones that can be drilled, pinned<lb/>
and wired just like the real things<lb/>
are saving dogs' lives and im-<lb/>
proving teaching at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Illinois veterinary school.<lb/>
The lifelike models of major<lb/>
canine bones allow students to<lb/>
learn how to handle special in-<lb/>
struments and manipulate bro-<lb/>
ken bones as they are repaired.<lb/>
Use of these limbs saves the<lb/>
lives of up to 100 dogs a year at the<lb/>
school ? animals who would<lb/>
have been destroyed after sur-<lb/>
gery, says Dr. Ann Johnson, who<lb/>
teaches orthopedic surgery at the<lb/>
College of Veterinary Medicine.<lb/>
"Society now demands that<lb/>
we not use living animals in labo-<lb/>
ratories for practice surgery if we<lb/>
don't have to says Johnson.<lb/>
"But, society also demands that<lb/>
our vets be well trained<lb/>
The simulated dog bones ac-<lb/>
complish both purposes, she says.<lb/>
The models were purchased<lb/>
with a $2,000 grant from the Save<lb/>
The Animals Fund in California<lb/>
and will be used to train about 160<lb/>
vet students a year.<lb/>
The use of a plastic bone<lb/>
that is identical to the real thing is<lb/>
ideal in the classroom says Tom<lb/>
Porro, production supervisor at<lb/>
Pacific Research of Vashon,<lb/>
Wash.<lb/>
He says his company sup-<lb/>
plies a half-dozen veterinary col-<lb/>
leges with leg bones under the<lb/>
brand name Sawbones. They cost<lb/>
$15 to $20 each and are cast in<lb/>
molds made from real bones.<lb/>
Johnson says the models buy<lb/>
extra time for teaching.<lb/>
"I can stop them and take<lb/>
time to ask them what they are<lb/>
doing without jeopardizing a dog<lb/>
in surgery she says. "The main<lb/>
thing they have to learn is to use<lb/>
the equipment, and the best way<lb/>
is right on the bone with no<lb/>
muscle in the way<lb/>
The college spent about<lb/>
$12,000 to set up its bone model<lb/>
laboratory, with equipment rang-<lb/>
ing from $35 electric drills from<lb/>
the hardware store to a $700<lb/>
bender to shape metal plates that<lb/>
are put over fractures.<lb/>
It also uses supermarket<lb/>
chickens and foam rubber models<lb/>
to teach students how to suture<lb/>
and how to make incisions, and it<lb/>
uses cardboard mailing tubes and<lb/>
wooden dowels to teach the fun-<lb/>
damentals of pinning a broken<lb/>
bone.<lb/>
Johnson says she is glad the<lb/>
bone models eliminated the need<lb/>
to use and destroy real animals.<lb/>
"You get awfully tired of see-<lb/>
ing 12 dogs put to sleep every time<lb/>
you do a lab she says.<lb/>
Ward Howland, executive<lb/>
director of the Anti-Cruelty Soci-<lb/>
ety of Chicago, says groups like<lb/>
his applaud changes that reduce<lb/>
the number of animals used for<lb/>
research and training.<lb/>
"This is a major step in giving<lb/>
schools an alternative to the real<lb/>
thing, so they can teach with<lb/>
models but still do a good job<lb/>
says Howland. "These students<lb/>
will make mistakes and learn how<lb/>
to do it right before they deal with<lb/>
a real animal<lb/>
Johnson says a survey of stu-<lb/>
dents shows they were not op-<lb/>
posed to using the bone models,<lb/>
but they still want real surgical<lb/>
experience before graduating.<lb/>
The seniors have that oppor-<lb/>
tunity.<lb/>
"They scrub into surgery<lb/>
with me and help if a client animal<lb/>
comes in with a fracture she<lb/>
says.<lb/>
The bone models allow stu-<lb/>
dents to deal with complicated<lb/>
fractures they may not see in the<lb/>
clinic, says Johnson, and to learn<lb/>
sophisticated repair techniques<lb/>
"we never tried to teach with a<lb/>
live dog<lb/>
Consolidated<lb/>
Theatres<lb/>
Adults $27S til<lb/>
5:30<lb/>
CHILDREN <lb/>
ANYTIME 2rj<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
RATED R<lb/>
<lb/>
NAKED GUN<lb/>
1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:15<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
RATED PG HER ALIBI<lb/>
1: 00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00<lb/>
RATED R<lb/>
WHO'S HARRY CRUMB<lb/>
1:10-3:10-5:10-7:10-9:10<lb/>
<lb/>
Michel "hates to be bored<lb/>
99<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
ing a lot better since its reopen-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
As a result, Michel spends<lb/>
less time in downtown Greenville<lb/>
than she does at theater parties.<lb/>
She hates to be bored, so when the<lb/>
theater isn't keeping her enter-<lb/>
tained, theater people are.<lb/>
"I'm pretty resentful of the<lb/>
fact that people assume that just<lb/>
because we're theater majors,<lb/>
one, we sleep around and two, we Auditorium. After she graduates,<lb/>
do a lot of drugs  people slap all Michel plans to "go to New York<lb/>
these labels on us and I don't like and do all that poor stuff<lb/>
it<lb/>
In addition to her classes and "All in all, I wouldn't trade it<lb/>
projects, Michel is the Assistant for anything<lb/>
Box Office Manager at McGinnis<lb/>
Murals brighten up Tyler hall f<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
the job.<lb/>
The fifth floor celebrated the<lb/>
completion of the murals by hav-<lb/>
ing an open house for relatives<lb/>
and other resident advisors on<lb/>
College Hill.<lb/>
Since the project was such a<lb/>
success, Bankard encourages<lb/>
other floors and dorms to get in-<lb/>
volved. She said that it took three<lb/>
months to get approved, but now<lb/>
that the ground hasbeen settled, it<lb/>
should be easier for those who are<lb/>
interested.<lb/>
Bankard explained that the<lb/>
basis for the project was not just to<lb/>
beautify the hallways, but to build<lb/>
a community. She stated that the<lb/>
project turned into "something<lb/>
wonderful" and it gave those<lb/>
participating a sense of pride and<lb/>
Mascots<lb/>
kept busy<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
bad<lb/>
Does being a Pirate mascot<lb/>
interfere with school work or so-<lb/>
cial life? "Sometimes said<lb/>
Bailey. "It takes a lot of time and<lb/>
effort to do both men and<lb/>
women's sports activities<lb/>
Bonehead<lb/>
looks for<lb/>
"TLC"<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
service.<lb/>
I feel for these poor souls. 1<lb/>
hope I have the strength to<lb/>
deny myself a trip downtown<lb/>
when I hit 26 or 27. I made a<lb/>
