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<pb facs="00058126_0001"/>
EDITORIALSInside4<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS FEATURES6<lb/>
 8<lb/>
SPORTS10<lb/>
<lb/>
Features<lb/>
LaVonda Gaskins wins dance scholarship.<lb/>
Check out page 8.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pirate defense puts naval blockade on<lb/>
Navy. Women beat conference foe.<lb/>
Read about the action on page 10.<lb/>
?he iEaot Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. M No. S2<lb/>
Tuesday February 21, 19S-)<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
12 Tages<lb/>
Circulation 12,0CJ<lb/>
4Holy roos'ing winged mammals,<lb/>
there are bats in the Belk-fry<lb/>
KEE23E<lb/>
iV<lb/>
Residents oi this Belk Hall suite welcome others to experience an<lb/>
unique alternative to campus shelter. (Photo bv Thomas Walters?<lb/>
Photolab)<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
NrwiFditor<lb/>
On the door of room 417-D<lb/>
Belk Dormitory a sheet of paper<lb/>
reads "Welcome to the Bat Cave<lb/>
Rut super hero Batman is no<lb/>
where in sight.<lb/>
For a week, residences of<lb/>
rooms A, C and D in suite 417<lb/>
have had to share their homes<lb/>
with an estimated 100 small<lb/>
brown bats who flew through<lb/>
small cracks and holes in the<lb/>
walls.<lb/>
"Everybody thought we were<lb/>
pulling their leg at first Kathy<lb/>
iblock, resident of 417-D, said<lb/>
after having the webbed mam-<lb/>
mals in her room for a week.<lb/>
"They didn't realize the problem<lb/>
was that bad she said.<lb/>
"We figured campus security<lb/>
would be ones first to call, but<lb/>
thev said they didn't have an offi-<lb/>
cer to come at the time. They said<lb/>
it anyone gets bitten to give them<lb/>
a call Niblock said.<lb/>
Two weeks ago, the resi-<lb/>
dences of 417, located in the west-<lb/>
em corner oi Belk, heard noises<lb/>
coming from outside. The noise,<lb/>
described as a mixture between a<lb/>
bird and a mouse, was then heard<lb/>
in onderblock walls of the suite.<lb/>
Niblock saw the first bat on<lb/>
Feb. 13 but really didn't know<lb/>
what it was. "1 didn't think it was<lb/>
a bat because it was so small and it<lb/>
looked like a mouse Niblock<lb/>
said. The bats entered the room<lb/>
through small holes where the<lb/>
beds are connected to the walls.<lb/>
On Tuesday, an estimated 35<lb/>
bats were killed by workers from<lb/>
the housing department who<lb/>
used brooms as their weapons.<lb/>
Another 60 bats were<lb/>
exterminated on Friday morning<lb/>
after workers fumagated rooms A<lb/>
and D with 24 cans of poison.<lb/>
Workers also removed cin-<lb/>
dcrblocks from the walls of rooms<lb/>
of A and D in attempts to kill the<lb/>
remaining bats. After workers<lb/>
pulled several bricks from the<lb/>
exterior of the building, an esti-<lb/>
mated 300 bats flew from the in-<lb/>
ner wall crevice, Isabelle Cos-<lb/>
grove of 417-A.<lb/>
A member of the biology<lb/>
staff said it is not unusual for bat-<lb/>
to congregrate in the hundreds<lb/>
"Female bats can roost in the<lb/>
thousands Tim Charles said "In<lb/>
the mid west they roost by the<lb/>
millions in some caves he said.<lb/>
Charles said female bats stay<lb/>
together to roost while male bats<lb/>
are individualistic and live alone.<lb/>
" I hese bats were prol abl i<lb/>
brown bats Charles sai :<lb/>
The last Kit in suite 4<lb/>
sighted on Saturday but i<lb/>
fly because it was dizzy fr r<lb/>
poison. Niblock said wort<lb/>
have chalked all the crack<lb/>
have recemented the ii I<lb/>
blocks in the walls. "Wemigl I<lb/>
able to move in on Tuesday Ni<lb/>
bl? k said<lb/>
"We arc all kind oi jun<lb/>
now. We were sitting outside i I<lb/>
Raw! the other day and a leal<lb/>
dropped from a tree and we<lb/>
ran Niblock said.<lb/>
Small number of rapes reported<lb/>
By M1NDY McINNIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
(Editor's Note: This is the<lb/>
first part of a two part series on<lb/>
rapes at ECU. Thursday, Mindy<lb/>
Mclnnis will look into rape pre-<lb/>
vention on campus.)<lb/>
On the way to her night class<lb/>
west oi campus, Jane Doe cuts<lb/>
through a familiar but dimly lit<lb/>
path. Up ahead the reassuring<lb/>
twinkle of street lights urge her to<lb/>
go on. West Campus is now in<lb/>
view as lane rounds the corner of<lb/>
the biology building.<lb/>
To her left the densely-<lb/>
wooded area is illuminated by the<lb/>
soft glow oi campus lights. As<lb/>
Jane continues toward her desti-<lb/>
nation, the fear of rape is the far-<lb/>
thest thing from her mind. Like<lb/>
most of the students at ECU, Jane<lb/>
is unaware that rape occurs.<lb/>
In reality only 15 percent of all<lb/>
rapes are reported, making rape<lb/>
most unreported<lb/>
covered that one in two college<lb/>
women reported being the victim<lb/>
of some form of sexual assualt.<lb/>
A 1986 survey oi ;4? female<lb/>
ECU students found that 335<lb/>
percent reported Wine, a victim ot<lb/>
unwanted sexual activity. Ac-<lb/>
cording to ECU Public Safety,<lb/>
several incidents were reported<lb/>
and investigated in the 87-88<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
There was one acquaintance<lb/>
rape reported whk h took place in<lb/>
Garrett dorm and one rape off-<lb/>
campus which involved an EC L<lb/>
student. In other cases, friends of<lb/>
the victims call and report the<lb/>
rape to security. This is called a<lb/>
third-party report. So tar, there<lb/>
sailant in his shin and fled.<lb/>
The other rape attempt oc-<lb/>
curred when a student was walk-<lb/>
ing along the dark path located at<lb/>
the bottom of College Hill, the<lb/>
same path that Jane Doe was tak-<lb/>
ing on the way to her night class.<lb/>
The attempts on these victims<lb/>
were close calls and they are very<lb/>
lucky that it wasn't actual rape.<lb/>
Others aren't so lucky. For<lb/>
instance, in the past five years, 14<lb/>
rapes were reported on ECU<lb/>
campus. This number could be<lb/>
greatly reduces if students would<lb/>
use precautionary measures such<lb/>
as not allowing strangers to enter<lb/>
the dorms after curfew.<lb/>
Last spring a student in Jones<lb/>
"4<lb/>
jMMMjggi .<lb/>
These are sixty of the estimated hundred brown bats which were 'hanging out' in suite 417 of<lb/>
Belk Dormitory in the last week.<lb/>
Frat initiation may be replaced<lb/>
the most unreported violent<lb/>
crime. According to studies con<lb/>
ducted bv the American College counter leads to actual rape, hor<lb/>
Health Association, acquaintance instance, there were two rape at-<lb/>
rape occurs more often among tempts reported in 1988, a male al-<lb/>
college students. In one of the legedly put a gun to the victim's<lb/>
Association's surveys, itwasdis- head. The victim kicked the as-<lb/>
has been two third party reports dorm was raped when another<lb/>
in which one rape allegedly hap- student let in a stranger, Maurice<lb/>
pened oil campus and the other Crouell. Crouell then fled but was<lb/>
happened in one oi the dorms, later apprehended and found<lb/>
The callers didn't give enough guilty. He was sentenced to 40<lb/>
information to complete the in- years for first degree rape and 20<lb/>
vestigations so the investigaitons years for attempted rape,<lb/>
were dropped Rape isnt Just a local Prob-<lb/>
Not every sexual assualt en- lem, it's a state problem as well as<lb/>
a national problem. According to<lb/>
the U.S. Bureau of the Census, an<lb/>
average 26.4 women per 100,000<lb/>
get raped every year in North<lb/>
See RAPES, page 3<lb/>
By ADAM CORNELIUS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A report published by the<lb/>
Fraternity Executives Association<lb/>
concerning the National Inter-<lb/>
fraternity Conference meeting<lb/>
last Fall indicates that the pledg-<lb/>
ing system is under scrutiny by<lb/>
fraternity leaders and may be<lb/>
replaced by an alternative<lb/>
method of membership initiation<lb/>
by next December.<lb/>
Currently pledging involves<lb/>
the first month or two of a<lb/>
student's affiliation with a frater-<lb/>
nity, ending with the student's<lb/>
aquiring full membership The<lb/>
pledge period involves orienta-<lb/>
tion meetings, parties, and educa-<lb/>
tion about the fraternity's history,<lb/>
goals, and membership.<lb/>
The FEA is comprised oi the<lb/>
:hief executives of 58 fraternities<lb/>
and serves as a forum which<lb/>
works in close contact with the<lb/>
NIC on current fraternity issues.<lb/>
In a questionnaire distributed<lb/>
among its members, 52 percent<lb/>
voted in favor of a resolution to<lb/>
Hi.<lb/>
mi H miut i tit.au iirii"i<lb/>
 -i ? . ? ? ill n<lb/>
stud) alternatives to pledging<lb/>
Fourteen percent voted against a<lb/>
resolution and 34 percent of the<lb/>
members remained neutral on the<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
At the December 3 meeting ot<lb/>
the NIC House of Delegates<lb/>
proposal was adopted by a vote of<lb/>
50 0 in which each NIC member<lb/>
was asked 'To study alternatives<lb/>
to pledge status in their chapters<lb/>
and to report its position on how<lb/>
such a program can be imple<lb/>
ire nted at the NIC convention in<lb/>
IVcemhorot 1989<lb/>
See 'FRAT page 2<lb/>
. i<lb/>
SGA postpones decision<lb/>
By LORI MARTIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
jlM-M<lb/>
The weekend ice storm covered Greenville in a winter wonderland. Saturday's baseball game was<lb/>
postponed while the bleachers of Harrington field became frosted with ice. (Photo by Gretchen<lb/>
Journigan?Photolab)<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association voted to indefinitely<lb/>
postpone a resolution concerning<lb/>
the abolition of Pirate Walk, ap-<lb/>
proved appropriations for four<lb/>
campus organizations, and recog-<lb/>
nized the constitution of a new<lb/>
campus organization in<lb/>
Monday's meeting.<lb/>
Pirate Walk will remain as it is<lb/>
for now. A resolution authored by<lb/>
Marty Helms, speaker of the legis-<lb/>
lature, was postponed indefi-<lb/>
nitely until further suggestions<lb/>
can oe made to improve the escort<lb/>
service.<lb/>
The resolution called for the<lb/>
abolition of Pirate Walk and<lb/>
asked Public Safety to implement<lb/>
a similar service for the fall<lb/>
semester. According to I lelms, he<lb/>
has learned the service cannot<lb/>
feasibly be conducted by Public<lb/>
Safety due to lack of funds.<lb/>
"Since Pirate Walk was stu-<lb/>
dent-operated, it should bo re-<lb/>
vised by the students Helms<lb/>
said. He plans to meet with Chan-<lb/>
cellor Richard Eakm, Student<lb/>
Residence Association President<lb/>
Mark Carroll, and other SGA leg-<lb/>
islators on Wednesday to discuss<lb/>
the future of the program.<lb/>
Helms asked the legislature<lb/>
to support him in his attempt to<lb/>
improve the escort service. "1<lb/>
want this body to establish strict<lb/>
criteria for the operation of Pirate<lb/>
Walk<lb/>
"I would like to see in the<lb/>
neighborhood of four to five thou-<lb/>
sand going to the operation of the<lb/>
program Helms said. The funds<lb/>
will be used tor advertisments<lb/>
uniforms and possibly a new<lb/>
communication system.<lb/>
"My plans are to wrap this up<lb/>
thi semester for the fall of 1989 so<lb/>
we cn assure the students ai<lb/>
excellent escort ser ice<lb/>
In other business, the SGA<lb/>
voted to recognize the Universit)<lb/>
Scholars Organization as a cam<lb/>
pus group. The group has<lb/>
unofficially been on campus for<lb/>
several years. Each student must<lb/>
have been awarded a University<lb/>
Scholars Award in order to be a<lb/>
member of the organization.<lb/>
The SGA appropriated $60<lb/>
to the Arnold Air Society. TU<lb/>
money will send two represent<lb/>
ti ves of the Arnold Air Societv to a<lb/>
convention in Colorado.<lb/>
An appropriation of $1l"<lb/>
<pb facs="00058126_0002"/><lb/>
<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
EDITORIALSu4<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDSIf<lb/>
FEATURES? 8<lb/>
SPORTS10<lb/>
Matures<lb/>
LaVoncU Gaskins wins dance scholarship.<lb/>
Check out page 8.<lb/>
<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Fixate defense puts naval blockade on<lb/>
Navy. Women Jbeat conference foe.<lb/>
Read about the action on page 10.<lb/>
?he iEaHt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925.<lb/>
Vol. 63 No. 52<lb/>
Tuesday February 21,19S0<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
'Holy roosting winged mammals,<lb/>
there are bats in the Belk-fry<lb/>
??<lb/>
Residents ox this Belk Hall suite welcome others to experience an<lb/>
unique ?ltemaHTe'to campus shelter. (Photo by Thomas Walters?<lb/>
Photolab)<lb/>
By TIM HAMPTON<lb/>
Nam Editor<lb/>
On the door of room 417-D<lb/>
Belk Dormitory a sheet of paper<lb/>
reads "Welcome to the Bat Cave<lb/>
But super hero Batman is no<lb/>
where in sight.<lb/>
For a week, residences of<lb/>
rooms A, C and D in suite 417<lb/>
have had to share their homes<lb/>
with an estimated 100 small<lb/>
brown bats who flew through<lb/>
small cracks and holes in the<lb/>
walls.<lb/>
"Everybody thought we were<lb/>
pulling their leg at first Kathy<lb/>
Niblock, resident of 417-D, said<lb/>
after having the webbed mam-<lb/>
mals in her room for a week.<lb/>
"They didn't realize the problem<lb/>
was that bad she said.<lb/>
"We figured campus security<lb/>
would be ones first to call, but<lb/>
they said they didn't have an offi-<lb/>
cer to come at the time. They said<lb/>
if anyone gets bitten to give them<lb/>
a call Niblock said.<lb/>
Two weeks ago, the resi-<lb/>
dences of 417, located in the west-<lb/>
em corner of Belk, heard noises<lb/>
coming from outside. The noise,<lb/>
described as a mixture between a<lb/>
bird and a mouse, was then heard<lb/>
in dnderblock walls of the suite.<lb/>
Niblock saw the first bat on<lb/>
Feb. 13 but really didn't know<lb/>
what it was. "I didn't think it was<lb/>
a bat because it was so small and it<lb/>
looked like a mouse Niblock<lb/>
said. The bats entered the room<lb/>
through small holes where the<lb/>
beds are connected to the walls.<lb/>
On Tuesday, an estimated 35<lb/>
bals were killed by workers from<lb/>
the housing department who<lb/>
used brooms as their weapons.<lb/>
Another 60 bats were<lb/>
exterminated on Friday morning<lb/>
after workers fumagated rooms A<lb/>
and D with 24 cans of poison.<lb/>
Workers also removed cin-<lb/>
derblocks from the walls of rooms<lb/>
of A and D in attempts to kill the,<lb/>
remaining bats. After workers<lb/>
puiled several bricks from the<lb/>
exterior of the building, an esti-<lb/>
mated 300 bats flew from the in-<lb/>
ner wall crevice, Isabelle Cos-<lb/>
grove of 417-A.<lb/>
A member of the biology<lb/>
staff said it is not unusual for bats<lb/>
to congregrate in the hundreds.<lb/>
"Female bats can roost in the<lb/>
thousands Tim Charles said. "In<lb/>
the mid west they roost by the<lb/>
millions in some caves he said.<lb/>
Charles said female bats stay<lb/>
together to roost while male bats<lb/>
are individualistic and live alone.<lb/>
"These bats were probably small<lb/>
brown bats Charles said.<lb/>
The last bat in suite 417 was<lb/>
sighted on Saturday but couldn't<lb/>
fly because it was dizzy from the<lb/>
poison. Niblock said workers<lb/>
have chalked all the cracks and<lb/>
have recemented the cinder-<lb/>
blocks in the walls. "We might be<lb/>
able to move in on Tuesday Ni-<lb/>
block said.<lb/>
"We are all kind of jumpy<lb/>
now. We were sitting outside of<lb/>
Rawl the other day and a leaf<lb/>
dropped from a tree and we all<lb/>
ran Niblock said.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Small number of rapes reported<lb/>
By MINDY McINNIS<lb/>
WtM Writer<lb/>
covered that one in two college sailant in his shin and fled,<lb/>
women reported being the victim The other rape attempt oc-<lb/>
of some form of sexual assualt. curred when a student was walk-<lb/>
fFHUnr' Note- This is the A 1986 survey of 349 female ing along the dark path located at<lb/>
first part of ao paseries on ECU students found that 33.5 the bottom of College Hill, the<lb/>
??? a?FCIJ TTu?daV M?ndv percent reported being a victim of same path that Jane Doe was tak-<lb/>
M?EnU wlu'lok Sapeprey- unwanted' sexual activity. Ac- ing on the way to her night class.<lb/>
ventiroTcarPus cording to ECU Public Safety, The attempts on these victims<lb/>
On the wo her nieht class several incidents were reported were close calls and they are very<lb/>
??52? hevvas one acquaintance instance, in the past five yja. 14<lb/>
Hrinkfe of street liehtsuree her to rape reported which took place in rapes were reported on ECU<lb/>
? ? WeSusTsCw n Garett dorm and one ripe off- campus. This number could be<lb/>
v?ew as VaTe ro1ndPs the corner of campus which involved an ECU greatly reduces if students would<lb/>
ioloev buildine student. In other cases, friends of use precautionary measures such<lb/>
To her left the densely cal1 and rcP?rt thc as not allowing strangers to enter<lb/>
wooded area is illuminated by the rape to security. This is called a the dorms after curfew.<lb/>
sXeknv of camZs lights7 As third-party report. So far, there Last spring a student in Jones<lb/>
Unelominuetowardhedesh- has been two third-party reports dorm was raped when another<lb/>
ShonS?r of rape is thefar- in which one rape allegedly hap- student let in a stranger, Maurice<lb/>
mMhme torn hernd Like pened off campus and the"other Crouell. Crouell then fled but was<lb/>
?othf happened in one of the dorms, later apprehended and found<lb/>
unaware tf????K?rs Thecallers didn't give enough guilty. He was sentenced to 40<lb/>
taHlnlvlsSSSofall information to complete the in- years for first degree rape and 20<lb/>
rS? vestigationsso theXestigaitons yg<lb/>
LLS 'NoJefy sexual assualt en- lem, it'fa state f oblemas well as<lb/>
SWSSnSltege counter leads'to actual rape. For fe.fff<lb/>
Health Association, acquaintance instance, there were two rape at- the U.S. Bureau of the Census, am<lb/>
raoe occurTmore often among tempts reported in 1988, a male al- average 26.4 women per 100,000<lb/>
SSShSTfc one of the legedly put a gun to the victim's get raped every year in North<lb/>
Association's surveys, it was dis- head. The victim kicked the as- See RAPES, page 3<lb/>
.?<lb/>
It I 11<lb/>
These are sixty of the estimated hundred brown bats which were 'hanging ouf in suite 417 of<lb/>
Belk Dormitory in the last week.<lb/>
Frat initiation may be replaced<lb/>
By ADAM CORNELIUS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A report published by the<lb/>
Fraternity Executives Association<lb/>
concerning the National Inter-<lb/>
fraternity Conference meeting<lb/>
last Fall indicates that the pledg-<lb/>
ing system is under scrutiny by<lb/>
fraternity leaders and may be<lb/>
replaced by an alternative<lb/>
method of membership initiation<lb/>
by next December.<lb/>
Currently pledging involves<lb/>
the first month or two of a<lb/>
student's affiliation with a frater-<lb/>
nity, ending with the student's<lb/>
aquiring full membership. The<lb/>
pledge period involves orienta-<lb/>
tion meetings, parties, and educa-<lb/>
tion about the fraternity's history,<lb/>
goals, and membership.<lb/>
The FEA is comprised of the<lb/>
hief executives of 58 fraternities<lb/>
and serves as a forum which<lb/>
works in close contact with the<lb/>
NIC on current fraternity issues.<lb/>
In a questionnaire distributed<lb/>
among its members, 52 percent<lb/>
voted in favor of a resolution to<lb/>
Mttlt'l jlt'l.U ?"<lb/>
? ??v. Uiiittmtm t<lb/>
study alternatives to pledging.<lb/>
Fourteen percent voted against a<lb/>
resolution and 34 percent of the<lb/>
members remained neutral on the<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
At the December 3 meeting of<lb/>
the NIC House of Delegates a<lb/>
proposal was adopted by a vote of<lb/>
50-0 in which each NIC member<lb/>
was asked "To study alternatives<lb/>
to pledge status in their chapters<lb/>
and to report its position on how<lb/>
such a program can be imple-<lb/>
mented at the NIC convention in<lb/>
DecemNn- of 1989<lb/>
See 'FRAT page 2<lb/>
SGA postpones decision<lb/>
By LORI MARTIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The weekend ice storm covered Greenville in a winter wonderland. Saturday's baseball game was<lb/>
postponed while the bleachers of Harrington field became frosted with ice. (Photo by Gretchen<lb/>
Journigan?Photolab)<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association voted to indefinitely<lb/>
postpone a resolution concerning<lb/>
the abolition of Pirate Walk, ap-<lb/>
proved appropriations for four<lb/>
campus organizations, and recog-<lb/>
nized the constitution of a new<lb/>
campus organization in<lb/>
Monday's meeting.<lb/>
Pirate Walk will remain as it is<lb/>
for now. A resolution authored by<lb/>
Marty Helms, speaker of the legis-<lb/>
lature, was postponed indefi-<lb/>
nitely until further suggestions<lb/>
can je made to improve the escort<lb/>
service.<lb/>
The resolution called for the<lb/>
abolition of Pirate Walk and<lb/>
asked Public Safety to implement<lb/>
a similar service for the fall<lb/>
semester. According to Helms, he<lb/>
has learned the service cannot<lb/>
feasibly be conducted by Public<lb/>
Safety due to lack of funds.<lb/>
"Since Pirate Walk was stu-<lb/>
dent-operated, it should be re-<lb/>
vised by the students Helms<lb/>
said. He plans to meet with Chan-<lb/>
cellor Richard Eakin, Student<lb/>
Residence Association President<lb/>
Mark Carroll, and other SGA leg-<lb/>
islators on Wednesday to discuss<lb/>
the future of the program.<lb/>
Helms asked the legislature<lb/>
to support him in his attempt to<lb/>
improve the escort service. "I<lb/>
want this body to establish strict<lb/>
criteria for the operation of Pirate<lb/>
Walk<lb/>
"I would like to see in the<lb/>
neighborhood of four to five thou-<lb/>
sand going to the operation of the<lb/>
program Helms said. The funds<lb/>
will be used for advertisments,<lb/>
uniforms and possibly a new<lb/>
communication system.<lb/>
"My plans are to wrap this up<lb/>
this semester for the fall of 1989 so<lb/>
we can assure the students an<lb/>
excellent escort service<lb/>
In other business, the SGA<lb/>
voted to recognize the University<lb/>
Scholars Organization as a cam-<lb/>
pus group. The group has<lb/>
unofficially been on campus for<lb/>
several years. Each student must<lb/>
have been awarded a University<lb/>
Scholars Award in order to be a<lb/>
member of the organization.<lb/>
The SGA appropriated $60C<lb/>
to the Arnold Air Society. Thc<lb/>
money will send two representa-<lb/>
tives of the Arnold Air Society to a<lb/>
convention in Colorado.<lb/>
An appropriation of $111<lb/>
<pb facs="00058126_0003"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21,1989<lb/>
?<lb/>
Rash of hit and runs reported<lb/>
Military time is used, 00:00 is<lb/>
midnight, 12:00 is noon.<lb/>
Feb.13<lb/>
16:00 Belk resident reported<lb/>
the communication of threats<lb/>
from a Wilmington man.<lb/>
19:45 Storm drain without a<lb/>
grate reported.<lb/>
?0:00 Damage to vehicle re-<lb/>
ported.<lb/>
22:27 Keg oi beer found in<lb/>
Scott dorm room.<lb/>
2300 Stolen property, two<lb/>
traffic signs, were found in<lb/>
Aycock.<lb/>
23.00 Resident of Aycock<lb/>
found to be in possession of<lb/>
empty keg oi beer.<lb/>
Feb.14<lb/>
4.54 Slav resident reported<lb/>
harassing phone calls to his room.<lb/>
14:50 Bats reported in resi-<lb/>
dence hall.<lb/>
23:27 Man reported trespass-<lb/>
ing-<lb/>
Crime Report<lb/>
Feb 15<lb/>
3:15 Four males given cam-<lb/>
pus citations for visitation viola-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
15:15 Resident oi White dorm<lb/>
reported damage to vehicle.<lb/>
18:25 Tyler resident reported<lb/>
drivers license lost in Menden-<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
21:21 Loud party of underage<lb/>
students in Belk.<lb/>
21:55 Jones RA reported<lb/>
damage to east central door.<lb/>
Feb. 16<lb/>
00:10 Six persons given cita-<lb/>
tions for underage consumption<lb/>
of alcohol.<lb/>
01:05 Female resident of Jones<lb/>
reported a man trespassing in the<lb/>
bathroom while she was taking a<lb/>
shower.<lb/>
11:19 Vandalism reported on<lb/>
second floor of Jenkins Art Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
14:10 Threatening phone call<lb/>
received by resident of Garrett.<lb/>
22:45 Two student given cita-<lb/>
tions for selling doughnuts in<lb/>
