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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058122_0001"/>
Inside<lb/>
EDITORIALS4<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS6<lb/>
FEATURES 8<lb/>
SPORTS10<lb/>
Features<lb/>
After three years, fraternity builds house.<lb/>
Check out page 8.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
The Spiders of Richmond spin<lb/>
referee web on Pirates<lb/>
Read about the action on page 10.<lb/>
aUte i?ust (Earnltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 48<lb/>
Tuesday February 7,1989<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Coastal ecosystems are in trouble, say professors<lb/>
By DAVID HFRRING<lb/>
sstMant Nev?s Idttor<lb/>
By the year 2000,75 percent of<lb/>
all people in the US. will live<lb/>
within 50 miles of the coast, ac-<lb/>
cording to Dr. Donald W.Stanley<lb/>
of Inter-Coastal Marine Re-<lb/>
sources (ICMR).<lb/>
Increasing man's interaction<lb/>
with coastal ecosystems could<lb/>
cause more problems. In an at-<lb/>
tempt to better understand our<lb/>
coastal ecology, the ECU depart-<lb/>
ment of biologv and ICMR, a re-<lb/>
search arm of the Division of<lb/>
Academic Affairs, are studying<lb/>
various aspects of North<lb/>
Carolina's coastal and marine<lb/>
testuanne) resources.<lb/>
Some faculty members share<lb/>
joint appointments between the<lb/>
biologv department and ICMR,<lb/>
enabling them to conduct re-<lb/>
search, sometimes on as many as<lb/>
five projects at once, and teach.<lb/>
According to Dr. Robert R. Chris-<lb/>
tian, biologv dept the projects<lb/>
give ECU students the best of two<lb/>
worlds.<lb/>
'The people (professors) we<lb/>
have in biology and ICMR have<lb/>
excellent reputations and are re-<lb/>
nowned in their fields he said.<lb/>
"Thev are well-respected re-<lb/>
searchers having the special na-<lb/>
ture oi being current in their fields<lb/>
and thev can pass that on to stu-<lb/>
dents<lb/>
"Inestuarine ecology neither<lb/>
NC. State nor Duke has the repu-<lb/>
tation ECU has Christian con-<lb/>
tinued. "Here we are usually re-<lb/>
quired to teach at least three of<lb/>
tour courses. At Duke you<lb/>
wouldn't think of their star re-<lb/>
searchers teaching undergradu-<lb/>
ate students, but at ECU that's<lb/>
part of the game. We must teach<lb/>
them - and often<lb/>
"ECU has, as a group, proba-<lb/>
bly the best concentration of ex- off. and they are an important human sewage into streams and Since this bad algae is not<lb/>
pertisconestuarineccosystemsof landscape in tcrmsof maintaining rivers. "In ecology we don't have consumed, when it dies it collect!<lb/>
anywhere in North Carolina land against rises in sea level and good long term records for most on the surface forming a scum<lb/>
agreed Dr. Mark M. Brinson, biol- hurricane flood waters. His as- variables so we have to make esti- which man' PcoPj. d(n lke l?<lb/>
Ogy dept. "Our work is usually sessment will provide informa- mates based on indirect evi- skl or swim in. This aesthetac<lb/>
some response to an ecology tion to the NC. state government dence noted Stanley, "but over pollution has occurred on oc<lb/>
problem and our funding sources for long term protection strategics the past 50 years I'd estimate that<lb/>
determine the nature of our re- for our wetlands. these nutrients have increased in<lb/>
search projects Dr. Stanley is currently our estuaries by about three<lb/>
"Our geographical location studying the pollution problems times<lb/>
in our estuaries caused by an over The increase causes marine<lb/>
abundance of high plant growth plants, such as algae, to grow<lb/>
nutrients. Over the past 50 years faster, but algae is short-lived and<lb/>
makes it easier for us to do field<lb/>
work he added. Currently Dr.<lb/>
Brinson is working on an assess-<lb/>
ment of N.Cs fringe wetlands<lb/>
and their relation to other geo-<lb/>
graphical features to determine<lb/>
how the development of these<lb/>
areas may be better managed.<lb/>
According to Brinson, N.C.<lb/>
wetlands serve three basic func-<lb/>
tions in our coastal ecosystem:<lb/>
they are an important link in the<lb/>
food chain for the fish population,<lb/>
thev act as nutrient buffers and<lb/>
help protect estuaries from run-<lb/>
the use of nitrogen fertilization<lb/>
has increased by approximately<lb/>
seven times.<lb/>
The fertilization allows more<lb/>
crops to grow, but only a small<lb/>
percentage of this fertilizer actu-<lb/>
ally goes into plants. Most ends<lb/>
up in streams and rivers which<lb/>
channel this excess fertilizer into<lb/>
the coastal estuaries.<lb/>
Also, human sewage is a rich<lb/>
source of these same high plant<lb/>
growth nutrients and we dump<lb/>
that which is not eaten bv fish is<lb/>
J<lb/>
left to die and rot. The decomposi<lb/>
sion in the Neusc and Chowan<lb/>
rivers.<lb/>
"Our job is to understand<lb/>
how much of these nutrients our<lb/>
estuaries can withstand before the<lb/>
limit is reached said Stanley,<lb/>
"and we're a long way from arriv-<lb/>
ing at a solution we're confident<lb/>
in. We have the technology to<lb/>
tion process of these plants'uses remove up to 95 percent of the<lb/>
sometimes so much nutrients from the sewage, but at<lb/>
up oxygen<lb/>
so that fish in the area acually<lb/>
suffocate.<lb/>
These nutrients also cause<lb/>
some types of algae to grow which<lb/>
fish won't eat. This "bad" algae<lb/>
becomes abundant, crowding out<lb/>
the "good" algae and fish starve<lb/>
from a lack of food.<lb/>
a great cost. Scientists don't make<lb/>
political decisions, all we can do is<lb/>
present our findings<lb/>
Another estuarine study is<lb/>
being conducted by Dr. Roger A<lb/>
Rulifson, biologyICMR, on the<lb/>
declining population of striped<lb/>
bass. According to R?:lifson,<lb/>
See ROANOKE, page 3<lb/>
SGA change legislative laws<lb/>
By LORI MARTIN<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
Speaker of the Legislature, Marty Helms, answers a query to the chair during Monday's SGA<lb/>
eeting. A bill was passed in the weekly meeting to amend legislative by laws. (Photolab)<lb/>
New admission standards may be sought by<lb/>
administration as number of applications soar<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
With applications for admis-<lb/>
sion reaching a record high, ECU<lb/>
officials expect new procedures to<lb/>
enable them to be more selective<lb/>
of next year's student pool.<lb/>
Dr.Richard Eakin, ECU chan-<lb/>
cellor, told the Faculty Senate this<lb/>
week that "a new process for re-<lb/>
viewing applications should re-<lb/>
sult in higher average test scores<lb/>
and high school grade point<lb/>
averages this year<lb/>
Eugene Owens, acting direc-<lb/>
tor of admissions, said the new-<lb/>
procedures for reviewing appli-<lb/>
cations "enables us to be more<lb/>
selective" of the students ac-<lb/>
cepted for admission. He said the<lb/>
actual number of new students to<lb/>
be admitted next fall has yet to be<lb/>
determined.<lb/>
As of Jan. 26, 7,325 applica-<lb/>
tions had been received for un-<lb/>
dergraduate admission to the fall,<lb/>
1989, semester. This is 700, or 10.6<lb/>
percent, greater then the 6,624<lb/>
applications for fall, 1988, which<lb/>
had been received at the same<lb/>
time last year.<lb/>
For last fall semester, ECU<lb/>
student enrollment was a record<lb/>
15,583.<lb/>
Cutoffs for both in-state and<lb/>
out-of-state applications were im-<lb/>
posed earlier than usual last win-<lb/>
ter because of the large numbers.<lb/>
Under the new procedures,<lb/>
applicants who applied for un-<lb/>
dergraduate admission by Dec. 15<lb/>
were screened and are being noti-<lb/>
fied this week whether they have<lb/>
been accepted, Owens said.<lb/>
Prospective students who<lb/>
applied by Feb. 1 will be notified<lb/>
by M.irch 15. Owens said applica-<lb/>
tion for out-of-state students re-<lb/>
ceived by Dec. 31 will be re-<lb/>
viewed and the applicants noti-<lb/>
fied by March 15.<lb/>
"We've received a record<lb/>
number of applications Owens<lb/>
said. 'The process is working<lb/>
according to schedule. But we're'<lb/>
not sure yet how many will be<lb/>
admitted<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association amended legislative<lb/>
procedures, heard grievances<lb/>
from a disgruntled legislator and<lb/>
approved funding for the<lb/>
Panhellenic Council in Monday's<lb/>
weekly meeting.<lb/>
The SGA changed its time<lb/>
limitation oi debate used during<lb/>
their meetings.<lb/>
The legislature approved a<lb/>
time of 10 minutes for affirmative<lb/>
debate or the time allowed for<lb/>
legislators to argue for a certain<lb/>
resolution or bill. The new proce-<lb/>
dure also allows 10 minutes for<lb/>
negative debate or the time al-<lb/>
lowed to argue against a resolu-<lb/>
tion or bill.<lb/>
Speeches will be limited in<lb/>
. . ? i .lance to time remaining in<lb/>
the round of debate. Prior to this<lb/>
legislation, the SGA was limited<lb/>
to five minutes per round of de-<lb/>
bate as stated in the SGA Docu-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
But Speaker of the Legislature<lb/>
Marty Helms, who authored the<lb/>
legislation, said the SGA has been<lb/>
following the 10 minute proce-<lb/>
dure for as long as he has been in<lb/>
the government. Since the gov-<lb/>
ernment has been using the for-<lb/>
mat for some time, Helms thought<lb/>
it was time the amendment was<lb/>
added to the Documents.<lb/>
In the first order of business,<lb/>
Legislator Valeria Lassitcr ad-<lb/>
dressed the legislature with the<lb/>
charge that two members of the<lb/>
SGA were guilty of misconduct<lb/>
during the Feb. 30 meeting.<lb/>
"I, a black student legislator,<lb/>
was a victim of misconduct by<lb/>
other legislators Lassiter said.<lb/>
"As I was performing my duties, a<lb/>
black jelly bean hit my back. I<lb/>
picked the jelly bean up and in-<lb/>
quired to the legislator sitting<lb/>
directly behind me to whom did<lb/>
the item belong According to<lb/>
Lassiter, the improper conduct<lb/>
continued.<lb/>
Lassiter suggested the legis-<lb/>
lature review the conduct of the<lb/>
SGA and remove the two mem-<lb/>
bers involved in the incident from<lb/>
the governing body. "These legis-<lb/>
lators should not be permitted to<lb/>
hold any position in the SGA<lb/>
Lassitcr said.<lb/>
One of the accused legisla-<lb/>
tors, who would rather remain<lb/>
anonymous, said the incident was<lb/>
a misunderstanding. He intends<lb/>
to offer a private apology to Las-<lb/>
siter as well as an apology to the<lb/>
SGA in next Monday's meeting.<lb/>
'This is all blown out of pro-<lb/>
portion. It was purely an accident.<lb/>
We were eating jelly beans and<lb/>
one of the jelly beans fell off the<lb/>
table and hit her in the leg he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
'This was a miscommunica-<lb/>
rion Helms said. "An apology<lb/>
will bfcaade and I assume it will<lb/>
be accepted. There were no racial<lb/>
intentions<lb/>
In other business, the SGA<lb/>
appropriated $1500 to the<lb/>
Panhellenic Council to help fund<lb/>
the publication of booklets for the<lb/>
sorority rush. The total cost to<lb/>
publish the booklets will be $2500.<lb/>
According to a representative<lb/>
from the Panhellenic Council, the<lb/>
booklets will be sent to all female<lb/>
freshmen announcing that rush<lb/>
will take place one week before<lb/>
classes begin in the fall. This will<lb/>
avoid confusion during the first<lb/>
week of classes when rush is usu-<lb/>
ally held.<lb/>
Legislator Mike Hadlev said<lb/>
he is not against the funding but<lb/>
the organization should have<lb/>
requested the money in its annual<lb/>
appropriation. He suggested all<lb/>
organizations take this into con-<lb/>
sideration when planning their<lb/>
budgets in the future.<lb/>
A meeting will be held on Feb.<lb/>
17 from 2-5 p.m. for all campus<lb/>
organizations to work on their<lb/>
annual budgets. The purpose of<lb/>
the meeting is to explain proce-<lb/>
dures and issue forms for making<lb/>
appropriation requests for 1989-<lb/>
90.<lb/>
Death of pledges cause escalation<lb/>
in fraternity liability insurance<lb/>
By ADAM CORNELIUS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Fraternities nationwide have<lb/>
been evaluating induction proce-<lb/>
dures after the death of a Lamda<lb/>
Chi Alpha pledge in a hazing inci-<lb/>
dent at Rutgers University last<lb/>
Spring.<lb/>
The death of the pledge com-<lb/>
bined with several other incidents<lb/>
occurring over the past two years<lb/>
have led to several proposals,<lb/>
including a total ban on pledging.<lb/>
The ban would give fratenvties a<lb/>
chance to lower their insurance<lb/>
rates. Although rates have been<lb/>
decreasing, the rates are signifi-<lb/>
cantly higher than four years ago.<lb/>
The proposal is still under<lb/>
consideration by the National<lb/>
Intcrfraternity Conference. Cur-<lb/>
rently the decision to eliminate<lb/>
the pledge period is left to the<lb/>
individual fraternities. On the<lb/>
ECU campus the only fraternity to<lb/>
vote on this proposal was Zeta<lb/>
Beta Tau, which has since dis-<lb/>
banded.<lb/>
A spokesman for the Frater-<lb/>
nity Executive Association says<lb/>
that the question of banning<lb/>
pledging has not yet been put into<lb/>
effect.<lb/>
"The Fratcrinity Executive<lb/>
Association has committed to<lb/>
discuss the issue and, as I under-<lb/>
stand it at this July meeting, is<lb/>
continuing with a thoughtful re-<lb/>
view of the question. We encour-<lb/>
age each national fraternity to do<lb/>
so. Each national fraternity would<lb/>
need to embrace this policy on its<lb/>
own volition, so you have a vari-<lb/>
ety of groups probably in differ-<lb/>
ent stages evaluating the idea<lb/>
Rav Madden, president of<lb/>
See FRAT, page 3<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
Last week when it was warm and 'the Hill' was alive with activity? The cold has returned, but<lb/>
that teasing taste of spring is still in many ECU students'minds. (Photo by Mark Love-Photolab)<lb/>
<pb facs="00058122_0002"/><lb/>
y ??<lb/>
T IE LAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 7, 1989<lb/>
Soviets leave Afghanistan<lb/>
KABUL, Afghanistan (AD?<lb/>
The last Red Army convoys aban-<lb/>
doned their garrisons and headed<lb/>
north for home today. Soviet offi-<lb/>
cials said, bringing to an end a<lb/>
nine-year adventure that cost<lb/>
more than 13,000 Soviet lives.<lb/>
Hundreds of Soviet troops, mean-<lb/>
while, guarded the airport of the<lb/>
war-weary Afghan capital as<lb/>
military transports ferried in<lb/>
loads of grain and other supplies<lb/>
to help ease food shortages<lb/>
caused bv guerrilla blockades.<lb/>
In Moscow, the Communist<lb/>
Partv new pa per Pravda reported<lb/>
today that the last Soviet soldier<lb/>
left Kabul" on Sunday. But Soviet<lb/>
officals in the city said about 1,000<lb/>
troops would remain at the air-<lb/>
port until the end of the week.<lb/>
They said the last convoy left<lb/>
the capital on Saturday. Under a<lb/>
UNbrokered accord, all Soviets<lb/>
forces are to be out by Feb. 15.<lb/>
Pravda said Soviet troops<lb/>
would todav abondon their garri-<lb/>
son in the western citv of Sh-<lb/>
indand, the other remaining So-<lb/>
viet militarv complex in the coun-<lb/>
try. The paper said Soviet troops<lb/>
had by Sunday removed defen-<lb/>
sive checkpoints on the Salang<lb/>
Highway to about 30 miles morth<lb/>
of Kabul at the southern end of a<lb/>
tunnel that cuts through some of<lb/>
the roughest terrain on the with<lb/>
drawal route.<lb/>
Pravda said insurgents did<lb/>
not fire on Soviet convoys as thev<lb/>
moved along the highway, the<lb/>
only land route to the Soviet bor-<lb/>
der from Kabul. But four aval-<lb/>
Public objects<lb/>
to Congress'<lb/>
pay increase<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP? The<lb/>
public outcry over the proposed<lb/>
51 percent pav increase for mem-<lb/>
bers of Congress should hardly be<lb/>
surprising. Americans have been<lb/>
objecting to congressional pay<lb/>
raises for nearly all of the 200-year<lb/>
history of the Senate and House of<lb/>
Representatives.<lb/>
Alexis do Tocquevilie, a close<lb/>
observer of American life, offered<lb/>
an explanation in his 1S35 studv,<lb/>
"Democracy in America His<lb/>
conclusion: Democracies are far<lb/>
more stingy than other forms of<lb/>
government when it comes to<lb/>
paving high-ranking officials.<lb/>
Part of the reason, de<lb/>
Tocquevilie, wrote, is that a salary<lb/>
level which seems inadequate to<lb/>
the official receiving it "appears<lb/>
enormous to him whose wants do<lb/>
not extend beyond the necessities<lb/>
of life. When he reflects on own<lb/>
humble dwelling and the small<lb/>
earnings of his hard toil, he re-<lb/>
members all he could do with a<lb/>
salary which you judge insuffi-<lb/>
cient, and he is startled and almost<lb/>
frightened at the view of so much<lb/>
wealth he said.<lb/>
More than 150 years later,<lb/>
little has changed. "We have<lb/>
never had a satisfactory method<lb/>
for setting compensation for high<lb/>
government officials says Sen-<lb/>
ate Majority Leader George<lb/>
Mitchell, D-Maine.<lb/>
"We still do not. If contempo-<lb/>
rary public opinion were the sole<lb/>
determinant, the pay of members<lb/>
of Congress today would be the<lb/>
same as it was in 1789<lb/>
The root of the problem is in<lb/>
the Constitution. Article I, Section<lb/>
6 provides: "Senators and Repre-<lb/>
sentatives shall receive a compen-<lb/>
sation for their services, to be as-<lb/>
certained by law, and paid out of<lb/>
the Treasury of the United<lb/>
States<lb/>
That sounds well enough in<lb/>
theory. But in practice it leaves the<lb/>
question of congressional pay<lb/>
levels up to Congress itself, pos-<lb/>
ing an always sensitive, uncom-<lb/>
fortable and sometimes politi-<lb/>
cally explosive problem.<lb/>
Some of the framers of the<lb/>
Constitiution thought it woiTd<lb/>
give members of Congr-s a i-<lb/>
cense to steal. Others argued , at<lb/>
pressure from incensed constitu-<lb/>
ents would rein in greedy im-<lb/>
pulses.<lb/>
"Bringing up the pay i use<lb/>
issue is about as wefcome n a<lb/>
legislative body as a skunk is at a<lb/>
Sunday School picnic says en.<lb/>
Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa. "he<lb/>
present congressional salary:<lb/>
$89,500.<lb/>
The proposal by an inde-<lb/>
pendent commission: Increase it<lb/>
to $135,000 to more nearly ap-<lb/>
proach the compensation offered<lb/>
in the private sector to lawyers,<lb/>
corporate executives and others<lb/>
with similar responsibilities.<lb/>
ances crashed down on retreating<lb/>
columns Sunday, killing three<lb/>
Soviet soldiers and injuring a<lb/>
fouth, the paper said.<lb/>
Three officers were also in-<lb/>
jured bv "terrorist grenades" in a<lb/>
Kabul suburb Sundav as the Sovi-<lb/>
ets handed over motor vehicles to<lb/>
the Afghans, the newpaper said.<lb/>
lust across the Soviet border in<lb/>
Termez, where a Soviet airborne<lb/>
regiment arrived from Afganis-<lb/>
tan todav, military spokesman U.<lb/>
Col. Igor Dorolev said the last<lb/>
remaining Red Army soldiers<lb/>
were on the move toward the<lb/>
border.<lb/>
He said Soviet soldiers re-<lb/>
mained in Balkh, Samangan,<lb/>
Baglan, Parvan and Herat prov-<lb/>
inces. The first four are located<lb/>
between Kabul and the Soviet<lb/>
border: Herat province borders<lb/>
the Soviet Union in the west.<lb/>
Along the road behind the<lb/>
Kabul airport today, several So-<lb/>
viet soldiers dressed in padded<lb/>
olive green uniforms manned the<lb/>
bunker checkpoints, nervously-<lb/>
clutching their Kalashnikov rifles.<lb/>
ndrei. a 20-vear old soldier for<lb/>
Moldavia, said the troops would<lb/>
be flown home sometime before<lb/>
Feb. 15, but said thev had not been<lb/>
told exactly when.<lb/>
Tass today reported heavy<lb/>
shelling bv guerrillas in the Kabul<lb/>
province, killing eight people,<lb/>
and in the cities of Gardiz and<lb/>
Khost in Pakita province, killing<lb/>
one and wounding two. Rockets<lb/>
and rocket-propelled grenades<lb/>
also hit residential areas in the city<lb/>
of Herat and the airport in the<lb/>
southern city of Kandahar, Tass<lb/>
said.<lb/>
With the Soviet pullout, those<lb/>
cities have been held by the con-<lb/>
script army of Soviet-backed<lb/>
President Najib, a force that guer-<lb/>
rilla commanders say is demoral-<lb/>
ized and crippled by desertion.<lb/>
The Soviet Union sent troops into<lb/>
Afghanistan in December 1979 to<lb/>
replace on Marxist regime with<lb/>
another and stayed to help fight<lb/>
the U.S.? and Pakistani-backed<lb/>
insurgents.<lb/>
The Kremlin says more than<lb/>
13,000 Soviet troops were killed<lb/>
and 35,000 wounded in the con-<lb/>
flict. In neighboring Pakistan,<lb/>
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard<lb/>
Shevardnadze met with Pakistani<lb/>
officals today but said the talks<lb/>
had failed to bring about a politi-<lb/>
cal solution on Afghanistan's fu-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
The insurgents refuse to share<lb/>
power with Najib, an arangement<lb/>
upon which the Soviets insist.<lb/>
Shevardnadze told a news confer-<lb/>
ence that Moscow would con-<lb/>
tinue to support the Kabul gov-<lb/>
ernment.<lb/>
"If new complications hap-<lb/>
pen, if there is continued fighting,<lb/>
the Soviet Union has obligations<lb/>
to that country he said. How<lb/>
Arlington Village<lb/>
Attic Sale<lb/>
8:00 pm to 8:00 pm<lb/>
Starts Thursday,<lb/>
Feb. 9th<lb/>
60 -75<lb/>
(Final Reductions)<lb/>
All Fall and Winter<lb/>
Merchandise<lb/>
Some Spring and<lb/>
Summer Merchandise<lb/>
Selected Jewelry<lb/>
and Accessories.<lb/>
L<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
MonSat. 10-6<lb/>
Thurs. 10-8<lb/>
919 A. Redbanks Rd.<lb/>
Arlington Village<lb/>
756-1058<lb/>
$1.00 A Line Will Say It All On<lb/>
, Valentine's Day<lb/>
Capture<lb/>
Your<lb/>
Valentine<lb/>
WITH A<lb/>
FILL OUT THIS FORM &amp; DROP BY<lb/>
Valentine Love Lines<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Publications Building,<lb/>
Second Floor<lb/>
COMPOSE YOUR OWN MESSAGE BELOW<lb/>
ever, the Soviet envoy added,<lb/>
"We are not thinking of any Soviet<lb/>
re-entry into Afghanistan<lb/>
Shevardnadze, the highest-<lb/>
ranking Soviet offieal ever to visit<lb/>
Pakistan, told reporters he had<lb/>
not met with Afghan guerrillas<lb/>
leaders based in the countrv. On<lb/>
Sunday, guerrilla sources said<lb/>
Shevardnadze would meet with<lb/>
the insurgents today.<lb/>
Leaders of the Iran- and Paki-<lb/>
stan-based resistance signed a<lb/>
cooperation pact Sundav in the<lb/>
Iranian capital, Iran's foreign<lb/>
minister, All Akbar Velayati said.<lb/>
The agreement could boost the<lb/>
guerrillas' chances of taking over<lb/>
in Afghanistan and creating an<lb/>
Islamic republic once the Soviets<lb/>
are gone.<lb/>
In Kabul on Sunday, Najib<lb/>
told about 10,000 members of the<lb/>