vow that I would never go to a<lb/>
bar looking to get laid after I<lb/>
reached that age.<lb/>
Knowing me, I'll try to get<lb/>
away with it. I'll justify it ?<lb/>
saying I still look 23. In reality<lb/>
I'll be gasping for breath after<lb/>
climbing up on the barstool,<lb/>
and I'll keel over from dancing<lb/>
two songs in a row.<lb/>
A recurring request in the<lb/>
personals is a thing they call<lb/>
TLC. I have yet to decipher<lb/>
what these initials mean, but<lb/>
my guess is Total Lusty<lb/>
Clinches. I assume this be-<lb/>
cause the ads always mention<lb/>
that the writer has "lots of TLC<lb/>
to offer<lb/>
So, having done a whole<lb/>
column on personal ads, I de-<lb/>
cided to see what I could do<lb/>
with the form. Could I distill<lb/>
my Boneheaded essence down<lb/>
to 25 words or less? Here goes<lb/>
Famous columnist seeks<lb/>
total babe for lots of TLC.<lb/>
Like: comic books, X, and<lb/>
bizarre sexual positions.<lb/>
Drugs a plus, no dorm rats, fat<lb/>
chicks.<lb/>
That was easy. Send all<lb/>
replies care of: The East Carolin-<lb/>
ian, Publications Building.<lb/>
Greenville, 27834. Take it easy,<lb/>
and may the hangovers be<lb/>
gentle, but the buzzes intense.<lb/>
accomplishment<lb/>
Bankard concludes that<lb/>
building pride and a sense of<lb/>
community on a floor really does<lb/>
help residents to learn how to<lb/>
you know when you work on a<lb/>
project together you're going to<lb/>
be a little nice when you ask them<lb/>
to turn their music down<lb/>
So, if you are ever in Tyler<lb/>
dorm or near one of the surround -<lb/>
work together and to get to know ing dorms, go and check out the<lb/>
each other better. "It helps every- muraJs on the fifth floor. Who<lb/>
one on the floor to be more toler- knows? Maybe your floor will be<lb/>
ant and considerate of others, and next,<lb/>
I Money for College<lb/>
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For more information and a FREE copy of<lb/>
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fill out and Mail the attached coupon TODAY!<lb/>
11.1j ShrtiitmuiClr. 75GOOKH<lb/>
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Come join your friends on<lb/>
Sunday, February 5 at<lb/>
10:30 am for the<lb/>
installation of<lb/>
the Rev. John Emmans<lb/>
as Teaching Elder of the<lb/>
Greenville Bible Church<lb/>
John Emmans is best known for his ability to<lb/>
communicate the Heart of God to the hearts<lb/>
of people. He has an easy-going style and<lb/>
quick wit that makes his expository<lb/>
preaching a delight! John is no stranger to<lb/>
the struggles and needs of today's college<lb/>
student: six years of his long career was<lb/>
with the Headquarters Staff of Campus<lb/>
Crusade at San Bernadino, CA.<lb/>
Excellent Bible teaching with a<lb/>
Contemporary application at:<lb/>
Greenville Bible Church<lb/>
1348 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(Near Red Oak)<lb/>
Sunday School 9:30 am<lb/>
Morning Worship 10:30 am<lb/>
(hcari, g impaired<lb/>
Minist.y provided)<lb/>
Evening Fellowship &amp;<lb/>
Teen Group<lb/>
6:00 pm<lb/>
Send for FREE Information<lb/>
.71<lb/>
Name <lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I Mail Coupon To:<lb/>
I<lb/>
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205 E. 13th Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
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Ocean Front an<lb/>
popular nigh<lb/>
only 3 blocks from the most<lb/>
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Pen Rods, Razzles, etc<lb/>
youi Travel Aaociotes Suntxeok Package mciudw<lb/>
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Jj: S?vn nights accommodations, at ont ot<lb/>
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and omr f tondo oltrochons<lb/>
:?: A mon?y saving discount card<lb/>
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Dates:<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058121_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2. 1989 9<lb/>
The Clearly Labeled <lb/>
IS&amp;8$ ?@jr?Iia2ifl@jm ?giUfiir<lb/>
Quote of the Week:<lb/>
"Wha?"<lb/>
? Rhonda Woman<lb/>
Squirrel movie bought<lb/>
HOLLYWOOD (BP) ?<lb/>
Movie moguls have bought the<lb/>
rights to "Bucktoothed and<lb/>
Rockin The Squirrel Man Story"<lb/>
and a flim version is in pre-pro-<lb/>
iuction.<lb/>
fore his suicide were used to write<lb/>
the official biography of the<lb/>
strange visitor from another di-<lb/>
mension.<lb/>
Klicky-Klicky, who claimed<lb/>
to be innocent of the six deaths<lb/>
rhe movie has signed Mi- attributed to him by local police,<lb/>
chael keaton to play the dimen<lb/>
sionally-displaced squirrel crea-<lb/>
ture and Jack Nicholson to por-<lb/>
tray his evil twin. Despite the dif-<lb/>
ferences in Keaton and<lb/>
Nicholson's physical appcar-<lb/>
mces, the movie's producer<lb/>
committed suicide before his<lb/>
death sentence could be carried<lb/>
out. Apparently, Hollywood be-<lb/>
lieves Klicky's story of an evil<lb/>
twin, whereas the Greenville<lb/>
courts did not.<lb/>
Keaton and Nicholson, who<lb/>
promises that "the squirrel-man's are currently wrapping up film-<lb/>
ing on the new "Batman movie,<lb/>
are excited about their new col-<lb/>
laboration.<lb/>
own mama won't be able to tell<lb/>
I'm apart<lb/>
The saga of the squirrel man<lb/>
who terrorized the small college<lb/>
:uvn of Greenville, N.C. last year,<lb/>
was chronicled by the school<lb/>
newpaper. Transcripts of the<lb/>
v.uirrel-man's last interview be- show the audience what it feels<lb/>
like to be trapped, hunted in a<lb/>
world far from your own<lb/>
"I think this could be the film<lb/>
that gets me an Oscar. The script<lb/>
alone is brilliant he added.<lb/>
Nicholson enthuses over his<lb/>
new role. "1 get to play someone<lb/>
who is totally evil  yet he has a<lb/>
compassionate side  a side few<lb/>
people ever see. He's been pushed<lb/>
over the edge and he strikes back<lb/>
 that's what makes this character<lb/>
such a challenge  it's a role un<lb/>
like anything else I've ever done<lb/>
The author of "The Squirrel<lb/>
Man Story" is reportedly un-<lb/>
happy with the casting choices.<lb/>
he<lb/>
Remaining anonymous, he ex-<lb/>
"The Batman thing I played pressed his displeasure by dump-<lb/>
for laughs Keaton said. "I want ing over 20,000 copies of "Bee-<lb/>