Tyler.<lb/>
16:00 Girl reported being as-<lb/>
saulted in her Clement dorm<lb/>
rcxim.<lb/>
Feb.17<lb/>
00:10 Jones resident given ci-<lb/>
tations in possession of pyrotech-<lb/>
nics (fireworks) and underage<lb/>
alcohol consumption. Another<lb/>
lones resident given citation for<lb/>
placing pennies in door.<lb/>
01.35 Possible attempted sui-<lb/>
cide in Tyler dorm.<lb/>
10:15 Jones resident reported<lb/>
damage to vehicle.<lb/>
12H5 First DegTee Burglary<lb/>
reported in Belk. A wallet, con-<lb/>
taining $45, was stolen from pants<lb/>
of male resident. A teller card was<lb/>
stolen from purse of female. Both<lb/>
victims were asleep with the door<lb/>
unlocked when incident oc-<lb/>
curred.<lb/>
19:05 Unidentified man dam-<lb/>
aged wall of tv room in White<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
20:19 Resident of White re-<lb/>
ported a hit and run to car parked<lb/>
at 9th Street and James Street<lb/>
parking lot.<lb/>
23:00 Raymond E. Campbell<lb/>
of Apartment 10,1005 Elm Street<lb/>
was arrested for damage to real<lb/>
property in Belk Hall.<lb/>
Feb. 18<lb/>
02:09 Mother reported son<lb/>
had taken an overdo? 2 of a drug in<lb/>
Belk dorm.<lb/>
02:35 Umstead resident broke<lb/>
window of dormitory.<lb/>
16:30 Woman was ap-<lb/>
proached by suspicious male<lb/>
south of Greene Hall.<lb/>
02:13 Jones RA reported un-<lb/>
known male on the third floor of<lb/>
Jones.<lb/>
07:00 Michael Wayne Houpe<lb/>
of 401 BScott Hall wasarrestcd for<lb/>
possession of schedule 1 drug,<lb/>
LSD.<lb/>
22:50 Rescue Unit sent to Belk<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
23:00 Bayonet found in Belk<lb/>
dorm room.<lb/>
Feb. 19<lb/>
01:30 Pamela S. Thaxton of<lb/>
301 East Fifth Street was arrested<lb/>
for DWI and exceeding posted<lb/>
ipeed limit south of Brewster<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
11:00 Slay resident reported<lb/>
creaking and entering of his ve-<lb/>
licle and larceny of radar detec-<lb/>
:or.<lb/>
11:30 Reported damage to<lb/>
chicle north of Aycock.<lb/>
01:44 Glass broken in kitchen<lb/>
area of Fletcher.<lb/>
04:45 Aycock dorm door bro-<lb/>
ken.<lb/>
21:53 Clement resident re-<lb/>
ported suspicious male in her<lb/>
room saying he was repairing her<lb/>
closet door.<lb/>
22:15 Resident of Scott re-<lb/>
ported larceny oi $80.<lb/>
Feb. 20<lb/>
02:40 Marine banned from<lb/>
campus after being reported<lb/>
unescorted in Jones.<lb/>
01:27 Steven J. Hammond of<lb/>
467 Jones Hall was arrested for<lb/>
trespassing on third floor of Jones,<lb/>
drunk and disruptive, resisting<lb/>
arrest and obstruction and delay<lb/>
of a law enforcement officer.<lb/>
12:30 Bike reported stolen<lb/>
east of White.<lb/>
15:00 Damage to vehicle west<lb/>
of Avcock.<lb/>
TKK director says<lb/>
'Frat hazing violates human values'<lb/>
and environmental<lb/>
tern.<lb/>
The action of ZBT ma v set into<lb/>
Continued from page 1 problems<lb/>
The proposal comes amid changes<lb/>
growing concern over the hazing Some fraternities are already<lb/>
of pledges, which has led to the responding to the problems. The<lb/>
death of over fortv students since supreme council of Zeta Beta Tau<lb/>
1978. According to the FEA re- fraternity passed a resolution in<lb/>
port, significant movement is September abolishing the institu-<lb/>
underway at the national and tion oi pledging within their fra-<lb/>
campus levels to address the haz- ternity, noting that pledging was<lb/>
ing issue as well as the issues of put into effect 100 years after the<lb/>
?vxual abuse, discrimination, and foundation of the fraternity sys-<lb/>
ilcohol.<lb/>
Eleven out of the 44 FEA<lb/>
members questioned said that<lb/>
they were ready to proceed to find<lb/>
a way to eliminate pledging from<lb/>
the membership structure, 12<lb/>
were receptive but needed more<lb/>
time to develop the issue, and six<lb/>
v?re undecided. Nine said they<lb/>
were going to wait for the self-<lb/>
study process to work thorugh<lb/>
their fraternity and the NIC, and<lb/>
six were not in favor of the con-<lb/>
cept at all.<lb/>
In a report to the San Jose<lb/>
Mercury News Dwavne Woerpel,<lb/>
the NIC representative of Tau<lb/>
kappa Epsilon fraternity said,<lb/>
Hedging has become synono-<lb/>
mous with hazing. We must face<lb/>
the realities of our world today or<lb/>
race extinction. The public is fed<lb/>
up. The administrators are fed up.<lb/>
And the students are fed up<lb/>
Apparcn f, insurance com-<lb/>
panies are also noticing the haz-<lb/>
ing incidents, which range from a<lb/>
pledge who was burned by oven<lb/>
cleaner to another who died of<lb/>
alcohol poisoning. T.J. Schmitz,<lb/>
executive director of TKE said<lb/>
fhat fraternities were rated<lb/>
among the ten worst insurance<lb/>
risks because of hazing and alco-<lb/>
hol-related problems.<lb/>
"In the final analysis, 1 believe<lb/>
we must admit that our structure<lb/>
is a central part of the problem<lb/>
Schmitz said. "We have created a<lb/>
sub-status membership category<lb/>
which, in part, fosters these be-<lb/>
haviors, without action we may<lb/>
end up as a modern-day example<lb/>
of the dodo bird, extinct because<lb/>
we did not respond to the internal<lb/>
motion a return to the roots of the<lb/>
fraternity system.<lb/>
"The highest human values<lb/>
enunciated in our rituals and<lb/>
creeds have been pushed into the<lb/>
shadows and forgotten in the<lb/>
wake of these senseless hazing<lb/>
tragedies Schmidt said. "Be-<lb/>
cause of this profile, I believe fra-<lb/>
ternities are often unable to re-<lb/>
cruit the top students now on<lb/>
campus<lb/>
Dn?cl Nonstop<lb/>
R?eighOurh?m<lb/>
To Ctncun. M?nco<lb/>
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Thurs Feb. 23, 5-7 p.m. r<lb/>
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and Drink Specials<lb/>
521 Cotanche Street, Greenville 757-1666<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
James F.J.McKee, Director of Advertising<lb/>
Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Scott Makey J- Ke,lh Pearce<lb/>
Phillip V. Cope Adam Blankensh.p<lb/>
Ashley E. Dalton<lb/>
DISPLAY ADVERTISING<lb/>
OpenRate$495 LocalOpenRate $4 75<lb/>
BulkRate(Contracts) Frequency (Contracts)<lb/>
100-199col.inches$4.50 5 Insertions<lb/>
200-299 col. inches$4.40<lb/>
300-399 col. inches$4.30<lb/>
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Color Advertising<lb/>
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95 l"?OQ 95<lb/>
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10:00-5:00 M-F<lb/>
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CLOTHES<lb/>
At<lb/>
The Coin &amp; Ring Man<lb/>
400 S. Evans St.<lb/>
On the corner below Fizz"<lb/>
Recycled clothing (New &amp; Used)<lb/>
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A series to assist<lb/>
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At roppmani we re<lb/>
also interested in<lb/>
your future.<lb/>
Dressing<lb/>
for the<lb/>
Interview:<lb/>
i<lb/>
Every interviewer will agree that the way<lb/>
you are dressed for the interview is ex<lb/>
tremeiy important. Many potential<lb/>
employers will inspect you from head to<lb/>
toe When you consider that many com-<lb/>
panies will interview more than one hun<lb/>
died applicants for a position, it makes<lb/>
good sense to insure that you're properly<lb/>
dressed<lb/>
A dark suit, preferably a navy, navy<lb/>
pinstripe, grey, or grey pinstripe, should be<lb/>
worn for the first meeting.<lb/>
A white shirt should he worn for each in-<lb/>
terview (some large companies require that<lb/>
their employees wear nothing but white<lb/>
shirts)<lb/>
A conservative stripe or foulard tie is<lb/>
preferred. Don't make the mistake of wear<lb/>
ing a linen tie in the winter or a wool one<lb/>
during spring or summer A burgundy stripe<lb/>
with some navy blue and or grey usually<lb/>
looks very nice with either of the aforemen-<lb/>
tioned suits<lb/>
Dark shoes, preferably a dark leather<lb/>
tassel or lace up is best Light colored<lb/>
loafers won't cut it (a fresh shine would be a<lb/>
good ideal too) Wear a belt that matches<lb/>
your shoes.<lb/>
U e u am to offei<lb/>
i hen it es to mat<lb/>
i suit Our select es suits bj<lb/>
Aust Reed ? I ? t S ffrn '?' - ? ? <lb/>
Freema ? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
We waike sun<lb/>
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A navy blazer is permissible But it m isJ<lb/>
be worn properly with a conservative stripe<lb/>
tie Grey pant- are generally the best to<lb/>
wear with the blazer (khakis are too casual<lb/>
for an interview) Again, dark shoes are<lb/>
best<lb/>
Make sure that your clothes are clean and<lb/>
pressed<lb/>
Some self proclaimed professionals say<lb/>
that you should work your way up to your<lb/>
best looking suit In other words, save the<lb/>
best for last to make the lasting impression<lb/>
when it comes down to the final cut. This<lb/>
makes sense until you consider that you<lb/>
want to make a good enough impression at<lb/>
the first interview to be asked back for the<lb/>
second This is a decision you must make<lb/>
for yourself<lb/>
oPfrnans<lb/>
MENS WEAR<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Tarrytown Mall Rocky Mount<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00058126_0004"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21,1989 3<lb/>
Ex-Drug dealer re-lives saga<lb/>
WILMINGTON (AP) ? Dale<lb/>
Varnam was a high school gradu-<lb/>
ate who salvaged cars for a living.<lb/>
When he got a chance at adven-<lb/>
ture and money through drug<lb/>
smuggling, he jumped.<lb/>
"It was like this cocaine, it<lb/>
was power he said. "It gave a<lb/>
power of everything. It was a<lb/>
power to manipulate. It changed<lb/>
my life so much at that time. At<lb/>
that time, I didn't care about noth-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Varnam, now 38, savs it was<lb/>
money - and not a love of drugs -<lb/>
that led him into the business. He<lb/>
got drunk for the first time on the<lb/>
night of high school graduation<lb/>
and smoked two joints in his<lb/>
whole life, he said. He snorted<lb/>
lines of cocaine onlv once, he said,<lb/>
because he didn't like the way it<lb/>
made him feel.<lb/>
"I didn't care about drugs<lb/>
he said. "The money was what I<lb/>
was in it for - the green Living<lb/>
near the Lockwood Folly Inlet,<lb/>
Vamam grew up several minutes<lb/>
from what has historically been<lb/>
one of the hottest importing spots<lb/>
in the state.<lb/>
In Vamamtown, as in many<lb/>
isolated towns along the coast,<lb/>
Varnam had close-knit family and<lb/>
friendships laced with boyhood<lb/>
memories. Those ties are what<lb/>
initiallv drew him into the drug<lb/>
business.<lb/>
"Let's sav back in from '78 to<lb/>
the '80s, a lot of my friends was<lb/>
involved in drugs, and I would do<lb/>
so much for them just because of<lb/>
the goodness of my heart, really<lb/>
Varnam told the Wilmington<lb/>
Morning Star. As the drugs -<lb/>
mainly marijuana - came in, Var-<lb/>
nam, then in his late 20s, would<lb/>
hide it in the woods until his<lb/>
friends came to pick it up, he said.<lb/>
Or he would help them unload it.<lb/>
At the time, he didn't view<lb/>
drugs as particularly harmful. Il-<lb/>
legal drugs seemed about as seri-<lb/>
ous to him as moonshine, he said.<lb/>
His feelings would later change.<lb/>
In the late '70s and early '80s,<lb/>
illegal drugs in Brunswick<lb/>
County were so widespread, he<lb/>
said, that he barely knew anyone<lb/>
who wasn't either using, import-<lb/>
ing or selling them. Business was<lb/>
so brisk around Varnamtown, he<lb/>
said, that once after he blinked his<lb/>
car lights at a low-flying airplane,<lb/>
the pilot thought his yard was a<lb/>
drop-off point, and left two bales<lb/>
of marijuana on his front lawn.<lb/>
The adventure of smuggling<lb/>
appealed to him, and the money<lb/>
fit neatly into his preferred life-<lb/>
style: fast cars and women. For a<lb/>
high school-educated man who<lb/>
salvaged cars for a living, the<lb/>
amount of money to be had<lb/>
seemed tremendous.<lb/>
The smuggling also high-<lb/>
lighted a part of his heritage that<lb/>
fascinated him: his pirate ances-<lb/>
tors. When he began dealing co-<lb/>
caine in the 1980s, he took on pi-<lb/>
rate trappings.<lb/>
At the gate to his home, sur-<lb/>
rounded by a frontier-style<lb/>
wooden fence and called Fort<lb/>
Apache, he flew a skull-and-<lb/>
crossbones flag. The flag was both<lb/>
a sign of his heritage, he said, and<lb/>
a symbol of cocaine: poison.<lb/>
Through his network of<lb/>
friends, Vamam said, he became<lb/>
known as reliable. While they<lb/>
were getting caught and sent to<lb/>
jail, he kept a low profile and<lb/>
didn't buy a lot of flashy items.<lb/>
By 1982, his business associ-<lb/>
ates included importers from<lb/>
Central and South America. That<lb/>
year was a crucial one for Var-<lb/>
nam.<lb/>
Tired of how the high-pres-<lb/>
sure life was affecting his two<lb/>
daughters and wife, Vamam said,<lb/>
he quit the illegal drug business.<lb/>
During that "clean" period, he<lb/>
was miserable.<lb/>
"I missed the adventure, the<lb/>
excitement he said. "My mind<lb/>
was still deranged from all the<lb/>
money<lb/>
Six months later, he was back<lb/>
in the business, he said, and for<lb/>
the first time was dealing cocaine.<lb/>
After that, his life took on a<lb/>
frenzied, underworld nature that<lb/>
he still recalls with amazement.<lb/>
He was constantly ferrying<lb/>
cocaine between Florida and<lb/>
North Carolina, driving in one of<lb/>
his Corvettes or flying with it. He<lb/>
moved huge amounts, eliminat-<lb/>
ing what he calls the middle man.<lb/>
Some of the drug money he<lb/>
gave as anonymous gifts to<lb/>
friends in financial need, he said,<lb/>
but, mostly, he spent it. After he<lb/>
and his wife separated in the early<lb/>
1980s, he went on buying crazes,<lb/>
keeping many of his possessions<lb/>
in Florida.<lb/>
As Varnam's dealings grew,<lb/>
he became more and more open<lb/>
with his drug-trafficking lifestyle.<lb/>
The law was after him, and he<lb/>
knew it.<lb/>
When an agent came to him in<lb/>
early 1987 with enough informa-<lb/>
tion to put him behind bars for<lb/>
life, Varnam decided to cooper-<lb/>
ate. By that time, he said, he was<lb/>
ready to get out of the business.<lb/>
'They said, 'Hey, the train's<lb/>
leaving he said. "I said, '1 want<lb/>
on Best thing I ever done in my<lb/>
life<lb/>
None of Varnam's assets<lb/>
were seized. He said he gave<lb/>
away most of the things he bought<lb/>
with drug money.<lb/>
If he could, the former drug<lb/>
dealer said, he would start over on<lb/>
the side of the law. "I'd go in to<lb/>
destroy it from another way, in-<lb/>
stead of allowing it Vamam<lb/>
said.<lb/>
$ $<lb/>
MEDICAL SCHOOL<lb/>
WHO WILL PAY YOUR EXPENSES?<lb/>
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NAVY OFFICER &amp;A?iC?<lb/>
INTRODUCING:<lb/>
Rapes often go unreported because victim knows offender<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
Carolina. On the national level,<lb/>
37.5 women per 100,000 are raped<lb/>
every year. If all of these rapes,<lb/>
national as well as state, were<lb/>
broken down into catagories, sta-<lb/>
tistic? would show that most<lb/>
rapes occur on the college level.<lb/>
What causes campus rapes?<lb/>
According to Janice E. Harris,<lb/>
Greenvillle Detective and Narcot-<lb/>
ics Division, most college rapes<lb/>
are alcohol related and they usu-<lb/>
ally occur after the night clubs<lb/>
close. In order to help cut down<lb/>
the number of rape incidents stu-<lb/>
dents need to learn more about<lb/>
rape itself.<lb/>
In most cases, the victim<lb/>
knows the offender personally so<lb/>
she might be hesitant to report the<lb/>
rape. Sometimes the victim will<lb/>
experience guilt and shame be-<lb/>
cause she may believe that she<lb/>
provoked the attack. These feel-<lb/>
ings stem from the myths that<lb/>
have been associated with rape.<lb/>
One myth suggests that<lb/>
women provoke rape by the way<lb/>
they dress. A manner in which a<lb/>
woman dresses is her prerogative<lb/>
and she isn't responsible for the<lb/>
way an offender may respond.<lb/>
A female has the right to de-<lb/>
cide with who to have sexual<lb/>
contact with. Forced sexual con-<lb/>
tact against a woman's will is rape<lb/>
and there is no inbetween.<lb/>
Many rapes go unreported<lb/>
because women have a fear of<lb/>
having prior sexual encounters<lb/>
exploited in the courtroom. This<lb/>
type of display doesn't go on<lb/>
anymore due to the new Rape<lb/>
Shield Law.<lb/>
This law prevents the defense<lb/>
attorney from dragging up the<lb/>
victim's previous sex life. This<lb/>
law is a big relief for students<lb/>
since most of them lead an active<lb/>
sex life.<lb/>
Leading an active sex life and<lb/>
being raped are not related be-<lb/>
cause anyone could be raped.<lb/>
Studies show that most men who<lb/>
rape lead normal sexually active<lb/>
lives.<lb/>
I The East Carolinian<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058126_0005"/><lb/>
otfje iEaat (Ear0lttuan<lb/>
Serving the Last Carolina campus community since H.?5<lb/>
Pete Fernald, c??r?M?jj?r<lb/>
Stephanie Folsom, MPnS em?<lb/>
James F.J. McKee, dim of Advertising<lb/>
Tim Hampton, mm u? Brad Bannister, cm u,to,<lb/>
KRISTEN HALBERG, ???? JEFF PARKER, si?r illustrator<lb/>
Chip Carter, mm vhtor Tom Furr, a i imtpii m?<lb/>
Susan Howell, p m?i? Debbie Stevens, s??tary<lb/>
Dean Waters, &amp;? M?r Stepi ianie Emory,m t? su;?<lb/>
Stepi ianie Singleton, aw uor Mac Clark, mmm m<lb/>
February 21.1989<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Black history<lb/>
Attitudes pick up where laws leave off<lb/>
Dr. Carter G. Woodson founded<lb/>
"Negro History Week" in 1926 with<lb/>
the idea of teaching Whites to shed<lb/>
their chauvenism and Blacks to shed<lb/>
their feelings of inferiority.<lb/>
That week became a month-long<lb/>
recognition of the history of African-<lb/>
Americans ? a month for all Ameri-<lb/>
cans to remember those who<lb/>
worked so hard in the past for the<lb/>
civil rights enjoyed today.<lb/>
Sitv-three years later, we look at<lb/>
how far this country has come and<lb/>
the progress made towards a truly<lb/>
integrated society with an appropri-<lb/>
ate pat on the back. Remembering<lb/>
the struggles of men like Woodson<lb/>
and Martin Luther King, Jr cases<lb/>
like Brown vs. Board of Education,<lb/>
and books like Uncle Tom's Cabin<lb/>
show us how much closer we are to<lb/>
a society where we can just exist as<lb/>
people, not seemingly different<lb/>
creatures judged by skin color.<lb/>
The changes thus far have been<lb/>
brought about mostly by laws.<lb/>
There are a lot of things in this coun-<lb/>
try that are refused attention, such<lb/>
as rascism of every nature, until a<lb/>
law is made. Thirty or forty years<lb/>
ago they were necessary as a forceful<lb/>
change, but now we're living in the<lb/>
new version of an old society.<lb/>
This generation has come so far<lb/>
and yet has immense ground to<lb/>
cover. After another 63 years there is<lb/>
the hope that we can live in a society<lb/>
without archaic prejudices between<lb/>
racial and ethnicgroups. There is the<lb/>
hope that we can truly honor those<lb/>
of the past by completing the goals<lb/>
which they spent their lives striving<lb/>
toward.<lb/>
And yet it is only a hope. Laws<lb/>
were used to change the past, but<lb/>
this time nothing less than a change<lb/>
in attitudes will suffice in shaping<lb/>
the future. Ifs not up to the lawmak-<lb/>
ers in the legislature anymore. Law<lb/>
can be made upon law but without<lb/>
letting go of the bitter and fearful<lb/>
attitudes between races, our<lb/>
children's ideas about each other<lb/>
will be at a standstill instead of<lb/>
moving towards an even better na-<lb/>
tion to live in. <lb/>
TERR0WS<lb/>
IN<lb/>
2000<lb/>
(AF1ZR 7M6 OZOME<lb/>
tWER MAS ALL<lb/>
Bur DePteieD)<lb/>
1 WANT A<lb/>
PIAHF. TwO<lb/>
POOARS.<lb/>
THemzfiz<lb/>
GfMYFSLLOU<lb/>
raF?JUHF0HT0q<lb/>
Don't forget North's good points<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
What is the appropriate way to<lb/>
reward a Marine Officer for twenty<lb/>
years of loval service? The answer is<lb/>
definitely not to send him to jail. But<lb/>
that is what some people want to see<lb/>
happen to Oliver North.<lb/>
In 1968, four years after a near<lb/>
fatal automobile accident, Oliver<lb/>
North graduated from the United<lb/>
States Naval Academy. Immediately<lb/>
a f ter wards he went to Officers School<lb/>
in Quantico, Virginia and soon after<lb/>
to Vietnam to fight for his country.<lb/>
He fought like a true American hero<lb/>
while earning a silver star, a bronze<lb/>
star, and two purple hearts. After<lb/>
eleven months he returned to Quan-<lb/>
tico to teach battles tactics, taught<lb/>
jungle training in Japan, and re-<lb/>
turned to teach at the Naval War<lb/>
College. It was there he was recog-<lb/>
nized by John Poindexter and was<lb/>
brought to Washington to serve at the<lb/>
National Security Council as a White<lb/>
House aide.<lb/>
Now this man is being prose-<lb/>
cuted for his hard and loyal work for<lb/>
the United States of America. The<lb/>
government has already spent be-<lb/>
tween 7 and 9 million dollars to send<lb/>
this patriot to jail. How many home-<lb/>
less Americans could we have shel-<lb/>
tered and fed with that money?<lb/>
Throughout his time at the NSC,<lb/>
Oliver North never wanted to do<lb/>
anything but serve his country. As a<lb/>
former career Marine Corp Officer,<lb/>
Oliver North has worked with great<lb/>
love of Cod and country, never prof-<lb/>
itting personally, always in an effort<lb/>
to protect his and our country. Now<lb/>
fighting for his freedom, we all owe a<lb/>
great deal to Oliver North for twenty<lb/>
vearsofserviceand putting his life on<lb/>
the line for our country. Is this the<lb/>
way we are going to thank him?<lb/>
Support Oliver North.<lb/>
Nick Skottegaard<lb/>
ECU College Republicans<lb/>
Marketing<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
TnaEast Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
droj) than byourofficein the Publica-<lb/>
tions Building, across from the en-<lb/>
trance to Joynei I ibrary.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, it! ' I<lb/>
tcrs must include the name, major,<lb/>
classification, address, phone num-<lb/>
ber, and the signature of the author<lb/>
(s).<lb/>
Letters arc limited to 300 words or<lb/>
less, double spaced, typed or neatly<lb/>
printed. All letters are subject to ed-<lb/>
iting for brevity, obscenity and libel,<lb/>
ind no personal attacks will be per-<lb/>
mitted. Students, faculty and staff<lb/>
writing letters for this page are re-<lb/>
minded that they are limited to one<lb/>
every two weeks.<lb/>
 V deadb ne re titorial material is 5<lb/>
p.m. Friday for Tuesday papers and 5<lb/>
f.m. Tuesday for Thursday editions.<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
iddition to the "Campus Forum" sec-<lb/>
tion of the paper. The East Carolinian<lb/>
itw The Campus Spectrum This<lb/>
is an opinion column by guest writers<lb/>
?'  the student body and faculty. The<lb/>
lumns are printed in "The Campus<lb/>
trunt" will contain current topics of<lb/>
ern to the campus, community or<lb/>
??. n. Tnc told'fkhs are r&amp;frbcfrftonly<lb/>
regard to ruQ of gtiihfhffialld de-<lb/>
; Persons submitting :olumns<lb/>
? be willing to accept byline credit for<lb/>
theii efforts, as no entries from ghost<lb/>
riters will be published.<lb/>
1 gggggjjjgjggt-tfWgWWggrjSjg<lb/>
Don't leave a legacy of garbage ? recycle<lb/>
1 low much space do you take up on this<lb/>
planet? There's the size of your body, your room<lb/>
or house or apartment, your car and it's parking<lb/>
space, any additional storage you rent, your<lb/>
office if it sits vacant when you're not in it<lb/>
And then there's your trash. We don't think<lb/>
about trash, because once it becomes an annoy-<lb/>
ance to us, overflowing into the room of emitting<lb/>
noxious fumes, someone gets around to taking it<lb/>
to the dumpster, and at least for our concerns, ifs<lb/>
gone, never to be seen again.<lb/>
Where does it go? In Pitt County, your trash<lb/>
goes to Allen Landfill, a lined space of land about<lb/>
3 miles west of the hospital, where it is added to<lb/>
the trash of the other 100,000 residents of this<lb/>