ruli.ig People's Democratic Party<lb/>
that his Marxist government will<lb/>
survive the rebel onslaught de-<lb/>
spite the Soviet pullout.<lb/>
"God is with us. The people<lb/>
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he told about 10,000 partv mem-<lb/>
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The East Carolinian<lb/>
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Scott Ma key I. Keith<lb/>
Phillip V. Cope Adam Blank<lb/>
Ashley E Dalton<lb/>
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400-490col.inches$4 20<lb/>
500-599 col. inches$4.10<lb/>
600andabove$4.00<lb/>
Classified Display<lb/>
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Color Advertising<lb/>
OneColor and black $90.00 12<lb/>
TwoColorand black $155<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058122_0003"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 7, 1989 3<lb/>
Weekly Crime Report returns<lb/>
ECU Campus Security Log<lb/>
Book from last weekend.<lb/>
Friday February 3<lb/>
AM<lb/>
1:05 Breaking and entering of<lb/>
a car located in the parking lot<lb/>
located at 14th Street and Berkley.<lb/>
Two men were arrested for pos-<lb/>
session of stolen property.<lb/>
1:20 Extremely intoxicated<lb/>
student north of Belk Dorm.<lb/>
1:22 A butterfly knife was<lb/>
confiscated in a dorm room. A<lb/>
citation for drinking underage<lb/>
was issued to a resident in the<lb/>
same dorm room.<lb/>
9:00 A student reported the<lb/>
theft oi his car bra.<lb/>
PM<lb/>
1 45 A larceny of a bicycle<lb/>
east of Garrett was reported by<lb/>
the owner.<lb/>
11:56 Two residents of Um-<lb/>
stcad Dorm were issued citations<lb/>
for being in possession of plants<lb/>
belonging to the University.<lb/>
Saturday, February 4<lb/>
2:25 Resident of Aycock<lb/>
Dorm was charged with drinking<lb/>
underage.<lb/>
2:45 Resident of Carrett<lb/>
Dorm was arrested for driving<lb/>
while impaired and driving at<lb/>
unsafe speeds.<lb/>
PM<lb/>
8:15<lb/>
Two residents of Garret i<lb/>
PM<lb/>
12:35<lb/>
Three residents of<lb/>
Crime Report Dorm were charged in possession Aycock Dorm were given cita-<lb/>
??? of a kec of boor. ti,?- (- -i:i ?j<lb/>
10:35 Residents of Aycock<lb/>
Dorm were charged in possession<lb/>
of drug paraphernalia.<lb/>
11.19 A loud party reported<lb/>
in Fletcher Dorm. Shortly after-<lb/>
ward, three students were given<lb/>
citations for drinking underage.<lb/>
of a keg of beer.<lb/>
11:49 Possible over dose oc-<lb/>
curred in Tyler Dorm.<lb/>
Sunday, February 5<lb/>
AM<lb/>
1:53 Resident of Aycock<lb/>
Dorm was charged with drinking<lb/>
underage.<lb/>
tions for drinking underage.<lb/>
Earlv Mondav, February 6<lb/>
AM<lb/>
12:14 Residents of Aycock<lb/>
Dorm were charged with posses-<lb/>
sion of drug paraphernalia and<lb/>
marijuana.<lb/>
Tte 9cw Image<lb/>
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Appts. From<lb/>
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313 Plaza Drive<lb/>
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Behind Peppi's<lb/>
Roanoke River loses spawning bass<lb/>
Ocean Front and, only 3 blocks from the most<lb/>
popular night) spots in Daytona<lb/>
Pen Rods, Razzles, etc.<lb/>
Continued from page 1 (how many will mature and<lb/>
Striped bass has been declared an hatch1).<lb/>
important national resource by "Enough eggs are being<lb/>
Congress, bringing in around $90 spawned to make a successful<lb/>
million annually in commercial striped bass population, but<lb/>
and sport fisheries. fewer are reaching juvenile age<lb/>
"In 1986 the striped bass stated Rulifson. "Viability has<lb/>
commercial fishery in C. pro- decreased due to over harvesting,<lb/>
duced landings worth approxi- poor water quality, a low food<lb/>
mately $189,000 and 95 percent of supply, and variations in water<lb/>
water flow interrupting the bass' or vvc can put substrates along<lb/>
spawning acts stated Rulifson, thc yiXom of estuaries for scal-<lb/>
?Lni WC d?'ukn,?VVi h?W .manZ loPs t0 land on and develop. We<lb/>
can then collect them and allow<lb/>
those landings were in the Albe<lb/>
marie sound said Rulifson, "and<lb/>
that doesn't include the sports<lb/>
fishery which is much more valu-<lb/>
able<lb/>
Every spring striped bass<lb/>
swim from the Albemarle sound<lb/>
up the Roanoke River to spawn,<lb/>
and this is the locus oi Dr.<lb/>
Rulifson's study. Every four<lb/>
hours for two months ECU stu-<lb/>
dents worked around the clock<lb/>
taking p 0 samples from the<lb/>
Roano' . to determine viability<lb/>
flow<lb/>
On the Roanoke River, near<lb/>
Roanoke Rapids, dams are used<lb/>
to regulate water flow as a source<lb/>
oi hydroelectric power. The peak<lb/>
power demand season coincides<lb/>
with peak striped bass spawning<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The dams are opened to in-<lb/>
crease water flow and generate<lb/>
more power, sometimes raising<lb/>
the water level by as muchas eight<lb/>
feet in one hour. "There are docu-<lb/>
mented cases oi this increase in<lb/>
simply swim back downstream<lb/>
without spawning. Moderate<lb/>
flow is best for egg viability and<lb/>
juvenile abundance<lb/>
"By understanding how na-<lb/>
ture works we can predict how<lb/>
nature will work when changes<lb/>
are made said Dr. William G.<lb/>
Ambrose, biologyICMR. He is<lb/>
studying factors affecting the dis-<lb/>
tribution and abundance of ben-<lb/>
thic (bottom) marine communi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
The recent coastal red tide<lb/>
epidemic wiped out 90 percent of<lb/>
the state's scallop population. Dr.<lb/>
Ambrose is determining the<lb/>
feasability of a scallop "aaua-rul-<lb/>
ture" using two methods.<lb/>
"We can either breed them in<lb/>
thc lab by combining scallop egg<lb/>
and sperm in a test tube he said,<lb/>
them to grow in the lab protected<lb/>
from predators<lb/>
Dr. Christian concluded,<lb/>
"Environmental resources are<lb/>
becoming more scarce and valu-<lb/>
able which must be worked into<lb/>
our politics and economics.<lb/>
People need to become more<lb/>
aware of environmental issues<lb/>
and consider them in their day to<lb/>
day decisions<lb/>
"But don't panic cautioned<lb/>
Dr. Stanley. 'There is some 'eco-<lb/>
hysteria' out there which is un-<lb/>
warranted, but don't think envi-<lb/>
ronmental problems will go away<lb/>
if ignored. The point is we've<lb/>
done some things nature can't<lb/>
Fraternities consider ending rush<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
the Interfraternity Conference at<lb/>
ECU and a member of Delta<lb/>
Sigma Phi said that a ban on<lb/>
pledging would pose problems<lb/>
for the fraternity system.<lb/>
"I don't see how they can<lb/>
enact it Madden said. "Even a<lb/>
lot of civic clubs have a pledging<lb/>
period where the person has to<lb/>
prove themselves worthy as a<lb/>
member<lb/>
1 lowever, increases in insur-<lb/>
ance rates may compromise fra-<lb/>
ternities' current method of in-<lb/>
ducting new brothers. When<lb/>
Madden first joined the fratemitv,<lb/>
insurance rates were $25 per<lb/>
member.<lb/>
'Today insurance rates are<lb/>
$45 for each member Madder,<lb/>
said. "Some fraternities are pay<lb/>
ing as much as $80 per man<lb/>
In response to these rates, 32<lb/>
et the 54 national fraternities<lb/>
banded together last fall to form<lb/>
Fraterity Insurance Purchasing, a<lb/>
group which, according to the<lb/>
Fraternity Executive Association<lb/>
would "both provide insurance at<lb/>
competitive rates and improve or<lb/>
influence operations of under-<lb/>
graduate chapters. Seven of the 15<lb/>
members of the 1FC at ECU are<lb/>
members of this group.<lb/>
Despite this long-term in-<lb/>
crease, John Greene at the na-<lb/>
tional headquarters of Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau savs tl ' insurance rates<lb/>
have been going down since thc<lb/>
incidents oi hazing which have<lb/>
received national attention over<lb/>
the last two years.<lb/>
Among these incidents, thc<lb/>
one receiving the most attention<lb/>
was the death of James Callahan,<lb/>
who was pledging the Lamda Chi<lb/>
Alpha Chapter of Rutgers Univer-<lb/>
sity when he died of alcohol poi-<lb/>
soning during a hazing incident.<lb/>
The chapter was closed.<lb/>
Greene attributes the insur-<lb/>
ance rate decrease to a response<lb/>
bv fraternities and univerities to<lb/>
the attention these incidents have<lb/>
been receiving.<lb/>
'There is a lot more attention<lb/>
being paid to conduct on the<lb/>
campus, not only by fraternities<lb/>
but by universities. Everyone re-<lb/>
alizes that the situation has got to<lb/>
change and are taking the steps<lb/>
necessary to do that. I think the<lb/>
insurance companies are recog-<lb/>
nizing this Greene said.<lb/>
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Vandals rip up art galleries on several campuses<lb/>
(CPS)? There has been a run<lb/>
of art thefts and vandalism at<lb/>
Southeast Louisiana University,<lb/>
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and several other campus muse-<lb/>
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The theft came just one week strictions.<lb/>
after the world's second largest "Unless you have it on dis-<lb/>
crvstal ball and a 2,000-year-old play in a vault, this is one of the<lb/>
statuette of the Egyptian god risks you run Martin said.<lb/>
Osiris were stolen. "If someone wants to break in<lb/>
At Southeastern Louisiana, and vandalize or steal something,<lb/>
vandals smashed and pilfered a they'll do it<lb/>
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As a result, campus security<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058122_0004"/><lb/>
?h;e iEafit Carolinian<lb/>
Serving thet at Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Pete Fernald, c??zM?M?r<lb/>
Stephanie Folsom, MMpRf uu<lb/>
JAMES F.J. MCKEE, Director of yUwrtwif<lb/>
Tim Hampton, nm e? Brad Bannister, g u,<lb/>
KKISTEN HALBERG,3p??tt? JEFF PARKER stjf Mush<lb/>
Ci ur Carter, ??-?? ea Tom Furr, o?uhM m?<lb/>
Susan Howell, fw-rh. M???rr Debbie Stevens, m?ry<lb/>
Dean Waters, om Stephanie Emory,u t? s.?<lb/>
Stepi i anie Singleton, c ? Mac Clark, g.?? m<lb/>
February 7.19SQ<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
New Policy<lb/>
Administration force-feeds students<lb/>
According to Dean Carolyn<lb/>
Fulgham, Director of Residence Life<lb/>
and Housing, all students who live<lb/>
in dorms during the upcoming<lb/>
summer session must join a meal<lb/>
plan. In addition, within five years<lb/>
the administration plans to institute<lb/>
a year-round version of the manda-<lb/>
torv plan.<lb/>
The administration's defense of<lb/>
the mandatory meal plan is valid as<lb/>
far as it goes. In the long run, the<lb/>
plans would indeed provide a<lb/>
greater selection of food and im-<lb/>
proved campus dining facilities.<lb/>
And the administration apparently<lb/>
feels that the benefits to the students<lb/>
will be worth the drawbacks.<lb/>
Perhaps. But is that for the ad-<lb/>
ministration to decide?<lb/>
Clearly not. If the students are<lb/>
the ones to benefit from the plan,<lb/>
then the administration should cer-<lb/>
tainly do more than pay lip service<lb/>
to the student's wishes.<lb/>
There doesn't seem to be any<lb/>
chance that that will happen. The<lb/>
Student Government Association's<lb/>
strong opposition to the measure<lb/>
was ignored. It seems clear that the<lb/>
administration has its heart set on<lb/>
implementing the plans, and no<lb/>
amount of insistence on the part of<lb/>
students will sway the administra-<lb/>
tion from plans which have been<lb/>
finalized.<lb/>
In addition, it seems doubtful<lb/>
that the administration has consid-<lb/>
ered the number of students for<lb/>
whom it may be easier and cheaper,<lb/>
given the meal plan requirement, to<lb/>
simply find residence somewhere<lb/>
other than the dorms.<lb/>
In sum, the mandatory meal<lb/>
plans are unwarranted and un-<lb/>
wanted. It is wrong for the admini-<lb/>
stration to attempt to force the plan<lb/>
on students, and it is equally wrong<lb/>
to deny the students any real say in<lb/>
the decision to implement the plan.<lb/>
-T?W<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view. Mail or drop them by our office in the<lb/>
Publications Building, across from the entrance to oyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters must include the name, major, classification, address, phone number and<lb/>
the signature of the author (s). Letters are limited to 300 words or less, double-spaced, typed or neatly printed. All<lb/>
letters at: subject to editing for brevity, obscenity and libel, and no personal attacks will be permitted. Students,<lb/>
faculty and staff writing letters for this page are reminded that they are limited to one every two weeks. The<lb/>
deadline for editorial material is 5 p.m. Friday for Tuesday papers and 5 p.m. Tuesday for Thursday editions.<lb/>
Capitol Hillbilly Mr. Smith<lb/>
goes to freshman orientation<lb/>
By MICHAEL NEWMAN<lb/>
Nrw Republic<lb/>
Here is Ben Jones, newly elected congressman<lb/>
from Georgia, commenting on the Washington din-<lb/>
ner circuit after his first week in the capital: "If I<lb/>
never see another Swedish meatball, it'll be OK with<lb/>
mc Here is Barney Frank, five-term congressman<lb/>
from Massachusetts, on the same subject: "All recep-<lb/>
tions are total horseshit<lb/>
Someday, after years of seasoning, maybe Jones<lb/>
will be as eloquently cynical as Frank. For now,<lb/>
though, he's the official yokel of the 101 st Congress.<lb/>
Not only is Jones a good old boy from the South; he<lb/>
is a former actor whose career climax came playing<lb/>
that very role? as Cooter, the good-hearted greasy<lb/>
mechanic who was always rescuing Bo and Luke<lb/>
Duke in the CBS series "The Dukes of Hazzard<lb/>
That's not to say Jones hasn't been around the<lb/>
block a time or two. He prevailed in one of the most<lb/>
ad hominiem congressional campaigns of 1988. In<lb/>
the course of the campaign, he released a lengthy<lb/>
police record? acquired during his drinking days<lb/>
and including a battery charge by his former wife?<lb/>
to pre-empt any use of it by his opponent. But even<lb/>
amid vicious mudslinging, Jones managed to come<lb/>
off as a good old boy. When his opponent, Republi-<lb/>
can incumbent Pat Swindall, questioned his hon-<lb/>
esty, Jones alluded to the fact that Swindall had<lb/>
recently been indicated for perjury: "Being called a<lb/>
liar by Pat Swindall is like being called ugly by a<lb/>
possum Jones beat Swindall by 20 points.<lb/>
Jones's first step toward becoming a jaded vet-<lb/>
eran was taken in December, when he went through<lb/>
the standard orientation for newcomers to Con-<lb/>
gress, a 14-day crash course organized by the House<lb/>
Administration committee. Together with his 32<lb/>
classmates, Jones sat through a seemingly endless<lb/>
series of presentations, on topics both mundane and<lb/>
meaningful. In Washington and in Cambridge,<lb/>
where the new members convened for a six-day<lb/>
"issue orientation he was schmoozed, fed, lobbied,<lb/>
and lectured. Like most orientations, this one had a<lb/>
high percentage of seemingly pointless moments.<lb/>
But, also e most orientations, it succeeded in spite<lb/>
of itselt. it gave Jones a rough overview of the next<lb/>
two years and put him more closely in touch with the<lb/>
forces that will be governing his behavior.<lb/>
Jones arrived in Washington with no plans to<lb/>
"take this place by storm and change the world<lb/>
What he wanted most was "to get settled he said.<lb/>
"Set up an office that functions efficiently, learn the<lb/>
practical things that a congressman does? turning<lb/>
the mail around quickly, things like that Freshman<lb/>
orientation caters to such concerns. One of the first<lb/>
events on his calendar was a seminar titled "Setting<lb/>
Up Your Congressional Office<lb/>
Most of orientation was closed to the media.<lb/>
Officials said they did this to "encourage candid<lb/>
discussion" and ensure "total honesty: ? and to<lb/>
keep the sessions safe for stupidity. "We don't want<lb/>
some guy quoted as asking, 'Who's the Speaker?'<lb/>
said one organizer. He might have worried less<lb/>
about inquisitiveness and more about boredom.<lb/>
Even Jones, one of the more earnest in the group,<lb/>
played hooky a few times ("I knew a lot of this stuff<lb/>
already he explained. "When I was a kid, I used to<lb/>
lCad the Congressional Record every day) At the<lb/>
seminar about congressional offices, several fresh-<lb/>
men were as restless as kindergartners at nap time:<lb/>
they whispered to each other, manicured their nails,<lb/>
excused themselves to get another doughnut.<lb/>
The next presentation, sponsored by the Demo-<lb/>
cratic Study Group, was more lively. Three sitting<lb/>
congressmen were sharing their "candid" views<lb/>
about the coming budget crunch. It turned out they<lb/>
weren't worried so much about the deficit as about<lb/>
whether they or the Republicans were going to get<lb/>
blamed for it. When the question-and-answer pe-<lb/>
riod started, one freshman took issue with this ap-<lb/>
proach. "It seems to me there's enough blame to go<lb/>
around he said. His elders seemed a bit taken<lb/>
aback, but quickly rebounded. "Don't think of this as<lb/>
a budget problem said one. "Think of it as a politi-<lb/>
cal problem, because that's what it is<lb/>
The second day of orientation opened with a<lb/>
sermon from Representative Joe Kolter, a smarmy<lb/>
four-term Democrat from Pennsylvania. "The<lb/>
honeymoon is over he warned. "You've basked in<lb/>
the glory of victory; now lef s talk about survival<lb/>
He suggested that freshmen keep one thing in mind<lb/>
while pondering vexing public policy issues: "Two<lb/>
years down the road, you opponent's gonna have<lb/>
something to chew on?your voting record Older<lb/>
members regaled Jonesand his classmates with tales<lb/>
of battles past. One spoke of the first time he got up<lb/>
to address a committee hearing. "As soon as I stood<lb/>
up, one of the senior members of the committee said.<lb/>
'Sit down, you smartass young punk So I turned to<lb/>
him and said, 'Shut up, you senile old bastard<lb/>
Another listed the three most important things to do<lb/>
to get re-elected: "Use the frank. Use the frank. A n J<lb/>
use the frank<lb/>
One week into orientation, the freshmen made<lb/>
their pilgrimage to the Mecca of policy analysis.<lb/>
Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government.<lb/>
One of the first day's featured speakers was Alice<lb/>
Rivlin, a senior feHov at the Brookings Institution<lb/>
and former director of the Congressional Budget<lb/>
Office. Unlike the House budget experts back in<lb/>
Washington, Rivlin didn't try to lay the blarr.e on<lb/>
anybody. Instead, shespokf-crf "having a substantial<lb/>
surplus in the unified budget by the end of the '90s<lb/>
and the need for high levels of investment "for the<lb/>
next several decades. Since most freshmen were<lb/>
just learning how tc link in two-year cycles, this<lb/>
caused some contusion. Rivlin was barraged with<lb/>
questions. How could Congress possibly institute a<lb/>
five-year budget plan? Or even a two-year plan?<lb/>
What exactly is the "unified budget anyway? Jones<lb/>
said he found Rivlin's talk helpful? "every bit of<lb/>
knowledge is useful"? but his colleagues in the<lb/>
room seemed rattled.<lb/>
The rest of the week's meetings were off-limits<lb/>
to the media, and the Kennedy School's well-trained<lb/>
press shepherds gently nudged us out of the room.<lb/>
On the whole, said Jones, the Harvard program gave<lb/>
"a nice overview" of the issuesand was "delightful<lb/>
Why? It wasn't so much the encyclopedic commen-<lb/>
tary on matters of importance, the 20-odd seminars<lb/>
on'everything from AIDS poicy to the problems of<lb/>
sub-Saharan Africa. No, it was'something less tan-<lb/>
gible than that, something that turned Jones down-<lb/>
right poetic. "We were spending whole days<lb/>
together he said. "Going to classes during the day,<lb/>
socializing together at night. We really got to know<lb/>
each other And then, you know, it was Christmas-<lb/>
time, and a little snow was falling in Harvard<lb/>
Square, and we've just been treated royally. It's been<lb/>
a special time<lb/>
Besides digesting all the information served up<lb/>
during orientation, Jones had to begin setting up his<lb/>
office. He was getting scores of letters and phone<lb/>
calls every day, but he had only one staffer with him<lb/>
in Washington. The two of them had to contend with<lb/>
the swarms of eager job seekers who roamed the<lb/>
corridors of Capitol Hill like Hare Krishnas at air-<lb/>
ports, smiling earnestly and handing out resumes.<lb/>
Jones was also in demand among the media, and<lb/>
hardly a day passed without an interview. By the<lb/>
end of the second week, he had hired a few more<lb/>
assistants and submitted his choices in the freshman<lb/>
office lottery. (He got a cramped attic on the fifth<lb/>
floor.) He still hadn't found a site for his permanent<lb/>
district office, or a place to live in Washington.<lb/>
One leitmotiv that ran through orientation was<lb/>
the matter of re-election. Not that Jones? or anyone<lb/>
else in Congress? needed reminding. Even before<lb/>
he was sworn in, Jones was working on two different<lb/>
fund-raisers, in Washington and in Atlanta. To get<lb/>
re-elected, one congressman had said, it was neces-<lb/>
sary to "be a district man and Jones took that advice<lb/>
to heart. He said his primary goal for the next two<lb/>
years is "to provide the best constituent services this<lb/>
district's ever had He plans to have a mobile office<lb/>
roam his district, and he rattled on endlessly about<lb/>
answer "every piece of mail<lb/>
As for the Swedish meatballs: during orienta-<lb/>
tion, Jones attended a reception practically every<lb/>
night. Most of these free meals weren't exactly free;<lb/>
those dishing them out (and those eating them) had<lb/>
ulterior menus. For example, Representative Bill<lb/>
Gray, who gave a "do as Jones calls them, wanted<lb/>
to win the caucus chair (he did). And the incoming<lb/>
Democrats dutifully attended three receptions put<lb/>
on by the House triumvirate of Speaker Jim Wright,<lb/>
Majority Leader Tom Foley, and Whip Tony CoeTho,<lb/>
all of who stressed the importance of party unity.<lb/>
The reasons for heeding party elders, though not<lb/>
what they once were, are still substantial. Jones<lb/>
received some $17,000 from the party during his<lb/>
campaign, and he stands to be rewarded with an-<lb/>
other tidy sum in 1990.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058122_0005"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
. i3ti ?tttic mk aan<lb/>
?y<lb/>
otJre iEaat (Earfllmian<lb/>
Serving ic I'ast Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Pete Fernald, ootimm,<lb/>