to stretch myself in this role. 1 tlejuice" and "Mr. Mom" on the<lb/>
want to get into the character, front step of producer Halph<lb/>
Witted's Santa Monica home.<lb/>
Can man prophesies stroke!<lb/>
The infamous "squirrel-man" will be immortalized in a new movie starring Michael Keaton as<lb/>
the squirrel-man, and Jack Nicholson as his evil twin. The film is slated for a Christmas release.<lb/>
Chancellor takes to hospital bed<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (BP) ? loved Pookums Poodle, the acci- "The most important job I'll<lb/>
reenville's famed can-people, a dental unhooking of my mother- have, of course, is helping out the<lb/>
in-law's iron lung and now he Campus Beautification Commit-<lb/>
says that my darling hubbykins tee. They do so much good work<lb/>
will have a stroke and I will have for the school, and it is so ncces-<lb/>
to take over his duties as chancel- sary to have a clean, attractive<lb/>
lor " campus for visits from the other<lb/>
The chancellor himself is re- UNC system chancellor's wives<lb/>
ported to believe Flattnin's amaz- "Tin has been so helpful over<lb/>
ing and uncanny predictions. He the years in his own special way,<lb/>
could not be reached for com- that I want to appoint him as<lb/>
ment, as he has retreated to a secu- Special Advisor in Charge of<lb/>
race of humans noted for their<lb/>
uncannv abilitv to sniff out alumi-<lb/>
num cans in almost any<lb/>
jumpster, have suddenly be-<lb/>
vme famous for another reason<lb/>
their uncanny ability to predict<lb/>
tutu re events!<lb/>
Tin Flattnin, a 60-ycar-old<lb/>
bachelor, was often seen around<lb/>
campus, using his nose to seek out<lb/>
Sears Models<lb/>
?<lb/>
ALL OVER (BP) ? Today's<lb/>
yuppies are concentrating on one<lb/>
specific style  The Sear's?<lb/>
Model Look.<lb/>
The trend began in New York,<lb/>
as yuppie salespeople from the<lb/>
store that has more for your life<lb/>
started posing in singles bars in-<lb/>
stead of dancing. Trying to<lb/>
achieve a look of nonchalant dis-<lb/>
old Los Angeles native. Like, it<lb/>
doesn't take a lot of brains to look<lb/>
like the guys in the Sears? catol-<lb/>
ogue, y'know? I just stare off into<lb/>
space  like I'm not all there. It's<lb/>
so rad, man<lb/>
Surfer isn't sure of the trend's<lb/>
origins. He believes there is a<lb/>
planet in another dimension,<lb/>
where there exist nothing but<lb/>
remnants of college parties. Now rity wing of Pitt Memorial Hospi- Aluminum Recycling to the Cam-<lb/>
A new trend is in for yuppies:<lb/>
the vague, bland stare of<lb/>
a Sear's Model a<lb/>
interest has spread to all parts of Sear's? models, trying to outpose<lb/>
the country. each other eternallv.<lb/>
"Like, it's the coolest fad "Like, it must be a kinda<lb/>
explainsMurphSurfer,a21-year- heaven Surfer sighs.<lb/>
he is a frequent guest of the school tal for tests and instruction<lb/>
iiancellor's wife, who firmly be- stress management.<lb/>
Mrs. Beleever feels confident<lb/>
that the can man's strange proph-<lb/>
ecy will come true, and is prepar-<lb/>
ing herself for the unfortunate<lb/>
task of succeeding her husband.<lb/>
pus Beautification Committee<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
While the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association is rumored to<lb/>
support this move, several stu-<lb/>
dents have resigned from the<lb/>
Beautification Committe, includ-<lb/>
ing its current president, Muffy<lb/>
UHnuunHimniinmmmiimimmimiiiuiUinMtWHMimmMmin<lb/>
February Horoscope <lb/>
sieves in his ability to foretell the<lb/>
suture  before it happens.<lb/>
Mrs. Ima Beleever says that<lb/>
Hattnin has accurately foretold<lb/>
the hit-and-run death of mv be-<lb/>
Evictees punished with Aycock term<lb/>
ries a loser;<lb/>
Gemini slims<lb/>
3iiiimmii!iiiiimiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiii!iimiiiinii!imi<lb/>
Aquarius - Jan.20 - Feb. 18 : Good newsl Water<lb/>
?arers won't be bearing anything else this year!<lb/>
iThat faulty birth control vou used turned out to be<lb/>
t-so faulty. What a relief, eh?<lb/>
Pisces - Feb. 19-Mar. 20 : Those hot flashes you<lb/>
peel aren't really love  make sure you haven't<lb/>
Slugged yourself in by mistake. The 15th and 22nd<lb/>
sare Big Money days.<lb/>
Aries - Mar. 21 - April 19: This is your month ?<lb/>
 not for love, but for getting tons of junk mail ad- u u.<lb/>
fdrcssed to "Occupant" and "Hungy Pizza Lover<lb/>
?This will remind you of what a total loser you are, so<lb/>
fstay away from sharp objects.<lb/>
Taurus - April 20 - May 20 : That flu has turned<lb/>
into a case of total heartbreak that all the Hall's<lb/>
Imentho-lyptus? in the world won't cure. Try natu-<lb/>
Iral healing remedies like Campbell's soup ? Mmm-<lb/>
mmm- good!<lb/>
Gemini - May 21 - June 21: If you ever want to<lb/>
Igct a date again, you're going to have to slim down<lb/>
land stop writing all that bad poetry. Avoid high-cal<lb/>
f tilings like food.<lb/>
Cancer - June 22 - July 22 : Travel is always a<lb/>
Igood way to meet new friends. Unfortunately for<lb/>
fyou, you won't be able to travel far enough away to<lb/>
fescape those nasty rumours about your personal<lb/>
grooming habits. But love could turn up right<lb/>
f around the corner drugstore!<lb/>
Duke quote of the week:<lb/>
"Ennis, you dip stick,<lb/>
this is your superior<lb/>
officer'<lb/>
Roscoe P. Coltrane<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. (EP)<lb/>
Two ECU students were evicted<lb/>
from their apartment Wednesday<lb/>
-and forced to scrvehnnrtrmc-nt<lb/>
Avcock Dormitorv.<lb/>
According to the owner of<lb/>
Dumptovvn Park. "The evictees<lb/>
were evicted for stealing all of the<lb/>
faucet screens from the evictees'<lb/>
apartment unit which is a direct<lb/>
violation o( the ways to be evicted<lb/>
code Roscoe Hogg said Wed-<lb/>
nesday.<lb/>
Hogg said the two ECU stu-<lb/>
dents, Coo Pon and Doo Bet, had<lb/>
been model tenants before the<lb/>
intense investigation into the<lb/>
Both Coo Pon and Doo Bet are Avcock Dormitorv. Avcock was<lb/>
exchange students from Yiaman thrust into the national spotlight<lb/>
,maJi,rJU? An Jcdystrial Technol- last year with "largest cocVoacb<lb/>
-ogyatECU. Pon and Bet said that I contest" which Joe Beer won with<lb/>
all allegations against them are an one-foot pest he had raised in<lb/>