county, to rest and hopefully to rot, returning to<lb/>
the earth. Only most of it doesn't rot, like plastic,<lb/>
glass, and aluminum, they just sit there forever<lb/>
and take up space. Your space. You and I each, on<lb/>
the average, generate 1,547 pounds of trash ev-<lb/>
ery year. Using rough calculations based on the<lb/>
trash I carry out of my house, that would better<lb/>
than fill the average dorm room over your head.<lb/>
Multiply that times the years you will hopeful<lb/>
live, and you will realize thay YOU take up a<lb/>
whole lot of space, more than you might have<lb/>
thought.<lb/>
And that space is running out. As I under-<lb/>
stand it, the Allen Landfill could be FULL as<lb/>
early as next year. And so Pitt County is quickly<lb/>
pining the thousands of other communities<lb/>
searching for solutions to what has become a<lb/>
critical problem. A complicated problem. Noone<lb/>
wants a landfill started in their backyard, as gar-<lb/>
bage scow captains found out last year while<lb/>
floating the Gulf Stream, leaving in their wakes<lb/>
refuse that closed beaches. And much of our<lb/>
trash, as it decays or is burned, becomes quite<lb/>
toxic and dangerous to us and our environment.<lb/>
Maybe the best example is that seemingly harm-<lb/>
less Styrofoam packaging, which when broken<lb/>
or burned releases chlorofluorcarbons into the<lb/>
air, eating away the protective ozone. Scientists<lb/>
are predicting a new hole to form over the arctic<lb/>
within the next three weeks.<lb/>
And it is an expensive problem. Perhaps you<lb/>
or your folks have directly experienced trash<lb/>
collection fee hikes recently. Some fees have<lb/>
Campus Spectrum<lb/>
By<lb/>
Mike Burcher<lb/>
jumped 600 over the past year.<lb/>
It is YOUR problem. Yours and the person's<lb/>
sitting next to you and across from you. Are you<lb/>
enjoying a soda or a cup of coffee or a beer as you<lb/>
read this? What you do with that drink container,<lb/>
especially if ifs disposable, will be a legacy that<lb/>
you leave to your children and your children's<lb/>
children. Unless you choose otherwise, that plas-<lb/>
tic bottle, aluminum can, Styrofoam cup will<lb/>
long outlive you in some landfill somewhere.<lb/>
The good news is that you CAN do some-<lb/>
thing about the trash problem. You can even<lb/>
make money from it, if you are ambitious<lb/>
enough.<lb/>
Over half of what we throw away can be re-<lb/>
cycled. Pitt County has two recycling collection<lb/>
points (14th Street, and on County Home Rd, about<lb/>
1 2 mile from Bells Fork) which receive newspaper,<lb/>
mixed paper, cardboard, clear glass, colored glass,<lb/>
and aluminum cans. Several businesses will pay<lb/>
betweem $.3540 per pound of aluminum cans. It<lb/>
takes approx. 24 cans to make a pound. The East<lb/>
Carolina Vocational Center will also pay for card-<lb/>
board and computer paper.<lb/>
I lost a lot of sleep one night figuring out the<lb/>
economics of all this in terms of the ECU campus. It<lb/>
each residential student (this is NOT counting fac-<lb/>
ulty, staff, off-campus, or commuter students) gen-<lb/>
erates only one aluminum can per day for one<lb/>
semester (a conservative estimate which does not<lb/>
even begin to account for weekend consumption),<lb/>
ECU sends 600,000 cans per semester to the Allen<lb/>
Landfill, weighing 12.5 tons, taking up 11,200 cubic<lb/>
feet of space uncrushed, and which could be re-<lb/>
cycled for $9,250. SGA take note. And remember this<lb/>
is a CONSERVATIVE estimate.<lb/>
I admit that at this point, recycling is not conven-<lb/>
ient for most students. Chancellor Richard Eakin is<lb/>
now appointing a task force that will begin to resolve<lb/>
that problem within the next few years. But in the<lb/>
meantime, the Methodist Student Center will give<lb/>
you 1 cent for each can you bring, aluminum or steel,<lb/>
towards a $1.50 home-cooked meal Wednesday<lb/>
nights. (Note: Pepsi uses steel cans, which can be<lb/>
recycled in Washington for $.05pound, approx. 12<lb/>
cans). And if you do have a means of getting to the<lb/>
collection points, there is no reason vou have to wait<lb/>
for the Chancellor's committee. Certainly campus<lb/>
groups, fraternities and sororities could be on the<lb/>
cutting edge of some campus-wide solutions instead<lb/>
of waiting for a decree from the administration.<lb/>
Other ways you can help solve the trash prob-<lb/>
lem:<lb/>
 Use refillable "rcturn-for-deposit" bottles instead<lb/>
of disposable products, especially the plastic 2-liter<lb/>
bottles which never decay Even non-returnable<lb/>
bottles that can be recvcled are better than plastic.<lb/>
 Carry your own coffeetea mug which you can<lb/>
wash and reuse instead of using Styrofoam cups<lb/>
provided at so many functions and offices. Both the<lb/>
manager of the Student Stores, and the director of<lb/>
Food Services have agTeed to consider alternatives<lb/>
to the Styrofoam products used on campus, espe-<lb/>
cially in terms of letting people bring their own cups,<lb/>
if students and staff show enough interest.<lb/>
 When you give a party, use cups and utensils that<lb/>
can be washed. Soap is a whole lot cheaper than<lb/>
"plasricware Pirate cups are great for this.<lb/>
 Write your local government, congresspeople and<lb/>
senators and let them know your views about the<lb/>
environment and trash issues. Some states have<lb/>
already enacted bans on the use of chlorofluorocar-<lb/>
bons. They won't know what you think unless you<lb/>
tell them.<lb/>
"oycott businesses which use Styrofoam packag-<lb/>
ing, and encourage businesses which don't.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058126_0006"/><lb/>
Tf IE EAST C A ROLIN IAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21, 1989 5<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
5<lb/>
S<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
School eases smoking rules<lb/>
Qct ready for Spring rBreakj<lb/>
(CPS)? Bucking a national<lb/>
trend, the University of Louisville<lb/>
has softened its proposed anti-<lb/>
smoking rules, bowing to threats<lb/>
of fundig cuts from legislators in a<lb/>
state where tobacco is a $2 billion<lb/>
industry.<lb/>
University President Donald<lb/>
Swain said Feb. 7 that the new<lb/>
policy, supposed to take effect<lb/>
March 1, will not include a provi-<lb/>
sion that all "irreconcilable con-<lb/>
flicts between smokers and non-<lb/>
smokers be resolved in favor of<lb/>
nonsmokers.<lb/>
Some Kentucky legislators<lb/>
contended the policy was unfair<lb/>
to smokers and threatened to<lb/>
decrease state funding to the uni-<lb/>
versity if the new rules were im-<lb/>
plemented.<lb/>
"We've tried to address all<lb/>
concerns, including those of the<lb/>
legislators Swain said.<lb/>
"There was concern that<lb/>
smokers be treated with some<lb/>
balance. We were concerned that<lb/>
the previous policy was a little<lb/>
one-sided<lb/>
Swain said the revised policy<lb/>
directs department heads to settle<lb/>
conflicts with employees.<lb/>
The revised smoking policy<lb/>
also doesn't include previous<lb/>
bans on smoking in open work<lb/>
areas, directing instead that such<lb/>
areas be spearated into smoking<lb/>
and non-smoking sections or be<lb/>
designated one or the other after<lb/>
discussions with employees.<lb/>
"If it's fair to smokers, that's<lb/>
what we want to look at said<lb/>
state Rep. Donnie Gedling, chair-<lb/>
man of the legislature's Tobacco<lb/>
Task Force and an outspoken<lb/>
opponent of the university's ear-<lb/>
lier proposal.<lb/>
Another key legislator,<lb/>
House Agriculture Committee<lb/>
Chairman Clay Crugpper, said<lb/>
any smoking policy was inappro-<lb/>
priate for a public institution in a<lb/>
tobacco-growing state. "1 didn't<lb/>
think they needed any regula-<lb/>
tion he said.<lb/>
Louisville's policy revision is<lb/>
the exception to a growing trend,<lb/>
however. Scores of colleges and<lb/>
universities across the United<lb/>
States have restricted smoking in<lb/>
recent years, and some have even<lb/>
banned smoking completely from<lb/>
campus buildings. The policies<lb/>
generally have grown even more<lb/>
restricitive'since the start of the<lb/>
1988-89 school year.<lb/>
Washington's Big Bend Com-<lb/>
munity College, Penn State, Stan-<lb/>
ford, Tulane and Mankato State<lb/>
universities and the universities<lb/>
of Texas, Illmios, Colorado, Ne-<lb/>
braska and North Dakota are<lb/>
among the instutions that have<lb/>
restricted on-campus smoking.<lb/>
616 East Arlington Boulevard<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Chancellor Richard Eakin to discuss<lb/>
economics of eastern region in March<lb/>
ECU Newt luraau<lb/>
Dr. Richard Eakin, chancellor<lb/>
of ECU, will discuss the economic<lb/>
situation and outlook for eastern<lb/>
North Carolina during a public<lb/>
television program next month.<lb/>
Eakin will be the guest of for-<lb/>
mer University of North Carolina<lb/>
president Bill Friday on Friday's<lb/>
North Carolina People program<lb/>
that airs over the 10-channel net-<lb/>
work of North Carolina Public<lb/>
Television. It is scheduled at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. on Monday, March 6, and<lb/>
again at 7:30 p.m. Mondav, March<lb/>
27.<lb/>
Stations of the UNC Center<lb/>
for Public Television are WUND-<lb/>
TV ch. 2, Columbia; WUNC-TV<lb/>
Ch. 4, Chapel Hill; WUNE-TV Ch.<lb/>
17, Linville; WUNM-TV Ch. 19,<lb/>
Jacksonville; WUNK-TV Ch. 25,<lb/>
Greenville; WUNL-TV Ch. 26,<lb/>
Winston-Salem; WUNF-TV Ch.<lb/>
33, Asheville; WUNP-TV Ch. 36,<lb/>
Roanoke Rapids; WUNJ-TV Ch.<lb/>
39, Wilmington, and WUNG-TV<lb/>
Ch. 58, ConcordCharlotte.<lb/>
North Carolina People<lb/>
hosted by president-emeritus Fri-<lb/>
day is in its 18th year and is the<lb/>
longest running North Carolina<lb/>
public television production.<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
Martin and Mavretic debate issues<lb/>
as Republican party controls House<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) ? Despite a<lb/>
flareup over teacher pay raises<lb/>
that had the rumor mill churning,<lb/>
tli3 bipartisan coalition that<lb/>
wields power in the state House<lb/>
of Representatives is in no danger<lb/>
of collapsing, its leaders say.<lb/>
In fact, it's difficult to envi-<lb/>
sion circumstances undealent of<lb/>
Siamese twins joined at the head,<lb/>
unable to survive without each<lb/>
other. Since the faction succeeded<lb/>
in replacing former Speaker Lis-<lb/>
ten Ramsey with Joe Mavretic,<lb/>
Republicans have had their first<lb/>
taste of genuine power for the first<lb/>
tinuvjpevemory.<lb/>
They would lose it in an in<lb/>
SGA funds<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
was approved last month for the<lb/>
group to attend a regional con-<lb/>
vention where they won 11<lb/>
awards.<lb/>
An appropriation of $840<lb/>
requested by the Elections<lb/>
Committee was approved. The<lb/>
committee is responsible for the<lb/>
elections for SGA executive of-<lb/>
fices in March.<lb/>
The funds will be used for<lb/>
wages for students monitoring<lb/>
boxes and counting votes, adver-<lb/>
tising and food for the workers.<lb/>
According to Helms, an annual<lb/>
appropriation is traditional for<lb/>
the Elections Committee.<lb/>
Paul Puckett was elected to<lb/>
serve as chair of the Election<lb/>
Committee for this year's election<lb/>
on March 29. His responsibilities<lb/>
will be to solicit campus groups to<lb/>
monitor ballot boxes and to insure<lb/>
the ballot locations are run prop-<lb/>
erly.<lb/>
An appropriation of $1900 for<lb/>
the Inter-Fraternity Council was<lb/>
approved by the SGA. The money<lb/>
will pay for advertising of fall<lb/>
rush, printing and binding of<lb/>
materials and registration.<lb/>
The Irate Frisbee Club re-<lb/>
ceived an appropriation of $1015<lb/>
to cover traveling expenses to<lb/>
tournaments and registration<lb/>
fees. The 16 members of the team<lb/>
will compete in tournaments in<lb/>
North Carolina, South Carolina<lb/>
and Florida.<lb/>
Although the frisbee club<lb/>
conducts fund raisers, most of the<lb/>
money is spent maintaining the<lb/>
frisbee golf course on campus.<lb/>
Susan Cooperman, appro-<lb/>
priations chairperson, an-<lb/>
nounced a deadline of March 3 for<lb/>
all campus organizations to sub-<lb/>
mit their appropriation requests<lb/>
for the 1989-90 year. Cooperman<lb/>
said the groups must have an<lb/>
approved constitution filed with<lb/>
the SGA and raise at least 15 per-<lb/>
cent of the funds they request<lb/>
stant if the old regime were re-<lb/>
stored. And the Democrats, a<lb/>
minority within their own party,<lb/>
realize that many if not all of their<lb/>
54 colleagues still regard their<lb/>
defection as betrayal.<lb/>
If the Ramsey loyalists re-<lb/>
turned to power, the 20 renegades<lb/>
would be stripped of anything<lb/>
resembling influence. Addition-<lb/>
ally, the coalition members are<lb/>
under pressure to demonstrate<lb/>
they can effectively run the<lb/>
House.<lb/>
But as in marriage, to which<lb/>
the bipartisan arrangement is of-<lb/>
ten likened, there will be argu-<lb/>
ments - no matter how much the<lb/>
partners depend on each other.<lb/>
That's what happened last week<lb/>
when Mavretic, D-Edgecombe,<lb/>
hewed to the hard line in chastis-<lb/>
ing Republican Gov. Jim Martin's<lb/>
approach on teacher salaries.<lb/>
The day before 5,000 or more<lb/>
teachers marched on Raleigh to<lb/>
demand higher pay, Martin con-<lb/>
vened a "summit meeting of<lb/>
education and government lead-<lb/>
ers to discuss the issue. Mavretic<lb/>
was the only person invited who<lb/>
refused to go.<lb/>
He branded the summit a<lb/>
"public-relations ploy" and ac-<lb/>
cused the governor of making an<lb/>
unrealistic campaign promise to<lb/>
boost North Carolina teacher<lb/>
salaries to the national average by<lb/>
1992. The next day, as Martin lis-<lb/>
tened, Mavretic hurled moie<lb/>
darts his way in a fiery speech tc<lb/>
the teachers.<lb/>
Some Republicans cried foul.<lb/>
"I think it is time that the speaker<lb/>
be reminded that he would not be<lb/>
where he is today if the governor<lb/>
hadn't worked with the Republi-<lb/>
cans tc put him there Sen. Jim<lb/>
!ofcrw-HW R-Cabarrus. wrote in a<lb/>
letter to House Minority Leader<lb/>
Jchnathan Rhvne, R-Lincoln.<lb/>
(Ilie lEast (Carolinian<lb/>
To qualify tor Warrant Officer<lb/>
Fhyht Training, you'll need a<lb/>
high school diploma, and pref-<lb/>
erably two years of college.<lb/>
Then you must complete Army<lb/>
Basic Training before going to<lb/>
flight school. When you've<lb/>
completed flight training, you<lb/>
could have the wings of an<lb/>
Army aviator.<lb/>
Tii find out more about<lb/>
Warrant Officer Flight Train-<lb/>
ing, contact your local Army<lb/>
Recruiter.<lb/>
Sgt. Cottrell<lb/>
756-9695<lb/>
ARMY.<lb/>
BE ALL YOU CAN BL<lb/>
Ocean Front and only 3 blocks from the most<lb/>
popular nightw spots in DaytonaJ))<lb/>
vf Jk Pen Rods. Rarzles, etc.<lb/>
more<lb/>
than Sally Jesse Rapheal!<lb/>
Ifs the Return of the the<lb/>
scandalous, the libelous (but<lb/>
ALWAYS Clearly Labeled)<lb/>
Fast Carolinian Satire Page!<lb/>
Off wi wh?? prohibit by Uw.<lb/>
(919) 756-9221<lb/>
Come in and retake in our Sunat tanning bed<lb/>
urith stereo &amp; fan.<lb/>
$5.00 per visit or<lb/>
$50.00 per month, (1 visit per day).<lb/>
This offer good through March 31. 1989<lb/>
MEDIA BOARD<lb/>
is now accepting applications for General Manager<lb/>
the 1989 - 1990 academic year for the following:<lb/>
 ? The East Carolinian<lb/>
?WZMB-FM<lb/>
?Buccaneer<lb/>
?Rebel<lb/>
? Photo Lab<lb/>
?Expressions Magazine<lb/>
Please apply at the Media Board Office,<lb/>
2nd floor, Publications Building<lb/>
Phone 757-6009<lb/>
Applications accepted through<lb/>
February 24,1989<lb/>
for ?<lb/>
youi Travel Associates Sunoteak "Package maudes<lb/>
:j: Round tup ttanspoitation via Oeiuie mo'otcoocn<lb/>
ft Seven nighlj accommodations Ol one 0<lb/>
Daylono J tines! oceanltonl hotels<lb/>
 Opltonoi eicuisions to Wall Disney Wotid iPCOl<lb/>
and o'nei Hondo o"iocions<lb/>
:): A money saving discount cotd<lb/>
:?: Setyices ol t'Ovel Allocates on site vocotion sta"<lb/>
:): AH loies tips ond jetvice cnaiges<lb/>
You Drive: <lb/>
$113 for 4<lb/>
Wt Privc; i<lb/>
$178 for 4 March 4-12<lb/>
Contact;<lb/>
Lisa Deaton<lb/>
752-2789<lb/>
Renee' Hlncr<lb/>
758-8688<lb/>
?im<lb/>
e<lb/>
e<lb/>
West Area Residence Council<lb/>
is having a<lb/>
Talent Show<lb/>
March 20,1989<lb/>
7:00 pm<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
All those interested in<lb/>
participating should<lb/>
pick up an application at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Information desk<lb/>
or<lb/>
Call Mike at 752-9756.<lb/>
All applications should be turned into<lb/>
701 Fletcher Dorm<lb/>
by March 1.<lb/>
Tickets on sale at door.<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
752-9069.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058126_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21,1989<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT Two blocks<lb/>
from campus. (One bedroom available<lb/>
until July). Fully furnished, walking dis-<lb/>
tance to campus and downtown, hard-<lb/>
wood floors, friendly neighbors. $150<lb/>
month plus utilities. 757-0412.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDr D: Non<lb/>
smoker to share 2 bedroom town louse, 1<lb/>
1 2 baths. No deposit necessary. Located<lb/>
in Williamsburg Manor. Call Ximena be-<lb/>
tween 7 a m5 p.m. at 551-2109 or after 8<lb/>
p m. &amp; during weekends at 756-7797.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom duplex, 1 2 block<lb/>
from campus. Large den and kitchen<lb/>
5230.00 per month, $250.00 deposit, avail-<lb/>
able immediately. Call and leave message<lb/>
752-7538.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEELED: For summer at<lb/>
Hilton Head. Ocean ?front. Bryan 758-<lb/>
1665.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: March 1st<lb/>
Responsible female. Georgetown Apts.<lb/>
Walking distance from campus and<lb/>
downtown. 12 utilities and 12 rent. 830-<lb/>
1758. Leave message<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT: March 1st.<lb/>
Georgetown Apartments. Two bedroom,<lb/>
1 1 2 baths. Walking distance to campus.<lb/>
830-1758. Leave message.<lb/>
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
WANTED: starting in May. Three bedrm.<lb/>
apt. at Eastbook. $121.00 a month 13<lb/>
utilities. New Carpet and Ntvv refigera-<lb/>
tor. ECU Bus Serivice! Call now. 758-4924.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
LASLR PRINTER USERS! HP and<lb/>
Apple laser printer k ner cartridges can be<lb/>
recycled! Huge S$ savings. Satisfaction<lb/>
cuaranteed. For details call 7ANDMONT<lb/>
at 1 -800-332-3658.<lb/>
SONY RECEIVER: Excellent cond Re-<lb/>
mote control, still has 4 vears on warranty.<lb/>
Only S175.00. Call: 758-9470 anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE. Need ECU Alumni Directory,<lb/>
if vou have one and want to sell one,<lb/>
please call Phil at 919-829-2099 or 919-876-<lb/>
0669.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Ethan Allen bedroom set,<lb/>
$475.00, Couch, SI69.00,1800's oak dining<lb/>
table, S399.00, bookcase, $39.00, dining<lb/>
table, $69.00, coffee table, $59.00, chair<lb/>
SI 39.00, drum table, $65.00. 830-8944 or<lb/>
752-0751.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 3 cu. fridge used for 1 yr. Price<lb/>
neg. Call Jen 752-3677.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Apple He computer, monitor<lb/>
and 2 disk drives. $450.00. Call 355-5670<lb/>
CAN YOU BUY: Jeeps, Cars, 4 x 4's seized<lb/>
in drug raids for under $100.00? Call for<lb/>
facts todav. 602-837-3401. Ext. 711.<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, &amp; 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 diskettes. 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/>
(beside Cubbies) Greenville, NC 752-<lb/>
3694.<lb/>
NEED A D.J Hire the ELBO D.J. Call<lb/>
early and book for your formal or party.<lb/>
758-1700, ask for Dillon or leave a mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
PAPERS TYPEDRESUMES COM-<lb/>
POSED: Call 756-9136.<lb/>
TUTOR AVAILABLE: For Math 0045,<lb/>
Math 1063, Math 1065. Will tutor on cam-<lb/>
pus. Cull Denise at 757-6420 or 830-1750.<lb/>
SOUND MIXTURES DJ SERVICE:<lb/>
Music for all occassions. March dates<lb/>
available, call Bob at 752-4916. The most<lb/>
music variety with the best sound quality.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
FEMALE RESIDENT COUNSELOR:<lb/>
Interested in those with human service<lb/>
background wish ng to gain valuable<lb/>
experience in tht held. No monetary<lb/>
compensation, however room, utilities<lb/>
and phone providtu. Mary Smith REAL<lb/>
Crisis Center 758-HELP.<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS: Also Cruiseships.<lb/>
$10,000-$!05,000vr Now Hiring! 320<lb/>
Listings! (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. OJ-1166<lb/>
CABIN COUNSELORS &amp;<lb/>
INSTRUCTORS: (Male and Female) for<lb/>
western North Carolina 8 week children's<lb/>
camp Over 30 activities including Water<lb/>
Ski, 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 Pmewood, 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 ii. 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/>
James at 830-450 or 830-4533'<lb/>
WANTED: ENG Editor, proficient 34"<lb/>
video tape editing. Part-time. Contact<lb/>
News Director, WITN-TV, 946-3131.<lb/>
EOEAffirmative Action Employer. Mi-<lb/>
norities and women encouraged to apply.<lb/>
BRODY'S AND BRODY'S FOR MEN:<lb/>
Are now accepting applications for Cus-<lb/>
tomer Service Representatives and also<lb/>
Sales positions for the Spring semester.<lb/>
Sincere individuals with flexible sched-<lb/>
ules should apply at' Brody's, Carolina<lb/>
East Mall, M W, 2-4 p.m.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Summer job, June-<lb/>
August, at Emera.d Isle Mechanically<lb/>
inclined indhiduals to operate jet ski<lb/>
rentals. Call 523-4798 in Kinston day or<lb/>
night.<lb/>
NEW ENGIAND BROTHERSISTER<lb/>
CAMPS: OMass) Mah-Kee-Nac for Boys<lb/>
Danbee for Girls. Counselor positions for<lb/>
Program Specialists: All team sports, es-<lb/>
pecially baseball, basketball, field hockey,<lb/>
soccer and volleyball; 25 tennis openings;<lb/>
also archery, riflery and biking; other<lb/>
openings include performing Arts, Fine<lb/>
Arts, yearbook, photography, cooking,<lb/>
sewing, rollerskating, rocketry, rcpes,<lb/>
camp craft; all waterfront activities<lb/>
(swimming, skiing, sailing, windsurfing,<lb/>
canoei.igkayak). Inquire J &amp; D Camping<lb/>
(Boys) 190 Linden Ave, Glen Ridge, NJ<lb/>
07028; Action Camping (Girls) 263 ,4ain<lb/>
Road, Montvi'le, NJ 07045. Phone (Boys)<lb/>
201-429-8522; (Girls) 201-316-6660.<lb/>
ATTENTION?HIRING Government<lb/>
jobs?your area. Many immediate open-<lb/>
ings without waiting list or test. $17,840-<lb/>
$69,485. Call i-602-838 8885 Ext. B 5285.<lb/>
SOCCER COACHES NEEDED: Starting<lb/>
March 6th. Monday-Thursday after 2:30<lb/>
p.m. Pay starts at S5.00hour. Call Pitt<lb/>
County Community Schools. 830-4240.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Male workers needed.<lb/>
From 8:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. NO PHONE<lb/>
CALLS. Come by Carpet Bargain Cer'er,<lb/>
1009 Dickinson Ave for interview<lb/>
PART-TIME BABYSITTER NEEDED<lb/>
Thursday mornings from 8-12. Own<lb/>
transportation needed Call 756 6319,<lb/>
leave name, sch?dule and phone number.<lb/>
MAKE MONEY WORKING AT HOME:<lb/>
Sell informati n by mail Free details'<lb/>
Rush self-addressed stamped envelope<lb/>
to Cheryl Chavis, 819 Greene Mall,<lb/>
Greenville. NC 28364.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
GIRLS, GUYS: Poolside parties and ma<lb/>
jor tanning at Daytona Beach, Spring<lb/>
Break '89. Call Keith, Kelly, Ron and<lb/>
Wayne at 752-4693 for more information.<lb/>
ARE YOU GOING: To th. Miami or Ft<lb/>
Lauderdale area for Spring Ireak7 Do you<lb/>
need a quick retm? Two tickets from<lb/>
Miami to Raleigh a.e for so.le. Plane leaves<lb/>
March 10, 1989 at 11:20 a.m. If interested<lb/>
a?ll Richard at 752-0794 or 752-7382.<lb/>
REWARD Know anyone who has 1<lb/>
new laige oval shaped purple stone ring7<lb/>
j One was lost 2-9-89 in the downtown ore.<lb/>