Stephanie Folsom, mmp?, ????<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, rv?orof <lb/>
Tim Hampton, n?? &amp;?? Brad Bannister, a, m<lb/>
KPrnTT Hil 1PTP. "ji i ri riffi JEFF PARKER, s?ff kMn<lb/>
Ci hp Carter, ;r? &amp;?? Tom Furr, - v ??????<lb/>
Susan Hovvell, ?????? m? Debbie Stevens, s???<lb/>
Dean Waters, oofM??jer Stephanie Emory,ut?j. s.?<lb/>
Stepi t anie Singleton, &amp;? e?? Mac Clark, !??m<lb/>
February 7. 1989<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
New Policy<lb/>
Administration force-feeds students<lb/>
According to Dean Carolyn<lb/>
Fulgham, Director of Residence Life<lb/>
and Housing, all students who live<lb/>
in dorms during the upcoming<lb/>
summer session must join a meal<lb/>
plan. In addition, within five years<lb/>
the administration plans to institute<lb/>
a vear-round version of the manda-<lb/>
tory plan.<lb/>
The administration's defense of<lb/>
the mandatory meal plan is valid as<lb/>
far as it goes. In the long run, the<lb/>
plans would indeed provide a<lb/>
greater selection of food and im-<lb/>
proved campus dining facilities.<lb/>
And the administration apparently<lb/>
feels that the benefits to the students<lb/>
will be worth the drawbacks.<lb/>
Perhaps. But is that for the ad-<lb/>
ministration to decide?<lb/>
Clearly not. If the students are<lb/>
the ones to benefit from the plan,<lb/>
then the administration should cer-<lb/>
tainly do more than pay lip service<lb/>
to the student's wishes.<lb/>
There doesn't seem to be any<lb/>
chance that that will happen. The<lb/>
Student Government Association's<lb/>
strong opposition to the measure<lb/>
was ignored. It seems clear that the<lb/>
administration has its heart set on<lb/>
implementing the plans, and no<lb/>
amount of insistence on the part of<lb/>
students will sway the administra-<lb/>
tion from plans which have been<lb/>
finalized.<lb/>
In addition, it seems doubtful<lb/>
that the administration has consid-<lb/>
ered the number of students for<lb/>
whom it may be easier and cheaper,<lb/>
given the meal plan requirement, to<lb/>
simply find residence somewhere<lb/>
other than the dorms.<lb/>
In sum, the mandatory meal<lb/>
plans are unwarranted and un-<lb/>
wanted. It is wrong for the admini-<lb/>
stration to attempt to force the plan<lb/>
on students, and it is equally wrong<lb/>
to deny the students any real say in<lb/>
the decision to implement the plan.<lb/>
-<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian welcomes letters expressing all points of view. Mail or drop them by our office in the<lb/>
Publications Building, across from the entrance to Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters must include the name, major, classification, address, phone number and<lb/>
the signature of the author (s). Letters are limited to 300 words or less, double-spaced, typed or neatly printed. All<lb/>
letters ar: subject to editing for brevity, obscenity and libel, and no personal attacks will be permitted. Students,<lb/>
faculty and staff writing letters for this page are reminded that they are limited to one every two weeks. The<lb/>
deadline for editorial material is 5 p.m. Friday for Tuesday papers and 5 p.m. Tuesday for Thursday editions.<lb/>
V<lb/>
si vA -? <lb/>
&amp; FEE5<lb/>
BooKfl TTTf<lb/>
Capitol Hillbilly Mr. Smith<lb/>
goes to freshman orientation<lb/>
By MICHAEL NEWMAN<lb/>
ew Republic<lb/>
Here is Ben Jones, newly elected congressman<lb/>
from Georgia, commenting on the Washington din-<lb/>
ner circuit after his first week in the capital: "If I<lb/>
never see another Swedish meatball, it'll be OK with<lb/>
me Here is Barney Frank, five-term congressman<lb/>
from Massachusetts, on the same subject: "All recep-<lb/>
tions are total horseshit<lb/>
Someday, after years of seasoning, maybe Jones<lb/>
will be as eloquently cynical as Frank. For now,<lb/>
though, he's the official yokel of the 101st Congress.<lb/>
Not only is Jones a good old boy from the South; he<lb/>
while pondering vexing public policy issues: "Two<lb/>
years down the road, you opponent's gonna have<lb/>
something to chew on? your voting record Older<lb/>
members regaled Jones and his classmates with tales<lb/>
of battles past. One spoke of the first time he got up<lb/>
to address a committee hearing. "As soon as I stood<lb/>
up, one of the senior members of the committee said,<lb/>
'Sit down, you smartass young punk So I turned to<lb/>
him and said, 'Shut up, you senile old bastard<lb/>
Another listed the three most important things to do<lb/>
to get re-elected: "Use the frank. Use the frank. ?n J<lb/>
use the frank<lb/>
One week into orientation, the freshmen mado<lb/>
their pilgrimage to the Mecca of policy analysis.<lb/>
Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government.<lb/>
One of the first day's featured speakers was Alice<lb/>
is a former actor whose career climax came playing<lb/>
that very role- as Cooter, the good-hearted greasy j?j? ? ? ,1 thBro'okmlnshUution<lb/>
mechanic who was always rescuing Bo and Luke fomcr q CongTess6lonal Budgct<lb/>
Duke in the CBS series "The Dukes of Hazzard.<lb/>
That's not to say Jones hasn't been around the<lb/>
block a time or two. He prevailed in one of the most<lb/>
ad hominiem<lb/>
the course<lb/>
Office. Unlike the House budget experts back in<lb/>
Washington, Rivlin didn't try to lay the blame on<lb/>
anybody. Instead, she sptkoo "having a substanlia<lb/>
?m congressional campaigns of 988 In J J ,q<lb/>
of the campaign, he released a lengthy J of investment "for the<lb/>
police record-acquired dunng his drinking days S s;nc(? most freshm(?n <lb/>
and including a battery charge by his former wife? . . . . . . , . . ?. <lb/>
,b f.u u- in i mst learning how ?c .Mink in two-year cvcles, this<lb/>
to pre-empt anv use of it by his opponent. But even o J J'<lb/>
caused some comIuskhv Rivlin was barraged with<lb/>
questions. How could Congress possibly institute a<lb/>
five-year budget plan? Or even a two-year plan?<lb/>
What exactly is the "unified budget anyway? Jones<lb/>
said he found Rivlin's talk helpful? "every bit of<lb/>
knowledge is useful"? but his colleagues in the<lb/>
room seemed rattled.<lb/>
The rest of the week's meetings were off-limits<lb/>
amid vicious mudslinging, Jones managed to come<lb/>
off as a good old boy. When his opponent, Republi-<lb/>
can incumbent Pat Swindall, questioned his hon-<lb/>
esty, Jones alluded to the fact that Swindall had<lb/>
recently been indicated for perjury: "Being called a<lb/>
liar by Pat Swindall is like being called ugly by a<lb/>
possum Jones beat Swindall by 20 points.<lb/>
Jones's first step toward becoming a jaded vet-<lb/>
eran was taken in December, when he went through t0 lhc media, and the KcnnedySchool s well-trained<lb/>
the standard orientation for newcomers to Con- press shepherds gently nudged us out of the room,<lb/>
gress, a 14-day crash course organized by the House ?n the whole-?? ?thc Ha?ard ?$??!??!<lb/>
Administration committee. Together with his 32 anice overview oftheissuesandwas dehghttul.<lb/>
classmates, Jones sat through a seemingly endless WhY? ? wasn ? much thc encyclopedic commen-<lb/>
series of presentations, on topics both mundane and -Y on matters.of importance, the 20-odd seminars<lb/>
meaningful. In Washington and in Cambridge, on everything from A rSpoicy to the problems of<lb/>
where the new members convened for a six-day suSauhara" fnca- JJj " waf fJhTmg ,C? taiV<lb/>
"issueorientationhewasschmoozed,fed,lobbied, Pb?c than that, something that turned Jones down-<lb/>
and lectured. Like most orientations, this one had a n8ht P0" We were spending whole days<lb/>
high percentage of seemingly pointless moments, together he said. "Going to classes dunng the day,<lb/>
But, also e most orientations, it succeeded in spite socializing together at night. We really got to know<lb/>
of itself, it gave Jones a rough overview of the next each other And then, you know, it was Christmas-<lb/>
two years and put him more closely in touch with the time, and a little snow was falling in Harvard<lb/>
forces that will be governing his behavior. Square, and we've just been treated royally. It's been<lb/>
Jonei: arrived in Washington with no plans to a special time<lb/>
"take this place by storm and change the world Besides digesting all the information served up<lb/>
What he wanted most was "to get settled he said, during orientation, Jones had to begin setting up his<lb/>
"Set up an office that functions efficiently, learn the<lb/>
practical things that a congressman does? turning<lb/>
the mail around quickly, things like that Freshman<lb/>
orientation caters to such concerns. One of the first<lb/>
office. He was getting scores of letters and phone<lb/>
calls every day, but he had only one staffer with him<lb/>
in Washington. The two of them had to contend with<lb/>
the swarms of eager job seekers who roamed the<lb/>
events on his calendar was a seminar titled "Setting corridors of Capitol Hill like Hare Krishnas at air-<lb/>
Up Your Congressional Office ports, smiling earnestly and handing out resumes.<lb/>
Most of orientation was closed to the media. Jones was also in demand among the media, and<lb/>
Officials said they did this to "encourage candid hardly a day passed without an interview. By the<lb/>
discussion" and ensure "total honesty ? and to cnd of the second week, he had hired a few more<lb/>
keep the sessions safe for stupidity. "We don't want assistants and submitted his choices in the freshman<lb/>
some guy quoted as asking, 'Who's the Speaker?' office lottery. (He got a cramped attic on the fifth<lb/>
floor.) He still hadn't found a site for his permanent<lb/>
said one organizer. He might have worried less<lb/>
about inquisitiveness and more about boredom.<lb/>
Even Jones, one of the more earnest in the group,<lb/>
played hooky a few times ("I knew a lot of this stuff<lb/>
already he explained. "When I was a kid, I used to<lb/>
district office, or a place to live in Washington.<lb/>
One leitmotiv that ran through orientation was<lb/>
the matter of re-election. Not that Jones? or anyone<lb/>
else in Congress? needed reminding. Even before<lb/>
he was sworn in, Jones was working on two different<lb/>
read the Congressional Record every day) At the fund.rai in Washington and in Atlanta. To Ret<lb/>
seminar about congressional offices, several fresh<lb/>
men were as restless as kindergartners at nap time:<lb/>
they whispered to each other, manicured their nails,<lb/>
excused themselves to get another doughnut.<lb/>
The next presentation, sponsored by the Demo-<lb/>
cratic Study Group, was more lively. Three sitting<lb/>
congressmen were sharing their "candid" views<lb/>
about the coming budget crunch. It turned out they<lb/>
weren't worried so much about the deficit as about<lb/>
whether they or the Republicans were going to get<lb/>
blamed for it. When the question-and-answer pe-<lb/>
riod started, one freshman took issue with this ap-<lb/>
re-elected, one congressman had said, it was neces-<lb/>
sary to "bea district man and Jones took that advice<lb/>
to heart. He said his primary goal for the next two<lb/>
years is "to provide the best constituent services this<lb/>
district's ever had He plans to have a mobile office<lb/>
roam his district, and he rattled on endlessly about<lb/>
answer "every piece of mail<lb/>
As for the Swedish meatballs: during orienta-<lb/>
tion, Jones attended a reception practically every<lb/>
night. Most of these free meals weren't exactly free;<lb/>
those dishing them out (and those eating them) had<lb/>
ulterior menus. For example, Representative<lb/>
around" he said. His elders seemed a bit taken lo win thecaucus income<lb/>
aback,butquicklyrebounded "Don'tthinkofthisas d dutifull attended EXES<lb/>
a budget problem said one. "Think of it as a pohti- bv  w.?!T , SSS<lb/>
i budget problem<lb/>
-al problem, because that's what it is.<lb/>
The second day of orientation opened with a<lb/>
sermon from Representative Joe Kolter, a smarmy<lb/>
four-term Democrat from Pennsylvania. "The<lb/>
honeymoon is over he warned. "You've basked in<lb/>
the glory of victory; now lef s talk about survival<lb/>
He suggested that freshmen keep one thing in mind<lb/>
on by the House triumvirate of Speaker Jim Wright,<lb/>
Majority Leader Tom Foley, and Whip Tony Coefho,<lb/>
all of who stressed the importance of party unity.<lb/>
The reasons for heeding party elders, though not<lb/>
what they once were, are stiU substantial. Jones<lb/>
received some $17,000 from the party during his<lb/>
campaign, and he stands to be rewarded with an-<lb/>
other tidy sum in 1990.<lb/>
<lb/>
v<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058122_0006"/><lb/>
.<lb/>
1<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 7, 1989 5<lb/>
Crack linked to homicides<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AD?<lb/>
"Crack" cocaine has been linked<lb/>
to three homicides in the past five<lb/>
weeks in Greensboro, and Dunn<lb/>
police say it's the reason a man<lb/>
was beaten to death with a brick<lb/>
last summer on a city street.<lb/>
"I've had many a junkie tell<lb/>
me, you suck on that pipe one<lb/>
time and vou're in love. One<lb/>
time said Michael Grimes, a<lb/>
Wilmington-based agent for the<lb/>
U.S. Drug Enforcement Admini-<lb/>
stration. "They're just going to get<lb/>
hooked. Teriod. All of them<lb/>
Law officers say crack, long<lb/>
Bureau of Investigation, told the<lb/>
Greensboro News &amp; Records.<lb/>
"Some of the child abuse cases<lb/>
we're seeing are tied back to it<lb/>
"It's the growing way to use<lb/>
cocaine in the state Dunn said.<lb/>
Crack, a pure granular form<lb/>
of cocaine that is smoked, made<lb/>
its debut in the state about two<lb/>
summers ago, brought north from<lb/>
Florida by migrant farm workers,<lb/>
drug-enforcement officials guess.<lb/>
Since then, it has gained a<lb/>
foothold in several<lb/>
Last week, Greensboro police<lb/>
say, 20-year-old Christopher<lb/>
Caviness bludgeoned his 45-year-<lb/>
old father, Charles, to death with a<lb/>
lead pipe while the elder Caviness<lb/>
was in bed. Police say Christo-<lb/>
pher Caviness, who has been<lb/>
charged with murder, killed his<lb/>
father while stealing money to<lb/>
buy more crack during a night-<lb/>
long binge.<lb/>
Two other L.reensrxro homi-<lb/>
cides since Dec. 30 are attributed<lb/>
small towns<lb/>
ami counties flanking Interstate to crack deals gone sour, police<lb/>
95 and spread west to the Tied- said. Beginning in spring 1986,<lb/>
the scourge of New York and mont. As in big cities, users tend chemists in the SBl's drug-testing<lb/>
Washington ghettos, is com- to be poor blacks in their teens or laboratory tried to list all of their<lb/>
20s who can'l afford powder co- crack cocaine receipts separately<lb/>
caine. from powder cocaine but re-<lb/>
Crack, which takes its name turned to a single classification in<lb/>
from the "cracking" apart of one January 1987.<lb/>
rock-hard chunk from another,<lb/>
usually costs about $20 for a tiny<lb/>
manding a growing share of the<lb/>
drug trade in towns and cities<lb/>
across North Carolina.<lb/>
We're seeing more homi-<lb/>
cides, more crimes of violence<lb/>
related to the drug. Some of the<lb/>
killings we've seen in armed rob- bag of two or three chunks, but<lb/>
benes came because people were comes as cheap as $8 a bag. What<lb/>
on it and overreacting Charles the buyer gets is an intense high<lb/>
Dunn, deputy director of the State that lasts 15 to 20 minutes.<lb/>
"We stopped when so much<lb/>
of it started to be crack said<lb/>
Ralph Keaton, an assistant deputy<lb/>
director of the SRI. "It's just mush-<lb/>
roomed.<lb/>
Of about 1,100 drug samples<lb/>
sent to the lab each month, about<lb/>
half are cocaine, and of that por-<lb/>
tion, typically 20 to 40 are crack,<lb/>
Keaton estimates.<lb/>
Among the counties sending<lb/>
a disproportionate number of<lb/>
crack cases to the lab: Hamett,<lb/>
Johnston and Nash, all in the east<lb/>
and all temporary homes of large<lb/>
numbers of migrant farm workers<lb/>
during the spring and summer.<lb/>
"It was introduced here, and I<lb/>
guess a lot of people liked it said<lb/>
William D. Powell, police chief in<lb/>
the Harnett County town of Dunn<lb/>
since June 1987. Last year, more<lb/>
than 100 of the 159 drug arrests in<lb/>
the town of 10,000 involved crack.<lb/>
"I had seen crack only once or<lb/>
twice before I came here. I've seen<lb/>
it so much now I'm sick of it he<lb/>
said. "1 hate to say it, but we al-<lb/>
most like to get a marijuana or<lb/>
regular cocaine case. It's like a<lb/>
change of pace<lb/>
Barbara Bush discusses her role<lb/>
at home in the White House<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP? Two<lb/>
weeks after moving into the most<lb/>
prestigious home in America,<lb/>
Barbara Bush cannot conceal her<lb/>
excitement. For starters, there's<lb/>
the collection of presidential<lb/>
china: "Grover Cleveland at<lb/>
lunch today Abraham Lincolm<lb/>
yesterday. Can you believe that?"<lb/>
There's more. "The views are<lb/>
pretty spectaoar she savs, not-<lb/>
ing she can aze directlv at the<lb/>
Oval Office from her second-floor<lb/>
office in the White House. "See, I<lb/>
can see him right there Mrs.<lb/>
Bush savs, pointing across the<lb/>
Rose Garden to the office occu-<lb/>
pied bv her husband, President<lb/>
Rush. '<lb/>
In the Lincoln Bedroom, Mrs.<lb/>
Rush shows off a felt-covered<lb/>
frame that contains one of only<lb/>
five copies of the Gettysburg<lb/>
Address. "This is the only one<lb/>
signed and dated. You can read<lb/>
that.  Isn't that amazing?"<lb/>
"The Library of Congress<lb/>
man who was up here one day? I<lb/>
showed it. to-him and he looked<lb/>
absolutely green A canopy bed<lb/>
on the second-floor "was where<lb/>
the four presidents before Reagan<lb/>
slept M rs. Bush says as she leads<lb/>
a visitor on a tour of the presiden-<lb/>
tial residence. "Pretty grand,<lb/>
huh?"<lb/>
In an interview with The<lb/>
Associated Press, Mrs. Bush said<lb/>
she "felt right at home trom the<lb/>
very first moment I ler husband,<lb/>
she said, is "exactly the same" and<lb/>
has not changed since moving up<lb/>
from vice president under Ronald<lb/>
Reagan.<lb/>
However, she said everyone<lb/>
else has changed and "ever) body<lb/>
treats you differently when<lb/>
you're president She said her<lb/>
husband has an "enormous job<lb/>
'I really do not lobby George<lb/>
Push his wife said. "I don't<lb/>
lobby anyone<lb/>
Despite the intense demands<lb/>
of his office, Bush does not seem<lb/>
weighed dow n by the job, his wife<lb/>
said. "I should tell you 'yes' but<lb/>
no he sleeps like a baby she<lb/>
said, "because he knows he's<lb/>
human. I mean, he's been around<lb/>
the presidency so long that I think<lb/>
he really feels he can do the best<lb/>
job that can be done<lb/>
She said Rush awakens every<lb/>
morning about 6 a.m. and has<lb/>
coffee and juice in bed while read-<lb/>
??<lb/>
flUN<lb/>
????<lb/>
line'<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
1 9J <lb/>
?f ?<lb/>
m<lb/>
Coming Attractions<lb/>
Has he philosophized about ing morning newpapers? about<lb/>
it? "No. But he's absolutely deter-<lb/>
mined to do the best job he can. I<lb/>
see my job as trving to take some<lb/>
of that pressure off him Mrs.<lb/>
Bush said.<lb/>
"I see that as my job to try to<lb/>
not to talk about those problems<lb/>
and also? do not talk when he s<lb/>
working. I mean. I think that's a<lb/>
big part of it she said. "Because<lb/>
he knows with me, hope, that he<lb/>
can curl up with his problems and<lb/>
studv them and he's not going to<lb/>
have me badgering him about<lb/>
something else<lb/>
five in all? and scanning the<lb/>
White House news summary. He<lb/>
also watches morning television<lb/>
shows before leaving for the Oval<lb/>
Office about 7 a.m.<lb/>
Mrs. Bush said the president<lb/>
returns to the residence between 6<lb/>
p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Does he bring<lb/>
work home?<lb/>
"Yes, he always has his wife<lb/>
said. "He does a lot of reading.<lb/>
And he does an awful lot of per-<lb/>
sonal writing. He brings home<lb/>
mail, works on it. He gets his little<lb/>
briefcase sent up ahead, full of<lb/>
work<lb/>
Rapes at Duke<lb/>
anser students<lb/>
DURHAM (AP)? After sev-<lb/>
eral rapes at and around Duke<lb/>
.University in recent months, the<lb/>
mood among students is one of<lb/>
betraval. "The university commu-<lb/>
nity is viewed by them as their<lb/>
home, and home is a safe place,<lb/>
where we always go all our lives<lb/>
for a feeling of security said<lb/>
Suzanne Wasiolek, dean for stu-<lb/>
dent life.<lb/>
"Their home is being in-<lb/>
vaded she said. "The one place<lb/>
they can feel invulnerable is at<lb/>
home, and suddenly that sense of<lb/>
securitv is being taken away from<lb/>
them<lb/>
Women at Duke are packing<lb/>
Mace, hair spray and whistles to<lb/>
protect themselves after the latest<lb/>
in a series of sexual assaults, but<lb/>
they also are dealing with issues<lb/>
that go beyound the attacks them-<lb/>
selves. Some men and women see<lb/>
the rapes not only in terms of<lb/>
phvsical attack, but in terms of the<lb/>
female right to equal freedom of<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
They fear the rapes might<lb/>
split the' town and university be-<lb/>
cause many seem to assume the<lb/>
rapists are from outside the cam-<lb/>
pus. They are worried that all<lb/>
black men suddenly are being<lb/>
viewed with suspicion.<lb/>
Some are infuriated at what<lb/>
thev view as inadequate ?security<lb/>
measures. Students' sense of se-<lb/>
curity began to be shaken in April,<lb/>
when a Duke student was raped<lb/>
in her dorm room.<lb/>
A man was arrested, pleaded<lb/>
guilty to rape and was sentenced<lb/>
to 40 years in prison. The student<lb/>
has since filed suit against the<lb/>
university, saying security was<lb/>
inadequate.<lb/>
In the fall, there was a rash ot<lb/>
assaults and break-ins in the<lb/>
nearbv Trinity Park neighbor-<lb/>
hoodwhere three women were<lb/>
raped in their homes in Septem-<lb/>
ber Police think those rapes are<lb/>
related.  ,a<lb/>
Two more rapes occurred late<lb/>
in the year. On Nov. 8, a man<lb/>
armed with a screwdriver<lb/>
knocked on a student's Centtal<lb/>
Campus apartment, forced h I<lb/>
way in and raped the student.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
Abortions from 13 to 18 weeks at additional cost. Preg-<lb/>
nancy Test, Birth Control, and Problem Pregnancy<lb/>
Counseling. For further Information, call 832-0535 (toll<lb/>
free number : 1-800-532-5384) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.<lb/>
weekdays. General anesthesia available.<lb/>
LOW COST ABORTIONS UP TO 12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
STUDENT UNION OPEN HOUSE ,<lb/>
Wednesday, February 15 in the Coffeehouse basement<lb/>
of Mendenhall.<lb/>