false.<lb/>
"Maan, me don't understand<lb/>
these people, we didn't do noth-<lb/>
ing to those screens except brush<lb/>
our teeth with the water that<lb/>
comes out of them Pon said in an<lb/>
interview at Wendy's restaurant<lb/>
where he eats whenever he ob-<lb/>
tains coupons.<lb/>
As a consequence of their ac-<lb/>
tions, local law enforcement au-<lb/>
his dorm room closet.<lb/>
"It bo?thf? worst punishment,<lb/>
ooh ooh JR. Reid slam dunk, the<lb/>
heels up by eight Bet said<lb/>
before being distracted by an<lb/>
ACC basketball game.<lb/>
Later a smiling Bet said, "This<lb/>
be the worst punishment since<lb/>
they put us in International<lb/>
House of Pancakes When asked<lb/>
missing faucet screens earlier this thorities have decided to place the why he was so happv, he said "Me<lb/>
week.<lb/>
two criminals in ECU's infamous team cover the led<lb/>
Recurring 'mare puzzles E<lb/>
S?)l<lb/>
with me trying to roll back up-<lb/>
right.<lb/>
Do vou think this dream<lb/>
J<lb/>
could be some kind of omen?<lb/>
Signed,<lb/>
No Doz<lb/>
have dreams about gum on their<lb/>
butts.<lb/>
Advice: Don't stress on your<lb/>
exams and stop fantasizing about<lb/>
non-organic substances.<lb/>
Additional note: 'predate<lb/>
calling me the Biggest E.<lb/>
Help mc, Running Rough<lb/>
Dear Rough Rider,<lb/>
It is lonely living all alone<lb/>
Most experts say the best medi-<lb/>
cine for loneliness is to either join<lb/>
a frat or to Adopt a Highway. E<lb/>
suggests you do the latter of these<lb/>
two because you really don't<lb/>
want to buv your friends. Besides<lb/>
Dear Night tripper. After being accosted in a<lb/>
Sounds like you got a hold of downtown bar last week with<lb/>
some of that blotter going around claims that E is a yellow journalist you may die in a hazing incident<lb/>
on campus. (See page 1) At least full of scum, E has decided to tor<lb/>
you didn't go up to a campus cop down and answer some filed le<lb/>
and say "I just took some really ters on common problems,<lb/>
bad acid, take me to the hospitial. Hananailc<lb/>
Leo - July 23 - Aug. 22 : Despite pressure from<lb/>
friends, a new baby is the last thing you need right<lb/>
now. Try a pet first. A chronologically-advanced but<lb/>
still sexy person has their eye on you.<lb/>
Virgo - Aug. 23 - Sept 22: Virgins! Find out what<lb/>
you're missing! A night downtown with a Marine or<lb/>
Sidewinder fan could be the magic entry into ro-<lb/>
mance you've fantasized about.<lb/>
Libra - Sept. 23 - Oct. 23 : Too much of a one-<lb/>
handed relationship will make associates stare at<lb/>
new, unsightly hair growth. An optometrist ap-<lb/>
pointment is in your future. Get out of the house<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Scorpio - Oct. 24 - Nov. 21: You may be starved<lb/>
for affection, but the new video dating club you've<lb/>
joined may cause you to lose your appetite.<lb/>
Sagittarius - Nov. 22 - Dec. 21 : This year has<lb/>
been unkind to you. Battling those social diseases<lb/>
has taken their toll on your nightlife. Treat yourself<lb/>
to some counseling.<lb/>
Capricorn - Dec. 22 - Jan. 19 : Lucky you! The<lb/>
Biggest E,<lb/>
I have been troubled lately by<lb/>
a recurring nightmare that goes<lb/>
something like this:<lb/>
I go to my Health class in<lb/>
Brewster ? only it's not in<lb/>
Brewster it's at the Public Safety<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
My teacher ? only it's my<lb/>
psychology teacher instead of my<lb/>
health teacher ? hands me my<lb/>
physics test back ? only it's not<lb/>
my test, it's the test of the guy who<lb/>
sits beside me. (Only, in the<lb/>
dream, he's sitting across the<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Anyway, the guy has a failing<lb/>
I think I am going Chinese<lb/>
E is not a psychoanalysist but<lb/>
from what vou have written, E has<lb/>
come to several conclusions. First<lb/>
of all, you have a great anxiety<lb/>
about taking the sex test in Health<lb/>
class. Subliminally, you know as<lb/>
much about physics as about sex;<lb/>
nothing.<lb/>
Secondly, you have an op-<lb/>
pressed fear about failing while<lb/>
having sex. This is apparent when<lb/>
Dear Earl vis,<lb/>
I have a real bad problem<lb/>
with hangnails. They grow really<lb/>
long and get in the way when I<lb/>
chew on my real nails. How can<lb/>
you help me?<lb/>
Signed, Hang Nail<lb/>
Dear Hanging,<lb/>
The main mechanic down at<lb/>
Cooter's garage say to adjust the<lb/>
JUSt .?<lb/>
Big E<lb/>
j new love in your life is coming your way, with an thechairfallsontoitsside withme<lb/>
unlimited credit limit on their Visa?. Splurge!<lb/>
MlltftflflMMIIITTriltlllfMlfllUIIMIIIIMMIIItMtMntllltllfflMMlItMtMlllllttttllillllllflllliniriltltttlffntlllttllirillMIi<lb/>
you say you failed the test, but lead valve lifter on the third cylin-<lb/>
wait a minute, you said you didn't der before turning the cam shaft<lb/>
take the test But the other Satur- three degrees downward. This<lb/>
 grade on the test. And the teacher day morning when you were combined with the purchase of<lb/>
writes the grade by my name in askcd about that dwebby-look- some high-octane gas should<lb/>
ing guy you were seen dancing solve your problem,<lb/>
with in the smoke at Rafter's, you<lb/>
said, "That wasn't me Car<lb/>
The part about the piece of Dear Earlvis,<lb/>
gum stuck to your seat is a deep My car is running really<lb/>
seated metaphor for your crude roUgh lately. The engine clicks<lb/>
fantasies involving non-organic like a sowing machine and smoke<lb/>
substances. A recent report indi- billows out of the back. I thought<lb/>
cates that 67 percent of all women it had the measles, but their isn't<lb/>
any paint rash.<lb/>
hergradebook! ?only it's not her<lb/>
gradebook, it's my Shakespear-<lb/>
ean Tragedy teacher's. I try to tell<lb/>
her the grade isn't mine, but I'm<lb/>
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Signed, Loner<lb/>
Have you ever considered<lb/>
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Lee Send those letters to:<lb/>
BigE<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058121_0011"/><lb/>
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<pb facs="00058121_0012"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2, 1989 PAGE 11<lb/>
Tribe shot down<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