' Calk Wendy 758r6946 Sentimental vnlue.<lb/>
' Will pay tor its taturn. '  ,<lb/>
STRINGBEAN Happy 21st Birthday!<lb/>
REM was planning a birthday concert at<lb/>
the Delta Sig House, but they're overseas.<lb/>
Michael, Pete, Bill and Mike send th ir<lb/>
apologies?they're dedicating "You are<lb/>
the everything" to us when they're in<lb/>
Australia I Love You. ?Maude.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE FOL-<lb/>
LOWING GREEK WOMFN: Highest<lb/>
GPA?Alpha Kappa Alpha; Most Im-<lb/>
proved GPA?Alpha Omicron Pi; High-<lb/>
est GPAs?Mary Meadows and Amanda<lb/>
Huggins; Outstanding Greek Woman?<lb/>
Cam Ward; Outstanding Pledge?Debra<lb/>
Lyons; Outstanding Pledge Class?Delta<lb/>
Zeta; Gay Blockard Award?Patti Barnes;<lb/>
Artemis Award?Debbie Tavik, Cam<lb/>
Ward, Tracy Crimaldi, Barbara Lamb,<lb/>
Leslie Liedel, Mandy Marlowe, Jan Co-<lb/>
pley, Cheri Vitthews, Constance Foster<lb/>
and Veronica McKinney.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE NEW<lb/>
INDUCTEES INTO THE GREEK HALL<lb/>
OF FAME: Liz Walma, Renee I luffman,<lb/>
Cam Ward, Carol Shore, Debra Windley,<lb/>
Andrea Murray, Cassandra Bizzell,<lb/>
Gwendolyn Branch, Jennifer Vanderberg,<lb/>
Barbara Lamb, Cheri Matthews, Juanita<lb/>
Nicholson, Constance Foster, Jeronica<lb/>
Williams, Angela Sumrell, Jan Copley,<lb/>
Delynda Carter, Leslie Liedel, Alice<lb/>
Harden, Kris Kelly, Holly Condrey,<lb/>
Shelley Ray, Mandy Marlowe and Alicia<lb/>
Thomas Congratulations!<lb/>
BEST OF LUCK TO THE 1989<lb/>
PANHELLENIC COUNCIL: Pres.?Bar-<lb/>
bara Lamb; V-P?Kelly Greer; Treas-<lb/>
urer?And! Huff; Secretary?Susan<lb/>
1 lorne; Rush Chairman?Sherri Neal;<lb/>
Members-At-Large: Kelly Jones, Heidi<lb/>
Schafer, Melanie Gibson, Veronica McK-<lb/>
inney, Juanita Nicholson and Tammie<lb/>
Daugherty.<lb/>
NEED K1DE: 1 lome to Deleware oi sur-<lb/>
rounding sttes for Spring Break. Can<lb/>
leave by 12:30 on 3-3-89. Will help with<lb/>
expenses. Call Jen. 752-3677.<lb/>
BE A FOUNDER OF A FRATERNITY:<lb/>
. No pledging involved. If vou are inter-<lb/>
ested in making a difference, come to<lb/>
Mendenhall, room 248 on Thursday, Feb.<lb/>
23rd at 8:15 p.m. For more info, call Kevin<lb/>
830-13.<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL GIRLS: Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
will be holding little sister rush on Febru<lb/>
ary 20th and 21st. Come out to the new<lb/>
house from 8-11 and meet the brothers<lb/>
and little sisters of Pi Kappa Phi. Call for<lb/>
ride: 756-2371 or 756-7731.<lb/>
JOHN: This Valentine's Day was special<lb/>
? all because of you?you sent me on a<lb/>
scavenger hunt and told me you loved me<lb/>
too. On this special day you pledged vour<lb/>
love to me?to my heart 1 wear it near?<lb/>
around mv neck your lavalier. I love vou<lb/>
BBA. ?Christ.<lb/>
ATTENTION: Congratulations to the<lb/>
best ECU Pledge Class! Good job, Delta<lb/>
Zeta, Beta Pi Pledge Class. You made us<lb/>
proud at the banquet and forever! ?Love<lb/>
the sisters of Delta Zeta.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA: Pledges, the week is fi-<lb/>
nally here. Get yourselves in gear. It'll all<lb/>
be over soon, singing our favorite tune. If<lb/>
they could see me now the gang would<lb/>
know the DZ sisters love their pledges so!<lb/>
Get Psyched. -<lb/>
HOLLY CONDREY. You took the job and<lb/>
it's been tough. You're movin'and shakin'<lb/>
the greatest stuff. Keep it up all year thru.<lb/>
1000 we're behind you. ?Love the sis-<lb/>
ters and pledges of DZ.<lb/>
OUR CHI OMEGA BASKETBALL<lb/>
TEAM: Good job girls! We made it to the<lb/>
finals We're very proud. Good luck to-<lb/>
night. ?Love, The Chi-Os.<lb/>
MISSY AND ALYCE: The Chi-O's love<lb/>
you guys! You'll do a great job<lb/>
your sisters.<lb/>
-Love<lb/>
TO THE 17 PLEDGES OF PHI MU<lb/>
ALPHA SINFONIA: Congrats to Jimmy<lb/>
C, Mike D Chris D , Allen F? Robert H ,<lb/>
John H, Hamilton H, Andy H, Scott L,<lb/>
I lubert L , Wes L, James P Chris P , Steve<lb/>
P Rich S James S, and Enc S Good luck<lb/>
guys! We're all behind you! ?the broth-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
KELLY GREER, BARBRA LAMB, AND<lb/>
LIZ WALMA: Thanks for all your help<lb/>
Sunday night1! ?Shen<lb/>
TO A CERTAIN SIC EP: Last Friday<lb/>
night would have been great, if a certain<lb/>
person hadn't made me so irate Locking<lb/>
the door showed no class, that must be<lb/>
why your known as such an ass I really<lb/>
like beer, but not on my head, if you do it<lb/>
again, vou will be dead' ?Fivetowns<lb/>
RING0LD TOWERS<lb/>
NOW TAKING LEASES FOR FALL<lb/>
SEMESTER '89. EFFICIENCY 1 &amp; 2<lb/>
BEDROOM APARTMENTS. FOR<lb/>
INFO. CALL HOLLIE SIMONOWICH<lb/>
AT 752-2865<lb/>
HOUSE OF HATS<lb/>
for<lb/>
LADIES HATS AND<lb/>
ACCESSORIES<lb/>
(Latest Styles and<lb/>
Colors)<lb/>
403 Evans St.<lb/>
Greenville. XC 27834<lb/>
(Downtown Mall)758-3025<lb/>
OUR RESUMES<lb/>
MAKE A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE<lb/>
- ?? - - . a.<lb/>
 <lb/>
f AST COPi?S<lb/>
fO FAS r?fs<lb/>
ACCU :<lb/>
S5COPY<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
. rgetoum Sops<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/>
Ca'i for appointment Mon thru SaL Low<lb/>
Cost TV  ??? '?? "Tenancy<lb/>
WAKE Nf BAKE<lb/>
IN BEAUTIFUL<lb/>
NEGREL. JAMAICA<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
SPRING BREAK 89!<lb/>
VERY<lb/>
AFFORDABLE<lb/>
PACKAGES.<lb/>
BOOK EARLY AND<lb/>
SAVE!<lb/>
CALL TRIPP AT<lb/>
758-9177<lb/>
OR<lb/>
1-800-426-7710<lb/>
1-800-433-2930<lb/>
R - R - R - RING<lb/>
"Hi! I'm Tom Reichstetter, your AT&amp;T Student<lb/>
CampLis Manager here at ECU. I would like to<lb/>
tell you how AT&amp;T can help lower-your-lorvg<lb/>
distance bills. I can also answer any of your<lb/>
long distance questions.<lb/>
The best time to reach me is 11:30 am -1:30<lb/>
pm, M&amp;W, 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm, T&amp;TH, and<lb/>
3:00 pm - 5:00 pm F, but you can call anytime<lb/>
758-2103.<lb/>
1!<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Christian Fellowship will be held every<lb/>
Thurs at 6 p.m. in the Culture Center.<lb/>
LOST?<lb/>
Something missing in your life? We've<lb/>
found it and we want to share it with you.<lb/>
Jenkins 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 the 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 7p.m. in Rawl 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/>
Gallery Security Postion, must be quali-<lb/>
fied for university work study program.<lb/>
Hours: Mon. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sat. 10a.m. to<lb/>
5 p.m. and additional hours during the<lb/>
week. (10 to 15 hours per week). If inter-<lb/>
ested, please call Connie ? 757-6665 or<lb/>
Lou Anne 757-6336.<lb/>
TirrORS NEEDED<lb/>
Tutors needed for all business classes.<lb/>
Contact Lisa at Academic Counseling,<lb/>
Dept. of Athletics ? 757-6282 or 757-1677.<lb/>
VflFiriHT i iftiNG 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/>
ECU NAVIGATORS<lb/>
"Right 730 the weekly get-together of<lb/>
the Navigators, continues its streak of<lb/>
good Bible study every Thur 7:30-9 in<lb/>
Biology 103. The non-stop, no-frills meet-<lb/>
ing is designed to help you develop a<lb/>
closer walk with God. In-flight refresh-<lb/>
ments seWed. No ticket required; just re-<lb/>
serve your time.<lb/>
COOPERATIVE ED.<lb/>
Cooperative Ed a free service offered by<lb/>
the Univerity, is designed to help you find<lb/>
career-related work experience before<lb/>
you graduate. We would like to extend an<lb/>
invitation to all students to attend a Co-op<lb/>
info. Seminar in the GCB. Seminars for<lb/>
spring '89: Feb. 23,4 p.m room 2016; Feb.<lb/>
27, 4 pm , room 2016.<lb/>
AMNESTY INTL<lb/>
Amnestsy Intl. Group 402 is looking for<lb/>
persons to assist in its "Brazilian Cam-<lb/>
paign The group meets every fourth<lb/>
Wed. at 8 p.m. at St. Paul's Episcopal<lb/>
Church, 401 E. 4th St in the upper floor?<lb/>
enter from the 4th St. entrance. Next<lb/>
meeting: Feb. 22. Students welcome!<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, 8:00 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
This production is being staged by Daeda-<lb/>
lus Productions, who brought PURLIE to<lb/>
Wright 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/>
POLISH NAT'L RADIO<lb/>
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA<lb/>
The Polish National Radio Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra will appear as part of the Per-<lb/>
forming Arts Series on Feb. 22,8 00 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. Over 100 members<lb/>
strong, this synphony is led by Antoni<lb/>
Wit and features guest pianisi Piotr<lb/>
Paleczny. The program for this grand eve-<lb/>
ning includes: Strauss?DON JUAN, Op.<lb/>
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 numler is<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266. Office hours are 11:00<lb/>
a.m. - 6.00 p.m MonFri.<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 ihe<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/>
BLACK FACULTY SYMPO-<lb/>
SIUM<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/>
ALPHA PHI OMEGA<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega, the co-ed National<lb/>
Service Frat is sponsoring a 24-hour Run<lb/>
for Cancer on April 14th and 15th with the<lb/>
American Cancer Society. For more info<lb/>
call Heather at 758-9550, Bryan at 756-<lb/>
9665 or Rose Richards at Greenville's<lb/>
chapter of the American Cancer Society.<lb/>
Find out about entering .i team or donat-<lb/>
ing moneymaterials. Help fight the<lb/>
battle against cancer by supporting Alpha<lb/>
Phi Omega and the American Cancer<lb/>
Society in the 24-hour run.<lb/>
CO-OP ED.<lb/>
If you are interested in federal jobs and<lb/>
how to handle the federal employment<lb/>
process (permanent, summer, or Co-op),<lb/>
you will want to attend a presentation by<lb/>
Mr. Phil Hanson of the US. Office of Per-<lb/>
sonnel Mgmt. on 22489, from 10:00 a.m.<lb/>
-12 noon in room 1031, GCB.<lb/>
ASID<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/>
i' -es include: House cleaning, baby sitting,<lb/>
car washing, yard work &amp; window wash-<lb/>
ing. Students &amp; faculty &amp; staff are encour-<lb/>
aged to attend!<lb/>
ACCOUNTING INFO. SYS-<lb/>
TEMS<lb/>
The accounting firm of McGladrey, Hen-<lb/>
drickson, and Pullen will make a presen-<lb/>
tation to all graduate and undergraduate<lb/>
business students. This presentation will<lb/>
discuss accounting info, systems and will<lb/>
be given by Bud Moon, Certified Data<lb/>
Processor (CDP) and Rick Hemphil, CPA.<lb/>
The meeting is sponsored by the Decision<lb/>
Science Society and is scheduled for 3:00<lb/>
p.m. Feb. 22 in GCB 1009. Refreshments<lb/>
will be served All new or prospective<lb/>
members are welcome.<lb/>
INTERVIEWING WORK-<lb/>
SHOPS<lb/>
To. elp ECU people prepare for on and off<lb/>
car pus interviews, the Career Planning<lb/>
and Placement Service in Bloxton House<lb/>
is o' rering these one hour programs to aid<lb/>
you in developing better interviewing<lb/>
skills for use in your job search. The pro-<lb/>
gram is open to the first 20 people to come<lb/>
for each session. No sign up is required.<lb/>
These sessions are held in CP&amp;P Room on<lb/>
Feb. 13 and 23 at 2:15 p.m.<lb/>
RESUME WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement Serv-<lb/>
ice is offering these one hour programs on<lb/>
beginning a resume for your job search.<lb/>
Handouts and samples will be given out<lb/>
to the first 20 people to come to each ses-<lb/>
sion. No sign up is required. These ses-<lb/>
sions are held in the CP&amp;P Room on Feb.<lb/>
16,21 and 22 at 2:15 p.m.<lb/>
CAMPHRE<lb/>
Sing, eat s'mores and share good fellow-<lb/>
ship around a campfire, Feb. 17 at 8:00 in<lb/>
the Ampitheatre behind Fletcher Dorm.<lb/>
(Weather permitting). Bring instruments,<lb/>
blankets, flashlights, dress warmly. Spon-<lb/>
sored by Wesfel QMethodist and Presbyte-<lb/>
rian Campus Ministries), 758-2030 or 752-<lb/>
7240.<lb/>
SOPHOMORES AND JRS<lb/>
Earn over S600 this summer. Earn 5100 a<lb/>
month during your last 2 years in college.<lb/>
Become a part of the Army ROTC Dept.<lb/>
here at ECU Attend the summer officer<lb/>
leadership course at Fort Knox, Kentucky.<lb/>
Info, meeting will be held on Feb. 23 at<lb/>
1800 hours in room 339 Rawl. It's not too<lb/>
late for you to earn a commission prior to<lb/>
graduation. For more info contact Capt.<lb/>
Steve L. Jones, Rawl 344, 757-6974.<lb/>
IN-REC SERVICES<lb/>
TIMEX AEROBIX WEEK, Feb. 20-24<lb/>
marks a week of fitness and giveaways for<lb/>
all aerobic fitness participants. Watches,<lb/>
aerobic fitness apparal, coupons and fit-<lb/>
ness information wil be given away dur-<lb/>
ing the week of festivites.<lb/>
ANIMAL RIGHTS<lb/>
ECU students for the Ethical Treatment of<lb/>
Animals (SETA) will hold its introductory<lb/>
meetingon Feb. 28, in GC1004 at 5:00. A16<lb/>
minute video on primates used in immu-<lb/>
nological studies will be shown. All stu<lb/>
dents desirous of a more equitable world<lb/>
for animals should attend<lb/>
SCIENTIFIC INFO. PRESEN-<lb/>
TATION<lb/>
Dr. Richard Andrews will present a talk<lb/>
on Science and Environmental Policy:<lb/>
The U.S. and Our Global Habitat on Feb.<lb/>
21 at 7:00 p.m. in room 1028 GCB. The talk<lb/>
is sponsored jointly by Sigma Xi, the Sci-<lb/>
entific Research Society, and by the ECU<lb/>
Honors Program, the Science and Math<lb/>
Ed. Center and the International Studies<lb/>
Program. This talk will be the first in a<lb/>
series of Visiting Lectures to be held at<lb/>
ECU. The others will be Shenandoah Na-<lb/>
tional Park?Its Natural and Cultural<lb/>
History on Feb. 27 at 730 p.m. in room<lb/>
1028; A Day in the Life of a Park Ranger.<lb/>
March 28 at 7:30 p.m. in room 1026; and<lb/>
The National Parks of New Zealand and<lb/>
Costa Rica on April 4 at 730 pjn. in room<lb/>
1031. All of the lectures will be held in the<lb/>
GCB and are free and open to the public.<lb/>
CAMPUS HOUSING<lb/>
Students enrolled Spring Semester 1989<lb/>
who plan to return to ECU Fall Semester<lb/>
1989 and who wish to be guaranteed resi-<lb/>
dence hall housing will be required to<lb/>
reserve rooms during the week of Feb. 20-<lb/>
24. Prior to reserving a room, a student<lb/>
must make an advance room payment of<lb/>
SI 00. These payments, which must be<lb/>
accompanied by housing applicabons-<lb/>
contracts will be accepted in the Cashier's<lb/>
Office, room 105, Silman Bldg beginning<lb/>
Feb. 16. Students now living in residence<lb/>
halls should obtain housing applications<lb/>
from their residence hall office. Students<lb/>
residing off campus should obtain the<lb/>
applications from the Dept. of Housing,<lb/>
room 201, Whichard Bldg. These will be<lb/>
available beginning Feb. 14. ASSIGN<lb/>
MENT SCHEDULE: STUDENTS WHO<lb/>
WISH TO RETURN TO THE SAME<lb/>
ROOMS THEY PRESENTLY OCCUPY<lb/>
MUST RESERVE SUCH ROOMS ON:<lb/>
Feb. 20?8:30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. and 130<lb/>
p.m. to 4:00 p.m. and Feb. 21?830 a.m. to<lb/>
12.30 p.m. STUDENTS WHO WISH TO<lb/>
RETURN TO THE SAME BUILDINGS<lb/>
ON WHICH THEY PRESENTLY RESIDE<lb/>
BUT DIFFERENT ROOMS WILL BE<lb/>
PERMITTED TO RESERVE ROOMS ON<lb/>
Feb. 21?130 pm. to 4:00 pjn. ALL<lb/>
OTHER RETURNING STUDENTS WILL<lb/>
BE PERMITTED TO RESERVE ROOMS<lb/>
ON A FIRST-COME FIRST-SERVE BASIS<lb/>
ON: Feb. 22-24?830 a.m. to 12:30 pm.<lb/>
and 130 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. The number of<lb/>
unassigned rooms in each bldg. will be<lb/>
posted on the respective office door by<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Feb 21. NOTICE: The residence<lb/>
hall rental rate has not been set for the<lb/>
1989-90 school year However, we do<lb/>
anticipate an increase in the rental rate for<lb/>
the 1989-90 school year.<lb/>
VISITING LECTURES PRO-<lb/>
GJLAM<lb/>
The National Parks - Public Education -<lb/>
Earth Science and International Conser-<lb/>
vation Issues. Co-sponsors: The Honors<lb/>
Program, The Science and Math Ed. Cen-<lb/>
ter, International Studies, ECU. "Science<lb/>
and Environmental Policy: The U.S. and<lb/>
our Global Habitat" Feb. 21 (co-sponsored<lb/>
with the ECU Sigma Xi Chapter). Richard<lb/>
"Pete" Andrews?Director, Institute for<lb/>
Environmental Studies, UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill. 7:00 p.m room 1028 GCB. 'Shenan-<lb/>
doah National Park-Its Natural and Cul-<lb/>
tural History Feb. 27 (co-sponsored with<lb/>
the Cypress Group, The Sierra Club) John<lb/>
A. Conners?Geog. Dept, Radford Univ<lb/>
Radford, VA. author of "Shenandoah<lb/>
National Park?An Interpretive History<lb/>
730 p.m room 1028 GCB.<lb/>
1988 BUCCANEERS<lb/>
1988 Buccaneers will be given away cm a<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058126_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21f 1989 7<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
first-come, first-serve basis starting Feb<lb/>
27 at 5 p.m. They will be given away from<lb/>
the Buccaneer office only. There's only a<lb/>
limited supply and no more can be or-<lb/>
dered. So come early to receive your copy.<lb/>
ATTN. ART STUDENTS<lb/>
The Parents' Day Weekend Committee<lb/>
needs a logo for 89. Any media or ap-<lb/>
proach is accepted (except usage of the<lb/>
Pirate Mascot) Please turn in entries with<lb/>
3x5 card stating name, address &amp; phone<lb/>
 to 209 Whichard by 5 p.m. on March 15.<lb/>
The winning entry will be awarded a S25<lb/>
cash prize Don't delay, enter today! For<lb/>
more info contact Tonya Batizv (w)757-<lb/>
6611 ext. 210 or (h) 830-88S8.<lb/>
PHI ALPHA THFTA<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta will have a meeting on<lb/>
Feb. 27th at 1:30 p m. in the Todd Room in<lb/>
Brewster Bldg. All members are urged to<lb/>
come.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi National Honor Fraternity is<lb/>
sponsoring "Fill Your Lungs with<lb/>
Laughter" for the American Lung Assoc.<lb/>
at the Attic Feb. 22 at 9:30 pm Remember<lb/>
this is Comedy Zone night and you are<lb/>
guaranteed to ' g Everyone is invited.<lb/>
P.E. MAJORS CLUB<lb/>
ATTENTION, all P.E. Majors: We have a<lb/>
meeting Thurs. night at 8:00 pm.?please<lb/>
be there. Plans about our PARTY will<lb/>
definitely be discussed. If vou are unable<lb/>
to make the meeting, ask a friend about<lb/>
the details. Don't forget?Paitv is this Fri.<lb/>
night Make plans to attend.<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR<lb/>
CHRIST<lb/>
Looking for fellowship, fun and hearing<lb/>
God's word You are welcome to attend<lb/>
Prime Time held at Rawl, rm. 130?every<lb/>
Thurs. night at 7:30. Refreshments served.<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA THETA<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. will be<lb/>
sponsoring a Health Awareness Week<lb/>
during Feb. 20-23. Also, the sororitv is<lb/>
now selling buttons for SI 00 in honor of<lb/>
Black History Month.<lb/>
INTERMEDIATE ED. CLUB<lb/>
The Intermediate Ed. Club will be holding<lb/>
it next meeting on Feb. 22. All Intermedi-<lb/>
cte Majors are invited.<lb/>
DEBATE AT BRODY<lb/>
The ECU Delegation of NCSL will host the<lb/>
state Feb Interim Council on Feb 25 &amp; 26.<lb/>
Debate is scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to 6<lb/>
p.m. each day at the Brody Bldg. (School of<lb/>
Medicine). Affirmative Action and the<lb/>
use of video tapes for testimony in physi-<lb/>
cally or sexually abused children cases are<lb/>
issues to be discussed. Please come out<lb/>
and meet people from 20 other universi-<lb/>
ties in the N.C. College &amp; University Sys.<lb/>
For more info contact Janet at 355-6420.<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 loyner<lb/>
Library The first issue for Spring<lb/>
semester is expected to arrive in a few<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
MUSIC EVENTS<lb/>
ECU School of Music Events Feb 21-27:<lb/>
Faculty Recital, Kim Peori.i, bassoon (Feb.<lb/>
23, 8:15 p.m Fletcher Recital Hall, free);<lb/>
Ralph Walton, clarinet, graduate recital<lb/>
(Feb. 24, 7:00 p.m Fletcher Recital Hall,<lb/>
free); Faculty Recital, Brad Foley, saxo-<lb/>
phone, with guest pianist Donna Cole-<lb/>
man (Feb. 2 3:15 p.m Fletcher Recital<lb/>
1 lall, free); om McGinnis, pia.io, junior<lb/>
recital (Feb. 27, 7:00 p.m Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall, free).<lb/>
TENNIS DOUBLES<lb/>
Swinging singles prepare for the Intramu-<lb/>
ral tennis double competition registration<lb/>
meeting to be held March 14 at 6:00 p.m. in<lb/>
BIO 103.<lb/>
PRE-SEASON SOFTBALL<lb/>
A preseason softball tournament spon-<lb/>
sored bv CO. Tankard Co. (Miller Lite)<lb/>
will hold its registration March 14 at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. in BIO 103. T-shirts, trophies and<lb/>
more will be awarded to participants.<lb/>
Don't miss he big event!<lb/>
I<lb/>
SWIM MEET<lb/>
Drown your sorrows by signing up for<lb/>
this years intramural swim meet. This will<lb/>
be the only swim meet until 19S0! Don't<lb/>
miss registration meeting March 15 at 5:00<lb/>
pm. in GCB 1026. Your spring tan should<lb/>
look great!<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
Batter up! Intramural softball registration<lb/>
meeting will be held March 4 at 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
in BIO 103. All men's and women's teams<lb/>
must send a representative.<lb/>
ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
You are cordially invited to Alpha Kappa<lb/>
Alpha's Black History program featuring<lb/>
Dr. Theodore Muchiteni Feb. 23 at 7:00<lb/>
p.m 1031GCB.<lb/>
IMPROVING STUDY SKILLS<lb/>
Learning how to improve your study<lb/>
skills for greater success in college. The<lb/>
following mini course and workshops can<lb/>
help you prepare for the added workload<lb/>
of college or help to increase your GPA.<lb/>
All sessions will be held in 313 Wright<lb/>
Bldg. Feb. 27?Time Mgmt 3-4.30 pm<lb/>
Feb. 28?Time Mgmt 3-4:30 p.m.<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will be a very important general<lb/>
meeting 22289 in'Mendenhal1 at 5:15<lb/>
p.n . We will be voting on an urnmend-<lb/>
ment to the by-laws. Please remember<lb/>
that missing more than 2 meetings<lb/>
semester is grounds for probation.<lb/>
CELEBRATION<lb/>
Black I listory Month. Speaker. Dr. Vema<lb/>
Speight. Topic: "Black Female Leader-<lb/>
ship Time. Feb. 21 at 7:00 p.m. Place: rm.<lb/>
221 Mender.hall. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served. Sponsored by Tyler Hall House<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Our next meeting is Feb. 23 at 6:00 p.m. in<lb/>
GCB 1012. Please attend.<lb/>
FINANCIAL MGMT. ASSOC.<lb/>
The Student Fin. Mgmt. Assoc. W11 me A<lb/>
Feb. 22 at 4:30 p m. in room 3009 GCB. The<lb/>
guest speakers will be Michael Walsh and<lb/>
jerry Smith from Wachovia. The topic will<lb/>
be interviewing techniques and banking<lb/>
lobs.<lb/>
rsi chi<lb/>
All new members who hive recieved a<lb/>
letter of acceptance into Psi Chi honor<lb/>
society must fill out members' .ip cards<lb/>
along with a check for 35 (made out to Psi<lb/>
Chi; by Fri Feb. 24 in the Psi Chi Mailbox<lb/>
(Rawl 104). If both check and membership<lb/>
card are not recieved, you will have to<lb/>
reapply for membership next semester.<lb/>
The n ;xt meeting will be held in Rawl 302<lb/>
on March 1 at 4:00- Ml members must<lb/>
attend<lb/>
COMMUNION<lb/>
Worship God with the Lord's Supper fol-<lb/>
owed by a home-cooked meal ($2, $1.50<lb/>
for members). Wed. 5 pm, Mediodist Stu-<lb/>
dent Ctr. (5th st. across from Garrett<lb/>
Dorm), wes'fel Christian Fellowship.<lb/>
Sponored by Methodist and Presbyterian<lb/>
Campus Ministries.<lb/>
ECU GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
The ECU Gospel Choir thanks you for<lb/>
your support throughout our 10 vears of<lb/>
existence as a recognized campus organi-<lb/>
zation. We will be celebrating this mile-<lb/>
stone with a special anniversary musical<lb/>
program on Sun. Feb. 26 at 3.30 pm in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre. Students and children-<lb/>
Si, Adults- $2. We look forward to sharing<lb/>
our happy occasion with you.<lb/>
Read The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Every<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