FREE PIZZA with Student Union coupon,<lb/>
i Come by and meet your entertainers of ECU.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Committees of Student Union<lb/>
U.S. College Comedy Competition<lb/>
Tuesday, February 7 at 8 pm in Mendenhall Rm. 244.<lb/>
Comedians- Prepare a three minute routine and win a<lb/>
shot at Comedy, Fame and Fortune<lb/>
Open to all ECU Students<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Special Events Committee<lb/>
ILLUMINA ART COMPETITION '89<lb/>
Entry dates February 15-17. 3 - 5 pm<lb/>
Mendenhall. Rm. 221<lb/>
$3.00 fee per entry - 3 entry limit per person<lb/>
1st Place - $175.00<lb/>
2nd Place - $125.00<lb/>
Y 3rd Place - $75.00<lb/>
 5 Honorable Mentions - $25 each<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union Visual Arts Committee<lb/>
 Movies of the Week<lb/>
BIRD -R<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 8th<lb/>
SWEET HEARTS DANCE - R<lb/>
February 9-12<lb/>
r<lb/>
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CHINATOWN<lb/>
EXPRESS<lb/>
COUpOIl nsWOisVMMBBMI<lb/>
FREE DRINK<lb/>
with purchase of Luncheon or<lb/>
Dinner combo special.<lb/>
(12 oz. soft drink or tea)<lb/>
Lunch Special<lb/>
11:30am-4:00pm $2.95<lb/>
Dinner Combo Special<lb/>
4:00pm-Close $3.39<lb/>
?Two Entrees -Fried Rice<lb/>
?OneEggroll .Soup<lb/>
?Fortune Cookie<lb/>
218-B E. 5th St.<lb/>
(University Arcade)<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
(919)757-1183<lb/>
Free Delivery<lb/>
Mon. - Fri.<lb/>
4:30-9:00pm<lb/>
(coupon not<lb/>
valid on Delivery)<lb/>
expires 3 31 89<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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J<lb/>
<lb/>
All films are shown at 8 pm in Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre unless otherwise stated and are FREE to ECU Students<lb/>
with vaUd ECU I.D.<lb/>
?CACMNG OUT TO S??Vt IOU<lb/>
If you're thinking of going somewhere fun<lb/>
for Spring Break YOU'RE LATE!<lb/>
Get off your hindparts and get down to<lb/>
ITG Travel at the Plaza!<lb/>
Oh Yeah, Bring your Wallet.<lb/>
Air Tickets, Amtrak Packages,<lb/>
and Cruises are in limited quantity!<lb/>
<lb/>
Check out our low airfares and vacation packages<lb/>
to the Surf &amp; Sand, or the Ice &amp; Snow,<lb/>
and everywhere in between.<lb/>
Call ITG and Save!<lb/>
TRAVEL CENTER<lb/>
355-5075<lb/>
MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00 A.M-5:00 P.M.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058122_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 7, 1989<lb/>
<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
Immediately. Non-smoker. To share 3<lb/>
bedroom house. Will have own bedroom.<lb/>
175.00 per month plus 13 utilities. 5<lb/>
minutes from school. Call-Pamela at 758-<lb/>
7142.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Stratford<lb/>
Arms. To share 2 bedroom apt 1 2 utili-<lb/>
ties. Free cable. $170month. Call 756-<lb/>
5183 or 324-3354 on weekends.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Bedroom in house. Near<lb/>
ECU campus. Utilities included. Whole<lb/>
house privileges $165 00 per month. Call<lb/>
758-1274 after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 1 bedroom upstairs apt.<lb/>
Screened in porch. Utilities included.<lb/>
Near ECU campus $250.00 per month.<lb/>
Call 758-1274 after 6.00 p.m.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED Strat-<lb/>
ford Arms. S165.00mo. plus 1 2 electric.<lb/>
Private room. Available now Call 355-<lb/>
4547 Ask for Brad.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: To<lb/>
share 3 bedroom apartment at Eastbrook.<lb/>
Onlv S120.00month and 13 utilties.<lb/>
Available March 1st. Call 752-3678.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To share 3 bed<lb/>
room apt. with 2 other females. $173.00<lb/>
per month plus 13 utilities, Plantation<lb/>
apts 355-6731.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED IMMEDI-<lb/>
ATELY: Tar River Estates. Private room<lb/>
$118 75 per month.<lb/>
SERVICES OFFERED<lb/>
PARTY: If you are having a party and<lb/>
need a D.J. for the best music available for<lb/>
parties: Dance, Top 40, it Beach. Call 355-<lb/>
2781 and ask for Morgan.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING AND PHOTO-<lb/>
COPYING SERVICES: We offer typing<lb/>
and photocopying services. We also sell<lb/>
software and computer liskettes. 24<lb/>
hours in and .out. Guaranteed typing on<lb/>
paper up to 20 hand written pages. We<lb/>
repair computers and printers also. Low-<lb/>
est hourly rate in town. SDF Professional<lb/>
Computer Services, 106 East 5th Street<lb/>
fteside Cubbies) Greenville, NC 72-<lb/>
3694.<lb/>
NEED A D.J Hire the EI.BO D.J call early<lb/>
and book for your formal or party. 758-<lb/>
1700, ask for Dillon or leave a message.<lb/>
PAPERS TYPEDRESUMES COM-<lb/>
POSED: Call 756-9136<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
79 FIREBIRD FOR SALE: Good condi-<lb/>
tion. V6, automatic, AMFM, air condi-<lb/>
tion, new tires. $1750.00. lohn: 551-2460<lb/>
(day), 830-5295 (eve.)<lb/>
ATTENTION - GOVERNMENT<lb/>
SEIZED VEHICLES: From $100.00.<lb/>
Fords, Mercedes, Corvettes, Chevvs Sur-<lb/>
plus Buvers Guide. 602-838-S8S5 Ext. A-<lb/>
5285.<lb/>
ATTENTION - GOVERNMENT<lb/>
HOMES: From 51 (U-repair) Delinquent<lb/>
tax property Repossessions. Call 602-S38-<lb/>
SS85 Ext. GH 5285.<lb/>
LASER PRINTER LTERS HP and<lb/>
Apple laser prir.ter toner cartridges can be<lb/>
recycled' Huge S$ sav:ngs. Satisfactior<lb/>
guaranteed. For details call RANDMOM<lb/>
at 1-800-332-365$<lb/>
AMSTRAD PC 1512 IBM compatible, 20<lb/>
MB hard drive. 36C 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 it business software<lb/>
included. Make offer. 756-6805.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Earih Cruiser, like new S125<lb/>
neg. 758-8891.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Schwin Beach Cruiser. Like<lb/>
new?S100. 758-8891<lb/>
FOR SALE: Sachs Moped 1980.450 miles.<lb/>
Excellent to get around campus. $500.758-<lb/>
8891.<lb/>
CLOTHES GALORE Sizes 6-14. Guess<lb/>
Gasoline jeans, outfits priced from $1-<lb/>
25.00. Guvs stuff too. 355-6731.<lb/>
10 SPFED BIKE FOR SALE: Girls free<lb/>
spirit, very good condition. 50 dollar, 752-<lb/>
4224 after 6:00 p.m. Day time call 752-2814<lb/>
leave message.<lb/>
MOTORCYCLE FOR SALE: Yamaha 360<lb/>
street bike. Two helmets. Good condition.<lb/>
$600.00. Call 752-4224 after 6, daytime call<lb/>
752-2814, leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Mako electric guitar and 100<lb/>
watt Gorilla amplifier. Good condition.<lb/>
$430 value?selling for $200. Free R&amp;R<lb/>
instruction video. Call Wayne 752-1182.<lb/>
BIKE FOR SALE: Panasonic 2000 10<lb/>
speed. Like new, onlv ridden once. Retail<lb/>
S225.00, sell for $7500. Must sell?355-<lb/>
0764.<lb/>
IBM: Color monitor with stand, alsoCGA<lb/>
card; like new, S250.00. Phone: 758-2400,<lb/>
ask for Irish.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<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. Marv 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, PO Box 1221, Du-<lb/>
luth, GA 30136-1221. (404) 873-9042.<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 vou need It's a little work for alot of<lb/>
fun' Call 1-800-727-0005.<lb/>
TUTORS NEEDED: For all business<lb/>
classes. Contact Lisa at Academic Coun-<lb/>
seling, Dept of Athletics 757-6282 or 757-<lb/>
1677.<lb/>
RESORT HOTELS: Cruisehnes, 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; I lilton 1 lead, SC 29938.<lb/>
NEW ENGLAND BROTHERflSTER<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/>
Hockev, Soccer and Volleyball; 25 Tennis<lb/>
openings; also Archery, Riflery and Bik-<lb/>
ing; other openings include Performing<lb/>
Arts, Fine Arts, Yearbook, Phonography, <lb/>
Cooking, Sewing, Rollerskating, Rock-<lb/>
etry, Ropes, Camp Craft; AD Waterfront<lb/>
activities (Swimming, Skiing, Sailing,<lb/>
Windsurfing, CanoeingKayak). Inquire<lb/>
 &amp; D Camping (Boys) 190 Linden Avc<lb/>
Glen Ridge, NJ 07028; Action Camping<lb/>
(Girls) 263 Main Road, Montville, N<lb/>
07045. Phone (Bovs) 201-429-8522; (Girls)<lb/>
201-316-6660.<lb/>
ATTENTION - HIRING Government<lb/>
jobs - your area. Many immediate open-<lb/>
ings without waiting list or test S17,840-<lb/>
$69,485. Call 602-838-8885. Ext. R5285.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS: Also Cruiseships.<lb/>
$10,000-S105,000vr 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/>
Karts, 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/>
SOCCER COACHES NEEDED: The<lb/>
Greenville Recreation and Parks Depart-<lb/>
ment is recruiting for 10-14 part-time soc-<lb/>
cer coaches for the Spring Indoor Soccer<lb/>
program. Applicants must possess some<lb/>
knowledge in soccer skills and have pa-<lb/>
tience to work with youth. Applicants<lb/>
must be able to coach young people, ages<lb/>
5-18 in soccer fundamentals. Hours ap-<lb/>
proximately 3-7 p.m. Monday through<lb/>
Friday. Some night and weekend coach-<lb/>
ing. Program will extend from March 13,<lb/>
1989 to May, 1989. Salary rate starts at<lb/>
$3.55 hr. Application will be accepted<lb/>
starting Mon February 6 Contact Ben<lb/>
Jamess at 830-4550 or 830-4543.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
SINGERS WANTED If you've sung in a<lb/>
chorus and ould be interested in a low-<lb/>
pressure singing experience, come and<lb/>
sing in Choral Lab. 3-4 Mon. it Wed. Fac-<lb/>
ulty Welcome. Call Dr. Rhonda Fleming,<lb/>
757-6331 for more information.<lb/>
BIG MONEY! BIG PRIZES Ware Talent<lb/>
Show coming soo i!<lb/>
BE ON THE LOOKOUT: For information<lb/>
concerning Ware Talen Show coming<lb/>
soon. Big money! Big prizes!<lb/>
THE ALPHA XI DELTA PLEDGES<lb/>
Would like to c nnounce the sale of Mono-<lb/>
gram Lollipops for American Lung Asso-<lb/>
ciation. Come bv 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/>
LOST ID behind the Attic Sat. n'ght<lb/>
Initials on ID. are VS.?was in blue<lb/>
leather I.D. holder. $50 reward if returned.<lb/>
Please contact Pam or Tricia at 752-6105 or<lb/>
758-6731. PLEASE'<lb/>
GIRLS, GUYS: Poolside parties and ma-<lb/>
jor tanning at Davtona Beach, Spring<lb/>
Break '89. Call Keith, Kelly, Ron and<lb/>
Wayne at 752 4693 for more information.<lb/>
NEED HELP: With house cleaning, yard<lb/>
work, baby sitting, etc.? RENT-A-<lb/>
RROTl IER, 18 Feb. 1989. Call PI Q SIGMA<lb/>
PI 9 a.m. - 10 p.m. M-F 758 7535 or 752<lb/>
9723.<lb/>
THE BROTHERS OF THETA CHI:<lb/>
Would like to congratulate the following<lb/>
men: Mike Brown, Luke Fisher, Tommy<lb/>
Goodin, Tnpp Little, Paul Palermo, David<lb/>
Pureza, David Russer, Donald Sawyer,<lb/>
John Scot, Paul Southerland, David<lb/>
White. They're the new Theta pledge<lb/>
class. We're glad you chose Theta Chi,<lb/>
new it's time to be the best pledge class<lb/>
wj've ever had. Roll Chi!<lb/>
BARBARA LAMB: She's the best! Con<lb/>
gratulations on making Panhellenic Pre '<lb/>
So here's to vou, and vour new acquisi-<lb/>
tion' We knew only you could fill that po-<lb/>
sition! We're behind you, through thick<lb/>
and thin We'll support you from not til<lb/>
the end! ?Love, Alpha Xi Delta Sisters it<lb/>
Pledges!<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA: Thursday night just<lb/>
couldn't be beat! Partying down, at fa-<lb/>
mous Third Street! It was quite a nigh<lb/>
raising the dead?AZD and PIKA,<lb/>
ENOUGH SAID<lb/>
PIKE'S: How 'bout that Thursday morn<lb/>
ing breakfast!? The ONLY way to start a<lb/>
GREAT day ?Love, the AZD's.<lb/>
AOPI: Supcrbowl Sunday was a definate<lb/>
blast! No matter whether it was a kick,<lb/>
run, or pass. The Bengals gave the Niners<lb/>
a scare, but for the most part, none of us<lb/>
cared, cause our MVP was the imported<lb/>
beer! So if y'all are willin there's no need<lb/>
to fear, we'd love to meet ya the same time<lb/>
every year! ?The Theta Chi's.<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR WITH THETA CHI: And<lb/>
Pantana's on Wed. night 9 to cloiing.<lb/>
P.Bs is the best place to be, so let's i 'ike<lb/>
that line even longer than usual Plus,<lb/>
classes before 12 on Thurs have been<lb/>
cancelled! Whata bargain!<lb/>
THETA CHI: And Pantana Bob's present<lb/>
I lappv I lour Wed. 9 to closing Let's start<lb/>
Spring early this year and begin the ECU<lb/>
four day weekend in style.<lb/>
DZ'S: Thursday night was really hot. We<lb/>
couldn't do another shot. Kamikaze's got<lb/>
us going. After the beer bongs there was<lb/>
no slowing. The party turned in'o 2 dance<lb/>
Oh, Kinsey, have you found your pants?<lb/>
We had a blast. Let's do it again! ?The<lb/>
KA's.<lb/>
AZD'S: Thanks for helping us out at rush.<lb/>
Also, we had a killer time at the party fol-<lb/>
lowing rush! Let's do it again real soon. ?<lb/>
Phi Taus.<lb/>
PHI TAU PLEDGES: Congratulations on<lb/>
choosing the best fraternity on campus?<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau?a Legend of All Time. ?<lb/>
The Brothers.<lb/>
GIRLS: KA little sister rush begins to-<lb/>
night. Come by and meet the brothers and<lb/>
hi' sisters of Kappa Alpha 8:00-11:00 at<lb/>
the KA House.<lb/>
PAMELA JEAN: The Rose Bowl Queen'<lb/>
Congratulations! We luv ya. ?Robbie,<lb/>
I losen &amp; Blah.<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHAS: Congratula<lb/>
tions to the new AM's. ?Crescent Girls.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
HEY GREEKS Come hear nationally<lb/>
known speaker Bob Boyd at the ADPi<lb/>
house Tuesday, February 7 at 9 p.m. Tie<lb/>
topic is Love, Sex, and AIDS and it is<lb/>
sponsored by Campus Crusade for Chr t.<lb/>
ANGEL FLIGHT RUSH Monday, Feb. 6,<lb/>
7:00 p.m. at the Detachment Tuesday,<lb/>
Feb. 7, 7:00 p.m. at Colonel Patton's<lb/>
House. Wednesday, Feb. 8, 7:00 p.m. at<lb/>
Chico's. For more information, call 72-<lb/>
5431 or 752-9334.<lb/>
PHI TAU LITTLE SISTERS: Bring your<lb/>
girlfriends to rush tonight. The Brothers<lb/>
only want the best candidates for little<lb/>
sisters. After all, the best already are little<lb/>
sisters!<lb/>
PHI TAU BROTHERS: Can't wait to<lb/>
party tonight. We are bringing over some<lb/>
great girls to be little sisters at the best<lb/>
fraternity! ?Love, Theta Kappa Tau Little<lb/>
Sisters.<lb/>
VAMP CREW: William, Jimbo, Markus,<lb/>
and Scooby?I love you guys! We need to<lb/>
road trip again real soon! ?Love, the<lb/>
Nickster.<lb/>
DELTA ZLTAS. . . : Thanks for help;ng<lb/>
makeour rush that much more succcs' ul<lb/>
Maybe you could invite us over for dinner<lb/>
sometime. ?With much love, the Broth-<lb/>
ers and Pledges of Kappa Sigma.<lb/>
TO A SPECIAL ALPHA PHI: I had a<lb/>
great time at the formal Thanks for aim-<lb/>
ing with me. ?Clint.<lb/>
TO ALL NtW SORORITY SISTERS:<lb/>
The Brothers of Sigma Alpha Epsilon<lb/>
would like to congratulate you on vour<lb/>
success. May Greek life be all vou want it<lb/>
to be and more.<lb/>
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON AFTER-<lb/>
NOON DELIGHT Fridays at Grogs<lb/>
Beverage specials and dixrs open at "30<lb/>
Check out Kev, the host with the most<lb/>
AZD-PIKA DUEL BASH: Like 3rd Street<lb/>
wasn't enough, we pushed on to the Fi,<lb/>
where we really got hammered' Thanks<lb/>
for a thrashin' good time ?The Pikes.<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
WIN, LOSE OR DRAW: Coming Febru<lb/>
ary 13 ?Pika<lb/>
HEY GIRLS: Pi Kappa Alpha LiT Sister<lb/>
Rush tonight 7-10 Come experience the<lb/>
finest Ul' sister program on campus The<lb/>
Attic.<lb/>
SIGMA BASKETBALL TEAM: We re s,<lb/>
lucky to have such a wonderful team<lb/>
representing us Way to go on your past<lb/>
win and good luck the rest of the season<lb/>
?Love, Sigmas.<lb/>
KATHRYN SEPENZIS: Congratulations<lb/>
on being KA pinned' The best to you -<lb/>
Love the Sigmas<lb/>
KELLY GREER: Congratulations on get<lb/>
ting Panhellenic Vice President ?Love<lb/>
the Sigmas<lb/>
SIG EPS: We had a great time at the social,<lb/>
it looks like you all got a great group of<lb/>
guys. Let's get together again soon! ?<lb/>
Love the Sigmas<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA CRESCENT<lb/>
GIRLS: Welcome back, thank you for last<lb/>
semester, we had a blast on Monday<lb/>
nights I lope to see ou back for Rush Feb.<lb/>
7it 8 at 8 p m. at tiit I iouse. ?The Broth-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR At the Fizz This and<lb/>
every Thursday night 9pm until ?Pi<lb/>
Kappa Alpha<lb/>
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
DI$feAY CLASSIFIED<lb/>
HOUSE OF HATS<lb/>
for<lb/>
LADIES HATS AND<lb/>
ACCESSORIES<lb/>
(Latest Styles and<lb/>
Colors)<lb/>
403 Evans St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC27834 .<lb/>
(Dotvntown Mall) 758-3025<lb/>
VALENTINES DAY<lb/>
ROSES?<lb/>
CALL BONITAS<lb/>
BOUTIQUE OF<lb/>
FLOWERS AND GIFTS<lb/>
for SpecialPhone 355-<lb/>
7888. Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Center.<lb/>
(just down from K-mart)<lb/>
WOULD YOU LIKE<lb/>
i TO LEARN TO SHAG?<lb/>
5 Weeks<lb/>
Tuesdays<lb/>
$25.00<lb/>
SHAG LESSONS<lb/>
At the new<lb/>
Ramada Inn<lb/>
Starts Feb. 14<lb/>
Beginner 7:00<lb/>
Intermediate 8:00<lb/>
Advanced 9:00<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/>
I<lb/>
OUR RESUMES<lb/>
MAKE A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE<lb/>
-?<lb/>
fast cones<lb/>
for fast nues<lb/>
?<lb/>
ACCU :<lb/>
ESCOPY<lb/>
THt HtSUMf PfOPtf<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
J<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
WE DELIVER!<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
5:00 pm - 12:30 am<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
I<lb/>
PITT COUNTY DRIVING<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
SERVING ALL AGES<lb/>
PHONB:<lb/>
355-6552 (9:00 - 5:00)<lb/>
756-7457 (After5:00)<lb/>
1807 SOUTH CHARLES STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC 27858<lb/>
Boxers Wanted:<lb/>
TKE BOXING<lb/>
March 28, 29, 30<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Boxer Registration<lb/>
757-3042 or 830-1094<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Christian Fellowship will be held everv<lb/>
Thurs at 6 p.m in the Culture Center.<lb/>
COLLEGE WORK STUDY<lb/>
If you have been awarded college work<lb/>
study for Fall Semester and or Spring<lb/>
Semester, you are encouraged to contact<lb/>
the Co-op office about off-campus place-<lb/>
ments Call 757-6979 or come by the GCB,<lb/>
room 2028.<lb/>
LOST?<lb/>
Something missing in your life? We've<lb/>
found it and we want to share it with you.<lb/>
Jenlans Art Auditorium. EVERY Fri.<lb/>
night at 7:00.<lb/>
CAMPUS CHALLENGE<lb/>
If you are challenged everyday with prob-<lb/>
lems that you find hard to overcome, join<lb/>
us for the uncompromised word of God.<lb/>
Every Fri. night at 7:00 in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
TRAVEL COMMITTEE<lb/>
Hey you guys! Come join die fun on the<lb/>
Student Union Travel Committee's cruise<lb/>
to the BAHAMAS over Spring Break.<lb/>
There will be dancing, swimming, relax-<lb/>
ing and tons of other things to do aboard<lb/>
ship. All transportation and "all you can<lb/>
eat" on the Carnival ship The ship will<lb/>
dock at Freeport and Nassau, so come on<lb/>
and shop until you drop in the world's<lb/>
biggest marketplace!<lb/>
CCF<lb/>
CCF would like to invite you to our bible<lb/>
study every Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Ra wl 130.<lb/>
Bring your Bible and a friend as we study<lb/>
the book of Hebrews. Call Jim at 752-7199<lb/>
if you need a ride or further info.<lb/>
ART GALLERY<lb/>
Cailery Security Postion, must be quali-<lb/>
fied for university work study program.<lb/>
Hours: Mon. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sat. 10 a.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 ? 75?-o?65 or<lb/>
Lou Anne 757-6336.<lb/>
TUTORS NEEDED<lb/>
Tutors needed for all business classes.<lb/>
Contact Lisa at Academic Counseling,<lb/>
Dept. of Athletics ? 757-6282 or 757-1677.<lb/>
RACOUETBALL DOUBLES<lb/>
A registration meeting for Intramural rac-<lb/>
quetball doubles teams will be held Feb. 7<lb/>
at 5:00 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 I.D.<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 arc invited to sign-up. The goal wiy<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/>
FINANCIAL AID QRIENTA:<lb/>
TIQN<lb/>
Information and applications for 1989-90'<lb/>
Feb. 9, 4:00 p.m Hendrix Theatre?MSC.<lb/>
SOPHOMORES AND IRS<lb/>
Earn over $600.00 this summer Earn<lb/>
$100.00 a month during your last two<lb/>
years 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/>
be 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 Capt. Steve L. Jones, Rawl<lb/>
344, 757-6974.<lb/>
ILLUMINA<lb/>
The Ultimate Chance for all students to<lb/>
show their artistic talents! The Spring art<lb/>
competition will be accepting entries Feb.<lb/>
15-17 from 35 m in rm. 221 Menden-<lb/>
hall. Entry fee is $3.00entry and each<lb/>
pwttw may submit 3 pieces. First place<lb/>
$175.00, 2nd place $125.00, 3rd place<lb/>
$75.00 and 5 honorable mentions of<lb/>
$25.00. The Illumina reception will be Feb.<lb/>
20,7-9 p.m. in MehdenMf Gallery. Unife-<lb/>
lected pieces must be picked up by Feb. 19<lb/>
or no later than Feb. 20 by 3 p.m. due to<lb/>
lack of storage.<lb/>
PAFTICIPANTS NEEDED<lb/>
Participants for asthma research study.<lb/>
Males age 18-45, with mild to moderate<lb/>
asthma. Compensation available. Please<lb/>
call 551-3159.<lb/>
INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE<lb/>
Interested in spending this summer in<lb/>
remote parts of the world? 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/>
major can apply. Length of stay varies<lb/>
from 3-6 months. For more info contact<lb/>
Marianne Exum (h) 830-9450 it (w) 757-<lb/>
6271. Hurry! Applications Deadline?<lb/>
Feb. If.<lb/>
ECU NAVIGATORS<lb/>
"Flight 730 the weekly get-together of<lb/>
the Navigitors, continues its streak of<lb/>
good Bible study every Thur 7:30-9 in<lb/>
Biology 103. The non-stop, no-frills meet-<lb/>
ing is designed to help you develop a<lb/>
closer walk?with God. In-flight refresh-<lb/>
ments served. No ticket required; just<lb/>
reserve your time.<lb/>
CANDY-P-GRAMS<lb/>
Inter-varsity rill be selling candy-o-<lb/>
frams for Valentine's Day in front of the<lb/>
tudent Store Feb. 8-10. Proceeds will go<lb/>
towards Habakkuk coming to ECU in late<lb/>
March<lb/>
COOPERATIVE ED.<lb/>
Cooperative Ed , a free service offered by<lb/>
the Univerity, is designed to help vou find<lb/>
career-related work experience before<lb/>
you graduate V e would like to extend an<lb/>
invitation to al' students to attend a Co-oi.?<lb/>
info Seminar in the GCB Seminars for<lb/>
spring '89: Feb 9, 4 p.m , room 2016; Feb.<lb/>
13, 4 p.m , room 2016; Feb 16, 1 p.m<lb/>
rooml014;Feb 20,1 p.m room 1014; Feb.<lb/>
23,4pm,room 2016;Feb 27,4p.mroom<lb/>
2016<lb/>
PHI BETA SICMA<lb/>