A??t Sport Fditor<lb/>
As Head Coach Mike Steele<lb/>
left the floor tonight, he breathed<lb/>
a sigh of relief. He had good rea-<lb/>
son to, the Pirates narrowly de-<lb/>
feated a scrappy William &amp; Mary<lb/>
team, 73-68.<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
scoring leader Blue Edwards<lb/>
showed why he is the leading<lb/>
candidate for player of the year<lb/>
honors. He pumped in a game-<lb/>
high 32 points. The total gave him<lb/>
his seventh game in which he has<lb/>
scored 30 or more points. It was<lb/>
also Edwards second game in a<lb/>
row of 30 points.<lb/>
The game began as though no<lb/>
one wanted to score let alone win.<lb/>
Neither time could get on track for<lb/>
the first 2:30 of the game. But then<lb/>
a nice pass from Edwards to Reed<lb/>
Lose broke the ice and ECU went<lb/>
up 2-0.<lb/>
The first half would be played<lb/>
like a tennis match as the teams<lb/>
volleyed back and forth. The lead<lb/>
changed hands an amazing 17<lb/>
times and the teams exchanged<lb/>
turnover after turnover. But<lb/>
when it was all over, no blood had<lb/>
been drawn and the teams went<lb/>
into the lockerroom knotted at 29.<lb/>
"I knew it would be a hard<lb/>
fought game Coach Steele said.<lb/>
"We couldn't keep them off the<lb/>
boards the first half and we knew<lb/>
we would have to do better the<lb/>
second half to win the game<lb/>
Whatever Coach Steele and<lb/>
his coaches told the Pirates at<lb/>
halftime certainly worked. East<lb/>
Carolina came out fired up in the<lb/>
second half and played a physical<lb/>
half of basketball.<lb/>
The Tribe did all thev could in<lb/>
the second half to keep things<lb/>
close. They doubled and triple-<lb/>
teamed Blue Edwards which<lb/>
spelled their doom as the Pirates<lb/>
got hot from the perimeter.<lb/>
The first 11 minutes of the<lb/>
second half were similar to the<lb/>
first half, but then the Pirates took<lb/>
over. Gus Hill hit a hook shot in<lb/>
the lane that gave ECU the lead,<lb/>
46-45. This was all they needed<lb/>
and the Pirates never looked back.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary tried to keep<lb/>
Edwards quiet, but with seven<lb/>
minutes remaining in the game he<lb/>
showed why he is so important to<lb/>
the Pirates. On back-to-back trips<lb/>
down the floor, Edwards threw<lb/>
two perfect passes to Kenny<lb/>
Murphy who converted them into<lb/>
two three-pointers. The jumpers<lb/>
put East Carolina up, 54-51.<lb/>
"Murphy's two three-point-<lb/>
ers broke their back said Coach<lb/>
Steele. William &amp; Mary Coach<lb/>
Chuck Swenson agreed.<lb/>
"Murphy's shooting killed us<lb/>
both games we played the Pirates.<lb/>
The three-pointers tonight really<lb/>
killed us<lb/>
ECU stretched the lead to as<lb/>
much as 10 down the stretch with<lb/>
the icing on the cake being an<lb/>
amazing aerial manuever. You<lb/>
guessed it ? a Blue Edwards two-<lb/>
handed slam dunk that put the<lb/>
Prates ip, 69-59.<lb/>
East Carolina made the free<lb/>
throws thev needed down the<lb/>
J<lb/>
stretch to ice their fourth confer-<lb/>
ence victory of the season. But<lb/>
Coach Steele was not completely<lb/>
pleased with his team's victory.<lb/>
"I was pleased with our inten-<lb/>
sity and our play in the second<lb/>
half, but I was disappointed with<lb/>
our play the last 2:30 minutes of<lb/>
the game Steele said. "Ourteam<lb/>
needs to leam how to win. We let<lb/>
See PIRATES, page 12<lb/>
Fellows Dominate<lb/>
(IRS) ? The men's top intra-<lb/>
mural 3-on-3 basketball squad,<lb/>
The Fellows, found themselves<lb/>
defending their 1988 Schick<lb/>
Coastal Regional Basketball<lb/>
Championship in Greenville, S.C.<lb/>
The Fellows dominated the com-<lb/>
petition advancing to the final<lb/>
round of play undefeated.<lb/>
Percy Edwards, Mark Gaines,<lb/>
William Grady and Ron Wilson<lb/>
combined for a 57-19 shellacking<lb/>
of C. Wesley an and a 61-12 vic-<lb/>
tory over USC Union. The quick-<lb/>
ness and 'theft talent' of the Fel-<lb/>
lows as well as their street ball fast<lb/>
break style mystified their oppo-<lb/>
nents and labeled them as the<lb/>
team to beat.<lb/>
The Fellows ran into a slight<lb/>
snag during their third contest as<lb/>
opponent YVinthrop College took<lb/>
a nine-point halftime lead. Percy<lb/>
Edwards, team motivator, spun<lb/>
his web of quickness during the<lb/>
second half and lead The Fellows<lb/>
to a close but comfortable 53-47<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
Advancing to the champion-<lb/>
ship bracket, The Fellows faced<lb/>
their toughest challenge after eas-<lb/>
ily defeating two rounds of oppo-<lb/>
nents. Ready and waiting was<lb/>
Wingate College who stayed with<lb/>
ECU's squad until William Grady<lb/>
broke VVingate's tempo with a<lb/>
thundering slam dunk that<lb/>
brought the house down. Win-<lb/>
gate never recovered giving ECU<lb/>
the victory 57-42 and a chance to<lb/>
defend their title March 23 in<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
The final game will be played<lb/>
as the halftime program of the<lb/>
Charlotte Hornets-New York<lb/>
Knicks professional basketball<lb/>
game. ECU's The Fellows will<lb/>
meet the men from The Citadel to<lb/>
determine the 1989 Schick Super<lb/>
Hoop Coastal Regional Champi-<lb/>
onship.<lb/>
Face toughest team in the CAA<lb/>
Pirates host Spiders<lb/>
By MARK BARBER<lb/>
Spoils Writer<lb/>
Junior Gus Hill dumps a pass off to Blue Edwards but it is tipped<lb/>
by Greg Burzell of the Tribe and goes out of bounds (Photo by<lb/>
ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Women split<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERG<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Victory hovered in the aii<lb/>
Wednesday for the East Carolina<lb/>
basketball programs as both the<lb/>
men and the women overtook the<lb/>
Tribe of William &amp; Mary. The<lb/>
women however, did it on the<lb/>
road as they were guest in the<lb/>
William &amp; Mary Hall where, they<lb/>
overcame the Tribe 74-61.<lb/>
The win makes the Lady Pi-<lb/>
rates 1-1 on the road so far in the<lb/>
week as Monday they fell to<lb/>
UNC-Charlotte 72-56.<lb/>
Greta Savage led the Lady<lb/>
Pirates to victory over the Tribe<lb/>
when she scored a career high 26<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Three other players were also<lb/>