IN THE ARMY, YOU'LL<lb/>
TAKE CHARGE IN<lb/>
MORE WAYS THAN ONE.<lb/>
There's an added dtmeftskin to being a nurse in the Arms. You'll<lb/>
have increased responsibilities. And you'll enjoy the respect .md<lb/>
prestige th.ir come n.itunlU to people who serve a officers in the<lb/>
Arm) Nurse Corps.<lb/>
Vur opinion and counsel<lb/>
will be actively sought and hs<lb/>
tened to. You'll have opportuni-<lb/>
ties to practice nursing in t<lb/>
variety ot envuonments, horn<lb/>
high-tech mihur hospir.il to<lb/>
MASH units. m the I Inited<lb/>
States or overseas.<lb/>
Army Nursing pro ides good<lb/>
pay and benefits, opportunities<lb/>
ti r continuing educatk n in - ur<lb/>
chosen specialty, seniority thai<lb/>
moves with you when vou Jo.<lb/>
and oh experience vou can't put .? price tag on.<lb/>
Discover the Army Nurse Corps difference. T.ilk to an Army<lb/>
Nurse Recruiter today.<lb/>
Sgt. Cottrell<lb/>
756-9695<lb/>
ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
Federal Register implements rule which requires<lb/>
grant recipients to prove they don't use drugs<lb/>
(CPS)? In a move some stu-<lb/>
dent advocates are calling remi-<lb/>
niscent of "1984's" Big Brother,<lb/>
the federal government said Feb.<lb/>
3 i wauilclisrkart asking, 8tKiem!<lb/>
wht) get Pell Grants to prove they<lb/>
don't use illicit drugs.<lb/>
The measure was published<lb/>
in the Federal Register, the list of<lb/>
regulations and rules the govern-<lb/>
ment produces to enforce federal<lb/>
laws. The drug rule, which will<lb/>
automatically go into effect if it's<lb/>
not formally challenged within 90<lb/>
days, was created to implement<lb/>
the Drug-Free Work Place Act of<lb/>
1988. It asks that all federal grant on tips that students have gotten<lb/>
recipients like weapons manufac- involved in drugs or on newpaper<lb/>
rurers, highway builders and articles about drug activities<lb/>
apparently even students work in Bradsha w said,<lb/>
"drug-free" environments. Past convictions for drug<lb/>
Applying it to students, said possession or sales shouldn't af-<lb/>
Sheldon Steinbach of the Ameri- feet a student's Pell Grant applica-<lb/>
can Council on Education, the tion, Bradshaw said, but it is an<lb/>
campus presidents' lobbying issue the Education Department<lb/>
group in Washington, D.C was is considering,<lb/>
"a strained interpretation (of the "If the money is going to be<lb/>
law) that strikes me as being be- used for drugs, then it's better if<lb/>
yond the pale of what was in- they hand it to someone who<lb/>
tended would make good use of it said<lb/>
The U.S. Dept. of Education, Pell Grant recipient at San Diego<lb/>
which issued the rule, disagrees. City College, who asked that her<lb/>
Somehow, students will have name not be used,<lb/>
to swear they're not drug abusers. "it's great she said.<lb/>
"We're deciding if students But Kevin'Harris, organizing<lb/>
iHmiHmii1l?ll"wOlil"L4"jJlilk"i4MaiiaB<lb/>
will have to sign a separate form director of the United States Stu- Florida Gov. Bob Martinez an-<lb/>
or just check a box on the grant dent Association in Washington, nounced that, starting in August,<lb/>
application form said depart- DC, called the regulations "an all new state employees?includ-<lb/>
ment spokesman Jim Bradshaw. invasion of the personal right to ing faculty members, administra-<lb/>
f'BjUj, tljey will have to certify they privacy and a poor signal for the tors, staffers and students- work-<lb/>
are drug-free and not using the new Bush administration to send<lb/>
funds for drug-related activities to students.<lb/>
If students lie on the form, In fact, students are not the<lb/>
Bradshaw said, they could lose orly ones being attacked in the<lb/>
their grants. war on drugs. In early January,<lb/>
Still, no one knows how to<lb/>
determine if they are lying. "We<lb/>
don't have the resources to check<lb/>
on every student Bradshaw ad-<lb/>
mitted.<lb/>
"We'll base our information<lb/>
ers at State University System of<lb/>
Florida campuses? would have<lb/>
to pass drug tests before being<lb/>
hired.<lb/>
LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
OUT<lb/>
"????? ? ToTjpoi? ? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
FREE MEAL<lb/>
BUY ONE SHRIMP<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
GET ONE OP 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)<lb/>
FOSDICK<lb/>
1890 SEAFOOD<lb/>
2903 S. Evans St.<lb/>
Takeout Orders: 756-2011<lb/>
I Additional Parking Available<lb/>
"Ainerica?s Best Pizza"<lb/>
We guarantee it<lb/>
Now<lb/>
Serving<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
Pool Tables<lb/>
Video Games<lb/>
r2MALL"l2 DELUXE TEXTRA LARGE 1CT 2 H<lb/>
4 ITEM PIZZAS ITEM PIZZA. FREE <lb/>
?Q QQ LITER or SODA i<lb/>
 $8.99 j $799 ,<lb/>
(EXPIRES 22889)J (EXPIRES 22889)j<lb/>
830-9400<lb/>
HIS.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Charles St.<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
? us. Than,<lb/>
rrl. 8?t.<lb/>
Bear:<lb/>
llOOa.m<lb/>
ll:00?.m<lb/>
imiiyiio ? ikh nmwm ? ikh nniuio ? ?itn<lb/>
<pb facs="00058126_0009"/><lb/>
L<lb/>
- <lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21. 1989 7<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
first-come, first-serve basis starting Feb<lb/>
27 at 5 p.m. They will be given awav from<lb/>
the Buccaneer office only. There's only a<lb/>
limited supply and no more can be or-<lb/>
dered. So come early to receive your copy.<lb/>
ATTN. ART STUDENTS<lb/>
The Parents' Day Weekend Committee<lb/>
needs a logo for 89. Anv media or ap-<lb/>
proach is accepted (except usage of the<lb/>
Pirate Mascot) Please turn in entries with<lb/>
3x5 card stating name, address it phone<lb/>
 to 209 Whichard by 5 p.m. on March 15.<lb/>
The winning entry will be awarded a S25<lb/>
cash prize. Don't delay, enter today! For<lb/>
more info contact Tonya Batizv (w)757-<lb/>
6U ext. 210 or (h) 830-8888.<lb/>
PHI ALPHA THFTA<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta will have a meeting on<lb/>
Feb. 27th at 130 p.m. in the Todd Room in<lb/>
Brewster Bldg All members are urged to<lb/>
come.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Fhi Sigma Pi National Honor Fraternity is<lb/>
sponsoring "Fill Your Lungs with<lb/>
Laughter" for the American Lung Assoc<lb/>
at the Attic Feb. 22 at 9:30 p.m Remember<lb/>
this is Comedy Zone night and you are<lb/>
guaranteed to laugh Everyone is invited<lb/>
P.E. MAJORS CLUB<lb/>
ATTENTION, all P.E. Majors: We have a<lb/>
meeting Thurs. night at 8:00 p.m.?please<lb/>
be there Plans about our PARTY will<lb/>
definitely be discussed If vou are unable<lb/>
to make the meeting, ask a friend about<lb/>
the details. Don't forget?Paity is this Fri<lb/>
night Make plans to attend.<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR<lb/>
CHRIST<lb/>
Looking for fellowship, fun and hearing<lb/>
God's worcP You are welcome to attend<lb/>
Prime Time held at Rawl, rm. 130?every<lb/>
Thurs night at 730. Refreshments served.<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA THETA<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. will be<lb/>
sponsoring a Health Awareness Week<lb/>
during Feb. 20-23. Also, the sorontv is<lb/>
now selling buttons for SI 00 in honor of<lb/>
Black History Month.<lb/>
INTERMEDIATE ED. CLUB<lb/>
The Intermediate Ed. Club will be holding<lb/>
it next meeting on Feb. 22. All Intermedi-<lb/>
ate Majors are invited.<lb/>
DEBATE AT BRODY<lb/>
The ECU Delegation of NCSL will host the<lb/>
state Feb Interim Council on Feb. 25 &amp; 26.<lb/>
Debate is scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to 6<lb/>
p.m. each day at the Brody Bldg (School of<lb/>
Medicine). Affirmative Action and the<lb/>
use of video tapes for testimony in physi-<lb/>
cally or sexually abused children cases are<lb/>
issues to be discussed. Please come out<lb/>
and meet people from 20 other universi-<lb/>
ties in the N.C. College &amp; University Sys.<lb/>
For more info contact Janet at 355-6420.<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/>
MUSIC EVENTS<lb/>
ECU School of Music Events Feb 21-27:<lb/>
Faculty Recital, Kim Peori.i, bassoon (Feb.<lb/>
23, 8:15 p.m Fletcher Recital Hall, free);<lb/>
Ralph Walton, clannet, graduate recital<lb/>
(Feb. 24, 7:00 p.m Fletcher Recital Hall,<lb/>
free): Faculty Recital, Brad Foley, saxo-<lb/>
phone, with guest pianist Donna Cole-<lb/>
man (FeK 26, 3:15 p.m, Fletcher Recital<lb/>
I lall, free); Tom McGinnis, pia.io, junior<lb/>
recital (Feb. 27, 7:00 p.m Fletcher Recital<lb/>
I lall. free).<lb/>
TENNIS DOUBLES<lb/>
Swinging singles prepare for the Intramu-<lb/>
ral tennis double competition registration<lb/>
meeting to be held March 14 at 6:00 p.m. in<lb/>
BIO 103.<lb/>
PRE-SEASON SOFTdALL<lb/>
A pre season softball tournament spon<lb/>
sored by CO. Tankard Co. (Miller Lite)<lb/>
will hold its registration March 14 at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. in BIO 103. T-shirts, trophies and<lb/>
more will be awarded to participants.<lb/>
Don't misshe big event!<lb/>
I<lb/>
SWIM MEET<lb/>
Drown your sorrows by signing up for<lb/>
this years intramural swim meet. This will<lb/>
be the only swim meet until 19S0! Don't<lb/>
miss registration meeting March 15 at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. in GCB 1026. Your spring tan should<lb/>
look great!<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
Batter up! Intramural softball registration<lb/>
meeting will be held March 4 at 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
in BIO 103. All men's and women's teams<lb/>
must sond a representative.<lb/>
ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
You are cordially invited to Alpha Kappa<lb/>
Alpha's Black History program featuring<lb/>
Dr. Theodore Muchiteni Feb. 23 at 7:00<lb/>
p.m 1031GCB.<lb/>
IMPROVING STUDY SKILLS<lb/>
Learning how to improve your study<lb/>
skills for greater success in college. The<lb/>
following mini course and workshops can<lb/>
help you prepare for the added workload<lb/>
of college or help to increase your GPA.<lb/>
All sessions will be held in 313 Wright<lb/>
Bldg. Feb. 27?Time Mgmt 3-4:30 p.m<lb/>
Feb. 28?Time Mgmt 3-4:30 p.m.<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will be a very important general<lb/>
meeting 22289 inMendenhaL1 at 5:15<lb/>
p.n . We will be voting on an ummend-<lb/>
ment to the by-laws. Please remember<lb/>
that missing more than 2 meetings<lb/>
semester is grounds for probation.<lb/>
CELEBRATIQNUl<lb/>
Black I listory Month. Speaker: Dr. Vema<lb/>
Speight. Topic: "Black Female Leader-<lb/>
ship Time: Feb. 21 at 7:00 p.m. Place: rm.<lb/>
221 Mender.hall. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served. Sponsored by Tyler Hall House<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Our next meeting is Feb. 23 at 6:00 p.m. in<lb/>
GCB 1012. Please attend.<lb/>
FINANCIALCMT. ASSOC.<lb/>
The Student Fin. Mgmt. Assoc. will me t<lb/>
Feb. 22 at 4.30 p m. in room 3009 GCB. The<lb/>
guest speakers will be Michael Walsh and<lb/>
Jerry Smith from Wachovia. The topic will<lb/>
be interviewing techniques and banking<lb/>
iobs.<lb/>
ZSJLCHI<lb/>
All new members who hive redeved a<lb/>
letter of acceptance into Psi Chi honor<lb/>
society must fill out membersip cards<lb/>
alone; with a check for S35 (made out to Psi<lb/>
Chi, by Fri Feb. 24 in tho Psi Chi Mailbox<lb/>
(Rawl 104). If both check and membership<lb/>
card are not recieved, you will have to<lb/>
reapply for membership next semester.<lb/>
The n ?xt meeting will be held in Rawl 302<lb/>
on March 1 at 4:00- ll members must<lb/>
attend<lb/>
COMMUNION<lb/>
Worship God with the Lord's Supper fol-<lb/>
owed by a home-cooked meal ($2, $1.50<lb/>
for members). Wed. 5 pm, Mtihodist Stu-<lb/>
dent Ctr. (5th st. across from Garrett<lb/>
Dorm), wes'fel Christian Fellowship.<lb/>
Sponored by Methodist and Presbyterian<lb/>
Campus Ministries.<lb/>
ECU GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
The ECU Gospel Choir thanks you for<lb/>
your support throughout our 10 years of<lb/>
existenoe as a recognized campus organi-<lb/>
zation. We will be celebrating this mile-<lb/>
stone with a special anniversary musical<lb/>
program on Sun. Feb. 26 at 3:30 pm in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre. Students and children-<lb/>
Si , Adults- $2. We look forward to sharing<lb/>
our happy occasion with you.<lb/>
Read The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Every<lb/>
Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
IN THE ARMY, YOU'LL<lb/>
TAKE CHARGE IN<lb/>
MORE WAYS THAN ONE.<lb/>
There's an added dimension to being .i nurse in the Army. You'll<lb/>
have increased responsibilities. And you'll enjoy the respect and<lb/>
prestige that come naturalK to people who serve a officers in the<lb/>
Arms Nurse Corps.<lb/>
Yur opinion and counsel<lb/>
will he Activet) sought and lis-<lb/>
tened to. Vui'll have opportuni-<lb/>
ties to practice nursing in a<lb/>
variety or environments, from<lb/>
h-tech military hospitals to<lb/>
nig<lb/>
MASH units, in the I 'nited<lb/>
States or overseas.<lb/>
Army Nursing prov ides good<lb/>
pav and benefits, opportunities<lb/>
t? continuing education in your<lb/>
chosen specialty, seniority that<lb/>
moves u irh vou when vou do.<lb/>
and oh experience vou can't put a price tag on.<lb/>
Discover the Army Nurse Corps difference. Talk to an Army<lb/>
Nurse Recruiter today.<lb/>
Sgt. Cottrell<lb/>
756-9695<lb/>
ARMY NURSE CORPS. BEAU YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
Federal Register implements rule which requires<lb/>
grant recipients to prove they don't use drugs<lb/>
(CPS)? In a move some stu-<lb/>
dent advocates are calling remi-<lb/>
niscent of "1984's" Big Brother,<lb/>
the federal government said Feb.<lb/>
2 i wki:start a?kjry&amp;?tudcn.t&amp;.<lb/>
wrfb get Pell Grants to prove they<lb/>
don't use illicit drugs.<lb/>
The measure was published<lb/>
in the Federal Register, the list of<lb/>
regulations and rules the govern-<lb/>
ment produces to enforce federal<lb/>
laws. The drug rule, which will<lb/>
automatically go into effect if it's<lb/>
not formally challenged within 90<lb/>
days, was created to implement<lb/>
the Drug-Free Work Place Act of<lb/>
1988. It asks that all federal grant<lb/>
recipients like weapons manufac-<lb/>
turers, highway builders and<lb/>
apparently even students work in<lb/>
"drug-free" environments.<lb/>
Applying it to students, said possession or sales shouldn't af-<lb/>
Sheldon Steinbach of the Ameri- feet a student's Pell Grant applica-<lb/>
can Council on Education, the tion, Bradshaw said, but it is an<lb/>
campus presidents' lobbying issue the Education Department<lb/>
group in Washington, D.C was is considering,<lb/>
"a strained interpretation (of the "If the money is going to be<lb/>
law) that strikes me as being be- used for drugs, then it's better if<lb/>
yond the pale of what was in- they hand it to someone who<lb/>
tended would make good use of it said<lb/>
The U.S. Dept. of Education, Pell Grant recipient at San Diego<lb/>
which issued the rule, disagrees. City College, who asked that her<lb/>
Somehow, students will have name not be used.<lb/>
ers at State University System of<lb/>
Florida campuses? would have<lb/>
to pass drug tests before being<lb/>
hired.<lb/>
will have to sign a separate form director of the United States Stu- Florida Gov. Bob Martinez an-<lb/>
or just check a box on the grant dent Association in Washington, nounced that, starting in August,<lb/>
application form' said depart- D.C called the regulations "an all new state employees?includ-<lb/>
ment spokesman Jim Bradshaw. invasion of the personal right to ing faculty members, administra-<lb/>
j'Bjiij they will have to certify Lhey privacy and a poor signal for the tors, staffers and students work-<lb/>
are drug-free' and not using the new Bush administration to send<lb/>
funds for drug-related activities to students.<lb/>
If students lie on the form, In fact, students are not the<lb/>
Bradshaw said, they could lose orly ones being attacked in the<lb/>
their grants. war on drugs. In early January,<lb/>
Still, no one knows how to<lb/>
determine if they are lying. "We<lb/>
don't have the resources to check<lb/>
on every student Bradshaw ad-<lb/>
mitted.<lb/>
"We'll base our information<lb/>
on tips that students have gotten<lb/>
involved in drugs or on newpaper<lb/>
articles about drug activities<lb/>
Bradshaw said.<lb/>
Past convictions for drug<lb/>
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Regular $6.25<lb/>
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Good any time. Dlnc-in or Take-out.<lb/>
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to swear there not drug abusers.<lb/>
"We're deciding if students<lb/>
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"It's great she said.<lb/>
But Kevin Harris, organizing<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058126_0010"/><lb/>
THfc FAST I ARCH INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21, 1989 PAGE 8<lb/>
Dancer wins scholarship<lb/>
By CLEJhTTER PICKETT<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
"Always alive said La-<lb/>
Vonda Gaskin describes herself.<lb/>
Gaskin. the 1989 recipient of the<lb/>
Marie Wallace Pa nee Scholar-<lb/>
ship, the onlv scholarship given in<lb/>
the department strictly for danc-<lb/>
ers, is a senior majoring in dance<lb/>
at East Carolina Universitv.<lb/>
Gaskin has been dancing<lb/>
since she was a child growing up<lb/>
in Wilmington, N.C Although<lb/>
she has participated in many<lb/>
dance related activities through-<lb/>
out her life, she never thought she<lb/>
would receive a dance degree.<lb/>
After high school, Gaskin<lb/>
planned to stay home and attend<lb/>
UKC-W. Her mother encouraged<lb/>
her to attend FCU and earn her<lb/>
degree.<lb/>
Initially, she was unsure of<lb/>
majoring in dance, despite the<lb/>
manv awards and recognitions<lb/>
she previouslv received for her<lb/>
dance ability. She wondered<lb/>
whether she loved dance enough<lb/>
to pursue a career in it. As a so-<lb/>
phomore, Gaskin considered be-<lb/>
coming a business major, appre-<lb/>
hensive oi the hard work and<lb/>
dedication that accompanies<lb/>
being a dancer.<lb/>
It wasn't until she began tour-<lb/>
ing with 5.6.7,8, an ECU student<lb/>
repertory- company which tours<lb/>
North Carolina performing<lb/>
Broadway musicals, that she real-<lb/>
ized dancing was for her.<lb/>
"That was the time of trial and<lb/>
error where I had no free week-<lb/>
ends at all  that's when I real-<lb/>
ized you' ve got to love it to be able<lb/>
to do it she said.<lb/>
"1 dance because I love it<lb/>
She knows her chosen held is<lb/>
a competitive one which requires<lb/>
hard work and dedication, but<lb/>
she is willing to give it her best.<lb/>
"It's really hard. There are<lb/>
times when I say 'Wha t am I doing<lb/>
here because I spend most of my<lb/>
life in the studio, but it all comes<lb/>
back to vou have to love what vou<lb/>
are doing<lb/>
Gaskin has dreams of being<lb/>
the best. "I've always wanted to<lb/>
be a Rockette she said. "That's<lb/>
one of my greatest ambitions<lb/>
Her speciality is tap and she<lb/>
was once honored in high school<lb/>
for her performance in a high kick<lb/>
routine. Both tap and high kick<lb/>
are characteristics of being a<lb/>
Rockette.<lb/>
However, in the 11th grade,<lb/>
she visited Radio City Music Hall<lb/>
and learned that one must be 5'5"<lb/>
or taller to become a Rockette and<lb/>
Gaskin is only 5'2<lb/>
Gaskin isn't letting the ob-<lb/>
stacle of becoming a Rockette in-<lb/>
terfere with her ambition. "I don't<lb/>
necessarily want to be rich and<lb/>
famous. I just want to be success-<lb/>
ful in some way She plans to<lb/>
move to either New York or Cali-<lb/>
fornia to become a professional<lb/>
dancer.<lb/>
Gaskin was a dancer in the<lb/>
Motion Picture "Traxx" starring<lb/>
Christopher Lloyd, which was<lb/>
filmed in DEG Studios in 1987.<lb/>
She also danced in other produc-<lb/>
tions including "42nd Street"<lb/>
performed at the Opera House<lb/>
Theatre in Wilmington.<lb/>
Authorpoet Maya Angelou will<lb/>
speak tonight at 8 p.m. in Hendrix<lb/>
Pre?- Release<lb/>
Renowned poet and novelist<lb/>
Maya Angelou will speak tonight<lb/>
in Hendrix theater at 8 p.m. The<lb/>
lecture is sponsored by The Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Angelou has written four<lb/>
autobiographical bestsellers and<lb/>
four volumes of verse. Since 1981,<lb/>
she has been Professor of Ameri-<lb/>
can Studies at Wake Forest Uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
Her books include "1 Know<lb/>
which became a CBS television<lb/>
movie in 1979, and "Singin' and<lb/>
Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like<lb/>
Christmas<lb/>
She also wrote the 1983 stage<lb/>
play "On a Southern Journey<lb/>
She received the Golden Eagle<lb/>
Award for her PBS documentary<lb/>
Why the Caged Bird Sings "Afro-American in the Arts<lb/>
Dreams influence life<lb/>
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) ? Stud-<lb/>
ies of troubled Vietnam veterans<lb/>
and of people going through di-<lb/>
vorce show sleep researchers that<lb/>
one's dream life heavily influ-<lb/>
ences one's waking hours ? and<lb/>
vice versa.<lb/>
During a recent Arizona<lb/>
Conference on Sleep and Cogni-<lb/>
tion nse.iivhers reported that<lb/>
dreams arc not random, that they<lb/>
have meaning and serve vital<lb/>
mental health functions.<lb/>
Dr. Milton Kramer, medical<lb/>
director of the American Institute<lb/>
for Sleep Disorders Inc in Ohio,<lb/>
says dreams are a continuation of<lb/>
thought processes during waking<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
Kramer identifies two types:<lb/>
a progressive, sequential type in<lb/>
which problems are stated,<lb/>
worked on and resolved, and a<lb/>
repetitive, traumatic type in<lb/>
which the problem is simply re-<lb/>
stated with no resolution.<lb/>
The latter type is common in<lb/>
depressed people going through<lb/>
divorce, says Rosalind D.<lb/>
Cartwright, director of Chicago's<lb/>
Sleep Disorder Service and Re-<lb/>
search Center.<lb/>
She says depression is quite<lb/>
common during divorce, though<lb/>
the sufferers often do not recog-<lb/>
nized it. She says that 47 percent<lb/>
of the men and 51 percent of the<lb/>
women she studied were de-<lb/>
pressed, according to psychologi-<lb/>
cal tests.<lb/>
Often their dreams would be<lb/>
of childhood or adolescence, but<lb/>
rarclv of adulthood. Thev seem to<lb/>
be reviewing how they got into<lb/>
the present situation, Cartwright<lb/>
savs.<lb/>
They're more repetitive in<lb/>
their dreaming she says. "They<lb/>
mav state the problem and restate<lb/>
it across the right, and they seem<lb/>
to have no forward drive of work-<lb/>
ing through it<lb/>
People who were not de-<lb/>
pressed, she savs, had dreams<lb/>
covering a wider time frame, and<lb/>
some dreams speculated about<lb/>
new roles in their lives after di-<lb/>
vorce, she says.<lb/>
It's important for those going<lb/>
through divorce to recognize the<lb/>
symptoms of depression and to<lb/>
get help if needed, Cartwright<lb/>
says. Symptoms include troubled<lb/>
sleep, not enough hours of sleep<lb/>
and frequent awakenings.<lb/>
Weight loss and uncontrol-<lb/>
lable crying also arc symptoms.<lb/>
"Anyone going through a<lb/>
stressful life event may have a<lb/>
little of that she says. "But if it<lb/>
persists for more than three<lb/>
weeks, those are signs of trouble<lb/>
and they should get help<lb/>
Kramer notes that effectively<lb/>
working through problems while<lb/>
dreaming can influence mood on<lb/>
awakening. His subject showed<lb/>
both patterns of dreaming, pro-<lb/>
gressive and repetitive.<lb/>
"This shows there is not uni-<lb/>
versal success in altering the<lb/>
emotional preoccupations of the<lb/>
previous day he says. "This may<lb/>
account for some of the variability<lb/>
in how one feels on awakening<lb/>
from a night's sleep<lb/>
Generally, those with few<lb/>
emotional problems who feel<lb/>
upset at night may feel better in<lb/>
the morning because "dreams<lb/>
have worked their magic and<lb/>
done their job Cartwright says.<lb/>
"But we know the depressed<lb/>
don't have that restorative func-<lb/>
tion of their sleep. They feel worst,<lb/>
at their lowest point, first thing in<lb/>
the morning. And looking back at<lb/>