A formal smoker will be held Feb 9 at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. in NGB, room 2002. All interested<lb/>
voung men are invited to attend. BLUE<lb/>
PHI!<lb/>
AMNESTY INTL<lb/>
Amnestsy Intl. Group 402 is looking<lb/>
persons to assist in its "Brazilian Ca<lb/>
paign " The group meets every f<lb/>
Wed. at 8 p.m. at St. Paul's Ep<lb/>
Church, 401E. 4th St in the upper<lb/>
enter from the 4th St. entrance<lb/>
meeting: Feb. 22 Students welcome!<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058122_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 7,1989 7<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ASALTOfAMEAl<lb/>
FINANCIAL MGMT. ASSOC.<lb/>
The Financial Mgmt. Assoc. will hold a<lb/>
meeting on Feb 8 at 430 p.m. in room 3009<lb/>
GCB. The guest speaker will be Mr. Archie<lb/>
Jennings of Shearson Lehman Hutton,<lb/>
Inc. All are welcome to attend the meet-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
HEART FOR ART<lb/>
Ani.ual Valentine's Dav Sale pre rented by<lb/>
School of Art Metals Department. It will<lb/>
be Fob 8-10, 13-14. Displays are to be<lb/>
found in the fover and top of the ramp (3rd<lb/>
floor Jenkins Art Bldg.<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
It vou are wondering about God's love for<lb/>
you, then come to "Prime Time" and dis-<lb/>
oovef if through fellowship and hearing<lb/>
Cod's word at Rawl in rm. 130 evtry<lb/>
Thurs. at 7:30 p m. Refreshments served.<lb/>
BCST HONOR SOCIETY<lb/>
FCL' Broadcast 1 lonor Society will meet<lb/>
Wed at 530 in Joyner, rm. 234. Pictures<lb/>
will be taken for the yearbook. All mem-<lb/>
bers should attend.<lb/>
COLLEGIATE PECA<lb/>
On Feb. 13at 2:00pm. inCCB2010, DECA<lb/>
will be having a Valentine's Day party<lb/>
The faculty and staff of the BVTE Dept are<lb/>
cordially invited. DECA members please<lb/>
plan to attend.<lb/>
WATER HOCKEY CLUB<lb/>
Underwater Hockey Club will be playing<lb/>
Wed. at S.00 p.m. at Memorial Gym. Snor-<lb/>
keling equip, nor skill is necessary, but if<lb/>
have either, please bring The next dates of<lb/>
plav will be Feb. 14 at 9:00 p.m , Feb. 15 at<lb/>
8.00 p.m. Feb 28 at 9:00p.m. and Feb. 22 at<lb/>
8 00 p.m. Every night of play will be at<lb/>
Memorial Gvm. If an v questions call Craig<lb/>
Cannon 752-7620 or Chi 752-8124. Se ev-<lb/>
er vone interested underwater.<lb/>
SOCWCJ APPLICATIONS<lb/>
FOR SPRING. 1989<lb/>
Students must have received and turned<lb/>
in their applications to the major by Feb.<lb/>
10. Faculty interviews must be completed<lb/>
bv Feb. 27. The group meeting with Prof.<lb/>
Gartman will be on March 1 &amp; 2 at 500<lb/>
p.m in Ragsdale 218. You must attend<lb/>
either the March 1 or 2 meeting.<lb/>
CABARET<lb/>
The Performing Arts Series and the Dept.<lb/>
of University Unions present CABARET,<lb/>
the smash Broadway musical. This pro-<lb/>
fessional performance will take place on<lb/>
Feb 21, 800 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
This production is being staged by Daeda-<lb/>
?4us Productions, who brought PURLIE lo-<lb/>
VVright Auditorium last year. Don't miss<lb/>
this exciting musical of decadent, delight-<lb/>
ful, and dazzling entertainment. "Life is a<lb/>
Cabaret, Old Chum, Come to the Caba-<lb/>
ret Tickets for CABARET are on sale in<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office, MSC. Telephone<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266. Office hours are 11:00<lb/>
a.m. - 6:00 p.m Mon. - Fri.<lb/>
POTISH NAT.L RADIO<lb/>
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA<lb/>
The Polish National Radio Symphony Or-<lb/>
chestra will appear as part of the Perform-<lb/>
ing Arts Series on Feb. 22, 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. Over 100 members<lb/>
strong, this symphony is led by Antoni<lb/>
Wit and features guest pianist Piotr<lb/>
Paleczny. The program for this grand<lb/>
evening includes: Strauss?DON JUAN,<lb/>
Op. 20; Chopin-CONCERTO No. 2 in F<lb/>
Minor, Op. 21; and Brahms?SYM-<lb/>
PHONY No. 2 in D Major Op. 73. Tickets<lb/>
for this event are on sale now in the Cen-<lb/>
tral Ticket Office, MSC. The number is<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266. Office hours are 11:00<lb/>
a.m. - 6:00 p.m MonFri.<lb/>
avgft FLIGHT RUSH<lb/>
Feb. 6,7:00 p.m. at the Detachment; Feb. 7<lb/>
7:00 p.m. at Colonel Patton'shouse; Feb. 8,<lb/>
7:00 p.m. at Chico's. For more info cau<lb/>
752-5431 or 752-9334.<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS<lb/>
Expressions is now accepting poetry and<lb/>
short stories for publication in the April<lb/>
issue. Articles can be left at the office or the<lb/>
Media Board secretary's office, located in<lb/>
the Publications Bldg. across from Joyner<lb/>
Library. The first issue for Spring<lb/>
semester is expected to arrive in a few<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
MSAAfi<lb/>
The Minority Student Affairs Advisory<lb/>
Board will sponsor a Black History pro-<lb/>
gram entitled: "Continuing the Legacy"<lb/>
in Jenkins Aud. on Feb. 7 at 8:00 p.m. The<lb/>
keynote speaker is Dr. Larry Smith. Music<lb/>
will be rendered by Charles Maxwell and<lb/>
the ECU Gospel Choir. Also featured on<lb/>
the program will be Calvin Cherry who<lb/>
will perform an African dance.<lb/>
WQMENS EASKETBALL<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will be back at Minges on<lb/>
Feb. 11 after a f.ve-game road trip. They<lb/>
face James Madison at 7:00 p.m. At<lb/>
halftime there will be a Quinces dinner<lb/>
giveaway and a performance by the Pure<lb/>
Gold Dancers.<lb/>
MINORITY ADVISORY<lb/>
BOARD<lb/>
In honor of Black History Month, the M AB<lb/>
will be sponsoring "Continuing the Leg-<lb/>
jy" on Feb. 7 at 8:00 p.m. in Jenkins Aud.<lb/>
Please come and help us celebrate Black<lb/>
History<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
The Graduate Mgmt. Admission Test will<lb/>
be offered at ECU on March 18. Applica-<lb/>
tion blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to GMAT, Educational Testing<lb/>
Service. Box 966-R, Princeton, NJ 08540.<lb/>
Applications must be postmarked no later<lb/>
than Feb. 15. Applications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU Testing Center, room<lb/>
105 Speight Bldg.<lb/>
NTE (SPECIALTY AREA)<lb/>
The National Teacher Examination?Spe-<lb/>
cialty Area Exams?will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on April 1. Application blanks are to<lb/>
be completed and mailed to the Educa-<lb/>
tional Testing Service, Box 911-R, Prince-<lb/>
ton, NJ 08541. Applications must be post-<lb/>
marked no later than Feb. 27. Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the ECU Testing<lb/>
Center, Room 105 Speight Bldg.<lb/>
MEDICAL COLLEGE ADMIS-<lb/>
SION TEST<lb/>
Our next meeting will be at 7:00 in rm.<lb/>
1012 GCB on Fc b. 9th. We will be having a<lb/>
guest speaker. Plan to discuss dates for a<lb/>
trip to the U.S. Supreme Court. Members<lb/>
and newcomers are asked to attend.<lb/>
RETURNED PEACE CORPS<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS<lb/>
A represen'itive from the N.C. Peace<lb/>
Corps Assoc. will be on campus Feb. 9<lb/>
from 7-9 p.m. in room 1003 GCB with a<lb/>
slide show prepared by NC RPCVs. Come<lb/>
and share your PC experiences with the<lb/>
next generation.<lb/>
BLACK FACULTY SYMPO-<lb/>
SJUM<lb/>
Crt0uSTEB(X<lb/>
f?E<lb/>
LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
 OUT<lb/>
???" Toupbff m m m m l<lb/>
FREE MEAL<lb/>
BUY ONE SHRIMP<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
GET ONE OF EQUAL SIZE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Small $5.25<lb/>
Regular $6.25<lb/>
Large $7.25<lb/>
(Beverage not included.)<lb/>
Good any time. Dine-in or Take-out.<lb/>
(Offer expires Feb. 28. 1989) m m<lb/>
FOSDiCK -<lb/>
1890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
,2903 S. Evans St.<lb/>
Takeout Orders: 756-2011<lb/>
Additional Parking Available<lb/>
V<lb/>
The new 1989 Medical College Admission<lb/>
Test 0MCAT) applications have arrived in<lb/>
the Testing Center. Speight Bldg room<lb/>
105. The next test date is April 29. Applica-<lb/>
tions must le completed and postmarked<lb/>
no later than March 31.<lb/>
CQLXEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
The College Republicans will be meeting<lb/>
in rm 212 tomorrow evening at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
All new members welcome, all old mem-<lb/>
bers strongly urged to attend.<lb/>
SERVICE AUCTION<lb/>
A Service Auction sponsored by the stu-<lb/>
dent chapter of ASID is scheduled for Feb.<lb/>
23 from 7-9 p.m. The auction will be held<lb/>
in room 205 of the Home Ec. Bldg. All<lb/>
proceeds will benefit the physically dis-<lb/>
abled. Donations are tax deductible. Serv-<lb/>
ices include: Housecleaning, baby sitting,<lb/>
car washing, yard work and window<lb/>
washing. Students &amp; faculty &amp; staff are<lb/>
encouraged to attend!<lb/>
KAYAKING CLUB<lb/>
The Kayaking Uud will meet again on<lb/>
Feb. 7. The meetings are held in Memorial<lb/>
Gvm at 830 (downstairs). Time will be<lb/>
spent in the pool learning basic skills.<lb/>
Trips will also be planned. The pool fee is<lb/>
SI 00. Newcomers are certainly welcome.<lb/>
Come down and 'yak with us.<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Members of the Organization of Black<lb/>
Faculty and Staff (OBLS) will present their<lb/>
current andor on-going research inter-<lb/>
ests during Black History Month. Presen-<lb/>
tations will be held each Mon. during the<lb/>
month of Feb. in the Ledonia Wright Afro-<lb/>
American Cultural Center from 11:30-<lb/>
1:30. Students, faculty and staff are en-<lb/>
couraged to bring a brown bag lunch and<lb/>
enjoy the discussion. Sponsored by the<lb/>
Office of Minority Student Affairs.<lb/>
SPECIAL SCREENING<lb/>
Tonight at 7 p.m. in B-04 in Joyner Library,<lb/>
see the new video, America Hurts: The<lb/>
Drug Epidemic Stay for a while and dis-<lb/>
cuss what is happening on campus con-<lb/>
cerning Substance Abuse Prevention.<lb/>
This is in conjunction with National Colle-<lb/>
giate Drug Awareness Week, Feb. 6-12.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Office of Substance<lb/>
Abuse Prevention &amp; Education. For more<lb/>
info call 757-6793 or come by 303 Erwin.<lb/>
IMPROVING STUDY SKILLS<lb/>
Learning how to improve your study<lb/>
skills for greater success in college. Th?<lb/>
following mini course and workshops can<lb/>
help you prepare for the added workload<lb/>
of college or help to increase your GPA.<lb/>
All sessions will be in 313 Wright Bldg.<lb/>
Feb. 13, Making &amp; Using Notes, 3-4:30<lb/>
p.m Feb. 14, Making &amp; Taking Notes, 3-<lb/>
430 p.m. You may attend all the topic<lb/>
sessions or choose the ones where you<lb/>
need the most improvement.<lb/>
INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Meeting every Wed. night at 7 p.m. Come<lb/>
join us for fellowship and fun. Look for<lb/>
on-campus posted announcements for<lb/>
meeting location or call 758-5082 for more<lb/>
info.<lb/>
VfrTFMTTNECANPY-O-<lb/>
GRAMS<lb/>
Valentine Candy-O-Grams will be on sale<lb/>
in front of the Student Store Wed Thurs<lb/>
it Fri. from 10 aj?. - 2 pjn. Proceeds will<lb/>
go toward the Multi-Media Production of<lb/>
"Habakkuk which will be presented<lb/>
March 27 &amp; 28. There will be free general<lb/>
admission for "Habakkuk<lb/>
CI ASS PICTURES<lb/>
Class pictures will be taken Feb. 9th &amp; 10th<lb/>
in the Buccaneer Office from 9-12 &amp; 1-4.<lb/>
This is the last chance for individual pic-<lb/>
tures to be put in the class section of the<lb/>
1989 Buccaneer!<lb/>
BAKE SALE<lb/>
Buy your sweetheart a sweet for<lb/>
Valentine's Day! The Decision Science<lb/>
Society will be sponsoring a bake sale on<lb/>
Feb. 13 from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. in front of<lb/>
the Student Store. Baked goods for sale<lb/>
will include cup cakes, cookies, and other<lb/>
edible delights. Proceeds from this sale<lb/>
will be used to fund future Decision Sci-<lb/>
ence Society activities.<lb/>
ASH WED. SERVICE<lb/>
Worship God Wed. night at 5 p.m. at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center then enjoy a<lb/>
delicious, all-you-can-eat home cooked<lb/>
meal and good fellowship. The meal is $2,<lb/>
$1.50 for members, 1 cent credit for each<lb/>
aluminum or steel can you bring to be<lb/>
recycled. Call 758-2030 for more info.<lb/>
Sponsored by Presbyterian and Method-<lb/>
ist Campus Ministries.<lb/>
FSI CHI<lb/>
Psi Chi will have initiation for new spring<lb/>
members and election of new officers on<lb/>
Jan. 9 at 4 p.m. in the Psi Chi library ?<lb/>
Rawl 302. all members are required to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Daily Special<lb/>
6 oz. Sirloin with Shrimp<lb/>
(Fried, Boiled, or Broiled)<lb/>
served with French Friea or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Cole Slaw and Hushpuppies.<lb/>
only $5.99<lb/>
105 Airport Road<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
INTRODUCING:<lb/>
READ<lb/>
THE<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Wednesday - LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
- $2.00 Ice Teas!<lb/>
-Ladies FREE<lb/>
Thursday - TIAJUANA TEA PARTY!<lb/>
- LADIES FREE!<lb/>
- $2.00 TIAJUANA TEAS!<lb/>
TRY THE RAFTERS CHERRY BOMB!<lb/>
Romancing<lb/>
n Rio!<lb/>
eooco<lb/>
T<lb/>
)<lb/>
<lb/>
LOVE<lb/>
Buy a gift for $10.00 or more,<lb/>
get a Valentine Card<lb/>
$2.00 or less<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
FREE GIFT WRAPPING<lb/>
on items $3.50 or more<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Gift Ideas:<lb/>
Sweatshirts<lb/>
T-Shirts<lb/>
Stuffed Animals<lb/>
Glassware<lb/>
STUDENT STORE<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
"H.<lb/>
The Gift cannot be a Book<lb/>
<lb/>
FOR YOUR<lb/>
.VALENTINE<lb/>
mtiDOOOOonnrncoooooooaococoooooooeos<lb/>
<pb facs="00058122_0009"/><lb/>
IHfc -AS r CAROI 1NIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
FEBRUARYS 1989 PAGE 8<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi gets house<lb/>
By ALICIA FORD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
After three long years of stay-<lb/>
ing in apartments and dorms, the<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi fraternity is reunited<lb/>
again in a new house where the<lb/>
old one once stood on Hooker<lb/>
Road.<lb/>
The original house was lo-<lb/>
cated on the corner of Fifth and<lb/>
Eastern streets. During the mid-<lb/>
1970'sa few of the braver brothers<lb/>
decided to lay out nude on the<lb/>
sure systems studies major, also<lb/>
helped on moving day. "It was a<lb/>
lot of fun. We didn't really party<lb/>
until that weekend when we had<lb/>
everybody settled in said Dick-<lb/>
ens. , . . .<lb/>
The house is valued at<lb/>
$200,000 and the Pi Kapps'<lb/>
alumni donated almost $60,000.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi Properticsco-signcd<lb/>
a loan for the chapter to help to<lb/>
pay for the rest.<lb/>
The new house sits on three<lb/>
and a half acres of land and lias a<lb/>
lake, complete with ducks and a<lb/>
roof. When the chancellor's wife br fnm of thc driveway.<lb/>
rove by and saw them, they lake fa a four?<lb/>
court basketball court that the<lb/>
and<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi house manager Randy Bishop reflects on moving into the newly-built fraternity<lb/>
house. The house is the first new fraternity house built at ECU. (Photo by Thomas Walters, ECU<lb/>
Photolab)<lb/>
Royal Court Lp rocks<lb/>
Editot s n<lb/>
t was just sitting at my desk,<lb/>
doing those editorial-type things,<lb/>
when my good buddy Trey Bien production and export musician<lb/>
from over at WZMB New Rock ship<lb/>
The Royal Court of China's<lb/>
second album. Geared and<lb/>
Primed is oneof the best albums<lb/>
I've ever heard. "Geared and<lb/>
Primed offers a unique blend of<lb/>
Billy Idol mixed with Guns and<lb/>
Roses, all while maintaining slick<lb/>
91 called. He said, lieu. Have <lb/>
got a surprise for you<lb/>
Breathlessly, I waited to hear<lb/>
what the surprise was. MB was<lb/>
having another birthday party?<lb/>
drivin' n' cryin u s coming to<lb/>
town?<lb/>
"No, no,  "Not<lb/>
that good. I finally have tUose<lb/>
record rei ten - i e '<lb/>
I was let down, until he brc<lb/>
thetn over. I n em at i<lb/>
took up res r in m<lb/>
again.<lb/>
These two hip albums can be<lb/>
heard frequently on 91.3, so call<lb/>
up and request those babies. And<lb/>
look for the boss WZMB Top 13<lb/>
album chart right here every<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
folk album than a rock album.<lb/>
"Geared and Primed" is a rock<lb/>
record that pulls no punches from<lb/>
start to finish. One day this group<lb/>
will be HUGE, just remember you<lb/>
heard them here first.<lb/>
The Masters of Reality mark<lb/>
the return of producer Rick Ru-<lb/>
bin. This group has one of the<lb/>
most original sounds I've heard<lb/>
in a long time. The Masters of<lb/>
Reality display the eeriness of the<lb/>
Doors, the breakneck rhvthms of<lb/>
X, and the tightness of the Cult.<lb/>
Imagine what Led Zepplin<lb/>
would sound like with Rick Rubin<lb/>
producing them.<lb/>
"Domino" and "The Blue<lb/>
were kicked off campus<lb/>
moved to Hooker Road.<lb/>
They lived in this house until<lb/>
it was condemned by the city of<lb/>
Greenville in spring 1985 due to<lb/>
basement flooding and other ir-<lb/>
reparable damages. The house<lb/>
was empty until it was torn down<lb/>
in September 1988 and a new,<lb/>
two-level, western style A-frame<lb/>
was built in its place.<lb/>
The new house was com-<lb/>
pleted in January, and 12 brothers<lb/>
moved in on the third day of class<lb/>
this semester. Rick Miller, the Pi<lb/>
Kapps Archon President, helped<lb/>
supervise the move. "It took us<lb/>
about two to three days. We fin-<lb/>
ished on a Friday and had the<lb/>
official housewarming party that<lb/>
Sunday said Miller.<lb/>
One of the brothers who lives<lb/>
in the house, John Dickens, a lei-<lb/>
frnternity raised the money tor<lb/>
and built themselves.<lb/>
The party room overlooks the<lb/>
basketball court, and except for<lb/>
four double bedrooms, it takes up<lb/>
most of the downstairs. Eight o<lb/>
the Pi Kapps share these rooms,<lb/>
and each has an adjoining bath.<lb/>
The den, kitchen area, and<lb/>
four single bedrooms are located<lb/>
upstairs. Each bedroom contains<lb/>
new furniture that was donated<lb/>
with the house, and includes a<lb/>
bed, dresser and desk. "We had to<lb/>
pay for the TV ourselves, but the<lb/>
couches and chairs were all do-<lb/>
nated by alumni brothers said<lb/>
Miller. The money for the televi-<lb/>
sion and basketball court was<lb/>
earned during fundraisers like<lb/>
car washes and selling dough-<lb/>
nuts.<lb/>
ThePiKaj ps are planning on<lb/>
! lilding additions onto the house<lb/>
in the near future. A volleyball<lb/>
court and a JO by 32'deck, com<lb/>
plete with a hot tub, is in the<lb/>
nuking, "hey also hope to have a<lb/>
stage built on the deck. Some o(<lb/>
the brothers aa- members of the<lb/>
band 180 Proof, and they plan to<lb/>
perform at a number of the parties<lb/>
and fundraisers<lb/>
Vice-president Barry Oliver is<lb/>
also the drummer tor 180 Proof.<lb/>
"We hope to have the deck and<lb/>
stage built by April so we can be<lb/>
ready for the parties and activities<lb/>
we have planned this summer<lb/>
Oliver siid. A communications<lb/>
leisure systems studies major, he<lb/>
is a senior at ECU.<lb/>
The Pi Kapps currently have<lb/>
31 active members and 17<lb/>
pledges In order to live in the<lb/>
house vou are put on a waiting<lb/>
list When another brother moves<lb/>
out you can move in, and it usu-<lb/>
ally takes about two wars to wait.<lb/>
The fraternity is planning ai offi<lb/>
rial ribbon-cutting ceremony on<lb/>
February 18.<lb/>
Does having a brand new<lb/>
house help upgrade the Pi Kapps<lb/>
image and popularity? "Defi-<lb/>
nitely' said Miller. ' 'On the<lb/>
average, we have 10 to 15 guys<lb/>
pledge a semester, and this<lb/>
semest r e uui 17. We're really<lb/>
happy and extremely pleased<lb/>
with the noA house<lb/>
ECU hosts comedians<lb/>
Jeff Mays on lead guitar blis-<lb/>
ters through the fast tracks such<lb/>
as ' 1 ljuana Go" and "Geared and<lb/>
Primed" and still has thediversity<lb/>
to bring the tempo down to "Six<lb/>
Empty Bottles While listening to<lb/>
this album you can definately<lb/>
hear influences of Zodiac Mind-<lb/>
warp and Cult.<lb/>
rhe vocals on "Geared and<lb/>
Primed" are relentless. Joe Blan-<lb/>
i works in perfect synch with emplify their sound. The songs<lb/>
basslhx wailing guitars and take on a kind of dark, eerie mys-<lb/>
unding drums into one of the tery feeling with a laser pitched<lb/>
tightest albums oi the year. The guitar to blaze through the haze.<lb/>
! p marks a definite change for "On Looking To Get Rite" the<lb/>
The Royal Court of China from group displays a definite Led Zep<lb/>
their first album. acoustic sound. The Masters of<lb/>
Their debut album was much Reality's self-titled debut album videotaped,<lb/>
slower and sounded more like a is a refreshingly different sound. Certs and<lb/>
teamed up to send professional<lb/>
club comedians and college com-<lb/>
edy talent scouts on the road be<lb/>
tween January and March in a<lb/>
nationwide search for the crown<lb/>
prince ? or princess ? of college<lb/>
comedy. Comic hopefuls from<lb/>
College Comedy ECU will get the chance to per-<lb/>
form their best 3-minute stand-<lb/>
High school class clowns<lb/>
never die they goon to college!<lb/>
And now, comedians at 100 col-<lb/>
leges around the country will<lb/>
have a chance to get their act out<lb/>
of the classroom and into the<lb/>
spotlight by entering the third<lb/>
annual "U.S<lb/>
Competition'<lb/>
ECU has been selected to host up routine before fellow students<lb/>
Garden" are perfect songs to ex- the competition at 8 p.m. tonight and the College Comedy cameras.<lb/>
Each contestant's routine will be<lb/>
videotaped for review by our<lb/>
national judge, Jerry Seinfeld.<lb/>
Four finalists will be selected<lb/>
by Jerry Seinfeld to compete for<lb/>
the title of 'The Funniest College<lb/>
Comedian" at the U.S. College<lb/>
Comedy Competition finals in<lb/>
Daytona Beach during Spring<lb/>
in Mendenhall 244. Those wish-<lb/>
ing to perform should register at<lb/>
7:30.<lb/>
A professional comedian<lb/>
from New York will warm up the<lb/>
audience, and then contestants<lb/>
will have their performances<lb/>
Doritos have<lb/>
k i.i March Based on the<lb/>
number of entries in last year's<lb/>
100-campus search Certs and<lb/>
Doritos expect a minimum of<lb/>
2,000 contestants to give it "the<lb/>
old college comedy try<lb/>
Finalists , ill r- ceive an all-<lb/>
?expensepaid triptoDaj tona,fOtn<lb/>
daysofVIPaccomodations and a<lb/>
trip for two to 1 os Angeles to see<lb/>
the taping oi Comic Relief 111.<lb/>