in double figures. Sarah Gray<lb/>
dumped 10 points and Irish<lb/>
Hamilton chipped in with 10.<lb/>
Gray also had an excellent<lb/>
game on the boards. She led the<lb/>
Yebmmdtng efforts grabbing<lb/>
seven for ECU. Gray is third in the<lb/>
conference for rebounding<lb/>
averaging 8.5.<lb/>
See LADY PIRATES, page 12<lb/>
East Carolina basketball<lb/>
coach Mike Steele probably<lb/>
wishes he could call Orkin to take<lb/>
care of the insects due to arrive in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum Saturday night.<lb/>
No ordinary pests, these ar-<lb/>
thropods are the University of<lb/>
Richmond Spiders, and with<lb/>
three starters returning from last<lb/>
year's NCAA final 16 team, they<lb/>
should prove to be the toughest<lb/>
competition the Pirates have<lb/>
faced in the "Steele Mill" this sea-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
"They are definitely the best<lb/>
team in the conference Steele<lb/>
said. "They have experience back<lb/>
from last year's team, and they<lb/>
play tough<lb/>
Too tough for Orkin, the Spi-<lb/>
ders, coached by Dick Tarrant,<lb/>
boast four players averaging in<lb/>
double figures. Tops on the list is<lb/>
6'8" center Mike Winiecki, a sen-<lb/>
ior averaging 19.5 points and 8.2<lb/>
rebounds per game. Within the<lb/>
CAA, however, Winiecki<lb/>
averages 21.3 points and 10 re<lb/>
bounds per game.<lb/>
In ECU'S 83-56 los in<lb/>
Richmond Jan. 11, Winiecki<lb/>
scored 18 points and grabbed 10<lb/>
boards.<lb/>
Also in double figures for UR<lb/>
is Ken Atkinson (14.3 ppg ; 2.4<lb/>
rpg), Eric English (10.2 ppg; 2.3<lb/>
rpg) and Scott Stapleton (10 ppg;<lb/>
5.9 rpg). English scored 23 against<lb/>
the Pirates in Richmond, and Sta-<lb/>
pleton scored 12.<lb/>
Steele said Winiecki is the<lb/>
best inside player in the league<lb/>
and Atkinson is the best outside<lb/>
player, which is a difficult combi-<lb/>
nation to play against.<lb/>
ECU is not without some<lb/>
guns of its erwn, though, and will<lb/>
take aim at the Spiders with 6'5"<lb/>
senior forward Blue Edwards<lb/>
(25.7 ppg; 6.5 rpg), 6'3" forward<lb/>
Gus Hill (13.4 ppg; 4.1 rpg), 6'3"<lb/>
guard Kenny Murphy (7.8 ppg;<lb/>
4.2 rpg) and 6'3" Reed Lose (7.2<lb/>
ppg; 2.8 rpg).<lb/>
Edwards is first in the CAA in<lb/>
scoring this year and ranked ninth<lb/>
in the nation. In Richmond, Ed-<lb/>
wards ma naed to score 16 points<lb/>
in spite of playing only 23 min-<lb/>
utes, sitting out much of the con-<lb/>
test due to foul trouble. Edwards<lb/>
fouled out with seven minutes to<lb/>
play.<lb/>
Hill also scored 16 in<lb/>
Richmond and led the Pirates<lb/>
with seven rebounds.<lb/>
Mike Steele<lb/>
Steele expects Richmond to<lb/>
play 2-3 or 3-2 matchup zones<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
"We know Winiecki and At-<lb/>
kinson will get their points<lb/>
Steele said. "What we want to do<lb/>
is to keep their other players from<lb/>
doing well. English killed us in<lb/>
Richmond (23 points, 3 rbs) and<lb/>
we can't let that happen again.<lb/>
"It's been a tough stretch of<lb/>
road games for us, so we are glad<lb/>
to be at home. We just hope we<lb/>
have a lot of fan support to help us<lb/>
out<lb/>
After Wednesday's victory<lb/>
over William &amp; Mary, the Pirates<lb/>
erieTThe contest Saturday with a<lb/>
4-4 record in the CAA, 10-9 over-<lb/>
all. Richmond is 7-0, 12-7 on the<lb/>
season. The Spiders face the Ca-<lb/>
dets of-VMI in non-conference<lb/>
play tonight.<lb/>
At 181-150, set NCAA record<lb/>
Marymount wins in highest scoring game<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? The thead said. "We worked on our<lb/>
Loyola Marymount Lions and defense as well as offense and<lb/>
U.S. International Gulls ran amok worked hard to put that to-<lb/>
through the NCAA record book gether<lb/>
Memorial Gym<lb/>
receives new floor<lb/>
once again, bringing to a close<lb/>
perhaps one of the craziest home-<lb/>
and-home series ever seen in col-<lb/>
lege basketball.<lb/>
When the Lions and Gulls<lb/>
finished their 40 minutes of non-<lb/>
stop action Tuesday night, Loyola<lb/>
Marymount had won the highest-<lb/>
scoring game ever, 181-150, at<lb/>
home in Gersten Pavilion.<lb/>
That's 331 points, and just the<lb/>
start one of six offensive records<lb/>
set.<lb/>
"We were unconcerned<lb/>
It may sound strange to hear<lb/>
the coaches talk about defense,<lb/>
but that's what fuels these teams'<lb/>
fast-break offenses.<lb/>
"I thought we played very<lb/>
hard defense Westhead said.<lb/>
"We made some nice steals and<lb/>
forced turnovers<lb/>
mount.<lb/>
The game was an encore to<lb/>
the previous highest-scoring<lb/>
game, a 162-144 Loyola victory<lb/>
over U.S.Internalional on Jan. 7 at<lb/>
The Lions broke their own<lb/>
NCAA record for most points in a<lb/>
half when they took a 94-76 lead at<lb/>
intermission. Thev set that record<lb/>
when Bo Kimble, who had not<lb/>
San Diego, which set the previous played since r 23 in a loss to<lb/>
agreed.<lb/>
"Their pressure really both-<lb/>
ered us Zarecky said.<lb/>
Hank Gathers, who leads the<lb/>
nation in scoring and rebounding,<lb/>
about an NCAA record Loyola had 41 points and a school-record<lb/>
Gulls coach Gary Zarecky breaking the previous record<lb/>
record of 306 points<lb/>
The Lions' 181 points were<lb/>
the most ever by an NCAA team.<lb/>
Marcellus Lee's slam dunk<lb/>
with 3:52 remaining gave Loyola<lb/>
Marymount a 165-137 lead,<lb/>
 of<lb/>
in a 164-138 season-opening vic-<lb/>
tory against Azusa Pacific, an<lb/>
NAIA school, on Nov. 28.<lb/>
Nevada-Las Vegas scored 164<lb/>
points in 1976, against Hawaii-<lb/>
Marymount coach Paul Wes- 29 rebounds for Loyola Mary- Hilo, also an NAIA school.<lb/>
By MICHAEL ZAKELY<lb/>
Sport- Writer<lb/>
The total renovation of Me-<lb/>
morial Gymnasium will soon be<lb/>
complete. The gymnasium floor<lb/>
has received a facelift that the<lb/>
intramural Recreational Services<lb/>
have been pointing to for a long<lb/>
time.<lb/>
This is the first time the gym<lb/>
has ever been renovated com-<lb/>
pletely including sanding and re-<lb/>
surfacing. The overall facelift in-<lb/>
cludes the painting of the ceiling<lb/>
and of the sidewalls. The com-<lb/>
plete repair and replacement of<lb/>
the wooden floor has taken place.<lb/>
Mew boundary lines have been<lb/>