the depressed dreams, I see no<lb/>
progress<lb/>
Kramer has studied what is<lb/>
called "chronic delayed post-<lb/>
traumatic stress disorder7 in Viet-<lb/>
nam veterans. These vets seem<lb/>
fine for many years after return-<lb/>
ing home but then begin to have<lb/>
disturbing memories of Vietnam,<lb/>
nightmares and difficulty in con-<lb/>
centrating, he says. They either<lb/>
begin withdrawing or have diffi-<lb/>
culty coping with their intense<lb/>
emotions, he says.<lb/>
Similar disorders have been<lb/>
seen in veterans from other wars<lb/>
and in survivors of tragedies, he<lb/>
says. Kramer believes the intense<lb/>
See SLEEPERS page 9<lb/>
LaVonda Gaskin, a senior dance major at ECU, recently won the Marie Wallace Dance Scholar-<lb/>
ship. Gaskin, who dreams of being a Rockette, has danced in the 1987 movie, "Traxx as well as<lb/>
productions such as "42nd Street<lb/>
Dreamers learn to overcome<lb/>
fears while they're still asleep<lb/>
TUSCON, Ariz. (AP) ? Most<lb/>
people can learn to control their<lb/>
dreams and sue them to overcome<lb/>
fears, nightmares and depression,<lb/>
according to a Stanford Univer-<lb/>
sity dream researcher, though he<lb/>
has his critics.<lb/>
Stephen LaBerge of<lb/>
Stanford's Sleep Research Center<lb/>
says he knows "lucid dreamers"<lb/>
who have overcome their fears of<lb/>
heights and snakes by confront-<lb/>
ing those fears in dreams. Lucid<lb/>
dreamers know they're dreaming<lb/>
and can direct the course of the<lb/>
activities they're imagining, he<lb/>
said at a recent Arizona Confer-<lb/>
ence on Sleep and Cognition.<lb/>
LaBerge, a research associate<lb/>
in psychology, says he has<lb/>
worked with about 100 lucid<lb/>
dreamers over the past 11 years.<lb/>
One lucid dreamer was able<lb/>
to "greatly lessen" his fear of<lb/>
heights during dreams by delib-<lb/>
erately stepping off the edge of a<lb/>
tall building and floating away,<lb/>
LaBerge says.<lb/>
Rosalind Cartwright of the<lb/>
Sleep Disorders Center at Rush-<lb/>
Presbytcrian-St. Luke's Hospital<lb/>
in Chicago told of a recent study<lb/>
of depressed people who were<lb/>
able to change the endings to<lb/>
depressing dreams.<lb/>
"They became aware in the<lb/>
dream that they were dreaming,<lb/>
then changed the ending to stop<lb/>
the badness Cartwright says.<lb/>
"This technique also has a great<lb/>
deal of potential in treating night-<lb/>
mares<lb/>
LaBerge savs lucid dreaming<lb/>
is a skill anyone can learn.<lb/>
He predicts that lucid dream-<lb/>
ing will become increasingly<lb/>
popular as a tool for self-explora-<lb/>
tion and self-help because "it's<lb/>
such a simple, straightforward,<lb/>
effective means of dealing with<lb/>
fears and exploring the powers oi<lb/>
the mind<lb/>
In recent studies at the Stan-<lb/>
ford sleep lab, lucid dreamers<lb/>
have been trained to signal the<lb/>
onset and conclusion oi their<lb/>
dreams by moving their eyes to<lb/>
the left and right repeatedly in a<lb/>
prearranged pattern. Subjects<lb/>
also have been taught to hold their<lb/>
breath, count to five, then exhale<lb/>
while they're dreaming, he says.<lb/>
"These people arc capable ot<lb/>
remembering instructions given<lb/>
to them before sleeping, then exe-<lb/>
cuting them consciously while in<lb/>
sleep they re aware of what<lb/>
they're doing he says.<lb/>
Critics charge that those sub-<lb/>
jects probably were awake, not<lb/>
dreaming, when they carried out<lb/>
the tasks. But LaBerge says im-<lb/>
portant physiological indicators<lb/>
? brain waves, heart rate, respi-<lb/>
ration rate and others ? demon-<lb/>
strate that those people were in<lb/>
deep sleep.<lb/>
Critics also charge that<lb/>
LaBerge's experiments lack basic<lb/>
control measures and that sub-<lb/>
nets' reports of lucid dreaming<lb/>
are influenced by the researchers'<lb/>
expectations.<lb/>
'Yes, there may be lucid<lb/>
dreaming, and yes, mavbe vou<lb/>
can use it to help yourself, but we<lb/>
don't yet know enough about he<lb/>
process says David A. Dingcs.<lb/>
co-director of the Institute for<lb/>
Experimental Psychology at the<lb/>
University of Pennsylvania.<lb/>
Dinges asks: "How often do<lb/>
they occur? What state are these<lb/>
people in when they occur? How<lb/>
many people get them? To what<lb/>
extent can these results be sepa-<lb/>
rated from the searcher's expec-<lb/>
tations?"<lb/>
Thomas stars as televangelist in<lb/>
new HBO special 'Glory, Glory'<lb/>
LOS ANGELES, (AP) ? The with co-executive producer He's earnest but dull, and the rat-<lb/>
Rev. Bobby Joe Stuckey takes over Bonny Dore, who had worked ings start to tumble. In despera<lb/>
B fore the Blizzard of 89, there was warmth. Just days before the Great Ice Storm hit Friday, many<lb/>
hidents like these were worshipping the sun. (Photo by Mark Love, ECU Photolab)<lb/>
his father's television evangelism<lb/>
empire in HBO's "Glory, Glory"<lb/>
and is soon up to his halo in<lb/>
trouble, just like  well, some<lb/>
recent headline-makers.<lb/>
But Richard Thomas, who<lb/>
stars as Bobby Joe, insists that the<lb/>
script for the 3 12-hour musical<lb/>
comedy was written long before<lb/>
Jim and Tammy Bakker and<lb/>
Jimmy Swaggart became house-<lb/>
hold names.<lb/>
"The script's been around for<lb/>
a while says Thomas, best-re-<lb/>
membered as John Boy on the TV<lb/>
series "The Waltons "We filmed<lb/>
it last summer in Toronto. It more<lb/>
or less started as an examination<lb/>
of the phenomenon of television<lb/>
evangelism<lb/>
The story originated in 1981<lb/>
briefly with evangelist Oral<lb/>
Roberts in polishing his broad-<lb/>
casts.<lb/>
"If I felt the film was taking<lb/>
tion, he turns to a down-and-out<lb/>
rock singer who becomes the<lb/>
charismatic Sister Ruth. The rat-<lb/>
ings and the donations reach<lb/>
cheap shots at someone's faith 1 unprecedented levels with Sister<lb/>
never would have done it Tho<lb/>
mas says. At the center, Stuckey is<lb/>
a man of true faith but he's been<lb/>
seduced into straying. He can<lb/>
speak for the importance of spiri-<lb/>
tuality, but all institutions are<lb/>
subject for compromise and cor-<lb/>
ruption<lb/>
The movie, directed by Lind-<lb/>
say Anderson ("The Whales of<lb/>
August "O Lucky Man") will<lb/>
premiere on Sunday<lb/>
Ruth.<lb/>
But behind the altar, un-<lb/>
known to Bobby Joe, she's leading<lb/>
a life of Sodom and Gomorrah,<lb/>
He's deeply in love with her, and<lb/>
when it omes crashing down he's<lb/>
the candidate for a pillar of salt.<lb/>
Ellen Greene stars as SisHfir<lb/>
Ru th, Winston Rekert as an inves-<lb/>
tigative reporter, James Whit-<lb/>
more as a church elder and Barry<lb/>
Morse as Bobby Joe's father, the<lb/>
Bobby Joe is a biblical scholar Rev. Dan Stuckey.<lb/>
totally lacking in the star quality "When they called me they<lb/>
his father used to turn his little See 05 ,<lb/>
church into a television eTipire. r 6 <lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058126_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21, 1989 PAGE 8<lb/>
Dancer wins scholarship<lb/>
By CLEJETTER PICKETT<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
"Always alive said La-<lb/>
Vonda Gaskin describes herself.<lb/>
Gaskin, the 1989 recipient of the<lb/>
Marie Wallace Dance Scholar-<lb/>
ship, the only scholarship given in<lb/>
the department strictly for danc-<lb/>
ers, is a senior majoring in dance<lb/>
at East Carolina University.<lb/>
Gaskin has been dancing<lb/>
since she was a child growing up<lb/>
in Wilmington, N.C. Although<lb/>
she has participated in many<lb/>
dance-related activities through-<lb/>
out her life, she never thought she<lb/>
would receive a dance degree.<lb/>
After high school, Gaskin<lb/>
planned to stay home and attend<lb/>
UNC-W. Her mother encouraged<lb/>
her to attend ECU and earn her<lb/>
degree.<lb/>
Initially, she was unsure of<lb/>
majoring in dance, despite the<lb/>
many awards and recognitions<lb/>
she previously received for her<lb/>
dance ability. She wondered<lb/>
whether she loved dance enough<lb/>
to pursue a career in it. As a so-<lb/>
phomore, Gaskin considered be-<lb/>
coming a business major, appre-<lb/>
hensive of the hard work and<lb/>
dedication that accompanies<lb/>
being a dancer.<lb/>
It wasn't until she began tour-<lb/>
ing with 5,6,7,8, an ECU student<lb/>
repertory company which tours<lb/>
North Carolina performing<lb/>
Broadway musicals, that she real-<lb/>
ized dancing was for her.<lb/>
"That was the time of trial and<lb/>
error where I had no free week-<lb/>
ends at all  that's when I real-<lb/>
ized you've got to love it to be able<lb/>
to do it she said.<lb/>
"I dance because I love it<lb/>
She knows her chosen held is<lb/>
a competitive one which requires<lb/>
hard work and dedication, but<lb/>
she is willing to give it her best.<lb/>
"It's really hard. There are<lb/>
times when I say 'What am I doing<lb/>
here because I spend most of my<lb/>
life in the studio, but it all comes<lb/>
back to you have to love what you<lb/>
are doing<lb/>
Gaskin has dreams of being<lb/>
the best. "I've always wanted to<lb/>
be a Rockette she said. "Thafs<lb/>
one of my greatest ambitions<lb/>
Her speciality is tap and she<lb/>
was once honored in high school<lb/>
for her performance in a high kick<lb/>
routine. Both tap and high kick<lb/>
are characteristics of being a<lb/>
Rockette.<lb/>
However, in the 11th grade,<lb/>
she visited Radio City Music Hall<lb/>
and learned that one must be 5'5"<lb/>
or taller to become a Rockette and<lb/>
Gaskin is only 5'2<lb/>
Gaskin isn't letting the ob-<lb/>
stacle of becoming a Rockette in-<lb/>
terfere with her ambition. "I don't<lb/>
necessarily want to be rich and<lb/>
famous. I just want to be success-<lb/>
ful in some way She plans to<lb/>
move to either New York or Cali-<lb/>
fornia to become a professional<lb/>
dancer.<lb/>
Gaskin was a dancer in the<lb/>
Motion Picture "Traxx" starring<lb/>
Christopher Lloyd, which was<lb/>
filmed in DEG Studios in 1987.<lb/>
She also danced in other produc-<lb/>
tions including "42nd Street"<lb/>
performed at the Opera House<lb/>
Theatre in Wilmington.<lb/>
Authorpoet Maya Angelou will<lb/>
speak tonight at 8 p.m. in Hendrix<lb/>
Press Release<lb/>
Renowned poet and novelist<lb/>
Maya Angelou will speak tonight<lb/>
in Hendrix theater at 8 p.m. The<lb/>
lecture is sponsored by The Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Angelou has written four<lb/>
autobiographical bestsellers and<lb/>
four volumes of verse. Since 1981,<lb/>
she has been Professor of Ameri-<lb/>
can Studies at Wake Forest Uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
Her books include "I Know<lb/>
Why the Caged Bird Sings<lb/>
which became a CBS television<lb/>
movie in 1979, and "Singin' and<lb/>
Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like<lb/>
Christmas<lb/>
She also wrote the 1983 stage<lb/>
play "On a Southern Journey<lb/>
She received the Golden Eagle<lb/>
Award for her PBS documentary<lb/>
"Afro-American in the Arts<lb/>
Dreams influence life<lb/>
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) ? Stud-<lb/>
ies of troubled Vietnam veterans<lb/>
and of people going through di-<lb/>
vorce show sleep researchers that<lb/>
one's dream life heavily influ-<lb/>
ences one's waking hours ? and<lb/>
vice versa.<lb/>
During a recent Arizona<lb/>
Conference on Sleep and Cogni-<lb/>
tion, researchers reported that<lb/>
dreams are not random, that they<lb/>
have meaning and serve vital<lb/>
mental health functions.<lb/>
Dr. Milton Kramer, medical<lb/>
director of the American Institute<lb/>
for Sleep Disorders Inc in Ohio,<lb/>
says dreams are a continuation of<lb/>
thought processes during waking<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
Kramer identifies two types:<lb/>
a progressive, sequential type in<lb/>
which problems are stated,<lb/>
worked on and resolved, and a<lb/>
repetitive, traumatic type in<lb/>
which the problem is simply re-<lb/>
stated with no resolution.<lb/>
The latter type is common in<lb/>
depressed people going through<lb/>
divorce, says Rosalind D.<lb/>
Cartwright, director of Chicago's<lb/>
Sleep Disorder Service and Re-<lb/>
search Center.<lb/>
She says depression is quite<lb/>
common during divorce, though<lb/>
the sufferers often do not recog-<lb/>
nized it. She says that 47 percent<lb/>
of the men and 51 percent of the<lb/>
women she studied were de-<lb/>
pressed, according to psychologi-<lb/>
cal tests.<lb/>
Often their dreams would be<lb/>
of childhood or adolescence, but<lb/>
rarely of adulthood. They seem to<lb/>
be reviewing how they got into<lb/>
the present situation, Cartwright<lb/>
says.<lb/>
"They're more repetitive in<lb/>
their dreaming she says. "They<lb/>
may state the problem and restate<lb/>
it across the right, and they seem<lb/>
to have no forward drive of work-<lb/>
ing through it<lb/>
People who were not de-<lb/>
pressed, she says, had dreams<lb/>
covering a wider time frame, and<lb/>
some dreams speculated about<lb/>
new roles in their lives after di-<lb/>
vorce, she says.<lb/>
It's important for those going<lb/>
through divorce to recognize the<lb/>
symptoms of depression and to<lb/>
get help if needed, Cartwright<lb/>
says. Symptoms include troubled<lb/>
sleep, not enough hours of sleep<lb/>
and frequent awakenings.<lb/>
Weight loss and uncontrol-<lb/>
lable crying also are symptoms.<lb/>
"Anyone going through a<lb/>
stressful life event may have a<lb/>
little of that she says. "But if it<lb/>
persists for more than three<lb/>
weeks, those are signs of trouble<lb/>
and they should get help<lb/>
Kramer notes that effectively<lb/>
working through problems while<lb/>
dreaming can influence mood on<lb/>
awakening. His subject showed<lb/>
both patterns of dreaming, pro-<lb/>
gressive and repetitive.<lb/>
"This shows there is not uni-<lb/>
versal success in altering the<lb/>
emotional preoccupations of the<lb/>
previous day he says. "This may<lb/>
account for some of the variability<lb/>
in how one feels on awakening<lb/>
from a nighfs sleep<lb/>
Generally, those with few<lb/>
emotional problems who feel<lb/>
upset at night may feel better in<lb/>
the morning because "dreams<lb/>
have worked their magic and<lb/>
done their job Cartwright says.<lb/>
"But we know the depressed<lb/>
don't have that restorative func-<lb/>
tion of their sleep. They feel worst,<lb/>
at their lowest point, first thing in<lb/>
the morning. And looking back at<lb/>
the depressed dreams, I see no<lb/>
progress<lb/>
Kramer has studied what is<lb/>
called "chronic delayed post-<lb/>
traumatic stress disorder' in Viet-<lb/>
nam veterans. These vets seem<lb/>
fine for many years after return-<lb/>
ing home but then begin to have<lb/>
disturbing memories of Vietnam,<lb/>
nightmares and difficulty in con-<lb/>
centrating, he says. They either<lb/>
begin withdrawing or have diffi-<lb/>
culty coping with their intense<lb/>
emotions, he says.<lb/>
Similar disorders have been<lb/>
seen in veterans from other wars<lb/>
and in survivors of tragedies, he<lb/>
says. Kramer believes the intense<lb/>
See SLEEPERS page 9<lb/>
LaVonda Gaskin, a senior dance major at ECU, recently won the Marie Wallace Dance Scholar-<lb/>
ship. Gaskin, who dreams of being a Rockette, has danced in the 1987 movie, "Traxx as well as<lb/>
productions such as "42nd Street<lb/>
? ?? ?? ? Ma<lb/>
4 ? ? ?<lb/>
? ? I. Ill?l '<lb/>
w<lb/>
Dreamers learn to overcome<lb/>
fears while they're still asleep<lb/>
TUSCON, Ariz. (AP) ? Most<lb/>
people can learn to control their<lb/>
dreams and sue them to overcome<lb/>
fears, nightmares and depression,<lb/>
according to a Stanford Univer-<lb/>
sity dream researcher, though he<lb/>
has his critics.<lb/>
Stephen LaBerge of<lb/>
Stanford's Sleep Research Center<lb/>
says he knows "lucid dreamers"<lb/>
who have overcome their fears of<lb/>
heights and snakes by confront-<lb/>
ing those fears in dreams. Lucid<lb/>
dreamers know they're dreaming<lb/>
and can direcj the course of the<lb/>
activities they're imagining, he<lb/>
said at a recent Arizona Confer-<lb/>
ence on Sleep and Cognition.<lb/>
LaBerge, a research associate<lb/>
in psychology, says he has<lb/>
worked with about 100 lucid<lb/>
dreamers over the past 11 years.<lb/>
One lucid dreamer was able<lb/>
to "greatly lessen" his fear of<lb/>
heights during dreams by delib-<lb/>
erately stepping off the edge of a<lb/>
tall building and floating away,<lb/>
LaBerge says.<lb/>
Rosalind Cartwright of the<lb/>
Sleep Disorders Center at Rush-<lb/>
Presbyterian-St. Luke's Hospital<lb/>
in Chicago told of a recent study<lb/>
of depressed people who were<lb/>
able to change the endings to<lb/>
depressing dreams.<lb/>
"They became aware in the<lb/>
dream that they were dreaming,<lb/>
then changed the ending to stop<lb/>
the badness Cartwright says.<lb/>
"This technique also has a great<lb/>
deal of potential in treating night-<lb/>
mares<lb/>
LaBerge says lucid dreaming<lb/>
is a skill anyone can learn.<lb/>
He predicts that lucid dream-<lb/>
ing will become increasingly<lb/>
popular as a tool for self-explora-<lb/>
tion and self-help because "it's<lb/>
such a simple, straightforward,<lb/>
effective means of dealing with<lb/>
fears and exploring the powers of<lb/>
the mind<lb/>
In recent studies at the Stan-<lb/>
ford sleep lab, lucid dreamers<lb/>
have been trained to signal the<lb/>
onset and conclusion of their<lb/>
dreams by moving their eyes to<lb/>
the left and right repeatedly in a<lb/>
prearranged pattern. Subjects<lb/>
also have been taught to hold their<lb/>
breath, count to five, then exhale<lb/>
while they're dreaming, he says.<lb/>
"These people are capable of<lb/>
remembering instructions given<lb/>
to them before sleeping, then exe-<lb/>
cuting them consciously while in<lb/>
sleep ? they're aware of what<lb/>
they're doing he says.<lb/>
Critics charge that those sub-<lb/>
jects probably were awake, not<lb/>
dreaming, when they carried out<lb/>
the tasks. But LaBerge says im-<lb/>
portant physiological indicators<lb/>
? brain waves, heart rate, respi-<lb/>
ration rate and others ? demon-<lb/>
strate that those people were in<lb/>
deep sleep.<lb/>
Critics also charge that<lb/>
LaBerge's experiments lack basic<lb/>
control measures and that sub-<lb/>
jects' reports of lucid dreaming<lb/>
are influenced by the researchers'<lb/>
expectations.<lb/>
"Yes, there may be lucid<lb/>
dreaming, and yes, maybe you<lb/>
can use it to help yourself, but we<lb/>
don't yet know enough about he<lb/>
process says David A. Dinges,<lb/>
co-director of the Institute for<lb/>
Experimental Psychology at the<lb/>
University of Pennsylvania.<lb/>
Dinges asks: "How often do<lb/>
they occur? What state are these<lb/>
people in when they occur? How<lb/>
many people get them? To what<lb/>
extent can these results be sepa-<lb/>
rated from the researcher's expec-<lb/>
tations?"<lb/>
Thomas stars as televangelist in<lb/>
new HBO special 'Glory, Glory'<lb/>
Before the Blizzard of 89, there was warmth. Just days before the Great Ice Storm hit Friday, many<lb/>
students like these were worshipping the sun. (Photo by Mark Love, ECU Photolab)<lb/>
LOS ANGELES, (AP) ? The<lb/>
Rev. Bobby Joe Stuckey takes over<lb/>
his father's television evangelism<lb/>
empire in HBCKs "Glory, Glory"<lb/>
and is soon up to his halo in<lb/>
trouble, just like  well, some<lb/>
recent headline-makers.<lb/>
But Richard Thomas, who<lb/>
stars as Bobby Joe, insists that the<lb/>
script for the 3 12-hour musical<lb/>
comedy was written long before<lb/>
Jim and Tammy Bakker and<lb/>
Jimmy Swaggart became house-<lb/>
hold names.<lb/>
"The script's been around for<lb/>
a while says Thomas, best-re-<lb/>
membered as John Boy on the TV<lb/>
series "The Waltons "We filmed<lb/>
it last summer in Toronto. It more<lb/>
or less started as an examination<lb/>
of the phenomenon of television<lb/>
evangelism<lb/>
The story originated in 1981<lb/>
with co-executive producer<lb/>
Bonny Dore, who had worked<lb/>
briefly with evangelist Oral<lb/>
Roberts in polishing his broad-<lb/>
casts.<lb/>
"If I felt the film was taking<lb/>
cheap shots at someone's faith I<lb/>
never would have done it Tho-<lb/>
mas says. At the center, Stuckey is<lb/>
a man of true faith but he's been<lb/>
seduced into straying. He can<lb/>
speak for tbe importance of spiri-<lb/>
tuality, but all institutions are<lb/>
subject for compromise and cor-<lb/>
ruption<lb/>
The movie, directed by Lind-<lb/>
say Anderson ("The Whales of<lb/>
August "O Lucky Man") will<lb/>
premiere on Sunday.<lb/>
Bobby Joe is a biblical scholar<lb/>
totally lacking in the star quality<lb/>
his father used to turn his little<lb/>
church into a television e-npire.<lb/>
He's earnest but dull, and the rat-<lb/>
ings start to rumble. In despera-<lb/>
tion, he turns to a down-and-out<lb/>
rock singer who becomes the<lb/>
charismatic Sister Ruth. The rat-<lb/>
ings and the donations reach<lb/>
unprecedented levels with Sister<lb/>
Ruth.<lb/>
But behind the altar, un-<lb/>
known to Bobby Joe, she's leading<lb/>
a life of Sodom and Gomorrah,<lb/>
He's deeply in love with her, and<lb/>
when it vomes crashing down he's<lb/>
the candidate for a pillar of salt<lb/>
Ellen Greene stars as SisteV<lb/>
Ruth, Winston Rekert is an inves-<lb/>
tigative reporter, James Whit-<lb/>
more as a church elder and Baity<lb/>
Morse as Bobby Joe's father, the<lb/>
Rev. Dan Stuckey.<lb/>
"When they called me they<lb/>
See THOMAS, page 9<lb/>
?ipp(V9<lb/>
<pb facs="00058126_0012"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21. 1989 9<lb/>
c-<lb/>
?n<lb/>
is<lb/>
V<lb/>
Wild donkeys take over island<lb/>
CINNAMON BAY, U.S. Vir-<lb/>
gin Islands (AT) ? Wild donkeys<lb/>
are driving the tranquil Carib-<lb/>
bean island of St. John to distrac-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
An estimated 300 donkeys<lb/>
roam the smallest of the three<lb/>
main U.S. Virgin Islands. Thev<lb/>
knock over garbage cans, chew up<lb/>
gardens, wake people in the<lb/>
night, intrude on campers, eat<lb/>
native tamarind trees and foul the<lb/>
treets with their droppings<lb/>
Sometimes, theornerv 300-pound<lb/>
pests kick and bite.<lb/>
Thev also reproduce rapidly.<lb/>
After their first pregnancies, fe-<lb/>
males stay in heat and can give<lb/>
birth annuallv. It is estimated that<lb/>
the donkev population will<lb/>
double in five vears.<lb/>
Thev reproduce faster than<lb/>
jackrabbits in Australia, savs<lb/>
Eileen Sundra, a native of North-<lb/>
held, N.J who has lived on the<lb/>
island for eight years and bought<lb/>
an air gun to keep them away<lb/>
rrom her garden.<lb/>
The burros, descendants oi<lb/>
wild asses from northeast Africa,<lb/>
were brought to St. John in the<lb/>
mid-lbOOs during Spanish colo-<lb/>
nial davs. Thev were ideal for the<lb/>
rugged terrain and were valued<lb/>
.is work animals in sugar and cot-<lb/>
ton plantations.<lb/>
But with the advent of cars<lb/>
and roads in the 1950s there was<lb/>
little need for donkeys, and thev<lb/>
were graduallv turned loose.<lb/>
"Todav. thev have no real<lb/>
domain, says St. John administra-<lb/>
tor WilHam Lomax. Thev roam<lb/>
the whole island and they don't<lb/>
seem to fear human beings. We're<lb/>
concerned they'll injure some-<lb/>
one<lb/>
In the Caribbean, the problem<lb/>
which administers percent of<lb/>
St. John, say the 7-mile-long is-<lb/>
land of 3,000 people is too small<lb/>
tor-residents, thousand's of tour-<lb/>
ists and 300 donkeys.<lb/>
last November, under cover<lb/>
oi night, park rangers shot to<lb/>
death 10 donkeys in Cinnamon<lb/>
Bay, an area favored by tourists<lb/>
for its sandy beach, coral reefs and<lb/>
tropical campgrounds.<lb/>
David Nellis, a biologist who<lb/>
heads the Fish and Wildlife De-<lb/>
partment of Agriculture and Eco-<lb/>
nomic Development.<lb/>
Gilbert Sprauvc, a professor<lb/>
of foreign languages at the Virgin<lb/>
Islands University, denounced<lb/>
"the destruction of animals of<lb/>
servitude, animals which used to<lb/>
ease the pain.<lb/>
"There were wild donkeys in<lb/>
They dumped the carcasses St. John before the age of mechani<lb/>
into the ocean and hoped the<lb/>
slaughter would go unnoticed.<lb/>
Within two days everyone<lb/>
knew the Tark had been there<lb/>
blowing away donkeys says<lb/>
zation, and I don't recall they<lb/>
were a threat to anybody. I don't<lb/>
think they are much of a problem<lb/>
now<lb/>
Ranger Richard Jones coun-<lb/>
tered by saying that parks people<lb/>
would be responsible if a tounst<lb/>