errySeinfeld willopen the finals,<lb/>
then ea h of the finalists will taki<lb/>
the stage in an effort to get thou-<lb/>
sands of Spring Breakers laugh<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Entrants will receive a free<lb/>
tee shirt and there will be Doritos<lb/>
for the whole crowd.<lb/>
Tintin turns 60, still adventurous<lb/>
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AD<lb/>
Tintin, the moon-faced Belgian<lb/>
comic strip reporter who trots<lb/>
around in knickers in action-<lb/>
packed tales, has quietly turned<lb/>
60.<lb/>
The intrepid youngscribe a<lb/>
trademark tuft of hair rising<lb/>
above the round iace with the peg<lb/>
nose and beady eyes first ap-<lb/>
peared Jan. 29, 1929 in a cartoon<lb/>
strip in a week!) insert for young-<lb/>
sters in La Vingtieme Siecle, a<lb/>
now defunct Brussels daily.<lb/>
The rest is history, or at least<lb/>
years of happy reading and re-<lb/>
reading for comic strip lovers in<lb/>
30 nations who have devoured<lb/>
the 23 Tintin albums in any of 33<lb/>
languages.<lb/>
I iis albums have sold more<lb/>
than 100 million copies world-<lb/>
wide, said Yiviane Vandeninden,<lb/>
organizer of "Herge, Dessi-<lb/>
nateur" (Herge, Cartoonist), a<lb/>
retrospective of the work of<lb/>
Tintin'screator, George Remy. He<lb/>
signed his work Herge which are<lb/>
his initials in French, spelled<lb/>
backward.<lb/>
Herge died of cancer in 1983<lb/>
at the age of 76. He raised the low-<lb/>
key craft of comic strip drawing<lb/>
into an art form.<lb/>
His albums are gems of story-<lb/>
telling and drawing. They put<lb/>
Tintin ? who never aged and<lb/>
only late in life exchanged his<lb/>
puffy pants for slacks ? into fast-<lb/>
paced tales that took him from the<lb/>
Soviet Union to Africa, and from<lb/>
the opium dens of the Far East to<lb/>
the skyscrapers of America.<lb/>
He even explored the moon in<lb/>
two strips in the late 1940s whose<lb/>
drawings remain timeless to this<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Herge's death has done won-<lb/>
ders for the price of original Herge<lb/>
drawings which fetch upwards of<lb/>
$100,000, depending on quality.<lb/>
Baker learned blues from dad<lb/>
MORGANTON, NX. (AP)<lb/>
? They call the musk she coax <lb/>
from her six-strmg acoustic guitar<lb/>
the Piedmont blues, but to Etta<lb/>
Baker it isth language of joy and<lb/>
remembrance.<lb/>
It sounds that way, too, a she<lb/>
lightv picks out the melody of<lb/>
"Dew Drops the iirt tune she<lb/>
can remember hvr daddy playing<lb/>
more than 70 years ago in the<lb/>
Ca Id we 11 County foothills<lb/>
?Vmanv mornings I've been<lb/>
awakened by my daddy's banjo.<lb/>
and the smell oi ham cooking and<lb/>
apples frying she said. "And it<lb/>
was impossible to lay in bed when<lb/>
I smelled all that good food, and<lb/>
my daddy playing<lb/>
"It's Vist been a wonderful<lb/>
life, as far back as i can remem-<lb/>
ber<lb/>
Folklorists regard Baker, at<lb/>
75, as one of the finest guitarists in<lb/>
two-finger picking style that char-<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
In "A day in the life of a<lb/>
theater major" (Feb. 2), Nina<lb/>
Blanton's name was misspelled.<lb/>
acterizes the Piedmont blues. On<lb/>
an. 18 in Raleigh, she and seven<lb/>
other masters of traditional arts<lb/>
will be honored as the first recipi-<lb/>
ents of the North Carolina Folk<lb/>
Heritage Award from the N.C.<lb/>
Arts Council, worth $2,000<lb/>
apiece.<lb/>
After 23 years of work at a<lb/>
Morganton textile mill, she now<lb/>
performs at festivals nationwide,<lb/>
including JazzCharlotte.<lb/>
Baker has no formal music<lb/>
training, nor can she read music.<lb/>
But, she said from her small frame<lb/>
house under a spreading magno-<lb/>
lia tree, "I dream music. I hear<lb/>
chords in my sleep<lb/>
Born in the Johns River com-<lb/>
munity of Caldwell County,<lb/>
where her father hrnted and<lb/>
farmed for a living, she grew up<lb/>
near Richmond as thc last of eight<lb/>
children. The family, which later<lb/>
returned to North Carolina, had<lb/>
black, Cherokee and Irish - and<lb/>
musical - bloodlines.<lb/>
Boone Reid, her father,<lb/>
played banjo, fiddle and guitar;<lb/>
her mother played harmonica<lb/>
and Jew's harp. Her brothers and<lb/>
sister also played the eclectic mix<lb/>
of traditional mountain tunes and<lb/>
popular music in their racially<lb/>
mixed community, at shuckings<lb/>
and house parties where music<lb/>
was sometimes made all night.<lb/>
"I've seen my daddy dance,<lb/>
and he was a tall man, but so light<lb/>
on his feet that you could barely<lb/>
hear him on the floor she said.<lb/>
Before age 3, she was pluck-<lb/>
ing out notes on a small guitar as<lb/>
it lay flat across her lap. It was<lb/>
during the family's time in Vir-<lb/>
ginia that she first heard "the most<lb/>
sweetest music the blues.<lb/>
"I've had people ask me how<lb/>
the blues make me feel, and I say<lb/>
they make me feel good she<lb/>
said. "If s supposed to be based<lb/>
on somebody's sadness, but<lb/>
aren't you glad it's somebody<lb/>
else's and not yours?"<lb/>
She's known now for her in-<lb/>
ventive performances and the<lb/>
delicate picking style she devel-<lb/>
oped.<lb/>
"I make myself play every<lb/>
day about one hour and 45 min-<lb/>
utes she said. "If I make a sound<lb/>
that doesn't sound just right, I'll<lb/>
do it all over again. I just want to<lb/>
get to the point where 1 can tell<lb/>
myself, 'Etta, you can play"<lb/>
"But I'm not there yet. I'm<lb/>
working on it, though<lb/>
Baker was first recorded in<lb/>
1956 for the influential album<lb/>
"Instrumental Music of the<lb/>
Southern Appalachians" and two<lb/>
years later left the mill for music.<lb/>
She sometimes plays with her<lb/>
sister, guitarist Cora Phillips, as<lb/>
they did during the 1982 World's<lb/>
Fair in Knoxville, Tenn. The pair<lb/>
won the N.C. Folklore Society's<lb/>
Brown-Hudson Award for contri-<lb/>
butions to folk arts that year.<lb/>
It was at the fair that she<lb/>
composed her lively "Knoxville<lb/>
Rag the result of those chords<lb/>
that come to her in bed.<lb/>
Her nine children, of whom<lb/>
eight survive, continue the<lb/>
family's musical tradition on pi-<lb/>
ano and guitar. Daughter Darlene<lb/>
often accompanies her on festival<lb/>
trips, she said, while Dorothy has<lb/>
a beautiful singing voice. Baker<lb/>
rarely sings.<lb/>
As she tends her garden and<lb/>
her zebra finches at home, the<lb/>
music of Boone Reid haunts her<lb/>
still. She got a banio a year ago and<lb/>
a fiddle this month and is teaching<lb/>
herself to play them, too.<lb/>
These dorm residents score passing students as Greenville scores<lb/>
a 9.5 for great weather last week. (Photo by J.D. Whitmire, ECU<lb/>
Photolab)<lb/>
Sean Young is a good actress<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? The cate an empty-headed set decora-<lb/>
film world has yet to get a fix on tion. That's about all she contrib-<lb/>
Sean Young, whose very name uted in such films as "Young<lb/>
contributes to the confusion. Doctors in Love" and "Stripes<lb/>
A first glance, though, elimi- Then last year she dazzled audi-<lb/>
nates any question about gender, ences with her performance as the<lb/>
With a slender, leggy figure, near- sensuous Washington mistress:<lb/>
perfect face and long dark hair, caught between Kevin Costner,<lb/>
she is obviously all woman. and Gene Hackman in "No WayE<lb/>
Such attributes might indi- Out<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058122_0010"/><lb/>
3i ?<lb/>
1Mb FASrCAROl INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
FEBRUARY 7, 1999 PAGES<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi gets house<lb/>
By ALICIA FORD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi house manager Randy Bishop reflects on moving into the newly-built fraternity<lb/>
house. The house is the first new fraternity house built at ECU. (Photo by Thomas Walters, ECU<lb/>
Photolab)<lb/>
Royal Court Lp rocks<lb/>
By TREY BI1 N<lb/>
fcdttC ' S  t<lb/>
I zvas just fitting at my desk,<lb/>
doing those editorial-type things,<lb/>
when my good buddy Trey Bien<lb/>
from over at WZMB, New Rock<lb/>
91 called. He said, "Hey. Have I<lb/>
got a surprise for you<lb/>
Breathlessly, Iwaitedto hear<lb/>
what the surprise was. 7.MR was<lb/>
having another birthday party?<lb/>
drivin' n' cryin' u - coming to<lb/>
town?<lb/>
"No, no, ?; d. "Not<lb/>
that good. I finally have those<lb/>
record ????. tised<lb/>
twos let down, nought<lb/>
them oi er. I tea ' n i oy<lb/>
<lb/>
took up residt e ? I<lb/>
again.<lb/>
These tu o hip albums can be<lb/>
heard frequently i i ;1 v so call<lb/>
up and re mest those babies. And<lb/>
look for the boss W.MU Top 13<lb/>
album chart right here every<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
The Royal Court of China's<lb/>
second album, "Geared and<lb/>
rrimed is one of the best albums<lb/>
I've ever heard. "Geared and<lb/>
Primed" otters a unique blend of<lb/>
Billy Idol mixed with Guns and<lb/>
Roses, all while maintaining slick<lb/>
production and expert musician-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
Jeff Mays on lead guitar blis-<lb/>
ters through the fast tracks such<lb/>
as "Tijuana Go" and "Geared and<lb/>
Primed'andstill hasthediversity<lb/>
to bring the tempo down to "Six<lb/>
Empty Bottles While listening to<lb/>
this album you can definately<lb/>
hear influences of Zodiac Mind-<lb/>
warp and Cult.<lb/>
li e vocals on "Geared and<lb/>
Primed" are relentless. )oe Blan-<lb/>
ton works in perfect synch with<lb/>
e bass line, wailing guitars and<lb/>
unding drums into one of the<lb/>
tightest albums of the year. The<lb/>
Lp marks a definite change for<lb/>
The Roval Court of China from<lb/>
their first album.<lb/>
Their debut album was much<lb/>
slower and sounded more like a<lb/>
folk album than a rock album.<lb/>
"Geared and Primed" is a rock<lb/>
record that pulls no punches from<lb/>
start to finish. One day this group<lb/>
will be HUGE, just remember you<lb/>
heard them here first.<lb/>
The Masters of Reality mark<lb/>
the return of producer Rick Ru-<lb/>
bin. This group has one of the<lb/>
most original sounds I've heard<lb/>
in a long time. The Masters of<lb/>
Reality display the ecriness of the<lb/>
Doors, the breakneck rhythms of<lb/>
X, and the tightness of the Cult.<lb/>
Imagine what Led Zepplin<lb/>
would sound like with Rick Rubin<lb/>
producing them.<lb/>
"Domino" and "The Blue<lb/>
Garden" are perfect songs to ex-<lb/>
emplify their sound. The songs<lb/>
take on a kind of dark, eerie mvs-<lb/>
tery feeling with a laser pitched<lb/>
guitar to blaze through the haze.<lb/>
"On Looking To Get Rite" the<lb/>
group displays a definite Led Zep<lb/>
acoustic sound. The Masters of<lb/>
Reality's self-titled debut album<lb/>
is a refreshingly different sound.<lb/>
After three long years of stay-<lb/>
ing in apartments and dorms, the<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi fraternity is reunited<lb/>
again in a new house where the<lb/>
old one once stood on Hooker<lb/>
Road.<lb/>
The original house was lo-<lb/>
cated on the corner of Fifth and<lb/>
Eastern streets. During the mid-<lb/>
1970's a few of the braver brothers<lb/>
decided to lay out nude on the<lb/>
roof. When the chancellor's wife<lb/>
drove by and saw them, they<lb/>
were kicked off campus and<lb/>
moved to Hooker Road.<lb/>
They lived in this house until<lb/>
it was condemned by the city of<lb/>
Greenville in spring 1985 due to<lb/>
basement flooding and other ir-<lb/>
reparable damages. The house<lb/>
was empty until it was torn down<lb/>
in September 1988 and a new,<lb/>
two-level, western style A-frame<lb/>
was built in its place.<lb/>
The new house was com-<lb/>
pleted in January, and 12 brothers<lb/>
moved in on the third day of class<lb/>
this semester. Rick Miller, the Pi<lb/>
Kapps Archon President, helped<lb/>
supervise the move. "It took us<lb/>
about two to three days. We fin-<lb/>
ished on a Friday and had the<lb/>
official housewarming party that<lb/>
Sunday said Miller.<lb/>
One of the brothers who lives<lb/>
in the house, John Dickens, a lei-<lb/>
sure systems studies major, also<lb/>
helped on moving day. "It was a<lb/>
lot of fun. We didn't really party<lb/>
until that weekend when we had<lb/>
everybody settled in said Dick-<lb/>
ens. , .<lb/>
The house is valued at<lb/>
$200,000 and the Pi Kapps'<lb/>
alumni donated almost $60,000.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi Properties co-signed<lb/>
a loan for the chapter to help to<lb/>
pay for the rest.<lb/>
The new house sits on three<lb/>
and a half acres of land and has a<lb/>
lake, complete with ducks and a<lb/>
bridge, in front of the driveway.<lb/>
Directly behind the lake is a four-<lb/>
court basketball court that the<lb/>
fraternity raised the money for<lb/>
and built themselves.<lb/>
The party room overlooks the<lb/>
basketball court, and except for<lb/>
four double bedrooms, it takes up<lb/>
most of the downstairs. Eight of<lb/>
the Pi Kapps share these rooms,<lb/>
and each has an adjoining bath.<lb/>
The den, kitchen area, and<lb/>
four single bedrooms are located<lb/>
upstairs. Each bedroom contains<lb/>
new furniture that was donated<lb/>
with the house, and includes a<lb/>
bed, dresser and desk. "We had to<lb/>
pay for the TV ourselves, but the<lb/>
couches and chairs were all do-<lb/>
nated by alumni brothers said<lb/>
Miller. The money for the televi-<lb/>
sion and basketball court was<lb/>
earned during fundraisers like<lb/>
car washes and selling dough-<lb/>
nuts.<lb/>
The Pi Kapps are planning on<lb/>
building additions onto the house<lb/>
in the near future. A volleyball<lb/>
court and a m)1v J2' deck,com-<lb/>
plete with a hot tub. is in the<lb/>
making. They also hope tohavea<lb/>
stage built on the de k. Some of<lb/>
the brothers are members of the<lb/>
band 180 Proof, and they plan to<lb/>
perform at a number o the parties<lb/>
and fundraisers<lb/>
Vice president BarryOiiveris<lb/>
also the drummer for 180 Proof.<lb/>
"We hope to have the deck and<lb/>
stage built by April so we can be<lb/>
ready for the parties and activities<lb/>
we have planned this summer<lb/>
Oliver said. A communications<lb/>
leisure systems studies major, he<lb/>
is a senior at ECl<lb/>
The Pi Kapps curn ntl) have<lb/>
31 active members wc 17<lb/>
pledges In order to live in the<lb/>
house you are put i n a waiting<lb/>
list. When another brother moves<lb/>
out you can move in, and it usu-<lb/>
ally takes about two years to wait.<lb/>
The fraternity is planning ar offi<lb/>
rial ribbon-cutting ceremony on<lb/>
February 18.<lb/>
Does having a brand new<lb/>
house help upgrade the Pi Kapps<lb/>
image ivd popularity? "Defi-<lb/>
nitely said Miller. " 'On the<lb/>
average, we have 10 to 15 guys<lb/>
pledge a semester and this<lb/>
semestt i . e had 17. We re really<lb/>
happy and extremely pleased<lb/>
with the new house<lb/>
ECU hosts comedians<lb/>
High school class clowns<lb/>
never die they goon to college!<lb/>
And now, comedians at 100 col-<lb/>
leges around the country will<lb/>
have a chance to get their act out<lb/>
of the classroom and into the<lb/>
spotlight by entering the third<lb/>
annual "U.S. College Comedy<lb/>
Competition<lb/>
ECU has been selected to host<lb/>
the competition at 8 p.m. tonight<lb/>
in Mendenhall 244. Those wish-<lb/>
ing to perform should register at<lb/>
7:30.<lb/>
A professional comedian<lb/>
from New York will warm up the<lb/>
audience, and then contestants<lb/>
will have their performances<lb/>
videotaped.<lb/>
Certs and Doritos have<lb/>
teamed up to send professional<lb/>
club comedians and college com-<lb/>
edy talent scouts on the road be-<lb/>
tween January and March in a<lb/>
nationwide search for the crown<lb/>
prince ? or princess ? of college<lb/>
comedy. Comic hopefuls from<lb/>
ECU will get the chance to per-<lb/>
form their best 3-minute stand-<lb/>
up routine before fellow students<lb/>
and the College Comedy cameras.<lb/>
Each contestant's routine will be<lb/>
videotaped for review by our<lb/>
national judge, Jem' Seinfeld.<lb/>
Four finalists will be selected<lb/>
by Jerry Seinfeld to compete for<lb/>
the title of 'The Funniest College<lb/>
Comedian" at the U.S. College<lb/>
Comedy Competition finals in<lb/>
Daytona Beach during Spring<lb/>
Tintirt turns 60, still adventurous<lb/>
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP)<lb/>
Tintin, the moon-faced Belgian<lb/>
comic strip reporter who trots<lb/>
around in knickers in action-<lb/>
packed tales, has quietly turned<lb/>
60.<lb/>
The in t ep<lb/>
d voui<lb/>
-cr.lv<lb/>
trademark tuft of hair rising<lb/>
above the round face with the peg<lb/>
nose and beady eyes ? first ap-<lb/>
peared Ian. 29, 1929 in a cartoon<lb/>
strip in a weekl) insert for young-<lb/>
sters in La Vingtieme Siecle, a<lb/>
now defunct Brussels daily.<lb/>
The rest is history, or at least<lb/>
years of happy reading and re-<lb/>
reading for comic strip lovers in<lb/>
30 nations who have devoured<lb/>
the 23 Tintin albums in any of 33<lb/>
languages.<lb/>
His albums have sold more<lb/>
than 100 million copies world-<lb/>
 ide, said Viviane Vandeninden,<lb/>
organizer of "Herge, Dessi-<lb/>
nateur" (Herge, Cartoonist), a<lb/>
retrospective of the work of<lb/>
Tintin'screator, George Remy. He<lb/>
signed his work Herge which are<lb/>
his initials in French, spelled<lb/>
backward.<lb/>
Herge died of cancer in 1983<lb/>
at the age of 76. He raised the low-<lb/>
key craft of comic strip drawing<lb/>
into an art form.<lb/>
His albums are gems of story-<lb/>
telling and drawing. They put<lb/>
Tintin ? who never aged and<lb/>
only late in life exchanged his<lb/>
puffy pants for slacks ? into fast-<lb/>
paced tales that took him from the<lb/>
Soviet Union to Africa, and from<lb/>
the opium dens of the Far East to<lb/>
the skyscrapers of America.<lb/>
He even explored the moon in<lb/>
two strips in the late 1940s whose<lb/>
drawings remain timeless to this<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Herge's death has done won-<lb/>
ders for the price of original Herge<lb/>
drawings which fetch upwards of<lb/>
$100,0 ' spending on quality.<lb/>
Baker learned blues from dad<lb/>
MORC,ANTON, N.C. (AP)<lb/>
? Thev c all the music she cia s<lb/>
from her six-string ia ustk guitar<lb/>
the Piedmont blues, but to Etta<lb/>
Baker it is the langu ige of joy and<lb/>
remembrance.<lb/>
It sounds that wav, too, .b she<lb/>
lightlv picks out the melody of<lb/>
"Dew' Drops the first tune she<lb/>
can remember her daddy playing<lb/>
more than 70 years ago in the<lb/>
Caldwell County foothills.<lb/>
"A-manv mornings I've been<lb/>
awakened by my daddy's banjo,<lb/>
and the smc il of ham cooking and<lb/>
apples frying she said. "And it<lb/>
was impossible to lay in bed when<lb/>
I smelted all that good food, and<lb/>
my daddy playing<lb/>
"It's just been a wonderful<lb/>
life, as far back as 1 can remem-<lb/>
ber<lb/>
Folklorists regard Baker, at<lb/>
75, as one of the finest guitarists in<lb/>
two-finger picking style that char-<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
In "A day in the life of a<lb/>
theater major" (Feb. 2), Nina<lb/>
Blanton's name was misspelled.<lb/>
acterizes the Piedmont blues. On<lb/>
Ian. 18 in Raleigh, she and seven<lb/>
other masters of traditional arts<lb/>
will be honored as the first recipi-<lb/>
ents of the North Carolina Folk<lb/>
Heritage Award from the N.C.<lb/>
Arts Council, worth $2,000<lb/>
apiece.<lb/>
After 23 years of work at a<lb/>
Morganton textile mill, she now<lb/>
performs at festivals nationwide,<lb/>
including JazzCharlotte.<lb/>
Baker has no formal music<lb/>
training, nor can she read music.<lb/>
But, she said from her small frame<lb/>
house under a spreading magno-<lb/>
lia tree, "I dream music. I hear<lb/>
chords in my sleep<lb/>
Born in the Johns River com-<lb/>
munity of Caldwell County,<lb/>
where her father hrnted and<lb/>
farmed for a living, she grew up<lb/>
near Richmond as the last of eight<lb/>
children. The family, which later<lb/>
returned to North Carolina, had<lb/>
black, Cherokee and Irish - and<lb/>
musical - bloodlines.<lb/>
Boone Reid, her father,<lb/>
played banjo, fiddle and guitar;<lb/>
her mother played harmonica<lb/>
and Jew's harp. Her brothers and<lb/>
sister also played the eclectic mix<lb/>
of traditional mountain tunes and<lb/>
popular music in their racially<lb/>
mixed community, at shuckings<lb/>
and house parties where music<lb/>
was sometimes made all night.<lb/>
"I've seen my daddy dance,<lb/>
and he was a tall man, but so light<lb/>
on his feet that you could barely<lb/>
hear him on the floor she said.<lb/>
Before age 3, she was pluck-<lb/>
ing out notes on a small guitar as<lb/>
it lay flat across her lap. It was<lb/>
during the family's time in Vir-<lb/>
ginia that she first heard "the most<lb/>
sweetest music the blues.<lb/>
"I've had people ask me how<lb/>
the blues make me feel, and I say<lb/>
they make me feel good she<lb/>
said. "If s supposed to be based<lb/>
on somebody's sadness, but<lb/>
aren't you glad it's somebody<lb/>
else's and not yours?"<lb/>
She's known now for her in-<lb/>
ventive performances and the<lb/>
delicate picking style she devel-<lb/>
oped.<lb/>
"I make myself play every<lb/>
day about one hour and 45 min-<lb/>
utes she said. "If I make a sound<lb/>
that doesn't sound just right, I'll<lb/>
do it all over again. I just want to<lb/>
get to the point where I can tell<lb/>
myself, 'Etta, you can play<lb/>
"But I'm not there yet. I'm<lb/>
working on it, though<lb/>
Baker was first recorded in<lb/>
1956 for the influential album<lb/>
"Instrumental Music of the<lb/>
Southern Appalachians" and two<lb/>
years later left the mill for music.<lb/>
She sometimes plays with her<lb/>
sister, guitarist Cora Phillips, as<lb/>
they did during the 1982 World's<lb/>
Fair in Knoxville, Tenn. The pair<lb/>
won the N.C. Folklore Society's<lb/>
Brown-Hudson Award for contri-<lb/>
butions to folk arts that year.<lb/>
It was at the fair that she<lb/>
composed her lively "Knoxville<lb/>
Rag the result of those chords<lb/>
that come to her in bed.<lb/>
Her nine children, of whom<lb/>
eight survive, continue the<lb/>
family's musical tradition on pi-<lb/>
ano and guitar. Daughter Darlene<lb/>
often accompanies her on festival<lb/>
trips, she said, while Dorothy has<lb/>
a beautiful singing voice. Baker<lb/>
rarely sings.<lb/>
As she tends her garden and<lb/>
her zebra finches at home, the<lb/>
music of Boone Reid haunts her<lb/>
still. She got a banjo a year ago and<lb/>
a fiddle this month and is teaching<lb/>
herself to play them, too.<lb/>
These dorm residents score passing students as Greenville scores<lb/>
a 9.5 for great weather last week. (Photo by J.D. Whitmire, ECU<lb/>
Photolab)<lb/>
Sean Young is a good actress<lb/>
Bn ak in M in h Based<lb/>
number of entries in la-t year's<lb/>
100-campus search Certs and<lb/>
Doritos expect a minimum of<lb/>