put in along with two side and one<lb/>
main basketball court, one main<lb/>
volleyball court, and four bad-<lb/>
minton courts. Thirteen hundred<lb/>
square feet of flooring was re-<lb/>
placed.<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium was<lb/>
built in 1952 in honor of John B.<lb/>
Christenbury. Christenbury was<lb/>
the coach of the East Carolina<lb/>
University football team from<lb/>
194043.<lb/>
Total repair of the building<lb/>
will take place over spring break<lb/>
of this year. During that time,<lb/>
additional ceiling lights will be<lb/>
installed. Installment of electric<lb/>
motor operates the raising and<lb/>
lowering of the ceiling, also provi-<lb/>
sions for portable badminton<lb/>
standards, and backboard re-<lb/>
placements.<lb/>
The roof of the gym was re-<lb/>
paired four years ago at the cost of<lb/>
$180,000, but prior leakage and<lb/>
termites damaged the floor<lb/>
extensively.<lb/>
The total cost of the renova-<lb/>
tions will be $24,102. R.L. Dresser<lb/>
Inc. of Raleigh, N.C. did the con-<lb/>
struction over Christmas break<lb/>
1988.<lb/>
"Although the change has<lb/>
been long overdue, we appreciate<lb/>
all the positive comments from<lb/>
our faculty and staff and students<lb/>
that participate Nance Mize,<lb/>
director of Intramural Recrea-<lb/>
tional Services, said. "The gymna-<lb/>
sium now has a premier playing<lb/>
surface that we hope all East<lb/>
Carolinians will take advantage<lb/>
of<lb/>
Intramural Recreational Services has finally received a new wooden floor at Memorial Gymna-<lb/>
sium. The gym renovations were long overdue as Memorial hasn't seen any renovation since the<lb/>
gym was built in 1952 (Photo by J.P. Whitmire, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
DePaul, hit a jump shot as time<lb/>
expired. In the Jan. 7 game, Lovola<lb/>
led 93-68 at the half.<lb/>
The 170 points in the first 20<lb/>
minutes set a record for points in<lb/>
one half.<lb/>
The Gulls broke their own<lb/>
164. Loyola matched that j-ecord NCAA mark for points by a losing<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Jeff Fryer added 34 points for<lb/>
Loyola, 12-7, while Enoch Sim-<lb/>
mons had 25.<lb/>
Irving runs<lb/>
for third<lb/>
Over the weekend, the men's<lb/>
indoor track team participated in<lb/>
the Kodak Invitational held in<lb/>
Johnson City, Tenn. on the cam-<lb/>
pus of East Tennessee State Uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
The team ran well, but came<lb/>
away with only one finalist, Brian<lb/>
Irving, who finished third in the<lb/>
200-meter with a time of 21.67.<lb/>
The team still continues to pre-<lb/>
pare for the outdoor season which<lb/>
begins on March 18 with the<lb/>
North Carolina Invitational to be<lb/>
held in Chapel Hill. <lb/>
WINTER SPORTS<lb/>
RECORD<lb/>
Men's Basketball 10-9<lb/>
Women's Basketball 9-8<lb/>
Men's Swimming 9-1<lb/>
Women's Swimming 8-2<lb/>
??? .<lb/>
<pb facs="00058121_0013"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2,1989<lb/>
Bvnum and Goodson top finishers<lb/>
First round of NIKE shootout complete<lb/>
(IRS) ? The first round of the<lb/>
NIKE three-point shootout has<lb/>
been completed as is the final<lb/>
separation of the men from the<lb/>
boys. Tension was high at Minges<lb/>
as waves of competitors filed in to<lb/>
get a shot at being the 'best shot' as<lb/>
well as a chance at walking away<lb/>
with some fine NIKE apparel.<lb/>
Darren Bynum and Marcus<lb/>
Goodson are the top semi-final-<lb/>
ists in a field of 14 with 15 points<lb/>
each. When asked about the strat-<lb/>
egy for the upcoming semi-final<lb/>
competition, Goodson replied,<lb/>
"I'm just going to try and focus on<lb/>
the basket and hope for a high<lb/>
percentage of shots. Hopefully<lb/>
my technique will prevail<lb/>
Goodson also competed in<lb/>
the IRS free throw contest in<lb/>
which he made 44 of 50 shots.<lb/>
Bynum was unavailable for com-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The remaining two slots were<lb/>
decided Monday night in a shoot-<lb/>
out in Memorial Gym. Shane<lb/>
Wells and Bryan Price captured<lb/>
the last two spots with scores of 18<lb/>
and 12 respectively. All semi-fi-<lb/>
nalists receive NIKE jerseys and<lb/>
socks while the top four shooters<lb/>
receive NIKE shorts and NIKE<lb/>
shoes.<lb/>
The finals will be held Feb. 22<lb/>
during the ECU vs. Liberty Uni-<lb/>
versity basketball contest with the<lb/>
top finisher receiving a NIKE<lb/>
warm-up suit and gym bag.<lb/>
tC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
30C<lb/>
?DOC<lb/>
30C<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
<lb/>
awT"??"<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN? flffc<lb/>
NEED Hf LP? i T?n<lb/>
Why not con by th? REAL Crtnlr Irtorwrtlon C?nUr 312 E<lb/>
10th St; or call 7M-MELP. For Fro Confidential Counting or A?-<lb/>
Si Stan"<lb/>
Our Voluntoort and SUM aro on duty 24 hrs. a day, yoar around.<lb/>
In ordor to aaaiat you In virtually any probiom aroa you might ha?o.<lb/>
Our tengatandlng goal haa always boon to prooorvo and onhanco<lb/>
Mm quality of Irro tor you and our community.<lb/>
LICMMd ?i?d Accr?n4 Or Ifta ?Urt? o? Worth C??w<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
Pirates win on home turf<lb/>
HACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
Buyer's Market Memorial Drive<lb/>
INVENTORY<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
up on the defensive end towards<lb/>
tite end of the game. It happens<lb/>
when your team is not accustom<lb/>
to winning<lb/>
The Pirates were lead by<lb/>
Edwards who played well in all<lb/>
aspects. Edwards scored 32<lb/>
points and grabbed a game-high<lb/>
nine rebounds. Kenny Murphy<lb/>
chipped in with 16 points and six<lb/>
rebounds. Murphy's points were<lb/>
largely made on three three-<lb/>
pointers. Reed Lose also had 16<lb/>
points for ECU.<lb/>
Edwards and Lose drew high<lb/>
praises from William &amp; Mary<lb/>
Coach Swenson. "Blue Edwards<lb/>
was the key tonight. I am im-<lb/>
pressed with him more than any<lb/>
other player in the conference to<lb/>
date' Swenson said. He added<lb/>
he felt Lose was a "hell of a<lb/>
player" and was an underrated<lb/>
basketball player.<lb/>
The Tribe's big gun in the<lb/>
game was Jimmy Apple who<lb/>
scored 22 points. Scott Smith<lb/>