was hurt petting or feeding an<lb/>
"aggressive" donkey.<lb/>
Multimillonaire Laurance<lb/>
Rockefeller, who owns a chunk of<lb/>
St. John and helped establish the<lb/>
National Tark, proposed ship-<lb/>
ping donkeys to impoverished<lb/>
Haiti, where they could be useful.<lb/>
Other options include sterili-<lb/>
zation, euthanasia or adoption.<lb/>
"But people don't want a<lb/>
u ild, mangy donkey says Jones.<lb/>
"They have no value, no use<lb/>
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TAKE-OUTS OKAY<lb/>
Thomas stars as televangelist<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
said the part was for a nice, clean-<lb/>
out preacher Thomas says.<lb/>
Some things you do because<lb/>
thev're radically different from<lb/>
what vou've done before. Some<lb/>
vou do because they're familiar.<lb/>
This was familiar, but I liked the<lb/>
way it was written. It's satire<lb/>
without taking cheap shots.<lb/>
"He compromises himself<lb/>
with this woman and before he<lb/>
knows it he's trapped in a web of<lb/>
deceit and conspiracy<lb/>
In February, Thomas goes to<lb/>
the Hartford Stage in Connecticut<lb/>
tor "Peer Gvnt He will appear in<lb/>
a new translation of Henrik<lb/>
Waltons" in 1977. The immensely<lb/>
popular series that ran on CBS<lb/>
from 1972-81 was based on Earl<lb/>
Hamner's reminiscences about<lb/>
his boyhood in Virginia, in 1977.<lb/>
As for another series, Thomas<lb/>
says he would certainly consider<lb/>
it.<lb/>
"But a series takes up so much<lb/>
of your time it would have to be<lb/>
something I absolutely loved he<lb/>
says. "I prefer plays, but I'm an<lb/>
actor. The material comes first. If<lb/>
it's right I'll got anywhere and<lb/>
work in any medium.<lb/>
"I have been lucky as an actor.<lb/>
I've always gotten work. I've<lb/>
never had to wait by the phone.<lb/>
Too many actors regard the thea<lb/>
tion like having tea with a maiden<lb/>
aunt. When people see me in a<lb/>
film thev see mv work<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyers Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
TAKE AN EXTRA<lb/>
BE<lb/>
Ibsen's seven-hour play, which ter as some place you go to stretch,<lb/>
will be presented over two nights, as though it was an aerobics class.<lb/>
The six-week run will keep him Or they say it's their duty to go<lb/>
there until May. back, as though it were an obliga-<lb/>
"I plaved Hamlet' there in<lb/>
1987 Thomas savs. "That's<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Monday-Saturday 10-9<lb/>
Sunday 1-6<lb/>
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(Except Aigncr. lke and Reebok)<lb/>
it<lb/>
l i.i i<lb/>
is unique to St. John. With the Shakespeare's longest play and<lb/>
creation of the National Park in<lb/>
1956, more than half oi the 21<lb/>
square miles of land was pre-<lb/>
served? a donkey Utopia. Other<lb/>
islands became more developed<lb/>
and most donkeys died out<lb/>
Officials of the National Tark.<lb/>
this is a thousand lines longer<lb/>
than Hamlet Many people con-<lb/>
sider the play to be Ibsen's master-<lb/>
piece<lb/>
Thomas, who spends much of<lb/>
his time teaching classes at col-<lb/>
leges across thecountrv, left "The<lb/>
Sleepers' waking problems<lb/>
haunt them during the night<lb/>
Continued from page S<lb/>
emotional stress ot living through<lb/>
wars or disasters makes these<lb/>
people more vulnerable during<lb/>
times oi stress later in life, such as<lb/>
a divorce.<lb/>
"The previously troubling<lb/>
experiences may become a meta-<lb/>
phor to express feelings such as<lb/>
hostilitv and rage stirred by the<lb/>
present breakdown he says.<lb/>
The interplay between cur-<lb/>
rent problems and past traumatic<lb/>
experiences is illustrated by the<lb/>
dreams of some Vietnam vets,<lb/>
Kramer savs.<lb/>
One vet, for instance,<lb/>
dreamed of trving to cross a river<lb/>
in Vietnam and a "big guv" was<lb/>
trying to help him. Every time<lb/>
thev tried to get to the other side,<lb/>
they would end up at the begin-<lb/>
ning.<lb/>
In the dream the subject<lb/>
might well be referring to the<lb/>
therapeutic efforts he is attempt-<lb/>
ing with the doctor Kramer<lb/>
says. That's the idea of the 'big<lb/>
guy<lb/>
This could be a metaphor<lb/>
about going from one place in life<lb/>
to another. The more he tries, the<lb/>
more he ends up in the same<lb/>
place<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
c<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21 ?!??-<lb/>
"ft<lb/>
i<lb/>
Wild donkeys take over island<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIAL<lb/>
CINNAMON BAY, U.S. Vir-<lb/>
gin Islands (AP)?Wild donkeys<lb/>
are driving the tranquil Carib-<lb/>
bean island of St. John to distrac-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
An estimated 300 donkeys<lb/>
roam the smallest of the three<lb/>
which administers60 percent of<lb/>
St. John, say the 7-mile-long is-<lb/>
land of 3,000 people is too small<lb/>
for-residents, thousands of tour-<lb/>
ists and 300 donkeys.<lb/>
Last November, under cover<lb/>
of night, park rangers shot to<lb/>
tered by saying that parks people<lb/>
would be responsible if a tourist<lb/>
was hurt petting or feeding an<lb/>
"aggressive" donkey.<lb/>
.? ?v? Multimillonaire Laurance<lb/>
mam U.S. Virgin Islands. They death" 10 donkeys in Cinnamon ?$ desnction of animalsTof kefe,ler'wh??wnsachunkof<lb/>
knockovergarbagecans,chewup Bay, an area favored by tourists servitude, animals which used to St ohn and P"1 establish the<lb/>
gardens, wake people in the for its sandy beach, coral reefs and ease the pain. National Park, proposed ship-<lb/>
night, intrude on campers, eat tropical campgrounds. "There were wild donkeys in P?n.s. doJnkevs to impoverished<lb/>
native tamarind trees and foul the They dumped the carcasses St. John before the age of mechani-<lb/>
streets with their droppings, into the ocean and hoped the zation, and I don't recall they<lb/>
Sometimes, the ornery 300-pound slaughter would go unnoticed. were a thrat to anybody I don't<lb/>
pests kick and bite. "Within two days everyone think a are mu?J of a7problem<lb/>
They also reproduce rapidly ? Ko T ,rl h4,1 hppn thtft "<lb/>
David Nellis, a biologist who<lb/>
heads the Fish and Wildlife De-<lb/>
partment of Agriculture and Eco-<lb/>
nomic Development.<lb/>
Gilbert Sprauve, a professor<lb/>
of foreign languages at the Virgin<lb/>
Islands University, denounced<lb/>
"the destruction of animals of<lb/>
After their first pregnancies, fe- blowing<lb/>
males stay in heat and can give<lb/>
birth annually. It is estimated that<lb/>
the donkey population will<lb/>
double in five years.<lb/>
"They reproduce faster than<lb/>
jackrabbits in Australia says<lb/>
Eileen Sundra, a native of North-<lb/>
field, N.J who has lived on the<lb/>
Haiti, where they could be useful.<lb/>
Other options include sterili-<lb/>
zation, euthanasia or adoption.<lb/>
"But people don't want a<lb/>
wild, mangy donkey says Jones.<lb/>
MONSAT.<lb/>
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Thomas stars as televangelist<lb/>
r<lb/>
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Continued from page 8<lb/>
Waltons" in 1977. The immensely tion like having tea with a maiden<lb/>
popular series that ran on CBS aunt. When people see me in a<lb/>
Daily Specials<lb/>
10 Discount on<lb/>
Regular Priced<lb/>
Items<lb/>
With Student I.D.<lb/>
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island for eight years and bought said the part was for a nice, clean- from 1972-81 was based on Earl film they see my work<lb/>
J 2903 E. 10th St. - 758-2712<lb/>
an air gun to keep them away<lb/>
from her garden.<lb/>
The burros, descendants of<lb/>
wild asses from northeast Africa,<lb/>
were brought to St. John in the<lb/>
mid-1600s during Spanish colo-<lb/>
nial days. They were ideal for the<lb/>
rugged terrain and were valued<lb/>
as work animals in sugar and cot-<lb/>
ton plantations.<lb/>
But with the advent of cars<lb/>
and roads in the 1950s there was<lb/>
little need for donkeys, and they<lb/>
were gradually turned loose.<lb/>
"Today, they have no real<lb/>
domain, says St. John administra-<lb/>
tor William Lomax. "They roam<lb/>
cut preacher Thomas says. Hamner's reminiscences about<lb/>
"Some things you do because his boyhood in Virginia, in 1977.<lb/>
they're radically different from As for another series, Thomas<lb/>
what you've done before. Some says he would certainly consider<lb/>
you do because they're familiar, it.<lb/>
RACK ROOM SHOES<lb/>
"But a series takes up so much<lb/>
of your time it would have to be<lb/>
something I absolutely loved he<lb/>
says. "I prefer plays, but I'm an<lb/>
actor. The material comes first. If<lb/>
This was familiar, but I liked the<lb/>
way it was written. If s satire<lb/>
without taking cheap shots.<lb/>
"He compromises himself<lb/>
with this woman and before he<lb/>
knows it he's trapped in a web of if s right IT1 got anywhere and<lb/>
deceit and conspiracy work in any medium.<lb/>
In February, Thomas goes to "I have been lucky as an actor.<lb/>
the Hartford Stage in Connecticut I've always gotten work. I've<lb/>
for "Peer Gynt He will appear in never had to wait by the phone.<lb/>
a new translation of Henrik Too many actors regard the thea-<lb/>
Ibsen's seven-hour play, which ter as some place you go to stretch,<lb/>
the whole island and they don't will be presented over two nights, as though it was an aerobics class,<lb/>
seem to fear human beings. We're The six-week run will keep him Or they say if s their duty to go<lb/>
concerned they'll injure some- there until May. back, as though it were an obliga-<lb/>
one "I played 'Hamlef there in<lb/>
In the Caribbean, the problem 1987 Thomas says. "Thafs<lb/>
is unique to St. John. With the Shakespeare's longest play and<lb/>
BRANDED SHOES<lb/>
Greenville Buyer's Market<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
TAKE AN EXTRA<lb/>
CM<lb/>
10 <lb/>
CUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE<lb/>
(Elxcrpt Alner. 'tke and Reebok)<lb/>
creation of the National Park in<lb/>
1956, more than half of the 21<lb/>
square miles of land was pre-<lb/>
served? a donkey Utopia. Other<lb/>
islands became more developed<lb/>
and most donkeys died out.<lb/>
Officials of the National Park,<lb/>
this is a thousand lines longer<lb/>
than 'Hamlet Many people con-<lb/>
sider the play to be Ibsen's master-<lb/>
piece<lb/>
Thomas, who spends much of<lb/>
his time teaching classes at col-<lb/>
leges across the country, left "The<lb/>
Sleepers' waking problems<lb/>
haunt them during the night<lb/>
CominuedfrompigeS dreaJ ??'??<lb/>
emotional stress of living through in Vietnam and a "big guy" was<lb/>
wars or disasters makes these trying lo help Wm Every nme<lb/>
people more ydnerabie during they tried to get to the other side,<lb/>
they would end up at the begin-<lb/>
timesof stress later in life, such as<lb/>
a divorce.<lb/>
The previously -troubling<lb/>
experiences may become a meta-<lb/>
phor to express feelings such as<lb/>
hostility and rage stirred by the<lb/>
present breakdown he says.<lb/>
The interplay between cur-<lb/>
rent problems and past traumatic<lb/>
experiences is illustrated by the<lb/>
dreams of some Vietnam vets,<lb/>
Kramer says.<lb/>
ning.<lb/>
"In the dream the subject<lb/>
might well be referring to the<lb/>
therapeutic efforts he is attempt-<lb/>
ing with the doctor Kramer<lb/>
says. "Thafs the idea of the 'big<lb/>
"This could be a metaphor<lb/>
about going from one place in life<lb/>
to another. The more he tries, the<lb/>
more he ends up in the same<lb/>
place<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058126_0014"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21,1989 PAGE 10<lb/>
ECU defense sinks<lb/>
Navy for win at home<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
A??t. Sport Editor<lb/>
Hie Midshipmen of Naw<lb/>
sailed into Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Monday, but had to ambandon<lb/>
ship as the Pirates did the attack-<lb/>
ing. The defense of the Pirates<lb/>
neutralized Navy and walked<lb/>
away with its second straight<lb/>
conference win. ECU won hand-<lb/>
ily 67-58.<lb/>
It was dazzling defense that<lb/>
keyed the victory for the Pirates<lb/>
according to Head Coach Mike<lb/>
Steele. "1 think the difference in<lb/>
the game was our man-to-man<lb/>
defense and getting to their three<lb/>
point shooters' Steele said.<lb/>
The Pirates forced 12 Mid-<lb/>
shipmen turnovers and held<lb/>
Navy to a mere 35.8 shooting<lb/>
percentage for the game. ECU<lb/>
held the Middies to only 26.9 per-<lb/>
cent from three-point range, as<lb/>
Navy connected on just seven of<lb/>
27 attempts.<lb/>
The Pirates would control the<lb/>
opening tip-off and from there<lb/>
would establish the tempo of the<lb/>
game. On the first trip down the<lb/>
floor, senior Blue Edwards would<lb/>
can a three-pointer to put the Pi-<lb/>
rates up 3-0.<lb/>
Navy would answer back and<lb/>
following a three-pointer bv Joe<lb/>
Gottschalk would take the lead 7-<lb/>
5. But that lead was short lived.<lb/>
ECU would storm right back.<lb/>
Over the next five minutes the<lb/>
Pirates would outscore the Mid-<lb/>
dies 10-6. Gus Hill finished the<lb/>
run for the Pirates canning a jump<lb/>
shot and a layup. East Carolina<lb/>
was up by four, 17-13.<lb/>
Navy would not roll over and<lb/>
die, though. After several missed<lb/>
opportunities for the Piraies, the<lb/>
Midshipmen capitalized on three<lb/>
jump shots. Djuan Graham would<lb/>
top off the run with a 14-foot<lb/>
lumper. That put Navy up 19-17.<lb/>
This would be the last lead the<lb/>
Middies would see on the night<lb/>
East Carolina showed Navy<lb/>
why it has won the their last two<lb/>
games. Over the last six minutes<lb/>
ot the half, ECU outscored the<lb/>
Midshipmen 9-6, with Edwards<lb/>
doing most of the work. He con-<lb/>
nected on a three-pointer and hit<lb/>
two free throws to account for five<lb/>
of the 10 points. He also made a<lb/>
fine assist to Brooks Bryant for an<lb/>
easy layup. Edwards two free<lb/>
throws came with a 1:22 left in the<lb/>
half and ECU up three, 28-25.<lb/>
Both teams had several<lb/>
chances to score in the last minu te,<lb/>
but neither could do so. The last<lb/>
chance for the Pirates was an<lb/>
Edwards three-pointer that<lb/>
ended up lodged between the rim<lb/>
and the backboard. The half<lb/>
would end with ECU leading 28-<lb/>
25.<lb/>
Coach Steele and his staff<lb/>
seemed concerned as they en-<lb/>
tered the lockerroom at half. But<lb/>
whatever thev told the Pirate<lb/>
J<lb/>
team at intermission was effec-<lb/>
tive, because ECU came out in the<lb/>
second half on fire.<lb/>
Edwards would start off the<lb/>
half by canning a leaning jumper<lb/>
in the paint and ECU was quickly<lb/>
up by five, 30-25. FollowingaSam<lb/>
Cook jumper, the Pirates would<lb/>
can three straight layups and<lb/>
pushed thier lead to nine, 36-27.<lb/>
Cook would come back for<lb/>
Navy and can a short jumper, but<lb/>
once again Edwards would an-<lb/>
swer for the Pirates. Edwards<lb/>
would make a strong move to the<lb/>
basket and make the layup along<lb/>
with being fouled. He would can<lb/>
the free throw and two more and<lb/>
suddenly ECU was up 12 with<lb/>
14:57 remaining in the game. ECU<lb/>
had command and a 41-29 lead.<lb/>
East Carolina would continue<lb/>
to hold on to their lead and<lb/>
stretched it to as much as 18.<lb/>
Edwardshit a free throw to give<lb/>
the Pirates their largest lead in the<lb/>
game. With 6:25 remaining in the<lb/>
contest, ECU led 59-41.<lb/>
The Midshipmen would try<lb/>
to fight back into the game, but<lb/>
could never cut the lead to less<lb/>
See PIRATES, page 11<lb/>
Lady Pirates win<lb/>
O'Conner honored by CAA<lb/>
Junior Reed Lose goes up strong to take a rebound away from<lb/>
Midshipmen guard Joe Gottschalk (Photo by Angela Pridgen,<lb/>
ECU Photolab).<lb/>
By CAROLYN JUSTICE<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
Two Lady Pirates scored their<lb/>
career highs Saturday night as<lb/>
East Carolina's women's basket-<lb/>
ball team boosted their record to<lb/>
13-10 overall and 6-5 in the Colo-<lb/>
nial Athletic Association in a 87-<lb/>
83 win over American.<lb/>
Senior Chris O'Connor<lb/>
scored 24 points, her career high<lb/>
in the Lady Pirate win. O'Connor<lb/>
was 11 of 15 from the floor and<lb/>
two of two from the three-point<lb/>
range.<lb/>
O'Connor has been selected<lb/>
as the CAA women's player of the<lb/>
week for her efforts which in-<lb/>
cluded four assists and three<lb/>
steals.<lb/>
ECU now holds down fourth<lb/>
place in the conference.<lb/>
Junior Irish Hamilton was 6-7<lb/>
from the freethrow line as she<lb/>
scored a career-high 22 points in<lb/>
the ECU outing. Hamilton also<lb/>
added three assists and six steals<lb/>
to her efforts against the Lady<lb/>
Eagles.<lb/>
Pam Williams and Gretta<lb/>
Savage added 10 points each for<lb/>
ECU, while Sarah Gray led the<lb/>
way on the boards with 10 re-<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates had a slim<lb/>
36-34 lead over the Lady Eagles at<lb/>
halftime. ECU shot only 42 per-<lb/>
cent from the field during the first<lb/>
half, but improved their shooting<lb/>
to 59 percent in the second half to<lb/>
earn the conference victory.<lb/>
American is now 4-21 overall<lb/>
and 2-9 in CAA play as they<lb/>
ranked sixth in the conference.<lb/>
Earlier in the season, ECU<lb/>
claimed their first victory over the<lb/>
Lady Eagles, 66-43, in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum while freshman Tonya<lb/>
Hargrove also had a career high<lb/>
performance scoring 17 points.<lb/>
With three games remaining<lb/>
in regular season play and the<lb/>
CAA tournament still to be<lb/>
played in mid-March, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates'hopesofa winning season<lb/>
are still alive. Under second year<lb/>
head coach Pat Pierson, ECU has<lb/>
already passed their eight wins of<lb/>
1988 regular season play and their<lb/>
two conference wins.<lb/>
Earlier in the season, ECU<lb/>
was victorious over one of its<lb/>
See LADY PIRATES, page 12<lb/>
IRS basketball competition heats up<lb/>
Pirates win on home<lb/>
turf despite turnovers<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
After three straight games on<lb/>
the road, the Pirates were thank-<lb/>
ful to be in the happy confines of<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. They were<lb/>
even happier after the final<lb/>
buzzer sounded Saturday and the<lb/>
scoreboard showed ECU had<lb/>
claimed its second straight vic-<lb/>
tor) This time they defeated con-<lb/>
ference foe American, 66-60.<lb/>
"It wasn't a pretty game<lb/>
said Coach Mike Steele. "It's the<lb/>
worst we've played in three<lb/>
games. But even though we<lb/>
played bad, we beat a good team.<lb/>
It was an important game for us<lb/>
The Pirates commited 21<lb/>
turnovers, but made up for the<lb/>
muscues on the boards and at the<lb/>
free throw line. The Pirates were<lb/>
15-16 at the charity stripe and hit<lb/>
all eight free throws down the<lb/>
stretch to ice the victorv. Thev also<lb/>
J J<lb/>
outrebounded the bigger Ameri-<lb/>
can squad, 33-27.<lb/>
The key to the rebounding<lb/>
advantage was the fact that they<lb/>
held the nations second-leading<lb/>
rebounder Ron Draper to just two<lb/>
rebounds, 10 below his average.<lb/>
The Pirates came out a little<lb/>
sluggish the first half. American<lb/>
outscored ECU 8-3 in the first four<lb/>
munutes of the game.<lb/>
The Pirates then ran off eight<lb/>
straight points to take their first<lb/>
lead 9-8 with 12:59 remaining in<lb/>
the first half. Freshman Brooks<lb/>
Bryant did most of the work in the<lb/>
Pirates spurt. Bryant canned three<lb/>
jumpers and Blue Edwards got<lb/>
the other two on a jump shot.<lb/>
American came right back<lb/>
hitting five straight later in the<lb/>
half to take the lead 17-16. The<lb/>
Pirates came right back with eight<lb/>
straight of their own and, with<lb/>
four minutes left in the period,<lb/>
had their biggest lead of the half,<lb/>
24-17.<lb/>
American outscored the Pi-<lb/>
rates 9-2 over the last few mun-<lb/>
utes and tied the game before<lb/>
halftime. At intermission, the<lb/>
score was knotted at 28.<lb/>
The second half would turn<lb/>
(IRS) ? Intramural basket-<lb/>
ball squads have passed the half-<lb/>
way mark with all divisional fi-<lb/>
nals up for grabs. In the men's in-<lb/>
dependent A division, last year's<lb/>
All Campus Champions 'The<lb/>
Dream Team' continue to head up<lb/>
the action with an undefeated<lb/>
record.<lb/>
Their dream may become a<lb/>
nightmare if high league scorers,<lb/>
The Fellows, who have put to-<lb/>
gether 137 points in a single con-<lb/>
test, have anything to do with it.<lb/>
Also on the war path are Here's<lb/>
the Beef and Fried City Gang.<lb/>
Men's independent B squads<lb/>
are being hung over by 100 Proof.<lb/>
This band of hoopsteers look to<lb/>
moveinto the A division next vear<lb/>
J<lb/>
with a divisional championship.<lb/>
Their hottest competition is com-<lb/>
ing from a group of rapping<lb/>
roundballers, Heave D and the<lb/>
Boyz. Next on target is Total<lb/>
Chaos who has left the gymna-<lb/>
sium confused with their quick-<lb/>
ness and strength.<lb/>
In fraternity action, point<lb/>
system leaders Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
may not even make the cut as the<lb/>
new boys on the block, Sigma<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon, hit the number<lb/>
one spot. Tau Kappa Epsilon fol-<lb/>
lows behind in the Frat A division<lb/>
and is looking tough in the B divi-<lb/>
sion as well.<lb/>
Our Prerogative continues to<lb/>
dominat intramural play and<lb/>
this tin khe females will have<lb/>
their way on the basketball<lb/>
courts. O.P. gets the top vote in<lb/>
women's action followed closely<lb/>
behind SQRD and the Little Ras-<lb/>
cals. As for the sororities, three<lb/>
teams remain undefeated as Zeta<lb/>
Tau Alpha, Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
and Alpha Delta Pi head into the<lb/>
playoffs.<lb/>
Co-rcc bowlers are lighting<lb/>
up the lanes in Mcndenhall with<lb/>
extremely high individual<lb/>
averages and team scores adding<lb/>
up. The top ranking squads are as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
l.Our Prerogative<lb/>
2. The Scrags<lb/>
3. Just Us<lb/>
4. PinTopplers<lb/>
5. The 300 Club<lb/>
Our Prerogative is the favor-<lb/>
ite, but second through fifth place<lb/>
is up for grabs.<lb/>
Several individual bowler's<lb/>
averages are worth noting at this<lb/>
point. In the ladies lane, Holly<lb/>
Eckman from the Mad Dogs tops<lb/>
her opponents with 179 followed<lb/>
closelv behind bv Belk Pin<lb/>
Topplcr's own Donna Tender.<lb/>
Christine Elzie and Sonia Long,<lb/>
both from Our Prerogative, hold<lb/>
the third and fourth spot with<lb/>
individual averages of 170 and<lb/>
164 respectively.<lb/>
Jeff Hussey from Just Us is<lb/>
striking hot this year and boasts a<lb/>
188 average leading all other male<lb/>
competitors. Steve Kuykenddall<lb/>
from Our Prerogative is the next<lb/>
in line with a 171 average fol-<lb/>
lowed by Ray Chilcote with 169<lb/>
and The Red Measles' own Mike<lb/>
Swain breaking out with a 167<lb/>
average.<lb/>
On Wednesday, the four fi-<lb/>
nalists from the NIKE three-point<lb/>
shoot out competition will trv to<lb/>
hit the spot once again and walk<lb/>
awav with the grand prize - a full<lb/>
NIKE warm-up suit and bag.<lb/>
The final four surpassed 60<lb/>
other competitors and are as fol-<lb/>
lows: Darren Bynum, Marcus<lb/>
Goodson, Shane Wells and Mark<lb/>
Games. These four have already<lb/>
received NIKE jerseys, socks and<lb/>
shoes for their efforts.<lb/>
This week marks the official<lb/>
Timex Aerobix Week. In promot-<lb/>
ing this week for physical fitness,<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Services<lb/>
will be having giveaways in each<lb/>
of it's aerobic fitness classes on<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday.<lb/>
Watches, aerobic fitness apparel,<lb/>
coupons and fitness information<lb/>
tips will be given away to partici-<lb/>
pants during the week of festivi-<lb/>
ties. The prizes are outstanding<lb/>
arid available to all aerobic fitness<lb/>
participants.<lb/>
Season opens Friday with Palmetto tourney<lb/>
ECU golf team looks toward a third title<lb/>
By LORI MARTIN<lb/>