2,000 conw stants ? giit "the<lb/>
old college comedy try<lb/>
Finalists will n cerve an all-<lb/>
?CTCpensepaid tript? D o f na.four<lb/>
daysofVIPaccomodations and a<lb/>
trip for two to 1 os Angeles to see<lb/>
the taping of Comic Relief III.<lb/>
errySeinfeld willopen the finals<lb/>
then ea h of the finalists will take<lb/>
the stage in an effort to get thou-<lb/>
sands of Spring Breakers laugh<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Entrants will receive a free<lb/>
tee shirt and there will be Doritos<lb/>
for the whole crowd.<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? The<lb/>
film world has yet to get a fix on<lb/>
Sean Young, whose very name<lb/>
contributes to the confusion.<lb/>
A first glance, though, elimi-<lb/>
nates any question about gender.<lb/>
With a slender, leggy figure, near-<lb/>
perfect face and long dark hair,<lb/>
she is obviously all woman.<lb/>
Such attributes might indi-<lb/>
cate an empty-headed set decora-<lb/>
tion. That's about all she contrib<lb/>
uted in such films as "Young<lb/>
Doctors in Love" and "Stripes?<lb/>
Then last year she dazzled audi-<lb/>
ences with her performance as the<lb/>
sensuous Washington mistress:<lb/>
caught between Kevin Costner.<lb/>
and Gene Hackman in "No WayS<lb/>
Out r-<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00058122_0011"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN-<lb/>
FEBRUARY 7 J98Q9<lb/>
Louisianans cook gumbo dishes<lb/>
OPELOUSAS, La. (AP)?<lb/>
Rachel Thompson had never<lb/>
tasted shrimp in her native Lou-<lb/>
isiana, which is famous for its<lb/>
seafood, and Ronnie Emonet had<lb/>
never heard the wind moan<lb/>
through the piney hills of his own<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Both are 16 and represent the<lb/>
the Catholic Cajuns, who make<lb/>
time for work around a busy<lb/>
schedule of consuming the full<lb/>
cup of life.<lb/>
The des endants of the exiles<lb/>
from Nova xrotia make up a third<lb/>
of the state's population and those<lb/>
of different ancestry living in<lb/>
south Louisiana have absorbed<lb/>
the laid-back lifestyle of the<lb/>
Roemer, whose family plantation guests like their own kids, Andre-<lb/>
best hope for dismantling a wall<lb/>
of mistrust built generations ago Cajuns.<lb/>
bv two clashing cultures, says Former Gov<lb/>
Edwin Ed-<lb/>
Carole Andrepont of Opelousas, wards, the first French-speaking Rouge<lb/>
is not far from the Arkansas bor<lb/>
der in north Louisiana.<lb/>
Edwards and Roemer agree<lb/>
that an exchange program aimed<lb/>
at youths can eventually erase the<lb/>
perception.<lb/>
The idea for the exchange<lb/>
program gnawed at Andrepont<lb/>
and finally she talked with Linda<lb/>
Graham, her Ruston counterpart<lb/>
at a tourism meeting in Baton<lb/>
who turned a joke into a serious Catholic elected to the state's<lb/>
experiment that worked. highest office this century, says<lb/>
Andreponta memberof the the division is more a perception<lb/>
than anything else, but "a percep-<lb/>
tion can be real<lb/>
"The barrier exists in the<lb/>
minds of those who have not had<lb/>
the opportunity to visit one end of<lb/>
the state or the other he says.<lb/>
"But invariably when they<lb/>
do, they come away with an<lb/>
amazement of how much in com-<lb/>
mon they have<lb/>
"The barrier is exaggerated<lb/>
but it's there adds Gov. Buddy<lb/>
Louisiana Tourism Board who<lb/>
has been active in international<lb/>
youth exchange programs for<lb/>
years, jokingly told a friend one<lb/>
day, "If you want to have a real<lb/>
cultural exchange, have folks<lb/>
from north Louisiana come to<lb/>
south Louisiana. It's like two dif-<lb/>
ferent countries<lb/>
An almost visible line across<lb/>
the center of Louisiana separates<lb/>
the staid upstate Protestants from<lb/>
'I told her I had an idea about<lb/>
two cities having an exchange<lb/>
program and the more we looked<lb/>
at it, the more we like it she says.<lb/>
pont says.<lb/>
The mayors and civic leaders<lb/>
visited each other's municipali-<lb/>
ties and, like the kids, discovered<lb/>
that even with the cultural differ-<lb/>
ence, people are just folks and get<lb/>
different views of what they see,<lb/>
depending on personalities.<lb/>
"The people are more free,<lb/>
more open down here says Ra-<lb/>
chel, who attends Ruston High<lb/>
School. "Up north, we're very<lb/>
polite, but down here<lb/>
"I like Ruston better than<lb/>
here says Teleameckus Ander-<lb/>
son, a 16-year-old junior at Ope-<lb/>
In trodUCinC?<lb/>
JOliEWf BAGEL<lb/>
? ? ? DELI SANDWICHES ? ? ?<lb/>
3c? Arlington Bivcl<lb/>
GrppnviHr NC ?78'A4<lb/>
(919)355 3311<lb/>
All Bagels 'N Breads Baked Fresh Daily<lb/>
r<lb/>
'We talked to our mayors, school lousas High School. "They're so<lb/>
officials and civic leaders. Now, nice. The hills are beautiful<lb/>
we've done it<lb/>
In a recently ended two-week "The family I stayed with<lb/>
program, about 20 Ruston high made me feel like we were re-<lb/>
school students spent a week in lated says Emonet, a junior at<lb/>
Opelousas and an equal number Opelousas Catholic,<lb/>
of the south Louisisana students Andrepont, meanwhile, says<lb/>
stayed in Ruston. Cajuns can learn from the other<lb/>
Host families provided lifestyles, maybe find a middle<lb/>
homes and meals, treating their ground.<lb/>
L.<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
6 FREE Bagels<lb/>
with any Dozen<lb/>
(Not valid with any other coupon)<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
L.<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
L<lb/>
Butter Bagel &amp; Coffee<lb/>
95<lb/>
i??Eil?5221.89I<lb/>
FREE Pepsi<lb/>
with any Deli Sandwich I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
1<lb/>
Cowboys write good poetry<lb/>
whew the sun alwts sVwet'<lb/>
ELKO, Nev. (AP)?The 300<lb/>
cowboys in town this week ain't<lb/>
here to rope steers or whoop it up<lb/>
at a saloon. No sirree, mister,<lb/>
these folks are the biggest bunch<lb/>
of prose-packin' smile-slingin<lb/>
versifying-est cowboys you ever<lb/>
saw, and they're here for the an-<lb/>
nual Cowboy Poetry Gathering.<lb/>
It ain't all dogie doggerel, and<lb/>
you better smile when you quote<lb/>
em pardner.<lb/>
Upwards of 7,000 visitors<lb/>
have jammed this northeastern<lb/>
Nevada town of 13,000 for the<lb/>
five-day event, which began<lb/>
Wednesday and wraps up Sun-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The area's 40 motels have<lb/>
been booked for weeks. Ten-gal-<lb/>
lon hats dot Railroad Avenue and<lb/>
Commercial Street, and more spill<lb/>
out of the Branding Iron Bar.<lb/>
The crowds have come to<lb/>
hear the cowboys recite their<lb/>
bunkhouse ballads, sing soulful<lb/>
town, from the Elko Convention<lb/>
Center to the bar at the<lb/>
Stockman's Hotel.<lb/>
The buckaroos don fancy<lb/>
duds for the gathering ? broad-<lb/>
brimmed Stetsons, silver buckles<lb/>
and handmade pointy-toed boots<lb/>
? but their sunburned faces,<lb/>
calloused hands and<lb/>
the plight of Tom O'Dell, found<lb/>
behind a bar with his throat cut.<lb/>
When "they got him to the hospi-<lb/>
tal he wouldn't sign a complaint<lb/>
against the fella who done it be-<lb/>
cause he was a friend of his<lb/>
Mitchell and Baxter Black,<lb/>
fine,<lb/>
And give me to a cowgirl that<lb/>
likes to ride,<lb/>
So in the hereafter I may rest,<lb/>
Between the two things that I<lb/>
love the best<lb/>
Besides stage performances,<lb/>
there are informal sessions for<lb/>
One such poet is Waddie<lb/>
Mitchell, who runs 2,000 head of<lb/>
cattle on a ranch near Jiggs. Before<lb/>
he came to the gathering, he had<lb/>
to make sure there was enough<lb/>
hay put out and find a baby sitter<lb/>
for his five children.<lb/>
Mitchell began writing verse<lb/>
during long winters on the range.<lb/>
Like most cowboy poets, he didn't<lb/>
show his work to many people<lb/>
because poetry didn't quite fit the<lb/>
cowboy image.<lb/>
But the first cowboy. poetry<lb/>
gathering five years ago brought a<lb/>
who will sing and tell stories at the<lb/>
, tar,away Saturday night finale, are bie greenhorn poets, singers and sto<lb/>
?gaze tell their own tales of hard guns in the cowboy entertain rytellers. Exhibitions display<lb/>
and solitary lives. ment world j havc bccn on handmade saddles, bits, spurs<lb/>
'The Tonight Show and Black's and olhcr cowboy regalia,<lb/>
records are available anywhere Tara McCarty of the Western<lb/>
Western music is sold. Black, a Fo,kife Center in Salt Lake City,<lb/>
veterinarian from Brighton,<lb/>
Colo cams a six-figure income<lb/>
from his performances.<lb/>
Gary McMahan, a singer,<lb/>
songwriter and poet from<lb/>
songs and tell of hard and high lot of sagebrush scribes off the<lb/>
times on the range.<lb/>
The activities have filled ev-<lb/>
ery available meeting place in<lb/>
praine.<lb/>
One of Mitchell's poems tells<lb/>
which coordinates the gathering,<lb/>
said one of the center's biggest<lb/>
challenges is keeping the cowboy<lb/>
poetry pure.<lb/>
That's why they've come up<lb/>
Bellvue, Colo who claims to have with an ironcla rule: Every par-<lb/>
theonly yodelingdog, recited this tlc,Pant has to make a living on<lb/>
verse at one gathering: the range- No "drugstore cow-<lb/>
"Two things in life that I re- boys" allowed,<lb/>
ally love,<lb/>
That's women and horses, of<lb/>
that I'm sure of.<lb/>
So when I die please tan my<lb/>
hide,<lb/>
And tool me into a saddle so<lb/>
SunSational<lb/>
Tanning And Toning Center, Inc.<lb/>
Tan in Luxury<lb/>
Get your base tan now, Spring Break<lb/>
is just around the Corner<lb/>
Lose Inches<lb/>
Toning Special<lb/>
$60 Unlimited<lb/>
permonth<lb/>
1414 Charles Blvd.<lb/>
Greenvilie, NC<lb/>
Phone:<lb/>
758-0404<lb/>
Boy Scout<lb/>
loves caves<lb/>
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (AP)<lb/>
? James H. Smith was a terrified,<lb/>
14-year-old Boy Scout growing<lb/>
up in Georgia when he entered his<lb/>
first cave.<lb/>
"I was scared todeath Smith<lb/>
recalls. "There were large lakes<lb/>
and large streams. People put on<lb/>
scuba diving equipment and<lb/>
went under water<lb/>
"I remember thinking, 'I'll<lb/>
never do that<lb/>
Now, some 19 years later,<lb/>
Smith has won a national award<lb/>
for his work in cave exploration,<lb/>
and he is working on a master's<lb/>
thesis on the caves of the Huautla<lb/>
Plateau in Mexico.<lb/>
Smith received the 1988 Lew<lb/>
B:cking Award, presented by the<lb/>
National Speleological Society to<lb/>
outstanding explorers.<lb/>
Bicking, an agressive spelun-<lb/>
ker from Baltimore who died in an<lb/>
automobile accident, explored<lb/>
caves in the East ? particularly in<lb/>
West Virginia?during the 1960s.<lb/>
Smith is credited with tri-<lb/>
pling the number of known caves<lb/>
in Tennessee, Alabama and Geor-<lb/>
gia that are more than 400 feet<lb/>
deep.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Good Teachers Are In Demand<lb/>
and we're training good teachers.<lb/>
v.<lb/>
The School of Education is searching for a<lb/>
few good students to enroll in an innovative<lb/>
Teacher Education program.<lb/>
?9-week Summer Research Project with<lb/>
UNC-CH Faculty Mentor<lb/>
?Rising Senior Minority Undergraduates<lb/>
?Humanities, Social Sciences. Natural<lb/>
Sciences, Biomedical and Environmental<lb/>
Engineering.<lb/>
?Skills Enhancement Workshops Available.<lb/>
?Room and board plus $1500 Stipened.<lb/>
?Application Deadline March 1. 1989.<lb/>
?Period of Program May 30. 1989 to<lb/>
July 28, 1989.<lb/>
For Application Forms and<lb/>
Additional Information Contact:<lb/>
Dr. Larry Smith<lb/>
204 Whichard Building<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
TEXAN<lb/>
?? ? ?<lb/>
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TRAVELOOGE<lb/>
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? ?? ? ?? ,<lb/>
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featuring Daytona's hottest Spring Break hotels<lb/>
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23 miles long!)<lb/>
V<lb/>
CLASS PICTURES<lb/>
Class pictures will be taken on<lb/>
February 9th &amp; 10th<lb/>
in the Buccaneer office from<lb/>
9-12 and 1 - 4<lb/>
This is the LAST Chance for individual<lb/>
pictures to be put in the class section of the<lb/>
1989 Buccaneer<lb/>
?3<lb/>
Shouting Distance<lb/>
from Everything<lb/>
The top bars rtsteurentt ??pos and<lb/>
Irat concerts (not a tail rioe<lb/>
away, like other trips)<lb/>
Top of the Line<lb/>
Luxury Coaches<lb/>
For the most comtonable party<lb/>
trip to Florida<lb/>
Pool Deck Parties<lb/>
Every Day<lb/>
The honest biggest parties in<lb/>
Oaytona BeacN<lb/>
L ILLh<lb/>
To Sign Up 1 1 Or For More Info 11m M k You might find a cheaper trip V amLP whYnsk your 2pjsv VBbV Spnnq Brrk cash on a ? r H ? cheap imitation!<lb/>
752-4693 WA f<lb/>
Ron, Keith, Kelly iL1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058122_0012"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
rut EASTC ROI INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
I BRI 'AK, 7, ivh PA A<lb/>
Pirates lose in last :13<lb/>
Richmond holds on to upset ECU, 56-54<lb/>
ByCHRIS SIECEL<lb/>
AmbUbi Sporti Mitor<lb/>
On Friday, Head Coach Mike<lb/>
Steele celebrated a birthday and<lb/>
his Pirate team was looking,to<lb/>
give him a belated birthdav pres-<lb/>
ent Saturday by knocking off<lb/>
league leading Richmond. But it<lb/>
wasn't meant to be as the Pirates<lb/>
missed three opportunities in the<lb/>
final :13 seconds to tie the game.<lb/>
Richmond held vn to win Sb-<lb/>
"You have to give Richmond<lb/>
credit They played a good<lb/>
game' Steele said. "It we beat<lb/>
Richmond tonight, we send a<lb/>
message to the rest of the confer-<lb/>
ence that we can beat anyone<lb/>
The rvlO tans who packed<lb/>
Minges Coliseum were treated to<lb/>
an exciting ballgame. The crowd<lb/>
was the second largest on the<lb/>
season and the eighth largest in<lb/>
Minges historv.<lb/>
The teams came out at the<lb/>
start of the game a little tentative.<lb/>
They exchanged baskets the first<lb/>
five minutes ot the game with<lb/>
neither team really taking charge<lb/>
Then with 141" to play tin Spi<lb/>
ders mounted a run.<lb/>
With the score tied at 12<lb/>
Richmond went on a9-2 run Ken<lb/>
Atkinson highlighted the run bj<lb/>
scoring five points on a jump shot<lb/>
and a three-point shot The run hv<lb/>
the Spiders gave them a seven<lb/>
point lead. 21-14.<lb/>
But the Pirates fought right<lb/>
back and started a scoring spurt of<lb/>
their own. ECU rattled off 12 of<lb/>
the next 14 points, the most dam-<lb/>
aging coming from three-point<lb/>
shots by Kenny Murphy and Gus<lb/>
1 fill. Blue Edwards capped off the<lb/>
run with a thundering two-<lb/>
handed dunk that put East Caro-<lb/>
lina up by three, 2e-23.<lb/>
lust as the home town fans<lb/>
started to get into the game and<lb/>
coud smell an upset. Richmond<lb/>
quieted them. This time they did<lb/>
itbygoingonan 18 n scoring run.<lb/>
Benjj Taj lor came off the bench to<lb/>
ignite the Spiders and hit two<lb/>
three-pointers. The close of the<lb/>
first half saw the Spiders up by<lb/>
nine, 41-32.<lb/>
In the first half, they had a lot<lb/>
of open shots Steele said. "We<lb/>
knew we would line to come out<lb/>
the second halt and play solid<lb/>
defense and stop their transition<lb/>
game<lb/>
And play defense the Pirates<lb/>
would: EC1 limited the Spiders<lb/>
to 15 points in the second half and<lb/>
a dismal 28 6 percent shooting<lb/>
percentage But even that was not<lb/>
enough to pull out the upset as<lb/>
Richmond also played fine de<lb/>
fense in the halt<lb/>
East Carolina came out fired<lb/>
up in the second half and took it<lb/>
right to the Spiders. Edwards<lb/>
ignited his team and thecrowdby<lb/>
making a two-handed breakaway-<lb/>
dunk to stai t the second halt. The<lb/>
dunk cut Richmond's lead to<lb/>
seven, 41 -34.<lb/>
he next 12 minutes the Pi-<lb/>
rates and Spiders would play<lb/>
hard-fought, physical basketball.<lb/>
ECU clawed and scratched their<lb/>
way back in to the game. And<lb/>
after a 15-8 run, the Pirates found<lb/>
the game tied with 6:40 remain-<lb/>
ing, 49-49.<lb/>
Following two baskets by<lb/>
Atkinson, Richmond found them-<lb/>
selves up by four with 4:37 left in<lb/>
the game, 53-49. Kenny Murphy<lb/>
answered with a three-pointer,<lb/>
but Atkinson fired up a three-<lb/>
pointer of his own and the lead<lb/>
was still four, 56-52.<lb/>
With 2:08 left to play, Ed-<lb/>
wards hit a turnaround jump shot<lb/>
to pull ECU within two, 56-54.<lb/>
That would be the last bucket ei-<lb/>
ther team would score. But the<lb/>
action in the last two minutes was<lb/>
fast and furious.<lb/>
After exchanging unsuccess-<lb/>
ful posscsions, the Pirates found<lb/>
themseleVes with the ball and :13<lb/>
seconds remaining in the game.<lb/>
ECU called a timeout and Coach<lb/>
Steele set up the inbound plav.<lb/>
"We ran our special. We<lb/>
wanted to get the ball to Gus at the<lb/>
top oi the key Steele said. "If he<lb/>
was open, he was to take the shot.<lb/>
If not he was to look for Blue in-<lb/>
side<lb/>
The plav ran asdesigncd. The<lb/>
inbound pass went to Hill who<lb/>
was so open, he took a dribble in<lb/>
to get a closer shot. But as he fired<lb/>
the shot up, the defense extended<lb/>
out and blocked the three-point<lb/>
attempt. Reed Lose immediately<lb/>
fouled Scott Stapleton, who had<lb/>
picked up the loose ball.<lb/>
With nine seconds, Stapleton<lb/>
had a chance to ice the game for<lb/>
Richmond at the free throw line.<lb/>
He missed the front end of the<lb/>
one-and-one and ECU got the<lb/>
rebound. They pushed the ball up<lb/>
court to Hill who took a three-<lb/>
pointer from the left corner. The<lb/>
shot missed, but went out of<lb/>
bounds off a Richmond plaver<lb/>
with two seconds remaining, set-<lb/>
ting up the last chance for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
With two seconds to go, ECU<lb/>
had the ball out of bounds under<lb/>
their own basket. The pass went<lb/>
to Hill under the basket. He was<lb/>
forced to put up an off-balance,<lb/>
fall-away jumper that rimmed out<lb/>
and Richmond had preserved<lb/>
their slim two point win.<lb/>
"We played outstanding de-<lb/>
fense the seond half Steele said.<lb/>
"We fought on the boards and<lb/>
competed. We held them to just<lb/>
15 points in the half and they still<lb/>
find a way to win. They're a good<lb/>
team<lb/>
Richmond Coach Dick Tar-<lb/>
rant summed up his feelings in<lb/>
one statement. "We were very<lb/>
fortunate to win<lb/>
The Spiders were lead by<lb/>
senior point guard Ken Atkinson<lb/>
who scored 16 points and dished<lb/>
out five assists. Atkinson scored<lb/>
the last 10 points for the Spiders.<lb/>
Richmond's leading scorer Mike<lb/>
Winiecki was held to just 13<lb/>
points and only two in the scond<lb/>
half. This output was almost<lb/>
SeePIRATS, page 12<lb/>
Blue Edwards dazzles the second to largest crowd at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum with a slam dunk in the beginning of the second half.<lb/>
Edwards' dunk brought the Pirates to within seven at 11-34<lb/>
(Photo by T.D. Whitmore, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Women lose to Richmond<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Spord Writr<lb/>
point-<lb/>
be? .<lb/>
East Carolina's women's bas-<lb/>
ketball team dropped its fourth<lb/>
Colonial Athletic Association<lb/>
game Saturday, as it lost to the<lb/>
University of Richmond, 78-70.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, now 9-9<lb/>
overall and 4-4 in the CAA, took<lb/>
their second loss to the Lady Spi-<lb/>
ders this season. In January, the<lb/>
two teams met at Minges with UR<lb/>
winning the 67-58 decision.<lb/>
ECU'S Sarah Grav led ECU<lb/>
with a career high 32<lb/>
Gray, a junior forward<lb/>
only the eighth ECU womer<lb/>
player to ever score 30 plus rx i<lb/>
in a game. Crav also led the ' a<lb/>
on the boards with seven n.<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
Richmond scored four <lb/>
ers in double figures. Parr. Br ant<lb/>
and Beth Spence socred 17 points<lb/>
each as the Lady Spiders im-<lb/>
proved their record to 16-3 overall<lb/>
and 6-1 in CAA plav.<lb/>
Despite shooting 56 percent<lb/>
in the first half, ECU still trailed<lb/>
UR 29-33 it the half The Lad)<lb/>
iTrab re srserit:from the<lb/>
for the<lb/>
I<lb/>
re Si<lb/>
tion<lb/>
ning t:<lb/>
? - they trai ??! to Dele<lb/>
le in rence ac-<lb/>
I ad; Pirate - .? ill return<lb/>
inference action Feb 11, when<lb/>
they host ames Madison fniver-<lb/>
SltV<lb/>
ECU Tennis season underway<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
AuitUnt Sports Editor<lb/>
ECL Head Coach Mike Steele shows his discontent at the way a call was made in Saturday night's game<lb/>
(Photo by J.D. Whitmore, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Pirates open against Bowling Green<lb/>
New football schedule announced<lb/>
Sept. 23 in Greenville. The game<lb/>
against 1SU will mark Parent's<lb/>
Weekend. On Sept. 30, ECU will<lb/>
square off against Louisiana Tech<lb/>
in Ficklen Stadium. During<lb/>
half time of the game, the ECU<lb/>
Athletic Hall of Fame will have<lb/>
inductions.<lb/>
The Pirates then travel to<lb/>
South Carolina on Oct. 7 and fol-<lb/>
lowing a week off, return home to<lb/>
face Virginia Tech. The VPI game<lb/>
will also be ECU's Homecoming<lb/>
game of 1989.<lb/>
East Carolina then travels to<lb/>
Syracuse on Oct. 28, Miami (Ha.)<lb/>
See FOOTBALL, page 11<lb/>
By CLAUDINE WURST<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
East Carolina University offi-<lb/>
cially announced the 1989 football<lb/>
schedule on Friday and the home<lb/>
town fans will get to see a lot of the<lb/>
Pirates in the beginning of the<lb/>
season. Three of the first four<lb/>
games will be in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
The 11 game schedule for the<lb/>
Pirates includes five home games<lb/>
and contests against four teams<lb/>
that played in post-season bowl<lb/>
games in 1988. These teams in-<lb/>
clude Mo. 2 ranked Miami (Fla.),<lb/>
South Carolina, Syracuse and<lb/>
Southern Mississippi.<lb/>
The Pirates open the 1989<lb/>
season on Sept. 9 against Bowling<lb/>
Green in Ficklen Stadium. This is<lb/>
a change from many tentative<lb/>
schedules that had the first game<lb/>
scheduled for Sept. 2 against<lb/>
Southern Mississippi. That game<lb/>
has been moved to Thanksgiving<lb/>
weekend (Nov. 25).<lb/>
New Head Coach Bill Lewis<lb/>
will have the luxury of playing the<lb/>
majority of the beginning of the<lb/>
season at home. The Pirates will<lb/>
travel to Cincinnati on Sept. 16<lb/>
and then will face Illinois State on<lb/>
East Carolina's tennis teams<lb/>
gear up for their opening games<lb/>
this season. The men began their<lb/>
spring schedule Saturday against<lb/>
Duke in Durham. The women<lb/>
play their first match against Wil-<lb/>
liam &amp; Mary March 9, at home.<lb/>