scored 14 points and grabbed<lb/>
seven rebounds. Curtis Pride<lb/>
helped out by scoring 11.<lb/>
Coach Steele said that tonight<lb/>
was an important win for the team<lb/>
and it was essential to get the<lb/>
conference win at home. But he<lb/>
said that things need to continue<lb/>
to improve. "Our team needed a<lb/>
win, but we need to get better if<lb/>
we are going to beat Richmond on<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
The win moved the Pirates to<lb/>
10-9 overall and 4-4 in the CAA.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary dropped to 3-16<lb/>
and 1-7 in the conference.<lb/>
The Pirates face off against<lb/>
the Richmond Spiders on Sat. Feb.<lb/>
4inMingesCloiseum. Game time<lb/>
is 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Lady Pirates lose to UNC-C<lb/>
East Carolina (73)<lb/>
MP FG FT R F A FT<lb/>
Edwards 36 13-20 6-9 9 3 4 32<lb/>
Hill 18 2-8 0-0 4 3 1 4<lb/>
Love 28 1-2 0-0 2 2 1 2<lb/>
Kelly 38 0-1 1-3 1 4 5 1<lb/>
Murphy 33 5-6 3-5 6 11 16<lb/>
Lose 30 5-8 6-7 6 12 16<lb/>
Perlich 6 0-10-0 0 11 0<lb/>
Mote 5 1-10-0 0 0 0 0<lb/>
Bryant 5 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0<lb/>
Scherer 10-0 0-0 0 10 0<lb/>
THURS FRI. AND SAT. ONLY!<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
Tiffany Stone was the high-<lb/>
' light for William &amp; Mary. She had<lb/>
21 points on the game for the<lb/>
Tribe.<lb/>
Monday's game against<lb/>
UNC-Charlotte proved to be a<lb/>
long night for the Pirates as their<lb/>
poor shooting and stiffness on the<lb/>
tree throw line impacted the final<lb/>
score.<lb/>
UNC-C led by 15 in the half<lb/>
and before the end of the contest,<lb/>
Charlotte had increased their<lb/>
margin to 16 to upset the Ladv<lb/>
Tirates 56-72.<lb/>
ECU shot a measly 45 per-<lb/>
cent from the line as they missed<lb/>
nine out of 19 free throws in the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
The Pirates also were ice cold<lb/>
from the field as they shot a mere<lb/>
l percent. L'NC-C shot 53 per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
Savage was aain the leading<lb/>
scorer in the game for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates as she put 14 points on the<lb/>
scoreboard tor ECU. In addition,<lb/>
she had three reboundsbefore she<lb/>
fouled out with 4:32 left in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Gray also fouled out with 1:00<lb/>
to go in the game but not before<lb/>
she could score nine points for<lb/>
ECU and grab seven boards.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are back in<lb/>
action Saturday as they continue<lb/>
their four game stretch on the<lb/>
road as they face the Spiders of<lb/>
Richmond. ECU closes out their<lb/>
on-the-road action Feb. 8 when<lb/>
they face Deleware State.<lb/>
Team2<lb/>
Totals200 27-4716-24 3018 15 William &amp; Mary (68)73<lb/>
MP FG FTR F APt<lb/>
Apple3610-20 0-03 0 322<lb/>
Blocker152-4 0-00 5 04<lb/>
Burzell280-6 0-14 5 20<lb/>
O'Reilly323-6 0-01 4 49<lb/>
Potts243-4 0-05 1 06<lb/>
Pide263-7 5-63 4 311<lb/>
S ,ith355-11 4-47 3 114<lb/>
V tkeheld 30-0 0-00 0 00<lb/>
- .utthews 11-1 0-01 0 02<lb/>
Team5<lb/>
Totals200 27-59 9-1129 22 1368<lb/>
East Carolina29 44 73<lb/>
William &amp; Mary29 39  68<lb/>
Now Save<lb/>
an extra<lb/>
15<lb/>
on Ladies'<lb/>
Winter<lb/>
Sale prices<lb/>
already<lb/>
reduced<lb/>
15-15<lb/>
SAVE AN<lb/>
EXTRA<lb/>
OFF ALL LADIES' WINTER<lb/>
SAU: PRICES ON SHOES, BOOTS,<lb/>
HANDBAGS &amp; ACCESSORIES<lb/>
GOQD 2-2 THRU 2-4 '(except Nike &amp; Reebok)<lb/>
READ TH1<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday<lb/>
100 SUPER SUMMER CAMP POSITIONS<lb/>
North Carolina 4-H Camps<lb/>
A<lb/>
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Here's what the J-Team can do for you:<lb/>
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? rumrji resouri (wildlife, forestry. water hiolog) I eel<lb/>
Kr applications contact,<lb/>
? J Roland Hory<lb/>
Box 7606<lb/>
N C State Univfrsity<lb/>
Raleigh. NC 276<lb/>
Join us for the most memorable summer of your life<lb/>
helping kids<lb/>
Mr. Flory will be on Campus February 9 for interviews<lb/>
J<lb/>
Why Trust Your<lb/>
Pictures With an<lb/>
Out of Town Lab?<lb/>
jifflube<lb/>
?Change your oil with a major brand!<lb/>
?Add a new oil filter!<lb/>
?Lubricate the chassis!<lb/>
?Check and fill transmission,<lb/>
differential, brake, power steering.<lb/>
window washer and battery fluids!<lb/>
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?Inflate tires!<lb/>
?Check wiper blades!<lb/>
?Vacuum the interior!<lb/>
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PLUS FREE car wash<lb/>
with full service!<lb/>
$2.00 off (with this ad)<lb/>
126 Greenville Blvd. Phone: 756-2579 Hours: Mon. - Fri. 8 am - 6 pm Sat. til 5<lb/>
INSTANT REPLAY WILL DEVELOP<lb/>
YOUR PICTURES WHILE YOU WAIT<lb/>
E INSTANT REPLAY "<lb/>
ONE HOUR PHOTOS AND PORTRAITS<lb/>
"Quality, Convenience and Personal Service"<lb/>
THE PLAZA<lb/>
(next to Annabelle's)<lb/>
355-5050<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
REPRINTS I<lb/>
ONE FREE REPRINT <lb/>
WITH EACH TWO<lb/>
PURCHASED.<lb/>
ONE COUPON PER VISIT.<lb/>
T<lb/>
(EXPIRES 21489)<lb/>
I<lb/>
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2ND SET<lb/>
OF PRINTS<lb/>
AT TIME OF PROCESSING.<lb/>
LIMIT 2<lb/>
ONE COUPON PER<lb/>
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(EXPIRES 21489)<lb/>
L<lb/>
ENLARGENTS<lb/>
WITH PURCHASE OF ANY<lb/>
COLOR ENLARGEMENT UP<lb/>
TO 11" X 14<lb/>
RECEIVE 2ND ENLARGE-<lb/>
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PERSONAL PORTRAITS<lb/>
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INSTANT REPLAY<lb/>
ARE GREAT, TRADITIONAL AND LONGLASTING GIFTS<lb/>
1aCentine 's SpeciaC<lb/>
$29.95<lb/>
(normally $50.70)<lb/>
2-8x10's 3-5x7fs<lb/>
12- Wallets<lb/>
TrlcncluoslttlngFee<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Ladies Night<lb/>
Ladies Free all Night<lb/>
$1.75 Frozen Specials<lb/>
$1.00 Cans<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
The famous Day Tea Bash<lb/>
$2.00 Ice Teas 5pm-lam<lb/>
$50 Door Prize for Fraternity and<lb/>
Sorority With best Attendance<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
$2.00 Teas All Night<lb/>
<pb facs="00058121_0014"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>