Sport! Writer<lb/>
The Pirate golf team will<lb/>
open its spring season Friday<lb/>
with The Palmetto Intercollegiate<lb/>
tournament in Santee, S.C.<lb/>
According to Coach Hal<lb/>
Morrison, qualifying has already<lb/>
determined which six of the 15<lb/>
golfers will represent ECU.<lb/>
Morrison said the team has a<lb/>
good chance of winning a third<lb/>
consecutive conference title this<lb/>
spring. "Richmond will be the<lb/>
team that will be hard to beat<lb/>
Morrison said. "They have a little<lb/>
more experience than we do<lb/>
Returning veterans for the<lb/>
Pirates are three 1988 all-confer-<lb/>
ence players, Frances Vaughn,<lb/>
Tee Davies and Paul Garcia. Also<lb/>
valuable to the team is John<lb/>
McGinnis, last year's winner of<lb/>
the Guilford Intercollegiate tour-<lb/>
nament. Other important players<lb/>
will be John Chapman, Simon<lb/>
Moye and Doug Hoey.<lb/>
The golf team has a new goal<lb/>
for the spring of '89, to qualify for<lb/>
the NCAA Championship Tour-<lb/>
nament in June. In order to qual-<lb/>
ify, the team must finish in the top<lb/>
seven half of thedistrict, Morrison<lb/>
said. This will enable them to play<lb/>
in a qualifying tournament with<lb/>
the other six from their half of the<lb/>
district and an additional eight<lb/>
teams from the other half of the<lb/>
district. The top 11 teams will<lb/>
then advance to the NCAA's.<lb/>
The golf captains for the<lb/>
spring season are Garcia, a red-<lb/>
shirt junior, and Davies, a true<lb/>
senior. "Both Paul and Tee are<lb/>
Softballers look forward to<lb/>
year of powerhouse competition<lb/>
great leaders and will be good for<lb/>
the team Morrison said.<lb/>
"It takes a strong academic<lb/>
student to play golf for the var-<lb/>
sity team Morrison said.<lb/>
Because some tournaments<lb/>
last for three or more days, the<lb/>
golfers are required to miss more<lb/>
classes than other varsity athletes.<lb/>
The golfers proved their aca-<lb/>
demic strength in the fall<lb/>
semester with one member mak-<lb/>
ing the Dean's list and six making<lb/>
the honor roll.<lb/>
 The team will participate in<lb/>
eight tournaments this spring.<lb/>
Most tournaments last for two or<lb/>
three days and only five or six<lb/>
golfers can go to each. Because<lb/>
there are 15 golfers on the team,<lb/>
most of their practice time is spent<lb/>
qualifying. Fifteen to 25 teams<lb/>
participate in each tournament.<lb/>
The home courses for the<lb/>
ECU golfers are Greenville Coun-<lb/>
try Club and Brook Valley Coun-<lb/>
try Club. Because both courses are<lb/>
private, the Pirates are unable to<lb/>
host home tournaments.<lb/>
The golfers played in five<lb/>
tournaments in the fall season<lb/>
during September and October.<lb/>
They placed third in the Campbell<lb/>
Intercollegiate tournament. From<lb/>
the other tournaments, thev took<lb/>
two fifth place finishes and two<lb/>
seventh place finishes.<lb/>
Morrison is in his third vear of<lb/>
coaching the ECU golf team.<lb/>
According to Garcia, the team<lb/>
has made a great improvement as<lb/>
a result of Morrison's time and<lb/>
patience. Morrison has 11 con-<lb/>
secutive conference titles to his<lb/>
credit which has earned him a<lb/>
place in the Golf Coaches Hall of<lb/>
Fame.<lb/>
By TRACYE LARKIN<lb/>
Sporti Writer<lb/>
Look beyond the hedges of<lb/>
Herrington field and there lies<lb/>
another field. This is home to the<lb/>
Lady Pirate fast-pitch softball<lb/>
team.<lb/>
The softballers had a sixth<lb/>
place Southern region ranking<lb/>
mid season, last year. The South-<lb/>
ern region consists of all Division<lb/>
I colleges in the Southern part of<lb/>
the United States.<lb/>
The team lost five players; but<lb/>
with two seniors and a force of 10<lb/>
juniors they will not be lacking in<lb/>
experience. The Lady Pirates also<lb/>
have a group of six talented rook-<lb/>
ies who are expected to see play-<lb/>
ing time. According to eight-year<lb/>
coach Sue Manahan, "There is as<lb/>
much potential on the field as I<lb/>
have seen since I have been at<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Leading the team in offense<lb/>
this year will be three year veteren<lb/>
and team captain, Mickey Ford.<lb/>
Ms. Ford received the honor of<lb/>
best offensive player for the Pi-<lb/>
rates last season having a batting<lb/>
average of .321.<lb/>
The defensive attack will be<lb/>
led by three returning junior<lb/>
pitchers: Renee Meyers, Jenifer<lb/>
Sagi, and Tracye I .arkin. The three<lb/>
had a combined ERA of 1.82 last<lb/>
season. "The pitching staff has<lb/>
matured and is ready to lead the<lb/>
team Manahan said. A new<lb/>
addition to the mound this year<lb/>
will be sophomore Wendy<lb/>
Tonker.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are going<lb/>
through strenuous workouts,<lb/>
preparing for the upcoming sea-<lb/>
son. The team also has been in-<lb/>
vited to five major tournaments<lb/>
and will host the First Annual<lb/>
Lady Pirates Classic.<lb/>
The softballers will face .na-<lb/>
tionally ranked powerhouses this<lb/>
year such as Florida State and<lb/>
University of South Carolina.<lb/>
Junior pitcher Renee Meyers said,<lb/>
"Our team has the talent and de-<lb/>
termination to beat these so-<lb/>
called powerhouse teams; and I<lb/>
know we can<lb/>
The Lady Pirates open their<lb/>
season March 1, at home against<lb/>
Furman.<lb/>
;<lb/>
X<lb/>
llie ECU softball team practices their hitting to prepare them for their first game March 1 against<lb/>
Furman. The Pirates hope their potential and experience will give them a chance against the nation-<lb/>
ally ranked powerhouse teams (Photo by J.D. Whitmire, ECU Photolab).<lb/>
<pb facs="00058126_0015"/><lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
X<lb/>
'<lb/>
V,<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21. 1989 11<lb/>
Winning medals will be primary goal<lb/>
Olympic Commision draws up report<lb/>
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) ?<lb/>
George Stoinbrenner promised<lb/>
his critique of America's Olympic<lb/>
program would be packed with<lb/>
meat But now that the secret is<lb/>
out some members are wonder-<lb/>
ing, "Where's the beef?"<lb/>
Steinbrenner's U.S. Olympic<lb/>
Committee Overview Commis-<lb/>
sion issued a 21-page plan Sun-<lb/>
day for trimming the fat from a<lb/>
bloated bureaucracy to create a<lb/>
aner, meaner USOC.<lb/>
The report declares winning<lb/>
nedals the primary goal of the<lb/>
SOC sounds a rallying crv for a<lb/>
national marketing blitz, but of-<lb/>
rs tow new initiatives.<lb/>
Rather than specifics on how<lb/>
) resolve nagging athlete and<lb/>
bach selection problems, the<lb/>
port gives only guidelines.<lb/>
Instead of devisine a detailed<lb/>
program to put more monev in<lb/>
support a jobs program and pro-<lb/>
vide relatively small amounts of<lb/>
direct financial aid.<lb/>
Without saying how much<lb/>
money, if any, has been misspent<lb/>
or wasted, the report urges more<lb/>
than a dozen financial steps, say-<lb/>
ing that "without the very strong-<lb/>
est financial planning and ac-<lb/>
countability procedures, the<lb/>
USOC may very well face finan-<lb/>
cial disaster as early as the 1992-96<lb/>
e;uadrennium<lb/>
Edwin Moses, the two-time<lb/>
Olympic gold medalist in the 400-<lb/>
mecer intermediate hurdles, said<lb/>
he would have liked to see more<lb/>
specifics that could lead to<lb/>
changes quickly. Nothing in the<lb/>
report is likely to affect U.S. per-<lb/>
formances in the 1992 Olympics.<lb/>
Moses and many USOC offi-<lb/>
cials were satisfied, though, that<lb/>
the report at least addresses the<lb/>
"I think when a company letics, critics such as speedskater<lb/>
goes from being a small, family- Bonnie Blair said, was participa-<lb/>
type business to a large corpora- no. ,nd strivi for one's own<lb/>
tion you have to go through some not just winbmng.<lb/>
land of restructuring m order to "Winning medals must al-<lb/>
operate efficiently he said. "? thc Primary &amp;?<lb/>
"Everybody might not be happy, Sl?njn" IT" ?T 2<lb/>
thouch " asked about that goal, he turned<lb/>
Steinbrenner's panel shook the l? ar?Und' , ,<lb/>
up the USOC, to the delight of If the winn,nS of mcda,s<lb/>
some and the consternation of<lb/>
others, by saying it should slash<lb/>
its executive board from 89 to 43<lb/>
voting members and eliminate 19<lb/>
of 32 committees to cut costs and<lb/>
work more smoothly.<lb/>
Steinbrenner, the New York<lb/>
Yankees' principal owner and<lb/>
new USOC vice president, was<lb/>
criticized by many Olympic ath-<lb/>
letes for his "winning is every-<lb/>
isn't important, how come every<lb/>
one of your newspapers puts the<lb/>
medal count on the front page?"<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
"It's important for this coun-<lb/>
try to be among the best. The<lb/>
American public must never be<lb/>
satisfied just to make the team and<lb/>
not care about the performance,<lb/>
and there's some of that<lb/>
Moses didn't quarrel with<lb/>
MEMORIAL COINS<lb/>
&amp;PAWN<lb/>
?BASEBALLCARDS<lb/>
?STAMPS<lb/>
?COINSUPPLIES<lb/>
?DIAMONDS<lb/>
?TELEVISIONS<lb/>
?VCR's<lb/>
?CAMERAS<lb/>
?STEREOS<lb/>
?MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS<lb/>
?COINS<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS-WI BUY<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
All Transactions Strictly Confidential<lb/>
752-7736<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
??<lb/>
655MEMORIAL DRIVE<lb/>
thing" attitude when he was ap- Steinbrenner's emphasis on win<lb/>
the pockets of athletes, the report issue of reshaping the USOC to<lb/>
simply supports the current effort make it more responsive to ath-<lb/>
increase tuition assistance, letcs' needs.<lb/>
Pirate victory due<lb/>
to tough defense<lb/>
pointed last year to head the<lb/>
commission.<lb/>
The point of amateur ath<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
than nine. Following two free<lb/>
throws bv freshman Robin<lb/>
House. Navy would score four<lb/>
straight points to make the final<lb/>
score, 67-58.<lb/>
The Tirates were led by Blue<lb/>
cd wards who scored a game-high<lb/>
2 points. The Colonial Athletic<lb/>
Conference's leading-scorer also<lb/>
did a little moving in the ECU<lb/>
record books with that perform-<lb/>
ance. The 28 points gave Edwards<lb/>
a career total of 1,067 points,<lb/>
which places him 12th on thc all-<lb/>
time career scoring list. Along<lb/>
with his points, Edwards also<lb/>
gabbed a game-high 11 rebounds<lb/>
and dished out five assists.<lb/>
East Carolina also got help<lb/>
from its othere two seniors, Jeff<lb/>
Kelly and Kenny Murphy.<lb/>
Murphy chipped in with eight<lb/>
points, while Kelly dished out<lb/>
seven assists. Kellv's seven assists<lb/>
moved him into secondon, the.<lb/>
single-season assist list. Kelly<lb/>
now has 111 assists for the season.<lb/>
Two other Pirates also contrib-<lb/>
Support<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
Athletics<lb/>
uted in this team effort. Gus Hill<lb/>
added 10 points and Reed Lose,<lb/>
even though he played part of the<lb/>
game hurt, scored eight points<lb/>
and had five rebounds.<lb/>
Navy was led bv forward<lb/>
Bobbv Jones who scored 14 points<lb/>
and grabbed four rebounds. Sam<lb/>
Cook added 10 points and had<lb/>
seven rebounds.<lb/>
The win moves the Pirates to<lb/>
13-12 on the season and 6-7 in the<lb/>
CAA. The loss closes out a disap-<lb/>
pointing CAA season for Navy.<lb/>
The Midshipmen won just one<lb/>
league game and finished at 1-13.<lb/>
Their overall record is now 5-21.<lb/>
The Pirates will be back in<lb/>
action Wednesday in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. ECU will square off<lb/>
with the Flames of Liberty in a<lb/>
non-conference game. Tip-off will<lb/>
be 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Lose<lb/>
Edwards<lb/>
Love<lb/>
Kelly<lb/>
Murphy<lb/>
Hill<lb/>
Bryant<lb/>
House<lb/>
Perhch<lb/>
Mote<lb/>
Team<lb/>
Totals .<lb/>
Jones<lb/>
Cook<lb/>
Prather<lb/>
East Carolina (67)<lb/>
MP FC FT R F A<lb/>
38 4-8 0-0 5 0 2<lb/>
38 7-1512-13 11 3 5<lb/>
19 2-3 0-14 10<lb/>
39 0-0 3-3 2 1 7<lb/>
38 3-6 2-2 2 0 2<lb/>
20 4-10 2-3 1 4 1<lb/>
14 2-2 0-0 10 0<lb/>
1 0-0 2-2 0 0 0<lb/>
1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<lb/>
1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<lb/>
3<lb/>
200 22-44 21-24 29 9 17<lb/>
Navy (58)<lb/>
MP FC FT R<lb/>
31 5-15 0-0 4<lb/>
23 5-8 0-0 7<lb/>
25 1-3 0-2<lb/>
1-1<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
2-2<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-2<lb/>
TP<lb/>
8<lb/>
28<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
8<lb/>
10<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
Cottschalk 24 2-9<lb/>
Harris 28 2-8<lb/>
Davis,M. 4 1-2<lb/>
Davis,Mel 8 0-2<lb/>
Graham 25 3-9<lb/>
Turner 19 2-7<lb/>
Marusich 13 3-4<lb/>
Team<lb/>
Totals 200 24-67 3-7<lb/>
F A<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
5 0<lb/>
3 0<lb/>
1 4<lb/>
1 3<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
2 3<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
3 0<lb/>
3 0<lb/>
9<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
40 19 12<lb/>
67<lb/>
TP<lb/>
14<lb/>
10<lb/>
2<lb/>
7<lb/>
5<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
8<lb/>
4<lb/>
6<lb/>
58<lb/>
East Carolina28 39 ? 6<lb/>
Navy25 33 ?58<lb/>
ning medals. "I think that's what<lb/>
any athlete wants he said. "Ev-<lb/>
eryone is in it to win<lb/>
Graf wins<lb/>
again<lb/>
FAIRFAX, Va. (AP) ? Steffi<lb/>
Graf couldn't remember anything<lb/>
similar. Zina Garrison will never<lb/>
forget it.<lb/>
In a display of tennis that was<lb/>
extraordinary even by her own<lb/>
spectacular standards, Graf won<lb/>
the opening 20 points Sunday in a<lb/>
6-1, 7-5 victory over Garrison in<lb/>
the finals of the $300,000 Virginia<lb/>
Slims of Washington.<lb/>
After she won her $60,000 top<lb/>
prize, Graf, the world's top-<lb/>
ranked player, was asked if she<lb/>
had ever gotten off to such a daz-<lb/>
zling start.<lb/>
"Not winning 20 points in a<lb/>
row, that's for sure she re-<lb/>
sponded.<lb/>
West Germany's Graf, 12-0<lb/>
this year and 84-3 since the begin-<lb/>
ning of 1988, captured 25 of the 29<lb/>
points in the first set.<lb/>
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 fi.??<lb/>
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(Qg jiontt)nnnt)Hoi r oi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058126_0016"/><lb/>
A. -<lb/>
I<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 21,1989<lb/>
Edwards breaks 1.000 point barrier<lb/>
Pirates win over weekend<lb/>
By CHRIS SIEGEL<lb/>
Aaat Sports Editor<lb/>
As Coach Mike Steele and his<lb/>
Pirate team exited the bus Thurs-<lb/>
day night, there wasn't but one<lb/>
thing on their minds?winning.<lb/>
After losing three games in a row,<lb/>
ECU needed a victory badly and<lb/>
they got it at the expense of the<lb/>
Campbell Camels. It was not a<lb/>
high scoring affair, but the Pirates<lb/>
prevailed 65-60.<lb/>
In a game that was high-<lb/>
lighted by defense, there was a<lb/>
bright spot offensively. Senior<lb/>
Blue Edwards scored a game-<lb/>
high 31 points in front of vocal<lb/>
Campbell fans and even a few<lb/>
professional basketball scouts.<lb/>
Not only was this Edwards ninth<lb/>
game over 30 points, it also<lb/>
pushed Edwards over the 1000<lb/>
point mark for his career. His 1007<lb/>
points makes him the 16th leading<lb/>
scorer in ECU history.<lb/>
The sparse Cumberland<lb/>
County Memorial Arena crowd<lb/>
had little to get excited about in<lb/>
the first half. The two teams<lb/>
traded baskets for the first eight<lb/>
minutes of the game.<lb/>
Trailing 10-8, Edwards shot a<lb/>
10-foot jumper that hit the front of<lb/>
the rim. He grappei his own re-<lb/>
bound and slammed it home to tie<lb/>
the score at 10-10. Thirty seconds<lb/>
later Edwards hit two free throws<lb/>
to put the Pirates up 12-11. That<lb/>
would be the last lead of the half<lb/>
for ECU.<lb/>
Neither team caused any-<lb/>
great damage the rest of the half.<lb/>
Campbell made a slight push<lb/>
towards the end of the first half<lb/>
and mounted a 7-4 run to grab the<lb/>
half time lead. The Camels lead at<lb/>
intermission 28-25.<lb/>
The quiet Pirate team that<lb/>
played the first half must have<lb/>
stayed in the locker room, because<lb/>
ECU jumped out to a big lead<lb/>
early in the second half. East<lb/>
Carolina started the half with the<lb/>
hot shooting touch and forged<lb/>
ahead on a 154 run. With 12:05<lb/>
left in the game ECU was up by<lb/>
eight, 40-32.<lb/>
The two teams volleyed back<lb/>
and forth for the next six minutes.<lb/>
Then it was Campbell's turn to<lb/>
mount a comeback. Following<lb/>
seven straight points, the Camels<lb/>
had pulled to within one, 51-50.<lb/>
The game remained close<lb/>
with ECU never going ahead by<lb/>
more than three. But with 1:30<lb/>
remaining and the Pirates up<lb/>
three, the stage was set for an<lb/>
exciting finish. Edwards would<lb/>
get his fifth foul with 1:11 remain-<lb/>
ing in the game. Henry Wilson<lb/>
would hit the two free throws and<lb/>
pull Campbell back within one,<lb/>
59-58.<lb/>
The Pirates would bring the<lb/>
ball down court and milk the<lb/>
clock. With :30 seconds left in the<lb/>
game and only four seconds left<lb/>
on the 45 second clock, Reed Lose<lb/>
would find Kenny Murphy un-<lb/>
derneath the basket for an easy<lb/>
two. ECU up, 61-58.<lb/>
Campbell worked their of-<lb/>
fense well and following a near<lb/>
steal by Murphy, Mark Mocnik<lb/>
would get an easy layup to draw<lb/>
the Camels to only one point<lb/>
down, 61-60. But that would be<lb/>
all, as the Pirates would get two<lb/>
clutch free throws from Jeff Kelly<lb/>
and Murphy would add two to<lb/>
make the final score 65-60.<lb/>
The Pirates were lead by<lb/>
Edwards' 31 points. The eighth<lb/>
leading scorer in the country also<lb/>
grabbed six rebounds and dished<lb/>
out six assists. Coach Stecle spoke<lb/>
highly of Edwards' performance<lb/>
after the game. "I think Blue<lb/>
played better tonight than any<lb/>
other game this year. He had a<lb/>
great game and completely domi-<lb/>
nated the game Steele said.<lb/>
But Edwards was not the lone<lb/>
star for the Pirates. Although the<lb/>
only scorer in double figures, two<lb/>
other Pirates played big roles in<lb/>
the win. Senior point guard Kelly<lb/>
shot well for the game. Kelly con-<lb/>
nected on three of six from the<lb/>
field and hit the two clutch free-<lb/>
throws to win it for ECU. Kelly<lb/>
also ran the offense well and had a<lb/>
game-high eight assists.<lb/>
A surprise,here also appeared<lb/>
against Campbell. Freshman<lb/>
Brooks Bryant came off the bench<lb/>
to play well for the Pirates. He<lb/>
may have only scored four points<lb/>
and had two rebounds, bu t he had<lb/>
two clutch defensive plays to<lb/>
make the Pirate win possible. In<lb/>
the last two minutes of the game,<lb/>
Bryant took a charge and tied up a<lb/>
loose ball to help ECU maintain<lb/>
slim one point leads.<lb/>
Campbell was lead by Henry<lb/>
Wilson who had 18 points and<lb/>
seven rebounds. Sanders Jackson<lb/>
pitched in with 13 points and<lb/>
seven rebounds and Mark<lb/>
Mocnik chipped in 10.<lb/>
Pirates break losing streak<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
out to be a dogfight just like the<lb/>
first half. Draper would get a tech-<lb/>
nical foul for the Eagles and<lb/>
Edwards would hit the free<lb/>
throws to put ECU up 30-28 early<lb/>
in the half.<lb/>
The big blow for American<lb/>
would come at 15:13 when team-<lb/>
leader Draper would be whistled<lb/>
for his fourth personal foul. De-<lb/>
spite this though, the Eagles<lb/>
would rattle off eight straight<lb/>
points and take the lead. With<lb/>
11:34 remaining in the game,<lb/>
American was ahead of the Pi-<lb/>
rates, 42-36.<lb/>
The Pirates would fight right<lb/>
back and following an alley-oop<lb/>
to Edwards, the Pirates were back<lb/>
in the lead 45-44. American would<lb/>
regain the lead and stretch it to<lb/>
three before Edwards showed his<lb/>
magic again.<lb/>
With ECU down three and<lb/>
American having the momen-<lb/>
tum, Edwards canned a three-<lb/>
pointer from the right wing and<lb/>
the Pirates would never look<lb/>
back.<lb/>
Gus Hill would come in off<lb/>
the bench and nail two important<lb/>
three-pointers. American was<lb/>
forced to foul to stay in the game,<lb/>
Lady Pirates win<lb/>
Continued from page 10<lb/>
remaining opponents. The Lady<lb/>
Pirates defeated the Lady<lb/>
Seahawks of UNC-Wilmington,<lb/>
87-69 in January at Minges.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will take a<lb/>
break after their two consecutive<lb/>
wins and prepare to travel to<lb/>
Wilmington to take on C AA rival<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington on Saturday.<lb/>
but the Pirates responded by hit-<lb/>
ting eight for eight from the free<lb/>
throw line.<lb/>
The Pirates were led by Sen-<lb/>
ior Blue Edwards who scored a<lb/>
game-high 32 points. Edwards'<lb/>
performance was his 10th game of<lb/>
the season in which he scored 30<lb/>
plus points. It was also his third<lb/>
straight game of 30 or more<lb/>
points. Hill's two three-pointers<lb/>
paced him to 10 points. He also<lb/>
helped out on the boards grab-<lb/>
bing six rebounds.<lb/>
Brvant had his second nice<lb/>
game for the Pirates. He scored<lb/>
eight points and grabbed two<lb/>
rebounds.<lb/>
ECU career assist leader Jeff<lb/>
Kelly padded his stats as he<lb/>
dished a game-high seven assists.<lb/>
Although in foul trouble, Kelly<lb/>
led the Pirates through some turn-<lb/>
over plagued spots and was as-<lb/>
sisted in running the offense by<lb/>
Kenny Murphy.<lb/>
American was led by Chuck<lb/>
West who scored 15 points.<lb/>
Draper scored 11 and Dale Spears<lb/>
chipped in with 11.<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/>
Ifree 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/>
30C?XKiicuc<lb/>
FEELING LOW?<lb/>
UNCERTAIN?<lb/>
NEED HfLP?<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised rtems .s required to be readily<lb/>
avaJable for sale in each Kroger Store, except as<lb/>
specifically noted in Mi ad. If we do ? ??"<lb/>
advertised item, we will offer you your choice of a<lb/>
comparable item, when available, reflecting the same<lb/>
savings or a raincheck which will entitle you to purchase<lb/>
the advertised item at the advertised price within 30 dayr<lb/>
Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item<lb/>
purchased.<lb/>
COPYRIGHT 1989 THE KROGER COq ITEMS, AND<lb/>
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. FEB 19. THROUGH<lb/>
SATURDAY, FEB 25. 1989, IN<lb/>
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE<lb/>
SOLD TO DEALERS<lb/>
You Can Count On Kroger For<lb/>
Low Prices<lb/>
And More<lb/>
uikw ? caiim bv the REAL Crislr Intervention Center: 312 E.<lb/>
JXS SITsShSJ For Free Confidential Counseling or As-<lb/>
 Staff<lb/>
Our Volunteers and Staff are on dutyMhrs. aday.year .round.<lb/>
In order to sssist you In virtually any problem area you <lb/>
?T!o?fl.urlo.? has alwaye been topreeenre and enhance<lb/>
the quality of life for you and our community.<lb/>
LfaMd A A?H?? Th. SUrt. North C??<lb/>
31 Wat:<lb/>
SKI SEASON SALE<lb/>
Skis &amp; Boots20 off<lb/>
v ??. V(V JllClcCtS<lb/>
t M (CB.Obermeyer, Rollfe. Nils)30 off<lb/>
WW Mens &amp; Ladies Ski Coats30off<lb/>
Mens &amp; Ladies Woolrich Coats40 off<lb/>
Mens Bibs20 off<lb/>
Ladies Bibs20-40 off<lb/>
CTl "An Mens Stretch20 off<lb/>
fj? Ladies Stretch in Fashion Colors40 off<lb/>
mt Mens &amp; Ladies Sweaters30 off<lb/>
? Warm-Ups40 off<lb/>
All Sales Final. No Returns. <lb/>
GORDON'S GOLF &amp; SKI<lb/>
264 ByPass (Next To Greenville TV &amp; Appliance)<lb/>
756-1003<lb/>
Serve 'INT Save<lb/>
Wieners<lb/>
12-oz.<lb/>
NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,<lb/>
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,<lb/>
Diet Pepsi<lb/>
or Pepsi Cola<lb/>
2-Liter<lb/>
6-PAK 12-0Z. CANS . . . $199<lb/>
PROCESSED<lb/>
County Line<lb/>
American Cheese Food<lb/>
12-oz<lb/>
99<lb/>
Keebler<lb/>
Tato Skins<lb/>
$119<lb/>
8-oz. A<lb/>
Original or Custard Style Q <lb/>
Yoplait Yogurt ??? <lb/>
99c<lb/>
Suave Shampoo<lb/>
or Conditioner<lb/>
16-oz.<lb/>
California<lb/>
Navel Oranges<lb/>
Each<lb/>
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