The men's team had their first<lb/>
match against Duke Saturday at<lb/>
Durham. The Pirates were de-<lb/>
feated by the Blue Devils 6-0. Al-<lb/>
though the men lost, Head Coach<lb/>
Bill Moore said, "The team did<lb/>
well for the first time out and the<lb/>
matches were close<lb/>
"For the next few games, we<lb/>
will be working on pulling the<lb/>
team together Moore said.<lb/>
"With so much depth anil pot n<lb/>
rial, we are still working our line-<lb/>
up<lb/>
Last year, the men's team fin-<lb/>
ished sixth in the CAA 1 all Tour<lb/>
nament. This year, Moore said,<lb/>
"The Pirates will do well because<lb/>
of the overall depth of the team<lb/>
There are seven returning<lb/>
players, a transfer student and<lb/>
three competitive freshmen who<lb/>
compose the Pirates. Bobby<lb/>
MacPherson is a junior transfer<lb/>
student from the top-ranked ten-<lb/>
nis team of Anderson Junior Col-<lb/>
lege in South Carolina Sammy<lb/>
Tunsi, a freshman, is the No. 1<lb/>
ranked player in Algeria, Africa.<lb/>
All of the new members bring<lb/>
added strength to the team this<lb/>
season. "The men will be quite<lb/>
competitive,and highly ranked in<lb/>
the conferen M re said<lb/>
Pirates also fin-<lb/>
ished sixth in the . - Tourna-<lb/>
ment last year They have tour<lb/>
returning members and four new<lb/>
players: Brandi Dutcher, fresh<lb/>
man Ty Meyers, senior; Heather<lb/>
Mason, sophomore; and Eliza-<lb/>
beth Henderson, junior. "This<lb/>
will be a building semester tor the<lb/>
team. Assistant Coach Lvnn<lb/>
Gorskj said.<lb/>
I"his is also the first year for<lb/>
both o the coaches. Moore comes<lb/>
to ECU from East Stroudsburg<lb/>
University in Pennsylvania<lb/>
where he was director of tennis in<lb/>
1987 s Moore received his doc-<lb/>
torate in sports psychology at the<lb/>
University ot Virginia where he<lb/>
See TENNIS, page 12<lb/>
Gamecock coach dies at 51<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP)<lb/>
South Carolina coach Joe Morri-<lb/>
son, who brought the Gamecocks<lb/>
into the national spotlight with<lb/>
the success on the football field<lb/>
and controversy off it, died of a<lb/>
heart attack after playing racquet-<lb/>
ball with three friends. He was 51.<lb/>
Morrison had been playing<lb/>
racquetball at Williams-Brice Sta-<lb/>
dium for about a half hour with<lb/>
defensive coordinator joe Lee<lb/>
Dunn, attroncy Edward "Punky"<lb/>
Holler and businessman Ken<lb/>
Wheat before he suffered what<lb/>
Providence Hospitial spokes-<lb/>
woman Dawn Catalano called a<lb/>
"massive heart attack<lb/>
Morrison, who had a history<lb/>
of heart problems, was taken to<lb/>
Providence, arriving at 844 alive<lb/>
but unconscious. He was pro-<lb/>
nounced dead at 904 pm, Cata-<lb/>
lano said.<lb/>
Morrison was not feeling any<lb/>
pain but did have a "small, funny<lb/>
sensation near his elbow" after<lb/>
playing racquetball, Athletic Di-<lb/>
rector King Dixon said. But when<lb/>
the players shook hands they<lb/>
noticed Morrison's hands were<lb/>
"awfully cold Dixon said.<lb/>
Dunn called trainer Terry<lb/>
Lewis, who in turn contacted a<lb/>
team doctor, who checked<lb/>
Morrison's pulse and heartbeat,<lb/>
Dixon said<lb/>
"I think they were well within<lb/>
the range when the doctor got<lb/>
there. But they prevailed upon Joe<lb/>
to spend the night in the hospital<lb/>
to have a complete check, which<lb/>
Joe agreed to Dixon said.<lb/>
First, however, Morrison de-<lb/>
cided to take a shower. But during<lb/>
the shower, he collapsed. He was<lb/>
found there by one or more of his<lb/>
playing partners, who began per-<lb/>
forming cardiopulmonary resus-<lb/>
citation on the coach, Catalano<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Morrison, a smoker, under-<lb/>
went a sugical procedure for<lb/>
removal of a blockage in a coro-<lb/>
nary artery in March 1985.<lb/>
Dixon said Morrison, who<lb/>
had been on the road recruiting<lb/>
almost constantly since the season<lb/>
See COACH, page 12<lb/>
Pirate's Booty<lb/>
Officiating assisted Richmond<lb/>
By KR1STEN HALBERG<lb/>
Spoils Editor<lb/>
Hello sports fans.<lb/>
All across campus faithful<lb/>
Pirate fans continue to weep and<lb/>
dwell over Saturday night's<lb/>
game. The physical contest be-<lb/>
tween the No. 1 team in the CAA,<lb/>
Richmond, and the seventh place<lb/>
Pirates proved to be an exciting<lb/>
and entertaining game for the<lb/>
packed Minges Coliseum, but, to<lb/>
no avail, East Carolina would not<lb/>
leave the court with a victory.<lb/>
The Hoopsters played their<lb/>
hearts out, letting up only once<lb/>
when Richmond stretched their<lb/>
lead 41-32 by the end of the first<lb/>
half.<lb/>
ECU then buckled down,<lb/>
regained the lead and went on to<lb/>
lose 56-54 in the last :13 seconds<lb/>
when, after three attempts, the<lb/>
Pirates could not get the ball in the<lb/>
basket.<lb/>
But perhaps more dis-<lb/>
sapointing than the loss itself was<lb/>
the fact that Richmond was play-<lb/>
ing with a three player handicap.<lb/>
The Spiders had three extra<lb/>
players on the court throughout<lb/>
the game. 1 thought only five play-<lb/>
ers could be on the court at one<lb/>
time. This must be a new NCAA<lb/>
rule tor away games<lb/>
To make things even more<lb/>
difficult for ECU, Richmond<lb/>
dressed these three extra players<lb/>
in black and white striped uni"<lb/>
forms instead of the traditional<lb/>
blue and red uniforms the Pirate <lb/>
are accustomed to seeing whe<lb/>
they play Richmond.<lb/>
Finally, to really make the<lb/>
Pirates scratch their heads<lb/>
Richmond gave those three play-<lb/>
ers the power and the whistles to<lb/>
stop the game at any given time to<lb/>
call fouls against East Carolina<lb/>
while simply shutting their eyes<lb/>
to any Richmond foul.<lb/>
Now to an average viewer<lb/>
these three extra players might<lb/>
seem like they were the officials<lb/>
See, OFFICIATING, page II<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058122_0013"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN'<lb/>
FEBRUARY 7,1989 11<lb/>
Pirate swimmers<lb/>
head to the CAAs<lb/>
By KRISTEN HALBERC<lb/>
Spot Editor<lb/>
Navy is the favorite in confer-<lb/>
ence swimming and diving for the<lb/>
men and women according to<lb/>
ECU Head Coach Rick Kobe as his<lb/>
team prepares for the Colonial<lb/>
Athletic Association Champion-<lb/>
ships to be held Wednesday- Sat-<lb/>
urday.<lb/>
"For the guys, we see the<lb/>
CAA meet as a two team meet,<lb/>
us and the Naval Academy<lb/>
Kobe said. "Navy will be our only<lb/>
competition<lb/>
The Middys were the CAA<lb/>
champions last season beating the<lb/>
Pirates by 14 points. "We hope we<lb/>
are 14 points better and Navy is 14<lb/>
points worse Kobe said.<lb/>
The Midshipmen have been<lb/>
tough throughout the season and<lb/>
look to take the CAA champion-<lb/>
ship meet, but Kobe is optimistic<lb/>
that his team can give them a run<lb/>
tor their money. "I think us and<lb/>
Navy will probably be a good 200-<lb/>
250 points ahead of the next best<lb/>
team Kobe said.<lb/>
For the women, Navy also<lb/>
won last year and look to be the<lb/>
favorites again prior to CAA<lb/>
competition. Kobe explained the<lb/>
real competition will come from<lb/>
the Dukes of James Madison. "Us<lb/>
ind fames Madison will probably<lb/>
ne fighting for third Kobe said.<lb/>
ECU swam JMU during the<lb/>
in regular season action. "She<lb/>
should win but it is going to be<lb/>
tough Kobe said.<lb/>
For the men, Kobe predicted<lb/>
Raymond Kennedy to be a power-<lb/>
house for the Pirates as he should<lb/>
regular season and in a hard-<lb/>
fought contest, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
just narrowly escaped the wrath<lb/>
of James Madison to win it in Har-<lb/>
risonburg, Va 153-147.<lb/>
Kobe said William &amp;: Mary<lb/>
would probably fill the second<lb/>
place position.<lb/>
Meredith Bridgers, the<lb/>
NCAA qualifier and ECU record-<lb/>
holder in both the breaststrokes, is<lb/>
a stronghold for the Lady Pirates<lb/>
as she is almost a shoe-in to win<lb/>
both 100 and 200-yard<lb/>
breaFtet?okes. "Meredith will eas-<lb/>
ily win in both the breaststrokes<lb/>
Kobe predicted.<lb/>
Sherry Campbell, also an<lb/>
NCAA qualifer on both the one<lb/>
and three-meter diving boards,<lb/>
should also prove to be tough to<lb/>
beat. However, she has lost twice<lb/>
win both the 100 and 200-yard<lb/>
breaststroke events. Kennedy<lb/>
won the 100-yard breaststroke<lb/>
and the 200-yard individual med-<lb/>
ley in the C A A's last year when he<lb/>
swam a 57.93 in the breaststroke<lb/>
and a 1:55.40 in the IM.<lb/>
Andy Johns is also favored to<lb/>
win in both the 100 and 200-yard<lb/>
butterfly.<lb/>
Kobe has been resting his<lb/>
swim and dive teams before CAA<lb/>
action but the work in preparing<lb/>
has been more involved. "The<lb/>
work we do is a little more quality<lb/>
kind of work while swimming<lb/>
less yardage Kobe explained.<lb/>
The swimmers will also shave<lb/>
their bodies before competition.<lb/>
Kobe said that a few swim-<lb/>
mers still have a chance to qualify<lb/>
for the NCAA's because most of<lb/>
the fastest times come out of the<lb/>
conference championship meet.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION FOR<lb/>
STUDENTS WHO NEED<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
MONEY FOR COLLEGE<lb/>
Every Student Is Eligible for Some Type of Financial Aid<lb/>
Regardless of Grades or Parental Income.<lb/>
? We have a data bank ot over 200 000 listings of scholarships, fellow<lb/>
ships, grants, and loans representing over $10 billion in private sector<lb/>
funding<lb/>
Many scholarships are given lo students based on their academic<lb/>
interests, career plans family heritage and place of residence<lb/>
There's money available tor students who have been newspaper<lb/>
carriers, grocery clerVs cheerleaders non smokers etc<lb/>
? Results GUARANTEED<lb/>
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ANYTIME<lb/>
For A Free Brochure<lb/>
(800) b-6401<lb/>
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Why Trust Your<lb/>
Pictures With an<lb/>
Out of Town Lab?<lb/>
INSTANT REPLAY WILL DEVELOP<lb/>
YOUR PICTURES WHILE YOU WAIT<lb/>
Head Coach Rick Kobe supervises the performance of the swim-<lb/>
mers (Photo bv ECU Photolab).<lb/>
Football schedule released<lb/>
Continued from paeelO<lb/>
on Nov. 4 and then rcturnnomc to<lb/>
plav Temple on Nov. 11 in the<lb/>
final home game of the season.<lb/>
ECU finishes the season on the<lb/>
road with games at Pittsburgh,<lb/>
Nov. 18 and Southern Missis-<lb/>
sippi, Nov. 25.<lb/>
"Obviously, it is a very chal-<lb/>
lenging schedule, as you can tell<lb/>
bv looking at it said Lewis, who<lb/>
comes to ECU after spending nine<lb/>
years at the University of Georgia.<lb/>
"It means we will have to be the<lb/>
verv best team we are capable of<lb/>
being to be successful<lb/>
ECU Athletic Director Dave<lb/>
Hart, Jr. also announced that se-<lb/>
ries contracts have been signed<lb/>
with Pittsburgh and Tulane for<lb/>
the early 1990's. South Carolina,<lb/>
Southern Mississippi, Virginia<lb/>
Tech and Cincinnati have all<lb/>
signed contract extension.<lb/>
There has also been an<lb/>
extension with West Virginia for<lb/>
the 1995 and 1996 seasons. Akron<lb/>
has been added to the schedules<lb/>
for the 1991 and 1992 seasons.<lb/>
1989 EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
Sept. 6 BOWLING GREEN<lb/>
(7 p.m.)<lb/>
Sept. 16 at Cincinnati (7 p.m.)<lb/>
Sept. 23 ILLINOIS STATE<lb/>
(Parent's Weekend)<lb/>
Officiating<lb/>
questionable<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
on the court and it turns out, they<lb/>
were.<lb/>
Richmond is a tough, aggres-<lb/>
sive team who loves to get physi-<lb/>
cal with their opponents. Satur-<lb/>
day was no exception for the Spi-<lb/>
ders as they played with the same<lb/>
style and intensity against the<lb/>
Pirates as they had in ECU's last<lb/>
confrontation with Richmond<lb/>
and against other opponents all<lb/>
season. And even with this push<lb/>
and shove style of play, East Caro-<lb/>
lina did not go to the free throw<lb/>
line unbl 26 minutes into the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Officiating is a tough occupa-<lb/>
tion. This nonglorious job re-<lb/>
quires an official to maintain a fair<lb/>
and just game of basketball while<lb/>
at the mercy of a hostile home<lb/>
crowd. But the key word here is<lb/>
fair, something that the officials<lb/>
failed to review in their officiating<lb/>
manuals before arriving on the<lb/>
court.<lb/>
No one can say with total<lb/>
confidence that East Carolina<lb/>
would have beaten the Spiders<lb/>
had the officiating been better.<lb/>
And while the ECU vs. Richmond<lb/>
basketball game will go down in<lb/>
the record books as just another<lb/>
game the Pirates lost for the 1988-<lb/>
89 season, ECU players, coaches<lb/>
and fans will daydream of the win<lb/>
that almost could have been.<lb/>
Sept.<lb/>
Oct.<lb/>
Oct. 21<lb/>
Oct. 28<lb/>
Nov. 4<lb/>
Nov. 11<lb/>
Nov. 18<lb/>
Nov. 25<lb/>
(7 p.m.)<lb/>
30 LOUISIANA TECH<lb/>
(Hall of Fame Inductions)<lb/>
(1:30 p.m.)<lb/>
7 at South Carolina (TBA)<lb/>
VIRGINIA TECH<lb/>
(Homecoming) (2 p.m.)<lb/>
at Svracuse (1:30 p.m.)<lb/>
at Miami, Fla. (TBA)<lb/>
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at Southern Mississippi<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058122_0014"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 7,1989<lb/>
South Carolina coach dies of heart attack<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
ended, had been sick about a<lb/>
week ago with a flu or virus that<lb/>
had left him "feeling awfully<lb/>
weak<lb/>
"Coach Joe Lee Dunn said he<lb/>
had never seen Joe feel so badly in<lb/>
his life physically Dixon said.<lb/>
Morrison, who played in the<lb/>
NFL for the football Giants from<lb/>
1959 to 1972 as a running back and<lb/>
an end, came to South Carolina<lb/>
after previous coaching stints at<lb/>
both Tennessee-Chattanooga and<lb/>
New Mexico, Morrison's career<lb/>
record was 101-72-7 over 16 sea-<lb/>
sons.<lb/>
He was 39-28-2 in six seasons<lb/>
at Sou th Carolina, including 8-4 in<lb/>
1988, when he took the Game-<lb/>
cocks to the Liberty Bowl, where<lb/>
they lost ot Inidana 34-10. South<lb/>
Carolina has never won a bowl<lb/>
game, losing all eight it has<lb/>
played.<lb/>
The season was a controver-<lb/>
sial one, however. The Game-<lb/>
cocks faltered near the end, losing<lb/>
four of their last six games. That<lb/>
came on the heels of allegations by<lb/>
former Gamecock defensive line-<lb/>
man Tommy Chaikin.<lb/>
In a story in Sports Illus-<lb/>
trated, Chaikin, who played at<lb/>
South Carolina from 1983 to 1987,<lb/>
said he and other players used<lb/>
steroids and about half of the 1986<lb/>
team use the muscle-building<lb/>
drug. Chaikin also said some<lb/>
players used drugs such as co-<lb/>
caine and LSD.<lb/>
Morrison said he had heard<lb/>
rumors some players might have<lb/>
been using steroids but the allega-<lb/>
tions were never substantiated.<lb/>
The allegations by Chaikin<lb/>
have prompted a grand jury in-<lb/>
vestigation that is expected to<lb/>
continue when juors reconvene<lb/>
later this month.<lb/>
University President James<lb/>
Holderman said he didn't think<lb/>
Morrison was under any added<lb/>
pressure this year.<lb/>
"I don't think he was under<lb/>
any more stress than any football<lb/>
coach was under Holderman<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Dixon agreed.<lb/>
"I did not detect any more<lb/>
stress on Joe this year Dixon<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Morrison's private life was<lb/>
the focus of intense scrutiny two<lb/>
years ago when it was learned he<lb/>
had had a child by a woman he<lb/>
began seeing while he was at New<lb/>
Mexico. The woman, Barbara J.<lb/>
Button, moved to South Carolina<lb/>
after Morrison became head<lb/>
coach there.<lb/>
Morrison acknowledged he<lb/>
was the father of Ms. Button's<lb/>
daughter, Lisa Nicole Morrison,<lb/>
who was born June 12, 1982 in<lb/>
Albuquerque, N.M.<lb/>
Despite the con trovers! tes,<lb/>
Morrison was known as a winner<lb/>
as a coach and a player.<lb/>
Pirates lose to Richmond in final seconds of the game<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
seven points under his season<lb/>
average.<lb/>
"We ran a box and one against<lb/>
VViniecki Steele said. "He got a<lb/>
lot of easy baskets and layups<lb/>
against us the first game. Tonight,<lb/>
we really played him well and<lb/>
kept him from getting those easy<lb/>
shots<lb/>
ECU senior Blue Edwards led<lb/>
the way for the Pirates. He scored<lb/>
a game-high 21 points on 10-19<lb/>
from the field. He also grabbed<lb/>
five rebounds and had four as-<lb/>
sists. Kenny Murphy also had a<lb/>
fine game chipping in with 15<lb/>
points. Murphy was 34 from<lb/>
three-point range and had four as-<lb/>
sists.<lb/>
Edwards 21 points gives him<lb/>
515 points on the season. This<lb/>
moves him to fourth on the single-<lb/>
season scoring list at ECU. He<lb/>
needs 20 points to surpass March-<lb/>
ell Henry for third and Edwards<lb/>
needs 185 to pass Oliver Mack for<lb/>
the all-time single season scoring<lb/>
record.<lb/>
Senior point guard Jeff Kelly<lb/>
dished out two assists to tie him<lb/>
for the career assist record.<lb/>
Kelly's two assists gave him 232<lb/>
for his career. This tied him with<lb/>
former ECU star Curt Vander-<lb/>
horst. Kelly's next assist will give<lb/>
him the outright record.<lb/>
The loss moves the Pirates to<lb/>
10-10 for the season and 4-5 in the<lb/>
CAA. Richmond runs their rec-<lb/>
ord to 14-7 and an unblemished 8-<lb/>
0 in conference.<lb/>
Edwards<lb/>
Hill<lb/>
Love<lb/>
Kelly<lb/>
Murphy<lb/>
Lose<lb/>
Perlich<lb/>
Mote<lb/>
Team<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
East Carolina (54)<lb/>
MP FG FT R F A<lb/>
10-19 1-3 5 3 4<lb/>
2-11 0-0 4 4 2<lb/>
39<lb/>
28<lb/>
18<lb/>
29<lb/>
36<lb/>
33<lb/>
7<lb/>
5<lb/>
200<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
2-3<lb/>
6-11<lb/>
2-5<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
1-2<lb/>
0-0 3 10<lb/>
0-0 12 2<lb/>
0-0 5 14<lb/>
2-2 6 3 4<lb/>
0-0 0 0 0<lb/>
0-0 0 10<lb/>
5<lb/>
23-52 3-5 29 15 16 54<lb/>
FT<lb/>
21<lb/>
6<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
15<lb/>
6<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
Shields<lb/>
Staplcton<lb/>
VViniecki<lb/>
Atkinson<lb/>
English<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
Blair<lb/>
Webb<lb/>
Bryant<lb/>
Team<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
32<lb/>
41<lb/>
Richmond (56)<lb/>
MP FG FT<lb/>
1-3<lb/>
3-5<lb/>
6-9<lb/>
6-15<lb/>
3-9<lb/>
3-8<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
1-1<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
18<lb/>
26<lb/>
40<lb/>
40<lb/>
38<lb/>
25<lb/>
1<lb/>
8<lb/>
4<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-2<lb/>
1-3<lb/>
1-2<lb/>
2-2<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
R F<lb/>
5 2<lb/>
3 2<lb/>
9 3<lb/>
1 2<lb/>
5 1<lb/>
3 0<lb/>
200<lb/>
0-0 0 0<lb/>
0-0 1 1<lb/>
0-0 0 0<lb/>
3<lb/>
23-50 4-9 3011 15 56<lb/>
FT<lb/>
2<lb/>
6<lb/>
13<lb/>
16<lb/>
8<lb/>
9<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
22?54<lb/>
15? 56<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<lb/>
Chico's in Rocky Mount<lb/>
or Greenville (two trips<lb/>
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No purchase ncc?saryY?u n??d not be<lb/>
present to wia. Most be lBjrear?-old to refit<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Tennis team preview<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
was also the assistant coach from<lb/>
1982-86.<lb/>
A native of North Carolina,<lb/>
Moore resides in Greenville with<lb/>
his wife and two children. Moore<lb/>
also serves as a sport psychology<lb/>
consultant to collegiate tennis<lb/>
teams and professional athletes.<lb/>
52lCotanche 757-1666<lb/>
Lacrosse season to open<lb/>
w<lb/>
ALL JEWELRY<lb/>
If you enjoy all the nonstop<lb/>
action of hockey and the physical<lb/>
contact of football, then you'll<lb/>
love lacrosse. Lacrosse a mainly<lb/>
Northeastern game that combines<lb/>
finesse with a lot of physical plav.<lb/>
The East Carolina Lacrosse<lb/>
Club began practice for their<lb/>
spring season at the end of Janu-<lb/>
arv. The lacrosse club, coached by<lb/>
Duke Whelan, is looking forward<lb/>
to another successful season.<lb/>
Many returning veterans, along<lb/>
with new freshman, help to make<lb/>
up a strong team both offensively<lb/>
and defensively this season.<lb/>
The lacrosse team has many<lb/>
home games this season with<lb/>
their first one against Maryland.<lb/>
The game is Sunday Feb. 26, at 1<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
If you want to see a finesse<lb/>
game, packed with actions and<lb/>
physical contact, come support<lb/>
Pirate Lacrosse in their seven<lb/>
home games.<lb/>
At omnan we're also<lb/>
interested in vour future.<lb/>
Let's Deal With The Basic Suit<lb/>
so you can get the most out<lb/>
of that very important interview.<lb/>
The navy or charcoal suit is basic<lb/>
to any wardrobe, especially in<lb/>
the desirable dacron wool blend<lb/>
which is the best all-year fabric.<lb/>
We highly recommend these<lb/>
suits for the about-to-graduate<lb/>
senior and the young Profes-<lb/>
sional Businessman. Normally<lb/>
priced at $325.00, this very spe-<lb/>
cial group of Austin Reed suits in<lb/>
their Westminster series will be<lb/>
priced at<lb/>
$285.00<lb/>
(For a limited time only)<lb/>
o?fmans<lb/>
MENS WEAR<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Tarrytown Mall, Rocky Mount<lb/>
(Inquire about our college charge account for this event.)<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
Bracelets<lb/>
Necklaces<lb/>
Earrings<lb/>
Charms<lb/>
50 off<lb/>
Diamonds<lb/>
Watches<lb/>
Sterling<lb/>
Fancy Rings<lb/>
at<lb/>
The Coin &amp; Ring Man<lb/>
10:00-5:00 M - F<lb/>
10:00-3:00 Sat.<lb/>
On The Corner Below "Fizz"<lb/>
400 S. Evans Street<lb/>
(Closed for Lunch<lb/>
12:30-1:30)<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
Eas<lb/>
tXanolina<lb/>
Playhouse<lb/>
presents<lb/>
im tin?<lb/>
fBaad<lb/>
CONTAINS AN EXTREME FRANKNESS OF LANGUAGE. THE BEST<lb/>
AMERICAN PLAY IN SOME SEASONS  NOT FOR EVERYBODY, JUST FOR<lb/>
SOPHISTICATED PLAYGOERS - N.Y. TIMES<lb/>
FEBRUARY 8, 9, 10 &amp; 11<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre ? 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
GENERAL PUBLIC: $5.00 ? ECU STUDENTS: $3.00<lb/>
CALL: 757-6829<lb/>
?.???y'sSswK<lb/>
Be a part of<lb/>
National Collegiate Drug Awareness Week<lb/>
February 6-12<lb/>
special screening of<lb/>
AMERICA HURTS:<lb/>
The Drug Epidemic<lb/>
TuesFeb.7i?tf7pm<lb/>
B04 JoynrTill<lb/>
?" SP9<lb/>
tance A$<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058122_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>